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32 - The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday ,.May II , 1975

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By Norma Newlal!d ·
There is lots of news this -tiine, so much I herdly know
whereto begin. Let's star.t with the bank : there's a new rumor,
maybe more fact than rumor - anyway, a private person is
supposed to purchase the land and the unfinished building and
complete it. Then perhaps the bank will either lease it or
perhaps buy it.
We don't really care how the-paper work is carried out, do
we, so we just get the bank completed. Thank goodness the
Pomeroy National Bank people come on strong in the stretch. .
They waited over three years because the EPA made an error
and wouldn't allow them to build , and now this delay.
THE ALUMNI BANQUET OF THE Olive-Drange Alumni
Assn. will be held in the Tuppers Plains Elemenlary &amp;hool
House May 31. You may make reservations by contacting
Merle Bradford, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, or Nila Jean Ritchie, who is
heading ·the Community Club committee that will serve the
dinner.
Don't know exactly wha t all is on the menu but I do know
theyhavepurchasedacoupleofbushelofapplestomakeapple
pie (a Ia mode) . You know what good cooks we have in the
Community Club. You may want to go whether you are an
alum or not just to get to eat dinner.
The Community Club is still taking orders for the Sarah
Coventry party they will have in June. Do n't forget to order
something.
MRS. NIESEL WEATHERMAN RECENTLY spent a
Sunday with her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Eldred Grimes of Athens. They attended church at the First
Church of God. The pastor of that church is the Rev. Nichols,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Cla re~ce Nichols of Tuppers Plains.
Speaking of the Nichols, Mrs. Nichols is 89 years young and
Mr. Nichols will be 89 in July. These super senior citizens just
took off for Dayton (witn Mr. Nichols driving) to visit their
daughter and son-in-law.
Do you suppose y_ou or I will do that weU? I have a good
chance, because my grandma is 87 and going strong and I have
been told I am more like her than any child she raised. I hope
she means that as a compliment'
I CHA'ITED WITH BEA DOUGLAS, our elementary
school principal. She corrected on my reporting her mother
was ill. That's what I get for reporting rumors. It is Ray's
mother who was ill, and now much better, and she lives in
Washington C. H. Thank goodness, we have that straight, now.
TO GET BACK TO THE SUBJECT at hand, there is much
going on at the school. The pupils will be taking their school
trip, all on the same day, bui different grades going in different
directions. The fifth and sixth grades will tour the telephone
company in Coolville, the Farmers Bank to see what makes
them tick, then to the Meigs Museum for a smattering of local
history, and then to Fort Meigs for a picnic and a baseball
game. The first and fourth grades will go to the Bob Evans
Farm for the day.
The second and· third grades will be journeying to the
Frecker Farm in our county to view the un~al animals, then
to the Portland Park for a picnic. I understand Mamie Headley
will supply the fried chicken and pupils the trimmings.
Oh,yes,allthisgalavantingaroundwiUtakeplaceonMay
20.
The school will have an Olympic Day the last week of
&amp;hool in which all kinds of games and contests will be
featured .
'
· · Connte
· Stromba ch, was at
Just recentIy th e denta I hygtemst,
the school giving the second, third and fourth grades a
brush ing demonstration and small gifts, such as brushes and
paste to encourage good dental habits. Two mothers, Mrs.
· d.
J udy Sams and Mrs. Do rothy Stout, assiSte
The the mixed chorus of all three elementary schools in

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J;uppers Plains area· eVf:l!ts, views, comment·

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our district, which -consists of students in the fifth and· kixth
grades, will present at concert at the Eastern High School on
May 15.
·
The sixth grade will entertain their mothers with . a
Mother's Day Tea at the school on Friday afternoon. This is a
lovely gesture, and probably the last .time the sixth grade can
' entertain their mothers at the Tuppers Plains school, since
they willl&gt;e going to Eastern next year.
BEA WAS RATHER BREATHLESS WHEN she was
giving me this news-because she had just returned with the
sixth grade from a hike to the fire tower. Lunch was eaten at 10
a.m. because no one wanted to miss Mamie's pizza , and then
off they went, taking snacks with them. Only thing was, the
trail was very dry and dusty .-Water tasted pretty good to them
when they got back.
Last but not least at the school, the new officers of the
Boosters will be installed at the May meeting. The new
president is Jim Caldwell, whom we all know, and the vice
president is Mrs. Judy Sams. Jucty and husband, Dr. Robert
Sams, live in the former Schroath property. )'4r. Sams is a
practicing psychiatrist in Parkersburg and Nelsonville.
MENTIONING JIM CALDWELL MADE me think of his
two boys, Jimmie and Jeff, who are recovering from surgery
and will be returning to school very soon.
Do you like riddles? Here's one most of you won't have too
much trouble with. What gay young blade is so enthusiastic
about spring gardening that he has taken up plowing fields
with his car at night ? And in the dark of the moon, yet!
.TUDY KENNEDY'S MOTHER IS NOW on the recovery
list. Mrs. Martina Van MatreoWiifton, W.Va. is still in Holzer
Hospital but doing much better after suffering a heart attack.
Others either in the hospital ar at home now, to name a few
are: Iva Upton scheduled for surgery Thursday at the
Veterans Hospital ; Eleanor Douglas will enter O'Bieness
Memorial in Athens on Wednesday and is scheduled for
surgery on Friday; Billy Kuhl is stiU confined to Veterans
Hospital in Huntington with a heart condition; Mr. and Mrs.
Eimer Bibbee (formerly of this area) have returned home
after being confined in Camden Clark Memorial Hospital at
the same time; Lucille Ridenour is home from St. Joseph's
Hospital recovering from surgery, and Ruby Miller underwent
surgery in Camden Clark Hospital and is on the road to
recovery.
And the Rev. Meese continues to improve, although to look
at his newsletter and his visiting list, you wonder what he does
when he is working on a lull-load, if he is just part-time now.
The Tuppers Plains Adult Class will meet at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Gorrell on Monday, May 19.
And finally, the Tuppers Plains United Methodist will
serve a supper at the annex on June 6, proceeds of which will
go toward the building fund. Everyone should put this on their
calendarandbesure toattend. Itisaverygoodcause. Besides
that, they are. very good cooks.
The ladies are not only good cooks but there are some very
nimble fingers when it .comes to quilt making for the church
benefit, Effie Sanders, Mae Vineyard and Mrs. Harper, to
name three.
MARVIN AND MIMA WALKER HAD A NICE family
gathering over the past weekend. Mirna's brother and sisterin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Howard and three children of
Vanceburg, Kentucky, spent Saturday and Sunday with them.
Joining in the visit were J ohn and Mary Newell and sons Jeff
o.
· ; and Tommy and
an d. ""otty;
A1·tee, Tammy an d Toby curtts
Ruthie Mills.
Marvin and Mirna attended a funeral Sunday and on the
way back, stopped in Logan to visit with John Arbaugh. John
·
d and was very happy to see 1rte
· nd s f rom
1·s much unprove
Tuppers Plains.

Doris Ann Davis Wells flew to Florida to drive her mother
and fath er, Mr . and Mrs. J . S. Davis, back to Tuppers Plains. I
don't know whether it is just.for the sliiT\ffiel', or whether J . S.
might have had his fill of Florida. We will be glad to have them
back.
Mr: and Mrs: Veri Tuttle are spending several days in
Fairborn visiting son, Bill and his family. While there, Mr.
Tuttle will consult with an ear specialist.
ANNOUNCEMENT OF SELECTION of cheerleaders at
Eastern High &amp;hool has been made. The seven ·varsity
cheerleaders chosen by a panel of judges from Ohio University
were Lola Walker, Katrina Batey, Peggy l'rlmseU, Diane
Benedum, Jan Wilson, l:m&lt;ly Ritchie and Diana Jones. The
reserve cheerleaders are Cindy Dill, Diane Epple, Avis
Bissell, Sonia Beaver and Kim Batey.
I think the junior high school cheerleaders will be chosn
Tuesday or Wednesday of next we ek.
THE LAST TIME YOU READ this newsletter, I talked
about Marge and Francis Benedum celebrating their 25th
wedding anniversary. Well, I just found out that Wayne and '
Evelyn Brickles celebrated their 45th wedding anniversary on
April 17. Wayne said he had a pretty bard time getting through
this first45 and doesn 't think he can make it the next 4!i. But
Evelyn is going to help him.
WHILE OUT LOOKING OV!j:R THE GARDEN, I saw a
familiar sight. Win Blake on his tiding garden tractor-mower,
working in his garden. Win and Marne both haven't been too
well this winter, and it is good to see him out and busy. I'D bet
he had some groundhog and greens to go with that goat's milk.
I DIDN't GET THE FULL PARTICULARS on the pony
pull as Cricket Pullins wasn 't borne when I telephoned, but I
did hear they had 50 teams which is about the best pony pull,
anywhere, evetin these parts. And despite the rain, too. I think
the next one will be the first Saturday night of June, but will
check it out lor you.
Ethel Morlan and I chatted by telephone about Hickory
Lakes. In case you didn't know, the campgrounds are open
now. They have 76 camp sites with the fuU hook-up, you know,
water, sewage, etc. plus primitive camping sites. The
swimming pool won't be open until Memorial Day, but then it
is only open to the campers and not to the public. The grass and
trees are lovely now and we have a beautiful camping area in
our back yards.
Oh yes, I finally found a candied dill pickle recipe. Mildred
Caldwell invited me down to enjoy it, but only after I mentioned I was brewing PP a batch of dandelion wine. We better
be careful or more than the cucumbers might get pickled.
So long for now .
'
P. S. - Don't forget the Junior Class of Eastern horse
show at the Bar-30 showgrounds.today. Halter classes begin at
9:30a.m. and performance classes at 12:30 p.m. Come on out!

R ura [ fi re

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0-tfered
uran._t proirram
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COLUMBUS - The Ohio
The Rural Development
Department of Natural Act of 1972 authorizes up to 50
Resources ( DNR) has an • per ce nt· federal funding for
nounced a· grant program fire equipment to serve
that will allow rural fire comm uniti es under 10 •000
departments to purchase fire people. However • groups of
eqw·pment wt'th the at'd of communities may J'oin
federal ma tching funds .
wgether to serve more than

I

WITH HER PROTEGE - Mi-s. Mary M. Seaman,
left, one of the advocates in the Personal Advocacy
program of the Meigs County Community Mental Health
Center, is shown at Powell's Super Valu store with her
protege, Miss Etta Mae Ellis. This kind of one-to-&lt;Jne
relationship is the key to the personal advocacy program.
~rsonal advocates fill varied roles according to the
needs and capabilities of their protege. This means they
become close friends and supply emotional support for
their handicapped friends, accepting them "as they are,"
in normal community living ami day to day experiences .
Mrs. Seaman has been Etta's advocate since last September .
10,000 people.
Ohio has been alloted
$101,000 in fed eral funds for
this year by the u:• s.
Department of Agriculture.
DNR 's Division of Forestry
will allocate the money in
increment&amp; which cannot
exceel $22,500.
The federal funds may be
used to purchase smoke
de tectors
for
rural
reside nces, alarm and
d is pa tchi ng systems ,
protective clothing, and
equipment essential to increase fire pro tec tion
capabilities.
Priority will be given to
communities which have
applied for loans through the
Farmers
Home
Administration to construct fire
department buildings or
water systems.
Applications for the federal
grants may be obtained fr om
the Division of Forestry, Ohio
Departmen t of Natural
Resources, Fountain Square,
Columbus 43224 . The applica lions must be returned

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On Sale

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Souvanna said. "The government has not changed its role
and policies but will .firmly
continue to apply the Vientiane peace agreement and its
protocols."
Although nothing. official
has been said about
replacements for the departed
members of 'the coalition
cabinet,
political
and
diplomatic sources here expect they will be succeeded by
ligures who wiD offer little

to a Pathet Lao ing to leave on flights to
takeover.
Bangkok although they had ·
Souvanna
asked
all valid exit visas. A radio
elements of the populaiion to communique from the police
keep up their day to day-work. warned foreigners not to try to
Part of his speech was ad- leave the country illegally and
dressed directly to the said cars and trucks would not
Chi nese, Vietnamese and be taken aboard ferries across
Indians who control the the Mekong River to neighboreconomy and whose mass ing Thailand.
night caused the value of the
Laotian currency to plummet
The communique issued by
as they turned it into dollars Kham
Quane directed no
on the black market to take troops be moved without his
with them.
ministry's orders and that no
The prime minister assured war materiel, particu!arly T28
foreigners of "seeurity and attack hombe&lt;s-ahd artillery
justice" and asked them to pieces, be moved from their
keep their shops open and not present locations.
raise prices of commodities
It said any troops. oppJsing
and aggr avate already the government and the
rampant inflation.
Consulta live Council "will be
Authorities at Vientiane air- regarded as rebels and that
port today halted groups of loyalists and Pathet Lao
Vietnamese and Chinese seek- troops wiD suppress them ."

VOL. XXVII NO. 20

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

·-·

MONDAY, MAY 12, 1975

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particularly in South Boston, during the current
:~~~!::;:;:;:::;:;:;:::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~?
school year.
. U. S. District Judge W. Arthur Garrity Jr .,
who originally found racial discrimination in
several areas of school administration, issued a
new plan last week. No specific plan was before
the Supreme Court.

FUN D._·
IN,UIANCI

p 7302

POPOORN FOR DOUGH - Members of the Pomeroy
Fire. Dept. and emergency squad were on the street
Saturday distributing popcorn in exchange for cash

Garrity found that the
Boston School Committee had
intentionally caused or
maintained segregation
through use ·of facilities,
districting, f~er patterns ,
transfer policies, assignment
/ ..
of faculties
and- administration of vocational and
contributions to the Ryan Scott Jeffers fund. They raised
examination schools.
over $200. From the left are Chuck Bartels; Gary &amp;louffer,
In upholding Garrity's finJohn Manley, Jim Sisson ahd Jeffrey Shank.
.dings, the lsi U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals said: "In the
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
light of the ample factual
Wednesday through record and the precedents of
Friday, chance of showers the Supreme Court, we do not
Methodist Church, Mr. and Wed!JI'sday or Thursday, see how the court could have
Mrs. C. W. Stansbury, the clearing Friday. Highs in arrived at any other conRutl and P oo I Room with . the 60 san d Iower 70 s. Lows . clus1'on ."
Stewart Hardware, Albert in the40s Wednesday and in
Massachusetts is the only
Dunn . John Smith, Jr., the 50s Thursday and state with a racial imbalance
Charles Musser, Goldsmith Friday.
lawforschools.Itwasenacted
and Black, Larry's Recreation :::::::::::::::::::::::-:::.;::::::::.:-:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,: in 1965 but amended in 1974 to
Center, Vona Taylor, Jeff
remove some power from the
Snowden, Everett Pierce,
Slate Board of Education . The
Harry Swisher, Steve Taylor,
Boston lawsuit was filed by
Lee Dombes, Jr. , Dennis
blacks in 1972.
·
Mayor Kevin White authorMcKinney, Paul Jeff Combs,
ized the city to appeal the 1st
Jr ., Dennis McKinney, Paul
Circuit's decision to the SuPatterson, George Korn,
preme Court in order to
Connie Mash and Ike Bolin,
exhaust every legal avenue
contributing through that
"to silence _the rhetoric of
effort, and Mr. and Mrs.
rebellion."
Richard Vaughan.
The school committee filed
NORFOLK, Va. (UP!)- An a separate appeal. It has been
appeal to halt construction of arguing that racial imbalance
an Ohio River bridge at springs from residential patHuntington, W. Va. is under terns and the neighborhood
e·.
0
adviseinent by the 4th U. S. school policy.
Circuit Court of Appeals.

Popcorn produces $202.82
Pomeroy fire department
and emergency
squad
members took to the street
with their popcorn machine
Saturday to raise $202.82 ·for
the Ryan &amp;ott Jeffers fund.
Men of. the two groups were
on the street all day Saturday
distributing popcorn for
donations to the fund. Ryan , 3,
·
IS a patient at St. Mary's
Hospital in Huntington where
he was taken following a
power mower accident a
I 0 f weeks ago.
coupe
In the past IWO weekS the
public has contributed
$2,863.86tothefund.whichisto
be used on the hospital ex·
penses involved . Ryan is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. David
Jeffers, Route I, Pomeroy.
Mr. Jeffers is employed with
the Pomeroy Police Dept.

May 17
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where
there
is
no
hospitalization insurance.
Contributions are still being
accepted and mail may be
addressed to Mrs. Dorinda .
Nardei at Pomeroy City Hall
or left there. Checks ·are to be
made payable to the Ryan
Jeffers Hospital Fund.
Other contributors to the
fund since Friday are the
Bradford Church of Christ
Class I, Bradford Church of
· t
He 1pmg
·
Han d
Chrts
· ty, ve 1rna
. ·on ary So Cle
MISS!
Rue, Mr. and Mrs. John
Manley, Mr. and Mrs . Paul
&amp;ott, Reed Gandee, Butch
,tmd Ed Yates , Bob Hawk,
Marie Custer, Ethel Grueser ,
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Werry,
Mr. and Mrs. George MeDaniel, Enterprise United

Court has_·
quest.ion

on hn"dge

p ick eting
ca ll.

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·Main Store, Annex and Warehouse Open Weekdays 9:30 to 5, Fridays and Saturdays
9:30 to 8 pm.
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ELBERFEL,DS IN POMEROY

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By United Press International
WASHINGTON - THE MATTER OF ENDING U. S. and
Latin American sanctions against Cuba must for now be left "a
little bit to secret diplomacy," and Secretary of State Henry
·
Kissinger. Bu\ KiSsing_er, meeting with ·foreign ministers
·attending the Organization_ of American S
_tales' general
assembly this week, said Saturday "a geperaI understandin g' •,
has been reached among members on how to deal with the 11year~ld
economic sanctions.
.
The OAS assembly goes into formal committee sessions
today and wl1l elect a new secretary general today or Tuesday .
•·
p t withdr
ew
Paraguayan Foreign Minister PauI .,..pens as or ·
his candidacy fQI' the post Sunday, virtuaUy assuring t be
-··•
election of Argentina's amba""""
· or to the um·ted Sta tes,
Alejandro Orflla, to succeed Secretary General Galo Pia za.
The other candidate is Domllllcan Republic Foreign Minister
.
·
Victor Gome_z Berges_.

TilE NATION'S FE.RTILJZER SHORTAGE APPEARS
OVER, but experts say high prices of fertiUzer appear sure to
boost oonswner prices for agriculture products and could
produce food shortages later this year :
B. F. Smith, preaidenl of the Delta CouncU, a fann group
llrVIng the MIJaiaslppl Delta region, said farmers are able to
get ferlilller, but only at "tremenaously increased" costs.
"There Ire two possible effects," .he said. "One, it's going to
increalll! production Co&amp;ts. Two, with the high prices (of ferlllizer), farmen in some cases may try to make ferWizer go a
(011111-.f an Pill I)

increases and other benefits,
was to discontinue picketing
tod
t the even it
hools
· ay ad ds b . cLaY sc ·
as or ere
Y
wrence
County Common Pleas Court
Judge Kenneth Ater Friday ·
The So th Point Board 01
Ed ti u fired 114 st 'k
1' 1ucawond d8
d rtthm;s
a e e nes Y an
en
n~t th
de Th
d
SOUo;u
e or r. e nex1 ay
the teachers offered to put the
·
in 1 ding
· ti
nego1ta on Issues c u
·
to b' ding
pay mcreases
m
arbt' tr tt' b t th
h00I board
a
on,
u
e
sc
ref sed
· · 1·
Aussocla
lon p rest'd en t
Wt'lll
B kl
id hi 5
am uc tiller sa
'Din t
group was s
WI
g o
·arbt'tr t th
trik ·
· a e e s e Issues.
No further negotiations were
scheduled.
Since the 'teachers walked
out a week ago, classes have
. been held for the few pupils
attending, with substitute
teachers and supervisory
personnel directing actlvilies.
Board Member Edward W1Uis
said his _group would meet to
decide whether to hire ad· ditional teachers.

All teachers of the Eastern
·ft.led for the appeal after U S
·
·
·
District Cour_t Judge Dennis Local &amp;hool District were at
Knapp of West Viroinia denied their posts this morning after
....
a pet1·t 1·00 ,.'or a temporary a tentative agreement was
· · t' 1 t A
1
reached in negotiations over
IDJunc ton as ugus · ·
Knapp said it was in the the . weekend . between
public . interest to build the representatives of the Board
'-1
"' 'dge'. as plan' ned, .and the of Education and the teachers.
span 1'ntheGuyandottesection.· The agreement is expected
of Huntington 19' atreacty under to be approved by the teachers
construction .
association and the board of
The citl'zens gro· up con- education when each meets in
tended that state and federal a separate session Tuesday
regulations were violated 11. night.
the placement of tbe_ bridge at
- LOCAL TEMPS
Guyan Street.
Temperatur_e in downtown
'Jndges hearm
· g the a...,ea
· I Pomeroy_MondaY.....
.. 11 a.m.
,...
•••
were John D. Bulmer, Jr , of . was 64 degrees under cloudy
Ri hm d V
H Em
skies.
,
c on • a ., · ' ory
Widener- (,{ Bristol, Va., and
Harriso.n L. Winter , of BalEBER NEIGLER DIES
Ebet B. Neigler, formerly of
timore ; Md.
Meigs County, died Sunday at
his home in Canton. He is
sUI'vived. by a ·brother, Guy
Showers likely, chance of Neigler, of Racine ; his wife,
thundershowers . Turning two daughters, and a son. The.
cooler, highs in the upper 60s. body is at the Reed Funeral
Cloudy, cooler, showers likely Horne in Canton .where sertonight. Lows in upper 40s. vices will be held at I P• m.
Fair Tuesday , high s in upper Wednesday. Burial will be in
60s.
Canton.

Weather ,

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CINCINNAfl (UPI) -The body of Suzanne Kandler, ;:;:
( 18, Lima, a student at the Southern Ohio Technical School ;~;~
:;:; here, was found Sunday along Interstate 75. She had been :;;;
) shot once in the head, police said.
\
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Miss Kandler was last seen late SatuJ:day nlgbt. She :;:;
~;~; had told friends she was going home to Lima to visit her ~;~;
X family for Mother's Day.
;:;;
When she did not arrive on time, her father drove to {
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Supreme Court }} Cincinnati,
contacted police and joined others in the ~:~:
today let stand decisions by two federal courts ;:;; search for her.
;:;;
that Boston authorities unconstitutionally (
Miss Kandler's father l01md his daughter's ear about ;:;~
promoted segregation in the city's schools.
} the lime police got a report a 13-year~ld suburban Hart- }
Under the Court's brief order, the decisions \ well youth had found the body. An autopsy was to be held \
are no~ final. Turmoil and resistance to busing ':': to determine how long she bad been dead and if sbe bad ';:;
have been rife in the Boston schQol system , } been sexually assaulted, since her clothing was found In a •:::
;:;: stale of disarray , police said.
::;:

RYAN J E~-F £R:'

State Farm Insurance Com pan ies
Home Offices: Bloom ington, Il linois

PRICE 15'

Court upholds
Boston ruling

~LL MlJN Ey

See him for all your family
insurance needs.

.

TOURS WELOOMED - Dr. John H. Ridgway, chief
of staff, and Mrs. Teresa Collins, supervisor of nurses,
discuss the observance of National Hospital Week at
Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy. The public is
invited to tour the .hospital this week as a part of the observance by stopping by from 8a.m. to 4 p.m.

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

24 State St.
Gallipolis
Phone 446-4290

Like A
Good Neighbor,
StaiB Farm
Is Them

"resistence

en tin e

Carrol K. Snowdl! n

AT UNLINED DRAPERY PRICES

;

"lil reality, the situation of
our country is not serious,''

NeigHBOr

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destroy peace."

GOO

LINED WITH ROC-LON(R)

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political upheaval directly,
nor did it give, any indication
of how he expected it would be
resolved. He 8aid rumors were
be ing spread by "opportunists
seekfng· to further their
national interests, undermine
the national economy and

Your

May 12 thru

;

. Tiie announc~ment found
loyalists in disarray with four
!iightist cabinet ministers who
resigned over the weekend
fled from the country and a
growing number of military
units
disavowing
the
leadership
of
ri ghtis t
generals. A fifth rightwing
cabinet minister in Europe
was not expected to return.
The Pathet Lao also accused
Thailand of supporting a coup
to overthrow the leftists in the
coalition govermnent but the
statement brought a quick
denial from the Thai government. Thai Prim~ Minister
Kukrit Pramoj described as a
fabrication reports Thailand
had sent gunboats and ar'·
tillery up the Mekong River to
support such a coup.
Souvanna 's brief radio message did not mention the

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evacuate the 1,000 American&amp;
now in Laos.
·
The Communist move to
lake over the military came
from Kham Ouane Boupha ,'
the new Pathet Lao Defense
Minister. He issued a C01ll·
munique over national radio
which forbade movements of
loyalist •troops or wa~
equipment without Defense
Ministry orders and warned of
. punitive action against any
units that did not obey .
The communique also demanded rililitary units declare
,their loyalty to the coalition
govermnent and the National
Poli tical Consultative Council
controlled by the Pathet Lao ."
The government's principal
artillery, armor and logistic
units immediately disavowed
their ties with right-wing
elements .

•

to the Forestry Division by
June 2 to quality for funding
during 1975.

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VIENTIANE,Laos (UP!) The Communist Pathet Lao
moved today to seize control
of the loyalist military forces
in Laos.
The Pathet Lao already had
Seized control of the cabinet
and
Prince · Souvanna
Phouma, the neutralist prime
minister , went on the radio to
try to stem panic and public
f~ars about the deteriorating
SitUation.
VIetnamese, Indian and
Olinese, fearful of a Commtimst takeover of the last nonCornt;nunist nation in I•dochma, were fleeing the
country in large numbers,
severely disrupting its
economy since they control
most business here.
In Washmgton, a State
Department spokesman said
there were no plans to

White asked the Supreme
Court to look at the Boston
situation in light of Denver
and Detroit school decisions
made in 1973 and 1974,
respectively.
In the Denver case, the
Court held that where intentional segregation has been
proved as to an appreciable
portion of a school system, the
burden is on the authorities to
show their actions as to other
similar areas were not taken
with the same motives.
In the Detroit case, the
Court refused to sanction a
mullidistrict remedy when no
violations had been shown in
some of the districts.
On April 28, the Court
rejected an appeal by the
Springfield, Mass., School
Committee, which also has
resisted desegr~gation .

Anita King, Jeff
Musser named
Prom king, queen

The Meigs High School
Junior-Senior Prom Saturday
night at the high school used
the theme "Don 't ~t The Sun
Go Down On Me'' , in the

gymnas ium decorated to
represent a desert setting .
The junior class did all the
decorating for the event which
las ted from 9 p. m. to mid·
night. A ban quel was held in
the school cafeteria preceding
the dance.
Highlighting the prom was
the crowning of the 1975 Prom
King and Queen selected from
four couples nominated by
vote of the junior class.
Winners this year were Anita
King and Jeff Musser .
Included in the decorations

for the prom were paper
flowers placed on the ta bles
with candles and miniature
paper cacti. The dance floor
also had large replicas of the
cactus, thus carrying out the
desert theme. In one corner a
waterfall and 011.sis were
constructed with palm trees.
On the curtain at the front of
the gym a large picture of a
sunset was placed.
Music was supplied by the
"River City" instrumental
group from Pittsburgh.
Following the prom, the young
people - as is traditional celebrated further "on their
own ", some going to parties,
some bowling, and others to
mov ies in the area.

Suburb housing on agenda
WASHINGTON (UPI ) The Supreme Court today
agreed to decide whether
federal courts can remedy
past discrimination in public
housing by requiring that
future projects be built in the
suburbs.
The justices wiD have the
opportunity in a Chicago case
to expand the meaning of their
landmark 1974 decision
limiting desegregation efforts
across county lines .
In Bradley v. Milliken in
1974, the Court narrowly held
that suburban school districts
actively
must
have
discriminated against blacks
before they can be forced to

Entries filed
in local court
Theodore Connolly, Rt. I,
Reedsville, and Marjorie
Connolly, same address, have
filed for dissolution of their
marriage in Common Pleas
Court. In other court entries:
Clarence .E. Dewees, Grove
City, filed suit for partition of
real estate located in Middleport, against Earl R.
Dewees, Middleport, ~~ al. ;
Erline · NQrris $tobart, RD
Racine, is suing Darrell E.
Norris and Janet Norris,
Racine , et al, to construe
purpose and intent of a deed,
and cases dismissed were
Doris Haynes versus Basil
Haynes and Sue Ann Simspon
versus Gar Simpson .

becQme part of an inner city
school desegregation plan.
The ruilng struck down a
couri-&lt;Jrdered busing plan in
Detroit.
The case accepted today for
a decision next term was appealed by the Department of
Housing and Urban Development. HUD contends it cannot
be ordered to forCP. unwilling
suburban areas to accept
public housing .
The complex case was
begun in 1966 when black
residents of Chicago public

housing filed suit against the
Chicago Housing Authority
and HUD .
CHA was found by the
federal courts to have
discriminated against blacks
seeking public housing ~e
at least 1954 by using public
funds to create virtual ghettos
of high rise housing.
In a separate action in 1971,
HUD was found to have aided
the
discrimination
by
willingly providing over $300
million for such isolated
housing.

Solution essential in
malpractice problems
COLUMBUS (UP!)
A
representative of the Ohio
Insurance Institute said today
a "litigation explosion" . has
caused a crisis in medical
mapractice insurance, and
that it is up to lawyers, doctors
and hospitals to stop it. ·
John C. WincheD, exe-cutive ·
director of the on, told anews
conference that the size of the
average award ill malprl!ctice
suits has risen from $62,000 in
1965 to $350,000.
"Solutions
must
be
developed so that doctors and
hospitals can continue to serve
their patients free from the
threat of unjwlitifed lawsuits
and
backbreaking
premiums," W'mchell said.
"However, reform of the.

medical-legal aspeets of the
malpractice situation Is absolutely esssential."
Winchell said .the legal
system must he rformed to
''remove uqreasonable legal
lees· and recoveries."
He added that doctors,
hospitals and other health
care institutins must create
"better loss prevention ·
systems" . to minimize the
nulnber and severity of ·injuries caused by negU,ence."
As for a proposed "lbared
risk" insurance plan, Including casualty companletS
represented by the on, in
malpractice lel!lslatlon now
under study in the Ohio
General Asaembly, Winchen
said it Li unfair.

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2- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Monday , May 12,1975

Red regime promises Viet election, sometime

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3- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomerov, 0., Mondav, May 12, 1975

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United Preu lnlematiooal
The new Conununlst regune
m Saigon has promised to hold
a nationwide election m South
V1elnam, but has refused to
set a time limit for the vote.
The Viet Cong government
has also called for the
reunification of North and
South Vietnam, but says 1ts
first pr1or1ty IS normalmng
life in Sa1gon.
Delayed dispatches from
UPI's Sa1gon bureau sa1d
Sunday the leader of the
"military management
conuruttee" runnmg the South

By

Vietnamese capital announced plans last week for
the election.
Gen Tran Van Tra told a
news conference last Thurs·
day the V1et Cong's
Prov1s1onal RevolutiOnary
Gov~rnmenl would drop the
word "ProVlSlonal" from ds

title after the vote
"When there is a general
election there WID he no more
'Provisional," ' the general
Said
Tra refused to set a date for
the election, however, and
said the military c01ruruttee

would stay in power 'to
organize normal life" and put
down any security threats m
Sa1gon
"That lS why we cannot
speak of a tune lurut,'' he said
The general held his news
conference under the crystal
chandeliers of an ornately
carpeted room lll the fallen
government's presidential
palace.
Tra, head of the 11-rnember
comm1ttee runnmg Saigon,
Said security 1s still the major
problem m the South Vietnamese cap1tal

UP! correspondents in
Saigon said, however, there
have been no reports of armed
opposition m the City smce the
Communist takeover April 30.
The UPI dlSpatches, dated
last Thursday, arrived m
Hong Kong Sunday after being
routed 1 through the North
VIetnamese capital of Hanoi.
UP!
Saigon
bureau
manager Alan Dawson and
UP! As1an news editor Leon

Camp jammed full-up
United Press International
Although facilities at Camp
Pendleton, Calif., have filled
to capac1ty with Vietnamese
refugees, the b1g camp was
able to take two more occupants Sunday -both
newborn babies
Le Xuan Mal and Tokin
Thanh and the1r infants "are
both domg !me," a spokesman
reported shortly after the
births at the camp's Naval
hospital
The two little girls should
JOin their families m a few
days m one of the e1ght tent
and quonset hut towns bunched together m a corner of
this sprawling base
But two planeloads of 500
refugees who landed at nearby
El Taro Marme Air Station
earlier thiS weekend will not
be ad!mlted, smce the camp
has no more room until some
of the refugees already here
are released.
A total of 25,889 Southeast
Asians -counting the two
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newborn babies -had arrived
at the Marine camp through
Sunday mght. A spokesman
S81d 7,225 of them had been
processed out and released to
authoriZed sponsors, most of
them m the first few days
But government officials m
Washmgton ordered tighter
security checks early last
week Smce then the flow out
has slowed to a tnckle
The 18,664 refugees m camp
at the start of the week can
expect to stay a minimum of
seven to 10 days 1f they have
sponsors and do not run mto
any secunty problems. For
others , officials now say, the
wa1t could stretch as long as 90
days
At Eglm, Air Force Base,
F1a , the dreary, wet weather
of the last two days was
for gotten as thousands of
bouquets donated by local
flonsts were distributed to the
senior mother of each refugee
fam1ly while the happy youngsters were handed teddy

Historic accord
reached in west
SACRAMENTO, Calif
(UPI) - Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr has struck an historic
accord between growers and
Umted Farm Workers leader
Cesar Chavez which may end
strife and violence m the
state's $10 billion farm mdustry
When Brown first unveiled
his farm labor proposal a
month ago Chavez at first
denounced It as ''not betrayal,
but close." Other labor groups
opposed lt
After 100 hours of negotia·
lions last week, Brown came
out w1th a compromiSe bill
calling for secret ballot union
elections and it Zipped through
1ls first and perhaps toughest
legislative test.
Supporters now predict the
legislation will beCome law m
time for next year's growmg
season.
"I thmk an historic moment
lS drawmg near not only for
people in agnculture but for
people of this country," Brown
said shortly before the senate
mdustrl81 relations comnultee
approved the measure on a
bipartisan f&gt;.1 vote.
The conuruttee was considered the bill's most arduous
hurdle since 1\s members have
been sympathelic to Chavez'

b1tter union nval -the Teamsters -and growers.
But supporters concede
forceful opposition by the
Teamsters and the Building
Trades Council still could
derail
the
landmark
legislation.
"No one has anythmg to lear
. if they (union leaders) can
wm at a secret ballot election," countered Rose Bird,
Brown's chief farm labor
negotiator.
The Building Trades Council
lS upset because the measure
would take away their
iurisdiction over construction
on farms.
'
Chavez' major concession
was the bill's sharp restriction
on secondary boycotts, which
he used successfully to
pressure growers mto signmg
con tracts after nationwide
grape and lettuce boycotts
Under the legislation, harvest-time strikes would be
permitted and workers would
be allowed to vote for ''no
Wlion. "
A f1ve-member state
Agricultural Relations Board
would supervise eleclions.
"We have the framework to
resolve the disputes that
•inevitably arise m farm
labor," Brown sa1d.
0

bears, baby dolls and other
toys distributed by the Red
Cross
Also " frt endshtp boxes, "
contammg combs, brushes,
soap and other such articles
were d1str1buted to the
children, who compose about
half the camp's population.
The boxes came from a
nalionw1de campaign among
elementary school children:
A total of 2,777 refugees
have been flown mto Eglin
smce May 4, but 220 have been
processed out through a sponsorship program, leavmg a
population of 2,5~7 .
In Arkansas, Gov DaVId
Pryor Said Sunday, 1f health
problems can be avoided, he
had no obJection to temporarily housmg more VIetnamese than the 20,000
orgmally planned for at Ft.
Chaffee, Ark.
By Sunday there were at
least 16,106 refugees at Ft.
Chaffee, but officials expected
the camp would reach 1ts
20,000 capacity by today.

Daniel Signed the diSpatches.
It was not known if the reports
were censored.
Gen Tra, m his news conference, vowed to take over all
properly owned by evacuated
U S citizens . "because
American Imperialism has not
honored Its conunitments" to
the 1973 p a r 1 s peace
agreement.
The general promised a

"policy of lemency" toward
South VIetnamese refugees
wbo fled the country before
the CommuniSt takeover.
"Our government will
' continue to take care of every
Vietnamese at home or
abroad, with the exception of a
number of reactionary
ringleaders or people who
continue to cling to foreign
imperialism," he said.

Tass prods Wallace as fiendish
MOSCOW (UP!) - The
Sov1et
Unwn
Sunday
denounced Gov. George
Wallace of Alabama as
"fiendish" for suggesbng the
Umted States may have
fought on the wrong s1de m
World War Il In a com·
mentary enhtled "George
Wallace and the Gas Cham·
bers," the Tass news agency
charged that Wallace's
"sp1n tual precursors, " at~
tempted to destroy the Grand
Alliance of the Sov1ets,
Amenca and Bntam
Wallace told a group of
correspondents that the
United States should have
aided Germany economically
after World War I and worked
together with the Germans to
fight commumsm then. He
sa1d the Umted States may
have been fighting the "wrong
people" dunng World War II,
"This lS a truly fiendish
slatement tuned for the 30th
anmversary of the rouhng of
Hitler Germany," Ta!iS sa1d
" It lS more than just a
flagrant abuse of the sacred
memory of 2tl million Sov1et
people and several hundred
thousand Americans who died

fighting Fascism," 11 said.
Wallace spoke May 3 to 25
foreign journalists taking a U.
S lnformahon Agency tour of
"the new South "
Wallace said the Umted
States should have been
"cullivatmg the friendship" of
Germans and Japanese m the
prewar years mstead of an·
tagon1zmg them and added
"! thmk we were fighting the
wrong people , maybe, m

World War II and f say that
w1th all due regard to the
Soviet person (one of the
correspondents) here. We
fought on your s1de, but I w1sh
that the Soviet Umon, or
government rather, had been
con tamed somewhat "

The Washington Post quoted
Wallace as telling a Japanese
correspondent m the group "!
w1sh we'd been on the same
side m World War II "

Bayh thinking
of race in '76

DR. LAMB

Mr. and Mrs Bob Harrison
and family of Stoutsville
visited her parents, Mr and
M~s. William Cheadle and
other relabves here during the
weekend.
Mr. and Mrs Harold
Gillogly, V1cky and Bruce,
and Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Jordan attended funeral
serviCes for Mrs. Lincoln
Russell in Pomeroy on
Tuesday ll!'d then they, along
w1th the Jordans. baby son,
Joshua Perry, jomed other
relabves at the family home m
Wolfpen m the late afternoon.
Earl Starkey and his son-mlaw and daughter, Mr and
Mrs. Donald Jones of
Nelsonville were m Columbus
on Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs Alfred Rice of
Columbus were overnight
guests of her parents, Mr and
Mrs. William Culwell.
Mrs Terry Cain and son,
Charleston, S. C., are spending some lime here with her
parents, Mr and Mrs. Cecil
Hoyd. Her husband will jom

~~:.~or a leave m the near

Social Notes

News Notes
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Ignorance People are peculiar Some
hold It agamst you if you try to
achieve anythmg. Maybe they don't
like seeing anyone else work so hard
In distance running, there is no other
way, no shortcut You've gotta do the
work."
Before departmg for Tokyo today
With the rest of the team on the f1rst
leg to China, Maguire was anx1ous to
get in a workout of some kind. The
freeways here aren't espec18Uy built
for distance runners, so he had to go
find hlinself a s1de road someplace,
which he did.
A Penn State graduate, Magwre
runs the 10,000 aqd 5,000 meters and
the 3,000 meter steeplechase. He runs
for the love of 11, not for any money
like each of the 66 athletes on thiS
trip, he IS receiving only his room and
board plus $3 a day for expenses.
"Distance runnmg lS the most
rewarding thmg I can think of," says
the stocky New Englander . "If not for
1t, I'd never have this chance to got to
China or to have gone to Russia the
way I did. I don't see how anyone's

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NEW YORK (UPI) - Once New York's other hero
the first-inning horror show SuQday was 24-year-()ld Texan
was fmished, II turned mto a Mike Phillips, who was picked
beautiful day for Tom Seaver up on wmvers from the San
The sky was cloudless, the rranclSCO . Giants last week
weather was warm and the 'After singling to lead off the
New York Mets snapped their
sill-game losmg streak With a
3-2 v1ctory over the Cincinnati
Reds behind Seaver's sillhitter.
But. that's hardly the way
Seaver's day started.
by FRED OOWN
On his fourth pitch of the UP! Sports Writer
game, Pete Rose jarred Sea- The Oakland A's call Joe
ver's ego with a shot that Rud1 "the man without a
landed atop the nght-center- weakness" - with good
field fence 400 feet away and reason.
bounced over for a horne run.
Probably the qwetest and
"The pitch to Rose I thought least controversial of the
was good," Seaver said after three-lime world champiOns
the game, "but one that's hit Rudl was switched to first
thai far can 'I be too good." base against hiS will thiS
Seaver hardly had time to season to make room for
recover from that shot when Claudell Washington m left
Ken Griffey auned for the field. Then, when Regg1e
same spot and bounced aoHe. ' Jackson and Sal Banda
hopper off the fence for a slumped at the plate, Rudi
double.
Joe
Morgan's was !llade the A's cleanup
grounder advanced Griffey to man.
third, but Seaver struck out Rudl's feathers were someJohnny Bench for the second ' what ruffled by the switch to
out.
" '" 4 first' ba,se llut he has
Then Dan Driessell' top~ ~· swii11Rwed his pride and
slow roller between the mound · currently is the most conand first base which Seaver Sistent game-winning hitter on
ran over to pick up. It was the team After gomg 2-for..S
siow-rnollon agony for Seaver and batting m three runs m the
"It was an easy play," A's 7-li v1ctory over the New
Seaver said. "But the ball York Yankees Sunday, he has
seemed to take a crooked hop a .296 batting average and 14
in toward me. I saw 11 and I runs batted in.
didn't move my glove. I don't
"! don't feel any exira
know why. It just went behind pressure batting cleanup," he
my glove."
said. "Aciually, I don't care
The VIctory improved Sea- where I bat because I still
ver's record this season to ~- have to play my own game.

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W aniors got job done

R11fle doubled home Mark
Sayre and Brady Huffman but
an appeal by the Tr1mble
Coach brought the umpire's
rulmg that R1ffle fa1led to
touch flrst base, thus
nulhfymg the runs, the h1t,
and ended the mnmg, smce
there were two outs

: ~~~~~~~sb::s~~~a~c~;~~~~

motivated over there The Russian
government takes care of anything.
I'm anx1ous to see how China compares with Russia "
Magu1re lives m Slate College, Pa.,
where he works for an msurance
company He plans to keep runnmg as
long as he can afford to, although
there are some aspects about the
sport he iSn't crazy about.
"I don't like to train, but I like to run
the races," he says The races teach
you a great deal about other thmgs on
life , thmgs like discipline and
dedicatiOn

up for another year after
R1ffle struck out But Greg
Dunnmg smacked h1s second
smgle of the afternoon, John
Salser walked, putting runners on f1rst and second, and
semor M1tchNease became an
mstant hero when he launched
a ball that the nght f1eld
watched go over h1s head for a
tr1ple, g1vmg Southern the
Victory.

(;ED,~RV ILLE

WBIS
CEDARVILLE, Ohio (UPll
- It was an all-Cedarville
fmals as the host ~m scored
29 points to run ~way w1th the
D1stnct 22 NAJA tenniS crown
Saturday.
Cedarville placed first lind
second m the smgles and
doubl es wh1le scoring 29
pomts Runnerup Malone had
12 pomts.
Dave DeLancey defe11..ed
Sam Kesler for the singles
Iitle, then teamed With Kesler
to defeat Wes Johnson and
Chuck Neuhaus for the
doubles crown.
Other team scormg mcluded
W1hmngton 10, Findlay 9,
Defiance 7, Bluffton and Cen·
tral State ~ each

Crampton sharing top spot

DALLAS (UP!) - Confident am keyed up, you have to be to
Bruce Crampton says the play well, but I am not nerwashout m Sunday's cham· vous or JUmpy."
Crampton, 39, planned to
p10nship round of the $175,000
sk
ip New Orleans and
Byron Nelson Golf Class1c cost
him one day off and nothing Memphis m the next two
weeks before gomg to Atlanta
more.
"My last f1ve rounds ~ve
Crampton, an Austrahan
who has never won his
adopted hometown tourTnmble
102 000 0-3 2 2 nament, shared the lead today
Southern
001 001 2--4 6 3 w1th Bob Eastwood and Rod
G1llesp1e, Hunter (LP ) and Funseth at 10 under 203 The
Brunton
Huffman and leaders were m the clubhouse
"There's one place tn every race
Sunday before a heavy sprmg
where you either go or don't go, the =· Dunmng
thunderstorm whipped across
place that separates the runner from
the oak tree lined Preston
::
the non-runner," Magu1re reflects, ..
Trails
course W1th 46 players
diggmg a bit deeper into the crux of
out, PGA tour supervisor
his craft. "Everybody who has ever
Wade Cagle canceled play
been m a race and achieved some .•
followmg a 2'i.! hour suspen·
degree of success has arrived at the
s10nand ordered a fresh shari.
pomt where he knows he has to go on
The leaders held a one
now or bag lt-{!Uit and lose the race
stroke
lead over Miller
The guy who keeps gomg lS the one
Barber, Bob E. Smith and
wbo achieves the success."
CANTON (UP!)- The f1nal Tom Watson George Knud·=
weekend rollmg m the 11-week son, Jack Ewmg and second
Oh10
Men's
Bowling round leader Larry Nelson
Assoc1ation Tournament here were bunched at 8 under 205.
saw three changes made m the Sill others, mcluding Johnny
top standmgs
M11ler who had a sore
Only 42 learns competed In shoulder, were four strokes off
the hnal tourney stand, one- at 207 It was an open shot at
e1ghth, Phillips scored the which nailed Rose at the plate fourth the preVIous number on the $35,000 first prize
Crampton, who has shot 66winning run on Rusty Staub's trying to score the go-ahead the lanes weekly.
The tourney. w1th a total of 70-&lt;&gt;7 on the par 35-36--71, 6,983
run.
ground smgle to right
John M1iner drove m the $80,000 m pme money, drew a yard course, won last week m
In the top half of the inning,
ACULT MEll
Phillips was the middle man f1rst two Mets' runs w1th a record 1,562 ~~ as well as Houston, h1s f1rst triUmph
Brg Shef
second-mmng
homer
and
a
3,644
entries
m
doubles,
5,199
smce four VICtories In 1913
on a letter-perfect relay from
Reg Fr ench Ft es
groundout
m the all-events and 7,288 m
Tur no11er &amp;
"It makes no difference,"
the left-centerheld fence fourth-mmng
'
.
Larg e Soli Dr nk
the s1ngles
Crampton said of the ramout,
The Roy Black Chrysler the second thiS season " It lS
team from Euclid, wh1ch won only a delay of 24 hours I feel
m the recent ABC tournament perfectly settled I won last
at Dayton w1th a 3,234, rolled a week and thiS Will cause no
3,080 here, mcluding 988-1,063- difference.
Where you bat doesn't make Royals 4 Brewers 0
Steve
Busby
pitched
a
live1,029, to take fifth place m the
that much difference as long
" II will make the course
PT PLEASANT
as you are between two good hitter and struck out nme, actual team standings. The play longer m the fairWays
2325 Jackson Av e
r11ismg hiS record to f&gt;-2, m the squad was led byldike ~ossi But I know th1s golf CQllrse,
hitters.
"I'm unhappy about playmg Royals' v1ctory . Harmon w1th a 65~
I've played here for years I
f1rst base," he conceded, "but Killebrew smgied home one The Gran brothers of Akron
I guess I'm there for the run, stole hiS f1rst base m four took over second place m the
duration, so there's no sense years and scored on a smgle actual doubles standmgs with
~ Cookie Rouas as the Royals a 1,345. DiCk rolled a 727 and
complauung about 11."
Rud1 h1t a two-run 'homer m scored three runs m the fourth Terry a 618
Jim Kerchner of Lou1sv11le,
a s1x-run th1rd-lnnlng raJiy mning.
Red Sox 5 1\ngels 2
who has a 54 handicap, put
which routed Rudy May and
Two-run singles by RICO together 227 .~t8, ~ to claim
homered in the seventh
Sunday when the A's made 1t Petrocelli and R1ck Burleson the ,runne!l!i!~::~ot ~In the
two out of three 'over the led the Red Sox to their wm handicap slngles"at 7113 The
Yankeees. V1da Blue was over the Angels and gave BiD top handicap team score the
tagged for five runs and nine ike hiS fourth wm of the !mal weekend was the 3, 14~
hits m 6 2-3 innmgs but with season. Bill Singer, tagged for carded by the Mason F1ve of
relief help from Jun Todd seven hits and three runs in 6 Cmcmna ti
became the
Amencan 2-3 innrngs, was handed hiS
League's hrst seven-game fifth deafeat
wmner of the season. He has a
7-1 mark.
SEfS RECORD
The Baltimore Orwles MARION, Ohio (UPI) BUY, SELL, TRADE
bounced back from a 6-4 loss Wllfred Boutlier of Sherman
Oaks, Calif., set a track record
Sunday during hot rod racing
Mmnesota Twins 9-3, the at the Marion County InTexas Rangers beat the ternational Raceway.
Detroit Tigers 11-7, the
Boutller won the funny car
Cleveland Indians shaded the meet in an elapsed time of 7 11
Chicago White Sox ~. the seconds at a speed of 196
ROGER WAMSLEY
Kansas City Royals topped the m.p.h.
MUwaukee BW\ewers 4-0, and ---------~::::::::::::::;;:==~
the Boston Red Sox downed .~
the California Angels f&gt;-2, m
other AL games

been consiStent," Crampton
sa1d He shot 61Hl9 to close
Houston "! haven't been
playmg as well as I would like
I am still h1ttmg some )oose
shots but I've hit no real wild
shots here except one

11

3 switches in

top standings

among bowlers

FOR

"
"'

"'

"'
'"
"
"
'"

"
'"

"
'"

.,
•• 1

'

.••.
"'

--,

'

Nat•onal League
East

w 1. pet. g.b

Ch1cago
PittSburgh

,,
"

PhiiOdlphia

...

51 LOUIS
New York
Montreal

-.
_,

'

'
J

'

0

••
••
•

""
,,.,

•..'

18 9 667
13 12 520
13 14
12 14
II 14

4

481
462
440

5
51/:z
6

10 14 417
West
w I. pel

61h

g.b
21 11 656
Los Angeles
Clnc1nnat1
18 14 563 3
Atlanta
17 16 515 4117
San Francsco U 16 467 6
San Diego
15 16 484 51h
Houston
11 23 324 11
Slturdav's Results
Chlcaoo s San Oll'Qo 1
Montreal 8 Houston 7
Los Angeles 6 Pittsburgh 2
Cincinnati 7 New York 2
Atlanta 2 Phila 1, 11 Inns
st Louis 9 san Francisco 2
$UndiY'S Resulb
Los Angeles 1 Pittsburgh 0
New York 3 Cincinnati :Z
Houston 6 Montreal 0
Safl Diego :z Ctlleaao 1
Atlanta 7 Phllldtii'~UII 3
St LouiS • San Francisco 3
Monday' s Probable P1tchers
(All Times EDT)
Cincinnati CNorman 2 n at
Phlladelphlo (LonbOrD 3 1), 7 35
p m Atlanta (Morton 5 21 at
Montrul (Rogers 141. 8 05
p m San Francisco lBarr 3 :Z J
1t New York (Mttlack :z 31 ,
1 "05 p m Los Angeles (Mes
ursmlth 5 OJ 1t St, Louis
(Denny 2 2) . 8 3D P m
Tutsdav•s Gomef
Houston 1f t;hiclgq. At anta at
Montreal , night sen Francisco
1t New York, night Cincinnati

al

Philadelphia. night

Los

Angeles at st . Louis, night San
Diego 1t Plffsburoh , night

'I
•

•

I u.

~e;~o~J~~~~~ ~:e:

KIDS~

FUNMEAL""
Fun Tr ay
Funb urger
Reg FrencnFn es
Su rpr se Prize

Reg Soli Drmk &amp;
a Swee1 Treat

Jackson does it all

7\.Tews 7\.Tot.'es

By-the Day

•

0

Horro·,, r first, then perfection

Ca rmel

1

wa lked
leadmg
off,
M1ke Etchenkamper tr1plcd to
dr1ve m Faires, and scored on
an error on a play to p1ck him
off lh1rd
Southern came to bat on the
bottom of that mmng needmg
runs badly, gettmg JUSt one.
Earher, however, tn the
second mnmg the Tornados
scored what appeared to be
the go ahead runs when J1m

There comes a time when you quit, or win

.&amp;

Denise Dean
is president
of4-H club

Eastern Huffman w11l p1tch
lor Southern m the d1stnct
opener aga mst the Northwestern Regwnal champ on
Chillicothe Wednesday.
The Tomcats took a 1-0 lead
m the first mmng when Patton
walked to start thmgs off,
stole second, and scored on
back-to-back errors Trimble
fattened 1ts lead to 3-0 on the
record at 1)..3 on the season, third when Jack Faires
mcludmg a no-h1tter over

· : .. · ·· ·· :..:·: .::::.::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Reedsville

Impotence and prostate problem
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. of this newspaper at P. 0 . Box whether that IS bark of a saDEAR DR LAMB - About 1551, Radio C1ty Statwn, New called mag1cal tree or male
two years ago I had a prostate York, N y 10019, and ask for sex hormones The bram 18 a
gland operahon through the my report on impotence. Send very Important factor 10
urethra Smce that lime I have a long stamped self- periormance Older men can
become impotent. Is that a addressed envelope 'and 50 ~ \ose confidence, too, just as
result of the operatwn•
cents to cover costs.
well as younger' men Loss of
I
have
read
that
About half of American men sexual capac1ty m both men
testosterone can be g1ven to at age 75 are 1mpotent This and women IS often a s1gn of
overcome 11 Would 11 help? may have somethmg to do depression. This Is one more
Does 11 swell the remaining w1th our livmg habits that reason why a person at aoy
prosta te and cause more result 10 fatty cholesterol age With th1s symptom needs
trouble to develop Is anythmg deposits that m turn affect the medical attention.
better m the ~ormone line that male sex organs as well as
It often happens that men
can be taken ·to remove the · causmg he&amp;tt attacks and who are in the age group to
unpotency?
' strokes. It follows that about need prostate surge'1' are ~lso
DEAR READER - There half of men in this age group m the age group when 1mare many causes of im- are not Impotent
potence Is more common. The
potency. Some young men
A gradual decline m male unpolence then may follow
have 11 on a psychological hormone levels can contribute surgery, not (jecause of the
basiS, often from mexpenence to 1mpotence. However, men operahon, but because 11 was
and lack of confidence
w1th relatively low male gomg to happen anyway
Impotence can also be hormone levels often function There IS a very low incidence
caused by many other medical well so 11 lS not JUSt a matter of impotence after the type of
p r o b I e m s b e s 1 d e of hormones 1n every case. pros late surgery that you
psychological factors. When a man has had some have had.
Diabetes IS a classic example. unsahsfactory expenences Doctors are reluctant to
By affecting the nerves and loses h1s confidence then g1ve much male hormone to
necessary to a response, he may get over h1s lack of men who are 10 the age group
unpotence develops. For a confidence just by the fa1th he lo develop cancer of the
more complete discussion of has many medlCme he takes, prostate or those who have
unpotence write to me ln care
already had some form of

p..a.a. "

the defendmg champs of last
year, Trimble. The v1ctory
was a remarkable turnaround m fortune, as the
Tornadoes fmlShed at 1..S, m
last place m the SV AC
Southern p1tchmg ace Brady
Huffman went the distance on
the mound, str1kmg out 13 and
walkmg seven to win his fifth
straight game. It put h1s

By MILTON RICHMAN
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - Has
anybody here seen Charlie •
Everybody has sometime or other,
only nobody ever recogruzes him.
Passmg motorists, catching s1ghl of
him or any of his other conscienllous
colleagues working alongside the road
each day, even runnmg m the ram
sometunes, have a pronounced tendency to lack any understandmg
"Get outta the way before ya get
killed, ya stupid Sebastian 1" some
driVers have hollered angrily
Charlie Magu1re, a bright, clean-cut
22-year-()Jd long distance runner from
Foxboro, Mass., flmches anytime he
hears that. He knows his name Isn't
Sebastian His name is Charlie.
On his way to the People's Republic
of China now, with the rest of the US
team for a ser1es of goodwill track and
f1eld meets, Maguire says 11 doesn't
bother him any more when shorttempered motorists get his name
mixed up.
"" some of them really let me have
it," he laughs "I mark 1t up to

..i: .,., ··"'-'""'· ···m·

CHICAGO (UP!) - f he Golden Stale Warriors did the
JOb on th e trenches, under the backboards, to retUID a
chance for the National Basketball Association championship
The Warriors, 10 a game they couldn't afford to lose,
oulrebounded the ChiCago Bulls, 51-39 to earn an 116-72
v1ctory Sunday and even their best-&lt;~f-seven seri.S for the
NBA Western Conference championship at three victories
apiece.
"1 stopped counting wben they had picked up their 161!'
pomt oq us on the offensive board," Bulls Coach Dick Motta
Southern got another run said. "Every time we made a mistake, they scored. Every
home on the s1xth but shU ltme they got an offensive rebound, they scored fhat was
tr ailed by one g01ng mto the the difference. They wtre more opportunists than we
fonal frame
were."
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::·::::::::::::: The bottom of the seventh,

L

RACINE- Hilton Wolfe Jr
and h1s Southern Tornado
baseball team used sixth and
seventh lnmng rallies to
defeat the Trimble Tomcats 43 here Saturday afternoon to
wrap up the Class A Northeastern Sectional Baseball
Tournament chamyuonship
Earlier v1ctones over
Crooksville 6-1, and Miller 133put them in the fma ls agams t

fo~...view

Mr and Mrs Bert Christian
and Catrma , Clarksville,
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Tenn., came for a viSit here Mr
and Mrs
M1lo
w1th relalives. They came Richardson of Michigan are
especially at this lime to help spendmg two weeks at their
celebrate the birthdays of farm
Catrma and her great grand- Mr and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
father, Granv1Ue Lyons. They were visitors at Parkersburg
spent Sunday In Lancaster on Monday.
with Mr. and Mrs. Billy Lyons. Mr and Mrs Jenmngs Hall,
Others there were Mr . and Ray Lawson and children of
Mrs. Granville Lyons, Mr. and Columbus attended funeral
Mrs. Gordon Perry and Troy, serv1ces of Mrs. Zelia Lawson
all local, and Mr. and Mrs Sunday at the Ewmg Funeral
Dewey Walker, Vinton
Home, Interment was at
Recent guests of Dale Dye Lelart Falls Cemetery.
were his daughters and
Mrs. Gary M1ller and
families, Mr. and Mrs Glen daughter, Amy, of Bellvue,
Irwm and family, Marysville, spent a weekend with Mr. and
and Mr. and Mrs. CJ!eslj!r~ *s ~1~ · ~~on and
Baumgardner and fa,m1ly ' fllm1ly . •1. ~~!&lt; f1 •
Coshocton.
Mr and Mrs Dana Lewis of
The Carpenter Church Busy Clifton, W. Va, called on Mr.
Beegroupwillholdabakeand and Mrs Roger Roush, Mr.
rummage sale on May 17 at pnd Mrs. Russell Roush
the Columbia Townhouse.
Sunday evenmg.
Mrs Alta Murphy of wwe , ~Butch) Wilson was
McArthur and Betty Colenum, ·returned to his horne Monday
Columbus, called on Murl • from Veterans Memorial
Galaway Other visitors were Hospital where he was a
mediCal pat1ent.

Alfred

----l :ornados win Sectional 4-3

her son-m-iaw and daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Woodrum,
Rick and Ran~Y, also of
McArthur.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewill Smith
vlsited their son-m-law and
daughter, Mr . and Mrs. Larry
Stanley and Anna, at their new
location near Manon, Ohio.
Murl Galaway was In
McArthur to attend a shower
that was held for her greatgranddaughter, Karen
Radcliff. Karen Is the
daughter of W1hna Woodrum
Petty who grew up m this
community.
Marvm
Covey
of
Charleston, W. Va , visited
with the Rex Cheadle and
Noble 'Hamon families dur1ng
the weekend
Mr and Mrs. Walter Jordan
and son called on her grand-,
mother, Ava Gilkey, In
Harrisonville on Tuesday
evenmg.

The poll showed that 37 per
WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen. Birch Bayh, D-lnd., still cent favored a new party
while 56 preferred the existing
has the Iresidential bug .
Bayh dropped out of the 1972 lineup, and a third-party
race for the Democratic presi- ticket with Reagan and
dential nominatiOn when his Alabama's Gov. George
w1fe underwent cancer Wallace would pull29 per cent
surgery. He said Sunday In a of the vote.
UP! Washington Window The early maneuvermg kept
mlerview that "a number of up. In South Plainfield, N.J.,
people" were asking him to Rep. Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz.,
consider a new effort and he S8ld Saturday he believes the
was trying to decide ''If it Democratic nomination will
makes any political sense." be won m the primaries and he
"I am g1ving 11 a lot of "quite probably" Will enter
thought -lrankly,more than I the one m New Jersey June I,
thought I would a montb ago." 1976.
In Pekin, m., Sen. Henry M.
Bayh sa1d he takes Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, D· Jackson, !).Wash., criticized
Mass., "at his word that he IS Ford for talking about former
not gomg to seek or accept the President Harry S. Truman
and placmg his bust m the
nomination.''
Kennedy said Saturday in 0\ial Office. He said Ford and
Keene, N.H., "My poSition IS other Republicans were
unchanged and I will not be a "trying to capitalize" on
Sunday School attendance 1 ll
1 ll
.
candidate. I expect to be a Truman's new popularity.
"r' think the Republicans on May 4 was 51, offenng Sarah Foster has returned
candidate for re-e!ec~ m the
Senate In Massachusetts. But ougljt to go out and get their $24.22 Plans were made to honie after spending several
I will speak out on Issues own litical heroes" said' observe Mother's Day. Also days at Camden-Clark
po
'
plans were made to make up a Hospital in Parkersburg after
facmg the country'."
Jacl!som.
"gift purse" for Dr. James suffenng an accident w1th a
The Indiana senator said he
McCormack
power mower She is the
could foresee a situation at the
Worship
services
were
held
daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
1976 Demoa'atic convention
at
11
with
John
Sauvage
Foster.
"where we go on ballot after
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Thomas
leadmg and Rev. Meece
ballot after ballot without
speaking
on
"How
Close
We
and
f8ffilly of Enon were
anyone moving toward or
Stand
to
Eternity."
Chas.
&amp;
weekend
guests of Mr and
getting the nonunation ... wtth
Woode
s~ng
·"How
'
Mrs.
Walter
Brown and
Helen
the acrimony that could come,
Marvelous" w1th 'Nina family. '""
the bitterness, perhaps
Senator Kennedy could be OffiCers were elected when Robmson at the p13no. At- Mrs. Guy Spencer and Mrs.
persuaded to change his the Meigs County Better tendance was 33 with $21.89 Larj'y Spencer,and children of
T,uppers Plains, visited with
Iivl!lltock 4-H Club held their offenng and $52 pledges.
mind."
There
was
an
attendance
of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward
REV. EWON BROWN
If Kennedy ever did decide firSt meeting at the Roy Holter
nine
at
the
bible
study
held
at
Cheval1er recentiy .'
serv1ce. He is presently domg to run, Bayh said, "I certainly home, April 30 at 8 p.m. The
graduate work at the would not have any Interest In meeting was called to order by the Bobby Burke horne 01)_' .Mi:. and Mn. ROJI Pooler of
" , ~py ,Rp, 'Visi.~ with the
Assemblies of God Graduate (the nomination) because I Patty Pullins. Pledges were Wednesday afternoon.
Quite
a
number
of
local
Dohrinan Ree\1 famUy.
School m Springfield, Mo. He tbink he would appeal to a Jot led by Ed Holter
people
attended
the
funeral
of
-Mrs. L. Balderson
Officers were, president,
and h1s wife pastored chur- of the same people I would
Danny
Smith
Jr
at
the
Zion
DeniSe bean; VICe president,
ches m Sylvama, Ga., and appeal to."
"J\T
Conservatives
hoping
to
reStephanie
Radford; Church last Tuesday and
Ewmg, Va., prior to their
VISited
at
While's
Funeral
~
1
~ews
place President Ford, and secretary, JaniS Carnahan;
missiOnary appointment.
'
Mr Brown w1ll share ex- especially Vice President Nel· treasurer, Mark Mora; news Home on Monday
Genevieve
Guthrie
recently
penences from his IIU!ISIOnary son Rockefeller, with Republi- reporter, Patty Pullins;
visited at Sugar Grove where
mmlStry m Okinawa during cans more to their liking recreation leader, Ed Holter;
Ella
Yost is ill and on to
thiS special miSSions service. received a poll over the health chairman, Kathy Columbus where Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Frank HudThe public 1s mv1ted to attend weekend that gave Ford 53 per Parker,1and safety chairman, Seldon O'Brien are quite son, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
sa1d the Rev. Chester Ten- cent compared to former Tony Carnahan.
Hudson of Racine and Mr. and
California Gov. Ronald Rea- Dairy sweepstakes, dues, poorly.
Mrs
. Shelby Pickens and
nant, pastor
Jeanie Flanders, who atgan's ,40 per cent. A race trophies for Open Class and
family of Pomeroy visited at
between-Ford and Sen. Ed· the fa1r the club wanted to tends church here, 1s a the home of Mr. and Mrs.
surgical patient In Camdenmund S. Muakie gave the visi I were discussed.
Allan Taylor Sunday.
Pre131delit 48 per cent and the
Refreshments were served Clark Hospital m Parker- Mr. and Mrs. James Circle
Maine Demoa'at 40 per cent. by Pat Holter. The next sburg
of New Haven were at the
The poll, financed by the meeting IS to be at the horne of
home of Mary Circle on
STILL IN HOSPITAL ·
American Conaervatlve Union Stephanie Radford on May 14
Mrs. Kathy Smith, daughter Sunday. Lucy Taylor called at ,
and obtained by UPI Satur- at 8 p.m. - Patty Pullins.
the Circle home recently.
of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roush
pros late d1ff1culty
day, had results leu favorable
William Carleton, Tanya
_of Pomeroy, R D , remams a
Ills true that if there really for ROckefeller. It Indicated
pat1ent at the Mount Carmel Sayre, Racme,and Ralph Lee,
lS a deficiency in male hor- Republicana favored Reagan
LODGE
TO MEET
West Hospital In Columbus. local, called at the Betty Van
mone that g1vmg testosterone over the vice president by 59 to
Meter and Arthur Johnson may help Whether that 1s a 33 per cent if Ford would not CHESTER - There will be Her room number Is 341. She home over the weekend.
a special meeting of the Shade expects to be confined there
w1se course of action depends run.
River Lodge No. 453 here this indefimtely. Her two children, Mary Roush called at the
entirely on the total medical
Thursday, May 15 a\7 :30 p.m. Kevm and Christi, reside here home of Eva and Walter
p1cture
Archer on Saturday.
There will be work in the MM with their grandparents.
The Daily Sentinel
Whether
you
need
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E.
degree. All master masons
DEVOTED TO TH~
testosterone or something else
Johnson
and daughter, Sheryl
INTEREST OF
are mv1ted.
ALFRED CLUB MET
depends on the cause of the
MEIGS-MASON AREA
LeAnn,
called
at the home of
L. TANNEHILL
A demons !ration on placing
Impotence. If you have poor CHESTER
EXIC Ed.
a pattern on msterlal was Mr. and Mrs. Roy Johnson and
ROBERT HOEFLICH
circulation to your sexual
Clly Edllor
GHTE O
given by Susan Henderson at son on Sunday.
organs
then
tak1ng
Publ••hed dolly except
DAU
RB RN
by The Ohio Volley I Mr. and Mrs Bruce the recent meeting Of the
testosterone w11l not correct 1Solurdoy
M0111ER VISITED
Publishing Company, 111
the problem. If your problem Court st , Pomeroy. Oh•o • Wallace, GalllpollS, are an- Alfred Angels 4-H Club held at Mrs. Dwight Wallace,
(5769 BuSinen Office Phone
nouncing the birth Of a the horne of Dorothy Calaway· Middleport, spent Friday and
1s from underlying diabetes 992
2156 Edltonal Phone 992
then male hormone 1s useleBS. 2157
daughter, Natalie Dawn, Tammy Calaway and Lori Saturday In McConnelsville
In such cases the male hor- 1~ 1 5t~~~r~~~·~,::gmwe peld Friday at the Holzer Medical RobhlSon conducted games, visiting her mother, Mrs. G. c.
Nollonot edverllslfl.F · Center. The Infant weighed and Lori Robinson and Tara KnOll:, and her father at the
mone production may be
re~resentatlvt
'
Mr
entirely normal, 1t 1s the Grott1th Compony,Ward
Inc , seven pounds, 11 ounces.
. Guthrie served refreslunenla. Good Samaritan Hoapltal In
Bottone li t &amp; Getoewher Dlv , and Mrs. Wallace have a son, Next meeting will be held 011 Zanesville where he unnerves that don' t work And, If 157
Third Ave , New York ,
11 1s psychological you might NY 10017
Buck Richard, age 2~ . June 5 at the Calaway home, derwent fool surgery.
Subscript •on ro fi"s: G d
nla
Mr and 7.30 p. m.
get psychic benefit, but you Delivered
by carrier where
ran pare
are
•
could get that from sugar evolleble 75 cents per week. Mrs G~ " Buck, Pomeroy ;
~Y Motor Route wher•
h alia
pills.
MEETING DELAYED
corrler
urvlct
no! ' Mr.andMrs.Dwig tW ce,
AWAY ON WEEKEND
One month,I32S Middleport
Great · The Wednesda¥ night
T1me and traimng often help ~vollobie.
Mr.
and Mrs. Arnold
By mall In Ohio and W VI ,
men return to an active sex One Year . 122 oo. Six , grandparents are Mrs. meeting of the Middleport Richards, Mrs. Ann Ancel and
50, Three w1lliam M811o00I1,
••
ColumbUS,. Literary Club has been
months, $7Sll
hfe, partiCularly when they t-nonttis
00 Elsewhere
Kevin of Middleport were In
Beatrice
Buck, postponed until May 21, 7:30p. Columbus over the weekend to
have a problem in loss of Sl6 oo year. Sl• months Mrs.
l3 so . three montM, 11 so
dMr G m. at the home of Mrs. Harold
confidence
s. .
Subscript ion price ~ncludes Pomeroy, and Mr an
visit Mr. and Mrs. Edward
rnSunday Times Sentinel
(' Knox , McConnelsville
Sauer.
Smith and famUy.

Missionary will speak
Friday at Mason church
MASON, W Va - The Rev
Eldon A Brown, Assemblies
of God m1s1sonary to
Ok10awa , w11l be guest
speaker, Fnday, May 16, 7&gt;tj)
p m at the Assembly of Goil
Church, here on Dudd10g
Lane.
Durmg the1r last term of
IIUJlSlOnary serv1ce, Mr and
Mrs Brown established the
Servicemen's F1rst Assembly
of God m Koza City, Okinawa.
From th1s church, two
nahonal
works
were
pwneered m the c1lies of Kin
and Naha The Okmawa Teen
Challenge was also orgamzed
under the direction of Mr and
Mrs Brown
The Browns were f1rst
appomted as m1ss10nanes to
Korea m 1965 While there,
they pioneered the Assemblies
of God church in Pusan. They
moved to Seoul where Mr
Brown founded the Korean
Servicemen's Center. The
Browns also served as
directors of the Korean deaf
churches, the Mountam V1ew
Orphanage and as mter1m
directors of the Chnsllan
Serviceman's Home
Mr Brown rece1ved the B
A degree from South-Eastern
Assemblies of God Bible
College m Lakeland, Fla , m
preparalion for ffilSSionary

Carpenter Personals

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Cono

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1975 Burg e Cno!

Sys 1 em~ I n ~

s. OOINSI

CAll RUTlAND

742-3651

Orioles 4-9 fwlns &amp;-3
Steve Brye and Craig
Kusick each drove in two runs
and Bert Blyleven pitched a
sixh1tter raiSing his record to
4-I in the TwirlS' first-game
Amer•can League
East
triumph. The Or10les won the
w. I. pet
g.b
second
game behind Jim
16 10 615
Milwaukee
14 10 583 1
Boston
12 12 500 3 Palmer's nme-hitter witb the
Detro•t
12 15 444 4v, big blows two homers by
Balt1more
11 15 423 s
Cleveland
Bobby Grieb and AI Bumbry's
11 17 393 6
New York
bases-filled double
West
w 1 pet g b
Rangers 11 rtgen 7
17 12 586
Oakland
11
12
586
Homers by Jeff Burroughs,
Texas
Kansas Ci ty
15 15 soo 2'h Leo Cardenas, Roy Smalley
15 16 484 3
California
12 13 480 3 and Tom Grieve pai!ed the
Mmnesota
ChiCIQO
12 11 m 5 Rangers' 15-hit attack which
brought Ferguson Jenkins hiS
Saturday's Results
fifth win against two losses.
8alt1more 8 Minnesota 6
Tex as 5 Detrou 2
JenklriS needed relief help
New York J Oakland 0
from
Steve Foucault in the
Chicago 8 Cleveland J
Milwaukee 3 Kansas Cltv o
free-hitting game . Mickey
Callforn.a 2 Boston 0
Lolich suffered the loss for the
Tigers.
SundiY'I Results
Texas 11 L&gt;etro•t 7
Iudlltna t Wbite Sox 3
1 Clevlnd 4 Chlcgo 3, 11 Inns
Tom McCraw's infield
Minesota 6 Baltimore 4, 1st
Baltimore 9 M1neso1a J, 2nd
single drove In the tymg run
Kansas C1tv 4 Milwaukee o
and successive errors on the
soston 5 Cahforn1a 2
Oakland 7 New ¥ork 5
play by Terry Forster and Bob
Monday's P.robiible P1tchen
Coluccio allowed the winning
(All Times EDTI
Kansas C1ty (Leonard 0 0) lit run to score for the Indiana in
Detroit I Ruhle 1 1) , 8 00 p m
Boston tt:leveland
2 1l at the 11th inning. The White Sox
Oakland (Hamilton 1 2 ), 11 00 had taken a 3-2 lead In the top
pm
of the inning when Nyls
Tuesd•v's Glmll
Boston at Olkllnd, rtlght New Nyman drove In Tony M11ser
York 1t
CalifOrnia , night
Milwaukee at Texas, night fro(ll second base. The victory
Cleveland at M innesota, night snapped the Indians' fiveKansllS C•tv at Detroi t, ntght
game losmg streak.
ChteaQo at Balt1mor e rm 11 1

,.

What is

''

service?
You·get that
·nght
wHh
our low rates..~

clean

•

Clean energy-energy that doesn't blacken sk1es or pollute rivers-::___
is obv1ously worth qu1te a bit And here's tlie paradox The cleanest-burmng
fuel-and thus the most valuable fuel-is drasllcally under proced
THat fuel is natural gas.
Columbia Gas 1s workmg to help
But, because natural gas 1s so clean, and so
solve the energy cn sts ' I t 's expens1ve
inexpens1ve, the demand has fa r outgrown
to duplicate nature' s work, but we're
conv~ntional supplies.
domg It A reformmg plan t built at a
cost of over 44 m1lhon dollars, turns
We need new sources of clean energy And we
petroleum hqmds mto p1pehnequality
need them now
gas and 1s des1gned to dehver eighty·
•
e1ght b1lhon cub1c feel of gas each
Columbia Gas is mvesting hundreds of
year. Ic's only a tnckle of che new
millions of doJlars in developmg dramatic
energy Amenta needs Stoll,1t's sheddmg a bngh t hope on tomorrow
new sources, such as gas from the Arctic,
from overseas, from under the sea, from
petroleum liquids . even from
plentiful coal.
Gas from these new sou rces costs more to
find and deliver, and eventually we'Jl probably
all notice it in our gas b11ls. But natural
gas w11l contmue to be your best energy buy
What 1s clean energy really worth?
Try to 1magme your world without 1t
Imagine your children without it

Along wolh our lamous low-cost auto protection comes '
a prom1se of prompt personal serv1ce So you don't
have to g1ve up a th•ng to g~t our low rales You just
have Ia take advantage olthem

STEVE SNOWDEN
12:.11 Powell St., Middleport

PHONE 992·7155

.•.. Uke a good neighbor,
A State Fann is there.

.,...,.

IMIIfiAMU

STATE FARM MUTUAL
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY
Home OffiCe Bloomlngton 1 Il linOIS

?

•
•'

~MBIA~ is doing something abolltthe energy crisis.
"'

�'
I

I

2- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Monday , May 12,1975

Red regime promises Viet election, sometime

•"

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I

3- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomerov, 0., Mondav, May 12, 1975

._.
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United Preu lnlematiooal
The new Conununlst regune
m Saigon has promised to hold
a nationwide election m South
V1elnam, but has refused to
set a time limit for the vote.
The Viet Cong government
has also called for the
reunification of North and
South Vietnam, but says 1ts
first pr1or1ty IS normalmng
life in Sa1gon.
Delayed dispatches from
UPI's Sa1gon bureau sa1d
Sunday the leader of the
"military management
conuruttee" runnmg the South

By

Vietnamese capital announced plans last week for
the election.
Gen Tran Van Tra told a
news conference last Thurs·
day the V1et Cong's
Prov1s1onal RevolutiOnary
Gov~rnmenl would drop the
word "ProVlSlonal" from ds

title after the vote
"When there is a general
election there WID he no more
'Provisional," ' the general
Said
Tra refused to set a date for
the election, however, and
said the military c01ruruttee

would stay in power 'to
organize normal life" and put
down any security threats m
Sa1gon
"That lS why we cannot
speak of a tune lurut,'' he said
The general held his news
conference under the crystal
chandeliers of an ornately
carpeted room lll the fallen
government's presidential
palace.
Tra, head of the 11-rnember
comm1ttee runnmg Saigon,
Said security 1s still the major
problem m the South Vietnamese cap1tal

UP! correspondents in
Saigon said, however, there
have been no reports of armed
opposition m the City smce the
Communist takeover April 30.
The UPI dlSpatches, dated
last Thursday, arrived m
Hong Kong Sunday after being
routed 1 through the North
VIetnamese capital of Hanoi.
UP!
Saigon
bureau
manager Alan Dawson and
UP! As1an news editor Leon

Camp jammed full-up
United Press International
Although facilities at Camp
Pendleton, Calif., have filled
to capac1ty with Vietnamese
refugees, the b1g camp was
able to take two more occupants Sunday -both
newborn babies
Le Xuan Mal and Tokin
Thanh and the1r infants "are
both domg !me," a spokesman
reported shortly after the
births at the camp's Naval
hospital
The two little girls should
JOin their families m a few
days m one of the e1ght tent
and quonset hut towns bunched together m a corner of
this sprawling base
But two planeloads of 500
refugees who landed at nearby
El Taro Marme Air Station
earlier thiS weekend will not
be ad!mlted, smce the camp
has no more room until some
of the refugees already here
are released.
A total of 25,889 Southeast
Asians -counting the two
By

L•

'·

..•
L

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'·.'

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newborn babies -had arrived
at the Marine camp through
Sunday mght. A spokesman
S81d 7,225 of them had been
processed out and released to
authoriZed sponsors, most of
them m the first few days
But government officials m
Washmgton ordered tighter
security checks early last
week Smce then the flow out
has slowed to a tnckle
The 18,664 refugees m camp
at the start of the week can
expect to stay a minimum of
seven to 10 days 1f they have
sponsors and do not run mto
any secunty problems. For
others , officials now say, the
wa1t could stretch as long as 90
days
At Eglm, Air Force Base,
F1a , the dreary, wet weather
of the last two days was
for gotten as thousands of
bouquets donated by local
flonsts were distributed to the
senior mother of each refugee
fam1ly while the happy youngsters were handed teddy

Historic accord
reached in west
SACRAMENTO, Calif
(UPI) - Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr has struck an historic
accord between growers and
Umted Farm Workers leader
Cesar Chavez which may end
strife and violence m the
state's $10 billion farm mdustry
When Brown first unveiled
his farm labor proposal a
month ago Chavez at first
denounced It as ''not betrayal,
but close." Other labor groups
opposed lt
After 100 hours of negotia·
lions last week, Brown came
out w1th a compromiSe bill
calling for secret ballot union
elections and it Zipped through
1ls first and perhaps toughest
legislative test.
Supporters now predict the
legislation will beCome law m
time for next year's growmg
season.
"I thmk an historic moment
lS drawmg near not only for
people in agnculture but for
people of this country," Brown
said shortly before the senate
mdustrl81 relations comnultee
approved the measure on a
bipartisan f&gt;.1 vote.
The conuruttee was considered the bill's most arduous
hurdle since 1\s members have
been sympathelic to Chavez'

b1tter union nval -the Teamsters -and growers.
But supporters concede
forceful opposition by the
Teamsters and the Building
Trades Council still could
derail
the
landmark
legislation.
"No one has anythmg to lear
. if they (union leaders) can
wm at a secret ballot election," countered Rose Bird,
Brown's chief farm labor
negotiator.
The Building Trades Council
lS upset because the measure
would take away their
iurisdiction over construction
on farms.
'
Chavez' major concession
was the bill's sharp restriction
on secondary boycotts, which
he used successfully to
pressure growers mto signmg
con tracts after nationwide
grape and lettuce boycotts
Under the legislation, harvest-time strikes would be
permitted and workers would
be allowed to vote for ''no
Wlion. "
A f1ve-member state
Agricultural Relations Board
would supervise eleclions.
"We have the framework to
resolve the disputes that
•inevitably arise m farm
labor," Brown sa1d.
0

bears, baby dolls and other
toys distributed by the Red
Cross
Also " frt endshtp boxes, "
contammg combs, brushes,
soap and other such articles
were d1str1buted to the
children, who compose about
half the camp's population.
The boxes came from a
nalionw1de campaign among
elementary school children:
A total of 2,777 refugees
have been flown mto Eglin
smce May 4, but 220 have been
processed out through a sponsorship program, leavmg a
population of 2,5~7 .
In Arkansas, Gov DaVId
Pryor Said Sunday, 1f health
problems can be avoided, he
had no obJection to temporarily housmg more VIetnamese than the 20,000
orgmally planned for at Ft.
Chaffee, Ark.
By Sunday there were at
least 16,106 refugees at Ft.
Chaffee, but officials expected
the camp would reach 1ts
20,000 capacity by today.

Daniel Signed the diSpatches.
It was not known if the reports
were censored.
Gen Tra, m his news conference, vowed to take over all
properly owned by evacuated
U S citizens . "because
American Imperialism has not
honored Its conunitments" to
the 1973 p a r 1 s peace
agreement.
The general promised a

"policy of lemency" toward
South VIetnamese refugees
wbo fled the country before
the CommuniSt takeover.
"Our government will
' continue to take care of every
Vietnamese at home or
abroad, with the exception of a
number of reactionary
ringleaders or people who
continue to cling to foreign
imperialism," he said.

Tass prods Wallace as fiendish
MOSCOW (UP!) - The
Sov1et
Unwn
Sunday
denounced Gov. George
Wallace of Alabama as
"fiendish" for suggesbng the
Umted States may have
fought on the wrong s1de m
World War Il In a com·
mentary enhtled "George
Wallace and the Gas Cham·
bers," the Tass news agency
charged that Wallace's
"sp1n tual precursors, " at~
tempted to destroy the Grand
Alliance of the Sov1ets,
Amenca and Bntam
Wallace told a group of
correspondents that the
United States should have
aided Germany economically
after World War I and worked
together with the Germans to
fight commumsm then. He
sa1d the Umted States may
have been fighting the "wrong
people" dunng World War II,
"This lS a truly fiendish
slatement tuned for the 30th
anmversary of the rouhng of
Hitler Germany," Ta!iS sa1d
" It lS more than just a
flagrant abuse of the sacred
memory of 2tl million Sov1et
people and several hundred
thousand Americans who died

fighting Fascism," 11 said.
Wallace spoke May 3 to 25
foreign journalists taking a U.
S lnformahon Agency tour of
"the new South "
Wallace said the Umted
States should have been
"cullivatmg the friendship" of
Germans and Japanese m the
prewar years mstead of an·
tagon1zmg them and added
"! thmk we were fighting the
wrong people , maybe, m

World War II and f say that
w1th all due regard to the
Soviet person (one of the
correspondents) here. We
fought on your s1de, but I w1sh
that the Soviet Umon, or
government rather, had been
con tamed somewhat "

The Washington Post quoted
Wallace as telling a Japanese
correspondent m the group "!
w1sh we'd been on the same
side m World War II "

Bayh thinking
of race in '76

DR. LAMB

Mr. and Mrs Bob Harrison
and family of Stoutsville
visited her parents, Mr and
M~s. William Cheadle and
other relabves here during the
weekend.
Mr. and Mrs Harold
Gillogly, V1cky and Bruce,
and Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Jordan attended funeral
serviCes for Mrs. Lincoln
Russell in Pomeroy on
Tuesday ll!'d then they, along
w1th the Jordans. baby son,
Joshua Perry, jomed other
relabves at the family home m
Wolfpen m the late afternoon.
Earl Starkey and his son-mlaw and daughter, Mr and
Mrs. Donald Jones of
Nelsonville were m Columbus
on Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs Alfred Rice of
Columbus were overnight
guests of her parents, Mr and
Mrs. William Culwell.
Mrs Terry Cain and son,
Charleston, S. C., are spending some lime here with her
parents, Mr and Mrs. Cecil
Hoyd. Her husband will jom

~~:.~or a leave m the near

Social Notes

News Notes
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Ignorance People are peculiar Some
hold It agamst you if you try to
achieve anythmg. Maybe they don't
like seeing anyone else work so hard
In distance running, there is no other
way, no shortcut You've gotta do the
work."
Before departmg for Tokyo today
With the rest of the team on the f1rst
leg to China, Maguire was anx1ous to
get in a workout of some kind. The
freeways here aren't espec18Uy built
for distance runners, so he had to go
find hlinself a s1de road someplace,
which he did.
A Penn State graduate, Magwre
runs the 10,000 aqd 5,000 meters and
the 3,000 meter steeplechase. He runs
for the love of 11, not for any money
like each of the 66 athletes on thiS
trip, he IS receiving only his room and
board plus $3 a day for expenses.
"Distance runnmg lS the most
rewarding thmg I can think of," says
the stocky New Englander . "If not for
1t, I'd never have this chance to got to
China or to have gone to Russia the
way I did. I don't see how anyone's

.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Once New York's other hero
the first-inning horror show SuQday was 24-year-()ld Texan
was fmished, II turned mto a Mike Phillips, who was picked
beautiful day for Tom Seaver up on wmvers from the San
The sky was cloudless, the rranclSCO . Giants last week
weather was warm and the 'After singling to lead off the
New York Mets snapped their
sill-game losmg streak With a
3-2 v1ctory over the Cincinnati
Reds behind Seaver's sillhitter.
But. that's hardly the way
Seaver's day started.
by FRED OOWN
On his fourth pitch of the UP! Sports Writer
game, Pete Rose jarred Sea- The Oakland A's call Joe
ver's ego with a shot that Rud1 "the man without a
landed atop the nght-center- weakness" - with good
field fence 400 feet away and reason.
bounced over for a horne run.
Probably the qwetest and
"The pitch to Rose I thought least controversial of the
was good," Seaver said after three-lime world champiOns
the game, "but one that's hit Rudl was switched to first
thai far can 'I be too good." base against hiS will thiS
Seaver hardly had time to season to make room for
recover from that shot when Claudell Washington m left
Ken Griffey auned for the field. Then, when Regg1e
same spot and bounced aoHe. ' Jackson and Sal Banda
hopper off the fence for a slumped at the plate, Rudi
double.
Joe
Morgan's was !llade the A's cleanup
grounder advanced Griffey to man.
third, but Seaver struck out Rudl's feathers were someJohnny Bench for the second ' what ruffled by the switch to
out.
" '" 4 first' ba,se llut he has
Then Dan Driessell' top~ ~· swii11Rwed his pride and
slow roller between the mound · currently is the most conand first base which Seaver Sistent game-winning hitter on
ran over to pick up. It was the team After gomg 2-for..S
siow-rnollon agony for Seaver and batting m three runs m the
"It was an easy play," A's 7-li v1ctory over the New
Seaver said. "But the ball York Yankees Sunday, he has
seemed to take a crooked hop a .296 batting average and 14
in toward me. I saw 11 and I runs batted in.
didn't move my glove. I don't
"! don't feel any exira
know why. It just went behind pressure batting cleanup," he
my glove."
said. "Aciually, I don't care
The VIctory improved Sea- where I bat because I still
ver's record this season to ~- have to play my own game.

..
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0

W aniors got job done

R11fle doubled home Mark
Sayre and Brady Huffman but
an appeal by the Tr1mble
Coach brought the umpire's
rulmg that R1ffle fa1led to
touch flrst base, thus
nulhfymg the runs, the h1t,
and ended the mnmg, smce
there were two outs

: ~~~~~~~sb::s~~~a~c~;~~~~

motivated over there The Russian
government takes care of anything.
I'm anx1ous to see how China compares with Russia "
Magu1re lives m Slate College, Pa.,
where he works for an msurance
company He plans to keep runnmg as
long as he can afford to, although
there are some aspects about the
sport he iSn't crazy about.
"I don't like to train, but I like to run
the races," he says The races teach
you a great deal about other thmgs on
life , thmgs like discipline and
dedicatiOn

up for another year after
R1ffle struck out But Greg
Dunnmg smacked h1s second
smgle of the afternoon, John
Salser walked, putting runners on f1rst and second, and
semor M1tchNease became an
mstant hero when he launched
a ball that the nght f1eld
watched go over h1s head for a
tr1ple, g1vmg Southern the
Victory.

(;ED,~RV ILLE

WBIS
CEDARVILLE, Ohio (UPll
- It was an all-Cedarville
fmals as the host ~m scored
29 points to run ~way w1th the
D1stnct 22 NAJA tenniS crown
Saturday.
Cedarville placed first lind
second m the smgles and
doubl es wh1le scoring 29
pomts Runnerup Malone had
12 pomts.
Dave DeLancey defe11..ed
Sam Kesler for the singles
Iitle, then teamed With Kesler
to defeat Wes Johnson and
Chuck Neuhaus for the
doubles crown.
Other team scormg mcluded
W1hmngton 10, Findlay 9,
Defiance 7, Bluffton and Cen·
tral State ~ each

Crampton sharing top spot

DALLAS (UP!) - Confident am keyed up, you have to be to
Bruce Crampton says the play well, but I am not nerwashout m Sunday's cham· vous or JUmpy."
Crampton, 39, planned to
p10nship round of the $175,000
sk
ip New Orleans and
Byron Nelson Golf Class1c cost
him one day off and nothing Memphis m the next two
weeks before gomg to Atlanta
more.
"My last f1ve rounds ~ve
Crampton, an Austrahan
who has never won his
adopted hometown tourTnmble
102 000 0-3 2 2 nament, shared the lead today
Southern
001 001 2--4 6 3 w1th Bob Eastwood and Rod
G1llesp1e, Hunter (LP ) and Funseth at 10 under 203 The
Brunton
Huffman and leaders were m the clubhouse
"There's one place tn every race
Sunday before a heavy sprmg
where you either go or don't go, the =· Dunmng
thunderstorm whipped across
place that separates the runner from
the oak tree lined Preston
::
the non-runner," Magu1re reflects, ..
Trails
course W1th 46 players
diggmg a bit deeper into the crux of
out, PGA tour supervisor
his craft. "Everybody who has ever
Wade Cagle canceled play
been m a race and achieved some .•
followmg a 2'i.! hour suspen·
degree of success has arrived at the
s10nand ordered a fresh shari.
pomt where he knows he has to go on
The leaders held a one
now or bag lt-{!Uit and lose the race
stroke
lead over Miller
The guy who keeps gomg lS the one
Barber, Bob E. Smith and
wbo achieves the success."
CANTON (UP!)- The f1nal Tom Watson George Knud·=
weekend rollmg m the 11-week son, Jack Ewmg and second
Oh10
Men's
Bowling round leader Larry Nelson
Assoc1ation Tournament here were bunched at 8 under 205.
saw three changes made m the Sill others, mcluding Johnny
top standmgs
M11ler who had a sore
Only 42 learns competed In shoulder, were four strokes off
the hnal tourney stand, one- at 207 It was an open shot at
e1ghth, Phillips scored the which nailed Rose at the plate fourth the preVIous number on the $35,000 first prize
Crampton, who has shot 66winning run on Rusty Staub's trying to score the go-ahead the lanes weekly.
The tourney. w1th a total of 70-&lt;&gt;7 on the par 35-36--71, 6,983
run.
ground smgle to right
John M1iner drove m the $80,000 m pme money, drew a yard course, won last week m
In the top half of the inning,
ACULT MEll
Phillips was the middle man f1rst two Mets' runs w1th a record 1,562 ~~ as well as Houston, h1s f1rst triUmph
Brg Shef
second-mmng
homer
and
a
3,644
entries
m
doubles,
5,199
smce four VICtories In 1913
on a letter-perfect relay from
Reg Fr ench Ft es
groundout
m the all-events and 7,288 m
Tur no11er &amp;
"It makes no difference,"
the left-centerheld fence fourth-mmng
'
.
Larg e Soli Dr nk
the s1ngles
Crampton said of the ramout,
The Roy Black Chrysler the second thiS season " It lS
team from Euclid, wh1ch won only a delay of 24 hours I feel
m the recent ABC tournament perfectly settled I won last
at Dayton w1th a 3,234, rolled a week and thiS Will cause no
3,080 here, mcluding 988-1,063- difference.
Where you bat doesn't make Royals 4 Brewers 0
Steve
Busby
pitched
a
live1,029, to take fifth place m the
that much difference as long
" II will make the course
PT PLEASANT
as you are between two good hitter and struck out nme, actual team standings. The play longer m the fairWays
2325 Jackson Av e
r11ismg hiS record to f&gt;-2, m the squad was led byldike ~ossi But I know th1s golf CQllrse,
hitters.
"I'm unhappy about playmg Royals' v1ctory . Harmon w1th a 65~
I've played here for years I
f1rst base," he conceded, "but Killebrew smgied home one The Gran brothers of Akron
I guess I'm there for the run, stole hiS f1rst base m four took over second place m the
duration, so there's no sense years and scored on a smgle actual doubles standmgs with
~ Cookie Rouas as the Royals a 1,345. DiCk rolled a 727 and
complauung about 11."
Rud1 h1t a two-run 'homer m scored three runs m the fourth Terry a 618
Jim Kerchner of Lou1sv11le,
a s1x-run th1rd-lnnlng raJiy mning.
Red Sox 5 1\ngels 2
who has a 54 handicap, put
which routed Rudy May and
Two-run singles by RICO together 227 .~t8, ~ to claim
homered in the seventh
Sunday when the A's made 1t Petrocelli and R1ck Burleson the ,runne!l!i!~::~ot ~In the
two out of three 'over the led the Red Sox to their wm handicap slngles"at 7113 The
Yankeees. V1da Blue was over the Angels and gave BiD top handicap team score the
tagged for five runs and nine ike hiS fourth wm of the !mal weekend was the 3, 14~
hits m 6 2-3 innmgs but with season. Bill Singer, tagged for carded by the Mason F1ve of
relief help from Jun Todd seven hits and three runs in 6 Cmcmna ti
became the
Amencan 2-3 innrngs, was handed hiS
League's hrst seven-game fifth deafeat
wmner of the season. He has a
7-1 mark.
SEfS RECORD
The Baltimore Orwles MARION, Ohio (UPI) BUY, SELL, TRADE
bounced back from a 6-4 loss Wllfred Boutlier of Sherman
Oaks, Calif., set a track record
Sunday during hot rod racing
Mmnesota Twins 9-3, the at the Marion County InTexas Rangers beat the ternational Raceway.
Detroit Tigers 11-7, the
Boutller won the funny car
Cleveland Indians shaded the meet in an elapsed time of 7 11
Chicago White Sox ~. the seconds at a speed of 196
ROGER WAMSLEY
Kansas City Royals topped the m.p.h.
MUwaukee BW\ewers 4-0, and ---------~::::::::::::::;;:==~
the Boston Red Sox downed .~
the California Angels f&gt;-2, m
other AL games

been consiStent," Crampton
sa1d He shot 61Hl9 to close
Houston "! haven't been
playmg as well as I would like
I am still h1ttmg some )oose
shots but I've hit no real wild
shots here except one

11

3 switches in

top standings

among bowlers

FOR

"
"'

"'

"'
'"
"
"
'"

"
'"

"
'"

.,
•• 1

'

.••.
"'

--,

'

Nat•onal League
East

w 1. pet. g.b

Ch1cago
PittSburgh

,,
"

PhiiOdlphia

...

51 LOUIS
New York
Montreal

-.
_,

'

'
J

'

0

••
••
•

""
,,.,

•..'

18 9 667
13 12 520
13 14
12 14
II 14

4

481
462
440

5
51/:z
6

10 14 417
West
w I. pel

61h

g.b
21 11 656
Los Angeles
Clnc1nnat1
18 14 563 3
Atlanta
17 16 515 4117
San Francsco U 16 467 6
San Diego
15 16 484 51h
Houston
11 23 324 11
Slturdav's Results
Chlcaoo s San Oll'Qo 1
Montreal 8 Houston 7
Los Angeles 6 Pittsburgh 2
Cincinnati 7 New York 2
Atlanta 2 Phila 1, 11 Inns
st Louis 9 san Francisco 2
$UndiY'S Resulb
Los Angeles 1 Pittsburgh 0
New York 3 Cincinnati :Z
Houston 6 Montreal 0
Safl Diego :z Ctlleaao 1
Atlanta 7 Phllldtii'~UII 3
St LouiS • San Francisco 3
Monday' s Probable P1tchers
(All Times EDT)
Cincinnati CNorman 2 n at
Phlladelphlo (LonbOrD 3 1), 7 35
p m Atlanta (Morton 5 21 at
Montrul (Rogers 141. 8 05
p m San Francisco lBarr 3 :Z J
1t New York (Mttlack :z 31 ,
1 "05 p m Los Angeles (Mes
ursmlth 5 OJ 1t St, Louis
(Denny 2 2) . 8 3D P m
Tutsdav•s Gomef
Houston 1f t;hiclgq. At anta at
Montreal , night sen Francisco
1t New York, night Cincinnati

al

Philadelphia. night

Los

Angeles at st . Louis, night San
Diego 1t Plffsburoh , night

'I
•

•

I u.

~e;~o~J~~~~~ ~:e:

KIDS~

FUNMEAL""
Fun Tr ay
Funb urger
Reg FrencnFn es
Su rpr se Prize

Reg Soli Drmk &amp;
a Swee1 Treat

Jackson does it all

7\.Tews 7\.Tot.'es

By-the Day

•

0

Horro·,, r first, then perfection

Ca rmel

1

wa lked
leadmg
off,
M1ke Etchenkamper tr1plcd to
dr1ve m Faires, and scored on
an error on a play to p1ck him
off lh1rd
Southern came to bat on the
bottom of that mmng needmg
runs badly, gettmg JUSt one.
Earher, however, tn the
second mnmg the Tornados
scored what appeared to be
the go ahead runs when J1m

There comes a time when you quit, or win

.&amp;

Denise Dean
is president
of4-H club

Eastern Huffman w11l p1tch
lor Southern m the d1stnct
opener aga mst the Northwestern Regwnal champ on
Chillicothe Wednesday.
The Tomcats took a 1-0 lead
m the first mmng when Patton
walked to start thmgs off,
stole second, and scored on
back-to-back errors Trimble
fattened 1ts lead to 3-0 on the
record at 1)..3 on the season, third when Jack Faires
mcludmg a no-h1tter over

· : .. · ·· ·· :..:·: .::::.::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Reedsville

Impotence and prostate problem
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. of this newspaper at P. 0 . Box whether that IS bark of a saDEAR DR LAMB - About 1551, Radio C1ty Statwn, New called mag1cal tree or male
two years ago I had a prostate York, N y 10019, and ask for sex hormones The bram 18 a
gland operahon through the my report on impotence. Send very Important factor 10
urethra Smce that lime I have a long stamped self- periormance Older men can
become impotent. Is that a addressed envelope 'and 50 ~ \ose confidence, too, just as
result of the operatwn•
cents to cover costs.
well as younger' men Loss of
I
have
read
that
About half of American men sexual capac1ty m both men
testosterone can be g1ven to at age 75 are 1mpotent This and women IS often a s1gn of
overcome 11 Would 11 help? may have somethmg to do depression. This Is one more
Does 11 swell the remaining w1th our livmg habits that reason why a person at aoy
prosta te and cause more result 10 fatty cholesterol age With th1s symptom needs
trouble to develop Is anythmg deposits that m turn affect the medical attention.
better m the ~ormone line that male sex organs as well as
It often happens that men
can be taken ·to remove the · causmg he&amp;tt attacks and who are in the age group to
unpotency?
' strokes. It follows that about need prostate surge'1' are ~lso
DEAR READER - There half of men in this age group m the age group when 1mare many causes of im- are not Impotent
potence Is more common. The
potency. Some young men
A gradual decline m male unpolence then may follow
have 11 on a psychological hormone levels can contribute surgery, not (jecause of the
basiS, often from mexpenence to 1mpotence. However, men operahon, but because 11 was
and lack of confidence
w1th relatively low male gomg to happen anyway
Impotence can also be hormone levels often function There IS a very low incidence
caused by many other medical well so 11 lS not JUSt a matter of impotence after the type of
p r o b I e m s b e s 1 d e of hormones 1n every case. pros late surgery that you
psychological factors. When a man has had some have had.
Diabetes IS a classic example. unsahsfactory expenences Doctors are reluctant to
By affecting the nerves and loses h1s confidence then g1ve much male hormone to
necessary to a response, he may get over h1s lack of men who are 10 the age group
unpotence develops. For a confidence just by the fa1th he lo develop cancer of the
more complete discussion of has many medlCme he takes, prostate or those who have
unpotence write to me ln care
already had some form of

p..a.a. "

the defendmg champs of last
year, Trimble. The v1ctory
was a remarkable turnaround m fortune, as the
Tornadoes fmlShed at 1..S, m
last place m the SV AC
Southern p1tchmg ace Brady
Huffman went the distance on
the mound, str1kmg out 13 and
walkmg seven to win his fifth
straight game. It put h1s

By MILTON RICHMAN
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - Has
anybody here seen Charlie •
Everybody has sometime or other,
only nobody ever recogruzes him.
Passmg motorists, catching s1ghl of
him or any of his other conscienllous
colleagues working alongside the road
each day, even runnmg m the ram
sometunes, have a pronounced tendency to lack any understandmg
"Get outta the way before ya get
killed, ya stupid Sebastian 1" some
driVers have hollered angrily
Charlie Magu1re, a bright, clean-cut
22-year-()Jd long distance runner from
Foxboro, Mass., flmches anytime he
hears that. He knows his name Isn't
Sebastian His name is Charlie.
On his way to the People's Republic
of China now, with the rest of the US
team for a ser1es of goodwill track and
f1eld meets, Maguire says 11 doesn't
bother him any more when shorttempered motorists get his name
mixed up.
"" some of them really let me have
it," he laughs "I mark 1t up to

..i: .,., ··"'-'""'· ···m·

CHICAGO (UP!) - f he Golden Stale Warriors did the
JOb on th e trenches, under the backboards, to retUID a
chance for the National Basketball Association championship
The Warriors, 10 a game they couldn't afford to lose,
oulrebounded the ChiCago Bulls, 51-39 to earn an 116-72
v1ctory Sunday and even their best-&lt;~f-seven seri.S for the
NBA Western Conference championship at three victories
apiece.
"1 stopped counting wben they had picked up their 161!'
pomt oq us on the offensive board," Bulls Coach Dick Motta
Southern got another run said. "Every time we made a mistake, they scored. Every
home on the s1xth but shU ltme they got an offensive rebound, they scored fhat was
tr ailed by one g01ng mto the the difference. They wtre more opportunists than we
fonal frame
were."
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::·::::::::::::: The bottom of the seventh,

L

RACINE- Hilton Wolfe Jr
and h1s Southern Tornado
baseball team used sixth and
seventh lnmng rallies to
defeat the Trimble Tomcats 43 here Saturday afternoon to
wrap up the Class A Northeastern Sectional Baseball
Tournament chamyuonship
Earlier v1ctones over
Crooksville 6-1, and Miller 133put them in the fma ls agams t

fo~...view

Mr and Mrs Bert Christian
and Catrma , Clarksville,
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Tenn., came for a viSit here Mr
and Mrs
M1lo
w1th relalives. They came Richardson of Michigan are
especially at this lime to help spendmg two weeks at their
celebrate the birthdays of farm
Catrma and her great grand- Mr and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
father, Granv1Ue Lyons. They were visitors at Parkersburg
spent Sunday In Lancaster on Monday.
with Mr. and Mrs. Billy Lyons. Mr and Mrs Jenmngs Hall,
Others there were Mr . and Ray Lawson and children of
Mrs. Granville Lyons, Mr. and Columbus attended funeral
Mrs. Gordon Perry and Troy, serv1ces of Mrs. Zelia Lawson
all local, and Mr. and Mrs Sunday at the Ewmg Funeral
Dewey Walker, Vinton
Home, Interment was at
Recent guests of Dale Dye Lelart Falls Cemetery.
were his daughters and
Mrs. Gary M1ller and
families, Mr. and Mrs Glen daughter, Amy, of Bellvue,
Irwm and family, Marysville, spent a weekend with Mr. and
and Mr. and Mrs. CJ!eslj!r~ *s ~1~ · ~~on and
Baumgardner and fa,m1ly ' fllm1ly . •1. ~~!&lt; f1 •
Coshocton.
Mr and Mrs Dana Lewis of
The Carpenter Church Busy Clifton, W. Va, called on Mr.
Beegroupwillholdabakeand and Mrs Roger Roush, Mr.
rummage sale on May 17 at pnd Mrs. Russell Roush
the Columbia Townhouse.
Sunday evenmg.
Mrs Alta Murphy of wwe , ~Butch) Wilson was
McArthur and Betty Colenum, ·returned to his horne Monday
Columbus, called on Murl • from Veterans Memorial
Galaway Other visitors were Hospital where he was a
mediCal pat1ent.

Alfred

----l :ornados win Sectional 4-3

her son-m-iaw and daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Woodrum,
Rick and Ran~Y, also of
McArthur.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewill Smith
vlsited their son-m-law and
daughter, Mr . and Mrs. Larry
Stanley and Anna, at their new
location near Manon, Ohio.
Murl Galaway was In
McArthur to attend a shower
that was held for her greatgranddaughter, Karen
Radcliff. Karen Is the
daughter of W1hna Woodrum
Petty who grew up m this
community.
Marvm
Covey
of
Charleston, W. Va , visited
with the Rex Cheadle and
Noble 'Hamon families dur1ng
the weekend
Mr and Mrs. Walter Jordan
and son called on her grand-,
mother, Ava Gilkey, In
Harrisonville on Tuesday
evenmg.

The poll showed that 37 per
WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen. Birch Bayh, D-lnd., still cent favored a new party
while 56 preferred the existing
has the Iresidential bug .
Bayh dropped out of the 1972 lineup, and a third-party
race for the Democratic presi- ticket with Reagan and
dential nominatiOn when his Alabama's Gov. George
w1fe underwent cancer Wallace would pull29 per cent
surgery. He said Sunday In a of the vote.
UP! Washington Window The early maneuvermg kept
mlerview that "a number of up. In South Plainfield, N.J.,
people" were asking him to Rep. Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz.,
consider a new effort and he S8ld Saturday he believes the
was trying to decide ''If it Democratic nomination will
makes any political sense." be won m the primaries and he
"I am g1ving 11 a lot of "quite probably" Will enter
thought -lrankly,more than I the one m New Jersey June I,
thought I would a montb ago." 1976.
In Pekin, m., Sen. Henry M.
Bayh sa1d he takes Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, D· Jackson, !).Wash., criticized
Mass., "at his word that he IS Ford for talking about former
not gomg to seek or accept the President Harry S. Truman
and placmg his bust m the
nomination.''
Kennedy said Saturday in 0\ial Office. He said Ford and
Keene, N.H., "My poSition IS other Republicans were
unchanged and I will not be a "trying to capitalize" on
Sunday School attendance 1 ll
1 ll
.
candidate. I expect to be a Truman's new popularity.
"r' think the Republicans on May 4 was 51, offenng Sarah Foster has returned
candidate for re-e!ec~ m the
Senate In Massachusetts. But ougljt to go out and get their $24.22 Plans were made to honie after spending several
I will speak out on Issues own litical heroes" said' observe Mother's Day. Also days at Camden-Clark
po
'
plans were made to make up a Hospital in Parkersburg after
facmg the country'."
Jacl!som.
"gift purse" for Dr. James suffenng an accident w1th a
The Indiana senator said he
McCormack
power mower She is the
could foresee a situation at the
Worship
services
were
held
daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
1976 Demoa'atic convention
at
11
with
John
Sauvage
Foster.
"where we go on ballot after
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Thomas
leadmg and Rev. Meece
ballot after ballot without
speaking
on
"How
Close
We
and
f8ffilly of Enon were
anyone moving toward or
Stand
to
Eternity."
Chas.
&amp;
weekend
guests of Mr and
getting the nonunation ... wtth
Woode
s~ng
·"How
'
Mrs.
Walter
Brown and
Helen
the acrimony that could come,
Marvelous" w1th 'Nina family. '""
the bitterness, perhaps
Senator Kennedy could be OffiCers were elected when Robmson at the p13no. At- Mrs. Guy Spencer and Mrs.
persuaded to change his the Meigs County Better tendance was 33 with $21.89 Larj'y Spencer,and children of
T,uppers Plains, visited with
Iivl!lltock 4-H Club held their offenng and $52 pledges.
mind."
There
was
an
attendance
of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward
REV. EWON BROWN
If Kennedy ever did decide firSt meeting at the Roy Holter
nine
at
the
bible
study
held
at
Cheval1er recentiy .'
serv1ce. He is presently domg to run, Bayh said, "I certainly home, April 30 at 8 p.m. The
graduate work at the would not have any Interest In meeting was called to order by the Bobby Burke horne 01)_' .Mi:. and Mn. ROJI Pooler of
" , ~py ,Rp, 'Visi.~ with the
Assemblies of God Graduate (the nomination) because I Patty Pullins. Pledges were Wednesday afternoon.
Quite
a
number
of
local
Dohrinan Ree\1 famUy.
School m Springfield, Mo. He tbink he would appeal to a Jot led by Ed Holter
people
attended
the
funeral
of
-Mrs. L. Balderson
Officers were, president,
and h1s wife pastored chur- of the same people I would
Danny
Smith
Jr
at
the
Zion
DeniSe bean; VICe president,
ches m Sylvama, Ga., and appeal to."
"J\T
Conservatives
hoping
to
reStephanie
Radford; Church last Tuesday and
Ewmg, Va., prior to their
VISited
at
While's
Funeral
~
1
~ews
place President Ford, and secretary, JaniS Carnahan;
missiOnary appointment.
'
Mr Brown w1ll share ex- especially Vice President Nel· treasurer, Mark Mora; news Home on Monday
Genevieve
Guthrie
recently
penences from his IIU!ISIOnary son Rockefeller, with Republi- reporter, Patty Pullins;
visited at Sugar Grove where
mmlStry m Okinawa during cans more to their liking recreation leader, Ed Holter;
Ella
Yost is ill and on to
thiS special miSSions service. received a poll over the health chairman, Kathy Columbus where Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Frank HudThe public 1s mv1ted to attend weekend that gave Ford 53 per Parker,1and safety chairman, Seldon O'Brien are quite son, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
sa1d the Rev. Chester Ten- cent compared to former Tony Carnahan.
Hudson of Racine and Mr. and
California Gov. Ronald Rea- Dairy sweepstakes, dues, poorly.
Mrs
. Shelby Pickens and
nant, pastor
Jeanie Flanders, who atgan's ,40 per cent. A race trophies for Open Class and
family of Pomeroy visited at
between-Ford and Sen. Ed· the fa1r the club wanted to tends church here, 1s a the home of Mr. and Mrs.
surgical patient In Camdenmund S. Muakie gave the visi I were discussed.
Allan Taylor Sunday.
Pre131delit 48 per cent and the
Refreshments were served Clark Hospital m Parker- Mr. and Mrs. James Circle
Maine Demoa'at 40 per cent. by Pat Holter. The next sburg
of New Haven were at the
The poll, financed by the meeting IS to be at the horne of
home of Mary Circle on
STILL IN HOSPITAL ·
American Conaervatlve Union Stephanie Radford on May 14
Mrs. Kathy Smith, daughter Sunday. Lucy Taylor called at ,
and obtained by UPI Satur- at 8 p.m. - Patty Pullins.
the Circle home recently.
of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roush
pros late d1ff1culty
day, had results leu favorable
William Carleton, Tanya
_of Pomeroy, R D , remams a
Ills true that if there really for ROckefeller. It Indicated
pat1ent at the Mount Carmel Sayre, Racme,and Ralph Lee,
lS a deficiency in male hor- Republicana favored Reagan
LODGE
TO MEET
West Hospital In Columbus. local, called at the Betty Van
mone that g1vmg testosterone over the vice president by 59 to
Meter and Arthur Johnson may help Whether that 1s a 33 per cent if Ford would not CHESTER - There will be Her room number Is 341. She home over the weekend.
a special meeting of the Shade expects to be confined there
w1se course of action depends run.
River Lodge No. 453 here this indefimtely. Her two children, Mary Roush called at the
entirely on the total medical
Thursday, May 15 a\7 :30 p.m. Kevm and Christi, reside here home of Eva and Walter
p1cture
Archer on Saturday.
There will be work in the MM with their grandparents.
The Daily Sentinel
Whether
you
need
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E.
degree. All master masons
DEVOTED TO TH~
testosterone or something else
Johnson
and daughter, Sheryl
INTEREST OF
are mv1ted.
ALFRED CLUB MET
depends on the cause of the
MEIGS-MASON AREA
LeAnn,
called
at the home of
L. TANNEHILL
A demons !ration on placing
Impotence. If you have poor CHESTER
EXIC Ed.
a pattern on msterlal was Mr. and Mrs. Roy Johnson and
ROBERT HOEFLICH
circulation to your sexual
Clly Edllor
GHTE O
given by Susan Henderson at son on Sunday.
organs
then
tak1ng
Publ••hed dolly except
DAU
RB RN
by The Ohio Volley I Mr. and Mrs Bruce the recent meeting Of the
testosterone w11l not correct 1Solurdoy
M0111ER VISITED
Publishing Company, 111
the problem. If your problem Court st , Pomeroy. Oh•o • Wallace, GalllpollS, are an- Alfred Angels 4-H Club held at Mrs. Dwight Wallace,
(5769 BuSinen Office Phone
nouncing the birth Of a the horne of Dorothy Calaway· Middleport, spent Friday and
1s from underlying diabetes 992
2156 Edltonal Phone 992
then male hormone 1s useleBS. 2157
daughter, Natalie Dawn, Tammy Calaway and Lori Saturday In McConnelsville
In such cases the male hor- 1~ 1 5t~~~r~~~·~,::gmwe peld Friday at the Holzer Medical RobhlSon conducted games, visiting her mother, Mrs. G. c.
Nollonot edverllslfl.F · Center. The Infant weighed and Lori Robinson and Tara KnOll:, and her father at the
mone production may be
re~resentatlvt
'
Mr
entirely normal, 1t 1s the Grott1th Compony,Ward
Inc , seven pounds, 11 ounces.
. Guthrie served refreslunenla. Good Samaritan Hoapltal In
Bottone li t &amp; Getoewher Dlv , and Mrs. Wallace have a son, Next meeting will be held 011 Zanesville where he unnerves that don' t work And, If 157
Third Ave , New York ,
11 1s psychological you might NY 10017
Buck Richard, age 2~ . June 5 at the Calaway home, derwent fool surgery.
Subscript •on ro fi"s: G d
nla
Mr and 7.30 p. m.
get psychic benefit, but you Delivered
by carrier where
ran pare
are
•
could get that from sugar evolleble 75 cents per week. Mrs G~ " Buck, Pomeroy ;
~Y Motor Route wher•
h alia
pills.
MEETING DELAYED
corrler
urvlct
no! ' Mr.andMrs.Dwig tW ce,
AWAY ON WEEKEND
One month,I32S Middleport
Great · The Wednesda¥ night
T1me and traimng often help ~vollobie.
Mr.
and Mrs. Arnold
By mall In Ohio and W VI ,
men return to an active sex One Year . 122 oo. Six , grandparents are Mrs. meeting of the Middleport Richards, Mrs. Ann Ancel and
50, Three w1lliam M811o00I1,
••
ColumbUS,. Literary Club has been
months, $7Sll
hfe, partiCularly when they t-nonttis
00 Elsewhere
Kevin of Middleport were In
Beatrice
Buck, postponed until May 21, 7:30p. Columbus over the weekend to
have a problem in loss of Sl6 oo year. Sl• months Mrs.
l3 so . three montM, 11 so
dMr G m. at the home of Mrs. Harold
confidence
s. .
Subscript ion price ~ncludes Pomeroy, and Mr an
visit Mr. and Mrs. Edward
rnSunday Times Sentinel
(' Knox , McConnelsville
Sauer.
Smith and famUy.

Missionary will speak
Friday at Mason church
MASON, W Va - The Rev
Eldon A Brown, Assemblies
of God m1s1sonary to
Ok10awa , w11l be guest
speaker, Fnday, May 16, 7&gt;tj)
p m at the Assembly of Goil
Church, here on Dudd10g
Lane.
Durmg the1r last term of
IIUJlSlOnary serv1ce, Mr and
Mrs Brown established the
Servicemen's F1rst Assembly
of God m Koza City, Okinawa.
From th1s church, two
nahonal
works
were
pwneered m the c1lies of Kin
and Naha The Okmawa Teen
Challenge was also orgamzed
under the direction of Mr and
Mrs Brown
The Browns were f1rst
appomted as m1ss10nanes to
Korea m 1965 While there,
they pioneered the Assemblies
of God church in Pusan. They
moved to Seoul where Mr
Brown founded the Korean
Servicemen's Center. The
Browns also served as
directors of the Korean deaf
churches, the Mountam V1ew
Orphanage and as mter1m
directors of the Chnsllan
Serviceman's Home
Mr Brown rece1ved the B
A degree from South-Eastern
Assemblies of God Bible
College m Lakeland, Fla , m
preparalion for ffilSSionary

Carpenter Personals

·" ......,..

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Cono

~m

1975 Burg e Cno!

Sys 1 em~ I n ~

s. OOINSI

CAll RUTlAND

742-3651

Orioles 4-9 fwlns &amp;-3
Steve Brye and Craig
Kusick each drove in two runs
and Bert Blyleven pitched a
sixh1tter raiSing his record to
4-I in the TwirlS' first-game
Amer•can League
East
triumph. The Or10les won the
w. I. pet
g.b
second
game behind Jim
16 10 615
Milwaukee
14 10 583 1
Boston
12 12 500 3 Palmer's nme-hitter witb the
Detro•t
12 15 444 4v, big blows two homers by
Balt1more
11 15 423 s
Cleveland
Bobby Grieb and AI Bumbry's
11 17 393 6
New York
bases-filled double
West
w 1 pet g b
Rangers 11 rtgen 7
17 12 586
Oakland
11
12
586
Homers by Jeff Burroughs,
Texas
Kansas Ci ty
15 15 soo 2'h Leo Cardenas, Roy Smalley
15 16 484 3
California
12 13 480 3 and Tom Grieve pai!ed the
Mmnesota
ChiCIQO
12 11 m 5 Rangers' 15-hit attack which
brought Ferguson Jenkins hiS
Saturday's Results
fifth win against two losses.
8alt1more 8 Minnesota 6
Tex as 5 Detrou 2
JenklriS needed relief help
New York J Oakland 0
from
Steve Foucault in the
Chicago 8 Cleveland J
Milwaukee 3 Kansas Cltv o
free-hitting game . Mickey
Callforn.a 2 Boston 0
Lolich suffered the loss for the
Tigers.
SundiY'I Results
Texas 11 L&gt;etro•t 7
Iudlltna t Wbite Sox 3
1 Clevlnd 4 Chlcgo 3, 11 Inns
Tom McCraw's infield
Minesota 6 Baltimore 4, 1st
Baltimore 9 M1neso1a J, 2nd
single drove In the tymg run
Kansas C1tv 4 Milwaukee o
and successive errors on the
soston 5 Cahforn1a 2
Oakland 7 New ¥ork 5
play by Terry Forster and Bob
Monday's P.robiible P1tchen
Coluccio allowed the winning
(All Times EDTI
Kansas C1ty (Leonard 0 0) lit run to score for the Indiana in
Detroit I Ruhle 1 1) , 8 00 p m
Boston tt:leveland
2 1l at the 11th inning. The White Sox
Oakland (Hamilton 1 2 ), 11 00 had taken a 3-2 lead In the top
pm
of the inning when Nyls
Tuesd•v's Glmll
Boston at Olkllnd, rtlght New Nyman drove In Tony M11ser
York 1t
CalifOrnia , night
Milwaukee at Texas, night fro(ll second base. The victory
Cleveland at M innesota, night snapped the Indians' fiveKansllS C•tv at Detroi t, ntght
game losmg streak.
ChteaQo at Balt1mor e rm 11 1

,.

What is

''

service?
You·get that
·nght
wHh
our low rates..~

clean

•

Clean energy-energy that doesn't blacken sk1es or pollute rivers-::___
is obv1ously worth qu1te a bit And here's tlie paradox The cleanest-burmng
fuel-and thus the most valuable fuel-is drasllcally under proced
THat fuel is natural gas.
Columbia Gas 1s workmg to help
But, because natural gas 1s so clean, and so
solve the energy cn sts ' I t 's expens1ve
inexpens1ve, the demand has fa r outgrown
to duplicate nature' s work, but we're
conv~ntional supplies.
domg It A reformmg plan t built at a
cost of over 44 m1lhon dollars, turns
We need new sources of clean energy And we
petroleum hqmds mto p1pehnequality
need them now
gas and 1s des1gned to dehver eighty·
•
e1ght b1lhon cub1c feel of gas each
Columbia Gas is mvesting hundreds of
year. Ic's only a tnckle of che new
millions of doJlars in developmg dramatic
energy Amenta needs Stoll,1t's sheddmg a bngh t hope on tomorrow
new sources, such as gas from the Arctic,
from overseas, from under the sea, from
petroleum liquids . even from
plentiful coal.
Gas from these new sou rces costs more to
find and deliver, and eventually we'Jl probably
all notice it in our gas b11ls. But natural
gas w11l contmue to be your best energy buy
What 1s clean energy really worth?
Try to 1magme your world without 1t
Imagine your children without it

Along wolh our lamous low-cost auto protection comes '
a prom1se of prompt personal serv1ce So you don't
have to g1ve up a th•ng to g~t our low rales You just
have Ia take advantage olthem

STEVE SNOWDEN
12:.11 Powell St., Middleport

PHONE 992·7155

.•.. Uke a good neighbor,
A State Fann is there.

.,...,.

IMIIfiAMU

STATE FARM MUTUAL
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY
Home OffiCe Bloomlngton 1 Il linOIS

?

•
•'

~MBIA~ is doing something abolltthe energy crisis.
"'

�.I

5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 12, 1975

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday , May 12, 1975
;-:·:-:-:.;::.;-:::::::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:···:·:::·:·:::·::::::::::
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Bullets kill Celtics
.. LANDOVER, Md (UPil "It's got to be a championship
feeling any time you beat
Boston," a former champion
Boston Celtic said after the
Washington Bullets ousted the
defending champions 98-92
from the NBA playoffs.
The ex-Celtic was K .C.
Jones who coached the Bullets
to their 4-2 series triumph over
his old team and now laces a
tiUe showdown with either the
Chicago Bulls or the Golden
State Warriors.
But Jones acknowledged a
touch of regret -that his
Bullets' Eastern Conference
championship came at the
expense of his former team,

his lor!ller teammate, Boston
Coach Tom Heinsohn, and his
former coach, Red Auerbach.
"The br.eaks went our way,"
Jones said, "but I don't think
it's any great satisfaction
beating my old teacher and
teammates . I feel bad for
them just like I did for the
teams that lost to us when I
played for the Celtics. But it's
great to be on top."
Heinsohn said only, "the
Bullets are a fine basketball
team" and declined to speculate on the outcome of a
Washington showdown with
either Chicago or Golden
State, who are now tied :l-3 in
tlleir senes.

Linesoores
Bv Um1ed Pre ss lnterrnational
Nat1nnal LAaau,:.
Los Ange les
023 IIQ-7 10 0
P rttsburgh
000 000 OOQ- 0 8 I
Sutton (7 1) and Ferguson .
Brett , .Moose (6), McDowell fB I
and Sanguill en LP Brett (2 2) .
Crncr natl
200 000 000 - 2 6 0
New York
010 100 Ol x- 3 50
Brllrngham , McEnaney (8 )
and Bench ; Seaver (4 31 and
Grote. LP -- Bill ingham (3 2)
HRs-- Rose (2nd) , Mtlner Ordl

Sutton headed
to 20 ·winners

San Francsc 210 000 OQO-- 3 10 0

St LOU&gt;S

400 000 OOK- 4 7 2

DEADLINE SET .
All boys interested In

Lavelle (8) and
Rader , ·Hill (8) , Forsch , Hra
bosky (B) and Stmmons WP Forsc h (3 31 LP - Falc:one (J
21 HR- Simmons (&lt;l thl
Falcone ,

Houston

By WALLY HALL
UPI Sports Writer
Don Sutton has never won 20
games in a season but if his
ego has anything to do with it
he will this year and not by
hypnosis as the popular consenus might think.
Sutton became the National
League's first seven-game
winner, including three
shutouts, with a 7-0 Los
Angeles victory over the
Pittsburgh Pirates Sunday.
Last season Sutton had a 6-2
record at this time but went
into a slump. He came out of it
to stop Pittsburgh twice in the
National League pennant
series and credit, undue according to Sutton, was given to
a Los Angeles hypnotist.
"That was a vastly overwritten, over-proclaimed
segment of my life which I
wish everyone would leave
alone," Sutton, who has only
one loss so far, said.
He then gave credit where
he felt it was due. Sutton said
Walt Alston gave him "the
biggest ego boost of my
career" when he kept Sutton
in rotation through the slump
and told him: "II we're going
to win it all you'll have to

to a 55-40 lead. The proud
defending champions whittled
their deficit to live points in
the early minutes of the final
period but Washington's two
sharpshooting guards, Kevin
Porter and Phil Chenier, fired
back with 21 of their combined
total of 45 points to nail down
the win.
The Bullets led the entire
way Sunday just as they did in
the series when they won the
opening game m Boston and
never relented. Their big man,
Elvin Hayes, paced them in
the first hall with 15 points but
then hit only a single free
throw in the final two periods.
But Chenier ,-with 24 points,
Porter with 21 and four
teanunates registering double
ligures never let the Celtics

Celtic
veteran
John
Havlicek con~eded Boston
was outplayed by the younger
Bullets. " They proved it.
They're· the best team." He
also said he intends returning
lor another year next season.
An erratic first half in which
the Celtics committed 14
costly turnovers and shot only
34.1 percent helped the Bullets

000 120 003-

6

playing Pony League
Baseball in the MeigsMason Pony
League

a0

effort against the Pirates.
Montreal
ooooooooo- o 5 1
Dierker (4 JJ and May, Blair,
"I wanted to throw 63 pit- DeMola 191 and Foole LP chesinseveninnings,"hesaid Blair II" HR - Metzger ltstl .
after97throwsintheentire Phlldelpha 210000000- 3 84
ta
40030000x - 7 81
game. HJ'm not supposed to Atlan
Tw,tchetl .
Htlgendorf
(d) ,
pitch-that much."
Schueler (6) and Boone . Capra

Association this summer
are reminded that tbe
deadline for sign up and
entry fees is this comiog
Thursday, Mayl5.
Anyone who bas not paid
his entry fee should get In
eontaet with Ed Kennedy,

(3 41
and
Pocoroba
!...PTw rtchell ( 3 4) . HRs- Williams
&lt;2nd ), Garr (2nd) .

Cardinals 4, Giants 3

Si&gt;OHTS TODAY

CINCINNATI (UP!)
ISascball ~' Hannan Nadarko won the featured
'!'ran~
at Eastern, ninth race at River Downs
Sunday by beating Mayme's
Waverly at Meigs.
Track - · Meigs girls Joy to the wire by one and onehalf lengths. Lot 0 Song was
at Gallipolis.
thir\1.
.
Nadarko
was
timed at I :12
:·:::;:::;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:·:
for the six furlongs and
International League
returned $10.60, $5.40, · $3.40.
Slandmgs
By UPI
The 7-7 daily double of Gold
w. I. pet. g .b .
Peep
and Billie Lue paid
Roc h es ter
15 9 625
Tidewater
17 11
607
$94.60.
Syracuse
16 12 571 1
The 6,593 thoroughbred
Charl eston
14 14
soo 1
R 1ch mond
14 14
500 3
racing fans wagered $532,488.
Paw tu cket
13 13 .500 3
In Saturday's racing,
Tol edo
11 16
407 51;.,
Memphis
10 21 323 Blf 2 Dontallah won the featured
Saturday's Res ults
race, three lengths ahead of
Rochester 4 Toledo 3

flag them down.
Heinsohn blamed the loss on
the lax play of the Celtics in
the first half when they
weren't able to get their first
field goal until more than 31f.!
minutes were gone and at one
time trailed by 18 points.
"We threw the ball away,"
he said. "We weren't moving.
We were very, very lethargic.
Our whole team was a split
second off in its reactions."
Jones thought his Bullets
outthought the Celtics.
"We got smart fast," he
said. "That's the smartest
team in the whole league.
They take advantage of
everything if you let them. We
had to learn fast how to beat
them at their own game. We
did a pretty good job of it."

Memphis 2 Trdewater 1
Pawtucket 2 Sy ra c use 1
Char les to n 8 Rtchmond 1

Sunday's Results
Roches ter 3 Tol ed o l
Syracuse 4 Pawtucket 2
R1chrpond 2 Memphrs 0 , Sin
inn, ra in
Charleston 4 Trdewater I , Jst ,
7 1nn
Tr d ewa t er 2 Charleston 1. 2nd .
7 mn

Class AA Sectional results
Fteld Events
Shot Put 1
No xe l.
Wheelersburg
2
Me e k ,
Wheelersburg
3.
Fr!lz,
Ironton , 51 - Jlt::l, Drscus - l
Meredrth, Belpre
2 Fritz ,

Gallipolrs 49 , Rock Hrll 45,
Whee lersburg 33 , Oak Hill 26,
W e ll st on
22 , Belpr e 22,
waverly 19 , Shertdan Ia ,
Jackson
16 , Minford
16 ,
Warr en 14 , Portsmouth West

Ironton . 3 Noxell , Wheelers 12, wash&lt;ongton Court House
10, Meigs 8, Federal Hockrng
I Marti. Washmgton CH . 2 8, Vmton County 6. New
M&gt;llendorf. lronlon 3 Eberts , LeK&gt;nglon 1. McClain 1,

burg , 146- 81 '2; Pole Vault -

Vmton County1 , 13s a3.u ndLong
Jump
e rs ,
Ga l lipolis .
2
Valentine ,
Galltoolrs J . Ke lley , . Port s
mo~th W 22 73~ , H 1gh Jump1 Meadows , Sheridan
2
Campbell, Oak H ill 3. Pun
nell , Hillsboro , 6 6
Runnmg Events

.'

•'

,. '
• I

Frosty Bandit: Erin Hickory
was third.
·
- -Petare Blue won the first
race and Antendate the second
to return $168 In the dally
double on the combination 6f 3
and 4.
The crowd of 7,003 wagered
$616,498.

Life insurance:

Got too
·much?
Call 1 NtUonwldl ,1genl tor
1 conr+dtnlltl ,nalytlt.
PaylniJ too much?

WHA

Plavotf ' Sclledule and
Results
Bv Un•ted Press International
(All Times EDT)
(Final Rounct-Best of Seven&gt;
Quebec vs. Houston
(Houston leads series, 3-0l
Sat May 1Q-Houston 2 Quebec
0
Mon , May 1 2 ~at Quebec , 8. 05

Danger·

ou1 jtps? Find out FREE.

pm

x Wed ., May 14 ~ at Houston ,
a JO p m
;~~, Fn ., May 16- at Quebec, 8· 05
p m.
x Sat , May 11- at Houston ,
B 30p .m .
:~C·If necessary

N•hon••d• Lolt

C-...ny ,

I'O~t Oll•u Colwmllot~. 011•0

N wCO~P'JiRft
•

~~w,.,.u

•

OPT

AT NOON ON THURS.l-EAST COURT
ST POMEROY

FoW'consecutlveextra-base
Pomeroy Rt. 3 before
hits, including a two.,.un home san o,ego ooo 010 oro- 2 a 1 Thursday. All entry money
100 yard dash - I. Saun
run by Ted Sunm'ons m' th Chicago
000 010 ooo- I 9 0
ders . G allipOl iS . 2
Burns ,
'
e
F reisleben (2 3) and Hundley ,
must be turned in to Mr. Hillsboro 3 John son , Ironton
,
first inning accounted lor all Bonham 13 21 and Hosley . HR Kennedy by this lime.
to 2. 220 yard dash - t
Saunders ,
GallipOlis
2.
the Cardinals' runs and Hosley ( Jsn
Johnson , Ironton 3 R Vinson ,
allowed them to slip by the
Amencan League
·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.·:::::;.;::·:=:·:=:·:=:·:::::::::::::.;:::: Ironton , 23.2. 440 yard dash Giants, despite a 10-l!it attack list Ga(llel
1 Valentine, GallipoliS . 2.
Mrnnesota
040 010- 6 a o
Jordan , Sher1dan • 3. Jew1tt ,
led by Von Joshua win three. Ball more
000 013 000- 4 6 0
Hillsboro . 51 9; 880 yard run The Cardinals, with Luis
Blyleven (4 .1) and
Borg .
I Johnson , Wellston 2 Maple,
m ann . Cuellar , Johnson (51 and
Waverly 3 Woods , Hillsboro ,
Melendez hitting his second Hendri cks LP - Cuellar (2 21 .
1 sa s. Mile Run 1 Me .
triple while playing in place of HR --OeC&gt;nces I2nd I
Fann, Rock Hdl 2 Marl in.
Oak Hill J. Map le, Waverly ,
las t season's National League (2nd Game)
4· 34 6 , Two .Mile Run 1
Rookie-Of-the-Year, swept the M1nesota
000002100- J 90
Sauers, Jackson 2. Par lor ,
three game series.
·
Ballmore
010 50003x - 912 0
By Clarice Allen
Wheelersburg J B McFann ,
Paz1k, Campbell C41 and
Harry Rose, Akron, spent 8 Rock Hill , 10 ' 04 .7 ; 120 hrgh
Astro's&amp;,ExposO
Lundstedt , Borgmann( 7) ,
h urdles · - 1. D
V i n son ,
Roger Metzger drove in Palmer (5 21 and Duncan LP - few days wtth Mr . and Mrs. Ironton . 2 Bond, Rock Hi ll. 3.
Paz 1k (O. lJ . HRs - S v · t 4th George Genheimer.
Lackey. Federal Hock rng , 15 .
three runs and had as many &amp; ~t h )
I. 180 low hurdles 1 o
hi · 1 di
David Baker has joined the Vrnson . Ironton 2 Whit lach,
ts, tncu ng a home run, to (11 mnings)
air force and is' in basic Me1gs 3. Fa uhre·r , H1llsboro,
complement Larry Dierker's Ch1cago 101 ooo ooo 01 - 3 11 J
21.4; BBO -relay 1 Ironton
Anyone who has sex once, just once. can get syphilis or gonorrhea.
five-ltitter and lead the Astros Clevlnd 000 000 200 02- ' 12 0 trainmg at Lackland Air IAllen, R. Vinslon, D Vinson ,
Osteen.
Forster
(1)
and F
B
T
Johnson) . 2 Hillsboro
J.
VD
IS spreadmg through our neighborho ods H1ttmg people you'd least
over 1he Expos. It was the Down.ng , Kern, Buskey (!O J
orce ase, exas.
Warren, 1: 32 9; Mrle Relay seventh time this season the and Ashby WP- Buskey 12-01
Mr . and Mrs . James I Hillsboro !Captain, Kelch.
expect to get 1t.
LP -· Forster (2 21 HR - Carty Ridenour have retl.lrned home Woods , Jew1tt l. 2 Wellston . 3
Pillars of soc rety are fallrng at o ut-of-town co nventron s and brlngmg VD
Expos have been shut out.
13rd l
Minford, 3·35 6
Braves 7, Pblllies 3
alter a five day vacation in
Team Scoring
home to the rr wrves Frndmg that hard to believe is one of the reasons rt's
Milwauke
ooo 000 ooo- o 5o Tucson, Arizona, as guests of __,_ro_n_l_on__7•_·_H_•_IIs_b_o_ro__
s6 ,
s
preading so fast.
Earl Williams hit a two-run Kansas Ctv ooo 300 to•- ' 9 0
home run and Ralph Garr
Champion, Rodr.guez 17l and the Tracy-Wells Co. of
So don't thrnk rt's not your problem.
Porter . Busby IS 21 and Mar Columbus.
COBRAS LOSE FIRST
Antrbrotrcs cure VD and prevent rts spreadmg. Sort's rronrc there's so much
added a three-run homer to tmez LP- Champ ion 14-21
MOUN
account for all the Braves'
Mrs . Grace Gumpf has
T VERNON, N.Y.
VD alound when rt's so easy to prevent or cure
earned runs but four Phillie 6~~:~11
~~t ~~~ ~~ 1 ) ~il moved to her new trailer home (UP!) - The New York
If you're curious or confused , get info rmation or a pam ~t at most
errors allowed them the winJenk&gt;ns. Foucault 161 and in Coolville from the Lodwick Apollos handed the Cleveland '· pharmacres or a hea lth clinic. If you need he lp, see a doctor.
win.''
Cobras a ~defeat Saturday •
In other games New York ning margin. Buzz Capra gave ~~~~berl~ ·l. Lo~;~~~r wa/W ~~~d apartment.
Freehan
WP
Jenkms
IS
21
Robert
Allen,
Ashland,
Ky
.,
the first loss for Cleveland in
downed Cincinnati 3-2, St.
up three runs in the first two LP- Lolich 13-21 HRs- Bur spent a recent weekend with the Amencan Soccer League.
Louis edged San Francisco 4- innings but held on lor the win. ·roughs 16th I. Cardenas llstl ,
c0 b ra rookie fullback
Freehan 14th! , Smalley 11s11. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen.
3, Houston beat Montreal IH&gt;, Padres 2, Cubs 1
Hector. Torres watched Bill Grieve l3rdl
Mrs. Opal Eichinger and Manuel Reynosa mis-ehested
Atlanta downed Philadelphia
· ooo 102 002- 5 10 2 Laura Jean recently called on a ball into his own net for one
7-3 and San Diego slipped by Bonham intentionally walk Boston
Chicago 2-1.
Steve Huntz to pitch to him. ca~~~nil~ 31 ~~~o~%-;;,;e;y~ Mr. and Mrs. Larry Wolf and sco~e t!klmmanuel Rakitzog ou
a perfect cross . .
Sutton received help from With Dave Winfield on second Songer. scott 171. Figueroa12 181 children, Racine.
Sl.
Torres
caJmly
drove
a
single
~n~~flc':;
~i-Smger
D.
D.
Cleland
and
Mrs
from
Roberto
Ellines for the
151
Ron Cey who went 3-4 inColumbus, vislted _o'-th_e_r_s_co_r_e·- - - - - - - - ' - - : - - - -- - - - -- - - - - - ---_:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
cluding a triple and a run- into right field in the eighth New York 010 002 200- 5 9 2 Carpenter,
tl
'th
1 11
inning to gtve the Padres the Oakland
006 ooo tO• - 1 12 1 recen Y wt Denze C e and.
scoring double.
May , Tidrow 131, Lyle 171
Mrs. Letha Wood, Mrs. Bob
The Los Angeles Dodger win. Tim Hosley accounted for
and Munson; Blue , TOdd (7) w0od
dM
dM
an
r. an
rs. Roy
pitcher said he had intended to the lone Cub run with a solo and Tenace, Fosse 181 WPput out the least amount of home run in the fifth inning. Blue 17 11 . LP-May 12-21 HRs Christy attended the wedding
- - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - -, - - - ---B_o_n_ds_ls_th_I_._R_ud_i_l_3r_d_l_--. of Miss Jan Betzing and John
1 Sheets at Hemlock Grove .
Mr. and Mrs . Douglas
t ,
u E N E AA L A E V E N U E S H A A I N G p L A N N E 0 U 5 E R E p O ji.f
Wickham, Richmond, were
Bad habits are as easy to 'get rnlo as they are hard 1~7
The extr a operators we ~e ed to serVICe your exira calls
get out of.
cost us money A cdst that shows'up on your phone brll
to
er.courlgt
C:I!IZtn
PlrtiCIPBIIOn
dal.,moniOg
your goyern11"18rrt's
GenMal
Revenue
Shanng
PfOIIIdes rn
federal
f!Jnds d1rectly
to local{~"'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ recent overnight guests of Mr,
L1ke_cal ltng directory assrstance when you don't
d~tcrlmlrwtlion In ....
tl1ne fundi mey be llnl to
and Mrs. B. K. Ridenour and
As part of the monthly serv&lt;ce charge Last year mil irons
20220
absolutely have to. You try 11 once or tw,ce And before
of consumer dollars were wasted on unnecessary
' .
·
SALEM TOWNSHIP
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
you know rt you're·hooked
rnformation requests
,_.
"VE'"'
and Mrs. John Wickham.
After a whrle you don't thmk tw &lt;ce abou t p&lt;ck1ng up the
And all of those dollars came out of your pocket
ICJ 0 PERA liNG J
)i'ffi.Sii'S~HA~R~INii;G'~A~YM;.i"~';i\Oi;;F~~$2'?,3~33;;.00~===-,;:- - : - : - - --t-----1-_::MA::&gt;:_NT:::
EN::A::NC::E_j fO~ THE s1xr H EN TITLEMENT PERioo JuLY 1 ,, 75 ltumvGw JUNE 30
•
Bob Bill Lee, Bashan,
phone and ask&lt;ng us to find phone numbers that, lhree
If that doesn't make you mad e nou gh to cutit out alto Hnli PLANS fO SPEND lH£S£FUNDS FORTHE PURPOSESiiHOWN
recently spent 8 night With
times out of four. you could f&lt; nd yourself. In the phone oook , gether , 1sn't II enough to make you cut 1t down?
And people are abus ,ng d~re ctory assrs\ance now like
V ACCOUNT NO 36 J Os:J 009
and Dennis
MrS. Arthur
Orr •was
1390 Mr,
Mrs.
Long
never before (O ne customer called us 1.460 t&lt;mes in one
month alone')
.
, "'"'"
~~~EN~H~~~~~H~;
honored with a stork shower
The
trouble
is,
callrng
d~rec\ory
ass
&lt;
stance
needlessly
MEIGS COUNTY
Friday evening at the fire
0
ends up costmg you money
LANGSVILLE, OHIO 45741
house. Hostesses were Mary
Because phone in'form atron isn 't free .
Newell and Darlene Justice.
Mrs. Long received many nice
gifts.
IIJ,,JUJ,fl,jj,,,,JJ,/,IIJ,,IUJ,,UJ/.,,,u,,,,Jt/,JJJ,Jd

Chester
News Notes

Kick

~~~~l~===i====

~

(

'

1 II

I

,

to_. Aima E. Smith, clerk.

S'.IPPIII'IIng docul!lfli.t••,. op.n 1or ~ublic .el'lltl"'-

Local Bowq ·

"' CODY al lhll ••JIO"I. 100

,, Rt. 1 Langsville, Olio 45741

Friday N1te
M1xed League
May9,1975
Standings

il;gn.nn b1 c hotf biCUt~ oG

Team
No . 6

12
12
10

No 3
No
No '1

·

E. Smith

"

w.
8

'

I

I

•

'

L.
4
4

6

8

Karl Grueser &amp; Son
Plum bing
6 10
5
0
16
High game, men Edd1e
Wt1rf.t , 212 and 191 ; women,
, oonna McF~rland 181. Opal
Hupp 178.
1 H1gh sertes. men, Eddie
Whitt 559 , Ken Mohler 500.
women , Opal Hupp 502, Donna
' McFarland 475

IIIIo
G EN EAA l

A E V E·N U E

SH A AI N G

P LA N N E 0

U5 E

A EP0 RT

(Q 0f'Efi-'TING I

THESE fUNDS FOA THf: PIJ"I'OSU SHOWN
/ ACCOUNT

MIAlTH

By Helen Bottel

This Hoax Is No Joke!
Dear Helen:
My wife got a telephone call that nearly wrecked our
marnage. The man on the line said he was a doctor from the
state Depa.rtment of Health , reporting that her husband had
vene.real dtsease and she must see her family physician immediately.
. y.'hen she confronted me, I had the devil of a time convmcmg her it was some lool'sidea of a practical joke
She ~ight still suspect me except that our docto~ gave me
a clean btll of health .
. In case other families have been bothered with this type of
Sick hoax, please prmt a warrung : don't believe phony "doctors" on the phone !
What kind of person would think up such a move?
FIGHTING MAD
.

Dear Helen:
Telephone pranksters, obscene callers- I had my fill! So I
bought the loudest, most piercing police whistle 1 could find
~d keep it by my P_hhone . When I get a nut on the line, j
literally blow the whistle on him . II everyone would do this
hoaxers might desist in the interest of saving their ear drums:
- SMART SINGLE
Dear Helen:
If women want to work on men's construction jobs it 's fine
with me, but do they have to take on the tough waysof ~en ?
I lost my way and entered a restricted site that was off
limits to the public. Acouple of women in hard hats let loose a
stream of obscenity that outdid most males, telling me to "get
the so and so off the property, you dumb such and such broad!"
· Is there some psychological reason for this kind of thing?
-BLASTED
Dear Blasted :
Maybe they wanted to prove their ''manhood ." - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
Our neighbors are from Europe. They never tire of telling
us !herr ways are best. It seems Americ.ans are nothings:
people in THEIR country are cleaner, take more pride in their
work, train their children better, have less crtme 1 superior
schools, smarter and more honest leaders, cleaner air - tbey
even make the best beer and sausage.
What do we say to these overbearing people? All they like
about the U.S. is the fat paychecks they bring home every
week. - UNCLE SAM'S FRIEND
Dear U.S.F.:
Since you can't change these overbearing people, why say
anything~ (Though I'd imply, "European, go home" when
they push their views on you.) - H.

's Pointers
BY P\JLL Y CRAMER

Who has design for
coat hanger trellis?
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POU.. Y - I hope
someone will tell me how to
make a trellis from wire coat
hangers. I lost my directions
and cannot remember how it
is done. - RETA.
DEAR RETA- I am sure
some readers will kuow how
this Is done and that we will
soon hear frol)l them:
POLLY.
' •
DEAR POLLY - We are
told to do our part in conserving energy by keeping our
heat turned down, save
electricity, preserve water,
recycle paper, bottles and
cans. Yet, we see some soap
commercials on television
demonstrating the use of
liquid detergents that show
dishes being washed and
rinsed, one by one, while a
steady stream of water keeps
running from the faucet. My
Pet Peeve concerns this kind
of example being shown to all
- young and old - who are
actively interested in conservation and preserving our

natural resources. - AUCE.
DEAR POLLY - Do tell
Mrs. P. T. she can clean her
alabaster by using either
talcum powder or corn starch.
The decorator who told me
this said, as you did, not to put
the ttem in water. That might
cause it to "melt." Use a soft
brush to clean in the crevices.
-·,
- SANDRA.
DEAR POLLY - I find that
furniture pohsh sold m bottles
goes further than that in
aerosol cans. I also have read
questions concerning the
adverse effects of propellants.
I u~e a soft cloth to apply the
polish. Since furniture does
not require polish each time
one dusls I have a way to
make my polish go a long
distance. After dusting I shake
the cloth into my outdoor trash
receptable and then store the
cloth m a wide-mouthed glass
jar in a closet. The polish
permeates the cloth and is
good for a number of dustings.
Placing the cloth in a sealed
container avoids an odor in the
closet and, more importantly,

,,

•

MAINTEMNCE

A

·us...

\!D. isn't what

tiji;t
GEnERAL TELEPHOnE

101 Subm•tP'090"1s lo•lundoll9 conaldertlionby:July 10, 1975

Helen Help

+++

•

ETR
OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE

I

w.~::.

Dear Mad:
Your hoaxer is either screwed up mentally or thinks it
~oul~ even the score on an old grudge - and figures a VD rap
IS qwcker and meaner than turning you in to the IRS lor a tax
aud1t.
Since I understand others have received similar phony
calls, here's :•assurance : Neither the State Department of
Health nor pnvate physicians follow this procedure in alerting
mates to possible infection . - H.
P. S. How to handle a telephone hoaxer? Read on:

r~N~el~so:n~v~d~le~Y~o~rk~O,~P~i~k:et~o:n~o~~~~-·~~~~~~·~~~~~~=~:~=~~

uther

-.,

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

Nadarko wins featured 9th

NO 363-053-012

SUTTON TOWNSHIP
TOWNSHIP CLERK
MEIGS COUNTY
RACINE, OHIO 4Sn1

SYRACUSE WINS
, In independent baseball
action Sunday at Syracuse
Municipal Park Syracuse
defeated Portland 6-2. Letart
will play Syracuse Sunday,
·May 18, at Syracuse Pa•k.

'

.OPENe

Now you can have alf your fall and winter
garments dry cleaned and stored free of
·charge until needed later.
Bring l~em In NOW. Then pick. up lofer anq PAY
ONLY the cleaning charge.

6 DAYS

A WEEK

INSURED FUR STORAGE
For. '-11 Your Fur• Available H•r•

I· _'

MON. thru SAT.

D&amp;DMEAT
830 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

".

.'

. Robinson's Ceaners
· 216 E. 2nd

992-S~I

POMEROY

.u uu: :. ••:: s c

Social
Calendar

Two win district honors

Two Me1gs County stxth
graders were hrst place
MONDAY
wumers in the Distnct 16 PTA
POMEROY ELEMEN- cultural arls competition.
TARY PTA, 7:30 p.m.
Judging results were anMonday with safety patrol-to nounced Saturday a t the
be reeogmzed by band spnngdistrictconference held
studentS of David Bo;;,en. at the Zaleski Elementary
Installation of officers; School.
refreshments by mothers of
Winnmg first tn the visual
sixth graders; public invited. arts
competition,
inH
termediate division, was Beth
UNITED Perrin, 12-year-old daunhter
M thEAT
d. H
~
e 0 tst Women, Heath of the Rev. and Mrs. W. H.
Church M1ddl
t 7
•
epor • · 30 Perrrn, and a Pomeroy
p.m. Monday at the church. ) Elementary School student
Mrs. Nan Moore , program Jayne Hoeflich 10 daughter:
leader, Mrs . Billy Jo of Mr. and Mrs.' Bob Hoeflich,
Krawsczyn
devo!tonal and a st'xth grader at the
Iea d er • and Mrs. Grace Bradbury School, won first
French, Mrs. Lavma Davts, place in the intermediate
and Mrs . Garnet Entsminger di
f h
•
vrston
or er ptano comhOS te sses.
position ' "The B'rcen te nma 1
RIVER VIE

Waltz".
Both entnes will now enter
sta te competition .with the
resulloi to be announced at the
Ohio PTA Conference to be
held in the fall . Thts is the
second time Miss Perrin's art
work and the third !tme Miss
Hoeflich's music have gone
in to state competrtion .
Ribbons were awarded in
the first, second and third
1
Paces
of eac h division in the
dt's trr'ct compett.tton. The
resulls were as follows :
VISUAL ARTS
Pnmary Division (ftrst
through third graders)·.
Rrchard Parkinon, Zalesk 't
Elementary, grade 2, ltrst ;
Doug
Mullet,
Coalton
Elementary School grade 2
second· and Kelly 'Jo Moore '

Parkview Elementary School
in Jackson County, grade 3,
thtrd .
Intermediate Divtson
lfourth through stxthgrades ):
Beth Perrin,
Pomeroy
Elementary School, Meigs
County,
first;
Rus~ell
Faulkner, Zaleski Elementary, gr~de five, second; and
Jamie McDonald, Coalton
Elementary, grade 4, thtrd .
Junior High (Seventh and
· hth
d
ul
etg
gra e) Pa a Exline,
J k El
fi~~tson ementary, grade 7,
MUSIC
P
J
·
nmary: oanne Ztmerly,
Jackson Ctty Element r
a Y
School, first grade, rirst ;
LeRay
Bay,
Za)eskt
Elementary grade one
'
'
second

Fami/11 week
tS bserved

~~.:~;~~~i~~;i!r·~~O pr~:~;~lyG~Oa~~nded ~~~

Edwina Scott, 441 Beech St.,
Middleport. Installation of
officers. Cultural report by
Well
entitled
Texanna
"Friendship in Beta Sigma
Phi". Hostesses, Mrs. Scott
and Mrs . Iris Payne.
''
ANNUAL Mother-Daughter
banquet of St. John and St.
Paul Lutheran Churches will
be held at 6:30 Tuesday at the
St. Paul's Church. Each
person is to take either one or
two. covered dishes with the
American Lutheran Church
Women to furnish the meat.
TUESDAY
AMERICAN Legion ·
Auxiliary, Lewts Manley Post,
7 p. m., home of Mrs. Campbell Harper.
WEDNESDAY
WHITE Rose
Lodge,
Wednesday, 1:30 p.m. at the
American Legion Hall in
Middleport.
POMEROY - Middleport
lions Club, Wednesday noon,
Meigs Inn.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
Wednesday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple, followed by
Bosworth Council, Royal and
Select Ma_sters, 8:30 p.m. at
the tem~le. All regular
companions and officers
urged to attend.

fellowship at the Letart Falls
Community Center Sunday in
observance of family week.
Games were played during
the afternoon and at 6 p.m. a
dinner was served. The Rev.
Steve Wilson gave the prayer.
The Rev. Howard Shtveley
had scripture and prayer to
open the evening servtce.
Dallas Hill led in group
singing and there was a
program for the devotional
servtce. Mrs. Betty Shiveley
was at the ptano. Readings
were given by Bernice Roush,
Donna Hill, Dee Spencer,
Lucille Rhodes and Mrs .
Shiveley .
'
ARRIVED SUNDAY
Mr and Mrs. Raymond
Zirkle, Warner-Robbins, Ga.,
arrived Sunday and wiU be
spending several days here
with Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Duckworth
and
other
rel~·tives .
They
came
especially lor the funeral
services of Mrs. Jean Zirkle,
Pomeroy.

----------the possibility of spontaneous
combustion . I do not have to
use water, detergent and
electricity to wash the cloth. I
simply toss it out when I feel
its usefulness has ended and
then I start with another rag. I
keep one in a container upstairs and another downstairs.
- JEAN F.
DEAR POLLY- When you
have emptied a plastic bottle
of dishwashing detergent fill it
with water and put it in the
car. There is enough detergent
left to make soapy water that
is very handy for washing
dirty hands when out on the
road.
Also, outdated credit cards
make fine identification plates
lor luggage, notebooks or key
chains. Cut out only your
name and address and attach
to the label with a good
coating of household cement
or punch a hole in it for a chain
to go through. - MRS. L. W.
DEAR MRS. L W.- Yours
Is Indeed a ,good idea for using
old credit cards except for the
part about using on a key
chal~~; I, too, had my name
and address on my key chain
untO my car was stolen and a
detective told me that was not
a smart thing to do. The car
thlel had my name ·and address. (aleng with my key) so
burglarizing my house would
be a cillch. The locks had to he
changed. Also do not save
wliOie old -credit cards. Cut
them up and throw them
away. - POLLY.

The !20th anniversary flf the
Middleport First United
Presbyterian €burch will be
celebrated on Sunday, June
29.
Plans lor the observ~nce
are being completed by a
committee composed of Mrs.
Mtldred Karr, Mrs. Maxine
Owens, Miss Judy Arnold,
Mrs. Lennie Haptonstall, J"hn
Fultz, Russell Lyons, Don
Vaughan , and the Rev. Dwight ·
Zavitz. The church was
organized on May 27, 1855, and
the present church building
was begun in 1859

banquet

20% OFF

eam gzven trophies

Trophies were presented at
the annual dmner of ·the
American Legion Auxiliary
bowling team held at the
Legion hall in Middleport
Friday mght.
First place team members
were Sherrie Might, Patty
Might, and Doris Halfhill,
sponsored by the Juniors of
the Auxiliary of FeeneyBennett Post 128. Second place
team consisted of Sandra
Might, Gerry Kessinger, and
Becky Drenner, sponsored by
Post 128, and the third place
team members were Pearl
Russell, Erma Hendricks and
Rose Hysell, sponsored by the
Racine Legion 602.

· ·--

Ingels Furniture

FOR THE
PROTECTION
YOUNEEOPlay it eafe and- sore.

It may be time to
have your present
policy updated,

Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. at' the
Meigs County Courthouse.

THURSDAY
MISSIONARY
Society,
Mount
Moriah
Baptis,
t
Church,
COMMITTEE lor the
Mentally Retarded, special 7:30 p. m. Thursday at the
meeting to complete plans for home of Mrs. John Moon .
promoting the levy and to hear
reports from all committees,

be celebrated by
Middleport church

LITERATURE
Primary: Brad McCorkley,
Jackson City, grade 2, first;
Melody Burnem , Salem
Center Elementary , Mergs
County, grade 3, second ; and
Cheryl
Eng le,
Zaleski
Elementary, grade 3, thtrd.
lntermed~a te : Brenda Caryl
Richards , Jackson C1ty , grade
6, first ; Jayne Hoefli ch,
Bradbury , Meigs Coun ty,
SON HONORED
grade 6, second; and Teresa
Mr.
and
Mrs. Roger Keller,
Fuller, Zaleski Elementary,
Route 3, Pomeroy , engrade 6, thtrd .
tertained Sunday evemng with
a party in observance of the
btrthday of therr son, Russell .
Guests were Miss Erma
Smtth, Mrs . Philhp Meinhart,
with Mrs. Thomas Werry then
Presented potted plants Mrs. Stella Kloes and Mrs.
responding wtth a tribute to were Mrs. Clara Karr , the Rose Ginther, Pomeroy; Mr.
her daughter. Jon Pernn and oldest mother; Mrs. Davtd and Mrs. Norman Rose ,
Nicky Rtggs were cast as Russell, the youngest, and Brdwell; Mr . and Mrs .. Don
fishermen. for a pantomime " Mrs . Perrin, the mother with Rose, Racine, and Mr. and
with the narration being given the most children present. Mrs . Ralph Keller, Chester
by Mrs. Phillip Memhart.
Also presented a plan t was Road.
Mrs. Paul Nease gave two Mrs . James Shato of
poems, "Be A Good Boy", and Gallipolis.
"John's Visit to a Musewn",
Mrs. Marvin Burl ha d
taken from a book of poems charge of the presentation of
compiled by her mother, the door pnzes and was assisted TO GRADUATES
late_Mrs. Horace Smtih, Sr. by Nicky Riggs and Jon
Hrs. Mon .- Fri., 9 to 5
Sal. 91o8
A smg-a-long was held under Perrin who pulled them from
Your Thom MeAn Store
the direction of Mrs. Nease a simulated fish pond. A vote
wrth a medley of familiar of thanks was extended to
songs being included.
Miss Erma Smith, general
chairwoman, by Mrs. Ginther.
The program concluded with
the song, "God Be Wi th You" ,
and prayer by Mrs. Ginther.
Trophy for high game went
to Doris Halfhill with 204.
Other trophy winners were
MAY DAYS VALUE AT
Gerry Kessinger, high series,
high average, and most improved; Patty Migh~ Sandra
Mtght and Judy McNickle,
perfect attendance; and Jane
Garnes, Denise Garnes, Linda
Ph. 992-2635
Middleport
Hysell, Juanita Justis, Judy
McNickles, Brenda Pettit ,
Elizabeth Atkins, Ruby
Hysell, and Ellen Tucker ,
partici pation trophtes.
Sandra Might accepted the
first place sponsors trophy for
the Junior Auxiliary , and
Albert Roush accepted the
Middleport Legion trophy .

~~~00~~~·~£~f!~~~:rfo Chu,.,.,.'Ch
cftj'a·s.s ho ftU
Lis• a.nnu·al
I

1
Colonial Williamsburg color
slide presentation.
TUPPERS Plains PTO Tlie
annual
motherFollowmg the dmner a
Monday, 7:30 p.m. Judge daughter dinner sponsored by contest on Proverbs was
Manmng Webster will_ speak members of the Happy conducted by Mrs . Paul
on the proposed 1.6 mtlllevy " Harvesters Class of Trinity Nease The program opened
for the mentally retarded.
Church was held Friday night with a toast to daughters by
POMEROY Chamber of m the church social rooms.
Mrs . W. H. Pernn with her
Co~merce Monday at noon at Mrs. John Terrell and Mrs. daughter, Beth, giving the
Metgs Inn.
Rose Ginther greeted and toa st to the mothers. Mrs. Don
TUESDAY
offered each guest a small hat Thomas and daughter, Becky,
RACINE Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, replica name tag and a hatbox sang "0 Mother Ilea~" acwtll meet in regular session at program . Mrs. Ben Neutzling companied by Mrs. Neutzling
7:30p.m. Tuesday. All Master gave the welcome and table and Mrs. Ginther read two
Masons are invited. ·
grace.
poems, "l'v!other" and "A
· SPECIAL Meeting, MidCookte or a Kiss".
dleport Masonic Lodge _363, 7
Debbie Werry gave a tribute
'J'
to her mother and then
p.m. Tuesday. Work m entered apprentice degree. All •
Master Masons invited.
Q
presented her with a carnation
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
~
,

Int ermediate : Ja y ne
Hoeflic h, Bradbury , Meigs
County , fir s t;
Allyson
Aldridge, Jaokson-Gity,-grade
4, second ; and Russell
Faulkner, Zaleski Elementary, grade five , third.

A nnit!ersary wilt

111111

let's Talk Soon

DALE C. WARNER

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5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 12, 1975

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday , May 12, 1975
;-:·:-:-:.;::.;-:::::::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:···:·:::·:·:::·::::::::::
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Bullets kill Celtics
.. LANDOVER, Md (UPil "It's got to be a championship
feeling any time you beat
Boston," a former champion
Boston Celtic said after the
Washington Bullets ousted the
defending champions 98-92
from the NBA playoffs.
The ex-Celtic was K .C.
Jones who coached the Bullets
to their 4-2 series triumph over
his old team and now laces a
tiUe showdown with either the
Chicago Bulls or the Golden
State Warriors.
But Jones acknowledged a
touch of regret -that his
Bullets' Eastern Conference
championship came at the
expense of his former team,

his lor!ller teammate, Boston
Coach Tom Heinsohn, and his
former coach, Red Auerbach.
"The br.eaks went our way,"
Jones said, "but I don't think
it's any great satisfaction
beating my old teacher and
teammates . I feel bad for
them just like I did for the
teams that lost to us when I
played for the Celtics. But it's
great to be on top."
Heinsohn said only, "the
Bullets are a fine basketball
team" and declined to speculate on the outcome of a
Washington showdown with
either Chicago or Golden
State, who are now tied :l-3 in
tlleir senes.

Linesoores
Bv Um1ed Pre ss lnterrnational
Nat1nnal LAaau,:.
Los Ange les
023 IIQ-7 10 0
P rttsburgh
000 000 OOQ- 0 8 I
Sutton (7 1) and Ferguson .
Brett , .Moose (6), McDowell fB I
and Sanguill en LP Brett (2 2) .
Crncr natl
200 000 000 - 2 6 0
New York
010 100 Ol x- 3 50
Brllrngham , McEnaney (8 )
and Bench ; Seaver (4 31 and
Grote. LP -- Bill ingham (3 2)
HRs-- Rose (2nd) , Mtlner Ordl

Sutton headed
to 20 ·winners

San Francsc 210 000 OQO-- 3 10 0

St LOU&gt;S

400 000 OOK- 4 7 2

DEADLINE SET .
All boys interested In

Lavelle (8) and
Rader , ·Hill (8) , Forsch , Hra
bosky (B) and Stmmons WP Forsc h (3 31 LP - Falc:one (J
21 HR- Simmons (&lt;l thl
Falcone ,

Houston

By WALLY HALL
UPI Sports Writer
Don Sutton has never won 20
games in a season but if his
ego has anything to do with it
he will this year and not by
hypnosis as the popular consenus might think.
Sutton became the National
League's first seven-game
winner, including three
shutouts, with a 7-0 Los
Angeles victory over the
Pittsburgh Pirates Sunday.
Last season Sutton had a 6-2
record at this time but went
into a slump. He came out of it
to stop Pittsburgh twice in the
National League pennant
series and credit, undue according to Sutton, was given to
a Los Angeles hypnotist.
"That was a vastly overwritten, over-proclaimed
segment of my life which I
wish everyone would leave
alone," Sutton, who has only
one loss so far, said.
He then gave credit where
he felt it was due. Sutton said
Walt Alston gave him "the
biggest ego boost of my
career" when he kept Sutton
in rotation through the slump
and told him: "II we're going
to win it all you'll have to

to a 55-40 lead. The proud
defending champions whittled
their deficit to live points in
the early minutes of the final
period but Washington's two
sharpshooting guards, Kevin
Porter and Phil Chenier, fired
back with 21 of their combined
total of 45 points to nail down
the win.
The Bullets led the entire
way Sunday just as they did in
the series when they won the
opening game m Boston and
never relented. Their big man,
Elvin Hayes, paced them in
the first hall with 15 points but
then hit only a single free
throw in the final two periods.
But Chenier ,-with 24 points,
Porter with 21 and four
teanunates registering double
ligures never let the Celtics

Celtic
veteran
John
Havlicek con~eded Boston
was outplayed by the younger
Bullets. " They proved it.
They're· the best team." He
also said he intends returning
lor another year next season.
An erratic first half in which
the Celtics committed 14
costly turnovers and shot only
34.1 percent helped the Bullets

000 120 003-

6

playing Pony League
Baseball in the MeigsMason Pony
League

a0

effort against the Pirates.
Montreal
ooooooooo- o 5 1
Dierker (4 JJ and May, Blair,
"I wanted to throw 63 pit- DeMola 191 and Foole LP chesinseveninnings,"hesaid Blair II" HR - Metzger ltstl .
after97throwsintheentire Phlldelpha 210000000- 3 84
ta
40030000x - 7 81
game. HJ'm not supposed to Atlan
Tw,tchetl .
Htlgendorf
(d) ,
pitch-that much."
Schueler (6) and Boone . Capra

Association this summer
are reminded that tbe
deadline for sign up and
entry fees is this comiog
Thursday, Mayl5.
Anyone who bas not paid
his entry fee should get In
eontaet with Ed Kennedy,

(3 41
and
Pocoroba
!...PTw rtchell ( 3 4) . HRs- Williams
&lt;2nd ), Garr (2nd) .

Cardinals 4, Giants 3

Si&gt;OHTS TODAY

CINCINNATI (UP!)
ISascball ~' Hannan Nadarko won the featured
'!'ran~
at Eastern, ninth race at River Downs
Sunday by beating Mayme's
Waverly at Meigs.
Track - · Meigs girls Joy to the wire by one and onehalf lengths. Lot 0 Song was
at Gallipolis.
thir\1.
.
Nadarko
was
timed at I :12
:·:::;:::;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:·:
for the six furlongs and
International League
returned $10.60, $5.40, · $3.40.
Slandmgs
By UPI
The 7-7 daily double of Gold
w. I. pet. g .b .
Peep
and Billie Lue paid
Roc h es ter
15 9 625
Tidewater
17 11
607
$94.60.
Syracuse
16 12 571 1
The 6,593 thoroughbred
Charl eston
14 14
soo 1
R 1ch mond
14 14
500 3
racing fans wagered $532,488.
Paw tu cket
13 13 .500 3
In Saturday's racing,
Tol edo
11 16
407 51;.,
Memphis
10 21 323 Blf 2 Dontallah won the featured
Saturday's Res ults
race, three lengths ahead of
Rochester 4 Toledo 3

flag them down.
Heinsohn blamed the loss on
the lax play of the Celtics in
the first half when they
weren't able to get their first
field goal until more than 31f.!
minutes were gone and at one
time trailed by 18 points.
"We threw the ball away,"
he said. "We weren't moving.
We were very, very lethargic.
Our whole team was a split
second off in its reactions."
Jones thought his Bullets
outthought the Celtics.
"We got smart fast," he
said. "That's the smartest
team in the whole league.
They take advantage of
everything if you let them. We
had to learn fast how to beat
them at their own game. We
did a pretty good job of it."

Memphis 2 Trdewater 1
Pawtucket 2 Sy ra c use 1
Char les to n 8 Rtchmond 1

Sunday's Results
Roches ter 3 Tol ed o l
Syracuse 4 Pawtucket 2
R1chrpond 2 Memphrs 0 , Sin
inn, ra in
Charleston 4 Trdewater I , Jst ,
7 1nn
Tr d ewa t er 2 Charleston 1. 2nd .
7 mn

Class AA Sectional results
Fteld Events
Shot Put 1
No xe l.
Wheelersburg
2
Me e k ,
Wheelersburg
3.
Fr!lz,
Ironton , 51 - Jlt::l, Drscus - l
Meredrth, Belpre
2 Fritz ,

Gallipolrs 49 , Rock Hrll 45,
Whee lersburg 33 , Oak Hill 26,
W e ll st on
22 , Belpr e 22,
waverly 19 , Shertdan Ia ,
Jackson
16 , Minford
16 ,
Warr en 14 , Portsmouth West

Ironton . 3 Noxell , Wheelers 12, wash&lt;ongton Court House
10, Meigs 8, Federal Hockrng
I Marti. Washmgton CH . 2 8, Vmton County 6. New
M&gt;llendorf. lronlon 3 Eberts , LeK&gt;nglon 1. McClain 1,

burg , 146- 81 '2; Pole Vault -

Vmton County1 , 13s a3.u ndLong
Jump
e rs ,
Ga l lipolis .
2
Valentine ,
Galltoolrs J . Ke lley , . Port s
mo~th W 22 73~ , H 1gh Jump1 Meadows , Sheridan
2
Campbell, Oak H ill 3. Pun
nell , Hillsboro , 6 6
Runnmg Events

.'

•'

,. '
• I

Frosty Bandit: Erin Hickory
was third.
·
- -Petare Blue won the first
race and Antendate the second
to return $168 In the dally
double on the combination 6f 3
and 4.
The crowd of 7,003 wagered
$616,498.

Life insurance:

Got too
·much?
Call 1 NtUonwldl ,1genl tor
1 conr+dtnlltl ,nalytlt.
PaylniJ too much?

WHA

Plavotf ' Sclledule and
Results
Bv Un•ted Press International
(All Times EDT)
(Final Rounct-Best of Seven&gt;
Quebec vs. Houston
(Houston leads series, 3-0l
Sat May 1Q-Houston 2 Quebec
0
Mon , May 1 2 ~at Quebec , 8. 05

Danger·

ou1 jtps? Find out FREE.

pm

x Wed ., May 14 ~ at Houston ,
a JO p m
;~~, Fn ., May 16- at Quebec, 8· 05
p m.
x Sat , May 11- at Houston ,
B 30p .m .
:~C·If necessary

N•hon••d• Lolt

C-...ny ,

I'O~t Oll•u Colwmllot~. 011•0

N wCO~P'JiRft
•

~~w,.,.u

•

OPT

AT NOON ON THURS.l-EAST COURT
ST POMEROY

FoW'consecutlveextra-base
Pomeroy Rt. 3 before
hits, including a two.,.un home san o,ego ooo 010 oro- 2 a 1 Thursday. All entry money
100 yard dash - I. Saun
run by Ted Sunm'ons m' th Chicago
000 010 ooo- I 9 0
ders . G allipOl iS . 2
Burns ,
'
e
F reisleben (2 3) and Hundley ,
must be turned in to Mr. Hillsboro 3 John son , Ironton
,
first inning accounted lor all Bonham 13 21 and Hosley . HR Kennedy by this lime.
to 2. 220 yard dash - t
Saunders ,
GallipOlis
2.
the Cardinals' runs and Hosley ( Jsn
Johnson , Ironton 3 R Vinson ,
allowed them to slip by the
Amencan League
·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.·:::::;.;::·:=:·:=:·:=:·:::::::::::::.;:::: Ironton , 23.2. 440 yard dash Giants, despite a 10-l!it attack list Ga(llel
1 Valentine, GallipoliS . 2.
Mrnnesota
040 010- 6 a o
Jordan , Sher1dan • 3. Jew1tt ,
led by Von Joshua win three. Ball more
000 013 000- 4 6 0
Hillsboro . 51 9; 880 yard run The Cardinals, with Luis
Blyleven (4 .1) and
Borg .
I Johnson , Wellston 2 Maple,
m ann . Cuellar , Johnson (51 and
Waverly 3 Woods , Hillsboro ,
Melendez hitting his second Hendri cks LP - Cuellar (2 21 .
1 sa s. Mile Run 1 Me .
triple while playing in place of HR --OeC&gt;nces I2nd I
Fann, Rock Hdl 2 Marl in.
Oak Hill J. Map le, Waverly ,
las t season's National League (2nd Game)
4· 34 6 , Two .Mile Run 1
Rookie-Of-the-Year, swept the M1nesota
000002100- J 90
Sauers, Jackson 2. Par lor ,
three game series.
·
Ballmore
010 50003x - 912 0
By Clarice Allen
Wheelersburg J B McFann ,
Paz1k, Campbell C41 and
Harry Rose, Akron, spent 8 Rock Hill , 10 ' 04 .7 ; 120 hrgh
Astro's&amp;,ExposO
Lundstedt , Borgmann( 7) ,
h urdles · - 1. D
V i n son ,
Roger Metzger drove in Palmer (5 21 and Duncan LP - few days wtth Mr . and Mrs. Ironton . 2 Bond, Rock Hi ll. 3.
Paz 1k (O. lJ . HRs - S v · t 4th George Genheimer.
Lackey. Federal Hock rng , 15 .
three runs and had as many &amp; ~t h )
I. 180 low hurdles 1 o
hi · 1 di
David Baker has joined the Vrnson . Ironton 2 Whit lach,
ts, tncu ng a home run, to (11 mnings)
air force and is' in basic Me1gs 3. Fa uhre·r , H1llsboro,
complement Larry Dierker's Ch1cago 101 ooo ooo 01 - 3 11 J
21.4; BBO -relay 1 Ironton
Anyone who has sex once, just once. can get syphilis or gonorrhea.
five-ltitter and lead the Astros Clevlnd 000 000 200 02- ' 12 0 trainmg at Lackland Air IAllen, R. Vinslon, D Vinson ,
Osteen.
Forster
(1)
and F
B
T
Johnson) . 2 Hillsboro
J.
VD
IS spreadmg through our neighborho ods H1ttmg people you'd least
over 1he Expos. It was the Down.ng , Kern, Buskey (!O J
orce ase, exas.
Warren, 1: 32 9; Mrle Relay seventh time this season the and Ashby WP- Buskey 12-01
Mr . and Mrs . James I Hillsboro !Captain, Kelch.
expect to get 1t.
LP -· Forster (2 21 HR - Carty Ridenour have retl.lrned home Woods , Jew1tt l. 2 Wellston . 3
Pillars of soc rety are fallrng at o ut-of-town co nventron s and brlngmg VD
Expos have been shut out.
13rd l
Minford, 3·35 6
Braves 7, Pblllies 3
alter a five day vacation in
Team Scoring
home to the rr wrves Frndmg that hard to believe is one of the reasons rt's
Milwauke
ooo 000 ooo- o 5o Tucson, Arizona, as guests of __,_ro_n_l_on__7•_·_H_•_IIs_b_o_ro__
s6 ,
s
preading so fast.
Earl Williams hit a two-run Kansas Ctv ooo 300 to•- ' 9 0
home run and Ralph Garr
Champion, Rodr.guez 17l and the Tracy-Wells Co. of
So don't thrnk rt's not your problem.
Porter . Busby IS 21 and Mar Columbus.
COBRAS LOSE FIRST
Antrbrotrcs cure VD and prevent rts spreadmg. Sort's rronrc there's so much
added a three-run homer to tmez LP- Champ ion 14-21
MOUN
account for all the Braves'
Mrs . Grace Gumpf has
T VERNON, N.Y.
VD alound when rt's so easy to prevent or cure
earned runs but four Phillie 6~~:~11
~~t ~~~ ~~ 1 ) ~il moved to her new trailer home (UP!) - The New York
If you're curious or confused , get info rmation or a pam ~t at most
errors allowed them the winJenk&gt;ns. Foucault 161 and in Coolville from the Lodwick Apollos handed the Cleveland '· pharmacres or a hea lth clinic. If you need he lp, see a doctor.
win.''
Cobras a ~defeat Saturday •
In other games New York ning margin. Buzz Capra gave ~~~~berl~ ·l. Lo~;~~~r wa/W ~~~d apartment.
Freehan
WP
Jenkms
IS
21
Robert
Allen,
Ashland,
Ky
.,
the first loss for Cleveland in
downed Cincinnati 3-2, St.
up three runs in the first two LP- Lolich 13-21 HRs- Bur spent a recent weekend with the Amencan Soccer League.
Louis edged San Francisco 4- innings but held on lor the win. ·roughs 16th I. Cardenas llstl ,
c0 b ra rookie fullback
Freehan 14th! , Smalley 11s11. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen.
3, Houston beat Montreal IH&gt;, Padres 2, Cubs 1
Hector. Torres watched Bill Grieve l3rdl
Mrs. Opal Eichinger and Manuel Reynosa mis-ehested
Atlanta downed Philadelphia
· ooo 102 002- 5 10 2 Laura Jean recently called on a ball into his own net for one
7-3 and San Diego slipped by Bonham intentionally walk Boston
Chicago 2-1.
Steve Huntz to pitch to him. ca~~~nil~ 31 ~~~o~%-;;,;e;y~ Mr. and Mrs. Larry Wolf and sco~e t!klmmanuel Rakitzog ou
a perfect cross . .
Sutton received help from With Dave Winfield on second Songer. scott 171. Figueroa12 181 children, Racine.
Sl.
Torres
caJmly
drove
a
single
~n~~flc':;
~i-Smger
D.
D.
Cleland
and
Mrs
from
Roberto
Ellines for the
151
Ron Cey who went 3-4 inColumbus, vislted _o'-th_e_r_s_co_r_e·- - - - - - - - ' - - : - - - -- - - - -- - - - - - ---_:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
cluding a triple and a run- into right field in the eighth New York 010 002 200- 5 9 2 Carpenter,
tl
'th
1 11
inning to gtve the Padres the Oakland
006 ooo tO• - 1 12 1 recen Y wt Denze C e and.
scoring double.
May , Tidrow 131, Lyle 171
Mrs. Letha Wood, Mrs. Bob
The Los Angeles Dodger win. Tim Hosley accounted for
and Munson; Blue , TOdd (7) w0od
dM
dM
an
r. an
rs. Roy
pitcher said he had intended to the lone Cub run with a solo and Tenace, Fosse 181 WPput out the least amount of home run in the fifth inning. Blue 17 11 . LP-May 12-21 HRs Christy attended the wedding
- - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - -, - - - ---B_o_n_ds_ls_th_I_._R_ud_i_l_3r_d_l_--. of Miss Jan Betzing and John
1 Sheets at Hemlock Grove .
Mr. and Mrs . Douglas
t ,
u E N E AA L A E V E N U E S H A A I N G p L A N N E 0 U 5 E R E p O ji.f
Wickham, Richmond, were
Bad habits are as easy to 'get rnlo as they are hard 1~7
The extr a operators we ~e ed to serVICe your exira calls
get out of.
cost us money A cdst that shows'up on your phone brll
to
er.courlgt
C:I!IZtn
PlrtiCIPBIIOn
dal.,moniOg
your goyern11"18rrt's
GenMal
Revenue
Shanng
PfOIIIdes rn
federal
f!Jnds d1rectly
to local{~"'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ recent overnight guests of Mr,
L1ke_cal ltng directory assrstance when you don't
d~tcrlmlrwtlion In ....
tl1ne fundi mey be llnl to
and Mrs. B. K. Ridenour and
As part of the monthly serv&lt;ce charge Last year mil irons
20220
absolutely have to. You try 11 once or tw,ce And before
of consumer dollars were wasted on unnecessary
' .
·
SALEM TOWNSHIP
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
you know rt you're·hooked
rnformation requests
,_.
"VE'"'
and Mrs. John Wickham.
After a whrle you don't thmk tw &lt;ce abou t p&lt;ck1ng up the
And all of those dollars came out of your pocket
ICJ 0 PERA liNG J
)i'ffi.Sii'S~HA~R~INii;G'~A~YM;.i"~';i\Oi;;F~~$2'?,3~33;;.00~===-,;:- - : - : - - --t-----1-_::MA::&gt;:_NT:::
EN::A::NC::E_j fO~ THE s1xr H EN TITLEMENT PERioo JuLY 1 ,, 75 ltumvGw JUNE 30
•
Bob Bill Lee, Bashan,
phone and ask&lt;ng us to find phone numbers that, lhree
If that doesn't make you mad e nou gh to cutit out alto Hnli PLANS fO SPEND lH£S£FUNDS FORTHE PURPOSESiiHOWN
recently spent 8 night With
times out of four. you could f&lt; nd yourself. In the phone oook , gether , 1sn't II enough to make you cut 1t down?
And people are abus ,ng d~re ctory assrs\ance now like
V ACCOUNT NO 36 J Os:J 009
and Dennis
MrS. Arthur
Orr •was
1390 Mr,
Mrs.
Long
never before (O ne customer called us 1.460 t&lt;mes in one
month alone')
.
, "'"'"
~~~EN~H~~~~~H~;
honored with a stork shower
The
trouble
is,
callrng
d~rec\ory
ass
&lt;
stance
needlessly
MEIGS COUNTY
Friday evening at the fire
0
ends up costmg you money
LANGSVILLE, OHIO 45741
house. Hostesses were Mary
Because phone in'form atron isn 't free .
Newell and Darlene Justice.
Mrs. Long received many nice
gifts.
IIJ,,JUJ,fl,jj,,,,JJ,/,IIJ,,IUJ,,UJ/.,,,u,,,,Jt/,JJJ,Jd

Chester
News Notes

Kick

~~~~l~===i====

~

(

'

1 II

I

,

to_. Aima E. Smith, clerk.

S'.IPPIII'IIng docul!lfli.t••,. op.n 1or ~ublic .el'lltl"'-

Local Bowq ·

"' CODY al lhll ••JIO"I. 100

,, Rt. 1 Langsville, Olio 45741

Friday N1te
M1xed League
May9,1975
Standings

il;gn.nn b1 c hotf biCUt~ oG

Team
No . 6

12
12
10

No 3
No
No '1

·

E. Smith

"

w.
8

'

I

I

•

'

L.
4
4

6

8

Karl Grueser &amp; Son
Plum bing
6 10
5
0
16
High game, men Edd1e
Wt1rf.t , 212 and 191 ; women,
, oonna McF~rland 181. Opal
Hupp 178.
1 H1gh sertes. men, Eddie
Whitt 559 , Ken Mohler 500.
women , Opal Hupp 502, Donna
' McFarland 475

IIIIo
G EN EAA l

A E V E·N U E

SH A AI N G

P LA N N E 0

U5 E

A EP0 RT

(Q 0f'Efi-'TING I

THESE fUNDS FOA THf: PIJ"I'OSU SHOWN
/ ACCOUNT

MIAlTH

By Helen Bottel

This Hoax Is No Joke!
Dear Helen:
My wife got a telephone call that nearly wrecked our
marnage. The man on the line said he was a doctor from the
state Depa.rtment of Health , reporting that her husband had
vene.real dtsease and she must see her family physician immediately.
. y.'hen she confronted me, I had the devil of a time convmcmg her it was some lool'sidea of a practical joke
She ~ight still suspect me except that our docto~ gave me
a clean btll of health .
. In case other families have been bothered with this type of
Sick hoax, please prmt a warrung : don't believe phony "doctors" on the phone !
What kind of person would think up such a move?
FIGHTING MAD
.

Dear Helen:
Telephone pranksters, obscene callers- I had my fill! So I
bought the loudest, most piercing police whistle 1 could find
~d keep it by my P_hhone . When I get a nut on the line, j
literally blow the whistle on him . II everyone would do this
hoaxers might desist in the interest of saving their ear drums:
- SMART SINGLE
Dear Helen:
If women want to work on men's construction jobs it 's fine
with me, but do they have to take on the tough waysof ~en ?
I lost my way and entered a restricted site that was off
limits to the public. Acouple of women in hard hats let loose a
stream of obscenity that outdid most males, telling me to "get
the so and so off the property, you dumb such and such broad!"
· Is there some psychological reason for this kind of thing?
-BLASTED
Dear Blasted :
Maybe they wanted to prove their ''manhood ." - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
Our neighbors are from Europe. They never tire of telling
us !herr ways are best. It seems Americ.ans are nothings:
people in THEIR country are cleaner, take more pride in their
work, train their children better, have less crtme 1 superior
schools, smarter and more honest leaders, cleaner air - tbey
even make the best beer and sausage.
What do we say to these overbearing people? All they like
about the U.S. is the fat paychecks they bring home every
week. - UNCLE SAM'S FRIEND
Dear U.S.F.:
Since you can't change these overbearing people, why say
anything~ (Though I'd imply, "European, go home" when
they push their views on you.) - H.

's Pointers
BY P\JLL Y CRAMER

Who has design for
coat hanger trellis?
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POU.. Y - I hope
someone will tell me how to
make a trellis from wire coat
hangers. I lost my directions
and cannot remember how it
is done. - RETA.
DEAR RETA- I am sure
some readers will kuow how
this Is done and that we will
soon hear frol)l them:
POLLY.
' •
DEAR POLLY - We are
told to do our part in conserving energy by keeping our
heat turned down, save
electricity, preserve water,
recycle paper, bottles and
cans. Yet, we see some soap
commercials on television
demonstrating the use of
liquid detergents that show
dishes being washed and
rinsed, one by one, while a
steady stream of water keeps
running from the faucet. My
Pet Peeve concerns this kind
of example being shown to all
- young and old - who are
actively interested in conservation and preserving our

natural resources. - AUCE.
DEAR POLLY - Do tell
Mrs. P. T. she can clean her
alabaster by using either
talcum powder or corn starch.
The decorator who told me
this said, as you did, not to put
the ttem in water. That might
cause it to "melt." Use a soft
brush to clean in the crevices.
-·,
- SANDRA.
DEAR POLLY - I find that
furniture pohsh sold m bottles
goes further than that in
aerosol cans. I also have read
questions concerning the
adverse effects of propellants.
I u~e a soft cloth to apply the
polish. Since furniture does
not require polish each time
one dusls I have a way to
make my polish go a long
distance. After dusting I shake
the cloth into my outdoor trash
receptable and then store the
cloth m a wide-mouthed glass
jar in a closet. The polish
permeates the cloth and is
good for a number of dustings.
Placing the cloth in a sealed
container avoids an odor in the
closet and, more importantly,

,,

•

MAINTEMNCE

A

·us...

\!D. isn't what

tiji;t
GEnERAL TELEPHOnE

101 Subm•tP'090"1s lo•lundoll9 conaldertlionby:July 10, 1975

Helen Help

+++

•

ETR
OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE

I

w.~::.

Dear Mad:
Your hoaxer is either screwed up mentally or thinks it
~oul~ even the score on an old grudge - and figures a VD rap
IS qwcker and meaner than turning you in to the IRS lor a tax
aud1t.
Since I understand others have received similar phony
calls, here's :•assurance : Neither the State Department of
Health nor pnvate physicians follow this procedure in alerting
mates to possible infection . - H.
P. S. How to handle a telephone hoaxer? Read on:

r~N~el~so:n~v~d~le~Y~o~rk~O,~P~i~k:et~o:n~o~~~~-·~~~~~~·~~~~~~=~:~=~~

uther

-.,

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

Nadarko wins featured 9th

NO 363-053-012

SUTTON TOWNSHIP
TOWNSHIP CLERK
MEIGS COUNTY
RACINE, OHIO 4Sn1

SYRACUSE WINS
, In independent baseball
action Sunday at Syracuse
Municipal Park Syracuse
defeated Portland 6-2. Letart
will play Syracuse Sunday,
·May 18, at Syracuse Pa•k.

'

.OPENe

Now you can have alf your fall and winter
garments dry cleaned and stored free of
·charge until needed later.
Bring l~em In NOW. Then pick. up lofer anq PAY
ONLY the cleaning charge.

6 DAYS

A WEEK

INSURED FUR STORAGE
For. '-11 Your Fur• Available H•r•

I· _'

MON. thru SAT.

D&amp;DMEAT
830 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

".

.'

. Robinson's Ceaners
· 216 E. 2nd

992-S~I

POMEROY

.u uu: :. ••:: s c

Social
Calendar

Two win district honors

Two Me1gs County stxth
graders were hrst place
MONDAY
wumers in the Distnct 16 PTA
POMEROY ELEMEN- cultural arls competition.
TARY PTA, 7:30 p.m.
Judging results were anMonday with safety patrol-to nounced Saturday a t the
be reeogmzed by band spnngdistrictconference held
studentS of David Bo;;,en. at the Zaleski Elementary
Installation of officers; School.
refreshments by mothers of
Winnmg first tn the visual
sixth graders; public invited. arts
competition,
inH
termediate division, was Beth
UNITED Perrin, 12-year-old daunhter
M thEAT
d. H
~
e 0 tst Women, Heath of the Rev. and Mrs. W. H.
Church M1ddl
t 7
•
epor • · 30 Perrrn, and a Pomeroy
p.m. Monday at the church. ) Elementary School student
Mrs. Nan Moore , program Jayne Hoeflich 10 daughter:
leader, Mrs . Billy Jo of Mr. and Mrs.' Bob Hoeflich,
Krawsczyn
devo!tonal and a st'xth grader at the
Iea d er • and Mrs. Grace Bradbury School, won first
French, Mrs. Lavma Davts, place in the intermediate
and Mrs . Garnet Entsminger di
f h
•
vrston
or er ptano comhOS te sses.
position ' "The B'rcen te nma 1
RIVER VIE

Waltz".
Both entnes will now enter
sta te competition .with the
resulloi to be announced at the
Ohio PTA Conference to be
held in the fall . Thts is the
second time Miss Perrin's art
work and the third !tme Miss
Hoeflich's music have gone
in to state competrtion .
Ribbons were awarded in
the first, second and third
1
Paces
of eac h division in the
dt's trr'ct compett.tton. The
resulls were as follows :
VISUAL ARTS
Pnmary Division (ftrst
through third graders)·.
Rrchard Parkinon, Zalesk 't
Elementary, grade 2, ltrst ;
Doug
Mullet,
Coalton
Elementary School grade 2
second· and Kelly 'Jo Moore '

Parkview Elementary School
in Jackson County, grade 3,
thtrd .
Intermediate Divtson
lfourth through stxthgrades ):
Beth Perrin,
Pomeroy
Elementary School, Meigs
County,
first;
Rus~ell
Faulkner, Zaleski Elementary, gr~de five, second; and
Jamie McDonald, Coalton
Elementary, grade 4, thtrd .
Junior High (Seventh and
· hth
d
ul
etg
gra e) Pa a Exline,
J k El
fi~~tson ementary, grade 7,
MUSIC
P
J
·
nmary: oanne Ztmerly,
Jackson Ctty Element r
a Y
School, first grade, rirst ;
LeRay
Bay,
Za)eskt
Elementary grade one
'
'
second

Fami/11 week
tS bserved

~~.:~;~~~i~~;i!r·~~O pr~:~;~lyG~Oa~~nded ~~~

Edwina Scott, 441 Beech St.,
Middleport. Installation of
officers. Cultural report by
Well
entitled
Texanna
"Friendship in Beta Sigma
Phi". Hostesses, Mrs. Scott
and Mrs . Iris Payne.
''
ANNUAL Mother-Daughter
banquet of St. John and St.
Paul Lutheran Churches will
be held at 6:30 Tuesday at the
St. Paul's Church. Each
person is to take either one or
two. covered dishes with the
American Lutheran Church
Women to furnish the meat.
TUESDAY
AMERICAN Legion ·
Auxiliary, Lewts Manley Post,
7 p. m., home of Mrs. Campbell Harper.
WEDNESDAY
WHITE Rose
Lodge,
Wednesday, 1:30 p.m. at the
American Legion Hall in
Middleport.
POMEROY - Middleport
lions Club, Wednesday noon,
Meigs Inn.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
Wednesday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple, followed by
Bosworth Council, Royal and
Select Ma_sters, 8:30 p.m. at
the tem~le. All regular
companions and officers
urged to attend.

fellowship at the Letart Falls
Community Center Sunday in
observance of family week.
Games were played during
the afternoon and at 6 p.m. a
dinner was served. The Rev.
Steve Wilson gave the prayer.
The Rev. Howard Shtveley
had scripture and prayer to
open the evening servtce.
Dallas Hill led in group
singing and there was a
program for the devotional
servtce. Mrs. Betty Shiveley
was at the ptano. Readings
were given by Bernice Roush,
Donna Hill, Dee Spencer,
Lucille Rhodes and Mrs .
Shiveley .
'
ARRIVED SUNDAY
Mr and Mrs. Raymond
Zirkle, Warner-Robbins, Ga.,
arrived Sunday and wiU be
spending several days here
with Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Duckworth
and
other
rel~·tives .
They
came
especially lor the funeral
services of Mrs. Jean Zirkle,
Pomeroy.

----------the possibility of spontaneous
combustion . I do not have to
use water, detergent and
electricity to wash the cloth. I
simply toss it out when I feel
its usefulness has ended and
then I start with another rag. I
keep one in a container upstairs and another downstairs.
- JEAN F.
DEAR POLLY- When you
have emptied a plastic bottle
of dishwashing detergent fill it
with water and put it in the
car. There is enough detergent
left to make soapy water that
is very handy for washing
dirty hands when out on the
road.
Also, outdated credit cards
make fine identification plates
lor luggage, notebooks or key
chains. Cut out only your
name and address and attach
to the label with a good
coating of household cement
or punch a hole in it for a chain
to go through. - MRS. L. W.
DEAR MRS. L W.- Yours
Is Indeed a ,good idea for using
old credit cards except for the
part about using on a key
chal~~; I, too, had my name
and address on my key chain
untO my car was stolen and a
detective told me that was not
a smart thing to do. The car
thlel had my name ·and address. (aleng with my key) so
burglarizing my house would
be a cillch. The locks had to he
changed. Also do not save
wliOie old -credit cards. Cut
them up and throw them
away. - POLLY.

The !20th anniversary flf the
Middleport First United
Presbyterian €burch will be
celebrated on Sunday, June
29.
Plans lor the observ~nce
are being completed by a
committee composed of Mrs.
Mtldred Karr, Mrs. Maxine
Owens, Miss Judy Arnold,
Mrs. Lennie Haptonstall, J"hn
Fultz, Russell Lyons, Don
Vaughan , and the Rev. Dwight ·
Zavitz. The church was
organized on May 27, 1855, and
the present church building
was begun in 1859

banquet

20% OFF

eam gzven trophies

Trophies were presented at
the annual dmner of ·the
American Legion Auxiliary
bowling team held at the
Legion hall in Middleport
Friday mght.
First place team members
were Sherrie Might, Patty
Might, and Doris Halfhill,
sponsored by the Juniors of
the Auxiliary of FeeneyBennett Post 128. Second place
team consisted of Sandra
Might, Gerry Kessinger, and
Becky Drenner, sponsored by
Post 128, and the third place
team members were Pearl
Russell, Erma Hendricks and
Rose Hysell, sponsored by the
Racine Legion 602.

· ·--

Ingels Furniture

FOR THE
PROTECTION
YOUNEEOPlay it eafe and- sore.

It may be time to
have your present
policy updated,

Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. at' the
Meigs County Courthouse.

THURSDAY
MISSIONARY
Society,
Mount
Moriah
Baptis,
t
Church,
COMMITTEE lor the
Mentally Retarded, special 7:30 p. m. Thursday at the
meeting to complete plans for home of Mrs. John Moon .
promoting the levy and to hear
reports from all committees,

be celebrated by
Middleport church

LITERATURE
Primary: Brad McCorkley,
Jackson City, grade 2, first;
Melody Burnem , Salem
Center Elementary , Mergs
County, grade 3, second ; and
Cheryl
Eng le,
Zaleski
Elementary, grade 3, thtrd.
lntermed~a te : Brenda Caryl
Richards , Jackson C1ty , grade
6, first ; Jayne Hoefli ch,
Bradbury , Meigs Coun ty,
SON HONORED
grade 6, second; and Teresa
Mr.
and
Mrs. Roger Keller,
Fuller, Zaleski Elementary,
Route 3, Pomeroy , engrade 6, thtrd .
tertained Sunday evemng with
a party in observance of the
btrthday of therr son, Russell .
Guests were Miss Erma
Smtth, Mrs . Philhp Meinhart,
with Mrs. Thomas Werry then
Presented potted plants Mrs. Stella Kloes and Mrs.
responding wtth a tribute to were Mrs. Clara Karr , the Rose Ginther, Pomeroy; Mr.
her daughter. Jon Pernn and oldest mother; Mrs. Davtd and Mrs. Norman Rose ,
Nicky Rtggs were cast as Russell, the youngest, and Brdwell; Mr . and Mrs .. Don
fishermen. for a pantomime " Mrs . Perrin, the mother with Rose, Racine, and Mr. and
with the narration being given the most children present. Mrs . Ralph Keller, Chester
by Mrs. Phillip Memhart.
Also presented a plan t was Road.
Mrs. Paul Nease gave two Mrs . James Shato of
poems, "Be A Good Boy", and Gallipolis.
"John's Visit to a Musewn",
Mrs. Marvin Burl ha d
taken from a book of poems charge of the presentation of
compiled by her mother, the door pnzes and was assisted TO GRADUATES
late_Mrs. Horace Smtih, Sr. by Nicky Riggs and Jon
Hrs. Mon .- Fri., 9 to 5
Sal. 91o8
A smg-a-long was held under Perrin who pulled them from
Your Thom MeAn Store
the direction of Mrs. Nease a simulated fish pond. A vote
wrth a medley of familiar of thanks was extended to
songs being included.
Miss Erma Smith, general
chairwoman, by Mrs. Ginther.
The program concluded with
the song, "God Be Wi th You" ,
and prayer by Mrs. Ginther.
Trophy for high game went
to Doris Halfhill with 204.
Other trophy winners were
MAY DAYS VALUE AT
Gerry Kessinger, high series,
high average, and most improved; Patty Migh~ Sandra
Mtght and Judy McNickle,
perfect attendance; and Jane
Garnes, Denise Garnes, Linda
Ph. 992-2635
Middleport
Hysell, Juanita Justis, Judy
McNickles, Brenda Pettit ,
Elizabeth Atkins, Ruby
Hysell, and Ellen Tucker ,
partici pation trophtes.
Sandra Might accepted the
first place sponsors trophy for
the Junior Auxiliary , and
Albert Roush accepted the
Middleport Legion trophy .

~~~00~~~·~£~f!~~~:rfo Chu,.,.,.'Ch
cftj'a·s.s ho ftU
Lis• a.nnu·al
I

1
Colonial Williamsburg color
slide presentation.
TUPPERS Plains PTO Tlie
annual
motherFollowmg the dmner a
Monday, 7:30 p.m. Judge daughter dinner sponsored by contest on Proverbs was
Manmng Webster will_ speak members of the Happy conducted by Mrs . Paul
on the proposed 1.6 mtlllevy " Harvesters Class of Trinity Nease The program opened
for the mentally retarded.
Church was held Friday night with a toast to daughters by
POMEROY Chamber of m the church social rooms.
Mrs . W. H. Pernn with her
Co~merce Monday at noon at Mrs. John Terrell and Mrs. daughter, Beth, giving the
Metgs Inn.
Rose Ginther greeted and toa st to the mothers. Mrs. Don
TUESDAY
offered each guest a small hat Thomas and daughter, Becky,
RACINE Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, replica name tag and a hatbox sang "0 Mother Ilea~" acwtll meet in regular session at program . Mrs. Ben Neutzling companied by Mrs. Neutzling
7:30p.m. Tuesday. All Master gave the welcome and table and Mrs. Ginther read two
Masons are invited. ·
grace.
poems, "l'v!other" and "A
· SPECIAL Meeting, MidCookte or a Kiss".
dleport Masonic Lodge _363, 7
Debbie Werry gave a tribute
'J'
to her mother and then
p.m. Tuesday. Work m entered apprentice degree. All •
Master Masons invited.
Q
presented her with a carnation
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
~
,

Int ermediate : Ja y ne
Hoeflic h, Bradbury , Meigs
County , fir s t;
Allyson
Aldridge, Jaokson-Gity,-grade
4, second ; and Russell
Faulkner, Zaleski Elementary, grade five , third.

A nnit!ersary wilt

111111

let's Talk Soon

DALE C. WARNER

Big 22 cu. ft. Refrigerator

992-2143
102 W. Main
Pomeroy

IT WILL SOON BE

BIKINI
WEATHER
GALS!
Summer's just around
the corner ... now's the
time to get in shape for
those
pretty
new
swimsuits.
Let
us
"program" you for a
lovely new figure.

SIGN UP NOW

FOR

•1 0

A MONTH

Plus •..

OR

'30 FOR 4 MONTHS

UP TO

hrs.
~ON. - FRL 9-9

Trade In

SAT. 9-4

On .Your Old Refrigerator

I

MEIGS SLIM' ~N' TRIM
North 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 0.
'

•,

s1oooo

_

Prices Start At $399.95

'

�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 12, 1975

R- '1'lw&gt; flailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, May 12,1975
Nlltice ~oMALL bretu pupp ies to give
to good home. Phone 992
5629.

,
Apple Grove

News Notes

5 6 6tp
PUBLIC

SHOOT ,

DICK t'RACY

For Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifieds
Auto Sales
Sale
I
Busmess
e
's •
2 SIGNS Pomeroy
•

Me igs

OF

QUALITY Motor Co.·

..

'

•

- -- ~n---rrr-.---

_____________

TURf; TRIM
MOWER

By Bertha
Parker
r
Sabbath School attllndance
on May ,. 4 at the Free
Methodist! Church was 100.
• · Choir members present were,
15. Morning offering was
'153.16.
The Dan Hayman group of
singers were at the loca)
church Sunday evening. A
large crowd attended the
aervice.
Mrs. Florence Stahl of
Stockdale visited recently
with Mr, and Mrs. Norman
llchaeler.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Walker
.left Sunday for Indiana where
Mr. Walker is employed. Mrs.
Walker spent two weeks with
lierparenla,Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Howell.
·

T. Penn Deceased.
Notice is hereb y given t hat
Mollie Alice Penn of Route 3,
A lbany , Oh 10, has been duly
appointed AdministratriK of
the Est ate of Truman A llen
Penn , Jr aka Allen P enn aka
Allen T Penn , d eceased, late
of Route 3, Albany , Meigs
County , Oh10
Creditors are r equ 1r ed to
ftle the~r c la ims wtth said
· f idUc ia ry W1th1n four months .
Dat ed t his 1st day of May
197 5
M anning 0 . Webster
Judge
Court of Co mm on Pleas,
Pr Pbat e D ivis ion
Meigs County
(51 5, 12, 19, 3tc

PUBLIC NOTIC.E
r'JOt 1ce is hereby given that
the prelimi nary su bmi ssion of
the Ohio EPA FY 1976 Con
solidated
Envi ronmental
Programs Grant { in c luding
draft progr am commi tm ents
and strategies)
will
be
available for publtc v 1ewmg rn
the Ohio EP A Cen t ral and
Distr1ct Off1ces m Columbus.
Bowling Green , Twinsburg,
L ogan . and Dayton a_nd in the
li brar ies in th e count y seat of
each Oh io county for a period
of two week s f rom May i9~
1975 .to May 31. 1975 Com ments may be mad e in writing
by June 4, 1975 to Ohio EPA ,
Division of Interg ove rnmental
Administration , 361
East
Broad Street , ColumbuS / Ohi.o

The Laurel Cliff Health Club
wW meet May '15 at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Allen 43215,
1 ~1 12,
Eichinger.

Utilities pa id , 356 North 4th
Sf , Middleport , Ohio
5-11 lfc

2 BEORM trailer , close to
stores , school and swim ming pool. Call after I p .m .

992 5914

'

5·1Htc
J

BEDROOM frailer, real
n ice . Phone 992 -3324 .
5 · l l tic
.... ~--- -- - ---

'72.9Q&lt;KDJ

story frame home,

22''-3112 HP
Self- Propelled

basement .

'104.95&lt;KD)
POME !i'o y LAN o'M'A'II K

9 .. s_Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
dlil ~ Phone 992-2181 · .

1

-----

Mobile Homes for Sale
SELL your 1n0bile home for
cash . 15 homes wanted . 1958
thru 1972 models . Phone
(614) 446 -1425( Gallipolis .

J.9-78tf

2 BEDRM . mob ile Home . Will
sell with option to rent lot.
On Co . Rd . b_y Salem Center .
Phone 669 -4242 . Robert
Molden

5·11 6tp
1959 GREAT Lakes. 1Q x 50, 2

MAKE MOTHER happ¥ thiS

5

11 ·5tc

AKC
German
Sh ortha lr
pointer , male , 21~ yrs old
Tra ined , $50 . Phone 985

3934.

5

li e

·,

11 Jtp

and

workshop 24x32 , barn
35X40, large building
30x200, pond,• 2 free gas
wells. lots of building site,,
about all fenced. Minerals
$33.000
.
included. ONLY
TUPPERS PLAINS - , I
level acre, very nice t story ·

year with a living room suite
from Jack ' s Furniture .
Many styles and colors to
ctroose from . A.tl suites sale
priced , starting as low as
5139 .00 and up . Also, a nice
selection- of swivet rockers
at S89.95. Jack's Furniture &amp;
Main ,

fireplace, porch, garage,
lot 50x12S. S9,500.
POMEROY - 12x60 Mobile
Home, 3 BR, bath, expando
living fL ciir cond., wasfier
&amp; dryer, furnished. ONLY
$4.500.
IF THE PROPERTY YOU
ARE LOOKING FOR IS
HERE, FINE. IF NOT
PLEASE CALL US.
992-2259

Uphols tery Supply , 236 E.
Pomeroy ,

Phone 992·3903.

Oh io .

5·1·l0fc

MANURE
Loader ,
$200 .
Phone Reedsville, 378-6311

' 5·J1 .Jtc

5·11 ·3tc

-·----------------RE F RIGERATOR ,
Pho~e

Pets for Sale

Garage

home, lovely kitchen and
dining, 2 BR; bath , utility ,
R. , forced air heal, part
basemen!, HW floors.
JUST 513,500.
RUTLAND - Close to
shopping, 2 BR , bath,

bedroom , · front kitchen - - - - -·- ~ - ---- ·-----­
model Pr1ced to sell . Can be '
seen at Kingsbury Home 1 HuFF v etectt:"iC mower, in
5ales. 1100 E. Main Sl..
good condition . Phone 9n Pomeroy , Ohio, or cafl 992 2262.

)034

3 BR.

bath , utility , some car·
,peting, paneling &amp; tile, part

992 -7836 .

$50 .

carpeted,

paneled,

5-9 ·3tc HOUSE 'NEAR

--- -- --· - -- - --- - - - - ONE NEW mattress, used 6
weeks . Fits hospital bed .
AlsooneMartinbox . 12apt s
New Call 992 7560 .
~

5 11 ·5!p

tiled,

CHESTER.

OHIO . L shaped brick, 3
bedrm ., ranch style , rural
hom e .
1.5 acres , full
basement.
garage,
fireplace . Call 985 39 43

57

5tc

~

•

GLEN·R.

Merle Norman
Cosmetics

Bissell

lOlA'S
BEAUTY SALON

AWMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

John St., Next To
Grade School
992-2549 Syracuse, 0.

tREE ESTIMATES

PH. 949-5184

5·8-1 mo.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

1

·~--~~~H~i(~1~~~~~~~--?UH~-~-.;[~~~~;;~~

e~nces
.J. y .A. ·
._

.

5-d-1 mo .

~~P~rd's

NEIGLER
Building Supply

Greenhouse
In Syracuse
Now open for season Now
available- most var!eti_es
of vegetable plants &amp;
flowers plus potted flowers .
OUR SPECIALTY over
2,000 hanging baskets of
Petun 1e s, Ivy , Geraniums,
~ines, and Begonias

Racine, Ohio
We Build the Best and
Repair the Rest .
-Cabinets lnsta lied-

•

Call Before 7:30A.M.
Or After 6:00P.M.
949-1604
5-7-1 mo.

TOP QUALITY AT
LOWEST PR1CES
992-5776

4-17-lmo .

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES

HElL

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating
Free Estimates
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 949-2211
or 992-5700

'•

,.

..,.,•

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

S~ITH

NELSON
MOTORS, INC. -

Ph. 992 -2174

..
"
••

~

..••

r.o.

~

••

Chllsttr, Olllo
. Ph. 985-4,02

••
•
"'•

Home Bullcllni

,endGI'r .,._ ·
· &gt;·S-1 mo.

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

4-2 ·75

UTI'Lp: ORPHAN ANNIE

PHONE 992·2823
~omeroy,

o_.

,
•

OPEN9a.m . to6p .m.
Monday thru Saturday
We will pick up &amp; delivery.
Special low prices on all
mechanical ,.,ork.
·
5-l -1 mo .

'

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-POWERFUL

~,ro JOWllntl. IIA~DS
.,,:w.\!.,., 1.&amp;81\ ~.~·ll'IP...
AIID J. PIISTOII SU.W.E WAS PlUCI.ID

ROJI KU l.OCl!D ANO GUmiD stUDY...

VAltiSHUI ··.af C.l

',,'

nut tO nu ROW

Ol WHI.NC'l H£ Wllf1 ·· • •

t·A.·It-- IT SORT
0' M-'ICES M.'f H~
CK.liTU Just TO
TH\Nl 'lOUT IT ·

.

'IIIU.T PO 'f'&amp;P'OU
COUlD'l IU.PP'iNED
TO

~IM?

fi-'RD TO Slt.V.

IMY8E lME

GOII.INS

GOT HI».· I'YI!.

HEAIIII Tl1!'1'

LU.vE NO TltACE·

..

FREE ESTIMATES

0. J. lAUDERMILT
ROOFING

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown into Walls &amp; AMics
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

Pleasant Ridge
Pomeroy, Ohio

FREE ESTIMATES
Reasonable Rates

...
•

-·'
'

,,

Also Repairs On All
Riding Tractors

Is I roi,:Jin' ~er han'
too tiqht, Miss Melba?

St. --

Ohio

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

Nobod1..j'd Quess
in th' worl'! You
almos' a .e)( pert!

®
•

- - Sweepers , toasters , irons ,
all small appliances Lawn
mower , next to S tate High .
way Garage on Route 7.

-

Trimming, til
year s exper1ence . Insured,
free est imates . Call 992 -3057,
Coolv ille
Phone (1) 667
304 1
4-JO -tfc

nwnber

,..

22 Formerly

...

23 Celerity
25 Sardonic
grtn
26 Drop In a
maUbox
27 Hints
28 Stringy

LAWN mower repair. 308
Page St , Middleport . Phone
992 3509
I
4-16·30tc
'•

P &amp; J Home Mamtenance,
Refr 1geratlon ,
A.
c.
Heating . Phone 992 -J5D9.
4·16 -30tc

Maybe yoll1' life's pretty
good right now. But if you
LANE 'S GARAGE, Slate - - - -- - - - - - - - - -=--want to keep it that way,
Route 338 , Apple Grove, SE PTI C tanks and leach lines
installed . Also , field drain
Ohio . All k inds of mechanic
you've got to plan for it. And
tiles . A l l work guaran teed
work Phone 247 -2257 .
one
way you can do just that
Lewts Excavat1ng , Rt. l ,
5·8·12tp
Rutland , Oh io. Phone 742 is by signing up for the
- --------------- 3742
.
I
..J t:.PTI( TANKS CLEANED .
Payroll Savings Plan where
4-24 -26t c
ReasonablE: RATE S Phone
you work. An amount you
446 -47 82 Gallipolis . John
SHALLOW Wells dug, springs
Russell , owner .
specify will be set aside from
deve l oped and c1sterns
4 9-tfc
each paycheck and used to
installed to appro)(imately
18 tt Lewis Excavating, Rt 1 buy U.S. Savings Bonds.
1, Rutland Phone 742 -3742.
Then, when you're ready
4-2.4 -26tc
to stop working, you'll still
S EWING
MACHINE ;· be able to keep on living.

Real Estate For Sale

'
••

IF MAH PITCHE:R GOT ANY
OFFE:RS, WHICH IT. COULDN'r ~
BECUZ AH IS SO UNBEARABLE ff-

600TIFUL. ""'':~...;.:_:;
-

)) __,

.'
"
'
.'
".
'

..

''-'
•

.......'
'"

~

l

""

Bernice Bede Osol
Tueedoy, Moy 13, 1175
Allll!l (M•ch 21·Aprll II)
Someone yoo·n be dealing wllh
today will anger you. You'll
ke-ep it to yourself and
smolder, rather than let him
know.

TAURUS (April 20-Miy 20)
Don'llet a disagreement With a

19 Devoutness 38 "Good

zt Mistake

Night -"
%3 Elf
31 Rose essencE
2t Least
33 Cantinflas
affluent •
movie .
Z5 1938 Tyrone 31 Olga Juan
Power
· movie
37 Wall St.
27 Swil&amp;-atyle
watclldog
house
1abbr.)

pal over something material

jeopardize a friendship. Take
the lOss. If necessary .

G!MINI (May 21-Juno 20) I(
lhe boss_gives you a specific
order today. follow 11 10 the
tener. or you 're sure to Incur
his wrath.

CANC!R (J- 21·July 22)
Keep your opinions to yourself

now about something lhat does
no1 Involve you directly, bul
does affect a sensitive friend.

'"
•o

""
·"
,,.,
O..: fl

ou

'"

..
-~

"'

"'
'"
""

,,
''
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""

LEO

~~uly

23·Aug , 221

completely in the open will pu1·
some stumbling blocks In your
path today. H....,_, don't let
~im know yo"'re on to him.
VIRGO jAug. 23-lapl. 22)
Diplomacy and 1ac1 are called

32 wrath
33 La-,
Bolivia
34 Table
scrap
35 Prickly
herb
31 Fat
_ _,. _ 38- hatch
38 Sicilian
volcano
40 Principle
U Ex Mrs.
Bono,

for in an Important career
maHer or you will anger one
whose cg..operation Is essen~

tlal now.
LIIRA fltpl, 23·0ct. 23) Don'l

."
.'' '

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nor. 112)
You lend to be a bit too

"
Join the Payroll Silvlngs Plan.

.,

SAGITTARIUS (Now. 2S.O.C.

.

21) Try to see and understand
your mate's point of view on a
v1ta1 fam1ly issue that he feels
very strongly about.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22~.
11) Don't let yourself be rlllhe&lt;f
with tasks requ1ring tools to~
day. What you don't finish can
be completed later

..."

R

.

WK DO,

-.........

••

~

~·

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...

PISCES jFeb. 20-Morch ftl
set for your
tamily 1oday os lhe one they'll
The example you

'"
"'

..

"'

follow . If you're cranky M'td
short-tempered, expect lhe
same from them .

Your
Birthday
13, 1175
You will be much bolder and
enterprismg th ts year In
situationS that could Increase
your revenues. Substanttal
returns are probable If you
don't take foolish risks .

··~

.,

'"'

"'
"'

'

AXYDLBAAXI
LONGFELLOW

PNDGDP

WKDO

"'

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AQUARIUS (Jon. 211-Feb. Itt
·This is one of those days where
you won 't be as prudent .rtth
your resources as you should.
Some loss is likely.

UIIICI'Uilblo theoe f~a~r Jumbles,
letter lo oath oquue, to
farm four ordlnory wonlo.

c&amp;YPTOqUOTES
~

...,
..
•rl

possessive today with one
you 're emotionally involv8d
with. Loosen the reins or you'll
anger hrm

ant

One leiter simply ltlnda lor another. In lhls aalnple A Ia
·used for the lhne L's, X for the lwo O'a, elo. Sln1le letters,
opostrophn. lht lenl(h and formalioin 'o l lhe words sre all
h1nta. Eeoh dey the r&lt;!de letle~ ere.dlll'erent.

\

"

problems wl1 h before. Find

~W/MmltJE;-::'-==~ ,_J r:

II

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someone more reliable.

Someone who doesn't operate

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTB- Hen'• how to work It:

..",

----------------·

DF

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YWPWFFRNZ

I NEPOR I

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IWHOANYI

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ABNERNI

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YWPWFFDGZ . -PRNQOZY

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Yetiterday'• Ctnl 1r

te1

HAPPINESS LS A VEGETABL\N

LOOKING AT THE PRICE OF MEAT. - ABEL GREEN

I

Now arnnp the circled llltlla
to form tbe eurprlee - · ..
ledbfthe1bcrre=1'1

~,].A~~~M~~·=._j

I_

flllllll . . . . . .

LWOOF
. . . . . . . ., . .

J--• FRAMI

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(~
TONIC TYPING EFFKll'

..-····

""'-" .,..., a blloi,........,n'• in ,..,J tondltl.. ht
ohwo it-A PROFIT

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5-11 Str

"1

i · LARGE

lots , rural water
available . Hard road, 3
m iles from bY -PlUS on
Lead,ing Creek Road . Phone

742 3108 .

-

•U

take something for repair or
servtce to one you've had

--.'

__________ ____ _

------------;-----

DOWN t
1 Silent
buUer's
contents
2 Gregorian,
e.g.
3 Be sUent
(3 wds. l
4 Lambkin's
ma
5 cause
&amp; Ranch or
stage
7 Written
letter
8 See 3 Down
(3 wds.)
9 Playwright
Rattigan
12 Execute
18 SIJackle

.' lc~====~YO~':Ssoeoe~~~L~OOKx;~A~N~'SE~E~~)~tot'EG~O~r~ONNEE~FUMFU~A~~::I:Q:~~~zs~~~

Repairs , service , all makes .
992 -2284 . The Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy . Authori zed Singer
Sa l es and Se rvice . we
sharpen Scissors

NICE home , good location in
Middleport. needs no repair ,
3·29·ffC
v inyl sid ing , n,e w roof.
panelled and carpeted . 7 DOZER -work , land clearing
rooms and bath, clean, good
by the acre, hourly or
outbu ildings . Priced right
contra ct . Farm
ponds ,
for quick sale . Phone 992 roads, etc . Large dozer and
7244 .
operator w i th over 20 years
.....:;;
5- 11 -3tc
experience
Pllllins Ex cavating, Pomeroy , Ohio .
NEW brick home on st . Rt . 7
Phone 992-2.478 .
between
Pomeroy
and
12 -19-ttc
Chester ,, 3 bedrms ., 2 bath,
double
garage,
full
basement. fire.P.Iace, car - PRICE
Construction
Co
peted . Phone 985·3365.
Roof ing, Spouting , Gemini
s.11 .Jtp
tilt -In replacement, wrn dows, complete remodeling
REAL ESTATE SALE by
Phone 7.42-6273 or (304) 773 5684 .
UNITEO STATES OF
AMERICA, Property, a
H ·26tp
seven room, two story home
appro~~t . so years old . Five
acres of land. Location , one
mite northwest or Pomeroy
on the east side of State Rt.
143 .. ln&amp;pectioh. please
contact the o-ff i ce of Far mers Home Admin i stration,
221 West Second Street,
Pomeroy , Ohio,
45769,
telephone No . 992 -7603 .
Terms of sate. 1. Cash, 2. 10
percent down
and
10
amortized payments for the 1
balance . Current Interest
rate is a• ·:~ percent . BidS to
IJe accepted at Pomeroy
untll2 p .m . May JO, at which
time bids will be opened.
The government reserves
the r ight to reject any or all

bids .

ACRo&amp;,&lt;;
1 Twinge
5 Medicine
or tool
10 Demonstrate
11 Slice of
bacon
13 Robust
14 Guarantee
15 Finale
16 Defective
17 Hamilton
bill
18 Cut that
out!
(2 wds.)
Z8 1X11
2l Diamond

.4- t6 -1fc
r

4·27 ·12tp

AstroGrapt-1

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Ground

Phone 985 3825 .

IO:OG--Carlbe 6, 13; Medical Center 8.10; News 201
Washington Straight Talk 33.
10:»-Muslc Pro(ect Presents 33.
11 :DO-News 3.4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Mystery 13; .
FBI 6; Movie "My Darling Da1J9hters' An·
nlversary" 8; Movie "Man with the Icy Eyes" 10·
Janakl 33.
'
12:30--Wide World Mystery 6.
I :GO-Tomorrow 3,4; News 1~
TUESDAY, MAY 13, 1975

~.ua.-~tr

""

GASOUNE ALLEY

McDANIEL t.usr om
But chering, State and Federal
Inspected , slaughter, cut ,
and wrap Phone 1304) 882 -

~

"

Chain

2 11 -ffc

MQNDAY, MAY 12, lt75
7:110--Truth or Cons. 3.-4; ~ling for DollarS6; What's
My Line I; News 10; N.w Candid Camera 13;
Wally's Workshop 15; Ohio This Week 20; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:»-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3;; Maaquerade
Party 4; Pollee Surgeon 6; $25,000 Pyramid I ;
Municipal Court 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Untamed
World 15; Washington Straight Talk 20; Episode
Action 33.

6:~unrlse Seminar 4; Public Affairs 10.
6:25-Farm Report 13.
6:»-Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6; Bible An·
-- ~TARTIIJG WITH THAT
5PEAK1t.J''
swers 8; Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Rev. Cleophus
PLU6·U6L'l' YOU HIRED OF WHtCH·Robinson 13.
TO STOP ME FROM
wHERE 15
6:3S-Columbus
'Tc!day 4.
REVEAL!~ ~U$T&amp;R.
OUR PARLIN'
6:45-Mornlng
Report
3; Farmtlme 10.
KALLU&lt;AK? IMPER·
f&gt;OY ~
7:00-Today 3,4,15; A. M. America 6,13; CBS Newt
50111ATION OF GURU
8,10.
e.A&amp;OO!
8:110--Lassle 6; Captain Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 101
Sesame Street 33.
8: IG-Your Future Is Now 20.
8:30--Big Valley 6; Popeye 10.
heart,
South
should
·croa
to
8:5~huck White Reports 10.
NORTH
12 dummy, play the six of~
9;110--A.M.
3; Phil Donahue 4; Phil Donahue 1S; Rocky
41096
and go up, with the killl.'
and
Bullwlnkle
8; Captain Kangaroo 10; Morning
•1ou
·
Jim
:
'
That
play
is
designed
'
with
D.
J
.
13.
.AQJS
to encourage West to use his
9:30--Hot For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6;Galloplng
.AK2
then
and
ace
of
trumps
right
Gourmet 8; Hew Zoo Revue 13.
WEST(D)
EAST
there, If he does, South will 'IO:OG--Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, IS; Joker's Wild 8, IG;
411742
453
make his contract. West will
Dlnahl 13. ·
•KQJ86
• 914
lead the queen and jack of
10:3()-Wheel
Of Fortune 3,4, 15; Gambit B, 10. u
.106432
hearts, but South will discard a
11:110--High Rollers 3,4,15; One Life To Live 6; Now
•Q 10&amp;
.J87
losing club and West will have
You See It 8,10; Electric Company 20.
SOUTH
his last trick."
II :30--Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Blankety Blanks 13;
4 KQJ8
Oswald: "West can beat the
Hews '4'; Love Of Life 8, 10; Sesame Street 20.
.A;
contract by refusing both the
11 :55-Graham Kerr 8.0; Dan Imel's World 10.
• K 87
first and second trump leads. If
12:110--Jackpot! 3,15; Password 6,13; Bob Braun's 50• 96 4 3
South plays a third trump you
50 Club 4; News 8, 10.
take your ace, lead hearts and
12: 30--Biank Check 3, IS; Split Second 6, 13; Search For
Both vulnerable
beat him two tricks. If South
Tomorrow a, 10.
abandons trumps you make
12:45-Eiectrlc Company 33.
West North Eost Sowtll
your last small trump and beat
12:55---NBC Hews 3,15.
him one trick."
1:00-Hews 3; All My Children 6,13; Phil Donahue 1:
1•
Pass Pau Dbte.
Young and the Restless 10; Hot For Women Only 13.
Pass
Paso 2ol0
I
:30--Days
Of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Let's Make A Deal
Pass 3 4
Pass 44
6, 13; As the World Turns 8, 1o.
.Pass Pass Pass
2:~10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8,10.
2:30--Doctors 3,4,15; Big Showdown 6,13; Edge ol
Opening lead ~ K •
Night 8, 10.
The bidding has been: 12
INFL .U ENCE FOR Goou'------_;__..J
3:110--Anolher World 3,4, IS; General Hospital ' 6,13:
Price Is Rlghll, 10; Lilias, Yoga and You 20.
By Oswald &amp; J11111es Jacoby
Well Nortb East Soot~
3:~ellleto Llvel3; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
·~ · Jim: "The Bois bridge tips
8, 10; The Romagnolls' Table 20.
competition Is certainly bring·
1•
4:00-Mr. Cartoon 3; l Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset
ing out some fine tips rrom the Pass 2 •
P~Bs
'
15; Gilligan's Island 6; Tattletales 8; Sesame
masters."
You, South, bold;
Street 20,33; Movie "Vera Cruz".10; Mike Douglas
Oswald : "Giorgio Belladonna • K Q tl5 • 112 • K 4 • A987
13.
of Italy may well be the best What do you do oow!
4:30--Bewltched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6;
player in the world. His tip Is, A - lkltloret clolos. 'l'llllllrMI
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza IS.
'The most powerful card is the lttd II J•llfl&lt;ll IIJ yHr - . ..... 5:00-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mister Rogers' Neigh·
ace ol trumps. When you are
TODAY'S QUESTION
borhood 20,33; Ironside 13.
lucky enough I? hold it,
to y 011 bid t1tree clubs and your 5: 30--Hews 6; Beverly HIll billies 8; Hodgepodge Lodge
play it~! the right ~ll'!e.
partner continuos to three
20; Get Smart 15; Electric Company 33.
Jim; The hand tan I really dlamoiMls. What do you do now?
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Electric
complicate~. North and South
Aoower Tom'"""
Company 20; To Be Announced 33.
have 27 htgh-card pomls and
6:3()-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC news 13; Bewitched 6;
reach what turns out to be an
CBS News 8,10; Zoom 20,33.
optimistic game contract after Sand $1 lor JACOBY MODERN
7:00-Truth
Or Consequences. Bowling For Dollars 6;
West's opening bid."
boo/&lt; to: 'Win •t Brldpe," (cto Wo
What's
My
Line? 8; News 10; Nam~ ThaiTune 13;
Oswald ; "Gioraio suggests llfiWiplper), P.O. Bo• ~. R•dlo
.
High
School
T.V. Honor Society 15; Antiques 20;
that after winning the flnt City St•tlon, Nlrr Yorlr, N.Y. 10010. Lilias. Yoga and You 33-'.

#A. '

EXCAVATING. dozer , loader
and backhoe work , septic
tanks
installed ,
dump
trucks and lo -boys for hire ;
will ha lJ I f ill dirt. top soil ,
limestone and gravel. Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers , day
phone 992 7089 , night phone

T~l::t:

'

'

992-3092

SEPTIC TANK S cleaned .
Modern sanitation . 992 3954
or 992-7349
9-18 -tfc

'

,...._._..._........_.,.~-~·--"

-::--:-="7"--:-==,...,.,==-·

Sa~s &amp; Service

6·30 ftc

0 &amp; 0

2·52tp

WILKINSON
SMALL ENG

delivered right to you r
project Fast and easy . Free
~estimates . Phone 992 3284 ,
Goeglein Ready Mix Co .,
Middleport. Oh io

__....

1'J

''

4

- 4-10 1 mo .

RE ADY MI X CONCRETE

.

.,

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . 992-3993

4-10-1 mo .

3224 .

"

~

LARRY LAVENDER

Phone 992-7665

992 3525 or 992 .5232 .

"

ExcA vATING ,
Dozer ,
Ba ck hoe, ditcher , water
lines , tooters , drains , roads
and brush c leaning . No job
too small, no weather too
bad
Phone Charles R .
Hatf ield, Rt . 1. Rutland ,
Ohio . Phone 742 -609 2

5

· - · -. .- - . _ . .

2•

Wolfe &amp;Ward
Garage
Condor St.

1

Trump ace can be big one

lml Bldhels .

Room Addition.

·--

WIN AT BRIDGE

PomerOY

Qrlbuctill

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

8:00-Smothers Brothers 3,4, 15;; Rookies 6, 13; Gunsmoke I, 10; Thin Edge 20,33.
9:110--Movle "Buck and the Preacher" 3,4,15; SWAT
6,13; Maude 8, 10; The Man Who's Giving 'Em Hell
20; Thin· Edge and You 33.
9:»-Rhoda8,10; Sweet_Ohlo20; Oneola Klnd33.

Grand Opening

On aluminum replacement
windows, siding , storm
doors and windows, railing,
phone
Charles
Lisle,
Syracuse,
Ohio .
carl
Jacob, Sale!;! Represen tative.

A_ir conditioning. plum b•ng, heating, roofing ,
spouting, general sheet
metal work .
.

From the largest Truck or
Bu lldoz er Radiator to the
smallest Heater Core .

_..

l -Television log for easy viewing

YOUR CAR MISSING

LIZZ

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

-·-------- ~------

Fcir

~~-·

1

....
.I

For

By Mrs. Herl!erl Roush
CO N TE MPOR A RY
Modern
Muzzl e L oader s.
lza ak
walnut s ter eo. am fm radi o,
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Johnson
Walton Farm , Ch es t er
&lt;1 speaker sound system
Oh io _ May 13, 1975 TuesdaY
speed
autom ati c- chan ger4.
and children, Michelle and
ev en tng , 6 p . m
Balance $103.29. Use ou~
budge t t erms Ca ll 992-3965.
Della, Mrs . ..Florence Smith,
5-B 4tc
--------------·
·--5 7 t fc
Mrs. Emma Johnson attended
CLELAND 'S
BLOOMERS t
the crowing of the 1975 May
STRAWBERRY plants , Rt .
Opening May 5th F lo wers ,
plants and produ ce . F air
338 near Rac1ne Locks ,
Day Queen Miss Valerie
Clla rli e Foster
prices
,
cour
teous
servtce
.
1971
MATADOR
51595
Johnson at Rio Grande
4 29 12tc
next door fo Steamboat Inn
4 door , local car , ai r condition ed , full equipment .
Ji m Cl eland , ~ac1ne , Oh io
College Friday night. Valerie
F L OWER S for Mother 's Day .
B ene f it f or th e Oh io Val l ey
1970 CHEV.·IMPALA SPT. SEDAN
$1595
is the daughter of Mr. and
Fel lo wship
Sma ll ey's
G 1ft
Shop ,
V-8, automatic. power steering &amp; brakes, factory a1r,
Chester , Ohio Phon e 985
Mrs. Jerry Johnson of Racine.
5-B SIC
good w-w t ires, radio, v inyl in tenor , sa ndstone fini sh .
3537 '
Mrs. Ruth . Parsons was a
4-29- lOt c
Nice.
QU I CK rRINT by mai l fr om
dinner guest of Billy and Kelly
c am e ra -r eady copy . One
1970CHEVELLEMALIBU CPE.
51695
3 POLLED Re g. Here ford
page SS 55 first 100 , $ 1 15
Parsons at Afttiquity Sunda~.
307 V-8, power steering, good G70 w1 de oval tires .
bu ll s, one 4 yr . old , 2 year each addttional 100 Send
lrng s , al l Rollo Mixer
Cookie Weddle and Sharon
radio, sil ver grey f in ish, automat ic tran s, interior
c opy ,
check
to
LE T
breeding . Phone 992 5565.
spo tl ess
TERSHOP PLU S, 72 W.
and Cindy Roush and Debbie
5 11 -3t c
Union , At h ens, Ohio A l so,
1969
CHEVY
NOVA
4
DR
.
51095
Holsinger were shopping in
lOb pr inting .
6 cyl . automati c tran s., cl ean interior , good tires,
1970 CHEV . Nova 350, 4 sp
4 29 38 t p
Parkersburg _ Monday
46,000 miles , $1,200 Also ,
radio
1968 fold down cam per ,
evening.
BEAUT I F UL selectton of
sl eeps 8 S450 Phone 992 Don and Lois Bell each
f lowers , pot s. ba skets and
7378
spray s for Memortal Day .
5-ll -3tc
celebrated a birthday the past
Cliff's Pla ce , N Se cond St,
week, Lois on Thursday and
Midd l eport .
1972 VW SUPER Beetle Baha
5 4 tfc
i ncluding lugga ge rack and
Don Saturday. Here to help
OPEN EVES.'B:QO P. M.
1 snow tires Ph one 742 -6252
them celebrate were their ot7;~-~~; -~~~; --;,-;- -s-;-ud ,
POMF! RqY, OHIO
5 11 3tc
you ng son ot " THE OLE .'.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..:...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ ,
daughter. Lorna, of ColumMAN ," AAAT , a leading
bus. Bruce Hart called during
1965 T BIRO First S2SO Phone ~eal Estate
si re of race and show hor
Sale
99'2 -721 0 after 6 p .m .
ses . Ran within 100th of a Wanted To Buy
the weekend on the Bells.
5-ll -4fp
second of AAA time before
Mrs . Mildred Donohew
TW O NEW 3 bedroom hom es
Old
upr1ght
he was 2. Offic1a1 AA w 1th an WANTED :
with I car ga rage, carpeted,
p i anos . any
con d 1tion
197 1 G M c J4 ton p u ., auto
89 sp eed i nde x , hatter ,
called on Ferne B. Hayman
F HA or bank f inancing
transmission , p b , p s, ·
Payi ng $10 each . First f loor
contorm!t1on , and b es t
and Kqthryn Philson SaturPhon e 742-3615 or see Milo
only
Write
and
give
heavy duty , 350 cu
in .
d isposition Fee $100 at time
Hut chinson , Rutland ,
d irect 1ons to Witten Piano
Phone 992 2143 or ~92 - 2724 .
of services with live foal
day.
5-8-1fc
co , Box 188 , Sardis, Ohio
5-11 -3tp
guarantee Phone 992 -7888 .
Mr. Clarence Story and
- -- -------------43946 .
4-20 -26tc
5 8 6tp 1968 FI REBIRO for $700 Call L OT near Ractne Phone 84 3daughter, Rosalie, called on
991 -253 7, after 5 p m
p
ai
d
fo
r
all
mak
es
and
CASH
2253 after 5 p m
Mr. and Mrs . Erww
5-7-12tc
m od els of mobile homes . OL D furn i tur e, ice bo xes,
5 4 7tc
Gloeckner Sunday afternoon.
Phon e ar ea c ode 614 -423 brass
beds
.
or
complete
9531
Mrs . Golda Wyant of
househol ds . Wr1te M . o. For Sale
NEED A new home built on
4-13 -tfc
Miller
.
Rt
4,
Pomeroy
,
your lot ? Contact Milo B
Harrisonville spent Friday
Oh io. Call 992 7760 .
Hut ch ison , Rutland , Ohio .
REFRIGER
ATOR
.
$50
JUNK
autos
,
comp
l
ete
and
with her brother, Mr . and Mrs.
• Phone 742 36 15
10 -7 74
Phone 992 7836.
del ivered to our ya rd . we
5-8-lfc
Bert Hunt.
pick up auto bodies and buy
5·9 31c
--a II k tnds of sera p meta Is and
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Durst
i ron . Rid er's Sa lvage , St . Employment Wanted
FISH BAIT - fish bai t We 2 BEDROOM trailer and lot in
of Niles came Sunday for Mr.
Rt . 124 , Rt. 4. Pomeroy ,
town Phone 992 3975 or 992
have ou r baif in , night
REMODELING
,
Plumbing
,
2571
Ohio Call 992 5468 .
crawlers ,
large
meal
Durst's parents , Mr . and
heating· and all types of
4 9 tt c
10 -17 tfc
worms , worms, red worms,
general
repair .
Work
Mrs. Pete Durst of Ravenblood
bai
t,
Indian
Joe's
·
g uaranteed . 20 years ex
Sport and CB Shop, 308 Page SERVICE stat 1on and garage
swood and took them to their AUCTION, Thursday night , 7
perience
Phone 992 2409 .
St ., Middleport Phone 992Rutland . Will finan ce or
p
m
.
at
Mason
Auction,
5-1
tt
c
home in Niles Tuesday for an
3509
teas e. Call 742 -5052 .
Horton St . in M ason . w va .
4-9-26tc
.4 -9-30tc
indefinite visit.
Consignments
wel com e.
Phone (3041 773 -547l.
There will be a Memorial
2-2-1fc Help Wanted
HOME grown 1omo1o p l anT~ . 1.72 ACRES of land and locust
posts Phone 742-3656
Day dinner at the Letart Falls
improved MeKican and
F OR your " Oil of - Mrnk " BEE LIN E Fash 1ons neects 3
4 20-26tp
Heinz 1350 . Across from
Community Hall Sunday, May
st yi1Sts in t h1S area No
C osmet i cs
--Phone
Mun 1cipa1 Park 1n Syracuse ,
investmen
t
Ca
ll
99
2
1789.
BROWN 'S 99 2 5113 .
25. Proceeds will be used for
Thomas Hayman .
s 12 Jtc
1 7. ffc
•4·28·30tc
the upkeep of the hall.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Bearhs NOW se llmg Fuller Brush HOUSEKEEPER
and TRAV EL trarler , 21 u ., a.c .,
Products , phone 992 3410
bab ysrtter , varied ho u rs
returned to their home · at
se l f contained . 1972 Pontia c
1 24 tfc
lap p rox I 30 hours per
Cata lina . low mileage , like
week Must have car Phone
Portsmouth, Va ., after a
new
Gas range , good
992
-2832
.
condit 1on
Phone 742-5403 .
week 's vacation with her
5-7 6tc
· 5-9·3tc
mother, Mrs. Erma Wilson Los1
LOOKING for an exciting and 6 H . P
Craftsman r 1d ing ·
and family .
LO ST m vic 1n1ty of Pomeroy
profitable
career
w1th
mower S 1~D . · Coll/£~.S!er, MIDDLEPORT - 7 room
El
ementary
Sc
hooL
a
go
(d,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burri,
fle xr ble
hours?
Like
Conn trumpet 1n bla ck case,
98 5 3889,. •J tt "' ,j.. , .. 11 ~ ~~;. j '' 1 . home with view of the river. 2
meeting ~ the publ ic? Have a
Billy Wilson of Bolivar Dam,
sm all r ew ard . Pho"!' ' ·992 ........:·
-~.
5.., t c baths , family room, automatic
car?
Welcome
Wagon
wants
56.d2
----------------heal on a good street.
spent a week with Mrs . Erma
you .
Representa tive -191
1l
MX
Yahama
,
good
59 6tc
Position ' op en tn Pomeroy .
helmet to match bike . S400 . $22,500.00.
Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Butch - - - ~- ------__:--- --.
Write Box 729 W . c o Daily
Phone 9'9 "01 ·
OUT OF TOWN - A working
Sen t rnel. Pomeroy , Ohio .
Wilson and Mrs . Kathryn LOST Thursday in ~utland
5-9-3tc man's special. 3 bedrooms,
Lang svi l l e area , large male
We lc ome Wagon , an eq ua l
Hunt.
- --- --- -- - - - - - - - - - ·
bath, furnace , cook and bake
Walker hound , bla ck , brown , , ~rtunity employer
S anc:t Ammo
Our
and wh1te , very sh y. If seen, _., ~t-,
51 6tc GUN
Mrs. Kathryn Hunt visited
summer ~-!pck -.-,"1~ • ._nbw units, and refrigerator . Only
call 742 3141 .
• :j,;,.a;:..
---- - - - - - - - arri v ing still at last $7 ,500.00.
·
Mrs . Art Sylvester at
year 's pnces 22 MAG - NEW LISTING - In the
~ - ---~--------~':!'l For ' ent
Syracuse:
rifl es , Winchester . Moss
country, with view of the
Mrs. Kathryn Hunt and Mrs. L O~T.1 - LSa nta Ger trud 1s red TRAILER space for rent m
berg , and Marlin Hand g un s river . 3 bedrooms, bathroom,
he r er , ost ne ar Bowman's
Mi ddlepor t
Call 992 -2625.
-~
44 MAG Two 22 I r
Beverly Wickline entertained
Run on 124 . Call 949 365 4 or
AMMO - - 22 Mag H .P ., $3 a furnace (cpal or wood). oak
4 . 2] .tfc
,949
2832
bo'X : $27 .50 per 500 round floors , aluminum siding,
with a cookout at their home
5-6-7tp
ca r t on Rem1ngton High needs finished . Buy this for a
TRAILER space , 1 m ile from
Friday evening in honor of Mr.
Vol. 22 H.P 12 10 pe r 100 pk . summer cottage. $10,000.00.
Pomeroy
Phone 992 -5858
and Mrs. Pete Bearhs of
NOTICE OF
Get them while they last
POMEROY _ 3 nice size
5 2-tfc
APPOINTMENT
Ph one 992 5177 V illage Gun bedrooms, bath, basement,
Portsmouth, Va. and Mr. and
Shoppe. 266 Mill St , Mid
cas e No. 21502 2 BEDROOM mobile home ,
d lepor t. Oh~ 6 .
fenced yard and 2 porches.
Mrs. Charles Burri and Billy Esf,a te of William . Er'-nest ·a C' 1 in Ra cine area . Phone
59
7t
c
Paneling and carpeting. Walk
Sellards,
Dec
eased
.
9-92&lt;5858
Wilson of Bolivar Dam. Atto work or stores. 517.500 .00 .
Not ic e is her eby given t hat
S-2-tfc - --------------- - - - tending were Mrs. Betty Edgar Se llard s pf Ro ute 1,
1970 CHEVY NOVA 350, 4
Dove r . Ohio 44622, has been
speed , 46 ,000 miles, $1400
WE NEED SOME' NICE
Wilson, Ronnie, Robin and duly
apartment.
appointed Adm inistrator FURNISHED
Also , 1968 fold -down camper
NEARLY NEW HOMES
adults only m Middleport
.Cheryl, William Wickline and of the E stat e of Wi lliam Er
sleep s 8, !.550 Phone 992
WITH A FEW ACRES OF
Pt'lone 992 -3874 .
7378
.
'
nest
Sellards
,
d
ece
ased.
l
ate
sons, Scotty a)ld Kyle · and of Me1g s County , Ohio .-··, ..
3 25 tfc
,;., 4, :.. 5-8-4tp LAND. CALL 992·3325.
Mrs. Erma Wilson.
Cred i tors are r eq uir ed to
--- - - - -t"'ll
•
the ir c la ims w1t h said 5 RM apt furnish ed ; 3 rm
Mrs.
Maggie
Roush file
apt f urn ished ; 4 rm . apt ., 1974 CJ 5 Renegad,e .Jeep .
f iduc iary Wi l h1n fou r months
Phon e 949 -2981
returned to her home in
utili t ies paid , I ch 1l d ac Dated this 23rd day of Ap ril ,
5 7 6tc
191
5
cepted
Also
,
ax38
mobile
Baltimore, Md., due to illness .
home for sale . John Sheets,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush,
3 mlles south of Middleport. VARIETY
Mannin g D . Webs ter
OF cabbage,
Rt 7
Probate Judge
tomato and pepper plants.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Pickett of
5 8 6tp
of sa id County
AlsO, caulifloWer, broccolt,
Middleport and Mr. and Mrs.
brussel sprouts. egg -plants . 3 BEDROOM home on 4 acres
of ground , full basement,
Bedding plants , -:-:- ' pansies,•
Herbert Roush visited Mr. and (4) 28, ( 5 ) 5 , 12, 3tc
COUNTRY Mobile Home
fuel oil furnace, a .c .•
petunia, marigold, salv ia,
Park, Rt 33, ten m11es north
Mrs . Charles Michael Sunday.
breezeway and large garage
phlox , portuiBca, · ageh um,·
of Pom eroy . Large lots with
NOTICE OF
in' the country but c lose to
alyffum, impatiens, coleus,
Mrs. Young has moved to
concrete
patios,
sidewalks,
APPOJNTMENT
town . On hardtop road , 2
Variety of geraniums, also,
runners
and
off
street
Case No . 21510
the former Ralph Chapman
traiter setups included . Call
pots of petunias and mums .
parking Phon e 992 7479 .
Estate of HAROLD CAR·
992 -7649 after 4 p.m . or 992 Han~lng
baskets
residence.
12 -31 -tfc
NAHAN , Decea sed.
2519 any time for ap petunias, i vy geranium ,
Nottce ls hereb y g1ven t hat
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert of
po intmen t .
tobelia, ferns, wandering
V Pr i ce of Portland , 2 BEORM mobile home, 308
4 30·26tc
jews , porch boxes , large
Kanawha City, George Hunt of Clarence
Oh10, has been duly appoint ed
Page St.. in Middleport $75
hearty red azaleas, Cleland
depos it req uired .
Addison an&lt;j Mr. and Mrs. ~ dm1ni strato r of the Estate of
Greenhouse,
Racine .
Haro l d Carnahan , deceased .
5-11 -tfc
Geraldine Cleland·.
•
Charles Burri of Bolivar Dam la t e of Me1gs Coun t y , Ohio .
......;
4
13.tfc
Credrtors ar e r equi red to 3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
visited Mr. and Mrs. Bert
f i le t he ir claims with sa id
unfurn 1shed
apartmen ts. CLOSE OUT on new Zig -Zag
Hunt.
f1duc iar v within four months .
Phon e 992 5434 .
sewing
machines.
For ·
Dated this 1st day of May
Mrs . Eula Wolfe spent
4-12-tfc
se wing stretch fabrics ,
1975
.
buttonholes, fancy designs ,
Friday evening with Mr. and
PRIVAT E meet 1ng room tor
etc .
Paint
slightly
Manning D Webster
Mrs. Bert Hunt and Mr. and
any organ i zation . phone 992
.blemished.
Choice
of
Judge
3915
carrying case or sewing
Mrs. Herbert Roush .
Court of Common Pleas,
3 11 -tfc
stand . $49.80 cash or terms
Probat e Div is ion
Mr. and Mrs. Guy ' Shuler
available
. Phone 992-7755
APT ltke new , 3 rooms, with
12 18 ftc . CLOSE IN - About 3
have purchased the former 15 1 5. 12. 19, 3tc
targe bath , tabletop range,
~
Grace Crow residence and
large closet . East Main St,
Acres . I slory frame, 2 BR .
Pom er oy See to apprec iate .
dining
R., bath, FO forced
moved 11\ere from Pomeroy.
Phone Gallipolis dur ing day ,
air
furnace,
part
NOTICE OF
.446 -9699 , evenings 446 9539
APPOINTMENT
basement, barn, own water
4-10-tfc
Case No . 21509
system. SI0,9oo.
Estate of Truman Allen Penn,
20"-3112 HP
3 RM and bath furn tshed apt.
RUTLAND - 60 acres. l'/ 2
Jr. aka Allen Penn aka. Allen

Laurel Oiff
" Notes ·
News
, ,

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H

H .30tc

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�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 12, 1975

R- '1'lw&gt; flailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, May 12,1975
Nlltice ~oMALL bretu pupp ies to give
to good home. Phone 992
5629.

,
Apple Grove

News Notes

5 6 6tp
PUBLIC

SHOOT ,

DICK t'RACY

For Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifieds
Auto Sales
Sale
I
Busmess
e
's •
2 SIGNS Pomeroy
•

Me igs

OF

QUALITY Motor Co.·

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_____________

TURf; TRIM
MOWER

By Bertha
Parker
r
Sabbath School attllndance
on May ,. 4 at the Free
Methodist! Church was 100.
• · Choir members present were,
15. Morning offering was
'153.16.
The Dan Hayman group of
singers were at the loca)
church Sunday evening. A
large crowd attended the
aervice.
Mrs. Florence Stahl of
Stockdale visited recently
with Mr, and Mrs. Norman
llchaeler.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Walker
.left Sunday for Indiana where
Mr. Walker is employed. Mrs.
Walker spent two weeks with
lierparenla,Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Howell.
·

T. Penn Deceased.
Notice is hereb y given t hat
Mollie Alice Penn of Route 3,
A lbany , Oh 10, has been duly
appointed AdministratriK of
the Est ate of Truman A llen
Penn , Jr aka Allen P enn aka
Allen T Penn , d eceased, late
of Route 3, Albany , Meigs
County , Oh10
Creditors are r equ 1r ed to
ftle the~r c la ims wtth said
· f idUc ia ry W1th1n four months .
Dat ed t his 1st day of May
197 5
M anning 0 . Webster
Judge
Court of Co mm on Pleas,
Pr Pbat e D ivis ion
Meigs County
(51 5, 12, 19, 3tc

PUBLIC NOTIC.E
r'JOt 1ce is hereby given that
the prelimi nary su bmi ssion of
the Ohio EPA FY 1976 Con
solidated
Envi ronmental
Programs Grant { in c luding
draft progr am commi tm ents
and strategies)
will
be
available for publtc v 1ewmg rn
the Ohio EP A Cen t ral and
Distr1ct Off1ces m Columbus.
Bowling Green , Twinsburg,
L ogan . and Dayton a_nd in the
li brar ies in th e count y seat of
each Oh io county for a period
of two week s f rom May i9~
1975 .to May 31. 1975 Com ments may be mad e in writing
by June 4, 1975 to Ohio EPA ,
Division of Interg ove rnmental
Administration , 361
East
Broad Street , ColumbuS / Ohi.o

The Laurel Cliff Health Club
wW meet May '15 at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Allen 43215,
1 ~1 12,
Eichinger.

Utilities pa id , 356 North 4th
Sf , Middleport , Ohio
5-11 lfc

2 BEORM trailer , close to
stores , school and swim ming pool. Call after I p .m .

992 5914

'

5·1Htc
J

BEDROOM frailer, real
n ice . Phone 992 -3324 .
5 · l l tic
.... ~--- -- - ---

'72.9Q&lt;KDJ

story frame home,

22''-3112 HP
Self- Propelled

basement .

'104.95&lt;KD)
POME !i'o y LAN o'M'A'II K

9 .. s_Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
dlil ~ Phone 992-2181 · .

1

-----

Mobile Homes for Sale
SELL your 1n0bile home for
cash . 15 homes wanted . 1958
thru 1972 models . Phone
(614) 446 -1425( Gallipolis .

J.9-78tf

2 BEDRM . mob ile Home . Will
sell with option to rent lot.
On Co . Rd . b_y Salem Center .
Phone 669 -4242 . Robert
Molden

5·11 6tp
1959 GREAT Lakes. 1Q x 50, 2

MAKE MOTHER happ¥ thiS

5

11 ·5tc

AKC
German
Sh ortha lr
pointer , male , 21~ yrs old
Tra ined , $50 . Phone 985

3934.

5

li e

·,

11 Jtp

and

workshop 24x32 , barn
35X40, large building
30x200, pond,• 2 free gas
wells. lots of building site,,
about all fenced. Minerals
$33.000
.
included. ONLY
TUPPERS PLAINS - , I
level acre, very nice t story ·

year with a living room suite
from Jack ' s Furniture .
Many styles and colors to
ctroose from . A.tl suites sale
priced , starting as low as
5139 .00 and up . Also, a nice
selection- of swivet rockers
at S89.95. Jack's Furniture &amp;
Main ,

fireplace, porch, garage,
lot 50x12S. S9,500.
POMEROY - 12x60 Mobile
Home, 3 BR, bath, expando
living fL ciir cond., wasfier
&amp; dryer, furnished. ONLY
$4.500.
IF THE PROPERTY YOU
ARE LOOKING FOR IS
HERE, FINE. IF NOT
PLEASE CALL US.
992-2259

Uphols tery Supply , 236 E.
Pomeroy ,

Phone 992·3903.

Oh io .

5·1·l0fc

MANURE
Loader ,
$200 .
Phone Reedsville, 378-6311

' 5·J1 .Jtc

5·11 ·3tc

-·----------------RE F RIGERATOR ,
Pho~e

Pets for Sale

Garage

home, lovely kitchen and
dining, 2 BR; bath , utility ,
R. , forced air heal, part
basemen!, HW floors.
JUST 513,500.
RUTLAND - Close to
shopping, 2 BR , bath,

bedroom , · front kitchen - - - - -·- ~ - ---- ·-----­
model Pr1ced to sell . Can be '
seen at Kingsbury Home 1 HuFF v etectt:"iC mower, in
5ales. 1100 E. Main Sl..
good condition . Phone 9n Pomeroy , Ohio, or cafl 992 2262.

)034

3 BR.

bath , utility , some car·
,peting, paneling &amp; tile, part

992 -7836 .

$50 .

carpeted,

paneled,

5-9 ·3tc HOUSE 'NEAR

--- -- --· - -- - --- - - - - ONE NEW mattress, used 6
weeks . Fits hospital bed .
AlsooneMartinbox . 12apt s
New Call 992 7560 .
~

5 11 ·5!p

tiled,

CHESTER.

OHIO . L shaped brick, 3
bedrm ., ranch style , rural
hom e .
1.5 acres , full
basement.
garage,
fireplace . Call 985 39 43

57

5tc

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GLEN·R.

Merle Norman
Cosmetics

Bissell

lOlA'S
BEAUTY SALON

AWMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

John St., Next To
Grade School
992-2549 Syracuse, 0.

tREE ESTIMATES

PH. 949-5184

5·8-1 mo.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

1

·~--~~~H~i(~1~~~~~~~--?UH~-~-.;[~~~~;;~~

e~nces
.J. y .A. ·
._

.

5-d-1 mo .

~~P~rd's

NEIGLER
Building Supply

Greenhouse
In Syracuse
Now open for season Now
available- most var!eti_es
of vegetable plants &amp;
flowers plus potted flowers .
OUR SPECIALTY over
2,000 hanging baskets of
Petun 1e s, Ivy , Geraniums,
~ines, and Begonias

Racine, Ohio
We Build the Best and
Repair the Rest .
-Cabinets lnsta lied-

•

Call Before 7:30A.M.
Or After 6:00P.M.
949-1604
5-7-1 mo.

TOP QUALITY AT
LOWEST PR1CES
992-5776

4-17-lmo .

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES

HElL

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating
Free Estimates
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 949-2211
or 992-5700

'•

,.

..,.,•

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

S~ITH

NELSON
MOTORS, INC. -

Ph. 992 -2174

..
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~

..••

r.o.

~

••

Chllsttr, Olllo
. Ph. 985-4,02

••
•
"'•

Home Bullcllni

,endGI'r .,._ ·
· &gt;·S-1 mo.

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

4-2 ·75

UTI'Lp: ORPHAN ANNIE

PHONE 992·2823
~omeroy,

o_.

,
•

OPEN9a.m . to6p .m.
Monday thru Saturday
We will pick up &amp; delivery.
Special low prices on all
mechanical ,.,ork.
·
5-l -1 mo .

'

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-POWERFUL

~,ro JOWllntl. IIA~DS
.,,:w.\!.,., 1.&amp;81\ ~.~·ll'IP...
AIID J. PIISTOII SU.W.E WAS PlUCI.ID

ROJI KU l.OCl!D ANO GUmiD stUDY...

VAltiSHUI ··.af C.l

',,'

nut tO nu ROW

Ol WHI.NC'l H£ Wllf1 ·· • •

t·A.·It-- IT SORT
0' M-'ICES M.'f H~
CK.liTU Just TO
TH\Nl 'lOUT IT ·

.

'IIIU.T PO 'f'&amp;P'OU
COUlD'l IU.PP'iNED
TO

~IM?

fi-'RD TO Slt.V.

IMY8E lME

GOII.INS

GOT HI».· I'YI!.

HEAIIII Tl1!'1'

LU.vE NO TltACE·

..

FREE ESTIMATES

0. J. lAUDERMILT
ROOFING

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown into Walls &amp; AMics
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

Pleasant Ridge
Pomeroy, Ohio

FREE ESTIMATES
Reasonable Rates

...
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Also Repairs On All
Riding Tractors

Is I roi,:Jin' ~er han'
too tiqht, Miss Melba?

St. --

Ohio

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

Nobod1..j'd Quess
in th' worl'! You
almos' a .e)( pert!

®
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- - Sweepers , toasters , irons ,
all small appliances Lawn
mower , next to S tate High .
way Garage on Route 7.

-

Trimming, til
year s exper1ence . Insured,
free est imates . Call 992 -3057,
Coolv ille
Phone (1) 667
304 1
4-JO -tfc

nwnber

,..

22 Formerly

...

23 Celerity
25 Sardonic
grtn
26 Drop In a
maUbox
27 Hints
28 Stringy

LAWN mower repair. 308
Page St , Middleport . Phone
992 3509
I
4-16·30tc
'•

P &amp; J Home Mamtenance,
Refr 1geratlon ,
A.
c.
Heating . Phone 992 -J5D9.
4·16 -30tc

Maybe yoll1' life's pretty
good right now. But if you
LANE 'S GARAGE, Slate - - - -- - - - - - - - - -=--want to keep it that way,
Route 338 , Apple Grove, SE PTI C tanks and leach lines
installed . Also , field drain
Ohio . All k inds of mechanic
you've got to plan for it. And
tiles . A l l work guaran teed
work Phone 247 -2257 .
one
way you can do just that
Lewts Excavat1ng , Rt. l ,
5·8·12tp
Rutland , Oh io. Phone 742 is by signing up for the
- --------------- 3742
.
I
..J t:.PTI( TANKS CLEANED .
Payroll Savings Plan where
4-24 -26t c
ReasonablE: RATE S Phone
you work. An amount you
446 -47 82 Gallipolis . John
SHALLOW Wells dug, springs
Russell , owner .
specify will be set aside from
deve l oped and c1sterns
4 9-tfc
each paycheck and used to
installed to appro)(imately
18 tt Lewis Excavating, Rt 1 buy U.S. Savings Bonds.
1, Rutland Phone 742 -3742.
Then, when you're ready
4-2.4 -26tc
to stop working, you'll still
S EWING
MACHINE ;· be able to keep on living.

Real Estate For Sale

'
••

IF MAH PITCHE:R GOT ANY
OFFE:RS, WHICH IT. COULDN'r ~
BECUZ AH IS SO UNBEARABLE ff-

600TIFUL. ""'':~...;.:_:;
-

)) __,

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'"

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Bernice Bede Osol
Tueedoy, Moy 13, 1175
Allll!l (M•ch 21·Aprll II)
Someone yoo·n be dealing wllh
today will anger you. You'll
ke-ep it to yourself and
smolder, rather than let him
know.

TAURUS (April 20-Miy 20)
Don'llet a disagreement With a

19 Devoutness 38 "Good

zt Mistake

Night -"
%3 Elf
31 Rose essencE
2t Least
33 Cantinflas
affluent •
movie .
Z5 1938 Tyrone 31 Olga Juan
Power
· movie
37 Wall St.
27 Swil&amp;-atyle
watclldog
house
1abbr.)

pal over something material

jeopardize a friendship. Take
the lOss. If necessary .

G!MINI (May 21-Juno 20) I(
lhe boss_gives you a specific
order today. follow 11 10 the
tener. or you 're sure to Incur
his wrath.

CANC!R (J- 21·July 22)
Keep your opinions to yourself

now about something lhat does
no1 Involve you directly, bul
does affect a sensitive friend.

'"
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O..: fl

ou

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LEO

~~uly

23·Aug , 221

completely in the open will pu1·
some stumbling blocks In your
path today. H....,_, don't let
~im know yo"'re on to him.
VIRGO jAug. 23-lapl. 22)
Diplomacy and 1ac1 are called

32 wrath
33 La-,
Bolivia
34 Table
scrap
35 Prickly
herb
31 Fat
_ _,. _ 38- hatch
38 Sicilian
volcano
40 Principle
U Ex Mrs.
Bono,

for in an Important career
maHer or you will anger one
whose cg..operation Is essen~

tlal now.
LIIRA fltpl, 23·0ct. 23) Don'l

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SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nor. 112)
You lend to be a bit too

"
Join the Payroll Silvlngs Plan.

.,

SAGITTARIUS (Now. 2S.O.C.

.

21) Try to see and understand
your mate's point of view on a
v1ta1 fam1ly issue that he feels
very strongly about.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22~.
11) Don't let yourself be rlllhe&lt;f
with tasks requ1ring tools to~
day. What you don't finish can
be completed later

..."

R

.

WK DO,

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••

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PISCES jFeb. 20-Morch ftl
set for your
tamily 1oday os lhe one they'll
The example you

'"
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follow . If you're cranky M'td
short-tempered, expect lhe
same from them .

Your
Birthday
13, 1175
You will be much bolder and
enterprismg th ts year In
situationS that could Increase
your revenues. Substanttal
returns are probable If you
don't take foolish risks .

··~

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AXYDLBAAXI
LONGFELLOW

PNDGDP

WKDO

"'

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AQUARIUS (Jon. 211-Feb. Itt
·This is one of those days where
you won 't be as prudent .rtth
your resources as you should.
Some loss is likely.

UIIICI'Uilblo theoe f~a~r Jumbles,
letter lo oath oquue, to
farm four ordlnory wonlo.

c&amp;YPTOqUOTES
~

...,
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possessive today with one
you 're emotionally involv8d
with. Loosen the reins or you'll
anger hrm

ant

One leiter simply ltlnda lor another. In lhls aalnple A Ia
·used for the lhne L's, X for the lwo O'a, elo. Sln1le letters,
opostrophn. lht lenl(h and formalioin 'o l lhe words sre all
h1nta. Eeoh dey the r&lt;!de letle~ ere.dlll'erent.

\

"

problems wl1 h before. Find

~W/MmltJE;-::'-==~ ,_J r:

II

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someone more reliable.

Someone who doesn't operate

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTB- Hen'• how to work It:

..",

----------------·

DF

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YWPWFFRNZ

I NEPOR I

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Yetiterday'• Ctnl 1r

te1

HAPPINESS LS A VEGETABL\N

LOOKING AT THE PRICE OF MEAT. - ABEL GREEN

I

Now arnnp the circled llltlla
to form tbe eurprlee - · ..
ledbfthe1bcrre=1'1

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flllllll . . . . . .

LWOOF
. . . . . . . ., . .

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(~
TONIC TYPING EFFKll'

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ohwo it-A PROFIT

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5-11 Str

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i · LARGE

lots , rural water
available . Hard road, 3
m iles from bY -PlUS on
Lead,ing Creek Road . Phone

742 3108 .

-

•U

take something for repair or
servtce to one you've had

--.'

__________ ____ _

------------;-----

DOWN t
1 Silent
buUer's
contents
2 Gregorian,
e.g.
3 Be sUent
(3 wds. l
4 Lambkin's
ma
5 cause
&amp; Ranch or
stage
7 Written
letter
8 See 3 Down
(3 wds.)
9 Playwright
Rattigan
12 Execute
18 SIJackle

.' lc~====~YO~':Ssoeoe~~~L~OOKx;~A~N~'SE~E~~)~tot'EG~O~r~ONNEE~FUMFU~A~~::I:Q:~~~zs~~~

Repairs , service , all makes .
992 -2284 . The Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy . Authori zed Singer
Sa l es and Se rvice . we
sharpen Scissors

NICE home , good location in
Middleport. needs no repair ,
3·29·ffC
v inyl sid ing , n,e w roof.
panelled and carpeted . 7 DOZER -work , land clearing
rooms and bath, clean, good
by the acre, hourly or
outbu ildings . Priced right
contra ct . Farm
ponds ,
for quick sale . Phone 992 roads, etc . Large dozer and
7244 .
operator w i th over 20 years
.....:;;
5- 11 -3tc
experience
Pllllins Ex cavating, Pomeroy , Ohio .
NEW brick home on st . Rt . 7
Phone 992-2.478 .
between
Pomeroy
and
12 -19-ttc
Chester ,, 3 bedrms ., 2 bath,
double
garage,
full
basement. fire.P.Iace, car - PRICE
Construction
Co
peted . Phone 985·3365.
Roof ing, Spouting , Gemini
s.11 .Jtp
tilt -In replacement, wrn dows, complete remodeling
REAL ESTATE SALE by
Phone 7.42-6273 or (304) 773 5684 .
UNITEO STATES OF
AMERICA, Property, a
H ·26tp
seven room, two story home
appro~~t . so years old . Five
acres of land. Location , one
mite northwest or Pomeroy
on the east side of State Rt.
143 .. ln&amp;pectioh. please
contact the o-ff i ce of Far mers Home Admin i stration,
221 West Second Street,
Pomeroy , Ohio,
45769,
telephone No . 992 -7603 .
Terms of sate. 1. Cash, 2. 10
percent down
and
10
amortized payments for the 1
balance . Current Interest
rate is a• ·:~ percent . BidS to
IJe accepted at Pomeroy
untll2 p .m . May JO, at which
time bids will be opened.
The government reserves
the r ight to reject any or all

bids .

ACRo&amp;,&lt;;
1 Twinge
5 Medicine
or tool
10 Demonstrate
11 Slice of
bacon
13 Robust
14 Guarantee
15 Finale
16 Defective
17 Hamilton
bill
18 Cut that
out!
(2 wds.)
Z8 1X11
2l Diamond

.4- t6 -1fc
r

4·27 ·12tp

AstroGrapt-1

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Ground

Phone 985 3825 .

IO:OG--Carlbe 6, 13; Medical Center 8.10; News 201
Washington Straight Talk 33.
10:»-Muslc Pro(ect Presents 33.
11 :DO-News 3.4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Mystery 13; .
FBI 6; Movie "My Darling Da1J9hters' An·
nlversary" 8; Movie "Man with the Icy Eyes" 10·
Janakl 33.
'
12:30--Wide World Mystery 6.
I :GO-Tomorrow 3,4; News 1~
TUESDAY, MAY 13, 1975

~.ua.-~tr

""

GASOUNE ALLEY

McDANIEL t.usr om
But chering, State and Federal
Inspected , slaughter, cut ,
and wrap Phone 1304) 882 -

~

"

Chain

2 11 -ffc

MQNDAY, MAY 12, lt75
7:110--Truth or Cons. 3.-4; ~ling for DollarS6; What's
My Line I; News 10; N.w Candid Camera 13;
Wally's Workshop 15; Ohio This Week 20; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:»-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3;; Maaquerade
Party 4; Pollee Surgeon 6; $25,000 Pyramid I ;
Municipal Court 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Untamed
World 15; Washington Straight Talk 20; Episode
Action 33.

6:~unrlse Seminar 4; Public Affairs 10.
6:25-Farm Report 13.
6:»-Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6; Bible An·
-- ~TARTIIJG WITH THAT
5PEAK1t.J''
swers 8; Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Rev. Cleophus
PLU6·U6L'l' YOU HIRED OF WHtCH·Robinson 13.
TO STOP ME FROM
wHERE 15
6:3S-Columbus
'Tc!day 4.
REVEAL!~ ~U$T&amp;R.
OUR PARLIN'
6:45-Mornlng
Report
3; Farmtlme 10.
KALLU&lt;AK? IMPER·
f&gt;OY ~
7:00-Today 3,4,15; A. M. America 6,13; CBS Newt
50111ATION OF GURU
8,10.
e.A&amp;OO!
8:110--Lassle 6; Captain Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 101
Sesame Street 33.
8: IG-Your Future Is Now 20.
8:30--Big Valley 6; Popeye 10.
heart,
South
should
·croa
to
8:5~huck White Reports 10.
NORTH
12 dummy, play the six of~
9;110--A.M.
3; Phil Donahue 4; Phil Donahue 1S; Rocky
41096
and go up, with the killl.'
and
Bullwlnkle
8; Captain Kangaroo 10; Morning
•1ou
·
Jim
:
'
That
play
is
designed
'
with
D.
J
.
13.
.AQJS
to encourage West to use his
9:30--Hot For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6;Galloplng
.AK2
then
and
ace
of
trumps
right
Gourmet 8; Hew Zoo Revue 13.
WEST(D)
EAST
there, If he does, South will 'IO:OG--Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, IS; Joker's Wild 8, IG;
411742
453
make his contract. West will
Dlnahl 13. ·
•KQJ86
• 914
lead the queen and jack of
10:3()-Wheel
Of Fortune 3,4, 15; Gambit B, 10. u
.106432
hearts, but South will discard a
11:110--High Rollers 3,4,15; One Life To Live 6; Now
•Q 10&amp;
.J87
losing club and West will have
You See It 8,10; Electric Company 20.
SOUTH
his last trick."
II :30--Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Blankety Blanks 13;
4 KQJ8
Oswald: "West can beat the
Hews '4'; Love Of Life 8, 10; Sesame Street 20.
.A;
contract by refusing both the
11 :55-Graham Kerr 8.0; Dan Imel's World 10.
• K 87
first and second trump leads. If
12:110--Jackpot! 3,15; Password 6,13; Bob Braun's 50• 96 4 3
South plays a third trump you
50 Club 4; News 8, 10.
take your ace, lead hearts and
12: 30--Biank Check 3, IS; Split Second 6, 13; Search For
Both vulnerable
beat him two tricks. If South
Tomorrow a, 10.
abandons trumps you make
12:45-Eiectrlc Company 33.
West North Eost Sowtll
your last small trump and beat
12:55---NBC Hews 3,15.
him one trick."
1:00-Hews 3; All My Children 6,13; Phil Donahue 1:
1•
Pass Pau Dbte.
Young and the Restless 10; Hot For Women Only 13.
Pass
Paso 2ol0
I
:30--Days
Of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Let's Make A Deal
Pass 3 4
Pass 44
6, 13; As the World Turns 8, 1o.
.Pass Pass Pass
2:~10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8,10.
2:30--Doctors 3,4,15; Big Showdown 6,13; Edge ol
Opening lead ~ K •
Night 8, 10.
The bidding has been: 12
INFL .U ENCE FOR Goou'------_;__..J
3:110--Anolher World 3,4, IS; General Hospital ' 6,13:
Price Is Rlghll, 10; Lilias, Yoga and You 20.
By Oswald &amp; J11111es Jacoby
Well Nortb East Soot~
3:~ellleto Llvel3; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
·~ · Jim: "The Bois bridge tips
8, 10; The Romagnolls' Table 20.
competition Is certainly bring·
1•
4:00-Mr. Cartoon 3; l Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset
ing out some fine tips rrom the Pass 2 •
P~Bs
'
15; Gilligan's Island 6; Tattletales 8; Sesame
masters."
You, South, bold;
Street 20,33; Movie "Vera Cruz".10; Mike Douglas
Oswald : "Giorgio Belladonna • K Q tl5 • 112 • K 4 • A987
13.
of Italy may well be the best What do you do oow!
4:30--Bewltched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6;
player in the world. His tip Is, A - lkltloret clolos. 'l'llllllrMI
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza IS.
'The most powerful card is the lttd II J•llfl&lt;ll IIJ yHr - . ..... 5:00-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mister Rogers' Neigh·
ace ol trumps. When you are
TODAY'S QUESTION
borhood 20,33; Ironside 13.
lucky enough I? hold it,
to y 011 bid t1tree clubs and your 5: 30--Hews 6; Beverly HIll billies 8; Hodgepodge Lodge
play it~! the right ~ll'!e.
partner continuos to three
20; Get Smart 15; Electric Company 33.
Jim; The hand tan I really dlamoiMls. What do you do now?
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Electric
complicate~. North and South
Aoower Tom'"""
Company 20; To Be Announced 33.
have 27 htgh-card pomls and
6:3()-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC news 13; Bewitched 6;
reach what turns out to be an
CBS News 8,10; Zoom 20,33.
optimistic game contract after Sand $1 lor JACOBY MODERN
7:00-Truth
Or Consequences. Bowling For Dollars 6;
West's opening bid."
boo/&lt; to: 'Win •t Brldpe," (cto Wo
What's
My
Line? 8; News 10; Nam~ ThaiTune 13;
Oswald ; "Gioraio suggests llfiWiplper), P.O. Bo• ~. R•dlo
.
High
School
T.V. Honor Society 15; Antiques 20;
that after winning the flnt City St•tlon, Nlrr Yorlr, N.Y. 10010. Lilias. Yoga and You 33-'.

#A. '

EXCAVATING. dozer , loader
and backhoe work , septic
tanks
installed ,
dump
trucks and lo -boys for hire ;
will ha lJ I f ill dirt. top soil ,
limestone and gravel. Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers , day
phone 992 7089 , night phone

T~l::t:

'

'

992-3092

SEPTIC TANK S cleaned .
Modern sanitation . 992 3954
or 992-7349
9-18 -tfc

'

,...._._..._........_.,.~-~·--"

-::--:-="7"--:-==,...,.,==-·

Sa~s &amp; Service

6·30 ftc

0 &amp; 0

2·52tp

WILKINSON
SMALL ENG

delivered right to you r
project Fast and easy . Free
~estimates . Phone 992 3284 ,
Goeglein Ready Mix Co .,
Middleport. Oh io

__....

1'J

''

4

- 4-10 1 mo .

RE ADY MI X CONCRETE

.

.,

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . 992-3993

4-10-1 mo .

3224 .

"

~

LARRY LAVENDER

Phone 992-7665

992 3525 or 992 .5232 .

"

ExcA vATING ,
Dozer ,
Ba ck hoe, ditcher , water
lines , tooters , drains , roads
and brush c leaning . No job
too small, no weather too
bad
Phone Charles R .
Hatf ield, Rt . 1. Rutland ,
Ohio . Phone 742 -609 2

5

· - · -. .- - . _ . .

2•

Wolfe &amp;Ward
Garage
Condor St.

1

Trump ace can be big one

lml Bldhels .

Room Addition.

·--

WIN AT BRIDGE

PomerOY

Qrlbuctill

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

8:00-Smothers Brothers 3,4, 15;; Rookies 6, 13; Gunsmoke I, 10; Thin Edge 20,33.
9:110--Movle "Buck and the Preacher" 3,4,15; SWAT
6,13; Maude 8, 10; The Man Who's Giving 'Em Hell
20; Thin· Edge and You 33.
9:»-Rhoda8,10; Sweet_Ohlo20; Oneola Klnd33.

Grand Opening

On aluminum replacement
windows, siding , storm
doors and windows, railing,
phone
Charles
Lisle,
Syracuse,
Ohio .
carl
Jacob, Sale!;! Represen tative.

A_ir conditioning. plum b•ng, heating, roofing ,
spouting, general sheet
metal work .
.

From the largest Truck or
Bu lldoz er Radiator to the
smallest Heater Core .

_..

l -Television log for easy viewing

YOUR CAR MISSING

LIZZ

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

-·-------- ~------

Fcir

~~-·

1

....
.I

For

By Mrs. Herl!erl Roush
CO N TE MPOR A RY
Modern
Muzzl e L oader s.
lza ak
walnut s ter eo. am fm radi o,
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Johnson
Walton Farm , Ch es t er
&lt;1 speaker sound system
Oh io _ May 13, 1975 TuesdaY
speed
autom ati c- chan ger4.
and children, Michelle and
ev en tng , 6 p . m
Balance $103.29. Use ou~
budge t t erms Ca ll 992-3965.
Della, Mrs . ..Florence Smith,
5-B 4tc
--------------·
·--5 7 t fc
Mrs. Emma Johnson attended
CLELAND 'S
BLOOMERS t
the crowing of the 1975 May
STRAWBERRY plants , Rt .
Opening May 5th F lo wers ,
plants and produ ce . F air
338 near Rac1ne Locks ,
Day Queen Miss Valerie
Clla rli e Foster
prices
,
cour
teous
servtce
.
1971
MATADOR
51595
Johnson at Rio Grande
4 29 12tc
next door fo Steamboat Inn
4 door , local car , ai r condition ed , full equipment .
Ji m Cl eland , ~ac1ne , Oh io
College Friday night. Valerie
F L OWER S for Mother 's Day .
B ene f it f or th e Oh io Val l ey
1970 CHEV.·IMPALA SPT. SEDAN
$1595
is the daughter of Mr. and
Fel lo wship
Sma ll ey's
G 1ft
Shop ,
V-8, automatic. power steering &amp; brakes, factory a1r,
Chester , Ohio Phon e 985
Mrs. Jerry Johnson of Racine.
5-B SIC
good w-w t ires, radio, v inyl in tenor , sa ndstone fini sh .
3537 '
Mrs. Ruth . Parsons was a
4-29- lOt c
Nice.
QU I CK rRINT by mai l fr om
dinner guest of Billy and Kelly
c am e ra -r eady copy . One
1970CHEVELLEMALIBU CPE.
51695
3 POLLED Re g. Here ford
page SS 55 first 100 , $ 1 15
Parsons at Afttiquity Sunda~.
307 V-8, power steering, good G70 w1 de oval tires .
bu ll s, one 4 yr . old , 2 year each addttional 100 Send
lrng s , al l Rollo Mixer
Cookie Weddle and Sharon
radio, sil ver grey f in ish, automat ic tran s, interior
c opy ,
check
to
LE T
breeding . Phone 992 5565.
spo tl ess
TERSHOP PLU S, 72 W.
and Cindy Roush and Debbie
5 11 -3t c
Union , At h ens, Ohio A l so,
1969
CHEVY
NOVA
4
DR
.
51095
Holsinger were shopping in
lOb pr inting .
6 cyl . automati c tran s., cl ean interior , good tires,
1970 CHEV . Nova 350, 4 sp
4 29 38 t p
Parkersburg _ Monday
46,000 miles , $1,200 Also ,
radio
1968 fold down cam per ,
evening.
BEAUT I F UL selectton of
sl eeps 8 S450 Phone 992 Don and Lois Bell each
f lowers , pot s. ba skets and
7378
spray s for Memortal Day .
5-ll -3tc
celebrated a birthday the past
Cliff's Pla ce , N Se cond St,
week, Lois on Thursday and
Midd l eport .
1972 VW SUPER Beetle Baha
5 4 tfc
i ncluding lugga ge rack and
Don Saturday. Here to help
OPEN EVES.'B:QO P. M.
1 snow tires Ph one 742 -6252
them celebrate were their ot7;~-~~; -~~~; --;,-;- -s-;-ud ,
POMF! RqY, OHIO
5 11 3tc
you ng son ot " THE OLE .'.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..:...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ ,
daughter. Lorna, of ColumMAN ," AAAT , a leading
bus. Bruce Hart called during
1965 T BIRO First S2SO Phone ~eal Estate
si re of race and show hor
Sale
99'2 -721 0 after 6 p .m .
ses . Ran within 100th of a Wanted To Buy
the weekend on the Bells.
5-ll -4fp
second of AAA time before
Mrs . Mildred Donohew
TW O NEW 3 bedroom hom es
Old
upr1ght
he was 2. Offic1a1 AA w 1th an WANTED :
with I car ga rage, carpeted,
p i anos . any
con d 1tion
197 1 G M c J4 ton p u ., auto
89 sp eed i nde x , hatter ,
called on Ferne B. Hayman
F HA or bank f inancing
transmission , p b , p s, ·
Payi ng $10 each . First f loor
contorm!t1on , and b es t
and Kqthryn Philson SaturPhon e 742-3615 or see Milo
only
Write
and
give
heavy duty , 350 cu
in .
d isposition Fee $100 at time
Hut chinson , Rutland ,
d irect 1ons to Witten Piano
Phone 992 2143 or ~92 - 2724 .
of services with live foal
day.
5-8-1fc
co , Box 188 , Sardis, Ohio
5-11 -3tp
guarantee Phone 992 -7888 .
Mr. Clarence Story and
- -- -------------43946 .
4-20 -26tc
5 8 6tp 1968 FI REBIRO for $700 Call L OT near Ractne Phone 84 3daughter, Rosalie, called on
991 -253 7, after 5 p m
p
ai
d
fo
r
all
mak
es
and
CASH
2253 after 5 p m
Mr. and Mrs . Erww
5-7-12tc
m od els of mobile homes . OL D furn i tur e, ice bo xes,
5 4 7tc
Gloeckner Sunday afternoon.
Phon e ar ea c ode 614 -423 brass
beds
.
or
complete
9531
Mrs . Golda Wyant of
househol ds . Wr1te M . o. For Sale
NEED A new home built on
4-13 -tfc
Miller
.
Rt
4,
Pomeroy
,
your lot ? Contact Milo B
Harrisonville spent Friday
Oh io. Call 992 7760 .
Hut ch ison , Rutland , Ohio .
REFRIGER
ATOR
.
$50
JUNK
autos
,
comp
l
ete
and
with her brother, Mr . and Mrs.
• Phone 742 36 15
10 -7 74
Phone 992 7836.
del ivered to our ya rd . we
5-8-lfc
Bert Hunt.
pick up auto bodies and buy
5·9 31c
--a II k tnds of sera p meta Is and
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Durst
i ron . Rid er's Sa lvage , St . Employment Wanted
FISH BAIT - fish bai t We 2 BEDROOM trailer and lot in
of Niles came Sunday for Mr.
Rt . 124 , Rt. 4. Pomeroy ,
town Phone 992 3975 or 992
have ou r baif in , night
REMODELING
,
Plumbing
,
2571
Ohio Call 992 5468 .
crawlers ,
large
meal
Durst's parents , Mr . and
heating· and all types of
4 9 tt c
10 -17 tfc
worms , worms, red worms,
general
repair .
Work
Mrs. Pete Durst of Ravenblood
bai
t,
Indian
Joe's
·
g uaranteed . 20 years ex
Sport and CB Shop, 308 Page SERVICE stat 1on and garage
swood and took them to their AUCTION, Thursday night , 7
perience
Phone 992 2409 .
St ., Middleport Phone 992Rutland . Will finan ce or
p
m
.
at
Mason
Auction,
5-1
tt
c
home in Niles Tuesday for an
3509
teas e. Call 742 -5052 .
Horton St . in M ason . w va .
4-9-26tc
.4 -9-30tc
indefinite visit.
Consignments
wel com e.
Phone (3041 773 -547l.
There will be a Memorial
2-2-1fc Help Wanted
HOME grown 1omo1o p l anT~ . 1.72 ACRES of land and locust
posts Phone 742-3656
Day dinner at the Letart Falls
improved MeKican and
F OR your " Oil of - Mrnk " BEE LIN E Fash 1ons neects 3
4 20-26tp
Heinz 1350 . Across from
Community Hall Sunday, May
st yi1Sts in t h1S area No
C osmet i cs
--Phone
Mun 1cipa1 Park 1n Syracuse ,
investmen
t
Ca
ll
99
2
1789.
BROWN 'S 99 2 5113 .
25. Proceeds will be used for
Thomas Hayman .
s 12 Jtc
1 7. ffc
•4·28·30tc
the upkeep of the hall.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Bearhs NOW se llmg Fuller Brush HOUSEKEEPER
and TRAV EL trarler , 21 u ., a.c .,
Products , phone 992 3410
bab ysrtter , varied ho u rs
returned to their home · at
se l f contained . 1972 Pontia c
1 24 tfc
lap p rox I 30 hours per
Cata lina . low mileage , like
week Must have car Phone
Portsmouth, Va ., after a
new
Gas range , good
992
-2832
.
condit 1on
Phone 742-5403 .
week 's vacation with her
5-7 6tc
· 5-9·3tc
mother, Mrs. Erma Wilson Los1
LOOKING for an exciting and 6 H . P
Craftsman r 1d ing ·
and family .
LO ST m vic 1n1ty of Pomeroy
profitable
career
w1th
mower S 1~D . · Coll/£~.S!er, MIDDLEPORT - 7 room
El
ementary
Sc
hooL
a
go
(d,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burri,
fle xr ble
hours?
Like
Conn trumpet 1n bla ck case,
98 5 3889,. •J tt "' ,j.. , .. 11 ~ ~~;. j '' 1 . home with view of the river. 2
meeting ~ the publ ic? Have a
Billy Wilson of Bolivar Dam,
sm all r ew ard . Pho"!' ' ·992 ........:·
-~.
5.., t c baths , family room, automatic
car?
Welcome
Wagon
wants
56.d2
----------------heal on a good street.
spent a week with Mrs . Erma
you .
Representa tive -191
1l
MX
Yahama
,
good
59 6tc
Position ' op en tn Pomeroy .
helmet to match bike . S400 . $22,500.00.
Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Butch - - - ~- ------__:--- --.
Write Box 729 W . c o Daily
Phone 9'9 "01 ·
OUT OF TOWN - A working
Sen t rnel. Pomeroy , Ohio .
Wilson and Mrs . Kathryn LOST Thursday in ~utland
5-9-3tc man's special. 3 bedrooms,
Lang svi l l e area , large male
We lc ome Wagon , an eq ua l
Hunt.
- --- --- -- - - - - - - - - - ·
bath, furnace , cook and bake
Walker hound , bla ck , brown , , ~rtunity employer
S anc:t Ammo
Our
and wh1te , very sh y. If seen, _., ~t-,
51 6tc GUN
Mrs. Kathryn Hunt visited
summer ~-!pck -.-,"1~ • ._nbw units, and refrigerator . Only
call 742 3141 .
• :j,;,.a;:..
---- - - - - - - - arri v ing still at last $7 ,500.00.
·
Mrs . Art Sylvester at
year 's pnces 22 MAG - NEW LISTING - In the
~ - ---~--------~':!'l For ' ent
Syracuse:
rifl es , Winchester . Moss
country, with view of the
Mrs. Kathryn Hunt and Mrs. L O~T.1 - LSa nta Ger trud 1s red TRAILER space for rent m
berg , and Marlin Hand g un s river . 3 bedrooms, bathroom,
he r er , ost ne ar Bowman's
Mi ddlepor t
Call 992 -2625.
-~
44 MAG Two 22 I r
Beverly Wickline entertained
Run on 124 . Call 949 365 4 or
AMMO - - 22 Mag H .P ., $3 a furnace (cpal or wood). oak
4 . 2] .tfc
,949
2832
bo'X : $27 .50 per 500 round floors , aluminum siding,
with a cookout at their home
5-6-7tp
ca r t on Rem1ngton High needs finished . Buy this for a
TRAILER space , 1 m ile from
Friday evening in honor of Mr.
Vol. 22 H.P 12 10 pe r 100 pk . summer cottage. $10,000.00.
Pomeroy
Phone 992 -5858
and Mrs. Pete Bearhs of
NOTICE OF
Get them while they last
POMEROY _ 3 nice size
5 2-tfc
APPOINTMENT
Ph one 992 5177 V illage Gun bedrooms, bath, basement,
Portsmouth, Va. and Mr. and
Shoppe. 266 Mill St , Mid
cas e No. 21502 2 BEDROOM mobile home ,
d lepor t. Oh~ 6 .
fenced yard and 2 porches.
Mrs. Charles Burri and Billy Esf,a te of William . Er'-nest ·a C' 1 in Ra cine area . Phone
59
7t
c
Paneling and carpeting. Walk
Sellards,
Dec
eased
.
9-92&lt;5858
Wilson of Bolivar Dam. Atto work or stores. 517.500 .00 .
Not ic e is her eby given t hat
S-2-tfc - --------------- - - - tending were Mrs. Betty Edgar Se llard s pf Ro ute 1,
1970 CHEVY NOVA 350, 4
Dove r . Ohio 44622, has been
speed , 46 ,000 miles, $1400
WE NEED SOME' NICE
Wilson, Ronnie, Robin and duly
apartment.
appointed Adm inistrator FURNISHED
Also , 1968 fold -down camper
NEARLY NEW HOMES
adults only m Middleport
.Cheryl, William Wickline and of the E stat e of Wi lliam Er
sleep s 8, !.550 Phone 992
WITH A FEW ACRES OF
Pt'lone 992 -3874 .
7378
.
'
nest
Sellards
,
d
ece
ased.
l
ate
sons, Scotty a)ld Kyle · and of Me1g s County , Ohio .-··, ..
3 25 tfc
,;., 4, :.. 5-8-4tp LAND. CALL 992·3325.
Mrs. Erma Wilson.
Cred i tors are r eq uir ed to
--- - - - -t"'ll
•
the ir c la ims w1t h said 5 RM apt furnish ed ; 3 rm
Mrs.
Maggie
Roush file
apt f urn ished ; 4 rm . apt ., 1974 CJ 5 Renegad,e .Jeep .
f iduc iary Wi l h1n fou r months
Phon e 949 -2981
returned to her home in
utili t ies paid , I ch 1l d ac Dated this 23rd day of Ap ril ,
5 7 6tc
191
5
cepted
Also
,
ax38
mobile
Baltimore, Md., due to illness .
home for sale . John Sheets,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush,
3 mlles south of Middleport. VARIETY
Mannin g D . Webs ter
OF cabbage,
Rt 7
Probate Judge
tomato and pepper plants.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Pickett of
5 8 6tp
of sa id County
AlsO, caulifloWer, broccolt,
Middleport and Mr. and Mrs.
brussel sprouts. egg -plants . 3 BEDROOM home on 4 acres
of ground , full basement,
Bedding plants , -:-:- ' pansies,•
Herbert Roush visited Mr. and (4) 28, ( 5 ) 5 , 12, 3tc
COUNTRY Mobile Home
fuel oil furnace, a .c .•
petunia, marigold, salv ia,
Park, Rt 33, ten m11es north
Mrs . Charles Michael Sunday.
breezeway and large garage
phlox , portuiBca, · ageh um,·
of Pom eroy . Large lots with
NOTICE OF
in' the country but c lose to
alyffum, impatiens, coleus,
Mrs. Young has moved to
concrete
patios,
sidewalks,
APPOJNTMENT
town . On hardtop road , 2
Variety of geraniums, also,
runners
and
off
street
Case No . 21510
the former Ralph Chapman
traiter setups included . Call
pots of petunias and mums .
parking Phon e 992 7479 .
Estate of HAROLD CAR·
992 -7649 after 4 p.m . or 992 Han~lng
baskets
residence.
12 -31 -tfc
NAHAN , Decea sed.
2519 any time for ap petunias, i vy geranium ,
Nottce ls hereb y g1ven t hat
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert of
po intmen t .
tobelia, ferns, wandering
V Pr i ce of Portland , 2 BEORM mobile home, 308
4 30·26tc
jews , porch boxes , large
Kanawha City, George Hunt of Clarence
Oh10, has been duly appoint ed
Page St.. in Middleport $75
hearty red azaleas, Cleland
depos it req uired .
Addison an&lt;j Mr. and Mrs. ~ dm1ni strato r of the Estate of
Greenhouse,
Racine .
Haro l d Carnahan , deceased .
5-11 -tfc
Geraldine Cleland·.
•
Charles Burri of Bolivar Dam la t e of Me1gs Coun t y , Ohio .
......;
4
13.tfc
Credrtors ar e r equi red to 3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
visited Mr. and Mrs. Bert
f i le t he ir claims with sa id
unfurn 1shed
apartmen ts. CLOSE OUT on new Zig -Zag
Hunt.
f1duc iar v within four months .
Phon e 992 5434 .
sewing
machines.
For ·
Dated this 1st day of May
Mrs . Eula Wolfe spent
4-12-tfc
se wing stretch fabrics ,
1975
.
buttonholes, fancy designs ,
Friday evening with Mr. and
PRIVAT E meet 1ng room tor
etc .
Paint
slightly
Manning D Webster
Mrs. Bert Hunt and Mr. and
any organ i zation . phone 992
.blemished.
Choice
of
Judge
3915
carrying case or sewing
Mrs. Herbert Roush .
Court of Common Pleas,
3 11 -tfc
stand . $49.80 cash or terms
Probat e Div is ion
Mr. and Mrs. Guy ' Shuler
available
. Phone 992-7755
APT ltke new , 3 rooms, with
12 18 ftc . CLOSE IN - About 3
have purchased the former 15 1 5. 12. 19, 3tc
targe bath , tabletop range,
~
Grace Crow residence and
large closet . East Main St,
Acres . I slory frame, 2 BR .
Pom er oy See to apprec iate .
dining
R., bath, FO forced
moved 11\ere from Pomeroy.
Phone Gallipolis dur ing day ,
air
furnace,
part
NOTICE OF
.446 -9699 , evenings 446 9539
APPOINTMENT
basement, barn, own water
4-10-tfc
Case No . 21509
system. SI0,9oo.
Estate of Truman Allen Penn,
20"-3112 HP
3 RM and bath furn tshed apt.
RUTLAND - 60 acres. l'/ 2
Jr. aka Allen Penn aka. Allen

Laurel Oiff
" Notes ·
News
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J~ Zirkle died Saturday

News •• in Briefs
(ConUnued frGIII Jllllt 1)
lon-g way and not put out as much as they should to get optimum yields ."
Either way, experts say, consumers probably will have to
loot the bill .
BRUSSELS - THE EUROPEAN COMMON Market has
signed a far-reaching trade agreement with Israel despite
Arab w;~rnings ol the political consequenc~s. Israeli Foreign
Minister Yigal Allon praised the "courage" of -the Common
Market, but the Algerian government urged Arabs to call off
talks for a similar pact:
The nine-nation economic community signed the
agreement with Israel Sunday, defending tpe accord as part ol
a "balanced overall approach to the Mediterranean." The
pact, which replaces a 1970 trade agreement, calls lor dutyfree imports of all Israeli Industrial products and most farm
goods into the market by July 1, 1977. Israel would end duties
on similar market products by Jan. 1, 1980.

Mrs . Jean Zirkle, 54, ol 605'h
W. Main St., pomeroy, died
Saturday at Holzer Medical
Center.
Born Feb. 23, 1921, she was
preceded in death by his
parents, Marion and Bertha
Hysell Radford, and her
husband, Chester.
Survivors include two sons,
Danny and Bruce, both ol
Pomeroy; a sister, Lucille
Leifheit, Pomeroy, and lour
grandchildren . .
Funeral servi;es will be
held Tuesday at 11 a.m. at the
Ewing Chapel with the Rev :

Director Olarles Yeago, Terri mackhw-st, Vicky
Carolyn Roush, Jeanette Oldaker, Rex
Howard, Jennifer Oldaker, and Diane Finnicum. Absent
were Dianna Evans and Patty Athey.

~-_Spradling,

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- L. D. Harti~er , Middleport; Eunice Brown,
Pomeroy ; Harry Shain,
Racine .
DISCHARGES - Randy
Riffle, Roy Icenhower, Jr _,
Ann Barrett, Eunice Christy,
John McMurray, Ada Stigliano, Dalton Grover , Nick
Grueser.

Robert Kreider, Jackson, a
son . Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Laudermilt, Pomeroy, a
daughter . .
Mayll
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Rowe,
Racine, a daughter and Mr.
and Mrs. Steven Stewart,
Minersville, a son.

.~

SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Velva Ambergy, Syracuse ;_
Renee Russell, Minersville;
Roland Morris, Rutland.
DISCHARGES - Wayne
Milhoan, Minnie Johnson.

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•

FOUR AWARDED COVETED ARION AWARD Traditionally, only one person wtns the Wahama High
School Band Arion Award.- However, this year, it became
impossible to single out one Individual, so lour musicians
who lit the criteria lor the award received it Saturday

night at the Wahama Band Banquet. Winners, with their
band directors, left to right, are Diaries Yeago, band
director ; Diane Finnicum , Jeanette Oldaker, Rex
Howard, Lou Ellen Roush , and Tom Phillips; assistant
band director.
TRANSFER MADE
The Pomeroy Unit ol
SEOEMS at 1:49 p. m. Friday
She was preceded in death made an emergency transfer
by her parents an d her
ol Nick Grueser, Rutland,
husband, Jimmie L. Haney, in !rom Veterans Mem orial
1963.
Hospital to Holze• · Medical
Survivors include two Center .
sisters-in-law and one brotherin-law, Mr. and Mrs. William
SQUAD CALLED
Boyles and Mrs . Denzil
Rh onda Hawley, MidHan ey, all ol Fairmont, W. dleport , was taken to Pleasant
Va.; one uncle, John SwetValley Hospital by the
nam, Louisa, Ky ., and several Pomeroy E·R squad at 2:39 p.

Ethel Haney died Saturday

Mrs. Ethel S. Haney, 71, ol
2134 Washington Blvd.,
Belpre, formerly ol Coolville,
died un expectedly Saturday
morni~g at her home. The
daughter of the late Bud and
Nanie Swetnam, she was born
in Lawrence County, Ky .
She was a memtier ol the
Tuppers Pla ins Christian
Ch urch and th e Minier
Chapter No. 274, Order of the cousins.
Eastern Star, Guysville.
Funeral services will be
held Tuesday at I p.m. at the
White Funeral Home in
Coolville with Evangelist
Mike Bridembaugh in charge.
Burial will be in the Tuppers
Plains Christian Church
The Meigs County Sheriff 's Cemetery. Friends may call
Dept. investigated two ac- any time .
"Fifty years ago a man
cidents Sunday. At 10:15 p.m.
fi ni shed a day 's work and
needed rest. Now he needs
on SR 7 in Chester Township,
exerc•-se ... "
three miles north of Chester a
deer was killed when it ran
If your idea o.f exercise is
into ihe path ol an auto driven
puttering around the house,
by James W. Hollon , 31, ·
check your tool ·and· hard·
Vienna, W. Ya .
.
ware needs. Then vis it our
" FRIENDLY ONES" and
At 2 a.m. in Sutton Twp., on
stock up.
SR 124, two mites west of
Webb Channell, 9th District
Syracuse , Willard E. Miller,
Commander,
Department ol
33, Rt . 1, Shade, traveling
Ohio
,
Disabled
American
west, reported that an oncoming car on his side ol the Veterans , announced today a
highway struck his car and 9th District meeting will be
continued on. The incident is held Saturday, May 17, at 2
p.m. at the F.O.P. Hall, corner
under investigation.
"·" ...
ol Wood and High' Sts. in
*AAAAAAAAAAAAAAA*A********••••~ Jackson .
The 9th District is compri sed ol Athens, Gallia ,
~
For a Gala Evening : Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs ,.
Under the Stars
Pike, Ross, Scioto and Vinton
~
On the Beautiful
~ counties.
At present, the 9th District
Ohio River . . .
leads all other districts in
Buy Your Tickets Now For The
: memberships, and ranks _first
in the Department ol Ohio,
~ruise On The
Disa bled American Ve terans.
All members are urged to
attend.

2 accidents
are reported

DAV's 9th
district will

1

meet Saturday

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK OJ.
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CHAPERONE

THURSDAY, (AT POMEROY) ~ ·
~ MAY 15
LEAVING AT 8 PM :

l*

*: -

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:
*:
•Jt.
it•
:

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Visit Meigs Inn ' for cocktails and dinner.
Make it a real gala!! Make your res,e rvations early, phone 992-3629.
Proceeds-from excursion go fo tne Pomero y Chamber

of COmmerce communlt~ projects.

*!!:
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:

:: . MEIGS INN .
POMEROY, OHIO

::
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It
It

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REMEMBER THAT . SOMEONE SPECIAL on any
occasion with a Gift Certificate from the Me igs Inn - a :
Gift Certificate from the Meigs Inn is something
anyone can use and a great gift id•a for the per son that lj&gt;
has everything .
lj&gt;

*

It

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It

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs. John
Little;
Leon ;
Wendell
Rossiter , Scottown; Connie
Nibert, Gallipolis Ferry;
Georgia Schartiger, daughter ,
Middleport; Mrs. Dale Warns·
ley, Gallipolis Ferry; Debra
Pearson , Point Pleasant;
Jarrell
Wheeler, West
Columbia; Mrs. Donald
Gilbert, New Haven; Mrs.
Robert Rulen , daughter, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. James Barnett, son, Point J;'leasant;
Doris Swanson, Middleport;
Eugene Sterrett, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Joey Hall , Sr .,
son, Arbuckle; James Greene,
Sr ., Hartford ; Mrs. Lester
Little,
Leon;
Stephen
Cochran, Point Pleasant ;
Homer Johnson, Mason; Mrs.
Carsel Stone, Jr., son, West
Columbia; . John Weekly,
Mason ; Sarah Lutton, Point
Pleasant; William
Bonecutter, Point Pleasant;
Oscar Emboden, Minersville;
Mrs. Morris Moss, daughter,
Cheshire.
NEW CITIZENS - May 12,
a daughter to Mr . and Mrs.
Terrance Blankenship, Point
Pleasant.

Roger Moore as
James Bond 007 in

THE MAN WITH
THE GOLDEN GUN
( Technicolor)

Travelers
Checks
$ 300
500
1,000
2,500
5,000

Show Starts 7:00p.m .

'

REGULAR $89.95 UPRIGHT
With REGULAR $19.85
CLEANING TOOLS. You

SAVI $28.851

...

You'll lind a great selection ol fine
furniture, floor coverings and
appliances at the lowest possible prices.
· free delivery, convenient terms, service .
wheri you need (t •.Serving you has been
our business since J952.

BAKER

\

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,...

• Edge Kl_...r clelnt lhit
tough if'!ch al ong t111
bolrdl

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY ,

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· DR. LEWIS D. TELLE, chief ol surgery, lelt, and
Scott Lu~s. right, administrator, discuss plans lor an
Intensive care ward expected to open at the hospital in a
few montl)s.

r:;-=''-'""~

Jllews • • •in Briefi

•=
'"

By United PresslDternaUonal

-'"'

WHILE PARENTS PICKETED FOR STRIKING teachers
at South Point and another teacher walkout was being reported
In Trumbull CoWlty, officials at the Ross School District,
Butler CoWlty, Monday threatened to Invoke the state's
Ferguson Act against striking teachers.
Parents ol students in the South Point School District,
Lawrence County, picketed In place ol teachers prohibited
from picketing by Lawrence County Common Pleas Court
Judge ·Kenneth Ater.
The South Point School Board last week Invoked the
Ferguson Act, which prohibits strikes by public employes, and
fired all114 teachers Involved In the work stoppage. All seven
schools were open Monday. No students showed up a.t live ol
them, however, and only 40 reported for classes at the high
school and six at the junior high school.

during May only
.

Usual

May

lee

YOU

tee

SAVE

$ 3.00

$2.00

5.00

10.00

2.00
2.00

8.00

25.00

2.00

50.00

23.00

2.00 .

48.00

$

1.00
3.00

HAMILTON, OHIO - JAMES RUPPORT, 40, Hamilton,
Ohio, charged with killing 11 members of his family at their
'home here Easter Sunday, suffers !rom a mental disorder but
Is SliDe enough to stand trial, two psychiatrists and a
'jlsychologiat said Monday.
Roppert is sane enough to stand trial despite suffering
from "a paranoid psychotic state," said University ·a! Cin·clnnati College ol Medicine psychiatrist Dr. Howard H.
-Sokolov. Sokolov was appointed by the Butler Cotmty, Ohio,
Common Pleas Court io examine l\uppert. He described the
accwted 's condition as a ''major mental disorder ."
Dayton, Ohio, psychiatrist Dr. Dan A. Thomas, testifying
as a witness for the prosecution, agreed that Roppert has a
''paranoid personality."
·

Wherever you travel ... or
if you keep money at home ·
or at work . . . the best way
to protect your money is to use
First National City Travelers CheckS.

THE FARMERS BANK
AND .SAVINGS
CO.
Ponierov. 0 hio

NEW YORK - IF RONALD ; REAGAN aQd Goorge
Wallace ran for preSident as_Independents against majorparty candidacies by President Ford and Sen. Edward Kennedy, they would force the next national election Into the
House the Harris SW'vey predicted Monday.
' In 'a poll of 1,384 persons chosen as a croSHeCtion of likely
w... Harris said a ticket headed by Kennedy and Sen. John
Gleilft of Ohio came out first, wtth 38 per cent of the "vote,"
followed by 30 per cent for Ford-Vice ~esidenf Nelson
Rockefeller and 23 pet. lor Reagan-Wallace. N1ne pet. ol
tbote polled were undecided. The Reagan-Wallace vote was
the hl&amp;hel!t thirdi)arty vote ever rec_orded In a Harris Survey, ,
the polllnl! OJl!anlzatlon said.
·
.

1\ fTILL
SEr\VICE
B;\NI(

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WOLFSBURG, WEST GERMANY - Volksw,agen, the
Jargellt auto maker In Europe and a symbol ol West German
economic might, has gone Into the red for the first time In its
hlatcry. Volbwqen President Toni Schmuecker told a news
confermce today the cunpany lost $34~ mlJIIon last year and
would 1'1111 pay a dlvldenli for the 1974 (lac81 year.
Sc:bamecker, a former Ford executive who became head ol
VW Iaiit January Ill an attempt to Iring the atllng auto giant
back on ill feet, said sales fen 12 per cent last year and
production dropped 11.4 per cent. The 53-year-old auto
·· ·
(Coallnued ,on pip 10)

.,'

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. By HELEN fHOMAS
·Communist regime.
UP! White House Reporter
But White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen declined to
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - President Ford, applying both discuss the details ol Ford's diplomatic and military strategy
diplomatic and military pressure, today sought the help ol toward the seizure. "We cannot discuss any possible military
Olina and ordered 1,000 Marines to prepare to enter Thailand movements," he said when asked about the Marine alert. He
in an effort to win release of an unarmed American merchant also said he could not answer the question whether Ford was
considering a military response.
vessel seized by Cambodia, sources said.
Pentagon sources said 1,000 Marines on Okinawa received
Asked il U.S. ollicials had sought to speak directly to the
the order lo "prepare to depart soon" for Thailand in a show ol Camhodian government, Nessen replied "I cannot talk about
military Ioree against the Cambodian armed forces who seized that." The Cambodian government has made no public
the ship Mayaguez early Monday In what Ford described as an statement on the incident.
"act ol piracy."
The U.S. embassy in Phnom Penh was closed a month ago, a
The aircraft carrier USS Coral Sea and several destroyers lew days before the American-backed government of U&gt;n Nol
also ·w.ere stean1lng toward the area. And U.S. aircralt were !ell to the Communists.
Nessen said flatly that the Mayaguez was not a "spy ship"
continuing air surveillance ol the Mayaguez, which was being
held by two CambOdian vessels near a tiny islal)d about 30 such as the USS Pueblo which was seized by.North Koreans In
miles offshore in the Gull ol Siam.
1968.
Nessen said the fact that Ford instructed the State DepartState Depanment sources reported the administration was
ment
Monday to demand release ol the ship indicated that
seeking the help of China to convince the Cambodian Kluner
Rouge government to release the Mayaguez and its 39-man active diplomatic efforts were underway to reach a peaceful
crew and avoid an international incident. China is one ol the solution ol the problem.
Ford meanwhile summoned members ol the National
lew countries which has communiciations with the new

•

VOL. XXVII

NO. 21

•

Security Council to-their second meeting since the Incident .
Nessen said Secretary ol State Henry A. Kissinger, who was on
a speaking trip in Missouri, did not intend ·to return to
Washington for the meeting.
Nessen explained that the Mayaguez, a containerized merchant ship which was carrying cargo !rom Hong Kong to
Thailand when it was seized, has been under constant surveillance by U.S. aircraft.
He reported that the vessel was seized ne~r the island ol
Pouto Wai, a tiny rock about 60 miles offshore claimed by both
the Cambodians and the Vietnamese_ Two Cambodian gunboats then escorted the Mayaguez to another island, Koh Tan,
ahout 30 miles north, where it has been held ever since, he said.
Cambodians are aboard the ship, Nessen said. But he
declined to say whether the American crew had been taken of(
the vessel.
"The United States has received no reports ol any
crewmember being wounded on the merchant ship," Nessen
said.
The Mayaguez apparently did not go to the Cambodian port
of Komporg Son as first announced.

•

enttne

at y

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The ~cond reading of an
ordinance, which appeared
destined t9 go down to defeat,
with only lour members
present lor the session, was
tabled until the next meeting
when Middleport Village
Council met in regular session
Monday night.
The ordinance, which would
11

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Marines prepared to enter
•
Thailand on rescue miSSion

allow recreation centers" -

Miclcl1port, ~ .

.

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Main Store Annex and Warehouse
Open Weekdays9 :301o S~ . m .

·.W,Ooo.OO Maximum Insurance
~: for Each Depositor

·fURNITURE

.

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORJ. OHIO
TUESDAY, MAY 13, 1975

PRICE 15' .

Council stalled
on SUnday rules

BuyNo~r/1

at over 35,000 refund points in the U.S. and overseas.
The most extensive refund service in the travelers check
busin~ss. They're honored world-wide in millions of places.
Best tune to buy them is during May. Offer ends May 31st

for your home!

'

(See page two today for .picture and text
' report on activities or the Veterans Memorial
,. Hospitalin Pomeroy,'and pages four and five for
' other informative material on the theme or 1975 .
' National Hospital WeeJI.

If they're lost or stolen you ·c an get an on-the-spot refund

. . : and a niw look

'

lfFER

Am~ntol

Rated " PG"

..

COMBINATION

Up to .$5000 worth of
First National City
Travelers Checks
for a fee of just $2

Fri. , Sai., Sunday

I

-

DAVTODINE
Meigs Chapter 53, DAY, will
hold a steak dinner at 6 p. m.
Tuesday at the chapter home
on Butternut Ave., PomerQy,with a business session to
follow .

'

Tonightlhru Thursday .
NOT OPEN

.

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MEETING SET
RACINE - tbe Ra.clne Fire
Dept. Auxiliary will' meet at
7:30p. m. tbursday at the lire
house.

Even if your trip is months away
buy from us in May and save up to $48!

. MEIGS THEATRE

:

JEAN WRIGHT, RN, displays blood sugar testing
equipment used to get reasonably accurate count ol blood
sugar at any 'hour, without calling in a laboratory
technician to perlonn a standardized test.

.

SPRING
TIMEI

(

I,

--

·siJ99D

unusual Offer

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

Wilbur Perrin officiating.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery . Friends may call
at the funeral home any time ._

Ifill'"

Tickets: $6 Single, $10 Couple, On Sale At:

i

t*,.
*

REGULAR

NOW YOU KNOW
Antifreeze is used in lire
hydrants in Fairbanks,
Alaska.
UNIT CALLED
The Middleport E-R squad
was called to the Will Winston
residence at 667 South Second
Ave . at 12:10 a.m. Monday. No
detail~ were available.
SALE NOTED
The Ladies Auxiliary ol the
Bi~ Bend Citizens Band Club
will hold a yard sale at 161)
Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy ;
May 13 and 14. All proceeds-.!
will go to the Ryan Jeffers,
F.und.

l

,.l

I

FIRE 'DEATH
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio
(UP!) -William Howdeshell,
47, Sprlngfied, died Sunday in
a lire at his apartment here
which officials said was
caused by smoking around "a
flammable liquid."
- Firemen put the blaze out
within two hours. Damage
was estimated at $1,500.

TRAINING ENDS
Army Private First Class
John W. Slaven , son ol Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Slaven, 883 Maple
St. , Middleport, has completed the radio relay and
carrier attendant course at
the Army Signal School, Ft.
Gordon, Ga.

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*

·I

m. Saturday alter the car she
was driving ran over the side
ol the road near the PomeroyMason Bridge. Only minor
damage was reported to the
car. The Pomeroy squad went
to the Lawrence Klein
residen&lt;;e in Welshtown, at
7:03p. m. Sunday for a child
who was ill but did not need
treatment. At 1:55 p. m.
Saturday, Penny Landers,
Union Ave ., was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the squad.

Holzer Medical Center
Blrtbs
Mily9
Mr. and Mrs. Rickie Brown;
Ray , Ohio, a daughter. Mr.
and Mrs. William DeU&gt;ng,
Oak Hill, a daughter . Mr. and
Mrs. Tracy Discus, Jackson, a
son. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Smith,
Jr., Jackson, a daughter. Mr.
and Mrs. Everett Tribby,
Wellston, a son. Mr oand Mrs.
Bruce Wallace, GaUipolis, a
daughter.
MaylO
Mr . and Mrs . Randy
Hammond, Winfield, W. Va., a
daughter. Mr. and Mrs .

r

,.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

HOSPITAL NEWS
SENIOR BAND MEMBERS HONORED - Band
seniors at Wahama High School received awards duriru!
&amp;1turday evening's banqueC in-the·lii'Sf tim, I r, are Macy
Fox, Cindy Workman , Gewanna Johnson, Guyl8Rousli,
- T~ Van Meter and U&gt;u EUen Roush; second row,

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'.

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 12,1975

business with ·pool tal)les, pin
ball machin es and other
games - to be open Sundays,
was approved in its first
reading at the last meeting.
At that time councilman
Marvin Kelly cast the only
disse nting vote. Last night he
again stated he is against pool
halls being open on Sundays.
Council members William

C&amp;Q fro;m Logan
said abandoned

Walters, Allen· Lee King and
Mrs. Jean Craig who supported the first reading, indicated they would continue to
support the measure permitting the centers, or pool
rooms, to stay open Sundays .
However, with only the four
members present, and Kelly
indicating he would not favor
the measure , the second
reading appeared defeated
si nce lour affirmative votes
are required for passage . The
three council members, over
Kelly's protests, voted to table
the measure until the next
meeting. Kelly stressed that
he is not against recreation,
but is opposed to pool rooms
operating on Sunday. The
session at times became
"quite heated" as members
argued
definiti ons
ol ,
recreation
. Themay~r 's reportlor April
showed receipts ol $197.20 in
lines and lees and merchant
police collections totaling $120
to make a total o1 $317 .20 lor
the month. Mrs. Craig
questioned the report, which
was approved by council. She
said that receipts in the
mayor 's
reports
are
decreasing steadily and noted
a decrease ol some $2,500
under last year's receipts. She
said the revenues are need~
(Contiiiueifon page 10 )

NEW OFFICERS - Officers ol the Meigs County Jaycees for 1975-76 are front, 1-r, Bill
Young, internal vice president; Larry Spencer,
secretary; Richard Poulin external vice
.
president ; back, Rick Collins, president; Don Nelson; treasurer, and Ralph Werry , state
~rector . Absent were Rick Crow, internal local director, and Danny Abbott, ~xternallocal
director.

.

Ted Reed , president ol the on proposed bus service from
Pomeroy Chamber ol Com- Pomeroy to Athens.
merce, Monday at its noon
Regatta committee
luncheon reported that he has chairmen will meet this
been informed that a tern- evening at the Meigs Inn at
porary abandonment ol the 7:30p.m. Everyone inte~esU:d
C&amp;O Railway in the Meigs- m the Regatta promotwn IS
Gallia area has been ordered. urged to attend.
Reed did not explain further
Helicopter ·rides will be
the reported temporary available this year during
abandonment as to whether an Regatta weekend begmnmg
impact study will be made or onThursday._Two copters wtll
not. The action would land on the nver bank across
The Meigs County Jaycees
eliminate service !rom Logan . !rom the Pomeroy Juntor
have elected new ollicers lor
Delay in the proposed ·High School. Charge lor the
1975-76.
abandonment ol the Penn ndes will be $5 a person:
Elected were Rick Collins,
Central road into Meigs Jack Carsey reported that
president; Bill Young, inCounty have been announced lour ptckup boats are needed
ternal vice president; Richard
!rom Washington pending an lor the boat races. Those who
Poulin,
external
vice
impact study.
are wtlhng to use thetr boats
president ; Don Nelson,
Reed . also reported that are to contact Carsey or Mrs .
•
treasurer; Larry Spencer,
'
:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
papers are ready lor the use of Thomas..
secretary; Ralph Werry, state
Doc McCoy's ferry service
Jack Kerr said the fishing
' director; Rick Crow, internal
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
when the Pomeroy-Mason derby will be held again this
local director, and Danny
A chanc·e of showers
Bridge is ' closed (or repairs. year under the supervision ol
Abbott,
external
local
Roger Hysell , Mason, is to Ted Dean ol the Wildlife Thursday, clearing Friday
director
.
and lair Saturday. Highs
contact the Mayor ol Mason in Division .
Rick Collins was named
Introduced as a guest at the will be in the 70s and lows
regard to the ferry service
Jaycee
ol the year for his work
(rom Pomeroy to Mason . meeting was_Mrs. Janet Korn will be in the 40s and the 50s.
in getting the Pomeroy
Time and date lor repair to the ol WJEH Radio, Gallipolis. ::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;
Municipal Park underway .
Attending were Reed, Mrs.
bridge is not fixed , but bids (or
Ralph Werry was named
the project have been award- Thomas, Carsey, Kerr,
Ja)'cee
Chairman of the Year
ed.
Wendell Hoover, Bill Grueser,
lor
his
efforts
as chairman of
Carolyn Thomas, secretary, · Dale Warner, Ferman Moore,
the 1974 Christmas Basket
again reminded residents that Bob Jacobs, Don Thomas,
Project
and Bill Young was
JAYCEE OF'THE YEAR - Rick Collins, left, was
tickets lor the excursion on the Nor bet Compton, Beckey ·
named
Haycee
Compresented a plaque by Richard Poulin lor being named
SYRACUSE - For the
Chaperone are still available . . Mallory, Crai~ Ramsey, Mrs.
mitteeman Of the Year lor his
"Jaycee of the Year" when the Jaycees met recently_
fourth aonsecutive year Miss
Only 400 tickets will be sold. Korn and Katie Crow.
efforts
in renovating the
CoUlns
was
credile&lt;!
lor
his
efforts
in
getting
the
Pomeroy
Cindy Patterson, 13, daughter
The excursion is Thursday,
room,
located on the
meeting
MuniCipal
Park
project
underway.
ofMr. andMrs .'Corbett "Pat"
May 15. It will leave th~
ground
floor
o(
the Pomeroy
Patterson, Syracuse, has one
Pomeroy levee at 8 p.m. and
City Hall and in sponsoring the
first place·in the annual State
return at midnight.
pizza party for the Meigs
'
Drum Major -ol America
Those who wish to purchase '
County
children at the
Contest, Saturday at Tillin.
ticke Is should .con tact Mrs.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - tlte 1973 War Powers Ac t, Gallipolis Children's Home.
Miss Patterson won the title
Thomas at the Chamber ofCongr.essional
sources say which restricts his use ol
Delega~s who attended the
ol Junior Miss Majorette of
lice.
An estimated 1,500 people
·
there
)s
some
confusion
about
military_
forces
abroad
in
the
state
Jaycee convention in
Reed also reported that were without electricity Ohio. She also won first place
President Ford's legal power absence ol a aectaration .ol Columbus May 2·4 were
there is nothing new to report Monday when Columbus and in the Ohio State Strut-Off and to use military Ioree il he so war to 60 days unless Congress Richard Poulin, Don Nelson,
Southern Electric Co., had an Ohio State Twirl-Of!, com- chooses to get back a U. S. orders an end to such use Vincent Knight and Bill
peting with contestants ages
outage.
Young.
'
merchant ship and crew sOQrer.
Lightning struck the four through 20.
seized by Cambodians .
Sen. Jacob K. Javits.• R·
"Temperance", a musical
SALES REPORTED
Bashan Substation at 3:30 · She is now eligible to
On
one
hand,
the
sources
N.Y
..
one
.
ol
the
·
chief
argroup
!rom Lancaster, will
March 1975 sales ol Series p.m. and destroyed the trans· compete in the national said, the Presidimt has a chitects of the .war powers · play at the Jaycee-sponsored
E&amp;H United States Savings former. The local crew and competition at Ashville, N. C. constitutional duty to protect legislation, said Monday it Frog Ball during Regatta
llonds In Ohio were $36.1 men (rorn other divisions
U.S. property and citizens. H~ would permit the President to Weekend at the -Pomeroy
million At the end ol March, restored service in "record
could cite precedents back to act militarily in the Citm- Junior High building.
the state attained 26. 2 pet. ol time" ol 10 hours, according to
DRIVER FINED
1793, when President John bodian situation.
A vote ol thanks was exi.ts 1975 sales goal. Theodore Assistant Manager John
SYRACUSE - In Mayor Adams folight France over But some congressional tended to the All-Weather
Reed, Jr., Meigs County Weeks.
Herman London's Court shipping rights and 1801 when stall sources believe this Hardware and King Builders
Volunteer Savings Bonds
A . portable substation Monday night · Jerry R. Marines swarmed ashore at authority is clouded by the ci Middlerort for the donation
Chairman, reported March weighing 26 tons were pulled Hu])bard, Racine, was lined Tripoli to recover the U. S. congressional order to former ol paint which was used in the
sales of savings bonds in the . !rom Bradbury to Bashan to $10 and costs lor failure to navalfrigllle Philadelphia and President Nixon to end U. S. renovation ol the meeting
county w~re $35,469 . The supply ·. electricity
to register a motor. vehicle . i~ crew !rom Barbary Coast invovement in Indochina by room. The election was
county achieved 20.6 pcl.,oltls customers (rom Bashan to ·Police Chief Milton- Varian pirates.
• Aug. 15, 1973.
conducted following ' recent
annual sales goal March 31. Hockingport.
was the arresting ollicer.
Ford, h~w~ver, is bound by
,
. banquet at
Meigs Inn.tl!.

Cindy takes
fourth title

Bashart
area
..
hit by outage

\'

Collins is
president
·of Jaycee~

.)

•

....

Can he, or not?

llJ

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