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Exploszon kills iiro workers,5 injured .
.

M
. eigs Local board

·
COiltinued from page 1
Jean Shaver (1), Jack Slavin : \ JACKSONVILLE, . Fla.
.
!II. Jeanette · Thomas (t), (UPI) _ An explosion and
~ry R•~e Ill. Mary Rose IJJ , Rebecca Triple II (I) ·, Gary fl sh fire · th II
f th
Rugborgi:~(1RlooAsahon(2). Oan(21e)l Walker . (3) and · Caroi Wolfe UaS N mde
. etrrerooMmoditbe
. • r Sayre
' (1).
. . avy s oyer ere
THE BOARD EMPLOYED three Meigs High School Tuesday killed two shipyard
pduates w~o have compleled their college work or will do so by workers and . injured· five
June for employment as teaChers next year. They are Margaret others.
.
liiggs, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, Twl18 Clatworthy, Middleport, and Donna
The Incident happened
·weber ' Rutland.
quickly, aod a Navy
.
Added to the substitute teacher ~I as recomm_ended by spokesman said. dam&amp;ge to the
County Supt. Robert Bowen were Lin!la Yonker, cosmetology; ship was negligtble.
Tara Ruggles, French; William P. Maynard, elementary
The names of the dead were
pltyslcal education, general science and social studies; Barbara being withheld pending
Shultz, English; Ellen Henderson, mathematics, and Susalllle notification of next of kin.
Ughrln, elementary.
Homicide Detective W. E.
The bciard 'llppolnted Mary Kay Yost to the Pomeroy- Beacham said the victims'
Middleport Ubrary Board to complete the unexpired term of charred bodies- would be
Jemlfer Sheets and approved a resolutloo of employer support positively identified before
for the National Guard. An agreement with the Gallla County authorities contacted their
Board of Edueation for ·the services of an educable mentally families.
. retarded S~~pen~isor was a(iproved along with the renewal of an
Only one of the five other
agreement with the Meigs County Boaril of Education for the workers was Injured seriously
aervices of an educable work-6tudy coordinator.
enough to be taken to a
A request of the Ohio Power Co. to relocate facilities in hospital, and he was admitted
conjunction -with-highway improvement pWis, was app-oved. for observation.
The )&gt;oard approved attendance at the following meetings . by
The workers, part of a crew
staff members: Cecel18 Hart, Ohio Modern .Language Assn. in giving a general .overhaul to
COlumbus, April 11·12; John Blaettnar to a dlstrlbntive education the Meredith based at nearby
1
q'l'RE awii'S'- AllcWe .... 111e clllqllana a1 lbe 11e1p Ultle Leii!UIJ BMI!etmn. 'l1le
meeting in Columbus, April IS; Ray Goodman to a vocational Mayport Naval Base, were
Latera finished the season 14 in the league and 26-4 overall. First row, I~, Todd AckenTU\",
director intern meeting In Columbus May 7 and 8; Pennee welding a water tank in the
Todd Call, Nick Bush, Greg Bush, Mike Miller, David Demosky. 2nd row, 1~, Coach Woody
Knapp, Samuel Crow, Michael Barr and Eriuna Finch to an EMR fireroom when the explosion
Call, David Meadows, Tony Scott, Brent Dodson, Terry Wayland.
•
materlllls worbhop in Nelsonville, Aprill8, and Margaret Good· occurred.
.
man to a work coordinators meeting in Cambridge, April 1.5.
Jim Sugrue, vice president of
Appointed teachers of the new adult education classes with operations for Jacksonville
some 90 pe1'S0!18 now enrolled were \ViUard MiUer, welding, Shipyards Inc., said apcarpentry; Beverly Gaul, iyping, b!'Biness and office education; parently the explosion was
Fred Gaql, .ae&amp;OWlting; Carl Brannan, auto mechilnlcs; Susan
Auto wrecked
Miller and Ruth Bwngarner, two sewing classes; Dale Harrison,
radio and television and Cecil Newsome, bus driving.
· Upon the recommendation of girls' athletic director Joy •
"d • d
Bentzley, Kenda Rainey was named head girls' track eoach and m avm mg eer
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SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Mary Jane Deeley was niUned asaistant. The seniority records of
The Meigs County Sheriff's
The FBI refused comment bus driver, Mrs. Allee Globokar, were correcled.
~ COLUMBUS - Ohio Stale
Department investigated a
A letter from Middleport Mayor Fred HOffman requesting single car accident that DC·
today on a report that fugitive
Jligbway Patrol Major Earl H.
newspaper heiress 'Patricia first chance by the village If the Central building·is ever sold was curred at 12:10 a.m. today on
}{eich has been promoled to the
rank of Ueutenant Colonel and
Hearst is Dying to Algiers to read and a request for llnanclal support from the Pomeroy- SR 124 near Minersville .
seek asylum.
Middleport Ubrary was tabled until more information is
11amed Assistant Superln·
Patrick A. HiD, 22, Racine,
The report came Tuesday secured. A request for financial support for the purchase'of new was reported to have been
.tendent of the Division.
night
from
KPIX-TV band uniforms wlls also ta,bled.
' He leaves his former position
traveling north. when a deer
Given continuing teaching contracts were Emma Fineh, ran into the path of his car. To
lis commander of .!11e Patrol's
neWSWCHll8n Marilyn Baker,
author of a book on the Hearst educable mentally retarded; Gladys Foley, vocal music; Dwight avoid hitting the animal he
,IJureau of Personnel Ad·
kidnaping.
Goins, instrumental instructor, and Winifred Naas, foorth grade went off the highway and
lninistration which he has helcl
The reporter said · Miss · teacher.
·since May, 1973. Prior to that
struck and !mocked out two
Contracts approved for non-eertificated employes included guardrail posts. There was
Hearst would land somelline
he commanded the Patrol's
today in Algiers along with bus drivers, Jerry Blac.lt, two years; Leo Morris, continuing; moderate damage. The driver
Massillon District
Jack Scott and his wife, Mlckl. William Thornton, two years. Cooks, Phyllis English, continuing. was not injured. No citation
'Headquarters for eight years.
Custodians, Ted Hatfield, continuing; Mary Hawkins, two years; was issued .
, A native of Wooster in Wayne
.......
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Kenneth Uttle, one year. Secretary, Rita Harnm, continuing
,County , Lt. Col. Reich joined
contract, and food service supervisor, Avice Bailey, one year.
the Patrol in September, 1947
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
END VACATION
TeaCher resignations accepled included those of Ladona
and !lllrved at Warren, Man.
Friday through Sunday,
Mr.
and
Mrs. Leonard Van
Boyd, Pauline Hysell, Barbara Nibert, Daisy Cook, Sharon
field, Wooster and Ashland. He
cloudiness Friday and
Meter,
Pomeroy,
have
Ransdell, Jennifer Butcher and Jane Russell, effective at the end
commanded the Zanesvme;·
Sunday and a chance of raiD
returned
from
a
two
week
visit
of the current school year. Stephen Pullins was released to·attend
Fremont, and Mansfield Posta
Saturday. Hlgbs will be Ia
Eastern Local Schools next year with parents to pay tuition and in Lakeland, Fla., with Mr. and
and served as assistant
LT. coi.. REICH
the 4ts oortb and 50s south.
p-ovide transportation. Virgil Carr was appoinled substitute bus Mrs. Dwight Reed; sister and
commander of the Bucyrus
Lows wiD be In the 31s and
driver pending certification and Leland Parker was named brother-in-law. of Mr. Van
District Headquarters before years in the U. S. Army during low 40s.
Meter, and the Van Meters'
substitute bus mechanic.
laking charge of the MassiUon World War II before joining the
son,
Steve, who resides with
w.::f.:'$$$&gt;Xo$W..&gt;!*-=$.'i&lt;~::s::'§~~~~
The board employed Ron Logan as new head basketball
DistriCt In 1965.
Patrol. Lt. Col Reich and his
the
Reeds.
Easter Sunday the
coach. Logan has been reserve coach for several years. The
During his 27.year career, wife , Glenna, reside in
salary of the teacher corps secretary was increased from birthday of Leonard Van Meter
Lt. Col. Reich has had Westerville.
$3,248.70 to $3,600 and the ooard approved the lease of a mobile was observed and joining them
specialized taw enforcement
lor the occasion were ~nnie
Cloudy tonight, lows in the reading laboratory for the Teacher Corps Program.
training conducled by the FBI,
Bowling
Green
State
mid 30s. Chance of rlli1t Thurs-¥e board also passed a resolution of intent at !Q,e request of Van Meter, Ponpano Beach,
day, highs in the upper 50s.
tiona! Director Ray Goodman to accept $30,000 in slate Fla., and Andy Vaughan,
University, and the Northfor use in any number of directions lor improving the formerly of Pomeroy, also of
Probability of precipitation, 20
western University Traffic NEPHEW XU I,ED
per cent tonight, 30 per cent
meroy Junior High Scbool Building. It is Goodman's plan to Pompano Beach, and Mr. and
lnsitute.
ENID, Okla. (UPI) - The Thursday.
.
convert that structure into a vocational training unit building. Mrs. Gary Slonaker, Lakeland.
He Is a graduate of Wooster
nephew of astronaut Dr. Owen
Attending the meeting were Hargraves, Clerk L. W. McHigh School and served three
Garriott Jr . .was ldJied in a
Comas, board members, President Carol Pierce, Wendell
motorcycle accident on a
Hoover, Joe Sayre, Virgil King and Robert Snowden, Don Dixon
downtown street Tueaday.
represented the teachers association.
Larry Gl:ne Rock, 20, was
TWO CITED
rldlng a motorcycle that hit lh.e
Two
defendants
appeared in
rear of a pickup truck making
the
court
of
Middleport
Mayor
a turn and was thrown into the
Continued from page I
Fred
Hoffman
Tuesday
night.
side of a semltractor 'trailer,
They
are
Joseph
M.
Magnotta,
said all the CommuniSts had pollee said.
Continued from page I
been driven out by midaf·
Rock and his father were . Middleport, charged with
temOon.
visiting Garriott's father running a stop sign, fined ~ tax payments which would furnish more than $300 m1lllon.
Field officers said the Tan before joining Rock's mother and costs, and Ben Davidaon, Rhodes told a news conference it is the duty of the General
Middleport, charged with Asaembiy to balance the budget. "They're going to liave the last
An attackers were sbock troops in California. ·
assault and battery, fined $25 word," he told a news conference.
·
for a full IO,OCJO.rnan Com·
an'd ~osts.
The governor ftrat denied, then confirmed, then denied again
munlst division poised within · .
that his budget was out of balance. He ended up saying that If
30 miles of Saigon.
appropriations outstrip revenues, cuts will have to be made, but
Communist diplomats have
the legislature wiU have to make them.
predicted an alk&gt;ut attack on
WOULD BE VIOLATION
''They said they didn't need my budget anyway,'' Rhodes
Sal&amp;on in the near future unlesa
MINNEAPOLIS,
Minn.
SQUAD
RUNS
told
newsmen. "They have three budgets up there - mine, the
Prellldent Nguyen Van Thleu ia
.
(UPI) - The Minnesota Civil
RACINE
The
Racine
p-evlous administration's and their own." The governor sal~ his
replaced by 8 chief of state
willing to negotiate with the Uberties Union has demanded Emergency Squad took Goldie budget was drawn up under a "misunderstanding" that corthat School District 719 in Prior Holman, Rt. I, Racine, to the poratlOOII would receive full federal exemptions for preViet Cong. .
Lake, Minn., not give out Holzer Medical Center at 9:40 payments of the state corporate franchise tax, an assunnption
In addition to fighting at the
which turned out to be false.
two province capitals, Commu- Bibles to fifth graders as it has a.m. Wednesday.
nist guMers shelled Bien Hoa p-opo!led to do.
Randall Tigue, legal counsel
llrbase agalil today with 28
NOT HOSPITALIZED
for
the MCLU, said giving out
rounds of beavy weapons fire,
RUTLAND - Dano King, Rt.
killing two soldiers and wound- Bibles would be "a blatant
1, Rutland, is not a patient at
violation
of
the
1st
and
14th
ing 15 persons. · ·
Holzer Medical Ce•ter
Birtl1 - April 8, a son to Mr. hospital as was reported in the
amendments to the U.S.
· In other developments, a
(Discharged, AprilS)
and
Mrs. ROber.! Painter, ·Harrisonville News Items.
Constitution."
~ding SoJJth Vietnamese gen,
Jaime
Arthur,
Terri
Bowen,
Bidwell.
"School sponsorship of Bible
era! apparently shot hiiilSelf to
Mrs; Paul Camden and
distribution
Is clearly an
death after arguing with bia
Veterans Memorial H01pltal
establl.!lunent of religion in daughter; Anita Cordell, Mrs.
oornrnander over tactics to
Roger Cosby and 8011, Helen
Admitled - Patricia Slavin,
combat tile Communist ad- vlolatloo of the 1st Amendment Creech, Kathy Drummond, Middleport; Flossie Prunty,
and constitutes .the use of
ftllce on 'Saigon.
Nellie Eblin, Patsy Great· Bidwell; Clolst Badge ley,
Tonight and Thursday
President Nguyen Van Thieu pubUc funda to p-omull!ate house, Lawrence Hulrlns, Otto Racine; ' Barbara Crabtree,
NOT OPEN
moved back into his 11omb- religion in public schools in Hewitt, Arthur Maloy, Barbara Albany; Usa Peters, Clifton;
damaged palace for a top..level violation of the Minnesota Potts, Michelle Roach, Mrs. Connie Manley, Middleport;
Fri .. Sal.. Sunday
meeting of advisers, govern- Constitution,'' he said.
James Sizemore and son, Mrs. Betty Pugh, Addison.
Aprli11·13
•
ment offldala said today.
FOR PETE'S SAK-E
Paul Skinner and da1J8hler,
Discharged
Bessie
(Technicotcirl
Oppollltlon poUiicWis con.
Tonya Smith, Iva Stewart, Napper, Robin Rathburn,
Starring
Katherine Walker, Emmert Robert Thompson, Eric
demned the bombing "' the
Barbra Striesand
palace by II rinegade fighter
ASK TO WED
Welch, Jr., era ton Wolfe.
Powell, Millard Ball, Walter
Rated"PG"
' pilot, but aiDed ·, on Thleu to
Ge&lt;rge w. MiUer, 35, t.fid.
(lilrtbl)
Walburn, Linda Jacks, RObert
· · Colorcarto011s
Show starts 7:00p.m.
resign. The South Vietnatn.e dleport, and Jan~ MiUer, 35,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gard· Daftnell, Raleigh Sayre, Jean
leader vowed to remain in Middleport.
·
ner, a son, GalliPolis; .Mr. and Taylor.
office, however.
,
·
Mrs. Terry Groth, a daughter,
.. ,
Gallipolis.

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ships before ihere Is any use of
he "S
esald "He had ·
tore. s, ~ru
·
earlier cerUfted it as clear. He
was called oock to check th•
bel
could use torChes
"We have ·a chemist air orethewehodies." .
routinely check the air In these to get to
·

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Elberfelds In Pomeroy
HEADQUARTERS FOR

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ton

2

WEEI&lt;END SPECIAL

Plea~~~nt Valley Hooplllll

Discharges, Mrs. Jo!m
Fowler, Pliny; Orin Hanna,
Point Pleasant; Collette
Keefer,
Leon;
Charles
Leonard, Point Pleasant; Scott
McDermitt, Point Plea8ant;
Mrs. Timothy Blaaell, Point
Pleasani; Charles Wray, Apple ,
Grove.;....Jolin Barker, Point
.~Pleasant; Jane Fetty, Point
Pleaaant; Mrs. Geor1e ·
Morrow, Point Pleasant;
GeOI'fle Kearns, HunUn11on;
Gene Gardner, Gallipolis
Ferry; Worthy Casto, Apple
Grove; Charlotte Knaul, Point
Ple.lsant; ,Mri. Cindy Hudson,
Point Pleasant.

Footlong Hot Dog, .
French Fries, Potato
Chips and 20c ~rink ...

99~
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY AT

Blue &amp; Gray Renaurant
POMEROY, OHIO

Frank Sisty

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t~ be hls paraphrase,.~e said
he dld not know whether the
assurance meant military·
Intervention.

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Organ, Drums, Guitar

1975

'

~wn-Boy

Special 19"

ONLY sn9.95
.

Mower$-At The Mechanic Street Warehouse

·'

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

RUTLAND, 0.

~.?.1:•••• 2/59~

l

"c

BOOTH

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when !he Ohio Volley Hcailh

641.

Services Foundation, Inc .,

( PSRO J by Region IX Peer

- Appli c ation s

for

rcnov3tion of Nelsonville
Children's Cenler, purcha~e of
cardio-pulmonary equipment
al O'Bleness . Hospital, and
three Nursing .Home Ap-

Re vi_ew Sys tems, Inc .,· in

Hocking ;· Meigs,

Vinton ,

Jackson, Gallia , Pike, Scioto

and Lawrence Counties.
Any interested group or
citizen of the seven-county
plication s : Fee 's-Ja ckson , area served by OVHSF who
Dal ton-Ironton, and Pulley- desires to address the Board of ·
South Point.
Tr us tees shall submit, in
- Endorseme nt for tpe writing , his s ta tement to
development or a Professional OVHSF a! leas t five days in
Sta ndard Review Organization advance of the meeting.

'fhe genercd business session

which will begin at 7:30p.m. is
open to the public.
r·
The Board of Trustees also
expect to discuss :

- Proposed area designation
of OVHSF as a Health Systems

Agency under Public Law 93·

~;:s:s::~~::::::::~::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:~:~:!:•:~=·~=~:::::::::~::::s:::::::::::::::::::::::::8::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::*.::::::::s::::::::::::::::;:::::=::::::~::::::~:::~:::::;::::::::::::::::::~:::::;-~:

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Shale gas project urgf!d

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov. presentatives or governors of Rhodes said. "We. have right
James A. Rho&lt;leLilllnounced . 10 other states today in here in Ohio responsible
today he would 115k the Federal Washington, said the grant drillers who believe they have
Energy
Research
and money. would be used in the answer. We must acquire
Development Adn)inistration research designed to find ways the money to test these
lor a $21 million gran( for · .tq drill for the shale gas which methods. The benefit of tal&gt;'
development of Ohio gas is ala higher levelthan natural ping this great resource In Ohio
resources, mainly i.n shale g~s pockets.
is unmeasurable."
formations in eastern and
~~Even the most conservative
"We are talking here about a
estimates indicate that we realistic, down-to-earth prosoutheastern Ohio.
Rhodes, who is scheduled to have enough shale gas in Ohio gram,'' Rhodes said. "At this
meet with Vice President to make up the · industrial very moment major Ohio inNelson Rockefeller and re. deficit for 20 years Of. more,''
Con tinued on page 10
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HELP WITH $167.52 - Students of the Meigs High School .
expressed their concern for mentally retarded children by
designating one-filth of the proceeds from the Combined
Charities Drive for use by the Meigs County Menwl Retar·
dation Board. Wednesday, Paula Eichinger, secretary of the
studenJ,council, presented a check for $167.52 to the Rev. W.
H. Perrin, a member of the Board. The money will be used to
purchase a piece of special equipment lor the Meigs Com·
munity School.

en tine

. Devoted To T_he lnterests of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL. XXVI

NO. 253

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1975

By United Press International
COSHOCTON, OHIO - MARK VORNHOLT and Patrick A.
Velbington, hoth 18, were being held In the Coshocton County Jail
here in lieu of $500,000 bond each today charged with the murders
last Friday of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hahn;Coshocton.
The victims died of multiple stab wo~nds in their bedroom.
Their hands and feet had been bound, pollee said. Officials issued
a stolen car report when they ftiscovered 'the Hahn's auto was
missing . The car was subsequently spotted on a downtown street
and Vornholt was arrested when he tried to drive it. The other ·
suspect was arrested later.
COLUMBUS, OHIO- SEN. JOHN GLENN JR ., IUlhio,
Wednesday urged President Ford, Secretary of State Kissinger
or "anyone having knowledge" of any secret agreements con·
cernlng South Vietnam to make them public so the nation could
know "once and lor all" where it stauds.
"H the President or secretary of state or anybody connected
with all of the things that have happened in Vietnam over the
past years knowsof any additional agreements .or arrangements
whereby we have indicated to them certain things which have not
been made public yet or indica led support that has not been
made public ... I say In heaven's name bring it out,'' Glenn said.
COLUMBUS- DAVID SWEET, A MEMBER of the Public
Utilities Couimission of Ohio, claims "a disagreement between
lawyers" has delayed a necessary study of utility rate structures
by the PUCO. The Ohio Energy Emergency Commission Wednesday requested its legal staff to further examine the contract
with the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio which would
authorize $41,500 lor a five-month rate stru.cture study. .
Sweet said the energy commission's legal staff and PUCO's
legal staff,' both provided by the state attorney general's office,
had failed to communicale on two non-substantive changes in the
contract. "As a result of a disagreement between lawyers we are
handicapped in our attempts to study the rate structure of public
utilities," Sweet told the commission .

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DAIRY

MILK·······

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COLUMBUS _:_ SALES OF OHIO RETAILERS were up 3 per
cent during February when compared to February, 1974, The
Center lor Business and Economic Research at Ohio State
University reported Wednesdax. Officials said sales showed
increases in 15 of the 25 business surveyed, led by drug stores
with sales up 18 per cent and filling stations 14 per.cent.
Motor vehicle dealers aiso saw an increase in sales for the
second straight month, up 13 per cent, reflecting -in part consluner reaction to February's flurry of rebates by automobile
manufacturers, the center said. Declines were reporied by
furniture, department aud appliance stores, down 5, 9 and 10 per
· cent respectively, the' center said. .
·
WASHINGTON - ASENATE REPORT says school violence
has become a national crisis requiritlg legislative ·action. Sen.
Birch Payh, D-Ind., said Wednesday the survey disclosed hun·
dreds of thousands of assaults ons tudents, Including 100 murders
in 1973; about 70,000 serious physical assaults on teachers each
year; and extortion, drug and prostitution rings in suburban and
urban schools.
The su!'Vey, prepared by the Senate juvenile delinquency
subcommittee, covered 757 public elementary and public schools
and showed dramatic incre·ases in all forms of violence and
vandalism. The report said "there is clear and compelling
evidence that violence and vandalism In the schools has reached
a level of crisis that det:rulnds immediate comprehensive review
and legislative action. ·
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.GAL

$129

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·············· 2 lb. 'l.M

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79~

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PERCH FILLET..................................~~.~ ...

THE
MEIGS
INN
POMEROY
·
PH. 992·3629
.,

......

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BOSTON BUn STEAK=
ENTERTAIN_YOU Al'

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See The Complete Line of Lawn·Boy

MEATS
POLISH SMOKED SAUSAGE ............................ ,,79• lb.
BOSTON BUn ROAST .. ~ ......... ;............•...••.•.••• ~.-·~ lb.

' THURS.,B:J0-1:00
TUES., WED.,
FRI. &amp; SAT., 9:30-2:00

PRICE 15'

'•'

WASHINGTON - THE AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT
announci!d Wednesday the nation's winter wheat crop made less
than normal growth during March because of cold weather .
However, the departmen~p Reporting Board added in a
monthly report that winter wheat·prospects in the Great Plains
~where most of the crop is grown - appear favorable except for
a dry area which runs from the Oklahoma panhandle northward
to Wyoming. The report said there was excess moisture in most
areas. ·
·
No new estimate of !!Je,size of the cropLwhich.was forecast in
·---~
JC!Intmued on..page 10)

Flag program has 16 firms
Sixteen new Pomeroy
businesses hav,e signed to
participate in the Pomeroy.
Middleport
Lions
Club
" holiday" flag program, it was
announced when the club met
for a noon luncheon Wednesday
at the Meigs Inn.
The flags fQr the 16 new firms
have arrived and holders will

he installed near &lt;lie business
establishments soon. Bruce
Teaford proposed holding· a
_l!!ly race on Memorial Day
and plans will be disciiS81'd
·. further later. Clarence Struble,
secretary-treasurer, w~s in
charge 01 the meeting. A board
of directors meeting was ~~~·
nounced for Thurs&lt;tay evening.
i :
II

By HELEN THOMAS
already said he wiD seek
UPI White House Reporter · humanitarian aid.
·
WASHINGTON (UPI ) He ~till has before Congress
President Ford tonight wiD a request for $300 million in
give Congress and the military aid for South Vietnam
American people his blueprint and $220 miUion for Cambodia.
for future U.S. policy in In- He gave some indication at a
dochina.
news conference last week in
White House aides are San DiegQ that he might seek
anxious that it not be a policy even more funds to help South
that will hang around Ford's Vielnam survive.
neck like the Vietnam
Sources said ArtJIY Chief of
albatross other presidents Staff Gen. -Frederick Weyand,
wore. "We don't want it to whom Ford sent on a fact·
become Ford 's war," said one. finding mission to Saigon, has
The President will give his estimated that re-&lt;&gt;quipping
program in a nationally televi· the South Vietnamese 4hny
sied "state
the world" would require more than $700
speech to a joint session of million. It lost more than $1
Congress at 9 p.m. EDT.
billion worth of equipment,
As late as Wednesday eve- including tanks and planes,
ning , White House Press when it retreated in panic from
Secretary Ron Nessen said the central highlands, givln~
Ford had "not made up his up three-quarters of govern·
mind" whether to renew his ment-held territory.
appeal to Congress for military
Nessen
said
former
aid for South Vietnam and President Richard Nixon
Cambodia. The President has assured South Vietnamese

or

NOVELTY PRIZES - Betty Ohlinger, left, and Rose Sisson, members of Preceptor
Chapter, Beta Sigma Pht, unpack 13 dozen novelty items which will be used as prizes for games
to he held Saturday evening during pre·.show and betw~n sh?w intervals at the_Spring Fling of
-the Btg Bend Minstrel Assoctatton m !lie· Pomeroy JuniOr Htgh School aud1tormm. Shows will
be staged at 7:30 and 9:15p.m. The sorority, sponsors of the presentation, wiD serve light
refreshments to patrons free of charge.
·-----~·

President Nguyen Van Thieu
both publicly and privately in
1973· In effect that the United
States would provide adequate
economic--and military aid and
would "react vigorously" in
case of massive Communist
violations of the peace accords.
Nessen said Congress has since
ruled out any U.S. military
intervention.
Ford invited congressional
leaders of both parties to White
House briefing Wednesday aft.
ernoon . None of
the
Democratic Senate leaders,'
including Mike Mansfield,
attended.
·
House Democratic leader
Thomas P. O'Neill said Ford
told the group liis speech
tonight would be "blunt, frank,
candid, hard," and would seek
bipartisan cooperation . But
Ford did not give the legislators details.

·. d Pomeroy
Meigs Voc-Ed conference opens M· on ay
.
· ·m en are
Calvin Carlini of Ports- will appear before groups at
mouth, division manager of the the school throughout the week
Ohio Power Co., will be to tell about their work.
keynote speaker Monday when Students will select the group
!he seventh annual vocational sessions in which they may be
conference gets underway at particularly interested: The
Meigs High School.
conference is staged by the
Representatives · of 44 guidance department of the
professions, crafts or trades high school.
Speakers for the week are:
TUESDAY
Mr s. Georgene Childers,
Farmers
Home
Ad·
ministration; Army, Sgt. Jerry
Pa tton ; Marines, Sgt. Nick
·Burkhart; police science,
Daryl Cullison; medical
records , Helen '· Glidden;

400 tickets
available
for cruise

'

forestry and recreation , Bill
Price ; heat processing, Steve
Lukasik; drafting and design,
Joe Pierce; accounting, Lei!
Hatl estad;
Air
Force,
R.O .T. C., for males and
females, Mike Boring .
WEDNESDAY
Corrections, Olaf Rankis;
Emergency Medical, Doris
Rowe;
Mechanic a l
Engineering , Steve Lukasik;
Secretarial Science, Dorothy
Poling; Wittenburg College,
Richard R. Johnson; Navy,
Vernon · E. Harrison; Foote
Mineral, Don Mills; Printing,
Vern on Weber ; Mid-Wes t

Steel, Bill Snouffer; Federal
Bureau of Investigation, Mack
Ellis; Sanking , Maxin e
Griffith; Physical Therapy,
Joan Anderson.
THURSDAY
Environmental Health, Dave
Mingus; Fire Science, J ohn

Yates; Elec tronics, Wall
New lon; Ceramics, Bob
Weedy; Registered Nursing,
Judy
Maxson;
Medical
Assistant, Kathy Bonewit:
Hotel-Restaur a nt,

K.im

Bonewil; Kentucky Christian
Larry Coleman;
Journali s m ,
Charlene
Hoeflich ; Engineering, Ohio
Coll~ge,

The Pomeroy chamber of
Commerce again will sponsor
an evening river cruise on the
excursion boat ''C haperon"
May 15 from 8 p.m. till mid·
Anthony D. Cennamo, a th.'n $25 per month.
billing with that of an average
night.
Columbus attorney who owns a
In the complaint, plaintiff billing;
that defendant
Due to the crowded con· home on Rt. 2, Bidwell, has Atty. Cennamo, has asked the reimburse plainti!Nor all
ditions last year, there will be a filed .a suit in Gallia County court to enjoin the defendant overcharges, penalty charges,
maximum of 400 tickets (200 Common Pleas Court against immediately and permanenily together with 10 pel. per month
couples) sold this year .
Buckeye Rural Electric from terminating plaintiff's and that IJecause of · willful
Tickets will be sold only at Cooperal_ive Inc. of Gallipolis service without authorization refusal to jus(ify or rectify
the Pomeroy Chamber · of for what he terms "unjust and and sanction of the court; that plaintiff's
unjust
and
Commerce offiCe in the court- unreasonable charges."
defendant provide the court the unreasonable bills with a ." pay
house at a cost of $10 per
The. action was filed to seek range of billing with .an or else" thereby necessitating
· couple, $6 single, all on a. first redress for · alleged over· average of dwelling places ; · this aCtion, that plaintiff he
come, first served basis. No payments and unreasonable that defendant explain and awarded costs including ate
tickets will be held· lor more charges made by plaintilf to justify · to the court the torney lees.
than one week. Tickets·may be iiie defendant since 1968.
discrepan cy in plaint(ll' s
ordered by mail by sending a
According to the petition, the
check lor the proper amount plaintiff, -Anthony D. Cennamo ~r::::::::::::::::::::::::.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::%:::::~-=:::::::::::::::::8:::::::?:~W:w.~~
and a self-addressed envelope
-~
to Pomeroy Chamber of ~O:erc~to:r d~~:.~~":ttr~~a~ ~
Commerce,
P.O.
Box
5~6,
1
owns a ·home on Rt. 325 north of · :·:·
CHARLESTON - The· West Vir-'·'·
....
....,. Air Pollution :\!l:&gt;
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
35
~~ Control Commlsilon agreed Wednesday to consider ~
Music will; be furnlsh~d by U. S. ·
Since 1968, the plaintiff says, ~ proposals by Appa~ehlan Power ~mpany to disregard
Armand·at the organ. Reiresh-repeatedly ,requesled lh~ . ~ . air qu$11ty standards In· order to •keep two power plants :~
ments will be sold oq· board he
~efendant to inform him of the i§
operating.
· ·
· ·'
during the cruise .
basis lor electric bills that are ij
Appaiachlanolflclalapromlsed todelayplans.toclpresumed
to
be
unjust
and
~
the
Cabin
Creek Power Plant and four generating units at
-~:W:@;:s~f~~@.-~~
unreasonable.
'&gt;.~ the Ph !Up Sporn Plant In Muon County until the he~~rings
SPORTS TODAY ·
Plaintiff contends tha,l he !i~~l are held . 0111e ....
•-•· said that should be'wlthln sil weeb.
had
his
·
electrical
system
&gt;.:·,
:
InthePhill
Baseball, 1-;astern at
&gt;.:
P spom case, the APCC agreed to consider
Kyger Creek. Southern scrutinized "from the meter" ?! a proposal to grant a one-year extell8lon for operation of
by a professional electrical f, the units without the filing of a compliance schedule by'the
at Symmes Valley.
Track . Eastern at serviceman who found no ~! company. That would lnclade !he possibility of aoother •
defects, and has recommended
year's extension.
.
.M\•igs.
Ihat th~re ~hoold he no reason
.;:;:::::;::::;;:;:::;:::;:.-:::;::=*:,~~ why ·Ins bill should be m&lt; ~re ~~~:=~~*~~-.:.::.::~~'&gt;h--;.:-..."*:::::::::::::::::::::;:::~~~:::::~-:::~~:-d

Electric cooperative sued

Delay won on closing Sporn

ij

f.

i . ..

_

.

University, Roge r Quisen·
berry ; Medi cine (General
Practitioner ), Dr. Lewis Telle .
FRIDAY
Broadcasting, Fred Worley ;
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Four
Practical Nursing, Betsy
southern
Ohio telephone
Sh~aker; Computer Science,
were
honored Wedworkers
Jay
Waugh;
Retail
Management, Bill Rothman; nesday lor 'acts of heroism
Registered Nurse (Holzer ), "beyond the call of duty " at the
Connie Radford and Connie Ohio Independent Telephone
Grueser; Airlorce, Sgt. Ronald Association convention:
The men , three from
Rile; Rio Grande College,
Pomeroy
and the other from
Dean Brown; Southern Ohio
Coa l Company, Dave Baker; Chillicothe, were honored lor
Hotel Chef, Bill Childs; Ben- their acts of valor during last
Tom Corporation, Richard year.
Glenn Crisp, J. William
Foltrod; West Virginia Career
Davis
and Thorn Hysell, all
College, Dan .Phillips .
employed by the General
Telephone Co. of Ohio in
Pomeroy·, were instrumental in
saving the leg of an auto accident victim in March of last
year.
A small truck and a car.
crashed headon about 100
yards from the phone . com.. ,
pany's exchange building.
Hysell said the men used a
winch on the back of their jeep
,. SAIGON (UP I) _ com- to separate the two vehicles
munist ' tanks and infantry and then freed two men froni
backed by artillery sw,ep! into the auto. Crisp· said one man 's
Xuan Loc province capital leg was broken and a piece of
today and attacked other his thigh bone was protruding .
The telephone workers ad·
government positions as dose
ministered
first aid and ·
as 25 miles to Saigon. Thick
stopped
the
bleeding until
columns of smoke rfsing from
rescue squadsmen arrived .'
:~g~ttlefield could he seen in The Chillicothe worker~
Xuan Loc, 38 mt' les east of Larry Harwell, employed by ·
Saigon, 'l'as pounded by more the Chillicothe Telephone Co.,
than 4,000 rounds of North' helped five members of a
Vietnamese artillery fir.e . Chi!Ucothe family out of their
Fleeing civilians said the main burning residence last · July.
Xuan Loc Roman Catholic
church was hit today-· while
hundreds of women and
cht'ldren huddled t'nst'de. They
said there were ca•ualt
1·es but •
o
could give no details.
Chance of showers central
Tens of thousands of and south today and tonight.
refugees Oed in panic down the Highs today in the 50s south.
French-built highway toward Lows tonight in the high 30s
·Saigon , lining the road for a south. Friday cloudy and cool.
Con tinued on page 1~.
Highs in the 50s south .

honored

RedS get~
1
t
C oser 0
sa1gon
•

Weather

•

,,,

. )&gt;.

.

&lt;,

.

Ford to report

oi •••••• •

NITELY

to

DAIRY PRINCESS - Ann Colwell, seated left, was
selecled the new Meigs County Dairy Princess by the Meigs
Dairy Service Unit at Fellowship Hall of St. Paul's Lutheran
Church in Pomeroy Wednesday night. The daughter of,Mr.
and Mrs. John Colwell, Route I Vinton, Miss Colwell is a
senior at Meigs High School, a member of the marching and
concert bands, of the Ohio Office Education Assn., and of the
Rutland United Methodist Church. Presenled gifts and
trophy, she was crowned by Jan Holter, Pomeroy, who was
last year's local princess and went on to win the Ohio Dairy
Princess Crowri. Standing,! tor, are David Nease, president
of the unit, and Dr. Harry Barr, extension specialist, Dairy
Science, Ohio State University who was guest speaker.
Named to three year terms on the unit board were Nease,
Earl Cross and Rex Shenefield.

"

I • I • • • • • • • • • • • • • •- . •

TRIO

Communist

·" react vigorously'.' appeared

RADIStiES ....................••.••••...
Pkg. 1ftt:
.
••••••••••••• .wJ~.
NEW ONIONS (White or Yellow) ................:..~.!~:..~~ .. 4CJC
CARRO!$ ..... I...... I.. I.................I
I.. ~~~~~: I~'-· 2/39'

J

major

violations, the While House
said Wednesday.
· P~ess Secretary Ron
Nessen said the assurance
was contained In confidential
exchanges .between former
President Nixon ·and South
.Vietnamese Presi dent
Nguyen Van Thiou. Nessen
declined to stale e.actly
.·what was said. The words

•
VIENNA SAUSAG,E . ~.~~~.~-~.....
'..'
STAR KIST TUNA .......................~:~.~~: ... 59~ . ••
'
'•'
SHAKE &amp; BAKE PORK ........~:~.~.~:. 2/59~ '
•••
SHAKE &amp; BAKE CHICKEN.~.~:.~~:.2/59~ .••
!•
KRAFT CHEESE PIZZA .............~~~.~.~~ . 49~ ••.,•.
•
WHITE.PUFFS ......................... ~~.~.~~.~~~. 2/97~ '.•••
••••
MARGAR IN E.~~.~.~..~~~~~~ ....................~.~:. 69~ ••
•
•'
9
·COFFEE MATE............ ;.................~~.?.~·......$13 •••

MEIGS lHEATRE

WASHINGTON (UPI) The United ~tales privately
assured South Vietnam
before the 1973 Paris peace
agreement was signed that it
would "react vigorously" to

.,

742-5543

HOSPITAL NEWS

medicine In

Thieu assured

RUTLAND
News . • • in Briefs DEPARTMENT STORE

Enemy

'

southeastern Ohio is one of hOlds its ·quarterly Board of
four projects to be review'],~) Trustees meeting, April 23 at
:=:&gt;.:~:~::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::!::8:8:::::::8::::· the_Holiday Inn in Gallipolis.

comment on
Hearst case

Weather

I •

A proposal lo build a sc hool
of osteopathic

..FBI refuses

··Lt. Col. Reich IS
.No.2 in OSP

•

used b malfunction of the
ca
ya .
.
welding equtpment or equiP'
mentmishandUngby one of the
workers. ·

' '

I

i

'.

'

�___.,...1"' ....,......... _ ...,.,_=
•

' - ·- - -

,.
{

3- The Datly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Thursday, AptlllO, 1975

2- The Datly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tltursday, Ap•·•IIO, 197..!_

Twins nip Rangers

Gambling curb
bill·" in senate

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The
Ohto Senate has receiVed from
the House legtslation destgned
to mp m the bud a growmg
trend toward caslllO~ype gam·
blmg in northeastern Oh10
The bill, adopted Wednesday
by the House,~. outlaws the
acquisition, possessiOn and operation of slot machines and
roulette wheels It also tightens
defm1t1ons under which
charitable groups may conduct
' garrung activtties
Tho chief sponsor, Rep
Ronald H Weyandt, D-Akron,
satd current dehmtlons of

charitable gamblmg are bemg
skirted to the pomt where
Summit County is becommg a
'Las Vegas East" on Frtday
rughts, attractmg elements of
orgamzed crune.
Represelltat•ves from other
areas warned that tinless the
b1ll 1s enacted, the orgamzed
l!amblmg could spread, particularly to Cuyahoga County
The measW"e contams an

emergency clause , meamng 1t
would be effective unmedtately upon stgnature by
Gov. James A Rhodes if
cleared by the Senate
Rep Joseph P Tulley, R·
Mentor, proposed an amend·
ment elumnatmg the prohtb•·
tion agamst slot machmes and
roulette wheels on grounds
they should be available for use
m family recreatton rooms.
Amendment Tabled
But Tulley's amendment was
tabled after Rep Wilham G
Batchelder , R-Medma, satd he
thought "we ought to gtve the
sledgehammers back to the

prosecutors.''
Rep Denms L Wojtanowski,
D-Willoughby Hill'&gt;' also faded,
21-70, on an amendment which
would have authoriZed games
of chance to be conducted by
orgamzatwns such as !he
•

VFW, the Little League and
major pohllcal parties.
Weyandt sa1d h1s btlhsonly a
starting pomt, and conce4ed 1ts
success would depend on local
law enforcement
He satd the House IS conSidenng a conslltullonal
amendment to allow Oh10
voters to set standards for
charttable bmgo, whtch he
described as a "mtsh-mash of
mterpretallon m dtfferent
counties "
The House also adopted, 88-6,
and sent to the Senate
leg1slahon extending the
powers of the state attorney
general's office over charitable
ttusts and mslltuhons
The btU 1s sought by state
Attorney General William J.
Brown
Tulley failed, 42..Sl, on an
amendment which would have
required the attorney general
to get a court order to procure
certam informallon from a
chantable trust He satd his
amendment would have elinunated Hbureaucrahc harass..
ment" of charitable trusts.
The House also unanimously
agreed with Senate amendments and sent to Rhodes' desk
a bdlallowmg county boards of
election to htre mterpreters to
ass1st non-English speakmg
voters at the polls
Meanwhile, the Senate
unarumously approved a btU
, authonzmg the use of pubhc
school food servtce faciltties to
provide meals for elderly
persons
Sen Donald J . Pease, DOberlm, ch1ef sponsor, amend·
ed the bill on the floor to defme
elderly persons as bemg 60 and
older
"There are 1.4 million persons over 60 years of age m
Ohto," Pease noted. "Twentyftve per cent of thern--350,000
persons-have mcomes below
til• poverty level and many

By BIU. MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
The Mmnesota Twms sent
one longhme favortte and
future Hall of Farner- Harmon
K1Uebrew-packing this wmter
and elected to keep anotherTony
Ohva-a$
the1r
destgnated hitter
Off the early-season returns ,
they kept the nght man
Oliva smashed h1s second
home run m as many games to
help the Twins to their second
stra1ght VIctory, 3-2, over the
Texas Rangers Wednesday
mght.
Killebrew,
un-

Standings

THEY'LL CLOWN• - 'Wearmg attracllve clown costumes the students above of Mason
Elementary School wtll partictpate m a spnng program to be held at Wahama High School gym
Friday at 7 30 p m The program IS under-the d1rect10n of Mrs Ehzabeth Mattox, Mason
County Mustc Supervisor Schools participating will he West Columbta , New Haven, Hartford
and Letart Left to nght are Todd Kitchen, L&lt;y:ry Roach , Mary Ann Tnpp and Todd Tucker

wtth madequate nutrition."
Provide Hot Meal
The btU would allow school
dist ncIs to coopera te wlth
semor Clttzen orgamzatlons m
proVI dmg one hot meal each
dq,y for the elderly.
The Senate also approved,
32-1, legtslatwn lunttmg work- _
men's compensahon for casual
workers to those earmng $160
or more in cash from a single
household m any calendar
arter Present law mcludes
:h'ose earnmg $50 or more for
the same penod of tune
Both Senate mea sures are
subject to House approval

In other legtslattve develop-

ments Wednesday .
-The House passed, 79' 11•
and sent to the Senate a b1ll
lunttmg arb•trary cancellation
of health lllSurance pohc1es
and requrrmg health msurance
plans to allow converston of
group pohc1es to mdtVIdual
pohcres
Ca
-Reps Thomas J
rney,
D-Youngstown, and A G Lan·
ctone, D-BeUa1re, Introduced a
constltutlonjl] amendment authonzmg the state and local
govenunents to construct el~­
trlc and gas utilities.
- Rep Patnck A. Sweeney'

D-Cleveland, mtrodu ced
legtslatlon doubling the state's
contnbullon to the local
government fund , while Rep
Charles F Kurfess, R-Bowling
Green, offered a btU reqmrmg
earmarkmg all state income
tax proceeds to local government, schools and tax relief.
- Rep Denrus E Eckart, DEuchd, proposed a resolution
askmg the governor's cooperahon m making available
temporary care and housing m
Ohto for VIetnamese orphans.
The Senate was to reconvene
at 11 a m today and the House
at I p.m

wrong

1

,

Scott, 33, accompanied by

pro basketball superstar Bill rented by Scott's wtfe, Micki
Walton, answered no questtons The FBI has telephone records
on the adVIce of counsel He of calls between the farmhouse
sa•d he would not talk wtth the and Walton's home m PortFBI or respond to quest10mng land, Ore , where the two
by a grand jury
Scotts were VJSitmg.
M1ss Hearst and fellow
The Scotts dropped out of
Symb10nese Liberation Army stght rust before the publtc
fugtllves reportedly stayed m a learned of the farmhouse last
Pennsylvania farmhouse month FBI agents smce have
been mterrogatmg Scott's
fr1ends and fam1ly
Newsmen were summoned
abruptly Wednesday to a
lawyer's off•ce and then sent
speedmg to Glide Methodist

Defenses shown against
robberies, kidnapings
Thrrty-se~e'i&gt; iiank personnel

of Metgs County atU&gt;nded an

mformaltona:l semmar on
defendmg agamst bank robbery and kidnapmg presented ,
by the FBI at the Parkersburg
Htgh School Aud1tormm m
Parkersburg Wednesday
evenmg sponsored by the Oh10
Valley Chapter, Amencan
Institute of Banking
Four representahves from
the Pittsburgh Off1ce of the
Federal Bur~au of Jn•esltgallon presented the
program
Attendmg from ' Me•gs
County were LoiS McEihmney,
Dortha Salser, Chester King ,
Dorolhy Anthony, Edward
Durst and M;mmng Kloes from ·
the Clltzens Natwnal Bank,
Middleport; Patty Young ,

Add•e Noms, Sharon Sm1th,
Evelyn Lanmng, Suste An·
drews , Jean Werry, Joanne
W1lllams, Mary Riggs, Recka
McGUire, Jenny Smtih, Dl8na
Kmg, Sus•e Abbott, Joan
Vaughan , and Roger Hysell, all
from The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savmgs Co , Pomeroy, Unda
Spencer, Marilyn Robmson,
Ronda Dempsey, Cheryl Ab·
bolt, Lee Ann Nease. Lera
Jones, George Hobstetter,
Joan Wolfe, Manlyn Wolfe,
Dons Snowden, Maxme
Gr1ff1th, and Donna Nelson,
Pomeroy National Bank, and
William J HobsU&gt;tter, Joan
May, Ruth Ann Graham, Susie
Jeffers and Sharon Barr from
the Rutland Branch of The
Pomeroy Natwnal Bank.

Pelt~er

Church where tfe Scotts and
Walton appeared
FBI agents surrounded the
bmldmg, but took no action
smce there IS no warrant or
subpoena for Scott
The Scotts denounced what
they called FBI harassment
and expressed fear "of bemg
set up and posstbly killed" by
agents amoous for a shootout
wtth the SLA
"First of all," the Scotts
smd, "we have done nothmg
wrong We are not fugitives.
We have not been charged or

rejected 6 to 3

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov
James A Rhodes ' norrunallon
of Gordon Peltter as state
commerce dtrector was rejected, 6 to 3, Wednesday rught by
the Ohio Senate Elections,
Fmancial Institutions and Insurance Commtttee.
Peltter, 57, a Columbus attorney, was Ohto's commerce
director tn the previous Rhodes
Administration. He also was
treasurer of Rhodes' reelectton campaign last year.
The party-line vote found the
six Democrats on the comrruttee agamst nommatlon and the
three Repubhcan members m
favor The nomination still
must go Ia the state Senate
floor, where Democrats have

21-I2 control
Democrats complamed Peltier sollctted campaign funds
from persons he would be
regulatmg as commerce director The btggest rap agamst
him , however, was that he
ISsued a real estate broker's
hcense to htmself before
Rhodes left offtce m 1971
Democrats satd Pelller also
was instrumental m Rhodes'
taking and passmg an oral
exarrunation for a broker's
license a few days pr1or to the
governor leavtng office. They
also votced concern that Pelher, as dtrector, m1ght
dtsmantle the department's
Consumer Protection DIVIsion.

•

streets of Moscow w prov•de
That art1cle on cholesterol emergency treatment to the
you sent me 1s a travesty on victims of the many heart
truth Finally because of the attacks that occur Heart
efforts of the American Heart diSease 1s common m Europe
Assn ., dedicated sc1enhsls, the now, mcludmg Switzerland,
National Heart and Lung In- except m those areas wbere
stitute and other pubhc- food 1s m short supply and JUS!
sptrlted orgamzahons, the getting enough to eat 1s the
mc1dence of heart d1sease m b1gger problem
the Um!ed States m young and
And, I went to Alaska myse If
mtddle-aged men · has started several years ago and
to decrease sharply. That says reviewed the Eskuno data.
somethmg for these efforts
Native Eskimos don 'I eat much
The
complex1t1es
of m the wmter, and at that time
cholesterol are many. For the native Esk1mo seldom hved
more detailed Information much past 30. We don't have
send a self-addressed, stamped ' tnuch heart d1se~se before that
envelope to me at P 0 Box age e~ther The older Eskimo,
1551, Radio Ct!y Statton, New or lhe one who had a chance to
York, N. Y 10019 and ask for hve as we do , had fatty
the booklet on cholesterol depos• Is m the arU&gt;rtes.
Enclose 50 cents to cover costs
The story IS the same lhe
Tbe booklet discusses many of world over When people hve
the pom ts YW ra1se
like we do they get heart
I must correcl your disease It IS not just
statements, though Russ•a has cholesterol but the calories, the
a ser1ous heart disease 4at, the saluraled fat, lack of
problem nght now They hawe e~erc1se and cigarettes, JUSI lo

DEAR READER - No
wonder you are confused if you
are gomg to u5e information
from the type of health
magazines you sent me Many
people read these magazmes,
and somettmes there is a good
arbcle m them But many of
these magazmes .are vehicles
for adverttsmg 'so-&lt;oalled health
products
The fact the article was
wr1tten by a doctor doesn't
make 11 holy I was asked by
one owner of such a health
magazme to become the ed1tor
and wnter of the arhcles for
the magazme There was Qne
Important hitch I could not
·write anythmg that would
confhcC w1th the vanous
product§ bemg advert~d m
the magazme The mqney 1s in
the advert1smg, and 11 ts a
fortune I could have made a
lot of money dmng lhts, as
opposed to helpmg the public.
Not all doctors refuse Similar
mobile hea r t um ts rovmg the
opportunities.

Sslty Deal
The state of New York has
been handmg salt to Indians for
187 years Under a treaty wtth
the Onondagas m 1788. New
York 1s obligated to g1ve a
. bushel of salt every October to
any member of the tr1be who
requests 11 In return, New
York rece1ved 15,000· acres of
'
salt lands
BELPRE - The Metgs :
Marauder thmclads of head
track coach Don D1xon opened
their 1975 track season at
Belpre Tuesday, losmg 75-53 m
the two-way meet.
Belpre records bemg
unavailable, Marauders I ATHENS - While the focus
captunng firsts were Bob .of Exce'ptwnal Children's
Wtlltamson m the 100 yd dash Week this week has been the
and the 220 yd. dash, Ph1l educa tiona! needs of hanOhlinger m the 440 yd dash, • d•capped chtldren, there is one
Terry Whitlatch in the 180 low group
of
exceptional
hurdles and broad jump, Jack youngsters who are sometimes
01ler, the shot put, and the mtle ignored, talenU!d and gifted
relay team fmtsbed first.
children accordmg 16 the
Other Marauders placmg Southeastern Ohio Regtonal
were T1m Scltes, second in the Education Service Agency '
htgh hurdles and third in 180
Friday marks the fourth in a
low hurdles, Whitlatch, second senes of day-long traming
m the 100 yd dash , Brpce workshops sponsored by the
Reed, second m tbe mtle run SEO-RESA a1med at providing
and thml m the 880 yd
educahonal programs
Lonme Coats, thtrd m the 220 designed to meet the unique
yd dash and th1rd m the htgh needs of Southeastern Ohio's
jump; Mark Gilkey, th1rd m "TAG" (talenU!d and gifted)
the 2 mile run, and Allen children.
Stewart second V' the shot put
The SEO-RESA project
and th1rd m the diScus
serves tbe 27 school diStricts m
Tomght the Marauders take Athens, Galha, Hockmg,
on Eastern Eagles of Me1gs Jackson, Me1gs, Monroe,
Cuunty coac hed by Sp1ke Morgan, Perry, Vinton and
Berkhe•me~ on the Middleport l'{ashmgton Counties with
held at 4 30 p m
programs rangm~ from

m~ ntwn

a few factors •

~ TAG

;
(

ATHENS
Teachmg
strategtes geared to meeting
the mdtv1dual learning
problems of under-achievmg
and under-motivated students
should be the focus of proposed
In-se rvice trammg for tn struchonal personnel, accordmg to the results of a
mass1ve teacher in-serv1ce
needs assessment conducted
by the Southeaslfrn Ohto
Regtonal Education Service
Agency (SEO-RESA)
SEO-RESA Drrector Robert
L. Weutfurfner announced the
resul Is of the survey today as
part of Exceptional Children's
Week ( Apnl 6-12). The SEORESA proJect prov1des services
ran gmg
from
management
efftc1ency
systems to programs for
talenU!d and gifted children to
the 27 school d•slncts m
Athens, Galha, Hockmg ,
Jackson, Metgs, Monroe,
Morgan, Perry, Vmton, and
Washington Counties and 1s
funded by the Appalachian

smce

run;

II

alcohohcs and narcottcs add•cts, the Anchor Home for
Boys at Zapata, Texas, the
Peaceful Valley home for older
Chnshans m the Rio Grande
Valley near Mission, Texas,
the lighthouse, a place on the
Intracoastal Canal, forty miles
south of Corpus Christi for boys
and men m trouble, the
Bethesda Home for Girls m
Hattiesburg, Mtsslsslppl, and
the Rebekah Home for Girls 10
Corpus Chnsh
The theme of Brother
Roloff's mtmstry ts "Chns t is
the Answer" and also "Now the
Just Shall Uve by Fatth". The
pubhc is mvited to hear _this
untque man A fully adult
staffed nur sery w1ll be
provided.

Regwnal Comrrusswn.
Weanfurtner explamed that
every teacher, principal and
mstruch on-rela ted staff
member m all 27 school
d1stncts and three jomt
vocational diStrtcls m the !(}county regton we~e given an
opportumty to participate m
the assessment Some 3,000
education professionals- or 90
per ce nt of the target
populatiOn - from the region
responded.
The 50-•lem assessment
mstrument dealt with three
areas
mstruchonal
techmques, curnculum areas
and m-servtce procedures The
lndtvtdual responses were then
comptled and analyzed .by
computer, wtth constderahon
g•ven to vanables deabng wtth
area of education servtce,
amount of traimng and level of
expenence
The top stx (those rated as
extremely high pnortly) mstructwnal techmques that
should be considered for future
m·servtce activthes accordmg
to the respondents were the
foll owing
-Techmques for 11 turmng
on" the "turned off" student;
-Dtagnosts of learning
problems m students and
developmg strategtes for
overcommg them;
-Bmldmg positive student
alit tudes as a planned teachmg
straU&gt;gy·
- Effective teachwg

Jl

pm

Montreal (Renko 12 16 or
Fryman 6 9)
at
Sf
LOU IS
(McGlothen 16 12) 1 30 p m
los Ange l es IRau 13 11) at
Ctncmnalt ( Ktrby 12 9J. 8 05

pm

no one scores."
A tr1ple by Ken Griffey off

Mtke Marshall, the Dodgers'

..,.

Cy Young award-wmrun~ relief

San Franc1sco (Barr 13 9) at
Sa n Ot eg o (Jones B 221 10 00

(Only games schedu l ed J
Fnday 's Games
Montre&lt;~l at Ch,cago
New York at Ptttsburgh
Atlanta at San Franctsco
St Lout s at Phtla ntght
Los Ang at Houston nrght
Ctnct a t San Drego nrght

RIPLEY , W Va - The
Me•gs Marauders of Coach
Donald Wolfe swept a
Amencan League
doubleheader from Ripley here
East
w
I pet • b.
Wednesday, although the
Cleveland
1 0 1 000
second
game had a s trange
M tlwaukee
I
1 500
"'., endmg
Boston
1
1 500
Detroit
0 0 000
The flrsl contest was won by
Bai t more
0 0 000
1'
New York
I 000
I
0
the Marauders 7-3 The teams
West
then agreed to play another
w
I pet g b .
Mmnesota
2 0 1 000
g.,-.e of f•ve mmngs to g1ve the
Cal1 fo r nta
1
I 500
I
reterves of each a chance to
Oakland
1
1 500
I
Ch cago
1
1 500
I
play Because Me1gs only
Kansas Ctly
1
1 500
1
cames a 16 man squad to away
Texes
o
2 000 2
Wednesday's Resul1s
games, they had to use vars1 ty
Mrlwaukee 7 Bos t on 4
substitutes and two vars1ty
Mmnesota 3 Texas 2
Ch,cago 7 Oakland 5
starters agamsk the Rtpley
Kan Ctty 7 Cal t fornta 6
reserves wh1ch were mamly
Today's Probable Pttchers
(All Ttmes EDTJ
freshman and sophomore
Ba l ltmore {Pa l mer 7 12 ) at
Detrotl (Coleman 14 12) 2 JO players. The two coaches
pm
agreed to thts, and the game
Chtcago C Bahnsen 12 15 1 a!
began
Oakland (Norns 0 OJ. 4 30 p m
M1nnesota !G oltz 10 lO J at
The second conU&gt;st went the
Texas (Brown 13 12) 9 00 p m
f1rst four mmngs with Me1gs
(On l y games scheduled)
Frrday's Games
leadmg 3-0 gomg mto the fifth
Cleveland at Milwaukee
and
!mal lnmng In the top of
Boston at Balttmor e
Detrorl a t New York
the mmng the Marauders
Chteago at Ca l tf , ntght
erupted for 7 runs to run the
Oa kland at Texas, ntght
Mmn at Kan Crty ntgh t
score lo J().j) J:?urmg that m·

.,

LESTER ROWFF

""

/
strategies for reachmg the
below-average student 10 the ;
classroom,
- lndiVIduallzmg mstrucllon
m lhe regular classroom, and,
- ldentifymg and prov1dmg "
for the talen ted and g1fted •
student m the classroom
Those areas that were rated
as having "h1gh prwnty" by .
the respondents mcluded ex- ;
plonng
alternatives
to ~
evaluating students and :
to
parents,
reportmg
developmg aperopnate mstruchonal materials, developmg learmng resource :
centers, explormg alternatives ::
to the "tradlhonal " classroom :',:
approach
to
learmng, ~
techmques for reachmg :::
cult urally disadvantaged ..
students, a nd updates on ""
recent legal trends m :
educatiOn.
:
"Under the Southeastern ::
OhiO Spec1al ~ducahon ..
Regtonal ' Resource Center's •
(SEO-SERRC) Jnstructtonal Resource Center, teachers and :
others who work with han- ..:;:
dicapped children have had :::
continuous mservic6 traimng ~
ava ilable to them smce 1968,"
VVe1nfurtner sa1d
"Now, through the Appalachian RegiOnal CommissiOn's grant for the SEORESA's flrsl year of operabon,
we can ex tend those same
opportunities to the general ,
classroom U&gt;achers and otheP · '
~ ::;professiOnals," he satd

FOR YOUR GARDEN

pitcher, touched off thi Reds
wmning rally
"!had walked up to the plate
thmkmg about bunting but I
changed my n'lind when I
ste~ped into the batter's box "
'
said Griffey "That's one time
I'm glad Ken dtdn't bunt," satd
Reds manager Sparky Anderson
Chaney followed Griffey's
tr1ple wtth a game-tymg line
smgle to nghtfteld off Marshall.
Darrel started Wednesday
rught's game as a replacement
for Concepcton, who IS nursmg
a pulled muscle in his left
grom Chaney switched to third
when John Vukovtch was lifted
for a pmch hitter m the seventh
IMmg and rookte Doug F1ynn
1\ent to shortstop.

We have a

,.

~

full line of

...

GARDEN SEEDS

-

Hours 1.00-5 lO _ , •

Thurs.

And, 11 was a perfect
l&gt;_unt by this same
Flynn that moved Chaney to
second m the nmth and set the
stage for Concepcron 's gamewmnmg htt
.
"The way that ptlch moved
m on Flynn, I don't know how
m the world he put down such a
perfect
bunt/'
Reds
coach Alex Grammas
As Chaney sUd across the
plate with the wmrung run, an
errant pttch from the bullpen
thrown by Pat Darcy crossed
m front of him
"That's why the Dodgers
were argumg wtth the umprres
at tbe end of the game," sa1d
Morgan "They were saymg
because of that loose ball, tune
should have been called but
how can an umptre call tune m

m•ds\ of a play'"
Th1~ ":as f1rst base ,umptre
Ntck Colos1 's answer to the
Dodger protest.
The Do\igers owned a iHl
lead, two of the runs corrung on
a Btll Buckner homer, when
the Reds scored for the ftrst
time m Sixth mning. A pmch
double by Ed Armbnster and
the secotid of Morgan's three
smgles accounted for the runs

sacrift~

Vo

wet

Pittsburgh at Cht, ppd

wea

Mon t real
000 coo 000- o 2 0
St LO UtS
200 000 llx - 4 12 0
Rogers
Taylor
( 7)
and
Foote , Forsch (1 OJ and Stm
mons LP - Rogers 10 1)
Los Ang
100 020 000 - J 7 1
Ctnctnnatt
000 001 102 - 4 10 1
MesserSmith. Marsllilll (7)
and
Ferguson
Btlltngham
Carroll (7)
Borbon (9) and
Bench WP ""'- BOrbon (1 OJ LPMarsha l l (0 l l HR - Buckner
&lt;1st )

&lt;On ly games sched ul ed I
Amencan l ea gue
M1IW
002 301 010- 7 8,0
Boston
000 300 001 - 4 7 2
Broberg , Murphy (7) and
Porte r
Lee. Segu1 (7) and
Montgomery WP - Broberg {1
OJ LP - Lee (0 1l
010 101 000 - 3 1 1
000 002 000 - 2 6 3
Decker Corbtn (6), Burgme1
er (7) an d Borgmann
Btbby
(O I) and
Su ndberg
WP Decker (011 HR - - Oli va
(2ndl
T~xas

Ch1cago
100 000 033- 1 15 2
Oakland
014 000 000- 5 9 2
Kaat ( 1 0) end Downmg
Holt zman , Odom (8) Ltndblad
IBJ Fmgers (9) and Tenace LP
- F tngers (0 I)
HR - Tenace
{lst l
Kan C1ty
014 010 001 ~ 7 II 1
Califor n ia
031 020 000- 6 13 1
Sp l•ttorff, McDan tet ( 5) and
Healy, Tanana
Dobson (5),
Sco tt
{91
Pena
(9)
and
Rodnguez WP - McDanlel (1
OJ LP- Dobson (0 1)
HRsMcRae I 1st) Otts ( 1st)

,_
""-

, ,.

PLAYER BOUNCES BACK
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UP!) _
Gary Player bounced back
Wednesday from a touch of
food pOisoning "feeling gre~t"
for the defense of his Masters
champlilnshtp. He qmt on the
back mne of Tuesday's prachce
round feeling sick after a lunch
of shnmp
Player, wmner qf the 1974
Masters w1th a 278 predicted a
277 or 278 would ~m this year
"tf the weather 1s good "

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Cmcmnatt Bengals rummg back
Boob•e Clark has told a club
offtctal he never mtentionally
lDjured former
Denver
Broncos defensive back Dale
Hackbart, who has filed a $1
m1llion lawsmt ag01nst Clark
and tbe Bengals.
•
"Thts thmg IS a mystery to
Boob~e,"
sa1d
Bengals
assistant general manager
Mike Brown after conferrmg
w1th Clark "He says he never
mtenllonally IDJUred Hack-

bart "

STATE FARM·
~

n..

.Nundler One
Horneownns Insurer

More people ' 1nsure thetr homes w1th State Farm
than w•th any other company That's because they ve
found State Farm offers the best an serv1ce, protect•on
and economy GIVe me a can I n be glad to g1ve you
an the details

dtstr~ets

....

A

UUUtAMtl

WHITE CONV_ERSE TENNIS SHOES
'7.00 pr.
AnENTION: EFFECTIVE APRIL
12th -NEW HOURS

t rithe Area

PH. 992·7155

.,.... ,

FISHING AND CAMPING
EOUIPMENT

Tire Pt'i!;.es·

Powell St., Middleport

1258

15%oFF

-

STEVE SNOWDEN

Consultant for Frtday's
session will be David Bates, a
teacher of TAG children from
the Rockford, Ill. school
system Bates will discuss
"Evaluation and Modification· ,
of Programs for TAG : •
Children," lncluping some :
suggestions for Initial stepa the;
coordinators might take in ~
beginning programs in thts-

APRIL 12

'For the ~Jowt,.,

Tue.-Wed.- Fri.· Sat. 9:30 to 5:00
Mon.9:30to8:00
Thurs. 9:30 to 12: 00

It's

l.ilre I good neighbor, Slate Farm is there
'STATE FARM FIRE AND CASUALTY COMPANY
Home OHice Bloomington, lll lno11

BEND TIRE CENTER
771-5Ql

I

N&amp;N SPORTSHOP
Pomerov, Ohjo

Moson,W.fA.

sense When you get sued, 1t's
expensive to deal w1th m
court''
Clark, a 6-2, 245-pound
fullback from Jacksonville,
Fla who played m college at
Bethune-Cookman , was a
rook•• playmg his hrst regular
season pro game m the contest
c1ted by Hackbart Denver won
the game
The suit bnngs to mmd the
recent case of a pro hockey
player chargei'l w1th assault
and battery for an alleged
hittmg mc1dent w1th a hockey
slick
Hol\ever, Brown says this
smt appears different because
he sees 1t mvolvmg a regular
play durmg a game
" If something like this was
allowed to go though the courts
•t would radically change the
futureofsports,''hesaJd. ''You
·could sue anytime you were
hurt on the field. "

Hackbart clauns he was
mjured by "mallcwus and
wanton" acts by Clark m the
openmg game of the 1973
season
Hackbart, a 13-year Nallonal
Football League veteran who
retired Ia ter m Ibe 1973 season,
contends he received a Hsevere
fracture of the cerVIcal spme"
m the game at Denver
HIS smt, filed m a Denver
court, seeks $500,000 m comThe Dai~ Sentrner
pensatory damages and
DtVOTED tvTHE
INTEREST OF
another $500,000 m punitive
ME lG S-MASON AREA
damages
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
Clark was served w1th a
ROBERT HOEFLICH
summons here and he turned 11
Ctty Ed1 tor
Publtshed da l y excep t
over to Brown, an attorney,
Saturday by The Oh to Valley
Publ1 Shrng Company
111
who saw the game m question
Cou r t St , Pomerov Oh10
and says he assumes tbe m- 45769 Busmess OHtce Phone
2156 Edttonal Phone 992
ctdent referred to IS a play m 992
2157
which Hackbart tackled Clark
Second class postage patd at
Pomeroy Oh 10
near the goal line.
Nat tona l
adver t1S 1nJ
r ep r esenta1 t ve
Bottmel l 'l
" It was JUSt another play,"
Ga l lagher Inc 12 East 42n'f
recalled Brown. "Boob1e was St N ew York , New York !
ub scrtpt • on
raf es
trymg to score a touchdown but DelS tvered
by earner wherl
Hackbart made a good tackle availab l e 75 cents per week1
By Motor Route where carrter
on htm Hackbart clatms servtee
not available
One
Boobte's forearm and fiSt h1t month SJ 25 By mad tn Ohu~
and W Va , One Year $22 00 1
his neck .
S1x months
$ 11 SO
T hree
months
S7 00
Elsewher&amp;
"Heckbart contmued to play $26
00 year
Stx monthi
m the game and played m two SlJ so th-ree months $7 soT
Subscr1pt •on p r ~ee m cl udes
or three games after that."
~ unday Ti[ll~S Senltne l
_
Brown sa1d be mtended to
review ftlms of tbe game,"
"But 11 appears Hackbart has
dressed this thing up."
"To us, this ts a harassment
type of thmg," added Brown,
son of general manager and
head coach Paul Brown "It's
someone clutching at straws-seekmg somethmg on the basiS
that there's nothmg to lose
"You jUSI can't penrut this
type of action in sports
Everyone knows there IS a riSk
m~ol~ed ..There are going to be
IDjurtes
Brown also called the sutt
"!?,'oundless and ludtcrous."
The most you can say IS
that tt IS nov~l and amusing,
but not amusmg m a happy

SATURDAY SPECIAL
Convenience Counts
The Seventh Earl of Cardigan, who led the Charge of the
Ltght Brtgade m the Crtmean
War, got tired of ptillmg a
sweater over h1s head Tradt·
t10n says he des1gned the
sweater jacket wtth buttons
that has carrted his name down
through history

Chaney's sacrifice fly w1th the
bases loaded m tbe seventh
mnmg gave the Reds thetr
second run .
Pedro Borbon, the last of
three Reds p1 tchers, hurled a
scoreless nmth to gam the
VICtory for the Reds who wmd
up therr three-game set with
the Dodgers Thursday mght
when Clay Kirby goes agamst
LA lefty Doug Rau

lawsuit mystery to him

'"

!

v1ctory Jtm Kaat went the
distance for the White Sox after
bemg rocked for a grand slam
homer by Gene Tenace m the
th1rd.
Royals 7, Angels 6:
Hal McRae cracked a homer,
a double and two smgles to
dr1ve home three runs-mcludmg the game-wmner m the top
of the mnth-and Kansas City
spoiled Chuck Dobson's comeback effort for Cahfornia.
Amos Oils also had a smgle, a
tworun homer and three runs
scored for tbe Royals Undy
McDamel got the wm after
hurting the !mal f1ve mnmgs.

Bengals' Clark says

&lt;Only games scheduled l

school distnct superin· .
tendents
....-,
Some 27 school dtstricts,.
romt vocational schools and ~ '
county offices from the•
project's IO.County regton have·
named local level coordmators The role of the
coordmators is to develop' an
'•'
awareness of TAG children and
'
thetr needs m therr · home
',,
d•str1cts , begm pilot efforts in
programmmg for them, and
coordinate programs m their

reglon..

Mater League Results
By Untted Press lnternat tonal
Nattona 1 League
San Fran at San Otego ppd ,

coacl· cannot do. An ump1re
mu&amp;t stlJt. Pame
In the first game, wh1ch went
w1thout
mc1dent,
the
Marauders were led at the
plate by M•ke Nessetroad w1th
a smgle and a home run over
the left centerfield fence w1th
two men on base. Other
Marauders getting smgles m
the f•rst game were Perk Ault
and Carl Carmtchael wtth 2
and Mick Davenport and
Ham1lton each had one
The wmnmg pitcher for
Me•gs was T1m Cundiff who
worked five mmngs before
bemg reheved by Gary George
who f1mshed the conrest The
losmg pitcher for Ripley was
Taylor
A mentwnable fact about the
Marauder vtctory over Ripley
IS the f!IN that Ripley had
recently defeated Wahama ,
Barboursville, and Charleston
Stonewall Jackson - all b1gger
schools
In the second game Dale
Browmng got the v1ctory for
Me1gs and Mowery received
the loss.
FIRST GAME
Me1gs
201 103 0-7 8 0
Ripley
DID 020 0-3 8 7
Metgs
Cundtff (WP),
George (6) and Ham1lton
Ripley- Taylor (LP), Parson
(6) and Wmters
SECOND GAME
Metgs
101 17-10 5 0
Ripley
000 Ox- 0 2 3
Browning (WP) and Howard
Mowery ('LP), Polmg (5) and
WmU&gt;rs

M1nn

I 00 IO I 00 fri.·IOII.

w

kids subject of workshop

mng Gary George shd mto
home. plate w1th 2 outs and m
the course of h1s slide spiked
the Ripley catcher, cuttmg a
deep gash m the boy's leg ThiS
was ,purely accidental, as the
sl1de was clean, with no mtentwn to tn)ure the catcher.
The home plate umptre agreed
to th1s, but the home town fans,
some of whom were edgy
because of the fact !hat the
Marauders were playmg
vansty subs and not reserves,
wanted to carry the mc1dent
further The R1pley coach then
stopped the contest, wh1ch a

000 010 1002 8 1
A tl anta
Houston
000 6QO BOx - 14 15 1
Reed Torrealba ( 4) Easterly
(5) House (7), Harnson (7J
and Correll R Ichard Roberts
(5) and May WP- Roberts (I
0) LP - Reed (0 I)

"

..

as Mtlwaukee beat Boston for
its first wm Scott hit a basesloaded two-out s1ngle m the '
th1rd and Yount smgled home
one run m the fourth and ac.
counted for another m the sixth
wtth a sacrif•ce fly Pete
Brobeilg, acqurred from Texas
m the off..season, went 6 1-3
mnmgs and gave up three runs
on four h1fs to gam the victory
White Sox 7, A's 5:
Pinch hitter Pat Kelly's twoout two-run triple plus a runscormg double by Carlos May
m the runth mrung enabled
Chtcago to erase a 5-I deftclt
and beat Oakland for tts f1rst

Marauders sweep pair

~.,.

managemeht
eff1c1ency
systems to special education
services The agency is funded
by the Appalachian Regtonal
Commission and is in its ftrst
year of operation
Agency Dtrector Robert L.
Wemfurtner satd the school
personnel from the region
Identified programming for
talenU!d and gtfU!d children as
one of several needs areas in
an assessment m 1972 Those
needs areas served 811 the basis
for applying for ARC and other
funds to establish the SEORESA project
The m-oervice sessions are
designed to train some 45
"local level TAG coordinators"
to
Implement
such
programming In thell' home
diStrtcts. The coordinators are
teachers, principals, supportive
personnel
and
classroom supervtsors ap·
· po1n ted by their Individual

w1mer Joe Decker m the siXth
Burgme1er quelled a basesloaded rally m the seventh, by
stnking out Tom Gneve and
checked Texas the rest of the
way.
Elsewhere in the American
League Mtlwaukee topped Boston, 7-1, Chicago tripped Oakland, 7..S, and Kansas City
edged Californta, 7-6 In the
Nallonal League 11 was Cmcmnatl4 Los Angeles 3, St LoUIS 4
Montreal 0 and Houston 14
Atlanta 2.
Brewers 7, Red Sox 4:
- George Scott and Robm
Yount drove In two runs ap1ece

pm

Teaching strategy assessed

2nd at Belpre

Reader co.n fused about cholesterol

•

POINT PLEASANT
Nallonally known evangelist
Lester Roloff of Texas, 61, w1ll
be m Pomt Pleasant at the
Na !tOnal Guard Armory lhts
Saturday evemng, Apr1l 12 at
7:30 p.m for a Family Altar
Radio Rally sponsored by the
Grace B1ble Baptist Church.
The Honeybee Quartet, from
the Rebekah Home for G1rls m
Corpus Chnsti, Texas, wtll
prov1de spec1al mus•c
"Brother Roloff'\ as he is
affectionately known by his
listeners, has one of the most
un•que mtmstrtes m the world.
He started two rescue mtssions
and then has founded s•x
homes for people in need of
help - the C1ty of Refuge at
Cu lloden,
Georgta
for

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Joe
Morgan called the wmrung h1t
a "real jam JOb
The Cinncmah Redrsecond
bhseman was referrmg to
Davey Concepcton's two-out,
off-the-ltandle pmch smgle, a
loopmg fly ball to left field
which scored Darrel Chane~
and clunaxed a two-run nmth
mnmg rally that beat the Los
Angeles Dodgers 4-3 Wednesday mght.
"But ,'' added Morgan, who
contributed. three hits toward
the Reds' second vtclory m a
row over the Dodgers, "that's
part of the game Sometunes
you hit the ha ll real hard and

'

Evangelist Roloff to speak.

1hlnclads take

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - Help'
Please! I am one of those
people
confused
about
cholesterol I read the enclosed
article by a physician ltke
yourself who thmks that your
theory of cholesterol ts all
wrong I thought you m1ght
cons1der readmg 11
One thmg that supports h1s
article ts that Russ10 and
Eastern Europe hve on
saturated fats w1thout any
undue effects. They eat salt
pork, sour cream, butter,
cheese and fatty sausage Also,
what about the healthy Sw1ss
and their saturated fats ,
cheeses and da~ry products'
Easten Europan and Russian ·
phySicians think we are crazy
worrymg about cholesterol and
that you could work 1t out w1lh
phySical acUvity, that 1! we
uaed our legs mor.. maybe we
could ~t like the Europeans
and the Esk1mos, who. live on
fat

convicted of any crune "
The hint of a connection WJth
Hearst came when they satd:
''Our actions of the past year
are completely defenstble. If
we somehow acted to avert
bloodshed and ktllmg, we
certamly fmd that nothing to
apologtze for "
They satd MIss Hearst
"apparently concluded durmg
the first few weeks of her
kidnapmg" that the FBI had no
concern for her safety and that
her life was endangered by
"tngger-ltappy agents "
The Scotts satd they would
not answer grand JUry questions , 1f asked , because "total
noncollaboration wtth this government ts our moral respJn·
Slbtlity "
Walton satd he was "terrtbly
sorry" he had discussed the
case with the FBI.
Walton, who plays for the
Portland Trail Blazers, expressed support for the Scotts,
h1s longtime fr1ends, and
JOmed them "to urge,the people
of the world to stand with us m
our rejection of the U.S.
goverrunent.''
Miss Hearst, 21, a newspaper
herress, was ktdnaped Feb 4,
1973, ·ll) Berkeley, G;llif , but
JOtned her SLA abductors'
cause two months later. The
group has been in hiding ever

BASEBALL PLAYERS who will be dm~g their thmg in the spring program to be held at
Wahama High School Frtday at 7:30p.m. are, front, 1-r, Sheldon Gerlach, Ronnie Martin, Mark
Thompson, Mike Buzzard. David SISk; back row, Donald Roush, Larry G1pbs, Joey Roush,
Derrick Taylor, and Peanut Harris. The program IS under the d1recllon of Mrs. Ehzabeth
Mattox, Mason County Mustc SuperviSor.

try to make sure I take a good
np at the hall "
In ad9tllon to Oliva's fourthmning homer, the Twms scored
m the second on a walk to
Bobby Darwm, a single by
Ohva and a sacnftee fly by
Eric Soderhohn, -atid a gam m
the s•xth when Soderholm
stngled , stole second, moved to
th~rd on a throwing error by
catcher Jun Sundberg and
came home on pitcher Jun
Bibby's wtld throw on Steve
Braun's grounder
It was up to rehever Tom
Burgmeier to save the game
after Texas scored tw1ce off

for second win in row

Morgan says winning hit 'real jam job'

Ma1or Leagu e-4-t-and•ngs
By Un1ted Press lnternattonal
Nattonal League
East
w
I pet g b
New York
1 0 I 000
Montrea l
1 1 soo
'~
St LOUIS
1 1 500
I l
Pt l tsburgh
o 0 000 0 I 1
Cht ca go
0
0 000 I I 2
Phdadelph ' a
o
1
1 000
West
w
I pet g b
Cmcmnaft
2 0 I 000
Houston
2
1 667
Allan Ia
1 2 333
1' '&gt;
San D1ego
o
o coo
I
San FranCIS CO 0
0 000
I
Los Angeles
o
2 ooo
2
Wednesday's Results
51 LOU tS .:1 Montreal 0
Ctnc ,n natt 4 Los Angeles 3
Houston 14 Atlanta 2
S F at San OteQo ppd wet
Pttlsburgh at Ch t, ppd , wea
Today's Probable Pttchers
fAll Ttmes EDT)
Phtlade lph ta (Lonborg 17 13 1
at N ew York {Mat lack 13 15)
'l OS p m
Ptltsburgh
( El l s 129) at
Ch tcago ( R e uschel 13 12) 2 30

'•

Scott challenges FBI, grand jury questions
By ROBERT STRAND
SAN FRA'NCISCO (UP!) Jack Scott, a sports world
radtcal suspected of aidmg
Patr1c1a Hearst, emerged from
hidmg Wednesday hintmg he
w!IS comected 'to the Hearst
case but M!;l ~done nothmg

fortunately, struck out four
limes m h1s opemng day debut
for Kansas Ctty, against
Gahforma's Nolan Ryan, and
then was 1}-for-4 wtth two more
strikeouts, m the Royals' 7-6
wm over the Angels Wednesday night.
"Some years 1 start off
qu1ck. Some years I start off
slow," sa1d the 33-year old
Ohva, who undenvent h1s ftfth
knee operation during the offseason "Right now, I am
seemg the ball real good, which
IS Important, a nd I am
swmgmg the bat good When I
have my swmg gomg hke thts, I

3~2

ABA Results
By Ul"ftted Press lnternatumal
(All Ttmes EDTJ
(All Sertes Best of SevenJ
Eastern Dtvn Semtfmals
Kentucky vs Memphts
{Kentucky leads, 1 OJ
Apr 6- Ky 98 MemphiS 91
Apr B ~ Ky 119 Memphts 105
Apr 10- at Mmphs 9 10 p m
Apr 11 - at Mmphs ~9 10 p m
x A pr 13- at Ky - 1 35 p m
x Apr 15- at Mmphs 9 10 p m
xA pr1 6- at Ky , 73Spm
New York vs Sf lOUIS
(Series tted, I 1J
A pr 6- N Y 111 St lOU IS lOS
Apr 9- St Lou ts 11 5 N Y 97
A pr 11 - at Sl L 9 p m
Apr lJ-- at St L 2 35 p m
x Apr 15- -at N Y B 05 p m
X Apr 16- at St L , 9 p m
x Ap r ll- at N Y 8 05 p m
Western Otvn Semtltnals
Utah vs Denver
I D enver leads, 2 1l
Ap r 6- Dnvr 122 Utah 107
Apr 7- 0nvr 126 Utah 120
Al'JT'9- Utah 122 Dnvr 108
Ap r 11 - at Utah 9 35 p m
x Ap r 12- at Dnvr 9 35 p m
x Apr 14- at Utah 9 35 p m
x Apr 15- at Dnvr 9 35 p m
San Anton•o vs lndtana
( lndtana leads, 2 0 )
Apr 5- lnd 122 San An 119 ol
Apr 7- lnd 98 San An 93
Apr 10- at lnd 9 05 p m
Apr 12- at lnd 9 05 p m
x Apr J.:l- at San A n 8 35 p m
x Apr 16 ~ a t tnd 9 05 p m
x A pr 19- at San An 8 35 p m
x tf necessary
NBA Results
By Untted Press lnternattonal
(All Ttmes eon
( Ftrst Round Act•on1
Ea st ern Conference
Houston vs New York
(Best of Three)
(Houston leads, 1 OJ
Apr 8- Hous 99 New York 84
Ap r 10 - at N Y 9 p m
x Ap r 12- at Hous , 1 40 p m
Washmgton vs Buflalo
(Best of Seven)
Ap r 10- at Wash 8 05 p m
Ap r 12- at Bflo 1 40 p m
Apr 16- at Wash 8 05 p m
Apr 18- at Bflo 9 10 p m
x Apr 20- at Wash , 1 10 p m
x A pr 22 or 23 - at Bfl o , y tba
x Apr 25 - at Wash 8 OS p m
Western Conference
Detrott vs Seattle

f Best of Three}
f Seattle lnds, 1 0)
Apr 8- Sea ttle 90 Det 77
Apr 10- at De t, a 35 p m
x Apr 12- at Seat tle, 11 p m
l·Chtcago vs I&lt;C-Om•ha
{Best of Seven)
( Ch•cago leads, t.o)
Apr 9- Chl 95 KC Omaha 89
Apr 13- at ,KC o 1 35 p m
Apr 15 or 16- at Cht , 8 JO p m
Apr 17 of 18- at KC 0 , 8 35

pm

x Apr 19 or 20 - at Cht , v tba
x Ap r 22- at KC 0. y tba
x Apr 25 - at Cht 8 JO p m

x tf necusary
y ttme to be announced
z All I&lt;C Omaha Games To Be
Played In Kansas Crty
IHL Playoff Standtngs
By Untied Press I nternaf•onal
Sem tf •na Is- Best of Seven
w I gf 'ilil
Muskegon
1 I 14 13
Sag mew
121314

w
gf 91
Dayton
1 o 4
3
Toledo
o 1 3 4
Wednesday's Results ;
Dayton 4 To ledo 3
Tonight's Games
No games scheduled
Trtb Bowl mg met
Thursday Skyhners League
Apnl13 , 1975
Loca l 6.44 No 1
83 21
Oh1o R 1ver Realty
12 40
Russ' Glass Shop
60 so
Bob Evans Farms
56 48
Wooten s Lounge
55 5~
Chrts Craft
_..
55 57
Central Supply
54 58
Burg er Chef
53 59
Jones Boy s
46 66
Lo ca l 644 No 2
44 68
Amerrcan Leg ton
42 70
Hemers Bakery
40 74
Wooten s Lounge, L Gleason
201 571
Jones
Boys , M
(ana Qay 187 503
H etners
Bakery
R
Ell 10ft 213 533
Chrrs Craft R Ferguson 223
572 Amer1can l eg iOn S See
F
177 414 , Centra l Supp l y
Petr.e 187 49 3 Ohto Rtver
Realty 0 Hall 226 601 Russ'
G lass Shop c Queen 228 566 ,
Burger Chef. c Meadows 203
540
Local 644 No
2
L
Wtlcoxen 172 480

Your Best Buy!
:)teel-deck rotanes.b~

HAHN-ECLIPSE
econom!d and performance I
All the quahty Hahn-Echpse features lln&amp;erttp
hetght ad,ustment, easy-sp1n vertteal-pull start1n1,
and many more--but at our spectal low prtces
Foldtng handle, too-lets you store your
steel-deck Just about anywhere.
And they comply wtth all
ex•slmg m~ustry safety
stlndards

Priced from

......

,

TM Hlftn&lt;ION...

lultt ....,.
t1 meb)'tlllf
llfi••J·

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE
110 W. MAIN

POMEROY

Glass Packed Mufflers, Reg. '12.95 .............................. SS.88
Shocks, Original Equipment (limited Supp~) Reg. '6.99.. !4.99
Spark Plugs, Famous Brands (List Price '1.39) .................. 9r
Aoor Mats for Ca!S, Discontinued Numbers ......... Now 1h Price
New Water Pumps or Fuel Pumps
20% OH Regular Price

Berkley Famous FIShing Rods ............... 20% Off Regular Price
Dough Balls, barge Pkg. Reg. 9Cr. .................................... 55•
Spaulding Kro-Aite Golf Balls........ :.......................3

It's· Our Annual Salee-Speclals All Over The Store

"'""'"'

\

'

•

II

'

'

�___.,...1"' ....,......... _ ...,.,_=
•

' - ·- - -

,.
{

3- The Datly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Thursday, AptlllO, 1975

2- The Datly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tltursday, Ap•·•IIO, 197..!_

Twins nip Rangers

Gambling curb
bill·" in senate

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The
Ohto Senate has receiVed from
the House legtslation destgned
to mp m the bud a growmg
trend toward caslllO~ype gam·
blmg in northeastern Oh10
The bill, adopted Wednesday
by the House,~. outlaws the
acquisition, possessiOn and operation of slot machines and
roulette wheels It also tightens
defm1t1ons under which
charitable groups may conduct
' garrung activtties
Tho chief sponsor, Rep
Ronald H Weyandt, D-Akron,
satd current dehmtlons of

charitable gamblmg are bemg
skirted to the pomt where
Summit County is becommg a
'Las Vegas East" on Frtday
rughts, attractmg elements of
orgamzed crune.
Represelltat•ves from other
areas warned that tinless the
b1ll 1s enacted, the orgamzed
l!amblmg could spread, particularly to Cuyahoga County
The measW"e contams an

emergency clause , meamng 1t
would be effective unmedtately upon stgnature by
Gov. James A Rhodes if
cleared by the Senate
Rep Joseph P Tulley, R·
Mentor, proposed an amend·
ment elumnatmg the prohtb•·
tion agamst slot machmes and
roulette wheels on grounds
they should be available for use
m family recreatton rooms.
Amendment Tabled
But Tulley's amendment was
tabled after Rep Wilham G
Batchelder , R-Medma, satd he
thought "we ought to gtve the
sledgehammers back to the

prosecutors.''
Rep Denms L Wojtanowski,
D-Willoughby Hill'&gt;' also faded,
21-70, on an amendment which
would have authoriZed games
of chance to be conducted by
orgamzatwns such as !he
•

VFW, the Little League and
major pohllcal parties.
Weyandt sa1d h1s btlhsonly a
starting pomt, and conce4ed 1ts
success would depend on local
law enforcement
He satd the House IS conSidenng a conslltullonal
amendment to allow Oh10
voters to set standards for
charttable bmgo, whtch he
described as a "mtsh-mash of
mterpretallon m dtfferent
counties "
The House also adopted, 88-6,
and sent to the Senate
leg1slahon extending the
powers of the state attorney
general's office over charitable
ttusts and mslltuhons
The btU 1s sought by state
Attorney General William J.
Brown
Tulley failed, 42..Sl, on an
amendment which would have
required the attorney general
to get a court order to procure
certam informallon from a
chantable trust He satd his
amendment would have elinunated Hbureaucrahc harass..
ment" of charitable trusts.
The House also unanimously
agreed with Senate amendments and sent to Rhodes' desk
a bdlallowmg county boards of
election to htre mterpreters to
ass1st non-English speakmg
voters at the polls
Meanwhile, the Senate
unarumously approved a btU
, authonzmg the use of pubhc
school food servtce faciltties to
provide meals for elderly
persons
Sen Donald J . Pease, DOberlm, ch1ef sponsor, amend·
ed the bill on the floor to defme
elderly persons as bemg 60 and
older
"There are 1.4 million persons over 60 years of age m
Ohto," Pease noted. "Twentyftve per cent of thern--350,000
persons-have mcomes below
til• poverty level and many

By BIU. MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
The Mmnesota Twms sent
one longhme favortte and
future Hall of Farner- Harmon
K1Uebrew-packing this wmter
and elected to keep anotherTony
Ohva-a$
the1r
destgnated hitter
Off the early-season returns ,
they kept the nght man
Oliva smashed h1s second
home run m as many games to
help the Twins to their second
stra1ght VIctory, 3-2, over the
Texas Rangers Wednesday
mght.
Killebrew,
un-

Standings

THEY'LL CLOWN• - 'Wearmg attracllve clown costumes the students above of Mason
Elementary School wtll partictpate m a spnng program to be held at Wahama High School gym
Friday at 7 30 p m The program IS under-the d1rect10n of Mrs Ehzabeth Mattox, Mason
County Mustc Supervisor Schools participating will he West Columbta , New Haven, Hartford
and Letart Left to nght are Todd Kitchen, L&lt;y:ry Roach , Mary Ann Tnpp and Todd Tucker

wtth madequate nutrition."
Provide Hot Meal
The btU would allow school
dist ncIs to coopera te wlth
semor Clttzen orgamzatlons m
proVI dmg one hot meal each
dq,y for the elderly.
The Senate also approved,
32-1, legtslatwn lunttmg work- _
men's compensahon for casual
workers to those earmng $160
or more in cash from a single
household m any calendar
arter Present law mcludes
:h'ose earnmg $50 or more for
the same penod of tune
Both Senate mea sures are
subject to House approval

In other legtslattve develop-

ments Wednesday .
-The House passed, 79' 11•
and sent to the Senate a b1ll
lunttmg arb•trary cancellation
of health lllSurance pohc1es
and requrrmg health msurance
plans to allow converston of
group pohc1es to mdtVIdual
pohcres
Ca
-Reps Thomas J
rney,
D-Youngstown, and A G Lan·
ctone, D-BeUa1re, Introduced a
constltutlonjl] amendment authonzmg the state and local
govenunents to construct el~­
trlc and gas utilities.
- Rep Patnck A. Sweeney'

D-Cleveland, mtrodu ced
legtslatlon doubling the state's
contnbullon to the local
government fund , while Rep
Charles F Kurfess, R-Bowling
Green, offered a btU reqmrmg
earmarkmg all state income
tax proceeds to local government, schools and tax relief.
- Rep Denrus E Eckart, DEuchd, proposed a resolution
askmg the governor's cooperahon m making available
temporary care and housing m
Ohto for VIetnamese orphans.
The Senate was to reconvene
at 11 a m today and the House
at I p.m

wrong

1

,

Scott, 33, accompanied by

pro basketball superstar Bill rented by Scott's wtfe, Micki
Walton, answered no questtons The FBI has telephone records
on the adVIce of counsel He of calls between the farmhouse
sa•d he would not talk wtth the and Walton's home m PortFBI or respond to quest10mng land, Ore , where the two
by a grand jury
Scotts were VJSitmg.
M1ss Hearst and fellow
The Scotts dropped out of
Symb10nese Liberation Army stght rust before the publtc
fugtllves reportedly stayed m a learned of the farmhouse last
Pennsylvania farmhouse month FBI agents smce have
been mterrogatmg Scott's
fr1ends and fam1ly
Newsmen were summoned
abruptly Wednesday to a
lawyer's off•ce and then sent
speedmg to Glide Methodist

Defenses shown against
robberies, kidnapings
Thrrty-se~e'i&gt; iiank personnel

of Metgs County atU&gt;nded an

mformaltona:l semmar on
defendmg agamst bank robbery and kidnapmg presented ,
by the FBI at the Parkersburg
Htgh School Aud1tormm m
Parkersburg Wednesday
evenmg sponsored by the Oh10
Valley Chapter, Amencan
Institute of Banking
Four representahves from
the Pittsburgh Off1ce of the
Federal Bur~au of Jn•esltgallon presented the
program
Attendmg from ' Me•gs
County were LoiS McEihmney,
Dortha Salser, Chester King ,
Dorolhy Anthony, Edward
Durst and M;mmng Kloes from ·
the Clltzens Natwnal Bank,
Middleport; Patty Young ,

Add•e Noms, Sharon Sm1th,
Evelyn Lanmng, Suste An·
drews , Jean Werry, Joanne
W1lllams, Mary Riggs, Recka
McGUire, Jenny Smtih, Dl8na
Kmg, Sus•e Abbott, Joan
Vaughan , and Roger Hysell, all
from The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savmgs Co , Pomeroy, Unda
Spencer, Marilyn Robmson,
Ronda Dempsey, Cheryl Ab·
bolt, Lee Ann Nease. Lera
Jones, George Hobstetter,
Joan Wolfe, Manlyn Wolfe,
Dons Snowden, Maxme
Gr1ff1th, and Donna Nelson,
Pomeroy National Bank, and
William J HobsU&gt;tter, Joan
May, Ruth Ann Graham, Susie
Jeffers and Sharon Barr from
the Rutland Branch of The
Pomeroy Natwnal Bank.

Pelt~er

Church where tfe Scotts and
Walton appeared
FBI agents surrounded the
bmldmg, but took no action
smce there IS no warrant or
subpoena for Scott
The Scotts denounced what
they called FBI harassment
and expressed fear "of bemg
set up and posstbly killed" by
agents amoous for a shootout
wtth the SLA
"First of all," the Scotts
smd, "we have done nothmg
wrong We are not fugitives.
We have not been charged or

rejected 6 to 3

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov
James A Rhodes ' norrunallon
of Gordon Peltter as state
commerce dtrector was rejected, 6 to 3, Wednesday rught by
the Ohio Senate Elections,
Fmancial Institutions and Insurance Commtttee.
Peltter, 57, a Columbus attorney, was Ohto's commerce
director tn the previous Rhodes
Administration. He also was
treasurer of Rhodes' reelectton campaign last year.
The party-line vote found the
six Democrats on the comrruttee agamst nommatlon and the
three Repubhcan members m
favor The nomination still
must go Ia the state Senate
floor, where Democrats have

21-I2 control
Democrats complamed Peltier sollctted campaign funds
from persons he would be
regulatmg as commerce director The btggest rap agamst
him , however, was that he
ISsued a real estate broker's
hcense to htmself before
Rhodes left offtce m 1971
Democrats satd Pelller also
was instrumental m Rhodes'
taking and passmg an oral
exarrunation for a broker's
license a few days pr1or to the
governor leavtng office. They
also votced concern that Pelher, as dtrector, m1ght
dtsmantle the department's
Consumer Protection DIVIsion.

•

streets of Moscow w prov•de
That art1cle on cholesterol emergency treatment to the
you sent me 1s a travesty on victims of the many heart
truth Finally because of the attacks that occur Heart
efforts of the American Heart diSease 1s common m Europe
Assn ., dedicated sc1enhsls, the now, mcludmg Switzerland,
National Heart and Lung In- except m those areas wbere
stitute and other pubhc- food 1s m short supply and JUS!
sptrlted orgamzahons, the getting enough to eat 1s the
mc1dence of heart d1sease m b1gger problem
the Um!ed States m young and
And, I went to Alaska myse If
mtddle-aged men · has started several years ago and
to decrease sharply. That says reviewed the Eskuno data.
somethmg for these efforts
Native Eskimos don 'I eat much
The
complex1t1es
of m the wmter, and at that time
cholesterol are many. For the native Esk1mo seldom hved
more detailed Information much past 30. We don't have
send a self-addressed, stamped ' tnuch heart d1se~se before that
envelope to me at P 0 Box age e~ther The older Eskimo,
1551, Radio Ct!y Statton, New or lhe one who had a chance to
York, N. Y 10019 and ask for hve as we do , had fatty
the booklet on cholesterol depos• Is m the arU&gt;rtes.
Enclose 50 cents to cover costs
The story IS the same lhe
Tbe booklet discusses many of world over When people hve
the pom ts YW ra1se
like we do they get heart
I must correcl your disease It IS not just
statements, though Russ•a has cholesterol but the calories, the
a ser1ous heart disease 4at, the saluraled fat, lack of
problem nght now They hawe e~erc1se and cigarettes, JUSI lo

DEAR READER - No
wonder you are confused if you
are gomg to u5e information
from the type of health
magazines you sent me Many
people read these magazmes,
and somettmes there is a good
arbcle m them But many of
these magazmes .are vehicles
for adverttsmg 'so-&lt;oalled health
products
The fact the article was
wr1tten by a doctor doesn't
make 11 holy I was asked by
one owner of such a health
magazme to become the ed1tor
and wnter of the arhcles for
the magazme There was Qne
Important hitch I could not
·write anythmg that would
confhcC w1th the vanous
product§ bemg advert~d m
the magazme The mqney 1s in
the advert1smg, and 11 ts a
fortune I could have made a
lot of money dmng lhts, as
opposed to helpmg the public.
Not all doctors refuse Similar
mobile hea r t um ts rovmg the
opportunities.

Sslty Deal
The state of New York has
been handmg salt to Indians for
187 years Under a treaty wtth
the Onondagas m 1788. New
York 1s obligated to g1ve a
. bushel of salt every October to
any member of the tr1be who
requests 11 In return, New
York rece1ved 15,000· acres of
'
salt lands
BELPRE - The Metgs :
Marauder thmclads of head
track coach Don D1xon opened
their 1975 track season at
Belpre Tuesday, losmg 75-53 m
the two-way meet.
Belpre records bemg
unavailable, Marauders I ATHENS - While the focus
captunng firsts were Bob .of Exce'ptwnal Children's
Wtlltamson m the 100 yd dash Week this week has been the
and the 220 yd. dash, Ph1l educa tiona! needs of hanOhlinger m the 440 yd dash, • d•capped chtldren, there is one
Terry Whitlatch in the 180 low group
of
exceptional
hurdles and broad jump, Jack youngsters who are sometimes
01ler, the shot put, and the mtle ignored, talenU!d and gifted
relay team fmtsbed first.
children accordmg 16 the
Other Marauders placmg Southeastern Ohio Regtonal
were T1m Scltes, second in the Education Service Agency '
htgh hurdles and third in 180
Friday marks the fourth in a
low hurdles, Whitlatch, second senes of day-long traming
m the 100 yd dash , Brpce workshops sponsored by the
Reed, second m tbe mtle run SEO-RESA a1med at providing
and thml m the 880 yd
educahonal programs
Lonme Coats, thtrd m the 220 designed to meet the unique
yd dash and th1rd m the htgh needs of Southeastern Ohio's
jump; Mark Gilkey, th1rd m "TAG" (talenU!d and gifted)
the 2 mile run, and Allen children.
Stewart second V' the shot put
The SEO-RESA project
and th1rd m the diScus
serves tbe 27 school diStricts m
Tomght the Marauders take Athens, Galha, Hockmg,
on Eastern Eagles of Me1gs Jackson, Me1gs, Monroe,
Cuunty coac hed by Sp1ke Morgan, Perry, Vinton and
Berkhe•me~ on the Middleport l'{ashmgton Counties with
held at 4 30 p m
programs rangm~ from

m~ ntwn

a few factors •

~ TAG

;
(

ATHENS
Teachmg
strategtes geared to meeting
the mdtv1dual learning
problems of under-achievmg
and under-motivated students
should be the focus of proposed
In-se rvice trammg for tn struchonal personnel, accordmg to the results of a
mass1ve teacher in-serv1ce
needs assessment conducted
by the Southeaslfrn Ohto
Regtonal Education Service
Agency (SEO-RESA)
SEO-RESA Drrector Robert
L. Weutfurfner announced the
resul Is of the survey today as
part of Exceptional Children's
Week ( Apnl 6-12). The SEORESA proJect prov1des services
ran gmg
from
management
efftc1ency
systems to programs for
talenU!d and gifted children to
the 27 school d•slncts m
Athens, Galha, Hockmg ,
Jackson, Metgs, Monroe,
Morgan, Perry, Vmton, and
Washington Counties and 1s
funded by the Appalachian

smce

run;

II

alcohohcs and narcottcs add•cts, the Anchor Home for
Boys at Zapata, Texas, the
Peaceful Valley home for older
Chnshans m the Rio Grande
Valley near Mission, Texas,
the lighthouse, a place on the
Intracoastal Canal, forty miles
south of Corpus Christi for boys
and men m trouble, the
Bethesda Home for Girls m
Hattiesburg, Mtsslsslppl, and
the Rebekah Home for Girls 10
Corpus Chnsh
The theme of Brother
Roloff's mtmstry ts "Chns t is
the Answer" and also "Now the
Just Shall Uve by Fatth". The
pubhc is mvited to hear _this
untque man A fully adult
staffed nur sery w1ll be
provided.

Regwnal Comrrusswn.
Weanfurtner explamed that
every teacher, principal and
mstruch on-rela ted staff
member m all 27 school
d1stncts and three jomt
vocational diStrtcls m the !(}county regton we~e given an
opportumty to participate m
the assessment Some 3,000
education professionals- or 90
per ce nt of the target
populatiOn - from the region
responded.
The 50-•lem assessment
mstrument dealt with three
areas
mstruchonal
techmques, curnculum areas
and m-servtce procedures The
lndtvtdual responses were then
comptled and analyzed .by
computer, wtth constderahon
g•ven to vanables deabng wtth
area of education servtce,
amount of traimng and level of
expenence
The top stx (those rated as
extremely high pnortly) mstructwnal techmques that
should be considered for future
m·servtce activthes accordmg
to the respondents were the
foll owing
-Techmques for 11 turmng
on" the "turned off" student;
-Dtagnosts of learning
problems m students and
developmg strategtes for
overcommg them;
-Bmldmg positive student
alit tudes as a planned teachmg
straU&gt;gy·
- Effective teachwg

Jl

pm

Montreal (Renko 12 16 or
Fryman 6 9)
at
Sf
LOU IS
(McGlothen 16 12) 1 30 p m
los Ange l es IRau 13 11) at
Ctncmnalt ( Ktrby 12 9J. 8 05

pm

no one scores."
A tr1ple by Ken Griffey off

Mtke Marshall, the Dodgers'

..,.

Cy Young award-wmrun~ relief

San Franc1sco (Barr 13 9) at
Sa n Ot eg o (Jones B 221 10 00

(Only games schedu l ed J
Fnday 's Games
Montre&lt;~l at Ch,cago
New York at Ptttsburgh
Atlanta at San Franctsco
St Lout s at Phtla ntght
Los Ang at Houston nrght
Ctnct a t San Drego nrght

RIPLEY , W Va - The
Me•gs Marauders of Coach
Donald Wolfe swept a
Amencan League
doubleheader from Ripley here
East
w
I pet • b.
Wednesday, although the
Cleveland
1 0 1 000
second
game had a s trange
M tlwaukee
I
1 500
"'., endmg
Boston
1
1 500
Detroit
0 0 000
The flrsl contest was won by
Bai t more
0 0 000
1'
New York
I 000
I
0
the Marauders 7-3 The teams
West
then agreed to play another
w
I pet g b .
Mmnesota
2 0 1 000
g.,-.e of f•ve mmngs to g1ve the
Cal1 fo r nta
1
I 500
I
reterves of each a chance to
Oakland
1
1 500
I
Ch cago
1
1 500
I
play Because Me1gs only
Kansas Ctly
1
1 500
1
cames a 16 man squad to away
Texes
o
2 000 2
Wednesday's Resul1s
games, they had to use vars1 ty
Mrlwaukee 7 Bos t on 4
substitutes and two vars1ty
Mmnesota 3 Texas 2
Ch,cago 7 Oakland 5
starters agamsk the Rtpley
Kan Ctty 7 Cal t fornta 6
reserves wh1ch were mamly
Today's Probable Pttchers
(All Ttmes EDTJ
freshman and sophomore
Ba l ltmore {Pa l mer 7 12 ) at
Detrotl (Coleman 14 12) 2 JO players. The two coaches
pm
agreed to thts, and the game
Chtcago C Bahnsen 12 15 1 a!
began
Oakland (Norns 0 OJ. 4 30 p m
M1nnesota !G oltz 10 lO J at
The second conU&gt;st went the
Texas (Brown 13 12) 9 00 p m
f1rst four mmngs with Me1gs
(On l y games scheduled)
Frrday's Games
leadmg 3-0 gomg mto the fifth
Cleveland at Milwaukee
and
!mal lnmng In the top of
Boston at Balttmor e
Detrorl a t New York
the mmng the Marauders
Chteago at Ca l tf , ntght
erupted for 7 runs to run the
Oa kland at Texas, ntght
Mmn at Kan Crty ntgh t
score lo J().j) J:?urmg that m·

.,

LESTER ROWFF

""

/
strategies for reachmg the
below-average student 10 the ;
classroom,
- lndiVIduallzmg mstrucllon
m lhe regular classroom, and,
- ldentifymg and prov1dmg "
for the talen ted and g1fted •
student m the classroom
Those areas that were rated
as having "h1gh prwnty" by .
the respondents mcluded ex- ;
plonng
alternatives
to ~
evaluating students and :
to
parents,
reportmg
developmg aperopnate mstruchonal materials, developmg learmng resource :
centers, explormg alternatives ::
to the "tradlhonal " classroom :',:
approach
to
learmng, ~
techmques for reachmg :::
cult urally disadvantaged ..
students, a nd updates on ""
recent legal trends m :
educatiOn.
:
"Under the Southeastern ::
OhiO Spec1al ~ducahon ..
Regtonal ' Resource Center's •
(SEO-SERRC) Jnstructtonal Resource Center, teachers and :
others who work with han- ..:;:
dicapped children have had :::
continuous mservic6 traimng ~
ava ilable to them smce 1968,"
VVe1nfurtner sa1d
"Now, through the Appalachian RegiOnal CommissiOn's grant for the SEORESA's flrsl year of operabon,
we can ex tend those same
opportunities to the general ,
classroom U&gt;achers and otheP · '
~ ::;professiOnals," he satd

FOR YOUR GARDEN

pitcher, touched off thi Reds
wmning rally
"!had walked up to the plate
thmkmg about bunting but I
changed my n'lind when I
ste~ped into the batter's box "
'
said Griffey "That's one time
I'm glad Ken dtdn't bunt," satd
Reds manager Sparky Anderson
Chaney followed Griffey's
tr1ple wtth a game-tymg line
smgle to nghtfteld off Marshall.
Darrel started Wednesday
rught's game as a replacement
for Concepcton, who IS nursmg
a pulled muscle in his left
grom Chaney switched to third
when John Vukovtch was lifted
for a pmch hitter m the seventh
IMmg and rookte Doug F1ynn
1\ent to shortstop.

We have a

,.

~

full line of

...

GARDEN SEEDS

-

Hours 1.00-5 lO _ , •

Thurs.

And, 11 was a perfect
l&gt;_unt by this same
Flynn that moved Chaney to
second m the nmth and set the
stage for Concepcron 's gamewmnmg htt
.
"The way that ptlch moved
m on Flynn, I don't know how
m the world he put down such a
perfect
bunt/'
Reds
coach Alex Grammas
As Chaney sUd across the
plate with the wmrung run, an
errant pttch from the bullpen
thrown by Pat Darcy crossed
m front of him
"That's why the Dodgers
were argumg wtth the umprres
at tbe end of the game," sa1d
Morgan "They were saymg
because of that loose ball, tune
should have been called but
how can an umptre call tune m

m•ds\ of a play'"
Th1~ ":as f1rst base ,umptre
Ntck Colos1 's answer to the
Dodger protest.
The Do\igers owned a iHl
lead, two of the runs corrung on
a Btll Buckner homer, when
the Reds scored for the ftrst
time m Sixth mning. A pmch
double by Ed Armbnster and
the secotid of Morgan's three
smgles accounted for the runs

sacrift~

Vo

wet

Pittsburgh at Cht, ppd

wea

Mon t real
000 coo 000- o 2 0
St LO UtS
200 000 llx - 4 12 0
Rogers
Taylor
( 7)
and
Foote , Forsch (1 OJ and Stm
mons LP - Rogers 10 1)
Los Ang
100 020 000 - J 7 1
Ctnctnnatt
000 001 102 - 4 10 1
MesserSmith. Marsllilll (7)
and
Ferguson
Btlltngham
Carroll (7)
Borbon (9) and
Bench WP ""'- BOrbon (1 OJ LPMarsha l l (0 l l HR - Buckner
&lt;1st )

&lt;On ly games sched ul ed I
Amencan l ea gue
M1IW
002 301 010- 7 8,0
Boston
000 300 001 - 4 7 2
Broberg , Murphy (7) and
Porte r
Lee. Segu1 (7) and
Montgomery WP - Broberg {1
OJ LP - Lee (0 1l
010 101 000 - 3 1 1
000 002 000 - 2 6 3
Decker Corbtn (6), Burgme1
er (7) an d Borgmann
Btbby
(O I) and
Su ndberg
WP Decker (011 HR - - Oli va
(2ndl
T~xas

Ch1cago
100 000 033- 1 15 2
Oakland
014 000 000- 5 9 2
Kaat ( 1 0) end Downmg
Holt zman , Odom (8) Ltndblad
IBJ Fmgers (9) and Tenace LP
- F tngers (0 I)
HR - Tenace
{lst l
Kan C1ty
014 010 001 ~ 7 II 1
Califor n ia
031 020 000- 6 13 1
Sp l•ttorff, McDan tet ( 5) and
Healy, Tanana
Dobson (5),
Sco tt
{91
Pena
(9)
and
Rodnguez WP - McDanlel (1
OJ LP- Dobson (0 1)
HRsMcRae I 1st) Otts ( 1st)

,_
""-

, ,.

PLAYER BOUNCES BACK
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UP!) _
Gary Player bounced back
Wednesday from a touch of
food pOisoning "feeling gre~t"
for the defense of his Masters
champlilnshtp. He qmt on the
back mne of Tuesday's prachce
round feeling sick after a lunch
of shnmp
Player, wmner qf the 1974
Masters w1th a 278 predicted a
277 or 278 would ~m this year
"tf the weather 1s good "

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Cmcmnatt Bengals rummg back
Boob•e Clark has told a club
offtctal he never mtentionally
lDjured former
Denver
Broncos defensive back Dale
Hackbart, who has filed a $1
m1llion lawsmt ag01nst Clark
and tbe Bengals.
•
"Thts thmg IS a mystery to
Boob~e,"
sa1d
Bengals
assistant general manager
Mike Brown after conferrmg
w1th Clark "He says he never
mtenllonally IDJUred Hack-

bart "

STATE FARM·
~

n..

.Nundler One
Horneownns Insurer

More people ' 1nsure thetr homes w1th State Farm
than w•th any other company That's because they ve
found State Farm offers the best an serv1ce, protect•on
and economy GIVe me a can I n be glad to g1ve you
an the details

dtstr~ets

....

A

UUUtAMtl

WHITE CONV_ERSE TENNIS SHOES
'7.00 pr.
AnENTION: EFFECTIVE APRIL
12th -NEW HOURS

t rithe Area

PH. 992·7155

.,.... ,

FISHING AND CAMPING
EOUIPMENT

Tire Pt'i!;.es·

Powell St., Middleport

1258

15%oFF

-

STEVE SNOWDEN

Consultant for Frtday's
session will be David Bates, a
teacher of TAG children from
the Rockford, Ill. school
system Bates will discuss
"Evaluation and Modification· ,
of Programs for TAG : •
Children," lncluping some :
suggestions for Initial stepa the;
coordinators might take in ~
beginning programs in thts-

APRIL 12

'For the ~Jowt,.,

Tue.-Wed.- Fri.· Sat. 9:30 to 5:00
Mon.9:30to8:00
Thurs. 9:30 to 12: 00

It's

l.ilre I good neighbor, Slate Farm is there
'STATE FARM FIRE AND CASUALTY COMPANY
Home OHice Bloomington, lll lno11

BEND TIRE CENTER
771-5Ql

I

N&amp;N SPORTSHOP
Pomerov, Ohjo

Moson,W.fA.

sense When you get sued, 1t's
expensive to deal w1th m
court''
Clark, a 6-2, 245-pound
fullback from Jacksonville,
Fla who played m college at
Bethune-Cookman , was a
rook•• playmg his hrst regular
season pro game m the contest
c1ted by Hackbart Denver won
the game
The suit bnngs to mmd the
recent case of a pro hockey
player chargei'l w1th assault
and battery for an alleged
hittmg mc1dent w1th a hockey
slick
Hol\ever, Brown says this
smt appears different because
he sees 1t mvolvmg a regular
play durmg a game
" If something like this was
allowed to go though the courts
•t would radically change the
futureofsports,''hesaJd. ''You
·could sue anytime you were
hurt on the field. "

Hackbart clauns he was
mjured by "mallcwus and
wanton" acts by Clark m the
openmg game of the 1973
season
Hackbart, a 13-year Nallonal
Football League veteran who
retired Ia ter m Ibe 1973 season,
contends he received a Hsevere
fracture of the cerVIcal spme"
m the game at Denver
HIS smt, filed m a Denver
court, seeks $500,000 m comThe Dai~ Sentrner
pensatory damages and
DtVOTED tvTHE
INTEREST OF
another $500,000 m punitive
ME lG S-MASON AREA
damages
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
Clark was served w1th a
ROBERT HOEFLICH
summons here and he turned 11
Ctty Ed1 tor
Publtshed da l y excep t
over to Brown, an attorney,
Saturday by The Oh to Valley
Publ1 Shrng Company
111
who saw the game m question
Cou r t St , Pomerov Oh10
and says he assumes tbe m- 45769 Busmess OHtce Phone
2156 Edttonal Phone 992
ctdent referred to IS a play m 992
2157
which Hackbart tackled Clark
Second class postage patd at
Pomeroy Oh 10
near the goal line.
Nat tona l
adver t1S 1nJ
r ep r esenta1 t ve
Bottmel l 'l
" It was JUSt another play,"
Ga l lagher Inc 12 East 42n'f
recalled Brown. "Boob1e was St N ew York , New York !
ub scrtpt • on
raf es
trymg to score a touchdown but DelS tvered
by earner wherl
Hackbart made a good tackle availab l e 75 cents per week1
By Motor Route where carrter
on htm Hackbart clatms servtee
not available
One
Boobte's forearm and fiSt h1t month SJ 25 By mad tn Ohu~
and W Va , One Year $22 00 1
his neck .
S1x months
$ 11 SO
T hree
months
S7 00
Elsewher&amp;
"Heckbart contmued to play $26
00 year
Stx monthi
m the game and played m two SlJ so th-ree months $7 soT
Subscr1pt •on p r ~ee m cl udes
or three games after that."
~ unday Ti[ll~S Senltne l
_
Brown sa1d be mtended to
review ftlms of tbe game,"
"But 11 appears Hackbart has
dressed this thing up."
"To us, this ts a harassment
type of thmg," added Brown,
son of general manager and
head coach Paul Brown "It's
someone clutching at straws-seekmg somethmg on the basiS
that there's nothmg to lose
"You jUSI can't penrut this
type of action in sports
Everyone knows there IS a riSk
m~ol~ed ..There are going to be
IDjurtes
Brown also called the sutt
"!?,'oundless and ludtcrous."
The most you can say IS
that tt IS nov~l and amusing,
but not amusmg m a happy

SATURDAY SPECIAL
Convenience Counts
The Seventh Earl of Cardigan, who led the Charge of the
Ltght Brtgade m the Crtmean
War, got tired of ptillmg a
sweater over h1s head Tradt·
t10n says he des1gned the
sweater jacket wtth buttons
that has carrted his name down
through history

Chaney's sacrifice fly w1th the
bases loaded m tbe seventh
mnmg gave the Reds thetr
second run .
Pedro Borbon, the last of
three Reds p1 tchers, hurled a
scoreless nmth to gam the
VICtory for the Reds who wmd
up therr three-game set with
the Dodgers Thursday mght
when Clay Kirby goes agamst
LA lefty Doug Rau

lawsuit mystery to him

'"

!

v1ctory Jtm Kaat went the
distance for the White Sox after
bemg rocked for a grand slam
homer by Gene Tenace m the
th1rd.
Royals 7, Angels 6:
Hal McRae cracked a homer,
a double and two smgles to
dr1ve home three runs-mcludmg the game-wmner m the top
of the mnth-and Kansas City
spoiled Chuck Dobson's comeback effort for Cahfornia.
Amos Oils also had a smgle, a
tworun homer and three runs
scored for tbe Royals Undy
McDamel got the wm after
hurting the !mal f1ve mnmgs.

Bengals' Clark says

&lt;Only games scheduled l

school distnct superin· .
tendents
....-,
Some 27 school dtstricts,.
romt vocational schools and ~ '
county offices from the•
project's IO.County regton have·
named local level coordmators The role of the
coordmators is to develop' an
'•'
awareness of TAG children and
'
thetr needs m therr · home
',,
d•str1cts , begm pilot efforts in
programmmg for them, and
coordinate programs m their

reglon..

Mater League Results
By Untted Press lnternat tonal
Nattona 1 League
San Fran at San Otego ppd ,

coacl· cannot do. An ump1re
mu&amp;t stlJt. Pame
In the first game, wh1ch went
w1thout
mc1dent,
the
Marauders were led at the
plate by M•ke Nessetroad w1th
a smgle and a home run over
the left centerfield fence w1th
two men on base. Other
Marauders getting smgles m
the f•rst game were Perk Ault
and Carl Carmtchael wtth 2
and Mick Davenport and
Ham1lton each had one
The wmnmg pitcher for
Me•gs was T1m Cundiff who
worked five mmngs before
bemg reheved by Gary George
who f1mshed the conrest The
losmg pitcher for Ripley was
Taylor
A mentwnable fact about the
Marauder vtctory over Ripley
IS the f!IN that Ripley had
recently defeated Wahama ,
Barboursville, and Charleston
Stonewall Jackson - all b1gger
schools
In the second game Dale
Browmng got the v1ctory for
Me1gs and Mowery received
the loss.
FIRST GAME
Me1gs
201 103 0-7 8 0
Ripley
DID 020 0-3 8 7
Metgs
Cundtff (WP),
George (6) and Ham1lton
Ripley- Taylor (LP), Parson
(6) and Wmters
SECOND GAME
Metgs
101 17-10 5 0
Ripley
000 Ox- 0 2 3
Browning (WP) and Howard
Mowery ('LP), Polmg (5) and
WmU&gt;rs

M1nn

I 00 IO I 00 fri.·IOII.

w

kids subject of workshop

mng Gary George shd mto
home. plate w1th 2 outs and m
the course of h1s slide spiked
the Ripley catcher, cuttmg a
deep gash m the boy's leg ThiS
was ,purely accidental, as the
sl1de was clean, with no mtentwn to tn)ure the catcher.
The home plate umptre agreed
to th1s, but the home town fans,
some of whom were edgy
because of the fact !hat the
Marauders were playmg
vansty subs and not reserves,
wanted to carry the mc1dent
further The R1pley coach then
stopped the contest, wh1ch a

000 010 1002 8 1
A tl anta
Houston
000 6QO BOx - 14 15 1
Reed Torrealba ( 4) Easterly
(5) House (7), Harnson (7J
and Correll R Ichard Roberts
(5) and May WP- Roberts (I
0) LP - Reed (0 I)

"

..

as Mtlwaukee beat Boston for
its first wm Scott hit a basesloaded two-out s1ngle m the '
th1rd and Yount smgled home
one run m the fourth and ac.
counted for another m the sixth
wtth a sacrif•ce fly Pete
Brobeilg, acqurred from Texas
m the off..season, went 6 1-3
mnmgs and gave up three runs
on four h1fs to gam the victory
White Sox 7, A's 5:
Pinch hitter Pat Kelly's twoout two-run triple plus a runscormg double by Carlos May
m the runth mrung enabled
Chtcago to erase a 5-I deftclt
and beat Oakland for tts f1rst

Marauders sweep pair

~.,.

managemeht
eff1c1ency
systems to special education
services The agency is funded
by the Appalachian Regtonal
Commission and is in its ftrst
year of operation
Agency Dtrector Robert L.
Wemfurtner satd the school
personnel from the region
Identified programming for
talenU!d and gtfU!d children as
one of several needs areas in
an assessment m 1972 Those
needs areas served 811 the basis
for applying for ARC and other
funds to establish the SEORESA project
The m-oervice sessions are
designed to train some 45
"local level TAG coordinators"
to
Implement
such
programming In thell' home
diStrtcts. The coordinators are
teachers, principals, supportive
personnel
and
classroom supervtsors ap·
· po1n ted by their Individual

w1mer Joe Decker m the siXth
Burgme1er quelled a basesloaded rally m the seventh, by
stnking out Tom Gneve and
checked Texas the rest of the
way.
Elsewhere in the American
League Mtlwaukee topped Boston, 7-1, Chicago tripped Oakland, 7..S, and Kansas City
edged Californta, 7-6 In the
Nallonal League 11 was Cmcmnatl4 Los Angeles 3, St LoUIS 4
Montreal 0 and Houston 14
Atlanta 2.
Brewers 7, Red Sox 4:
- George Scott and Robm
Yount drove In two runs ap1ece

pm

Teaching strategy assessed

2nd at Belpre

Reader co.n fused about cholesterol

•

POINT PLEASANT
Nallonally known evangelist
Lester Roloff of Texas, 61, w1ll
be m Pomt Pleasant at the
Na !tOnal Guard Armory lhts
Saturday evemng, Apr1l 12 at
7:30 p.m for a Family Altar
Radio Rally sponsored by the
Grace B1ble Baptist Church.
The Honeybee Quartet, from
the Rebekah Home for G1rls m
Corpus Chnsti, Texas, wtll
prov1de spec1al mus•c
"Brother Roloff'\ as he is
affectionately known by his
listeners, has one of the most
un•que mtmstrtes m the world.
He started two rescue mtssions
and then has founded s•x
homes for people in need of
help - the C1ty of Refuge at
Cu lloden,
Georgta
for

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Joe
Morgan called the wmrung h1t
a "real jam JOb
The Cinncmah Redrsecond
bhseman was referrmg to
Davey Concepcton's two-out,
off-the-ltandle pmch smgle, a
loopmg fly ball to left field
which scored Darrel Chane~
and clunaxed a two-run nmth
mnmg rally that beat the Los
Angeles Dodgers 4-3 Wednesday mght.
"But ,'' added Morgan, who
contributed. three hits toward
the Reds' second vtclory m a
row over the Dodgers, "that's
part of the game Sometunes
you hit the ha ll real hard and

'

Evangelist Roloff to speak.

1hlnclads take

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - Help'
Please! I am one of those
people
confused
about
cholesterol I read the enclosed
article by a physician ltke
yourself who thmks that your
theory of cholesterol ts all
wrong I thought you m1ght
cons1der readmg 11
One thmg that supports h1s
article ts that Russ10 and
Eastern Europe hve on
saturated fats w1thout any
undue effects. They eat salt
pork, sour cream, butter,
cheese and fatty sausage Also,
what about the healthy Sw1ss
and their saturated fats ,
cheeses and da~ry products'
Easten Europan and Russian ·
phySicians think we are crazy
worrymg about cholesterol and
that you could work 1t out w1lh
phySical acUvity, that 1! we
uaed our legs mor.. maybe we
could ~t like the Europeans
and the Esk1mos, who. live on
fat

convicted of any crune "
The hint of a connection WJth
Hearst came when they satd:
''Our actions of the past year
are completely defenstble. If
we somehow acted to avert
bloodshed and ktllmg, we
certamly fmd that nothing to
apologtze for "
They satd MIss Hearst
"apparently concluded durmg
the first few weeks of her
kidnapmg" that the FBI had no
concern for her safety and that
her life was endangered by
"tngger-ltappy agents "
The Scotts satd they would
not answer grand JUry questions , 1f asked , because "total
noncollaboration wtth this government ts our moral respJn·
Slbtlity "
Walton satd he was "terrtbly
sorry" he had discussed the
case with the FBI.
Walton, who plays for the
Portland Trail Blazers, expressed support for the Scotts,
h1s longtime fr1ends, and
JOmed them "to urge,the people
of the world to stand with us m
our rejection of the U.S.
goverrunent.''
Miss Hearst, 21, a newspaper
herress, was ktdnaped Feb 4,
1973, ·ll) Berkeley, G;llif , but
JOtned her SLA abductors'
cause two months later. The
group has been in hiding ever

BASEBALL PLAYERS who will be dm~g their thmg in the spring program to be held at
Wahama High School Frtday at 7:30p.m. are, front, 1-r, Sheldon Gerlach, Ronnie Martin, Mark
Thompson, Mike Buzzard. David SISk; back row, Donald Roush, Larry G1pbs, Joey Roush,
Derrick Taylor, and Peanut Harris. The program IS under the d1recllon of Mrs. Ehzabeth
Mattox, Mason County Mustc SuperviSor.

try to make sure I take a good
np at the hall "
In ad9tllon to Oliva's fourthmning homer, the Twms scored
m the second on a walk to
Bobby Darwm, a single by
Ohva and a sacnftee fly by
Eric Soderhohn, -atid a gam m
the s•xth when Soderholm
stngled , stole second, moved to
th~rd on a throwing error by
catcher Jun Sundberg and
came home on pitcher Jun
Bibby's wtld throw on Steve
Braun's grounder
It was up to rehever Tom
Burgmeier to save the game
after Texas scored tw1ce off

for second win in row

Morgan says winning hit 'real jam job'

Ma1or Leagu e-4-t-and•ngs
By Un1ted Press lnternattonal
Nattonal League
East
w
I pet g b
New York
1 0 I 000
Montrea l
1 1 soo
'~
St LOUIS
1 1 500
I l
Pt l tsburgh
o 0 000 0 I 1
Cht ca go
0
0 000 I I 2
Phdadelph ' a
o
1
1 000
West
w
I pet g b
Cmcmnaft
2 0 I 000
Houston
2
1 667
Allan Ia
1 2 333
1' '&gt;
San D1ego
o
o coo
I
San FranCIS CO 0
0 000
I
Los Angeles
o
2 ooo
2
Wednesday's Results
51 LOU tS .:1 Montreal 0
Ctnc ,n natt 4 Los Angeles 3
Houston 14 Atlanta 2
S F at San OteQo ppd wet
Pttlsburgh at Ch t, ppd , wea
Today's Probable Pttchers
fAll Ttmes EDT)
Phtlade lph ta (Lonborg 17 13 1
at N ew York {Mat lack 13 15)
'l OS p m
Ptltsburgh
( El l s 129) at
Ch tcago ( R e uschel 13 12) 2 30

'•

Scott challenges FBI, grand jury questions
By ROBERT STRAND
SAN FRA'NCISCO (UP!) Jack Scott, a sports world
radtcal suspected of aidmg
Patr1c1a Hearst, emerged from
hidmg Wednesday hintmg he
w!IS comected 'to the Hearst
case but M!;l ~done nothmg

fortunately, struck out four
limes m h1s opemng day debut
for Kansas Ctty, against
Gahforma's Nolan Ryan, and
then was 1}-for-4 wtth two more
strikeouts, m the Royals' 7-6
wm over the Angels Wednesday night.
"Some years 1 start off
qu1ck. Some years I start off
slow," sa1d the 33-year old
Ohva, who undenvent h1s ftfth
knee operation during the offseason "Right now, I am
seemg the ball real good, which
IS Important, a nd I am
swmgmg the bat good When I
have my swmg gomg hke thts, I

3~2

ABA Results
By Ul"ftted Press lnternatumal
(All Ttmes EDTJ
(All Sertes Best of SevenJ
Eastern Dtvn Semtfmals
Kentucky vs Memphts
{Kentucky leads, 1 OJ
Apr 6- Ky 98 MemphiS 91
Apr B ~ Ky 119 Memphts 105
Apr 10- at Mmphs 9 10 p m
Apr 11 - at Mmphs ~9 10 p m
x A pr 13- at Ky - 1 35 p m
x Apr 15- at Mmphs 9 10 p m
xA pr1 6- at Ky , 73Spm
New York vs Sf lOUIS
(Series tted, I 1J
A pr 6- N Y 111 St lOU IS lOS
Apr 9- St Lou ts 11 5 N Y 97
A pr 11 - at Sl L 9 p m
Apr lJ-- at St L 2 35 p m
x Apr 15- -at N Y B 05 p m
X Apr 16- at St L , 9 p m
x Ap r ll- at N Y 8 05 p m
Western Otvn Semtltnals
Utah vs Denver
I D enver leads, 2 1l
Ap r 6- Dnvr 122 Utah 107
Apr 7- 0nvr 126 Utah 120
Al'JT'9- Utah 122 Dnvr 108
Ap r 11 - at Utah 9 35 p m
x Ap r 12- at Dnvr 9 35 p m
x Apr 14- at Utah 9 35 p m
x Apr 15- at Dnvr 9 35 p m
San Anton•o vs lndtana
( lndtana leads, 2 0 )
Apr 5- lnd 122 San An 119 ol
Apr 7- lnd 98 San An 93
Apr 10- at lnd 9 05 p m
Apr 12- at lnd 9 05 p m
x Apr J.:l- at San A n 8 35 p m
x Apr 16 ~ a t tnd 9 05 p m
x A pr 19- at San An 8 35 p m
x tf necessary
NBA Results
By Untted Press lnternattonal
(All Ttmes eon
( Ftrst Round Act•on1
Ea st ern Conference
Houston vs New York
(Best of Three)
(Houston leads, 1 OJ
Apr 8- Hous 99 New York 84
Ap r 10 - at N Y 9 p m
x Ap r 12- at Hous , 1 40 p m
Washmgton vs Buflalo
(Best of Seven)
Ap r 10- at Wash 8 05 p m
Ap r 12- at Bflo 1 40 p m
Apr 16- at Wash 8 05 p m
Apr 18- at Bflo 9 10 p m
x Apr 20- at Wash , 1 10 p m
x A pr 22 or 23 - at Bfl o , y tba
x Apr 25 - at Wash 8 OS p m
Western Conference
Detrott vs Seattle

f Best of Three}
f Seattle lnds, 1 0)
Apr 8- Sea ttle 90 Det 77
Apr 10- at De t, a 35 p m
x Apr 12- at Seat tle, 11 p m
l·Chtcago vs I&lt;C-Om•ha
{Best of Seven)
( Ch•cago leads, t.o)
Apr 9- Chl 95 KC Omaha 89
Apr 13- at ,KC o 1 35 p m
Apr 15 or 16- at Cht , 8 JO p m
Apr 17 of 18- at KC 0 , 8 35

pm

x Apr 19 or 20 - at Cht , v tba
x Ap r 22- at KC 0. y tba
x Apr 25 - at Cht 8 JO p m

x tf necusary
y ttme to be announced
z All I&lt;C Omaha Games To Be
Played In Kansas Crty
IHL Playoff Standtngs
By Untied Press I nternaf•onal
Sem tf •na Is- Best of Seven
w I gf 'ilil
Muskegon
1 I 14 13
Sag mew
121314

w
gf 91
Dayton
1 o 4
3
Toledo
o 1 3 4
Wednesday's Results ;
Dayton 4 To ledo 3
Tonight's Games
No games scheduled
Trtb Bowl mg met
Thursday Skyhners League
Apnl13 , 1975
Loca l 6.44 No 1
83 21
Oh1o R 1ver Realty
12 40
Russ' Glass Shop
60 so
Bob Evans Farms
56 48
Wooten s Lounge
55 5~
Chrts Craft
_..
55 57
Central Supply
54 58
Burg er Chef
53 59
Jones Boy s
46 66
Lo ca l 644 No 2
44 68
Amerrcan Leg ton
42 70
Hemers Bakery
40 74
Wooten s Lounge, L Gleason
201 571
Jones
Boys , M
(ana Qay 187 503
H etners
Bakery
R
Ell 10ft 213 533
Chrrs Craft R Ferguson 223
572 Amer1can l eg iOn S See
F
177 414 , Centra l Supp l y
Petr.e 187 49 3 Ohto Rtver
Realty 0 Hall 226 601 Russ'
G lass Shop c Queen 228 566 ,
Burger Chef. c Meadows 203
540
Local 644 No
2
L
Wtlcoxen 172 480

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:)teel-deck rotanes.b~

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econom!d and performance I
All the quahty Hahn-Echpse features lln&amp;erttp
hetght ad,ustment, easy-sp1n vertteal-pull start1n1,
and many more--but at our spectal low prtces
Foldtng handle, too-lets you store your
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And they comply wtth all
ex•slmg m~ustry safety
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POMEROY

Glass Packed Mufflers, Reg. '12.95 .............................. SS.88
Shocks, Original Equipment (limited Supp~) Reg. '6.99.. !4.99
Spark Plugs, Famous Brands (List Price '1.39) .................. 9r
Aoor Mats for Ca!S, Discontinued Numbers ......... Now 1h Price
New Water Pumps or Fuel Pumps
20% OH Regular Price

Berkley Famous FIShing Rods ............... 20% Off Regular Price
Dough Balls, barge Pkg. Reg. 9Cr. .................................... 55•
Spaulding Kro-Aite Golf Balls........ :.......................3

It's· Our Annual Salee-Speclals All Over The Store

"'""'"'

\

'

•

II

'

'

�.

.

.

•

.
4 ·- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, ApriiiO, 1975

..

.

to Mexicru1 teruus
CINCINNATI ( UP!)
Cinci nnati Re~s ' ouflielder
Roger Freed and catcher Hal
King were sold Wednesday to
Mexican League teams.
Neither man had made the
Reds' major league roster ,
minor

league player of the year in
1970 but played in only six
games lor the Reds last year,
was sold'to Monterrey. Mexico.
King, who spent much of his
time with the Reds' In-

' dianapol.is farm team.~ went to
Puebla. Mexico. -

Star grange
has meeting
Star Junior Grange 878 .met
at the Star Grange Hall April S.
Craft projects were discussed.
The· Monkey Faced Cookie
baking contest was held with
Gary Hollid ay ta·king first.
place, and Billy Dyer second.
There were four entries.
The theme of the literary
program was Spring . The
following program
was
presented: "April Fooling" by
Gary Holliday ; "Tulips" by
Opal Dyer; "What is_a Bad
Boy?" by Floyd Holliday;
"Sharing" by Judy Holliddy;
"The Flirt" by Dean Colwell ;
"Riddl es lor Fun " Ricky
Macomber; Stand for a Minute
game by all; Western Union
game by all. Eight members
were present.

ATrEND MEETING
Maxine Griffith, cashier of
the Pomeroy National Bank,
atte nded the spring meeting of
the Ohio Group, Na tional
Association of Bank Women,
Inc., at the Mohican State
Lodge near Mansfield, April S
and 6.

Mother's Day, May 11

eccll'w-._,
;..
MOTHER

tm., St,t.

""·"
S•t

with

IOdoon l

birftltiOnft _: Ol'le tfOM

for to&lt;h memb.r of

ft.

fomil~ .

111 preciout l_OI.t . ~low
or whitt ookf.

'26Si

13.00~

~o--

biMhs!CIO'a

\

.-

GOESSLER
JEWEI.IY ·SIORE
Court' St., Pomeroy

THEY LED THE CHEERS - These girls led ·the cheers for the Middleport Lakers
basketball team this past season. They are, front- Tammy Blake and back row, left to r1ght Kim Glass, Cleo Bego and Mary Miller. Absent were Nancy Wallace, Pauletta Stgman and
Rhonda Southern .

victory by all owing only two
more VVaterford runs to cross
the plate.
Eastern pitchers gave up .a
total of six runs, on 6 hits and
the Eagle defense made . 7
errors. Ha nnum and Spencer
combined to erase six Wildcats
· by strikeouts and walked four
batsmen .
Waterford ptichers Mike

Eastern

s tar ter

Dave

Han num worked the first four
innings Or the conLest giving up
4 runs before relief man Tim
Spencer came on in the fifth to
finish the game and get the

Falcons top
Tornadoes
Jeff Gilland subdued the
Tornadoes of.Southern on a one
hit shutout Wednesday evening
as Wahama went on to win 9-0.
It was a no hit ball game for
the senior, who made the
second start of the year, unlit
only one out remained in the
top half of the seventh inning
and Dunning collected the lone
hit a single, for Southern. On
his way to his second victory of
the year Gilland collected 14
strikeouts wh ile only walking
thr ~e batters .
Twelve stolen bases including five from centerfielder
Tim Sayre, helped to spark the
Falcons in their nine run
outpour. One of Sayres stolen
bases came in the fourth inning
in which he crossed home
plate. This gives him a total of
four times this year that he has
stolen home.
Others collecting si olen
bases included Dan Harmon's
three, Greg Lambert's two,
Gilland's one and Jerry
Tucker's one.
Not only was Sayre spectacular on the base lines he
also had a perfect day at the
plate, hitting three for three ..
One of which included a double.
In all Wahama collected five
doubles including first base
sacker Mike Goldsberry's two.
Going the
distance and
losing for Southern was Ba5l!
who gave up 13 hits while
walking only four.
Wahama's victory became
even more significant because
it was with out the services of
its leading hitter catcher Rick
Thompson, who broke his

MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS

ALL DAY LONG
ON THE STREETS OF

MIDDLEPORT
., ..

.
.
share of attention· here _this
week because of his umque
situation and he'll continue to
get a lot of attenhon as long as
he PIa
'
·
ys we11 enough 1os18 Y m
the tournarnen
·
t·
ButElderhasnotplayedwell
since earning a Masters invitatl I I Ap i1 b
. ing th
Mon as to ·or Y wPem~•colae
onsan
pen m · •
Fla ., and many doubtthathe 'II
make the J6.hole cut, least of
all be in contention for the
championship·
But the 46-year-old Elder
•-• It unders toed that he
wan=
isn't out to prove anything
beyond IIIIi ability to play golf.
"I've pt.)'e4 bad before, and
I've played lood before, !n
maj~ ct;•or!';lllonsltlps and .m
othel' ,,,.,,,aments," sa1d
Elder. "So, no matter bow good
or how bad I pt.y, It ,wm be for
myself, and I won I be embarrasaed."
Elder was scheduled ·to tee
off at 11 :15 a.m. EDT with
Gene UtUer,. the former U.S.

By United Press lnleraatlonal showed the way for the Stars
The American Basketball with an awesome 30-point, ~2Association playoffs belonged rebound performance.
to the rqpkies Wednesday
Tonight, Kentucky goes for
night.
its third straight win against
In a show of power, two of Memphis while Indiana tries to
basketball's finest future pros- do the same against San An_pects carried their teams to tonio.
victory in first round playoff
The Spirits unleashed a
action~
season of frustration against
Marvin Barnes, newly the Nets and never stopped
named Rookie of theY..,..., had pouring it on . In the opening
37 points and 18 rebounds while two minutes, they opened up a
rookie ,teammate Maurice 10-2 lead which continued to
Lucas added 21 rebounds, 14 swell until it reach 31 early in
points and seven assists as the the fourth period.
·
Spirits of St. Louis walloped
St. Louis otitrebounded New·
New York , lll&gt;-97, on the Nets' York, 59-46, and outshot the
home court. The win evened Nets, 31 per cent to '38 per cent.
their best-of-seven playoff ser- Freddie Lewi.-added 28 points
ies at a game apiece and was for St. Louis while Larry Kenon
the first victory lor the Spirits paced N ~w York with 28.
against the Nets this season
Julius Erving, the man the
after 12 straight losses.
Nets look to in a crisis, never
In Salt Lake City, Utah rode got going in t:l€ one-!!ided game
to its first playoff victory .and wound up with a careerfollowing two losses in Denver low six points on 3-of.\4
with a 122-108 thumping of the shooting.
Nuggets. Rookie Mosi!S Malone
Seven-year veteran guard

gooa team."
Archibald was held to 12
points. The Kings never led in
the gal)le but they - almost
overcBltte a 14-point deficit,
rallying within one poil)t twice
in the third period and within
tw6points with three minutes
to play in the game.
But a pair of offensive fouls
on Scott Wedman and Ar·
chibald denied tying baskets to
the Kings and in the final
minute, the Bulls grabbed two
o!fensivt\ rebounds, running
out aimost all.of. the 24-second
clock each time to keep control.
Motta discounted the importance of the offensive fouls,
saying "Love was called four

261399

Totals

SOUTHERN (0)
Player
Sayre 3rd
Riffle cf
Teaford cf.
Salser c
Snodgrass if
Brownrf
Huffman rf
Wolfe 2nd
Dunningss
Bassp
Nease
Totals

AB H R RBI
3000

I 000
I 000
3000

'

3000

2000
l 000
I 000
3 l 0 0·
3000
2000
23 I 0 0

WHA R esu lts
By United Pre ss International
Quart er -tin a Is

All Series Best of Se ve n
(All Tim es E DT )

Series A.
Cl evelan d vs . Hou st on
Apr 10- a t H ous , B:JO p .m .
Apr 12- at H ou s, B: 30 p .m
Apr 13 - - at Cl eve . 7 :30p .m .
Apr 15- at Cleve , 7 : 30p .m .
x -A p r 17 - at Hous , 8 . 30 p .m .
x -Apr 19- at Hou s, 8 · 30 p .m .
x -Apr 23- a l Cl eve, 7 ; 30 p .m .

Series 8

Phoenix vs. Qu ebec
{ Queb ec leads, 1-0l

A'pr 8- Que 5 F'hoenix 2
Apr 10- at Que, 9 : OS p m .
Ap r 12- at Ph oe n i x , 11 p .m .
Ap r 15- al Phoenix , 11 p .m .
)( -Apr 17- at Q u e , 9 :05p .m .
x -Apr 19- Phoen t x . 11 p ,m .

•

Open champion who came
ck from a bout with cancer,
bah' Ia . partner.
as ~P kymgtee-off times inOt dr Tey 'no ·at 11 . 36 ·
elude
. kl · rev1
. . Player· at•
1 12 · 04 •
N1c. aus
a
and Weiskopf at 1 p.m.
12 · 32• ld p lmer only other
Arne 'dea Nl kla' us to win
man besl s c
four Masters, 'finds himself in
of ,. timental favon·
1.
the, roe
sen the l&gt;-year-•
te this YJl8r s1nee t 4 here

Prices Effective Thru April 13

~

old Palmer has no _won
since
Pia
. 19&amp;1. edlcted that the
. _yer pr . ld be about
wmnmg
d score won
277 a score
1l-u~ ,; -pa~etter~d only five
. ~ua . or he
revious
38
limes
N' kl ~said "I
• ~·~:~~k ou ~e :olng to see
on
Y
ou might
as low,scores as Y
ex~~ia 'thi king was based
nN~e f~~t th:t "if it doesn't
0 •
th
lll get hard
ra~ ,f e.•~reens w
an ast.
"'\

1

'"bu:

The American Legion
Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, Middleport, will se nd
four Meigs County high school
juniors to Buckeye Girls' State
at
Capital
University ,
Columbus, for a week's study
in the democ ratic form of
government.
J?elegates selected for Girls'
State June 14 to June 22 from
Meigs High School are Crystal
Glaze, Tamra Stanley and
Melissa Kay Thomas, and from
\
Eastern High School, Patricia
Windon . Alternates to the
''
M eigs Hi gh s tudents are
SHERRY EPPLE
Kimberly Ohlinger and Pam
Holcomb. Alternate to Miss
Windon is Sherry Epple.
Miss Glaze is sponsored by
the auxiliary, Miss Stanley by
4"
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta
I '
'}:"
Sigma Phi Sorority; _1)1iss
Glaze by Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority; and Miss Windon by
The Citizens National Bank.
Miss Glaze is the daughter of
Mrs.
Belva Glaze and the late
Sunday, April 13, from 1 to 3
Ray
Gla ze , Pomeroy. She
p. m. the French Art Colony
plays
flute in the Mei gs
will present a choice of four
Marauders pep and concert
workshops at Riverby .
They are batik, instructed by bands, is a member of, the
Sarah Moshier at no charge; National Honor Society, and
patchwork quilting, instructed her hobbies are sewing and
by Bess Grace, no charge; playing the guitar. A member
of the Candys tri pers at
enametin~, instructed by Jan
Wetherholt, no charge, . an~ Veterans Memorial Hospital,
flower arranging, instructed she plans to attend the Holzer
Medi ca l Ce nte r School of
by ruta Frazer, no charge.
Thursday, April17from Ito 3
p. m. the following workshop~
are p1anned : macrame, instructed by Pat Martin with a
$1 charge lor materials ; basic
needlepoint, instructed by Sara
Wal~er,
$1 charge for
materials; knitting, instructed
A vacation, Bible School
by Betty Plymale. Please bring
meeting was announced for
No. 10 or 10\2 ~eedles and 4 ply Aprill5 when the Young Adult
worsted or washable yarn; rug Class of the Bradford Church of
hooking, instructed by Edna Christ met at the home of Mr .
Borden, authentic heritage and Mrs. Butch Leifheit:
'methnds taught at no charge.
It was noted that a re~ord
Register by calling Janet player had been delivered to
Byers, 446-1903.
the Gallia County Children's

·A good deodorant · .
doesn't have to be expens1ve .. .
TUSSY
GUARANTEES IT*

x Apr 22- at Que, 9 :05 p .m .
Series C
Minnesota H. New Eng
(Minnesota leads, 1-0 )

.
0 'kS hOlllJ
T d
h
d
'sc e Ute

.59

Why pay more?
Tussy deodorants . . quali ty at a savin~sl
•sahslaction or your money back!

x -Apr 23- at S. D . , 10 : 30p .m .
lil"i f necessary

STARTS FRIDAY, 9 AM

EASTER CANDY CARRYQVER

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NoveHys, Gifts,
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Flowers, etc.

'•

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REGULAR PRICE

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Sand Pails, Garden Sets., etc.

PLANT NOWI
Packaged Flower Seeds, Garden
Seeds and Bulbs for . Spring
Planting Are Here .

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· geese, bird baths and swan planters . Wire &amp; plastiC
decorating fence and corners.

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·use- Our .Convenient t.y,A-Way l'tan.

$1.0 9

69¢

8 oz .

102 E. Main
. .

Betty Ohlinger

Valley _Lumber
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992·2709
'

Pomeroy
',

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COTTON BAllS

gg~

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13 oz.
PARTY TREAT

NUTS

MIXED
75~ w_ith_coupon

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12 oz.

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100

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Reg . $1.42

RDAY, APRIL 12

.JN THE STREETS OF
'

MIDDLEPORT

77(:

with coupon

-----t-----~----

Betrothal
revealed

Auxiliary meets
at fire h'ouse

3-way top t~at pours, stra ins , closes .

I -~eg . $1. 07
Limit 2
I
DUTTON 'S
I PRICESVALIDTHRUAPRIL 13

p

PT. PLEASANT.- Mr . and
Mrs. Michael Whalen of Rl. I,
Sandhill Road, are announcing
the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter , Stephani&lt;&gt; Kay to
Randy Mulford , son of Mr . and
Mrs. John Mulford, Rt . 2,
Cheshire ..
Miss Whalen is a 1974
graduate of Point Pleasant
High Sc hool and is currently
employed at · Peoples Bank in
Poin t Pleasant. Mulford is a
1969 graduate of Meigs High
School and is employed by the
Post Office in Gallipolis.
The wedding will take place
at the Fi rst Ch urch of th e
Nazarene in Point P1easan t,
Thursday, April 17, at 7:30 p.
m. The custom of open church
will be obse rved and the
reception will be held at the
Krodel Park Club House.

SERVING PITCHER.

1
I

PAM HOLCOMB

Home and tha t carpeting for
Nancy and Caro l Mor.ris,
the junior classroom had been Sylvia, David and Chuckie
donated by the Biggs family . A · Blake; Clifford, Polly and Chris
vote of thanks was extended to Smith, Gerri Lightfoot, Cherri
the woinen who did some
and Suzie, Bonnie and Butch
painting at the church. Plans
Lightfoot and Bonnie a nd
were made for members to
Larry Pickens.
paint the ~ws of the junior
church at the May meeting.' It
was agreed to order Volume 2
of the workbooks.
BOARD MEETS
The
Meigs County Junior
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . - Mrs. Sylvia Blake gave
de
votions
us
in
g
the
theme
Fair
Board
met April 2 in the
WARDS SUPER SAVINGS
"
God's
·Glory
Manifest"
CHESTER - Marg~rel Meigs Hig h School Vo-Ag
-IN STOCKScripture .was taken from the Christy, president, presided at r oom. Organizational
Psalms and Richard Gilkey the April meeting of the Ladies representation was discussed.
had prayer. Larry · Pickens Auxiliary of the Fire Dept., Junior Fair Committees were
presided at the meeting with Wednesday evening_ at the fire revised for 1975. There will be a
Regular 489.95
95
Mrs. Polly Smith giving the house. · The meeting opened committee mee ting April 21, at
secretary 's report. It was with the Lord's Prayer and 7 p. m. at the Meigs High
reported that Hom.e r Forest is minute s of the previous School Vo-Ag room .
19"
TV
hospitalized.
meeting were read by Clara
Regular 389.95 .
18
· Refreshmen Is were served Conroy,. the treasurer 's report
by Gerri Ughtfoot. Attending by Opal Wickham .
20" 3.5 HP Power
were Richard and Phyllis
Mower, Was 106.95------------582.88
The auxiliary has purchased
Watch Fn'da,u's
Gilkey, Catherine Russell, a two-way radio for the firmen
'1
106 COURT
Madeline Painter and Victor, who have installed it at the
Paper r:
Bill and Carol Biggs, Sonya firehouse. The auxiliary has
rOr
992-3001, Pomeroy
Wayland, Guy and Ruby
new greeting cards for sale.
lk
Hysell, Donna Kay Hysell, committee reports were given.
Ur
ewa
'
Roll call was answered by
Sale" Ad.
Clarice Allen , Mrgaret Christy,
Joy Ciark, Erma Cleland ,
Clara conroy, Grace Gumpf,
heritage house
Opal
Hollon,
Betty
Newell,
Your
Thom MeAn Stan. .
Footlorig Hot Do'g,
Georgia
Smith
and
Opal
Middleport,
Ohio
The Almanac
Wickham.
. ,_ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _,
French Fries and a
By United Press International
bag of Mister Bee
Today is Thursday, April 10,
Potato Chips t for
the 100th day of 1974 with 26S to
follow .
The moon is approaching its
·'pew phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY AT
The evening stars are Saturn
and Venus.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aries.
Famed American explor~r
POMEROY, OHIO
Matthew Perry was born April
10, 1874. This is actor Chuck
Connors' Slst birthday.
·
On this day in history :
. In 1849, Walter Hilnt &lt;if New
York received a patent for-hls
invention of the safety pin.
In 1945, the Nazi concentration camp at Buchenwald was
liberated by the U.S. 80th
Division.
FOR ALL YOUR
In 1971; the US. table .ennis
team arrived in China, the first
American group to penetrate
the "Bamboo Curtain" sir.ce
the 1950s . .
· In 1972, an estimated 2,000 io
ALL DAY LONG
4,000 persons WJlre killed in an
earthquake in Iran.

REMODELING·
NEEDS

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230 st erile co~ton balls
Reg 11 89
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YOUR.
HEADQUARTERS

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MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS

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FROM

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Chester, Ohio
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Johnson

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1 Group Ladies' Dress and Casual
JONES DISABLED
NEW YORK (UPI ) - The
New York Mets Tuesday
placed outfielder Cleon Jones
on the 1iklay disabled list and
sent him to their Florida spring
training complex in order 19
work his injured knee mto
shape.
.
Jones who underwent offseason surgery to his left knee,
was slow to recover and got to
bat . only twice during the
exhibition season.
General Manager Joe Mello. · nald said that a replacement
for Jones on the 25-rnan roster
would be made at a later date.

'

Color PQrtable

0

(San Oiego leads, 1-0)
Apr 9- San Di eg o 5 Tqr 3
Apr 12- at S. D . 10 :30 p .m.

the Language Club and the Pep
Club .
Kimberly Ohlinger. daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. William
Ohlinger, Rt. 3,.Pomeroy, is an
alternate to the Meigs High
delegates. She is in the band,
the National Honor Society ,' the
Usherettes Club, and attends
the First Baptist Chti'rch,
Pomeroy. Her hobbies are
swimming, bike riding, and
bowling.
Alternate Pam Holcomb is
the daughter of Everette and
Vera Holcomb of nea r
Pomeroy. She is lecturer of the
gra nge, the Meigs Cou nty
Grange Princess, a member of
the Meigs County Junior Fair
Board, president of the
Columbia Make·lt 4·H Club, a
4-H Junior Ceader a nd
publicity chairperson, and at
Meigs High is a member of the
Pep Club, presid ent of the
Meigs FHA Chapter, in the
junior play cast, a. member of
the Girls ' Athletic Association,
plays volleyball, and belongs to
the National Honor Society .
Daug hter of Mr. and . Mrs.
Roger Epple, Rt. l, Reedsville,
Sherry is in the junior class
play cast, the foreign language
club, the marching, pep and
conce rr bands, the vocal
choirs,
and
is
track
statistician. She belongs to the
Chesle r United Methodis t
Church.

r.zl l

LINDA LEE

~

She a ttends the
Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Stanley, R. D., Albany,
Tamra is a member of the
National Honor Society, vice
president of student council
and will be attending the stale
Student Council Convention in
Bucyrus this spring. She is
active in lhe Office Education
Association, the Camera and
Music Clubs, and her hobbies
are bowling and swimming.
Miss Thomas is currenUv th•
senior princess of Bethel 62,
International Order of Job's
Daughter s, Pomeroy.
Daughter of Mr , and Mrs. Don
Thomas, Pomeroy, she is a
member of the National Honor
Society, the Meigs Band, the
National Honor Society, the
Music Club and the gymnastics
te11m. She is a member of
Trini ty Church where she
teaches Sunday School. Her
hobbies are camping, swimming and skiing.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
William Windon, Rt. l , Long
Bottom, Patricia is a member
of the Chester Church of the
Nazarene and the Kathnous
, Yough Group at Racine. She is
a Candystriper at 'Veterans
Memorial Hospital. She has a
part in the junior play, and is
active in the concert, marching, pep and contest bands,
the mixed chorus, the Art Club,

.

r- ---·--- ~~·11J:Z•FJ- ----- ;-- ---- ~ ----

'449

PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
Friendly Service
112 E. MAIN . . POMEROY, 0.

Special Savings

Toronto vs. San Diego

I
5/99~ w.ith. c oupon
I
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I
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DUTTON'S
I PRICES VALID THRU APRIL 13

with coupon
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DUTTON'S
PRICES VALID THRU APRI L 13

KIMBERLY OHUNGER

25" Color Console TV

· Kenneth McCullough, R. 1'11. Charles RIHte, R. Ph.
OpenDaity a-:oo a~ m. to 9:30p.m.
Sunday 10:30 to 12:30 and s IG 9 p.m .

Apr 9- M i nn 6 Ne w Eng 5
.
Apr 11 - at New Eng , 7 : 30p .m .

A pr 13- at Minn . 8: 30p .m .
Apr 15- al Minn , 8 : 30p .m .
x -Apr 17- at N . E ng , 7: 30 p .m .
x -Apr 19- at Mlnn , 8:30p .m .
x -Apr 22- al N . En g, 7: 30p .m .
Series 0 .

N ur ~in g.

'

VBS meeting set for April 15

69¢

Tussy spray
deodorant . 7 oz. 79¢
TUssy dry
an ti-perspirant spray $1
13 oz .

PATRICIA WINDON

Girls delegates ·announced

TU./'./'Y'

Tussy cream,

MELISSA .THOMAS

of lights

$1.35

-:3:

centes~•~

stick, roll-on

TAMRA STANLEY

79e

Tho us.and s .

..

CRYSTAL GLAZE

Ron Boone shook off a badly Boone had been a listed a a
sprained right shoulder with doubtful starter prior to the
the help of acupuncture to add
25 ofnts to the Utah attack.

times for offensive fouls and ·
every time he lost a basket."
Kings Coach Phil Jol&gt;_..,n
said the Kings "mllaed a
couple of key shots" to lake
away the chance to win near
the finish, but added, "We're
not ready to fold yet. Thls Is
going to be a close series."
Love netted 38 points to tie
his career playoff high and
lead the Bulls to victory, the
first ever lor Chicago in nine
playoff series openers. Larry 1
McNeill paced the Kings with
22 points.
In playoff action tonight,
New York plays . ·host to
· Houston and Detroit entertains
Seattle as both home teams
fight elimination from the
playoffs in their best-of-three
qualifying series.
In the only other game, the
Buffalo Braves take on the
· Bullets in Washington as their
~hest-of -!!even series )legins.

lfO!!J_~~_=·. 11PLASTICRO!lTABLECLOTHS~="
.

GILlffiE CRICKET
LIGHTER Reg . 11.49

Rookies shine in AHA-playoffs

B ullS trip Kings, 95-89

.

·sATURDAY, A~ft,IL 12

Rauch and Rick Rauch combined to strike out 6 Eagles and
walk 5. Eastern got a total of 9
hits off the Rauch brothers
with the leading Eagle hillers
bei ng Randy Blake who went 2
for 5 with a triple and a single,
Hannum, 2-2 with a single and
a home run with one man on
base, and Don Jackson, Don
Eichinger, Mike Larkins, Bob
McClure, and Tim Kuhn each
had singles for the winners.
Jackso'n had three RBI's. For
Waterford the leading hitter
was Ge!ltge Allen with 2
sin gles. Eastern pitchers
allowed only singles to the
Wildcats.
Eastern
302 004 0-9 9 7
Waterford
200 211 0--6 6 5
Hannum , Spencer (5), (WP),
and McClure. R. Rauch, M.
Rauch (4), (LP), and Tucker.
.
.

thumbduringWahama's game
against Spencer.
The Falcons wasted no time
in scoring when shortstOP. Dan
Harmon drove Sayre who had
previously walked and then
stole a second and third in the
CHICAGO (UPI ) - The
fi rst inning, home on a
Chicago
Bulls' Norm Van Uer
sacrifice bunt.
drew
praise
from Coach Dick
The Falcons then added two
Motta
·for
the
defensive job he
more in the second and third
did
on
the
Kansas
City Kings '
innings and one in the fourth
and had a big three run iiming Nate Archibald.'Va n Uer said
he didn't do it himself.
in the sixth.
' 'One man doesn't slop Ar·
WAHAMA (9)
chibald
," the Bulls' guard said
Player
AB H R RNBI
his
team beat the Kings,
after
3330
Sayre cf
95-ll9,
Wednesday
night, in the
2I I 2
Harmon ss
. 3 2 I l only National Basketball
Gilland p
2 I I I Association playoff game. "!
Davis3rd
I I I l didn't stop Tiny. I tried to force
Riggs3rd
Goldsberry lsi
4 2 0 I him and Nate Thurmond or
I 0 I I Tom Boerwinkle helped me in
Lambert rf
.I 0 0 0 the lane and Bob Love helped
T. Tucker rf
2 1 o 1 me on the wings.
Reed II
·
I 0 ·()' 0 .' " You don't stop Ard\ibald
Buzzard If
1 o o every game. He'll be back.
2
J . Tucker 2nd
1 0 0 0 He's tough and they're a very
Smith 2nd
3
1 I 0
Lewisc

.

,,

'
.
·
By DAVID MOFFIT
· of · times before (second in
UPI Sports Writer .
three of the past six years) and
AUGUSTA , Ga. '(UP!) _ It came in here alter winning at
was Jack Nicklaus against the Greensboro with some fine
·
world today.when the Masters golf."
·
·
·
· ed that
go lf tournament began its 39th
Nicklaus
a1so cautw_n
run through the azaleas and although Lee Tr.evmo has
dogwoods .
·
never played' well in the
.
"Lee'
'te
bl
That world includes Lee Mfasplters, this Q.UI capla he
Elder the hrst black ever to o aymg
s course I e
~ thts
· preshglous
..
·
play m
tour- wants to. He 's won oth~r maJor
nament.
'
championships and It's just a
Nicklaus, seeking his fifth matter of time before he gets
· here. "
·
Ma sters _ crown an d 15th gomg
" major" championship was
Oddly enough, Nicklaus did
·
'
·
· clude J ohnn Y Mlll_er in
everybody's favorite but his not m
,own -and he was just being that group even though Miller
modest.
has won more t~rname_nts
· ''Sure 1 should be close, but (11) and more money
it's not ~P to me to say I'm the ($450,000) than any other golfer
man to beat," said the 35-year- the past 15 months. .
· old king of the golf links.
"I think Gary and Lee are
• "People had better : not better golfers than Johnny,"
overlook Gary Player. He's the said Nicklaus: "~s far as I am
defending-champion and he's a concerned, wmrung the major
very real threat anytime he oournaments is the real test.
tees it up.
Gary's won eight, Lee five and
"And bow about Tom Weis- Johnny only one."
· kopf ? He's been close here a lot
Elder has had the lion's

Eagles clip Wildcats 9-6
WATERFORD - Eastern
defeated the Waterford
Wildcats ~-6 here Wednesday to
give them their second victory
in eight starts this season.

•

39th Master~ tourney unde!way.

Freed, King sold

Freed. who was

..

. .,

DENIM
SHOULDER BAG

Choose from unique " blue
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.
4 ·- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, ApriiiO, 1975

..

.

to Mexicru1 teruus
CINCINNATI ( UP!)
Cinci nnati Re~s ' ouflielder
Roger Freed and catcher Hal
King were sold Wednesday to
Mexican League teams.
Neither man had made the
Reds' major league roster ,
minor

league player of the year in
1970 but played in only six
games lor the Reds last year,
was sold'to Monterrey. Mexico.
King, who spent much of his
time with the Reds' In-

' dianapol.is farm team.~ went to
Puebla. Mexico. -

Star grange
has meeting
Star Junior Grange 878 .met
at the Star Grange Hall April S.
Craft projects were discussed.
The· Monkey Faced Cookie
baking contest was held with
Gary Hollid ay ta·king first.
place, and Billy Dyer second.
There were four entries.
The theme of the literary
program was Spring . The
following program
was
presented: "April Fooling" by
Gary Holliday ; "Tulips" by
Opal Dyer; "What is_a Bad
Boy?" by Floyd Holliday;
"Sharing" by Judy Holliddy;
"The Flirt" by Dean Colwell ;
"Riddl es lor Fun " Ricky
Macomber; Stand for a Minute
game by all; Western Union
game by all. Eight members
were present.

ATrEND MEETING
Maxine Griffith, cashier of
the Pomeroy National Bank,
atte nded the spring meeting of
the Ohio Group, Na tional
Association of Bank Women,
Inc., at the Mohican State
Lodge near Mansfield, April S
and 6.

Mother's Day, May 11

eccll'w-._,
;..
MOTHER

tm., St,t.

""·"
S•t

with

IOdoon l

birftltiOnft _: Ol'le tfOM

for to&lt;h memb.r of

ft.

fomil~ .

111 preciout l_OI.t . ~low
or whitt ookf.

'26Si

13.00~

~o--

biMhs!CIO'a

\

.-

GOESSLER
JEWEI.IY ·SIORE
Court' St., Pomeroy

THEY LED THE CHEERS - These girls led ·the cheers for the Middleport Lakers
basketball team this past season. They are, front- Tammy Blake and back row, left to r1ght Kim Glass, Cleo Bego and Mary Miller. Absent were Nancy Wallace, Pauletta Stgman and
Rhonda Southern .

victory by all owing only two
more VVaterford runs to cross
the plate.
Eastern pitchers gave up .a
total of six runs, on 6 hits and
the Eagle defense made . 7
errors. Ha nnum and Spencer
combined to erase six Wildcats
· by strikeouts and walked four
batsmen .
Waterford ptichers Mike

Eastern

s tar ter

Dave

Han num worked the first four
innings Or the conLest giving up
4 runs before relief man Tim
Spencer came on in the fifth to
finish the game and get the

Falcons top
Tornadoes
Jeff Gilland subdued the
Tornadoes of.Southern on a one
hit shutout Wednesday evening
as Wahama went on to win 9-0.
It was a no hit ball game for
the senior, who made the
second start of the year, unlit
only one out remained in the
top half of the seventh inning
and Dunning collected the lone
hit a single, for Southern. On
his way to his second victory of
the year Gilland collected 14
strikeouts wh ile only walking
thr ~e batters .
Twelve stolen bases including five from centerfielder
Tim Sayre, helped to spark the
Falcons in their nine run
outpour. One of Sayres stolen
bases came in the fourth inning
in which he crossed home
plate. This gives him a total of
four times this year that he has
stolen home.
Others collecting si olen
bases included Dan Harmon's
three, Greg Lambert's two,
Gilland's one and Jerry
Tucker's one.
Not only was Sayre spectacular on the base lines he
also had a perfect day at the
plate, hitting three for three ..
One of which included a double.
In all Wahama collected five
doubles including first base
sacker Mike Goldsberry's two.
Going the
distance and
losing for Southern was Ba5l!
who gave up 13 hits while
walking only four.
Wahama's victory became
even more significant because
it was with out the services of
its leading hitter catcher Rick
Thompson, who broke his

MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS

ALL DAY LONG
ON THE STREETS OF

MIDDLEPORT
., ..

.
.
share of attention· here _this
week because of his umque
situation and he'll continue to
get a lot of attenhon as long as
he PIa
'
·
ys we11 enough 1os18 Y m
the tournarnen
·
t·
ButElderhasnotplayedwell
since earning a Masters invitatl I I Ap i1 b
. ing th
Mon as to ·or Y wPem~•colae
onsan
pen m · •
Fla ., and many doubtthathe 'II
make the J6.hole cut, least of
all be in contention for the
championship·
But the 46-year-old Elder
•-• It unders toed that he
wan=
isn't out to prove anything
beyond IIIIi ability to play golf.
"I've pt.)'e4 bad before, and
I've played lood before, !n
maj~ ct;•or!';lllonsltlps and .m
othel' ,,,.,,,aments," sa1d
Elder. "So, no matter bow good
or how bad I pt.y, It ,wm be for
myself, and I won I be embarrasaed."
Elder was scheduled ·to tee
off at 11 :15 a.m. EDT with
Gene UtUer,. the former U.S.

By United Press lnleraatlonal showed the way for the Stars
The American Basketball with an awesome 30-point, ~2Association playoffs belonged rebound performance.
to the rqpkies Wednesday
Tonight, Kentucky goes for
night.
its third straight win against
In a show of power, two of Memphis while Indiana tries to
basketball's finest future pros- do the same against San An_pects carried their teams to tonio.
victory in first round playoff
The Spirits unleashed a
action~
season of frustration against
Marvin Barnes, newly the Nets and never stopped
named Rookie of theY..,..., had pouring it on . In the opening
37 points and 18 rebounds while two minutes, they opened up a
rookie ,teammate Maurice 10-2 lead which continued to
Lucas added 21 rebounds, 14 swell until it reach 31 early in
points and seven assists as the the fourth period.
·
Spirits of St. Louis walloped
St. Louis otitrebounded New·
New York , lll&gt;-97, on the Nets' York, 59-46, and outshot the
home court. The win evened Nets, 31 per cent to '38 per cent.
their best-of-seven playoff ser- Freddie Lewi.-added 28 points
ies at a game apiece and was for St. Louis while Larry Kenon
the first victory lor the Spirits paced N ~w York with 28.
against the Nets this season
Julius Erving, the man the
after 12 straight losses.
Nets look to in a crisis, never
In Salt Lake City, Utah rode got going in t:l€ one-!!ided game
to its first playoff victory .and wound up with a careerfollowing two losses in Denver low six points on 3-of.\4
with a 122-108 thumping of the shooting.
Nuggets. Rookie Mosi!S Malone
Seven-year veteran guard

gooa team."
Archibald was held to 12
points. The Kings never led in
the gal)le but they - almost
overcBltte a 14-point deficit,
rallying within one poil)t twice
in the third period and within
tw6points with three minutes
to play in the game.
But a pair of offensive fouls
on Scott Wedman and Ar·
chibald denied tying baskets to
the Kings and in the final
minute, the Bulls grabbed two
o!fensivt\ rebounds, running
out aimost all.of. the 24-second
clock each time to keep control.
Motta discounted the importance of the offensive fouls,
saying "Love was called four

261399

Totals

SOUTHERN (0)
Player
Sayre 3rd
Riffle cf
Teaford cf.
Salser c
Snodgrass if
Brownrf
Huffman rf
Wolfe 2nd
Dunningss
Bassp
Nease
Totals

AB H R RBI
3000

I 000
I 000
3000

'

3000

2000
l 000
I 000
3 l 0 0·
3000
2000
23 I 0 0

WHA R esu lts
By United Pre ss International
Quart er -tin a Is

All Series Best of Se ve n
(All Tim es E DT )

Series A.
Cl evelan d vs . Hou st on
Apr 10- a t H ous , B:JO p .m .
Apr 12- at H ou s, B: 30 p .m
Apr 13 - - at Cl eve . 7 :30p .m .
Apr 15- at Cleve , 7 : 30p .m .
x -A p r 17 - at Hous , 8 . 30 p .m .
x -Apr 19- at Hou s, 8 · 30 p .m .
x -Apr 23- a l Cl eve, 7 ; 30 p .m .

Series 8

Phoenix vs. Qu ebec
{ Queb ec leads, 1-0l

A'pr 8- Que 5 F'hoenix 2
Apr 10- at Que, 9 : OS p m .
Ap r 12- at Ph oe n i x , 11 p .m .
Ap r 15- al Phoenix , 11 p .m .
)( -Apr 17- at Q u e , 9 :05p .m .
x -Apr 19- Phoen t x . 11 p ,m .

•

Open champion who came
ck from a bout with cancer,
bah' Ia . partner.
as ~P kymgtee-off times inOt dr Tey 'no ·at 11 . 36 ·
elude
. kl · rev1
. . Player· at•
1 12 · 04 •
N1c. aus
a
and Weiskopf at 1 p.m.
12 · 32• ld p lmer only other
Arne 'dea Nl kla' us to win
man besl s c
four Masters, 'finds himself in
of ,. timental favon·
1.
the, roe
sen the l&gt;-year-•
te this YJl8r s1nee t 4 here

Prices Effective Thru April 13

~

old Palmer has no _won
since
Pia
. 19&amp;1. edlcted that the
. _yer pr . ld be about
wmnmg
d score won
277 a score
1l-u~ ,; -pa~etter~d only five
. ~ua . or he
revious
38
limes
N' kl ~said "I
• ~·~:~~k ou ~e :olng to see
on
Y
ou might
as low,scores as Y
ex~~ia 'thi king was based
nN~e f~~t th:t "if it doesn't
0 •
th
lll get hard
ra~ ,f e.•~reens w
an ast.
"'\

1

'"bu:

The American Legion
Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, Middleport, will se nd
four Meigs County high school
juniors to Buckeye Girls' State
at
Capital
University ,
Columbus, for a week's study
in the democ ratic form of
government.
J?elegates selected for Girls'
State June 14 to June 22 from
Meigs High School are Crystal
Glaze, Tamra Stanley and
Melissa Kay Thomas, and from
\
Eastern High School, Patricia
Windon . Alternates to the
''
M eigs Hi gh s tudents are
SHERRY EPPLE
Kimberly Ohlinger and Pam
Holcomb. Alternate to Miss
Windon is Sherry Epple.
Miss Glaze is sponsored by
the auxiliary, Miss Stanley by
4"
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta
I '
'}:"
Sigma Phi Sorority; _1)1iss
Glaze by Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority; and Miss Windon by
The Citizens National Bank.
Miss Glaze is the daughter of
Mrs.
Belva Glaze and the late
Sunday, April 13, from 1 to 3
Ray
Gla ze , Pomeroy. She
p. m. the French Art Colony
plays
flute in the Mei gs
will present a choice of four
Marauders pep and concert
workshops at Riverby .
They are batik, instructed by bands, is a member of, the
Sarah Moshier at no charge; National Honor Society, and
patchwork quilting, instructed her hobbies are sewing and
by Bess Grace, no charge; playing the guitar. A member
of the Candys tri pers at
enametin~, instructed by Jan
Wetherholt, no charge, . an~ Veterans Memorial Hospital,
flower arranging, instructed she plans to attend the Holzer
Medi ca l Ce nte r School of
by ruta Frazer, no charge.
Thursday, April17from Ito 3
p. m. the following workshop~
are p1anned : macrame, instructed by Pat Martin with a
$1 charge lor materials ; basic
needlepoint, instructed by Sara
Wal~er,
$1 charge for
materials; knitting, instructed
A vacation, Bible School
by Betty Plymale. Please bring
meeting was announced for
No. 10 or 10\2 ~eedles and 4 ply Aprill5 when the Young Adult
worsted or washable yarn; rug Class of the Bradford Church of
hooking, instructed by Edna Christ met at the home of Mr .
Borden, authentic heritage and Mrs. Butch Leifheit:
'methnds taught at no charge.
It was noted that a re~ord
Register by calling Janet player had been delivered to
Byers, 446-1903.
the Gallia County Children's

·A good deodorant · .
doesn't have to be expens1ve .. .
TUSSY
GUARANTEES IT*

x Apr 22- at Que, 9 :05 p .m .
Series C
Minnesota H. New Eng
(Minnesota leads, 1-0 )

.
0 'kS hOlllJ
T d
h
d
'sc e Ute

.59

Why pay more?
Tussy deodorants . . quali ty at a savin~sl
•sahslaction or your money back!

x -Apr 23- at S. D . , 10 : 30p .m .
lil"i f necessary

STARTS FRIDAY, 9 AM

EASTER CANDY CARRYQVER

.

NoveHys, Gifts,
. ·v

Flowers, etc.

'•

All

---. ----------~ .

%
REGULAR PRICE

.S UMMER TOYS • KITES

Sand Pails, Garden Sets., etc.

PLANT NOWI
Packaged Flower Seeds, Garden
Seeds and Bulbs for . Spring
Planting Are Here .

~-------~-------------·
LAWN DECORATIONS

20% OFF

•s.oo·pa1r

GRADUATES

· geese, bird baths and swan planters . Wire &amp; plastiC
decorating fence and corners.

..•

MARGUERITE'S

'.

r'

SHOES
·use- Our .Convenient t.y,A-Way l'tan.

$1.0 9

69¢

8 oz .

102 E. Main
. .

Betty Ohlinger

Valley _Lumber
&amp;. SQpp~ Co.
992·2709
'

Pomeroy
',

'·

..

COTTON BAllS

gg~

-

13 oz.
PARTY TREAT

NUTS

MIXED
75~ w_ith_coupon

I

With coupon
Limit 2

Salted
Reg . SLOO

I

DUTTON'S
PRICESVALIDTiiRU APRIL 13

L1m1t 2

I
DUTTON'S .
IPRICESVALIDTHRU APRIL 13

-~----ii-=--

12 oz.

1 ALABASTER

100

COLGATE

i

MOUTHWA

Reg . $1.42

RDAY, APRIL 12

.JN THE STREETS OF
'

MIDDLEPORT

77(:

with coupon

-----t-----~----

Betrothal
revealed

Auxiliary meets
at fire h'ouse

3-way top t~at pours, stra ins , closes .

I -~eg . $1. 07
Limit 2
I
DUTTON 'S
I PRICESVALIDTHRUAPRIL 13

p

PT. PLEASANT.- Mr . and
Mrs. Michael Whalen of Rl. I,
Sandhill Road, are announcing
the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter , Stephani&lt;&gt; Kay to
Randy Mulford , son of Mr . and
Mrs. John Mulford, Rt . 2,
Cheshire ..
Miss Whalen is a 1974
graduate of Point Pleasant
High Sc hool and is currently
employed at · Peoples Bank in
Poin t Pleasant. Mulford is a
1969 graduate of Meigs High
School and is employed by the
Post Office in Gallipolis.
The wedding will take place
at the Fi rst Ch urch of th e
Nazarene in Point P1easan t,
Thursday, April 17, at 7:30 p.
m. The custom of open church
will be obse rved and the
reception will be held at the
Krodel Park Club House.

SERVING PITCHER.

1
I

PAM HOLCOMB

Home and tha t carpeting for
Nancy and Caro l Mor.ris,
the junior classroom had been Sylvia, David and Chuckie
donated by the Biggs family . A · Blake; Clifford, Polly and Chris
vote of thanks was extended to Smith, Gerri Lightfoot, Cherri
the woinen who did some
and Suzie, Bonnie and Butch
painting at the church. Plans
Lightfoot and Bonnie a nd
were made for members to
Larry Pickens.
paint the ~ws of the junior
church at the May meeting.' It
was agreed to order Volume 2
of the workbooks.
BOARD MEETS
The
Meigs County Junior
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . - Mrs. Sylvia Blake gave
de
votions
us
in
g
the
theme
Fair
Board
met April 2 in the
WARDS SUPER SAVINGS
"
God's
·Glory
Manifest"
CHESTER - Marg~rel Meigs Hig h School Vo-Ag
-IN STOCKScripture .was taken from the Christy, president, presided at r oom. Organizational
Psalms and Richard Gilkey the April meeting of the Ladies representation was discussed.
had prayer. Larry · Pickens Auxiliary of the Fire Dept., Junior Fair Committees were
presided at the meeting with Wednesday evening_ at the fire revised for 1975. There will be a
Regular 489.95
95
Mrs. Polly Smith giving the house. · The meeting opened committee mee ting April 21, at
secretary 's report. It was with the Lord's Prayer and 7 p. m. at the Meigs High
reported that Hom.e r Forest is minute s of the previous School Vo-Ag room .
19"
TV
hospitalized.
meeting were read by Clara
Regular 389.95 .
18
· Refreshmen Is were served Conroy,. the treasurer 's report
by Gerri Ughtfoot. Attending by Opal Wickham .
20" 3.5 HP Power
were Richard and Phyllis
Mower, Was 106.95------------582.88
The auxiliary has purchased
Watch Fn'da,u's
Gilkey, Catherine Russell, a two-way radio for the firmen
'1
106 COURT
Madeline Painter and Victor, who have installed it at the
Paper r:
Bill and Carol Biggs, Sonya firehouse. The auxiliary has
rOr
992-3001, Pomeroy
Wayland, Guy and Ruby
new greeting cards for sale.
lk
Hysell, Donna Kay Hysell, committee reports were given.
Ur
ewa
'
Roll call was answered by
Sale" Ad.
Clarice Allen , Mrgaret Christy,
Joy Ciark, Erma Cleland ,
Clara conroy, Grace Gumpf,
heritage house
Opal
Hollon,
Betty
Newell,
Your
Thom MeAn Stan. .
Footlorig Hot Do'g,
Georgia
Smith
and
Opal
Middleport,
Ohio
The Almanac
Wickham.
. ,_ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _,
French Fries and a
By United Press International
bag of Mister Bee
Today is Thursday, April 10,
Potato Chips t for
the 100th day of 1974 with 26S to
follow .
The moon is approaching its
·'pew phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY AT
The evening stars are Saturn
and Venus.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aries.
Famed American explor~r
POMEROY, OHIO
Matthew Perry was born April
10, 1874. This is actor Chuck
Connors' Slst birthday.
·
On this day in history :
. In 1849, Walter Hilnt &lt;if New
York received a patent for-hls
invention of the safety pin.
In 1945, the Nazi concentration camp at Buchenwald was
liberated by the U.S. 80th
Division.
FOR ALL YOUR
In 1971; the US. table .ennis
team arrived in China, the first
American group to penetrate
the "Bamboo Curtain" sir.ce
the 1950s . .
· In 1972, an estimated 2,000 io
ALL DAY LONG
4,000 persons WJlre killed in an
earthquake in Iran.

REMODELING·
NEEDS

.

230 st erile co~ton balls
Reg 11 89
w1lh coupon

:
1

. Deodorant protect i on

YOUR.
HEADQUARTERS

SHOES

TO All

Hen &amp; chi cks, duck &amp; ducklings, rabbits, flamingos,

OPEN FIIIO~fAS.UUrcuAY NUl" I&gt;

I
I

BODY POWDER Reg

Blue &amp;Gray .Restaurant

OFF

Johnson

&amp;

L1m11 2
1
DUTTON 'S ·
+PRICE S ~ALI[) THR U APRIL' 13

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON
SHOWER TO SliOWER ·

MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS

'·

FROM

STOCK!

ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS

Smalley's Gift Shop
Chester, Ohio
'
Phone 985-3537
.

SHOES

Johnson

. ---- -w:l{•111ijl•D------ :---:-:-

Wild Weekend Special

Ap r 16- at Tor, 9 p .m .

x -Apr 18- at S.D . . 10 :30 p .m.
x -Apr 21 - at"Tor, 9 p .m.

(AND LESS)

!e~~!r}~S~IOO Ea . ~ lI
2/$} 00 . ~ii~ilc~upon .__ __,I1

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PRICES YALIO TtiRU APRIL 13

0 "Sid

Apr 14 - at Tor. 9 p .m .

lf2 PRICE

.

1 FLINTSTONE BANKS

BLOWER/STYLER
Reg . $24.95

I

_____

lP~C~~~~.~:~-----

~

PLAY BALLS

1~
I 5 WILKINSON

, ~ ~ ~~ _:1STAINlESSNo. 8ST81~EL

•w· sturdy plastic balls

~· u ~

Assorted de signs
Req . 98 &lt;
'w•lh coupon

59¢

Unbrea kab le Chotlse from

I Fr ed, Pebbles' or Barney
I 9'1," tall $169 with coupon
: Reg . 12.80
Limit 2
OUTTON'S

~~
A

limit 2

:

1

BLADES
'riFO'=;!

Reg. 95' 29~ w_ith coupon
Ltmlt 2

· DUTTON 'S
0.. L ' I
DUTTON 'S
PRICES VALID TliRU APRIL 13
-- ~ PRICES VALID THRU APRIL 13
-- ·~- ---- 4 -----~----- TRIPLE FRAME

Be~j~b~~~lo~~~"gn
• 'th

79

i 11 oz. COLGATE
~ ! RegINSJAN
T ~~~~coupon
.

-

$1. 09

w! . coupon
Llmtt 2
DUTTON 'S
PRICES VALID THRU APRIL 13
Reg .

51 19

•· ·

7 OZ. Johnson &amp; Johnson

1 SPALDING
.
1
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1
I
TENNIS

sn

NO MORE TANGLES .
Spray on creme rin se
No more ta.ngl es, no
Reg . $1.64

99¢

•

-:----Tif•lllijtiRJI ____ _

---- -:- yi!•llUl•RWI· ----- ~

more tea rs._

39

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Limit 2
I
1
DUTTON 'S
LPRlCES VALtD_IIiRU APRIL 13

"'

Includes racket, 3 balls, and cover.

wi th cou pon

: Reg .

$19.95

Limit 2

DUTTON &lt;S

:

$999

wL_ith. coupon
•mtt 2

DUTTON 'S

PRICE~'0~.;~.~----l~~ICES~ALIDTHRUAr:.L
13-----14 OZ.

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~~~!!t ~!!AY

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Kil ls household germs

R

eg .

Sl

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18

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w1th couoon

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PRICESVALIOTiiRUAPRIL tl

I!

For

Kl!l-.}IJijtl~-

u§~~f;~~~h~tos,

fabr ic, leather .

1
Reg. 89c 39~ with coupon
1
limit 2
I
DUTTON 'S
JPRICESVALIDTHRUAPRIL13

____ T _____.t•JIIijl•NIl

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299

1 Group Ladies' Dress and Casual
JONES DISABLED
NEW YORK (UPI ) - The
New York Mets Tuesday
placed outfielder Cleon Jones
on the 1iklay disabled list and
sent him to their Florida spring
training complex in order 19
work his injured knee mto
shape.
.
Jones who underwent offseason surgery to his left knee,
was slow to recover and got to
bat . only twice during the
exhibition season.
General Manager Joe Mello. · nald said that a replacement
for Jones on the 25-rnan roster
would be made at a later date.

'

Color PQrtable

0

(San Oiego leads, 1-0)
Apr 9- San Di eg o 5 Tqr 3
Apr 12- at S. D . 10 :30 p .m.

the Language Club and the Pep
Club .
Kimberly Ohlinger. daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. William
Ohlinger, Rt. 3,.Pomeroy, is an
alternate to the Meigs High
delegates. She is in the band,
the National Honor Society ,' the
Usherettes Club, and attends
the First Baptist Chti'rch,
Pomeroy. Her hobbies are
swimming, bike riding, and
bowling.
Alternate Pam Holcomb is
the daughter of Everette and
Vera Holcomb of nea r
Pomeroy. She is lecturer of the
gra nge, the Meigs Cou nty
Grange Princess, a member of
the Meigs County Junior Fair
Board, president of the
Columbia Make·lt 4·H Club, a
4-H Junior Ceader a nd
publicity chairperson, and at
Meigs High is a member of the
Pep Club, presid ent of the
Meigs FHA Chapter, in the
junior play cast, a. member of
the Girls ' Athletic Association,
plays volleyball, and belongs to
the National Honor Society .
Daug hter of Mr. and . Mrs.
Roger Epple, Rt. l, Reedsville,
Sherry is in the junior class
play cast, the foreign language
club, the marching, pep and
conce rr bands, the vocal
choirs,
and
is
track
statistician. She belongs to the
Chesle r United Methodis t
Church.

r.zl l

LINDA LEE

~

She a ttends the
Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Stanley, R. D., Albany,
Tamra is a member of the
National Honor Society, vice
president of student council
and will be attending the stale
Student Council Convention in
Bucyrus this spring. She is
active in lhe Office Education
Association, the Camera and
Music Clubs, and her hobbies
are bowling and swimming.
Miss Thomas is currenUv th•
senior princess of Bethel 62,
International Order of Job's
Daughter s, Pomeroy.
Daughter of Mr , and Mrs. Don
Thomas, Pomeroy, she is a
member of the National Honor
Society, the Meigs Band, the
National Honor Society, the
Music Club and the gymnastics
te11m. She is a member of
Trini ty Church where she
teaches Sunday School. Her
hobbies are camping, swimming and skiing.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
William Windon, Rt. l , Long
Bottom, Patricia is a member
of the Chester Church of the
Nazarene and the Kathnous
, Yough Group at Racine. She is
a Candystriper at 'Veterans
Memorial Hospital. She has a
part in the junior play, and is
active in the concert, marching, pep and contest bands,
the mixed chorus, the Art Club,

.

r- ---·--- ~~·11J:Z•FJ- ----- ;-- ---- ~ ----

'449

PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
Friendly Service
112 E. MAIN . . POMEROY, 0.

Special Savings

Toronto vs. San Diego

I
5/99~ w.ith. c oupon
I
l1m1t 2 .
I
I
DUTTON'S
I PRICES VALID THRU APRIL 13

with coupon
Li""it 2

DUTTON'S
PRICES VALID THRU APRI L 13

KIMBERLY OHUNGER

25" Color Console TV

· Kenneth McCullough, R. 1'11. Charles RIHte, R. Ph.
OpenDaity a-:oo a~ m. to 9:30p.m.
Sunday 10:30 to 12:30 and s IG 9 p.m .

Apr 9- M i nn 6 Ne w Eng 5
.
Apr 11 - at New Eng , 7 : 30p .m .

A pr 13- at Minn . 8: 30p .m .
Apr 15- al Minn , 8 : 30p .m .
x -Apr 17- at N . E ng , 7: 30 p .m .
x -Apr 19- at Mlnn , 8:30p .m .
x -Apr 22- al N . En g, 7: 30p .m .
Series 0 .

N ur ~in g.

'

VBS meeting set for April 15

69¢

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deodorant . 7 oz. 79¢
TUssy dry
an ti-perspirant spray $1
13 oz .

PATRICIA WINDON

Girls delegates ·announced

TU./'./'Y'

Tussy cream,

MELISSA .THOMAS

of lights

$1.35

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TAMRA STANLEY

79e

Tho us.and s .

..

CRYSTAL GLAZE

Ron Boone shook off a badly Boone had been a listed a a
sprained right shoulder with doubtful starter prior to the
the help of acupuncture to add
25 ofnts to the Utah attack.

times for offensive fouls and ·
every time he lost a basket."
Kings Coach Phil Jol&gt;_..,n
said the Kings "mllaed a
couple of key shots" to lake
away the chance to win near
the finish, but added, "We're
not ready to fold yet. Thls Is
going to be a close series."
Love netted 38 points to tie
his career playoff high and
lead the Bulls to victory, the
first ever lor Chicago in nine
playoff series openers. Larry 1
McNeill paced the Kings with
22 points.
In playoff action tonight,
New York plays . ·host to
· Houston and Detroit entertains
Seattle as both home teams
fight elimination from the
playoffs in their best-of-three
qualifying series.
In the only other game, the
Buffalo Braves take on the
· Bullets in Washington as their
~hest-of -!!even series )legins.

lfO!!J_~~_=·. 11PLASTICRO!lTABLECLOTHS~="
.

GILlffiE CRICKET
LIGHTER Reg . 11.49

Rookies shine in AHA-playoffs

B ullS trip Kings, 95-89

.

·sATURDAY, A~ft,IL 12

Rauch and Rick Rauch combined to strike out 6 Eagles and
walk 5. Eastern got a total of 9
hits off the Rauch brothers
with the leading Eagle hillers
bei ng Randy Blake who went 2
for 5 with a triple and a single,
Hannum, 2-2 with a single and
a home run with one man on
base, and Don Jackson, Don
Eichinger, Mike Larkins, Bob
McClure, and Tim Kuhn each
had singles for the winners.
Jackso'n had three RBI's. For
Waterford the leading hitter
was Ge!ltge Allen with 2
sin gles. Eastern pitchers
allowed only singles to the
Wildcats.
Eastern
302 004 0-9 9 7
Waterford
200 211 0--6 6 5
Hannum , Spencer (5), (WP),
and McClure. R. Rauch, M.
Rauch (4), (LP), and Tucker.
.
.

thumbduringWahama's game
against Spencer.
The Falcons wasted no time
in scoring when shortstOP. Dan
Harmon drove Sayre who had
previously walked and then
stole a second and third in the
CHICAGO (UPI ) - The
fi rst inning, home on a
Chicago
Bulls' Norm Van Uer
sacrifice bunt.
drew
praise
from Coach Dick
The Falcons then added two
Motta
·for
the
defensive job he
more in the second and third
did
on
the
Kansas
City Kings '
innings and one in the fourth
and had a big three run iiming Nate Archibald.'Va n Uer said
he didn't do it himself.
in the sixth.
' 'One man doesn't slop Ar·
WAHAMA (9)
chibald
," the Bulls' guard said
Player
AB H R RNBI
his
team beat the Kings,
after
3330
Sayre cf
95-ll9,
Wednesday
night, in the
2I I 2
Harmon ss
. 3 2 I l only National Basketball
Gilland p
2 I I I Association playoff game. "!
Davis3rd
I I I l didn't stop Tiny. I tried to force
Riggs3rd
Goldsberry lsi
4 2 0 I him and Nate Thurmond or
I 0 I I Tom Boerwinkle helped me in
Lambert rf
.I 0 0 0 the lane and Bob Love helped
T. Tucker rf
2 1 o 1 me on the wings.
Reed II
·
I 0 ·()' 0 .' " You don't stop Ard\ibald
Buzzard If
1 o o every game. He'll be back.
2
J . Tucker 2nd
1 0 0 0 He's tough and they're a very
Smith 2nd
3
1 I 0
Lewisc

.

,,

'
.
·
By DAVID MOFFIT
· of · times before (second in
UPI Sports Writer .
three of the past six years) and
AUGUSTA , Ga. '(UP!) _ It came in here alter winning at
was Jack Nicklaus against the Greensboro with some fine
·
world today.when the Masters golf."
·
·
·
· ed that
go lf tournament began its 39th
Nicklaus
a1so cautw_n
run through the azaleas and although Lee Tr.evmo has
dogwoods .
·
never played' well in the
.
"Lee'
'te
bl
That world includes Lee Mfasplters, this Q.UI capla he
Elder the hrst black ever to o aymg
s course I e
~ thts
· preshglous
..
·
play m
tour- wants to. He 's won oth~r maJor
nament.
'
championships and It's just a
Nicklaus, seeking his fifth matter of time before he gets
· here. "
·
Ma sters _ crown an d 15th gomg
" major" championship was
Oddly enough, Nicklaus did
·
'
·
· clude J ohnn Y Mlll_er in
everybody's favorite but his not m
,own -and he was just being that group even though Miller
modest.
has won more t~rname_nts
· ''Sure 1 should be close, but (11) and more money
it's not ~P to me to say I'm the ($450,000) than any other golfer
man to beat," said the 35-year- the past 15 months. .
· old king of the golf links.
"I think Gary and Lee are
• "People had better : not better golfers than Johnny,"
overlook Gary Player. He's the said Nicklaus: "~s far as I am
defending-champion and he's a concerned, wmrung the major
very real threat anytime he oournaments is the real test.
tees it up.
Gary's won eight, Lee five and
"And bow about Tom Weis- Johnny only one."
· kopf ? He's been close here a lot
Elder has had the lion's

Eagles clip Wildcats 9-6
WATERFORD - Eastern
defeated the Waterford
Wildcats ~-6 here Wednesday to
give them their second victory
in eight starts this season.

•

39th Master~ tourney unde!way.

Freed, King sold

Freed. who was

..

. .,

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••
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aprii !O, 1975

f' SOciaflOpen .rizeeting hosted by Friendly .Gardeners
·i -Calendar\jl.

--

~ -

'i'HURSDAY
OCK Springs Grange host
,Q)jjo Valley Grange and
tlltfrisonville Grange , 8 p.m.
UREL Cliff Health Club.
:t'3b p.m. at home of Mrs.
1'iltlored Bowen, Chester Road .
!;MEETING of all girls 10 and
over· interested in summer
..eflball program at Middleport
Mmunity Park, 7 p.m. in
~~un ci! chamber, Middleport
Village Hall.
&gt;
~-bADIES Night 7:30 p.m. at
llwin City Shrine Park, Racine.
P.DUuck, take covered dish .
~at and drinks furnished by
~\\lb . Belpre Shrine will show
fi lm. All Meigs Nob les and
~

RUTLANQ - The annual
open meeting of the Rutland
. Friendly Gardeners was held
recently at the Rutland Church
of Cht·ist.
Hos tesses for 'he ineeting
were Mrs . Judy S11Jwden , Mrs.
Marvel Qui.Jlen , Mrs. Marjorie
Bishop, Mrs. Juanita Lambert
and Mrs. Donna Williamson.
O, votions were given )Jy ·Mrs.
Judy Snowden, on the "Legend
of tl1e Lily ."
· Guests were Mrs. Emogene
Crooks and Mrs . Jea nette
Th omas, Middlepor t Amateur
Gardeners; Miss Ruby Diehl
and Mrs. Stell a Atkins ,
Rutland Garden Club,. Mrs.
Elvira Barr a nd Mrs . Emma

Door prizes "'ere· won by
Mrs. Charl otte Willford,· Mrs.
Suzy Carpe nter, Miss Diehl,
Mrs. Crooks and Mrs. Thomas.
Plans were. made for the
April therapy program with
the special ed ucation children .
Mrs. Janet Bolin and Mrs. Lois
Walker wi ll have the program,
wi th Mrs . Joanne Fetty to
provide the refreshments. Mrs.
Carpenter will host the April
meeting .

The open meeting featured
table settings with appropriate
floral arrangements. These
were arranged by Mrs.
Snowden, 'Mrs. Joa nn Stewart,
Mrs. Sharon Barr, Mrs. Fetty,
Mrs. Bolin , Mr~ wi'n rnr~ ~ "~

printed Ia ble cloth with · a container. Another '·se tting . in
cerrll!rpiece of brown fern, yellow and avocado green had '
pussy · willow, daffodils and daffOdils and leather leaf fern
yellow mums.
in the arrange ment: In a more
An 'arrangement of yellow formal setting, a gol~ lame
daffodils was used on a table cloth with sheer overlay was
showing green and white china enhanced by pink and yellow
on an avocado cloth. Another mums with baby's breath and
setting showed pink mums and leather leaf fern in a ruby red
baby's breath. An orange cloth glass container.
·
with brown stoneware and
A deep blue cloth with a
orange glassware setting flowered napkin, wfiite cKina
showed a handmade Mexican and blue glassware was the
copper grain scoop with gold pace setting f_gr an informal
and orange artichoke blossoms breakfas t
table .
The
and pampas grass.
arrangement was in a white
A light blue cloth with china container using white ,red and
in a blue and pink design was yejlow mums and daffodils.
used with a ·. centerpiece of
spring flowers in a crystal

Mrs. Carpenler.
An informal buffet table
fea tured pink and blue mums
with baby's breath in a candelabra container on a whi te
damask eloth, while a picnic
table setting used a denim
cloth with re.d gin gham
napkins"cenll!red with a red
flower pot filled with white
mwns.

An informal brunch Ia ble
was set with white china oq a
rus t
cloth
with
the
~rrangement
showing a
pineapple, bananas, oranges,
red maple blossoms and yellow
daisy_ mums . The luncheon
table ' featur ed Yorktown
ironstont- on Fl blue ~ nd brown

, . Racine Social
EVen
·.

-INSULATIO~'alown Into Walls
and Attlcs _·

-Fire 1 Retq~rdant-

•

Free Estimates-No Obligation

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOIT
Middleport, Ohjo

Ledlie, Langsv ille

wives invited .

;: AFTERNOON Circle 2 p.m. ,
Beath United Me\hodist
C)lurch. Mrs. Mildred McQanicl in • charge of meeting.

Mrs. French hosts ·garden club

Hostesses,
Mrs.·
Lorena--navis
~·
'
.
The Middleport Garden Club pres ident, appointed Mrs . noted t!iat re&amp;ervations for lhe
and Mrs. Li llian Zerkle.
mee
ting Monday night at the Mildred McDaniel , chair- luncheon are to be in by April
: MEIGS County Humane
H
ome
of Mrs. M. L. French woman , Mrs. Mildred Fowler, 12. Miss Nellis Zerkle, _Mrs.
:l)pciety, 7:30 p.m. at Midvoted
to
sponsor a rider in the Mrs. Ski nner, Mrs. Elizabeth Etoilla Cassell, Mrs. Morris
dle port Village Ha ll. All
ni~ mbe rs urg ed to attend . '' luke bike" to be staged April F'isher, Mrs. Dorothy Roller, and Mrs. French were ap. 19 by the Meigs County Chapter Mrs. Michael Fry and Mrs . pointed to the nomina\,\ng
Public is welcome.
of lhe Ohio Association of Dorothy Morris to wor k with committee.
~SPEGIAL mee ting, Meigs
Miss Zerkle gave a report on
the club's already active civic
Cnun ty Pioneer a nd Historical Retarded Children and Adults.
the Johnnie Appleseed painting
~ommi t tee on fund raising and
Mrs.
Arthur
Skinner,
active
SOciety, 7:.JU p.m . at musPum ,
by the late Miss Daisy
with the chapter , explained beautification projects.
!;l tternut Ave .. Pomeroy
Members were reminded of Saunders, an artist and for•ELEANOR Circle . Heoth tha t the acti vily is to raise
the Region 11 meeting in . mer member of the garden
money
for
the
retarded
of
United Methodist 'church, . :30
Meigs County. The cl ub voted Marietla April 19 and it was club. She no ted that the
p ~m. at the home of Mrs.
Pliuline Harten, 285 So uth 10 sponsor a daughte't of Mrs.
Th'ird Av e. Mrs. Dwigh t Carl Horky in the " hike bike ."
Members discussed ways of
:.Xallace will be the guest
raising
money and plans for
speaker . Mrs . Margie Swope ,
par
ticipation
in projects of
Co~ tiostess .
beautificat
ion
in the com.~ REGULAR meeting, Shade
r.tver Lodge No. 453 .F&amp;AM, munity. Mrs. Sibley Slack,

L_ung diseases on agenda
•

of Nelsonville semmar

7; 30 p.m. All Master Masons
urged to attend. ·
::-'
,. OAPSE Chapter 453, 7:30
p.m. at Southern High School.
Siate represeniative to be·
present. Everyone urged to
jlt tend.
"
:~
FRIDAY
·::' POTLU C K ~ SUPPE·R 5:30
ir. m . Enterprise Uni te d
~ethodisl Church followed by
talk and film by Mary Skinner
.
explaining Personal Advocacy
· t:&amp;ogram. Rev. Wm. Sidens.t ricker , pas tor . Public
welcome.
,:ANNUAL Inspection Shade
River Lodge No. 453 F&amp;AM,
7: 30p.m. Work in Fellow Craft
Degree. All Master Masons are
invited. Refreshments served.
MARY SHRINE 37, Order of
the White Shrine of Jerusalem,
installation, 8 p.m. at the
Pomero y Masonic Temple.
I'Jembers to take sandwiches
aDd cookies . A busines s
rf),eeting will be at 4 p.m. that
~

1

I

f

d~y.
~

SATURDAY
.f!YMN SING Hazel Commun ity Church, between Long
BOttom and Portland, 7:30p.m.
·•Jointaires" of Point Pleasant~11 ·be featlired singers . . All
o,!,her sin gers invited . .
~DRUG Awareness meeting,
i :'45 p.m. at Modern Woodmen
Ha ll, Burlingham , Guest
sfjeaker and films. Special
~g in g. Open to public,
l!l!freshments.
:;JITNEY Supper, Chester
~:ementary Shoo! beginning at
fto p.m. Each person will be
charged by single servin gs.
Variety show by the chjldren of
the school at 7 p.m. Adniission
50 cents .
'
Ml'URDAY
• YARD SALE and Car. Wash,
12:30 to 7:30 p. m. on Fifth
Street in Racine, sponsored by
S'O uther n Junior High, 8-5
cjass .

Women hear
guest speaker
Mrs. Arthur Skinner, Meigs
County coordina tor for the
Personal Advocacy Progr~m ,
was guest speaker at the
Tuesday ni ght meeting of the
United Methodis t Women at
the East Lel.m·t Church .
Mrs. Hazel Fox introduced
Mrs. Skinner who talked of her
successes and needs in the
Advocacy program , and noted
that Meigs County is a -pilot
pro ject in this service
prog ram.
The women . voted to p\11'c ha ~ a new coffee urn and also
to use some missionary funds
for a local cause . Mrs. Ferne B.
Hayman, missionary coordinator , talked on needs of the
mission fie ld s. Mrs. Doris
Adams gave the program nn
" Chil'd,~ Advocacy" us in g
scripture from Luke and Mark,
with Mrs. Margaret Gloeckner ,
Mrs. Mary Roush and Mrs.
Focie Hayman assisti ng.
The birthdays of Mrs. Doris
Sayre and Mrs. Fox were
obse rv ed . Mrs. Fe rne ·B.
Hayman and Mrs. Fox serVed
refreshments.
·Attending bes ides those
named were Mrs. Sue Beegle,
Mrs . Eileen Roush, Mrs .
Kathryn Philson, Mrs. Eula
Wolfe , Mrs. Nora Pearson,
Mrs. Julia Norris, Mrs . Lucy
Donahue, Mrs. Betty Shiveley ,
Mrs. Mildred Donahew, and
guests, Mrs. Skinner and Mrs.
Helen Barnhart.

SUNDAY
GOSPEL
Messengers ,
Vinton, sing at Eagle Ridge
Comm un ity Ch urch, 7:30p.m.
Everyone ~elcome.

.....
. Henry Block has

·~-------

17.reasons why )DU
should corite to .us
ft,r.income tax.help.

Physicians, nurses and othe.r 24 at Columbus, April 29 at St.
health personnel of Meigs and -Clairsville and May 1 at CinGallia Counties have been cinnali.
Persons inll!rested . in atinvited to attend a seminar on
chronic obstructive lung tending the seminar may
disease by the Ohio Thoracic obtain information from South
Society and the Southeast Ohio East Ohio Lung Association
Lu ng Association at th e offices in Athens , 15 South
Hocking Valley Motor Lodge in Court Slrfe l, phone 5n-1945
Nelsonville, April 17. Other and Marietta, 310 St. Clair
sponsors include the Ohio Building, P. 0. Box 807, phone
Department of Health and the 614 373-5581. Participants will
Ohio Lun g Association. receive 0.6 (CE!J) continuing
Discussion of diagnosis and , education credit. Advan ce d
treatme nt ofY mphyse ma , registration is required with
Black Lung· (coa lworker 's $5.50 registration fee. April 14
pneumoconiosis) , chronic is the deadline to register for
br onchitis, and drug and the seminar in Nelsonville.
oxygen therapy are scheduled.
The program will emphasize TJ T'l
out-patien t treatme nt and
home s~rvices.
DemonJ
stra tion s of physical and
mechanical treatment and a
panel discussion will round out
the program.
Mr . and Mrs. David Wiley
Expansion of se rvices for
disabled Ohio coal miners is a and daughll!r, Ang~la , hosted a
major goal of a new program buffet dinner at their home in
un der ·which the Ohio Washington, W. Va., on Easter
Department of Heal th has Sunday.
com mitted $440,000 .of federal
Easter baskets and colored
program grants to treatment eggs decorated the table.
· and referral centers in Zanes- . Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
vill e,
Athens,
Bellaire, Wilbur Bailey, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Columbus, Cincinnati, Dayton L. R. Wiley, Middleport ; Mr.
and Cleveland . The services and Mrs. Larry Wiley, Arthur
are a part of the Black· Lung and Jennifer, New Haven, W.
Program.
·
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Stan Price
Letters 'of invi tation and and d~ughters, Molly and
programs of the seminars have Betsey Price, Marietta; Mr·.
been . mailed to · physicians, and Mrs. Eugene Metz, Mr .
nurses, therapists and social . and Mrs. Jon Metz and son,
workers in this area from the Matthew, Belpre ; Mr. and
Ohio Thoracic Society. Four Mrs. Donald Metz, Columbus,
more seminars are scheduled and Mrs . James Metz ,
for April!5 at Zanesville, April Parkersburg. The hosts served
a . "bunny cake " and Angela
presenll!d all of the . children
with gifts left by " Pe ter
Rabbit."

h
vvUe11S ost
Easter meal

ViSIT AUNT
.I
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Dabo
were in Barboursville, W. Va .,
Sunday to visit Mfs. Dabo's 91
year old aunt, Mrs. A. D.
Wilson, and her daughter, Mrs.
Frances Ellis. They also drove
to Hunting ton 'to visit Mrs.
Charles Shum&amp;ker, Gravel
Hill, .Middleport, who is confined to the Jenny Hall Nursing
.Home there.

Reason I. We are income tax
· specialists. · We .asJ0.hlrli.ght .
questions. We djf(for eyery honest .
deduction. _We want to leave no
stone unturned to make sure .you
pay. the smallest legitimate tax.

•

The verse of the month read
to open the meeting was
written by Mrs .' Joan Hoover~
granddaughter of Mrs. Cecile
Kincaid. Mrs. Horky presented
the secretary's report, Miss
Zerkle, the treasurer~s report.
For roll call members named
Rowers and trees in bloom
now.
. Mrs. Kincaid display(d a
blooming early specimen of a
miniature iris. Mrs. French
had an arrangement of forced
branchesondi.splay,'andon t))e
· table was a bouquet of daffodils
from the garden of the hostess.
Mrs. Slack presided at the
coffee service. Hostesses were
Mrs. French, lljrs. M. C.
Wilson , Mrs. John Davis.
Guests were Mrs. Norma Jean
Stivers, Mrs. Kathryn Knight,
and Mrs. Slack's houseguest,
Mrs. N. M. White, Arlington ,
Va.

ON ANY

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•

•

Sears ,Has a Credit Plan to Suit Most Every Need
• Prices are Catalog Prices
' • Shipping, Delivery lnclu~ed ,

0

•

o

$269.95

• Sale Ends May

-

Sears

.. ....__ _ _...J

Authori'zed CATALOG SALES MERCHANT
220 E Main.

t

Pomeroy, Ohio

Lou Osborne '

'·

Yours ,

GROOMS HAIR WITHOUT GREASE

""

'

· 30's
TABLET

SIZE

SUPPOSITORIES .

•

Martha Chllmbers , Clerk ·
Meigs County Board
. of Com m issioners
11 (4) 10, 17, 2tc

,12 ,j

8 oz.

gg~

'
.I

TABLET
SIZE

Vital
is®
-v1.

Proposals are to be rQturned
o'n bid forms supplied by the
vendor, and will . be open&amp;d on
t he date and place specified
abo\le .
.The Meigs County Com ·
missioners reserve the right to
accept or re jec t any or all bids
or anv part tft~reof .

PHONE 992-2178
..
'

lOO's

NORFORMS

Bids."

s

®

Only
$119

of Ohio, Departme'lt of High ·
ways
Construction
and
Materia ls Specifications, ex .
ce pting pea or shot gravel
which Is an ungraded material.
~ith respec t to the aforesaid
estimated ~uan fi t l es tl'le ven ·
dOrs shall une1erstand that no
guarantee is gi ven as to the
ac tual e~uantlties of aggregates
to be furn ished , but each vendor.
shall be ~eQu i red to furnish any
part of the actual reQuirements
a.s ore1ered during the 1975
season .
Prices on ttl is b id shall be in
effect. for the rema inder of the
yei!lr 1975.
On the envelope containing
each bid, the name and add'r eu
of the vendor must be shown
artd pla inly inarkec;t " Aggregate

90

Short on apace? Compact 24-in. version of above w~her is. also on oale
'

•

Bid Spec i f icat ions To Be
Submitted As FolloWs:
Bid pr ice per ton , f .o.b. lo'a ded
at vendor 's plant for the v arious
kind and size of aggregates that
may be requ ired which wi ll
confirm to The ~ertlne:nt Sta1.e

248G1

• 5 cycles include knit/
delicate setting
o Bleach and rinse
dispcnaen
• 5 position washfrin..,
temperature control
o· Porcelain enameled top

$1.03
Valu e

ASHTON GARDEN TOOLS

Ohio , at the office of The County

Commissioners in

Save '30, Automatic Washer

....."!.

were guests of Mr. and MQ;.
Roy Riffle.
•·
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle were
guests Thursday of Mr. aii'd
Mrs .. Bill McKenzie, PhiliR,
Jeff and Jozie, Gallipolis. ·,·.

•

Sealed bids wm be rece ived
by Th e Boa rd of County Com .
missioners of Meigs · County,

•
I

IVORY

and Mrs , Anna Wines.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis of
Lorain, Ohio and daughter, sue
Ann of Jacksonville, Florida
and Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Curtis and ·Sherry of Vinton

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice t.o Aggregate Vend or s:

830 E. Main
"Pomero·y, Ohio

STAR SUPPLY

spent a day With Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Turley and son.
·
M•. and Mrs. Larry Grimm
of Westerville spen t the
weekend with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Grimm ·

Constant
Easy -to-opeate
8-digit operaton
Convenient tax discount calculation

Wilbur Dean, Roy Eiselstein,
Lenora Dean Eiselstein, John
Eisel, Clara Eisel to Earl
Dean, Betty LQu Dean, 12'f... A.,
Chester.
..
Bobby J . Adams, Jr .,
Carl
Belinda
Adams ,
Whitehead, Cindy Whitehead to
Larry Fitch, Mildred Fitch, 1
A. , Lebanon . .
Della L. Douglas; Gladys
Chaney, Robert Chaney to
James A. Will, Carol Will,
Parcels, Chester.
Edna L. Evans, Edward C.
Evans, Sr. , to Edward C.
Evans, Sr ., Edna L. Evans,
Lot, Middleport.
Samuel C. Lewis, Faye
Lewis to Amedee L. Lefebre, ·
Rachel L. Lefebre, 2 A., Scipio.
·v
James J . Proffitt, Margie A.
Proffitt to Monty R. Proffitt,
Vicki K. Proffitt, 17 A.,
Lebanon.
Bradford
B. Massey,
Kathryn Marie Massey to
Carroll M. Fisher, Joan C.
Fisher, Parcels, Columbia.
Vernon A. Nease, Helen I.
Nease to Arthur W. Nease, Ada
L. Nease, Parcels, Sutton.

D&amp;D MEAT

.Bulk Seeds
Tillers, Lawn Mo.wers,
and Garden Tools.

EN DUST

Grella and Isabel Simpson
spen t Friday, .April4, with Mr.
and Mrs. Solon. Butcher at
Spencer, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Ball and
children of St. Albans, W. Va.

SHARP
ELECTRONICModel
/ E L8005
.
CALCULATOR Automatic
Easy-to- Read

Transfers

KERM'S KORNER
~

_,. ,·,

returned home from visiting
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. David Nease
arid son , David, of Baltimore
were guests Saturday 'of his
'mother, Mrs. Carrie Nease .

·Meigs

This is our way of honoring the grads ...
a savings of 15 per cent. Buy your new
spring suit or sport coat now. Be ready
for every special occasion, especially
graduation coming next month .

50 LB. BAG

THI IMCOMI TAll II'IOI&gt;L!

·'

SUIT. or
SPORT COAT

7DAYS
A WEEK

SPRING
BARGAINS

••
•
•

0

TO GRADS

love and care .

eOPENe

12-12-12 FERT_ILIZER .$499

:

CHEESE
.,PIZZA
MIX

e-1801

..••

•
•

ATTENTION GRADUATES

painting isnow displayed in the
_children's department at t~e
Middleport Library but that
plans ·are being 'made to have
the painting hung in a
prominent place in the library.
Mrs . Horky presented a
review of the book, "The Secret
Life of Plan Is" by Peter
Tompkins and 'christopher
Bird . Scientific experts in
seve ral ·fields , the authors
propose the theory that plants•
have feelings and emotions and
that they communicate with
human beings and respond to

· · li)"Si!n me , . lddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aprll!O. 1975
ts
.
returnedhomeafteravisilwith
her .daughter, Mrs. Marian
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Sunday afternoon enroute ·l.o Knigh tstep, Columbus and
. The Mission~r.y Society was their home at Hannibal, N. Y. spentling the month of March
10 charg e of the Sunday
after spending two weeks h.¢re. in Florida with relatives.
evening service at 7:30p.m. in
-Mrs . '' avinia Simpson
Mrs. J essie Palmer has
.
observance of America n
Baptist Women's Sunday. Mrs.
Mary K.. Yost, president, was
m charge of the program , Mrs.
Bikacsan · conducted the
Women's chorUs · who sang
"How Great Thou Art" with
Mrs. Lillian Hayman at the
piano.
~Miss Wilma Rose of
Columbus spent a week with
Mr - and Mrs. Herman Wolfe
and Mrs. Ward Sayre 'and
visited Mr. Sayre, a surgical
patient in Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mrs. Karen Turl~y returned
home from Pleasant Valley
Hosp.ili!l, Point Pleasant, w.
Va.
Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Mallory of Georgia are here to
he at the bedside of his mother
Mrs. Mayme Mallory who is ~
JENO'S
patient a t Holzer Medical
Center.
Easter weekend visitors of
6 oz.
Rev . and Mrs. Walter Bikacsan
were their son and daughter-in$1.09
law, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
Value
Bikacsan of Akron .
Rev . and Mrs. Bikacsan and
Sharon spent a few days after
Easter in Tllmadge and Wadsworth visiting their parents.
Easter guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Martin Wilcoxen were
Mr. and Mrs. Rock Young and
Andy of Columbus.
Mrs. Ralph Badgley, !&gt;Irs.
Ruth Hill and Mrs. Karen
Eckersley and Doug spent a
couple days in Baltimore with
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpson
and children.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley
took their daugh ter,. Mrs ..
Karen Eckersley and son,
Doug to Parkersburg Airport

.

1.70 VAWE

1

�'

'.

.

~

. . 'I

. I

)

.. '

••
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aprii !O, 1975

f' SOciaflOpen .rizeeting hosted by Friendly .Gardeners
·i -Calendar\jl.

--

~ -

'i'HURSDAY
OCK Springs Grange host
,Q)jjo Valley Grange and
tlltfrisonville Grange , 8 p.m.
UREL Cliff Health Club.
:t'3b p.m. at home of Mrs.
1'iltlored Bowen, Chester Road .
!;MEETING of all girls 10 and
over· interested in summer
..eflball program at Middleport
Mmunity Park, 7 p.m. in
~~un ci! chamber, Middleport
Village Hall.
&gt;
~-bADIES Night 7:30 p.m. at
llwin City Shrine Park, Racine.
P.DUuck, take covered dish .
~at and drinks furnished by
~\\lb . Belpre Shrine will show
fi lm. All Meigs Nob les and
~

RUTLANQ - The annual
open meeting of the Rutland
. Friendly Gardeners was held
recently at the Rutland Church
of Cht·ist.
Hos tesses for 'he ineeting
were Mrs . Judy S11Jwden , Mrs.
Marvel Qui.Jlen , Mrs. Marjorie
Bishop, Mrs. Juanita Lambert
and Mrs. Donna Williamson.
O, votions were given )Jy ·Mrs.
Judy Snowden, on the "Legend
of tl1e Lily ."
· Guests were Mrs. Emogene
Crooks and Mrs . Jea nette
Th omas, Middlepor t Amateur
Gardeners; Miss Ruby Diehl
and Mrs. Stell a Atkins ,
Rutland Garden Club,. Mrs.
Elvira Barr a nd Mrs . Emma

Door prizes "'ere· won by
Mrs. Charl otte Willford,· Mrs.
Suzy Carpe nter, Miss Diehl,
Mrs. Crooks and Mrs. Thomas.
Plans were. made for the
April therapy program with
the special ed ucation children .
Mrs. Janet Bolin and Mrs. Lois
Walker wi ll have the program,
wi th Mrs . Joanne Fetty to
provide the refreshments. Mrs.
Carpenter will host the April
meeting .

The open meeting featured
table settings with appropriate
floral arrangements. These
were arranged by Mrs.
Snowden, 'Mrs. Joa nn Stewart,
Mrs. Sharon Barr, Mrs. Fetty,
Mrs. Bolin , Mr~ wi'n rnr~ ~ "~

printed Ia ble cloth with · a container. Another '·se tting . in
cerrll!rpiece of brown fern, yellow and avocado green had '
pussy · willow, daffodils and daffOdils and leather leaf fern
yellow mums.
in the arrange ment: In a more
An 'arrangement of yellow formal setting, a gol~ lame
daffodils was used on a table cloth with sheer overlay was
showing green and white china enhanced by pink and yellow
on an avocado cloth. Another mums with baby's breath and
setting showed pink mums and leather leaf fern in a ruby red
baby's breath. An orange cloth glass container.
·
with brown stoneware and
A deep blue cloth with a
orange glassware setting flowered napkin, wfiite cKina
showed a handmade Mexican and blue glassware was the
copper grain scoop with gold pace setting f_gr an informal
and orange artichoke blossoms breakfas t
table .
The
and pampas grass.
arrangement was in a white
A light blue cloth with china container using white ,red and
in a blue and pink design was yejlow mums and daffodils.
used with a ·. centerpiece of
spring flowers in a crystal

Mrs. Carpenler.
An informal buffet table
fea tured pink and blue mums
with baby's breath in a candelabra container on a whi te
damask eloth, while a picnic
table setting used a denim
cloth with re.d gin gham
napkins"cenll!red with a red
flower pot filled with white
mwns.

An informal brunch Ia ble
was set with white china oq a
rus t
cloth
with
the
~rrangement
showing a
pineapple, bananas, oranges,
red maple blossoms and yellow
daisy_ mums . The luncheon
table ' featur ed Yorktown
ironstont- on Fl blue ~ nd brown

, . Racine Social
EVen
·.

-INSULATIO~'alown Into Walls
and Attlcs _·

-Fire 1 Retq~rdant-

•

Free Estimates-No Obligation

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOIT
Middleport, Ohjo

Ledlie, Langsv ille

wives invited .

;: AFTERNOON Circle 2 p.m. ,
Beath United Me\hodist
C)lurch. Mrs. Mildred McQanicl in • charge of meeting.

Mrs. French hosts ·garden club

Hostesses,
Mrs.·
Lorena--navis
~·
'
.
The Middleport Garden Club pres ident, appointed Mrs . noted t!iat re&amp;ervations for lhe
and Mrs. Li llian Zerkle.
mee
ting Monday night at the Mildred McDaniel , chair- luncheon are to be in by April
: MEIGS County Humane
H
ome
of Mrs. M. L. French woman , Mrs. Mildred Fowler, 12. Miss Nellis Zerkle, _Mrs.
:l)pciety, 7:30 p.m. at Midvoted
to
sponsor a rider in the Mrs. Ski nner, Mrs. Elizabeth Etoilla Cassell, Mrs. Morris
dle port Village Ha ll. All
ni~ mbe rs urg ed to attend . '' luke bike" to be staged April F'isher, Mrs. Dorothy Roller, and Mrs. French were ap. 19 by the Meigs County Chapter Mrs. Michael Fry and Mrs . pointed to the nomina\,\ng
Public is welcome.
of lhe Ohio Association of Dorothy Morris to wor k with committee.
~SPEGIAL mee ting, Meigs
Miss Zerkle gave a report on
the club's already active civic
Cnun ty Pioneer a nd Historical Retarded Children and Adults.
the Johnnie Appleseed painting
~ommi t tee on fund raising and
Mrs.
Arthur
Skinner,
active
SOciety, 7:.JU p.m . at musPum ,
by the late Miss Daisy
with the chapter , explained beautification projects.
!;l tternut Ave .. Pomeroy
Members were reminded of Saunders, an artist and for•ELEANOR Circle . Heoth tha t the acti vily is to raise
the Region 11 meeting in . mer member of the garden
money
for
the
retarded
of
United Methodist 'church, . :30
Meigs County. The cl ub voted Marietla April 19 and it was club. She no ted that the
p ~m. at the home of Mrs.
Pliuline Harten, 285 So uth 10 sponsor a daughte't of Mrs.
Th'ird Av e. Mrs. Dwigh t Carl Horky in the " hike bike ."
Members discussed ways of
:.Xallace will be the guest
raising
money and plans for
speaker . Mrs . Margie Swope ,
par
ticipation
in projects of
Co~ tiostess .
beautificat
ion
in the com.~ REGULAR meeting, Shade
r.tver Lodge No. 453 .F&amp;AM, munity. Mrs. Sibley Slack,

L_ung diseases on agenda
•

of Nelsonville semmar

7; 30 p.m. All Master Masons
urged to attend. ·
::-'
,. OAPSE Chapter 453, 7:30
p.m. at Southern High School.
Siate represeniative to be·
present. Everyone urged to
jlt tend.
"
:~
FRIDAY
·::' POTLU C K ~ SUPPE·R 5:30
ir. m . Enterprise Uni te d
~ethodisl Church followed by
talk and film by Mary Skinner
.
explaining Personal Advocacy
· t:&amp;ogram. Rev. Wm. Sidens.t ricker , pas tor . Public
welcome.
,:ANNUAL Inspection Shade
River Lodge No. 453 F&amp;AM,
7: 30p.m. Work in Fellow Craft
Degree. All Master Masons are
invited. Refreshments served.
MARY SHRINE 37, Order of
the White Shrine of Jerusalem,
installation, 8 p.m. at the
Pomero y Masonic Temple.
I'Jembers to take sandwiches
aDd cookies . A busines s
rf),eeting will be at 4 p.m. that
~

1

I

f

d~y.
~

SATURDAY
.f!YMN SING Hazel Commun ity Church, between Long
BOttom and Portland, 7:30p.m.
·•Jointaires" of Point Pleasant~11 ·be featlired singers . . All
o,!,her sin gers invited . .
~DRUG Awareness meeting,
i :'45 p.m. at Modern Woodmen
Ha ll, Burlingham , Guest
sfjeaker and films. Special
~g in g. Open to public,
l!l!freshments.
:;JITNEY Supper, Chester
~:ementary Shoo! beginning at
fto p.m. Each person will be
charged by single servin gs.
Variety show by the chjldren of
the school at 7 p.m. Adniission
50 cents .
'
Ml'URDAY
• YARD SALE and Car. Wash,
12:30 to 7:30 p. m. on Fifth
Street in Racine, sponsored by
S'O uther n Junior High, 8-5
cjass .

Women hear
guest speaker
Mrs. Arthur Skinner, Meigs
County coordina tor for the
Personal Advocacy Progr~m ,
was guest speaker at the
Tuesday ni ght meeting of the
United Methodis t Women at
the East Lel.m·t Church .
Mrs. Hazel Fox introduced
Mrs. Skinner who talked of her
successes and needs in the
Advocacy program , and noted
that Meigs County is a -pilot
pro ject in this service
prog ram.
The women . voted to p\11'c ha ~ a new coffee urn and also
to use some missionary funds
for a local cause . Mrs. Ferne B.
Hayman, missionary coordinator , talked on needs of the
mission fie ld s. Mrs. Doris
Adams gave the program nn
" Chil'd,~ Advocacy" us in g
scripture from Luke and Mark,
with Mrs. Margaret Gloeckner ,
Mrs. Mary Roush and Mrs.
Focie Hayman assisti ng.
The birthdays of Mrs. Doris
Sayre and Mrs. Fox were
obse rv ed . Mrs. Fe rne ·B.
Hayman and Mrs. Fox serVed
refreshments.
·Attending bes ides those
named were Mrs. Sue Beegle,
Mrs . Eileen Roush, Mrs .
Kathryn Philson, Mrs. Eula
Wolfe , Mrs. Nora Pearson,
Mrs. Julia Norris, Mrs . Lucy
Donahue, Mrs. Betty Shiveley ,
Mrs. Mildred Donahew, and
guests, Mrs. Skinner and Mrs.
Helen Barnhart.

SUNDAY
GOSPEL
Messengers ,
Vinton, sing at Eagle Ridge
Comm un ity Ch urch, 7:30p.m.
Everyone ~elcome.

.....
. Henry Block has

·~-------

17.reasons why )DU
should corite to .us
ft,r.income tax.help.

Physicians, nurses and othe.r 24 at Columbus, April 29 at St.
health personnel of Meigs and -Clairsville and May 1 at CinGallia Counties have been cinnali.
Persons inll!rested . in atinvited to attend a seminar on
chronic obstructive lung tending the seminar may
disease by the Ohio Thoracic obtain information from South
Society and the Southeast Ohio East Ohio Lung Association
Lu ng Association at th e offices in Athens , 15 South
Hocking Valley Motor Lodge in Court Slrfe l, phone 5n-1945
Nelsonville, April 17. Other and Marietta, 310 St. Clair
sponsors include the Ohio Building, P. 0. Box 807, phone
Department of Health and the 614 373-5581. Participants will
Ohio Lun g Association. receive 0.6 (CE!J) continuing
Discussion of diagnosis and , education credit. Advan ce d
treatme nt ofY mphyse ma , registration is required with
Black Lung· (coa lworker 's $5.50 registration fee. April 14
pneumoconiosis) , chronic is the deadline to register for
br onchitis, and drug and the seminar in Nelsonville.
oxygen therapy are scheduled.
The program will emphasize TJ T'l
out-patien t treatme nt and
home s~rvices.
DemonJ
stra tion s of physical and
mechanical treatment and a
panel discussion will round out
the program.
Mr . and Mrs. David Wiley
Expansion of se rvices for
disabled Ohio coal miners is a and daughll!r, Ang~la , hosted a
major goal of a new program buffet dinner at their home in
un der ·which the Ohio Washington, W. Va., on Easter
Department of Heal th has Sunday.
com mitted $440,000 .of federal
Easter baskets and colored
program grants to treatment eggs decorated the table.
· and referral centers in Zanes- . Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
vill e,
Athens,
Bellaire, Wilbur Bailey, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Columbus, Cincinnati, Dayton L. R. Wiley, Middleport ; Mr.
and Cleveland . The services and Mrs. Larry Wiley, Arthur
are a part of the Black· Lung and Jennifer, New Haven, W.
Program.
·
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Stan Price
Letters 'of invi tation and and d~ughters, Molly and
programs of the seminars have Betsey Price, Marietta; Mr·.
been . mailed to · physicians, and Mrs. Eugene Metz, Mr .
nurses, therapists and social . and Mrs. Jon Metz and son,
workers in this area from the Matthew, Belpre ; Mr. and
Ohio Thoracic Society. Four Mrs. Donald Metz, Columbus,
more seminars are scheduled and Mrs . James Metz ,
for April!5 at Zanesville, April Parkersburg. The hosts served
a . "bunny cake " and Angela
presenll!d all of the . children
with gifts left by " Pe ter
Rabbit."

h
vvUe11S ost
Easter meal

ViSIT AUNT
.I
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Dabo
were in Barboursville, W. Va .,
Sunday to visit Mfs. Dabo's 91
year old aunt, Mrs. A. D.
Wilson, and her daughter, Mrs.
Frances Ellis. They also drove
to Hunting ton 'to visit Mrs.
Charles Shum&amp;ker, Gravel
Hill, .Middleport, who is confined to the Jenny Hall Nursing
.Home there.

Reason I. We are income tax
· specialists. · We .asJ0.hlrli.ght .
questions. We djf(for eyery honest .
deduction. _We want to leave no
stone unturned to make sure .you
pay. the smallest legitimate tax.

•

The verse of the month read
to open the meeting was
written by Mrs .' Joan Hoover~
granddaughter of Mrs. Cecile
Kincaid. Mrs. Horky presented
the secretary's report, Miss
Zerkle, the treasurer~s report.
For roll call members named
Rowers and trees in bloom
now.
. Mrs. Kincaid display(d a
blooming early specimen of a
miniature iris. Mrs. French
had an arrangement of forced
branchesondi.splay,'andon t))e
· table was a bouquet of daffodils
from the garden of the hostess.
Mrs. Slack presided at the
coffee service. Hostesses were
Mrs. French, lljrs. M. C.
Wilson , Mrs. John Davis.
Guests were Mrs. Norma Jean
Stivers, Mrs. Kathryn Knight,
and Mrs. Slack's houseguest,
Mrs. N. M. White, Arlington ,
Va.

ON ANY

•••
•••
••
•

••

,

618 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

••

Open 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Mon.-Sal.

•

Ph . 992 -3795

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

Property

New York Clothing House
'

POMEROY I OHIO

.-lutltorized

CATALOG SALES
MERCHANT

'
•
Kenmore ·Large-Capacity Laundry Pair
Complete
with Our Most Popular
Features
.
.
.

-.

RACINE, OHIO .

-.

....

---

,,

COMET

WINDEX

SOAP

CLEANSER

Bath
Size

25c Value

IS oz.
Ae ro sol

.71&lt;€

2Jc Value

Value

Hou se ,

Val~e

SJ7.95

LG. SPADE,
SMALL SPADE,
WEEDER, &amp;
CULTIVATOR

$2475

11.00 VALUE

66 C

P::::::::1.......----==-..!

O'CEDAR
.LIGHT &amp; EASY

SPONGE MOP

'\• 8
•

-~

li(/ht

'JUS 'Uil!E

'·

2.69 VAWE

1

2.58 VALUE ·

1

a.ASSIC WROUGHT IRON

PLASTIC FENCE

In

The

The

Court

Vi l lage

o.f

Pom er oy, Ohio 45769, unt il 9:30
A .M . on the 22nd day of April
1975 for the furn ishing of al l
klnd s and sizes of aggregates
th at may be requ ired by The

•

nn

Meigs
Co un ty
H i ~ hway
Dep artm e nt.
Est im ated' quantity of ,all
aggrega tes
required,
ap .
proximat' ely 60,000 tons .

· Save '30, Electric Drye~

Was $299.95

8

• Automatic Fabric·
Master with Wrinkle ·
Guard"'
o End-of-cycle signal
o Handr, full-width door
o 2-pos•tlon fabric
, setting

26995
·

.

.

Pair Price

8

479

I

'

'

•

Was $249.95

•

•

Sears ,Has a Credit Plan to Suit Most Every Need
• Prices are Catalog Prices
' • Shipping, Delivery lnclu~ed ,

0

•

o

$269.95

• Sale Ends May

-

Sears

.. ....__ _ _...J

Authori'zed CATALOG SALES MERCHANT
220 E Main.

t

Pomeroy, Ohio

Lou Osborne '

'·

Yours ,

GROOMS HAIR WITHOUT GREASE

""

'

· 30's
TABLET

SIZE

SUPPOSITORIES .

•

Martha Chllmbers , Clerk ·
Meigs County Board
. of Com m issioners
11 (4) 10, 17, 2tc

,12 ,j

8 oz.

gg~

'
.I

TABLET
SIZE

Vital
is®
-v1.

Proposals are to be rQturned
o'n bid forms supplied by the
vendor, and will . be open&amp;d on
t he date and place specified
abo\le .
.The Meigs County Com ·
missioners reserve the right to
accept or re jec t any or all bids
or anv part tft~reof .

PHONE 992-2178
..
'

lOO's

NORFORMS

Bids."

s

®

Only
$119

of Ohio, Departme'lt of High ·
ways
Construction
and
Materia ls Specifications, ex .
ce pting pea or shot gravel
which Is an ungraded material.
~ith respec t to the aforesaid
estimated ~uan fi t l es tl'le ven ·
dOrs shall une1erstand that no
guarantee is gi ven as to the
ac tual e~uantlties of aggregates
to be furn ished , but each vendor.
shall be ~eQu i red to furnish any
part of the actual reQuirements
a.s ore1ered during the 1975
season .
Prices on ttl is b id shall be in
effect. for the rema inder of the
yei!lr 1975.
On the envelope containing
each bid, the name and add'r eu
of the vendor must be shown
artd pla inly inarkec;t " Aggregate

90

Short on apace? Compact 24-in. version of above w~her is. also on oale
'

•

Bid Spec i f icat ions To Be
Submitted As FolloWs:
Bid pr ice per ton , f .o.b. lo'a ded
at vendor 's plant for the v arious
kind and size of aggregates that
may be requ ired which wi ll
confirm to The ~ertlne:nt Sta1.e

248G1

• 5 cycles include knit/
delicate setting
o Bleach and rinse
dispcnaen
• 5 position washfrin..,
temperature control
o· Porcelain enameled top

$1.03
Valu e

ASHTON GARDEN TOOLS

Ohio , at the office of The County

Commissioners in

Save '30, Automatic Washer

....."!.

were guests of Mr. and MQ;.
Roy Riffle.
•·
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle were
guests Thursday of Mr. aii'd
Mrs .. Bill McKenzie, PhiliR,
Jeff and Jozie, Gallipolis. ·,·.

•

Sealed bids wm be rece ived
by Th e Boa rd of County Com .
missioners of Meigs · County,

•
I

IVORY

and Mrs , Anna Wines.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis of
Lorain, Ohio and daughter, sue
Ann of Jacksonville, Florida
and Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Curtis and ·Sherry of Vinton

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice t.o Aggregate Vend or s:

830 E. Main
"Pomero·y, Ohio

STAR SUPPLY

spent a day With Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Turley and son.
·
M•. and Mrs. Larry Grimm
of Westerville spen t the
weekend with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Grimm ·

Constant
Easy -to-opeate
8-digit operaton
Convenient tax discount calculation

Wilbur Dean, Roy Eiselstein,
Lenora Dean Eiselstein, John
Eisel, Clara Eisel to Earl
Dean, Betty LQu Dean, 12'f... A.,
Chester.
..
Bobby J . Adams, Jr .,
Carl
Belinda
Adams ,
Whitehead, Cindy Whitehead to
Larry Fitch, Mildred Fitch, 1
A. , Lebanon . .
Della L. Douglas; Gladys
Chaney, Robert Chaney to
James A. Will, Carol Will,
Parcels, Chester.
Edna L. Evans, Edward C.
Evans, Sr. , to Edward C.
Evans, Sr ., Edna L. Evans,
Lot, Middleport.
Samuel C. Lewis, Faye
Lewis to Amedee L. Lefebre, ·
Rachel L. Lefebre, 2 A., Scipio.
·v
James J . Proffitt, Margie A.
Proffitt to Monty R. Proffitt,
Vicki K. Proffitt, 17 A.,
Lebanon.
Bradford
B. Massey,
Kathryn Marie Massey to
Carroll M. Fisher, Joan C.
Fisher, Parcels, Columbia.
Vernon A. Nease, Helen I.
Nease to Arthur W. Nease, Ada
L. Nease, Parcels, Sutton.

D&amp;D MEAT

.Bulk Seeds
Tillers, Lawn Mo.wers,
and Garden Tools.

EN DUST

Grella and Isabel Simpson
spen t Friday, .April4, with Mr.
and Mrs. Solon. Butcher at
Spencer, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Ball and
children of St. Albans, W. Va.

SHARP
ELECTRONICModel
/ E L8005
.
CALCULATOR Automatic
Easy-to- Read

Transfers

KERM'S KORNER
~

_,. ,·,

returned home from visiting
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. David Nease
arid son , David, of Baltimore
were guests Saturday 'of his
'mother, Mrs. Carrie Nease .

·Meigs

This is our way of honoring the grads ...
a savings of 15 per cent. Buy your new
spring suit or sport coat now. Be ready
for every special occasion, especially
graduation coming next month .

50 LB. BAG

THI IMCOMI TAll II'IOI&gt;L!

·'

SUIT. or
SPORT COAT

7DAYS
A WEEK

SPRING
BARGAINS

••
•
•

0

TO GRADS

love and care .

eOPENe

12-12-12 FERT_ILIZER .$499

:

CHEESE
.,PIZZA
MIX

e-1801

..••

•
•

ATTENTION GRADUATES

painting isnow displayed in the
_children's department at t~e
Middleport Library but that
plans ·are being 'made to have
the painting hung in a
prominent place in the library.
Mrs . Horky presented a
review of the book, "The Secret
Life of Plan Is" by Peter
Tompkins and 'christopher
Bird . Scientific experts in
seve ral ·fields , the authors
propose the theory that plants•
have feelings and emotions and
that they communicate with
human beings and respond to

· · li)"Si!n me , . lddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aprll!O. 1975
ts
.
returnedhomeafteravisilwith
her .daughter, Mrs. Marian
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Sunday afternoon enroute ·l.o Knigh tstep, Columbus and
. The Mission~r.y Society was their home at Hannibal, N. Y. spentling the month of March
10 charg e of the Sunday
after spending two weeks h.¢re. in Florida with relatives.
evening service at 7:30p.m. in
-Mrs . '' avinia Simpson
Mrs. J essie Palmer has
.
observance of America n
Baptist Women's Sunday. Mrs.
Mary K.. Yost, president, was
m charge of the program , Mrs.
Bikacsan · conducted the
Women's chorUs · who sang
"How Great Thou Art" with
Mrs. Lillian Hayman at the
piano.
~Miss Wilma Rose of
Columbus spent a week with
Mr - and Mrs. Herman Wolfe
and Mrs. Ward Sayre 'and
visited Mr. Sayre, a surgical
patient in Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mrs. Karen Turl~y returned
home from Pleasant Valley
Hosp.ili!l, Point Pleasant, w.
Va.
Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Mallory of Georgia are here to
he at the bedside of his mother
Mrs. Mayme Mallory who is ~
JENO'S
patient a t Holzer Medical
Center.
Easter weekend visitors of
6 oz.
Rev . and Mrs. Walter Bikacsan
were their son and daughter-in$1.09
law, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
Value
Bikacsan of Akron .
Rev . and Mrs. Bikacsan and
Sharon spent a few days after
Easter in Tllmadge and Wadsworth visiting their parents.
Easter guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Martin Wilcoxen were
Mr. and Mrs. Rock Young and
Andy of Columbus.
Mrs. Ralph Badgley, !&gt;Irs.
Ruth Hill and Mrs. Karen
Eckersley and Doug spent a
couple days in Baltimore with
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpson
and children.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley
took their daugh ter,. Mrs ..
Karen Eckersley and son,
Doug to Parkersburg Airport

.

1.70 VAWE

1

�•

9- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday, ApnllO, 1975
DICK TRACY
I PASS
I SPOT ABOUT
10:20 EVERY {VIORNING, BUT
I NEVER SAW A CAA LIKE TMAT.

J

.,
~

:, Card of Thanks

AS OF
A p r il 1
1975 The
Syra c u se Home U l lltttes

cere t hank s to all our netgh

bors, fnends . and re la ttves

'who

were

so

kma

thoughtful when my

Company will be col leclmQ
their gas bills at the fo rm er
offt ce tn Syra cu se
~
4 I lOtc

and

h ~sband

Purtey Ka rr , passe d away I
wtsh t could thank each one
personelty f or the many
._ ,beaut iful f lowers . ca r ds , and
au the food tha t was brought
'" May God nchty b l ess ea ch
' one Your k mdness wdl never
be forgotten
Mrs
Purtey
Karr and fam tly
4 10 He

196J A N o otO er coms Wrll pa)'
2Jc for d1m es 60c for Quar
ters 51 20 tor ha l ves Wrll
also -buy , sel l or trad e U ;,
co1ns and curr en c y Ca ll
Roger Wam sley 7&lt;12 3651
4 4 12tp

Y A RD SA LE , ftrst road aft er
yo u pa ss WMPO radtO stat ton

9 5 Thur sday and F nday Lot s
of children 's tl e m s
Phon e
99 2 346 3
4 9 Jtp
------- - - - - YARD S ALE
170 Mulberry
Pom eroy
Frrday
and
Saturday , 9 a m td dark
410 2tc
- - - - - - - -- - - - - - - -

Phone 985 3952
4 10 31p

--------------YARDSALE and tar wash , 5th
St , RaCine Saturday , April
12, 12 ~ 30 to 7 30 p m Spon
sorPd by the Southern Junior
HlgtrB 5 Class
4 10 ttc

YARD SA LE rn Ra c 1ne IUS! off
124 on Broadway St r eet
I t em s too numerous t o
mentron Call 949 5 194 9 t o
&lt;l8 3tc
5 pm
YA RD SA LE 3 F a mdy Frr day
and Satu r day at Donna
W i lliam son res 1dence, Salem
St , Rut l and Clo thes , drapes .
b edspreads
e le c
mrKer
A von bottle s baby carseat
and manv 'Ot her rtems
Startrng at 9 a m Phone 742

1 7 tf c

FREE
WELDING
CLINIC

65'1?

4 10 21c
2' F AMILY y ard sa te, Fnday
and Saturday , April 11 12
Lots of c totlles and 1tems to
choose from on old R I 33 tust
1 J mile past Me1g s Co
fatr
grounds trrst tratl er on left
across from Rock Spr rni,JS
Me t hod1st
Church
Free
coffee W1l l be served
4 9 Jtc

Landmark Store
Pomeroy

WED., APRIL 16
7:30PM
Rtvet Weldmg , Soldermg,
Cutttng, etc.
Free Refreshments!
Everybody Welcome!
Corne! See! learn'

s E LL your mob•l e hom e tor
cash 15 hom es wanted , 1958
thru 1972 mode ls Phone (614)
4d6 1425 , GallipOliS
J 9 7Btc

4 RM furn1 shed

3658

apt PhOne 992
.:1 6 tf c

3 R M and bath furnrshed ap t
Uft l rlies pa rd 356 North 4t h
St Midd leport
d 9 ttc
1

BEDROOM mobile home
Phone A l bert Hil l Rac 1ne
949 2261
4 6 6tc
mobt l e
home Roush Lane , Cheshire.
Oh10 Phone (304) 77 3 5423
4 3 7tp

F URNI S H ED

counory

ORDER
1'01JR
southern
vegetab l e plants now for
delivery around May 1
Charles R Harr1s Phone 84 3
1693
4 3 18t ~

garden

Help Wanted

AUCTION , Thursday n rght , 7
at Mason AuctiOn,,
p m
Horton St ' In Mason , W Va
Cons1gnments welcome
Phone (304 1 773 5471
2 2 tfc

'140 week fulftime

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

'84 week partime

ANNOiTNCINt.:&gt; new hours
SKATE A WAY , 7 30 to 10
p m , Wednesday , Frrday
and Saturday Available fo r
private part1es Mo.'!day
TuesdaY
and
Thursdav
nrgh t s,
Sat urd ay
and
Sunday afternoons Phone
985 3929 985 9996 or 985 4141
3 30 12tc

Must have car and
willing to learn .
Call Personnel Dept.
446·9673
BEAUT I C I AN wanted , take
over clrent e le F u ll or pa r t
l1me Phone 992 2840 or 992
7495
4 B 61 C

INTERSTATE COMMERCE
COMMISSION
NOTI.CE
AB IB (S ub- No 10)

CHESAPEAKE AND OHIO
n eeded
1n
RAILWAY
CO.MPANY BABY SITTER
Mason , w va for ii! school
ABANDONMEN T OF THE
age Childr en PhOne (304 ) 77 3
POMEROY BRANCH SER
5195
V ING Tt;iE STATIONS OF
4 9 6tc
U NION FURNACE , STARR .
NEW P LYMOU TH , QRLAND,
CREOLA ,
McARTHUR , r------ - - - - --,
DUNDA S, ORETON, HAW KS,
MINERTON , VINTON
810
WELL , K ERRS GALLIPOLIS
KANAUGA ,
CHESHIRE ,
MIDDLEPORT,
AM
SASSADOR
SIDING
A ND
POMEROY.
ALL
IN
HOCKING , V IN TON, GALLIA
AN D MEIGS COUNTIES , OH 10

CARRIER
WANTED
On West Main St.
an~ Monkey Run
in Pomellrj
The Daily Sentinel

Large yard and

Phone 992 78644 10 3tp

--------

J

Ph. (614 992-2156

NEPA
It was

concluded . among
ol her lh •ngs, 1hal lh e en L _ _..!(.:!3,0:!4L).!.7.!.7,3::,-5"'3"'8"'6vtronmental 1mpacts of. the
proposed act 1on are cons1dered

Wanted TO Buy

lnsog nifocanl because adequate

h1ghways ex1st .n the area tc
accommodate any mcreases 1n OLLJ rurnrture, 1Ce ooxes , ordsS
motor earner traff 1c necessary
beds, or comp lete households
to
replace
current
rail
Wnte M D Mrller. Rt 4,
operatrons , the resu1t 1ng atr ·Po meroy , OhiO Call 992 7760
poltut 1on , rntrus1ve no1se , fuel
10 7 74
consumpt1on. and sa fety hazard .
-------------alterations would be m 1nor . and U SED brush hog for a Grave l y
the re are no h 1St0r 1c or ma1or
tra ctor Phone 99 t. ::;_,u2
eco!og1ca1 1mpa~ts 1nvotved
4 8 3tc
Th 1s determ1nat ion was based - - - - - - - - - - - - - - upon the staff p repara llon and WOULb t1ke to buy 1 to 2 acres
co ns1derat 10n
of
an
en
of l and I n Ra c .ne area
v1ronmental
threshold
Preferably wllh well Phone
assessment su rv ey , wh1ch tS
(304) 773 5404
available on reQuest to the
4 a 5tp
tnterstale Commerce Com - - - - - - - - - - - - - - miSSion. Off 1Ce of Proc eedmgs, HOR SES&amp; P ONIE S Phone742
washington, 0
C
~0423 ,
3264
te lepl'lone 202 343 2086
4 3 ttc
Interested .persons
may - - - - - - - - - - - - - - comment on th1s matter by
k
b 1
ttl 1ng the 1 r statements 1n USED I H McCorm1c 46 a er
wrttmg w 1th the Int e rstat e
for parts
Pllone 992 5917
com mer ce
Comm rss 1on 1
Hu gh
L e 1fh e1t,
Rt
'2 ,
Washington , 0 C , 20423, on or
Pomeroy
tc
4 10 3
belore April 30. 1975
---------------This negat1ve envtronmental
determ i nation shall become WANTED Old lJpqght p1anos.
final unless good and suffiCient
any condrt1on Pay1ng S. IO 00
reason demonstratmg why an
each First floor only Wnte
envJronme'nta.f
lmpa'C f
and g1ve drrect 1ons to W1 tt en
statement should be prepared
P1ano Co , so.: 188 Sa rd1s ,
for this act10ll 1S subm1tted to
Ohm 43946
the Com m tssion by the above
4 10 6tp
spec1f1ed date
SIMMON S meta l twtn bed ,
14) 10, 1tc
model B 42 Phone 985 3951
10 Jtp
- _.
..._
-4 ---

·--------------

i

REG POLLED Hereford bul l
Pllone 247 2196
4 6 6tc

COMRLE TE
excavaflng
equ1pment
New 350 Case
do'zer w1th 280 hours Ford
8500 Endloader, backhoe
New co nd1t1on Also 2 T
Dump w1th low bouy Down
paym e n t.
take
over
payments Phone 742 6621
4 10 Jtc

' cASH pa1d for al l makes and
models of mobrle homes
Phone area code 61' 4239531
t
413ffc

Internationa l Truck , 1970, 1 t
ton , very good s 1600 Phone
949 3500
4 10 6tp

I
1

1:
I

. -- ~-- - -----~---

____________ _

II

I

GROCERY busmess for sate
Bu 1ldmg for sale or lease
Phone 773 -5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m tor appointment
3·10 nc

JUNK dUtos, complete ano
delivered to our yard We l)lck
up auto bod.1es and buy all
kmcf\ of $crap metals and
~ron R 1der's Salvage , St Rt
124, Rt 4, F'omeroy, 01'\io
Ca II 992 5468
.......,..._
10 17 tfc

______

STAN D ING limbers Contact
Pomeroy Forrest Products
P 0 Box 726. Pomeroy , Oh1o
Ph on e 9p2 5965
3 30 12tc

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

I

1969 DUO 14 f 1b erg tass boat
1970 Ev1nrude 40 HP motor
1969 Shorel 1ne Tilt Trailer all
5afely and sk 1 equr pm en t
very good conctrt 1on , $1,200 or
best offer Call Apn t 12 and 13
on l y please Phone 985 3830
4 9 Jtp

IND IAN JOE's Sports and CB
Shop Spec rats fOr 10 days w1th
th1S ad - One only, Couner
mobrle am ssb , $269, One
only, Rovce 602 , $142 SO. One
only Royce 605, S159 50, One
Sha k espeare TMA , $24 95
One only Shakespeare double
trucker, S2G 50 , One only,
Sh ake speare Wh i p , S8 95 , One
only , HY Gain G P .. Sl2 95
One only 0 10 11 desk m1ke.
$4 0 95, One only , astat1c 555
no1setess tru ck m 1ke, S25 95
One Unemetr1c Base, $185
One only Coleman lantern,
S17 95 , One only used 22
marltn bolt actron, S35 One
only cap ball pistoL S32 50
One only , new 22 Sidew mder
w mag cytmder , $42 50 , One
on l y , 25 auto , $42 50 One
only, 32. 30 p 1stol. SJJ SO Stop
and save at t he lndtan's SAVE WAMPUM , JOB Page,
Mrddleport, Phone 992 3509
4 10 101c

_____

I
I

For Sale

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

3·25·1 mo.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

D &amp; D TREE Tr1mmtng , 20
years experience
I nsured,
fre e es t1m a t es Call 992 3057
Coolville (1) 667 3041
'421 2t p

Pomeroy

ijb,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~':"~~~~~~

Real Estate· For Sale

________

FAM I LY
milk cow
F1ne 7 RM HOUSE and bath. most l y
reg1stered J ersey
Good
carpeted, l arge lot Sllown bY
M il ker Phone 742 6722
appt
234 Mu l berry Ave
4 6 6tp
Phone 992 34 39
--- - - - - - - - - -- - - 4 10 3tc
l.J SE O parts, Frye's Tru ck and - - · - - - - - - - - - - - - Auto Parts, Ru t land Oh 1o 5
RM
HOUSE,
Bath ,
'l
Phone (6 14) 742 6094
bedrooms, gas heat w1th to t
550 Sou th Th1rd Avenue,
1 22 7Btp
- - - - -- - -- - - - -- Middleport Phon e 992 5078
F I SH BAIT - f1Sil ba11 -we have
4 10 3tp
our ba rt 1n , n 1g ht crew te rs , - - - -- - - - - - - - - - la rg e meal worms worms, BRICK HOU SE on Second Sf.
red worms blood baif. tnd1an
Pomeroy downtown Su1table
Joe's Sp ort and CB Shop , 308
fo r ltvtng quarters upsta1rs,
Page St , Middleport Phone
sma ll busmess down , otf1ce or
992 3509
home
W1th1n
walk1ng
4 9 30 tc
d1stance of all stores Call 992·
- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - 3489
4 10 3tc
8 FT transport d iSC , 4 x 16
Pllone 949 576 3
house fo r sale 1n
4 9 4tp 3 BEDROOM
Rutland , double garage , barn ,
--------------garden space Call 742 6456
Cl"OSE OUT on new Z 1g Zag
4 10 31c
sewmg mach1nes For sewmg
- ------------ stretch fabrrcs, buttonholes .. BUY NOW &amp; ~~-~.vE Low, low ,
fan cy deS1gn s, e t c Pamt
down payments , B pet m
terest 30 yr tman cing on n ew
sl1ghtly bl em 1shed Choice of
carry1ng • case or sewing
homes 1n 3 Me 1gs County
stand. $4.9 80 cash or terms
locatrons, or BUILD on your
available Phone 992 7755
lot Phone 992 5976 or 992 5844
. 1218tfc
313tfc

----------- --- - ---- ----------SERV ICE slat10n and garage,
Rutland
Will f1nance or
lease Call 742 5052
4 9 26tc

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

all
electriC,
3
W HIR L POO L
automa t 1c MODERN
bedrooms , k1tchen, d 1n1ng
washer, l 1ke new
Phone
area, l1vmg room, bath Fu ll
Lutller Frrend, 949 4603
basement, part ially f 1nlstted ,
4 8 Jtp
laundry, recrea t 1on st orage,
workshop areas Three and
NEW &amp; USED t il l er s and cha1n
two t h1 rds acres on c R 28
saws A lso will repa 1r 498
near Rac-1ne Phone 949 3457
Locus t St , Middleport Oh 10
4 9 4tp
Phone 99 2 3092
4 8 3tc

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

pony Call George Frecker,
985 3827 after 0 p m
4 8 6tc

-·--·------------

FERTILIZER
10-10-10
$135.60
12-12-12
$148.00
5-20-20
$165.80
6-24-24
$181.00
5-10-15&amp;5· 10-10

2 AC RES With 1 ~ x70 t rader , 3
bedroom , 1 1h bath, diSh
washer, furniShed Also, 12 x
60 trailer With 16ft 11pout. air
cond1t1oned , washer dryer.
furn1shed $17,500 Phone 992
33 88

TUP.PERS Pl.kor4S -

21h

acres with some budding
sites 2 BR, bath, large l1ving
R , ktfchen &amp; dtntng R Part
basement, all new steel
sidmg , well water &amp; ' 1ty

waler JUST $10,500
POMEROY RT 4- Just 51h
m1 les out NEW home wtth 1
Acre of ground 2 BR , bath,
carpeted, full basement w1th
large rec room also car
carport,

Ctty

water

All

Y\)URS J UST 522.700.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 'NEW
HOME wolh 1 level acre 3
BR , bath, nice k1tch en &amp;
dmmg, lots of closets, uftltfy
R , all electnc. garage, all
carpeted wtth your chotce of

colors $20,000
•
RUTLAND - Close to
shoppmg, 2 BR. bath, llvong
R has f treplace Real n1ce
tnstde, carpeted, paneled,
tiled , n ew bath, garage,

porch, $9.500

I

TO A PULP!

~IINr, Electric,

tines,

lnslllltd.

NEAR POMEROY - 6 room

f

&lt;Sl'A~,

FFa,\ bRMJ'MAIIJ AIJD -:DMCTHI~ I~ A

8-K EXCAVATING
OOMPANY
I

INSON
SMALL

READY ~LIX CONCRETE ae .
l1vet;ed right to your protect
F as't · a nd
easy
Free
~s t 1 m ates
Pllone 992 -328"'
Goegle1n Ready M1x Co,
Midd lepo rt Ohio

6 30 tfc
SEWING MACH I NE , Repa 1r s,
serv1ce. all makes, 992 2284
The Fabnc Shop. Pomeroy ,
Author1zed Smger Sa tes and
Service We sharpen Sc1ssors

c

BRA07o R IY.'Auctlonee(
Complete Serv1ce
Phone949 3821or949 316\
Racme , Oh10
Cr11t Bradford
5 1 tfc

'IOU

I
II I

ttc

L AWSON &amp; McCoy Pam t mg &amp;
Roof1ng Pamtmg H\S1de or
out, Roof1ng hole '" root or
new roof Call 367 0456 Free
esllmates
4 9 12tc

tv t LL TR I M or cut trees an&lt;
shrubbery
Clean
ou
Dasements, a tt1c , etc Phon•
949 3221 or 742 4441
4 B 26tc

ULABNER
BUT THAR'S ONI...Y ONE
MARY~! ALL AMERICA NE"S'PS
NOW THAT EVERYT'HING
EI.SE: IS 'SO ROTTE~rr-

MU..LYLJNG
0 ' IDIOTS
COU L D BG

WE'LLGOTO
HOLLYWOOD AN'
BEG HG'R TO

AMBASSADOR TO
FRAfVKSNSTAN

'r

IS
'

GREAT COUNTRY STEREO

old Bath, gas floor furnace,

TUNE TO WMPQ.FM 92.1

WINNIE
:THAT'S OKAY,
WINNIE . I. KNOW 'THAT

FROM

THIIOU6H A DIFFICULT
PERIOD R16HT OOW.

6:00 A.M. TIL MIDNIGHT

'8 6tp

Persons possessing an Interest In an unclaimed fund Item

Buy it now or use our
Convenient
Lay-Away
Plan I

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

Herman Grate

Mason, W.

Va:

a claim

BARNEY

therefor wl/1

be furnished upon recelpl of written Inquiry.
MIDDLEPORT
McCormick, William T.. SJ7.110
POMEROY
Jeffers, W , Box 146, S28 00; Jelfers, W., Box 146, SJ5.00;
McNeil, E¥elyn II. lrmard, ~I. 3, $46. 15 ; Watkins, William,
S89 54, Young, Mllry AM, 1178.74
,
PORTL~ND
Kosk1, M , &lt;·O Richard Dunbar, RD 1, U9 00.
RACINE
Durfee, James A.. S28 03.
REEDSVILLE
Canter, Janet C.. Box 129, 1117.70,
RUTLAND
Franklin, James. RR 1, 143.00; McKenrle, H., Box 145,

V 'f\1
.A__}

Now arranre the elr&lt;led letteri

t-..._

to fonn the surpriH an~wer. u

su1gested. by the abot'e cartoon.

FER BEIN'TARDY
TODAY, JUGHAID ··

'IE CAN WEAR
TH'DUNCECAP

Fo&lt; Frldty March 11. 1175
ARIES (March 21-Aprll

I

will be dtHtcult to get a handle

ROBBER MOTHER

Hlillt.N lo Pill flu s 'gm ""'"'
lwt~( - YOUR SHIRT

on thmg s today Much of what
you destre to do wtll be beyond
your control

1111 (I

GEMINI (May 21.JWIO 20)Be
ca reful how yo u treat frrends
today Thoughtless actions
could terminate a good and
long-standtng relattonship

CANCER (June 2HUiy22)Pay
extra heed to things reftectmg
on your honor and reputat1on
Your actions are betng observ-

DOWN

I Beyon~

2 D1vis10n word
3 Act m
(Lat.)
concert
11 Musical
ds )
work
( 2 w.
12 Kind of shell 4 Not him
Yesterday's Answer
13 Enclosures 5 Stew
15
Little
lamb 25 Primrose 6 Reagan,
14 Cargo
owner
29 Shoppers'
to some
. weight
18 Refute
delight
15 Welcome - 7 Leagued
20 Love song 31 Sicilian
16 Potable
(3 wds.)
21 Snarl
c1ty
17 June 6, 1944 8 Australian
22 North Star 32 Fnjole
!$ .Trilby
Clly
,
23 Inter 34 Tease
20 Cubic meter 9 Flowerlike
(among
35
Kmd
_
alone
ornament
21
other things) of nurse
( 2 wds.)
13 Allee 22 Crowfoot
family plant '-.-+-t--1-23 Positive
'"
tenninal
21 Saturnalia
25 Denture
26 JerryLewis
27 .Pul on28 Industrious
colonist
29 As wntten,
in music
30 Spider's
creation
33 College
cheer
(2 wds.)
35 Madeira
3ti Exemplar
:r7 Sicilian
volcano
38 Twilled
fabric

It:

QJPSTWQ

CWZ,

RVA

ALV

KVJX

BV

AVRR

WVYA

DVJTPND
XPN,

DAV'H

AP

ALCA'D
FVTWQ

ZNRR -CZZTDPW
WHAT TOOK ME 50
LON6,MIZ PRUNELL'I
WUZ ·PICKIN' 'IOU
THIS BOKAY OF
WILD FLOWERS,

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Now:

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)1t

sv

as listed below may address an Inquiry lo The Ohio
concerning the manner of presenting

ru

NE:WSPAPER'~

COMPOSING ROOAI.

CRYPTOQuon;
..,

NOTICE OF NAMES OF PERSONS
APPEARING TO BE OWNERS
OF UNCLAIMED FUNDS
· MEIGS COUNTY

Yemnlay's Cryploquote: HALF OF US AI\E BUND, FEW.
OF US FEEL, AND WE ARE ALL DW.-WILLIAM OSLER
(0 ltU ICID&amp; F"'"'" SJDII1&lt;alo,IAC.)

ed by hosti le eyes
LEO (July 23-Aug 22)Now 1s
the time to dtscard worn out
tdeas that haven't accomplished the resu lts you had
hoped for Thmk or new ap.
preaches

VIRGO (Aug . 23·Stpt.
22)0on't rely on resources of
others One who prom tse d to
help you won't be able to now
through no fault of his own

LIBRA (Stpl. 23-0ct. 23)0ne
~~o _Is_ usually

a staunch any

~

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan.
19)You have a tendency today
to shut others out 1f they don t
comp ly readtly With your ways

It cou ld cos t you a fnend.

AQUARIUS (Jtn. 20· Feb.
19)Be careful while traveling
today If driving, keep your
eyes and m1nd on the road
Don't daydream or talk mcessa ntty to passengers

'~
•

"
' :~

PISCES (Ftb. 20-Merch
20)Contlnu e to be extra ...,
cau ttous and watchful in frnan- :~:
c1a1 dealrngs Count your
change Get rece1pts of all
transact1ons
'o

'"

~Your

·

~Birthday _,
Aprll11, 1975

"'
.. ,.,

You Wtll embark on a promts1ng new venture th1s year It w11! '"':
be a complete departure from
what you 've done m the past ;,;-;

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN ) •'"'

nv

'"
&lt;

10

NORTH
.K 2

• 10 8 6 4
•t0864
.864
WEST
.Q J 10
• J 95 3
• J 9 53
• 53

Both Yulnerable
West

North

East

Pass 6N T Pass
Pass
Opening lead - Q•

South

SN T

hiS lop red cards East diScard· :
ed a couple of small spades ""
Now came the lop clubs Wes~~
had to throw the 10 of spades '""
order to hang on lo hts reel .
Jacks Now Lancelot led his las~ ':
club, the deuce West had to
make another diScard ll had tQ ,
be hiS lasl spade He could nol •
spare a red Jack
....
Lancelol was now able to diScard dummy's kmg of spades '"
East won w1th the jack of clgbs":
and had lo lead a spade ~~
Lancelol's none and seven had: ~
become a winmng tenace ovel\1'
East's e~ght and SIX
""

LZ:H;J :1 t!&amp;,&gt;.&amp;D:;~
The b1ddmg has been

10

Pass

West

Nor1h

East

South

2•

Pass

3 It

""
'"

1.

"'

"
'"'
Pass 3 It
Pass 4 •
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Pass
5+
Pass
5•
Lancelot, the peerless kmghl P.ass 6 N.T Pass ?
u)
and bridge player, looked al hiS
You, South, hold
••
'"
collection of aces, kings and .KQ96 5 .A2 .K43.QP_:
queens with · almost as much · What do you do now '
, ...
awe as if he had found the Holy
A - Pass aad hope your part•ei6 1l
Grall Then he looked qver al knows !.What. be has been doiaJ.
Dmadan, hiS partner, and
TODA Y'S QUESTION
·'
dectded he had beller make
Instead
of
bidd1ng
three
spades;:~
sure to play notrulllp If the hand
worked out that way He opened your partner has b1d three , ,.
d1amonds over your three clubs ' J '
f1ve notrump
1
Pass

Dmadan wasn't sure what

that b1d meant bul .he thought
hiS kmg ol spades justified a
ra1se lo SIX

West opened the queen of
spades Lancelot won with h1s
ace m order to keep dummy's
one entry ahve Then he cashed

I KNOIII I'0 6ETLOST! NOlo),
WAAT IS 'f'OOR RfACTION
TO M'( ~&amp;lEM 1

.'

SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23·Doc.
21)Be on your best behavlot
socially or you may act so as tO'
come others to hold you 1n less
esteem

Lancelot slays 'em at tables

I DON'T WANT I.{OIJ 10 60

'

22)Pace yourself sensibly at
work today Don't tackle tasks
exceedt ng your talents or pre-' .....
sen t capabtl1t1es

WIN AT QRIDGE

WITH ME, M loiiTHOUT 'iOV

$37 00.

_.

will behave m a very un - _
cooperat tve manner today Be ~
forglvtng# H1s defection Is temporary
'

, One letter simply st1nds for another. In this simple A b
used for the three L'a, X for the two O's, etc Slnale letters,
1postropheo, the lenath 1nd formation of the wol'&lt;\1 are Ill
hillt.s. E1eh day the code letters 1re dllrerent.

.

361 East Broad Streel, Columbus, Olllo, .0215. Information

WHAT /.UO&lt;!!

IO·Jil-The 2000 Year Old Man 8,10

LIKE 'THEY
17117 oT IN THE

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's hpw to work
AXYDLBAAXR
11 LONGFELLOW

13DNNAZ: 1500NG'

Department of Commerce, Division of Unclai med Funds,

5011£ 8ABG1'!'-

9 3()--0dd Couple 6.13, Assignment America 33
10 oo-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15. Get Chn stie Love! 6, 13 , Paul
Nuchlms 33; News 20

(..\uwen lomorrowl

5 Laurence
or Tuck
10 Before

You mean
som'bodi.l qot
t' climb that
thin'?

Kit 33.

II

nonsense 1

authorized jobber for A1rco
Welding Supplies Camp line
of 1ndustr tal gases and
weldmg equipment
Phone
992 3768
4 8 5tc

McShane" 8, l O, Masterpiece Theatre 20 , Consumer Surv1val

"The Rookie" 6, Movie "It" 8, Mov ie "The Brides of Fu

by THOM~S JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Comparative
1 Stuff and
word

T"WIN-:C~y- ~~ch-;-~- ;-hop,

Macaroni 10

Manchu" 10. Janak! 33

~.ct)td'

GASOUNE ALLEY

'

8 31l-Choco and The Man 3,4, 15, We' ll Get By 8, 10; Wall Slreet '
Week 20,33.
·
9 00-Rockford Files 3.4, 15, Hot L Baltimore 6, 13, Mov1e "Kate

~~~~~~~~oom~~.~l~[X~I~I~J[IIIIJ
A.riJwl"r'

WMPO-FM

7 ROOMS and bath hOU$e , gas
furnace, central a1r con
d 1t 10n 1ng Phone 992 7001
•
4 8 6tc

J

Jumbl"' HURRY STOIC

-----------=--~-

the news 20,33; Treasure Hunt 10; To Tell The Truth 13

8 00-Sanford and Son M, 15; Night Stalker 6, t3; Comedy•
Special 8; WasH1ngtOfl Week In Review 20,33, Call II

11)You're going to make a
sudden change 1n d~recl1on A
se lf- 1n te rest you've been
vtgorously pursutng wtU no
longer appeal

l'l"ll&lt;"rd•v'•

:xCAVA TING , dozer, lo ader
and backhoe work, sepJic
tanks 1nsta1ted, dump t rucks
•and lo boys fo'r hire. Wilt haul
til~ dtrl. top soli. limestone &amp; '
gravel , Call Bob or Roger
•Jeffers , eta y ph one 992 7089,
n 1g ht phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc

T A NKS-~ i;;;;d
Modern San,tat1on, 992 3954 or

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

I

CR/&lt;;1&lt;'()0

49

Aviation Weather 20,33, News 10, J1mmy Dean 1J, I Spy 15
7 30-Porter Wagoner 3, Pop I Goes The Country 4, New Candid : Camera 6; Pop! Goes The Country 8; Black Perspective on ,

5 30-Movle "The Guns of Augu!)l'' &amp;

J I

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

7 00- Truth or Consequences 3, Probe Conference With ttle
Congressman 4, Bowling For Dollars 6, WCHS TV Report 0;

3 30-Movie "Harvey" 4

t1'REMIC

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

6 3()-NBC News 3,4, t5, ABC News 13; Bewitched 6, CBS News8, 10, Zoom 20.

, 1 ~,!i~i~~~~.;::~c;~~~·.~· ~~: Wide World In Concert 6. News 1 ; "
2 »-Star Trek 4

•

498 Locust 51.

20,33. Ironside 13

5 31l-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge lodge 20, Gel

11 00-News 3,4, ,8, 10, 13, 15,33
ll .JQ-Johnny Carson 3.4, 15, W1de World in Concert 13; Movie

Th1\ I! where they
moke the t~pe

~IVP;TE

Rtdtng Tractors

"""Ep TIC-

··-'1.1.-J ,_

I!A.SV PRONTO,
Y'HI:Aiit?

Chain
Precision
Ground
Afso Re&lt;oai"s On

3 29 lfc

DOLE R work , le nd cleanng by
the acre, hourly or contract
Farm ponds , roads , etc
Large dozer and operator
wtth over 20 years ex
penence Pullms Excavat1ng .
Pomeroy, OhiO Phone 992
2478
12 19 tf c

10 0()-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4,15, Joker's Wild 8,10, Dinah!
13
10 31l-Wheel Of Fortune 3,4, 15; Gambit 8,10
11 00 - H1gh Rollers 3,4,t5, One Lole to Live 6, Now You See II

REMEM6Eii:, TENNill.., WHEN
I GIVE 'IOU 'THE IA/OilD,

SALES&amp; SERVIcr:•.r-..
992-3092

5 00-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8. M1 ster Rogers' Neighborhood

Personality and Behavioral Development 33

Tattlefales 10, New Zoo Revue 13

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form rour ordmary "ords. '

SEPTIC
tanks
cleaned
Reasonab le rates Phone 446
4782 Gallipolis, JOhn Russell,
owner.

I Dream Of Jeanme 4, Som erset 15,

Smart 15; Electnc Company

33
8·25-Caplain Kangaroo 10
8·3()-Missoon· Impossible 6
9 00-A M 3; Ph1l Donahue 4.15. Cocky and Ho s Friends 8;
Mornmg W•th D J 13
9·25-Chuck White Reports 10
9 3()-Not For Women Only 3, Dinah! 6,, Galloping Gourmet 8.

~WJMffiM;u...J

W

--

Interna t ional Report 20

6 00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6, Electric Company 20,

11 55--Graham Kerr 8, Dan Imel's World 10

Phonlo 992.5»7 or992.1M1

Jri

Right 8,10, Bill Moyers' Journa l

3 3o-Qne Llfe to Live 13; Lucy Show 6, Match Game8, 10

Bonanza 15

Love Of Life 8, 10. Sesame Street 20,J3

mPNriStreet
Mlddltporl, Ohio

25 - per
ya rd
Call R 1chard West
Phone 843 2667
4 3 30tp

and fenced yard. 517,500 ,
YOUR BHT SAV1NGS IS IN
PROPERTY. INVEST NOW
AND
BUILD
YOUR
RETIREMENT,
OR
CHILDREN'S FUTURE .
CALL 9Y2·3Ji'&gt;,

Sunrise Semester 10

8, 10, E lectnc Company to.
11 31l-Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Brady Bunch 6, 13, News 4;

Construction &amp; Rtmocltl

•rOME
Improvement
and
Repa1r Service - Anythmg
f1x~d around the home , froiTI
roof to basement You W1l
• l1ke our work and rates
Phone 742 5081
12 29 :fc

front porch for only $7.500 00
POMEROY - Nice renovated
6 room home . Bath, carpetmg,
paneling, basement, porches

ALm6R FOR IKlM

BROw!.! ~ FOR. DA.DOI/!

LlmHiont &amp; Fill Dirt

Free Estimates
Phone: 949-5961
Emergency 949-2211 or
992-5700
4·2·75

510,000 00
MIDDLEPORT - 7 rooms. 2

frame home , only a few years

~'71H8 MAlt) 51'1. 131U..S, A

Commerci•t-Rnidentlal

Atr conditioning, plumbing,
heatmg , roofmg, spouting,
general sheet metal work .

well, cellar, shop, barn and a
good btg garden Want only

4,

8 00-Lassie 6, Captain Kangaroo 8. Popeye 10, . Sesame Street

Dozer,Beckhoe,Truckl

992 7J49

baths, "gas furnace, famtly
room , and basement
Nice
v1e w of the nver $22 ,500

6 DO-Sunrise Semtnar

6 15-Engllsh 505 J

7 00-Today 3,4,15, AM Amerlca6,13; CBSNews8

Work

6, 13, As the World Turns 8,10
2 00-'-0ays of Our Loves 3,4, 15; $10,000 Pyramid 6, 13. Guiding
L1ght 8,10
,
2 »-Doctors 3,4,15, Big Showdown 6,13, Edge Of Night 8,10
3 00-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13, Price I~

Douglas 13
·
4 3()-Bewotched 3, Merv Grlf,fln 4, Mod Squad 6; Lucy Show 8;

FRIDAY, APRIL 11,1975

PubliC ollffairs tO; Bl'ue Ridge Quartet 13
6.35-Col umbus Today 4

ouaranfHd.

1 3G-How To Survive A Marrtage 3,4, 15, Let's Make A Deal

Gilligan's Island ·6, Tatlletales 8; Sesame Streel 20,33;

6 · 25-Farm Report 13
.
6·3G-Fiye Mtnutes to Live By 4, News 6; Btble Answers 8.

Gas, Sewer

Tomorrov-( 8, 10, To Be Announced 33

12 45-E lectrlc Company 33
12 55-NBC News 3.
I 00-News J; All My Children 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8, Young and
The Restless 10; Not For Women On ly 15

'' Movie l'he Beauf tfu l Blonde from Bashful Bend, '' 10, Mike "

AM FORCED TO
PROTECTION!

CALL TODAY THE ABOVE
9 18 tfc•
PROPERTIES SHOULD ~----- --- - ------~
· ------~~~-,
SE LL FAST, DON' T BE
The
Gallia·Meigs
Community Action
LEFT OUT IN THE COLD
Agency is seeking applicants for the position
992-2259
of Director of the Head Start Program. The
applicant should possess a degree in Early
Childhood
Education,
Social
Work,
Psychology, or related fields, plus relevant
expe~ience in working with disadvantaged
children.
•
Applications are available from the
Agency office in the Gallia and Meigs County
NEW LISTING - 3 room cabin
Court Houses or the Cheshire Community
at Forked Run Lake 52900.00
Center. Inquiries or resumes may be directed
MIDDLE PORT - 4 room
to:
Joseph Barsolli, Executive Director,
house on large lot Bath, nat
Gallia·
Meigs CAA, Box 686, Pomeroy, Ohio
gas heat, and porches Make us
45769.
an offer. Want 58500.00.
DEXTER - Large older home,
bath , furnace heat, drilled

.
'

I

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

peted Utility R All electroc,

Herbicide-Insecticide

985-3831
Chesler, Ohio

0 ET BEATEN

~

12 OO-Jackpot 1 3,15; Password 6. 13. Bob Braun' s 50·50 Club 4;'
News 8,10
12 »-Blank Check 3, 15, Split Second 6, IJ, Search For

4·00-Mr. Carton 3,

6·45-Morning Report 3; Farmtime 10

CAR ·P-ET~stallat 10n:i 1

Pioneer Seed Corn
2 Pet •. Discount
Thru April15

GRASS SEEDS
CHESTER AGRICO
SERVICE CENTER

ME'AIII

Movie "Generatton" 8, Mov1e " Unde rwor ld, W SA " 10.

Janak! 33
12 »-Wide World Special 6

1 00-Tomorrow 3,4, New s 13

Home Building
Room Additions
and Garages
3 21 75

,; LUM"Ir/1..;&gt;, heat1'ny, repa 1r
and mstatlatlon , electncal.
water pump repa1r , roofmg,
root and house pamtmg ,
genera l repa 1r
Reasonable
rates , free es t imates 15 yr
expe n ence
Call Charles
Srn c larr , 985 4121 or 992 2221
4 4 12tc

- ------ --------Real Estate For 5ale

--------------LAMB S, 2 mutes, 2 goats and

-

$TCADY O N. 6URU: ...
I HAVE AN IPEII!

Ph. 985-4102

~

Your Chevy Dealer"

· ---~----------

SACRED PERo; ON!
;;.WHAT CAN THIS

'

TH IN K OF
THE BLOW TO MY
PUBLIC IMAGE IF
l-· 6URU MAHA·
5wAMI BA600-·

Chest11r. Ohio

HElL

949·3604

Building Homes

STEREO. modern style, am tm
rad 10 , 4 speake r
sound
syr.tem, 6 track tape Balance
$104 79or terms Call 992 3965
4 B ttc

'

S HOW UP Ill/
6UR 6 0 111
TOUR I' D 5 AY
IT MEANS YOU

HIS

11 3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15. Wide World SpeCia l 13, FBI 6,

LOSER

We Specialize In

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

THE DAILY SENTINEL

I

We have the right deal for you. Large m·
ventory of 75 Model at great saving - good
service after the sale.

For Sale

WANTED

I
I

Racme , 0.

______

A THREAT OF
VIOLENCE
AGAINST MV

Construction Co.

11 4 1 mo

NEIGLER
BUILDERS SUPPLY

'3898

Open Eves. Til8

11. 00-News 3,4,6,8, tO, 13,15, ABC News 33

..:.

rad1o Save $1500 from 75 model wtth similar equtpment

992-2126

10 3G-Horace Marshall 33

4101 mo

8' Fleets1de. whtte &amp; moss green, loaded wtth destrable
• delu xe equtp m cludmg automptiC I? steering &amp; brakes,

11

9 3()-Movle "A Matter of Wile . and Dealh"-3,4, 15

PLEAD FOR POLICE

PH. 949-5184

Ph \192.3993

Movie "A Htgh Wmd In Jamatca" 10. Washington Debates
for the '70s 20, To Be Announced 33

10 00-Happy Endongs 6, 13, News 20. Woman 33

Bissell BrothelS

FREE ESTIMATES

Syracvse, Oh1o

1969 CAD Conv fu l l power. 1964 FORD r,, to n p1ckup, 292
l'.ape deck, low mileage good
eng rne 5300 ~h one 992 74 06
trres A steal at $1495 Phone
4 9 31p
304 773 56 13
--------------4 10 Jtp 1969 PONTIAC . Don Say r e, 632
- - ----- -----~--Grant , M 1ddlepor t. Oh10
1968WILDCAT a c pb , ps
493tp
Good condrtron , S400 Phone
John lh le, Rt
1 Rac1ne
F OR RENT rn M1dd l ep~rt 6
PhOne 949 4B92
rm t10use a nd bath , rent very
4 10 3tp
reasonab le Ca ll 992 2731
6 ROOM house W1lh bath, 3
4 8 tfc
bedroom, full basement, gas
1969 FORD Tonno , VB S500
Phone 992 3463
heat h w floor wall to walt
3 TRAILERS for rent One 3
1~
carpet Close lo sch ool rn
4 8 Jtp
bedrm ,
m rle
from
Pomeroy Phone 992 3097
Harrrsonv11 1e on 14 3 Other 2
3 9 52tc
..._
bedrm tra il ers off 143 at
Krngsbury
Phone 742 3123
2 BEDROOM trad er an d lot 1n
4 8 3tc
town Phone 992 3975 or 992
- rANLEY Products for sa te
2571
J BEDROOM mob rl e home .
Phone 742 3762
4 9 tfc
washer and dryer 11 2 bath s.
3 9 26tc
uti11 t 1es pard $42 50 week 308
Page St , Midd lepor t , Oh ro
TRA I LER wheels and ax les BEAUTIFUL new home 1on
take , J bedrooms. bath &amp; / 2 ,
3 4 He
tandem , 8 ft wrde overall
ca rpet 1ng, drapes, b19 den
Elec brakes, sprrngs and
Ca ll 992 3493
tfc
l1res Phone 992 5885
2 BEDROOM mob1le home 1n
3 24
4 6 6tp
Syracuse No childr e n or pets
Call 9921441 after 6 p m
1973 MOTORCYCLE Honda 100 2 BEDROOM home, new Depos1t r equired
CL Road and trail b1ke Good
foundat ron roof1ng , cement
3 11 tfc
condltron
Contact
Greg
porches, thermo p.:tne wm
Dunn rng a t 949 4341
dows storm doors , nat ur a l
F URNI S HED
apartm t' nl
4 6 7tp
gas f urnace , wh1te a lum mu m
adults only 1n Mrddleport
s1d1ng btack,shutters , k 1t chen
Phon e 992 3874
cab1nels, paneltng rerl rng
3 25 tfc 10 • B&amp;D Radtal arm saw, l1ke
trte , floors ref1n rshed , low
new
Mlllrng machme for
heat1ng brll n1ce locat1on, c1ty
metal, $300, a1r compressor
3 and 4 ROOM furnrsl'1ed and
water Phone 965 4102
Without motor, cos t S300. will
unflJrnr she d
apartments
4 4 26tc
take $65 R1dmg mowers and
PllOne 992 5434
others, lots of guns , many S &amp; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4 12 tft
w handguns Will trade for 2 WOODED lo ts a ppr ox 21~
anyth1ng of value Wanted
acres each One has sep t1 c
PRIVATE meetmg ro om for
drtll press and Gravely
tank , rural water available
any organ1za t1on , phone 992
Tractor F1fe s, 711 Th 1rd St ,
Phone 742 662 1 $2,000 each
3975
M idd leport, phone 992 7494
4 10 3tc
3 11 ff
4 6 6tc
---------- ----

CARRIER.

I

'3.7 64

Po"!erot

ALUMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

LARRY LAVENDER

New '74 Chevy ¥z ton

3 rooms , w1th
large bath , tabletop range
large c loset East Marn St ,
Pomeroy See to apprec 1at e
Phone GallipOlis dunng day
446 7699 , evenr ngs 446 9539
410tfc

The In te rstate Commerce
Comm 1SS1on
hereby
g t ves
'couNTRY Mobile Home Park
not 1ce that by order dated
Rt 33 , ten miles north of
March 20, 1975, 1f !las been
Pomeroy
L a rg e l ots w1th.
determined that the proposed
concrete pat1os , Si dewa l ks,
abandonment
ot
t he
rlJnners and
off
street
Chesapeake and Oh10 Rat l way
parkmg
P_.one
992
7479
Company's llne_i!nd track be
12 31 tfc
tween Ol dtown anti GallipOliS, a
dtsfance of 62 84 m lies , line and L- - - ---------,-...J
track near Pomeroy, a d1stance , - - - - - - - - - - - - FARM house, 6 rooms, modern
of 3 05 m lies, and operations
co nv en ien ces
garden
garage, and barn on Tanners
only between GalliPOliS and
Run Longswo rth Homest ead
Pomeroy , a diSta nce of 17 8
off S t Rt 124, Rac 1ne , Oh1o
miles , all 10 Hock 1ng, Vrnton,
R F D $100 month , If des1red
Gallia and Me 1gs Count1es.
'"
22 acres bottom land for
Ohto, 1f approved by t he
&lt;}ddrtronal $25 per month
Comm ISSlon , does not conSti tut e
mator
Federa l
act1on
Must turn 1sh references
a
Significantly affect1ng the
Wnte or cal l Cha rl es A
Dobb1n
17 A rl 1ngton St ,
quality of the human en ·
MASON,
W.VA.
PawtlJ c ket , Rhode Island
v1ronment w1th1n the mean1ng
02860 , or 140 1) 72 3 4747
ot the Nat 1onat Env1ronmentat
CONTACT •
4 4 121:::
Pbllcy Ac t of 1969 ( NEP A L 42
U S C ss 4321 , et seQ. , and that
2 BEDROOM f ur n ished apt ,
preparation
a detai
led en
de posit r equ1 r ed
No pets
monmenlal· of
•mpact
slalemenl
Phone 949 38 11
will not be reQUired under
4 4 6tp
SeCIIOn 4332{2) fC ) Of the
•

,

STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING· SOFFITT
GUTTERS . AWNINGS

6 3Q--Karen 6, 13
9 00-Streets of San Francalsco 6,13: Movie "Crawlspace" 8,

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

GLEN R.
BISSELL

Blown mto Walls &amp; AHies

'

60K12

~pT- ~;; ~;w ,

Help Wanted

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

brlna you
extra cash
f 0r
shopping sprees

SPECIALLY
PRICED

Ph. 99~·21 74.

Blown .
Insulation Services

Atr · condttton , tmt. glass, body mldg, custom intenor ,
roof carrier &amp; atr deflector, turbo hydromattc, power
steer ing , wheel tr im , w htte wa ll tires, AM radto, new car
title , full warran ty

Report 20,33

Charles lisle, Syracuse,
Ohio. Carl Jacob, Sales
Representative.

SMITH NILSON
MOTORSL.INC.

FREE ESTIMATES

LARGE
CPcmel; d si-;;;- Pi

NOW seltmg Fu lle r Brus~
Products, phOne 992 3410
1 14 tf&lt;

I
I
1

New Chevrolets

THURSDAY, APRIL 10,1975
8 oo-:-Mov1e "Con spi ra cy of Terror," 3,4. 15, Barney Miller 6,13;
The Waltons 8, 10; Bill Moyers' Journal
lnternatlot;~al

windows, soding. slorm ~oors
ond wondows, rliling, phone

largest
Radiator to •
~mallest Heater 'Cqre
Nalllan B1gp1
R-_dja.l9.r.Jm.cfjlllst

4 10 1 mo

New '74 Vega Sta. Wagon

For Rent
1 BEDR OO M modu lar home ,
furn1shed UIJIIt•es pa•d near
Pomeroy Ntee locatron No
c hrl dren or pet s Phon e 992
7011 or ~ 92 7 666
4 9 41p

'TRAILER SPACE . J/• mil~
nor th of Me 1QS H 1Qh School on
REMODELING
plumb1ng ,
old Rt 33 Phone 992 2941
neatrng, and al l types of
1 23 tt c
general
repatr
Work
guaran t eed
20 years ex
us
per1en ce Phon e 911 2 2409
storage space 1n rear lm
3 11 tfc
medrate possess ron , 11 6 Mam
St , Pomeroy Cal l Collect 1
304 529 3369
W I LL DO small gard en
4 10 3tc
p l owmg wrfh Grav ely garden
tr actor Phone 992 7492 or 992
3716
2 BEDROOM
T ra iler
'"
4 6 6tp

POMEROY LANDMARK

Classified Ads

THE BALANCE OF OUR

.T elevision log for easy yiewing

On aluminum replacement

PHONE 992-7(»65

Road Ha s ba th &amp; 1 2, washer ,
dryer , drshw a sh er Phone 992
7416
4 a 41 c

-~--------~------"-------------~-----

RE'PORT WOULD
CLEAR HIM !'•

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES
the
!From
BUII'dozer

Reasonable Rates

MOB ILE home for sat e on
acr e ground on Fl at woods

Employment Wanted

9._Jnk W. C.rsey, Mgr.
6'il fl'ftone"2·2111

1

Pleasant Ridge
Pomeroy, Ohio

'Mobile Homes. For Sale

Yard Sale

1 WILL keep an elderly woman

E Mam

0. l LAUDERMILT
ROOFING

I

6·HOUR RIGOR MORTIS

. - -· _ ·-

FREE ESTIMATES

Notice
m my home

Wan!P.tt To Buy

Notice

WE WISH to express our Stn

r---

THE

What do you do now'

'

'

Y&lt;

:S~en-d~$7
1~f~ar~JA7C~O~B~Y~M~O~D~E~R~N '
book to " Wm at Bridge," (c/o this
newspaper). P.O Box 489. Radio
City Slat/on, New York, NY 10019. ,,
•j

lNEWSPAIJE:It ENTERPRISE ASSN I

HEE HEf
tieE IE
HE! HE£
!lEE HEe

�•

9- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday, ApnllO, 1975
DICK TRACY
I PASS
I SPOT ABOUT
10:20 EVERY {VIORNING, BUT
I NEVER SAW A CAA LIKE TMAT.

J

.,
~

:, Card of Thanks

AS OF
A p r il 1
1975 The
Syra c u se Home U l lltttes

cere t hank s to all our netgh

bors, fnends . and re la ttves

'who

were

so

kma

thoughtful when my

Company will be col leclmQ
their gas bills at the fo rm er
offt ce tn Syra cu se
~
4 I lOtc

and

h ~sband

Purtey Ka rr , passe d away I
wtsh t could thank each one
personelty f or the many
._ ,beaut iful f lowers . ca r ds , and
au the food tha t was brought
'" May God nchty b l ess ea ch
' one Your k mdness wdl never
be forgotten
Mrs
Purtey
Karr and fam tly
4 10 He

196J A N o otO er coms Wrll pa)'
2Jc for d1m es 60c for Quar
ters 51 20 tor ha l ves Wrll
also -buy , sel l or trad e U ;,
co1ns and curr en c y Ca ll
Roger Wam sley 7&lt;12 3651
4 4 12tp

Y A RD SA LE , ftrst road aft er
yo u pa ss WMPO radtO stat ton

9 5 Thur sday and F nday Lot s
of children 's tl e m s
Phon e
99 2 346 3
4 9 Jtp
------- - - - - YARD S ALE
170 Mulberry
Pom eroy
Frrday
and
Saturday , 9 a m td dark
410 2tc
- - - - - - - -- - - - - - - -

Phone 985 3952
4 10 31p

--------------YARDSALE and tar wash , 5th
St , RaCine Saturday , April
12, 12 ~ 30 to 7 30 p m Spon
sorPd by the Southern Junior
HlgtrB 5 Class
4 10 ttc

YARD SA LE rn Ra c 1ne IUS! off
124 on Broadway St r eet
I t em s too numerous t o
mentron Call 949 5 194 9 t o
&lt;l8 3tc
5 pm
YA RD SA LE 3 F a mdy Frr day
and Satu r day at Donna
W i lliam son res 1dence, Salem
St , Rut l and Clo thes , drapes .
b edspreads
e le c
mrKer
A von bottle s baby carseat
and manv 'Ot her rtems
Startrng at 9 a m Phone 742

1 7 tf c

FREE
WELDING
CLINIC

65'1?

4 10 21c
2' F AMILY y ard sa te, Fnday
and Saturday , April 11 12
Lots of c totlles and 1tems to
choose from on old R I 33 tust
1 J mile past Me1g s Co
fatr
grounds trrst tratl er on left
across from Rock Spr rni,JS
Me t hod1st
Church
Free
coffee W1l l be served
4 9 Jtc

Landmark Store
Pomeroy

WED., APRIL 16
7:30PM
Rtvet Weldmg , Soldermg,
Cutttng, etc.
Free Refreshments!
Everybody Welcome!
Corne! See! learn'

s E LL your mob•l e hom e tor
cash 15 hom es wanted , 1958
thru 1972 mode ls Phone (614)
4d6 1425 , GallipOliS
J 9 7Btc

4 RM furn1 shed

3658

apt PhOne 992
.:1 6 tf c

3 R M and bath furnrshed ap t
Uft l rlies pa rd 356 North 4t h
St Midd leport
d 9 ttc
1

BEDROOM mobile home
Phone A l bert Hil l Rac 1ne
949 2261
4 6 6tc
mobt l e
home Roush Lane , Cheshire.
Oh10 Phone (304) 77 3 5423
4 3 7tp

F URNI S H ED

counory

ORDER
1'01JR
southern
vegetab l e plants now for
delivery around May 1
Charles R Harr1s Phone 84 3
1693
4 3 18t ~

garden

Help Wanted

AUCTION , Thursday n rght , 7
at Mason AuctiOn,,
p m
Horton St ' In Mason , W Va
Cons1gnments welcome
Phone (304 1 773 5471
2 2 tfc

'140 week fulftime

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

'84 week partime

ANNOiTNCINt.:&gt; new hours
SKATE A WAY , 7 30 to 10
p m , Wednesday , Frrday
and Saturday Available fo r
private part1es Mo.'!day
TuesdaY
and
Thursdav
nrgh t s,
Sat urd ay
and
Sunday afternoons Phone
985 3929 985 9996 or 985 4141
3 30 12tc

Must have car and
willing to learn .
Call Personnel Dept.
446·9673
BEAUT I C I AN wanted , take
over clrent e le F u ll or pa r t
l1me Phone 992 2840 or 992
7495
4 B 61 C

INTERSTATE COMMERCE
COMMISSION
NOTI.CE
AB IB (S ub- No 10)

CHESAPEAKE AND OHIO
n eeded
1n
RAILWAY
CO.MPANY BABY SITTER
Mason , w va for ii! school
ABANDONMEN T OF THE
age Childr en PhOne (304 ) 77 3
POMEROY BRANCH SER
5195
V ING Tt;iE STATIONS OF
4 9 6tc
U NION FURNACE , STARR .
NEW P LYMOU TH , QRLAND,
CREOLA ,
McARTHUR , r------ - - - - --,
DUNDA S, ORETON, HAW KS,
MINERTON , VINTON
810
WELL , K ERRS GALLIPOLIS
KANAUGA ,
CHESHIRE ,
MIDDLEPORT,
AM
SASSADOR
SIDING
A ND
POMEROY.
ALL
IN
HOCKING , V IN TON, GALLIA
AN D MEIGS COUNTIES , OH 10

CARRIER
WANTED
On West Main St.
an~ Monkey Run
in Pomellrj
The Daily Sentinel

Large yard and

Phone 992 78644 10 3tp

--------

J

Ph. (614 992-2156

NEPA
It was

concluded . among
ol her lh •ngs, 1hal lh e en L _ _..!(.:!3,0:!4L).!.7.!.7,3::,-5"'3"'8"'6vtronmental 1mpacts of. the
proposed act 1on are cons1dered

Wanted TO Buy

lnsog nifocanl because adequate

h1ghways ex1st .n the area tc
accommodate any mcreases 1n OLLJ rurnrture, 1Ce ooxes , ordsS
motor earner traff 1c necessary
beds, or comp lete households
to
replace
current
rail
Wnte M D Mrller. Rt 4,
operatrons , the resu1t 1ng atr ·Po meroy , OhiO Call 992 7760
poltut 1on , rntrus1ve no1se , fuel
10 7 74
consumpt1on. and sa fety hazard .
-------------alterations would be m 1nor . and U SED brush hog for a Grave l y
the re are no h 1St0r 1c or ma1or
tra ctor Phone 99 t. ::;_,u2
eco!og1ca1 1mpa~ts 1nvotved
4 8 3tc
Th 1s determ1nat ion was based - - - - - - - - - - - - - - upon the staff p repara llon and WOULb t1ke to buy 1 to 2 acres
co ns1derat 10n
of
an
en
of l and I n Ra c .ne area
v1ronmental
threshold
Preferably wllh well Phone
assessment su rv ey , wh1ch tS
(304) 773 5404
available on reQuest to the
4 a 5tp
tnterstale Commerce Com - - - - - - - - - - - - - - miSSion. Off 1Ce of Proc eedmgs, HOR SES&amp; P ONIE S Phone742
washington, 0
C
~0423 ,
3264
te lepl'lone 202 343 2086
4 3 ttc
Interested .persons
may - - - - - - - - - - - - - - comment on th1s matter by
k
b 1
ttl 1ng the 1 r statements 1n USED I H McCorm1c 46 a er
wrttmg w 1th the Int e rstat e
for parts
Pllone 992 5917
com mer ce
Comm rss 1on 1
Hu gh
L e 1fh e1t,
Rt
'2 ,
Washington , 0 C , 20423, on or
Pomeroy
tc
4 10 3
belore April 30. 1975
---------------This negat1ve envtronmental
determ i nation shall become WANTED Old lJpqght p1anos.
final unless good and suffiCient
any condrt1on Pay1ng S. IO 00
reason demonstratmg why an
each First floor only Wnte
envJronme'nta.f
lmpa'C f
and g1ve drrect 1ons to W1 tt en
statement should be prepared
P1ano Co , so.: 188 Sa rd1s ,
for this act10ll 1S subm1tted to
Ohm 43946
the Com m tssion by the above
4 10 6tp
spec1f1ed date
SIMMON S meta l twtn bed ,
14) 10, 1tc
model B 42 Phone 985 3951
10 Jtp
- _.
..._
-4 ---

·--------------

i

REG POLLED Hereford bul l
Pllone 247 2196
4 6 6tc

COMRLE TE
excavaflng
equ1pment
New 350 Case
do'zer w1th 280 hours Ford
8500 Endloader, backhoe
New co nd1t1on Also 2 T
Dump w1th low bouy Down
paym e n t.
take
over
payments Phone 742 6621
4 10 Jtc

' cASH pa1d for al l makes and
models of mobrle homes
Phone area code 61' 4239531
t
413ffc

Internationa l Truck , 1970, 1 t
ton , very good s 1600 Phone
949 3500
4 10 6tp

I
1

1:
I

. -- ~-- - -----~---

____________ _

II

I

GROCERY busmess for sate
Bu 1ldmg for sale or lease
Phone 773 -5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m tor appointment
3·10 nc

JUNK dUtos, complete ano
delivered to our yard We l)lck
up auto bod.1es and buy all
kmcf\ of $crap metals and
~ron R 1der's Salvage , St Rt
124, Rt 4, F'omeroy, 01'\io
Ca II 992 5468
.......,..._
10 17 tfc

______

STAN D ING limbers Contact
Pomeroy Forrest Products
P 0 Box 726. Pomeroy , Oh1o
Ph on e 9p2 5965
3 30 12tc

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

I

1969 DUO 14 f 1b erg tass boat
1970 Ev1nrude 40 HP motor
1969 Shorel 1ne Tilt Trailer all
5afely and sk 1 equr pm en t
very good conctrt 1on , $1,200 or
best offer Call Apn t 12 and 13
on l y please Phone 985 3830
4 9 Jtp

IND IAN JOE's Sports and CB
Shop Spec rats fOr 10 days w1th
th1S ad - One only, Couner
mobrle am ssb , $269, One
only, Rovce 602 , $142 SO. One
only Royce 605, S159 50, One
Sha k espeare TMA , $24 95
One only Shakespeare double
trucker, S2G 50 , One only,
Sh ake speare Wh i p , S8 95 , One
only , HY Gain G P .. Sl2 95
One only 0 10 11 desk m1ke.
$4 0 95, One only , astat1c 555
no1setess tru ck m 1ke, S25 95
One Unemetr1c Base, $185
One only Coleman lantern,
S17 95 , One only used 22
marltn bolt actron, S35 One
only cap ball pistoL S32 50
One only , new 22 Sidew mder
w mag cytmder , $42 50 , One
on l y , 25 auto , $42 50 One
only, 32. 30 p 1stol. SJJ SO Stop
and save at t he lndtan's SAVE WAMPUM , JOB Page,
Mrddleport, Phone 992 3509
4 10 101c

_____

I
I

For Sale

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

3·25·1 mo.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

D &amp; D TREE Tr1mmtng , 20
years experience
I nsured,
fre e es t1m a t es Call 992 3057
Coolville (1) 667 3041
'421 2t p

Pomeroy

ijb,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~':"~~~~~~

Real Estate· For Sale

________

FAM I LY
milk cow
F1ne 7 RM HOUSE and bath. most l y
reg1stered J ersey
Good
carpeted, l arge lot Sllown bY
M il ker Phone 742 6722
appt
234 Mu l berry Ave
4 6 6tp
Phone 992 34 39
--- - - - - - - - - -- - - 4 10 3tc
l.J SE O parts, Frye's Tru ck and - - · - - - - - - - - - - - - Auto Parts, Ru t land Oh 1o 5
RM
HOUSE,
Bath ,
'l
Phone (6 14) 742 6094
bedrooms, gas heat w1th to t
550 Sou th Th1rd Avenue,
1 22 7Btp
- - - - -- - -- - - - -- Middleport Phon e 992 5078
F I SH BAIT - f1Sil ba11 -we have
4 10 3tp
our ba rt 1n , n 1g ht crew te rs , - - - -- - - - - - - - - - la rg e meal worms worms, BRICK HOU SE on Second Sf.
red worms blood baif. tnd1an
Pomeroy downtown Su1table
Joe's Sp ort and CB Shop , 308
fo r ltvtng quarters upsta1rs,
Page St , Middleport Phone
sma ll busmess down , otf1ce or
992 3509
home
W1th1n
walk1ng
4 9 30 tc
d1stance of all stores Call 992·
- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - 3489
4 10 3tc
8 FT transport d iSC , 4 x 16
Pllone 949 576 3
house fo r sale 1n
4 9 4tp 3 BEDROOM
Rutland , double garage , barn ,
--------------garden space Call 742 6456
Cl"OSE OUT on new Z 1g Zag
4 10 31c
sewmg mach1nes For sewmg
- ------------ stretch fabrrcs, buttonholes .. BUY NOW &amp; ~~-~.vE Low, low ,
fan cy deS1gn s, e t c Pamt
down payments , B pet m
terest 30 yr tman cing on n ew
sl1ghtly bl em 1shed Choice of
carry1ng • case or sewing
homes 1n 3 Me 1gs County
stand. $4.9 80 cash or terms
locatrons, or BUILD on your
available Phone 992 7755
lot Phone 992 5976 or 992 5844
. 1218tfc
313tfc

----------- --- - ---- ----------SERV ICE slat10n and garage,
Rutland
Will f1nance or
lease Call 742 5052
4 9 26tc

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

all
electriC,
3
W HIR L POO L
automa t 1c MODERN
bedrooms , k1tchen, d 1n1ng
washer, l 1ke new
Phone
area, l1vmg room, bath Fu ll
Lutller Frrend, 949 4603
basement, part ially f 1nlstted ,
4 8 Jtp
laundry, recrea t 1on st orage,
workshop areas Three and
NEW &amp; USED t il l er s and cha1n
two t h1 rds acres on c R 28
saws A lso will repa 1r 498
near Rac-1ne Phone 949 3457
Locus t St , Middleport Oh 10
4 9 4tp
Phone 99 2 3092
4 8 3tc

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

pony Call George Frecker,
985 3827 after 0 p m
4 8 6tc

-·--·------------

FERTILIZER
10-10-10
$135.60
12-12-12
$148.00
5-20-20
$165.80
6-24-24
$181.00
5-10-15&amp;5· 10-10

2 AC RES With 1 ~ x70 t rader , 3
bedroom , 1 1h bath, diSh
washer, furniShed Also, 12 x
60 trailer With 16ft 11pout. air
cond1t1oned , washer dryer.
furn1shed $17,500 Phone 992
33 88

TUP.PERS Pl.kor4S -

21h

acres with some budding
sites 2 BR, bath, large l1ving
R , ktfchen &amp; dtntng R Part
basement, all new steel
sidmg , well water &amp; ' 1ty

waler JUST $10,500
POMEROY RT 4- Just 51h
m1 les out NEW home wtth 1
Acre of ground 2 BR , bath,
carpeted, full basement w1th
large rec room also car
carport,

Ctty

water

All

Y\)URS J UST 522.700.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 'NEW
HOME wolh 1 level acre 3
BR , bath, nice k1tch en &amp;
dmmg, lots of closets, uftltfy
R , all electnc. garage, all
carpeted wtth your chotce of

colors $20,000
•
RUTLAND - Close to
shoppmg, 2 BR. bath, llvong
R has f treplace Real n1ce
tnstde, carpeted, paneled,
tiled , n ew bath, garage,

porch, $9.500

I

TO A PULP!

~IINr, Electric,

tines,

lnslllltd.

NEAR POMEROY - 6 room

f

&lt;Sl'A~,

FFa,\ bRMJ'MAIIJ AIJD -:DMCTHI~ I~ A

8-K EXCAVATING
OOMPANY
I

INSON
SMALL

READY ~LIX CONCRETE ae .
l1vet;ed right to your protect
F as't · a nd
easy
Free
~s t 1 m ates
Pllone 992 -328"'
Goegle1n Ready M1x Co,
Midd lepo rt Ohio

6 30 tfc
SEWING MACH I NE , Repa 1r s,
serv1ce. all makes, 992 2284
The Fabnc Shop. Pomeroy ,
Author1zed Smger Sa tes and
Service We sharpen Sc1ssors

c

BRA07o R IY.'Auctlonee(
Complete Serv1ce
Phone949 3821or949 316\
Racme , Oh10
Cr11t Bradford
5 1 tfc

'IOU

I
II I

ttc

L AWSON &amp; McCoy Pam t mg &amp;
Roof1ng Pamtmg H\S1de or
out, Roof1ng hole '" root or
new roof Call 367 0456 Free
esllmates
4 9 12tc

tv t LL TR I M or cut trees an&lt;
shrubbery
Clean
ou
Dasements, a tt1c , etc Phon•
949 3221 or 742 4441
4 B 26tc

ULABNER
BUT THAR'S ONI...Y ONE
MARY~! ALL AMERICA NE"S'PS
NOW THAT EVERYT'HING
EI.SE: IS 'SO ROTTE~rr-

MU..LYLJNG
0 ' IDIOTS
COU L D BG

WE'LLGOTO
HOLLYWOOD AN'
BEG HG'R TO

AMBASSADOR TO
FRAfVKSNSTAN

'r

IS
'

GREAT COUNTRY STEREO

old Bath, gas floor furnace,

TUNE TO WMPQ.FM 92.1

WINNIE
:THAT'S OKAY,
WINNIE . I. KNOW 'THAT

FROM

THIIOU6H A DIFFICULT
PERIOD R16HT OOW.

6:00 A.M. TIL MIDNIGHT

'8 6tp

Persons possessing an Interest In an unclaimed fund Item

Buy it now or use our
Convenient
Lay-Away
Plan I

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

Herman Grate

Mason, W.

Va:

a claim

BARNEY

therefor wl/1

be furnished upon recelpl of written Inquiry.
MIDDLEPORT
McCormick, William T.. SJ7.110
POMEROY
Jeffers, W , Box 146, S28 00; Jelfers, W., Box 146, SJ5.00;
McNeil, E¥elyn II. lrmard, ~I. 3, $46. 15 ; Watkins, William,
S89 54, Young, Mllry AM, 1178.74
,
PORTL~ND
Kosk1, M , &lt;·O Richard Dunbar, RD 1, U9 00.
RACINE
Durfee, James A.. S28 03.
REEDSVILLE
Canter, Janet C.. Box 129, 1117.70,
RUTLAND
Franklin, James. RR 1, 143.00; McKenrle, H., Box 145,

V 'f\1
.A__}

Now arranre the elr&lt;led letteri

t-..._

to fonn the surpriH an~wer. u

su1gested. by the abot'e cartoon.

FER BEIN'TARDY
TODAY, JUGHAID ··

'IE CAN WEAR
TH'DUNCECAP

Fo&lt; Frldty March 11. 1175
ARIES (March 21-Aprll

I

will be dtHtcult to get a handle

ROBBER MOTHER

Hlillt.N lo Pill flu s 'gm ""'"'
lwt~( - YOUR SHIRT

on thmg s today Much of what
you destre to do wtll be beyond
your control

1111 (I

GEMINI (May 21.JWIO 20)Be
ca reful how yo u treat frrends
today Thoughtless actions
could terminate a good and
long-standtng relattonship

CANCER (June 2HUiy22)Pay
extra heed to things reftectmg
on your honor and reputat1on
Your actions are betng observ-

DOWN

I Beyon~

2 D1vis10n word
3 Act m
(Lat.)
concert
11 Musical
ds )
work
( 2 w.
12 Kind of shell 4 Not him
Yesterday's Answer
13 Enclosures 5 Stew
15
Little
lamb 25 Primrose 6 Reagan,
14 Cargo
owner
29 Shoppers'
to some
. weight
18 Refute
delight
15 Welcome - 7 Leagued
20 Love song 31 Sicilian
16 Potable
(3 wds.)
21 Snarl
c1ty
17 June 6, 1944 8 Australian
22 North Star 32 Fnjole
!$ .Trilby
Clly
,
23 Inter 34 Tease
20 Cubic meter 9 Flowerlike
(among
35
Kmd
_
alone
ornament
21
other things) of nurse
( 2 wds.)
13 Allee 22 Crowfoot
family plant '-.-+-t--1-23 Positive
'"
tenninal
21 Saturnalia
25 Denture
26 JerryLewis
27 .Pul on28 Industrious
colonist
29 As wntten,
in music
30 Spider's
creation
33 College
cheer
(2 wds.)
35 Madeira
3ti Exemplar
:r7 Sicilian
volcano
38 Twilled
fabric

It:

QJPSTWQ

CWZ,

RVA

ALV

KVJX

BV

AVRR

WVYA

DVJTPND
XPN,

DAV'H

AP

ALCA'D
FVTWQ

ZNRR -CZZTDPW
WHAT TOOK ME 50
LON6,MIZ PRUNELL'I
WUZ ·PICKIN' 'IOU
THIS BOKAY OF
WILD FLOWERS,

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Now:

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)1t

sv

as listed below may address an Inquiry lo The Ohio
concerning the manner of presenting

ru

NE:WSPAPER'~

COMPOSING ROOAI.

CRYPTOQuon;
..,

NOTICE OF NAMES OF PERSONS
APPEARING TO BE OWNERS
OF UNCLAIMED FUNDS
· MEIGS COUNTY

Yemnlay's Cryploquote: HALF OF US AI\E BUND, FEW.
OF US FEEL, AND WE ARE ALL DW.-WILLIAM OSLER
(0 ltU ICID&amp; F"'"'" SJDII1&lt;alo,IAC.)

ed by hosti le eyes
LEO (July 23-Aug 22)Now 1s
the time to dtscard worn out
tdeas that haven't accomplished the resu lts you had
hoped for Thmk or new ap.
preaches

VIRGO (Aug . 23·Stpt.
22)0on't rely on resources of
others One who prom tse d to
help you won't be able to now
through no fault of his own

LIBRA (Stpl. 23-0ct. 23)0ne
~~o _Is_ usually

a staunch any

~

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan.
19)You have a tendency today
to shut others out 1f they don t
comp ly readtly With your ways

It cou ld cos t you a fnend.

AQUARIUS (Jtn. 20· Feb.
19)Be careful while traveling
today If driving, keep your
eyes and m1nd on the road
Don't daydream or talk mcessa ntty to passengers

'~
•

"
' :~

PISCES (Ftb. 20-Merch
20)Contlnu e to be extra ...,
cau ttous and watchful in frnan- :~:
c1a1 dealrngs Count your
change Get rece1pts of all
transact1ons
'o

'"

~Your

·

~Birthday _,
Aprll11, 1975

"'
.. ,.,

You Wtll embark on a promts1ng new venture th1s year It w11! '"':
be a complete departure from
what you 've done m the past ;,;-;

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN ) •'"'

nv

'"
&lt;

10

NORTH
.K 2

• 10 8 6 4
•t0864
.864
WEST
.Q J 10
• J 95 3
• J 9 53
• 53

Both Yulnerable
West

North

East

Pass 6N T Pass
Pass
Opening lead - Q•

South

SN T

hiS lop red cards East diScard· :
ed a couple of small spades ""
Now came the lop clubs Wes~~
had to throw the 10 of spades '""
order to hang on lo hts reel .
Jacks Now Lancelot led his las~ ':
club, the deuce West had to
make another diScard ll had tQ ,
be hiS lasl spade He could nol •
spare a red Jack
....
Lancelol was now able to diScard dummy's kmg of spades '"
East won w1th the jack of clgbs":
and had lo lead a spade ~~
Lancelol's none and seven had: ~
become a winmng tenace ovel\1'
East's e~ght and SIX
""

LZ:H;J :1 t!&amp;,&gt;.&amp;D:;~
The b1ddmg has been

10

Pass

West

Nor1h

East

South

2•

Pass

3 It

""
'"

1.

"'

"
'"'
Pass 3 It
Pass 4 •
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Pass
5+
Pass
5•
Lancelot, the peerless kmghl P.ass 6 N.T Pass ?
u)
and bridge player, looked al hiS
You, South, hold
••
'"
collection of aces, kings and .KQ96 5 .A2 .K43.QP_:
queens with · almost as much · What do you do now '
, ...
awe as if he had found the Holy
A - Pass aad hope your part•ei6 1l
Grall Then he looked qver al knows !.What. be has been doiaJ.
Dmadan, hiS partner, and
TODA Y'S QUESTION
·'
dectded he had beller make
Instead
of
bidd1ng
three
spades;:~
sure to play notrulllp If the hand
worked out that way He opened your partner has b1d three , ,.
d1amonds over your three clubs ' J '
f1ve notrump
1
Pass

Dmadan wasn't sure what

that b1d meant bul .he thought
hiS kmg ol spades justified a
ra1se lo SIX

West opened the queen of
spades Lancelot won with h1s
ace m order to keep dummy's
one entry ahve Then he cashed

I KNOIII I'0 6ETLOST! NOlo),
WAAT IS 'f'OOR RfACTION
TO M'( ~&amp;lEM 1

.'

SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23·Doc.
21)Be on your best behavlot
socially or you may act so as tO'
come others to hold you 1n less
esteem

Lancelot slays 'em at tables

I DON'T WANT I.{OIJ 10 60

'

22)Pace yourself sensibly at
work today Don't tackle tasks
exceedt ng your talents or pre-' .....
sen t capabtl1t1es

WIN AT QRIDGE

WITH ME, M loiiTHOUT 'iOV

$37 00.

_.

will behave m a very un - _
cooperat tve manner today Be ~
forglvtng# H1s defection Is temporary
'

, One letter simply st1nds for another. In this simple A b
used for the three L'a, X for the two O's, etc Slnale letters,
1postropheo, the lenath 1nd formation of the wol'&lt;\1 are Ill
hillt.s. E1eh day the code letters 1re dllrerent.

.

361 East Broad Streel, Columbus, Olllo, .0215. Information

WHAT /.UO&lt;!!

IO·Jil-The 2000 Year Old Man 8,10

LIKE 'THEY
17117 oT IN THE

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's hpw to work
AXYDLBAAXR
11 LONGFELLOW

13DNNAZ: 1500NG'

Department of Commerce, Division of Unclai med Funds,

5011£ 8ABG1'!'-

9 3()--0dd Couple 6.13, Assignment America 33
10 oo-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15. Get Chn stie Love! 6, 13 , Paul
Nuchlms 33; News 20

(..\uwen lomorrowl

5 Laurence
or Tuck
10 Before

You mean
som'bodi.l qot
t' climb that
thin'?

Kit 33.

II

nonsense 1

authorized jobber for A1rco
Welding Supplies Camp line
of 1ndustr tal gases and
weldmg equipment
Phone
992 3768
4 8 5tc

McShane" 8, l O, Masterpiece Theatre 20 , Consumer Surv1val

"The Rookie" 6, Movie "It" 8, Mov ie "The Brides of Fu

by THOM~S JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Comparative
1 Stuff and
word

T"WIN-:C~y- ~~ch-;-~- ;-hop,

Macaroni 10

Manchu" 10. Janak! 33

~.ct)td'

GASOUNE ALLEY

'

8 31l-Choco and The Man 3,4, 15, We' ll Get By 8, 10; Wall Slreet '
Week 20,33.
·
9 00-Rockford Files 3.4, 15, Hot L Baltimore 6, 13, Mov1e "Kate

~~~~~~~~oom~~.~l~[X~I~I~J[IIIIJ
A.riJwl"r'

WMPO-FM

7 ROOMS and bath hOU$e , gas
furnace, central a1r con
d 1t 10n 1ng Phone 992 7001
•
4 8 6tc

J

Jumbl"' HURRY STOIC

-----------=--~-

the news 20,33; Treasure Hunt 10; To Tell The Truth 13

8 00-Sanford and Son M, 15; Night Stalker 6, t3; Comedy•
Special 8; WasH1ngtOfl Week In Review 20,33, Call II

11)You're going to make a
sudden change 1n d~recl1on A
se lf- 1n te rest you've been
vtgorously pursutng wtU no
longer appeal

l'l"ll&lt;"rd•v'•

:xCAVA TING , dozer, lo ader
and backhoe work, sepJic
tanks 1nsta1ted, dump t rucks
•and lo boys fo'r hire. Wilt haul
til~ dtrl. top soli. limestone &amp; '
gravel , Call Bob or Roger
•Jeffers , eta y ph one 992 7089,
n 1g ht phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc

T A NKS-~ i;;;;d
Modern San,tat1on, 992 3954 or

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

I

CR/&lt;;1&lt;'()0

49

Aviation Weather 20,33, News 10, J1mmy Dean 1J, I Spy 15
7 30-Porter Wagoner 3, Pop I Goes The Country 4, New Candid : Camera 6; Pop! Goes The Country 8; Black Perspective on ,

5 30-Movle "The Guns of Augu!)l'' &amp;

J I

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

7 00- Truth or Consequences 3, Probe Conference With ttle
Congressman 4, Bowling For Dollars 6, WCHS TV Report 0;

3 30-Movie "Harvey" 4

t1'REMIC

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

6 3()-NBC News 3,4, t5, ABC News 13; Bewitched 6, CBS News8, 10, Zoom 20.

, 1 ~,!i~i~~~~.;::~c;~~~·.~· ~~: Wide World In Concert 6. News 1 ; "
2 »-Star Trek 4

•

498 Locust 51.

20,33. Ironside 13

5 31l-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge lodge 20, Gel

11 00-News 3,4, ,8, 10, 13, 15,33
ll .JQ-Johnny Carson 3.4, 15, W1de World in Concert 13; Movie

Th1\ I! where they
moke the t~pe

~IVP;TE

Rtdtng Tractors

"""Ep TIC-

··-'1.1.-J ,_

I!A.SV PRONTO,
Y'HI:Aiit?

Chain
Precision
Ground
Afso Re&lt;oai"s On

3 29 lfc

DOLE R work , le nd cleanng by
the acre, hourly or contract
Farm ponds , roads , etc
Large dozer and operator
wtth over 20 years ex
penence Pullms Excavat1ng .
Pomeroy, OhiO Phone 992
2478
12 19 tf c

10 0()-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4,15, Joker's Wild 8,10, Dinah!
13
10 31l-Wheel Of Fortune 3,4, 15; Gambit 8,10
11 00 - H1gh Rollers 3,4,t5, One Lole to Live 6, Now You See II

REMEM6Eii:, TENNill.., WHEN
I GIVE 'IOU 'THE IA/OilD,

SALES&amp; SERVIcr:•.r-..
992-3092

5 00-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8. M1 ster Rogers' Neighborhood

Personality and Behavioral Development 33

Tattlefales 10, New Zoo Revue 13

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form rour ordmary "ords. '

SEPTIC
tanks
cleaned
Reasonab le rates Phone 446
4782 Gallipolis, JOhn Russell,
owner.

I Dream Of Jeanme 4, Som erset 15,

Smart 15; Electnc Company

33
8·25-Caplain Kangaroo 10
8·3()-Missoon· Impossible 6
9 00-A M 3; Ph1l Donahue 4.15. Cocky and Ho s Friends 8;
Mornmg W•th D J 13
9·25-Chuck White Reports 10
9 3()-Not For Women Only 3, Dinah! 6,, Galloping Gourmet 8.

~WJMffiM;u...J

W

--

Interna t ional Report 20

6 00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6, Electric Company 20,

11 55--Graham Kerr 8, Dan Imel's World 10

Phonlo 992.5»7 or992.1M1

Jri

Right 8,10, Bill Moyers' Journa l

3 3o-Qne Llfe to Live 13; Lucy Show 6, Match Game8, 10

Bonanza 15

Love Of Life 8, 10. Sesame Street 20,J3

mPNriStreet
Mlddltporl, Ohio

25 - per
ya rd
Call R 1chard West
Phone 843 2667
4 3 30tp

and fenced yard. 517,500 ,
YOUR BHT SAV1NGS IS IN
PROPERTY. INVEST NOW
AND
BUILD
YOUR
RETIREMENT,
OR
CHILDREN'S FUTURE .
CALL 9Y2·3Ji'&gt;,

Sunrise Semester 10

8, 10, E lectnc Company to.
11 31l-Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Brady Bunch 6, 13, News 4;

Construction &amp; Rtmocltl

•rOME
Improvement
and
Repa1r Service - Anythmg
f1x~d around the home , froiTI
roof to basement You W1l
• l1ke our work and rates
Phone 742 5081
12 29 :fc

front porch for only $7.500 00
POMEROY - Nice renovated
6 room home . Bath, carpetmg,
paneling, basement, porches

ALm6R FOR IKlM

BROw!.! ~ FOR. DA.DOI/!

LlmHiont &amp; Fill Dirt

Free Estimates
Phone: 949-5961
Emergency 949-2211 or
992-5700
4·2·75

510,000 00
MIDDLEPORT - 7 rooms. 2

frame home , only a few years

~'71H8 MAlt) 51'1. 131U..S, A

Commerci•t-Rnidentlal

Atr conditioning, plumbing,
heatmg , roofmg, spouting,
general sheet metal work .

well, cellar, shop, barn and a
good btg garden Want only

4,

8 00-Lassie 6, Captain Kangaroo 8. Popeye 10, . Sesame Street

Dozer,Beckhoe,Truckl

992 7J49

baths, "gas furnace, famtly
room , and basement
Nice
v1e w of the nver $22 ,500

6 DO-Sunrise Semtnar

6 15-Engllsh 505 J

7 00-Today 3,4,15, AM Amerlca6,13; CBSNews8

Work

6, 13, As the World Turns 8,10
2 00-'-0ays of Our Loves 3,4, 15; $10,000 Pyramid 6, 13. Guiding
L1ght 8,10
,
2 »-Doctors 3,4,15, Big Showdown 6,13, Edge Of Night 8,10
3 00-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13, Price I~

Douglas 13
·
4 3()-Bewotched 3, Merv Grlf,fln 4, Mod Squad 6; Lucy Show 8;

FRIDAY, APRIL 11,1975

PubliC ollffairs tO; Bl'ue Ridge Quartet 13
6.35-Col umbus Today 4

ouaranfHd.

1 3G-How To Survive A Marrtage 3,4, 15, Let's Make A Deal

Gilligan's Island ·6, Tatlletales 8; Sesame Streel 20,33;

6 · 25-Farm Report 13
.
6·3G-Fiye Mtnutes to Live By 4, News 6; Btble Answers 8.

Gas, Sewer

Tomorrov-( 8, 10, To Be Announced 33

12 45-E lectrlc Company 33
12 55-NBC News 3.
I 00-News J; All My Children 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8, Young and
The Restless 10; Not For Women On ly 15

'' Movie l'he Beauf tfu l Blonde from Bashful Bend, '' 10, Mike "

AM FORCED TO
PROTECTION!

CALL TODAY THE ABOVE
9 18 tfc•
PROPERTIES SHOULD ~----- --- - ------~
· ------~~~-,
SE LL FAST, DON' T BE
The
Gallia·Meigs
Community Action
LEFT OUT IN THE COLD
Agency is seeking applicants for the position
992-2259
of Director of the Head Start Program. The
applicant should possess a degree in Early
Childhood
Education,
Social
Work,
Psychology, or related fields, plus relevant
expe~ience in working with disadvantaged
children.
•
Applications are available from the
Agency office in the Gallia and Meigs County
NEW LISTING - 3 room cabin
Court Houses or the Cheshire Community
at Forked Run Lake 52900.00
Center. Inquiries or resumes may be directed
MIDDLE PORT - 4 room
to:
Joseph Barsolli, Executive Director,
house on large lot Bath, nat
Gallia·
Meigs CAA, Box 686, Pomeroy, Ohio
gas heat, and porches Make us
45769.
an offer. Want 58500.00.
DEXTER - Large older home,
bath , furnace heat, drilled

.
'

I

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

peted Utility R All electroc,

Herbicide-Insecticide

985-3831
Chesler, Ohio

0 ET BEATEN

~

12 OO-Jackpot 1 3,15; Password 6. 13. Bob Braun' s 50·50 Club 4;'
News 8,10
12 »-Blank Check 3, 15, Split Second 6, IJ, Search For

4·00-Mr. Carton 3,

6·45-Morning Report 3; Farmtime 10

CAR ·P-ET~stallat 10n:i 1

Pioneer Seed Corn
2 Pet •. Discount
Thru April15

GRASS SEEDS
CHESTER AGRICO
SERVICE CENTER

ME'AIII

Movie "Generatton" 8, Mov1e " Unde rwor ld, W SA " 10.

Janak! 33
12 »-Wide World Special 6

1 00-Tomorrow 3,4, New s 13

Home Building
Room Additions
and Garages
3 21 75

,; LUM"Ir/1..;&gt;, heat1'ny, repa 1r
and mstatlatlon , electncal.
water pump repa1r , roofmg,
root and house pamtmg ,
genera l repa 1r
Reasonable
rates , free es t imates 15 yr
expe n ence
Call Charles
Srn c larr , 985 4121 or 992 2221
4 4 12tc

- ------ --------Real Estate For 5ale

--------------LAMB S, 2 mutes, 2 goats and

-

$TCADY O N. 6URU: ...
I HAVE AN IPEII!

Ph. 985-4102

~

Your Chevy Dealer"

· ---~----------

SACRED PERo; ON!
;;.WHAT CAN THIS

'

TH IN K OF
THE BLOW TO MY
PUBLIC IMAGE IF
l-· 6URU MAHA·
5wAMI BA600-·

Chest11r. Ohio

HElL

949·3604

Building Homes

STEREO. modern style, am tm
rad 10 , 4 speake r
sound
syr.tem, 6 track tape Balance
$104 79or terms Call 992 3965
4 B ttc

'

S HOW UP Ill/
6UR 6 0 111
TOUR I' D 5 AY
IT MEANS YOU

HIS

11 3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15. Wide World SpeCia l 13, FBI 6,

LOSER

We Specialize In

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

THE DAILY SENTINEL

I

We have the right deal for you. Large m·
ventory of 75 Model at great saving - good
service after the sale.

For Sale

WANTED

I
I

Racme , 0.

______

A THREAT OF
VIOLENCE
AGAINST MV

Construction Co.

11 4 1 mo

NEIGLER
BUILDERS SUPPLY

'3898

Open Eves. Til8

11. 00-News 3,4,6,8, tO, 13,15, ABC News 33

..:.

rad1o Save $1500 from 75 model wtth similar equtpment

992-2126

10 3G-Horace Marshall 33

4101 mo

8' Fleets1de. whtte &amp; moss green, loaded wtth destrable
• delu xe equtp m cludmg automptiC I? steering &amp; brakes,

11

9 3()-Movle "A Matter of Wile . and Dealh"-3,4, 15

PLEAD FOR POLICE

PH. 949-5184

Ph \192.3993

Movie "A Htgh Wmd In Jamatca" 10. Washington Debates
for the '70s 20, To Be Announced 33

10 00-Happy Endongs 6, 13, News 20. Woman 33

Bissell BrothelS

FREE ESTIMATES

Syracvse, Oh1o

1969 CAD Conv fu l l power. 1964 FORD r,, to n p1ckup, 292
l'.ape deck, low mileage good
eng rne 5300 ~h one 992 74 06
trres A steal at $1495 Phone
4 9 31p
304 773 56 13
--------------4 10 Jtp 1969 PONTIAC . Don Say r e, 632
- - ----- -----~--Grant , M 1ddlepor t. Oh10
1968WILDCAT a c pb , ps
493tp
Good condrtron , S400 Phone
John lh le, Rt
1 Rac1ne
F OR RENT rn M1dd l ep~rt 6
PhOne 949 4B92
rm t10use a nd bath , rent very
4 10 3tp
reasonab le Ca ll 992 2731
6 ROOM house W1lh bath, 3
4 8 tfc
bedroom, full basement, gas
1969 FORD Tonno , VB S500
Phone 992 3463
heat h w floor wall to walt
3 TRAILERS for rent One 3
1~
carpet Close lo sch ool rn
4 8 Jtp
bedrm ,
m rle
from
Pomeroy Phone 992 3097
Harrrsonv11 1e on 14 3 Other 2
3 9 52tc
..._
bedrm tra il ers off 143 at
Krngsbury
Phone 742 3123
2 BEDROOM trad er an d lot 1n
4 8 3tc
town Phone 992 3975 or 992
- rANLEY Products for sa te
2571
J BEDROOM mob rl e home .
Phone 742 3762
4 9 tfc
washer and dryer 11 2 bath s.
3 9 26tc
uti11 t 1es pard $42 50 week 308
Page St , Midd lepor t , Oh ro
TRA I LER wheels and ax les BEAUTIFUL new home 1on
take , J bedrooms. bath &amp; / 2 ,
3 4 He
tandem , 8 ft wrde overall
ca rpet 1ng, drapes, b19 den
Elec brakes, sprrngs and
Ca ll 992 3493
tfc
l1res Phone 992 5885
2 BEDROOM mob1le home 1n
3 24
4 6 6tp
Syracuse No childr e n or pets
Call 9921441 after 6 p m
1973 MOTORCYCLE Honda 100 2 BEDROOM home, new Depos1t r equired
CL Road and trail b1ke Good
foundat ron roof1ng , cement
3 11 tfc
condltron
Contact
Greg
porches, thermo p.:tne wm
Dunn rng a t 949 4341
dows storm doors , nat ur a l
F URNI S HED
apartm t' nl
4 6 7tp
gas f urnace , wh1te a lum mu m
adults only 1n Mrddleport
s1d1ng btack,shutters , k 1t chen
Phon e 992 3874
cab1nels, paneltng rerl rng
3 25 tfc 10 • B&amp;D Radtal arm saw, l1ke
trte , floors ref1n rshed , low
new
Mlllrng machme for
heat1ng brll n1ce locat1on, c1ty
metal, $300, a1r compressor
3 and 4 ROOM furnrsl'1ed and
water Phone 965 4102
Without motor, cos t S300. will
unflJrnr she d
apartments
4 4 26tc
take $65 R1dmg mowers and
PllOne 992 5434
others, lots of guns , many S &amp; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4 12 tft
w handguns Will trade for 2 WOODED lo ts a ppr ox 21~
anyth1ng of value Wanted
acres each One has sep t1 c
PRIVATE meetmg ro om for
drtll press and Gravely
tank , rural water available
any organ1za t1on , phone 992
Tractor F1fe s, 711 Th 1rd St ,
Phone 742 662 1 $2,000 each
3975
M idd leport, phone 992 7494
4 10 3tc
3 11 ff
4 6 6tc
---------- ----

CARRIER.

I

'3.7 64

Po"!erot

ALUMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

LARRY LAVENDER

New '74 Chevy ¥z ton

3 rooms , w1th
large bath , tabletop range
large c loset East Marn St ,
Pomeroy See to apprec 1at e
Phone GallipOlis dunng day
446 7699 , evenr ngs 446 9539
410tfc

The In te rstate Commerce
Comm 1SS1on
hereby
g t ves
'couNTRY Mobile Home Park
not 1ce that by order dated
Rt 33 , ten miles north of
March 20, 1975, 1f !las been
Pomeroy
L a rg e l ots w1th.
determined that the proposed
concrete pat1os , Si dewa l ks,
abandonment
ot
t he
rlJnners and
off
street
Chesapeake and Oh10 Rat l way
parkmg
P_.one
992
7479
Company's llne_i!nd track be
12 31 tfc
tween Ol dtown anti GallipOliS, a
dtsfance of 62 84 m lies , line and L- - - ---------,-...J
track near Pomeroy, a d1stance , - - - - - - - - - - - - FARM house, 6 rooms, modern
of 3 05 m lies, and operations
co nv en ien ces
garden
garage, and barn on Tanners
only between GalliPOliS and
Run Longswo rth Homest ead
Pomeroy , a diSta nce of 17 8
off S t Rt 124, Rac 1ne , Oh1o
miles , all 10 Hock 1ng, Vrnton,
R F D $100 month , If des1red
Gallia and Me 1gs Count1es.
'"
22 acres bottom land for
Ohto, 1f approved by t he
&lt;}ddrtronal $25 per month
Comm ISSlon , does not conSti tut e
mator
Federa l
act1on
Must turn 1sh references
a
Significantly affect1ng the
Wnte or cal l Cha rl es A
Dobb1n
17 A rl 1ngton St ,
quality of the human en ·
MASON,
W.VA.
PawtlJ c ket , Rhode Island
v1ronment w1th1n the mean1ng
02860 , or 140 1) 72 3 4747
ot the Nat 1onat Env1ronmentat
CONTACT •
4 4 121:::
Pbllcy Ac t of 1969 ( NEP A L 42
U S C ss 4321 , et seQ. , and that
2 BEDROOM f ur n ished apt ,
preparation
a detai
led en
de posit r equ1 r ed
No pets
monmenlal· of
•mpact
slalemenl
Phone 949 38 11
will not be reQUired under
4 4 6tp
SeCIIOn 4332{2) fC ) Of the
•

,

STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING· SOFFITT
GUTTERS . AWNINGS

6 3Q--Karen 6, 13
9 00-Streets of San Francalsco 6,13: Movie "Crawlspace" 8,

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

GLEN R.
BISSELL

Blown mto Walls &amp; AHies

'

60K12

~pT- ~;; ~;w ,

Help Wanted

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

brlna you
extra cash
f 0r
shopping sprees

SPECIALLY
PRICED

Ph. 99~·21 74.

Blown .
Insulation Services

Atr · condttton , tmt. glass, body mldg, custom intenor ,
roof carrier &amp; atr deflector, turbo hydromattc, power
steer ing , wheel tr im , w htte wa ll tires, AM radto, new car
title , full warran ty

Report 20,33

Charles lisle, Syracuse,
Ohio. Carl Jacob, Sales
Representative.

SMITH NILSON
MOTORSL.INC.

FREE ESTIMATES

LARGE
CPcmel; d si-;;;- Pi

NOW seltmg Fu lle r Brus~
Products, phOne 992 3410
1 14 tf&lt;

I
I
1

New Chevrolets

THURSDAY, APRIL 10,1975
8 oo-:-Mov1e "Con spi ra cy of Terror," 3,4. 15, Barney Miller 6,13;
The Waltons 8, 10; Bill Moyers' Journal
lnternatlot;~al

windows, soding. slorm ~oors
ond wondows, rliling, phone

largest
Radiator to •
~mallest Heater 'Cqre
Nalllan B1gp1
R-_dja.l9.r.Jm.cfjlllst

4 10 1 mo

New '74 Vega Sta. Wagon

For Rent
1 BEDR OO M modu lar home ,
furn1shed UIJIIt•es pa•d near
Pomeroy Ntee locatron No
c hrl dren or pet s Phon e 992
7011 or ~ 92 7 666
4 9 41p

'TRAILER SPACE . J/• mil~
nor th of Me 1QS H 1Qh School on
REMODELING
plumb1ng ,
old Rt 33 Phone 992 2941
neatrng, and al l types of
1 23 tt c
general
repatr
Work
guaran t eed
20 years ex
us
per1en ce Phon e 911 2 2409
storage space 1n rear lm
3 11 tfc
medrate possess ron , 11 6 Mam
St , Pomeroy Cal l Collect 1
304 529 3369
W I LL DO small gard en
4 10 3tc
p l owmg wrfh Grav ely garden
tr actor Phone 992 7492 or 992
3716
2 BEDROOM
T ra iler
'"
4 6 6tp

POMEROY LANDMARK

Classified Ads

THE BALANCE OF OUR

.T elevision log for easy yiewing

On aluminum replacement

PHONE 992-7(»65

Road Ha s ba th &amp; 1 2, washer ,
dryer , drshw a sh er Phone 992
7416
4 a 41 c

-~--------~------"-------------~-----

RE'PORT WOULD
CLEAR HIM !'•

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES
the
!From
BUII'dozer

Reasonable Rates

MOB ILE home for sat e on
acr e ground on Fl at woods

Employment Wanted

9._Jnk W. C.rsey, Mgr.
6'il fl'ftone"2·2111

1

Pleasant Ridge
Pomeroy, Ohio

'Mobile Homes. For Sale

Yard Sale

1 WILL keep an elderly woman

E Mam

0. l LAUDERMILT
ROOFING

I

6·HOUR RIGOR MORTIS

. - -· _ ·-

FREE ESTIMATES

Notice
m my home

Wan!P.tt To Buy

Notice

WE WISH to express our Stn

r---

THE

What do you do now'

'

'

Y&lt;

:S~en-d~$7
1~f~ar~JA7C~O~B~Y~M~O~D~E~R~N '
book to " Wm at Bridge," (c/o this
newspaper). P.O Box 489. Radio
City Slat/on, New York, NY 10019. ,,
•j

lNEWSPAIJE:It ENTERPRISE ASSN I

HEE HEf
tieE IE
HE! HE£
!lEE HEe

�•.

I
lO _ The oaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday,

Calvin Smith, engin eer,
NEWHAVEN , W. Va. - The
eKp
lalned the comrn'un ity
first reading or an ordinance to
development
block grant
inc.rease mWJicipal fees was
approved, its meeting date was proposa l fonNew Haven . The
changed, re-roofing of town increase"" in municip.al fees
hall was approved, Clean-Up propos ~ d . is for poli re
Week was set. and a motion protecti on and garbage fees .
Coun cil agreed to , hold
was passed to purchase new
council
meetings the second
l&gt;!bles for town hall at the
regular meeting or the council Tue sday of each month
through the summer months,
tins week .
In the absence of Mayor tes ting if only one mee ting a
Charles Smith, record er : monlh proves sa tisfa c tory~.
Clean-Up Week was set for
Shelby Duncan presided and
May
l-10.
coun c iJmen pre se nt were
Hi ldtl Smtth appea red on
Wi lliam Gibbs. Bernard
Lifving, Thomas Grinstead, behalf of the New Haven
Charles Roush and Neil Library. regardmg a lease on
Haymaker . Also present were library property . No action
Hilda Smith and Calvin Smith. wa s ta ken.

Utility asks hydro ·pe.rmit

MUVE TO BUY
!'OINT PLEASANT - Tht·
Mas4Jfi' l.:ounty
Commi ssioners actt·d Wednesday
night to purchase a $2K,OOO
pit•ct• of propt•rty in New
Haven that ·Will eventually
be the site of .u new fire and
rrst·uc squad station and
possibly a library.

Generation Rap.
By

Uel~n

and Sue Bottel

Does "Wife " Mean "Strife"?
Rap:
I grew up believing that "He who gettelh a wife getteth a
good thing," but from what I hear, it's more likely he getteth
~k.

'

I have seen so many men saying, "She took my house, my
The proposal was formally
car, my money and my kids and left me destitute ," that I wonder
brought before the com- · what good are women to lnen?
~
missioners by New Haven
Can a man expect anything but luck when he marries? Mayor Charles Smith, ~) FALTERING' FA!T!J
Councilman Tom Grinstead,
and Mason County Bank
F.F.:
Cashier Jim Layne in a
Ii dependa on his choice. He who getteth toOk waseth
mt•eling that continued until
probably blind to danger signals. Love does that to people. . midnight and !hen recessed
HELEN
until uoon today. The
+++
property purchased is known
F.F~ :
as the " Dr. Bryant Prpcrty ''
Or ma¥be he who got took may have deserved it. Those men
located on old Route 33 in
who cry broke don' t tell you the wives' side of the story. - SUE
New Haven.
P.S: The following letter Should cheer you.
The commissions also
agreed to take under con-

The Qh~o Pow er Company of Hydroelectric project. It would
Can ton, Ohio, has filed an be coordi nated with the sideratifm a proposal by a
delegallon from Hartford to
.q1plication under the Federal proposed replace ment and
Power Act for a proposal to qe modermzation of the Corps ' r e model th e old schOill
building th ere thai is
kno wn
aS
Gallip ol is existing Gallipolis Loeks and
Hydroelectric pro j ~ct. located Dam recommended by the presently not being used.
lfll the Ohio Rtver near the
Board of Rivers. and Habors .
re placement and In oder A fo ur-nu lc long 69 KV transENTERS HOSl'ITAL
nization of the G allipoli~ Locks mission line would connect thi s
Rebecca B rod~. r i c,k,
and Dam.
, '"
ge ncr~1ting h1ci lity with the .~ Pomer oy, has enteied the
The project wouJd cQnsis t of America n Powe1· System. No Holzer Medical Center where
;, powerhouse constructed at cons lr uet ion IS authorized she wi ll undergo facial
tt.c west end on the Ohi[} side of under the prelinun8ry pcr;mil. surgery .
the U. S. Corps of Engineers
Gallipolis Locks and Darn . The
pro posed powe rhouse would
h~ tve an installation of low head
Continued fr om page 1
generating un its totaling 40,000
kw.
January at a record 1.6 billion bushels, was issued this month.
It would be similar to the
Installa tion at the Racine
WASHINGTON - ABILL WAS INTRODUCED in the Senate
Wednesday th at would allow railroads to turn their tracks and
roadbeds over to the federal and state governments for maintenance. The bill, sponsored by lien. Hubert H. Humprbey, DTomgh t
Minn. , would set up an Interstate Railroad System to include all
NOT OPEN
routes with traffic of more than 10 million gross ton-miles a year
per mile of rail line.
·
.
Fri. , Sa t., Su r1da y
Hurnph&lt;ey said this would involve about half the track
Aprilll -11
mileage in the country and about 80 per cent of the freight. In
FOR PETE 'S SAKE
addition, rail companies could turn over all their tracks to the
( Techni coto rl
federa l government, being relieved of both main tenance costs
Star ring
and property taxes . Tracks included in the In terstate Railroad
Barbra Str iesand
Rated " PG "
System would be ma intained by the federal government, with the
Co torca rtoo ns
rema ining tra ck turned over to individual' states. Maintenance
Show star ts 7:00p.m.
costs would be financed by a user fee assessed against the
ra ilroads.

MEIGS THEATRE.

· 'f
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,.

FRI., SAT., SUN., APRIL 11-12-13

!

**
*: "SWINGING

*
&gt;t

** SWAMPERS

:t

1

"SIXTEEN"
Mmedes MoComb•ldee
Ford Reiner Beverly Powers
Simune Griffeth
John Lozier

Sho t.. mo d

••••ythi"B

th .. h•r d w&lt;Jy.

R~TED

**

R

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Lawrence
Sta~ley , Mason ; Mark Bailey,
Vin ton , b!SCHARGED - Oscar
Imboden, Glenna Little, Lisa
Peters, Julia Gibbsr Ire ne
Cundiff.

Holzer Medical Center
1Discharged, Aprll9)
Bertha Barloe, Ruth Bell,
Stella
Brewer ,
Teresa
Bumgardner,, Kentworth
Butler , Darlene Carter, Lillian
Church, Niki· Corfi as, Walter
R. Davis, Jr., Edward Dickson,
Goldie Fraley, Timo thy
Hartley, !val Jenkins, Mrs.
Tra cy Johnson and son, Bea
Lambert, Be ssie Landaker,
Alma Lawhor n, Charles
Loudermilk , Jon Mar tin, Mary
Maynard, Willard Maynard ,
Lawrence McQuaid, Marjorie
McCausland, Roy O'Dell, Rick
Pendleton , Ansel Phillips,
Janice Reynolds, Christa Rupf,
Eugenia Sharp, Kur t Shelton,
Shirley Southall, Matthew
Sprague, Allie Spurlock,
Gertrude Stan ley, Er nest
Wi seman, Helen Woodruff,
William Young.
!Corrected Birth)
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Groves,
a da ughter, Gallip olis, instead
Continued from page 1
of Gro th as appeared Weddustries such as Ford, General nesday ..
Motors and General Electric
plants are being supplied with
gas they produce in Ohio.
"This program will make Two couples ask
that same help available to
smaller Ohio industries which for dissolution
caMot afford that kind or
In Meigs County Common
program on their own," said
Pleas
Court two dissolutions of
the governor. "It will keep
Ohio working people on the marriage and one sui t for
divorce were filed, and another
job."
Rhodes said he would also granted .
Filin g for dissolution of
discuss with ,Rockefeller the
gas re gulation policies of the marriage were Betty Jewett
Federal Power Commission and Cormal T. Jewett, both of
anq how they affect Ohio.
Rutland , and Carolyn Vance,
Pomeroy, and Robert Earl
Vance, Rt. 1, Middleport.
Janice Louise Smith, Middlepor t, filed for divo rce
against Louis W. Smith, Rl. 4,
Conlinuect' fr om page l
Pomeroy , charging gross
dozen miles .in an attempt to neglec t or duty and extreme
escape the fighting. The cruelly. Janice J . Davis was
prov ince chief told the Saigon granted a divor ce from
command he adquarter s by LaWFence R. Davis on charges
·radio that another 12,000 fled of gross neglect or duty and
toward Communist lines to the extreme cruelty.
nor th .
Military sources said the
CHAPTER TO MEET
dnve by two North Vietnamese
The
Meigs County Chapter of
di visions- with two more in
the
American
Red Cross will
reserve - may be the start of a
hold
its
regular
meeting Thursmajor Communist orfensive
day, April10 at 7:30p.m. in the
against Saigon. The Battle for
Xuan Lo c, whi c h began Veterans Memorial Hospital
Cafeteria . All board members
Wednesday, is the first major
test for the South Vietnamese and the public are invited to
armed forces following three attend . -~
wee ks of disa str ous rout ~
throughout the northern twoTO HAVE SURGERY
thirds of the nation.
REEDSVILLE
- Eastern
One force" of Communist
Eagle
sophomore
Bruce
Riffle
troops skirted Xuan Loc, and
will
have
kilee
surgery
at
the
government officers said they
Holzer Medical Center Friday
were pushing artillery pieces
dow n abandoned ra ilway morning. Bruce is in room 502
tracks paralleling Highway l, a and is the son or Mr. and Mrs.
Roy S. Riffle, Reedsville.
remnan t of French colonia lism

~

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**
:

Jf-

*
*

&gt;t

»

:t

I

t
I

MASON, WEST VIRGINIA

!

*~*******************************~*

MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS

SATURDAY, APRIL 12
ALL DAY LONG
·ON THE.STREDS OF

MIDDLEPORT

Reds get

and tile most important road in
South Vietnam.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Lewis .
Lu tto n, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Weaver, Letart; Mrs. David
Norrell, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Dean Frazier, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. William Reed, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Richard Lake , Mason;
Mrs. Kenneth Marlin, Buffalo;
Belva Smith, Point Pleasant;
Harold Clark, Reedsville; Mrs.
Donald Zerkle ; Hartford; Mrs.
Reginald Tygretl, Point
Pleasant; Richard Lyons ,
Ravenswood ; Rober t Gordin;
Hamden ; Mrs. James Beaver ,
Gallipolis ;· Bridget Patterson,
Point Pleasant; Sherry Haltz,
Wellston; Russell Slayton,
Vinton ; Lottie Wilfong, Point
Pleasant;
Cecil Queen,
Gallipolis; William Wray ,
. Ashton.

Advance sales
end 8( 4 Saturday

: Shale gas

,,...
!* MASON DRIVE-IN THEATRE *a
:

..
.

STOREWIDE SALE

B FT . Tra nspor t disc,

~x

16

p ln w s . Phon e 949 .576 3.
~ · 9 · 4tp

MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE
1973 12x60 Sk ylin e Mobile
Home, 2 bedroom , f urnis hed ,

A.C.,

$5,500 .

afte r 4 p, m.

Ca ll

992 7048
4·10 ·4tp

Adv ance tickets for the
"Spring Fling" of the Big Bend
Minstrel Association to be
staged at 7: 30 and 9:15 p. m.
Saturday in the Pomeroy
Junior High School Auditorium
will be removed from sale at 4
p.m. Saturday .
The advance tickets are $1.25
and include light refreshments
to be served during lhe
evening . Tickets will be $1.50 al
the door Saturday. Tickets
may be secured from the New
York Clothing House, SwisherLohse Pharmacy, Pomeroy,
and at Dutton Drugs and The
\tillage Pharmacy in Middleport .

New church will
meet in union

hall in Mason
MASON ~ A new church,
The Faith Baptist, organized
here will use as ~ a temporary
me eting place the Sleet
Workers Unio n Hall on
Railroad St., located between
Horton and Pomeroy Streets.
Wednesday e~e ning the Rev.
Clifford Coleman , Ja ckson,
pastor of the First Soutfiern
Baplisl Church there was guest
speaker. Saturday, April 12,
the Rev. Alan Blackwood of
Middleport will deliver the
message at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday School is at 10 a.m.
James (Hap ) Ingles is
superintendent . .
SPEAKER SLATED
TUPPERS PLAINS - Guest
speaker for a meeting of the
.nippers Plains Boosters at
7:30p.m. Monday at the school
will be Ron MiUs or Lake Hope
Stale Park. He will show slides
and speak on Forestry, Nature
and Wildlife. Election ·or of·
ricers will be held. Fathers will
be honored and will counl
double in the room count.
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to the
William Jones residence, CR
367 at 8:50 a.m. Thursday for
Cora Christy, a medical
patient, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

HAPPY FISHERMAN - Jim Anderson, left, lahded a large mouth bass, five po~ds 10
0\!JICes, Wednesday evening at Hidden Lakes. Anderson used an artificial lure called the
gyrator manufactured locally by Steve Finlaw, right. The lures may be obtained at Grave)y
Sales, Pomeroy.
·

SPECIAL SAVINGS .ON ALL

TRIO

VOL. XXVI

WOMENS AND GIRLS COORDINATES, PANTS,
SKIRTS, BLOUSES, JEANS, SHIRTS, KNIT TOPS,
SHORTS, DRESSES, PANTSUITS, COATS, UNIFORMS,
SLIPS, PANTIES, BRAS, GIRDLES, GOWNS,
PAJAMAS, ROBES, DUSTERS, HOSIERY, SLIPPERS,
JEWELRY, HANDBAGS, - SCARF3, UMBRELLAS,
BILLFOLDS, WATCHES, MENS AND BOYS PANTS,
DRESS SHIRTS, SPORT SHIRTS, BELTS, TIES,
HOSIERY, JEANS, HATS, PAJAMAS, ROBES, WORK
UNIFORMS, JACKETS, PIECE GOODS, SEWING
NOTIONS, YARN, PATTERNS, FILM, CAMERAS,
COSMETICS, NOTIONS, CARDS, GIFT WRAP,
SCHOOL SUPPLI"ES, CANDY, SMALL APPLIANCES,
GLASSWARE, CLOCKS, COOKWARE, PAPER GOODS,
. GIFTWARES, HAMPERS, KITCHEN GADGETS,
CUTLERY, RECORDS, TAPES, RADIOS, TAPE
PLAYERS, TOYS, GAMES, BEDROOM FURNITURE,
MATTRESSES. CHAIRS, LIVING ROOM SUITES,
DINETTES, NURSERY FURNITURE, TABLES,
PICTURES,
MIRRORS,
LAMPS,
WALL
.
,.
DECORATIONS, DINING ROOM FURNITURE.

HOOVER PRODUCTS

HOME FURNISHINGS ANNEX
114 EAST MAIN STREET
TOWELS, SHEETS, PILLOWCASES, BED- ·
. SPREADS, TABLECOVERS, FURNITURE
THROWS, ·DRESSER SCARFS, PLACE MATS,
CURTAINS, DRAPERIES, MATTRESS PADS,
DOMESTICS, BATH MATS, AREA RUGS,
DRAPERY HARDWARE, WINDOW SHADES,
BLANK~TS, PILLOWS.

THE MEIGS POMEROY
INN

PH. 992-3629

..

.....

THESE MEMBERS OF Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop 249 will be U!klng part In the "hike
bike" to be held In Meigs County on Saturday, April19, by the Meigs Chapter or the Association
for Retarded Children and Adults. The "hike bike" will raise funds for the retarded of the
county, Residents may walk or ride non-motorized vehicles on the 25 mile trip. Sponsors make
a contribution to the activity for various participants. Making up this group are Max Jonas,
Dan Will, Dan Thomas, Rick Blaettnar, Jeff Couch, Rick Baker, Jeff Daniels, Jim Rosenbaum,
Jim Will, Bill Stone, Bob Wears, DaMy Norman and Gary Nakamoto. Persons or those wishing
to be sponsors may call Cynthia Mills, 992-2117; Mrs. Clarence Might, 742-4400, or Mrs. Hugh
Roush, 992-3232.
• ...--'""'.,.,.""""'--· . .
J~I!II'IM!m001&gt;$$J'-'*':~··"'.

::· x. ..~v);.?."'.";o&lt;A~-... """.............................»~.

FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1975

PRICE 15'

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
..,

By United Press International land housewife , said, "From
Ohioans reacted swiftly but wha t I understa nd, he wants to
with differing opinions Thurs· allocate all this money to
day night, followin g President Vietnam. when we can't even
Ford's address lo a joi nt give our. own people the aid
session of Congress .
they need.
Ford as~ed Congress to "What obligation do we have
provide South Vietnam with to them that we don't have to
nearly $1 billion "to crush ourselves ? We deceive ouron rushing aggression" and to selves into thinking we are
give him a uthority to send U.S. Robin Hood in Sherwood
troops to evacuate 6,000 Ameri- Forest. He's talking about what
cans and up to 200,000 South everybody else thinks about
Vietnamese if Saigon falls .
American, nol about wruit the
Andrew Saiko, a factory American people feel about
worker fr om Middleburgh their own problems."
Heighl,, sa id he agreed with
Ralph Smith, Eastlake, a
Ford .
hospital maintenance worker,
"I am 100 per cent behind also was cri:ical or the
him . I think if he gets a litte President.
cooperati on from Congress
"I think that lhe President is
things will be a lot better than talking in circles," ~a id Smi th.
they are . I can't understand
"He has no positive action, he
why they make such a russ has nothing specified and he
over Vietnam .
seems to 'be blaminr the
"All the Vietnamese are Democratic Congress for what
asking for is financial aid - has been going on for all the
they are not asking for any or Nixon years," he said . ' 1But
our troops . There is no doubt in now he wants to give something
. my mind that the Communists like $720 .million to tile South
are going t continue if we don 't Vietnamese.
put a ~lop lo them here. They
"I think he is way orr base .
are going to keep going as long This has got to be a "no-no' by
as we keep giving up, 11 Saiko now , He should learn some thing
concluded.
by experience," added Smith.
Mrs, Rowena Riley, a Cleve- Mrs. Mildred Horton, a
commerical artist in Coliunbus,
however, said she believed
Congress should have paid
attention to Ford earlier this
year.
"I think he is right, but I
think it Is a shame that the
Congress couldn't have listened
had poor financial Showings in to him in January,~" Mrs.
the final quarter of 1974. GM Horton said.
trimmed its dividend while . " If they had, maybe, some or
Chrysler and AMC eliminated this would not have happened.
thelr stockholder payments. The Congress has fought him
While Ford's first quarter ever since he went into offi ce
financial statement isn 't due and now here it is zero hour.
until late lhls month, Wall . Maybe if they would have
Street analysts have said it will listened back in January it
Show a record $130 miUlon loss might have 'have turned out a ·
- the worst in any quarter · little different in Vietnam ."
since It became a public corporation in 1956, They said,
however , that the firm will
rebound and show a profit for
the year.

ews.• in Briefs! Stockholders hit

by Ford company

By United Press International

IN THE MID-SIXTIES; TilERE WERE TilOUSANDS OF
men like Bart Bonner - Marines fighting and dying in the
.steamy jungles near Da Nang, Tod!ly, Bonner says he 's ready to
go back to Vietnam, and could take 75,000buddies with him ..
"I'm not talking about some llttle humanitarian effort to go
over there and bring out orphans," Bonner sald. "I'm talking
about resisting Communist aggression." •
'nle 34-year~ld ex-Marine, who is slighUy bald, and wears a
thick black mustache, says he is one of "literally thousands of
Americans who want to go back to Vietnam." Bonner was· in
Washingtoo seeking support and financial backing for a volunteer unit. But volun!eers are making little headway.
South Vietnamese and Cambodian Embassy spokesmen said
· Thursday tl)ey have rejected th.ousands of American volun~eers:

To 8 PM

·:

e-n tin e
.,

SAIGON- THE BATTLE-WEARY DEFENDERS of Xuan
LOc dug In today for new assaults by Conununist tanks, infantry
and artlllery besieging the embatUed province capital ~ar
Saigoo. So!tth Vietnamese commanders reported a sudden lull In
tbe batUe for ·:Xuan .U!c, but milll!lry analysts said the Communlals may be regrouping for new human wave attacks against
the city of 38,000.
The Saigon military command reported 571 Communists
killed In the first two days of fighting for control of the provincial
capital. The climmand declined to dlaclose government losses.
Soatb VIetnamese warplanes roared over the provinces around
Xuan Loc and reported bombarding Conununlst armored
Contlnued on page 14
.

.

~

..

By EDWARD S. LECHTZIN
UP! Auto Writer
DETROIT (UP!) - Fa01!d
with the most staggering red
ink performance in its history,
the Ford Motor Co. ha5
slashed its dividend to stockholders by 25 per cent so it will
have the money it needs to
build more small cars.
Ford directors Thursday
said the quarterly dividend
was being lowered to 60 cents
-a 21k:ent drop -in a move
that will mean an extra $75
million a year for the company.
It was the first time since the
Tryouts for the Meigs entry
1958 recession that the No. 2"
in
the Ohio Valley Amateur
auto company was forced to
0
Football
League have been se t
slash a dividend.
, following a recent meeting or
Ford Chairmll!l Henry Ford
lllll
team representatives in Athens
ll said he hoped the extra lunda
Four defendan Is were fined, where counties represented
could be used to develop better
cars, not just to me~t new four forfeited bonds and two were Athens, Gallia, Meigs,
were assessed costs only in the Hocking, and WaShington.
government standards.
COW't
of ~omeroy Mayor Dale
The new league plans to open
"We are hopeful that our
Smith
Thursday night.
its season this fall . A
investment capital ca n be used
Fined were · William Justis, representative from Zides
for such prOductive purposes
as fuel economy and other Middleport, $130 and costs and Sport Shop in · Marietta
product improvements," he three days in jail, driving while demonstra ted equipment
said, "and that we will not be in \cxi.cated ; · Harry Hewitt, needed to open play this fall .
Locally, the Meigs amateur
required to use the funds to Long Bottom, $10 and costs,
meet government-mandated driving while under suspen- team will hold spring tryouts
standards that would be sion ; Nettie Cross, Racine, $10 · the last part of April. Sign-up
produce only marginal and costs, speeding ; Randy meeting is set for April '!I at
Ebersbach, Minersville, $5 and 3:30p .m. in the Meigs Jr. High
results. "
·costs,
assured clear distance. School gylll In Pomeroy (the·
The aciion by Ford followed
Forfeiting
bonds were David old Jr. High School). The head
similar moves by Gmeral
Motors,
Chrysler
and Parsons, Syracuse, $18.70, · coach, Charle&gt; MarShall or
American Motors, wbich also· , poste&lt;\ on speeding charges; Pomeroy, will be present at the
. TetTence Brewer, Middleport, sign-up. Persons interested in
$28.70, speeding; Milo Hut- ·pla;ying football this fall should
chinson ; Rutland, $18.70, attend.
SPOUTS TODAY
speeding, and David Matheny,
· Baseball. Logan at Reedsville, $30, assured •clear
disb!nce .
Meigs.
.Continued cool tonight and
Assessed costs only ;..ere Saturday, highs In the ldwer
Trimble at Eastern.
Miller and Jay. Rowe, 50s. Tonight in the lower 30s.
Wahama at Hun- Fred
both of Letart . Township , Highs Saturday in lower 50s.
tington St. Joseph.
chargect with defrauding an Probability cf precipitation 10
innkeeper.
' pel cenl tonight and Saturday .

Tryouts set
for gridders

TEHRAN - TilE SHAH OF IRAN says oil prices may shoot
up again unless the petroleum-exporting countries and the
Western Industrial powers settle their differences.
· Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi warned of a new round or oll
price hikes if 'exporters and consumers fail to reach an
agreement at this sununer's energy talks in Paris. "If there is
not an understanding, what will happen is that the consumers
will increase the price or their commodities, or keep up the ra te
of lnflatlon," he said Wednesday in an exclusive interview.

M~CHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

FRIDAY AND SATURUAY 9:30

TO ENTE'RTAIN YOU AT

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

COLUMBUS - EMPWYMENT OF OffiO production
workers during February fell 8 per cent below February, 1974,
the Center for Business and Economic Research at Ohio State
~university reported Thursday. The center said all eight major
Ohio city~unty areas it surveyed showed declines over that
time period with Columbus-Franklin County recording the
largest drops at II per cent.
other declines were Cincinnati-Hamilton, 9 per cent;
Cleveland-Cuyahoga and Dayton-Montgomery 8 per cent;
Canton-Stark and Toledo-Lucas, 7 per cent; Akron-Summit 6 per
cent and Youngstown-Mahoning 3"per cent. The center said
employment in the state's coristruction industry was down 12 per
cent in ·the February-loFebruary comparison.

MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND WAREHOUSE OPEN BOTH

TUES., WED., THURS., 8: 30-1:00
FRI. &amp; SAT., 9:30-!:DD,

NO. 2fl4

~

.

NITELY

leader Thomas P. O'Neill.
"There would have to be a
complete turnaround in the
opinion of the American public
-as I read it talking with
members when they came
back from the Easter recess to support such aid."
Ford asked Congress to act
.by April 19, just over ll week,
much faster than Congre~s
usually moves unless it is
virtually united on an issue.
"A vast human tragedy has
befallenourfriendsin.Vietnam
and Cambodia," Ford said.
He said he must consider the
.safety of some 6,000 An)ericari.
who re•nain in South Vietnam
"and tens of thousands of South

Vietnamese employes of the
U)lited States government, or
news agencies, .of contractors
and businesses for many years
whose .lives, with their dependents, are in grave peril. ''
He' said there are "tens of
thousands or other So uth
Vietnamese intellectuals,
professors an d teac hers,
editors and opinion -leaders
who have supported the South
Vietnamese cause and the
· alliance with the United States,
to whom we have a profound
moral obligation."
The $722 million military aid
figure was more than 'llouble
the $30Q mlllion request he
made before the recent Communist gains in South Vietnam,
and on which Congress has
never acted. The new figure
was the sum recommended by
Army Chief of Stall Frederick
- C. Weyand, whom Ford sent to
· Saigon on a fact-finding
mission.
. The speech was Ford 's first
public report on his foreign
policy throughout the world,
and he discussed several
groups or countries: ·
-To allies, he sai&lt;j, ·"We will

stand by our friends." He will
attend a summit conference of
European leaders in May or
June. He plans a series of
meetings ~ with leaders of
Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Indonesia and Japan.
He asked Congress to repeal i~
ban on U.S. military aid w
Turkey and said he is conside ring economic and military
aid to Greece - both NATO
members.
- He told the Communist
worldnottomistakedetenteas
a license to "fish in troubled
waters. " But he urged
Congress to repeal trade
restrictions against the Soviet
Union tied to emigration of
Jews. He expressed hope of
new U.S ..SOviet accords to
' limit nuclear weapons. He said
he plans a visit to China this
year.
- He saiq ~ the United States
will continue peace efforts in
the Middle East.
-He called on North Vietnam to "cease military
operatiofts immediately," and
he urged Russia, China and
other signatories to the 1973
Continued on page 14

Opinions. .clash
on Ford's plan

Organ, Drums, Gu~tar

'"'""

at y

refugees, should Saigon fall.
Ford made no new aid
request for Cambodia, saying
it soon "may be too late" to
prevent its falling to the
Communists.
Officials said evacuation of
some Americans from South
Vietnam .has already begun.
Democratic congressional
leaders were stunned by the
size of Ford's aid request which~included $722 million fu
military assistance and $250
million in economic and
hwnanitarian aid for Saigon.
"! can't conceive or this
· Congress voting $722 million in
military aid for South Vietnam," said House Democratic
--

'

PAINT, LAWN MOWER~, TELEVISIONS,
.STEREOS, REFRIGERATORS, RANGES,
WASHERS, DRYERS, LINOLEUM, PORCH AND
LAWN
FURNITURE .
.

Sisty

.

Devoted To Th e Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

158 MECHANIC STREET .
SATURDAY 10 A.M. TIL 4 P.M.

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP! ) President Ford has asked
Congressfornearly$1billionin
aid for South· Vietnam and
. permission to use U.S. military
forces if necessary to evacuate
Americans and tens of thousands of South Vietnamese
refugees.
Ford's Thursday night State
of the World message met
immediate and stiff oppooition
among many congressmen.
Administration officials said
contingency plans are being
prepared for possible evacualion of up to 6,000 Americans
and 200,000 South Vietnamese

•

e

EVERY ITEM IN EVERY
DEPARTMENT IN THE
MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND
WAREHOUSE IS INCLUDED
IN THIS TWO DAY SALE

•

Ford .asks ·$972 million
_to save Saigon refugees

Elberfelds In·Pomeroy

HOSPITAL NEWS

News. • .. in Briefs

DOUBLE FEATURE

..

April.10;,,,t;,;,~::::::~:~:,:;:&lt;:::~::;::::::,~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ~~~&gt;SIMII&gt;NI~~~~~~WW~iw..l~~llllllll8lllli!K'ri!A

New Haven council met

!

.

F ur fined by
Mayor S , h

~

· . Weather

-

PEA~L WELKER, left, and Ele!'flor Thomas are filling silver slippers with pink roses in
preparation for tables at the "Spring Fling" of the Big Bend Minstrel Association to he staged
Saturday mght at 7:30 and 9:15 m the Pomeroy Junior High School Auditorium. Mrs. Welker
and Mrs._Thomas are ~embers or Preceptor Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority , sponsors of the
two mustcal presentattons.

Wilbur Molden killed
in accidental shooting
RUTLAND - Wilbur L.
(Tipp ) Molden, 60, Rutland;
died Thursday afternoon al
Veterans Memorial Hospital
from an accidental gunshot
•
wound.
Sheriff Robert ·.c. Hartenbach said M ~!den , with
John Thompson , 21, Rutland,
and three other men , Ronnie
Williams, Bruce Bissell and
Richard Ward, were employed
by the l..eading Creek Conservancy District on the New
Lima Road, county road 3
Thursday morning. They had
been target shooting at ca ns
and bottles in a creek with a .22

cal. rifle.
Mr . Mold en , nicknamed
After Thompson had fired "Tip/' was born in Rutland
the gun ~several times it failed Township Feb.ll, 1914, ;tson of
to discharge. He opened the lhe late Shtrk A. an~ Essie May
gun and at the same time was Folden Molden. He · was
tripping the trigger when the married to the former Helen
gun accidentally discharged, Priddy who also preceded htm
the slug striking Molden in the in death, as has a brothej.
right eye, coming out the top or
Surviving are two brothers,
his head. Thompson had the Robert B., Rt. 1, Dexter, and
gun pointed toward the ground David W., in Pennsylvania and
when it aectdentally we nt orr, three sisters, Helen, Martins
and Molden was standing a t a Ferry, and Jessie and
lower level by the creek.
Gwendolyn, both of Gary, Ind.
Molden was taken to the
Mr. Mold en was employed as
hos pital by the Rutland a laborer mos t of his life.
SEOEMS ambulance . He died
Funeral services will be at 1
at 3: 10 p.m.
p.m. Sunday at the Walker
Funeral Home in Rutland with
Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr~,
officiating. Burial will be in the
Miles Cemetery . Friends may
call at the funeral home any
time after 2 p.m. Saturday.

Mayor Black runs
strong 3rd time
HARTFORD, W. Va. Incumben t Hartford Mayor
Cl13rl~s Black was reele~ted
overwhelmingly for the third
straighl lime in that town's
elections Thursday.'
When the clerks al Hartford
Town Hall had fi nished
tabulations the votes, Black
held a landslide margin of 114
to 38 votes over his opponent,
Williwn Kimes, who ran under
the peoples banner . The
q;argin was precisely three lo
one.
Black also seemed to lead, the
way for most of the other
BLOODMOBILE TO
COME ON MONDAY ~
The Bloodmobile will be at
Pomeroy Elementary School
Monday, Aprll14, from lto 6
p.m.
Teo Meigs County people
have over lhe past lew years
donated 753 pints or blood.
Donations have been e~­
celleot; and residents are
asked to cdnllnue thai outstanding record. ·The quola
lor each visit has been increased lo 100 units.

." ,,
.

Citizens ' Ticket candid ales
who won all the town- positions
wi th 'the exception of one.
Virginia Roush , the only
female running for cotmcil,
God works in mysterious
collected 67 votes to win for the
single office on the Peoples ways and places, to which
Rev. Dwight Zavltz of the
ticket.
Voting in Hartford began at First Presbyterian Church of
6:30a.m. at the town hall and Middleport might be the llrst
the polls were closed by 7 p.m. to testify after reaching the
In all,,1-57 residents cast votes. ultimate - hole in one - on
, In other contests, Maxine the No. 2 bole at the
:Arnold of the Citizens Ticket Riverside Gold Colll'se In
was elected recorder ove r Mason Thursday afternoon.
He used a numher 3' wood.
Doug Stewart, 104 to 39.
Other cou ncilmen elected · Witnessing the event was
besides Mrs . Rous h were Rev. Roher\ T. Bwngardner
Rupert Howard, who collected · of the Heath United
102 votes: Donald ~ Fields with Methodist Church, also of
87, Arthur Gibbs with 85, and Middleport.
Vernon Gfinstead with 78.
Kenny Green": and Rav
Riebmire , under the . Citizen~
Ticket, lost in their bids for
WRONG CENTER
coun cil seats when they
An
article by-lined " Ruth
received 66 and 29 ~ votes,
Miller"
in the Daily Sentinel
respectfu ll y. Those men
Tuesday
purported to be
seeking council seats under tke
related
to
activities of the
Peoples Ticket, but comi ng up
short included T. Bryan with 37 Meigs County Senior Citizens'
votes, Howard Myers 64 , Center. That was an etTor ,
Donald Justice 44, and Gary Mrs. Miller was writing about
the Gallia ce nter.
'Gibbs, 55.

He 'II testify

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