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~
A· bill to prohibit
Coal-Con Conversion piHnt foi' two bills that he is in Vi•lv~rl in
fluoridati
on may be inare
,House
Bill
405,
whicll
'
will
· Southeastern Ohio may be
tr
odu
t:l'
d.
The • dental
located in Meigs County · e liminatt~ 1he first week of
James, a democrat, observed walt ing period for un cni- profession has always ar·gued
. that Meigs County -is not high ployment benefits; a tom-_ flw;ridal ion in water helps
on the priority list. He believes promise permits the unem- preve-nt Iouth decay. But
tj1at itwill possibly be located ployed to collsct the fir st week Jmnes said it also is argued
in Belmont County in Ohio.
if tmemployed four ,tonse&amp;tive that fluoridation is deadly and
Jal'l)es noted that it is iJn weeks. Also House Bill liB could possibly be _a cancer
e·xciting time to be in , would reduc e the tangible ca use. He noted that . Midlegislation , especially fpr a personal tax froh1 70 to 50 dleport Village "is considering
small ta.wn boy fro.m Proc- percent to :!5 percent over an adding fluoride, and advised
torville. He said he felt Hke a eight year period so as not tu that they mov'e slowly.
rookie HI his fir'st spring cause a great deal of loss of
- Asked about the comtraining .
money to schools and local puteri zed system on groceries,
He observed that disputes govern ment. ·
James explained that such a
are good for a two party
- The leg islatw·e is in- 'bill is going to be introduced
system and that disputes today vestigating the rising cost of but it is being suggested that
are much like those of many utilities and hopes to have a each item be marked with the
years ago. He said, "We need solution to the probleni by correct price for the conmore men like Cal-vin eliminating the fu el . ad- ve ni ence of custom ers. If
Coolidge.'.'
justment clause until utility computers are_placed in chain
James made these other companies .me et with the stores and the changeover is
points:
Public Utilities Company . •· All costly, the mechanics of the
- The general assembly is utilities should justify this equipment" wilr eliminate
(Continued on page 10)
working on important issues; clause." James suggested.

.oi-

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Rails needed in: Meigs
il-~y KATIE CROW
"Railroad lines fn Mt:igs
Co~ ty-should bj! kept, as they
are unportant to the economy
of t~e area," according to Ron
~s. representative of the
92nd House District, speaking
to ~e Pomeroy-' Chamber of
Commerce at its noon luncheo"'
meeting Monday at the ¥eigs
Il)n.
· .
Referring to the · national
'&gt;...debate on reorganization of
· money losing railroads, James
Jjxplained that railroads would
be necessary for the PortAuthority that Gov. James
Rhodes has proposed for the
PomProy , Middleport area 'as
well as access to the large
supply of coal in this area.
He also commented that
without railroad' lines a portauthority could not be located
in the area.
.
When asked .if the proposed

•

James ·are", 1-r, Ted Reed, president, J~mes, C~olyn
Thomas, secretary and Fred Morrow, vice president.

·RON JAMES, second from left, representative of the
92nd district, was the guest speaker at the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce noon luncheon Monday at the Meigs Inn. With

Weather ·
Cloudy tonight, lows 30 to 35.
Cloudy and cooler Wednesday,.
chance 9( rain in afternoon or
evening. · Highs in~ the 40s.
• Probability of precipitation 10
per cent today, 20 per cent
tonight and 40 percent Wednesday.

VOL. XXVI

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e

at y
Devoted To The Interests Vj' The

NO. 246

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1975

en tine
•

Meigs ~Mllson

,1'

Now You ' Know
The state song of Kansas is
'" Home on the Range."

Are;,
PHONE 992-2156

15 CENTS

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Reds overrun Thieu's· central domain
'

SAIGON (UPi) - Tank-led Communist troops rumblmg down
the South Vietnamese coast without resistance today overran
Nha Trang, the Saigon goverrunent 's headquarters base for the
central region of the country, military sources said.
The fall of Nha Trang isolates Phu Yen province, the northernmost area still controlled by Saigon .
:·::
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces thundering down the
cities of Qui
Tuy
.j. coast seized South Vietnam's fourth largest city, Qui Nhon,
Monday .
Qui Nhon, 250 miles northeast of Saigon; is the capital of Binh
Dinh province, which the Communists all but control. Nha Trang
is the capital of Khanh Hoa province, much of which is under
ut tetnamese rest en guyen an
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong control.
'
Thieu abruptly-canceled a meeting with the U.
· Military sources said the only secure area at Nha Trang late
S. Chief of . Staff, Gen. Frederick Weyand,
this afternoon was the airport, situated on _the beach at the east
end of town.
They said the only effective fighting forces in the area were
government rangers caught up in heavy fighting eight and 14
miles north of Nha Trang near the Due My training base and the
· Former Foretgn Mtmster Vu Van Mau, a
town of Ninh Hoa.
&lt;
,
militant Bu!ldhist who helped engineer the {
The North Vietnamese and Viet Cong also made tank-led atoverthrow of the late President Ngo Dinh } tacks on two towns 35lo 40 miles north of Saigon and cut Highway
Diem a decade ago, joined Vice President ( 1 east of the capital as the military situation continued to
Nguyen Cao Ky today in asking Thieu to ;::: deteriorate.
President Nguyen Van Thieu canceled a late afternoon
resign. Ky abruptly cancelled an interview :::.
meeting with U.S. Army Chief of Staff Gen. Frederick C. Weyand
on the eve of the American officer's departure for the United
States to report to President Ford.

/ ;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::f::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

T/iieu::
tank~A~~d0i~fa~~:?~oday :V~~~han ~~~nc~~s~~~

: :[ Coup threatens
:·:1

~htn,

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::1!

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:;::
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HQab~n: N~at~~~g a~

~~~:Soi~~h:~V~c;~~=~1!:p!~:a~di~:lat·. ~Num:rs ~V~aa ~ ~

&gt;

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Robbery suspect held
A suspect in the armed
robbery Monday afternoon of
the Ridgeview Carry Out on SR
681 on the Meigs-Athens County
""- 1e near Albany iri Athens
1
Jun ty, was being questioned
today by Meigs County Sheriff
Robert C.' Harlenbach. The
suspect's name was withheld.
Sheriff Hartenbach was
called at I: 53 p.m. Monday to
investigate reports that the
carry out was robbed of apparently about $100 by a
masked man carrying a gun.
As pieced together by witnesses, and according to
Theada Phillips, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, who was wotJ?ng in

Rumors of a CO liP began to sweep the capitaL
regiments, abouliO,OOO men, into the campaign to overrun Binh
Anumber of government and military sources hinted to friends Dinh.
that political shifts might be imminent, but offered no details. '
They said the Binh Dinh province chief escaped from Qui Nhon
One said he would meet a newsman "after certain events lake
~hoard the U.S. charter vessel Trans Colorado after local ofplace."
ficials declared the situation hop_eless.
Former Premier and Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky, who last
At least 5,000 persons swarmed aboard the ship, most of them
week assumed effective control of anti-Thieu forces, canceled an
members of the 22nd Infantry Division, which the-Saigon cominlerview·with foreign newsmen, saying'he was_too tired to hold
mand had ordered to defend the city, a major American logistics
the meeting.
base before the U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam.
South Vietnamese Deputy Prime Minister Phan Quang Dan
Military sources reported today that South Vietnamese
called on North Vietnam to permit free passage for 1.5 million
helicopter pilots were charging residents of isolated Binh Tuy
refugees stranded in Communi~t-eaptured 'Oa Nang and to stop
Province east of Saigon for rides to the capital area. attacking refugees along the coastal cities.
They said Highway I outsrcte Xuan U&gt;c, ~8 miles northeast of
The Viet Cong, however, offered to negotiate a peace with
Saigon, had been effectively blocked by the Communists.
..
South Vi~lnam only if Tllieu is overthrown.
Communist tanks and troops this morning assaulted \he
Communist forces 'also launched attacks along an east.to-west
district town of Trang Bang, 35 miles northwest of Saigon,
arc 40 miles north of Saigon, cutting a highway and pounding two
military sources said. They said they had no immediate reports
South Vietnamese positions.
on the battle.
Qui Nhon was the 14th provincial capital lost to the North
At Chon Thanh, 40 miles north of SaigQn, North Vietnamese
Vietnamese and Viet Cong in their three-week-old lightning and Viet Cong troops pounded a ranger and tank camp Monday
thrust across the north and central quarter of South Vietnam.
night with 3,000 roimds of mortar and artillery fire and' followed
Most of the city's 100,000 residents fled before the advancing with a tankled ground assault, the sources said.
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong.
They said the qmger force took Cl!li!,Ullties of 18 dead and 100
Binh Dinh is the coWltry's third largest province. Kontum and wounded but reported knocking out 11 of the Ccinmunist T-54
Darlac, the two largest, already are in Communist hands, as are tanks.,
the second and third largest cities in South Vietnam, Da Nang
Agiant U.S. Air Force C5A Galaxy transport plane which flew
and Hue'.
nonstop from California landed just after dawn today_at Saigon's
Military sources said the Communists had thrown three
Tan Son Nhut air base, carrying 14 105mm howitzer artillery
pieces and other equipment.

..

Get in hock for
soll1ething big

picked up by a person driving a
yellow van.
Assisting in the search were
Athens County sheriff's
deputies, Vinton County sheriff
deputies, FBI members who
By RICHARD OUGHES
were in the area and two airUPI Business Writer
planes, one from · Albany and
The best way consumers can
one from Fairfield CO!ffi ty . "'
help end the recession, an
Sheriff Harlenbach stated
econmist says, is to take the
that a subjct is in custody in
tax rebate when it arrives and
Athens County and he will be
use
it as a down payment on an
'
checking on this person this
expensive item.
morning:
"We'd get tremendous imThe sheriff's department has
pact out of that," Alan Murray
.
.'
also investigated two breaking
of First National City Bank of
and enterings.
1.
New York, said Monday.
Deputy Ray Manley was
U consumers use their $98 to
.. ...
called to Royal Oak Park
$200 tax rebate as a down
····· ·.
where between $50 and $55 was
payment
to buy something on
. "'
'·
. w· ... ~oao -,,,,,.,...,~ .......
taken from a'n envelope that
the
instalhnent
plan, Murray
~""·' ~·"~"" .
.
had been shoved under the
said, the, $22.8 billion tax cut
door.
would be multipled several
. En trance was gained by
times as it rippled through the
breaking a back window. The
econo'Ily.
By United Press International
incident is believed to have
But the majpr question is not
COLUMBUS- OHIOANS HAVE UNTIL April 28 to write in
· occurred soine time late
whether
consumers will buy
support of a request by the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
Sunday night or Sunday
something on installments but
{or a nationwide investigation of the so&lt;alled natural gall
morning . It was discovered by
whether they'll buy anything at
shortage.
Del Hawthorne, an employe.
aiL
- "This is a clear case where the federal government wants
Time on above was 8:01 a,m.
Otto Eckstein, director of
input from the public in arriving at its decision," PUCO ComAt 9:34 a.m . Monday the
Data Resources, a major
missioner Sally W. Bloomfield said. "If we are to gain a nationsheriff's department was
economic consulting group,
wide picture of the natural gas situation, support by Ohio connotifiQd of a B&amp;E at the Reedsbelie-ves at least two-thirds of
sumers is crucial."· Mrs. Bloomfield said letters of. support
ville Dam late Saturday or
the money will be spent, l)nd
. THESE MEMBERS of Preceptor Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, were busy Monday
-should be addr~ed to the Federal Power Comrnission,
the rest saved:
Washington D. and should refer to either the ~·Petition by the -ea~- · Sunday morning . . afternoon sorting well over 200 prizes which will be awardeii during ~he chapter'~ c~ndy sale
"The whole theory of the
Thoml!S Diddle reported the
during the two presentations of the "Spring Fling" of the Big Bend Mmlrtrel Assoc1ab~n at the
·Ohio C:&gt;mmlssion'~ or to the FPC docket number "RP7~7." .
present
tax cut is to reduce the
,
theft.
Pomeroy Junior High SChool on-saturday; April12. From the left are Jane Walton, chairperson
.
decline
in purchasing power,
Awindow on the north side of
of the activity; Lois Rosenbaum, prize committee chairman, and Clarice Krautter. Shows w1ll
COLUMBUS - DEMOCRATJC NATIONAL Committee
increa~e consumer spending
the
building
was
broken
to
be stated by 7:30 and ~:15 p.m.
Chairman RobertS. Strauss is slated to be the featured speaker
and have the whole economy
gain entrance .
Friday at the annual Ohio Democratic Party State Dinner. , .
catch fire," said Eckstein. '·' We
Taken · were two battery
...: The presentation of the annual "Democrat of the Year"
think it will."
chain
saw,
two
sets
chargers,
a
. 11ward to a man or woman who has contributed o~er ~e ~ears to
But, he addded, "Our conthe growth of the pemocratic Party in the state, w~l highlight the of tools valued at $1,000, and
cern
is that it will peter out too
,
.
· _
dinner. Joseph T.- Fe~gww,n! former state aud1tor and state . two tool boxes.
quickly.
When all the one-shot
At the scene were deputies
•
. treasurer was ·the last rec1p1ent of the award.
'l
d
The
Meigs
.County
ComThe
commissioners
noted.·
cuspidors
·
be
provided.
At:
cuts
are
over, then the
and Car1 W1son, an
w 11
.. . Sen. john H. Gle~n, D-Ohio, was also scheduled to speak at Manley
Mack Ellis and Bob Horal of missioners this morning ap~ that they have been advised by tending were • Henry
e s, economy has e_nough moml!n-·
the dinner.
the .FBI. ·
,.
pointed Dorothea_McKenzie as Meig~ ¢ounly .. Common Pleas Warden Ours 11nd Bernard tum . to carry forward or ·. it
•
deputy- clerk · of the county ·. Judg~ John C. Bacon m regard ·Gilkey, commissioners and :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:
· • · THE PROVERBIAL MARCH LION STA~D ~e ~ation
court and took official noti"ce of to cigaret bulls and sp1ttmg of Martha Chambers, clerk.
PATTY NOT HERE
M0 da ilirig up heavy snows in the East, dumping five mches
NUMBER CHANGED
the bad . habits ()f cigarel t9bacco in front of the court
The Gallla-Meigs Post of
of ~ewy~w on blizzard-weary North Dakota and_touchin~ off
The Meigs Co\IDlY Chapter of smokers and tobac.co chewers. room . The· judge ·said the
the
Ohio Stale Highway
.., 'flooding from the Mississippi Vall~y to the eastern App~lach1ans. the American Red Cross has
SUPPER SET
In other business the com- problem is " becoming.. a ··
Six t ight inches of snow blinlteted northern New England, notified The Daily Se,n,tinelthat missioners granted Larry nuisance . Tlie commissioners
Patrol
reported this morning
RUTLAND - A spaghetti
. and Newo~mpshire was han;lest hit, with 18 inches of new s~ow " the· telephone number for the Spencer, clerk of courts, and feel th,at people should abstain supper will be served at the that rumors that Patty •
t J ckso . N H. The mercury dipped to 2 below zero and wmds. service to military families iil three of his deputies to attend a from -such pracltces.
Rutland Elementary School Hearst and other SIA
~ atni27 'miles per hour atop mile-high Mt. Washington in Meigs County has been district clerk of courts meeting
Judge Bacon in his letter Jo beginning at 4:30 p.m. membe.rs are in the Gallia-.
li""""u
disconnected and will be
the rommissioners !10\e'd that · Saturday with proceeds to go ttl Meigs area are unfounded.
New Hampshire.
disconnected until further in Ironton April 25.
Rutland
Volunteer An all ' points bulletin for
The commissioners accepted there is or should be a law to the
WASHINGTON ..:. JuRY SElECTION BEGINS tody in the notice. Anyone who needs to a bid for · a ne~ Case High prohibit smoking in . publ\c Emergency Squad Building , .Miss Hearst had been sent ,
trial of fonnel' Treasury Secr.eta~ John B. Connally Jr,, _accused . use the number must11ow call a . Flotation Dozer at a cost of places. Judge Bacon feels such Fund . All squad members have out iq the northern Ohio area
of accepting a $10,000 bribe m-milk-produ~r funds. Chief u. S. Columbus number . The $12,500 from · Soll!heastern . a law shollld be enac.ted. Bacon tickets and can be contacted during the morning ·hours.
1
District Court Judge George L. Hart Jr., estimated the selecbon . number to c~l) in. Columbus is
E~uiprnent Ccl. ~ GHllipolis. ·
asked that · ash trays and for reservations.
:;:;:;:;::::::::::: :: :::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :
·
(Contin~ed on page 10)
253-7961. .
the- carry ,out at. the time, a
man "across the road wearing
a mask" was noticed by three
children playing in the area~
The man walked across the
road and went into the store ~
Drawing a revolver he
demanded all the money,
which was given to him. The
exact amoun l was not deter_mined, but is. believed to be
over $100.
The man ran from the store
toward the Athens line. The
owner, Maxine Howard, Rt. 2,
Blbany, had two or three dogs
which chased the man as he
fled. He fired at the dogs,
missing them. The robber was

lll:l
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ews .. zn Brzefs.

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smok.ers. .a nd ch·e wers Warned

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doesn 'l."
Eckstein said the tax rebate
should stimulate co nsumer
spending enough to raise
consumption -by 6 p_er cent and
produce "positive" growth in
the Gross National Product in
the next three months for the
first time in more than a year.
Albert Sindlinger of Sindlinger &amp; Co. s11id recent surveys
indicate the rebate won 'l work
because the majority of people
will use the money to pay bills,
mostly for utilities, or save it.
Sindlinger said · surveys
taken two years ago showed
"tremendous hedge-buying " in
cars and houses to beat inflation. "People were even
buying canned peas to beat
rising prices," he said.
Therefore, he said, lhe.re is
not a pressing need for cars
and houses. "Without housing
and cars, the economy can't
possibly turn around," he said.
Murray, the Citibank economist, S(.lid the debate over
whether consumers will spend
or save their rebates has been
"exaggerated way out of
proportion."
"If a consumer doesn't spend
any of it," he said, "one way or
the other he puts the funds in
the hands of people who will '
spend it."
In other developments:
-The New -York Stock
Exchange Monday completed
one of its best first quarters in
its 183-year history. Th~ total
value ·of of NYSE ·$ ares rose
nearly $100 billion in January
and February and between an
estiinated $30 billion to $50
billion in March. Trading
volume was the heaviest ever.
- L. William Seidman, an
economic advisor to President
Ford, said in Philadelphia that
although the economy "is still
going down," there will be a
botlQ.ming out in mid-swnmei'. ·
Seidman said the first signs of
the economic recovery will be
in housing and mortgage rates.

�r
•

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Budget balancing 'plan would
acc;elerate corporaJion
Cham"ber of Commerce and
Oh to Manuf act ur ers
Assoctatwn compl amed It
would be unfatr
Hearings Stopped
The House Ways and Means
Committee abruptly stopped
hearmgs
on
separate
legiSlatiOn to Implement the
stepped up corporatio n tax
pa) ments whert Rhodes lltthdrew hts s upport
The legtslature and the
governor are reqmred to come
up wtth a balanced budget by
June 30
So far ...,.they (legtslahve
Democrats) have gone off on
thetr own and haven I patd
much attentiOn to the execuhve
branch • Collier satd I hope
we can get together and get
something worked out "
Collter satd he realtzes his
break wtth Rhodes over the
corpo rahon tax tssue has
created uncertamty among the
lawmakers a~ to how to
balance the budget
The people m the assembly
have the responstbllty to come
tdea '
up wtth a solution " he satd
•Rhodes last week wtthdrew
Th e only reason I'm sucking
his support from the tdea of wtth this one IS that tl does
acceleratmg the busmess tax balance the budget And I'll
pay ments after the Ohto sttck wtth 11 until somebody
C()ffies up wtth a better tdea
wasn t any great legiSla- - - - - - - -- --, There
tive support for tt but I hope to
The Daily Sentinel
present a case for tt ./
OtvOTEOT'iJT H E
"!don t vtew this whole thmg
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASO N AREA
break wtth Rhodes) as the
(the
CHESTER l TANNEHILL

trageoy that some people do,'
the fmance chief contmued
It s up to the assembly and
(state Tax Commtsswner)
Gerry Coltins and myself and
some poople whO krrow what
they re talkmg about to come
up wtth a way to balance the
budget that wtD be acceptable
to the legtslators and the
governor and everybody concerned
Will Accept Alternattve
Collter 531d he ts not bound
by. hts own plan and would
accept anl reasonable alter
nattve I m a pragmatist, he
satd
\.c I m sure the governor
would cooperate, Collier satd
He wants a balanced budget
He s stck of those unfunded
'hero btlls gomg through up
there ( m the Jegtslature)
He s sent up two bills
reamrmg additiOnal taxes and
you saw what happened to
them Then they keep messmg
around wtth extra appropra

, Mason eounty

....

Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C f y E d•1or
Pub sh e d da l y exce lSaturda y by The Oh o Valle y
P u bl s h ng Company
111

Court S t

Pomeroy

Oh o

45 769 Bu s ness O ff ce Ph o n e
99 2 2156 Ed tor a l Pho n e 992

21 57
Second c l sss postage pa d at
Pom e ro y Oh o
Naf to n al
adve rtr srn g
repr es en ta t ve
Bo l t ne 111
Gallagher nc 12 E ast &lt;~2 nd
St N ew York N ew York
Su b sc ript on
ra t es
Del ve red by car r 1er w he re
ava lab te 75 cents pe r w ee k.
Bv Motor Route whe r e ca rr er
se r v ce not av a Ia ble
One
month $3 25 By ma I n O h o
and W va One Ye ar $22 00
5:-: months
:ii l 1 5a
Three
m on hs
S7 0 0
E l se where
$26 00 year
S1x m onth
s 3 50 three mon t hs $7 50f
~ ubscr pt on
pr ce
ncl ud es
Sunday T mes Sent ne l

l

......--:--...

On lhts day m htstory
In 1853, Cmcmnalt, Ohto,
~egan paymg the fire department a regular salary Ordt
nary firemen drew $60 a week
In 1918 the Royal Air Force
NBS founded and two months
ater Bni&lt;Jm began bomb10g
md us tnal I&lt;Jrge\s m Germany
fr om French bases 10 World
War I
In !9;JI, 19-year-old Verne
Jackte Mttchell becaf'{le the
ftrs t woman to stgn wtth an all
male baseball team She JOtned
the Chattanooga Tenn club

"'

~

~axes
Ito~ wtthout provtdmg the
revenues That's a fun posttlon
for the legtslature to take bdf
tl tsn't very responstble
"I think tt's good that tt (the
break wtth Rhodes) happened
last week • Collter satd
We've ~nt the whole months
of January , February and
March JOckeymg around, and
maybe now that tt's Aprtl, we •
can get down to busmess and
work out solutions to some of
these problems '
Collier demed perststent rumors that the break w1lh
Rhodes over corporate tax
pa) ments wtll cause hun to
abandon the lmance dtrector's
JOb early and return to hts post
at Medtcal College ot Ohto m
Toledo
He satd he w1ll stay on for
two or three months after Ute
budget ts enacted, but has
always plalllled to return to the
college, where ts on leave of
absence m the mtddle of a SIX·
year contract

News

Notes_~

By Alma MarsJtall
NEW HAVEN - VIcki Keefer, extension agent, home
demonstration, was a guest of the Cherokee Extenston
Homemakers Club on Tuesday everung, March 25, at the home of
Mrs Luther Srruth Mrs Keefer satd, unportant dales to
remember are Aprtl9 lesson trammg meelmg on metrtc system
at 2 p m May 13 one day tour w King's Island and May 22,
Mason County Sprmg Lunchoon at Moose Hall, PI Pleasant
A four day tour ts plalllled m etlher September or October to
Gatlmburg, Tenn wtth stops m Asheville, N C to vtstl the
Vanderbtlt Mans1on and through the Smokey Mountams
Mrs Ollie Brownmg prestdent of the Cherokee Clyb,
prestded Mrs I..uther Smith presented devotionals, Scrtpture St
John 15th chapter, verse 5 The thought for the day was Is My
Life Leavmg the Imprmt of ChriSt's Love? Mrs Browmng
closed the devoltonals wtth prayer
Mrs Oscar (Nellie) Casto was m charge of the lesson, "Tax
Records Who Needs Them?,' and Mrs Keefer gave pomters on
keeptng records I
The Cherokee Homemakers have been quilting for some
tune on a 9 patch qUilt whtch IS now for sale for $35 This IS the •
money makmg proJect of the club
Mrs K K Scttes gave out proJect sheets for the year
At the conclusion of the m~eting, Mrs Srruth, served refreshments to Vtcki Keefer, Mrs Ollie Browmng, Mrs Oscar Casto,
Mrs Davtd Dewhurst, Mrs Joseph Scttes Mrs K K Scttes,
Mrs Vwlet Stanton and Mrs Grace Whtte
NEW HAVEN - Dtd you see the 6 ft Easter rabbit displayed
at Sayre s Hardware and thought, "where on earth would you put
a rabbtt that btg,' even if you were lucky enough to wm tl
Well, Wendy Harbour daughter of Mr and Mrs Danny
Harbour, New Haven, was the wmner and I'm sure she ll really
apprectate an Easter Bulllly that btg and you can bet she brought
her lots and lots of goodies

8y
REV HOWARD C BLACK

THE HIGH COST OF CARING
A growmg number of poople m our soctety today get by so
cheaply It costs an mdtVIdual much less when he does not care
anout bettermg hunself, hts family , or hts corrununtty Take, for
ex;rrnple, the man who doesn t care how he looks His clothes do
not need to be washed and cleaned so often , h1s hatr cut as
frequently , hts shoes shmed very often his home kept as mcely,
his lawn mowed regularly, or hts car kept clean and m safe
repatr as much as the person who does care
There ts an mcreasmg number of poople m our land who do
not care They strew the streets and htghways wtth beer cans,
be verage bottles and debris They make a mockery of the laws
that have been passed to protect the n ghtsof everyone
fhey live carelessly and thetr higher rate of msurance IS
paid by those who do care They refuse to work and thetr welfare
pa yments are made by the decreasmg number of people who do
care It costs m energy effo rt, and money for everyone who
really ca res
Rtght hvmg IS more demandmg than wrong hvmg Rtght
llvmg calls for dtsctplme, strong moral character, and the a~
ceptance of spmtual values It reqmres the best that a person
can be
It costs to do nght when the nght confltcts With personal
mterests, or when no one else ts domg It But rtght IS still nght
even tf no one else ts domg tt, and wrong ts still wrong, even if
everyone else ts domg tt
Yes tl costs to care But anything that IS worthwhtle costs
And "hat happens tf we don't pay the cost of carmg? We pay the
higher pnce of not carmg 1 It C()Sls to do nght, but there are great
divtdends m the rewards along the way

DR. LAMB

MASON - Approxuna tely 90 women and children were
Easter mormng breakfast guests at Mason Umted Methodist
Church, the men of the church cookmg and servmg Special
guests were the Rev and Mrs John Campbell and daughter of
New Haven Uruted Methodtst Church
The Rev Clarence McCloud, pastor of Mason Umted Methodist
Church, delivered the Sunrtse Sernce, Easter Our Commencement Day ' "Tears and a Tune of Joy was the message
he brought at Ute 9 45 a m servtce
On April13, the Reverend Mrs Achsah Mlller of New Haven
wtD brmg a message at the 9 45 a m servtce at the Mason Uruted
MethodiSt Church

MASON - Mrs Ellner VanMeter used an Easter theme
.when she presented devoltonals at Ute meeting of Mason Extenston Homemakers on Tuesday at the home of Mrs Cecil
Smtih Mrs VanMeter served as co-hostess Mrs VanMeter
closed the devoltonals by smgmg "Christ Arose" and other msptrmg songs She was accompamed 9Y Mrs Demus HarriS at
the p1ano Mrs Dorothy Queen presided durmg the business
meetmg
Mrs Helen Wtlliams thanked the group for the flowers sent
durmg her recent illness Mrs Alburtice (Roberta) Young was m
charge of the lesson, "Tax Records - Who Nee&lt;js Tbem ?"
The members talked brtefly about a communtty proJect Mrs
Laura Johnson gave the secretary's report and Mrs Cecil Smith
reported on the amount m the treasury Hostess next month will
be Mrs Landon Smtih
Refreshments were served to Mrs Lawrence Roush, Mrs Pirl
Burrts, Mrs Alburtlce Young, Mrs Denrus HarriS, Mrs Dorothy
Queen, Mrs Uoyd Wtlliams, Mrs Evelyn Stewart, Mrs Laura
Johnson, Mrs Landon Srruth, Mrs Helen Williams Mrs J
MarshaD, Mrs Matilda Noble by hostesses Mrs Smtih and Mrs
VanMeter

•'

LANCASTER 0/uo - Eleven homes
and semt private bmldmgs w1ll be open to
the public dur10g the Fatrfteld Hert tage
Assoctal&gt;ion Pilgnmi!Ge m Lancaster from
1-6 p m Saturday ana Sunjay, May 3 and

)

By Lawrence E I..amb, M D
absorb them through the m
DEAR DR LA\!B - What tesltne
causes a large amount of gas m
When carbohydrates are not
the stomach and colon? Do dtgested, and hence absorbed,
certam foods cause thts ? What they stay m the mtestme and m
can one do to avotd thts con the colon they undergo fer
dthon ?
mentatwn, releasmg lots of
DEAR READER - The gas gas
ts m the small mteshne and
Afrequent offender m adults
mos tly m the colon The ts mtlk The double milk sugar
stomach proper seldom has (lactose) ts not spilt 10to smgle
gas 10 tl except for those few sugars and can't be absorbed
souls who swallow atr '
It may ca use dtarrhea and
The atr swallower often does dtstent10n or 1 symptoms
thts wtth belch10g Each ttme resembhng a spastic colon
he belches he takes m more atr The way to fmd out if ibat IS
than he releases Thts usually the problem or not ts to
reqwres recogmtwn of the ehmmate all m1lk and mtlk
problem and educatton to tram products If !he condtllDn slops,
oneself not to do tt
you can be pretty sure what the
The ca use of gas may be problem ts I always like to add
different foods for dtlferent that you can t do wtthout mtlk
people A common cause ts the or a mtlk subslttule You need
loss of the abtbty to break down somethmg to provtde the
starches and sugars Thts may calcu1111 you should get every
be related to loss of normally day
occurrmg enzymes m the mIn other people fats may be
testlne that help to break these the ma10 cause of gas Thts
substances down, so you can •

may be assoctated wtth hver or
gall bladder problems Btle
helps to em ulstfy the fats so
they can be absorbed If you
have gall bladder dtsease you
may not be provtdmg bile
normAlly and tf you can'I
emulstfy the fat• they are
poorly dtgested
These und1gested fats 10crease the forma bon of gas and
may lead to dtstenlton and
belchmg A person who has
these symptof'{ls when eatmg
frted or fatty foods ts suspected
of havmg gall bladder dtsease
Unfortunately even tf a
dt seased gall bladder IS
removed the symptom§ may
perstst at least to some
1
degree
Then there ts the common
problem of spast1c colon Thts
IS often assoctaled wtth a diet
deftctent m bulk and poor
bowel habits The poor colon
over contra c ts and ca uses
cramps and pam Wtlh ab'

(

(

normal colon funclton , gas 15
formed and adds to the trapped
gas pams that can ll'e excructatmg
Thts problem requtres
careful management and
usually Improved markedly by
addmg bran and whole cereals
to the dtet to replace whtte
bread and projlucts made wtth
whtte flour
The changeover may, ttself,
cause excess gas at ftrst But,
lor those who stick to a d1el
with plenty of cereal fiber and
bulk, the problems dlmtmsh
ahd fmally dtsappear 10 about
three weeks \'\'tth thts tmprovement, the gas problems
and sharp abdommal pams
also go away
So there are many ways gas
can be produced You can try
differen t approaches and fmd
out whtch foods are causmg
• wtll go a
you the problem Tlits
long way m helpmg your dO&lt;:tor
pmpomt and advtse you on
your cond11ton

"

THE GEORGIAN an 1833 man&lt;non recently purchased by the Heritage
Assoctation, currently ~nder restoration Recetpts of the Pilgtunage will further
Utts project

' Georgtan • and at the Holiday Inn at 1858

house the Fox house (1831 ) bmlt wtlh
plan s brought from Germany by Captam
Agustus Wttte m 1829 the Welsh home
(1836) wtth tis four majeshc Dons ptllars
reachm g two stones h1gh to the pedtment,
and the Masheter home (1831) whtch has
tis ong10al roo t cellar currently used b)
the present owrl'ers
Vtsttors may begm thetr tour at The
&amp;eorgtan 'where llckets wtll be avatla ble
at $4 for adults and $1 50 for children
Ttckets wtll also be avatlable at each of the
ftve homes, Wagnalls Memortal the Hotel
Lancaster across the street from The

North Memonal Drtve on the freeway
approachmg Lancaster
A buffet luncheon at the Lancaster
Country Club w11l be served from II am
to 1 p m on both days to ltcket holders
only
Reservatwns ($4) must be made m
advance by sendmg a check or money
order to Mrs Jack Furmss, Jr , 740 Grand
vtew, Lancaste1 OhiO, 43130 Tour hckets
may be oblamed m advance from Mrs
Gerald Stebelton 328 Scott Drtve, Lancaster Ohto 43130

Med1care clatms for serv1ces

whtch m fact had not been
rendered Hifetz could recetve
a maxtmum penalty of one
year tmpnsonment and-or a
$10,000 fme on each coun t He
wtll be sen lenced Ia ter
Dr Heifetz 's co nvtch on
represents the thtrd convt2twn
for Medtcare fraud mvolvmg
Ohw phystctans and ts the 12th
such convtction 10 the Chtcago
Regton of the Department of
Health
Educatwn, and
Welfare whtch m addttton to

Peace, prosperity predicted
after Thieu and Lon Noll
VIENTIANE, Laos (UPI) - Laotian VIce Premier

Ph~,;;l Vongvlchll sal~ Monday the fall of Cambodia and

~il'ihvletnam would bring peace and prosperity to Indochina
Phouml, a Patbet Lao member of the coallllon cabinet,
said In an Interview wltb UPI be believed that South
VIetnam and Cambodia have the right to choose their own
governments, suitable to their geopolitical location
He said Laos will not become Communist, as feared by
the rightist side ol the coaUilon govermnenl.
"We bave chosen our poUey abd our national direction
which Is clearly staled in the VIentiane peace agreement
and m the 18-polnl poUtlcal program," Phouml said
11te VIentiane peace agreement, signed In 1973,
reconfirms Laos' neutraU!y' as prescribed by the 1962
Geneva agreement The polllieai program designates !,.aos
to follow a policy of peace, ltld"l'"""enee, neutraUty,
democracy, national imlty and prosperity '
The 18-polnt poUtical program also caDs for improvement of good relations with Laos' neighbors, Ineluding the Provisional Revolutioll8rr. Government of
Vietnam and the Khmer Rouge In Cambodia

Ilh nots
mclud es
Mtchtgan, Ind tana, Wtsconsm
and Mmnesota
The mvesltgalton and
refe rral to the Department of
Jushce of potenttal Medtcare
fraud cases ts part of an
ongo10g effort of the Soctal
Securtt)'Admtmstrahon auned
at assurmg proper use of the
Medtcare program
Oh10

NEW PRESIDENT
SAN DIEGO (UP!) - Bob
Hentzen of the Topeka (Kan )
Capttal;Journal has been elected prestdent of the U S
Bask e tball
Writers
Assoctation, 11 was announced
Monday
Hentzen succeeds Ed Chay of
the Cleveland Plain Dealer
Steve Guback of the
Washmgton Star was chosenc
ftrst v1ce prestdent of the ~
member group whlle Edgar
Allen of the Nashville Ballller
was p1cked as second vtce
prestdent Ray Marquette of
Tl\e Indtanapolts Star was reelected secretarytreasurer and
Bill Kreifeldt of Wayne State
Uruverstly (Mtch ) wa· ~ed
edt tor

p ack 256 busy in March
~

NEWHAVEN,W Va - '(he
den leaders of Pack 256 here
met March 18 at the home of
Mary Carolyn Wtley to dtscuss
fund ratsmgs Pa ck mght and
commumty clean up
Cub scout theme for March
bemg ' Ctrcus
t~e bo ys
11 orked on ctrcus prOJects and
skt ts for the pack mght
program on March 25 at thetr
weekly meetmgs
The cubmaster den leaders
and the Cub scouts were
dressed as clowns durmg pack
mght The leaders, Mtke Boyd,
Steve Elliott Movetta Sands,
Sue Hatd Mary Carolyn Wtley
and Tana Stmonton had the
opemng
and
closmg
ceremomes
Den I presented the f~r s t sktt
wtth a clown act Davtd Sands
and Tony Hatd d1d a chase
routme Butch Arnold and
Mtke Pethel entertamed wt th a
tumbmg act and Randy King
and Darrell Sands put on a
false mtrror scene

Den 2 foll owed wtth a ctrcus
act Steven Stmonton was the
bon I&lt;Jmer Arthur Wtley was a
sensatiOn when he swallowed
gold fish 1 Bobby Dolm was the
ctrcus fatman and Roome
Bradley the clown
Den 2 ended wtth a puppet '•
show, the pupl\.e ts bemg made
by the boys the Webelos den
had a dtsplay of wood ttems,
sa nded and burned wtlh
destgns and Den I had a
dtsplay of Circus stde show
boxes and rabbtts made of mtlk
cartons and cotton
• A" ards were presented by
the Cubmaster Mtchael Boyd
to the followmg ~couts
Den I - Butch Arnold, bear
book Tony Hatd, stlver arrow
pomt and Randy King, one
year servtce pm
Den 2 - Bobby Dohn, "'
travehng regatta trophy
Webelos den, Jimmy Love,
denner s cord
The Cubbte Award was won
by Den I for attendance

Letters to the editor
Letters expressing oplnlon on pubUc Issues are welcomed I.elters must be in
good taste and be signed, lneludlllg address and telephone number. No leiter without a
bona fide lljllDe, address and telephone number can be published Upon request of the
writer, names wiD be withheld from publication, however, upon legitimate request oy
a reader, names musllte revealed Leiters should not exceed 300 words. The editor
reserves the privilege of eondenslllg all leiters.

No way to run a railroad, or the ODOT either, as for that
Hocking Noble Vmton and pomt out was the fact that they
Washmgton
must pay the unemRioymen t
On March 7, 1975, the layoffs
Wtthtn Dtstrtct ten, thtrly ben~ftts to these employees
wtthm the Ohto Departinent of four employees have recetved wht h would amount to over
Transport.alton started wtth layoff nottces ALL of these $2 500 a week
over eighty
employees employees
have
been
Jtrnrny RhOdes states that he
dtscharged
from
thetr Democrats New employees, wants a depresston-proof state
pOSltions On March 19, 1975, who have been htred smce of Ohw Is thts meant only for
the masstve layoffs wtlhin January 13, have 1all been the repubhcans??? He also
ODOT continued !!flth over 500 Republicans They have been stated durmg the elections that
employees bemg diScharged htred m classtflcatlons where there was Rlenty of montes to
Of these employees, over 99 9 layoffs wtll not occur, yet the run lhts state, only the adpercent were Democrats Most same dulles wtll be performed m10tslralton of the momes was
of the Repubhcan employees
The reason, gtven for the poor Now he ts askmg the
who were latd off were htre'd layoffs ls shortage' of work taxpayers of Ohto to approve
under the Gtlllgan Ad- This IS tmposs1ble espectally hts bond tssues whtch are
mmtstralton
durmg the sprmg of the year nothmg but forms of taxalton
In January, 1975, there were All mamtenance and repatr of
The Ohio Legtslature has
130 vacant postltons wtlhm htghways, construction of new approved $19 mtllion to be used
Dtstr1ct ten, ODOT In htghway
projects,
and ""as matching funds "to secure
January, 1975, there were also prellmmary work on future Federal Highway FundS Thts
less employees than m prOJects are always busy Will supply addtltonal funds for
Januar y, 1971 This alone durmg the spr10g and summer employment throughout this
should prove that the Ga1lhgan " months
~tate, whtch means :here Is
Admtntstrahon dtd
not
Accordmg to offlctals of work wtthm the Department of
overload the taxpayers of OhiO Otstrtct ten, over $5,000 a week Transportation
wtth non-producmg personnel wtll be saved by the layoff of
All taxpayers are becoming
m Distrtct ten, which includes thirty-four (democrats ) em aware that their tax momes
the counties of Athens, Gallia
ployees But what they fatled to are bemg spent very foolish!
Metgs , Monroe, Morgan ,
Y
'

'

lndustrtes htre employees and
tram them m their positions
and hope that they Will be
produchve employees The
State htres employees and
trams them m thetr pos1tlon
]ust to lay them off when the
admmtstrahon changes It Is
hme the Citizens of Ohio realtze
that employees who excel ln
knowledge of their positions,
save taxpayers many dollars
Past training efforts serve
UtUe purpose If massivF layOffs
by etther party, dispose of
employees who are dedicated
to thetr jobs and to the tax·
payers of Ohio
Betng ' a taxpayer and
dedicated citizen of the great
state Of Ohi'o, 1 strongly protest
the masstve layoffs of employees of whom I am a part

•

•
'I

-

Sincerely,
William R McAfee
:1203 Pride Ave •
Belpre, Ohio 4&amp;714

•
WI-n -s

~

~
m
S ,
1::
port Parade

~

m

~

SANDIEGO(UPI)-Ftttm
~&gt;@ gly, John Wooden has gone out
a wmner

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

The man who turned out the
, " greatest dynasty m college
basketball history did 11 agam
NEW YORK (UP!) - Some people are born lucky They're Monday mght- his fin al game
gtfted With such beautiful vo1ces, they smg like btrds Others of coaching
.I
have all they can dow hum and shll others can't so much as hold
If Wooden, the wtly Wtzard of
a note In the mustc world they're known as ltsleners, and there Westwood was co nducting
you have DaVId Arthur Kingman-he s a liStener a real good some kmd of psychologtcal
one
warfare when be annount'ed
' I listelied to everybody, he says "Tha twas my down! all I his rettrement Saturday after
listened to too many poople " ~
UCLA's 75-74 overtime wm
Some of the people wtth his new ball club, the New York Mets
over Lowsvtlle m the NCAA
say right-handed httting 6-foot-6 Dave Kingman listens semifmals tt worked
beautifully Some of those wtth hts old club, the San FranciSCo
For the loth time t'l\.12 years,
Gtancs, say the same thing but add a condiltonal phrase
hts UCLA Brmns' won a
' He listens all rtght, ' agrees one member of the Gtants "He national championshiP Two
Ustens and he trte~~ but unfortunately he seems to have a con
days after Wooden s dramatic
centra lion span of only three mmutes You tell hun somethmg
announcement, hts Bnltns beat
and he'll forget tt three minutes later
'
l{entucky's take-no-prtsoners
Kingman says tlujt tsn't true He says he sunply was gtven too defens e, 92-35
much adVIce about. hittmg adjustments
''One person would tell m~ to do thts, and another person would
tell me to do that, ' he says ' I was unable to relax I couldn't
have fun out t)lere Things went badly, and never got better The
pressure Just kept mounting
But tbal was With the Gtants Now, w1~h the Mets, people approach Dave Kingman wanting to know what suddenly has
gotten mto him How come he's the btggest, rrlost terriftc, thmg
to rome along for the Metssmce Tom Seaver? He has etght home
runs, 15 RBis and a fancy 358 batting average so far this sprmg
and promtses to enJoy himself at Shea Stadium thts summer
followtng four dtsmally dlsappomting seasons m San Franctsco
SAN PIEGO (UP!) - Loust
"Over here," he says, meanmg )Vllh the Mets, they 've left me VIlle basketball Coach Denny
pretty much on my own Phil &lt;tavarretta, the team s batting Crum
whO
has been
lllStrucwr, SBld 'I'm gonna watcl1you for a coupla • weeks and not prommen tly menttoned In
say anythmg 'He's been real patient Oh sure he talks wtth me speculalton of John Wooden s
and g1ves me little suggesttons But h~doesn't ~y 'do II •.he says • successor at UCLA, Monday
'think about 11 ' I ve never had anybody say that to m~ before " ru\ed out the Briun JOb m his
The ftrst lirfie the Gtants saw the huge 210-pound Kingman plans for the unmediate future
swmg a bat, they were fascmated by hun They followed hun and
Crum, 37, a former Wooden
saw him deposit baseballa 450 feet over the fence and farther so player and chtef asststant, told
naturally they hoped he'd do the same thing fo; them and that a hastily call~ news confer
was why they drafted hun after he recetved hts degree at the ence at the San Otego Sports
Uruverstly of Southern Californta
•
Arena that he plalllled to
Kingman d~proVIde the long ball for the Gtants, hitting 29 remam at Loutsvtlle for at
homers for tbem in 1972, 25 1m 1973 and !Blast year Those fJgures • least the four remaining years
were more \han offset, however, by his 225, 203 and 223 batting
averages the past three seasons, and his strikeout ralto, of once
every three times up, was merely an added md1ctment
E ..: h•b•l•on Baseball Standings
"I tried too hard,'' says Kingman "I put too much pressure on
Bv Untted Press lnt ernat•onal
myself With the opportunity gtven me But I thtnk I'll benefit ( Inc l udes Only Games vs
Lg Teams)
from the whole Situation Certam ballplayers need a change, and Mator American
Leagu e
I felt I needed a change
w I pet
l torn1 a
13
7 650
' Now, with the Mets, 11 sa complete swttch, a new sttuation, a Ca
T exas
15 11
5 77
new everythmg Il'sa fantastic feelmg bemg over here "
Ba 1t1 mor e
11 10
524
c ty
12 11
522
Kmgrnan IS a relatively young man yet at 26 His baseball MKansas
nnesota
13 12 52 0
future still could be allm front of hun and he's aware of that He Cleve lan d
500
6
Oak l and
6'
7
462
doesn't hide the fact he always wanted to play m New York
Detro t
11 14 440
Why? For the same reason Catfish Hunter did and Kareem N ew York
I IS
423
Ch1cago
11 15
423
Abdui.Jabbar does More exposure and more opportunities
M !wa u kee
7 11 389
"I like the town,' ' he says, 'and I've always h1t wellm Shea Boston
9 15 375
Stadium"
Nat onal Leagu e
Another factor oould be that Kingman does promotional work
w I pet
Los An geles
17
5 773
.,. for Uruted Airlines, a company hiS father worked for for 33 years San
Fra n c sco
11
5 688
before he dted a year ago If he does well wtth the ]\1ets his Mon tr ea l
15
7
682
Pht ladelp hla ~
13
7 650
posslbtUites, both on and off the f1eld, are limitless and he ~ows C1
ncmnat t
15
9
625
that
P1ttsburgh
14 12 538
D ego
7
7 500
Wtth the G1ants, Kingman really had no one ftxed pos1tion He San
Houston
10 14
417
playlld ftrsl base, thtrd base and the outfield for them He even St LOUI S
9 13 409
New York.
7 14 333
pitcM m a couple of games The Mets are thinking of hrrn'IIS an Atlanta
7 16 304
outfielder Later, they may reconstder and gtve him a shot at Chtcago
4 13
235
x sp l t ~uad
ftrst base, but nght now be's an outfielder
av s R:esutts
AI; far as Dave Kingman IS concefiled, there's nothing m the
M mnes a 3 New York. (Al 0
Kansas C1ty 3 Bait more 0
world like baseball
Detro1t S ch cag o (A) 3
It bas taught me an awful lot alr~dy ' he says 'I've found
T e~~:as 5 At lant a 1
St LO U S 6 Bost on 3
It 's not aU roses aU Ute time It'snot that easy "
&lt;

of false medicare claims

Marcj) Tl 1975

Tbotlv Sentmel, Middleport Pomeroy 0 , Tuesday April! 1975

'@

Ohio podiatrist convicted

What causes gas pains?

•

., _

~~
~~

4

CLEVELAND - Chaytm
Hetfetz a Cleveland podtatnst
pleaded gutlty March 20 to
three counts of fthn g
fraudulent Medtcare clatms
He1fe tz had been mdtcted 10
February on II counts of
submttlmg false Medtcar•
cla1ms
The mvestigatwn of Hetfetz,
whtch was conducted by the
Soctal
Secunty
Admmtstratwn s Bureau of
Health Insurance, disclosed
that Hetfetz had submttled

~

TM

~-~~'Wii-~:·::t.fum~~:~t,.
b1 Today's
·
,h

Pilgrimage tour offer~d in Lan as~er~j

The tour offers a wtde vartely of ar
chtteclural styles dat10g from 1803 to 1974
all chosen for qualtty of restorahon antl
furmshmgs
Headquarters ts The Georgtan ' an
1833 mansiOn recently purchased by the
Hen tage Assoctallon and currently under
restoratwn Funds from the Pilgrunage
wtll further lhts proJeCt
In addition to The Georgtan," pomts
of mterest on the tour are
The Stanberry-Rtsmg-Ftrst Methodtst
'thurch Home (1834) bUilt by the first
Attorney General of the State of Ohto and
later Umted Stales Attorney General
Shermaq. House ( 1811 ), btrlhplace of
General Wtlltam T Sherman and Ius
brother John, U S Senator and author of
the Anll-trust Act whtch bears hts name
Emanuel Evangelical Lutheran Church
(1920), a modtfted Gothtc structure where
the ladtes of the church will be servmg
food, Wagnalls ~emonal, fowoded m 1924
by Mabel Wagnalls-Jones to be used as a
hbrary and cornrnuntly center, a Log
Cabm beheved to be·the upper story of a
cabm bmlt by squatters ctrca 1803
Also, the Carroll Ohw Hoelting Valley C
&amp;0 Depot 10 use from 1871 1966 , a covered
brtdge whtch was ongmally over the Ohto
Canal the France house (1974) formerly
a bru:n and adjacent bmldmg used as a
Slaughter house, both whtch have been
converted mto a most unusual and
beaultful home the Carpenter house
(ctrca 1875), a recently restored farm

•

{

•

2- The DatiY Sentinel Mtddleport-Porneroy, 0 , Tuesday , Apnll 1975

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Fmance Dtrector Howard L
Collter today was to go before
the House Fmance Corrumttee
to urge lawmakers to balance
the new state budget through
accelerated corporatiOn tax
payments a move opposed by
Clbv James A Rhodes
Collter was to appear at a 2
p m meetmg of the corrumttee,
\\htch ts holdmg hea n ngs
durm g a legtslattve recess this
week on Rhodes proposed
$12 2 btlllon budget and the
$11 5btllton plan recommended
for fiscal 1975-76 by maJority
Democrats m the legtslature
Collter satd. he plans to
furrush fi gures backmg up his
proposal to ratse $85 rrullion
thr ough a stn gle adva nce
corporate tax payment, ~nd to
free another $219 mtlllon by
reqmrmg quarterly mstead of
annual pa ~ ments
He satd he \\ould contmue to
defend the plan until some
body comes up wtth a better

'

.

UCLA played a tremendo4!" &gt; 147 record Wooden won the btg
and tnsptred game satd Jo'e lttle of &lt;:()liege basketball wtth
B Hall, the Wtldcats coac h
the legendary Kentucky roach
In beatmg Kentucky for the Adolph Rupp stltmg m the
first lime tn h1 s fabled stands
coachmg career Wooden used
Rupp now 73, retired as
only st&lt; players aga mst a team Kentucky s coach three years
tha t had been mcknamed, ago a fter runmng up an
amazmg 879 190 mark In three
The Slaughterhouse Ftve
because of tis abthty to maul meetmgs wtth Wooden he won
4
oppost tion
them aU
Kentucky s defense had been
Rut Wooden s 10 NCAA
able to knock off the No 1- champ10nsh1ps were stx more
ranked teart\ m the country than Rupp could put together
Bobby Kmght s Indtana Hoo
Poker faced Rtchard Wasters, m the Mtdeast reg10nals sh mgton , a slick 6 foot 9
I JUst can l belleve a team sophom ore from ):'o rtland ,
could only play SIX men agamst Ore , ftred m 28 pomts for
such a fme phystcal team as UCLA and was voted the Most
Kentucky and wm ' sa td Valuable Player of the wurWooden But we dtd tt
namen t AIIAmenca Dave
Closmg hts Tl year UCLA Meyers added 24 for the
tenure With a remarkable 620- Brums who were 28 3 tn

•

r

\

•
. I

'

crown
Wooden s fmal season
Washmgton and Meyers
off set a 34-pom t exploston from
Kentucky's fine 6-5 semor
fof\\ard KeVIn Grevey
My feelmgs at thts moment
are a combmatlon of sadness
and happmess, S31d Wooden m
his farewell post game mter
VIew sess10n Thts was by far
our most phystcal game of the
year But I tell my playe rs they
must be m tletter condttlon
than thetr opponents
'Maybe tl's the )l(lwer of
postttve thmlting But tf I can t
work them mto conditiOn I try
to talk them mto tt I have
never had a condtttomng
problem wtth my UCLA
teamS '
At 6-4, Wooden stepped down
four years pefore he had to, for

a mynad of reasons, whtch he
satd he dtd not want to go mto
UCLA AthletiC Dtrector J D
Morgan satd after the game
that he would have an announcement on Wooden s
successor, m the relatively
near future "
However, tl wtll not be
Loutsvtlle Coach Denny Crum
a former Wooden player and
chu!f asststant In a hastily
called news conference 25
mmutes before the Cardmals'
•
consolation game With Syracu
se Crum allllounced that he
would remam m Kentucky to
fulftll the fmaf four years of his
ftve year contract
Loutsvtlle won the thtrd
ptace game 96-88 m overtune
For Wooden the victory
came ma season m whi~h he

Wooden has mixed feelings
SAN DIEGO ( UPI) - In his

fmal post-game mtervtew ses
Denny Crum rules out Bruin j'ob ston
Monday mght, reltrmg
of hts ftve year contract
'I felt because of all the
speculatwn that I should ~II
my athletic director (Dave
Hart) th 0t I would honor my
C()ntract at Loutsvtlle, • Crum
S31d
"! have not been olfered a
JOb at UCLA I have no tdea if
they planned to offer 11 to me
I m gomg to be coachmg at
LouiSVIlle for a long tune "
Wooden 64, restgned Saturday after UCLA had defeate d
LoUtsvtlle, 7&amp;-74 m overtun~

Pro Standings

]abbar's fine
paid by Bucks
NEW YORK (UPI) -Larry
Fleisher, attorney for the NBA
Players Assoc1ation, s8ld Monday be would pull out all stops
m aSSlstmg the American Civil
Ubocties Umon m combating
Ute $300 fine leVIed against
Milwaukee's Kareem Abdul
Jabbar by Commissioner Walter Kennedy
Paul Silas of the Boston
Celt1cs, president of the AsIIOCllltion, Wes Unseld of the
Washington Bullets and Bill
Bradley of the New York
Knlcks also were adamant m
their belief that "all athletes
have a rtghl to speak out and
that a player's feelings should
be not be muffled by the
league
In Mtlwaukee, General
Manager Wayne Embry announced that Ute Bucks have
paid the fine and sa1d, "The
Bucks are sending the money
with tbe provision made by Ute
NBA that if Kareem's aPVC~~Its
succesaful It will he refunded
We support Kareem but we
can't lake a chance on his
suapension "
Flelllher, a guest speaker at
• IWlCh aMounclng the joint
sponsorship of the NBA

'

Cm c mna t 1 4 Phtladelphta 0
ca l led after 6 1n n s
Ptttsburgh 4 N ew York (Nl 0
Montreat 7 Houston 1
M !waukee 13 Oakland 11
C ev etand 2 Ch cago 1N J 0
San D1 ego 10 Cal forn1a 9
San Franc sco 8 Los A ngeles 1
Tue sday s Games
St Lo u s vs Hou ston at Cocoa
I 30 p m
C ncmnat 1 vs New York (Nl
at St Petersburg 1 30 p m
Atlanta vs New York (A) at
West Pa l m Beac h 1 30 p m
Pittsburgh vs Chtcago (Al
(2J at Sa ra so ta 1 30 p m
Montreal vs M nn esol a at
Orlando 1 30 p m
Texa s &lt;-:S
Bait mor e at
Mta m • 1 30 p m
Detrod vs
Boston ( N l at
Lak e land 1 30 p m
Ch1cago ( N J vs San 0 ego at
Scot tsdal e 1 00 p m
M lwaukee vs Oakland at Sun
Ctty 4 DO p m
Los Angeles vs San Fran
c sco at Ph oen tx 1 00 p m
Cl evela nd
vs
A r1 zona
Un verstty at Tucson 4 00 p m

Players Assoctation and the
YMCAs of tbe Uruted States m
promoting JUmor basketball
compehtwn, satd 'lt was
unprolfr for tbe league olftce
to fme a player for statmg his
opmlon about olftctalmg" m
Ute NBA
Abdui-Jabbar enlisted the
wd of Ute ACLU after bemg
rapped by a stiff !me for calling
referee Jerry Loeber inept in
ills job
WHA Stand1ng s
''The ACI..U called me at By Untted
Press lnternaltonal
East
Kareem 's behest," Fletsher
gf ga
satd "They are gomg to x New Eng w41 28I 5t pts
BJ 262 267
charge the NBA With stifling
34 38 3 71 223 246
free speech It will be a con- Cleveland
Ch 1cago
28 45 I 51 252 303
stltuUonal matter w1th them ln d1a napols 18 54 3 39209 319
West
We are gomg on the theme that
w
I t pts gf ga
Kareem did not do anything x Houston 50 24 0 100 347 233
"detrunental" to the game SanD ego
41 30 3 85 301 254
38 29 8 84 289 252
with his outburst and we'll Ph oen •
fight tt*' $300 fine"
' Mm nesola 40 30 3 83 291 257
Abftw-Jabbar was soaked Ba llom ore 19 50 4 42 IS4 313
canad1a-n
$200for what he satd wLoeber
w I I pts gf ga
43 31 0 86311284
, Ul public and another $100 for Quebec
entenng the referees' quar- Toronto
.41 32 2 84 333 297
Wmn peg
38 32 4 80 307 266
ters
Concetning the Players As- Edmonton 3A 36 4 72 263 265
sociation's affiliation w1Ut the Van couver :33 38 2 68 236 252
x Cltnched dtVISt~n t•tle
YMCA, Silas said kids will
Mondav s Results
receive an opportunity to Wtn n peg 4 lnd 1a napol 1s 1
5 Edmonton 2
develop their skiDs in "Y" San Otego
Tuesday s Games
!Xtllosophy and 10 baske\!&gt;all Ph oen x 'at New England

BASEBALL TODAY
Eastern at Ravens

wood
Metgs al Ironton
Southern vs alumm
at home (postponed
from Monday )

UCLA basketball Coach John
Wooden admttted he thought
we had a chance" to wm the
Brums' loth NCAA cha mptonshtp
I guess to say that I thought
we would go thts far would be
stretchmg the pomt,' Wooden
satd, followm g UCLA's 92-35
VIctory over. Kentucky m the
natwnal finals 'But I dtd thmk
we ha d a chance
For Wooden, who announced
his retirement Saturday, tl was
a story book fmtsh for a man
who came to Los Angeles from
Indtana State Teachers College
m 1948
'My feelmgs at thts moment
are a combmat10n of sadness
and happmess he sald I m
sad at leaVIng the young people
whom I ve been assoctaled
wtth so many years, members
of the medta wtth whom I
haven't always agreed and the
other players, coaches and

~!":!!!on~~~M~-~~r~.~?l!.~~~~~~X.. . ,;,M

UPI Sports Writer
The computenzed All-Star
ballots came out Monday and
St Louts catcher Ted Sun
mons' name was on 11
Not that tt really matters-It
ts a foregone concluSion that
Johnny Bench, tf he stays
healthy wtll be behind the
pjltte when the National league
s~uares off With the Amertcan
League July 15
Thts IS not a knock on Sun
mons' abtlilles II s JUSI that
Bench has been around a whtle
longer and has rolled up some
rrnpresstve staltstlcs m his
seven years wtth Cinncmnatl
Sunmons has been 10 the btg
leagues for only four seasons
and a regular for just three He
has htt 304, 303, and 272 10
those three years-and last
season was his best desptte the
30-pomt drop m batting avera
ge He drove m over 100 runs
for the ftrst time and htt 20
borne nms
Sunmons was second among
catchers m doubles, home
runs, total bases and RBI m the
National League but the No I
catcher m all those calegortes
was Bench
Still, Sunmons only fmtshed
Uttrd m the voting for the
ctrcu1t's i\11-star catcher last
surruner behind Bench and
PhtladelphlB's Bob Boone
The Cardinals' field general
apparently out to make
amends this season and IS m
his best lr81llmg camp ever
Simmons had one game this
spnng m which he hit three
home runs-and was walked m
the nmth mrung to ~ent a
possibility of four m consecultve at bats
IS

The swttch-hllting backstop
clubbed !;)is stxth home run m
e1ght games Monday w spark
St Louis to a 6-3 victory over
the Boston Red Sox He drove
10 two runs wlift his RBI count
w 17 m 20 games

the bench m favor of Bill
Plummer as the Cinc10nati
Reds beat the Phtladelphta
Phtllies 10 a ram-shortened
game, W Ton) Perez drove m
three of the Cmcy runs
Nelson Bnles and Marty
Pattm combmed to hold the
Baltunore Orioles to JUSt four
hits m a 3-0 Kansas City vtc
wry Montreal exploded for a
f1ve-run ftrst mmng off
Houston starter Tom Griffm
and coasted home to a 7 I
trmmph and Tony Oliva belted
a two-run homers to cap a
three run fourth mrung and
lead Mmnesota to a 3-0 vtclory
over the New York Yankees
Terry Humphrey rapped two
doubles and a smgle to lead
Detroit past the Chtcago Whtte
Sox, 5-3 Lelllly Randle stroked
out three hits m Texas' 5-I
pastmg of Atlanta and Rtck
Manmng deltvered a two-run
smgle m the siXth to hand
Cleveland a 2-ll wm over the
Chicago Cubs

MARCH 27 UNTIL APRIL 4
~OR VACATION
'

In Case Of Emergency, Ca II
The Galhpohs Off1ce Collect·
J

71SS

~

···- .. -IIIII

IIf/~

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ITAJI'-

•••

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•

Johnny Scott and df.hbed a threenm homer In
capped a two;-un etghth uuung the etghth mmng to gtve
rally tbat gave San Dtego a 10-9 Milwaukee a 13-11 vtctory
wm over Califorrua, Rellllle
Derrel Thomas' smgle and
Stennett poked three htts and ftrst home run of the sprmg and
drove 10 two runs as Ptttsburgh a dou ble and triple by Ed
whipped the New York Mets 4- Goodson helped San Franctsco
0 and Mtke Hegan, pmch defeat Los Angeles, 8-1

.

VALUE

lnd1anapol1s at Toronto

Balt•more at San D ego
Quebec at Edmo n ton

scor ~d

•

This Week s Spectal

Vancouver at Minnesota
Cleveland at Chtcago

OFFICE CLOSED

admmtstrators 11 has been my number for champwnshtps "
pleasure to be assocfated wtth
Kentucky Coach Joe B Hall
over the y~ars "
was not deJected
Of the game, Wooden satd,
'We had a great year, he
We made no adJustment at satd 'I II never forget our SIX
halftune to gel'more rebounds semors I wtsh I C()UJd adopt all
even though we were out- of them UCLA s defenstve
rebounded by SIX m the ftrst board work turned th mgs
half and outrebounded by 12 m around for them Ralph'
the second
Drollinger had three baskets
"! stress conditioning from real qwck m the second ball
the ftrst day of practice and he was a thorn m our stde
through the champtonshtp most of the tune he was m
game of the season I keep there
workmg them 10 prachce but
'I felt we had some chances
tl s up to them to keep up to wmtt but tt didn 'I seem to be
phystcally betwe.en games
meant for us We took some
'Thts, by far , was our most questwnable shots but that ts
phyrucal game of the year •
no cn ttctsm We wanted to stay
Rtchard Washmgton, who loose m our shootmg
scored "28 pomts agamst KenKevm Grevey had a great
lucky and was chosen the Most rught I m very happy for him
· Valuable Player of the tour
He s been a great player for
nament, satd:
Ken tucky
I remember m Coach
Wooden s pre-game talk, 1 was
thmkmg I had better listen
The earth s magnetic poles
because tt was his last one I h~ve reversed places at least
thought he had to go out m seven ltmes on the past three
style Ten ts a mce round mllhon years

was not supposed to wm A
year ago Ute Btll Walton-led
Brums were the favorttes but
had a strmg of seven consecu
tive natwnal titles snapped m
the NCAA semtfmals at
Greensboro, N C , by North
Carol10a State
We tned to play Kentucky
heads up,' satd Meyers "They
were very phystcaJ on the
boards but we played a lot of
tough board teams this season,
like Oregon and Southern
Califorma 10 the Paciftc Etght
We wanted to slow thmgs up
near the end and set up for the
good shot, espectally for RIchard He's like (pro star) Bob
McAdoo
Washmgton who beat LoUIS
vtlle wtth a shot wtth three
seconds left Saturday satd
Wooden s restgnation g;lve him
extra mcentlve

at Reasonable

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call on your fiouse
If you ve owned your
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chances are 1t s doubled
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On paper
Now \lOU can turn that

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HomeOwner Loa n The
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f1nan c 1al needs B1gger
bec ause 1t s backed by the
grow1ng value of your house
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Without hov1ng r
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POME~Y, OHIO

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�r
•

~

Budget balancing 'plan would
acc;elerate corporaJion
Cham"ber of Commerce and
Oh to Manuf act ur ers
Assoctatwn compl amed It
would be unfatr
Hearings Stopped
The House Ways and Means
Committee abruptly stopped
hearmgs
on
separate
legiSlatiOn to Implement the
stepped up corporatio n tax
pa) ments whert Rhodes lltthdrew hts s upport
The legtslature and the
governor are reqmred to come
up wtth a balanced budget by
June 30
So far ...,.they (legtslahve
Democrats) have gone off on
thetr own and haven I patd
much attentiOn to the execuhve
branch • Collier satd I hope
we can get together and get
something worked out "
Collter satd he realtzes his
break wtth Rhodes over the
corpo rahon tax tssue has
created uncertamty among the
lawmakers a~ to how to
balance the budget
The people m the assembly
have the responstbllty to come
tdea '
up wtth a solution " he satd
•Rhodes last week wtthdrew
Th e only reason I'm sucking
his support from the tdea of wtth this one IS that tl does
acceleratmg the busmess tax balance the budget And I'll
pay ments after the Ohto sttck wtth 11 until somebody
C()ffies up wtth a better tdea
wasn t any great legiSla- - - - - - - -- --, There
tive support for tt but I hope to
The Daily Sentinel
present a case for tt ./
OtvOTEOT'iJT H E
"!don t vtew this whole thmg
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASO N AREA
break wtth Rhodes) as the
(the
CHESTER l TANNEHILL

trageoy that some people do,'
the fmance chief contmued
It s up to the assembly and
(state Tax Commtsswner)
Gerry Coltins and myself and
some poople whO krrow what
they re talkmg about to come
up wtth a way to balance the
budget that wtD be acceptable
to the legtslators and the
governor and everybody concerned
Will Accept Alternattve
Collter 531d he ts not bound
by. hts own plan and would
accept anl reasonable alter
nattve I m a pragmatist, he
satd
\.c I m sure the governor
would cooperate, Collier satd
He wants a balanced budget
He s stck of those unfunded
'hero btlls gomg through up
there ( m the Jegtslature)
He s sent up two bills
reamrmg additiOnal taxes and
you saw what happened to
them Then they keep messmg
around wtth extra appropra

, Mason eounty

....

Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C f y E d•1or
Pub sh e d da l y exce lSaturda y by The Oh o Valle y
P u bl s h ng Company
111

Court S t

Pomeroy

Oh o

45 769 Bu s ness O ff ce Ph o n e
99 2 2156 Ed tor a l Pho n e 992

21 57
Second c l sss postage pa d at
Pom e ro y Oh o
Naf to n al
adve rtr srn g
repr es en ta t ve
Bo l t ne 111
Gallagher nc 12 E ast &lt;~2 nd
St N ew York N ew York
Su b sc ript on
ra t es
Del ve red by car r 1er w he re
ava lab te 75 cents pe r w ee k.
Bv Motor Route whe r e ca rr er
se r v ce not av a Ia ble
One
month $3 25 By ma I n O h o
and W va One Ye ar $22 00
5:-: months
:ii l 1 5a
Three
m on hs
S7 0 0
E l se where
$26 00 year
S1x m onth
s 3 50 three mon t hs $7 50f
~ ubscr pt on
pr ce
ncl ud es
Sunday T mes Sent ne l

l

......--:--...

On lhts day m htstory
In 1853, Cmcmnalt, Ohto,
~egan paymg the fire department a regular salary Ordt
nary firemen drew $60 a week
In 1918 the Royal Air Force
NBS founded and two months
ater Bni&lt;Jm began bomb10g
md us tnal I&lt;Jrge\s m Germany
fr om French bases 10 World
War I
In !9;JI, 19-year-old Verne
Jackte Mttchell becaf'{le the
ftrs t woman to stgn wtth an all
male baseball team She JOtned
the Chattanooga Tenn club

"'

~

~axes
Ito~ wtthout provtdmg the
revenues That's a fun posttlon
for the legtslature to take bdf
tl tsn't very responstble
"I think tt's good that tt (the
break wtth Rhodes) happened
last week • Collter satd
We've ~nt the whole months
of January , February and
March JOckeymg around, and
maybe now that tt's Aprtl, we •
can get down to busmess and
work out solutions to some of
these problems '
Collier demed perststent rumors that the break w1lh
Rhodes over corporate tax
pa) ments wtll cause hun to
abandon the lmance dtrector's
JOb early and return to hts post
at Medtcal College ot Ohto m
Toledo
He satd he w1ll stay on for
two or three months after Ute
budget ts enacted, but has
always plalllled to return to the
college, where ts on leave of
absence m the mtddle of a SIX·
year contract

News

Notes_~

By Alma MarsJtall
NEW HAVEN - VIcki Keefer, extension agent, home
demonstration, was a guest of the Cherokee Extenston
Homemakers Club on Tuesday everung, March 25, at the home of
Mrs Luther Srruth Mrs Keefer satd, unportant dales to
remember are Aprtl9 lesson trammg meelmg on metrtc system
at 2 p m May 13 one day tour w King's Island and May 22,
Mason County Sprmg Lunchoon at Moose Hall, PI Pleasant
A four day tour ts plalllled m etlher September or October to
Gatlmburg, Tenn wtth stops m Asheville, N C to vtstl the
Vanderbtlt Mans1on and through the Smokey Mountams
Mrs Ollie Brownmg prestdent of the Cherokee Clyb,
prestded Mrs I..uther Smith presented devotionals, Scrtpture St
John 15th chapter, verse 5 The thought for the day was Is My
Life Leavmg the Imprmt of ChriSt's Love? Mrs Browmng
closed the devoltonals wtth prayer
Mrs Oscar (Nellie) Casto was m charge of the lesson, "Tax
Records Who Needs Them?,' and Mrs Keefer gave pomters on
keeptng records I
The Cherokee Homemakers have been quilting for some
tune on a 9 patch qUilt whtch IS now for sale for $35 This IS the •
money makmg proJect of the club
Mrs K K Scttes gave out proJect sheets for the year
At the conclusion of the m~eting, Mrs Srruth, served refreshments to Vtcki Keefer, Mrs Ollie Browmng, Mrs Oscar Casto,
Mrs Davtd Dewhurst, Mrs Joseph Scttes Mrs K K Scttes,
Mrs Vwlet Stanton and Mrs Grace Whtte
NEW HAVEN - Dtd you see the 6 ft Easter rabbit displayed
at Sayre s Hardware and thought, "where on earth would you put
a rabbtt that btg,' even if you were lucky enough to wm tl
Well, Wendy Harbour daughter of Mr and Mrs Danny
Harbour, New Haven, was the wmner and I'm sure she ll really
apprectate an Easter Bulllly that btg and you can bet she brought
her lots and lots of goodies

8y
REV HOWARD C BLACK

THE HIGH COST OF CARING
A growmg number of poople m our soctety today get by so
cheaply It costs an mdtVIdual much less when he does not care
anout bettermg hunself, hts family , or hts corrununtty Take, for
ex;rrnple, the man who doesn t care how he looks His clothes do
not need to be washed and cleaned so often , h1s hatr cut as
frequently , hts shoes shmed very often his home kept as mcely,
his lawn mowed regularly, or hts car kept clean and m safe
repatr as much as the person who does care
There ts an mcreasmg number of poople m our land who do
not care They strew the streets and htghways wtth beer cans,
be verage bottles and debris They make a mockery of the laws
that have been passed to protect the n ghtsof everyone
fhey live carelessly and thetr higher rate of msurance IS
paid by those who do care They refuse to work and thetr welfare
pa yments are made by the decreasmg number of people who do
care It costs m energy effo rt, and money for everyone who
really ca res
Rtght hvmg IS more demandmg than wrong hvmg Rtght
llvmg calls for dtsctplme, strong moral character, and the a~
ceptance of spmtual values It reqmres the best that a person
can be
It costs to do nght when the nght confltcts With personal
mterests, or when no one else ts domg It But rtght IS still nght
even tf no one else ts domg tt, and wrong ts still wrong, even if
everyone else ts domg tt
Yes tl costs to care But anything that IS worthwhtle costs
And "hat happens tf we don't pay the cost of carmg? We pay the
higher pnce of not carmg 1 It C()Sls to do nght, but there are great
divtdends m the rewards along the way

DR. LAMB

MASON - Approxuna tely 90 women and children were
Easter mormng breakfast guests at Mason Umted Methodist
Church, the men of the church cookmg and servmg Special
guests were the Rev and Mrs John Campbell and daughter of
New Haven Uruted Methodtst Church
The Rev Clarence McCloud, pastor of Mason Umted Methodist
Church, delivered the Sunrtse Sernce, Easter Our Commencement Day ' "Tears and a Tune of Joy was the message
he brought at Ute 9 45 a m servtce
On April13, the Reverend Mrs Achsah Mlller of New Haven
wtD brmg a message at the 9 45 a m servtce at the Mason Uruted
MethodiSt Church

MASON - Mrs Ellner VanMeter used an Easter theme
.when she presented devoltonals at Ute meeting of Mason Extenston Homemakers on Tuesday at the home of Mrs Cecil
Smtih Mrs VanMeter served as co-hostess Mrs VanMeter
closed the devoltonals by smgmg "Christ Arose" and other msptrmg songs She was accompamed 9Y Mrs Demus HarriS at
the p1ano Mrs Dorothy Queen presided durmg the business
meetmg
Mrs Helen Wtlliams thanked the group for the flowers sent
durmg her recent illness Mrs Alburtice (Roberta) Young was m
charge of the lesson, "Tax Records - Who Nee&lt;js Tbem ?"
The members talked brtefly about a communtty proJect Mrs
Laura Johnson gave the secretary's report and Mrs Cecil Smith
reported on the amount m the treasury Hostess next month will
be Mrs Landon Smtih
Refreshments were served to Mrs Lawrence Roush, Mrs Pirl
Burrts, Mrs Alburtlce Young, Mrs Denrus HarriS, Mrs Dorothy
Queen, Mrs Uoyd Wtlliams, Mrs Evelyn Stewart, Mrs Laura
Johnson, Mrs Landon Srruth, Mrs Helen Williams Mrs J
MarshaD, Mrs Matilda Noble by hostesses Mrs Smtih and Mrs
VanMeter

•'

LANCASTER 0/uo - Eleven homes
and semt private bmldmgs w1ll be open to
the public dur10g the Fatrfteld Hert tage
Assoctal&gt;ion Pilgnmi!Ge m Lancaster from
1-6 p m Saturday ana Sunjay, May 3 and

)

By Lawrence E I..amb, M D
absorb them through the m
DEAR DR LA\!B - What tesltne
causes a large amount of gas m
When carbohydrates are not
the stomach and colon? Do dtgested, and hence absorbed,
certam foods cause thts ? What they stay m the mtestme and m
can one do to avotd thts con the colon they undergo fer
dthon ?
mentatwn, releasmg lots of
DEAR READER - The gas gas
ts m the small mteshne and
Afrequent offender m adults
mos tly m the colon The ts mtlk The double milk sugar
stomach proper seldom has (lactose) ts not spilt 10to smgle
gas 10 tl except for those few sugars and can't be absorbed
souls who swallow atr '
It may ca use dtarrhea and
The atr swallower often does dtstent10n or 1 symptoms
thts wtth belch10g Each ttme resembhng a spastic colon
he belches he takes m more atr The way to fmd out if ibat IS
than he releases Thts usually the problem or not ts to
reqwres recogmtwn of the ehmmate all m1lk and mtlk
problem and educatton to tram products If !he condtllDn slops,
oneself not to do tt
you can be pretty sure what the
The ca use of gas may be problem ts I always like to add
different foods for dtlferent that you can t do wtthout mtlk
people A common cause ts the or a mtlk subslttule You need
loss of the abtbty to break down somethmg to provtde the
starches and sugars Thts may calcu1111 you should get every
be related to loss of normally day
occurrmg enzymes m the mIn other people fats may be
testlne that help to break these the ma10 cause of gas Thts
substances down, so you can •

may be assoctated wtth hver or
gall bladder problems Btle
helps to em ulstfy the fats so
they can be absorbed If you
have gall bladder dtsease you
may not be provtdmg bile
normAlly and tf you can'I
emulstfy the fat• they are
poorly dtgested
These und1gested fats 10crease the forma bon of gas and
may lead to dtstenlton and
belchmg A person who has
these symptof'{ls when eatmg
frted or fatty foods ts suspected
of havmg gall bladder dtsease
Unfortunately even tf a
dt seased gall bladder IS
removed the symptom§ may
perstst at least to some
1
degree
Then there ts the common
problem of spast1c colon Thts
IS often assoctaled wtth a diet
deftctent m bulk and poor
bowel habits The poor colon
over contra c ts and ca uses
cramps and pam Wtlh ab'

(

(

normal colon funclton , gas 15
formed and adds to the trapped
gas pams that can ll'e excructatmg
Thts problem requtres
careful management and
usually Improved markedly by
addmg bran and whole cereals
to the dtet to replace whtte
bread and projlucts made wtth
whtte flour
The changeover may, ttself,
cause excess gas at ftrst But,
lor those who stick to a d1el
with plenty of cereal fiber and
bulk, the problems dlmtmsh
ahd fmally dtsappear 10 about
three weeks \'\'tth thts tmprovement, the gas problems
and sharp abdommal pams
also go away
So there are many ways gas
can be produced You can try
differen t approaches and fmd
out whtch foods are causmg
• wtll go a
you the problem Tlits
long way m helpmg your dO&lt;:tor
pmpomt and advtse you on
your cond11ton

"

THE GEORGIAN an 1833 man&lt;non recently purchased by the Heritage
Assoctation, currently ~nder restoration Recetpts of the Pilgtunage will further
Utts project

' Georgtan • and at the Holiday Inn at 1858

house the Fox house (1831 ) bmlt wtlh
plan s brought from Germany by Captam
Agustus Wttte m 1829 the Welsh home
(1836) wtth tis four majeshc Dons ptllars
reachm g two stones h1gh to the pedtment,
and the Masheter home (1831) whtch has
tis ong10al roo t cellar currently used b)
the present owrl'ers
Vtsttors may begm thetr tour at The
&amp;eorgtan 'where llckets wtll be avatla ble
at $4 for adults and $1 50 for children
Ttckets wtll also be avatlable at each of the
ftve homes, Wagnalls Memortal the Hotel
Lancaster across the street from The

North Memonal Drtve on the freeway
approachmg Lancaster
A buffet luncheon at the Lancaster
Country Club w11l be served from II am
to 1 p m on both days to ltcket holders
only
Reservatwns ($4) must be made m
advance by sendmg a check or money
order to Mrs Jack Furmss, Jr , 740 Grand
vtew, Lancaste1 OhiO, 43130 Tour hckets
may be oblamed m advance from Mrs
Gerald Stebelton 328 Scott Drtve, Lancaster Ohto 43130

Med1care clatms for serv1ces

whtch m fact had not been
rendered Hifetz could recetve
a maxtmum penalty of one
year tmpnsonment and-or a
$10,000 fme on each coun t He
wtll be sen lenced Ia ter
Dr Heifetz 's co nvtch on
represents the thtrd convt2twn
for Medtcare fraud mvolvmg
Ohw phystctans and ts the 12th
such convtction 10 the Chtcago
Regton of the Department of
Health
Educatwn, and
Welfare whtch m addttton to

Peace, prosperity predicted
after Thieu and Lon Noll
VIENTIANE, Laos (UPI) - Laotian VIce Premier

Ph~,;;l Vongvlchll sal~ Monday the fall of Cambodia and

~il'ihvletnam would bring peace and prosperity to Indochina
Phouml, a Patbet Lao member of the coallllon cabinet,
said In an Interview wltb UPI be believed that South
VIetnam and Cambodia have the right to choose their own
governments, suitable to their geopolitical location
He said Laos will not become Communist, as feared by
the rightist side ol the coaUilon govermnenl.
"We bave chosen our poUey abd our national direction
which Is clearly staled in the VIentiane peace agreement
and m the 18-polnl poUtlcal program," Phouml said
11te VIentiane peace agreement, signed In 1973,
reconfirms Laos' neutraU!y' as prescribed by the 1962
Geneva agreement The polllieai program designates !,.aos
to follow a policy of peace, ltld"l'"""enee, neutraUty,
democracy, national imlty and prosperity '
The 18-polnt poUtical program also caDs for improvement of good relations with Laos' neighbors, Ineluding the Provisional Revolutioll8rr. Government of
Vietnam and the Khmer Rouge In Cambodia

Ilh nots
mclud es
Mtchtgan, Ind tana, Wtsconsm
and Mmnesota
The mvesltgalton and
refe rral to the Department of
Jushce of potenttal Medtcare
fraud cases ts part of an
ongo10g effort of the Soctal
Securtt)'Admtmstrahon auned
at assurmg proper use of the
Medtcare program
Oh10

NEW PRESIDENT
SAN DIEGO (UP!) - Bob
Hentzen of the Topeka (Kan )
Capttal;Journal has been elected prestdent of the U S
Bask e tball
Writers
Assoctation, 11 was announced
Monday
Hentzen succeeds Ed Chay of
the Cleveland Plain Dealer
Steve Guback of the
Washmgton Star was chosenc
ftrst v1ce prestdent of the ~
member group whlle Edgar
Allen of the Nashville Ballller
was p1cked as second vtce
prestdent Ray Marquette of
Tl\e Indtanapolts Star was reelected secretarytreasurer and
Bill Kreifeldt of Wayne State
Uruverstly (Mtch ) wa· ~ed
edt tor

p ack 256 busy in March
~

NEWHAVEN,W Va - '(he
den leaders of Pack 256 here
met March 18 at the home of
Mary Carolyn Wtley to dtscuss
fund ratsmgs Pa ck mght and
commumty clean up
Cub scout theme for March
bemg ' Ctrcus
t~e bo ys
11 orked on ctrcus prOJects and
skt ts for the pack mght
program on March 25 at thetr
weekly meetmgs
The cubmaster den leaders
and the Cub scouts were
dressed as clowns durmg pack
mght The leaders, Mtke Boyd,
Steve Elliott Movetta Sands,
Sue Hatd Mary Carolyn Wtley
and Tana Stmonton had the
opemng
and
closmg
ceremomes
Den I presented the f~r s t sktt
wtth a clown act Davtd Sands
and Tony Hatd d1d a chase
routme Butch Arnold and
Mtke Pethel entertamed wt th a
tumbmg act and Randy King
and Darrell Sands put on a
false mtrror scene

Den 2 foll owed wtth a ctrcus
act Steven Stmonton was the
bon I&lt;Jmer Arthur Wtley was a
sensatiOn when he swallowed
gold fish 1 Bobby Dolm was the
ctrcus fatman and Roome
Bradley the clown
Den 2 ended wtth a puppet '•
show, the pupl\.e ts bemg made
by the boys the Webelos den
had a dtsplay of wood ttems,
sa nded and burned wtlh
destgns and Den I had a
dtsplay of Circus stde show
boxes and rabbtts made of mtlk
cartons and cotton
• A" ards were presented by
the Cubmaster Mtchael Boyd
to the followmg ~couts
Den I - Butch Arnold, bear
book Tony Hatd, stlver arrow
pomt and Randy King, one
year servtce pm
Den 2 - Bobby Dohn, "'
travehng regatta trophy
Webelos den, Jimmy Love,
denner s cord
The Cubbte Award was won
by Den I for attendance

Letters to the editor
Letters expressing oplnlon on pubUc Issues are welcomed I.elters must be in
good taste and be signed, lneludlllg address and telephone number. No leiter without a
bona fide lljllDe, address and telephone number can be published Upon request of the
writer, names wiD be withheld from publication, however, upon legitimate request oy
a reader, names musllte revealed Leiters should not exceed 300 words. The editor
reserves the privilege of eondenslllg all leiters.

No way to run a railroad, or the ODOT either, as for that
Hocking Noble Vmton and pomt out was the fact that they
Washmgton
must pay the unemRioymen t
On March 7, 1975, the layoffs
Wtthtn Dtstrtct ten, thtrly ben~ftts to these employees
wtthm the Ohto Departinent of four employees have recetved wht h would amount to over
Transport.alton started wtth layoff nottces ALL of these $2 500 a week
over eighty
employees employees
have
been
Jtrnrny RhOdes states that he
dtscharged
from
thetr Democrats New employees, wants a depresston-proof state
pOSltions On March 19, 1975, who have been htred smce of Ohw Is thts meant only for
the masstve layoffs wtlhin January 13, have 1all been the repubhcans??? He also
ODOT continued !!flth over 500 Republicans They have been stated durmg the elections that
employees bemg diScharged htred m classtflcatlons where there was Rlenty of montes to
Of these employees, over 99 9 layoffs wtll not occur, yet the run lhts state, only the adpercent were Democrats Most same dulles wtll be performed m10tslralton of the momes was
of the Repubhcan employees
The reason, gtven for the poor Now he ts askmg the
who were latd off were htre'd layoffs ls shortage' of work taxpayers of Ohto to approve
under the Gtlllgan Ad- This IS tmposs1ble espectally hts bond tssues whtch are
mmtstralton
durmg the sprmg of the year nothmg but forms of taxalton
In January, 1975, there were All mamtenance and repatr of
The Ohio Legtslature has
130 vacant postltons wtlhm htghways, construction of new approved $19 mtllion to be used
Dtstr1ct ten, ODOT In htghway
projects,
and ""as matching funds "to secure
January, 1975, there were also prellmmary work on future Federal Highway FundS Thts
less employees than m prOJects are always busy Will supply addtltonal funds for
Januar y, 1971 This alone durmg the spr10g and summer employment throughout this
should prove that the Ga1lhgan " months
~tate, whtch means :here Is
Admtntstrahon dtd
not
Accordmg to offlctals of work wtthm the Department of
overload the taxpayers of OhiO Otstrtct ten, over $5,000 a week Transportation
wtth non-producmg personnel wtll be saved by the layoff of
All taxpayers are becoming
m Distrtct ten, which includes thirty-four (democrats ) em aware that their tax momes
the counties of Athens, Gallia
ployees But what they fatled to are bemg spent very foolish!
Metgs , Monroe, Morgan ,
Y
'

'

lndustrtes htre employees and
tram them m their positions
and hope that they Will be
produchve employees The
State htres employees and
trams them m thetr pos1tlon
]ust to lay them off when the
admmtstrahon changes It Is
hme the Citizens of Ohio realtze
that employees who excel ln
knowledge of their positions,
save taxpayers many dollars
Past training efforts serve
UtUe purpose If massivF layOffs
by etther party, dispose of
employees who are dedicated
to thetr jobs and to the tax·
payers of Ohio
Betng ' a taxpayer and
dedicated citizen of the great
state Of Ohi'o, 1 strongly protest
the masstve layoffs of employees of whom I am a part

•

•
'I

-

Sincerely,
William R McAfee
:1203 Pride Ave •
Belpre, Ohio 4&amp;714

•
WI-n -s

~

~
m
S ,
1::
port Parade

~

m

~

SANDIEGO(UPI)-Ftttm
~&gt;@ gly, John Wooden has gone out
a wmner

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

The man who turned out the
, " greatest dynasty m college
basketball history did 11 agam
NEW YORK (UP!) - Some people are born lucky They're Monday mght- his fin al game
gtfted With such beautiful vo1ces, they smg like btrds Others of coaching
.I
have all they can dow hum and shll others can't so much as hold
If Wooden, the wtly Wtzard of
a note In the mustc world they're known as ltsleners, and there Westwood was co nducting
you have DaVId Arthur Kingman-he s a liStener a real good some kmd of psychologtcal
one
warfare when be annount'ed
' I listelied to everybody, he says "Tha twas my down! all I his rettrement Saturday after
listened to too many poople " ~
UCLA's 75-74 overtime wm
Some of the people wtth his new ball club, the New York Mets
over Lowsvtlle m the NCAA
say right-handed httting 6-foot-6 Dave Kingman listens semifmals tt worked
beautifully Some of those wtth hts old club, the San FranciSCo
For the loth time t'l\.12 years,
Gtancs, say the same thing but add a condiltonal phrase
hts UCLA Brmns' won a
' He listens all rtght, ' agrees one member of the Gtants "He national championshiP Two
Ustens and he trte~~ but unfortunately he seems to have a con
days after Wooden s dramatic
centra lion span of only three mmutes You tell hun somethmg
announcement, hts Bnltns beat
and he'll forget tt three minutes later
'
l{entucky's take-no-prtsoners
Kingman says tlujt tsn't true He says he sunply was gtven too defens e, 92-35
much adVIce about. hittmg adjustments
''One person would tell m~ to do thts, and another person would
tell me to do that, ' he says ' I was unable to relax I couldn't
have fun out t)lere Things went badly, and never got better The
pressure Just kept mounting
But tbal was With the Gtants Now, w1~h the Mets, people approach Dave Kingman wanting to know what suddenly has
gotten mto him How come he's the btggest, rrlost terriftc, thmg
to rome along for the Metssmce Tom Seaver? He has etght home
runs, 15 RBis and a fancy 358 batting average so far this sprmg
and promtses to enJoy himself at Shea Stadium thts summer
followtng four dtsmally dlsappomting seasons m San Franctsco
SAN PIEGO (UP!) - Loust
"Over here," he says, meanmg )Vllh the Mets, they 've left me VIlle basketball Coach Denny
pretty much on my own Phil &lt;tavarretta, the team s batting Crum
whO
has been
lllStrucwr, SBld 'I'm gonna watcl1you for a coupla • weeks and not prommen tly menttoned In
say anythmg 'He's been real patient Oh sure he talks wtth me speculalton of John Wooden s
and g1ves me little suggesttons But h~doesn't ~y 'do II •.he says • successor at UCLA, Monday
'think about 11 ' I ve never had anybody say that to m~ before " ru\ed out the Briun JOb m his
The ftrst lirfie the Gtants saw the huge 210-pound Kingman plans for the unmediate future
swmg a bat, they were fascmated by hun They followed hun and
Crum, 37, a former Wooden
saw him deposit baseballa 450 feet over the fence and farther so player and chtef asststant, told
naturally they hoped he'd do the same thing fo; them and that a hastily call~ news confer
was why they drafted hun after he recetved hts degree at the ence at the San Otego Sports
Uruverstly of Southern Californta
•
Arena that he plalllled to
Kingman d~proVIde the long ball for the Gtants, hitting 29 remam at Loutsvtlle for at
homers for tbem in 1972, 25 1m 1973 and !Blast year Those fJgures • least the four remaining years
were more \han offset, however, by his 225, 203 and 223 batting
averages the past three seasons, and his strikeout ralto, of once
every three times up, was merely an added md1ctment
E ..: h•b•l•on Baseball Standings
"I tried too hard,'' says Kingman "I put too much pressure on
Bv Untted Press lnt ernat•onal
myself With the opportunity gtven me But I thtnk I'll benefit ( Inc l udes Only Games vs
Lg Teams)
from the whole Situation Certam ballplayers need a change, and Mator American
Leagu e
I felt I needed a change
w I pet
l torn1 a
13
7 650
' Now, with the Mets, 11 sa complete swttch, a new sttuation, a Ca
T exas
15 11
5 77
new everythmg Il'sa fantastic feelmg bemg over here "
Ba 1t1 mor e
11 10
524
c ty
12 11
522
Kmgrnan IS a relatively young man yet at 26 His baseball MKansas
nnesota
13 12 52 0
future still could be allm front of hun and he's aware of that He Cleve lan d
500
6
Oak l and
6'
7
462
doesn't hide the fact he always wanted to play m New York
Detro t
11 14 440
Why? For the same reason Catfish Hunter did and Kareem N ew York
I IS
423
Ch1cago
11 15
423
Abdui.Jabbar does More exposure and more opportunities
M !wa u kee
7 11 389
"I like the town,' ' he says, 'and I've always h1t wellm Shea Boston
9 15 375
Stadium"
Nat onal Leagu e
Another factor oould be that Kingman does promotional work
w I pet
Los An geles
17
5 773
.,. for Uruted Airlines, a company hiS father worked for for 33 years San
Fra n c sco
11
5 688
before he dted a year ago If he does well wtth the ]\1ets his Mon tr ea l
15
7
682
Pht ladelp hla ~
13
7 650
posslbtUites, both on and off the f1eld, are limitless and he ~ows C1
ncmnat t
15
9
625
that
P1ttsburgh
14 12 538
D ego
7
7 500
Wtth the G1ants, Kingman really had no one ftxed pos1tion He San
Houston
10 14
417
playlld ftrsl base, thtrd base and the outfield for them He even St LOUI S
9 13 409
New York.
7 14 333
pitcM m a couple of games The Mets are thinking of hrrn'IIS an Atlanta
7 16 304
outfielder Later, they may reconstder and gtve him a shot at Chtcago
4 13
235
x sp l t ~uad
ftrst base, but nght now be's an outfielder
av s R:esutts
AI; far as Dave Kingman IS concefiled, there's nothing m the
M mnes a 3 New York. (Al 0
Kansas C1ty 3 Bait more 0
world like baseball
Detro1t S ch cag o (A) 3
It bas taught me an awful lot alr~dy ' he says 'I've found
T e~~:as 5 At lant a 1
St LO U S 6 Bost on 3
It 's not aU roses aU Ute time It'snot that easy "
&lt;

of false medicare claims

Marcj) Tl 1975

Tbotlv Sentmel, Middleport Pomeroy 0 , Tuesday April! 1975

'@

Ohio podiatrist convicted

What causes gas pains?

•

., _

~~
~~

4

CLEVELAND - Chaytm
Hetfetz a Cleveland podtatnst
pleaded gutlty March 20 to
three counts of fthn g
fraudulent Medtcare clatms
He1fe tz had been mdtcted 10
February on II counts of
submttlmg false Medtcar•
cla1ms
The mvestigatwn of Hetfetz,
whtch was conducted by the
Soctal
Secunty
Admmtstratwn s Bureau of
Health Insurance, disclosed
that Hetfetz had submttled

~

TM

~-~~'Wii-~:·::t.fum~~:~t,.
b1 Today's
·
,h

Pilgrimage tour offer~d in Lan as~er~j

The tour offers a wtde vartely of ar
chtteclural styles dat10g from 1803 to 1974
all chosen for qualtty of restorahon antl
furmshmgs
Headquarters ts The Georgtan ' an
1833 mansiOn recently purchased by the
Hen tage Assoctallon and currently under
restoratwn Funds from the Pilgrunage
wtll further lhts proJeCt
In addition to The Georgtan," pomts
of mterest on the tour are
The Stanberry-Rtsmg-Ftrst Methodtst
'thurch Home (1834) bUilt by the first
Attorney General of the State of Ohto and
later Umted Stales Attorney General
Shermaq. House ( 1811 ), btrlhplace of
General Wtlltam T Sherman and Ius
brother John, U S Senator and author of
the Anll-trust Act whtch bears hts name
Emanuel Evangelical Lutheran Church
(1920), a modtfted Gothtc structure where
the ladtes of the church will be servmg
food, Wagnalls ~emonal, fowoded m 1924
by Mabel Wagnalls-Jones to be used as a
hbrary and cornrnuntly center, a Log
Cabm beheved to be·the upper story of a
cabm bmlt by squatters ctrca 1803
Also, the Carroll Ohw Hoelting Valley C
&amp;0 Depot 10 use from 1871 1966 , a covered
brtdge whtch was ongmally over the Ohto
Canal the France house (1974) formerly
a bru:n and adjacent bmldmg used as a
Slaughter house, both whtch have been
converted mto a most unusual and
beaultful home the Carpenter house
(ctrca 1875), a recently restored farm

•

{

•

2- The DatiY Sentinel Mtddleport-Porneroy, 0 , Tuesday , Apnll 1975

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Fmance Dtrector Howard L
Collter today was to go before
the House Fmance Corrumttee
to urge lawmakers to balance
the new state budget through
accelerated corporatiOn tax
payments a move opposed by
Clbv James A Rhodes
Collter was to appear at a 2
p m meetmg of the corrumttee,
\\htch ts holdmg hea n ngs
durm g a legtslattve recess this
week on Rhodes proposed
$12 2 btlllon budget and the
$11 5btllton plan recommended
for fiscal 1975-76 by maJority
Democrats m the legtslature
Collter satd. he plans to
furrush fi gures backmg up his
proposal to ratse $85 rrullion
thr ough a stn gle adva nce
corporate tax payment, ~nd to
free another $219 mtlllon by
reqmrmg quarterly mstead of
annual pa ~ ments
He satd he \\ould contmue to
defend the plan until some
body comes up wtth a better

'

.

UCLA played a tremendo4!" &gt; 147 record Wooden won the btg
and tnsptred game satd Jo'e lttle of &lt;:()liege basketball wtth
B Hall, the Wtldcats coac h
the legendary Kentucky roach
In beatmg Kentucky for the Adolph Rupp stltmg m the
first lime tn h1 s fabled stands
coachmg career Wooden used
Rupp now 73, retired as
only st&lt; players aga mst a team Kentucky s coach three years
tha t had been mcknamed, ago a fter runmng up an
amazmg 879 190 mark In three
The Slaughterhouse Ftve
because of tis abthty to maul meetmgs wtth Wooden he won
4
oppost tion
them aU
Kentucky s defense had been
Rut Wooden s 10 NCAA
able to knock off the No 1- champ10nsh1ps were stx more
ranked teart\ m the country than Rupp could put together
Bobby Kmght s Indtana Hoo
Poker faced Rtchard Wasters, m the Mtdeast reg10nals sh mgton , a slick 6 foot 9
I JUst can l belleve a team sophom ore from ):'o rtland ,
could only play SIX men agamst Ore , ftred m 28 pomts for
such a fme phystcal team as UCLA and was voted the Most
Kentucky and wm ' sa td Valuable Player of the wurWooden But we dtd tt
namen t AIIAmenca Dave
Closmg hts Tl year UCLA Meyers added 24 for the
tenure With a remarkable 620- Brums who were 28 3 tn

•

r

\

•
. I

'

crown
Wooden s fmal season
Washmgton and Meyers
off set a 34-pom t exploston from
Kentucky's fine 6-5 semor
fof\\ard KeVIn Grevey
My feelmgs at thts moment
are a combmatlon of sadness
and happmess, S31d Wooden m
his farewell post game mter
VIew sess10n Thts was by far
our most phystcal game of the
year But I tell my playe rs they
must be m tletter condttlon
than thetr opponents
'Maybe tl's the )l(lwer of
postttve thmlting But tf I can t
work them mto conditiOn I try
to talk them mto tt I have
never had a condtttomng
problem wtth my UCLA
teamS '
At 6-4, Wooden stepped down
four years pefore he had to, for

a mynad of reasons, whtch he
satd he dtd not want to go mto
UCLA AthletiC Dtrector J D
Morgan satd after the game
that he would have an announcement on Wooden s
successor, m the relatively
near future "
However, tl wtll not be
Loutsvtlle Coach Denny Crum
a former Wooden player and
chu!f asststant In a hastily
called news conference 25
mmutes before the Cardmals'
•
consolation game With Syracu
se Crum allllounced that he
would remam m Kentucky to
fulftll the fmaf four years of his
ftve year contract
Loutsvtlle won the thtrd
ptace game 96-88 m overtune
For Wooden the victory
came ma season m whi~h he

Wooden has mixed feelings
SAN DIEGO ( UPI) - In his

fmal post-game mtervtew ses
Denny Crum rules out Bruin j'ob ston
Monday mght, reltrmg
of hts ftve year contract
'I felt because of all the
speculatwn that I should ~II
my athletic director (Dave
Hart) th 0t I would honor my
C()ntract at Loutsvtlle, • Crum
S31d
"! have not been olfered a
JOb at UCLA I have no tdea if
they planned to offer 11 to me
I m gomg to be coachmg at
LouiSVIlle for a long tune "
Wooden 64, restgned Saturday after UCLA had defeate d
LoUtsvtlle, 7&amp;-74 m overtun~

Pro Standings

]abbar's fine
paid by Bucks
NEW YORK (UPI) -Larry
Fleisher, attorney for the NBA
Players Assoc1ation, s8ld Monday be would pull out all stops
m aSSlstmg the American Civil
Ubocties Umon m combating
Ute $300 fine leVIed against
Milwaukee's Kareem Abdul
Jabbar by Commissioner Walter Kennedy
Paul Silas of the Boston
Celt1cs, president of the AsIIOCllltion, Wes Unseld of the
Washington Bullets and Bill
Bradley of the New York
Knlcks also were adamant m
their belief that "all athletes
have a rtghl to speak out and
that a player's feelings should
be not be muffled by the
league
In Mtlwaukee, General
Manager Wayne Embry announced that Ute Bucks have
paid the fine and sa1d, "The
Bucks are sending the money
with tbe provision made by Ute
NBA that if Kareem's aPVC~~Its
succesaful It will he refunded
We support Kareem but we
can't lake a chance on his
suapension "
Flelllher, a guest speaker at
• IWlCh aMounclng the joint
sponsorship of the NBA

'

Cm c mna t 1 4 Phtladelphta 0
ca l led after 6 1n n s
Ptttsburgh 4 N ew York (Nl 0
Montreat 7 Houston 1
M !waukee 13 Oakland 11
C ev etand 2 Ch cago 1N J 0
San D1 ego 10 Cal forn1a 9
San Franc sco 8 Los A ngeles 1
Tue sday s Games
St Lo u s vs Hou ston at Cocoa
I 30 p m
C ncmnat 1 vs New York (Nl
at St Petersburg 1 30 p m
Atlanta vs New York (A) at
West Pa l m Beac h 1 30 p m
Pittsburgh vs Chtcago (Al
(2J at Sa ra so ta 1 30 p m
Montreal vs M nn esol a at
Orlando 1 30 p m
Texa s &lt;-:S
Bait mor e at
Mta m • 1 30 p m
Detrod vs
Boston ( N l at
Lak e land 1 30 p m
Ch1cago ( N J vs San 0 ego at
Scot tsdal e 1 00 p m
M lwaukee vs Oakland at Sun
Ctty 4 DO p m
Los Angeles vs San Fran
c sco at Ph oen tx 1 00 p m
Cl evela nd
vs
A r1 zona
Un verstty at Tucson 4 00 p m

Players Assoctation and the
YMCAs of tbe Uruted States m
promoting JUmor basketball
compehtwn, satd 'lt was
unprolfr for tbe league olftce
to fme a player for statmg his
opmlon about olftctalmg" m
Ute NBA
Abdui-Jabbar enlisted the
wd of Ute ACLU after bemg
rapped by a stiff !me for calling
referee Jerry Loeber inept in
ills job
WHA Stand1ng s
''The ACI..U called me at By Untted
Press lnternaltonal
East
Kareem 's behest," Fletsher
gf ga
satd "They are gomg to x New Eng w41 28I 5t pts
BJ 262 267
charge the NBA With stifling
34 38 3 71 223 246
free speech It will be a con- Cleveland
Ch 1cago
28 45 I 51 252 303
stltuUonal matter w1th them ln d1a napols 18 54 3 39209 319
West
We are gomg on the theme that
w
I t pts gf ga
Kareem did not do anything x Houston 50 24 0 100 347 233
"detrunental" to the game SanD ego
41 30 3 85 301 254
38 29 8 84 289 252
with his outburst and we'll Ph oen •
fight tt*' $300 fine"
' Mm nesola 40 30 3 83 291 257
Abftw-Jabbar was soaked Ba llom ore 19 50 4 42 IS4 313
canad1a-n
$200for what he satd wLoeber
w I I pts gf ga
43 31 0 86311284
, Ul public and another $100 for Quebec
entenng the referees' quar- Toronto
.41 32 2 84 333 297
Wmn peg
38 32 4 80 307 266
ters
Concetning the Players As- Edmonton 3A 36 4 72 263 265
sociation's affiliation w1Ut the Van couver :33 38 2 68 236 252
x Cltnched dtVISt~n t•tle
YMCA, Silas said kids will
Mondav s Results
receive an opportunity to Wtn n peg 4 lnd 1a napol 1s 1
5 Edmonton 2
develop their skiDs in "Y" San Otego
Tuesday s Games
!Xtllosophy and 10 baske\!&gt;all Ph oen x 'at New England

BASEBALL TODAY
Eastern at Ravens

wood
Metgs al Ironton
Southern vs alumm
at home (postponed
from Monday )

UCLA basketball Coach John
Wooden admttted he thought
we had a chance" to wm the
Brums' loth NCAA cha mptonshtp
I guess to say that I thought
we would go thts far would be
stretchmg the pomt,' Wooden
satd, followm g UCLA's 92-35
VIctory over. Kentucky m the
natwnal finals 'But I dtd thmk
we ha d a chance
For Wooden, who announced
his retirement Saturday, tl was
a story book fmtsh for a man
who came to Los Angeles from
Indtana State Teachers College
m 1948
'My feelmgs at thts moment
are a combmat10n of sadness
and happmess he sald I m
sad at leaVIng the young people
whom I ve been assoctaled
wtth so many years, members
of the medta wtth whom I
haven't always agreed and the
other players, coaches and

~!":!!!on~~~M~-~~r~.~?l!.~~~~~~X.. . ,;,M

UPI Sports Writer
The computenzed All-Star
ballots came out Monday and
St Louts catcher Ted Sun
mons' name was on 11
Not that tt really matters-It
ts a foregone concluSion that
Johnny Bench, tf he stays
healthy wtll be behind the
pjltte when the National league
s~uares off With the Amertcan
League July 15
Thts IS not a knock on Sun
mons' abtlilles II s JUSI that
Bench has been around a whtle
longer and has rolled up some
rrnpresstve staltstlcs m his
seven years wtth Cinncmnatl
Sunmons has been 10 the btg
leagues for only four seasons
and a regular for just three He
has htt 304, 303, and 272 10
those three years-and last
season was his best desptte the
30-pomt drop m batting avera
ge He drove m over 100 runs
for the ftrst time and htt 20
borne nms
Sunmons was second among
catchers m doubles, home
runs, total bases and RBI m the
National League but the No I
catcher m all those calegortes
was Bench
Still, Sunmons only fmtshed
Uttrd m the voting for the
ctrcu1t's i\11-star catcher last
surruner behind Bench and
PhtladelphlB's Bob Boone
The Cardinals' field general
apparently out to make
amends this season and IS m
his best lr81llmg camp ever
Simmons had one game this
spnng m which he hit three
home runs-and was walked m
the nmth mrung to ~ent a
possibility of four m consecultve at bats
IS

The swttch-hllting backstop
clubbed !;)is stxth home run m
e1ght games Monday w spark
St Louis to a 6-3 victory over
the Boston Red Sox He drove
10 two runs wlift his RBI count
w 17 m 20 games

the bench m favor of Bill
Plummer as the Cinc10nati
Reds beat the Phtladelphta
Phtllies 10 a ram-shortened
game, W Ton) Perez drove m
three of the Cmcy runs
Nelson Bnles and Marty
Pattm combmed to hold the
Baltunore Orioles to JUSt four
hits m a 3-0 Kansas City vtc
wry Montreal exploded for a
f1ve-run ftrst mmng off
Houston starter Tom Griffm
and coasted home to a 7 I
trmmph and Tony Oliva belted
a two-run homers to cap a
three run fourth mrung and
lead Mmnesota to a 3-0 vtclory
over the New York Yankees
Terry Humphrey rapped two
doubles and a smgle to lead
Detroit past the Chtcago Whtte
Sox, 5-3 Lelllly Randle stroked
out three hits m Texas' 5-I
pastmg of Atlanta and Rtck
Manmng deltvered a two-run
smgle m the siXth to hand
Cleveland a 2-ll wm over the
Chicago Cubs

MARCH 27 UNTIL APRIL 4
~OR VACATION
'

In Case Of Emergency, Ca II
The Galhpohs Off1ce Collect·
J

71SS

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•

Johnny Scott and df.hbed a threenm homer In
capped a two;-un etghth uuung the etghth mmng to gtve
rally tbat gave San Dtego a 10-9 Milwaukee a 13-11 vtctory
wm over Califorrua, Rellllle
Derrel Thomas' smgle and
Stennett poked three htts and ftrst home run of the sprmg and
drove 10 two runs as Ptttsburgh a dou ble and triple by Ed
whipped the New York Mets 4- Goodson helped San Franctsco
0 and Mtke Hegan, pmch defeat Los Angeles, 8-1

.

VALUE

lnd1anapol1s at Toronto

Balt•more at San D ego
Quebec at Edmo n ton

scor ~d

•

This Week s Spectal

Vancouver at Minnesota
Cleveland at Chtcago

OFFICE CLOSED

admmtstrators 11 has been my number for champwnshtps "
pleasure to be assocfated wtth
Kentucky Coach Joe B Hall
over the y~ars "
was not deJected
Of the game, Wooden satd,
'We had a great year, he
We made no adJustment at satd 'I II never forget our SIX
halftune to gel'more rebounds semors I wtsh I C()UJd adopt all
even though we were out- of them UCLA s defenstve
rebounded by SIX m the ftrst board work turned th mgs
half and outrebounded by 12 m around for them Ralph'
the second
Drollinger had three baskets
"! stress conditioning from real qwck m the second ball
the ftrst day of practice and he was a thorn m our stde
through the champtonshtp most of the tune he was m
game of the season I keep there
workmg them 10 prachce but
'I felt we had some chances
tl s up to them to keep up to wmtt but tt didn 'I seem to be
phystcally betwe.en games
meant for us We took some
'Thts, by far , was our most questwnable shots but that ts
phyrucal game of the year •
no cn ttctsm We wanted to stay
Rtchard Washmgton, who loose m our shootmg
scored "28 pomts agamst KenKevm Grevey had a great
lucky and was chosen the Most rught I m very happy for him
· Valuable Player of the tour
He s been a great player for
nament, satd:
Ken tucky
I remember m Coach
Wooden s pre-game talk, 1 was
thmkmg I had better listen
The earth s magnetic poles
because tt was his last one I h~ve reversed places at least
thought he had to go out m seven ltmes on the past three
style Ten ts a mce round mllhon years

was not supposed to wm A
year ago Ute Btll Walton-led
Brums were the favorttes but
had a strmg of seven consecu
tive natwnal titles snapped m
the NCAA semtfmals at
Greensboro, N C , by North
Carol10a State
We tned to play Kentucky
heads up,' satd Meyers "They
were very phystcaJ on the
boards but we played a lot of
tough board teams this season,
like Oregon and Southern
Califorma 10 the Paciftc Etght
We wanted to slow thmgs up
near the end and set up for the
good shot, espectally for RIchard He's like (pro star) Bob
McAdoo
Washmgton who beat LoUIS
vtlle wtth a shot wtth three
seconds left Saturday satd
Wooden s restgnation g;lve him
extra mcentlve

at Reasonable

For a really Big Loan
call on your fiouse
If you ve owned your
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chances are 1t s doubled
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you ve made a b1g prof1l
On paper
Now \lOU can turn that

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f1nan c 1al needs B1gger
bec ause 1t s backed by the
grow1ng value of your house
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�,
'
•
. 4- The ~ily Sentinel, M~ddlrrt-P~meroY,. o., Tuesday, i\prilt. 1~15 . .

~irates

jolt ·'Cats .

USDA CHOICE

.,

_

DAVID POLING, IT. D• .

'
Scottish church s
gift to New World

Laurel Cliff
,. .

.

.

News Notes

.

.

the fi~st inning.
Getting North Gallia's t'hree · Southwestern thi;e;;ening and
BY RERTIIA PARKER
Tim Lucas, junior infielder, hil' off Baird were Gene Han nan 'frace Thursday. ·
Sabbath
School attenda nce
opened with a single then Welch, James and Casey.
Lincscores :
March
30
al
the Free Methodist
When I fail, /
moved up on a single off the bat
Kyger. Creek hillers were Kyger Creek 100 000 1- 2 3 2
school seniors.
By David Poling
of . second baseman Brian Tim Lucas, Brian Lucas and NorthGalli a · 000 012 x- 3 3 2 Church was 126. Choir mem- . At the · beginning of the
Now a new paperback has 1 learn a lesson
bers was 20. Attendance at all American adventure 200 years arrived and.quieUy worked tts in humanity, if/ nothing else:
Lucas and a walk to catcher Baird.
Baird fl. I and Metzner.
serv ices wa s 184. Offerin g from
B1ll Metzner . Lucas then ,.--.James, in gomg the distance.
James (.W) a1id Tackett.
ag o, the Scots sent some large way into my thought and Fairure mades me reatize,
all services was $230.95.
scored on. a balk by James. ' fanned l4 and issued three
gifts to the New World. Along prayer, patterns and seems even more ,
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
Joseph
North
Gallia
110
000
t&gt;--2-7
1
The junior fireballer then walks. Baird struckout 11 and
wi th · the migrati on of hard- destined to join the Bailie book rny complete dependence upon
Higgenbotham
,
Columbus,
and
Kyger
Creek
000
000
t&gt;--0
I
I
reached back for a little extra walked fow .
. ·
gift from the Scottish you,
. work-in g, disciplin ed people as
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Whiteker, came the conceijl of freedom of spiritual treasury. Barris and upon other people.
Minnis ( W) and Tackett.
and prompUy fanned Dave
NIGHTCAP
Lucas (L) and Metzner. ,
New York, visited the weekend religion,' a yearning for free Shepherd, popular college
Wise , Chris Preston and Terry
The Pirates sco~ed a run in
with Rev. and Mrs. Floyd public educaKon and a careful pas tor- at th e- College of But whenever I manage
Lucas to end the threat.
· each of the first two innings
Shook .
North Gallia tied the score by · then held on behind the pitchWooster. and graduate of New to accomplish some great
ey e on people in public life.
Some Wardrobe
Mr._Fritz Stahl, New Marshplating an unearned run in the ing of Minnis to win the nightTheir theology informed College, Edinburgh brl'lJls !he achievement,
An
entourage
of
24,000
field,
visited
recently
with
Mr
.
i am on my own and proud of it,
fifth . Ron Plants reached on a cap, 2-0.,
noblemen with their families, and Mrs. Norm an Schaefer and them abol\t the depravitY of thoughts of a glad and trusti~g dependent upon no one,
two base throwing error. He
NG plated its first run on a servants,
man a nd their experience in heart. In his "Diary of Dally .
and household goods
was sacrificed to third and Fred Logan double and Minnis ' - accompanied the Empress Mr . and Mrs . Harry'Stahl.
politics · confirm ed that Prayer" . (Augsburg · Pub . supreme master of my fate .
scooted home on-a fi y ball off single. In the second inni ng, ·Elizabeth of Imperial Russia Mr. Vern Story and son, judgm ent. There were. no House Minneapolis r the
the bat of Fred Logan.
· Mark Theiss £eached as a hit whenever she moved the 400 John , spen t' a day recently in Watergales because no one author ' expands the bOundries Lord, keep me truly humble in
. . ,
The Pira tes broke the tie in batsman then raced across the miles between her palaces at Cohunbus. '
~ ·,
was irusted with .all the of mind' and spirit, urges us to whatever measure
Mr.
and
Mr
s.
William
the sixth on a walk to Minnis, plate on a Homer McMillan St. Petersburg a~d MOSCOW. At
machinery of government. honesty and affection .and of success this day may bring.
her death in 1761 , Elizabeth's Jac obs, Columbus , v isit~d · Checks and balances emerged admits failure and loss . A And grant, in all things,
James' triple and a single by double.
Mike Casey.
Kyger Creek managed one closets .contained 15 ,000 recently wi th Mr. and Mrs. in our system out of _ the morning prayer of his says whether failure or success,
Pearl Ja cobs. ·
Kyger Creek scored its final hit off Minnis, a third inning - dresses!
that I might find you,
theological perspective of the stm'ply and profoundly :
M r. Mark Stahl, Stockdale, Calvinistic view of man and his
run in the last inning on an double by Baird. Minnie had
ana in finding you, find all that
Law·et Cliff
visited recently with Mr. and
error and a double by Baird. eight strikeouts but issued six
I can ever ask,
temptations.
"Lord, I will need
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roy
'
Howell
Mrs.
Norman Schaefer.
'
free passes.
..
or hope for ."
The Scots have never been your support this day ,
Top. Pirate hitters were spent the weekend with Mr. · Mr. and Mrs . Ted Mathew, lavish in their gifts: frugality not only when I fail ,
James aiitl Minnis with two hits Howell'sparents, Mr. and Mrs. Huron, spenllhe weekend with is ihe best description for tlie but also when I succeed.
Presbyterians may want to
each. McMillan, Logan and Vern on !lowell, Can ton. Mr. her parents , Mr. and Mrs. o]d.country. Yet they gave the For my successes
temper their pride in this new
Gene Payne bad one hit each Cl)d Mrs. Howell are in their Charl es Karr . Mrs . Karr essentials, and high on the list seem to set me even farther emergence of a ·Scottish peroff Bobcat righty Terry Lucas. e1ghties and feeling real good . returned home with them for a for the New World were the from you,
s~;t - ior after all, the
Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Fox , week's visit.
&gt;
Lucas fanned four and walked
pastors who accompanied the and from my fellow human / publisller that made this
Mr .andMrs. Lennie Lyons and
Mr . Paul Archer, Columbus, first settlements. In upstate beings.
four .
discovery was a Lutheran.
Leslie
spent
Easter
Sunday
spen
l a Saturday with his New York, entire villages
North Gallia 2-1 this spring
will host Eastern, Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. John ny&gt; mother , Mrs. Georgia Giehl arrived in a package, in places
an d Charles Anthony Diehl.
night. Kyger Creek G-2 will host Douglas, Guysv ille.
like Caledonia and ScottsviUe,
with c~rgy among the first
By Ray Cromley
Vietnam a viable government
settlers. .
.
WASHINGTOJII: - We may and economy, more and more
The enduring gift froin the
do as we c'hpose about cutting influenced by capable- young . ,
Scottish church has been the
off aid lor South Vietnam. But men. We have do~e much to .}!
amazing quality of great
there are facts we must face. eliminate decadent generals
'
preachers who came to Canada
Newspapers have recently and to bring to the fore younger
of officers less tied ·to the .old
and the tJnited States. And
reported
hundreds
close to this tradition that has
thousands of refugees, with corruption.
lasted lor centuries is the
more coming, as more
South Vietnam has n&lt;1t
provinces fall or are given up become a democracy, except
' mystical expression - the
inner spiritual life that is so
because Saigon la cks the in contrast to the North .
contagious
and refreshing
means to supply !hell).•
Freedoms are limited but are
I when understood.
This is in addition to 594,000 great when compared to the
1.
·•
Twenty-live years ago John
refugees in 1974, 616,000 in 1973 regimentation in Hanoi. There
Bailie (who with his brother,
and 10,271,000 in the 10 years is still much economic and
Ponald, spent several years in
before.
.
political corruption but less
study in the United States)
A Senate
committee than the political-power
es timatels many more un- corruption in North Vietnam.
published his "Diary of Private
Prayer. " Within months it
counted .
· And there is less cruelty, again
By Dr. Robert 'Stefanko
.
· There is , of course, much in comparison to the invaders.
The present energy dileliiiiJa facing the country results from a lack of national lead ership and zoomed to the top of the sales
duplication, in that some
We must also face the fact
public understandinw.qf the re'al situation . Tough decisioru; need to be made, but the political sector ltst and is firmly established in
families have been refugees that the difficulty in· which
JX'Omotes popular but ineffective, inflationary programs rather than positive policies that would the hearts of millions of people .
two, three and four times in the South Vietnam now finds itself
encourage the investment of private capital to~uild the energy capacity this country so despera tely For more than a decade it was
•
the gift to graduating high
course of war. But however is the result of sloppy
needs.
much one discounts the total, negotiating by Sec.retary of
But the public, too, must assume a large share of the relljioru;ibility. Prodigious amounts of
those fieeing mlnber in the State Henry Kissinger.
. energy are expended that provide a questionable cost-benefit ratio - for instance,the use of dish- .
LAFF- k- DAY
millions.
Had Kissinger insisted in
washers; washers and dryers, !restless refrigerators, instant-on TVs, gas - guzzlmg cars and an
The refugees apparently ar• 1973
on
an
air-tight
infinite variety of electrical gadgetry.
all going in one direction - arrangement whereby neither
The p1Jbllc must be made aware of the true cost of producing the power to sustain this tremendous
away from communist rule. North Vietnam nor the U. S.
demand ~ We are fooling ourselves if we t.nink such usage can continue Wlabated.
1
·"" c
A few years ago it was would resupply Saigon or the
Amajor portion of the public still thinks our energy plight is a result.of collusion amon g the large popular in some circles to say Viet Cong, and neither Russia
energy-producing compjies to raise p!lices and in!Jate profits. The meqia do nothing to help
these men , women and nor China resupply Hanoi, and
children
were
fleein g if he had made realistic in•
•
American and South Viet- spection a part of the
Dr. Stefanko, Assistant. Dean for Contlnning Education at Penn State's College of Earth and
namese aerial and artillery arrangement instead of
Mineral Sciences,is also Professor Mineral Engineering at the unlverslly.
raids. They didn't care where phantom inspection which
A. Powtrl\lt 16 hp wpplies big mu•cl• through alt-eear l,ll'l idri" trOMmiuion. $11
they went so long as they mean t no inspection at all, we
forward gnd 2 r...-ot ipMd1. W:oh!.r cast-Iron qiM, lvilt-in htod and toil tight.,
correct this misconception when they quote large earnings increases for these companies. While a
I. Big 12 h.p. cost-Iron •ntint witb the tall of auktrftatic tran..Wuiot\. ". ft10t
escaped this terror. That story would not be asked to day to
500-per cent profit 'increase may appear exorbitant at first. But if this represents a rise in earnings
combinglion lor lown cort, gord.t.in; and moitltef'OIICt jobl.
...
,_
......
.
no longer holds water. Today, send arms to Saigon .
C. 8 h.p. COII·iron tngin. wppli111 maaimum powtr thf01o!gh unidri..,. o""vtor
from a depressed lOcehts to SO cents a share, it hardly appears excessive.
_1 . "Loafing again , Pearson?
""on.uJ~It 3 forword ar1d OM rtMFII &amp;pttds . S.porate broh ond clvtch ptdoll fOr
it is the North Vietnamese who . We had before us the failure
The use of percentages and averages can be misleading. It reminds one of the sfory of a man who That'~ good ."
1ofe 1tart1 011 1lopir~g ground
are able to mass superior of toothless inspection teams in
drowned in a pool that averaged three feer 'tn depth - he just had the misfortune to fall into the
• Your used trOctcwh worth tQP dolar In ..... now! ·
forces and shell towns.
• . .W' ltOI'Iy and &amp;Gv•l lor* finandnt avaMalale. AI this WhMI Horw
North Korea and Laos, subject
eight ..foot-deep end!
·
power at bargain pricetl
Note·, too, that the local Vi et to communist veto and
While our domestic supplies of crude oil and natural gas are limited, our coal reserves, which
fimifHf olf~r ... Sal• ~ A,tli' ~. J97.S
Cong, once tile backbone of the therefore in no position to
represent nearly 25 per_cent' of the world 's supply, are adequate for 500 years at our present rale of
rurafimderground government check on their violations. In
consumption. Although development of offshore oil and gas reserves could buy time until other
Free Energy
and guerrilla forc~ s . have North Korea, the treaty was
resources.become available, it is coal that must ultirnatelyprovide a long-term solution to our · World production of geothergiven way to North Vietnamese grossly violated before the ink
problem. .
·
mal )lower, in which the earth's
units. It is now estimated was dry. In Laos, Hanoi 's
Admittedly,'there are supplementary sources of energy that.can be develo):ied but these should heat is used to produce steam
between two thirds and three troops never left. Resupply in
be kept in proper perspective. Solar and geothermal energy may make some contributions to our that drives generators, now
fourths of the Communis t violation of the agreements
energy needs, but both have suCh severe tethnicallimi\!ltions that they cannot provide a significant totals about a million kilowatts.
Geologists believe this could be
cadre and military forces are began immediately by Mao · percentage of our requirements in the near future. ·
increased tenfolq, a pollutionOHIO
CHESTER
men from Hanoi.
Tsi-tung in North Korea and by
One supplementary energy resource that should be. developed is methane from coal seams. free source of power that would
The South Vietnamese army , Ho Chi Minh in Laos. The
Methane is associated with all coal seams since it evolves m tl)e coalification process. However, tbe be equivalent to burning a
once ridiculed publicly or treaties failed because there
PHONE 985-3301
quantity present varies considerably from seam io seam and at different locations· in the same billion Ions of coal.
privately by virtually every were no means provided for
seam.
American adviser, now fights enforcement. Kissinger knew
Methane has long been an unwelcome byproduct of coal mining, continually being released into
well when out-gunned and all this.
the mine atmosphere as the coal is removed. As a result it has been necessary to develop
outnumbered.
South Korea '1\'aS saved by
sophisticated ventilation systems capable of circulating four to six tons of air throughout a mine
All this is a way of voting for each ton of coal produced in order to dilute and sweep away dangerous accumulations of gas.
two decades of u..S. military
the refugees who move in one aid and the presence of U. S.
Every day, nearly 300 million cubic feet of gas - $300,000 worth at today 's price - is vented to
direction, the decay of the Viet troops. Laos held because this
the atmosphere from active U.S. coal mines. And still, with the increasing depth of mining, most
Cong, the new elan of the South country organized one of the
If you're male, married
mfne .ventilation systems are being overloaded. The result is the need for frequen t and costly
Vietnamese military.
.
. and over twenty, your
more skillful underground
suspensions of miliing activity untU the gas can be cleared.
There are reasons for ' this operations In our history and
Experts agree that the deeper and more gassy coal seams connot be mined in tbe future unless
Grange Insurance agent
new spirit. We have over the fought fire with !Ire until
some degaslfication technique is applied before mining is begun. The U. S. Bureau of Mines has
•
· ..
has good news for you .
year s developed in South r.;~ cenUY .
demonstraied that it is possible to degasify virgin coal 'Seams by drilling vertical holes into them
r a n c e w e want your business
from the surface. The gas obtained from such boreholes is of high purity with a heating value
~md our low rate~ prove
equivalent to natural gas and may be placed directly into commercial pipelines.
tt. • You 'll probably be
To find out if methane ·recovery from ~irgin coal seams is economically feasible, a research
team In the department of Mineral Engineering at Pennsylvania State University is presently ·
operating a car the rest
making arrangements to drill five vertical boles into PeMsylvania seams, test tbese wells and
of your life. so you·re a
· determine the amoWtt and rate of fiow I)L,gas from them.
·
1
valuable customer .. Our
When gas was plentiful and cheap, !lui process was not fman cially worthwhile, but in today's
low rates prove we want
market It appears that it may be·. In addition to the profits from the sale of the methane, benefits
'you now: Talk to us
will also accrue to mining operations through greater safety and fewer production delays.
.
abc ut liability, property .'
The use of verucal boreholes from the surface is not, by any means, the ultimate ~chnique for
.
.
. · danage, collision, medirecovering methane. Wider shafts are necessary for .mining : If these shafts were to be sunk into
. · coal seams several 'years ahead of mining and a radial pattern of borizonlat boles.drilled into the
cal payments, as well
'
coal
seams
from
the
bottoms
of
them,
the
result
would
be
a
·
s
till
more
effective·
degosi{ication
·
as a payment plan that
Reaiion 3. We spend all the time we
scheme.
The economics of this multiple-6h;lft scheme appear to he even more favorable than the
fits your income. When
n~ when it comes to preparing your
borehole metbod.
you
have a family, you
return. We conduct in-depth in~rviews
In any event, accelerated research and develbpffil!nt is needed in the near future to assess the'
just ·can 't do it alone . .·
to make sure we·understand your
economic, techiiological and social benefits otrecoverilig methane from coal seams.
·
·

Coach Ron Janey's North
Gallia Pirates served notice
Monday afternoon they were
_ ready to play baseball this
spring as the Pirates doWned
the SVAC defending champion
Kyger Creek Bobcats twice in a
doubleheader at Che_shire.
,
North Gallia got s tellar
pitching performances from
righthanders Greg James and
Calvin Minnis in equaling their
two 3.. victories recorded the
entire ~prin g of 1974.
For Coach Jim Sprague, the
pitching department gave an.
outstanding effort, but the
Bobcat hitting left a lot to be
desired. Both games will coun t
in the league standings. The
first was a make-up of last
Thursday 's rainout game on
the Pirate {ield.
The Bobcats, behind the
strong pitching of sophomore
righthande r Steve Baird ,
jumped into a quick 1-0 lead in

. The Tuppers Plains 4-H Girls ,
organized the evening of ·
March 25 at the home of Rose
Carr. There were five advisors
and 16 ·members present.
Officers for the new 4'H cluQ
year elected were Teresa Carr
President; Susan Shields Vice:
, President; Sarah G~ebel , .
Secretary ; Brenda Cal~way ,
Treasurer; Diana Jones, News ·
Reporter. The next mee ting
will he' April
3 at the Carr
•
horne. 'Diana Jones . ·
OFFICERS FOR the new
club year of the Bedford Gals 4H Cluli elecU!d at their March
25th meeting were President,
Becky Dorst; Vice-President
· Paula Swindell; Secretary :
Camille Swindell; Treasurer,
Teresa Dorst; News ReporU!r,
Angela Sinclair ; Recreation
Leader, Kim DeMoss; Safety
· Chairman, Linda Williams .
The nine members present
discussed individual projects,
•a community service project
and fund-raising ideas .
Refreshmen Is were served by .. Joan Kaldor, advisor.
The next meeting 'will be
April7 at 6:30p.m. at the home
of Camille and Paula Swindell .
- 'Angela Sinclair.
THE MEIGS County Better
Livestock Beef 4-H Club mel
March 20 at the Meigs County
Extension Office with 24
members present. There.was a
question and answ~se ssion
covering the first chapter of
the Introductory Beef Breeding
book . The next meeting will be
April17 at the home of Roger
Gaul .''- Teresa Carr.
THE FIVE POINT Bucks
·organized March 26 • at the
home of Nick Leonard , ad-'
visor. From the 11 members
present officers elected were
Rocky Pitzer, President· Paul
Goeglein, Vice-President;
Tommy Pullins, Se&lt;:rel:arv
Rhonda Riebel, TrE! ast~rel~ .
Chuckie Martin, · Recreati''~

a

RAY CROMLEY

'

South Vietnam up

against the ·wall

iiiilWHEEL HoRSE
~lawn&amp; garden tractors

Editorial comment,
•

1

Early Buy

•

opznton, features

Coal gas a virgin power source

~·

·~

~ -~ ··- -- - ~

,._ ,~

BAUM
TRUE VALUE

Block.

·•Jt 1. MAIN IT..

...

POMI!iOY

_ . . ...... lt~P- III- Mon.·Sot.
.
Ph tn 1795
·
NO APP&lt;\!I'f!''II!NT ~EtESSARY '
•

I

'

MUu.EN I~SURANCE AGENCY, iNC.

ZENITH

113 E. $econd St., Pom,eroy• 45769, Ph: 992-3381

COLOR TV

•
•BLACK &amp; .
WHITE lV
eSTfREO

Free Delivery I

Fet;leral Food 'Stamps
PHONE: 992-3480

~~
-" -=~toliml=.
· t~....:=~

Superiors Boneless Po.Jt Roast •••••• lb.
.

Superiors Pure Pork Sausage •••••••• lb.

GROUND
BEEF
LB.

Superiors All Meat Bologna ••••••••••• lb.
\

I

USDA CHOICE BEEF

Superiors Polish Sausage ••••• lb. '

GROUND
CHUCK

SuperiorS .
Baby Beef
LIVER

USDA CHOICE BEEF

GROUND
ROUN-D
SWIFT'S PREMIUM

1/t

BEEF OR REG.
WIENERS 1.2 oz.

69

.....

-

,

\b"' 79e

•

..

99

U. S. GRADE A LARGE SIZE

tl!
1

-

Sl\.lt1 (\Ufl.l\T'f

•

\\l.

"~

bai

MARTHA WHITE

~

lb.
bag

5

--·~

-

89e

BANQUET
POT .P-IES

-59e

ARMOUR'S CANHED

f

~

~

CAM

~

fP,tAil~ Silt

69e.

-

CHILl WITH BEANS

·59~

CAN

6f\\\ ' 39~
I

. oP.Yt\Mt lOQOltRS

..

,,q

. \(\MBl£S

- 4 couttl $
2

•

•

.

.I

.. SCOT ·LAD
'
IC~ CREAM .

.

2·1b.

$}·49

'

pkg.

89~

h gal.

1

crt.
.

SCOT LAD

'

.

can

-

R~

DAD'S ROOT BEER

C. COLA
16 oz.

8 bots;$129
pak

AND DIET RITE COLA

.

8

16,oz.
btls.

I,

..

SPECIAL SALE

ALL. WEEK PRICE -

THURSDAY ONLY

'

59~

16 oz.

ORANGE JU_ICE

COKE ·

DIET RITE
•
.··. FLA'VORS

~~49

w

'.

for

·•

- '

"

·j

. Throw Away 110ttle
'
Big 64. oz. bot

(

4 ~ qu~
..t .

$1

plus

deposit

SAVE
351

.

~

•

pkgs.

BOOTH'S BREADED .
FISH STEAKS _

Nt'fl OU~l GOl\l

ARMOUR'S CANNED

-~

w

•

Chili Without .Beans

@

· ,

310 oz.$1 00

.,

· ' the Almailac
By United Press Int~rilallonal 1
Today is Tuesday, April 1,
the 91st day of 1975 wi\h 274 to
follow.
The moon is approaching its ·
, last quarU!r. ·
.
' The morning siars· are
Mercury, Mars and Jupi ler.
' The morning stars are Venus
and Saturn.
Thoee born . on this date are'
under the sign.Df Aries. .
· ,
Ruulan composer Sergei
Rachmaninoff was born _April i,
I873. This is ,ctress' pebbie
ReynoldS' 43rd birthday.

OD

Varieties

QUEEN .OF SCOT
BROCCOLI SPEARS

-a.

lri addition to his sister;
Hazel, he is survived by
another sister and two
brothers, Virgie Cobb, Adr.ian,
W. Va ., Rush Crites, Weston
and Raymond Criies of Adrian.
FWteral services will be held
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at ·
Rawllngs Coats · Chapel with
the Rev. Donald _.Cole of·
fi~iadng. Burial will \Je in
Riverview ceme!&lt;!ry. Friends
llli!Y call at any time.

for

-

late Thorton B. · and Sarah
Kenner Cri les . He was also
preceded in death · by one
brother and one sisU!r . He had
lived in Middleport the past 15

$} QO

4
4 ~=· $} 00

All

QUEEN OF SCOT
ORANGE JUICE

survives.
Mr . Crites was the son of the.

_

GAllON. $1lg

FROZEN FOODS

CHEESE PIZZA
box

79¢

CHOCOLATE. MILK 2~89¢

APPIAN WAY

William A. Crites, 69, Mid'
dleport, died Monday morning
at Holzer Medical, Center . Mr.
Crites made his home with his
sister, Hazel Board,
"
who

LARGE
SIZE

BROUGHTON'S

SELF-RISING FLOUR

died Monday

y~rs.

BROUGHTON'S

2% ·MILK.

.

69e

ooz.

BROUGHTON'S

..,

·a·

EGGS
COTTAGE~- CHEESE

~~~ 9l~t\S

t\
4

William Crites

balloMa.

HE_RMAN GRATE
MASON, W.VA.

''

(\U3(\ .·

The Meigs County Junior
Leaders 4-H Clu~· 'Jieeting
March 18 at the Meigs County
Historical Museum discussed
the "Buckey~ Trail" and the
J~ckson Area Mini-Recreation
Workshop. · Flower
and
vegetable seed Jl1l)ney was
collected.
A special program, ''Let's
Get In Gear for Camp " was
presented by the guest
speakers, Fred Dee!, Gallia
County 4-H Agent, and Bud
Carter , Gallia
County
A'gricullural Agent. - Pam
,- • Holcomb.
·

IIIey be&amp;ID to p.~int 'I · billl

MASON FURNrnJRE ·

fl
.
1\f\ \)\\f.SSU'
SI'\U"U .

1j;tfl

4 at 7:30 p.m. at the Leonard
home. - Renee Riebel.
THE MEIGS County Junior
Leaders-4-HCiub me

,
•

t

~

USDA CHOICE 6EEF

:,mn~:7 m~!ti~r~ill ~e0~;~i

Worry allollt · iaflatloa w!lee

" Easy Terms!

·Superiors Pork Steak ................... lb.

Ae~ept

We

-

.&amp;

perional tax situation. And, we keep
· all information completely confidential.

·~,

SUI»ER MARKET • Open Daily 9 .to 10 Sun. 10 to 10

DAIRY DE]:lAR1'MENT

Lo"' au'tO
s
.
.
ln U ·'. . .
..3 tes Or·
·oung .
,·.marrte
' ds.

Henry
17 reasons why .' juu
should come to us .
for inCome tax -~p.

THE IHCO.MI TU PI!OPL!

('

~

'e'

WHEELING' AND .DEALING
MESA, Ariz. (UP!) - The
.World Oliunpioll Oakland. A's
are wheeling and dealing In an
effort to beef up a pitching staff .
badly 'burt when Catfish
HIUiter werit \o the N.W York
Yankee!. ·
The A's purchased the
contracts of Horaclo Plna from
. the Califol'llla Angels and Skip
Lockwood from the New York
Yankees over the weekerid.
Both ptayen JX'eviously were
in the A's organization.
oakland also annowtced that
· relief_pitcher Mike Barlow was
bein(! sent to its Tucson !ann
club. ""\

MEAT .SALE

•

79~
-"

'

'·

...
. ,)

..

I

&gt;

l .

·-·

�,
'
•
. 4- The ~ily Sentinel, M~ddlrrt-P~meroY,. o., Tuesday, i\prilt. 1~15 . .

~irates

jolt ·'Cats .

USDA CHOICE

.,

_

DAVID POLING, IT. D• .

'
Scottish church s
gift to New World

Laurel Cliff
,. .

.

.

News Notes

.

.

the fi~st inning.
Getting North Gallia's t'hree · Southwestern thi;e;;ening and
BY RERTIIA PARKER
Tim Lucas, junior infielder, hil' off Baird were Gene Han nan 'frace Thursday. ·
Sabbath
School attenda nce
opened with a single then Welch, James and Casey.
Lincscores :
March
30
al
the Free Methodist
When I fail, /
moved up on a single off the bat
Kyger. Creek hillers were Kyger Creek 100 000 1- 2 3 2
school seniors.
By David Poling
of . second baseman Brian Tim Lucas, Brian Lucas and NorthGalli a · 000 012 x- 3 3 2 Church was 126. Choir mem- . At the · beginning of the
Now a new paperback has 1 learn a lesson
bers was 20. Attendance at all American adventure 200 years arrived and.quieUy worked tts in humanity, if/ nothing else:
Lucas and a walk to catcher Baird.
Baird fl. I and Metzner.
serv ices wa s 184. Offerin g from
B1ll Metzner . Lucas then ,.--.James, in gomg the distance.
James (.W) a1id Tackett.
ag o, the Scots sent some large way into my thought and Fairure mades me reatize,
all services was $230.95.
scored on. a balk by James. ' fanned l4 and issued three
gifts to the New World. Along prayer, patterns and seems even more ,
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
Joseph
North
Gallia
110
000
t&gt;--2-7
1
The junior fireballer then walks. Baird struckout 11 and
wi th · the migrati on of hard- destined to join the Bailie book rny complete dependence upon
Higgenbotham
,
Columbus,
and
Kyger
Creek
000
000
t&gt;--0
I
I
reached back for a little extra walked fow .
. ·
gift from the Scottish you,
. work-in g, disciplin ed people as
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Whiteker, came the conceijl of freedom of spiritual treasury. Barris and upon other people.
Minnis ( W) and Tackett.
and prompUy fanned Dave
NIGHTCAP
Lucas (L) and Metzner. ,
New York, visited the weekend religion,' a yearning for free Shepherd, popular college
Wise , Chris Preston and Terry
The Pirates sco~ed a run in
with Rev. and Mrs. Floyd public educaKon and a careful pas tor- at th e- College of But whenever I manage
Lucas to end the threat.
· each of the first two innings
Shook .
North Gallia tied the score by · then held on behind the pitchWooster. and graduate of New to accomplish some great
ey e on people in public life.
Some Wardrobe
Mr._Fritz Stahl, New Marshplating an unearned run in the ing of Minnis to win the nightTheir theology informed College, Edinburgh brl'lJls !he achievement,
An
entourage
of
24,000
field,
visited
recently
with
Mr
.
i am on my own and proud of it,
fifth . Ron Plants reached on a cap, 2-0.,
noblemen with their families, and Mrs. Norm an Schaefer and them abol\t the depravitY of thoughts of a glad and trusti~g dependent upon no one,
two base throwing error. He
NG plated its first run on a servants,
man a nd their experience in heart. In his "Diary of Dally .
and household goods
was sacrificed to third and Fred Logan double and Minnis ' - accompanied the Empress Mr . and Mrs . Harry'Stahl.
politics · confirm ed that Prayer" . (Augsburg · Pub . supreme master of my fate .
scooted home on-a fi y ball off single. In the second inni ng, ·Elizabeth of Imperial Russia Mr. Vern Story and son, judgm ent. There were. no House Minneapolis r the
the bat of Fred Logan.
· Mark Theiss £eached as a hit whenever she moved the 400 John , spen t' a day recently in Watergales because no one author ' expands the bOundries Lord, keep me truly humble in
. . ,
The Pira tes broke the tie in batsman then raced across the miles between her palaces at Cohunbus. '
~ ·,
was irusted with .all the of mind' and spirit, urges us to whatever measure
Mr.
and
Mr
s.
William
the sixth on a walk to Minnis, plate on a Homer McMillan St. Petersburg a~d MOSCOW. At
machinery of government. honesty and affection .and of success this day may bring.
her death in 1761 , Elizabeth's Jac obs, Columbus , v isit~d · Checks and balances emerged admits failure and loss . A And grant, in all things,
James' triple and a single by double.
Mike Casey.
Kyger Creek managed one closets .contained 15 ,000 recently wi th Mr. and Mrs. in our system out of _ the morning prayer of his says whether failure or success,
Pearl Ja cobs. ·
Kyger Creek scored its final hit off Minnis, a third inning - dresses!
that I might find you,
theological perspective of the stm'ply and profoundly :
M r. Mark Stahl, Stockdale, Calvinistic view of man and his
run in the last inning on an double by Baird. Minnie had
ana in finding you, find all that
Law·et Cliff
visited recently with Mr. and
error and a double by Baird. eight strikeouts but issued six
I can ever ask,
temptations.
"Lord, I will need
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roy
'
Howell
Mrs.
Norman Schaefer.
'
free passes.
..
or hope for ."
The Scots have never been your support this day ,
Top. Pirate hitters were spent the weekend with Mr. · Mr. and Mrs . Ted Mathew, lavish in their gifts: frugality not only when I fail ,
James aiitl Minnis with two hits Howell'sparents, Mr. and Mrs. Huron, spenllhe weekend with is ihe best description for tlie but also when I succeed.
Presbyterians may want to
each. McMillan, Logan and Vern on !lowell, Can ton. Mr. her parents , Mr. and Mrs. o]d.country. Yet they gave the For my successes
temper their pride in this new
Gene Payne bad one hit each Cl)d Mrs. Howell are in their Charl es Karr . Mrs . Karr essentials, and high on the list seem to set me even farther emergence of a ·Scottish peroff Bobcat righty Terry Lucas. e1ghties and feeling real good . returned home with them for a for the New World were the from you,
s~;t - ior after all, the
Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Fox , week's visit.
&gt;
Lucas fanned four and walked
pastors who accompanied the and from my fellow human / publisller that made this
Mr .andMrs. Lennie Lyons and
Mr . Paul Archer, Columbus, first settlements. In upstate beings.
four .
discovery was a Lutheran.
Leslie
spent
Easter
Sunday
spen
l a Saturday with his New York, entire villages
North Gallia 2-1 this spring
will host Eastern, Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. John ny&gt; mother , Mrs. Georgia Giehl arrived in a package, in places
an d Charles Anthony Diehl.
night. Kyger Creek G-2 will host Douglas, Guysv ille.
like Caledonia and ScottsviUe,
with c~rgy among the first
By Ray Cromley
Vietnam a viable government
settlers. .
.
WASHINGTOJII: - We may and economy, more and more
The enduring gift froin the
do as we c'hpose about cutting influenced by capable- young . ,
Scottish church has been the
off aid lor South Vietnam. But men. We have do~e much to .}!
amazing quality of great
there are facts we must face. eliminate decadent generals
'
preachers who came to Canada
Newspapers have recently and to bring to the fore younger
of officers less tied ·to the .old
and the tJnited States. And
reported
hundreds
close to this tradition that has
thousands of refugees, with corruption.
lasted lor centuries is the
more coming, as more
South Vietnam has n&lt;1t
provinces fall or are given up become a democracy, except
' mystical expression - the
inner spiritual life that is so
because Saigon la cks the in contrast to the North .
contagious
and refreshing
means to supply !hell).•
Freedoms are limited but are
I when understood.
This is in addition to 594,000 great when compared to the
1.
·•
Twenty-live years ago John
refugees in 1974, 616,000 in 1973 regimentation in Hanoi. There
Bailie (who with his brother,
and 10,271,000 in the 10 years is still much economic and
Ponald, spent several years in
before.
.
political corruption but less
study in the United States)
A Senate
committee than the political-power
es timatels many more un- corruption in North Vietnam.
published his "Diary of Private
Prayer. " Within months it
counted .
· And there is less cruelty, again
By Dr. Robert 'Stefanko
.
· There is , of course, much in comparison to the invaders.
The present energy dileliiiiJa facing the country results from a lack of national lead ership and zoomed to the top of the sales
duplication, in that some
We must also face the fact
public understandinw.qf the re'al situation . Tough decisioru; need to be made, but the political sector ltst and is firmly established in
families have been refugees that the difficulty in· which
JX'Omotes popular but ineffective, inflationary programs rather than positive policies that would the hearts of millions of people .
two, three and four times in the South Vietnam now finds itself
encourage the investment of private capital to~uild the energy capacity this country so despera tely For more than a decade it was
•
the gift to graduating high
course of war. But however is the result of sloppy
needs.
much one discounts the total, negotiating by Sec.retary of
But the public, too, must assume a large share of the relljioru;ibility. Prodigious amounts of
those fieeing mlnber in the State Henry Kissinger.
. energy are expended that provide a questionable cost-benefit ratio - for instance,the use of dish- .
LAFF- k- DAY
millions.
Had Kissinger insisted in
washers; washers and dryers, !restless refrigerators, instant-on TVs, gas - guzzlmg cars and an
The refugees apparently ar• 1973
on
an
air-tight
infinite variety of electrical gadgetry.
all going in one direction - arrangement whereby neither
The p1Jbllc must be made aware of the true cost of producing the power to sustain this tremendous
away from communist rule. North Vietnam nor the U. S.
demand ~ We are fooling ourselves if we t.nink such usage can continue Wlabated.
1
·"" c
A few years ago it was would resupply Saigon or the
Amajor portion of the public still thinks our energy plight is a result.of collusion amon g the large popular in some circles to say Viet Cong, and neither Russia
energy-producing compjies to raise p!lices and in!Jate profits. The meqia do nothing to help
these men , women and nor China resupply Hanoi, and
children
were
fleein g if he had made realistic in•
•
American and South Viet- spection a part of the
Dr. Stefanko, Assistant. Dean for Contlnning Education at Penn State's College of Earth and
namese aerial and artillery arrangement instead of
Mineral Sciences,is also Professor Mineral Engineering at the unlverslly.
raids. They didn't care where phantom inspection which
A. Powtrl\lt 16 hp wpplies big mu•cl• through alt-eear l,ll'l idri" trOMmiuion. $11
they went so long as they mean t no inspection at all, we
forward gnd 2 r...-ot ipMd1. W:oh!.r cast-Iron qiM, lvilt-in htod and toil tight.,
correct this misconception when they quote large earnings increases for these companies. While a
I. Big 12 h.p. cost-Iron •ntint witb the tall of auktrftatic tran..Wuiot\. ". ft10t
escaped this terror. That story would not be asked to day to
500-per cent profit 'increase may appear exorbitant at first. But if this represents a rise in earnings
combinglion lor lown cort, gord.t.in; and moitltef'OIICt jobl.
...
,_
......
.
no longer holds water. Today, send arms to Saigon .
C. 8 h.p. COII·iron tngin. wppli111 maaimum powtr thf01o!gh unidri..,. o""vtor
from a depressed lOcehts to SO cents a share, it hardly appears excessive.
_1 . "Loafing again , Pearson?
""on.uJ~It 3 forword ar1d OM rtMFII &amp;pttds . S.porate broh ond clvtch ptdoll fOr
it is the North Vietnamese who . We had before us the failure
The use of percentages and averages can be misleading. It reminds one of the sfory of a man who That'~ good ."
1ofe 1tart1 011 1lopir~g ground
are able to mass superior of toothless inspection teams in
drowned in a pool that averaged three feer 'tn depth - he just had the misfortune to fall into the
• Your used trOctcwh worth tQP dolar In ..... now! ·
forces and shell towns.
• . .W' ltOI'Iy and &amp;Gv•l lor* finandnt avaMalale. AI this WhMI Horw
North Korea and Laos, subject
eight ..foot-deep end!
·
power at bargain pricetl
Note·, too, that the local Vi et to communist veto and
While our domestic supplies of crude oil and natural gas are limited, our coal reserves, which
fimifHf olf~r ... Sal• ~ A,tli' ~. J97.S
Cong, once tile backbone of the therefore in no position to
represent nearly 25 per_cent' of the world 's supply, are adequate for 500 years at our present rale of
rurafimderground government check on their violations. In
consumption. Although development of offshore oil and gas reserves could buy time until other
Free Energy
and guerrilla forc~ s . have North Korea, the treaty was
resources.become available, it is coal that must ultirnatelyprovide a long-term solution to our · World production of geothergiven way to North Vietnamese grossly violated before the ink
problem. .
·
mal )lower, in which the earth's
units. It is now estimated was dry. In Laos, Hanoi 's
Admittedly,'there are supplementary sources of energy that.can be develo):ied but these should heat is used to produce steam
between two thirds and three troops never left. Resupply in
be kept in proper perspective. Solar and geothermal energy may make some contributions to our that drives generators, now
fourths of the Communis t violation of the agreements
energy needs, but both have suCh severe tethnicallimi\!ltions that they cannot provide a significant totals about a million kilowatts.
Geologists believe this could be
cadre and military forces are began immediately by Mao · percentage of our requirements in the near future. ·
increased tenfolq, a pollutionOHIO
CHESTER
men from Hanoi.
Tsi-tung in North Korea and by
One supplementary energy resource that should be. developed is methane from coal seams. free source of power that would
The South Vietnamese army , Ho Chi Minh in Laos. The
Methane is associated with all coal seams since it evolves m tl)e coalification process. However, tbe be equivalent to burning a
once ridiculed publicly or treaties failed because there
PHONE 985-3301
quantity present varies considerably from seam io seam and at different locations· in the same billion Ions of coal.
privately by virtually every were no means provided for
seam.
American adviser, now fights enforcement. Kissinger knew
Methane has long been an unwelcome byproduct of coal mining, continually being released into
well when out-gunned and all this.
the mine atmosphere as the coal is removed. As a result it has been necessary to develop
outnumbered.
South Korea '1\'aS saved by
sophisticated ventilation systems capable of circulating four to six tons of air throughout a mine
All this is a way of voting for each ton of coal produced in order to dilute and sweep away dangerous accumulations of gas.
two decades of u..S. military
the refugees who move in one aid and the presence of U. S.
Every day, nearly 300 million cubic feet of gas - $300,000 worth at today 's price - is vented to
direction, the decay of the Viet troops. Laos held because this
the atmosphere from active U.S. coal mines. And still, with the increasing depth of mining, most
Cong, the new elan of the South country organized one of the
If you're male, married
mfne .ventilation systems are being overloaded. The result is the need for frequen t and costly
Vietnamese military.
.
. and over twenty, your
more skillful underground
suspensions of miliing activity untU the gas can be cleared.
There are reasons for ' this operations In our history and
Experts agree that the deeper and more gassy coal seams connot be mined in tbe future unless
Grange Insurance agent
new spirit. We have over the fought fire with !Ire until
some degaslfication technique is applied before mining is begun. The U. S. Bureau of Mines has
•
· ..
has good news for you .
year s developed in South r.;~ cenUY .
demonstraied that it is possible to degasify virgin coal 'Seams by drilling vertical holes into them
r a n c e w e want your business
from the surface. The gas obtained from such boreholes is of high purity with a heating value
~md our low rate~ prove
equivalent to natural gas and may be placed directly into commercial pipelines.
tt. • You 'll probably be
To find out if methane ·recovery from ~irgin coal seams is economically feasible, a research
team In the department of Mineral Engineering at Pennsylvania State University is presently ·
operating a car the rest
making arrangements to drill five vertical boles into PeMsylvania seams, test tbese wells and
of your life. so you·re a
· determine the amoWtt and rate of fiow I)L,gas from them.
·
1
valuable customer .. Our
When gas was plentiful and cheap, !lui process was not fman cially worthwhile, but in today's
low rates prove we want
market It appears that it may be·. In addition to the profits from the sale of the methane, benefits
'you now: Talk to us
will also accrue to mining operations through greater safety and fewer production delays.
.
abc ut liability, property .'
The use of verucal boreholes from the surface is not, by any means, the ultimate ~chnique for
.
.
. · danage, collision, medirecovering methane. Wider shafts are necessary for .mining : If these shafts were to be sunk into
. · coal seams several 'years ahead of mining and a radial pattern of borizonlat boles.drilled into the
cal payments, as well
'
coal
seams
from
the
bottoms
of
them,
the
result
would
be
a
·
s
till
more
effective·
degosi{ication
·
as a payment plan that
Reaiion 3. We spend all the time we
scheme.
The economics of this multiple-6h;lft scheme appear to he even more favorable than the
fits your income. When
n~ when it comes to preparing your
borehole metbod.
you
have a family, you
return. We conduct in-depth in~rviews
In any event, accelerated research and develbpffil!nt is needed in the near future to assess the'
just ·can 't do it alone . .·
to make sure we·understand your
economic, techiiological and social benefits otrecoverilig methane from coal seams.
·
·

Coach Ron Janey's North
Gallia Pirates served notice
Monday afternoon they were
_ ready to play baseball this
spring as the Pirates doWned
the SVAC defending champion
Kyger Creek Bobcats twice in a
doubleheader at Che_shire.
,
North Gallia got s tellar
pitching performances from
righthanders Greg James and
Calvin Minnis in equaling their
two 3.. victories recorded the
entire ~prin g of 1974.
For Coach Jim Sprague, the
pitching department gave an.
outstanding effort, but the
Bobcat hitting left a lot to be
desired. Both games will coun t
in the league standings. The
first was a make-up of last
Thursday 's rainout game on
the Pirate {ield.
The Bobcats, behind the
strong pitching of sophomore
righthande r Steve Baird ,
jumped into a quick 1-0 lead in

. The Tuppers Plains 4-H Girls ,
organized the evening of ·
March 25 at the home of Rose
Carr. There were five advisors
and 16 ·members present.
Officers for the new 4'H cluQ
year elected were Teresa Carr
President; Susan Shields Vice:
, President; Sarah G~ebel , .
Secretary ; Brenda Cal~way ,
Treasurer; Diana Jones, News ·
Reporter. The next mee ting
will he' April
3 at the Carr
•
horne. 'Diana Jones . ·
OFFICERS FOR the new
club year of the Bedford Gals 4H Cluli elecU!d at their March
25th meeting were President,
Becky Dorst; Vice-President
· Paula Swindell; Secretary :
Camille Swindell; Treasurer,
Teresa Dorst; News ReporU!r,
Angela Sinclair ; Recreation
Leader, Kim DeMoss; Safety
· Chairman, Linda Williams .
The nine members present
discussed individual projects,
•a community service project
and fund-raising ideas .
Refreshmen Is were served by .. Joan Kaldor, advisor.
The next meeting 'will be
April7 at 6:30p.m. at the home
of Camille and Paula Swindell .
- 'Angela Sinclair.
THE MEIGS County Better
Livestock Beef 4-H Club mel
March 20 at the Meigs County
Extension Office with 24
members present. There.was a
question and answ~se ssion
covering the first chapter of
the Introductory Beef Breeding
book . The next meeting will be
April17 at the home of Roger
Gaul .''- Teresa Carr.
THE FIVE POINT Bucks
·organized March 26 • at the
home of Nick Leonard , ad-'
visor. From the 11 members
present officers elected were
Rocky Pitzer, President· Paul
Goeglein, Vice-President;
Tommy Pullins, Se&lt;:rel:arv
Rhonda Riebel, TrE! ast~rel~ .
Chuckie Martin, · Recreati''~

a

RAY CROMLEY

'

South Vietnam up

against the ·wall

iiiilWHEEL HoRSE
~lawn&amp; garden tractors

Editorial comment,
•

1

Early Buy

•

opznton, features

Coal gas a virgin power source

~·

·~

~ -~ ··- -- - ~

,._ ,~

BAUM
TRUE VALUE

Block.

·•Jt 1. MAIN IT..

...

POMI!iOY

_ . . ...... lt~P- III- Mon.·Sot.
.
Ph tn 1795
·
NO APP&lt;\!I'f!''II!NT ~EtESSARY '
•

I

'

MUu.EN I~SURANCE AGENCY, iNC.

ZENITH

113 E. $econd St., Pom,eroy• 45769, Ph: 992-3381

COLOR TV

•
•BLACK &amp; .
WHITE lV
eSTfREO

Free Delivery I

Fet;leral Food 'Stamps
PHONE: 992-3480

~~
-" -=~toliml=.
· t~....:=~

Superiors Boneless Po.Jt Roast •••••• lb.
.

Superiors Pure Pork Sausage •••••••• lb.

GROUND
BEEF
LB.

Superiors All Meat Bologna ••••••••••• lb.
\

I

USDA CHOICE BEEF

Superiors Polish Sausage ••••• lb. '

GROUND
CHUCK

SuperiorS .
Baby Beef
LIVER

USDA CHOICE BEEF

GROUND
ROUN-D
SWIFT'S PREMIUM

1/t

BEEF OR REG.
WIENERS 1.2 oz.

69

.....

-

,

\b"' 79e

•

..

99

U. S. GRADE A LARGE SIZE

tl!
1

-

Sl\.lt1 (\Ufl.l\T'f

•

\\l.

"~

bai

MARTHA WHITE

~

lb.
bag

5

--·~

-

89e

BANQUET
POT .P-IES

-59e

ARMOUR'S CANHED

f

~

~

CAM

~

fP,tAil~ Silt

69e.

-

CHILl WITH BEANS

·59~

CAN

6f\\\ ' 39~
I

. oP.Yt\Mt lOQOltRS

..

,,q

. \(\MBl£S

- 4 couttl $
2

•

•

.

.I

.. SCOT ·LAD
'
IC~ CREAM .

.

2·1b.

$}·49

'

pkg.

89~

h gal.

1

crt.
.

SCOT LAD

'

.

can

-

R~

DAD'S ROOT BEER

C. COLA
16 oz.

8 bots;$129
pak

AND DIET RITE COLA

.

8

16,oz.
btls.

I,

..

SPECIAL SALE

ALL. WEEK PRICE -

THURSDAY ONLY

'

59~

16 oz.

ORANGE JU_ICE

COKE ·

DIET RITE
•
.··. FLA'VORS

~~49

w

'.

for

·•

- '

"

·j

. Throw Away 110ttle
'
Big 64. oz. bot

(

4 ~ qu~
..t .

$1

plus

deposit

SAVE
351

.

~

•

pkgs.

BOOTH'S BREADED .
FISH STEAKS _

Nt'fl OU~l GOl\l

ARMOUR'S CANNED

-~

w

•

Chili Without .Beans

@

· ,

310 oz.$1 00

.,

· ' the Almailac
By United Press Int~rilallonal 1
Today is Tuesday, April 1,
the 91st day of 1975 wi\h 274 to
follow.
The moon is approaching its ·
, last quarU!r. ·
.
' The morning siars· are
Mercury, Mars and Jupi ler.
' The morning stars are Venus
and Saturn.
Thoee born . on this date are'
under the sign.Df Aries. .
· ,
Ruulan composer Sergei
Rachmaninoff was born _April i,
I873. This is ,ctress' pebbie
ReynoldS' 43rd birthday.

OD

Varieties

QUEEN .OF SCOT
BROCCOLI SPEARS

-a.

lri addition to his sister;
Hazel, he is survived by
another sister and two
brothers, Virgie Cobb, Adr.ian,
W. Va ., Rush Crites, Weston
and Raymond Criies of Adrian.
FWteral services will be held
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at ·
Rawllngs Coats · Chapel with
the Rev. Donald _.Cole of·
fi~iadng. Burial will \Je in
Riverview ceme!&lt;!ry. Friends
llli!Y call at any time.

for

-

late Thorton B. · and Sarah
Kenner Cri les . He was also
preceded in death · by one
brother and one sisU!r . He had
lived in Middleport the past 15

$} QO

4
4 ~=· $} 00

All

QUEEN OF SCOT
ORANGE JUICE

survives.
Mr . Crites was the son of the.

_

GAllON. $1lg

FROZEN FOODS

CHEESE PIZZA
box

79¢

CHOCOLATE. MILK 2~89¢

APPIAN WAY

William A. Crites, 69, Mid'
dleport, died Monday morning
at Holzer Medical, Center . Mr.
Crites made his home with his
sister, Hazel Board,
"
who

LARGE
SIZE

BROUGHTON'S

SELF-RISING FLOUR

died Monday

y~rs.

BROUGHTON'S

2% ·MILK.

.

69e

ooz.

BROUGHTON'S

..,

·a·

EGGS
COTTAGE~- CHEESE

~~~ 9l~t\S

t\
4

William Crites

balloMa.

HE_RMAN GRATE
MASON, W.VA.

''

(\U3(\ .·

The Meigs County Junior
Leaders 4-H Clu~· 'Jieeting
March 18 at the Meigs County
Historical Museum discussed
the "Buckey~ Trail" and the
J~ckson Area Mini-Recreation
Workshop. · Flower
and
vegetable seed Jl1l)ney was
collected.
A special program, ''Let's
Get In Gear for Camp " was
presented by the guest
speakers, Fred Dee!, Gallia
County 4-H Agent, and Bud
Carter , Gallia
County
A'gricullural Agent. - Pam
,- • Holcomb.
·

IIIey be&amp;ID to p.~int 'I · billl

MASON FURNrnJRE ·

fl
.
1\f\ \)\\f.SSU'
SI'\U"U .

1j;tfl

4 at 7:30 p.m. at the Leonard
home. - Renee Riebel.
THE MEIGS County Junior
Leaders-4-HCiub me

,
•

t

~

USDA CHOICE 6EEF

:,mn~:7 m~!ti~r~ill ~e0~;~i

Worry allollt · iaflatloa w!lee

" Easy Terms!

·Superiors Pork Steak ................... lb.

Ae~ept

We

-

.&amp;

perional tax situation. And, we keep
· all information completely confidential.

·~,

SUI»ER MARKET • Open Daily 9 .to 10 Sun. 10 to 10

DAIRY DE]:lAR1'MENT

Lo"' au'tO
s
.
.
ln U ·'. . .
..3 tes Or·
·oung .
,·.marrte
' ds.

Henry
17 reasons why .' juu
should come to us .
for inCome tax -~p.

THE IHCO.MI TU PI!OPL!

('

~

'e'

WHEELING' AND .DEALING
MESA, Ariz. (UP!) - The
.World Oliunpioll Oakland. A's
are wheeling and dealing In an
effort to beef up a pitching staff .
badly 'burt when Catfish
HIUiter werit \o the N.W York
Yankee!. ·
The A's purchased the
contracts of Horaclo Plna from
. the Califol'llla Angels and Skip
Lockwood from the New York
Yankees over the weekerid.
Both ptayen JX'eviously were
in the A's organization.
oakland also annowtced that
· relief_pitcher Mike Barlow was
bein(! sent to its Tucson !ann
club. ""\

MEAT .SALE

•

79~
-"

'

'·

...
. ,)

..

I

&gt;

l .

·-·

�•

•

•

j

.

.

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. April!. 1975

. Pros and Cons on Anti-Vote
'
Rap:
.
.
.
Please add my voice, and the. voices of 111any qfmy friends,
to that of "Involved but Di~couraged," who is tired of voting for
thehiast objectionable candida!~ and ' wants
additional box
added after the list of contenders I'd glad!~ vote "Yes!" to " !
Want .None of These" ill thought 'it would brhg out worthi er
•
candidates.
But there's anol)ler alternative. Say I go to vote on election
day and find three male can~:da tes for! he same office. I am not
enthused. Bijl wail, there is a fourth candrilate - a woman. I
utter a·silent prayer and vote for her (even though I may know.
little about her). .
Perhaps she will not be a perfec.t answer to my prayer, but
I'll bet she won't be a bifworse than one oft he three men, and she
may prove a whole heap better.
.
One honest woman in office, reinforced by other honest
worr.; n officials all over the country, should give ' politicians
something to think about. After considerable research I've come
to the conclusion tirat women, often being more conscientious,
empathetic, intelligent and honest than ~en , wQuld do a b~tter
job of ruMing the country..
.
•
\ __ No doubt you will be surprised w~en you see my signature.~R. BERT W.

.

.

.

:4uxiliary mdkes ~ontrjbutions

-Generation ~ap
·- ' .
By Helen IUld ~ue Bottel
an

Dear Mr. Bert:
· As women, we thank you for the kind words. But as persons
'we must add that voting for an unknown candidate just because
she's female is as hazardous as voting for a candidate just
because his name appears first on the list.
WE vote for becoming better informed before we go to the
polls. - HELEN AND SUE

·.

..

•

'

.• .

'

.

+++
+++

Helc . and Sue: ·
.
I am a student of political science and a holder of an elected
position at the Univer.ity of Delaware. Thus my interestin "I but
D's" suggeslior: for a changed ballot.
·
.
True, many voters do, indeed, cast th~ir voteuor the least
objeclionable.cand idate. However, I certamly do not agree that
the addition of an "I Want None of These" box to the list of names
would he asolution.'
·.
.
.
"!but D," like many Ainericans, is not being a responsible
citizen. People like him believe that casting their vote on election
day fuUills their duty. If they really .cared, they'd get involved.
Two hackneyed but releva.nt phrases come to mind : "The
people get the type of governtfle,nt they deserve," and "With
Freedom comes responsibility. "
Simply put, this means that if you don't like the candidate, "!
but D" and company , you should run as an alternate, or find
someone who will !
I become increasingly incensed at Americans who seem to
silently express, "Don't bother me, I only live here." DOUGLAS B. ( For Freedom and Responsibility 1)

.. Contributions ul $5 each were
made to the American Red
Cross, the Cancer Society, the
Heart Fund, and Easter seals
by the All)eric-an Legion
Auxiliary' of Feeney - Bennett r
Post }28, meeting at · the hall
Wednesday night.
The unit also voted to send
$Hi to Mrs. Clifford Adkins for
the district community service
party_ at the Athens Mental
Health Center April 13 with
several members to send game

Brenda Cunningham for
flowers sent during her
hospitalization. Reported ill
were 1 Mrs. Ruth Gosney,
Vanessa . Morris, . ·Emma
.-Wayland, Roy Miller, Bert
Bodimer, Mrs. Kathy ·SU!ilh. It
was · noted that Albert Roush
has been hospitalized.
The door prize donalerl hy
.

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TUESDAY
STATED meeting of Middleport Masonic Lodge 363,
7:30p.m. at temple. AU.Master
Masons are invited.
MEIGS Saddle Sitters Club,
7:30 p.'m. at Junior Kennedy
residence, Tuppers Plains.
New members welcome. Each
old member is to take a
potential new memberf
A!\INIVERSARY Dinner of
Ladies Auxiliary, Middleport
Fire Department, 6:30p.m. at
Oscar's in Gallipolis. Members
to meet
,_, at fire station at 5:45
p.m ,
OHIO Eta Phi Chapter, Bel&lt;.
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:'30 p.m.
at the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. office. Girl of
the year to be elected. Cultqral
report by Dottie Musser, with
Libby Sayre and Joyce Bartimus, hostesses.

Polly's Poin
dY PifLLY €RAMER

By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - What do
you recon\mend for polishing a
brass bed• Is there something
one can put on the brass after
polishing to prevent it from
tarnishing? I would certainly
like to know and thank you. BETTY.
DEAR BETTY - If yours lB
a new brass bed It Is doubtless
already lacquered to prevent
tarnish so would only need to
be wiped off with a ·soft, dry
cloth. MIDe 111 an old one and I
had It professionally polished
after some paint was removed
and then lacquer was appUed.
With years of use plus someone
mlstakeo!y using polish, that
protective finish wore away.
After It was cle~ed abd
polished with a eoifimerelol
brass cleaner available at
hardware stores. and supermarkets, I sprayed on tWo
coals of .lacquer, drying between each of . them . .I held
newspaper back of the part
being sprayed to protect things
nearby. - POLLY.

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with the canners of
dietetic foods who charge such
Douglas:
.
.
outlandish prices for their
Your points are Well put and well taken, but you overlook one
products. They know diabetics,
sad fact of life: it costs like the dickens to run for office. If a
etc., have to have it and ·will
candidate can't afford (or wangle ) promoti6p, he or she scarcely
buy. I have canned fruit myseU
stands a chance in today's political arena. -HELEN
and It Is much better flavored
NOTE FROM SUE :.And if he or she "wangles," there goes
when no sweetener is added but
"freedom" out the window. It then runs the chance of becoming
just cooked In its own juices. "responsibility TO" the group that provides the ·money.
CURTY.
Pity ... - SUE
DEAR POLLY - My sister
is in the hopsital and her
elbows were becoming Sj)re
from· lyin~ down and from
sitting up to read. To remedy
Megan Elizabeth Wolfe , Bradbury and Nichole; Mr.
this I made her a pair ~~
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl .and Mrs. Carl Wolfe, Tricia
"Elbow
Softeners" from four
POMEROY Chapter 186,
Wolfe, Racine, and Jeffrey and Wendy, Racine; Mrs.
circles of soft material, stuffed
Powell Bradbury, son of Mr. Dolly Wolfe, Apple Grove; Mr. - OES, 7:45p.m. at the Pomeroy with cotton and sewed together
and Mrs. Asa Bradbury, and Mrs. Pat O'Brien, Ada ; Masonic Temple .
around tile edges. Two short
Circleville, were christened and Mr . and Mrs.· C. P.
WAHAMA Band Boosters, pieces of elastic were covered
Sunday at the Heath Methodist Bradbury, Middleport. A cake
regular meeting. } :30 p.m. at with lace and then the ends of
Church, Middleport. They were served following the dinner
school. All members asked to an elastic piece. sewed to the
the grandchildren of Mr . and was decorated one side in pink
front. side of a circle on opattend.
Mrs. Charles Bradbury.
and the other in blue.
posite sides. This way her hand
.
.
Rev. Robert Bumgarner
can
slip right thro,ugh the lace
CHESTER Council 323 D of A
offiCiated at the christening
Tuesday 8 p.m. All members covered elastic that is pushed
rites which were followed by a
CLASS TO SELL
taking part in rally urged to right up to her elbow, This also
buffet dinner at the Bradbury
The junior cosmetology class attend.
would be helpful to many
home .
Attending
the at Meigs High Sehool will hold
Senior Citizens. - DOROTHY
christening ~nd the dinner a rummage sale April4 and 5 in
B.
WEDNESDAY
were Mr. and.._.Mrs. Gene the basement of t~e Masonic
POMEROY Lodge 164 F&amp;AM ' DEAR POLLY- For over 25
Wright, Jeannie · and Terry, Temple, Middleport, from 9 7:30 p.m. All master masons years I have saved the water in
Circleville; Mr. and Mrs. Asa a.m. to 4 p.m.
which potatoes were cooked to
invited.--.,
make gravy (poured into a
MIDDLEPORT UTERARY small pan until ready to make
Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m. at the the gravy) .' Now I als,o use
home of Dr. Kathryn Philson . ·some of it to mash the. potatoes
Mrs. James Ti Ius to review instead of turning on the gas to
"Working" by Studs Terkel. heat milk. I use dry milk In the
Roll call will be a comment on hot water and find the potatoes
the program.
Beginning at 11:00 A.M.
stay hot longer. - ANN.
We have sold our farm and will sell the following chaHels~
DEAR POLLY - I have
SOCIAL
Security discovered a quick and conlocated 17 miles S. E. of Jackson, Ohio, 5 miles east of Oak
representative at Middleport venient way to give medicine to
Hill and 3 miles N.,:N. of Centerville (Thurman) on
Jackson County Road 6 (signs posted) .
Village Council Chambers, 9:30
FARM MACHINERY
a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
David Brown Li vedrive 1200 dies.el tractor with factory
ATHENS County Satsang
cab, wide front full hydraul ic, full power and on good
Society
will present a public
rubber ; Int. TO 9 Crawler tractor with Drott hi -lift 6ft.
lecture at 7:30 p.m. at Room
skid shovel ; Allis Chalmers WD tractor whh wide front,
• 327, Baker Center, Athens, with
PS wheels, etc. ; Allis Chalmers WC tractor for parts ;
Ford 3 pt. breaking plow (3-14) with coverboards; J?hn
Barbara Roaden as speaker. · Veterans Memorial Hospital
Deere 494 planter with disc: openers, rubber press wheels,
BIG Bend Neighborhooir was provided with nu.tcups and
{ready to go) ; New Holland ¥ode,l 352 mixer-grinder with,
of leaders, a8sistant napkins for both St. Patrick's
meeting
sheller attachments and.flotatiOflt tireS £ Fox Model ~A
Day and Easter by the Junior
field chopper ( PTO) wi!h Fo;i 'Oo,e row Model C54 corn
leaders and
committee American Legion of Feeneyhead ; Fox Model 476 hay pick -up a!!achmen!, (Nearly
members at the home of Mrs.
new) ; New Idea Model325 pull !ype picker (2 row N) wi!h
Pat Thomas, -service unit Bennett Post 128, Middleport.
husk ing bed ; New Idea Model 314 shelling unit to -lit pull
That was one of the activities
type picker ; New Idea Model604 si lage wagon on HD New
director, · 9:30 a.m . Mrs. reportedonatarecentmeeling
Idea gears; Gehl silage v;agon on Gehl 706 gears, (both
Isabelle Foster district of the junior unit with their
wagons fr ont unloading) ; A. C. ensilage blower , pipe and
to be present. For advisor, Mrs. Bonnie Dailey, at
director,
elbow. ( PTOI ; J&amp;M 200 bushel grav ity bed and side
directions
to the Thoma home the hall. 11 was.also noted that
boards ; 3 flat bed wagons and gea~s ;'_A . C. 15-7 grain drill
telephone 992-2277.
two boxes of favors, small gifts
on low rubber {complete}; ·Hesston PT 10 mowercondi!loner (10 fl . cufl; F ;~rm-hand ·wheel •ake; Ford 3pt
THURSDAY
and napkins for use in March
hi-speed rake ; Farm-hand tedder i Ford 3 pt . rotary
SPECIAL
meeting
Preceptor
and April had been sent to the
mower (5 ft .); 3 pl. rotary mower (6ft.) ; Brillion 3 pf.
Chapter,
Beta
Sigma
Phi
Ohfo ·Soldiers . ilnd Sailors'
pasture seeder ; J . D. 2-sed!on steel. harrow ; Ford (3 pt .l
'2-row cultivators ; J. D. 2-row rotary hoe ; 3 pt. sub-sailer; 3
Sorority, 7:45 p.m. to make Home In Sandusky for the
pf . !rencher; 3 pl. carryall; 20 fl. single chain bale
final plans for sponsoring diabetic ward "adopted" by
elevator with eledric motor ; 16 ff. grain auger (Sin.) with
Spring Fling.musical .Aprill2. the unit.
·
· elt?ctrlc ·motor ; Plus miscellaneous small farm. items
Members
to
take
candy
prizes.
Another
large
box of
fOund In sale of his kind. Some ·ant ique horse equipment.
TV
stamp
books
and
clothing;-'toilet
'
articles,
and
..
14ft. cattle and stOck traile-r With tandem wHeels, electric
stockholder
names.
bed
linens
is
ready
for)nailing
brakes, racks, etc.; 2 Patterson combination chutes and
head sjates; good set Ranger livestock scales ; 5 Pamline
· EVANGELINE Chapter 172, to the Peck of Wee Ones at
oilers ; 4 &lt;'1-t!le feed 'bunks ; 2 portable hay and grain
der of the Eastern Star, 7:30 .. Columbus. Carla J . Miller was
'racks: Urii·co feed c4rt; ptvs smaller l.ivestock equipment.
m.
at the Middle ort Masonic welcomed as a new mem~r .
FURNITURE-MOTOR BIKES, ETC.( Sells First)
m.
le
.P
..
,
.. It .was_noted that there ..ui
Yamaf1a Model 125 molor bik~ ; .:Yamaha Model 60. motor •
.
P.
'
·.
·
not
be a district jWJior con,
bike; small 6u!-board 1119tor'.; ~d i ning room suite with
REVIVAL
now
In
progress
ferenee
this year since there
table, chairs, buffet, china closet; bedroom suite with
this · week at Rutland Cum- are 9flly two active units in
bookcase double bed, mattress and box sprl'ngs, ·dresser,
etc .i 2 oak chests; ·Hide-a-bed; occasional chairs; end
m'unity Church 7:30p.m. Rev. District 8, but that entries will
tables ; pool tcible i apartment . · s;· ~e gas ,range;
· William Owen speaker.
be judged and sent to the ·
Westinghouse refrlgeralor ; lawn cfiairs; lamps ; dishes;
'
CATHOLI&lt;;
WOMEN's
Cl_ub,
Department
of Ohio for
kitchen utensils ; some bedding; pluS usual amount -small
Pol!leroy
Sacred
Heari
-Parrsh,
~ompetition.
Items, household items.
...
,
, ., 8 ~.m. Demonstrallon·s on
T.rm s·• Cash'
•·
_
11 '"'
"""'
lunch Served.
r ~ "'' \
•
crafts by Shirley Huston. ·
HOSTS GUESTS
REVIV,\Lnowin progress at
MIDDLEPORT .,:. _EasterFirst Church of God, Syracuse, weekend guests of Hllah Jones,
, .
through April 6, 7:30 lp.m. ThirdSI. ; Middleport,wereh~r
S.toConductod By
nightly. Wilbrir Leifheit and meceandnephew, V1v1an Tillis
O:MERSON MARTING &amp; SONS, AUCTIONEERS
.• (ie,orge Oiler, p~stors. Public, and Jimmy Shell, both of Pomt
L..•;,;3l;;,;;S,;;.Ma;;;,;'";.s;.'·.--·33•5•-l,llirr~:'""·'~="'·"'w~
.~~:.;hi;,;,n.;a.;to•n•C•.•H.;,.,.o•h•io_., 'l invite.d.
Pleasant.

Children are christened

AUCTION

SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1975 ·

Junior group
has meeting

my infant son. I thoroughly
clean with hot Soap and water
and boil a small bottle ' (the
kiild nose drops or eye drops
come in) and then put the
required amount of medicine in
it. Cover the bottle by pulling a
nipple over it and baby suck~
· the medicine out with no mess
and iittle bother. - SANDI.
DEAR SANDI - How I wish
I had thought of this years ago.
It always seemed to me that
my babies missed haU the
medlelue In a spoon. Be certain
though the bottle Is sterilized
and has no traces of other
medlelue In IL ""POL'L Y.

LAZY 8 FARMS -.614:682-6751 ·.

'
.

.

_

Mrs. Grtmm marks
6Oth year today
A birthday dinner was held
Easter Sunday at the home.?f
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Tayler in
Middleport honoring .the birth- .
day of Mrs. Neva Grimm.
Attending were Mr. and Mrfi.
Taylor and Lonnie; Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Grimm, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Johnson of
Athens , and Mr. and Mrs. Tim
Taylor of Elyria. Mrs. Grimm
is observing her 60th biithday
today.

GARDEN ROTARY
TILLER!

MTD
TillERS

·Briggs &amp;
Stratton
Engine

Reg. 5329.95 ·

...

..

SAYRE HARDWARE

~'

i
:7The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomer·uy, 0 .. 'l'ucsdi!Y, i\pr·ill, I~i5

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F~:,~:;;~~ .~:~~~~~'::~~~~~:;.~~
1

: Accqsed inurdei-er DOt a favorite sOn
· ' ·HAMILTON, Ohio (UP!) ..James Ruppert often allowed
65-year-old mother to
.• ·shovel snow and was repor) edly not one of her favorite
sons . .James today 1s charged
'' with the Easter murders of his
mother, his brother, his
brother's wife and their eight
children.
an unemployed
draftsman who neighbors said
has not worked steadily during
the past few years, is being
held Wider $200,000 dollars
bond. Although a family friend
said there might have been
lriction between Ruppert and
"his 42-yelir-old brother,
'Leonard - known as Pinkybtirer neighbors said James'
motirer had often said she
might have n·e-glected him in
favor of his brother.
James, unmarried and out of
work for about three months,
·· was living with his widowed
. mO'tli'er wh~n the murders were
committed during an Easter .
Sunday family gathering.
The killings are the largest
.
rde 0 f
b
01
:·•mass mu r mem ers
·· the same family in American
•·
• history.
~ One neighbor, Mrs. Ann
said the situation
- ~,. t..Tea 1edb y ou toQ1awor k J ames
vlng · wi h h'
h
m I rs rhot er was
'•· mo
• "sometimes odd. "
·
•V' Mother Sbovee
1 d' Snow ·
, "For instance, when Jimmy
", was there an d th ere was snow
~- to be shoveledd, inI never once
'' saw Jimmy o g it. Billie
'; (Mrs. Charity Rupgert, James '
'. mother) had to do It or get a
~. neighbor," said M•s. Spears-.
~: "I find it odd !~at a 4().year·~ old son .~ho was m good health •.
- ~ wouldn t go out and shovel
.•snow for hrs 65-year-&lt;&gt;ld mo.:ther," she added.
-~ .When Mrs. Spears and BiUie

talked it was usually about
Mrs. Spears' eight-year-old came ru Court
,
"lie·was a smart student and
politics, but sometimes they daughter, ·Eiice, had been in
".Jimmie wasn't there this a .·. good kid,'' remembered
o.iscussed one of Mrs. 1\upthe Ruppert house a few hours sunday night and 1
over Fischer. "He was not an odd1
pert's sons.
,.
before _ the other relatives to court to see if this was the ball, not a troublemaker."
"She talked about .Pinky to arrived Sunday.
same guy," Said one of James'
James is a C:athOlic, but
. me," said Mrs. ·Spears, "She
"Elice took an Easter basket , friends · at Monday's arraign- · preists here don't recall him
· Wf very proud bf him. To be over to Billie and stayed about ment. "I can't believe all this is attending · church regularly in
truth full, I can'trccall her ever an hour," Mrs. Spears said. hapening.
recent years.
mentioning Jimmie."
"Billie told her the family was
" I've never heard Jimmie
Neighbors said they knew of
Roy Zinuners, who lives coming over later that'
·say a cuss word in my life. This no sex ual problems and,
across. the street from the noon, but Jinunie stayed up- is hard to fathom. The way the althougl) James,frequented the
Ruppert home and who says he stairs the whole time Elice was talk is going around, the people tavern, he was not known as a
had been a 4().year friend of there. " '·
in this town have got him heavy drinker:
Mrs. Ruppert,saidtheremight
About every Sunday night already convicted."
Psychiatrists will examine
have
friction between the James would have some beer
Dan Fischer, knew James at the suspect this week,
two brothers.
at a neighborhood tavern.
Hamilton catholic High School.
' '
''That's
I gather from
'
what Billie has told me," said
Zimmers. "BiJlie lo. her
husband when the boys were
young and with Pinky being the
oldest, she said she must have
· '
unintentionally
neg lected
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The bushel, dropped· 19 cents from dropped 20-cents to .$10.60'!ler
James. Jimmy might have prices receiver! by farmers for mid-February and was one hundredweight. 'I:his category,
resented that.
their commodities declined for cent below a year ago. Oal.s ·at known as, food grains, was 28
Good To Mother
the fifth straight month , plung- $1.46were off 12 cents a bushel, per cent lower on an average
"Pinky was extra good to his. mg another 2_ per cent durmg barley'dropped 34 cents during than one year ago and 7 per
mother and I'm afraid that the month ending March 15, the the month to $2.55, and grain cent-lower than last month.
Jimmy took advantage of her " Agrrcullure Department sorghum at $4·03 per hundred!Continued on page 10)
'
reported
Monday
weight
was
down
18
cents.
Only
said the 71-year-old Zimmers .
· . ·
. .
"When Billie needed a reThe latest ftg~es mdlCate oats were selling at more this
fr'
1 Pi k bo ht 1.1 1
farmers are recervmg 15 per year than mid-March, 1974.
REVIVAL SE;T
rgera or, n Y ug
or cent less for the'rr commodities
The fe d grains index
A two-week revr·val wr'll be
her. When BiUie needed a new
.
.
•
thrs year than m March 1974 dropped 6 per cent by mid- held at the Freedom Gospel
davenport Pinky took care of
'
·
.1
'
The.last time farm commodity . March.
Mission, Bald Knob, beginning
'·;'And,Pinkyalsohadhisown prices rose was
Octodber,
Wheat, at $3.65 per bushel, .Sdnday, April 6 at 7:30p.m.
horne
· an d 1amt.1y to proVl'd e 1974, when. theyaseregrstere a 4 was down 30 cents
from
d
d mid- Evangelist will be Rev . Willard·
1
h
J'
per cen1 mere .
February, rye roppe 26 cents Carney, Charleston. Special
or. But, w enever muny was , Then the do·wnward sprr
· al
$2 15
b bel d .
ct
an nee singing by Dan Ha)·man an
out of work he carne .to stay , be ·
ff 15
r cent r'n to . per us
· h'rs mother but I don!• November,
gan-o · · per
pe cent ·n
the Hymntimers and others.
wr_th
3
1
·
The
public is invited. ·
thmk he gave her much sup- Dec be 1 5
FIRST CHILD BORN
r ent in
t
"
em
r
'
·
pe
c
·
Mr
por
in
HARRISONVILLE .
FLOWERS GIVEN
Z. ·
January
and 3 per cent
ber t ,
t
muners sar'd J ames . was· ad F
b
and
Mrs.
·
rrimmy
Lam
Altar
flowers for· ·the Eas
e ruary.
th
· er
Is h tin
th
1
~r. s oo g en usats an
The Agriculture Depart- Harrisonville, an nounce
e services at the Laurel Cliff
Brllre , sometunes
ment's Crop Reporting Service birth of their first child, a son, Free Me thodist Church were
he;. sons ho_bby with n:re. =•
blal\led the price decline since .Jimmy Lambert, .Jr., March 28 placed by Mr . and Mrs. Uoyd
He was mterested m guns
'dFeb ary on lower prices a( Pleasant Valley -Hospital. Wright in memory of Josie
and sportS sHooting, but he was · ~~ whe~ corn, upland cotton, The infant weighed 6 !bs., 8 ozs. Turner ; Mr . anct Mrs. Jack
not like a gun collector. He soybeans, tomatoes and milk. Grandparents are Mr. and Robson in memory of Mrs.
It ked to go to a lot of trap- 'Higher prices for cattle, onions Mrs. John Lambert, Rutland, Mary Heines ; a nd Mrs.
shoots, - BrUte told me . she and applies partially offset the and great-great-grandparents Marjori e Goelt and Robin
sometunes ltked to shoot guns decline ·
are Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cam pbell in memory of Mrs..,
herself."
selling at. $2.67 per Romin e, Rutland.
Ernestine Campbell.

·~bls

c~111_e

after~

Ruppert, ~.

b~

~hat

Farm
· prl·ce ., slump c-ontm•
. ues

lc..

~ Spears,

3 HP "HUFFY"

Po·meroy
Persona I Notes J

i~

disc~sed

Curn:

"

(prf!,sent drama : ~

was observed recently wlth a
:::: surpriSe party at the home of
The New Crea'tions, a youth Mr. 'and Mrs. Albert Pettit,
group uf the Bradbury Chw:ctr__, Pomeroy.
, .of Christ, presented an Easter
Gifts were presente\1 to Mrs.
drama ·on the life of Christ Pettit along with two cakes
Sunday evening at the church. .from her granddaughters,
The drama depicted the birth Vanessa Crites and Bessie
of Christ, His life when 12 years Dar.&amp;,t. Attending were Mr. and
old , His baptism, temptations, Mrs. Albert Pettit and
the water He turned into wine, children, Harry, Butch and
the Sermon on .the Moun t, the Tammy, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
sing of the temple , Pettit and Cindy, Mr. and Mrs.
Lazarus
from the dead, James Pettit and Jamie, Mr.
Peter's confession, Ule woman and Mrs. Adam Oldaker, Mark
at the well, the last supper, the and Sleven, Mr. and Mrs. .
betrayal, the crucifixion 'and Larry Hudnall, Mrs. Darst ·and
the resurrection.
Craig, l&gt;{rs. Crites, BIU Pettit
Narrators were Jeanette and Mrs. Fred Smith.
Ranson and Jeff Ranson, with . Sending gifts were Mrs. Lucy
the roles being taken by
Weir , MI. Vernon; Henry
Bing, Rodney Bailey, Rita Pettit, Columbus, and Mr. and
Bailey, Mike Miller, Bryan
Wilcox, Sherrie King, Desi
Jeffers, June Ann Hutton, --------~·
David Cole, Laura Hoover,
SERVICE CHANGED
Kevin King, Sherrie Barnhart,
LETART FALLS - Funeral
Beverly Wilcox, and Lisa
services scheduled for 3 p.m.
Roush . Terry Whitlatch and Thursday at the Letart Falls
Jim Hutton handled the stage Church of Christ for Mrs. Edith
selling.
Ann Hutton Wittekind, 25,
K th Ki
.
a Y ng was organrs1 Marietta, will not . be held.
with Maryln Wilcox as pianist. Instead there will be graveside
There was special music by the services at 3 p.m. Thursday at
Cherubs Choir composeR of the betart Falls Cemetery
KristiHaynes, MelanieArnold, following services at I p.m.
J ohnme
. Ar nod, David Hoover,
Thursday at the Doudna and
1
and Laura Roush. Singing in McClure Funeral Home in
the ad ult choir were Bill and Marietta.
Delores Bailey, Kathryn and
Glenn Evans, Paula Haynes,
Sh aron Kuhn, Je If and
J eanetle Ranson, Kat hy Kin
· g
.
.and Mike Miller.
::;:

~lean

rais~d

~aron

eOPENe
7DAYS

SALE PLANNEp
. SYRACUSE - Syracuse Boy
Scout Troop 242 will sponsor a
rummage sale beginning
Wednesday, April 2 through
April 5 in' .the building across
from Star Electric in Racine.
Proceeds ~re to be used for
camp fund .

·Mrs. Pettit recently ·spent a
week with Mr . and Mrs :.
Hudnall in

Middle~rt.

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· Tal~ about ni~htmares.
You dreamed yQ),Ir ,
dreadl house had become a hot house. And
that you were bad! y underinsured.
Well ... there's one
way to be sure you
won't bf: badly burned.
Get down to your
independent insurance
agent.
We're experts on
selecting the right pole
icies to protect you.
And then helping you
keep your property\
insured to value.

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.\ll:wullf~

AOir.NT

Reuter-Brogan ·

INSURANCE
PH. 992-5130

A WEEK

107 Sycamore

Pomeroy

If we can't

D&amp;D MEAT

help you, nobody

can.

E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
830

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IT'S APRIL 1st
DON'T BE FOOLED ON. YOUR BANKING NEEDS!

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FREE OF CHARGE
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FOR THREE DAYS
WED., THURS. and FRI., ·APRIL 2, 3, 4

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Modem
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All ads m.ust be in writing 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 rn
your ad. Free Ads will not be accepted by telephone.

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W. VA.

882-2525

LOOKING
FORA
JOB?

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Use the following Coupon for your Free Advertisement; ·
or submit it on another.. sheet of paper.

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FREE OFFER

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MY AD READS AS FOU.OWS:

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HI-LO
NECKLACE

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GOESSLER'S

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Jewelry StUre

.Court St., Pomeroy

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April 24 at the Zion Church .
Marcia Curn~ll from Operation .
Evangelize will speak on the
works of that group ~ · Closing song. was ' "Old
Rugged Cross" and Bonnie
Ranson of the Operation
Evangelize Team had the
ciosi~g prayer. Refreshmeryts
were served in the church
basement.

'~EARLY BIRD SPECIAL"

MEETING CANCELLED
A meeting of the Meigs
County Council of,Parenls and
Teachers scheduled for ThursReg. $249.95 .
~~1$ll$1'm:m~~t&lt;:&lt;:::::w::::' day night has been cancelled.
Save
$20.00
~. Next meeting will be May 1 at
.
~B · the Syracuse Elementary
® School with the cultural ar\s
exhibit to be on display, and
cJunty
winners announced .
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Mr. and Mrs. Roy Miller, Mr. The district spring conference
and Mrs. Gary Whaley, and will be May 10 at the Zaleski
Mrs.
Mildred
Meade, School, and Mrs. - Charles
Columbus. were Saturday Goeglein, council president,
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Albert requested that at least two
NEW HAVEN
Roush and -family.
representat,ives from each
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan E. Loftis, local PTA unit attend.
the former Barbara Kennedy, I
of Minnesota, spent the Easter
weekend here with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter R.
Kennedy, Pomeroy.
Guests· for a ham dinner OQ
Easier Sunday at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. William
Stephenson, Pomeroy, were
Nancy Whittekind,' Anita Van
Cooney and children, Lonnie
and Tom, Elyria, Mr. and Mrs. ·
Jerry Colmer, Shari, Billy and
Timmy, Mr. and Mrs. James '
Farley, Davy and Jimie, David
Johnson and Tammy, Randy
and Jimmie Snider.
Mrs. James Rafferty of
/
Payton is the guest of !&gt;Jr. and
Mrs. Paul Chapman and .
family.
WE WILL INSERT
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Whittle of
Worthington spent Easter
weekend here with her parents,
YOUR SITUAtiON WANTED AD
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Neuman.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Powell
had as their Easter dinner
~uests Mr. and Mrs. Ivan
Powell and son, Ivan Euge~e ,
Mrs. John Hoffman, Chester;
Mrs. Marjorie Goett, Robin
Campbell, and Mrs. Mary
!jraley and five sons, Pomeroy.
They all at tended Easter
services at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church. Afternoon visitors were William
Campbell 1111d daughter,
Michelle, New Haven, W. Va.

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ONE YElAR OLD- Robin
Dawn·Manuel'eelebrated her
first birthday March .8 at the
home of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald
Manuel,
Racine. Cake Inscribed
"Happy First Birthday,
Robin" was served with Ice
cream, pop and coffee-to-Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Manuel;
Tommy and Terrie, Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Manuel, Pvt. Jell
Grady, Cheryl Moore,
Jacson Moore, Jeff Hysell,
Diane Lawson, Erie Lawson
and Robin's sisters, Rhoda
South and Doolta Manuel.
Unable to attend but sendlug
gUts were Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Bush and Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Hupp.

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·A Bible drama on the life of
Christ highlighted the monthly
meeting of the Meigs County
Women's Fellowship · at the
Bradbury Church of Christ ~ .
Jeanette Ranson was song
leader for the service wit~ Mrs.
Maryln Wilcox at the piano.
Participating in the drama by
the Bradbury youth wereLaura Hoover, .Rod Bailey,
Kevi King, Mike Miller, Dave
Cole, Bryan Wilcox, June
Hutton, Rita Bailey, Beverly
Wilcox, Lisa Roush, Pest
Jeffers, Sherri Barnhart,_
Sharon Bing and Sherrie King .
Ruby Rife presided at the
business meeting With Miss
Hoover reading the secretary's
report', and ,Cath.erine Russell
the treasurer's Ieport. Mrs.
Wilcox was appointed to send
cards to the sick apd shut-in.
Sharon Groniger was · appointed
assistant
vice
president.
Plans were made for a-talent
night presentation at the
Bradford Church of Christ May
22. Next meeting of the
Women's Fellowship will be

You will receive a doUar If
Polly uses your . favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve,
Polly's Problem or solution,to a
problem. Write Polly In care of
thl. newspaper.

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Mrs. Lelah·- Weatherby was
won by Mrs. Etta Will .
Following the potluck dinner '
preceding the meeling. at- ·
tended by both the auxiliarY.
members .and legionnaires, .. a
cake and ice cream were
served in observance of the
Legion birthday~
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.-1ge of brass bed
determines care.

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County women meet

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prizes.

Four girls have been selected
to attend Buckeye Girls State
at Capital University in June
with the Auxiliary co-sponsors
to be the Citizens National
Bank, Preceptor Beta Beta,
and Xi Gamma Mu.
A leadership training
program was announced for
April12 beginning at 9 a.m. at
Post 62, Chillicothe. 'j'he_
registration fee is $1.50. The
annual Girls' State tea will be
hos ted by Juncton City on May
18 at I p.m. with Mrs. Lester
l)ierritt, director of Girls'
State, to be the speaker.
The Poppy Day open house at
the Sandusky Home was announced for Sunday, April17.. A
thank you note was read from

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MAIL TO:

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qassified
The Daily Sentinel

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Name
Address

:City

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Compare This.
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We. .Have .Safety Deposit
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· 3" n·zg.
· h x 5" .wz
w.r.·dex ·
;noxes
..••"' 21" Lo_ng for Only '3.50
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Per ·Year!

~Also
·oiher; SizP-s .S;nd Pric~s•
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Servi~e. ciuirges ·Are Costly•

New Haven

County Bank :· .
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Jimes H . Layne

Ray

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' HOURS
Mon.-Wed. 9,2

Thursday 9-12
I Drive-In 9-2)
Friday 9-.2, 5-7:30
I Drive-In 9-1:30)

Llovd Roush ·
Michael Shaw
Weaver

Howard Burris

882-2135

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fMPLOYEES

DIRECTORS

A. ~ K . Mcef'u ng -Pres • .
.oonald Foglesong -Chair .
Charles R. Ord

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West Virginia

C. ·R. Ord- Exec . · V.P.
· ~amlts H. Lav~:~e, Cashier

... \VHY? ·rarABank
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Mae RousH ·
Lethia B . · Bumgarner
Barbara ~ef\kl~
Lona Howartl

Lilian Fields
Na~cv

Connie" Roush

' Hele.n FieldS

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For Using Your Money! ! _!

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Holbrook ·
·Enid Adains •
.•. Betty. . FOXIP .

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A Good Bar1k in a Good
Area

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Raodv van ,fllr,l,f[ ·Asst. Casbler

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Oteck With Us
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Ana Save•

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6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. April!. 1975

. Pros and Cons on Anti-Vote
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Please add my voice, and the. voices of 111any qfmy friends,
to that of "Involved but Di~couraged," who is tired of voting for
thehiast objectionable candida!~ and ' wants
additional box
added after the list of contenders I'd glad!~ vote "Yes!" to " !
Want .None of These" ill thought 'it would brhg out worthi er
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candidates.
But there's anol)ler alternative. Say I go to vote on election
day and find three male can~:da tes for! he same office. I am not
enthused. Bijl wail, there is a fourth candrilate - a woman. I
utter a·silent prayer and vote for her (even though I may know.
little about her). .
Perhaps she will not be a perfec.t answer to my prayer, but
I'll bet she won't be a bifworse than one oft he three men, and she
may prove a whole heap better.
.
One honest woman in office, reinforced by other honest
worr.; n officials all over the country, should give ' politicians
something to think about. After considerable research I've come
to the conclusion tirat women, often being more conscientious,
empathetic, intelligent and honest than ~en , wQuld do a b~tter
job of ruMing the country..
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\ __ No doubt you will be surprised w~en you see my signature.~R. BERT W.

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:4uxiliary mdkes ~ontrjbutions

-Generation ~ap
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By Helen IUld ~ue Bottel
an

Dear Mr. Bert:
· As women, we thank you for the kind words. But as persons
'we must add that voting for an unknown candidate just because
she's female is as hazardous as voting for a candidate just
because his name appears first on the list.
WE vote for becoming better informed before we go to the
polls. - HELEN AND SUE

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Helc . and Sue: ·
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I am a student of political science and a holder of an elected
position at the Univer.ity of Delaware. Thus my interestin "I but
D's" suggeslior: for a changed ballot.
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True, many voters do, indeed, cast th~ir voteuor the least
objeclionable.cand idate. However, I certamly do not agree that
the addition of an "I Want None of These" box to the list of names
would he asolution.'
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"!but D," like many Ainericans, is not being a responsible
citizen. People like him believe that casting their vote on election
day fuUills their duty. If they really .cared, they'd get involved.
Two hackneyed but releva.nt phrases come to mind : "The
people get the type of governtfle,nt they deserve," and "With
Freedom comes responsibility. "
Simply put, this means that if you don't like the candidate, "!
but D" and company , you should run as an alternate, or find
someone who will !
I become increasingly incensed at Americans who seem to
silently express, "Don't bother me, I only live here." DOUGLAS B. ( For Freedom and Responsibility 1)

.. Contributions ul $5 each were
made to the American Red
Cross, the Cancer Society, the
Heart Fund, and Easter seals
by the All)eric-an Legion
Auxiliary' of Feeney - Bennett r
Post }28, meeting at · the hall
Wednesday night.
The unit also voted to send
$Hi to Mrs. Clifford Adkins for
the district community service
party_ at the Athens Mental
Health Center April 13 with
several members to send game

Brenda Cunningham for
flowers sent during her
hospitalization. Reported ill
were 1 Mrs. Ruth Gosney,
Vanessa . Morris, . ·Emma
.-Wayland, Roy Miller, Bert
Bodimer, Mrs. Kathy ·SU!ilh. It
was · noted that Albert Roush
has been hospitalized.
The door prize donalerl hy
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TUESDAY
STATED meeting of Middleport Masonic Lodge 363,
7:30p.m. at temple. AU.Master
Masons are invited.
MEIGS Saddle Sitters Club,
7:30 p.'m. at Junior Kennedy
residence, Tuppers Plains.
New members welcome. Each
old member is to take a
potential new memberf
A!\INIVERSARY Dinner of
Ladies Auxiliary, Middleport
Fire Department, 6:30p.m. at
Oscar's in Gallipolis. Members
to meet
,_, at fire station at 5:45
p.m ,
OHIO Eta Phi Chapter, Bel&lt;.
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:'30 p.m.
at the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. office. Girl of
the year to be elected. Cultqral
report by Dottie Musser, with
Libby Sayre and Joyce Bartimus, hostesses.

Polly's Poin
dY PifLLY €RAMER

By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - What do
you recon\mend for polishing a
brass bed• Is there something
one can put on the brass after
polishing to prevent it from
tarnishing? I would certainly
like to know and thank you. BETTY.
DEAR BETTY - If yours lB
a new brass bed It Is doubtless
already lacquered to prevent
tarnish so would only need to
be wiped off with a ·soft, dry
cloth. MIDe 111 an old one and I
had It professionally polished
after some paint was removed
and then lacquer was appUed.
With years of use plus someone
mlstakeo!y using polish, that
protective finish wore away.
After It was cle~ed abd
polished with a eoifimerelol
brass cleaner available at
hardware stores. and supermarkets, I sprayed on tWo
coals of .lacquer, drying between each of . them . .I held
newspaper back of the part
being sprayed to protect things
nearby. - POLLY.

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with the canners of
dietetic foods who charge such
Douglas:
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outlandish prices for their
Your points are Well put and well taken, but you overlook one
products. They know diabetics,
sad fact of life: it costs like the dickens to run for office. If a
etc., have to have it and ·will
candidate can't afford (or wangle ) promoti6p, he or she scarcely
buy. I have canned fruit myseU
stands a chance in today's political arena. -HELEN
and It Is much better flavored
NOTE FROM SUE :.And if he or she "wangles," there goes
when no sweetener is added but
"freedom" out the window. It then runs the chance of becoming
just cooked In its own juices. "responsibility TO" the group that provides the ·money.
CURTY.
Pity ... - SUE
DEAR POLLY - My sister
is in the hopsital and her
elbows were becoming Sj)re
from· lyin~ down and from
sitting up to read. To remedy
Megan Elizabeth Wolfe , Bradbury and Nichole; Mr.
this I made her a pair ~~
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl .and Mrs. Carl Wolfe, Tricia
"Elbow
Softeners" from four
POMEROY Chapter 186,
Wolfe, Racine, and Jeffrey and Wendy, Racine; Mrs.
circles of soft material, stuffed
Powell Bradbury, son of Mr. Dolly Wolfe, Apple Grove; Mr. - OES, 7:45p.m. at the Pomeroy with cotton and sewed together
and Mrs. Asa Bradbury, and Mrs. Pat O'Brien, Ada ; Masonic Temple .
around tile edges. Two short
Circleville, were christened and Mr . and Mrs.· C. P.
WAHAMA Band Boosters, pieces of elastic were covered
Sunday at the Heath Methodist Bradbury, Middleport. A cake
regular meeting. } :30 p.m. at with lace and then the ends of
Church, Middleport. They were served following the dinner
school. All members asked to an elastic piece. sewed to the
the grandchildren of Mr . and was decorated one side in pink
front. side of a circle on opattend.
Mrs. Charles Bradbury.
and the other in blue.
posite sides. This way her hand
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Rev. Robert Bumgarner
can
slip right thro,ugh the lace
CHESTER Council 323 D of A
offiCiated at the christening
Tuesday 8 p.m. All members covered elastic that is pushed
rites which were followed by a
CLASS TO SELL
taking part in rally urged to right up to her elbow, This also
buffet dinner at the Bradbury
The junior cosmetology class attend.
would be helpful to many
home .
Attending
the at Meigs High Sehool will hold
Senior Citizens. - DOROTHY
christening ~nd the dinner a rummage sale April4 and 5 in
B.
WEDNESDAY
were Mr. and.._.Mrs. Gene the basement of t~e Masonic
POMEROY Lodge 164 F&amp;AM ' DEAR POLLY- For over 25
Wright, Jeannie · and Terry, Temple, Middleport, from 9 7:30 p.m. All master masons years I have saved the water in
Circleville; Mr. and Mrs. Asa a.m. to 4 p.m.
which potatoes were cooked to
invited.--.,
make gravy (poured into a
MIDDLEPORT UTERARY small pan until ready to make
Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m. at the the gravy) .' Now I als,o use
home of Dr. Kathryn Philson . ·some of it to mash the. potatoes
Mrs. James Ti Ius to review instead of turning on the gas to
"Working" by Studs Terkel. heat milk. I use dry milk In the
Roll call will be a comment on hot water and find the potatoes
the program.
Beginning at 11:00 A.M.
stay hot longer. - ANN.
We have sold our farm and will sell the following chaHels~
DEAR POLLY - I have
SOCIAL
Security discovered a quick and conlocated 17 miles S. E. of Jackson, Ohio, 5 miles east of Oak
representative at Middleport venient way to give medicine to
Hill and 3 miles N.,:N. of Centerville (Thurman) on
Jackson County Road 6 (signs posted) .
Village Council Chambers, 9:30
FARM MACHINERY
a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
David Brown Li vedrive 1200 dies.el tractor with factory
ATHENS County Satsang
cab, wide front full hydraul ic, full power and on good
Society
will present a public
rubber ; Int. TO 9 Crawler tractor with Drott hi -lift 6ft.
lecture at 7:30 p.m. at Room
skid shovel ; Allis Chalmers WD tractor whh wide front,
• 327, Baker Center, Athens, with
PS wheels, etc. ; Allis Chalmers WC tractor for parts ;
Ford 3 pt. breaking plow (3-14) with coverboards; J?hn
Barbara Roaden as speaker. · Veterans Memorial Hospital
Deere 494 planter with disc: openers, rubber press wheels,
BIG Bend Neighborhooir was provided with nu.tcups and
{ready to go) ; New Holland ¥ode,l 352 mixer-grinder with,
of leaders, a8sistant napkins for both St. Patrick's
meeting
sheller attachments and.flotatiOflt tireS £ Fox Model ~A
Day and Easter by the Junior
field chopper ( PTO) wi!h Fo;i 'Oo,e row Model C54 corn
leaders and
committee American Legion of Feeneyhead ; Fox Model 476 hay pick -up a!!achmen!, (Nearly
members at the home of Mrs.
new) ; New Idea Model325 pull !ype picker (2 row N) wi!h
Pat Thomas, -service unit Bennett Post 128, Middleport.
husk ing bed ; New Idea Model 314 shelling unit to -lit pull
That was one of the activities
type picker ; New Idea Model604 si lage wagon on HD New
director, · 9:30 a.m . Mrs. reportedonatarecentmeeling
Idea gears; Gehl silage v;agon on Gehl 706 gears, (both
Isabelle Foster district of the junior unit with their
wagons fr ont unloading) ; A. C. ensilage blower , pipe and
to be present. For advisor, Mrs. Bonnie Dailey, at
director,
elbow. ( PTOI ; J&amp;M 200 bushel grav ity bed and side
directions
to the Thoma home the hall. 11 was.also noted that
boards ; 3 flat bed wagons and gea~s ;'_A . C. 15-7 grain drill
telephone 992-2277.
two boxes of favors, small gifts
on low rubber {complete}; ·Hesston PT 10 mowercondi!loner (10 fl . cufl; F ;~rm-hand ·wheel •ake; Ford 3pt
THURSDAY
and napkins for use in March
hi-speed rake ; Farm-hand tedder i Ford 3 pt . rotary
SPECIAL
meeting
Preceptor
and April had been sent to the
mower (5 ft .); 3 pl. rotary mower (6ft.) ; Brillion 3 pf.
Chapter,
Beta
Sigma
Phi
Ohfo ·Soldiers . ilnd Sailors'
pasture seeder ; J . D. 2-sed!on steel. harrow ; Ford (3 pt .l
'2-row cultivators ; J. D. 2-row rotary hoe ; 3 pt. sub-sailer; 3
Sorority, 7:45 p.m. to make Home In Sandusky for the
pf . !rencher; 3 pl. carryall; 20 fl. single chain bale
final plans for sponsoring diabetic ward "adopted" by
elevator with eledric motor ; 16 ff. grain auger (Sin.) with
Spring Fling.musical .Aprill2. the unit.
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· elt?ctrlc ·motor ; Plus miscellaneous small farm. items
Members
to
take
candy
prizes.
Another
large
box of
fOund In sale of his kind. Some ·ant ique horse equipment.
TV
stamp
books
and
clothing;-'toilet
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articles,
and
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14ft. cattle and stOck traile-r With tandem wHeels, electric
stockholder
names.
bed
linens
is
ready
for)nailing
brakes, racks, etc.; 2 Patterson combination chutes and
head sjates; good set Ranger livestock scales ; 5 Pamline
· EVANGELINE Chapter 172, to the Peck of Wee Ones at
oilers ; 4 &lt;'1-t!le feed 'bunks ; 2 portable hay and grain
der of the Eastern Star, 7:30 .. Columbus. Carla J . Miller was
'racks: Urii·co feed c4rt; ptvs smaller l.ivestock equipment.
m.
at the Middle ort Masonic welcomed as a new mem~r .
FURNITURE-MOTOR BIKES, ETC.( Sells First)
m.
le
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.. It .was_noted that there ..ui
Yamaf1a Model 125 molor bik~ ; .:Yamaha Model 60. motor •
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not
be a district jWJior con,
bike; small 6u!-board 1119tor'.; ~d i ning room suite with
REVIVAL
now
In
progress
ferenee
this year since there
table, chairs, buffet, china closet; bedroom suite with
this · week at Rutland Cum- are 9flly two active units in
bookcase double bed, mattress and box sprl'ngs, ·dresser,
etc .i 2 oak chests; ·Hide-a-bed; occasional chairs; end
m'unity Church 7:30p.m. Rev. District 8, but that entries will
tables ; pool tcible i apartment . · s;· ~e gas ,range;
· William Owen speaker.
be judged and sent to the ·
Westinghouse refrlgeralor ; lawn cfiairs; lamps ; dishes;
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CATHOLI&lt;;
WOMEN's
Cl_ub,
Department
of Ohio for
kitchen utensils ; some bedding; pluS usual amount -small
Pol!leroy
Sacred
Heari
-Parrsh,
~ompetition.
Items, household items.
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T.rm s·• Cash'
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lunch Served.
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crafts by Shirley Huston. ·
HOSTS GUESTS
REVIV,\Lnowin progress at
MIDDLEPORT .,:. _EasterFirst Church of God, Syracuse, weekend guests of Hllah Jones,
, .
through April 6, 7:30 lp.m. ThirdSI. ; Middleport,wereh~r
S.toConductod By
nightly. Wilbrir Leifheit and meceandnephew, V1v1an Tillis
O:MERSON MARTING &amp; SONS, AUCTIONEERS
.• (ie,orge Oiler, p~stors. Public, and Jimmy Shell, both of Pomt
L..•;,;3l;;,;;S,;;.Ma;;;,;'";.s;.'·.--·33•5•-l,llirr~:'""·'~="'·"'w~
.~~:.;hi;,;,n.;a.;to•n•C•.•H.;,.,.o•h•io_., 'l invite.d.
Pleasant.

Children are christened

AUCTION

SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1975 ·

Junior group
has meeting

my infant son. I thoroughly
clean with hot Soap and water
and boil a small bottle ' (the
kiild nose drops or eye drops
come in) and then put the
required amount of medicine in
it. Cover the bottle by pulling a
nipple over it and baby suck~
· the medicine out with no mess
and iittle bother. - SANDI.
DEAR SANDI - How I wish
I had thought of this years ago.
It always seemed to me that
my babies missed haU the
medlelue In a spoon. Be certain
though the bottle Is sterilized
and has no traces of other
medlelue In IL ""POL'L Y.

LAZY 8 FARMS -.614:682-6751 ·.

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Mrs. Grtmm marks
6Oth year today
A birthday dinner was held
Easter Sunday at the home.?f
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Tayler in
Middleport honoring .the birth- .
day of Mrs. Neva Grimm.
Attending were Mr. and Mrfi.
Taylor and Lonnie; Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Grimm, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Johnson of
Athens , and Mr. and Mrs. Tim
Taylor of Elyria. Mrs. Grimm
is observing her 60th biithday
today.

GARDEN ROTARY
TILLER!

MTD
TillERS

·Briggs &amp;
Stratton
Engine

Reg. 5329.95 ·

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SAYRE HARDWARE

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:7The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomer·uy, 0 .. 'l'ucsdi!Y, i\pr·ill, I~i5

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: Accqsed inurdei-er DOt a favorite sOn
· ' ·HAMILTON, Ohio (UP!) ..James Ruppert often allowed
65-year-old mother to
.• ·shovel snow and was repor) edly not one of her favorite
sons . .James today 1s charged
'' with the Easter murders of his
mother, his brother, his
brother's wife and their eight
children.
an unemployed
draftsman who neighbors said
has not worked steadily during
the past few years, is being
held Wider $200,000 dollars
bond. Although a family friend
said there might have been
lriction between Ruppert and
"his 42-yelir-old brother,
'Leonard - known as Pinkybtirer neighbors said James'
motirer had often said she
might have n·e-glected him in
favor of his brother.
James, unmarried and out of
work for about three months,
·· was living with his widowed
. mO'tli'er wh~n the murders were
committed during an Easter .
Sunday family gathering.
The killings are the largest
.
rde 0 f
b
01
:·•mass mu r mem ers
·· the same family in American
•·
• history.
~ One neighbor, Mrs. Ann
said the situation
- ~,. t..Tea 1edb y ou toQ1awor k J ames
vlng · wi h h'
h
m I rs rhot er was
'•· mo
• "sometimes odd. "
·
•V' Mother Sbovee
1 d' Snow ·
, "For instance, when Jimmy
", was there an d th ere was snow
~- to be shoveledd, inI never once
'' saw Jimmy o g it. Billie
'; (Mrs. Charity Rupgert, James '
'. mother) had to do It or get a
~. neighbor," said M•s. Spears-.
~: "I find it odd !~at a 4().year·~ old son .~ho was m good health •.
- ~ wouldn t go out and shovel
.•snow for hrs 65-year-&lt;&gt;ld mo.:ther," she added.
-~ .When Mrs. Spears and BiUie

talked it was usually about
Mrs. Spears' eight-year-old came ru Court
,
"lie·was a smart student and
politics, but sometimes they daughter, ·Eiice, had been in
".Jimmie wasn't there this a .·. good kid,'' remembered
o.iscussed one of Mrs. 1\upthe Ruppert house a few hours sunday night and 1
over Fischer. "He was not an odd1
pert's sons.
,.
before _ the other relatives to court to see if this was the ball, not a troublemaker."
"She talked about .Pinky to arrived Sunday.
same guy," Said one of James'
James is a C:athOlic, but
. me," said Mrs. ·Spears, "She
"Elice took an Easter basket , friends · at Monday's arraign- · preists here don't recall him
· Wf very proud bf him. To be over to Billie and stayed about ment. "I can't believe all this is attending · church regularly in
truth full, I can'trccall her ever an hour," Mrs. Spears said. hapening.
recent years.
mentioning Jimmie."
"Billie told her the family was
" I've never heard Jimmie
Neighbors said they knew of
Roy Zinuners, who lives coming over later that'
·say a cuss word in my life. This no sex ual problems and,
across. the street from the noon, but Jinunie stayed up- is hard to fathom. The way the althougl) James,frequented the
Ruppert home and who says he stairs the whole time Elice was talk is going around, the people tavern, he was not known as a
had been a 4().year friend of there. " '·
in this town have got him heavy drinker:
Mrs. Ruppert,saidtheremight
About every Sunday night already convicted."
Psychiatrists will examine
have
friction between the James would have some beer
Dan Fischer, knew James at the suspect this week,
two brothers.
at a neighborhood tavern.
Hamilton catholic High School.
' '
''That's
I gather from
'
what Billie has told me," said
Zimmers. "BiJlie lo. her
husband when the boys were
young and with Pinky being the
oldest, she said she must have
· '
unintentionally
neg lected
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The bushel, dropped· 19 cents from dropped 20-cents to .$10.60'!ler
James. Jimmy might have prices receiver! by farmers for mid-February and was one hundredweight. 'I:his category,
resented that.
their commodities declined for cent below a year ago. Oal.s ·at known as, food grains, was 28
Good To Mother
the fifth straight month , plung- $1.46were off 12 cents a bushel, per cent lower on an average
"Pinky was extra good to his. mg another 2_ per cent durmg barley'dropped 34 cents during than one year ago and 7 per
mother and I'm afraid that the month ending March 15, the the month to $2.55, and grain cent-lower than last month.
Jimmy took advantage of her " Agrrcullure Department sorghum at $4·03 per hundred!Continued on page 10)
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reported
Monday
weight
was
down
18
cents.
Only
said the 71-year-old Zimmers .
· . ·
. .
"When Billie needed a reThe latest ftg~es mdlCate oats were selling at more this
fr'
1 Pi k bo ht 1.1 1
farmers are recervmg 15 per year than mid-March, 1974.
REVIVAL SE;T
rgera or, n Y ug
or cent less for the'rr commodities
The fe d grains index
A two-week revr·val wr'll be
her. When BiUie needed a new
.
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thrs year than m March 1974 dropped 6 per cent by mid- held at the Freedom Gospel
davenport Pinky took care of
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The.last time farm commodity . March.
Mission, Bald Knob, beginning
'·;'And,Pinkyalsohadhisown prices rose was
Octodber,
Wheat, at $3.65 per bushel, .Sdnday, April 6 at 7:30p.m.
horne
· an d 1amt.1y to proVl'd e 1974, when. theyaseregrstere a 4 was down 30 cents
from
d
d mid- Evangelist will be Rev . Willard·
1
h
J'
per cen1 mere .
February, rye roppe 26 cents Carney, Charleston. Special
or. But, w enever muny was , Then the do·wnward sprr
· al
$2 15
b bel d .
ct
an nee singing by Dan Ha)·man an
out of work he carne .to stay , be ·
ff 15
r cent r'n to . per us
· h'rs mother but I don!• November,
gan-o · · per
pe cent ·n
the Hymntimers and others.
wr_th
3
1
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The
public is invited. ·
thmk he gave her much sup- Dec be 1 5
FIRST CHILD BORN
r ent in
t
"
em
r
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pe
c
·
Mr
por
in
HARRISONVILLE .
FLOWERS GIVEN
Z. ·
January
and 3 per cent
ber t ,
t
muners sar'd J ames . was· ad F
b
and
Mrs.
·
rrimmy
Lam
Altar
flowers for· ·the Eas
e ruary.
th
· er
Is h tin
th
1
~r. s oo g en usats an
The Agriculture Depart- Harrisonville, an nounce
e services at the Laurel Cliff
Brllre , sometunes
ment's Crop Reporting Service birth of their first child, a son, Free Me thodist Church were
he;. sons ho_bby with n:re. =•
blal\led the price decline since .Jimmy Lambert, .Jr., March 28 placed by Mr . and Mrs. Uoyd
He was mterested m guns
'dFeb ary on lower prices a( Pleasant Valley -Hospital. Wright in memory of Josie
and sportS sHooting, but he was · ~~ whe~ corn, upland cotton, The infant weighed 6 !bs., 8 ozs. Turner ; Mr . anct Mrs. Jack
not like a gun collector. He soybeans, tomatoes and milk. Grandparents are Mr. and Robson in memory of Mrs.
It ked to go to a lot of trap- 'Higher prices for cattle, onions Mrs. John Lambert, Rutland, Mary Heines ; a nd Mrs.
shoots, - BrUte told me . she and applies partially offset the and great-great-grandparents Marjori e Goelt and Robin
sometunes ltked to shoot guns decline ·
are Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cam pbell in memory of Mrs..,
herself."
selling at. $2.67 per Romin e, Rutland.
Ernestine Campbell.

·~bls

c~111_e

after~

Ruppert, ~.

b~

~hat

Farm
· prl·ce ., slump c-ontm•
. ues

lc..

~ Spears,

3 HP "HUFFY"

Po·meroy
Persona I Notes J

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disc~sed

Curn:

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(prf!,sent drama : ~

was observed recently wlth a
:::: surpriSe party at the home of
The New Crea'tions, a youth Mr. 'and Mrs. Albert Pettit,
group uf the Bradbury Chw:ctr__, Pomeroy.
, .of Christ, presented an Easter
Gifts were presente\1 to Mrs.
drama ·on the life of Christ Pettit along with two cakes
Sunday evening at the church. .from her granddaughters,
The drama depicted the birth Vanessa Crites and Bessie
of Christ, His life when 12 years Dar.&amp;,t. Attending were Mr. and
old , His baptism, temptations, Mrs. Albert Pettit and
the water He turned into wine, children, Harry, Butch and
the Sermon on .the Moun t, the Tammy, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
sing of the temple , Pettit and Cindy, Mr. and Mrs.
Lazarus
from the dead, James Pettit and Jamie, Mr.
Peter's confession, Ule woman and Mrs. Adam Oldaker, Mark
at the well, the last supper, the and Sleven, Mr. and Mrs. .
betrayal, the crucifixion 'and Larry Hudnall, Mrs. Darst ·and
the resurrection.
Craig, l&gt;{rs. Crites, BIU Pettit
Narrators were Jeanette and Mrs. Fred Smith.
Ranson and Jeff Ranson, with . Sending gifts were Mrs. Lucy
the roles being taken by
Weir , MI. Vernon; Henry
Bing, Rodney Bailey, Rita Pettit, Columbus, and Mr. and
Bailey, Mike Miller, Bryan
Wilcox, Sherrie King, Desi
Jeffers, June Ann Hutton, --------~·
David Cole, Laura Hoover,
SERVICE CHANGED
Kevin King, Sherrie Barnhart,
LETART FALLS - Funeral
Beverly Wilcox, and Lisa
services scheduled for 3 p.m.
Roush . Terry Whitlatch and Thursday at the Letart Falls
Jim Hutton handled the stage Church of Christ for Mrs. Edith
selling.
Ann Hutton Wittekind, 25,
K th Ki
.
a Y ng was organrs1 Marietta, will not . be held.
with Maryln Wilcox as pianist. Instead there will be graveside
There was special music by the services at 3 p.m. Thursday at
Cherubs Choir composeR of the betart Falls Cemetery
KristiHaynes, MelanieArnold, following services at I p.m.
J ohnme
. Ar nod, David Hoover,
Thursday at the Doudna and
1
and Laura Roush. Singing in McClure Funeral Home in
the ad ult choir were Bill and Marietta.
Delores Bailey, Kathryn and
Glenn Evans, Paula Haynes,
Sh aron Kuhn, Je If and
J eanetle Ranson, Kat hy Kin
· g
.
.and Mike Miller.
::;:

~lean

rais~d

~aron

eOPENe
7DAYS

SALE PLANNEp
. SYRACUSE - Syracuse Boy
Scout Troop 242 will sponsor a
rummage sale beginning
Wednesday, April 2 through
April 5 in' .the building across
from Star Electric in Racine.
Proceeds ~re to be used for
camp fund .

·Mrs. Pettit recently ·spent a
week with Mr . and Mrs :.
Hudnall in

Middle~rt.

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· Tal~ about ni~htmares.
You dreamed yQ),Ir ,
dreadl house had become a hot house. And
that you were bad! y underinsured.
Well ... there's one
way to be sure you
won't bf: badly burned.
Get down to your
independent insurance
agent.
We're experts on
selecting the right pole
icies to protect you.
And then helping you
keep your property\
insured to value.

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.\ll:wullf~

AOir.NT

Reuter-Brogan ·

INSURANCE
PH. 992-5130

A WEEK

107 Sycamore

Pomeroy

If we can't

D&amp;D MEAT

help you, nobody

can.

E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
830

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IT'S APRIL 1st
DON'T BE FOOLED ON. YOUR BANKING NEEDS!

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All ads m.ust be in writing 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 rn
your ad. Free Ads will not be accepted by telephone.

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882-2525

LOOKING
FORA
JOB?

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or submit it on another.. sheet of paper.

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MY AD READS AS FOU.OWS:

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HI-LO
NECKLACE

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GOESSLER'S

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Jewelry StUre

.Court St., Pomeroy

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April 24 at the Zion Church .
Marcia Curn~ll from Operation .
Evangelize will speak on the
works of that group ~ · Closing song. was ' "Old
Rugged Cross" and Bonnie
Ranson of the Operation
Evangelize Team had the
ciosi~g prayer. Refreshmeryts
were served in the church
basement.

'~EARLY BIRD SPECIAL"

MEETING CANCELLED
A meeting of the Meigs
County Council of,Parenls and
Teachers scheduled for ThursReg. $249.95 .
~~1$ll$1'm:m~~t&lt;:&lt;:::::w::::' day night has been cancelled.
Save
$20.00
~. Next meeting will be May 1 at
.
~B · the Syracuse Elementary
® School with the cultural ar\s
exhibit to be on display, and
cJunty
winners announced .
'
.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Miller, Mr. The district spring conference
and Mrs. Gary Whaley, and will be May 10 at the Zaleski
Mrs.
Mildred
Meade, School, and Mrs. - Charles
Columbus. were Saturday Goeglein, council president,
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Albert requested that at least two
NEW HAVEN
Roush and -family.
representat,ives from each
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan E. Loftis, local PTA unit attend.
the former Barbara Kennedy, I
of Minnesota, spent the Easter
weekend here with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter R.
Kennedy, Pomeroy.
Guests· for a ham dinner OQ
Easier Sunday at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. William
Stephenson, Pomeroy, were
Nancy Whittekind,' Anita Van
Cooney and children, Lonnie
and Tom, Elyria, Mr. and Mrs. ·
Jerry Colmer, Shari, Billy and
Timmy, Mr. and Mrs. James '
Farley, Davy and Jimie, David
Johnson and Tammy, Randy
and Jimmie Snider.
Mrs. James Rafferty of
/
Payton is the guest of !&gt;Jr. and
Mrs. Paul Chapman and .
family.
WE WILL INSERT
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Whittle of
Worthington spent Easter
weekend here with her parents,
YOUR SITUAtiON WANTED AD
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Neuman.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Powell
had as their Easter dinner
~uests Mr. and Mrs. Ivan
Powell and son, Ivan Euge~e ,
Mrs. John Hoffman, Chester;
Mrs. Marjorie Goett, Robin
Campbell, and Mrs. Mary
!jraley and five sons, Pomeroy.
They all at tended Easter
services at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church. Afternoon visitors were William
Campbell 1111d daughter,
Michelle, New Haven, W. Va.

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ONE YElAR OLD- Robin
Dawn·Manuel'eelebrated her
first birthday March .8 at the
home of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald
Manuel,
Racine. Cake Inscribed
"Happy First Birthday,
Robin" was served with Ice
cream, pop and coffee-to-Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Manuel;
Tommy and Terrie, Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Manuel, Pvt. Jell
Grady, Cheryl Moore,
Jacson Moore, Jeff Hysell,
Diane Lawson, Erie Lawson
and Robin's sisters, Rhoda
South and Doolta Manuel.
Unable to attend but sendlug
gUts were Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Bush and Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Hupp.

.
·A Bible drama on the life of
Christ highlighted the monthly
meeting of the Meigs County
Women's Fellowship · at the
Bradbury Church of Christ ~ .
Jeanette Ranson was song
leader for the service wit~ Mrs.
Maryln Wilcox at the piano.
Participating in the drama by
the Bradbury youth wereLaura Hoover, .Rod Bailey,
Kevi King, Mike Miller, Dave
Cole, Bryan Wilcox, June
Hutton, Rita Bailey, Beverly
Wilcox, Lisa Roush, Pest
Jeffers, Sherri Barnhart,_
Sharon Bing and Sherrie King .
Ruby Rife presided at the
business meeting With Miss
Hoover reading the secretary's
report', and ,Cath.erine Russell
the treasurer's Ieport. Mrs.
Wilcox was appointed to send
cards to the sick apd shut-in.
Sharon Groniger was · appointed
assistant
vice
president.
Plans were made for a-talent
night presentation at the
Bradford Church of Christ May
22. Next meeting of the
Women's Fellowship will be

You will receive a doUar If
Polly uses your . favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve,
Polly's Problem or solution,to a
problem. Write Polly In care of
thl. newspaper.

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Mrs. Lelah·- Weatherby was
won by Mrs. Etta Will .
Following the potluck dinner '
preceding the meeling. at- ·
tended by both the auxiliarY.
members .and legionnaires, .. a
cake and ice cream were
served in observance of the
Legion birthday~
~·

.-1ge of brass bed
determines care.

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County women meet

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prizes.

Four girls have been selected
to attend Buckeye Girls State
at Capital University in June
with the Auxiliary co-sponsors
to be the Citizens National
Bank, Preceptor Beta Beta,
and Xi Gamma Mu.
A leadership training
program was announced for
April12 beginning at 9 a.m. at
Post 62, Chillicothe. 'j'he_
registration fee is $1.50. The
annual Girls' State tea will be
hos ted by Juncton City on May
18 at I p.m. with Mrs. Lester
l)ierritt, director of Girls'
State, to be the speaker.
The Poppy Day open house at
the Sandusky Home was announced for Sunday, April17.. A
thank you note was read from

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MAIL TO:

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The Daily Sentinel

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
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Compare This.
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We. .Have .Safety Deposit
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· 3" n·zg.
· h x 5" .wz
w.r.·dex ·
;noxes
..••"' 21" Lo_ng for Only '3.50
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·oiher; SizP-s .S;nd Pric~s•
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New Haven

County Bank :· .
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Jimes H . Layne

Ray

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' HOURS
Mon.-Wed. 9,2

Thursday 9-12
I Drive-In 9-2)
Friday 9-.2, 5-7:30
I Drive-In 9-1:30)

Llovd Roush ·
Michael Shaw
Weaver

Howard Burris

882-2135

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DIRECTORS

A. ~ K . Mcef'u ng -Pres • .
.oonald Foglesong -Chair .
Charles R. Ord

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West Virginia

C. ·R. Ord- Exec . · V.P.
· ~amlts H. Lav~:~e, Cashier

... \VHY? ·rarABank
• I ~

Mae RousH ·
Lethia B . · Bumgarner
Barbara ~ef\kl~
Lona Howartl

Lilian Fields
Na~cv

Connie" Roush

' Hele.n FieldS

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·Enid Adains •
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8~ The.Daily Sentlnel, Middl~port~P~~eroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Ai&gt;nll, 197'5'

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By Stephen Ford
NEW YORK
Only
someone as 1soia ted from
Clvtlluttion as a Tibetan lallll!,
could not know who Roy Clark
· is. In just 28 days, Clark, fix·
ture of television's HeeHaw,
taped 14 different nal!Onaliy
syndicated programs.
Delighted w1th such mass1ve
exposure, the ever-affable 42·
year-old Country &amp; Western
s1nger says he would, nontheless, welcome a slump just
to catch h1s breath But with
h1s year-round sched ule of
hoppmg town-to-town m
pnvate Jet for one-mghters -· ..· ~~
vtdeo tapmgs, Clark has t1me
for It ttie else.
Wtth h1s current populanty

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Auto Sales

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ROY CLARK: Involve
,yourself.

awards He has also had a star
dedicated to hun on Hollywood
Boulevard
Such noton ely ha s 1ts
compe nsatiOns Clark cons ide rs his well pubhctzed
11,000-acre cattle ranch m
Tulsa, Okla , as JUSt a business
venture w1th h1s manager, J1m
Halsey and another C&amp;W
great Hank Thompson .
Actua ll y, Mr and Mrs.
Clark and
their four
children live m Maryland but
he plans to move to Tulsa th1s
fall
In his pocket, Jangle the keys
to a $2 milhon M1lsubish1 jet, a
Rolls Royce, a Contmental, a
'32 Chrysler, a Model "A"
Ford, two Harley Davidson
motorcyc les and a 43-foot
yacht.
A pubhc1st for ABC-Dunh1ll
busmess For mstance, I have who Clark records for ,
learned that thts country d1sclosed "1 th 002 karat
doesn't run Itself and you candor , 11 Roy's management
rea lly must mvolve yourself in has prom1sed to sh t me from
what's gomg on "
guzzle to zatch 1f I made the
That may sound hke a man fact pubhc that Roy 's mcome IS
con51 den ng parhc1pa tion m over a milhon bucks a year "
some pohtical campaign or
The w1de Sideburns on
pubhc ISSUe ") would endorse Clark's face shift up and down
a politician 1f I believed m as he explatns that in a few
answers ye~rs, he hopes his crazy
h1m,"
Clark
cauhously, '"If I felt he was sch~dule w1ll slow down and he
smcere. But 1 would have to be
sure about this man, have to
know all h1s v1ews and have
some 1dea about how he may
change them once m office .
Suppose he 's elected and found
to be a crook? That doesn't do
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - C
much for a performer's 1mage
Wilham
Swa nk , executive vice
If he was helpmg 1p the campresident
of the Ohio Farm
paign and 1s Identified w1\h the
Federation,
today anBureau
crook
·
"So far, the on ly pohttcally nounced a five-pomt plant to
related show I ever did was for help combat crtme and vandalGeorge Wallace when he ran ISm in the state's rural areas.
Swank sa1d the major potnts
for president m W68. But I was
of
the program tnclude formapaid for my act and d1d not
tiOn
of a neighborhood watch
have to endorse h1m . It was not
and making 11 more difficult
a benefit qerformance."
And the~ have been per- for local th1eves to succeed m a
form ances -' 300 of them crime.
The plan also calls for closer
scheduled for just this year and
among local law
coordination
covenng 200,000 mtles Past
performances have brought enforcement ag enci es; inawards - 27 of them, mcluding creasmg employment m rural
recognilton for h1s comedic araas; and developmg a youth
talents as well as singmg and crime education program
"Rural people are going to
music1ansh1p.
have
to cooperate closely with
Clark scored a hat ir1ck m
Country &amp; Western last year their police agencies, with
when he swept up all three top schools and employers to hck
this problem," Swank sa1d
here at a news conference.

. OKAY, OKAY,
BUT THE~E'S

'

@)

IT

SAW IT WAS L0,\DED
DROPPED

IT

l:::&lt;.f'oCK

w1i1have ~ore 'ume to languish
Blown
' over his real passion - mus1c.
Insulation
Serv)ces
"I'm always mterested in
1 - BlowR into Walls &amp; Attics-;
trymg som'e thing new in music.
"1974 CHEvROLET IMPALA
'
seriously experimenting. Until
f!195
STORM
4 Dr only 10,400 mdes, f ully equtpped me em , dark 'l~ A
HeeHaw, most folks thought
' '
Wtndows&amp;tloors
Rac•ne. 0 .
949-3604
r ea l cream puff
there were two Roy Clarks, one
ALUMINUM
I
who Joked and sang, the other a
1914 CHEV ELLE MALI'!IU
SJ095
Sidtng · Soff1H
se n ous guitans t Hee Haw • CM D•vlston car, air cond tttan mg, 350 V 8, P stee nng,
We Specialize In
Gutters - Awning's
made people understand 11 was
dark grey fm •sh, rad to
Free Est1mates
Ph, '1,92-3993 ,
me domg both." There is no
Building
Homes
1974
MONTE
CARLO
LANDAU
S469S
confusmg h1s genuine warmth
(Demo), load&amp;d wtt h op1tons
wtth another Roy Clark ·
Svracuse, Ohio
3 25 1 mo
·
"'
· ('I"
3 10"7
however.
Despite
hi s
1971 CHEVROLET2 TON
S349&gt;
JUshftable fame,
Clark
C&amp;E 102" C A , 4 speed trans , 2 speed l5,00d"rear axle,
remams a hkeable, down-home
gpod t ~es
.._.... sort and not of the "good 'old
Water, Electric,- Ges, Sewer
boy' category;~'~e1ther
·
tines, Installed
Work
Snobs are stunned by th1s
guaranteed.
PcNEVES. il :oo P-:-M.
m~ n when he reels off a
Dozer, Backhoa,Trucka
POMEROY, OHIO
Limestone &amp; Fill Dirt
stomac h-wrenchi ng pun beCommercloi-Resldenlial
30 8 Page, Middleport
. tween blu~grass d1tttes and
Construction &amp; Remodel
Heattng
Cooling
then tosses the guitar aside,
1970
FORD
Maver1ck
Refngerat•on Roof Repa1rs
aut
omatiC
,
6
cy
l
easy
on
gas
picks up a vwhn and executes Notice
Gutters - Plumbing ~K
Phone 992 2608 or 9&lt;19 29 11
E lectr1 c a I Repatrs
as, tender a passage from MEIGS County H umane Soc ety ---~ ~~ ___ -~ --- -=-~_:t c
. and
er vice.
1
Paganmi as they'll ever hear.
Caii992 -JS09 and
DOGS FOR ADOPTION One
full
blooded
G
197d CAPR I V 6 eng me, stee l
Save on your reparrs also
C&amp;W, h1s real bread and
Shepherd fem al e, 3 ~~r;;~~~ ~ belled r ad 1a ls, d ecor group, :
repatr mowers, compressors
7n Pearl Street •
old One black and whrf e
e~&lt;ce ll e!lt cond ttton 25 to 2t1
butter he- says, has undergone
and outboard s Brmg 11 In
· Middleport, Ohio
m 11&lt;ed breed m ale, 18 mon ths
m ~ g Call 992 5170 after 5
and save
Phone 992-5167 or 992-lN1
some obvwus changes when 1l
.
old Two Collte and Shepherd
P
3307tc
• ___
was enJOYed mamly by •those
__ z
mr~&lt;ed ,
bl a ck and whr t e - - - - - - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ !,.__
males, 31 1 months old Ca ll
below the Mason D1xon or by
JY7J CJ5 jeep 14,000 m rles L1ke
9d9 4917
new SJ,OOO Phon e 9-&lt;19 5182
small pockets of fans
3 30 6tp
WiLK iN_S_O_N_ _, "~-----=a=PE::-:R-:-:IE::-N~C:::E-::D-4
4 3 3t c ,.-------------------throughout the country.
ANNOUNC IN G new h ou r s ,
"Coun try 's had 1ts ups and
SKATE A WAY , 7 30 to 10 1972 PLY Ouster 318. 2 bl
SMALL -~lhiGI_NE
,RaCII_ato' ' . .41. . •""
automcHtc , new trres and
p
m "Wednes day , F r Hta y ,
downs, not as consistent as 1t
shocks $1 ,560 ,or ta'ke over . SALES&amp; SERVICE
1J
and Sat urday Availa ble for
paymen ts Call 992 3682 after
used to be; probably because of
........... :
pr• vate parftes Monday ,
m-3092
Servke
5 p m
Tu es da y
and
Th ursday
all the new blood. Some new
4
1
Stc
n1gh t s
Wednesday
and
From lhe la rgest Truck orl
entertainers have brought a
Sunday af t ernoons Pho ne 19 70
VW
conver trb le
,Bufl'dozer
Radlalpr to . the
985 3939. 985 9996 or 985 41-&lt;~1
1
new mfluence, too. There isn't
Everyt hrng new Phone 742
Smallest
Heater
CQre .
33012tc
3502
·
Nathan
Bigg•
as much drug use now as there - ·--- ---- --------Chain
J 30 Jt c
Rajl '!' tor S!!ec!allst
still '1:-I)R your 'Od of Mm, ·
was
but
there 's
Precision
Cosmetrcs Phone BROWN 'S 1975 MONTE Carlo, 4,000 miles.alcohohsm That's died down
99251 13 ~
iMITH N.EL$0N I
Ground
all power atr, AM st ereo
though, m comparison to what
1 7 tfc
tap e Call 992 7036 a f ter S p m
MOTORS. INC.
3 5 tfc
498 Locust St .
1t was hke years ago. Back - ------------- - AUCTIO N , Thursday n rg ht 7
Mtddleport,
OhiO
l
2
I
Mo
,
Ph.
Y'i'J.·J.tl4~
,,omerofl I,
then, Hank W1lhams Sr. was a
at Mason Auct 1o n ,
p m
Hor ton St In Mason , w Va
kn own alcohohc but everyone
For Rent
Consrgnm ent s wel c ome
tolerated it because he was so
-lOM E
l m provemenl
and
Phone (3 04 ) 773 5471
4 BED ROOM house , wall tOwall For Sale
Repa1 r Ser v 1ce - Anythmg
talented , a b1g star Then, a lot
2 2 ftc
carp et1ng, a c, fenced 1n ya rd
f1xed aro un d t he home, from

Motor Co.

1-J&lt;.. ·~. -

.

20.33, lronstde 13. '
5
-

HUSH

UP, SON:

LEAD. DA WAY,
MAC NATCHER LY
DA ~I D"S A LITT LE
FLUSTERED OVER
BECOMIN A
S WAMI!

COU RSE!

IF YOU'LL
~UST

FOLLOW

WOTS

1

OOIN' T "

ME,POP2

of not so successful smgers

thought drmkmg hke Hank
would make them b1g stars,
too .

"After they were told not to
return to many places for bemg
drunk wh1le playing, they got
the message. Country doesn 't
have the decadence that, say,
rock mus1c has - I don't mean
m the mus1c, obviously, I mean
the arhsts' ltves. Country
stngers are usually more
conventional than rock stars."
And how conventiOnal a
country smger IS Ray Clark?
Ooo_h,_)ust a run , of the null
superstar-m1lhon-jet p1lot

Farm Bureau has ·
plan to stop crime

3 IV tfc

Products phone 992 34 10
1 24 tf c

PUal.lc- ~;;t:-Me~7Mu-; le.
Loaders , l zaak Walton Fa rm .
Chester , Apnt 5 1 30 p m
Aprd 6, ra1 n dat e
3 31 5tc

____ -- ------------

Trac l or wrf h side
mower , runs good and good
rub ber $950 985 35 9&lt;1
3 30 7t p

A-VAILABLE fh1s week sma ll 2
bedroom doubl e w1de mobile TWO 12 rn plo ws 3 pt h ttch
Sl85 Also, 2 14 m plows, 3 pt
home near Po m eroy Off R t 7
hrtch $200 Phone 985 3594
by pass No chrl dren or pe t s
3 30 7tp
Phone 992 7017 or 992 7666
3 ,3 0 3t c

iR~Ailj_RapartmffitSJo!~~t

T RF TRIM
MOWER

OF Aprll 1, 1975 T he
Phone 992 '52118
Syracu se Ho me Uttlrt•'es
3 30 6tc .
Companv Will be co ll ectr ng - ·-r..-....-....-.-.-.....=::--------th err gas b1 ll s at l he form er 3 BEDROOM mob 1le home ,
Off1ce 1n Sy racuse
washer and ~ryer , Jl2 ba th s,
utrlrt res pa1d , $42 SO week 308
4 1 lOtc
Page Sf , Mrdd leport. Oh ro
GRA NO Openrng April I Of 0 &amp; J
3 4 trc
Fabr1c Shop , I mrle below
M rdd l eport on Route 7 2 BEDROOM mob ile home 1n
Spec1al po lyeste r doub l e
Syr acu.se No children or pe ts
kn1ts , Sl 39 yd
Ca ll 992 24&lt;1 1 afler 6 p m
d 1 3te,
Oepostt requtred
AS

H onor Soc tety 15, Ant1ques ~0 , Liltas. Yoga and You 33.
4, Wtld, Wtld
W orld of A ntmals 6, Bu ck Owens 8, New Pnce Is R1ght 10.

PLEAS~!

To Te ll The Truth 13; Sprong Street USA 15, RFD 20, Marco
Sportl &lt;te 33
DO-Adam 12 3,4, 15, Happy Days 6, 13, Good Tomes a,10, Solar
...Energy
- . . 20,33 ·
9 30-Movle " Strange Homecom1ng " Mov1e "Savages" 6 13
Mov 1e "The Runaways" 8, 10, Ascent of Man 20,33

'72.9Q(KD)

Jones 8,10. News 20, Interface 33.
•
10 30-Your Future Is Now 33, International Animation
Fest1val JJ .
II DO-News J,4,6,a,I 0,13, 15, ABC News 33
II 3D-Johnny Carson i,4, 15, Wtde World My slery "Come Ole

BORN LOSER

'

WHAT'Re

Wtlh Me"' 13, FBI

IT'S t&lt;:(X){) FOR ME .. ,I

'IOU

I rottf llUNK
llX&gt;MUGMOF

Ttlll.lK ~HttJb OF
~ttJb ll-jf~E€

12 3D-Wide World Mystery 6

Wt.DNESDAY,APRIL2, 1975
1&gt;-E ngii Sh 505 3
6 2&gt;-Farm Report 13

... _Jack W Carsey, Mgr ,
6i! Phone 992-2181

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

•

"Although the country is still
far safer than the city, rural
people are becoming increasmgly concerned w1th vandalism and thievery, especially
with rural crime up 300 per
cent since 1963," said Swank.
SWank said that a survey
conducted in Medll\8, Ashland,
Wayne, Perry, Hockmg,
Athens, Madison , Clark and
Fayette sounttes showed that
38 per cent of all crimes in
rural areas "involve vandalism,
18 per cent mvolve larceny and
burglary , 10 per cent involve
auto offenses and 8 per cent
mvolve threats.
He sa1d 60 per cent of all
persons arrested for rural
cr tmes are from urban areas
and 74 per cent of those
arrested are under 30 years-ofage.

Help coming on purchases

Wantell Jo Buy

1

STANDI NG f1mb ers Contact
Pomeroy Forrest Products
P 0 Box 726 . Pom eroy. Oh ro
Phon e 992 5V65
3 30 12tc
OLD turn1ture. rce bo,..es. bfass
beds, or com pl ete hou seholds
Write M D M1ller , Rt 4
· Pomeroy, Ohto Ca l l 992 -7760,

I0 7 74

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

10

WANTED O td uprrght p 1anos,
any condl l ton
Payrng S10
each F rrst f loor on ly Wr rte fRA I LER SPACt, J~ m 1~~;:
north of Me 1gs H1gh Schoo l on
an d g1v e d rrectrons to Wtften
old R 1 33 Phone 992 2941
P1ano Co , Box 188, Sardi S,
I 23 tfc
Oh10 d3946
3 27 6\p DUPiEX ~238~~-WiirWfSt ,
,Middleport , Ohto Phone 9~2
JUNK autos , com pl ete dnd
2780 or 992 3432
del ivered to our yard We ptck
2 19 tfc
up ~uto bod res and buy ' all
ktnd\ of sc rap metals and 'COUNTRY Mob 1le Hofl, .,, .. ,,..,
1ron R rder's Sa lvag e, St Rt
Rt 33, ten mrles north of
124, Rt 4, Pom eroy, 01\to
Pomeroy Large lot s W1 fh.
Call 992 5468
conc r ete pat 1os, Sidewalks,
runners and off
st re et
10 17 tfc
parkrng PAone 992 7479
CASH pard fo r all m akes and •
12 31 tfc
m ode l s of m obt le hom es , ----- --- --- ~ -Phone area CQde 614 423 9531
&lt;t
413tfc

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

Auto Parts, Rutland , Ohro
Phone (614) 7~2 6094

1 22 78tp
---------------- - STAN LEY Products tor sa le
- ~

Phone 742 3762
3 9 26 tc

FAR_M_L~ ;be7"See~Si0r-y0u r
nee ds
Pomeroy Forrest
Products , Barle y Run Road
Phon e 992 5965
r
3 19 12tc

------

dard stze cars with framj

'
ORPHAN ANNIE
,• 1.ITTLE
'

and unstrlpped motors, have
scales so there is no
guessing, we need matenal
to fill our quota. Try us,
we 're sure our prices will

,,

a trailer One house tHented

·

I

I

I Sli\.L C'A"'T
8f"IIEVE THAT G.INGER
t~ GO~E AMO I'LL
NEVE~ e-Ee HER

AND

POO~

OLD SAHD'fl

AGAtH · OH, I'1 L HfAR
'NAT MACHINE GIJH AS
lO~ A!l I LNE= -

tlfiOUT- IN

~

WAY

MAVBE If'S LUCIC,'( 'HE
60T 5~T - HE MElPS

Ttii&lt;E ttfR ~IHD
OI=F WORSE THtN6S ·

· ~~

.

Tha-t books Gl
qol' m1ne!

Newton don'-t
know beans
about hold1n'
a qwl's han·1

MISS MelbGI
qo1n' t' be

m,qhtL.J
Impress',

b04'

'
2-11 -lfc ·

Real Estate For Sale

$9,500 00

'

NOW S. SAVE Low , IO"f ,
30 ACRES - In the boon &lt;locks · BUY
down paym ents, 8 pet. in
on Shade River $6,000
terest 30 yr f 1nanc rng on new

UL ABNER
GUL-P!!- AH
GOHA FIGHT
A OPPONENT
AH CAINT

hom es rn 3 Me igs County
1ocat1ons, or BUILD on vour
lot Ph one 992 5976 or 992-584 -V
3 13 tfc

BUSINESS - We have several
and loca tions w1th buildings .
Work· for yourself with no

Pets For Sale

I tol' lJOU!

Now 3 bedroo~
home with u; tached garage •
Mid 20s, good loca tton Phone
fJOd I 77 3 5468
I

NiAS'ON -

TOUCH?

WHAT

ARE
YOU

DOING 2

WINDIN6 UP TO
DEE-LIVER A
PUNCH AH 15
FORBIDDEN To

THATB~RR!!

WIND
IT:S

up:

'--'· '-

11 -..:c -'~.•-

---------

Help Wanted

!IJe._a, ·

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

For Sale

__________ __

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

---------------·-----------------

-

- ------

.

.

- ~---"

!NEWSPAPER

~?nEHP RI SE

Cop)Tifll 1&lt;! 1ltn

ASSN I

·'

MOBILE home, 1971 65 x · 12K inC! 2 bedr,oom Phone 99'2
54ij6
~

6:00 A.M. nL MIDNIGHT

3 28 61c

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

.'

'

.

lJ

Now arranre the circled letters
to form the 1urpri~e anawer. u

.,
'

'I

WHEN THE ALMANAC
SAID WE WUZ IN ~!;~,,

A LONG

SPELl ~"[ .

'l r xxr

(AMwert to..orrewJ

PRUNE COUGH MALICE FEUDAL

...
H hall/i('l/ lf i i{Jiwd allf•r a ht'G! JI meal - ANCHOR

I HAD NO IDEE IT WUZ
TALK IN' ABOUT '10U 1
0 1.' BOSS.IE

you re very fond Will

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Whitened,
1 Upbratd;
as with
scold
frost
5 Super 40 Intensify
abundant
41 Umque
11 Seaweed
DOWN
extract
1
Winged
12 Right now
( 2 wds.)
2 Nunble
13 - 'sPeak
3 Evenmg a
14 Pen tn
score
IS As1an nver
(2 wds.)
16 Gain
4 Before
17 Building
5 ,Tying the
extension
oxfords
18 Tooth
6 Make
substance
amends
20 Pagoda
7, Norse
ornament
betrothal
21 Percussion
goddess
instrument
22 "Budden brooks"
author
23 Actor,
Gene 25 Fray
26 Avon's earl
27 Indonesian
1sland
28 Bulgana n

II
you don t take the t1me to grve
subordinates clea r -cu t 1nstruct1ans, there's no way you II get
hoped-for results

For Wodnolday, April 2, 1875
ARIES (Morch 21 -Aprl111) Be

SAGITTARIUS (NQ•. 23-Do&lt;:

careful h ow you conduct
yo urself 1n front of others Your
·image 15 very, frag1 le for th e
next couple days

21) You II have to count yo ur
penn1es today Pay past
obl1gat1ons before assum1ng
new ones M anage money
prudently

TAURUS (April 20·M•y 201
You haYe a tendency today to
JU mp to unwarranted conc lu s ions Hear o th ers out
before
mak1ng
hasty
' Judgments

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan.
11) Your ac 11ons could cause
so me hard feelings today
You re too am.1ous to serve
your own Interests Be careful
whose toes you step on

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20)

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19)
You re too ~as lly put upon today You could laler resent a
commttment so th1nk before
you volun teer

Bu srness dealings with friend s
at th1s time are more

com ~

pllca ted than usual Be waryor you 'll be burned
CAN~ER

21-.luly 22)

(.tune

PISCES (Fob. 20·Morch 20)
Stay out ot s1tuat1o ns w1th
frrends today where money or
th1ngs change han ds You re
l1kely to feel ialer you got the
short end

Don't tr eat llgbtly legal In volvements tad a~ or tomorrow
A m1stake could prove costly
later Acl only on adv1ee ot
counsel

LED (July 23·Aug. 22) Thts

Yesterday's Allswer
8 Words akin 24 "Sweet" gal
to 3 Down
of song
(2 wds.)
25 Numerous
9 Type of
27 UnfrUitful
tnangle
Z9 Locale ..,.
10 Greek
30 Eventual
1' Vtnous
31 Corundwn
19 Lacerated 38 Plunge
22 Defrost
37 However
23 Tardy
(var.)

IS

·~

not a day to tackle tasks
beyond your talents a nd
capab1l1tles Trymg to 1mpress
others w1ll have the oppo,site
effect

April 2, 1975

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl.

22)
Don t count on others today 1f
you re JOYolved In a r1sk:; Sliva ~
tton Don t buy a big deal or a
dime's worth, Sight unseen

LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0cl. 23) An
1ssue between two persons o f

You 'll set some very amb1t1ous
goals for you rself th1s year
Success 1s likely 1f you stay on
course Keep one 1r0n In lhe
f1re at a t1me
JNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE .\SSN I

4rt.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Look for that extra chanc,
admontttons He won the kmg of
spades, played a cl ub to the
kmg and a club to the ace When
that su 1 ~ fa1led to spht he trted
the diamond finesse The result

NORTH

•K

• 94 3 2

t64
.AQ75 32
WEST
EAST

com

- down one

.QJ 1084

• 9 7 53

• J 875

• K to 1

• Q 10
• J 93

oloiO

o1o J 9 8 I

SOUTH

(D)

o1o A 62

.AK6
tAQ852
o!oK6
NorUt-South vulnerable
West

Nortb

East

South

Pass

2•

Pass

JN T

Pass

Pass

Pass

I

DAILY &lt;;RYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AJ!YDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
•
One letter simply standa for another. In this sample A 11
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnele letters,
apoalrophes, the length and formation of the word• are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dilf~ rent.

e

Opemng lead - Q •

By Oswald &amp; James Jacpby
Bridge is a game full of
adages - "second hand low .
third hand htgh" , "cover an
honor with an honor" , "aces
are made to take kmgs" , "lead
from longest and strongest"
CRYPTOQUOTE
They all form a htany that
a Gregortan chant seem
KUYBSD
VUE
LRGE
TUP
A C FRE makes
brtef.
One
of the standard ad,
'
morubons for declarers IS to atB 'U,~ WPE
LRtE TUP
MRUPJB BU, tack your best su1t.
But just as good declarers
GYB !_fiE DSFGDB NUD BPET JUY· learn lo postpone finesses unt1l
other avenues of pl~y are exEDUI ~ TUPD
A C Y B • - J I G P B C G Y" · hausted , they should also be
alert to mstances when weaker
-· \
suits
should be attadted first m
Yesterday's Cr)optoq110te: IF I AM CONTENT WITII LIT· the play
of a hand.
TLE , THEN ENOUGH IS AS GOOD AS A FEAST.-DEAN
Tod&lt;jy's declarer was a f1rm
SWIFT
•
behe~er in adages and standard

.

LAND 0' GOSHEN!!

TUNE' TO WM~ 92.1

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

CAP wedges and trailer
wedges Any amoun t Phone
742 374 3
-1 1 6t c

BELOVED GREECE.

MONEY18 NO _ __.,"
OBJECT I
pCJL'- -J. .rl'lt

:l!ARNEY

.

FROM

&lt;llayama, 420 miles, is 4 hours
10 minutes.

AWAY FROM MY

YOUR OWN PRICE.

' I

IS

___ _

ENOUGH MONEY IN mE:
WORLD ID GET ME: •

YOU COULD WRITE YOUR
OWN TICKET. NAME

Buyers See Us For You
Needs In Real Estalo.

GREAT .COUNTRY STEREO

!

---

III

IT'S 5Aic;&gt; TO
6RING ACTION
TO A HALT.

~t¥tJ'.t)f!r'

.

WMPO-FM

Mobile Homes For Sale

KOI&lt;TDt;t Ti'E RE'5 I\OT

CAll 992-2259

•

--

I'M AFRAID NOT, MR.

properties to sell : :
Strike while the Iron is"
hot.:... Sell Today while
we have Cash Buyers._
All Cash for Your
Property.

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

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

.

filii!

~~~..,
• HELP • HW:l.
------------- -- H~
We are in great ne.td ot • ~

.

The ambulance business Ira- with the latest and most
&lt;jitiqnally has been a "rags and complet,~ , !l)luipment, designed
riches " affair . The military , to last many years and to be
and the hospitals tende"d to buy remounted on a new, relatively
inexpensive panel trucks and cheap chassiS every few years.
equip them f6r short ltved
Other new companies and
emergency use.
some of the existing amThe ambulance comp;m1es, bulance bwlders are fairly
on the other hand, bought the certain to folloW Emergency
most expensive Cad1Uac . or One's lead.
s1mtlar chas;;is and outf1tted
For the fire departments of
the veh1cle for elegance ad well rural communities and small
as comfort and emergency c11tes, Emergency One is
treatment.
·
building two sizes of pwnpers
~ Neither of these suits majori- with auxiliary foam and
ty needs toda~, says'bilain1\l!n. chemiCal fire fighUng equipRobert C. Tyo of, Emergenc~ ment, 10 ¥il for $20,000. Tbey
One, a new cpmpany organized · also are tritended as "quick
at• Ocala, Fla., to tum out at~ck 'i pumpers for fire
radically new ambulances and deparlments in bigger comP,;l\cks and blk~ advantage munitles. Each nhicle is
ballill.
Of the new federal financmg.
mounted on a moderate priced
~e- the ambUlance situa---aoaventional truck cha~.
A Rural Fire Safety
pendllig in Congres.s to Ji:A~d!IIA:::ti
Tyo said the averagti!\il i t e&amp;l'A -~go, many small
federal help lo smaller ~' ~... eblional ambulance, even':_dh~ap " tf~l!, engines vier~
munltiu which need new ~ "'~lie ~w:Y type, is good only for 1 qunted ~ !l¥ht trucka bl!l, in
eftlllnel.
~ foil' years serv1ce. "It&amp;' e liLih days after World War
Nlltnily, tho prospect V a
n~s the chassis is shot, U..
,' veii ilie Unlest towna be&amp;an
matket Jar&amp;ely finanl'l!d by
"vehicle IS shot," he sa &gt;
lng the blvillt behemotbl.
federalaovenment haa wbe~.
•lotj the same '17,000 ~--:: mergency One also
ted U. ~ of the toOtS
,~ that a convent!~ ~ vides a new industry for
wbo build unbulances and ~ 1114 ,i· ~- ambulance costs~ Ia, a town that 1taa been a
lnldlland lt has brooght llOI!'it!"'"'·mb f"ency One is building two cen roi'"!Jiedepressed mobile
~e into ~ buslnes.s. sizes of an, ambulance body home. ma!lllfacbtri,llll indutry.

-

NEW YORK (UPJ ) - There
are 45,000 ambulances tn
service in the United States. A
~ngreSijlonal committee has
been told 100,000 w11l be needed
by 1980.
'jhe .countn has about
250,000 fire trucks. Many are 35
or 40 years old and their
replacement cost has soared
from J30,000to $65,000, which is
well beyond the means of small
cities and poses quite a burden
for larger cities.
Congress was so impressed
by the ambulance shortage
that, in enacting the Emerger:\;
cy Medical Act, 11 provided a
way for COII)Jiluruties lo ' get .:
federal itelp in buying new
ambulances on a cost sharing

~

of f~e, E~R equipment

An••"r

15;

Jeann1e 4 , Somerset

,_,

29 New Mexico
c1ty ( 2 wds. )
32 Knight's
drtnk
33 Wa1I
34 Comedi• n
Conway
35 Combusttble
ll!3terlal
37 Prong
38 Railroad
locomotive

41 6fQ,
________

~---- ---

I

lumbln

\ ... , ....d•y"•

of

Gilligan's Is 6, Sesame 51 20,33; Mike Douglas 13
~ : 39'---Bewllched 3; Merv Griffin 4, Mod Squad 6, Lucy Show 8,
Movie-To Be Announced 10, Bonanza 15
5:DO-FBI 3, Andy Grtff llh 8 Mosier Rogers' Netghborhood
20,33; lrqnslde 13
5·»--News 6; Bevetly Hlllbtllles 8, Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Get
Sfnarl 15, E lee. Co 33
6.DO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6, Elec Co 20
6·3D-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13, Bewitched 6; CBS News
8,10, Zoom 20, Your Future os Now 33
7 .DO-Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowling for Dollars 6, What's My Lone
8; News 10, Country Music Jubilee 13, 1 Spy 15, To Be Announced 20, Know Your Schools 33
7.30--Pollce Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4, Let's Make a Dea l
6; Wilburn Brothers 8, The Judge 10, To Tell lhe Truth 13,
Book Beat 20, Episode Acllon 33
{
8:DO-L11tle House on the Prairie 3,4, 15; Thai's My Mama 6, 13,
Tony Orlando 1!. Dawn 8, 10, Feeling Good 33, Thea ler 1n
America 20.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22!

"'

YE"S · BUT SHE HAS
'Sf1ND'( TO WORR'f

HE TRIED TO GIVE HISttf::£
ID 'SAvE HER- H£'6 50
QUIET, AHD SO, SO WEAl&lt; I DCIH'T 'SEE HOW HE
LIVED AT ALL -

~-- - -----------.,._

atfd 3 noce butldmg lois Only

Dream

Magaz tne 8, 10, On

1n lhe m1ddle Arbitrat e

_..:..::Priii::..:•=::SIMISI==-=INSWIR=lleR
~___~I

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-A DOG'S LIFE

&amp;nd backhoe work , septk 'r
tanks ins talled. dump truckl
•l!lnd lo-boys for hire , wiJI hal!l
fiiJ d irt, top soil, limestone-,_
gravel ; Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992 7089 ,
nlgl'1t phone 992 3525 or 99) ;

5232

Cartoon 3, I

6,

whom

I I
1
~==~=~:::::::::::::::._~•:•~l~l:e•:t::ed by the above cartoon.

_;.

12 19
- ~ Pr - -------EXCAVATING, o.!!,ozer, loador

basem ent. garage w1fh shop
and large lot

Right 1,10, RFO 20
3.30-Qne Lile to Live 13, Lucy Show
A~lng 20
,

anse today You II tmd yourself

L.l

sal! sly you .·
o.,..n 9 Til4 :30
Mon. Uhrul Fri.
9 unlil2 . 30 Sat.

F A furna ce, 7 large closets
with storage shelves Dry

()
~

*

RACINE - Modern J bedroom
home Large balh Nat gas

1

ITACHU(;!

, ,.L----2~-U~~--.u. . .

~feel

DO:i"ER: work, land clearing by '
the acre , hourly or contract• 1
Farm ponds , roads , e tc.
Large do ze r and operator
with o ye r 20 year! ex
perlence Pullins Excavating,
Pomeroy , Oh10 Phone 992 ,
2478
..

Porches and ga r age w1th level

Employment Wanted

-TIM_E_b;.;k;;;;-

I

"'--- - - - - - - - - - - - - - '

CL"OSE OU-:;: -o~-;,e;"i;;-;ag
layol fs
sew mg m ach ines For sewmg
stretch fabr1cs, buttonhole s._
fan cy de S1gn s, etc. Pa 1nt
WE HAVE NEARLY 50
Sl igh tly blemished Chotce of
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
W ILL do 1anr tor work or
ca rryi ng case or sew1ng
parntrng Phone 992 2262
WHEN YOU REALLY WANT
stand S49 80 cash or to:rn. ~
IT SOLO, TRY TEAFORD AT
FEMA L E Dachsh und , red AK
3 30 6tc - available Phon e 992 7755
C Reg mm1ature. 7 m0nths i£RA ·R- T
12 18 ttc
old Phon e 7&lt;12 d256
fle xable hours 1 or 2 d a~~ga
INDI AN Joe's s;:: ... , ,.,y 1..10ou:s.'
3 30 3t c
week or
eve n 1ngs
Ex
buy and se ll guns . amm o
--------- - --------per renced, excel l ent l oca l
ftshlng equipm ent , and after
re ference Phone 992 7090
A pr il 1, we w rll ha ye fr sh batt
eYen mg s
Stop by at 308 Page St
3 30 8tc
DRAFTSMAN
wanted
Mtddleport Phone 992 3509 ,
Pretera bly w1th trac k work ----- --- ~--- ---­
3 2 30tc
ex.penence Send resume to REMODELING,
p lumbi n g,
P 0 Box 152, Pome roy , Oh iO
heatmg and all types of ~--------- ----6 ROOM house with bath 3
E qual
Op po rt un tty
em
genera l
repa~r
Work 24,000 BTU G;neral e 1 ect~1c a.;
bedr oom. full baSem ent , ias
con d1t 1oner , not a year o ld
players
g uaranteed 20 yea r s ex
heat , h w fl oor, wall to wall
Phone 992 2952
3 JO 71c
perienc:e Phone 992 2409
carpe t Close to schoo l tn
3 26 tfc
3 11 He
Pomeroy Phone 992 3097.
------- ~------ --~---------------3 9 52tc
U SE D ceme n t and c1nde r block
, for sate Phone 742 3743
B EA UTI F UL n ew home on
l ake, 3 bedrooms , ba th &amp; 112,
MODERN ster eo r ad io, am 11n. -·--------- -----~~tc
ca rp eting , drapes , big den
separat e con tr ols .:1 speaker · POTATOE S brtng own •con
Ca ll 99 2 3493
soun d
sy s t em
aat a nc e
..._ 3,___
24 lfc
talner , S4 tor 100 lb Also . 1966
S103 58 or term s Ca ll 9&lt;112 3965
l=o rd van bus for sa le or traCte
3 31 tf c
for motorcycle Phone 985
3 l!E OROOM house , fully
38&lt;9
10 HP SEARS trac tor 46 tn
carpe fed, basement. garage ,
.:1
1
6tc
m ower , diSC, 8 1n t urni ng
on corner lot , fenced yard ,
plow and snow blade Phon e 1971 6SO. TRIUMPH , good
for ced air fu r nace heat,
Charles R. Harr rs, 843 -2693
out sr de storage bu1ldt n g ,
cond tt 1on Phone 992 7054 or
4 I 3tc
stor m w ind ows , alummum
992 5985
sl d rng, V) -m de east or Mason .
4
1
6tc
1S 1F T F I BERGLASS boat , 50
on Rt 33 , SI 9,500 Phone (304)
h p M erc ury motor . tra•ler , 750 HO NDA motorcy cle for
773 5942
and ~kllng equrpment Ex
J 31 3tc
Sale Phone 742 4294
cellen t conct rt 1on $900 Phone
4
1
5tc
davs 992 2689 or evenmgs 992
.........
2941
KE L FOO D A RAMA stde by
4 1 61C
si d e r efrrgerator t r eezer r
-- -~Ph()n e 992 -2257 a ft er S 30 p m
1972 KAWASAKI motor c ycle,
4,1 Jtp
75()' CC, 2,200 m1les , like n ew - ~ .
~-- --------cond lt mn S1s sy bar and 4
Rail service between· Tokyo
lug gage rack , 2 helmets, must
se ll Phone 985 41 31
and Osaka • via the standard4 1 5t c
gauge!! New Tok~I~O Line is
--~
head~ ;by 36 "Hlkarl" super- ON E Hhc20 l 1re, rim and tube , 10xSO MOBILE hom e, good
condrt•on S21,050 25 ga llon
com p le t e / $25, ready for
, expi%i'Jtmns which make the
cat tle waterrng t ank, S25 JO
trt1ck Phone 992 7429
320.1-nlile run m 3 hours 10
- _______ ..._ __ 4 1 l tc bags of l ime Ph one 9924 7330
1•5t c:
minutes at an avera,e speed of
-. ' .
_......_
.:_
101.1 mph, The World Almanac 10 F'T ALUMINUM boat , 7 h p !:.ELt vour mobtle homf' for
Eska motor, A 1 condtf1on 2
reports W1 til the opening of the
cash , 15 ho mes wanted , 1958
new ltfe lackefs , used oars
.thru 1972 m od~ls . Phone 16 14 )
new Sanyo Line, westward
sale or tra de t or good
d46-1425, Gal lipol is
bargarn Phone 992 7429
from Osaka lo Oltayama , best
3 9 78tc
4l
-3t
c
time between Tokyo· and

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

lrom Grueser's Chip Mill.
Put tho5e 1unk autos into
cash. We pay SIJ for stan'

3 29 tfc

lol 54500 00

b
I I

ICAI.AP.4

m1le above Meigs F~rir
Gr~undson right, IUSiacroo

service, all makes, 992 22U.
The Fabric Sh op, PomeroY.
Aut horized Singer Sales and
Servtce We Sharpen Sc issors

NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom
house wllh shower balh

:GO-Another Wor ld 3,-4, 15, General Hosp1tal 6, 13 , Price tS

HUSBY

SEWING MACHINE , Repairs ,•

a·;TCAMPE~-;~~;-;-:;;~p NEW LISTING - 2 houses and
truck Prtce $200 Phone 99 2
1727
3 27 4tc

;
II

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

-------

PR IVATE m ee t rng room for
any organ iZat ion phone 992
3975
3 11 tfc

ORVILLI:!

., MEBBE WE CAN JAM il·HS
'ALIEN' BUSINESS RIGHT
DOWN lW -moRN KING'S
THROAT !

' Localed on old 33' Jusl IV,.'

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

If&lt;;~

--------------lJSED parts, Frye's T ruck and

AN
IDEA,

l1vered tig h t tb your prole ct.
Fas't
and
easy
Free
est 1mates. Phone 992 -32,...
Goegleln Ready M ix C&lt;i..
Middleport Oh io
I
630 t c

Real Estate· For Sale

3·an d 4 ROOM f ur n1shed and • ----- --------- 2.~~t c
un f urni Shed
apartments GAS cooKs tove, n 1ce for ca n
nrn g Phon e 985 3585
Phone 992 5&lt;1 34
4 12 tfc
3 30 Jtc

WHAT
IS IT ?

"READY M"IX CO NCRETE

FURNIS H ED
dparrment , · - - - - - - - - - - - -- -:
adul ts onl y rn Mrddleport 197 1 F ORO' truck 1 1 ton , mrxed
Ph one 992 3874
hay Phone 992 3436 or 992
J 25 tfc
57&lt;18

-----

v---'-.. JUST

HALL'S SALVAGE

and rear end. We buy

' " ' ' !H lfl 1 f f

Unscramble these four Jumbles.,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary word s,

' ALLEY OOP

3 21 75

- Swee pers, toa sters 1rons,
all small appliances Lawn
mowers. nex t to Sta te H1gh
way Garage qp Route 7
Ph one 985 3825
3 11 26to;

GROCERY bus1neSS tor sale
B u1 ld1n g tor sa le or lease
Phon e 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m tor appo rntment /

3

hv tH Nil I AI1Nfll fl

Ph. 985-4102

C BRADF"ORD , AuctiOneer

POMEROY LANOMARK,

.' -

Home Building
Room Additions
and Garages

a,

~!Y~M ® /J..J lctno~l..I..-J ,_.

'

Chester, Ohio

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

'104.95(KD)

3 ll ff C:

Yard Sale
bedroom t ra1 ler Ad u l ts
THERE w rll be a garage sa le at TWO
only Phone 997 3975 or 992
Euger:e F 1nk 's res 1d en ce
2571
beh 1M Rutland Grade SchooL
3 23 tt c
Aprrl 4 and 5 Few Avon
bottles and ant rques , Odds and
3 RM furni shed ap t, ut rl rt res
ends
pard 356 North 4th Sf ,
4 1 3t c
M 1dd leport
3 30 6t c

6 JG---F1ve M1nutes to L1ve By 4, News 6, ~1ble Answers

QmstructiJn Co.

&gt;
School Scene 10, Th~ Story 13.
6:35--&lt;:olumbus Today~
6:4.k--Mornlng Report 3; Farmllme 10 . •
7·DO-Today 3,4,15; A.M A.merlca 6,13, CBS News 8,10
8 DO-Lassie 6; Captain Kangaroo 8, Popeye 10, Sesame 51 3o.
8. 25--&lt;:apl Kangaroo 10
B·JG-Misslon· Impossible 6
9·DO-A M 3, Phil Donahue, 4, To Be Announced 8, Morning~
wllh 0 J 13, Phil Donahue 15
9.25--&lt;:huck While Reports 10
9 3D-Nol for Women Only 3, Dinah 6, Galloping Gourmets,
Taltlelales 10; New Zoo Revue 13
10 DO-Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4, IS, Joker 's Wtld a, 10, Dtnah
13
"
10 JG-Wheel ol Forlune 3,4,15, Gambol 8, 10
11·00-High Rollers 3,4, 15; One L1fe to Ltve 6, Now You See It
8, 10, E lee Co 20.
II 3D-Hollywood Squares 3, 15, Brady 8unch 6, 13, News 4,
Love of Llf~ 8, 1~; Sesame St 20,33
11 ·5&gt;-Graham Kerr 8, Dan !mel 's Wl!rld 1012 co-Jackpot
3, 15, Password 6, 13! To Be Announced 4; News 8,10
12 .3D-Biank Check 3,15, Spilt Second 6,13, Searc h for
Tomorrow 8,10; To Be Announced 33
12 4&gt;-E lee Co 33.
12.5&gt;-NBC News 3,15
I·DO-News 3; All My Children 6,13, Ph1l Donahue 8 Young 1!.
lhe Reslle5S 10, Nol For Women Only 15
1.»--How To Survive a Marriage 3,4,15; Lei's Make a Deal /'
6, 13, As lhe Wor ld Turns 8,]0
·DO-Days of Our Lives 3.4, 15, $10,000 Pyramid 6, 13, Gutdtng
Light 8,10
2:3G-Doclors 3,4, 1S; Big Showdown 6, 13, Edge of Ntght 8,10

.. · oo-:-Mr

00----'Tomorrow 3,4, News 13

Bissell Brothers

ELWOO D BOWER S REPAIR

Self- Propelled

Gol The Acloon?" 8;

ITM'/SaF!

~'I ~

I.IU..GS A

6, Movi e "Who's
Mov1e "The Sw1 nger " 10, Janakl 33

6 oo-Sunrise Semmar 4, Sunrise Semest er 10

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

Com plet e Servrce
Phon e949 3821or 949 3161
R a c~ne, Ohto
Crrtt Brad ford
s 11f

'•

6

roof to ba semen t You Will
l rke our work and ra tes
Ph one 742 508 1
12 29tfc

22"-3112 HP

'

9 3D-Woman 20, Wotness lo Yeslerday 33
10 OD-Po loce Story J,4, 15. Marcus Welby, M 0 4,6, 13. Barnaby

Radtos, Antennu, Towen,
Used T.v.'s. Buy trom thr
" lnd•an " and save "Wam ~
Pum", We buy U$ed Radios,
and Towers. Radl'h rep1ired,
by FCC licensed service~
.P.ersonnel . Stop and see thel
Bubbles .:
' lnd1an" and
Monttor Chln"tl 10 and 20.,

""'S,EPTIC
I At'l~~
Cleaneo
Modern San tt at ron , 992 3954 or
992 73 49
v 18 He

20" -llf2 H P ··

Bowlmg For Dollars 6, W1'1at's

' 3D-Hollywood Squares 3, Hollywood Squares

ME

308 PageSt.
Middleport, 0. 992-3509

j

FOR 0

oo- Truth or Consequences 3,4,

My L~ne? 8. News 10, Nam e-Thai Tune 13; High School TV

CB SALES &amp; PARTS .

!

Phone 992

6, Beverly Hillbill tes 8. "Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Gel

8, 10, Zoom 20, Your' Future Is Now 33.

fiE

-INDIAN JOE'S

--

wt th pat ro nt ce
2780 or 992 3432

3D-N~ws

&gt;'

6 DO-News 3,4,8, 10,13,15, AB C News 6, Eleclroc Com p a~y 20;
lTV Uftltzat oon 33
6 3D- NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13, Bew1tc hed 6; CBS News

)

#

------------NOW se lltn g F u l l er Brush

Slrllfl 20,33;'

Smart 15, Electnc Company 33

Phone 949-5961

EXCAVAnNG
OOMPANY

1!1

~omerser

Bonan za 15
~
'5 DO-FBI 3, Andy ' t{~1 ff rth 8, Mo sler Rogers' t-1e1ghborhood·

tomplet' plumbing
heating service and·
general sheet · metal,
wo r k s .
F r e ,.,
Estimates.

Home Maintenance

.Television logrfor easy vi,ewing

3D-Bewtlched 3, 'Merv Grofltn 4, Mod Squad 6, Lucy Shqw I,

4

RACI_
NE_fWM~I_NG
&amp; HEAnNG

p.J

''" "" ...

I

1..arroon J; 1 uream ot Jeannte 4:
Gtll lgan's lslanq 6, Tat!lelales 1!1 Sesa me
Movie "The Jrap" 10, M1ke Douglas 13

HEJ.L

NEIGLER
BUILDERS SUPPLY

.

4 uv-tvlr

·Business Service

.Pomeroy
'
,

QUAun

GRP-55. I PICKED

A DEAD
•

'

2 SIGNS
OF

I

OH, TH,l\T&lt;&gt; IT WAS IN

-

;

POMEROY
MOTOR
CO
'
c

dtverSif~

_...)

--

~...

lARRY JAVENDER

on a par wtth tax rebates, he
feels now IS the bme ~ to

hts talent to prove
he's J!'Ilfth tl all That exhausts
'-s.tilY more of hiS precious
le1sure lime for , m addt lion IQ
the 10 mt lhon v1ewers who tune
m HeeHa" each week to eat up
h1s ag1ie gmtar-p1ckmg served
\lith a 's1de order of cornpone,
m1lhons 'more crowd mto
country fairs and rodeos across
the Midwest and South to see
thetr hero.
Upon h1s fourth ap!)ea rance
as host of the Tomght Show,
Clark drew more VIewers than
any other guest host m that
pr ogram's h1story. And
comedy, vane ty or talk show
gues l!ng Clark, such as Mac
Davis, The Odd Couple or Merv
Gnff1n , where he frequently
appears, can be assured of a
quantum leap in viewer ratmgs
that evemng
"I'm pleased with how thmgs
have gone for me," the s1x-foot,
230-pound smger understates.
"But my goals have changed a
lot tn the past f1ve years. My
mterests are different now and
not always related to show

,.

r

'

For Fast •Results Use Sentinel Classifieds
.

C~rk:

one-man
talent ,,c:o;n glomerat.. e

Roy

.

'l'he Da1lv Sen\tne!, Mlddleport-Pomet uy, 0 , Tuesday, Apnt 1, 1~75

Smce he was always gomg to
make the hand If clubs split
declarer s hould have gtven

htmself an extra chance by
F1RST playmg the heart sutt
W1th a three-three dl\ lSI on , the
mnth tnck would be assured
The extra divtdend occ urred
here. W1th the queen and 10 fallmg m the East hand the play of
the th1rd round of th e su1 t
toward',the mne m dummy w1ll
produce•the game-gomg trtck

u:a;1 :11!&amp;J9.!?D
The b1dd mg has been
'
West

North

East l South

Pass

1N T

Pass

I •

.

?

You South hold
•KQ 965 . A2 tK4 3 olo QB7
What do yo u do now"
A - Pass Your hand can play
notrump and you only have five
!plrdes

TODAY"S QUESTION
Vol{ do pass

West btds two

diamonds , your par tn er two spades
illd East three d1amonds What do
you do now' '
, Aaswer Tomorrow

SfJIXI $1 lor JACOBY MODERN
book lo. ""Win at Bndgo."" (clo lhls
rHIW$paper). P 0 Box 489. Radio
CilyStaiiOn. Ne"w York, N ~ 10019
\NEWSPAPER ENTERPIU§E ASSN I

•

�'

'

)

•

r
Q-

~

8~ The.Daily Sentlnel, Middl~port~P~~eroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Ai&gt;nll, 197'5'

••

•

By Stephen Ford
NEW YORK
Only
someone as 1soia ted from
Clvtlluttion as a Tibetan lallll!,
could not know who Roy Clark
· is. In just 28 days, Clark, fix·
ture of television's HeeHaw,
taped 14 different nal!Onaliy
syndicated programs.
Delighted w1th such mass1ve
exposure, the ever-affable 42·
year-old Country &amp; Western
s1nger says he would, nontheless, welcome a slump just
to catch h1s breath But with
h1s year-round sched ule of
hoppmg town-to-town m
pnvate Jet for one-mghters -· ..· ~~
vtdeo tapmgs, Clark has t1me
for It ttie else.
Wtth h1s current populanty

"

•

.•

..

fll'

Auto Sales

1

ROY CLARK: Involve
,yourself.

awards He has also had a star
dedicated to hun on Hollywood
Boulevard
Such noton ely ha s 1ts
compe nsatiOns Clark cons ide rs his well pubhctzed
11,000-acre cattle ranch m
Tulsa, Okla , as JUSt a business
venture w1th h1s manager, J1m
Halsey and another C&amp;W
great Hank Thompson .
Actua ll y, Mr and Mrs.
Clark and
their four
children live m Maryland but
he plans to move to Tulsa th1s
fall
In his pocket, Jangle the keys
to a $2 milhon M1lsubish1 jet, a
Rolls Royce, a Contmental, a
'32 Chrysler, a Model "A"
Ford, two Harley Davidson
motorcyc les and a 43-foot
yacht.
A pubhc1st for ABC-Dunh1ll
busmess For mstance, I have who Clark records for ,
learned that thts country d1sclosed "1 th 002 karat
doesn't run Itself and you candor , 11 Roy's management
rea lly must mvolve yourself in has prom1sed to sh t me from
what's gomg on "
guzzle to zatch 1f I made the
That may sound hke a man fact pubhc that Roy 's mcome IS
con51 den ng parhc1pa tion m over a milhon bucks a year "
some pohtical campaign or
The w1de Sideburns on
pubhc ISSUe ") would endorse Clark's face shift up and down
a politician 1f I believed m as he explatns that in a few
answers ye~rs, he hopes his crazy
h1m,"
Clark
cauhously, '"If I felt he was sch~dule w1ll slow down and he
smcere. But 1 would have to be
sure about this man, have to
know all h1s v1ews and have
some 1dea about how he may
change them once m office .
Suppose he 's elected and found
to be a crook? That doesn't do
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - C
much for a performer's 1mage
Wilham
Swa nk , executive vice
If he was helpmg 1p the campresident
of the Ohio Farm
paign and 1s Identified w1\h the
Federation,
today anBureau
crook
·
"So far, the on ly pohttcally nounced a five-pomt plant to
related show I ever did was for help combat crtme and vandalGeorge Wallace when he ran ISm in the state's rural areas.
Swank sa1d the major potnts
for president m W68. But I was
of
the program tnclude formapaid for my act and d1d not
tiOn
of a neighborhood watch
have to endorse h1m . It was not
and making 11 more difficult
a benefit qerformance."
And the~ have been per- for local th1eves to succeed m a
form ances -' 300 of them crime.
The plan also calls for closer
scheduled for just this year and
among local law
coordination
covenng 200,000 mtles Past
performances have brought enforcement ag enci es; inawards - 27 of them, mcluding creasmg employment m rural
recognilton for h1s comedic araas; and developmg a youth
talents as well as singmg and crime education program
"Rural people are going to
music1ansh1p.
have
to cooperate closely with
Clark scored a hat ir1ck m
Country &amp; Western last year their police agencies, with
when he swept up all three top schools and employers to hck
this problem," Swank sa1d
here at a news conference.

. OKAY, OKAY,
BUT THE~E'S

'

@)

IT

SAW IT WAS L0,\DED
DROPPED

IT

l:::&lt;.f'oCK

w1i1have ~ore 'ume to languish
Blown
' over his real passion - mus1c.
Insulation
Serv)ces
"I'm always mterested in
1 - BlowR into Walls &amp; Attics-;
trymg som'e thing new in music.
"1974 CHEvROLET IMPALA
'
seriously experimenting. Until
f!195
STORM
4 Dr only 10,400 mdes, f ully equtpped me em , dark 'l~ A
HeeHaw, most folks thought
' '
Wtndows&amp;tloors
Rac•ne. 0 .
949-3604
r ea l cream puff
there were two Roy Clarks, one
ALUMINUM
I
who Joked and sang, the other a
1914 CHEV ELLE MALI'!IU
SJ095
Sidtng · Soff1H
se n ous guitans t Hee Haw • CM D•vlston car, air cond tttan mg, 350 V 8, P stee nng,
We Specialize In
Gutters - Awning's
made people understand 11 was
dark grey fm •sh, rad to
Free Est1mates
Ph, '1,92-3993 ,
me domg both." There is no
Building
Homes
1974
MONTE
CARLO
LANDAU
S469S
confusmg h1s genuine warmth
(Demo), load&amp;d wtt h op1tons
wtth another Roy Clark ·
Svracuse, Ohio
3 25 1 mo
·
"'
· ('I"
3 10"7
however.
Despite
hi s
1971 CHEVROLET2 TON
S349&gt;
JUshftable fame,
Clark
C&amp;E 102" C A , 4 speed trans , 2 speed l5,00d"rear axle,
remams a hkeable, down-home
gpod t ~es
.._.... sort and not of the "good 'old
Water, Electric,- Ges, Sewer
boy' category;~'~e1ther
·
tines, Installed
Work
Snobs are stunned by th1s
guaranteed.
PcNEVES. il :oo P-:-M.
m~ n when he reels off a
Dozer, Backhoa,Trucka
POMEROY, OHIO
Limestone &amp; Fill Dirt
stomac h-wrenchi ng pun beCommercloi-Resldenlial
30 8 Page, Middleport
. tween blu~grass d1tttes and
Construction &amp; Remodel
Heattng
Cooling
then tosses the guitar aside,
1970
FORD
Maver1ck
Refngerat•on Roof Repa1rs
aut
omatiC
,
6
cy
l
easy
on
gas
picks up a vwhn and executes Notice
Gutters - Plumbing ~K
Phone 992 2608 or 9&lt;19 29 11
E lectr1 c a I Repatrs
as, tender a passage from MEIGS County H umane Soc ety ---~ ~~ ___ -~ --- -=-~_:t c
. and
er vice.
1
Paganmi as they'll ever hear.
Caii992 -JS09 and
DOGS FOR ADOPTION One
full
blooded
G
197d CAPR I V 6 eng me, stee l
Save on your reparrs also
C&amp;W, h1s real bread and
Shepherd fem al e, 3 ~~r;;~~~ ~ belled r ad 1a ls, d ecor group, :
repatr mowers, compressors
7n Pearl Street •
old One black and whrf e
e~&lt;ce ll e!lt cond ttton 25 to 2t1
butter he- says, has undergone
and outboard s Brmg 11 In
· Middleport, Ohio
m 11&lt;ed breed m ale, 18 mon ths
m ~ g Call 992 5170 after 5
and save
Phone 992-5167 or 992-lN1
some obvwus changes when 1l
.
old Two Collte and Shepherd
P
3307tc
• ___
was enJOYed mamly by •those
__ z
mr~&lt;ed ,
bl a ck and whr t e - - - - - - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ !,.__
males, 31 1 months old Ca ll
below the Mason D1xon or by
JY7J CJ5 jeep 14,000 m rles L1ke
9d9 4917
new SJ,OOO Phon e 9-&lt;19 5182
small pockets of fans
3 30 6tp
WiLK iN_S_O_N_ _, "~-----=a=PE::-:R-:-:IE::-N~C:::E-::D-4
4 3 3t c ,.-------------------throughout the country.
ANNOUNC IN G new h ou r s ,
"Coun try 's had 1ts ups and
SKATE A WAY , 7 30 to 10 1972 PLY Ouster 318. 2 bl
SMALL -~lhiGI_NE
,RaCII_ato' ' . .41. . •""
automcHtc , new trres and
p
m "Wednes day , F r Hta y ,
downs, not as consistent as 1t
shocks $1 ,560 ,or ta'ke over . SALES&amp; SERVICE
1J
and Sat urday Availa ble for
paymen ts Call 992 3682 after
used to be; probably because of
........... :
pr• vate parftes Monday ,
m-3092
Servke
5 p m
Tu es da y
and
Th ursday
all the new blood. Some new
4
1
Stc
n1gh t s
Wednesday
and
From lhe la rgest Truck orl
entertainers have brought a
Sunday af t ernoons Pho ne 19 70
VW
conver trb le
,Bufl'dozer
Radlalpr to . the
985 3939. 985 9996 or 985 41-&lt;~1
1
new mfluence, too. There isn't
Everyt hrng new Phone 742
Smallest
Heater
CQre .
33012tc
3502
·
Nathan
Bigg•
as much drug use now as there - ·--- ---- --------Chain
J 30 Jt c
Rajl '!' tor S!!ec!allst
still '1:-I)R your 'Od of Mm, ·
was
but
there 's
Precision
Cosmetrcs Phone BROWN 'S 1975 MONTE Carlo, 4,000 miles.alcohohsm That's died down
99251 13 ~
iMITH N.EL$0N I
Ground
all power atr, AM st ereo
though, m comparison to what
1 7 tfc
tap e Call 992 7036 a f ter S p m
MOTORS. INC.
3 5 tfc
498 Locust St .
1t was hke years ago. Back - ------------- - AUCTIO N , Thursday n rg ht 7
Mtddleport,
OhiO
l
2
I
Mo
,
Ph.
Y'i'J.·J.tl4~
,,omerofl I,
then, Hank W1lhams Sr. was a
at Mason Auct 1o n ,
p m
Hor ton St In Mason , w Va
kn own alcohohc but everyone
For Rent
Consrgnm ent s wel c ome
tolerated it because he was so
-lOM E
l m provemenl
and
Phone (3 04 ) 773 5471
4 BED ROOM house , wall tOwall For Sale
Repa1 r Ser v 1ce - Anythmg
talented , a b1g star Then, a lot
2 2 ftc
carp et1ng, a c, fenced 1n ya rd
f1xed aro un d t he home, from

Motor Co.

1-J&lt;.. ·~. -

.

20.33, lronstde 13. '
5
-

HUSH

UP, SON:

LEAD. DA WAY,
MAC NATCHER LY
DA ~I D"S A LITT LE
FLUSTERED OVER
BECOMIN A
S WAMI!

COU RSE!

IF YOU'LL
~UST

FOLLOW

WOTS

1

OOIN' T "

ME,POP2

of not so successful smgers

thought drmkmg hke Hank
would make them b1g stars,
too .

"After they were told not to
return to many places for bemg
drunk wh1le playing, they got
the message. Country doesn 't
have the decadence that, say,
rock mus1c has - I don't mean
m the mus1c, obviously, I mean
the arhsts' ltves. Country
stngers are usually more
conventional than rock stars."
And how conventiOnal a
country smger IS Ray Clark?
Ooo_h,_)ust a run , of the null
superstar-m1lhon-jet p1lot

Farm Bureau has ·
plan to stop crime

3 IV tfc

Products phone 992 34 10
1 24 tf c

PUal.lc- ~;;t:-Me~7Mu-; le.
Loaders , l zaak Walton Fa rm .
Chester , Apnt 5 1 30 p m
Aprd 6, ra1 n dat e
3 31 5tc

____ -- ------------

Trac l or wrf h side
mower , runs good and good
rub ber $950 985 35 9&lt;1
3 30 7t p

A-VAILABLE fh1s week sma ll 2
bedroom doubl e w1de mobile TWO 12 rn plo ws 3 pt h ttch
Sl85 Also, 2 14 m plows, 3 pt
home near Po m eroy Off R t 7
hrtch $200 Phone 985 3594
by pass No chrl dren or pe t s
3 30 7tp
Phone 992 7017 or 992 7666
3 ,3 0 3t c

iR~Ailj_RapartmffitSJo!~~t

T RF TRIM
MOWER

OF Aprll 1, 1975 T he
Phone 992 '52118
Syracu se Ho me Uttlrt•'es
3 30 6tc .
Companv Will be co ll ectr ng - ·-r..-....-....-.-.-.....=::--------th err gas b1 ll s at l he form er 3 BEDROOM mob 1le home ,
Off1ce 1n Sy racuse
washer and ~ryer , Jl2 ba th s,
utrlrt res pa1d , $42 SO week 308
4 1 lOtc
Page Sf , Mrdd leport. Oh ro
GRA NO Openrng April I Of 0 &amp; J
3 4 trc
Fabr1c Shop , I mrle below
M rdd l eport on Route 7 2 BEDROOM mob ile home 1n
Spec1al po lyeste r doub l e
Syr acu.se No children or pe ts
kn1ts , Sl 39 yd
Ca ll 992 24&lt;1 1 afler 6 p m
d 1 3te,
Oepostt requtred
AS

H onor Soc tety 15, Ant1ques ~0 , Liltas. Yoga and You 33.
4, Wtld, Wtld
W orld of A ntmals 6, Bu ck Owens 8, New Pnce Is R1ght 10.

PLEAS~!

To Te ll The Truth 13; Sprong Street USA 15, RFD 20, Marco
Sportl &lt;te 33
DO-Adam 12 3,4, 15, Happy Days 6, 13, Good Tomes a,10, Solar
...Energy
- . . 20,33 ·
9 30-Movle " Strange Homecom1ng " Mov1e "Savages" 6 13
Mov 1e "The Runaways" 8, 10, Ascent of Man 20,33

'72.9Q(KD)

Jones 8,10. News 20, Interface 33.
•
10 30-Your Future Is Now 33, International Animation
Fest1val JJ .
II DO-News J,4,6,a,I 0,13, 15, ABC News 33
II 3D-Johnny Carson i,4, 15, Wtde World My slery "Come Ole

BORN LOSER

'

WHAT'Re

Wtlh Me"' 13, FBI

IT'S t&lt;:(X){) FOR ME .. ,I

'IOU

I rottf llUNK
llX&gt;MUGMOF

Ttlll.lK ~HttJb OF
~ttJb ll-jf~E€

12 3D-Wide World Mystery 6

Wt.DNESDAY,APRIL2, 1975
1&gt;-E ngii Sh 505 3
6 2&gt;-Farm Report 13

... _Jack W Carsey, Mgr ,
6i! Phone 992-2181

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

•

"Although the country is still
far safer than the city, rural
people are becoming increasmgly concerned w1th vandalism and thievery, especially
with rural crime up 300 per
cent since 1963," said Swank.
SWank said that a survey
conducted in Medll\8, Ashland,
Wayne, Perry, Hockmg,
Athens, Madison , Clark and
Fayette sounttes showed that
38 per cent of all crimes in
rural areas "involve vandalism,
18 per cent mvolve larceny and
burglary , 10 per cent involve
auto offenses and 8 per cent
mvolve threats.
He sa1d 60 per cent of all
persons arrested for rural
cr tmes are from urban areas
and 74 per cent of those
arrested are under 30 years-ofage.

Help coming on purchases

Wantell Jo Buy

1

STANDI NG f1mb ers Contact
Pomeroy Forrest Products
P 0 Box 726 . Pom eroy. Oh ro
Phon e 992 5V65
3 30 12tc
OLD turn1ture. rce bo,..es. bfass
beds, or com pl ete hou seholds
Write M D M1ller , Rt 4
· Pomeroy, Ohto Ca l l 992 -7760,

I0 7 74

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

10

WANTED O td uprrght p 1anos,
any condl l ton
Payrng S10
each F rrst f loor on ly Wr rte fRA I LER SPACt, J~ m 1~~;:
north of Me 1gs H1gh Schoo l on
an d g1v e d rrectrons to Wtften
old R 1 33 Phone 992 2941
P1ano Co , Box 188, Sardi S,
I 23 tfc
Oh10 d3946
3 27 6\p DUPiEX ~238~~-WiirWfSt ,
,Middleport , Ohto Phone 9~2
JUNK autos , com pl ete dnd
2780 or 992 3432
del ivered to our yard We ptck
2 19 tfc
up ~uto bod res and buy ' all
ktnd\ of sc rap metals and 'COUNTRY Mob 1le Hofl, .,, .. ,,..,
1ron R rder's Sa lvag e, St Rt
Rt 33, ten mrles north of
124, Rt 4, Pom eroy, 01\to
Pomeroy Large lot s W1 fh.
Call 992 5468
conc r ete pat 1os, Sidewalks,
runners and off
st re et
10 17 tfc
parkrng PAone 992 7479
CASH pard fo r all m akes and •
12 31 tfc
m ode l s of m obt le hom es , ----- --- --- ~ -Phone area CQde 614 423 9531
&lt;t
413tfc

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

Auto Parts, Rutland , Ohro
Phone (614) 7~2 6094

1 22 78tp
---------------- - STAN LEY Products tor sa le
- ~

Phone 742 3762
3 9 26 tc

FAR_M_L~ ;be7"See~Si0r-y0u r
nee ds
Pomeroy Forrest
Products , Barle y Run Road
Phon e 992 5965
r
3 19 12tc

------

dard stze cars with framj

'
ORPHAN ANNIE
,• 1.ITTLE
'

and unstrlpped motors, have
scales so there is no
guessing, we need matenal
to fill our quota. Try us,
we 're sure our prices will

,,

a trailer One house tHented

·

I

I

I Sli\.L C'A"'T
8f"IIEVE THAT G.INGER
t~ GO~E AMO I'LL
NEVE~ e-Ee HER

AND

POO~

OLD SAHD'fl

AGAtH · OH, I'1 L HfAR
'NAT MACHINE GIJH AS
lO~ A!l I LNE= -

tlfiOUT- IN

~

WAY

MAVBE If'S LUCIC,'( 'HE
60T 5~T - HE MElPS

Ttii&lt;E ttfR ~IHD
OI=F WORSE THtN6S ·

· ~~

.

Tha-t books Gl
qol' m1ne!

Newton don'-t
know beans
about hold1n'
a qwl's han·1

MISS MelbGI
qo1n' t' be

m,qhtL.J
Impress',

b04'

'
2-11 -lfc ·

Real Estate For Sale

$9,500 00

'

NOW S. SAVE Low , IO"f ,
30 ACRES - In the boon &lt;locks · BUY
down paym ents, 8 pet. in
on Shade River $6,000
terest 30 yr f 1nanc rng on new

UL ABNER
GUL-P!!- AH
GOHA FIGHT
A OPPONENT
AH CAINT

hom es rn 3 Me igs County
1ocat1ons, or BUILD on vour
lot Ph one 992 5976 or 992-584 -V
3 13 tfc

BUSINESS - We have several
and loca tions w1th buildings .
Work· for yourself with no

Pets For Sale

I tol' lJOU!

Now 3 bedroo~
home with u; tached garage •
Mid 20s, good loca tton Phone
fJOd I 77 3 5468
I

NiAS'ON -

TOUCH?

WHAT

ARE
YOU

DOING 2

WINDIN6 UP TO
DEE-LIVER A
PUNCH AH 15
FORBIDDEN To

THATB~RR!!

WIND
IT:S

up:

'--'· '-

11 -..:c -'~.•-

---------

Help Wanted

!IJe._a, ·

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

For Sale

__________ __

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

---------------·-----------------

-

- ------

.

.

- ~---"

!NEWSPAPER

~?nEHP RI SE

Cop)Tifll 1&lt;! 1ltn

ASSN I

·'

MOBILE home, 1971 65 x · 12K inC! 2 bedr,oom Phone 99'2
54ij6
~

6:00 A.M. nL MIDNIGHT

3 28 61c

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

.'

'

.

lJ

Now arranre the circled letters
to form the 1urpri~e anawer. u

.,
'

'I

WHEN THE ALMANAC
SAID WE WUZ IN ~!;~,,

A LONG

SPELl ~"[ .

'l r xxr

(AMwert to..orrewJ

PRUNE COUGH MALICE FEUDAL

...
H hall/i('l/ lf i i{Jiwd allf•r a ht'G! JI meal - ANCHOR

I HAD NO IDEE IT WUZ
TALK IN' ABOUT '10U 1
0 1.' BOSS.IE

you re very fond Will

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Whitened,
1 Upbratd;
as with
scold
frost
5 Super 40 Intensify
abundant
41 Umque
11 Seaweed
DOWN
extract
1
Winged
12 Right now
( 2 wds.)
2 Nunble
13 - 'sPeak
3 Evenmg a
14 Pen tn
score
IS As1an nver
(2 wds.)
16 Gain
4 Before
17 Building
5 ,Tying the
extension
oxfords
18 Tooth
6 Make
substance
amends
20 Pagoda
7, Norse
ornament
betrothal
21 Percussion
goddess
instrument
22 "Budden brooks"
author
23 Actor,
Gene 25 Fray
26 Avon's earl
27 Indonesian
1sland
28 Bulgana n

II
you don t take the t1me to grve
subordinates clea r -cu t 1nstruct1ans, there's no way you II get
hoped-for results

For Wodnolday, April 2, 1875
ARIES (Morch 21 -Aprl111) Be

SAGITTARIUS (NQ•. 23-Do&lt;:

careful h ow you conduct
yo urself 1n front of others Your
·image 15 very, frag1 le for th e
next couple days

21) You II have to count yo ur
penn1es today Pay past
obl1gat1ons before assum1ng
new ones M anage money
prudently

TAURUS (April 20·M•y 201
You haYe a tendency today to
JU mp to unwarranted conc lu s ions Hear o th ers out
before
mak1ng
hasty
' Judgments

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan.
11) Your ac 11ons could cause
so me hard feelings today
You re too am.1ous to serve
your own Interests Be careful
whose toes you step on

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20)

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19)
You re too ~as lly put upon today You could laler resent a
commttment so th1nk before
you volun teer

Bu srness dealings with friend s
at th1s time are more

com ~

pllca ted than usual Be waryor you 'll be burned
CAN~ER

21-.luly 22)

(.tune

PISCES (Fob. 20·Morch 20)
Stay out ot s1tuat1o ns w1th
frrends today where money or
th1ngs change han ds You re
l1kely to feel ialer you got the
short end

Don't tr eat llgbtly legal In volvements tad a~ or tomorrow
A m1stake could prove costly
later Acl only on adv1ee ot
counsel

LED (July 23·Aug. 22) Thts

Yesterday's Allswer
8 Words akin 24 "Sweet" gal
to 3 Down
of song
(2 wds.)
25 Numerous
9 Type of
27 UnfrUitful
tnangle
Z9 Locale ..,.
10 Greek
30 Eventual
1' Vtnous
31 Corundwn
19 Lacerated 38 Plunge
22 Defrost
37 However
23 Tardy
(var.)

IS

·~

not a day to tackle tasks
beyond your talents a nd
capab1l1tles Trymg to 1mpress
others w1ll have the oppo,site
effect

April 2, 1975

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl.

22)
Don t count on others today 1f
you re JOYolved In a r1sk:; Sliva ~
tton Don t buy a big deal or a
dime's worth, Sight unseen

LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0cl. 23) An
1ssue between two persons o f

You 'll set some very amb1t1ous
goals for you rself th1s year
Success 1s likely 1f you stay on
course Keep one 1r0n In lhe
f1re at a t1me
JNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE .\SSN I

4rt.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Look for that extra chanc,
admontttons He won the kmg of
spades, played a cl ub to the
kmg and a club to the ace When
that su 1 ~ fa1led to spht he trted
the diamond finesse The result

NORTH

•K

• 94 3 2

t64
.AQ75 32
WEST
EAST

com

- down one

.QJ 1084

• 9 7 53

• J 875

• K to 1

• Q 10
• J 93

oloiO

o1o J 9 8 I

SOUTH

(D)

o1o A 62

.AK6
tAQ852
o!oK6
NorUt-South vulnerable
West

Nortb

East

South

Pass

2•

Pass

JN T

Pass

Pass

Pass

I

DAILY &lt;;RYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AJ!YDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
•
One letter simply standa for another. In this sample A 11
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnele letters,
apoalrophes, the length and formation of the word• are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dilf~ rent.

e

Opemng lead - Q •

By Oswald &amp; James Jacpby
Bridge is a game full of
adages - "second hand low .
third hand htgh" , "cover an
honor with an honor" , "aces
are made to take kmgs" , "lead
from longest and strongest"
CRYPTOQUOTE
They all form a htany that
a Gregortan chant seem
KUYBSD
VUE
LRGE
TUP
A C FRE makes
brtef.
One
of the standard ad,
'
morubons for declarers IS to atB 'U,~ WPE
LRtE TUP
MRUPJB BU, tack your best su1t.
But just as good declarers
GYB !_fiE DSFGDB NUD BPET JUY· learn lo postpone finesses unt1l
other avenues of pl~y are exEDUI ~ TUPD
A C Y B • - J I G P B C G Y" · hausted , they should also be
alert to mstances when weaker
-· \
suits
should be attadted first m
Yesterday's Cr)optoq110te: IF I AM CONTENT WITII LIT· the play
of a hand.
TLE , THEN ENOUGH IS AS GOOD AS A FEAST.-DEAN
Tod&lt;jy's declarer was a f1rm
SWIFT
•
behe~er in adages and standard

.

LAND 0' GOSHEN!!

TUNE' TO WM~ 92.1

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

CAP wedges and trailer
wedges Any amoun t Phone
742 374 3
-1 1 6t c

BELOVED GREECE.

MONEY18 NO _ __.,"
OBJECT I
pCJL'- -J. .rl'lt

:l!ARNEY

.

FROM

&lt;llayama, 420 miles, is 4 hours
10 minutes.

AWAY FROM MY

YOUR OWN PRICE.

' I

IS

___ _

ENOUGH MONEY IN mE:
WORLD ID GET ME: •

YOU COULD WRITE YOUR
OWN TICKET. NAME

Buyers See Us For You
Needs In Real Estalo.

GREAT .COUNTRY STEREO

!

---

III

IT'S 5Aic;&gt; TO
6RING ACTION
TO A HALT.

~t¥tJ'.t)f!r'

.

WMPO-FM

Mobile Homes For Sale

KOI&lt;TDt;t Ti'E RE'5 I\OT

CAll 992-2259

•

--

I'M AFRAID NOT, MR.

properties to sell : :
Strike while the Iron is"
hot.:... Sell Today while
we have Cash Buyers._
All Cash for Your
Property.

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

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

.

filii!

~~~..,
• HELP • HW:l.
------------- -- H~
We are in great ne.td ot • ~

.

The ambulance business Ira- with the latest and most
&lt;jitiqnally has been a "rags and complet,~ , !l)luipment, designed
riches " affair . The military , to last many years and to be
and the hospitals tende"d to buy remounted on a new, relatively
inexpensive panel trucks and cheap chassiS every few years.
equip them f6r short ltved
Other new companies and
emergency use.
some of the existing amThe ambulance comp;m1es, bulance bwlders are fairly
on the other hand, bought the certain to folloW Emergency
most expensive Cad1Uac . or One's lead.
s1mtlar chas;;is and outf1tted
For the fire departments of
the veh1cle for elegance ad well rural communities and small
as comfort and emergency c11tes, Emergency One is
treatment.
·
building two sizes of pwnpers
~ Neither of these suits majori- with auxiliary foam and
ty needs toda~, says'bilain1\l!n. chemiCal fire fighUng equipRobert C. Tyo of, Emergenc~ ment, 10 ¥il for $20,000. Tbey
One, a new cpmpany organized · also are tritended as "quick
at• Ocala, Fla., to tum out at~ck 'i pumpers for fire
radically new ambulances and deparlments in bigger comP,;l\cks and blk~ advantage munitles. Each nhicle is
ballill.
Of the new federal financmg.
mounted on a moderate priced
~e- the ambUlance situa---aoaventional truck cha~.
A Rural Fire Safety
pendllig in Congres.s to Ji:A~d!IIA:::ti
Tyo said the averagti!\il i t e&amp;l'A -~go, many small
federal help lo smaller ~' ~... eblional ambulance, even':_dh~ap " tf~l!, engines vier~
munltiu which need new ~ "'~lie ~w:Y type, is good only for 1 qunted ~ !l¥ht trucka bl!l, in
eftlllnel.
~ foil' years serv1ce. "It&amp;' e liLih days after World War
Nlltnily, tho prospect V a
n~s the chassis is shot, U..
,' veii ilie Unlest towna be&amp;an
matket Jar&amp;ely finanl'l!d by
"vehicle IS shot," he sa &gt;
lng the blvillt behemotbl.
federalaovenment haa wbe~.
•lotj the same '17,000 ~--:: mergency One also
ted U. ~ of the toOtS
,~ that a convent!~ ~ vides a new industry for
wbo build unbulances and ~ 1114 ,i· ~- ambulance costs~ Ia, a town that 1taa been a
lnldlland lt has brooght llOI!'it!"'"'·mb f"ency One is building two cen roi'"!Jiedepressed mobile
~e into ~ buslnes.s. sizes of an, ambulance body home. ma!lllfacbtri,llll indutry.

-

NEW YORK (UPJ ) - There
are 45,000 ambulances tn
service in the United States. A
~ngreSijlonal committee has
been told 100,000 w11l be needed
by 1980.
'jhe .countn has about
250,000 fire trucks. Many are 35
or 40 years old and their
replacement cost has soared
from J30,000to $65,000, which is
well beyond the means of small
cities and poses quite a burden
for larger cities.
Congress was so impressed
by the ambulance shortage
that, in enacting the Emerger:\;
cy Medical Act, 11 provided a
way for COII)Jiluruties lo ' get .:
federal itelp in buying new
ambulances on a cost sharing

~

of f~e, E~R equipment

An••"r

15;

Jeann1e 4 , Somerset

,_,

29 New Mexico
c1ty ( 2 wds. )
32 Knight's
drtnk
33 Wa1I
34 Comedi• n
Conway
35 Combusttble
ll!3terlal
37 Prong
38 Railroad
locomotive

41 6fQ,
________

~---- ---

I

lumbln

\ ... , ....d•y"•

of

Gilligan's Is 6, Sesame 51 20,33; Mike Douglas 13
~ : 39'---Bewllched 3; Merv Griffin 4, Mod Squad 6, Lucy Show 8,
Movie-To Be Announced 10, Bonanza 15
5:DO-FBI 3, Andy Grtff llh 8 Mosier Rogers' Netghborhood
20,33; lrqnslde 13
5·»--News 6; Bevetly Hlllbtllles 8, Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Get
Sfnarl 15, E lee. Co 33
6.DO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6, Elec Co 20
6·3D-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13, Bewitched 6; CBS News
8,10, Zoom 20, Your Future os Now 33
7 .DO-Truth or Cons 3,4, Bowling for Dollars 6, What's My Lone
8; News 10, Country Music Jubilee 13, 1 Spy 15, To Be Announced 20, Know Your Schools 33
7.30--Pollce Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4, Let's Make a Dea l
6; Wilburn Brothers 8, The Judge 10, To Tell lhe Truth 13,
Book Beat 20, Episode Acllon 33
{
8:DO-L11tle House on the Prairie 3,4, 15; Thai's My Mama 6, 13,
Tony Orlando 1!. Dawn 8, 10, Feeling Good 33, Thea ler 1n
America 20.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22!

"'

YE"S · BUT SHE HAS
'Sf1ND'( TO WORR'f

HE TRIED TO GIVE HISttf::£
ID 'SAvE HER- H£'6 50
QUIET, AHD SO, SO WEAl&lt; I DCIH'T 'SEE HOW HE
LIVED AT ALL -

~-- - -----------.,._

atfd 3 noce butldmg lois Only

Dream

Magaz tne 8, 10, On

1n lhe m1ddle Arbitrat e

_..:..::Priii::..:•=::SIMISI==-=INSWIR=lleR
~___~I

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-A DOG'S LIFE

&amp;nd backhoe work , septk 'r
tanks ins talled. dump truckl
•l!lnd lo-boys for hire , wiJI hal!l
fiiJ d irt, top soil, limestone-,_
gravel ; Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992 7089 ,
nlgl'1t phone 992 3525 or 99) ;

5232

Cartoon 3, I

6,

whom

I I
1
~==~=~:::::::::::::::._~•:•~l~l:e•:t::ed by the above cartoon.

_;.

12 19
- ~ Pr - -------EXCAVATING, o.!!,ozer, loador

basem ent. garage w1fh shop
and large lot

Right 1,10, RFO 20
3.30-Qne Lile to Live 13, Lucy Show
A~lng 20
,

anse today You II tmd yourself

L.l

sal! sly you .·
o.,..n 9 Til4 :30
Mon. Uhrul Fri.
9 unlil2 . 30 Sat.

F A furna ce, 7 large closets
with storage shelves Dry

()
~

*

RACINE - Modern J bedroom
home Large balh Nat gas

1

ITACHU(;!

, ,.L----2~-U~~--.u. . .

~feel

DO:i"ER: work, land clearing by '
the acre , hourly or contract• 1
Farm ponds , roads , e tc.
Large do ze r and operator
with o ye r 20 year! ex
perlence Pullins Excavating,
Pomeroy , Oh10 Phone 992 ,
2478
..

Porches and ga r age w1th level

Employment Wanted

-TIM_E_b;.;k;;;;-

I

"'--- - - - - - - - - - - - - - '

CL"OSE OU-:;: -o~-;,e;"i;;-;ag
layol fs
sew mg m ach ines For sewmg
stretch fabr1cs, buttonhole s._
fan cy de S1gn s, etc. Pa 1nt
WE HAVE NEARLY 50
Sl igh tly blemished Chotce of
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
W ILL do 1anr tor work or
ca rryi ng case or sew1ng
parntrng Phone 992 2262
WHEN YOU REALLY WANT
stand S49 80 cash or to:rn. ~
IT SOLO, TRY TEAFORD AT
FEMA L E Dachsh und , red AK
3 30 6tc - available Phon e 992 7755
C Reg mm1ature. 7 m0nths i£RA ·R- T
12 18 ttc
old Phon e 7&lt;12 d256
fle xable hours 1 or 2 d a~~ga
INDI AN Joe's s;:: ... , ,.,y 1..10ou:s.'
3 30 3t c
week or
eve n 1ngs
Ex
buy and se ll guns . amm o
--------- - --------per renced, excel l ent l oca l
ftshlng equipm ent , and after
re ference Phone 992 7090
A pr il 1, we w rll ha ye fr sh batt
eYen mg s
Stop by at 308 Page St
3 30 8tc
DRAFTSMAN
wanted
Mtddleport Phone 992 3509 ,
Pretera bly w1th trac k work ----- --- ~--- ---­
3 2 30tc
ex.penence Send resume to REMODELING,
p lumbi n g,
P 0 Box 152, Pome roy , Oh iO
heatmg and all types of ~--------- ----6 ROOM house with bath 3
E qual
Op po rt un tty
em
genera l
repa~r
Work 24,000 BTU G;neral e 1 ect~1c a.;
bedr oom. full baSem ent , ias
con d1t 1oner , not a year o ld
players
g uaranteed 20 yea r s ex
heat , h w fl oor, wall to wall
Phone 992 2952
3 JO 71c
perienc:e Phone 992 2409
carpe t Close to schoo l tn
3 26 tfc
3 11 He
Pomeroy Phone 992 3097.
------- ~------ --~---------------3 9 52tc
U SE D ceme n t and c1nde r block
, for sate Phone 742 3743
B EA UTI F UL n ew home on
l ake, 3 bedrooms , ba th &amp; 112,
MODERN ster eo r ad io, am 11n. -·--------- -----~~tc
ca rp eting , drapes , big den
separat e con tr ols .:1 speaker · POTATOE S brtng own •con
Ca ll 99 2 3493
soun d
sy s t em
aat a nc e
..._ 3,___
24 lfc
talner , S4 tor 100 lb Also . 1966
S103 58 or term s Ca ll 9&lt;112 3965
l=o rd van bus for sa le or traCte
3 31 tf c
for motorcycle Phone 985
3 l!E OROOM house , fully
38&lt;9
10 HP SEARS trac tor 46 tn
carpe fed, basement. garage ,
.:1
1
6tc
m ower , diSC, 8 1n t urni ng
on corner lot , fenced yard ,
plow and snow blade Phon e 1971 6SO. TRIUMPH , good
for ced air fu r nace heat,
Charles R. Harr rs, 843 -2693
out sr de storage bu1ldt n g ,
cond tt 1on Phone 992 7054 or
4 I 3tc
stor m w ind ows , alummum
992 5985
sl d rng, V) -m de east or Mason .
4
1
6tc
1S 1F T F I BERGLASS boat , 50
on Rt 33 , SI 9,500 Phone (304)
h p M erc ury motor . tra•ler , 750 HO NDA motorcy cle for
773 5942
and ~kllng equrpment Ex
J 31 3tc
Sale Phone 742 4294
cellen t conct rt 1on $900 Phone
4
1
5tc
davs 992 2689 or evenmgs 992
.........
2941
KE L FOO D A RAMA stde by
4 1 61C
si d e r efrrgerator t r eezer r
-- -~Ph()n e 992 -2257 a ft er S 30 p m
1972 KAWASAKI motor c ycle,
4,1 Jtp
75()' CC, 2,200 m1les , like n ew - ~ .
~-- --------cond lt mn S1s sy bar and 4
Rail service between· Tokyo
lug gage rack , 2 helmets, must
se ll Phone 985 41 31
and Osaka • via the standard4 1 5t c
gauge!! New Tok~I~O Line is
--~
head~ ;by 36 "Hlkarl" super- ON E Hhc20 l 1re, rim and tube , 10xSO MOBILE hom e, good
condrt•on S21,050 25 ga llon
com p le t e / $25, ready for
, expi%i'Jtmns which make the
cat tle waterrng t ank, S25 JO
trt1ck Phone 992 7429
320.1-nlile run m 3 hours 10
- _______ ..._ __ 4 1 l tc bags of l ime Ph one 9924 7330
1•5t c:
minutes at an avera,e speed of
-. ' .
_......_
.:_
101.1 mph, The World Almanac 10 F'T ALUMINUM boat , 7 h p !:.ELt vour mobtle homf' for
Eska motor, A 1 condtf1on 2
reports W1 til the opening of the
cash , 15 ho mes wanted , 1958
new ltfe lackefs , used oars
.thru 1972 m od~ls . Phone 16 14 )
new Sanyo Line, westward
sale or tra de t or good
d46-1425, Gal lipol is
bargarn Phone 992 7429
from Osaka lo Oltayama , best
3 9 78tc
4l
-3t
c
time between Tokyo· and

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

lrom Grueser's Chip Mill.
Put tho5e 1unk autos into
cash. We pay SIJ for stan'

3 29 tfc

lol 54500 00

b
I I

ICAI.AP.4

m1le above Meigs F~rir
Gr~undson right, IUSiacroo

service, all makes, 992 22U.
The Fabric Sh op, PomeroY.
Aut horized Singer Sales and
Servtce We Sharpen Sc issors

NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom
house wllh shower balh

:GO-Another Wor ld 3,-4, 15, General Hosp1tal 6, 13 , Price tS

HUSBY

SEWING MACHINE , Repairs ,•

a·;TCAMPE~-;~~;-;-:;;~p NEW LISTING - 2 houses and
truck Prtce $200 Phone 99 2
1727
3 27 4tc

;
II

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

-------

PR IVATE m ee t rng room for
any organ iZat ion phone 992
3975
3 11 tfc

ORVILLI:!

., MEBBE WE CAN JAM il·HS
'ALIEN' BUSINESS RIGHT
DOWN lW -moRN KING'S
THROAT !

' Localed on old 33' Jusl IV,.'

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

If&lt;;~

--------------lJSED parts, Frye's T ruck and

AN
IDEA,

l1vered tig h t tb your prole ct.
Fas't
and
easy
Free
est 1mates. Phone 992 -32,...
Goegleln Ready M ix C&lt;i..
Middleport Oh io
I
630 t c

Real Estate· For Sale

3·an d 4 ROOM f ur n1shed and • ----- --------- 2.~~t c
un f urni Shed
apartments GAS cooKs tove, n 1ce for ca n
nrn g Phon e 985 3585
Phone 992 5&lt;1 34
4 12 tfc
3 30 Jtc

WHAT
IS IT ?

"READY M"IX CO NCRETE

FURNIS H ED
dparrment , · - - - - - - - - - - - -- -:
adul ts onl y rn Mrddleport 197 1 F ORO' truck 1 1 ton , mrxed
Ph one 992 3874
hay Phone 992 3436 or 992
J 25 tfc
57&lt;18

-----

v---'-.. JUST

HALL'S SALVAGE

and rear end. We buy

' " ' ' !H lfl 1 f f

Unscramble these four Jumbles.,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary word s,

' ALLEY OOP

3 21 75

- Swee pers, toa sters 1rons,
all small appliances Lawn
mowers. nex t to Sta te H1gh
way Garage qp Route 7
Ph one 985 3825
3 11 26to;

GROCERY bus1neSS tor sale
B u1 ld1n g tor sa le or lease
Phon e 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m tor appo rntment /

3

hv tH Nil I AI1Nfll fl

Ph. 985-4102

C BRADF"ORD , AuctiOneer

POMEROY LANOMARK,

.' -

Home Building
Room Additions
and Garages

a,

~!Y~M ® /J..J lctno~l..I..-J ,_.

'

Chester, Ohio

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

'104.95(KD)

3 ll ff C:

Yard Sale
bedroom t ra1 ler Ad u l ts
THERE w rll be a garage sa le at TWO
only Phone 997 3975 or 992
Euger:e F 1nk 's res 1d en ce
2571
beh 1M Rutland Grade SchooL
3 23 tt c
Aprrl 4 and 5 Few Avon
bottles and ant rques , Odds and
3 RM furni shed ap t, ut rl rt res
ends
pard 356 North 4th Sf ,
4 1 3t c
M 1dd leport
3 30 6t c

6 JG---F1ve M1nutes to L1ve By 4, News 6, ~1ble Answers

QmstructiJn Co.

&gt;
School Scene 10, Th~ Story 13.
6:35--&lt;:olumbus Today~
6:4.k--Mornlng Report 3; Farmllme 10 . •
7·DO-Today 3,4,15; A.M A.merlca 6,13, CBS News 8,10
8 DO-Lassie 6; Captain Kangaroo 8, Popeye 10, Sesame 51 3o.
8. 25--&lt;:apl Kangaroo 10
B·JG-Misslon· Impossible 6
9·DO-A M 3, Phil Donahue, 4, To Be Announced 8, Morning~
wllh 0 J 13, Phil Donahue 15
9.25--&lt;:huck While Reports 10
9 3D-Nol for Women Only 3, Dinah 6, Galloping Gourmets,
Taltlelales 10; New Zoo Revue 13
10 DO-Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4, IS, Joker 's Wtld a, 10, Dtnah
13
"
10 JG-Wheel ol Forlune 3,4,15, Gambol 8, 10
11·00-High Rollers 3,4, 15; One L1fe to Ltve 6, Now You See It
8, 10, E lee Co 20.
II 3D-Hollywood Squares 3, 15, Brady 8unch 6, 13, News 4,
Love of Llf~ 8, 1~; Sesame St 20,33
11 ·5&gt;-Graham Kerr 8, Dan !mel 's Wl!rld 1012 co-Jackpot
3, 15, Password 6, 13! To Be Announced 4; News 8,10
12 .3D-Biank Check 3,15, Spilt Second 6,13, Searc h for
Tomorrow 8,10; To Be Announced 33
12 4&gt;-E lee Co 33.
12.5&gt;-NBC News 3,15
I·DO-News 3; All My Children 6,13, Ph1l Donahue 8 Young 1!.
lhe Reslle5S 10, Nol For Women Only 15
1.»--How To Survive a Marriage 3,4,15; Lei's Make a Deal /'
6, 13, As lhe Wor ld Turns 8,]0
·DO-Days of Our Lives 3.4, 15, $10,000 Pyramid 6, 13, Gutdtng
Light 8,10
2:3G-Doclors 3,4, 1S; Big Showdown 6, 13, Edge of Ntght 8,10

.. · oo-:-Mr

00----'Tomorrow 3,4, News 13

Bissell Brothers

ELWOO D BOWER S REPAIR

Self- Propelled

Gol The Acloon?" 8;

ITM'/SaF!

~'I ~

I.IU..GS A

6, Movi e "Who's
Mov1e "The Sw1 nger " 10, Janakl 33

6 oo-Sunrise Semmar 4, Sunrise Semest er 10

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

Com plet e Servrce
Phon e949 3821or 949 3161
R a c~ne, Ohto
Crrtt Brad ford
s 11f

'•

6

roof to ba semen t You Will
l rke our work and ra tes
Ph one 742 508 1
12 29tfc

22"-3112 HP

'

9 3D-Woman 20, Wotness lo Yeslerday 33
10 OD-Po loce Story J,4, 15. Marcus Welby, M 0 4,6, 13. Barnaby

Radtos, Antennu, Towen,
Used T.v.'s. Buy trom thr
" lnd•an " and save "Wam ~
Pum", We buy U$ed Radios,
and Towers. Radl'h rep1ired,
by FCC licensed service~
.P.ersonnel . Stop and see thel
Bubbles .:
' lnd1an" and
Monttor Chln"tl 10 and 20.,

""'S,EPTIC
I At'l~~
Cleaneo
Modern San tt at ron , 992 3954 or
992 73 49
v 18 He

20" -llf2 H P ··

Bowlmg For Dollars 6, W1'1at's

' 3D-Hollywood Squares 3, Hollywood Squares

ME

308 PageSt.
Middleport, 0. 992-3509

j

FOR 0

oo- Truth or Consequences 3,4,

My L~ne? 8. News 10, Nam e-Thai Tune 13; High School TV

CB SALES &amp; PARTS .

!

Phone 992

6, Beverly Hillbill tes 8. "Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Gel

8, 10, Zoom 20, Your' Future Is Now 33.

fiE

-INDIAN JOE'S

--

wt th pat ro nt ce
2780 or 992 3432

3D-N~ws

&gt;'

6 DO-News 3,4,8, 10,13,15, AB C News 6, Eleclroc Com p a~y 20;
lTV Uftltzat oon 33
6 3D- NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13, Bew1tc hed 6; CBS News

)

#

------------NOW se lltn g F u l l er Brush

Slrllfl 20,33;'

Smart 15, Electnc Company 33

Phone 949-5961

EXCAVAnNG
OOMPANY

1!1

~omerser

Bonan za 15
~
'5 DO-FBI 3, Andy ' t{~1 ff rth 8, Mo sler Rogers' t-1e1ghborhood·

tomplet' plumbing
heating service and·
general sheet · metal,
wo r k s .
F r e ,.,
Estimates.

Home Maintenance

.Television logrfor easy vi,ewing

3D-Bewtlched 3, 'Merv Grofltn 4, Mod Squad 6, Lucy Shqw I,

4

RACI_
NE_fWM~I_NG
&amp; HEAnNG

p.J

''" "" ...

I

1..arroon J; 1 uream ot Jeannte 4:
Gtll lgan's lslanq 6, Tat!lelales 1!1 Sesa me
Movie "The Jrap" 10, M1ke Douglas 13

HEJ.L

NEIGLER
BUILDERS SUPPLY

.

4 uv-tvlr

·Business Service

.Pomeroy
'
,

QUAun

GRP-55. I PICKED

A DEAD
•

'

2 SIGNS
OF

I

OH, TH,l\T&lt;&gt; IT WAS IN

-

;

POMEROY
MOTOR
CO
'
c

dtverSif~

_...)

--

~...

lARRY JAVENDER

on a par wtth tax rebates, he
feels now IS the bme ~ to

hts talent to prove
he's J!'Ilfth tl all That exhausts
'-s.tilY more of hiS precious
le1sure lime for , m addt lion IQ
the 10 mt lhon v1ewers who tune
m HeeHa" each week to eat up
h1s ag1ie gmtar-p1ckmg served
\lith a 's1de order of cornpone,
m1lhons 'more crowd mto
country fairs and rodeos across
the Midwest and South to see
thetr hero.
Upon h1s fourth ap!)ea rance
as host of the Tomght Show,
Clark drew more VIewers than
any other guest host m that
pr ogram's h1story. And
comedy, vane ty or talk show
gues l!ng Clark, such as Mac
Davis, The Odd Couple or Merv
Gnff1n , where he frequently
appears, can be assured of a
quantum leap in viewer ratmgs
that evemng
"I'm pleased with how thmgs
have gone for me," the s1x-foot,
230-pound smger understates.
"But my goals have changed a
lot tn the past f1ve years. My
mterests are different now and
not always related to show

,.

r

'

For Fast •Results Use Sentinel Classifieds
.

C~rk:

one-man
talent ,,c:o;n glomerat.. e

Roy

.

'l'he Da1lv Sen\tne!, Mlddleport-Pomet uy, 0 , Tuesday, Apnt 1, 1~75

Smce he was always gomg to
make the hand If clubs split
declarer s hould have gtven

htmself an extra chance by
F1RST playmg the heart sutt
W1th a three-three dl\ lSI on , the
mnth tnck would be assured
The extra divtdend occ urred
here. W1th the queen and 10 fallmg m the East hand the play of
the th1rd round of th e su1 t
toward',the mne m dummy w1ll
produce•the game-gomg trtck

u:a;1 :11!&amp;J9.!?D
The b1dd mg has been
'
West

North

East l South

Pass

1N T

Pass

I •

.

?

You South hold
•KQ 965 . A2 tK4 3 olo QB7
What do yo u do now"
A - Pass Your hand can play
notrump and you only have five
!plrdes

TODAY"S QUESTION
Vol{ do pass

West btds two

diamonds , your par tn er two spades
illd East three d1amonds What do
you do now' '
, Aaswer Tomorrow

SfJIXI $1 lor JACOBY MODERN
book lo. ""Win at Bndgo."" (clo lhls
rHIW$paper). P 0 Box 489. Radio
CilyStaiiOn. Ne"w York, N ~ 10019
\NEWSPAPER ENTERPIU§E ASSN I

•

�•

•

10 - The Daily Seri'tmel, Mtddlepor[:l'omero; 0

"'
l'ut•&lt;&lt;i"l', Ap11l I 1" "

Farm price Railroads
Contmued from page
(Contmued from page 7)
Soybeans accounted for most
of the 6 per cent drop tn prtces
recetved for otl-bearmg crops
Soybean prtces averaged $5 31
.a bushel mmtd-March, down 41
m the past month and 65 per
cent below March, 1974 Smaller declmes were also recorded
fdr cottonseed and flaxs~d
All beef cattle prtces averaged $27 80 per hun• dredwetght - up 90 cents
•durmg the month -and helped
the meat ammal pnce mcrease
•regtster a sltght one per cent
' mcrease by March 15 Cow and
steer prrces also mcreased, but
hog prtces dropped 10 cents to
an Jtverage of $30 30
Sheep and lamb pnces also
mcreased, but the meat antmal
pnces sbll averaged some 20
per cent belo" the le\ els of
March, 1974
Cotton prtces dropped 6 per
cent, wtth upland cotton selling
at 30 cents a pound, down 2
cents from rrud-February. and
23 4 cents below March 1974
The market prtces fell an
average 5 per cent for the
fa rmers' vegetables, "'th decreases for tomatoes , as·
paragus, lettuce and sweet
corn Prtces were htgher for
cabbage, omons, snap beans
and cauliflower, the report
SBld

The caultflower prtces of $25
per hundredweight for the
month ended March 15 were a
ne\\ record, and the overall
vegetable prtce mdex was still
29 per cent higher than one
year ago

II

1

check ..... mt ..J.m•n nr•d

Wllll ll.' ll

James Sci lrl Ted Reed p1est dent tntrodured Jmnes but h&lt;1d to
leav~ soon, t&gt;O F'red M u11 O\\
pres1dc nl pr es1ded
Reed tn h1s upemng remttr ks

Vl l'f'

sa td that the btds on the
Pomeroy-Ma son Br td ~e wt ll be
let Apnl 29 but work wtll. not
start Wl tll all matenals are
available He • t~ l so reported
that there \\ 3S nothmg new to

report on bus service between
Pomeroy a nd Athens He

also menlaoned that 1t ts un
der td ed "hethet a fireworks
dtsplay wtll be held at the Btg
Bend Ragatta 111 June
Reed also announced that
Richard

Ch{Hilbers

was

rehrmg Jrom the Pmnero)
Nattonal Ban k and Mond a)
was hts last day to work Reed
thanked Chambers fot hts loyal
suppor t to the chamber cmd
asked that he contmue attendm g meetmgs
Dan Thomas son of Mr and
Mrs Dan Thomas, atlended
the meehng as part of hts scout
proJect m recetvmg a ~om­
mun tcal ton ment badge Dan
1s a se mor patrol leader for
Pomeroy Scout Thoop 249
Others alle~mg m addthon
to those named were Mrs
Thoma s. secre tar ) , Dale
Warne r , F' ~rma n Moore ,
Ch&lt;~mbers
Bil l Grue se r ,
Melvtn VanM ete r
Jack
Carsev, C E Blakeslee,
Wend ell Hoover, Jack Kerr ,
Bob Ja cobs, Fred Cro" ,
Meltssta Conse, Beulah Jones
•and Kalte Crow

Dinsmore Boyles died Monday
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mr
Dmsmore Boyles, 68, Tuppers
Platns, dted Monday evemng tn
Camden Clark Memm tal
Parker s burg,
Hos pt ta l,
followmg a bnef tllness
Mr Boyles was born at Mt
Zion, Calhoon Count; , W Va ,
a son of the late Lyman and
Martha Dmsmore Boyles He
was preceded m d._ by two
brothers and stx Sisters
He was raiSed tn Parkersburgand hadbeenareStdent of
the Tuppers Plams area for the
past 27 years He was a
member of the Alfred Umted

MEIGS THEATRE
Tontght thru Thursday
Aprtl 1 3

NOT OPEN •

Fn Sat , Sunday

Margarer'Mttchell 's
GONE Wf'fH THE WIND
( Techmcolor)

Ra1ed PG
Show Starts 7 00 p m

Methodtst Church In hts early
yea rs he was employed at the
Bmck Factory ,,t Fltnl Mtch
for ftve years He returned to
Calhoon Coun ty and made hiS
home there before movmg to
Tuppers Plams
He was an acltve church
member, hav mg sung wtth hts
fam tly at man) funeral and
church serv tces m the area
He ts survtved by hts wtfe ,
Eleanor Sturn Boy les, one son,
Phtlhp N (Joe) Boyles, two
daught ers , Mrs Rtchard
(Florence ) Spencer and Mrs
Starhng (Sandra 1 Massar, all
of Tuppers Plams one Sisler,
Mrs Okey (Ada ) E\an s,
Gra nd Blanc , Mt ch , stx
gra ndchtldren and several
meces and nephe" s
Funeral servtces wtll be
Thursday at I p m at t.ne
· Alfred Unt ied Melhodtst
Church wtth Rev Glendon
McKee assiSted by Rev Robert
Mee ce, offtctattng Frtends
may call at the Whtte Funeral
Home m Coolville after noon
Wednesday

/

HOSPITAL _NEWS
"'

Vl·ll runs ~h·nwnal HnsprLal

AHMIT rED John Bh htcl
Mtddlcport Cu1 lts Sn11th
RuHCHI(\
Dorwlt! C'ov~t l
Pumcr ov Don Rca Potht&gt;l o~ •
Vwlct S;mtlt Reedsvrll c Jcc~ n
I aylUI Mason Men vm Dar sl
V r ~m n a Whrle ,
Pomero)
Pomeroy !'r,mkhn StaffOJ d,
Pomcr o\
Jull d
Cribbs,

Tag

...
sticker~

Cnwt ty p,tsscngcr l ,u
0\l.qer S ell(' I Cll1 Jnded thai 1!)75
valuldt mn slu.:kers went on sole
M ct~s

1oda;

Depuly regtslrar offices 111
Metgs Coun ty are h&gt;c,tl ed at
1he Grbbs Grocery Mulbe1ry
Av e , Pom e1o; , and at the
Pomeroy
Qu ahl y P11nl Shop, M11I S\ ,
Paul • Middleport
DISCHAR GED
Mr1 chell
Bess1e Ohvcr ,
Motorrsts are also remrndcd
Eugene Ymmg, Paulute Jooes
Orpha Rouse, Anncl Baker
Edna Stiles. Robert Steffel
Rut h Stetfel, l't!•ry Arcil,er
Orv1lle McVey
Holzer M~dtcal Center
1Disc harged, March 311
Charles Adam s Emma
Barnett Er nest Ca ld we ll ,
Debra
Carter,
Emma
Cheesebre" , Brarr) Cox , Ro)
D.1y Jonathan Durham !.€she
Evans Mrs Patnck Ftelds
and daughter Donald Gates,
Ltllt a Haner, Mrs Larry
Hemby and twtn daughters,
Mtll on Houdashelt Angela
K•ng, Linda Mc.Gutre, Mehssa
Nance, Justa Otler, Kenneth
Ralph , Donme Rayburn, Joey
Rtlbe t ts, Ches ter Roge rs,
Corabell e
Marte Ro ush
Russell, Eddte Russell Glo11e
Sn)der Dora Sorrell, Juamla
Sprouse, Coetta Thomas , Loure
Th omas Mrnme Th or nton,
Myr lt e Welk er , August
Wtmgman
(Btrthsl
Mr and Mrs Wtnton Helton,
a daughter, Ravenswood , W
Va 1' Mr and Mrs C1rvy
Johnson, a son , Btdwell, Mr
and Mrs Phtlhp Ktng, a son,
Mason, W Va , Mr and Mrs
Do nald Luca s, a son,
Galhpolts , Mr and Mrs
James PucciO, a son, Mason ,
W Va , Mr and Mrs Ronald
Reynolds ,
a
daughte r ,
Pomeroy, Mr and Mrs Robert
Roush a son, New Haven, W
Va Mr and Mrs Donald Van
Maler, a daughter , Mason, W
Va

i.

selling today

llltt l I he slate has a new
~ laggered '' lrcensrng plan lhrs
ycell
A~cordmg to the phm,
passenger car uw11 ers wr th last
ncunes starting w1lh A lhrou ~h
K must complete the 1975
1eg tstralton between Aprtl I
and mtdmght Aprtl 30 Only
persons tn the A-1'&lt; alphabettcal
group can obtarn vahdatron
slickers durmg the month of
1

Election rules
1n Mason noted
MASON W Va - Pelt ltons
for electrve off1ces to be !tiled
m Mason's b1enmal electron
are avatlable tn town hall
Persons desrnng to f1l&amp; for
the Jun e 3 eleclton when a
rna} or, recorder and frve
counctlmen are elected must
do so on or before noon the 20th
day precedmg the electton day
Kenneth Reynolds, recorder,
satd today voter eltgtbtll ly
rul es mclude
Qualtftcatton s for the town
offtce holders are they must be
restdents of Mason, must be
legal voters enlltled to vote for
members of tts coun ctl, and for
the year precedm g the electiOn
must have been assessed wrth
and patd taxes upon at least
one hundred dollars ($100)
worth of real or personal
properly !herem
Ballots for absentee votmg
may be cast not more than 30

nor less than 10 days pnor to
the elec tion w1lh the recorder
at c1ty hall
All persons "ho have been
bona ftde restden ts of the
tern lot y tncluded tn the town
of MH son for .10 di:l ys next
precedrng a mumcrpal electiOn
therem are eltgtble to vote
Voters must also be quahfted
under the constttutton and laws
of the state and none others,
shall be enlttled lo vole at any
muntctpal elec llon held tn the
town
The code also stales th at no
person shall be deemed a
restden t of the town of Mason
by reason of bem g statiOned
therem for any temporary
purpose

Aprtl
Passe n g~ r car reg tslr~lton
for th ose tn the L-A
alph abe ttcal group begms on
Ma y I and eon tmues through
May 31
Persons rn etlher group wtll
be able to regtsler trucks ,
lrarlers , motorcycles and other
non-passe nger vehtcles at the
same ltme they buy passenger
car stickers
·Applicants must present a
vahd Ohto hlle for each vehtcle
bemg regtstered If the lttle ts
lost or stolen, a dupltcate can
be obtamed from the County
Clerk of Cow ls offtce before
apphcalwn for a str cker IS
made
Smce 1974 ltcense plates are
remammg rn use, the ap·
pltcant's hcense number must
be vertfted before th e
regtslrahon can be renewed
The qrnckest and most accurate method of venfym g a
ltcense number ts fr om the 1974
reg1stratron card whrch wa s
tssued when 1974 plates were
purcttased Anyone who fatls to
take thetr 1974 regtslratton wtll
ha\ e to wmt "htlc an addi tiOnal venf1 catton form IS
com pleted
State regtstrattOn e e tn
Metgs Count; ts $1
for

Heavy fighting ..breaks out again,·
South Viet forces said crum~lirtg
'

Suit filed
MICK C}IILDS

to contest

Orilds joins

Hyatt will

RETIRE~ Riehard
Chambe;.., vice president of
the Pomero; National Bank,
retired Monday followin g 33
years of service. Chambers
jomed the firm on March 16,
1942. Chambers, active tn
many civic organtzattons
over the years, will spend a
great deal of time enJoymg
his farm 18 the Texas
community, Eastern Meigs
County. HIS wife, Martha, ts
clerk for the Meigs County
Comm1ss1oners They have
one son Eric who IS Instructur 'of the 'workshop forthe mentally retarded m
Meigs County

insurance

In Metgs County Common
Pleas Court an actton to con- ag
test a wtll, and a sut t for money
wer e fri ed, one d1 vo rce
dtss olv ed and ftve others
Mtck Chtlds has become
awarded
assoctaled wtth the DowmngThelma LewiS, Colwnbus, Chtlds Insurance Agency m
ftled aga mst Eltzabelh Axle Mtddleport The son of Mr. and
Roush, Rt 2, Ractne el al to Mrs Wtlltam D Chtlds, 444
contest the wtll of the late Lincoln St , Chtlds ts a 1971
Harnett Hyatt
graduate of Metgs High School
Shetla L Martm, Rt , I, where he was a member of the
pa ssen ger~cars
Cheshtre, and Rtchard E varstly basketball squad
On ly o e slicker til be
Martm, Pomeroy, ftled for
F ollowtng graduatton , Chtlds
tssued for each vehtc,W That
diSsolulton
of
marrtage
•
attended
Ohto State Untversttcker must be placed on the
Eme
l
Ray
Aleshtre
and
stty,
Columbus,
and for two
COMMITTEE MEETS
rear hcense plate, rn the bot.
Linme
Bell
Aleshtre
,
Pomeroy
,
years
was
manager
for the
The Metgs County Com
tom rrght hand corner Thts IS
mttt ee for the Ment ally also lhe localt on otthe sltcker ftled a JUdgment m the amount varstly baske tball team For
Retarded wtll meelat 7 30 p m for
Mo to rcycle of $4,000 agamsl Shelly' and the past year, Ch tlds ha s been
trucks
Thursday at the Metgs County stickers, however, must be Sands, Inc , Zanesvtlle The working for Capttal Fmance m
Courtroom All org amzaltons placed tn the top center of the Aleshtres charge that the Logan, Belpre and Pomeroy
Recently , Chtlds completed
ON DEAN'S LIST
are urged to send represen- rear plate and slickers ISsued defendants ca used charges of
Jean Sla" ter, Mmersvtlle, tal!ves to the sessiOn
for semt -tractor-trucks must explostves to be set off causmg an msurance mst1tute school of
ha s been named to the dean's
be pla ced on the front plate m damag e to thet~ home located the Ohto Assoctatton of Inlt sl at Oh10 Umverstly for the
the bottom , rtgh t hanct corner on SR 7 m Sahsbury Township surance Agents, Inc , held at
The marnage of Lee R Muskingum College and has
wm ter quarter Mrs Slawter
Even though only one shcker
PRACTICE SET
co mpleted
her
studen t
Mary Shrtne 37, Whtte Shrme IS tssued per vehtcle, Cadle and Cheru H Cadle " as passed hts stale exammahon
as an agent
teachmg m the Athens Schools of Jerusalem wtll hold a passenger cars, trucks and dtssolved
were
Carol
CALLED SQUAD
Granted
dtvorces
durtng the quarter and com- prac hce sesston for mstallalton other two plate vehtdes musl
pried a four pom l average for Sunday, Aprt~ 6 at 2 p m at conltnue to dt splay both fr ont Eynon from Robert Joseph
RA CINE _ The Rac tn e
the quarter
Eyn
on
on
charges
of
gross
Emergency
Squad answered a
and rear plates
Pome roy Masom c Temple
neg lect of duty, Ina M Van- ca ll toRt 2, Portland, at 4 55
met.et....fl:om Gar; E Van- p m Monday for Ralph
Pleasant Valley Hospttal
meter ' Dorlene Jeffers from Brewer' hea rt patien t, who was
DISCHARGES - Kalhr; n
Harold F Jeffers ; V.onda Kay taken to the Holzer Medtcal
Casto and daughter , Potnl
Pleasant , Arn old Nq.rman,
A change tn operatiOn at the 24 hour shtft "tlh a staff of requests for SEOEMS servtce J ohnson from George M Center:. At the same hour' the
Potnl Pleasant , Mrs Delbert Pomeroy Ambulance Stat10n ' call-m ' personnel on standby from the Pomeroy sta t10n, Johnson, and Mary Elizabeth Ractne squad two picked up
Se arl es from Charl es W Nra 1s p rc kens who was 111 a"'• a
Jefferson, Pltny , Mrs John has been announced by the
2 Onl; emerge ncy medtcal whtch occurs about 22 ttmes a
McDamel, and Kenneth Ash
Southeast Ohto s Emergency ass rstance and emergency year accordmg to the system 's Searles, all on charges of gross Ractne busmess eslabhshment
wor th, Ashton
tr ansportatiOn wrll be provrded records, the Rutland vehtcle neglec t of duty and extreme , and transported htm to hts
Med•ca l Service
cruelty
home
As requested at a meetmg by Metgs County SEOEMS wtll be routed Should a third
among Metgs County Com- Unt ls Request s for non- stmultaneous request occur,
missiOners, the pr osecutmg emer gency tra nsfers ,from SEOEMS vehtcl e~ from
at torney, Bernard Fultz and hospN,al to hosptlal , hosptlal to sta t1on s surr oundmg Me1 gs
•
SEOEMS offt ctals, alteraltons nursmg home, home to nursmg County wtll be sen t m Three
tn
the
Metgs
County home, etc , will be refused m stmultaneous requests have
Emergency Servtce have been order to allow avatlabthly of not occurred m the coun ty In
the Metgs Coun ty Squad for the 21 months SEOEMS
The Homestead Exemplton made as follows
veh1 cles have been m operatron
1 Full-lime slaffmg has been true emergencies
Btll for the totally and perIn case of simultan eous there
manently dtsabled has passed reduced from four emergency
m both the Ohto House and medtcal techmctans to two
Senate and ts now a"atttng the One EMT "'ll be on duty each
governor's signa ture , Meigs
County Audttor &lt;llo"ard E PENSION AGREEMENT
SAN FRANCISCO (UP! ) Frank sa1d today
from page I)
MaJor
league baseball umprres
The btll wtll be effecttve May
Buy tbe skillet ... Get the
of the JurY would take about a day and a half, much less than m
I , lhts ; ear Apphcattons may came to an agreement on a
other
Watergate..-elated
trtals
And
unhke
those
tnals,
the
saucepan for only one dollar
be !tied from May I, 1975, unltl pensiOn program Monday wtth
Connally JUry Will not be sequestered
Nahonal
and
Amertcan
League
Aug 1, 1975 The appltcaltons
COR "H OWEA emblem
Connally ts charged wtth twtce acceptmg $5,000 m cash for
for the exemplton wtll be on offiCia ls
tnm shown I
512 95
The settleme nt was an- his help as a member of Prestdent Richard M Ntxon's Cabmet m
forms prescnbed by the board
1 Ql ~ove re d
noll!)eed ]Otntly by Natwnal gettmg the 1971 mcrease m the federal prtce support for raw
saucepan
S 7 95
of tax appeals
mtlk He has mamtamed his mnocence
10 m ~ h cove ted
League
Prestdent
Charles
S
These forms wtll not be
sktllet
S11 95
'
Items purchased - - ·
rece tved by the county audttor Feeney and Amencan League
PHNOM PENH - PRESIDENT LON NOL of Cam\4&gt;dia flew
sepatately
Sl9 90
Prestdent Lee MacPhatl, along
Wl hi somt! trme rn May or
mto
extle from hts besteged capttal today , pavmg the way lor
SAVE
$6.95
wtth
thfuard
of
directors
of
June Tl.e quahftcaltons for the
posstble talks wtth CoiRmumst-led Insurgents, who have moved
•
dtsabled homes tead wtll be the Umprres Assocw tion and wtthm four miles of Phnom Penh
1 Ql covered
John
Cifellt,
of
the
Umptre's
publtshed at a later date
saucepan
s 8 95
Mmutes before his departure, rmlitary commanders moved
Council
10 mch COVI31ed
troops to block breaches m the city's defense !me to keep Khmer
sk•Hel
Sl2 95
HH4'HH&lt;OHH---.
Items purchased - Rouge rebels from breakmg through
.
separately
S21 90
the Distinctive
The 62-year.old Lon Nol flew wtth more than 30 persons from
SAVE
$795
le ofthe ...
Pochentong Arrport, under !ll'e from UISurgent 105mm hoWitzers
and 107mm rockets Three rockets landed as Lon Nol boarded an
The buck stops here!
Air Cambodge CaraveUe Jetimer for the Amertcan B52 bomber
base at Utapao m netghbormg Thruland
Now' ONLY ONE DOLLAR MORE Will gel you
a CORN ING WARE 1 qt covered saucepan
when you buy the 10-mch covered Skillet at the
PALM SPRINGS, CAUF - PRESIDENT FORD, faced
Organ, Drums, Guitar
regular pnce Both p1eces are packed m an
wtth a raptdly detertoratmg mthtary situation m Southeast Asia,
attractive g1ft box A ternf1c value avatlable m
Is
sununonmg
Secretary
of
State
Henry
A
Kissmger
here
earlier
NlTELY
either the Cornflower emblem or the Sp1ce
than expected, Whtte House sources mdtcate
0 L1fe dea)gn t
TUES, WED, THURS ,8 301.00
Kissinger, orlgmally scheduled to confer With Ford Frtday or
FRI &amp; SAT , 9 30-2 •00
Saturday, IS now expected here by rmdw~k to revtew
developments m South Vtetnam and Cambodia wtth Ford and to
chart U s Indochma poltcy The Prestdent plaMed to get a
report Saturday from Army Chief of Staff Fredenck C Weyand,
TO ENTERTAIN YOU AT
Products that make life easter
the former u s military commander m Saigon who ts now on a
fact-ltndmg tnp to South Vtetnam

en.cy staff

By United Press International
.
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO EDUCATION Assoc1at10n's
sprmg reprentattve assembly wtll begm here Thursday mght
wtth delegates scheduled to conSider resolutiOn s rangmg from
collectiOn of property taxes to suspenston and expulston of
students m pubhc schools
About 1,400 delegates, representmg teachers from nearly
every distrtct m the state, wtll also elect a full slate of off rcers
durmg the meetmg Htghllghting the eleetwn wt ll be the
presidential contest betw~n E Wade Underwood of Akron and
Carol Gerhard of the Vandalia-Butler school system Underwood, the first OEA president to run for re-election under th e
group's new constitutiOn, wtll end hts ftrst term July I
IT WAS THE SAME OLD STORY - ONLY ENLARGED
Rtchard J Daley mounted the speakers platform to the stra ms of
"Chtcago" and a roarmg ovatiOn Tuesday mght and told about
3,000 supporters how glad he was that th ey had gtven htm an
unprecedented SIXth term and the btggest landslide win tn his 20
years of CIVIC maJesty
The 72-year.old Democratic power-broker and kingmaker
won nearly 78 per cent of the vote, the btggest percentage of his
career, to vanqwsh John J Hoellen, the last mcwnbent
Republican m the "Cincago Ctty Council "It 's hard to be a
Republican m Chtcago," Hoellen said as he watched the
mountmg landslide '

Elbeifelds In Pomeroy

up to Rhodes

CONCEPCION, TEX - SOUTH TEXAS POLITICAL boss
George B Parr, 74, who was called "the Duke of Duval ," was
f~und shot to death Tuesdsy Authonttes satd he commttted
swelde Parr, who faced a pnson sentence for mcome tax
evasion, was supposed to have appeared m Corpus 'ChrtStt
Monday· for a hearmg concerrung hts latest tax evasion convictiOn When he faded to appear, he was ordered arrested
Texas Rangers fanned out across South Texas Tuesday
hunting him Ranger Game Powell, ndmg m a Department ofPublic Sefety helicopter, spotted Parr's car near a wmdrmll 5¥..
mtles from the nearest farmhouse on Parr's Los Orcones Ranch
Rangers found Parr's body slumped over the steermg wheel at
1120am
~

News ... in 'Briefs

DETROIT - THE SPECIAL FUND that guarantees 44 ,000
laid-off Chrusler workers up to 95 per cent of thetr take-home pay
runs dry next week, stgnalling a sharp belt-ttghtenmg for most
lald.off workers and possible fmanctal rum for others
"About one month after the SUB supplemental unemployment beneftts checks stop, I'll be deep m th~ hole," sayd Ray
Rubato, 39, a truck drtver for Chrysler for two years before he
was latd off In Janll8ry. He bought a 1974-model Dodge Monaco
Brougham, a car ma'de by fellow workers, last summer and
doesn't know how he's going to make the monthly $125 payments
"I've got four ktds, house payments and car payments," Rubago
says. "There's no way I can support them on the $106 a week I'll
get from the state."

TRIO

a checking account Whether 1t be

THE MEIGS INN

PH 992-3629

POMEROY'

personal or busmes-. the records a
checkmg account gtves you can help
make tax time or any time easter to

Spring Time

I

know where you stand financially

You '11 find a great selectton of fine .

WALK· UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS 5 To 7 P.M. ·

fu.rnzture, floor covenngs and
appli(znces at_ the lowest posszble

When You Visit, Park FREE

pnces Free delzvery, convenzent

"THE FRIENDLY BANK "

terms, servzce when you need tt.

HOUSEWARES DEPT. '

WASHINGTON - THE UNITED MINE WORKERS Unton
struck the anthraotte coal mmes m northeastern PeMsylvanw
today m a contract diSpute
The old contract exptred at rmdmght and umon offtctals
mvoked thetr "no contract, no work" proviSion m thetr constttubon The ~strike became mevttable when talks between the
umon and the Anthractte Operators Wage Negotwting Com·
mttlee recessed Monday afternoon wtth no settlement. Another
round of talks was scheduled today
d

Baker
Furniture
'

IIIDOL£PORT, OHIO
N•lllr ,...... Deposit Insurance Corpolllion

•

I

Miilclleport, Ohio

'

DEPOSITS INSURED TO •40,000

'

r

-·

'

f

l '

Mam Floor, Annu: and Warehouse
Open Wednesday 9 30 to s p m

ELBERFELD$

THE RAIN-GLU'I'TED MISSISSIPPI and Oh10 nvers
sloshed over !herr banks today and flowed over nearby lowlands,
forcing hundreds of persons from their homes The muddy
floodwaters of the powerful Ohio Rtver swrrled wmdow sill deep
In portions of western Kentucky , drtvtng 200 famtlles from thetr
low-lymg homes
The Mlsslsstppt lumbered southward bringing the threat of
major floodmg to the southern MlsslSstppt Delta. Wtth the Ohto
River 12 feet above flood stage at Paducah , Ky , the big nver's
overflow swamped McCracken County, blocked at least two
major highwayS' and closed many ~·de roads. The Natwnal
Weather Service predicted the Ohio and other swollen Kentucky
rivers would be falllng today.

W~ther
REVIVAL BEGINS
Rev Noel Herman wtll
conduct a re vrva l serv rce
begmmng Wednesday, Apnl 2
at the Ash Street Freewill
Baptist Church. Smgers and
publtc InVIted ServtceS are at
730pm

Servmg )'Ott bas been our busmess
sznce 1952 '

MAIN FLOOR
,

Lows 35 to 40 Cooler Thursday chance of showers m the
mo;nuig. High will be m the
mtd 40s Probabtltty of
preclp~tatton 60 per cent today,
70 per cent tomght, 40 per cent
Thursday.

$1.00 Off A Gayon Of
Any Gray-Seal Product
•

SQ~D SUMMONED

The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Pleasant
Rtdge at I 48 p m MoMay for
seven year.old Dtanna Whtle
who recetved a fr actured leg m
a fall She was"" taken to
Veterans Memonal Hospttal
where she was admtlted

W1th Th1s Coupon

TWO RUNS MADE
MASON, W Va - Mason's
Emergency Squad made two
runs Tuesday, at 2·25 p m for
Amelia Roach of Hartford who
was transported to Pleasant
Valley Hospital, and Gladys
Blessing was removed from
West Colwnbta to Pleasant
Valley where she "as admttled

I'

\

Try Gray-Seal

SAYRE HARDWARE
NEW HAVEN. W. VA.
Coupon Expires 6/ !'0175

Vreln.un e~e

army

r

~

ollr c L r s

at

the presrdcnlla l p,!l,u:c at 5 30
p rn f01 a CIIS IS meet lnj~

Government sourr.:es s-cud
Premter Tt an I hten Khtem
had subml lteP hts restgna tton
but that tl had not yet bee n
ace ep ted Khtcm appet~led to
the South Vtetnamese people m
an emoltona l addre ss not to
grve up desprtc the OV()I whelm-

EXTENDED WEATHER
Friday through Sunday,
fair and cold Friday.
Moderallng temperatures
and a chance oi showers
Saturday and Sunday. Htghs
Friday will be In the upper
30s north to mid lOs south,
warming to the 50 s on
Sunday. Lows early Friday
In the low and mid 20s and in
tbe 30s Sunday.

Now You Know
The Ltberly Bell wetghs 2,080
pounds

rug Cornmurust &lt;Jdvance 'to·
wa1 ds the capt tal
'I he South Vt etnamese
Senate unanrmously passed ,,
resolutton cal hng for a change
-of leadership m the government- but not specJft cally
ca ll tng for Thteu to restgn It
blamed the staggenng mthta ry
defea ts on fatlure of the Untied
Stat es to honor tls com·

m1tments and on the mtslakes
of the Thuru goverrunent
The f tr s~ convoys of refugees
and soldiers fleemg the central
coast reached the outskirts of
Sa tgon late today, landtn)l at
the port of Vung Tau 40 mtles
so utheast of , Sa tgon a nd
bypassmg the ft ghtmg at Xuan
Loc 40 mtles to lhe north They
were met !fl barncades and

•

tough mtlltar) pohc~men
The MPs dtsarmed soldters
among the refugees . ang
collected thelll m groups Only
ctvt lmns who could prove they
lmd addresses m Satgon were
allo .. ed to pass the barncades
on a crossroads 8 mrles no r
theast of the capt tal
Most could not meet the test
and were left sttltng forlornly

at y

•

trucks, buses and cars
parked alongstde the htghway
as a heavy ram fell
Several armored personnel
earners and about 200 MPs
were mannmg the blockade at
the mtersectton of the Bten Hoa
Htghway and the Sa tgon Belt
Road near Tu Due
MPs he ld UP! photographer
Wtllte Vteoy at gunpomt and
m

•

enttne

VOL XXVI

NO 247

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~_::_--------------'-----,,,-----:.....::..:.:..::..__

Colburn
ch 0 ice
11m Colbrn n, sentOI at Metgs
Htgh School, wtll be m Cm
cumatr thrs weekend wh~ re he
\11 11 attend the annual World
Affa trs Institute under the
sponsorshtp of the MtddleportPomeroy Rotary Clu b
Ph1lr p ED\\ en a se mor ctl
E.tslern Ht gh School, also was
named a delegate to the con:
fe~e nce but
not be at
1enclmg beca use he hc:IS not
been released from the care of
hts doctor following a recent
acctdent Anothe r delegate ts
ex pected to be n.m1ed ,at
Eastern
Colburn, the son of M1 and
Mrs Dale Colburn, Route 2
PoiJleroy , IS enrolled m the
academtc course at Metgs Htgh
School He ts a member of the
Spantsh Club and en Joys
playmg basketball, ftshmg and
hun lmg He attends Sac red
Hearl Ch ur ch •
The World Affatrs Inslttute
was begun tn Ctnc tnnalt tn 1947
all!! has p1 ovtded opporlunt ly

"'II

Margaret Allen, 72 Rl 4, mcrde nt
Pomeroy, rs.m farr co nd1hun at
Pomeroy poltce were alerted
Veteran s Memon al Hosp1lal, a and a htgh speed search \\as
vJc lJm o! a htls ktp acc tde nl made fm the car that Itt the
that occurred Tuesda) at 4 18 descnplton gtven by the wtlp m on SR 143 on HOI ner Hill ness At 4 30 p m the car was
The Me tgs Coun ty Shertff s located m front of Fulton
Dep t smd Mrs Allen had Thompson Equtpment busmess
ta ken some trash to a nearby m Pomero}
dump area an d \\ as returnrng
In the meanhme the dnver
to her home, walktn g fac mg of the car, Joe Roach, 29,
traffi c, when a car carne Spr mg Ave,
Pomeroy,
aroun d the sharp curve at the reported to Pomeroy poltce
top of the htll struck her , and that he was the dnver of a car
d•d not stop
that struck Mrs Allen
Mrs Allen \las taken to the
Roach was arreste d on
TIM COLBU RN
hospttal by the Pome roy E-R charges of httsktp reckless
squad A \\tlness at a carry.oul operatron and no operator's
lot 18,000 h1 gh schoo l stude nt store nearby \\tlnessed the li ce nse He was released under
I e ath~ I s of OhiO, Ind iana,
Kentucky and West Vtrgmta to
be better prepared lot then
responsibtlltJes as cttl ze ns by
patltct patmg m crealtve study
of COlUl tn es, regrons and In·
Several staff members were
Pr1mary changes are that
ternat10nal tssues vtlal to the reemployed Tuesday mght by the qualtfymg age for bus
mlerests and concerns of the the Metgs Co unty Board of drt vers ts no" 18 rather than 21
Um led Stales
Educalton
an d the count)' board now
Ro!ary clubs tbroughout the
Htred fo r another year were names one or more doctors
four-slate area sen d student Charlene Gtlmore and Candace who wtll conduct the physteal
delegates to the m•h tute at Rogers , speec h theraptsls ex amt na ttons for pote nttal
wht ch they hear and questton Mary Bacon, work st udy drtvers Under the new stan
lea dm g experts from the ftelds coordtn ator lor Met gs and dards,
an
andtvr dual
of governm ent and diplomacy, Galha Coun ltes, and Sharon dtsqualtfted for phystcal or an;
scholarsh ip , busin ess and Btrch R N, as sc hool nurse other reason can appeal the
JOurnal tsm and dtscuss thetr Mrs Nellte Vale, an elemen dtsqualtft cat ton and ca n
own rdeas
ta ry sup en rsor, was g1ven a req ues t a heanng
The top tc for the 1975 m new four ;ear contract
A report of an audtl by the
The board adopted the new s la te audt tor s office was
shtute ts 'Thts Era of Inte rd ependen ce ' wt lh sub- stan dards m relalton to bus re\tewed and accepted The
topr cs to 1nclude food, ' drtvers as develqped by the board readopted textbooks tn
ag rt cult ure an d pop ul atton OhiO Department of Educal1on health , spellmk, mustc, sc1ence
pr essur es , dile mmas of
,
and wrthng for grades seven,
eco nomic de velopment and
etghl and mne Attending· the
energy sour ces. commod rhes
meetmg were board members
and resources
Harold Roush , George Perry,
Judge and Mrs Robert Beck
Bob Burdette , and Gordon
wtll accompan y the loca l
Col ltns, and Cou nt y Supt
delegates to the weekend mSYRACUSE - Syracuse Robert Bowen
sll tut e
resrde nts ha vrn g queshons
regardtng trnplementatlon of a
prop osed ordmance quahfymg
the vt llage for nattona l flood
protec tr on rn surance should be
present at a meetmg Thursday at 7 30 p m of town
co un ctl, Mayor Herman
The new 1975 verston of the
London sa td today
Mergs Htgh School Band wtll be
The vtllage has been presented \\hen the band apdestgnated as a town wtth flood pears tn three public concerts
Pomeroy 's Drew Webster prone areas and the town Satur&lt;!ay
Pos l 39, Amencan l.egton , wtll government must adopt zomng
The pop muSic concerts,
host the sprtn g conference of re gulatiOns spec tfte d by dtrecte d by Fre d Ruth ,
the Etghth Dtslrtcl Sunday at federal leg tslat10n before July ass tstaGl dtrec tor of the
1, 1975 to qualify property -dtstnct, wtll be staged to make
the post home
-;'I he Etghth Dtstnct ts made owners for flood protectiOn the public a \I are of a four hour
up of 30 Leg ton posts consts!tng wsurance or resrdents withrn telethon over Chan nel 5
of over 6,000 members plus the lhrea lened secttons cannot Saturday begmmng at 12 noon
auxtltary members At leas! qualtfy for loans from federally to seek pledges of contnbutwns
150 memb~rs are expected to regulated mstttutwns to tm- fo r new unf1forms
be at Sunday 's sess ton prove prop erties Also tf
The ftrst of the three conIConlt nued on page 201
Spea ker wtll be Past Departcerts wtll be at 9 a m Saturday
ment Commander Dave
Cropper, Portsmouth
The auxthary of the host untt
will serve the droner at noon
Amertcan fla gs wtll be
dt splayed throughout the
Pomet oy bustness sec tton for
the
day
through
the
cooperatiOn of the Pomeroy Mtddleport Lions Club Mayor
at Frrst NatiOnal Ctty Bank of
Dale E Smtih wtll gtve a short By RICHARD HUGHES
UP! Business Writer
New York, srud m a separate
welcome
Four top economists predict- economtc analysts that the
ed Tuesday the nation would severe economtc slwnp m the
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
expe nence a strong economtc ftrst three months of thts year
The ' Pomeroy E-R squad recovery m the second balf of "enhances the llkelthood" of a
answered a call to 320 Condor 1975 'One srud 1976 would brmg strong recovery m the next stx
St at 9 17 p m Tuesday for one of the "btggest bot!ms" m months
Edw,jird Marttn who was 30 years.
But, satd Olsen, -" the
havmg dtfftcully brea lhm g He
Edward Bernstem, a con- strength of retatl sales, while
"!as ta ken to Veterans sultant to the TJ S Treasury, better than the fourth qll8rtet
Memortal Hospi tal where he told Dun 's Revtew, a busmess Of 1974, IS not greal enough now
\H t'&gt; 1rlrml lf'd
newsletter, that recent stgns of to suggest that thts ts the
recovery from the recesston turmng pomt "
TO mserlss SALE
are only the begmnmg
Another'Cihbank economtst,
The Mtddleport Chamber of
"Inflation wtll be down to 4 Alan Murray, . said "the
Commerce wtll meet for a per cent and by the mtddle of process of mventory correction '
luncheon at 12' 30 p m Thurs- the btcentennttal year we. wtll has proceeded far enough to be
day at the M.trtm Restaurant be m one of the btggest booms conststent wtth the forecast of
Am ong the bustness tlems to be of the postwar era ," Bernstem an upturn tn the second half of
dtscussed wtll be a stdewalk satd
1975 "
sate betng planned Saturday,
!.tel ·Olsen, semor economtst , Gabnel Hauge, chatrman of
i\Jllll 12
Manufacturers Hanover Ttusl

Staff rehired

in Syracuse

selected
as leader
Douglas Wtlltam [Jttle , a
]uniDr m Frna nce, has been

selec ted as one of 56 outstandmg scholars and leaders tn lh.,
College of Admtmstra ttve
Scte nce at 1he Oluo State
Umverstly
lJttle was se lected as a Pace
Setter , an
or gamza tw n
spo nsored
by
busmess
execultves and pubhc admmlstrators whtch ts destgned
to honor the top sc holars an d
leaders m the college The
names of the 56 students were
announced at the Aprtl 9 Pace
Se llers Banquet held at the
Fawcett Center for Tomorrow
Pace Selle rs recetve th e
orgamzalt~n· s cerltlocate and a
ptn
The son of Mr and Mt s Btll
I.tttle, Rt I, MtddlepOJ l, Ltltle
graduated f1om Metgs Htgh
Sehoul tn 1972 A wmner of the
UV C Summa Award tn th e
sprtng of 1974, he plans etl~r
to ente r liiw sc hool or extend
hts studtes tn busme ss admrmsh at ron after r ece1vmg hrs
degt ee ..at thl! cntl of the \\111 tcr
qu&lt;:~.rle r m 1!l7fl

$250 bond
The shenff's Dept also tn·
veshgated a srngle car ac·
ctdent al 4 30 p m on SR 681,
one mtle east of the JUOclton of
7 and 661
Harry J un10r Smtlh 42, Rt 1,
Reedsville, was t1avehn g :west
on 681 when he reported a truck
ct owded htm off the htgh"ay
caus1ng h1m to leave the htghwa) and stnke a ma tl box He
left the scene, but returned
laler He "as ctled to court on
char ges of no operat or 's
ltre nse The rnatl box belonged
lo Mrs Dorothy Dudderer
There \l as approximate\;~, $100
m propet ty dam.age

.

DIANA WAYNE
M1ss D1ana Wa)ne of
SIGNUP SET
' Sebrmg will he the speaker
RUTbAND - Boys. tn·
at the annual Meigs Count)
tere sted m playmg baseball
grange banquet to· be held
are advi sed that slgnup day
Frtday at 115 p.m at the
IS Saturday, Aprtl 5 at the old
Sahsbury E le mentary
Rutland High School gym
School Mtss Sebring won the
from 11 a m to 12 noon The
1973 contest for the Ohto
fee fo r stgnup is $4 All tn·
State Grange prmcess and
terested boys are " elcome.
re prese nt ed Oht o at the
Nahonal Grange session m
Sacramento Cahf last
November
THREE RUNS MADE
The Mtddlepor l E-R .&amp;juad
answered three calls Tuesday
at 11 42 a m to Pearl St for
Kell) Gt lmore who wa s taken
to the Holzer Medtcal Center ,
at 5 12 p m to the Route 7
bypass for Mary Jane MeCarty , who was taken to
Ve terans Memonal Hospttal,
and at 9 28 p m to Batley Run
Road for Mary Archer, who
was havmg dtfftculty bt eath
mg, and was also taken to
Veterans Memortal Hospt tal

~

Legion will

'75 Marauder hand

host spring

three shows Saturday

conference

Doug Little

__:__ _ _ _PRICE
_ _ _15'
__•

Elderly woman hit .

Meeting-set

DOUGLAS LITTLE

~

WEDNESDAY APRIL 2. 1975
_ _ _ ___:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __ __ __

~

m front of the Rutland gym
nastum, the second at 10 am
near the fo rm er R H
Rawltngs and Son Garage m
Mlddlepotl , and the !mal one at
II a m on lhe upper parking lot
m Pomeroy near the barbecue
ptt
.
T)' ts week color ftlm of band
memb ~ rs m vanous actrvtttes
ts bemg shot by Channel 5 for
showmg durmg the telethon
Phone numbers to be called to
make pledges wtll be hsted
durmg the four hour prograr_n

Rutland man is
hurt in wreck
Lee R Cadle 24, of Rutla nd,
was hospttaltzed at the Holzer
Medtcal Center for tiiJurtes
suffered tn a stngle car acctdenlat 10 35 p m Tuesday on
Rl 143, three mt les west of Rt
7 tn Metgs County
The Galha-Metgs Post State
Htghway Patrol reported Cadle
was dn vmg north on Rt l43
when he attempted to pass
another vehtcle Cadle lost
con trol of hts car whtch went
off the Jell Stde of the htghwa\
sinkin g an embankment
Cadle wtll be charged wtth
DWI There was moderate
damage to ht s car
BONDS FORFEITED
SYRACUSE - Two defendants forfetted bon ds tn
Syr ac use Mayor Her man
London's court Monday fli ght
They were Roger B Htll ,
Racme,,, 10, slop stgn vtolalton,
and Gary P Noms, Racme,
$25, for speedmg The defend
ants were ctled by Pollee Chtef
Mtllon Van an

Economists predict good times
, just around the corner in '75 "'
of New York and a economtc
advtser tn the Etsenuower
admimstratlon, told a stockholders meetmg that there are
"fltckers of ltght around the
hortzon ''
He srud the rate of mflation
has declmed, mventones are
close to a pomt where
production must resume and
mter~~t rates contmu~ to fall
Hauge predtcted the economy ·
would begin to move upward m
the thtrd quarter.
Among ~!her, economiC developments •
- New orders for manu!aclured good~ mcreased m
February lot the fil'l't tune m
stx months, the Commerce
Department satd Orders were
up 1 3 per cent after decllrung 2

per cent tn January and 9 3 per
cent m December. Inventortes
were Vll'tually unchanged after
nsmg raptdly In prtor months
-Construclton s~ndmg at
an annual adjusted rate of
$12lll bjJhon in February was
at the lowest levelm 27 montha,
Commerce reported When
higher pnces are constdered,
the volume was the lowest m 13
years: The February decline
was expected because of the
low nwnber of hollSIDg starts
last year
,
- Uruted Auto Workers Vtce
Prestdent Douglas Fraser satd
Tuesday' supplemental unem·
ployment beneftt funds for
44,000 tdled Chrysler workers
wtll be exhausted after next
week's checks

•

'

'

pulled !tim from hts cameras
at tne roadblock An MP maJor
ordered JOUrnalists to leave the
scene
Tho 41senatprs passed a SIX·
pomt resolutton "htch satd,
"We urgently call for a change
of policy to solve the war and a
new leadershtp whtch wtll base
It' pohc) on freedom and
(Con lmued on page ZO)

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason A~ea

COLUMBUS - OHIO'S WELFARE ROLLS continued to
Increase tn March wtth 12,521 reetptents added last month tn the
Aid to Dependent Chtldren Program for a monthly total of
564,686, state Welfare Director Denver L Whtte satd Tuesday
ADC rectplents m February totaled 552,165 persons, an tn·
crease of 13,723 over January, Whtte satd Whtle satd ADC rolls
passed the 500,000 mark m August of 1974 and have been climbmg
steadtly smce that time.

Frank Sisty

. . of peace of mmd when you have

SAIGON (UPI ) - Heavy
fightmg broke out today m the
Xuan Loc regwn 36 mtles
northwest of Satgon where
Commumst forces cut Htghway I, the retreat rou te of
government for ces trytng to
halt the Communtst onslaught
' down the coast
Satgon seeth ed tn a CrtSIS of
leadershtp
Government defenses were
reported crumbltn g around
Cam Ranh Bay , 188 tmles
northeast of Smgon, a nd mill·
tary sources satd less tha n
5,000 government troops stood
betwee n Satgon a nd the
Commumst offenstve that has
swept up 16 provmces m a
matter of weeks Some were
alread; commttied at Xua n
Loc
PreSident Nguyen Van Thieu
held a sen es of ut gent mtlttary
co nferences am td reports
army generals had gtven him
three days to restgn Gen
Fredenck C Weyand, the U S
Army chtef of staff, JOtned
Thteu and htgh rankin g SOuth

•

fj¥~;~ .. {;t"Jjri~js: Rotary

SEOems at Pomeroy in new routine

Exemption bill

.

.

'

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
T hursday through
Saturday, chance of rain
south and snow or rain north
.,t:Arly Thursday, becoming
fair and cool Frtday and
tem·
Saturday.
High
peratures Thursday ' will be
m the 30s north to the low 40s
south, moderating to mid 40s
or mid 50s by Saturday.
Lo" s will be 20 to 30 Thursday and In the 30s j)y Saturday.

~ontinued

4SSURrD

'

'

•

)

''

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