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'

.18-The Daily Sentinel, Middle.port-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Alll'il

News ·. . ,. . in Briefs
coniiimecffrom page 1
·
His death 'followed· by one d~y thai of Academy:award
winning stage and screen aqtor Frederic March, 77. Larry
_Parb, 60, who Up-synched the tiUe role in "The AI Jolson Story"
and then faded Into obscwity 'With the admlaslon he was a
Commimlsl, died Sunday, and Marjorie Main, _85, mounialn
matriarch of the "Ma and Pa KetUe" series, died Thursday.
Conte'slast 1J!8jor role was as Don Banlni in "The Godfather."

.i

..

.
SPORTS TODAY
BASEBALL

Mains is .se«;retary of district

Cambodia gjves up

Middleport funds total

The Southea~tern District City Schools, who has resigned. Don Gatchell, Chillicothe High
Board of the Ohio High School · The new secretary 'in ad· School Principal, arid Jaines
Athletic Association has ap- dillon to his new duties is the Diehl, Meigs High Principal,
.pointed James J . ~~sear" ·Class '"AA"· representative to represent the class HAAA 11
The balance in all Middleport no receipts, $2.80, $208.14;'
Mains , Director of In· the Board. He serves 'With John S&lt;Jhools ·of the Southeastern
Village
funds as of March 31 street maintenance, $3,038.79,
structional Services of the Martin , principal of Waverly District.
totaled$228,528.
45 accor.dlng to $3,634.33, $18.46; sanitary
Ironton City Schools, as High School, in this capacity.
Mains has · had a varied the report of Clerk-Treasurer · sewer, $3,939 .51, f3;898 .92,
·Secretary of the Board, el- John Wickline, teacher at career in high school athletics
Gene ·Grate.
$38,015.15; water, $6,493.21;·
fective last April I. Mains Kyger Creek High School, and as he has served as athletic
Receipts and expenditures $6,719.61, $22,238.08; water
succeeds Ralph McCormick, James Young, Superintendent ·director alld head coach in all
PHNOM PENH- BLACK..sHIRTED GUERRilLAS ba.tUed
from the various funds, meter deposit trusts, $100, $125,
of Wellston of Valley Local, Lucasville are sports at Iron ton St. Joseph
Superintendent
their way into Phnom Penh today, driving back diebard armored
respectively, and the balance $6,635.59; sanitary sewer
the Class "A" representatives. High School' At Ironton High ·in each as of March 31include :
troops ordered to defend the Cambodian capital at aU costs.
escrow, $1,020, ·no disburReporters at the scene said the Communist-led tnsursents
School he served in similar general, $3,829.35, $7,041 .52, sements, $107,175.09; lederl!lClUSed the United Nations Bridge at the southern edge of the
. positions at various intervals $28,195.53; cemetery, $524.88, revenue sharing, no receipts, ~
city this IIWI1nng, gaining the first rebel foothold inside Phnom
as head football coach, head · $818.30, $96.04; lire equipment, $152.79, $4,903.58; lire house
Penh. The Khmer Rouge insurgents - firing rifles, . machine
baseball coach, head track $125, $327.04, $106.91 ; swim- construction, no receipts, nQ.
guns and bazooka-l.lke rocket grenades - drove a government
coach,
assistan t basketball ming pool, no receipts, $29.62, disbursements, $11,99; general•
Additional spnsors have for Retarded Citizens. Persons Pharmacy,
Veteran s
armored force back to a traffic circle near the bridge.
coach,
and
athletic director $206.21; plannil)g commission, bond retirement, no receipts, ·
agreed to participate in the may hike or ride any non- Memorial Hospital , Judge
Reporters ne.a r the !ridge said dive-bombing government
·and
in
administrative
posts as
no disbursements, $20,717:88.
"hike-bike" Saturday intended motorized vehicle in the event. Robert Buck, Teaford Realty,
warplanes blasted the guerrUJas again and again but failed to
Dean
of
Boys
,
Guidance
Receipts lor the month
to raise funds lor the mentally Sponsors pay lor a participant Newell's Sunoco Station, Mark
ball the advance across the span.
Director,
and
Ironton
High
MEETING
CHANGED
totaled
$19,068.74 while
retarded.
to make up· the funds to be Morris, Crill Bradford , auc- School Principal. Presently,
.
HARRISONVILLE
A
disbursements
totaled
The "hike-like" is being collected from the event. tioneer, Racine ; Thomas
COLUMBUS - THE OWNERS OF "BIG MUSKIE " the
Mains
is
coordina
tor
of
federal
meeting
of
the
HarrisonviUe
$22,749.93.
The
total
· in·
sponsored by the Meigs Persons or groups interested in Grocery-, Rousl,l Dairy Farm,
world's largest earth moving machine, bave requested 1~ Ohio
programs and administrative Senior Citizens Club originally debtedness of the community Is
Chapter oii!Je Ohio Association participating as entries or Salem Center; Clarence Might,
Board of Tax Appeals to reduce the value of the gigantic shovel
assistant to Superint endent · scheduled for tuesday will be $481,756.25, or ·. $535.83 per .
~onsors may contact Hank N~w York Clothing House, an,ll ' Harold Copley.
from $25 mlllion to $8 lllillion in an attempt to lower personal
'·
this· ThursdAy i~tead.
capita.
·Cleland, Mrs. Clarence Might Pomeroy National Bank.
JI'Operty taxes assessed during 1971·72.
• ·
},
The ~turday event will get
or Mrs. Hugh Roush.
.
Klrwlri said attorneys for Commonwealth Plari', Inc., Boston,
underway
at 10 a.m. from the
The latest sponsors are
Mass., which leaseS the lmge machine to Central Ohio Coal Co.
starting
point,
of which is the
Ridenour Supply, employes of
for strip mining in Musklngum County, claim "Big Muskle" was
the Bureau of . Vocational Poineroy Junior High SchooL
only one-third efficient during mining operations in 1971·72.
Rehabilitation, Dr . George
Groves,
Center
Board
MENS DEPARTMENTS-: FIRST FLOOR .
North VIetnamese and Viet
Director, Gallipolis ; R. E.
Cong bad established wbat
Carpenter, Ruby Diehl, Della
they considered their main air
E. A. Wingett announced
Continued from Page I
base in tjle fallen Central today that Judge Manning Norton, Linda Mayer, Jim
two-thirds of the nation's Highlands province capital of Webster will be the guest Owens, Mary M. Seaman,
territory,
Pleilru, 230 miles north of speaker when the Democrat Middleport Garden Club,
Robinson 's Laundry, Cleland
Military sources said Saigon.
committee meets ·Thursday Realty, Mary Skinner, Village
government warplanes
The sourcea said at least one night.
Causes behind the current
bombed the Pban Rang air Korean War-vintage MIGI9 jet
Webster, Wingett -said, is
natural gas shortage - a key
Spec ial introductory sale prices .
base after the city's 2,500 and some Soviet-built helicopt- weD verses on the subject of
factor
in
the
overall
national
of
a new line mens work
defenders fled to ships waiting ers were on the ground at the
the 1.6 mill levy operation for
energy
crisis
and
concerted
uniforms
.
offshore . Two South Viet- Plellru airfield.
the comlllunity school in the
gas
industry
efforts
to
develop
Forest Green - Charcoal . Dark
namese generals were feared
Communist troops meanJune 3 primary. Wingett said
new sources of gas supply are
Olive .
.
trapped in the city, and while today fired more than 30
Webster can best eKplHin the
graphically outlined in a new
PANTS
in
sizes
29
to
50 waist.
Commmunist tanks were rounds of 130uun arttllery into
Middleport firemen anlevy and answer questions
.sound,
color
motion
picture
reported cruising the streets . the government's major air- about it.
8'1' ounce twi II. 65 per cent
swered 43 calls - seven lire
now available for showing to
Intelligence sources said the base at Bien Hoa, 14 miles
polyester, 35 per cen t cotton.
calls
and
36
first
aid
runs
The meeting will be held at
local school and club groups.
northeast of Saigon and
Neat fitting · permanent press .
the Episcopal Parish House during March, Bob E. Byer,
Hugh
Downs,
well
known
TV
headquarters lor South VietHas watch pocket .
Thursday at 8 p.m. The public fire chief, reported Monday to personality and former
nam's Military Region ni.
CounciL
is invited .
"Today" show host, serves as
Mililary sources said the
Of the seven lire calls live
commentator
for the 28-minute
barrage destroyed at least lour
were in the village, one was a
film
which
combines in F5 jet fighter-bombers on the
mutual aid call to PoJlleroy,
terviews
with
actua l onground and the base was closed
and. one was in Salisbury
lo
ca
tion
photography
to
for nearly six boors. The
FIRE SQUAD CALLED
Township. Total man hours on
sources said at least two air·
INTEtiEST
The
Middleport
Fire fire calls amounted to 107.8 present a comprehensive
In neck sizes 14'12 to 20. 2 button
inen were kiUed and three
Department answered a call while total man hours, on first .report on the vital role of "nonhistoric"
sources
of
gas
in
through flap pockets - long
Injured in the 7 a.m. sheUlng.
to Hudson St. at 3:22 p.m. · aid calls totaled 147.1. Total
· The 13~nm.
is the biggest Tuesday to eKtinguish a brush : mileage lor the month on all efforts to obtain national
fails. 50 per cent polyester, 50
and most feared weapon in the fire. At 5:27a.m. Wednesday, vehicles was 1,007.3. The total energy sufficiency.
per cent cotton.
Three gas industry experts
CommuniSt arsenal with a the squad was called to Pearl lire runs lor the first three
also
discuss their areas of
range of 17 miles.
St.!or Charles Searles who was.. months of 1975 is 20 and the
special
interes t in easily unDespite the defeat sustained taken to Veterans Memoria! total first aid calls for the first
qerstandable
terms, pointing
by the 18th Division outside
HospitaL
three months is 84.
out
that
the
overall
solution to
Xuan Loc, the strategic city
the problem must be achieved
. apparently remained in
by combining development of
Ninety day i n~erest penalty
government bands. The South
if
w i thdrawn
before
major non-historic sources of
Vietnamese wilts at Gla Klem
m~turity date .
gas
- Alaska, Arctic Canada
moved down provincial HighMatches pants perfectly. Two
and
the outer Atlantic Conway 20 and then onlll Highway
button through pockets. Sizes
tineni&lt;Jl Shelf- with synthetic
I on which they made their way
sm·au (14-14 112 ), medium (15products of the laboratory,
to Trang Born, field reports
15'12 ), large (16-16'1&lt;) and extra
such as reformed and liquefied
said.
large (17-17'12).
Although Bien Hoa was
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!) - of 2,400 continuous mining gas and coal gasification.
The new film is designed for
closed during the morning, Pr_esldent Ford's call lor rise machines .
all
audience levels except
Tl'\e Athens county
government F5 jets were flying in coal production to meet the
Craven also said the nation's
Sa~Jings &amp; Loan Co .
missions around Xuan Loc by nation's energy needs by 1985 energy program must Include young children. It may he
296 Second St.
early afternoon.
Pomeroy , Ohio
will mean at least 270 new amending the clean air act and obtained by contacting local
mines opening, added machi- the energy supply and environ- Columbia_Gas offices.
NOW YOU KNOW
nery to work them and more mental coordination act of 1974
.The deepest lake in the world jobs, according to Donald B. to permit ·" a vigorous program
is Lake Baikal in the Soviet Craven, acllng assistant ad- for expanded use of coal." He
Union, which is more than 5,700 ministrator of energy resource also called lor adopting legal
feet deep in places. ·
diligence requirements to asdevelopment.
Craven said his department sure timely production from
anticipates development of 140 existing coal leases . lll)d a
new underground mines and 30 program for accelerated new '
new· surface mines in the coal leasing to increase low
eastern half of the nation and sulfur coal supplies.
Craven said the Be$rch lor
100 new surface mines in the
western sectlon over the next new energy sources over the
Your local Da1 ry Isle deale r
next 10 years should Include
has a super deal for you h1s
decade.
annual 2 for 1 sundae spec·
"We estimate that this in- exploring and developing naval
tacu la r Buy you r ta vor1 te
crease in coal production will petroleum reserves and implesundae
al 1 1 ~ regular pnce and
necessitate recruiting and menting an aggressive leasing
1
get. &lt;=t second sundae tree
training 60,000 new eastern policy on the outer Continental
Bnng the ent1re farn 1ly. ther e
coal miners and 46,000 new Shelf.
1s no 11m1t But hu r ry . deals Ilk€
this don t last forever
western coal miners," the
federal energy spokesman told
the Kentucky Chamber of
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Commerce's annual dinner
(--., . ' Friday through Sunday,
meeting ·here Wednesday
chance of showers Friday,
night. He also said doubllog
otherwise lltlle or no
national coal productlon also · precipitation; highs in lbe
Locust St., Middleport
would require the manufacture
• Built to take
60s, lows Ia the 40s Friday,
rough riding ·in
OFFER GOOD THURS. &amp; FRI. ·
lower!Dg by Sunday to. highs
l!ltyle . . , gives you
lu the 50s and lows in the 30s.
Jong·wearing;
SAYS IT'S DEPRESSION
dependabl e
mileage.
AUS'J'IN, Tex. (UP!)
Texas Comptroller Bob
6.70x15 6-ply Tube·type blackwatl plus $2.36
Bullock believes the nation Ia in
Fed. Ex. Tax and tire off your vehicle.
a depresalon, and economiBta
·are trying to fool the public by
calnng it a recession.
"Some people want to call a
skunk a dog," Bullock said.
"But if the damn thing lias a .
• Decp-bl1ing "Z"white stripe down Its back and shaped tread heps
yo,u goinx in the
a propensity to squirt on you
roughest terrain . ..
,
and it stinks It's still a skunk."
long-wearing tire

By United Press lnle1118tlunal

_$ 228,528 clerk·reports

Wahama at Eastern;
Meigs at Gallipolis,
resched\lled from April
3; Gallipolis Reserves
at Meigs Reserves.
TRACK - Meigs at
Gallipolis.

Hike-Bike sponsors added

Judge Webster

.

to explain levy

is explained

Sale!

in new film

•

ELBERF~LDS IN POMEROY

Gas shortage

Saigon reels

J

.

Men's Work Uniforms

0

Firemen called
out 43 times

6.95
·-----------------Long Sleeve Shirts

.On Certificates
Of Deposit
'1,000 Minimum

gun

5.95
------------------Short Sleeve Shirts

30 Mo. Term

270 new mine openings

Meigs Co. Branch

expected next 10 years

·4 1

.

~

BEYOND THE CALL AWARDS were presented three
General Telephone Co. - of Ohio employees being
. congratulated herr by Robert M. Wopat (left) ,·president. ,
Glen Crisp, J . William Davis and Tom Hysell (left to right ),
installer-repairmen at Pomeroy, were presented the awards
lor heroic action of the Ohio Independent Telephone Assn.
They were honored for saving the leg and possibly the life of a ...
__traffic accident victim. After a car-truck crash in Pomeroy

a

4.95

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

on March 21, 19'14, the men worked quickly to free the truck
driver by prying ·open the door . Then, while Crisp applied
pressure to the car driver's I~ art&amp;y, the others worked to
move the steering column of the car so the driver could be
extricated.
The awards were presented April9 at the OITA's annual
convention in Co lwnbus.

VOL XXVI

e-

at y

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 3

By United Press lnte1118tlonal
BERUIT - PALESTINIAN GUERRilLAS and right-wing
Phalangists today appeared to be honoring a shaky, governmentarranged truce which ended four days of fighting that left almost
400 persons dead or wounded. Shooting continued around the Tal
Zaatar Palestinian refugee camp and scattered explosions could
he heard for sev~ral hours after the ceasefire went into effect
Wednesday night.
But as the night wore on and a heayy rain began to fall on the
capital, the lighting died down with only scattered, occasional
sniping reported. Premier Rashid Solli, ·who announced the
cease-fire over Beirut Radio, said it would be enforced with a n
"iron fist" by Lebanese security forces . Palestinian arid
Phalangist leaders also werit on the air and broadcast appeals for
order.

to get

·:~- daTry15Je

WASHINGTON ~ l\ POSSIBLE NATIONAL railroad strike
bas been stalled lor 60 days by action of President Ford. Ford
Wednesday created an emergency board to forestall the strike,
which was to have begun Friday.
The board will investigate contract dispute between the
National Railway Labor Conference, composed of most of the
nation's railroads, and employes represented by the Brotherhood
of Railway and·Airline Clerks..'J'he union had announced that its
members would walk out at 12:01 a.m. Friday.
Ford acted under provisions of the National Railway Labor
Act, which authorizes establishment of a presidential emergency
(Continued on Page 6)

a

600 miners
out of pits

About 600 employes of Meigs
Mine No. 1 and R;iccoon Mine
No . 3 are off their jobs today
due to a work stoppage.
It was reported that some 347
employes of Mine No. I are out
on strike due to a disagreement
over the discharge of some
employes. These employes had
gone out on the afternoon shift
Monday .
At Raccoon Mine No. 3, the
workers went out due to pickets
from Mine No. I. Some 245
employes went out there at
midnight Wedoesday. Meigs
Mine No. 2 is working,
however.

TRACTION .
SURE-GRIP

A number of additional
sponsors have been secured for
tbe " hike•bike" to be held

THE STAGING AND LIGIITING CREW for a two act comedy to "Enter Laughing" to be
presented by the Senior Class of Meigs High School at 8 p.m. Friday in the Larry Morrison
Auditonum mcludes, front row, I to r, Carol Lewis, Linda Williams, Ann Colwell, Linda
Gerard; second row, I tor, Sharon Bing, Sandy Curtis Joy White and Debbie Kennedy with
Jeff Reuter seated at the rear.
·
'
·
'

d

MEETING PLANNED
RACINE - There will he a
special meeting of Racine
Masonic Lodge 461 Monday,
April21at 7:30p.m. There wilf
be work in the Master Mason
degree. AU Master Masons are .
welcome.

6.70x15 6·ply Tube-type blackwallplus $2.71
Fed. Ex. Tl! and tire off your vehicle.
· 8RI'AT FOR PICKUP, PANEL, YAH AND CAMPER!

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight thru Thursday
NOT OPEN .

Pomeroy, Ohio

,.

'

Slide back the dark , lustrous door panetllf this 2o.o
cu.-r 100% Frost Proof Refngerator-Freezer, and
you II discover tour push-button selectors : one for Ice
cubes, .another lor chilled water, plus two lor chilled
beverages like orange juice, ice tea, lemonade etc
The F.rlgld~lre Refreshment Center. See this refreshing
Idea .In relngerators today!

V

their heaviest artillery into the
Mekong Delta for the first time
and used it to destroy a
government naval transport.
Large Communist forces also
were poised some 23 miles
no(theast of Saigon.
Minh, whp_led the 1963 coup
that toppled the government of
Ngo Dinh Diem, said Thieu's
continuation in power WOJ!Id
bring the collapse of South
(
Vietnam.
"The present sitW!tion is not
hopeless," Minh told a luncheon he held for reporters at
/
Jbu Due, six miles north of
Saigon .
DISPLAY ffiKE-BIKE TROPHY - Hank Cleland, chairman of the Hike-Bike, and Jessie
"Non-Communist VietnameMigllt, president of the Meigs Chapter of the Ohio Association for Mentally Retarded Children
se can still negotiate a
and Adults, display the trophy that will be awarded to the person who receives the largest sum
relatively good political
of money from a sponsor. The Hike-Bike will be Saturday, Aprill9, leaving from the Pomeroy
solution with the Communists
Junior High Building at 10 a.m. Reliable sources indicate that the Meigs Band will give riders a
within the framework of th·e
send
off.
.
Paris peace accords. But the
urgent problem now is that the
government of President ::!:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::~:::::~::::::::::::::::::::::
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Nguyen Van Thieu should
Saturday
through Monday,
resign, for the national inchance
of
showers
Saturday
terest, and in Saigon, there
and lair Sunday and · Monshould he a new government
day. Highs Saturday will be
which can implement the
In the 60s and lows in the 40s,
agreement. lowering
by Monday to highs
The Meigs Coun ty Human discussed a similar group
"The remaining time is
in
the
50s
and
lows
in
the
30s.
Resources Council organized which is now functioning in
short," he said. "With · the
continuation in power of Thieu, :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:::,:::,::::. Tuesday at the Meigs Inn in Galli a County.
A committee was named to
Pomeroy to improve working
very soon Saig9n will become
another Phoom' l&gt;enh."
No-till seeding
re lations hip s with public develop proposals for the
service age ncies in Meigs struc ture and functioning of
A South Vietnamese governCoun ty by disseminating in- the council. Those chosen for
ment official said the action on show
formation . The objective is to the committee were Robert
surrender by Cambodian of- ~
Area farme rs are invited to a improve services and to reduce Bowen, Meigs Coun ty School
(Continued on Page 6)
" no-till " seeding demon- duplication of effort.
Superintendent; Maxine
stration this Saturday, April
This fir s t meeting was Plummer, 648 Board; Hank
19th, at 10 a.m. on the Erwin organized by Hank Cleland, Cleland, Bureau of Vocational
Gloeckner farm located be- counselor from the Bureau of Reh a bilitati on ; . Leafy
tween Racine and Letart Falls Vocational Rehabilitation, and Chasteen, Senior Citizens
Auxiliary of Fire Department, off of Route 338.
by Mrs. Anna Schuler of the Center Representative; Hazel
Sadie's Market, A. E.
This will be a no-till seeding Gallia-Meigs Comm unity McKelvey, C.A.P.; Glenna
Colema n, Middleport Book of orchardgrass into bluegrass Action Program.
Crisp, Leading Creek ConStore, Hill's Den tal Lab, sod. We will have a no-till
Maxine Plummer of the servancy District; Helen
· Eber's Gull Station, Codner's seede r there actually per- Co mmunity Health and Watstell,' Ohio University, and
Ashland Station, Butch Pettit, forming.
Retardation Board ·( 648) (l:;oatillued oa Pqe I)
Dorothy Hendricks, Denny
Moore, B. E. Owens, 8. Durst,
C. Hayes, Royal Crown, Ben
Franklin Store, Middleport
Lun.ch Room, Chateau Beauty
'Salon, 'Leland Parker, King
Building Supply, Fire~ tone
Store , General Tires, FultonThompson; E. Fisher, v. D.
Edwards, Guy Stew.art, Kate
Jarrell, Charles Blakeslee,
H&lt;lcine First Baptist Church,
Meigs Crippled Children · and
Adutls Society, Carol Wimer,
Russell . Miller Certified Gas,
Pomeroy Cement Block Co.,
Bruce Davis, Bea Stewart,
Sewing Center, Heritage
House, Baker Furniture,
· Dutton's Drug Store, H. WiU,
Jack 's Dairy . Bar , Goldie
Gilmorei Wa11da Swearil)ger
Tom Stewart, Salem Center
PTA .

I

tl

Council acts to
•
•
Improve services

SPORTS TODAY

tnt DIYIIIon of G....a .Mt&amp;&amp;m.

(T~chnitolo'}

"

15 CENTS

1

,........

Fri .. S.t.. Sunday
Lerner &amp; Loewe's
THE L,l'rTLE PRINCE
Show •t•rtut 7:00p.m.

'1

frigidaire Introduces the Refreshm~nt
Center Refrigerator, the first refrigerator
with four In the door.

ll&amp;allavll&amp;

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

l

Saturday to raise funds for the
county's retarded.
Dona t{ons for participants
will be made by the sponsors to
the Meigs Association for
Re larded Associ alion or to the
"hike bike" pledgers fund.
New sponsors are Mildred
Jeffers, Syracuse Ladies

'f

I

liVIIs depen,dabhl
mileage .

The name for the state of
Kansas is the Sioux Indian
word for South Wind People.

More sp_onsors signed

··-

~

en tine

Now You Know

~ut agai~

and the Communists.
By BERT OKULEY
SAIGON (UP!) - Gen.
American officials on orders
Duong Van (Big) Minh, an from President Ford were
arch political rival of President organizing a massive evacuaNguyen Van Thieu, called tion of U.S ~ citizens from
again today for Thieu' s Saigon with a warning that the
resignation before Saigon time to make the break is
"becomes another Phnom running out.
Per$ ." ;
A U.S. Embassy source said
~- Some government officials
earlier this week there were
expressed fear that the fall of abo ut 5,000 Americans in
Phnom Penh was a prelude to Vietnam but put the figure
events in Saigon.
klday as fewer than 4,000.
Minh told newsmen he is
On the worsening military
ready to head a new govern- front Communist forces moved
ment·of national reconciliation
with the Viet Cong, ' 'because
that has always been my
stand."
Minh is considered the leader
of the so-called third force
composed ,of elements who
opposed the Thieu .government

. McCLURE'S
.

"RIB HI•MILER".

broadcast an appeal for calm. landed today in Thailand with .
He urged all government 140 reluge·es includirig a Camforces to lay down their arm. bodian general and 29 children.
Th~re was no inunediate· Thailand said it would recogreaction from the U.S. govern- nize the Khmer Rouge government to the fall of Phnom Penh . ment when there is formal
but in Saigon there was dismay announcement of its formation.
among South Vietnamese who
President Ferdinand E.
· saw it as a portent M the Marcos of the Philippines said
futur e. Gen. Duong Van (Big) the fall of the AmericanMinh called again for the , supported
Cambodian
resignation of President Nguy- government made it necessary
en Van Thieu before Saigon for the Philippines to review its
"becomes another Phnom ties with the United States in
Penh."
view of the developments in
Australia,
citing
the lndochilll! and hinted he would
"realities of the situation," turn to the Soviet Union · and
promptly reconized the new China.
The first order given by
Khmer Rouge go.vernment.
insurgent
spokesmen who took
Japan said it would do so
• shortly. Britain said it would over Radio Phnom Penh was
wait to see what kind of for the surrender of senior
government was fo rmed in officials. All civil servants and
Phnom Penh. China and. the government functionaries
Soviet Union,merely reported were ordered to return' to work
the "liber a lion of Phnom as usual Friday morning.
Penh."
...,
"We enter Phnom Penh as
Thailand closed its borders conquerors and we have not
to halt the exodus of Cam- come here to speak about
bodian refugees--but at least peace with the traitors of the
11 Cambodian air force planes
1Continued on Page 6) .

THUR SDAY, APRIL 17, 1975

I

NYLON CORD

international Cormriittee of the
Red Cross said· in Geneva the
Communist forces were respecting the neutrality of the
Royal Phnom Hotel.
About 2,000 persons, inclu_ding some Americans,
United Nations arid relief officials and. other foreigners,
'were crowded into the hotel.
The Red Cross, which·declared
the hotel a neutral zone
Wednesday , said many of the
persons at the hotel were
wounded or sick.
The Yugoslav news agency
Tanjug, in a dispatch from
Peking, said Prince Norodom
Sihanouk announced he will be
chief of state in Cambodia but
that direct power wiU be
wielded by Khieu Samphan,
co mmander of the Khmer
Rouge. forces. Sihanouk also
said Cambodia would join the
nonaligned bloc of nations'.
~eu Slimp han, a Jlardline
Communist closely allied to
China- but believed to be first
of all a nationalist-entered the
capital with his troops and

/)evoted To '{he Interests Of The Meigs-M11son Areu

Twice .the fun
for the price
of one!!

GOODYEAR

•

Weather
Mild, chance of showers and
thundershowers tonight and
Thursday. Lows will be 50 to 55
and highs will be in the upper ·
60s .
Probability
of
precipitation is 20 per cen t this
afternoon and 50 per cent
tonight and Friday.

Phom Penh surrendered
today to -the Communist-led
Khmer insurgents, ending live
·years of war that devastated
Cambodia and took the lives of
a quarter million persons.
Fall of the city closed a
painful chapter in American
history.
The victorious rebel forces
spurned government offers
Wednesday to negotiate a
cease-fire so they coufd enter
Phnom Penh to " as conquerors." The black-shirted
insurgents were greeted by
Cambodians waving flags and
streamers as they moved into
-the city through a sea of white
~ surrender flags.
. Jubilant Khmer Rouge soldiers fired shots into the air as
they marched through the
streets or rode in captured
• American Jeeps.
• There were fears that the
rebel forces would carry out a
bloodbath wlren they stormed
into Phnom .Penh alter a three
and a half month siege, but the

.'

.i

· 'nlll: MDJ8 llllR saiOOL Nlllor~a~ have roles in
a two act comedy, "Enter Laughing" to be presented at a
p.m. Frldayl,n the Lirry Morrison Auditorium. Front row, 11
. to r, are Ken Hoffman, Debbie Black, Cindi Garnes, J.eff
~

-~
I

....'ll,.df, row VIIUIIIIor, Marty lleelig, Babs Witte, Boonle
. Dillon and Chris Miller; the back row, Rick Couch, Mike
Gilmore, April Fraser, Celia McCoy, director; Dave Moore,
and Lonnie Coats. Not present for t~e picture was Steve
Walburn.
'

I

Baseball - Southern
at
Kyger
Creek,
Wahama at Winfield.
Track - Meigs at
Nelsonville, Eastern at
Wa!erford.

.
.
BICENTENNIAL THEME will be u.ed durinc lbe 8ICOIId half oflbe ~ lfi'GIII'8M at
Syracuse Elementary School Friday at 7:30 p.m. Front, ·1-r, portrilylng cuntlnentaf
congre!;Slllen will be Tim Patterson and Roger Hubbard shown 'With the old covered wagon;
bacli:, 1-r, is a vocal group, Sarah Black, Vicki Arnold, Mary Ann Winebrenner, Denise Deem
and Susan.Jett. The program is under the direction of Ruth Slea!'ll5 and Sandra Hill. See more.
. pictures on Page 5.
.,,

.

�"

.

'
2- The Daily Sentinel, Midldleport-Pomeroy. 0., Th:..--8day, April!?, 1975

·
::&gt;
Of the Bend#_-~ -

'

Senate votes 30-2 -for $20.8 added disaster relief

. ·Beat .••

JJ.y &amp;b lloeflich

•

~ •

Alfred N. (Fred ) Sisson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leland Sisson,
Second St., Pomeroy, was initiated into the Gabon Area Ohio
Chapter of Phi Delta Kappa on April 10.
The initiation ceremonies were followed by a soda! hour in the
Accent Room of Ashland College at Ashlanq.
Phi Delpta Kappa is a professional organization made up of
persons who had dedicated their lives to teaching. Its membership is made up of women and men teachers and administrators who have earned a Master's Degree or higher.
Fred and his wife, Alice, who incidentally were here over the
weekend, reside in Galion where he teaches at the Dawsett
Elementary School.
YOU MIGH:f SEND along a card to John Arbaugh; formerly
of Me1gs County, who IS confined to the Hocking Valley Community Hospital, Room 109, in Logan, as result of a heart
attack. Mr. Arbaugh lives mI.ngan at 967 Mohican Ave.
·
To err is human-.
The names of ~vera! stockholders of the "Silver Slipper"
, operated Saturday night at the Junior high in Pomeroy in conJlUJI'tlon wit~ the "Spring Fling" were olnitted from the prograni
accidentally 'stockholders, who receive no dividends by the way,
omitted from the list were Mr. and Mrs. George Hackett, Sr., Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Goeglein, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Dutton, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Childs, Dr. and Mrs. Ray Pickens, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Fultz, Mr. and Mrs. Don Mullen, Jamey Scally, Mr. and
Mrs. William Anderson and Mr. and Mrs. Horace Karr.
EVERYONE IS LOOKING back these days, it seems, and so
the following excerpt from the diary of Wade C. Arnold, who was
the father of the late Mrs. Theodosia Frecker :
April 22, 1899:
"The East End\Literary Society of Pomeroy had another
joint debate with the Ohio Valley College Society of Ravenswood,
W.Va .
"Some 100 people came down and the two societies met at
Schwegman's Hall, it being crowded to its fullest capacity.
' 'The question debated:
"Resolved't That the United States are in greater danger
from foreign complications than mternal disfentives.
"Ohio Valley had tlie alternative and the East End Literary
Society, the negative.
"Speakers for the negative were James Pullins, Herman
Bierce, Wade C. Arnold. The jury was Rev. Turnbull, Rev.
Wisswasser, Tom Curtis, David Miller and Prof. George Heaton.
"They decided unanimously in favo of the negative thus
giving the victory to the East End Society".
Incidentally, Theodosia Frecker was named after the
daughter of Aaron Burr -Theodosia.
•
VANDAUSM APPEARS to be riding a high wave these
days. Apparently, a lot of people have destroying as their
"thing". And, isn't it amazing no one seems to witness this
destruction or else refuse to express themselves. If thls vandalism is in the minority -and I hope Ills- then, it's about time
that the majority of us speak out against the offenders.
William Ryerson, nej:ilew of Mr. and Mrs. Allen C. Hill, Sr.,
Beech St., Pomeroy, has been the photographer for some a~
solutely fascinating publications by the Boston Globe. Boston, of
course, is rich in historical events dealing with the Revolution
and the first shots between the Americans and the Brltish were
fired 200 years ago Friday, April19, on the Lexington Green.
SANDY GRIFFITH would like to hear from people who are
against the bringing of Vietnamese orphans into the United
States.
.
Sandy says that this country has enough problems without
adding to them through bringing the children into the States.
Sandy says that she resents U. S. tax dollars being apent on
!ringing the children who will eventually compete wtth
American youngsters for jobs. She also wonders why many
American children 'in orphanages are no~ adopted while homes
are being readily found for the Vietnamese children.
"I feel sorry for the children, but I oppose our country's
action," Sandy conunents.

New code
By JERRY R. WIL'ION
TULSA, Okla. (UP!)
Consulting engineer Jack
Tumilty, a friendly man with a
quick smile and a wry sense of
humor, has a job which
requires aU the skills of Henry
Kissinger at his dlplomatic
best.
Turnilty heads a committee
drafting .a_ standards code on
enetgy conservation in new
building design which is expected to become law in most,
if not all, of the 50 states.
He is caught in one of the

involve~

energy · industry's oldest
battles -an efficiency fight
between gas and electric
utilities.
The federal . government
_asked states to legislate energy
conservation in building codes
and the National Conf~ of

business today
States on Building Codes and
Standards turned to the
National Bureau of Standards.
The NBS drafted a prellminacy
report, then suggested it- be
given tti the American Society

DR. LAMB

By LEE LEONARD

liP! Slatebouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Senate has passed and
returned to the House a $20.8
million supplemental · appropriation
for . public
assistance and disaster relief.
The vote on the bill Wednesday
was 3().2.
Sponsors said the money was
needed to support burgeoning
public welfare rolls in view of a
depressed economy. The $2
million worth of disaster relief
was inserted by the Senate

Finance Committee to fulfill
state pledges for assistance to
the Xenia area, ravaged by a
tornado in 1974.
The House must agree to the
disaster relief money as well as
$173,000 for promotion of food
stamp programs, also Inserted
by the Finance €ommittee.
The appropriation originally
was
for $14.6 million, but was
6
$18.6 million by the time it left
the House on March 4.
The Senate Finance Comrruttee also voted to restore
regional welfare offices in

~:;:::::::::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::~::;:::::::::::::::::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·!·!•!•!•!•!·!·!·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:

.

~;

:;;;

~:i

the poet's corner·

\tI

N

MOM'S OW COOK STOVE AND POP'S OLD BARN!
When I was a little girl
And grew up on the farm,
I remember Mom's old cook stove And Pop's old barn!!.

•
The old stove was black and bl'own
W1th ~ .warming closet up above,
Where loaves·of bread were placed to raise
And later baked with love.

Youngstown, Mansfield,
Dayton- and Portsmouth, ad to
staff those in Lima, Zanesville
and Athens. The Rhodes administration had cut back on
the regional offices.
Senate Minority Leader Michael J . Maloney, RCincinnati, failed 14-18 on a
near part.y-line vote to
eliminate the offices . He
claimed it would cost the state
$500,000 to gear them up.
Check Welfare ProgrBDIB
But Senate Majonty Whip
Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown,
the bill's floor manager, said
the offices would only cost a
maximum of $300,000, and
were vital to monitoring local
welfare programs.
Meshel said elinninatwn of
the offices would leave only
five to cover 85 counties. ''They
simply can't do the job," he
said.
Meshel conceded under
questioning, however, that the
· state Department of Public
Welfare did not ask tl'le
legislature for the offices to be
staffed.
The disaster relief money is
designed to fund tornado
recovery projects in Greene
and Hamilton counties which
the state Controlling Board
was unable to pay for April 3.
The major unfunded project is
in Saylor Park, Hamilton
County.
The Senate also approved
and sent to the governor
emergency legislation closing
a loophole in the law which
allows a person 21 or older to
purchase beer or liquor for a
person between 18 and 21.
The loophole, discovered
earlier this year, came about m
1974 when the age of adulthood
was lowered to 18 but the
definition of ''minor" in the
liquor law was not changed.
The lone opponent of the bill,
Rep . Neal Zirruners Jr ., DDayton, said he felt the law
was inconsistel\t anyway, and
the minimiDll drinking age
should be reduced to 18.
Setup Special Board
Also approved by the Senate,
24-8, and sent to the House was
a bill setting up a special board
for examming, licensing and
regulating chiropractors.
Vocal opposition was led by
Sen. Robert E. O'Shaughnessy,
~luinbus, who said it would
"give chiropractors almost
unlimited responsibility. in
medical care and treatment."
O'Shaughnessy tried unsuccessfully to eliminate language
authorizing chiropractors to
examine, diagnose and treat
pabents, and classifying them
as physicians.
But he was successful in an
amendment forbidding them to
perform surgery or acupunclure.
Senate President Pro '\'empore Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron,
noted the legislation has been
tried for years without succesS
in Ohio but has become law in
most other states.
" It is high time that Ohio
joins the union," Ocasek said.
Raze Abandoned Statloos ,
• Meanwhile, the House approved, 69-23, and sent to the
Senate legislation establishing
a procedure for municipalities
and counties to raze abandoned
service stations.

The bill, sponsored by Rep.
Ike Thompson, 0-Clel(eland,
specifically would require serVIce station operators to post a
bond which would be forfeited
if the station is abandoned.
Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker, DBourneville, intro&lt;juced
legislative Democrats • $645
million capital improvements

bill, bringmg proposed
Democratic two-year appropriations even with Rhodes'
at $12.2 billion . .
In other action, the House
approved and sent to the
Senate separate bui. which
would:
-Exempt from counties'
debt limit bonds used for refuse

collection or disposal systems.
' .
-Eliminate
the requirement
that· ~rtain campaign finance
reports be notarized and
provide a penalty for false
reporting .
- Penni! the extension of
social services program to
families that could pay part but
not all of the cost and establish
an advisory committee.
The Senate was to reconvene .
at 11 a.m. today and the House
at I p.m.

BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN
PORTLAND
Hazel
School
is
the
only one I ever attended and my school ended when I was 14
Our bath water too,
because
of
tramportation.
George
H.
Crow,
county superintendent; allowed the teacher to give my
Rendered out the lard
8th
grade
final
at
school.
Like farmers have to do.
There was no way to go to high school, so the teacher and my dad, John Wells; said if I went again
next
year to review the 8th grade they would have transportation, but it never came in my school
It cooked meals for the threshers
days.
So ended my education.
And all our family dinners,
The
school was situated on Dewitts Run, which was named for Dal Dewitt who once lived there;
Everything Mom baked in it;
but most folk called it "Duits RlUl." We had moved here from Sherman, W, Va. in March on the
Made her a Gold Medal Winner!
flood waters. My folk were Reorganized Church of Christ of Latter-Day Saints who had no church
home, nor had the CarnpbeUtes, so we used the Hazel school alternately. Many folk attended both
Pop's old barn was made from beams
services.
There weren't many places to go, and all were relatives or friends and neighbors.
Hewed from trees chopped down on the farm,
The
school
house was set on a stone foundation with a metal roof and green wood shutters to be
Put together with wooden pegs;
closed
at
night,
or in the afternoon against the sun. A blackboard ran all the way across the front
Stood mighUy and proud , that old barn'
wall, with a ledge to hold chalk and erasers. A table with drawer· was the teacher's desk, aoo two
chairs.
·
After my swing was put away
On the table were a water pitcher and glass, a bell to call students inside, pencils, books, a paddle
As it hung in the big barn door,
or
litUe
switch and the biggest dictionary I've ever seen. The pot-bellied stove set in the eenter with a
I "drank" in the smells ol animals and hay;
long
iron
poker, sho~el, and coal bucket that doubled for a waste paper basket.
Why! I was rich! never poor!
At one end of the blackboard a 3ft. square varnished box held maps to be hung on the wall. Two
rows of seats were on each side of the stove. Boys on one side, girls the other. The seats aoo desk
I'd watch Pop make a nest in the hay
were fastened together and to the floor.
At each cow's place, where corn nubbins lay,
· The desks had a shelf underneath for supplies, and a round hole in the center to set ink bo!Ues in.
They'd chew and crunch 'til the cob was bare,
Our
pens were old quill-like or Spencerian, to dip into the ink. Seats, desks, doors, coal house and even
And I just loved to stand and stare.
the trees were scarred and marked up by penknives, where the boys' and girls' names and dates had
been carved.
I watched my brother throw baseballs.
I started to Sunday school there In April1913.1n June I was six and started school in September.
At the old sliding doors;
My parents had to furnish books those days. Being the oldest of 11, I got the new ones: These were
With big excited eyes handed down until they were worn out or the books changed. My fu-st reader was green covered with
Watched the thresher creak across the floor.
a red flower on the front.
But I liked poems Mom recited to me from her McGuffey's readers, so I spent much of my time
I'd show my sister the new baby kittens
listening
to older classmates say poems committed to memory in their lesson.
.
.
Hid far back under the barn,
There were no dunce caps and stools like I'd heard of, but children stood up in front of the room
They wouldn't eome out 'til their eyes were big
for misdemeanors, at least. Most teachers had a switch in the corner, but Edwin Hayman had several
'Cause that was the way on the farm.
size switches he called, ''persualies," not persuaders.
Children came from up and down the creek carrying book satchels and lunch buckets, walking,
The farm was sold on a day in December
mosUy. We live&lt;! near the school and went home for lunch and to do chores of feeding horses, slopping
A day we'll all remember,
hogs and·carrymg water.
.
But we must remember our Lord above,
My cousin; Lillian .Mosier Proffitt and friend, Ora Fitch Hall went home with me sometimes to
Gives us "HIS" world to use and love.
eat their lunch, as did two litUe boys whom older ones pestered when I wasn't near. They were
Howard Zink and Chrissy Powell (They called me their sweetheart).
The bouse is now gone,
For teacher's attention and to "get permission," we'd snap our fingers and raise our hand to
And so are the trees
leave
the room (go outside to the toilet), get a drink or speak to another about a lesson. .
It looks pretty deformed; Only one at a time was allowed outside or on the floor at once. A long bench set in back ol the
Still lingering on are my memories,
school for lunch pails and with two zinc waste buckets and dippers. Water was carried from Grandma
Still standing there is the big old barn.
Wells, next door. And the boys vied with each other to carry water and coal, to get outside In time of
school
hours.
There was a lot of livin ' and Iovin'
In
the
second grade I'd get tired ot s1ttmg and take up paper to put in the coal bucket. Byroo
On that Ohio farm,
Hayman
would yell, "Goldie Wells, take yyur seat." I never was scared ol him. Our families were
With Mom's old cook stove,
neighbors, and friends; I was used to his lciud talk sometimes. MosUy he spoke low and easy, with a·
And Pop's old barn!
' · Phyllis Amos,
'
drawl.
Columbia, S. C., formerly of Meigs County.
Gus Brewer was my first teacher, a good one, I guess. But I was afraid when he called some one
down, because he was strict.
. In 1913 we all got whooping cough. In 1914, Roy McMurray, a next door neighbor boy, died of
diphtherm. He was a young man, still in school, and every one liked him. My dad had a throat
problem from diphtheria w~en ~was young so he went to sit up with Roy at night. When Roy died,
my dad, John Wells, went wtth his dsd, "Dutch" M~urray, to Racine for his cllsket. Several years
of Heating, Refrigerating and corpora ted thereafter In state
later when our Utile brother, Fred, got killed Dutch went with dad for the casketfor his son.
Air~tioning Engineers for
legislation to satisfy the
. There was a scarlet fever scare in the community right after that, and schOol shut down. We were
review, refinement and endor- federal authorities. Debate
m
the fourth grade and most of the l&lt;ids tore up their grade cards! None of us passed that year. Mom
sement.
which has delayed action on
would not let me tear my report card, but the rest went in the•flfth grade when schoolstarted.
ASHRAE dropped the the draft concerns ''point of
Mom and Granny Wells had made me study at home. Everyone's name was on· the tegister'.
project into the lap of Tumilty, origin" versus ''point of use" in
George Crow, County Supt., made us all take an examination. I was the only one passed, aoo wu in a
48, a University of Oklahoma detennining the relative
grade alone the rest of my school days.
.
·
graduate who is a past
conservation merits of gas and
The only thing I liked about that was getting head marks and a pencil when I'd missed no words
president of ASHRAE's Tulsa
electricity.
in 10 lessons.
.. ,
chapter with a record of four
It's a battle Tumilty would
We had several teachers over the years, Gus Brewer, Byr~n Hayman, his brother, Edwin
years service oo similar in- juS\ as soon stay away from but where the fuel is put into the Hayman, Ada Gilliland, Bessie Mosler, Maggie Nease,~- Bissell, Allen Bailey and Ruth Shilin.
:
dustry committees.
Byron, Edwin and Bessie walked to acbool. Mr. Bailey and Bisaellrode horse3 from Bashan. Miss
can't.
electric generating plant or
Tumilty's committee hopea
"The gas industry wants this where natural gas enters the Gilliland and Mrs. Nease were from Syracuse and boarded at Squire Hayman's. Ruth Shain boarded
to have Its final draft approved document to recognize the need transmission system-to with us.
by ASHRAE in June, with the
to go beyond the building itself realistically measure energy
5?me teachers read the Bible and had morning·prayers. Others exercised, yet others pledt!ed
ASHRAE
standard
in- in considering the energy used efficiencies," says Dale E. Alleglllnce to the Flag. Some just set quieUy for the first few minutes. I loved Misa Shain. This was
by the building," he says. "We Frieden, marketing vice her first year to teach or be away from home. She shared a room with me and went home to Bashan
have been trying to oonsider presidentofOktahomaNatural on Friday evening and returned SUnday evening.
'
the point of generation-the Gas Co.
. Mrs. Nease, an older WQllllln, I believe left a deeper Impression than any other, especially on
power plant."
The gas industry is worried gu-ls. She could make one so ashamed of misbehavior, we'd almost wished she had whipped us. She
A committee appointed by ASHRAE will publish its bronghtcharacters in the Bible and school books alive to us. There were.large Bible pictures all over
Dave Rickilton, ASHRAE standard without taking a the walls wblch she taught from. ,
pres !dent,
1nc 1udin g position.
., She'd never punished us before others, rather, she'd ask us to stay after school and talk rut the
representatives
of
the
"This would, in all probabili- differences with her as a sort of moderator.
'
.
Each Monday morning there was a new verse on the board for all week. She'd have us repeatafter
American Gas Association, ty • legislate the selection of
·
'
Only about f1ve per cent of National Oil Fuel Institute, electric equip!llent and appli- her while pointiog out the words with a stick. One Ii'emember especially':
.''The lives of great men, all remind us we can make our lives aublime, and departing, leave
patients with the disease ac- Edison Electric Institute, the ances in new bulldings •"
tually die from It, which is coal industry, N~tlonal Bureau Frieden says. "This would be behind us, footprints on the sands of ttme."
Sbehadawayofbrlngjilgoutthegoodlnthebestorworstolus.
pretty remarkable when you of Standards and two con- additional waste of primary
suiting
engineers,
failed
to
energy-natural
gas,
for
Then
there was Mr. crow. We were always so happy to see him. He would write in tb&amp;t shaded, i
realize how much it can involve
reach
conclusions
despite
exa!llple-which
means
the
beautiful
hand,
our names on the IJ&lt;?ard. Then he's have WI put down a strlng'of figures from as high
and how litUe we know about
several long and often heate!l standard would have a as we could reach on the board to add. Held turn aroWJd, run his finger down them, and. !jill us the'
treating it.
1.
disastrous impact on energy answers.
. ·
The
corticosterone meetings.
conservation."
H
talked
to
t
t
h
ds
Basically, the gas industry
e
us, no a us, over our ea . One day at noon some boys were jumping off a bank aoo'
medicines like Prednisone are
claims
electricity
is
wasteful
..::...,..
_
_
_
_::._.....::._..,
bragging
how
far
they could jump. Then Mr. Crow walked over and outjumped them 811. When school·
commonly used in patients
because
it
loses
too
!OUCh
·
.took
up
he
complimented
them, but said, "Always do your best, but n:member, someone elae can
with extensive Involvement or
energy
in
oonverting
natural
The
Dai~
Sentiiler
always
do
better."
·
complications . The biggest
· O~OfED TO THE
We always had a Christmas tree and program at school. Parents came to see and hear ua perdanger really is too much llUlg ga s or other fuels into power .
INTEREST OF '
f
0
•
I
MEIGS-MASON AREA
orm. ncewhenCharleySmlthwasSantaCiaushiswhlskerscaughtflrefromthl!cand.les' whl!ehel
damage, so it was a good thing before It ever gets to a
CHESTER L. TANNEHILl.
waa giying out preaeirtl.
.
,
•
~
you
quit
smoking. building. The electriC industry
Exec. Ed.
Teach
treated........
then ,nowit'sotherwayaround.Somanythlngshavechanged,bu
,
counters
that
electricity
is
'
ROaEATHOEFLICH
.
ers
........
rs
Many patients do have a
Publ lshc:~Y Edd~~?~ except there are still many dedicated teachers.
. .
·
,
relapse after treatment with nearly 100 per cent efficient at
the
building
site,
while
gas
is,
Solvrdoy
by
The
Ohio
valley
Bessie
Mosler
Johnlop,
my
first
cousin,
and
I
stayed
with
Granny
Wells
the
year
she
taughtt
cortisone. But the relapse is
Publishing Company·, 111
sch 1 Sh andEd
·
cour1 Sf., Pomeroy, Ohio
oo · . e
winHaymanwerestudenlsintheelghthgradewbenlstartedintheflrst.
1
usually much milder and of at best, 00 per cent efficient.
"Th~ flUlction of the
d- I 992
45769. Business Olfice Phone
ShehelpedmewithleSsonsandwouldbuymecopyboobwith-•mnJesinwrltlilgbeca"••I~
shorter duration. So you should
2156. Editorial Phone 992-....
.,....
1
always g~ttlnll her papers to try towrite·Uke her. When she went to Athens for &amp;ormal training in
be through the worst of it and ards should be the con· 21s1
01
Second class
' .
' ·
•
can look forward to less servation of energy used in the Pomeroy,
Oh1opostage paid 1 summer she's save her old note booksforme.llovetl.......,.•llytheliterature
• .,.._
N ali 0~
vseo'i:l;~n ~
Mrs. Neaae, mentioned earlier, made a lot of changes In the school. Onewas the bell. It wu'i
preblema and eventually a building," says J.E. Daley,
complete cure. In most cases vice president for public llf- ~e.'lf:9'~!'r."l~~ . 12 Easl 42n4 roulld and flat, and set on her desk. Or she'd hold It In one hand and hit It with theotbei-. We lined up1
New York, New York
• outsldethedooraltlmeforschooltotakeup glrllllrst Aftereveryonewuqulel 'andthe"'-luwl!
the diseaae lasts less than two fairs' PubliC Service Co. of Sf,Subscrlptton
rates 1, '
.
.
'
•
t
vv1•~...,..
Oklahoma. " ...Archllectl and Delivered by carrier where thell'capa in hand, she would tap the bell once for U4 to go qulelly lnllde and llland at our-~~· ; ,
years.
available 75 cenls per wee k; again for,. to be •••led
·
'
"
'
...
•
Muscles, including the heart, engineers should not be forced By Motor Route where carr 1er
not available . . One
Teacben had problellllin one room hoJA•30 or more pupilll • Some 118D1Ulrecall
are,_,..,_
can be Involved, but I would not to attempt evalu,atlon of service
month , SJ 25 . By mad In OhiO R
~"!i
.,
VVIIIIft:l , ,
nebulous
factors
beyond
the
and
w
va
,
one
Year.
sn
oo
,
uth,
Charles,
Theodore,
Irene
raoo
Sylvia
Hilton;
Cllrl,
Oscar,
and
Ora
Fitch;
Nora
Honaker
Ula ~
be so easily convinced that any
111
chest pain you haye is from confines of the building they're ~~nt~~~~~~·. 00 ~~se.J~~~= Uona and Lliota Smith; Kermeth Biram, Clarence, Helen, and Floyd Benli; Allee Wataa, M.a~;
$26 oo year . Six month~ Larkins, lla Fulton, Russell and Uooel Johnlon, Gladdy Quillin, Mllbelaoo Ulllan MCleier and Lew~
your heart without other ln.- designing aoo building."
S1J 50 , three months, S7 SO McMurray 1
·
· · ' ...• i
''You
must
go
back
to
the
:
Subscnp t lon pr1ce includes
•
•
1
,. •
formation. The liver too can be
source
of
the
energy-the
point
j
su~day
Tif!l~sSentinel.
···.;
My
school
pictures,
alas,
have
au
beenloetor
bumedlnmydad'a.house.
;
involved, but can recover.
""
•
(io
"
l!l
·~
It heated wash water ...

old energy battle

Small lumps are
medical' mystery
By Lawreace E. Lamb, M.D.
for the first tlffie, often in
DEAR DR. LAMB - Last people who have no symptoms
year I was hospitalized for at all and thought they were
tests, and they showed I have a perfecUy healthy.
.
disease called sarcoidosis. I
The disease causes little
have been on Prednisone for lump-like formations which
months.
can be lairly large in ·size.
The other day I went for Doctors call these granulomas.
another chest X ray. and the The lillie lumps most comdoc tot said it was clear, I can monly 'form In the lungs. And
start to decrease the Pred· they may not interfere with
nisone and hopefully this lung function.
coodition will stay dormant.
These lump-like formations
I am still experiencing may disatppear in one part of
Ughtening in my cheat and the body and show up In
have frequent heart pains. ThU another area , They can involve
condition also brought out any part of the body, although
arthritis in my legs and hilnds. the lung is the most common
May I also say I gave up location.
smoking nine month.a ago when
Sarcoid has been confused
this dlaease was discovered. with tuberculosis, which it is
I'm 30 and have never been not. !lis not cancer. We know a
sick a day In my life.
tot more about what ,it is not
I want to know any in- than what it is.
fprmltion on this disease. I
In a large number of cases
heard it II rare. What will the dlaease never causes any
happen If It reoccurs? And, is It symptoms at aU and just
in any way related to cancer? disappears. About.IO to 20 per
DEAR READER - Sarcoid 'cent of the patients do develop
is one of those dlaeases th.a t we arthritis while the disease Is
have net solved. No one ;mows active, and if there is not too
wllat causes it. It is commonly much damage it may leave no
folUld on routlne chest X rays permanent iU effects.

'f

.. .

li

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,, 0., Thursday: April17. 1975

Sporl ·Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporlll Editor
NEW YORK (UPJ) - If somebody came up and offered to
grant you one wisll, promised to provide anything your litUe
heart desired, have you the slightest idea at all what you'd ask
for?
Me, I think I'd like to have another new league because at last
count there were only 6,837,595 of them and these take in only
fully accredited ones within the geographical boundaries of the
United States of America. A figure like this makes it plain what
this COlUltry needs far more than a good five-cenl cigar or decent
!!kent spot remover is another new league.
Well. today we've&lt;got one, and if your reaction to this piece of
startling information is 'How lucky can we caa get?' isn',t that
funny, that's the same reaction I get.
The exciting name of this "new" circuit is the World Football
League, and if that sounds exactly like one of those old leagues
yo~ once knew, you're absolutely right, it is! .
What the "old" World Football League has done ls simply
disappeared. Poooof! Just lille that. Now you see it; now ·you
don't. It left quietly, which is understandable considering the fact
it was some $20 million in the hole, but who's counting? Besides,
it's only money, isn't it?
In place of the "old" WFL, which lasted one season, gasping
heavily crossing the finish line, we now have the "new" WFL all
,. set and ready to go with franchises in Birmingham, Charlotte,
• Chicago, Hawaii, Jacksonville, Philadelphis, Memphis, San
Antonio, Shreveport and Southern California.
• Now 'it may strike you some of those names are familiar, and
'·that San An!Dnio is the only one among them which didu 't operate
in the "old" WFLlastyear, but you knowhow it is in this day and
age, ail you have to do is put a label saying "new" on something
, that really isn't, and people readily accept it, anyway, especially
.:if It's attractively merchandised.
• Speaking of that, the ''new" league has a new president. His
name is Chris Hemmeter and he certainly is a winner. He's so
.,smooth, so polished, so knowledgable about so many subjects,
, he's really wasting his time serving as president of the "new"
, World Football League. He should be out there running for
president of the United States.
· Hemmeter is a 35-year-old banker-businessman from
,Honolulu, who was one of the investors in the Hawaii club m the
"old" WFL last year. Like so many of the other investors in the
.. "old" league, he took a bath.
, As president of the ''new" circuit, he ouUined some of its aims
at a news conference Wednesday and posed for pictures_v;ith five
of its premier players, Larry Csonka, Jim Klick, Paul Warfield,
nCalvin Hill and John Gilliam.
, Hemmeter is one of those individuals with a knack for mfluencing people because of his intelligence', his manner and his
patience. One radio man wedged himself between Hemmeter
,and Csonka Wednesday, trying to fix his tape recorder, and
..although he delayed the start of the news conference for some
time and had Hemmeter bending over to one side like the leaning
.,Tower of Piss, the league's new president took it all in good grace
and never lost his composure.
. The urbane, youthful-looking Hemmeter has a sharp mind and
•a pleasing way about him, and when he speaks, you can abnost
hear the angels sing.
He said he was pleased to announce the formation of the ''new"
,World Football League. The emj:ilasis was on the word "new."
Everytlme he referred to the league, he made sure to include the
:word ''new" before it. Same with Csonka, Klick, Warfield, HID
,and Gilliam.
Hemmeter said also the ''new" WF_.l,-Wilspay(ng aU the debts
'of the old one ... in due time ... and that under re.'&lt;!l!_utiO!Jlii'Y
system of incentive contracts, all players in the leaguewould
:share in the net tevenue. Not the profits, you understand, merely
.the net revenue after Uncle Sam took his cut.
, The distinct possibility there may not be revenue to share in,
and that, indeed, there could be a deficit as there was so
,frequenUy among the franchises of the "old" . WFL, was not
:dlacussed. In that case, presumably the players would dip down
Jnto their own pockets and help defray expenses. When you quit
laughing, we'll go on.
, Over and over again, Hemmeter spoke of the "variable cost
concept" that would be employed to prevent the "new" WFL
'from winding up the same way the old one did. There was also
talk about an offer being made Joe Namath by the new operator
of the Chicago frandtise, a bld that goes over $4 million and indudes an amuity 'tlfat would pay Namath $100,100 a year lor 20
years. Part ownership of a franchise also is being promised
.Namath to jump from the Jets.
The offer was almost incaleulable, and listening to It being
'broken down, I somehow found myself equating it with the cold,
hard fact that some of the clubs in the "old" WFL couldn't even
pay their laundry bill.
Chris Hemmeter stole the show, though. He was ·the one who
put It all together, and when he talked about how all the old WFL
debts eventually would be pald by the new operators, he brought
to mind no other group so much as our national Department of
Health, ,Education and Welfare, which keeps offering repeated
liiSW'ance that everybody in the country will be taken care of in

a

lime.
When specifically?

\

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - It They entertain the Reds agam
was a sweet victory·for Jimmy this afternoon, with Andy
Wynn and the I.ns Angeles Messersmith on the mound for
Dodgers.
the Dodgers and Gary Nolan
Wynn hit his fourth grand for Cincinnall.
slam in t2 years as a pro and
Wynn h1t the fateful grand
the Dodgers won their third · slam in the seventh iming to
straight game against the tie the score 6-6. Wynn also hit
Cincinnati Reds alter losing the Dodgers' final grand slam
the same number ·against the last season -also against
club earlier in the season. The Cincinnati.
"There was nn rlnuM ~ hn•1t it
Dodgers rallied to defeat the
Reds 7-6 Wednesdav nil!ht.

Gal)1pohs clunbed mto a
four-way tie for second place in
the Southeastern Ohio League
baseball standings by turning
back visiting Meigs 111-4 on
Memorial F1eld Wednesday
evening.
,
·The Blue Dowlls collected
15 safeties off fbur Marauder
hurlers enroute to their fifth
victory In nine starts this
spring. Meigs dropped to 5-4
on tbe year.
Inside the SEOAL, Gallipolis
is now t1ed with Ironton, I.ngan
and Jackson with a 3-2 record.
Meigs dropped to J.4 m conference play followmg the
makeup contest.
The Gallians built up a 6·0
lead off Meigs starter Gary
George after three innings of
play.
Meigs came back wllh
three runs In the fourth and
another In the top'of the fifth
to cut Gallia's advantage to
two, 6-4.
The roof caved in on the

vtsttors

the final two rungs.
GAHS sent 20 men to the plate
1n

in the fifth and s1x rungs - 12
crosseo horne plate.
Jtrnmy Niday went the
distance for GAHS. Nlda~
fanned eight and walked seven.
He ·allowed s1x hits GAHS
commltt~ four errors
· •
George hurled the first two
and two-thirds innings for
Meigs He was reheved by
Perk Ault in the third Ault
pitched the next mning and
one-th1rd, followed by Mickey
Davenport m the fifth and M1ke
Nesselroad m the sixth . George
was charged With the loss.
The four Meigs hurlers
fanned four, walked e1ght, hit
one GAHS batter, permitted
two stolen bases and had one
wild pitch Meigs also had five
passed balls. The Marauders
committed seven costly errors.
Thirty players took part in
the 21&gt; hour marathon .
Mike Magnotta paced the
Marauders with two hits in
four trips and two RBI's.

Host Gallipohs won t2 of 15
events to defeat visiting Meigs
84-43 In a dual track meet on
Memorial Field Wednesday
evemng.
Meigs Terry Whitlatch

captured the 180-yard low
hurdles, Allan Stewart cap·
lured the discus honors wh1le
the Marauders' 680-relay team
won that event.
Galha's Brent' Saunders won

Ma1or League Standmgs
By Un1ted Press lnternat•onal
National League
East
w . I. pet . g b.
Ch •cago
5 1 833
St Louis
5 2 714
11
P 1ttsburgh
3 2 600
11 1
Philadelphia
3 4 429
21 2
Montreal
2 5 286
Jl l
New Y.ork
I 5 167
4
West
w I. pet. g .b.
San D iego
4
3 571
Atlanta
5 4 556
Los Angeles
5 4 556
San Franc•sco 4 4 500
11
Cincinnati
4
5 444
1
Houston
3 5 375
112
Wednesday's Resut1s
S2rt FranCISCO 7 San D1ego 1
Atlanta 5 Houston 2
Ch1cago 9 Ph1ladelph1a 3
Montreal 5 P •tt sb urgh o
St L OUIS J New York 2
Los Angeles 7 C1ncinnat1 6
Today's Probable P1tchers
(All Times EDTI
New York ( Seaver 1 l) at St
Lou1s (McGlothen 1 OL 1 30

Detro•t
M1lwaukee
Cleve land
Balf•more
New York

3

'J

2

'

2
J

600

1

500
500
143

J

1 6
West

w

I.

571

pet

I' '

Jl · ~

'

g b

Kansas C1ty
6
2. 750
Oak la nd
5 J 625
1
Cal1torn•a
4
4 500
2
Te)(as
3 4 429
21 ,
Mmnesota
3 5 375
3
Ch1 cago
3 6 33 3 3 11
Wedn es day' s Results
Boslon 4 New York 2
Texas 14 Ch1cago 4
Mmnesota 10 Ca l •forni a 4
Ba l timore 2 Mllwaukee 0
Kansas C1ty 0 Oakland 2
(On ly games scheduled )
Today's Probable P'•tchers
CAll T1mes EDT I
Callforn•a [ Tan ana 0 0 or
S1 nger
0 1)
at
Minnesota
{ Dec k er 11), 2 15p m
Texas (Jenkms 0 2) at Ch1ca
go ( Bahnsen (0 1). 2. 15 p m
Fnday's Games
Milwaukee at Clev eland
Bal t Jmore at Boston
pm
M1nn at Oa~land, n1g ht
Cinc1nnati (Nolan 0 l) at Los Kan City at T e11.as, night
Angeles (Messersmith 1 0) 4 15 Callforn•a at Ch1cago , n •ght
P:m
Ch1cago
(Hooton
o 01 at New York at Detro1t. n1gh t
Philadelphia (U nderwood 1 Ol.
5 JS p m
Houston
!G riff1n
0 ll
at
Atlanta {Morton20),7 J5p m
Montreal (McNally 1 OJ at
Pittsburgh j Reuss o OJ, 7 35

pm

(Only games scheduled)
Fr.day's Games
Philadelphia at Montreal
San Fran at Los Ang, night
Houston at Cincinnati. night
San D 1ego at Atlanta, n1ght
Pi ttsburgh al Sf LOU IS, night
IOnlv Qames scheduled I
Amer.can League

w

Hindu Heilderson, 675-1220 or
446-4230 (home) should be
contacted by Point Pleasant
area men wishing to play in the
"over 30" game and Red
Tucker, '173-5636, Is in charge of
the same age squad of the
Wahama team,
J'uruny Joe Wfllge can be
contacted by Point Pleasant
area men wishing to play in the
second game and either Red
Tucker or Ramey Cundiff, '1135425, for the Wahama team.

Team
Athens
Logan
Ironton

3
3

2 20
2 39

10
31

Jackson

3 2 23

21

GallipOlis

3

Waverly

2 34

)S

2 3 •19

18

~

4~

Meigs

1

Wellston
TOTALS

0 5 13 A3

2J

!.145.00

SALE ... ; ............

QUANTITI'ES LIMITED

DASH

-

B

20 20 200 200

and up

Toush Ontl .

•unt

tOUifl

to m1t11 your
llf• ..., .

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE
POMEROY

110 W. MAIN

- -----

Saddle Birc~ .~ ........... 5.99
Dark Walnut .............. 3.99
Orchard Coffee .......... 4.79
Plantation Aspen ......4.79
Western Cedar.......... 5.99

Friday's games :

Gallipolis at Wellston
Waverly

Logan at Athens
, .Jaskson vs. Ironton

Twice the fun
for. the price
of one!!
•

the Distinctive
ofthe ...

Your local Da1ry Isle dealer
has a su per deal lor you h•s
annual 2 IC'l r I sundae spec ·

Organ, Drums, Guita:
NITELY
TUES., WED., THURS., 8'30-1 :00
FRI. &amp; SAT., 9:30-2:00

THE MEIGS INN
,

'

ta c ut&lt;~ i Buy your tavor11e
sundae at 115 regul~r PfJC€ and
get i1 second sund.3e lree
Bnnc; the Ant•re l~l mlly there
1c; no hhlll Bu t hur ry deals hke
th1s don 1 last lorAverl

McCLURE'S

: ciaTryIsle ~

TO ENTERTAIN YOU AT

PH. 992-3629

Priced from

SAVE
UP TO

Jackson 8 Meigs A
Ironton 4 Waverly 3 ( 11 I
Athens 10 Wellston 2
Wednesdiy'$ result
Gaii2POil5 18 ~elgS 4

MeiQs at

$10325

CLEARANCE

Gallipolis 2 Logan o

TRIO

•

220 - YARD

All the quality Ha.hn-Eclipse features: fingerttp
hetght adjustment, easy-spin vert•cai·Pull startmg,
and many more-but at our special low pnces
Folding handle, tao-lets you store ~our
steel-deck JUSt about anywhere.
And they comply w1th all
exist1ng 1ndustry 'safety
standards

I

B

Sa und ers. G . Va len t me , G .
W•lllamson , M - 23 6
440 YARD
DASH
Va le nt •ne , G , Oh lin ger , M .
Wha ley , G 53 1
880 · YARDRUN - Chang , G.
Hayc raft , G , Reed, M
J 56 6
TWO MILE RUN - Rutz , G .
Gilkey M
Canter bury , G 11 1J 7
120-HIGH
HURDLES Betz , G , Sc1 tes , M . Green , G
'17 7
180-YARD LOW HURDLES
Whitlatch , M
Sc 1t es, M ,
Betz G - . 219
880 - RELAY Won
by
Me•gs
MILE RELAY - Won by
Ga ll• po l• s
( F1eld Events)
SHOT PUT Evans , G ,
Oile r , M , Brown , G - 43' 514"
DISCUS Stewart , M
Evans , G , Harnson, M - 111'
LONG JUMP ~ B Saunders,
G , Va le nlme , G Wh1tlatch, M
- 20' 71 7"
HIGH JUMP - B Saunders,
G . Val ent 1ne. G Dabn ey , G .
Nea l 0 1e ) G - 5'6"
POLE VAULT- K Saun
de r s , G , T
Thomas , M
Walkms . M , J Thomas and
Dabney G, he - 9

econom~ and performance I

"''

Runnmg Events )

Saun
der s
G
W 1ll1a ms
M ,
Whitla tc h , M - 10 6

HAHN-ECLIPSE

i Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Co.

'

List '19,.95

AB R H
Magnotta If
4 0 7
A ult , ct , p ss
4 1 1
Nesse lroad , 2b , p ,
4 0 0
M ar sha ll , Jb
4 1 1
Davenport ,ss p
3 1 1
Ham11ton ,c.
2 0 0
CflrmKhae l. 1b ,
3 0 0
Owe n. ph
0 0 0
George, p rf,
3 1 1
Bach ner, rl cf.
0 0 0
Sm 1lh , ph
0 0 0
Walburn , r f ,
1 0 0
Wy alt , ph ,
1 o o
TOTALS
29 4 6
GALLIPOLIS 118 }
PLAYER - Po s
AB R H
B Johnson , c 3b
7 3 1
1 1 0
Dray ph ,
Wilson . 2b,
3 2 3
T Johnson 2b
0 1 0
N1day , p
3 I 1
1 2 0
Perry , ss
Sa unders , ph ,
1 0 0
Wall rt
d 1 1
G Holl ey , r f,
1 1 1
F old en, cf.
3 1 1
Warr en, l b.
1 0 1
Swa1n . It
3 1 1
S1ck l es . If p r
I 1 0
Watson 3b
7 o 1
Bryslan c
1 1 1
Grolh , 1b cl
3 1 1
R Holl ey, ph ,
1 I 1
TOTALS
31 18 15
Score by •nn .n gs
Me1gS
000 310 0- 4 6 7
GAH S
J03 075 )( - 18 15 4

~teel -deck rotones. b~

ouANTITIEs ARE LIMITED
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Frank Sisty

Midland 13:883 MOBIL£

MEIGS ( 4)
PLAYER - Po s

Tuesday's results:

Located On Upper Route 7
At
, Addison, Ohio

·SALE ........... ~2Q4.95

j

100 Yard Dash -

p 7301

-Cash Only-

.

·

the 100-yard dash , 220-dash,
long Jump and h1gh Jump tn the
Blue Devils first victory of the
season.
Tom Valentine captured the
440-yard dash . John Chang
picked up a pa1r'of firsts in the
680-yard run and mile run
while Eugene Rutz won the two
mile run . Kim Saunders won
the pole vault, Mike E!etz the
120-high hurdles and Mike
Evans the shot put The GAHS
mile relay team (Green. Betz,
Shawver and R. Whaley )
captured that event.
Gallipolis w1ll take 'part m
the annual Athens Relays
Saturday .
Wednesday 's results :

Meigs. Chip Brauer relieved
Brownmg in the seventh.
Browning was charged with
the loss.
GAHS ml.chers fanned seve n
and walked six while Meigs
pil.ch~rs struck out six and.
Issued four free passes ,
Today, lhe GAHS J9yvees
play at Jackson .
Wednesday's varsity box
score:

R OR
5 0 29 14

.s&amp;E 2 WAY RADIO

c. B.

Meigs left tO runners
stranded.
Breit Wilson led Galha 's
attack With three smgles and a
sacnfice ny. Tony Folden had
tw,o smgles m three trips Brent
Jphnson ~nd Terry Wall each
had doubles for GAHS.
GAHS will host Rave~swood
at 4 today. Fnday, the Blue
Dev1ls play at Wellston Meigs
IS at Waverly Friday.
The Gallipolis Junior Varsity
defeated host Meigs 9-0 at
Middlep ort Wedne sday
evening for its second wm m
two starts Darrell Jones was
credited w1th the win. Chuck
Lane hUrled the last two in·
mngs for · GAHS. Colin Saun·
ders paced the winners with
four hlts. The Galhans banged
out 12 safeties
Gaiha's Darrell Jones and
Mickey Graham had two hits
apiece.
Meigs collected two hits,
singles by Dave Miller and
Jim Ho"ard. Dale Browning
started on the mound for

.......... ,,

Your Best Buy!

W L

·

. With digital Clock-Base Station
L1st S269. 95

Juan Marichal started for
the Dodgers but was replaced
by RICk Rhoden alter givmg up
four runs and seven hits in less
than three innings. Mike
Marshall replaced Rhoden in
the eighth and got the win.
The Dodgers, who played
seven ol their first 13 games

against' the Reds, . begm a
three-game series against San
Francisco Fnday before gomg
on a seven·game road lnp
Cincmnati heads home for a
senes against Houston .

pet : g .b.
2 .714 -

. .

Pean:e'Simpson SUPER LYNX

nm ."

SEO standings

Alwnni benefit game scheduled

· I·

fastballs and he threw me a
fast hall that I hit for the home

1.

5

Boston

WEEKEND SPECIALS:

was JUStlrymg oo meet the bell.
·I wasn't trying for a home run
- 1 seldom do. But I did think
when I got up there that a home
run would tie it up ."
Wynn hit his slam off
reliever Pat Darcy.
"I was a little surpriSed that
(Reds manager) Sparky Anderson trough! m Darcy," he
s8ld. "He ihrows nothing but

Marauders lose at GAHS

East

POINT PLEASANT
Alumni basketball teams from
Point Pleasant High School and
Wahama High will meet
Saturday in a benefit game
sponsorea by the OhioKanawha Officials
Association.
The first game, at 6:30p.m.
will be for cagers over 30 years
old. Those under 30 except
those still in high school, can
play in the second game at 8
p.m.

when I htt ltt" Wynn sald. "I

Devils tied for second after win

By and by.

s
'
t a n

"I· r

Reds lose heartbreaker

. POMEROY

Locust St., Maddteport

.

OFFER GOOD THURS. &amp; FRI.

i••

.I•

�"

.

'
2- The Daily Sentinel, Midldleport-Pomeroy. 0., Th:..--8day, April!?, 1975

·
::&gt;
Of the Bend#_-~ -

'

Senate votes 30-2 -for $20.8 added disaster relief

. ·Beat .••

JJ.y &amp;b lloeflich

•

~ •

Alfred N. (Fred ) Sisson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leland Sisson,
Second St., Pomeroy, was initiated into the Gabon Area Ohio
Chapter of Phi Delta Kappa on April 10.
The initiation ceremonies were followed by a soda! hour in the
Accent Room of Ashland College at Ashlanq.
Phi Delpta Kappa is a professional organization made up of
persons who had dedicated their lives to teaching. Its membership is made up of women and men teachers and administrators who have earned a Master's Degree or higher.
Fred and his wife, Alice, who incidentally were here over the
weekend, reside in Galion where he teaches at the Dawsett
Elementary School.
YOU MIGH:f SEND along a card to John Arbaugh; formerly
of Me1gs County, who IS confined to the Hocking Valley Community Hospital, Room 109, in Logan, as result of a heart
attack. Mr. Arbaugh lives mI.ngan at 967 Mohican Ave.
·
To err is human-.
The names of ~vera! stockholders of the "Silver Slipper"
, operated Saturday night at the Junior high in Pomeroy in conJlUJI'tlon wit~ the "Spring Fling" were olnitted from the prograni
accidentally 'stockholders, who receive no dividends by the way,
omitted from the list were Mr. and Mrs. George Hackett, Sr., Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Goeglein, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Dutton, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Childs, Dr. and Mrs. Ray Pickens, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Fultz, Mr. and Mrs. Don Mullen, Jamey Scally, Mr. and
Mrs. William Anderson and Mr. and Mrs. Horace Karr.
EVERYONE IS LOOKING back these days, it seems, and so
the following excerpt from the diary of Wade C. Arnold, who was
the father of the late Mrs. Theodosia Frecker :
April 22, 1899:
"The East End\Literary Society of Pomeroy had another
joint debate with the Ohio Valley College Society of Ravenswood,
W.Va .
"Some 100 people came down and the two societies met at
Schwegman's Hall, it being crowded to its fullest capacity.
' 'The question debated:
"Resolved't That the United States are in greater danger
from foreign complications than mternal disfentives.
"Ohio Valley had tlie alternative and the East End Literary
Society, the negative.
"Speakers for the negative were James Pullins, Herman
Bierce, Wade C. Arnold. The jury was Rev. Turnbull, Rev.
Wisswasser, Tom Curtis, David Miller and Prof. George Heaton.
"They decided unanimously in favo of the negative thus
giving the victory to the East End Society".
Incidentally, Theodosia Frecker was named after the
daughter of Aaron Burr -Theodosia.
•
VANDAUSM APPEARS to be riding a high wave these
days. Apparently, a lot of people have destroying as their
"thing". And, isn't it amazing no one seems to witness this
destruction or else refuse to express themselves. If thls vandalism is in the minority -and I hope Ills- then, it's about time
that the majority of us speak out against the offenders.
William Ryerson, nej:ilew of Mr. and Mrs. Allen C. Hill, Sr.,
Beech St., Pomeroy, has been the photographer for some a~
solutely fascinating publications by the Boston Globe. Boston, of
course, is rich in historical events dealing with the Revolution
and the first shots between the Americans and the Brltish were
fired 200 years ago Friday, April19, on the Lexington Green.
SANDY GRIFFITH would like to hear from people who are
against the bringing of Vietnamese orphans into the United
States.
.
Sandy says that this country has enough problems without
adding to them through bringing the children into the States.
Sandy says that she resents U. S. tax dollars being apent on
!ringing the children who will eventually compete wtth
American youngsters for jobs. She also wonders why many
American children 'in orphanages are no~ adopted while homes
are being readily found for the Vietnamese children.
"I feel sorry for the children, but I oppose our country's
action," Sandy conunents.

New code
By JERRY R. WIL'ION
TULSA, Okla. (UP!)
Consulting engineer Jack
Tumilty, a friendly man with a
quick smile and a wry sense of
humor, has a job which
requires aU the skills of Henry
Kissinger at his dlplomatic
best.
Turnilty heads a committee
drafting .a_ standards code on
enetgy conservation in new
building design which is expected to become law in most,
if not all, of the 50 states.
He is caught in one of the

involve~

energy · industry's oldest
battles -an efficiency fight
between gas and electric
utilities.
The federal . government
_asked states to legislate energy
conservation in building codes
and the National Conf~ of

business today
States on Building Codes and
Standards turned to the
National Bureau of Standards.
The NBS drafted a prellminacy
report, then suggested it- be
given tti the American Society

DR. LAMB

By LEE LEONARD

liP! Slatebouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Senate has passed and
returned to the House a $20.8
million supplemental · appropriation
for . public
assistance and disaster relief.
The vote on the bill Wednesday
was 3().2.
Sponsors said the money was
needed to support burgeoning
public welfare rolls in view of a
depressed economy. The $2
million worth of disaster relief
was inserted by the Senate

Finance Committee to fulfill
state pledges for assistance to
the Xenia area, ravaged by a
tornado in 1974.
The House must agree to the
disaster relief money as well as
$173,000 for promotion of food
stamp programs, also Inserted
by the Finance €ommittee.
The appropriation originally
was
for $14.6 million, but was
6
$18.6 million by the time it left
the House on March 4.
The Senate Finance Comrruttee also voted to restore
regional welfare offices in

~:;:::::::::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::~::;:::::::::::::::::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·!·!•!•!•!•!·!·!·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:

.

~;

:;;;

~:i

the poet's corner·

\tI

N

MOM'S OW COOK STOVE AND POP'S OLD BARN!
When I was a little girl
And grew up on the farm,
I remember Mom's old cook stove And Pop's old barn!!.

•
The old stove was black and bl'own
W1th ~ .warming closet up above,
Where loaves·of bread were placed to raise
And later baked with love.

Youngstown, Mansfield,
Dayton- and Portsmouth, ad to
staff those in Lima, Zanesville
and Athens. The Rhodes administration had cut back on
the regional offices.
Senate Minority Leader Michael J . Maloney, RCincinnati, failed 14-18 on a
near part.y-line vote to
eliminate the offices . He
claimed it would cost the state
$500,000 to gear them up.
Check Welfare ProgrBDIB
But Senate Majonty Whip
Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown,
the bill's floor manager, said
the offices would only cost a
maximum of $300,000, and
were vital to monitoring local
welfare programs.
Meshel said elinninatwn of
the offices would leave only
five to cover 85 counties. ''They
simply can't do the job," he
said.
Meshel conceded under
questioning, however, that the
· state Department of Public
Welfare did not ask tl'le
legislature for the offices to be
staffed.
The disaster relief money is
designed to fund tornado
recovery projects in Greene
and Hamilton counties which
the state Controlling Board
was unable to pay for April 3.
The major unfunded project is
in Saylor Park, Hamilton
County.
The Senate also approved
and sent to the governor
emergency legislation closing
a loophole in the law which
allows a person 21 or older to
purchase beer or liquor for a
person between 18 and 21.
The loophole, discovered
earlier this year, came about m
1974 when the age of adulthood
was lowered to 18 but the
definition of ''minor" in the
liquor law was not changed.
The lone opponent of the bill,
Rep . Neal Zirruners Jr ., DDayton, said he felt the law
was inconsistel\t anyway, and
the minimiDll drinking age
should be reduced to 18.
Setup Special Board
Also approved by the Senate,
24-8, and sent to the House was
a bill setting up a special board
for examming, licensing and
regulating chiropractors.
Vocal opposition was led by
Sen. Robert E. O'Shaughnessy,
~luinbus, who said it would
"give chiropractors almost
unlimited responsibility. in
medical care and treatment."
O'Shaughnessy tried unsuccessfully to eliminate language
authorizing chiropractors to
examine, diagnose and treat
pabents, and classifying them
as physicians.
But he was successful in an
amendment forbidding them to
perform surgery or acupunclure.
Senate President Pro '\'empore Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron,
noted the legislation has been
tried for years without succesS
in Ohio but has become law in
most other states.
" It is high time that Ohio
joins the union," Ocasek said.
Raze Abandoned Statloos ,
• Meanwhile, the House approved, 69-23, and sent to the
Senate legislation establishing
a procedure for municipalities
and counties to raze abandoned
service stations.

The bill, sponsored by Rep.
Ike Thompson, 0-Clel(eland,
specifically would require serVIce station operators to post a
bond which would be forfeited
if the station is abandoned.
Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker, DBourneville, intro&lt;juced
legislative Democrats • $645
million capital improvements

bill, bringmg proposed
Democratic two-year appropriations even with Rhodes'
at $12.2 billion . .
In other action, the House
approved and sent to the
Senate separate bui. which
would:
-Exempt from counties'
debt limit bonds used for refuse

collection or disposal systems.
' .
-Eliminate
the requirement
that· ~rtain campaign finance
reports be notarized and
provide a penalty for false
reporting .
- Penni! the extension of
social services program to
families that could pay part but
not all of the cost and establish
an advisory committee.
The Senate was to reconvene .
at 11 a.m. today and the House
at I p.m.

BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN
PORTLAND
Hazel
School
is
the
only one I ever attended and my school ended when I was 14
Our bath water too,
because
of
tramportation.
George
H.
Crow,
county superintendent; allowed the teacher to give my
Rendered out the lard
8th
grade
final
at
school.
Like farmers have to do.
There was no way to go to high school, so the teacher and my dad, John Wells; said if I went again
next
year to review the 8th grade they would have transportation, but it never came in my school
It cooked meals for the threshers
days.
So ended my education.
And all our family dinners,
The
school was situated on Dewitts Run, which was named for Dal Dewitt who once lived there;
Everything Mom baked in it;
but most folk called it "Duits RlUl." We had moved here from Sherman, W, Va. in March on the
Made her a Gold Medal Winner!
flood waters. My folk were Reorganized Church of Christ of Latter-Day Saints who had no church
home, nor had the CarnpbeUtes, so we used the Hazel school alternately. Many folk attended both
Pop's old barn was made from beams
services.
There weren't many places to go, and all were relatives or friends and neighbors.
Hewed from trees chopped down on the farm,
The
school
house was set on a stone foundation with a metal roof and green wood shutters to be
Put together with wooden pegs;
closed
at
night,
or in the afternoon against the sun. A blackboard ran all the way across the front
Stood mighUy and proud , that old barn'
wall, with a ledge to hold chalk and erasers. A table with drawer· was the teacher's desk, aoo two
chairs.
·
After my swing was put away
On the table were a water pitcher and glass, a bell to call students inside, pencils, books, a paddle
As it hung in the big barn door,
or
litUe
switch and the biggest dictionary I've ever seen. The pot-bellied stove set in the eenter with a
I "drank" in the smells ol animals and hay;
long
iron
poker, sho~el, and coal bucket that doubled for a waste paper basket.
Why! I was rich! never poor!
At one end of the blackboard a 3ft. square varnished box held maps to be hung on the wall. Two
rows of seats were on each side of the stove. Boys on one side, girls the other. The seats aoo desk
I'd watch Pop make a nest in the hay
were fastened together and to the floor.
At each cow's place, where corn nubbins lay,
· The desks had a shelf underneath for supplies, and a round hole in the center to set ink bo!Ues in.
They'd chew and crunch 'til the cob was bare,
Our
pens were old quill-like or Spencerian, to dip into the ink. Seats, desks, doors, coal house and even
And I just loved to stand and stare.
the trees were scarred and marked up by penknives, where the boys' and girls' names and dates had
been carved.
I watched my brother throw baseballs.
I started to Sunday school there In April1913.1n June I was six and started school in September.
At the old sliding doors;
My parents had to furnish books those days. Being the oldest of 11, I got the new ones: These were
With big excited eyes handed down until they were worn out or the books changed. My fu-st reader was green covered with
Watched the thresher creak across the floor.
a red flower on the front.
But I liked poems Mom recited to me from her McGuffey's readers, so I spent much of my time
I'd show my sister the new baby kittens
listening
to older classmates say poems committed to memory in their lesson.
.
.
Hid far back under the barn,
There were no dunce caps and stools like I'd heard of, but children stood up in front of the room
They wouldn't eome out 'til their eyes were big
for misdemeanors, at least. Most teachers had a switch in the corner, but Edwin Hayman had several
'Cause that was the way on the farm.
size switches he called, ''persualies," not persuaders.
Children came from up and down the creek carrying book satchels and lunch buckets, walking,
The farm was sold on a day in December
mosUy. We live&lt;! near the school and went home for lunch and to do chores of feeding horses, slopping
A day we'll all remember,
hogs and·carrymg water.
.
But we must remember our Lord above,
My cousin; Lillian .Mosier Proffitt and friend, Ora Fitch Hall went home with me sometimes to
Gives us "HIS" world to use and love.
eat their lunch, as did two litUe boys whom older ones pestered when I wasn't near. They were
Howard Zink and Chrissy Powell (They called me their sweetheart).
The bouse is now gone,
For teacher's attention and to "get permission," we'd snap our fingers and raise our hand to
And so are the trees
leave
the room (go outside to the toilet), get a drink or speak to another about a lesson. .
It looks pretty deformed; Only one at a time was allowed outside or on the floor at once. A long bench set in back ol the
Still lingering on are my memories,
school for lunch pails and with two zinc waste buckets and dippers. Water was carried from Grandma
Still standing there is the big old barn.
Wells, next door. And the boys vied with each other to carry water and coal, to get outside In time of
school
hours.
There was a lot of livin ' and Iovin'
In
the
second grade I'd get tired ot s1ttmg and take up paper to put in the coal bucket. Byroo
On that Ohio farm,
Hayman
would yell, "Goldie Wells, take yyur seat." I never was scared ol him. Our families were
With Mom's old cook stove,
neighbors, and friends; I was used to his lciud talk sometimes. MosUy he spoke low and easy, with a·
And Pop's old barn!
' · Phyllis Amos,
'
drawl.
Columbia, S. C., formerly of Meigs County.
Gus Brewer was my first teacher, a good one, I guess. But I was afraid when he called some one
down, because he was strict.
. In 1913 we all got whooping cough. In 1914, Roy McMurray, a next door neighbor boy, died of
diphtherm. He was a young man, still in school, and every one liked him. My dad had a throat
problem from diphtheria w~en ~was young so he went to sit up with Roy at night. When Roy died,
my dad, John Wells, went wtth his dsd, "Dutch" M~urray, to Racine for his cllsket. Several years
of Heating, Refrigerating and corpora ted thereafter In state
later when our Utile brother, Fred, got killed Dutch went with dad for the casketfor his son.
Air~tioning Engineers for
legislation to satisfy the
. There was a scarlet fever scare in the community right after that, and schOol shut down. We were
review, refinement and endor- federal authorities. Debate
m
the fourth grade and most of the l&lt;ids tore up their grade cards! None of us passed that year. Mom
sement.
which has delayed action on
would not let me tear my report card, but the rest went in the•flfth grade when schoolstarted.
ASHRAE dropped the the draft concerns ''point of
Mom and Granny Wells had made me study at home. Everyone's name was on· the tegister'.
project into the lap of Tumilty, origin" versus ''point of use" in
George Crow, County Supt., made us all take an examination. I was the only one passed, aoo wu in a
48, a University of Oklahoma detennining the relative
grade alone the rest of my school days.
.
·
graduate who is a past
conservation merits of gas and
The only thing I liked about that was getting head marks and a pencil when I'd missed no words
president of ASHRAE's Tulsa
electricity.
in 10 lessons.
.. ,
chapter with a record of four
It's a battle Tumilty would
We had several teachers over the years, Gus Brewer, Byr~n Hayman, his brother, Edwin
years service oo similar in- juS\ as soon stay away from but where the fuel is put into the Hayman, Ada Gilliland, Bessie Mosler, Maggie Nease,~- Bissell, Allen Bailey and Ruth Shilin.
:
dustry committees.
Byron, Edwin and Bessie walked to acbool. Mr. Bailey and Bisaellrode horse3 from Bashan. Miss
can't.
electric generating plant or
Tumilty's committee hopea
"The gas industry wants this where natural gas enters the Gilliland and Mrs. Nease were from Syracuse and boarded at Squire Hayman's. Ruth Shain boarded
to have Its final draft approved document to recognize the need transmission system-to with us.
by ASHRAE in June, with the
to go beyond the building itself realistically measure energy
5?me teachers read the Bible and had morning·prayers. Others exercised, yet others pledt!ed
ASHRAE
standard
in- in considering the energy used efficiencies," says Dale E. Alleglllnce to the Flag. Some just set quieUy for the first few minutes. I loved Misa Shain. This was
by the building," he says. "We Frieden, marketing vice her first year to teach or be away from home. She shared a room with me and went home to Bashan
have been trying to oonsider presidentofOktahomaNatural on Friday evening and returned SUnday evening.
'
the point of generation-the Gas Co.
. Mrs. Nease, an older WQllllln, I believe left a deeper Impression than any other, especially on
power plant."
The gas industry is worried gu-ls. She could make one so ashamed of misbehavior, we'd almost wished she had whipped us. She
A committee appointed by ASHRAE will publish its bronghtcharacters in the Bible and school books alive to us. There were.large Bible pictures all over
Dave Rickilton, ASHRAE standard without taking a the walls wblch she taught from. ,
pres !dent,
1nc 1udin g position.
., She'd never punished us before others, rather, she'd ask us to stay after school and talk rut the
representatives
of
the
"This would, in all probabili- differences with her as a sort of moderator.
'
.
Each Monday morning there was a new verse on the board for all week. She'd have us repeatafter
American Gas Association, ty • legislate the selection of
·
'
Only about f1ve per cent of National Oil Fuel Institute, electric equip!llent and appli- her while pointiog out the words with a stick. One Ii'emember especially':
.''The lives of great men, all remind us we can make our lives aublime, and departing, leave
patients with the disease ac- Edison Electric Institute, the ances in new bulldings •"
tually die from It, which is coal industry, N~tlonal Bureau Frieden says. "This would be behind us, footprints on the sands of ttme."
Sbehadawayofbrlngjilgoutthegoodlnthebestorworstolus.
pretty remarkable when you of Standards and two con- additional waste of primary
suiting
engineers,
failed
to
energy-natural
gas,
for
Then
there was Mr. crow. We were always so happy to see him. He would write in tb&amp;t shaded, i
realize how much it can involve
reach
conclusions
despite
exa!llple-which
means
the
beautiful
hand,
our names on the IJ&lt;?ard. Then he's have WI put down a strlng'of figures from as high
and how litUe we know about
several long and often heate!l standard would have a as we could reach on the board to add. Held turn aroWJd, run his finger down them, and. !jill us the'
treating it.
1.
disastrous impact on energy answers.
. ·
The
corticosterone meetings.
conservation."
H
talked
to
t
t
h
ds
Basically, the gas industry
e
us, no a us, over our ea . One day at noon some boys were jumping off a bank aoo'
medicines like Prednisone are
claims
electricity
is
wasteful
..::...,..
_
_
_
_::._.....::._..,
bragging
how
far
they could jump. Then Mr. Crow walked over and outjumped them 811. When school·
commonly used in patients
because
it
loses
too
!OUCh
·
.took
up
he
complimented
them, but said, "Always do your best, but n:member, someone elae can
with extensive Involvement or
energy
in
oonverting
natural
The
Dai~
Sentiiler
always
do
better."
·
complications . The biggest
· O~OfED TO THE
We always had a Christmas tree and program at school. Parents came to see and hear ua perdanger really is too much llUlg ga s or other fuels into power .
INTEREST OF '
f
0
•
I
MEIGS-MASON AREA
orm. ncewhenCharleySmlthwasSantaCiaushiswhlskerscaughtflrefromthl!cand.les' whl!ehel
damage, so it was a good thing before It ever gets to a
CHESTER L. TANNEHILl.
waa giying out preaeirtl.
.
,
•
~
you
quit
smoking. building. The electriC industry
Exec. Ed.
Teach
treated........
then ,nowit'sotherwayaround.Somanythlngshavechanged,bu
,
counters
that
electricity
is
'
ROaEATHOEFLICH
.
ers
........
rs
Many patients do have a
Publ lshc:~Y Edd~~?~ except there are still many dedicated teachers.
. .
·
,
relapse after treatment with nearly 100 per cent efficient at
the
building
site,
while
gas
is,
Solvrdoy
by
The
Ohio
valley
Bessie
Mosler
Johnlop,
my
first
cousin,
and
I
stayed
with
Granny
Wells
the
year
she
taughtt
cortisone. But the relapse is
Publishing Company·, 111
sch 1 Sh andEd
·
cour1 Sf., Pomeroy, Ohio
oo · . e
winHaymanwerestudenlsintheelghthgradewbenlstartedintheflrst.
1
usually much milder and of at best, 00 per cent efficient.
"Th~ flUlction of the
d- I 992
45769. Business Olfice Phone
ShehelpedmewithleSsonsandwouldbuymecopyboobwith-•mnJesinwrltlilgbeca"••I~
shorter duration. So you should
2156. Editorial Phone 992-....
.,....
1
always g~ttlnll her papers to try towrite·Uke her. When she went to Athens for &amp;ormal training in
be through the worst of it and ards should be the con· 21s1
01
Second class
' .
' ·
•
can look forward to less servation of energy used in the Pomeroy,
Oh1opostage paid 1 summer she's save her old note booksforme.llovetl.......,.•llytheliterature
• .,.._
N ali 0~
vseo'i:l;~n ~
Mrs. Neaae, mentioned earlier, made a lot of changes In the school. Onewas the bell. It wu'i
preblema and eventually a building," says J.E. Daley,
complete cure. In most cases vice president for public llf- ~e.'lf:9'~!'r."l~~ . 12 Easl 42n4 roulld and flat, and set on her desk. Or she'd hold It In one hand and hit It with theotbei-. We lined up1
New York, New York
• outsldethedooraltlmeforschooltotakeup glrllllrst Aftereveryonewuqulel 'andthe"'-luwl!
the diseaae lasts less than two fairs' PubliC Service Co. of Sf,Subscrlptton
rates 1, '
.
.
'
•
t
vv1•~...,..
Oklahoma. " ...Archllectl and Delivered by carrier where thell'capa in hand, she would tap the bell once for U4 to go qulelly lnllde and llland at our-~~· ; ,
years.
available 75 cenls per wee k; again for,. to be •••led
·
'
"
'
...
•
Muscles, including the heart, engineers should not be forced By Motor Route where carr 1er
not available . . One
Teacben had problellllin one room hoJA•30 or more pupilll • Some 118D1Ulrecall
are,_,..,_
can be Involved, but I would not to attempt evalu,atlon of service
month , SJ 25 . By mad In OhiO R
~"!i
.,
VVIIIIft:l , ,
nebulous
factors
beyond
the
and
w
va
,
one
Year.
sn
oo
,
uth,
Charles,
Theodore,
Irene
raoo
Sylvia
Hilton;
Cllrl,
Oscar,
and
Ora
Fitch;
Nora
Honaker
Ula ~
be so easily convinced that any
111
chest pain you haye is from confines of the building they're ~~nt~~~~~~·. 00 ~~se.J~~~= Uona and Lliota Smith; Kermeth Biram, Clarence, Helen, and Floyd Benli; Allee Wataa, M.a~;
$26 oo year . Six month~ Larkins, lla Fulton, Russell and Uooel Johnlon, Gladdy Quillin, Mllbelaoo Ulllan MCleier and Lew~
your heart without other ln.- designing aoo building."
S1J 50 , three months, S7 SO McMurray 1
·
· · ' ...• i
''You
must
go
back
to
the
:
Subscnp t lon pr1ce includes
•
•
1
,. •
formation. The liver too can be
source
of
the
energy-the
point
j
su~day
Tif!l~sSentinel.
···.;
My
school
pictures,
alas,
have
au
beenloetor
bumedlnmydad'a.house.
;
involved, but can recover.
""
•
(io
"
l!l
·~
It heated wash water ...

old energy battle

Small lumps are
medical' mystery
By Lawreace E. Lamb, M.D.
for the first tlffie, often in
DEAR DR. LAMB - Last people who have no symptoms
year I was hospitalized for at all and thought they were
tests, and they showed I have a perfecUy healthy.
.
disease called sarcoidosis. I
The disease causes little
have been on Prednisone for lump-like formations which
months.
can be lairly large in ·size.
The other day I went for Doctors call these granulomas.
another chest X ray. and the The lillie lumps most comdoc tot said it was clear, I can monly 'form In the lungs. And
start to decrease the Pred· they may not interfere with
nisone and hopefully this lung function.
coodition will stay dormant.
These lump-like formations
I am still experiencing may disatppear in one part of
Ughtening in my cheat and the body and show up In
have frequent heart pains. ThU another area , They can involve
condition also brought out any part of the body, although
arthritis in my legs and hilnds. the lung is the most common
May I also say I gave up location.
smoking nine month.a ago when
Sarcoid has been confused
this dlaease was discovered. with tuberculosis, which it is
I'm 30 and have never been not. !lis not cancer. We know a
sick a day In my life.
tot more about what ,it is not
I want to know any in- than what it is.
fprmltion on this disease. I
In a large number of cases
heard it II rare. What will the dlaease never causes any
happen If It reoccurs? And, is It symptoms at aU and just
in any way related to cancer? disappears. About.IO to 20 per
DEAR READER - Sarcoid 'cent of the patients do develop
is one of those dlaeases th.a t we arthritis while the disease Is
have net solved. No one ;mows active, and if there is not too
wllat causes it. It is commonly much damage it may leave no
folUld on routlne chest X rays permanent iU effects.

'f

.. .

li

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,, 0., Thursday: April17. 1975

Sporl ·Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporlll Editor
NEW YORK (UPJ) - If somebody came up and offered to
grant you one wisll, promised to provide anything your litUe
heart desired, have you the slightest idea at all what you'd ask
for?
Me, I think I'd like to have another new league because at last
count there were only 6,837,595 of them and these take in only
fully accredited ones within the geographical boundaries of the
United States of America. A figure like this makes it plain what
this COlUltry needs far more than a good five-cenl cigar or decent
!!kent spot remover is another new league.
Well. today we've&lt;got one, and if your reaction to this piece of
startling information is 'How lucky can we caa get?' isn',t that
funny, that's the same reaction I get.
The exciting name of this "new" circuit is the World Football
League, and if that sounds exactly like one of those old leagues
yo~ once knew, you're absolutely right, it is! .
What the "old" World Football League has done ls simply
disappeared. Poooof! Just lille that. Now you see it; now ·you
don't. It left quietly, which is understandable considering the fact
it was some $20 million in the hole, but who's counting? Besides,
it's only money, isn't it?
In place of the "old" WFL, which lasted one season, gasping
heavily crossing the finish line, we now have the "new" WFL all
,. set and ready to go with franchises in Birmingham, Charlotte,
• Chicago, Hawaii, Jacksonville, Philadelphis, Memphis, San
Antonio, Shreveport and Southern California.
• Now 'it may strike you some of those names are familiar, and
'·that San An!Dnio is the only one among them which didu 't operate
in the "old" WFLlastyear, but you knowhow it is in this day and
age, ail you have to do is put a label saying "new" on something
, that really isn't, and people readily accept it, anyway, especially
.:if It's attractively merchandised.
• Speaking of that, the ''new" league has a new president. His
name is Chris Hemmeter and he certainly is a winner. He's so
.,smooth, so polished, so knowledgable about so many subjects,
, he's really wasting his time serving as president of the "new"
, World Football League. He should be out there running for
president of the United States.
· Hemmeter is a 35-year-old banker-businessman from
,Honolulu, who was one of the investors in the Hawaii club m the
"old" WFL last year. Like so many of the other investors in the
.. "old" league, he took a bath.
, As president of the ''new" circuit, he ouUined some of its aims
at a news conference Wednesday and posed for pictures_v;ith five
of its premier players, Larry Csonka, Jim Klick, Paul Warfield,
nCalvin Hill and John Gilliam.
, Hemmeter is one of those individuals with a knack for mfluencing people because of his intelligence', his manner and his
patience. One radio man wedged himself between Hemmeter
,and Csonka Wednesday, trying to fix his tape recorder, and
..although he delayed the start of the news conference for some
time and had Hemmeter bending over to one side like the leaning
.,Tower of Piss, the league's new president took it all in good grace
and never lost his composure.
. The urbane, youthful-looking Hemmeter has a sharp mind and
•a pleasing way about him, and when he speaks, you can abnost
hear the angels sing.
He said he was pleased to announce the formation of the ''new"
,World Football League. The emj:ilasis was on the word "new."
Everytlme he referred to the league, he made sure to include the
:word ''new" before it. Same with Csonka, Klick, Warfield, HID
,and Gilliam.
Hemmeter said also the ''new" WF_.l,-Wilspay(ng aU the debts
'of the old one ... in due time ... and that under re.'&lt;!l!_utiO!Jlii'Y
system of incentive contracts, all players in the leaguewould
:share in the net tevenue. Not the profits, you understand, merely
.the net revenue after Uncle Sam took his cut.
, The distinct possibility there may not be revenue to share in,
and that, indeed, there could be a deficit as there was so
,frequenUy among the franchises of the "old" . WFL, was not
:dlacussed. In that case, presumably the players would dip down
Jnto their own pockets and help defray expenses. When you quit
laughing, we'll go on.
, Over and over again, Hemmeter spoke of the "variable cost
concept" that would be employed to prevent the "new" WFL
'from winding up the same way the old one did. There was also
talk about an offer being made Joe Namath by the new operator
of the Chicago frandtise, a bld that goes over $4 million and indudes an amuity 'tlfat would pay Namath $100,100 a year lor 20
years. Part ownership of a franchise also is being promised
.Namath to jump from the Jets.
The offer was almost incaleulable, and listening to It being
'broken down, I somehow found myself equating it with the cold,
hard fact that some of the clubs in the "old" WFL couldn't even
pay their laundry bill.
Chris Hemmeter stole the show, though. He was ·the one who
put It all together, and when he talked about how all the old WFL
debts eventually would be pald by the new operators, he brought
to mind no other group so much as our national Department of
Health, ,Education and Welfare, which keeps offering repeated
liiSW'ance that everybody in the country will be taken care of in

a

lime.
When specifically?

\

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - It They entertain the Reds agam
was a sweet victory·for Jimmy this afternoon, with Andy
Wynn and the I.ns Angeles Messersmith on the mound for
Dodgers.
the Dodgers and Gary Nolan
Wynn hit his fourth grand for Cincinnall.
slam in t2 years as a pro and
Wynn h1t the fateful grand
the Dodgers won their third · slam in the seventh iming to
straight game against the tie the score 6-6. Wynn also hit
Cincinnati Reds alter losing the Dodgers' final grand slam
the same number ·against the last season -also against
club earlier in the season. The Cincinnati.
"There was nn rlnuM ~ hn•1t it
Dodgers rallied to defeat the
Reds 7-6 Wednesdav nil!ht.

Gal)1pohs clunbed mto a
four-way tie for second place in
the Southeastern Ohio League
baseball standings by turning
back visiting Meigs 111-4 on
Memorial F1eld Wednesday
evening.
,
·The Blue Dowlls collected
15 safeties off fbur Marauder
hurlers enroute to their fifth
victory In nine starts this
spring. Meigs dropped to 5-4
on tbe year.
Inside the SEOAL, Gallipolis
is now t1ed with Ironton, I.ngan
and Jackson with a 3-2 record.
Meigs dropped to J.4 m conference play followmg the
makeup contest.
The Gallians built up a 6·0
lead off Meigs starter Gary
George after three innings of
play.
Meigs came back wllh
three runs In the fourth and
another In the top'of the fifth
to cut Gallia's advantage to
two, 6-4.
The roof caved in on the

vtsttors

the final two rungs.
GAHS sent 20 men to the plate
1n

in the fifth and s1x rungs - 12
crosseo horne plate.
Jtrnmy Niday went the
distance for GAHS. Nlda~
fanned eight and walked seven.
He ·allowed s1x hits GAHS
commltt~ four errors
· •
George hurled the first two
and two-thirds innings for
Meigs He was reheved by
Perk Ault in the third Ault
pitched the next mning and
one-th1rd, followed by Mickey
Davenport m the fifth and M1ke
Nesselroad m the sixth . George
was charged With the loss.
The four Meigs hurlers
fanned four, walked e1ght, hit
one GAHS batter, permitted
two stolen bases and had one
wild pitch Meigs also had five
passed balls. The Marauders
committed seven costly errors.
Thirty players took part in
the 21&gt; hour marathon .
Mike Magnotta paced the
Marauders with two hits in
four trips and two RBI's.

Host Gallipohs won t2 of 15
events to defeat visiting Meigs
84-43 In a dual track meet on
Memorial Field Wednesday
evemng.
Meigs Terry Whitlatch

captured the 180-yard low
hurdles, Allan Stewart cap·
lured the discus honors wh1le
the Marauders' 680-relay team
won that event.
Galha's Brent' Saunders won

Ma1or League Standmgs
By Un1ted Press lnternat•onal
National League
East
w . I. pet . g b.
Ch •cago
5 1 833
St Louis
5 2 714
11
P 1ttsburgh
3 2 600
11 1
Philadelphia
3 4 429
21 2
Montreal
2 5 286
Jl l
New Y.ork
I 5 167
4
West
w I. pet. g .b.
San D iego
4
3 571
Atlanta
5 4 556
Los Angeles
5 4 556
San Franc•sco 4 4 500
11
Cincinnati
4
5 444
1
Houston
3 5 375
112
Wednesday's Resut1s
S2rt FranCISCO 7 San D1ego 1
Atlanta 5 Houston 2
Ch1cago 9 Ph1ladelph1a 3
Montreal 5 P •tt sb urgh o
St L OUIS J New York 2
Los Angeles 7 C1ncinnat1 6
Today's Probable P1tchers
(All Times EDTI
New York ( Seaver 1 l) at St
Lou1s (McGlothen 1 OL 1 30

Detro•t
M1lwaukee
Cleve land
Balf•more
New York

3

'J

2

'

2
J

600

1

500
500
143

J

1 6
West

w

I.

571

pet

I' '

Jl · ~

'

g b

Kansas C1ty
6
2. 750
Oak la nd
5 J 625
1
Cal1torn•a
4
4 500
2
Te)(as
3 4 429
21 ,
Mmnesota
3 5 375
3
Ch1 cago
3 6 33 3 3 11
Wedn es day' s Results
Boslon 4 New York 2
Texas 14 Ch1cago 4
Mmnesota 10 Ca l •forni a 4
Ba l timore 2 Mllwaukee 0
Kansas C1ty 0 Oakland 2
(On ly games scheduled )
Today's Probable P'•tchers
CAll T1mes EDT I
Callforn•a [ Tan ana 0 0 or
S1 nger
0 1)
at
Minnesota
{ Dec k er 11), 2 15p m
Texas (Jenkms 0 2) at Ch1ca
go ( Bahnsen (0 1). 2. 15 p m
Fnday's Games
Milwaukee at Clev eland
Bal t Jmore at Boston
pm
M1nn at Oa~land, n1g ht
Cinc1nnati (Nolan 0 l) at Los Kan City at T e11.as, night
Angeles (Messersmith 1 0) 4 15 Callforn•a at Ch1cago , n •ght
P:m
Ch1cago
(Hooton
o 01 at New York at Detro1t. n1gh t
Philadelphia (U nderwood 1 Ol.
5 JS p m
Houston
!G riff1n
0 ll
at
Atlanta {Morton20),7 J5p m
Montreal (McNally 1 OJ at
Pittsburgh j Reuss o OJ, 7 35

pm

(Only games scheduled)
Fr.day's Games
Philadelphia at Montreal
San Fran at Los Ang, night
Houston at Cincinnati. night
San D 1ego at Atlanta, n1ght
Pi ttsburgh al Sf LOU IS, night
IOnlv Qames scheduled I
Amer.can League

w

Hindu Heilderson, 675-1220 or
446-4230 (home) should be
contacted by Point Pleasant
area men wishing to play in the
"over 30" game and Red
Tucker, '173-5636, Is in charge of
the same age squad of the
Wahama team,
J'uruny Joe Wfllge can be
contacted by Point Pleasant
area men wishing to play in the
second game and either Red
Tucker or Ramey Cundiff, '1135425, for the Wahama team.

Team
Athens
Logan
Ironton

3
3

2 20
2 39

10
31

Jackson

3 2 23

21

GallipOlis

3

Waverly

2 34

)S

2 3 •19

18

~

4~

Meigs

1

Wellston
TOTALS

0 5 13 A3

2J

!.145.00

SALE ... ; ............

QUANTITI'ES LIMITED

DASH

-

B

20 20 200 200

and up

Toush Ontl .

•unt

tOUifl

to m1t11 your
llf• ..., .

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE
POMEROY

110 W. MAIN

- -----

Saddle Birc~ .~ ........... 5.99
Dark Walnut .............. 3.99
Orchard Coffee .......... 4.79
Plantation Aspen ......4.79
Western Cedar.......... 5.99

Friday's games :

Gallipolis at Wellston
Waverly

Logan at Athens
, .Jaskson vs. Ironton

Twice the fun
for. the price
of one!!
•

the Distinctive
ofthe ...

Your local Da1ry Isle dealer
has a su per deal lor you h•s
annual 2 IC'l r I sundae spec ·

Organ, Drums, Guita:
NITELY
TUES., WED., THURS., 8'30-1 :00
FRI. &amp; SAT., 9:30-2:00

THE MEIGS INN
,

'

ta c ut&lt;~ i Buy your tavor11e
sundae at 115 regul~r PfJC€ and
get i1 second sund.3e lree
Bnnc; the Ant•re l~l mlly there
1c; no hhlll Bu t hur ry deals hke
th1s don 1 last lorAverl

McCLURE'S

: ciaTryIsle ~

TO ENTERTAIN YOU AT

PH. 992-3629

Priced from

SAVE
UP TO

Jackson 8 Meigs A
Ironton 4 Waverly 3 ( 11 I
Athens 10 Wellston 2
Wednesdiy'$ result
Gaii2POil5 18 ~elgS 4

MeiQs at

$10325

CLEARANCE

Gallipolis 2 Logan o

TRIO

•

220 - YARD

All the quality Ha.hn-Eclipse features: fingerttp
hetght adjustment, easy-spin vert•cai·Pull startmg,
and many more-but at our special low pnces
Folding handle, tao-lets you store ~our
steel-deck JUSt about anywhere.
And they comply w1th all
exist1ng 1ndustry 'safety
standards

I

B

Sa und ers. G . Va len t me , G .
W•lllamson , M - 23 6
440 YARD
DASH
Va le nt •ne , G , Oh lin ger , M .
Wha ley , G 53 1
880 · YARDRUN - Chang , G.
Hayc raft , G , Reed, M
J 56 6
TWO MILE RUN - Rutz , G .
Gilkey M
Canter bury , G 11 1J 7
120-HIGH
HURDLES Betz , G , Sc1 tes , M . Green , G
'17 7
180-YARD LOW HURDLES
Whitlatch , M
Sc 1t es, M ,
Betz G - . 219
880 - RELAY Won
by
Me•gs
MILE RELAY - Won by
Ga ll• po l• s
( F1eld Events)
SHOT PUT Evans , G ,
Oile r , M , Brown , G - 43' 514"
DISCUS Stewart , M
Evans , G , Harnson, M - 111'
LONG JUMP ~ B Saunders,
G , Va le nlme , G Wh1tlatch, M
- 20' 71 7"
HIGH JUMP - B Saunders,
G . Val ent 1ne. G Dabn ey , G .
Nea l 0 1e ) G - 5'6"
POLE VAULT- K Saun
de r s , G , T
Thomas , M
Walkms . M , J Thomas and
Dabney G, he - 9

econom~ and performance I

"''

Runnmg Events )

Saun
der s
G
W 1ll1a ms
M ,
Whitla tc h , M - 10 6

HAHN-ECLIPSE

i Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Co.

'

List '19,.95

AB R H
Magnotta If
4 0 7
A ult , ct , p ss
4 1 1
Nesse lroad , 2b , p ,
4 0 0
M ar sha ll , Jb
4 1 1
Davenport ,ss p
3 1 1
Ham11ton ,c.
2 0 0
CflrmKhae l. 1b ,
3 0 0
Owe n. ph
0 0 0
George, p rf,
3 1 1
Bach ner, rl cf.
0 0 0
Sm 1lh , ph
0 0 0
Walburn , r f ,
1 0 0
Wy alt , ph ,
1 o o
TOTALS
29 4 6
GALLIPOLIS 118 }
PLAYER - Po s
AB R H
B Johnson , c 3b
7 3 1
1 1 0
Dray ph ,
Wilson . 2b,
3 2 3
T Johnson 2b
0 1 0
N1day , p
3 I 1
1 2 0
Perry , ss
Sa unders , ph ,
1 0 0
Wall rt
d 1 1
G Holl ey , r f,
1 1 1
F old en, cf.
3 1 1
Warr en, l b.
1 0 1
Swa1n . It
3 1 1
S1ck l es . If p r
I 1 0
Watson 3b
7 o 1
Bryslan c
1 1 1
Grolh , 1b cl
3 1 1
R Holl ey, ph ,
1 I 1
TOTALS
31 18 15
Score by •nn .n gs
Me1gS
000 310 0- 4 6 7
GAH S
J03 075 )( - 18 15 4

~teel -deck rotones. b~

ouANTITIEs ARE LIMITED
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Frank Sisty

Midland 13:883 MOBIL£

MEIGS ( 4)
PLAYER - Po s

Tuesday's results:

Located On Upper Route 7
At
, Addison, Ohio

·SALE ........... ~2Q4.95

j

100 Yard Dash -

p 7301

-Cash Only-

.

·

the 100-yard dash , 220-dash,
long Jump and h1gh Jump tn the
Blue Devils first victory of the
season.
Tom Valentine captured the
440-yard dash . John Chang
picked up a pa1r'of firsts in the
680-yard run and mile run
while Eugene Rutz won the two
mile run . Kim Saunders won
the pole vault, Mike E!etz the
120-high hurdles and Mike
Evans the shot put The GAHS
mile relay team (Green. Betz,
Shawver and R. Whaley )
captured that event.
Gallipolis w1ll take 'part m
the annual Athens Relays
Saturday .
Wednesday 's results :

Meigs. Chip Brauer relieved
Brownmg in the seventh.
Browning was charged with
the loss.
GAHS ml.chers fanned seve n
and walked six while Meigs
pil.ch~rs struck out six and.
Issued four free passes ,
Today, lhe GAHS J9yvees
play at Jackson .
Wednesday's varsity box
score:

R OR
5 0 29 14

.s&amp;E 2 WAY RADIO

c. B.

Meigs left tO runners
stranded.
Breit Wilson led Galha 's
attack With three smgles and a
sacnfice ny. Tony Folden had
tw,o smgles m three trips Brent
Jphnson ~nd Terry Wall each
had doubles for GAHS.
GAHS will host Rave~swood
at 4 today. Fnday, the Blue
Dev1ls play at Wellston Meigs
IS at Waverly Friday.
The Gallipolis Junior Varsity
defeated host Meigs 9-0 at
Middlep ort Wedne sday
evening for its second wm m
two starts Darrell Jones was
credited w1th the win. Chuck
Lane hUrled the last two in·
mngs for · GAHS. Colin Saun·
ders paced the winners with
four hlts. The Galhans banged
out 12 safeties
Gaiha's Darrell Jones and
Mickey Graham had two hits
apiece.
Meigs collected two hits,
singles by Dave Miller and
Jim Ho"ard. Dale Browning
started on the mound for

.......... ,,

Your Best Buy!

W L

·

. With digital Clock-Base Station
L1st S269. 95

Juan Marichal started for
the Dodgers but was replaced
by RICk Rhoden alter givmg up
four runs and seven hits in less
than three innings. Mike
Marshall replaced Rhoden in
the eighth and got the win.
The Dodgers, who played
seven ol their first 13 games

against' the Reds, . begm a
three-game series against San
Francisco Fnday before gomg
on a seven·game road lnp
Cincmnati heads home for a
senes against Houston .

pet : g .b.
2 .714 -

. .

Pean:e'Simpson SUPER LYNX

nm ."

SEO standings

Alwnni benefit game scheduled

· I·

fastballs and he threw me a
fast hall that I hit for the home

1.

5

Boston

WEEKEND SPECIALS:

was JUStlrymg oo meet the bell.
·I wasn't trying for a home run
- 1 seldom do. But I did think
when I got up there that a home
run would tie it up ."
Wynn hit his slam off
reliever Pat Darcy.
"I was a little surpriSed that
(Reds manager) Sparky Anderson trough! m Darcy," he
s8ld. "He ihrows nothing but

Marauders lose at GAHS

East

POINT PLEASANT
Alumni basketball teams from
Point Pleasant High School and
Wahama High will meet
Saturday in a benefit game
sponsorea by the OhioKanawha Officials
Association.
The first game, at 6:30p.m.
will be for cagers over 30 years
old. Those under 30 except
those still in high school, can
play in the second game at 8
p.m.

when I htt ltt" Wynn sald. "I

Devils tied for second after win

By and by.

s
'
t a n

"I· r

Reds lose heartbreaker

. POMEROY

Locust St., Maddteport

.

OFFER GOOD THURS. &amp; FRI.

i••

.I•

�•

•

4- The Dailv Sentinel. Middleoort·PotnetQ:I:o Q.,_'ThiiJldaY, April i?, 1975

.Bulls, Celtics post triumphs
/

cowboy, rode roughshod over
Archibald, one of the NBA
Kansas City~aha Stars Sam leaders in assists, goi 18 p(Jints
Lacey .and Nate Archibald but no assists.
,
Wednesday night as the Bulls · "He's a great ball player,'
took a 2-1 lead in their best..,f- said Van tier, "but to me, Sam
seven quarter-final series with Lacey is a key too. He can
a 93-90 win.
tebound and score from the top
"Keep Nate Archibald from of the key and block shots. He's
getting assists," Van tier said, · the hub."
Lacey did rebound, hauling
"and you can beat the Kansas
City Kirigs. Archibald won't down an impressive 18, but
beat us by hilll••1f." ·
Boerwinkle grabbed 24 to helP.

By fOI)D NEMANIC
UP! Sports Writer
1
The Olicago Bulls proved
·'once more that they are the
) nost aptly nicknamed team in
· the National Basketball As·
sociation.
.._ : '". Center Tom Boerwinkle, who
~ o ~esembles a steer as much as a
basketball player, and guard
) Norm Van Lier, who plays
defense tike a bronco-busting

'

the Bulls win the war on the
front lines ,with a 58-44 edge.
Bulls Coach Dick Motta,
despite ttie victory and the
series edge, warned, "These
teams are very evenly mat·
ched and u one has an ad·
vantage over the Other, it's
probably got· to be the home

•

SIIUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Fire Department answered a call to the
Howell Cemetery Road near
Mulberry Heights at 7:43p.m.
Wednesday to extinguish a

led Boston with 26 points while
Hav licek and White each had
23. The Rockets' Calvin
Murphy topped all scorers with
30 points . Game three is
Sa turd~y in Houston.
SuperSonics 100, Warriors
99:

Fred Brown's'layupwith 1:08
left and Spencer Haywood's
two free throws 20 seconds
later led Seattle over Golden
State to even their series at one
victory each . Haywood led all
scorers with 28 points and
Brown added 26. Rick Barry
led Golden Stale with 29 points.
The series shifts to Seattle for
the third and fourth games.

Frigidai~e
:tHy

Sh~

reu

•

I~ 11~c:es

cleaning power to make washdays

easier around any home.

WFL will try again m '75
years to present a team per, John Gilliam of Min·
By MARflN LADER
playing on equal terms with an nesota. His WFL affiliation is
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Once it NFL team," Csonka said. "I not yet decided.
"There are a lot of great
w.S established that the World think it will take us a tittle less
than
half
the
time
.
players
in the World Football
Football League was back in
"The reason for this is the League," said Hill, a running
business for another crack at
great
quantity of new talent back, "and I don't want to .
the money~osing record, the
comink
out of the colleges, and · pretend that my putting on a
next · matter of concern was
'it's
not
just that the quality of uniform will ~ssure me the
just how godd it woUld be comis better;tbere are same ·status I've had. There
the
players
petitively.
are some good players· to
And for that expertise, the more of tbem."
Csonka,
along
with
former
contend with and they'll be
man who put the WFL back in
Miami
Dolphin
teammates
hitting."
one piece again, Olris HemWarfield
81ld
Jim
Kiick,
Hemmeter, a 3:&gt;-year-old HaPaul
meter, turned to some of the
will
play
!or
Memphis
of
the
waiian,
announced Wednesday
people who are being paid
restructured
WFL.
Hill,
who
that
despite
losses estinnated at
handsomely to prevent another
said he feit tike a pioneer, is $20 million, the WFL would
oostly collapse.
Larry Csonka and Calvin moving from the Dallas Cow· return for another season
dedicated to ' 'a prudent and
Hill, as the spokesmen for the boys to Hawaii.
All
four
attended
the
WFL's
responsible fiscal plan." In
players, didn't disappoint .
news
conference
Wednesday
addition,
although now a dif.
"It took the old American
along
with
another
NFL
jumferent
corporate
entity than the
Football League eight to nine

second run. "He doesn't ordinarily get sharp untO the
warm weather sets in."
The win was especially
gratifying to the Orioles because Cuellar Wednesday'night
gave them a win after they had
lost three of their four previous
games.
Kansas City defeated Oak·
land, 6-2, Boston beat tbe New
York Yankees, 4-2, Texas
topped the Olicago White Sox,
14-4, and Minnesota whipped California, 10·4, in other
American League games.
The ()rioles scored their first
run .off Jim Slaton in the sixth
inning when Ken Singleton
waiked, moved to second on a
sacrifice and scored on a single
by Don Baylor. Slaton gave up .
only six hits in going the
distance but suffered his
second loss against one vic·

UP! Sports Writer
The Baltimore Orioles call
pitcher Mike Cuellar "O'azy
Horse" but he's really crazy
like a fox .
The word went out during
spring training that the fourtime 20-game winner was
working on a' forkball to supplement his fastball and
- a report which
screwball
The starting Wahama pitspread
joy
among American
cher, Dan Harmon, went six
League
hitters.
innings without allowing . an
They became practically ecEas tern score to get the vicstatic
when Cuellar was
lory. The lone Eagle runs came
bombed by the Boston Red Sox
off reliever Buzzard.
in
his farst start of the season.
Hitters for Eastern were Jim
Why,
they asked, should an
D"'is wi th two singles; Tim
outstanding
pitcher unnecesKuhn e double; Mike Hall a .
sarily
adjust
fiis pitching
triple; Bob ~cClure , Joe Kuhn,
equipment•
·
Mark Hawk and Don Eichinger
Well,
the
Milwaukee
each had singles.
Brewers
spent
a
frustrating
Wahama pitchers struck out
two
hours
and
seven
minutes
six and walked none. Eastern
looking
for
CueUar's·
new
forkmoundsmen fanned seven and
.
ball
Wednesday
night
but
they
walked four.
· saw only two of them. TheBy innings:
Waharna
605 703 ll-21-17-1 canny Cuellar threw 75 per
East.
000 001 2-3- 8-7 cent screwballs en route to a
Batteries
Wahama , three-bitter and a ~ victory
over the Brewers.
·Harmon, WP; Buzzard, (7)
"It's unusual to see CueUar
and Lewis .
·
Eastern -- Eichinger , LP, pitch that weD this early in the
Hannum (E), Hall (6) and season," said catcher Elrod
Hendricks, who homered in the
~I ills.
seventh inning for the Orioles'

Wahama rolls
over EHS 21-3
EASTERN - The visiling
Wahama White Fa lco ns
bombffd the Eastern Eagles
here Wednesday evening by
th e final count of 21-3.
The 1•isi tors jumped on Eagle
s~~rte r Don Eichinger early by
scoring six runs in the first

inning. Eichj_n er, the losing ·

pi tcher, was relieved in third
by Dave Hannum . The latter
was relieved in the sixth by
Mike Ha ll. Th e Easte rn
defense com mitted eig ht
errors during tile game while
the Wahama defense committe&lt;! on ly one error.

The White Falcons banged
out 17 hits off the three pitchers. Top hitters were Doug
Smith with a triple and home
run ; Tom Tucker had a double
and single; Riggs a double ,
triple and a home run; Dan
Har'mon a double and single
and Jeff Gilland a triple.

Giants turn back
said Giants Manager Wes
Westrum, "but in Murcer, I
think we got as good, if not
bette~. player in return. Mur·
cer's the kind of player I
wanted to lead my club. He 's a
smart hitter and he is' setting a
wonderful example for iny
younger players."
Murcer's two-run triple was
the key blow during a five-run
rally in the fifth inning and the
28-year old ex-Yankee singled
in another run·in the eighth. All
told, he has six RB!s in eight
games.
"That's the way I like to hit,"
said Murcer after his triple
which soared into the gap in
left-center. "I don't think home
run unless I see a pitch I know I
can hit. When there are guys on
. base, though, I get jacked up."
John D'Acquisto, with 1 1·3
innings of relief help from
Randy Moffitt, picked up the
victory for the .. Giants while
Dan Spillner, victim of Murcer1s triple, was tagged with
the· loss.
Elsewhere in the National
League w'ectnesdsy, Atlanta

By BILL MADDEN
UP I Sports Writer
No one (east of San Francisco anyway ) is ·laughing any
_ _ mo.re over the supposedly onesided Bobby Bonds-for-Bobby
Murcer deaL
Folks in New York, especially, are not finding Bonds'
current .148 batting average
very fun ny. And in San
Francisco, where the Giants
were vilified for allowing
them~!Ves to be "suckered"
into such a trade, Bobby
Murcer's .345 is looking mighty
fine right now.
·
Murcer reached that lofty
average Wed nesday by
banging out a triple and two
singles and driving in three
runs in the Giants' 7-1 victory
over the San Diego Padres.
Meanwhile, back East, poor.
Bobby Bond s was still
st ruggli ng, st randing five
runners-three on a basesloaded strikeout-during the
Yankees' sixth loss in seven
outings .
" I don't mean to downgrade
Bobby Bond• for one minute,"

BOTTOMS ARE TOPS!

\".

. . miss america.

::_) ~
-

~

1

l ,' .

.~

...._.....--r-

7

HEARTY
WOOD BOTTOM
.A

.

;'itfJ ~:~ERS
BEAT FASHION

IN COJ':fi'ETITIO!" -A Miss Frankensieln contest, a take off of Miss America, only in the
opposite dtrection, wrU be one of the highlights of the annual spring program Friday at
Syracuse Elementary SehooL L-r, Becky Koehler Teresa Holstein Wilma Cook Paula il;lrnett and Tina Gibbs.
·'
'
'

· Expos 5, Pirates 0:
Montreal's 35-year-old
Woody· Fryman, celebrating
his return to the National ·
League after a 2%-year stay in
the American League, limited
the usuaUy potent Pittsburgh
attack to just five singles and
dido 'tallow a runner past first
until the eighth. Fryman got an
early cushion from l'UII-SCoring
singles by Pepe Mangual and
Tony Scott in the first and
Larry. Parrish's first major
league homer m the second.
Cubs 9, PltiUies 3:
·
Manny Trillo's three-run
homer was the big blow in
Olicago's five..-un, first-inning
outburst against Plilladelphia.
Bill Madlock arid Rick Monday, with three hits apiece,
paced a 14-rut Cub attack. Bill
Bonham went the distance
yielding six hits, to gain th~
win.
Cardinals 3, Meta 2:
Run-scoring singles by Lou
Brock and Ed Brink111~n,
combined with two Mets'
errors, enabled St. Louis to
stage a three-run, fifth-inning
rally and deal New York its
sixth loss · in seven games.
Rookie right-hander John
Denny picked up his second
victory but needed 1 2-3 innings
of retief help from AI Hrabosky
and Mike Garman .

rD a~ dres·

di)wned Houston, 5-2, Montreal
blanked Pittsburgh, 5-G, the
Chicago
Cubs
clubbed
Philadelphia, 9-3, St. Louis
shaded the New York Mets, ~2.
and Los Angeles ambushed
Cincinnati, 7-6.
Braves 5, Astros 2:
Buzz Capra, apparently
determined to prove last year's
16-8 mark was no fluke,
.scattered six hits against
Houston in claiming his second
\ictory il.f as many starts for
Atlanta. Dusty Baker smacked
a solo homer for the Braves in
the second inning and Atlanta
scored 'four more in tbe fourth
-the ·big hit being "Sogar
Bear" manks' base&lt;Hoaded
two..-un single.

tory:
Royals 6, A's 2:
Harmon Killebrew started a
three-run, fourth-inning burst
with ~ walk and also hit the
560th homer of his career for
Kansas·- City, which dealt
Oakland's Vida Blue his first
loss after two wins. Nelson
Briles pitched a five-bitter and
struck out seven in gaining his
ftrst win. &amp;II Rando had two
hits for the A's.
Red Sox 4, Yankees 2:
Rookie Fred Lyim hit two
solo homers arid Carl Yastrzemski a two-run homer as
Boston handed the Yankees
their sixth loss in seven games.
Rick Wise went the distance
with a nine-hitter to complete
his first game since April 13,
1974 and gain his first victory
since June 23.
Rangers 14, Wblte Sox 4:
Jeff Burroughs hit . two
homers and drove in three runs
and Willie Davis and Toby
l!arrah also had three hits each
to lead Texas' 18-hit assault on
Olicago's Wilbur Wood and
two suc.cessors. Wood, a 26game winner in each of the last
three seasons, was ripped for
eight hits and seven runs in two
innings and lost his third
straight game.
rwms 10, Angels 4:
Bobby Darwin, Craig Kuslck
and Larry Hisle doubled in two
runs each for Minnesota, which
snapped a five-game losing ,
streak. Bert Blyleven aUowed
California 10 hits and six walks
but went the distance behind a
12-llit at.tack for his second
straight win.

Middleport, Ohio

Hen &amp; chicks. duck &amp; ducklings, rabbits, flamingos,
geese, birO baths a·nd swan planters. Wire &amp; plastic
decorating fence and corners,

Sl.OO o!Uitilnot
fotHKh
IW!hl.tor•

PAY
YOUR

BILLS
AT
DUnON'S

GOESSLER

1

;

DUTTON

JEWELRY STORE

Kerm's Korner • Pomeroy

Court St .• Pomeroy

$20 $40

1974 FLOOR
CLEARANCE

Quantity

'

220 E Main

'
'
Use Ou.r Convenient Lay-A-Way Plan .

Pomeroy, Ohio
'

'

•

SALE PRICE

8-14, Slim &amp; Regular

WA.S

ROB ROY SHIRTS &amp; TRUNKS
---------------~----------CARTER'S PAJAMAS,
BABY DOLLS, GOWNS

NOW

60.00
1.$0.00
89.95
42.95

Sites 1-14
-------------------------~-

BOYS&amp;GIRLS

359.95
125.00
134.95

LAY-A -WAY NOW

--------·--~-'-------------- 1

SPECIAL FRI.&amp; SAT.

~

i

I'

BAR~AIN
I

RACKS
-

Coats, Jackets·, Capes.
Boys 4-7 Health· Tex . Knil Slacks •
·
·
Slim &amp; Regular Sizes

I

20%

I
I
I
I
I

I
I
I
.I

l
,
.• --------------------------'
••
••
••

r

OFF

NEW STORE HOURS :
9-5 MON. lhru SA TU R DAY

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

THE KIDDIE' SHOPPE
Middleport, Ohio ·

f

i

1------------r------------~

Lou Osborne
' II

••
•

Spring into Spo~s
CONVERSE TENNIS SHOES
. SWEAT SHIRTS
COLOREil GYM SHORTS
and MATCHING SHIRTS
TENNIS RACKETS
-·TENNIS BALLS
BASKETBALLS

$}0 $20

famous manufacturers.

To,

\

.1 Lot Mens White Shirts and Colored Sport Shirts
Valu.es from

$5

to

$8

SALE PRICE

$2 .
To

'

Spring &amp; Summer Play COO!es ·
for lnfan ts thru ,Size 1.4 .

369.95

575.00
85.00
10.00
150,00
25.00
25.00

,

~I

63 Mens Sport Coats

-:~n7

BOYS' SHORTS

Authorized CATALOG SALES MERCHANT

· OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS

$5

/laatAtls

-..

PHONE 992-2178

-.NfFAANKUDI

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY APRIL 18 and 19

r&gt;RUG CO.

Plus shipping and tax,

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

·'

In precious J()io;t. ytllow
or white vo/d.

85.00
183.95
99.95
82.95
19.3 cu. ft., white
Refrigerator_ ----:--c_ _ _ _.........:1~----- 409.95
. 19.3 cu. ft ., avocado
419.95
Refrigerator
1
159.00
Air Conditioner, 51000 BTU- 3
Air Conditioner, 6,000 BTU:. 1
164.95
Color TV 25"
1·
739.95
12" B&amp;W TV
1
97.95
11.95
TV Stand
1
Trash· Compactor
1
179.95
Snow Tires, G-78x14
2 _ _ _ __ 34.90
34.35
Wide Tires, G-70x15
2

--------------~--------·
LAWN DECORA.TIONS

POMEROY. OHIO

fomi l ~ .

Lawn Mower (Used)
1
Pump &amp; Tank (Multi-Stage)_1
WC!Iter .Heater
1
Furnace Humidlfler~___ 1

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

992 - 349.~

rodiorlf

Merchandise

~Y.&amp;&amp;::::3»::c:)J!»'.&amp;~'.&amp;;.e:ww.&amp;:mJg~&amp;;}~~wm.w

THE SHOE BOX

with

birth,tones - one stone
lor ta&lt;tl mtmb.r of tke

SALE STARTS FRIDAY

PLANT NOWI

200-202 Easl Main 51.

S•l

ONLY ITEMS LISTED and IN.STORE

Sand Pails, Garden Sets., etc.

·Baker Furniture

Worst quak-: is recalled

..1 i1tlwrind

ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS
SUMMER TOYS • KITES

PHONE

MOTHER

CATALOG SALES
MERCHANT

. Specials throughout the store. Watch
this paper: for full details.

wc~o

WASHER-----..S319.t5
DRYER. ______ S224.f5
PAIR ________ $499.00

assistance" in a few days "the
South Vietnamese could
Thorough yet ;.entl• fabrle c.r• Is a tUrn of the dial ~wa
stabilize the military situation
.~lth a Frigidaire Custom Deluxe Laundry Pair. Was~
in South Vietnam today."
enythlng, trom a single pleu- to an 18-lb. load without
PTOTOMEET
wasflng wat~r and' deter,.nt thanks to 'the Water L•v~l
He likened the situation in I ,
RACINE - The Racine PTO
StledOI". In the matching dryer, &amp; Fabrics Selector to dla'
Vietnam to "the last minute of ~
\\&gt;ill meet at 7:30p.m. Monday
the pr~per hNt H'ttlng for virtually every fabr-Ic .
the last quarter of the game."
at the grade school. There will
"I don't think we can blame
be in stallation of officers,
the Soviet Union, and the
observance of fathers night,
Middleport
People's Republic of Olina for ~
and the cultural arts program
Ohio
supplying North Vietnam,"
w1ll be held. A babysitter will
Ford said.
be provided.
" If we had done ·with our
allies what we had promised,'!
think this whole tragedy could
OTHERS TAKING PART in the Miss Frankenstein contest will be 1-r Julie Thoren Cindy
have been eliminated."
W~aver, Mary Beth Slavin, Donna Hubbard and Jody Grueser. Th~ pl~y will be pr~sented
Most of the questions cenFr1day at 7:30p.m. at Syracuse Elementary School.
tered on South Vietnam and
~ " I wish we had," he said. "1 Cambodia. Ford said Prince
think if we had, this present Norodom Sihanouk is "in no
tragic situation in South Viet- position" wnegotiate i?rleamnam would not have oc- bodian settlement. He said
curred."
leaders in Phnom Penh had
.. Displaying his frustration asked for a cease-fire and that
By CARRICK LEAVITT
'Tt&gt;e wind must be shaking the gas pipes by as much as 21 feet.
Wednesday in a meeting of the the United States would do
"All the candles in the chapel
SAN
FRANCISCO
(UPI)
house ,'" Mrs. Todd said. ''My
4merican
Society
of what it could to get a
fell
over. Alter the fire (in San
Gladys
Todd,
84,
remembers
mother said, 'Wind nothing!
~ewspaper Editors, Ford said,
negotiated settlement.
Francisco)
we couldn't see the
the
morning
of
April
18,
1906,
It's an earthquake! Hurry up
:.' The human tragedy of South
He disclosed that he had
sun
for
two
weeks.
Ashes fell in
Vietnam just makes me sick ordered evacuation of all when America's worst earth· and get dressed! '"
our
courtyard
."
George Fagan, 82, was in St.
every day I hear about it·, read nonessential American quake swayed her three-story
Two months later Fagan was
frame
house
like
a
strong
wind.
Vincent's Orphanage, 15 miles
®out it, and see it.
civilians in SQuth Vietnam.
taken
to the train station in San
~'
I'd
never
seen
an
earthacross San Francisco Bay in
_"I am absolutely convinced
Ford said he would be
Francisco
.
quake
before.
I
thought
it
was
San Rafael, not far from the
if Congress made available reluctant to make public the
"All
of
Market Street was
$722 million , in military confide ntia l exchanges be- the wind coming through the jagged San Andreas Fault line
black
il)
ashes
--and soldiers
which slipped along a 27(}-mile
tween former President Nix- Golden Gate," she ·said.
everyw
here.
There was
· ~~'t9'!'1!'!~
Aftershocks jolted her off her course, offsetting roads,
on and South Vietnamese
t"Kt:~\#Kit" I IUN
nothing left ."
President Nguyen. Van Thieu bed as she tried to pull on her fences; buildings, water and
In the days of chaos which
stockings.
the peace negotiations.
AND SURGICAL during
followed the first great shock
Brick
buildings
down
the
He insisted no secret comat 5:13a .m., an area of more
mitments were made to South street crumbled. Fires started
than 2,593 acres was burned,
Market Report
Support Genter · Vietnam that differed in by broken. electrical and gas
destroying
490 city blocks.
West Virginia Department
substance from Nixon 's public . connections ravaged the city
.
Near
by
at
San Jose; an infor days.
Of Agriculture
policy statements.
sane asylum collapsed, killing
The San Francisco 'q~ake
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
117 patients and attendants.
and resulting fire left 250,000
Apri112, 19'75
•
persons homeless -more ~han
Slaughter Steers - Good and Fifty persons lost their lives at
half the population . An Choice
800-1100,
24 .80; Santa Rosa.
estimated 452 died.
Slaughter Heifers, good and
~ TELEPHONE
·" we had ,a roomer who slept choice, 700-1000 lbs, 22.00.
International Leagu e
through the whole thing. Men Slaughter Cows, Utility 18 to
By United Press Internat ional
wlpc t . gb
can sleep through anything," 19.25 ; Canner and Cutter 16.25
Ch ar les ton
4 1 .80 0
Mrs. Todd said during an to 20; Bulls, over 1000 lbs 24.95.
Sy racuse
3 1 .750
1 :1
Tid ewa ter
2 1 .66 7 1
annual reunion of earthquake
Yearling Steers - Gdod and
Pawtucket
3 3 .500 J l ;.
survivors.
.
Choice,
600 to 700 lbs, 24.80.
Richmond
2 2 .500 Jl ~
Toled o
2 :t .400 'J
Thirty oldsters living in the
Steer Calves, good and
Memphis
2 4 . 333 2
Victorian Hotel Wednesday choice, 400 to 500 lbs, 24 to ·
Rocheste r
0 3 .00 0 3
Wednes-day's Re sult s
commemorated the an· 27.50; 500 -600 lbs, 20.50 to 24.75.
Memphis 3 To ledo 1
niversary of the worst ear- . Bull Calves - Good an d
~ h"!rl es ton 6 Pawt uc ket 5. 11
1n nrn gs
·
thquake in the history of the Choice, 4()().500 lbs, 21.50 to 26.
United States. At least 20 of
Heifer Calves - Good and
67 Men's Suits, sizes 38 to so Reg. Shorts &amp; Longs.
IHL Playoff Standings
By Un i ted Press lnternationa ·
them lived in San Francisco Choice, 300-400 lbs, 2Jto 24; 400Values from $50 to $90 ·
Sem ilinals- Best of Seven '
during the earthquake 69 years 500 lbs, 18 to 26; Cows and
"Your
w 1 gf ga
Dayton
3 2 22 18 ·ago.
Calves (by head) , 155 to 200.
SALE PRICE
To
Prescription
Toledo
2 3 18 22
The 'quake registered 8.3 on Cows (by head ), 150 to 186.
w 1 gf ga the Richter Scale and was the
Baby Calves (by head )Drug Store"
1 Lot Mens Colored
Levis &amp; Permanent Press
Muskeg on
3 J 28 27
most
destructive
in
the
record.
Beef
34: Holstein and Brown
Saginaw
3 J 27 28
ed history of North America. Swiss 8 to 32.
Wednesday's Re su lts
992-3106
Pants, Tapered Legs. Values to '11.50
Dayton 5 TOledo 0
"l
was
15.
I
said
to
mother,
•·
vt:tu
Choice
and
Prime,
00
Tonight's Games
Pair
.
:
.
SALE PRICE
190 to 225 lbs., 40 ; 226-265 ·lbs. 40
No ga mes schedul ed
Middleport, U .
to 50.
Hogs - U.S. 1-3, 190 to 240
li}Wr»f4W'EJW'}I
lbs. 40.25-40:60; Sows, U.S. 1-3,
Shop us for an excellent
300-500 lbs. 34.75 to 35 ; Boars,
selection of men's double knit
300-600 lbs. 26.50; Pigs (by
Corduroy &amp; Wool Blends
FOR SALE
head ) 20-40 lbs. 9 to 12: 40-60 lb.
suits. leisure suits, &amp; sport
WHITE CHINE SE baby geese
Values from S25 to $52.SO
13 to 18; 60 lb. and over, 16 to 21.
Phone 378 617 1.
coats, knit pants &amp; shirts by
Plaids, Solids, Jean
4 17 6tp
Reporter - Rolfe l~e

8-·~·-1Jil'.ce
.
Few

Sears

Parade of Values Sale

4

S!1MMON SQUAD.
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad was called
toRt. 2, Racine, Wednesday at
7:40p.m. for Preston Parsons
a medical patient, who wa~
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was admitted .

By HELEN THOMAS
UP! White House Reporter
. WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford, contending the
United States has an obligation
to South Vietnam, says he is
"absolutely convinced" that
the $722 million in arms aid he
· requested would lead to a
negotiated settlement of the
war.
"The United States did not
carry out its commitment in
the supplying of military
l)ardware and economic aid to
~uth Vietnam" in the same
way that Moscow and Peking
backed Hanoi, Ford said .

...

COMING SOON/

CALIFORNIA DANCERS - Perfonnlng In the amual Spring show at Syracuse
Elementary Frtday at _7:30p.m. will he the above dance line. L-r are, Amber Warner, Penny
Wolfe, Barbara Hendrrcks, Dlana Nease, Tina Pierce, Julie Flagg and Ann Williams Ruth
Stearns and Sandra Hill are tbe directors assisted by other teachers at the school.
·

Ford 'sure .motiey··
would buy time

Cuellar blanks Brewers
By FRED DOWN

H8a.y Duty Automatic w.t1ers.

They combine tough, hay duty
components and gentle, thonJugh

•

HiKE-BIKE - Helen Barnhart, Mary Skinner and Jessie
Might, 1-r, will be participating in the Hike-Bike Saturday.
Mrs. Barnhart, receptionist at the Meigs County Community
Men tal Health Center, is' being sponsored by Bill Bailey, Mrs.
Skinner is a sponsor and participant, and Jessie who is
president of the Meigs Olapter of the Ohio Association for
Retarded Children and Adults is being sponsored by Faye
Sauer.

brush fire. At 10: 1:i p.m.
Wednesday, the squad was
called to Wyllis Hill, for Minnie
Green, who was ill. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
HospitaL

'

1 Lot Ladies Dresses in Misses, Juniors and Half Sizes
Values To $38.00

$1000

SALE PRICE

'

1 Rack of Ladies' Suits . &amp; Pant

1 Rack of Ladles' Blouses

Knit
Tops, Sweaters and Shirts by
Jantzen. Catalina and Lady
Ma~Jhattan.

· Suits by Jantzen and Catalina.

h PRICE

1

1h PRICE

OPEN FRI. AND SAT. TIL 8:0n.M.

. THE MIDDLEPORT
·DEPARTMENT ,STORE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Bahr Clothiers
1\'!.iddleport, Ohio
Hrs. Open Til 8 PM Fn. Til 5 PM Sat.

'

Shop our ladies' department for
the spring &amp; summer lines of
Janhen, Catalina, Coddington
etc : for Sportswear, Dresses and
Swim wear.
and
Lady
Manhattan Blouses and Switchmate Knit Tops .

�•

•

4- The Dailv Sentinel. Middleoort·PotnetQ:I:o Q.,_'ThiiJldaY, April i?, 1975

.Bulls, Celtics post triumphs
/

cowboy, rode roughshod over
Archibald, one of the NBA
Kansas City~aha Stars Sam leaders in assists, goi 18 p(Jints
Lacey .and Nate Archibald but no assists.
,
Wednesday night as the Bulls · "He's a great ball player,'
took a 2-1 lead in their best..,f- said Van tier, "but to me, Sam
seven quarter-final series with Lacey is a key too. He can
a 93-90 win.
tebound and score from the top
"Keep Nate Archibald from of the key and block shots. He's
getting assists," Van tier said, · the hub."
Lacey did rebound, hauling
"and you can beat the Kansas
City Kirigs. Archibald won't down an impressive 18, but
beat us by hilll••1f." ·
Boerwinkle grabbed 24 to helP.

By fOI)D NEMANIC
UP! Sports Writer
1
The Olicago Bulls proved
·'once more that they are the
) nost aptly nicknamed team in
· the National Basketball As·
sociation.
.._ : '". Center Tom Boerwinkle, who
~ o ~esembles a steer as much as a
basketball player, and guard
) Norm Van Lier, who plays
defense tike a bronco-busting

'

the Bulls win the war on the
front lines ,with a 58-44 edge.
Bulls Coach Dick Motta,
despite ttie victory and the
series edge, warned, "These
teams are very evenly mat·
ched and u one has an ad·
vantage over the Other, it's
probably got· to be the home

•

SIIUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Fire Department answered a call to the
Howell Cemetery Road near
Mulberry Heights at 7:43p.m.
Wednesday to extinguish a

led Boston with 26 points while
Hav licek and White each had
23. The Rockets' Calvin
Murphy topped all scorers with
30 points . Game three is
Sa turd~y in Houston.
SuperSonics 100, Warriors
99:

Fred Brown's'layupwith 1:08
left and Spencer Haywood's
two free throws 20 seconds
later led Seattle over Golden
State to even their series at one
victory each . Haywood led all
scorers with 28 points and
Brown added 26. Rick Barry
led Golden Stale with 29 points.
The series shifts to Seattle for
the third and fourth games.

Frigidai~e
:tHy

Sh~

reu

•

I~ 11~c:es

cleaning power to make washdays

easier around any home.

WFL will try again m '75
years to present a team per, John Gilliam of Min·
By MARflN LADER
playing on equal terms with an nesota. His WFL affiliation is
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Once it NFL team," Csonka said. "I not yet decided.
"There are a lot of great
w.S established that the World think it will take us a tittle less
than
half
the
time
.
players
in the World Football
Football League was back in
"The reason for this is the League," said Hill, a running
business for another crack at
great
quantity of new talent back, "and I don't want to .
the money~osing record, the
comink
out of the colleges, and · pretend that my putting on a
next · matter of concern was
'it's
not
just that the quality of uniform will ~ssure me the
just how godd it woUld be comis better;tbere are same ·status I've had. There
the
players
petitively.
are some good players· to
And for that expertise, the more of tbem."
Csonka,
along
with
former
contend with and they'll be
man who put the WFL back in
Miami
Dolphin
teammates
hitting."
one piece again, Olris HemWarfield
81ld
Jim
Kiick,
Hemmeter, a 3:&gt;-year-old HaPaul
meter, turned to some of the
will
play
!or
Memphis
of
the
waiian,
announced Wednesday
people who are being paid
restructured
WFL.
Hill,
who
that
despite
losses estinnated at
handsomely to prevent another
said he feit tike a pioneer, is $20 million, the WFL would
oostly collapse.
Larry Csonka and Calvin moving from the Dallas Cow· return for another season
dedicated to ' 'a prudent and
Hill, as the spokesmen for the boys to Hawaii.
All
four
attended
the
WFL's
responsible fiscal plan." In
players, didn't disappoint .
news
conference
Wednesday
addition,
although now a dif.
"It took the old American
along
with
another
NFL
jumferent
corporate
entity than the
Football League eight to nine

second run. "He doesn't ordinarily get sharp untO the
warm weather sets in."
The win was especially
gratifying to the Orioles because Cuellar Wednesday'night
gave them a win after they had
lost three of their four previous
games.
Kansas City defeated Oak·
land, 6-2, Boston beat tbe New
York Yankees, 4-2, Texas
topped the Olicago White Sox,
14-4, and Minnesota whipped California, 10·4, in other
American League games.
The ()rioles scored their first
run .off Jim Slaton in the sixth
inning when Ken Singleton
waiked, moved to second on a
sacrifice and scored on a single
by Don Baylor. Slaton gave up .
only six hits in going the
distance but suffered his
second loss against one vic·

UP! Sports Writer
The Baltimore Orioles call
pitcher Mike Cuellar "O'azy
Horse" but he's really crazy
like a fox .
The word went out during
spring training that the fourtime 20-game winner was
working on a' forkball to supplement his fastball and
- a report which
screwball
The starting Wahama pitspread
joy
among American
cher, Dan Harmon, went six
League
hitters.
innings without allowing . an
They became practically ecEas tern score to get the vicstatic
when Cuellar was
lory. The lone Eagle runs came
bombed by the Boston Red Sox
off reliever Buzzard.
in
his farst start of the season.
Hitters for Eastern were Jim
Why,
they asked, should an
D"'is wi th two singles; Tim
outstanding
pitcher unnecesKuhn e double; Mike Hall a .
sarily
adjust
fiis pitching
triple; Bob ~cClure , Joe Kuhn,
equipment•
·
Mark Hawk and Don Eichinger
Well,
the
Milwaukee
each had singles.
Brewers
spent
a
frustrating
Wahama pitchers struck out
two
hours
and
seven
minutes
six and walked none. Eastern
looking
for
CueUar's·
new
forkmoundsmen fanned seven and
.
ball
Wednesday
night
but
they
walked four.
· saw only two of them. TheBy innings:
Waharna
605 703 ll-21-17-1 canny Cuellar threw 75 per
East.
000 001 2-3- 8-7 cent screwballs en route to a
Batteries
Wahama , three-bitter and a ~ victory
over the Brewers.
·Harmon, WP; Buzzard, (7)
"It's unusual to see CueUar
and Lewis .
·
Eastern -- Eichinger , LP, pitch that weD this early in the
Hannum (E), Hall (6) and season," said catcher Elrod
Hendricks, who homered in the
~I ills.
seventh inning for the Orioles'

Wahama rolls
over EHS 21-3
EASTERN - The visiling
Wahama White Fa lco ns
bombffd the Eastern Eagles
here Wednesday evening by
th e final count of 21-3.
The 1•isi tors jumped on Eagle
s~~rte r Don Eichinger early by
scoring six runs in the first

inning. Eichj_n er, the losing ·

pi tcher, was relieved in third
by Dave Hannum . The latter
was relieved in the sixth by
Mike Ha ll. Th e Easte rn
defense com mitted eig ht
errors during tile game while
the Wahama defense committe&lt;! on ly one error.

The White Falcons banged
out 17 hits off the three pitchers. Top hitters were Doug
Smith with a triple and home
run ; Tom Tucker had a double
and single; Riggs a double ,
triple and a home run; Dan
Har'mon a double and single
and Jeff Gilland a triple.

Giants turn back
said Giants Manager Wes
Westrum, "but in Murcer, I
think we got as good, if not
bette~. player in return. Mur·
cer's the kind of player I
wanted to lead my club. He 's a
smart hitter and he is' setting a
wonderful example for iny
younger players."
Murcer's two-run triple was
the key blow during a five-run
rally in the fifth inning and the
28-year old ex-Yankee singled
in another run·in the eighth. All
told, he has six RB!s in eight
games.
"That's the way I like to hit,"
said Murcer after his triple
which soared into the gap in
left-center. "I don't think home
run unless I see a pitch I know I
can hit. When there are guys on
. base, though, I get jacked up."
John D'Acquisto, with 1 1·3
innings of relief help from
Randy Moffitt, picked up the
victory for the .. Giants while
Dan Spillner, victim of Murcer1s triple, was tagged with
the· loss.
Elsewhere in the National
League w'ectnesdsy, Atlanta

By BILL MADDEN
UP I Sports Writer
No one (east of San Francisco anyway ) is ·laughing any
_ _ mo.re over the supposedly onesided Bobby Bonds-for-Bobby
Murcer deaL
Folks in New York, especially, are not finding Bonds'
current .148 batting average
very fun ny. And in San
Francisco, where the Giants
were vilified for allowing
them~!Ves to be "suckered"
into such a trade, Bobby
Murcer's .345 is looking mighty
fine right now.
·
Murcer reached that lofty
average Wed nesday by
banging out a triple and two
singles and driving in three
runs in the Giants' 7-1 victory
over the San Diego Padres.
Meanwhile, back East, poor.
Bobby Bond s was still
st ruggli ng, st randing five
runners-three on a basesloaded strikeout-during the
Yankees' sixth loss in seven
outings .
" I don't mean to downgrade
Bobby Bond• for one minute,"

BOTTOMS ARE TOPS!

\".

. . miss america.

::_) ~
-

~

1

l ,' .

.~

...._.....--r-

7

HEARTY
WOOD BOTTOM
.A

.

;'itfJ ~:~ERS
BEAT FASHION

IN COJ':fi'ETITIO!" -A Miss Frankensieln contest, a take off of Miss America, only in the
opposite dtrection, wrU be one of the highlights of the annual spring program Friday at
Syracuse Elementary SehooL L-r, Becky Koehler Teresa Holstein Wilma Cook Paula il;lrnett and Tina Gibbs.
·'
'
'

· Expos 5, Pirates 0:
Montreal's 35-year-old
Woody· Fryman, celebrating
his return to the National ·
League after a 2%-year stay in
the American League, limited
the usuaUy potent Pittsburgh
attack to just five singles and
dido 'tallow a runner past first
until the eighth. Fryman got an
early cushion from l'UII-SCoring
singles by Pepe Mangual and
Tony Scott in the first and
Larry. Parrish's first major
league homer m the second.
Cubs 9, PltiUies 3:
·
Manny Trillo's three-run
homer was the big blow in
Olicago's five..-un, first-inning
outburst against Plilladelphia.
Bill Madlock arid Rick Monday, with three hits apiece,
paced a 14-rut Cub attack. Bill
Bonham went the distance
yielding six hits, to gain th~
win.
Cardinals 3, Meta 2:
Run-scoring singles by Lou
Brock and Ed Brink111~n,
combined with two Mets'
errors, enabled St. Louis to
stage a three-run, fifth-inning
rally and deal New York its
sixth loss · in seven games.
Rookie right-hander John
Denny picked up his second
victory but needed 1 2-3 innings
of retief help from AI Hrabosky
and Mike Garman .

rD a~ dres·

di)wned Houston, 5-2, Montreal
blanked Pittsburgh, 5-G, the
Chicago
Cubs
clubbed
Philadelphia, 9-3, St. Louis
shaded the New York Mets, ~2.
and Los Angeles ambushed
Cincinnati, 7-6.
Braves 5, Astros 2:
Buzz Capra, apparently
determined to prove last year's
16-8 mark was no fluke,
.scattered six hits against
Houston in claiming his second
\ictory il.f as many starts for
Atlanta. Dusty Baker smacked
a solo homer for the Braves in
the second inning and Atlanta
scored 'four more in tbe fourth
-the ·big hit being "Sogar
Bear" manks' base&lt;Hoaded
two..-un single.

tory:
Royals 6, A's 2:
Harmon Killebrew started a
three-run, fourth-inning burst
with ~ walk and also hit the
560th homer of his career for
Kansas·- City, which dealt
Oakland's Vida Blue his first
loss after two wins. Nelson
Briles pitched a five-bitter and
struck out seven in gaining his
ftrst win. &amp;II Rando had two
hits for the A's.
Red Sox 4, Yankees 2:
Rookie Fred Lyim hit two
solo homers arid Carl Yastrzemski a two-run homer as
Boston handed the Yankees
their sixth loss in seven games.
Rick Wise went the distance
with a nine-hitter to complete
his first game since April 13,
1974 and gain his first victory
since June 23.
Rangers 14, Wblte Sox 4:
Jeff Burroughs hit . two
homers and drove in three runs
and Willie Davis and Toby
l!arrah also had three hits each
to lead Texas' 18-hit assault on
Olicago's Wilbur Wood and
two suc.cessors. Wood, a 26game winner in each of the last
three seasons, was ripped for
eight hits and seven runs in two
innings and lost his third
straight game.
rwms 10, Angels 4:
Bobby Darwin, Craig Kuslck
and Larry Hisle doubled in two
runs each for Minnesota, which
snapped a five-game losing ,
streak. Bert Blyleven aUowed
California 10 hits and six walks
but went the distance behind a
12-llit at.tack for his second
straight win.

Middleport, Ohio

Hen &amp; chicks. duck &amp; ducklings, rabbits, flamingos,
geese, birO baths a·nd swan planters. Wire &amp; plastic
decorating fence and corners,

Sl.OO o!Uitilnot
fotHKh
IW!hl.tor•

PAY
YOUR

BILLS
AT
DUnON'S

GOESSLER

1

;

DUTTON

JEWELRY STORE

Kerm's Korner • Pomeroy

Court St .• Pomeroy

$20 $40

1974 FLOOR
CLEARANCE

Quantity

'

220 E Main

'
'
Use Ou.r Convenient Lay-A-Way Plan .

Pomeroy, Ohio
'

'

•

SALE PRICE

8-14, Slim &amp; Regular

WA.S

ROB ROY SHIRTS &amp; TRUNKS
---------------~----------CARTER'S PAJAMAS,
BABY DOLLS, GOWNS

NOW

60.00
1.$0.00
89.95
42.95

Sites 1-14
-------------------------~-

BOYS&amp;GIRLS

359.95
125.00
134.95

LAY-A -WAY NOW

--------·--~-'-------------- 1

SPECIAL FRI.&amp; SAT.

~

i

I'

BAR~AIN
I

RACKS
-

Coats, Jackets·, Capes.
Boys 4-7 Health· Tex . Knil Slacks •
·
·
Slim &amp; Regular Sizes

I

20%

I
I
I
I
I

I
I
I
.I

l
,
.• --------------------------'
••
••
••

r

OFF

NEW STORE HOURS :
9-5 MON. lhru SA TU R DAY

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

THE KIDDIE' SHOPPE
Middleport, Ohio ·

f

i

1------------r------------~

Lou Osborne
' II

••
•

Spring into Spo~s
CONVERSE TENNIS SHOES
. SWEAT SHIRTS
COLOREil GYM SHORTS
and MATCHING SHIRTS
TENNIS RACKETS
-·TENNIS BALLS
BASKETBALLS

$}0 $20

famous manufacturers.

To,

\

.1 Lot Mens White Shirts and Colored Sport Shirts
Valu.es from

$5

to

$8

SALE PRICE

$2 .
To

'

Spring &amp; Summer Play COO!es ·
for lnfan ts thru ,Size 1.4 .

369.95

575.00
85.00
10.00
150,00
25.00
25.00

,

~I

63 Mens Sport Coats

-:~n7

BOYS' SHORTS

Authorized CATALOG SALES MERCHANT

· OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS

$5

/laatAtls

-..

PHONE 992-2178

-.NfFAANKUDI

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY APRIL 18 and 19

r&gt;RUG CO.

Plus shipping and tax,

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

·'

In precious J()io;t. ytllow
or white vo/d.

85.00
183.95
99.95
82.95
19.3 cu. ft., white
Refrigerator_ ----:--c_ _ _ _.........:1~----- 409.95
. 19.3 cu. ft ., avocado
419.95
Refrigerator
1
159.00
Air Conditioner, 51000 BTU- 3
Air Conditioner, 6,000 BTU:. 1
164.95
Color TV 25"
1·
739.95
12" B&amp;W TV
1
97.95
11.95
TV Stand
1
Trash· Compactor
1
179.95
Snow Tires, G-78x14
2 _ _ _ __ 34.90
34.35
Wide Tires, G-70x15
2

--------------~--------·
LAWN DECORA.TIONS

POMEROY. OHIO

fomi l ~ .

Lawn Mower (Used)
1
Pump &amp; Tank (Multi-Stage)_1
WC!Iter .Heater
1
Furnace Humidlfler~___ 1

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

992 - 349.~

rodiorlf

Merchandise

~Y.&amp;&amp;::::3»::c:)J!»'.&amp;~'.&amp;;.e:ww.&amp;:mJg~&amp;;}~~wm.w

THE SHOE BOX

with

birth,tones - one stone
lor ta&lt;tl mtmb.r of tke

SALE STARTS FRIDAY

PLANT NOWI

200-202 Easl Main 51.

S•l

ONLY ITEMS LISTED and IN.STORE

Sand Pails, Garden Sets., etc.

·Baker Furniture

Worst quak-: is recalled

..1 i1tlwrind

ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS
SUMMER TOYS • KITES

PHONE

MOTHER

CATALOG SALES
MERCHANT

. Specials throughout the store. Watch
this paper: for full details.

wc~o

WASHER-----..S319.t5
DRYER. ______ S224.f5
PAIR ________ $499.00

assistance" in a few days "the
South Vietnamese could
Thorough yet ;.entl• fabrle c.r• Is a tUrn of the dial ~wa
stabilize the military situation
.~lth a Frigidaire Custom Deluxe Laundry Pair. Was~
in South Vietnam today."
enythlng, trom a single pleu- to an 18-lb. load without
PTOTOMEET
wasflng wat~r and' deter,.nt thanks to 'the Water L•v~l
He likened the situation in I ,
RACINE - The Racine PTO
StledOI". In the matching dryer, &amp; Fabrics Selector to dla'
Vietnam to "the last minute of ~
\\&gt;ill meet at 7:30p.m. Monday
the pr~per hNt H'ttlng for virtually every fabr-Ic .
the last quarter of the game."
at the grade school. There will
"I don't think we can blame
be in stallation of officers,
the Soviet Union, and the
observance of fathers night,
Middleport
People's Republic of Olina for ~
and the cultural arts program
Ohio
supplying North Vietnam,"
w1ll be held. A babysitter will
Ford said.
be provided.
" If we had done ·with our
allies what we had promised,'!
think this whole tragedy could
OTHERS TAKING PART in the Miss Frankenstein contest will be 1-r Julie Thoren Cindy
have been eliminated."
W~aver, Mary Beth Slavin, Donna Hubbard and Jody Grueser. Th~ pl~y will be pr~sented
Most of the questions cenFr1day at 7:30p.m. at Syracuse Elementary School.
tered on South Vietnam and
~ " I wish we had," he said. "1 Cambodia. Ford said Prince
think if we had, this present Norodom Sihanouk is "in no
tragic situation in South Viet- position" wnegotiate i?rleamnam would not have oc- bodian settlement. He said
curred."
leaders in Phnom Penh had
.. Displaying his frustration asked for a cease-fire and that
By CARRICK LEAVITT
'Tt&gt;e wind must be shaking the gas pipes by as much as 21 feet.
Wednesday in a meeting of the the United States would do
"All the candles in the chapel
SAN
FRANCISCO
(UPI)
house ,'" Mrs. Todd said. ''My
4merican
Society
of what it could to get a
fell
over. Alter the fire (in San
Gladys
Todd,
84,
remembers
mother said, 'Wind nothing!
~ewspaper Editors, Ford said,
negotiated settlement.
Francisco)
we couldn't see the
the
morning
of
April
18,
1906,
It's an earthquake! Hurry up
:.' The human tragedy of South
He disclosed that he had
sun
for
two
weeks.
Ashes fell in
Vietnam just makes me sick ordered evacuation of all when America's worst earth· and get dressed! '"
our
courtyard
."
George Fagan, 82, was in St.
every day I hear about it·, read nonessential American quake swayed her three-story
Two months later Fagan was
frame
house
like
a
strong
wind.
Vincent's Orphanage, 15 miles
®out it, and see it.
civilians in SQuth Vietnam.
taken
to the train station in San
~'
I'd
never
seen
an
earthacross San Francisco Bay in
_"I am absolutely convinced
Ford said he would be
Francisco
.
quake
before.
I
thought
it
was
San Rafael, not far from the
if Congress made available reluctant to make public the
"All
of
Market Street was
$722 million , in military confide ntia l exchanges be- the wind coming through the jagged San Andreas Fault line
black
il)
ashes
--and soldiers
which slipped along a 27(}-mile
tween former President Nix- Golden Gate," she ·said.
everyw
here.
There was
· ~~'t9'!'1!'!~
Aftershocks jolted her off her course, offsetting roads,
on and South Vietnamese
t"Kt:~\#Kit" I IUN
nothing left ."
President Nguyen. Van Thieu bed as she tried to pull on her fences; buildings, water and
In the days of chaos which
stockings.
the peace negotiations.
AND SURGICAL during
followed the first great shock
Brick
buildings
down
the
He insisted no secret comat 5:13a .m., an area of more
mitments were made to South street crumbled. Fires started
than 2,593 acres was burned,
Market Report
Support Genter · Vietnam that differed in by broken. electrical and gas
destroying
490 city blocks.
West Virginia Department
substance from Nixon 's public . connections ravaged the city
.
Near
by
at
San Jose; an infor days.
Of Agriculture
policy statements.
sane asylum collapsed, killing
The San Francisco 'q~ake
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
117 patients and attendants.
and resulting fire left 250,000
Apri112, 19'75
•
persons homeless -more ~han
Slaughter Steers - Good and Fifty persons lost their lives at
half the population . An Choice
800-1100,
24 .80; Santa Rosa.
estimated 452 died.
Slaughter Heifers, good and
~ TELEPHONE
·" we had ,a roomer who slept choice, 700-1000 lbs, 22.00.
International Leagu e
through the whole thing. Men Slaughter Cows, Utility 18 to
By United Press Internat ional
wlpc t . gb
can sleep through anything," 19.25 ; Canner and Cutter 16.25
Ch ar les ton
4 1 .80 0
Mrs. Todd said during an to 20; Bulls, over 1000 lbs 24.95.
Sy racuse
3 1 .750
1 :1
Tid ewa ter
2 1 .66 7 1
annual reunion of earthquake
Yearling Steers - Gdod and
Pawtucket
3 3 .500 J l ;.
survivors.
.
Choice,
600 to 700 lbs, 24.80.
Richmond
2 2 .500 Jl ~
Toled o
2 :t .400 'J
Thirty oldsters living in the
Steer Calves, good and
Memphis
2 4 . 333 2
Victorian Hotel Wednesday choice, 400 to 500 lbs, 24 to ·
Rocheste r
0 3 .00 0 3
Wednes-day's Re sult s
commemorated the an· 27.50; 500 -600 lbs, 20.50 to 24.75.
Memphis 3 To ledo 1
niversary of the worst ear- . Bull Calves - Good an d
~ h"!rl es ton 6 Pawt uc ket 5. 11
1n nrn gs
·
thquake in the history of the Choice, 4()().500 lbs, 21.50 to 26.
United States. At least 20 of
Heifer Calves - Good and
67 Men's Suits, sizes 38 to so Reg. Shorts &amp; Longs.
IHL Playoff Standings
By Un i ted Press lnternationa ·
them lived in San Francisco Choice, 300-400 lbs, 2Jto 24; 400Values from $50 to $90 ·
Sem ilinals- Best of Seven '
during the earthquake 69 years 500 lbs, 18 to 26; Cows and
"Your
w 1 gf ga
Dayton
3 2 22 18 ·ago.
Calves (by head) , 155 to 200.
SALE PRICE
To
Prescription
Toledo
2 3 18 22
The 'quake registered 8.3 on Cows (by head ), 150 to 186.
w 1 gf ga the Richter Scale and was the
Baby Calves (by head )Drug Store"
1 Lot Mens Colored
Levis &amp; Permanent Press
Muskeg on
3 J 28 27
most
destructive
in
the
record.
Beef
34: Holstein and Brown
Saginaw
3 J 27 28
ed history of North America. Swiss 8 to 32.
Wednesday's Re su lts
992-3106
Pants, Tapered Legs. Values to '11.50
Dayton 5 TOledo 0
"l
was
15.
I
said
to
mother,
•·
vt:tu
Choice
and
Prime,
00
Tonight's Games
Pair
.
:
.
SALE PRICE
190 to 225 lbs., 40 ; 226-265 ·lbs. 40
No ga mes schedul ed
Middleport, U .
to 50.
Hogs - U.S. 1-3, 190 to 240
li}Wr»f4W'EJW'}I
lbs. 40.25-40:60; Sows, U.S. 1-3,
Shop us for an excellent
300-500 lbs. 34.75 to 35 ; Boars,
selection of men's double knit
300-600 lbs. 26.50; Pigs (by
Corduroy &amp; Wool Blends
FOR SALE
head ) 20-40 lbs. 9 to 12: 40-60 lb.
suits. leisure suits, &amp; sport
WHITE CHINE SE baby geese
Values from S25 to $52.SO
13 to 18; 60 lb. and over, 16 to 21.
Phone 378 617 1.
coats, knit pants &amp; shirts by
Plaids, Solids, Jean
4 17 6tp
Reporter - Rolfe l~e

8-·~·-1Jil'.ce
.
Few

Sears

Parade of Values Sale

4

S!1MMON SQUAD.
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad was called
toRt. 2, Racine, Wednesday at
7:40p.m. for Preston Parsons
a medical patient, who wa~
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was admitted .

By HELEN THOMAS
UP! White House Reporter
. WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford, contending the
United States has an obligation
to South Vietnam, says he is
"absolutely convinced" that
the $722 million in arms aid he
· requested would lead to a
negotiated settlement of the
war.
"The United States did not
carry out its commitment in
the supplying of military
l)ardware and economic aid to
~uth Vietnam" in the same
way that Moscow and Peking
backed Hanoi, Ford said .

...

COMING SOON/

CALIFORNIA DANCERS - Perfonnlng In the amual Spring show at Syracuse
Elementary Frtday at _7:30p.m. will he the above dance line. L-r are, Amber Warner, Penny
Wolfe, Barbara Hendrrcks, Dlana Nease, Tina Pierce, Julie Flagg and Ann Williams Ruth
Stearns and Sandra Hill are tbe directors assisted by other teachers at the school.
·

Ford 'sure .motiey··
would buy time

Cuellar blanks Brewers
By FRED DOWN

H8a.y Duty Automatic w.t1ers.

They combine tough, hay duty
components and gentle, thonJugh

•

HiKE-BIKE - Helen Barnhart, Mary Skinner and Jessie
Might, 1-r, will be participating in the Hike-Bike Saturday.
Mrs. Barnhart, receptionist at the Meigs County Community
Men tal Health Center, is' being sponsored by Bill Bailey, Mrs.
Skinner is a sponsor and participant, and Jessie who is
president of the Meigs Olapter of the Ohio Association for
Retarded Children and Adults is being sponsored by Faye
Sauer.

brush fire. At 10: 1:i p.m.
Wednesday, the squad was
called to Wyllis Hill, for Minnie
Green, who was ill. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
HospitaL

'

1 Lot Ladies Dresses in Misses, Juniors and Half Sizes
Values To $38.00

$1000

SALE PRICE

'

1 Rack of Ladies' Suits . &amp; Pant

1 Rack of Ladles' Blouses

Knit
Tops, Sweaters and Shirts by
Jantzen. Catalina and Lady
Ma~Jhattan.

· Suits by Jantzen and Catalina.

h PRICE

1

1h PRICE

OPEN FRI. AND SAT. TIL 8:0n.M.

. THE MIDDLEPORT
·DEPARTMENT ,STORE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Bahr Clothiers
1\'!.iddleport, Ohio
Hrs. Open Til 8 PM Fn. Til 5 PM Sat.

'

Shop our ladies' department for
the spring &amp; summer lines of
Janhen, Catalina, Coddington
etc : for Sportswear, Dresses and
Swim wear.
and
Lady
Manhattan Blouses and Switchmate Knit Tops .

�'

...

'

u

~f;:•:•8;:;:;:•:•:::,;;~~~=~:::::::::::;:::::::::~;:::::::::~:::::::::::::~::::::!:!:!:!:!:!:!:!:!:!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;::t:1;~

r~! .Fertilizer, clean e~ergy,

Historic patch put .o.n to heart
speci~list . implanted a steel
and dacron umbrella-like
device in the heart of Suzette
Marie Creppel of New Orleans
on AprU 8. She is in fine COD'
dition, the hospital said.
The hospital said doctors
made a small incision in her
right leg and passed a catheter,
or tube, through a large vein

~ither

!I

promised using ne'Y process

leading to her heart to correct
side of the .defect _bet- ',:1.J.
the defect, a hole in her hea.rt's ween the upper chambers of
wan, she was .born with.
her heart, sealing the hole and :;:;· CHICAGO (UPI )- TWo scientists report that they have
At the end of the catheter
was a capsule containing two
.·,
smaU unibreUas an inch and a
and the need for pollution-free energy sources.
"The procedure could elimihalf in diameter when opened. riate .the need for open-heart :;: ·The process, they said, wiD enable high sulfur coal to be
By manipulating the controls
of the device outslde her body,
the two umbreUas expanded on

1.,:..:.,·,

&lt;~

:~~:r~~~;~%~~~~~~~e~~ :~e~= :.~:~;a~~ :o~~e ~r":e~~~r~!~ :!~:

.•

i:i:.l:.

,•l,.i,.l:.•:.

·:;·

~gf~~~~~:::i~~:::::: ~§~~~~=

·,i.,l:!:.

1
,,1:J.
, .1,

procedure was carried out by
engineering at the !Uinois Institute oi Technology, and
Dr. Terry King, a pediatric ···· Ladd J . Pircon, president of the Purity Corp., outlined the

·7,000 Miners stay out
BELLAIRE, Ohio (UPI ) Over 7,000 members of United
Mine Workers District 6 which
covers Eastern Ohio ·and the
Northern Panhandle of West
Virginia remained off the job
today in a diapute that began
over the assignments of some
miners and disciplinary action
taken against 26 others. ·
. The strik~ began March. 5
when miners complained that
safety helpers for rOOf holt
oper11,tors were not being
proj,erly ""'igned at three•
North ~merican Coal Co.
mines in Eastern Ohio.
Earlier this week, Consolidalion Coal Co. suspended 26
miners at Its Rose VaUey Mine
in Eastern Ohio for participalr
ing in what it caUed illegal
picketing.
'
Roving banda of pickets then
began shutting down the mines
and UMW officials Wednesday
warned miners to stay away

from their jobs.
John Guzek, president of
District 6, said Wednesday that
many of the miners "are just
. afraid to return to work."
Several UMW District 6
locals met Wednesday night to
discuss the work stoppage and
agreed not to return to work.
Uoyd Burian, president of
Local 5497 at the North
American mine at Powhatan,
warned local members to stay
away from their jobs beCause
of "threais of bodUy hann ood
damage to our property."
William 'voust, who recently
resigned as president of Local
2262 at another North
American
mine
near
Powhatan, said several men in
the local had received threats
against them, 'their families
and their homes. ·
A spokesman for the Bel·
mont, Ohio, County sheriff's
office at St. Clairsville said

there were "no problems" at

:::un::~~.actuaUy

;~:
~::

from the burning of high sulfur coal can be turned into a
quality crop fertilizer instead of into the sludge which

the .~: ·,: ., cu.~~t ;.?!~~ea=k~:::
r~~=Uon-free com·
our nation 's huge reserves of high sulfur coal
~::

~stion of

and other high ~ulfur fossil fuels' for energy production

COLUMBUS (UPI )- James
M. WagonseUer, national commander of the American
Legion, says South VIetnam is
a "lost cause" and the United
States should refrain from
furnishing any more military
assistance.
"It's a lost cause, so why
pour more money in there and
have it end up with r!orth
Vietnamese control anyway,"
WagonseUer, of Lancaster, told
newlllllen after appearances
before the Ohio House and
Senate Wednesday.
"If South Vietnam can't
draw a defense position,
there's nothing we can do to
help,'' said Wagonseller. "We
can proViCie humanitarian aid,
and I'm in favor ofthat. We can
provide food and medical
supplies, and try to get the

Tbe PropeUer Club of the
United States, Port of Hun·
tington, W. Va., wiD hold its
annual Charleston meeting
Friday, April18, at 6:30p.m.
at the Kanawha Country Club
in Charleston.
Guest of honor will be John J.
Flynn of the Washington law
firm of O'.Connor and Hannan.
Flynn wiD addres~ the meeting
on water transportation of
hazardous cargoes, especially
relating to the chemical and
petroleum traffic on the
Kanawha and Ohio Rivers.
A native of Evanston, ill.,
Flynn received his law degree
from the University of Minnesota following his service in
the army in WW II. He served
as legislative counsel to
Senator Hubert Humphrey of
Minnesota from 1958 to 1962,
having previously · served as
counsel to the U. S. Senate
Small Business Committee.
Rev . Jack Dabney of Perrow · Memorial Presbyterian
Church, Cross Lanes, will give
the invocation. Following the
banquet, entertainment wiD be
provided by the highly touted
comedy team of Charleston,
"Chilton and Daughterly" .
Carl Riggs of Amherst Industries , Charleston, Is
chairman of the meeting and
Amherst Industries wUl host a
reception preceding the
banquet.

Parsons, Racine ; Bernice

Grueser, Middleport.
DISCHARGES - Marilyn
Napper, Lucy While, Cora
Christy, Cloist Badgely, Ernest
Davidson.
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, Aprlll6 l
Lorena Arnold , Elizabeth
Barbour, Louise Bartels,
Glenna Brush, Dimple Jane
Campbell, Carol Carder,
Robert Crank, Alma Curry,
Lawrence Fowler , Samuel
Hamilton, Luther Harvey,
Mrs. John Henzmann and
daughter , Roger Ho~uck,
Jennifer Hug~es , Anita
Johnson, Wesley Kelvington,
Benjamin Knox, William
Lunsford, Mrs. Frank MiUs
and daughter, Evie Nickels,
Georgia Rathburn, . Edith
Rayburn, Connie Saunders,
Loretta Shaffer, Fern Sheets,
Jerry Simpson, Nancy Terry,
Norma Williams.
(Blrtbs)
Mr. and Mrs. James D!ll1can,
son, Point Pleasant, W. Va .;
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Nibert, a
son, Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va .;
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Spaun, a
daughter, Racine ; Mr .. and
Mrs. William R. Wilcoxen, a
daughter, Point Pleasant, W.
' ' ·
Va.

orphans out."

·

Wagonseller commended the
Ohio lawmakers for returning
Veterans' Day to Nov. 11, its
traditional date. He said 45
states and the U.S. Senate have
taken similar action, "and we
are hopeful the House of
Representatives will take its
cue."

NEW CLAIMS DOWN
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services reported tOday the
number of Ohio unemployed
workers filing initial claims for
unemployment compensation
benefits during the week ending April 12 dropped to the
lowest ·OQe-week· total·' since
mid-November 1974. Bureau
Director Albert G. Giles said
' the number of initial claims
totaled 23,853 last week, a 21.5
per cent decrea se from the
previous week.
AD BANNED
HAARLEM ,
The
Netherlands (UP!) - The
Broadcas ling ' Advertising
Council has banned a television
ad for a detergent in which
toilets are heard flushing. The
_council said many people are
eating when the ads appear
and are ~ery sensi Uve to
flushing sounds at that particular lime.

GUEST SPEAKER SET :
·SEVEN WIN HONORS
~TOWED
. Rev. Nyle Borden will be
Seven Meigs Coun tians have
Raymond Frederick Miller, guest speaker at the Forest
been named to the Ohio Stale · 23, Rt. 1, Minersville, and Jane . Run Baptist Church Sunday
. University honor roU for the Aim Roush, 28, Pomeroy.
morning at 10:45.
winter quarter making an
average of at least 3.5. They
are Richard Anderson KeUy,
William David Krawsczyn,
.Douglas William Little,. . .
Middleport; Roger David
Nease, Route 1 Minersville :
Franklin Morris· Rizer, MUisa
K. Rizer, Pomeroy, and Karie
Robin Humphrey, ReedaviUe.

-INSULATION~
Blown Into Walls
·and Attics

HONEY .80UGIIT
Volunteers of the Meigs·
Chapter of the American
Cancer Sodety Jlre pfe.e.-t;r
soliciting
for
money
tllrouChont Meigs County, It
wu anliounced today.
'

-Fire Retardant'
..

.Free Estimates-No Obligation

FOREMAN . &amp; ABBOIT
..

Middleport, Ohio

.

~

-

¥

lac~ing
'

.

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - State
Transportation Director Richard Jackson told a legislative
panel today Ohio standa to lose
up to $l bUlion in federal highway funds during the next two
years because the state can't
afford to put up rna tching
money.
. Jackson testified before the
House Finance Committee,
which is conducting hearings
on the state budget.
He explained that Ohio wiD
be eligible for $429 million in
withheld federal road funds
during fiscal 1976, and $558
million more the following
year.
"We are unable to match
this,'' Jackson said.
The director said approval of
Gov. James A. Rhodes' $1.64
billion transportation bond
issue by the legislature would
have done the job. He also.said
the General Assembly could
(X'Ovide needed revenues in the
form of an increased gasoline
tax.

Portland school ·
honor roll noted

:. 1.
1
..:..

.

!~:

sulftir coal back ,into the eartb, this process ·not only
~ prolilces a valuable bYJiroduct from what untu now has
:;:: been waste emission, but also cleans up stack gases which
~§ produce air contamination," he said.
:~
When high sulfur coal is burned, it emits a sulfur oxide
::. ( gas which pollutes the air if it is not controUed. Pircon
;:;; said· the new pollution.fertlll.zer process combines those
:;;: sulfur oxide gas emissions with other chemicals injected
'!:; into the exhaust stack to produce a liquid fertilizer.
!!~! "We can say with certainty that utilities wiD r"'!lize
;!;! very significant savings by using this system to replace
:;:; the current practice of transporting low sulfur coal from
western states to the Midwest and East,'' Pircon

:;:;
1:!:

.;:;:
{

;!;!
:.::.
:;:;

!;!;
':!:

•• •

Con tinued from page 1
panel to conduct an inquiry when a dispute, in I!Je judgment of
the National Mediation Board, threatens to ~epr1ve a section of
the country of essential transportation serviCe.
WAsHINGTON - THE SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS .
Committee is holdiug up $200 milllon in humanitarian and
evacuation funds because several members say the administration is not withdrawing .Americans fast enough from
South Vietnam. Those members succeeded Wednesday in
postponing untU at least this·afternoon a conunittee vote on the
funds while seeking White House assurance ttJat the evacuation
of Americans wiD be speeded up.
.
The Senate Armed Services Committee caUed a meelillg
today to consider a possible compromise on President Ford's
request of $722 million in emergency military aid for South
Vietnam. Chairman John C. Stennis predicted the panel would
recommend some aid. The House International Relations
Committee was meeting to mark up and vote on a proposal
authorizing an additionar $73 mUlion in humanitarian aid for
Saigon.
· · CINCINNATI - THIS CITY'S VICE Ma~or faced
arraignrrient todsy on charges of embezzling nearly $6,000, but
contended, "I'm an honest man." William Chenault was indicted
just three days ago by a special Hamilton County Grand Jury on
charges of embezzlement, theft in office and falsification of
records,
·
"I'm bewildered because I'm · a.n honest rna~," ~id
Chenault, a Democrat. "I am convinced that I spent more on llle
conduct of the business of the government of this city than I ever
received." Chenault had testified before the grand jury.
"Perhaps they didn 't understand what I said," he commented
after being indicted. "I thought the proof was conclusive."
Chenault, also a member of city council since 1968, is
charged with embe~zling $2,602 in city funds in 1972 and 1973 and
another $3,3091ast year. He was indicted on two felony charges of
embezzlement and theft in office and four misdemeanor counts
of falsification of city pay vouchers.

~!!
~;:

~\)
.•.,

/

.

Thieu ·called

Council

Continued from page 1·
Continued from page 1
Anna Schuler , C.A.P. This
committee will meet Tuesday, ficials to the rebels ''was
April22, at 1 p. m. in Pomeroy. psychologl~ shock for the
Others attending were Jo~n ,IIJ'1IIY and the people of South -·
T. Griffin, Gallia-Meigs Vietnam who have been
C.A .P.; David Gloeckner, fighting the Communists" and
Gallia-Meigs C A.P.; Bridget who have seen two-thirds of
Toben, Ga Uia-Meigs C.A.P.: their country faD to North
Gene Lyons, Meigs Co. Health Vietnam.
Dept.; Beulah Strauss, Meigs
U.S. sources said today that
Co. Health Dept.; Charlotte American officials wtU open a
Wells, Gallia-Meigs C.A.P. : special processing center at
Doro thy Davis, Meigs Co. Saigoo 'sTan Son Nhut Airbase
Humane Society ; Goldie Die!, by Saturday to cut th1'ough red
Meigs Co. Humane Society; tape and expedite the evacua·
Evelyn Scarberry , Ohio tion 'of American citizens ·and ·
Bureau of Employment Ser- their Vieinamese famiUes.
'
vices ; Sharon Bailey, Meigs
The official said they will '
Co. Unit of American Cancer leave on U.S. military flights to~
Society ; Margaret Ella Lewis, the United States. American;
Meigs Community. School ; officials have denied an ·
Eloise Smith, Meigs ·com- "evacuation" Is underway and ·
munity School; Rhonda Dailey, said the departure is volun- ·
Meigs Co. Chapter of American tary.
'
Red Cross . Disaster ChairThe source said lll.e creation :
man; Lelah Weatherby, Red of the processinll center was to '
Cross Board Member ; Chester aid Americans with Viet- ;
V. King, Red Cross Chapter namese families cut through :
Dan
Sch- government . red
Chairman;
tape. '
. wendewson, M. H, District 298 However, other nations,
Office; Christopher .Timm, eluding Britain, are reportedly ;
Social Services . Holzer drawing up plans with the U.S. •
Steve Embassy for a final evacuation :
Medical
Center;
Daws on, Meigs Community of foreigners. ·
'
Mental Health; Tim Waltner,
, '.
M.H. District office; Vernon ~ ~_...,._ _ _..__.._-:i
Nease, Meigs County Red : '
For thl!.LoiNesr •
Cross; Charles E. Blakeslee,
Red Cross and Helen BarnT1re Pr'ic;.es
hart, Community Mental
Health.
1n rne _,rea

a

Car and truck

Cambodia

News

in Briefs

:;:;

::':~: ::::::?.:::::::::::::::::!:!:!:!:::::::=::;!;:;:::;::~::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~

in collision

Continued from page 1
Phnom Penh clique,'' said a
radio announcer speaking for
The Meigs County Sheriff's
the insurgents.
Dept. investigated a car-truck
The announcer ordered accident Wednesday afternoon
generals and high ranking on SR 124 in Minersv!Ue.
government officials tor eport
Vince E. Knight, Pomeroy,
to the downtown Information traveling west in a wrecker
Ministry under a white flag of truck and Ronald S. Grady, Rt.
surrender. The radio said 1, Racino, traveling east,
Phnom Penh commander Gen. collided in a curve. There were
Chhim Chhuon and Gen. Lon no injurie~ and medium
.Non , brother of exiled damage to the truck and heavy
president Lon No!, were the damage to the car. The acfirst to surrender.
cident is still under inRebel broadcasters in- · vestigation. '
dicated no other high-ranking
officials of the Phnom Penh
government had arrived.
WANT TO END IT
Three hours after the first
George Hensley, Reedsville,
surrender order, the rebel calls
for the presence of former and Dolores Hensley have filed
government leaders increaSed for dissolution of marriage in
in number and grew more Meigs County Common Pleas
Court. FUing for divorce is
insistent.
The formal surrender order Paulette J . White, Pomeroy,
was made over Radio Phnom against George Robert White,
Penh at !p.m. (!a.m. EDT) by Gallipolis, ch~rging gross
Brig. Gen. Mey Sichan, chief of neglect of duty and extreme
operations of the Cambodian cruelty.
armed forces. He said soldiers
and govenmient functionaries
should cease all-comhat.Insurnation would be a massive
gent troops with loudspeakers
program of arrests. They
moved through the street with
expected the government to be
appeals for calm.
run initiaUy by a revolutionary
"I order, after an appeal by
military committee.
the (Buddhist) bonzes, the
In foreign affairs, the new
three arms of the armed forces
government was expected to
·of the Kluner Republic to lay
break diplomatic ties with the
down their arms and invite
United States, South Vietnam,
repre5e!Jtati.ves of the Kluners
Thailand and all other nations
of tlie other side to take power.
which maintained embassies
"The doors to Phnom Penh during the last months of the
and other province capitals are
Cambodian war.
open to them.
"I ask the population in
Phnom Penh and in the
provinces to stay calm.
"Representatives of the (government) army are trying to
find ways to negotiate with the
Kluners of the other side in
order
to
guarantee

The fifth sixih weeks grading
period honor roll at the Portland Elementary School lias
been announced.
Named to the roll with thos-e
making all A's in capital letters
were : Teresa Barber, Charlie
Boso, Tammie Proffitt, first
grade; Bruce Wolfe, Kim
Sprouse, second; . Christie
Lawrence, DANNY WEDDLE,
CINDY
EVANS,
third;
BRUCE JOHNSON, TAMMY
MEADOWS,
DEBRA
OCTEAU, Paul ·ours, fourth;
SHERRY BEEGLE, Ali cia
Evans, Krista Johnson, Kelly
Pickens, fifth; BONNIE BOSO,
JANET MIDDLESWART,
CHARLOTTE PICKENS,
DANNY TALBOTT, sixth ; security.''
Juanita Powell, Rebecca
UP! reporters in Phnom
Au!llerson, special education .
Penh said the surrender came
shortly after dawn when the
rebel forces swept across the
city. Cambodian naval units
CAR WASH SET
across the Mekong River had
SYRACUSE - The Asbury already raised white flags. The
United Methodist Church last battle was for the threeYoung Adult Class will hold a story taU Information Ministry
car wash at the Syracuse housing Phom Penh Radio.
municipal buUding from 10
Experts on the Camboclisn
a.m. to 4 p.m. on April26. Cost situation said they ~lieved the
will be $1.50for the outside only first order of business for the
and $2 for inside and outside. rebels on taking control of the

In-:

--

SING SLATED
CHESTER - A gospel sing
will be held at 7:30 p.in. 1
Saturday at the Chester .
Church of God featuring The
·
Homeward Bound. The public ;m.&lt;sh
is invited.
' ,. ··

It's ·
•

ance

given . you more power over
your pension than ever before.
The heart of the new law,
covering the more than 300,000
existing private pension plans
and all future ones, sets
standards for participation
(how soon you must he in·
eluded in a pension plan) and
vesting (how long you must be
covered by a plan before your
pension
is
irrevocably
guaranteed).
Participation begins after a
year of work and at age 25. If
the employe joins the company
as a youngster, he must get
credit for up to three years of
prior service by age 25, which
means in effect his pension
participation would start as
early as age 22.
A company has the alternative . of waiting three years
before it covers a· worker, but
at the end of that time It must
immediately "vest'.' him, or
guarantee him at least some
pension
payments
at
retirement age.
Vesting is the worker's
guarantee he wm receive those
payments no matter whether
he is fired, quits his job, or sees
the company go out of
business.
One reason Congress acted
was to stop ~~Qme companies
from requiring an employe to
work until retirement age
before he could receive a
pension. Under this practice.
some workers have been laid
off only weeks before retirement, with no pension to show
for a lifetime of labor.
That can't happen under the
.new law. Companies must
meet minimum standards for
vesting, foUowing one of three
formulas :
··Immediate vesting after 10
years under one plan. For
exl!IJiple, if YOII · .quit after
working under a pension plan
for nine years and 363 days,
you receive nothing , but if you
make it 10 years and one day,
you receive a pension at

retirement age based on your
service credits.
Gradual vesting; starting
with 25 per cent of full pension
rights after five years' work
and increasing by steps to 100
per cent vesting after ,15 y~ars.
The "rule of 45,'' which says
you must be 50 per cent vested
after your age plus years of
service add up to 45. Full
vesting occurs five years later.
Under the rule of 45, let's say
you join a company when you
are 35. Five years later, you
will be 411 and you wiD have
worked five years-a total of
45,-and you will be half vested.
At age 45, you will be fully
vested. (To protect younger
workers, the law says vesting ·
must begin after 10 years even
if age and 8ervice do not yet
add up to 45.)
Full vesting does not mean a

Polly's Poin

1

'

Leaky ball point
stiJins ·handbag
''

'

12-12-12 FERTILIZER . $499
50 LB. BAG

otherwise, benefits will be paid
to your surviving spouse if you
die before retirement but after
you are · eligible for early
retirement. Again, benefits
may be reduced.
One right Congress did not
guarantee is "portability," or
fuU pension, which usually participa tion and vesting the right to carry pension
depends 011 number of years standards are retroactive. This credits along to a new emworked and amount of saiary means thai in almost all cases, ployer. The jijw leaves the
paid. NaturallY., an employe if you have worked at least 15 issue for the worker and his
who sticks it out to retirement years for the same company former company to negotiate.
age, with the higher salary he under the Same pension plan, But an employer could stand to
might expect by then, will get a your benefits are fully protec- lose less money paying a small
bigger pension than the fellow · ted.
If you have contemplated
worker who leaves before age
65.
changing jobs or retiring early,
The new law also makes don't worry about losing your
certain that employe credits pension. But remember, if you
determining the actual doUar retire early, your benefits
amount of his pension are almost certainly wm be lower,
accumulated in a fair and even an\1 you might not be able to
way -not in a lump near collect them untU age 65.
retirement age.
When you apply for Social .
Again, the new. law gives Security benefits at retirement
cOmpanies three formulas to age, Social Security is supchoose from.
posed to give you a complete
The first says the amount of list of aU pension rights you
benefits credited lor any one have accumulatep . from aU ·
year can he no more than one yo.ur , empklyers so you cart ·
and one-third the amount applyforeachofthem. The isw
credited in any other year. For requires each company to
example, a company could inform Social Security of any
credit you with 3 per cent a pension credits an employe has
year for 20 years, then 4 per buUt up when he leaves.
cent-but not 5 per cent or · The pension credit buildup is
more-per year after that.
only half retroactive under the
The second says credits can law. If you have 30 years with a
be accumulated at a flat 3 per company, for example, the law
cent a year.
says you will get at least 15
The third option would aUow years of pension credits recredits based on an employe's troactively.
What about your spouse ?
years with a company as a
Right Reserved To
proportion of the age span Unlessyoudeclineitinwriting,
Lim
it Quantities
covered by its pension plan. your pension wiD be paid oo a
For example, if a company's joint and survivor basis, with
pension period covers ages 20 your spouse getting at least
. to 60, or 411 years, a worker who half the pension after your
joined the company at 38 and death. However-and It is a big
worked 22 years .to retirement however-a joint pension may
would get 22·40ths of the be paid at a reduced rat~ , so. It
maximum pension credits.
might be preferable over a
Q. Suppose you left a com· . joint and survivor annuity.
pany and returned several
years later. Can you get credit
for those (X'ior years of work ?
A. If you were at least 50 per
cent vested before )'ou· left, the
answer is yes. If you were not
vested, the answer Is maybe.
Generally, if your time away
was no longer than your
•
•
original term of service under/
the pension plan, you must be
given credit for prior service.
Q. What about part-lime

Worker's.hill of rights

·sy POLLY \:RAMER

SPRING
BARGAINS

.

The· new pension law:

By DON PHilLIPS
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - If
you are one of the 30 milllon
Americans working for a
company with a private pension plan, Congress has given
you a new bill of rights.
It is the Employe Retirement
Income Security Act of 1974,
and it (X'omises that if you have
worked long enough to earn a
peiiBIO)l, you wiU receive one at
retirement age. Nothing- including bankruptcy, plant closings, dismissal or resignation
~au stand in the way.
·If you have spent a year on
the job and reached age 25, you
must be eiU'oUed in the company pension plan. Later, after
you have worked for certain
minimum periods, your employer must guarantee you at·
least a basic pension payment.
.If the company defaults; the
government wUI step in and
pay your pension up to $750 a
month.
An equally important but
little.floticed guarantee is the
right to know your pension
rights. Your employer must
teD you by next August 31, in
simple, easy-to-understand
language, exactly what your
pension plan contains. If he .
doesn't, lie wiD be breaking the
law.
Furthermore, if you want to
know where you personally
stand in the pension plan at any
time, he Is required to give you
up-to-dale information.
Sen. JacobK. Javits, R-N.Y.,
has called the law "the
greatest social legislation since
Social Security" was passed 40
years ago. At the least, your
pension is much safer than it
was a year ago.
'
The government enforces
these new pension rights in two
ways:
A new federal pension insuragency in the Labor
Department, similar to the
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation which protects
your bank accounts, was
created to pay you some
retirement pension if your
employer fails to keep his
barg&amp;in.
If you believe you were
cheated, or that the pension
fund Is being handled improperly, you are entitled to go
directly to federal court to fight
your case, and be awarded
attorney fees If your case has
merit.
The law does not force any
company to start a pension
plan; that Is up to the company
or the union. But if a plan
exists, the company must live
up to Its promises. A pension,
ooce promised, is no looger a
prlvUege. It is a right.
As the CQI!Iplex legislation
graduaUy goes into effect in
coml!lg months and years, it Is .
important to know Its many
technicalities, for Congress has

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Ink from a
ball point pen leaked on the
nap of an expensive leather
handbag and I cannot remove
· it. How can I get it off? :....
DOROTHY.
DEAR DOROTHY - The
color of your purse and
wbether or not It Is real leather
(so many syathetlcs are 110
good looking thai we are often
mistaken) can affect the
suceess or failure of many
remedies. '

stree~ In the grocery, ete.) HAZEL.
.
DEAR POLLY AND Mrs.
E.L.B. who wants to muffle the
sound of her cuckoo clock from
Germany. I like to hear it tick
but I do not sleep weD. I woUld
just as soon not hear It strike
each hour at night. We
removed the weight from the
chain that makes it cuckoo and·
stiU have a clock that tells
time. Alittle knot also was tied
on the end Qf the chain so it will.
not slip back up Into the clock.
-DELORES.
I remeved a .baD poiDt Ink
DEAR DEWRES - A clock
stain (not too old) from a red repaJ~&amp;D told me that he did
syathellc leather bag by nol thlak It was even necessary
sprayiDg II with hair spray that to lie 1he knot iD the c~aln. wis left on to dry.'Wben rubbed POLLY.
I
off the Ink came off, too. White
DEAR POLLY - When
petroleum jeUy rubbed iD well knitting . children's cardign
IUid then rubbed off will werk sweaters 1 make butuinholes
OD many bag1 aJid WOuld be down both front sides. When
ule for mosL U leather II dull · the sweater Is handed down the
lool:lng after anything II apo buttons always can be on the
plied cover the entire bag with . right side for either a girl or a
a leather preserver er boy. (Polly's nate: Sew the
1parlngly - liquid wax, the butlons on over the unused
klad .Uied OD furniture. Flnt butlonbolts that are caught
1ry any remedy on an Jn. together with a thread as you
CODBplcuous spot te see what It sew.) -MRS. O.E.P.
dots 1o lbe leather .aad tbe . DEAR POLLY- I painted
color. - POLLY.
garden rake green and hung it
on a wall to serve as a key
' DEAR POLLY - My •Pet holder so we can always find
Peeve coocems seeing women the one needed: - BETTY . ·
but in public with their hair
I
DEAR POLLY
rolled up In curlen. I wish they discovered a new use for my
could aee themselves as others discolored or slightly worn sink
do. ( PoDy'1 DOte: I alwaya mats. Alter seeing rubber mats
wOIIIler whllt 1reat event they advertised for use under car
.,., ldfiDI rudy for that Is so wheels when stuck on ice 91' in
IIDPI'flut they will so em- snow I thought of those old sink
barrul tllems,elvea 011 the mats nnd they work ,iust great

. •.

CALL OR VISIT

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STAR SUPPLY

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-VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SU~PLr ·fA).

RACINE, OHIO

3rd Ave.

Middleport, Ohio

!

992-2709
•
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it earns until retirement, when self~mployed person can Ill
his crt'&lt;lits to another com- income· and thus taxes are aside 15 per cent of earoinli&amp;lil
pany 's fund' .
lower . But the money cannot be a maximum of $7,500 a ye"
What if your company has no used untU the employe is 59'k ins)ead of 10 per c..K anct;_.
pension plan, or if you are self- years old, or he is liable to $2,500 maximum, all tax f?f
emp1oyed ? The iaw has some- penalties. The fund must be until retirement. A mlnimUIII
thing for you, t90.
established in a special bank of $750 can be set aside,
Effective this year, any account , special TreaSury matter what his income. ;__:
employe ol a pensionless bonds or in annuities set up by
The higher limits wiD bene!!$
company may set aside 15 per insurance. companies.
high-income professionals 1!11:
cent of pay, to an annual
For the self-employed, the pecially, but also the employe
maximum of $1,500, for an pension ·pot is sweetened by of a pension pian company who
"i ndlvidua l retirement ac· easing of . limitations on SO· .works part-time elsewhere bf
count."
called
" Keogh"
self. does free lance work and th\11
No taxes are paid on the retirement plans.
qualifies for the self-emplo~4
amount set aside or the interest
•
Retroactive to Jan. I, 1974, a fund .

bo

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~====================~·

Discount Prices You'll LikeTHuRsDAY, FRIDAY,

workers?

A. If you worked 1,000 hours
or more in a year (about half
the year ), you worked long·
enough to earn a year of
vesting . and credit rights,
although your company migh{
give you less credit than a
fulltime worker.
Don't he surprised if the
pension booklet you must get
by Aug. 31 does not conform to
aU these standards. Most wiD
not go into effect until Jan. 1,
1976, or after, except for new
plans which must conform
immediately. Companies cov·
erect by industry-wide union
pension plans have untu Dec.
31, 1980, to comply.

.

SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY

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\ Kenneth McCullough. R. Ph . Char les Rillte, R. Ph.
·Open Daitvs :ooa .m: to9 :30p.m.
Sunday 10 :30 to 12: 30 and S to 9 p.m.

I
I PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
I
. Friendly Service
! 112 E. MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
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.JEWELRY
COMPLETE STOCK

PRICE

Ladies
discuss
mtsston
program

" Missions Start With
People" was the program topic
of Mrs. Robert Bumgarner at
the Monday night meeting of
the United Methodist· Women
at the Hea th United Methodist
Church, Middleport.
Mrs. Bumgarner said that in
today 's · .world we find
missionaries trying to understand and enjoy the beliefs
and methods of others rather
than trying to change thase
beliefs. She said that missions
bring an awareness of different
religions and societies and an
acceptance rather than a
One right you won't have to struggle to inflict personal
waitforis financial protection. beliefs on others.
She spoke of the two great
Since the new Pension
to love thy
commandments,
Benefit Guaranty Corp. was
God,
and
to
love
they
neighbor
esta.blished July 1, 1974, your
pension has been insured up to . as thyself , and set these as the
$750 a month, to be paid if your basis for all Christian
company terminates ita plan . missions. In her program she
· without enough funda to pay all talked ·on Netal , a Hindu
country between India and
its promised pensions.
The corporation is financed China, where· to belong to
by an employer contribution of anything but the Hindu religion
$1 a year for each pension plan is against the law. She said that
participant, or 50 cents for United Methodist missionaries
multlcompany union plans. are active there but that they
Many companies can be ex- are required . to accept 'the
pected to pass this added cost society in which these people
along to consumers in the form live, and the laws of the land.
Mrs. James B~ewington
of higher prices.
,
The law reqaires the compa· presided at the meeting with
ny to finance Its pension plan Mrs. Emerson Jones giving
properly, and sets strict new · devotions on the theme " The
standards governing liow the World is Like a Garden, Lord" .
money can be invested and the She talked of the symbols of
Rowers comparing these to
activities of "fiduciarles"different
phases of life and
those who manage or make
gave
scripture
from Matthew
decisiilns affecting the plan:
The new requirements are 6. Mrs. Jones also read several
mainly your employer's worry, legends about birds and
but you have every right to full Dowers.
Ways to raise money were
disclosure of aU pension fund
dealings. If you don't like the discussed. The birthday of
way the fund Is being · Mrs. Clara Hennesy residing.in
managed, you can go to {llderal Columbus with her son-in-law
court either in your area or in and daughter, April 28, was
the District of Columbia.
· noted and members . were
What does aU this mean to askeq to send cards.
the aging or already retired
Mrs. Glenn Lambert, Mrs.
worker? Plenty.
Earl Knight, and Mrs. M. C.
As of the first )llan year after Wilson served coffee and cake.
Dec. 31, 1975 (you will have to Mrs. C. F. Hibbs presided at
check when that is for yo)~). aU the coffee service.

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Tillers, Lawn Mowers,
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••

In a ddition , UHiess yo u elect · pension later than transferring

BEND TIRE
CENTER. .
·
·· MaS&lt;In, w. Yo.

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~

7- The Dally Sentine I, Middleoport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday, A(X'il17, 197:;

_

'

v

·-

::::

§l Dr. Thomas L. Martin, IIT president, said development !;!;
;;1 of the process was "of major natlcinal significanc;e. . . :;:;
}
· "By essentiaUy recycling all the fertilizer value of hig6 ;:!:

•
Mat Chmg
• [\) ';:Jar
mo:q.ey IS

The Chesapeake and Ohio
Railway today awarded,
subject to Interstate Commerce Commission approval,
an issue of $»,540,000 principal
amoun t of its Equipment Trust
Certificates to a syndicate
headed by Halsey, Stuart &amp;
Co., Inc. and MerriU, Lynch,
Pierce, Fenner &amp; Smith, Inc.
on their bid of 98.8275 for 8%
per cent obligations . The offer,
tendered at competitive bid·
ding, represented a net interest
cost to the company of 8.974 per
cent.
The Certificates wiD be dated
as of March 1, 1975, and wiD
mature seriaUy over 15 years.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Charles
Searles, Middleport; Margaret
Gans, Pomeroy; Genevieve
Guthrie, Coolville; James
Warner, Pomeroy ; Preston

,'·!.:!.,:!.

:~~~t~0a~~~h~~ t-.~,il.: :thr~~~yts~~~Le:~~?.·~~:;i:!i~~~

Issue to build
coal cars sold

HOSPITAL
NEWS

!:!:
,.,
;:;:
,.,

. 1.::.:'

·the mines today.
procedure took 90 minutes,
"The mines are at1U closed doctors needed but seven
and the district (UMW) of.
fleers have asked that they
implant
stay that way until this
The hospital said King and
(X'oblem is settled one way or MiUs were developing several
the other," said a dispatcher
for the sheriff's office. "Our
regular patrols have checked
the mines and there are '·no
in hopes of finding a safe
problems."
method for repair of l)eart
Twenty-one deep mlnelt in defects such as atrial septal
the aref. .were closed·'toctay !IS defects (d$ctive heart walls)
we'l'e severat strip mine using .cardiac catheterizlition
operations.
techniques which · !10tentially
Court action has been initiat- would be less costly, shorten
ed in Pittsburgh and U.S. the hospital stay and eliminate
District Court in Elkins, W.Va., the need of a . heart-lung
in an effort to stop the wildcat mac e, " Kin g sa1·d. .
hin
walkout.
Nortb American asked a
Pittsburgh court to assess the
UMW $10,000 a day fine for
contempt of court because its
members violated a court
order to return to their jobs.

Asian war lost
says leader
of legionaires

Capital lawyer
will address
Propeller club

·:&lt;

0
~i~~~log;st,
c~~~ifv:·sc~~:~
JX'=~:~d
~~~~~=~r::~~~:fr;.r coal can be
surgeon. Although the entire ,,. burned "cleanly and efficiently." and .that the effluent

,•,•

This is the second of three
ins talfments
of
C&amp;O's
$38,355,000 Equipment Trust of
1975.
The Trust was created to
finance not more than 80 per
ce nt of the $48 million
estimated cost of 2,000 one
hundred-ton coal hoppt r cars
and 10 diesel locomotives. The
second installment will cover
80 per cent of tfie $15.7 million
estimated cost of 700 of the
h6pper cars. The cars will be
built at the company's own
shops at Raceland, .,.. Ky.
Another syndicate )leaded by
Salomon Bros. also submitted
a bid .

....

•

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, AprU 17, 1975

NEW ORLEANS (UPI) Docton said today they patched a hole in the heart of a l7·
year'Old girl without using
general anesthesia and without
resorting , to open-heart
surgery. They said it was a
historic medical first.
Ochsner Foundation Hospital
said a surgeon and a heart

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EXPIRES: 4-20-75

Mas11n, W. Va.

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r~! .Fertilizer, clean e~ergy,

Historic patch put .o.n to heart
speci~list . implanted a steel
and dacron umbrella-like
device in the heart of Suzette
Marie Creppel of New Orleans
on AprU 8. She is in fine COD'
dition, the hospital said.
The hospital said doctors
made a small incision in her
right leg and passed a catheter,
or tube, through a large vein

~ither

!I

promised using ne'Y process

leading to her heart to correct
side of the .defect _bet- ',:1.J.
the defect, a hole in her hea.rt's ween the upper chambers of
wan, she was .born with.
her heart, sealing the hole and :;:;· CHICAGO (UPI )- TWo scientists report that they have
At the end of the catheter
was a capsule containing two
.·,
smaU unibreUas an inch and a
and the need for pollution-free energy sources.
"The procedure could elimihalf in diameter when opened. riate .the need for open-heart :;: ·The process, they said, wiD enable high sulfur coal to be
By manipulating the controls
of the device outslde her body,
the two umbreUas expanded on

1.,:..:.,·,

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:~~:r~~~;~%~~~~~~~e~~ :~e~= :.~:~;a~~ :o~~e ~r":e~~~r~!~ :!~:

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procedure was carried out by
engineering at the !Uinois Institute oi Technology, and
Dr. Terry King, a pediatric ···· Ladd J . Pircon, president of the Purity Corp., outlined the

·7,000 Miners stay out
BELLAIRE, Ohio (UPI ) Over 7,000 members of United
Mine Workers District 6 which
covers Eastern Ohio ·and the
Northern Panhandle of West
Virginia remained off the job
today in a diapute that began
over the assignments of some
miners and disciplinary action
taken against 26 others. ·
. The strik~ began March. 5
when miners complained that
safety helpers for rOOf holt
oper11,tors were not being
proj,erly ""'igned at three•
North ~merican Coal Co.
mines in Eastern Ohio.
Earlier this week, Consolidalion Coal Co. suspended 26
miners at Its Rose VaUey Mine
in Eastern Ohio for participalr
ing in what it caUed illegal
picketing.
'
Roving banda of pickets then
began shutting down the mines
and UMW officials Wednesday
warned miners to stay away

from their jobs.
John Guzek, president of
District 6, said Wednesday that
many of the miners "are just
. afraid to return to work."
Several UMW District 6
locals met Wednesday night to
discuss the work stoppage and
agreed not to return to work.
Uoyd Burian, president of
Local 5497 at the North
American mine at Powhatan,
warned local members to stay
away from their jobs beCause
of "threais of bodUy hann ood
damage to our property."
William 'voust, who recently
resigned as president of Local
2262 at another North
American
mine
near
Powhatan, said several men in
the local had received threats
against them, 'their families
and their homes. ·
A spokesman for the Bel·
mont, Ohio, County sheriff's
office at St. Clairsville said

there were "no problems" at

:::un::~~.actuaUy

;~:
~::

from the burning of high sulfur coal can be turned into a
quality crop fertilizer instead of into the sludge which

the .~: ·,: ., cu.~~t ;.?!~~ea=k~:::
r~~=Uon-free com·
our nation 's huge reserves of high sulfur coal
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~stion of

and other high ~ulfur fossil fuels' for energy production

COLUMBUS (UPI )- James
M. WagonseUer, national commander of the American
Legion, says South VIetnam is
a "lost cause" and the United
States should refrain from
furnishing any more military
assistance.
"It's a lost cause, so why
pour more money in there and
have it end up with r!orth
Vietnamese control anyway,"
WagonseUer, of Lancaster, told
newlllllen after appearances
before the Ohio House and
Senate Wednesday.
"If South Vietnam can't
draw a defense position,
there's nothing we can do to
help,'' said Wagonseller. "We
can proViCie humanitarian aid,
and I'm in favor ofthat. We can
provide food and medical
supplies, and try to get the

Tbe PropeUer Club of the
United States, Port of Hun·
tington, W. Va., wiD hold its
annual Charleston meeting
Friday, April18, at 6:30p.m.
at the Kanawha Country Club
in Charleston.
Guest of honor will be John J.
Flynn of the Washington law
firm of O'.Connor and Hannan.
Flynn wiD addres~ the meeting
on water transportation of
hazardous cargoes, especially
relating to the chemical and
petroleum traffic on the
Kanawha and Ohio Rivers.
A native of Evanston, ill.,
Flynn received his law degree
from the University of Minnesota following his service in
the army in WW II. He served
as legislative counsel to
Senator Hubert Humphrey of
Minnesota from 1958 to 1962,
having previously · served as
counsel to the U. S. Senate
Small Business Committee.
Rev . Jack Dabney of Perrow · Memorial Presbyterian
Church, Cross Lanes, will give
the invocation. Following the
banquet, entertainment wiD be
provided by the highly touted
comedy team of Charleston,
"Chilton and Daughterly" .
Carl Riggs of Amherst Industries , Charleston, Is
chairman of the meeting and
Amherst Industries wUl host a
reception preceding the
banquet.

Parsons, Racine ; Bernice

Grueser, Middleport.
DISCHARGES - Marilyn
Napper, Lucy While, Cora
Christy, Cloist Badgely, Ernest
Davidson.
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, Aprlll6 l
Lorena Arnold , Elizabeth
Barbour, Louise Bartels,
Glenna Brush, Dimple Jane
Campbell, Carol Carder,
Robert Crank, Alma Curry,
Lawrence Fowler , Samuel
Hamilton, Luther Harvey,
Mrs. John Henzmann and
daughter , Roger Ho~uck,
Jennifer Hug~es , Anita
Johnson, Wesley Kelvington,
Benjamin Knox, William
Lunsford, Mrs. Frank MiUs
and daughter, Evie Nickels,
Georgia Rathburn, . Edith
Rayburn, Connie Saunders,
Loretta Shaffer, Fern Sheets,
Jerry Simpson, Nancy Terry,
Norma Williams.
(Blrtbs)
Mr. and Mrs. James D!ll1can,
son, Point Pleasant, W. Va .;
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Nibert, a
son, Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va .;
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Spaun, a
daughter, Racine ; Mr .. and
Mrs. William R. Wilcoxen, a
daughter, Point Pleasant, W.
' ' ·
Va.

orphans out."

·

Wagonseller commended the
Ohio lawmakers for returning
Veterans' Day to Nov. 11, its
traditional date. He said 45
states and the U.S. Senate have
taken similar action, "and we
are hopeful the House of
Representatives will take its
cue."

NEW CLAIMS DOWN
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services reported tOday the
number of Ohio unemployed
workers filing initial claims for
unemployment compensation
benefits during the week ending April 12 dropped to the
lowest ·OQe-week· total·' since
mid-November 1974. Bureau
Director Albert G. Giles said
' the number of initial claims
totaled 23,853 last week, a 21.5
per cent decrea se from the
previous week.
AD BANNED
HAARLEM ,
The
Netherlands (UP!) - The
Broadcas ling ' Advertising
Council has banned a television
ad for a detergent in which
toilets are heard flushing. The
_council said many people are
eating when the ads appear
and are ~ery sensi Uve to
flushing sounds at that particular lime.

GUEST SPEAKER SET :
·SEVEN WIN HONORS
~TOWED
. Rev. Nyle Borden will be
Seven Meigs Coun tians have
Raymond Frederick Miller, guest speaker at the Forest
been named to the Ohio Stale · 23, Rt. 1, Minersville, and Jane . Run Baptist Church Sunday
. University honor roU for the Aim Roush, 28, Pomeroy.
morning at 10:45.
winter quarter making an
average of at least 3.5. They
are Richard Anderson KeUy,
William David Krawsczyn,
.Douglas William Little,. . .
Middleport; Roger David
Nease, Route 1 Minersville :
Franklin Morris· Rizer, MUisa
K. Rizer, Pomeroy, and Karie
Robin Humphrey, ReedaviUe.

-INSULATION~
Blown Into Walls
·and Attics

HONEY .80UGIIT
Volunteers of the Meigs·
Chapter of the American
Cancer Sodety Jlre pfe.e.-t;r
soliciting
for
money
tllrouChont Meigs County, It
wu anliounced today.
'

-Fire Retardant'
..

.Free Estimates-No Obligation

FOREMAN . &amp; ABBOIT
..

Middleport, Ohio

.

~

-

¥

lac~ing
'

.

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - State
Transportation Director Richard Jackson told a legislative
panel today Ohio standa to lose
up to $l bUlion in federal highway funds during the next two
years because the state can't
afford to put up rna tching
money.
. Jackson testified before the
House Finance Committee,
which is conducting hearings
on the state budget.
He explained that Ohio wiD
be eligible for $429 million in
withheld federal road funds
during fiscal 1976, and $558
million more the following
year.
"We are unable to match
this,'' Jackson said.
The director said approval of
Gov. James A. Rhodes' $1.64
billion transportation bond
issue by the legislature would
have done the job. He also.said
the General Assembly could
(X'Ovide needed revenues in the
form of an increased gasoline
tax.

Portland school ·
honor roll noted

:. 1.
1
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!~:

sulftir coal back ,into the eartb, this process ·not only
~ prolilces a valuable bYJiroduct from what untu now has
:;:: been waste emission, but also cleans up stack gases which
~§ produce air contamination," he said.
:~
When high sulfur coal is burned, it emits a sulfur oxide
::. ( gas which pollutes the air if it is not controUed. Pircon
;:;; said· the new pollution.fertlll.zer process combines those
:;;: sulfur oxide gas emissions with other chemicals injected
'!:; into the exhaust stack to produce a liquid fertilizer.
!!~! "We can say with certainty that utilities wiD r"'!lize
;!;! very significant savings by using this system to replace
:;:; the current practice of transporting low sulfur coal from
western states to the Midwest and East,'' Pircon

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{

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Con tinued from page 1
panel to conduct an inquiry when a dispute, in I!Je judgment of
the National Mediation Board, threatens to ~epr1ve a section of
the country of essential transportation serviCe.
WAsHINGTON - THE SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS .
Committee is holdiug up $200 milllon in humanitarian and
evacuation funds because several members say the administration is not withdrawing .Americans fast enough from
South Vietnam. Those members succeeded Wednesday in
postponing untU at least this·afternoon a conunittee vote on the
funds while seeking White House assurance ttJat the evacuation
of Americans wiD be speeded up.
.
The Senate Armed Services Committee caUed a meelillg
today to consider a possible compromise on President Ford's
request of $722 million in emergency military aid for South
Vietnam. Chairman John C. Stennis predicted the panel would
recommend some aid. The House International Relations
Committee was meeting to mark up and vote on a proposal
authorizing an additionar $73 mUlion in humanitarian aid for
Saigon.
· · CINCINNATI - THIS CITY'S VICE Ma~or faced
arraignrrient todsy on charges of embezzling nearly $6,000, but
contended, "I'm an honest man." William Chenault was indicted
just three days ago by a special Hamilton County Grand Jury on
charges of embezzlement, theft in office and falsification of
records,
·
"I'm bewildered because I'm · a.n honest rna~," ~id
Chenault, a Democrat. "I am convinced that I spent more on llle
conduct of the business of the government of this city than I ever
received." Chenault had testified before the grand jury.
"Perhaps they didn 't understand what I said," he commented
after being indicted. "I thought the proof was conclusive."
Chenault, also a member of city council since 1968, is
charged with embe~zling $2,602 in city funds in 1972 and 1973 and
another $3,3091ast year. He was indicted on two felony charges of
embezzlement and theft in office and four misdemeanor counts
of falsification of city pay vouchers.

~!!
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Thieu ·called

Council

Continued from page 1·
Continued from page 1
Anna Schuler , C.A.P. This
committee will meet Tuesday, ficials to the rebels ''was
April22, at 1 p. m. in Pomeroy. psychologl~ shock for the
Others attending were Jo~n ,IIJ'1IIY and the people of South -·
T. Griffin, Gallia-Meigs Vietnam who have been
C.A .P.; David Gloeckner, fighting the Communists" and
Gallia-Meigs C A.P.; Bridget who have seen two-thirds of
Toben, Ga Uia-Meigs C.A.P.: their country faD to North
Gene Lyons, Meigs Co. Health Vietnam.
Dept.; Beulah Strauss, Meigs
U.S. sources said today that
Co. Health Dept.; Charlotte American officials wtU open a
Wells, Gallia-Meigs C.A.P. : special processing center at
Doro thy Davis, Meigs Co. Saigoo 'sTan Son Nhut Airbase
Humane Society ; Goldie Die!, by Saturday to cut th1'ough red
Meigs Co. Humane Society; tape and expedite the evacua·
Evelyn Scarberry , Ohio tion 'of American citizens ·and ·
Bureau of Employment Ser- their Vieinamese famiUes.
'
vices ; Sharon Bailey, Meigs
The official said they will '
Co. Unit of American Cancer leave on U.S. military flights to~
Society ; Margaret Ella Lewis, the United States. American;
Meigs Community. School ; officials have denied an ·
Eloise Smith, Meigs ·com- "evacuation" Is underway and ·
munity School; Rhonda Dailey, said the departure is volun- ·
Meigs Co. Chapter of American tary.
'
Red Cross . Disaster ChairThe source said lll.e creation :
man; Lelah Weatherby, Red of the processinll center was to '
Cross Board Member ; Chester aid Americans with Viet- ;
V. King, Red Cross Chapter namese families cut through :
Dan
Sch- government . red
Chairman;
tape. '
. wendewson, M. H, District 298 However, other nations,
Office; Christopher .Timm, eluding Britain, are reportedly ;
Social Services . Holzer drawing up plans with the U.S. •
Steve Embassy for a final evacuation :
Medical
Center;
Daws on, Meigs Community of foreigners. ·
'
Mental Health; Tim Waltner,
, '.
M.H. District office; Vernon ~ ~_...,._ _ _..__.._-:i
Nease, Meigs County Red : '
For thl!.LoiNesr •
Cross; Charles E. Blakeslee,
Red Cross and Helen BarnT1re Pr'ic;.es
hart, Community Mental
Health.
1n rne _,rea

a

Car and truck

Cambodia

News

in Briefs

:;:;

::':~: ::::::?.:::::::::::::::::!:!:!:!:::::::=::;!;:;:::;::~::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~

in collision

Continued from page 1
Phnom Penh clique,'' said a
radio announcer speaking for
The Meigs County Sheriff's
the insurgents.
Dept. investigated a car-truck
The announcer ordered accident Wednesday afternoon
generals and high ranking on SR 124 in Minersv!Ue.
government officials tor eport
Vince E. Knight, Pomeroy,
to the downtown Information traveling west in a wrecker
Ministry under a white flag of truck and Ronald S. Grady, Rt.
surrender. The radio said 1, Racino, traveling east,
Phnom Penh commander Gen. collided in a curve. There were
Chhim Chhuon and Gen. Lon no injurie~ and medium
.Non , brother of exiled damage to the truck and heavy
president Lon No!, were the damage to the car. The acfirst to surrender.
cident is still under inRebel broadcasters in- · vestigation. '
dicated no other high-ranking
officials of the Phnom Penh
government had arrived.
WANT TO END IT
Three hours after the first
George Hensley, Reedsville,
surrender order, the rebel calls
for the presence of former and Dolores Hensley have filed
government leaders increaSed for dissolution of marriage in
in number and grew more Meigs County Common Pleas
Court. FUing for divorce is
insistent.
The formal surrender order Paulette J . White, Pomeroy,
was made over Radio Phnom against George Robert White,
Penh at !p.m. (!a.m. EDT) by Gallipolis, ch~rging gross
Brig. Gen. Mey Sichan, chief of neglect of duty and extreme
operations of the Cambodian cruelty.
armed forces. He said soldiers
and govenmient functionaries
should cease all-comhat.Insurnation would be a massive
gent troops with loudspeakers
program of arrests. They
moved through the street with
expected the government to be
appeals for calm.
run initiaUy by a revolutionary
"I order, after an appeal by
military committee.
the (Buddhist) bonzes, the
In foreign affairs, the new
three arms of the armed forces
government was expected to
·of the Kluner Republic to lay
break diplomatic ties with the
down their arms and invite
United States, South Vietnam,
repre5e!Jtati.ves of the Kluners
Thailand and all other nations
of tlie other side to take power.
which maintained embassies
"The doors to Phnom Penh during the last months of the
and other province capitals are
Cambodian war.
open to them.
"I ask the population in
Phnom Penh and in the
provinces to stay calm.
"Representatives of the (government) army are trying to
find ways to negotiate with the
Kluners of the other side in
order
to
guarantee

The fifth sixih weeks grading
period honor roll at the Portland Elementary School lias
been announced.
Named to the roll with thos-e
making all A's in capital letters
were : Teresa Barber, Charlie
Boso, Tammie Proffitt, first
grade; Bruce Wolfe, Kim
Sprouse, second; . Christie
Lawrence, DANNY WEDDLE,
CINDY
EVANS,
third;
BRUCE JOHNSON, TAMMY
MEADOWS,
DEBRA
OCTEAU, Paul ·ours, fourth;
SHERRY BEEGLE, Ali cia
Evans, Krista Johnson, Kelly
Pickens, fifth; BONNIE BOSO,
JANET MIDDLESWART,
CHARLOTTE PICKENS,
DANNY TALBOTT, sixth ; security.''
Juanita Powell, Rebecca
UP! reporters in Phnom
Au!llerson, special education .
Penh said the surrender came
shortly after dawn when the
rebel forces swept across the
city. Cambodian naval units
CAR WASH SET
across the Mekong River had
SYRACUSE - The Asbury already raised white flags. The
United Methodist Church last battle was for the threeYoung Adult Class will hold a story taU Information Ministry
car wash at the Syracuse housing Phom Penh Radio.
municipal buUding from 10
Experts on the Camboclisn
a.m. to 4 p.m. on April26. Cost situation said they ~lieved the
will be $1.50for the outside only first order of business for the
and $2 for inside and outside. rebels on taking control of the

In-:

--

SING SLATED
CHESTER - A gospel sing
will be held at 7:30 p.in. 1
Saturday at the Chester .
Church of God featuring The
·
Homeward Bound. The public ;m.&lt;sh
is invited.
' ,. ··

It's ·
•

ance

given . you more power over
your pension than ever before.
The heart of the new law,
covering the more than 300,000
existing private pension plans
and all future ones, sets
standards for participation
(how soon you must he in·
eluded in a pension plan) and
vesting (how long you must be
covered by a plan before your
pension
is
irrevocably
guaranteed).
Participation begins after a
year of work and at age 25. If
the employe joins the company
as a youngster, he must get
credit for up to three years of
prior service by age 25, which
means in effect his pension
participation would start as
early as age 22.
A company has the alternative . of waiting three years
before it covers a· worker, but
at the end of that time It must
immediately "vest'.' him, or
guarantee him at least some
pension
payments
at
retirement age.
Vesting is the worker's
guarantee he wm receive those
payments no matter whether
he is fired, quits his job, or sees
the company go out of
business.
One reason Congress acted
was to stop ~~Qme companies
from requiring an employe to
work until retirement age
before he could receive a
pension. Under this practice.
some workers have been laid
off only weeks before retirement, with no pension to show
for a lifetime of labor.
That can't happen under the
.new law. Companies must
meet minimum standards for
vesting, foUowing one of three
formulas :
··Immediate vesting after 10
years under one plan. For
exl!IJiple, if YOII · .quit after
working under a pension plan
for nine years and 363 days,
you receive nothing , but if you
make it 10 years and one day,
you receive a pension at

retirement age based on your
service credits.
Gradual vesting; starting
with 25 per cent of full pension
rights after five years' work
and increasing by steps to 100
per cent vesting after ,15 y~ars.
The "rule of 45,'' which says
you must be 50 per cent vested
after your age plus years of
service add up to 45. Full
vesting occurs five years later.
Under the rule of 45, let's say
you join a company when you
are 35. Five years later, you
will be 411 and you wiD have
worked five years-a total of
45,-and you will be half vested.
At age 45, you will be fully
vested. (To protect younger
workers, the law says vesting ·
must begin after 10 years even
if age and 8ervice do not yet
add up to 45.)
Full vesting does not mean a

Polly's Poin

1

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Leaky ball point
stiJins ·handbag
''

'

12-12-12 FERTILIZER . $499
50 LB. BAG

otherwise, benefits will be paid
to your surviving spouse if you
die before retirement but after
you are · eligible for early
retirement. Again, benefits
may be reduced.
One right Congress did not
guarantee is "portability," or
fuU pension, which usually participa tion and vesting the right to carry pension
depends 011 number of years standards are retroactive. This credits along to a new emworked and amount of saiary means thai in almost all cases, ployer. The jijw leaves the
paid. NaturallY., an employe if you have worked at least 15 issue for the worker and his
who sticks it out to retirement years for the same company former company to negotiate.
age, with the higher salary he under the Same pension plan, But an employer could stand to
might expect by then, will get a your benefits are fully protec- lose less money paying a small
bigger pension than the fellow · ted.
If you have contemplated
worker who leaves before age
65.
changing jobs or retiring early,
The new law also makes don't worry about losing your
certain that employe credits pension. But remember, if you
determining the actual doUar retire early, your benefits
amount of his pension are almost certainly wm be lower,
accumulated in a fair and even an\1 you might not be able to
way -not in a lump near collect them untU age 65.
retirement age.
When you apply for Social .
Again, the new. law gives Security benefits at retirement
cOmpanies three formulas to age, Social Security is supchoose from.
posed to give you a complete
The first says the amount of list of aU pension rights you
benefits credited lor any one have accumulatep . from aU ·
year can he no more than one yo.ur , empklyers so you cart ·
and one-third the amount applyforeachofthem. The isw
credited in any other year. For requires each company to
example, a company could inform Social Security of any
credit you with 3 per cent a pension credits an employe has
year for 20 years, then 4 per buUt up when he leaves.
cent-but not 5 per cent or · The pension credit buildup is
more-per year after that.
only half retroactive under the
The second says credits can law. If you have 30 years with a
be accumulated at a flat 3 per company, for example, the law
cent a year.
says you will get at least 15
The third option would aUow years of pension credits recredits based on an employe's troactively.
What about your spouse ?
years with a company as a
Right Reserved To
proportion of the age span Unlessyoudeclineitinwriting,
Lim
it Quantities
covered by its pension plan. your pension wiD be paid oo a
For example, if a company's joint and survivor basis, with
pension period covers ages 20 your spouse getting at least
. to 60, or 411 years, a worker who half the pension after your
joined the company at 38 and death. However-and It is a big
worked 22 years .to retirement however-a joint pension may
would get 22·40ths of the be paid at a reduced rat~ , so. It
maximum pension credits.
might be preferable over a
Q. Suppose you left a com· . joint and survivor annuity.
pany and returned several
years later. Can you get credit
for those (X'ior years of work ?
A. If you were at least 50 per
cent vested before )'ou· left, the
answer is yes. If you were not
vested, the answer Is maybe.
Generally, if your time away
was no longer than your
•
•
original term of service under/
the pension plan, you must be
given credit for prior service.
Q. What about part-lime

Worker's.hill of rights

·sy POLLY \:RAMER

SPRING
BARGAINS

.

The· new pension law:

By DON PHilLIPS
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - If
you are one of the 30 milllon
Americans working for a
company with a private pension plan, Congress has given
you a new bill of rights.
It is the Employe Retirement
Income Security Act of 1974,
and it (X'omises that if you have
worked long enough to earn a
peiiBIO)l, you wiU receive one at
retirement age. Nothing- including bankruptcy, plant closings, dismissal or resignation
~au stand in the way.
·If you have spent a year on
the job and reached age 25, you
must be eiU'oUed in the company pension plan. Later, after
you have worked for certain
minimum periods, your employer must guarantee you at·
least a basic pension payment.
.If the company defaults; the
government wUI step in and
pay your pension up to $750 a
month.
An equally important but
little.floticed guarantee is the
right to know your pension
rights. Your employer must
teD you by next August 31, in
simple, easy-to-understand
language, exactly what your
pension plan contains. If he .
doesn't, lie wiD be breaking the
law.
Furthermore, if you want to
know where you personally
stand in the pension plan at any
time, he Is required to give you
up-to-dale information.
Sen. JacobK. Javits, R-N.Y.,
has called the law "the
greatest social legislation since
Social Security" was passed 40
years ago. At the least, your
pension is much safer than it
was a year ago.
'
The government enforces
these new pension rights in two
ways:
A new federal pension insuragency in the Labor
Department, similar to the
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation which protects
your bank accounts, was
created to pay you some
retirement pension if your
employer fails to keep his
barg&amp;in.
If you believe you were
cheated, or that the pension
fund Is being handled improperly, you are entitled to go
directly to federal court to fight
your case, and be awarded
attorney fees If your case has
merit.
The law does not force any
company to start a pension
plan; that Is up to the company
or the union. But if a plan
exists, the company must live
up to Its promises. A pension,
ooce promised, is no looger a
prlvUege. It is a right.
As the CQI!Iplex legislation
graduaUy goes into effect in
coml!lg months and years, it Is .
important to know Its many
technicalities, for Congress has

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Ink from a
ball point pen leaked on the
nap of an expensive leather
handbag and I cannot remove
· it. How can I get it off? :....
DOROTHY.
DEAR DOROTHY - The
color of your purse and
wbether or not It Is real leather
(so many syathetlcs are 110
good looking thai we are often
mistaken) can affect the
suceess or failure of many
remedies. '

stree~ In the grocery, ete.) HAZEL.
.
DEAR POLLY AND Mrs.
E.L.B. who wants to muffle the
sound of her cuckoo clock from
Germany. I like to hear it tick
but I do not sleep weD. I woUld
just as soon not hear It strike
each hour at night. We
removed the weight from the
chain that makes it cuckoo and·
stiU have a clock that tells
time. Alittle knot also was tied
on the end Qf the chain so it will.
not slip back up Into the clock.
-DELORES.
I remeved a .baD poiDt Ink
DEAR DEWRES - A clock
stain (not too old) from a red repaJ~&amp;D told me that he did
syathellc leather bag by nol thlak It was even necessary
sprayiDg II with hair spray that to lie 1he knot iD the c~aln. wis left on to dry.'Wben rubbed POLLY.
I
off the Ink came off, too. White
DEAR POLLY - When
petroleum jeUy rubbed iD well knitting . children's cardign
IUid then rubbed off will werk sweaters 1 make butuinholes
OD many bag1 aJid WOuld be down both front sides. When
ule for mosL U leather II dull · the sweater Is handed down the
lool:lng after anything II apo buttons always can be on the
plied cover the entire bag with . right side for either a girl or a
a leather preserver er boy. (Polly's nate: Sew the
1parlngly - liquid wax, the butlons on over the unused
klad .Uied OD furniture. Flnt butlonbolts that are caught
1ry any remedy on an Jn. together with a thread as you
CODBplcuous spot te see what It sew.) -MRS. O.E.P.
dots 1o lbe leather .aad tbe . DEAR POLLY- I painted
color. - POLLY.
garden rake green and hung it
on a wall to serve as a key
' DEAR POLLY - My •Pet holder so we can always find
Peeve coocems seeing women the one needed: - BETTY . ·
but in public with their hair
I
DEAR POLLY
rolled up In curlen. I wish they discovered a new use for my
could aee themselves as others discolored or slightly worn sink
do. ( PoDy'1 DOte: I alwaya mats. Alter seeing rubber mats
wOIIIler whllt 1reat event they advertised for use under car
.,., ldfiDI rudy for that Is so wheels when stuck on ice 91' in
IIDPI'flut they will so em- snow I thought of those old sink
barrul tllems,elvea 011 the mats nnd they work ,iust great

. •.

CALL OR VISIT

r •
1.

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STAR SUPPLY

'

-VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SU~PLr ·fA).

RACINE, OHIO

3rd Ave.

Middleport, Ohio

!

992-2709
•
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it earns until retirement, when self~mployed person can Ill
his crt'&lt;lits to another com- income· and thus taxes are aside 15 per cent of earoinli&amp;lil
pany 's fund' .
lower . But the money cannot be a maximum of $7,500 a ye"
What if your company has no used untU the employe is 59'k ins)ead of 10 per c..K anct;_.
pension plan, or if you are self- years old, or he is liable to $2,500 maximum, all tax f?f
emp1oyed ? The iaw has some- penalties. The fund must be until retirement. A mlnimUIII
thing for you, t90.
established in a special bank of $750 can be set aside,
Effective this year, any account , special TreaSury matter what his income. ;__:
employe ol a pensionless bonds or in annuities set up by
The higher limits wiD bene!!$
company may set aside 15 per insurance. companies.
high-income professionals 1!11:
cent of pay, to an annual
For the self-employed, the pecially, but also the employe
maximum of $1,500, for an pension ·pot is sweetened by of a pension pian company who
"i ndlvidua l retirement ac· easing of . limitations on SO· .works part-time elsewhere bf
count."
called
" Keogh"
self. does free lance work and th\11
No taxes are paid on the retirement plans.
qualifies for the self-emplo~4
amount set aside or the interest
•
Retroactive to Jan. I, 1974, a fund .

bo

..

~====================~·

Discount Prices You'll LikeTHuRsDAY, FRIDAY,

workers?

A. If you worked 1,000 hours
or more in a year (about half
the year ), you worked long·
enough to earn a year of
vesting . and credit rights,
although your company migh{
give you less credit than a
fulltime worker.
Don't he surprised if the
pension booklet you must get
by Aug. 31 does not conform to
aU these standards. Most wiD
not go into effect until Jan. 1,
1976, or after, except for new
plans which must conform
immediately. Companies cov·
erect by industry-wide union
pension plans have untu Dec.
31, 1980, to comply.

.

SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY

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I.

I

.

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\ Kenneth McCullough. R. Ph . Char les Rillte, R. Ph.
·Open Daitvs :ooa .m: to9 :30p.m.
Sunday 10 :30 to 12: 30 and S to 9 p.m.

I
I PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
I
. Friendly Service
! 112 E. MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
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COMPLETE STOCK

PRICE

Ladies
discuss
mtsston
program

" Missions Start With
People" was the program topic
of Mrs. Robert Bumgarner at
the Monday night meeting of
the United Methodist· Women
at the Hea th United Methodist
Church, Middleport.
Mrs. Bumgarner said that in
today 's · .world we find
missionaries trying to understand and enjoy the beliefs
and methods of others rather
than trying to change thase
beliefs. She said that missions
bring an awareness of different
religions and societies and an
acceptance rather than a
One right you won't have to struggle to inflict personal
waitforis financial protection. beliefs on others.
She spoke of the two great
Since the new Pension
to love thy
commandments,
Benefit Guaranty Corp. was
God,
and
to
love
they
neighbor
esta.blished July 1, 1974, your
pension has been insured up to . as thyself , and set these as the
$750 a month, to be paid if your basis for all Christian
company terminates ita plan . missions. In her program she
· without enough funda to pay all talked ·on Netal , a Hindu
country between India and
its promised pensions.
The corporation is financed China, where· to belong to
by an employer contribution of anything but the Hindu religion
$1 a year for each pension plan is against the law. She said that
participant, or 50 cents for United Methodist missionaries
multlcompany union plans. are active there but that they
Many companies can be ex- are required . to accept 'the
pected to pass this added cost society in which these people
along to consumers in the form live, and the laws of the land.
Mrs. James B~ewington
of higher prices.
,
The law reqaires the compa· presided at the meeting with
ny to finance Its pension plan Mrs. Emerson Jones giving
properly, and sets strict new · devotions on the theme " The
standards governing liow the World is Like a Garden, Lord" .
money can be invested and the She talked of the symbols of
Rowers comparing these to
activities of "fiduciarles"different
phases of life and
those who manage or make
gave
scripture
from Matthew
decisiilns affecting the plan:
The new requirements are 6. Mrs. Jones also read several
mainly your employer's worry, legends about birds and
but you have every right to full Dowers.
Ways to raise money were
disclosure of aU pension fund
dealings. If you don't like the discussed. The birthday of
way the fund Is being · Mrs. Clara Hennesy residing.in
managed, you can go to {llderal Columbus with her son-in-law
court either in your area or in and daughter, April 28, was
the District of Columbia.
· noted and members . were
What does aU this mean to askeq to send cards.
the aging or already retired
Mrs. Glenn Lambert, Mrs.
worker? Plenty.
Earl Knight, and Mrs. M. C.
As of the first )llan year after Wilson served coffee and cake.
Dec. 31, 1975 (you will have to Mrs. C. F. Hibbs presided at
check when that is for yo)~). aU the coffee service.

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~

7- The Dally Sentine I, Middleoport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday, A(X'il17, 197:;

_

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::::

§l Dr. Thomas L. Martin, IIT president, said development !;!;
;;1 of the process was "of major natlcinal significanc;e. . . :;:;
}
· "By essentiaUy recycling all the fertilizer value of hig6 ;:!:

•
Mat Chmg
• [\) ';:Jar
mo:q.ey IS

The Chesapeake and Ohio
Railway today awarded,
subject to Interstate Commerce Commission approval,
an issue of $»,540,000 principal
amoun t of its Equipment Trust
Certificates to a syndicate
headed by Halsey, Stuart &amp;
Co., Inc. and MerriU, Lynch,
Pierce, Fenner &amp; Smith, Inc.
on their bid of 98.8275 for 8%
per cent obligations . The offer,
tendered at competitive bid·
ding, represented a net interest
cost to the company of 8.974 per
cent.
The Certificates wiD be dated
as of March 1, 1975, and wiD
mature seriaUy over 15 years.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Charles
Searles, Middleport; Margaret
Gans, Pomeroy; Genevieve
Guthrie, Coolville; James
Warner, Pomeroy ; Preston

,'·!.:!.,:!.

:~~~t~0a~~~h~~ t-.~,il.: :thr~~~yts~~~Le:~~?.·~~:;i:!i~~~

Issue to build
coal cars sold

HOSPITAL
NEWS

!:!:
,.,
;:;:
,.,

. 1.::.:'

·the mines today.
procedure took 90 minutes,
"The mines are at1U closed doctors needed but seven
and the district (UMW) of.
fleers have asked that they
implant
stay that way until this
The hospital said King and
(X'oblem is settled one way or MiUs were developing several
the other," said a dispatcher
for the sheriff's office. "Our
regular patrols have checked
the mines and there are '·no
in hopes of finding a safe
problems."
method for repair of l)eart
Twenty-one deep mlnelt in defects such as atrial septal
the aref. .were closed·'toctay !IS defects (d$ctive heart walls)
we'l'e severat strip mine using .cardiac catheterizlition
operations.
techniques which · !10tentially
Court action has been initiat- would be less costly, shorten
ed in Pittsburgh and U.S. the hospital stay and eliminate
District Court in Elkins, W.Va., the need of a . heart-lung
in an effort to stop the wildcat mac e, " Kin g sa1·d. .
hin
walkout.
Nortb American asked a
Pittsburgh court to assess the
UMW $10,000 a day fine for
contempt of court because its
members violated a court
order to return to their jobs.

Asian war lost
says leader
of legionaires

Capital lawyer
will address
Propeller club

·:&lt;

0
~i~~~log;st,
c~~~ifv:·sc~~:~
JX'=~:~d
~~~~~=~r::~~~:fr;.r coal can be
surgeon. Although the entire ,,. burned "cleanly and efficiently." and .that the effluent

,•,•

This is the second of three
ins talfments
of
C&amp;O's
$38,355,000 Equipment Trust of
1975.
The Trust was created to
finance not more than 80 per
ce nt of the $48 million
estimated cost of 2,000 one
hundred-ton coal hoppt r cars
and 10 diesel locomotives. The
second installment will cover
80 per cent of tfie $15.7 million
estimated cost of 700 of the
h6pper cars. The cars will be
built at the company's own
shops at Raceland, .,.. Ky.
Another syndicate )leaded by
Salomon Bros. also submitted
a bid .

....

•

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, AprU 17, 1975

NEW ORLEANS (UPI) Docton said today they patched a hole in the heart of a l7·
year'Old girl without using
general anesthesia and without
resorting , to open-heart
surgery. They said it was a
historic medical first.
Ochsner Foundation Hospital
said a surgeon and a heart

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Mas11n, W. Va.

••

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--' •• •

THURSDAY
SERVICES at Eagle . Ridge
·J •
Church through Saturday with
( ;
Rev . Roy Deeter speaking.
(
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, I : 15 p.m. home of
Mrs. Ethel Grueser.
TW IN CI TY Shrinettes,
"
Thurstlay, B p.m. at home of
CELEBRATES - Jamey
Mary Hughes.
Hensler, son of Mr. and· Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT
Chi ld Daniel C. Hensler, Racine,
Conservation League, Thurs- · celebrated his Jixth birthday
day , 7:30p.m. at the home of April 14 by appearing on the
Mrs. Louis Osborne, Lasley St., Mr. Cartoon Show, WSAZ.
I
~Pomeroy , Members urged to TV, Hunlin.gton, W. Va. He
at tend since final plans will be was accompanied to Hunmade for the spring con- tington by his mother, and .a
cousin, Sherry Bissell, The
ference .
: :
ACCEPTS GIFT- Ronald L. Saunders, ARRT, director of respiratory therapy at Holzer
group had their lunch out
: !Medical Center, accepts a pressure breathing thera py unit from Registered Nurses As~ 'n._
MEIGS CoWlty Rail Service and then on their return
: :P..esident Kay Rutherford . The compact device, in Mrs. Rutherford's hand, asststs the patient
Committee, 7:30 at Middleport home Jamey 's birthday was
: lo breathe more comfortably. Two of the Wlits were given to the department by the RNA.
Village Hall on Chessie System
celebrated with a decorated
proposed abandonment be cake, ice ·cream and Koof.
tween Pomeroy and !.pgan.
Aid
.at the · home of his
FRIDAY .
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
SHADE River Lodge 453, Raymond Hensler. Gifts
F&amp;AM ; special meeting 7:30 were presented to the
,
::rwo Pr essu re Bre athin g Therapy at Holzer Medical It makes possible· a shorter p.m. at the hall. Work in the youngster and attending
nerapy units have been Center, sa id: "We hope that hospital confinement when a Master Mason degree .
besides his parents and
Jltesented to the Respiratory havin g th es e units n ow patient can take one of these • POMEROY CHARTER 186, grandparents were his uncle,
'i'llerapy Department at Holzer available for loan to patients. handi-vent ·Wlits home with D.E.S. inspection, 7:45p.m. at David Hensler and couslnl',
lredic a\ Ce nte r bv the wi th breathing problems wiH them, While awaiting one Of the Masonic Temple. Donna Sherry, Joey and VIcki
~gistered Nurses Ass;,iat ion be a valuable serv ice to them . . their own to be delivered ."
Spring, deputy grand matron, Bissell, Mason, W. Va.
DCGallipelis.
inspecting officer .
: :rhese ~ ~Jm p:.:- t units .1 ssist a
CHURCH WOMEN United of
R~ien t to breathe, b:
·omMeigs County, key women to
~Pes si n g,
regul a•i ng and
meet at 1:30p .m. Friday at the
J
il~iveri ng room air lc the
Enl&lt;!rprise United Methodist
patient through a mout hpiece
Church to plan for the observBy Helen and Sue Bottel
JO lrc hment . A mea ns to
&gt;Yr.Ur
ance of May fellowship day .
I V
'f'
Otlliver medication and enrich
SATURDAY
He
Doesn't
Want
His
Baby
ttl£"' air wiLl oxygen is aJso
M E IGS ATHLETIC
•
Plans for the annual mother·
Rap :
eossible.
Boosters
sponsor of dance at daughter banquet at the
We've
been
married
a
year
and
I
think
I'm
pregnant.
I
told
• Kay Rutherford, R.N. ,
the old Pomeroy Jr. High 8-ll Middl eport First Bapti st
~esident of the RNA , in my husband before I confirmed it, and we just had our first big
p.m
. with WMPO Disc Jockey
tl!aking the presenlatw~ to fi ght. He wants me to have an abortion' Says we can't afford a Bob Cooper. Admission , $1 per Church were made during
mee lings of the circles of the B.
baby. That's true, but ...
~ma id L. SaWlders , ARRT,
person.
There
will
be
10
record
My real problem is that I had an abortion when I was 16 and
H. Sanborn Missionary Society
;tirec tor of Respira tory
the psychiatrist said if I ever went tbrough another one it would albums given away by Cooper Tuesday night.
break me. 1 know I couldn't stand it again. More to the pomt, I during the dance.
The circle members joined
GIRLS AGES 10-14 in- for a· potluck dinner at the
love my husband and want our baby . What should I do? - CAN 'T
terested in playing softball for church and then went into
FACE IT AGAIN
the
Forrest RWI team and girls separate meetings to complete
•
15-18 interested in playin g group activities and business
CFIA :
You didn't say whether or notyourhusband knows about the senior softball meet at the before being reorganized at the
first abortion. If he does, he surely must Wlderstand your
Minersville diamond at 2 p.m. banquet meeting.
:Parents Without Partners feelings, and a calm diseussion (not a fi_ghl ) wi~ bring him wit~ Susie Grueser.
The banquet will be May 5
~int Pleasant Chapter 838 will
FINAL Signup for all and at that time new circle
around. If he doesn 't, it's time you told htm, provtded he still
htlld a general meeting for needs a reason for keeping the baby. (Somehow I don 't think he
Rutland baseball teams at the chairwomen will be selected
o;anizational purposes at the will , once fatherly pride cushions the financial shock .) old Rutland High School from and members assigned to the
-~palachian Power Company
HELEN
2-4 p.m., for boys and girls. ·circles.
Aliditorium, Jackson Ave .,
There will be a $4 fee.
Mrs. Frances Smart gave
+++
f'!lint Pleasant, Wednesday, CFJA :
prayer
to open the Love Joy
SUNDAY
Az!rU 23; 7:30 to 9:30p.m. The
Perhaps a cou nselor could make your husband understand.
REVIVAL services through Circle meeting with Mrs .
cllapter needs to reorganize Then, work on finances together: you may discover things aren 't
April 27 at Dyesville Com- Kathleen Anthony presiding .
aAil to establish new officers. as rough as he thinks.
·
mWlity Church , off SR 143 on Devotions on compani onship
~usan Wilson , president of
1 believe abortion is becoming a too-easy way out for those
Meigs Coun ty Road II. John were given by Mrs. JWle Kloes.
i\&amp;&gt;alachian Regional Council who claim they ,;aren't ready." When you are mature enough to
Elswiek, evangelist . The Plans ~ere . made to send a
5:t~Jf Parents Without Partners
marry, you should be ready for responsibility, and if that in- " Gospel Tones " will be birthday gift to Rev . Thomas
3lld District Supervisor, will cludes a baby - well, you made him (or her) , so have the baby
featured April 25. The public is Olsen, a mtsstonary in
p;esent information con- and love it. I'm sure you will. - SUE
Philadelphia and to send the
invited .
c~i-ning the organization.
+++
money remaining in the
Mlmbership dues may be paid Dear Sue:
treasury to Paula Sarver, an
aC: this meeting and present
In Home Ec. class we were discussing wedding etiquette. I
Ohio Baptist scholarship
nrJnbers may also renew their asked, why not have a female usher escort the men to their seats,
student atlencting Judson
membership.
since male ushers only escort women guests - leavmg men to
College .
:loy single parent may at· follow behind , alone?
Dorcas Circle members
teid this meeting to learn
Any reasonable argument against it - except that it isn't
reported on Easter trays
a~ut
the organization . "done" in etiquette books ? - DEBBIE
delivered to shut-ins during
CO\odY of children is not a
their business session conrpement.
.
Dear Debbie :
ducted by Mrs. Frepa Hood.
Teresa Collins, director of Balance of money in the
"hapter programmmg
None at all - if the bride and bridegroom don't mind in·
nurses at Veterans Memorial treasury was designated for
ct&amp;si.sts of family activities, eluding several more females in their wedding party.
Hospital, was guest speaker at
dilcussio ns, ed ucational
These days, etiquette is "whatever you wish , so long as it's in
a
meeting of the Women 's
p~grams , and social ac· • . good taste. " Often the "different" touches at a ceremony start a
Auxiliary
Tuesday night at the
ti'Cties. In addition to these, new trend..
hospital.
th~ are Regional Council
My husband, Cliff, and 1 changed tradition several ways at
Mrs. Collins talked on the
cc.ferences four times per our January wedding: Cliff, rather t!lan an usher, escorted his
role of the .volW!teer in the
yw, Zone con fer ences an- mother then my mother down the aisle to their seats . When our
hospital, outlining- duties and
mCily, and In ternational pastor ~sked, ''Who gives this woman?," he continued, "Who
She gave
responsibilities.
Qf~yention which will he in gives this man ?" and both sets of parents answered, "We do."
x-ray
reminders
concerning
Wf\bington ; D. C. this swn- After which they promised to love , cherish and stand by us in our
patient help and conducted a
CARPENTER - The Mixed
mor, July 111-13.
new life together.
question and answer session. Up Hot Shots 4-H Club finished
"r additional information ,
These "different" touches made us all feel very close. yollmay call , ( 304 ) 422-1482 or SUE
Mrs. Janice Daniels, auxiliary its 1974 year wlth a trip to
wee Susan Wilson, 1059 31st
president, gave her a gift on Col,umbus. ·
Sleet, Apt. A, Parkersburg, . Rap :
The group IWlched at the
behalf of the auxiliary .
v~ 26101.
·
A report wa s given on the Smorgasbord on Columbus '
I hear restaurants that cater to women are hiring male go-go
60th
annual convention of the east side, moved on to the
dancers
for
their
ladies-only
days.
The
pay
is
good,
I've
got
the
"
Ohlo Hospital Association in Columbus Zoo, and dined on
body for it. But my girl says, "No !" Why not? - STEVE FROM
Columbus April 2. Attending the way home at the Pizza Hut
STATE UNIVERSITY
were Mrs. Daniels, Mrs. Clara in Chillicothe. Attending were
P.'S. It's not "bottomles'S:"
Burris, Mrs. Mildred Fry, Mrs. Lester, Marco and Robert
Nettie Hayes and Mrs. Mildred Jeffers, Virginia, Hlcky and
Dear Steve:
Mitch,
Ralph Jordan, Cheryl Lawson,
It's okay by us, and I'm sure by women customers . An~ if the
Mrs. Daniels annoWlced the Gary Hut ton and Brian and
good pay gets you through college, your girl had better gnn and
l !'e 26th annual convention let you bare it. - HELEN AND SUE
Candystripers tea at 7:30 'Keith Jordan. Advisors atof &gt;the Ohio Baptist Guild will
Mqnday night at the hospital. tending were Martha Jeffers ,
beoat the Triedstone Baptist
The auxiliary will help with Margie Lawson and Dorsey
Chwrch in Ironton, May 4, Mrs.
refreshments.
Jordan . Guests were Mike
Also announced were two in- Lawson and Mrs . Angela
Mlelia Smith , district
sudfrvisor for the Providence
o
_
service fire safety programs Ungle.
~pciation , announced today. . A musical May 8 and 9 at the General Telephone of Ohio. His by Rhonda Dailey, R.N ., both
A•morning workshop wlll be Sa lisbury Elementary School program was titled "Advents April24, with one at 2 p.m. and
in ~harge of the host church was announced at the Tuesday in Sound" .
' the other ' at 4 p.m. J:(eporting
with the guild program 'to begin night meeting of the Salisbury
on the dictophone , electric St1rt loti~ weight tod1y or moMy
b~ek. MONADl:X il 1 ti"'£ tlblet
·
at _'1 :15 p.m. Rev . Douglas PTA.
thermometer, and drapes for and
111y to take; . MONADEX will
CatJ:er of the Birlington Church
The show directed by J ohn ·
the cafeteria was Mrs. Daniels. help curb your desi,.. for exc•
faod. E1t 1•-WIIigh~ ltu.C~Iins
will-be the guest speaker and Lisle, principal, is titled "S. S.
-----:=--;-~--- It was noted that the nursing no d1ngerous drt~g~ 1nd will not
hiSfmiOr choir will participate . Salisbury, Musical Showboat ".
scholarship will be presented maka you nervous. No rt..,.uous
exerci•. Chlllfll your lift , , . 1t1rt
in llle. program . Mrs. Smith Dale Colburn presided at the
---_.!~!!.:=::=:=- at a meeting in May. .
i:od1y. MONADEX cOlt $3.00 for
repltts that all girls in the meeting and plans we re
. By PHIL PASTORF.T
Refreshments were served • 20 dey supply. L•• ~ economy
try AQUATABS :
Pr ~i den ce Associatin are completed for the May 17 Child
"Pinheads" are presidents by Mrs. Alma Newton, Mrs. lizols$5.00.Aloo
they wCN'k gently to Mlp you IDle
we1$pme to take part in the Conservation League. Lun- of bowling associations.
Margaret Martin and Mrs. Wlttr·bloat. AOUATABS -I ..Wit«
pill" !hot wolf&lt;s· - $3,00, Both
con.ention .
cheon.
Nellie Borg an.
The
boss
grumps
that
none
9UII'Inw.d lnd IOid by:
•
Officers for 1975-76 were of us ever truly take lime off
Hostesses for May will he
'
Swisher &amp; Lohse "Phlrmacy ,
installed. Mis5 Rosalie Story's from work.
Mrs.
Velsia Roush, Miss Becky 11'2
•
E. Main, Pomeroy ; Dutton
: NAME OFFICERS
· third grade won the attendance
Roush, Mrs. Etta Will and Mrs. Drug Store, Middleport • .Mail
Orders Filled.
otficers for the year were banner. . The progra m was
Ruth Morris.
eleoted at, a recent meeting of presented by. B.. L. Bauer,
the Rock Springs Ladybugs 4-H public affatrs manager for
Clul They are Tracey Jeffers,
Preldent ; Ja ckie King, vice
prel!dent ; Carla Whaley,
There's nothing like a cold
VISIT PARENTS
sec~tary; Christy Evans,
shower to make you have the
Mr.
and Mrs . Charles
CORRECTION
water heate~· fixed.
tre...-er ; and Pam Evans,
Meg am!_Robert, of
Lochary,
The Ohio Pallet Co ., and not
new:i reporter . Members
How can anyone possibly· near Chicago, 111. , spent · the
ill be both "high" and "dry"?
~plans for a dance and the Ohio Power Co. , W
weekend here visiting their
sponsor
a
rider
from
the
• bOe sale. The group went
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
Mid(lleport
Child
Conservation
kite flying . Five new members
Most of us use no more than
Chester, Ohio
!fer.. welcomed Into mem- League in th~ hike-bike of the 60,000 of ·th e 700,000 -odd Lochary and Mr , and Mrs. Leo
Story.
Mr.
.
and
Mrs.
HatTy
Meigs
Chapter
of
the
·
Ohio
berdip. Attending were 15
words in the la nguage Henry, Amesville, joined the
Phone 985-3537
menters; t~ree advisors and Association· for Retarded unless we're ta lk ing about group
for
a
family
dinner
.
Citizens
Saturday
.
oUr
leaSt
,Cav'
o
rite
polltican.
two l)sitors.

•

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-.
--

f herapy departme~t get5 gift
-·-·

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'

Missionar11
g .n meets

Generation Rap

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Point
PWP
4J reorganize

-

By OOROfHY HARfLEY
On the third Sunday of
Ea~ter,
April 13, approximately 350 Episcopalians
from the .Diocese of Southern
Ohio, met in an exhilerating
celebration of Thanksgiving at
the · Church of . the Good
Sheplie; if, 64 University
Terrace, Athens. At least 13
parishes of the diocese were
represented.
Leaving Grosvenor House at
3 p.m., the procession of 150
vested acolytes, choir, lay
readers and clergy proceeded

Jewels tea
·observed ·
The ritual of jewels tea was
announced for 3 p.m. April 27
at the horne of Debi Buck when
the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority met
Tuesday night at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Plans were also made during
the mee ting for the Mother's
Day tea May II, at 3 p.m. with
the place to be annoWlced
later. Mrs. Sandi Sargent is
social

Chairwoman

and

reported on plans for the two
events.
Mrs. Janet Downie, service
·-chairwoman , thanked members for helping with . the
Easter party for the Meigs
Community
Class
and
especially Darla Hawley and
her son, Randy, for being the
bWlnies. It was decided that_
three members will attend the
Beta Sigma Phi Convention to
be held in Toledo with part of
their expenses to be paid from
the treasury. Members were
asked to take bottle caps to the
next meeting . Mrs. Downie
gave the cultural report and
refreshments were ,served by
Mrs. Buck and Mrs. Hawley.

with crosses, banners and fla gs st . Edwards, Col,umbus, spoke
representing their respectjve in his sennon of Evangelism,
churches, to the Church of the . its meaning and its need in our
·
Good Shepherd next. door . As daily lives .
The
Collection
from this
they entered, the standing
service
will
go
to
the
Presiding
Congregation was singiog the
Bishop's
Fund
for
world
stirring 18th Century hymn
"All Hail the Power of Jeslts' hWlger.
Refreshments were served in
Nam~ ' ' .
Participants in the Holy the Undercroft of the Church,
Eucharist preparation were and historical displays from
Anthony Coleman, Rev. Philip the various parishes of the
McNairy, Rector, and Dr. Diocese were placed for easy
Arthur Savage from the viewing.
Members of the Diocesan
Church of the Good Shepherd,
Athens: C. Albert Fromm, Jr., "Staff directly responsible forSt . Paul's, Chillicothe; Mrs. this memorable assemblage
Ted Reed, Grace Church, are Rev. Roy Hall, Planning
Pomeroy : Presley E. McKissic Officer of the Diocese ; Captain
and Miss Jeanie Amash , St. William P a ddock ,
Congregational Development
Luke's, Marietta .
Celebrants administering the Officer and Registrar, and
challce at the Main Altar con· Rev . Lo Wootenn, Community
celebration and three at- Development Officer of the
tendant stations were Rev . Diocese.
John Carson, St. Mary 's,
Hillsboro; Rev . Albert -' H.
MacKenzie, St. . P,e ter's,
Gallipolis, and Rev . Da'lid.
Allardyce, St. Phillips, Cir· ,
deville.
Assisting the celebrants
were Rev . Fred Wolfe, .St.
A WEEK
Paul's, Chillicothe: Rev . Philip
McNairy, Church of the Good
Shepherd, Athens and Lay
Readers Dr. John Markley and
Jimmie Evans of st. Peter's,
. 830 E. Main
Gallipolis.
Pomeroy, Ohio .
Rev. Jim V. Bills, Rector of

.eOPEN.e
7 DAYS

D&amp;D MEAT

-

'

Noweltys, Gifts,

-

flovlers, etc.

that would allow ronununities

flac·ks l hl'Y havt&gt;, " No rri s

to determine for Ul emsclves addL'fl .

. '
'

t

..'

1'1'111

of 1111'

s;titl 11.- t•mpk k1ww tlw ndtls

four

)'t' ;II' S,

C'Oil l' dV &lt;lhl y

an· JW id out in l,ri :t.l'S .
'l'lw bill wmiltl require a
lotter y ti cket to ha ve prinletl m1
it the odds o f winning a pr i ~.c ,

rev ersin J.! lhl' n •s ul ts uf &lt;HI

wheth er they should parThe bill would prov ide for a • t•arlicr referendum .
licipate in the Ohio l1lttery.
special. electi on in any com The Westerville llepubli cH n
Norris, disturbed by the
"circus barkers" employed by
the Ohio l&lt;&gt;ttery Commission
to sell tickets, Wednesday
introduced a bill which would
permit local-option elections qn .
the sale of the tickets. '
Also attached to the legislation is a provision requiring the
Ohio Lottery to comply with
truth~n-advertisin g laws.
Norris said there wa s a near
perfect analogy between exist,
ing liquor statutes and the .
lottery. He said communities
AUNT
should have the right to decide
JAN-ES
for themselves whether Jot\ery
tickelsstioitld be sold' in their
COmmWlitles as they now can
Oven Cleaner
vote on the sale of liquor.
8 oz .
"I try to teach my sons that
32 oz.
gambling is wrong and the
state tells them its right,"
Norris ooted. "And now we
~

HAMBURGER

awl al stl wuuld list t.Jw l'l'l·4'1'1ll.n J1,4' u r (.j(•k('l s;dt•S I"I ' V!' IIU4 '
l.l lal"i.'-' rdtU"IIt'tl in pri"l.t' I!IOIU 'Y
and 11 11 ' pt·n ·I ~Hta gl' wlt id1 go1 •s
i11t.u l.hl' g1·rwr al n· Ve mw fund.
" No st'lf-rt·s,wding ~-.:on nhl! • r
wuu ld l'Vt' r hu y ;1 loll.er y
litkl'l ," Nurris said . " Wt• don't
pnmmh• liquur so why shou ld
we promutc gmJJt.ling . 'l11c

onl y I.Muly lh:tl. II JIIW&lt;ll"~ l.u h1 •
iflllllllfll'
rnuu
truth -iu ;ulvt ·rtisiiiJ'. st ul ut1 ~s appt~:~r~ to
IN· tlw i:ov(TIHtu ~ nt. "
Norris mldt~l th:.tt in his
1~ ov c rn menl had n(J
hu si m ~.o.;s hei n~ in the gmnhlinl-(

opinion

husim.:ss.
" If Wt_;
- re ven u e~ ,

JOY
LIQUID

MR.

MUSCLE

nee(.] o ddi t i on &lt;~ l
we &lt;:et n rai:-~e la~c:-1, "

lit • X~lirl . ." But thiH lr•Ht~ry WH!it
otpprnvPd when wt~ hatl a

,., lnKitalthat It rnay Kenf!N ie
hrrH,H1 a ppro va l froffi

' "f'(&gt;ius in the statt• hud~ et."

ll1e

general rJUhlie '

:-

Nf•rri~ ~u id h1 ~

had no ide::t
wlwt the t hante!i wen~ nf hi .~
lcJ,(islltlion lx:i n ~ uprrovL"fl hy
lht: gc n crt~l :n-t.'H.! ruhl y but
hope d il wuuld ;Jl l ca~t akrl
pcup lt! lu whul i!i ~oinJt: un . lie
saill the loc~l-option election iR

LIQUID
DRANe

22 oz.

32

scverttl thurch 5(rouptt for , the

lcKiHlat inn and hoped that It
w&lt;&gt;uld at leaH! Ioree the l.ottcry
CmnmiHsion to "clean up ilq
act. "
•

Regular or
Super

oz.

$1.09 Value

8lc Va lu e

" "' .wirl" he already .tlltd
re&lt;:civcll wide HUPIX&gt;rt ftpm

$1.95
Valu e

24's

•'

STOCII!

BISHOP KRUMM

OFF
REGULAR PRICE

the Rev. and Mrs. T. Bennett
Dickerson , missionaries in
Thailand.
Plans for a visit to the
Syracuse Nursing Home
SWlday, May 4, was made by
the Dorca s Circle. Mrs.
Alwilda Werner presided and
after reports of the ·officers
were given, the circle voted to
send what money remains in
the accoWlt to Haiti to help
· with mission work. A birthday
card will be sent to Mrs.
Lucinda Daines.

\.

Council will
meet Thursday

20% OFF
TO All

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES
BeHy Ohlinger

Pomeroy

10

1~[

110\'1\l.

IJAN I ~t i "(COURl

·PLUMRDSE
Danish Canned
Ham

· Thursday, April 17, the
Episcopal Southern Ohio
Diocesan Council will meet at
St. Pe!&lt;!~'s, Gallipolis, for a
12 :10 p.m. luncheon and
meeting . Rev . Albert H .
MacKenzie, Recto r, is a
member of the council.
The Diocesan CoWlcil is the
Legislative body of the
Diocese, and makes the
decisions of all policy, budgets,
programs and legislative
actions between the annual
Church Conventions.
Rt. Rev. John M. Krumm ,
Bishop of the Southern Ohio
Diocese will chair the meeting .
Attending will be members of
the diocesan staff, lay members and clergy. Rev . Jack
Weichert, Rec tor of St.
George's, Dayton , is council
secretary.
'

GR~DUATES

102 E. Main

. eV.WPO!~ I M l"'f

I-LB.

MAGIC TAPE

2.29 VALUE

1

~~ ;r H=

~
wella .

~

$2.98

Value

lla~m

f

J

--·

WHIFFLE BALL &amp;
SET

BLOSSOMS
SHAMPOO

'

f

i

f'6tanl

. Oily, Dry,

"' tmii!Kn&gt;

Normal

1.40

1

t:'..!.-·

VALUE

Meig~

Property

FLINTSTONE$
VITAMINS

Transfers

We're going across the ocean to .
get you more clean-burning gas.
In just a few years, huge ships with
specially de signed, super-cold compartments will be bringing additional nat·
·ural gas supplies-in liquid form - from ·
across the ocean. Natural gas can be
liquefied by reducing its temperature to
minus 260 ' F., m~king it possible toreduce 625 cubic feet of gas to I cubic .
foot of liquid. That means LNG can
be · shipped in cryogenic t~nkers from
places we can't reach with our pipelines.
· Each ship, ·carrying enough gas to

supply m.ore than 14,000 homes for a
full year, will deliver LNG to a special
receiving terminal that Columbia Gas is
helping to build on Chesapeake Bay.
There, the LNG will be revaporized for
delivery to Columbia's pipelines.
Although its cost will be higher, LNG
·Will give Columbia's customers more
clean energy. And .with scarcity and
mounting expense affecting all types of
energy. your gas bill .will still represent
one of your most economical purchases.

Harry C. Hill, Katie L. Hill to
Paul E. Hill, Crestlyn R. Hill ,
.30 A., Racine.
Robert J. Eynon, Carolyn
Sue Eynon to Athens Co.
Savings &amp; Lo~n, Parcel,
Chester.
Harley R. Burson, Leona
Burson, J oa n Gaynelle Burson
to Robert H. Burson, Donna
Jeanne Burson, Robert Steven
Burson, Pamela Lyn~ Burson ,
Mark Owen Burson, 60 A.,
Bedford.
Rufus
R.
Browning,
Joseph ine M. Browning to
Frank Herald, Jr. , Mary Jane
Hera ld, Parcel, Rutland·.
Julius W. Sauvage, Mary C.
Sauvage to James C. Hartis,
Mildred E. Harris, .74 A.,
Salisbury .
David Brickles, Jacqueline
Brickies to Joseph Christy,
Mary Christy , Parce l, Bedford .
George S. Hobstetl&lt;!r, Zelda
M. Hobstetter, F:r,ed W. Crow, ,
Jr., Eleanor K. Crr,w tr, Archie
E. Lee, June P. Lee , 3.26 A.,
Chester.
He len :vf. Rea, dec . to RfJhert
E. Peopl es, Edythe F. Ford,
Flr,rence M. Mickey: Cert. r,f

Trans., PrJmer'JY .
State ,,f Ohi•J \1, Edn• f..

shields, 16 .00 A., lklart.
· I.erJilard WttrrJ , R~n ee Wa rd
tr,J•,hn Tillis, Wilm~ :vr. Tillis 2
A., (JT•n~e .

Smalley's Gift Shop

•

lllUII il y . d.kr :tJ pt.·r

UP1 stnttthousr Reporter
voh•rs iu l.!w pn·viuus gulwr- ' ag;tinsl. w inuilt~'. 01 pri·t.l' in ll w
COLUMBUS IUPII - Ht•p. buy lol tt•ry lirk..t s.
llillorii!l 4'il' l'1. iml ltacl :--;igm •d i l lol.tt•r y, tlwy .wo nl!ll lt'\lt 'l' huy ••
Abm E. Norris, R-Westrrville,
"Wt' tl idn 't knnw l.ht•y WtTt' JK'1l l.inn n'iJllt'sting a rdt'l"l.' ll· l.wkd
. lit•· ;il so said p4 'HJII t'
has introduced lt•gislation in go ing lo lw t•irl'us-IJarkt•rs. You dum ·A rdt•rt•nthun on l.lll'
shunlil h1 • ;1warc that unly 5J
thp Ohio GenPral Assembly know th"l high -p;&gt;i tl st aff of - issue cuuld bt• la•hl onc-c t•wry pt•r ( 't'lll n£ the lullt·r y n•vt·mu·s

All FROM

h
Salisbury parentS p/an lunc eon

Barbs

an• :u·1 i\'t'ly bt•st't't'ltmg pPnpl 1•
. that it is"tht•ir pal.rintit· dutx to

SHOES

-

LOSE UGLY FAT

By VICTOR LANIAllSKt\~

I Gmup Ladies' Dn!ss and Casltal

Haptist Guild
-.
meets
- May 4
'

••

Special Savings

Hot Shots hold
recent meeting

-·

''

'

Auxiliary
has. meet

.

---Home rule hill proposed on participation in Ohio's lottery --•

~ - Tht' On il~· &amp;ntinrl, Mhhtlt•J'IC.lrt-Pt\Hlt'n'~· . cl ., 'l'h11rstl; ,~.. Anri l 17. I!175
'

·Episcopalians celebrate
.

Social

'

IMBIA GAS i.! doing .!Omerhing_qbourrhe energy crisis.
/
Th•: way
.

•·

'1

V1rf11:

',

UltANIJ

INTENSIVE CARE ~
LOTION
¢
10 oz.

$1.59 Va lue

99

PLAIN

60's
2.59 VALUE

1

$159

.l____l'. ;)
VaseJinl!
l,.llli\IVI U. ll
IA1K 11-'Dl

'

.,

',

''

WITH IRON

IUU\ N I I

~:.~

INTENSIVE CARE ..
BEADS
' ......_
•.,, BATH
16 oz . '

' .

"''.

s1.59

Value

¢

KODAK
POCKET INSTAMATIC
A20RE

60's
2.89 VALUE

1

$189

DISNEY
HAT MUGS

"I

20 OUTFIT
KODAK
UTILE CAMERA.
C-126-12 FILM
BIG PICTURES
EASY FilM
'-V
.-r!J
BREAk
lOADING
'1.60
RESISTANT
DEPENDABLE
VALUE
PERMANENT
MAGICUBE FLASH
STRAW
~
'36.95 VALUE
KEEPS DRINKS
· FRESH

\J

8

/.-/·
·,' '
r.lf:r,r,lt: t :&lt;Jf.,·

f.ht;y Sh fi iJ){j f;;J JJ J.hr!
;' rm~ n f!:"' "

i

fJ IJf. Jrlg \

.'
•.'

1.25 ·VALUE.

1

�(

I,_

•

t. •

•

--' •• •

THURSDAY
SERVICES at Eagle . Ridge
·J •
Church through Saturday with
( ;
Rev . Roy Deeter speaking.
(
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, I : 15 p.m. home of
Mrs. Ethel Grueser.
TW IN CI TY Shrinettes,
"
Thurstlay, B p.m. at home of
CELEBRATES - Jamey
Mary Hughes.
Hensler, son of Mr. and· Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT
Chi ld Daniel C. Hensler, Racine,
Conservation League, Thurs- · celebrated his Jixth birthday
day , 7:30p.m. at the home of April 14 by appearing on the
Mrs. Louis Osborne, Lasley St., Mr. Cartoon Show, WSAZ.
I
~Pomeroy , Members urged to TV, Hunlin.gton, W. Va. He
at tend since final plans will be was accompanied to Hunmade for the spring con- tington by his mother, and .a
cousin, Sherry Bissell, The
ference .
: :
ACCEPTS GIFT- Ronald L. Saunders, ARRT, director of respiratory therapy at Holzer
group had their lunch out
: !Medical Center, accepts a pressure breathing thera py unit from Registered Nurses As~ 'n._
MEIGS CoWlty Rail Service and then on their return
: :P..esident Kay Rutherford . The compact device, in Mrs. Rutherford's hand, asststs the patient
Committee, 7:30 at Middleport home Jamey 's birthday was
: lo breathe more comfortably. Two of the Wlits were given to the department by the RNA.
Village Hall on Chessie System
celebrated with a decorated
proposed abandonment be cake, ice ·cream and Koof.
tween Pomeroy and !.pgan.
Aid
.at the · home of his
FRIDAY .
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
SHADE River Lodge 453, Raymond Hensler. Gifts
F&amp;AM ; special meeting 7:30 were presented to the
,
::rwo Pr essu re Bre athin g Therapy at Holzer Medical It makes possible· a shorter p.m. at the hall. Work in the youngster and attending
nerapy units have been Center, sa id: "We hope that hospital confinement when a Master Mason degree .
besides his parents and
Jltesented to the Respiratory havin g th es e units n ow patient can take one of these • POMEROY CHARTER 186, grandparents were his uncle,
'i'llerapy Department at Holzer available for loan to patients. handi-vent ·Wlits home with D.E.S. inspection, 7:45p.m. at David Hensler and couslnl',
lredic a\ Ce nte r bv the wi th breathing problems wiH them, While awaiting one Of the Masonic Temple. Donna Sherry, Joey and VIcki
~gistered Nurses Ass;,iat ion be a valuable serv ice to them . . their own to be delivered ."
Spring, deputy grand matron, Bissell, Mason, W. Va.
DCGallipelis.
inspecting officer .
: :rhese ~ ~Jm p:.:- t units .1 ssist a
CHURCH WOMEN United of
R~ien t to breathe, b:
·omMeigs County, key women to
~Pes si n g,
regul a•i ng and
meet at 1:30p .m. Friday at the
J
il~iveri ng room air lc the
Enl&lt;!rprise United Methodist
patient through a mout hpiece
Church to plan for the observBy Helen and Sue Bottel
JO lrc hment . A mea ns to
&gt;Yr.Ur
ance of May fellowship day .
I V
'f'
Otlliver medication and enrich
SATURDAY
He
Doesn't
Want
His
Baby
ttl£"' air wiLl oxygen is aJso
M E IGS ATHLETIC
•
Plans for the annual mother·
Rap :
eossible.
Boosters
sponsor of dance at daughter banquet at the
We've
been
married
a
year
and
I
think
I'm
pregnant.
I
told
• Kay Rutherford, R.N. ,
the old Pomeroy Jr. High 8-ll Middl eport First Bapti st
~esident of the RNA , in my husband before I confirmed it, and we just had our first big
p.m
. with WMPO Disc Jockey
tl!aking the presenlatw~ to fi ght. He wants me to have an abortion' Says we can't afford a Bob Cooper. Admission , $1 per Church were made during
mee lings of the circles of the B.
baby. That's true, but ...
~ma id L. SaWlders , ARRT,
person.
There
will
be
10
record
My real problem is that I had an abortion when I was 16 and
H. Sanborn Missionary Society
;tirec tor of Respira tory
the psychiatrist said if I ever went tbrough another one it would albums given away by Cooper Tuesday night.
break me. 1 know I couldn't stand it again. More to the pomt, I during the dance.
The circle members joined
GIRLS AGES 10-14 in- for a· potluck dinner at the
love my husband and want our baby . What should I do? - CAN 'T
terested in playing softball for church and then went into
FACE IT AGAIN
the
Forrest RWI team and girls separate meetings to complete
•
15-18 interested in playin g group activities and business
CFIA :
You didn't say whether or notyourhusband knows about the senior softball meet at the before being reorganized at the
first abortion. If he does, he surely must Wlderstand your
Minersville diamond at 2 p.m. banquet meeting.
:Parents Without Partners feelings, and a calm diseussion (not a fi_ghl ) wi~ bring him wit~ Susie Grueser.
The banquet will be May 5
~int Pleasant Chapter 838 will
FINAL Signup for all and at that time new circle
around. If he doesn 't, it's time you told htm, provtded he still
htlld a general meeting for needs a reason for keeping the baby. (Somehow I don 't think he
Rutland baseball teams at the chairwomen will be selected
o;anizational purposes at the will , once fatherly pride cushions the financial shock .) old Rutland High School from and members assigned to the
-~palachian Power Company
HELEN
2-4 p.m., for boys and girls. ·circles.
Aliditorium, Jackson Ave .,
There will be a $4 fee.
Mrs. Frances Smart gave
+++
f'!lint Pleasant, Wednesday, CFJA :
prayer
to open the Love Joy
SUNDAY
Az!rU 23; 7:30 to 9:30p.m. The
Perhaps a cou nselor could make your husband understand.
REVIVAL services through Circle meeting with Mrs .
cllapter needs to reorganize Then, work on finances together: you may discover things aren 't
April 27 at Dyesville Com- Kathleen Anthony presiding .
aAil to establish new officers. as rough as he thinks.
·
mWlity Church , off SR 143 on Devotions on compani onship
~usan Wilson , president of
1 believe abortion is becoming a too-easy way out for those
Meigs Coun ty Road II. John were given by Mrs. JWle Kloes.
i\&amp;&gt;alachian Regional Council who claim they ,;aren't ready." When you are mature enough to
Elswiek, evangelist . The Plans ~ere . made to send a
5:t~Jf Parents Without Partners
marry, you should be ready for responsibility, and if that in- " Gospel Tones " will be birthday gift to Rev . Thomas
3lld District Supervisor, will cludes a baby - well, you made him (or her) , so have the baby
featured April 25. The public is Olsen, a mtsstonary in
p;esent information con- and love it. I'm sure you will. - SUE
Philadelphia and to send the
invited .
c~i-ning the organization.
+++
money remaining in the
Mlmbership dues may be paid Dear Sue:
treasury to Paula Sarver, an
aC: this meeting and present
In Home Ec. class we were discussing wedding etiquette. I
Ohio Baptist scholarship
nrJnbers may also renew their asked, why not have a female usher escort the men to their seats,
student atlencting Judson
membership.
since male ushers only escort women guests - leavmg men to
College .
:loy single parent may at· follow behind , alone?
Dorcas Circle members
teid this meeting to learn
Any reasonable argument against it - except that it isn't
reported on Easter trays
a~ut
the organization . "done" in etiquette books ? - DEBBIE
delivered to shut-ins during
CO\odY of children is not a
their business session conrpement.
.
Dear Debbie :
ducted by Mrs. Frepa Hood.
Teresa Collins, director of Balance of money in the
"hapter programmmg
None at all - if the bride and bridegroom don't mind in·
nurses at Veterans Memorial treasury was designated for
ct&amp;si.sts of family activities, eluding several more females in their wedding party.
Hospital, was guest speaker at
dilcussio ns, ed ucational
These days, etiquette is "whatever you wish , so long as it's in
a
meeting of the Women 's
p~grams , and social ac· • . good taste. " Often the "different" touches at a ceremony start a
Auxiliary
Tuesday night at the
ti'Cties. In addition to these, new trend..
hospital.
th~ are Regional Council
My husband, Cliff, and 1 changed tradition several ways at
Mrs. Collins talked on the
cc.ferences four times per our January wedding: Cliff, rather t!lan an usher, escorted his
role of the .volW!teer in the
yw, Zone con fer ences an- mother then my mother down the aisle to their seats . When our
hospital, outlining- duties and
mCily, and In ternational pastor ~sked, ''Who gives this woman?," he continued, "Who
She gave
responsibilities.
Qf~yention which will he in gives this man ?" and both sets of parents answered, "We do."
x-ray
reminders
concerning
Wf\bington ; D. C. this swn- After which they promised to love , cherish and stand by us in our
patient help and conducted a
CARPENTER - The Mixed
mor, July 111-13.
new life together.
question and answer session. Up Hot Shots 4-H Club finished
"r additional information ,
These "different" touches made us all feel very close. yollmay call , ( 304 ) 422-1482 or SUE
Mrs. Janice Daniels, auxiliary its 1974 year wlth a trip to
wee Susan Wilson, 1059 31st
president, gave her a gift on Col,umbus. ·
Sleet, Apt. A, Parkersburg, . Rap :
The group IWlched at the
behalf of the auxiliary .
v~ 26101.
·
A report wa s given on the Smorgasbord on Columbus '
I hear restaurants that cater to women are hiring male go-go
60th
annual convention of the east side, moved on to the
dancers
for
their
ladies-only
days.
The
pay
is
good,
I've
got
the
"
Ohlo Hospital Association in Columbus Zoo, and dined on
body for it. But my girl says, "No !" Why not? - STEVE FROM
Columbus April 2. Attending the way home at the Pizza Hut
STATE UNIVERSITY
were Mrs. Daniels, Mrs. Clara in Chillicothe. Attending were
P.'S. It's not "bottomles'S:"
Burris, Mrs. Mildred Fry, Mrs. Lester, Marco and Robert
Nettie Hayes and Mrs. Mildred Jeffers, Virginia, Hlcky and
Dear Steve:
Mitch,
Ralph Jordan, Cheryl Lawson,
It's okay by us, and I'm sure by women customers . An~ if the
Mrs. Daniels annoWlced the Gary Hut ton and Brian and
good pay gets you through college, your girl had better gnn and
l !'e 26th annual convention let you bare it. - HELEN AND SUE
Candystripers tea at 7:30 'Keith Jordan. Advisors atof &gt;the Ohio Baptist Guild will
Mqnday night at the hospital. tending were Martha Jeffers ,
beoat the Triedstone Baptist
The auxiliary will help with Margie Lawson and Dorsey
Chwrch in Ironton, May 4, Mrs.
refreshments.
Jordan . Guests were Mike
Also announced were two in- Lawson and Mrs . Angela
Mlelia Smith , district
sudfrvisor for the Providence
o
_
service fire safety programs Ungle.
~pciation , announced today. . A musical May 8 and 9 at the General Telephone of Ohio. His by Rhonda Dailey, R.N ., both
A•morning workshop wlll be Sa lisbury Elementary School program was titled "Advents April24, with one at 2 p.m. and
in ~harge of the host church was announced at the Tuesday in Sound" .
' the other ' at 4 p.m. J:(eporting
with the guild program 'to begin night meeting of the Salisbury
on the dictophone , electric St1rt loti~ weight tod1y or moMy
b~ek. MONADl:X il 1 ti"'£ tlblet
·
at _'1 :15 p.m. Rev . Douglas PTA.
thermometer, and drapes for and
111y to take; . MONADEX will
CatJ:er of the Birlington Church
The show directed by J ohn ·
the cafeteria was Mrs. Daniels. help curb your desi,.. for exc•
faod. E1t 1•-WIIigh~ ltu.C~Iins
will-be the guest speaker and Lisle, principal, is titled "S. S.
-----:=--;-~--- It was noted that the nursing no d1ngerous drt~g~ 1nd will not
hiSfmiOr choir will participate . Salisbury, Musical Showboat ".
scholarship will be presented maka you nervous. No rt..,.uous
exerci•. Chlllfll your lift , , . 1t1rt
in llle. program . Mrs. Smith Dale Colburn presided at the
---_.!~!!.:=::=:=- at a meeting in May. .
i:od1y. MONADEX cOlt $3.00 for
repltts that all girls in the meeting and plans we re
. By PHIL PASTORF.T
Refreshments were served • 20 dey supply. L•• ~ economy
try AQUATABS :
Pr ~i den ce Associatin are completed for the May 17 Child
"Pinheads" are presidents by Mrs. Alma Newton, Mrs. lizols$5.00.Aloo
they wCN'k gently to Mlp you IDle
we1$pme to take part in the Conservation League. Lun- of bowling associations.
Margaret Martin and Mrs. Wlttr·bloat. AOUATABS -I ..Wit«
pill" !hot wolf&lt;s· - $3,00, Both
con.ention .
cheon.
Nellie Borg an.
The
boss
grumps
that
none
9UII'Inw.d lnd IOid by:
•
Officers for 1975-76 were of us ever truly take lime off
Hostesses for May will he
'
Swisher &amp; Lohse "Phlrmacy ,
installed. Mis5 Rosalie Story's from work.
Mrs.
Velsia Roush, Miss Becky 11'2
•
E. Main, Pomeroy ; Dutton
: NAME OFFICERS
· third grade won the attendance
Roush, Mrs. Etta Will and Mrs. Drug Store, Middleport • .Mail
Orders Filled.
otficers for the year were banner. . The progra m was
Ruth Morris.
eleoted at, a recent meeting of presented by. B.. L. Bauer,
the Rock Springs Ladybugs 4-H public affatrs manager for
Clul They are Tracey Jeffers,
Preldent ; Ja ckie King, vice
prel!dent ; Carla Whaley,
There's nothing like a cold
VISIT PARENTS
sec~tary; Christy Evans,
shower to make you have the
Mr.
and Mrs . Charles
CORRECTION
water heate~· fixed.
tre...-er ; and Pam Evans,
Meg am!_Robert, of
Lochary,
The Ohio Pallet Co ., and not
new:i reporter . Members
How can anyone possibly· near Chicago, 111. , spent · the
ill be both "high" and "dry"?
~plans for a dance and the Ohio Power Co. , W
weekend here visiting their
sponsor
a
rider
from
the
• bOe sale. The group went
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
Mid(lleport
Child
Conservation
kite flying . Five new members
Most of us use no more than
Chester, Ohio
!fer.. welcomed Into mem- League in th~ hike-bike of the 60,000 of ·th e 700,000 -odd Lochary and Mr , and Mrs. Leo
Story.
Mr.
.
and
Mrs.
HatTy
Meigs
Chapter
of
the
·
Ohio
berdip. Attending were 15
words in the la nguage Henry, Amesville, joined the
Phone 985-3537
menters; t~ree advisors and Association· for Retarded unless we're ta lk ing about group
for
a
family
dinner
.
Citizens
Saturday
.
oUr
leaSt
,Cav'
o
rite
polltican.
two l)sitors.

•

---·-----.----

-.
--

f herapy departme~t get5 gift
-·-·

.
'

Missionar11
g .n meets

Generation Rap

.

'

l.

--

Point
PWP
4J reorganize

-

By OOROfHY HARfLEY
On the third Sunday of
Ea~ter,
April 13, approximately 350 Episcopalians
from the .Diocese of Southern
Ohio, met in an exhilerating
celebration of Thanksgiving at
the · Church of . the Good
Sheplie; if, 64 University
Terrace, Athens. At least 13
parishes of the diocese were
represented.
Leaving Grosvenor House at
3 p.m., the procession of 150
vested acolytes, choir, lay
readers and clergy proceeded

Jewels tea
·observed ·
The ritual of jewels tea was
announced for 3 p.m. April 27
at the horne of Debi Buck when
the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority met
Tuesday night at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Plans were also made during
the mee ting for the Mother's
Day tea May II, at 3 p.m. with
the place to be annoWlced
later. Mrs. Sandi Sargent is
social

Chairwoman

and

reported on plans for the two
events.
Mrs. Janet Downie, service
·-chairwoman , thanked members for helping with . the
Easter party for the Meigs
Community
Class
and
especially Darla Hawley and
her son, Randy, for being the
bWlnies. It was decided that_
three members will attend the
Beta Sigma Phi Convention to
be held in Toledo with part of
their expenses to be paid from
the treasury. Members were
asked to take bottle caps to the
next meeting . Mrs. Downie
gave the cultural report and
refreshments were ,served by
Mrs. Buck and Mrs. Hawley.

with crosses, banners and fla gs st . Edwards, Col,umbus, spoke
representing their respectjve in his sennon of Evangelism,
churches, to the Church of the . its meaning and its need in our
·
Good Shepherd next. door . As daily lives .
The
Collection
from this
they entered, the standing
service
will
go
to
the
Presiding
Congregation was singiog the
Bishop's
Fund
for
world
stirring 18th Century hymn
"All Hail the Power of Jeslts' hWlger.
Refreshments were served in
Nam~ ' ' .
Participants in the Holy the Undercroft of the Church,
Eucharist preparation were and historical displays from
Anthony Coleman, Rev. Philip the various parishes of the
McNairy, Rector, and Dr. Diocese were placed for easy
Arthur Savage from the viewing.
Members of the Diocesan
Church of the Good Shepherd,
Athens: C. Albert Fromm, Jr., "Staff directly responsible forSt . Paul's, Chillicothe; Mrs. this memorable assemblage
Ted Reed, Grace Church, are Rev. Roy Hall, Planning
Pomeroy : Presley E. McKissic Officer of the Diocese ; Captain
and Miss Jeanie Amash , St. William P a ddock ,
Congregational Development
Luke's, Marietta .
Celebrants administering the Officer and Registrar, and
challce at the Main Altar con· Rev . Lo Wootenn, Community
celebration and three at- Development Officer of the
tendant stations were Rev . Diocese.
John Carson, St. Mary 's,
Hillsboro; Rev . Albert -' H.
MacKenzie, St. . P,e ter's,
Gallipolis, and Rev . Da'lid.
Allardyce, St. Phillips, Cir· ,
deville.
Assisting the celebrants
were Rev . Fred Wolfe, .St.
A WEEK
Paul's, Chillicothe: Rev . Philip
McNairy, Church of the Good
Shepherd, Athens and Lay
Readers Dr. John Markley and
Jimmie Evans of st. Peter's,
. 830 E. Main
Gallipolis.
Pomeroy, Ohio .
Rev. Jim V. Bills, Rector of

.eOPEN.e
7 DAYS

D&amp;D MEAT

-

'

Noweltys, Gifts,

-

flovlers, etc.

that would allow ronununities

flac·ks l hl'Y havt&gt;, " No rri s

to determine for Ul emsclves addL'fl .

. '
'

t

..'

1'1'111

of 1111'

s;titl 11.- t•mpk k1ww tlw ndtls

four

)'t' ;II' S,

C'Oil l' dV &lt;lhl y

an· JW id out in l,ri :t.l'S .
'l'lw bill wmiltl require a
lotter y ti cket to ha ve prinletl m1
it the odds o f winning a pr i ~.c ,

rev ersin J.! lhl' n •s ul ts uf &lt;HI

wheth er they should parThe bill would prov ide for a • t•arlicr referendum .
licipate in the Ohio l1lttery.
special. electi on in any com The Westerville llepubli cH n
Norris, disturbed by the
"circus barkers" employed by
the Ohio l&lt;&gt;ttery Commission
to sell tickets, Wednesday
introduced a bill which would
permit local-option elections qn .
the sale of the tickets. '
Also attached to the legislation is a provision requiring the
Ohio Lottery to comply with
truth~n-advertisin g laws.
Norris said there wa s a near
perfect analogy between exist,
ing liquor statutes and the .
lottery. He said communities
AUNT
should have the right to decide
JAN-ES
for themselves whether Jot\ery
tickelsstioitld be sold' in their
COmmWlitles as they now can
Oven Cleaner
vote on the sale of liquor.
8 oz .
"I try to teach my sons that
32 oz.
gambling is wrong and the
state tells them its right,"
Norris ooted. "And now we
~

HAMBURGER

awl al stl wuuld list t.Jw l'l'l·4'1'1ll.n J1,4' u r (.j(•k('l s;dt•S I"I ' V!' IIU4 '
l.l lal"i.'-' rdtU"IIt'tl in pri"l.t' I!IOIU 'Y
and 11 11 ' pt·n ·I ~Hta gl' wlt id1 go1 •s
i11t.u l.hl' g1·rwr al n· Ve mw fund.
" No st'lf-rt·s,wding ~-.:on nhl! • r
wuu ld l'Vt' r hu y ;1 loll.er y
litkl'l ," Nurris said . " Wt• don't
pnmmh• liquur so why shou ld
we promutc gmJJt.ling . 'l11c

onl y I.Muly lh:tl. II JIIW&lt;ll"~ l.u h1 •
iflllllllfll'
rnuu
truth -iu ;ulvt ·rtisiiiJ'. st ul ut1 ~s appt~:~r~ to
IN· tlw i:ov(TIHtu ~ nt. "
Norris mldt~l th:.tt in his
1~ ov c rn menl had n(J
hu si m ~.o.;s hei n~ in the gmnhlinl-(

opinion

husim.:ss.
" If Wt_;
- re ven u e~ ,

JOY
LIQUID

MR.

MUSCLE

nee(.] o ddi t i on &lt;~ l
we &lt;:et n rai:-~e la~c:-1, "

lit • X~lirl . ." But thiH lr•Ht~ry WH!it
otpprnvPd when wt~ hatl a

,., lnKitalthat It rnay Kenf!N ie
hrrH,H1 a ppro va l froffi

' "f'(&gt;ius in the statt• hud~ et."

ll1e

general rJUhlie '

:-

Nf•rri~ ~u id h1 ~

had no ide::t
wlwt the t hante!i wen~ nf hi .~
lcJ,(islltlion lx:i n ~ uprrovL"fl hy
lht: gc n crt~l :n-t.'H.! ruhl y but
hope d il wuuld ;Jl l ca~t akrl
pcup lt! lu whul i!i ~oinJt: un . lie
saill the loc~l-option election iR

LIQUID
DRANe

22 oz.

32

scverttl thurch 5(rouptt for , the

lcKiHlat inn and hoped that It
w&lt;&gt;uld at leaH! Ioree the l.ottcry
CmnmiHsion to "clean up ilq
act. "
•

Regular or
Super

oz.

$1.09 Value

8lc Va lu e

" "' .wirl" he already .tlltd
re&lt;:civcll wide HUPIX&gt;rt ftpm

$1.95
Valu e

24's

•'

STOCII!

BISHOP KRUMM

OFF
REGULAR PRICE

the Rev. and Mrs. T. Bennett
Dickerson , missionaries in
Thailand.
Plans for a visit to the
Syracuse Nursing Home
SWlday, May 4, was made by
the Dorca s Circle. Mrs.
Alwilda Werner presided and
after reports of the ·officers
were given, the circle voted to
send what money remains in
the accoWlt to Haiti to help
· with mission work. A birthday
card will be sent to Mrs.
Lucinda Daines.

\.

Council will
meet Thursday

20% OFF
TO All

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES
BeHy Ohlinger

Pomeroy

10

1~[

110\'1\l.

IJAN I ~t i "(COURl

·PLUMRDSE
Danish Canned
Ham

· Thursday, April 17, the
Episcopal Southern Ohio
Diocesan Council will meet at
St. Pe!&lt;!~'s, Gallipolis, for a
12 :10 p.m. luncheon and
meeting . Rev . Albert H .
MacKenzie, Recto r, is a
member of the council.
The Diocesan CoWlcil is the
Legislative body of the
Diocese, and makes the
decisions of all policy, budgets,
programs and legislative
actions between the annual
Church Conventions.
Rt. Rev. John M. Krumm ,
Bishop of the Southern Ohio
Diocese will chair the meeting .
Attending will be members of
the diocesan staff, lay members and clergy. Rev . Jack
Weichert, Rec tor of St.
George's, Dayton , is council
secretary.
'

GR~DUATES

102 E. Main

. eV.WPO!~ I M l"'f

I-LB.

MAGIC TAPE

2.29 VALUE

1

~~ ;r H=

~
wella .

~

$2.98

Value

lla~m

f

J

--·

WHIFFLE BALL &amp;
SET

BLOSSOMS
SHAMPOO

'

f

i

f'6tanl

. Oily, Dry,

"' tmii!Kn&gt;

Normal

1.40

1

t:'..!.-·

VALUE

Meig~

Property

FLINTSTONE$
VITAMINS

Transfers

We're going across the ocean to .
get you more clean-burning gas.
In just a few years, huge ships with
specially de signed, super-cold compartments will be bringing additional nat·
·ural gas supplies-in liquid form - from ·
across the ocean. Natural gas can be
liquefied by reducing its temperature to
minus 260 ' F., m~king it possible toreduce 625 cubic feet of gas to I cubic .
foot of liquid. That means LNG can
be · shipped in cryogenic t~nkers from
places we can't reach with our pipelines.
· Each ship, ·carrying enough gas to

supply m.ore than 14,000 homes for a
full year, will deliver LNG to a special
receiving terminal that Columbia Gas is
helping to build on Chesapeake Bay.
There, the LNG will be revaporized for
delivery to Columbia's pipelines.
Although its cost will be higher, LNG
·Will give Columbia's customers more
clean energy. And .with scarcity and
mounting expense affecting all types of
energy. your gas bill .will still represent
one of your most economical purchases.

Harry C. Hill, Katie L. Hill to
Paul E. Hill, Crestlyn R. Hill ,
.30 A., Racine.
Robert J. Eynon, Carolyn
Sue Eynon to Athens Co.
Savings &amp; Lo~n, Parcel,
Chester.
Harley R. Burson, Leona
Burson, J oa n Gaynelle Burson
to Robert H. Burson, Donna
Jeanne Burson, Robert Steven
Burson, Pamela Lyn~ Burson ,
Mark Owen Burson, 60 A.,
Bedford.
Rufus
R.
Browning,
Joseph ine M. Browning to
Frank Herald, Jr. , Mary Jane
Hera ld, Parcel, Rutland·.
Julius W. Sauvage, Mary C.
Sauvage to James C. Hartis,
Mildred E. Harris, .74 A.,
Salisbury .
David Brickles, Jacqueline
Brickies to Joseph Christy,
Mary Christy , Parce l, Bedford .
George S. Hobstetl&lt;!r, Zelda
M. Hobstetter, F:r,ed W. Crow, ,
Jr., Eleanor K. Crr,w tr, Archie
E. Lee, June P. Lee , 3.26 A.,
Chester.
He len :vf. Rea, dec . to RfJhert
E. Peopl es, Edythe F. Ford,
Flr,rence M. Mickey: Cert. r,f

Trans., PrJmer'JY .
State ,,f Ohi•J \1, Edn• f..

shields, 16 .00 A., lklart.
· I.erJilard WttrrJ , R~n ee Wa rd
tr,J•,hn Tillis, Wilm~ :vr. Tillis 2
A., (JT•n~e .

Smalley's Gift Shop

•

lllUII il y . d.kr :tJ pt.·r

UP1 stnttthousr Reporter
voh•rs iu l.!w pn·viuus gulwr- ' ag;tinsl. w inuilt~'. 01 pri·t.l' in ll w
COLUMBUS IUPII - Ht•p. buy lol tt•ry lirk..t s.
llillorii!l 4'il' l'1. iml ltacl :--;igm •d i l lol.tt•r y, tlwy .wo nl!ll lt'\lt 'l' huy ••
Abm E. Norris, R-Westrrville,
"Wt' tl idn 't knnw l.ht•y WtTt' JK'1l l.inn n'iJllt'sting a rdt'l"l.' ll· l.wkd
. lit•· ;il so said p4 'HJII t'
has introduced lt•gislation in go ing lo lw t•irl'us-IJarkt•rs. You dum ·A rdt•rt•nthun on l.lll'
shunlil h1 • ;1warc that unly 5J
thp Ohio GenPral Assembly know th"l high -p;&gt;i tl st aff of - issue cuuld bt• la•hl onc-c t•wry pt•r ( 't'lll n£ the lullt·r y n•vt·mu·s

All FROM

h
Salisbury parentS p/an lunc eon

Barbs

an• :u·1 i\'t'ly bt•st't't'ltmg pPnpl 1•
. that it is"tht•ir pal.rintit· dutx to

SHOES

-

LOSE UGLY FAT

By VICTOR LANIAllSKt\~

I Gmup Ladies' Dn!ss and Casltal

Haptist Guild
-.
meets
- May 4
'

••

Special Savings

Hot Shots hold
recent meeting

-·

''

'

Auxiliary
has. meet

.

---Home rule hill proposed on participation in Ohio's lottery --•

~ - Tht' On il~· &amp;ntinrl, Mhhtlt•J'IC.lrt-Pt\Hlt'n'~· . cl ., 'l'h11rstl; ,~.. Anri l 17. I!175
'

·Episcopalians celebrate
.

Social

'

IMBIA GAS i.! doing .!Omerhing_qbourrhe energy crisis.
/
Th•: way
.

•·

'1

V1rf11:

',

UltANIJ

INTENSIVE CARE ~
LOTION
¢
10 oz.

$1.59 Va lue

99

PLAIN

60's
2.59 VALUE

1

$159

.l____l'. ;)
VaseJinl!
l,.llli\IVI U. ll
IA1K 11-'Dl

'

.,

',

''

WITH IRON

IUU\ N I I

~:.~

INTENSIVE CARE ..
BEADS
' ......_
•.,, BATH
16 oz . '

' .

"''.

s1.59

Value

¢

KODAK
POCKET INSTAMATIC
A20RE

60's
2.89 VALUE

1

$189

DISNEY
HAT MUGS

"I

20 OUTFIT
KODAK
UTILE CAMERA.
C-126-12 FILM
BIG PICTURES
EASY FilM
'-V
.-r!J
BREAk
lOADING
'1.60
RESISTANT
DEPENDABLE
VALUE
PERMANENT
MAGICUBE FLASH
STRAW
~
'36.95 VALUE
KEEPS DRINKS
· FRESH

\J

8

/.-/·
·,' '
r.lf:r,r,lt: t :&lt;Jf.,·

f.ht;y Sh fi iJ){j f;;J JJ J.hr!
;' rm~ n f!:"' "

i

fJ IJf. Jrlg \

.'
•.'

1.25 ·VALUE.

1

�10- The Daily.Senttnel, M1ddleport-Pomerov. 0 . Thm oday, Aprill7, 1975

~: Har~isonville

: Society News

••

[_

For ·Fast Results Use

Not1ce

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

Mr and Mrs Robert Alkire
•
and son, Ray, VISited Rev. and
Mrs Lew1s Campbell ( Coelle
In Syracuse
Alkire l m Delaware Sunday
Now opr n t or sea son Now
The Alkires stopped m
a'fa llable
m ost VM iett es of
v egelab le pla. ts &amp; flowers
Colwnbus and called on the
Auto Sa~
plu s po tted f low ers OUR
In MemO!)
' Robert G1bsqns and the F 0
SPECIALTY ov er 2 000
Whaleys
hang mg baskets ot Pe lunta s
I N M E M O R Y of my hu sband
I vy Geran tums Vme s and
Mrs Sue King had a yard
Oav rd Orl cr who pa ssed awa y
Begon ras
April 17 1958 17 years ago
• sale Fnday. Saturday and
t.. pla ce rs v acant rn my home
TOP QUALITY AT
Sunday
Wh rch can nev er be til ted
LOWEST PRICES
Sadl y m rsse d b y hr s wtf e Ro x rc
992 .5776
CIJnton Gilkey v1s1ted Ava
Or ter and tw o d au q hter s
G1lkey Saturday evemn~
Vrolet Bat ey Pom ero y and
M ildred M rll rro n Rey nold s
SWAP B uy Sell lra de 53 00
Mr Seth Nicholson and Mrs
bu r g
Grand c hild re n an d
msrde and S2 00 ou ts tde al
Allegra W1ll v1s1ted Allee
Qr eal Qrand ch rldr cn 1 grcut
Cr ossroa d s
124 bel w ee n
qreat gran d son
• Epple m a hospital near her
Pome r o v an d Rutl and Ohro
1972 DODGE OART4 OOOR
S2345
Jt 7 1f c .
Every F nd &lt;t.Y Sat urd ay and
Local owner &amp; low m1leage, good whtte wall tires small
daughter m Byesville, OhiO
Sun da y
V 8 engine power steenng factory atr, gold fintsh, blk
J 11 Jl c
Mrs Epple 1s suffenng from
vtnyl top. vmyl mtenor trim radio A clean car
· diabetis
Corn
SHOOT I N G MA T CH
Hollo w Gun Club tu rn frrst
Mr . and Mrs M. A Epple
1971 MATADOR
$1595
Notice
r rght afl er Mr le s Cem etery
viSited m Lancaster, 0 last
4
door local car. air conditioned, full equtpment
Ru t l an d
F ac t o ry c hok e d
YOUR
soulhern
~ Sunday evemng w1 th Louella
guns onl y Su nd a y Apr il 20 1 ORDER
vegetab l e pla n l s now for
p m
1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE
51695
Hamng and Mrs Colburn
de l tver y around May I
4 17 3tc
307 V-8, power steering, good G70 w1de oval fires, rad1o,
Charles R Harr 1S Phon e 843
Don Updegraff , Jr , of
stl ver grey ftntsh, automatic trans lntenor spotless
•
2693
RE WARD lead tng to the
AUanta, Ga IS flymg to ln- S25ar res
4 3 18t c
t and c onvr c t 1on o f
dtana on bustness and wdl fly
per sons w ho stole th e brrd -----~
- -~
--·_
-_·_ _ __
feeder an d c ar batl ery plu s .on to Ohio to vJSlt h1s grandt wo tratl er : trr es and wh eels
mother, Ava G1lkey Saturdar
from rn fr ont of t he Me 1gs
I
co unt y Hom e Phone Mtldr e~ Campbell's Swap 'n •shop
M1ss Brenda B1shop ass1sled
Jl! COb S 99 2 2 4 3 ~ or 992 5469
yard sale &amp; flea market. 2
OPEN EVES. 8:00P. M.
Ava G1lkey Saturday
4 17 3tc
blocks from Dairy Queen,
POMEROY, OHIO
Sunday guests of The Junwr
Jericho Rd., Pt. Pl., W. Va.
A TTEN TIO N SAL E S LA DIE S
Paynes were Mr. and Mrs. Joe
MI SS A ME R I CA DEBB IE
Sat. &amp; Suo , Aprlll2 &amp; 13. 10
1960 CAD I LLAC
390 motor
BR YANT J OIN S K OSCOT
Carsey, Darold Graham and
p s p b p w Phone 843 2802
a.m - 6 p.m. Every weekend
C O S ME T IC S
OP
For
Rent
4 16 3tc
Mr and Mrs Donald Weaver
POR T UNIT Y W I L L NEVER
through Oct. For in! call675BE GRE ATER
J O IN OUR
Mrs Lola Clark and Normar A RM house 6 rooms modern FOR Sale or tr ade - 1971 Pinto
1239.
SALES
TE AM
NOW
conventen c es
gard en
rn good condrtton or trade for
Lee were busmess v1s1tors m
WRITE SA U VA GE S. Box 4
garage and barn_ on Tanners
Datsun truck Call 992 5637
Sy
r
acuse
Oh
10
4S77
9
Pomeroy Wednesday.
Run Longsworth Homestead
4 16 3tc
4 16 31p
"t!'CR your ' 0 11 Of Mrnk '
off Sf Rt 124 Racrne Oh ro
Mr Eugene Young 1s slowly
Cosmetrcs Phone BROWN S
R F D S100 month If destrea
1968 vw Good cond 1t1on S300
1111provmg
99 2 5113 '22 acres bottom land for
Phone 985 4185 after 6 p m
'
1 1 tfc
addttrona l S2S per m onth
4 16 3t c
Mrs Lula Belle Eshebnan ,
Must turntsh references
- - ----who was a med1cal pallent at
Wnte or call Char l es A BIDS b;,ng- accepted on one
1969 Che-vrolet 1 ton flatbed
Dobbrn
17 Arlrngton St
Veterans Memonal Hospital,
Help Wanl!d
truck 350 cu m eng me good
Pawtucket Rhode I s la n d
was returned horne a~d 1s
MOO MOO Da rry Barn Long
20"·31/z HP
cond rl•on One local owner
02860 or (401) 723 4747
Bottom Ohio prefer woman
we reser-ve the rrght to re1ect
4 4 12tc
slowly 1mprovmg
over 20 Phone 318 62M
any and or all b1ds Voto Mfg
Mrs Magg1e Allen, who was
Sales Co 1528 Eastern Ave
- ... .4 13 . 61p
Galltpolts, Ohro
recently man acc1dent. wdl be
22"-3112 H P
4 17 3tc
For ~le
able to be on crutches 1t IS
Self- Propelled
1949 CHEVROLET truck short
reported m another week
wheel base 1 , ton Phone
INDIAN JOE's Sports and CB
Mrs Lomse DIXon has sold
992 3433
Shop Speetals for 10 days w1lh
4 15 Jt c
thrs ad - One only Courter
her bustness m Athens, Ohio
POMEROY LANDMARK
mob il e a m ssb $269 One
Jack W Caney, Mtr
The Lee Bmgs who recently
DODGE
Ptckup ,
anly Royce 602 S142 50 One 1910
Phone tt2. 2.111
automat tc
PhOne 742 3742
only Royce 605. S159 50 one
lost the1r home by f1re, have
• J;&gt;
Shakespeare TMA S24 95
4 13 6tc
MASON, W VA.
purchased a trailer .
One only Shakespeare double
tr ucker S26 SO One only
1972 PlYMOUTH Ouster 318 2
CONTACT
Mrs Oma Anx of Racme NOW selltng Fuller ~~~rush
barr el Nrce car 51 560 or
Products. phone 992--3410
Shakespeare wh rp, $8 95 One
spent a day recently w1th Rex
only HY Garn G P S12 95
take o ver payments 336
1: 1 24 tfc
One only D 104 desk m•ke,
Broadway Mreldleport Oh10
and Jettie ArlX
- ~---- --- - ----PA RASOL BoutiQue announces
S40 9S One only asllltlc 555
Phone 992 5301
Mr and Mrs. Frank Graves
speCials of 10 percent off on
no1se1ess truck mtke S25 95
4 13 SI C
all frostrng from Apr d 15
One Uneme tnc Base SIBS
of Michigan are expected m
ttt'Pough 30 Located next to
One only Coleman lantern
Fnday for a VlSI t w1 th hiS
the Skate A Way R:ollmg
Sl 7 95 , One only used 22
For Sale
Rfn k
Phone
985 4141
marlrn bolt act ron , SJS , One
uncle, Guy Bolm
PULL type tractor disc Hugh
Operator Sandra Kerns
only cap ball pts tol S32 SO
Letfhel t
RI
2
Pomeroy
Mrs Mmme McGrath who
4 13 12f C
One only new 22 sldew tnder
Phone 992 5918
w mag cylinder , S42 SO, One
spent a vacation in Flonda, SHOOTING Mat c h Wrndy Wantetl To Buy
4 16 Jtc
on l y 25 auto , $42 SO One
8 x 12 DUMP body w rth cab
says she would much rather
R rdg e Gun Cl ub Go through
on tv 32 30 P•Sto1, S33 SO Stop
protec tor Complete Phon e
1973 APACHE Camper '5700
Harr rsonvr l le on Rt
143
and save at th e Indian s live m Oh10
843 206.d e\lentngs
Phone 992 3366
Follow arrows Shoo t 1ng 6's
SAVE WAM PUM 308 Page
4 16 Jtc
4 11 SIC
Mrs May Mason stayed a
7 ~ 8 s and 9 s Apr rl 20 1
Mrdd l eport Phone 992 3509
p m Free r efreshments
4 10 lOtc
day with Eunice Bradfield
HOR SE S &amp; PONIE S Phone 742
1972 HONDA SL 350 CC h
A 14 Si p
326 4
cellent condtlron Also 1950
wh1le Mrs. Bud Douglas went
NEW Sears -van tty m trror 1
4 3 tf c
r ord to sel l or trade for van
GUN SHOOT on M rle H1ll Road
medtcrne cabrnel and com
shoppmg
Phone 992 3897 •
factory choked g uns only
moae All tor S200 Phone 992
The Rutland Road reSidents
4 11 12tc
Sponsored
by
lhcrne GOOD used lra ctor t tre s1ze
5817
ll x2 8 Phone 949 3690
Amer 1c an L egron Saturday
have been mformed they may
4 15 Jtc
Apnl 19 ~ p m
4 17 3tc
FORD Tractor with •" side
rece1ve water m the near
4 16 ltc
mower runs goad and good
RAD
IO
am
fm
radro
STEREO
1964 A ND older corns w rl l pay
- - ---- - - - - - - - - - rubber S950 985 3S94
8
track
!
ape
combmat1on
future
24c tor Clrmes 60c fo r Quar
AUCTION Thursday n tght 7
Balance S106 92 or t erms Call
3 30 7tp
Mr and Mrs. Dale Whaley
ters Sl 20 for ha l -ves Wrll
P m at Mason A uctron ,
992 3965
also
buy
sell
or
trade
U
S
Horton St tn Mason , W Va
4 15 tt c TWO 12 tn plows 3 pt httch
and Mr and Mrs Clintvn
corns and c urrency Ca l l
Constgnments welcome
$185 Also, 2 14 rn plows, 3 pt
Gdkey w•ll attend a bowling
Roger
Wamsley
74
2
36)1
Phone (304) 773 54~1
h rtch S200 Phone 985 3594
t97 3 HARLEY Oavrdson 350 SX
4
4
12tp
2 2 tfc
tournament Saturday and
1 800 m lies S600 Phone 985
3 30 7fp
33 41 between 8 am and 6
Sunday at Wdmmgtvn
JUDO Gee Phon e 992 2797
pm
CLOSE OUT on new Zig Zag
4 t 1 6tc
Monday guests for dmner at
4 IS 12tp
sew mg machtnes For sewing
stretch fabr~cs buttonholes.
UNITED STATES
the M A Epple horne were
r
•
•
t950 FERGUSON tractor, new
fancy des1gns, etc Palnt
OLD furn1tvre , 1ce boxes, brass
OF AMERICA
rubber and pamt A 1 con
Mrs Mmme Foit, Mrs Louella
sltghrly blemtshed Cho1ce of
beds or comp lete households
FEDERAL POWER
drtton SJ 500 Phone 985 359~
carrying case or stw rng
Wrrte M 0 M il ler, R1 4
COMMISSION
Hamng and Mrs Letha Cowen
stand S49 80 cash or terms
Pomeroy
,
Ohro
Call
99
2
7760
"' IS 6tp
2751
Pro1ect No
of Colwnbus
available Phone 992 7755
10 7 74
Ohro Power company &gt;

Sentinel Classifieds
2 SIGNS

OF
QUALITY

Home Building
Room Additions
and Garages

•104,95(K0)

Representative

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

WANTED

----- - ----

•

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

Fairview
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Sunday dinner guests of Mr
and Mrs. Herbert Sayre were
Br1ce Sayre and son of
Jackson, Mr and Mrs Danny
Sayre of Columbus, Paul
Sayre Brooks Sayre of
Syracuse called on the Sayres
in the afternoon
Mr and Mrs Russell Roush
and fam1ly, Mr and Mrs Dana
Lewis were Sunday dmner
guests of Mr and Mrs Ronald
Russell and chtldren at Wolf

Pen
Mr and Mrs Herbert Roush
VISited Mr and Mrs Ott Bostvn
at Racme Sunday evening
PUBLIC NOTICE
Not rce to Aggregate Vendors
Sealed b1dS Wi ll be recetved
bY The Board of County Com
m issioners of Metgs County
OhtO lit the off tee of The County
Comm1SStoners rn The Court
House
rn The Vtllage of
PomerOy , Ohto 4S769, untrl 9 30
A M on the 22nd day of April
1975 for the furnrshrng of al l
kinds ariel s•zes of aggregates
that may be reQu tred by The
Mergs
Cou nty
Htghway
Department
Esttmated quan t tty of all
aggregates
requ rred ,
ap
prox1mately 60 1000 tons
Btd SpectfiCatlons To Be
Submrtted As Fol lows
Brd pnce per ton fob loaded
at vendor s phmt for the varrous
kind and srze of aggregates that
may be required whrch will
confirm to The Perttnent Sta te
of Oh1o Department of H1gh
ways
Conl truct1on
and
Metenats Spectflcat•ons. ex
cepttno pee or shot gravel
whrch 1S an ungraded matenal
Wtth respect to the atoreSl!ld
est rmated quant•t res the ven
dors shall understand that no
guarantee rs grven as to the
actual quantities of aggregates
to be furn1shed, but each vendor
she l l be requtred to lurnlsh any
par t of the actual reQurrements
as ordered dur rng the ~975
season
Prices on fh 1S bid shall be tn
effect tor the rematnder of the
year 1975
On the en-velope contatnrng
each bld 1 the nafTle and address
of the -vendor must be shown
and plainly marked ' Aggregate
BidS "
Proposals are to be returned
on bid forms supplied bV the
vtndor , and will be opened on
the dete and place spectf•ect
a Dove
The Metgs county Com
missioners reserve the ng:ht to
accept or rttect any or all brds
or any part thereof
Yours,
•
Martha Chambers, Clerk • 1
Melga County eoarct
~'··
of Commissioners
.

l•l If' 17, 21c

NOTICE OF APPLICATION JUNK l!utos , complete and
FOR PRELIMINARY PERMIT
delivered to our yard We prck
UNCONSTRU CTED PROJECT
up auto bodres and buy all
I M•rch 31 , ltt Sl
ktnels of scrap metals and
1ron Rider 's Sal-vage , St Rt
Publrc n0t1ce tS hereby g rven
1241 Rt 41, Pomeroy Oh.ro
that appltcatlon for prel rmmary
Cll l l 992 5468
perm iJ has been ft led under the
10 11 tfc
Fedef·al Power Act (16 U S C
79la 82Sr J by the Ohro Power CASH pa!d for all makes and
Company (correspondence to
models of mobtle homes
Frank N Bten Executtve V1ce
Phone area code 61( A2J 9531
President Ohra Power Com
4 13 tfc
pany 301 Cleveland Avenue
s w , Canton Ohto 44702 and A
Dowd , Esq , Vrce
Joseph
Prestelent and General Counsel.
lf.l mtlll!'
Amertcan
Electrt c Power TRAILER SP'ACE
north of Mergs Htgh Schoo l on
Servtce Corporation , Two
old R: t 33 Ptrone 992 29411
Broadway
New York , New
1 23 tfc
York 1000 41 tor proposed
Pro tect No 27 51 to be known as
Galltpol rs
Hydroelectr•c 3 RM and bat h furn rshed apt
Ultlrt1es patd ~56 North 4th
Pro1ect. located rn Gall ra
St Mrddleport
County Oh 10 on the Ohio Rrver
The project affects navtgable
4 9 tfc
waters of I he Untted States and
lands of the u s and wot,lld HOU SE rn Pomeroy 1 or 2
uttltze water from a govern
bedrooms
550 a ' month
ment dam
Phone 992 2568 or 985 4209
The Galltpotrs Protect would
4 16 5tc
cons rst of a powerhouse con
structed at the west end (OhiO TRAILER apT Phone 992 52~8
srde l of the u S Corps of
4 16 IOIC
Eng 1neers Galltpol rs Locks and
Dam The proposed powerhouse 2 BEDROOM S prrv&amp;te bat no
wou ld ha-ve an rnstallatron of
pets SIOO per month Phone
low head generatmg un tfs
99 2 3863
totaling appro x tmately AO 000
~ IS 3tc
I&lt;.W Normal poo l elevat1on of
tne Gatl rpolls reser'Jorr rs 538 ONE bedroom prrvate bath
fee t Applicant states that the
s100 per month Phone 992
Installation wou ld be s•m rlar to
3863 No pets
Applrcent 's proposed Racme
4 IS Jtc
Hydroelectr.c Protect No 2570
loca t ed tmmedlate l y upstream
fM II e 2371
The Installa ti on APT lrke new J rooms wi t h
large bath , tabletop range,
would be coordmated w1th the
large c loset E as t Mam St ,
proposed replacement and
Pomeroy See to apprec1ate
modern•zat1on of the Corps
Phone Gall rpolts Clur rng day
~x1stlng Galllpolts Locks and
446 7699
e-v enmgs 446 9539
Dam recommended by the
4 10 tfc
Board of Rivers and Harbors A
tour m11e long 69kV trans
F URNISHED
itPllrlment
mrsston lrne would connect thiS
adults on l y 1n Mrddleport
generatrng fac.ltty with the
Phone 992 3874
Amertcan
Electrtc
Power
System No construct10n rs
3 25 ftc
authortzed
under
t he
preltmmary permrt
SMALL 2 bedroom double wrde
Appltunt proposes to market
mob1le hOme near Pomeroy
the electrtc power dev eloped by
Off Rt 7 by pass no Chtldren
the pro1ect to meet the loads
or pets Phone 992 7017 or call
and expected l oad growth of tts
992 7666
customers rn the Stale of Oh•o
4 11 3tc
Any person desiring to be
heard or to make protest w rth 12 xS2 2 bedroom lra rl er l rke
reference to satd apphcatton
new SJS week ut rltttes pa td
should on or before June 9 1975
Phone 992 3324
file wtth the Federal Power
4 11 tfc
Commisston washtngton 0 c
20426 , pe t lt rons to mtervene or
protests '" accordanc e wrth th e 7 BEDROOM doub l e wide
mobtle hOme '" Syracuse No
requtrements of the Com
c htl dren or pels Call 99 2 2J 1t
m rssron•s Rules ofL.Practtce and
after 6 p m Depost t requrr ed
Procedure ( 18 CF1&lt; 18 or t 10).
3 11 lfc
All protests fried w rth the
Commtnion Wtll be cons•dered
'cOlJNT~V Mobrle Home Park ,
by 1t '" delermtntng the ap
Rt 33 , ten mrles north of
propnate act ron to be taken, but
Pomeroy
Lllrge tots w 1th
w tll not ser-ve to make the
concrele pat1os, stdewa lks,
protestants
parties to
a
runners
and Off
street
proceed•no Persons wtsh rng to
parktng Plione 992 7479
become part res to a proceed rnQ
12 31 tfc
or to parlt cr pate us a party 1n
any hearmg th ere rn m ust ftle
petl ftons to tntervent 1n ac cord
.J and 4 ROOM t urn tshed and
ance w rth the Comm rss ron 'S
unfurnished
apartmen t s
Rules The appl1 cat•on tS on t tl e
Phone 99'2 5434
W1lh t t) e Commrss ron and
4 12tfc
l!"Vailable for public tnsp ect1on
PRIVATE mettlng r49m for
K. enneth F Plumb
eny organizat ion p~~ ~ 992
Sec retary
J97S
3 11 lfc

For Rent

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

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

-- --- -

--'"'(. -r--

TWO lots m Metgs Memory
Gardens Phone 949 4992
4 15 3tc

12 18 tfc

--------- -----Yard Sale

1970 350 JOHN Deere dozer
canopy hydrai.llr c blade, like
new condrhon S7 000 Phone
98S 3S94
4 15 6tp

YARD SALE
also many
fhmgs tn house
Upper
M rnersv ll le Phone 992 3081
4 16 21P

196S JOHN
Deere dozer
canopy comp reb uilt 8 ft
blade 56 000 Phone 985 3594
4 15 6tp

YARD Sale 2 mrles up Batley
Run Wednesday and Thurs
day Phone 992 3965
4' 15 2tp

SNAPPER r tding mower for PUBLIC SALE
books, best
sale Phon e 992 3222 After
setecttons n ew and old
5 30 p m
mostly non ftct,on better sets
and smg les
Covers most
~ 15 3tc
areas
A l so
Avons
LP
records, mrsc Aprtl 19 and 20
VAR IETY of cabbage tomato
740 Htgh St Middleport
and pepper plants Also
4 17 2tc
cauliflower, broccoli brussel
sprouts egg plants Beddtng
p lants
pansres petun1a YAR 0 SALE - Done ld Manuel
marrgold
sa i 'Jia
phlox
restden c e , Greenwood
por t ulaca , agertum, atyffum
Cemetery Road , Ractne
1mpattens coleus Varrety of
Baby tlems, clothes etc
geran tums also pots of
F riday noon and Saturday
petun1as and mums Hangmg
Apr1l 18 and 19
baskets petuntas
rvy
4 16 Jtc
gerantum. lobel1a ferns
- wandermg 1ews porch boxes
large hearty red azaleas
Cl eland Greenhouse Racme
Geraldme Cleland
~ELL your mobrle home for
4 13 ffC
cash lS homes wanted, 1958
thru 1972 models Phone C614l
\.JSED parts , Frye's Truck and
446 1425 GalltpOI IS
Auto Parts Rutland , Ohio
3 9 78fc
Phone (614 ) 742 6094
I 22 78fp 24
)I;
B ONE
bedroom
housetrarter oood condrtlon
F ISH BAIT - ftSh ba it We have
See
at
James
Stewart
our bait In, ntght crawlers
restdence m West Columbia
large mea l worms, worms,
Phone ( 304 l 773 5893
red worms. blood ba it, lnd1an
~ 16 Jtc
Joe s Sport ana CB Shop, 308
Page St M rddleport Phone 1972
GREENBRIER
2
992 3509
bedroom
front
k 1tch en.
4 9 30tc
raised drn1ng area fuel 011
furnace eye level oven, m
surface untt Can be seen at
FURNITURE bargarns l rke
K ingsbury Home Sales and
new Bedroom , stud10 couch
Serv 1ce Inc 1100 E Main St ,
3 pc small breakfast set 16
Pomeroy Phone 992 7034
tn fans ethel' th rn gs Owner
41 15 Jt&lt;;
movtng Phone 992 3081
4 16 2tp

""- -

Mobile Homes For Sale

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

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

COLLECTORs
plates
Chr1stmas W rnter scenes
Western and m ise (good and
better) Must sell at cost
Phone 992 2041

Pets For Sale
AKC Reg Doberman Plncher
pupptes Phone 388 9991
4 11 41tc

RCJdlato
Service

ALUMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

I

I

..... ,..... :' I

mo

Employment Wanted
WILL do Odd lObS ancl haul
brush Phone 992 5327
4 15 6tc
REMODEL I NG
plumb i ng ,
heat1ng , and all types of
ger.eral
repair
work
guaranteed 20 years fi' X
pertence Phone 992 2409
3 11

ttc

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

6, ROOM house With bath, J
bedroom, full basement, gas
heat. h w floor, wall to wall
carpet Close to schoo l '"
Pomeroy Phone 992 3097
3 9 S21c

,-------------1

1 • •your phone w.i 11 Jinch I
••cash results", too, •h•nJ
1you
place an act .ton lant 1
I Ad. You
can ull furniture,
l•ppl uncu, clothu • .tdo.l
l••n• of other unuaed but I
p•nful
t
I

.lt•••

L.-------------1

BEAUTIFUL new home on
lake , J bedrooms, bath &amp; 1h ,
cl!rretmg drapes. btg den
Cal 992 3493
He
3 24

HOU SE In Mrddleport pr i ced
reasonable Phone (3041 882
2821
~ 16 3tc
14 RM LARGE bnck home
Ideal for 1 larg e famrly or two
3 bedroom apartments Call
992 3173
4 13 6tc
2 BEDROOM home new foundatton roofrng cement
porches, thermo pane wm
dows storm doors natural
gas furnace wht te alum rnum
sldrno bla ck shutters krtchen
cab1nets paneling, cell1ng
tile floors refrntshed
low
heatmg btl I n1ce location ct ty
water Phone 98 5 4107
4 4 26tc
2 BEDROOM trlltler and lot'"
town Phone 992 3975 or 992
2571
4 9 lfc

'

Ph. 992-2114.

Lim"tona &amp; Fill Dirt
Commtrctai·Rtsldantlal

CHIHUAHUA puppies
742 4465

Phone
4 11 3tc

HORSE trailers for sa le or
trade Phone 388 9991
~

S TARCRA F" T

17 .JIC

WEEKEND
~ PECIAL S
1J'7 ' deluxe
17 024 now SS ,S29 r-eid down
Sl SOO up Auto awnmgs
Reese h 1tches arr cond 20
pet off complete parts and
servrce department
We
trade
hnancmg arranged
Ca m p Conley Starcrilft Sal£'s
Rt 67 N , PI PI NI Sftnt W V a
.. 1' '•

I~HAL.E;S!

;··;;~~Ti;l

:

·OOMPANY

.

Pomerofl

SALES&amp; SERVIC
992-3092

Locus! St.
OhiO 59 I

:=::¢~::::=~::===~~..,••ucrHted

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

HOU SE for sale m Cool v ille, 3
bedrooms l rvtng room Cltnrng
room built rn ' kitchen com
btnat ron bath , utlltty room .
small basement , block garage
and garden space Phone 667
3501
4 11 3tc
HOUSE for sale in Portland,
good well , 2 acres of ground
S6 200 Phone 843 7292
4 1S 6tc
- - - _,_
SERVICE station and garage
Rutland
Will fmance or
l ease Call 742 5052

---------

261c

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

grass
5 Negligent
11 Italian
coin
1% Show

4 3 301p

I ~

13 English
river

GASOUNE ALLEY

6 30 tfc

SEWING MACHINE , Repair.,
servtce, all mak11, 992 2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy,
Authoriztd Singer Sales and
S&amp;rvlce We sharpen Scissors

3 29 ffc

@

.'

water a~Jallable.

mtnerals ,
recreation, good

close to
hunting, LESS THAN S125 an
acre.

POMEROY rental

or

id eal lor

couple,

1 story

frame, bath, part basement,
large lot, porches, ASKING
ONLY $4,000
HARRISONVILLE AD. NEW HOME, 1 Acre, 2 BR,
bath, kitchen w1!h rei &amp;
range ,
carp,ted.
lull
basement with lo•ely
recreation room, carport &amp;

storage, all electric $22,700
NEW RT. 33 - 68 Acres,
barn, 19 ,500 now trees.
welnut, while pine, short leal

lot Rural water A qutet place
to relax after work

•

IN TOWN - 2'h acres of
wooded land near utilities
70 ACRES - Out 33 near water
line
BUILDING LOT- W1th water,
nat
gas,
Pomerov

and

sewer

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

11 ROOMS - Converted Into a
double rental 2 baths. nat.

playground
LIST YOUR PROPERTIES
WITH THE LIVE WIRES,
WHO WILL SHOW AND TRY
TO SELL THEM. WE HAVE A
LOT
OF
PROSPECTS
WANTING TO BUY. CALLf92.
3325

St, Middleport
3S09

•

timber, excellent hunting
ANSWER TO YOUR HOME
HUNTING
PROBLEMS
CAN
PROBABLY
BE
FOUND WITH US CALL

NOW

992·2259

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
Wildwood Estates, at Flatwoods, turn left off
St. Route 7, at Five Points, now selling
bu1ldmg lots in all sizes. All utilities available,
zoned for $20,000 and up homes for your
protec;tion

GEORGE S. HOBSTE II ER JR.
Real Estate Broker
Phone 985-41U After 4:00P.M.
Box 101, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

. .,____. .M
_ ------ --

THURSDAYS AND FRIDAYS AT 10:15 A.M. ON

WMPO AM-FM.
'

(J~

-;;,·-'

23·AUCI· 22) You'll
tasl tor a rBSpon-

Stblllty you neglected Don t
attempt to sweep It under the
rug again

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept, 22) A

EvEtnts wrlllead YOIJ to make an
1mportant adJUStment In your
lifestyle this year At ftrst unwelcome, 1t wtll later pro-ve advantageous
11 INEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

WIN AT BRIDGE

•"

came next w1th the ace of clubs
gomg on the second one The
kmg and queen of clubs
collected the ace and kmg of
spades
Now Lancelot led h1s Jack of
spades East CO!Ild 1take h1s
queen then or lat~r but Lancelot
still had a trump to ruff on case
he had to and of course the rest
of the spades were good
The way the cards lay
Lancelol had several ways to
make h1s contract and qu1te a
few that would leave h1m on the
ash can H1s way Insured
success agamst anr dlvlston of
the adverse cards

17

EAST
.Q6542

·-

• 10 3 2

.J97S4

SQUTH
• J 10987
•AQJ 1094

·-

•KQ
Both vulnerable

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it..:
AXYDLBAAXB
II LONGPBLLOW
One letter simply standi for another. In thlt sample A II
Uled for the three L's. X lor !be two O's, etc. Single letters.
apo.strophu, lbe length and formation of tbe worda are aU
blnta. Each day tbe &lt;ode letters are dllrerent.

CRYI'TOQUOTBS
ZHZQK

YMOZ

IZVVYL

~~~

u'•

SEX

LET
to:",•-.l&gt;lll.l&lt;~

SHOWMAW
TRltK 1::tATER

GM

E

LGNAYJN

AESGN

CZNR

LAGVZ

E

RYTZ

RGMCVZ
OEJCAN-

BGM
AJSSEQX
Yesterday's Cryploqaote: AN OUNCE 'OF KEEPING YOUR
MOUTH SHUT IS WORTH A POUND OF EXPLANATION.SOURCE UNKNOWN
lt711Qq

Apri~

.

pal Is .getttng peeved because
of arr old obltgatlotl you ve
overli;Klked Square thing's as
soon as possible

tAKQ

&lt;C

KALEIDOSCOPE

LEO

be called to

•to 8 6 3 2

suffh

,.JOME
Improv em-ent
and~
Repair Servlte Anythlnt
fhctd around the home, fro!'!!\
roof to basement You wiiJ4
l!.k• our work end r•tes)
,...hone 742 5081
, !l"

EXPRESS IT ON

You II soft.pedal your prinCiples where the youngsters
are concerned today and tn dulge them too much Careful

• 8 7 53

40 PeMyU IntensifJ
«% Numerical

~

GOT SOMETHING ON YOUR MIND?

PISCES (Fob. :!0-March 20)

your mates vlewpomt 1n a
dectston affecting the tam1ly

as fodder

.

• 16 301f
- - - ---------- ...

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

CANCER (June 21-JUIJ 22) 11
you challenge pef sons In
authorlljl today, you II on ly
tempt them to show you just
how much muscle they really
have

38 Meander
39 Store,

1

12 29

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Foll. 18)
It w11l be d!Htcult for subor·
dmates to please you today
YQ4 don t know your own mind
Make sure orders are clear
before volcmg them

leaf

Refri51eratlon, A C, Heating~
Pl'lone 992 3S09
\ t'

pine , poplar and others,
about 6 yrs old , some cutting

GI!MINI (MOJ 21-Junt 20)
Don t lend anything to a frtend
you've had tro uble wUh before
over something borrowed Thts
leopard hasn t changed hts
spots

36- bicycle

4 16 30to
--·---·------ -P &amp; J Home Marntenanct

-

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon
11) You 're priming the pump
for a problem rf you rgnore

WEST
·'3'~ •

32Wooden
core
33 Small
child
Sf Palm

Phone 992 1
,

-

SAGITTARIUS (No¥. 23·Dec
21) Your conclus1ons regar·
dmg a shared Interest are tnBC·
curate
Some lnformatton
needed for a valid appratsal 1s
betng wtthheld

fldential matter could be your
downfall Your words could
haunt you later via 'instant
replay" • from an unpleasant
source

NORTH (D)
.IlK
• K 62
tJ987651

Z9 Plactd

-LAWN
- - - mower
- ------- -repair 308 Pag~

gas, furnau, city water near

You'll do things for the sake of
expediency that are not to your
advantage Be patient Time !s
vour ally Shortcuts will work
agatnst you

Gad! North takes not a trick

Zl Inclination
r7- sauce
Z8 Killer
whale

J.1L ABNER

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAI~
- Sweepers, toasters Irons~·
all small appliances Lawn
mower, next to State H lgl'lway
Garage on Route 1 Phone 985 1
3825
~
.o1 16 tfc

in

For FrlctaJ, April11, 1175
ARIEl (,._h 21-Aprl 11)

co-star

WILL TRIM or cut trees and
shrubbery
Clean
ouf
basements, attic, etc Phone
9-49 3221 or 142 A4·il
•
4 8 26t"

who ts business mmded

Subordtnates wtll rebel today 1f
you treat them in an arrogan'
manner Conl lder their
feelmgs Lead by example

:15 Lake's

LAWSON &amp; McCoy Painting &amp;
Roofing Painting inside or
out. Roofing hole In roof or:
new roof Cl!ll 361 G4S6 Free
esttmates
41' 12tC!

RACINE - Large 7 room
houso!'V..1th a 4 room rental and
large lot
2 BUSINESS BUILDINGS with rentals, located In M1d
dleport Good places for one

Yesterda)"sADIIwer
!2 Stubby or Z9 CommemSanuny
oratlve
Z3 Apposite
pillar
24 Inflame
30 Total
with anger
attendaac:e
25- of
0 (2 wds.)
Hoots
31 stimulate
2li Navlgllted 35 Prayer word
the Thames 17 Pickpocket
rl They
(sl)
may be
311 Willard of
common
fame

organ

- - --- "='"-~------

RUTLAND
AN EX
CELLENT BUY ~T JUST
S8.BOO 1 story frame, 2 BR,
bath, natural gas furnace,
carpeting, porch, large
concrete block building and
garage 25x49 II, large lot
REEDSVILLE - 135 Acres,

lash

U Of words
15 Sweet
potato
II Tree
17 Valuable
rock
18 Not long
ago
20 Vase
21 - de
France
!2 One kind
19 - at
of breeches · windmills
Z3 Breathing

READY MIX CONCRETE- aT."
livered fight to your" prolect
Fan
and
easy •
Free
es timates Phone 992 32N
Goegle rn Ready Mix Co,

OOCER work, land clearing by
the acre, hourly or contract
Farm ponds , roads, etc
Large dozer and operator
with over 20 years ex
perlence Pullins Excavating,
Pomeroy, Ohio Phone 992 •
24178
12 19-tfc

smell

4 Declare
verboten
5 Tongue6 All
7 RllSSlllll
community
8 Approaching
shore
9 Like an
old fighter
10 Greek
moon
goddess
16 Cruel

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Hov. 22)

TAURUS (April 20-1111)' 20)
Talkmg too freely about a con·

EYEFUL

DOWN
I - ptgeon
2 Adversary
3 Swell

ACROSS •
I Kind of
suburban

West

41 17 31p

AZURE BEACON

~e"''"
~·r'
ltp THOMAS JOSErH

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonllble RATES
Phone
446 4782 Gall i po1ts
John
R usse11 owner
41 9 tfc

OFF RT Jl - 2 bedroom
mob1le home patio and large

I

Jumbl•o SOUSE

A...wer1 Thf' {Wrtwn U'ho doe,. lhrt4 may lrnr e ~~~
mu1talt.f'n- ERASE

S~82

Middleport Oh lo

(Auwert lomorTGwJ
Yen~.,.·.

W ILL PAINT roots and houses
free estimates Phone 992

Real Estate For S31e

49

LITTLE

-----.--.---------CARPET lnstallatron, S1 25 per
Call R1chllrd
Phone 843 2647

by the above Clltoon.

I ,. .... a~~~... I r I 1 )( 1 I I l

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

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

yard

r]

Now orranre the circled letterw
to form the IUrpriH aruwer, u

23-0cl. 23) In

partnershtp situations today ,
be certain both partners are tn
~ccord about the goal or a
senous nh may ensue

COME$&gt; UP AFIE~
IO&gt;OING OlJ11 '

ISWoNTI I

C BR AOF'O~ 0 , Auctroneer
J&amp;O TREE Trrmmmg , 20 vears
Complete Serv1ce
exper rence , rnsured, free
Phone 9A9 3821 or 949 3161
esttml!tes
Call 992 3057 .
Raclne.Ohto
Coolv•lte Phone 11) 667 30A1
Crltt Bradford
4 16 12tp
5 1 tfC EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
PLUMBING
heet rng, reparr
ana bllckhoe work , septic ,
and m sta l lat ron , electrica l
tanks Instilled, dump trucks
water t:rump repetr roofrng
and lo boys for hire , w ill haul
roof and house painting
fi.U dtrt, top soli. limestone L
genera l repl! tr
Reasonable
grevel. Calf Bob or Roger
rates, tree estimates IS yr
Jerters day phone 9927089,
expertence
Cal l Cherl es
night phone t923525 or 992
Smclatr, 985 412 1 or 992 2221
5232
4 4 12tc
211 ttc '
'SEPTIC
TANKS
cleaned
Modern San It at ron, 992 395A or
992 7349
9 18 lfc

"LIBRA (Sopt.

I I

4 10 1 mo

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

:ro, Get
Smar115, Elec Co 33
6 oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6, E lee Co 20, Per
sonallty &amp; Behavioral Development 33
6 30-NBC News 3,4,15, ABC News 13, Bewitched 6, CBS tyews
8,10, Zoom :ro
.•
•
7 ocJ-Tru!h or Cons 3,4, Lawrence Welk 6, Bowling for
Dollars 6, What's My Line 8. Aviation Weather 2Q,33, News
10, Jimmy Dean 13, I Spy-15
7 30-Porter Wagoner 3, Pop Goes the Country 4,8, New Candid
Camera 6, Black Perspective on the News 20,33, Treasure
Hunt 10, To Tell the Trut~ 13
8 DO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,15, Night Salker 6, 13, Think Poslllve
Updale4, Comedy Special 8,10 Washington Week In Review
20,33
8 JG-Chlco&amp; The Man 3,4, Baseball15, We'll Get By 8,10. Wall
Street Week 20,33
9 DO-Rockford Flies 3.4, JuiJe My Favorite Th1ngs 6,13, NBA
Play Off 8,10, Masterpiece Theatre 20 , Consumer Survival
,(&lt;Jt 33
9 30-Aklgnmenl America 33
10 oo-F!ollce Woman 31 4, Get Chrlst&lt;e Love' 6,13, News 20,
Paul Nuchlms 33
f1 00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15, ABC News J3
11 3Q-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, W1de World Mystery 13, Movie

TIVINE

PHONE 992·7665

R•dtng Tradors

20,33, Ironside 13

S 3o-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge Lodge

I I

Reasonable Rates

Also Aepaors

S oo-FBI 3, Andy Griffith B.. Mister Rogers' Neighborhood

"Web of Violence" 10. Janak! 33.
1 oo-Midnlghl Speclai3,4,1S, Wide World Mystery 6, News 13
1 15-Movle " Talk About a Stranger" 10
2 30-Slar Trek 4
3 3~Mo\rle "Captain Newman, M D " 4
S 30-Movle "Where the Bullets Fly" 4

UDG/E

FREE ESTIMATES

Chain
Precision
Ground

Tomorrow 8,10, To Be Announced 33

12 .15--Eiec Co JJ
12 ~NBC News 3,15
l oo-News 3; All My Children 6, 13, Phil Donahue 8, Young &amp;
The Restless 10, Not For Women Only 15
1 30-First Ladles' Diaries 3,4,15; Let's Make a Deal 6,13, As
the World Turns 8,10
'
2 0()-SIO,OOO Pyramid 6, 13, Gu1dlng Ugh! 8,10
2 30-Big Showdown 6,13; Edge of Night 8,10
3 oo-Another World 3,4,15, General Hospital 6, 13, Price Is
Right 8,10, Bill Moyers' Journal International Report 20
3 30-0ne Ute to Live 13, Lucy Show6, Match Game 8,10
4 oo-Mr Cartoon 3. I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset tS,
Gilligan's Is 6, Taltlelales 8, Sesame Sf 20,33, Movie
"Inferno" 10, Mike Douglas 13
4 3o-Bewltched 3, Merv Griffin 4, Mod Squad 6, Lucy Show B,

"Ttle House of Fear" 6, Movie "The Mummy' ' B. Movie

Pleasant Ridge
Pomeroy, Ohio

. .A
.
JiG
.

6 15-Engllsh 505 3
'
6 25-Farm Report 13
6 30-Five Minutes to L1ve By 4, News 6, Bible Answers 8,
Public Affairs 10, Blue R1dge Quart~! 13
6 35-Columbus Today 4
6 45-Mornln~ Report 3, Farmtlme 10
7 oo-Today 3,4,15; AM America 13,6, CBS News 8,10
8·00-Lassie6, Capt Kangaroos, Popeye10, SfsameSt 33
8 25-Capt Kangaroo 10
B JO-Big Valley 6~
9 oo-A M. 3 Phil Donahue 4,15, Rocky &amp; His Friends 8,
Morning with D J 13
9 25-Chuck White Reports 10
9 3o-Not For Women Only 3, Dinah 6, Galloping Gourmet 8.
Tattletales 10, New Zoo Revue 13
10 D&lt;h-Ceiebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4,15, Joker's Wild 8,10, Dinah
13
10 JG-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15 Gambit 8,10
11 oo-High Rollers 3,4,15, One Life to Live 6, Now You See It
8,10, E lee Co 20

U111Cramble~heoe fwr Jumbl..,
one letter to each square, to
Corm four ordrnary words

0. J. LAUDERMILT
ROOFING

WILKINSON
SMALL

11 ·30-Hollywood Squares 3,15. Brady Bunch 6,13; News 4,
Love of Ute 8,10; Sesame 51 20,33
11 55-Graham Kerr 8, Dan Imel's World tO
12 ()()-Jackpot 3, 15, Password 6,13, Bob Braun's 50·50 Club 4.
News 8,10
12 JO-B lank Check 3, 15, Split Second 6,13, Search for

Bonanza 15

J}tg~~®"'-' lotow''J .-I,_.

777 PUrl SlrHI
MlddlatN1rl, Ohio
l'honatt2-5167orf92..:JN1 : .
.

Minerals on 20 acres
TOMATO PLANT S, Strong
4 17 Jtc
healthy
seed l i ngs
18 ..
va.rret 1es
Dozen 20 cents
Qu rsenberry Syracuse Ohio 2 MONTH old blllck regtstereel
.a 17 Sip
poodle Wtth papers Phone
992 2803
KAWA SAKI 500 Phon e Harold
4 16 4t t;
Hager 949 5924
" 17 Jtp

41£ I3R8,A.T' IS
aAD evaJ Wl4f;N I

Ooza~Backhoo,Trucks

SMITH N.ELSON
MOTORS. INC.

PH. 949-5184

v~~

Water, Elac:trlc, G81, S.W.r
fines, lnstollad
Work
guoranfaacl.

... ~ ~···

!From the largest Truck o;{
'Bull'dozer Radiator to. the
'smallest Heater Cojre
'
Nothan Biggs
Radialor Stoeclohst

FREE ESTIMATES
44 1

Ph 992·3993
4·10 1 mo

E«PeRIENCED

10 oo-Movln' On 3,4, 15, Harry 0 6,13
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15,20; ABC News 33
11 30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Wide World Special 13, F B1 6.
Movie "Bronk" B. Movie "Rhapsody" 10. Janak! JJ
12 3Q-Wide World Special 6
1 oo-Tomorrow 3, Pilot Film 81 News 13
FRIDAY, APRIL 18,1975
6 DO-Sunrise Semtnar 4, Sunrise Semester

LA~~!~~~~~ER

4 17 1 mo

GLEN R.
BISSELL

8U5TER!

Blown Into Wolls &amp;Attics
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING . SOFFtTT
GUTTERS· AWNINGS

992-S776

..--------,•

BUT I'll 6E LIKE
A FATHEJ'Z TO

Blown
Insulation Services

Now open tor season Now
avatlable - rhost vanettes ot
vegetable plants a. flowers
plus potted f lowers OUR
SPECIALTY over 2, 000
hangrng baskets of Petunias,
tvy Gerantums, Vtnes and
Beg on ras
TOP QUALITY AT
LOWEST PRICES

Syrlcuse,
Carl Jacob, Sales

NOT A THOU6HT
I CAi:E TO DWELL
ONo lr\R KALLIKAK· ·

FREE ESTIMATES

In Syracuse

Ltsle~

"Ffrecreek" 10

IT~

4· 2-75

Greenhouse

wmdows, sidmg, storm doors

-

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

Hubbard's

and w'"dows, ratUng, phone

Ohto

healing, roofing, spoulong,
work.

genenl shell mttll

3 25 l mo

On aluminum ret~latemen1
Charles

Arr tonditloning, plumbing,

Building Homes

fOR FREE
ESTIMATES

co.

CARRIER

949-3604

3·21 75

THIJRSDAY,APRIL 17,1975
6 3Q-NBC News3,4,15, ABC News 13, Bewllhched6, CBS News
8, 10, Zoom 20, M U Report 33
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3,4; Bowling lor Dollars 6, What's My
Line 8, News 10, Let's Maka a Deal 13; Jimmy Dean 15,
Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel ;!0, Nova 33
7 3Q-Hollywoqd Squares 3, ,4, Ohio Lottery 6, New Price Is
Right 8, Wild Kingdom 10. To Tell the Truth 13, American
Outdoorsman 15, Consumer Survival Kll ;!0
8 oo-Sunshlne 3,4,15, Barney Miller 6,1 3, The Waltons 8,10, Bill
Moyers' Jouurnal 20,33
8 30-Bob c,ane 3,4,15, Karen 6,13
9 oo-Bob Hope 3,4,15, Streets of San Francisco 6,13, Movie
"Picture Mommy Dead" 8 , Quarterly Report 20,33, Movie

RACINE PWMBING
&amp; HEATING

We Specialize In

Ph. 985-4102

TURF TRI'M
MOWER
'72,90(K0)

Roclne.O

Chester, Oh1o

Television log for easy viewing

HEll

NEIGLER
BUILDERS SUPPLY

Construdion Co.

Motor Co•.

]

Busfues·s Services
--

Bissell Brothers

Pomeroy I

POMEROY MOTOR

11- The DaUy S€ntlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 Thursday Apnl17 1975
DICK TRACY
' .,
'
'

r.,..,.. Syndlcat•, Inc.&gt;

w..t

Nortb

lt

Pass

t¥

Pass
Pass
Pass

2•
I•
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

2•
6•

East

Lz:a;J ;1 t,y,;,x;u

S..tb

The b1ddmg has been

By O,wald &amp; James Jacoby
Lancelot the peerless dummy
player ruffed the d1amond lead
and played h1s queen of trumps
When East showed out •
Lancelot looked over dummy
and remarked "You certamly
b1d a lot w1th a hand that 1sn't
gomg to take even one trock '"
"Gadzooks, " snorted
D1nadan who was dummy as usual "Meth1nks I have given you
a beautiful assortment of high

I.

West

North

East

South

Pass

2•

Pass

1

Open1ng lead - K •
1

17

You South. hold
•KQ9B5.A2 tKI.Q987
What do you do now?
A - 811 three spades \'ou want
to try for 11me DOW In fact 1 jump
allllle way lo four spades woulda't
be m•ch of an overbid .

TODA Y'S QUESTION

Instead ol boddmg two spades
your partner has responded two

cardJJ ''

diamonas What do you do now?

Sorod $1 for J&lt;ICOBY MODERN
book

to

'Win al 8rtag.,' (clo ltlls

At trtck three Lancelot newspaper) P 0 Box 489, Radio
played h1s ace of trumps and City Srerlon, New YOlk, NY 100111
followed from dummy w1th the
kmg Two more h1gb trumps
CNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

'IOU ONLI( WENT To SEE

HEft 8EcAU5E SIIE 6AVE
I(OV COOKtES!

.,,

�10- The Daily.Senttnel, M1ddleport-Pomerov. 0 . Thm oday, Aprill7, 1975

~: Har~isonville

: Society News

••

[_

For ·Fast Results Use

Not1ce

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

Mr and Mrs Robert Alkire
•
and son, Ray, VISited Rev. and
Mrs Lew1s Campbell ( Coelle
In Syracuse
Alkire l m Delaware Sunday
Now opr n t or sea son Now
The Alkires stopped m
a'fa llable
m ost VM iett es of
v egelab le pla. ts &amp; flowers
Colwnbus and called on the
Auto Sa~
plu s po tted f low ers OUR
In MemO!)
' Robert G1bsqns and the F 0
SPECIALTY ov er 2 000
Whaleys
hang mg baskets ot Pe lunta s
I N M E M O R Y of my hu sband
I vy Geran tums Vme s and
Mrs Sue King had a yard
Oav rd Orl cr who pa ssed awa y
Begon ras
April 17 1958 17 years ago
• sale Fnday. Saturday and
t.. pla ce rs v acant rn my home
TOP QUALITY AT
Sunday
Wh rch can nev er be til ted
LOWEST PRICES
Sadl y m rsse d b y hr s wtf e Ro x rc
992 .5776
CIJnton Gilkey v1s1ted Ava
Or ter and tw o d au q hter s
G1lkey Saturday evemn~
Vrolet Bat ey Pom ero y and
M ildred M rll rro n Rey nold s
SWAP B uy Sell lra de 53 00
Mr Seth Nicholson and Mrs
bu r g
Grand c hild re n an d
msrde and S2 00 ou ts tde al
Allegra W1ll v1s1ted Allee
Qr eal Qrand ch rldr cn 1 grcut
Cr ossroa d s
124 bel w ee n
qreat gran d son
• Epple m a hospital near her
Pome r o v an d Rutl and Ohro
1972 DODGE OART4 OOOR
S2345
Jt 7 1f c .
Every F nd &lt;t.Y Sat urd ay and
Local owner &amp; low m1leage, good whtte wall tires small
daughter m Byesville, OhiO
Sun da y
V 8 engine power steenng factory atr, gold fintsh, blk
J 11 Jl c
Mrs Epple 1s suffenng from
vtnyl top. vmyl mtenor trim radio A clean car
· diabetis
Corn
SHOOT I N G MA T CH
Hollo w Gun Club tu rn frrst
Mr . and Mrs M. A Epple
1971 MATADOR
$1595
Notice
r rght afl er Mr le s Cem etery
viSited m Lancaster, 0 last
4
door local car. air conditioned, full equtpment
Ru t l an d
F ac t o ry c hok e d
YOUR
soulhern
~ Sunday evemng w1 th Louella
guns onl y Su nd a y Apr il 20 1 ORDER
vegetab l e pla n l s now for
p m
1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE
51695
Hamng and Mrs Colburn
de l tver y around May I
4 17 3tc
307 V-8, power steering, good G70 w1de oval fires, rad1o,
Charles R Harr 1S Phon e 843
Don Updegraff , Jr , of
stl ver grey ftntsh, automatic trans lntenor spotless
•
2693
RE WARD lead tng to the
AUanta, Ga IS flymg to ln- S25ar res
4 3 18t c
t and c onvr c t 1on o f
dtana on bustness and wdl fly
per sons w ho stole th e brrd -----~
- -~
--·_
-_·_ _ __
feeder an d c ar batl ery plu s .on to Ohio to vJSlt h1s grandt wo tratl er : trr es and wh eels
mother, Ava G1lkey Saturdar
from rn fr ont of t he Me 1gs
I
co unt y Hom e Phone Mtldr e~ Campbell's Swap 'n •shop
M1ss Brenda B1shop ass1sled
Jl! COb S 99 2 2 4 3 ~ or 992 5469
yard sale &amp; flea market. 2
OPEN EVES. 8:00P. M.
Ava G1lkey Saturday
4 17 3tc
blocks from Dairy Queen,
POMEROY, OHIO
Sunday guests of The Junwr
Jericho Rd., Pt. Pl., W. Va.
A TTEN TIO N SAL E S LA DIE S
Paynes were Mr. and Mrs. Joe
MI SS A ME R I CA DEBB IE
Sat. &amp; Suo , Aprlll2 &amp; 13. 10
1960 CAD I LLAC
390 motor
BR YANT J OIN S K OSCOT
Carsey, Darold Graham and
p s p b p w Phone 843 2802
a.m - 6 p.m. Every weekend
C O S ME T IC S
OP
For
Rent
4 16 3tc
Mr and Mrs Donald Weaver
POR T UNIT Y W I L L NEVER
through Oct. For in! call675BE GRE ATER
J O IN OUR
Mrs Lola Clark and Normar A RM house 6 rooms modern FOR Sale or tr ade - 1971 Pinto
1239.
SALES
TE AM
NOW
conventen c es
gard en
rn good condrtton or trade for
Lee were busmess v1s1tors m
WRITE SA U VA GE S. Box 4
garage and barn_ on Tanners
Datsun truck Call 992 5637
Sy
r
acuse
Oh
10
4S77
9
Pomeroy Wednesday.
Run Longsworth Homestead
4 16 3tc
4 16 31p
"t!'CR your ' 0 11 Of Mrnk '
off Sf Rt 124 Racrne Oh ro
Mr Eugene Young 1s slowly
Cosmetrcs Phone BROWN S
R F D S100 month If destrea
1968 vw Good cond 1t1on S300
1111provmg
99 2 5113 '22 acres bottom land for
Phone 985 4185 after 6 p m
'
1 1 tfc
addttrona l S2S per m onth
4 16 3t c
Mrs Lula Belle Eshebnan ,
Must turntsh references
- - ----who was a med1cal pallent at
Wnte or call Char l es A BIDS b;,ng- accepted on one
1969 Che-vrolet 1 ton flatbed
Dobbrn
17 Arlrngton St
Veterans Memonal Hospital,
Help Wanl!d
truck 350 cu m eng me good
Pawtucket Rhode I s la n d
was returned horne a~d 1s
MOO MOO Da rry Barn Long
20"·31/z HP
cond rl•on One local owner
02860 or (401) 723 4747
Bottom Ohio prefer woman
we reser-ve the rrght to re1ect
4 4 12tc
slowly 1mprovmg
over 20 Phone 318 62M
any and or all b1ds Voto Mfg
Mrs Magg1e Allen, who was
Sales Co 1528 Eastern Ave
- ... .4 13 . 61p
Galltpolts, Ohro
recently man acc1dent. wdl be
22"-3112 H P
4 17 3tc
For ~le
able to be on crutches 1t IS
Self- Propelled
1949 CHEVROLET truck short
reported m another week
wheel base 1 , ton Phone
INDIAN JOE's Sports and CB
Mrs Lomse DIXon has sold
992 3433
Shop Speetals for 10 days w1lh
4 15 Jt c
thrs ad - One only Courter
her bustness m Athens, Ohio
POMEROY LANDMARK
mob il e a m ssb $269 One
Jack W Caney, Mtr
The Lee Bmgs who recently
DODGE
Ptckup ,
anly Royce 602 S142 50 One 1910
Phone tt2. 2.111
automat tc
PhOne 742 3742
only Royce 605. S159 50 one
lost the1r home by f1re, have
• J;&gt;
Shakespeare TMA S24 95
4 13 6tc
MASON, W VA.
purchased a trailer .
One only Shakespeare double
tr ucker S26 SO One only
1972 PlYMOUTH Ouster 318 2
CONTACT
Mrs Oma Anx of Racme NOW selltng Fuller ~~~rush
barr el Nrce car 51 560 or
Products. phone 992--3410
Shakespeare wh rp, $8 95 One
spent a day recently w1th Rex
only HY Garn G P S12 95
take o ver payments 336
1: 1 24 tfc
One only D 104 desk m•ke,
Broadway Mreldleport Oh10
and Jettie ArlX
- ~---- --- - ----PA RASOL BoutiQue announces
S40 9S One only asllltlc 555
Phone 992 5301
Mr and Mrs. Frank Graves
speCials of 10 percent off on
no1se1ess truck mtke S25 95
4 13 SI C
all frostrng from Apr d 15
One Uneme tnc Base SIBS
of Michigan are expected m
ttt'Pough 30 Located next to
One only Coleman lantern
Fnday for a VlSI t w1 th hiS
the Skate A Way R:ollmg
Sl 7 95 , One only used 22
For Sale
Rfn k
Phone
985 4141
marlrn bolt act ron , SJS , One
uncle, Guy Bolm
PULL type tractor disc Hugh
Operator Sandra Kerns
only cap ball pts tol S32 SO
Letfhel t
RI
2
Pomeroy
Mrs Mmme McGrath who
4 13 12f C
One only new 22 sldew tnder
Phone 992 5918
w mag cylinder , S42 SO, One
spent a vacation in Flonda, SHOOTING Mat c h Wrndy Wantetl To Buy
4 16 Jtc
on l y 25 auto , $42 SO One
8 x 12 DUMP body w rth cab
says she would much rather
R rdg e Gun Cl ub Go through
on tv 32 30 P•Sto1, S33 SO Stop
protec tor Complete Phon e
1973 APACHE Camper '5700
Harr rsonvr l le on Rt
143
and save at th e Indian s live m Oh10
843 206.d e\lentngs
Phone 992 3366
Follow arrows Shoo t 1ng 6's
SAVE WAM PUM 308 Page
4 16 Jtc
4 11 SIC
Mrs May Mason stayed a
7 ~ 8 s and 9 s Apr rl 20 1
Mrdd l eport Phone 992 3509
p m Free r efreshments
4 10 lOtc
day with Eunice Bradfield
HOR SE S &amp; PONIE S Phone 742
1972 HONDA SL 350 CC h
A 14 Si p
326 4
cellent condtlron Also 1950
wh1le Mrs. Bud Douglas went
NEW Sears -van tty m trror 1
4 3 tf c
r ord to sel l or trade for van
GUN SHOOT on M rle H1ll Road
medtcrne cabrnel and com
shoppmg
Phone 992 3897 •
factory choked g uns only
moae All tor S200 Phone 992
The Rutland Road reSidents
4 11 12tc
Sponsored
by
lhcrne GOOD used lra ctor t tre s1ze
5817
ll x2 8 Phone 949 3690
Amer 1c an L egron Saturday
have been mformed they may
4 15 Jtc
Apnl 19 ~ p m
4 17 3tc
FORD Tractor with •" side
rece1ve water m the near
4 16 ltc
mower runs goad and good
RAD
IO
am
fm
radro
STEREO
1964 A ND older corns w rl l pay
- - ---- - - - - - - - - - rubber S950 985 3S94
8
track
!
ape
combmat1on
future
24c tor Clrmes 60c fo r Quar
AUCTION Thursday n tght 7
Balance S106 92 or t erms Call
3 30 7tp
Mr and Mrs. Dale Whaley
ters Sl 20 for ha l -ves Wrll
P m at Mason A uctron ,
992 3965
also
buy
sell
or
trade
U
S
Horton St tn Mason , W Va
4 15 tt c TWO 12 tn plows 3 pt httch
and Mr and Mrs Clintvn
corns and c urrency Ca l l
Constgnments welcome
$185 Also, 2 14 rn plows, 3 pt
Gdkey w•ll attend a bowling
Roger
Wamsley
74
2
36)1
Phone (304) 773 54~1
h rtch S200 Phone 985 3594
t97 3 HARLEY Oavrdson 350 SX
4
4
12tp
2 2 tfc
tournament Saturday and
1 800 m lies S600 Phone 985
3 30 7fp
33 41 between 8 am and 6
Sunday at Wdmmgtvn
JUDO Gee Phon e 992 2797
pm
CLOSE OUT on new Zig Zag
4 t 1 6tc
Monday guests for dmner at
4 IS 12tp
sew mg machtnes For sewing
stretch fabr~cs buttonholes.
UNITED STATES
the M A Epple horne were
r
•
•
t950 FERGUSON tractor, new
fancy des1gns, etc Palnt
OLD furn1tvre , 1ce boxes, brass
OF AMERICA
rubber and pamt A 1 con
Mrs Mmme Foit, Mrs Louella
sltghrly blemtshed Cho1ce of
beds or comp lete households
FEDERAL POWER
drtton SJ 500 Phone 985 359~
carrying case or stw rng
Wrrte M 0 M il ler, R1 4
COMMISSION
Hamng and Mrs Letha Cowen
stand S49 80 cash or terms
Pomeroy
,
Ohro
Call
99
2
7760
"' IS 6tp
2751
Pro1ect No
of Colwnbus
available Phone 992 7755
10 7 74
Ohro Power company &gt;

Sentinel Classifieds
2 SIGNS

OF
QUALITY

Home Building
Room Additions
and Garages

•104,95(K0)

Representative

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

WANTED

----- - ----

•

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

Fairview
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Sunday dinner guests of Mr
and Mrs. Herbert Sayre were
Br1ce Sayre and son of
Jackson, Mr and Mrs Danny
Sayre of Columbus, Paul
Sayre Brooks Sayre of
Syracuse called on the Sayres
in the afternoon
Mr and Mrs Russell Roush
and fam1ly, Mr and Mrs Dana
Lewis were Sunday dmner
guests of Mr and Mrs Ronald
Russell and chtldren at Wolf

Pen
Mr and Mrs Herbert Roush
VISited Mr and Mrs Ott Bostvn
at Racme Sunday evening
PUBLIC NOTICE
Not rce to Aggregate Vendors
Sealed b1dS Wi ll be recetved
bY The Board of County Com
m issioners of Metgs County
OhtO lit the off tee of The County
Comm1SStoners rn The Court
House
rn The Vtllage of
PomerOy , Ohto 4S769, untrl 9 30
A M on the 22nd day of April
1975 for the furnrshrng of al l
kinds ariel s•zes of aggregates
that may be reQu tred by The
Mergs
Cou nty
Htghway
Department
Esttmated quan t tty of all
aggregates
requ rred ,
ap
prox1mately 60 1000 tons
Btd SpectfiCatlons To Be
Submrtted As Fol lows
Brd pnce per ton fob loaded
at vendor s phmt for the varrous
kind and srze of aggregates that
may be required whrch will
confirm to The Perttnent Sta te
of Oh1o Department of H1gh
ways
Conl truct1on
and
Metenats Spectflcat•ons. ex
cepttno pee or shot gravel
whrch 1S an ungraded matenal
Wtth respect to the atoreSl!ld
est rmated quant•t res the ven
dors shall understand that no
guarantee rs grven as to the
actual quantities of aggregates
to be furn1shed, but each vendor
she l l be requtred to lurnlsh any
par t of the actual reQurrements
as ordered dur rng the ~975
season
Prices on fh 1S bid shall be tn
effect tor the rematnder of the
year 1975
On the en-velope contatnrng
each bld 1 the nafTle and address
of the -vendor must be shown
and plainly marked ' Aggregate
BidS "
Proposals are to be returned
on bid forms supplied bV the
vtndor , and will be opened on
the dete and place spectf•ect
a Dove
The Metgs county Com
missioners reserve the ng:ht to
accept or rttect any or all brds
or any part thereof
Yours,
•
Martha Chambers, Clerk • 1
Melga County eoarct
~'··
of Commissioners
.

l•l If' 17, 21c

NOTICE OF APPLICATION JUNK l!utos , complete and
FOR PRELIMINARY PERMIT
delivered to our yard We prck
UNCONSTRU CTED PROJECT
up auto bodres and buy all
I M•rch 31 , ltt Sl
ktnels of scrap metals and
1ron Rider 's Sal-vage , St Rt
Publrc n0t1ce tS hereby g rven
1241 Rt 41, Pomeroy Oh.ro
that appltcatlon for prel rmmary
Cll l l 992 5468
perm iJ has been ft led under the
10 11 tfc
Fedef·al Power Act (16 U S C
79la 82Sr J by the Ohro Power CASH pa!d for all makes and
Company (correspondence to
models of mobtle homes
Frank N Bten Executtve V1ce
Phone area code 61( A2J 9531
President Ohra Power Com
4 13 tfc
pany 301 Cleveland Avenue
s w , Canton Ohto 44702 and A
Dowd , Esq , Vrce
Joseph
Prestelent and General Counsel.
lf.l mtlll!'
Amertcan
Electrt c Power TRAILER SP'ACE
north of Mergs Htgh Schoo l on
Servtce Corporation , Two
old R: t 33 Ptrone 992 29411
Broadway
New York , New
1 23 tfc
York 1000 41 tor proposed
Pro tect No 27 51 to be known as
Galltpol rs
Hydroelectr•c 3 RM and bat h furn rshed apt
Ultlrt1es patd ~56 North 4th
Pro1ect. located rn Gall ra
St Mrddleport
County Oh 10 on the Ohio Rrver
The project affects navtgable
4 9 tfc
waters of I he Untted States and
lands of the u s and wot,lld HOU SE rn Pomeroy 1 or 2
uttltze water from a govern
bedrooms
550 a ' month
ment dam
Phone 992 2568 or 985 4209
The Galltpotrs Protect would
4 16 5tc
cons rst of a powerhouse con
structed at the west end (OhiO TRAILER apT Phone 992 52~8
srde l of the u S Corps of
4 16 IOIC
Eng 1neers Galltpol rs Locks and
Dam The proposed powerhouse 2 BEDROOM S prrv&amp;te bat no
wou ld ha-ve an rnstallatron of
pets SIOO per month Phone
low head generatmg un tfs
99 2 3863
totaling appro x tmately AO 000
~ IS 3tc
I&lt;.W Normal poo l elevat1on of
tne Gatl rpolls reser'Jorr rs 538 ONE bedroom prrvate bath
fee t Applicant states that the
s100 per month Phone 992
Installation wou ld be s•m rlar to
3863 No pets
Applrcent 's proposed Racme
4 IS Jtc
Hydroelectr.c Protect No 2570
loca t ed tmmedlate l y upstream
fM II e 2371
The Installa ti on APT lrke new J rooms wi t h
large bath , tabletop range,
would be coordmated w1th the
large c loset E as t Mam St ,
proposed replacement and
Pomeroy See to apprec1ate
modern•zat1on of the Corps
Phone Gall rpolts Clur rng day
~x1stlng Galllpolts Locks and
446 7699
e-v enmgs 446 9539
Dam recommended by the
4 10 tfc
Board of Rivers and Harbors A
tour m11e long 69kV trans
F URNISHED
itPllrlment
mrsston lrne would connect thiS
adults on l y 1n Mrddleport
generatrng fac.ltty with the
Phone 992 3874
Amertcan
Electrtc
Power
System No construct10n rs
3 25 ftc
authortzed
under
t he
preltmmary permrt
SMALL 2 bedroom double wrde
Appltunt proposes to market
mob1le hOme near Pomeroy
the electrtc power dev eloped by
Off Rt 7 by pass no Chtldren
the pro1ect to meet the loads
or pets Phone 992 7017 or call
and expected l oad growth of tts
992 7666
customers rn the Stale of Oh•o
4 11 3tc
Any person desiring to be
heard or to make protest w rth 12 xS2 2 bedroom lra rl er l rke
reference to satd apphcatton
new SJS week ut rltttes pa td
should on or before June 9 1975
Phone 992 3324
file wtth the Federal Power
4 11 tfc
Commisston washtngton 0 c
20426 , pe t lt rons to mtervene or
protests '" accordanc e wrth th e 7 BEDROOM doub l e wide
mobtle hOme '" Syracuse No
requtrements of the Com
c htl dren or pels Call 99 2 2J 1t
m rssron•s Rules ofL.Practtce and
after 6 p m Depost t requrr ed
Procedure ( 18 CF1&lt; 18 or t 10).
3 11 lfc
All protests fried w rth the
Commtnion Wtll be cons•dered
'cOlJNT~V Mobrle Home Park ,
by 1t '" delermtntng the ap
Rt 33 , ten mrles north of
propnate act ron to be taken, but
Pomeroy
Lllrge tots w 1th
w tll not ser-ve to make the
concrele pat1os, stdewa lks,
protestants
parties to
a
runners
and Off
street
proceed•no Persons wtsh rng to
parktng Plione 992 7479
become part res to a proceed rnQ
12 31 tfc
or to parlt cr pate us a party 1n
any hearmg th ere rn m ust ftle
petl ftons to tntervent 1n ac cord
.J and 4 ROOM t urn tshed and
ance w rth the Comm rss ron 'S
unfurnished
apartmen t s
Rules The appl1 cat•on tS on t tl e
Phone 99'2 5434
W1lh t t) e Commrss ron and
4 12tfc
l!"Vailable for public tnsp ect1on
PRIVATE mettlng r49m for
K. enneth F Plumb
eny organizat ion p~~ ~ 992
Sec retary
J97S
3 11 lfc

For Rent

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

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

-- --- -

--'"'(. -r--

TWO lots m Metgs Memory
Gardens Phone 949 4992
4 15 3tc

12 18 tfc

--------- -----Yard Sale

1970 350 JOHN Deere dozer
canopy hydrai.llr c blade, like
new condrhon S7 000 Phone
98S 3S94
4 15 6tp

YARD SALE
also many
fhmgs tn house
Upper
M rnersv ll le Phone 992 3081
4 16 21P

196S JOHN
Deere dozer
canopy comp reb uilt 8 ft
blade 56 000 Phone 985 3594
4 15 6tp

YARD Sale 2 mrles up Batley
Run Wednesday and Thurs
day Phone 992 3965
4' 15 2tp

SNAPPER r tding mower for PUBLIC SALE
books, best
sale Phon e 992 3222 After
setecttons n ew and old
5 30 p m
mostly non ftct,on better sets
and smg les
Covers most
~ 15 3tc
areas
A l so
Avons
LP
records, mrsc Aprtl 19 and 20
VAR IETY of cabbage tomato
740 Htgh St Middleport
and pepper plants Also
4 17 2tc
cauliflower, broccoli brussel
sprouts egg plants Beddtng
p lants
pansres petun1a YAR 0 SALE - Done ld Manuel
marrgold
sa i 'Jia
phlox
restden c e , Greenwood
por t ulaca , agertum, atyffum
Cemetery Road , Ractne
1mpattens coleus Varrety of
Baby tlems, clothes etc
geran tums also pots of
F riday noon and Saturday
petun1as and mums Hangmg
Apr1l 18 and 19
baskets petuntas
rvy
4 16 Jtc
gerantum. lobel1a ferns
- wandermg 1ews porch boxes
large hearty red azaleas
Cl eland Greenhouse Racme
Geraldme Cleland
~ELL your mobrle home for
4 13 ffC
cash lS homes wanted, 1958
thru 1972 models Phone C614l
\.JSED parts , Frye's Truck and
446 1425 GalltpOI IS
Auto Parts Rutland , Ohio
3 9 78fc
Phone (614 ) 742 6094
I 22 78fp 24
)I;
B ONE
bedroom
housetrarter oood condrtlon
F ISH BAIT - ftSh ba it We have
See
at
James
Stewart
our bait In, ntght crawlers
restdence m West Columbia
large mea l worms, worms,
Phone ( 304 l 773 5893
red worms. blood ba it, lnd1an
~ 16 Jtc
Joe s Sport ana CB Shop, 308
Page St M rddleport Phone 1972
GREENBRIER
2
992 3509
bedroom
front
k 1tch en.
4 9 30tc
raised drn1ng area fuel 011
furnace eye level oven, m
surface untt Can be seen at
FURNITURE bargarns l rke
K ingsbury Home Sales and
new Bedroom , stud10 couch
Serv 1ce Inc 1100 E Main St ,
3 pc small breakfast set 16
Pomeroy Phone 992 7034
tn fans ethel' th rn gs Owner
41 15 Jt&lt;;
movtng Phone 992 3081
4 16 2tp

""- -

Mobile Homes For Sale

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

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

COLLECTORs
plates
Chr1stmas W rnter scenes
Western and m ise (good and
better) Must sell at cost
Phone 992 2041

Pets For Sale
AKC Reg Doberman Plncher
pupptes Phone 388 9991
4 11 41tc

RCJdlato
Service

ALUMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

I

I

..... ,..... :' I

mo

Employment Wanted
WILL do Odd lObS ancl haul
brush Phone 992 5327
4 15 6tc
REMODEL I NG
plumb i ng ,
heat1ng , and all types of
ger.eral
repair
work
guaranteed 20 years fi' X
pertence Phone 992 2409
3 11

ttc

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

6, ROOM house With bath, J
bedroom, full basement, gas
heat. h w floor, wall to wall
carpet Close to schoo l '"
Pomeroy Phone 992 3097
3 9 S21c

,-------------1

1 • •your phone w.i 11 Jinch I
••cash results", too, •h•nJ
1you
place an act .ton lant 1
I Ad. You
can ull furniture,
l•ppl uncu, clothu • .tdo.l
l••n• of other unuaed but I
p•nful
t
I

.lt•••

L.-------------1

BEAUTIFUL new home on
lake , J bedrooms, bath &amp; 1h ,
cl!rretmg drapes. btg den
Cal 992 3493
He
3 24

HOU SE In Mrddleport pr i ced
reasonable Phone (3041 882
2821
~ 16 3tc
14 RM LARGE bnck home
Ideal for 1 larg e famrly or two
3 bedroom apartments Call
992 3173
4 13 6tc
2 BEDROOM home new foundatton roofrng cement
porches, thermo pane wm
dows storm doors natural
gas furnace wht te alum rnum
sldrno bla ck shutters krtchen
cab1nets paneling, cell1ng
tile floors refrntshed
low
heatmg btl I n1ce location ct ty
water Phone 98 5 4107
4 4 26tc
2 BEDROOM trlltler and lot'"
town Phone 992 3975 or 992
2571
4 9 lfc

'

Ph. 992-2114.

Lim"tona &amp; Fill Dirt
Commtrctai·Rtsldantlal

CHIHUAHUA puppies
742 4465

Phone
4 11 3tc

HORSE trailers for sa le or
trade Phone 388 9991
~

S TARCRA F" T

17 .JIC

WEEKEND
~ PECIAL S
1J'7 ' deluxe
17 024 now SS ,S29 r-eid down
Sl SOO up Auto awnmgs
Reese h 1tches arr cond 20
pet off complete parts and
servrce department
We
trade
hnancmg arranged
Ca m p Conley Starcrilft Sal£'s
Rt 67 N , PI PI NI Sftnt W V a
.. 1' '•

I~HAL.E;S!

;··;;~~Ti;l

:

·OOMPANY

.

Pomerofl

SALES&amp; SERVIC
992-3092

Locus! St.
OhiO 59 I

:=::¢~::::=~::===~~..,••ucrHted

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

HOU SE for sale m Cool v ille, 3
bedrooms l rvtng room Cltnrng
room built rn ' kitchen com
btnat ron bath , utlltty room .
small basement , block garage
and garden space Phone 667
3501
4 11 3tc
HOUSE for sale in Portland,
good well , 2 acres of ground
S6 200 Phone 843 7292
4 1S 6tc
- - - _,_
SERVICE station and garage
Rutland
Will fmance or
l ease Call 742 5052

---------

261c

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

grass
5 Negligent
11 Italian
coin
1% Show

4 3 301p

I ~

13 English
river

GASOUNE ALLEY

6 30 tfc

SEWING MACHINE , Repair.,
servtce, all mak11, 992 2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy,
Authoriztd Singer Sales and
S&amp;rvlce We sharpen Scissors

3 29 ffc

@

.'

water a~Jallable.

mtnerals ,
recreation, good

close to
hunting, LESS THAN S125 an
acre.

POMEROY rental

or

id eal lor

couple,

1 story

frame, bath, part basement,
large lot, porches, ASKING
ONLY $4,000
HARRISONVILLE AD. NEW HOME, 1 Acre, 2 BR,
bath, kitchen w1!h rei &amp;
range ,
carp,ted.
lull
basement with lo•ely
recreation room, carport &amp;

storage, all electric $22,700
NEW RT. 33 - 68 Acres,
barn, 19 ,500 now trees.
welnut, while pine, short leal

lot Rural water A qutet place
to relax after work

•

IN TOWN - 2'h acres of
wooded land near utilities
70 ACRES - Out 33 near water
line
BUILDING LOT- W1th water,
nat
gas,
Pomerov

and

sewer

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

11 ROOMS - Converted Into a
double rental 2 baths. nat.

playground
LIST YOUR PROPERTIES
WITH THE LIVE WIRES,
WHO WILL SHOW AND TRY
TO SELL THEM. WE HAVE A
LOT
OF
PROSPECTS
WANTING TO BUY. CALLf92.
3325

St, Middleport
3S09

•

timber, excellent hunting
ANSWER TO YOUR HOME
HUNTING
PROBLEMS
CAN
PROBABLY
BE
FOUND WITH US CALL

NOW

992·2259

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
Wildwood Estates, at Flatwoods, turn left off
St. Route 7, at Five Points, now selling
bu1ldmg lots in all sizes. All utilities available,
zoned for $20,000 and up homes for your
protec;tion

GEORGE S. HOBSTE II ER JR.
Real Estate Broker
Phone 985-41U After 4:00P.M.
Box 101, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

. .,____. .M
_ ------ --

THURSDAYS AND FRIDAYS AT 10:15 A.M. ON

WMPO AM-FM.
'

(J~

-;;,·-'

23·AUCI· 22) You'll
tasl tor a rBSpon-

Stblllty you neglected Don t
attempt to sweep It under the
rug again

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept, 22) A

EvEtnts wrlllead YOIJ to make an
1mportant adJUStment In your
lifestyle this year At ftrst unwelcome, 1t wtll later pro-ve advantageous
11 INEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

WIN AT BRIDGE

•"

came next w1th the ace of clubs
gomg on the second one The
kmg and queen of clubs
collected the ace and kmg of
spades
Now Lancelot led h1s Jack of
spades East CO!Ild 1take h1s
queen then or lat~r but Lancelot
still had a trump to ruff on case
he had to and of course the rest
of the spades were good
The way the cards lay
Lancelol had several ways to
make h1s contract and qu1te a
few that would leave h1m on the
ash can H1s way Insured
success agamst anr dlvlston of
the adverse cards

17

EAST
.Q6542

·-

• 10 3 2

.J97S4

SQUTH
• J 10987
•AQJ 1094

·-

•KQ
Both vulnerable

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it..:
AXYDLBAAXB
II LONGPBLLOW
One letter simply standi for another. In thlt sample A II
Uled for the three L's. X lor !be two O's, etc. Single letters.
apo.strophu, lbe length and formation of tbe worda are aU
blnta. Each day tbe &lt;ode letters are dllrerent.

CRYI'TOQUOTBS
ZHZQK

YMOZ

IZVVYL

~~~

u'•

SEX

LET
to:",•-.l&gt;lll.l&lt;~

SHOWMAW
TRltK 1::tATER

GM

E

LGNAYJN

AESGN

CZNR

LAGVZ

E

RYTZ

RGMCVZ
OEJCAN-

BGM
AJSSEQX
Yesterday's Cryploqaote: AN OUNCE 'OF KEEPING YOUR
MOUTH SHUT IS WORTH A POUND OF EXPLANATION.SOURCE UNKNOWN
lt711Qq

Apri~

.

pal Is .getttng peeved because
of arr old obltgatlotl you ve
overli;Klked Square thing's as
soon as possible

tAKQ

&lt;C

KALEIDOSCOPE

LEO

be called to

•to 8 6 3 2

suffh

,.JOME
Improv em-ent
and~
Repair Servlte Anythlnt
fhctd around the home, fro!'!!\
roof to basement You wiiJ4
l!.k• our work end r•tes)
,...hone 742 5081
, !l"

EXPRESS IT ON

You II soft.pedal your prinCiples where the youngsters
are concerned today and tn dulge them too much Careful

• 8 7 53

40 PeMyU IntensifJ
«% Numerical

~

GOT SOMETHING ON YOUR MIND?

PISCES (Fob. :!0-March 20)

your mates vlewpomt 1n a
dectston affecting the tam1ly

as fodder

.

• 16 301f
- - - ---------- ...

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

CANCER (June 21-JUIJ 22) 11
you challenge pef sons In
authorlljl today, you II on ly
tempt them to show you just
how much muscle they really
have

38 Meander
39 Store,

1

12 29

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Foll. 18)
It w11l be d!Htcult for subor·
dmates to please you today
YQ4 don t know your own mind
Make sure orders are clear
before volcmg them

leaf

Refri51eratlon, A C, Heating~
Pl'lone 992 3S09
\ t'

pine , poplar and others,
about 6 yrs old , some cutting

GI!MINI (MOJ 21-Junt 20)
Don t lend anything to a frtend
you've had tro uble wUh before
over something borrowed Thts
leopard hasn t changed hts
spots

36- bicycle

4 16 30to
--·---·------ -P &amp; J Home Marntenanct

-

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon
11) You 're priming the pump
for a problem rf you rgnore

WEST
·'3'~ •

32Wooden
core
33 Small
child
Sf Palm

Phone 992 1
,

-

SAGITTARIUS (No¥. 23·Dec
21) Your conclus1ons regar·
dmg a shared Interest are tnBC·
curate
Some lnformatton
needed for a valid appratsal 1s
betng wtthheld

fldential matter could be your
downfall Your words could
haunt you later via 'instant
replay" • from an unpleasant
source

NORTH (D)
.IlK
• K 62
tJ987651

Z9 Plactd

-LAWN
- - - mower
- ------- -repair 308 Pag~

gas, furnau, city water near

You'll do things for the sake of
expediency that are not to your
advantage Be patient Time !s
vour ally Shortcuts will work
agatnst you

Gad! North takes not a trick

Zl Inclination
r7- sauce
Z8 Killer
whale

J.1L ABNER

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAI~
- Sweepers, toasters Irons~·
all small appliances Lawn
mower, next to State H lgl'lway
Garage on Route 1 Phone 985 1
3825
~
.o1 16 tfc

in

For FrlctaJ, April11, 1175
ARIEl (,._h 21-Aprl 11)

co-star

WILL TRIM or cut trees and
shrubbery
Clean
ouf
basements, attic, etc Phone
9-49 3221 or 142 A4·il
•
4 8 26t"

who ts business mmded

Subordtnates wtll rebel today 1f
you treat them in an arrogan'
manner Conl lder their
feelmgs Lead by example

:15 Lake's

LAWSON &amp; McCoy Painting &amp;
Roofing Painting inside or
out. Roofing hole In roof or:
new roof Cl!ll 361 G4S6 Free
esttmates
41' 12tC!

RACINE - Large 7 room
houso!'V..1th a 4 room rental and
large lot
2 BUSINESS BUILDINGS with rentals, located In M1d
dleport Good places for one

Yesterda)"sADIIwer
!2 Stubby or Z9 CommemSanuny
oratlve
Z3 Apposite
pillar
24 Inflame
30 Total
with anger
attendaac:e
25- of
0 (2 wds.)
Hoots
31 stimulate
2li Navlgllted 35 Prayer word
the Thames 17 Pickpocket
rl They
(sl)
may be
311 Willard of
common
fame

organ

- - --- "='"-~------

RUTLAND
AN EX
CELLENT BUY ~T JUST
S8.BOO 1 story frame, 2 BR,
bath, natural gas furnace,
carpeting, porch, large
concrete block building and
garage 25x49 II, large lot
REEDSVILLE - 135 Acres,

lash

U Of words
15 Sweet
potato
II Tree
17 Valuable
rock
18 Not long
ago
20 Vase
21 - de
France
!2 One kind
19 - at
of breeches · windmills
Z3 Breathing

READY MIX CONCRETE- aT."
livered fight to your" prolect
Fan
and
easy •
Free
es timates Phone 992 32N
Goegle rn Ready Mix Co,

OOCER work, land clearing by
the acre, hourly or contract
Farm ponds , roads, etc
Large dozer and operator
with over 20 years ex
perlence Pullins Excavating,
Pomeroy, Ohio Phone 992 •
24178
12 19-tfc

smell

4 Declare
verboten
5 Tongue6 All
7 RllSSlllll
community
8 Approaching
shore
9 Like an
old fighter
10 Greek
moon
goddess
16 Cruel

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Hov. 22)

TAURUS (April 20-1111)' 20)
Talkmg too freely about a con·

EYEFUL

DOWN
I - ptgeon
2 Adversary
3 Swell

ACROSS •
I Kind of
suburban

West

41 17 31p

AZURE BEACON

~e"''"
~·r'
ltp THOMAS JOSErH

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonllble RATES
Phone
446 4782 Gall i po1ts
John
R usse11 owner
41 9 tfc

OFF RT Jl - 2 bedroom
mob1le home patio and large

I

Jumbl•o SOUSE

A...wer1 Thf' {Wrtwn U'ho doe,. lhrt4 may lrnr e ~~~
mu1talt.f'n- ERASE

S~82

Middleport Oh lo

(Auwert lomorTGwJ
Yen~.,.·.

W ILL PAINT roots and houses
free estimates Phone 992

Real Estate For S31e

49

LITTLE

-----.--.---------CARPET lnstallatron, S1 25 per
Call R1chllrd
Phone 843 2647

by the above Clltoon.

I ,. .... a~~~... I r I 1 )( 1 I I l

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

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

yard

r]

Now orranre the circled letterw
to form the IUrpriH aruwer, u

23-0cl. 23) In

partnershtp situations today ,
be certain both partners are tn
~ccord about the goal or a
senous nh may ensue

COME$&gt; UP AFIE~
IO&gt;OING OlJ11 '

ISWoNTI I

C BR AOF'O~ 0 , Auctroneer
J&amp;O TREE Trrmmmg , 20 vears
Complete Serv1ce
exper rence , rnsured, free
Phone 9A9 3821 or 949 3161
esttml!tes
Call 992 3057 .
Raclne.Ohto
Coolv•lte Phone 11) 667 30A1
Crltt Bradford
4 16 12tp
5 1 tfC EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
PLUMBING
heet rng, reparr
ana bllckhoe work , septic ,
and m sta l lat ron , electrica l
tanks Instilled, dump trucks
water t:rump repetr roofrng
and lo boys for hire , w ill haul
roof and house painting
fi.U dtrt, top soli. limestone L
genera l repl! tr
Reasonable
grevel. Calf Bob or Roger
rates, tree estimates IS yr
Jerters day phone 9927089,
expertence
Cal l Cherl es
night phone t923525 or 992
Smclatr, 985 412 1 or 992 2221
5232
4 4 12tc
211 ttc '
'SEPTIC
TANKS
cleaned
Modern San It at ron, 992 395A or
992 7349
9 18 lfc

"LIBRA (Sopt.

I I

4 10 1 mo

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

:ro, Get
Smar115, Elec Co 33
6 oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6, E lee Co 20, Per
sonallty &amp; Behavioral Development 33
6 30-NBC News 3,4,15, ABC News 13, Bewitched 6, CBS tyews
8,10, Zoom :ro
.•
•
7 ocJ-Tru!h or Cons 3,4, Lawrence Welk 6, Bowling for
Dollars 6, What's My Line 8. Aviation Weather 2Q,33, News
10, Jimmy Dean 13, I Spy-15
7 30-Porter Wagoner 3, Pop Goes the Country 4,8, New Candid
Camera 6, Black Perspective on the News 20,33, Treasure
Hunt 10, To Tell the Trut~ 13
8 DO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,15, Night Salker 6, 13, Think Poslllve
Updale4, Comedy Special 8,10 Washington Week In Review
20,33
8 JG-Chlco&amp; The Man 3,4, Baseball15, We'll Get By 8,10. Wall
Street Week 20,33
9 DO-Rockford Flies 3.4, JuiJe My Favorite Th1ngs 6,13, NBA
Play Off 8,10, Masterpiece Theatre 20 , Consumer Survival
,(&lt;Jt 33
9 30-Aklgnmenl America 33
10 oo-F!ollce Woman 31 4, Get Chrlst&lt;e Love' 6,13, News 20,
Paul Nuchlms 33
f1 00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15, ABC News J3
11 3Q-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, W1de World Mystery 13, Movie

TIVINE

PHONE 992·7665

R•dtng Tradors

20,33, Ironside 13

S 3o-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge Lodge

I I

Reasonable Rates

Also Aepaors

S oo-FBI 3, Andy Griffith B.. Mister Rogers' Neighborhood

"Web of Violence" 10. Janak! 33.
1 oo-Midnlghl Speclai3,4,1S, Wide World Mystery 6, News 13
1 15-Movle " Talk About a Stranger" 10
2 30-Slar Trek 4
3 3~Mo\rle "Captain Newman, M D " 4
S 30-Movle "Where the Bullets Fly" 4

UDG/E

FREE ESTIMATES

Chain
Precision
Ground

Tomorrow 8,10, To Be Announced 33

12 .15--Eiec Co JJ
12 ~NBC News 3,15
l oo-News 3; All My Children 6, 13, Phil Donahue 8, Young &amp;
The Restless 10, Not For Women Only 15
1 30-First Ladles' Diaries 3,4,15; Let's Make a Deal 6,13, As
the World Turns 8,10
'
2 0()-SIO,OOO Pyramid 6, 13, Gu1dlng Ugh! 8,10
2 30-Big Showdown 6,13; Edge of Night 8,10
3 oo-Another World 3,4,15, General Hospital 6, 13, Price Is
Right 8,10, Bill Moyers' Journal International Report 20
3 30-0ne Ute to Live 13, Lucy Show6, Match Game 8,10
4 oo-Mr Cartoon 3. I Dream of Jeannie 4, Somerset tS,
Gilligan's Is 6, Taltlelales 8, Sesame Sf 20,33, Movie
"Inferno" 10, Mike Douglas 13
4 3o-Bewltched 3, Merv Griffin 4, Mod Squad 6, Lucy Show B,

"Ttle House of Fear" 6, Movie "The Mummy' ' B. Movie

Pleasant Ridge
Pomeroy, Ohio

. .A
.
JiG
.

6 15-Engllsh 505 3
'
6 25-Farm Report 13
6 30-Five Minutes to L1ve By 4, News 6, Bible Answers 8,
Public Affairs 10, Blue R1dge Quart~! 13
6 35-Columbus Today 4
6 45-Mornln~ Report 3, Farmtlme 10
7 oo-Today 3,4,15; AM America 13,6, CBS News 8,10
8·00-Lassie6, Capt Kangaroos, Popeye10, SfsameSt 33
8 25-Capt Kangaroo 10
B JO-Big Valley 6~
9 oo-A M. 3 Phil Donahue 4,15, Rocky &amp; His Friends 8,
Morning with D J 13
9 25-Chuck White Reports 10
9 3o-Not For Women Only 3, Dinah 6, Galloping Gourmet 8.
Tattletales 10, New Zoo Revue 13
10 D&lt;h-Ceiebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4,15, Joker's Wild 8,10, Dinah
13
10 JG-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15 Gambit 8,10
11 oo-High Rollers 3,4,15, One Life to Live 6, Now You See It
8,10, E lee Co 20

U111Cramble~heoe fwr Jumbl..,
one letter to each square, to
Corm four ordrnary words

0. J. LAUDERMILT
ROOFING

WILKINSON
SMALL

11 ·30-Hollywood Squares 3,15. Brady Bunch 6,13; News 4,
Love of Ute 8,10; Sesame 51 20,33
11 55-Graham Kerr 8, Dan Imel's World tO
12 ()()-Jackpot 3, 15, Password 6,13, Bob Braun's 50·50 Club 4.
News 8,10
12 JO-B lank Check 3, 15, Split Second 6,13, Search for

Bonanza 15

J}tg~~®"'-' lotow''J .-I,_.

777 PUrl SlrHI
MlddlatN1rl, Ohio
l'honatt2-5167orf92..:JN1 : .
.

Minerals on 20 acres
TOMATO PLANT S, Strong
4 17 Jtc
healthy
seed l i ngs
18 ..
va.rret 1es
Dozen 20 cents
Qu rsenberry Syracuse Ohio 2 MONTH old blllck regtstereel
.a 17 Sip
poodle Wtth papers Phone
992 2803
KAWA SAKI 500 Phon e Harold
4 16 4t t;
Hager 949 5924
" 17 Jtp

41£ I3R8,A.T' IS
aAD evaJ Wl4f;N I

Ooza~Backhoo,Trucks

SMITH N.ELSON
MOTORS. INC.

PH. 949-5184

v~~

Water, Elac:trlc, G81, S.W.r
fines, lnstollad
Work
guoranfaacl.

... ~ ~···

!From the largest Truck o;{
'Bull'dozer Radiator to. the
'smallest Heater Cojre
'
Nothan Biggs
Radialor Stoeclohst

FREE ESTIMATES
44 1

Ph 992·3993
4·10 1 mo

E«PeRIENCED

10 oo-Movln' On 3,4, 15, Harry 0 6,13
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15,20; ABC News 33
11 30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Wide World Special 13, F B1 6.
Movie "Bronk" B. Movie "Rhapsody" 10. Janak! JJ
12 3Q-Wide World Special 6
1 oo-Tomorrow 3, Pilot Film 81 News 13
FRIDAY, APRIL 18,1975
6 DO-Sunrise Semtnar 4, Sunrise Semester

LA~~!~~~~~ER

4 17 1 mo

GLEN R.
BISSELL

8U5TER!

Blown Into Wolls &amp;Attics
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING . SOFFtTT
GUTTERS· AWNINGS

992-S776

..--------,•

BUT I'll 6E LIKE
A FATHEJ'Z TO

Blown
Insulation Services

Now open tor season Now
avatlable - rhost vanettes ot
vegetable plants a. flowers
plus potted f lowers OUR
SPECIALTY over 2, 000
hangrng baskets of Petunias,
tvy Gerantums, Vtnes and
Beg on ras
TOP QUALITY AT
LOWEST PRICES

Syrlcuse,
Carl Jacob, Sales

NOT A THOU6HT
I CAi:E TO DWELL
ONo lr\R KALLIKAK· ·

FREE ESTIMATES

In Syracuse

Ltsle~

"Ffrecreek" 10

IT~

4· 2-75

Greenhouse

wmdows, sidmg, storm doors

-

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

Hubbard's

and w'"dows, ratUng, phone

Ohto

healing, roofing, spoulong,
work.

genenl shell mttll

3 25 l mo

On aluminum ret~latemen1
Charles

Arr tonditloning, plumbing,

Building Homes

fOR FREE
ESTIMATES

co.

CARRIER

949-3604

3·21 75

THIJRSDAY,APRIL 17,1975
6 3Q-NBC News3,4,15, ABC News 13, Bewllhched6, CBS News
8, 10, Zoom 20, M U Report 33
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3,4; Bowling lor Dollars 6, What's My
Line 8, News 10, Let's Maka a Deal 13; Jimmy Dean 15,
Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel ;!0, Nova 33
7 3Q-Hollywoqd Squares 3, ,4, Ohio Lottery 6, New Price Is
Right 8, Wild Kingdom 10. To Tell the Truth 13, American
Outdoorsman 15, Consumer Survival Kll ;!0
8 oo-Sunshlne 3,4,15, Barney Miller 6,1 3, The Waltons 8,10, Bill
Moyers' Jouurnal 20,33
8 30-Bob c,ane 3,4,15, Karen 6,13
9 oo-Bob Hope 3,4,15, Streets of San Francisco 6,13, Movie
"Picture Mommy Dead" 8 , Quarterly Report 20,33, Movie

RACINE PWMBING
&amp; HEATING

We Specialize In

Ph. 985-4102

TURF TRI'M
MOWER
'72,90(K0)

Roclne.O

Chester, Oh1o

Television log for easy viewing

HEll

NEIGLER
BUILDERS SUPPLY

Construdion Co.

Motor Co•.

]

Busfues·s Services
--

Bissell Brothers

Pomeroy I

POMEROY MOTOR

11- The DaUy S€ntlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 Thursday Apnl17 1975
DICK TRACY
' .,
'
'

r.,..,.. Syndlcat•, Inc.&gt;

w..t

Nortb

lt

Pass

t¥

Pass
Pass
Pass

2•
I•
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

2•
6•

East

Lz:a;J ;1 t,y,;,x;u

S..tb

The b1ddmg has been

By O,wald &amp; James Jacoby
Lancelot the peerless dummy
player ruffed the d1amond lead
and played h1s queen of trumps
When East showed out •
Lancelot looked over dummy
and remarked "You certamly
b1d a lot w1th a hand that 1sn't
gomg to take even one trock '"
"Gadzooks, " snorted
D1nadan who was dummy as usual "Meth1nks I have given you
a beautiful assortment of high

I.

West

North

East

South

Pass

2•

Pass

1

Open1ng lead - K •
1

17

You South. hold
•KQ9B5.A2 tKI.Q987
What do you do now?
A - 811 three spades \'ou want
to try for 11me DOW In fact 1 jump
allllle way lo four spades woulda't
be m•ch of an overbid .

TODA Y'S QUESTION

Instead ol boddmg two spades
your partner has responded two

cardJJ ''

diamonas What do you do now?

Sorod $1 for J&lt;ICOBY MODERN
book

to

'Win al 8rtag.,' (clo ltlls

At trtck three Lancelot newspaper) P 0 Box 489, Radio
played h1s ace of trumps and City Srerlon, New YOlk, NY 100111
followed from dummy w1th the
kmg Two more h1gb trumps
CNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

'IOU ONLI( WENT To SEE

HEft 8EcAU5E SIIE 6AVE
I(OV COOKtES!

.,,

�'

·12-The Daily Sentinei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursaay, April 17

College costs
going up, up

Mains is

.

of district

I

.i
I

I

Carmel News,

By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hudson
of Racine , Mr . and Mrs. Shelby
Pickens and family of
Pomeroy were at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Taylor on
Sunday.
William Carleton of Racine
was calling in the community
on Saturday.
Calling at the home of Mary
Circle on Sunday were Laura
Circle, Angie and Cris Boster
of Dorcas, Mr. and Mrs. James
Circle, Mr. and Mrs. George
Circle of New Haven, W. Va .
Mr . and Mrs. Wayne Roush
called at the home of Beulah
and Fred Roush recently .
There were 20 present for

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, Apri I 7
NOT OPEN

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
By Bertha Parker
Sabbath School attendance
April 13 was 106, choir members present were 15 and the
morning offering was $163.62.
Rev. and Mrs. Shook are on
vacation and visiting their
daughtersand sons~ in -ia w ,

l

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

Mr .

and Mrs. Joseph Higgin·
botham, Columbus, and Mr.
and Mrs . Jerry Whitaker,
Newark.
Rev . Cecil Wise will tJ; guest
speaker Sunday morning, April
·20. Robert Barton will be the
speaker in the evening,
· Mrs. Alice Finlaw Cappel,
formerly of this community,
now living in Canada, and Mrs.
Joan Finlaw Garden and
daughter, Dawn, Reedsville, ·
attended Sunday morning
1ervice at the Joel church.
Mr. Vern Story, Columbus,
;pent the weekend with his wife '
md son, John .
Mrs. Mildred Bowen was
1ostess to the Laurel Cliff
rlealth Club Tuesday evening.
A donation was given to the
Easter Seals Fund. Games
were played and won by Polly
Eichinger, Leona Karr and
Jean Wright. There were 12
members present, Refreshments were served .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles, Della
Stahl, Kate Parker and Bertha
Parker attended the Spring
Fling at the Junior High School
in Pomeroy Saturday evening,
Mrs. Ruth Douglas and Mrs.
Roseann ·Hiener, Guysville,
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Harmon Fox.
Sunday School April 13.
Mrs. Erma! Schreckengost
and Dee Roberts of Parkersburg called at the home of Mrs.
Dean Brin ker Sunday af·
ternoon.
· Mr. and llirs. Arthur Orr of
Chester called at the home of
Mr. anH Mrs. Robert Lee and
family on Sunday.

(TechnicOior)

Rated " G"

Colorcartoons
Show Starts 7:00p.m .

"•cops" from the Old English
verb ',' to cop" - to catch. So

why are some police we can
think of called "cops"?

DOUBLE FEATURE

FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUN.DAY
i

"CAMPUS
PUSSYCATS"

BARGAIN DAYS!

BARGAIN DAYS!

BARGAIN DAYS!

Women's
Blouses,

SALE! MEN'S

MEN'S
.

TROUSERS

SHIRT
•
SALE

.

Group I Mens Double
Knit Slacks

Shirts
and

"HUNGRY .
WIVES~'

RATED X

MASON DRIVE-IN THEATRE
MASON, WEST VIRGINIA

Opposition
•
to contznue
.

Sizes 29 to 44 waist. Solid

~en's

colors -' stripes - plaids. An
exce llent selection. Includes
all of our mens double knit
slacks .

Knit Tops

Sport Shirts
.'

"'

I

Sizes small, medium. large and

SALE PRICES

Big group of Spring
Tops selected from
our regular stock.
Misses. juniors and
womens sizes.

-

extra large In sport shirts . Sizes .

14'11 to 17 In dress shirts. This
special sale Is on all of our.. mens

short sleeve sport and dress
shirts. Solid colors
white

pastels . stripes - 'plaids. An
excellent selection . This sa le also

Includes denim and ci&gt;ambray
long sleeve western shirts.

•

While They Last ...

/z PRICE

1

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

MEN'S FASH.ION JEANS

COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR

Waist sizes 29 to 42. Lenghts 29 to 36. Solid
colors - checks - stripes - cotton. polyester

blends - brushed denims - twills. Includes all
of our mens fashion jeans . All famous makes.
Stock up now.

Sale Prices

Several
groups
from
famous
makers are in cluded for this sale.

·Our entire stock is
included in this threeday sale.

SALE PRICES

SALE PRICES

MEN'S

sleeve knit si&gt;lrts. Solids - pat.
terns . numbers . stripes. Some
with collars . turtle necks . crew
necks .

SALE PRICES

Sizes small, medium. large and

BLUE
JEANS

tank tops . An exce llent selection.

SALE PRICES

J-

{:o

. BOYS SHIRTS

- rags look - patch pocket
jeans. Includes our entire
stock of mens and young
mens jeans. ·

Sizes 3 to 7

Sale
Prices

Chlldrens Dept.
Second Floor

Days!

LACES ~ND TRIMS
SALE 35r YD.
Group II

RIBBON - ASSORTED WIDTHS
SALE 1&amp; YD.

Bargain Days
.
In The Home Furnishings Annex

FIBERGLASS DRAPERIES
63" . 84" . 90"

·Group Ill

APPLIQUES. HUNDREDS IN SELECTION

Choose blue, gold or green

WHILE THEY lAST

SALE 6 FOR •1.00

GIRLS
COATS

co lors ~

Home Sewing, · First Floor
". ,

SALE '1.88

, Bargain Days ·

With heater and vibrator •.

Two discontinued patterns. Several popular
sizes.

Sale Prices

You~ choice of all vlnrh combination ol nylon
and vinyl or all nylon. arge selection· of colors.

Reg. $209.00

.SALE % PRICE
On

•

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.

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BEIRUT - EDGY PALESTINIAN GUERRILLAS and
rlghtwing milltlamen puiJ helr forces on alert today after.a new
round of fighting temporarily shattered their shaky truce and left
more than a dozen people dead or injured.
Despite the violations, the government-&amp;Tanged cease-fire
ending four days of warfare appeared to be holding again In most
parts of the city . •
Pollee said at least 10 persons were killed and several more
Injured in an out!reak of bombinga, snipinga, machine gun and
mOrtar attacks Thursday. The new casualties brought the
estimated toll in five days of fighting between the Palestinians
and Lebanese Pbalagists to 145 dead and more than 250 wounded.
CARDINGTON, ENGLAND- THE FLYING saucer is for
·real- and stamped ''made In Britain." Its firsUllght was hardly
Impressive. It Ufted off, wobbled along for a few hundred feet and
dl\opped to the floor. But Its makers say better thlnga are to
come.
. . .
'lbe model that flew Thursday Inside a giant hangar on the
Royal Air Force Base lOoked just Uke the flying saucers of the old
flllllce movies: 30 (eel arou!!d and 9'h feet high, with a rim of
portholee around the edge. John West, head of the firm that
designed II, said It was a prototype of what will someday be a 701).
foot craft capable of haulin8 400 to111 of cargo thousands of miles.
"It's not a gimmick," West said. The "Skyship," In fact; is a
radically designed balloon p-opelled by eight minla~ure electric
motors drlvlnll six-Inch plastic propellers.
.

Thursday at the conclusion of a thre~y hearing in U.S, District
Court at Elldns, W. Va.
Muwell held both the International union and Distri~ 6 in
·Clllllempl for !allure to end widespread work stoppages under
WI)' In the dlltrlct· since Jut month. Maxwell's ruling was for
Conlolldatloo Coel Co.'s Ireland, McElroy and Shoemaker
mlnea. He said the UMW would be liable for $10,000 and District 6
would have to pay p,ooo for each shift mi8sed because of the
wllkout.
n,e Judie furtjlerslld that If pickets did reappear, the UMW
would be required to identify individuals blocking the work shift.·
·
ConUmied on page I~

Free CustomeiS Parking oo Second Street and At The Mechanic Sbeel Wai1house

sIn Pomero

-

'l1fE UNITED MINE WORKERS UNION WAS under federal
court orders today to get its members back to work In Eastern
Ohio and Welit Virginia's Northern Panhandle or face fines of up
to $135,000per day. Judge Robert E, Maxwell Issued ~e directive

SALE '159.00

Sole In the Ho~e Furnishings An~u

'.-

e~~:w:!~erna~!fiefSI

'

BERKLINE ROCK.Q..LOUNGERS

AREA RUGS

(Small Lot)
Infants, Toddlers
and Girls 4-14

II

.

"Group I

Stop in- You'll like this selection.

Big selection of

Housewares Dept.

Big Shipment of Home Sewing Needs

A tine new selection of popular wide width sport belts in white
-solid colors. Boys sizes 20 to 28- mens sizes 30 to 42.
Special price 52.50. Also mens and boys reverslbl~ belts.
Popular width. Special $1.75. Mens genuine leather work
belts In brown pr black . Special for S2.50 ~ nd mens 13A inch
width black leather garrison belts for $3.00.

SALE

SALE $19.99

Just Arrived!

Shipment

New

' -

r'

BARGAIN DAYS!

MEN'S AND BOYS' BELTS

Misses and Juniors.
While They Last ...

Reg. $29.95
20 Piece Set

SALE $1.99

Bargain

our

OORELLE
DINNERWARE

Cut and Sewn

.

COATS

ys

Bargain Days

Denim jeans in sizes 29 to
46 . Flare legs - straight legs

Meigs Countians for the
The local committee will
second time in less than a begin at once to attempt to
month were asked Thursday to arllllect information on •the
act to save railroads from users, the amount of freight
being removed when the Meigs transported and other perRail Service Committee met at tinent data in regard to the
Middleport Village Hall.
line. The committee will stress
Earlier, residents rallied to not only the dollars and cents
present a considerable amount effect of the proposed abanof testimony on the proposed aonment but the public need of
abandonment of Penn Central the line. Some 25 emplcyes
'Jines in the county. Last night, would be affected if the line is
the proposed abandonment of abandoned.
Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad
The discussion brought out
Co. lines was up for discussion . also that att.!mpts by the C and
It was reported during the 0 to abandon the lines in 1962
discussion, led by two young were unsuccessful. The
Middleport men who have committee will also contact
taken an active role in the fight John Hanifin, Cleveland,
against the abandonments, president of the railroad, in its
Ken Gilkey and George Arnott, attempt to retain service by the
that practically all of the local company.
businesses use the Chessie
Lines and that if the lines were
abandoned as proposed by the
company, then the local firms
will be without service.
•
Residents, especially
business people, as a result of
last night's meeting, are being
urged to write the Interstate
Commeri:e Commission, Office
of Proceedings, Washington,
Members of Boy Scout Troop
D. C., 20423, at once on what the 249 assembled at the Pomeroy
abandonment of the Chessie Junior High School Wednesday
Linet from Logan, tq_ 01\llJpotis , night-and then went' to Ttinity
would do to local .busmess Church to practice for acoperations. Those wnling are tivities Sunday when "the rank
to discuss not only the of Eagle Scout will be coneconomic impac~ of the !erred upon Joe Rosenbaum.
Adult leaders of the troop
abandonment but POl~ I out how
much they use the !me·
were in charge of the practice
They are also asked to session for Sunday's event.
requ~st that at least one pu~lic Rosenbaum is the son of Mr.
hearm.g be h~ld locally to bnng and Mrs. Richard Rosenbaum,
out pomts of mterest about the Wright
st.,
Pomeroy.
abandonment. Letters should Ceremonies are scheduled for 2
be ~ritten by April 30, 1975. p.m.
Re;'1dents are also asked to
The troop plans to parwrite Cong. Clarence Miller m ticipate in the "hike-bike"
Washington on their . sen- Saturday and following that
timents on the ahandonment. will go to Rio Grande in the
Pomero~ businessman Jack scout bus for swimming. Any
Carsey sa1d he would take the boy 11 or over or who has
matter before the Pomeroy completed the fifth grade is
Chamber of Comme~ce. invited to lake part in the troop
· Carsey also reported that he which 'meets at 7 each Wedhas been unable to receive nesday in the Pomeroy Junior
needed service from the High School auditorium.
Chessie System in the Anyone having questions may
operation of his. business.
call Dan Thomas.

Rosenbaum
to receive ·
Eagle rank

extra large, Popular sleeVeless

BARGAIN DAYS! r:-r"

Selected from
regular stock.

Hundreds of shirts to sell. Indudes all of our mens short

KNIT
TANK SHIRTS

Group Ill

GIRLS
SLEEPWEAR

WOMEN'S
SLIPPERS

WOMEN'S

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS

MEN~S

Bargain Days

Famous maker - our
entire stock Is included.

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

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

Sale Prices
Bargain Days

SALE PRICES

Group II

'

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Dress and

TOSS PILLOWS
Policemen are called

Vietnamese were moving SAM
By BERT OKULEY
SAIGON (UP!) - The U.S. missiles into the Saigon area
Emhassy, which has stepped and called the situation in
liP its program to evacuate South Vietnam ''precarious.' '
nonessential Americans from There were indications North
Saigon, today began burning Vietnam was moving more
what it called "nonessential" troops toward the threatened
papers, the embassy reported. capital.
With the embassy speeding
Both moves resulted from the
its evacuation
of
growing military · threat to up
Americans,
Manila
reports
Saigon.
A squad of Communist said the nuclear-powered
commandos attacked South aircraft carrier USS l'nVietnam's major communica- terprise and an escort vessel
tions center only five . miles broke off a five-&lt;iay good will
from the heart of Saigon today visit today and left Subic Bay
but was driven hack before it
could inflict damage. Anothe~
group unsuccessfully attacked
Showers tonigh t, lows in
the Long Blnh army base 14
upper
50s . Showers likely
miles northeast of Saigan
Saturday, turnmg cooler, 'highs
during the night. ·
Gen. Frederick Weyand, the in upper 60s. Probability of
U.S. Army, chief · of staff, pre]ipitation 80 per cent
reported Thursday the North tomght, 50 per cent Saturday.

Friday and .Sat~rday 9:30 to 8 pm - Monday, April 21, 9:30 to .5 pm·

Lo~we's

THE LITTLE PRINCE

Embassy burning papers
in Saigon to speed exit

'I

Fri ., Sat .• Sunday

Lerner &amp;

[

'

inCluding boolls and laundry,
will beat public colleges-up 12
per cent for resident students.
At the private colleges the
bills will go up eight per cent.
Harvard, Yale and Princeton
universities will be the most
expensive, with total expenses
- tuition, room and board,
laundry, books, transportation
and incidentals-&lt;!stimated at
$6,050, $6,670 and $6,515,
respective ly.
A spokesman for the College.
Board said the estimates do-not
include phone bills. These add '
to total expenses.
Overall resident costs on the
"
college front generally will
average $3,594 for the ninemonth academic year; commuter cOsts will average about
se~retary
" $3,186.
Averages at the private four
year colleges will corne to ·
$4,391 for residents and $3,950
for commuters. The private
The Southeastern Distric t schools are the most costly.
Board of the Ohio High Sc hool
The least painful bite on the
Athletic Association has ap- family budget comes if a son or
pointed_ James .1 . "B ear " daughter elects to go to a two·
Mains , Direc tor of In- , year public co llege, living at
structional Services of the home. The average bill is $301,
Ironton Ci ty Schools, as according to the College Board
Secretary of the Board, ef- report.
fective last April · I. Mains
The repori, "Student Exsucceeds Ralph McCormick, penses at Postsecondary InstiSuperintendent of Wellston tutions 1975·'76," contains
' .
City Schools. who has resigned. total resident
and commuter
The new secre tary in ad- budge ts for 2,400 schools.
dition to his new duties is the
Seventeen tables show averClass ''AA " rePresentative to age total expenses lor resithe Board. He serves with John dents, commuters, and self.
Martin , principal of Waverly supporting .students at the
High School, in this capacity . different kinds of schools:
John Wickline , teacher a t public, private, two and four
Kyger Creek High School, and year, and proprietary.
James Young, Superintendent
of Valley Local, Lucasville are
Don Gatchell , Chillicothe High
School Principal, and James
Diehl, Meigs High Principal,
represent the class "AAA!)
sc hools of the Southeastern
District.
Mains has had a varied
career in high school athletics
as he has served as athletic
director and head coach in all
sports at Iron ton St. Joseph
High School' At Ironton High
School he served in similar
positions at various intervals
as head football coach, head
baseball coach, head track
coach, assistant basketball
coach , and athletic director
and in administrative posts as
Dean of Boys, Guidance
Director, and Ironton High
School Principal. PresenUy,
Mains is coordinator of federal
programs and administrative
assistant to Superi ntenden t
Harold Conley.

•

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

'
NEW YORK ( I)PI) - Ned
school year parents of college
students will need to pinch
pennies harder.
The cost of college·in 1975 to
1976 will be six to eight per cent
higher than this year. This is no
"ballpark estimate ." The
prognostication is hased on a
survey of 2,400 colleges.
The analysis released Monday by the College Scholarship
Service of the College Board in
New York also shows that the
largest increase in tota~ costs

the Class " A" representatives .

.

•

e

at y

Earlier in the day, American
and South Vietnamese officials
began a new program designed
to cut through Vietnamj!se red
tape and expedite the evacua·
lion of an estimated 3,000
Americans and their Vietnamese families. Embassy
officials said Americans on
official missions also have
been barred from entering
Vietnam to keep .from adding
to the problem. ,
There were these other
major Vietnamese developmen~:

- The Australian Embassy
today warned ·Australian residents of South Vietnam to leave
the country as soon as possible
while normal commercial
is
transportafion
still
available. ·
- U.S. officials said in WashContinued on page 10

•

enttne

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL XXVII

NO. 4 .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

FRIDAY, APRIL18, 1975

PRICE 15'

Carnahan injured
in tractor mishap

HAROLD CARNAHAN

by hospital officials that he had
an eye injury and facial
lacerations.
The sheriff's department

Harold Carnahan, 68, Rt. 1,
Racine, was transferred from
the Holzer Medical Center to
University Hospital, Columbus, following an accident at
his home at 2:45p.m. Thursday:
Carnahan was fertilizing a
field , according to the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department,
when his tractor stuck in a
ditch, causing him to fall as it
rose in U'le air.
He was transported to Holzer
by . the Racine Emergency
Squad, where it was reported

also investigated an accident

at 1: 15p.m. Thursday when the
car of Curtiss Powell, 74,
Racine, was struck by an
automobile driven by Bonnie
Allen, 32, Cleveland. Powell
was circling his driveway when
Allen backed her car from its
parking place and struck the
Powell vehicle.
There were no injuries and

no citations were issued.
At 12:10 a.m. today , the
department investigated a
si_ngle car accident on CR 28,
two-tenths of a mile south of
CR 22 where James D.
.Officers of the newly formed
. TUPPERS PLAINS - The Houdashelt, 19, Syracuse, lost
Big Bend CB Club of Pomeroy, Orange Township Volunteer control of his auto.
a citizens band radio club, Fire Department will stage a
The car went off the right
were elected Tuesday night at public fund raising auction , side of the road, recrossed the
the Pomeroy City Hall.
rain or shine, at 7:30p.m. on highway and struck an emElected were Guy Hysell, F'riday, May 2, at the barn of J . bankment. There was expresident; PaulL. Smith, vice R. Kennedy in Tuppers Plains. tensive damage to the
.Pickup of items being Houdashelt vehicle . The
president; Patsy Warner,
secretary, and Terry Pickens, donated for the sale has begun Racine Emergency Squad
treasurer. Forty-one persons and will continue until the sale tran sported Houdashelt to
at tended and 33 signed for date. Space has been set aside Veterans Memorial Hospital
in the barn for the con- where he was treated and
membership.
The next meeting will be held tributions. Anyone wishing to released .
Tuesday, Aprll 22, at 7:30p.m. contribute may take items to
The accident is still under
at the Grange Hall located on the barn, to Millhone's Sohio inves ligation.
the fairgrounds at Rock Station, the Ohio Valley
Springs. All licensed CB Manufacturing Co. or to the
operators are welcom.ed to join Lindsey Lyons ho111e. Pickup
and all other interested per· service also will be provided
sons are invited to attend. The with those wishing to con·
organization is 'non-!lrofit. At tribute asked to call 667-3301,
Rain or shine, the "hike·
the last meeting the ladies 667-3131 or 667-3994 .
bike".. of the Meigs Chapter,
served refreshments.
Ohio Association for Retarded
;::~::8::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::::;;:;:;::~:::::::::::·:~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::· Citizens ,
will come off
Tuesday.
Highs
wlll
be
In
the
Saturday.
EXTENDED . OUTLOOK
50s and lower 60s and lows
Final arrangements were
Sunday through Tuesday,
wlll
be
In
the
upper
30s
and
made
at the Thursday night
chance of showers Sunday
the
40s.
of the planning
meeting
and fair Mondar and
:::::::::::::;:::i:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::.::::::::::::::::::::::: committee at the Meigs County

Officers of
Big Bend CB
club elected

Firemen plan
auction event

VOCATIONAL CONFERENCES at Meiga IUgh School concluded today with information
on 44 vocations being presented during the week to the students. Trudy Roach, who served as a
student guide for speakers, is pictured here with Joan Klirnko, counselor, Hocking Technical
College, Nelsonville, seated, left, and Jane Mong, 'instructor, associate degree nursing at
Hocking Technical, both participaling in Thursday's program.

Hike-Bike on, rain or .shine
courthouse.
before the starting time.
The Meigs High School Band
It was reporwd that the N.
will lead off the riders at 10 and N. Sport Shop has provided
a.m. Saturday morning from the trophy to be inscribed with
toe Pomeroy Junior High the name of the event and the
School, and a truck with a rider's name.
flashing light will bring up the
Sandwiches and candy for
rear. Riders are asked to be at the riders have been prov ided
the Junior High School well and Royal Crown will furnish

dr-inks. The Royal Crown truck
will be at check points two and
five . Sandwiches will be served
at check point two, candy at
three, and water will be
available at check points one
and four . The event will be
televised by cable.
Con tinued on page 10

•

93 celebrate SEO Athletic League's 50th year
"A tribute to communities iri
the area."
That's· how Dr . Harold
Meyer, commissioner, Ohio
High
School
Athletic
Association , praised
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League officials, coaches,
sportswriters, r'adio·broadcasters, athletes and f~nii
Thursday night on the occasion
of its 50th anniversary
celebration at the Coach House
in Wellston.
Dr, Meyer was referring to
the SEGAL's uniqueness
because of its longevity.
" You (the fine people of
southern Ohio) deserve the
best of everything, Your league
is in a rare vintage class.
Congratulations on past
achievementS. I wish you aU
success the n~xt 50 years."
Introduced by master of
ceremonies Dean Lewis of
Jac~son, Dr. Meyer reminded
93. persons attending last
.

SPORTS TODAY
Baseball - Eastern
at Miller, Waterrord at
Southern, Meigs at
Waverly, and Wahama
at Pt. Pleasant.

.

~

Weather

FIRST PHASE OF A FEDERAIL Y FUNDED
PROJECT, a 600 foot chain fence was placed around the .
ballfield at Syracuse Municiphl Park Wednesday, The 51}.50
federal grant ineludel! the fence, Ughts for the !leld, pa~ing
area and two tennis courts. The fence, which encircles the
field, is 600 feet in length"and four feet high .•The fence was
placed on thHield by The Ohio Valley Fence Com\&gt;any,
Belpre.

after a stay of only one hour.
Both .the Navy and the embassy refused to comment on
speculation the carrier, the
world's largest ship, had been
ordered to South Vietnamese
waters for any emergency
largescale evacuation of
Americans.
Edward J . Heine, Jr., presideptof the United States Lines,
said in New York that two of
his cargo ships were standing
· by in Saigon harbor ready to
evacuate American and Vietnamese civilians and that a
third vessel will soon be en
route.
Emhassy sources ssld the
papers being burned did not
include codebooks or other
vital information, bill were
'classified documents no longer
considered essential to the
embassy's function.

.

night's affair that athletic
"We can't take the girls
programs are for the young- programs for granted any
sters. "Gel participation . more. They must have equal
Those wins will follow, '' he opportunities. Don't sell their
said.
'
programs short.
Their
Continued Dr. Meyer, programs are just as import·
"Ath,letics afford individuals ant as bays programs."
an opportunity to play by rules,
The commissioner said lack
accept responsibilities and of facilities isn't the major
make decisions. In other problem or conflict when it
words, law and order.
comes to both programs. "It's
''There's an elemerit in our timing," he said. Proper
Society today trying to de!\trOy, training schedules must be
to tear down our ordered ·way worked out by local school
of life. II will be a sad day for officials," he concluded.
all if school athletics are not
One of the hlgbllgbts of
pennilted to teach discipline," Thursday night's banquet was
he added.
the presentation of special
The commissioner touched commemorative plaques to
on the "explosion that is upon representatives of the eight
us." He was referring to giL; league schools by Mn;. John
athletic programs In the (Katy) Weber, Wellston,
Buckeye State. "We saw this daughter of tbe league's
'equal opportunity•' coming and founder, the late WUUam E,
ani ready for If," the Com-. (Bill) 'lbomas.
··
missioner continued. Meyer · Accepting the plaques were:
pointed out plans are com- Ralph Nix, Athens·; Ed
pletect for state tournaments in Stewart, Gallipolis; Curt
girls track, gymnastics , Boggs, Ironton; Bob Bevins,
volleyball ·and basketball Jackson; .Joe Murtha, Logan;
during the 1975-76 school year. James Diehl, Meigs; John
"You have to have money Martin, Waverly, and William
makers to support non-money (Buck) Lockhart, Wellston.
making sports," Meyer con. · Two special awards were
tinued. He said admissions to made to league officials and
see girls volleyball and league sportswriters and radio
basketball teams compete will broadcasters.
help . pay for most girls'
State Representative Claire
,programs.
(Buzz) Ball (91st District),

'
' .·

'

Athens, former All-SEOAL
tackle at Athens High ( 1957-58)
and State Representative Ron
James (92nd
District) ,
Proctorville and former
Fairland athlete ( 1966 )
presented SEGAL President
Curt Boggs, Ironton, and
SEGAL Sportswriter Radio

broadcas ter vice-president
Paul Jassogne, Logan, and
secretary-treasurer Odie
O'Donnell, Gallipolis, framed
resolutions from the House of
Representatives saluting the
SEGAL on " the momenious
occasion of its 50th an·
niversary.' '

Tom Metiers, Athens, of.
fi cial SEOAL statistician,
summarized league activities
during the past 50 years and
recognized
two
former
Nelsonville coaches and a
former NHS athlete and
sportscaster who were special
Continued on page 'l.

.

PLAQUE PREsENTED - Mrs, John (Katy Thomas) Weber, presented the plaque
commemoraling membership in the 00-year SEOAL io James Diehl, principal of M~iga High
School. ·

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