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Monday wath the Me•gs School
Dtstftcl Pubhc Library Boat d.
at the Middlepo rt Library
dtscusscd future tmprovement
of the local hbranes
Introduced by C E
Blakeslee , Oh1o Valle y
Assoc tatwn of Ltbran es
re]Jresenta tt\e, were Jerr y

Grimm , Wellston, the Ohto
Valley Area Ltbrar&gt; director
and Rtchard Chesk1 and John
Ph1hp, state hbrartan workmg
m library development and
field operataons
.
The specialists offe red
suggestwns for better pubhc
service
and
an s\liered
questiOn s about a comprehensi ve study of future
library needs of the county
They suggested bemg named a
county dtstrtct hbrar} rather
than school diStnct hbrary
They revealed future plans of
the State Library for more
e:denswn se rv1ce thr ough

virws of those few "'ho rounsel that no achon be taken unhl
some vague future time. 11

bookmobile umts They ad·
vtsod local hb'i-anes exchange
staffs often so that all employees
rn a}
becom e
acqumn ted w1th resowces m
both hbranes through conta ct
an d better catalogtn g of
matertals

"ll would be callously cruel to delay aclwn on somclhmg
'" vital to alllhe people JUS! because a lew had adopted a
n·cklcss athtude uf rule or ruin, of our plan or no plan,"
Weinberger sa1d . TestifYing at the slarl of lbe ltrsl major
health msurance hea rings m Congress smce 1971, Wein·

berger satd ·
"The statement of Blue Cross yesterday was a par·
urularly bad example of this. I would only say beware of
an) one with 44 pet. of the busnM!sS who adVIses you logo slow

Sheets,
secretary, reported on the

on change."

progre ss
relatiOn s

prcstdc11t who adv1scd Congrcs:s lo avmd a ' 'crisis

Mrs

Jenm fer
of

publi c

new

Wemberger was relerrjng to a statement by Rlue CrOSii '
al~

PLE.\SAN1 -' Con. beneath the lower hne adjacent
struction of i:t volunteer f1re to the 150 x 300-foot parcel
Robertson sa1d plans already
!=&gt;latJOn m Ma son County h~ s
been gwen the "go ahl!ad" as a have been prepared for con.
result of land acqulsttlon by the struction of the fire sta tion and
that more than 100 residents,
Cnunty Court.
mctudm
g many from the
In a jowl announcement
Commtssioner Bas1l , Robert- Goodyea r plan t, have md1cated
son, and The Goodyear T1re &amp; their mte rest as volunteer
Rubber Compeny reported the firemen
transfer of a small parcel of
land at the southeast corner of
tis Pomt Pleasant, W Va plant
property
(Conlmued from page l )
The parcel consists of a
gra
phs taken durmg the Ken!
rectangular ptece of 150 foot
frontage on the east stde of State trouble played a key role
Route 2wtth a depth of 300 fee t, m the recent mdictments of
togelller w1th a year to year Natwnal Guardsmen m Ohw.
lease for additi ona l park10g He a!S&lt;J wrote a book on the
shootmgs
The letter to the Hearst
family srud "The strap of the
weapon (MISS Hearst was
ca rrymg) does not go around
Joseph V Wtlson 81 Mtd· the back of her neck Apart
dieport a retired New' York from the fa ct that thas 1s a little
Central Railroad conductor, unusual, that the strap should
dted Wed nesday mormng al go over her rtght shoulder only,
llle home of h1s daughl&lt;!r, Mrs what makes 11 extremely
Ausltn (Max!Oe) Ph!lhps, s•gmfiCant as !hat her coat has
Pomeroy, w1lh whom he had been pu t on aft er shouldermg
restded for the past tw o years the gun.
"Consequently, at becomes
Mr. Wtison was born Feb 28,
unposSib!e
for her to throw
1893, an Jackson County, W
down
the
weapon
without first
Va., a son of the late Joseph
and Jenny Wilson He was removmg the coat. "
Davies a!S&lt;J noted that the
preceded m death by hts wife,
bank
pholos showed M1ss
Ellen Booth Wtlson, a son, Joe,
Hea
rst
with her nght hand m
three brothers and thr ee
her coat pocket
sisters
"Wtth her nght hand 10 the
Mr Wtlson spent has boyhood
pocket
of her coat, how can she
in Charleston, W Va , where he
possibly
get a f10ger on the
enl&lt;!red s.&gt;rvice w1lll llle old
New York Central Ratlroad tngg er mechamsm of th e
He recetved a gold pass from gun?" he asked
Davies sa1d her hand m1ght
llle railroad for 50 years ser·
have
been bound 10sade the
v1ce and recently received a 60
year pan from lbe Brotherhood coat or strapped to the butt of
of Railway Trammen of whtch the nfle.
In another development, FBI
he was a member Mr Wtlson
agent
¥' charge Charles W
was a member of the Mid·
dleport Farsi Baptast Church Bates sa1d a tape recording
Surv•vmg are hts daughter, and penciled notes claiming to
Mrs Phllhps; a son, Frank, be from the SLA were a p.Middleport, a siSI&lt;!r, Mrs Tom parently a hoax They had been
(Sissy) Mar10n, Charleston, W received by the Sacramento
(Cahf ) Bee
Va • a brolller, John, Elksvtlle,
The messages sa1d hve
W Va.; 13 grandchildren and
Cahforma
policemen would be
s1x great.grandchtldren
killed for every SLA member
Funeral servaces wall be at 2
slam.
p m. Fnday at the RawlingsCoats Funeral Home, Middleport w1lll the Rev Steve
Skaggs off1c1atmg. Bunal w1ll
be m Beech Grove Cemetery
Fnends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p m
Thursday ·
I'I'

Patty

pollc1es bemg
mnsphea·e" and instead make a methodical examination of
prepared Samples from other
lhe 1ssue s before drafting legislation.
hbr anes m the area have been .;.::,:,:,:,.,;:,·:.·:·:·:.'·:':':c::::;; .;·::::;: ':':.:.;,:::;:::::·:;:···, •. ;.,.,. .••. . : .-~:·:·:·:·:::·:·.·=·~:·:·:·:···:·=:·:·: . ···..;-:-: •.·:.::
requested
. Bom d members were en ~
co uraged to attend the
govern or 's conference on May
Continued cool, htgh to mid
8 at the Umvers!ty Inn m
50s south Colder tonight ,
Athens Everyo ne Interested m
scattered frost, low 10 the 40s
hbra1 y servtce may make
south Thursday sunny and not
reservatiOns by contacllng the
so cool, hi gh from mtd 50s to
Pomeroy Ltbrary Frtday
mad 60s.
mormng
Atte nd mg th e
meetmg besides those named
MOTHER DIES
were Mrs . Pat Holter,
OGDEN, Utah (UP! ) - Two
Mr
and
Mrs John Reece ,
president, Mrs Pat Malls, and aarmen were held today on
Lincoln Htll Dr , flew toda y to
Wanda Eblm, Clerk
susplcton of tor tunng hv e
.Longview, Wash. to attend the
hostages w1th acid and funeral later lh1s week of h1s
shootmg each of them m llle mother Monday mght Mr
head dunng a robbery Three Reece is coordmator of pubhc
of the vtcllms were ktlled .
affairs for the Gavm Power
A thtrd aarman was Plant Their daughters , Ann
questwned but was released and Damelle, Will be staymg
An 18-year-old gar! was raped wtth relatives here
before she was ktlled an
Monday's robbery al a stereo
CINCINNATI - Aprti '"30 IS said Paul A. Schuster, IRS shop
JAYCEES TO MEET
the last day for employers to D1str1ct llarector
Police sa td the robbers
The
MeigS County Jaycees
report and pay Soctal Securtty
Employers should use the Jammed a pen mto the ear of
wall
meet
at 8 p.m thiS evemng
and withheld Federal mcome pre ·addressed Forms 941 one vtcllm and ktcked it The
at
the
Pomeroy
Vtllage Hall
taxes for the ltrst quarter of matled to them by lbe IRS, or man surv1ved the attack and
1974
obtam copies of llle form from was found waikang around the The mam order of busmess Will
be the electaon of offacers
"Employers have until Apnl the nearest IRS offtce.
shop w1th the pen stickang out
30 to file Form 941, 'Em·
IRS Publication 15, "Cir· of has ea r
player 's Quarterly Federal cular E - Employer's Ta•
The two men surrendered
Tax Return ,' If they have Guide," as available free from wathout reststance at thetr
deposited the entire quarterly the Cincmnall IRS ofllce to barracks at nearby Hall Atr
YOUTH TO MEET
tax liabthty on lime m a provtde more tnformatwn for Force Bas.&gt; Tuesday mght
There wall be a young
Federal Rese rve Bank or employers
They were tdenltf1ed as DaleS people's mee hn g at the
authortzed-commercial bank .' '
Pierre, 21, of Trm1dad, West Rutland Freewill Bapta st
Indies, and Wtlliam A An- Church at 7. 30 each Friday
evening All young people are
drews, 20, of Jonesboro, La
Ogden pollee satd llle th1rd welcome as well as adults
suspect was queslloned at llle
A deer was killed at 10 p.m colliston on Rl 35, one and five aar base and voluntanly went
NOTICE
Tuesday m Rt 7 near mile past tenllls miles west of Rl 160. to pollee headquarl&lt;!rs where
TH E CHE SA P EAKE AND
35 10 Me1gs County, the Gaiha- Officers sa•d an auto driven by he \vas mterrogated furlh er O HIO
RAILWAY COMPANY
hereby grves nolrce th.at on th e
Meigs Post State Highway Ronald Toler, 21 , of Mtd·
The man was relea sed
day of Apnl , 1974 rt fried
Patrol reported The ammal dleport, was struck m the rear Pollee officials sa1d he was 8th
wrth the Interst at e Com merce
ran mto the path of a car • by a car operated by Carl "mvolved" but dec!10ed ad- Commrssron at Washrngton D
C an ap pl ication for a cer
operated by Paul G. Buckley, Fraley. 20, of Caldwell There dttional comment until con- trf1cate
of pub trc con ven tence
necessrty perm rttm g ( lJ
45, of Coolville. There was was moderate damage.
sultm$ with the county at. and
a bandonm e n t of a port ron of the
shght damage lo h1s car. He
Fraley was charged w1lll torney
Pom er oy Branch betw een
Valuat ron Srat,on 85 + 79 8 at or
was not mjured
failure to stop w1lllm lbe
near Old t own , Ohio , and
At 5:20 p.m. Tuesday, the assured clear distance
V&lt;tluat ron Sta tton 3403 + 91 at or
near Ga l l tp ol rs Oh ro a d rsta n c e
patrol mvestiga led a rear end
Emma J. Wh1te, 35, Crown
D!VORCE GRANTED
BRIDGE BIDS IN
of appro xr mately 62 84 mrl es ,
C1ty, was charged with dr1vmg
Jane Ann Roush , Mtddleport,
{2 ) abandonmen t of a port ron of
CHARLESTON, W. Va.
the Pom er oy Branch betw een was awarded a dtvorce 10
wh1le unde r suspensaon t UP!) - The State HighValuatron Sta tton 4347 + 46 at or
following an accident at 8 30 ways Department said today
near Pom e ro y
Ohro, and Meigs County Common Pleas
Valuatton Statto n 4508 + 40 at Court from William Joseph
DEADLINE NEAR
p m Tuesday on Rt 218 at the a Nashville, Tenn., firm
end Qf I m e n ea r Pomeroy Ohto.
April 30 Is the last date for junction to County Road 33
ad sta n ce of appro&gt;umately 3 05 Roush, Hartford , on grounds of
submitted the apparent low
mil es and (3) abandonment of gross neglect of duty and exfllmg the personal property Officers said the White car bids for construction of
operations ove r a por t ron of the
tax Out of 1,220 fihng last year, collided w1lll an auto drtven by seven land piers lor a ne\\
Pom e roy
Branch
be tween treme cruelty. Three persons
Valuatron Sta t ron 3403 + 91 at or filed for divorces, all on the
only 324 have filed so far thts Randy Hunt, 18, of Crown Ctty
Ohio River bridge at St.
near Galltpol rs, Oht o
a nd
year
Valuatron Sta tion 4347 + 46 at or grounds of gross neglect of
Marys.
near Pomeroy OhtO , a d tstance duty and extreme cruelty.
Ten have asked for 'ex·
The bld of $2,126,856 by
of approximatel y 17 87 m ile s,
l&lt;!nswns. Under stale law, a 10
an rn Hoc k mg , V rnton , Ga l lra They were Templeton Grueser,
Foster and Creighton, 'Inc.,
Holzer Medical Center
d Mergs Count res, Oh ro The Rt 2, Pomeroy, vs Sharon Lee
pet penalty must be charged 1f
Nashville, was the apparent an
(DIScharges, Apri123 !
lrn tf for whrch the abandonment
an extenswn has not been
appll ca t ron has been fr ie d rn Grueser, Middleport; Ruth
low figure of seven bids
Deborah Arv idson, Mrs
eludes the sta tron s of Union Ann Gnffin, Rt 1, Reedsville,
apphed for and granted, sa1d Denms Boyd and son, Harold
submitted Tuesday.
Fu rn ace, Starr. N ew Plymou th,
County Audttor James Rousn Brown, Helen Cohenour, Lewts
.. ..:::::::: . . ·=·=·· . ·:·:-:·:·:·:·.·:::·:·: ··:: :-:·:·: •.•::::; Orland , Cre ola , McArthOr , vs Larry Ernest Gnffin, Rt 2,
Dundas
Oreton ,
Hawk s Long Bottom, and Amondal
Coon, Mary Jonas, Edna
Mrnerton, V rn to n , B rdw el l ,
Kerrs , Galllpolrs K anau ga , Fay Hartung , Mtddleport, vs
Jones, Betty Lynch, Truman
Cheshtre , Mtdd le porl. Am Donald Addi son Hartung,
DANCE PLANNED
McClell~n , Maye Mora, Anna
ba sse dor Srd rng and Pom er oy
CHESTER- Asquare dance Morns, Gladys Myers,
Th rs applt c atron ha s been Middleport
ass
igned Docket No AB 18 (Sub
w1ll be held at llle Chester Deborah Ohm, Eva Phillips,
No 10} The proceeding wtll be For Sale
Elementary School Saturday Roberta Prtddy, Forrest Rahe,
hand l ed wrthout public hea r rngs
unless protests are recetved
from 9 p.m unttl mtdmght Wallen Riley, Edson Roush,
whr c h contam tnform a t.on STRAWBERRY plant s, Cha r l te
under the sponsorship of the Manlyn Wallace , Mrs Richard
Fos ter , Rt l , Racrne . Ohro
rndtCiU rng a n ee d for such
~._h
ea
rrng
s
In
accordance
w
th
Phone 24 7 2309
1
Eastern Htgh School Alumm Rose and son, Wtlma Wamsley,
the Commrssron 's -regu l at .ons
4 18 12t C
Assn
(49 CFR 1100 250 ) rn Ex Parte ---- --------~-, David
Waugh,
Freda
No
55 ( Sub No
4),
lm· CHRYSANT HE MUMs
pla nts
Wolf10gbarger
plementatron-Nat'l
E:n
$1 a doz en Phon e 1 (3 04) 773'
vrronmenta l Polley Act, 1969,
5147
~Births)
MARRIAGE LICENSE
340 ICC 431 ( 1912 ), any prot ests
Mr
and
Mrs
James
Catron,
may rnclud e a statement 1n -~-------- --~~ 7t p
David Andrew Crow , 19,
d tcatrng the pr esen ce or a b
a
son
,
Ravenswood,
W
Va
,
Racme, and Mary Lou
Walnut
AM FM
sence of a ny effect of the srEREO
Rad ro 8 t rac k tape co m ~
requ es t ed CommrSStOn actron
Icenhower, 17, Rl 2, Pomeroy Mr and Mrs John Toml10, a
btnalton Balance $ 11 0 73 or
on tt1e qu a lrty of the human
daug hter, JacksQn, Mr and
terms ava rlable Phone 992
en\'tronment If any such effe ct
Mrs John R Smith , a
3965
•s al leged to be p rese n t. th e
LOCAL TEMPS
2 14 t f c
s t ate ment Shall tn cl ud e 1n
daughter, Gallipolis.
f orm attan r elating to the ~--------------­
Temperature m down town
releva nt factors set forth tn Ex NEW 3 bedroom hom e 1"2 ba th,
Pomeroy Wednesday at II a m
Part e No SS (Sub No 41 supra,
garage basemen t o n Gra\' el
Part (b l ( IJ (5), 340 ICC 431
H rll , Mrddleport Na tur~f'- gas
was 43 degrees under cloudy
461
The
applr ca nt ,
The
already m
!'hon e Da le
skies
Chesa pea ke and Oh ro Railway
D ull on , 992 3369 e\'enr ng s
A RUN ON BEER
Company, states th at th e relref
992 2534
GENEVA (UPI) - Stores
sough t rn thr s applrcalton rs no t
1 17 tfc 1
SUPERSTAR
Elvis
a
major
Federal
actron
---------~~~reported a run on beer Tuesday
Presley has reportedly s rgnrft ca n tly affecttng the
follow mg an an nouncement
of th e human en v ROCERY busmess for sate
turned down an offer of one qualtty
v •r o.nme n f Any per son oppo sed
But!dmg for sal e or lease
11
would
go
up
10
prace
by
that
Ton1ght thru Thursday
million dollars from an to th rs abandonment appltcat 1on Phone 77 3 561 8 from 8 30 p m
17 5 per cent May 1.
NOT OPEN
ad\'rse th e Comr'nrssron
to 10 P m for appo tntment
Australian promoter to play pShould
r omptly, wrth an or rgrnal and
3 20 tfc
Apml bottle wlll cost 35 cents
s rx c op res. rdentrf ¥ rng th e - - - - - - ' - -- - - - - -- Fr1 • Sat , Sun
only
two
shows
in
Sydney.
m stor es and the same amount
docket number , •n c ludrng the 16' 2 F T FIBERGLASS out
Apnl 26 27 28
of
draught beer 10 a tavern will
sub number , and send a copy of
board
80 h p
Mercury
EVEN ANGE LS
the pro test to M r
Rene J
complete wtlh t rader Phone
EAT eEANS
cost 47 cents And that's for NUDES ON BROADWAY
Gun nrng , Two ., North Charles
985 4176
.and that am ' t hay 1
St r ee t
Ba ltrmore, Maryland
4 21 Dtp
what 1s known as ''normal "
NEW YORK (UP! )
( T e chn~color )
21201 Al l protests submttted - - - - - - - - - - - - ---.
beer
The
preferred
stronger
Grultano Gemma
Nudity, now commonplace m sha lt be ftl ed wrth t he Com WE ARE ptckrng u p a p ra no rn
m rsSton no l ater than Jun e 7,
brew wall cost even more.
Bud Spen cer,
mollon pictures, IS spreadmg 1974
you r area and would ltke
Geneva
stores
satd
people
,
l PG )
some re spon si ble party to
to
Broadway
Two
stage
t ake over paymen ts
Call
Show Starts 7 p m
THE CHESAPEA K E A ND
have been buymg beer by the productions offer women on
Credr t Manager . (614 ) 772
OH IO RA IL WAY COMPANY
case smce the announcement stage who take off every stitch
5669 or wnte 260 Ea st Marn
Str eet , Chllltco t he , Ohro 45601
of clothing m front of the (4 ) 24, (5 ) 1, 8 3tc
4 7 t fc
aud1ence
One of them, Joan Byron,
stnps while hangmg by her
teeth from a Oymg trapeze in
the openmg of the new comedy
''Jumpers " wha cli opened
Monday
mght. She removes all
The most populi! .tight club in
he• clothing, piece by paece, as
she swmgs back and forth over
the tri-county area is proud to
the orchestta unlll she 1s
completely
nude
present the return of
DRIVE IN HOURS
Mon lo Thur s, 9 to J- Fr 1day 9 to
The other nude scene as m the
7
Saturday 9 to 1t
prod uc tiOn of " Uly~ses in
Naghttown."
CASH GIVEAWAY

Weather

Airmen
•
held m

Joseph Wilson
died wednesday

killings

Employment tax
deadline neat

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.,.,. ·~:H:N~·::;~···=;·~~;·;···:x~;:'·';:::,::~ ·~::~ w. Fire sta~ion is approved News
Wt•mbergt•r tailed today for sp l&gt;t.~y enactment of a natiOnal

Three Spectahsts meetmg

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IH'alth Insurance bill, urgmg Congress to ••firmly reJect the

better libraries

'

Deer killed in Route 7

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•(Continued
• • from pageBriefs
1)
h
h

rernams in the )Wigle on volcaruc Mahes e Mountam for

MARIETTA
Most
southeastern Oh10 counhes and
lownshtps apparen.tly have
made no effort to take ad·

~AUTO BANK

GEO. HALL

AND THE HALLMARKS

NOW YOU KNOW
The crack tp the Uberty Bell,
an ·. Indepen&lt;lellce•. Hall, ·
Ph\fadelphi!', occur~est )n, 1835
whale to!IJIIII for the funeral o( ·
Johrt Marshall, c~ter N•qee· or·
the Untl&lt;!d s.tates
·
· . .·.

TONIGHT 9 TIL 1

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I

Paul Casct, chairman of
upcommg local Memonal Day
servaces sponsored by Drew
Webster Posl 39, Amenca n
Leg10n, spoke to membe rs of
llle Pomeroy·M tddleport Lions
Club Wednesday

mv1ted Ltons lo partictpate 1n
the Memortal Day serv1ce and
t6 put more mterest m the
occasion Case• cxplamed llle
program bemg planned
Fred Morrow of the Oht o
Power Co presented a film ,
"What Tame as lJie Power on
easel, the guest of club Today" It explamed th e
president Wendell Hoover , events leadmg to shortages and

James Dtehl, Jr , Meags
prmc1pal, was
elec ted
president of the Southeastern
Oh10 Athlehc League for the
1974-75 school term.
The elecllon was held
Wednesday night at Jackso n
durmg a jomt session of
SEOAL offictals and the
Southeastern Ohto D1stnct
Athletic Board
The SEOAL schools were
also represented by ~arto us

Strike may break today

"

Distrlet Ten Deputv D1rertor )Urtsd tcltons m their efforl• to

The programs were an-

nounced earlier tlus year by
Dept
of Tran spo rlahon

Max R. Farley Leite rs were
s.&gt;nt to the county engmcers m
each county descnbmg the
procedur es necessa ry for
submtttan g proposals The

Ieplace cxtst10g stg ns · with
those spcctfled m the nc" Oh10
Manual of Umform Traffi c
Control Devices

engmeers were asked to be

pr ograms, de s igned
spectftca lly to md the less
populaled areas, has thus fa r
been poor Farley sa1d only
Athens County has subm1tl&lt;!d

responsible for the town ship
htghways m the1r counltes- -

problems confrontmg power
compa nt es The !tim was
provided by Amencan Electnc ·
Pow er George Nesselroad
ass1sted wtth the film
Guests at the noon luncheon
meeting at the Metgs Inn were
Larry Powell of Powell's Super
Valu Store, Nesselroad, Case•
and E F Robmson

Pavement markmg Im provements are ofrered under

the 1973 Federal-Aid Htghway
Act th at shpul ates that
pavement markmgs 'on any
htghway sysl&lt;!m, other than
Interstate, can be upgraded to
standard s requtr ed b} the
Htghway
Ad·
Federal
mtmstratton " Preference ts
g1ven lo county and township
htghways The OhiO Depa rt.
ment or Transportat ion lS
seedmg pracllces used durmg regula led lo provtde edge,
the past basketball campaign cenl&lt;!r or lane hoes and the
was of little or no advantage. upgradmg of mterseclton
Dastnct offtctals attendmg markmgs where traffi c volume
were John W1cklme, Kyger warrants them
Creek, president ; Ralph
The Ohto 1974 Ht ghway
McCo rmick, Wellston , Don Safety Program allows the
Gathell , Ch1lhcoth e, J1m ODOT to provtde "for the
Mames , Ironton; Tom Hesson, dtstrtbuhon of traffic contr ol
Chesapeake, and James Dtehl , stgns to mumcipahtles under
Me1gs.
llle 30,00() population range and
GAHS prmctpal James N M to ail counties "The purpose of
Dav1s was also m attendance thts proJec t 1s to ass1st local
1

athlellc coaches
Other offacers elected last
mght were Bob Shamp, Athens,
v1ce pr es adent, and Ed
Stewarl, Galhpohs, secretary·
treasurer
League and dtstrtcl offtctals
discussed a number of atems
mvolvmg tournament compel!llon, schedules, and ad- 7
vance informataon on tour·
nament sates
The group fell that the new

Weather

alleged sex discrinunation
The executive board of Loc;&gt;l
1699 of the Amencan Federallon of State, County and Murucapal Employes Umon (AFSCME) also met Tuesday mgllt
and voted to urge 1ts membership to return to the1r JObs
today Prevwusly the board
had left the declston whether to
work up to mdtv1dual members
"The stnke ," the AFSCME
board said in a statement, "Is
not m the best mterest of our
membership The students are
not orgamzed mto any type of
un1on and are a small mmority
who do not represent · the
maJOrity of working students
on campus.

pavement rnarkmg requests

and orders for lrafftc control
signs have been received from

the ctbes of Athens, Belpre,
Galhpohs and Logan and ll om
U1c counltes of Hocktng, Noble
and Vmlon
Deadlines for both of these
programs are scheduled for the
end of Apn i, however, sago
orders may be taken up to July
1 Counties or mumclpahttes

wh tch have not submitted
requests for htghway markmgs
by the deadline may be
reqmred to wait until next

year
"These two programs should

be g1ven full consaderall on by
all counties smce we m the
Departmen t of Transportallon
ca nnot provide them without

100 pet coope rahon w1th the
county ofllctals," smd Farley

NO 9

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~t·

THE FIRSf CABINS BUILT IN POMEROY
The ftrst cabm m Pomeroy was bw lt by Samuel Ervm ncar the old Horton boat}ard m the
sprmg of 1807 Thts locatwn IS about where the Baptist Church now stands Mr Ervm wa s the flr st
settler of the town of Pomeroy
Amos Partlow came 10 1809 and bull! htscabm about where the ExcelsiOr Salt works IS located
today ThiS was the second house m Pomeroy. The th ird cabm was erected by Fra nk Hughes on the
gro und whet e the present courthouse stands The fourth cabmwas erected by John Mason on Sug,u
Run
Mr Enon vacated hts cabm m favor of John Batley and bu tlt another at the mouth of Ke11 s
run He hved there un!Ill815 when he S&lt;Jld to Nathan Clark, who was theftfth settler m wh at became
the town of Pomeroy Some of the above residences were sold to other parties Clark sold his to
Robert Bailey. Batley sold to Randall Sttvers, who afterwards sold to Ma jor D1ll
Ntal Nye bought a lot from Dtll and built on ll the first store where he kept the ft~st post offi ce In
Pomeroy m 1827 John Knight bought the unprovements made by Ervm from a "Mr Mtles'' and
Samuel Grant bought Partlow's property located on th e western part of the lot where the Ebersba ch
flllmg stauon later stood. The store bwldmg and post office bruit by N13l N}e wa s located near tile
Roedel store, now the bookmobale headquarters

Now You Know

enttne

The Government Prmting
Office uses about 11 boxcar
loads of paper a day

lntere~t.

Of The Meig3-Mason Area
THURSDAY, APRIL.25, 1974

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PHONE 992 2156

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__T_EN~
C E_
N_
rs

More help coming
to fight

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
~

By Agues Hill

•

at y
lkvoled To The

VOL. XXVI

The response to these two

•

Partly cloudy and not so cool
tonight Low in 40s Friday,
mostly sunny and mild , h1gh an
60s and low 70s

Ready Made

DRAPERIES
IF YOU ORDERED THE popular G1rl Scout coo~ies in
March you can exP:.,ct delivery any day now Hundreds upon
hundreds of the cookies arrtved m Meigs County thiS week
and were distributed to G1rl Scouts for delivery Wednesday.
Here Robm Kitchen, left, and Brenda Haley, members of
Middleport Troop 39, load their cookies 10 a wagon
preparatory to making dehver1es.

THEREON JOHNSON, chainnan of the Meigs Soil and Water ConservatiOn Distncl board·
of supervisors, presented awards to pQS~r winners at the Pomeroy Elementary School
Wednesday. The group 10cluded, front row, l to r, Tanume Etchmger , Deborah Woodyard , Tun
Faulk and Mark Hood, first place winners in fourth, f1fth, sixth and spectal educallon,
respecllvely; second row, left to rtght, Brenda Wtlson, Beth Perr10, Jamte SISson, Davtd
Manley, second place wmners, fourlll, ftfth, sixth and spectal educatwn, respectavely, third
row , Belinda Grunm, Lorra Wasecup, Susie Sprague, Sean Will, fourth, flflh, SIXth and spec ta l
education, respecllvely, third place wmners.

By United Presslnteroaflonal
ATHENS OHIO - STRIKING CAFETERIA workers,
members of the Student Workers Umon (SWU ) on llle Ohio
Unlvensty Campus honored a court-issued temporary
restrammg order here today limitmg packeting on the school
campus. Judge Lowell Howard of the Athens County Common
Pleas Court Issued the order Wednesday after school of!acials
srud the absence of such an order would mean "immediate and
irreparable damage" to the untvers1ty.
Members of the SWU met late Wednesday and voted,
however, to continue the1r strike which began Monday over
wages, alleged sex discrunmallon and umon recogmllon but to
honor the court order.
SAN FRANCISCO- BRANDING HER FATHER and fwnce

•
erOSIOn

Federal fundmg to help on to llle desagn of the planned
streambank eroston problems fac1hhes Thts add1honal work
and other potential riverbank •s m progress
cor rective measures at
"No further acbon has been
Pomeroy and Middleport may tak en on the Mtddleport
be for thcommg accordmg to a problem smce prelimmary cost
letter recetved today by esltmates of corrective works
Middleport Mayor John Zerkle md1cated lllat the federal untl
from Cong Clarence E Miller of $50,00() under the authonty of
Mtddleporl's problem deals Section 14 of lhe Flood Control
w1th the eroswn of sewage Act of 1946 would be greatly
lagoons along the Ohw R1ver exceeded Local officials at
below Hobson and Pomeroy's Middleport have not md1cated
problem as w1lll 1Is upper that llley are capable or walling
parktng lot, a porhon of whtch to assume the additional costs
has been blocked off from use
" However , the rece ntly
fo r months due to shppage
enacted Water Resources
The commumca hon today Development Act of 1974 m.
revealed that new laws do creases the federal hmtl to
provide a hig her expenditure of $250,00() for a prOJect confecteral funds fo r remedial structed under the authority of
purposes - from the former Section 14 of the Flood Control
$50,000 to the present $250,000 Act of 1946 Wtth the revtsed
by the U S Corps of federal cost hmlt, perhaps, llle
Engmeers
VIllage of Mtddleport wall now
Enclosed m the com· be walling to assume the
mumcahon •s a letter from the requtrements
of
local
Huntington Dtstr1cl, Corps of cooperatwn 10 developmg and
Engmeers, dealing Wlth both constr ucltn g streambank
comm umttes , an d se nt to protectiO n works at Mid·
Miller It reads
dleport Middleport officials
"ThiS IS to further advise you wall be contacted to del&lt;!rmme
of the status of 10ves tiga twns their mteresl regard10g further
of
slreambank eroswn cons1deratwn of a potenllal
problems at Pomeroy and proJect as soon as pohcy
Middleport
guidelines on llle expanded
"A report on the feastblhly of Secllon 14 program are
certam measures designed to received at fteld level "
correct a cavmg bank conOther aspec ts of the
dillOn adjace nt to the public problems laced by Mtddleport
parktng lot at Pomeroy has are diScussed 10 a letter to
been completed It was Mayor Zerkle from Cong
determ10ed that further M11ler.
constderahon should be gtven
It reads

"Thank you for takmg the
time to contact our dtstrtct
offtce regardmg Middleport's
continuang mterest m gelt10g
assistance from the U S Army
Corps of Engmeers for per·
manent repair of the eroded
streamban k bordenng th e
commumty's sewage lagoons
As the material we 've se nt
along lo you mdtcates, we have
been m sl&lt;!~dy contact w1lll the
Corps' Hunhn gton Dastra ct
Offtce regardmg thts matter I
personall y di scus sed Ihe
proJeCt at lenglll wtth Col
Kenneth Mcintyre dunng hiS
recent v1s1t to Washmgton
" It IS ObVIOUS that the
communa ty has anvested a
great deal of local dollars 1010
lllts prOJCCI, and I ca n readily
understand yo ur desire to
further be assisted by the
Corps Perhaps this latest
co mmunicalton ( printed
above) fr om the Corps be Iter
def10es llle Corps' positwn 10
thts matter at the present bme
"I would thank that the expanded authortty provtded the
Co rps und er th e recently
enac ted Waters Resources
Development Act would be
directly applicable to proJects
such as tha t proposed fo r
Middleport If you feel that the
town has adequate ly met the
requirements for partictpahon
m a bank project coordmated
by the Corps, you should in.
dtcate such to the appropraate
Corps authorities ~ ·

as pigs and "clowns", Patricia Hearst has sworn her allegiance
to the terronst Symb10nese Uberatlon Army which kidnaped her
nearly three months ago Miss Hearst, 20, daughter of newspaper
executive Randolph A. Hearst, also said 11 was "rtdlcuious to llle
pomt of bemg beyond belief" for her farmly to think she was
lrainwashed into parllcapating m a $10,1l00 bank robbery by the
SLA AprU 15
Her comments were contained 10 an 11kn10ule tape recording given to a San Francisco community relatiOns policeman by
intermediaries Wednesday The upper raght hand corner of her
drtver's license was sent along wllh the tape to authenllcate 1l.
But Hearst, president and editor of The San Francis.co
Examiner, mamtamed his complete trust m has daughter despite
her vituperative remarks about hlffi

•

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HARRISBURG - WESTERN STRIP MINES that produce
clean burning coal at a lower cost will not hurt Pennsylvania's
coal industry, a federal offiCial srud Wednesday. Thomas Falkie,
director of the U S. Bureau of Min~s. told a conference here
there is room m lite coal market for both Eastern and Western

Values to $12.00 a pair. Thas group include
unlined cottons and satins .
s fiberglas, tined and
50 mches wade to the pair- 63 and 84 inch len 9 ths.

coal;,! realize there has been a hangup by Eastern people about
waelher western coal will overshadow Eastern coal," Falkie

' Solid colors and prints'

FOam Back

said."But Increases m production
' are g~ing to ha ve to come. from

both sides of the country, so I don't think you have anythmg to
worry shout." His comments came at a "coal for the 70's"
seminar attended by coal producers, mdustry representatives,
govenuoent officials and enviromnentalists.
One Industry offiCial told the conference a shortage of mmmg
machinery may be an "insurmountable" obstacle In efforts to
Increase coal producllon

~., . . .·. . . . . ~ . . :. . ~.: . . . ~~. 5~9 ·.
:

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sysl&lt;!ms

]ames Diehl named SEO president

SAN FRANCISCO - MAYOR JOSEPH AUOTO ~td
Tuesday "stop and question" tactics wall go on as long as police
believe 1t will turn up clues m the search for the mysterious
"Zebra'' killers, who have shot 18 persons randomly. Alioto
responded to cnhcasm by some black groups and to two ciVIl
nghts smts flied agamst the pollee, saying pollee used the same
procedures to hunt a whtle suspect m the "Zo&lt;hac" killmgs
severa l years ago
"More people were stopped m the Zodiac invesllgation than
m lbe current on~." Ahoto told newsmen The "Z&lt;!diac" claimed
to kill as many as 37 persons belween 1966 and 1968, 1/lll was only
linked def101tely to sax He has never been captured The Zebra
killers have taken a dozen hves

i:. .Jc h W&lt;.•ck ~'J O first pnze , 510 second. 55 th ird
Rcgl'st er fr e~ Wmner s Will be rtOhfied Drawlhgs
A~1l6 13, 20, 27, May 6. Dnve tn , try th1s n~w
conv e nu~ nt !&gt;er v1ce

'I

1I

" programs that
vantage of
provade for an upgradmg of
road s1gns and paveme nt
mark10gs along lbe1r road

Lions urged to be part of Memorial Day

WASHINGTON - AN AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT
report today srud bro•ler chtckens, eggs and turkeys. wall b~
cheaper this sprmg than 10 1973 Department. economiSts sal
poultry and egg produchon w1il riSe th1s sp.nng, although tJ:le
margm over year-ago levels wall dwmdle for poultry meat They
predicted chtcken and egg pnces "will run wea~er than a year
ago while turkey pnces wall be down sharply."
'Looking tnlo the summer, econo;msts predtcled broiler
praces would me to keep pace wtth beef and pork But, the
specialists added, the br&lt;&gt;iler mcreases w1ll probably be smaller
Ulan lbe normal seasonal gam whtch comes when summer
wealber spurs demand for chacken or backyard barbecues As a
result, sununer prices should average "well aeiow" a year
ear her

MEIGS THEATRE

The MEIGS INN

•

Road marking prQgrams mostly ignor~d

t e roug

trap down the slopes
.
d
ighl
The Pan Boemg 707 crashed mto the rnountam Mon ay n
100 yards from the summit and burst Into fiaJnes killing all
aboard The troops reached llle crash sate Tuesday after a sevenhour , J:&gt;&lt;mle trap through lbe JUngle

ATHENS, Oh10 (UPI)Members of the Student
Workers Umon (SWU ) at Ohw
Umversaty sa1d they mtended
to "make or break" their strike
today agamst the school.
• SWU
members voted
Tuesday mght to reJect a
proposal by Ward Wtlson, OU
perS&lt;Jnnei d1rector, to negollate
ISSues on the condtbon the
unwn stop packeting at fave
campus cafetenas.
SWU offtctals sa1d they
would attempt to have more
pickets on hand today than the
27 pickets lllat shOwed up Tues·
day
The SWU struck Monday
over grievance procedures,
wages, umon recogmllon and

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AIDE ARRESTED
-m&gt;NN (UP!) - Chancellor
Willy Brandt's personal ad·
visor, Guenther Gmlleaume,
1was arrested today on charges
of spying for East Ge':ffiany, a
government spokesman sa1d:O

I '

\1
I

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$12,500 ARRIVES
Meigs County has received
$12,500 as tis share of the
diStribution of $4,569,957.97 in
local government fund money,
State Auditor Joseph T.
Ferguson's 1off1ce reports.

'

...

Spring upturn signaled
WINNERS IN THE ANNl:JAL Metgs Soil and Water Conservation Dtslnct rece1ved the1r
awards at the Riverview ·Elementary School Wednesday from Roy Miller, a member of the
district's board of superviSOrs. They mclude . front row, I to r, Darrell Henderson, Mary
' Masters and Teresa Dailey, firSt place wmners m the fourth, fifth and sixth grades, respectively; second row, I tor, Karen Bartimus, Greg W1gal, Roger Ho~mger, second place m the
fourth, fifth and sixth grades, respectively; back row, 1tor, Scott Dtiion, Rhonda Holsmger and
Tommy Harrts, fourth, fifth and sixth grade, respectively, th1rd place w10ners.

'3 1 more pupils recQgnized
Thirty-one fourth, fiflll and present lJie awards in llle
sixth graders of three contest which has been SliD·
elementary schools were · pUlled this year and has been
rewarded Wednesday afl&lt;!rnoon for llle1r work in the
annual posl&lt;!r conl&lt;!st of the
Meigs County Soli and Water
Two persons were hired to
Conservatlon District
work at the Meigs 'County
Each of the hrst place Welfare Dept when lJie Meigs
winners in each grade of the County Commissioners met
schools receaved a blue rtbbon earher this week They were
and $3 m "Ike" sliver dollars; &lt;Cyn thll! Malls, Middleport,
second place wmners received caseworker, and Elizabeth A
a red ribbon and two "Ike" Hensley, Pomeroy, clerk typist
dollars and th1rd place wmners I.
recetved a wh\1&lt;! ribbon and
In other busmess, architect
one 'Ike " sllv,er dollar .
Bob Scott, mel w1th the
The staff of the dastrict 1s commission to further discuss
VISiting the schools lllis week to the proposed tnenlal retar-

designed to create more
!&lt;!rest m each local school.
(Continued on page 10)

In·

Two employed by commission

I

I

dallon trammg center . No site
for the school has been
established
1
Barbara Shuler, welfare
director , was given permtsswn
to attend a Red Cross Disaster
Trathmg meeting m Galllpolis
th1s week . Attending were •
Robert Clark, Warden Ours
an d Henry Wells, commlsstoners, and Martha
Chambers,~clerk
, I

DETROIT (UP!) - General
Motors' deCisiOn -li!c..Step~ up
output of full and mtermedtate·
s1ze cars m the lace of sales
reports that show the Industry
trmlmg tls record year-ago
COLUMBUS tUPI) Sixty-five thousand more
Ohioans were jpbless at the
end of March, 1974, than at
the end of March, 1973, according
' to William Papler,
director of research and
statistics of the Bureau of
Employment Services.
According to the BES, the
number unemployed In Ohio
jumpetl 3.4 per cent in October of last year, peaked at
5.4 per cent in February of
this year, and appears to be
headiug downward.
pace IS a furlller mdicatton of a
spring upturn
The addttion of 24,000 cars to
1ts 1974-model production
schedule was announced
Wednesday by GM just
minutes after the mdustry
reported mld-Apnl sales were
off 28.7 per cent from Aprilii2lJ last year SO' far this year,
sales of ~w cars are down 26.5
' '

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per cent from a year ago
The hagher GM production
schedules mean the recall of
about 2,300 workers from mdefmite layoffs, S&lt;Jme of them
datmg hack to January There
are now about 105,000 US. auto
workers on mdef10ite layoffs,
mcludmg '80,00Q at GM
TheGM Fisher Body plant at
Euclid, near Cleveland, w1ll recall 102 persons.
Mack W Worden, GM vice
president, said full-siZe cars
contmue to represent an mcreasing share of llle company's sale~7.9 per cent in
the ftrsl 20 days of April.
Bennet E. Bidwell, Ford
diVISIOn general manager, sa1d
orders for , the standard-size
Ford were up 11 per cent m the
past two weeks over the last
two weeks of March
Atthe top end of the market,
Cadillac dlVlslOn of GM sa1d
saTes of 11,986 cars in the first
20 days of April were the best of
any month m 1974 Deliveries
of the standard"'lize Mercury
models were the highest for
any middle ltklay period since
November.
Deliveries in the first 20days
of -April, while trailing the
same period last y0111r by 22.3

' J

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per cent, were 4 5 per cent
above th e first 20 days of
March, 20 4 per cent higher
than the farst 20 days of
February and 31 2 per cent
above the slow f1rst 2tklay
penod of January.
Desptle the drop, AMC
captured S per cent of the
domestic market in mid-April,
compared with 4 5 per cent for
the same peraod a year ago
The penetrallon could have
been h1gber if more small cars
had been available, satd Wilham
McNealy,
AMC
marketmg VICe pres1dent
:::::::::&lt;·:-::::~:::::~=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:i!.m::::::::&lt;&lt;m

FOOD COSTLIER
WASHINGTON (UP!) Higher prices charged by
mlddlemeo resulted In a $15
Increase In the typical
famfiy's food bfil In March,'
according to new government figures.
Tbe Increase, which offset
decllolog farm prices, sent
the annual market basket
rate to a record $1,747.
Agriculture Department
calculations showed middlemen's sblire rose to an
r&amp;DIIIUII rate of $985.

, ~~~,~·~"II::J~
""Sl.3lQ
8!.~~8l:!:!&amp;'l&amp;,.
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3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., April25, 1974
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., April25, 1974

Nicklaus liked
•
m T of C pl~iy

Bonus f9rmsChester pupils to perform
Gallia board_
hires
.
48
teachers
..
,,

Gallia County's Local Board
of Education in special session
Wednesday night at North
Gallia
·~-employed
48
teachers, dismissed nine, and
accepted resignations from 11.
Written notices not to renew
contracts will be sent to MiSS
Edith Alley, an elementary
teacher at Hannan Trace;
Debra Rhodes, Barbara Wolfe,
and Joan Kimmel, Remedial
Reading teachers in the Southwestern area; head football
coacl, and teacher Robert
Ashley;
Keith
Carter,
basketball coach; William
Meek, Don ·Hodge, and Mrs .
Ja,ne Ann Slagle, oil teachers
at Southwestern High School.
Those five will be reemployed if ·the Fourth District
Court of Appeals finds in favor ·
of the former Southwestern
Board in a lawsuit filed last
year by 11 teachers dismissed
at Southwestern.
The board also went on
record stating the five teachers
would be considered in any
vacancies which might arise in
the county.
The board, following an
executive session, acted upon
the recommendation of Local
and County Superintendent
Comer Bradbury to terminate
the coaching contract of James

Arledge, head basketball caoch
at Kyger Creek High School.
The recommendation
overruled Principal Robert
L. · Lanning's
recom·
mendalion that Arledge be
graoted a conlinulng contract as a teacher and a five
year supplemental contract
as coach. The board later
granted only the continuing
cOotract.
AdaJ!I Krahel, speaking for a
delegation of 20 parents,
students, and teachers asked
the board why Arledge would
not be offered a coaching
contract in addition to a continuing teaching contract.
Supt . Bradbury said the
action was taken due to Coach
Arledge's "bench conduct".
David T. Phillips, KC band
director , Assistant basketball
coach Krahel, and Lanning
highly recommended Arledge
and told the board of Arledge's
hard work and dedication to
both teaching and coaching.
KC faculty members present
were Principal Lanning,
Wllliano Bahr, president of the
Gallia County Local Teachers'
Assn., Mrs. Aileen Rutz,
Phillips, Krahel and Mrs.
Janet Neal.
During the discussion,
Bradbury said, "! know Mr.

Trace .

Lanning is not pleased with my
recommendation. Hi s
judgment is based on his eight
months as principal at Kyger
Creek. My decision is based on
two years as superintendent at
Kyger Creek".
·
During the executi\'e session,
both Lanning and Bradbury
spoke to the board .
Cam Sands, a parent, said
the delegation had a petition
with names supporting Arledge
as a coach, · but the board
ignored the petition._
Wes Simms, Ohio Education
Assn. field representative, also
spoke on behalf of the coach.
Coach Arledge has been at
Kyger Creek for the past three
years. Although his varsity
squads have not had winning
records, his freshman team
was unbeaten this past year.
Resignations accepted were
Barbara Armbruster, Southwestern; Christine Napier,
Addaville; Cheryl Enyart,
EMR, Cheshire-Kyger;
Katherine Harris, Vinton; Tom
Campbell, North Gallia High
School; Pamela White, EMR,
Centerville; Barbara Wolfe,
Centerville ; Jeff Pope, Vocagriculture , North Gallia;
Ramona Lewis, BidwellPorter; Janet Neal, Kyger
Creek Jr. High, and Eleanor
Fadeley, Bidwell-Porter.

Two

Machir, North Gallia ; William
Bahr, Kyger Creek ; Gloria

Kemper.

Story of transportation
told in historical film
MARIE ITA- "Let's hear It
for Ohio - 170 Years of
Progress,'' a. unique film
depicting the historical
significance of transportation
in Ohio, is •vailable to commurdty organizations and clubs
in the counties comprising the
Ohio Deparbnent of Transportation's District Ten.
District Deputy Director
Max R. Farley said the 16nun
film premiered at the 1973 Ohio
State Fair and since. then has
been a popular itern on the
agendas
of
manv

''

Ernestine Smith, Kyger Creek ;
Jera ld ine. Sa mples , Bidwell . Porter ; Judith Sheets, Bidwell -

Porter ;

organizations.
The film, running 21 minutes,
traces the history of transportation in Ohio since the·
state's founding In 1803, .the
effects Of transportation in
Ohio's development and the
possible future for transportation in the Buckeye state.
Reques is for use of the film
should be made to ihe Public
Information Office, District
Ten, Ohio Department of
Transportation, Muskingum
Drive, Marietta, Ohio 45750.

Southwestern;

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB
· Reading of your disapproval of
fad diets, I think you should
comment on some of ,the
weight-losing programs I saw
in my association with secondaryschool wrestling. These are
motivated by the desire to
compete in a lighter weight
class.
It was quite common for
heavier boys to lose 15, yes 15
pounds or more the first night
Of practice. A close friend of
, mine lost a total of 19 pounds
through the season to wrestle
at tighter weight. He said the
last few pounds really came off
hard. All he ate for a week was
an orange; on a heavy exercise
program to boot. Many of them
severely restricted drinking
· liquids a large part of the time.
,
The idea was to eat like a
:, king the weekend after the
meet, and .then starve, run in
' sweaisuiis and take steam
•' baths until the next meet. They
.• sometimes took . laxatl~es for
, the sake of losmg weight. I
remember one With two or
three pounds to lose about eight ,
hours before we1gh-m, so he
,' raJ\ and steamed until it was

Centerville, and

'
·'

Wanda Ball, Vinton ; larry
Shong, Vinton , and Sharon

Finney , Bidwell -Porter.

One year contracts - Robert
Shaver,
Hannan
Trace ;
Carolvn r,!'".,,. c::, •.• ~-. ,~,J:&gt;&lt;; h•rn :
John 1-:\~P~('n~ . SnuthwP.stern;
Dwayne Jolley, Hannu11 I race ;
Emily Robinson, Bidwell -

Porter ;

these procedures, even when
you lose 19 pounds, do not
eliminate fat - just the water
lhe body normally needs. Most
people don 't realize that the
normal body is about half
water. · Over 70 pet. of the
weight of our muscles is water.
When you dry a person out you
seriously affect the way all the
vital cells in the body work,
even those in the brain. Also,
such people are more prone to
faint.
Water loss from weightlessness in space flight has a
similar effect. The loss is
nothing like what you describe.
Astronaut Ed While lost about
nine pounds when he was on the
flight with his space walk, but
he told me he regained most of
it the first day back. He
regained the normal amount of
water for earthlings. Those
interested in losing weight
safely without dangerous fads
can get more information by
writing to me in care of this
newspaper, P. o. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
N. Y. 10019, and ask for the
bookie t on losing weight. Send
50 cents to cover costs.
Those 15-pounds losses
during the first night's practice
are mostly water and salt. It
comes right back. The sweatsuits simply contribute to
draining ·the water and salt out
of the body. Thia saps energy in
a number of instances. This Is
. not the way to train our youth
!() have .a healthy body and
develop healthy living patterns. And, I think It is rather
poor sportsmanship to try such
gimmicks so you can wrestle
someone who is really smaller
than you.
·

Five year contracts -

Centerville.

Three year contracts -

Martha Meek, Bidwell -Porter ;

Barbara Curtis, Hannan Trace

and Mary

Neal , one -half day at V inton .
Frank
A.
Cremeans,
Gallipolis ,
form er
local
superintendent at
Kyger
Creek , was g iven a one ,year
contract as assistant county
superintendent at a salary of
$17,500 per year .
Atlee
Fulks,
veterans
teacher and administrator,
wa!1. granted a three year
contract as principal at

School.

No coaching contracts were
offered, but Bradbury stated
two -year con tra cts will be
given to John Blake, head
football coach at 'North Gallia ·

1\',

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and Jim Foster. head
basketball coach for the
Pirates.
The board also voted to
participate in Title I, II and Ill.

Jones , HBnrJan

REGAZZONI LEADS
MADRID (UP!) - Clay
Regazzoni of Switzerland was
favored today to increase his
lead in the G~and Prix driver
standings when 25 Formula
Qne cars roar away from the
starting grid Sunday in the
SPanish GP.
Regazzoni leads all drivers
with 10 points.

Of the Bend
Good news for Pomeroy residents who will have a chance to
get rtd of the winter's accumulation of junk real soon.
. Mayor Dale Smith has set cleanup week for May 6 and
reSidents are to place all of those things that they've been
wondertng what to do ~ith in their front yards or near the curbing. By the way, articles sho.uld he boxed or bagged.
RECENTLY, TWO TRUCKS left Middleport for Xenia with
food and clothing, Making the trip besides those named earlier
were Mr. and Mrs. Bob McElhinny and Mrs. George Glaze and
two sons.
. MONDAY IS BLOODMOBILE day for Meigs County. The
unit wm be at the Pomeroy Elementary School from 1 to 6 p. m.
Wa~-m donors are more than welcome . Local supporters are
hopmg for a good turnout.
BOB ROY, RACINE, an installer for the General Telephone
Co. of Ohto, IS pictured In the current edition of the company's
newspaper, "General News". Roy will he the subject of more
.feature malerialm forthcoming editions of the newspaper.
JOHN MOHLER, MIDDLEPORT Route I has.a new song
. "Anything for Jesus" coming out on the Neon Label in May and
has signed contracts for two more sacred tunes. John has worked
for 15 years caring for the lawn of the late Dr. E ..F. Maag and
M_rs. Maag. He has such high praise for Dr. and Mrs. Maag and
wdl miSS Dr. Maag who died recently. Many can remember the
faithful service of Dr. Maag through the years.
'

THE NAME. OF PATRICIA IHLE, Racine Route 1, a junior
at Ohio Umver~Ity, was omitted from the computerized winter
quarter dean's list, the university advises us . To be named to the
list, a student J?USt have earned a grade point average of 3.3 or
over on a 4 pomt scale.
IN CASE YOU HADN'T heard, Meigs County is one of 600
counties tn 15 states east of the Mississippi, due to be visited b
the 17-year locusts, probably in late May.
y

6D

May 20

COLUMBUS _ John w.
Bush, director of the Ohio
Vietnam Veterans Bonus
Commission has announced
bonus applications will be
available Monday, May 20.
·" County Veterans Service
Officers in the 88 Ohio Counties
have agreed to begin
distributing application
packets simultaneously, at 9
a.m. on that date," he said.
Director Bush said that any
veteran or next.«-kin of a
deceased veteran living outside Ohio who has requested an
application from the commission Office will be mailed a
packet
before
general ·
distribution.
The Ohio National Guard is
volunteering troops and trucks
to move more than 1,000,000
application packets to County
Veterans Service Officers
throughout Ohio over the
weekend prior to May 20.

Scouts prepare

Hannan Trace Elementary

Beat •••

for 'O•Rama
May 10-11-12

···•

Frank DiCiemete, MGM
District Scout Activities
Chairman, announced today
"everything is go" for this
year's Scout.Q-Rama at the
Gallia County Fairgrounqs,
. May 10-11-12.
According to DiClemente
this year 's show will have ~
new twist. In addition to the
booths in which Cubs and
Scouts will display their talents
and skills, the Boy Scouts will
be camping out for the
weekend on the premises.
SPecial events due to the
campout will include a campfire and the Order of the Arrow
Indian Dancers.
Scouts have begun to sell
tickets to the event and are
encouraging all to come and
see what Scouting is all about.
This year's Scout.Q-Rama
committee includes
Di
. Clemente, Bob Matthews, Ray
Sutherland, Bill Wellman
George French and George'
Hout.

"Sing, America, Sing" is the
title of this year's annual
musical of the Chester
Elementary School to be
presented at 8 p.m. Friday in
the sctiool auditorium.·
,
Musical heritage of the
United Statehvill be depicted
through songs, dances and
narrations. Narrators will be
Randy Keller and Paula
Hysell.
First grade will open the
program with "0 Dear, What
Can the Matter Be'", and the
dramatization of "A Frog
Went A-Courtin" '. Second
grade boys dressed as Continental soldiers will do a

s·mg. .Amenca
. s·mg
military drill to "Yankee end men.
The final section of the show
Doodle" followed by the
Virginia Reel by second grade will feature the seventh and.
eighth graders doing Civil War
girls and boys.
songs,
songs of the Gay
Third graders, dressed as
Nineties
and a Charleston
frontiersmen and pioneers, will
present songs and a dance dance by five girls and others.
popular during that period The entire cast will close the
followed by fourth grade program .. wtth, "This Is My
"cowboys and cowgirls" doing Country".
Maxine Whitehead, vo~al
songs and a sq~are dance .
music
instructor, assisted by
Grades five and six will
classroom
teachers,
is
combine ·for a short minstrel
directing
ihe
musical·.
with Jimmy Bahr, serving as
interlocutor, and Rodney Teachers serving as piano
Keiler , Ray Werry, Eddie accompanists are Carol King
Holter, John Tuttle, Kenny and Eleanor Knight. Duane
Newell and Leonard Myers as Wolfe, faculty member, will
play guitar accompaniment to
several numbers.
Mothers with roommothers
in charge are making costumes
for the children appropriate for
the different periods in
American history. A small
admission is to be charged at
the door. The public is invited.

RANCHO )..A COSTA, Calif.
• (UP!) - - Pro golf's elite including the first black ev~r to
qualify for the Masters, tee off
today in the $200,000 Tournament of Champions with·
Jack Nicklaus looking for his
fifth win here . · ·
Although Nicklaus is the man
to beat in the 22nd edition of the
T of C at the La Costa Country
Club, 39-year..,ld Lee Elder
was the man in the spotlight
on the day before the
prestigious tournament gut
under way.
Elder, of Washington, D.C .,
became the 25th qualifier last
Sunday when he heat Britain's
Peter Oosterhuis on the fourth
hole of a sudden-death playoff
at the Monsanto Open at
Pensacola, Fla.
But, more importantly, he
became the first black player
to earn a spot at Augusta, Ga.
"The first thing I want to
say," Elder told a news conference Wednesday, "is that I
have definitely accepted the
invitation to the Masters and I
plan to play in it.
"In fact, 1 hope somebody
will invite me to play a practice
round at Augusta."
Elder, who joined the PGA
tour in 1968, made it clear he
wanted to win here.
"My immediate and future
plans are to win another
tournament," he said. "I hope
to become a better player and I
think I will because I'll have
more confidence. I'll just let
the dollars fall ·where they

,Spring concert planned
by Meigs Jrmior High
The Meigs Junior High
School Music Dept., under
direction of Fred Ruth, will
present its annual spring
concert on Tuesday, April 30,
at 7:30p.m. in the Junior High
Auditorium in Middleport.
The seventh grade band will
present
five
numbers
"Overture in Blue", "SmokY
Mountain Suite", ''Sweet
Caroline",
"Salute
to
America'', _and ''Battle Hymn
of the Republic".
The combined seventh and
eighth grade choir will present
five numbers, "Yesterday

Report needed
on damage to
bee colonies

All beekeepers in Meigs
Counly who wish to become
eligible for payment for
destroyed or damagr d colonies
must file an '"Apiary Report"
with the Meigs ASCS Office by
July 15 to · be eligible for
payment for c'Olonies owned in
1974. The program is offered to
all beekeepers who suffered
loss or damage to colonies by
pesticides.
A new plan for payment is
being proposed. The new
paytrlent rate for destroyed
colonies would be from $15 to
$22.50, damaged colonies from
$10 to $15 and for each queen
nucleus destroyed from $5 to
$5.50. Interested persons may
submit their comments to the
KINGS MILLS - The JS(). Ohio State ASC State Office,
member Meigs High School 116 Old Federal Building,
Band is scheduled to appear at Columbus, Ohio 43215 by May
the Kings Island family en- 15 in regard to the 'proposed
tertainment center near change.
Cinci~nati on Sunday, April 28.
Edward J. McHale, the
park's general manager said ,
"We are proud to hav~ this
DEEP THROAT
CINCINNATI (UP.l) - The
outstanding band perform at
Kings Isla-rid."
. contro~ers1al mov1e "Deep
The hand is to play in the Throat . f~d. nm.: life WedInternational Street seclion of nesday m Cincmnati. A jury of
the park. After mai-ching a nine women .and three n:'en
short distance, the band will found Cin~.()hio!nc., not guilty
give a short eoncert at the base of cnmmal charges for
of the park's 33-story replica of sho":lng the movie which
the Eiffel Tower. The band ~ton County prosecutors
then will be guests of the park said was obscene. Hamilton
for the day.
County Prosecutor Simon Leis
said he knew of only "three or
four" cases in the country
Involving the movie which
received a verdict in its favor.

Once More" "One Tin
Soldier", "What Are You
Doing the Rest of YourLife",.
"MacArthur Park", and "Let
There Be Peace on Earth".
The eighth grade band will
conclude the concert with
"Citadel", a concert march,
''Shenandoah'', Overture :
"The · Court of Henry VIII",
"The Masterpiece", "Finale
Grandioso", "Stratford
- Overtur~", "Aria" (When
Thou Art Near), "March of the
Men of Harlech", "The Candy
Man", and "Pageantry
Overture".
During the eighth grade band
portion of the prograno, the
Director's Award. for Outstanding Achievement by a
Junior High Band student will
be presented to a memher o(
the eighth grade band.
The Junior Contest Band
which received a superior
rating at the District Vlll Band
and Choral Competition
Contest las,t month will repeat
its .three contest numbers at
the high school band concert
Friday, April 26. There is no
admission charge for the
concert.
I .

I .

may.''

The T of C is an exclusive
event open only to winners of
major tournaments since the
last tournament. It offers a
$40,000 first prize.
Although Nicklaus is the

Blue Grass
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Saw Blades
Blades are made of fhe finest
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Cordial Invitation ·to Attend

Detroit
Hands , Fife

(6),

Corbin

992-3106

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takes on Bob Saunders Quaker
State team.

000 000 100- 1 6 1
100 000 20x- 3 6 0

The annual baskelball
banquet honoring members
of lhe 1973-74 Nortb Gallla
Pirates will be held at 6:311
p.m. Friday.
Charles McAfee, head
basketball coach al Athens
will be the fealured speaker.
The public Is Invited to attend.

Cleveland (1 -2) and Mont gomery ; Jenkins (.4 -l) and

Sundberg .
Mllw
100 001 000- 2 s 3
Chicago
000 311 02x - 7 13 0
Wright , Sprague
(51 and
Porter ; Wood , Forster (71 and
Herrmann . WP - Wood (2 -4) .
LP- Wright (3 -1 I.
NBA Playolf

Sc;:hedutes and Results
By United Press International
East Final
Boston vs . New York
(Boston won series 4·1)
Apr 14- Bcston 113 N .Y . BB
Apr 16- Boston 11 I N .Y . 99
Apr 19- N .Y. 103 Boslon 100
Apr 21 - Boston 98 N.Y . 91
Apr 24- Boston 105 N .Y . 94
West Final
Chicago vs. Milwaukee
(Milwaukee won series 4-0)
Apr 16- Milw 101 Chicago 85
Apr 18 - Milw 11 3 Chicago Ill
Apr 20- Mitw 11 3 Chicago 90
Apr 22- Mitw 115 Chicago 99

~

TOURNEY ON
According to a spokesman at
the Kyger Creek Power Plant,
the annual Little League
baseball tournament will be
held this year. The tournament
will begin on July 8.

THREE ENSHRINED
SPRINGFIELD, Mass .
(UP!) - Former NBA Commissioner Maurice Podoloff
was one of three basketball
greats inducted Wednesday
into the Naismith Memorial
Hall of Fanoe. Also enshrined
were Harry A. Fisher,
Columbia University's first
fulltime basketball coach, and
Ernest J. Schmidt, who starred
in Amateur Athletic Union play
with Denvor and Reno.

Kyger Creek posted its
fourth victory in five league
starts Wednesday night with a
lopsided JM triumph over the
Southwestern Highlanders.
The Bobcats hold down first
place in the loop standings.
Southwestern dropped to 3-3 in
the SV AC. Coach Jim
Sprague's diamondmen broke
a close game wide open with 13
runs in the fifth inning .
KC held just a 2-llead going
into the fifth . Southwestern
took a !-&lt;!lead int he first on a
walk to Kip Lewis and a two out
·infield error.
Kyger Creek assumed the
lead in the second on singles by
Ben Arnett and catcher Dave
Wise and a long double by
shortstop Terry Lucas. The
game remained a pitcher's
duel between Bobcat righty
Clay Hudson and Highlander
righty Kevin Walker until the
fatal fifth.
Ben Arnett started the rally
with a double, then came
consecutive walks to Wise,
Bruce Arnett and Terry Lucas.
Bill Metzner plated the second
run with a s queeze bunt.
Bobcat second baseman Tim
Lucas lined a single which was

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The MEIGS INN
The most populi.r night club in
the tri-couitty area is proud to
present the-return of

GEO. HALL
AND THE HAlLMARKS

TONIGHT 9 TIL 1

oowered tor toughest mowing.
Buy 21" Pow-R-Pro: ..
get FREE 51095 grassbag.

close win
ATHENS - It was a close
finish, at least as far as two of ·
the teams were concerned,
when J\thens won 'its own
-triangular match, edging out
Logan 182-184 ., the Meigs
Marauder golfers finishing
third with 202 team score.
Logan's Tim Cole was the
day's medalist, firing a 41,
followed by Bulldogs Terry
Hawk and Jim France with 44
and 45 respectively. Meigs
swinger Bruce Blackston shot
a 46. Other Meigs scores were
J. D. Story with a 49, John
Thonoas with a 53 and Jeff
Warner with a 54 .
F.oi Logan, John Russell and
Randy GoodUve each carded a
, ·47, and Mark Bumgardner shot
a 49.
·
Howie Dean had a 46 for
Athens, followed by Tim
Lavelle with a 47.
Team members w~o finished
fifth, and whose scores consequently. didn't count In the
final team totals, were Meigs
\Joe R011enbaum with a 56,
Logan's Mark Chapman with a
62 and Athens' Mike Blosser ·
with 48.
Friday, 1 the Marauder
linksters of Nolan Swackhamer
travel to New Lexington, ·

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May 1 games :
Ironton at Wells ton
Jackson at Logan

IN MIDDLEPORt
CONTACT •
I)ONNA STEWART
HEATING OIL

GENERAL
·TIRE SALES

SEO standings

Meigs at Alhens

Houn:7o.m.loS:JOp.m. Dolty
7 a.m. tot p.m. Frklay &amp; Saturday Meson 1 W. Va.

Fuel Chief

OUR ·PRICES

golfers win

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CHECK

Southern High

Athens in
~7J.SHl

WHEELS

good for two RBI's , Lawrence
Tabor got his fourth hit of the
game, a double; Ron Roush
walked, Hudson singled, and
hils by Bruce Arnett, Metzner
and Tabor plated the other
runs.
Southwestern got two more
runs in the sixth off the offerings of Metzner. Rick
Crouse opened with a grounder
which was bobbled at short. He
came around on a single by
Mike Russell. Russell scored
on two infield throwing errors.
Tabor led the Bobcats with
five hils in five trips to the
plate. Tim Lucas, Ben Arnett,
Terry Lucas and Bill Metzner
had two hils each.
The Southern Tornado golf
Russell led Southwestern
team of Greg Bailey defeated
with two hits in four at bat.
Warren Local, 211·226 at
Kevin Walker, Rick Crouse,
Pomeroy Wednesday afternoon.
Bob Johnson was the
medalist, shooting a 48,
followed by teammates Bob
Roush with a a2, Randy
Dudding with a f&gt;:l, and Gene
SEOAL BASEBALL
• Shively with a 58.
Team
w L R OR
Dale Moody led Warren with
Ironton
5 1 30 11
Wellston
, 1 29 IS a 53, followed by Brian Butts
Athens
' 2 34 12 with a :;s, Tim Lane with a a7,
Waverly
4 3 25 21
.
Looan
3 3 30 34
and Greg Lowe With a 60.
Me;gs
1 ' 20 37
Fifth men for both teams
JacKson
1 4 24 24
,
Gallipolis
1 5 22 30
were Tornados Kenton
TOTALS
23 : 23 214 214 Holmanwitha70andWarren's
Tuesda,y•s results
·
Ironton 3 Athens o
Andy Moyers with a 62.
Waverly 3 Gallipolis o
The ~T-ornados- travel to
Ja ckson -Logan . PPnd
.
Wellston .Meigs, ppnd
Vmton for a dual match today.

Me igs at Well ston
April 19 game :

Children's Gym Sets
by BLAZON

'

\

FOR YOUR

Gallipolis 12 Meigs 3
Today's games :
Jackson at Gallipolis

.SPRING SPECIAL FOR NEW HOMES

MORRIS M. WOLFE, Pastor

BEFORE YOU
BUY
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Wednesday's Resull:

FOR THE BACKYARD

MIDDLEPORT

IN POINT PLEASANT
CONTACT
HARLEY HENDRIX
PHONE 675-2460

junior righthander, walked six
and struck out seven in ·
anybody as Niday retired the recording his first win of the
next three. batters in order.
year~ He is J-1.
Gallipolis struck for two
Ault went five innings,
"i nsura nce" runs in the
seven th when Watson singled striking out six and giving up
for the third time , Jim Perry . ~IX hils, before he wa~ replaced
. led , fo11 owe db y a f'ae ld er ,s m the Sixth. by semor
smg
lk d ·Steve
choice, a double by Gary Pnce . Pnce. wa e one,
Swain a walk, and a fielder 's struck out three and gave .up
one earned run on three h1 ts.
. '
ChOICe.
Only
two of the 10 runs off Ault
Th e Marau ders a dd ed th etr
, h
h If f th e were earned;
only one of the
, 1
fmarunmomeao
·
seventh on a walk, double by three Marauder runs wa s
.
d d .
b earned
MIke
Nesse1roa an smg 1e y
Wat .on th e GAHS third
s •
.
Charhe Marsha ll .
'd
.
ld
d
Its
baseman,
wa
s
the
leadmg
II
Ina ,Niayyle e sJXll, h'tte 'thth
. I . f
while the Blue Devils com- 1. r WI
ree smg es m our
mitted three err ors. Niday, a tr1ps. Holland went two for f~ur
and Datley two for ftv e with
three RBis .
Nesselroad, whose strike out
in the first inning was hit first
in 10 games this season, was
the only Marauder with 2 hils ,
to
pickoff
Harris
with
the
a
single and double.
second; Mark Theiss walked,
pitcher
throwing
the
ball
away
The Marauders travel to
Gardner walked and Bill Petrie
and Goebel scoring.
Wellston this afternoon for a
singled.
In the fourth , Rob Barber makeup game with the Golden
A Mike Harris single,
second; Rock ets while Gallipolis hosts
stole
followed by a sacrifice bunt, walked,
Eichinger
singled
and
stole Jackson on Memorial Field .
stolen base and single by Tim
second,
followed
by
a
Randy
Kuhn provided Eastern with
aOO 050 2-12-9-3
another run in the third, before Blake single. Blake then stole Gallipolis
Meigs
000 020 1- 3-6-8
the Pirates retaliated on a walk second, third and home.
Niday
(WP
)
and Berridge.
walked,
stole
second
Spencer
to Dobbins, a stolen base and
(5th~ &amp; Ash.
Ault,
Price
and
third
,
followed
by
a
walk
to
Gene Welc~'s double .
Eastern took the lead for Goebel and stolen base before
good in the third as Tim an error by the shortstop let
Spencer opened with a single SPencer score.
Welch's homer with Stout
and stole second . Goebel
doubled and went to third on an aboard in the bottom of the
error by the pitcher, followed inning accounted for the final
by a hit batter, Mike Harris . On ' Pirate tallies.
The Eagles added four in the
the ensuing play, Gardner tried
fifth on a walk, error, hit
batter, double- by Goebel and
another error.
Three more came home in
the sixth on a Tim Kuhn
double, 'walk, sacrifice, walk
and double by Blake.
Top hitters for the Eagles
were Goebel with a pair of
doubles, Kuhn and Blake with a
and Kip Lewis had the other single and double apiece,
safeties.
Eichinger with two singles, and
Hudson was the winning SPencer and· Harris with a
pitcher while Walker took the single each.
loss.
Goebel yielded just four hits,
Linescore :
with the top Pirate batter
S'western
tOO 002 2- 6- 4-4 Welch with a double and round
K. Creek 020 0 13 3 x- 18-18-a tripper.
Walter (L) Lewis ( a~ and
The Eagles travel to Racine
Crouse. Hudson (W) Metzner this afternoon for a league
(6) and Wise.
battle with Southern, while
North Gallia is at Southwestern
· today.
Eastern · 112 443 Il-Ia 10 o
N. Gallia
110 200 11-- 4 4 6
992-7161
Goebel (WPJ and Harris.
Gardner and Patterson.

K
c
k
d
an~o~~g~~~~~~~~~.'m., Luigis
yger ree recor s
, , , , , , , , , , , ,,, , ,,,, , , , , , , , , , ,·fourth league victory
.

(7)

and Brinkman ; Coleman, Hiller
(7) and Moses . WP- Coleman
(3 -1) . LP -H ands (0-4). HR KIIIeb,-ew ( l s t l.

Boston
Texas

Goebel struck out five and
walked 10. His counterpart,
Jack Gardner, also went the
route, striking out six and
walking four .
Eastern managed 10 hits off
Gardner, and touched him for a
single run in the first when
sophomore Don Eichinger
· singled, stole second and third,
and came home when Randy
Blake struck out, the catcher
dropping the ball and overthrowing first base.
On the afternoon, the Eagles
streaked for 17 ·stolen bases.
North Gallia came right back
in the bottom of the first , as
Tim Stout walked, stole

and Davis led Luigis with 17

000 000 400- 4 14 0
200 003 30x - 8 lA 1

Minn

R;EVIVAL SERVICES

•

•• - . - - i

,-.

g\~~~ Williams. WP - McNally

Prescriptions Are Uur Main Business

n B'rother Cr~ne. Wh? ~as had 16 years in pas~oral-mlnistry In Ten. ,'
Nessee and West Virgmta, attended 'Trevecca Nazarene College and
azarene Th~logical Seminary : While at Trevecca he traveled
th~oughout the Southeast with s!nging groups. During seminary years he
~.e ved as minister ~~ music '" two churches and also sang in ttie
mS'ff~r~l Blessing choir and quartet. ,Wlth hla wife, Mildred, he later .
. Asa n a n " I weekly rediQ brqadcast ,I called ''Hymns of Blessed
surance, . which was aired for five years.
.

IN _
•,

Egan Ill: McNally, R-eynolds

DUTTON'S

REV. BILLY D. CRANE, a full -time evangelist In the C"urch of the
~azaren.e, was raised In a Nazarene parsonage. He has sung the gospel
smce childhood and was commissioned. as a song evangelist while ·1n h'
~ns
ts

The Kiddie Shoppe
\.

1

011 010 01)( - 4 6 o
Si ng er (2 -2J and Rodriguez ,

.
MIDDLEPORT

Evangelist· Song Evangelist '

Friday and Saturday

..

Jl/1

1117

\

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Co.

BILL n. CRANE

VALUES TO 22.00

(OLD LC?CATION)

WP - Medich 13·1l. HRs- Mun ·

son (3rdL Nett les ( lOth ).

Tyree Boulevard- Racine, Ohio

ALL SEASONS MERCHANDISE

.

Patt in 10-ll and Martinez;
Medich , Lyle (8) and Munson.

8

in the sixth but couldn't plate

Gallipolis runs were unearned . ·
Meanwhile, GAHS starter
Jim Niday had a no-hitter
going until the fifth when Ault
broke it up with a triple to
rightfield. That was followed
by an error, sacrifice fly by
catcher Mick Ash, and two
more Marauder hils, singles by
Dave Wolfe and Mike
Nesselroad.
Gallia Academy burst for
five more runs in the fifth on an
error, a walk, a single · by
Dailey, back·tO-back walks, a
single by Watson, an error, and
a single by Holland.
The' Marauders got a double
from right fielder Gary George

Eagles beat North Gallia 15-4

'

FIRST CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE

.

•

2 4 .333
2 4 .333

at Wellston

Wheel Chairs
Walkers
Crutches and Canes
Back Hraces
Bedside Commodes
Support Stockings
Trusses
Incontinent Garments
Traction Equipment
Elastic Supports
Surgical Dressings

FLAT LATEX

CONTINUES

50~ to

South
w . 1. pet . g .b.
3 2 .600
3 2 .600

out thriller

Holtzman 11 -2). LP - Tidrow II·
31 . HR - Bando 13rd l.
Kan City
010 010 1oo- 3 51
N.Y.
ooo 201 lOx- • 7 1

ooo ooo 003- 3

-

The Devils wasted no time
jumping on Meigs starter and
loser Perk Ault for five runs iii
the . first on a walk, Mike
Watson 's single, a fielder 's
choice, Bill Holland 'ssingle, an
error 1 a walk, an error, a single
by Roger Dailey; and a third
walk.
In all, the Marauders
committed eight errors on the
afternoon; seven coming from
the left side of the infield .
Added to the fielding miscues
of Donald Wolfe 's lads, were
nine bases on balls by Ault. The
junior righthander gave up just
six hits . Nine of the 12

LIDgi pulls

American League
Oakland
200 020 302- 9 8 3
Cleveland
001 000 010- 2 9 4
Holtzman , Fingers (91 and
Fosse ; Tid row , Bosman (6) ,
W iiCO )( (7) and Dunca n . WP -

Bait

By Denny FobesThe Gallipolis Blue Devils,
winless in Southeastern Ohio
League action, and scoreless in
their last, 22 iJIIlings, exploded
for five runs in the first inning,
added five in the fifth, and two
in the•seventh enroute to a 12-3
triumph over the Meigs
Marauders in Middleport
Wednesday afternoon.
The win, the fits! for the
diamondmen of Jim Osborne,
brings them to 1-5 in the
league, 4-7 overall .
The Marauders, meanwhile,
dropped to seventh place in the
A last second 20-foot shot by league standings at 1-4.
Skip Davis gave Luigis a comefrom-behind 119-117 victory
over the Jackson AU Stars in
the Wellston Independent
basketball tournament at
Wellston Junior High Tuesday.
Luigis was led by former Ohio
University star Tommy Corde
BIDWELL - The Eastern
who poured in 45 points, Eagles snapped a nine game
followed by Davis with 25, Ron losing streak, thumping the
Ferguson with 18, Doxie North Gallia Pirates 1:&gt;-1 here
Walters with 14 and another Wednesday afternoon.
The Eagles, who at one time
former OU player, Fred Cluff.
with 12.
•
were 4-1 overall and 1-&lt;l in
Jackson was led by Rio SV AC play, now are a-10
Grande star Ron Lambert with overall, 3-3 in loop competition.
H
11
Eastern. with starter Steve
43. e got exce ent help from
former SEOAL MVP Harold Goebel going the route on the
mound, tallied solo runs in the
Howe with 34 points.
Luigis trailed most of the first and second innings, before
game, but with five seconds adding two in the third, four in
left Ferguson stole the ball .and the fourth and fifth and three in
fired a full court pass to Davis the sixth . North Gallia
who hit the jumper at the managed solo runs in the first
two innings, before addin~ a
buzzer.
pair
in the fourth.
Lambert led all rebounders
with 19 caroms, while Walters

PRESCRIPTION AND SURGICAL
SUPPORT CENTER

7:30 EAat EVENING

ODDS &amp; ENDS

I
21h
31h

R0chesler 1 Memphi s 1
Pawtucket at Richmond , ppd.,
cold weather
Syracuse 6 Tidewater 2

King's Island
on April 28th

.-

4 2 .667
2 3 .4 00
1 4 .200

Wednesday's Results
Charleston 4 Toledo 2

Band will play

SING SET
A hymn sing will he held at 2
p. m. Sunday at the Bethlehem
'Baptist Church located at the
junction of Routes 338 and 124,
about six miles from Racine.
The public is Invited.

w . I. pet . g.b.
5 1 .8 33

lli\SEBALL
Eastern at Sou.t hern,
Mdgs at Wellston.
GOLF - Southern at
Vinton.
TRACK
North
Gallia and Eastern at
Meigs.

Linescores

Californ;a

'•

.

Devils thump Marauders 12-3

Sports today:

favorite at La Costa, Johnny
Miller h£S been the big winner
on the tour this year. He has
four victorieS-One of two
multiple winners in 1974.
In fact, he won the tour's first
three eVellis, the Bing Crosby,
the Phoenix Open and the
Tucson Open. He also captured
the 12th tournament of the
year, the Heritage Classic.
Nicklaus, who has had backto-back $300,000 seasons, won
the fifth event of the season,
capturing the Hawaiian Open.
Hubert Green is the only
other multiple winner this
year . He won the Bob Hope
Desert Classic and the Greater
Jacksonville Open .
A year ago, Nicklaus won by
one stroke at La Costa, shading
Lee Trevino 276 to 277.

North

APRIL 29 - MAY 5

.,

becauae It points out
1lelm baths aJid a lot of
J

Roy

well -Porter; Judy Burdell,
Addavllle; Rochella Foster.
Addaville and Alberta Lew is.

I

1 weJ~hl

•

Moody .

Bur·

Vinton ;
Fannie Metcalf,
Vinton; Martha Brown, Bid-

froln the blooclalriam,

,: Your clelcriptiCII Ia IJnpcirto
•: !lilt . to other people lotilng

•· lbet

Carol

Cheshire- Kyger, and Jerry

-

Mullins. North Gallla ; Rozena
Rees, Centerville ; Lois Sheets.
Southwestern; Dallle Forgey,

.!'J

.; WIIW

Vicki

nette, Southwestern .

When the last meet was
finished the friend who lost 19
pounds put all 19 pounda back
on In two days. I wish I knew
, wheiber or not these teeoagera
; took vitamins or mineral
·. supplements while they were
·. fasting, but I doubt that they
' did
"
·' You would do a public ser' vice by warning of the possible
; repercusaions of such starving
; .and drying out1My friend said
i that he had done things he
wouldn't normally do !he week 'rl''-=-"'iii;'D;i~~-~;!-"'r~
·' he fasted. I lind it lurrlble ·that ·
1he 'Oily .S.tlillll
.i our public schools cultivate
.: such things, Oon't you? .. · .
· .; DEAR READER - That's
· awful. AI your letter demonstratea
the caoe of your
. friend who regained all 19
: pounds he lost In just two dais,. most Of the !01111 was water·Josa.
,; Thil allo means a lou of salt
,i lind major dlalurbance In the
. body chemistry. Under .such
· ~ clrcum~ea even the
· ' amount ·blOOd iD the body 1.1
i decft!a d by ellml~llnc

l

Phyll is

Thompson , Hannan Trace ;
Andrew Owens, Southwestern;
Joyce Collins, Hannan Tra ce;

By Bob Hoeflich

encourage fad diet

,I

Fish er,

nan- Trace; Herm"an Sprague,

Some athletics

.

J essie

Cheshire - Kyger ;
Lynda
Dunlop. Cadmus; Ellen Van ce,

James Arledge, Kyger Creek ;
Faye Sauer, Kyger Creek;
James Foster. North Gallla;
Marilyn Reese. Che'shlreKyger; Betty Wilmoth, Han·

DR. LAWHENCE E. LAMB

,· off.

Kyger Creek ; J .

Robert Evans. Southwestern ;

,granted new contracts:
contracts

co ntra cts -

Trace; John Blake , North
Gallia ; Harold K. Brown,
North Gallia; fv\arfha Cornelius. North Gallia ; David
Danko, North Gallia; Jennifer

The following teachers were
Continuing

year

Charles Cornelius, Hannan

.
•
al
music ,

available
·

'

\

...•

'

. I'

·.

'I

.-

'' .

·'
'

I

,· l

�·,

.. !

~

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., April25, 1974
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., April25, 1974

Nicklaus liked
•
m T of C pl~iy

Bonus f9rmsChester pupils to perform
Gallia board_
hires
.
48
teachers
..
,,

Gallia County's Local Board
of Education in special session
Wednesday night at North
Gallia
·~-employed
48
teachers, dismissed nine, and
accepted resignations from 11.
Written notices not to renew
contracts will be sent to MiSS
Edith Alley, an elementary
teacher at Hannan Trace;
Debra Rhodes, Barbara Wolfe,
and Joan Kimmel, Remedial
Reading teachers in the Southwestern area; head football
coacl, and teacher Robert
Ashley;
Keith
Carter,
basketball coach; William
Meek, Don ·Hodge, and Mrs .
Ja,ne Ann Slagle, oil teachers
at Southwestern High School.
Those five will be reemployed if ·the Fourth District
Court of Appeals finds in favor ·
of the former Southwestern
Board in a lawsuit filed last
year by 11 teachers dismissed
at Southwestern.
The board also went on
record stating the five teachers
would be considered in any
vacancies which might arise in
the county.
The board, following an
executive session, acted upon
the recommendation of Local
and County Superintendent
Comer Bradbury to terminate
the coaching contract of James

Arledge, head basketball caoch
at Kyger Creek High School.
The recommendation
overruled Principal Robert
L. · Lanning's
recom·
mendalion that Arledge be
graoted a conlinulng contract as a teacher and a five
year supplemental contract
as coach. The board later
granted only the continuing
cOotract.
AdaJ!I Krahel, speaking for a
delegation of 20 parents,
students, and teachers asked
the board why Arledge would
not be offered a coaching
contract in addition to a continuing teaching contract.
Supt . Bradbury said the
action was taken due to Coach
Arledge's "bench conduct".
David T. Phillips, KC band
director , Assistant basketball
coach Krahel, and Lanning
highly recommended Arledge
and told the board of Arledge's
hard work and dedication to
both teaching and coaching.
KC faculty members present
were Principal Lanning,
Wllliano Bahr, president of the
Gallia County Local Teachers'
Assn., Mrs. Aileen Rutz,
Phillips, Krahel and Mrs.
Janet Neal.
During the discussion,
Bradbury said, "! know Mr.

Trace .

Lanning is not pleased with my
recommendation. Hi s
judgment is based on his eight
months as principal at Kyger
Creek. My decision is based on
two years as superintendent at
Kyger Creek".
·
During the executi\'e session,
both Lanning and Bradbury
spoke to the board .
Cam Sands, a parent, said
the delegation had a petition
with names supporting Arledge
as a coach, · but the board
ignored the petition._
Wes Simms, Ohio Education
Assn. field representative, also
spoke on behalf of the coach.
Coach Arledge has been at
Kyger Creek for the past three
years. Although his varsity
squads have not had winning
records, his freshman team
was unbeaten this past year.
Resignations accepted were
Barbara Armbruster, Southwestern; Christine Napier,
Addaville; Cheryl Enyart,
EMR, Cheshire-Kyger;
Katherine Harris, Vinton; Tom
Campbell, North Gallia High
School; Pamela White, EMR,
Centerville; Barbara Wolfe,
Centerville ; Jeff Pope, Vocagriculture , North Gallia;
Ramona Lewis, BidwellPorter; Janet Neal, Kyger
Creek Jr. High, and Eleanor
Fadeley, Bidwell-Porter.

Two

Machir, North Gallia ; William
Bahr, Kyger Creek ; Gloria

Kemper.

Story of transportation
told in historical film
MARIE ITA- "Let's hear It
for Ohio - 170 Years of
Progress,'' a. unique film
depicting the historical
significance of transportation
in Ohio, is •vailable to commurdty organizations and clubs
in the counties comprising the
Ohio Deparbnent of Transportation's District Ten.
District Deputy Director
Max R. Farley said the 16nun
film premiered at the 1973 Ohio
State Fair and since. then has
been a popular itern on the
agendas
of
manv

''

Ernestine Smith, Kyger Creek ;
Jera ld ine. Sa mples , Bidwell . Porter ; Judith Sheets, Bidwell -

Porter ;

organizations.
The film, running 21 minutes,
traces the history of transportation in Ohio since the·
state's founding In 1803, .the
effects Of transportation in
Ohio's development and the
possible future for transportation in the Buckeye state.
Reques is for use of the film
should be made to ihe Public
Information Office, District
Ten, Ohio Department of
Transportation, Muskingum
Drive, Marietta, Ohio 45750.

Southwestern;

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB
· Reading of your disapproval of
fad diets, I think you should
comment on some of ,the
weight-losing programs I saw
in my association with secondaryschool wrestling. These are
motivated by the desire to
compete in a lighter weight
class.
It was quite common for
heavier boys to lose 15, yes 15
pounds or more the first night
Of practice. A close friend of
, mine lost a total of 19 pounds
through the season to wrestle
at tighter weight. He said the
last few pounds really came off
hard. All he ate for a week was
an orange; on a heavy exercise
program to boot. Many of them
severely restricted drinking
· liquids a large part of the time.
,
The idea was to eat like a
:, king the weekend after the
meet, and .then starve, run in
' sweaisuiis and take steam
•' baths until the next meet. They
.• sometimes took . laxatl~es for
, the sake of losmg weight. I
remember one With two or
three pounds to lose about eight ,
hours before we1gh-m, so he
,' raJ\ and steamed until it was

Centerville, and

'
·'

Wanda Ball, Vinton ; larry
Shong, Vinton , and Sharon

Finney , Bidwell -Porter.

One year contracts - Robert
Shaver,
Hannan
Trace ;
Carolvn r,!'".,,. c::, •.• ~-. ,~,J:&gt;&lt;; h•rn :
John 1-:\~P~('n~ . SnuthwP.stern;
Dwayne Jolley, Hannu11 I race ;
Emily Robinson, Bidwell -

Porter ;

these procedures, even when
you lose 19 pounds, do not
eliminate fat - just the water
lhe body normally needs. Most
people don 't realize that the
normal body is about half
water. · Over 70 pet. of the
weight of our muscles is water.
When you dry a person out you
seriously affect the way all the
vital cells in the body work,
even those in the brain. Also,
such people are more prone to
faint.
Water loss from weightlessness in space flight has a
similar effect. The loss is
nothing like what you describe.
Astronaut Ed While lost about
nine pounds when he was on the
flight with his space walk, but
he told me he regained most of
it the first day back. He
regained the normal amount of
water for earthlings. Those
interested in losing weight
safely without dangerous fads
can get more information by
writing to me in care of this
newspaper, P. o. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
N. Y. 10019, and ask for the
bookie t on losing weight. Send
50 cents to cover costs.
Those 15-pounds losses
during the first night's practice
are mostly water and salt. It
comes right back. The sweatsuits simply contribute to
draining ·the water and salt out
of the body. Thia saps energy in
a number of instances. This Is
. not the way to train our youth
!() have .a healthy body and
develop healthy living patterns. And, I think It is rather
poor sportsmanship to try such
gimmicks so you can wrestle
someone who is really smaller
than you.
·

Five year contracts -

Centerville.

Three year contracts -

Martha Meek, Bidwell -Porter ;

Barbara Curtis, Hannan Trace

and Mary

Neal , one -half day at V inton .
Frank
A.
Cremeans,
Gallipolis ,
form er
local
superintendent at
Kyger
Creek , was g iven a one ,year
contract as assistant county
superintendent at a salary of
$17,500 per year .
Atlee
Fulks,
veterans
teacher and administrator,
wa!1. granted a three year
contract as principal at

School.

No coaching contracts were
offered, but Bradbury stated
two -year con tra cts will be
given to John Blake, head
football coach at 'North Gallia ·

1\',

,

! '

. {

,.

i

.

.'

.

and Jim Foster. head
basketball coach for the
Pirates.
The board also voted to
participate in Title I, II and Ill.

Jones , HBnrJan

REGAZZONI LEADS
MADRID (UP!) - Clay
Regazzoni of Switzerland was
favored today to increase his
lead in the G~and Prix driver
standings when 25 Formula
Qne cars roar away from the
starting grid Sunday in the
SPanish GP.
Regazzoni leads all drivers
with 10 points.

Of the Bend
Good news for Pomeroy residents who will have a chance to
get rtd of the winter's accumulation of junk real soon.
. Mayor Dale Smith has set cleanup week for May 6 and
reSidents are to place all of those things that they've been
wondertng what to do ~ith in their front yards or near the curbing. By the way, articles sho.uld he boxed or bagged.
RECENTLY, TWO TRUCKS left Middleport for Xenia with
food and clothing, Making the trip besides those named earlier
were Mr. and Mrs. Bob McElhinny and Mrs. George Glaze and
two sons.
. MONDAY IS BLOODMOBILE day for Meigs County. The
unit wm be at the Pomeroy Elementary School from 1 to 6 p. m.
Wa~-m donors are more than welcome . Local supporters are
hopmg for a good turnout.
BOB ROY, RACINE, an installer for the General Telephone
Co. of Ohto, IS pictured In the current edition of the company's
newspaper, "General News". Roy will he the subject of more
.feature malerialm forthcoming editions of the newspaper.
JOHN MOHLER, MIDDLEPORT Route I has.a new song
. "Anything for Jesus" coming out on the Neon Label in May and
has signed contracts for two more sacred tunes. John has worked
for 15 years caring for the lawn of the late Dr. E ..F. Maag and
M_rs. Maag. He has such high praise for Dr. and Mrs. Maag and
wdl miSS Dr. Maag who died recently. Many can remember the
faithful service of Dr. Maag through the years.
'

THE NAME. OF PATRICIA IHLE, Racine Route 1, a junior
at Ohio Umver~Ity, was omitted from the computerized winter
quarter dean's list, the university advises us . To be named to the
list, a student J?USt have earned a grade point average of 3.3 or
over on a 4 pomt scale.
IN CASE YOU HADN'T heard, Meigs County is one of 600
counties tn 15 states east of the Mississippi, due to be visited b
the 17-year locusts, probably in late May.
y

6D

May 20

COLUMBUS _ John w.
Bush, director of the Ohio
Vietnam Veterans Bonus
Commission has announced
bonus applications will be
available Monday, May 20.
·" County Veterans Service
Officers in the 88 Ohio Counties
have agreed to begin
distributing application
packets simultaneously, at 9
a.m. on that date," he said.
Director Bush said that any
veteran or next.«-kin of a
deceased veteran living outside Ohio who has requested an
application from the commission Office will be mailed a
packet
before
general ·
distribution.
The Ohio National Guard is
volunteering troops and trucks
to move more than 1,000,000
application packets to County
Veterans Service Officers
throughout Ohio over the
weekend prior to May 20.

Scouts prepare

Hannan Trace Elementary

Beat •••

for 'O•Rama
May 10-11-12

···•

Frank DiCiemete, MGM
District Scout Activities
Chairman, announced today
"everything is go" for this
year's Scout.Q-Rama at the
Gallia County Fairgrounqs,
. May 10-11-12.
According to DiClemente
this year 's show will have ~
new twist. In addition to the
booths in which Cubs and
Scouts will display their talents
and skills, the Boy Scouts will
be camping out for the
weekend on the premises.
SPecial events due to the
campout will include a campfire and the Order of the Arrow
Indian Dancers.
Scouts have begun to sell
tickets to the event and are
encouraging all to come and
see what Scouting is all about.
This year's Scout.Q-Rama
committee includes
Di
. Clemente, Bob Matthews, Ray
Sutherland, Bill Wellman
George French and George'
Hout.

"Sing, America, Sing" is the
title of this year's annual
musical of the Chester
Elementary School to be
presented at 8 p.m. Friday in
the sctiool auditorium.·
,
Musical heritage of the
United Statehvill be depicted
through songs, dances and
narrations. Narrators will be
Randy Keller and Paula
Hysell.
First grade will open the
program with "0 Dear, What
Can the Matter Be'", and the
dramatization of "A Frog
Went A-Courtin" '. Second
grade boys dressed as Continental soldiers will do a

s·mg. .Amenca
. s·mg
military drill to "Yankee end men.
The final section of the show
Doodle" followed by the
Virginia Reel by second grade will feature the seventh and.
eighth graders doing Civil War
girls and boys.
songs,
songs of the Gay
Third graders, dressed as
Nineties
and a Charleston
frontiersmen and pioneers, will
present songs and a dance dance by five girls and others.
popular during that period The entire cast will close the
followed by fourth grade program .. wtth, "This Is My
"cowboys and cowgirls" doing Country".
Maxine Whitehead, vo~al
songs and a sq~are dance .
music
instructor, assisted by
Grades five and six will
classroom
teachers,
is
combine ·for a short minstrel
directing
ihe
musical·.
with Jimmy Bahr, serving as
interlocutor, and Rodney Teachers serving as piano
Keiler , Ray Werry, Eddie accompanists are Carol King
Holter, John Tuttle, Kenny and Eleanor Knight. Duane
Newell and Leonard Myers as Wolfe, faculty member, will
play guitar accompaniment to
several numbers.
Mothers with roommothers
in charge are making costumes
for the children appropriate for
the different periods in
American history. A small
admission is to be charged at
the door. The public is invited.

RANCHO )..A COSTA, Calif.
• (UP!) - - Pro golf's elite including the first black ev~r to
qualify for the Masters, tee off
today in the $200,000 Tournament of Champions with·
Jack Nicklaus looking for his
fifth win here . · ·
Although Nicklaus is the man
to beat in the 22nd edition of the
T of C at the La Costa Country
Club, 39-year..,ld Lee Elder
was the man in the spotlight
on the day before the
prestigious tournament gut
under way.
Elder, of Washington, D.C .,
became the 25th qualifier last
Sunday when he heat Britain's
Peter Oosterhuis on the fourth
hole of a sudden-death playoff
at the Monsanto Open at
Pensacola, Fla.
But, more importantly, he
became the first black player
to earn a spot at Augusta, Ga.
"The first thing I want to
say," Elder told a news conference Wednesday, "is that I
have definitely accepted the
invitation to the Masters and I
plan to play in it.
"In fact, 1 hope somebody
will invite me to play a practice
round at Augusta."
Elder, who joined the PGA
tour in 1968, made it clear he
wanted to win here.
"My immediate and future
plans are to win another
tournament," he said. "I hope
to become a better player and I
think I will because I'll have
more confidence. I'll just let
the dollars fall ·where they

,Spring concert planned
by Meigs Jrmior High
The Meigs Junior High
School Music Dept., under
direction of Fred Ruth, will
present its annual spring
concert on Tuesday, April 30,
at 7:30p.m. in the Junior High
Auditorium in Middleport.
The seventh grade band will
present
five
numbers
"Overture in Blue", "SmokY
Mountain Suite", ''Sweet
Caroline",
"Salute
to
America'', _and ''Battle Hymn
of the Republic".
The combined seventh and
eighth grade choir will present
five numbers, "Yesterday

Report needed
on damage to
bee colonies

All beekeepers in Meigs
Counly who wish to become
eligible for payment for
destroyed or damagr d colonies
must file an '"Apiary Report"
with the Meigs ASCS Office by
July 15 to · be eligible for
payment for c'Olonies owned in
1974. The program is offered to
all beekeepers who suffered
loss or damage to colonies by
pesticides.
A new plan for payment is
being proposed. The new
paytrlent rate for destroyed
colonies would be from $15 to
$22.50, damaged colonies from
$10 to $15 and for each queen
nucleus destroyed from $5 to
$5.50. Interested persons may
submit their comments to the
KINGS MILLS - The JS(). Ohio State ASC State Office,
member Meigs High School 116 Old Federal Building,
Band is scheduled to appear at Columbus, Ohio 43215 by May
the Kings Island family en- 15 in regard to the 'proposed
tertainment center near change.
Cinci~nati on Sunday, April 28.
Edward J. McHale, the
park's general manager said ,
"We are proud to hav~ this
DEEP THROAT
CINCINNATI (UP.l) - The
outstanding band perform at
Kings Isla-rid."
. contro~ers1al mov1e "Deep
The hand is to play in the Throat . f~d. nm.: life WedInternational Street seclion of nesday m Cincmnati. A jury of
the park. After mai-ching a nine women .and three n:'en
short distance, the band will found Cin~.()hio!nc., not guilty
give a short eoncert at the base of cnmmal charges for
of the park's 33-story replica of sho":lng the movie which
the Eiffel Tower. The band ~ton County prosecutors
then will be guests of the park said was obscene. Hamilton
for the day.
County Prosecutor Simon Leis
said he knew of only "three or
four" cases in the country
Involving the movie which
received a verdict in its favor.

Once More" "One Tin
Soldier", "What Are You
Doing the Rest of YourLife",.
"MacArthur Park", and "Let
There Be Peace on Earth".
The eighth grade band will
conclude the concert with
"Citadel", a concert march,
''Shenandoah'', Overture :
"The · Court of Henry VIII",
"The Masterpiece", "Finale
Grandioso", "Stratford
- Overtur~", "Aria" (When
Thou Art Near), "March of the
Men of Harlech", "The Candy
Man", and "Pageantry
Overture".
During the eighth grade band
portion of the prograno, the
Director's Award. for Outstanding Achievement by a
Junior High Band student will
be presented to a memher o(
the eighth grade band.
The Junior Contest Band
which received a superior
rating at the District Vlll Band
and Choral Competition
Contest las,t month will repeat
its .three contest numbers at
the high school band concert
Friday, April 26. There is no
admission charge for the
concert.
I .

I .

may.''

The T of C is an exclusive
event open only to winners of
major tournaments since the
last tournament. It offers a
$40,000 first prize.
Although Nicklaus is the

Blue Grass
Circular
Saw Blades
Blades are made of fhe finest
quality chrome nickel saw

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE

steeL hardened and tem pered. Hard chrome finish
stays sharp up to 5 times

By United Press lnterna1ional

Svra"cuse

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Rochesler
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Cordial Invitation ·to Attend

Detroit
Hands , Fife

(6),

Corbin

992-3106

.

takes on Bob Saunders Quaker
State team.

000 000 100- 1 6 1
100 000 20x- 3 6 0

The annual baskelball
banquet honoring members
of lhe 1973-74 Nortb Gallla
Pirates will be held at 6:311
p.m. Friday.
Charles McAfee, head
basketball coach al Athens
will be the fealured speaker.
The public Is Invited to attend.

Cleveland (1 -2) and Mont gomery ; Jenkins (.4 -l) and

Sundberg .
Mllw
100 001 000- 2 s 3
Chicago
000 311 02x - 7 13 0
Wright , Sprague
(51 and
Porter ; Wood , Forster (71 and
Herrmann . WP - Wood (2 -4) .
LP- Wright (3 -1 I.
NBA Playolf

Sc;:hedutes and Results
By United Press International
East Final
Boston vs . New York
(Boston won series 4·1)
Apr 14- Bcston 113 N .Y . BB
Apr 16- Boston 11 I N .Y . 99
Apr 19- N .Y. 103 Boslon 100
Apr 21 - Boston 98 N.Y . 91
Apr 24- Boston 105 N .Y . 94
West Final
Chicago vs. Milwaukee
(Milwaukee won series 4-0)
Apr 16- Milw 101 Chicago 85
Apr 18 - Milw 11 3 Chicago Ill
Apr 20- Mitw 11 3 Chicago 90
Apr 22- Mitw 115 Chicago 99

~

TOURNEY ON
According to a spokesman at
the Kyger Creek Power Plant,
the annual Little League
baseball tournament will be
held this year. The tournament
will begin on July 8.

THREE ENSHRINED
SPRINGFIELD, Mass .
(UP!) - Former NBA Commissioner Maurice Podoloff
was one of three basketball
greats inducted Wednesday
into the Naismith Memorial
Hall of Fanoe. Also enshrined
were Harry A. Fisher,
Columbia University's first
fulltime basketball coach, and
Ernest J. Schmidt, who starred
in Amateur Athletic Union play
with Denvor and Reno.

Kyger Creek posted its
fourth victory in five league
starts Wednesday night with a
lopsided JM triumph over the
Southwestern Highlanders.
The Bobcats hold down first
place in the loop standings.
Southwestern dropped to 3-3 in
the SV AC. Coach Jim
Sprague's diamondmen broke
a close game wide open with 13
runs in the fifth inning .
KC held just a 2-llead going
into the fifth . Southwestern
took a !-&lt;!lead int he first on a
walk to Kip Lewis and a two out
·infield error.
Kyger Creek assumed the
lead in the second on singles by
Ben Arnett and catcher Dave
Wise and a long double by
shortstop Terry Lucas. The
game remained a pitcher's
duel between Bobcat righty
Clay Hudson and Highlander
righty Kevin Walker until the
fatal fifth.
Ben Arnett started the rally
with a double, then came
consecutive walks to Wise,
Bruce Arnett and Terry Lucas.
Bill Metzner plated the second
run with a s queeze bunt.
Bobcat second baseman Tim
Lucas lined a single which was

r---------------------.
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992-2145

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AND SP·ACE HEATERS

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·'

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The MEIGS INN
The most populi.r night club in
the tri-couitty area is proud to
present the-return of

GEO. HALL
AND THE HAlLMARKS

TONIGHT 9 TIL 1

oowered tor toughest mowing.
Buy 21" Pow-R-Pro: ..
get FREE 51095 grassbag.

close win
ATHENS - It was a close
finish, at least as far as two of ·
the teams were concerned,
when J\thens won 'its own
-triangular match, edging out
Logan 182-184 ., the Meigs
Marauder golfers finishing
third with 202 team score.
Logan's Tim Cole was the
day's medalist, firing a 41,
followed by Bulldogs Terry
Hawk and Jim France with 44
and 45 respectively. Meigs
swinger Bruce Blackston shot
a 46. Other Meigs scores were
J. D. Story with a 49, John
Thonoas with a 53 and Jeff
Warner with a 54 .
F.oi Logan, John Russell and
Randy GoodUve each carded a
, ·47, and Mark Bumgardner shot
a 49.
·
Howie Dean had a 46 for
Athens, followed by Tim
Lavelle with a 47.
Team members w~o finished
fifth, and whose scores consequently. didn't count In the
final team totals, were Meigs
\Joe R011enbaum with a 56,
Logan's Mark Chapman with a
62 and Athens' Mike Blosser ·
with 48.
Friday, 1 the Marauder
linksters of Nolan Swackhamer
travel to New Lexington, ·

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May 1 games :
Ironton at Wells ton
Jackson at Logan

IN MIDDLEPORt
CONTACT •
I)ONNA STEWART
HEATING OIL

GENERAL
·TIRE SALES

SEO standings

Meigs at Alhens

Houn:7o.m.loS:JOp.m. Dolty
7 a.m. tot p.m. Frklay &amp; Saturday Meson 1 W. Va.

Fuel Chief

OUR ·PRICES

golfers win

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CHECK

Southern High

Athens in
~7J.SHl

WHEELS

good for two RBI's , Lawrence
Tabor got his fourth hit of the
game, a double; Ron Roush
walked, Hudson singled, and
hils by Bruce Arnett, Metzner
and Tabor plated the other
runs.
Southwestern got two more
runs in the sixth off the offerings of Metzner. Rick
Crouse opened with a grounder
which was bobbled at short. He
came around on a single by
Mike Russell. Russell scored
on two infield throwing errors.
Tabor led the Bobcats with
five hils in five trips to the
plate. Tim Lucas, Ben Arnett,
Terry Lucas and Bill Metzner
had two hils each.
The Southern Tornado golf
Russell led Southwestern
team of Greg Bailey defeated
with two hits in four at bat.
Warren Local, 211·226 at
Kevin Walker, Rick Crouse,
Pomeroy Wednesday afternoon.
Bob Johnson was the
medalist, shooting a 48,
followed by teammates Bob
Roush with a a2, Randy
Dudding with a f&gt;:l, and Gene
SEOAL BASEBALL
• Shively with a 58.
Team
w L R OR
Dale Moody led Warren with
Ironton
5 1 30 11
Wellston
, 1 29 IS a 53, followed by Brian Butts
Athens
' 2 34 12 with a :;s, Tim Lane with a a7,
Waverly
4 3 25 21
.
Looan
3 3 30 34
and Greg Lowe With a 60.
Me;gs
1 ' 20 37
Fifth men for both teams
JacKson
1 4 24 24
,
Gallipolis
1 5 22 30
were Tornados Kenton
TOTALS
23 : 23 214 214 Holmanwitha70andWarren's
Tuesda,y•s results
·
Ironton 3 Athens o
Andy Moyers with a 62.
Waverly 3 Gallipolis o
The ~T-ornados- travel to
Ja ckson -Logan . PPnd
.
Wellston .Meigs, ppnd
Vmton for a dual match today.

Me igs at Well ston
April 19 game :

Children's Gym Sets
by BLAZON

'

\

FOR YOUR

Gallipolis 12 Meigs 3
Today's games :
Jackson at Gallipolis

.SPRING SPECIAL FOR NEW HOMES

MORRIS M. WOLFE, Pastor

BEFORE YOU
BUY
YOUR TIRES

Wednesday's Resull:

FOR THE BACKYARD

MIDDLEPORT

IN POINT PLEASANT
CONTACT
HARLEY HENDRIX
PHONE 675-2460

junior righthander, walked six
and struck out seven in ·
anybody as Niday retired the recording his first win of the
next three. batters in order.
year~ He is J-1.
Gallipolis struck for two
Ault went five innings,
"i nsura nce" runs in the
seven th when Watson singled striking out six and giving up
for the third time , Jim Perry . ~IX hils, before he wa~ replaced
. led , fo11 owe db y a f'ae ld er ,s m the Sixth. by semor
smg
lk d ·Steve
choice, a double by Gary Pnce . Pnce. wa e one,
Swain a walk, and a fielder 's struck out three and gave .up
one earned run on three h1 ts.
. '
ChOICe.
Only
two of the 10 runs off Ault
Th e Marau ders a dd ed th etr
, h
h If f th e were earned;
only one of the
, 1
fmarunmomeao
·
seventh on a walk, double by three Marauder runs wa s
.
d d .
b earned
MIke
Nesse1roa an smg 1e y
Wat .on th e GAHS third
s •
.
Charhe Marsha ll .
'd
.
ld
d
Its
baseman,
wa
s
the
leadmg
II
Ina ,Niayyle e sJXll, h'tte 'thth
. I . f
while the Blue Devils com- 1. r WI
ree smg es m our
mitted three err ors. Niday, a tr1ps. Holland went two for f~ur
and Datley two for ftv e with
three RBis .
Nesselroad, whose strike out
in the first inning was hit first
in 10 games this season, was
the only Marauder with 2 hils ,
to
pickoff
Harris
with
the
a
single and double.
second; Mark Theiss walked,
pitcher
throwing
the
ball
away
The Marauders travel to
Gardner walked and Bill Petrie
and Goebel scoring.
Wellston this afternoon for a
singled.
In the fourth , Rob Barber makeup game with the Golden
A Mike Harris single,
second; Rock ets while Gallipolis hosts
stole
followed by a sacrifice bunt, walked,
Eichinger
singled
and
stole Jackson on Memorial Field .
stolen base and single by Tim
second,
followed
by
a
Randy
Kuhn provided Eastern with
aOO 050 2-12-9-3
another run in the third, before Blake single. Blake then stole Gallipolis
Meigs
000 020 1- 3-6-8
the Pirates retaliated on a walk second, third and home.
Niday
(WP
)
and Berridge.
walked,
stole
second
Spencer
to Dobbins, a stolen base and
(5th~ &amp; Ash.
Ault,
Price
and
third
,
followed
by
a
walk
to
Gene Welc~'s double .
Eastern took the lead for Goebel and stolen base before
good in the third as Tim an error by the shortstop let
Spencer opened with a single SPencer score.
Welch's homer with Stout
and stole second . Goebel
doubled and went to third on an aboard in the bottom of the
error by the pitcher, followed inning accounted for the final
by a hit batter, Mike Harris . On ' Pirate tallies.
The Eagles added four in the
the ensuing play, Gardner tried
fifth on a walk, error, hit
batter, double- by Goebel and
another error.
Three more came home in
the sixth on a Tim Kuhn
double, 'walk, sacrifice, walk
and double by Blake.
Top hitters for the Eagles
were Goebel with a pair of
doubles, Kuhn and Blake with a
and Kip Lewis had the other single and double apiece,
safeties.
Eichinger with two singles, and
Hudson was the winning SPencer and· Harris with a
pitcher while Walker took the single each.
loss.
Goebel yielded just four hits,
Linescore :
with the top Pirate batter
S'western
tOO 002 2- 6- 4-4 Welch with a double and round
K. Creek 020 0 13 3 x- 18-18-a tripper.
Walter (L) Lewis ( a~ and
The Eagles travel to Racine
Crouse. Hudson (W) Metzner this afternoon for a league
(6) and Wise.
battle with Southern, while
North Gallia is at Southwestern
· today.
Eastern · 112 443 Il-Ia 10 o
N. Gallia
110 200 11-- 4 4 6
992-7161
Goebel (WPJ and Harris.
Gardner and Patterson.

K
c
k
d
an~o~~g~~~~~~~~~.'m., Luigis
yger ree recor s
, , , , , , , , , , , ,,, , ,,,, , , , , , , , , , ,·fourth league victory
.

(7)

and Brinkman ; Coleman, Hiller
(7) and Moses . WP- Coleman
(3 -1) . LP -H ands (0-4). HR KIIIeb,-ew ( l s t l.

Boston
Texas

Goebel struck out five and
walked 10. His counterpart,
Jack Gardner, also went the
route, striking out six and
walking four .
Eastern managed 10 hits off
Gardner, and touched him for a
single run in the first when
sophomore Don Eichinger
· singled, stole second and third,
and came home when Randy
Blake struck out, the catcher
dropping the ball and overthrowing first base.
On the afternoon, the Eagles
streaked for 17 ·stolen bases.
North Gallia came right back
in the bottom of the first , as
Tim Stout walked, stole

and Davis led Luigis with 17

000 000 400- 4 14 0
200 003 30x - 8 lA 1

Minn

R;EVIVAL SERVICES

•

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g\~~~ Williams. WP - McNally

Prescriptions Are Uur Main Business

n B'rother Cr~ne. Wh? ~as had 16 years in pas~oral-mlnistry In Ten. ,'
Nessee and West Virgmta, attended 'Trevecca Nazarene College and
azarene Th~logical Seminary : While at Trevecca he traveled
th~oughout the Southeast with s!nging groups. During seminary years he
~.e ved as minister ~~ music '" two churches and also sang in ttie
mS'ff~r~l Blessing choir and quartet. ,Wlth hla wife, Mildred, he later .
. Asa n a n " I weekly rediQ brqadcast ,I called ''Hymns of Blessed
surance, . which was aired for five years.
.

IN _
•,

Egan Ill: McNally, R-eynolds

DUTTON'S

REV. BILLY D. CRANE, a full -time evangelist In the C"urch of the
~azaren.e, was raised In a Nazarene parsonage. He has sung the gospel
smce childhood and was commissioned. as a song evangelist while ·1n h'
~ns
ts

The Kiddie Shoppe
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Si ng er (2 -2J and Rodriguez ,

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MIDDLEPORT

Evangelist· Song Evangelist '

Friday and Saturday

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ALL SEASONS MERCHANDISE

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Patt in 10-ll and Martinez;
Medich , Lyle (8) and Munson.

8

in the sixth but couldn't plate

Gallipolis runs were unearned . ·
Meanwhile, GAHS starter
Jim Niday had a no-hitter
going until the fifth when Ault
broke it up with a triple to
rightfield. That was followed
by an error, sacrifice fly by
catcher Mick Ash, and two
more Marauder hils, singles by
Dave Wolfe and Mike
Nesselroad.
Gallia Academy burst for
five more runs in the fifth on an
error, a walk, a single · by
Dailey, back·tO-back walks, a
single by Watson, an error, and
a single by Holland.
The' Marauders got a double
from right fielder Gary George

Eagles beat North Gallia 15-4

'

FIRST CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE

.

•

2 4 .333
2 4 .333

at Wellston

Wheel Chairs
Walkers
Crutches and Canes
Back Hraces
Bedside Commodes
Support Stockings
Trusses
Incontinent Garments
Traction Equipment
Elastic Supports
Surgical Dressings

FLAT LATEX

CONTINUES

50~ to

South
w . 1. pet . g .b.
3 2 .600
3 2 .600

out thriller

Holtzman 11 -2). LP - Tidrow II·
31 . HR - Bando 13rd l.
Kan City
010 010 1oo- 3 51
N.Y.
ooo 201 lOx- • 7 1

ooo ooo 003- 3

-

The Devils wasted no time
jumping on Meigs starter and
loser Perk Ault for five runs iii
the . first on a walk, Mike
Watson 's single, a fielder 's
choice, Bill Holland 'ssingle, an
error 1 a walk, an error, a single
by Roger Dailey; and a third
walk.
In all, the Marauders
committed eight errors on the
afternoon; seven coming from
the left side of the infield .
Added to the fielding miscues
of Donald Wolfe 's lads, were
nine bases on balls by Ault. The
junior righthander gave up just
six hits . Nine of the 12

LIDgi pulls

American League
Oakland
200 020 302- 9 8 3
Cleveland
001 000 010- 2 9 4
Holtzman , Fingers (91 and
Fosse ; Tid row , Bosman (6) ,
W iiCO )( (7) and Dunca n . WP -

Bait

By Denny FobesThe Gallipolis Blue Devils,
winless in Southeastern Ohio
League action, and scoreless in
their last, 22 iJIIlings, exploded
for five runs in the first inning,
added five in the fifth, and two
in the•seventh enroute to a 12-3
triumph over the Meigs
Marauders in Middleport
Wednesday afternoon.
The win, the fits! for the
diamondmen of Jim Osborne,
brings them to 1-5 in the
league, 4-7 overall .
The Marauders, meanwhile,
dropped to seventh place in the
A last second 20-foot shot by league standings at 1-4.
Skip Davis gave Luigis a comefrom-behind 119-117 victory
over the Jackson AU Stars in
the Wellston Independent
basketball tournament at
Wellston Junior High Tuesday.
Luigis was led by former Ohio
University star Tommy Corde
BIDWELL - The Eastern
who poured in 45 points, Eagles snapped a nine game
followed by Davis with 25, Ron losing streak, thumping the
Ferguson with 18, Doxie North Gallia Pirates 1:&gt;-1 here
Walters with 14 and another Wednesday afternoon.
The Eagles, who at one time
former OU player, Fred Cluff.
with 12.
•
were 4-1 overall and 1-&lt;l in
Jackson was led by Rio SV AC play, now are a-10
Grande star Ron Lambert with overall, 3-3 in loop competition.
H
11
Eastern. with starter Steve
43. e got exce ent help from
former SEOAL MVP Harold Goebel going the route on the
mound, tallied solo runs in the
Howe with 34 points.
Luigis trailed most of the first and second innings, before
game, but with five seconds adding two in the third, four in
left Ferguson stole the ball .and the fourth and fifth and three in
fired a full court pass to Davis the sixth . North Gallia
who hit the jumper at the managed solo runs in the first
two innings, before addin~ a
buzzer.
pair
in the fourth.
Lambert led all rebounders
with 19 caroms, while Walters

PRESCRIPTION AND SURGICAL
SUPPORT CENTER

7:30 EAat EVENING

ODDS &amp; ENDS

I
21h
31h

R0chesler 1 Memphi s 1
Pawtucket at Richmond , ppd.,
cold weather
Syracuse 6 Tidewater 2

King's Island
on April 28th

.-

4 2 .667
2 3 .4 00
1 4 .200

Wednesday's Results
Charleston 4 Toledo 2

Band will play

SING SET
A hymn sing will he held at 2
p. m. Sunday at the Bethlehem
'Baptist Church located at the
junction of Routes 338 and 124,
about six miles from Racine.
The public is Invited.

w . I. pet . g.b.
5 1 .8 33

lli\SEBALL
Eastern at Sou.t hern,
Mdgs at Wellston.
GOLF - Southern at
Vinton.
TRACK
North
Gallia and Eastern at
Meigs.

Linescores

Californ;a

'•

.

Devils thump Marauders 12-3

Sports today:

favorite at La Costa, Johnny
Miller h£S been the big winner
on the tour this year. He has
four victorieS-One of two
multiple winners in 1974.
In fact, he won the tour's first
three eVellis, the Bing Crosby,
the Phoenix Open and the
Tucson Open. He also captured
the 12th tournament of the
year, the Heritage Classic.
Nicklaus, who has had backto-back $300,000 seasons, won
the fifth event of the season,
capturing the Hawaiian Open.
Hubert Green is the only
other multiple winner this
year . He won the Bob Hope
Desert Classic and the Greater
Jacksonville Open .
A year ago, Nicklaus won by
one stroke at La Costa, shading
Lee Trevino 276 to 277.

North

APRIL 29 - MAY 5

.,

becauae It points out
1lelm baths aJid a lot of
J

Roy

well -Porter; Judy Burdell,
Addavllle; Rochella Foster.
Addaville and Alberta Lew is.

I

1 weJ~hl

•

Moody .

Bur·

Vinton ;
Fannie Metcalf,
Vinton; Martha Brown, Bid-

froln the blooclalriam,

,: Your clelcriptiCII Ia IJnpcirto
•: !lilt . to other people lotilng

•· lbet

Carol

Cheshire- Kyger, and Jerry

-

Mullins. North Gallla ; Rozena
Rees, Centerville ; Lois Sheets.
Southwestern; Dallle Forgey,

.!'J

.; WIIW

Vicki

nette, Southwestern .

When the last meet was
finished the friend who lost 19
pounds put all 19 pounda back
on In two days. I wish I knew
, wheiber or not these teeoagera
; took vitamins or mineral
·. supplements while they were
·. fasting, but I doubt that they
' did
"
·' You would do a public ser' vice by warning of the possible
; repercusaions of such starving
; .and drying out1My friend said
i that he had done things he
wouldn't normally do !he week 'rl''-=-"'iii;'D;i~~-~;!-"'r~
·' he fasted. I lind it lurrlble ·that ·
1he 'Oily .S.tlillll
.i our public schools cultivate
.: such things, Oon't you? .. · .
· .; DEAR READER - That's
· awful. AI your letter demonstratea
the caoe of your
. friend who regained all 19
: pounds he lost In just two dais,. most Of the !01111 was water·Josa.
,; Thil allo means a lou of salt
,i lind major dlalurbance In the
. body chemistry. Under .such
· ~ clrcum~ea even the
· ' amount ·blOOd iD the body 1.1
i decft!a d by ellml~llnc

l

Phyll is

Thompson , Hannan Trace ;
Andrew Owens, Southwestern;
Joyce Collins, Hannan Tra ce;

By Bob Hoeflich

encourage fad diet

,I

Fish er,

nan- Trace; Herm"an Sprague,

Some athletics

.

J essie

Cheshire - Kyger ;
Lynda
Dunlop. Cadmus; Ellen Van ce,

James Arledge, Kyger Creek ;
Faye Sauer, Kyger Creek;
James Foster. North Gallla;
Marilyn Reese. Che'shlreKyger; Betty Wilmoth, Han·

DR. LAWHENCE E. LAMB

,· off.

Kyger Creek ; J .

Robert Evans. Southwestern ;

,granted new contracts:
contracts

co ntra cts -

Trace; John Blake , North
Gallia ; Harold K. Brown,
North Gallia; fv\arfha Cornelius. North Gallia ; David
Danko, North Gallia; Jennifer

The following teachers were
Continuing

year

Charles Cornelius, Hannan

.
•
al
music ,

available
·

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'

. I'

·.

'I

.-

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·'
'

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,· l

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).'Ill:~

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4- The Daily'Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy,U., April :1.'i , 1974

To9a)r's

Sport -Parade By MlliTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UP I)- Dick Allen's three-year contract with the
Chicago White Sox is the best in baseball. Good as it is, lt doesn 't
match larry Cspnka 's new one .though. Csonka gets more
money . Allen gets more knocks.
It's always a source of discomfort to Chuck Tanner, the White
Sox manager, when anybody knocks Dici\.Allen, his $675,000 first
llaseman. They take pot shots at Allen for many different reas: ns
--for not being there every day in spring training, for not always
showing up at the ball park three hours before the game, and for
not always being wiUing to sit down and make small talk .
Generally speaking, those who knock Dtck Allen the most know
him least.
.
'
Chuck Tanner probably knows Dick Allen as well as anyone m
baseball. He knows him since he was a kid shooting baskets m
junior high school and his affectiOn for Dick Allen, as a human
being as well as a ballplayer, is genuin e.
Some people already are tying the White Sox ' slow start in the
American League West to a sinular start by Dick Allen.
He Points Out Details
Chuck TaMer hears something like that and immedia tely
wishes to point out some pertinent little details about both the
White Sox and Dick Allen.
"Let's see," he said, studymg lhe ~am's stats' sheet before
Wednesday night's ball game with Milwaukee, "Allen is hitting
.214, and leads our ball club in RB!s and bases on balls. They
never give hlm anything good to him. I mean NEVER.
Everytlme he walks up there, they pitch to hlm like it's the
seventh game of the World Series.
"He has hit six shots, just punished the baseball, but each one
of these line drives was right at some infielder or outfielder. If
those balls would 've fallen in, he'd be hitting .270or .2&amp;1."
Chuck Tanner didn't have his ready calculator with him ,
otherwise he would've discovered that had those six shots of
Allen's found some holes, he'd be hitting .321, not .270or .2&amp;1.
"Why should Dick Allen be slllgled out?" asked the White Sox
manager . "Look at_Amos Otis. He put in a full spring training;
he's having trouble getting out of the gate; he 's hitting .135, but
you know he'll get straightened out and have a good year. Johnny
Bench is another one. He has four RB!s as of today and he 's
hitting .217, but he's going to be in the All-Star Game. Look, Dick
Allen could hit .190 all year and play forme .
That's Nonsense Also
"That business of him not being there for all of spring training
is nonsense also. Frank Robinson had only seven official at bats
in spring training for the California Angels, so what ? He's still
one of the greatest players in baseball . ·Mike Marshall sai~ he
had his own way of getting ready and wasn't going to do any
running in spring training. The Dodgers told him 'You have a
good track record, go ahe~d and do it your own way.'
"Usten, people simply don't know Dick Allen. He 's like
everybody else. He has two anns, two legs and he has a heart. He
has feelings just like you and, me. He's a dedicated individual
who stays in shape 12 months a year. People think he keeps to
himself and Is a loner. Maytie that's the way he is on the outside,
but you ought to see him inside the clubhouse. He helps the young
ballplayers. He has been instrumental in the -improvement of
Jorge Orta, our second baseman.
"Nobody's ever going to hurt Dick Allen as long as I'm
manager," Chuck Tanner went on. "I'll never trade him, he 's
always going to play for me and when he's through , he'll walk
into the Hall of Fame. They talk about his hitting . Why, he's one
of the best base runners who ever played this game. He reminds
me of Joe DiMaggio in that regard. Ever see Joe run bases? Ever .
see anyone run them better? Dick Allen runs them the same
way.'.'

Pi~tol

!'
I.

I
i

Tampa new NFL
•
expanszon team
•

NEW YORK (UP!) - Expansion and inflation , two
concepts that typify modern
America, will take another
staggering step outward and
upward as part of the National
Football League's tribute to
the country's bicentepnial.
The NFL, which already has
gone from 12 tea ms to 26 since
1960, will expand further in 1976
with the definite addition of
:rampa, F1a. At least one other
city, and possibly more, will be
selected later this year to join
the burgeoning fraternity .
Those cities under consideration
are
Seattle,
Phoenix, -· Honolulu
and
Memphis, all of whose bids
were discussed at this week's
NFL meeting.
The price of admission is a
cool $16 million, almost double
what the National League
charged for its last group of
expansion franchises just a few
years ago and the largest in

sport history :
Never Blinked an Eye
But no one concerned with
the Tampa bid so much as
blinked an eye at the initiation
fee . The only emotion they
showed· .vas relief' at gaining
the privilege to pay the price.
"I'm sure that the people
who are bidding for the franchise have certainly evaluated
the situation and know there
will be a return on it/' said
Leonard Levy, chairman of the
Chamber of Commerce Task
Force that has worked for six
years to bring the NFL to
Tampa.
"This is inflation now, we're
paying more for everything we

do."
Levy said · that 1\(lme 13
groups have expressed an
interest in taking over the
Tampa franchise. One of the
strongest groups is headed by
Harry T. Mangurian, whom
Levy said "has been the most

Celtics eliminate Knicks
BOSTON (UP! ) - The sign
on the blackboard said : "Practice tomorrow al 11 a.m."
That seemed to sum things
up for the Boston Celtics, who
had jt.St eliminated the New
York Knickerbockers from
contention in the National
Basketball Association
championships in a 105·94
decision that waxed from
brutal to poetic.
It was the first time the
Celtics had won the Eastern
Division playoffs since 1!169,
but there was no time to savor
the victory because the
Milwaukee Bucks, with 7-foot-2
Kareem Abdul Jabbar, loomed
over the locker room like a
specter.
The two teams meet Sunday
in Milwaukee.
"This will be a mess-around
practice. We get one messaround practice for winning, "
said Boston Coach Tom Heln- ·
sohn. "Then we get down to

neither team able to control
play for any length of time. The
officials called a total of 31
fouls in the first half most of
them under the boards, where
elbows and hips were turned
into nearly lethal weapons.
The defense on both sides
was frantic and aggressive,
especially in the first quarter
when the two teams managed
only a total of 41 points between
them.
"The game was won in the
first half," said Boston's Don
Chaney, who took control of the
game in the second ha lf,
scoring 12 of his 19 points. "It
was a real tough hall and the
Khicks were tired when they
came out for the last haH," he
said.
"This is just one step along
the way," said captain John
Havlicek, who turned in another outstanding performance,
scoring 33 points, most of them
in a second.IJalf surge which
business.''
broke the Kni_~:ks' back. "We
Boston held a 52-45 lead at really don't have time to enjoy
the end of the first half, with this (the victory) because we

have another big obstacle
staring us in the face."
Dave Cowens, who took time
to visit the Knicks' dressing
room before facing reporters,
admitted he was already
thiuking about the Milwaukee
series.
"! think it's going to be a
matter of the turtle trying to
catch the hare," he said. "The
Bucks have never played a
series against a running team.
I'm going to try to get the big
man (Abdul.Jabbar) outside,
tl1at's for sure.''
" We ' re gonna let Dave
(Cowens) go one on one with
Jabbar and let him do his best.
The rest of us are going to work
on shutting the other guys off,"
said Paul Silas, who had 14
points.

article lasf Friday that Maravich was going to New Orleans
after his contractual issues had
been settled with the Hawks.
He said last Monday Williams
telephoned Herskovitz here
and Wilcox called the following
morning. Both conversations,
· Zittrain said, involved the
meeti)lg held in Atlanta.
"There was no mention of
Pete going to New Orleans,"
Zittrain said.
Tuesday evening Williams
called Berkovitz again, saying
a deal had been brewing for
months with New Orleans and
that Pete was making the
switch . This flabbergasted
Herskovitz.

"Pete is very distressed - clear the air. "
· said.
and so are we -that he was not
Zittrain, his colleague and
The attorney said when the
told beforehand about the attorney Art Herskovitz, and Hawks began losing last fall,
switch," attorney Lester Zit- Maravich met with Hawks Maravich was made the
train said. "We thought a General Manager Pat WiUiams "scapegoat" by the Hawks'
meeting we had with Hawks and John Wilcox, principal front office. Maravich and
officials April 15 about Pete's owner and president.
Fitzsimmons had words in
case was successful and would
"The session was delightful, Houston and the player was
fined $1,000 and suspended for
we
was to Fitzmeet two days. "Pete kept quiet
withthought.
CoachPeteCotton
simmons and they would settle dnring that time," he said.
Zittrain said he read in an
their differences," Zittrain

..--------------------'
"
'
1
1
CHICKEN BARBECUE
SA.T., APR.
1

71

AT

MASON, W. VA.
Serving Starts At 11 A. M.

BUY A DINNER OR CHICKEN SEPARATELY.
ALL ARE INVITED!

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
The Pittsburgh Pirates may
be on the way toward solving
their problems, but it looks as
if the New York Mets' troubles
are just beginning.
The Pirates and the Mets, the
co-favorites to fight it out for
the National League East
pennant, have been looking
more like Little Leaguers
during the first weeks of the
season as they've struggled to
remain competitive in their
division.
But the Pirates, at least, are

5-3.
The Pirates unloaded three
homers in dowrdng the Braves
with Manny Sanguillen and
Willie Stargell each contributing a twO-run shot and Richie
Hebner adding a solo blast.
Pittsburgh also got some
good pitching from right-hander
Dock Ellis, who allowed five
hits in six innings to record his
first win. The Pirates have not
been getting much pitching thus
far but Ellis' performance was
encouraging.
Mels Plunge Deeper
The Mets, on the other hand,

games.
Once again it was a
combination of lack of hitting
and poor relief pitching that
deserted the Mets Wednesday
night. The team, batting only
.244, manage&lt;! only · five hits
and reliever Bob Apodaca fell
apart in the ninth inning as the
Padres pushed across . the,
wmmng run.
Derrell Thomas started the
rally with a one-out double and,
after a ·pair of walks, the
Padres pushed across the
winning run on Nate Colbert's
check swing grounder to second

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CINCINNATI (UPI )- Jack year when Chicago beat the
S t . LOUIS
21!2
Billingham, even though both· Reds eight out of 12 games
4
Ch icago
Pittsburgh
~ - 10 .286
6112 ered tiY
sore shoulder, Is even though the Cubs flilished
J n .21-4
71;,
New York.
running one day ahead of last fourth in the East while the
West
Reds were winning the
w . 1. pet. g.b. year's schedule when he
LosAngetes
12 5 .706
racked up 19 victories, tops for Western Division title. .
Houston
11 a .579 2
Since last year, though, there
1
Ci ncin nat i
9 7 563
2 h Cincinnati Reds pitchers.
San Fr ancisco 9 8 529 3
have
been a lot of. changes on
The 6-foot-4 Cincy rightAt lanta
8 10 . 4.U
A'h
San D1ego
6 13 .316
7
hander gained his third victory the Cubs roster. Veterans have
Wednesday's Results
been replaced by youngsters.
Cin c innati 1 Ch icago 0 M t l at in four decisions Wednesday as
Billy
Williams, Jose Cardenal
San Fr an , ppd ., { Bin
the Reds edged the Chicago
Pittsburgh 5 Atlanta 3
and
Don
Kessinger are the only
Cubs 1-0 when Bill Bonham
Hou ston 9 Sl Louis 4
San Diego 4 New York J
walked George Foster with two veterans remaining in the
Los Ang 6 Philadelphia 1
outs and the bases loaded in the Cubs' starting cast.
Today 's Probable Pitchers
But you didn't find Reds
(All times EDT}
'
ninth inning.
Montrea t (McAnelly 1.1) at
The victory was the second Manager Sparky Anderson
San Fr an c isco (C al dwell 3· 1).
J : 15p m
•
straight for the Reds over the shedding any tears when a few
P i tt sburgh (Reuss 0· 1) at
Cubs, in sharp contrast to last of the Cubs' veterans departec'
Atlanta (Reed J. 1J. 8 .05 p .m .
during the wint~r . This is
New York. (Koosman 2 OJ at
San Diego (McAndrew 1·3l. 10
especially true where Ron
p .m .
Santo and Ferguson Jenkins, a
Philadelph i a (Ruthven 1·0) at
Los Ange les (John 4·0L 1(1 : 30
couple of old Reds' nemesis,
p m.
are concerned.
(O nly games scheduled )
'
Friday' s Games
"! will say that in Bonham
Ch ica go at Atlanta , night
the Cubs have a fine young
Houst on at P iUs , night
Clnci at St Louis , n i ght
pitcher who Ts going to win a lot
Ph ita at San Diego, n ight
Major League Leaders
of games," said Anderson.
Montreo51 at Los Ang, night
By United Press International
New York at San F ran, night
Leading Batters
A double by Dave ConNational League
cepcion
led to the Reds winning
American League
g . ab r. h. pet.
East
Tavrs, Pit
10 26 2 12 . Ati 2 run in the ninth inning Wedw. I. pet. g.b. Sngltn,Mtl 11 36 9 15 417
Baltimore
9 6 .600
Perez , At I
11 25 6 10 .400 nesday.
New York
10 7 .5 88
Reitz , St .L
18 6ti 7 26 .394
Idle Thursday, the Reds open
Boston
9 7 . 563
'h
Hebner , Pit 14 60 13 23 383
a
three-game
series in st. Louis
Milwaukee
7 6 .538
1
Unser,Phil 13 48 11 18 .375
Detro i t
6 9 .400 3
Rbnsn . Phil 12 38 6 14 .368 Friday night when they'll send
Cleveland
5 It .3 13 4 1!~ Smlth,SI.L 18 72 11 26 .361
West
Hetms , Hou 18 61
7 22 .361 Don Gullett against lefty John
w . I. pet . g.b. Winfld , so
14 42 6 15 .357 Curtis. Saturday and Sunday
Tex as
9 6 .600
American League
Oakland
9
7 .5 63
g . ab r. h . pet . games complete the series.
Mmnesota
8 7 .533
lf1
Carew.Min 16 67 11 27 .403
From St. Louis the Reds
California
9 8 .529
1!:2 Ja cksn , Oak 16 61 14 24 .393
move
onto Pittsburgh and then
Chicago
6 9 .400 3
Yn, Bos
16 56 11 22 .393
Kansas City
5 9 .357
3% Stantn,Cal
11 59 12 23 .390 will wind up their trip with a
.
. Wednesday's Results
Grlffn , Bos
15 52 5 20 .385
Oakland 9 Cleve land 2
Pnela , NY
9 34 3 13 .382 return engagement against the
New York 4 Kansas City 3
Oliva , Min
12 38 o 14 .368 Cubs in Chicago May 3-6.
Baltimore 4. California 3
21f7

·a

Major League
Leaders

Detroit 8 Minnesota 4
Texas 3 Boston I
Chicago 7 Milwaukee 2
Today's Probable Pitchers
CAll Times EDT,
Kan sas City (Spllttorft 1-1) at
New York (K line 2· 1l. 2 p .m .
Boston (Lee 2· 1) at Texa s
(B ibby 3.2), 9 p .m
(On ly games scheduled l
Friday's Games
M ilwaukee at Minnesota
Cal if at Cleveland, night
Oakland at Baltimore , night
Texas at New York , n ight
Detroit at Chicago , n 1ght
Boston at Kan City , night
Major League Results
By United Press International
National League
Mtl at San Fran, ppd ., rain

Chicago
ooo ooo ooo- o 52
C1nc:innati
000 000 001 - 1 50
Bonham (l .J) and Mltter .
ward , Billingham {3 · 1 l and
Bench .

Grlch, ear
15 52 10 19 .365
Splkes,Cie
16 60 7 21 .350
Netls, NY
17 64 13 22 .344
Home Runs
National League : Perez , Cin
and Wynn . LA 7 , Hebner , P itt
6 : Garvey, LA 5; Aaron , Atl
and Cedeno, Hou 4.
Amerlnn League: . Nettles,
NY
10;
Jackson , Oak
7;
Yastrzemski , sos 6 ; Duncan ,
Ctev and Burroughs , Tex 5.
Runs Baned 1n
National League : . Cedeno.
Hou 23 ; Perez , Cln and Wynn ,
LA 19 ; ConcePC IOn , Cin 17 i

Smith , St .L

\

I..

.'

16 .

American league: . Nettles ,
NY and Jackson . Oak 21;
Yastrzemski , Bos 17 ; Robinson,
Cal 16; Hisle, M lnn 15.
Pitching . . .
National League : John, LA 4·
0; Sutton , LA 4.1 ; Roger s and
Torrez. Mtt J.O; Reed, Atl ,
Bi ll ingham , Cln, Osteen and
Roberts, Hou and Caldwell , SF
J-1; P . Nlekro , At I J-2 .
American League : Hi l ler , Det
3.0; Coleman , Oet, Wright , Mil.
Medlch and Stott lemyre , NY ,
Fingers and Hun ter, Oak and
Jenkins , Tex 3· l i Bibby , Tex J.
2.

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Orders Filled .

Redmen take over
lead in MOC play
Rio Grande College took over
undisputed first place in the
Mid-Ohio Conference baseball
race following a double victory
over Urbana Wednesday.
Rio won the opener 4-2 and
the nightcap, 7-1. Rio is now 7-1
in league play and 12-4 on the
year.
The Redmen, with nine
slraight wins, will play Ohio
Dominican a twinbill at
Colwnbus Saturday. It will be
non-league encounters.

"'e(e'S

Summel"Fun

St . Louis
001 010 02D-- 4 11 2
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Reds' victory. Bill Bonham,
who struck out nine In a routegoing performance, issued the
decisive walk and took his third
loss in four decisions . Jack
Billingham allowed five hits in
going the route for his third win
in four decisions.
Dodgen 8, Pblllies 1:
Jim Wynn drove In two rwts
with a single and his seventh
homer and Don Sutton tossed a
seven-hitter to lead the Dodgers
past the Phillies. Willie Crawford also chipped in with a tworun triple as Los Angeles
bested Jim Lonborg.

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children will use their
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Please, remember there is
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and It Is not necessary to be a
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Any- adult may bring as
many children as he or she can
supervise. The Art Colony
invites you to participate
.SUnday and wishes everyone a
happy vacation until September.
•

Bird bath s, hen &amp; chickens ,
du ck &amp; duckl ings , roosters,
flam ingos , rabb its , · ch ip .
munks , egrets , wild geese
and Pheasan ts

,""" .. &amp;4- .-.* ·c.. . ,
~·,...

I•,.JI••

BETTY OHLINGE-R
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$1.89 O~ly

$129

q,on

Iltilly loDO o.m. to 10 :00 p.m
Sund1y 10:30 . 12 :30 and s to 9 p. rTl

PR~SCRIP:rtONS

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Special! ...FOR GRADS
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1:

OFF
Seniors, This Is For You!

Get Your Spring and
Graduation Outfit
Now and -Save 10%.
WHY ,WAIT?

R-SHOPPING CENTER

POMEROY

BEN,F.RANK'
IQI.
PHONE
200-~Q2 East Main St.
. 992-3498

POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN"f;RIDAY &amp; ~ATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 9

yse Our Conven1e?t Lax; A-Way Plan-,

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The elegant look of wroughl iron in
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Eas ter
theme ~ from
.. ReSponse" magazine was led ·
by Helen Woode.
:
The can dl elight service
included singi ng "The Light of
the World is Jesus" and a
worship center depicting the
cross with pictures of distress
and. g l ad n e~s . for Christ's
giving of his life and the
resu rrec ti on showing joy
brought out of despair. The
readings, sc ripture, prayer
and song broug ht . out the
redemption story of Christ and
his love as related to the world
today. The Lord's Prayer m
unison closed the program .
The hostess served refreshment,; during the soc1al hour .
The next meeting will be
Tuesday, May 21, at 8 p.m. at
the home of Helen Woode, with
Flore n('e Spencer as program
leader .

· 1
ti A '116 t th mentioned
was given $15 to be ~sed for -~egu arfmMeel nGg PI!~~ ?th e
Gertrud~ Bloede, wtlh the
prizes for juniors assastmg 1ll ·~orne o ere n 1 , Wl an
.
. .
the poppy sale
attendance of II .
Red Bird Mtssmt"' Beverly,
In re s po ns~ to a comThe meeting, in charge of Ky .,_ was se ec ted as
. N ll ' p k
d t miSSIOnary or the month . A
munlca tion from the Oht o
e ted .athr er, prebst Oen _' round-robtn card was stgned
Soc1e.\y fo r Preven ti on of opene w1 prayer Y ste
.
Blindness the unit sent $5 It Mae Follrod , and singin~ or for her btrthday, Aprt1 23 ..
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·
" Pr · H' p · H' "
A letter from the dtslrtct
was announced that May 5 is
alse tm, raise tm
"membership secretary, Jamce
Hospital Day at the Chillicothe . There were 36 stck and shutVeteran s Hospital Mrs . Ellen tn calls reported
McG hee, on
in creasi ng
Couch , comm unity se rvice
Commumcatw~s were r~ad membership in 1~i4 was rea d
chairwoman, reported on her from I_rene Matth_las on the ftve by Osie Follrod and a question
contact with Mrs. Vera Crow of pc t · tncrease tn P Iedge to and answer ses§ion on this
Preceptor Bei.ii· Beta Chapter r~tssi?ns, an d the district topic foll owed.
of Belli Sigma Phi Sorority, ftnanc tal report.
.
Elea nor Boyles ga ve a
A Ie tie r from _ the dIS tr 1c t mission repor t on '' Broadcast
regarding cpoperation in the
cleanup campaign in Pomeroy . secretary, Frankte McKelvey , from a Bed room,,, uy Maunnc
A party for the veterans at tn the fo rm of Easter greetings Seale, who is a victim of
the Athens Mental Hea lth announce d severa I ruture Paralysis .
Ce nter was announced for May meetings.
The program, "A Time for
I. It was voted to se nd $:1.'i to the
A list of misswnartes 'SU))- Joy, A Time to Share" wrth an
Xenia Disaster Fund, and it ported by the prayer calendar
was reported that Xenia Orphans Home for Children of
Veterans was not damaged in
the tornado.
It' s So Ea sy. Try .. Delegates elected to the
Department of Ohio convention, Columbus, July 12-14,
were Mrs. Pratt, Mrs. Neutzling, Mrs. Welsh and Mr s.
Vida Davis . Alternates named
DRIVE -IN H O UR So
were Mrs. Hac kett , Mrs.
M on . lo Thurs. 9 1o J- Fr1day 9 to 7
Sauer, Mrs . Knapp and Mrs.
Sat urday 9 to 12.
Raymond D. Prtddy, Ruth
Mary Martin .
Ann Priddy to J ames E.
CASH GIVEAWAY
Named to the nominating
Ferguson, J oa nn Fe rguson,
commtttee were Mrs. Norma 7.22 Acres, Rutland .
E ..... h week , $2 0 first prize , SIO second , SS th1rd .
Jewell, Mrs. Reuter and Miss
Corbett Clerrk , Mary H.
Reg.'ster fre e Wmne rs w11l be nol1fled . Drawing s
Smith . Purchase of new drapes Cleek to Thomas E. Diddle,
Apn l 6, 13, 20, 27 . May 6 Drive in , f ry thi S new
for the hall was discussed and
con~Jenlent se rv1 ce
Pamela J. Diddle, .64 acre,
Mrs. Welsh and Mrs. Knapp Sot ton.
pomeroy
will secure cost estimates.
Rena Lemas ter to Ray
national
Mrs. Reuter , children and Harper, 2 acres, Bedford .
bank
youth, reported that there is in
G. Douglas Circle, Elsie G.
Meigs County a child of a Circle to James R. Parsons,
veteran m need of a kidney Martha Parsons, 26 acres,
transplant. The unit voted to Sutton .
contribute $10 to the family .
Roy Z. Brickles, Mabel E.
Mrs. Wildermuth reported Brickles, to Dana Murry,
membership at 156, and Mrs . Karen Murray, parcels,
Couch noted that she had taken Bedford .
a sachet bowl to Mrs.
Barton E. Pearson, Johnetta
Genevieve Well, and sent a J . Pearson to Charl es J .
ca rd to Mrs. Davis who is Ohlinger, Opal Ohlinger,
confined to the Holzer Merlical parcel, RuUand.
Center.
laurence R. Facemyer, Jr.
Mrs. Jewell reported that to !neva M. Facemyer
there is now in the special fund Howard, Walter Howard, 4.897
$2,684.72 designated for a new acre, Scipio.
kitchen. Thank-you notes were
laurence R. Facemyer Jr. to
read from Eloise Hayes, Mrs. !neva M. Facemyer Howard,
Davis and Commander George easement, Scipio.
Nesselroad ol Drew Webster
Citizens NatiOnal Bank to
Post.
Lewis Taylor, Daisy L. Taylor,
. Committees appointed for lots, Pomeroy.
the games parties were as
When your child is ill, i.e takes a
follows : April 26, Mr. Couch r_..------·------~
little more than tender, loving care
and Mrs. Neutzling ; May 3,
Miss Erma Smith; May 6, Mrs.
to nurse him back to health quickly
Frances Hunnel ; May 10, Mrs.
and effecti vely.
Jean Wright and Mrs . Iva
Powell ; May 13, Mrs. Gemma
It takes the nJCdical know-how
Casci; May 17, Mrs. Reuter ;
of your doctor and pharmac ist. Rely
May 20, Mrs. Isabelle Couch;
May 24, Mrs. Lena Nesselroad
MAIN ST.
on us for sick-care help.
and Evelyn Clark; May 27,
Mrs. Norma Jewell and Mrs. 1 POMEROY
Sickroom Supplies
Pratt, and May 31 , Mrs.
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Wildermuth.
WEEKEND I
Cookies, punch and coffee I
were served by Mrs . Isabelle
SPECIAL
Couch and Mrs. Wright. May
hostesses will be Mrs. Jewell
Fri. &amp; Sal.
and Mrs. Welsh, with Mrs.
I
Apri
I 26-27
I
Wildermuth and Mrs. Reuter to
present a program on Poppy
Day and children and youth
1
work.

FAC sets last workshop

Goessler's Jewelry Store

JUNIORS:

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contributions

.19'~4
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economy of their ci ties and the
culture are constantly movmg .
He said that Seoul destroyed in
1960 by ·North K~rea is now
.
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being rebUilt..
.
.
Democracy ts practiced tn
South Korea he said and
'
declared that all the glory of
by-gone days is now returning .
Huge shipyards, all kinds- of
fa ctortes1 symbols of great
prosperity marked the slides
shown at the meeti ng. He spoke
or the new interest in farming,
ofwheatproductionontherise,
of ca ttle production and .dairy
farming increasing, and piclured a prosperous land. He
satd that the steel production
has increased to 300,000 tons a
year' and that at the present
time 940 thousand barrels of oil
is produced each day and this
IS on the increase . Atom power
is used fo r healin g and
med 1cmal purposes, he explained .
As for education, he said that
Koreans look on education as a
means of achieving their goals.
Koreans are a peace-lovin g
people, the speaker commented, and Korea will
overcome any future powers
with their own strength and
determination . "The sun rises
on a reformed Korea ", he
declared .
Jung Koo was attired in a
pink satin gown which her
husband said would cost
several hundred dollars in
America, but only about $60 in
Korea. She wore diamond and
jade rings .
A check for $15 and personal
gifts were presented to the
three following the program.
During the business meetin g,
conducted by Mrs . Grace
Pratt, plans were made for the
RACINE - The success of summer convention of Distr1ct
fund-raising projects to be 8 in Pomeroy. Mrs. Carrie
carried out by the Southern Neutzling, Miss Erma Smith
Local
Band '
Boosters and Mrs. Catherine Welsh were
Association will determine named co-chairwomen, with
whether the Southern High Mrs . Faye Wildermuth, Mrs .
School Marching . Band will Marge Reuter, Mrs. Knapp,
atjend band camp at Rio Mrs. Rhoda Hackett and Mrs .
Grande this summer.
Edith Sauer to have charge of a
Meeting Tuesday night at the reception following
the
school, the boosters planned a meeting.
variety of projects including
The Memorial · Day parade
tag day Saturday in the May 27 was discussed and it
Southern Local School District. was noted that the parade will
The young musicians wtll end at the Pomeroy Junior
march through Racine at 9 a . High School Bldg. where a
m. and then will present an program will be presented with
informal concert on the a speaker, music by the Senior
parking lot by the old bank Citizens Choir under the
building. Tbe remainder of Ute direction of Mrs. Neutzling,
morning will be spent going and scenes depicting patriotic
from door-t&lt;Kioor in Racine songs. A practice session for
soliciting contributions. In the the program was set for May 19
afternoon the bandsmen will at 2 p.m.
return to their own comThe Buckeye Girls' State tea
munities and do a door-to-&lt;loor wasannouncedforMay5, 2 to5
canvass for funds. All of the p.m. at the Logan Federal
money collected will be used Savings and Loan Bldg., North
toward band camp expenses. Merritt St.
Sunday, May 5, following the
Poppy Day will be observed
spring concert of the band, an May 24 and 25, Mrs. Wilderinformal tea will be held with a muth announced. She said the
silver offering to be .taken. at · theme is "Americanism is a
that tlme. That money, !Qo, will Family Affair". Mrs . Neutbe designated lor camp ex· zling will have a program over
penses. May 10 and II a WMPO on the observance of
rumr.mge and bake sale will be Poppy Day. Mrs . Wildermuth
held, the' place to be announced
later.
Tentatively the Southern·
band has scheduled the first
week in August for band camp.
Purchase of three Instruments
The French Art colony will
for the marching band was
hold
its regular monthly parent
discussed.
child workshop, Sunday, April
28 from 2 to 4 p.m.
This will be the final
workshop until school starts
again in September. Those
attending will be using up all
BONUS
the leftover~ and scraps that
can be found arowtd Rlverby to
OFFER
make puppets.
There will be no specific
instructor for this workshop,
but the chairpersons of
workshope will be present to
aid-anyone who needs help. The

Band solicits

MA-9

OatesHou\e
WP - (7).
EIIis (1.1).
l(B)
en .and
N i ekro,
LP ~ Niekro (3.2 ). HRs- Hebner
(6th ). Stargell (3 rd l. Baker

~~::;::ngull~:: ;:~:~~- 9 11 2

Start losing weight today or money
Nc:k. MONADEX i1 a tmy tablet
and easy to like. MONADEX will
help c:urb your desire for IXC:IA
food. Eat 1. . - weigh less. Contains
no dengerous dntg1 and will not
rNkl you nervous. No strenuous
exercise. Chlflil your life • • . start
today. MONADEX cost $3.00 lor

Softness!

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• Montreal
Phil a delph ta

Oh' u ·
't K
to notvedrsttsy t ldorethan
ha
exc nge s U en
e
story of Korea, a land on the
move, Tuesday evening when
th
k bef
be
f
spoAe ore memL rs o
they
e
mencan
eglOn
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39
·.
Introduced by Mrs. Pea rl
_Kn~pp , foret gn re latton s
chatrwoman , ~he ~tudents were
Joo Kooand his wtfe, Jun_ g, a_nd
Se 0 k Sagong . In contunc ti on
with _their talk , they showed
two ftlm s.
. .
Joo_ Koo, prmctp Ie spea ker ,
descrtbed K?rea as 300 large
an_d small IS_land_s of mo_unta mous te rratn WI th beau t1ful
flowers . He said· there is
always a sign in the sky which
tells them of three cold days to
be followed by three warm
days.
The speaker talked of
Chinese culture emphastzmg
that Koreans have now
developed thetr own culture
and that ope:•: special dances
and . rehg1on .
occupy
prommence . Pictures of
museums, art and sculpture,
he satd; are provtdl~g great
attr~ctton for tounsts . Attractive g1rls etchmg vas_eg,
dou)_g handwork and making
w1gs were mcluded m the film
presentation .
.
.
Joo Koo descrtbed his land
VISIT FREINDS
a~ one of many prectous metals
Mr . and Mrs. Fred Hankel, w1th Jade bemg the specialty.
Celveland, who resided in Transportatton shdes showed
Middleport during construction vehicles similar to those here
of the TNT plant, were and the speaker said that the
Tuesday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Wise at their
Waverly home. Hankel is now
with the State Highway
Department, working out of
Cleveland.

RACINE - Vicki Wolfe, Lights_of..Friendship for Korea .
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs, Wallier spoke to the group
Victor Wolfe, Racine, has been on the forei gn rehitions
named delegate, and Stephanie projects of the auxiliary this
Ord , daughter of Mr . and Mrs. · year which is to raise funds for
B. J. Ord, Syracuse, alternate, Korea . A program on
to Buckeye .Girls' State by the Americanism was given by
American Legion Auxiliary of Mrs. M2rgaret Yost.
The pledge of allegiance,
Racine Post 602.
Both girls are juniors at prayer by Mrs. Eula Wolfe and
Southern High SChool. It was the preamble to the auxiliary
noted that th~ annual Girls' constitution were given to open
State tea will be at Logan, May the meeting. Officers' reports
5. Girls' State will be held at were presented and a thank
Capital University in June.
you note was read from Mrs.
Mrs . Frances Roberts Garnet Ervine for get,well
presided at the meeting during cards.
The traveling prize donated
which time delegates and
alternates to the District 8 by Mrs. Barbara Roush, was
summer
convention
in won by Mrs. Brinker. Plans
Pomeroy were. elected. They were made for. a poUuck at tlie
are Mrs. Roberts an~ Mrs. May meeting. Mrs. Martha
Myrtle Walker, delegates, and Lou Beegle won the door prize
Mrs. Eunie B;inker and Mrs. and the game prize .
Margaret Yost, alternates.
Mrs. Walker and Mrs. Julia
Appointed to the nomin~tihg Norris served refreshments
committee were Mrs. Brinker, from a table decorated in an
Mrs. Walker and Mrs. Leora Hawaiian theme with apYoung. Mrs. Opal Diddle and pointments of leis, a hula girl,
Mrs. Jeanette Moore will audit napkins and candles from
tile books.
Hawaii.
Favors
were
Donations were made to the miniature flags in candies.
Xenia Disaster Fund and the Served were papaya juice,
macadamia candied crunch,
oatmeal cake, lemon-pineapple
pie, sandwiches and coffee.

Opert,UPto

••lllllll!l..•••••lllit•••••lll!lll••lill _.._.,.____,.___!!!!!!!!!!!l'!!''!lll!!!itotltt!!!ltt!!!ltt!!!i!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!l1!-~
!! .
•

w. 1. pel . g ,b.

Exchange students ,speak -~lj~~~w ~~~~ th'!!an~r~f.~as

Delegate selected

base.
Colbert and Dave Winfield ~------------------------.:~;;..;,·
also helped the Padres' catl!l!
with early homers while Wayne
Garrett had a two-run shot for
the Mets.
In other National League
games. Houston whipped St.
Louis, 9-4, Cincinnati edged
Chicago, !..(), and Los Angeles
Ulpped Philadelphia, 6-1. Montreal at San Francltco was
postponed by rain.
Oakland whipped Cleveland,
9-2, Texas downed Boston, 3-1,
Baltimore edged California, 4--3,
Detroit topped Minnesota, 8-4,
Chicago defeated Milwaukee, 7·
2, and New York nipped Kansas
City, 4-3, in American League
action.
·
Astro8 9, Cardlullt:
Tommy Helms·collected lour
These airy sandal-looks for Spring have plenty of dash ... and you get an
hits and drove In lour runs to
added bonus .. . cushlony, pillow-soft insoles to make the walkin' easy.
spark the Astros' triumph.
Go on- indulge yourself! Cut-out in bone or black.
1
Wlnillng pitcher Dave Roberts
14.99
also chipped in with a twO-I'tlll
homer as Houston collected II
hits off five pitchers. Reggie
Smith drove in three runs for
I
•
the Cardinals, one coming on
his thitd homer of the rear.
• Reds I, Cubs 0:
George F011ter walked with
the base.~ loaded and t-Wo .Ut in
Yo11r Thorn Mc'An Store
the last of the ninth to force
MIDDLEPORT
.. ho.tlt lne winning run In · the ..

beginning
to plunge
deeper
into
they are toon show
the signs
rise. that
The continued
the East Division
cellar
as they
Pirates, losers of 10 of their , lost to the San Diego Padres, 4first 12 games, made it two 3. The defeat was the Mets'
victories in a row Wednesday lOth in their last II gamesnight when they used their their second In a row to the
favorite weapori- the home run Padres-and they now have
- to defeat the Atlanta Braves, won only three times In 14

Yl

East

Billingham recor~
third victory, 1-0

Pirates make it two in row

MASON FIREHOUSE

i

Major League Sta"'iSJngs
By Un•fed Press International
. National League

Pi tlsbgh
100 020 020- 5 13 1
AtJanta
000 002 010- 3 8 0
Ell i s, Giusti (7) ancf Sangull·

Pete upset with Hawk owners

PITTSBURGH (UP!) - Pistol Pete Maravich is a straight
shooter, his attorney said, and
that's why the Atlanta Hawks
star is perturbed because he
was not informed of a deal to
send him !o New Orleans, an
expansion team. in the NBA.

viable and active" force in
bringing a team to Tampa. .
Bill Marcum, a member of
the Mangurian group, said that
money wouldn 't be a factor if
they won the bid.
No Stumbling Block
"! ~on't think it's a stwnbling block with our particular
ownership group, but it might
be a stumbling block to some
others," silid Marcum, who
successfully promoted 12 NFL
exhibition games tn Tampa
since 1968.
According to NFL Commis·
sioner Pete Rozelle, the factors
that impressed the NFL
owners about Tampa included
the stadiwn, the weather and
the general sports interest of
the area . Including neighboring St. Petersburg, there is
an excess of one million people
living within a 25-mile radius of
the municipally owned Tampa
Stadium.

Standings

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April :1.'i, 1974

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4- The Daily'Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy,U., April :1.'i , 1974

To9a)r's

Sport -Parade By MlliTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UP I)- Dick Allen's three-year contract with the
Chicago White Sox is the best in baseball. Good as it is, lt doesn 't
match larry Cspnka 's new one .though. Csonka gets more
money . Allen gets more knocks.
It's always a source of discomfort to Chuck Tanner, the White
Sox manager, when anybody knocks Dici\.Allen, his $675,000 first
llaseman. They take pot shots at Allen for many different reas: ns
--for not being there every day in spring training, for not always
showing up at the ball park three hours before the game, and for
not always being wiUing to sit down and make small talk .
Generally speaking, those who knock Dtck Allen the most know
him least.
.
'
Chuck Tanner probably knows Dick Allen as well as anyone m
baseball. He knows him since he was a kid shooting baskets m
junior high school and his affectiOn for Dick Allen, as a human
being as well as a ballplayer, is genuin e.
Some people already are tying the White Sox ' slow start in the
American League West to a sinular start by Dick Allen.
He Points Out Details
Chuck TaMer hears something like that and immedia tely
wishes to point out some pertinent little details about both the
White Sox and Dick Allen.
"Let's see," he said, studymg lhe ~am's stats' sheet before
Wednesday night's ball game with Milwaukee, "Allen is hitting
.214, and leads our ball club in RB!s and bases on balls. They
never give hlm anything good to him. I mean NEVER.
Everytlme he walks up there, they pitch to hlm like it's the
seventh game of the World Series.
"He has hit six shots, just punished the baseball, but each one
of these line drives was right at some infielder or outfielder. If
those balls would 've fallen in, he'd be hitting .270or .2&amp;1."
Chuck Tanner didn't have his ready calculator with him ,
otherwise he would've discovered that had those six shots of
Allen's found some holes, he'd be hitting .321, not .270or .2&amp;1.
"Why should Dick Allen be slllgled out?" asked the White Sox
manager . "Look at_Amos Otis. He put in a full spring training;
he's having trouble getting out of the gate; he 's hitting .135, but
you know he'll get straightened out and have a good year. Johnny
Bench is another one. He has four RB!s as of today and he 's
hitting .217, but he's going to be in the All-Star Game. Look, Dick
Allen could hit .190 all year and play forme .
That's Nonsense Also
"That business of him not being there for all of spring training
is nonsense also. Frank Robinson had only seven official at bats
in spring training for the California Angels, so what ? He's still
one of the greatest players in baseball . ·Mike Marshall sai~ he
had his own way of getting ready and wasn't going to do any
running in spring training. The Dodgers told him 'You have a
good track record, go ahe~d and do it your own way.'
"Usten, people simply don't know Dick Allen. He 's like
everybody else. He has two anns, two legs and he has a heart. He
has feelings just like you and, me. He's a dedicated individual
who stays in shape 12 months a year. People think he keeps to
himself and Is a loner. Maytie that's the way he is on the outside,
but you ought to see him inside the clubhouse. He helps the young
ballplayers. He has been instrumental in the -improvement of
Jorge Orta, our second baseman.
"Nobody's ever going to hurt Dick Allen as long as I'm
manager," Chuck Tanner went on. "I'll never trade him, he 's
always going to play for me and when he's through , he'll walk
into the Hall of Fame. They talk about his hitting . Why, he's one
of the best base runners who ever played this game. He reminds
me of Joe DiMaggio in that regard. Ever see Joe run bases? Ever .
see anyone run them better? Dick Allen runs them the same
way.'.'

Pi~tol

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Tampa new NFL
•
expanszon team
•

NEW YORK (UP!) - Expansion and inflation , two
concepts that typify modern
America, will take another
staggering step outward and
upward as part of the National
Football League's tribute to
the country's bicentepnial.
The NFL, which already has
gone from 12 tea ms to 26 since
1960, will expand further in 1976
with the definite addition of
:rampa, F1a. At least one other
city, and possibly more, will be
selected later this year to join
the burgeoning fraternity .
Those cities under consideration
are
Seattle,
Phoenix, -· Honolulu
and
Memphis, all of whose bids
were discussed at this week's
NFL meeting.
The price of admission is a
cool $16 million, almost double
what the National League
charged for its last group of
expansion franchises just a few
years ago and the largest in

sport history :
Never Blinked an Eye
But no one concerned with
the Tampa bid so much as
blinked an eye at the initiation
fee . The only emotion they
showed· .vas relief' at gaining
the privilege to pay the price.
"I'm sure that the people
who are bidding for the franchise have certainly evaluated
the situation and know there
will be a return on it/' said
Leonard Levy, chairman of the
Chamber of Commerce Task
Force that has worked for six
years to bring the NFL to
Tampa.
"This is inflation now, we're
paying more for everything we

do."
Levy said · that 1\(lme 13
groups have expressed an
interest in taking over the
Tampa franchise. One of the
strongest groups is headed by
Harry T. Mangurian, whom
Levy said "has been the most

Celtics eliminate Knicks
BOSTON (UP! ) - The sign
on the blackboard said : "Practice tomorrow al 11 a.m."
That seemed to sum things
up for the Boston Celtics, who
had jt.St eliminated the New
York Knickerbockers from
contention in the National
Basketball Association
championships in a 105·94
decision that waxed from
brutal to poetic.
It was the first time the
Celtics had won the Eastern
Division playoffs since 1!169,
but there was no time to savor
the victory because the
Milwaukee Bucks, with 7-foot-2
Kareem Abdul Jabbar, loomed
over the locker room like a
specter.
The two teams meet Sunday
in Milwaukee.
"This will be a mess-around
practice. We get one messaround practice for winning, "
said Boston Coach Tom Heln- ·
sohn. "Then we get down to

neither team able to control
play for any length of time. The
officials called a total of 31
fouls in the first half most of
them under the boards, where
elbows and hips were turned
into nearly lethal weapons.
The defense on both sides
was frantic and aggressive,
especially in the first quarter
when the two teams managed
only a total of 41 points between
them.
"The game was won in the
first half," said Boston's Don
Chaney, who took control of the
game in the second ha lf,
scoring 12 of his 19 points. "It
was a real tough hall and the
Khicks were tired when they
came out for the last haH," he
said.
"This is just one step along
the way," said captain John
Havlicek, who turned in another outstanding performance,
scoring 33 points, most of them
in a second.IJalf surge which
business.''
broke the Kni_~:ks' back. "We
Boston held a 52-45 lead at really don't have time to enjoy
the end of the first half, with this (the victory) because we

have another big obstacle
staring us in the face."
Dave Cowens, who took time
to visit the Knicks' dressing
room before facing reporters,
admitted he was already
thiuking about the Milwaukee
series.
"! think it's going to be a
matter of the turtle trying to
catch the hare," he said. "The
Bucks have never played a
series against a running team.
I'm going to try to get the big
man (Abdul.Jabbar) outside,
tl1at's for sure.''
" We ' re gonna let Dave
(Cowens) go one on one with
Jabbar and let him do his best.
The rest of us are going to work
on shutting the other guys off,"
said Paul Silas, who had 14
points.

article lasf Friday that Maravich was going to New Orleans
after his contractual issues had
been settled with the Hawks.
He said last Monday Williams
telephoned Herskovitz here
and Wilcox called the following
morning. Both conversations,
· Zittrain said, involved the
meeti)lg held in Atlanta.
"There was no mention of
Pete going to New Orleans,"
Zittrain said.
Tuesday evening Williams
called Berkovitz again, saying
a deal had been brewing for
months with New Orleans and
that Pete was making the
switch . This flabbergasted
Herskovitz.

"Pete is very distressed - clear the air. "
· said.
and so are we -that he was not
Zittrain, his colleague and
The attorney said when the
told beforehand about the attorney Art Herskovitz, and Hawks began losing last fall,
switch," attorney Lester Zit- Maravich met with Hawks Maravich was made the
train said. "We thought a General Manager Pat WiUiams "scapegoat" by the Hawks'
meeting we had with Hawks and John Wilcox, principal front office. Maravich and
officials April 15 about Pete's owner and president.
Fitzsimmons had words in
case was successful and would
"The session was delightful, Houston and the player was
fined $1,000 and suspended for
we
was to Fitzmeet two days. "Pete kept quiet
withthought.
CoachPeteCotton
simmons and they would settle dnring that time," he said.
Zittrain said he read in an
their differences," Zittrain

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1
1
CHICKEN BARBECUE
SA.T., APR.
1

71

AT

MASON, W. VA.
Serving Starts At 11 A. M.

BUY A DINNER OR CHICKEN SEPARATELY.
ALL ARE INVITED!

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
The Pittsburgh Pirates may
be on the way toward solving
their problems, but it looks as
if the New York Mets' troubles
are just beginning.
The Pirates and the Mets, the
co-favorites to fight it out for
the National League East
pennant, have been looking
more like Little Leaguers
during the first weeks of the
season as they've struggled to
remain competitive in their
division.
But the Pirates, at least, are

5-3.
The Pirates unloaded three
homers in dowrdng the Braves
with Manny Sanguillen and
Willie Stargell each contributing a twO-run shot and Richie
Hebner adding a solo blast.
Pittsburgh also got some
good pitching from right-hander
Dock Ellis, who allowed five
hits in six innings to record his
first win. The Pirates have not
been getting much pitching thus
far but Ellis' performance was
encouraging.
Mels Plunge Deeper
The Mets, on the other hand,

games.
Once again it was a
combination of lack of hitting
and poor relief pitching that
deserted the Mets Wednesday
night. The team, batting only
.244, manage&lt;! only · five hits
and reliever Bob Apodaca fell
apart in the ninth inning as the
Padres pushed across . the,
wmmng run.
Derrell Thomas started the
rally with a one-out double and,
after a ·pair of walks, the
Padres pushed across the
winning run on Nate Colbert's
check swing grounder to second

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CINCINNATI (UPI )- Jack year when Chicago beat the
S t . LOUIS
21!2
Billingham, even though both· Reds eight out of 12 games
4
Ch icago
Pittsburgh
~ - 10 .286
6112 ered tiY
sore shoulder, Is even though the Cubs flilished
J n .21-4
71;,
New York.
running one day ahead of last fourth in the East while the
West
Reds were winning the
w . 1. pet. g.b. year's schedule when he
LosAngetes
12 5 .706
racked up 19 victories, tops for Western Division title. .
Houston
11 a .579 2
Since last year, though, there
1
Ci ncin nat i
9 7 563
2 h Cincinnati Reds pitchers.
San Fr ancisco 9 8 529 3
have
been a lot of. changes on
The 6-foot-4 Cincy rightAt lanta
8 10 . 4.U
A'h
San D1ego
6 13 .316
7
hander gained his third victory the Cubs roster. Veterans have
Wednesday's Results
been replaced by youngsters.
Cin c innati 1 Ch icago 0 M t l at in four decisions Wednesday as
Billy
Williams, Jose Cardenal
San Fr an , ppd ., { Bin
the Reds edged the Chicago
Pittsburgh 5 Atlanta 3
and
Don
Kessinger are the only
Cubs 1-0 when Bill Bonham
Hou ston 9 Sl Louis 4
San Diego 4 New York J
walked George Foster with two veterans remaining in the
Los Ang 6 Philadelphia 1
outs and the bases loaded in the Cubs' starting cast.
Today 's Probable Pitchers
But you didn't find Reds
(All times EDT}
'
ninth inning.
Montrea t (McAnelly 1.1) at
The victory was the second Manager Sparky Anderson
San Fr an c isco (C al dwell 3· 1).
J : 15p m
•
straight for the Reds over the shedding any tears when a few
P i tt sburgh (Reuss 0· 1) at
Cubs, in sharp contrast to last of the Cubs' veterans departec'
Atlanta (Reed J. 1J. 8 .05 p .m .
during the wint~r . This is
New York. (Koosman 2 OJ at
San Diego (McAndrew 1·3l. 10
especially true where Ron
p .m .
Santo and Ferguson Jenkins, a
Philadelph i a (Ruthven 1·0) at
Los Ange les (John 4·0L 1(1 : 30
couple of old Reds' nemesis,
p m.
are concerned.
(O nly games scheduled )
'
Friday' s Games
"! will say that in Bonham
Ch ica go at Atlanta , night
the Cubs have a fine young
Houst on at P iUs , night
Clnci at St Louis , n i ght
pitcher who Ts going to win a lot
Ph ita at San Diego, n ight
Major League Leaders
of games," said Anderson.
Montreo51 at Los Ang, night
By United Press International
New York at San F ran, night
Leading Batters
A double by Dave ConNational League
cepcion
led to the Reds winning
American League
g . ab r. h. pet.
East
Tavrs, Pit
10 26 2 12 . Ati 2 run in the ninth inning Wedw. I. pet. g.b. Sngltn,Mtl 11 36 9 15 417
Baltimore
9 6 .600
Perez , At I
11 25 6 10 .400 nesday.
New York
10 7 .5 88
Reitz , St .L
18 6ti 7 26 .394
Idle Thursday, the Reds open
Boston
9 7 . 563
'h
Hebner , Pit 14 60 13 23 383
a
three-game
series in st. Louis
Milwaukee
7 6 .538
1
Unser,Phil 13 48 11 18 .375
Detro i t
6 9 .400 3
Rbnsn . Phil 12 38 6 14 .368 Friday night when they'll send
Cleveland
5 It .3 13 4 1!~ Smlth,SI.L 18 72 11 26 .361
West
Hetms , Hou 18 61
7 22 .361 Don Gullett against lefty John
w . I. pet . g.b. Winfld , so
14 42 6 15 .357 Curtis. Saturday and Sunday
Tex as
9 6 .600
American League
Oakland
9
7 .5 63
g . ab r. h . pet . games complete the series.
Mmnesota
8 7 .533
lf1
Carew.Min 16 67 11 27 .403
From St. Louis the Reds
California
9 8 .529
1!:2 Ja cksn , Oak 16 61 14 24 .393
move
onto Pittsburgh and then
Chicago
6 9 .400 3
Yn, Bos
16 56 11 22 .393
Kansas City
5 9 .357
3% Stantn,Cal
11 59 12 23 .390 will wind up their trip with a
.
. Wednesday's Results
Grlffn , Bos
15 52 5 20 .385
Oakland 9 Cleve land 2
Pnela , NY
9 34 3 13 .382 return engagement against the
New York 4 Kansas City 3
Oliva , Min
12 38 o 14 .368 Cubs in Chicago May 3-6.
Baltimore 4. California 3
21f7

·a

Major League
Leaders

Detroit 8 Minnesota 4
Texas 3 Boston I
Chicago 7 Milwaukee 2
Today's Probable Pitchers
CAll Times EDT,
Kan sas City (Spllttorft 1-1) at
New York (K line 2· 1l. 2 p .m .
Boston (Lee 2· 1) at Texa s
(B ibby 3.2), 9 p .m
(On ly games scheduled l
Friday's Games
M ilwaukee at Minnesota
Cal if at Cleveland, night
Oakland at Baltimore , night
Texas at New York , n ight
Detroit at Chicago , n 1ght
Boston at Kan City , night
Major League Results
By United Press International
National League
Mtl at San Fran, ppd ., rain

Chicago
ooo ooo ooo- o 52
C1nc:innati
000 000 001 - 1 50
Bonham (l .J) and Mltter .
ward , Billingham {3 · 1 l and
Bench .

Grlch, ear
15 52 10 19 .365
Splkes,Cie
16 60 7 21 .350
Netls, NY
17 64 13 22 .344
Home Runs
National League : Perez , Cin
and Wynn . LA 7 , Hebner , P itt
6 : Garvey, LA 5; Aaron , Atl
and Cedeno, Hou 4.
Amerlnn League: . Nettles,
NY
10;
Jackson , Oak
7;
Yastrzemski , sos 6 ; Duncan ,
Ctev and Burroughs , Tex 5.
Runs Baned 1n
National League : . Cedeno.
Hou 23 ; Perez , Cln and Wynn ,
LA 19 ; ConcePC IOn , Cin 17 i

Smith , St .L

\

I..

.'

16 .

American league: . Nettles ,
NY and Jackson . Oak 21;
Yastrzemski , Bos 17 ; Robinson,
Cal 16; Hisle, M lnn 15.
Pitching . . .
National League : John, LA 4·
0; Sutton , LA 4.1 ; Roger s and
Torrez. Mtt J.O; Reed, Atl ,
Bi ll ingham , Cln, Osteen and
Roberts, Hou and Caldwell , SF
J-1; P . Nlekro , At I J-2 .
American League : Hi l ler , Det
3.0; Coleman , Oet, Wright , Mil.
Medlch and Stott lemyre , NY ,
Fingers and Hun ter, Oak and
Jenkins , Tex 3· l i Bibby , Tex J.
2.

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a 20 doy "'Pply. Lorge economy
size is $6.00. Al10 try AQUAT ABS:
rhev work Qently to help you loa

wattr·bloat. AQUAT ABS -a "wattr
pill" that works - $3.00. Both
IIUM'Inteed and sold by:
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy,
112 E . Main, Pomeroy &amp; Dutton
Drug Store, Middleport. Ma11
Orders Filled .

Redmen take over
lead in MOC play
Rio Grande College took over
undisputed first place in the
Mid-Ohio Conference baseball
race following a double victory
over Urbana Wednesday.
Rio won the opener 4-2 and
the nightcap, 7-1. Rio is now 7-1
in league play and 12-4 on the
year.
The Redmen, with nine
slraight wins, will play Ohio
Dominican a twinbill at
Colwnbus Saturday. It will be
non-league encounters.

"'e(e'S

Summel"Fun

St . Louis
001 010 02D-- 4 11 2
Roberts, Scherman (8} and
M May ; McGiothten , Thomp.

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BOYS:

Reds' victory. Bill Bonham,
who struck out nine In a routegoing performance, issued the
decisive walk and took his third
loss in four decisions . Jack
Billingham allowed five hits in
going the route for his third win
in four decisions.
Dodgen 8, Pblllies 1:
Jim Wynn drove In two rwts
with a single and his seventh
homer and Don Sutton tossed a
seven-hitter to lead the Dodgers
past the Phillies. Willie Crawford also chipped in with a tworun triple as Los Angeles
bested Jim Lonborg.

~

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WP - Roberts (3.2). LP- McG io
then {2 · 1J. HRs- Roberts (1st),
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Corkins (9) and KendalL WPCorkins Cl OJ. LP-Apodaca (O.
2) HRs-Colbert &lt;1st), Winfield
13rd) , Garrett (3r dl.

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children will use their
Imaginations and will design
their puppets at random.
Please, remember there is
no charge for these workshope
and It Is not necessary to be a
member of the French Art
Colony to attend.
Any- adult may bring as
many children as he or she can
supervise. The Art Colony
invites you to participate
.SUnday and wishes everyone a
happy vacation until September.
•

Bird bath s, hen &amp; chickens ,
du ck &amp; duckl ings , roosters,
flam ingos , rabb its , · ch ip .
munks , egrets , wild geese
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Eas ter
theme ~ from
.. ReSponse" magazine was led ·
by Helen Woode.
:
The can dl elight service
included singi ng "The Light of
the World is Jesus" and a
worship center depicting the
cross with pictures of distress
and. g l ad n e~s . for Christ's
giving of his life and the
resu rrec ti on showing joy
brought out of despair. The
readings, sc ripture, prayer
and song broug ht . out the
redemption story of Christ and
his love as related to the world
today. The Lord's Prayer m
unison closed the program .
The hostess served refreshment,; during the soc1al hour .
The next meeting will be
Tuesday, May 21, at 8 p.m. at
the home of Helen Woode, with
Flore n('e Spencer as program
leader .

· 1
ti A '116 t th mentioned
was given $15 to be ~sed for -~egu arfmMeel nGg PI!~~ ?th e
Gertrud~ Bloede, wtlh the
prizes for juniors assastmg 1ll ·~orne o ere n 1 , Wl an
.
. .
the poppy sale
attendance of II .
Red Bird Mtssmt"' Beverly,
In re s po ns~ to a comThe meeting, in charge of Ky .,_ was se ec ted as
. N ll ' p k
d t miSSIOnary or the month . A
munlca tion from the Oht o
e ted .athr er, prebst Oen _' round-robtn card was stgned
Soc1e.\y fo r Preven ti on of opene w1 prayer Y ste
.
Blindness the unit sent $5 It Mae Follrod , and singin~ or for her btrthday, Aprt1 23 ..
'
·
" Pr · H' p · H' "
A letter from the dtslrtct
was announced that May 5 is
alse tm, raise tm
"membership secretary, Jamce
Hospital Day at the Chillicothe . There were 36 stck and shutVeteran s Hospital Mrs . Ellen tn calls reported
McG hee, on
in creasi ng
Couch , comm unity se rvice
Commumcatw~s were r~ad membership in 1~i4 was rea d
chairwoman, reported on her from I_rene Matth_las on the ftve by Osie Follrod and a question
contact with Mrs. Vera Crow of pc t · tncrease tn P Iedge to and answer ses§ion on this
Preceptor Bei.ii· Beta Chapter r~tssi?ns, an d the district topic foll owed.
of Belli Sigma Phi Sorority, ftnanc tal report.
.
Elea nor Boyles ga ve a
A Ie tie r from _ the dIS tr 1c t mission repor t on '' Broadcast
regarding cpoperation in the
cleanup campaign in Pomeroy . secretary, Frankte McKelvey , from a Bed room,,, uy Maunnc
A party for the veterans at tn the fo rm of Easter greetings Seale, who is a victim of
the Athens Mental Hea lth announce d severa I ruture Paralysis .
Ce nter was announced for May meetings.
The program, "A Time for
I. It was voted to se nd $:1.'i to the
A list of misswnartes 'SU))- Joy, A Time to Share" wrth an
Xenia Disaster Fund, and it ported by the prayer calendar
was reported that Xenia Orphans Home for Children of
Veterans was not damaged in
the tornado.
It' s So Ea sy. Try .. Delegates elected to the
Department of Ohio convention, Columbus, July 12-14,
were Mrs. Pratt, Mrs. Neutzling, Mrs. Welsh and Mr s.
Vida Davis . Alternates named
DRIVE -IN H O UR So
were Mrs. Hac kett , Mrs.
M on . lo Thurs. 9 1o J- Fr1day 9 to 7
Sauer, Mrs . Knapp and Mrs.
Sat urday 9 to 12.
Raymond D. Prtddy, Ruth
Mary Martin .
Ann Priddy to J ames E.
CASH GIVEAWAY
Named to the nominating
Ferguson, J oa nn Fe rguson,
commtttee were Mrs. Norma 7.22 Acres, Rutland .
E ..... h week , $2 0 first prize , SIO second , SS th1rd .
Jewell, Mrs. Reuter and Miss
Corbett Clerrk , Mary H.
Reg.'ster fre e Wmne rs w11l be nol1fled . Drawing s
Smith . Purchase of new drapes Cleek to Thomas E. Diddle,
Apn l 6, 13, 20, 27 . May 6 Drive in , f ry thi S new
for the hall was discussed and
con~Jenlent se rv1 ce
Pamela J. Diddle, .64 acre,
Mrs. Welsh and Mrs. Knapp Sot ton.
pomeroy
will secure cost estimates.
Rena Lemas ter to Ray
national
Mrs. Reuter , children and Harper, 2 acres, Bedford .
bank
youth, reported that there is in
G. Douglas Circle, Elsie G.
Meigs County a child of a Circle to James R. Parsons,
veteran m need of a kidney Martha Parsons, 26 acres,
transplant. The unit voted to Sutton .
contribute $10 to the family .
Roy Z. Brickles, Mabel E.
Mrs. Wildermuth reported Brickles, to Dana Murry,
membership at 156, and Mrs . Karen Murray, parcels,
Couch noted that she had taken Bedford .
a sachet bowl to Mrs.
Barton E. Pearson, Johnetta
Genevieve Well, and sent a J . Pearson to Charl es J .
ca rd to Mrs. Davis who is Ohlinger, Opal Ohlinger,
confined to the Holzer Merlical parcel, RuUand.
Center.
laurence R. Facemyer, Jr.
Mrs. Jewell reported that to !neva M. Facemyer
there is now in the special fund Howard, Walter Howard, 4.897
$2,684.72 designated for a new acre, Scipio.
kitchen. Thank-you notes were
laurence R. Facemyer Jr. to
read from Eloise Hayes, Mrs. !neva M. Facemyer Howard,
Davis and Commander George easement, Scipio.
Nesselroad ol Drew Webster
Citizens NatiOnal Bank to
Post.
Lewis Taylor, Daisy L. Taylor,
. Committees appointed for lots, Pomeroy.
the games parties were as
When your child is ill, i.e takes a
follows : April 26, Mr. Couch r_..------·------~
little more than tender, loving care
and Mrs. Neutzling ; May 3,
Miss Erma Smith; May 6, Mrs.
to nurse him back to health quickly
Frances Hunnel ; May 10, Mrs.
and effecti vely.
Jean Wright and Mrs . Iva
Powell ; May 13, Mrs. Gemma
It takes the nJCdical know-how
Casci; May 17, Mrs. Reuter ;
of your doctor and pharmac ist. Rely
May 20, Mrs. Isabelle Couch;
May 24, Mrs. Lena Nesselroad
MAIN ST.
on us for sick-care help.
and Evelyn Clark; May 27,
Mrs. Norma Jewell and Mrs. 1 POMEROY
Sickroom Supplies
Pratt, and May 31 , Mrs.
I
I
Wildermuth.
WEEKEND I
Cookies, punch and coffee I
were served by Mrs . Isabelle
SPECIAL
Couch and Mrs. Wright. May
hostesses will be Mrs. Jewell
Fri. &amp; Sal.
and Mrs. Welsh, with Mrs.
I
Apri
I 26-27
I
Wildermuth and Mrs. Reuter to
present a program on Poppy
Day and children and youth
1
work.

FAC sets last workshop

Goessler's Jewelry Store

JUNIORS:

°

contributions

.19'~4
~"~::(\0 ~·

Capra~--;~::::::::::::::~---,

economy of their ci ties and the
culture are constantly movmg .
He said that Seoul destroyed in
1960 by ·North K~rea is now
.
'
being rebUilt..
.
.
Democracy ts practiced tn
South Korea he said and
'
declared that all the glory of
by-gone days is now returning .
Huge shipyards, all kinds- of
fa ctortes1 symbols of great
prosperity marked the slides
shown at the meeti ng. He spoke
or the new interest in farming,
ofwheatproductionontherise,
of ca ttle production and .dairy
farming increasing, and piclured a prosperous land. He
satd that the steel production
has increased to 300,000 tons a
year' and that at the present
time 940 thousand barrels of oil
is produced each day and this
IS on the increase . Atom power
is used fo r healin g and
med 1cmal purposes, he explained .
As for education, he said that
Koreans look on education as a
means of achieving their goals.
Koreans are a peace-lovin g
people, the speaker commented, and Korea will
overcome any future powers
with their own strength and
determination . "The sun rises
on a reformed Korea ", he
declared .
Jung Koo was attired in a
pink satin gown which her
husband said would cost
several hundred dollars in
America, but only about $60 in
Korea. She wore diamond and
jade rings .
A check for $15 and personal
gifts were presented to the
three following the program.
During the business meetin g,
conducted by Mrs . Grace
Pratt, plans were made for the
RACINE - The success of summer convention of Distr1ct
fund-raising projects to be 8 in Pomeroy. Mrs. Carrie
carried out by the Southern Neutzling, Miss Erma Smith
Local
Band '
Boosters and Mrs. Catherine Welsh were
Association will determine named co-chairwomen, with
whether the Southern High Mrs . Faye Wildermuth, Mrs .
School Marching . Band will Marge Reuter, Mrs. Knapp,
atjend band camp at Rio Mrs. Rhoda Hackett and Mrs .
Grande this summer.
Edith Sauer to have charge of a
Meeting Tuesday night at the reception following
the
school, the boosters planned a meeting.
variety of projects including
The Memorial · Day parade
tag day Saturday in the May 27 was discussed and it
Southern Local School District. was noted that the parade will
The young musicians wtll end at the Pomeroy Junior
march through Racine at 9 a . High School Bldg. where a
m. and then will present an program will be presented with
informal concert on the a speaker, music by the Senior
parking lot by the old bank Citizens Choir under the
building. Tbe remainder of Ute direction of Mrs. Neutzling,
morning will be spent going and scenes depicting patriotic
from door-t&lt;Kioor in Racine songs. A practice session for
soliciting contributions. In the the program was set for May 19
afternoon the bandsmen will at 2 p.m.
return to their own comThe Buckeye Girls' State tea
munities and do a door-to-&lt;loor wasannouncedforMay5, 2 to5
canvass for funds. All of the p.m. at the Logan Federal
money collected will be used Savings and Loan Bldg., North
toward band camp expenses. Merritt St.
Sunday, May 5, following the
Poppy Day will be observed
spring concert of the band, an May 24 and 25, Mrs. Wilderinformal tea will be held with a muth announced. She said the
silver offering to be .taken. at · theme is "Americanism is a
that tlme. That money, !Qo, will Family Affair". Mrs . Neutbe designated lor camp ex· zling will have a program over
penses. May 10 and II a WMPO on the observance of
rumr.mge and bake sale will be Poppy Day. Mrs . Wildermuth
held, the' place to be announced
later.
Tentatively the Southern·
band has scheduled the first
week in August for band camp.
Purchase of three Instruments
The French Art colony will
for the marching band was
hold
its regular monthly parent
discussed.
child workshop, Sunday, April
28 from 2 to 4 p.m.
This will be the final
workshop until school starts
again in September. Those
attending will be using up all
BONUS
the leftover~ and scraps that
can be found arowtd Rlverby to
OFFER
make puppets.
There will be no specific
instructor for this workshop,
but the chairpersons of
workshope will be present to
aid-anyone who needs help. The

Band solicits

MA-9

OatesHou\e
WP - (7).
EIIis (1.1).
l(B)
en .and
N i ekro,
LP ~ Niekro (3.2 ). HRs- Hebner
(6th ). Stargell (3 rd l. Baker

~~::;::ngull~:: ;:~:~~- 9 11 2

Start losing weight today or money
Nc:k. MONADEX i1 a tmy tablet
and easy to like. MONADEX will
help c:urb your desire for IXC:IA
food. Eat 1. . - weigh less. Contains
no dengerous dntg1 and will not
rNkl you nervous. No strenuous
exercise. Chlflil your life • • . start
today. MONADEX cost $3.00 lor

Softness!

·•

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\

• Montreal
Phil a delph ta

Oh' u ·
't K
to notvedrsttsy t ldorethan
ha
exc nge s U en
e
story of Korea, a land on the
move, Tuesday evening when
th
k bef
be
f
spoAe ore memL rs o
they
e
mencan
eglOn
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39
·.
Introduced by Mrs. Pea rl
_Kn~pp , foret gn re latton s
chatrwoman , ~he ~tudents were
Joo Kooand his wtfe, Jun_ g, a_nd
Se 0 k Sagong . In contunc ti on
with _their talk , they showed
two ftlm s.
. .
Joo_ Koo, prmctp Ie spea ker ,
descrtbed K?rea as 300 large
an_d small IS_land_s of mo_unta mous te rratn WI th beau t1ful
flowers . He said· there is
always a sign in the sky which
tells them of three cold days to
be followed by three warm
days.
The speaker talked of
Chinese culture emphastzmg
that Koreans have now
developed thetr own culture
and that ope:•: special dances
and . rehg1on .
occupy
prommence . Pictures of
museums, art and sculpture,
he satd; are provtdl~g great
attr~ctton for tounsts . Attractive g1rls etchmg vas_eg,
dou)_g handwork and making
w1gs were mcluded m the film
presentation .
.
.
Joo Koo descrtbed his land
VISIT FREINDS
a~ one of many prectous metals
Mr . and Mrs. Fred Hankel, w1th Jade bemg the specialty.
Celveland, who resided in Transportatton shdes showed
Middleport during construction vehicles similar to those here
of the TNT plant, were and the speaker said that the
Tuesday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Wise at their
Waverly home. Hankel is now
with the State Highway
Department, working out of
Cleveland.

RACINE - Vicki Wolfe, Lights_of..Friendship for Korea .
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs, Wallier spoke to the group
Victor Wolfe, Racine, has been on the forei gn rehitions
named delegate, and Stephanie projects of the auxiliary this
Ord , daughter of Mr . and Mrs. · year which is to raise funds for
B. J. Ord, Syracuse, alternate, Korea . A program on
to Buckeye .Girls' State by the Americanism was given by
American Legion Auxiliary of Mrs. M2rgaret Yost.
The pledge of allegiance,
Racine Post 602.
Both girls are juniors at prayer by Mrs. Eula Wolfe and
Southern High SChool. It was the preamble to the auxiliary
noted that th~ annual Girls' constitution were given to open
State tea will be at Logan, May the meeting. Officers' reports
5. Girls' State will be held at were presented and a thank
Capital University in June.
you note was read from Mrs.
Mrs . Frances Roberts Garnet Ervine for get,well
presided at the meeting during cards.
The traveling prize donated
which time delegates and
alternates to the District 8 by Mrs. Barbara Roush, was
summer
convention
in won by Mrs. Brinker. Plans
Pomeroy were. elected. They were made for. a poUuck at tlie
are Mrs. Roberts an~ Mrs. May meeting. Mrs. Martha
Myrtle Walker, delegates, and Lou Beegle won the door prize
Mrs. Eunie B;inker and Mrs. and the game prize .
Margaret Yost, alternates.
Mrs. Walker and Mrs. Julia
Appointed to the nomin~tihg Norris served refreshments
committee were Mrs. Brinker, from a table decorated in an
Mrs. Walker and Mrs. Leora Hawaiian theme with apYoung. Mrs. Opal Diddle and pointments of leis, a hula girl,
Mrs. Jeanette Moore will audit napkins and candles from
tile books.
Hawaii.
Favors
were
Donations were made to the miniature flags in candies.
Xenia Disaster Fund and the Served were papaya juice,
macadamia candied crunch,
oatmeal cake, lemon-pineapple
pie, sandwiches and coffee.

Opert,UPto

••lllllll!l..•••••lllit•••••lll!lll••lill _.._.,.____,.___!!!!!!!!!!!l'!!''!lll!!!itotltt!!!ltt!!!ltt!!!i!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!l1!-~
!! .
•

w. 1. pel . g ,b.

Exchange students ,speak -~lj~~~w ~~~~ th'!!an~r~f.~as

Delegate selected

base.
Colbert and Dave Winfield ~------------------------.:~;;..;,·
also helped the Padres' catl!l!
with early homers while Wayne
Garrett had a two-run shot for
the Mets.
In other National League
games. Houston whipped St.
Louis, 9-4, Cincinnati edged
Chicago, !..(), and Los Angeles
Ulpped Philadelphia, 6-1. Montreal at San Francltco was
postponed by rain.
Oakland whipped Cleveland,
9-2, Texas downed Boston, 3-1,
Baltimore edged California, 4--3,
Detroit topped Minnesota, 8-4,
Chicago defeated Milwaukee, 7·
2, and New York nipped Kansas
City, 4-3, in American League
action.
·
Astro8 9, Cardlullt:
Tommy Helms·collected lour
These airy sandal-looks for Spring have plenty of dash ... and you get an
hits and drove In lour runs to
added bonus .. . cushlony, pillow-soft insoles to make the walkin' easy.
spark the Astros' triumph.
Go on- indulge yourself! Cut-out in bone or black.
1
Wlnillng pitcher Dave Roberts
14.99
also chipped in with a twO-I'tlll
homer as Houston collected II
hits off five pitchers. Reggie
Smith drove in three runs for
I
•
the Cardinals, one coming on
his thitd homer of the rear.
• Reds I, Cubs 0:
George F011ter walked with
the base.~ loaded and t-Wo .Ut in
Yo11r Thorn Mc'An Store
the last of the ninth to force
MIDDLEPORT
.. ho.tlt lne winning run In · the ..

beginning
to plunge
deeper
into
they are toon show
the signs
rise. that
The continued
the East Division
cellar
as they
Pirates, losers of 10 of their , lost to the San Diego Padres, 4first 12 games, made it two 3. The defeat was the Mets'
victories in a row Wednesday lOth in their last II gamesnight when they used their their second In a row to the
favorite weapori- the home run Padres-and they now have
- to defeat the Atlanta Braves, won only three times In 14

Yl

East

Billingham recor~
third victory, 1-0

Pirates make it two in row

MASON FIREHOUSE

i

Major League Sta"'iSJngs
By Un•fed Press International
. National League

Pi tlsbgh
100 020 020- 5 13 1
AtJanta
000 002 010- 3 8 0
Ell i s, Giusti (7) ancf Sangull·

Pete upset with Hawk owners

PITTSBURGH (UP!) - Pistol Pete Maravich is a straight
shooter, his attorney said, and
that's why the Atlanta Hawks
star is perturbed because he
was not informed of a deal to
send him !o New Orleans, an
expansion team. in the NBA.

viable and active" force in
bringing a team to Tampa. .
Bill Marcum, a member of
the Mangurian group, said that
money wouldn 't be a factor if
they won the bid.
No Stumbling Block
"! ~on't think it's a stwnbling block with our particular
ownership group, but it might
be a stumbling block to some
others," silid Marcum, who
successfully promoted 12 NFL
exhibition games tn Tampa
since 1968.
According to NFL Commis·
sioner Pete Rozelle, the factors
that impressed the NFL
owners about Tampa included
the stadiwn, the weather and
the general sports interest of
the area . Including neighboring St. Petersburg, there is
an excess of one million people
living within a 25-mile radius of
the municipally owned Tampa
Stadium.

Standings

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April :1.'i, 1974

•

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7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Oc, April 25, 1974
•
6-'- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddl~port-Pomero y, 0., April25, 1974
:1~
:'?' . X? '"'&gt;;:~::::::X:::,&gt;.;:l i&lt;::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::&gt;~:::::::::::::~:~::~:::::::~:::::::::l&lt;':::::::::::::z:,~::::::::~~:::::&gt;.:~~~:;~.&lt;,

l.Ltst prayer Participants
1·.·~. meet held announced

~i.. Soc1al J ~communtty
~1 ·catendad. tICorner By charleneHoetlich·ll,
~

:;::

·:::

.

.

THURSDAY
TWIN City Shrinettes, 7: 30
p.m . at Coliunbus and Southern
Electric Co.
FREE Clothing Da y at
Salvation Army from 10 a.m.
WJtil noon. All area residents
are welcome .

RIVERVIEW Garden Club, 8
p.m. home of Mrs. Ronald
Osborne, with Mrs. Roy
Hannum, co-hostess.
FRIDAY
P AST
M ATRO NS ,
Evangeline Chapter, O.E.S.,
7: 30p.m. , Middleport Masonic
Temple.
OHIO VALLEY Adopt-AChild Today Chapter, 8 p.m.,
St. Peter's Eposcipal Church,
541 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Panel discussion on child
de velopment as related to
environment with experts In
the field.
MEIGS HIGH School Alumni
Association 7: 30 p. m. at
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Elec tric Co. Those interested
in assisting with the alumni
dance and meeting are urged
to attend .
SATURDAY
FLEA MARKET and Bake
Sale, 9 a. m. to 5 p. m.,
Southern Junior High, Racine.
Sponsored by Southern High
students for Europe. Those
who wish to have items picked
up may call 949-4843 or 9492972.
TAG DAY , in Pomeroy.
Middleport and Rutland for
Rutland Leagil'e baseball
teams. Ice cream social and
bake sale at Rutland gym
beginning at 4 p. m.; square
dance beginning 8:30 p. m.
going to midnight at Rutland
gym . All proceeds to the
Rutland League baseball
teams.
SQUARE DANCE, Chester
Elementary School, 9 to
midnight, sponsoreil by
Eastern High School Alumni
Association .
SUNDAY
MASTER'S MEN of Kentucky Christian College appearing 7:30 p. m. nightly,
Friday through SWlday, at Zion
Church of Christ on PomeroyHarrisonville Road. Parking
lot program In Pomeroy at 2 on
Saturday and special program
at church at 2:30 SWlday.
Public is invited.
SIGNUP Pomeroy Girls
Softball League, Pomeroy City
Hall, 4 p. m.
BAPTISMAL Service, 3 p.
m., at Racine Levee, sponsored
by Syracuse First Church of
God. Everyone welcome.

Rose degree
to be given
The Order · of the Rose
Degree wiU be given to Amie
Chapman at the preferential
tea scheduledfor May 5 at the
home of Doris Ewing, according to plans made at a
meeting of XI. Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority Tuesday night.
Carol McCullough presided
at the meeting at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio .Electric Co.
The
social
committee
reminded members of the
FoWJder's Day observance at
6:30p. m. Tuesday, April30, at
the Sportsmen in Athens.
Mr. A. R. Knight, chapter
spijnsor, invited member• to
attend the organ recital of Mro.
Gladys Foley at 4 p. m. Sunday
at Grace Episcopal Church.
Lynn Shuler presented the
cultural report on "Creative
Thinkirlg". Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Jeanette
Thomas and Mrs. Carolyn
Grueser.
Attending besides those
named were Sarah Bechtle,
Lynn ,Shuler, Vikki Gloeckner,
Charlotte Haiming , Donna
Nease ,' Linda Riffle, Ruth
R!ffie; Carolyn Satterfield and
Marilyn Swan.

THE REV. DONALD Boone, fonner pastor of the Middleport
First BaptiSt Church, is now the senior minister of the First
. Baptist Church of PattersOn, N. J., a large-Inter-city church.
Hiswlfe Bonnie, inanotetosomefrlendshere,saidthatthe
family would be moving to 348 Squallbrook Rd., North Haledon, '
N. J ., into a seven-room house on an acre of land.
The Rev. Mr.Boone wtllhave on his staff a Spanish-apeeking
minister and a Christian education director.
Would you believe that Jeannie is now almost 14 and David is
12. Both of the children were adopted by the Boones while they
were In Middleport. Later they had a son of their own who is now
four.

Bereans discuss PA set
Ashley, Mrs. Gertrude Miller
and Mrs. Martha Childs will be
hostesses.
Group singing of "Standing
on the Promises" opened the
meeting with Mrs . Louise
McElhinny giving the prayer.
Mrs. Ruth !Carr read "Too
Busy" and "The Hope of the
World". It was announced that
Dr. Pemberton, Rhodesia, will
show slides of hio work there
Sunday morning at the church.
Mro. Ruth Ann Taylor was a
guest.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. McElhinny, Mrs.
Martha Haggerty, Mrs. !Carr,
and Mrs. Bessie Ashley.

Assistance with the.purchase
of a new public address system
for the church was discussed
during the Tuesday night
meeting of the Loyal Bereans
Class of the Middleport Church
of ·christ.
The claso also approved ·the
purchase of three mattress
covers for the · Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly camp at
Darwin. Reported iU were Mrs.
Ullian Triplett, Mrs:·Eula Rice
and Mrs. Gladys Mowery .
Cards were signed for Mrs.
Rice and Mrs . Mowery. A
~lent auction was planned for
the May meeting when Mrs.
· Regina Swift, Mrs. Gamet

Boosters have meet
blazers for the basketball
team. Pat White suggested
warm-up ouits are needed for
the football squad. Both will be
considered.
New cheerleader uniforms
are being purchased by the
boosters. A large pop cooler
was donated for the conceBJ~ion
stand by Mrs. Maria Waldnig.
Aloo you can still purchase
booster jackets by calling 9494935.
Those who attended were
Roger Adams, Dee Brown,
Martha Dudding, Pat White,
Maria
Waldnig , Alma Johnoon,
SUNDAY
Carl
Wolfe,
Ronnie Salser,
POMEROY Wesleyan
Ronnie
Hill,
Dave
Hill, John
Holiness Church baptizing at
the Middleport Levy, 11 a.m. Dudding and Charles Mathews.
Everyone was asked to bring
Missionary service concerning
someone
to the next meeting.
the American Indian, 2 p.m. at
the church, SR i43. Everyone
welcome. Rev. O'Dell Manley,
pastor.

RACINE - The Southern
Athletic Boosters inet Monday
· evening at the high school with
Roger . Adams, president,
presiding. Several things were
discussed Including paying off
remaining bonds, the new
whirlpool which was purchased
for the hoys, the membership
drive and cards to be printed.
Carl Wolfe asked the
boos te rs about purchasing

RACINE
Recreation al
,activities were discussed
during a Methodist youth
meeting at the Racine parsonage of the Rev. Steve
Wilson.
A fishing trip for the boys, a
hay ride, and the volley ball
schedule were discussed. A
Bible study was conducted and
welcomed Into the group were
Dannie! Smith and Ron
Roberts. Refreshments were
served.
Attending were Sharon
Baker, Danny Brown, Denise
Hendrix , Kost!a Hysell ,
Brenda Lawrence , Cynthia
Pitser, Tammy Pitzer, Denise
Roberts, Dave Theiss, Denise
Talbott, Randy Warner, Steve
REYIVAL OPENS
Trussell , 'Peggy Trussell ,
CHESTER
-Special revival
Melania Waldnig, Cathy Smith,
Ron Roberts and Dannie ! crusade services wiU begin
Monday, April 29, at the
Smith.
Church of God here where the
Rev . Dan I,.. Ayers is the pastor
and Rev . Don Combs,
evangelist. Area families were
warmly invited to attend these
special meetings which begin
nightly a! 7:30. The nursery
will be open for the convenience
of parents.
A ·post-Easter egg hllnt was

wins prize

.

•

•3ooo ·· Handling &amp; Shipping

'

Chapman's Shoes

• STEREO

HURRY! EXPIRES APRIL 30, 1974

POMEROY

MAIN ST.

Ethel Mae Evans to Sherrie
Turner, .26 Acre, Pomeroy.
J. B. O'Brien, Adm., Verna
Davis, dec. to Larry W.
Lavend er, Edna M. Lavender,
'5.96 Acres, Rutland-. - ''
Raymond F . Hatfield,
Berth a ~ E il ee n Hatfield to
Charles R. Hatfield, Janet M.
Ha tfield, 26 .2 Acres , 14.45
Acres, Rutland.
Forrest A. Ward, Eula I.
Ward to Duane B. Wolfe , 31
Acres, Olive.
Richard Darst to Ronald
Grate, Lot 17, Hutchinson Sub .,
Rutland.
Douglas D. Grover , Norma
Grover to Barton E. Pearson,
Johnetta J. Pearson, .98022
Acre , Rutland.
Eli Powell, Ella Powell to
Charle y M. Powell, 40.50
Acres, Olive.
Charles Powell, dec. aka
Charley M. Powell to Emma
Powell, Pearl Powell, Ruby
Brewer, Bernice Deem, Aff.
for trans., Olive .
Emma Powell, Pearl Powell,
Ryby·Brewer , Harold Brewer,
Bernice Deem, Charles H.
Deem to Roger Deem, 3 Acres,
41 '111 Acres, ~ 40. 50 Acres, Olive.
Dorothy E . Warmke to
Roman F. Warmke, 160.61'
Acr~, 119.42 Acres, SalemRutland.
·•.Donald E. Roush, Jo Ellen
RQ!ish to Paul Simon, Allie
Simon, 1.12 Acre , Chester.

..-------,

I

Louisv ille Visitors Bureau

I
I

Dept, 606. Fou nders Square.

l OuiSville, KY 40202
Tell me mofe abou t t he Summer of
Sevent y-fo ur '

I
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Ia.....;. _ _ _ _ _ _ _,I

no rt her n. so ut hern. riv er -spiced

fun t h~t's alw ays yours. Just a
tank awa y. A nd mostly free •
C 'm on . live a little ... ln-l ouisville's

Name

Ad dr !!SS ---------~

City

L

St ille

Summer of Seventy-fou r!

Zip _ __

When cooking vegetabl es. use as little
water as possible and cover the pan to
speed cooking.

~~*
While you can use
almost any type
pan or pot on a gas
range, those with
flat, smooth bottoms cook faster
with less chance of
burning the food
inside.

Good maintenance r including period ic
cleaning, assures more econom ical and
elficient operation. Proper adjustment of
burners to a blue flame is an important
maintenance chec k. Clean burne r ports is
another: Your gas range manual has com- .
ple~e instruct i~ns.

I

'

New Gas Range
'

II you're thinking of replacing your old :

.

.

Pre-heat your oven only:
when it 's necessary. And
whan you do, five or ten
minutes Is all it takes. Setting the temperature higher

~

gao range now, remember that you ·,
needn'.t . worry about your home gao ,
oupply. A new, modern gao range helpo ·
conoerve gao becauoe !1'1 more efltclenl. It oflere automatic controls, beltar lnaulallon and other gaa-aavlng
features.
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Alka-Seltzer

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VITAM I

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BAND-AID

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ALKASEL11ER

100 with
24 FR E E
$3.11 Va lue

. CEPACOL

Clear P l ~stic
Strips
70 wi th
20 FREE
No. 4671
$1.15Va lue

25 's
79 c Va (l •p

MINI
PADS

Reg .ul .•r
or
Sup er
40's

20 oz.
$ 1. 67 Valu e

. PO
PRESS-EO
POWDER

NOXZEM
TUBE
MAKE-UP

\

llRANO
DRAIN
OPENER

Ru g Clea ner
24 oz.
Aerosol

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$1.89 Va lue

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Special S;lle!

FLEX BALSAM

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HAIR CONDITIONER
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VANQUISH

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EX T RA

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gentle btill'e rs q;;.

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49c Va li•e

$1.25 Va lue

MICE
28 oz.

29~

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admissions ~ Mae Pearson,
Rac ine· Fred M. Shain,
Racine~ Bernard. Rairden,
Hartford.
Discharges ~ Linda .Bailey,
David
Jenkins ,
Basil
Cre};l!eans, Mellissa Roney,
Ruth ·Bennett, George BlackweUr Bessie Stitt, William
Grueser,' Dreda Evans, Mabel
BeattY.

KILLER
pound
S1.85 Va lue

ONLY

COT Y

SWEET EARTH
SOFT. MISTS

• j"

·FUNERAL SATURDAY
PALM SPRINGS, Calif.
(UP! ) - Funeral services wiU
be h~ld Saturday for BIU .
Martin, 59, head golf professional at Desert ISland CountrY
Club lh Cathedral City, Calif.
Mart.in, a former president of
the U.S. Mational Senior Golf
Association; died of cancer at
the Eisenhower Hospital here
Tu~~y . He was survived by ·
his ~,llow, Maurine. ·

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$.,7 77

$10.98 Value

LIQUID
MAKE-UP

$1.29

•

Hig h ImpaCT t-'taslic
El ec t ronically Seam ed
Lin er. No. Pl4-785

SPRAY
'N VAC
Make-Up
$2 .25 Value

,,

30 QUART CHEST
WITH FREE GALLON JUG

$1.90 Value
for $1.09

77~

---

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WONDER
CLOTHS

/
Helena Rubinstein

J'

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Al l· Pur pose
Wipe s ·

BRUSH-ON
PEEL-OFF

.,'I

2

2 FOR

For fresn , c1e" "
complexions

$375

UNIT CAlLED
The Pomeroy ER Squad was
called Wednesdey at'l0:42.p.m.
to 144 Mulberry Ave. for Doris
Haynes who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

.

I

we re backing the Presiden t or
rebels.

tl1e

Jr-•••••••-•••••••••••••••••••••••-••••••••••••••!!lll••••••••••••~~~:~••••••a••••••••lli1,

Transfers

. MiDDLEPOR;J. QHIO

~

whetherthetroopsg uardingi t

Property

FOREMAN .&amp; ABBOTT
.

rice rs .

Lisbon joiniqg in the uprising.
The whereabouts of Caetano
and his ministers were unknown . The residenc~ of Presi•dent A m e r i c o Thomaz,
Portugal's 79-year-olcl rightwing s trongman. Pres ide11t,
was heavily guarded - but ..
the re was no indica ti on

Meigs

I

MASON FURNITURE

' .•

It's our annual gift to
honor graduates. Stop in
now and select your
footwear .

dom req uires a high
flame for very long . Use

low one when it
do just as welL

in the provinces. Spanish po li ce
reported th at things appeared

· s_ion that hio vessel would o~n
fire on "D)'one interfering with
the rebels.
The sta te-backed l1 ul'lugut!sr
news ·auency 1\\1 1 sa1tl "a
milita ry upr is.n~ took place in
Li s.bon this uwrning . lts s-izt•
und rt~ture :tre yN llnknown .''
AN I cited "un confirmed reports," howrvc r, of military
WJits at Liiml\go in the Nortl1
&lt;-md Tomar ~nd Si:l rJt&lt;lrcm ·near

' Ro ush Guern sey

GRADS

than yOu want won't pre· .
heat the oven any fa~ter.

_a

support from manygarrisons

normal ,;cross the Spanish- report of bloodshed.
Portuguese bo,rd er.
Several explosions or shots
~·h ere was no officit.~ l confir- were hea rd in Lisbon 's down.
11~ation of reports - tlwt the . town- Cais do Sod re district,
whole government with the near t'l railway stntion. Witexception or the ministers of n~sses repo rte d the street
education. infornwtion and iitte rell wi th glass and two
tourism, .and tradP unions, lutd persons gravely injured or
been arrested .
dead.
Ry noon (7 a.m. EDT )I'fl1ecommandcrof awarship
eight hours after ·till' upr ising in thr Tagus Hiver off Lisbon
st~-J rted - there wi:is only one warned in a military tran.smis·

RACINE - Locust Grove
Floss C, a juni or two year old
re gistere d Guernsey cow
owned by Edson Roush, Locust
Grove Fa nns, has completed
an offi cial DHIR actual
production record of 12,530
pounds of milk and 619 pounds
of butterfat in 305 days two
times a day milking, according
to , The American Guernsey
Cattle Club. The testing was
"
suli'ervised
by Ohio Sta te
Un iversi ty.

naturally saves gas and
mo ney. Cooking g;el-

To Cover

I .

.J

HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrisonville Alwnni Banquet
will be May 25 at 7p. m. at the
·grade school. A dance will
follow at 9 p. m. wi th music to
be provided by the Kord Kings,
Belpre.
.
~
Reservations may be made
by contac ting Mrs . Pansy
Jordan, Route 4, Pomeroy . Her
phone nu mbe r is 698-3477 .
Everyone is welcome to atte nd .

1974

The ii1 stant-on, instantoff control of your gas
r ang e m ea n s les s
was tt;d heat before and
after cooking, and just

RADAR RANGE
For·Only

The rebel broadcast asked
the P., pulation "to coliabora t~
wiU1 ll $ ------{)fh erwise we wi ll
have to en force martial law.
All shops must close to avoirl
people h&lt;ia rding. If they cion 'I,
we will rna ke them."
Diplomati c sources said lhe
rebels appeared to be gaining

banquet set

TO ALL

wort h of special events. fo r
everyon e .on top of all th e

"Conservation is important today, as·
. the nation laces an energy crisi.s. Help
fight waste of our vital re~ources right
in your own kitchen by using these
gas-$aving cooking tips . . . and save
money, too. I encourage you to start
now to do your share."

in IJ·y ing to put down rebellions
in Angola, Mozambique and
Gull1ea.
. ...
The coinmunique d1d.not say
who was leading the uprising,
but it wa~ the S"!'ond upri sing
in six weeks. On March 16 la nk
columns tried to enter Lisbon
to r rotest the African involvemcn t bu t were turned
back peacefully by• loyal of-

Harrisonville

20% Discount

t ucky's fi rst settl em ent • So
l ou isvi lle's got a summer 's

"YOUR
GAS RANGE
HELPS YOU
CONSERVE-ENERGY.
AND SAVE
MONEY.

broadcast at 11 :45 a.m, (6: 45
a.m. EDT) said.
"The hour of freedom has
arrived and we will liberate
lhis country from the oppress\ ve government . whi ch has
ruled for many years."
The uprising was reported
led by military men tired of the
long history or Portuguese
colonial wars in Africa. Portugal for years has hf\en invol ved

-.in offic ial test

It' s th e 100 th yea r of the
Derby! The 200 th year of Ken-

BEQUEATHS PAPERS
RUSHVIlLE, Ind. (UPI) ~
Personal papers pertaining to
Wendell L. Willkie's unsuccessful1940 presidential try
and several scrapbooks have
been bequeathed to Indiana
University in the will of
Willkie 's son, Philip H. Willkie,
a Rushville banker and atU?mey who died last week .

DR. GAVER RESIGNS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
director of the state Mental
Health and Mental Retardation
Department, Dr. Kenneth
Gaver, annOW1ced Wednsday
he has resigned his post to
accept a similar position in
Texas.

. ·. toppling
the their
government.
proclaimed
intention of
' "We dominate the situation
· . . from the North to the South (of
Por tugal )", a comm unique

a
hand·elapping, foot-tapping,
black-tie, blue-leans, paintthe-town-red Good Time tbe
whole Summer of '74!

J·Miller

held recently at the Middleport
Elementary School w!lli James
Miller, fourth grade student,
winning the grand prize.
Eggs were furnished by the
PTA and the kindergarten
classes . colored them. Each
child who · participated
received a small gHt. Prizes
were furnished by the Modern
Woodmen of Amer!c~ with
Mrs. Ethel Hart and Mrs .
Helen Hart as directors.
Other winners were Robert
Spires and Lisa Ashley, first
graders; Harry Roush and
Mark McCloud, second
graders; Kenny Mullins and
Keith Scott, third graders; Bill
Powell and Tara Bacon, fourth
graders; Cindy Hawley and
Jef(Mahon, kindergarten.

.IIY HAROLD H . MARTIN
LISBON (UP! ) - An armed
. fOrc es group attempting to
,· averthrow Premie r Marcelo '
~elano sa id today .it had
seized control of the na tiOn and
, ',., Plat "the hour of freedom has
arrived."
The rebels -calling themse lves the. Armed Fo rC~s
:· ... Movement -took control Of
· ·, , Usbon 's two radio stations and

Get A Panasonic

WHITE TV

' ' ' l.

News, Notes

Mrs. Duffy
hosts club

Hermitage Air Cond~ioning
and

e BLACK &amp;

HERMAN GRATE
77J-S.j92
MASON, W. VA.

Reedsville

By Mrs. L. Ba1denon
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Berkheimer and
daughters, were Mr. and Mrs.
Roy .Berkheimer, of Friendly,
W. Va. , and Mr. and Mrs.
Cumblidge ,
of
Ruosell
Sistersville, W. Va.
Dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Freda Duffy en- Mrs. Warren Pickens were Mr.
tertained the Third Friday and Mrs. Bill Will!arns of
Athens, Ga., Mrs . Kathryn
Club at. her home recently and
Dietz
of Belpre, Mr. and Mrs.
was presented wi_th hostess
R. E. W!Ullims, Mrs. Lyle
gHts by the members.
The Lord's Prayer in uniso~ Balderson and Kay.
Visiting at the Hetzer-Bjse
opened the meeting conducted
by Miss Erma Smith, vice home were Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
president, in the absence of Bigley, and Mr . and Mrs . Jeff
Mrs. Mabel Wolfe. A poem, Foster and family .
Mr. and Mrs . J . D. Kibble, of
"Miracle of God's Love "
Parkersburg,
W. Va. were
composed by Mrs. Wolfe was
dinner
guests
of Mrs. Hazel
read, along with another poem,
Barton
on
Monday.
They also
"Climb Until Your Dreams
Come True" . Mrs . Carrie visited with Mr. and Mro. R. E.
Neutzling will host the May 31 WIUiarns.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
meeting of the club.
Mrs
. Walter Brown and David
During the social hour games ,
were played with prizes being were Mr. and Mrs. WIUiam
awarded to Mrs. Neutzling, Thomas and sono, of Enon.
Mrs. Edna Reibel and Miss
Smith. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Duffy .

oorno~

VISIT SISTER
Miss Erma Smith and Mro.
Philip Meinhart were in
HWltington over the weekend
to visit their sister, Mrs. E . A.
Bartels, who remains critically
ill .a t her home.

•

Easy Terms! ·
·-Free DeliYery !

Activities
discussed

Mr. and Mrs. Roger Turner,
Elgin, .Ill. spent a week .
rece nUy with his parents Mr .
and Mrs. Herii-y Turner. Mr.
Turner ha s purchased a
grocery store in Langsvllle
from Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bolin .
Mr. Turner is operating the .
store and Mrs. Turner and
children returned to Illinois
where Jhey will remain Wltil
the ~-e nd of the school term . .
'!'hen they w!ll be moving to
their new home in Langsville.
Mr . and Mrs. · David
Uewellyn and daughter visited
her parenta Mr. and Mrs.
Lavern Jordan and famlly .
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Coen,
Kenneth, John, Ruth, Rachel
and Grace Hensler spent
Easter with Mr. and Mrs. J. P.
Hensler and sons Radford
Road.
The youth of Columbia
Chapel Christian Church
prepared and served breakfast
Easter morning before the
regular SWlday School classes.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Randolf,
Toledo, spent Easter with her
sister Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Chapman.
Mrs. Dorothy Johnston,

Mr. and l\1rs. Floyd Ross
entertained Monday evening
with a ourprise party honoring
Steve Smith on his 18th birthday. The party was held at
the home of Steve's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Smith,
· Pomeroy.
Gilts were presented to the
honored guest and refreshments were served. Attending
were Steve Brickles, Sue Wood,
Ron Wood, Rodney Carl,
Brenda Ross, Ju!lior Ross,
Richard Salser, Mike Salser,
David King, Helen King, John
Davis, Joe Davis, Mr. and Mrs.
Wallace Hatfield, Angela,
Barbara and Wally, Mr . and
Mrs. Ray Roush, the honoree,
his parents, and the hosts.

Participants in the "Skate
Agai nst Can ce r " stage d
recently by the Meigs County
Unit of the American Cancer
Society were announced today
by Brenda Roush , president.
They were Penny Landers,
.Ray Justice, Jackie Justice,
Greg Bush, Tara Bacon, Sara
Diddle, Jackie Ohlinger , Pam
Stobart, John Bacon, Grace
White, ·Rheba Hysell, Denise
Brickles , Br uce Br ickles,
Debbie Milliro n, Sharon
Milliron , Pam Milliron, Karen
Neigler , Donna Hatfield,
Barbar a Ha tfi eld, An ge la
Hatfield , Michelle Taylor ,
Buster Phelps and Doug
Enoch.
Making donation s to th e
project were Janeth Beat,
Harold White and Marjorie
Smith. Bob Trussell and P. M.
Cowdery, owners of the SkateA-Way Rink , donated the bus
for transportation.

BUY NOW!

ZENITH
COLOR TV

•.

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HACINE - The last prayer
breakfast of the school year
was held at Racine Weoleyan
:::&gt;
United Methodist Chur ch
"
We dne s day mornin g .
Earl Warnke and family, Port Clinton, formerly of Middleport, have just returned from a week in Holland at the Tulip Devotions were opened with
the singing of ''He Touched
Time International Festival.
Me".
Rev. Steve Wilson led in
Warnke is the director of the Port Clintoq Senior High School
prayer.
"
Wind Ensemble, a group of 49, which was one of 15 bands from
Roget
Birch, teach er a t
North America invited to appear at the festival.
Meigs JWlior High and active
In a letter to Walter and Emogene crooks, before they left,
layman
of the Betl]any United
Earl said that the band would perform about five times
Methodist
Church brought the
throughout the week-long event which Is sponsored by the Dutch
mornin
g
meditation. Rev.
government. He added that to his know ledge, the Port Clinton
Howard Shiveley made anband and a band from Ida, Mich.. were the only groups from
nouncements and closed the
midwestern United States who would lie making the Jrip.
meeting
with prayer .
His musicianS were selected for performance at the event on
Breakfas
t of scrambled
the basis of audition tapes. During theJest!val, seminars were to
be available for all ensembles, and there were to have been eggs, toast, coffee cake ana
sightseeing excursions to Amsterdam, Rotterdam and· The orange juice was served by
Mrs. Curtis Johnson and Mrs.
Hague.
Each ensemble was also scheduled ~present a concert in a Howard Shiveley .
Those present .were Mike
village or city outside of Katwijk in addition to the adjudication
Huddleston,
Kelly Hayman,.
and festival concerts.
Debbie
Harden,
Sharon Baker,
Must have been quite a week!
Molly Fisher, Gene Shiveley,
RHONDA ERVIN DAILEY, Columbus, daughter of Howard Tim Hill, Bill Shiveley, Danny
and Nancy Ervin, Racine, made the dean 's list last quarter at Dudding, Steve Hill and Sharon
Ohio State University. Rhonda will be graduating in June with a Evans.
Many youth activities are
degree in nursing.
Incidentally, this young lady credits.her employment these planned for the summer
months and the weekly prayer
pa~t two years at Means Hall, University Hospital, in the intensive care wing, to the experience she had as a nurse 's aid~ at breakfast will begin again the
Veterans Memorial Hospital during her last two years of high fir~ week in September .
school. Since her sophomore year at Ohio State she has worked
summers and part-time during school quarters to help with her
school expenses.
THERE'S NOTHING like a little appreciation ....
Bea Kuhn, whose husband, tbe Rev. Robert Kuhn, is
chaplain at the Gallipolis State Institute, for the past few .weeks
has been playing for chapel services there on Sunday afternoons.
Last Sunday, a memberofthechoir presented her with a gift.

Point ·Rock
Notes
marks 18 years SQcial
By Wanetla Radekin
Steve Smith

.Armed grotip · claims · Portugal '~ hour of freedom h as· arrived

Pomeroy ,,visited her sister Mr.
and Mrs. G. A. Radekin and
Tina.
_
Mr . Francis · Canod e,
Columbus, visited his mother
Mrs. Uzzle Canode .
Mr . Frank Shiltz and son
J ohn·visited his wife Ellen who
is confined to a· Charleston
HoSpital.
.
Thirty-two members of the
Dyesville Comml!fiily Church
held Easter Sunrise Service on
the hill near the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Oxley. The
group enjoyed doughnuts and
coffee at the Oxley home then
had the regular Sunday School
lesson discussion.
Mrs. Kenneth Wilcox, David
and Darla, Middleport spent an
evening with her parents Mr,
and Mrs. John Holliday and
brother Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Holliday and family.
Mr . and Mrs . Dale Harvey
and daughters spent Easter
with his parents Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Harvey and called on
his grandparents Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Westfall.
Miss Judy Holliday attended
a birthday party for Marsha
Holcomb at the Holcomb home
at Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Bobo,
Chillicothe, have been spending some time at their farm
here and visiting their
relatives and friends .

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7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Oc, April 25, 1974
•
6-'- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddl~port-Pomero y, 0., April25, 1974
:1~
:'?' . X? '"'&gt;;:~::::::X:::,&gt;.;:l i&lt;::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::&gt;~:::::::::::::~:~::~:::::::~:::::::::l&lt;':::::::::::::z:,~::::::::~~:::::&gt;.:~~~:;~.&lt;,

l.Ltst prayer Participants
1·.·~. meet held announced

~i.. Soc1al J ~communtty
~1 ·catendad. tICorner By charleneHoetlich·ll,
~

:;::

·:::

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.

THURSDAY
TWIN City Shrinettes, 7: 30
p.m . at Coliunbus and Southern
Electric Co.
FREE Clothing Da y at
Salvation Army from 10 a.m.
WJtil noon. All area residents
are welcome .

RIVERVIEW Garden Club, 8
p.m. home of Mrs. Ronald
Osborne, with Mrs. Roy
Hannum, co-hostess.
FRIDAY
P AST
M ATRO NS ,
Evangeline Chapter, O.E.S.,
7: 30p.m. , Middleport Masonic
Temple.
OHIO VALLEY Adopt-AChild Today Chapter, 8 p.m.,
St. Peter's Eposcipal Church,
541 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Panel discussion on child
de velopment as related to
environment with experts In
the field.
MEIGS HIGH School Alumni
Association 7: 30 p. m. at
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Elec tric Co. Those interested
in assisting with the alumni
dance and meeting are urged
to attend .
SATURDAY
FLEA MARKET and Bake
Sale, 9 a. m. to 5 p. m.,
Southern Junior High, Racine.
Sponsored by Southern High
students for Europe. Those
who wish to have items picked
up may call 949-4843 or 9492972.
TAG DAY , in Pomeroy.
Middleport and Rutland for
Rutland Leagil'e baseball
teams. Ice cream social and
bake sale at Rutland gym
beginning at 4 p. m.; square
dance beginning 8:30 p. m.
going to midnight at Rutland
gym . All proceeds to the
Rutland League baseball
teams.
SQUARE DANCE, Chester
Elementary School, 9 to
midnight, sponsoreil by
Eastern High School Alumni
Association .
SUNDAY
MASTER'S MEN of Kentucky Christian College appearing 7:30 p. m. nightly,
Friday through SWlday, at Zion
Church of Christ on PomeroyHarrisonville Road. Parking
lot program In Pomeroy at 2 on
Saturday and special program
at church at 2:30 SWlday.
Public is invited.
SIGNUP Pomeroy Girls
Softball League, Pomeroy City
Hall, 4 p. m.
BAPTISMAL Service, 3 p.
m., at Racine Levee, sponsored
by Syracuse First Church of
God. Everyone welcome.

Rose degree
to be given
The Order · of the Rose
Degree wiU be given to Amie
Chapman at the preferential
tea scheduledfor May 5 at the
home of Doris Ewing, according to plans made at a
meeting of XI. Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority Tuesday night.
Carol McCullough presided
at the meeting at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio .Electric Co.
The
social
committee
reminded members of the
FoWJder's Day observance at
6:30p. m. Tuesday, April30, at
the Sportsmen in Athens.
Mr. A. R. Knight, chapter
spijnsor, invited member• to
attend the organ recital of Mro.
Gladys Foley at 4 p. m. Sunday
at Grace Episcopal Church.
Lynn Shuler presented the
cultural report on "Creative
Thinkirlg". Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Jeanette
Thomas and Mrs. Carolyn
Grueser.
Attending besides those
named were Sarah Bechtle,
Lynn ,Shuler, Vikki Gloeckner,
Charlotte Haiming , Donna
Nease ,' Linda Riffle, Ruth
R!ffie; Carolyn Satterfield and
Marilyn Swan.

THE REV. DONALD Boone, fonner pastor of the Middleport
First BaptiSt Church, is now the senior minister of the First
. Baptist Church of PattersOn, N. J., a large-Inter-city church.
Hiswlfe Bonnie, inanotetosomefrlendshere,saidthatthe
family would be moving to 348 Squallbrook Rd., North Haledon, '
N. J ., into a seven-room house on an acre of land.
The Rev. Mr.Boone wtllhave on his staff a Spanish-apeeking
minister and a Christian education director.
Would you believe that Jeannie is now almost 14 and David is
12. Both of the children were adopted by the Boones while they
were In Middleport. Later they had a son of their own who is now
four.

Bereans discuss PA set
Ashley, Mrs. Gertrude Miller
and Mrs. Martha Childs will be
hostesses.
Group singing of "Standing
on the Promises" opened the
meeting with Mrs . Louise
McElhinny giving the prayer.
Mrs. Ruth !Carr read "Too
Busy" and "The Hope of the
World". It was announced that
Dr. Pemberton, Rhodesia, will
show slides of hio work there
Sunday morning at the church.
Mro. Ruth Ann Taylor was a
guest.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. McElhinny, Mrs.
Martha Haggerty, Mrs. !Carr,
and Mrs. Bessie Ashley.

Assistance with the.purchase
of a new public address system
for the church was discussed
during the Tuesday night
meeting of the Loyal Bereans
Class of the Middleport Church
of ·christ.
The claso also approved ·the
purchase of three mattress
covers for the · Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly camp at
Darwin. Reported iU were Mrs.
Ullian Triplett, Mrs:·Eula Rice
and Mrs. Gladys Mowery .
Cards were signed for Mrs.
Rice and Mrs . Mowery. A
~lent auction was planned for
the May meeting when Mrs.
· Regina Swift, Mrs. Gamet

Boosters have meet
blazers for the basketball
team. Pat White suggested
warm-up ouits are needed for
the football squad. Both will be
considered.
New cheerleader uniforms
are being purchased by the
boosters. A large pop cooler
was donated for the conceBJ~ion
stand by Mrs. Maria Waldnig.
Aloo you can still purchase
booster jackets by calling 9494935.
Those who attended were
Roger Adams, Dee Brown,
Martha Dudding, Pat White,
Maria
Waldnig , Alma Johnoon,
SUNDAY
Carl
Wolfe,
Ronnie Salser,
POMEROY Wesleyan
Ronnie
Hill,
Dave
Hill, John
Holiness Church baptizing at
the Middleport Levy, 11 a.m. Dudding and Charles Mathews.
Everyone was asked to bring
Missionary service concerning
someone
to the next meeting.
the American Indian, 2 p.m. at
the church, SR i43. Everyone
welcome. Rev. O'Dell Manley,
pastor.

RACINE - The Southern
Athletic Boosters inet Monday
· evening at the high school with
Roger . Adams, president,
presiding. Several things were
discussed Including paying off
remaining bonds, the new
whirlpool which was purchased
for the hoys, the membership
drive and cards to be printed.
Carl Wolfe asked the
boos te rs about purchasing

RACINE
Recreation al
,activities were discussed
during a Methodist youth
meeting at the Racine parsonage of the Rev. Steve
Wilson.
A fishing trip for the boys, a
hay ride, and the volley ball
schedule were discussed. A
Bible study was conducted and
welcomed Into the group were
Dannie! Smith and Ron
Roberts. Refreshments were
served.
Attending were Sharon
Baker, Danny Brown, Denise
Hendrix , Kost!a Hysell ,
Brenda Lawrence , Cynthia
Pitser, Tammy Pitzer, Denise
Roberts, Dave Theiss, Denise
Talbott, Randy Warner, Steve
REYIVAL OPENS
Trussell , 'Peggy Trussell ,
CHESTER
-Special revival
Melania Waldnig, Cathy Smith,
Ron Roberts and Dannie ! crusade services wiU begin
Monday, April 29, at the
Smith.
Church of God here where the
Rev . Dan I,.. Ayers is the pastor
and Rev . Don Combs,
evangelist. Area families were
warmly invited to attend these
special meetings which begin
nightly a! 7:30. The nursery
will be open for the convenience
of parents.
A ·post-Easter egg hllnt was

wins prize

.

•

•3ooo ·· Handling &amp; Shipping

'

Chapman's Shoes

• STEREO

HURRY! EXPIRES APRIL 30, 1974

POMEROY

MAIN ST.

Ethel Mae Evans to Sherrie
Turner, .26 Acre, Pomeroy.
J. B. O'Brien, Adm., Verna
Davis, dec. to Larry W.
Lavend er, Edna M. Lavender,
'5.96 Acres, Rutland-. - ''
Raymond F . Hatfield,
Berth a ~ E il ee n Hatfield to
Charles R. Hatfield, Janet M.
Ha tfield, 26 .2 Acres , 14.45
Acres, Rutland.
Forrest A. Ward, Eula I.
Ward to Duane B. Wolfe , 31
Acres, Olive.
Richard Darst to Ronald
Grate, Lot 17, Hutchinson Sub .,
Rutland.
Douglas D. Grover , Norma
Grover to Barton E. Pearson,
Johnetta J. Pearson, .98022
Acre , Rutland.
Eli Powell, Ella Powell to
Charle y M. Powell, 40.50
Acres, Olive.
Charles Powell, dec. aka
Charley M. Powell to Emma
Powell, Pearl Powell, Ruby
Brewer, Bernice Deem, Aff.
for trans., Olive .
Emma Powell, Pearl Powell,
Ryby·Brewer , Harold Brewer,
Bernice Deem, Charles H.
Deem to Roger Deem, 3 Acres,
41 '111 Acres, ~ 40. 50 Acres, Olive.
Dorothy E . Warmke to
Roman F. Warmke, 160.61'
Acr~, 119.42 Acres, SalemRutland.
·•.Donald E. Roush, Jo Ellen
RQ!ish to Paul Simon, Allie
Simon, 1.12 Acre , Chester.

..-------,

I

Louisv ille Visitors Bureau

I
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Dept, 606. Fou nders Square.

l OuiSville, KY 40202
Tell me mofe abou t t he Summer of
Sevent y-fo ur '

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Ia.....;. _ _ _ _ _ _ _,I

no rt her n. so ut hern. riv er -spiced

fun t h~t's alw ays yours. Just a
tank awa y. A nd mostly free •
C 'm on . live a little ... ln-l ouisville's

Name

Ad dr !!SS ---------~

City

L

St ille

Summer of Seventy-fou r!

Zip _ __

When cooking vegetabl es. use as little
water as possible and cover the pan to
speed cooking.

~~*
While you can use
almost any type
pan or pot on a gas
range, those with
flat, smooth bottoms cook faster
with less chance of
burning the food
inside.

Good maintenance r including period ic
cleaning, assures more econom ical and
elficient operation. Proper adjustment of
burners to a blue flame is an important
maintenance chec k. Clean burne r ports is
another: Your gas range manual has com- .
ple~e instruct i~ns.

I

'

New Gas Range
'

II you're thinking of replacing your old :

.

.

Pre-heat your oven only:
when it 's necessary. And
whan you do, five or ten
minutes Is all it takes. Setting the temperature higher

~

gao range now, remember that you ·,
needn'.t . worry about your home gao ,
oupply. A new, modern gao range helpo ·
conoerve gao becauoe !1'1 more efltclenl. It oflere automatic controls, beltar lnaulallon and other gaa-aavlng
features.
•' '
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r--.r==i.==::;, ·/

I I . e1

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will

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Alka-Seltzer

I

UN ICAP
VITAM I

--."-"..." · ..:...~ ~-~~~~-

BAND-AID

____ v
I

ALKASEL11ER

100 with
24 FR E E
$3.11 Va lue

. CEPACOL

Clear P l ~stic
Strips
70 wi th
20 FREE
No. 4671
$1.15Va lue

25 's
79 c Va (l •p

MINI
PADS

Reg .ul .•r
or
Sup er
40's

20 oz.
$ 1. 67 Valu e

. PO
PRESS-EO
POWDER

NOXZEM
TUBE
MAKE-UP

\

llRANO
DRAIN
OPENER

Ru g Clea ner
24 oz.
Aerosol

I

t

. I

12 oz.
Can

$1.89 Va lue

•

Re vlon

Special S;lle!

FLEX BALSAM

Re v Ion

and

HAIR CONDITIONER
..D

1

!:
._
t4~i
il!

..

Reg ul ar
or
Ex tra Body
$2. 50 Va lue

VANQUISH

Cla iro l
EX T RA

Th e extra·stren~

pai n formuJawnh
gentle btill'e rs q;;.

t
I

TRAC II

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TWIN INJECTOR

Spra y Mist
Spec ial Offer

..

R~ ZOR
$2.19 Va lue

ONLY

!..· ~::-, ;.:

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GI LL ETTE

MOON DROPS
COLOGNE-PLUS

BREATH
OF

FR OSTED

SPRING

NAIL
COLOR

D-CON

LESTOIL

RAT &amp;

Air
Freshen e r
49c Va li•e

$1.25 Va lue

MICE
28 oz.

29~

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admissions ~ Mae Pearson,
Rac ine· Fred M. Shain,
Racine~ Bernard. Rairden,
Hartford.
Discharges ~ Linda .Bailey,
David
Jenkins ,
Basil
Cre};l!eans, Mellissa Roney,
Ruth ·Bennett, George BlackweUr Bessie Stitt, William
Grueser,' Dreda Evans, Mabel
BeattY.

KILLER
pound
S1.85 Va lue

ONLY

COT Y

SWEET EARTH
SOFT. MISTS

• j"

·FUNERAL SATURDAY
PALM SPRINGS, Calif.
(UP! ) - Funeral services wiU
be h~ld Saturday for BIU .
Martin, 59, head golf professional at Desert ISland CountrY
Club lh Cathedral City, Calif.
Mart.in, a former president of
the U.S. Mational Senior Golf
Association; died of cancer at
the Eisenhower Hospital here
Tu~~y . He was survived by ·
his ~,llow, Maurine. ·

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$.,7 77

$10.98 Value

LIQUID
MAKE-UP

$1.29

•

Hig h ImpaCT t-'taslic
El ec t ronically Seam ed
Lin er. No. Pl4-785

SPRAY
'N VAC
Make-Up
$2 .25 Value

,,

30 QUART CHEST
WITH FREE GALLON JUG

$1.90 Value
for $1.09

77~

---

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•·i70~;---..., ~ , ~.;-~·--;, ,,, ' .-.,,,-;

WONDER
CLOTHS

/
Helena Rubinstein

J'

oz.

Al l· Pur pose
Wipe s ·

BRUSH-ON
PEEL-OFF

.,'I

2

2 FOR

For fresn , c1e" "
complexions

$375

UNIT CAlLED
The Pomeroy ER Squad was
called Wednesdey at'l0:42.p.m.
to 144 Mulberry Ave. for Doris
Haynes who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

.

I

we re backing the Presiden t or
rebels.

tl1e

Jr-•••••••-•••••••••••••••••••••••-••••••••••••••!!lll••••••••••••~~~:~••••••a••••••••lli1,

Transfers

. MiDDLEPOR;J. QHIO

~

whetherthetroopsg uardingi t

Property

FOREMAN .&amp; ABBOTT
.

rice rs .

Lisbon joiniqg in the uprising.
The whereabouts of Caetano
and his ministers were unknown . The residenc~ of Presi•dent A m e r i c o Thomaz,
Portugal's 79-year-olcl rightwing s trongman. Pres ide11t,
was heavily guarded - but ..
the re was no indica ti on

Meigs

I

MASON FURNITURE

' .•

It's our annual gift to
honor graduates. Stop in
now and select your
footwear .

dom req uires a high
flame for very long . Use

low one when it
do just as welL

in the provinces. Spanish po li ce
reported th at things appeared

· s_ion that hio vessel would o~n
fire on "D)'one interfering with
the rebels.
The sta te-backed l1 ul'lugut!sr
news ·auency 1\\1 1 sa1tl "a
milita ry upr is.n~ took place in
Li s.bon this uwrning . lts s-izt•
und rt~ture :tre yN llnknown .''
AN I cited "un confirmed reports," howrvc r, of military
WJits at Liiml\go in the Nortl1
&lt;-md Tomar ~nd Si:l rJt&lt;lrcm ·near

' Ro ush Guern sey

GRADS

than yOu want won't pre· .
heat the oven any fa~ter.

_a

support from manygarrisons

normal ,;cross the Spanish- report of bloodshed.
Portuguese bo,rd er.
Several explosions or shots
~·h ere was no officit.~ l confir- were hea rd in Lisbon 's down.
11~ation of reports - tlwt the . town- Cais do Sod re district,
whole government with the near t'l railway stntion. Witexception or the ministers of n~sses repo rte d the street
education. infornwtion and iitte rell wi th glass and two
tourism, .and tradP unions, lutd persons gravely injured or
been arrested .
dead.
Ry noon (7 a.m. EDT )I'fl1ecommandcrof awarship
eight hours after ·till' upr ising in thr Tagus Hiver off Lisbon
st~-J rted - there wi:is only one warned in a military tran.smis·

RACINE - Locust Grove
Floss C, a juni or two year old
re gistere d Guernsey cow
owned by Edson Roush, Locust
Grove Fa nns, has completed
an offi cial DHIR actual
production record of 12,530
pounds of milk and 619 pounds
of butterfat in 305 days two
times a day milking, according
to , The American Guernsey
Cattle Club. The testing was
"
suli'ervised
by Ohio Sta te
Un iversi ty.

naturally saves gas and
mo ney. Cooking g;el-

To Cover

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HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrisonville Alwnni Banquet
will be May 25 at 7p. m. at the
·grade school. A dance will
follow at 9 p. m. wi th music to
be provided by the Kord Kings,
Belpre.
.
~
Reservations may be made
by contac ting Mrs . Pansy
Jordan, Route 4, Pomeroy . Her
phone nu mbe r is 698-3477 .
Everyone is welcome to atte nd .

1974

The ii1 stant-on, instantoff control of your gas
r ang e m ea n s les s
was tt;d heat before and
after cooking, and just

RADAR RANGE
For·Only

The rebel broadcast asked
the P., pulation "to coliabora t~
wiU1 ll $ ------{)fh erwise we wi ll
have to en force martial law.
All shops must close to avoirl
people h&lt;ia rding. If they cion 'I,
we will rna ke them."
Diplomati c sources said lhe
rebels appeared to be gaining

banquet set

TO ALL

wort h of special events. fo r
everyon e .on top of all th e

"Conservation is important today, as·
. the nation laces an energy crisi.s. Help
fight waste of our vital re~ources right
in your own kitchen by using these
gas-$aving cooking tips . . . and save
money, too. I encourage you to start
now to do your share."

in IJ·y ing to put down rebellions
in Angola, Mozambique and
Gull1ea.
. ...
The coinmunique d1d.not say
who was leading the uprising,
but it wa~ the S"!'ond upri sing
in six weeks. On March 16 la nk
columns tried to enter Lisbon
to r rotest the African involvemcn t bu t were turned
back peacefully by• loyal of-

Harrisonville

20% Discount

t ucky's fi rst settl em ent • So
l ou isvi lle's got a summer 's

"YOUR
GAS RANGE
HELPS YOU
CONSERVE-ENERGY.
AND SAVE
MONEY.

broadcast at 11 :45 a.m, (6: 45
a.m. EDT) said.
"The hour of freedom has
arrived and we will liberate
lhis country from the oppress\ ve government . whi ch has
ruled for many years."
The uprising was reported
led by military men tired of the
long history or Portuguese
colonial wars in Africa. Portugal for years has hf\en invol ved

-.in offic ial test

It' s th e 100 th yea r of the
Derby! The 200 th year of Ken-

BEQUEATHS PAPERS
RUSHVIlLE, Ind. (UPI) ~
Personal papers pertaining to
Wendell L. Willkie's unsuccessful1940 presidential try
and several scrapbooks have
been bequeathed to Indiana
University in the will of
Willkie 's son, Philip H. Willkie,
a Rushville banker and atU?mey who died last week .

DR. GAVER RESIGNS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
director of the state Mental
Health and Mental Retardation
Department, Dr. Kenneth
Gaver, annOW1ced Wednsday
he has resigned his post to
accept a similar position in
Texas.

. ·. toppling
the their
government.
proclaimed
intention of
' "We dominate the situation
· . . from the North to the South (of
Por tugal )", a comm unique

a
hand·elapping, foot-tapping,
black-tie, blue-leans, paintthe-town-red Good Time tbe
whole Summer of '74!

J·Miller

held recently at the Middleport
Elementary School w!lli James
Miller, fourth grade student,
winning the grand prize.
Eggs were furnished by the
PTA and the kindergarten
classes . colored them. Each
child who · participated
received a small gHt. Prizes
were furnished by the Modern
Woodmen of Amer!c~ with
Mrs. Ethel Hart and Mrs .
Helen Hart as directors.
Other winners were Robert
Spires and Lisa Ashley, first
graders; Harry Roush and
Mark McCloud, second
graders; Kenny Mullins and
Keith Scott, third graders; Bill
Powell and Tara Bacon, fourth
graders; Cindy Hawley and
Jef(Mahon, kindergarten.

.IIY HAROLD H . MARTIN
LISBON (UP! ) - An armed
. fOrc es group attempting to
,· averthrow Premie r Marcelo '
~elano sa id today .it had
seized control of the na tiOn and
, ',., Plat "the hour of freedom has
arrived."
The rebels -calling themse lves the. Armed Fo rC~s
:· ... Movement -took control Of
· ·, , Usbon 's two radio stations and

Get A Panasonic

WHITE TV

' ' ' l.

News, Notes

Mrs. Duffy
hosts club

Hermitage Air Cond~ioning
and

e BLACK &amp;

HERMAN GRATE
77J-S.j92
MASON, W. VA.

Reedsville

By Mrs. L. Ba1denon
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Berkheimer and
daughters, were Mr. and Mrs.
Roy .Berkheimer, of Friendly,
W. Va. , and Mr. and Mrs.
Cumblidge ,
of
Ruosell
Sistersville, W. Va.
Dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Freda Duffy en- Mrs. Warren Pickens were Mr.
tertained the Third Friday and Mrs. Bill Will!arns of
Athens, Ga., Mrs . Kathryn
Club at. her home recently and
Dietz
of Belpre, Mr. and Mrs.
was presented wi_th hostess
R. E. W!Ullims, Mrs. Lyle
gHts by the members.
The Lord's Prayer in uniso~ Balderson and Kay.
Visiting at the Hetzer-Bjse
opened the meeting conducted
by Miss Erma Smith, vice home were Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
president, in the absence of Bigley, and Mr . and Mrs . Jeff
Mrs. Mabel Wolfe. A poem, Foster and family .
Mr. and Mrs . J . D. Kibble, of
"Miracle of God's Love "
Parkersburg,
W. Va. were
composed by Mrs. Wolfe was
dinner
guests
of Mrs. Hazel
read, along with another poem,
Barton
on
Monday.
They also
"Climb Until Your Dreams
Come True" . Mrs . Carrie visited with Mr. and Mro. R. E.
Neutzling will host the May 31 WIUiarns.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
meeting of the club.
Mrs
. Walter Brown and David
During the social hour games ,
were played with prizes being were Mr. and Mrs. WIUiam
awarded to Mrs. Neutzling, Thomas and sono, of Enon.
Mrs. Edna Reibel and Miss
Smith. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Duffy .

oorno~

VISIT SISTER
Miss Erma Smith and Mro.
Philip Meinhart were in
HWltington over the weekend
to visit their sister, Mrs. E . A.
Bartels, who remains critically
ill .a t her home.

•

Easy Terms! ·
·-Free DeliYery !

Activities
discussed

Mr. and Mrs. Roger Turner,
Elgin, .Ill. spent a week .
rece nUy with his parents Mr .
and Mrs. Herii-y Turner. Mr.
Turner ha s purchased a
grocery store in Langsvllle
from Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bolin .
Mr. Turner is operating the .
store and Mrs. Turner and
children returned to Illinois
where Jhey will remain Wltil
the ~-e nd of the school term . .
'!'hen they w!ll be moving to
their new home in Langsville.
Mr . and Mrs. · David
Uewellyn and daughter visited
her parenta Mr. and Mrs.
Lavern Jordan and famlly .
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Coen,
Kenneth, John, Ruth, Rachel
and Grace Hensler spent
Easter with Mr. and Mrs. J. P.
Hensler and sons Radford
Road.
The youth of Columbia
Chapel Christian Church
prepared and served breakfast
Easter morning before the
regular SWlday School classes.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Randolf,
Toledo, spent Easter with her
sister Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Chapman.
Mrs. Dorothy Johnston,

Mr. and l\1rs. Floyd Ross
entertained Monday evening
with a ourprise party honoring
Steve Smith on his 18th birthday. The party was held at
the home of Steve's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Smith,
· Pomeroy.
Gilts were presented to the
honored guest and refreshments were served. Attending
were Steve Brickles, Sue Wood,
Ron Wood, Rodney Carl,
Brenda Ross, Ju!lior Ross,
Richard Salser, Mike Salser,
David King, Helen King, John
Davis, Joe Davis, Mr. and Mrs.
Wallace Hatfield, Angela,
Barbara and Wally, Mr . and
Mrs. Ray Roush, the honoree,
his parents, and the hosts.

Participants in the "Skate
Agai nst Can ce r " stage d
recently by the Meigs County
Unit of the American Cancer
Society were announced today
by Brenda Roush , president.
They were Penny Landers,
.Ray Justice, Jackie Justice,
Greg Bush, Tara Bacon, Sara
Diddle, Jackie Ohlinger , Pam
Stobart, John Bacon, Grace
White, ·Rheba Hysell, Denise
Brickles , Br uce Br ickles,
Debbie Milliro n, Sharon
Milliron , Pam Milliron, Karen
Neigler , Donna Hatfield,
Barbar a Ha tfi eld, An ge la
Hatfield , Michelle Taylor ,
Buster Phelps and Doug
Enoch.
Making donation s to th e
project were Janeth Beat,
Harold White and Marjorie
Smith. Bob Trussell and P. M.
Cowdery, owners of the SkateA-Way Rink , donated the bus
for transportation.

BUY NOW!

ZENITH
COLOR TV

•.

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HACINE - The last prayer
breakfast of the school year
was held at Racine Weoleyan
:::&gt;
United Methodist Chur ch
"
We dne s day mornin g .
Earl Warnke and family, Port Clinton, formerly of Middleport, have just returned from a week in Holland at the Tulip Devotions were opened with
the singing of ''He Touched
Time International Festival.
Me".
Rev. Steve Wilson led in
Warnke is the director of the Port Clintoq Senior High School
prayer.
"
Wind Ensemble, a group of 49, which was one of 15 bands from
Roget
Birch, teach er a t
North America invited to appear at the festival.
Meigs JWlior High and active
In a letter to Walter and Emogene crooks, before they left,
layman
of the Betl]any United
Earl said that the band would perform about five times
Methodist
Church brought the
throughout the week-long event which Is sponsored by the Dutch
mornin
g
meditation. Rev.
government. He added that to his know ledge, the Port Clinton
Howard Shiveley made anband and a band from Ida, Mich.. were the only groups from
nouncements and closed the
midwestern United States who would lie making the Jrip.
meeting
with prayer .
His musicianS were selected for performance at the event on
Breakfas
t of scrambled
the basis of audition tapes. During theJest!val, seminars were to
be available for all ensembles, and there were to have been eggs, toast, coffee cake ana
sightseeing excursions to Amsterdam, Rotterdam and· The orange juice was served by
Mrs. Curtis Johnson and Mrs.
Hague.
Each ensemble was also scheduled ~present a concert in a Howard Shiveley .
Those present .were Mike
village or city outside of Katwijk in addition to the adjudication
Huddleston,
Kelly Hayman,.
and festival concerts.
Debbie
Harden,
Sharon Baker,
Must have been quite a week!
Molly Fisher, Gene Shiveley,
RHONDA ERVIN DAILEY, Columbus, daughter of Howard Tim Hill, Bill Shiveley, Danny
and Nancy Ervin, Racine, made the dean 's list last quarter at Dudding, Steve Hill and Sharon
Ohio State University. Rhonda will be graduating in June with a Evans.
Many youth activities are
degree in nursing.
Incidentally, this young lady credits.her employment these planned for the summer
months and the weekly prayer
pa~t two years at Means Hall, University Hospital, in the intensive care wing, to the experience she had as a nurse 's aid~ at breakfast will begin again the
Veterans Memorial Hospital during her last two years of high fir~ week in September .
school. Since her sophomore year at Ohio State she has worked
summers and part-time during school quarters to help with her
school expenses.
THERE'S NOTHING like a little appreciation ....
Bea Kuhn, whose husband, tbe Rev. Robert Kuhn, is
chaplain at the Gallipolis State Institute, for the past few .weeks
has been playing for chapel services there on Sunday afternoons.
Last Sunday, a memberofthechoir presented her with a gift.

Point ·Rock
Notes
marks 18 years SQcial
By Wanetla Radekin
Steve Smith

.Armed grotip · claims · Portugal '~ hour of freedom h as· arrived

Pomeroy ,,visited her sister Mr.
and Mrs. G. A. Radekin and
Tina.
_
Mr . Francis · Canod e,
Columbus, visited his mother
Mrs. Uzzle Canode .
Mr . Frank Shiltz and son
J ohn·visited his wife Ellen who
is confined to a· Charleston
HoSpital.
.
Thirty-two members of the
Dyesville Comml!fiily Church
held Easter Sunrise Service on
the hill near the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Oxley. The
group enjoyed doughnuts and
coffee at the Oxley home then
had the regular Sunday School
lesson discussion.
Mrs. Kenneth Wilcox, David
and Darla, Middleport spent an
evening with her parents Mr,
and Mrs. John Holliday and
brother Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Holliday and family.
Mr . and Mrs . Dale Harvey
and daughters spent Easter
with his parents Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Harvey and called on
his grandparents Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Westfall.
Miss Judy Holliday attended
a birthday party for Marsha
Holcomb at the Holcomb home
at Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Bobo,
Chillicothe, have been spending some time at their farm
here and visiting their
relatives and friends .

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B- The D,uly Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Ap1 ll 25, 1974

SHOOT I N G MATCH , Fo r ~ e d
RUn Spo rtsman Cl ub noon
Sund a y Factor y c ho ked gu ns
only
4 25 J IG
GUN S H OOT , 7 p m F nd ay a t
th e Ra e ne Gu n Clu b Fac tor y
ch ok ed gun s on l y Assor ted

mea ts
J 25 21c

SHOOTIN G MATCH
Co r n
H o ll ow G un Club t urn fe rsl
rtgh t il f''..?r Mil e s Ce metery
Ru tl a nd
Factory c hoked
g u n s oe, ty Sunday Apr I 28 1
P m
J 25 Jt c

Y ARD SAL E , Fr 1day an d
Sa t ur d .1y Larkens St r ee t
Ru lt an d T r .:H ier h tt c h b.Jby
str oll er s Vo l kswa gen whee l

and rere

ch ar rs
mi se

cream can

re cord

la wn

play ers

and

_______ ..... _______

4 25 2tc

·,~_. 1\1~· ,tgqge Life lnsuron(e
Ca ll:
Ste ve Snowden
Ph . 992 71 55

p

ITA11 UIIM

A

IMJ VIANCI

7023 1

T HERE wil t b e a rumm age sa l e
en the F r y Bulldmg •n M d
d teport Good bus ness d es k
T h ur sd u y th rough Sat ur d a y
9 JQ thrO UQh 4 00
J 2d 11c

MEIGS CO UNTY
HUM ANE
SOCIETY
THRIFT SHOP
OP EN 10 Til 4 30
~ v ery

F nda y &amp; Sa tu r day

Tre asures and Junque

Help Wanted

For ,Sale

A PPLI CATI ON S on l y fo r m eter
patr ol m en and extra pOI1 ce
Pl ea se co nta c t Po m er oy
Po l l ee Depa rtm en t 99 2 2427
&lt;~ 16 1tc

AM F M st er eo rad o 8 t rn ck "'R OCERY bu smes s for sa le
4
combrn alio n ! ap e p l t~y e r
Butld mg for sal e or lease
so un d
s ys t e m
sped'k er
Phon e 77 3 56 18 from !I 30 p m
Bal an c e Sl OB 63 or b l.l dge t
to 10 p m fo r aopo 1nl ment
t erm s Call 997 J965
3 70 lfc
" 3 ti c
TI GHT B U D G E T ? Add to the
t,.a mlly
rn c om e
se r v m g ONE B A BY c alf Ca l l 99 2 7165 ONE D 2 dozer Phon e 949 385B
4 ?3 5t c
cu stom er s n ear your hom e
4 23 2tc
Ex:ce llent 1n com e po ten t,a l
Y AMA HA 350 CC str eet b lk e A 1
Fl e)( lb l e ho ur s Wr 1te Per
con d rtron 3 000 ac tu al m il es
PAI NT DAM AGE
197 1! Z I G
sonal sn op per , De p art m ent
Sho w r oo m con d d ton $75 0
ZAG SEWI N G MA CH.IN ES
Box: 10 w an . ns Prod uc ts
f rrm Ca ll 742 650 1 a ft er 5 p m
Still 1n or ,g,nal ca r ton s No
In €
Wtn ona
M1 nn eso ta
a
c
hments
needed
as
ou
r
all
4 '13
55 987
---..-------con tro l s ar e bu •l t m
Sews
&lt;I 23 31p
w tth 1 or 'l nee dl es ma k ~:ts. SO UT HE RN plilnls p la ce order
for abou t May 8 de li very
b uttonhol es sew on butt on s
WA I T R ESS and k1l ch en he lp
Cha rl es R H arri s Port l and
monog r a m s and blmd he m
wante ct
Ap p l y rn pe r son
Oh1 0 843 2693
5td c h F u ll cash pn ce $58 50
Crow 's Stea k Hou se
4 23-- tfc
or
bu
dg
e
t
plan
av
ailab
l
e
4 23 10tc
PM on e 992 2653
4 23 tf c TW O steers r eady to sl al.lghte r
CO OK or ca r hO P w an l ed for
Ph on e 985
v ,r g il W rn den
Syrac use Dnv e n Ap pl y m
3811 6
VACUUM c lea n ~e r s new 1974
p er so n
4 23 3t p
mode l
Com pl ete wl/h .a l l
,J 21 6tp
c leanr ng too l s sm al l p a1 nt
damage tn Sh ppmg w II take CL E LA N D
F A RM S
AND
$27 ca sh or budge t p lan
GR EENHOU SE A va r et y ol
availa bl e Ph on e 99 7 '/653
c abbag e an d l omato pl an t s
97 1 12x 51 MOB I L E no m e W ill
4 ?3 tt c
fo r sa l e A l so br occol i and
sacrd •cc fo r qu tc k ca t e
c au li flower
swee t peppers
S IN GER Auto m a li c Z1g Zag
Phon e 949 3811
not pepp er s egg pl an ts h ea a
4 13 6tp
Se wmg Mac h1n es 1n se win g
le tt u ce
and
EASTER
M a kes Ov ttonho tes
ta bl es
F LOWER S pan sy , m um s
sews on bu lton s bimd hem s
a1 a1 e a
hy d rang e a
e t c Top notch co nd1tton Pa y
gera n1um s p et unra s se v eral
$51 or t er m s ava tlable P ho n ~
k.tn ds o f han g mg ba sk et s
n 9 Z29 CA M A RO 1n ex ce l len t 99'}. 2653
Ger al dm e Cl elan d
Ra c 1ne
cond1hon
1964 M&lt;l l ib U SS
4 2J tf c
0 /l 0
good co nd 1f1on Phon e 949 - -------3 29 ti C
5182
L OS E we 1gh t w1 tn New Shap e
4 23 4tp
Tabl e ts a nd Hv dr ex Wa t er
- - - - - - -- - .....,
------------ -Ptl ls, Du tton Drug '" M 1d
19 72 KS CHEVY B la ze r , 4 w hee l
d l ep or t , and Nelson Dr ug
dr 1ve .1 speed tr an SmiSS IOn
" 23 31 p
excel len t c on d rt10 n Ca l l 992 - - - - - - - - - - - - - SPEC IAl
720 5 ev en ngs
AM F M st er eo rad1 o 8 tr a c k
4 23 Sic
tape c ombr na l!on 4 spea k er
-------------so und
s y s tem
Ba l a n c e
M E ~ CURY Couga r XR7 197 1
$107 49 on easy ter m s Ca ll
green me tall 1c wrth w h tt e 992 3965
&lt;1 23 H e
v rn y l top Hur st 4 sp eed 8
tre~ c k tape dec k
A 1r co n - - - - - - - - - - - - - - d rt ton mg , Wh1 fe lea th er m 5 SHELF bo okcase 3 pte ce
TUR F TR IM pu s h ty pe
ter1 or New lld b att er y N ew
stud1o c o uc h , k 1tchen t a bl e
ro tar y mower Ha s Bn gg s &amp;
and 4 c ha1 rs Rectr n1ng sofa ,
steel b elt ed r a d 1a 1s , or1gm a l
St ratto n e ng m e
7 tn c h
own er Phon e 992 31 49
m e ta l des k 1r onrng board and
p l .:~ s fl c w h ee l s loop st y l e
4 23 Stp 1r on Ba b y ca rn age co nv er ts
-------------to stro l le r , b est off er Ph on e
tubu la r ha ndl e ( 22 1982)
992 3149
4 23 Sip
POMER OYl ANDMAR K

$52~0
20", 3 H.P.

~

p e r s on s

who

1970 OL OS 98 Lu)(ury Sedan full
power eq urpmen t, e xc e ll en t
Low mrl eaae
con d 1tr o n
$1625 Phone 992 3863
4 2&lt;1 4t c

--------------OPE N Rog er H yse ll s Garag e
--------------

Rewa rd SlSO for the a rrest
a nd con vt ct10n o l person or
st ole

my

1 972 VW bus, ex cell ent c on
d ttron ver y c l ea n Phone 1
304 773 5867 $2 695
4 23 7tc

-------------For Rent

Gra ve ly tra ctor Tu es day
n1ght. Phone Sob Grueser,
992 7365 , Rt 3, Pomeroy

Re~ l

Estate For Sale

H t: u KLlOM h ou se 1n M1d
N ew k itc h en and
d lepor t
b a t ll app l rances rn c tud e d
Call 992 5310
4 2S 26tc

FUR NI SH E D a p a r t m ent , l
bedroom , c on\len rent loc at ron
In co untry near Pomeroy
Phone (3 04 ) 773 511 8
4 24 4tc

82 ACR E S FA RM Gas we ll
pond 2 bar n s, 2 hom es one
n ew 3 bed r oo m l'h ba th all
ca r p et on e 7 r ooms and ba t h
Phon e 7&lt;12
goo d con d 1t10n
6261
4 24 3tc
3

L OTS
Pom eroy

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

VW AN D DATSU
SPECIALIST

Wat er Lrn es and Power
Lm es All wo r k done by the
foot or contra ct Al so dozer
work and sephc t a nks tn·

, stalled
See or Call
Bob
Roger Jeffers
Day 992-7089
Night 992-3525
or 992-5232

or

Mon ke y Ru n ,
Phon e 992 731 1
4 24 3tc

FLOW ERS

WISEMAN
AGENU'
Ga ll,pol1 s

..· RACINE
2 STORY PERMA STO N E 3
LARGE
MO D E RN
BR
KIT CH EN , 1112
BAT H S
CAR PET
T H RO U G H OU T
F U L L BAS EME NT 2 CAR
GARA G E
ALL
ON E
L A RGE
FL AT
WEL L
L AN D SC A P ED
LO T
PR I CED M ID TWEN T IE S

- .J

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

________

....~..

RUTLAND

__ _

3 BE D ROOM S L ARGE K I T ,
LI KE
NEW
CAR P ET ,
AL UM SIDIN G ,
OW N ER
W IL L H E L P
~ !N A N CE
F O R QU ALIFIED BUYER 1

7 ROOM house and ba l h haTI
ba sement Wff h 27 acr es l arg e
fa rm bu ild mg . m ac llme sh ed
Ph on e 992 5058
4 23 6f c
N E W A L L E L E CT R IC BR ICK
f ul l b ase m en t , 2 Cifr gar a ge,
ba t h and half , loca ted 1n
Rutlan d and pr 1ced to se ll
Call 949 331 1 or 949 2153
4 23 12t c

PRICE D

Cabbage head l ettu ce , sweet
an d hot peppers , ma ny
"'ar le t 1es o f t omatoes , soc
a nd 6Sc do1en
Fto w ers- Pe tun ra s. Pans 1es ,
M ar i gOlds, plu s ma n y oth er
v ar 1et es , soc t o 65c pak
Ger an 1ums an d o t her pot
pl anl s, 10 rn ch h a n g 1ng
b asket s. petun 1iJS or vtn rng
ge r an ru m s , $ S 00
Porch
bo x es, petun 1as or pan stes ,
S3 00 or u 00
Hubba r d's G ree nhou se
Syracu se, 0
99 2-5776

AIR CONDITION NOW?

YES!
Now wh1le tl'le weather rs
sftll cool 1s the b est t1me It
can be m stalled at your
conventen ce w1th no wa1tmg
around
m hot muggy
w ea ther

BELOW

All WEATHER
HARDWARE

OFF ICE 44 6 3643

EVENING S
Bu d M cGh ee- 446 12SS
E M " Ike" W lse man- 446-

N 2nd Ave.

o.

Wanted To Huy

Pels For Sale

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofmg . Spouting
Alummum Siding
And Complete
Remodeling

608 E.
MAIN
c a b1n , bath , sprt ng wa t er ,
wood burning f trep lace, and 20
acres of la nd on b lacktop roa d

Want on ly $13,500 00
NEW liSTING - New 3 B R

all

e l ect r iC ho m e
L a rg e
closets, n 1ce ba th, 29' of
ca bmet s L 1vmg dtn1ng 36x 14,
u trl rty w 1t h w asher drve r 147
y ds of good ca r petmg Block 2
ca r gara ge w tth works hop

Nearl y 2 ac res $35,500 00
NEW liSTING - 2 bedrooms.

m ob!l e home w rt h centra l a tr
and lot, pl us patio Rents for

$1 40 00 a month Only $5.750 00
4 BEPROOMS - Ranch type

1'h , to
fr a m e, 3 bedroom s, bath , f ul l
ba sement, a lmost new gas
F A fur nace, p or ch es, la r ge
leve l y ard m e tal fe n ce

742-6273

$6,500 00

NELSON

POMEROY ~ Fu r nr sh ed
home. 3 bedl'"ooms bath
k1 t chen ca b inet s, por c hes,

MIDOLEPORT -

SPR ING IS HERE. SO ARE
TH E BUYERS LI ST IT WITH

PAINTING
ROOF PAINTING

2 story

IF YOU NEE D A HOME
RIGHT NOW CAl l US, WE
CA N SOL VE MOST OF
YOUR REA L ES TATE
PROB LEMS

us

1 1 i\. 1 01-( [')
1f f\.FORO

~'..'. ',OC t Al!)

HENRY E CLELANP
REALTOR
"991-2159 or 992 2568

992-3325 or
992-2378

CALL CARL NELSON
PHONE 992-5083 Wa t er , Elecfr1c , Gas, Sewer
lm es
m s ta lied
Work
guaranteed .
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucks
Ltmestonej. F1ll D1rt
Commercrai- Resrdenttal
Construct•on &amp; Remodel

B-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY
777 Pearl Street
Mrddleport, Oh1o
Phone 992-5367 or 992-3861

For Rent or Lease

E«PERIEftiCED
'

Radlato

------·-- ------

kmd s of suap meta ls and
rron R 1der 's Salva g e State
Rout e H 4 R! 4 Porner oy ,
Oh10 Phon e 992 5468
4 16 26tp

--OL------------D furnitu r e,- oa k tabt es,
'

clo.;'ks , 1c e bo xes, br !l ss beds
d fshe·s desks or com pl ete
h o us eh o l ds
W r rt e M
D
M !ll ef, Rt 4, Pomer oy , Oh ro,
ca l l 99?· ' ""!-0
5 13 tfc

Help Wantea

5 R""OOM:;. iii d ba t ll

tn Sy r acu se
Betw een 1 acre and 11h acr es
of land Phon e 992 3135
4 21 7t c

For Sale
EXC E L SIO R !::i alt Works , ~:;
M a in St , Pomer oy All k 1nds
of sal t water pellets , w&amp;ter
nu ggets, bl oc k salt and own
Ohto R1ver Sa lt Phone 992
89 1
..,..3_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,..

:;.OME O N E to help Wr th spri ng
c leanmg Phon e 992 2677
4 2 1 6tc

PER SON to li v e m to ass rst
person who ts rl l Call J oh n
W ee k s, 9 a m to S p m 992
2148
4 25 6tc

' w A IT RE ~ SE S,

ca r ho ps an d
~ k itc hen he lp Apply m p erson
\Cr o w •s
Steak
Hous e,
Pomer oy
4 4 tfc

GREAT
COUNTRY

STEREO
92.1
WMPO-FM
Middleport Pomeroy

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

smallest Hea ter Core

Nathan B1gg5
Aad1ator

1 17 tfc 1
-------- ------

------------ ~ ~ 7tp
wal n l.l t
AM Flii!
Ra d ro
8 track tape com ,
b rnat 1on ,Ba l an ce $ 11 0 73, or
te l'" mS availa bl e Phone 99 2

3965.

2 14 tf c

-----,--------- -

"For when the One Great
Scor~r comes to wnte agamst
your npme, he marks - not
that you won or lost - but how
you played . the game " ' Gran tland R1ce, Ame ri can ,
sports wr iter .

Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

CHRY SANTHEMUMs plan t s,
$1 a do zen Phon e 1 (30 4) 773
5147

.,,,.,.,u"'! "s TI:: t&lt;t:U

1'

Bulldozer Rad1alor to the

1

992 2534

111. YV2·2174

...

Pomeroit

FOR SALE
3 BEDROOM HOME
Beauti f ul kit che n, garage, central a ir con di ll on .

ONLY '25,000

SEPTIC TANKS ClEANED

R EA S ON ~ BLE rates , Ph

4.46
4782, Gall rpol ls, John Russell
Own er and Operator
5 12 th •

s EPTic--TA N'Ks.-'A'RoBic
SEWAGE S Y S TEMS
Cl EAN ED, REPAIR ED
MILL ER SA NITATION
STE WA RT , OH 10 PH 662
3 035

Phone: 992-2720

10 4 t fc

,O'BRIEN &amp; CROW REALTY

1 OO - Tomorrow 3, 4, New sl J , Take F I\IeFor lrfe l5

f; or F r ee Es ltmate 1nqu1re
now about a beaut1ful new
,. 0 0 t rn fa rth ton colors

200 - News 4

6

6
6
6

ALL WEATltER
HARDWARE

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

Middleport, 0

Now undel'" new
mana gement

33 . Jeff's Collie 6
8 25 - Jack laLanne 13
8 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55 - News 13
9 oo-AM 3, Paul 01xon 4, Phil Donahue 15, Abbott &amp; Costel lo
8, Friendly Junction 10, Mov1e 13 , Wild, Wild West 6
9 30 - To Tell the Truth 3; Tattletales 8
9 55 - Chuck White Report. 10
10 00 - Dinah Shore 3, 15 Joker's Wild 8, 10; Company 6
10•30 - Jeopardy 3, 4, 15. Gamb1t 8, 10
11 00 - Wizard of Odds 3, 4, 15, Password 13, M1ke Douglas 6,
Now You See It 8, 10
11 30 - Hollywood Squares3, 4, 15 , Brady Bunch 13, l ove oll1le
8, 10 , Sesame St 33
11 55- CBS News8 , Dan Imel's World 10
12 00 - Password 6 , News 8, 10, 13, Bob Braun's 50 50 Cl ub 4,
Jackpot' 3, 15.
12 . 30-Celebrltv Sweepstakes 3, 15 , So lit Second 6; Search For

On Most Amen can Cars

RON AND
KAREN TiiOMAS

- GUARANTEEDPHONE !l92-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 T1l 5

Stop m and say He llo Bnnt
a Free G1ft

Monday thr u Saturda y

tn tht s ad for

606 E. Mam, Pomeroy , 0 .

GENE WOLFE'S
BODY SHOP

AUTOMOTIVE
REPAIR

808W Mam St.

•

We r eparr lawn mowers and
ga l'ld en t r actors

PH. 949-3611

Tomorrow 8, 10

12· 45 - Electric Company 33
12 55- NBC News 3, 15
1:00 - News 3, All My Children 6, 13 ; Concentration 8, Not For
Women Only 15 , What's My Line 10
1:30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15, As the World Turns 8, 10, Let's
Make A Deal 6, 13.
2· 00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Guiding Light 8, 10 , Newl ywed

Pomeroy

PHONE 992-5271

Game 6, 13

'

Free Garage
Estimates

RAC INE, OHIO
DOZ ER and back hoe wor k ,
pon d s an d sep t 1c tan ks, drt
ch rng serv tce top so l i , f1ll
d ~rt. li meston e ,
B &amp;K E x
cava tl ng Pllone 992 5367 or
992 3861
9 1 tfc

Rlo ADY Ml )(

CO NCRETE ·

ri g h t to
pr oj ec t F ast and easy
"' e Stt ma te s Phone 99 2
Goe gl e tn R e ady Mtx
M iddl eport. Oh 1o
6
d e l1v e r ~ d

your
F r ee
328 .4 1
Co •

30

lie

~.U,-0 M o"H 1L~ 1 ri sU ran ce been WILL t rrm o r c ut trees and
c an cel l ed ?
! L o st
your
op erat or ' s l icense Call 9'92

7&lt;18

shru bber y
A l so clean oul v
ba se men t s, at tic s, etc Phon e
9.49 322 1 01'" 742 4.441
4 23 26tc

Small slam makes one way only

PillE·

NORTH i0 1
.AK6542
'AK7
86

-----~------SE PTIC
T ANKS
c leaned

M od erJJ Sanita tion , 992 3954 or
992 73.49
~
10 23 t f c

L---~----~----~--~----~----~ ~-------~------

I'

I,

'

I·

WEST

EAST

.108

.QJ93
'2
+K532
.KJ9 7

'J 93
+QJt0974

. 106

I

'.

By Helen and Sue Hottel

AQUARIUS (Jan

Older Woman After Boyfriend
VIRGO (Aug 23 -Sepl 22)
' ,
For Fnday, April 26. 197 4
Ra p:
'
Sl orm warnrngs are up !ha t tell
you to tread c arefu ll y where
I'm wom ed about a neighbor m her IIUd·2tl9 , who hve's"hear ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) ·
Be ex i ra p r o l ect 1v e and
l
rlends and mone y are con·
my guy. She's supposed to be a frtend of the f81lllly, but I not1ce walc hlul today ol !hose under
ce rned Ne1 ther lend no r b o r
distmct stgns of overfondness directed to John , who IS 18.
yo ur c harge Al so don t adm rl
row
liBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23)
She manages to he where be's at a lot, even though she's ques11onab le strang ers rnt o
yo ur home
Be sure goa ls yo u have 1n mmd
roamed. She's told him he deserves "more freedom " I was at TAURUS
(April 20-May 201
are wo rlh th e frust ra trons
his house the other day when she called and kept hun on the Travel w1!1 o lf~H more: rrus tra ·
!hey II c ause Ach1e vemenl s
phone IS minutes. Later that evenmg she had the nerve to call 11ons 1han usual today You II
wont come easrty the next few
days
MY house, asking for hun. It appeared she wanted hun to go w1th t:l e b ett er otf no t to d o a lo t o1
unnecessar y gaddmg abo ut
SCORPIO tOcl 24 -Nov 22)
her· ~r a JOb mterview
GEMINI (Ma~ 21- June 201
Yo u w111 mee t w1 th more re s1 s
" I'dDn 't know whether John realizes her mtent10ns, or even if Some budg et t rghl enmg I s
l ance than yo u c ounted on d
you try to I oree yo ur wrl l on
my evaluation IS correct, but let's put ~t thts_way - she sure gomg to be reQu tred O\ler the
next few da ys Be care rul you
o
thers toda y Wal c h ou !l
souhds like trouble'
do n 1 s p end b e y on d your
SAGITTARIUS (No v 23·
What should I do" - THREATENED BY AN OLDER means
Dec 2 1) Don t tak e anythmg
CANCER (June 21-July 2 21
for granted m bu smess deal
WOMAN
A number ol 1t11ngs Will po p up
rngs at th1 s lime lns1st upon
Dear TBAOW
tha t wr tl mh1brt your fre edom
!ac ts hgure s rec e1p ts and lu ll
Yes she does sound like trouble'
and t1 e \'Ol.l down more th an
d tsc losure
Maybe you could let your boyfriend know it would he smart
to ease up on this fr1endsh1p (without actually accusmg anyone).
U he doesn't discourage hts overeager neighbor , she may keep on 1t's the elders wbo have turned down the hea t, planned the use of
until her husband notu:es - and that could mean a big faiiUly their cars m carpools, forgone vacatwn tr1ps. My parents, who
drtve a mediurn..s!Zed car at 50 miles per hour, say 1t's the small
brawl - SUE
economy
ca rs that pass them on the highway
Dear Threatened:
We are m our 34E We rent an apartment m our home to a
A man doesn't like to feel chased, so if you can get 1t across in
young couple While we turn down the heat to 68 degrees,
very
a laughing way that an older woman 1s afte r hun, he may start
have the thermosta t set at 78 They drain the 40.
our
renters
s1de..stepptng a b1t.
gallon
water
heater w1th one sbower, and leave their lights on
On the other hand , there 's always the danger that an IS-yearday
and
mght
old might be flattered and mtrtgued by the attentions of a
We're d1sappomted that the younger generation IS so full of
roamed woman. So don't lay your suspicions on too thick. Just
talk
and so slow to act when 11 comes to conservmg keep the two separated as much as possible, and hope HER
DISTURBED
MINNESOTAN
husband does likew1se. - HELEN
Rap
DM .·
My mother IS a great cook and she loves to feed people She
I can 't see a valid argument in your letter ~ only a commv1tes my g~rl frtend over for lots of meals The result is my g f
panson hetween your parents and your tenants Come on now 1
is getting fat , and I don't like fat girls. Mom takes offense if you
Thts doesn't describe two generations 1 I coold yell about the
don't take second helpings (which I can turn down, but my g f IS 50ish man who was doing 75 mph while I was practically standing
afrmd to).
.
still at 50 - but what does 1t prove· only that every age has 1ts
What can I do w1thout hurting either one's feelings? -TONY
law-breakers
Dear Tony
So let's don't generalize Conservation and sh ortages are
I take 1t you don't have a we1ght problem So tell your girl
tough enough w1tbout turnmg them into a generation war - SUE
friend the secret of "eating thin " m sp1te of a mother who "cooks
fat." - HELEN
,
Jtl!lJ~i1[E®IkJ koowLI,J .-1 ,_.
Tony:
... And then have a talk With your motber. lf she won't "cook
Unscramble lhese four Jumbles,
thin "at least she can learn not to argue w1th "No thank you " one letler to each square, to
'
SUE
rorm four ordinary words.
Dear Sue:
I get tired of heartng the younger generation knocking people
my parents' age, as several have in your column I ha ve noticed

e

8 30 - Washington Connect1an 20, S1x Milli on Doll ar Man 6, 13,
Good Times 8; Basebal l 4, Marshall News·Meelong 33
9 00 - Bicentennial Lecture Ser ies 20, Gi rl With Someth1ng
Extra 3, 15, CBS News Spec1al8, 10 , Ma sterpiece Thea tre 33
9 30 - Bria n Ke 1th 3, 15, Odd Couple 13, Movie 6
10 00 - Country Com es Hom e 3, 15 , To m a 13, N ews 20 , Confl tcls
of Harry

S Truman 33

10 30 - Day At Night 33.
10 45 - Farm, Home and Garden 20
11 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15 , Janak! 33, Av! al 1on Weather 20
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, In Concert 6 , Mov ies " Sa yonara"
8, " The Vulture" 10, "The P1l and Ihe Pendul um" 13
00 - Mldntgh t Specral 3, 4, In Con cert 13 , Don K irshner ' s
Roc k Conce r t 6 , Take F1 ve For Lt fe 15, M ovre " Tr apped tn
Tang ters " 10
2 30 - Mov te " The Terrornaut s " .4 . News 13
4 00 - Mov ie "Season o f Pass 1on" 4

5 30- Movle " The Nunandthe Sergeant"4
CABLE CHANNEl FIVE
7 00 p m - LoCal New s
7 JO p m - Hollywood Old1es
9 30 p .m -

April 28, 1974

than usual where work rs c an ~
cerned Av o rO co wo rk ers who
are c are le ss or rnexper rence d
w1 th too ts

Thrs year you are ltke lv to
start severa l new pro1ects with
prom1se II you re perststant
and pa t rent the y II la te r pro ve
rewardmg

PIS CES (Feb 20-Mar ch 20)

Romanl rc ma ilers wrll be a Itt
tte rocky !he nex t c oup le of
days Try not to be too de

~'Hd'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

DOWN

1. Pers1an
tiger
5. Bra1d

1. Neckw ear

2. Hourly

3. M u se

of
poetry
4. Middle·
aisled it
agam

10 Nucleus
II. Immech·
ately
12. Anc1ent
Syna
13 ·-

5. Waste

unto

allowan ce

Cae sar

' Vesteriln's Answer
23. Chamber
some
phil·
24. Due to
7. Withstood
osopher
happen
8. Barren
· 21 Ocean
25. Pitfall
9. W1lh
route
28. Use
pam
(hyph
29. Csssettes
11. Chatter
wd )
30. Obliterate
15. Shade
22 Short
32. Religious
of
operatJc
body
blue
SOli&amp;
34. Sesame
6. Mr.
Reagan, to

"

14. Drum

roll
(hyph
wd)
16. English
nver
17. Little
flower

l8. Seed
coa ting

18 Greek

19. Scotllsh

I'&lt;"""'T.:--T=:'-,..To"""l

explorer

20. Trust
21. Embark

25.Journey
!4. Withered
Z5. Manhme

Sig nal
Z6. Placed
Z7. Jot
down
thoughts
31. Km to
porter
32. Large
brewmg
urn
33. Shred
35. Mulberry
cloth
36. Lure
37. "Little
White

-"

38.Adnun
Isle red

19. Otherw1se

Squares 4, Con cen t r a t ion
Washmgton Re\ltew 20, 33 , Brad y Bunch 6, 13 , W1 ld
Sctence 3, 15 , Big Red Ma chme 4, D1 r ty Sa ll y 8, 10

8.00 -

20 -Fe b

19) Bq. more salety-cooscrous

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:

I

( )

II

I

II

One letter s1mply stands for another In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, t he length and formati on of the words are a!'
hints Each day the code leiters are different

COASJF

II

t
J
I I

CJlYPrOQUOTES

NU/JER

Now orranro tho circlodlottora
an1wer, u
by the above c:utoon.

l o form the aurpritt

~=~====~::=:====-~•:u~r~r:••:lod:

L..._~. .~·::::SIII:::JIIl:.:::IISI::.:AHSWII==
.
·:___I (

XI XI )
(Aaawen lomorr ow'

Ye11erda,.·.

Jumbl .. , VIRUS OPIUM

I

BLOUSE

XM O H KXM L I MFK MHK NXVH)
HKI M BL KX
SF I IOMH
CY
EVHK
XM FI KH GJ K X M FKK I F SK OVB ~D
XOH

V N B .- XMBIJ

N F IT

1974 CHEVEU.E a.ASSIC........... ~3995

MOVIES

ili!J tn4 Kine Fe~turu Srncllate, Inc.)

'Q 1086 5 4

+A

.A85 32
Both vulne rable

West

"

Pass
Pass
Pass

cl ot h t nm, hnted glass, fac tor y a rr, turbo h y dr amahc ,
P S , P B , s1de prot ect1 ve mouldmgs, H 78 w s w t 1res,
bumper guards , ra d to Wi th tape

,.
' v

..

Cust om Hatchbac k Cpe, dar k g ree n f 1n1sh, l ike n ew
wh 1t e wal l ftres , fu ll wh cov ers, protecti ve s ide mldgs ,
... ~ P B , r adro , 6 cy l engtne w tth stand ard t r an s A v ery
popul a r mode l &amp; one that w rll plea se yo u

"

1971 DODGE CORONET.............$1495
4 door, 1 ownel'" ne w car trade m , good 1st ltne t tr es ,
s po tl ess cle an mfei'"IOr, small V 8 engrne , autom a t rc tr an s
mrss1on The nght s ize - the r1ght nee Valu e S167S

1972 CHEVROLET
6 cy linder ,

UP. ......... $2495

sl a nd ~ rd t

m1ss ion , wh ite o v er blue, v ,nyl
m te nor, a ppea ra nce o f new truck, rad to. l1ke new white
wa ll t1res, wheel co ver s,8' w tde body , step bum per

"
,.

1969 CHEVEUE COUPE.. ...........$1595

,.

Local 1 owner c ar , good hres, dar k red fini sh, v myl rn terlor , V 8 engine, automahc, P. steering Radro

"'

$3395

I

Whit e ftnt sh , blue v m y l roof , 350 V -8 w ith T~ l'"bo
H y dramat lc, powe r stee ring &amp; brakes, radio , white-wall
tires . wh co ver s, undersea /. New car with full warranty

·-----------------------Large Inventory of Ught Duty New 74
Chevrolet Pickup, Chevy Van, Sport Van, Step
Van.
We Have the Right Deal for You

"WWrao'f&amp;..st,~IIIIUSII*'
WI SRl SElVIG CIIVIlOUT CAliS 11UCII.
&amp;

&amp;

'

'"
.~.

..-..
- ".

Soulh

Pass
Pass
Pass

4NT

2'J

6'J

Pa:ss

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Pess1m1st1c Pete looked
over the dumm y and
remarked, "We ha ve a pretty
good play for seven, but smce
we are m SIX I had best try to
msure my contract."
Pete took h1s ace of d1amonds, led a low spade and
ducked m dummy West held
the tr~ck and led a second
diamond Pete, ruffed led a
trump to dummy's ace, ruffed
a low spade, cashed h1s queen
and dummy's king of trumps,
discarded h1s four losmg
c lubs on four spades and
claimed h1s contract
The hand IS worlhy of con·
s1derable study. Seven would
not be a bad contract. It
would make agamst a better
break m e1ther major sult,but w1th the actual dtstnbutwn of the East·West cards
Pete's hne of play was lhe
only one that would brmg m
12 tncks
As a further pomt of m·
terest 1f West had been one of
those 'super players who see
all the cards before the open·
mg lead IS made, he would
have plunked the 10 of clubs
on the table Pete would have
been unable to fmd any play
to make the slam

THE BORN WSER
MOM I YOU'RE NOT
HELPINO IM'ITER5
~y

5ERVIN0 HER

WH'/ f..M. I

50 MANY
.5TARCHE5 r

FOI..LOWI~(o

'{)U , SIR~IT

MIJSr

The b1ddmg has been
West
North East
t•
Pass
Pass
3'P
Pass
P ass Q

4'

1-:AiURA!:' BCfiJ
lEAt:€R ~

ALLEY OOP

PFIESE.NTING

&gt;Me
O.NO&amp;-E
GESTURE

25
South

1'f
4+

11J "

.J •

\

HE HUNG OUT

4NT

Pass

Pass
s•
Pass
You, South, hold

?

I HEAR TELL SHERIFF
TAIT IS CAMPAIGNIN'
EXTRV HARD FER
RE· ELECTION, LOWEEllf

TH ' WASHIN' FER ME

1'HIS MORNI N'

attempt ta get to seven. ,;1

TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of biddill&amp; five hearts,
your partner has bid five d!lmonda 1o show jllll ane aco m
responoe \o your Blackwood
What do you do now? 1

\

'

se~T

'OJ AAf: A

INEW.SPAPER ENTER PR - E ASSN I

What do you do now'
A-Just bid stx heorts. There
are 1.oe many bola to warrant an

1

.

3'J
S'J
Pass

East

•K 2 'JAJ765+A64.Q94

·PrOM EROY MOTOR CO.

'

North

'

"

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992-2126
Open Eves Ttl 8
POMEROY

1•

Opemng lead - +Q

4 door l u xury car, w h tf e trnlsh w 1th v iny l top , green knit

1973 CHEV. NOVA................... ~2695

.7

·-'
I
\

/.

I I'

'

G MMS X M1

Vesterday'a Cryptoquote : POVERTY MAY PARTLY
ECLIPSE A GENTLEMAN BUT IT CANNOT TOTALLY OS.
SCURE HIM.-CERVANTES

FORCED

An' " "r: Th ey can fw qu1te e nl ~rta mtng m the dark -

lntl'" i aue

AXYDLBAA X Jl
L ONGFELLOW

SOUTH

\

'

221

Yo u re b ut1dtng up more re ·
sen lmen t !han yo u shoold
about a s1 tuatton you \le been
kee p tng to yoursell ra the r
than rr'onrng rt out OQenly

+

liN

.

25

LEO (July 23 - Au g

manchng ol a l olled one

19) One· l o ·one relatro nshrps
w111 ha11 2 t o be handled w tth
e xt reme tac l o ver the ne:-.1 few
da ys Partne rshiP stt u a11on s
are explos1ve

.Q4

I

'

2 30 - Doctors 3, 4, 15, Edge of Night 8, 10; Girl in My Ute 6, 13
3 oo - Another World 3, 4, 15 , Genera: Hospital 6, 13, Lock,
Stock &amp; Barrel20, Price Is Right 8, 10.
3 30 - One Life to Live 6, 13; Phil Donahue 4, Oh io Th is Week
20; HowtoSurvlveAMarrlage3, 15; MatchGame8. 10
4 00 - Mr. Cartoon 3, Somerset 15 , Sesame 51 20, 33, love,
American Style 13 , Lucy Show B, Huck and Yog i 6, Mov1e
"The Golden Hawk" 10.
4 30 - Green Acres 3; Gilligan's Island 6, 13 , Bonanza 15 , Jac k·
pot 4, Hazel 8
5 00 - Bonanza 3; Merv Griffin 4, Andy Griffith 8, MISter
Rogers 20, 33 ; Gomer Pyle, USMC 13 ; Big Valley 6.
5 30- Beverly Hillbllll~s 8, Elec Co. 33 , Hodaeoodae Lodae 20
Hogan's Heroes 13 , Trails West 15.
6' 00 - News 3, 4. 8, 10, 15, ABC News 13, Sesame Sl 20; Truth
or Conseq. 6; Project Care 33.
6 30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15, ABC News6, CBS News 8, 10 , Room
222 13.
7 00 - Truth or Conseq. 3, Beat the Clock 4, News 6, 10, What's
My Line 3; Wild _Kingdom 13; Elec Co 20, Aviation Weather
33 , Area Mayor's Report.
7· 30 - Porter Wagoner 3, To Tell the Truth 6; Wall St Week 20,
33, New Treasure Hunt 10 r Beat tile Clock 13, Hollywood

DAY OR NIGHT

RACINE GARAGE

25- Farm Report 13
30 - Five Minutes to L1ve By 4. News 6, Bi ble Answers 8,
Blue Ridge Quartet 13
35 - Columbus Today 4
45 - Morning Report 3, Farmllme 10
00 - Today 3, 4, 15, CBS News 8, 10, D1 ck Van Dyke 13,
Speedracer 6
30 - New Zoo Revue6 ; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle 13

7
8 oo-captal n Kangaroo 8, 10, New Zoo Revu e 13, Sesam e St

H

I

Sunrise Seminar .4 , Sacr ed Heart 10
Folk Lttera ture 3, Milestones of Progress 10

6 15 -

7

N 2nd Av e

FRIPAY, APRIL 26, 1974

6 00 -

AI! WEATHER
HARDWARE

From the largest Truck or

N EW 3 t:l ed r oom home, 1'1'7nJ ath •
gar age , b asement on Gravell
Hil l. Mrd d leport Nat ural gas.i
a l ready rn
Ph on e Date
Dutton , 992 3369 ev en rng s

11 00 - News 13 , Janak l33, New s 3, 4, 6, 15
11 30 - Jol1nny Carson 3. 15
11 35 - Jol1nny Carson 4

399 "• Mam
Pomeroy , 0
L ocated at Modern Supply
Small Eng i ne Rep a 1r

-----------------------NEW '73 IMPALA SPORT CPE.

Service

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

.... J092

1973 CHEV. CAPRICE.. ............. ~3895

INTERIOR EXTERIOR

f r ame, 3 bedroom s, b a l h,
ga r age ,
tr arle r
r e ntal,
sever al lots $9, 500 00

home la r ge bath, n tce close ts,
all pa ne led E ff iCien t kr tchen
dm rng 11!:2 a cl'"es $18,000 00

Wtlkmson Small Engme

4 Door, less th an 3500 mile s, green vrn y l top &amp; l1gh t green
f l nt sh, green v rn y l m t error trrm, 350 V 8, 2 bbl , tmted
gl ass, fa ctory a 1r c ondtfroned, AM r ad1o, floor mats, body
prot ect tve m l dg , power sl eer rng &amp; brakes. turbo
hydramah c, ex t decor package . comfor ttlt stee ring
wheel , w h cov ers &amp; w w trres Very nice &amp; 1ts loaded Wlfh
ex tr as

PHONE

SYRACUSE -

frame , 4 b ed r oom s, 11h
baths. d mlng r oom , loads of
ga rd en s p ace
p o r c h es,
about 2 ac r es

NEW li STING - 2 bedroom

H! r.-N I

o.

lois of ground S7. 100 00
CARPENTER - 2 story

bath, new gas fu r nace, large
por ch and 2 lots $9500 00

GORDON !I

POMEROY,

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

for Rent or Sale

Middleport. 0

3796

NEW liSTING - 3 B R log

IS YOUR ROOF
LEAKING?
IS IT COLOR FADED?

WIN AT BRIDGE

Under New Management

VEGETABLE AND
R.OWER PLANTS

SHULER'S MARKET

Mason, W Va

Phone 9'12-2550

M ARK E T $1 2, 000
I

MATERIALS CO.

COMPLETE
VEGETABLES AND

THE

I

4/73-5554

. DITCHING SERVlCE

Phone 992 1181

1BEND TIRE CENTER

EO

Phone Stanley 949-2789
Bumper to Bumper
Service
Foreign rars Welcom e

SA CRES ot ground on Sta te 143.
2' 1 mrles f r om Harn sonv rll e
Phon e 99 2 37 40 a ft er 4 p m
4 2.4 7t c

EX CL U SIV E
LO C A T I ON S 1
Del u )(e full fea t ur ed ho m es
fro m $25 000 t o $45 000 "
bedr oom s 2 ba th s 2 c a r
g ar age , f amily r oom , arr
c ond il 10n ed , l ar g e co un t r y
lot s V rs1t R oc k Spr rngs l USt
P2 m1 l es north of Pom er o y
M as on , W V a
whe re R ts 33 and 7 m e e t ~
5881 ••
N E' x t to El ementary and n ew
I
•t
H rgh sc hool A l so v rSII Rrgg s
~T RAWBERRY plant s Ch ar 11e
Cr es t M anor , on Rt 7 1ust
Fos ter R t 2 Ra c me Ohro
pa st East ern J r and Sr H rgh
P hon e 24 7 2309
Sc hool For full det ail s w rrt e
4 19 12t c
Goeg l e m . G reat
Fr ed B
Am er ,can Hom es
221 W
GO LD t r um p e t w l h c a se ,
Se cond St
Pom eroy or ca ll
Sc r ea me r 1 5 sp boy 's b 1cy c1e
ou r 24 h o ur n umb er 1n
w th sp eedom eter Ph on e 992
1 2 39 9 681
Co lu m bus ,
Bu!lffer so f W G Bes t Hom es
5127 a fter 3 p m
4 21 6tc 4 21 6f c

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

DON'T DRIVE A
GAS.GULPER
OR A GAS HOG

1n

It 's

'BA R GA IN " I S OUR MID DL E
N A ME at K UH L B BAR GAIN
CEN T ER
All app l ran ces
FUt.! N t SH EO
apa rt m ent ,
have 30 day g uar an tees
adu lts on ly Phone 99 2 559 2
K OSCO !
KO::iM t:: ll l.~
&amp;
Retn gerat ors $ 19 95 up A pt
4 9 ff c
W tu :;
1- or a good l 1n e of
s11e r efrigera tor s $49 95, G E
Cosm c t tcs f rt endly se r v1ce
pushbu tton e l e c t r~c r anges
and som eone to c hat w dh , 2 BEDROOM mobile h om e a~r
$4 9 95 lU St 6 yr s old 20" g as
cond 1f1 0n 1ng an d I n t he
g tve me a call He len Ja ne
range s
(4 bur n er)
$ 45
Rac me ar ea Phone 992 58 59
Or ow n , 992 5 113
W r rn g e r
w a sh er s
[so m e
J 19 He
4 15 ft c
Maytags) S45 u p
Au t o
$45
E
l
ect
dr
y ers
w
a
sh
ers
2~
ROOM- -;Qb-;ie - hom e.
$35,
N EW
FUR NIT U RE
cable T V , ai r con,d tt tOn rng ,
SAVINGS
Re g
$69 95
Most Vane t1 es of
locat ed m Pom ero y
West
R EC L IN ERS $50, 3 p c t able
M am Str ee t Phon e 992 56 23
se t ( m a p l e or wal l S34 95
4 23 3tc
Lots o f c lean USED turn 1t ure
r ound OAK t abl es, oak buffe t,
ONE 3 bed r oom t rar l er Prefer
wood , ch ro me d rn ett es p r
con slr l.lc tton wo r k er s Phone
cor ner ch rnil cab1net s w 1t h
992 74 48 a ft er S p m
•
ma t ch rng t a bl e and 6 Sh1 el d
4 23 Jl p
b ack c h affS 12 ma ster an d 4
S1d e l, pecan fr n1sh $285 , oth er
Stop &amp; see ou r se lec·
N EW fur nr shed a partmen t 3
d m 1ng r m su rt es trom $12 5,
ro oms and ba th Rea l n 1c e
bed r oom sur tes,"'"Co uch es. O S
tton before you buy!
Reynolds '
A par t m ent s
c hairS , stu rd y and st r a 1gh t
Mason , W Va , ph on e 773
map l e c ha1 rs ss , m eta l desks ,
514 1 on good road
great fo r stud ent s or mom 's
4 23 H e
sew rng , ve r y SPEC IA L $1'1
W. Mam Pome roy,
lg se l ec t ron occ as t abl es .
T RAIL E R 2bed ro~;;;-~,lo~ to
c h ests d r essers , st r cha rrs
sw1mmmg poo l sch ool and
even fl a t top tru n ks luggage
4 F A M IL Y y ar d sa le anftQues,
shopp rng cen ter Phon e 99 2
Op en to 7 p m Tu esday t hr u
f ur nit ur e, an d d 1shes 2 m les
5914
Sunday KU HL 5 BARG AI N
south of Mrddlepo r t off Rout e
4 21 6t c
CE N TER R t 7 'at caut1on
7 on Sto f y 's Run Roa d Apn l
llghl ' TUP PE RS PLA IN S
20 an d 21
OHIO
4 19 61c
4 21 6tc
4 1&lt;1 tfc
CON CE RNI N U 1-\Lt :. w 14 In -- -- -~---- --- Fl.l r ntshed or 69 R I C HLIN E fo l d up camp er
t h e Brb l e Was Cor ne l rus ..: rHtN ~ A P I
un fu r n rst1ed ups t a 1r s 3 rms
trailer Sl eep s 6, used l i tt le ,
saved befo r e Pet er had oc
$3 00 Ph one 667 3858
c
cas on to sp eak to h 1m? No '
SUit able fo r s rng le per son or 2
4 21 61
Acts II 14 Th e Pentec ost al
wo r ktng
g i r ls
Walk 1n g - - - - - - -- - - - - -F rr e rs l rl on So ut h Thrrd
drstanc e to downtown S115
4
YR
:_ ....
'.7 t:L.UII" "' ·
A v enu e , M iddl epo rt , Oh10
m o , ufll! t 1es ex tra
Phon e
Reg rst ered Qua r ter Horse , a
45760
667 3858
good r ace h orse or t r arn ed as
41 9 6t c
4 21 6t c
a p l ea s ure hor se Cal l 99 2
2622
1 ANU 4 t&lt;UUM t urn i Sh eO and
4 24 3t p
unfl.lrn 1shed
iJpartm ents
-NI Gr1T c r aw ler s, pa y m g top
Phone 992 543 4
AMERI C AN bunk
4 12 tf c EARLY
p r rce Fr te s phon e 992 749 4
beds , only 2'1~ years .ol d
4 23 12tc
E xce ll en t cond 1l on , $100 Ca l l
P RI V A T E m ee t 1ng r oom for
~-~----------985 3824 , Ch es ter
an y or gant zaflon . phone 992
U SED gu n s, pa yrng top prr ce
4 25 4t c
3975
F rf e's, phone 992 7494
3 1l tfc
4 23 12tc
STARC R AF T Cam per s Ser vic e
N0 - 1 coPJ)er 8 sc ~rad,at or s, SM A L L MODER N ho use and an d q u a lity Reese H1tc h es
40c r ed br aSs 40c 1 b&lt;J tt ertes
and au t o a wn1 ngs, 25 pet o tt
garden n ear Port l and Ca lt
$ 1 40 M A Ha l l. Reed SVi l l e
camp Con l ey Star cr aft Sa l es,
84 3 2653 even 1nQS
Oh ro Phon e 376 6249
Rt 62 N or t h of Po ml P l e.::~ sa n t
4 23 Jtc
3 24 He
behrnd Red Carpet lti n
4 24 Jt c
OL D au to's , 6 or mo r e cars, wil l
g 1ve $3 00 pr ece, 18 ca r s o r
E L EC T R I C gurta r and am
m or e Wi ll g 1ve be trer pr 1ce
p ll f u~r
Ph one 992 3198 or see
Ca ll 985 4297
D AC H SH U N D Pu iJP' e!:&gt; Call
a t 16 71 L mcoln Hgts
3 28 tf c
742 509 2 after 6 p m
4 24 4tc
4 23 4tc
~--- ------ ----~A"!;'\Tpar d for al l m akes anct
W E AR E p!Ckrng l.I P a p1 an o rn
m od e l s of mo bil e homes P OOD L E groomrng , SS AK C~
yo ur area and would l rk e
To y St ud Ser v 1ce, S6 0 Ph on e
Phon e ar ea code 614 423 953 1
so me res ponS i ble par t y to
667 391 5 Coo l v ill e
4 13 H e
Ca ll
take over paym en ts
4 21 St p
--~------ -------'
Cr edrt Manager {614 ) 77 2
TR A N SM I SS I ON
for
1965
5669 or w r 1te 260 East Ma m
M us tan g , 6 CYlinder , 3 speed
Str ee t Chr ll 1cothe Oh ro 4560 1
sta fld ard Ph one 992 3198 or
4 7 tfc
con t ac t at 167 1 L1nco 1n H g ts . BUSI N E SS bulld m g m do wn
Pom er o y
fown Pom eroy, Oh io Ca ll 99?
l6 1! 2 "'" T F IBERG L ASS ou t
4 24 4tc
3975 or 99 2 5786
board , 80 h p
Merc ury
4 2 26 tc
comp l ete wr th t rail er Phon e
JUN K Au tos , complet e a nd
985 4176
d el 1vered to our ya rd We Pi ck
4 21 6tp
up a uto bodres and b l.l y a ll

1:=====~

HOU SE on 205 Spr n g Ave nu e m
Pomeroy S6000
4 24 31p

NI CE 3 bedroom hom e tor sa le
$11 ,000 Phon e 992 3975 or 99 2
25 71
4 19 tf c

t 72

Stop In a nd See Our
Floor D1 s play.

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

Phone 742 · 4~73
742-5595
Bt II Brown, Owner
Rutland, Ohio

HOGG &amp; 71JSPAN

•

M I\ LH I NES R l a ir
se r v 1ce. a ll m a kes, 99 2 .! 284
Th e Fa bnc Shop , Pomero y
A ul hor, ze d St ng er Sales and
Servt ce We Sharpen Sc issors
3 29 tf c

Real Estate For Sale

nea r Cr ossroad s on State
Ro ute 12d, 8 30 to 6 p m
M on d ay through SiJt ur da y
Phone 99 2 568 2 or 992 712 1
4 12 26tc

NOTICE!

Jack W Ca r sey, M gr

FURNITURE

6 30 - News 3, 4, CBS News 8, 10, Your Future Is Now 33 NB C
News 15, ABC News 6, Room 222 13
7 oo - Beatthe Clock 4, What's My Line 8, News 6, 101 Elec Co
20 , Truth or Consequences 3. Let's Make A Deal 13, Sports
Desk 15; Turned on CriSi s 33
7 30 - Hollywood Squares 3; Wild Kingdom 10. To Tell the
Truth 6; Ozzle's Gtrls 8, Beat the Clock 13 ; Zoom 20, Dea ler's
Choice A, Baseball 15
8·00 - Tile Waltans 10, B. Fl1p Wilson 3, 4, 15 , Chopper One 6. 13
Behind the Lmes 20, 33
8 311"- Firehouse 6, 13
9. 00 - IronSide 3, 4, Kung Fu 6, 13, Black Journal 20, Movoe 8,
10, War and Peace 33
10· 00 - News 20, MuSi c Country USA 3, 4, AB C News Closeup 6,
13 , TBA 15
10 30 - Day AI Night 33 , Musoc Courtry USA 15

CAPRICORN (Dec 22· Jan

Try l o keep y ou ~

you d l1ke
cool

Generation Rap

THURSPAY, APRIL2$, 1974
6 00 - New• 8; 10 , Sesame St 20; ABC News IJ, News 3, 4. 15 .
Truth or Conseq 6, L11la s, Yoga and You 33

FIRE PEPARTMENT
EQUIPMENT
EXTINGUISHER
SALES &amp; SERVICE
HOME AlARMS

Bu11t to Your ·~pees .
Delwered to Job S1te

and

Television Log

BROWN'S·FIRE &amp;
SAFETY EQUIPMENT

,.,.,
·- 's?\;

OFFICE SUPPLIES

'S t: W I Nlio

Auto Sales

Offtce

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

by
th e acr e hourl y or cM tra ct ,
fa r m pond s, road s, e tc La r ge
doze r and op erator w 1th O\ler
20 year s ex: p err ence Pull m s
E ~ c a v at ng Pom er oy Oh io
Phon e 992 ?478
12 19 tt c

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

Across lr om Pom e roy Post

4 10 lfc

DOiE R~;k. la n dd~;i~

WOOD TRUSSES

992-2094
606 E. Main
Pomero•·

~

over run k a ut omo br l~s over to
us Wil l p ay $5 fo r Ol d tunk
ca r s Pho ne 1 (3 04) 77 3 5890
R rv cr s de Au t o W r ec km g
4 9 26tc

ASK !JS ABOUT
PRE- FABRICATED

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

. 2 11 tfC
-TIO------ -- . . . .-- - N 1 fu ss , don t cuSs , t ur n

Mobile Homes For Sale

MOWERS

.

9 - TbeDaUy Sentmel, Middleport-Pom...oy, O., April25, 1974

.

d o1e r , loader
and ba c khoe work , sept rc
tanks 1nstalled dump t r uck s
and lo bo ys tor h 1re, Wi l l hau l •
fil l d1rt , top so rl l 1m estone
and gr av el Ca l l Bob or Roger
Jeff er s da y phon e 992 7089,
nr ght pho ne 992 3525 or 992

523'/

'

I' Busiitess Services.

~XC A VA TING

?' P

dts.hes, toys, col lecta bles

va

C BRA DF O RD . A uct1on eer
Comp le te Serv 1Ce
Phon e 94Y :Jil 21 or: 949 3161
R ac me , Oh io
Cr ltt Bradford
s 1 lf c

For Sale

Cl of htn g, book s, r eco r ds
lamps, ptctures, fur n1ture,

A T O Z Ma r t u s ed furn1sh ed
a pp lf unccs, ctolh 1ng d tshes
and m tsc
R t J J oppo s1te
tr a d e r cou r t , Ha rt for d
W

Busmess Services

Resul~s!

Serttinel Classifieds Get
Notice

.

.

(

�,, .
B- The D,uly Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Ap1 ll 25, 1974

SHOOT I N G MATCH , Fo r ~ e d
RUn Spo rtsman Cl ub noon
Sund a y Factor y c ho ked gu ns
only
4 25 J IG
GUN S H OOT , 7 p m F nd ay a t
th e Ra e ne Gu n Clu b Fac tor y
ch ok ed gun s on l y Assor ted

mea ts
J 25 21c

SHOOTIN G MATCH
Co r n
H o ll ow G un Club t urn fe rsl
rtgh t il f''..?r Mil e s Ce metery
Ru tl a nd
Factory c hoked
g u n s oe, ty Sunday Apr I 28 1
P m
J 25 Jt c

Y ARD SAL E , Fr 1day an d
Sa t ur d .1y Larkens St r ee t
Ru lt an d T r .:H ier h tt c h b.Jby
str oll er s Vo l kswa gen whee l

and rere

ch ar rs
mi se

cream can

re cord

la wn

play ers

and

_______ ..... _______

4 25 2tc

·,~_. 1\1~· ,tgqge Life lnsuron(e
Ca ll:
Ste ve Snowden
Ph . 992 71 55

p

ITA11 UIIM

A

IMJ VIANCI

7023 1

T HERE wil t b e a rumm age sa l e
en the F r y Bulldmg •n M d
d teport Good bus ness d es k
T h ur sd u y th rough Sat ur d a y
9 JQ thrO UQh 4 00
J 2d 11c

MEIGS CO UNTY
HUM ANE
SOCIETY
THRIFT SHOP
OP EN 10 Til 4 30
~ v ery

F nda y &amp; Sa tu r day

Tre asures and Junque

Help Wanted

For ,Sale

A PPLI CATI ON S on l y fo r m eter
patr ol m en and extra pOI1 ce
Pl ea se co nta c t Po m er oy
Po l l ee Depa rtm en t 99 2 2427
&lt;~ 16 1tc

AM F M st er eo rad o 8 t rn ck "'R OCERY bu smes s for sa le
4
combrn alio n ! ap e p l t~y e r
Butld mg for sal e or lease
so un d
s ys t e m
sped'k er
Phon e 77 3 56 18 from !I 30 p m
Bal an c e Sl OB 63 or b l.l dge t
to 10 p m fo r aopo 1nl ment
t erm s Call 997 J965
3 70 lfc
" 3 ti c
TI GHT B U D G E T ? Add to the
t,.a mlly
rn c om e
se r v m g ONE B A BY c alf Ca l l 99 2 7165 ONE D 2 dozer Phon e 949 385B
4 ?3 5t c
cu stom er s n ear your hom e
4 23 2tc
Ex:ce llent 1n com e po ten t,a l
Y AMA HA 350 CC str eet b lk e A 1
Fl e)( lb l e ho ur s Wr 1te Per
con d rtron 3 000 ac tu al m il es
PAI NT DAM AGE
197 1! Z I G
sonal sn op per , De p art m ent
Sho w r oo m con d d ton $75 0
ZAG SEWI N G MA CH.IN ES
Box: 10 w an . ns Prod uc ts
f rrm Ca ll 742 650 1 a ft er 5 p m
Still 1n or ,g,nal ca r ton s No
In €
Wtn ona
M1 nn eso ta
a
c
hments
needed
as
ou
r
all
4 '13
55 987
---..-------con tro l s ar e bu •l t m
Sews
&lt;I 23 31p
w tth 1 or 'l nee dl es ma k ~:ts. SO UT HE RN plilnls p la ce order
for abou t May 8 de li very
b uttonhol es sew on butt on s
WA I T R ESS and k1l ch en he lp
Cha rl es R H arri s Port l and
monog r a m s and blmd he m
wante ct
Ap p l y rn pe r son
Oh1 0 843 2693
5td c h F u ll cash pn ce $58 50
Crow 's Stea k Hou se
4 23-- tfc
or
bu
dg
e
t
plan
av
ailab
l
e
4 23 10tc
PM on e 992 2653
4 23 tf c TW O steers r eady to sl al.lghte r
CO OK or ca r hO P w an l ed for
Ph on e 985
v ,r g il W rn den
Syrac use Dnv e n Ap pl y m
3811 6
VACUUM c lea n ~e r s new 1974
p er so n
4 23 3t p
mode l
Com pl ete wl/h .a l l
,J 21 6tp
c leanr ng too l s sm al l p a1 nt
damage tn Sh ppmg w II take CL E LA N D
F A RM S
AND
$27 ca sh or budge t p lan
GR EENHOU SE A va r et y ol
availa bl e Ph on e 99 7 '/653
c abbag e an d l omato pl an t s
97 1 12x 51 MOB I L E no m e W ill
4 ?3 tt c
fo r sa l e A l so br occol i and
sacrd •cc fo r qu tc k ca t e
c au li flower
swee t peppers
S IN GER Auto m a li c Z1g Zag
Phon e 949 3811
not pepp er s egg pl an ts h ea a
4 13 6tp
Se wmg Mac h1n es 1n se win g
le tt u ce
and
EASTER
M a kes Ov ttonho tes
ta bl es
F LOWER S pan sy , m um s
sews on bu lton s bimd hem s
a1 a1 e a
hy d rang e a
e t c Top notch co nd1tton Pa y
gera n1um s p et unra s se v eral
$51 or t er m s ava tlable P ho n ~
k.tn ds o f han g mg ba sk et s
n 9 Z29 CA M A RO 1n ex ce l len t 99'}. 2653
Ger al dm e Cl elan d
Ra c 1ne
cond1hon
1964 M&lt;l l ib U SS
4 2J tf c
0 /l 0
good co nd 1f1on Phon e 949 - -------3 29 ti C
5182
L OS E we 1gh t w1 tn New Shap e
4 23 4tp
Tabl e ts a nd Hv dr ex Wa t er
- - - - - - -- - .....,
------------ -Ptl ls, Du tton Drug '" M 1d
19 72 KS CHEVY B la ze r , 4 w hee l
d l ep or t , and Nelson Dr ug
dr 1ve .1 speed tr an SmiSS IOn
" 23 31 p
excel len t c on d rt10 n Ca l l 992 - - - - - - - - - - - - - SPEC IAl
720 5 ev en ngs
AM F M st er eo rad1 o 8 tr a c k
4 23 Sic
tape c ombr na l!on 4 spea k er
-------------so und
s y s tem
Ba l a n c e
M E ~ CURY Couga r XR7 197 1
$107 49 on easy ter m s Ca ll
green me tall 1c wrth w h tt e 992 3965
&lt;1 23 H e
v rn y l top Hur st 4 sp eed 8
tre~ c k tape dec k
A 1r co n - - - - - - - - - - - - - - d rt ton mg , Wh1 fe lea th er m 5 SHELF bo okcase 3 pte ce
TUR F TR IM pu s h ty pe
ter1 or New lld b att er y N ew
stud1o c o uc h , k 1tchen t a bl e
ro tar y mower Ha s Bn gg s &amp;
and 4 c ha1 rs Rectr n1ng sofa ,
steel b elt ed r a d 1a 1s , or1gm a l
St ratto n e ng m e
7 tn c h
own er Phon e 992 31 49
m e ta l des k 1r onrng board and
p l .:~ s fl c w h ee l s loop st y l e
4 23 Stp 1r on Ba b y ca rn age co nv er ts
-------------to stro l le r , b est off er Ph on e
tubu la r ha ndl e ( 22 1982)
992 3149
4 23 Sip
POMER OYl ANDMAR K

$52~0
20", 3 H.P.

~

p e r s on s

who

1970 OL OS 98 Lu)(ury Sedan full
power eq urpmen t, e xc e ll en t
Low mrl eaae
con d 1tr o n
$1625 Phone 992 3863
4 2&lt;1 4t c

--------------OPE N Rog er H yse ll s Garag e
--------------

Rewa rd SlSO for the a rrest
a nd con vt ct10n o l person or
st ole

my

1 972 VW bus, ex cell ent c on
d ttron ver y c l ea n Phone 1
304 773 5867 $2 695
4 23 7tc

-------------For Rent

Gra ve ly tra ctor Tu es day
n1ght. Phone Sob Grueser,
992 7365 , Rt 3, Pomeroy

Re~ l

Estate For Sale

H t: u KLlOM h ou se 1n M1d
N ew k itc h en and
d lepor t
b a t ll app l rances rn c tud e d
Call 992 5310
4 2S 26tc

FUR NI SH E D a p a r t m ent , l
bedroom , c on\len rent loc at ron
In co untry near Pomeroy
Phone (3 04 ) 773 511 8
4 24 4tc

82 ACR E S FA RM Gas we ll
pond 2 bar n s, 2 hom es one
n ew 3 bed r oo m l'h ba th all
ca r p et on e 7 r ooms and ba t h
Phon e 7&lt;12
goo d con d 1t10n
6261
4 24 3tc
3

L OTS
Pom eroy

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

VW AN D DATSU
SPECIALIST

Wat er Lrn es and Power
Lm es All wo r k done by the
foot or contra ct Al so dozer
work and sephc t a nks tn·

, stalled
See or Call
Bob
Roger Jeffers
Day 992-7089
Night 992-3525
or 992-5232

or

Mon ke y Ru n ,
Phon e 992 731 1
4 24 3tc

FLOW ERS

WISEMAN
AGENU'
Ga ll,pol1 s

..· RACINE
2 STORY PERMA STO N E 3
LARGE
MO D E RN
BR
KIT CH EN , 1112
BAT H S
CAR PET
T H RO U G H OU T
F U L L BAS EME NT 2 CAR
GARA G E
ALL
ON E
L A RGE
FL AT
WEL L
L AN D SC A P ED
LO T
PR I CED M ID TWEN T IE S

- .J

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

________

....~..

RUTLAND

__ _

3 BE D ROOM S L ARGE K I T ,
LI KE
NEW
CAR P ET ,
AL UM SIDIN G ,
OW N ER
W IL L H E L P
~ !N A N CE
F O R QU ALIFIED BUYER 1

7 ROOM house and ba l h haTI
ba sement Wff h 27 acr es l arg e
fa rm bu ild mg . m ac llme sh ed
Ph on e 992 5058
4 23 6f c
N E W A L L E L E CT R IC BR ICK
f ul l b ase m en t , 2 Cifr gar a ge,
ba t h and half , loca ted 1n
Rutlan d and pr 1ced to se ll
Call 949 331 1 or 949 2153
4 23 12t c

PRICE D

Cabbage head l ettu ce , sweet
an d hot peppers , ma ny
"'ar le t 1es o f t omatoes , soc
a nd 6Sc do1en
Fto w ers- Pe tun ra s. Pans 1es ,
M ar i gOlds, plu s ma n y oth er
v ar 1et es , soc t o 65c pak
Ger an 1ums an d o t her pot
pl anl s, 10 rn ch h a n g 1ng
b asket s. petun 1iJS or vtn rng
ge r an ru m s , $ S 00
Porch
bo x es, petun 1as or pan stes ,
S3 00 or u 00
Hubba r d's G ree nhou se
Syracu se, 0
99 2-5776

AIR CONDITION NOW?

YES!
Now wh1le tl'le weather rs
sftll cool 1s the b est t1me It
can be m stalled at your
conventen ce w1th no wa1tmg
around
m hot muggy
w ea ther

BELOW

All WEATHER
HARDWARE

OFF ICE 44 6 3643

EVENING S
Bu d M cGh ee- 446 12SS
E M " Ike" W lse man- 446-

N 2nd Ave.

o.

Wanted To Huy

Pels For Sale

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofmg . Spouting
Alummum Siding
And Complete
Remodeling

608 E.
MAIN
c a b1n , bath , sprt ng wa t er ,
wood burning f trep lace, and 20
acres of la nd on b lacktop roa d

Want on ly $13,500 00
NEW liSTING - New 3 B R

all

e l ect r iC ho m e
L a rg e
closets, n 1ce ba th, 29' of
ca bmet s L 1vmg dtn1ng 36x 14,
u trl rty w 1t h w asher drve r 147
y ds of good ca r petmg Block 2
ca r gara ge w tth works hop

Nearl y 2 ac res $35,500 00
NEW liSTING - 2 bedrooms.

m ob!l e home w rt h centra l a tr
and lot, pl us patio Rents for

$1 40 00 a month Only $5.750 00
4 BEPROOMS - Ranch type

1'h , to
fr a m e, 3 bedroom s, bath , f ul l
ba sement, a lmost new gas
F A fur nace, p or ch es, la r ge
leve l y ard m e tal fe n ce

742-6273

$6,500 00

NELSON

POMEROY ~ Fu r nr sh ed
home. 3 bedl'"ooms bath
k1 t chen ca b inet s, por c hes,

MIDOLEPORT -

SPR ING IS HERE. SO ARE
TH E BUYERS LI ST IT WITH

PAINTING
ROOF PAINTING

2 story

IF YOU NEE D A HOME
RIGHT NOW CAl l US, WE
CA N SOL VE MOST OF
YOUR REA L ES TATE
PROB LEMS

us

1 1 i\. 1 01-( [')
1f f\.FORO

~'..'. ',OC t Al!)

HENRY E CLELANP
REALTOR
"991-2159 or 992 2568

992-3325 or
992-2378

CALL CARL NELSON
PHONE 992-5083 Wa t er , Elecfr1c , Gas, Sewer
lm es
m s ta lied
Work
guaranteed .
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucks
Ltmestonej. F1ll D1rt
Commercrai- Resrdenttal
Construct•on &amp; Remodel

B-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY
777 Pearl Street
Mrddleport, Oh1o
Phone 992-5367 or 992-3861

For Rent or Lease

E«PERIEftiCED
'

Radlato

------·-- ------

kmd s of suap meta ls and
rron R 1der 's Salva g e State
Rout e H 4 R! 4 Porner oy ,
Oh10 Phon e 992 5468
4 16 26tp

--OL------------D furnitu r e,- oa k tabt es,
'

clo.;'ks , 1c e bo xes, br !l ss beds
d fshe·s desks or com pl ete
h o us eh o l ds
W r rt e M
D
M !ll ef, Rt 4, Pomer oy , Oh ro,
ca l l 99?· ' ""!-0
5 13 tfc

Help Wantea

5 R""OOM:;. iii d ba t ll

tn Sy r acu se
Betw een 1 acre and 11h acr es
of land Phon e 992 3135
4 21 7t c

For Sale
EXC E L SIO R !::i alt Works , ~:;
M a in St , Pomer oy All k 1nds
of sal t water pellets , w&amp;ter
nu ggets, bl oc k salt and own
Ohto R1ver Sa lt Phone 992
89 1
..,..3_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,..

:;.OME O N E to help Wr th spri ng
c leanmg Phon e 992 2677
4 2 1 6tc

PER SON to li v e m to ass rst
person who ts rl l Call J oh n
W ee k s, 9 a m to S p m 992
2148
4 25 6tc

' w A IT RE ~ SE S,

ca r ho ps an d
~ k itc hen he lp Apply m p erson
\Cr o w •s
Steak
Hous e,
Pomer oy
4 4 tfc

GREAT
COUNTRY

STEREO
92.1
WMPO-FM
Middleport Pomeroy

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

smallest Hea ter Core

Nathan B1gg5
Aad1ator

1 17 tfc 1
-------- ------

------------ ~ ~ 7tp
wal n l.l t
AM Flii!
Ra d ro
8 track tape com ,
b rnat 1on ,Ba l an ce $ 11 0 73, or
te l'" mS availa bl e Phone 99 2

3965.

2 14 tf c

-----,--------- -

"For when the One Great
Scor~r comes to wnte agamst
your npme, he marks - not
that you won or lost - but how
you played . the game " ' Gran tland R1ce, Ame ri can ,
sports wr iter .

Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

CHRY SANTHEMUMs plan t s,
$1 a do zen Phon e 1 (30 4) 773
5147

.,,,.,.,u"'! "s TI:: t&lt;t:U

1'

Bulldozer Rad1alor to the

1

992 2534

111. YV2·2174

...

Pomeroit

FOR SALE
3 BEDROOM HOME
Beauti f ul kit che n, garage, central a ir con di ll on .

ONLY '25,000

SEPTIC TANKS ClEANED

R EA S ON ~ BLE rates , Ph

4.46
4782, Gall rpol ls, John Russell
Own er and Operator
5 12 th •

s EPTic--TA N'Ks.-'A'RoBic
SEWAGE S Y S TEMS
Cl EAN ED, REPAIR ED
MILL ER SA NITATION
STE WA RT , OH 10 PH 662
3 035

Phone: 992-2720

10 4 t fc

,O'BRIEN &amp; CROW REALTY

1 OO - Tomorrow 3, 4, New sl J , Take F I\IeFor lrfe l5

f; or F r ee Es ltmate 1nqu1re
now about a beaut1ful new
,. 0 0 t rn fa rth ton colors

200 - News 4

6

6
6
6

ALL WEATltER
HARDWARE

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

Middleport, 0

Now undel'" new
mana gement

33 . Jeff's Collie 6
8 25 - Jack laLanne 13
8 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55 - News 13
9 oo-AM 3, Paul 01xon 4, Phil Donahue 15, Abbott &amp; Costel lo
8, Friendly Junction 10, Mov1e 13 , Wild, Wild West 6
9 30 - To Tell the Truth 3; Tattletales 8
9 55 - Chuck White Report. 10
10 00 - Dinah Shore 3, 15 Joker's Wild 8, 10; Company 6
10•30 - Jeopardy 3, 4, 15. Gamb1t 8, 10
11 00 - Wizard of Odds 3, 4, 15, Password 13, M1ke Douglas 6,
Now You See It 8, 10
11 30 - Hollywood Squares3, 4, 15 , Brady Bunch 13, l ove oll1le
8, 10 , Sesame St 33
11 55- CBS News8 , Dan Imel's World 10
12 00 - Password 6 , News 8, 10, 13, Bob Braun's 50 50 Cl ub 4,
Jackpot' 3, 15.
12 . 30-Celebrltv Sweepstakes 3, 15 , So lit Second 6; Search For

On Most Amen can Cars

RON AND
KAREN TiiOMAS

- GUARANTEEDPHONE !l92-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 T1l 5

Stop m and say He llo Bnnt
a Free G1ft

Monday thr u Saturda y

tn tht s ad for

606 E. Mam, Pomeroy , 0 .

GENE WOLFE'S
BODY SHOP

AUTOMOTIVE
REPAIR

808W Mam St.

•

We r eparr lawn mowers and
ga l'ld en t r actors

PH. 949-3611

Tomorrow 8, 10

12· 45 - Electric Company 33
12 55- NBC News 3, 15
1:00 - News 3, All My Children 6, 13 ; Concentration 8, Not For
Women Only 15 , What's My Line 10
1:30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15, As the World Turns 8, 10, Let's
Make A Deal 6, 13.
2· 00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Guiding Light 8, 10 , Newl ywed

Pomeroy

PHONE 992-5271

Game 6, 13

'

Free Garage
Estimates

RAC INE, OHIO
DOZ ER and back hoe wor k ,
pon d s an d sep t 1c tan ks, drt
ch rng serv tce top so l i , f1ll
d ~rt. li meston e ,
B &amp;K E x
cava tl ng Pllone 992 5367 or
992 3861
9 1 tfc

Rlo ADY Ml )(

CO NCRETE ·

ri g h t to
pr oj ec t F ast and easy
"' e Stt ma te s Phone 99 2
Goe gl e tn R e ady Mtx
M iddl eport. Oh 1o
6
d e l1v e r ~ d

your
F r ee
328 .4 1
Co •

30

lie

~.U,-0 M o"H 1L~ 1 ri sU ran ce been WILL t rrm o r c ut trees and
c an cel l ed ?
! L o st
your
op erat or ' s l icense Call 9'92

7&lt;18

shru bber y
A l so clean oul v
ba se men t s, at tic s, etc Phon e
9.49 322 1 01'" 742 4.441
4 23 26tc

Small slam makes one way only

PillE·

NORTH i0 1
.AK6542
'AK7
86

-----~------SE PTIC
T ANKS
c leaned

M od erJJ Sanita tion , 992 3954 or
992 73.49
~
10 23 t f c

L---~----~----~--~----~----~ ~-------~------

I'

I,

'

I·

WEST

EAST

.108

.QJ93
'2
+K532
.KJ9 7

'J 93
+QJt0974

. 106

I

'.

By Helen and Sue Hottel

AQUARIUS (Jan

Older Woman After Boyfriend
VIRGO (Aug 23 -Sepl 22)
' ,
For Fnday, April 26. 197 4
Ra p:
'
Sl orm warnrngs are up !ha t tell
you to tread c arefu ll y where
I'm wom ed about a neighbor m her IIUd·2tl9 , who hve's"hear ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) ·
Be ex i ra p r o l ect 1v e and
l
rlends and mone y are con·
my guy. She's supposed to be a frtend of the f81lllly, but I not1ce walc hlul today ol !hose under
ce rned Ne1 ther lend no r b o r
distmct stgns of overfondness directed to John , who IS 18.
yo ur c harge Al so don t adm rl
row
liBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23)
She manages to he where be's at a lot, even though she's ques11onab le strang ers rnt o
yo ur home
Be sure goa ls yo u have 1n mmd
roamed. She's told him he deserves "more freedom " I was at TAURUS
(April 20-May 201
are wo rlh th e frust ra trons
his house the other day when she called and kept hun on the Travel w1!1 o lf~H more: rrus tra ·
!hey II c ause Ach1e vemenl s
phone IS minutes. Later that evenmg she had the nerve to call 11ons 1han usual today You II
wont come easrty the next few
days
MY house, asking for hun. It appeared she wanted hun to go w1th t:l e b ett er otf no t to d o a lo t o1
unnecessar y gaddmg abo ut
SCORPIO tOcl 24 -Nov 22)
her· ~r a JOb mterview
GEMINI (Ma~ 21- June 201
Yo u w111 mee t w1 th more re s1 s
" I'dDn 't know whether John realizes her mtent10ns, or even if Some budg et t rghl enmg I s
l ance than yo u c ounted on d
you try to I oree yo ur wrl l on
my evaluation IS correct, but let's put ~t thts_way - she sure gomg to be reQu tred O\ler the
next few da ys Be care rul you
o
thers toda y Wal c h ou !l
souhds like trouble'
do n 1 s p end b e y on d your
SAGITTARIUS (No v 23·
What should I do" - THREATENED BY AN OLDER means
Dec 2 1) Don t tak e anythmg
CANCER (June 21-July 2 21
for granted m bu smess deal
WOMAN
A number ol 1t11ngs Will po p up
rngs at th1 s lime lns1st upon
Dear TBAOW
tha t wr tl mh1brt your fre edom
!ac ts hgure s rec e1p ts and lu ll
Yes she does sound like trouble'
and t1 e \'Ol.l down more th an
d tsc losure
Maybe you could let your boyfriend know it would he smart
to ease up on this fr1endsh1p (without actually accusmg anyone).
U he doesn't discourage hts overeager neighbor , she may keep on 1t's the elders wbo have turned down the hea t, planned the use of
until her husband notu:es - and that could mean a big faiiUly their cars m carpools, forgone vacatwn tr1ps. My parents, who
drtve a mediurn..s!Zed car at 50 miles per hour, say 1t's the small
brawl - SUE
economy
ca rs that pass them on the highway
Dear Threatened:
We are m our 34E We rent an apartment m our home to a
A man doesn't like to feel chased, so if you can get 1t across in
young couple While we turn down the heat to 68 degrees,
very
a laughing way that an older woman 1s afte r hun, he may start
have the thermosta t set at 78 They drain the 40.
our
renters
s1de..stepptng a b1t.
gallon
water
heater w1th one sbower, and leave their lights on
On the other hand , there 's always the danger that an IS-yearday
and
mght
old might be flattered and mtrtgued by the attentions of a
We're d1sappomted that the younger generation IS so full of
roamed woman. So don't lay your suspicions on too thick. Just
talk
and so slow to act when 11 comes to conservmg keep the two separated as much as possible, and hope HER
DISTURBED
MINNESOTAN
husband does likew1se. - HELEN
Rap
DM .·
My mother IS a great cook and she loves to feed people She
I can 't see a valid argument in your letter ~ only a commv1tes my g~rl frtend over for lots of meals The result is my g f
panson hetween your parents and your tenants Come on now 1
is getting fat , and I don't like fat girls. Mom takes offense if you
Thts doesn't describe two generations 1 I coold yell about the
don't take second helpings (which I can turn down, but my g f IS 50ish man who was doing 75 mph while I was practically standing
afrmd to).
.
still at 50 - but what does 1t prove· only that every age has 1ts
What can I do w1thout hurting either one's feelings? -TONY
law-breakers
Dear Tony
So let's don't generalize Conservation and sh ortages are
I take 1t you don't have a we1ght problem So tell your girl
tough enough w1tbout turnmg them into a generation war - SUE
friend the secret of "eating thin " m sp1te of a mother who "cooks
fat." - HELEN
,
Jtl!lJ~i1[E®IkJ koowLI,J .-1 ,_.
Tony:
... And then have a talk With your motber. lf she won't "cook
Unscramble lhese four Jumbles,
thin "at least she can learn not to argue w1th "No thank you " one letler to each square, to
'
SUE
rorm four ordinary words.
Dear Sue:
I get tired of heartng the younger generation knocking people
my parents' age, as several have in your column I ha ve noticed

e

8 30 - Washington Connect1an 20, S1x Milli on Doll ar Man 6, 13,
Good Times 8; Basebal l 4, Marshall News·Meelong 33
9 00 - Bicentennial Lecture Ser ies 20, Gi rl With Someth1ng
Extra 3, 15, CBS News Spec1al8, 10 , Ma sterpiece Thea tre 33
9 30 - Bria n Ke 1th 3, 15, Odd Couple 13, Movie 6
10 00 - Country Com es Hom e 3, 15 , To m a 13, N ews 20 , Confl tcls
of Harry

S Truman 33

10 30 - Day At Night 33.
10 45 - Farm, Home and Garden 20
11 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15 , Janak! 33, Av! al 1on Weather 20
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, In Concert 6 , Mov ies " Sa yonara"
8, " The Vulture" 10, "The P1l and Ihe Pendul um" 13
00 - Mldntgh t Specral 3, 4, In Con cert 13 , Don K irshner ' s
Roc k Conce r t 6 , Take F1 ve For Lt fe 15, M ovre " Tr apped tn
Tang ters " 10
2 30 - Mov te " The Terrornaut s " .4 . News 13
4 00 - Mov ie "Season o f Pass 1on" 4

5 30- Movle " The Nunandthe Sergeant"4
CABLE CHANNEl FIVE
7 00 p m - LoCal New s
7 JO p m - Hollywood Old1es
9 30 p .m -

April 28, 1974

than usual where work rs c an ~
cerned Av o rO co wo rk ers who
are c are le ss or rnexper rence d
w1 th too ts

Thrs year you are ltke lv to
start severa l new pro1ects with
prom1se II you re perststant
and pa t rent the y II la te r pro ve
rewardmg

PIS CES (Feb 20-Mar ch 20)

Romanl rc ma ilers wrll be a Itt
tte rocky !he nex t c oup le of
days Try not to be too de

~'Hd'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

DOWN

1. Pers1an
tiger
5. Bra1d

1. Neckw ear

2. Hourly

3. M u se

of
poetry
4. Middle·
aisled it
agam

10 Nucleus
II. Immech·
ately
12. Anc1ent
Syna
13 ·-

5. Waste

unto

allowan ce

Cae sar

' Vesteriln's Answer
23. Chamber
some
phil·
24. Due to
7. Withstood
osopher
happen
8. Barren
· 21 Ocean
25. Pitfall
9. W1lh
route
28. Use
pam
(hyph
29. Csssettes
11. Chatter
wd )
30. Obliterate
15. Shade
22 Short
32. Religious
of
operatJc
body
blue
SOli&amp;
34. Sesame
6. Mr.
Reagan, to

"

14. Drum

roll
(hyph
wd)
16. English
nver
17. Little
flower

l8. Seed
coa ting

18 Greek

19. Scotllsh

I'&lt;"""'T.:--T=:'-,..To"""l

explorer

20. Trust
21. Embark

25.Journey
!4. Withered
Z5. Manhme

Sig nal
Z6. Placed
Z7. Jot
down
thoughts
31. Km to
porter
32. Large
brewmg
urn
33. Shred
35. Mulberry
cloth
36. Lure
37. "Little
White

-"

38.Adnun
Isle red

19. Otherw1se

Squares 4, Con cen t r a t ion
Washmgton Re\ltew 20, 33 , Brad y Bunch 6, 13 , W1 ld
Sctence 3, 15 , Big Red Ma chme 4, D1 r ty Sa ll y 8, 10

8.00 -

20 -Fe b

19) Bq. more salety-cooscrous

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:

I

( )

II

I

II

One letter s1mply stands for another In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, t he length and formati on of the words are a!'
hints Each day the code leiters are different

COASJF

II

t
J
I I

CJlYPrOQUOTES

NU/JER

Now orranro tho circlodlottora
an1wer, u
by the above c:utoon.

l o form the aurpritt

~=~====~::=:====-~•:u~r~r:••:lod:

L..._~. .~·::::SIII:::JIIl:.:::IISI::.:AHSWII==
.
·:___I (

XI XI )
(Aaawen lomorr ow'

Ye11erda,.·.

Jumbl .. , VIRUS OPIUM

I

BLOUSE

XM O H KXM L I MFK MHK NXVH)
HKI M BL KX
SF I IOMH
CY
EVHK
XM FI KH GJ K X M FKK I F SK OVB ~D
XOH

V N B .- XMBIJ

N F IT

1974 CHEVEU.E a.ASSIC........... ~3995

MOVIES

ili!J tn4 Kine Fe~turu Srncllate, Inc.)

'Q 1086 5 4

+A

.A85 32
Both vulne rable

West

"

Pass
Pass
Pass

cl ot h t nm, hnted glass, fac tor y a rr, turbo h y dr amahc ,
P S , P B , s1de prot ect1 ve mouldmgs, H 78 w s w t 1res,
bumper guards , ra d to Wi th tape

,.
' v

..

Cust om Hatchbac k Cpe, dar k g ree n f 1n1sh, l ike n ew
wh 1t e wal l ftres , fu ll wh cov ers, protecti ve s ide mldgs ,
... ~ P B , r adro , 6 cy l engtne w tth stand ard t r an s A v ery
popul a r mode l &amp; one that w rll plea se yo u

"

1971 DODGE CORONET.............$1495
4 door, 1 ownel'" ne w car trade m , good 1st ltne t tr es ,
s po tl ess cle an mfei'"IOr, small V 8 engrne , autom a t rc tr an s
mrss1on The nght s ize - the r1ght nee Valu e S167S

1972 CHEVROLET
6 cy linder ,

UP. ......... $2495

sl a nd ~ rd t

m1ss ion , wh ite o v er blue, v ,nyl
m te nor, a ppea ra nce o f new truck, rad to. l1ke new white
wa ll t1res, wheel co ver s,8' w tde body , step bum per

"
,.

1969 CHEVEUE COUPE.. ...........$1595

,.

Local 1 owner c ar , good hres, dar k red fini sh, v myl rn terlor , V 8 engine, automahc, P. steering Radro

"'

$3395

I

Whit e ftnt sh , blue v m y l roof , 350 V -8 w ith T~ l'"bo
H y dramat lc, powe r stee ring &amp; brakes, radio , white-wall
tires . wh co ver s, undersea /. New car with full warranty

·-----------------------Large Inventory of Ught Duty New 74
Chevrolet Pickup, Chevy Van, Sport Van, Step
Van.
We Have the Right Deal for You

"WWrao'f&amp;..st,~IIIIUSII*'
WI SRl SElVIG CIIVIlOUT CAliS 11UCII.
&amp;

&amp;

'

'"
.~.

..-..
- ".

Soulh

Pass
Pass
Pass

4NT

2'J

6'J

Pa:ss

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Pess1m1st1c Pete looked
over the dumm y and
remarked, "We ha ve a pretty
good play for seven, but smce
we are m SIX I had best try to
msure my contract."
Pete took h1s ace of d1amonds, led a low spade and
ducked m dummy West held
the tr~ck and led a second
diamond Pete, ruffed led a
trump to dummy's ace, ruffed
a low spade, cashed h1s queen
and dummy's king of trumps,
discarded h1s four losmg
c lubs on four spades and
claimed h1s contract
The hand IS worlhy of con·
s1derable study. Seven would
not be a bad contract. It
would make agamst a better
break m e1ther major sult,but w1th the actual dtstnbutwn of the East·West cards
Pete's hne of play was lhe
only one that would brmg m
12 tncks
As a further pomt of m·
terest 1f West had been one of
those 'super players who see
all the cards before the open·
mg lead IS made, he would
have plunked the 10 of clubs
on the table Pete would have
been unable to fmd any play
to make the slam

THE BORN WSER
MOM I YOU'RE NOT
HELPINO IM'ITER5
~y

5ERVIN0 HER

WH'/ f..M. I

50 MANY
.5TARCHE5 r

FOI..LOWI~(o

'{)U , SIR~IT

MIJSr

The b1ddmg has been
West
North East
t•
Pass
Pass
3'P
Pass
P ass Q

4'

1-:AiURA!:' BCfiJ
lEAt:€R ~

ALLEY OOP

PFIESE.NTING

&gt;Me
O.NO&amp;-E
GESTURE

25
South

1'f
4+

11J "

.J •

\

HE HUNG OUT

4NT

Pass

Pass
s•
Pass
You, South, hold

?

I HEAR TELL SHERIFF
TAIT IS CAMPAIGNIN'
EXTRV HARD FER
RE· ELECTION, LOWEEllf

TH ' WASHIN' FER ME

1'HIS MORNI N'

attempt ta get to seven. ,;1

TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of biddill&amp; five hearts,
your partner has bid five d!lmonda 1o show jllll ane aco m
responoe \o your Blackwood
What do you do now? 1

\

'

se~T

'OJ AAf: A

INEW.SPAPER ENTER PR - E ASSN I

What do you do now'
A-Just bid stx heorts. There
are 1.oe many bola to warrant an

1

.

3'J
S'J
Pass

East

•K 2 'JAJ765+A64.Q94

·PrOM EROY MOTOR CO.

'

North

'

"

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992-2126
Open Eves Ttl 8
POMEROY

1•

Opemng lead - +Q

4 door l u xury car, w h tf e trnlsh w 1th v iny l top , green knit

1973 CHEV. NOVA................... ~2695

.7

·-'
I
\

/.

I I'

'

G MMS X M1

Vesterday'a Cryptoquote : POVERTY MAY PARTLY
ECLIPSE A GENTLEMAN BUT IT CANNOT TOTALLY OS.
SCURE HIM.-CERVANTES

FORCED

An' " "r: Th ey can fw qu1te e nl ~rta mtng m the dark -

lntl'" i aue

AXYDLBAA X Jl
L ONGFELLOW

SOUTH

\

'

221

Yo u re b ut1dtng up more re ·
sen lmen t !han yo u shoold
about a s1 tuatton you \le been
kee p tng to yoursell ra the r
than rr'onrng rt out OQenly

+

liN

.

25

LEO (July 23 - Au g

manchng ol a l olled one

19) One· l o ·one relatro nshrps
w111 ha11 2 t o be handled w tth
e xt reme tac l o ver the ne:-.1 few
da ys Partne rshiP stt u a11on s
are explos1ve

.Q4

I

'

2 30 - Doctors 3, 4, 15, Edge of Night 8, 10; Girl in My Ute 6, 13
3 oo - Another World 3, 4, 15 , Genera: Hospital 6, 13, Lock,
Stock &amp; Barrel20, Price Is Right 8, 10.
3 30 - One Life to Live 6, 13; Phil Donahue 4, Oh io Th is Week
20; HowtoSurvlveAMarrlage3, 15; MatchGame8. 10
4 00 - Mr. Cartoon 3, Somerset 15 , Sesame 51 20, 33, love,
American Style 13 , Lucy Show B, Huck and Yog i 6, Mov1e
"The Golden Hawk" 10.
4 30 - Green Acres 3; Gilligan's Island 6, 13 , Bonanza 15 , Jac k·
pot 4, Hazel 8
5 00 - Bonanza 3; Merv Griffin 4, Andy Griffith 8, MISter
Rogers 20, 33 ; Gomer Pyle, USMC 13 ; Big Valley 6.
5 30- Beverly Hillbllll~s 8, Elec Co. 33 , Hodaeoodae Lodae 20
Hogan's Heroes 13 , Trails West 15.
6' 00 - News 3, 4. 8, 10, 15, ABC News 13, Sesame Sl 20; Truth
or Conseq. 6; Project Care 33.
6 30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15, ABC News6, CBS News 8, 10 , Room
222 13.
7 00 - Truth or Conseq. 3, Beat the Clock 4, News 6, 10, What's
My Line 3; Wild _Kingdom 13; Elec Co 20, Aviation Weather
33 , Area Mayor's Report.
7· 30 - Porter Wagoner 3, To Tell the Truth 6; Wall St Week 20,
33, New Treasure Hunt 10 r Beat tile Clock 13, Hollywood

DAY OR NIGHT

RACINE GARAGE

25- Farm Report 13
30 - Five Minutes to L1ve By 4. News 6, Bi ble Answers 8,
Blue Ridge Quartet 13
35 - Columbus Today 4
45 - Morning Report 3, Farmllme 10
00 - Today 3, 4, 15, CBS News 8, 10, D1 ck Van Dyke 13,
Speedracer 6
30 - New Zoo Revue6 ; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle 13

7
8 oo-captal n Kangaroo 8, 10, New Zoo Revu e 13, Sesam e St

H

I

Sunrise Seminar .4 , Sacr ed Heart 10
Folk Lttera ture 3, Milestones of Progress 10

6 15 -

7

N 2nd Av e

FRIPAY, APRIL 26, 1974

6 00 -

AI! WEATHER
HARDWARE

From the largest Truck or

N EW 3 t:l ed r oom home, 1'1'7nJ ath •
gar age , b asement on Gravell
Hil l. Mrd d leport Nat ural gas.i
a l ready rn
Ph on e Date
Dutton , 992 3369 ev en rng s

11 00 - News 13 , Janak l33, New s 3, 4, 6, 15
11 30 - Jol1nny Carson 3. 15
11 35 - Jol1nny Carson 4

399 "• Mam
Pomeroy , 0
L ocated at Modern Supply
Small Eng i ne Rep a 1r

-----------------------NEW '73 IMPALA SPORT CPE.

Service

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

.... J092

1973 CHEV. CAPRICE.. ............. ~3895

INTERIOR EXTERIOR

f r ame, 3 bedroom s, b a l h,
ga r age ,
tr arle r
r e ntal,
sever al lots $9, 500 00

home la r ge bath, n tce close ts,
all pa ne led E ff iCien t kr tchen
dm rng 11!:2 a cl'"es $18,000 00

Wtlkmson Small Engme

4 Door, less th an 3500 mile s, green vrn y l top &amp; l1gh t green
f l nt sh, green v rn y l m t error trrm, 350 V 8, 2 bbl , tmted
gl ass, fa ctory a 1r c ondtfroned, AM r ad1o, floor mats, body
prot ect tve m l dg , power sl eer rng &amp; brakes. turbo
hydramah c, ex t decor package . comfor ttlt stee ring
wheel , w h cov ers &amp; w w trres Very nice &amp; 1ts loaded Wlfh
ex tr as

PHONE

SYRACUSE -

frame , 4 b ed r oom s, 11h
baths. d mlng r oom , loads of
ga rd en s p ace
p o r c h es,
about 2 ac r es

NEW li STING - 2 bedroom

H! r.-N I

o.

lois of ground S7. 100 00
CARPENTER - 2 story

bath, new gas fu r nace, large
por ch and 2 lots $9500 00

GORDON !I

POMEROY,

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

for Rent or Sale

Middleport. 0

3796

NEW liSTING - 3 B R log

IS YOUR ROOF
LEAKING?
IS IT COLOR FADED?

WIN AT BRIDGE

Under New Management

VEGETABLE AND
R.OWER PLANTS

SHULER'S MARKET

Mason, W Va

Phone 9'12-2550

M ARK E T $1 2, 000
I

MATERIALS CO.

COMPLETE
VEGETABLES AND

THE

I

4/73-5554

. DITCHING SERVlCE

Phone 992 1181

1BEND TIRE CENTER

EO

Phone Stanley 949-2789
Bumper to Bumper
Service
Foreign rars Welcom e

SA CRES ot ground on Sta te 143.
2' 1 mrles f r om Harn sonv rll e
Phon e 99 2 37 40 a ft er 4 p m
4 2.4 7t c

EX CL U SIV E
LO C A T I ON S 1
Del u )(e full fea t ur ed ho m es
fro m $25 000 t o $45 000 "
bedr oom s 2 ba th s 2 c a r
g ar age , f amily r oom , arr
c ond il 10n ed , l ar g e co un t r y
lot s V rs1t R oc k Spr rngs l USt
P2 m1 l es north of Pom er o y
M as on , W V a
whe re R ts 33 and 7 m e e t ~
5881 ••
N E' x t to El ementary and n ew
I
•t
H rgh sc hool A l so v rSII Rrgg s
~T RAWBERRY plant s Ch ar 11e
Cr es t M anor , on Rt 7 1ust
Fos ter R t 2 Ra c me Ohro
pa st East ern J r and Sr H rgh
P hon e 24 7 2309
Sc hool For full det ail s w rrt e
4 19 12t c
Goeg l e m . G reat
Fr ed B
Am er ,can Hom es
221 W
GO LD t r um p e t w l h c a se ,
Se cond St
Pom eroy or ca ll
Sc r ea me r 1 5 sp boy 's b 1cy c1e
ou r 24 h o ur n umb er 1n
w th sp eedom eter Ph on e 992
1 2 39 9 681
Co lu m bus ,
Bu!lffer so f W G Bes t Hom es
5127 a fter 3 p m
4 21 6tc 4 21 6f c

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

DON'T DRIVE A
GAS.GULPER
OR A GAS HOG

1n

It 's

'BA R GA IN " I S OUR MID DL E
N A ME at K UH L B BAR GAIN
CEN T ER
All app l ran ces
FUt.! N t SH EO
apa rt m ent ,
have 30 day g uar an tees
adu lts on ly Phone 99 2 559 2
K OSCO !
KO::iM t:: ll l.~
&amp;
Retn gerat ors $ 19 95 up A pt
4 9 ff c
W tu :;
1- or a good l 1n e of
s11e r efrigera tor s $49 95, G E
Cosm c t tcs f rt endly se r v1ce
pushbu tton e l e c t r~c r anges
and som eone to c hat w dh , 2 BEDROOM mobile h om e a~r
$4 9 95 lU St 6 yr s old 20" g as
cond 1f1 0n 1ng an d I n t he
g tve me a call He len Ja ne
range s
(4 bur n er)
$ 45
Rac me ar ea Phone 992 58 59
Or ow n , 992 5 113
W r rn g e r
w a sh er s
[so m e
J 19 He
4 15 ft c
Maytags) S45 u p
Au t o
$45
E
l
ect
dr
y ers
w
a
sh
ers
2~
ROOM- -;Qb-;ie - hom e.
$35,
N EW
FUR NIT U RE
cable T V , ai r con,d tt tOn rng ,
SAVINGS
Re g
$69 95
Most Vane t1 es of
locat ed m Pom ero y
West
R EC L IN ERS $50, 3 p c t able
M am Str ee t Phon e 992 56 23
se t ( m a p l e or wal l S34 95
4 23 3tc
Lots o f c lean USED turn 1t ure
r ound OAK t abl es, oak buffe t,
ONE 3 bed r oom t rar l er Prefer
wood , ch ro me d rn ett es p r
con slr l.lc tton wo r k er s Phone
cor ner ch rnil cab1net s w 1t h
992 74 48 a ft er S p m
•
ma t ch rng t a bl e and 6 Sh1 el d
4 23 Jl p
b ack c h affS 12 ma ster an d 4
S1d e l, pecan fr n1sh $285 , oth er
Stop &amp; see ou r se lec·
N EW fur nr shed a partmen t 3
d m 1ng r m su rt es trom $12 5,
ro oms and ba th Rea l n 1c e
bed r oom sur tes,"'"Co uch es. O S
tton before you buy!
Reynolds '
A par t m ent s
c hairS , stu rd y and st r a 1gh t
Mason , W Va , ph on e 773
map l e c ha1 rs ss , m eta l desks ,
514 1 on good road
great fo r stud ent s or mom 's
4 23 H e
sew rng , ve r y SPEC IA L $1'1
W. Mam Pome roy,
lg se l ec t ron occ as t abl es .
T RAIL E R 2bed ro~;;;-~,lo~ to
c h ests d r essers , st r cha rrs
sw1mmmg poo l sch ool and
even fl a t top tru n ks luggage
4 F A M IL Y y ar d sa le anftQues,
shopp rng cen ter Phon e 99 2
Op en to 7 p m Tu esday t hr u
f ur nit ur e, an d d 1shes 2 m les
5914
Sunday KU HL 5 BARG AI N
south of Mrddlepo r t off Rout e
4 21 6t c
CE N TER R t 7 'at caut1on
7 on Sto f y 's Run Roa d Apn l
llghl ' TUP PE RS PLA IN S
20 an d 21
OHIO
4 19 61c
4 21 6tc
4 1&lt;1 tfc
CON CE RNI N U 1-\Lt :. w 14 In -- -- -~---- --- Fl.l r ntshed or 69 R I C HLIN E fo l d up camp er
t h e Brb l e Was Cor ne l rus ..: rHtN ~ A P I
un fu r n rst1ed ups t a 1r s 3 rms
trailer Sl eep s 6, used l i tt le ,
saved befo r e Pet er had oc
$3 00 Ph one 667 3858
c
cas on to sp eak to h 1m? No '
SUit able fo r s rng le per son or 2
4 21 61
Acts II 14 Th e Pentec ost al
wo r ktng
g i r ls
Walk 1n g - - - - - - -- - - - - -F rr e rs l rl on So ut h Thrrd
drstanc e to downtown S115
4
YR
:_ ....
'.7 t:L.UII" "' ·
A v enu e , M iddl epo rt , Oh10
m o , ufll! t 1es ex tra
Phon e
Reg rst ered Qua r ter Horse , a
45760
667 3858
good r ace h orse or t r arn ed as
41 9 6t c
4 21 6t c
a p l ea s ure hor se Cal l 99 2
2622
1 ANU 4 t&lt;UUM t urn i Sh eO and
4 24 3t p
unfl.lrn 1shed
iJpartm ents
-NI Gr1T c r aw ler s, pa y m g top
Phone 992 543 4
AMERI C AN bunk
4 12 tf c EARLY
p r rce Fr te s phon e 992 749 4
beds , only 2'1~ years .ol d
4 23 12tc
E xce ll en t cond 1l on , $100 Ca l l
P RI V A T E m ee t 1ng r oom for
~-~----------985 3824 , Ch es ter
an y or gant zaflon . phone 992
U SED gu n s, pa yrng top prr ce
4 25 4t c
3975
F rf e's, phone 992 7494
3 1l tfc
4 23 12tc
STARC R AF T Cam per s Ser vic e
N0 - 1 coPJ)er 8 sc ~rad,at or s, SM A L L MODER N ho use and an d q u a lity Reese H1tc h es
40c r ed br aSs 40c 1 b&lt;J tt ertes
and au t o a wn1 ngs, 25 pet o tt
garden n ear Port l and Ca lt
$ 1 40 M A Ha l l. Reed SVi l l e
camp Con l ey Star cr aft Sa l es,
84 3 2653 even 1nQS
Oh ro Phon e 376 6249
Rt 62 N or t h of Po ml P l e.::~ sa n t
4 23 Jtc
3 24 He
behrnd Red Carpet lti n
4 24 Jt c
OL D au to's , 6 or mo r e cars, wil l
g 1ve $3 00 pr ece, 18 ca r s o r
E L EC T R I C gurta r and am
m or e Wi ll g 1ve be trer pr 1ce
p ll f u~r
Ph one 992 3198 or see
Ca ll 985 4297
D AC H SH U N D Pu iJP' e!:&gt; Call
a t 16 71 L mcoln Hgts
3 28 tf c
742 509 2 after 6 p m
4 24 4tc
4 23 4tc
~--- ------ ----~A"!;'\Tpar d for al l m akes anct
W E AR E p!Ckrng l.I P a p1 an o rn
m od e l s of mo bil e homes P OOD L E groomrng , SS AK C~
yo ur area and would l rk e
To y St ud Ser v 1ce, S6 0 Ph on e
Phon e ar ea code 614 423 953 1
so me res ponS i ble par t y to
667 391 5 Coo l v ill e
4 13 H e
Ca ll
take over paym en ts
4 21 St p
--~------ -------'
Cr edrt Manager {614 ) 77 2
TR A N SM I SS I ON
for
1965
5669 or w r 1te 260 East Ma m
M us tan g , 6 CYlinder , 3 speed
Str ee t Chr ll 1cothe Oh ro 4560 1
sta fld ard Ph one 992 3198 or
4 7 tfc
con t ac t at 167 1 L1nco 1n H g ts . BUSI N E SS bulld m g m do wn
Pom er o y
fown Pom eroy, Oh io Ca ll 99?
l6 1! 2 "'" T F IBERG L ASS ou t
4 24 4tc
3975 or 99 2 5786
board , 80 h p
Merc ury
4 2 26 tc
comp l ete wr th t rail er Phon e
JUN K Au tos , complet e a nd
985 4176
d el 1vered to our ya rd We Pi ck
4 21 6tp
up a uto bodres and b l.l y a ll

1:=====~

HOU SE on 205 Spr n g Ave nu e m
Pomeroy S6000
4 24 31p

NI CE 3 bedroom hom e tor sa le
$11 ,000 Phon e 992 3975 or 99 2
25 71
4 19 tf c

t 72

Stop In a nd See Our
Floor D1 s play.

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

Phone 742 · 4~73
742-5595
Bt II Brown, Owner
Rutland, Ohio

HOGG &amp; 71JSPAN

•

M I\ LH I NES R l a ir
se r v 1ce. a ll m a kes, 99 2 .! 284
Th e Fa bnc Shop , Pomero y
A ul hor, ze d St ng er Sales and
Servt ce We Sharpen Sc issors
3 29 tf c

Real Estate For Sale

nea r Cr ossroad s on State
Ro ute 12d, 8 30 to 6 p m
M on d ay through SiJt ur da y
Phone 99 2 568 2 or 992 712 1
4 12 26tc

NOTICE!

Jack W Ca r sey, M gr

FURNITURE

6 30 - News 3, 4, CBS News 8, 10, Your Future Is Now 33 NB C
News 15, ABC News 6, Room 222 13
7 oo - Beatthe Clock 4, What's My Line 8, News 6, 101 Elec Co
20 , Truth or Consequences 3. Let's Make A Deal 13, Sports
Desk 15; Turned on CriSi s 33
7 30 - Hollywood Squares 3; Wild Kingdom 10. To Tell the
Truth 6; Ozzle's Gtrls 8, Beat the Clock 13 ; Zoom 20, Dea ler's
Choice A, Baseball 15
8·00 - Tile Waltans 10, B. Fl1p Wilson 3, 4, 15 , Chopper One 6. 13
Behind the Lmes 20, 33
8 311"- Firehouse 6, 13
9. 00 - IronSide 3, 4, Kung Fu 6, 13, Black Journal 20, Movoe 8,
10, War and Peace 33
10· 00 - News 20, MuSi c Country USA 3, 4, AB C News Closeup 6,
13 , TBA 15
10 30 - Day AI Night 33 , Musoc Courtry USA 15

CAPRICORN (Dec 22· Jan

Try l o keep y ou ~

you d l1ke
cool

Generation Rap

THURSPAY, APRIL2$, 1974
6 00 - New• 8; 10 , Sesame St 20; ABC News IJ, News 3, 4. 15 .
Truth or Conseq 6, L11la s, Yoga and You 33

FIRE PEPARTMENT
EQUIPMENT
EXTINGUISHER
SALES &amp; SERVICE
HOME AlARMS

Bu11t to Your ·~pees .
Delwered to Job S1te

and

Television Log

BROWN'S·FIRE &amp;
SAFETY EQUIPMENT

,.,.,
·- 's?\;

OFFICE SUPPLIES

'S t: W I Nlio

Auto Sales

Offtce

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

by
th e acr e hourl y or cM tra ct ,
fa r m pond s, road s, e tc La r ge
doze r and op erator w 1th O\ler
20 year s ex: p err ence Pull m s
E ~ c a v at ng Pom er oy Oh io
Phon e 992 ?478
12 19 tt c

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

Across lr om Pom e roy Post

4 10 lfc

DOiE R~;k. la n dd~;i~

WOOD TRUSSES

992-2094
606 E. Main
Pomero•·

~

over run k a ut omo br l~s over to
us Wil l p ay $5 fo r Ol d tunk
ca r s Pho ne 1 (3 04) 77 3 5890
R rv cr s de Au t o W r ec km g
4 9 26tc

ASK !JS ABOUT
PRE- FABRICATED

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

. 2 11 tfC
-TIO------ -- . . . .-- - N 1 fu ss , don t cuSs , t ur n

Mobile Homes For Sale

MOWERS

.

9 - TbeDaUy Sentmel, Middleport-Pom...oy, O., April25, 1974

.

d o1e r , loader
and ba c khoe work , sept rc
tanks 1nstalled dump t r uck s
and lo bo ys tor h 1re, Wi l l hau l •
fil l d1rt , top so rl l 1m estone
and gr av el Ca l l Bob or Roger
Jeff er s da y phon e 992 7089,
nr ght pho ne 992 3525 or 992

523'/

'

I' Busiitess Services.

~XC A VA TING

?' P

dts.hes, toys, col lecta bles

va

C BRA DF O RD . A uct1on eer
Comp le te Serv 1Ce
Phon e 94Y :Jil 21 or: 949 3161
R ac me , Oh io
Cr ltt Bradford
s 1 lf c

For Sale

Cl of htn g, book s, r eco r ds
lamps, ptctures, fur n1ture,

A T O Z Ma r t u s ed furn1sh ed
a pp lf unccs, ctolh 1ng d tshes
and m tsc
R t J J oppo s1te
tr a d e r cou r t , Ha rt for d
W

Busmess Services

Resul~s!

Serttinel Classifieds Get
Notice

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Tell about the ol~ days

10 - The Daily S&lt;ntinel. Middlcpurt-Pumer,ly, 0 ., l\pril 25, 19H

Lillie a&lt;·tion
in disharmony

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

PT. PLE;ASI\N.T - All was
not hnrm ony amid topics of
discussion at Wednesda y
night's long regular Board of
Edu ca ti on meeting where
charges of.politics were le\'e lt•d

...

:·.

.::..

·:

"People. P laces . Things ;:md celebration June 2:t &lt;ll · the

Eve nts of Meigs Co unty's
Pas!" is the theme of the
histuricttl essay conte st being'
sponsored by the Meigs County
Pioneer and Hi s tori c~d Society.
The rontest is open to· persons
of all ages and pilrtic ip atlon b
urg-ed .
The essays a re to be· a
minimum of 700 word s .. with no
maximum length set. They

•'·'·

'•

am idst intermitte nt hea led'

exchanges.
As a result, no decision wa!-i

rea ched on Service Personnel
contracts in re la tion to actua l

pay and that which is called for
' in the contract, reinstatement
of Bri ght McCa uslan d as
!Ianna n p•·inci pal fell through ,
and the promotion of an em·
ploye at t11e bus garage still
stands.

St~ss ion to

open

April 29--Moore

/

CHARLES TON, W. Va.
1UPI) - The governor 's office
an nounced today Gov. Arch
Moore will ca ll th e Wesl
Virgi nia Le gisla ture into
special session beginning next
Monday, April 29.
"The Governor is dn1fting

IN.FLATION FIGHTER SALE

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ROY MILLER, A MEMBER of the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District board of

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OPEN HOUSE - Public "open house" of Pomeroy 's new
Fire Stationwill beheld Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. Shown is the

.

superv isors, presented ribbons a nd cash prizes to Tuppers Plains Elementary School winners
in the conservat ion poster contest. They include: front row, I tor , Randy Shields, Beth Ritchie,
Danny Brawley, first place winners, fourth , fifUi ·and sixth grades, respectively ; Hr1an Connoll y and C. J. Morlan, working cooperative ly, Den Hawk and Tim Eneveldson, second place
wiiU1crs in the fo urth , fifth and sixth grades, respectively: Patricia Kay Edward, Carla
Chich ester, Edward Scyoc, third place winners in the fourth, fifth and sixth grades, respectively .

"VOL XXVI

Normal Yos t. Yos t declined to
say what items, other than the
budget will be included in the
agenda .

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Fair Saturday. A ch•nce oi
showers Sunday but more
· llkely Monday. Daily highs
In lo"· to mid 70s. Lows In
upper 40s and lower 50s. ·

April26-27-28
EVEN ANGELS
EAT BEANS
.,. and that ain't hay!

l PG I

31 more

MASON DRIVE-IN

(Continued from Page ·!)
Thereon Johnson, chairman
of U1e Meigs Soil and Water

FRI.· SAT. · SUN. APR. 26-27-28
DOUBLE FEATliRE PROGRAM

District board of supervjsors,

uNAUGHTY

prese nted the awards Wedne sday at the Pomeroy
Elementary school, with Roy
Miller , a board memb er ,

STEWARDESSES/I·
e PLUS .e

.

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'!HIS AIIIUif SI!IW!S THAI!I! WID 015111!$
e
. TAKf liOUR OIOIC!
&lt;1

VOTING CHANGE
The Meigs County Board of
Elections has announced· a
change in voting location for
the Middleport fifth ward at the
May 7 primary elections. May
7 ·voters of the ward will east
their ballots at the Rich Valley
Ice Cream Plant, corner of
Park and High Sis. , and are to
·ente r the East side basement
door.

Nelhbel, three marches,
"Lass us Trombone," " Them

Misses and Juniors Spring Coats, Dresses and Pantsuits,
Blouses, All-Weather Coats, Capes, Sweaters, Skirts,
Shorts, Famous Makes Coordinates, Pants, Tank Tops,
Swimwear, Pant Tops, Bodyshirts, Jeans, Shirts,
Uniforms, Daytime Dresses, Smocks, Aprons, Maternity
Wear, Bras, Girdles, Slips, Panties, Half Slips, Robes,
Dusters, Gowns, Pa iamas, Stockinqs, Panty ' Hose,
Slippers, Socks, Umbrellas, Billfolds, Handbags, Gloves,
Scarfs, Handkerchiefs, Belts. GirJs ,Coats, Girls Dresses,
Girls Sportswear, Girls Lingerie, Girls Sleepwear. Infants
and Toddlers Clothing, Bedding, Diapers, Accessories.
Piece Goods, Sewing Notions, Patterns, .Sewing Books.
Blankets, Bedsp·reads, Pillows, Sheets, Pillowcases,
Towels, Washcloths, Bath Mats. Table Covers, Tea
Towels, Dresser Scarfs, Mattress Pad~, lroninJJ Board
Covers, Mattress Protectors, Mens Dress Shirts, Sport
Shirts, Ties, Belts, Handerchiefs, Work Gloves, Pajamas,
Robes, Hats,' Hosiery, Dress Slacks, Dungarees, Work
Uniforms, Jackets, Underwear, Stlorts, Swimwear,
Sweaters, Sweatshirts, Knit Shirts, Boys Jackets, Boys
Shirts, Boys Slacks, Boys Hosiery, Boys Underwear,
Notions, Cosmetics, Yarn, Greeting Cards, Gift Wrap,
·Note Paper, School and Office Supplies, Typewriters,
Candy, Filmr Flashcubes, Cameras, Projectors,
Binoculars, Lamps, Pictures, Mirrors, Area · Rugs,
Carpet, Curtains, Furniture Throws, Draperies, Window
Accessories, Cushions, Hassocks, Wi.ndow Shades,
Wallpaper, Wall Decorations, Small Appliances, Fans,
Vacuum Cleaners, China, Glassware, Clocks, Artificial
Flowers, Candles, Cookware, Cutlery, Kitchen Gadgets,
Pi.cnic Supplies, Pantryware, Paper Goods, Cleaning
Supplies- Light Bulbs. Hampers, Scale.s, Home Repair
·Items. Bedroom Furniture, Chairs, Dining Room Furniture, Mattresses, Box Springs, Living Room Furniture,
Tables~ Fireplace Sets; Desks, Radios, Tape Players,
Records, Tapes,. Toys, Luggage.

making the prese ntation at
Tuppers Pla ins and Riverview .
Mrs. Leota Young, local office
employe, travels to each of the STAYS WITH, KINGS
schools to assist with the
INGLEWOOD, Cali!. (UP!)
presen ta lions.
- Dan Maloney has turned
down a lucrative offer from the
World Hockey Association and
signed a multiyear contract .
with the Los Angeles Kings, it
LOCAL TEMPS
was announced Wednesday.
Temperature in downtown
Maloney, 23, had 15 goals and
Pomeroy Thursday at II a. m. 17 assists for the Kings this
was 50 degrees under sunny past National Hockey League
skies.
season . NHL coaches voted
him the best fighter in the
league.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Se aled bids will be acce pted
unlil noon May 9, 1914 by the
Vi l lage of Syritc u se , Ohio , for
th e purcha se of police com ·
municat i on :; equ ipm ent by sa id
vi l l age .
The items for which bid s are
being acce pted are one mob i l e
and on e portabl e pol ic e r ad ios .
Sp ec ifi ca t io ns can be ob ta ined by con tac tin g ei th er the
clerk or polic e chief of the
vi ll age
Ka thryn H. crow , Clerk
Village of Sy racuse .
(4) 25 ; (5) 2, 2t c

THE

GOSPEL OF CHRIST
ROMAN S 116

I COR. 9 I ~

2 COR . 4:4

BRO; TED BLACKWOOD, Evangelist
Nitro, West Virginia
in

&lt;!-

series of
., '

Gospel Meetings
APRIL 28 · MAY 4,' 1974
DISTRESSED

~Services Each Evening at 7:30 p.in.

DENIM SANDALS
TO GO WITH THOSE

MAIN .FLOOR AND _WAREHOUSE OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:Jo TO 9
'

THE SHOE BOX

MILLER STREET
MASON, ,WEST VIRGI'NIA .

ELBERFELDS IN -POMEROY

.MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO.
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the love theme from "Ladles
Sing Blue" by LaGrande,
and the "Sounds of the
Carpenters" by Carcarias.
The Junior High School Band
will play Its three contest
numbers
during · Intermission. The concert is
free to the public.

r·

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BRADBURY SCHOOL WINNERS in the annual Meigs
Soli and Water District poster contest are pictured with
district representative, Roy Miller. They are front row, I to 4,
Mindy Long, Matt Weaver, first places, fifth and six-th
grades, respectively; second row, I tor , Jayne Lee Hoeflich,
Christine Ehersbach, second place, fifth and six th grades,
respectively ; third row, I tor, Jeff Moore, Melinda Demosky,
fifth and sixth grades, respectively, third place winners.

J',_ .
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WINNERS IN THE MEIGS conservation poster contest
at the Middleport Elementary School received awards from
Roy Miller. They are from the left, Melissa Sr?encer, first;
Greg Bush, second, and Pam Crooks, third. All are fourth
graders.
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·' lmulav . ,\J&gt;ril 2!1 is Bloodmo~ile D ~y for
'll'i l(s ( 'ounty . Th l' llloodrnobilt• will be at The
l'nmt · ru~· Elrme1ilar y Sdwol from I to ti p.m.
Tht•n• is a nt·w rulin!( b~· th e ll ed Cross
which allows Jlcrsons Ii yt•ars old to donate
hloml JII'OViding the y havt' wrillt•n parental
ronsl'nt. This provitlt•s tht• famil y wi t h blood
,·on• rag(•·so donate a nd g: h-c some senior citizen
a nt"w ..:hanl'e in lih~.
·

RETURN F:U
State Aud1 to r .Joseph T.
Ferguson's office announced a
supplemental distribution of
$343,423. 17in liquor permi t fees
to Ohio cities, vill~;~ge &lt;Jnd
townships. Pomeroy Village
received $298.25.

i, , , ,~:~,, 1,': ,~:·,;;'~EE::.;,,~,:~~~~~:~;:,:,~ ~~~,,,~~:,:,0,~,~:;, ,::,': : ~, , ~:·, , ,':;
Now You Know

.,

.;·:-.~·:-.-x-................................. ,•,•,• ..................,............................................................ •••·••
••
•...... ,•,•,•,•.•.•.•,•.-.•.•;&lt;",o,•,.... ,•••••:-:;......-:-.·.....·.••V'W"T.'.·...•:O;&gt;,•,•,•.•:.C.•:-..........;.........;.••;.•••\

ews .. in Briefs[
,•,•

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - TilE SENATE FINANCE Committee
voted unanimously today in favor of the nomination of William E.
Simon as new Treasury secretary . The full &amp;nate is expected to
confirm him next week.
Simon, nominated to replace George P. Shultz who is
resigning, appeared briefly at a closed meeting of the committee. Within 10 minutes, after Simon left, Chairma n Russell B.
Long, D-La., emerged to announce the unanimous vote.

Contest.
finished

•

SAUSBURY ELEMENTARY School winners in the annual poster contest of the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District 'are pictured with Roy Miller, district board of supervisors ·
member who presented awarda. They are : front, I tor, Mike Dill,; !Jnda Williams, Linda Partlow first place winners of the fourth, fifth and sixth grades, respectively; second row, I !O r,
Vicki Sauters, Tom Hooper, Carla Kauff, second place winners of the,fourth, fifth and siXlh
grades, respectively, and third r~w, l tor~ Kathy Parker, T~d Thacker, and Brencla Ross;
. third place winners of the fourth, ftfth and s1xth gra~es, respecbvely. .
,

CINCINNATI IUPI I - An
official for the Department of
Housin g
and '
Urb~n
Development said here Tht•rsday most federall y funded
public housing projects in the
natio n's inn er citi es ar e·
failur es be cause of poo r
management.
H. R. Cra wf ord, HUD
assistant secretary for Housing
Management and the highest
ranking black in the Nixon
Administration, s·aid minority
groups should turn va cant
federal housing to their own
advantage.
.
.
'' We have been permissive
for too long , and it has been too
costly to the taxpayer for too ·
long," Crawford told a Housi ng
League meeting here.
" At HUD we have to se t
regulations or guidelines for
the managemen t of a public
housing project," he said . " We
have managers who cannot

read or write or articulate a housin g who haven't paid rent
lease. We have managers who in three years because they're
protesting, " he added.
cannot count.

" We have 20,000 people who
pay no rent and we spend $35
mil lion a year on vandalism
and $280 million to subsidize
the projects. ,
"We have people living in our

COLUMBUS (UP! i - Over
5,000 high sc hool voca ti on
agr iculture students , advisors
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
and parents were expected for
Warm Sunday and Monday the 46th annual Ohio Future
with chance uf showers
Farmers of America FF A
Sunday but more likely convention here today and
Monday. Cooler Tuesday Saturday at the Ohio Exwith showers ending. Highs positions Center .
In the 70s and low 80s Sunday
The convention parti cipants
cooltng to 80s on Tuesday. represent 22,000 FF A members
Lows mostly In the 50s.
who are vocational agriculture
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::: studen ts at more than 327 high
schools in the state. Theme of
the convention , scheduled to be
LOCAL TEMPS
one
of the largest for youth in
Temperature in downtown
For
Pomeroy Friday at 11 a.m. was Ohio, is 11 FFA
62 degrees under sunny skies. Tomorrow's Agriculture ."

record. A statement from a physician is the best
record of all.
A COMPLETE ll.EGISTRA TION of all children ·
fo r kindergarten is extremely important now that we
provide transportation for the1J1 . At the registration
you
will be asked to give detailed information about
Speaking of schools--No. 311
. 'i" we can accurately locate
' your home
where you live
who are not attending kindergarten this y~ar. We on a map as we attempt to construct the kindergarten
will, of course, have the necessary information for bus routes. If we do not have your child registered or
those students who are in kindergarten this year. The do not have accurate information about the location
registration will take place at the school where the of your residence, it will be impossible foq,1s tO obtain
child will be attending next .year.
an a.ccurate bus route. This is a point that I cannot
At the registration we will expect you to present a overeinph,asize .
•
birth certificate that will confirm the child's age. To ·
THERE IS ANOTHER PRESSING reason why
enter kindergarten this fall the youngster must he we need a complete registration on May 1. With this
five on or before .S&lt;ptemher 30, 1974. To enter grade 1 information we must learn the nwnber of classes we
a child must be six on or before September 30, 1974. will have. If we have an· inaccurate or incomplete,
·The only exception . to this esl&lt;lblished age registration, we cannot make intelligent decisions. In
requirement will come about if a student successfully addition to this, the registration also tells us the
passes a test given by the county Office during the number of particular learning materials that we will
swruner months.
have to order for use next fall .
A second item that we will need at the time of
Let me sum up by saying that it is extremely
registration will be a record of the ·child's im- important that we attain a complete and accurate
munization against the childhood diseases stated in registration for next year 's kindergar ten and grat:\C I
th.e law. These are diphtheria, }&gt;hooping cough, classe.s on May ). We truly need your cooperation in
tetanus, polio and measles plus a skin test for TB. It'is seeing that we do obi:lili a complete and accurate
quite important that you bring to the r~gis tratioli · registration at each school. The effectiven.ess of the I
information that will confirm the il;nmunization early days of ,the next s~hool year will be greatly

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in FFA meeting

pupils to sign up May 1

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5,000 voc-cd 'ers

BAGS TURKEY - Greg Gibbs, Mason, at the annual "Spring Gobbler Hunt " at Spruce
Knob, W. Va., brought down this 17-pound wild turkey. Greg used a turkey call to lure the bird
into position . Greg accompanied his father, Gary Gibbs, on the four day trip, one th e family
enjoys each year. Greg's father has yet to land his first bird .

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TEN CENT::i

9922156

Br George Hargraves, Supt.
Meigs Local School District
Next Wednesday, May I, we will have · our
sign -· tip day for next year's kindergarten
pupils ' and for pupils entering · grade 1

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Worldwide holdings of th e
famo us King Ranch - based
mainly in Texas, Pennsylvania
and Kentucky - are larger in
area than England .

Scandals cited in HUD

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Bloodmobile Day: April 29

n~E S

~HON E

Kindergarte~

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::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~

enttne

JACKSON, MISS. - PRESIDENT Nixon, beset by troubles
of his own, toid a hospitable Southern audience Thursday of a
young farmer who in the face of great adversity had said, "I an1
going to see it through." More thim 30times during his 41-minute
· address to the Mississippi Economic Council. the audience of
12,000 that januned the Coliseum in Jacli.son broke into applause.
Nixon, who faces due dates next week of subpoenas by both
Special Prosecutor Leon Jaworski and the House Judiciary
Committee for his Watergate tape recordings, did not refer
specifically to his own problems. Nixon will spend the weekend at
Representatives of the Meigs Camp David, Md., presumably to make final decisions on how he
Soil and Water Conservation will respond to the subpoenas next week. He will speak next
District made their fourth visit Friday in Phoenix, Ariz., and Saturday in Spokane, Wash.
in four day,s to Meigs County
elementary schools Thursday
LISBON - GEN . ANTONIO DE SPINOLA, HEAD of the
afternoon to award prizes in seven-man military junta that seized power in an almost bloodthe district's annual poster less coup Thursday promised today to free political prisoners,
end press censorship and call elections "in the shortest possible
contest.
The contest·this year had far time." DepQsted President America Thomaz and Premier
more entries than in previous Marcelo Caetano were flown today by milita ry plane to exile in
years due to the simplification the Ritz Hotel on the Atlantic holiday island of Madeira , leaving
of the rules and expansion of behind 40 years of right-wing dictatorship. Two other ministers
the awards system in order to were exiled toJhe equally luxurious Palace Hotel on the island.
Portugal was returning to near normal, but in !Jsbon an
give mor~ recognition in local
angry
crowd shouting "murderers, murderers," pressed forschools.
Visited (see pictures at left ) ward trying to get at the policemen who were surrendering to (he
the final day of the program ru;rny at the downtown headquarters of security police (DGS ).
were Middleport, Bradbury Meinbers of the opposition under the Thomaz-Caetano regime
and Salisbury · Elementary repeatedly accused the dreaded DGS of using torture on political
Schools. Making official prisoners.
presentations to winners was
SAN FRANCISCO - MIDDLE-AGED MALES who smoke
Roy Miller, a member of the
more
than 20 cigarettes a day suffer strokes six times more often
district's board of supervisors.
Mrs . Leota Young , office than non-!l!llokers, the American Academy of Neurology was told
employe, accompanied Miller Thursday.
The conclusion for men, ages 45 to 54, came from an 18-year
to record winners and to pick
up all first and second place study of 5,184 men and women at Framingham, Mass. The study
winners which now will be results, developed by a Boston University Group, said the type of
stroke suffered by smokers is a cutoff of blood which causes the
judged on a county basis.
First place winner in each death of brain cells.
school received 3 Ike silver
WASHINGTON - AMERICAN CONSUMERS may have
dollars and a blue ribbon :
been
overcharged more than $100 million by domestic fuel
second place, two silver dollars
and a red ribbtln and third distributors this winter, according to John C. Sawhill, new
place, a white ribbon and one federal energy chief. sawhill told thJ!.- House Government
Operations subcommittee Thursday that the FEO was insilver dollar.
·
vestigating thousands of complaints of price gouging and had
"already challenged or has under investigation some $100 million
. (Continued on page 12)

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BEAT UP JEANS

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST

Basses" and uon the Mall,"

SALE STARTS FRIDAY, APRIL 26 AT 9:30 AM

pa st beca use as M_rs·. Hilfe rty
explained , ' 'it is illl ]}Orl&lt;Jn't that
there be some record of ]fx:al
hi story and the ma in snurce of
informat ion on the past will
come fr om the people ...
" 'l'he ((let:; aren't in boob for
Uw m os t part , but ::1re in the
minds of oUr citizens" . Lhc
c ha ir wonuw sl ate d . d Yo ur

FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1974

CONCERT TONIGHT
The Meigs High School
Band, directed by Dwight
Goins, will be presented In
concert at 7:30 tonight at the
Larry Morrison Gymnasium
In the high school.
Some highlights of the
spring concert will be

DURING THIS STOREWIDE SALE EVENT!

This is your invitation to hear

..J./

PO MEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ON ALL 3 FLOORS

MRS. GRACE WEBEB, principal of the Riverview Elementary School, presents first
place award s to the winners of the annual cultural arts program sponsored by the PTA. As
visual arts first place winners, the work of these three students will be entered in district
competition at Middleport on May 4. The wiiU1 ers are, I tor , Jay Johnson, primary division :
Donald Putnam, intermediate division and Daw n Sorden, junior high division.

Show Starts 7 p.m.

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ON EVERY ITEM
IN EVERY DEPARTMENT

Fri. , Sat., Sun .

library, Mrs. llilferty s:old.
·MciJ.: s Counti ans ar('_urged to
write about Meigs County 's

nc 1~d

Devoted To The lntereJJU Of The Meig5-Mcuon Area

"Ceremonial Musie " by V.

April25
NOT OPEN

l'OW hollow, your fami ly,
ente rtamment of the old days,
the opera hou ses , keepin g
house without wa ter or elec tri ci ty, farming with a tea rn or
oxen,
were am ong the topi c
Si'hools, tre~ i ns, mines. horse
suggestions
rrt!:lde by Mrs.
and buggy travel, stores or
Hilferty
.
building now ~on e , you r town ,
nut he drrtrn:Jtic or
t'IJil L'crn in'4 s omethin~ or
.~m11cunc ranwus, bu t merr;:ly
;J bou~ what times or places
used to be lik(' " , she Sa id .

s tory

Me igs County Mu seu 111 on
ButLt.:rnu t Ave. All ess&lt; IYS wi ll
be kept (lfl fi ll' Il l thr • lllU SCU III

•

at y

"·

MEIGS
THEATRE
Tonight , Thursc!ay

should be either typewritte n or
rlea rly handwritten. There is
no limi t on the number of
essays which ca n be submitted
by a participan t.
All en tries arc to b.e rna iled to
Mrs. Elizabeth Hilferty , Ro ute
2, Pomeroy, no later than May
31. A to tal of $tOO will be
awarded in prizes, $10 for the
best, and $7 for other good
essays . Winners will be announced Regatta Weekend at
th e
Heri tage
Sund ay

•

Mostly sunny and mild '
today. High in upper 50s and
60s north ranging to low 70s
south . Fair tonight. Low in 40s
and low 50s . Saturday sunny
and warmer. High from mid
60s to mid 70s.

la te to day," said Moore's
admini s tr ative
assista n t~

Giulian o Gemma
Bud Spence r

new facility located on Butternut Ave. See a message from
the firemen on page 7 today .

Weather

the call today , and it will be
mailed to each member as soon
as it's finished, probably very

( Technicolorl

.

affected by your cooperation at this registration time.
Please, help us do a good job so we can then do a
better job for you next fall. We really need your
cooperatiol\ and sincerely request it.
NEXT WEEK WILL BRING ANOTHER
significant time for the Meigs Local School District .
On Saturday, May 4, at IOa .m. the board will conduct
a public auction of the old Coal Port School B)lilding.
This auction will take place at the school site, The
Coal Port School Building is located just up-river
from the ·Jones Boys store. ·
The Coal Port &amp;boo! contains a lot of salvagea ble
timber, bricks, etc. With the building, of course, will
go the-land upon which it is situated. This land also is
va luable .
. We have had inquiries from persons who are
interested in this structure and the land it sits on , We
look forward to their attending this public auction at
10 a.m. on Saturday, May 4. Perhaps this is
something that you should give some thought to also,
even if you aren't in a buying mood . We would lie glad
to have you attend.
'
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In the advertisements which the board haS had
published in the papers, it has indicated, o~ eoilrse,
that it-reserves the right to reject all bids. This will
protect the board from the p.ossible •,sale of the ·
/building and land at a price that is not \rlily in line
with its value: Why not drop down riext Saturday. ai

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