<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15382" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/15382?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-06-11T01:37:19+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48504">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/8f54c1a8b5a289c8584b28ea0a3ce95e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>193e4b85028ce19ad0e386d362f06fb2</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="49354">
                  <text>'·

•Ti•--~",;"~1

J

~'

•

Sunday. March 30. 1975

::·:=:·:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=··::;.;:;:-:.:;:··-·-.;::·::.: :-:: :.:;::::·:-· ·.:;:;:;:::.::·::;:;:;:.: :.::·-:_: :; ·-:· :-:;·_:;:;:-;;:;.::

your Wayne ·Natio-,lal Forest

r

•

By T. Allan Wolter

plus Guam, The Virgin Island,· and

District Ranger

Pucrl o Rie,:o, adds up to over $:i0 million

IRONTON - Much has been s;11d
) lately about, "who pays for Wildlife
.;.· conservntion'1 "

.:

.·.·
::::
··
}
::::
::::

f

...

CADET DUVALL
Coast Guard CadPt James
A. Duvall, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James W. Duvall of
Route I. Reedsville, has been
placed on the Commandant
ol Cadets List at the U. S.
Coast Guard Academy. Nt'W
London. Conn . He was
commended for his superior
· Initiative and military
bearing during the fir st
semester of this school year.
Upon compl•tlon nf the
academy's four·y ear
curriculum, Duvall will
receive a bachelor ol science
degree and be commissioned
a Coast Guard ensign.

r
::::

:·:

;:.:

...
·.

{
::,:
.:::
..
.-~~
::::
.. &gt;
}

:::
·.·
···
-:::
:'::
/
::;:
·.·:
}
::::
:,:_,: :
.:
::::

The n ..d tor llftlnluranct 11 grta1tlt wtltn

vou'rt voung and c• n
tta1t efford It, Stttt
Farm'• rarm llft

lni~.Jr ­

tnct provldtl econom·

shu1rt_en hlheh hunti,ng seasofn and to .:~.:~ ·: _:~
ras n et t e unter s quota o game, or
lo pay bounties for the elimination of ::::
predators. It was thought that lhe best -:·: ·
way to 1mprove hunting was to stock -~ .r ~ .~
every available cover with the most

1

bulk of wildlife managemen t fu,;J,,
pet. malclung basis, half the funding is
popular game btrd or animal of lhe
an other significant but lillie known
to be used for target ranges and
Source orfund ing exists . It is ca lled the
firc;ums safet_
y· programs : the other
regwn.
Federal Aid in Wildlife RestoratiOn Acl
hillf directed to the Federa l Aid to
When P-R funds first became
of 1937. Funds from this ad &lt;Jre ea r·
W1ld hfe Re.s tora twn Fund . Previously
available, game departments made
marked primarily for state controlled
the 10 percent hand-gun sa les ex else tax
liberal use of them ln research projects
public lands; however, H larg e W!ldlif
went into the general fund of the u. s.
to determme why these so&lt;alled
management program has begun on
Treasury . Th1s tax amounts to nearly
"co nservation " tech niques did not
our sister fo rest in Indiana {Hoos1e r . !7,000,000 annua lly
y1e ld the hoped-for results As a
National Fores t). More recently, a
To become ehg able for P· B funds, a
reservoir of sc ientific knowledge about
nW1odest pr ohg~am has begun on the
Slate musC not divert huntmg license
wildlife and conservatiOn has been built
ayne 1n
10 .
fee s for any purpose other than adup,less P-R money has had to be spent
It is better known as the Pittmanmm istratwn of 1ts fish and game
on research proJects Nevertheless,
Robertson Pl·og ram , or Simply the •·p..
department.
research earned out under the P·R
H" Program, after 1ts sponsors, Sen .'
Made possible by the PittmanProgram continues to 1mprove the
Key Pillman of Nevada and Rep A.
Robertson Program , Stale game
quality of game management
Willis Robertson of Virgima .
departments have moved mto land
throughout the country .
S1nce it w~nt mto effect July l, 1938,
acquisition and munagernent on a
No phase of game management has
the P-R Program has made nearly 50
broad scale and embarked on a wide
benefited more from the Pittmannulhon acres avai_Iab~e for hunhting a nd
vanety of wlldhfe research and
Robertson Program than restockmg
other sports acUv1hes. 11 as a1so
developmen t projects. Then, they can
From indiscriminate and ineffective
spend their own money on the projects,
dumpin g of btrds and ammals,
transformed game management from
hopeful guess work to applied science,
secure in the kn owledge that they w11l
restocking has been refined so tha t the
much to the benefit of sportsmen,
be reimbursed for up to 75 percent of
ngh l wildlife in the right quantity is
naturalists. nature lovers and iantheir outlays. If a State dOes not use its
settled on the right land.
downers everyw here.
P-H allotments one year, it may use it
The list is long and runs the gamut
A Federal exc1se tax o£ 11 percent
the next.
of restocking native species to areas
on sportmg arms and fa ctory~p roduced
Unobligated P-R monies at the end
where game has been exploited or
ammunition supplies the flmds for the
of the second year revert to the U.S · destroyed through changing or harmful
Bureau of Sporl• Fisheries and Wildlife
land management practices. The whiteprogram. Collected at the manufacturer's level, ·the lax momes are and are utilized under the Migratory
tailed deer has been successfully
distributed to the Stales on a 75-25Bird Conservation Act. No State's
returned to Ohw and many of the
percent matching basis to be used by
allotment may be transferred to eastern Stales. Equal success can be
their game deparlmenl&lt; for various
another Stale.
reported for return of the wtld turkey to
wildlife projects.
Some of the nation's finest public
many of its native haunts.
Since Its mceplion, more tha n $472 hunting is to be found in tracts pur·
In retrospect, one can say that
million have been alloled to the Stales chased outright by the States with P-R
dwing the 30-odd years since the
with shares based on each State's area
fund s, nearly 3 million acres over the
enactmen t of the Pitlman-Robertson
and number of hunting licenses sold. No
past 30 years. In fact, all aspects of
Program all phases of game
State may be allotted more than 5 game management have benefited
management have benefited greatly.
percent, nor less than 0.5 percent, of
grea tly from the P-R Program since its
All Americans owe a vote of thanks to
each year's P-R outlay
inception .
those responsible· for its introduction
The apporlwnment to the 50 states
and safe passage through the Congress.

0

;:;:

::::

::::

{

···

College students give a hand
The lndlviduahzed Program
at Green Elementary School
functions on the basic premise
that pup1ls must be involved in
a vanety of experiences and be
achvely mvolved mdividually
::: to realize optimum educahon
development.
&lt;
The
class , the refore,
recently parllc1pated w an

....
·.·
:-:·
(
(
:::: !·
::::
\
:·.·
:-··
:::
:::.

24 Siito s·treel

Galllliolls, Ohto·
446·4290, Home 446-4518
1..111• a pod nel1hbor,
Stele '•rm I• ther•.

lr:::~::)SlrATE fARM lifE

ltN!iU~~,NC~COMPANY
Qffi~o ;

lltoll'llfttiO!I, IIII!IOit

p 7-'18 .

'*-

\~\)

~"

~(:

~~ HOME IMPROVEMENT SPECIAL ~
We Are Over Stocked On Insulation
Cut those big gas &amp; oil bills with this Spring
Special.
Before you pai11t or make repairs to your
home, call us about insulating it. We insulate
brick, wood and aluminum homes.
Sale From
March 26, 1975
to April30, 1975

Over Stocked. Check
On This Spring
Special Now.
Tomorrow May
Be Too late
Ca II for a Free Estimate

Blown In Walls
and Attics

PASQUALE
ELECTRICAL &amp; INSUlATING CO.

103 Cedar St.

Day or Night
614-446-2716

Gallipolis, Ohio

Midway Church and Morgan
Center Gospel Mission.
Special numbers were sung
by Mrs. Jean Wrey of Morga n
Center Wesleyan Church and
her parents, the Rev . and Mrs .
William Wisemantle of Vinton
Wesleyan Church, as a lrioj lhe
Morgan Center Wesleyan
youth group and the Midway
youth group, and Vickie Might,
Mary Johnson, Pam Davis and
Hick Matheny, ·of the Danville
Wesleyan
Churc h,
ac·
companied on his guitar by
Rich Matheny .
Rev . 0. H. . Car t read
scriphu·e and preached the
sennon.
At the end of the sei"VlCe the
all&lt;lr call was given to which
three responded by becoming
converted to Christ.
Youtns attending we re,
Timmy Spires, Sandy Davis,
Ofbne
Hickma n, LeeAnn
Davis. Jimmy Sp!res, Ray
Hall , Debbie Hall , Ruth Hall.
Lawrence Russel l, Bruce
Hysell , Terry Hysell. Donald
E. Shupe, Oencll Ray Yost, Jr .,

II
I
I
I
I
I
I

Thomas , Charlotte Barrett,

Shane Smith, Kelly Thoma s,
Mel1ssa- Durham , Robin Rath burn , Norma Jean Hy selL
Mark Rathburn, Ric hie Van
HaUtern, Guy Schuler, Chrys-

tal Roush , Alena Wrey , Donna

Shupe , Brian Durham , Cindy
Coy, Debbie Adkins. Joyce

Stewart, Charles Stewart,
Karen Shupe, Geraldine Shupe,
Terry Russel l, Brenda Yost,
M1ke Adkins, James Sp1res,
Rob in Hersman, So[lnv Adkms ,

Debbie Spires, Mark Wrey ,
Linda Kay Yost, Paula Justi ce,

Scotty Justice. Vickie Might,
Rick Matheny and Pam Da vis.
Youth leaders attending
were Mrs . Jesse Might, Mrs.
Beverly Spires, Mrs. Jean
Wrey and Mr . and Mrs Theron
Durham .
Preachers attending were
the Re vs. Lelon Glasure,
Wilham W•semantle, Theron
Durham. 0. H. Cart and John
Hersman .
Adults attending were, Mrs .
Deanna Davis, Mrs Loi s Hick man, Mrs. Nellie My ers, Mrs.
Martha Glasure, Mrs. Carol
Hall. Mrs Mozel le Russell. Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Coy , Mr . and
Mrs Herbie Lance, Mr . and
Mrs . Edwin Davis, Mr . and

Nine fined, 5 no shows
POMEROY - Nine defen·
dants were fined and five
forfeited bonds in Pomeroy
Judge Robert Buck's Coun ty
Court Friday.
Fined were David G. Ashley,
Middleport, $15 and cos ts;
Lawrence A. Smith. Forestville. N. Y., and Lonnie Black,
Rt. 1, Ruiland, $12 and costs
each; Myles R. Blake, Rt. 1,
Reedsville, $13 and costs;
Jerry D. Swartz. Middleport.
$18 and costs; David M
McGiven, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, $33
and costs, all speeding; Clifford Connally , Norton, Ohio,
$150 and costs. three days
6 months
confinement,

,. -----------

I

Carol Ann Yost, Bobby Rath.
burn , Dav id Might, Kennie Sue

HONDA

probation , and 30 days
suspenswn of license, driving
while intoxicated; Kenne th
Mohler, Middleport, two
charges of disorderly conduct,
$10 and costs each; Elhs
Clonch, Middleport, $100 and
costs. 75 days confinement,
assao~t and trespassing .
Forfeiting bonds were
Eugenia A. Kresge , Athens,
Harry D. Garnes, Pomeroy ,
Charles M. Yeager, Mason, W
Va .. each $27.50 for speeding;
Alan J . Boggs, Rt. 2, Coolville,
$27.50, overwidth load, and
Denver C. Ferguson, New
Boston, Ohio, $357.50, drivin~
while inioxicated.

~

I

Good things_happen on a Honda.
]
One look or one ride on a Honda
CB-750 K5 and you'll knoW: .it's one of
. the world's grea1 super bikes.
- '*·

--

Whether you're headed aaoss
'the country or across town,
a Honda CB-750 K5 gets you
there in luxury.

'

.:\.._,
'

'

. '.,__

Mrs. Clifford Might, Mrs.
Patricia Hysell, Mrs. Gladys
Barrett, Mr. and Mrs. Vineyard, Mr . and Mrs Coy Barr,
Mrs . Julie
Wisemantle,
Clarence Might, Mrs. Joan
Yost, M rs Marilyn Halfhil l,
Mrs Dorthy Davis, Mr . and
Mrs . Robert Hersman , Mr . and
Mrs Clyde Hampton, Buddy
Hampton , Mr and Mr s Floyd
Cleland, Mr . and Mrs. David
Gardner , Mr . and Mrs Donald
Shupe and Mrs. Sa lley Shupe.

&amp;stern PTSA
has recent meet

'-"'.

·The King of Superbike offers:
• Powerful, smooth·running,
4-cylinder, 4-stroke OHC ell&lt;Jine
• Easy-shifting, 5-speed trans·
mission • Hydraulic disc brake •
Running lights and headlight
tight up when the engine is
started • Bright new color
schemes 'and new styling.

Cl_ ....

. 'I

.

.

KANAUGA,
OHIO
-

Needs of the school were
discussed and the PTSA voted
to make some purchases with
Chester Gooding being ap· ·
pointed to check into what 1s
needed .
Officers' reports were g1ven
following a prayer by Mrs.
Menlyn Hannum to open the
meehng. Reports were given
on the um t's reeent meettng
with the school board and a
ways and means committee
meeting. An article asking that
!he pubhc s1gn a petihon or
se nd a letter to NASA in support of the astrona uts' reading
verses from the B1ble while in
space was read.
Gooding presented the
program USing slides Of his tnp
to Maine, Ne'v Brunswick and
Newfoundland. Refreshments
were served by the hos pitality
coamnittee.
DIVIDEND EARNED
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio
Robbms &amp; Myers. Inc. Board of
Directors Friday declared the
99th consec utive quarterly
dividend on the common stock
of the company, this year of ten
cents per share payable June
13, 1975, to shareholders of
record on May 30
· Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Bessie
Napper, Pomeroy ; Orpha
Rouse, Rutland ; Eber Gillilan,
Chester ..
DISCHARGED - Virginia
Hayman, Clarence Spurrier,
Henry Roney, Sr ., Ruby Erb,
Martin CUnningham, Henry
Hunt, MarJ Hackney.

1'.

END-OF-MONTH SALE BRINGS
EXCEPTIONAL SAVINGS ON THE VERY
ITEMS YOU NEED THIS SPRING &amp; SUMMER.

NEW HOURS

SALE PRICES

A big selection of solid colors. stripes . plaids . checks. patterns. Sizes 29
to 44 waist .

SALE PRICES

MEN'S DRESS AND SPORT SHIRTS
An unusually fine selection . Dress shirt sizes 141/z to 17 ·sport shirt sizes
small. medium, large, extra large. Solid colors and smart patterns.

SALE PRICES
Sizes 8 lo 18 in s lim s and regulars. Includes all of our boys pants and
jeans.

SALE PRICES

BOYS SPORT AND DRESS SHIRTS
Sizes B to 20 in solid colors
press .

~

plaids and neat patterns. All permanent

SALE PRICES

FIREPLACE EQUIPMENT
Furniture Department Jrd Floor
Fireplace ensembles, folding screens. log baskets, gas and electric log
sets .

1f2 PRICE ·

WOMEN'S SLEEPWEAR
Our entire stock of Spring Sieepwear is included. Gowns
Robes · Steepshirts.

Pajamas

SALE PRICES

Women's -Misses -Juniors Coordinate Sportswear
Pants . Shorts ~ Blazers - Shirl Jacs ~ Skirts· Shells- Sweaters.

SALE PRICES

WOMEN'S COATS AND DRESSES
Our e ntire stock is included. Misses· Juniors · Half Sizes.

SALE PRICES

WOMEN'S PANTS AND JEANS
Fash1on and basic colors, polyester
denims. All sizes .

crepe ~

twills

~ .polyester - gabardine ~

SALE PRICES

Special Sale Prices at our new
Home F_urnishlngs Annex on
towels and Cannon Royal Family Sheets.

SALE . PRICES.
.

AT MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE
. SALE PRICES
SAVE MONDAY, MARCH 3 hf DURING
LAST DAY ~ND OF THE MONTH SALE
.,
9:30 AM TO 5 PM.
•

'

7:30p.m.till10:00p.m .
Weds .• Fri. &amp; Sa f.

•

·ELBERFELDS If! POMEROY
'

.,

-

.

-.

at y

Clouay, cnance 0( ugnt snow

or rain·tonighl. Lows in the mid
30s. Chance of rain Tuesday .
Highs 45 to 60. Probability of
precipitation 10 per cent today
and 30 per cent tonight and
Tuesday.

VOL. XXVI

NO. 243

•

Now You Know

en tine

Nathaniel Hawthorne based
h1s book, "The House of the
Seven Gables", on the John
Twner House of Salem, Mass.,
which was built In 1668 and if
still standing .

Devoted To The Interests OJ' The Meigs-Mason Are11
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1975
.

--~

15 CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

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

·South
Viet
marines
rape,
murder,
loot
refugees
IN... . . . . . " . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1
ews•• in Briefs

Tops ~

sizes.

Beginning Aprill

Chester, Ohio

•

Weather

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
The entire stock is included. Tank
Dressy Knits · Crew Neck. All

PORCH, LAWN AND PATIO FURNITURE.
BIG NEW 1975 SELECTION.

RDU.ER RINK

PH. 446-2240

MONDAY, MARCH 31st • 9:30 to·5 PM

prices.

SKATE-A.WAY

SALES ~

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Boys Fashion Jeans and Denim Dungarees

CHESTEH - Mrs. Charles
Martin, pres1dent of the
Eastern Parent-TeacherStudent Associalwn, reported
at a meehng Monday night that
she has se nt a public opmiun
message to Congress Clarence
Miller in support of a bill which
would stabilize school lunch

.\.. - -llll!!lllilltii---~---J
SMITH HONDA

A thought for the day:
American poet James Russell
Lowell said, "Then it is the
brave man chooses, while the
coward stands alone.,'

c

.....

Make this y_ear
your year
- for a Super bike.

adaptive recreation activity on
the RIO Grande College
campus. Rod O'Donnell, mstructor of Physical Education,
coordinated the activity .
College students enrolled m
O'Donnell's class conducted
~clivllies wh1ch provided each
pupil w1lh individual Instruction . All the activities

were conducted in the area of
th e swimming pool and
gymnasium . The class was
accompanied on the trip by
their teacher, Mrs. l;losemary
Evans .

MEN'S DOUBLE KNIT DRESS SLACKS

,

DANVILLE - Over 100
persons attended a Youth
fellowship meeting March 20 at
the
Danville
Wesleyan
Methodist Church Mrs. Jene
Might, the leader, welcomed
representatives from VintonWesleyan Methodist Church,
Morgan Center Wesleyan
Methodist Church, Danville
Wesleyan Methodist Church,

ON COLLEGE CAMPUS - Left to right (front r~w), Phillip Cook, James CaU, Olerri
Wright Linda Cox; (back row), Kenny Hunter, Victor Miller, Lester Cox, Kevin Jolmson,
Terry Reynolds, who took part in an adaptive recreation activity on Rio Grande College
campus

:.·•
.·

Danville church hosts over 100 youths

Caroll K. Snowden

CHILLY HUNT - Despite chilly weather
accented with near freezing wind, the annual
Easter- Egg Hunt of the Middleport - Pomeroy
.Rotary Club was held Sunday at 4 p.m. at the
Middleport Community Park. Rotary members
were assisted by the Middleport Fire and Police
Departments in staging the event in which
youngsters found some 500 eggs worth cash or
merchandise prizes. The sound system for the
event was provided by Rotarian John Werner.
At right, Gene Riggs, co-chairman, presents
cash prizes to Cindy Smith, Middleport, left, for
finding the "golden egg," and Joey Loving, $5.
for finding the silver egg. At the back , left, is
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman who fired a gun
to start the hunt, and right, Judge John C. Bacon
who served as co-chairman with Riggs .
At left are some of the toddler - age Easter
egg hunters being led away from the special area
set aside for them in the park.

;:;:

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

leal protect ion nqw - and
cen bt ctlanGtd to 1 Cllh·
buildinG pltn lntr on
wld'lout additional m~Jcal
111-tms. Stt:

didn't stop egg hunt

}

;:;:

Thirty yc&lt;Jrs ago it wati thoug ht that ·,=·.~:-~

fishi~idl~c~~:s~h~~~~~' ~,~~~li:~ ~~~ ~~t Z1~ ~~~ ,::~i~~~r~~n°~hett;:~:l;5.~;

.'_. .·
'__1
._
!.' _..·' :_1

.::.

lhe' best way to conserve game was to

;m nually
.A f e ~&lt; years ago the P-R Act was
admended, makmg available to the

0

·Cold, blustery day

·)

By United Press International
RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA- PRINCE FAISAL BIN Musaed
was sane when he killed his uncle, King Faisal, the government
says. If convicted, he wiU most likely be beheaded with scimitar.
Beheading in a public square Is the traditional form of
execution in Saudi Arabia, although the less spectacular
l!l&lt;ecution by firing squad has been more common in recent
years. Prince Nayef Bin Abdel Aziz, Saudi minister of state for
internal affairs, said doctors who examined the U.S.- educated
prince have concll!ded he is sane and should be held responsible
for shooting Faisal.

SAIGON -TEN MEMBERS DF THE U. S. embassy staff
have sent their families out of Saigon, but officials have not ordered an evacuation of Americans from Vietnam, an embassy
spokesman said today.
'!be spokesman said regulations in fact bar families from
Vietnam, but "with the improved security situation of the past
)'HI" or so, many people have been apowed to b[ing their families
to Saigon. Afew,a very few, people In the emhassy have decided
themselves to send their fami}jes hack to places like Bangkok,"
the spokesman said.
CLEVELAND- AUTHORITIES SIFTED THROUGH a long
list of possible suspects today in an attempt to find the killer of
underworld figure Alex "Shondor" Birns, assassinated behind a
West Side g~o bar here Saturday night. "We have Q\lestioned a
nwnber of peoPle who had dealings with Birns, and we will
continue to do so," Lt. Ralph M. Joyce, head of Cleveland's
Homicide Unit said Sunday. "We have no actual suspect in mind
at this time.
"We are going to talk to as many people as we can who knew
him and his operations and go from there," said Joyce. "A lot of
people had dealings with Birns and most, if not aU, did not like
him. Birns, the reputed local nwnbers kingpin, was blown to
pieces Saturday night when a bomb made up of "eight to 10 stickS
of dynamite" exploded when he tried to start his luxury
automobile, which was parked behind the Jack and Jill West
lDunge.
KATMANDU - THE WIFE AND DAUGHTER of Sir Edmund Hillary, the first man to conquer Mt. Everest, and three
other persons were killed today in the crash of a single engine
plane shortly after takeoff from Katmandu airport, police said.
Sir Edmund, a New Zealander who climbed the world's tallest
peak in 1953, flew directly to the scene in a special helicopter and
glwnly Inspected the bodies of his wife, Lady Louise, and
daughter Belinda.
Sir Edmund has been living in the village of Phaphlu, 100
miles northeast of Katmandu at tbe foot·of Mt. Everest, where he
is directing construction of a hospital for Nepalese sherpas.
Hillary's family was flying to Phaphlu to visit Sir Edmund and
the hospital site together with former American Peace Corps
volunteer Barbara W¥1ie an4. !ler ~.usband A. Lama, a Nepalese
national.
EASTER RAINS TOUCHED OFF FLASH floods in the
Southland Sunday and dampened the spirits of Easter paraders
and worshipers. High winds swept the Rocky Mountains and one
skier was killed. Acting Kentucky Gov. William Sullivan called
out 12 two-man Natipnal Guard jeep units Sunday night and sent
them into the flood«ricken Paducah-McCracken County, Ky.,
area in the northwestern portion of the state.
Sullivan said 10 more units would be placed on standby status
to prevent lOoting of evacuated homes in northwest McCracken
County and the Reidland, Ky., area. Jail inmates at Smithland in
western Kentucky helped residents fiU sandbags to keep rising
flood waters from downtown streets. Weekend rains pushed the
Tug Fork River over its bankS in the eastern portion of the state
and spring floods closed several Kentucky roads.
Spot flooding also was reported in portions of Tennessee, •
Virginia and West Virginia. Flooding from the heavy rains of the
piSI week C!l"tinued in portions of the Ohio Valley and middle
Missisalppl Valley.
·
,

SAIGON (UP!) - South Vietnamese marines mutinied aboard
two ships carrying refugees from fallen Da Nang today, forced
the U.S. crew of the Pioneer Contender to barricade themselves
in a cabin and then went on an orgy of rape, murder and looting,
terrified passengers reported.
The evacuation of Qa Nang itself ended today when the Viet
Cong began firing from the beaches at U.S. tugs and barges
ferrying refugees to the Pioneer Contender and a sister ship, the
Pioneer Commander. The Communists warned that no ships or
planes could enter the area without their permission.
The marines fired at the helicopter of David Kennerly,
President Ford's personal photographer, when he tried to take
pictures of a South Vietnamese navy ship also commandeered by
the rebellious troops.
With half of South Vietnam in Communist hands the U.S.
Embassy flew 10 of its families out of Saigon to the greater safety
of Bangkok but said there was no order to evacuate the embassy
itself. Aspokesman said "a few, a very few" Americans left the
city and many more dependents were remaining in Saigon.
Military and political presswe on President Nguyen Van Thieu
to resign grew and today South Vietnam's most powerful Buddhist leader, Bonze Thich Tri Quang, emerged from three years

Armada stands off Da Nang
waiting to effect rescues
By United Press Interatlooal
An international armada of
more than 20 ships, including
U.S. charter vessels, stood
vigil off Communist-occupied
Da Nang in the South Olina Sea
today in a desperate attempt to
rescue hundreds of thousands
of South Vietnamese from the
fallen city.
Four U.S. Navy transports
due in the area from the
Philippines were under strict
orders to withdraw and avoid
combat with North Vietnamese
forces if fired upon.
South Vietnam marines
forced tbeir away aboard The
Pioneer Challenger, one of the
American charters with 8,000

SAIGON (UPI) - South
Vietnam's most powerful Buddhist leader rose out of three
years of obscurity today to join
the military, political and
religious forces demanding the
ouster of President Nguyen
Van Thieu.
Buddhist Bonze Thich Tri

(CBS Morning News).
"This is an international
effort. At last count this
morning, there were some 18
vessels from half a dozen
nations other than the U.S.,"
Parker said. "Some local boats
and small craft are able to get
some people off shore to get
them to the vessels which are
standing offshore in International waters.,,
He said the United States had
made no request to Haooi for
safe passage of the American
rescue craft.
A cease-ftre plea, he said,
was made by the Saigon
government ·to the United
Nations to appeal to the North

and rain south Thursday.

Otherwise lillie or no
precipitation Is expected.
Highs Wednesday will be In
the mid 30s to mid 40s,
moderating by Friday to 40s
north and 50s south portion.
Lows will be In the upper 20s
and 30s.

.

Vietnamese for safe passagge
Wlder termsofthe U.N. Code of
Universal Hwnan Rights.
"The Communists have
made statements in Hanoi
indicating
lack
of
cooperation," Parker said,
adding "the main objective
now is to take care of refugees,
no matter where they are, to a
Apprehended was Richard
One of two prisoners who
safe haven."
escaped from the Middleport Swan, who had 13 days left to -jail Saturday morning was serve on a six months sentence
apprehended by Middleport for vehicular homicide. The
police officer Sid L1ttlc other escapee, Dave Darst,
Satwday at 10:20 p.m ., the Mason, who was in jail on an
of late President Ngo Dinh Corps- the northernmost sheriff's department reported. armed robbery charge is still
sector- in two weeks.
Diem in November. 1963.
at large.
In 1966, the 51-year-old monk
Tri Quang's re~ergence on
Swan will appear in Meigs
staged a three-week rebellion the politicaJ scene was seen as
County Common Pleas cowt
against the central govern- a major blow to the Thieu
this week.
ment in Hue and Da Nang, government, already hardDarst,
Dave
Tyree,
which cost the government of pressed by legislators and
Pomeroy, and Mark Haley,
then Prime Minister Nguyen dissident Roman Catholic leadMiddleport, were arrested last
Cao Ky eight commanders of I ers to vacate in favor of a more
week on charges of armed
pliable leader or a government
robhery . They were alleged to
by committee.
have pulled a gun on Harry D.
The Communists have been
Sm1lh, 68, Coal St., Middleport,
demanding the ouster of Thieu
COLUMBUS (UP!) - An who was at a local tavern, took
for
the past several months as estimated 9.2 per cent of Ohio's him to Poulin Hill where he
LeVi blamed.' the increase on a
"dismal and tragic ·failure" of the primary condition for labor force, the largest per- was left robbed of between $45
the criminal justice system to resuming peace negotiations centage of jobless in 14 years, and $50.
,
broken off last June.
prevent crime.
Tyree
is
still
in Middleport
were unemployed ' in March,
(Continued on page 8)
jail
and
Haley
is
out on bond.
the state Bureau of Em•
Swan is now lodged in Meigs
ployment Services reported
County
Jail.
today.
A spokesman for the bureau
COMING WEDNESDAY
said overall claimants in Ohio
A
representative of the
seeking
·
unemployment
tied or had been restrained in Haffiilton Catholic High School.
Social
Security Administration
compensation
numbered
any way, police said.
"He was very highly regardwill
be
at the Middleport
Holcomb said the suspect ed in high school. He was a fine slightly more than 300,000, but
called police from the house at boy -a good student, active in an estimated 450,000 persons Village council chambers from
about 9:30p.m. Sunday night. various school activities," were jobless. The percentage 9:30 a. m. to 12:30 p. m.
"There's been a ~ Fischer said. "He went on to of unemployed is ap- Wednesday for the benefit of
here," he told police.
the University of Cincinnati proximately the same as the residents who have questions,
in dealing with Social Security.
national average.
·
He was arrested at 10 p.m. and studied engineering.
"Unemployed
nonclaimants
and questioned until I :30 a.m.
"I saw him a few years agp
COURSE OFFERED
when police filed the charges and he said he was spending include jobless who failed to
An eight..hour first aid cotirse
against hlm. Authorities said most of his time with the st~k file claims, plus those with
he was very calm during ques- market . "! talked wtth him insufficient or no prior em .. will begin Wednesday at the
lioning.
about tbe stock market quite a ployment, young people, Senior Citizens Center under
"This guy hasn't talked. We bit . He was very interesting to housewives and others en- the direction of, Mrs. Nancy
tering or ree11\ering tbe labor Ramey of the Southeast Dhlo
don't know why he did it.'' talk to.
Holcomb said.
"! always knew him as a market.'' the spokesman sai?. Emergency Medi~al Service.
The bureau said unemploy- The sessions will be held from ,
Ruppert, ~ and very thin, gobd kid. He was not an oddment
benefits paid under Ohio 10 a.m. to 12 noon and-from 1 p.
put· up oo resistance when he ball. He was not a
unemployment
compenSation m. to 3 p. m. on Wednesday and.
' was arrested at the scene.
troublemaker. He never imDan Fischer, Holcomb's ftrSI pressed me as anything but a law would total apP.'Oximately April 9, A certificale will be
assistant, was a year behind straight, conscientious in- $200 million for the first three presented to those attending
months of this year.
Ruppert when the two attended dividual."
the full ~Jr.t hour course~

Swan retaken by police

Quang led a demonstration of
monkS_and laymen from An
Quang pagoda under banners
demanding
that
Thieu
resign.
Tri Quang is given credit for
the mass civilian movement
which supported the military
establislunent in the overthrow

Jobless

hit 9.2%
in Ohio

Serious crime soared in '74
'

WASHINGTON (UPI)
ever, the FBI reported today.
Crimes against propertySerious crime in tbe United
States increased 17 per cent in burglary and theft-went up as
1974, the biggest increase in 14 . the economy declined.
'
years and possibly the biggest
Attorney Ge~eral Edward H.

Motive and how of killings unkno,wn

more

"

persons aboard. Passengers
said the troops terrorized the
crew, killed and raped some
refugees, and fired on the
helicopter of David Kennerly,
President' Ford's personal
photographer in Vietnam on a
special mission.
Daniel Parker, head of the
Agency for International Development leading the American
evacuation efforts, said none of
the U.S. vessels could reach Da
Nang's shores where vast
throngs of panic-stricken civilians and deserting South
Vietnamese troops massed
awaiting rescue.
11
We can't go in," Parker
said in a television interview

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, chance of snow north

at Cam Ranh Bay, 185 miles northeast of Saigon, early today.
Civilians said the marines beat refugees, stole money, raped
some girls and women and killed those who protested.
Kennerly, who has been Ford's personal photographer since
the President took office, is on a fact-finding mission for Ford,
along with Army Chief of Staff Gen. Frederick C. Weyand. He
was fired on when he flew over the Pioneer Contender and the
South Vietnamese navy vessel.
Weyand conferred in Saigon and briefly visited the Mekong
Delta today and was not in Nha Trang to witness the shipboard
incidents.
Refugees said they could not say how many persons aboard the
ship were murdered by the marines, considered one of South
Vietnam's best fighting forces.
At Cam Ranh, military police sealed off the port and tried to
quell the marines, but the rebellious troops managed to break out
of the cordon and began commandeering vehicles to make their
way into Nha Trang. If drivers of the vehicles refused, the
marines blew out the tires with gunfire.
u.s. Embassy officials in Saigon said the Communists Sunday
night sent rocket.jJropelled grenade fire against barges and
smaller vessels hauling refugees out to U.S. charter ships offshore in the South China Sea.
.
Three charter vessels -the Pioneer Contender, Pioneer
Commander and Trans Colorado -were out of range ·of the
grenade rounds but their captains were forced to suspend
evacuation operations.
All three ships were sailing southward today toward Cam Ranh
Bay with more than 20,000 refugees aboard, embassy officials
said.
The Communists triumphantly occupied Da Nanag, their
greatest trophy in 20 years of Indochina war.
Sowces said Lt. Gen. Ngo Quang Truong, the government
commander in the fallen northern provinces, Sunday refused an
order from President Nguyen Van Thleu to return to Saigon for
an emergency meeting.
Truong fled to a ship offshore hours before Da Nang was
overrun, the sources said.
In other developments:
- A policeman who escaped from Hue before It feU said five
high-ranking pollee officials and a young cadet were executed
publicly in front of the police station when the Communists took
over.
- Brig. Gen. Nguyen Van Diem, commander of the shattered
(Continued on page 8)

Tri Quang joins anti-Thieu groups

HAMILTON, Ohio (UPI) Twelve relatives gathered at
Olarity Ruppert's house for an
WASHINGTON ·- .UNITED MINE WORKERS President Easter reunion Sunday. Eleven
Arnold R. .Miller says he will seek another five-year tenn in 1977, were shot to death.
buf eJpeCts some changes in union leadership in other contests.
The twelfth, James Ruppert,
"Some of the programs that I've started now will require me 40, Chai-ity's son, was charged
to rpn one
term," Miller said in an interview Sunday (UPI today with \he methodical
-Audio's Washington Window) ..
killlngs .•There was blood on his
"I don't have any desire to nm after that. I have some shoes, police said.
younger leadership coming on ... and it would be a guarantee that
11
1 was there and it was an
tlllB union would not be taken back down the road frn'D whence it unbelieveable scene," said
came," he said.
prosecutor John Holcomb. "I
don't want to describe it -it
DIVORCE ASKED
·was horribl~ ."
RACINE - Irma Boothe,
Ruppert, an unemployed
Racine, has filed suit for dir~ve draftsman, was charged with
TAKEN TO HOLZER ..
'lbe Middleport emergency in Meigs County Common 11 counts of aggravated
oquad was called to Ash St. at Pleas Court against .Dennis murder.
Those killed were his
7:19 a. m. Sunday for E1za Boothe, ~arne address, on
clW-ges
of
gross
neglect
of
mother,
Charity, 65, his
Preston who was taken to the
duty
and
extreme
cruelly.
b.~;,other , .
Leonard,
42,
HolZer Medical Center •

,..,

of obscurity to demand Thieu's resignation. The Buddhist leader
who helped overthrow President Ngo Dinh Diem in November,
1963, led a demonstration from An Quang Pagoda under banners
demanding that Thieu quit. The demonstration was broken up by
police.
The evacuation ships were taking thousands of refugees from
Da Nang to the former American base of Cam Ranh Bay, 20
miles 1south of Nha Trang. Nha Trang was swept by panic and
residents of the refugee-swollen city began looking for ways out.
U.S. officials pruned the consulate staff to essential personnel
only.
With Da Nang in Communist hands, the North Vietnamese and
Viet Cong twned their attention to the big coastal city of Qui
Nhoh, midway between Da !fang and Nha Trang, and Its fall
appeared imminent. Qui Nholt was described as a ghost city, its
population long since fled.
There were increasing reports of disorder among South
Vietnamese troops in the panicky evacuation of Da Nang and
passengers aboard the Pioneer Contender said a third of tbe 8,000
persons aboard were marines who had fought their way onto the
ship illegally -the ships had been sent to rescue civilians.
The Pioneer Contender left Da Nang late Sunday and arrived

,

Leonard's wife, Alma, 38, and
their eight children, Leonard
Jr., 18; Carol, 14; Michael, 12;
Thomas, 10; Dave, Theresa,
7; Ann, 5; and John, 3.
"There is a possibility that
the victims were picked off one
by one as they came into the
hcuse," Holcomb said. "We
just don't know at this time. It
is a strange situation."

a:

The victims, apparently
dead for up to four hours, were
found in the living room and
the-kitchen of the modest twostory home located in the
Lindenwald section of this
southwestern Ohio city.
All but one were shot in the
head at close range, autborities
said . None of the dead had been

'.

·.•

,I
I

l

"

f.

I

.•

'

�J

3- TheDatlySentmel MtddleP&lt;orll on"" 0 Mun~

11

M 111h 11

o

1

I •

\

Christendom's 1975th year

Applications invited

marked by prayers, vigils
WASHINGTON D C YoWlg men from Ohio s Tenth
CongreSSional Dtstrtcl who are
seeking admissiOn to the U S
Air Force Merchant Manne
and Naval Academtes for the
term begmmng m the swnmer
of 1976 are mvtted to apply to
Congressman Clarence Mtller
To be ehgtble a candtdate
must be smgle at least 17 and
not yet 22 years of age as of
July I 1976 and a restdent of
the
Tenth
Dtslnc t
(Spec tftcally
the Tenth
Di.strtct mcludes all of Athens
Fatrheld Ga lh a Hockmg
Jackson I awrence Metgs
Morgan Muskmgwn Perry
and Washtnglon CoWll!es the
townshtps of Elk Enoch
Jackson Jefferson Sharon and

Stock m Noble County and all
of Vmton County except
Hamson townshtp )
Mtller
requests
all
prospechve candtdates to
submtl thetr apphcahons as
soon as posstble to facthtate
thorough evaluahon of thetr
quahftcahons Those who have
not already taken the
Scholasltc Aplttude Tests
t SAT) whtch are reqwred by
all the academtes are urged to
stgn up by May 15 for the
exammat10ns to be conducted
JWle 28 Results from later
exammahons would not be
avatlable tn lime for con
stderat10n
1\11 apphcal!ons must be m
and all hies completed by
November I The Tenth

Dtstnct Servtce Academy
Board a panel of ctvtc leaders
from the 13 counl!es of the
Distrtct meets 1n November to
select the nomtnees and
alter na tes to the vanous
academies
Our servtce academies

offer an educatiOn on a par
wtlh the worlds fmest
umvers1hes, whtle preparmg
thetr graduates to have the
quahltes and allnbutes to
follow 1n a proud tradtl!On of
servtce to our na lton Mtller
asserted
Addtltonal tn
formahon and appltcahon
forms may be obtamed by
wntmg Cong Clarence E
Mtller 434 Cannon House
Ofhce Bwldmg Washmgton
D C 20515

Glenn and Taft agree
tax cut bill needed
By United Press International

Both of Ohio s U S Senators
Democrat John Glenn Jr and
Republican Robert Taft Jr
expressed reservations con
cermng the $24 8 bt!Uon tax cut
bill stgned durmg the weekend
by Prestdenl Ford but both
satd Ford was correct 10
signing the measure
Glenn In Columbus said he
agreed wtUt Ford on several
points
I Utlrik the btll Utat was
passed was a Christmas tree
biU, bul we talked about !hat
when 1t was being passed and
Utere were many things I wish
we had had more time to
de bale, " Glenn said
Glenn said he and other
senators dldn t hke the way
things were being rushed
through without consideration
and putting pretty btg amend
ments onto Utat tax bill
I think Ute President did
rY!ht to sign It because we have
to realize we do have 8 3
mliUon Wlemployed m this
country today and that's tn·
tolerable There Is tremendous
suffering going on and it s
about to get worse unless we
get the economic pump prhned
a little bit and get things going
agam and gel employment
started and new jobs under
way, ' Ute freshiman senator
said
Want Action Now
Asked If Ford had any choice
whether lo sign Ute biU, Glenn
said, ' From a political stand
pomt he didn t because people
want this and people want Ute
economy on an upturn Many
people are very worried wheth·
er the economy can even be
turned around They want to
see action right now So I think

pohbcally looking forward to
next year bemg an election
year, the Prestdent had httle
chotce
Taft at hts Clncmnatl home
where he ts recovering from
eye surgery said, I have
some reservations about tl but
I feel Utat a tax cut IS
necessary and (the biU) ts
probably the besl compromtse
the Prestdenl can get
Rep Samuel L Devme R
Ohto, vtce chatrman of the
House Republican caucus and
who voted agamst the measure
tn the House satd, I still
haven t had any econorrust or
anyone else leU me how you
can reduce revenues and m·
crease spendmg and have
anything other Ulan htgher
Inflation
The type of bill I would like
to see on Ute Presldenl'sdesk ts
a 10 per cent across the board
cutback m all federal ex
pendltures, Devine
satd
That means Congressional
salartes tho Department of
Defense and every other
area- cut tt across lho board
That would save $30 billion
dollars and I Utmk that ts the
best way we could help the

economy '
Provides More Relief
Rep Charles A Vanik, 1).
Ohto, contacted by UP! al his
home al Falls Church, Va ,
satd he was glad Ford had
signed Ute bill
I worked on Utls legislation
all through Ute conference
commtttee between the House
and Senate, ' Vanlk said It
represents substantially what
Ute President requested ex
cept that tt Is tilted to provide
more tax relief for lite poor and
the lower mtddle classes and I

Uttnk Utts was rtghl
I Utlnk tt would be wrong for
the Prestdenl to promtse to
veto all other measures commg
through the Congress ex
ceptlng Utose tnvolving Ute
nabonal securtty H tt becomes
necessary to provtde furUter
approprtaltons lo take care of
the distress of the unemployed
I would expect thai the
Prestdenl would recogmze
these spectal needs Vamk
added
Rep Ronald M Mottl, 1).
Ohto told UP! from hts
vacalton home m Ft Lauder
dale, Fla , I d like to com
plemenl lhe Prestdent lor
stgnmg the tax measure
Fmally we can stunulate Ute
economy
The taxpayers should spend
II (rebates) unmedtately for
worUtwhtle ttems for Utetr
famtlles, raUter than save 11
I agree wiUt the Prestdent
that we need to watch our
spending I also agree wtUt him
that we need lax reform I
agree that we should not have
wasteful spendtng so we can
keep the deficit m check
I disagree wtth lhe Prest
denl on where our prtortties
lie, ' MotU added The money
we are spendmg for foreign atd
could be used for expanston of
Ute school lunch program It
could be used for medical
research and In Ute area of
educallon and hoalth raUter
than spend the money
wastefully m Cambodia
Our ftrst prtorlty should be
to help our own people nol
helpmg Ute people 10 Cambodta
and Vtelnam and other people
aroWld the world wiUt foretgn
atd

DR. LAMB
This reader is always cald

By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - I hve m
western New York Our
chmate ts certamly not hke
Flortda any lune of the year
My problem ts thai regardless
of wmter or Ute sprtng swn
mer or fall I am freeztng I'm a
male of 44 years went mto Ute
servtce m 1951 wetghmg 147
and came out Utree years later
wetghmg about 230 I was tn
terrtble shape
I m only S.feet-9 and dectded
I had to lose some wetght I
kept gomg down over Ute
years Now I m about 130
poWlds My watst ts 29 or 30 and
11 used to be 40 some
I do smoke heavtly about
four packs a day, and take four
Anacln tablets a day I take
Utese because I read once they
keep your blood Utm I walk at
least 10 mtles a d~
Everyone has gotten to know
my problem, no matter where I
go It doesn I really mallei' for
I am cold In Ute wmter I wear
underwear, thermals pants a
sieat shirt and at least lwo
heavy sweaters, plus some sort
of a Jacket and over that a
hghlwetght msulated full
lengUt c:&gt;at
In the summertime tl s
almost the same I could Stl m a
car wtth the wtndows closed
and the sWl out full to JUSt bake
tn tl I cOuld ~o outstde tn the
SWl wtUt a blanket over me and
I'd be m heaven
DEAR READER - It soWlds
to me hke you are well swted
for lroptcal survtva Did you
ever thtnk of movmg to Death
Valley'
I doubt four Anacm tablets
are responstble for your

"

not generate enough heal
because he won t have the
energy cell eqwpmentto do tl
Severe wetght loss oft en
depletes muscles as well as fat
Th1s may have occurred m
your case wtth your wetghl
loss You mtghl try a muscle
building program and stop
smoking Wtlh more muscles
you mtghl generate more heat
Just walking won I butld up
much muscle mass
There are a few medtcal
problems that contribute to
feehng cold These are those
that are assoctated w1th a slow
down tn melabohsm Lo\\
Utyrotd ts one of these So wtlla
low fWlctionmg adrenal gland
GAUJPOLIS, OHIO
March 29 1975
I presume you have had a
medical
exammalton You
Sales Report of
Ohio Valley Uvestock Co
should have a test of ) our
STOCKER CATTLE
thyrotd function If all ts well
STEERS 250 to 300 lbs 22 lo 27
I d try the muscle bwldmg
300 to 400 lbs 22 to 30 400 to 500 progranuf you mtend to sta) m
lbs 22 50 to 30 500 to 600 lbs 22 colder climates And, smce you
to 30 600 to 700 lbs 24 50 to 30
read my colwnn you a~ady
700 lbs and Over 25 50 to 38 know Utat I think ctgaretles are
HEIFER CALVFS-250 lo 300 qwte harmful If you would
lbs 1&amp; to 20 300 to 400 lbs 9 50 qwt those four packs a day tl
to 21 50 400 to 500 lbs :ro to 22
would do wonders for ) our
500 to 600 lbs 19 to 22 5([; 600 to fut.~e heaiUt and rmght help
700 Jbs 20 to 23, 700 1~ your baste problem
Over 2Q to 33
STOCK COWS- BULLS (By
'lbe Head 1- Stock Cows 115 lo
190 Stock Cows and Calves 150
to 245, Stock Bulls 100 to 200
fiDROW IIREAKS BONE
Baby Calves !Ito 35 (By Tbe
FORT LAUDERDALE
Pound) - Canners &amp; Cutters
Fla (UPI)-RighUtander Dick
Cows 15 to 18 75 Holstem Cows Tidrow wtU be lost IIi the New
20 to 24, Conimerctal Bulls York Yankees for 10 to 14 days
(I ,000 lbs and Over) 2Q to 28
after breaking a bone 10 his
VEAL CALVES - 220 to pttchmg hand m a pepper game
250 40 to 55, Medtum 200 Saturday after he had pttched
lbs to 300 30 to 40 Culls ~ for Ute Yankees Syracuse
condttwn They do con tam
sahcylates whtch do act to
lower body temperature when
taken m sufltctent amoWlts
Most of the heat m the body
comes from chenucal ac !tons
parltcularly those used to tear
down food w1thm the celts and
release the food energy Heat ts
hterally a byproduct of the
body s acltvtties
!t follows Utat you need a lot
of acltve celts to generate heal
Thalts where muscles come m
When a person ts fat and has
more fal Ulan muscle he rna)

Market Report

Down

SHOATS - 15 to 35

'

farm club

Bruins, 'Cats in title clash

. ,'.

'

By Uruled Press Internallooal
American air crews in Vietnam prayed for refugees of
Communlsto()verrun areas, pilgrims gathered at the
traditional site of Christ's burial aod resurrection, and
Pope Paul VI preached of ' a hope for aU manldud" Sunday
as the Christian world observed Easter
Christian ptll!fimS fewer than ill previous years,
celebrated Easter services in the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre In Jerusalem About 2,000 pilgrims attended a
pontifical High Mass sung by Msgr Glacommo J Beltrlttl,
Roman Catholic patriarch of Jerusalem
In Saigon, American air crews wbo new the last
evacuation lllghts oul of Da Nang attended an Easter mass
for refugees from the fallen city- aud for those who didn't
make tl out No refugees attended the service, held ill tbe
courtyard of a Jesuit school, but most of the eight World
Airways crews which Dew the overcrowded jets were there
President Ford attended Easter Services at Sl
Margaret's Episcopal Church In Palm Springs, CaUl , and
heard Episcopal Bishop Robert Wolterstorff preach of the
need for the Christian spirit to take eftect In "affluent
Southern California, In arid and drought-ridden Afrlda and
in starving Bangladesh and In VIetnam "
At the Vatican, Pope Paul, speaking In a strong voice to
some 400,000 Holy Year pilgrims, told of the resurrection of
Christ as' a comfort for the poor aud suffering a hope for
the hwnble and for Utose who pray, for the whole church,
for all mankind '
In New York, several thousand persons strolled along
;:. Flflh Avenue In the annual 'Easter Parade, 'but wet, raw
weather discouraged traditional bonnet wearers from
sporting thetr Easter finery Many of the paradlrs, Instead,
wore wild costumes, gaudy headresses and outlaodish
makeup
A woman and four artist friends aopeared as "the
Easter apparittons, 'dressed m rags toilet paper rolls, egg
boxes and assorted veils
ln an eastern Tenoessee mountain valley, Ike Taylor of
Carter County was the runaway vtctor ill the anuual Petera
Hollow Easter egg light When everyone's eight-dozen egg
maximum supply was exhausted, Taylor still had some four
dozen left The broken eggs -tapped against each other to
determine which is harder -were donated to an orphanage
at nearby Elizabethton after the fight

'·" Conference on malpractice

Accordmg to the doctors
and all, ' Casey satd They
f1gure she hasn t been dead
over 10 days lo 15 al the most
' We are pretly sure that she
was strangled, he satd ' Bul
whether 11 was done there or
the body was taken there, we
don t know
It s hard to beheve Utat Ute
body has been tn Utat garage
all Utts tune, the police chtef
srud But tt s a poSSibility
Casey srud Marcta s body
was flown to Memphts Sunday
aboard Ute slateo()wned Jel
loaned by Gov Ray Blanton
He satd the state medical
exammer wtll per!orm an
autopsy
Casey satd Marcta was
carrymg $10 to $12 when she
lefl home about 5 30 p m on
Feb 25 to dehver lhe Gtrl Scout
cookies to a netghbor s home
No money was found on Ute

Federal
and
state FOWtded In 1949, It currenUy
legislators, public officials, represents more than 14,000
physicians and other health group practitioners across the
care provtders, attorneys, nation
Insurers and consumers ,..._ _..._.,_~_..::....--....,
convened lo examme the
""The Daiij Sentin~
medtcal liabtllty Insurance
uEvo 1 "" 1o '""
crlSIS, to publicly atr Utetr
MEI:n,'1~~l.~au
VIews and to diSCUSS some of
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
the possible solutions already
Roae'itV~JilFLtCH
advanced
~lly Editor
Published dolly excepi
Fea Iured speakers IncIuded t••urdoy
by The Ohio Valle
Senator Edward M Kennedy
ubllshlng Company 11
ourt Sf
Pomeroy Ohl
(D ·Mass), John A McMahon,
5769 eustne" Office Phone
PreSident of the Amertcan 992 2156 Editorial Phone 991
2157
Hospital
Assoctatlon,
Second class postage paid •
Ohio
Represen tsllve Pa ul B Rogers Pomeroy
Notional odvert!Sin
(D Fla) Representative Dan representative Bottlnelll
Roslenkowskt
( D !II ) , ~,·"~~'::rv~~~ N1:we~~tr: 2 n
Subscr•ptlon
rates
Represe ntat1ve Henry Wax· Delivered
by carrier wher
man (0-Caltf) and Robert available 75 cents per week
By Motor Rout&amp; where carr ie
CartWI'Ight' LL B President service
not available
of the Association of Trial month SJ 25 By mall In Oht
and W Va One Year $22 00
Lawyers of Amertca
s x months Sll so Thre
SUSPECT KILLED
The AGPA 18 the national months S7 oo Elsewher
MONROE Ohto (UP[)I
$26 00 year
S x month
S1J so three months s7 so
One man was fatally woWlded, orgamzahon representmg
,._ Subscription prtce Include~
another suspec~ woman- PhySICians and dentists ln uM;" Sunday Times SentlnPI
was apprehended Sunday and a group practice of medicme
second man remamed at large
after an attempted robbery
and shootout between the Uu:ee
and the owner of a home 10 this
Butler CoWlty commumty pollee satd
Names of persons mvolved tn
'DIE CHANGED CROSS
the Saturday mght IOctdent
were be10g wtthheld pending
It was a time of sadnf!88, and my heart,
further mveshgation
Although It knew and loved Ute better part,
Offtctals satd the three 111Fell wearted wtth Ute conflict and the strife
truders fled the house The
And all the needful discipline of life
woman suspect and Ute body of
Ute dead man were foWld 10 an
And while I thought on these as given to me,
automobile The second male
My trial testsoffalthandlove to be,
suspect escaped, pohce satd
It seemed as If I never could be sure
That faithful to the end I should endure

Onl

the poet's

fully clad body he satd
'It looks like Ute mottve was
robbery, ' Casey satd That's
what we've got to go on at this
time
Earlier this week Marcta's
mother told reporters her
daughter would be 10 years old
on Good Frtday
It s a mtracle time of year,
and I feel my daughter wiU be
home by Easter, that God will
perform a mtracle, the
mother satd
About the tune the Trhnbles
were returning home from
church Harry Moffett, visiting
at the John Thorpe home about
mtl yards east of the Trimble
restdence walked Into Thor
pe's doorless two-car garage
to look for a ttre
Pushmg astde a small orange
wadtng pool m a back corner,
he found Marcia s body

~

and Mrs Verl Tuttle Both sets
of Tutlles have lhe same
weddmg anmversary March
25 Veri and Bmas have been
marrted 55 years and BtU and
Faye have been marrted 26
years makmg a total of 81
years of marned bhss 1- thmk
that ts really great parents
and son ha vmg the same
weddmg date and celebratmg
together The four of them
spent the evemng al Stddens on
the Mall m Parkersburg
The Cole Stables Rtdmg
Academy opened on March 29
for the 1975 season Hours are
from 10 am unltl 8 p m
Monday through SWlday
Cole Stables have qwte a
tesl!montal to lhett back·
grOWld and abthly recetved at
the 2Qih Annual Nattonal AU
Breed Sprmg Horse Show held
at the Ohto State Fatrgrounds
thts past week Btll Cole home
on Easter break from law
school at Cleveland State
Umverstl) captured a ftrst
place m the Appaloosa Semor
Pleasure Horse class rtdtng Jet
Reed He also took a thtrd m
the Appaloosa stud halter
class 2 years and Wlder, and a
ftflh place m the Quarlerhorse
stud halter 4 years and older
When you constder the classes
average 30 to 60 horses you are
lucky to even place m a class
much less wm tl
Robm Jo Rllchte recetved
the lion s share of Ute awards,
however She, too, rode Jet
Reed and look ftrst place 10 the
Children's Appaloosa Pleasure
Horse firSt place m the youth
western horsemanshtp, horse
17 years and Wlder and fourth
place m the youUt western
pleasure horse 17 years and
under Rob10 rode her pony
Miss Tinker to WID ftrsl place
tn the Pony pleasure, over 48'
and Wlder 56 nder Wlder 17
) ears ftrst place tn Ute youth
11estern horsemanship, pomes,
nder Wlder 17 years and
showed M1ss Tinker for a
second place ID the pleasure
pony show man ship IT years
and Wlder Hoblit also won the
J

htgh pomt trophy m Ute youth
acttvtly classes on Mtss
Tmker So wtth aU the beautiful
rosette nbbons, trophies, silver
trays and the huge high potnl
trophy Cole Stables returned
from Columbus wtth the
proverbtal 'potful of win·
niDgs
We have another ptoneer
gWlsmtUt m our mtdst Last
year Grant bwlt a muzzle
loading n!le from scratch and
now Roger Brooks has JUSt
completed building hts own
muzzle loading rt!le The two of
them had a large! session wtth
the new nile and report tits a
dandy BoUt these yoWlg men
hun ted deer this past season
wtth muzzle loaders but were
not lucky enough to bag one
An mcreaStng nwnber of
young men are becommg tn
terested m bow hWlting and tn
muzzle loading rt!le hunting
These yoWlg men are true
sportsmen because Utey have
to devote a great deal of time,
energy and skill to the hWlt,
and Ute antmal, more olten
Ulan not ts Ute wtnner
Don I forget the Ftre
Department and CommWltly
Club meetm~~on Wednesday
mght and IJ'e Bar-30 Horsemen wtll meet on Tuesday
mght
Last but not least, don't
forget Ute pony pull to be held
at the Bar-30 showgroWlds on
Apnl 5 aiUtough you have
probably already read about It
Pony Pulls are packed wtth
fas\and fur10us action, and are
sure fire entertamment
Don I miSS tt'

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy umt of
SEOEMS answered a call at 3
p m SWlday to Long Bottom
for Effte KeMedy, who was iU
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hosptlal where she
was admitted

And thus no lolUier trustln~ to his miRht
Who says, 'Wewalk~falthal¥1 not by Stght,"
Doubting, and almost yteldlng to despair,
The thought arose, ' My cross I cannot bear '
For heavier Its wetght must surely be
Than those of others which I daily see,
Oh 1 If I might another burden choose,
Methlnks I should not fear my crown to lose '
A solemn silence reigned on all around,
E en Nature's voices uttered not a IIOlllld,
The evening shadows seem'd of peace to leU
And sleep upon my weary spirit feU
Amoment's pause -and then a heavenly light
Beam'd full upon my wondering, raptured ~t,
Angels on silver wmgs seem'd everywhere
And Angels' music thrilled Ute belrny atr
Then one, more fair than all the rest to see,
One to whom aU the other bow'd Ute knee,
Came gently to me, as I trembling lay,
And, ' Follow me," he said, 'I am the way '
Then saying thus, he led meJar above
And there, beneath a canopy of love
Crosses of divers shape and size were seen
Larger and smaller than my own had been
And one there was most beauteous to behold,
A little ooe, with jewels set In gold
Ah t this," methought, "I can wtth comfort wear
For tt wiU be an easy one to bear "
And so the litUe cross I qulcltly took
But all at once my frame beneath It shook,
The sparkling jewels, 11111" were they to see,
Butfartooheavywas Utetrwelghtlorme
'This may not be," I cried, and looked again
To see If there was any here could ease my pain
Bul one by one I passed them slowly by
Till on a lovely one I cast my eye
Fair Dowers around Its sculptured form entwined
And grace 81¥1 beauty seem'd In It combined
Wondering, I gazed, and stiU I wonder'd more
ro Utlrik so mall)' should have pass'd it o

er

But Oh, Uta! fonn so beautllul to see,
Soon made its bidden SOITOWll latown to me
Thorns lay beneath diose Oowera and colors fair
Sorrowtng, I said, 'This cross I cannot bear '
And so tt was with each 81¥1 aU around
Not ooe to suit my need could there be found.
Weeping, I laid each heavy burden down,
As my gtl!degently said, ''NoCI"OIIS -nocrown 1"
At length to him I raised my sadden'dbeart,

He Ita IIOITOWll bade Its doubt&amp; depart
Be not afraid," he said, ''but trust In me,
My perfect low shall now be shown to thee "
And then with llghten'd eyes and wllilng feet
Again 1 turned my earthly CI'088 to meet,
W!Ut f&lt;noard footstep!! turning not aside
For fear some hidden evil might b.ltlde
And there - In lite prepared, appointed way,
Ustening to hear, and ready to obeyA cro&amp;S I qwckly Iauro of plainest flrlll
Wtth only words of love in8crlhed tbereoo
Wtth thankfulneu I r'alletl it fnm the rest
And joyfully aclmowledged,tt the best,
'lbe only one, of aU the IIIIIIY. ~
That I could feel '11'81 good forD!f' tn bear
And while I thua my cholen ooe CODf.-1.
I saw a heavenly brightnell on It rest
And 811 I bent, my burden to suataln,
I recognlaed my own old CI'OIII again
But ()hI how dlffereJ&amp;diditMSJ~ to be
Now I had learned 118 precioulnel!a to aee 1
No looger could I unbelievinl! say,
"Pedtaps another Is a better WIY "

Ah, no' heocefoi1b my one desire sltal1 he
That He, who kitowl me best, lbould moo. for me,
And so, wllate'er Hlllcm sea sood to !lelld,
ru trust It belt bei:autJe he 1mow1 !be EDcL
-Mrs Geoqe Halls', ~. C»JJo

SAN DIEGO tliPI l - Uri A
md Kentucky lhe wo gtants m

James M Orr M D of the
Holzer Medtcl , Cen~r Cbmc,
recently attended Ute Naltonal
on Medical
Conference
Malpractice March 21).21, m
Washington D C
Co sponsored
by
the
Amencan Group Prachce
Assoctahon (AGPA) and U S
Congressman James F
Hastings ( R·N Y ) the con
feren ce brought together
nearly 500 representatives of
vartous groups affected by the
problem
Dr Orr a pedtatrtctan ts
chatrman of the AGPA
Credentials Comrruttee

Tuppers Plains area news
By Nonna Newland
At long last a con tractor ts
breaking ground for the new
branch bank of Ute Pomeroy
NatiOnal Bank here Can t watt
untilttts completed No doubt
thts ts Just the first butldmg m a
shoppmg center that will ex
plode m the heart of beaul!ful
down town Tuppers Plams 1
And e\en more wonderful to
behold the new treasurer of
Metgs County ts our 011 n
George Colhns There ts JUst no
end to the heights a bnghl
cowttry boy can chmb to All
your fnends wtsh you well
George and 11e know you wtll
do a ftne JOb H E Cole has
taken over hts place all he Oh10
Valley Mig Corp
Grant rNe11land and hts
empl9yer Terry Wyatt of
Belpre attended a one-&lt;lay
heatmg and refngeralton
serrunar tn Charles ton W Va
Mrs Robert Dodderer has
returned home after spendmg
several weeks wtth her
daughter Mrs EsUter Riggs
of Logan Ohto
Illness mUte family has kept
Richard and Florence Spencer
hopptn g lately Rtchard s
mother spent some ltme tll at
home and m the hospttal but ts
now reported re.:ovenng mcely
from a toe amputahon
Florence s fath er has been
senously ill at home for some
bme, no11 complicated by a
prolonged case of htccoughs
AI this wrtting, he may have
had to go to the hospttal for
treatment
Alan Duvall has had a ten
day Easter break from his
studtes at the Coast Guard
Academy vtstting hts parents
Mr and Mrs Jtm Duvall and
stster Ntesel and many
fnends
Bob and Kate Tuttle and
Kate s moUter Mrs Kathertne
Walters
of
Whttehall
(Columbus ) spent Frtday and
Saturday wtth his parents Mr
and Mrs Veri Tuttle
BtU and Fa)e Tuttle of
Fatrborn spent Mondav and
Tuesday wtth hts parents Mr

Sport Parade

attended by 'Dr. James Orr

Expected miracle reversed
NASHVILLE Tenn (UP[)
- Mrs Vtrguua Trunble went
to church on a cold blustery
Easter SWlday hopmg that
God wtU perform a mtracle
She returned home to learn
that her IIJ.year.old daughter
mtssmg for more than a month
had been murdered
The body of pretty, freckle
faced Marcta Trunble object
of one of the most mtense
searches m NashvtUe htstory
was found shorUy before noon
Sunday beneath a plashc
wadmg pool m Ute cluttered
garage of a netghbor s home
Lymg around Ute body were
four boxes of Gtrl Scout cooktes
she was carrymg when she
disappeared Feb 25
Metro Pobce Chief Joe Casey
satd Marcta apparently was
strangled but Utere wa s no
evtdence she was assaulted
sexually

Today's

college basketb,tll lnslm 1 wtlh
13 natiOnal champtonslups be

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sp&lt;Jrts Ed1tor

t\\ een them

NEW YORK t UPI ) - When the) plav the Star Spangled
Banner 10 Wngle) Fteld Chicago a "eek from tomorrow
stgmfymg the begtnnmg of a v~rgmal new baseba II season AI
Ohver 11111 put hts cap gver his heart the same wa1 &lt;til
ballplayers do then probably get lost m thought for the next \110
nunutes Not exactly IOO..Saroc lund of thought most hallpla) ers
do
J
AI Oltver ts commg off a. splendtd year one of hts best e1er for
the Ptttsburgh Pirates and wtlh Danny Murtaugh fmally setthng
the questtbn of who 11 play hrsl base- Wtlhe Sta1 gel! wtll-Ohver
can plan on not bemg diSturbed tn centerfteld for a11 lule He sllll
keeps thin&lt;tng of a dozen different things ne1 ertheless because
well AI Ohver has a ferttle mmd and tl has a \Ia) of workiDg all
the tune

un';::r~~:~~~a~ ~~:~~~~e;:: !~~~~i: ~~~ ~u~o:~~~,~~ b\~

difftcult because he s already one or the bestlefthanded lttllers '"
th e Nahonal ~.£ague today Some e1 en say he s the hest The
credenllals are all there He batted 321 last season and ts !ltr ~
tmg wtUI 400 this sprtng
Ohver 28 and startmg his seventh season wtth the Ptrates
draws a stx figure sala ry from them now but didn t convmce
them he was a star overmght For awhtle he was platooned
I got an opportumty lo pia) regularly the last '" o vears and
that turned my career around he says
For some tune after Roberto Clemente s death thei!e "as
conJecture over who would repla ce htm wtlh the Ptrates Nobody
has, but Al Oltver comes closer to the datly ballplaymg pattern of
Roberto Clemente than anybod) else wtth the club He s a
naturally gtfted httter mtelhgent and outgomg m personahty the
way Clemente was but he tsn t nearly as moody or mlense
In a ptece of baseball htstory whtch generally tends be lost
Ohver took over for Clemente tn the Pirates lmeup the very hrst
day he put on a Pittsburgh umform m Septembe1 of 1968
I played the second game of a doubleheader agamst Cmcm
nah and the only reason I gol mlo lhe ltneup was because
Clemente dtdn t pla) he says I faced Jun Maloney my first
tune up and he struck me out on a fas t ball It was toward the end
of his career but he sllll had a good fast ball
AI Ohver can never forget his debut wtth lhe Ptrates because
that event 1s stamped 10delibly m his mmd alongstde sllll
another one he rna) even be lhlnk10g abbut when he holds his
cap over hts hear! m Chicago a week from tomorrow Detatls of
that second event sttll remam vtvtd wtth Oltver although the
event ttself took place seven years ago
When he .. as II, AI Ohver s mother dted and when he was 20
on the very same day he was called up to the btg leagues he lost
his father Now AI Oltver takes care of hts enltre famtl) or
what s left of tl
My IaUter made bncks ' says the Ptrates centerflelder He
worked m a brtck plant m Portsmouth Ohio 20 years The dust
got him It was an accwnulatton over the years
The date Sept 14 1968 sticks out m AI Oltver s mmd
I was wtth Columbus ID Ute Internattonal Leag11_e and we were
JUSt gomg 10to the playoffs wtth Buffalo he says I had the flu
and dtdn 1make the trtp to Buffalo and I got a call m Columbi!S
from my Aunt Annabelle m Portsmouth She was crymg She told
me my father was dymg I packed my clothes put em m tpe car
and drove stratght lo Portsmouth It s 90 mlles from Columbus
but I made tim httle over an hour I went to see my father and he
was still ahve He dtdn t say very much He couldn t But the one
Utmg he told me was AI" ays take care of your brother
AI Ohver lrted to get some sleep that mght but couldn t At
4 30 In the morn10g there was a call from the hospttal telhng him
his father had taken a turn for the worse Ohver got up
awakened hts uncle hts aunt and hts brother and went wtth tnem
all to the hospttal When he arnved there he found hts father
dead
Later Uta\ day he called Columbus baseball offtctals to tell
him what had happened They offered thetr condolences then
told Ohver they had some news for him too The Pirates had
called hun up
AI Oltver s father never saw his son play tn the btg leagues but
he knew all along he was gomg to make 11 because his boy had the
self-&lt;lisctpltne and sell-conftdence to succeed m whatever he
Wldertook m life
Now AI Oliver ts a full fledged star tn the btg leagues and that
would ve made hts father enormously proud He would ve been
prouder yet that his btg league son ts taking excellent care of his
kid brother, Jtm 20 a !me athlete at Bethwte.Cookman
College
• AI Ohver ts making sure hts brother gets the college educatton
he didn t SomeUtmg ltke that makes hun feel even better !han
hitting 300 Everyone even a ballplayer has hts own pnvate
Utoughts when he stands there stlently hstemng to the Nattonal
Anthem

colhde m the

fm,tls of the 37th annu 11 NCAA
tournament lomght "1111 the
Brums hoping to send John
Wooden off mto rettrement
111lh hts loth lttle m a dozen
vems

At 64 the filmed \\IZard of
West11 ood has dtsclosed that
he wtll step down after 27 years
as the Brwns coach an m
nouncement that has ovpr
shadO \\ ed thP tuurnament

ttse lf
Although each club has

extraOllhnary

hrtght

~dill€

biJll'&lt;i

IS

bl:"tn~

f

til

(I

II
11

f" 101 th,tl ha' ' ti!Setlu s Ill/It
11\Uh

will stay in Detroit
the last ptlcher to wtn tlu ee

when they open the ga tes of
regular season Lohch w11l

games m a s mglc World Scncs

UH~

t 1968) has been mauhandled
by even the most humble of
batters this spnng m lr)tng to
prepare himself for a rebound
of hts disastrous 211-loss cam
patgn of last year
Lohch has appeared tn stx
games this sprmg and has lost
four of them The other two
games were no-dects10ns thanks only to the efforts of
some boommg Detrott bats
Lohch was gtven the startmg
asstgnment m Sunday s game
wtth Ctnctnnatt and by the
seco nd tnmng the Reds had an
8-(1 lead Lohch whose earned
rWl average has soared to 6 85
Utts sprmg "as pulled m the
lhtrd mnmg tn favor of Dave

pt ohably ha ve JUS I two 11101 e
sla1 t.s 111 Flottda to shake Ius

Three hom. ms later the
Tigers were back m the game
and fmally won 11, 13 12 on a
two-run smgle by Btll Freehan
tn the bottom of the mnth
But Lohch Wlhke Blass and
Stolllem) re IS m very httle
danger of bemg cut-stmply
because the Ttgers have no one
better on thetr ptlchmg staff
Joe Coleman ts the only other
hurler on the team to have
spent more Ulan one season ID
ReservatiOnS are sltll bemg the btg leagues as a starter
accepted un ttl vl'ednesday for
Detrotl Manager Ralph Houk
the SV AC All Sports banquet tnststs Lohch wtll be ready
slated at 6 30 p m Frtday at
RIO
Grande
Colleges
Cafetena
Vtnce Chtckerella head
basketball coach at CaptU!l
Umverstty wtll be the featured
speaker
fhe banquet wtll be
htghhghted by the presenlatton
SAN DIEGO (UP!) - Who
of lrophtes to members of the
1974 All SVAC Football §quad wtll replace John Wooden as
and 1974 75 SVAC basketball UCLA s basketball coach •
That queshon 1.5 even ovei
teams
shadowmg
tomghl s UCLA
The leagues Most Valuable
Player trophtes tn football and Kentucky matchup for lhe
basketball sponsored by the NCAA basketball cham
Sunday Ttmes Sentmel and ptOnshtp
Wooden 64 dropped a
Radto StatiOn WJEH wtll also
bombshell by annoWlcmg hts
be presented
rettrement
after the Brutns
Football MVP s were Dave
shaded
LOUISVIlle
75 74 tn
Wtse of Kyger Creek ana Mtlch
overttme
m
the
semtfmals
Nease of Southern All Stater
Mark Swam of Hannan Trace Saturday
On the eve of the btg game of
was the MVP tn basketball
the season- UCLA vs Ken
tucky - most of lhe talk cen
tered around who would be
Wooden s successor
J D Morgan the UCLA
athlettc dtrector wtll make the
dectston but he tsn t saytng who
he s constdermg
I want the best man
posstble
was all Morga n
would say He also won t say
when he wtll say but that s
hkely to be before Apnl 9 the
date high school athletes begm
stgnmg thetr names to nattonal
letters of mtent
A hkely candidate would
appear to be Denny Crum, the
brtlhant 37 ycaro()ld Lowsvtlle
coach who twtee m four years
has had the Cardinals m the
NCAA ftnal round of four only
to lose both tunes to his former
coach Wooden
Crum who has comptled an
86 22 record at Loutsvtlle
played under Wooden and was
a starttng guard two seasons
He was Wooden's No I
asststant for three years before
mov10g on to Loutsvtlle
Crum known for his candor

Friday

JU

For oe.taiiS~

Call 675-3398 or 992-2505

A11it

I

nding on Ills left etrm

rh e favonte to WID the AI
East- Baltmwre- was dealt a
dose of humtlll) SWlday when
Jeff Burroughs rtpped four htts
and drove m stx runs m the II 1
Texas Ranger WID Two of
Burroughs htts were home
runs
Dale Parker also hil two
home 1uns to lead the Pt lls
bw gh Pu ales to an 8.Q vtc lot)
over Kansas Ctty Jose Ct uz
belted three home runs m
Houston s 12 7 maulmg of
Montreal and Los Angeles won
tts 16th game m 21 lnes thts
sprmg by blaslmg Boston 7 2
St Lows catchers drove tn
four runs as the Cardmals
snapped a SIX game losmg
streak "tUt a 5-4 tnun1ph over
the New York Mets Mtnnesola
JUmped on Atlanta ace Piul
Ntekro for stx runs m the fifth
uuung to post a 12-4 wm ove1
the Braves and BtU Robinson s
sacnftce lly m the etghth
proVIded Phtladelphta w1th a 3
2 vtctory over the Chicago
Whtte Sox

Crum figures to
get UCLA plum
satd Sunday !hat Morgan had
not talked to htm about
becommg Wooden s successor
H I were offered the JOb I
would have to consider tt he
satd
Any coach who "ould not
would have rocks tn hts head
But I don t know tf I d accept
ll
I have yet to complete what
I want to do at Louts\ tile I love
1\ there They ve been very
good to me
Of Wooden Crum smd I
doubt very sertously tf anyone
wtll come close to what he s
accomphshed tn basketball
Iromcally money mtght
stand m Crum s way tf he ts
offered the post Knowledgable
observers speculated that Mor
gan mtght not be able to match
whal Crum ts recetvmg m
sala ry and restduals at Lows
VIlle
There was a be\ y of othet
names hemg thrown about here
but Crum s name was lhe most
promment tn the rumor mtll A
survey of coaches who are m
San. Otego showed most of
them fell Crum would be of
fered- and accept the UCLA
jOb
However Washmgton State
Coach George Ravel10g who
satd before the NCAA cham
ptonshtp round began that
Wooden deftmtely would leave
UCLA after thts season sa1d he
knew who was gomg to be
Wooden s successor and tl
wouldn t be Crum
It s gomg to come as a
shock to some people who 11
1s, he sa1d

pet

g b

6 15
H
110

B
8
?1

pe t

g b

rn

IH 10
lll 10
1
'&gt;

~

I

C tJt r &lt;~ID v'&gt;O

w

s

W 'J. ICI

'16

1
1

10

'&gt; 00

19

JU
1 8

')

10

~6

?9

1I

M

I
II

c ncc

CO I\I C

w

t

p et

I
I

11
6

~6

) I

10

19

u l..
'J 1
! IV
Pi1 e l e 0 V IS O

1

IdS!

p et

'

n

g b

'
q b

next for
Nicklaus
Hll10N HEAD lSI AND
S C 1UP!) - Nex t up for lack
Ntcklaus ts the Masters and ius
renewed btd to enhance hts
record fot wmnmg maJor
gol f championships
Don t bel aga mst the
Golden Bear wmnmg hts
fifth Mastel s and 15th 111a)ot
title next week at Augusta Ga

J .t J B J 7 1 2'23 4'46
78 ,J ) 1 )7 252 303
d:lll&lt;I POS
s; J J 3101208 31 5
West
w I tpt sg lga
x o us to n
SO 4' I 0 00 31 7 2J3

( I U I QO

II

t.'J
6

P t oe n x

38 '} 9

~Hin

40 30

o eqo

M 1 n e so a
Utt l l 10 e

84 28101 252
3 8 3 296 252

8

40 30 3 8 3 291 257
Jljl ) Q 4

4~

1 t ph gf ga
43 J 1 0 86 3 II 284

w

Qu e b ec

ABA St~nd lg S
B v U 1lcd P r es s Int er at o ni\1

Ea st

w

I

Y or ~

56

26

68 3

K l uc k y
St I o ~
M
p s

55

26

6 19
37[)
34'

25
29

811

40

N w

Vrq

n

pe t

JO 5 1
16 55
15

il

x Denv er
~ a 1\ t ton o
1 d t1na
u at
Sa ' 0 e g o
X Cl n C h C d

65

Wc sl
w I
6 3 19
9 32
.t 5 36
35 15
3 I 50

pet
768
60 5
55 6
136
383

q b

g b

3
7

17
3

d l\1 S IOn htl(!

Saturt:lay s R es u lt s
K e t u c k y 1/6 N ew York 1015
I da n a 14 MemphiS 104
Sa n A to 1 o 108 V r g n a 10 I
u &lt;~ 11 9 Sru o ego 100
D e v er 110 St Lou s IJO
S undd y s Results
St Lou s 1 16 S a 1 D e go 11 2
N ew Y ork 130 San An t on 0 IQ,J
Kc It eky 11 3 M e mph s 109

' d CJna 128 De nv e r 12 1
M o ndi1y s Gilmes

1\n ton o v s Ke lllu cky

S &lt;1

at Lex 1 gton
V rq n ll a t U r1h

NHL S t and ng s
Bv U n t e d Prcs!i Inter n a l onal
DIVISIOn 1

He appears to be at the peak of

w
1 1 pts g f ga
19 8 10 108 11;12 177

Ius game

X Pt tad ph

!he 35 )Car-&lt;&gt;ld Ntcklaus won
the $200 000 He11tage Golf
Cl&lt;I sstc by three s\1okcs Sun
day Ius second vtclory m a
row He s only played m stx
tournaments so far thts year
and alread) won more Umn
$109 000
But the sktllful Ntcklaus satd
he mtght not have won Sunday
tf he had not detected and
corrected a flaw m hiS swmg
Ntcklaus tote up the Ha1
bourtown course whtch he
helped destgn back m th e 60s
the ftrst two days "tth rounds
of 66-!\3 Then hts game went
sour 1for him) m Saturday s
thtrd round "hen he shot a 74
and he was sttll strugghng
th1 ough Sundays front mne
I11at s when f found out
wha l I was domg wrong satd
the only man to wm mor e than
$2 mtllton playmg golf
I
suddenly realiZed that I was
too loose too 1elaxed I was
htthng the ball too far n ght
Once I corrected that I started
htthng the ball at the sttck

N Y s land e r !i322 4 2 8 5 25S :t 11
NYR ru ge r s 36 28 13 85 3 11 26 7
I\ I "
a
33 2101 14 80 23 4 222
01V S IOR 2

Va co u vc
C t Cfl go

35 34

S llou s
M 1 e-.o t a
K r~

w
1
35 32

s a sC

Mon I e n

w
41

8

78 25 6 233
78 253 254
53 117 327

39 75 318

J

I t pis gf ga
1 9 107 35 1 211

lO S 1\ nc P. ICS 10 16 20
P ll s b u rq 1
36 26 15
Df' r o 1
12 .:13 '1
IIJ l &lt;;
ng ton
7 65 5

00 257 17ii
873 1527 1
56 2 1B 32 1
19 16,11 123

DtVI S IOII 4

)( B u ff al o

w
I I pis gf ga
16 16 15 10 7 3 13 235

J O 2 1 13 ljl J 338 234
31 3 I S 71 '17 4 298

13os to n

.t l 32

Edn on to1

34 35

2 84 333 297
37 32 4 78 303 265
4

n

tournament now m 20 months
suffered a bogey at No 8

To r onto
Ca l fo rn a
19 &lt;~5 12
x Cl tneh ed dl\t tS on

Sunday s Results
Ball n or e 4 Van couve r 1
Cl eveland 7 Chicago 6
Minnes ota s lnd ana pols 3
New Eng la nd 4 Toronto 3
Q uebec 6 Phoen x 5 ot
San D e go at Edmonton
ppd bad te e

Mondays Games

1nd 1anapo 1 sat w nnipeg
Sa n D1 e go at Edmonton

DUAL fRACK MEET
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
UCLA defeated defending
NCAA champion Tennessee,
83 71 tn an tntersecttonal dual
!tack meel Saturday by sweepmg Utree events
Mike Pully a freshman had
a hfethne best 17 9 tn the pole
va ull to lead Ute Brwns sweep
tn the pole vaull the long JUmp
and the 4411-yard 10termedlate
hurdles

50 208 300

Kids®
CANVAS

For the
entrre jam1ly.
Women's Sandals m
Canvas and Leather

heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store
Middleport. Ohto

Ntcklaus took a one.stroke
lead With a btrdie at No II and
We'"kopf fe ll tw o st rokes
hehmd at No 12 by mtsstng a
three foot putt Both btrdied
the par ftve 15th but when
Ntcklaus put a four tron shot
less than ftve feet from the cup
at the 17th tl was all over

ADULT MEAL
B o St et
R 'l 1 r- ct F es

lu

nov ~

&amp;

Lil 1" $r"J t 0 nk

PT PLEASANT
2325 Jack so n Ave

OFFICE CLOSED'
MARCH 27 UNTIL APRIL 4
FOR VACATION

PoonTVoewCable TV

r~·•

Cable TV... It's A

In Case of Emergency, Call
The Galltpolts Offtce Collect

Detter BuY.

Than Ever!

446-4290
STEVE SNOWDEN

1258 Powell Sf Mtddleport Ph 992 7155
Llfl
,...,..~w.

111111 ,,,. •

OFFER EXPIRES APRIL 15, 1975

l

*"

-·--

.... .......

.,,., ,

A

I ATE FUM

161 260

Va n c ouv e r
33 38 2 68 236 25 2
ll Clmcfled d VI S IOR title
Saturday s R es ults
W 1 peg 9 N ew England 3
C leve la nd 7 lnd an a pols 5
Hou 5l on B M nnesola 2
Toronto 5 Quebe c 4 at
Sa D ego 7 Vancouve r J

t ph gt ga
0 80 25 7 253

3130 11
n 17 1
y 14 5 7 11
DIVI S itln

Toron o
w n p eg

agam

Ntcklaus "ho appeared to be
runnmg away wtth the tourna
men\ when he bwlt a com
mandmg stx stroke lead
through the ftrsl two rounds
was tted wtth fellow Ohto Slate
alumnus fom Wetskopf at the
start of Sunday s ram-damp
ened play and was two strokes
behmd • Wetskopf after five
holes of play
For the next ftve holes I
kept h1ttmg m bad spots and
"ondcred tf tt would be another
one of those days
sa td
Ntcklaus But after stx holes,
I started playtng golf
Nicklaus btrdied No 6 wtth
an 11&gt;-foot putt a nd 11as all even
"1lh Wetskopf a gam when
Wetskopf .. ho has not won a

84313

Canad1~n

(eft In

Masters

WHA StfHldlng s
By u 1 t e d Prcu lnterna110ni111
Ea s t
w 1 t pts gf ga
x N ew E nQ
t '28 J 8! 162 267

Cl vea nd

Wooden S&lt;Itd \\ ashtnglon the
hero of the Lou svtllc contest
111th the ga mc 11mnmg ba ~kct
tunc

t so tr~ ! Pt s bur g h4

Mondays Games
I N o ga m es sc h c du ed

IUS
100

We
hl\l
gl edt
ps\ dlOlogtc d momentum 1 1ght
no\\ Hdll :ldld l don l lhmk
C(Jl&lt;h Wooden s I C~H gndtlOn
"ill h IVl m\ negdt tve 1ffect
on us Wlldt 11 docs lo h1s team
I don 1 knt 11
We " 111l to \\ Ill 1t £or coach

O\ e1

al 1.2 phil4 Ch cago t

10

g II!IC

With J llf. t t(u l C S( UJ!ld S

Pt

19
1

9

w

Satur-day s Results
N Y s l a nd er s 6 NY Ranger s .:1
P t s b u r q h 4 De tro t 'l
Ph l ade lp l 1a 5 Chic ago 2
Mon t rea l 4 K 11 n sa s ( 1ty 1
S t Lou s 'l M nn c so n ' 1
Bo s to n I Tor a n o
Van c. ouve r J Los A ng e l es J
S unda y s Re•s.tJits
N Y s land er s 1 A !Inn;, '}
Tu r on to S B uff a l o 4
N Y Range r s B K an sa s C ty 2
Mon r c&lt;~ l 1 Bo&gt;; to n ?
0 r o t !I W a sh nq on 5

')!

M d w l ~ t0 vS 01

Sd\ till S 11\(. 111 S IIIOi t: to

dold!: ums before headmg 1101 th

wtth the hopes of an) fu st
diVISIOn ftntsh by the ltge!S

1

r.,, n

ll l Ub\c

Ill( JU St b Cl HI :SC It S Ill\

D I VI S 01

Ih e

w

I 11 tnltxlthe fn st on&lt; tUlc
1964lttlel ve r) mu ch ht Sltd
But no one pH tlcubu &lt;.ham
p10nsh1p h 1s btl n n 01~ IIICcln
mgful th HI HI\ othc1 So no 1
Celli

ng s

E &lt;1 s t ~: rr Conl c r e cc

Woodt n dena d th1 s ch Ull
g allll me u I more to
hun tl u 11 ' of In s othet mne
lltll l ontests

for thtrd place at 3 35 p m
Wtlh mne a nd four titles
1espetltvel) UCLA and Ken
tuck\ lead a parade of 21
schoo l~ that have captured
NCAA charnptonshtps In Ute

banquet

S t&lt;~nd

pton~lllp

se the two losers m the
sennfmals Saturday Will meet

All-SVAC

NB A

Hy U 1 1: d P rl:'&gt;'i llt ~r &lt;II o Jill

msldr people m e 11101 c
1!JJh tlltn " c 11 e
but

game dt the Sports Arena ,., 111
begm at 6 10 p m PO l and wtll
Jx&gt; sho\\ non national televisiOn
tNBCl Lowsv1lle and ~) ratu

1£m "'

Pro Standings

t 11

quu kncss h 1sn t 1h,,u s bt:cr 1

L0 1•I Ch , h 0 m b e d h ard ,
By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sports Wrtler
The sprmg of 1975 has not
heen a good one for former
pennant heroes
First Balttmore peddled
first baseman Boog Powell Ute
man moun tam" ho had started
m four World Sertes for the
Onoles
Then Ptttsburgh cut Steve
Blass btddmg farewell 1o the
guy who won two grunes m
eluding the dectstve .geventh
game m the 1971 World Senes
to giVe Ute Pirates lhetr ftrsl
world champ10nshtp 10 more
than a decade
fhe New York Yankees
follow ed by releasmg Mel
Sto~tlemyre the last hnk wtth
thetr glory teams
Now 11 sMtckey Lohch s lurn
to lake his lumps
The Detrmt Ttger southpaw,

Kentu(k Y c1 lth ~mel
l he y
h l\t_ ri Jsctphncd offense qnd
d sc!phnt!'t
f0nse
Wr._ lCllldlh m Ill: ! lnt

1he national champ10nsh1p

so, if you have afriend or relative
who wants cable TV, you can give
him or nef a specia• OLD TIMERS
certifl~ate :gdOd fOr one free
installatior,l &lt;.$10 valuel.
!1UJ

Nl I

mtt&lt;h up bct11e en UCI A s
ftm sse and
Kent111 k) s b1 ute st rength tnd
depth

You AREA MEMbER o
THE OLD TIMERS
CLUB.
SoWHAT?

J~ U

ciS

II

q~t r knes s a tH~

If You ARE PRESENTly A

1

t1rs

the

the

~ellow

Pages

�J

3- TheDatlySentmel MtddleP&lt;orll on"" 0 Mun~

11

M 111h 11

o

1

I •

\

Christendom's 1975th year

Applications invited

marked by prayers, vigils
WASHINGTON D C YoWlg men from Ohio s Tenth
CongreSSional Dtstrtcl who are
seeking admissiOn to the U S
Air Force Merchant Manne
and Naval Academtes for the
term begmmng m the swnmer
of 1976 are mvtted to apply to
Congressman Clarence Mtller
To be ehgtble a candtdate
must be smgle at least 17 and
not yet 22 years of age as of
July I 1976 and a restdent of
the
Tenth
Dtslnc t
(Spec tftcally
the Tenth
Di.strtct mcludes all of Athens
Fatrheld Ga lh a Hockmg
Jackson I awrence Metgs
Morgan Muskmgwn Perry
and Washtnglon CoWll!es the
townshtps of Elk Enoch
Jackson Jefferson Sharon and

Stock m Noble County and all
of Vmton County except
Hamson townshtp )
Mtller
requests
all
prospechve candtdates to
submtl thetr apphcahons as
soon as posstble to facthtate
thorough evaluahon of thetr
quahftcahons Those who have
not already taken the
Scholasltc Aplttude Tests
t SAT) whtch are reqwred by
all the academtes are urged to
stgn up by May 15 for the
exammat10ns to be conducted
JWle 28 Results from later
exammahons would not be
avatlable tn lime for con
stderat10n
1\11 apphcal!ons must be m
and all hies completed by
November I The Tenth

Dtstnct Servtce Academy
Board a panel of ctvtc leaders
from the 13 counl!es of the
Distrtct meets 1n November to
select the nomtnees and
alter na tes to the vanous
academies
Our servtce academies

offer an educatiOn on a par
wtlh the worlds fmest
umvers1hes, whtle preparmg
thetr graduates to have the
quahltes and allnbutes to
follow 1n a proud tradtl!On of
servtce to our na lton Mtller
asserted
Addtltonal tn
formahon and appltcahon
forms may be obtamed by
wntmg Cong Clarence E
Mtller 434 Cannon House
Ofhce Bwldmg Washmgton
D C 20515

Glenn and Taft agree
tax cut bill needed
By United Press International

Both of Ohio s U S Senators
Democrat John Glenn Jr and
Republican Robert Taft Jr
expressed reservations con
cermng the $24 8 bt!Uon tax cut
bill stgned durmg the weekend
by Prestdenl Ford but both
satd Ford was correct 10
signing the measure
Glenn In Columbus said he
agreed wtUt Ford on several
points
I Utlrik the btll Utat was
passed was a Christmas tree
biU, bul we talked about !hat
when 1t was being passed and
Utere were many things I wish
we had had more time to
de bale, " Glenn said
Glenn said he and other
senators dldn t hke the way
things were being rushed
through without consideration
and putting pretty btg amend
ments onto Utat tax bill
I think Ute President did
rY!ht to sign It because we have
to realize we do have 8 3
mliUon Wlemployed m this
country today and that's tn·
tolerable There Is tremendous
suffering going on and it s
about to get worse unless we
get the economic pump prhned
a little bit and get things going
agam and gel employment
started and new jobs under
way, ' Ute freshiman senator
said
Want Action Now
Asked If Ford had any choice
whether lo sign Ute biU, Glenn
said, ' From a political stand
pomt he didn t because people
want this and people want Ute
economy on an upturn Many
people are very worried wheth·
er the economy can even be
turned around They want to
see action right now So I think

pohbcally looking forward to
next year bemg an election
year, the Prestdent had httle
chotce
Taft at hts Clncmnatl home
where he ts recovering from
eye surgery said, I have
some reservations about tl but
I feel Utat a tax cut IS
necessary and (the biU) ts
probably the besl compromtse
the Prestdenl can get
Rep Samuel L Devme R
Ohto, vtce chatrman of the
House Republican caucus and
who voted agamst the measure
tn the House satd, I still
haven t had any econorrust or
anyone else leU me how you
can reduce revenues and m·
crease spendmg and have
anything other Ulan htgher
Inflation
The type of bill I would like
to see on Ute Presldenl'sdesk ts
a 10 per cent across the board
cutback m all federal ex
pendltures, Devine
satd
That means Congressional
salartes tho Department of
Defense and every other
area- cut tt across lho board
That would save $30 billion
dollars and I Utmk that ts the
best way we could help the

economy '
Provides More Relief
Rep Charles A Vanik, 1).
Ohto, contacted by UP! al his
home al Falls Church, Va ,
satd he was glad Ford had
signed Ute bill
I worked on Utls legislation
all through Ute conference
commtttee between the House
and Senate, ' Vanlk said It
represents substantially what
Ute President requested ex
cept that tt Is tilted to provide
more tax relief for lite poor and
the lower mtddle classes and I

Uttnk Utts was rtghl
I Utlnk tt would be wrong for
the Prestdenl to promtse to
veto all other measures commg
through the Congress ex
ceptlng Utose tnvolving Ute
nabonal securtty H tt becomes
necessary to provtde furUter
approprtaltons lo take care of
the distress of the unemployed
I would expect thai the
Prestdenl would recogmze
these spectal needs Vamk
added
Rep Ronald M Mottl, 1).
Ohto told UP! from hts
vacalton home m Ft Lauder
dale, Fla , I d like to com
plemenl lhe Prestdent lor
stgnmg the tax measure
Fmally we can stunulate Ute
economy
The taxpayers should spend
II (rebates) unmedtately for
worUtwhtle ttems for Utetr
famtlles, raUter than save 11
I agree wiUt the Prestdent
that we need to watch our
spending I also agree wtUt him
that we need lax reform I
agree that we should not have
wasteful spendtng so we can
keep the deficit m check
I disagree wtth lhe Prest
denl on where our prtortties
lie, ' MotU added The money
we are spendmg for foreign atd
could be used for expanston of
Ute school lunch program It
could be used for medical
research and In Ute area of
educallon and hoalth raUter
than spend the money
wastefully m Cambodia
Our ftrst prtorlty should be
to help our own people nol
helpmg Ute people 10 Cambodta
and Vtelnam and other people
aroWld the world wiUt foretgn
atd

DR. LAMB
This reader is always cald

By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - I hve m
western New York Our
chmate ts certamly not hke
Flortda any lune of the year
My problem ts thai regardless
of wmter or Ute sprtng swn
mer or fall I am freeztng I'm a
male of 44 years went mto Ute
servtce m 1951 wetghmg 147
and came out Utree years later
wetghmg about 230 I was tn
terrtble shape
I m only S.feet-9 and dectded
I had to lose some wetght I
kept gomg down over Ute
years Now I m about 130
poWlds My watst ts 29 or 30 and
11 used to be 40 some
I do smoke heavtly about
four packs a day, and take four
Anacln tablets a day I take
Utese because I read once they
keep your blood Utm I walk at
least 10 mtles a d~
Everyone has gotten to know
my problem, no matter where I
go It doesn I really mallei' for
I am cold In Ute wmter I wear
underwear, thermals pants a
sieat shirt and at least lwo
heavy sweaters, plus some sort
of a Jacket and over that a
hghlwetght msulated full
lengUt c:&gt;at
In the summertime tl s
almost the same I could Stl m a
car wtth the wtndows closed
and the sWl out full to JUSt bake
tn tl I cOuld ~o outstde tn the
SWl wtUt a blanket over me and
I'd be m heaven
DEAR READER - It soWlds
to me hke you are well swted
for lroptcal survtva Did you
ever thtnk of movmg to Death
Valley'
I doubt four Anacm tablets
are responstble for your

"

not generate enough heal
because he won t have the
energy cell eqwpmentto do tl
Severe wetght loss oft en
depletes muscles as well as fat
Th1s may have occurred m
your case wtth your wetghl
loss You mtghl try a muscle
building program and stop
smoking Wtlh more muscles
you mtghl generate more heat
Just walking won I butld up
much muscle mass
There are a few medtcal
problems that contribute to
feehng cold These are those
that are assoctated w1th a slow
down tn melabohsm Lo\\
Utyrotd ts one of these So wtlla
low fWlctionmg adrenal gland
GAUJPOLIS, OHIO
March 29 1975
I presume you have had a
medical
exammalton You
Sales Report of
Ohio Valley Uvestock Co
should have a test of ) our
STOCKER CATTLE
thyrotd function If all ts well
STEERS 250 to 300 lbs 22 lo 27
I d try the muscle bwldmg
300 to 400 lbs 22 to 30 400 to 500 progranuf you mtend to sta) m
lbs 22 50 to 30 500 to 600 lbs 22 colder climates And, smce you
to 30 600 to 700 lbs 24 50 to 30
read my colwnn you a~ady
700 lbs and Over 25 50 to 38 know Utat I think ctgaretles are
HEIFER CALVFS-250 lo 300 qwte harmful If you would
lbs 1&amp; to 20 300 to 400 lbs 9 50 qwt those four packs a day tl
to 21 50 400 to 500 lbs :ro to 22
would do wonders for ) our
500 to 600 lbs 19 to 22 5([; 600 to fut.~e heaiUt and rmght help
700 Jbs 20 to 23, 700 1~ your baste problem
Over 2Q to 33
STOCK COWS- BULLS (By
'lbe Head 1- Stock Cows 115 lo
190 Stock Cows and Calves 150
to 245, Stock Bulls 100 to 200
fiDROW IIREAKS BONE
Baby Calves !Ito 35 (By Tbe
FORT LAUDERDALE
Pound) - Canners &amp; Cutters
Fla (UPI)-RighUtander Dick
Cows 15 to 18 75 Holstem Cows Tidrow wtU be lost IIi the New
20 to 24, Conimerctal Bulls York Yankees for 10 to 14 days
(I ,000 lbs and Over) 2Q to 28
after breaking a bone 10 his
VEAL CALVES - 220 to pttchmg hand m a pepper game
250 40 to 55, Medtum 200 Saturday after he had pttched
lbs to 300 30 to 40 Culls ~ for Ute Yankees Syracuse
condttwn They do con tam
sahcylates whtch do act to
lower body temperature when
taken m sufltctent amoWlts
Most of the heat m the body
comes from chenucal ac !tons
parltcularly those used to tear
down food w1thm the celts and
release the food energy Heat ts
hterally a byproduct of the
body s acltvtties
!t follows Utat you need a lot
of acltve celts to generate heal
Thalts where muscles come m
When a person ts fat and has
more fal Ulan muscle he rna)

Market Report

Down

SHOATS - 15 to 35

'

farm club

Bruins, 'Cats in title clash

. ,'.

'

By Uruled Press Internallooal
American air crews in Vietnam prayed for refugees of
Communlsto()verrun areas, pilgrims gathered at the
traditional site of Christ's burial aod resurrection, and
Pope Paul VI preached of ' a hope for aU manldud" Sunday
as the Christian world observed Easter
Christian ptll!fimS fewer than ill previous years,
celebrated Easter services in the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre In Jerusalem About 2,000 pilgrims attended a
pontifical High Mass sung by Msgr Glacommo J Beltrlttl,
Roman Catholic patriarch of Jerusalem
In Saigon, American air crews wbo new the last
evacuation lllghts oul of Da Nang attended an Easter mass
for refugees from the fallen city- aud for those who didn't
make tl out No refugees attended the service, held ill tbe
courtyard of a Jesuit school, but most of the eight World
Airways crews which Dew the overcrowded jets were there
President Ford attended Easter Services at Sl
Margaret's Episcopal Church In Palm Springs, CaUl , and
heard Episcopal Bishop Robert Wolterstorff preach of the
need for the Christian spirit to take eftect In "affluent
Southern California, In arid and drought-ridden Afrlda and
in starving Bangladesh and In VIetnam "
At the Vatican, Pope Paul, speaking In a strong voice to
some 400,000 Holy Year pilgrims, told of the resurrection of
Christ as' a comfort for the poor aud suffering a hope for
the hwnble and for Utose who pray, for the whole church,
for all mankind '
In New York, several thousand persons strolled along
;:. Flflh Avenue In the annual 'Easter Parade, 'but wet, raw
weather discouraged traditional bonnet wearers from
sporting thetr Easter finery Many of the paradlrs, Instead,
wore wild costumes, gaudy headresses and outlaodish
makeup
A woman and four artist friends aopeared as "the
Easter apparittons, 'dressed m rags toilet paper rolls, egg
boxes and assorted veils
ln an eastern Tenoessee mountain valley, Ike Taylor of
Carter County was the runaway vtctor ill the anuual Petera
Hollow Easter egg light When everyone's eight-dozen egg
maximum supply was exhausted, Taylor still had some four
dozen left The broken eggs -tapped against each other to
determine which is harder -were donated to an orphanage
at nearby Elizabethton after the fight

'·" Conference on malpractice

Accordmg to the doctors
and all, ' Casey satd They
f1gure she hasn t been dead
over 10 days lo 15 al the most
' We are pretly sure that she
was strangled, he satd ' Bul
whether 11 was done there or
the body was taken there, we
don t know
It s hard to beheve Utat Ute
body has been tn Utat garage
all Utts tune, the police chtef
srud But tt s a poSSibility
Casey srud Marcta s body
was flown to Memphts Sunday
aboard Ute slateo()wned Jel
loaned by Gov Ray Blanton
He satd the state medical
exammer wtll per!orm an
autopsy
Casey satd Marcta was
carrymg $10 to $12 when she
lefl home about 5 30 p m on
Feb 25 to dehver lhe Gtrl Scout
cookies to a netghbor s home
No money was found on Ute

Federal
and
state FOWtded In 1949, It currenUy
legislators, public officials, represents more than 14,000
physicians and other health group practitioners across the
care provtders, attorneys, nation
Insurers and consumers ,..._ _..._.,_~_..::....--....,
convened lo examme the
""The Daiij Sentin~
medtcal liabtllty Insurance
uEvo 1 "" 1o '""
crlSIS, to publicly atr Utetr
MEI:n,'1~~l.~au
VIews and to diSCUSS some of
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
the possible solutions already
Roae'itV~JilFLtCH
advanced
~lly Editor
Published dolly excepi
Fea Iured speakers IncIuded t••urdoy
by The Ohio Valle
Senator Edward M Kennedy
ubllshlng Company 11
ourt Sf
Pomeroy Ohl
(D ·Mass), John A McMahon,
5769 eustne" Office Phone
PreSident of the Amertcan 992 2156 Editorial Phone 991
2157
Hospital
Assoctatlon,
Second class postage paid •
Ohio
Represen tsllve Pa ul B Rogers Pomeroy
Notional odvert!Sin
(D Fla) Representative Dan representative Bottlnelll
Roslenkowskt
( D !II ) , ~,·"~~'::rv~~~ N1:we~~tr: 2 n
Subscr•ptlon
rates
Represe ntat1ve Henry Wax· Delivered
by carrier wher
man (0-Caltf) and Robert available 75 cents per week
By Motor Rout&amp; where carr ie
CartWI'Ight' LL B President service
not available
of the Association of Trial month SJ 25 By mall In Oht
and W Va One Year $22 00
Lawyers of Amertca
s x months Sll so Thre
SUSPECT KILLED
The AGPA 18 the national months S7 oo Elsewher
MONROE Ohto (UP[)I
$26 00 year
S x month
S1J so three months s7 so
One man was fatally woWlded, orgamzahon representmg
,._ Subscription prtce Include~
another suspec~ woman- PhySICians and dentists ln uM;" Sunday Times SentlnPI
was apprehended Sunday and a group practice of medicme
second man remamed at large
after an attempted robbery
and shootout between the Uu:ee
and the owner of a home 10 this
Butler CoWlty commumty pollee satd
Names of persons mvolved tn
'DIE CHANGED CROSS
the Saturday mght IOctdent
were be10g wtthheld pending
It was a time of sadnf!88, and my heart,
further mveshgation
Although It knew and loved Ute better part,
Offtctals satd the three 111Fell wearted wtth Ute conflict and the strife
truders fled the house The
And all the needful discipline of life
woman suspect and Ute body of
Ute dead man were foWld 10 an
And while I thought on these as given to me,
automobile The second male
My trial testsoffalthandlove to be,
suspect escaped, pohce satd
It seemed as If I never could be sure
That faithful to the end I should endure

Onl

the poet's

fully clad body he satd
'It looks like Ute mottve was
robbery, ' Casey satd That's
what we've got to go on at this
time
Earlier this week Marcta's
mother told reporters her
daughter would be 10 years old
on Good Frtday
It s a mtracle time of year,
and I feel my daughter wiU be
home by Easter, that God will
perform a mtracle, the
mother satd
About the tune the Trhnbles
were returning home from
church Harry Moffett, visiting
at the John Thorpe home about
mtl yards east of the Trimble
restdence walked Into Thor
pe's doorless two-car garage
to look for a ttre
Pushmg astde a small orange
wadtng pool m a back corner,
he found Marcia s body

~

and Mrs Verl Tuttle Both sets
of Tutlles have lhe same
weddmg anmversary March
25 Veri and Bmas have been
marrted 55 years and BtU and
Faye have been marrted 26
years makmg a total of 81
years of marned bhss 1- thmk
that ts really great parents
and son ha vmg the same
weddmg date and celebratmg
together The four of them
spent the evemng al Stddens on
the Mall m Parkersburg
The Cole Stables Rtdmg
Academy opened on March 29
for the 1975 season Hours are
from 10 am unltl 8 p m
Monday through SWlday
Cole Stables have qwte a
tesl!montal to lhett back·
grOWld and abthly recetved at
the 2Qih Annual Nattonal AU
Breed Sprmg Horse Show held
at the Ohto State Fatrgrounds
thts past week Btll Cole home
on Easter break from law
school at Cleveland State
Umverstl) captured a ftrst
place m the Appaloosa Semor
Pleasure Horse class rtdtng Jet
Reed He also took a thtrd m
the Appaloosa stud halter
class 2 years and Wlder, and a
ftflh place m the Quarlerhorse
stud halter 4 years and older
When you constder the classes
average 30 to 60 horses you are
lucky to even place m a class
much less wm tl
Robm Jo Rllchte recetved
the lion s share of Ute awards,
however She, too, rode Jet
Reed and look ftrst place 10 the
Children's Appaloosa Pleasure
Horse firSt place m the youth
western horsemanshtp, horse
17 years and Wlder and fourth
place m the youUt western
pleasure horse 17 years and
under Rob10 rode her pony
Miss Tinker to WID ftrsl place
tn the Pony pleasure, over 48'
and Wlder 56 nder Wlder 17
) ears ftrst place tn Ute youth
11estern horsemanship, pomes,
nder Wlder 17 years and
showed M1ss Tinker for a
second place ID the pleasure
pony show man ship IT years
and Wlder Hoblit also won the
J

htgh pomt trophy m Ute youth
acttvtly classes on Mtss
Tmker So wtth aU the beautiful
rosette nbbons, trophies, silver
trays and the huge high potnl
trophy Cole Stables returned
from Columbus wtth the
proverbtal 'potful of win·
niDgs
We have another ptoneer
gWlsmtUt m our mtdst Last
year Grant bwlt a muzzle
loading n!le from scratch and
now Roger Brooks has JUSt
completed building hts own
muzzle loading rt!le The two of
them had a large! session wtth
the new nile and report tits a
dandy BoUt these yoWlg men
hun ted deer this past season
wtth muzzle loaders but were
not lucky enough to bag one
An mcreaStng nwnber of
young men are becommg tn
terested m bow hWlting and tn
muzzle loading rt!le hunting
These yoWlg men are true
sportsmen because Utey have
to devote a great deal of time,
energy and skill to the hWlt,
and Ute antmal, more olten
Ulan not ts Ute wtnner
Don I forget the Ftre
Department and CommWltly
Club meetm~~on Wednesday
mght and IJ'e Bar-30 Horsemen wtll meet on Tuesday
mght
Last but not least, don't
forget Ute pony pull to be held
at the Bar-30 showgroWlds on
Apnl 5 aiUtough you have
probably already read about It
Pony Pulls are packed wtth
fas\and fur10us action, and are
sure fire entertamment
Don I miSS tt'

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy umt of
SEOEMS answered a call at 3
p m SWlday to Long Bottom
for Effte KeMedy, who was iU
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hosptlal where she
was admitted

And thus no lolUier trustln~ to his miRht
Who says, 'Wewalk~falthal¥1 not by Stght,"
Doubting, and almost yteldlng to despair,
The thought arose, ' My cross I cannot bear '
For heavier Its wetght must surely be
Than those of others which I daily see,
Oh 1 If I might another burden choose,
Methlnks I should not fear my crown to lose '
A solemn silence reigned on all around,
E en Nature's voices uttered not a IIOlllld,
The evening shadows seem'd of peace to leU
And sleep upon my weary spirit feU
Amoment's pause -and then a heavenly light
Beam'd full upon my wondering, raptured ~t,
Angels on silver wmgs seem'd everywhere
And Angels' music thrilled Ute belrny atr
Then one, more fair than all the rest to see,
One to whom aU the other bow'd Ute knee,
Came gently to me, as I trembling lay,
And, ' Follow me," he said, 'I am the way '
Then saying thus, he led meJar above
And there, beneath a canopy of love
Crosses of divers shape and size were seen
Larger and smaller than my own had been
And one there was most beauteous to behold,
A little ooe, with jewels set In gold
Ah t this," methought, "I can wtth comfort wear
For tt wiU be an easy one to bear "
And so the litUe cross I qulcltly took
But all at once my frame beneath It shook,
The sparkling jewels, 11111" were they to see,
Butfartooheavywas Utetrwelghtlorme
'This may not be," I cried, and looked again
To see If there was any here could ease my pain
Bul one by one I passed them slowly by
Till on a lovely one I cast my eye
Fair Dowers around Its sculptured form entwined
And grace 81¥1 beauty seem'd In It combined
Wondering, I gazed, and stiU I wonder'd more
ro Utlrik so mall)' should have pass'd it o

er

But Oh, Uta! fonn so beautllul to see,
Soon made its bidden SOITOWll latown to me
Thorns lay beneath diose Oowera and colors fair
Sorrowtng, I said, 'This cross I cannot bear '
And so tt was with each 81¥1 aU around
Not ooe to suit my need could there be found.
Weeping, I laid each heavy burden down,
As my gtl!degently said, ''NoCI"OIIS -nocrown 1"
At length to him I raised my sadden'dbeart,

He Ita IIOITOWll bade Its doubt&amp; depart
Be not afraid," he said, ''but trust In me,
My perfect low shall now be shown to thee "
And then with llghten'd eyes and wllilng feet
Again 1 turned my earthly CI'088 to meet,
W!Ut f&lt;noard footstep!! turning not aside
For fear some hidden evil might b.ltlde
And there - In lite prepared, appointed way,
Ustening to hear, and ready to obeyA cro&amp;S I qwckly Iauro of plainest flrlll
Wtth only words of love in8crlhed tbereoo
Wtth thankfulneu I r'alletl it fnm the rest
And joyfully aclmowledged,tt the best,
'lbe only one, of aU the IIIIIIY. ~
That I could feel '11'81 good forD!f' tn bear
And while I thua my cholen ooe CODf.-1.
I saw a heavenly brightnell on It rest
And 811 I bent, my burden to suataln,
I recognlaed my own old CI'OIII again
But ()hI how dlffereJ&amp;diditMSJ~ to be
Now I had learned 118 precioulnel!a to aee 1
No looger could I unbelievinl! say,
"Pedtaps another Is a better WIY "

Ah, no' heocefoi1b my one desire sltal1 he
That He, who kitowl me best, lbould moo. for me,
And so, wllate'er Hlllcm sea sood to !lelld,
ru trust It belt bei:autJe he 1mow1 !be EDcL
-Mrs Geoqe Halls', ~. C»JJo

SAN DIEGO tliPI l - Uri A
md Kentucky lhe wo gtants m

James M Orr M D of the
Holzer Medtcl , Cen~r Cbmc,
recently attended Ute Naltonal
on Medical
Conference
Malpractice March 21).21, m
Washington D C
Co sponsored
by
the
Amencan Group Prachce
Assoctahon (AGPA) and U S
Congressman James F
Hastings ( R·N Y ) the con
feren ce brought together
nearly 500 representatives of
vartous groups affected by the
problem
Dr Orr a pedtatrtctan ts
chatrman of the AGPA
Credentials Comrruttee

Tuppers Plains area news
By Nonna Newland
At long last a con tractor ts
breaking ground for the new
branch bank of Ute Pomeroy
NatiOnal Bank here Can t watt
untilttts completed No doubt
thts ts Just the first butldmg m a
shoppmg center that will ex
plode m the heart of beaul!ful
down town Tuppers Plams 1
And e\en more wonderful to
behold the new treasurer of
Metgs County ts our 011 n
George Colhns There ts JUst no
end to the heights a bnghl
cowttry boy can chmb to All
your fnends wtsh you well
George and 11e know you wtll
do a ftne JOb H E Cole has
taken over hts place all he Oh10
Valley Mig Corp
Grant rNe11land and hts
empl9yer Terry Wyatt of
Belpre attended a one-&lt;lay
heatmg and refngeralton
serrunar tn Charles ton W Va
Mrs Robert Dodderer has
returned home after spendmg
several weeks wtth her
daughter Mrs EsUter Riggs
of Logan Ohto
Illness mUte family has kept
Richard and Florence Spencer
hopptn g lately Rtchard s
mother spent some ltme tll at
home and m the hospttal but ts
now reported re.:ovenng mcely
from a toe amputahon
Florence s fath er has been
senously ill at home for some
bme, no11 complicated by a
prolonged case of htccoughs
AI this wrtting, he may have
had to go to the hospttal for
treatment
Alan Duvall has had a ten
day Easter break from his
studtes at the Coast Guard
Academy vtstting hts parents
Mr and Mrs Jtm Duvall and
stster Ntesel and many
fnends
Bob and Kate Tuttle and
Kate s moUter Mrs Kathertne
Walters
of
Whttehall
(Columbus ) spent Frtday and
Saturday wtth his parents Mr
and Mrs Veri Tuttle
BtU and Fa)e Tuttle of
Fatrborn spent Mondav and
Tuesday wtth hts parents Mr

Sport Parade

attended by 'Dr. James Orr

Expected miracle reversed
NASHVILLE Tenn (UP[)
- Mrs Vtrguua Trunble went
to church on a cold blustery
Easter SWlday hopmg that
God wtU perform a mtracle
She returned home to learn
that her IIJ.year.old daughter
mtssmg for more than a month
had been murdered
The body of pretty, freckle
faced Marcta Trunble object
of one of the most mtense
searches m NashvtUe htstory
was found shorUy before noon
Sunday beneath a plashc
wadmg pool m Ute cluttered
garage of a netghbor s home
Lymg around Ute body were
four boxes of Gtrl Scout cooktes
she was carrymg when she
disappeared Feb 25
Metro Pobce Chief Joe Casey
satd Marcta apparently was
strangled but Utere wa s no
evtdence she was assaulted
sexually

Today's

college basketb,tll lnslm 1 wtlh
13 natiOnal champtonslups be

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sp&lt;Jrts Ed1tor

t\\ een them

NEW YORK t UPI ) - When the) plav the Star Spangled
Banner 10 Wngle) Fteld Chicago a "eek from tomorrow
stgmfymg the begtnnmg of a v~rgmal new baseba II season AI
Ohver 11111 put hts cap gver his heart the same wa1 &lt;til
ballplayers do then probably get lost m thought for the next \110
nunutes Not exactly IOO..Saroc lund of thought most hallpla) ers
do
J
AI Oltver ts commg off a. splendtd year one of hts best e1er for
the Ptttsburgh Pirates and wtlh Danny Murtaugh fmally setthng
the questtbn of who 11 play hrsl base- Wtlhe Sta1 gel! wtll-Ohver
can plan on not bemg diSturbed tn centerfteld for a11 lule He sllll
keeps thin&lt;tng of a dozen different things ne1 ertheless because
well AI Ohver has a ferttle mmd and tl has a \Ia) of workiDg all
the tune

un';::r~~:~~~a~ ~~:~~~~e;:: !~~~~i: ~~~ ~u~o:~~~,~~ b\~

difftcult because he s already one or the bestlefthanded lttllers '"
th e Nahonal ~.£ague today Some e1 en say he s the hest The
credenllals are all there He batted 321 last season and ts !ltr ~
tmg wtUI 400 this sprtng
Ohver 28 and startmg his seventh season wtth the Ptrates
draws a stx figure sala ry from them now but didn t convmce
them he was a star overmght For awhtle he was platooned
I got an opportumty lo pia) regularly the last '" o vears and
that turned my career around he says
For some tune after Roberto Clemente s death thei!e "as
conJecture over who would repla ce htm wtlh the Ptrates Nobody
has, but Al Oltver comes closer to the datly ballplaymg pattern of
Roberto Clemente than anybod) else wtth the club He s a
naturally gtfted httter mtelhgent and outgomg m personahty the
way Clemente was but he tsn t nearly as moody or mlense
In a ptece of baseball htstory whtch generally tends be lost
Ohver took over for Clemente tn the Pirates lmeup the very hrst
day he put on a Pittsburgh umform m Septembe1 of 1968
I played the second game of a doubleheader agamst Cmcm
nah and the only reason I gol mlo lhe ltneup was because
Clemente dtdn t pla) he says I faced Jun Maloney my first
tune up and he struck me out on a fas t ball It was toward the end
of his career but he sllll had a good fast ball
AI Ohver can never forget his debut wtth lhe Ptrates because
that event 1s stamped 10delibly m his mmd alongstde sllll
another one he rna) even be lhlnk10g abbut when he holds his
cap over hts hear! m Chicago a week from tomorrow Detatls of
that second event sttll remam vtvtd wtth Oltver although the
event ttself took place seven years ago
When he .. as II, AI Ohver s mother dted and when he was 20
on the very same day he was called up to the btg leagues he lost
his father Now AI Oltver takes care of hts enltre famtl) or
what s left of tl
My IaUter made bncks ' says the Ptrates centerflelder He
worked m a brtck plant m Portsmouth Ohio 20 years The dust
got him It was an accwnulatton over the years
The date Sept 14 1968 sticks out m AI Oltver s mmd
I was wtth Columbus ID Ute Internattonal Leag11_e and we were
JUSt gomg 10to the playoffs wtth Buffalo he says I had the flu
and dtdn 1make the trtp to Buffalo and I got a call m Columbi!S
from my Aunt Annabelle m Portsmouth She was crymg She told
me my father was dymg I packed my clothes put em m tpe car
and drove stratght lo Portsmouth It s 90 mlles from Columbus
but I made tim httle over an hour I went to see my father and he
was still ahve He dtdn t say very much He couldn t But the one
Utmg he told me was AI" ays take care of your brother
AI Ohver lrted to get some sleep that mght but couldn t At
4 30 In the morn10g there was a call from the hospttal telhng him
his father had taken a turn for the worse Ohver got up
awakened hts uncle hts aunt and hts brother and went wtth tnem
all to the hospttal When he arnved there he found hts father
dead
Later Uta\ day he called Columbus baseball offtctals to tell
him what had happened They offered thetr condolences then
told Ohver they had some news for him too The Pirates had
called hun up
AI Oltver s father never saw his son play tn the btg leagues but
he knew all along he was gomg to make 11 because his boy had the
self-&lt;lisctpltne and sell-conftdence to succeed m whatever he
Wldertook m life
Now AI Oliver ts a full fledged star tn the btg leagues and that
would ve made hts father enormously proud He would ve been
prouder yet that his btg league son ts taking excellent care of his
kid brother, Jtm 20 a !me athlete at Bethwte.Cookman
College
• AI Ohver ts making sure hts brother gets the college educatton
he didn t SomeUtmg ltke that makes hun feel even better !han
hitting 300 Everyone even a ballplayer has hts own pnvate
Utoughts when he stands there stlently hstemng to the Nattonal
Anthem

colhde m the

fm,tls of the 37th annu 11 NCAA
tournament lomght "1111 the
Brums hoping to send John
Wooden off mto rettrement
111lh hts loth lttle m a dozen
vems

At 64 the filmed \\IZard of
West11 ood has dtsclosed that
he wtll step down after 27 years
as the Brwns coach an m
nouncement that has ovpr
shadO \\ ed thP tuurnament

ttse lf
Although each club has

extraOllhnary

hrtght

~dill€

biJll'&lt;i

IS

bl:"tn~

f

til

(I

II
11

f" 101 th,tl ha' ' ti!Setlu s Ill/It
11\Uh

will stay in Detroit
the last ptlcher to wtn tlu ee

when they open the ga tes of
regular season Lohch w11l

games m a s mglc World Scncs

UH~

t 1968) has been mauhandled
by even the most humble of
batters this spnng m lr)tng to
prepare himself for a rebound
of hts disastrous 211-loss cam
patgn of last year
Lohch has appeared tn stx
games this sprmg and has lost
four of them The other two
games were no-dects10ns thanks only to the efforts of
some boommg Detrott bats
Lohch was gtven the startmg
asstgnment m Sunday s game
wtth Ctnctnnatt and by the
seco nd tnmng the Reds had an
8-(1 lead Lohch whose earned
rWl average has soared to 6 85
Utts sprmg "as pulled m the
lhtrd mnmg tn favor of Dave

pt ohably ha ve JUS I two 11101 e
sla1 t.s 111 Flottda to shake Ius

Three hom. ms later the
Tigers were back m the game
and fmally won 11, 13 12 on a
two-run smgle by Btll Freehan
tn the bottom of the mnth
But Lohch Wlhke Blass and
Stolllem) re IS m very httle
danger of bemg cut-stmply
because the Ttgers have no one
better on thetr ptlchmg staff
Joe Coleman ts the only other
hurler on the team to have
spent more Ulan one season ID
ReservatiOnS are sltll bemg the btg leagues as a starter
accepted un ttl vl'ednesday for
Detrotl Manager Ralph Houk
the SV AC All Sports banquet tnststs Lohch wtll be ready
slated at 6 30 p m Frtday at
RIO
Grande
Colleges
Cafetena
Vtnce Chtckerella head
basketball coach at CaptU!l
Umverstty wtll be the featured
speaker
fhe banquet wtll be
htghhghted by the presenlatton
SAN DIEGO (UP!) - Who
of lrophtes to members of the
1974 All SVAC Football §quad wtll replace John Wooden as
and 1974 75 SVAC basketball UCLA s basketball coach •
That queshon 1.5 even ovei
teams
shadowmg
tomghl s UCLA
The leagues Most Valuable
Player trophtes tn football and Kentucky matchup for lhe
basketball sponsored by the NCAA basketball cham
Sunday Ttmes Sentmel and ptOnshtp
Wooden 64 dropped a
Radto StatiOn WJEH wtll also
bombshell by annoWlcmg hts
be presented
rettrement
after the Brutns
Football MVP s were Dave
shaded
LOUISVIlle
75 74 tn
Wtse of Kyger Creek ana Mtlch
overttme
m
the
semtfmals
Nease of Southern All Stater
Mark Swam of Hannan Trace Saturday
On the eve of the btg game of
was the MVP tn basketball
the season- UCLA vs Ken
tucky - most of lhe talk cen
tered around who would be
Wooden s successor
J D Morgan the UCLA
athlettc dtrector wtll make the
dectston but he tsn t saytng who
he s constdermg
I want the best man
posstble
was all Morga n
would say He also won t say
when he wtll say but that s
hkely to be before Apnl 9 the
date high school athletes begm
stgnmg thetr names to nattonal
letters of mtent
A hkely candidate would
appear to be Denny Crum, the
brtlhant 37 ycaro()ld Lowsvtlle
coach who twtee m four years
has had the Cardinals m the
NCAA ftnal round of four only
to lose both tunes to his former
coach Wooden
Crum who has comptled an
86 22 record at Loutsvtlle
played under Wooden and was
a starttng guard two seasons
He was Wooden's No I
asststant for three years before
mov10g on to Loutsvtlle
Crum known for his candor

Friday

JU

For oe.taiiS~

Call 675-3398 or 992-2505

A11it

I

nding on Ills left etrm

rh e favonte to WID the AI
East- Baltmwre- was dealt a
dose of humtlll) SWlday when
Jeff Burroughs rtpped four htts
and drove m stx runs m the II 1
Texas Ranger WID Two of
Burroughs htts were home
runs
Dale Parker also hil two
home 1uns to lead the Pt lls
bw gh Pu ales to an 8.Q vtc lot)
over Kansas Ctty Jose Ct uz
belted three home runs m
Houston s 12 7 maulmg of
Montreal and Los Angeles won
tts 16th game m 21 lnes thts
sprmg by blaslmg Boston 7 2
St Lows catchers drove tn
four runs as the Cardmals
snapped a SIX game losmg
streak "tUt a 5-4 tnun1ph over
the New York Mets Mtnnesola
JUmped on Atlanta ace Piul
Ntekro for stx runs m the fifth
uuung to post a 12-4 wm ove1
the Braves and BtU Robinson s
sacnftce lly m the etghth
proVIded Phtladelphta w1th a 3
2 vtctory over the Chicago
Whtte Sox

Crum figures to
get UCLA plum
satd Sunday !hat Morgan had
not talked to htm about
becommg Wooden s successor
H I were offered the JOb I
would have to consider tt he
satd
Any coach who "ould not
would have rocks tn hts head
But I don t know tf I d accept
ll
I have yet to complete what
I want to do at Louts\ tile I love
1\ there They ve been very
good to me
Of Wooden Crum smd I
doubt very sertously tf anyone
wtll come close to what he s
accomphshed tn basketball
Iromcally money mtght
stand m Crum s way tf he ts
offered the post Knowledgable
observers speculated that Mor
gan mtght not be able to match
whal Crum ts recetvmg m
sala ry and restduals at Lows
VIlle
There was a be\ y of othet
names hemg thrown about here
but Crum s name was lhe most
promment tn the rumor mtll A
survey of coaches who are m
San. Otego showed most of
them fell Crum would be of
fered- and accept the UCLA
jOb
However Washmgton State
Coach George Ravel10g who
satd before the NCAA cham
ptonshtp round began that
Wooden deftmtely would leave
UCLA after thts season sa1d he
knew who was gomg to be
Wooden s successor and tl
wouldn t be Crum
It s gomg to come as a
shock to some people who 11
1s, he sa1d

pet

g b

6 15
H
110

B
8
?1

pe t

g b

rn

IH 10
lll 10
1
'&gt;

~

I

C tJt r &lt;~ID v'&gt;O

w

s

W 'J. ICI

'16

1
1

10

'&gt; 00

19

JU
1 8

')

10

~6

?9

1I

M

I
II

c ncc

CO I\I C

w

t

p et

I
I

11
6

~6

) I

10

19

u l..
'J 1
! IV
Pi1 e l e 0 V IS O

1

IdS!

p et

'

n

g b

'
q b

next for
Nicklaus
Hll10N HEAD lSI AND
S C 1UP!) - Nex t up for lack
Ntcklaus ts the Masters and ius
renewed btd to enhance hts
record fot wmnmg maJor
gol f championships
Don t bel aga mst the
Golden Bear wmnmg hts
fifth Mastel s and 15th 111a)ot
title next week at Augusta Ga

J .t J B J 7 1 2'23 4'46
78 ,J ) 1 )7 252 303
d:lll&lt;I POS
s; J J 3101208 31 5
West
w I tpt sg lga
x o us to n
SO 4' I 0 00 31 7 2J3

( I U I QO

II

t.'J
6

P t oe n x

38 '} 9

~Hin

40 30

o eqo

M 1 n e so a
Utt l l 10 e

84 28101 252
3 8 3 296 252

8

40 30 3 8 3 291 257
Jljl ) Q 4

4~

1 t ph gf ga
43 J 1 0 86 3 II 284

w

Qu e b ec

ABA St~nd lg S
B v U 1lcd P r es s Int er at o ni\1

Ea st

w

I

Y or ~

56

26

68 3

K l uc k y
St I o ~
M
p s

55

26

6 19
37[)
34'

25
29

811

40

N w

Vrq

n

pe t

JO 5 1
16 55
15

il

x Denv er
~ a 1\ t ton o
1 d t1na
u at
Sa ' 0 e g o
X Cl n C h C d

65

Wc sl
w I
6 3 19
9 32
.t 5 36
35 15
3 I 50

pet
768
60 5
55 6
136
383

q b

g b

3
7

17
3

d l\1 S IOn htl(!

Saturt:lay s R es u lt s
K e t u c k y 1/6 N ew York 1015
I da n a 14 MemphiS 104
Sa n A to 1 o 108 V r g n a 10 I
u &lt;~ 11 9 Sru o ego 100
D e v er 110 St Lou s IJO
S undd y s Results
St Lou s 1 16 S a 1 D e go 11 2
N ew Y ork 130 San An t on 0 IQ,J
Kc It eky 11 3 M e mph s 109

' d CJna 128 De nv e r 12 1
M o ndi1y s Gilmes

1\n ton o v s Ke lllu cky

S &lt;1

at Lex 1 gton
V rq n ll a t U r1h

NHL S t and ng s
Bv U n t e d Prcs!i Inter n a l onal
DIVISIOn 1

He appears to be at the peak of

w
1 1 pts g f ga
19 8 10 108 11;12 177

Ius game

X Pt tad ph

!he 35 )Car-&lt;&gt;ld Ntcklaus won
the $200 000 He11tage Golf
Cl&lt;I sstc by three s\1okcs Sun
day Ius second vtclory m a
row He s only played m stx
tournaments so far thts year
and alread) won more Umn
$109 000
But the sktllful Ntcklaus satd
he mtght not have won Sunday
tf he had not detected and
corrected a flaw m hiS swmg
Ntcklaus tote up the Ha1
bourtown course whtch he
helped destgn back m th e 60s
the ftrst two days "tth rounds
of 66-!\3 Then hts game went
sour 1for him) m Saturday s
thtrd round "hen he shot a 74
and he was sttll strugghng
th1 ough Sundays front mne
I11at s when f found out
wha l I was domg wrong satd
the only man to wm mor e than
$2 mtllton playmg golf
I
suddenly realiZed that I was
too loose too 1elaxed I was
htthng the ball too far n ght
Once I corrected that I started
htthng the ball at the sttck

N Y s land e r !i322 4 2 8 5 25S :t 11
NYR ru ge r s 36 28 13 85 3 11 26 7
I\ I "
a
33 2101 14 80 23 4 222
01V S IOR 2

Va co u vc
C t Cfl go

35 34

S llou s
M 1 e-.o t a
K r~

w
1
35 32

s a sC

Mon I e n

w
41

8

78 25 6 233
78 253 254
53 117 327

39 75 318

J

I t pis gf ga
1 9 107 35 1 211

lO S 1\ nc P. ICS 10 16 20
P ll s b u rq 1
36 26 15
Df' r o 1
12 .:13 '1
IIJ l &lt;;
ng ton
7 65 5

00 257 17ii
873 1527 1
56 2 1B 32 1
19 16,11 123

DtVI S IOII 4

)( B u ff al o

w
I I pis gf ga
16 16 15 10 7 3 13 235

J O 2 1 13 ljl J 338 234
31 3 I S 71 '17 4 298

13os to n

.t l 32

Edn on to1

34 35

2 84 333 297
37 32 4 78 303 265
4

n

tournament now m 20 months
suffered a bogey at No 8

To r onto
Ca l fo rn a
19 &lt;~5 12
x Cl tneh ed dl\t tS on

Sunday s Results
Ball n or e 4 Van couve r 1
Cl eveland 7 Chicago 6
Minnes ota s lnd ana pols 3
New Eng la nd 4 Toronto 3
Q uebec 6 Phoen x 5 ot
San D e go at Edmonton
ppd bad te e

Mondays Games

1nd 1anapo 1 sat w nnipeg
Sa n D1 e go at Edmonton

DUAL fRACK MEET
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
UCLA defeated defending
NCAA champion Tennessee,
83 71 tn an tntersecttonal dual
!tack meel Saturday by sweepmg Utree events
Mike Pully a freshman had
a hfethne best 17 9 tn the pole
va ull to lead Ute Brwns sweep
tn the pole vaull the long JUmp
and the 4411-yard 10termedlate
hurdles

50 208 300

Kids®
CANVAS

For the
entrre jam1ly.
Women's Sandals m
Canvas and Leather

heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store
Middleport. Ohto

Ntcklaus took a one.stroke
lead With a btrdie at No II and
We'"kopf fe ll tw o st rokes
hehmd at No 12 by mtsstng a
three foot putt Both btrdied
the par ftve 15th but when
Ntcklaus put a four tron shot
less than ftve feet from the cup
at the 17th tl was all over

ADULT MEAL
B o St et
R 'l 1 r- ct F es

lu

nov ~

&amp;

Lil 1" $r"J t 0 nk

PT PLEASANT
2325 Jack so n Ave

OFFICE CLOSED'
MARCH 27 UNTIL APRIL 4
FOR VACATION

PoonTVoewCable TV

r~·•

Cable TV... It's A

In Case of Emergency, Call
The Galltpolts Offtce Collect

Detter BuY.

Than Ever!

446-4290
STEVE SNOWDEN

1258 Powell Sf Mtddleport Ph 992 7155
Llfl
,...,..~w.

111111 ,,,. •

OFFER EXPIRES APRIL 15, 1975

l

*"

-·--

.... .......

.,,., ,

A

I ATE FUM

161 260

Va n c ouv e r
33 38 2 68 236 25 2
ll Clmcfled d VI S IOR title
Saturday s R es ults
W 1 peg 9 N ew England 3
C leve la nd 7 lnd an a pols 5
Hou 5l on B M nnesola 2
Toronto 5 Quebe c 4 at
Sa D ego 7 Vancouve r J

t ph gt ga
0 80 25 7 253

3130 11
n 17 1
y 14 5 7 11
DIVI S itln

Toron o
w n p eg

agam

Ntcklaus "ho appeared to be
runnmg away wtth the tourna
men\ when he bwlt a com
mandmg stx stroke lead
through the ftrsl two rounds
was tted wtth fellow Ohto Slate
alumnus fom Wetskopf at the
start of Sunday s ram-damp
ened play and was two strokes
behmd • Wetskopf after five
holes of play
For the next ftve holes I
kept h1ttmg m bad spots and
"ondcred tf tt would be another
one of those days
sa td
Ntcklaus But after stx holes,
I started playtng golf
Nicklaus btrdied No 6 wtth
an 11&gt;-foot putt a nd 11as all even
"1lh Wetskopf a gam when
Wetskopf .. ho has not won a

84313

Canad1~n

(eft In

Masters

WHA StfHldlng s
By u 1 t e d Prcu lnterna110ni111
Ea s t
w 1 t pts gf ga
x N ew E nQ
t '28 J 8! 162 267

Cl vea nd

Wooden S&lt;Itd \\ ashtnglon the
hero of the Lou svtllc contest
111th the ga mc 11mnmg ba ~kct
tunc

t so tr~ ! Pt s bur g h4

Mondays Games
I N o ga m es sc h c du ed

IUS
100

We
hl\l
gl edt
ps\ dlOlogtc d momentum 1 1ght
no\\ Hdll :ldld l don l lhmk
C(Jl&lt;h Wooden s I C~H gndtlOn
"ill h IVl m\ negdt tve 1ffect
on us Wlldt 11 docs lo h1s team
I don 1 knt 11
We " 111l to \\ Ill 1t £or coach

O\ e1

al 1.2 phil4 Ch cago t

10

g II!IC

With J llf. t t(u l C S( UJ!ld S

Pt

19
1

9

w

Satur-day s Results
N Y s l a nd er s 6 NY Ranger s .:1
P t s b u r q h 4 De tro t 'l
Ph l ade lp l 1a 5 Chic ago 2
Mon t rea l 4 K 11 n sa s ( 1ty 1
S t Lou s 'l M nn c so n ' 1
Bo s to n I Tor a n o
Van c. ouve r J Los A ng e l es J
S unda y s Re•s.tJits
N Y s land er s 1 A !Inn;, '}
Tu r on to S B uff a l o 4
N Y Range r s B K an sa s C ty 2
Mon r c&lt;~ l 1 Bo&gt;; to n ?
0 r o t !I W a sh nq on 5

')!

M d w l ~ t0 vS 01

Sd\ till S 11\(. 111 S IIIOi t: to

dold!: ums before headmg 1101 th

wtth the hopes of an) fu st
diVISIOn ftntsh by the ltge!S

1

r.,, n

ll l Ub\c

Ill( JU St b Cl HI :SC It S Ill\

D I VI S 01

Ih e

w

I 11 tnltxlthe fn st on&lt; tUlc
1964lttlel ve r) mu ch ht Sltd
But no one pH tlcubu &lt;.ham
p10nsh1p h 1s btl n n 01~ IIICcln
mgful th HI HI\ othc1 So no 1
Celli

ng s

E &lt;1 s t ~: rr Conl c r e cc

Woodt n dena d th1 s ch Ull
g allll me u I more to
hun tl u 11 ' of In s othet mne
lltll l ontests

for thtrd place at 3 35 p m
Wtlh mne a nd four titles
1espetltvel) UCLA and Ken
tuck\ lead a parade of 21
schoo l~ that have captured
NCAA charnptonshtps In Ute

banquet

S t&lt;~nd

pton~lllp

se the two losers m the
sennfmals Saturday Will meet

All-SVAC

NB A

Hy U 1 1: d P rl:'&gt;'i llt ~r &lt;II o Jill

msldr people m e 11101 c
1!JJh tlltn " c 11 e
but

game dt the Sports Arena ,., 111
begm at 6 10 p m PO l and wtll
Jx&gt; sho\\ non national televisiOn
tNBCl Lowsv1lle and ~) ratu

1£m "'

Pro Standings

t 11

quu kncss h 1sn t 1h,,u s bt:cr 1

L0 1•I Ch , h 0 m b e d h ard ,
By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sports Wrtler
The sprmg of 1975 has not
heen a good one for former
pennant heroes
First Balttmore peddled
first baseman Boog Powell Ute
man moun tam" ho had started
m four World Sertes for the
Onoles
Then Ptttsburgh cut Steve
Blass btddmg farewell 1o the
guy who won two grunes m
eluding the dectstve .geventh
game m the 1971 World Senes
to giVe Ute Pirates lhetr ftrsl
world champ10nshtp 10 more
than a decade
fhe New York Yankees
follow ed by releasmg Mel
Sto~tlemyre the last hnk wtth
thetr glory teams
Now 11 sMtckey Lohch s lurn
to lake his lumps
The Detrmt Ttger southpaw,

Kentu(k Y c1 lth ~mel
l he y
h l\t_ ri Jsctphncd offense qnd
d sc!phnt!'t
f0nse
Wr._ lCllldlh m Ill: ! lnt

1he national champ10nsh1p

so, if you have afriend or relative
who wants cable TV, you can give
him or nef a specia• OLD TIMERS
certifl~ate :gdOd fOr one free
installatior,l &lt;.$10 valuel.
!1UJ

Nl I

mtt&lt;h up bct11e en UCI A s
ftm sse and
Kent111 k) s b1 ute st rength tnd
depth

You AREA MEMbER o
THE OLD TIMERS
CLUB.
SoWHAT?

J~ U

ciS

II

q~t r knes s a tH~

If You ARE PRESENTly A

1

t1rs

the

the

~ellow

Pages

�'

I

4 ...... Tile Datly Senlint•l. ~lldctlt•pm t-1 '"""'' "'

•

-

' .'

I '

•

5- The Dally Sentinel, Middlecort-Pomeroy, 0 .. '&gt;1onday , March 31, 1975

I

ll . ~J.m&lt;la;, ~l a~h '11, l'l!j

· Robinson makes first

~ough

.

BASEBALL TOQ 1\ Y

Eastern at Federal

National swim records tumbled

difficult decision as boss
Sen! do\\n \\ ere p1tcher J un
Stnrkland , Bruce Elhngsen
.and Et ac R:_.uch, tnhe lders
Jerry D.~Vanon t~nd Rob
Bellmr and out!telder Tom my
Snuth
" II was worse Utan I thou~h t
11 would be. ' Robmson sa td.
·what&lt;·lrt· )OU say doesn't hi
the sttu at10n "
Two of tlu• to u ~ h est,
Hobmson smd were Ellm~sen

Th e Indwn!i, who had been
h1tt111g at a hot pa ce the
pa st
I
\H'Ck, \\ere lumted to s1x h1t~
Sunday by Mtl waukee pitchers

·: :,.; ::·: ·:::

. . ..· .. .

·:· :;:,

Reds edged
13-12 in 9·

John Y Brown, the Kentucky
Colonels' vocal and dyna miC
owner , has had some wlderangmg and controv~ rsial remarks attributed to htm over
the years SundaJ, hts team
almost choked on one of them .
Kentucky has been making a
late btd for the ABA East tiUe,
mcludmg t" o cnttca l v1ctones
las! week over the nval New
York Nets Brown sa td
recently he would like to see Ius
temn go agamst the Nets and
the other top teams every mghl
rather tha n, say, \l atch Jus
team beat Memphts by 50
JX)ints
The Sound s, upset ov('r
Brown's quoted rema1 k, took
the Colonels mto ovclltmc
Su nday before bowmg, 113·109.
"'11tey had to come with thctr
best," Memphts forww-d Stew
Johnson satd after the hard·
fought battle.
Kentucky was happy to
escape wtth any sort of vtctory .
TI1e win kept the Colonels a
ha lf-game behmd the dtvtstonleading Nels gomg mlo the
!mal week of the regular
season. Both teams hnve 26

Green Thumb

th mks, ~ wow, th1s ISperfect '" .Umted St&lt;ttes ctttzenshtp for Bruner of Stanford set NCAA
Because next yeGtr IS an the Olymp ics beca use h1s and meet records wtth 15:16.64
Olymp1c year, tl was appropri- country does not compete, wtlh m the 1,650-yard freestyle.
43.92 m the 100-yard freesty le
ate to ask coach Peter Deland,
- John Hencken of Stanford
whose TroJans won the team
l1 tl e handily . wh ethe r the wtth 2 00.83 in the 200-) ard
marks would stand up beyond breaststroke, who set an NCAA
and meet mark wtth :55.59 1n SPRIN G CAMP
next year's meet.
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UP! )"These records wtll stand up the 100-yard event.
The
Green Bay Packers will
- Indtana 's lell(ll of Ken
lor a while," he srud . "Next
ho
ld
their annua l spring camp
Knox,
Montgomery,
Murphy
year we won't be tn parttcularfor
rookies,
free agents and a
ly fast pools for ctther the and Btll Htckcox wt lh 2·58 42 tn
NCAA or AAU meet The the 400-yard freestyle relay. handful of veterans lh1s week
Oh10 Slate' s Ttm Moore at Scottsdale, Artz.
sw tlllll1ers w1 ll be better, but
The camp will open Wednes·
repeated for the one-meter
the recorda won't go "
day
and run through Saturday
UCLA caplatn Ttm McDon- drtvtng crown and added the
do uble
wor kouts
nell, who won the 200-ya rd three-meter as well. Washm~­ wtth
scheduled
for
Thursday
. and
lon's
Robin
Backhaus
look
the
fr eestyle and set a record of
Frtday
1 37.75, called the pool "fantas-- 200-yard butterfly a nd Mtke
ttc," lite same \\Ord used by
Indtana 's Fl ed Tyler , wtth a
1· 50 62 m the 200-yard mdivtdual medley
Also m the record book are:
I'M TELLING 4A,
F\?ED FI'DM
- Na ber, Mark Cha lfteld,
E'vEI&lt;4THif.l6
L
Joe Bo ttom and Scott Ftndorlf,
F'EAD
J 19 22 m the 400-yard medley
relay
- Dick Thomas, John Mur·
phy. Jun Montgomery and
Tyler wtth 6 36 29 lo' Indiana
m the 800-yard freestyle relay .
- .Jonty Sktnner, Alabama, a
So uth Afrtcan who ma y seek

Jm1 Slaton and Pat Osburn
Hen ry Aaro n, baseball 's alltune home 1 un king, &lt;.:rune
LAKELAND, Fla 1UPI I \llthm a foot ol getlmg Ius !trsl
The
Cmctnnall Reds co llected
spn ng tra m10g homer w1th a
o75-foot double off sta rter and 19 h1ts and DetrOit 15 here
loser Fritz Peterson 111 the f1flh Sunrlny 1n a frec-swmgw g
e-xlnhltlon ga me won by the
1nnmg
Buddy Bell dnd Charlie Ttgers 13-12 on Btl! Fre&lt;han' s
mu19'&gt;nuth E lhngSl'll had a 1- l
Sptkcs had lwo Juts each fo1 the h\ o-run smgle wtth one out m
record .111cl :1 12 earned run
the last of the mnth mmng
average Ut e last ljil lf of 1974 lnd wns
The contest was htghl!ghted
Now 5-7 m cxlubttlon pla y,
'1-\hl lc w1th the lmhans and
by
s1x home runs. one tnple
Snnlh had balled .342 and 312 Cleveland played the Chicago
.1nd four doubles
the past two seasons w1lh the Cu bs today and meet the
Freehan's homer and gameUmvt·rslt} of A1 1zona Tuesday
Ok lahoma Ctty farm tea m
wmmng smgle gave hun four
runs lx1 tted tn for the day Also
luttlng home runs for DetrOit
were Dan Meye r and Art
James.
F'or Cl nl'mrwtl, Joe Morgan
and B1 ll Plwnmer each had
thrcc-1 un homers anct teamrnc~te George Foster htt a solo
pomts
as
New
York
outscmed
losses '111&lt;' Nets npped Sa n
th e Spurs, 42·19, m the second shot
Antonto. IJ0- 104, Sunda)
Mtckey Lol!rh, who co nKen tuck) , led by center A1us ponod
t
mue~
to struggle th is sprm g,
Sptnl&lt;
116,
Q's
112·
Gilmore, had a &lt;:JwnC'(' tu beat
\fHS
t._1gged
for e1ght Cmcmnat1
Freddte l.ev. ts scored 29
MemphiS 111 the fma l rnmute of
the f ou1 th quarter LoUi e pomts as St l.ous handed San run s m the - second uuung
Dmnp1e1. \\ hu thul 27 pomts, h tt Dt ego its e tghth stra1 ght I .ohch now has a 6 65 earned
two fll'(' throws to g1ve the defea t. Th e loss ehmmated Sa n run average
Pedro Borbon, who gave up
Dtego from the ABA playoffs
Co lonels a 100-99 le.HI
th
e
fmal three Delrotl runs m
Kentuck y's Ron Th omas The Sptrits, who have bea ten
then went to the fou l Ime with San D1ego five tunes m seven hts two mmn gs of work, was
19 seconds left but Jut only one games th1s season, have al- th e losing pttcher.
of thl'e&lt; h ee throws and a ttpm ready chnched a playoff spot
UCLA FAVORED
Pacers 128. Nuggets 121:'
by Johnson \l ith 13 seco nds to
LAS VEGAS. Nev I UPI) Billy Kmght had 32 pomls
play lle&lt;l the score at 101 A
6RE60t?Y
Oddsma
ket· Jtmmy " Th e
and
Geor
~e
McGmms
30to
lead
KOIVTOS ??.'.'
missed Kent ucky shot at the
YOU MEAN
buzzer sent th e ga me mto Indtana past Denver. Rookte Greek" Snyder says UCLA is
TH E GREEK
to
wm
tomght
's
NCAA
favored
Bobby Jones had a career ~u gh
over ltme
..
MILLIONAIRE?
32 powts and 16 rebounds m champtonshtp by one potnt
D&lt;~mp1er scored etght of the
over Kentucky
12 pomts the Colonels made m l eadm ~ the Nuggets
overtun e ami propelled the
tea m to victo ry. Geo rge Carter
led the Sounds wt lh 32 pomls,
followed by Johnson wtth 26
Elsewhere, St. Louts edged
San Diego, 116-112, and lndta na
beat De nver, 1211-121 .
Nets t30, Spu rs liJ.I :
Led by Juhus Ervtng's 40
pomts, the Nets bl'oke a fo urCHARLESTON, W Va (UP! ) rota! that stood a dozen yeru·s
Other athletes selected Ill~ame los mg strea k wlu le
- The la te J1m Thorpe ,
eluded
Bob Rtchards, the only
OH, ONE OII&lt;ER n&lt;ING .. I TRU5T YOU
snnppln g Sun Antomo's seven- legendary Indian athlete whose
WILL BE DISCREET. YOU NEVER
man
to
capture
two
Gold
game wm streak Ervmg a nd meteu n c nse m track was
KONTOS, WE MADE A f:EW E/Z.
SAW ME .. AND KNOW NOTHING
Medals
m
the
Olymptc
pole
AP&lt;.f/JSlitfENTS AND THE EQUIPWendell Lad11cl teamed for 22 ec lipsed by a flap over
OF MY CONNECTION
MENT YOU WANT WILL BE
va ull event ; Helen Stephens,
WI'TH ATl&lt;ENA
profess tona l statu s that
DE LI VERED 1D ATHENA
FASHION:'&gt;!
stnpped htm of Olym ptc wnmer of the liJO.ineter m 11 5,
FA:'&gt;HIONS IATELY.'
sett10g a world mark 10 the 1936
medals, was al)1ong 13 men and
IMMEJ)
Ber lin Olymptcs; Horace
women mducted Sa turday mto
Ashenfel ter Ill. the 1949 NCAA
the Nahona I Track and Fteld
t\\o o-m1le-run champion as a
Hall of ~· ame
Thorpe, a Sac-Fox Indtan colle~tan at Penn State; Allee
Coachmun Dav1s, .., mner of 25
who became the only com·
AAU md oo r and outdoor cham(Pol't cr ) co nlmually sc &lt;H Cll pot1to1 to wm both the pen- pwnshtps m the sprmls and
from outside or got the ball ta thlon a nd deca thlon tn !ugh JWnp; Ralph Metcalfe,
Olympic htstory, a nd John B.
• .............
• " ' " ,.,,r ...,.
mstde."
who won more sprmt titles than
Flan
aga
n,
anot
her
Olymptc
Pol'ter had 12 pomts and Ute
" ny uf h1 s contempora n es
leHgue leader 111 ass1sts helped superstar of the early 1900s, dunng hts years at Marquette ,
out on II baskets to close to were th e only deceased Bobby Joe Morrow, wtnner of
MEANWII!Lf...
WHAT L CALL
I KNOW . I KNOW .I'LL
WE NEED
athletes
chosen
fo
r
the
hall
.SERVICE
! .I ALWAYS MID
CHECK
WITl-1
TI-lE
FACJDRY
wtlhm two of the B ~ll e t:; ' allTI-105E IMCHINES
fONMUCH
® I M50RRY,MISS
the 100 and 200 meters, who
IT
NEVER
PAYS TO SEND
Coaches
mducted
were
Wtl·
AND
SEE
WHAT
.I
CAN
DO
tDNGERWILL
055PERATElY.'
.VINKLE 1 BUT TI-lE
time mark of 606 set by Arch1e
ancho!'ed the world record
::--.---\.A BOY ON AMAIVIS JOf&gt;l
1DIOXPEDITE TI-IINGBI
WE
HAVE TO
"Btll
"
Easton
and
Edburn
EQUIPMENT
Clark m 1'971-72.
spnnt relay team m the 1956
W41T2
BQNNAZ O@ERED
Whtle Hayes was hav mg ward · Hunt, and the lone con- Melbourne Olympics. Wtlham
HASN'T
ARRIVED
success with hts gan1e, wluch trtbutor selected was Edward A Toomey. wmner of the
&gt;ET
included 11 rebounds and four M. "Ted " Hayde n
natto~a l AAU pentathlon title
Eas ton coached winnm g
blocks, Chi&lt;;_a go's Bob Love
four tunes m a ftv e-year span
teams
at Hammond, lnd , High
was stntgghng.
m 1960-64; and Stella Walsh,
" He took the good shots bul Sc hool, Drake and Kansas who wun ftrst place m the 100
they just didn 't fall for hun," From 1951 to 1959, hts Kansas meters 10 the 1932 Olympics
Hayes noted. "He got mto early teams landed cross-country, and sel'O nd place m the same
foul trou ble a nd he couldn't mdoor a nd outd oor NCAA even t four years later
crowns whtl e a mass in g a
play the way he wanted to "
slnng
of 24 straight cham·
Chicago's Nate Thurmond
also had his problems. The 6-11 p10nslups.
Hurt , a Brookneal, Pa •
center , whc could have tied up
e,
produced
etght
nallv
Hayes tnside, didn't pllly after
se
parate
NCAA
titles
fo r
the first pertod, feel mg the
Morgan State as well as a
effects of the nu .
dozen
AAU cha mpiOnships.
Elsewhere, New York beat
Utree NCAA relay champions,
Milwaukee, 111-99, Seattle
downed Portland. 98..'l8, New and stx AA U relay cham·
Orleans edged AUa ntu, 108-105. pionshtp efforts
Hayden was cited for his
PO INT PLEASANT - An
and Los Ange les slopped
creatton of the University of appea l Is bemg made fm public
Phoenix, 104-90
C'htcago Track Club , viewed as su ppm·t m the form of cash
Kmcks lll, Bucks 99:
a velucle for amateur track dorldttons to help the n e wl~ ­
New York look a gtant step
.&amp;Rd field deve lopment in !o11ned
Potnl
Pleasan t
forwa t·d m tls btd for a wild
E met gency -Rescue Squad
ca rd pla yo ff spot by beating Al:ncnca
Thorpe,
whose real name,
Pluhp E Ba ll , squad clue!,
Milwaukee, despite 32 points
Wa-Tho-Huck
meant
"brtght
scud
\ Oiunteers formed the
by Kareem Abdui.Jabbar. Earl
path,"
won
hts
dua
l
honors
at
umt,
drC\\
up then char ter and
Monroe's 24i)oin t performance
helped reduce New York's the 1912 Stockholm Olymptc b)-ll:.I\\ S, ,md haH~ ta ken
NOW ,ILL HIRE 1HE BEST TALENT
lVE Gar Tl&lt;E PLANT AND
EQUIPMENT I NEED TO
AVAILABLE·- REGARDLESS OF
magtc number for chnchmg to games. His score was 700 stan dard fn·st a1d r l a~ses
COMPETE WITH WINNIE
IC05Tl7. AND ATI-IENA FA17HIONB
three with four left. John pomts nbove hts ' closest Prese11tly they mE' workmg
WINKLES OONNAZ
compehlor
m
the
decathlon-&lt;\
wt
th
Pleasant
Valle)
Hosptlal
WILL 8C IN /3(/61NE6Sl
Gianelli had 21 pomts and· 10
FASH IONS ..
111 eonJ unchon \\ lth Enterge ncy
rebounds for New York
Medtcal Tedm tctan Tratmng
Sonirs 98, Blazers 88 :
\1 htch began Nov 23
Classes
l .ed by Spencer Haywood's PARSONS SENf DOWN
ST. LOUIS I UP! I - The St las I year .
40 points, Seattle clinclled lhe
Pomt Pleasant's umt hopes
first playoff berth tis e\l(ht- Louis Cardmals Sunday sent
l&lt;l
purehase a motor veh1cle
year l11story by beatmg Port· pttcher BtU Parsons to their
med1ral
land. The vtclory clinched mmor leag ue co mplex for cwd necessa ry
'
cqmpment,
Ba
ll
smd.
but
needs
reasstgnment.
reducmg
.thetr
second place m the Pactfic
fmnnc1al
help
from
the
comDil&gt;ision. The Somes will meet roster to 29.
mumty
either Detrm t or Milwaukee m
Satd Ball. I'm sure people
a best-of-three playoff senes.
art'
aware of the formation of
Jazz 108, Hawks 105: ·
fH E PROBLEM
'
the
Point Pleas.1 nt Rescue
Otlo Moore blocked two shots
SANTIAGO. Chile (UPI) THAT'S FUNNY! MlOEVER
IVE SPENT '111E WHOLE
IF WE DON'T GET 11-IAT
late in the ga nie and Nate The Ch tlean Tennis Federation Squad, "htch came about as a
I/ORNING ON '111E PHONE
TOO&lt; CM:fl. 'THE ' HOUSE
result
of
the
1965
Htghway
EQUIPMENT
WE
Wtlltanls hit 18 points to lead says tt ts ready to meet So uth
AND
NO-ONE
SEEMS
OF Ml&lt;!Dll' DOE$N'T
ORDERED,
WE'RE
· New Orleans past Allan! a. Nrica in the Davts Cup lmals Safely Act spec t!yin g t)Je
&amp;!:EM lD 6E HAVII-.G ANY
GOIN6100ET
TO HAVE 'THE KIND
TROU f&gt;lE GETTING WHAT·
MORE AND
OF M'\CHINES
Moore. who scored e tght of the Amertcan Zone. but lhe standards of equipment and
training
reqUired
to
pro\'
tde
EVER THEY
WE
NEED.
MORE
OF
pomts. blocked two Atlanta problem now is to lind a stte for
NEED !
n4E5E.
ambulance
servtce.
This
act
shots with the Jazz ahead by a Ute games
wen t m to effPCt January l. 1975
pomt Then he set up Wtlliruns'
alld has resulted in the anlayup and added a tipin to put
llQ\U]C&lt;'Illent that se\'eral local
RECORDS BEffERED
New Orleans ahead by fl \'e
fw1eral homes \\ Ould not hare
VALENCIA. Calif IUPI) Lakt•rs 104. Swts 90 .
Gat! Goodric.h scor ed 28 UCI.A 's J uhe Brown beltered ambulance sen tee after that ..
Ball asks that checks be
points and sat out the fmal the women 's world trat:k
made
pa) able to the Point
etght mmutes after Los rt'COrds m the 10,000 meters
Angeles spurted lo an 87-74 and six nules Saturday at the Pleasant Rescue Squad, c-0
lead over Phoenix. Elmore Southern Pacthc AAU cham- Plnhp E. Ball, Chtel. 11&gt;
Streel,
P01nt
Smith contributed 16 points, 15 pionship. She ran the 10,000 Pleasant
Pleasant.
W
Vw.
25550
rebounds and five blocked meters m 35 :00 flat, and. her
Donauons or " pledges are
' shots as Los Angeles won its 33:52 8 along the way for SIX
Wl'leomcd.
e1ghth game m the last 12.
nules also bettered the rc~11rd

Colonels remain half-game
behind Nets in ABA chase
Br United Press International

c u :Vfi.AND !UP!) - Wtl"~
t·on mlerahle dSStstance from
Cle ve l, nd State 's · Super
Pool ," ( ollegtate sw1mrners
\\ IJ)C'(\ out national records tn 10
of Hi events m the fo w--day
52nd ,mnual NCAA s.. mumng
and b tvtng Cham pwnslup
whtch ended he1 e Saturday
mght
The Umvers1ty of Southern
Ccdtform cJ's John Naber set
three re &lt;· ords- the 500-yard
freestyle 14 20 50 1, the 100yard backst1 oke 1 49 65) and
th e 200-)al d backstr oke
11 46 82J-and helped the
TroJans 400-)a l d medley relay
team set another 13 19.22.1
·I'd be dtsappomted tf I
lmd n t :m um my best tunes
here, " Naber sa td .
The 1e&lt;mds do not qualify as
wu1 ld standards , however , .
\\: h1ch must be set m a S~rnelt!r
pool CSU's 25-ya rder gtves
sw1mmer the advantage of
tw1ce as many turns, and tls l:lfoot depth and well-&lt;leSigned
gutters nummtze wc.~ve actiOn .
"The biggest help, though, ts
1n a klcl' s hea d, " smd UCLA
coach George Hames · He
comes he1e am! ~ees this and

Notes . ...

By Mrs. 0. J. Pennington
Rose Garden Club
APRIL GARDENING
When cultivating m the garden be careful not to cut off the
growmg ttps of the lilies. Scatter aMual poppy seeds m the
borders or anywhere else you wish to have them.
Seeds of annuals should be planted as soon as the ground is
ready and lhe danger of frost ts over. Bordeaux mixture can be
used to advantage on many of lhe perenmals, mcluding peonies,
when !hey start to grow.
Clematis pan1culata may be cut down almost to the ground.
It will make rapid growth and flower m' the fall Lily-&lt;Jf-theValley clumps should be set out now. Plant them with the tops of
the ptps JUSt even wtth lhe ground.
Spraying and dushng delphmtwns, holly hocks, and phlox
should be begun as soon as the plants start to grow, using
Boreaux nusture, sulphur, or one of the propeitary remedtes.
There lS no better tune for diVIdtng delphiruwns and for makmg
new plantations than as soon as the plants start in the spring. It is
not necessary to have large clumps. Three good crowns with a
well-&lt;leveloped root are sufftc1ent.
The pruning of roses should be hmshed as soon as possible
cutting back to live wood and cuttmg the stems still more ti
particularly fine blooms are destred. Comparatively ltght
pruning may be pracllced if owner prefers a profuston of blooms
Clean out all old foliage and weeds from among trises before
the plants have grown so much that th1s work would be difficult
Make cuttings of house plants such as coleus, wandermg Jew, and
other easy-growing vartet1es so !hat they may be set out in lhe
garden at the end of May .
It 1s not too late to start tubers of lbe tuberous-rooted begonia
indoors. Plant them m a box of sot! lightened wilh leal mold and
sand. The side of lhe tuber showmg and irregular cavity ts the
top. Plant them just barely below the surface. Sllade boxes from
strong light.
Lilies are benefitted by a mulch of old well-rotted manure
after the growths are above ground.
Oriental popp1es leave a blg bare gap when they die down.
Scarlet sage or ryyacinlhus cymdicans make a good succession.
Perennial borders must be deeply prepared with fertilizer
mixed in bottom layer of soil if plants are to grow well and
remam m good condition for several years . Barnyard manure is
excellent lor this purpose if it is sufficiently well-rotted. The
perennial flower garden should be given much attention at this
time. Divide the large clumps of such perennial plants as phlox,
delphimum, golden glow, and others. Trim out the dead tops of
old plants and give the bed a good cleaning up .
Plan to grow some sunflowers. You and the birda will both
have some fun this fall .

SORRY! Last week's. Winnie Winkle
was missing from our ·package

Peerless Sac-Fox
in Tracks' Hall

BY POLLY CRAMER

Check store about
unwrinkling rug

STl!AMilmiACliON

CARPET
CLEANING
(OH IOCATIOH)

CLEANING
1B
(~r JOt{. ,
7(/, J... ·, ~ ,.t _,.,. ,
,..,.ICH1'

jFoR FREE ESTIMAT
CALL, tt2-Hl5
AT ANYTIME

., Ingels FurnibnMrooLEPORT
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.

Public appeal

made for help

on ambulance

(Now, contin..ie.'OD. comic page~

'
•

'

unwtped streaks.- MRS. E. D.
POLLY' PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I JUSt made
DEAR POLLY - Last week
a
discovery I wa11t to share
I bought a 9x12-foot rug !hat IS
full of folds and wrmkles !hal wtth others smce tl is a savings
have not smoothed out. I would m electnctty. One of my outltke to know how to ge l rid of side hghts burned out The only
them. My daughter suggested bulb I had to use for
puttmg it m a big rug dryer at replacement was a 15 watt. I
the laundromat but I thmk the put In m and found tt g1ves
rug would have to be wei lo do plenty of light to see by so I wtll
never use stronger bulbs
this What do you think ' outside. - NAOMI.
CLEO
DEAR POLLY - All stores
DEAR CLEO - I really
cannot make a suggestion do not have current newspaper
because you did not say what adverttsing avat lable at lhe1r
your rug was made of - cotton, checkout counters . When
nylon, wool or whatever. I taking advantage of spec1als
would certainly call the firm listed in ads I take the ENTIRE
from which the rug was pur- ad, not for just the items I am
chased. II this produces purchasing, to the store. If the
nothing consult the attendant clerk accidentally or even
at the laundromat who can mtentionally rings up tqe
doubtless give you some good wrong amount you can whip
advice about putting it in the out the paper and have proof in
dryer. Have you tried ho)ding a black and white . Saves time
steam iron over, not on, it to and mtsunderst.anding on both
see If tbe steam would help? stdes - MRS. C W.
Weight II down until dry. The
nap would have to be brushed r:;~:.P2•J•W.* .a .•
up alternards. -POLLY.

i
My Pet !i.

DEAR POLLY ~
Peeve ts with tiJose service
station atlendan ls who grasp
the wmdshteld wtpers when ~
cleaning the windshield. Each
Maj General James Harfinger leaves a wiper blade
tinger
of Maxwell Air Force
bent and then contact cannot
be made with lhe glass when it Base in Alabama, left today
lS turned on so one ts left with after spending Easter weekend
here with his mother, Mrs.
Violet Harltnger, and Mrs.
Clyda Allensworth.
Mr. and Mrs . Wtlliam Bland
of Akron were Easter guests of
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds. They
came espectally lor his
motqer , Mrs. Nma Bland, who
has been here wtth Mrs
Reynolds for lhe past three
weeks.
Mrs. Mary Meinbart, til for ·
many months, was able to
attend services at lhe Mtddleport Church of Chnst
Easter mornmg.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hinkle
of Chesapeake were Easter
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Swift and other relatives.
Mrs . Mabel Walburn ,
recenlly confined to an Akron
hospital, was •returned home
Saturday by her daughter,
Mrs. Marcella Phillips.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert . Jay,
Columbus 1 were Easter

I

Middleport
Personal Notes

Krautter a nd Mrs. Offutt was
the greeter
Featured m the church
decorations were numerous
lihes and palms On lhe baptismal font was a Madonna !ted
wtth gold velvet nbbon, the gtft
of Mrs Kathleen Francts tn
memory of her husband A
cross flanked by hiles a top a
grassy mound was spotlighted
tn blue, and 'a Madonna
arrange ment on the com.
munion table was hghted wtth
a white spotlight
Lihes were g1ven m memory
of Mr and Mrs Wilham Hines
by Mr and Mrs .John Terrell,
Mr and Mrs Eddte Epple by
Mr and Mrs John Terrell,
Mrs Clara Gerhart by Mr . and
Mrs. Joe Struble and son,
Mtke, Mr and Mrs. William
Grueser by the famtly, Mr. and
Mrs Albert Kasper by Mr and
Mrs. RO) Smith and family and
Mr and Mrs. Robert Arnold ;
Mr and Mrs W. A. Ebersbach
by Mtss Sybtl Ebersbach , Carl
Wtlliant Kautz by Mr and Mrs
Lawrence Stewart and family ;
Fred Dessa uer by Mrs Eva
Dessa uer; Mr and Mrs. Harry
Prortor by Mr and Mrs. Ralph
Graves and Kay Proc tor ;
Cha rles Frecker by Roy and
Alho Holter; wnnam Grtlfllh
b~ Mrs. Clara Grt l!ith

Mr and Mrs. John Blaettnar
by the Fred Blaettnar family ;
Cha rl es J . Werry by his
family ; Freda and Leste r
Fauber by Marguerite Meyer ;
Mr and Mrs. Theodore Mora
by the Lawrence Stewart
family ; Lafe and Georg ta
Wtlliamson by thetr Iamtly ;
the Rev W. K. Rtggs by Ray
and Mary Rtggs, Albert Werry
by hts famtly; Mr. and Mrs. C.
D. Frecker by Roy and Ada
Holter , Mr . and Mrs. Henry
Slj'atlle br Helen Lyons and
Henri etta J enkms; Homer
Holler by Ada. Holter; Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Ewtng; Sr., by Mr.
and Mrs. Benny Ewing; Mr
and Mrs Earl Young by the
famtly ; Henry Ewmg by Mrs
Beulah Ewmg and fam1ly;
Majorte Woodard by Albert
Woodard, Fred Rosenbaum by
Mrs. Lou1se Rosenbawn and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Rosenbawn ; Mr . and Mrs
Earl Young by Mr. and Mrs
Hobar t Young, and Donald
Houck by Mrs Mane Houck
a nd
Donna
The church decoratm g
com mittee extended a vote of
thanks by lhe nunister consisted of Mrs. Pat Holter, Mrs
Neutzling, Mrs . Wtlma Terrell,
Mrs. Ginlher, Mrs. Ada Holter,
assisted by Mary Blaettnar
and Becky Thomas.

.

'Over 80s ' hottored during party

Polly's Poin+"".."

Hayes nets 37 markers

I

Spectal mustc by the choir of'
Trt nity Chur~h was a fea llll'e of
both the Easter sunrise and
mornmg worship se rvices
conducted by lhe Rev W. H
Perrin
Mrs. Alice Nease directed
the choir, accompanied at the
organ by Mrs. Carne Neulzling, 10 "Where Have Ye Laid
Htm '," "He is Risen" with
Mrs. Lois Blll't as solmst, and
the " Hallelu jah Chorus."
Organ prelude by Mrs. Neutzhng was "The Res\ll'reclton "
and lhe processtonal was
"Chnsl the Lord Is R1sen
Today."
Smgmg m lhe chotr were Ben
Neulzling, Dtck Nease, Jeff
Burl , Don Thomas, Fred Ruth,
Robert Hartley, Fred Blaettnar , Mrs. Burt, Melanie Burt,
Rose
Gmther,
Clarice
Krautter , Barbara Offutt, Pal
Holte r , Mary Rtggs, Gay
Perrtn, Pat Young, Fa tlh
Perrtn , Carolyn Thomas,
Becky Thomas, Lisa Thomas.
and Terrt Russell.
Followtng the sunnse ser·
vtce, breakfast was served by
lhe women of lhe church.
Communton was giVen at tho
mormng worship servtl t .
Us hers were David s,,l'l,
Davtd Hams, Eddte Hol k 1.
Rtck Blaettnar . and Kelt.

A weekly feature of Me~g 5
County Garden Club members

Bullets trip Bulls as
By Uulted Press Internallonal
Elvm Hayes' 37-pomt perlor-·
mance Sunday afternoon ga ve
the Washington Bullets an
tmportant Nationa l Basketball
Associa tiOn victory over the
Chicago Bulls in a nationally
televised game between d!Vlston leaders.
Hayes' output m lhe 9~2
vic tory ,
wh ich
kept
Washmgton ahead of idle
Boston in the duel lor the best
record in the NBA, more than
made up lor fo lll'-pomt performance by Phtl Chenier, his
worst o{fensive showmg of the
season.
" When one player lS off, you
have to put on as much presure
as possible," explained Hayes,
whc tntssed his se8S&lt;ln-high
pomt tot&lt;t l by two. "You've got
to just play your ga me, run
your palterns and hope thmgs
work out."
Hayes had 10 hrst.quarter
points and 18 by haUtune as
Washington surged ,to a 4&amp;.35
lead. The !Hoot-9, seven-year
veteran then scored 17 thirdquarter pclnls as the Bullets
expanded thetr lead to 74.W.
"We got help from everybody, " Hayes sa id . " Jtmm y
1Jones) came in and took up
the slack His back-to-back
baskets in the third penod
rea lly helped. And Kevm

Special music ~by choir
.highlighted two services

!

llocking.

TUC',SON, Anz t UPl ) Sunday wa s the longest day of
spring training for new Cleveland Indtans' manager Frank
RoblllS()n.
Ftrst he watched ht s team
suffer a 6-0 loss to the
Mtlwaukee Brewers . a defeat
thai ended the India ns' four
game wtnrung streak.
Nter the defeat Robmson
faced the task of maktng Jus
ftrst maJor squad cut of the
spring He spent more than an
hour m private t&lt;t lks wtlh stx
pla yers reassigned to the Indians 1ninor league trmning
camp.

••
••

Mrs. Glenna Milhoan, 89, of
Long Bottom , was presented
an orchid corsage as the oldest
btrlhday honoree In March at
the Senior Citt zens Cen ter
monthly party Thursday
Others uover 80" recogmzed
and pre sen ted flowers were
Dessie Patterson, Great Bend;
Gladys Cuckler, Pomeroy;
Charlie Bennett, Mtddleporl;
Edna Morgan, Flatwoods, and
Roscoe Hollon, Chester.
Also ce lebrating birthdays

~!ii!Y'OO? w:~-.~~~=~'''f· Altar banked bj lilies :
~
I
i~ altarMemorial
lilies banked lhe and Miss Nma Barnett; wtU
of the Moun! Moriah Winston a nd Charles Wlnatog
i
,
~ Baptist Church. in Middleport by Mrs. Nellie Winston an~
~

¥j
~

Soc aI
caIen dar

1::: {or the Easter Sunday services. Mrs. Virginia Stallworth; Mt&lt;:
~ ' Lilies were gtve n mmemory and Mrs. O&amp;~;ar Hardaway by
'
» of the Bates lam.tly by Clyde Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Rlcharda'!
MONDAY
Lynch of Colwnbus; Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Con Young by
MEIGS County Salon 710, Mrs Fred Jackson by Mrs. Mr. a nd Mrs. Douglas
Eig ht and Forty, 7 30 p.m. , Campbell Harper; Mrs Arlena Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Daii
home of Mrs. Marie Boyd
Reese by Mrs Ernest Bowles, Jackson by David Jacksonj
Mrs Ervm Bnwngardner, nnd Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Guthrie
REGULAR
MEETING Miss Julia Reese; Mrs. Nan by Billy GutiJrle; and Mr. ani!
Umted Methodtsl Men of Metgs Barnett by Mrs Julw Wt lhams Mrs. Aaron WilliBJrul by Mr.
County , 7· 45 p.m. at East
and Mrs. Carl Williams.
•
Letar t Church. Some tmporlant matters to be dtscussed.
Charles McVey, Ia) speaker,
will be guest speaker
RUTLAND BaSeball l£ague,
7 p.m at old Rutland Htgh
Sc hoo l Gym
Everyone
welcome.
TUESDAY
STATED meeting of Middleport Masomc Lodge 363,
7:30p .m. at temple All Mas ter
Masons arc mvlted
MEIGS Saddle Stllers Club,
7:30 p m at Juntor Kennedy
re stdence, Tuppers Plains.
New members welcome Each
old member ts to take a
potential new member
ANNIVERSARY Dtnner of
Ladtes Auxihury, Mtddleport
Ftre Department, 6 30 p m at
Osca r's tn Galhpohs Members
to meet·at ftre statwn a t 5: 45
p.m.
OHIO Eta Pht Chapter, Beta
Sigma Pht Soronty, 7:30 p.ln
at the Columbus and Southern
Ohto Eleclrtc Co oflt ce. Gtrl of
the year lo be elected. Cultural
report by Dollie Musser , wtth
Libby Sayre and Joyce Bar·
timus, hostesses.

GREEN·THINGS
GROW WELL
'

HERE!

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Lodge 164 F&amp;AM
7 30 p m. All master masons
invited

during the month were Hazel on March 9
Thomson, Bradbury; Edtth
The Rev . Floy d Shook,
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
Betzing, Tuppers Plains; Ahce pastor of the Laurel Cliff Free Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m. at the
Grant, Asa Jo~dan , and Wayne Me thodist Church, gave the home of Dr . Kathryn Phtlson.
Harrtson, Mtddleport; B1ll blessing before the dmner al Mrs. James Titus to review
Watson, Pomeroy; Orvtlle - noon. Bill Wa tson sang a solo, "Working" by Studs Terkel.
Hogue , Rutland; Bertha and Thora Blackwood gave a Roll call wtll be a commen t on
Parker, Laurel Chff; Cora readtng. Present to dtScuss the program.
Htlton, Portland , Carol Taylor, homestead exempli on and tax
Ra cine, a nd Wilhelmma rates m the county was Howard
Thoma, Chester
Frank , Meigs County audttor. Surprise dinner
Flowers were also pliesented
to Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Ntce, the
given at OU Inn
former Audra Keyse, mamed
Announ ced during the
Mrs. Arnold Rt chards of
gathering were several acMiddl
epo r t was IJonored
tivities planned for thts spring.
Sunday
wtth a surprise birth·
A tnp on the Chaperon has
been scheduled for May 15 at a day dmner at the Universtly
Hos hng the
cost of $3 per person . Also Inn, Athens.
r
celebratiOn
were
her son-m·
an noun ced was the 1975
Governor's Conference on law and daughter, Mr . and
Agmg to be held Apnll5 and 16 Mrs. Edward Smith, ColumBy Helen Bottel
at the Lausche Building on the bus, and daughter , Mrs . Ann
Ohio Sta te Fairgrounds in Angel.
Gtfls were presented to Mrs.
Columbus. Mrs
Eleanor
Help! Who Needs His Kind?
Rtchards
. Atlendmg the
Thomas, Center director ,
celebration
were Arn old
Dear Helen :
advtses lhal lunch for each day
A man on our block runs to belp out whether you need it or will be $4 and that dormitory Rtchards, Mrs Angel and son,
not. Pamting lhe house, weeding the yard: !here he is. Which ts facili ties at Rhodes Center on Kevin, Mr. and Mrs. Smith,
okay sometunes, but he expects return favors that often cost us the fairgrounds will be chtldren,
Vaughn
a nd
more than the help we don't really want.
Saglenda,
Mrs.
Campbell
· a vailable at $5 per person.
No matter what type of busmess we're in, he hmts for
Harper, and the Rev. and Mrs.
freebies or discounts. H we don't come through, we lee! guilty.
Henry Key , David and Jenny .
Anyone desinng to attend the
Since we can't say outright, "We don't want you puttermg
Conference is asked to pick up
around!," what can we do' - NEIGHBORS
In 1971, Army Lt. William
registration blanks at the
Calley
was sentenced to life
Center this week since
Dear Neighbors:
'
unprtsonment
for his part In
When "neighborliness" is linked to the wallet, it's best to cut registration ts to be completed
lhe colUlection . How' With a "Thanks for your help," but no by April 10. Also announced by the slaying of 22 Vietnamese
Mrs. Thomas ts the ballroom civilians.
gratuities (and no gmlt feelings).
I mean, ignore !his man's hmts lor freebies until he learns dancing course to be offered at
!hat "I'll scratch your back if you scratch mine" only works the center with the first sesston
on April 10 at 12 30 p.m
when both parties have an itch. - H.

WHY
NOT
PLANT

••

•

'

'

YOUR

SAVINGS
TODAY?
You might say we've got a green thumbmoney green l We can show you a whole
variety of savings plans from regular passbook savings to certificate savings- each
plan designed to suit your particular budget requirements and savings goals! So
drop in today and plant your savings with
us!

Helen Help

Us.

•

Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Co.
POMEROY, OMIO

MEMBER FDIC
MEMBER
FEDERAL RESERVE
SYSTEM
U OIIAl DIPDIIT IHIUIAHCl COIN&gt;UIIOfll

+++
Dear Helen:
I took a frtend out for a drive. This person is arways telling
me what to do. We missed our freeway entrance, and he said it
was okay to make a U.turn at lhe next road leading back. I took
his word and didn't read lhe sign, which, I learned too late, satd

your
pick:

uNo U-Turn."

We got stopped by a cop. The fine was $35, as it was my
second citation. The first happened when !his friend also directed
me wrong.
Neither lime did he offer to pay half. Sllould I send him a bill,
since my hmts fall on barren ground ? - RE-FINED

1 DAY ONLY

O a new car
D a new camper
O a new boat
D all of the
above

Dear Re-Fined :
That depends on whether you value your money more !han
this friendship.
- (But I would say, "Leave lhe drtving to me!," next time
you're out. And I'd start reading my own road s1gns.)- H.

1 ~ !2r&gt; c~ll you •

10('0! I £' •

WED., APRIL 2
10 AM

ro 5 PM

N;t l oon y,o de

rl f' T FIII~

en

Ct'lm

p let&lt;&gt; \' '11' stop 1on,t nc1ng ,1 1

+++

lh &lt;J • 1!lll • r ~I" S l rl•ou qh

Dear Helen :
About20years ago , I had an affair with my sister's husband.
It ended almost before tl began, and I begged her forgiveness
before I got married and moved away. She told me to drop dead.
Now I'm moving back and I want her friendship . I've been
told by olher relatives that she'd sp1t m my face if she saw me.
Sllould I write once more and ask for a second chance ? - N. W.

N ,tl " "' ' 1c Ccmsum(' r
:.,e rvr(" ('S ~~~
o n a lmost

.l" V con~u mN

ou

c h ase

r .1~ .. yO rJ' p rr k a nd c a ll
y ou r r1111 0 11WI/ 1 ~ agto n l
N~· o n Hrd e '" C
ll'l ~ ou r srd e

P. J. PAULEY
307 Sprmg Ave .. Pomeroy
Ph 992-2318

Dear N. :
Of course you should write, but don't be too devastated if
your stSter doesn't answer.
I'd guess her jealousy started long before the affair; and this
kind of rivalry doesn't mellow with time. To her, your "second
chance" ought read, "at my husband." - H.
'
weekend guests of Mr and
Mrs. William T. Grueser. They
were joined at the Grueser
home for dinner by Mr. and
M~s . Michael Gerlach and
daughter, Tara , and Mrs.
Clyda Allensworth.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Brannan
spent Easter Sunday at West
Union VISiting Mr. Brennan's
Wlcle, Clarence .Brannan, and
other relatives.

sPEciAL

~~ I'"' *

0'

.O.nor Ito &lt;! '"'~

~ U!y~l 11\t" !I " CI CO II'IOI" 'f
Colv "' D~ I 0~ •0

!-!em• e ll &lt;'

Wheel

OFFER

Buy 1 Wheel at .$14fl

PURatASE 2nd $}}47
WHEELFOR

'

AT TIME OF SlniNG.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
'

WHERE: -

SOLD SEPARATELY
AT$80.50 EACH

GUNITE TAl 18K

Regular Price 5109.90

WHILE SUPPLY LASTS!

For most popular trailers and dead axles
euept Fru.

OFF ICE HOURS t:30 to 12; 2 TO 5 (CLOSE AT
NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,'

GROUPS TAKEN •1.00 PER PERSON

'

THE PARTS ·BAR~
Gallipolis, Ohio

Ph. (614) 446-4670

RUTLAND FURNITURE
TELL YOUR FRIENDS,
THEY WILL BE
• GLAD YOU DID!

RUTLAND, OHIO
Your Finished P,ortralts
Delivered In Store.

••

..•
..••

~

�'

I

4 ...... Tile Datly Senlint•l. ~lldctlt•pm t-1 '"""'' "'

•

-

' .'

I '

•

5- The Dally Sentinel, Middlecort-Pomeroy, 0 .. '&gt;1onday , March 31, 1975

I

ll . ~J.m&lt;la;, ~l a~h '11, l'l!j

· Robinson makes first

~ough

.

BASEBALL TOQ 1\ Y

Eastern at Federal

National swim records tumbled

difficult decision as boss
Sen! do\\n \\ ere p1tcher J un
Stnrkland , Bruce Elhngsen
.and Et ac R:_.uch, tnhe lders
Jerry D.~Vanon t~nd Rob
Bellmr and out!telder Tom my
Snuth
" II was worse Utan I thou~h t
11 would be. ' Robmson sa td.
·what&lt;·lrt· )OU say doesn't hi
the sttu at10n "
Two of tlu• to u ~ h est,
Hobmson smd were Ellm~sen

Th e Indwn!i, who had been
h1tt111g at a hot pa ce the
pa st
I
\H'Ck, \\ere lumted to s1x h1t~
Sunday by Mtl waukee pitchers

·: :,.; ::·: ·:::

. . ..· .. .

·:· :;:,

Reds edged
13-12 in 9·

John Y Brown, the Kentucky
Colonels' vocal and dyna miC
owner , has had some wlderangmg and controv~ rsial remarks attributed to htm over
the years SundaJ, hts team
almost choked on one of them .
Kentucky has been making a
late btd for the ABA East tiUe,
mcludmg t" o cnttca l v1ctones
las! week over the nval New
York Nets Brown sa td
recently he would like to see Ius
temn go agamst the Nets and
the other top teams every mghl
rather tha n, say, \l atch Jus
team beat Memphts by 50
JX)ints
The Sound s, upset ov('r
Brown's quoted rema1 k, took
the Colonels mto ovclltmc
Su nday before bowmg, 113·109.
"'11tey had to come with thctr
best," Memphts forww-d Stew
Johnson satd after the hard·
fought battle.
Kentucky was happy to
escape wtth any sort of vtctory .
TI1e win kept the Colonels a
ha lf-game behmd the dtvtstonleading Nels gomg mlo the
!mal week of the regular
season. Both teams hnve 26

Green Thumb

th mks, ~ wow, th1s ISperfect '" .Umted St&lt;ttes ctttzenshtp for Bruner of Stanford set NCAA
Because next yeGtr IS an the Olymp ics beca use h1s and meet records wtth 15:16.64
Olymp1c year, tl was appropri- country does not compete, wtlh m the 1,650-yard freestyle.
43.92 m the 100-yard freesty le
ate to ask coach Peter Deland,
- John Hencken of Stanford
whose TroJans won the team
l1 tl e handily . wh ethe r the wtth 2 00.83 in the 200-) ard
marks would stand up beyond breaststroke, who set an NCAA
and meet mark wtth :55.59 1n SPRIN G CAMP
next year's meet.
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UP! )"These records wtll stand up the 100-yard event.
The
Green Bay Packers will
- Indtana 's lell(ll of Ken
lor a while," he srud . "Next
ho
ld
their annua l spring camp
Knox,
Montgomery,
Murphy
year we won't be tn parttcularfor
rookies,
free agents and a
ly fast pools for ctther the and Btll Htckcox wt lh 2·58 42 tn
NCAA or AAU meet The the 400-yard freestyle relay. handful of veterans lh1s week
Oh10 Slate' s Ttm Moore at Scottsdale, Artz.
sw tlllll1ers w1 ll be better, but
The camp will open Wednes·
repeated for the one-meter
the recorda won't go "
day
and run through Saturday
UCLA caplatn Ttm McDon- drtvtng crown and added the
do uble
wor kouts
nell, who won the 200-ya rd three-meter as well. Washm~­ wtth
scheduled
for
Thursday
. and
lon's
Robin
Backhaus
look
the
fr eestyle and set a record of
Frtday
1 37.75, called the pool "fantas-- 200-yard butterfly a nd Mtke
ttc," lite same \\Ord used by
Indtana 's Fl ed Tyler , wtth a
1· 50 62 m the 200-yard mdivtdual medley
Also m the record book are:
I'M TELLING 4A,
F\?ED FI'DM
- Na ber, Mark Cha lfteld,
E'vEI&lt;4THif.l6
L
Joe Bo ttom and Scott Ftndorlf,
F'EAD
J 19 22 m the 400-yard medley
relay
- Dick Thomas, John Mur·
phy. Jun Montgomery and
Tyler wtth 6 36 29 lo' Indiana
m the 800-yard freestyle relay .
- .Jonty Sktnner, Alabama, a
So uth Afrtcan who ma y seek

Jm1 Slaton and Pat Osburn
Hen ry Aaro n, baseball 's alltune home 1 un king, &lt;.:rune
LAKELAND, Fla 1UPI I \llthm a foot ol getlmg Ius !trsl
The
Cmctnnall Reds co llected
spn ng tra m10g homer w1th a
o75-foot double off sta rter and 19 h1ts and DetrOit 15 here
loser Fritz Peterson 111 the f1flh Sunrlny 1n a frec-swmgw g
e-xlnhltlon ga me won by the
1nnmg
Buddy Bell dnd Charlie Ttgers 13-12 on Btl! Fre&lt;han' s
mu19'&gt;nuth E lhngSl'll had a 1- l
Sptkcs had lwo Juts each fo1 the h\ o-run smgle wtth one out m
record .111cl :1 12 earned run
the last of the mnth mmng
average Ut e last ljil lf of 1974 lnd wns
The contest was htghl!ghted
Now 5-7 m cxlubttlon pla y,
'1-\hl lc w1th the lmhans and
by
s1x home runs. one tnple
Snnlh had balled .342 and 312 Cleveland played the Chicago
.1nd four doubles
the past two seasons w1lh the Cu bs today and meet the
Freehan's homer and gameUmvt·rslt} of A1 1zona Tuesday
Ok lahoma Ctty farm tea m
wmmng smgle gave hun four
runs lx1 tted tn for the day Also
luttlng home runs for DetrOit
were Dan Meye r and Art
James.
F'or Cl nl'mrwtl, Joe Morgan
and B1 ll Plwnmer each had
thrcc-1 un homers anct teamrnc~te George Foster htt a solo
pomts
as
New
York
outscmed
losses '111&lt;' Nets npped Sa n
th e Spurs, 42·19, m the second shot
Antonto. IJ0- 104, Sunda)
Mtckey Lol!rh, who co nKen tuck) , led by center A1us ponod
t
mue~
to struggle th is sprm g,
Sptnl&lt;
116,
Q's
112·
Gilmore, had a &lt;:JwnC'(' tu beat
\fHS
t._1gged
for e1ght Cmcmnat1
Freddte l.ev. ts scored 29
MemphiS 111 the fma l rnmute of
the f ou1 th quarter LoUi e pomts as St l.ous handed San run s m the - second uuung
Dmnp1e1. \\ hu thul 27 pomts, h tt Dt ego its e tghth stra1 ght I .ohch now has a 6 65 earned
two fll'(' throws to g1ve the defea t. Th e loss ehmmated Sa n run average
Pedro Borbon, who gave up
Dtego from the ABA playoffs
Co lonels a 100-99 le.HI
th
e
fmal three Delrotl runs m
Kentuck y's Ron Th omas The Sptrits, who have bea ten
then went to the fou l Ime with San D1ego five tunes m seven hts two mmn gs of work, was
19 seconds left but Jut only one games th1s season, have al- th e losing pttcher.
of thl'e&lt; h ee throws and a ttpm ready chnched a playoff spot
UCLA FAVORED
Pacers 128. Nuggets 121:'
by Johnson \l ith 13 seco nds to
LAS VEGAS. Nev I UPI) Billy Kmght had 32 pomls
play lle&lt;l the score at 101 A
6RE60t?Y
Oddsma
ket· Jtmmy " Th e
and
Geor
~e
McGmms
30to
lead
KOIVTOS ??.'.'
missed Kent ucky shot at the
YOU MEAN
buzzer sent th e ga me mto Indtana past Denver. Rookte Greek" Snyder says UCLA is
TH E GREEK
to
wm
tomght
's
NCAA
favored
Bobby Jones had a career ~u gh
over ltme
..
MILLIONAIRE?
32 powts and 16 rebounds m champtonshtp by one potnt
D&lt;~mp1er scored etght of the
over Kentucky
12 pomts the Colonels made m l eadm ~ the Nuggets
overtun e ami propelled the
tea m to victo ry. Geo rge Carter
led the Sounds wt lh 32 pomls,
followed by Johnson wtth 26
Elsewhere, St. Louts edged
San Diego, 116-112, and lndta na
beat De nver, 1211-121 .
Nets t30, Spu rs liJ.I :
Led by Juhus Ervtng's 40
pomts, the Nets bl'oke a fo urCHARLESTON, W Va (UP! ) rota! that stood a dozen yeru·s
Other athletes selected Ill~ame los mg strea k wlu le
- The la te J1m Thorpe ,
eluded
Bob Rtchards, the only
OH, ONE OII&lt;ER n&lt;ING .. I TRU5T YOU
snnppln g Sun Antomo's seven- legendary Indian athlete whose
WILL BE DISCREET. YOU NEVER
man
to
capture
two
Gold
game wm streak Ervmg a nd meteu n c nse m track was
KONTOS, WE MADE A f:EW E/Z.
SAW ME .. AND KNOW NOTHING
Medals
m
the
Olymptc
pole
AP&lt;.f/JSlitfENTS AND THE EQUIPWendell Lad11cl teamed for 22 ec lipsed by a flap over
OF MY CONNECTION
MENT YOU WANT WILL BE
va ull event ; Helen Stephens,
WI'TH ATl&lt;ENA
profess tona l statu s that
DE LI VERED 1D ATHENA
FASHION:'&gt;!
stnpped htm of Olym ptc wnmer of the liJO.ineter m 11 5,
FA:'&gt;HIONS IATELY.'
sett10g a world mark 10 the 1936
medals, was al)1ong 13 men and
IMMEJ)
Ber lin Olymptcs; Horace
women mducted Sa turday mto
Ashenfel ter Ill. the 1949 NCAA
the Nahona I Track and Fteld
t\\o o-m1le-run champion as a
Hall of ~· ame
Thorpe, a Sac-Fox Indtan colle~tan at Penn State; Allee
Coachmun Dav1s, .., mner of 25
who became the only com·
AAU md oo r and outdoor cham(Pol't cr ) co nlmually sc &lt;H Cll pot1to1 to wm both the pen- pwnshtps m the sprmls and
from outside or got the ball ta thlon a nd deca thlon tn !ugh JWnp; Ralph Metcalfe,
Olympic htstory, a nd John B.
• .............
• " ' " ,.,,r ...,.
mstde."
who won more sprmt titles than
Flan
aga
n,
anot
her
Olymptc
Pol'ter had 12 pomts and Ute
" ny uf h1 s contempora n es
leHgue leader 111 ass1sts helped superstar of the early 1900s, dunng hts years at Marquette ,
out on II baskets to close to were th e only deceased Bobby Joe Morrow, wtnner of
MEANWII!Lf...
WHAT L CALL
I KNOW . I KNOW .I'LL
WE NEED
athletes
chosen
fo
r
the
hall
.SERVICE
! .I ALWAYS MID
CHECK
WITl-1
TI-lE
FACJDRY
wtlhm two of the B ~ll e t:; ' allTI-105E IMCHINES
fONMUCH
® I M50RRY,MISS
the 100 and 200 meters, who
IT
NEVER
PAYS TO SEND
Coaches
mducted
were
Wtl·
AND
SEE
WHAT
.I
CAN
DO
tDNGERWILL
055PERATElY.'
.VINKLE 1 BUT TI-lE
time mark of 606 set by Arch1e
ancho!'ed the world record
::--.---\.A BOY ON AMAIVIS JOf&gt;l
1DIOXPEDITE TI-IINGBI
WE
HAVE TO
"Btll
"
Easton
and
Edburn
EQUIPMENT
Clark m 1'971-72.
spnnt relay team m the 1956
W41T2
BQNNAZ O@ERED
Whtle Hayes was hav mg ward · Hunt, and the lone con- Melbourne Olympics. Wtlham
HASN'T
ARRIVED
success with hts gan1e, wluch trtbutor selected was Edward A Toomey. wmner of the
&gt;ET
included 11 rebounds and four M. "Ted " Hayde n
natto~a l AAU pentathlon title
Eas ton coached winnm g
blocks, Chi&lt;;_a go's Bob Love
four tunes m a ftv e-year span
teams
at Hammond, lnd , High
was stntgghng.
m 1960-64; and Stella Walsh,
" He took the good shots bul Sc hool, Drake and Kansas who wun ftrst place m the 100
they just didn 't fall for hun," From 1951 to 1959, hts Kansas meters 10 the 1932 Olympics
Hayes noted. "He got mto early teams landed cross-country, and sel'O nd place m the same
foul trou ble a nd he couldn't mdoor a nd outd oor NCAA even t four years later
crowns whtl e a mass in g a
play the way he wanted to "
slnng
of 24 straight cham·
Chicago's Nate Thurmond
also had his problems. The 6-11 p10nslups.
Hurt , a Brookneal, Pa •
center , whc could have tied up
e,
produced
etght
nallv
Hayes tnside, didn't pllly after
se
parate
NCAA
titles
fo r
the first pertod, feel mg the
Morgan State as well as a
effects of the nu .
dozen
AAU cha mpiOnships.
Elsewhere, New York beat
Utree NCAA relay champions,
Milwaukee, 111-99, Seattle
downed Portland. 98..'l8, New and stx AA U relay cham·
Orleans edged AUa ntu, 108-105. pionshtp efforts
Hayden was cited for his
PO INT PLEASANT - An
and Los Ange les slopped
creatton of the University of appea l Is bemg made fm public
Phoenix, 104-90
C'htcago Track Club , viewed as su ppm·t m the form of cash
Kmcks lll, Bucks 99:
a velucle for amateur track dorldttons to help the n e wl~ ­
New York look a gtant step
.&amp;Rd field deve lopment in !o11ned
Potnl
Pleasan t
forwa t·d m tls btd for a wild
E met gency -Rescue Squad
ca rd pla yo ff spot by beating Al:ncnca
Thorpe,
whose real name,
Pluhp E Ba ll , squad clue!,
Milwaukee, despite 32 points
Wa-Tho-Huck
meant
"brtght
scud
\ Oiunteers formed the
by Kareem Abdui.Jabbar. Earl
path,"
won
hts
dua
l
honors
at
umt,
drC\\
up then char ter and
Monroe's 24i)oin t performance
helped reduce New York's the 1912 Stockholm Olymptc b)-ll:.I\\ S, ,md haH~ ta ken
NOW ,ILL HIRE 1HE BEST TALENT
lVE Gar Tl&lt;E PLANT AND
EQUIPMENT I NEED TO
AVAILABLE·- REGARDLESS OF
magtc number for chnchmg to games. His score was 700 stan dard fn·st a1d r l a~ses
COMPETE WITH WINNIE
IC05Tl7. AND ATI-IENA FA17HIONB
three with four left. John pomts nbove hts ' closest Prese11tly they mE' workmg
WINKLES OONNAZ
compehlor
m
the
decathlon-&lt;\
wt
th
Pleasant
Valle)
Hosptlal
WILL 8C IN /3(/61NE6Sl
Gianelli had 21 pomts and· 10
FASH IONS ..
111 eonJ unchon \\ lth Enterge ncy
rebounds for New York
Medtcal Tedm tctan Tratmng
Sonirs 98, Blazers 88 :
\1 htch began Nov 23
Classes
l .ed by Spencer Haywood's PARSONS SENf DOWN
ST. LOUIS I UP! I - The St las I year .
40 points, Seattle clinclled lhe
Pomt Pleasant's umt hopes
first playoff berth tis e\l(ht- Louis Cardmals Sunday sent
l&lt;l
purehase a motor veh1cle
year l11story by beatmg Port· pttcher BtU Parsons to their
med1ral
land. The vtclory clinched mmor leag ue co mplex for cwd necessa ry
'
cqmpment,
Ba
ll
smd.
but
needs
reasstgnment.
reducmg
.thetr
second place m the Pactfic
fmnnc1al
help
from
the
comDil&gt;ision. The Somes will meet roster to 29.
mumty
either Detrm t or Milwaukee m
Satd Ball. I'm sure people
a best-of-three playoff senes.
art'
aware of the formation of
Jazz 108, Hawks 105: ·
fH E PROBLEM
'
the
Point Pleas.1 nt Rescue
Otlo Moore blocked two shots
SANTIAGO. Chile (UPI) THAT'S FUNNY! MlOEVER
IVE SPENT '111E WHOLE
IF WE DON'T GET 11-IAT
late in the ga nie and Nate The Ch tlean Tennis Federation Squad, "htch came about as a
I/ORNING ON '111E PHONE
TOO&lt; CM:fl. 'THE ' HOUSE
result
of
the
1965
Htghway
EQUIPMENT
WE
Wtlltanls hit 18 points to lead says tt ts ready to meet So uth
AND
NO-ONE
SEEMS
OF Ml&lt;!Dll' DOE$N'T
ORDERED,
WE'RE
· New Orleans past Allan! a. Nrica in the Davts Cup lmals Safely Act spec t!yin g t)Je
&amp;!:EM lD 6E HAVII-.G ANY
GOIN6100ET
TO HAVE 'THE KIND
TROU f&gt;lE GETTING WHAT·
MORE AND
OF M'\CHINES
Moore. who scored e tght of the Amertcan Zone. but lhe standards of equipment and
training
reqUired
to
pro\'
tde
EVER THEY
WE
NEED.
MORE
OF
pomts. blocked two Atlanta problem now is to lind a stte for
NEED !
n4E5E.
ambulance
servtce.
This
act
shots with the Jazz ahead by a Ute games
wen t m to effPCt January l. 1975
pomt Then he set up Wtlliruns'
alld has resulted in the anlayup and added a tipin to put
llQ\U]C&lt;'Illent that se\'eral local
RECORDS BEffERED
New Orleans ahead by fl \'e
fw1eral homes \\ Ould not hare
VALENCIA. Calif IUPI) Lakt•rs 104. Swts 90 .
Gat! Goodric.h scor ed 28 UCI.A 's J uhe Brown beltered ambulance sen tee after that ..
Ball asks that checks be
points and sat out the fmal the women 's world trat:k
made
pa) able to the Point
etght mmutes after Los rt'COrds m the 10,000 meters
Angeles spurted lo an 87-74 and six nules Saturday at the Pleasant Rescue Squad, c-0
lead over Phoenix. Elmore Southern Pacthc AAU cham- Plnhp E. Ball, Chtel. 11&gt;
Streel,
P01nt
Smith contributed 16 points, 15 pionship. She ran the 10,000 Pleasant
Pleasant.
W
Vw.
25550
rebounds and five blocked meters m 35 :00 flat, and. her
Donauons or " pledges are
' shots as Los Angeles won its 33:52 8 along the way for SIX
Wl'leomcd.
e1ghth game m the last 12.
nules also bettered the rc~11rd

Colonels remain half-game
behind Nets in ABA chase
Br United Press International

c u :Vfi.AND !UP!) - Wtl"~
t·on mlerahle dSStstance from
Cle ve l, nd State 's · Super
Pool ," ( ollegtate sw1mrners
\\ IJ)C'(\ out national records tn 10
of Hi events m the fo w--day
52nd ,mnual NCAA s.. mumng
and b tvtng Cham pwnslup
whtch ended he1 e Saturday
mght
The Umvers1ty of Southern
Ccdtform cJ's John Naber set
three re &lt;· ords- the 500-yard
freestyle 14 20 50 1, the 100yard backst1 oke 1 49 65) and
th e 200-)al d backstr oke
11 46 82J-and helped the
TroJans 400-)a l d medley relay
team set another 13 19.22.1
·I'd be dtsappomted tf I
lmd n t :m um my best tunes
here, " Naber sa td .
The 1e&lt;mds do not qualify as
wu1 ld standards , however , .
\\: h1ch must be set m a S~rnelt!r
pool CSU's 25-ya rder gtves
sw1mmer the advantage of
tw1ce as many turns, and tls l:lfoot depth and well-&lt;leSigned
gutters nummtze wc.~ve actiOn .
"The biggest help, though, ts
1n a klcl' s hea d, " smd UCLA
coach George Hames · He
comes he1e am! ~ees this and

Notes . ...

By Mrs. 0. J. Pennington
Rose Garden Club
APRIL GARDENING
When cultivating m the garden be careful not to cut off the
growmg ttps of the lilies. Scatter aMual poppy seeds m the
borders or anywhere else you wish to have them.
Seeds of annuals should be planted as soon as the ground is
ready and lhe danger of frost ts over. Bordeaux mixture can be
used to advantage on many of lhe perenmals, mcluding peonies,
when !hey start to grow.
Clematis pan1culata may be cut down almost to the ground.
It will make rapid growth and flower m' the fall Lily-&lt;Jf-theValley clumps should be set out now. Plant them with the tops of
the ptps JUSt even wtth lhe ground.
Spraying and dushng delphmtwns, holly hocks, and phlox
should be begun as soon as the plants start to grow, using
Boreaux nusture, sulphur, or one of the propeitary remedtes.
There lS no better tune for diVIdtng delphiruwns and for makmg
new plantations than as soon as the plants start in the spring. It is
not necessary to have large clumps. Three good crowns with a
well-&lt;leveloped root are sufftc1ent.
The pruning of roses should be hmshed as soon as possible
cutting back to live wood and cuttmg the stems still more ti
particularly fine blooms are destred. Comparatively ltght
pruning may be pracllced if owner prefers a profuston of blooms
Clean out all old foliage and weeds from among trises before
the plants have grown so much that th1s work would be difficult
Make cuttings of house plants such as coleus, wandermg Jew, and
other easy-growing vartet1es so !hat they may be set out in lhe
garden at the end of May .
It 1s not too late to start tubers of lbe tuberous-rooted begonia
indoors. Plant them m a box of sot! lightened wilh leal mold and
sand. The side of lhe tuber showmg and irregular cavity ts the
top. Plant them just barely below the surface. Sllade boxes from
strong light.
Lilies are benefitted by a mulch of old well-rotted manure
after the growths are above ground.
Oriental popp1es leave a blg bare gap when they die down.
Scarlet sage or ryyacinlhus cymdicans make a good succession.
Perennial borders must be deeply prepared with fertilizer
mixed in bottom layer of soil if plants are to grow well and
remam m good condition for several years . Barnyard manure is
excellent lor this purpose if it is sufficiently well-rotted. The
perennial flower garden should be given much attention at this
time. Divide the large clumps of such perennial plants as phlox,
delphimum, golden glow, and others. Trim out the dead tops of
old plants and give the bed a good cleaning up .
Plan to grow some sunflowers. You and the birda will both
have some fun this fall .

SORRY! Last week's. Winnie Winkle
was missing from our ·package

Peerless Sac-Fox
in Tracks' Hall

BY POLLY CRAMER

Check store about
unwrinkling rug

STl!AMilmiACliON

CARPET
CLEANING
(OH IOCATIOH)

CLEANING
1B
(~r JOt{. ,
7(/, J... ·, ~ ,.t _,.,. ,
,..,.ICH1'

jFoR FREE ESTIMAT
CALL, tt2-Hl5
AT ANYTIME

., Ingels FurnibnMrooLEPORT
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.

Public appeal

made for help

on ambulance

(Now, contin..ie.'OD. comic page~

'
•

'

unwtped streaks.- MRS. E. D.
POLLY' PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I JUSt made
DEAR POLLY - Last week
a
discovery I wa11t to share
I bought a 9x12-foot rug !hat IS
full of folds and wrmkles !hal wtth others smce tl is a savings
have not smoothed out. I would m electnctty. One of my outltke to know how to ge l rid of side hghts burned out The only
them. My daughter suggested bulb I had to use for
puttmg it m a big rug dryer at replacement was a 15 watt. I
the laundromat but I thmk the put In m and found tt g1ves
rug would have to be wei lo do plenty of light to see by so I wtll
never use stronger bulbs
this What do you think ' outside. - NAOMI.
CLEO
DEAR POLLY - All stores
DEAR CLEO - I really
cannot make a suggestion do not have current newspaper
because you did not say what adverttsing avat lable at lhe1r
your rug was made of - cotton, checkout counters . When
nylon, wool or whatever. I taking advantage of spec1als
would certainly call the firm listed in ads I take the ENTIRE
from which the rug was pur- ad, not for just the items I am
chased. II this produces purchasing, to the store. If the
nothing consult the attendant clerk accidentally or even
at the laundromat who can mtentionally rings up tqe
doubtless give you some good wrong amount you can whip
advice about putting it in the out the paper and have proof in
dryer. Have you tried ho)ding a black and white . Saves time
steam iron over, not on, it to and mtsunderst.anding on both
see If tbe steam would help? stdes - MRS. C W.
Weight II down until dry. The
nap would have to be brushed r:;~:.P2•J•W.* .a .•
up alternards. -POLLY.

i
My Pet !i.

DEAR POLLY ~
Peeve ts with tiJose service
station atlendan ls who grasp
the wmdshteld wtpers when ~
cleaning the windshield. Each
Maj General James Harfinger leaves a wiper blade
tinger
of Maxwell Air Force
bent and then contact cannot
be made with lhe glass when it Base in Alabama, left today
lS turned on so one ts left with after spending Easter weekend
here with his mother, Mrs.
Violet Harltnger, and Mrs.
Clyda Allensworth.
Mr. and Mrs . Wtlliam Bland
of Akron were Easter guests of
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds. They
came espectally lor his
motqer , Mrs. Nma Bland, who
has been here wtth Mrs
Reynolds for lhe past three
weeks.
Mrs. Mary Meinbart, til for ·
many months, was able to
attend services at lhe Mtddleport Church of Chnst
Easter mornmg.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hinkle
of Chesapeake were Easter
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Swift and other relatives.
Mrs . Mabel Walburn ,
recenlly confined to an Akron
hospital, was •returned home
Saturday by her daughter,
Mrs. Marcella Phillips.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert . Jay,
Columbus 1 were Easter

I

Middleport
Personal Notes

Krautter a nd Mrs. Offutt was
the greeter
Featured m the church
decorations were numerous
lihes and palms On lhe baptismal font was a Madonna !ted
wtth gold velvet nbbon, the gtft
of Mrs Kathleen Francts tn
memory of her husband A
cross flanked by hiles a top a
grassy mound was spotlighted
tn blue, and 'a Madonna
arrange ment on the com.
munion table was hghted wtth
a white spotlight
Lihes were g1ven m memory
of Mr and Mrs Wilham Hines
by Mr and Mrs .John Terrell,
Mr and Mrs Eddte Epple by
Mr and Mrs John Terrell,
Mrs Clara Gerhart by Mr . and
Mrs. Joe Struble and son,
Mtke, Mr and Mrs. William
Grueser by the famtly, Mr. and
Mrs Albert Kasper by Mr and
Mrs. RO) Smith and family and
Mr and Mrs. Robert Arnold ;
Mr and Mrs W. A. Ebersbach
by Mtss Sybtl Ebersbach , Carl
Wtlliant Kautz by Mr and Mrs
Lawrence Stewart and family ;
Fred Dessa uer by Mrs Eva
Dessa uer; Mr and Mrs. Harry
Prortor by Mr and Mrs. Ralph
Graves and Kay Proc tor ;
Cha rles Frecker by Roy and
Alho Holter; wnnam Grtlfllh
b~ Mrs. Clara Grt l!ith

Mr and Mrs. John Blaettnar
by the Fred Blaettnar family ;
Cha rl es J . Werry by his
family ; Freda and Leste r
Fauber by Marguerite Meyer ;
Mr and Mrs. Theodore Mora
by the Lawrence Stewart
family ; Lafe and Georg ta
Wtlliamson by thetr Iamtly ;
the Rev W. K. Rtggs by Ray
and Mary Rtggs, Albert Werry
by hts famtly; Mr. and Mrs. C.
D. Frecker by Roy and Ada
Holter , Mr . and Mrs. Henry
Slj'atlle br Helen Lyons and
Henri etta J enkms; Homer
Holler by Ada. Holter; Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Ewtng; Sr., by Mr.
and Mrs. Benny Ewing; Mr
and Mrs Earl Young by the
famtly ; Henry Ewmg by Mrs
Beulah Ewmg and fam1ly;
Majorte Woodard by Albert
Woodard, Fred Rosenbaum by
Mrs. Lou1se Rosenbawn and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Rosenbawn ; Mr . and Mrs
Earl Young by Mr. and Mrs
Hobar t Young, and Donald
Houck by Mrs Mane Houck
a nd
Donna
The church decoratm g
com mittee extended a vote of
thanks by lhe nunister consisted of Mrs. Pat Holter, Mrs
Neutzling, Mrs . Wtlma Terrell,
Mrs. Ginlher, Mrs. Ada Holter,
assisted by Mary Blaettnar
and Becky Thomas.

.

'Over 80s ' hottored during party

Polly's Poin+"".."

Hayes nets 37 markers

I

Spectal mustc by the choir of'
Trt nity Chur~h was a fea llll'e of
both the Easter sunrise and
mornmg worship se rvices
conducted by lhe Rev W. H
Perrin
Mrs. Alice Nease directed
the choir, accompanied at the
organ by Mrs. Carne Neulzling, 10 "Where Have Ye Laid
Htm '," "He is Risen" with
Mrs. Lois Blll't as solmst, and
the " Hallelu jah Chorus."
Organ prelude by Mrs. Neutzhng was "The Res\ll'reclton "
and lhe processtonal was
"Chnsl the Lord Is R1sen
Today."
Smgmg m lhe chotr were Ben
Neulzling, Dtck Nease, Jeff
Burl , Don Thomas, Fred Ruth,
Robert Hartley, Fred Blaettnar , Mrs. Burt, Melanie Burt,
Rose
Gmther,
Clarice
Krautter , Barbara Offutt, Pal
Holte r , Mary Rtggs, Gay
Perrtn, Pat Young, Fa tlh
Perrtn , Carolyn Thomas,
Becky Thomas, Lisa Thomas.
and Terrt Russell.
Followtng the sunnse ser·
vtce, breakfast was served by
lhe women of lhe church.
Communton was giVen at tho
mormng worship servtl t .
Us hers were David s,,l'l,
Davtd Hams, Eddte Hol k 1.
Rtck Blaettnar . and Kelt.

A weekly feature of Me~g 5
County Garden Club members

Bullets trip Bulls as
By Uulted Press Internallonal
Elvm Hayes' 37-pomt perlor-·
mance Sunday afternoon ga ve
the Washington Bullets an
tmportant Nationa l Basketball
Associa tiOn victory over the
Chicago Bulls in a nationally
televised game between d!Vlston leaders.
Hayes' output m lhe 9~2
vic tory ,
wh ich
kept
Washmgton ahead of idle
Boston in the duel lor the best
record in the NBA, more than
made up lor fo lll'-pomt performance by Phtl Chenier, his
worst o{fensive showmg of the
season.
" When one player lS off, you
have to put on as much presure
as possible," explained Hayes,
whc tntssed his se8S&lt;ln-high
pomt tot&lt;t l by two. "You've got
to just play your ga me, run
your palterns and hope thmgs
work out."
Hayes had 10 hrst.quarter
points and 18 by haUtune as
Washington surged ,to a 4&amp;.35
lead. The !Hoot-9, seven-year
veteran then scored 17 thirdquarter pclnls as the Bullets
expanded thetr lead to 74.W.
"We got help from everybody, " Hayes sa id . " Jtmm y
1Jones) came in and took up
the slack His back-to-back
baskets in the third penod
rea lly helped. And Kevm

Special music ~by choir
.highlighted two services

!

llocking.

TUC',SON, Anz t UPl ) Sunday wa s the longest day of
spring training for new Cleveland Indtans' manager Frank
RoblllS()n.
Ftrst he watched ht s team
suffer a 6-0 loss to the
Mtlwaukee Brewers . a defeat
thai ended the India ns' four
game wtnrung streak.
Nter the defeat Robmson
faced the task of maktng Jus
ftrst maJor squad cut of the
spring He spent more than an
hour m private t&lt;t lks wtlh stx
pla yers reassigned to the Indians 1ninor league trmning
camp.

••
••

Mrs. Glenna Milhoan, 89, of
Long Bottom , was presented
an orchid corsage as the oldest
btrlhday honoree In March at
the Senior Citt zens Cen ter
monthly party Thursday
Others uover 80" recogmzed
and pre sen ted flowers were
Dessie Patterson, Great Bend;
Gladys Cuckler, Pomeroy;
Charlie Bennett, Mtddleporl;
Edna Morgan, Flatwoods, and
Roscoe Hollon, Chester.
Also ce lebrating birthdays

~!ii!Y'OO? w:~-.~~~=~'''f· Altar banked bj lilies :
~
I
i~ altarMemorial
lilies banked lhe and Miss Nma Barnett; wtU
of the Moun! Moriah Winston a nd Charles Wlnatog
i
,
~ Baptist Church. in Middleport by Mrs. Nellie Winston an~
~

¥j
~

Soc aI
caIen dar

1::: {or the Easter Sunday services. Mrs. Virginia Stallworth; Mt&lt;:
~ ' Lilies were gtve n mmemory and Mrs. O&amp;~;ar Hardaway by
'
» of the Bates lam.tly by Clyde Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Rlcharda'!
MONDAY
Lynch of Colwnbus; Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Con Young by
MEIGS County Salon 710, Mrs Fred Jackson by Mrs. Mr. a nd Mrs. Douglas
Eig ht and Forty, 7 30 p.m. , Campbell Harper; Mrs Arlena Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Daii
home of Mrs. Marie Boyd
Reese by Mrs Ernest Bowles, Jackson by David Jacksonj
Mrs Ervm Bnwngardner, nnd Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Guthrie
REGULAR
MEETING Miss Julia Reese; Mrs. Nan by Billy GutiJrle; and Mr. ani!
Umted Methodtsl Men of Metgs Barnett by Mrs Julw Wt lhams Mrs. Aaron WilliBJrul by Mr.
County , 7· 45 p.m. at East
and Mrs. Carl Williams.
•
Letar t Church. Some tmporlant matters to be dtscussed.
Charles McVey, Ia) speaker,
will be guest speaker
RUTLAND BaSeball l£ague,
7 p.m at old Rutland Htgh
Sc hoo l Gym
Everyone
welcome.
TUESDAY
STATED meeting of Middleport Masomc Lodge 363,
7:30p .m. at temple All Mas ter
Masons arc mvlted
MEIGS Saddle Stllers Club,
7:30 p m at Juntor Kennedy
re stdence, Tuppers Plains.
New members welcome Each
old member ts to take a
potential new member
ANNIVERSARY Dtnner of
Ladtes Auxihury, Mtddleport
Ftre Department, 6 30 p m at
Osca r's tn Galhpohs Members
to meet·at ftre statwn a t 5: 45
p.m.
OHIO Eta Pht Chapter, Beta
Sigma Pht Soronty, 7:30 p.ln
at the Columbus and Southern
Ohto Eleclrtc Co oflt ce. Gtrl of
the year lo be elected. Cultural
report by Dollie Musser , wtth
Libby Sayre and Joyce Bar·
timus, hostesses.

GREEN·THINGS
GROW WELL
'

HERE!

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Lodge 164 F&amp;AM
7 30 p m. All master masons
invited

during the month were Hazel on March 9
Thomson, Bradbury; Edtth
The Rev . Floy d Shook,
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
Betzing, Tuppers Plains; Ahce pastor of the Laurel Cliff Free Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m. at the
Grant, Asa Jo~dan , and Wayne Me thodist Church, gave the home of Dr . Kathryn Phtlson.
Harrtson, Mtddleport; B1ll blessing before the dmner al Mrs. James Titus to review
Watson, Pomeroy; Orvtlle - noon. Bill Wa tson sang a solo, "Working" by Studs Terkel.
Hogue , Rutland; Bertha and Thora Blackwood gave a Roll call wtll be a commen t on
Parker, Laurel Chff; Cora readtng. Present to dtScuss the program.
Htlton, Portland , Carol Taylor, homestead exempli on and tax
Ra cine, a nd Wilhelmma rates m the county was Howard
Thoma, Chester
Frank , Meigs County audttor. Surprise dinner
Flowers were also pliesented
to Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Ntce, the
given at OU Inn
former Audra Keyse, mamed
Announ ced during the
Mrs. Arnold Rt chards of
gathering were several acMiddl
epo r t was IJonored
tivities planned for thts spring.
Sunday
wtth a surprise birth·
A tnp on the Chaperon has
been scheduled for May 15 at a day dmner at the Universtly
Hos hng the
cost of $3 per person . Also Inn, Athens.
r
celebratiOn
were
her son-m·
an noun ced was the 1975
Governor's Conference on law and daughter, Mr . and
Agmg to be held Apnll5 and 16 Mrs. Edward Smith, ColumBy Helen Bottel
at the Lausche Building on the bus, and daughter , Mrs . Ann
Ohio Sta te Fairgrounds in Angel.
Gtfls were presented to Mrs.
Columbus. Mrs
Eleanor
Help! Who Needs His Kind?
Rtchards
. Atlendmg the
Thomas, Center director ,
celebration
were Arn old
Dear Helen :
advtses lhal lunch for each day
A man on our block runs to belp out whether you need it or will be $4 and that dormitory Rtchards, Mrs Angel and son,
not. Pamting lhe house, weeding the yard: !here he is. Which ts facili ties at Rhodes Center on Kevin, Mr. and Mrs. Smith,
okay sometunes, but he expects return favors that often cost us the fairgrounds will be chtldren,
Vaughn
a nd
more than the help we don't really want.
Saglenda,
Mrs.
Campbell
· a vailable at $5 per person.
No matter what type of busmess we're in, he hmts for
Harper, and the Rev. and Mrs.
freebies or discounts. H we don't come through, we lee! guilty.
Henry Key , David and Jenny .
Anyone desinng to attend the
Since we can't say outright, "We don't want you puttermg
Conference is asked to pick up
around!," what can we do' - NEIGHBORS
In 1971, Army Lt. William
registration blanks at the
Calley
was sentenced to life
Center this week since
Dear Neighbors:
'
unprtsonment
for his part In
When "neighborliness" is linked to the wallet, it's best to cut registration ts to be completed
lhe colUlection . How' With a "Thanks for your help," but no by April 10. Also announced by the slaying of 22 Vietnamese
Mrs. Thomas ts the ballroom civilians.
gratuities (and no gmlt feelings).
I mean, ignore !his man's hmts lor freebies until he learns dancing course to be offered at
!hat "I'll scratch your back if you scratch mine" only works the center with the first sesston
on April 10 at 12 30 p.m
when both parties have an itch. - H.

WHY
NOT
PLANT

••

•

'

'

YOUR

SAVINGS
TODAY?
You might say we've got a green thumbmoney green l We can show you a whole
variety of savings plans from regular passbook savings to certificate savings- each
plan designed to suit your particular budget requirements and savings goals! So
drop in today and plant your savings with
us!

Helen Help

Us.

•

Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Co.
POMEROY, OMIO

MEMBER FDIC
MEMBER
FEDERAL RESERVE
SYSTEM
U OIIAl DIPDIIT IHIUIAHCl COIN&gt;UIIOfll

+++
Dear Helen:
I took a frtend out for a drive. This person is arways telling
me what to do. We missed our freeway entrance, and he said it
was okay to make a U.turn at lhe next road leading back. I took
his word and didn't read lhe sign, which, I learned too late, satd

your
pick:

uNo U-Turn."

We got stopped by a cop. The fine was $35, as it was my
second citation. The first happened when !his friend also directed
me wrong.
Neither lime did he offer to pay half. Sllould I send him a bill,
since my hmts fall on barren ground ? - RE-FINED

1 DAY ONLY

O a new car
D a new camper
O a new boat
D all of the
above

Dear Re-Fined :
That depends on whether you value your money more !han
this friendship.
- (But I would say, "Leave lhe drtving to me!," next time
you're out. And I'd start reading my own road s1gns.)- H.

1 ~ !2r&gt; c~ll you •

10('0! I £' •

WED., APRIL 2
10 AM

ro 5 PM

N;t l oon y,o de

rl f' T FIII~

en

Ct'lm

p let&lt;&gt; \' '11' stop 1on,t nc1ng ,1 1

+++

lh &lt;J • 1!lll • r ~I" S l rl•ou qh

Dear Helen :
About20years ago , I had an affair with my sister's husband.
It ended almost before tl began, and I begged her forgiveness
before I got married and moved away. She told me to drop dead.
Now I'm moving back and I want her friendship . I've been
told by olher relatives that she'd sp1t m my face if she saw me.
Sllould I write once more and ask for a second chance ? - N. W.

N ,tl " "' ' 1c Ccmsum(' r
:.,e rvr(" ('S ~~~
o n a lmost

.l" V con~u mN

ou

c h ase

r .1~ .. yO rJ' p rr k a nd c a ll
y ou r r1111 0 11WI/ 1 ~ agto n l
N~· o n Hrd e '" C
ll'l ~ ou r srd e

P. J. PAULEY
307 Sprmg Ave .. Pomeroy
Ph 992-2318

Dear N. :
Of course you should write, but don't be too devastated if
your stSter doesn't answer.
I'd guess her jealousy started long before the affair; and this
kind of rivalry doesn't mellow with time. To her, your "second
chance" ought read, "at my husband." - H.
'
weekend guests of Mr and
Mrs. William T. Grueser. They
were joined at the Grueser
home for dinner by Mr. and
M~s . Michael Gerlach and
daughter, Tara , and Mrs.
Clyda Allensworth.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Brannan
spent Easter Sunday at West
Union VISiting Mr. Brennan's
Wlcle, Clarence .Brannan, and
other relatives.

sPEciAL

~~ I'"' *

0'

.O.nor Ito &lt;! '"'~

~ U!y~l 11\t" !I " CI CO II'IOI" 'f
Colv "' D~ I 0~ •0

!-!em• e ll &lt;'

Wheel

OFFER

Buy 1 Wheel at .$14fl

PURatASE 2nd $}}47
WHEELFOR

'

AT TIME OF SlniNG.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
'

WHERE: -

SOLD SEPARATELY
AT$80.50 EACH

GUNITE TAl 18K

Regular Price 5109.90

WHILE SUPPLY LASTS!

For most popular trailers and dead axles
euept Fru.

OFF ICE HOURS t:30 to 12; 2 TO 5 (CLOSE AT
NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,'

GROUPS TAKEN •1.00 PER PERSON

'

THE PARTS ·BAR~
Gallipolis, Ohio

Ph. (614) 446-4670

RUTLAND FURNITURE
TELL YOUR FRIENDS,
THEY WILL BE
• GLAD YOU DID!

RUTLAND, OHIO
Your Finished P,ortralts
Delivered In Store.

••

..•
..••

~

�.'

~

'

•

'

.'
6- Tile Dally ~p!inel, Middleport-Po~neruy , 0 .. Mmjday, March 31 : 1975

I

r

Auto Sales
.

FORA
JOB?

2 SIGNS ·

Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY - :Motor Co•.
1972 CHEVROLET KINGSWOOD ESTATE

$2195

3 sea t wagon, te ss than 30.000 miles by local owner, 400 V
steer 1ng brakes, automat!( power door lock s,

8, P

Racine, 0 .

ll79l
Suburban 3 Seat, V·8 engme, automafte trans .. power
steeri ng &amp; brakes. factory a1r cond•t.onmg . lu ggage ra ck,
green fmish, radio . L•ke new W· W tires

YOUR SITUATION WANTED AD

1971 MATADOR
4 Door, fu lly equ1pped tnc air , dark red

puff .

FREE OFFER

/
l
I

MY AD READS AS FOLLOWS:

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

1

I

II
I
I

Thursday n1ght, 7
at Mason AUCI IOO ,
p m
Horton St . In Mason, W \Ia.
Consignments welcome
Phone (304 ) HJ 5471
2·2·1fc

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

NOW sell ing Fuller Brush
Products , phone 992 3410 .
1 24 tf c
PU BltC shoot. Meigs Mu zz le
Load er s. tzaa k Walton Far m ,
Chester . Apn l 5. 1 30 p .m
Ap ril 6, ram date

l

Classified
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 457(19

3 31 Sic

Pets For Sale

II

FEMALE OacMhund, red , AK
C Reg min•ature , 7 months
old Phone 7•2 4256
3 JO Jtc

1
I

Name

I

Employment Wanted

I

It

Mdress
City
Zip

----- ---.

TIME bookkeeping ,
fle x~ble hours 1 or 2 days a
week or
even1ngs
Ex
perl enced , excellent loca l
r e f ere n ce Phon e 992 7090
evenmgs
3 30 ·8tc

Carpenter News, Event Local Bowling

•

fl own by jet fr om Ohio
Untverstly Atrport to Bates~
vtlle. Indiamt, where he and
oth er guests toured the
fl1cihl1es of lhe Balesv11le
Casket Company and allendrd
semmars spunsured

by

the

company

Mr . and Mrs. Gene Jeffers,
Lesler. Marco, and Robert.
and

her alull, were g ues ts of

t,heJr son-m-law and daug hter ,
Mr. and Mrs . Mtke Lawson.
Mrs . Mike Lawson (Margie
Jeffers l has·re&lt;:mved word !hut
she has been accepted at the
Denllsl School at Oh10 State
University foll owing her
grad ual10n
from
Ohio
University in June

182

,,5

Thursday Str i ktrs
M•rcft :H.

H igh 1Md 1v 1duat series Wanda Teaford 533 ; Opal Hupp
J9J , D onna McFarland and
Sh 1r l ey M IICilell 482
H 1gh md 1vidual game
Wanda T eaford and Op al Hupp
194 . wa n da Teaford 190 ,
Don na M c Far l and 184

·---~----

"Hello. Gamblers' Anonymous'
FlYe to one you can't IU...
who's calling."

~,t l

A thought for the day :
American humorist Charles
Farrar ·' Browne
sa1d, aLet us
all be happy and live withtn our
means, even if we have to
borrow money lo do tl ."

March 2$ , 1975
Tri · Counly League
Stand.ngs
Team
Ph .
Raw li ngs Auto Parts
56
Roach 'S Gvn Shop
S6
Se ar s Catalog Merchants
S2
H &amp; R F i res tone
....
Po m eroy Cemnl Block Co
44
M 1dwest Stee l Co
J6
1-h gh ind iv •dual game
Henry Clafworthy 228 :
Sec ond h1gh ind1v rdual game
Henry Clatworth'l 216

•

-·- ------- - - - - - - - -

H Jgh senes - · Henry Clat
wor thy 603
Oale
Sec ond h 19h ser•es
D a vi s 552

r RAl
lj~ R. apartmentsTorrent
Phon e 992 .5248 - · - - ...... . _
- -

.

-

498 Locust Sf,
Middleport, Ohio 1 2 1 Mo

Team high' game - J)omeroy
Block Co . 950.
Team
h1Qh
ser.es
Pomeroy Cement Block Co
2641
I
Early Wednesdly
Miud Ltague
MarchU , 1971

Tum

Stand•nvs

heating service and
general sheet metal
Fr e e
works.
Estimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emer,gency 992-3995
or 992-5100
L .

'
\

CAP!' AIN EASY

'

OKAY-- LOOk:'i LIK E' DA COAST
15 C LEAR. BU5TER• ... HERE' WE' GO
1'-ITA

Regallaln
Young 's Super Mkt .
Sm i th Nelson Motors
Zide 's Sperl Shop
Tentll framers
Nelson Drug co,
High 1nd1V1dua l game
Men . Bill Por ter 245 ,· women .
Betty ~m1th 21 1.
Second h1gh md•vidual g•me
Men , larry Dugan 232,
wom en , Helen Phelps 204.
High ser 1es Men , Bill
Porter 658 ; women , Setty
Smith 536.
Second tligh ser1es ·- Men , A
L Phelps Jr 594 ; women . Pat
CcJrson 518
Team t,igll game Tenth
F ram ~ rs I'll•
Team hiqh c;erie~ Tenth
r ramcrs 21 11

''

Improvement
and
Se rvice - Anything
r.xed around th e home , from
roof to basement You w111
l1ke our work , and rates .
Phone 742 5081
12·29 -tfc
Repa~r

'72,9Q(KD)

BE DROO M mob1le home
washer and Clryer , 11 ? baths,
util i t ies paid , S42 SO week 308
Page St, Middleport. Oh10
3 4 lfc
. -·--1 BEDROOM mob 1le home m
Sy ra cu se No chddren or pets
Call 992 2441 after 6 p m .
Oepos1t required
3 11 lfc

22"-3112 HP
Self- Prope lied

- -----

E LWOOD BOWERS RE PA IR
- Sweepers , toasters, 1ron s,
all small appl•ances Lawn
mowers, next to Stat e H1gh
way Garage on Route 1
Phon e 985 3825
3 11 26tc
"St;PTIC
T-ANKS
cJea nea
Modern San,tatlon, 99 2.J9S4 or
992 7349.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-..!.. _ _ _
9_
18_ lfc

Real Estate--For Sale

DA MAHA · 5 WAMI'5

LDVE'-LOW:5 TEMPLE!

POMEROY LANDMARK:
9 ... _JackW . carsey,~gr.
6i1l Ptu~ne 992 -2191

WA~D!

NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom

---·------ ----

3 30 6tc GAS coo ks tove, n1ce for can
-- - - - -------- - - - - - - - - nmg Phone 985 3585
3 10 3tc
FURNISHED
apartment.
adults onty m Midd l eport
Phone 992 3874
lJSED parts, Fry e's Tru c k and
Auto Parts, Rutland , Oh10
3_
25_ lfc
- - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ !.._ _ _ _
Phone (614) 742 6094

house w i th shower bath
Porches and garage w i lh level

lot s•5oo oo
RACINE - Modern 3 bedroom
home. Large bath . Nat gas
F A furnace , 7 large closets
with s tora ge shelves . Dry
ba sement , garage w1th shop
and large lot

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

-------- -----STANLEY Products tor sale.

on Shade River . $6.000 .

3 9 261c
sate

BUSINESS - We have severa l
and locations with buildings .
Work for yourself with no
layoffs.

Phone
3 16 tfc

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

FARM Lumber See us tor your
ne eds
Pomeroy
Forrest
Products , Ba •l ey Run Road
Phon e 992 5965
3 19 -12t c

--- ------------...... ,
INDI A N Joe 's Spor ., ,.,.
~ou

buy and sell guns , ammo,
f iS hing equ1pment , and after
A pril 1, we wrll have f 1sh bart
Stop by at 308 Pag e St ,
Middleport Phone 992 3509 .
J 2 Jotc

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

FARMA LL 300 tractor, 8 fl
Ol1ver 0 1sc 2 bottom Ol1ver
pl ow on rubber All in good
cond1 t10n George Co l l 1ns ,
Tup pers Pla•ns Phone 667
. 3J84
3·28 3t c
MAKE beat en down carpet nap
at doorways bright and fluffy
aga1n w1lh Blue L ustre Baker
Furn1ture ComJ:)any
3 28 -Jtc

308 Page St.
Middleport, 0. 992-3509

News 8, 10
8:110-Lassle 6,
33.

Rad1os, Antenna!, Towers ,
Used TV 's. Buy from the
" 1nd1an " and save "Warn
Pum ". We buy used Radios
and Towers. RadiOS repa~red
by FCC lic ense d serv1ce
personnel Stop and see the
"lnd1an" and
Bubbles.
Mon1tor Chann•l 10 and 20.

SPLIT or round locust posts for
sa le Will del i ver . 7Sc each
Call 992 5702
3·28 ·3tc

del ,v eredtoour yard We ptck
up (!luto OOd l es and buy all
k1ndS of scrap metals and
1ron . R ider 's Salvage . St Rt
124, Rt 4, Pomer ov , 01\io .
Call 992 S-168
10 11 ttc

24,000 BTU General Electr1c a~r
condllioner , not a year old
Phone 992 2952
. l ·26 ·tfC
CASH pa 1d for all makes and models of mob rle homes , HAY and corn for sale . Phone
992 1306 .
Phone area code 61f123 -953 l.
3 25 6lp
•
~
4 lJ .tfc

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

BORN LOSER

-

WI-IEORE: CO
~OIJ n-Il f,J K
'lOI:JIRE

Z~RD
FRCCIPITATIOI'J t

Tattletales 10, New Zoo Revue 13.

~lob~

\

Home Building
Room Additions
and Garages

-

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

"THAT'S PlitET"N
SMAil::T "TH\Nl&lt;IN6
ON HIS PART, IF
V~K ME!

MIX CdNCRETE&lt;Ii"'
l1ver ed rrght tO you r prc.1ect .
Fas 1
and
easy
Free
est i mates Phone 992 -328-4
Goegle•n Ready Mix Co ,
M1ddleport Ohio .
6-30 -tfc

I

IAI.£'/ME

I I

UTrLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Ll----=.:Prii(~·~·=IISI~IIISWIII=IIIn==--.....JI ( I
,
I GOT THFn'E lttE
f1ti£ST OOGTOR-5 A

~ · 1 BlAME Tl£ COPS, ANNIE WHEN 50MFTHU4G tiAPPfHS SO
QuiCtc M090P'f COULD ~UESS
PI:QffCT - MAY8 f. TtiEY WfRE. FWf
SECOH06 TOO ~ArE - HOT MORE -

w

~ COUlOH'l HAVE

BElTER - AMD WE

ARE TAIC'I HQ HIM
lOA f!HE MOSPUA~·
't WO I".DN.TH5 -

-· - -- -~ ------- -- -

MOBILE ho ni e, 1971 65 X 12
King '2 bedroom Phone 992 5496
3·l 8·6tc

•

How !.IOU know
1t tell l.jOU that, 1,-,,11I
You can't read!

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

Real Estate For Sale

'

NEW all electflc home , 3
b edrms , 2 baths , doub l e
garage, 5 lots overlooking
nver 1n Syracuse Complete
tra il er hookup and rent ed
Pt1one 992 -5888
3 28 ·3tp

....... .

'"" "•" •L''-'"
"'.
' ' 0 ••
~

..

ULABNER

AH'LL HATE

IN ODBA-DCO WHEN
TWO M'EN WANrT}I!;-

')OU WILL USE

AND THE 00 WILL

THEMOSI

USE THE NOS!
FOPULAR WEAPON

TO SEE=

YO' GO-

5AME 6 /RI.., THEY

FbPULAR ~A?~

OF YOUR

THE

OFOOI&lt;S-

'fHE. SWORD!~!

'
I

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

6 ROOM house w•th oath . 3
bedroom , full basement , gas
hea l, n .w floor , wall to wall
carpet Close to school 1n
Pom eroy Phone 992 3097
3 9 52tc

-·'
.to, I

WINNIE

We are in great need ot
properties , to sell.
Strike while the i_ron is
hot- Sell Today while
we have Cash Buyers.
All Cash for Your
Property .

tT'S ONE OF

~EBESTKEPT

5ECRE15 IN 111E
INDU:m&lt;Y I

n""" ...,
...,.10 ~ ""' IC!wr
• :z....
••If&gt;
IO&lt;&gt;aiH ......

taD•~tl

lr:ouil&gt;e:ryiC ...... IWiolll

you'r• not telling him all. Don't
hold back lacto.
YIIIQO (Aug. 23-lopt. 22)

IFWECAN
GET SOME WORKOUf..AND

5TAVE OFF ANY MORE

.....

'

6-+--lr---

.

BARNEY

-'

wor~

It;

JH

ZBWFPWF

F"C P W

SQF •

TQFC

PWBRIC
XPJEF

..
•

--•....
.
:..

----

---

-.-

:t

•

--..
.

soctal sense. However, you'll
have a tendency to Ignore work
that should be done.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Keep Information concern ing
personal finances to yourself.
One you talk with will pul It on
the teletype for all the world to

read.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc:
21) A good Idea you have will
not muster all the support It
deserves because you wor}'t
have all your facts In order.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon.
11) It will prO\Ie embarraaalng
to the donor tf you reveal the
source of something given you .
He'll regret his generosity.

...'.::'-.

''--.
-..
-=...·
'

.' I"

..,.,...-·
..f
I~

:3

...~
;:

...:'£
........

.,

"'
·~

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 111
Th8re will be some game-

playing today with an acqualn·
tance , Each of you wlll try to
outmaneuver the other for his
own advantage.

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 201
Wnill you do will be noticed. II
won't be neces1ary to blqw
your own horn . Let others

::
.....E

-L~

-~ ..
April t, 1175

You will become more active
th i s . year In club and
,rganlzatlonaj work. The rote
you play will bl!l a leading and
rewarding one. You'll gain new
admrrers.
..
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.I

'··'"

'"
.........

• i 7 G2
tQJ IOH
4K 84

• Bt

t K 8 32
• 982 '

Well

East

Pass

Paas

Pass
Pass

Paas

Pass

Pass

PaiS

Pan
Pall
Pass
Pass
Openmg lead - Q t

,.

South

3.
3 N.T.
!NT

u

tract.'In fact, he could take all
thirteen tricks without a finesse
provided trumps divide tbreetwo."
Jim: "But he's only in a
small slam So he lets
pessimism take hold. What if
trumps are four-one• What ir
-the club king Is wrong• The
answer ts - take out a little in·

surance! ''

' IV v

'·""''('

' ......'
-r-.,

I

IJ Ut

"

.....

- •• t'T

Oswald: "At the second "
trick, South plays a low spade
from bo.th hands, letting East
win the spade seven. Now a II·U~ I
club is played. Declarer wins . "t n u
the ace, trumpa a diamond in
dummy, returns to his h~nd ·
with a high spade and trumps
his last diamond "lit' dummy
- Now the heart king is the entry
to his hand to draw the remainmg trumps and the good hearts
in dummy are enou'h trick• to
make th_e contract.'
.

... ..
~

u:a;l :1 1!*83 u ..

..

' "'' ·~

I

The. biddtng has been : 31

••1\ '

'" ~
. -.. v ·~

A X ·Y D L B A A X I
11· LONGFE' LLOW

QE

JE

-MPJW

Yesterday's Cryploqaote: SOME _BOOKS ARE TO BE
TASTED &lt;&gt;TilERS TO BE SWAlLOWED, AND SOME FEW
TO BE dm:WEi&gt; AND DIGESTED.-BACON

By 01wald &amp; Jamea Jacoby
Jim: "Have you ever stopped
to think that good declarers
possess Bplil personalities?" , .
Qswald . "t don't have to stop
to think to know our readers
wan{ bridge, not paychiatry."
Jim : "Sometimes even expert players find themselves in
bad contracts- due of course,
to partner's bad bidding. ,\nd
they have to ·hope for the best.
They must be optunistic. But
when you arrive at a very good
contract, that's the lime for
pessimism."
Oswald : "That ' s what
loday's hand is all abo.ut. After
the openi"' lead, South sees
that he is tn a very good con-

West

Nort~

East

Soutb
?

' ;_ ; __

You, South . hold :
•KQ96G.A2 +IUU.Q87

What•do you•do?
A - Bid

tpode. Thls caU It
•tomallc Ia •II DOrmll and most
Olt

llntorm1l sy1lem1 .

TODAY'S QUESTION
Your partner 'responds ·one
mtrwnp. What do you do now?

Aaswer Tomwrow

-•I-t• I
'"~

...-..u
........

", ... '
I II 11'1'

"

Send Sf lor JJICOBY MODER/II
Oook to: "Win II Blldge. " (ciD ,11
ne~l. P.O. Box 4BQ, Radio
City Sllllorl, New Yorl!. N.Y. 10018.

o-.,l' b V

'

,,.....,

INftSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

.,

TH' CLOTHES -

..

EAST
• J 10 8 7

.A K Q3
• K5
• 9 64
4 A J 10 5

ETQXF

WHAT IN THUNDER
ARE 'IE PLANTIN' 'lORE
GARDEN PATCH ' UNDER

WESTIOI

Neither vulnerable

· •" " .,_

Q

31

SOUTH

II

..II;•

Great hands can be bad news

••

•'''

will be a pleasant day In the

WIN AT BRIDGE

•AQJ 103
tA
•Q73

DAILY' CRYPI'OQUOTE- Here's how to

1B B M

_,

LIBRA (8opt. 23-0ct. 22) Thla

.9612

IP 1

F S P,

."'

Matters re l ating to family
finances ahould continue to
take precedence over all
others loday . Don't lniJelt In
frivolous ventures

NORTH

called. .. "

QX

.'

~

ATION.NOONE
KNOWS WHO'S
BEHIND IT ?

0 lD WORRY ABOUT.

Your ambitious scheme Is not
in accord with a friend's ldeaa.
Cross words will result If you
don't handle this with extreme
tact.

wtll be annoyed If he thinks

CRYPTOQUOTE

''
...

ATION '1 BOLGHT

BARTOLI OUT.

A DUMMY CORPOR- ' .

TAURUS (April 20-Mor 201

way
LEO (JUIJ 23-Aug. :12) One
you're closely associated with

'

LCWEEZV!!

........,. . . _ .lal9'
-'*" --.;;

~E 'XYZ CORPOR -

~AT/5 OBVIOUS/_Y , ;;:;,~;;:( WE'VE GOT OTHER

You won't accomplish as much
as you're capable of today
because of your self·doubta.
Strive lor more Inner faith

give credit where credit Is due,
especially to one who haa
proven to be a capable ISSia ..
tant Appreclarlon goes a long

One' .letter limply stands for anolher. In thla II!IIPie A II
used for the three L's, X lor the two o·s. etc. Slnale letters,
opoatrophes, the length and !ormation of the wortla ore •11
blots. Each day the code Jetter&amp; are different.

..
•
-·

~

BOVIE OUTFIT CALLED

Movie "The Runaways" 8,10; Ascent of Man 20.33.
20; Witness to Yesterday 33 .
\0:110-Pollce Story 3,4.15; Marcus Welby, M.D. 4,6, 13; Barnaby
Jones 8, 10; News 20; Interlace 33.
I0 ·3Q-Your Fulure Is Now 33; International Animation
Festival 33.
li ·OO.:::News 3.4.6.8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 : 3Q-Johnny Carson 3, ~. \5: Wide. World Mystery "Come Ole
Wllh Me" 13; FBI 6; Movte "Who's Got The Action?" 8:
Movie "The Swinger" 10; Janak I 33.
t2 :3Q-Wide World Mystery 6.
1:011-:-.Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

GEMINI (MIJ 21-Junl 20)

Ye.terday'•AIIwer····
2% Dungeon
30 Helnwnan
23 Food
31 Papal cro'llll
z. Bric-a-brac 32 Exhausted
cabinet
(2 wds.)
%6 WhOOunit 33 Prepare
figure
38 "- Little
26 First-rate
Teapot"
za English
(2 wda.)
playwright 39 Actress,
(1~1934)
Rita -

•

9 : ~o-Woman

CANCER (Juno 21-.lulr 22) Do

DOWN
1 Hawthorne's
birthplace
2 "Iris" or
"Fedorat"
e.g.
3 Friendless
guy
4 Singular
5 See
6 Russian lake
7 Wood sorrel
8 Military man
9 Arboreal
civet
( 2 wds.)
12 Printing
errors
16 70's musical
19 Avoid

*

*·

Movie "Savages" 6,13;

S:Jo-Movle "Strange Homecoming"

35Fe~e

I

-&gt;•

-'fi"" Aull~ o F.._.,

ACROSS
1 - flighL
5 Promote
10 Footless
animal
11 Cry from
the balcony
13 Afford
14 Faith 15 Prior to
16 Road 17 "Fuehrer's
Face"
18 Italian wine
20 Peruvian
aty
21 Concealed
22 Kind of rash
23 Be remembered
26 Main artery
27 School
or collar
28 Office
seeker ( sl.)
!9 GoHer's goal
30 Roofing
substance
(2 wds.)
34 In bygon.e
days .

,;.

5:3o-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Gel
Smart 15; Electric Company 33.
6:0D-News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6; Electric Company 20;
lTV Utilization 33.
.
6:3Q-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6; CBS News
8, 10; Zoom 20; Your Future Is Now 33
7:DO--Trulh or Consequences 3,4; Bowling For Dollars 6: What's
My Line? 8; News \0; Name That Tune 13; f-jlgh ~chool T.V.
Honor Society 15; Antiques 20; Lilias, Yoga and You 33.
7:3Q-Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywood Squares 4; 'Wild, Wild
World of Animals 6; Buck Owens 8; New Price Is Righi 10:
To Tell The Truth 13; Spring Street USA 15; RFD 20; Marco
Sportllle 33.
8:110-Adam -12 3,4,15; Happy Days 6, \3; Good Times 8, 10; Solar
•• ~ne_r_gy 20,33.

You'll eagerly pick another's
brain for advice. But when II
comes to making declalona,
you'll ignore the advlcel

suffix
31- de
France
37 Doling
39 Festive
to Quiver
n Jejune
t2 Muse of
poetry
43 "- are

'

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

in nn u"enrllrlg

~tN'·~~r
by THOMAS JOSEPH

GASOUNE AILEY

exp Insured. free esl1mates .
Call 992 3057 or Coolville, 1
667 3041
3·18 12tp

Your

co,wllmirnlt•M
A SATELLITE

euy HOT FOR OHE ,

------------- D&amp;D T REE frimm 1ng, 20 years

Us For
Needs in Real Estate.

I""""'"¥: 7'hlll
mc•dium
u-au-

H£ WilL Gn WflL,

'E XC AVATING , dozer , l oader
and backhoe work ; septic
tanks insta l led; dump trucks
and"'lo -boys for h1re , Wilt haul
fJI..j dlrl. top soli , limestone a
gravel , Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers , day pt1one 992 7089 ,
night phone 992 ·3525 or 992
5232
2-11 tfc

CALL 992·2259

(Ane,en l•••rrow)

-•...
---.
--.-..
--.

5.0D-FBI 3; Andy Grlllllh 8; Mister Rogers· Nelghbo.rhood
20,33; Ironside 13.

for T-oy, AprU I, 1178
(Morch 21-Aprlt 11)

III I )

;

1S.

ARI!I

Jmuhl.. ~: DALLY ENSUE TURTLE POLITE

"'alllrflllv'~

Bonanza

Bernice Bide Oaol

V~

I I I

20,

4·110-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset 15;
Gilligan's Island 6; Tattletales 8; Sesame Street 20,33;
Movie " The Trap" 10; Mike Douglas 13.
4:3Q-Bewllched3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6; Lucy Show 8;

WHAI "THEY
WEI6HE!7 AFTEI"r
A HEAVY MEAL.

......
~

•

Tomorrow 8, 10.

12 :45-Eiectrlc Company 33.
12 .55-NBC News 3.15.
I :110-News 3; All My Children 6, \3: Phil Donahue 8; Young and
the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1·30-How To Survive A Marriage 3.4,t5; Lei's Make A Deal
6,13; As The World Turns 8, 10.
2·00-0ays 01 Our Lives 3, ~.15; $10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
2 3Q-Ooctors 3 .~, )5 : Big Showdown 6, 13; Edge of Night 8, 10.
3:110-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; Price Is
Right 8,\0; Lilias, Yoga and You 20.
3· 30-0ne Life lo Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game 8, 10;. Your

AstroGrapM

Now .,..,..the elrolod letttro
to form the ourpriH 1111wer. u
~~~¢=~=~~~~~::7=~•=u~&amp;~&amp;~ested by the...,.. tlll1oon.

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

Buyers See

I []

*
...

11 :15-Graham Kerr 8; Dan lmel's World 10.
a .oo-Jackpol! 3, 15; Password 6.13; To Be Announced 4; News
8,10.
12 : ~Biank Check 3.15; Spilt Second 6,13; · Search For

[J

I

IJEFUAJ. ,

DOZER work , land clearing by
the ac re , hourly or contracl
Farm ponds , roads, etc
Large dozer and operator
wlft1 over 20 years ex
perience Pullms Excavahng
Pomeroy , Ohio Phone 99~ ·
2478
12 19 tfc

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

(;ucoRI

10

SEWING MACHINE ; Repair s,
ser vic e, all makes, 992 228 4.
The Fabf!c Shop, Pomeroy ,
Author~zed Singer Sales and
Se rv ice We sharpen Sc1ssor s
3 29 tf c

BUY NOW &amp; SAVE. Low , low ,
down payments, a pet 10 teres t 30 yr financmg on new
homes 1n 3 Meigs County
locations, or 6 \JI LD on your
lot Phone 992 5976 or 992 5844
3 13 lfc

=

,..., ........ &lt;. . ... .. _ ..

'REA DY

~w~

r»&amp;Mill'l!J1®~ =!::! -J

ALLEY OOP

3-21 -15

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

10 :110-Celebrily Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Joker's Wild 8,t0; Dinah!
13
lO:JQ-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,t5, Gambll8,10.
11 oo-H1gh Rollers 3,4,15: One Life to Live 6; Now You See It
8.10; Electric Company 20

one Iefler to each ~quare. to
form four ordinary word1.

8FT CAMPER t op for pickup
truck Pr ice S200 Phone 992
7727
3·27 4tc

your mobile hOme for
cash I~ homes wanted, 1958
r' thru 1972 model s. Phone ( 6U)
446 .1425. Gll l h po tis
J 9-78 tC:

J

( jnscramble these four Jumble1.

3 25 6tc

~ELL

!·

9·25-Chuck While Reports 10
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6 ; Galldplng Gourmet 8;

Ph. 985-4102

-

Mobile Homes For Sale

'.

&amp;

Chester, Ohio

WAS HER S for sale Phone 992 ·

3313

OlJT 1D SHeNa
Sl'f. ttJGH£;S a=

Construction Co.

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

Captain Kangaroo 8: Popeye 10, Sesame Slreet

8 . 25- Captain Kangaroo 10.

MU5r FIGHT TO

BEDROOM house . tully
carpeted , basem ent , garag~ ,
on corner ! ot. fenced yard .
fo rce d air furnace heat.
outside storage build1ng ,
w1ndows , alum1nlJm S1dmg.
12 m i l e east of Mason , on Rt
33 Sl 9, 500 . Phone ( 304) 773 ·
5942 .
3_
31 _ 31C
...L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

·~

8·3Q-Misslon: Impossible 6 ,
.1
9 00-A M 3, Phil Donahue 4,15, To Be Announced 8; Morning
With D. J. 13.

Bissell Brothers

HELP· HELP·

11 .3Q-Hollywood Squares 3.t5; Brady Bunch 6,13; News 4;
Love Of Llle 8, 10; Sesame Street 20.

Future Is Now

TUESDAY, APRIL 1,1975

8 lQ-Your Future Is Now 20.

6 RMS , garaQe : panelm_£1 ,
breezeway , 8 acr es Call 992
3059
3 25 6t c

3

3,4 ; News 13.

6:3o-1\f11!1'}\'olnutes to Live By 4; News 6; Bible Answer&amp; a.
Col'rcerns &amp; C,omments 10; Rev . Cleophus Robinson 13.
6 3s--tolumbus Today 4:
6 s&lt;5n"'.Morlllng lleport 3: Formllme 10.
7·110-Today 3,4,15; A M America 13; A M America 6; CBS

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

BEAUTIFUL new nome on
l ake, 3 bedrooms , bath &amp; • 2.
car pet 1ng , drap es , b1g den
Call 992 ·3493
3 24 tfc

oo-- Tomorrow
.

NEW br1ck home on Stale Rt 7
between
Pomeroy
and
Chester 3 bedrooms , 2 bath ,
garage, basement, f 1r ep lace,
carpeted Phone 985 -3365
3 28 Jtc

CLOSE OUT on new Zig Zag
sew 1ng rllach1nes . For sewing
stretch fabr iCS. buttonholes.,
fancy designs , etc Pa i nt
SI1Qhlly blemished . Cho1ce of
car rying case or sewing :
stand $49 .80 cash or te rms
ava1labl e Phone 992 .1755
1218·tfc,

1

6 .00-S unnse Seminar 4, Sunrise Se mester 10.
6 2~.,...,. Report 13.
' ,-

WE HAVE NEARLY 50
PROPERT IES FOR SA.LE
WHEN YOU REALLY WANT
IT SOLD, TRY TEAFORD AT ---------------

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

-- -----------WANTED Old upright p 1anos,

OF- rtCEGIRL -- Partorf ,
tim e N eat ty p ist , shorthand ,
knowledge of bookkeeping neces sar y or hel pful . f 1lrng
Experi enced preferred Write
to Sox 729 L. C·O The Da il y
Senllnel. Pomeroy, · Oh10
4516'i'
3 28 ·3tc

$9,500.00.
JO ACRES - In lhe boon docks

Phon e 742 ·3762

furn1ture , ice boxes , bfass
beds , or complete househo lds
Write M . 0 .-. Miller. Rt 4,
· Pomeroy , Ohio c.,n 992 -1760
10-7 74

DRAFTSMAN
wanted
Preferably w •th track wor k
eltpene,nce Sen d resume to
P . 0 . BoK 152, Pomeroy . Oh10
Equal
Opportun 1ly
em
ployers
3 JO 7tc

a frailer One house 1S rented
and 3 nice burtdmg lots. Only

l-22-78tp

·a u)

Help Wanted

,NEW LISTING -2 houses and

MONDAY, MARCH 31,1975
7:3o-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Masquerade Party~ ~
, Police Surgeon 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8 ; Municipal Court 10; To
Tell the Truth 13; Untamed World 15; Washington Straight
Talk 20: Episode Act/on 33.
'
8.110-Smothers Brothers 3,4, 15; Rookies 6, 13; Gun smoke 8, \0;
Thin Edge 20.33 .
9:110-NCAA Basketball 3.~. 15; SWAT 6, 13; Dreamer That
Remains : Harry Partch 20; Thin Edge and Yoo 33.
9:30-Rhoda 8,10; Romantic Rebellion 20.33.
10 OD-Carlbe 6, \3; Medical Center ·a, 10; News 20; Wash-Ington
Straight Talk 33.
10:3o-Behlnd the Lines 33.
11 .110-News 3,4,6,8, 10, \3, 15; ABC News 33.
lh:3Q-Johnny Carson 3,~, 15; Wide World Myslery 13; FBI 6;
Movie " Force Five" 8; Movie " II Started wllh a Kiss" 10;
Janak! 33.
12 :3Q-Wide World Mystery "The Nurse Killer" 6

I

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

TW O bedroom tra1ler Adults
only Phone 992 3975 or 992 ' GROCERY business for sale.
2571
Buildmg for sale or lease .
3 23 ttc
PhoneJ735618from 8. 30p m
- to 10 p m for appointment.
5 RM HOUSE Wi th bath on Rt
3 10 lfq
33, b1g yard Phone q92 757 1
3 30 6tc 1971 FORD t ru c k , 1? ton , m •xeq
hay Phone 992 3436 or 992
3 RM . turn 1shed itpl, ut i l i tie s
5248
pa 1d
356 North 4th St ,
3 30 Stc
Middleport

MIX E 0 hay for
992 3658

, 11\J FACT·· PAT 'S WH"r' DA GURU
MAH A - ~WAM I 6ABOO HAS
PICK EO Dt5 P1?0Mt5 tN, !llA&gt;JKMI&gt;JDe r. YOU&gt;J 6 5 PECI ME'-l TO
BE A SWAM I LI KE HI55E LF !

A LITTLE; BACK-

I

C BRAD~ORD , Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 -3a21 or 949 3161
Racme, Oh 1o
Cntt Bradford
5 1-tf

'104,95(KD)

- -·-,--·-- - - - - - - -

UH · IT5 ME' 50'-l·
BUSTER KA LLIKAK-HE 5 ALLUZ BEHJ'

CB SALES &amp; PARTS

Pomeroy?

-lOME

20"-3'12 HP

3 30 M e

,

Pts.
66
58
57
39
38
32

Ph. 992-2174.

For Sale

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

highway
Safety
any condition
Pav1ng SI O
each First floor onlv Write
Department suggests you show
and g1ve d 1rect1ons to W1rten
a litUe patience and cow-tesy·m
P 1ano Co .• Box 188 . Sa rd •s ,
Oh 10 43946
'
unexpected traffic situations.
3·27 6tp
Allow extra driving tune to - - -----------------ease the strain . Drive happy ! J UNK autos . complete .and

C~ment

SMITH N.EI.$0N
MOTORS, INC.

TURF TRIM MOWER

STANDI NG t•mbers
Contact
MOO ERN stereo rae110 am fm .
Pomeroy Forrest Products
separate controls 4 speaker '
P 0 Box 726 , Pomeroy , Oh 10
sou nd
syste m
Ba lanc e
Ph one 992 5965
Sl(lJ 5Bor terms Catl9923965
3 30 12tc
J 31 tfc --- - -· -- -- ---- -- -- ~---

Yo~r

1Butrdozer Radiator to the
_smallest 1-ieater CQre
Nathan Biggs
Radiator 5pec!alisl

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

Wanh!lt To Buy

MOVING , MusT sell - Double
oven electrtc ran!!Je . cop
perlone , l1ke new Also m •sc
1tems Pllon e 742 5734
3 31 6t c

--

4 BEDROOM house , wall to wall
carpetir\Q, a .c. fenced '" yard
Wit h pat JO, MICe Phone 992
2780 or 992 343 2
J 19 tfc TW O 12 m plows 3 pi hitCh ,
-·- -·SIBS Also, 2 14 in . plow s, 3 pt
h1t
ch !200 Ph one 985 3594 .
AVAILABLE thts week, small 2
3 30 1tp
bedroom, double Wide mobile
home near Pomeroy Off Rt 7
by pass No children or pets.
Ptlone 99 2 7017 or 992 7666 .
3 30 3fc

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

Foi Sale

..... .-

E«PERIENCED
'·
,R adlato.: I
:-......_ .·'
Service

"'ORD Trac lor
with side
mower, runs good and good
rubber S950 985 ·3594
3 30 7tp

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

~-

'

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

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cue No 21440
Est~ht
ol Beul~h B. Sm1th PR IVAT E meetmo room for
Deceased
any organ1zatron , phone 992
Not1ce 1S hereby Q1¥en that
39 75
Emma Jean Oabo of Pomeroy ,
J 11 tfc
Ohio , has been duly appointed
EKecutr1K of the Estate of
Beu l ah 8 Sm1th, deceased , late TRAILER space, 2 mi les rrom
of Me•QS Covntv . Ohio
· Harr1sonvilt e
Ut 111t 1es
Cre d •tor s are required to fJ!e
available Phone 742 3821
the1r claims with sa id fiduciary
3·25 5tc
within four months
Dated th i S lith day of March fRAILER SPACE , 3.it mil~
\915
norlh of Meigs High School on
old Rt . 33. Phone 992 -7941
Menning 0 Webster
1.23 tf c
JuCJge
Court or Common Pleas , DU~LEX ~ 2Js•-; -walnU fSt,
, Probat e D1viS10n
Middleport . Oh10 Phone 992
(3l 11 . 24, 31 , Jtc
27 80 or 992 3432
2 19 lf c

•,
7

Heatmg
Cooling
Refngeratian. Roaf Repa1rs
Gutters
Plumb.ng
E lectnca 1 Repa•n
and
Serv1ce .
Call 992-JS09 and
Save on your repa1.-s : also
repa1r mowers, compressors
and outboards 8rmg it m
and save.

Chain
Precision
Ground

3 'and 4 ROOM furn 1shed Bnd
unfurn i Shed
apartments .
Phone 992 5434.
4 12 .tfc

w

Tea m
L
M i tc,hetl 's Tr 10
86 26
S1 mdn · ~- ~jc~ a P,f i r
83 29
5] 49
Shak l ee 'G iris
H F rank 's G•rls
47 65
wa r d 's Rollettes
H 65
Me •gs Safetyettes
20 92'
Mit
H igh .ream senes Chell ' S Tr10 lt196 , Meios
143 I ,
Safetyettes
Ward ' s
Roii Pttes 1393
H tgh team oame Mit
Chell 's Tr 1o 526 . S•man 's P ick a
Pa •r 509 , Meigs Safetyett es

500

Jll

REMODELING,
plumbmg,
heat1ng , and all types of
general
repa1r
Work
guaranteed 20 years ex
perlence Phone 99 2 2409
3· 111fc

Pomero y Lanes
Thursday Str1k~rs
March 6, 1i15

Thursday Str i kers
March 10, 1915
Team
W . L.
S1mon 's P1ck a Pa1r
81 13
Ml t Cho l l s Trio
80 24
Shakt ee G•rls
S1 n
H Fr ank ' ~ Girls
45 59
Word 's Roll ett"s
41 bJ
M e.gs Safet..,.enes
u 90
H 1gh team ser ies - S•mon 's
P1 ck a Pa1r 1472 , Mitchell 's
Tr •o 1437 . Shaklee C.1r l s 1379
H•9h team Game - S1mon 's
P 1c k a Pa~r 511 and 499 ,
Shal&lt; tee G~r l s 493
H fgrl mCIIV IdVSII ser1eS Wanda Teaford 525 . P at t i
Donna Me
Wi ll i ams 519
Farland 488
H1gh !OdiV Idual Qlllme Wanda Teaford 204 . Patti
Williams 190 . wanda Teaford

- - - --

PART

l_____._-_-------------------Phone
-------- ..... ----- __,

Team
W l
M• tchell ' s 'frio
66 22
s.mon 's Ptck a Pa1r
t.5 23
S11aklee G1r l s
49 39
H Frank 's Girls
37 51
Ward 's Rolleltes
33 55
Me1gs Sate t ye tt es
14 74
H 19h team ser.es - Shaklee
G~rls 1408 . Mitc hell's Tr1 1396 ,
H Frank 'S Grrls 1392
H•g ll team game - Shaklee
G.rls SIB, Mitchell 's Trio 491.
H Frank's GirlS 48 4
H19h \n d1V1dua1 ser1es - Sue
Ha1d 508 . Shir ley M1tchell 500 .
Patt 1 Will1ams 461
H19h cnd•v •dual game Pdl11 W•lhams 20 1, Sue Haid
19 5. Sh •rley M•tchell 185

---

-

WILL do ia n i tor work or
P&lt;llnting Phone 992 2262
3 30 6tc

I
I
1

Jordan F\ mcral Home. wfl s

308 Page, Middleport

From the largest Truck 01

3

1

dau gh ter. Mr . and Mrs
Murrell Ba1ley and daughter,
and her brolher-m-law and
sister , Mr . and Mrs. Thad Dye
and · daughters. They were
ove rnight gues ts at the home of
Mrs Martha Mays and her
father , Ney Carpenter. Olher
callers al the Carpenter home
were Mr. and Mrs. W1lham
Cl~well, local, and Hilbert Cox,
Albany.
Waller Jordan , Bigony-

Home Maintenance

Limestone &amp; Fill Dirt
Commerciai-Residtntlll
Construction &amp; Remodel

RACINE PLUMBING
..
&amp;HEATING
tomplete plumbing

INDIAN JOE'S

P-J

1

·couNTRY Mob1le Ho'me•Park ,
Rt JJ , ten m1les north or
Pomeroy . Large 1o1s With.
concrete pat ios , Sidewalks,
runners
and
off
street
park1ng Pbone 992 7479
12 31 trc

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

AuCTION,

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

MAIL TO:

Mr , and Mrs. Ralph Fra•ier,
Gallipolis, visited her mother.
Goldte G1llogly, and called on
olher relatives in the area.
Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Oliver
and Steve, Columbus, were
guests of Mr. and Mrs . Wulter
Jordan on Salurday.
Mrs . Herman Cordray,
Athens Route, spent several
days here wilh Mrs. Bculuh
Cordray, while her son-in-law
and daughter, Mr and Mrs
Reed Jeffers , visited m lhe
New Boston. Illinois, area wtlh
their children, Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Jeffers, Mr . and Mrs .
Richard Jeffers and daughters.
and Mr . and Mrs . J ohn
Dw11181n and fatnily .
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Leist
and daughters, Gaithersbw-g,
Maryland, are spending a few
days here and her mother.
Lucy Thomas, who had spent
some time at the Letst home.
retw-ned to her home here with
them. They came to Columbus
dw-ing the weekend and Mrs.
Thomas ' sister, Amy Caldwell ,
accompanied them here from
there.
Mrs. Arthw- Crabtree enter tained with a Stanley
Products Party on Wednesday
evening. Several fr iends and
relatives attended.
·
Rick Woodrum. McArthur,
VIsited with his grandmother,
Murl Galaway, on Sunday
afternoon. Recent guests al tlle
Galaway home were Mrs.
Ardis Price, Athens, and Mrs.
Lenore Evans, Hebardsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Rick McDaniel
vaca tioned in Kentu cky,
.Tennessee, and Georgia. They
enjoyed sights at Mammoth
Cave, Kentucky ; visited with
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Euler at
Olattanooga, Tenn. and toured
Rock City, Georgia, before
retw-ning home.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gillogly
spent Saturday mght and
Sun&lt;\;ty with his sister, · Mrs
Elba McKrtight, tn Colwnbus.
Mrs. Mary I1&gt;vell, Teresa,
Robin , and Debbie . South
Olarleston, W. Va ., visited
here with 11&lt;-r mother, Helen
Queen , her son-in -law, and

10 ,,_

-

SALES&amp; SERVICE
992-3092

WE ARE no longer employees
of Dudley ' s Ftor1St, M1d
Cfleport
Mrs Beulah Wilde and Mrs
Bess1e Dar st
3 28 3tc

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

I

I
I

I

3

WilKINSON
SMALL ENGINE

---------------3 S·lfc
For Rent

- ----

I
I
I
I

I

1

Sv.racuse, Ohio

777 Pearl Street
Middleport. Ohio
Phone 992-5367 or 992-U. 1

'"tOR your "O il of Mmk"
CosmetiCS . Phone BROWN 'S
992 5113 ~
1 1 tfc

HIIV\''

HEI,L

-- --- - z

--1
Ir------- ~-----------------------------.

t

LARRY LAVENDER

8-K EXCAVATING
OOMPANY

MEIGS Coun ty Humane Soc1e t y
DOG S FOR ADOPTION One 1914 CAPR I V 6 eng.ne, steel
full
bloodeel
Ge rm an
bel t ed rad•als. decor group ,
Shepherd female , J months
excellent condition 25 to 28
ol d One black and wh 1l e
m p g Call 992 5170 after 5
m1xed breed male 18 months
P m
old Two Coll •e and Stlepherd
3 30 7t c
m l)ced . black and wh•Te
ma l e5. , 3' , months old Call 1974 OLDS MOBILE Cullass
949 4917
Sup reme , maroon W1fh whde
] 30 6tp
v1nyl top . sharp Phone 742
3215
ANNOUNCING new hours,
3 25 6tc
SKATE A WAY , 7 30 to 10
p m , Wednesday , F r 1d ay,
1970 "
VW
c onvert i ble
and Saturday Avail able for
Everythmg new Phone 742
pr •vate parTie s Monr;toy ,
3502
Tuesday
and
Thursday
J 30 ·3tc
n1ghts
Wednesday
and
- - - -------~- -- ---Sunct ay afternoon~ Phon e 1915
MONTE Carlo, 4, 000 miles,
985 3939,' 985 9990 or 985 4141
alt power , i!l!ff AM stereo
3 30 t2tc
tape Call 99 2 70)6 after 5 p m

or submit it on another sheet of paper.

I

Ph. 9J2-J99J

Water, Electric, Gu, Sewer
(lnes, insflllltd. Work
guaranteed.
Dozer, Bo~dchoe, Trucks

1970
FORD
Maver~ck
automat1c. 6 cy l easy on gas
Phone 992 2008 or 949 2911
3 30 3tc

Notice

U.~e the following Coupon for your Free Advertisement;

lI

Free Estimates

A real cream

'

/

l

Gutters· Awnings

3 25-1mo.

'

All ads must be in writjng and limited to 20 words or less.
We must have your name, address and telephone number
on file, whether or· not all this information appears in
yoer ad. Free Ads wi II not be accepted by telephone.

l

ALUMINUM
S1d1ng. Soflilt

Building Homes

POMEROY, OHIO

WED., THURS. and FRI., APRIL 2, 3, 4

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

STORM
Windows &amp;boors

'

POMEROY
MOTOK
CO.
OPEN EVES. 8:00P. M.

FOR THREE DAYS

:

Blow" into Wall s &amp; AH1cs .

I

FREE OF CHARGE

:

Blown
Insulation Services

949-3604

$1595

I Kli.l.

I......

Television log for easy viewing

FISHY HERE-

. .

We Specialize In

1913 PLY . STA. WAGON

WE WtLL INSERT

.

-

S OMETI-' ING'S

I JUST GOT HEr&lt;tl"_
HOW COUI.P

Busmess Services·

-.....

.,
KII..L.. HIM?

'

NEIGLER
BUILDERS SUPPLY

. luggag e r ack , r adio, dark green fin ish . Like new &amp; loaded
w ith extras.

,.

7- The _l)aily Senh~l, Middlepurt-l'otll•·ruy, u.. Munruty, Marol1:n, 1~115

Fo1: Fast 'Results Use Sentinel Clas·s ifieds

LOOKING.

..

,

.

' " ....:::!

LINE FER?

' : ;:!~;,
IM

..

nft ii:
lt'tl~ J

I

I

J •

..J.i

,y_;.

.'
'.
''

�.'

~

'

•

'

.'
6- Tile Dally ~p!inel, Middleport-Po~neruy , 0 .. Mmjday, March 31 : 1975

I

r

Auto Sales
.

FORA
JOB?

2 SIGNS ·

Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY - :Motor Co•.
1972 CHEVROLET KINGSWOOD ESTATE

$2195

3 sea t wagon, te ss than 30.000 miles by local owner, 400 V
steer 1ng brakes, automat!( power door lock s,

8, P

Racine, 0 .

ll79l
Suburban 3 Seat, V·8 engme, automafte trans .. power
steeri ng &amp; brakes. factory a1r cond•t.onmg . lu ggage ra ck,
green fmish, radio . L•ke new W· W tires

YOUR SITUATION WANTED AD

1971 MATADOR
4 Door, fu lly equ1pped tnc air , dark red

puff .

FREE OFFER

/
l
I

MY AD READS AS FOLLOWS:

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

1

I

II
I
I

Thursday n1ght, 7
at Mason AUCI IOO ,
p m
Horton St . In Mason, W \Ia.
Consignments welcome
Phone (304 ) HJ 5471
2·2·1fc

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

NOW sell ing Fuller Brush
Products , phone 992 3410 .
1 24 tf c
PU BltC shoot. Meigs Mu zz le
Load er s. tzaa k Walton Far m ,
Chester . Apn l 5. 1 30 p .m
Ap ril 6, ram date

l

Classified
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 457(19

3 31 Sic

Pets For Sale

II

FEMALE OacMhund, red , AK
C Reg min•ature , 7 months
old Phone 7•2 4256
3 JO Jtc

1
I

Name

I

Employment Wanted

I

It

Mdress
City
Zip

----- ---.

TIME bookkeeping ,
fle x~ble hours 1 or 2 days a
week or
even1ngs
Ex
perl enced , excellent loca l
r e f ere n ce Phon e 992 7090
evenmgs
3 30 ·8tc

Carpenter News, Event Local Bowling

•

fl own by jet fr om Ohio
Untverstly Atrport to Bates~
vtlle. Indiamt, where he and
oth er guests toured the
fl1cihl1es of lhe Balesv11le
Casket Company and allendrd
semmars spunsured

by

the

company

Mr . and Mrs. Gene Jeffers,
Lesler. Marco, and Robert.
and

her alull, were g ues ts of

t,heJr son-m-law and daug hter ,
Mr. and Mrs . Mtke Lawson.
Mrs . Mike Lawson (Margie
Jeffers l has·re&lt;:mved word !hut
she has been accepted at the
Denllsl School at Oh10 State
University foll owing her
grad ual10n
from
Ohio
University in June

182

,,5

Thursday Str i ktrs
M•rcft :H.

H igh 1Md 1v 1duat series Wanda Teaford 533 ; Opal Hupp
J9J , D onna McFarland and
Sh 1r l ey M IICilell 482
H 1gh md 1vidual game
Wanda T eaford and Op al Hupp
194 . wa n da Teaford 190 ,
Don na M c Far l and 184

·---~----

"Hello. Gamblers' Anonymous'
FlYe to one you can't IU...
who's calling."

~,t l

A thought for the day :
American humorist Charles
Farrar ·' Browne
sa1d, aLet us
all be happy and live withtn our
means, even if we have to
borrow money lo do tl ."

March 2$ , 1975
Tri · Counly League
Stand.ngs
Team
Ph .
Raw li ngs Auto Parts
56
Roach 'S Gvn Shop
S6
Se ar s Catalog Merchants
S2
H &amp; R F i res tone
....
Po m eroy Cemnl Block Co
44
M 1dwest Stee l Co
J6
1-h gh ind iv •dual game
Henry Clafworthy 228 :
Sec ond h1gh ind1v rdual game
Henry Clatworth'l 216

•

-·- ------- - - - - - - - -

H Jgh senes - · Henry Clat
wor thy 603
Oale
Sec ond h 19h ser•es
D a vi s 552

r RAl
lj~ R. apartmentsTorrent
Phon e 992 .5248 - · - - ...... . _
- -

.

-

498 Locust Sf,
Middleport, Ohio 1 2 1 Mo

Team high' game - J)omeroy
Block Co . 950.
Team
h1Qh
ser.es
Pomeroy Cement Block Co
2641
I
Early Wednesdly
Miud Ltague
MarchU , 1971

Tum

Stand•nvs

heating service and
general sheet metal
Fr e e
works.
Estimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emer,gency 992-3995
or 992-5100
L .

'
\

CAP!' AIN EASY

'

OKAY-- LOOk:'i LIK E' DA COAST
15 C LEAR. BU5TER• ... HERE' WE' GO
1'-ITA

Regallaln
Young 's Super Mkt .
Sm i th Nelson Motors
Zide 's Sperl Shop
Tentll framers
Nelson Drug co,
High 1nd1V1dua l game
Men . Bill Por ter 245 ,· women .
Betty ~m1th 21 1.
Second h1gh md•vidual g•me
Men , larry Dugan 232,
wom en , Helen Phelps 204.
High ser 1es Men , Bill
Porter 658 ; women , Setty
Smith 536.
Second tligh ser1es ·- Men , A
L Phelps Jr 594 ; women . Pat
CcJrson 518
Team t,igll game Tenth
F ram ~ rs I'll•
Team hiqh c;erie~ Tenth
r ramcrs 21 11

''

Improvement
and
Se rvice - Anything
r.xed around th e home , from
roof to basement You w111
l1ke our work , and rates .
Phone 742 5081
12·29 -tfc
Repa~r

'72,9Q(KD)

BE DROO M mob1le home
washer and Clryer , 11 ? baths,
util i t ies paid , S42 SO week 308
Page St, Middleport. Oh10
3 4 lfc
. -·--1 BEDROOM mob 1le home m
Sy ra cu se No chddren or pets
Call 992 2441 after 6 p m .
Oepos1t required
3 11 lfc

22"-3112 HP
Self- Prope lied

- -----

E LWOOD BOWERS RE PA IR
- Sweepers , toasters, 1ron s,
all small appl•ances Lawn
mowers, next to Stat e H1gh
way Garage on Route 1
Phon e 985 3825
3 11 26tc
"St;PTIC
T-ANKS
cJea nea
Modern San,tatlon, 99 2.J9S4 or
992 7349.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-..!.. _ _ _
9_
18_ lfc

Real Estate--For Sale

DA MAHA · 5 WAMI'5

LDVE'-LOW:5 TEMPLE!

POMEROY LANDMARK:
9 ... _JackW . carsey,~gr.
6i1l Ptu~ne 992 -2191

WA~D!

NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom

---·------ ----

3 30 6tc GAS coo ks tove, n1ce for can
-- - - - -------- - - - - - - - - nmg Phone 985 3585
3 10 3tc
FURNISHED
apartment.
adults onty m Midd l eport
Phone 992 3874
lJSED parts, Fry e's Tru c k and
Auto Parts, Rutland , Oh10
3_
25_ lfc
- - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ !.._ _ _ _
Phone (614) 742 6094

house w i th shower bath
Porches and garage w i lh level

lot s•5oo oo
RACINE - Modern 3 bedroom
home. Large bath . Nat gas
F A furnace , 7 large closets
with s tora ge shelves . Dry
ba sement , garage w1th shop
and large lot

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

-------- -----STANLEY Products tor sale.

on Shade River . $6.000 .

3 9 261c
sate

BUSINESS - We have severa l
and locations with buildings .
Work for yourself with no
layoffs.

Phone
3 16 tfc

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

FARM Lumber See us tor your
ne eds
Pomeroy
Forrest
Products , Ba •l ey Run Road
Phon e 992 5965
3 19 -12t c

--- ------------...... ,
INDI A N Joe 's Spor ., ,.,.
~ou

buy and sell guns , ammo,
f iS hing equ1pment , and after
A pril 1, we wrll have f 1sh bart
Stop by at 308 Pag e St ,
Middleport Phone 992 3509 .
J 2 Jotc

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

FARMA LL 300 tractor, 8 fl
Ol1ver 0 1sc 2 bottom Ol1ver
pl ow on rubber All in good
cond1 t10n George Co l l 1ns ,
Tup pers Pla•ns Phone 667
. 3J84
3·28 3t c
MAKE beat en down carpet nap
at doorways bright and fluffy
aga1n w1lh Blue L ustre Baker
Furn1ture ComJ:)any
3 28 -Jtc

308 Page St.
Middleport, 0. 992-3509

News 8, 10
8:110-Lassle 6,
33.

Rad1os, Antenna!, Towers ,
Used TV 's. Buy from the
" 1nd1an " and save "Warn
Pum ". We buy used Radios
and Towers. RadiOS repa~red
by FCC lic ense d serv1ce
personnel Stop and see the
"lnd1an" and
Bubbles.
Mon1tor Chann•l 10 and 20.

SPLIT or round locust posts for
sa le Will del i ver . 7Sc each
Call 992 5702
3·28 ·3tc

del ,v eredtoour yard We ptck
up (!luto OOd l es and buy all
k1ndS of scrap metals and
1ron . R ider 's Salvage . St Rt
124, Rt 4, Pomer ov , 01\io .
Call 992 S-168
10 11 ttc

24,000 BTU General Electr1c a~r
condllioner , not a year old
Phone 992 2952
. l ·26 ·tfC
CASH pa 1d for all makes and models of mob rle homes , HAY and corn for sale . Phone
992 1306 .
Phone area code 61f123 -953 l.
3 25 6lp
•
~
4 lJ .tfc

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

BORN LOSER

-

WI-IEORE: CO
~OIJ n-Il f,J K
'lOI:JIRE

Z~RD
FRCCIPITATIOI'J t

Tattletales 10, New Zoo Revue 13.

~lob~

\

Home Building
Room Additions
and Garages

-

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

"THAT'S PlitET"N
SMAil::T "TH\Nl&lt;IN6
ON HIS PART, IF
V~K ME!

MIX CdNCRETE&lt;Ii"'
l1ver ed rrght tO you r prc.1ect .
Fas 1
and
easy
Free
est i mates Phone 992 -328-4
Goegle•n Ready Mix Co ,
M1ddleport Ohio .
6-30 -tfc

I

IAI.£'/ME

I I

UTrLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Ll----=.:Prii(~·~·=IISI~IIISWIII=IIIn==--.....JI ( I
,
I GOT THFn'E lttE
f1ti£ST OOGTOR-5 A

~ · 1 BlAME Tl£ COPS, ANNIE WHEN 50MFTHU4G tiAPPfHS SO
QuiCtc M090P'f COULD ~UESS
PI:QffCT - MAY8 f. TtiEY WfRE. FWf
SECOH06 TOO ~ArE - HOT MORE -

w

~ COUlOH'l HAVE

BElTER - AMD WE

ARE TAIC'I HQ HIM
lOA f!HE MOSPUA~·
't WO I".DN.TH5 -

-· - -- -~ ------- -- -

MOBILE ho ni e, 1971 65 X 12
King '2 bedroom Phone 992 5496
3·l 8·6tc

•

How !.IOU know
1t tell l.jOU that, 1,-,,11I
You can't read!

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

Real Estate For Sale

'

NEW all electflc home , 3
b edrms , 2 baths , doub l e
garage, 5 lots overlooking
nver 1n Syracuse Complete
tra il er hookup and rent ed
Pt1one 992 -5888
3 28 ·3tp

....... .

'"" "•" •L''-'"
"'.
' ' 0 ••
~

..

ULABNER

AH'LL HATE

IN ODBA-DCO WHEN
TWO M'EN WANrT}I!;-

')OU WILL USE

AND THE 00 WILL

THEMOSI

USE THE NOS!
FOPULAR WEAPON

TO SEE=

YO' GO-

5AME 6 /RI.., THEY

FbPULAR ~A?~

OF YOUR

THE

OFOOI&lt;S-

'fHE. SWORD!~!

'
I

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

6 ROOM house w•th oath . 3
bedroom , full basement , gas
hea l, n .w floor , wall to wall
carpet Close to school 1n
Pom eroy Phone 992 3097
3 9 52tc

-·'
.to, I

WINNIE

We are in great need ot
properties , to sell.
Strike while the i_ron is
hot- Sell Today while
we have Cash Buyers.
All Cash for Your
Property .

tT'S ONE OF

~EBESTKEPT

5ECRE15 IN 111E
INDU:m&lt;Y I

n""" ...,
...,.10 ~ ""' IC!wr
• :z....
••If&gt;
IO&lt;&gt;aiH ......

taD•~tl

lr:ouil&gt;e:ryiC ...... IWiolll

you'r• not telling him all. Don't
hold back lacto.
YIIIQO (Aug. 23-lopt. 22)

IFWECAN
GET SOME WORKOUf..AND

5TAVE OFF ANY MORE

.....

'

6-+--lr---

.

BARNEY

-'

wor~

It;

JH

ZBWFPWF

F"C P W

SQF •

TQFC

PWBRIC
XPJEF

..
•

--•....
.
:..

----

---

-.-

:t

•

--..
.

soctal sense. However, you'll
have a tendency to Ignore work
that should be done.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Keep Information concern ing
personal finances to yourself.
One you talk with will pul It on
the teletype for all the world to

read.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc:
21) A good Idea you have will
not muster all the support It
deserves because you wor}'t
have all your facts In order.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon.
11) It will prO\Ie embarraaalng
to the donor tf you reveal the
source of something given you .
He'll regret his generosity.

...'.::'-.

''--.
-..
-=...·
'

.' I"

..,.,...-·
..f
I~

:3

...~
;:

...:'£
........

.,

"'
·~

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 111
Th8re will be some game-

playing today with an acqualn·
tance , Each of you wlll try to
outmaneuver the other for his
own advantage.

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 201
Wnill you do will be noticed. II
won't be neces1ary to blqw
your own horn . Let others

::
.....E

-L~

-~ ..
April t, 1175

You will become more active
th i s . year In club and
,rganlzatlonaj work. The rote
you play will bl!l a leading and
rewarding one. You'll gain new
admrrers.
..
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.I

'··'"

'"
.........

• i 7 G2
tQJ IOH
4K 84

• Bt

t K 8 32
• 982 '

Well

East

Pass

Paas

Pass
Pass

Paas

Pass

Pass

PaiS

Pan
Pall
Pass
Pass
Openmg lead - Q t

,.

South

3.
3 N.T.
!NT

u

tract.'In fact, he could take all
thirteen tricks without a finesse
provided trumps divide tbreetwo."
Jim: "But he's only in a
small slam So he lets
pessimism take hold. What if
trumps are four-one• What ir
-the club king Is wrong• The
answer ts - take out a little in·

surance! ''

' IV v

'·""''('

' ......'
-r-.,

I

IJ Ut

"

.....

- •• t'T

Oswald: "At the second "
trick, South plays a low spade
from bo.th hands, letting East
win the spade seven. Now a II·U~ I
club is played. Declarer wins . "t n u
the ace, trumpa a diamond in
dummy, returns to his h~nd ·
with a high spade and trumps
his last diamond "lit' dummy
- Now the heart king is the entry
to his hand to draw the remainmg trumps and the good hearts
in dummy are enou'h trick• to
make th_e contract.'
.

... ..
~

u:a;l :1 1!*83 u ..

..

' "'' ·~

I

The. biddtng has been : 31

••1\ '

'" ~
. -.. v ·~

A X ·Y D L B A A X I
11· LONGFE' LLOW

QE

JE

-MPJW

Yesterday's Cryploqaote: SOME _BOOKS ARE TO BE
TASTED &lt;&gt;TilERS TO BE SWAlLOWED, AND SOME FEW
TO BE dm:WEi&gt; AND DIGESTED.-BACON

By 01wald &amp; Jamea Jacoby
Jim: "Have you ever stopped
to think that good declarers
possess Bplil personalities?" , .
Qswald . "t don't have to stop
to think to know our readers
wan{ bridge, not paychiatry."
Jim : "Sometimes even expert players find themselves in
bad contracts- due of course,
to partner's bad bidding. ,\nd
they have to ·hope for the best.
They must be optunistic. But
when you arrive at a very good
contract, that's the lime for
pessimism."
Oswald : "That ' s what
loday's hand is all abo.ut. After
the openi"' lead, South sees
that he is tn a very good con-

West

Nort~

East

Soutb
?

' ;_ ; __

You, South . hold :
•KQ96G.A2 +IUU.Q87

What•do you•do?
A - Bid

tpode. Thls caU It
•tomallc Ia •II DOrmll and most
Olt

llntorm1l sy1lem1 .

TODAY'S QUESTION
Your partner 'responds ·one
mtrwnp. What do you do now?

Aaswer Tomwrow

-•I-t• I
'"~

...-..u
........

", ... '
I II 11'1'

"

Send Sf lor JJICOBY MODER/II
Oook to: "Win II Blldge. " (ciD ,11
ne~l. P.O. Box 4BQ, Radio
City Sllllorl, New Yorl!. N.Y. 10018.

o-.,l' b V

'

,,.....,

INftSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

.,

TH' CLOTHES -

..

EAST
• J 10 8 7

.A K Q3
• K5
• 9 64
4 A J 10 5

ETQXF

WHAT IN THUNDER
ARE 'IE PLANTIN' 'lORE
GARDEN PATCH ' UNDER

WESTIOI

Neither vulnerable

· •" " .,_

Q

31

SOUTH

II

..II;•

Great hands can be bad news

••

•'''

will be a pleasant day In the

WIN AT BRIDGE

•AQJ 103
tA
•Q73

DAILY' CRYPI'OQUOTE- Here's how to

1B B M

_,

LIBRA (8opt. 23-0ct. 22) Thla

.9612

IP 1

F S P,

."'

Matters re l ating to family
finances ahould continue to
take precedence over all
others loday . Don't lniJelt In
frivolous ventures

NORTH

called. .. "

QX

.'

~

ATION.NOONE
KNOWS WHO'S
BEHIND IT ?

0 lD WORRY ABOUT.

Your ambitious scheme Is not
in accord with a friend's ldeaa.
Cross words will result If you
don't handle this with extreme
tact.

wtll be annoyed If he thinks

CRYPTOQUOTE

''
...

ATION '1 BOLGHT

BARTOLI OUT.

A DUMMY CORPOR- ' .

TAURUS (April 20-Mor 201

way
LEO (JUIJ 23-Aug. :12) One
you're closely associated with

'

LCWEEZV!!

........,. . . _ .lal9'
-'*" --.;;

~E 'XYZ CORPOR -

~AT/5 OBVIOUS/_Y , ;;:;,~;;:( WE'VE GOT OTHER

You won't accomplish as much
as you're capable of today
because of your self·doubta.
Strive lor more Inner faith

give credit where credit Is due,
especially to one who haa
proven to be a capable ISSia ..
tant Appreclarlon goes a long

One' .letter limply stands for anolher. In thla II!IIPie A II
used for the three L's, X lor the two o·s. etc. Slnale letters,
opoatrophes, the length and !ormation of the wortla ore •11
blots. Each day the code Jetter&amp; are different.

..
•
-·

~

BOVIE OUTFIT CALLED

Movie "The Runaways" 8,10; Ascent of Man 20.33.
20; Witness to Yesterday 33 .
\0:110-Pollce Story 3,4.15; Marcus Welby, M.D. 4,6, 13; Barnaby
Jones 8, 10; News 20; Interlace 33.
I0 ·3Q-Your Fulure Is Now 33; International Animation
Festival 33.
li ·OO.:::News 3.4.6.8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 : 3Q-Johnny Carson 3, ~. \5: Wide. World Mystery "Come Ole
Wllh Me" 13; FBI 6; Movte "Who's Got The Action?" 8:
Movie "The Swinger" 10; Janak I 33.
t2 :3Q-Wide World Mystery 6.
1:011-:-.Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

GEMINI (MIJ 21-Junl 20)

Ye.terday'•AIIwer····
2% Dungeon
30 Helnwnan
23 Food
31 Papal cro'llll
z. Bric-a-brac 32 Exhausted
cabinet
(2 wds.)
%6 WhOOunit 33 Prepare
figure
38 "- Little
26 First-rate
Teapot"
za English
(2 wda.)
playwright 39 Actress,
(1~1934)
Rita -

•

9 : ~o-Woman

CANCER (Juno 21-.lulr 22) Do

DOWN
1 Hawthorne's
birthplace
2 "Iris" or
"Fedorat"
e.g.
3 Friendless
guy
4 Singular
5 See
6 Russian lake
7 Wood sorrel
8 Military man
9 Arboreal
civet
( 2 wds.)
12 Printing
errors
16 70's musical
19 Avoid

*

*·

Movie "Savages" 6,13;

S:Jo-Movle "Strange Homecoming"

35Fe~e

I

-&gt;•

-'fi"" Aull~ o F.._.,

ACROSS
1 - flighL
5 Promote
10 Footless
animal
11 Cry from
the balcony
13 Afford
14 Faith 15 Prior to
16 Road 17 "Fuehrer's
Face"
18 Italian wine
20 Peruvian
aty
21 Concealed
22 Kind of rash
23 Be remembered
26 Main artery
27 School
or collar
28 Office
seeker ( sl.)
!9 GoHer's goal
30 Roofing
substance
(2 wds.)
34 In bygon.e
days .

,;.

5:3o-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Gel
Smart 15; Electric Company 33.
6:0D-News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6; Electric Company 20;
lTV Utilization 33.
.
6:3Q-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6; CBS News
8, 10; Zoom 20; Your Future Is Now 33
7:DO--Trulh or Consequences 3,4; Bowling For Dollars 6: What's
My Line? 8; News \0; Name That Tune 13; f-jlgh ~chool T.V.
Honor Society 15; Antiques 20; Lilias, Yoga and You 33.
7:3Q-Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywood Squares 4; 'Wild, Wild
World of Animals 6; Buck Owens 8; New Price Is Righi 10:
To Tell The Truth 13; Spring Street USA 15; RFD 20; Marco
Sportllle 33.
8:110-Adam -12 3,4,15; Happy Days 6, \3; Good Times 8, 10; Solar
•• ~ne_r_gy 20,33.

You'll eagerly pick another's
brain for advice. But when II
comes to making declalona,
you'll ignore the advlcel

suffix
31- de
France
37 Doling
39 Festive
to Quiver
n Jejune
t2 Muse of
poetry
43 "- are

'

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

in nn u"enrllrlg

~tN'·~~r
by THOMAS JOSEPH

GASOUNE AILEY

exp Insured. free esl1mates .
Call 992 3057 or Coolville, 1
667 3041
3·18 12tp

Your

co,wllmirnlt•M
A SATELLITE

euy HOT FOR OHE ,

------------- D&amp;D T REE frimm 1ng, 20 years

Us For
Needs in Real Estate.

I""""'"¥: 7'hlll
mc•dium
u-au-

H£ WilL Gn WflL,

'E XC AVATING , dozer , l oader
and backhoe work ; septic
tanks insta l led; dump trucks
and"'lo -boys for h1re , Wilt haul
fJI..j dlrl. top soli , limestone a
gravel , Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers , day pt1one 992 7089 ,
night phone 992 ·3525 or 992
5232
2-11 tfc

CALL 992·2259

(Ane,en l•••rrow)

-•...
---.
--.-..
--.

5.0D-FBI 3; Andy Grlllllh 8; Mister Rogers· Nelghbo.rhood
20,33; Ironside 13.

for T-oy, AprU I, 1178
(Morch 21-Aprlt 11)

III I )

;

1S.

ARI!I

Jmuhl.. ~: DALLY ENSUE TURTLE POLITE

"'alllrflllv'~

Bonanza

Bernice Bide Oaol

V~

I I I

20,

4·110-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset 15;
Gilligan's Island 6; Tattletales 8; Sesame Street 20,33;
Movie " The Trap" 10; Mike Douglas 13.
4:3Q-Bewllched3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6; Lucy Show 8;

WHAI "THEY
WEI6HE!7 AFTEI"r
A HEAVY MEAL.

......
~

•

Tomorrow 8, 10.

12 :45-Eiectrlc Company 33.
12 .55-NBC News 3.15.
I :110-News 3; All My Children 6, \3: Phil Donahue 8; Young and
the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1·30-How To Survive A Marriage 3.4,t5; Lei's Make A Deal
6,13; As The World Turns 8, 10.
2·00-0ays 01 Our Lives 3, ~.15; $10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
2 3Q-Ooctors 3 .~, )5 : Big Showdown 6, 13; Edge of Night 8, 10.
3:110-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; Price Is
Right 8,\0; Lilias, Yoga and You 20.
3· 30-0ne Life lo Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game 8, 10;. Your

AstroGrapM

Now .,..,..the elrolod letttro
to form the ourpriH 1111wer. u
~~~¢=~=~~~~~::7=~•=u~&amp;~&amp;~ested by the...,.. tlll1oon.

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

Buyers See

I []

*
...

11 :15-Graham Kerr 8; Dan lmel's World 10.
a .oo-Jackpol! 3, 15; Password 6.13; To Be Announced 4; News
8,10.
12 : ~Biank Check 3.15; Spilt Second 6,13; · Search For

[J

I

IJEFUAJ. ,

DOZER work , land clearing by
the ac re , hourly or contracl
Farm ponds , roads, etc
Large dozer and operator
wlft1 over 20 years ex
perience Pullms Excavahng
Pomeroy , Ohio Phone 99~ ·
2478
12 19 tfc

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

(;ucoRI

10

SEWING MACHINE ; Repair s,
ser vic e, all makes, 992 228 4.
The Fabf!c Shop, Pomeroy ,
Author~zed Singer Sales and
Se rv ice We sharpen Sc1ssor s
3 29 tf c

BUY NOW &amp; SAVE. Low , low ,
down payments, a pet 10 teres t 30 yr financmg on new
homes 1n 3 Meigs County
locations, or 6 \JI LD on your
lot Phone 992 5976 or 992 5844
3 13 lfc

=

,..., ........ &lt;. . ... .. _ ..

'REA DY

~w~

r»&amp;Mill'l!J1®~ =!::! -J

ALLEY OOP

3-21 -15

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

10 :110-Celebrily Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Joker's Wild 8,t0; Dinah!
13
lO:JQ-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,t5, Gambll8,10.
11 oo-H1gh Rollers 3,4,15: One Life to Live 6; Now You See It
8.10; Electric Company 20

one Iefler to each ~quare. to
form four ordinary word1.

8FT CAMPER t op for pickup
truck Pr ice S200 Phone 992
7727
3·27 4tc

your mobile hOme for
cash I~ homes wanted, 1958
r' thru 1972 model s. Phone ( 6U)
446 .1425. Gll l h po tis
J 9-78 tC:

J

( jnscramble these four Jumble1.

3 25 6tc

~ELL

!·

9·25-Chuck While Reports 10
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6 ; Galldplng Gourmet 8;

Ph. 985-4102

-

Mobile Homes For Sale

'.

&amp;

Chester, Ohio

WAS HER S for sale Phone 992 ·

3313

OlJT 1D SHeNa
Sl'f. ttJGH£;S a=

Construction Co.

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

Captain Kangaroo 8: Popeye 10, Sesame Slreet

8 . 25- Captain Kangaroo 10.

MU5r FIGHT TO

BEDROOM house . tully
carpeted , basem ent , garag~ ,
on corner ! ot. fenced yard .
fo rce d air furnace heat.
outside storage build1ng ,
w1ndows , alum1nlJm S1dmg.
12 m i l e east of Mason , on Rt
33 Sl 9, 500 . Phone ( 304) 773 ·
5942 .
3_
31 _ 31C
...L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

·~

8·3Q-Misslon: Impossible 6 ,
.1
9 00-A M 3, Phil Donahue 4,15, To Be Announced 8; Morning
With D. J. 13.

Bissell Brothers

HELP· HELP·

11 .3Q-Hollywood Squares 3.t5; Brady Bunch 6,13; News 4;
Love Of Llle 8, 10; Sesame Street 20.

Future Is Now

TUESDAY, APRIL 1,1975

8 lQ-Your Future Is Now 20.

6 RMS , garaQe : panelm_£1 ,
breezeway , 8 acr es Call 992
3059
3 25 6t c

3

3,4 ; News 13.

6:3o-1\f11!1'}\'olnutes to Live By 4; News 6; Bible Answer&amp; a.
Col'rcerns &amp; C,omments 10; Rev . Cleophus Robinson 13.
6 3s--tolumbus Today 4:
6 s&lt;5n"'.Morlllng lleport 3: Formllme 10.
7·110-Today 3,4,15; A M America 13; A M America 6; CBS

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

BEAUTIFUL new nome on
l ake, 3 bedrooms , bath &amp; • 2.
car pet 1ng , drap es , b1g den
Call 992 ·3493
3 24 tfc

oo-- Tomorrow
.

NEW br1ck home on Stale Rt 7
between
Pomeroy
and
Chester 3 bedrooms , 2 bath ,
garage, basement, f 1r ep lace,
carpeted Phone 985 -3365
3 28 Jtc

CLOSE OUT on new Zig Zag
sew 1ng rllach1nes . For sewing
stretch fabr iCS. buttonholes.,
fancy designs , etc Pa i nt
SI1Qhlly blemished . Cho1ce of
car rying case or sewing :
stand $49 .80 cash or te rms
ava1labl e Phone 992 .1755
1218·tfc,

1

6 .00-S unnse Seminar 4, Sunrise Se mester 10.
6 2~.,...,. Report 13.
' ,-

WE HAVE NEARLY 50
PROPERT IES FOR SA.LE
WHEN YOU REALLY WANT
IT SOLD, TRY TEAFORD AT ---------------

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

-- -----------WANTED Old upright p 1anos,

OF- rtCEGIRL -- Partorf ,
tim e N eat ty p ist , shorthand ,
knowledge of bookkeeping neces sar y or hel pful . f 1lrng
Experi enced preferred Write
to Sox 729 L. C·O The Da il y
Senllnel. Pomeroy, · Oh10
4516'i'
3 28 ·3tc

$9,500.00.
JO ACRES - In lhe boon docks

Phon e 742 ·3762

furn1ture , ice boxes , bfass
beds , or complete househo lds
Write M . 0 .-. Miller. Rt 4,
· Pomeroy , Ohio c.,n 992 -1760
10-7 74

DRAFTSMAN
wanted
Preferably w •th track wor k
eltpene,nce Sen d resume to
P . 0 . BoK 152, Pomeroy . Oh10
Equal
Opportun 1ly
em
ployers
3 JO 7tc

a frailer One house 1S rented
and 3 nice burtdmg lots. Only

l-22-78tp

·a u)

Help Wanted

,NEW LISTING -2 houses and

MONDAY, MARCH 31,1975
7:3o-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Masquerade Party~ ~
, Police Surgeon 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8 ; Municipal Court 10; To
Tell the Truth 13; Untamed World 15; Washington Straight
Talk 20: Episode Act/on 33.
'
8.110-Smothers Brothers 3,4, 15; Rookies 6, 13; Gun smoke 8, \0;
Thin Edge 20.33 .
9:110-NCAA Basketball 3.~. 15; SWAT 6, 13; Dreamer That
Remains : Harry Partch 20; Thin Edge and Yoo 33.
9:30-Rhoda 8,10; Romantic Rebellion 20.33.
10 OD-Carlbe 6, \3; Medical Center ·a, 10; News 20; Wash-Ington
Straight Talk 33.
10:3o-Behlnd the Lines 33.
11 .110-News 3,4,6,8, 10, \3, 15; ABC News 33.
lh:3Q-Johnny Carson 3,~, 15; Wide World Myslery 13; FBI 6;
Movie " Force Five" 8; Movie " II Started wllh a Kiss" 10;
Janak! 33.
12 :3Q-Wide World Mystery "The Nurse Killer" 6

I

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

TW O bedroom tra1ler Adults
only Phone 992 3975 or 992 ' GROCERY business for sale.
2571
Buildmg for sale or lease .
3 23 ttc
PhoneJ735618from 8. 30p m
- to 10 p m for appointment.
5 RM HOUSE Wi th bath on Rt
3 10 lfq
33, b1g yard Phone q92 757 1
3 30 6tc 1971 FORD t ru c k , 1? ton , m •xeq
hay Phone 992 3436 or 992
3 RM . turn 1shed itpl, ut i l i tie s
5248
pa 1d
356 North 4th St ,
3 30 Stc
Middleport

MIX E 0 hay for
992 3658

, 11\J FACT·· PAT 'S WH"r' DA GURU
MAH A - ~WAM I 6ABOO HAS
PICK EO Dt5 P1?0Mt5 tN, !llA&gt;JKMI&gt;JDe r. YOU&gt;J 6 5 PECI ME'-l TO
BE A SWAM I LI KE HI55E LF !

A LITTLE; BACK-

I

C BRAD~ORD , Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 -3a21 or 949 3161
Racme, Oh 1o
Cntt Bradford
5 1-tf

'104,95(KD)

- -·-,--·-- - - - - - - -

UH · IT5 ME' 50'-l·
BUSTER KA LLIKAK-HE 5 ALLUZ BEHJ'

CB SALES &amp; PARTS

Pomeroy?

-lOME

20"-3'12 HP

3 30 M e

,

Pts.
66
58
57
39
38
32

Ph. 992-2174.

For Sale

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

highway
Safety
any condition
Pav1ng SI O
each First floor onlv Write
Department suggests you show
and g1ve d 1rect1ons to W1rten
a litUe patience and cow-tesy·m
P 1ano Co .• Box 188 . Sa rd •s ,
Oh 10 43946
'
unexpected traffic situations.
3·27 6tp
Allow extra driving tune to - - -----------------ease the strain . Drive happy ! J UNK autos . complete .and

C~ment

SMITH N.EI.$0N
MOTORS, INC.

TURF TRIM MOWER

STANDI NG t•mbers
Contact
MOO ERN stereo rae110 am fm .
Pomeroy Forrest Products
separate controls 4 speaker '
P 0 Box 726 , Pomeroy , Oh 10
sou nd
syste m
Ba lanc e
Ph one 992 5965
Sl(lJ 5Bor terms Catl9923965
3 30 12tc
J 31 tfc --- - -· -- -- ---- -- -- ~---

Yo~r

1Butrdozer Radiator to the
_smallest 1-ieater CQre
Nathan Biggs
Radiator 5pec!alisl

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

Wanh!lt To Buy

MOVING , MusT sell - Double
oven electrtc ran!!Je . cop
perlone , l1ke new Also m •sc
1tems Pllon e 742 5734
3 31 6t c

--

4 BEDROOM house , wall to wall
carpetir\Q, a .c. fenced '" yard
Wit h pat JO, MICe Phone 992
2780 or 992 343 2
J 19 tfc TW O 12 m plows 3 pi hitCh ,
-·- -·SIBS Also, 2 14 in . plow s, 3 pt
h1t
ch !200 Ph one 985 3594 .
AVAILABLE thts week, small 2
3 30 1tp
bedroom, double Wide mobile
home near Pomeroy Off Rt 7
by pass No children or pets.
Ptlone 99 2 7017 or 992 7666 .
3 30 3fc

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

Foi Sale

..... .-

E«PERIENCED
'·
,R adlato.: I
:-......_ .·'
Service

"'ORD Trac lor
with side
mower, runs good and good
rubber S950 985 ·3594
3 30 7tp

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

~-

'

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

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cue No 21440
Est~ht
ol Beul~h B. Sm1th PR IVAT E meetmo room for
Deceased
any organ1zatron , phone 992
Not1ce 1S hereby Q1¥en that
39 75
Emma Jean Oabo of Pomeroy ,
J 11 tfc
Ohio , has been duly appointed
EKecutr1K of the Estate of
Beu l ah 8 Sm1th, deceased , late TRAILER space, 2 mi les rrom
of Me•QS Covntv . Ohio
· Harr1sonvilt e
Ut 111t 1es
Cre d •tor s are required to fJ!e
available Phone 742 3821
the1r claims with sa id fiduciary
3·25 5tc
within four months
Dated th i S lith day of March fRAILER SPACE , 3.it mil~
\915
norlh of Meigs High School on
old Rt . 33. Phone 992 -7941
Menning 0 Webster
1.23 tf c
JuCJge
Court or Common Pleas , DU~LEX ~ 2Js•-; -walnU fSt,
, Probat e D1viS10n
Middleport . Oh10 Phone 992
(3l 11 . 24, 31 , Jtc
27 80 or 992 3432
2 19 lf c

•,
7

Heatmg
Cooling
Refngeratian. Roaf Repa1rs
Gutters
Plumb.ng
E lectnca 1 Repa•n
and
Serv1ce .
Call 992-JS09 and
Save on your repa1.-s : also
repa1r mowers, compressors
and outboards 8rmg it m
and save.

Chain
Precision
Ground

3 'and 4 ROOM furn 1shed Bnd
unfurn i Shed
apartments .
Phone 992 5434.
4 12 .tfc

w

Tea m
L
M i tc,hetl 's Tr 10
86 26
S1 mdn · ~- ~jc~ a P,f i r
83 29
5] 49
Shak l ee 'G iris
H F rank 's G•rls
47 65
wa r d 's Rollettes
H 65
Me •gs Safetyettes
20 92'
Mit
H igh .ream senes Chell ' S Tr10 lt196 , Meios
143 I ,
Safetyettes
Ward ' s
Roii Pttes 1393
H tgh team oame Mit
Chell 's Tr 1o 526 . S•man 's P ick a
Pa •r 509 , Meigs Safetyett es

500

Jll

REMODELING,
plumbmg,
heat1ng , and all types of
general
repa1r
Work
guaranteed 20 years ex
perlence Phone 99 2 2409
3· 111fc

Pomero y Lanes
Thursday Str1k~rs
March 6, 1i15

Thursday Str i kers
March 10, 1915
Team
W . L.
S1mon 's P1ck a Pa1r
81 13
Ml t Cho l l s Trio
80 24
Shakt ee G•rls
S1 n
H Fr ank ' ~ Girls
45 59
Word 's Roll ett"s
41 bJ
M e.gs Safet..,.enes
u 90
H 1gh team ser ies - S•mon 's
P1 ck a Pa1r 1472 , Mitchell 's
Tr •o 1437 . Shaklee C.1r l s 1379
H•9h team Game - S1mon 's
P 1c k a Pa~r 511 and 499 ,
Shal&lt; tee G~r l s 493
H fgrl mCIIV IdVSII ser1eS Wanda Teaford 525 . P at t i
Donna Me
Wi ll i ams 519
Farland 488
H1gh !OdiV Idual Qlllme Wanda Teaford 204 . Patti
Williams 190 . wanda Teaford

- - - --

PART

l_____._-_-------------------Phone
-------- ..... ----- __,

Team
W l
M• tchell ' s 'frio
66 22
s.mon 's Ptck a Pa1r
t.5 23
S11aklee G1r l s
49 39
H Frank 's Girls
37 51
Ward 's Rolleltes
33 55
Me1gs Sate t ye tt es
14 74
H 19h team ser.es - Shaklee
G~rls 1408 . Mitc hell's Tr1 1396 ,
H Frank 'S Grrls 1392
H•g ll team game - Shaklee
G.rls SIB, Mitchell 's Trio 491.
H Frank's GirlS 48 4
H19h \n d1V1dua1 ser1es - Sue
Ha1d 508 . Shir ley M1tchell 500 .
Patt 1 Will1ams 461
H19h cnd•v •dual game Pdl11 W•lhams 20 1, Sue Haid
19 5. Sh •rley M•tchell 185

---

-

WILL do ia n i tor work or
P&lt;llnting Phone 992 2262
3 30 6tc

I
I
1

Jordan F\ mcral Home. wfl s

308 Page, Middleport

From the largest Truck 01

3

1

dau gh ter. Mr . and Mrs
Murrell Ba1ley and daughter,
and her brolher-m-law and
sister , Mr . and Mrs. Thad Dye
and · daughters. They were
ove rnight gues ts at the home of
Mrs Martha Mays and her
father , Ney Carpenter. Olher
callers al the Carpenter home
were Mr. and Mrs. W1lham
Cl~well, local, and Hilbert Cox,
Albany.
Waller Jordan , Bigony-

Home Maintenance

Limestone &amp; Fill Dirt
Commerciai-Residtntlll
Construction &amp; Remodel

RACINE PLUMBING
..
&amp;HEATING
tomplete plumbing

INDIAN JOE'S

P-J

1

·couNTRY Mob1le Ho'me•Park ,
Rt JJ , ten m1les north or
Pomeroy . Large 1o1s With.
concrete pat ios , Sidewalks,
runners
and
off
street
park1ng Pbone 992 7479
12 31 trc

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

AuCTION,

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

MAIL TO:

Mr , and Mrs. Ralph Fra•ier,
Gallipolis, visited her mother.
Goldte G1llogly, and called on
olher relatives in the area.
Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Oliver
and Steve, Columbus, were
guests of Mr. and Mrs . Wulter
Jordan on Salurday.
Mrs . Herman Cordray,
Athens Route, spent several
days here wilh Mrs. Bculuh
Cordray, while her son-in-law
and daughter, Mr and Mrs
Reed Jeffers , visited m lhe
New Boston. Illinois, area wtlh
their children, Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Jeffers, Mr . and Mrs .
Richard Jeffers and daughters.
and Mr . and Mrs . J ohn
Dw11181n and fatnily .
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Leist
and daughters, Gaithersbw-g,
Maryland, are spending a few
days here and her mother.
Lucy Thomas, who had spent
some time at the Letst home.
retw-ned to her home here with
them. They came to Columbus
dw-ing the weekend and Mrs.
Thomas ' sister, Amy Caldwell ,
accompanied them here from
there.
Mrs. Arthw- Crabtree enter tained with a Stanley
Products Party on Wednesday
evening. Several fr iends and
relatives attended.
·
Rick Woodrum. McArthur,
VIsited with his grandmother,
Murl Galaway, on Sunday
afternoon. Recent guests al tlle
Galaway home were Mrs.
Ardis Price, Athens, and Mrs.
Lenore Evans, Hebardsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Rick McDaniel
vaca tioned in Kentu cky,
.Tennessee, and Georgia. They
enjoyed sights at Mammoth
Cave, Kentucky ; visited with
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Euler at
Olattanooga, Tenn. and toured
Rock City, Georgia, before
retw-ning home.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gillogly
spent Saturday mght and
Sun&lt;\;ty with his sister, · Mrs
Elba McKrtight, tn Colwnbus.
Mrs. Mary I1&gt;vell, Teresa,
Robin , and Debbie . South
Olarleston, W. Va ., visited
here with 11&lt;-r mother, Helen
Queen , her son-in -law, and

10 ,,_

-

SALES&amp; SERVICE
992-3092

WE ARE no longer employees
of Dudley ' s Ftor1St, M1d
Cfleport
Mrs Beulah Wilde and Mrs
Bess1e Dar st
3 28 3tc

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

I

I
I

I

3

WilKINSON
SMALL ENGINE

---------------3 S·lfc
For Rent

- ----

I
I
I
I

I

1

Sv.racuse, Ohio

777 Pearl Street
Middleport. Ohio
Phone 992-5367 or 992-U. 1

'"tOR your "O il of Mmk"
CosmetiCS . Phone BROWN 'S
992 5113 ~
1 1 tfc

HIIV\''

HEI,L

-- --- - z

--1
Ir------- ~-----------------------------.

t

LARRY LAVENDER

8-K EXCAVATING
OOMPANY

MEIGS Coun ty Humane Soc1e t y
DOG S FOR ADOPTION One 1914 CAPR I V 6 eng.ne, steel
full
bloodeel
Ge rm an
bel t ed rad•als. decor group ,
Shepherd female , J months
excellent condition 25 to 28
ol d One black and wh 1l e
m p g Call 992 5170 after 5
m1xed breed male 18 months
P m
old Two Coll •e and Stlepherd
3 30 7t c
m l)ced . black and wh•Te
ma l e5. , 3' , months old Call 1974 OLDS MOBILE Cullass
949 4917
Sup reme , maroon W1fh whde
] 30 6tp
v1nyl top . sharp Phone 742
3215
ANNOUNCING new hours,
3 25 6tc
SKATE A WAY , 7 30 to 10
p m , Wednesday , F r 1d ay,
1970 "
VW
c onvert i ble
and Saturday Avail able for
Everythmg new Phone 742
pr •vate parTie s Monr;toy ,
3502
Tuesday
and
Thursday
J 30 ·3tc
n1ghts
Wednesday
and
- - - -------~- -- ---Sunct ay afternoon~ Phon e 1915
MONTE Carlo, 4, 000 miles,
985 3939,' 985 9990 or 985 4141
alt power , i!l!ff AM stereo
3 30 t2tc
tape Call 99 2 70)6 after 5 p m

or submit it on another sheet of paper.

I

Ph. 9J2-J99J

Water, Electric, Gu, Sewer
(lnes, insflllltd. Work
guaranteed.
Dozer, Bo~dchoe, Trucks

1970
FORD
Maver~ck
automat1c. 6 cy l easy on gas
Phone 992 2008 or 949 2911
3 30 3tc

Notice

U.~e the following Coupon for your Free Advertisement;

lI

Free Estimates

A real cream

'

/

l

Gutters· Awnings

3 25-1mo.

'

All ads must be in writjng and limited to 20 words or less.
We must have your name, address and telephone number
on file, whether or· not all this information appears in
yoer ad. Free Ads wi II not be accepted by telephone.

l

ALUMINUM
S1d1ng. Soflilt

Building Homes

POMEROY, OHIO

WED., THURS. and FRI., APRIL 2, 3, 4

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

STORM
Windows &amp;boors

'

POMEROY
MOTOK
CO.
OPEN EVES. 8:00P. M.

FOR THREE DAYS

:

Blow" into Wall s &amp; AH1cs .

I

FREE OF CHARGE

:

Blown
Insulation Services

949-3604

$1595

I Kli.l.

I......

Television log for easy viewing

FISHY HERE-

. .

We Specialize In

1913 PLY . STA. WAGON

WE WtLL INSERT

.

-

S OMETI-' ING'S

I JUST GOT HEr&lt;tl"_
HOW COUI.P

Busmess Services·

-.....

.,
KII..L.. HIM?

'

NEIGLER
BUILDERS SUPPLY

. luggag e r ack , r adio, dark green fin ish . Like new &amp; loaded
w ith extras.

,.

7- The _l)aily Senh~l, Middlepurt-l'otll•·ruy, u.. Munruty, Marol1:n, 1~115

Fo1: Fast 'Results Use Sentinel Clas·s ifieds

LOOKING.

..

,

.

' " ....:::!

LINE FER?

' : ;:!~;,
IM

..

nft ii:
lt'tl~ J

I

I

J •

..J.i

,y_;.

.'
'.
''

�\

I

r

.·

•

8- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy, 0,, Monday, March 31,1975

Margaret

St~ey

dies

uosPITA~ NEws Mrs. Dewees of Dexter dies
r

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Mary Archer, Pomeroy,
Orville Graham, Pomeroy;
Hel~n Burkhart, Middleport ;
Lucy White, Long Bottom;
Gladys Sigler, Mid&lt;lleport:
Linda Jacks, Langsville.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Wanda Wood , Juanita
Chapman, Evelyn Weaver,
Nettie Gosney, Sally Sauvage,
Martha Anderson, GeoJge
Turnbull, Wilma Anderson,
Cora Roush, Shelba Dye,
Gladys Sigler, Landon McDaniel, Benjamin Brown,
Dianne Walker .
SUNDAY ADMJSSIONS Joseph Barloe, Long Bottom ;
Raleigh Sayre, New Haven ;
Bethel Coleman, Albany; Effie
Ken nedy, Long Bottom;
Clarence Murray, Middleport;
Charles Kessinger , Pomeroy :
Jennie Newmyer, Wilkesville.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES David Hubbard, Roland
Morris, Howard Richards, Jr.

DEXTER - Fannie Jane
Dewees, 72, Rt. I, Dexter,
died Saturday at the Holzer
Medical Center following a
short illness.
Mrs. Dewees was born Sept.
6, 1902, at Spencer, W. Va., the
daughter of the tate Thomas
and Liddle Belle McDonald
Runnion . Besides her parents,
she was preceded in death by
her husband, James, whom she
married Sept. 16, 1923, who
died on Jan . 23, 1972; a son, a
daughter, and a sister.
Surviving are a son, Berton,
Route I Dexter; four
daughters,
Mrs.
Jean
Drummond , Route I Dexter ;
Mrs. L. W. (Audrey) McQuaid
of Lorain; Mrs . Charles
(Media) Schoonover, Rutland,
BOOSTERS TO MEET '.
and Mrs. Gene (Geraldine)
The Wahama Band Boosters
McQul!id';' Lorain; 15 grandwill meet in reg ular session at
chi
ldren,
14
great7:30 p.m . Tuesday at the
grandchildren ; four brothers,
school. All members are asked
Ralph Runnion , Nitro, W. Va.;
to attend .
Fred Runnion, Smithville ;
Rufus, Rodney , and Donze I, St.
CALLED3 TIMES
Albans, W. Va ., and a sister,
RACINE - The Racine E-R
Mrs.
Earl (Mary ) Goode of
Holzer Medical Center
squad made three runs over
· venswo od , W. Va.·.
(Births)
Ra
the weekend, the first at 6:30
Funeral services will be at 2
FridayMr.
and
Mrs.
Gary
a.m. Saturday to the residence
p.m.
Tuesday at the old Dexter
of Donna Pierce, Rl. I Long · Moore, daughter, Jackson.
Church
with the Rev . Ron
Saturday - Mr . and Mrs.
Bottom, who was transported
to Holzer Medical Center . The Charles Menefee, daughter, Perry officiatin g. Burial will
second was at 6 p.m. Saturday Cheshire . Mr . and Mrs. Rodney be in the Standish Cemetery.
when the sq uad transported 5- Pierse, son, Long Bottom .
Tonight thru Thurs .
March 31-Aprll3
monlh-old William James, Rl.
.
NOT OPEN
I, Ra cine , to Veterans
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Memorial Hospital for treatDISCHARGES
Billy
ment
of
second
degree
burns
Stewart,
Letart;
Edgar
Mash,
Fri., Sal., Sunday
and the third came Sunday at Point Pleasant; Mrs. Paul
Margaret Mitchell's
Two Mason Countians were
5:30a.m. to the home of Olden Goodnite, Letart; Mrs. William
GONE WITH THE WIND
( Technicolor)
Thaxton who was transported Oldaker, Letart: James Lee, admitted to Pleasant Valley
Rated " PG "
to the Holzer Medical {;enter. Henderson: Samuel Eads, Hospital with injuries received
Show Starts 7: 00p.m .
Mr. Thaxton complained of a Point Pleasan t; Mrs. George when the car they were riding
Witmer, Jackson; Woodrow in went out of control and
'-~-------- muscle spasm in his back.
Byus, Point Pleasant: Garland turned over near Lakin at 12: 30
Nibert, Jr., Gallipolis; Scarlett a. m. Sunday. Admitted to the
Johnson, Vinton; Mrs. Harold local hospital were Kevin
Smith, daughter, Middleport; Yonker , 18, and William
Charles Long, Gallipolis: Addo Gregocry Camp, 18, both of
Barr, Mt. Alto ; Charles Mason .
Yonker is reported by atReitmire, Pomeroy: Janice
tendants
to be in a stable
Leffel, Point Pleasant: Mrs.
co
ndi
lion
with multiple
George Love, Point Pleasant.
abrasions and lacerations .
Camp is being observed for
Play it eafe and· eure.
possible
internal injuries.
It may be time to
State
Police
Trooper J . L:
have your preeent
Searls, the investigating ofONLY FOUR TO GO
policy updated.
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (UPI) fiCer, said Yonker was the
let's .Talk Soon
- The Chicago Cubs are now driver. Police said apparently
only four above the 25-player wet pavement caused the
roster requirement after they driver to lose control of the 1971
DALE C. WARNER
sent pitcher Pau! Reuschel model owned by Danny L.
and catcher Dick Stelmaszek Yonker of Mason which was a
992-2143
102 W. Main
to their minor league camp for total loss.
Pomeroy
reassignment Sunday.

Mrs . · Margaret Bayer
Stanley, 45, wife of Captain
Charles Stanley of 928
Mossman Circle,
Point
Pleasan t died at 1:40 a.m.
·Easter Sunday t110rning in
Holzer Medical Cen_ter in
Gallipolis, 0 .
Mrs. Stanley was a member
of the Sacred Hea rt Catholic
Church and the Sacred Heart
Guild in Point Pleasant and
was a former employe of the
Kaiser
Aluminum
an d
Chemical
Comp&lt;tny
at
Ravenswood.
Active in Democratic circles,
Mrs. Stanley was the first
president of the Mason County
Young Democrat Club.
A daughter of the late
Beverly P. B11yer and Louise
Morris Bayer, she was born at
Russell, Ky . July 28, 1929.
In addi lion to her husband,
survivors include : two sons,
John Richards of Columbus, 0.
and Herbert Charles Stanley at
home: two daughters, Patrrcia
and Anna Catherine Stanley at
home; one gra ndd aughter,
Rachel Richards of Cohunbus,

0 .: one sister, Mrs. Ran a
Dillon of Winfield ; two aunts,
Mrs. Grace Rogers of Henderson and Mrs.. Alice Bown ?f
Winfield.
Funeral services will be altO
a.m. ,Tuesday in the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church with Fr.
H. A. Ryan officiating. Burial
will follow in the Winfield
Cemetery at Winfield.
The Rosarv will be recited at
7:30 p.m. this evel]ing in the
Wilcoxen Funeral Home.
· Friends may call after 6 p.m.
tod.ay at the funeral home.
The family req uesl~ in lieu of
flowers that all donations be
made to the Mason County
Cancer Society .

MEIGS THEATRE

Crime soars Evacuation stopped

...,

(Continued .from p11g~ 1)
(Continued from page 1) ,
In 1973, crime rose 6 per cent
tst DiVision, and 14 ·oiher personS were ldlled In coastal ~lnh ~:
in 1973, and in 19721t declined 4 Dinh province when their helicopter ran out of fuel this weekend. •.
per cent. Much of the 1974 rise
- The United States started cutting back Its Consulate general ·c
came from a 19 per cent instaff at Nha Trang,188 miles north of Saigon.
· · ~crease in the last quarter- U.S. Army Chief of Staff Gen. Frederick C. Weyand ~de a ~
when unemployment first went
hurried flight to Nha Trang, where he conferred with the regional ,
above 6 per cent.
· military commander on defense measures.
:
The Uniform Crime Report is
- Military sources said nearly 55,000 persons had been eva- ;
compiled from reports of
cuated from Da Nang during the weekend.
.
.
federal , state and local agenMilitary analysts believe five of the Saigon government's 15 '
cies.
combat divisions have been virtually destroyed.
"It is estimated that about
In Washington, press secretary Ron Nessen said _President -;
one third of the violent crimes
Ford considered the fall of Da Nang "an bnmense human
committed go unreported ,"
tragedy" that "should be deeply disturbinJ·· tp all civilized·:
said Levi.
mankind_,.'
•
The FBI said the increase' is
Pentagon offidlis said U.S. ships would· cOnsider a soldier ·
the biggest since 1960, the
''who issep'lratedfromhis unit and given uphis~mDS" a refugee ,
latest year for which true
eligible to come onto the rescue vessels.
. :
comparisons can be made
They said full units would not be evacuated because of ..
because earlier reports used
legislation banning U.S. combat activities in 'l.¢ochlna.
:·
different categories. An FBI
The fall of Da Nang left them in control of 5o per cent of South
official said if comparisons
Vietnam's land area and fighting for another 25 per cent after ,
could be extended to earlier
three weeks of renewed fighting.
•
years the 1974 increase
The
next
objective
of
the
advancing
Viet
Cong
and
North
·
possibly would be found the
Vietnamese troops appeared to be coas~ Qui Nhon, 250 miles
biggest since the reports began
.
northeast of Saigon.
in 1930.
~
Nhon
a
"ghoat
town"
Sunday
rut
Military
sources
called
Murders were reported up 5 '
the government denied published reports it had fallen to the .
per cent, rape 9 per cent,
robbery 14 per cent, and Communists.
The Viet Cong flag of blue and red bars with a single yellow :
aggravated assault 9 per cent.
•
.ar
flew over wildings in Da Nang, a major port and the second.:
"Property crimes" rose even
largest
city in South Vietnam.
':'
more-burglary 17 per cent,
The Saigon government pressed for U.N. intervention and a:·
theft 20 per cent and car theft 4
cease-fire
in an attempt to feed and evacuate 1.5 million
persons ~
per cent.
.
,.
trapped
in
the
area.
. .
The report also showed
A Hanoi Radio broadcast monitored in Saigon, however, m-·.
crime is shifting from cities to
suburbs. Rural areas showed dicated the North Vietnamese had no intention of agreeing to a ·
temporary truce.
·
'
even bigger spurts.
The broadcast gave a rundown on areas captured by Com- ~­
munist troops - 13 of the 44 provinces -and said "the liberation ··
forces will protect the lives and property of the people."
;_.
Communist troops and tanks blasted their way into the city 370•
Racine before moving to miles northeast of Saigon late Saturday and early Sunday, en-,
Marietta. She graduated from ding a five-day blitz that sparked a desperate retreat by 100,000 ·.
Marietta High School, class of South Vietnamese soldiers.
1968, and was a member of the
· The capture of the city where U.S. Marines first waded ashore .
Church of Christ at Williams- 10 years ago gave the Communists control of the entire northe~ :
town, W. Va.
third of South Vietnam and amounted to their biggest milltary ·
Funeral services will be held victory since defeating the French &amp;t Dien Bien Phu in 1954.
at 1 p.m. Thursday at the
South Vietnamese Deputy Prime Minister Phan Quang Dano·
Doudna and McClure Funeral announced the fall Qf Da Nang early Sunday at a news conference ·'
Home , 314 Fourth St ., called to discuss the plight of nearly 2 million war refugees in the ··
Marietta, where friends may country.
·
can: Following the services in
"The city is lost," Dan said after receiving a phone call. "It is ,
Marietta the body will be confirmed."
.
brought 'to the Letart Falls
He said he had asked the United Nations to help with refugees ;
Church of Christ for services at and arrange a ceasefire. Four U.S. Navy ships dispatched by ·,3 p.m. Thursday. Burial will be President Ford from bases in the Far East steamed toward ~
in the Letart Falls Cemetery. South Vietnam to evacuate refugees.
"
In Saigon, the Viet Cong Provisional Revolutionary Government said "all boats and planes, from whatever country,
must ask permission before entering PRG territorial waters."
Two U.S. ships, the Pioneer Commander and Pioneer Contender, loaded refugees at Da Nang Sunday and today, then·
supplied goodies for the young sailed south to Cam Ranh Bay, where refugee camps have been
ones at her own expense. For set up.
the past two. years the town has
picked up the tab.
COUNCIL TO MEET
With assistance of Wahama's
CHESTER
Chester,.
FIREMEN CALLED
Keyette Club members, Mrs.
Council 323, Daughters ot
The Syracuse fire depart- America, will meet Tuesday at
Jenks. and volunteers scurried
ment
was called Sunday at 9:25 8p.m. All members taking part ·
around in damp grass to hide
a.m
.
to the Paul . Baker in the rally are urged to attend.~·
300 plastic eggs filled with
various amounts of change and residence where a dryer was
candy and 150 eggs marked on. fire. No damage was
REVIVALGOESON
v
with numbers for prizes of cash reported. Seventeen men
RUTLAND
Revival•.
and of baskets filled with answered the call. At 4:50p.m. services at the Rutland,;
Sunday the E-R squad Community Church willcandy.
Joey Ohlinger found a $5 egg, removed Sarah Eynon, ten- continue through this week.:
Nellie Esque the $3 prize, Jill month old daughter of Carol The Rev. William Owen will be':
Cundiff the $2 prize and Mary Eynon, to Holzer Medical the speaker. Services are at
Center.
Ann Tripp a one dollar gift.
· 7:30 nightly.

Friends J'(lay call at the Walker
Funeral Home in Rutland any
lime until noon Tuesday when
the body will be taken to the
church where it will lie i_n slate.
"

BURT HAS DEGREE
Randy Burt, son of Mr . and
Mrs. Marvin Burt, Pomeroy,
received his degree in ceramic
engineering from Ohio Slate
University in graduation
ceremonies on March 20. In
Columbus for commencement
were Mr . and- Mrs. Burt,
daughter, Melanie, and son,
David.

PRISONER HURT
At 11 :53 p.m. Sunday the
Pomeroy ER squad was called
to Meigs County jail for Curtis
Smith who had fallen earlier
and complained of injuries to
his foot . He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and admitted.
REVIVAL NOTED
A two week revi v.al at
Freedom Gospel Mission, Bald
Knob, will begin AprilS at 7:30
each ·evening. Evangelist will
be the Rev . Willard ~ney ,
Charleston . Featured smgers
will be Dan Hayman and the
Hymntimers and others . The
pubhc IS mv1ted.

Two inJ·ured
near Lakin Mrs. Whittekind is dead

...

In 1968, President Lyndon
Johnson announced he would
not seek re~lection and also
ordered suspension of American
bombing in North Vietnam.

!11111111

Mrs. Edith Ann (Hutton )
Whittekind, 25, of 817 Quarry
St., Marietta , formerly of
Meigs County, died Monday
morning at the Selby General
Hospital In Marlettca.
Mrs. Whltteklnd was born
Jan . 26,1950 in Letart Falls, the
daughter of Ralph and Gladys
Hupp Hutton, now of Racine,
who survive. She was married
to Donald W. Whittekind on
Sept. 25, 1969, who survives
along with a son, Donnie, at
home; a brother, Ralph Hutton, and a sister, Mrs. Patricia
cronin, Marietta.
Mrs. Whittekind lived in

350 hunt eggs at Mason
MASON, W. Va. - Approximately 350 children
turned out here Sunday for the
lOth Annual Easter Egg Hunt
at the town park directed by
Mrs. Darrell (Charlotte) Jenks
sponsored by the Town of
Mason.
Mrs. Jenks originated the
"hunt" and for eight years

Area churches
fonn slo-pitch
softball loop

" One of the greatest laborsaving inventions of today
is- tomorrow" ...

Don ' t play pick -up slicks
trying to piece together the
Iumber for the repair job
yo u have to do . Come in to
the " FRIENDLY ONES" .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Representatives from area
churches meeting recently at
the Mt. Hermon United Baptist
Church formed a slo-pitch
softball league for church
teams.
The new league, known as
the Meigs County Church ·
League, is open to any Meigs
County church. All that are
interested should contact Rev .
Robert Shook by mail at Rt. 3
. Pomeroy or by phone at 985: 3973 before April 8.
There will be a $10 entry fee
for each team plus one dollar
for each player on the team.
There should be approximately
15 players per team roster.
The next meeting of the
newly formed league will be
April 8, at the Mt. Hermon
United Bsptist Church in the
Fellowship Hall at 7:30p.m. All
thdse interested in this new
league should be present.
Officers of this league are
Bill Maynard, president; John
Grate, vice president, and Rev.
Robert Shook , secretary treasurer.

SPECIAL
PURCHASE
AND SALE

WOMEN'S PANTS
Big selection of fabrics
and colors in this
basic pull-on pant.
Misses sizes only.

i~

Spring Tim,e

• Playtex·

!1-ivin1!:

~LO:E"'P ~
~ma II/ Med ium / large]
· ,.
; Mfg . list : .
·'/J."!Y ' $11'.69 &amp;Q 1
(~;st "\'
I

~- ·'. \ I.

\ r.. •

7 9 t#o

'&lt;.' .
••••••

l::;;:=:;:t:, } ;

, • ( ' ...&gt;.

l

~eo 1

..

• ••••••••

VILLAGE PHARMACY
"The Creator of R easonaMe Drug Prices"
271 N. SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PHONE 992-5759

While They IS

You 'II find a great selection offine

.'

furniture, floor coverings and
appliances at the lowest possible

99

plices. Free delivery, convenient

I'R.

A

'"t I

' '

tetms, set-vice when you need it.
'

'

Serving you has been our business

Main Store, Annex and Warehouse

since 1952.

OPEN TUESDAY 9:30 to 5 PM

Baker Furniture

ELBERF.ELDS IN POMEROY

M idclleporl, Oh·io

.,

.'
'

t. .

. '

I .

'

.I . .
.

.'
,,

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="762">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11162">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="49356">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="49355">
              <text>March 31, 1975</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3274">
      <name>dewees</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2138">
      <name>stanely</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7651">
      <name>whittekind</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
