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I

· 10- The Daily Scntmel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 , Mon&lt;l&lt;i ), Mdrrh ~

~ Stella Porm of Pomeroy dies
• Stella Pon n, 86, of 244
, Mulberry Ave . Pomero). d1cd
Sunday a t Hillcres t Hest
Home. Athens
Mrs Ponn was born June 30
' 1889, the daughter of the late
Sheridan and Pl1oebe West She
was also preceded m death b)
her husband , Benton Ponn, two

slsters, Frances Ward and
Jenme Profflll , and four
brothers, R T West R1cha 1d
West, Wilbur Wesl, and Arv1lle
West
Mrs Ponn was a nlt'mber of
the Pomero) Umled MethodiSt
Church and Pome1O) Easte1 n
Stars
su rvtved b~ three
sisters! Mrs J ohn Ca pella,
She

IS

' Cha rlevna
Pa
Jessie
, Hennessey, and Maude Ackley,

both or
brothe l s,

Z.ll1l'S\lllt•

l\\ 11

West

Unwn

Sll crt

Ccmeter~.

Athe11s

l'~ ttcn d s

md\ l.ill .a t tlw

fu nerc~ l

honw

drl\ l lllll'

Mrs Elizabe th Nu:hul son
M(CLUnber, age 102, former
Dcx.te1 1cstdcnt dtcd ear l\

th e war "~"

Chang e the whole ap
pearance of your home

with

a room divi der

she lv 1ng
dozens of

paneling ,

or

other ways
Stop In at lhe home of lhe
" FRIENDLY ON ES" for
the materials you need

Stl l'Ul\111\ Y ADM ISSIONS
l:ul.. \Vt•lkt•l ( 1 1lumbu~
Hl'!IL't' l{lwdcs Hm lilt' j {,lmn~

(, uuld Sh.tdt•
SATUH!lil v nrsr II AHra s
Mu hue I Wmd. V11 gd

Hudson

Hd) mund

[Jd tdiiH:

Johnson

1-h se ll ,

Bessy

Tuan sa1d he had no
obligation to answer the questions, stood up and abruptly
signaled an end to the meeting
The Commumsts hav e
reported holding the bodies of
41 Amencans but have refused
to hand the remains over to
US. authorities .
During the trip, the legisla·
ll.rs met South Vietnamese
President Nguyen Van Th1eu m
Saigon and Cambodian President Lon No! m Phnom Penh
The delegation also ,held
meetings with various political
groups in Sa1gon and were
briefed by American and Soulh
Vietnamese offi Cials on the
military situation.

Ktlchen Jean
·1.-1\ lor , John Blosser, flpt)ccca
( .. , d I) dt&lt;-~ Bcuch, Jc s.oe; tc
V,111 l fl\\ ;1 ~on

Chur ch of Clmst, Mrs Me·
Cumber 1s survaved b\' several
meLes and nephews and great-

flc1ahng

Bunal w1 ll be

111

Wh1te Oa k Cemetery nea r
Dexter F'nends may call at the
WcilkN Fun e1a l Home Jn
Hutlancl mn tunc aftc1 2 p m
Tuesday un.tJ I noon Wednesday

11hen the body w1ll be taken to
the church to he In state

M.tr vtn

M,u

I'

Mom c

IIIndy

Pum cr uy ,

nv KAnt:cnow

Middleport ,

.SC ilt.•Js ShaUL' Ju 1\rm
Ml l.aughltn , Pomeroy

up four ~.:rnts pc1 1.000 tlllHL'

li:~rl

Holler Medical Center

1Births!
&lt;.tOd Mrs.

Clu-u lcs E Dunn , Henderson,
sun, Mr i:JrJcl Mr:-; Wcnllell
Hccs, Oak Hill , son
Saturday - Mr tmd Mrs.
Peter Pe1fer Vmton, son
Sunday - Mr and Mrs
M1ehael ~lbers, Ja ckson son
Mr and Mr:-; Jerry DougLas
Moore , Pomero; son

Pleasant Valley Hosp1llll
DISCHARGED
Mrs

LYONS REMAINED UNDEFEATED - Mickey Lyons
of Me1gs High won this match and the champ10nsh1p m the

Mrs Lena Chn stma Ebcrsbach, 87, of 102 Peacock Ave .
Pomeroy, died Sunday at
Yete1 an• Mem011al Hospital
Mrs E b e rs b~c h was the
daughter of the late John and
Chnstine Gress Wmter She
was also preceded m dea th by
her husband, J aco b Ebe rsbach She was the last sur·
VIVIIlg member 0£ her fami)y
Severa l meces and nephews
surviVe

Funeral se rv1ces w11l be
conducted at 10 a m Wed·
nesday at Sacred Hearl Church
of which she was a member
Rosary servwes w1ll be held at

TO HOSPITAL
Pome r oy

urnt

of

SEOE MS t1 ansported Lee
Combs of Rutland a medical
pa helll, to !he Holzer Medical
Ct•nlel at 10 .!0 p m Sunday
H,\D CHEST PAINS
Clarence Me Dame!, Route 7,
11a s laken lo the Holzer
Med ical Center by the Mid·
dleport E-R squad at 1 20 a m
Monday He was suffermg
ches t pmns

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E-R squad
answered a call to Laurel St at
9 40 a m Sunday for Lena
Ebersbach 1\ho wa~ taken to
Veterans Memon al Hospital

Pleasant, Jame Ha rr ts, Pmnt

KC musicians earn 11 Superior marks

Pleasant, Stolhe McComas,
Y1nton, Evelyn Locketl,
Chiton , Mrs Huber Dehart,
Fla twoods Ky , Larry Lee
Meadows, M1lton , Goldi e

Davul T Phillips ' Kyger Trw composed of Marsha received an excellent ratmg m p m at Kyger Creek High
Cre ek Instrumental band Leach, Carol Coleman and the Class A Snar-drlll1l com· School w1th the North Gallia,
members received 11 supenor Sheba Vance L~r.da Jenkms petitiOn Judges were Larry Southwestern, Hannan Trace
ratmgs and seven excellent
Clapper, Massillon; Richard and Galha Academy Bands ;
ratmgs Salut day dunng the
Lasko , Canton ; Richard the slllte contest in April and
Robinson. Pomt Plea sant ,
D1stnct XV!l Compehtwn at
Latimer, Wadsworth , Robert the Annual Sprmg Concert m
Mrs Ira Potts, Henderson
GALLIPOLIS,
OHIO
Athens It was one of the best
Lyon, Dover, Em1l Raab, May.
Ray DaY.son, Mason , li-01don showmgs Kyger Creek has
March 1, 1975
The group was accompamed
Bowling Gree n, Gary T1rey,
Wayne Han ley, Buffal o eve1 made 111 the dtstnct
Sales Report of
Satw-day
by Karen Miller, a
Collll1lbus and Max Tre1er of
Wilham Carpenter , Vmton
Ohio
Valley
Livestock
Co.
sophomore
p1ano student at
com peti tion
Cambndge H1gh School
STOCKER
CATTLE
KC was the only county band
The Kyger Creek Band w1ll Ohw UmverSily
STEERS - 250 tn 300 lbs 20 to now parilc1pate m the D1stnct
Band director Phillips was
to participate
24,
300
to
400
lbs
18.50
to
24.50;
well
pleased w1th the band's
Gettmg superto r rati ngs
XVII Compehtwn at Ports8 Tuesday evemng at the
400
to
500
lbs
20
to
23
75;
500
to
overall sho\\ mg and expressed
Ewmg Funeral Home w1lh the were Yvonne Massie, Class 8 600 lbs 21 to 27, 600 to 700 lbs. mouth March 22; the F~rs t
h1s thanks to the band for "a
Cla
n
net
Solo,
Jan
Drlll1lmond,
Annual
Gallia
County
Band-0·
Rev . Father Paul Welton of.
21
to
20,
700
lbs
and
Over
19
to
Job
well-done."
Rama slated Apnl 11 at 7:30
f1c1atmg Burial \\Ill be m Class B Clarmet Solo; Wanda 31 50
Beec h Grove Cemetery Saxon, Class B E-Fiat Clarmet
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
Fnends may call at the fun eral Solo , Dav1d Lasseter, Class B 300 lbs 17 lo 22; 300 to 400 lbs
home any hme after 7 thiS Bassoon Solo; Kay Roush, 19 to 21 50 , 400 to 500 lbs 20 to
Class C French Horn Solo,
evemng
!Continued from Page 11
Todd Thomas, Class B 21 25, 500 to6001bs. 19to 22; 600
to
700
lbs
18
50
to
21,
700
lbs
nommation wtthout conservahve support, may have gotten the
Tr om bone Solo, Timoth y
DIVORCE GRANTED
message
and
Over
19
to
26
50
It was learned that the President has asked to meet
Anna I. JC:tckson. on a cross- Lasseter, Class B Tuba Solo;
with
Sen
James L. Buckley, R-N.Y., a major conservative
STOCK
COWS
&amp;
BULLS
(By
eomplam t m Meigs County Arthur Leach, Class B Tuba
The Head! -Stock Cows 100 to
spokesman.
Common Pleas Court, has been Solo; The Ky ger Cree k
The group, including members of Congress, governors and
175 ,, Stock Cows and Calves
Clannel
Chmr,
The
MIXed
awarded a divorce from
officials, ended a two-day weekend political strategy
party
!5o
to
225,
Stock
Bulls
120
to
Wood Wmd Tno composed of
Russell L JRckson
at an inn in nearby St. Mtchaels, Md., called to discuss
meeting
165,
Baby
Calves
12
to
30,
(By
Jan Drummond, clannet;
ways conservatives can influence administration and party
Angelia Abshire, flute , and The Pound) - Canners &amp;
Cutters Cows 16 to 19, Holstem
pohctes.
Dav1d
Lasseter,
bassoon
The
MRS. DABO ILL
Co\\s
18
to
22;
Commercial
Mrs
V1ncent
Dabo , Clarmet Trw composed of Jan
COLUMBUS- WITH FOUR STATES HAVING had to obBulls ( 1,000 lbs and Over ) 23 50
Pomeroy, IS 1ll at her home Drwnmond, Yvonne Mass1e
tain
federal unemployment msurance loans and 20 others on the
to 26 75
and Wanda Saxon
111th Ou
brink
of jobless compensation bankruptcy, Ohio ranks high on
LAMBS- Tops 90 lbs. to 110
Rece1vmg excellen t ratmgs
the list-of states solvent enough to pay benehts to unemployed
wm e Carol Cole man, Class C 34 50 to 37, Seconds 75lbs to 80
Clar met solo, Tony Shamblm 28 to 32, L1ghts 40 lbs to 65 18 lo workers.
William Papen, director of the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Class C '1'1mpam Solo; George 26, Stock Ewes By the Head 12
TAK EN TO HOSPITAL
SerVIces Research and Statistics Section, says the state now has
The Racine ER squad was Thompson, Class B Bantone to 17 50
VEAL CALVES- Tops 220 $764.8million m tts compensation fund . The fund generated $241.6
called Sunday at 9·15 p m fo r Horn Solo , The Kyger Creek
million last year, he said. With the case rese~ve and ~e
George C1m1mms, Rae me, who PercussiOn Ensemble: A lbs. to 250 52 to 56, Medllll1l 200
.
estunated
$250million that will come mto the fund thiS year, Ohio
was havmg chest pams He Y. as Trombone Trw composed of lbs to 300 40 to 46 50; Culls 30
can compensate the approxunately 8 pel' cent of its population
taken to Holzer Med1cal Bulch Sm1th, Laune Burnett down
currently
unemployed for qUite a while, said Paperi
PIGS - 10 to 30
and Todd Thomas A Clannel
Cente r

Kissinger wants
Golan accord too
By United Press International
Secretary of State Henry
Kissmger , who returns to the
Middle East this week to work
out another troop disengagement agreement between
Israel and Egypt, may also try

I

•

••• but many of us
forget to pay

ourselves!
Isn't it time you began paying younell each
payday? You can, you know, and once you
get Into the habit, It really Isn't very hard to
do. Getting started is really very simple-

for new Israel! pullbacks from
Synan territory, accordmg to
Israeli press reports
" It has been learned that
Kissmger IS of the opimon that
11 is very desirable that a
separation of forces agreement
should be achieved on the
Golan Heights as well as
Sinai," the Israel! newspaper
Ha'aretz satd m a d1spatch
from Washington.
But Israel! government
sources said m Jerusalem the
time is not yet ripe lor
agreement w1th Syria.
In Moscow, the CommuniSt
party newspaper Pravda Sunday renewed its attacks on
K1ssmger's step·by·step Mid·
eas t diplomacy. saymg
partial measures are no
subshtute for a peaceful settlement
Pravda called a gam for the
resumption of the Geneva
peace conference, mcluding
the Palestinians, which 1t said
IS "the most swtable forum lor
settlmg the conllict "
Israel! troops today guarded
a group of muddy hills 12 miles
north of Jerusalem in occupied
Jordan to prevent new attempts by religiOus Jews to
establish seltlements m
defiance of a goverrunent ban

just walk 'into our bank and open up one of
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature III down·
town Pomeroy at 11 a m
Monday was 28 degrees w1th
snow !lurnes.

or passbook accounts. Then, each payday,
as you're writing out checks to pay your
bills, sl.mply write a check to yourself and
deposit It In your savings account.

SAVE SAVE

Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.

s10•BD

POMEROY, OHIO

ON OUH H Sllf:

MEMBER miC

sm

ON II.!NG Silt

""

Ea.ch depotnlor m"u redto S4fi 000

Ingels Furniture

MEMBER
FEDERAL RESERVE
SYSTEM

Bank Rate Financing
1992-2635

' '

•'

I

• • •

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
You II never wear a
padded bra aga1n
whenyou try the

Middleport

sltuc~tc.;ll

$2,400 pc1 ycm·, tho• eler k's

.llld

$1 000, l ounti i fllcm t,cr s $10 for
d 1cgulw· mcc hn g .111r1 $5 f(,, d

rl IJI'd( IU,: ('

bra by Playtex •
Now...~ fullness

withoUt falseness.
Thro., yourold padded
bra away because
INSlJ AD prcMdes a
nalurallook1ng roundness
w1thout 'h1ck uncomfortable
padd1ng

Socomfo11able because
t s made Jl soft coo tncot
Witha sheer elastic back for
around the tx:dy f1t and
comfort adrustatJe
straps thai res1st curt1ng
I aiJd binding
INSTEAD makes !he
Imostof naturally
Available 111 3 styles
1

you

BOARD TO MEET
The Me1gs Cou nty Fair
Board will meet · at 8 this
evemng III the secretary 's
o!llce on the Rock Sprmgs
Fairgrounds

FREE.
"! 1&gt; ~1'&gt;01-! NS Tl lo D

of H ... ''"""

81Vo

March 3 and 4
AMERICAN GRAFFITI
IT echmcolor)
Starr1ng Rrchard Drey fuss
and Ronny Howard

I PG)

Color cartoon~
Valley Forge Hero

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'l.any~PI •)t~ • t

TUESDAY MARCH 4, 1975

Treasurer hunters' dream made real
By MICHAEL GOLDMAN
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI ) - It may have come from
the ship La Nuestra de Atoci1e which sank m 1622, or from
another Spantsh galleon Whatever, it became a treasure
hunter's dream that today IS multun1lhon dollar reality
for a group of divers -and the state of Flonda ,
The state and the d1ving team, headed by salvage firm
chtef Mel Fisher, are splitting up an estimated $6 milliOn
in gold and sllver bars, coms, Jewelry, gold chains and
armaments found in the wreckage near Key West, Fla ..
Fisher said there IS more where that came from
"We all dreamed as children of lmdmg an old ship·
wreck," said Secretary of State Bruce Smathers, who was
among those vtewmg the heavily guarded treasure "Th1s
treasure is a realization of everyone's dream."
The state will keep 25 per cent of the treasure, and the
DiVISion of Archives and Htstory is doing the counting on
tts behalf. Fisher and his team, who began the proJect five
years ago, will keep the rest.
Robert Williams, clue! of the divisiOn, refused to place a
monetary value on the take Bul sources close to Fisher,
wbose 11ctivities in the prOJect were mvestigated by the
Sccuritil'li and Exchange Commission two years ago, estimate it at $8 million.

w;,;;;':':''''i~,,,,,.,,B;i~t;Ii!
~1 ~.
·:

Agriculture Department scientists to recommend that pregnant
mothers eatzinc-nch food&lt;! like meat and liver - JUst m ease it's

...,.11

Dun McKu1zJC, supcrv tsor of
the s tree t depar tment gave un
ex lt~ns J Vl'

repor t on the wo1 k

eompll'INI fo1 the st t eet
dl'prulment sl!l t:P Ia• bec.unc
supervJS!lf
( ~tunrll mcmbt•rs :lppnrt'Jitly
ugn·ed lht•v art· vcr; pleased
"'lh the: work that has bct•n
clont• anrl wrn· advised that
lul'al busiru•ss ll\1'11 haw suld

snnw

't'r} ( om pllnwnta ry
thinJ,:s in n·~,ml to Ml'Kcn:lil•'s
"ork
Counul dJ:! I £&gt;ed to advcrhsc
f01 btds fu1 dll 80-ga llon tclr and
c~ sp i M!t hPdllllg kdtlc
Mu)OI Simth s.ud he has
been ddvt sed that the Army

PRICE 15'

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

WASHINGTON - EXPERIMENTS WITH rats have led

Offer ends Apnl l5 1975

$15,000 to $25,000 on the collectors' market
Fisher and his associates sa1d the artifacts are from the
La Nuestra de Atoche, whiCh sa1led from Havana m 1622
and went down m a humcane tn the Marquesas Keys,
west of Key West
Williams satd archiVISts are uncertam if the sunken
ear go came from the Atoche. He sa1d state hiStori8Ils are
silll mveshgahng origins of the ship and cargo.
"We believe material from this site comes mostly from
Spamsh ships ollhe 17th century, wh1ch was the penod of
the Atoche," said Willwms. "Smce h1stonans depend on
exact documentation, we need more evidence to come to a
COnclUS IOn ,

"Th1s area off the Keys IS full of ships of all kinds of
ages. It's a place where accidents have frequently occurred over a long penod of time Ships from World War
ll have also been found there "
Fisher said only three of 901 silver bars beheved to be
aboard the Atoche have been found. He formed an ocean
salvage company 12 years ago and said most of the
Atoche's cargo IS still burled underwater
Fisher was mvestigated by the SEC after he began
sellmg stocks 111 his salvage company. The federal
regulatory panel doubted aspects of Fisher's v.ntures and
ordered him to qUit selling stock.

Wife held
•
In shooting
Betty F.ynon, 50, Ht 1,
Rae me, has been lodged m the
Me1gs County Jatl on eharges
of
aggrava ted
assault
followm g a shoo tmg mcJdenl at
lhe home of Ed Saunders, Rt. I,
llacme, at 2· 30 p m Monda)
Mrs
F.ynon shot her
husband. John , 42, m the arm
w1th a 410 sho tgun but he
refused treatment al the hme
acconhng to Shenff Robert C.
Ha1·tenbach
Hartenbach •a• d he was
called to the Eynon home
Sunday evemng w1th the
husban d and w1fc we1e hHvmg
problems Mon day , Mrs
Eynon look the gun cwd f1 red

through ~~ set cen door of the
Sa unde1s home where her
husband wa s VISiting, luttmg
hun m the r ight arm

In othe1 actwn the shen!!
1eported tlldt Ius department
and He1 man Hem·y of lhe BCI
a1 c mvest1gatmg two brea kmg

and entenn gs th at OCCW'red
some time afte r mtdnight
Monday m Racme
Star Supply and Cross's
Market we1 e entered through
rem dooo s and properly taken
mcluded a nflc and pistol
shells and money at the Supply
store dlld grocen es and a
quarter of beef from the
(Contmued on page 8)

Chamber assured about streets
Don McKenzie , superviSor of
the Street Dept. , said the
coucml and mavor do care
a bo ut p omeroy '.s s tree ts 1n
remark s to the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce
Mon daya t th e Me1gs 1nn.
McKenzie, was mtroduced
by Ted Reed , pres ldenl ,
followmg lunch A nahve of
Pomeroy, McKen Zie 1s a
graduate of Pomeroy High
Schoo1 where he P1aye d foo t·
ball, and a graduate of Oh10
Umv ers •ty He told the
chamber that hi s JOb IS to see
that the village of PomeJOy IS
clea ned up and problems
facmg residents solved.
" It 1s a b•g task," McKen Zie
smd, "and I can't do anythmg
to 1mprove the stluatwn
w1thout the cooperatiOn of the
commun1ty
"There are better JObs, but
someo ne has to take the
respons1b1hty ," McKenz1e
sa1d
He admitted that Pomeroy
Counc1! has been cnhCIZed but
he added tha t council does
care, and care a lot, about the
cond1tJon of town streets and
Sidewalks
McKenZie sa1d he would
repor t to council Monday mght
what h1s department has accomplished smee he took over
recen tly
Meanwhile, he sa1d parking
lots have been cleaned twice
and the railroad tracks cleaned
ever y week By Easter,
weather perm1llmg, the streets
and sidewal ks w11l have been
hosed down and cleaned. He \
observed that the constructton
of the new waler system has
retarded clean mg · the VIllage.
He was asked t! after the
water system 1s completed the

I
d
uld b
Sldewa ks an streets wo
c
replaced to the conditiOn they
were befo re constr uct/On
began on the water system
.
McKenzie rep1led 11•at the
Boone ConstructiOn Co Will
replac e all Sidewal ks and
repa1r all streets, and lhat unhl
the work IS completed to his
sa t Is fac t 1on bond money w1 11 be
WI til11eld
It IS the plan of the Stree t
Dept · to clean the mam streets
tw1ce a week and the oullymg
streets once a week, McKenziC
said
Also meetmg "'Ill the
chamber were Rea Roush and
Jessie Might, co-&lt;:hatrpersons

of the Meigs Coun ty Chaplet of
I
Oh
A
t
f
k'e d dlOC t ssoc•ahl on k od
f etar de t' •zcdns, w o ,"" fe
or
en . orsernen
o a
Hike
benefit
'Bikane go
10
d d
h ld
Tl
1
re ar el f cth' ren t II ble
procecr
dt s rom e teven WI db e
use o pw-c 1lase t ems use l'
thet bcllnhldrent Anby busmess
es a IS men or usmessman
ma y sponsor athch1ld ort adult
C to
1
1
par ICipa e Ill e evlelnb I ofst·1 •J
sponsor
h a person WI e e up
to.;h e sponstor
t
II eb ev~nld ~ nall~l~a 1 l~ne,
WI t e ~ b pr:h . M IS
; oneB
fe M
oun y
oar o
en a
RetardatiOn Member Ferman

~anc

~

e•tg~

Moore sa id he Will g•ve free RC
lo pel sons takmg part m the
event
•
Reed ro i'OI ted that he •s sllll
wm kmg on a plan to restore
bus serv~ce between Pomeroy
and Athens al so service
•
, Raeme
'
posSibly 'irom
to
Middl epor t Rulland and
S tlern Cen;e, throw' h the
o
Co' mmum ty Improvement
Cmp (CIC)
ll ltend ln g were Reed
McKcnzw , Carolyn Thomas,•
secre tary Don Thomas
Moore W~ndell Hoov er Joh~
Kerr 'Bob Jacobs R;chard
Clm;.bers Mehss;a Con se
Beulah Jon~s and Kal!e Crow '

MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND WAREHOUSE OPEN WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5
SHOP FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8 ?M

ELBERFELDS IN POMERO·Y
Ia~ ........ ta,:t; Hasloc ~ty llll, kiNin tw ""'"" ~ (~~;..._II llfW tlelllc
STYLES 11!11 1:,11 till$ ... s• l STu( ) ; 0.S Ct...- I s• 1a1t fa;i"' Autllt !tr""'

Showslarls 7·oo p.m

"Feeding a ZliiMeficlent diet to experimental rats durmg
the last third of pregnancy causes poor learmng abtlity m the1r
male offspring during young adulthood," said the report on tests
at the Hwnan Nutrition Laboratory m Grand Forks, N D "The
researchers do not know whether zmc deficiency occurs in
11unan fetuses, but it may be prudent for pregnant women ton
ClOII8UIIle foods nch 111 zinc durmg pregnancy."
PHNOM PENH - REBEL GUJifNERS in the jungles around
Phnom Penh sheUed a bote! and pagoda m the Cambodian
c!apltal, killing or wounding nearly thret! dozen persons, military
olfiCI!r'll said today. The officers S81d the Communist-led inContinued on page 8

UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to the Eagle
Ridge Road Monday evenmg
for Mary King who was havmg
dl!ltculty breathmg She was
taken lo Veterans Memonal
Hospital At 3 47 a m Tuesday
the squad went to Monkey Run
for John Russell , who was ill.
He was ta ken to Veterans
Memonal Hosp1tal

Corps of Engmeers at Hunlmgton WJII advertiSe for bids
lo repwr the upper parking lot
wallm March and do the JOb m
Apn l 11 the 1\ater level per·

wells elected
president of
• •
commissioners
Henry Wells was elected
pt eSident and Bernard G1lkey
v1ce pres1dent of the board of
Mmgs County CommissiOners
1n a reg ular sesswn th1s
mornmg
In other busmess Bernard
Fultz, prosecutmg attorney,
was named lo the board of
tru stees of the Southeastern
Oluo Emergency Med1cal
Scrv1ce lo replace Scott Lucas
who res1gned
Me et1n g w1 th the commiSSIOners were Tom Wolfe,
Joe Slobart and J1m Cleland 111
regard lo the comm1sswners
havmg refused to amend the
peU lions to add signatures of
apparent land owners to annex
outly1n g areas to Ra cine
Village

I

I

The three men asked why the
commtsstoners refused to
amend the petition They were
mformed that at the tune of
the~r filing, the petihons did not
contam a maJdrity of owners In
the proposed annexallon .
Therefore the pelitwns were
dismissed
The commissioners approved a resolutton declarmg It
necessary, 111 excess of the 10
mlllllmitahon, to place on the
ballot a 1.6 mill at a special
elechon at the primary election
June 3 for operalion of schools,
worksh1ps and tralmng centers
lor the mentally retarded.
Attendmg were Wells,
Warden Ours, and Gilkey,
commissioners and Martha
Chambers, clerk.

Support for levy
to he discussed ·
Meetings of two groups In·
lerested m the retarded persons of Meigs County were
announced for Thursday mghl
when the Meigs County Board
of Retardation mel Monday
mghl at the courthouse.
A comm1llee wh1ch has been
act1ve m the promotwn of tax
measures for the retarded will
meet at the cow-lhouse at 7
p.m Thursday and this will be
followed a! 7: 30 p.m by a
meetmg of the Meigs County
Un1t of lhe OhiO Assoc1alton for
Mentally retarded Adults and
Children.
Expected to come up before
both mee tmgs Is a 1.6 mill tax
levy wh1ch IS being placed
before Me1gs County voters at
the June 3 elechon to provide
operaltng funds for the planned
new school for the retarded
Voters of Metgs County have
already approved a bond Issue
for prov1dmg money for the
construct/On of the new
fac1hty, but last fall turned
down a 2 75 mill operatmg levy.
The levy now has been reduced
to 1 6 millS and this, It IS contemplated, would prov1de the
necessary money lor the new
school
At the present hme, offtcials
are not Interested tn
proceeding with the construction unless operating
funds are forthcommg from the
public. The Board of Retardation has been advised that
beginning next fall the
facllilles which have been used

CLOTHESI.JNE - In footbaU clothesllning an opponent - if caught - draws an iJn.
mediate 15 yard penalty. In g ~rls basketball, as played above m this Katie Crow shot of the
Southern High-Meigs High girls game 'Monday mght, it was strictly unmtenttonal. The
Southern High girls won agam over Mbigs, this time by the score of 45-35 See P'lge 3.

By RICHARD HUGHES
UPI Busrne .. Writer
The receSSion Is worse than
Indicated by even one of the
bleakest goverrune•t measurements, according to a Federal
Reserve study.
And even Democra he staff
members on the Senate Budget
Committee agreed there IS
little Congress can do to
prevent high unemployment
through 1976.
There also was further
evidence there has been no
upturn m the depressed construction industry.
But the stock market showed
continued strength. Prices
Monday on the New York Stock
Exchange, as measured by the
Dow Jones industrial index,
soared 14.08 to 753.13.
The Dow closed at the
highest level for the year,
aceeding the prior high of
749.77 Feb. 21.
The Commerce Department
said construction spendtng
dropped 2.7 percent in January
to the annual rate of $128.1
bilhon, the lowest since
November, 1972, when it was
$128 billion. BuDding volume.
was 15.5 per cent below a year
ago when mflatlon is
discounted
Residential housing and pub-

I

1

.

would be $33. Three outfits are
needed Council voted to
pw-chase the clolhmg.
Phil Globokar and Ralph
Werry reported that the chief
nuts
of pollee has rules and
Manley reported on the cost ,regulallons and asked why
of ram gea r ror street depart- they are not followed Both felt
ment
workers
Jac ket s that1f police ch1ef Jed Webster •. ,
1
Will cos t $13 20 each, IS not going to abide by the
overa lls
$11,
and
a rules, he should flnd another
nuncoat
for
cr ui ser, jOb
$25 W1th the boots, cost per
Ed1th S1sson, dispatcher for
uut£t l for the street department
(Continued on page 8)

for several years at the
Rutland Elementary School
will no longer be available, The
Meigs Local School District
Board of Education hu,
however, offered the gymnasium in Rutland for the
Community School for the
Retarded on a rental basis.
The board last mght
discussed atdes for the commtlhltjilichool. Seve~ aides are
now available and It was the
consensus lhal th1s nwnber ts
adequate, even thongh more
could be made available
through Tille I funds .
The board made plans to
move a younger group to an
upsta~rs room at the Rutland
Elementary Bulldmg and to
move a mediUm aged group to
the downstairs room. Betty
Longstreth of the Langsville
area was employed as a substitute bus drtver. Richard .
Chambers, a board member,
reported on an administrative
meetmg recently in Collll1lbus
and attended by his son, Eric,
who Is employed in the
workshop program of the
communtty school
Practically \he entire staff of
the school attended Monday
night's meeting along with
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewts,
teacher-administrator, and
board members Judge Manmng Webster, Rev. W. H.
Perrin, Mrs. Grace Weber,
Mrs. Wilma Parker, Rick Crow
and Chambers.

-It's had, real had

a boy.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tontght and Tomorrow

VOL. XXVI NO. 226

•'Y'" Ml&lt;l "'~ -~ . 0.. 1 P'-o 1C... !of

See Store D1splayror deta1ls

t.il rnechng

CI!U/l(.'ll ~ ISC' U SSNI noocl Ul·
Mil ,me£&gt; control and Mctyor
.Snnth adv ised thf:l l he 1s to
t~IIPIHJ d mcetmg on fl ood
lon trol c~t M.tnctta March l1

Devoted To 'The Interests of The MeiK.~·MclSOII Anm

DETROIT - IN THEIR RUSH TO BEAT THE CASH rebate
deadline, buyers helped push auto sales in the final days of
February to the highest level of the 1975 model year. Industry
11118l)'llts S8ld sales reports expected from General Motors,
Olrysler and American Motors today and from Ford Wednesday
would show sales of nearly 200,000 cars in the Feb. 21·28 periodthe best day.tlKiay average since the '75s were mtroduced m
early October.
While sales were movmg steadily upward in February
because of the rebates, the need to trun huge mventones of
unsold cars led to the lowest production in 14 years, the four
automakers reported Monday. But the sales upswmg from the
rebate programs means higher output for the industry in the next
three months. The rebate promollon ended Friday, and dealers
contacted by UPI said it was too early to tell what kmd of sales
dropoff there will he in early March . They said sales were stow
Saturday and Monday.

'!fnstead, Playtex
will'replace yow
old'bra

~pet

enttne

'

By United Press International
FIVEFREEDWESTGERMANPRISONERStook refugem
Aden today and sent a volunteer hostage back home setting the
. politician kidnaped
'.
stage for the possible release o!a leading
by
left-wing guerrillas The plane that flew the five freed prtsoners
to the South Yeme~ capital left for West Germany thiS morning
withHeinrtchAibertz aProtestantpastorand!ormermayoroI
West Berlin
'
The kiru;.,pers believed still holding ChriStian DemocratiC
' Lorenz m West Berlin have promised to
""litical leader Peter
.release the captive after the plane returns to' West Germany. A
spokesman lor Lufthansa satd Wesl Germany appealed to South
·
leave the plane 111 Aden and grant
Yemen toletthefive guerrillas
them politicalasylwn It has been SIX days since Lorenz head of
the West Berlin Chrisiian Democratic party was abducted from
his car by leftist guerrillas
•
.
ALGIERS- KJNGS, SHEIKHS AND PRESIQENTS of the
world's major oil-exportmg nations gathered today for
"solidarity" talks marred by the absence of a third of the
leaders. The leaders of the Orgamzatton of Petrolewn Exporting
Countries called the three-day summit meeting to coordinate
policy for a planned confrontation With the Western industrial
nations.
Benners vowing "No to Threats" set a defiant tone for the
talks, beginning this afternoon at the seas1de Palais des Nattons
conference hall west of the Algerian capital The leaders, takmg
)llrt in the first summit meeting in OPEC's 1~year hiStory,
planned to finish work on an "action program" to gwde
negotiators in talks with oil-consuming nations later thiS year.

NEW IJnstood•

The mayor 's sa lm y w1ll be

•

in Briefs

And,when you buy

our hlgh ·lnterest paying savings certificate

,ll hm SUdl

J oh n M&lt;Jn le,
dud !idr- PomNo\ to 1\tllen s, &lt;tfld
r) Davts still bel ievp tlw pus s1bh fr om Hc~un e to
bmldmg should be- solei to tlw Micldl l·potl
Hulland .tnd
village fm the s um uf $1 smce Sr.tlem Cenre1
the peop le of Pome1 U\ p~ud fo r
A f mc~lr t'&lt;ldlnj..!. ".ts ~1 pp 1 O\ t:d
II
011 .t 5 to 1 \ ute, of a11 urdmanc e
A new state li.i \\ effect1ve IO IIH.r C :I Eil~ the SaiaJ \ of the
Jul y 1 sl~:~ t ~s that ,lf- llld' 01 l'll'l k and CO UIH tl,
ter a motorist comes to a Cffl'l' h\"t' fdn I , j()/ 6 Julin
complete slup , he mc~r turn M.mk•, 'ulcd no

Market Report

News

&amp;=~~==~~~~~r)!::::~:;:::f:::::~::::::::=~=f'l

,.

.;

AWARD MADE -Dan Thompeon, left, 111mer of the Dan Thompson Ford Motor Co.,
Middleport, paresents Paul Gerard, Middleport, a check lor $150 awarded Gerard m the Ford
Company's closer look value promotion Through the promohon, auto owners are mailed IBM
card&lt;! whtch they take to the Thompson Agency The autos are appraised and the cards are
placed m a machine which identifies whether or not the particular owner IS a winnet . Awmner
can receive up to $3,000 which 1s paid by the Ford Motor Co There 1s no purchase requ1red for
participation m the program which wtll contmue until March 31 Rebaies offered by the
company concluded Feb. 28

100 lb. wmght class at the SEOAL tow-nament m Athens
Satw-day to remam undefeated. He will be wrestling thiS
weekend m district competition.

James Gr ueser, Pomeroy,

Mrs George Rhodes, Ripley,
M1s Clarence Rtder, Potn t

,,,ltl lCIO\ VIILJgt.• ts not
!11

cffct tJ\1' whC'n the btlb .tiL' \ l!ll'd I\• plcu l' 'N11 ttght ' l lUll
rendered Ap r t1 12 .J.m c 011 Ht-d S I ~I1S dt tl.lffH
W;:ilton, clerk , I old Puna•1o\ S l )-.: l l d l ~
An
o1diU dll tC
C(lllflctl Mumld' mght
!lt'&lt; rss,u \ to pnss tile 1ssuc " 111
Mr s Wall on \\dS JClil ttng bt tl! t1 '' n up
COli tents U[ a Jette! fT om the
( mmul t.' lldor sed ~~ h.· lt~" r
Colwnbw Gas of Ohw . Inc 1 11 fr Ulll thl Otno Dcp. u tuwnt of
regard to the four Cl'nt lil t 11. .1sc Tr .m s p( •J t,Jtton n.mnng t he
\\ htc.;h IS a llO\\l'd b' lht fuel lll.t\'Ot to :sl' J ve tm lilt• Apcost dause
p.ll.JLiu,m Oh!Q_ lh•gtuna! Tt elli Mf:I)'OJ Da le .Snut11 111fonned SII t\ SSOt lolii Otl, AOHTA
counci l that the Me1gs Board of AUH I'A 1:; dt!emplmg to ob tmn
Educatwn had dropped lhe cl ledrt .1\ gr.ull hJ l'X Icmi bus
pnce on the Pomero) Semor S('l \ llC Stl( h ,b ~ ~ USl'd Ill
H1gh Bmldlllg from $1H,OUO !u AlhPns l' hr bu s st'l \ ICC Me1~ s
$ 75 . 00 0
( u u n c 1 I m c 11 Cotml\ IS mleJe~!rd m1s flum

SUND!I Y DISCHAHGF.S -

Mr

loune1! fl•lt the

f~e l

Fr &lt;~ntc s WIIIwm s, Cu1 lJss
Smith, Sessa: Massie, Henr;

1- nda v -

1 1g h t 011 1Pd

Pt•I IWI 0~, ·/j ~dS I .tll'.~i ~\I ll ).:\I

Dunn~•

Lena Ebersbach died on Sunday

The

We all pay a lot of
bills ea'h month

SUNDAY ADM ISSIONS -

Shnw&lt;:~ lle r .Jo~ ck

Sunday at the O&lt;ik fili i Hospi tal J.! I cdt -gredt o111d g lt~ at -g teat ­
follow ing a short 1\Jness
~ r e,l1 meces and nephews The
Mrs McClmlber was Oom , u un ~cst mcmbc1 of he1
Aug 9, 1872 m Rutland, the fc~m1h . s h~ was preceded m
daughte r of the late Ph 1hp """ death b) several b1 others and
Cortnna Corne ll Nl('ho lson She ststers dS well ,1s her parents
marn ed Emm1 tt B M&lt;.:Cwnbcr and husband
on Aug 30, 169&gt; He died 111
Funerdl se rvtces wtll be held
1955
at 2 p 111 Wed nesday at the
A mem ber of the Dcxtc1 Dexler Church of Chn st w1 th
Mr
Ala n Blackwood of.

Continued from Page II
Durmg the legislators'
stormy meeting w1th the V1et
Cong, Rep John Flynt, D.Ca .
pomted his fmger at V1et Cong
MaJ. Gen Hoang Anh Tuan and
asked, ''Where are the 41
bodles of Amencans killed m

"Seekmg gree ner fields

\ l'h r.1ns 1\h·mnrl.ll Hospita l

Mrs. McCmnber, 102, is dead

Fact-finders

often produces noth10g but
wa steland "

Heating rates up in Pomeroy

HOSPITAL NEWS

i\lun t
w ~·s t
Z.me!ivtl\(', .Hld Wtlll s WL' ~t
Ptl\\llr~lten. Uluo .mel sev~· r. ll
nll'l:C!i ,md I llUS\1ls
Fun~ral Sl' l \t (es Will
he
Wedncsd&lt;n ell 2 p m d l Ewm g
C'h:1pel \\ tth tlw HPv Carl
Htt:ks o(fJUCilll1~ Btut.ll \.\'til bt

1n

I

1~75

~ I

lie construction both declined a
sharp 4.6 per cent and private
constructiOn was down 1.8 per
cent.
A study of 12 sectors of the
economy by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston shows the
economy slwnped in January
at almost twice the rate indicated by the Commerce
Department's composite of
nine leading economic indicators.
The index is considered a
better measurement than the
Commerce Department's composite because It allows . for
inflation and Commerce does
not.
The Fed's study showed an
econo1111c slide of 3 per cent
from January to Felruary and
21.7 per cent since July, im,
when the index hit its pe.t of
120.4. In January it was 9U,
"It shows we are in the for
the worst recession since we
started calculating the inde.J:"
22 years ago, the bank sald.
The automobile Industry finished its rebate promotloo
period last week on the upswing, selllng an ""imated
200,000 cars in the Feb, 21·28
period -the beat day4Q.Gay
average since the 1975 modela
were introduced in ear~v Ootober.
~

�•
2- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 Tuesday. March 4, !975

Rhodes' programs still
in running at deadline
which would have taken them
out agam
House M1nonty Leader
Charles F Kurfess, R·Bowlmg
economic recovery proposals Green, pomted out that tf the
for Ohto were sllll alive m the voters approved the expanded
General Assembly today run- housmg ass 1stance by the
rung a battle ag amst the clock state the legislature Will still
for legtslative enac tment by have to Implement 11 later on
'Probably no one can be
Wednesda y mght - th e
entirely
pleased wtth all as·
deadlme for placmg them on
pec
ts
of
th1s resolutiOn "
the June 3 primary ballot
Kurfess
satd
But certamly tt
Three modtfted proposals to
spur housmg, transporU.twn deser ves our support
" What we have before us IS a
and pub h e tmpro\ ements
roadmap
for economic recovecleared one chamber of the
ry
We
w11llet
the people study
General Assembl y Monday,
rece tvmg heavy support from th e map, and they w1ll dec1de
th e route we are to take '
the Democratic majonlles
Rep John A Galbraith RThe fourth plan , long-range
Maumee
, pomted out that an
tax relief for mdustnes ex
pandlng w the mner ctttes, Urban Development Corporrahung on by a thread rt lwn m New York sUite had w
received Senate co mm11tee default on a housmg bond only
approval m sunplifted form last week 'Th1s has had a
Monday and sttll stood an devastatmg effect on the bond
outs1de chance of clea rmg both market ' he sa1d
Jo1mng Galbraith m opposichambers by Wedn esday night
tion
were Reps Thomas P
It took marathon legislative
D Youngstown
actton, m caucus and on th e G1lmartm
Robert
E
Netzley,
R-Laura ,
floor Monday afternoon and
Rodn
ey
H
Hu
ghes,
Revenmg, to push the three other
conslltuttonal amendments Huntsvlllei'" Joseph P Tulley,
R-Menwr Donna Pope, Rthrough
Parma
, and James E Betts,
Wooed With VIsions
R-Rocky
Rtver
But Democrats, wooed by
TRANSPORTATION
Rhodes wtlh VISions of conSU'Uetion Improvements and Ne xt ca me the tra r:s
thousands of new jobs, and left portahon bond 1ssue w1th the
to thetr own deVIces by lhetr accompanymg gas tax boost
leaders and wary labor lol&gt;- elfechve next July I
Twelve Democrats Jomed all
bytsts, earned the measures
12
Repubhcan senators m
through
securing
24-11 passage of the
Passing their lntltal major
amendment
hurdles were
Rhodes or1gmally had asked
- A constitutional amend!o:
$1 64 b1ll1on, mcludmg $1
ment expanding the stale s
btlllon
for htghway construcauthority to fmance construction of lowcost housmg, tion, but Democrats reduced
nursing homes and health care the package durmg committee
centers, 87-7 in the House after meetings
Aid to mass transportation
35 minutes of debate and a 2\'z·
hour caucus The outlook m the and atrport Improvement was
Senate
was
generally restored on the Senate lloor m
a bipartisan vote
favorable
Sen Anthony 0 Calabrese
- A $1 b1ll1on scaled-down
D-Cleveland,
offfered an
verston of Rhodes' transportaamendment
provtdmg
up w$50
tion bond Issue costing a runemtiiion
for
urban
mass
trantenths cent htke m the state
$55
mtlbon
for
an
sportation,
gasoline lax, 24-&lt;1 in the Senate
after a two-hour caucus and 40 mterc!ty rail passenger system
mmules of public debate The and $10 mtlllon for atrport
House was expected to offer Improvements
Calabrese's amendment was
some revisions
approved
on a 2().12 vole w1th
- A $2 5 btlhon public lin·
eight
Democrats
JOming all 12
provements bond Issue reqwr·
Republican
senators
m
mg an mcrease m the stale
sales tax from 4 to 4 7 per cent, favor
As re-wrtllen by Calabrese s
72-22 m the House after 2\&lt;,
amendment,
the measure
hours of debate
The
Democratic-controlled Senate would proVIde $400 mlllton w
was expected to try to reduce local governments for road and
the stze of the bond Issue and bridge Improvements, a maxsubstitute a dtfferent tax unum of $485 million for htgh·
way construcllon and $15
package
mtllion
for mass transportation
HOUSING
and
elrport
Improvements ·
The housmg resolution ,
The senators reJected, 13-19,
which had been rewrttten by
a
proposal by Sen Wtlllam F
Democrats and Republicans m
Bowen
, D ~ Cmcmnat1, to
prtvate to requtre that the Ohto
reqwre
that any firms, unHousmg Development Board
make fmancmg asststance w dertaking the transportation
housmg projects only through projeCts take aggreSSive action
local lendmg mstttutions, was to employ members of
mmonty groups
the first to clear
Votmg agamsllhe bond tssue
Rhodes ' origmal verston
were
Democrallc Sens An·
would have authonzed the
thony
J Celebrezze Jr and
state agency to assiSt conL Butts, both
Charles
struction ftrms and other
Cleveland, Tony P Hall and
prtvate developers
The 6nal version of the Neal F Zlmffiers Jr , both of
measure was amended on the Dayton, Robert D Freeman,
floor to restore nursmg homes Canton , J T McCormack,
and health care fa cthhes, Wtckliffe, Gene Slagle, GaliOn,
which had been removed m and Mangene Valiquette ,
COmmittee The House voted Toledo
PUBLIC
24-70 agamst an amendment
Shortly before mtdmghl the
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - All
four of Gov James A Rhodes'

DR. LAMB

., Mason County

N;~7'N~te·;-; Rio drops heartbreaker
in District 22 tourney

MASON , W Va - Millard Grees, a former restdent here,
now of Bellatre, Ohto, recalls that there were qutte a few steam
hoats built here On~ was the D W Woodward m 1882 It had a
long and useful hfe and many mishaps, and changed owners and

House cleared the pubbc unprovements bond tssue, hghlmg off Democrallc attempts w names many times
The boat, 150 feet long, was ftrsl owned by Capt Jun
reduce the $2 5 btllion stze of
Woodward,
well known Ohio and Kanawha River ptlol In 1890 he
the package w $1 7 billion and
substitute a reduced sales Ulx sold 11 w State Senawr Bob Carr who used tl - then called the
mcrease or a boost tn the Bob Pr1chard - on the b1g Kanawha pushmg coal In 1898tl was
coroporallon tax and upper rebwlt and sold wT H DaviS, a grocer at Mtddleporl He named
level personal mcome tax the boat the T H DaVIs
About the year 1911 11 was sold to the Chicago Eastern
brackets
Thtrty-etght Democrats m- Ratlroad The old boat blew her boiler at Catro, m' killing one
cludlng most of the leadership, man She was rebuilt, but further trusfortune befell the T H
JOtned 34 Republicans m pass- Davts In December of 191511 sank at Joppa, Ky, after rammmg
mg the resolutiOn , whtch the hulk of a sunken barge The T H DaVIS was raiSed and
rebwlt and sold wa company m MeXIco, crossed the Gulf to wmd
needed 60 votes for approval
down
her last pays down there
Etghleen Democrats and four
About
1950 b1g steam boats ended on the Ohto Rlv.er, only a
Republicans voted agamst tl
few are now left Accordmg to Mr Gress, those were exciting
Rep Waldo B Rose, R·Llm8, days to have lived - maybe some day they may return
carrymg the plan for the
MR GRESS CALLS this portton of hiS story, "The Btg Fire
Rhodes admin1strat10n, satd 11 Canoe "
would "stimulate the economy
Most school boys are fanullar w1th the hiSIDry of Robert
m a fast developmg recessiOn " Fulton's boats and how he use w fish on the rtver near hiS home
111 his paddle wheel scow, an 111vention of his own
It wtll make a corrurutment
How later he made the ftrsl successful steam boat that ran
to the center ctties to rebmld, up tbe Hudson Rtver The town folks called him a nut Fulton
revttahze and remake them, ' made them eat those worda He had the last laugh, m 1807
Rose satd
He also, according to Gress, made the firSt submarme
But Galbraith, one of the (diving boat) The English goverrunent gave hun $75,000 to blow
Republican opponents, called tl up an old war ship He dove under the vessel and placed a bomb
a ' grab bag" and said It would on 1t They offered to pay him much more if he would sell them
make Ohio "number one m the the patent, and not revealtt to any government
nation all nghl - m debt "
Fulton srud, "No 1I am an American, if my country wants the
patent I wtll gtve tl to them free "
' Easter IS commg early '
In 1811 he went to Pittsburgh, Pa and built the first steam
Galbraith satd, and larger boat to ply the western rtvers It was a success from the start as
Thts Is a big basket of Easter 11 passed down the Ohto and on to New Orleans
eggs We re gomg w have a
One mght down below Cincmnati, they tied up for the mght
huge, permanent Easter egg by an Island Before dawn a huge earth quake occurred and was
hunt herem Ohto, JUSllike they srud to be the greatest to ever hit the USA Accordmg to Gress, 1t
have m Washmgton " House changed the course of the rtver When the crew of the boat awoke
Majortly Leader Barney Quilt- m the mornmg there was no Island The crew was very much
er, D·Toledo, one of the confused On the little hoat went, soon commg mto the
Democrallc opponents, satd MtSSisstppt The Indians, reportedly stood on the banks m
passmg the resolution would be amazement They shouted m excitement, "UGH-Btg Fire
givmg m to Rhodes
Canoe ''
41
If we pass thts," he satd,
It churned tls way on to New Orleans, stayed a few days and
"we abdtcate our role of equal turned w come back up the river Now the real challenge would
partners m government "
take place - many doubted the frat! craft would be able to
overcome the swift drastic current of the nughty rtver Fulton
Prtor to passage, the House had confidence m h1s boat - he knew what tt could do Slowly the
agreed overwhelmingly to an power of steam came agamst the terrific mad rtver and tl
amendment requmng that conquered
l1rms undertak111g public unAnd then a new era had begun, one that would last 150 years
provements projects funded by or steam boats lnumgranls then poured Ill by the thousands
the measure to make consciOus They came, they saw and they conquered
efforts to employ members of
In 191lan exact duphcale of Fulton's ftrsl boat was bmlt at
mmor1ty groupa, mcludlng the Pittsburgh It was sent down stream to New Orleans celebrating
aged
100 years of steam on inland riVers The replica of the ftrst boat,
Members narowly defeated, accordmg w Mr Gress came past Mason about 12 o'clock He
46-17, an amendment which was m Hartford wtth hiS father, buymg a horse People along the
would have elmunated refer- way were dressed m old !ashton clothes, some like lndtans As
ence to $140 million for cancer the boat slowly chugged past the Indtans shouted Ugh, Btg Ftre
research centers m Cleveland, Canoe
Columbus, Clncmnatt and
Toledo, and $40 nulllon for a
NEW HAVEN- The New Haven Women's Club held thetr
heart research center m lnternationalDmnerrecently at the club room at the New Haven
Cleveland
Library wtth Mrs Jack Flesher, Mrs Norene Layne, Mrs
They also defea led by two Franklin While, Mrs Kemut Ford, Mrs Karl Wtles and Mrs
votes an amendment which Jack Hesson as hostesses Mrs LoiS Robmson led m prayer
would have provtded up to
The table was decorated wtth handmade flags of other
$500,000 for Cilles with popula- countries Also served were favorite dishes of foods from other
twns under 5,000
lands
As possed, the bill contaliiS
Clothing from other countr1es was modeled by some of the
major allocations lor Ohto's ladtes
n111e largest cttles, plus
Those modelmg clothmg gave the or1gm of the garment and
reduced amounts for smaller told of Its past hiStory
ctltes , counttes and other
Attendmg were Mrs Rose Wolfe, Mrs Elizabeth Re1chert,
governmental umts A large Mrs Thelma Scally, Joyce Circle, Dtane Hickel, Wendy D1vers,
chunk __. mtlhon -would Marian Batey, Cathy Baley, Linda Young, Kitti Casto, Lllllan
be left for the legislature to Greene, Mrs Pete Ohlinger
approprtale as It sees hl if the
M1ss Erlinda Obregon, Mrs Donald Roush, Charlotte Roush,
voters approve
Mrs Laverne Powell, Conme Frishette, Mary Lou Edwards,
Jemy Dodd, LoiS RobtnsOn, Vemce Ward, Macil Clevenger,
Havollne Flesher, Martha Hart, Lots Bumgardner, Debbte
White, Alberta Wtles, Mrs Frances Haberle, Mrs Roger Fink,
Mrs Conrue Carter, Mrs Norene Layne

DEFIANCE
They
deserved better
The Rto Grande Redmen ,
cast m the role of underdogs,
led much of the game, then fell
apart at the foul !me as the
Def1ance Yell ow Jackets edged
past the snake bitten cagers of
Art Lanham, 83-82, at the
.College Co mmumty Center
here Monday mght
For the fourth consecutive
year the Redmen lost to the
host Ja ckets m the opemng
round of the NAIA D1slrtct 22
Tournament

It was also the fifth ltme m

the last Sixth years that Rio
and Defiance have met m ftrst
round tournament achvlt)
w1th the Redmen takm g a 1970
dcc1s10n at Lyne Center
The Redmen led most of the
way, although the Jackets took
the upper hand tn the second
half gmng on !Dp nt 49-48 w1th
14 21 remammg mthe game on
a 19 foot JWnper by John
Kornowa

The Redmen battled back,
leadmg by as much as stx at 75
69 w1th 4 27 rematmng before
Kevm Dtlwor th sank a dnvmg
bank shot wtlh 12 seconds left
to put Defiance m Wednesday's
Dtstr1ct 22 !mats
RIO Immediately brought the
ball up the court before callmg
hme out w1th four seconds left
to set up a fmal chance at
victory

The mbounds pass was ar
ched htgh over the Def1ance
defense to sophomore Jtm Noe
who was forced farther (rom
the basket than hoped for Noe
pUmped pp a 17footer from the
base hne , tt caught the edge of
the nm and bounded h1gh
toward the oppostte corner as
the buzzer sounded
The Redmen , who Jumped
out mto an early 8-0 lead, were
killed at the foul hne htlltng
JUst four of 12 char1ty chances
for 33 pet
Defiance. w1th two less held
goals than Rio, canned nme of
12 to provtde the margm of
v1ctory

After Jumpmg out to that 8-0
lead the Yello" Jackets got
hot, QUickly pullmg wtthm two,
10-8
Rto Then surged and ap-

In·

rarma twn on the treaunen t o(

arthr1tts ' Recently a relatl\ e
m hts late 50s developed pam Ill
both htps \\h1ch the doctors
have dia gnosed as arthrths I
am wondermg 1f exerctse ts the

I

I

·I
I \
J

j

'

best therapy or 1f rest wh1ch 1s
more comfor table. may be
recommended
f understand there ts no cure
but hope the pa m could be
lessened He uses a ca ne, so lar
wtth d1f!tculty
DEAR READER - Arthn tts
of the htp JOin ts IS a fatrl)
common problem m m en ThiS

IS usually os teoarthritis or
wear and tear arthnhs
Osteoarthnhs affects the
wetghl-bearmg JOmls most
frequently, hence the htps,
knees and ankles
The vanous for ms of ar
lhritis are discussed Ill a hoOk I
wnte wtth LaRue Stone called,
"There's Help for Arthntts "
You,can get a copy by wrttlng
to me m care of lh1s news
paper, at P 0 Box 1051 , RadiO
Ctty Stahon, New York, N Y
10019 and askmg for the book

Send one dollar for the boot.
plus 25 cents postage and hand·
hn g Or ' ou nught fmd 11
amung the pajJerbacks at l our
book store
It 1s 1mportant to mamtam
the full range of mouon of all
JOIIl ts rega rdless of the type or
arlhrt tls That ts pa rt of the
ObJeC tl\ e of continued exer
r tse HO\\ ever m osteoar thrths

there IS oft en a tendenq to
overdo 1! Rest IS equally
nnpor U!nt Characlertshcally
Ill os teoar thrtlls res t w111
re heve the pa m The use of a
cane and crutches are efforts
to decrease the work and help
to rehe\ e the arthnt1s
A person \lith os teoarthntis
causmg pam should try to hm1 t
the amoun t of acttvt ty A good
program ts to be up and about
lor only part of the da) then
get the we1gh t off the htps b)
lymg down for a couple or
hours Remember the purpose
of the exerc1se ts only to
mamtam full ran ge of molton
and muscle strength Other"'se the JOmt does be tter
gettmg as mu ch rest as
pOSSible A combmed rest and
SUi ta ble exerciSe prqg, am .,

med1cme

Ftrn.lly, I d hke to mention
that m advanced cases of
osteoarthrttisof the htp JOmt, tf
necessary, the whole J01111 can
be replaced
Htp JOmt
replace ment has progressively
Improved and IS an Important
a1d m treatmg many cases of
arthrtbs mvolvmg the htp JOtn t
DEAR DR LAMB - I'm 10
years old I would hke for ) ou
lo explain what convulsiOns
are
DEAR READER - They
usually occur after you have
los t consctousness ( passed
out) The bra111 has centers m tl
that control the contraction of
your muscles

These s tart

causmg your muscles to
con tract on theIf own The
resull1s the sudden contraction
and movement of the arms,

legs and other- parts of the
body
Th e conlra clt ons can be
trregular w1th no rhythm or
they can occur m a rhythnuc

Today's

Sport Parade

The

Dai~

Sent1nel

PLAYER
Dan Boll• nger

J1mmy Noe
J1m Stewart
Gil Pnce

Paul Albanese

RIO GRANDE (821
FG A FT A RB PF TP
13 25 0 \ 12
3
26
13 23
I 4
10 2 27
7 14
\ 2
9
5 IS
2 10 \ 2
4
2
s
37

Bob Caldwell

Mack Barbee

TOTALS

PLAYER
Bob Martm
Kev D ilworth
John Kornowa
Rex Shreve
Steve Van Au sdale

0 I

00

00

81

00
00

2

4

2
0
0
0

0
0
I
\

7
2
0
0
0

4 12 39
15 82
DEFIANCE (83)
FG-A FT A RB PF TP
S IS 3 5
6
3
13
9 16 0 0
2
2 18
46
00
3
2
8
39

Gregg Mugg

I4

67

9 21

00

610

Lonn 1e Nedderman
M1ke Schm1df
Roll 1e M 1nn 1ck

0 I
0 I

34

TOTALS

Score at half

00

00

Gary Swmehart
Andy Da venport

13

\ \

37 77
R1o 39 Def 1an ce 37

00
00

00

4
16
\
1

2

00
4
9 12 39

\
4
3
0

8
\8
\2
0

3
2

6

20

TA~NEHILL

EICeC Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1ty Edtfor
P ubtts h ed cH• trv exce pt
Salurda'( b y Th e Oh 10 Va ll ey
P v bl tshm g Compa ny
111
Cour t St
Po m ero y Oh 10
45169 Bus me n Off tc e Phone
99? 1156 E d1 tona l Phone 9 92
2 157
Second c lass pos tage patd at
Pomeroy Ohto
Na t tonal
adve r t1s1n g
r ep r ese n t a t t ve
80tt1nellt
Gallaghe r Inc 12 E as t 42n d
St NeW York New York
Subscrtp t 1on
r a t es
Delivered by ea r ner Wh ere
avatlabh.&gt; 75 ce n ts per week
By Mo tor Route wher e carr 1er
sen·1ce no t avail able One
month tJ 25 By m a 11 1n Oh10
and W V a O~e Year , SJ2 00
S1x mon ths
S11 50
Thr ee
months
S7 00
El sewhe r e
516 00 year
S1&gt;C 4'n onths
Sl 3 50 three months Sf 5D
Subscr1pf 1o n pn ce 1ncludes
Sunnily T1mes Senhnel

me
"Look, I like the Atlanta fans, and the Atlanta ball players,
Ralph Garr, Dusty Baker, Darrell Evans, all of 'em They were
fine, but some of the people m the front office didn't treat me
right. They kept makmg the statement they hadn't had a wtmer
m II years and the press blamed me for that I thought tt was
unfair to blame one man.
"After I couldn't work out a deal With the Braves, I realized the
only thing I could do was come over here Yeh, the Braves offered me a JOb all r1ghl, but what they told everybody they offered and what they actually did were altogether different Over
here at least, I know I'll get an opportunity to help the ktds
That's alii was really looking form Atlanta "
Whether be knows 11 or not, Hank Aaron also will get a chance
to help some of the older players among the Brewers.
"There's no quesllon he's gomg to help us m a lot of ways,''
says third baseman Don Money "We've been last m designated
hitting the past two years, but mth him here now, you know we
won't be last again
"Look around this clubhouse, fellows like Robm Yount and
Kevm Kobel over there weren't even born yet when Hank Aaron
started m the btg leagues Two years ago Yount was still m htgh
school Aaron was one of his tdols, and now he's playmg on the
same team as him ''
Don Money ripped open a leller whtch had just arnved He
glanced altt and then at Aaron, who was potting on his Brewers'
uniform for the first time m front of another locker across the
room.
"You know, I'm 27, this IS my seventh year m the big leagues,
and I feel about Hank Aaron the same way as lbe kids do," satd
Money "I feel he's gomg w be one tremendous influence around
here"

0

38

ence CorrurusSioners Tournament m St LouiS or the
Nahonal Invltallon Tournament m New York
Mtchtgan stalled out the last
56 seconds of Its game mlh
llllnol!! and Joe Johnson hit a
last-6eCOnd 15-foot JWIIP shot to
gtve the Wolvermes the twopomt wm It raiSed thetr league
record to 11-6 and thetr overall
mark to 18-7, Identical to
Minnesota's
'lt'sno secret that Michigan
has been on the short end of
voles by the NCAA and Btg Ten
before, ' Orr satd afterward,
referrmg to voles the last two
years to send Oluo State's
football team to the Rose Bowl
when the Buckeyes and Wolvermes bed for the title
Michtgan Coach John Orr
snapped about his team's lack
of nallonal recognition, "I'm
not gomg to get upset if they
PICk Mmnesota Maybe tf we
wm 25 games, we might even
get rated "
Surgmg Michigan State, although a game out of second
place, ftgured tt ought

to be ready for postseason play
too
The
Spartans go deftctt to go ahead
of Purdue, only w see Broce
Parkmson tie the game on a
shot With eight seconds left
Smooth-shootmg Terry
Furlow, who led the Spartims
With 27 pomts, swished a fallaway, 30-foot jwnp shot WJth
three seconds left m the game
for the wm
Freshman-donunated Minnesota clamped tts ferocious
defense on Wisconsin in the
first half, holding the Badgers
to 16 pomts Then, behind
freshman Mark Olberding's 25
pomts, the young Gophers
turned on the fast break and
coasted to the WJn They
fmished thetr home schedule
With a 12-1 record

ALL THOSE SEALS
OAKLAND (UP!) - Five
Navy frogmen, known as Seals,
smce they now work on sea,
land, and atr, began running
the 500 miles from Seal Beach
to Oakland Monday

Letters to the editor

-

Southern may have won, but ...
Dear Sir
Southern may have won the game by two pomts but
Our fans didn't boo when thm team came m before the
game, OOUTHERN'S DID Our fans and cheerleaders didn't
cheer to drown out tbe amouncmg of then- startmg line up,
OOUTHERN'S DID Not one of our players threw a basketball
and hit one of thetr players m the face, SOUTHERN'S DID Our
fans and cheerleaders didn't cheer while thetr cheerleaders were
on the lloor, SOUTHERN'S DID Not one of our cheerleaders
gave lbelt basketball players the fmger, SOUTHERN'S DID Our
cheerleaders d1dn 'I make run of their cheerleaders at pep tallies
or while on the floor, SOUTHERN'S DID Our fans didn ·~ shout
obscemties at lhetr players and cheerleaders, SOUTHERN'S
DID Our fans didn't.g1ve thetr fans the fmger after the game was
over, SOUTHERN'S DID Not one of our fans rtpped down a
Jacket. threw tl on the floor, sptt on tt and stomped on 11,
SOUTHERN'S DID

'

'

~
~

••
•
•

........
•
••
••

Letlenl expressing oplnlon on pubUc Issues are welcomed. Letters must be In
good taste aad be signed, Including address 8lld telephooe number. No letter without 8
bona !Ide name, address ud lelepboue number can be publlahed. Upon request ollbe
writer, mmes will be witbbeld from publlcatlou; however, uponlegntmate requeal 11y
a reader, Dames must be revealed. Letters should not eKeeed 380 words. The editor
reserves the privilege ol condeiiBlng all le«en.

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA

CHESTER l

"Because," explams the Brewers new 41-year-&lt;&gt;ld destgnated
hitter, "!wanted to leave wtth a good taste m my mouth You
have no 1dea how much that last home run meant to me A rookie
With the Reds, a Sidearm sinker ball ptlcher wbose name 1 don t
even remember (It was Rawly Eastwtck ) threw me a low, mside
fastball and I htt 11 out "
Hank Aaron's entire face lights up sunply remembermg how tt
was that fmal time up for h1m m the ctty he played the last rune
years
"I ran around the bases," he says, "took my uniform off and
said that was 11 I haven't been back there smce That's rtghll
senlsomebodyouttogetmy thmgs I didn'twanl togo back "
Had the Brewers not come along w1th thetr !me two-year offer,
Hank Aaron would have been all finiShed wtth baseball He says
so himself
The Brewers didn't obtam Aaron so eas1ly from the Braves
who, m the end, grew mcreasmgly reluctant to let him go. Bud
Selig, the Brewers' prestdent and chtef execultve offtcer, labored
arduously for nearly two months brmgmg Aaron back w
Milwaukee
Atlanta officials srud they had made Aaron an offer to kzep him
w1th them in a fronl-&lt;&gt;fflce capacity .. of sorts
You ask Hank Aaron about that offer and he laughs It ISn't a
happy laugh
"One of thetr owners S8ld 'You can look at everythmg that
comes over my desk,'" he recalls with obv1ous unhappmess
"What good does that do • The most depressmg thing ts w walk
mto an office, look at the four walls and have nothing to do I
wanted some responstbthty, some kmd of JOb where I could put
my experience to good purpose h~lpmg Atlanta's young ball
players, but they never gave me the opportunity "
Aaron pulled a ctgarette out a pack m his locker and lit 11.
"Everybody over there was afratd of his job The Braves had
15 executive vice-preSidents What dtd I need that for• I needed
that like a hole m the head I didn't want to go around selling
baseball gloves That was part of thiS 'great' deal they offered

Rio Grande box •••

Iashton

ConvulsiOns can occur wtth a
deep famt from any cause, or
m the presence of a fever or a
vanety of diSorders tha t may
affect the bram They are more
common m chtldren durmg tll·
ness "'th fever than m adults

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! s,ori1 Editor
CITY, AriZ (UPI) - Hank Aaron already has a day under
his belt With the Milwaukee Brewers, an espeCially good one, as
11 turned out, but the best day of all he says, was his very last one
mth the Atlanta Braves
That can be mterpreted two ways
It can be taken to mean he achieved his greatest sallsfaction
over something he accomplished m the Braves' !male m Atlanta
Stadtum last October or 11 can be Interpreted w mean he couldn't
really watt to get out of there
Hank Aaron, the man who broke Babe Ruth's long-staodmg
.-record of 714 home runs, says both conclusions are absolutely
correct.
"The greatest satisfachon I ever got was from the home run I
hit my last lime up tn Atlanta, No 733, " says Aaron , thought·
fu~~t was more of a ktck for me than 715 "

that pomt, the Redmen got
seven or etghl bps at the
bucket before Gtl Prtce
grabbed the loose ball and
popped m a seven footer to gtve
Rio an 82-111 lead
Controversy then raged, as
only one second came off the
clock durmg the Rto attack on
the boards The clock was reset
at 27 seconds to set the stage
for Dilworth's game wmnmg
bucket
The Rto defeat rumed ex·
cellen t performances by Noe
and semor Dan Bollinger Noe
htt 13 of 23 !1eld goat attempts
and one free throw lor 27 pomts
and the 6-5 sophomore held
Defiance's Ali - Amer~can
candtdate Bob Martin to jusl13
pmnts Bollinger hit 13 of 25
f1eld goal attempts for 26 pomts
and led Rio rebounders wtth 13
caroms
The only other Redman m
double ftgures was 6-7 center
Jtm Stewart wtth 15 pomts
Defiance was led by Dtlworth
and Dan Ausdale wtlh 18 pomts
while Martm tossed m 13 and
Mugg 12
The Redmen hit 39 of 81 fteld
goal attempts wh1ie the Yellow
Jackets canned 37 of Tl Both
teams hauled m 39 nussed
shots wtlh Noe and Stewart
giVIng Bollinger ample
rebound help wtth 10 and mne
respectively Dan Ausdale led
Defiance rebounders w1th 16

Mic)ligan remains in
second after 77-75 win

By GREG GORDON
United Press Inlernat!onal
No !-ranked Indiana may
have sewed up the Btg Ten
basketball title a week and a
half ago but four other Big Ten
coaches still are talking as if tl
w~re the football season and
the Rllse Bowl were at stake
One ~eason IS tbe new NCAA
tournament formal, wh1ch
adds seven at~arge teams to
theftrsl round of play, allowmg
more
tl}an Just conference
GIRLS TO PLAY
MASON - The Mason Homemakers ExtensiOn club and champiOns to COffiill'te for the
Any Pomeroy-Mtddleport
guests
held a workshop and dinner meetmg on Tuesday at the national lltle
area gtrls mterested m takmg
Monday night the unbeaten
borne
of
Mrs Landon Smtih m Mason Three ladles, Mrs
part 1n the reestablishment of
Roosters were tdle but the rest
~oberta Young, Mrs Laurene Lew1s of Clif!Dn and Mrs Evelyn
U1e gtrls softball league at the
of the league powers were
Middleport Commun1ty Park Stewart of Mason, demonstrated making Easter Baskets from
frozen
bread
dough
and
salt
dough
for the sp01ls
scramblmg
are asked to phone Mrs Jean
The dough was woven to gtve a lattice effect and when baked Michigan mpped llllnoJS, n-75,
Cra1g 992-3278, at once Girls
a golden brown looked good enough to eat A pyrex bowl formed w ri!IJilU!l in a second-place tie
10 and older wtth no age hmtl the foundation for the basket while tl baked
With Minnesota, a 65-58 VIctor
are mv1ted to parttctpate
Cute favors were made from the frozen bread dough, by over WISconsm Both teams
makmg a rmrua lure basket of the dough and placing a real could have a shot at an NCAA
berth when b1ds go out ThurContmued on page 11
sday
Michtgan state knocked Purdue
out of second wtth an 111-112
Be ashamed to d1e unttl you
have won some vtctory for wm that left tbe teams tied for
humamty
- Horace Mann fourth and hopmg for an mAmencan educator
Vltallon to e1ther the Confer-

best
You can get a lot of good out
of some 111structions from a
good phySical theraptst or from
a spec tahst 10 ph ystcal

peared to take a commandmg
lead outscormg the hosts 20-6
to take a 30-14 margm wtth 8 50
left m the ftrst half
Once agam, however, that
killer mshnct was mtssmg as
the Redmen went fng1d from
the field gomg scoreless for
the next five mmutes and one
second, w1th a Noe ftve footer
breakin g the 1ce at 3 49 to keep
the Redmen on top, 32-29
Rt o continued to hold the
lead taking a 39-37 margm mto
the lOC'keroom at mtermtss1on
Both teams battled for the
lead m the second half wtth
Defiance taking the lead for the
f1rs t t1me 49-48 at the 14 21
mark on that 19 footer by
Korn owa
The la rgest Defiance lead of
the mght came moments later
at 55-50 on a layup by Steve
Dan Ausdale
The Redmen regamed the
lead at 60-59 on a Bob Caldwell
layup w1th 9'31 remammg
The Redmen led by as much
as SIX 7&gt;-1&gt;9 on a Noe layup
w1th 4 27 rematmng The
Yellow Jackets regamed the
lead 79 78 on a lyup bl Greg
Mugg w1th 57 seconds left
Bollinger countered wtlh a
layup before Dan Ausdale htt
another bunny w1th 36 seconds
left
W1th 30 seconds remammg,
Noe was fouled by Mugg but
m1ssed both fre e throws At

Even though Eastern lust the game Coach Phillips went over to
shake hands and congratulate Southern's coach but he wouldn't
show enough sportsmanship to even accept the congratulations.
Southern may have won the game by two pomts but Eastern
won by a long ways m sportsmanship by our team, fans and
cheerleaders.
Some of the proud people !rom Eastern- V1clu Gaul Steve
Nelson, Jun Reed, Jun Lodwick, Steve Schmucker, !legtna
Kimes, Marsha Kimes, AVIS Bissell, Sandra Buchanan Rodney
While, Robert HarriS, Deruse Dean, Brtan Conde, Uz Edwards,
Sherry Epple, Janet Ambrose, Bonnie Wood Kathy Pulllrll
Debbie Shielda, Phil Bowen, John Smitlt, T.;ry Smith, Mik~
Smith, Patty Pullins, Brenda Boyles, Cindy Ritchie, Gu,y Walker,
Mike Hams, Cathy DaVIS, Don Jackson, Teresa Carr Juli
Whitehead, Rachel HIDller, Bruce Riffle, Mark Grossnickle,
Brenda Sampson, Nancy Chaffee, Davtd Mills, Joe Kuhn, Kini
Bates, Tim Kuhn, Gary Loogenette, Larry Longenette, Terri
Bahr, Dave Hannum, Julia Schultz, Edna Boggs, Cheryl
Benedurn, Connte Putman, Barbara Henderson T8lllllll Bahr
Rob Barker
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By Alma Marshall

Which therapy best for arthritis of hips?
By Lawr·ence
DEAR DR
you refer me to an\

3- The Daily Sentlllel,Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0, Tuesday, March 4, 1975

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Southern girls defeat Meigs
Basketball action at Metgs
last mght the Tornado gtrls
defeated the Metgs Marauder
gtrls 45-35, the second hme
Southern made Metgs viCtim
thts season and Southern's
seventh m a row w1thout a loss
Leading the Tornado attack
was Cindy Roush wtth 16 pomts
which was scormg honors for
both teams She was followed
by Cheryl Larkins w1th 11,
Becky Sayre 9, Brenda
Lawrence 8, and Jenmfer
Mugrage scored one Jennifer

grabbed 20 defensive rebounds
w lead her team m that
department
For Metgs, Pam Vaughan led
the way m a losmg cause by
sconng 15 pomts Others
scormg for the Marauders
were Beth Vaughan w1th 8,
Demans Ash 6, and Mary
Weyersm11ler ftmshed Metgs
scormg wtth 6 Beth Vaughan
led her team Ill reboundmg
By Quarters
Southern
4 15 7 19--45
Metgs
9 6 12 11--35

Henry Block has
17 reasons why )U1l
should come to us
for income tax help.
Raeon 14. We're human, and once
in a great while we make a mlatake.
But if our error means you must pay
additional tax, you pay only the tax.
We pay any interest or penalty.
We stand behind our work.

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]al;kson, Greenfield
rosters, '75 results
JACKSON ROSTE R
PLAYER
HT YR
Ma rt y Coope r
S9
3
Tom Osbor ne
6 o
~
Jeff Conro y
58
J
M 1k eMcDo nad
58
J
Greg F a nn n
S 10
Geo r 9e Sc hmtd
60
3
D 1c k Gent1l
62
4
Bo b Gr il lo
s9 4
Steve Morrow
6 0
3
I va i Sh elds
5 11 J
Dan Co ll
63
1
Ma r k. B u ch an an
6 ?
J 1m Sw 1ng e
6 .t
3

G REENFIELD ROS TER
PLAYER
HT Y R
Joe Stewa r t
57
-i
J1m Jones
S7 1
J eff Hots nger
5 B .1
T tm Dr eher
5 11 1
Da ve M cC oy
6 2
4
Bil l Flyn n
6 o
J
Cl1r1 s Nelson
60
J
Ga r y Bilr r
6 1
J
Sleve Ha r vey
6 3
3
SleveWtl lotl
6 3
.1
T1m Gosse n
6 11 1
Ke n Kens1n ger
6 0
3
Don w att s
SA
3

JACKSON RECORD
Jac k son 59 Oak Hil l 43
Ja ck son 53 Logan 62
Jac k son .tS A th ens 53
Jac k son 54 Gal lipol s 4 9
Jac k so n 64 We ll s ton 47
Jac k son 67 V nlon County 5 1
Jac k son at Greenfi eld ppnd
Jac k so n 55 Iron ton 42
Jac k son SO Wav erly 61
Jackson 57 L ogan 56
Jackso n 52 Wa shmg ton CH 65
Jac k so n 63 At hens 60
Jac k so n 47 Gall pol 1s 78
Jackso n 73 Wel lston 58
Jack son 53 Iron ton 47
Jackso n 49 Waverly 51
Jackson or Metg s 55
Coal Grove Secttonal
Jackson 44 Ironton 4 1
Jacks on 48 Ga ll 1po l ts 43
JaC'ks on 48 Sout h Pom r 36
TOTALS 10117
lOSD
Won 14 Lost 6

GREENFIELD RECORD
Gr ee nf tel d 79 Pa1 nt Vii l ley 55
Gr ee nfie ld 57 M 1a m1 Trace 54
Gr ee nf iel d 63 H 1ll sboro 39
Gr een f teld 62 E as t Cl nton 55.
Gr eenfte ld 66 C1rc1e v1 11e 7 1
Gr eenf1 eld 73 Wa shtn gton CH
60
Greenft eld 78 Un oto 63
Gr eenfi eld 58 Ade na 57
Greent 1e ld 8 1 Wdmm g ton 59
Greenl 1cld 68 M am Tr ace 11
Gree nl eld 77 Hill sbo ro BS
Green l eld 4 6 C1 r c l ev lie 6 1
Gr eenf eld 53 M ad1son Plil ns
50
Gr ee n I el d 59 WaSh1n 9ton CH

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54

Gr ee nf te ld 73 Un1 oto 63
Gr ee nft el d 55 Fa r f 1e ld 60
Gr eenf 1e d 75 W1lm1n g ton 62
Chtlllcothe Secltonal
Gr eenf 1eld 67 Wellston 49
Greenft eld 53 V1nlon Counl y J6
Gr eenft eld 62 Wa shing ton CH

Malone edges
Central State
By United Press International

layup With II seconds left to
Malone defeated Central give Deftance the wm over Rio
Slate 62-61 and Deftance got a ('r~ ~ ..
83-112 vtctory over Rio Grande
Dtlwo1. and teammate
Tuesday mght m the senu- Steve Can Ausdale ended wtth
finals of the NAJA Dtslrtct 22 18 pomts each w)llle Jim Noe of
basketball tournament to ad- Rw Grande wpp'ed all players
vance to Wednesday mghl 's With 27
fmals m Canton
Deftance takes a 19-9 record
Mark Klem poured m 30 mto the fmals Rio Grande
pomts to spark Malone to tts ended wtth a 13-11 record
wm over Central State Central
Marshall Umverstly's
State took a 33-28 lead by defense "folded like a tent"
halftime, but Malone rallied m Monday nlgltl, and Akron
the last secllon to wm Central unleashed 1ts full artillery to
Slate was headed by Bobby bomb the Thundermg Herd, 87Brown With 17 pomts
61
In Deftance, Kevm Dilworth
Marshall led m the early
hit the wmnmg basket on a going, but the Zips came back
wtth an etghl1JOllll ron and
went out front for good wtth
8 19 left m the ftrst half, on
semor guard Nate Barnett's 20• •
foot jumper
Akron won the battle of the
boards, scoopmg up 56
retrieves to Marshall's 25,and
oul-Bhol the Herd, 54 9 per cent

Hoosiers
remazn zn
top spot

NEW YORK (UP!) - Even
m perfectiOn the Indiana
Umverstty basketball team
finds ttself unable to satisfy
everyone.
Rather than ptck up support
as tl heads ever closer to an
unbeaten season, Indiana instead wound up With another
dlsstdent voter today when the
latest Umted Press In ternational Board of Coaches'
ratmgs were released
The HooSiers, who were a
un8lllmous No. I chotce for
several weeks, lost a firstplace ballot to Maryland last
week and another to UCLA this
week
Apparently,
the
dissentmg coaches were mfluenced by the loss of forward
Scott May mth a broken wriSt
although Indiana sports a 28-0
record
Ind1ana still recetved 40
firstplace ballots for a total of
408 points, easily outdistancmg
runnerup Maryland With 341
pomts and UCLA With 309
Louisville remamed fourth m
the ratings but Alabama
swttched
places
w1th
Southeastern Conference foe
Kentucky, movmg into the No
5 (&gt;03!tlon while the Wildcats
dropped to SIX.
Marquette climbed mto seventh place, followed by Arizona
State, defendlng national
champion North Carolina State
and Oregon State
Southern California headed
the second 10 wtth Penn 12th,
North Carolina 13th, Clemson
14th and Utah state 15th
Texas-El Paso and NevadaLas Vegas tied for 16th,

w 397

It was the third largest
margm of defeat for Marshall
m tis 25-year stay at Memorial
Fieldhouse m Huntmgton, W
Va
Tonight Penn State IS at Ohw
Uruverstly and Cmcmalt IS at
Duquesne

6111! MAIN ST
Oponfalh loSp m Man Sol

NO APP(IINTM!!'!'fT

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.;j
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H~CESSARY

Cld SS /\ /\ Dlstn ct OpCil (; l
T1poff li me IS 7 !0 p m Ap
proxmld leh 900 tickets \\Ill be
sold al the door Eac h pm
lt c ip &lt;llln g sc hoo l has bee n
t ~ek ct&gt;

all oca ted 800

Cot the

sc nufmal ~on test f1ckets dl t:

$1 50
Coach AI Burget s qumtet IS

B-6 on the )Car Coach Sam

Sn)der s flg e1s are 15·5
Smee the state spht Oh1o
tomnaments mto three classes

SEI-r~eAdln ~·s
lsdt&lt;l\\(~.11,,
~'
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oppo nent s
scconrl 111 thc 11

a ll ll Uii l rlr s tr Jet tourn ame nt
d\ et&lt;lgJ n g li5 2 pOi nts pe r

Jdc ksun

g~ nn e I he figeJ s are gavmg up
58 5 pel out tng

11 "" 9-5 1n the SEOAI bclnml

J.tck,on IS uveragmg 54 8

Iespec hve lcttgucs

LhtunpiOn Wave r!) Greenfield

\\,as second m the South Cc n
ha l l C.:lg ue beh m d Ohw

Class

~A

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UP! chumpwn Cn

clev1lle n1th .1 11 8 4 loop mt~rk
I he l 1gers 11111 be shoot1ng
fm theu fourth dish tc t Cl O\\ ll
havmg won the htlcs tn 1935
1942 Ulld 1943 Jackson \\Ill be
shootmg fot 11s fu sl dishr cl
Cl own m the sc hools lust OI )
f he ltgers .me! h onmen

pum ts a ~am c Defensively ,
JHS 15 pemuttmg 52 5 potn ts a
game
I"·llnn cr of Wedn esda) s
ccmtes t \.\111 battle rhursday 5

you're not
Was tl ng
money on
your c r nd
home
l"nsur nee?
I

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If car and home msurance
see m like a b1g 1tem 1n your

Ne lso nvill e

budget maybe 11 s because
yo u re wastmg money on the

lcdms star ted out

when

to mnament action began two
\\ ceks ago) and 8 berth m the
Alh cns Reg 1onal

wrong k1nd or am o unt of cov
e rage Too l1tt1 e protect1or. IS
JU Sl as wasteful as buymg
more prot e~n than you ac

tually neelf"
Thai s wh ere the professtonal
adv1ce of an mdependenl
agent can often save you
p lenty In premrum dollars and futu re regrels We are the
mdependent representat ive of
severa l In surance c ompan1es
wh tch lets us pt c k the one

company that has the best
policy lor you

for spring training
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Sprmg trammg ts supposed
to "belong" to rooktes but two
oldtimers took center stage
Monday - Hank Aaron and
Mtckey Mantle
Aaron , pulling on the
umform of the Milwaukee
Brewers for the ftrst tune m 10
years, delighted hts teammales and a tiny crowd of 87
persons by hitting three balls
out of the park durmg battmg
practice
''It fits a httle better than the
Braves' uruform 1 '' satd Aaron 1
referring to his slramed relations wtth the Atlanta club
durmg the latter part of the
1974 season
Aaron, the all-tune home run
leader wtth 733, was acqwred
by the Brewers to be thetr
designated hiller He arm'ed
m camp at 208 pounds__.,tght
more than the poundage at
which he played last season
Mantle, JOmmg m with the
tremendous enthusiasm m the
New York Yankees' camp at
Fl Lauderdale, Fla , srud the
club ts JUSt one mftelder away
from bemg on a par wtth the
great teams for whtch he
played m the 196tls
"H they can add another
inftelder, they could be as good
as the ones I played wtth," satd
Mantle, a batlmg mslructor for
the club durmg sprifig trammg
"I just wish they had an tnfield

Ire you sur J

I

y 01 k wmnei Sa turday m ght for
the dlstn ct ~.: I ov.n (24 area

Wh eelersb urg

Aaron, Mantle on hand

So call

us or come m soon

a nd lets talk over your presen
and future msurance needs

that could compare w1th Clete played by the Los Angeles
Boyer, Tony Kubek, Bobby Dodgers NL MVP Steve
Richardson and Joe Pepitone I Garvey also had three hils m
never saw one better than that the ~arne
on the club when I was wtth the
Yankees."
Elsewhere around the sprmg
Get you r happmess out of
your
work or you w11l never
traliUng ctrcmt
Reggie Jackson became the know what happmess IS
ftfth member of the World Flb ert Hubb ard Amen can
ChampiOn Qakland A's to work P.f!Jtor
out at first base this spring m
the club's search to fmd a place
for young Claudell Washmg!Dn
m the regular lineup Everythmg he did looked natural,"
srud A's Manager AI Dark of
Jackson's inttlal stmt, "and
that 's very unusual for a guy on
the f1rst tune "
Manager Darrell Johnson of
the Boston Red Sox srud he ts
slartmg sprmg trammg wtth
the conv1ctton that he has six
sure regulars catcher Carlwn
F1sk, ftrst baseman Carl
Yaslrzemskt, second baseman
Doug Griffm, shortstop Rick
Burleson, thtrd baseman Rico
Petrocelh and nght-l1elder
Easy Terms!
Dwight Evans Two homers
Free Delt very!
by Joe Ferguson were the b1g
blows of an mtra squad game

@:.)
W1lham

D. childs

DOWNING-CHILDS
AGENCY, INC.
Middleport, Ohio

ZENITH
COLOR TV

•
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~ASON
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FURNITURE

HERMAN GRATE
MASON, W.VA.

5592

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VALUE
RATED

United Press International
Board of Coaches top 20 ma 10r
college basketball teams w1th
f1rst place votes and won lost
records through games of
Saturday
March
1
1n
parentheses
(Thirteenth week)
Team
Pomts

I lndtana (40) (28 O)
408
2 Maryland (I) (22 3)
341
3 UCLA 11) (22 3)
309
4 LouiSVI lle (22 2)
298
5 Alabama (22 3)
177
6 Kentucky t2\ 4)
170
7 Marquette (21 31
142
8 Atrzona St 122 3)
1\7
9 N Carolina St !20 S)
107
10 Or09on St (\8 9)
31
11 SouthernCalt186)
2S
12 Pennsylvania (23 4)
24
13 North Carolina ( 18 71
\S
14 Clemson (\6 9)
\1
IS Utah Sl ( 19 S)
\0
16 (lte ) Texas El Paso(l9 5) 9
It/e) Nevada Las V09as (20

4)

9

18 Cre19Mon (20

8

4)
19 C1ncmnat1 (20 S)
20 A1rzona (20 5)

USED CARS

(3)1975
OLDS

Cutlass Supreme
SEDANS
Dnver Education Cars

$AVE

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You II Ltke Our Quality
Way of Doing Business

GMAC FINANCING
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992 5342

Pomero)'

Open Evemngs 'Ttl6 00

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7

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chlorine

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rocks...

Sur e

~ ou

~~o atm

need c hl orme n yOllr
o ma ke 1 sale B ul who
wams 10 dl nk 11

Ou r"le w M rae e Wale Water
rei .,e no t only removes 1astes
and f)(SorS lfom your 1ap wi U!f
but mo' man maoe PO u1an1s II

a so

em o~es

neavy on ted meta s

such &amp;\ t&gt;M ifld mercury Bul 1
M ac1e wa t&gt;r W.;ner Reimer goes
!u lhe t c~r 1 es .m.:~son ens yOu r
wa er too G v ng you OeiiC &gt;Ous
sparkl ng clear re i ned wa 1er Oreal
lOt coo~ ng batnrnQ do•no the
laund v ;~ nd last tlu noT eut 01 n~rng

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For a really Big Loan
call on your nouse
The Ci ty Loa n
If you ve owned you &lt;
HomeOwner
Loan The
house for ten years 01 so
B1g Loa n for maJor
c hances o re I s doubled
f1nanc1al need s B1gger
1n va lue Wh1ch means
because 1t s bac ked by the
you ve made o b1g prof1t
growng value of your house
On paper
So 1f you need a
Now you c a n /urn lhat
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prof t 1nto neede,cd~
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Without hav ng A 1\.T Loa n cal l
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house How?

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•

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-=:-:-::-:;J
CITY W'

Cal l us lhen lurn on vou1 lap

appetite EnJ(ly three good meals a day
as the tmy ODRINEX tablet auto
mat1cally helps yau eat less Without
bemg hungry W1th fewer talones your
weight gOes down Safe laken as
drrectrd w111 not make you nervbus
l ook better feel better as you start
'!l•mmmgd?wn today wtlh ODR1NEX

POMEROY
P~ fn·l7fJ

()Ill:'

pia~

( AA A
AA ttnd A 1 tl1c ln.t vc
ed at leas t tw o
So utheasterr1~hJO l£.tJ..:IIl! ht:~ s l Otnlll On roes - Wellston and
donnnated the Southet n Ohtu \V .ls lnn gton CH Gree nfi eld
D ashtct class!~
l \H l from Wuslungton CH whtle
W&lt;lverl) :s lagc 1s Ul plurt&gt;d Jc1c kson los t once 10 the Blue
lh1 ee st.ull gllt rh sli 1d ~.: 1 O\\ ns ld, s Both led ms defeated
1111970 197lcllld l 'ln Giilhpoll~ Wt• llston J iic kso n 1\\JCe and
\\Oil 11. Ill 1971 ,mel Wo~vcii\
l.r ~.:en fl e ld one{•
made II Ctve Ill &lt;I 10\\ fill the
(,recnhcld en ters the 52nd

Th1s Week's Specaal

ODRINEX contams an amazrn1
hunger tamer that suppresses the

THI IMCOMI TAX PI!OPLI!

C()l\e ~e s

Cen te r
Wedn cscta\ th e (J onmt• n
t.a kt• on Greenfield 111 the 1975

followed m order by Cretghton,
Cinctnnab and Arizona
NEW YORK I UP!) - The

excess weight qu1ck ly

::
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RIO Gl alldl

ct (

TOTALS 1304
1171
W'On 1S Lost s

New clm1cal tes ts completed at a

=
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:sc hoolbo~ confen•ncethls\\ eek

54

maror unlve·slty hospital prove thai the
OORINEX Phm Will help you lose

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A SOut hcdstel n Olno League
IC(llll IMs cap tlll cd the Cldss
AA Dts lt tl I br~ske l ba ll to111
11£111112 11 1 fl Vl CllllSl'L Ullve ~ ea rs
and Cu&lt;tch AI Burger s Jackson
h onnu: n hopt; to m ake 11 s1x m
a 10 \\ fO I lhE' stdk s oldes t

FIGHTS UGLY FAT
3 TIMES A DAY

:

:

SEOAL has dominated AA District
play during past five campaign=-=-s~

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2- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 Tuesday. March 4, !975

Rhodes' programs still
in running at deadline
which would have taken them
out agam
House M1nonty Leader
Charles F Kurfess, R·Bowlmg
economic recovery proposals Green, pomted out that tf the
for Ohto were sllll alive m the voters approved the expanded
General Assembly today run- housmg ass 1stance by the
rung a battle ag amst the clock state the legislature Will still
for legtslative enac tment by have to Implement 11 later on
'Probably no one can be
Wednesda y mght - th e
entirely
pleased wtth all as·
deadlme for placmg them on
pec
ts
of
th1s resolutiOn "
the June 3 primary ballot
Kurfess
satd
But certamly tt
Three modtfted proposals to
spur housmg, transporU.twn deser ves our support
" What we have before us IS a
and pub h e tmpro\ ements
roadmap
for economic recovecleared one chamber of the
ry
We
w11llet
the people study
General Assembl y Monday,
rece tvmg heavy support from th e map, and they w1ll dec1de
th e route we are to take '
the Democratic majonlles
Rep John A Galbraith RThe fourth plan , long-range
Maumee
, pomted out that an
tax relief for mdustnes ex
pandlng w the mner ctttes, Urban Development Corporrahung on by a thread rt lwn m New York sUite had w
received Senate co mm11tee default on a housmg bond only
approval m sunplifted form last week 'Th1s has had a
Monday and sttll stood an devastatmg effect on the bond
outs1de chance of clea rmg both market ' he sa1d
Jo1mng Galbraith m opposichambers by Wedn esday night
tion
were Reps Thomas P
It took marathon legislative
D Youngstown
actton, m caucus and on th e G1lmartm
Robert
E
Netzley,
R-Laura ,
floor Monday afternoon and
Rodn
ey
H
Hu
ghes,
Revenmg, to push the three other
conslltuttonal amendments Huntsvlllei'" Joseph P Tulley,
R-Menwr Donna Pope, Rthrough
Parma
, and James E Betts,
Wooed With VIsions
R-Rocky
Rtver
But Democrats, wooed by
TRANSPORTATION
Rhodes wtlh VISions of conSU'Uetion Improvements and Ne xt ca me the tra r:s
thousands of new jobs, and left portahon bond 1ssue w1th the
to thetr own deVIces by lhetr accompanymg gas tax boost
leaders and wary labor lol&gt;- elfechve next July I
Twelve Democrats Jomed all
bytsts, earned the measures
12
Repubhcan senators m
through
securing
24-11 passage of the
Passing their lntltal major
amendment
hurdles were
Rhodes or1gmally had asked
- A constitutional amend!o:
$1 64 b1ll1on, mcludmg $1
ment expanding the stale s
btlllon
for htghway construcauthority to fmance construction of lowcost housmg, tion, but Democrats reduced
nursing homes and health care the package durmg committee
centers, 87-7 in the House after meetings
Aid to mass transportation
35 minutes of debate and a 2\'z·
hour caucus The outlook m the and atrport Improvement was
Senate
was
generally restored on the Senate lloor m
a bipartisan vote
favorable
Sen Anthony 0 Calabrese
- A $1 b1ll1on scaled-down
D-Cleveland,
offfered an
verston of Rhodes' transportaamendment
provtdmg
up w$50
tion bond Issue costing a runemtiiion
for
urban
mass
trantenths cent htke m the state
$55
mtlbon
for
an
sportation,
gasoline lax, 24-&lt;1 in the Senate
after a two-hour caucus and 40 mterc!ty rail passenger system
mmules of public debate The and $10 mtlllon for atrport
House was expected to offer Improvements
Calabrese's amendment was
some revisions
approved
on a 2().12 vole w1th
- A $2 5 btlhon public lin·
eight
Democrats
JOming all 12
provements bond Issue reqwr·
Republican
senators
m
mg an mcrease m the stale
sales tax from 4 to 4 7 per cent, favor
As re-wrtllen by Calabrese s
72-22 m the House after 2\&lt;,
amendment,
the measure
hours of debate
The
Democratic-controlled Senate would proVIde $400 mlllton w
was expected to try to reduce local governments for road and
the stze of the bond Issue and bridge Improvements, a maxsubstitute a dtfferent tax unum of $485 million for htgh·
way construcllon and $15
package
mtllion
for mass transportation
HOUSING
and
elrport
Improvements ·
The housmg resolution ,
The senators reJected, 13-19,
which had been rewrttten by
a
proposal by Sen Wtlllam F
Democrats and Republicans m
Bowen
, D ~ Cmcmnat1, to
prtvate to requtre that the Ohto
reqwre
that any firms, unHousmg Development Board
make fmancmg asststance w dertaking the transportation
housmg projects only through projeCts take aggreSSive action
local lendmg mstttutions, was to employ members of
mmonty groups
the first to clear
Votmg agamsllhe bond tssue
Rhodes ' origmal verston
were
Democrallc Sens An·
would have authonzed the
thony
J Celebrezze Jr and
state agency to assiSt conL Butts, both
Charles
struction ftrms and other
Cleveland, Tony P Hall and
prtvate developers
The 6nal version of the Neal F Zlmffiers Jr , both of
measure was amended on the Dayton, Robert D Freeman,
floor to restore nursmg homes Canton , J T McCormack,
and health care fa cthhes, Wtckliffe, Gene Slagle, GaliOn,
which had been removed m and Mangene Valiquette ,
COmmittee The House voted Toledo
PUBLIC
24-70 agamst an amendment
Shortly before mtdmghl the
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - All
four of Gov James A Rhodes'

DR. LAMB

., Mason County

N;~7'N~te·;-; Rio drops heartbreaker
in District 22 tourney

MASON , W Va - Millard Grees, a former restdent here,
now of Bellatre, Ohto, recalls that there were qutte a few steam
hoats built here On~ was the D W Woodward m 1882 It had a
long and useful hfe and many mishaps, and changed owners and

House cleared the pubbc unprovements bond tssue, hghlmg off Democrallc attempts w names many times
The boat, 150 feet long, was ftrsl owned by Capt Jun
reduce the $2 5 btllion stze of
Woodward,
well known Ohio and Kanawha River ptlol In 1890 he
the package w $1 7 billion and
substitute a reduced sales Ulx sold 11 w State Senawr Bob Carr who used tl - then called the
mcrease or a boost tn the Bob Pr1chard - on the b1g Kanawha pushmg coal In 1898tl was
coroporallon tax and upper rebwlt and sold wT H DaviS, a grocer at Mtddleporl He named
level personal mcome tax the boat the T H DaVIs
About the year 1911 11 was sold to the Chicago Eastern
brackets
Thtrty-etght Democrats m- Ratlroad The old boat blew her boiler at Catro, m' killing one
cludlng most of the leadership, man She was rebuilt, but further trusfortune befell the T H
JOtned 34 Republicans m pass- Davts In December of 191511 sank at Joppa, Ky, after rammmg
mg the resolutiOn , whtch the hulk of a sunken barge The T H DaVIS was raiSed and
rebwlt and sold wa company m MeXIco, crossed the Gulf to wmd
needed 60 votes for approval
down
her last pays down there
Etghleen Democrats and four
About
1950 b1g steam boats ended on the Ohto Rlv.er, only a
Republicans voted agamst tl
few are now left Accordmg to Mr Gress, those were exciting
Rep Waldo B Rose, R·Llm8, days to have lived - maybe some day they may return
carrymg the plan for the
MR GRESS CALLS this portton of hiS story, "The Btg Fire
Rhodes admin1strat10n, satd 11 Canoe "
would "stimulate the economy
Most school boys are fanullar w1th the hiSIDry of Robert
m a fast developmg recessiOn " Fulton's boats and how he use w fish on the rtver near hiS home
111 his paddle wheel scow, an 111vention of his own
It wtll make a corrurutment
How later he made the ftrsl successful steam boat that ran
to the center ctties to rebmld, up tbe Hudson Rtver The town folks called him a nut Fulton
revttahze and remake them, ' made them eat those worda He had the last laugh, m 1807
Rose satd
He also, according to Gress, made the firSt submarme
But Galbraith, one of the (diving boat) The English goverrunent gave hun $75,000 to blow
Republican opponents, called tl up an old war ship He dove under the vessel and placed a bomb
a ' grab bag" and said It would on 1t They offered to pay him much more if he would sell them
make Ohio "number one m the the patent, and not revealtt to any government
nation all nghl - m debt "
Fulton srud, "No 1I am an American, if my country wants the
patent I wtll gtve tl to them free "
' Easter IS commg early '
In 1811 he went to Pittsburgh, Pa and built the first steam
Galbraith satd, and larger boat to ply the western rtvers It was a success from the start as
Thts Is a big basket of Easter 11 passed down the Ohto and on to New Orleans
eggs We re gomg w have a
One mght down below Cincmnati, they tied up for the mght
huge, permanent Easter egg by an Island Before dawn a huge earth quake occurred and was
hunt herem Ohto, JUSllike they srud to be the greatest to ever hit the USA Accordmg to Gress, 1t
have m Washmgton " House changed the course of the rtver When the crew of the boat awoke
Majortly Leader Barney Quilt- m the mornmg there was no Island The crew was very much
er, D·Toledo, one of the confused On the little hoat went, soon commg mto the
Democrallc opponents, satd MtSSisstppt The Indians, reportedly stood on the banks m
passmg the resolution would be amazement They shouted m excitement, "UGH-Btg Fire
givmg m to Rhodes
Canoe ''
41
If we pass thts," he satd,
It churned tls way on to New Orleans, stayed a few days and
"we abdtcate our role of equal turned w come back up the river Now the real challenge would
partners m government "
take place - many doubted the frat! craft would be able to
overcome the swift drastic current of the nughty rtver Fulton
Prtor to passage, the House had confidence m h1s boat - he knew what tt could do Slowly the
agreed overwhelmingly to an power of steam came agamst the terrific mad rtver and tl
amendment requmng that conquered
l1rms undertak111g public unAnd then a new era had begun, one that would last 150 years
provements projects funded by or steam boats lnumgranls then poured Ill by the thousands
the measure to make consciOus They came, they saw and they conquered
efforts to employ members of
In 191lan exact duphcale of Fulton's ftrsl boat was bmlt at
mmor1ty groupa, mcludlng the Pittsburgh It was sent down stream to New Orleans celebrating
aged
100 years of steam on inland riVers The replica of the ftrst boat,
Members narowly defeated, accordmg w Mr Gress came past Mason about 12 o'clock He
46-17, an amendment which was m Hartford wtth hiS father, buymg a horse People along the
would have elmunated refer- way were dressed m old !ashton clothes, some like lndtans As
ence to $140 million for cancer the boat slowly chugged past the Indtans shouted Ugh, Btg Ftre
research centers m Cleveland, Canoe
Columbus, Clncmnatt and
Toledo, and $40 nulllon for a
NEW HAVEN- The New Haven Women's Club held thetr
heart research center m lnternationalDmnerrecently at the club room at the New Haven
Cleveland
Library wtth Mrs Jack Flesher, Mrs Norene Layne, Mrs
They also defea led by two Franklin While, Mrs Kemut Ford, Mrs Karl Wtles and Mrs
votes an amendment which Jack Hesson as hostesses Mrs LoiS Robmson led m prayer
would have provtded up to
The table was decorated wtth handmade flags of other
$500,000 for Cilles with popula- countries Also served were favorite dishes of foods from other
twns under 5,000
lands
As possed, the bill contaliiS
Clothing from other countr1es was modeled by some of the
major allocations lor Ohto's ladtes
n111e largest cttles, plus
Those modelmg clothmg gave the or1gm of the garment and
reduced amounts for smaller told of Its past hiStory
ctltes , counttes and other
Attendmg were Mrs Rose Wolfe, Mrs Elizabeth Re1chert,
governmental umts A large Mrs Thelma Scally, Joyce Circle, Dtane Hickel, Wendy D1vers,
chunk __. mtlhon -would Marian Batey, Cathy Baley, Linda Young, Kitti Casto, Lllllan
be left for the legislature to Greene, Mrs Pete Ohlinger
approprtale as It sees hl if the
M1ss Erlinda Obregon, Mrs Donald Roush, Charlotte Roush,
voters approve
Mrs Laverne Powell, Conme Frishette, Mary Lou Edwards,
Jemy Dodd, LoiS RobtnsOn, Vemce Ward, Macil Clevenger,
Havollne Flesher, Martha Hart, Lots Bumgardner, Debbte
White, Alberta Wtles, Mrs Frances Haberle, Mrs Roger Fink,
Mrs Conrue Carter, Mrs Norene Layne

DEFIANCE
They
deserved better
The Rto Grande Redmen ,
cast m the role of underdogs,
led much of the game, then fell
apart at the foul !me as the
Def1ance Yell ow Jackets edged
past the snake bitten cagers of
Art Lanham, 83-82, at the
.College Co mmumty Center
here Monday mght
For the fourth consecutive
year the Redmen lost to the
host Ja ckets m the opemng
round of the NAIA D1slrtct 22
Tournament

It was also the fifth ltme m

the last Sixth years that Rio
and Defiance have met m ftrst
round tournament achvlt)
w1th the Redmen takm g a 1970
dcc1s10n at Lyne Center
The Redmen led most of the
way, although the Jackets took
the upper hand tn the second
half gmng on !Dp nt 49-48 w1th
14 21 remammg mthe game on
a 19 foot JWnper by John
Kornowa

The Redmen battled back,
leadmg by as much as stx at 75
69 w1th 4 27 rematmng before
Kevm Dtlwor th sank a dnvmg
bank shot wtlh 12 seconds left
to put Defiance m Wednesday's
Dtstr1ct 22 !mats
RIO Immediately brought the
ball up the court before callmg
hme out w1th four seconds left
to set up a fmal chance at
victory

The mbounds pass was ar
ched htgh over the Def1ance
defense to sophomore Jtm Noe
who was forced farther (rom
the basket than hoped for Noe
pUmped pp a 17footer from the
base hne , tt caught the edge of
the nm and bounded h1gh
toward the oppostte corner as
the buzzer sounded
The Redmen , who Jumped
out mto an early 8-0 lead, were
killed at the foul hne htlltng
JUst four of 12 char1ty chances
for 33 pet
Defiance. w1th two less held
goals than Rio, canned nme of
12 to provtde the margm of
v1ctory

After Jumpmg out to that 8-0
lead the Yello" Jackets got
hot, QUickly pullmg wtthm two,
10-8
Rto Then surged and ap-

In·

rarma twn on the treaunen t o(

arthr1tts ' Recently a relatl\ e
m hts late 50s developed pam Ill
both htps \\h1ch the doctors
have dia gnosed as arthrths I
am wondermg 1f exerctse ts the

I

I

·I
I \
J

j

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best therapy or 1f rest wh1ch 1s
more comfor table. may be
recommended
f understand there ts no cure
but hope the pa m could be
lessened He uses a ca ne, so lar
wtth d1f!tculty
DEAR READER - Arthn tts
of the htp JOin ts IS a fatrl)
common problem m m en ThiS

IS usually os teoarthritis or
wear and tear arthnhs
Osteoarthnhs affects the
wetghl-bearmg JOmls most
frequently, hence the htps,
knees and ankles
The vanous for ms of ar
lhritis are discussed Ill a hoOk I
wnte wtth LaRue Stone called,
"There's Help for Arthntts "
You,can get a copy by wrttlng
to me m care of lh1s news
paper, at P 0 Box 1051 , RadiO
Ctty Stahon, New York, N Y
10019 and askmg for the book

Send one dollar for the boot.
plus 25 cents postage and hand·
hn g Or ' ou nught fmd 11
amung the pajJerbacks at l our
book store
It 1s 1mportant to mamtam
the full range of mouon of all
JOIIl ts rega rdless of the type or
arlhrt tls That ts pa rt of the
ObJeC tl\ e of continued exer
r tse HO\\ ever m osteoar thrths

there IS oft en a tendenq to
overdo 1! Rest IS equally
nnpor U!nt Characlertshcally
Ill os teoar thrtlls res t w111
re heve the pa m The use of a
cane and crutches are efforts
to decrease the work and help
to rehe\ e the arthnt1s
A person \lith os teoarthntis
causmg pam should try to hm1 t
the amoun t of acttvt ty A good
program ts to be up and about
lor only part of the da) then
get the we1gh t off the htps b)
lymg down for a couple or
hours Remember the purpose
of the exerc1se ts only to
mamtam full ran ge of molton
and muscle strength Other"'se the JOmt does be tter
gettmg as mu ch rest as
pOSSible A combmed rest and
SUi ta ble exerciSe prqg, am .,

med1cme

Ftrn.lly, I d hke to mention
that m advanced cases of
osteoarthrttisof the htp JOmt, tf
necessary, the whole J01111 can
be replaced
Htp JOmt
replace ment has progressively
Improved and IS an Important
a1d m treatmg many cases of
arthrtbs mvolvmg the htp JOtn t
DEAR DR LAMB - I'm 10
years old I would hke for ) ou
lo explain what convulsiOns
are
DEAR READER - They
usually occur after you have
los t consctousness ( passed
out) The bra111 has centers m tl
that control the contraction of
your muscles

These s tart

causmg your muscles to
con tract on theIf own The
resull1s the sudden contraction
and movement of the arms,

legs and other- parts of the
body
Th e conlra clt ons can be
trregular w1th no rhythm or
they can occur m a rhythnuc

Today's

Sport Parade

The

Dai~

Sent1nel

PLAYER
Dan Boll• nger

J1mmy Noe
J1m Stewart
Gil Pnce

Paul Albanese

RIO GRANDE (821
FG A FT A RB PF TP
13 25 0 \ 12
3
26
13 23
I 4
10 2 27
7 14
\ 2
9
5 IS
2 10 \ 2
4
2
s
37

Bob Caldwell

Mack Barbee

TOTALS

PLAYER
Bob Martm
Kev D ilworth
John Kornowa
Rex Shreve
Steve Van Au sdale

0 I

00

00

81

00
00

2

4

2
0
0
0

0
0
I
\

7
2
0
0
0

4 12 39
15 82
DEFIANCE (83)
FG-A FT A RB PF TP
S IS 3 5
6
3
13
9 16 0 0
2
2 18
46
00
3
2
8
39

Gregg Mugg

I4

67

9 21

00

610

Lonn 1e Nedderman
M1ke Schm1df
Roll 1e M 1nn 1ck

0 I
0 I

34

TOTALS

Score at half

00

00

Gary Swmehart
Andy Da venport

13

\ \

37 77
R1o 39 Def 1an ce 37

00
00

00

4
16
\
1

2

00
4
9 12 39

\
4
3
0

8
\8
\2
0

3
2

6

20

TA~NEHILL

EICeC Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1ty Edtfor
P ubtts h ed cH• trv exce pt
Salurda'( b y Th e Oh 10 Va ll ey
P v bl tshm g Compa ny
111
Cour t St
Po m ero y Oh 10
45169 Bus me n Off tc e Phone
99? 1156 E d1 tona l Phone 9 92
2 157
Second c lass pos tage patd at
Pomeroy Ohto
Na t tonal
adve r t1s1n g
r ep r ese n t a t t ve
80tt1nellt
Gallaghe r Inc 12 E as t 42n d
St NeW York New York
Subscrtp t 1on
r a t es
Delivered by ea r ner Wh ere
avatlabh.&gt; 75 ce n ts per week
By Mo tor Route wher e carr 1er
sen·1ce no t avail able One
month tJ 25 By m a 11 1n Oh10
and W V a O~e Year , SJ2 00
S1x mon ths
S11 50
Thr ee
months
S7 00
El sewhe r e
516 00 year
S1&gt;C 4'n onths
Sl 3 50 three months Sf 5D
Subscr1pf 1o n pn ce 1ncludes
Sunnily T1mes Senhnel

me
"Look, I like the Atlanta fans, and the Atlanta ball players,
Ralph Garr, Dusty Baker, Darrell Evans, all of 'em They were
fine, but some of the people m the front office didn't treat me
right. They kept makmg the statement they hadn't had a wtmer
m II years and the press blamed me for that I thought tt was
unfair to blame one man.
"After I couldn't work out a deal With the Braves, I realized the
only thing I could do was come over here Yeh, the Braves offered me a JOb all r1ghl, but what they told everybody they offered and what they actually did were altogether different Over
here at least, I know I'll get an opportunity to help the ktds
That's alii was really looking form Atlanta "
Whether be knows 11 or not, Hank Aaron also will get a chance
to help some of the older players among the Brewers.
"There's no quesllon he's gomg to help us m a lot of ways,''
says third baseman Don Money "We've been last m designated
hitting the past two years, but mth him here now, you know we
won't be last again
"Look around this clubhouse, fellows like Robm Yount and
Kevm Kobel over there weren't even born yet when Hank Aaron
started m the btg leagues Two years ago Yount was still m htgh
school Aaron was one of his tdols, and now he's playmg on the
same team as him ''
Don Money ripped open a leller whtch had just arnved He
glanced altt and then at Aaron, who was potting on his Brewers'
uniform for the first time m front of another locker across the
room.
"You know, I'm 27, this IS my seventh year m the big leagues,
and I feel about Hank Aaron the same way as lbe kids do," satd
Money "I feel he's gomg w be one tremendous influence around
here"

0

38

ence CorrurusSioners Tournament m St LouiS or the
Nahonal Invltallon Tournament m New York
Mtchtgan stalled out the last
56 seconds of Its game mlh
llllnol!! and Joe Johnson hit a
last-6eCOnd 15-foot JWIIP shot to
gtve the Wolvermes the twopomt wm It raiSed thetr league
record to 11-6 and thetr overall
mark to 18-7, Identical to
Minnesota's
'lt'sno secret that Michigan
has been on the short end of
voles by the NCAA and Btg Ten
before, ' Orr satd afterward,
referrmg to voles the last two
years to send Oluo State's
football team to the Rose Bowl
when the Buckeyes and Wolvermes bed for the title
Michtgan Coach John Orr
snapped about his team's lack
of nallonal recognition, "I'm
not gomg to get upset if they
PICk Mmnesota Maybe tf we
wm 25 games, we might even
get rated "
Surgmg Michigan State, although a game out of second
place, ftgured tt ought

to be ready for postseason play
too
The
Spartans go deftctt to go ahead
of Purdue, only w see Broce
Parkmson tie the game on a
shot With eight seconds left
Smooth-shootmg Terry
Furlow, who led the Spartims
With 27 pomts, swished a fallaway, 30-foot jwnp shot WJth
three seconds left m the game
for the wm
Freshman-donunated Minnesota clamped tts ferocious
defense on Wisconsin in the
first half, holding the Badgers
to 16 pomts Then, behind
freshman Mark Olberding's 25
pomts, the young Gophers
turned on the fast break and
coasted to the WJn They
fmished thetr home schedule
With a 12-1 record

ALL THOSE SEALS
OAKLAND (UP!) - Five
Navy frogmen, known as Seals,
smce they now work on sea,
land, and atr, began running
the 500 miles from Seal Beach
to Oakland Monday

Letters to the editor

-

Southern may have won, but ...
Dear Sir
Southern may have won the game by two pomts but
Our fans didn't boo when thm team came m before the
game, OOUTHERN'S DID Our fans and cheerleaders didn't
cheer to drown out tbe amouncmg of then- startmg line up,
OOUTHERN'S DID Not one of our players threw a basketball
and hit one of thetr players m the face, SOUTHERN'S DID Our
fans and cheerleaders didn't cheer while thetr cheerleaders were
on the lloor, SOUTHERN'S DID Not one of our cheerleaders
gave lbelt basketball players the fmger, SOUTHERN'S DID Our
cheerleaders d1dn 'I make run of their cheerleaders at pep tallies
or while on the floor, SOUTHERN'S DID Our fans didn ·~ shout
obscemties at lhetr players and cheerleaders, SOUTHERN'S
DID Our fans didn't.g1ve thetr fans the fmger after the game was
over, SOUTHERN'S DID Not one of our fans rtpped down a
Jacket. threw tl on the floor, sptt on tt and stomped on 11,
SOUTHERN'S DID

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Letlenl expressing oplnlon on pubUc Issues are welcomed. Letters must be In
good taste aad be signed, Including address 8lld telephooe number. No letter without 8
bona !Ide name, address ud lelepboue number can be publlahed. Upon request ollbe
writer, mmes will be witbbeld from publlcatlou; however, uponlegntmate requeal 11y
a reader, Dames must be revealed. Letters should not eKeeed 380 words. The editor
reserves the privilege ol condeiiBlng all le«en.

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA

CHESTER l

"Because," explams the Brewers new 41-year-&lt;&gt;ld destgnated
hitter, "!wanted to leave wtth a good taste m my mouth You
have no 1dea how much that last home run meant to me A rookie
With the Reds, a Sidearm sinker ball ptlcher wbose name 1 don t
even remember (It was Rawly Eastwtck ) threw me a low, mside
fastball and I htt 11 out "
Hank Aaron's entire face lights up sunply remembermg how tt
was that fmal time up for h1m m the ctty he played the last rune
years
"I ran around the bases," he says, "took my uniform off and
said that was 11 I haven't been back there smce That's rtghll
senlsomebodyouttogetmy thmgs I didn'twanl togo back "
Had the Brewers not come along w1th thetr !me two-year offer,
Hank Aaron would have been all finiShed wtth baseball He says
so himself
The Brewers didn't obtam Aaron so eas1ly from the Braves
who, m the end, grew mcreasmgly reluctant to let him go. Bud
Selig, the Brewers' prestdent and chtef execultve offtcer, labored
arduously for nearly two months brmgmg Aaron back w
Milwaukee
Atlanta officials srud they had made Aaron an offer to kzep him
w1th them in a fronl-&lt;&gt;fflce capacity .. of sorts
You ask Hank Aaron about that offer and he laughs It ISn't a
happy laugh
"One of thetr owners S8ld 'You can look at everythmg that
comes over my desk,'" he recalls with obv1ous unhappmess
"What good does that do • The most depressmg thing ts w walk
mto an office, look at the four walls and have nothing to do I
wanted some responstbthty, some kmd of JOb where I could put
my experience to good purpose h~lpmg Atlanta's young ball
players, but they never gave me the opportunity "
Aaron pulled a ctgarette out a pack m his locker and lit 11.
"Everybody over there was afratd of his job The Braves had
15 executive vice-preSidents What dtd I need that for• I needed
that like a hole m the head I didn't want to go around selling
baseball gloves That was part of thiS 'great' deal they offered

Rio Grande box •••

Iashton

ConvulsiOns can occur wtth a
deep famt from any cause, or
m the presence of a fever or a
vanety of diSorders tha t may
affect the bram They are more
common m chtldren durmg tll·
ness "'th fever than m adults

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! s,ori1 Editor
CITY, AriZ (UPI) - Hank Aaron already has a day under
his belt With the Milwaukee Brewers, an espeCially good one, as
11 turned out, but the best day of all he says, was his very last one
mth the Atlanta Braves
That can be mterpreted two ways
It can be taken to mean he achieved his greatest sallsfaction
over something he accomplished m the Braves' !male m Atlanta
Stadtum last October or 11 can be Interpreted w mean he couldn't
really watt to get out of there
Hank Aaron, the man who broke Babe Ruth's long-staodmg
.-record of 714 home runs, says both conclusions are absolutely
correct.
"The greatest satisfachon I ever got was from the home run I
hit my last lime up tn Atlanta, No 733, " says Aaron , thought·
fu~~t was more of a ktck for me than 715 "

that pomt, the Redmen got
seven or etghl bps at the
bucket before Gtl Prtce
grabbed the loose ball and
popped m a seven footer to gtve
Rio an 82-111 lead
Controversy then raged, as
only one second came off the
clock durmg the Rto attack on
the boards The clock was reset
at 27 seconds to set the stage
for Dilworth's game wmnmg
bucket
The Rto defeat rumed ex·
cellen t performances by Noe
and semor Dan Bollinger Noe
htt 13 of 23 !1eld goat attempts
and one free throw lor 27 pomts
and the 6-5 sophomore held
Defiance's Ali - Amer~can
candtdate Bob Martin to jusl13
pmnts Bollinger hit 13 of 25
f1eld goal attempts for 26 pomts
and led Rio rebounders wtth 13
caroms
The only other Redman m
double ftgures was 6-7 center
Jtm Stewart wtth 15 pomts
Defiance was led by Dtlworth
and Dan Ausdale wtlh 18 pomts
while Martm tossed m 13 and
Mugg 12
The Redmen hit 39 of 81 fteld
goal attempts wh1ie the Yellow
Jackets canned 37 of Tl Both
teams hauled m 39 nussed
shots wtlh Noe and Stewart
giVIng Bollinger ample
rebound help wtth 10 and mne
respectively Dan Ausdale led
Defiance rebounders w1th 16

Mic)ligan remains in
second after 77-75 win

By GREG GORDON
United Press Inlernat!onal
No !-ranked Indiana may
have sewed up the Btg Ten
basketball title a week and a
half ago but four other Big Ten
coaches still are talking as if tl
w~re the football season and
the Rllse Bowl were at stake
One ~eason IS tbe new NCAA
tournament formal, wh1ch
adds seven at~arge teams to
theftrsl round of play, allowmg
more
tl}an Just conference
GIRLS TO PLAY
MASON - The Mason Homemakers ExtensiOn club and champiOns to COffiill'te for the
Any Pomeroy-Mtddleport
guests
held a workshop and dinner meetmg on Tuesday at the national lltle
area gtrls mterested m takmg
Monday night the unbeaten
borne
of
Mrs Landon Smtih m Mason Three ladles, Mrs
part 1n the reestablishment of
Roosters were tdle but the rest
~oberta Young, Mrs Laurene Lew1s of Clif!Dn and Mrs Evelyn
U1e gtrls softball league at the
of the league powers were
Middleport Commun1ty Park Stewart of Mason, demonstrated making Easter Baskets from
frozen
bread
dough
and
salt
dough
for the sp01ls
scramblmg
are asked to phone Mrs Jean
The dough was woven to gtve a lattice effect and when baked Michigan mpped llllnoJS, n-75,
Cra1g 992-3278, at once Girls
a golden brown looked good enough to eat A pyrex bowl formed w ri!IJilU!l in a second-place tie
10 and older wtth no age hmtl the foundation for the basket while tl baked
With Minnesota, a 65-58 VIctor
are mv1ted to parttctpate
Cute favors were made from the frozen bread dough, by over WISconsm Both teams
makmg a rmrua lure basket of the dough and placing a real could have a shot at an NCAA
berth when b1ds go out ThurContmued on page 11
sday
Michtgan state knocked Purdue
out of second wtth an 111-112
Be ashamed to d1e unttl you
have won some vtctory for wm that left tbe teams tied for
humamty
- Horace Mann fourth and hopmg for an mAmencan educator
Vltallon to e1ther the Confer-

best
You can get a lot of good out
of some 111structions from a
good phySical theraptst or from
a spec tahst 10 ph ystcal

peared to take a commandmg
lead outscormg the hosts 20-6
to take a 30-14 margm wtth 8 50
left m the ftrst half
Once agam, however, that
killer mshnct was mtssmg as
the Redmen went fng1d from
the field gomg scoreless for
the next five mmutes and one
second, w1th a Noe ftve footer
breakin g the 1ce at 3 49 to keep
the Redmen on top, 32-29
Rt o continued to hold the
lead taking a 39-37 margm mto
the lOC'keroom at mtermtss1on
Both teams battled for the
lead m the second half wtth
Defiance taking the lead for the
f1rs t t1me 49-48 at the 14 21
mark on that 19 footer by
Korn owa
The la rgest Defiance lead of
the mght came moments later
at 55-50 on a layup by Steve
Dan Ausdale
The Redmen regamed the
lead at 60-59 on a Bob Caldwell
layup w1th 9'31 remammg
The Redmen led by as much
as SIX 7&gt;-1&gt;9 on a Noe layup
w1th 4 27 rematmng The
Yellow Jackets regamed the
lead 79 78 on a lyup bl Greg
Mugg w1th 57 seconds left
Bollinger countered wtlh a
layup before Dan Ausdale htt
another bunny w1th 36 seconds
left
W1th 30 seconds remammg,
Noe was fouled by Mugg but
m1ssed both fre e throws At

Even though Eastern lust the game Coach Phillips went over to
shake hands and congratulate Southern's coach but he wouldn't
show enough sportsmanship to even accept the congratulations.
Southern may have won the game by two pomts but Eastern
won by a long ways m sportsmanship by our team, fans and
cheerleaders.
Some of the proud people !rom Eastern- V1clu Gaul Steve
Nelson, Jun Reed, Jun Lodwick, Steve Schmucker, !legtna
Kimes, Marsha Kimes, AVIS Bissell, Sandra Buchanan Rodney
While, Robert HarriS, Deruse Dean, Brtan Conde, Uz Edwards,
Sherry Epple, Janet Ambrose, Bonnie Wood Kathy Pulllrll
Debbie Shielda, Phil Bowen, John Smitlt, T.;ry Smith, Mik~
Smith, Patty Pullins, Brenda Boyles, Cindy Ritchie, Gu,y Walker,
Mike Hams, Cathy DaVIS, Don Jackson, Teresa Carr Juli
Whitehead, Rachel HIDller, Bruce Riffle, Mark Grossnickle,
Brenda Sampson, Nancy Chaffee, Davtd Mills, Joe Kuhn, Kini
Bates, Tim Kuhn, Gary Loogenette, Larry Longenette, Terri
Bahr, Dave Hannum, Julia Schultz, Edna Boggs, Cheryl
Benedurn, Connte Putman, Barbara Henderson T8lllllll Bahr
Rob Barker
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By Alma Marshall

Which therapy best for arthritis of hips?
By Lawr·ence
DEAR DR
you refer me to an\

3- The Daily Sentlllel,Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0, Tuesday, March 4, 1975

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Southern girls defeat Meigs
Basketball action at Metgs
last mght the Tornado gtrls
defeated the Metgs Marauder
gtrls 45-35, the second hme
Southern made Metgs viCtim
thts season and Southern's
seventh m a row w1thout a loss
Leading the Tornado attack
was Cindy Roush wtth 16 pomts
which was scormg honors for
both teams She was followed
by Cheryl Larkins w1th 11,
Becky Sayre 9, Brenda
Lawrence 8, and Jenmfer
Mugrage scored one Jennifer

grabbed 20 defensive rebounds
w lead her team m that
department
For Metgs, Pam Vaughan led
the way m a losmg cause by
sconng 15 pomts Others
scormg for the Marauders
were Beth Vaughan w1th 8,
Demans Ash 6, and Mary
Weyersm11ler ftmshed Metgs
scormg wtth 6 Beth Vaughan
led her team Ill reboundmg
By Quarters
Southern
4 15 7 19--45
Metgs
9 6 12 11--35

Henry Block has
17 reasons why )U1l
should come to us
for income tax help.
Raeon 14. We're human, and once
in a great while we make a mlatake.
But if our error means you must pay
additional tax, you pay only the tax.
We pay any interest or penalty.
We stand behind our work.

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]al;kson, Greenfield
rosters, '75 results
JACKSON ROSTE R
PLAYER
HT YR
Ma rt y Coope r
S9
3
Tom Osbor ne
6 o
~
Jeff Conro y
58
J
M 1k eMcDo nad
58
J
Greg F a nn n
S 10
Geo r 9e Sc hmtd
60
3
D 1c k Gent1l
62
4
Bo b Gr il lo
s9 4
Steve Morrow
6 0
3
I va i Sh elds
5 11 J
Dan Co ll
63
1
Ma r k. B u ch an an
6 ?
J 1m Sw 1ng e
6 .t
3

G REENFIELD ROS TER
PLAYER
HT Y R
Joe Stewa r t
57
-i
J1m Jones
S7 1
J eff Hots nger
5 B .1
T tm Dr eher
5 11 1
Da ve M cC oy
6 2
4
Bil l Flyn n
6 o
J
Cl1r1 s Nelson
60
J
Ga r y Bilr r
6 1
J
Sleve Ha r vey
6 3
3
SleveWtl lotl
6 3
.1
T1m Gosse n
6 11 1
Ke n Kens1n ger
6 0
3
Don w att s
SA
3

JACKSON RECORD
Jac k son 59 Oak Hil l 43
Ja ck son 53 Logan 62
Jac k son .tS A th ens 53
Jac k son 54 Gal lipol s 4 9
Jac k so n 64 We ll s ton 47
Jac k son 67 V nlon County 5 1
Jac k son at Greenfi eld ppnd
Jac k so n 55 Iron ton 42
Jac k son SO Wav erly 61
Jackson 57 L ogan 56
Jackso n 52 Wa shmg ton CH 65
Jac k so n 63 At hens 60
Jac k so n 47 Gall pol 1s 78
Jackso n 73 Wel lston 58
Jack son 53 Iron ton 47
Jackso n 49 Waverly 51
Jackson or Metg s 55
Coal Grove Secttonal
Jackson 44 Ironton 4 1
Jacks on 48 Ga ll 1po l ts 43
JaC'ks on 48 Sout h Pom r 36
TOTALS 10117
lOSD
Won 14 Lost 6

GREENFIELD RECORD
Gr ee nf tel d 79 Pa1 nt Vii l ley 55
Gr ee nfie ld 57 M 1a m1 Trace 54
Gr ee nf iel d 63 H 1ll sboro 39
Gr een f teld 62 E as t Cl nton 55.
Gr eenfte ld 66 C1rc1e v1 11e 7 1
Gr eenf1 eld 73 Wa shtn gton CH
60
Greenft eld 78 Un oto 63
Gr eenfi eld 58 Ade na 57
Greent 1e ld 8 1 Wdmm g ton 59
Greenl 1cld 68 M am Tr ace 11
Gree nl eld 77 Hill sbo ro BS
Green l eld 4 6 C1 r c l ev lie 6 1
Gr eenf eld 53 M ad1son Plil ns
50
Gr ee n I el d 59 WaSh1n 9ton CH

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Gr ee nf te ld 73 Un1 oto 63
Gr ee nft el d 55 Fa r f 1e ld 60
Gr eenf 1e d 75 W1lm1n g ton 62
Chtlllcothe Secltonal
Gr eenf 1eld 67 Wellston 49
Greenft eld 53 V1nlon Counl y J6
Gr eenft eld 62 Wa shing ton CH

Malone edges
Central State
By United Press International

layup With II seconds left to
Malone defeated Central give Deftance the wm over Rio
Slate 62-61 and Deftance got a ('r~ ~ ..
83-112 vtctory over Rio Grande
Dtlwo1. and teammate
Tuesday mght m the senu- Steve Can Ausdale ended wtth
finals of the NAJA Dtslrtct 22 18 pomts each w)llle Jim Noe of
basketball tournament to ad- Rw Grande wpp'ed all players
vance to Wednesday mghl 's With 27
fmals m Canton
Deftance takes a 19-9 record
Mark Klem poured m 30 mto the fmals Rio Grande
pomts to spark Malone to tts ended wtth a 13-11 record
wm over Central State Central
Marshall Umverstly's
State took a 33-28 lead by defense "folded like a tent"
halftime, but Malone rallied m Monday nlgltl, and Akron
the last secllon to wm Central unleashed 1ts full artillery to
Slate was headed by Bobby bomb the Thundermg Herd, 87Brown With 17 pomts
61
In Deftance, Kevm Dilworth
Marshall led m the early
hit the wmnmg basket on a going, but the Zips came back
wtth an etghl1JOllll ron and
went out front for good wtth
8 19 left m the ftrst half, on
semor guard Nate Barnett's 20• •
foot jumper
Akron won the battle of the
boards, scoopmg up 56
retrieves to Marshall's 25,and
oul-Bhol the Herd, 54 9 per cent

Hoosiers
remazn zn
top spot

NEW YORK (UP!) - Even
m perfectiOn the Indiana
Umverstty basketball team
finds ttself unable to satisfy
everyone.
Rather than ptck up support
as tl heads ever closer to an
unbeaten season, Indiana instead wound up With another
dlsstdent voter today when the
latest Umted Press In ternational Board of Coaches'
ratmgs were released
The HooSiers, who were a
un8lllmous No. I chotce for
several weeks, lost a firstplace ballot to Maryland last
week and another to UCLA this
week
Apparently,
the
dissentmg coaches were mfluenced by the loss of forward
Scott May mth a broken wriSt
although Indiana sports a 28-0
record
Ind1ana still recetved 40
firstplace ballots for a total of
408 points, easily outdistancmg
runnerup Maryland With 341
pomts and UCLA With 309
Louisville remamed fourth m
the ratings but Alabama
swttched
places
w1th
Southeastern Conference foe
Kentucky, movmg into the No
5 (&gt;03!tlon while the Wildcats
dropped to SIX.
Marquette climbed mto seventh place, followed by Arizona
State, defendlng national
champion North Carolina State
and Oregon State
Southern California headed
the second 10 wtth Penn 12th,
North Carolina 13th, Clemson
14th and Utah state 15th
Texas-El Paso and NevadaLas Vegas tied for 16th,

w 397

It was the third largest
margm of defeat for Marshall
m tis 25-year stay at Memorial
Fieldhouse m Huntmgton, W
Va
Tonight Penn State IS at Ohw
Uruverstly and Cmcmalt IS at
Duquesne

6111! MAIN ST
Oponfalh loSp m Man Sol

NO APP(IINTM!!'!'fT

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Cld SS /\ /\ Dlstn ct OpCil (; l
T1poff li me IS 7 !0 p m Ap
proxmld leh 900 tickets \\Ill be
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lt c ip &lt;llln g sc hoo l has bee n
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Coach AI Burget s qumtet IS

B-6 on the )Car Coach Sam

Sn)der s flg e1s are 15·5
Smee the state spht Oh1o
tomnaments mto three classes

SEI-r~eAdln ~·s
lsdt&lt;l\\(~.11,,
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oppo nent s
scconrl 111 thc 11

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Iespec hve lcttgucs

LhtunpiOn Wave r!) Greenfield

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ha l l C.:lg ue beh m d Ohw

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clev1lle n1th .1 11 8 4 loop mt~rk
I he l 1gers 11111 be shoot1ng
fm theu fourth dish tc t Cl O\\ ll
havmg won the htlcs tn 1935
1942 Ulld 1943 Jackson \\Ill be
shootmg fot 11s fu sl dishr cl
Cl own m the sc hools lust OI )
f he ltgers .me! h onmen

pum ts a ~am c Defensively ,
JHS 15 pemuttmg 52 5 potn ts a
game
I"·llnn cr of Wedn esda) s
ccmtes t \.\111 battle rhursday 5

you're not
Was tl ng
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home
l"nsur nee?
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wrong k1nd or am o unt of cov
e rage Too l1tt1 e protect1or. IS
JU Sl as wasteful as buymg
more prot e~n than you ac

tually neelf"
Thai s wh ere the professtonal
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for spring training
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Sprmg trammg ts supposed
to "belong" to rooktes but two
oldtimers took center stage
Monday - Hank Aaron and
Mtckey Mantle
Aaron , pulling on the
umform of the Milwaukee
Brewers for the ftrst tune m 10
years, delighted hts teammales and a tiny crowd of 87
persons by hitting three balls
out of the park durmg battmg
practice
''It fits a httle better than the
Braves' uruform 1 '' satd Aaron 1
referring to his slramed relations wtth the Atlanta club
durmg the latter part of the
1974 season
Aaron, the all-tune home run
leader wtth 733, was acqwred
by the Brewers to be thetr
designated hiller He arm'ed
m camp at 208 pounds__.,tght
more than the poundage at
which he played last season
Mantle, JOmmg m with the
tremendous enthusiasm m the
New York Yankees' camp at
Fl Lauderdale, Fla , srud the
club ts JUSt one mftelder away
from bemg on a par wtth the
great teams for whtch he
played m the 196tls
"H they can add another
inftelder, they could be as good
as the ones I played wtth," satd
Mantle, a batlmg mslructor for
the club durmg sprifig trammg
"I just wish they had an tnfield

Ire you sur J

I

y 01 k wmnei Sa turday m ght for
the dlstn ct ~.: I ov.n (24 area

Wh eelersb urg

Aaron, Mantle on hand

So call

us or come m soon

a nd lets talk over your presen
and future msurance needs

that could compare w1th Clete played by the Los Angeles
Boyer, Tony Kubek, Bobby Dodgers NL MVP Steve
Richardson and Joe Pepitone I Garvey also had three hils m
never saw one better than that the ~arne
on the club when I was wtth the
Yankees."
Elsewhere around the sprmg
Get you r happmess out of
your
work or you w11l never
traliUng ctrcmt
Reggie Jackson became the know what happmess IS
ftfth member of the World Flb ert Hubb ard Amen can
ChampiOn Qakland A's to work P.f!Jtor
out at first base this spring m
the club's search to fmd a place
for young Claudell Washmg!Dn
m the regular lineup Everythmg he did looked natural,"
srud A's Manager AI Dark of
Jackson's inttlal stmt, "and
that 's very unusual for a guy on
the f1rst tune "
Manager Darrell Johnson of
the Boston Red Sox srud he ts
slartmg sprmg trammg wtth
the conv1ctton that he has six
sure regulars catcher Carlwn
F1sk, ftrst baseman Carl
Yaslrzemskt, second baseman
Doug Griffm, shortstop Rick
Burleson, thtrd baseman Rico
Petrocelh and nght-l1elder
Easy Terms!
Dwight Evans Two homers
Free Delt very!
by Joe Ferguson were the b1g
blows of an mtra squad game

@:.)
W1lham

D. childs

DOWNING-CHILDS
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Middleport, Ohio

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5592

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VALUE
RATED

United Press International
Board of Coaches top 20 ma 10r
college basketball teams w1th
f1rst place votes and won lost
records through games of
Saturday
March
1
1n
parentheses
(Thirteenth week)
Team
Pomts

I lndtana (40) (28 O)
408
2 Maryland (I) (22 3)
341
3 UCLA 11) (22 3)
309
4 LouiSVI lle (22 2)
298
5 Alabama (22 3)
177
6 Kentucky t2\ 4)
170
7 Marquette (21 31
142
8 Atrzona St 122 3)
1\7
9 N Carolina St !20 S)
107
10 Or09on St (\8 9)
31
11 SouthernCalt186)
2S
12 Pennsylvania (23 4)
24
13 North Carolina ( 18 71
\S
14 Clemson (\6 9)
\1
IS Utah Sl ( 19 S)
\0
16 (lte ) Texas El Paso(l9 5) 9
It/e) Nevada Las V09as (20

4)

9

18 Cre19Mon (20

8

4)
19 C1ncmnat1 (20 S)
20 A1rzona (20 5)

USED CARS

(3)1975
OLDS

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-=:-:-::-:;J
CITY W'

Cal l us lhen lurn on vou1 lap

appetite EnJ(ly three good meals a day
as the tmy ODRINEX tablet auto
mat1cally helps yau eat less Without
bemg hungry W1th fewer talones your
weight gOes down Safe laken as
drrectrd w111 not make you nervbus
l ook better feel better as you start
'!l•mmmgd?wn today wtlh ODR1NEX

POMEROY
P~ fn·l7fJ

()Ill:'

pia~

( AA A
AA ttnd A 1 tl1c ln.t vc
ed at leas t tw o
So utheasterr1~hJO l£.tJ..:IIl! ht:~ s l Otnlll On roes - Wellston and
donnnated the Southet n Ohtu \V .ls lnn gton CH Gree nfi eld
D ashtct class!~
l \H l from Wuslungton CH whtle
W&lt;lverl) :s lagc 1s Ul plurt&gt;d Jc1c kson los t once 10 the Blue
lh1 ee st.ull gllt rh sli 1d ~.: 1 O\\ ns ld, s Both led ms defeated
1111970 197lcllld l 'ln Giilhpoll~ Wt• llston J iic kso n 1\\JCe and
\\Oil 11. Ill 1971 ,mel Wo~vcii\
l.r ~.:en fl e ld one{•
made II Ctve Ill &lt;I 10\\ fill the
(,recnhcld en ters the 52nd

Th1s Week's Specaal

ODRINEX contams an amazrn1
hunger tamer that suppresses the

THI IMCOMI TAX PI!OPLI!

C()l\e ~e s

Cen te r
Wedn cscta\ th e (J onmt• n
t.a kt• on Greenfield 111 the 1975

followed m order by Cretghton,
Cinctnnab and Arizona
NEW YORK I UP!) - The

excess weight qu1ck ly

::
:

RIO Gl alldl

ct (

TOTALS 1304
1171
W'On 1S Lost s

New clm1cal tes ts completed at a

=
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:sc hoolbo~ confen•ncethls\\ eek

54

maror unlve·slty hospital prove thai the
OORINEX Phm Will help you lose

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A SOut hcdstel n Olno League
IC(llll IMs cap tlll cd the Cldss
AA Dts lt tl I br~ske l ba ll to111
11£111112 11 1 fl Vl CllllSl'L Ullve ~ ea rs
and Cu&lt;tch AI Burger s Jackson
h onnu: n hopt; to m ake 11 s1x m
a 10 \\ fO I lhE' stdk s oldes t

FIGHTS UGLY FAT
3 TIMES A DAY

:

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SEOAL has dominated AA District
play during past five campaign=-=-s~

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4- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepor;Pomeroy, o.. ·ruesday, March 4, 1975

Loyal Women meet
Revival services at th e Dwight Eisenhower and his
Middleport Church of Christ strug gle with a foot problem . A
the week of March 9 were quiz on Bible characters was
announced during the Thurs- won by Mrs . Alice Robeson .
day night meeting of the Loyal The Easter cantata was anWomen 's Class at the church. nounced and the benediction
Plans were made to serve a concluded the meeting .
meal at the church March 13 in
conjun ction with the revival .
Evangelist will be Lilburn
Simmons, Wilkinson, lnd.
A buffet dinner preceded the
me~li?g with Mr. and Mrs .
George Glaze, Trey and
Clin ton. Mr. and Mrs. Errol!
Conroy, Wilbur Theobald and
Edgar Reynolds as guests .
Tammy Luster. bride-elecL
Floral pieces decorated the of Kenrleth Sear les , was
tables arranged by Mrs . honored recently with a shower
Eleanor Lohse and Mrs. at the home of Mrs. Mildred
Audrey Swett .
Nash wilh Ure women of the
A report was given on
Middleport Chur ch of the
flowers and cards sont by Mrs. Nazarene as hostesses .
Pearl Reynolds, and it was
A yellow and white color
noted that several members scheme was carried out.
are ill including Donna Russell, Games were played with pri
Mrs. Mary Meinhart , Marle going to Mrs. Bessie Bau~~~
Postelwait, a patient at Holzer man, Mrs. Grace Rusche!, and
Medical Center ; Mrs . Mabel Mrs. c8 rolyn Davrs. Cake,
Wilburn at the home of her · punch, coffee and mints were
daughter ; Richard Pickens. served wllh Mrs . Rusche!
home from the hospital, Mrs. serving the cake, Mrs. Anna
Alice Dodson, a patient at Mae Ellis and Mrs. Lucille
Veterans Memorial Hospital, Harrison pcuring the punch.
and Mrs . Grace Hawley 's son
Others.attending the shower
who is hospitalized .
were Phyllis Davis, Mary and
A communica tion was read Nita Rusche!, Mary Walburn ,
fr om the Mt. Healthy Chri stian Linda Cole, Artie Posey, Mrs.
Home, Cincinnati, concerning Phyllis Luster, Jackie An·
a sprinkling system which derson, Teresa Ellis ·and Lisa
·
must be completed to comply Nash.
with the stale law. Some
special program of assistance
will be carried ·out by the
HOST GUESTS
group.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight K.
Mrs . Beulah Roush tal ked
abcut the birthday dinner for Logan, R:~·- J, Pomeroy, were
the sewing club of the Loya l dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Women and it was suggested Dan ny Mitchell and daughter,
that perhaps one dinner will be Cara, Millw ood, W. Va .,
served each mor. ~h honoring Sunda y. Also at the &lt;j,iJwer
those with birthdays . Ice wo.re Mr . and Mrs. ,!i'lbyd
cream and cake were served Mitchell, Mason, W. Va .; and
last week for Mrs. Blanche Mr. and Mfs. Robert Hickman,
Glenville";-'W. Va .
Gilkey.
Miss. Mildr ed Hawley,
preside nt, pre sented Mrs.
Reynolds who gave th e
program .
Thoughts
on
presidents preceded the pledge
S~OFEST. SET
to · the flag, the American
A son~9t will be held aJ 2
Creed , and group singing of
p.m. Sunday at the Pomeroy
"America." She presented a
Sev e nth-Day Adventist
paper on the importance of
Church, on Mulberry Heights.
marking .the achievements of near Veterans Memorial
outstanding people and conHospital. All singers and the
cluded with a story, 1 '0n His
public are: invited.
Own Two Feet," the story of

Shower fetes
Miss Luster

s::r .,.,

uw? ;;;;w . ,. ..... , .. ~ . . &lt;::?, . ~ .. -····
............
KXY
"~'
,.,...,~~;

Generation

~ap

By Helen and Sue ~i"lttel
One Very Mixed-Up Siller ...
Dear Helen and Sue:
We were married about four,manths ago , My husband comes
from a large, close Italian lam~~) and every holiday they all get
together at his mother's place. ··
We live nearby, so I went over to help lier cook Christmas
dinner. Around noon, his yoWll!er alsrer (age 20) came into the
kitchen In her Pis.
She yelled, "This kitchen's a 'mess l '' Being busy, we didn't
answer her, so she hollered, ''Hey, you, are you going to clean up
this mess?"
·
I answered, "When we're done, we'll dean up." The next
thing I knew she dumped a howl of peppers and onions over my
head,
Being polite, I went and washed my hair, then told my
husband I was leaving. I refuse to go back. He insists tbat we
must go there for holidays and special dinners. One is coming up

-....

soon.

•

•&lt;

Should I stay firm or chance a repeal perfbrmance ? - MRS.
B. N.

Dear Mrs. N. :
Why ostracize the. whole family becat1.!4! there's one nut on
the tree? I'd say: go to the dinner, but seq away from ycur
"impetuous" sister-In-law. - HELEN
·

+++ '.

I'd find out from your husband what's with this screwball
sister. Maybe, with the help of his mother, be can straighten her
Out a bit. At any rate, be can protect you fnm more vegetable
headdresses. - SUE

+i+

Rap:.
~
You p!)01loohed "staple-punCture " as 81! aid to reducing.
Twenty days ago I had staples Inserted In my ears. When I get
hungry, I wiggle them, Voila : bWll!er pains are gone l
This inay be a psychological crutch, as you told "Doubtful,"
or it may be the staple, when moved, bits a nef\'1! tbal·cancels out
hunger. I really don't know or care. BuilD date , I've lost 18
pcunds. So for me, it's working.
~
To "Doubtful," I say, "Try it, you mighl like it," - SLIMMER BY STAPLES
Dear Slimmer :
.we can't argue with success. But we stUI say a person who
reduces by staples could have equal-luck with almost any
mwnbo-jumbo - if an "expert" assured her it would work. The
pcwer of suggestion is a wonderful thing ... for believers. HELEN AND SUE
Rap :
I read with Interest and sorrow the letti"trom the girl who
found a fox dying ina crude trap. She,asked, "Can 'tsomething be
done to stop lrutal trapping of animals?"
One way to help is by filling oul a "trapping information"
form which she can get at her local Hwnane Society. This
documents where and when the animal wu fOWid, what kind of
trap (if knoWn), and other pertinent facts •••
If we'd all make waves, laws gove. the ''harvest" of
animals for fur would he changed much faster: - MRS ..G.C. Y.,
Director,Humane Soci~ty of the U. S.• N.J. branch.
Dear Rap :
That "Wife of a Trapper" Claims then! is nothing mON!
lovely than a beaver fur. How about a beaver fur with a live
beaver Inside it, swim!ning ln.his pond or sitting on a dam ?
She says trappers keep down overpoplillltion of animals (so
tlleywon'tgetrabies ) butdoesn'tadd that beavers are on the ijSt
of endangered species. Would she advQC&amp;le killing children to
prevent their dying of possible .cancer? .''(
,
We no longer need to trap for food or clo~.If these animals
are so beauUful, why ldll .them? -DANIEL

·.

P o l l y ' s P o i n t e r s ,:,::::: · -·An nouncement of Lois Ann
BY POLLY CRAMF.R
Roush as Little Miss Poppy and
Terri Fox as Junior Miss

Polyester stumps
many with spots
By Polly Cramer
DEAR PO LLY
My
daughter-rn·law and l both
have spots on cream-&lt;olored
polyester blouses and on a light
pink and whi te plaid jacket and
ca nrlot remove them. They
seem to be ordinary spots like
light grease or perhaps from
cola drinks or coffee . l would
hke to kn ow how others remove
such spots from polyester
fabrrcs . These were expensive
garm~nts and neither spot
sprayrng nor soap helped. MRS. E. B.
DEAR MRS. E. B. - Synthetic fabrics have a tendency
lo relaio oily stains so much be
prelreated before being
laundered. Try putting liquid
detergent rrght on the spots
aod tel it stand for a few
minutes. Ofl ~n a grease
solvent is requ1red.
One maker of laundry
product&lt; suggests putting lhe
starn face down, apply dry
cleaning nurd)- to lhe back,
brush from lhe cenler oul with
a clean whrle cloth. Damplln
with waler and rub In a light
duly liquid detergent. If lhe
ga&lt;ments have already been
la undered il ml ghl be
necessary to take them to a dry
cleaner for removal of the
stains. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with all the talk of
ecology and we do· not make
use of all available materials.
Our poor trees are dying from
beetles and other infestation
and we read of a paper short-

··- ...

unit, a banne r from · the
American Legion, reportedly
the fi rst one in the Eighth
District and possibly in the
stale. The juniors made plans
to save bettie caps, Betty
Crocker coupons and bonus
coupons to buy a matching
American flag. A bake sale and
rummage sale ·will also be
held.
Clothes valued at $25 were
sen t to the Peck of Wee ONes,
Columbus, and several books

Puppy was made at.the 'recent

mee tin g

age . Why · cannot the paper
compa nies h;uvest these trees
to ma ke paper' This also
weould help the la ndowners
who have no way to destroy
them. - E. Z·.
DEAR READERS - rt has
never been the practice of this
column .to publish recipes but
we received one from Mrs.
T.J.N. !hat we could nol resist
due to the high price of making
or buying cookies. This makes
a cake-like cookie that I am
sure will be welcomed by those
who have been letting thei r
cookie jars stand empty. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - To make
cookies without eggs, butter or
sugar mix one cup of biscui t
mix : one small box of pudding
mix (the four serv ing size, any
flav or but NOT INSTANT
pudding I and half a cup of
water. Drop by the teaspoonful
on a greased cookie sheet and
bake in a 351J.&lt;legree oven for 10

of

the

Junior

American Legion Auxiliary of
Feeney·Benneit Post 128,
Middleport.
The two girls will be honored
during the observance of
Poppy Days, May 23 and 24 by
the auxiliary.

Becky Roush, president,
atcepted on behalf of the jun ior

Wedding vows exchanged
Following the wedding, Mr.
and Mrs . Murphy hosted a
reception for the couple. The
three-tiered wedding ca ke,
baked by Mrs. Sharon Barr,
Rutland, was se rved with
sherbet punch and mints and
nuts. Carmel Murphy served
the punch, Mrs. Downs the
cake, and Barbara Murphy the
nuts and mints.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Rick Morrison, Ronceverte, W.
Va. ; Alici'J,. Smith, Covington,
Va .; Shelba Maynard, Bernard
LaValley, Racine; Mr. and
Mrs. Harley T. Johnson,
Robert, Peggy, Carmel and
Barbara Murphy, Mr. and Mrs.
John Downs, and Mr. and Mrs.
John R. Murphy .
The couple resides at 270'h
Walnut St. , Middleport. The
bridegroom is employed at the
No. I Mine of the Southern Ohio
Coal Co.

The wedding of Ju li a
Mayna rd, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Maynard, Racine,
and John Edward Murphy, son
of Mr. and Mrs. J ohn R.
Murphy, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, was
held Friday, Feb. 28, at 1:30
p.m. at the Murphy home.
Rick Morrison, Ronceverte,
W. Va., former pastor of the
Zion Church of Christ, of·
fic iated at the ceremony
performed before a fi replace
decorated wi th a basket of
mixed pompons in pink and
aqua flanked by candles. Also
used in the setting were bud
vases containing aqua and pink
ca rnations.
For her wedding the bride
was attired in a street.iength
dress of ~ qua with pink and
gold floral accent, and carried
a. Bible lopped with a bouquet
of pink and squa daisies. Her
only jewelry was a necklace,
gift of the groom.

minutes. With this mix I make
four dozen cookies for 25 ce nts.
- MRS. T.J.N.
DEAR POLLY - After
washing a turtleneck sweater I
roll the collar into place and
pushed crushed tissue under
the collar . This speeds the
drxing time and aids in
re shaping the neck li ne . Mrs. J ohn Downs, sister of
MRS. M.J .
the
groom, served as matron of
You will receive a dollar if
Polly uses your favorlle honor and John Downs was
homemaking idea, Pet Peeve, best man fo r his brother-inPolly's Problem or solution loa law. Mrs. Downs wore a double
pnlblem. Wrlle Polly In care of knit yellow dress and ca rried a
si ngle carnation tipped with
Ibis ·newspaper.
yellow. ,

Mrs. Mary Skinner, coordinator for the' Personal Advocacy Program, was guest
speaker at the Thursday night
meeti ng of Preceptor Beta

Beta Chapter of Bela Sigma
Phi Sorority at the home of
Mrs . Ruby Baer. Mrs . Betty
Ohlinge r was CO·hostess.
Mrs. Skinner spoke on the

lAdies select delegate
A delegate to Buckeye Girls'
Slate was -selected at the
Wednesday night meeting of
the American Legion Auxiliary
of Feeney·Bennell Post 128 at
the Middleport hall.
Name announcement is withheld pending se lec ti on of
delegates by co-sponsors . It
was noted that co-sponsors
have until March 20 to select
delegates and pay fees.
Mrs . Er·m a Hendricks
·presided during which time
reports were given on two
recen t parties at the Athens
Mental Health Center, one for
the veterans, the other a
commWl ity service activity .
The unit voted to table action
on a reques t for a contribution
toward the swimming pooJ
project at the Xenia home for
orhpans.
Endorsement was glven Mrs.
Bruce Roush, candidate for
Department of Ohio treasurer.
It was reported that $25 had

Senior citizens
Mrs , Sadie Brown, 88,
Minersville, was prese nted an
orchid . corsage as the oldest
February birthday honoree at
the monthly party Thursday at
the Senior Citizens Center.
Others presented Oowers, all
over the age of 80. were Mrs.
Edna Reibel, 81, Pomeroy;
Mrs . Mabel Van Meter, 86.
Chester; Homer Willard, 82.
Hemlock Grove; Clarence
McNeal, 81, Middleport ; and
Dana Howe tt; 85, Burlingham.
Also honored were Eugia
Johnson, Ra cin e; Go ldie
Wolfe , Chester; Mildred
Harris. Reedsv ille ; Kathleen
Ward , Portland ; Gladys
Nicholson, Rutland : Jerome
Cook. Hemlock Grove ; Betty
Kern, Burlingham ; Nellie
'Russell, Virginia Gully, and
Mildred Sisson. Middleport; ·
and Loretta Beegle, Freda
Lieving, Beulah Ullerback ,
and Ed King. Pomeroy.
Presented peace roses for
anniversary celebrations were
John and Margie Brewer.
Reedsville ; and AI and Katy
White, Pomeroy.
A potluck dinner was served
at noon with 162 attending the
birthday observance. Jennifer
Sheets presented a program of
App'a lii:ijian
songs
acC0!1lpanying herself on the
dulcimer. Kathleen Ward gave
· a reading and Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas, .center director, read
a compOsition on Dana Howett
written by a H -year-old
student for an English class.

I•

been sent for four parties at the
Sand usky Hos pital in th e
diabefic ward. It was also
noted that several books and
pamphlets on Americanism
had been presented by the
juniors to the Bookmobile and
the Middlepor t Library.
Reported ill were Charles
Kessi nger , Brenda Cun·
nin gham, and th e grandchildren of Mrs. Ella Will,
chaplain. A pr ogram on
Americanism was presented .·
The door prize furnished by
Mrs. Emma Wayland was won
by Mrs. Lelah Weatherby. ·
A dinner for the pos t
members and the auxiliary
was se rved preceding the
meeting. Reports on members hip, community service,
and rehabilitation were
presented .

BIRTHDAY MARKED
Mr. and Mrs. Arland King,
Pomeroy, entertained Friday
with a party honoring their
daughter , Marsha on her third
,'
birthday, Dinner guests were
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence King
and Mr . and Mrs . Tony Fowler,
grandparents and Michel King.
Joining the group for a party
were Mr. and Mrs. William
Clark and April, and Mr. and
Mrs . Mark Tannehill, Brian
and April . Mrs. Fowler baked
her granddaughter a heartshaped cake topped with a
china doll with the numeral
"3", and Mrs. King served a
Winnie the Pooh ca ke,

advocacy program which she
described as "operation
special friend" and explai ned
the aims and objec tives of her
work.
Mrs. Mary Carolyn Wiley
and Tana Simonton were
we lcomed back into the
chapter. Mrs. Jun e Van
Vranken repor ted that she will
continue to be chairwoman for
the children's home committee.
A commWiication was read
from the Toledo Bela Sigma
Phi Sorority about the convention there in May. It was
reported that the chapte r will
pledge and those having names
to submit are to give them to
the membership committee,
Clarice Krautter, Vera Crow or
Margaret Follrod. The rush
party was set fo r May 8 with
the pledge ritual May 22. Mrs.
Wiley and Mrs. Simonton will
be given the exemplar degree.
Aspring Ding was announced
for Saturday night at the home
of Lillian Moore. The ways and
means committee announced
that'the Silver Slipper has been
se t for April 12 and all meinbers are to turn in trade stamp
books to Jane Walton by the
end of this month.
Roberta O'Brien, Teresa
Swatzel. Lois Rosenbaum.
June Van Vranken and Mrs.
Moore will se rve as the
telephone contact committee
for the upcoming Boy Scout
fund drive. Mrs. Velma Rue
announ ced that the Health Fair
has been set fo r June 29
through J uly 5 at the Middleport
First
United
Presbyterian Church.
Next meeting will be at the
home of Mrs. Rue with Reva
Vaug han as co-hostesS. A visit
to the Trim and Slim will be
made that night. It was announced that the girl of the
year and the election of new
officers will take place at the
next meeting . .

1

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Baker Furniture

·

FIRST CHILD BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Spaun, 8
Oak St., Pomeroy, are announcing the birth of their first
child, an 8 lb. son, Shannon
Eugene, Feb. 24 at the Holzer
Medical Center. Grandparents
are Walter W. Terrell and Mrs.
Anna Mae Terrell, both of
Pataskala, and Mr. and Mrs.
Junior Spaun , Racine. Greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Marklns, Racine ; Mr.
and Mrs. Elza Larkins, Long
Botiom, and Mrs. Joe Guess,
Pomeroy.

·Middleport, Ohio

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

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young
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Mayer &amp; Hill Barbers
32 56
Friendl y Tavern
28 60
High Ind . Game Men :
Junior Phelps 214. Junio r
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EARLY SUNDAY MIXEO
March 2,1975
Standings
Team

'

12

I[

•·team disbanded
Monday's Results
No games scheduled
Tonight's Games
Port Huron at Lansing

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By Umted Press International
' North
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Muskegon 41 23 3 85 178 219
Saginaw 40 24 2 82 264 its
Flint
37 23 5 79 240 188
PI. Huron 30 34 3 63 225 240
Kalama. 14 44 4 34 167 255
•·Lans. 12 2a 1 25 145 216

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TUESDAY
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Bela Stgma Phi Sorority, 7 p.
m. home of Mrs. J oyce Bar·
timus, Gallipolis. Members to
meet on the upper parking lot
m Pomeroy at 6: 15. Pizza party
along with a "do your own
thing " auction. Cultural
program will be on language
by Sandy Korn.
MIDDLEPORT Lodge, F
and AM 7:30 p.m. at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
MIDDLEPORT Evangeline
Chapter 172, OES, 7:30p.m. at
the Masonic Temple. Officers
to wear formals for initiatory
work.
POMEROY High School
Alumni Association officers
and mem~ers meeting 7:30
p.m. at home of association
prtsident, Mrs. Mila Mitch, 305
Wright St., Pomeroy.
POMEROY Chapter 186
Order of the Eastern Star'
Tuesday, Pomeroy Masonic
Temple, 7:45 p.m. Officers to
wear gowns for initiation . A 54J
year pin to be presented.
Donna Spring, deputy grand
matron will be present.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Fire men's Auxiliary, 8 p.m. at the
firehouse . Euvetta Bechtle and
Emma Wayland to be
hostesses.
POMEROY LODGE 164,
F&amp;AMat 7:30p. m. All master
masons invited.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, Mrs. M. L. French,
home, 2 p.m. Mrs. Robert
Fisher to review, "Captain
Cook" by Alister MacLean.
Roll call response to he on
"spending my first million."
THURSDAY
COMMITTEE . for
the
Mentally Retarded, 7:30 p.m.
in the Meigs County Court.
room. Organizations asked to
send representatives. Public
invited. Plans for promoting
levy to he made.
CATHOLIC Women's Club, 8
p.m. at Sacred Heart Parish.

POLISH ~
SAUSAGE
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1975

-

Mr. and Mrs. James Fry
entertained Saturday evening
wrth .• party in observance of
the flfth brrthday anniversary
of their daughter, Sue Ellen.
Ice cream and cake were
served. Guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Max Eichinger, Becky
and Max, Rl. 3, Pomeroy; .Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Stiles, Nina
Craddock, Middleport ; Mr .
and Mrs. John Fry . New
Haven ; W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas McPeek, Tammy and
Beth, New Haven; Mr. and
Mrs . Roger Stiles and Jason
Columbus; Selma·and Bill can'
Melissa and John Miller, Lon~
Bottom, and Ruth Ann Fry
sister of the honored guest. '

lobar Warranty ·-

IQ;~'!fffiv 1

I

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KITCHEN CONSOLE

SON BORN
RACINE - Sharon and Paul
Card, Racine , are announcing
the birth of a 6 lbs ., 5 ozs. son,
Aaron Bradley , Feb. 25 at 8:04
p.m. at O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital, Athens. Grandparents ar e Thomas and
Evelyn Holter, Racine, and
Rev. Rober t and Jeanne Card,
Uma. Great-grandmothers are
Martha L. Rose, Portland, and
Mr. H. B. Kellmer, Denver,
Colo.

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DINNER PLANNED
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
I
SAY
United Pentecostal Church will
"HAPPY BIRTHDAY"!
hold a chicken noodle dinner
WITH A LIFE LIKE
Saturday at the church. Serving will begin at 10:30 a.m.
and continue until 6:30 p.m.
Price is $1.54J and deliveries
will be made in Pomeroy and
Middleport areas only, phone
•
992-2502 or 982-7825. The me'nu I ,,
will include chic ken with
homemade noodles, green
59 N. Second St.
beans, slaw, roll and pie.

including " Need a Lift,"
" Buckeye Government
Digest," 11 Flag Code" and" Flag Etiquette "
were
presented to the Bookmobile
and to the Middleport Library,
Reports were given on the
two parties held at the Athens
Mental Health Center. The
one for veterans cost over $100,
while the community service
party attended by 49 cost
$144.30. Going to the community service party were
Mrs. Bonnie Dailey , junior
adv isor, Mrs. Erma Hendricks, senior unit president;
and Etta Will, chaplain.
It was noted that gifts valued
at $125 had been sen t to the
adopted ward of 32 diabetic
patients at the Soldiers and
Sailors Home in Sandusky.
Several items of good used
clothing were also sent along
with napkins, table favors and
nut cups suitable for each
month.
Cancelled 'siainps and used
greeting cards are still being
collected by the juniors who
also re port a need for men and
ladies' handkerchiefs for the
April 17 party at the Athens
Mental Health Center.
Valentine napkins and nut
cups were sent to ·Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Three fiveby·nine foot flags have been
ordered
as
gifts. for
organizations. Get-well cards
were sent to Richard Pickens,
Dale Allensworth and Roy
Miller, and a sympathy card
was sent to Mrs. Kathleen
Manley.

ATTEND WEDDING
· Mr . and Mrs. Joe Turner,
Middleport ; and Mr. and Mrs.
Doren See and daugh ter,
Brenda, Point Pleasant, were
in Bucyrus to attend the
wedding of Michael Turner and
Sandra Joe Royer Feb. 15, at
1:30 p.m. at the Good Hope
Lutheran Church. Michael is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Turner, Bucyrus. All but
Mrs. Joe Turner returned
home following the wedding.
She remainecl until Friday
when her son and family and
Rodney Frizzell returned her
to Middleport.

Preceptor Beta hears speaker

enjoy celebration

'

Mrs. N.:

Birthday
observed

Auxiliary··names '75 Poppy gir/s_r---~""~-;-;-,

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5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middle~ort-·Poonerc1v.

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4- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepor;Pomeroy, o.. ·ruesday, March 4, 1975

Loyal Women meet
Revival services at th e Dwight Eisenhower and his
Middleport Church of Christ strug gle with a foot problem . A
the week of March 9 were quiz on Bible characters was
announced during the Thurs- won by Mrs . Alice Robeson .
day night meeting of the Loyal The Easter cantata was anWomen 's Class at the church. nounced and the benediction
Plans were made to serve a concluded the meeting .
meal at the church March 13 in
conjun ction with the revival .
Evangelist will be Lilburn
Simmons, Wilkinson, lnd.
A buffet dinner preceded the
me~li?g with Mr. and Mrs .
George Glaze, Trey and
Clin ton. Mr. and Mrs. Errol!
Conroy, Wilbur Theobald and
Edgar Reynolds as guests .
Tammy Luster. bride-elecL
Floral pieces decorated the of Kenrleth Sear les , was
tables arranged by Mrs . honored recently with a shower
Eleanor Lohse and Mrs. at the home of Mrs. Mildred
Audrey Swett .
Nash wilh Ure women of the
A report was given on
Middleport Chur ch of the
flowers and cards sont by Mrs. Nazarene as hostesses .
Pearl Reynolds, and it was
A yellow and white color
noted that several members scheme was carried out.
are ill including Donna Russell, Games were played with pri
Mrs. Mary Meinhart , Marle going to Mrs. Bessie Bau~~~
Postelwait, a patient at Holzer man, Mrs. Grace Rusche!, and
Medical Center ; Mrs . Mabel Mrs. c8 rolyn Davrs. Cake,
Wilburn at the home of her · punch, coffee and mints were
daughter ; Richard Pickens. served wllh Mrs . Rusche!
home from the hospital, Mrs. serving the cake, Mrs. Anna
Alice Dodson, a patient at Mae Ellis and Mrs. Lucille
Veterans Memorial Hospital, Harrison pcuring the punch.
and Mrs . Grace Hawley 's son
Others.attending the shower
who is hospitalized .
were Phyllis Davis, Mary and
A communica tion was read Nita Rusche!, Mary Walburn ,
fr om the Mt. Healthy Chri stian Linda Cole, Artie Posey, Mrs.
Home, Cincinnati, concerning Phyllis Luster, Jackie An·
a sprinkling system which derson, Teresa Ellis ·and Lisa
·
must be completed to comply Nash.
with the stale law. Some
special program of assistance
will be carried ·out by the
HOST GUESTS
group.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight K.
Mrs . Beulah Roush tal ked
abcut the birthday dinner for Logan, R:~·- J, Pomeroy, were
the sewing club of the Loya l dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Women and it was suggested Dan ny Mitchell and daughter,
that perhaps one dinner will be Cara, Millw ood, W. Va .,
served each mor. ~h honoring Sunda y. Also at the &lt;j,iJwer
those with birthdays . Ice wo.re Mr . and Mrs. ,!i'lbyd
cream and cake were served Mitchell, Mason, W. Va .; and
last week for Mrs. Blanche Mr. and Mfs. Robert Hickman,
Glenville";-'W. Va .
Gilkey.
Miss. Mildr ed Hawley,
preside nt, pre sented Mrs.
Reynolds who gave th e
program .
Thoughts
on
presidents preceded the pledge
S~OFEST. SET
to · the flag, the American
A son~9t will be held aJ 2
Creed , and group singing of
p.m. Sunday at the Pomeroy
"America." She presented a
Sev e nth-Day Adventist
paper on the importance of
Church, on Mulberry Heights.
marking .the achievements of near Veterans Memorial
outstanding people and conHospital. All singers and the
cluded with a story, 1 '0n His
public are: invited.
Own Two Feet," the story of

Shower fetes
Miss Luster

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By Helen and Sue ~i"lttel
One Very Mixed-Up Siller ...
Dear Helen and Sue:
We were married about four,manths ago , My husband comes
from a large, close Italian lam~~) and every holiday they all get
together at his mother's place. ··
We live nearby, so I went over to help lier cook Christmas
dinner. Around noon, his yoWll!er alsrer (age 20) came into the
kitchen In her Pis.
She yelled, "This kitchen's a 'mess l '' Being busy, we didn't
answer her, so she hollered, ''Hey, you, are you going to clean up
this mess?"
·
I answered, "When we're done, we'll dean up." The next
thing I knew she dumped a howl of peppers and onions over my
head,
Being polite, I went and washed my hair, then told my
husband I was leaving. I refuse to go back. He insists tbat we
must go there for holidays and special dinners. One is coming up

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soon.

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Should I stay firm or chance a repeal perfbrmance ? - MRS.
B. N.

Dear Mrs. N. :
Why ostracize the. whole family becat1.!4! there's one nut on
the tree? I'd say: go to the dinner, but seq away from ycur
"impetuous" sister-In-law. - HELEN
·

+++ '.

I'd find out from your husband what's with this screwball
sister. Maybe, with the help of his mother, be can straighten her
Out a bit. At any rate, be can protect you fnm more vegetable
headdresses. - SUE

+i+

Rap:.
~
You p!)01loohed "staple-punCture " as 81! aid to reducing.
Twenty days ago I had staples Inserted In my ears. When I get
hungry, I wiggle them, Voila : bWll!er pains are gone l
This inay be a psychological crutch, as you told "Doubtful,"
or it may be the staple, when moved, bits a nef\'1! tbal·cancels out
hunger. I really don't know or care. BuilD date , I've lost 18
pcunds. So for me, it's working.
~
To "Doubtful," I say, "Try it, you mighl like it," - SLIMMER BY STAPLES
Dear Slimmer :
.we can't argue with success. But we stUI say a person who
reduces by staples could have equal-luck with almost any
mwnbo-jumbo - if an "expert" assured her it would work. The
pcwer of suggestion is a wonderful thing ... for believers. HELEN AND SUE
Rap :
I read with Interest and sorrow the letti"trom the girl who
found a fox dying ina crude trap. She,asked, "Can 'tsomething be
done to stop lrutal trapping of animals?"
One way to help is by filling oul a "trapping information"
form which she can get at her local Hwnane Society. This
documents where and when the animal wu fOWid, what kind of
trap (if knoWn), and other pertinent facts •••
If we'd all make waves, laws gove. the ''harvest" of
animals for fur would he changed much faster: - MRS ..G.C. Y.,
Director,Humane Soci~ty of the U. S.• N.J. branch.
Dear Rap :
That "Wife of a Trapper" Claims then! is nothing mON!
lovely than a beaver fur. How about a beaver fur with a live
beaver Inside it, swim!ning ln.his pond or sitting on a dam ?
She says trappers keep down overpoplillltion of animals (so
tlleywon'tgetrabies ) butdoesn'tadd that beavers are on the ijSt
of endangered species. Would she advQC&amp;le killing children to
prevent their dying of possible .cancer? .''(
,
We no longer need to trap for food or clo~.If these animals
are so beauUful, why ldll .them? -DANIEL

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P o l l y ' s P o i n t e r s ,:,::::: · -·An nouncement of Lois Ann
BY POLLY CRAMF.R
Roush as Little Miss Poppy and
Terri Fox as Junior Miss

Polyester stumps
many with spots
By Polly Cramer
DEAR PO LLY
My
daughter-rn·law and l both
have spots on cream-&lt;olored
polyester blouses and on a light
pink and whi te plaid jacket and
ca nrlot remove them. They
seem to be ordinary spots like
light grease or perhaps from
cola drinks or coffee . l would
hke to kn ow how others remove
such spots from polyester
fabrrcs . These were expensive
garm~nts and neither spot
sprayrng nor soap helped. MRS. E. B.
DEAR MRS. E. B. - Synthetic fabrics have a tendency
lo relaio oily stains so much be
prelreated before being
laundered. Try putting liquid
detergent rrght on the spots
aod tel it stand for a few
minutes. Ofl ~n a grease
solvent is requ1red.
One maker of laundry
product&lt; suggests putting lhe
starn face down, apply dry
cleaning nurd)- to lhe back,
brush from lhe cenler oul with
a clean whrle cloth. Damplln
with waler and rub In a light
duly liquid detergent. If lhe
ga&lt;ments have already been
la undered il ml ghl be
necessary to take them to a dry
cleaner for removal of the
stains. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with all the talk of
ecology and we do· not make
use of all available materials.
Our poor trees are dying from
beetles and other infestation
and we read of a paper short-

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unit, a banne r from · the
American Legion, reportedly
the fi rst one in the Eighth
District and possibly in the
stale. The juniors made plans
to save bettie caps, Betty
Crocker coupons and bonus
coupons to buy a matching
American flag. A bake sale and
rummage sale ·will also be
held.
Clothes valued at $25 were
sen t to the Peck of Wee ONes,
Columbus, and several books

Puppy was made at.the 'recent

mee tin g

age . Why · cannot the paper
compa nies h;uvest these trees
to ma ke paper' This also
weould help the la ndowners
who have no way to destroy
them. - E. Z·.
DEAR READERS - rt has
never been the practice of this
column .to publish recipes but
we received one from Mrs.
T.J.N. !hat we could nol resist
due to the high price of making
or buying cookies. This makes
a cake-like cookie that I am
sure will be welcomed by those
who have been letting thei r
cookie jars stand empty. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - To make
cookies without eggs, butter or
sugar mix one cup of biscui t
mix : one small box of pudding
mix (the four serv ing size, any
flav or but NOT INSTANT
pudding I and half a cup of
water. Drop by the teaspoonful
on a greased cookie sheet and
bake in a 351J.&lt;legree oven for 10

of

the

Junior

American Legion Auxiliary of
Feeney·Benneit Post 128,
Middleport.
The two girls will be honored
during the observance of
Poppy Days, May 23 and 24 by
the auxiliary.

Becky Roush, president,
atcepted on behalf of the jun ior

Wedding vows exchanged
Following the wedding, Mr.
and Mrs . Murphy hosted a
reception for the couple. The
three-tiered wedding ca ke,
baked by Mrs. Sharon Barr,
Rutland, was se rved with
sherbet punch and mints and
nuts. Carmel Murphy served
the punch, Mrs. Downs the
cake, and Barbara Murphy the
nuts and mints.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Rick Morrison, Ronceverte, W.
Va. ; Alici'J,. Smith, Covington,
Va .; Shelba Maynard, Bernard
LaValley, Racine; Mr. and
Mrs. Harley T. Johnson,
Robert, Peggy, Carmel and
Barbara Murphy, Mr. and Mrs.
John Downs, and Mr. and Mrs.
John R. Murphy .
The couple resides at 270'h
Walnut St. , Middleport. The
bridegroom is employed at the
No. I Mine of the Southern Ohio
Coal Co.

The wedding of Ju li a
Mayna rd, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Maynard, Racine,
and John Edward Murphy, son
of Mr. and Mrs. J ohn R.
Murphy, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, was
held Friday, Feb. 28, at 1:30
p.m. at the Murphy home.
Rick Morrison, Ronceverte,
W. Va., former pastor of the
Zion Church of Christ, of·
fic iated at the ceremony
performed before a fi replace
decorated wi th a basket of
mixed pompons in pink and
aqua flanked by candles. Also
used in the setting were bud
vases containing aqua and pink
ca rnations.
For her wedding the bride
was attired in a street.iength
dress of ~ qua with pink and
gold floral accent, and carried
a. Bible lopped with a bouquet
of pink and squa daisies. Her
only jewelry was a necklace,
gift of the groom.

minutes. With this mix I make
four dozen cookies for 25 ce nts.
- MRS. T.J.N.
DEAR POLLY - After
washing a turtleneck sweater I
roll the collar into place and
pushed crushed tissue under
the collar . This speeds the
drxing time and aids in
re shaping the neck li ne . Mrs. J ohn Downs, sister of
MRS. M.J .
the
groom, served as matron of
You will receive a dollar if
Polly uses your favorlle honor and John Downs was
homemaking idea, Pet Peeve, best man fo r his brother-inPolly's Problem or solution loa law. Mrs. Downs wore a double
pnlblem. Wrlle Polly In care of knit yellow dress and ca rried a
si ngle carnation tipped with
Ibis ·newspaper.
yellow. ,

Mrs. Mary Skinner, coordinator for the' Personal Advocacy Program, was guest
speaker at the Thursday night
meeti ng of Preceptor Beta

Beta Chapter of Bela Sigma
Phi Sorority at the home of
Mrs . Ruby Baer. Mrs . Betty
Ohlinge r was CO·hostess.
Mrs. Skinner spoke on the

lAdies select delegate
A delegate to Buckeye Girls'
Slate was -selected at the
Wednesday night meeting of
the American Legion Auxiliary
of Feeney·Bennell Post 128 at
the Middleport hall.
Name announcement is withheld pending se lec ti on of
delegates by co-sponsors . It
was noted that co-sponsors
have until March 20 to select
delegates and pay fees.
Mrs . Er·m a Hendricks
·presided during which time
reports were given on two
recen t parties at the Athens
Mental Health Center, one for
the veterans, the other a
commWl ity service activity .
The unit voted to table action
on a reques t for a contribution
toward the swimming pooJ
project at the Xenia home for
orhpans.
Endorsement was glven Mrs.
Bruce Roush, candidate for
Department of Ohio treasurer.
It was reported that $25 had

Senior citizens
Mrs , Sadie Brown, 88,
Minersville, was prese nted an
orchid . corsage as the oldest
February birthday honoree at
the monthly party Thursday at
the Senior Citizens Center.
Others presented Oowers, all
over the age of 80. were Mrs.
Edna Reibel, 81, Pomeroy;
Mrs . Mabel Van Meter, 86.
Chester; Homer Willard, 82.
Hemlock Grove; Clarence
McNeal, 81, Middleport ; and
Dana Howe tt; 85, Burlingham.
Also honored were Eugia
Johnson, Ra cin e; Go ldie
Wolfe , Chester; Mildred
Harris. Reedsv ille ; Kathleen
Ward , Portland ; Gladys
Nicholson, Rutland : Jerome
Cook. Hemlock Grove ; Betty
Kern, Burlingham ; Nellie
'Russell, Virginia Gully, and
Mildred Sisson. Middleport; ·
and Loretta Beegle, Freda
Lieving, Beulah Ullerback ,
and Ed King. Pomeroy.
Presented peace roses for
anniversary celebrations were
John and Margie Brewer.
Reedsville ; and AI and Katy
White, Pomeroy.
A potluck dinner was served
at noon with 162 attending the
birthday observance. Jennifer
Sheets presented a program of
App'a lii:ijian
songs
acC0!1lpanying herself on the
dulcimer. Kathleen Ward gave
· a reading and Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas, .center director, read
a compOsition on Dana Howett
written by a H -year-old
student for an English class.

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been sent for four parties at the
Sand usky Hos pital in th e
diabefic ward. It was also
noted that several books and
pamphlets on Americanism
had been presented by the
juniors to the Bookmobile and
the Middlepor t Library.
Reported ill were Charles
Kessi nger , Brenda Cun·
nin gham, and th e grandchildren of Mrs. Ella Will,
chaplain. A pr ogram on
Americanism was presented .·
The door prize furnished by
Mrs. Emma Wayland was won
by Mrs. Lelah Weatherby. ·
A dinner for the pos t
members and the auxiliary
was se rved preceding the
meeting. Reports on members hip, community service,
and rehabilitation were
presented .

BIRTHDAY MARKED
Mr. and Mrs. Arland King,
Pomeroy, entertained Friday
with a party honoring their
daughter , Marsha on her third
,'
birthday, Dinner guests were
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence King
and Mr . and Mrs . Tony Fowler,
grandparents and Michel King.
Joining the group for a party
were Mr. and Mrs. William
Clark and April, and Mr. and
Mrs . Mark Tannehill, Brian
and April . Mrs. Fowler baked
her granddaughter a heartshaped cake topped with a
china doll with the numeral
"3", and Mrs. King served a
Winnie the Pooh ca ke,

advocacy program which she
described as "operation
special friend" and explai ned
the aims and objec tives of her
work.
Mrs. Mary Carolyn Wiley
and Tana Simonton were
we lcomed back into the
chapter. Mrs. Jun e Van
Vranken repor ted that she will
continue to be chairwoman for
the children's home committee.
A commWiication was read
from the Toledo Bela Sigma
Phi Sorority about the convention there in May. It was
reported that the chapte r will
pledge and those having names
to submit are to give them to
the membership committee,
Clarice Krautter, Vera Crow or
Margaret Follrod. The rush
party was set fo r May 8 with
the pledge ritual May 22. Mrs.
Wiley and Mrs. Simonton will
be given the exemplar degree.
Aspring Ding was announced
for Saturday night at the home
of Lillian Moore. The ways and
means committee announced
that'the Silver Slipper has been
se t for April 12 and all meinbers are to turn in trade stamp
books to Jane Walton by the
end of this month.
Roberta O'Brien, Teresa
Swatzel. Lois Rosenbaum.
June Van Vranken and Mrs.
Moore will se rve as the
telephone contact committee
for the upcoming Boy Scout
fund drive. Mrs. Velma Rue
announ ced that the Health Fair
has been set fo r June 29
through J uly 5 at the Middleport
First
United
Presbyterian Church.
Next meeting will be at the
home of Mrs. Rue with Reva
Vaug han as co-hostesS. A visit
to the Trim and Slim will be
made that night. It was announced that the girl of the
year and the election of new
officers will take place at the
next meeting . .

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FIRST CHILD BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Spaun, 8
Oak St., Pomeroy, are announcing the birth of their first
child, an 8 lb. son, Shannon
Eugene, Feb. 24 at the Holzer
Medical Center. Grandparents
are Walter W. Terrell and Mrs.
Anna Mae Terrell, both of
Pataskala, and Mr. and Mrs.
Junior Spaun , Racine. Greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Marklns, Racine ; Mr.
and Mrs. Elza Larkins, Long
Botiom, and Mrs. Joe Guess,
Pomeroy.

·Middleport, Ohio

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lb.

Large Supply Onion Sets

REG. 69' OEL MONTE

BROUGHTON'S

TUNA

CHOCOLATE

can

DI,ET RITE

MILK

49~

FLAVORS
00

'2 =89~

quarts . $
for

•.

plus
dep.

31

4 64 238 231

25 33 6 56 218 137
25' 35 6 56 212 234

Swishers &amp; Lohse Phal" ·

m.

Pullins Excavating

62 ' 26
56 32

44 4-4

Eagles Club
42 4.6
Mayer &amp; Hill Barbers
32 56
Friendl y Tavern
28 60
High Ind . Game Men :
Junior Phelps 214. Junio r
Phelps 212 : Wom en: Maxine
. Dugan 222. Marv Voss 199.
High Seri es - M Ein : Junior
·
Phelps 602. Oic k Dugan 531 ;
Women : Mary. voss 539.

SAYRE HARDWARE

MIKine Dugan 511 .

Team High Game 1-

W.VA.

carrv out

·882-2525 .

Tom 1S

723. ·

Team Hi!:ih Series -

.

FRIED
CHICKEN

ON .COR

YELLOW ON IONS

3

lb. bag

19e

.IDAtiO .

BAKING POTATOES
10 lb. bag 99C:
'

'
2

BUFFET SUPPERS
'Turkey/ Gravy
Salisbury Steak

and Veal

REG. ~1.69

lb.
box

32 oz. pkg.

~1~29

I

\

'· '

DAD'S ..,l .BEER

$199
.

LEMONADE
5 ~::·•1.00

·.

I

ALL WEEI&lt; PRICE

ouui IJIET·lillnou 1liutiM ,.,.,. '

SCOT LAD FROZEN

Tom •s

. I.

•

BANOUET FROZEN '
FULLY COOKED

'

Cerrv Our 209• .

.

oz. 79e -

PKG..

36 24 3 75 245 222
35 27 3 73 258 229

EARLY SUNDAY MIXEO
March 2,1975
Standings
Team

'

12

I[

•·team disbanded
Monday's Results
No games scheduled
Tonight's Games
Port Huron at Lansing

NlrllmPIOI

' I

ilillililliliiliiil

oz.
PKG. 69e

12.

(I'

w. I. t. pis gf ga

Tom 's Carry Out

' .

MIDDLEPORT,

ALL MEAl. WIENERS

South

~ PIONEER

NEW HAVEN

to Limit

International Hockey
League Standings
By Umted Press International
' North
w. I. t. pts gf ga
Muskegon 41 23 3 85 178 219
Saginaw 40 24 2 82 264 its
Flint
37 23 5 79 240 188
PI. Huron 30 34 3 63 225 240
Kalama. 14 44 4 34 167 255
•·Lans. 12 2a 1 25 145 216

MIDDLEPORT, 0. I
---..-------~

.,

We Accept Federal Food SIJimp.•
PHONE: 992·3480

SUPERIORS

BEST BUY IS OUR

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10

1~~

TUESDAY
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Bela Stgma Phi Sorority, 7 p.
m. home of Mrs. J oyce Bar·
timus, Gallipolis. Members to
meet on the upper parking lot
m Pomeroy at 6: 15. Pizza party
along with a "do your own
thing " auction. Cultural
program will be on language
by Sandy Korn.
MIDDLEPORT Lodge, F
and AM 7:30 p.m. at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
MIDDLEPORT Evangeline
Chapter 172, OES, 7:30p.m. at
the Masonic Temple. Officers
to wear formals for initiatory
work.
POMEROY High School
Alumni Association officers
and mem~ers meeting 7:30
p.m. at home of association
prtsident, Mrs. Mila Mitch, 305
Wright St., Pomeroy.
POMEROY Chapter 186
Order of the Eastern Star'
Tuesday, Pomeroy Masonic
Temple, 7:45 p.m. Officers to
wear gowns for initiation . A 54J
year pin to be presented.
Donna Spring, deputy grand
matron will be present.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Fire men's Auxiliary, 8 p.m. at the
firehouse . Euvetta Bechtle and
Emma Wayland to be
hostesses.
POMEROY LODGE 164,
F&amp;AMat 7:30p. m. All master
masons invited.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, Mrs. M. L. French,
home, 2 p.m. Mrs. Robert
Fisher to review, "Captain
Cook" by Alister MacLean.
Roll call response to he on
"spending my first million."
THURSDAY
COMMITTEE . for
the
Mentally Retarded, 7:30 p.m.
in the Meigs County Court.
room. Organizations asked to
send representatives. Public
invited. Plans for promoting
levy to he made.
CATHOLIC Women's Club, 8
p.m. at Sacred Heart Parish.

POLISH ~
SAUSAGE
lb. 79~

RIGHT

Calendarl

mm..~~.l!rF

107 Sycamore

SUPfRIORS

··~·;:::~::::~~

range &amp;· dishwasher

rioiANSiNoilSl

I
1
1
I
I
I

Did you dream you
got the bird when you
skidded into that big
oak tree the other
night?
Fear not. Just wing
on down to the experts
on trouble : your independent insurance
agent.
We're free to place
your insurance with
any of several strong,
reliaqle companies.
And we're free to
choose the best policies for you.

1975

-

Mr. and Mrs. James Fry
entertained Saturday evening
wrth .• party in observance of
the flfth brrthday anniversary
of their daughter, Sue Ellen.
Ice cream and cake were
served. Guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Max Eichinger, Becky
and Max, Rl. 3, Pomeroy; .Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Stiles, Nina
Craddock, Middleport ; Mr .
and Mrs. John Fry . New
Haven ; W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas McPeek, Tammy and
Beth, New Haven; Mr. and
Mrs . Roger Stiles and Jason
Columbus; Selma·and Bill can'
Melissa and John Miller, Lon~
Bottom, and Ruth Ann Fry
sister of the honored guest. '

lobar Warranty ·-

IQ;~'!fffiv 1

I

.~~vw

KITCHEN CONSOLE

SON BORN
RACINE - Sharon and Paul
Card, Racine , are announcing
the birth of a 6 lbs ., 5 ozs. son,
Aaron Bradley , Feb. 25 at 8:04
p.m. at O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital, Athens. Grandparents ar e Thomas and
Evelyn Holter, Racine, and
Rev. Rober t and Jeanne Card,
Uma. Great-grandmothers are
Martha L. Rose, Portland, and
Mr. H. B. Kellmer, Denver,
Colo.

r---.------.
I.
-

DINNER PLANNED
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
I
SAY
United Pentecostal Church will
"HAPPY BIRTHDAY"!
hold a chicken noodle dinner
WITH A LIFE LIKE
Saturday at the church. Serving will begin at 10:30 a.m.
and continue until 6:30 p.m.
Price is $1.54J and deliveries
will be made in Pomeroy and
Middleport areas only, phone
•
992-2502 or 982-7825. The me'nu I ,,
will include chic ken with
homemade noodles, green
59 N. Second St.
beans, slaw, roll and pie.

including " Need a Lift,"
" Buckeye Government
Digest," 11 Flag Code" and" Flag Etiquette "
were
presented to the Bookmobile
and to the Middleport Library,
Reports were given on the
two parties held at the Athens
Mental Health Center. The
one for veterans cost over $100,
while the community service
party attended by 49 cost
$144.30. Going to the community service party were
Mrs. Bonnie Dailey , junior
adv isor, Mrs. Erma Hendricks, senior unit president;
and Etta Will, chaplain.
It was noted that gifts valued
at $125 had been sen t to the
adopted ward of 32 diabetic
patients at the Soldiers and
Sailors Home in Sandusky.
Several items of good used
clothing were also sent along
with napkins, table favors and
nut cups suitable for each
month.
Cancelled 'siainps and used
greeting cards are still being
collected by the juniors who
also re port a need for men and
ladies' handkerchiefs for the
April 17 party at the Athens
Mental Health Center.
Valentine napkins and nut
cups were sent to ·Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Three fiveby·nine foot flags have been
ordered
as
gifts. for
organizations. Get-well cards
were sent to Richard Pickens,
Dale Allensworth and Roy
Miller, and a sympathy card
was sent to Mrs. Kathleen
Manley.

ATTEND WEDDING
· Mr . and Mrs. Joe Turner,
Middleport ; and Mr. and Mrs.
Doren See and daugh ter,
Brenda, Point Pleasant, were
in Bucyrus to attend the
wedding of Michael Turner and
Sandra Joe Royer Feb. 15, at
1:30 p.m. at the Good Hope
Lutheran Church. Michael is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Turner, Bucyrus. All but
Mrs. Joe Turner returned
home following the wedding.
She remainecl until Friday
when her son and family and
Rodney Frizzell returned her
to Middleport.

Preceptor Beta hears speaker

enjoy celebration

'

Mrs. N.:

Birthday
observed

Auxiliary··names '75 Poppy gir/s_r---~""~-;-;-,

..•

•

5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middle~ort-·Poonerc1v.

'&gt;:

•

'

I

I

I

a.* ._,••

....

-

16&amp;

'

I'

j'

'

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�I

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6-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, March t 1975

f Voc.· ed costs in

r:f.~~~~!:_:~~~~~~~~~w~:.~!For

. dala fir St tlDle
a

con t 1nement

e

Pcl!1ent

at

PMknsbucg

as
Sl

a

1n

I appc cmle all
of vour 1&lt;.1n dn ess ana prayers
J M Ga ul Ch i' f. lc r . Oht O

COLUMBUS (UP! 1 - State
Schools Supt. Martin W. Essex
said Monday incluston lor the
first ltme .of joint vocationa l
school fiscal data m the Oh1o
Department of Educat1on
"Costs per Pupil" publication
for the 1973-74 school year
reflects the expansiOn of job
tratmng opporlumt1es for h1gh
school students m the stale
"There were not enough JOin t
vocational sc ho ols

( before

1973-74 ) to prov1de meanmgful
data on how the operating
dollars were bcmg mvcsted."
sai~ Essex
Twenty-fave JOirtt vocahonal
schools in OhiO

spent an

m the

fores~eable

future," sa1d

Essex. Essex sa 1d per-pup1l
Investment by the s tate 's
elementary an d seco ndary
sc hools 111 19n: t was up more
lhan SHO uver the prevwus
sc hool year to an average of
$968
"Unusual mrlationary forces

have eroded much of tins
s ub stan ttal tnvestment tn·
lTCase or cd ucatwn, winch wa s

made p&lt;ISs lble by the stale
mcomc tax," sa1d Essex
Catmg dat a from th e annual
study of 617 school dtslnc!s
serving 2 34 rmlhon studen ts.

average of $1,532 for each of Essex sa1d the educatwnal
21 ,834 students learning Mrk In ves tment per pupil in locaf
skills last sclwol year, Essex sc hoo l diSin cts 1n Oh10
sa1d.
averaged $829 1n 1973-74, -844 111
"There are 30 jomt exempted village sc hool
vocational schools 1n operation diStric ts and $1,024 1n c1t\.
th1s year w1lh an enrollment of school districts

New insurance available
to Vietnam ·era veterans
An es timated 2. 7 milhon
Vtetnam· e ra
v et~ rans
separa ted from April 2. 1970,
through Julr ,, 3!, 1974, are
eltgtble lor new low-cost
Veterans Group Life Insurance
( VGU) , but they must apply
before Aog. I, 1975. The new
program is designed as intertm
protection during
readjustment to civilian life, according to the Veterans Ad·
ministration.
Servicemen diScharged since
Aug. I receive application
forms aulhomatically, but
those discharged before the
insurance became available
must apply, VA satd.
Nonrenewable, five-year
tenn coverage is avaHable m
$5,000 increments up to $20,000
Monthly premium for the
maximum COVerage IS $3.40 for

veterans aged 34 and under and
$6.80 for lho.se 35 and over.
Former servteemen may
convert Servicemen's Group
Life Insurance to VGLI w1thout
med1 cal exami nah on 11 applicattons are received w1thm
120 days of sepa ration. Apphcaltons after that time must
mclude cvtdence of good
health . Thts requtrement is
waived lor veterans w1th VArated , serv ice - co trolled
dtoobillhes.
Application forms are
available fr om VA offices and
veterans serv 1 ce
organtzations
Completed
forms and premiums should be
sent to the Office of Servicemen's Group Life In·
surance, 212 Washington St ..
Newark, N. J 07102.

Dividends for veterans
of $178 million mailed
Checks totaling $178 million
m GI insurance dividends are
currently being mailed lo
millions of veterans, according
to S. W. Melidosian, dtrector ol
the Phtladelphla Veterans
AdministratiOn Center where
the agency's insurance
programs are administered
All veterans entitled to 1975
dtvtdends should receive
checks by mid March.
President Ford announced
Jan . 30 that he had dtrected the
VA to accelerate payment of
Ute 1975 insurance dividends
within 45 days Payments are
normally made throughout the

I

year on the anmversary dale of
the mdivtdual policies .
The Prestdenl said he was
taking the' step to d1stnbute a
substanhal amount of cash at a
lime when illS needed to give a
boost to consumer spending
The VA had announced m
December that a record $335.6
million would be paid to
veterans who have kept their
World War I, World War II and
Korean Conflic t insurance
policies m Ioree It is the first
t1me dividends have been pa1d
on the policies held by Korean
Conlltct veterans

MONTEGO BAY, Jamaica
(UP!) - Two U.S. students
were killed late Sunday when
their small !!il!~, ~ashed In a
dlrua grow here after rurutlng
out of fuel, pOike reported.
Two other passengers in Ute
single-engine Piper Cherokee
were l!ospltall2ed with critical
Injuries, pollee said.
The dead were identified as
Scott Brodie, 23, of St. Albans,
W.Va., and Richard Miller, 21,
of Belpre , Ohio.
The injured were the pilot,
Benjamin llfown, 23, and his
lrother, Gary, 21, both of
Otarleston, W.Va., pollee said.

'lor seminar

on channel 20

ATHENS- John W. Inman,
director or the Great Lakes
'
regional office of The Hwnane
Society ol the United States
(HSUS), will speak at an
animal weUare seminar to be
held !rom 9:30a.m. unlil4 p.m.
on Saturday, March 8 here at
Baker Center, Room 334.
He will present a program on
HSUS's work on the recent
"calf-kill" by farmers in
Wisconsin , the dogfighting
situation, and problems arising
from unwanted dogs and cats.
Representatives
fro'!'
hwname societies in Ute southeastern quadran! of Ohio and
hwnaite societies in Parkersburg and Wheeling, W. Va. are
expected to attend the aU day

senlinar.

Pomeroy
Motor
Co.
-

OF
QUALITY

1972 CHEVROLET KINGSWOOD ESTATE

$2895

GU N Shoot on M tlc H1ll Road
fa c tory c hok.cd guns only
~P on so r e CI
by
R ac.nc
1\mcr.can LegiOn Sa t ur day
Mar c n 8, 7 p rn
3 .:1 4tC

Jseat wagon Less than 30,000 m tles by local owner, 400 V
8, P s tee 1ng. brakes, automat1c power door locks, lug gag e
rack , rad•o . dark green fmtsh L•ke new &amp; loaded w1th
extra s

PIANO tun•n g

1911 PLY. STA. WAGON

Pho n e 9J9 19 11
3 .l ti c

st ee rmg &amp; brakes, factory air conditioning, luggage rack ,
green f1n1 sh, rad1o L1 ke n ew w ·w t1res

AUC TION . Thursday n1ght. 7
p m
at Ma s on A u c t10n
Horton St In Ma son . W Va
Cons •gnm ents welcome
Phon e (30&lt;1) 773 S471

2 2)tc
I N D I AN Joe s CB Sa l es and
Par15. , 301l Page St r eet Phone
992 3509
118 12ft
NOW sel l mg F ull e r Brush
Produ cts phone 992 341()
I 24 tf c

service frmds
ATHENS - The Buckeye
Hllls-Hocktng Valley Regwnal
Development D1slnct ( BHHVRDDI, the Oh1o Citizens
Counc1 l, and the OhiO Council
of Churches are co-sponsormg
a pubhc heanng to solicit
public op1nion conce rning
Ohto's use or T1tle XX (Social
Serv1ce I funds March 19 at the
Cily-Coun ty Hea lth Bwldmg,
West Union St., Athens.
Opinions will be solicited on
the effecltveness of social
serv1ces programming 1n the
pasl(funded under T1Ue IV-A),
the needs for social serv1cc
programs tn the eight-county
reg1onal development district
area, suggestions concermn g
the appropnale state agency to
admintsler Title XX funds, and
the number and types of
programs wh1ch should be
funded through Title II montes .
Tttle XX is supersedmg T1tle
IV-A.
From 9:30 a.m. till 3 p m
testimony w1ll be accepted
concerning Title XX planmng .
From 3 p m. to 4 p.m. the level
of ADC and General Rehel
grants in Ohio and leg islative
mitiat1ves to mcrease those
grants to 100 percent support
level wtll be discussed.
For further information
contact Joseph L. Badgley at
the BH-HVRDD office m
Marietta (phone nwntber 3749436) .

Fire Retardant
Insulation

HE~L

'RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
·c omplete plumbing &amp;

Blown Into Walls
and AtticS'
Free EstimateJ

lany L1vender
Phone 992-3993
Daily After 5:00

puff

POMo~~9!vE¥P!9.~. co. '@) •
POMEROY, OHIO
.

-

1969 PONTIAC Ex ecul•ve With
a c Phone 992 709 1
3 J Sic

Help Wanted
PROJECTION I ST loc Mason
Dr•ve In Th eatre Call Po1n l
Pl easant 675 374:1 or 67 5 S667
:z 27 lf c
-

------ --

-

-

-

-

-

--

---

-~ -

-

19 73 VEGA Hatc hba c k , 4 sp eed
tr ansm •ss •on new l1re s. tape
p l ayer . exce llent condll10n
Wil l se ll r easona ble Pho1e
(61 4) 9912377 or 992 2732 after
4 p m
2 28 12tc

WANTED

PAPER CARRIER

- - --- - - - - -

197 2 vw
SU PER
B ee tle ,
automal• c sh• ft good co n
dd•on Phon e 992 5866
:Z 2S 7tc:

HOU SEKEEPER , able to dnil e
slanda rd Sh1 fl ca r Phone 99 2
193 6
3 2 Jtc

Input invited
on Title XX

$1595

~~rvice_~

,"

' 19 t3 FORD Cou nt ry SQUirE
wago h, 20.000 m lies , all
equ ,p ment. $3,500 Phone 992
3493 or 992 1120

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

19 70 , I TON Chevrolet V 8
flatbed , 4 speed, dual wheels ,
runs good good body Phone
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom ,
98S 3SS4
2 16 ti c

LOWER END
OF MASON, W. VA.

---------~

CONTACT

- ---.- - - - -

For Rent

THE .DAILY

4 ROOM furnished apartm en t 1n
Middleport
2
bedroom,
ut i1111es pa1d Phone 992 2676
3 2 3tc

SENTINEL

TWO bedroom mobile home
corner Broadway and Elm 1n
Middl eport
Phone 992 :Z5BO
after6pm
2 16 tfc

992-2156
RE SPON SIBLE lady to live m
w •th eld erly l ady Pnone ( 1l
667 330S

N 1c E 2 Dedroom unturn •Shed
apartment 129 Lrncoln H•ll
p l enty o f cl o se ts . eas1IY
heated w1th gas floor furnace
Garage Ca ll Tracy Wha ley,
992 3054
3 2 6tc

J 4 1 ~~ c

MEAT De partment manager.
mus t be e)( p er 1enced •n
buyrng
pn c mg , and mer
ch and ls1ng of to tal r e tail .
meat
program,
sa lary
negot1abl e , bonus plan good 3 BEDROOM tra. ter. pa r tly
be nefit S w1th c hance of ad
furn•shed, utllltJes pa1d
vancement tor the nght man ,
Located •n Burl•ngham
sma ll young, progre ss tve
lra d er park Phone 992 775 1
com pany Send re sume to Mr
2 25 lfc
B lack
P
0
Box
807 ,
GalliPOliS , OhiO 45 631 A ll
TRAI L ER SPACE , J." mile
rep l •eS conf l dent•al
north of Me1gs High School on
] 4 61C
old Rt 33 Phone 992 294 1
1 23 tfc

CARRIER
WANTED

DUPLEX , 238 1&lt; Walnut St,
M•ddleport, Oh •o Phone 992
278 0 or 992 3432
2 19 tfc

FOR
MONKEY RUN AREA

Pomeroy, 0.

The

Dai~

Sentinel

COUNTRY Mobile Home Par.,_ ,
R t 33, ten m 11es north of
Pomeroy
L arge lots w1th
concrete patios . s•d.ewa lks,
runners
and
off
stree t
parkmg Phone 99 2 7479
12 31 tfc

APT- ) ro~~~ :-a-;-; ~;;.;r:~ nas

table top rang e, wall oven
real n•ce and c lea n , modern
Located
1n
Pomeroy
overlookmg ... the Oh10 R•ver
Phone Galt •polis , day 446
7699, evenings 446 9539
1 20 !In
' •

PH. 992-2156
REEDSVILLE area Someone
to c ut and p1 1e bn.JSh 1n ex
cha nge for ch ipwood Easy
ac cess and plenty of ch•P
wood Call 37EI 6311 after 6

:J and 4 ROOM furnist'led and

unfurn•shed
apartments
Phone 992 S4J &lt;l
4 12 ttc

pm

3 2 71C

----------- - --.PRIVATE meetmg room for

Wanted To Buy
W'ANl t: u v• ... upr~ght p1anos.
any co nd•f•on
Paymg S10
each Fi rs t floor only Wnte
and Q•v e d1rect1ons to W •tten
P1ano Co, Box 188 . SardiS ,
Oh10 43946
2 26 61p
OLD furn1ture , •ce boxes , b'rass
beds , or complete households
Wr1te M
D Mill er Rt 4,
Pomeroy , Oh•o Call 992 7760
10 7 7 4

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

TWO ROOM apartment on
Spr 1ng Avenue Phone 992
3429
3 3 6tp

For Sale

t.m ployment Wanteo
WILL do bookkeeping •n .,y
home Phone 992 73 16
_
2286tc

--- --=--------REMOUEL\NG
IJiu11011 19 ,
heat1ng , and • all types of
generel
repa1r
Work
guaranteed 20 years ex
per •e nce . Phone 992 2409
1. 19 tfc

CA MPEfi: top for P•Ckup truck ,
$200 Phone 992 7727
_
3 4 3t c

--- --- - - L - - - - - - - - 1969 F ORD 6 cyl , A lso , Wa rm
Mornmg heater Call 8·t3 2645
1n tne even1ngs
3 4 3tp
2

NICE Beagle pups
Phone 992 5302

for

sale

~----

-----------

For Rent
2 BEDROOM t ra •le r . Brown ' s
T railer Court , Phone 992 3324
3 4 tfc
FUR NI SHED apt , a •r con
d•t •on.ng , el ec hea t. 12 mi l es
from Pomero y on Rt
33
A dults on ly Phon e (30 4) 773
5118
3 4

1 (614) 247-3644

Middleport, Ohio

Phone 992-5347 or 9Jl-lio\1

-s-EPTIC
TANKS
cleaned
Modern Sanltat•on, 992 -3954 or
992 7)49
1957 CHEV Y parts
NEW .,_
9-18-tfc
Lakewood tract1on bars , n,
tac ker a1r Shocks, hooker WILL tnm or cut trees or
s hrubbery .
c lean
ou t
headers , W1fh 3" collec tors for
basements, attics, etc Phone
small bloc k
Call 992 3496
949 322 1 or 742 4441
afte r 6 p m BEST OFFER
1 28 ·26tc
'
1017ttc

For Sale

_______________ _

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

28TH ANNUAL Hereford "'"''"
18 bu lls and 15 fema les,
Southeastern Oh 10 Hereford
Assoc1al•on ,
all
clean
pedigrees both horned and
polled Saturday , Ma r ch 15,
197S s now 10 00 AM Sa le
I 00 PM Rock Spr mg s Fa~r
Grounds, R t No 33 , three
mil es nor t n of Pomeroy , Oh10
F or catalogs wr.t e to Lloyd
Blackwood, Sale Mgr, Rt 3,
Pomeroy , Oh•o 4S7 69
3 2 6tc

-lOME
Improvement
and
Repair Serv 1ce Anythmg
f 1dd around the home, from
roof to basement You will
ltke our work and rates
Phone 742 508 1
1229tfc

ONE Hand event breathmg
r es perator $100 One 2000 M
Mrl!er pamt sprayer , new for
SSO One 7 7S . t5 inch 6 hole
wheel and t1re tor c nev
tru c k . $25 One B mch 3 po1nt
h 1tch pos t ho le au~er , $200
Phone 742 S322
3 2 3tp
IN D I AN Joe's Sportmg Goods,
buy and sell guns , ammo ,
f 1shmg equ, pmen t. a'hd after
Apr il 1, we W i ll have f1 sh ba1t
Stop by at 308 Page St,
M•ddleport Phone 992 3509
3 2-10tc
1970 SCO TTIE Camper, very
good cond JI•on
Phone 992
7126
2 18 ttc
GROCERY bu siness for sale
Building tor sale or lease
Phone773 56 18 from a 30p m
to 10 p m for appoi ntment
3 10 tfc
CLOSE OUT on new Z1g -Zag
sewmg mach.nes For sewing
stretch fabncs , buttonholes ..
fancy destgns , etc
Paint
slightly blemished Cho1ce of
carry1ng case or sew1ng
stand S49 80 cash or terms
avail abl e. Phone 992 7755
12 18-tfc
USED parts, Frye 's Truck and•
Auto Parts . Rut l and , Oh 1o
Phone 1614) 742 6094
1
7Stp.

n
---------- -----

MODERN
Walnut
Sl.! r eo
con sole ,
AM FM
rad10 ,
separate controls
Balance
S107 10 or budget terms Ca l l
992 39 65
3 3 tfc

SI

10x55 FURN I SHED. a.r con
dii•On•ng , new a lummum
siding , 52 gallon hot water
heater . 275 ga llon fuel tan k,
underp•nn•ng, price $2000
f 1rm Call 992 5153
2.27 12tc
2 BEDROOM all electric 1974
Greenbner. 56900 Call 992
7328
J 1 3tc
__ ""7 _ _ _ _ _ _ - - - - - - - ECONOMY
MOTOR
AN 0
MOBILE HOME S SA LES Spot cash paid for mobile
homes Phone 446 140 1
2 26 78fc

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

Real Estate For Sale
LOW LOW DOWN PAYMENT
L ovely new homes in three
locations •n Me1gs County
Some w1th woQd ed lots We
will built on your lot or ours
Call 992 5976 or 992 5844 for
more mformahon
2 27 26tc
COUNTRY HOME 6 rms,
bath, 3 bedroom , vinyl SJding,
storm w1ndows and doors ,
new furnace on paved road
Ches ter water d istrict, 1 acre
l and Phone 949 5953
2-26· 12tc

....l

1971 GARDEN tractor , Sears , 8
h p 8 speed , S450 Phone 742
5052
2 26 6tp

TRAILER-LOAD

BALER
TWINE
-10,000 feet bales
- Ask for our cash and carry
prtce.

_ --------~------ _ ~tc ~POMEROY LANDMARK
3 BEDROOM mob ile nome- ; '
•
JackW . caney,Mgr .
washer and dryer , p 1 baths .
Ptlo"e992-21! 1
ut d•lles pa 1d , 542 50 wee k 308 •
·
Page St ., M idd leport , Oh'•o . 1
3 4 tfc INDUSTRIAL 6 •nch stroke saw
- ------------·--- $15 : 18 1nch met al f a tag 6mch
FURNISHED aPar t ment , 3
swing ,
complete
with
rm s and ba th Phone 992
threading gears motor and
2937
b •ts . 5100 2h p 220bolt single
3 4 6t c
pha se motor , industr1at type
-·------ - - ----·--.
w •tf'l pulley . sso . a.r c om .
,..TR AILER space . 2 m 1les from·
pressor motor and tan k . $2S
Po me roy , Rt '1 43, Phone 992 .
Lme Sf'lii!lft J pulleys. bearmgs
,5858
and belt , SIS Phone 985 4118 .
10-27 -tfc
2 13 26tc

a shelf to
Painting, siding,

From

house.
roofing,
paper hanging, kitchen
cabinets, expert carpeting,
etc.

., I .. ,.

J'H..:\ r
TQ:EACHEROUS

D-..'6 ::

BULL
0Aw50N

1

DEMAND5

Offset this with a nice garden . 1 le vel acre with
modern home, 2 BR, bath,
lovely kitchen and dining ,
utility room, basement. Just

$13,500.00.
GOTA LARGE FAMILY?NEED MORE ROOM 1 We
have 1ust the place for you

I Meigs school district) . 4
large BR, Jlh
baths,
reception or mus1c room,
sewing room , utlllty, full
basement, roofed pat1o,
garage, large lot, recently
renovated,
carpeted,

paneled, tiled. $19.900 .00.
LET US SELL YOUR
SMALLER HOME.
THROWOUTTHE ASPIRIN
HAVE A SELLING
PROBLEM' LET MEIGS
COUNTY' S OLDEST FULL
TIME REAL ESTATE
OFF ICE SOLVE YOUR
PROBLEM. - CALL AT
ONCE . PROPERTY IS
SELLING FAST NOW.
J92-225f

~ ,_.,R

..

~XCH L EN CY

WA 7 HI~It -=t T0fi.J'

l HEY "?A'r

TME.r::E5 A U S NAV Y TASK
FORCE $ 0 M E W HE~ E NEAR
{"J Je.OUTI!

T HIS.:

.

6 · 00-S unn se Semmar 4. Sunr ise Se mester 10

PR 1~ CE65

JA$Mif\l

6 IS- Eng liSh

~

f92-2067
Minersville, 0 .
Blocks
Cement and Mortar
Wood Burning Stoves
Heatllators
and
Fireplace Accessories

8 25-Capt Kangaroo 10.
8

BORN LOSER

ru:r:m.,

9 25-C huck White Reports
Tattleta les

Gold" 6.

9·/lO-Bob Hope 3,4, 1S; Cannon Cannon 8,10; Muttrploao
Theatre 33
10:ll0-Petrocell13,4, 15; Gel Christie Love6,13; Manhuntor I, 10;
News 20; Family at War 33 .
10 Jo-Your Future Is Now 20.
11 ·co-News 3.4,6.8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 3o-Johnny Corson 3,(,tS; Wide World Event 13; FBI 6;
Movie " The Glass House" 8; Movie "Cry Terror" 10; Jenakl
33.

I ill

'd

6.
1 DO-Tomorrow 3,4; Nws 13.

GOOD. IT 1S
SETTLED

I 11-ltNK I 'D RA-n-IER I
GO TO CALIFORNIA.

498 LocustS!.

... WE'RE GOING

Doublecheck anything impor·
tant that you pLit In writing or
sign your name to. If you make
an error. It wilt be a btg one.

TO Fl.ORIDA I

-n-IEN ...

C BRADF'ORO, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 382 1 or 949-3161
Rac in e, Ohio
Cr1tt Bradford
5 1-tfc

SCORPIO (Oat. 24·Nov. Ill 11

WHAT 501-DIEI&lt;:5
WITH AF:A1S USUALL-Y
HAVE TO 60
THR:OUC.H.

~&gt;CCA,VATING ,

dozer, loader
and backhoe work. septic
tlnks Installed, dump trucks
and to -boys for htre; will haul
fill d1rl. top so 1t. limestone &amp;
gravel, Ca l l Bob or Roger
Jeffers. day phone 992 .7089; .
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 992 -

t

"\]

r

1

1

~

Now arranro tho circled leltora
to form the

surpriae answer. u

~:::_,/]~===~~:=.:;l~~h,:':::::£1~ sun!•led by tho above cartoon.

2 ll ·tfC
·- - - - - - READY-MIX &lt;..v NCRf: 1 t: ae Hver1ed r 1ght to your project.
Fas
and
easy .
Free
estimates. Phone 992 32&amp;-t
Goeglein Ready Mix Co ,
Middleport Ohio
6 JD.tfc

I ,... .. SURPIIISI ANSW!R hm I r I I I I I I 1 J

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

----~

LITTLE ORPHAN ANN IE-UP IN THE W?'
O_R~L=D----""1

(Auwtln tomorrow)

'

Jumbl"

JOINT LEGAL ASYLUM PHYSIC

Yetlrrd•y"•
\ An•'"l"r' '/ Ju :ow ph11/11f1H1pf1H nu!i llt lf'if 110 11 all Obflrtl
u ht~tl.t·,IJ muJ.wg - "STILLS

~

DOZER work, land c learing bV
the acre , hourly or contract
Farm ponds , roads, etc
Large dozer and operator
w1t)'l over 20 years ex
perience . Pullins Excavating
Pomeroy . Ohio . Phone 99:

2478

~

(;A;7fNEA

5232

12-19-lf

GASOLINE AU..EY

ELWOOD BOWEt&lt;S t&lt;t:PAIN.
- Sweepers, touters, Irons,
att sman appliances. Lawn
mowers , next to State High way Garage on Route 7 Home
Phone 985 3825
.,
2 1 26tc

Yqu qot a car,
. Wallet' Wh4
is

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

To save
enerqL.J,
Melba'

ten l.jears I
I drive ten
miles back and will have saved Ten
Ljears?
1,750 qallons
forth to work
of qas 1
everL.J d.:14!

happen if LlOU
an th' bus qet wore
out b'fore then 1

LjOU

riclin'

th'

Order Your

bus?

Southern

Cabbage Plants
Now

JAMES HILl

ULABNER
~Z-IT

Phone: 247·2961

KEEPS

A- LAYIN' THEM
.SICK-?~

/"--,

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 "Rule
1 Beer
Britannia"
1ngred1ent
composer
5 Debacfes
DOWN
10 MUSICal
I One ktnd
instrument
of order
It Optionally
Add1t10nally
2
13 Wtnning
3
Become
margm
engrossed
14 Garment
(3 wds.)
part
4 Pagoda
15 N1ghl
ornament
before
t6 King (Sp.) 5 Feel an
affront
t7 Fratermty
6 Slippery
7 Colorado
IK Certatn
lnd1an
sailors
8 Cooper
20 L1ke Mr
work
Savalas
(2 wds. )
21 Famed
pohttcal
cartoomst
22 Tamartsk
salt tree
23 Thorax
25 Son of
Jacob
26 Dame
Myra
27 Eschew
labor
28 Regtan
29 Jotn up
32 Cambodia's

,•

... AND LET'&amp; PULL UP ·
1\NCHOR AND BET 5AIL

IMMEO/ATELY.'

TM BURE 1HEY'LLALL
=PERATI,' 1 WINNIE..
1HEY KNOvv WHAT
'&gt;VURE UP A6AIN8T!

Yesterday's Answer

9 F1garo's
ba11tw1ck
12 "- unto
Caesar "
16 Siesta
i9 Italian
c1ty
20 Fundamental
23 Fictional
magician

24 Woman of
Ute hour
25 First-rate
27 Ogled
30 Auto style
31 Name or
route
33 French
commune
36 Craze
37 Surprise

You w11t not gam as many advantages as you should from a
s1tuat1on where you share £10
In terest becau se you re overly
co mpl acent

GEMINI (Mey 21·Juno 20) 11
w1ll be easier lor yo u to give
yo ur word than to keep It later
o n A fn end could be lost
thr ough a broken prom1se.

THAR'S TWO BRIGHT NEW '
PENNIES FER CLEAN IN' OFF
'fORE
PLATE, HONE'! POT

LOWEE2'1

CAPRICORN (Dec. H•JOII.
18) You'll pass on some lnlor·
matlon solely because it mekn
interesting llslenlng, though
you know your source Isn't
reliable.

AQUARIUS (Jill. 211-hb. 111
Don't ask something olanothet
trial you refused lo do when

you had tho opportunity. Hor
answer will be lha &amp;lmt 11
yours.

PISCES (Fob. 20-Mllloll 101
There Is opportunity about you
today but It's the type you can't
take for granted. Vou must act
promptly on it

LIBRA (Sop!. 23·0ct. 231

WIN AT BRIDGE

Lucky breaks will be comi~
your way this year through un·
usual sources. One In particular will come from one you
know casually who now lives at
a distance from you.
•lli ..~ WSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASS.~ •

P~(centage pl~y has the edge
4

¥108 53
t A 93

WEST

"' 7 2

EAST

•K 973

•Jto86

¥ K2

¥1

tQJt02
"'1084

"'A96 S!'

tK75

SOUTH (01
..2
¥AQJ 96 4
• 8 64
fo~as t-West

West

ho-+-1-:t--t-r-

Morch 1, 1175

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 221 You
wont be as careful as you
usua lly are about household
matters today Something that
should be attended to will be
neglected

North

vulnerable

East

South

are gomg to break 4-3.
So you lead the 10 of trutnpl
from dummy. Eaat follows low .
Should you take the trump
finesse now1 If It works you are
home; II it loses you are solng
to be one down.
· ,
II you refuse the trump.
finesse and go .\JP with the ace·
you may drop the singleton ktq:
from West. rr yo1l,l!On't you can
try the spade 'filresse. II tbaf
loses, you will be two down but
the combination play Is attn,
worth while.
;
The reason is Utat you havea..
13 per cent chance to drop that
singleton king, which Is just !GO
much extra percentage to be';
wasted.
INEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN 1

1¥
Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

2¥
Pass

Opemng lead - Q t

The biddmg has been:

II

LONGFELLOW

One letter stmply stands for another In this sample A is

HVG

JHVCHTKNUHV

UVSTKNUH V

NLG

IHVGf'

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Four hearts ts a mighty line
contract. Agamst anr openmg
lead but a diamond, tt is practically a lay down. But as is so
frequently the ease, West is un. kmd enough to lead the queen of
diamonds
You dec1de to duck the ftrst
diamond on general principles
Sometimes your opponents
shtlt, but West contmues w1th

U C V ' -N the jack and you are m dummy
with the ace
You toy wtlh the idea of
RHENL KC IBJL KC UN BCGM
NH leadmg a club. If the man w1Ut
the ace of clubs started with
BVDVHRV
WG - C HBEJ G
just two diamonds, you will be
able to discard dummy 's last
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: DON'T ASK FOR THE MOON OR diamond on your lhird club. But
you abandon this idea because
YOU WILL GET SOMETHING ELSE.-ANTHONY EDEN
you have decided Utat d~amonds
(@ 197r. Kin&amp; Ftalures Syndlate. Inc. )

LKPGV'N

YHN

West

North

Ea~t

SMUt

•

Pass 2•
Pass
1•
Yoo, South, hold :
• K J94 ¥ AQ2 t J43 •K Ill~
What do you do now?
•
A - P111. Yoa ban a mlllm. .
bud and yoer ,.rtller lias ~ 1
minimum re.poase. Daii't ,....
be-elite you 011ly Uve tllree d ...

n

TODAY'S QUESTION
,,
Instead of blddl~~i two clubl-your ,
partner has jumped to lhne cluba. ~
What do you do now?

Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN"
book lo. "Win at Bridge," (clo,;

this newspaper), P.O. Bo• m,
Radio City Stet/on, New York, ,
N.Y. 10019

:;

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

WMRO ·AM-FM
.

~

'·

4

AXYDLBAAXR

FHB

AN' DON'T FERGIT
'TO GO Hf\FFENCE
WIF 'lORE
PARTNER

that will raise some eyebrows.

hand

NORTH
• A Q 54

•

THANK'/,
AUNT

SAOITTAIIIUI (Nov. za-a..
211 You have 1/Hto regord lor
the opinions ol other• now. tt'i
likely you'll pull ollalew atunta

be u nw1se at this Ume to count
on funds or resources that you
hope will be com•ng In Be
realistic Work w1lh what s at

'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

UV

BARNEY

20)

"'KQJ

NLGEG'C

KALEIDOSCOPE

TAURUS (AP'II 20-Moy

you're shar.ing something
socially with another. Itt her
share the B)Cpense. too. There's
no reason you should pick up
tt'le entire tab.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It woulo

CRYPTOQUOTE

EXPRESS IT ON

Key peop1e essen1181 to your
plans are likely to let you down
t oday Bank more upon
yourse tt . less upon others

You have e lot of big Ideas. It
doesn t appear you're
prepared to ro l l up your
slee ve s and do some fhmg
about lhem

apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are dilferent.

GOT SOMETHING ON YOUR MIND?

1t15
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 1tl

CANCER (Juno 21·July 221

used for the three L's, X for the two O's, clc. Single letters,

'

5,

For Wedn11d1y, Merch

Lon 33 Poker term
34 Father of
KISh
35 Dtsagree
37 Itahan nver
38 Egypbim
Christian
39 Lead
40 Terminated

W.VA.

rooms down and 4 up. Nice
offices and an apartment.

5 years of income
it. Want to see.

8 DO-Little House on the Prairie 3,4, 15; That's My Mama 6,131
Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8, 10; Theater In America 20; Slr1ner1
33
d 3o-Movle "The Desperate Miles" 13, Movie " Black Water

12:3o-Wide World Event

Chain
Precision
Ground

On College Road
We Build or Sell Separately
Phone 992-7320

and fenced yard for the puppy.
AskmQ $17,500.00.
NEW
LISTING--Busfness
bu1lding in Middleport with (

13.

l Jnscrambl e lhese four Jumble~
one letter to each sq'uu.re, to
form four ordinary ~ords.

Choice ,Build ina Sites
for Sale
ln-_Syracuse

brtck home, with bath, nat. gas
FA furnace . Nice paneling.
carpeting, basement, porches

Revue

J11JJ~ID!1~@ lk.i 41:towLIJ -.1 1"'-

TOOA.'{!

882-2525

Parkrng Asking $8.000.110.
POMEROY- Nice 3 bedroom

Zoo

l l . JQ-Hollywood Squaresl, 16 : Brady Bunch 6, News4; Love of

1/BAP.Ot..-D

11\ _

N ew

10 3o-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15, Gambll 8,10
11 Oo-High Rollers 3,4, IS, One Life to Ltve 6, Now You See It
8,10: Elec Co 20

FOR M5 -

eET '/OJ aue;
ME'--IT'SA

SALES&amp; SERVICE
992-3092

10 .

S:IJO-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mister Rogers' Ntlghborhaocl
20,33; Ironside 13; Beverly Hlllbllllu 8; Hodgepodge Lodge
20: Get Smart 15, Elec. Co. 33.
'
6 co-News 34 4,8.10,t3.t5; ABC News 6; Elec. Co. 20; lTV
Utilization 33.
·
6 3o-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6; CBS Ntwa
8, tO, Zoom 20; Your Future Is Now 33.
7·oo-Truth o• Cons. 3,(; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's My Line
8; News 10; Country Music Jubilee 13; I Spy 15: Arobs lo
Israelis 20; Know Your Schools 33.
7 3o-Pollce Surgeon 3; Name That iune 4: Wilburn Brotheral;
The Judge 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Book Beat 20; Episode
Action 33

10 00-Ce!ebnty Sweepstakes 3,.4, 15, Joker' s Wild 8, 10; Movit
" A New Kind of Love" 13

BII":TllC!o\'I

FIV5·oc:u.AR

10

9 Jo- Not For Women Only 3: Dinah 6, Gal loping Gourmet 8,

li.JISI-IIT
AHAPP)'

PIGK,M~AT

WILKINSON
SMALL ENGINE

NEW HAVEN

3

3o- Btg Valley 6

9 00-A M 3, Ph 1l Donahue 4, 15, Bullwlnkle 8, Morning with
D J 13

I ,l-¥·L 1-l~ •
HE'l-L .. COIJ'T
l-ll&lt;f3 TO tJIT-

Lite 8.10: Seume St. 20,33.
n ·ss-Graham Kerr 8: Dan !mel' a World 10; News13.
12: /lO-Jackpot 3, 15; Password 6, 13; Bob Braun' a 50-50 Club 4;
News 8,10.
12 :30-Biank Check 3,15; Split Second 6,13; Search lot
Tomorrow 8,10; To Be Announced 33.
12:45-Eiec Co. 33.
12 ·55-NBC News 3, 15.
"\
t .co-News 3; All My Children 6,13; Phil Donahue B; Young 1o
lhe Restless 10. Not For Women Only 15 .
t 30-How to Survive a Marriage 3,., 15: Let's Make 1 Deal6,13;
As the World Turns 8, tO.
·
2 co-Days ol Our Lives 3,(,.t5; S10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding
Light B. 10.
2·Jo-Ooclors 3,4,15; Big Showdown6, 13; Edge of Nlghtl,tO.
3 IJO-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6.13; Price Ia
Righi 8,10; RFD 20.
3 JQ-One Llle to Live 13, Lucy Show 6; Match Game 1,10; On
Aging 20.
4 IJO-Mr Cartoon 3; 1 Dream of Jeannie 4: SomerMI 15;
Gilligan's Island 6 ; Tattlelal .. B; Sesame St. 20,33; Movltl
"The Lleulenanl Wore Sklrl$" 10; Mike Douglas 13.'
4· 3o-Bewllched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6; Luch Show I;
Bonanza tS.

3

7 Oo-Today 3,4,15, A.M America 6,13, CBS NewjS,tO.
B OQ-Lassie 6. Capt Kangaroo 8, Popeye 10; Sesame St 33

RD No. t

SAYRE HARDWARE

nace, large level lot. Will move

505

6 25-F arm Report 13
6· Jo-F1ve Minutes to L 1ve By 4, News 6 , B1bte Answers 8,
School Scene 10, The Story 13
6 35-Colum bus Today
6 45---Morning Report 3, Farmt i me 10

FOREST RUN
BLOCK CO.

The name to remember for jobs you'd like to forget.

well, out cellar, shop. barn and

WEDNESDAY , MARCHS, 1975

' '

BEF8 RE HE
$ OVEJ&lt;

HAIJ

IN·SINK·E~I OR~

3 nice lots for only $10,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT-3 bedrooms,
bath , lots of paoeling and
ceiling tile. Natural gas, fur-

WE HAVE HOUSES, FARMS,
LOTS, AND SEVERAL
BUSINESSES. FOR A REAL
DEAL CALL '1'12·3325.

":" HEIK HAJI Hr\-::&gt; ...::AL.. LEr

A IGS THAT
MAKES FQl.KS

NEW LISTING--4 bedrooms,
bath, furnace heat, drilled

apartments .
w 1ll pay for

HOU!l5

Hf I\ ILL PAY DEAR' LY

us.ooa,YouR

BUILDING SITES

soon . Reduced to $8,500.00.
BUSINESS BUILDING -

IT WILL T·'\KE

10 1'!-"I~F. ..;;p , H M -=-1•,\1
~ 1&lt;('1\\ T HE' ,\ \ O,.. !EVL (:Nf'EC ::&gt; 11\.1 rl i' E N

3-29-tfc

FOOD'S
HIGH
AND
GETTING HIGHER

., I
••

CAPTAIN EASY

. serv1ce. all makes, 992 228~
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy ,
Authorized Singer Sales and
Serv1ce We sharpen Scissors

' 608 E.
MAIN
.PQO&lt;•E RQ'f...._ C'

Adam 12 3, 4, 15, Hnppy Days 6, i 3, Good T 1m es 8, 10,
Ame n ca 20,33
.
JO-M ov 1e ' The Last Survivor s" J,J4, 15. Movte " Tr~logy of
Ter ror 6, 13. M-A 5 H 8, 10, A scent of Man 20.33
9 oo-Peop le ' s C ho1ce Awards 8,1 0
9 JQ-Wo mnn 20 . W1tn ess to Y es terday 33
10 00- Poltce Stor y 3,4, 1:,, Marc u s Welby , M u 6, 13, N ews 20.
Inter l ace 33
10 36-- Your Future I s now 20. A ss1gnmenl Amenca 33
11 00.- News 3,4,6 8, 10, 13, IS, News 33
I I J()--Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 . W1de World My stery " N1c k and
N ora '', IJ FBI 6, Banacek 8. Mov1e " Htlda Crane" 10.
Janilkl 33
12 30- W•d e World M ystery 6
I 00 T omorrow 3.4. News 13

a

I
PHONE
J4f-3832 or 143·2667
'
All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

.,

,_

8 00

SEWING MACHINE , Repairs. •

Real Estate For Sale

ACREAGE for sale Wooded
lots at Rock Sprmgs to be
used for res•dent1at home use
only B1ll W1tte, 991 2789 .
2· 11 261C

I 30 Hol lywood Squares J ; Hollywood Squares 4. Wild, Wdd
Worldot Ammai s" 6. Buc k Owens B, New Prtce I s Rtght 10.
To Tell The- Tr uth 13, Spnng Str ee t USA 15, RFO 20 , Marco
Spot tide 33

MiddlepOrt, Ohia 1 2. 1 Mo

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

ALLIS Chalmers tra ctor , good
cond•t•on Phon e 742 5275
3 2 Stc

TUESDAY , MARCH 4, 1975

D&amp;D
OONSTRUCTION

l -17-7Sc

ONE lan execu t.ve type SW 1vel
off1ce cha •r Phone 992 21 64.
Modern Supply
3 4 Jtc

3 2 Jtc
AKC R eg•stered male toy
pood l e Phon e 992 7084
3 4 Jlp

777 Pearl !: ~reet

REGISTERED Hereford
b!JIIs Phone 992 7752
343tp

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

Pels For Sale

For lnfonnation
Call

_ __________ .!.~'- uc Mobile Homes For a e

JU N K autos , complete and
del 1vered to our yard We pick
up auto bod 1es and buy all
kmds of scrap metal s and NEW and used cham saws ,
1ron R1der 's Salvage , St Rt
tillers and mowers
A lso ,
124 . Rt 4, Pom eroy Ol\10 •
repa1rs
498 Locust St ,
Call 992 5468
M •ddleport Phon e 992 3092
10 17 ti c
2 28 26tc
CASH pa1d for all makes and
models of mob• l e ho mes
Pho"e area code 61~ 423 ·9531
4 1 J tfc

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

anv organization , phone 992
3975

HOUSE FOR RENT , 1634
L 1nco1n Hg ts , Pomeroy ,
Phone Pomeroy 99 2 3575 or
GalliPO l iS 446 27 49
'1 2 lfc

Professional
WEDDING
Photography

Water. Electnc, Gas, Sewer
Lines.
installed.
Work
guaranteed.
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucks
L•mestone &amp; Fill Dirt
Com mereta I· Residentill
Construction &amp; Remodel

Television log for easy viewing

MORONS!

'

4 Door , fu lly equipped 1nc a1r, dark red A r eal cream

F OR your ' Oil of Mmk ·
Cosmet, cs Phone BROWN 'S
992 5113
1 7 lfc

ATHEN S F lea Markel at Jr
F&lt;m Bl dg March 2 and 16
Spaces ava•labt e Phone ~93
B460 H•g h ly a~ve rl• se d
2 18 181(

- -- -

.

$2795

1971 MATADOR

Business

-

RETARDED

-

'

heating service and
general sheet metal
works .
Free
Estimates .
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700

Subu rban 3 Sea t . V 8 eng me , au tomat1c trans, power

1 WILL do roofing hca t.ng
r epa 1r plumb1n g and elc c
tr •cal work Phone Cha r les
S•n t la•r 98 S J1 11
3 4 11tp

The Almanac
By United Pr..s International
Today is Wednesday, March
5, the 64th day or 1975 with 301
The said the four young men to follow.
were traveling to Jamaica for
The moon is approaching its
a Scuba-diving vacation and new phase.
. ran out of fuel abool eight
The morning stars are
miles from Sangster In - Mercury and Mars.
ternational Airport here.
The evening stars are
The had flown here from Saturn, Venus and Juptter.
Miami, with a stop at Great
Those born on this date are
lnagua Island
m the under Ute sign of Pisces.
Bahamas, pollee said
American lithographer
Scuba gear was found in Ute James Ives of the Currier and
wreckage, of the plane, which Ives team was born March 5,
exploded alter it crashed into a 1806•.
clrtrus grove just four miles ' On this day in history:
from the center of this north
In I TIO, BriUsh troops killed
roast tourist city.
five civilians in the so-called
The said the pltine had been "Boston Massacre.''
leased from Executive Alt Inc.
In 1!1SJ, the Soviet Union
of Otarleston, W. Va .
announced that premier Josef
stalin had died ·al the age of 73.
In 1966, a BriUsh airliner
crashed mto Japan's Mount
Fuji, killing all 124 persons
aboard.
·
In 1968, an Air France
jetliner hit a mounl&lt;lln top near
Guadaloupe, killing 62.
March lOth at 7 p.m. on
channel 20, sl.atton WOUB out A thought for Ute day : Soviet
of Athens an Adopt a Child Communist leader Josef Stalin
Today Inc. will present a new said, "ill the u .S.s.R., work is
look at adopltan tn Ohio.
the duty of every able-bodied
This prom1ses to be an ex· dtizen, according to the princiceptional program in that ple: He who does not work,
vtewers wtll see actual neither shall he eat."
children available lor adoption.
Bob and Barbara Attenweiler of Athens, Dr. Jim tell ol a new and unique
Harris and Jeannette Walter of program available to those
Gallipolis, and Dennis and wtshmg to adopt. Throughout
Penny Pariseau of Wellston the program the viewer will
will participate in what see the waihng children and
prQmises to be the most mformation on whom to concomplete picture or adoption tact.
presented to date.
Those spectal people who
James Lardie, director of a 'have room "for one more"
special adoption project for should watch and then write to
Lutherans Chtldren 's Atd ACI', P. 0 . Box 563, Wellston ,
Society, will also be on hand to phta 45692.

John Inman of ACf ·offering
USUS coming TV special

2 SIGNS

@)

FLOWER S l or Ea~ t e r BdSkel s.
pots sp rays e tc Phone 985.
353! Smalley s G•lt Shop ,
Ches ter Oh•o
3 J ntc

Students of St. Albans,
Belpre die in Jamaica

'

Notice

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 . Tuesday, March 4, 1!175

-

Auto Sales

3 .\ lip

28,808. and the nwnber &lt;1!
schools will mcreasc caeh year

'

Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifi:eds

surQICcll

JOSC&gt;Pil 'S

..

.

. ,,

I

�I

.,

I

...
'

6-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, March t 1975

f Voc.· ed costs in

r:f.~~~~!:_:~~~~~~~~~w~:.~!For

. dala fir St tlDle
a

con t 1nement

e

Pcl!1ent

at

PMknsbucg

as
Sl

a

1n

I appc cmle all
of vour 1&lt;.1n dn ess ana prayers
J M Ga ul Ch i' f. lc r . Oht O

COLUMBUS (UP! 1 - State
Schools Supt. Martin W. Essex
said Monday incluston lor the
first ltme .of joint vocationa l
school fiscal data m the Oh1o
Department of Educat1on
"Costs per Pupil" publication
for the 1973-74 school year
reflects the expansiOn of job
tratmng opporlumt1es for h1gh
school students m the stale
"There were not enough JOin t
vocational sc ho ols

( before

1973-74 ) to prov1de meanmgful
data on how the operating
dollars were bcmg mvcsted."
sai~ Essex
Twenty-fave JOirtt vocahonal
schools in OhiO

spent an

m the

fores~eable

future," sa1d

Essex. Essex sa 1d per-pup1l
Investment by the s tate 's
elementary an d seco ndary
sc hools 111 19n: t was up more
lhan SHO uver the prevwus
sc hool year to an average of
$968
"Unusual mrlationary forces

have eroded much of tins
s ub stan ttal tnvestment tn·
lTCase or cd ucatwn, winch wa s

made p&lt;ISs lble by the stale
mcomc tax," sa1d Essex
Catmg dat a from th e annual
study of 617 school dtslnc!s
serving 2 34 rmlhon studen ts.

average of $1,532 for each of Essex sa1d the educatwnal
21 ,834 students learning Mrk In ves tment per pupil in locaf
skills last sclwol year, Essex sc hoo l diSin cts 1n Oh10
sa1d.
averaged $829 1n 1973-74, -844 111
"There are 30 jomt exempted village sc hool
vocational schools 1n operation diStric ts and $1,024 1n c1t\.
th1s year w1lh an enrollment of school districts

New insurance available
to Vietnam ·era veterans
An es timated 2. 7 milhon
Vtetnam· e ra
v et~ rans
separa ted from April 2. 1970,
through Julr ,, 3!, 1974, are
eltgtble lor new low-cost
Veterans Group Life Insurance
( VGU) , but they must apply
before Aog. I, 1975. The new
program is designed as intertm
protection during
readjustment to civilian life, according to the Veterans Ad·
ministration.
Servicemen diScharged since
Aug. I receive application
forms aulhomatically, but
those discharged before the
insurance became available
must apply, VA satd.
Nonrenewable, five-year
tenn coverage is avaHable m
$5,000 increments up to $20,000
Monthly premium for the
maximum COVerage IS $3.40 for

veterans aged 34 and under and
$6.80 for lho.se 35 and over.
Former servteemen may
convert Servicemen's Group
Life Insurance to VGLI w1thout
med1 cal exami nah on 11 applicattons are received w1thm
120 days of sepa ration. Apphcaltons after that time must
mclude cvtdence of good
health . Thts requtrement is
waived lor veterans w1th VArated , serv ice - co trolled
dtoobillhes.
Application forms are
available fr om VA offices and
veterans serv 1 ce
organtzations
Completed
forms and premiums should be
sent to the Office of Servicemen's Group Life In·
surance, 212 Washington St ..
Newark, N. J 07102.

Dividends for veterans
of $178 million mailed
Checks totaling $178 million
m GI insurance dividends are
currently being mailed lo
millions of veterans, according
to S. W. Melidosian, dtrector ol
the Phtladelphla Veterans
AdministratiOn Center where
the agency's insurance
programs are administered
All veterans entitled to 1975
dtvtdends should receive
checks by mid March.
President Ford announced
Jan . 30 that he had dtrected the
VA to accelerate payment of
Ute 1975 insurance dividends
within 45 days Payments are
normally made throughout the

I

year on the anmversary dale of
the mdivtdual policies .
The Prestdenl said he was
taking the' step to d1stnbute a
substanhal amount of cash at a
lime when illS needed to give a
boost to consumer spending
The VA had announced m
December that a record $335.6
million would be paid to
veterans who have kept their
World War I, World War II and
Korean Conflic t insurance
policies m Ioree It is the first
t1me dividends have been pa1d
on the policies held by Korean
Conlltct veterans

MONTEGO BAY, Jamaica
(UP!) - Two U.S. students
were killed late Sunday when
their small !!il!~, ~ashed In a
dlrua grow here after rurutlng
out of fuel, pOike reported.
Two other passengers in Ute
single-engine Piper Cherokee
were l!ospltall2ed with critical
Injuries, pollee said.
The dead were identified as
Scott Brodie, 23, of St. Albans,
W.Va., and Richard Miller, 21,
of Belpre , Ohio.
The injured were the pilot,
Benjamin llfown, 23, and his
lrother, Gary, 21, both of
Otarleston, W.Va., pollee said.

'lor seminar

on channel 20

ATHENS- John W. Inman,
director or the Great Lakes
'
regional office of The Hwnane
Society ol the United States
(HSUS), will speak at an
animal weUare seminar to be
held !rom 9:30a.m. unlil4 p.m.
on Saturday, March 8 here at
Baker Center, Room 334.
He will present a program on
HSUS's work on the recent
"calf-kill" by farmers in
Wisconsin , the dogfighting
situation, and problems arising
from unwanted dogs and cats.
Representatives
fro'!'
hwname societies in Ute southeastern quadran! of Ohio and
hwnaite societies in Parkersburg and Wheeling, W. Va. are
expected to attend the aU day

senlinar.

Pomeroy
Motor
Co.
-

OF
QUALITY

1972 CHEVROLET KINGSWOOD ESTATE

$2895

GU N Shoot on M tlc H1ll Road
fa c tory c hok.cd guns only
~P on so r e CI
by
R ac.nc
1\mcr.can LegiOn Sa t ur day
Mar c n 8, 7 p rn
3 .:1 4tC

Jseat wagon Less than 30,000 m tles by local owner, 400 V
8, P s tee 1ng. brakes, automat1c power door locks, lug gag e
rack , rad•o . dark green fmtsh L•ke new &amp; loaded w1th
extra s

PIANO tun•n g

1911 PLY. STA. WAGON

Pho n e 9J9 19 11
3 .l ti c

st ee rmg &amp; brakes, factory air conditioning, luggage rack ,
green f1n1 sh, rad1o L1 ke n ew w ·w t1res

AUC TION . Thursday n1ght. 7
p m
at Ma s on A u c t10n
Horton St In Ma son . W Va
Cons •gnm ents welcome
Phon e (30&lt;1) 773 S471

2 2)tc
I N D I AN Joe s CB Sa l es and
Par15. , 301l Page St r eet Phone
992 3509
118 12ft
NOW sel l mg F ull e r Brush
Produ cts phone 992 341()
I 24 tf c

service frmds
ATHENS - The Buckeye
Hllls-Hocktng Valley Regwnal
Development D1slnct ( BHHVRDDI, the Oh1o Citizens
Counc1 l, and the OhiO Council
of Churches are co-sponsormg
a pubhc heanng to solicit
public op1nion conce rning
Ohto's use or T1tle XX (Social
Serv1ce I funds March 19 at the
Cily-Coun ty Hea lth Bwldmg,
West Union St., Athens.
Opinions will be solicited on
the effecltveness of social
serv1ces programming 1n the
pasl(funded under T1Ue IV-A),
the needs for social serv1cc
programs tn the eight-county
reg1onal development district
area, suggestions concermn g
the appropnale state agency to
admintsler Title XX funds, and
the number and types of
programs wh1ch should be
funded through Title II montes .
Tttle XX is supersedmg T1tle
IV-A.
From 9:30 a.m. till 3 p m
testimony w1ll be accepted
concerning Title XX planmng .
From 3 p m. to 4 p.m. the level
of ADC and General Rehel
grants in Ohio and leg islative
mitiat1ves to mcrease those
grants to 100 percent support
level wtll be discussed.
For further information
contact Joseph L. Badgley at
the BH-HVRDD office m
Marietta (phone nwntber 3749436) .

Fire Retardant
Insulation

HE~L

'RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
·c omplete plumbing &amp;

Blown Into Walls
and AtticS'
Free EstimateJ

lany L1vender
Phone 992-3993
Daily After 5:00

puff

POMo~~9!vE¥P!9.~. co. '@) •
POMEROY, OHIO
.

-

1969 PONTIAC Ex ecul•ve With
a c Phone 992 709 1
3 J Sic

Help Wanted
PROJECTION I ST loc Mason
Dr•ve In Th eatre Call Po1n l
Pl easant 675 374:1 or 67 5 S667
:z 27 lf c
-

------ --

-

-

-

-

-

--

---

-~ -

-

19 73 VEGA Hatc hba c k , 4 sp eed
tr ansm •ss •on new l1re s. tape
p l ayer . exce llent condll10n
Wil l se ll r easona ble Pho1e
(61 4) 9912377 or 992 2732 after
4 p m
2 28 12tc

WANTED

PAPER CARRIER

- - --- - - - - -

197 2 vw
SU PER
B ee tle ,
automal• c sh• ft good co n
dd•on Phon e 992 5866
:Z 2S 7tc:

HOU SEKEEPER , able to dnil e
slanda rd Sh1 fl ca r Phone 99 2
193 6
3 2 Jtc

Input invited
on Title XX

$1595

~~rvice_~

,"

' 19 t3 FORD Cou nt ry SQUirE
wago h, 20.000 m lies , all
equ ,p ment. $3,500 Phone 992
3493 or 992 1120

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

19 70 , I TON Chevrolet V 8
flatbed , 4 speed, dual wheels ,
runs good good body Phone
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom ,
98S 3SS4
2 16 ti c

LOWER END
OF MASON, W. VA.

---------~

CONTACT

- ---.- - - - -

For Rent

THE .DAILY

4 ROOM furnished apartm en t 1n
Middleport
2
bedroom,
ut i1111es pa1d Phone 992 2676
3 2 3tc

SENTINEL

TWO bedroom mobile home
corner Broadway and Elm 1n
Middl eport
Phone 992 :Z5BO
after6pm
2 16 tfc

992-2156
RE SPON SIBLE lady to live m
w •th eld erly l ady Pnone ( 1l
667 330S

N 1c E 2 Dedroom unturn •Shed
apartment 129 Lrncoln H•ll
p l enty o f cl o se ts . eas1IY
heated w1th gas floor furnace
Garage Ca ll Tracy Wha ley,
992 3054
3 2 6tc

J 4 1 ~~ c

MEAT De partment manager.
mus t be e)( p er 1enced •n
buyrng
pn c mg , and mer
ch and ls1ng of to tal r e tail .
meat
program,
sa lary
negot1abl e , bonus plan good 3 BEDROOM tra. ter. pa r tly
be nefit S w1th c hance of ad
furn•shed, utllltJes pa1d
vancement tor the nght man ,
Located •n Burl•ngham
sma ll young, progre ss tve
lra d er park Phone 992 775 1
com pany Send re sume to Mr
2 25 lfc
B lack
P
0
Box
807 ,
GalliPOliS , OhiO 45 631 A ll
TRAI L ER SPACE , J." mile
rep l •eS conf l dent•al
north of Me1gs High School on
] 4 61C
old Rt 33 Phone 992 294 1
1 23 tfc

CARRIER
WANTED

DUPLEX , 238 1&lt; Walnut St,
M•ddleport, Oh •o Phone 992
278 0 or 992 3432
2 19 tfc

FOR
MONKEY RUN AREA

Pomeroy, 0.

The

Dai~

Sentinel

COUNTRY Mobile Home Par.,_ ,
R t 33, ten m 11es north of
Pomeroy
L arge lots w1th
concrete patios . s•d.ewa lks,
runners
and
off
stree t
parkmg Phone 99 2 7479
12 31 tfc

APT- ) ro~~~ :-a-;-; ~;;.;r:~ nas

table top rang e, wall oven
real n•ce and c lea n , modern
Located
1n
Pomeroy
overlookmg ... the Oh10 R•ver
Phone Galt •polis , day 446
7699, evenings 446 9539
1 20 !In
' •

PH. 992-2156
REEDSVILLE area Someone
to c ut and p1 1e bn.JSh 1n ex
cha nge for ch ipwood Easy
ac cess and plenty of ch•P
wood Call 37EI 6311 after 6

:J and 4 ROOM furnist'led and

unfurn•shed
apartments
Phone 992 S4J &lt;l
4 12 ttc

pm

3 2 71C

----------- - --.PRIVATE meetmg room for

Wanted To Buy
W'ANl t: u v• ... upr~ght p1anos.
any co nd•f•on
Paymg S10
each Fi rs t floor only Wnte
and Q•v e d1rect1ons to W •tten
P1ano Co, Box 188 . SardiS ,
Oh10 43946
2 26 61p
OLD furn1ture , •ce boxes , b'rass
beds , or complete households
Wr1te M
D Mill er Rt 4,
Pomeroy , Oh•o Call 992 7760
10 7 7 4

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

TWO ROOM apartment on
Spr 1ng Avenue Phone 992
3429
3 3 6tp

For Sale

t.m ployment Wanteo
WILL do bookkeeping •n .,y
home Phone 992 73 16
_
2286tc

--- --=--------REMOUEL\NG
IJiu11011 19 ,
heat1ng , and • all types of
generel
repa1r
Work
guaranteed 20 years ex
per •e nce . Phone 992 2409
1. 19 tfc

CA MPEfi: top for P•Ckup truck ,
$200 Phone 992 7727
_
3 4 3t c

--- --- - - L - - - - - - - - 1969 F ORD 6 cyl , A lso , Wa rm
Mornmg heater Call 8·t3 2645
1n tne even1ngs
3 4 3tp
2

NICE Beagle pups
Phone 992 5302

for

sale

~----

-----------

For Rent
2 BEDROOM t ra •le r . Brown ' s
T railer Court , Phone 992 3324
3 4 tfc
FUR NI SHED apt , a •r con
d•t •on.ng , el ec hea t. 12 mi l es
from Pomero y on Rt
33
A dults on ly Phon e (30 4) 773
5118
3 4

1 (614) 247-3644

Middleport, Ohio

Phone 992-5347 or 9Jl-lio\1

-s-EPTIC
TANKS
cleaned
Modern Sanltat•on, 992 -3954 or
992 7)49
1957 CHEV Y parts
NEW .,_
9-18-tfc
Lakewood tract1on bars , n,
tac ker a1r Shocks, hooker WILL tnm or cut trees or
s hrubbery .
c lean
ou t
headers , W1fh 3" collec tors for
basements, attics, etc Phone
small bloc k
Call 992 3496
949 322 1 or 742 4441
afte r 6 p m BEST OFFER
1 28 ·26tc
'
1017ttc

For Sale

_______________ _

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

28TH ANNUAL Hereford "'"''"
18 bu lls and 15 fema les,
Southeastern Oh 10 Hereford
Assoc1al•on ,
all
clean
pedigrees both horned and
polled Saturday , Ma r ch 15,
197S s now 10 00 AM Sa le
I 00 PM Rock Spr mg s Fa~r
Grounds, R t No 33 , three
mil es nor t n of Pomeroy , Oh10
F or catalogs wr.t e to Lloyd
Blackwood, Sale Mgr, Rt 3,
Pomeroy , Oh•o 4S7 69
3 2 6tc

-lOME
Improvement
and
Repair Serv 1ce Anythmg
f 1dd around the home, from
roof to basement You will
ltke our work and rates
Phone 742 508 1
1229tfc

ONE Hand event breathmg
r es perator $100 One 2000 M
Mrl!er pamt sprayer , new for
SSO One 7 7S . t5 inch 6 hole
wheel and t1re tor c nev
tru c k . $25 One B mch 3 po1nt
h 1tch pos t ho le au~er , $200
Phone 742 S322
3 2 3tp
IN D I AN Joe's Sportmg Goods,
buy and sell guns , ammo ,
f 1shmg equ, pmen t. a'hd after
Apr il 1, we W i ll have f1 sh ba1t
Stop by at 308 Page St,
M•ddleport Phone 992 3509
3 2-10tc
1970 SCO TTIE Camper, very
good cond JI•on
Phone 992
7126
2 18 ttc
GROCERY bu siness for sale
Building tor sale or lease
Phone773 56 18 from a 30p m
to 10 p m for appoi ntment
3 10 tfc
CLOSE OUT on new Z1g -Zag
sewmg mach.nes For sewing
stretch fabncs , buttonholes ..
fancy destgns , etc
Paint
slightly blemished Cho1ce of
carry1ng case or sew1ng
stand S49 80 cash or terms
avail abl e. Phone 992 7755
12 18-tfc
USED parts, Frye 's Truck and•
Auto Parts . Rut l and , Oh 1o
Phone 1614) 742 6094
1
7Stp.

n
---------- -----

MODERN
Walnut
Sl.! r eo
con sole ,
AM FM
rad10 ,
separate controls
Balance
S107 10 or budget terms Ca l l
992 39 65
3 3 tfc

SI

10x55 FURN I SHED. a.r con
dii•On•ng , new a lummum
siding , 52 gallon hot water
heater . 275 ga llon fuel tan k,
underp•nn•ng, price $2000
f 1rm Call 992 5153
2.27 12tc
2 BEDROOM all electric 1974
Greenbner. 56900 Call 992
7328
J 1 3tc
__ ""7 _ _ _ _ _ _ - - - - - - - ECONOMY
MOTOR
AN 0
MOBILE HOME S SA LES Spot cash paid for mobile
homes Phone 446 140 1
2 26 78fc

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

Real Estate For Sale
LOW LOW DOWN PAYMENT
L ovely new homes in three
locations •n Me1gs County
Some w1th woQd ed lots We
will built on your lot or ours
Call 992 5976 or 992 5844 for
more mformahon
2 27 26tc
COUNTRY HOME 6 rms,
bath, 3 bedroom , vinyl SJding,
storm w1ndows and doors ,
new furnace on paved road
Ches ter water d istrict, 1 acre
l and Phone 949 5953
2-26· 12tc

....l

1971 GARDEN tractor , Sears , 8
h p 8 speed , S450 Phone 742
5052
2 26 6tp

TRAILER-LOAD

BALER
TWINE
-10,000 feet bales
- Ask for our cash and carry
prtce.

_ --------~------ _ ~tc ~POMEROY LANDMARK
3 BEDROOM mob ile nome- ; '
•
JackW . caney,Mgr .
washer and dryer , p 1 baths .
Ptlo"e992-21! 1
ut d•lles pa 1d , 542 50 wee k 308 •
·
Page St ., M idd leport , Oh'•o . 1
3 4 tfc INDUSTRIAL 6 •nch stroke saw
- ------------·--- $15 : 18 1nch met al f a tag 6mch
FURNISHED aPar t ment , 3
swing ,
complete
with
rm s and ba th Phone 992
threading gears motor and
2937
b •ts . 5100 2h p 220bolt single
3 4 6t c
pha se motor , industr1at type
-·------ - - ----·--.
w •tf'l pulley . sso . a.r c om .
,..TR AILER space . 2 m 1les from·
pressor motor and tan k . $2S
Po me roy , Rt '1 43, Phone 992 .
Lme Sf'lii!lft J pulleys. bearmgs
,5858
and belt , SIS Phone 985 4118 .
10-27 -tfc
2 13 26tc

a shelf to
Painting, siding,

From

house.
roofing,
paper hanging, kitchen
cabinets, expert carpeting,
etc.

., I .. ,.

J'H..:\ r
TQ:EACHEROUS

D-..'6 ::

BULL
0Aw50N

1

DEMAND5

Offset this with a nice garden . 1 le vel acre with
modern home, 2 BR, bath,
lovely kitchen and dining ,
utility room, basement. Just

$13,500.00.
GOTA LARGE FAMILY?NEED MORE ROOM 1 We
have 1ust the place for you

I Meigs school district) . 4
large BR, Jlh
baths,
reception or mus1c room,
sewing room , utlllty, full
basement, roofed pat1o,
garage, large lot, recently
renovated,
carpeted,

paneled, tiled. $19.900 .00.
LET US SELL YOUR
SMALLER HOME.
THROWOUTTHE ASPIRIN
HAVE A SELLING
PROBLEM' LET MEIGS
COUNTY' S OLDEST FULL
TIME REAL ESTATE
OFF ICE SOLVE YOUR
PROBLEM. - CALL AT
ONCE . PROPERTY IS
SELLING FAST NOW.
J92-225f

~ ,_.,R

..

~XCH L EN CY

WA 7 HI~It -=t T0fi.J'

l HEY "?A'r

TME.r::E5 A U S NAV Y TASK
FORCE $ 0 M E W HE~ E NEAR
{"J Je.OUTI!

T HIS.:

.

6 · 00-S unn se Semmar 4. Sunr ise Se mester 10

PR 1~ CE65

JA$Mif\l

6 IS- Eng liSh

~

f92-2067
Minersville, 0 .
Blocks
Cement and Mortar
Wood Burning Stoves
Heatllators
and
Fireplace Accessories

8 25-Capt Kangaroo 10.
8

BORN LOSER

ru:r:m.,

9 25-C huck White Reports
Tattleta les

Gold" 6.

9·/lO-Bob Hope 3,4, 1S; Cannon Cannon 8,10; Muttrploao
Theatre 33
10:ll0-Petrocell13,4, 15; Gel Christie Love6,13; Manhuntor I, 10;
News 20; Family at War 33 .
10 Jo-Your Future Is Now 20.
11 ·co-News 3.4,6.8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 3o-Johnny Corson 3,(,tS; Wide World Event 13; FBI 6;
Movie " The Glass House" 8; Movie "Cry Terror" 10; Jenakl
33.

I ill

'd

6.
1 DO-Tomorrow 3,4; Nws 13.

GOOD. IT 1S
SETTLED

I 11-ltNK I 'D RA-n-IER I
GO TO CALIFORNIA.

498 LocustS!.

... WE'RE GOING

Doublecheck anything impor·
tant that you pLit In writing or
sign your name to. If you make
an error. It wilt be a btg one.

TO Fl.ORIDA I

-n-IEN ...

C BRADF'ORO, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 382 1 or 949-3161
Rac in e, Ohio
Cr1tt Bradford
5 1-tfc

SCORPIO (Oat. 24·Nov. Ill 11

WHAT 501-DIEI&lt;:5
WITH AF:A1S USUALL-Y
HAVE TO 60
THR:OUC.H.

~&gt;CCA,VATING ,

dozer, loader
and backhoe work. septic
tlnks Installed, dump trucks
and to -boys for htre; will haul
fill d1rl. top so 1t. limestone &amp;
gravel, Ca l l Bob or Roger
Jeffers. day phone 992 .7089; .
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 992 -

t

"\]

r

1

1

~

Now arranro tho circled leltora
to form the

surpriae answer. u

~:::_,/]~===~~:=.:;l~~h,:':::::£1~ sun!•led by tho above cartoon.

2 ll ·tfC
·- - - - - - READY-MIX &lt;..v NCRf: 1 t: ae Hver1ed r 1ght to your project.
Fas
and
easy .
Free
estimates. Phone 992 32&amp;-t
Goeglein Ready Mix Co ,
Middleport Ohio
6 JD.tfc

I ,... .. SURPIIISI ANSW!R hm I r I I I I I I 1 J

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

----~

LITTLE ORPHAN ANN IE-UP IN THE W?'
O_R~L=D----""1

(Auwtln tomorrow)

'

Jumbl"

JOINT LEGAL ASYLUM PHYSIC

Yetlrrd•y"•
\ An•'"l"r' '/ Ju :ow ph11/11f1H1pf1H nu!i llt lf'if 110 11 all Obflrtl
u ht~tl.t·,IJ muJ.wg - "STILLS

~

DOZER work, land c learing bV
the acre , hourly or contract
Farm ponds , roads, etc
Large dozer and operator
w1t)'l over 20 years ex
perience . Pullins Excavating
Pomeroy . Ohio . Phone 99:

2478

~

(;A;7fNEA

5232

12-19-lf

GASOLINE AU..EY

ELWOOD BOWEt&lt;S t&lt;t:PAIN.
- Sweepers, touters, Irons,
att sman appliances. Lawn
mowers , next to State High way Garage on Route 7 Home
Phone 985 3825
.,
2 1 26tc

Yqu qot a car,
. Wallet' Wh4
is

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

To save
enerqL.J,
Melba'

ten l.jears I
I drive ten
miles back and will have saved Ten
Ljears?
1,750 qallons
forth to work
of qas 1
everL.J d.:14!

happen if LlOU
an th' bus qet wore
out b'fore then 1

LjOU

riclin'

th'

Order Your

bus?

Southern

Cabbage Plants
Now

JAMES HILl

ULABNER
~Z-IT

Phone: 247·2961

KEEPS

A- LAYIN' THEM
.SICK-?~

/"--,

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 "Rule
1 Beer
Britannia"
1ngred1ent
composer
5 Debacfes
DOWN
10 MUSICal
I One ktnd
instrument
of order
It Optionally
Add1t10nally
2
13 Wtnning
3
Become
margm
engrossed
14 Garment
(3 wds.)
part
4 Pagoda
15 N1ghl
ornament
before
t6 King (Sp.) 5 Feel an
affront
t7 Fratermty
6 Slippery
7 Colorado
IK Certatn
lnd1an
sailors
8 Cooper
20 L1ke Mr
work
Savalas
(2 wds. )
21 Famed
pohttcal
cartoomst
22 Tamartsk
salt tree
23 Thorax
25 Son of
Jacob
26 Dame
Myra
27 Eschew
labor
28 Regtan
29 Jotn up
32 Cambodia's

,•

... AND LET'&amp; PULL UP ·
1\NCHOR AND BET 5AIL

IMMEO/ATELY.'

TM BURE 1HEY'LLALL
=PERATI,' 1 WINNIE..
1HEY KNOvv WHAT
'&gt;VURE UP A6AIN8T!

Yesterday's Answer

9 F1garo's
ba11tw1ck
12 "- unto
Caesar "
16 Siesta
i9 Italian
c1ty
20 Fundamental
23 Fictional
magician

24 Woman of
Ute hour
25 First-rate
27 Ogled
30 Auto style
31 Name or
route
33 French
commune
36 Craze
37 Surprise

You w11t not gam as many advantages as you should from a
s1tuat1on where you share £10
In terest becau se you re overly
co mpl acent

GEMINI (Mey 21·Juno 20) 11
w1ll be easier lor yo u to give
yo ur word than to keep It later
o n A fn end could be lost
thr ough a broken prom1se.

THAR'S TWO BRIGHT NEW '
PENNIES FER CLEAN IN' OFF
'fORE
PLATE, HONE'! POT

LOWEE2'1

CAPRICORN (Dec. H•JOII.
18) You'll pass on some lnlor·
matlon solely because it mekn
interesting llslenlng, though
you know your source Isn't
reliable.

AQUARIUS (Jill. 211-hb. 111
Don't ask something olanothet
trial you refused lo do when

you had tho opportunity. Hor
answer will be lha &amp;lmt 11
yours.

PISCES (Fob. 20-Mllloll 101
There Is opportunity about you
today but It's the type you can't
take for granted. Vou must act
promptly on it

LIBRA (Sop!. 23·0ct. 231

WIN AT BRIDGE

Lucky breaks will be comi~
your way this year through un·
usual sources. One In particular will come from one you
know casually who now lives at
a distance from you.
•lli ..~ WSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASS.~ •

P~(centage pl~y has the edge
4

¥108 53
t A 93

WEST

"' 7 2

EAST

•K 973

•Jto86

¥ K2

¥1

tQJt02
"'1084

"'A96 S!'

tK75

SOUTH (01
..2
¥AQJ 96 4
• 8 64
fo~as t-West

West

ho-+-1-:t--t-r-

Morch 1, 1175

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 221 You
wont be as careful as you
usua lly are about household
matters today Something that
should be attended to will be
neglected

North

vulnerable

East

South

are gomg to break 4-3.
So you lead the 10 of trutnpl
from dummy. Eaat follows low .
Should you take the trump
finesse now1 If It works you are
home; II it loses you are solng
to be one down.
· ,
II you refuse the trump.
finesse and go .\JP with the ace·
you may drop the singleton ktq:
from West. rr yo1l,l!On't you can
try the spade 'filresse. II tbaf
loses, you will be two down but
the combination play Is attn,
worth while.
;
The reason is Utat you havea..
13 per cent chance to drop that
singleton king, which Is just !GO
much extra percentage to be';
wasted.
INEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN 1

1¥
Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

2¥
Pass

Opemng lead - Q t

The biddmg has been:

II

LONGFELLOW

One letter stmply stands for another In this sample A is

HVG

JHVCHTKNUHV

UVSTKNUH V

NLG

IHVGf'

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Four hearts ts a mighty line
contract. Agamst anr openmg
lead but a diamond, tt is practically a lay down. But as is so
frequently the ease, West is un. kmd enough to lead the queen of
diamonds
You dec1de to duck the ftrst
diamond on general principles
Sometimes your opponents
shtlt, but West contmues w1th

U C V ' -N the jack and you are m dummy
with the ace
You toy wtlh the idea of
RHENL KC IBJL KC UN BCGM
NH leadmg a club. If the man w1Ut
the ace of clubs started with
BVDVHRV
WG - C HBEJ G
just two diamonds, you will be
able to discard dummy 's last
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: DON'T ASK FOR THE MOON OR diamond on your lhird club. But
you abandon this idea because
YOU WILL GET SOMETHING ELSE.-ANTHONY EDEN
you have decided Utat d~amonds
(@ 197r. Kin&amp; Ftalures Syndlate. Inc. )

LKPGV'N

YHN

West

North

Ea~t

SMUt

•

Pass 2•
Pass
1•
Yoo, South, hold :
• K J94 ¥ AQ2 t J43 •K Ill~
What do you do now?
•
A - P111. Yoa ban a mlllm. .
bud and yoer ,.rtller lias ~ 1
minimum re.poase. Daii't ,....
be-elite you 011ly Uve tllree d ...

n

TODAY'S QUESTION
,,
Instead of blddl~~i two clubl-your ,
partner has jumped to lhne cluba. ~
What do you do now?

Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN"
book lo. "Win at Bridge," (clo,;

this newspaper), P.O. Bo• m,
Radio City Stet/on, New York, ,
N.Y. 10019

:;

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

WMRO ·AM-FM
.

~

'·

4

AXYDLBAAXR

FHB

AN' DON'T FERGIT
'TO GO Hf\FFENCE
WIF 'lORE
PARTNER

that will raise some eyebrows.

hand

NORTH
• A Q 54

•

THANK'/,
AUNT

SAOITTAIIIUI (Nov. za-a..
211 You have 1/Hto regord lor
the opinions ol other• now. tt'i
likely you'll pull ollalew atunta

be u nw1se at this Ume to count
on funds or resources that you
hope will be com•ng In Be
realistic Work w1lh what s at

'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

UV

BARNEY

20)

"'KQJ

NLGEG'C

KALEIDOSCOPE

TAURUS (AP'II 20-Moy

you're shar.ing something
socially with another. Itt her
share the B)Cpense. too. There's
no reason you should pick up
tt'le entire tab.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It woulo

CRYPTOQUOTE

EXPRESS IT ON

Key peop1e essen1181 to your
plans are likely to let you down
t oday Bank more upon
yourse tt . less upon others

You have e lot of big Ideas. It
doesn t appear you're
prepared to ro l l up your
slee ve s and do some fhmg
about lhem

apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are dilferent.

GOT SOMETHING ON YOUR MIND?

1t15
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 1tl

CANCER (Juno 21·July 221

used for the three L's, X for the two O's, clc. Single letters,

'

5,

For Wedn11d1y, Merch

Lon 33 Poker term
34 Father of
KISh
35 Dtsagree
37 Itahan nver
38 Egypbim
Christian
39 Lead
40 Terminated

W.VA.

rooms down and 4 up. Nice
offices and an apartment.

5 years of income
it. Want to see.

8 DO-Little House on the Prairie 3,4, 15; That's My Mama 6,131
Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8, 10; Theater In America 20; Slr1ner1
33
d 3o-Movle "The Desperate Miles" 13, Movie " Black Water

12:3o-Wide World Event

Chain
Precision
Ground

On College Road
We Build or Sell Separately
Phone 992-7320

and fenced yard for the puppy.
AskmQ $17,500.00.
NEW
LISTING--Busfness
bu1lding in Middleport with (

13.

l Jnscrambl e lhese four Jumble~
one letter to each sq'uu.re, to
form four ordinary ~ords.

Choice ,Build ina Sites
for Sale
ln-_Syracuse

brtck home, with bath, nat. gas
FA furnace . Nice paneling.
carpeting, basement, porches

Revue

J11JJ~ID!1~@ lk.i 41:towLIJ -.1 1"'-

TOOA.'{!

882-2525

Parkrng Asking $8.000.110.
POMEROY- Nice 3 bedroom

Zoo

l l . JQ-Hollywood Squaresl, 16 : Brady Bunch 6, News4; Love of

1/BAP.Ot..-D

11\ _

N ew

10 3o-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15, Gambll 8,10
11 Oo-High Rollers 3,4, IS, One Life to Ltve 6, Now You See It
8,10: Elec Co 20

FOR M5 -

eET '/OJ aue;
ME'--IT'SA

SALES&amp; SERVICE
992-3092

10 .

S:IJO-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mister Rogers' Ntlghborhaocl
20,33; Ironside 13; Beverly Hlllbllllu 8; Hodgepodge Lodge
20: Get Smart 15, Elec. Co. 33.
'
6 co-News 34 4,8.10,t3.t5; ABC News 6; Elec. Co. 20; lTV
Utilization 33.
·
6 3o-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6; CBS Ntwa
8, tO, Zoom 20; Your Future Is Now 33.
7·oo-Truth o• Cons. 3,(; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's My Line
8; News 10; Country Music Jubilee 13; I Spy 15: Arobs lo
Israelis 20; Know Your Schools 33.
7 3o-Pollce Surgeon 3; Name That iune 4: Wilburn Brotheral;
The Judge 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Book Beat 20; Episode
Action 33

10 00-Ce!ebnty Sweepstakes 3,.4, 15, Joker' s Wild 8, 10; Movit
" A New Kind of Love" 13

BII":TllC!o\'I

FIV5·oc:u.AR

10

9 Jo- Not For Women Only 3: Dinah 6, Gal loping Gourmet 8,

li.JISI-IIT
AHAPP)'

PIGK,M~AT

WILKINSON
SMALL ENGINE

NEW HAVEN

3

3o- Btg Valley 6

9 00-A M 3, Ph 1l Donahue 4, 15, Bullwlnkle 8, Morning with
D J 13

I ,l-¥·L 1-l~ •
HE'l-L .. COIJ'T
l-ll&lt;f3 TO tJIT-

Lite 8.10: Seume St. 20,33.
n ·ss-Graham Kerr 8: Dan !mel' a World 10; News13.
12: /lO-Jackpot 3, 15; Password 6, 13; Bob Braun' a 50-50 Club 4;
News 8,10.
12 :30-Biank Check 3,15; Split Second 6,13; Search lot
Tomorrow 8,10; To Be Announced 33.
12:45-Eiec Co. 33.
12 ·55-NBC News 3, 15.
"\
t .co-News 3; All My Children 6,13; Phil Donahue B; Young 1o
lhe Restless 10. Not For Women Only 15 .
t 30-How to Survive a Marriage 3,., 15: Let's Make 1 Deal6,13;
As the World Turns 8, tO.
·
2 co-Days ol Our Lives 3,(,.t5; S10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding
Light B. 10.
2·Jo-Ooclors 3,4,15; Big Showdown6, 13; Edge of Nlghtl,tO.
3 IJO-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6.13; Price Ia
Righi 8,10; RFD 20.
3 JQ-One Llle to Live 13, Lucy Show 6; Match Game 1,10; On
Aging 20.
4 IJO-Mr Cartoon 3; 1 Dream of Jeannie 4: SomerMI 15;
Gilligan's Island 6 ; Tattlelal .. B; Sesame St. 20,33; Movltl
"The Lleulenanl Wore Sklrl$" 10; Mike Douglas 13.'
4· 3o-Bewllched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6; Luch Show I;
Bonanza tS.

3

7 Oo-Today 3,4,15, A.M America 6,13, CBS NewjS,tO.
B OQ-Lassie 6. Capt Kangaroo 8, Popeye 10; Sesame St 33

RD No. t

SAYRE HARDWARE

nace, large level lot. Will move

505

6 25-F arm Report 13
6· Jo-F1ve Minutes to L 1ve By 4, News 6 , B1bte Answers 8,
School Scene 10, The Story 13
6 35-Colum bus Today
6 45---Morning Report 3, Farmt i me 10

FOREST RUN
BLOCK CO.

The name to remember for jobs you'd like to forget.

well, out cellar, shop. barn and

WEDNESDAY , MARCHS, 1975

' '

BEF8 RE HE
$ OVEJ&lt;

HAIJ

IN·SINK·E~I OR~

3 nice lots for only $10,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT-3 bedrooms,
bath , lots of paoeling and
ceiling tile. Natural gas, fur-

WE HAVE HOUSES, FARMS,
LOTS, AND SEVERAL
BUSINESSES. FOR A REAL
DEAL CALL '1'12·3325.

":" HEIK HAJI Hr\-::&gt; ...::AL.. LEr

A IGS THAT
MAKES FQl.KS

NEW LISTING--4 bedrooms,
bath, furnace heat, drilled

apartments .
w 1ll pay for

HOU!l5

Hf I\ ILL PAY DEAR' LY

us.ooa,YouR

BUILDING SITES

soon . Reduced to $8,500.00.
BUSINESS BUILDING -

IT WILL T·'\KE

10 1'!-"I~F. ..;;p , H M -=-1•,\1
~ 1&lt;('1\\ T HE' ,\ \ O,.. !EVL (:Nf'EC ::&gt; 11\.1 rl i' E N

3-29-tfc

FOOD'S
HIGH
AND
GETTING HIGHER

., I
••

CAPTAIN EASY

. serv1ce. all makes, 992 228~
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy ,
Authorized Singer Sales and
Serv1ce We sharpen Scissors

' 608 E.
MAIN
.PQO&lt;•E RQ'f...._ C'

Adam 12 3, 4, 15, Hnppy Days 6, i 3, Good T 1m es 8, 10,
Ame n ca 20,33
.
JO-M ov 1e ' The Last Survivor s" J,J4, 15. Movte " Tr~logy of
Ter ror 6, 13. M-A 5 H 8, 10, A scent of Man 20.33
9 oo-Peop le ' s C ho1ce Awards 8,1 0
9 JQ-Wo mnn 20 . W1tn ess to Y es terday 33
10 00- Poltce Stor y 3,4, 1:,, Marc u s Welby , M u 6, 13, N ews 20.
Inter l ace 33
10 36-- Your Future I s now 20. A ss1gnmenl Amenca 33
11 00.- News 3,4,6 8, 10, 13, IS, News 33
I I J()--Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 . W1de World My stery " N1c k and
N ora '', IJ FBI 6, Banacek 8. Mov1e " Htlda Crane" 10.
Janilkl 33
12 30- W•d e World M ystery 6
I 00 T omorrow 3.4. News 13

a

I
PHONE
J4f-3832 or 143·2667
'
All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

.,

,_

8 00

SEWING MACHINE , Repairs. •

Real Estate For Sale

ACREAGE for sale Wooded
lots at Rock Sprmgs to be
used for res•dent1at home use
only B1ll W1tte, 991 2789 .
2· 11 261C

I 30 Hol lywood Squares J ; Hollywood Squares 4. Wild, Wdd
Worldot Ammai s" 6. Buc k Owens B, New Prtce I s Rtght 10.
To Tell The- Tr uth 13, Spnng Str ee t USA 15, RFO 20 , Marco
Spot tide 33

MiddlepOrt, Ohia 1 2. 1 Mo

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

ALLIS Chalmers tra ctor , good
cond•t•on Phon e 742 5275
3 2 Stc

TUESDAY , MARCH 4, 1975

D&amp;D
OONSTRUCTION

l -17-7Sc

ONE lan execu t.ve type SW 1vel
off1ce cha •r Phone 992 21 64.
Modern Supply
3 4 Jtc

3 2 Jtc
AKC R eg•stered male toy
pood l e Phon e 992 7084
3 4 Jlp

777 Pearl !: ~reet

REGISTERED Hereford
b!JIIs Phone 992 7752
343tp

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

Pels For Sale

For lnfonnation
Call

_ __________ .!.~'- uc Mobile Homes For a e

JU N K autos , complete and
del 1vered to our yard We pick
up auto bod 1es and buy all
kmds of scrap metal s and NEW and used cham saws ,
1ron R1der 's Salvage , St Rt
tillers and mowers
A lso ,
124 . Rt 4, Pom eroy Ol\10 •
repa1rs
498 Locust St ,
Call 992 5468
M •ddleport Phon e 992 3092
10 17 ti c
2 28 26tc
CASH pa1d for all makes and
models of mob• l e ho mes
Pho"e area code 61~ 423 ·9531
4 1 J tfc

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

anv organization , phone 992
3975

HOUSE FOR RENT , 1634
L 1nco1n Hg ts , Pomeroy ,
Phone Pomeroy 99 2 3575 or
GalliPO l iS 446 27 49
'1 2 lfc

Professional
WEDDING
Photography

Water. Electnc, Gas, Sewer
Lines.
installed.
Work
guaranteed.
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucks
L•mestone &amp; Fill Dirt
Com mereta I· Residentill
Construction &amp; Remodel

Television log for easy viewing

MORONS!

'

4 Door , fu lly equipped 1nc a1r, dark red A r eal cream

F OR your ' Oil of Mmk ·
Cosmet, cs Phone BROWN 'S
992 5113
1 7 lfc

ATHEN S F lea Markel at Jr
F&lt;m Bl dg March 2 and 16
Spaces ava•labt e Phone ~93
B460 H•g h ly a~ve rl• se d
2 18 181(

- -- -

.

$2795

1971 MATADOR

Business

-

RETARDED

-

'

heating service and
general sheet metal
works .
Free
Estimates .
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700

Subu rban 3 Sea t . V 8 eng me , au tomat1c trans, power

1 WILL do roofing hca t.ng
r epa 1r plumb1n g and elc c
tr •cal work Phone Cha r les
S•n t la•r 98 S J1 11
3 4 11tp

The Almanac
By United Pr..s International
Today is Wednesday, March
5, the 64th day or 1975 with 301
The said the four young men to follow.
were traveling to Jamaica for
The moon is approaching its
a Scuba-diving vacation and new phase.
. ran out of fuel abool eight
The morning stars are
miles from Sangster In - Mercury and Mars.
ternational Airport here.
The evening stars are
The had flown here from Saturn, Venus and Juptter.
Miami, with a stop at Great
Those born on this date are
lnagua Island
m the under Ute sign of Pisces.
Bahamas, pollee said
American lithographer
Scuba gear was found in Ute James Ives of the Currier and
wreckage, of the plane, which Ives team was born March 5,
exploded alter it crashed into a 1806•.
clrtrus grove just four miles ' On this day in history:
from the center of this north
In I TIO, BriUsh troops killed
roast tourist city.
five civilians in the so-called
The said the pltine had been "Boston Massacre.''
leased from Executive Alt Inc.
In 1!1SJ, the Soviet Union
of Otarleston, W. Va .
announced that premier Josef
stalin had died ·al the age of 73.
In 1966, a BriUsh airliner
crashed mto Japan's Mount
Fuji, killing all 124 persons
aboard.
·
In 1968, an Air France
jetliner hit a mounl&lt;lln top near
Guadaloupe, killing 62.
March lOth at 7 p.m. on
channel 20, sl.atton WOUB out A thought for Ute day : Soviet
of Athens an Adopt a Child Communist leader Josef Stalin
Today Inc. will present a new said, "ill the u .S.s.R., work is
look at adopltan tn Ohio.
the duty of every able-bodied
This prom1ses to be an ex· dtizen, according to the princiceptional program in that ple: He who does not work,
vtewers wtll see actual neither shall he eat."
children available lor adoption.
Bob and Barbara Attenweiler of Athens, Dr. Jim tell ol a new and unique
Harris and Jeannette Walter of program available to those
Gallipolis, and Dennis and wtshmg to adopt. Throughout
Penny Pariseau of Wellston the program the viewer will
will participate in what see the waihng children and
prQmises to be the most mformation on whom to concomplete picture or adoption tact.
presented to date.
Those spectal people who
James Lardie, director of a 'have room "for one more"
special adoption project for should watch and then write to
Lutherans Chtldren 's Atd ACI', P. 0 . Box 563, Wellston ,
Society, will also be on hand to phta 45692.

John Inman of ACf ·offering
USUS coming TV special

2 SIGNS

@)

FLOWER S l or Ea~ t e r BdSkel s.
pots sp rays e tc Phone 985.
353! Smalley s G•lt Shop ,
Ches ter Oh•o
3 J ntc

Students of St. Albans,
Belpre die in Jamaica

'

Notice

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 . Tuesday, March 4, 1!175

-

Auto Sales

3 .\ lip

28,808. and the nwnber &lt;1!
schools will mcreasc caeh year

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Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifi:eds

surQICcll

JOSC&gt;Pil 'S

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8- The Daily Sentmei,Middleporl-Pomeroy, 0. Tuesday, March 4, 1975

·:·:·:·:-:·:;:;:;.:·:'-:~;:.:-:-:·:·:?.x"-:..o:-~:::·:·:·::::::::::::::~::::::::

First round-played Monday
Three games ~ere pial ed m
f1rst round act10n of the 1975
Southern
Ind epe nd en t
Basketball 'lournament that
opened 111 Southern Htgh
School tn Racme Monda)
mght
In
th e
f ~rsl
game
Roseberrl s Pennzml defeated
lmpenal Electnc bl a score of
59-52. Lcadmg scot ers for the
wmners were Roger Dmgy
wttll 29, Dennj• Htll 10, Da ve
Hill 9 Scot ers for the lose• s
were Larry Jushce who led the
team wt!h 18, Ste\e Holley had
14, and Dave Rob!llclle 9
The second con tes t of the
m ght " as won by Jtm s

Campers 74-67

~ tlh

num leading the

E Chap·

1Hl)' ~uth

17

potnts He \\HS followed by
Doxte Wallers WIth 13 and Rtch
Datley and K Goodwm had 12
potnts eac h For S and R

MEIGS THEATRE

C' nns l. 'lCtl on .•Jam Am sbct \

Hatfield ftmshed the mghl w1th

h,1d 14 h Sanders 12 .md R 18 pomt.s
Rtlclue 11
Fn1 F1vc Pomts Gr tll M.u k
The fllnil gaiUP or th e T,u,nchlll led ~ 1lh 16, fo llowc•d
l'Hmng was \\ On by Peoples
bv Stc;c Dtmfce w1lh H
Bank over the Ftve Pomts f.r tll
Tomght 's games wall put
b\ ,, fmal score uf 8~-64 'I op Rutland F"c Dept aga mst
Sl'orcrs fu r Pt•oplcs B,mk were StJ ohs LUJ J,!l 's agou nst the
Ch&lt;~r l es

G.1rn son "' tth 22

Racme Hom e Natwnal Bank ,

pmnts, Bob LewiS and Phtl

and Car ter s Grucer) agamst
Hat.:me Vasta

MC' Mu..tlrns each 19 and Tom

Oarence Anderson, 94, dies

S(

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K!tMRI £~

St :T

H.lrt' snamblcs \\Ill IK·

held Sunday at the Meigs
Ka('C"ay. four mil(ls north of

Pomcro) on Ruulc 33 The
srramiJlcs arc sponsored b)

tht• H. T. C. Forestry Club
and will include classes of

100, 125, 200, 250 aod open
With four trophie ~ to be
a"arded m death elass plus

htgh poml trophy.
Entrrcs will be taken from

10 am to 12 noon \\ilh a
riders meeting at 12 15. The
para de tap "Ill start all2:30
and the racing, lasting about
l"o hours, \\111 begm al 1

RACINE - Clarence Lcrol Ernest Anderson, Gadeon, Mo,
pm
Ande1son, 84 , Rt 2 Racme. I I grandchild ren and two
cited SWltlay mght al Holzer g rea l-grandclnldrcn
Med1ca l Center
Funeral servtces wa ll be
l:hurale to giw
Mr Anderson was born nt!ur Thursday at 1 p m at Ewmg
Dextc1 Apnl 24 , 1890, the son of Fu neral Home w1th Rev
preview cunct&gt;rl
the l,1te James Curtt s and Freeland Norro s offlctalmg
RIO GRAN DE - The R1o
SteUa Turner Andel son His Bunai wtll be 10 Salem Ce nter
Grande
Co1Jege-R10 Grande
Mfe, Ves ta H a l hd&lt;~y Anderson
Cemetery Fnends may call at
Commumty College Grande
d ted 111 1959 He was a lso the fun eral home after 7 p m
Chorale
w1ll prese nt a preview
preceded m de~th by one s1ster th as cvcmng
of
selec
tiOns
lhe} wtll smg at
and one brother
Flonda
's
D!Sneyworld
la ter
Mr Anderson was a rchrcd
thas month for residents of the
state empl oye and a farme r tn
area
Wednesd ay evem ng
the Salem Ccnte1 Cummumty
The
concert wtll be 10 the Rw
He was a membct uf the
Fatr tomght, low 1n the lower
Chn shan Chm r h ,md the St dt
20s Warmer Wednesday, h1gh Grande Dmmg Hall WedG1.mgc
between 40 and 45 Probabtltty nesday , starlmg at 8 15 p m
He IS SW VIVCd by three
of precapa tahon, 10 per ce nt There IS no admtsswn chm gc ,
daughters, Mrs
Harold today, nem zero per ce nt and the concert IS open to the
I Luctll e I WeiSenborn. Maole
tomght and 20 per ceot Wed- public
Grand Chorale wtll perform
Hetghts,
Mrs.
Arnold nesday
at
Dtsneyworld 10 Flonda,
!G ladys! F1sher, Sabma, and
March
14, and wtll g1ve fourMrs
Raymond 1Grace I
ASK TOWED
teen other concerts durmg
Furbee, Racme , one son, Dr
Gary Wayne Lawson, 19, Rl. tlletr 10-day tour
I, Langsvt!le, and AVIS Me·
Clellan , 37, Rt I, Langsvtlle,
SPEEDUP SET
James Carl Pauley, Ill, 2fi, Rt
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
1, Mason, and Joyce Elame Ohio Bureau of Employment
Han son, 24, North Second Ser'vtces reported today 11 had
Street, Middleport, Uoyd Lee h1red about I ,000 extra emNice, 68, Rt 2, Racme, and ployes to ease the load brought
Audra Mildred Keyse. 63, on by mcreasmg JObless clmmRllcme
ants.

Weather

TONIGHT, MI\RCH 4
LI\ST NIGHT
1\MERICI\N GRIIFFITI
{Techmcolor )
Starnng R1 chard Dreyfuss
and Ronn y Howard

I PGI
Colorcartoon .
Valley Forge Hero
Show starts 7· 00 p.m

Our Favorite Word Is

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Early action approved
on Mason water project
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SERVICE

Yes were a ful l Serv tc e

Bank and ready to help yo u w1!h all your ba n k
tng need s fr om pa ssbo ok and cert1f 1ca te sav

mocey orders traveler s c hecks depoSII boxes
loans of all types and fnendl y serv1 ce

DEPOSITS INSURED TO 140,000
Auto Teller Window and Walk-up Window
()pen Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.
When You Visit, Park FREE
PITTSBURGh

.lllbens /4alional B ~
-"'CINCINNA Tl

0~10

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

"THE FRJENDLl' BANK "

F
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R
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w-&amp;

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uo~ \
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New Costume

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HARTFORD, W Va
ReSidents m Hartford may
expect better police orotectwn
followmg actwn taken by town
counc il du nng a reg ul ar
mee tmg m the town hall
Ma yo • Charl es Black
presid ed when reports were
made concermng the grantmg
of hnimc1al assiStance for the
employme nt of a regular town
poli ceman Bruce Dotson of
Rtpl ey, a former m1h tary
service man , was employed to
fill lhts pos1t10n Mayor Black
a nd tow n coun cil obta wed
fund s through the Governor's
Manpower Program to pa}
htm
Also through ac l! on of
counctl a telephone
be
mslalled m the mayor 's offi ce
so that restdents may reach
Dolson m hme of need
Mayor Black and coun cil are
making another attempt to get
fedei a) fman cmg assistance
for town Improvements such .as
for Sidewa lks and str ee ts
through Title X of the Pubhc
Works
and
Economi cs
Developmen t Act The mayor
and recorder have attended
spectal mee ting relal!o g a
' Survey Reporlmg Form" for
federal fmancmg assistance m
!he program.
The Federal Flood Act, no\\
a concern of many rtver towns,
was discussed and a proposal
was made concermng the
fede ral flood msuran ce
program Appltcahon for the
admt llance to the program wtll

"'II

MASON - The World Day of Prayer wtU be held thiS Friday,
March 7th at Mason United Methodist Church at 8 p m. The
theme IS "Become Perfectly One " All denommatiollS are 111vtted.
Mrs. Michael (Brenda ) Merritt IS tlle leader. The Rev.
Clarence McCloud, pastor of Mason Umted Methodist Church
will dehver the sermon
Mrs. J. V. McGrew, president of the Uruted Church Women
of the Bend area, is in charge of the World Day of Prayer here.

Dazzling

Jewelry
Fashions

authority to enforce the orbe made
dmance
The fme earned, w1th
Res1dents m Hartford are
remmded of the town or· vtolatwn of the ordinance, IS
dman ce controlhog dogs al for not less than $5 nor more
large l'he ordmaoce st~t es m than $10 for each offense wtth
part · " It shall tc deemed a 1n or notification to persons
nutsance and shall be unlawful vtolatmg thts ordmance
for any dog to run at large on
In addtlion lo Mayor Black,
any streets, alley or property also present were Gary Fields,
of any other than owner of the recorder; counc1lmen Rupert
dog' ~
How ard, Vernon Gnnstead,
Counctl IS adv1smg lhal tlle Don Ftelds and Arthur
tov.n poltceman w1ll have "Buddy" Gtbbs

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, March3!
Mrs Mark Abel and son,
Homer Angles, Georgia
Bowles, Judy Branham,
Robert Broyles, Helen Burt,
Julta Buller, Ktmber Cox,
James Matthew Dawson, Betty
Jo Dtehl , Ella Eads, Linda
Edwards Terry Ewing, Joseph
Fenderbosch, Dana Halflull
Edward Henry , Mary Howell,'
Joey Jarrell, Rose McQuaid,
Donn a Mullins. Frances
Mundell , Meltssa Nance ,
Salena Ntcholas, Brenda
Pollard , Susan Russell,
Mtldred Westfall
(Birlhl
Mr aod Mrs Thomas Bailes,
a son, Robertsburg, W. Va

HOP SET
RACINE - A sock hop wtll
be held from 9 until m1dmghl
Saturday at the Southern High
School Students are en·
couraged to wear dress datmg
to the 1950s but !he costume ts
Pleasant Valley Hospital
not req111red There w1U be a
DISCHARGED - Robert H dance marathon and contests
Hall, Pomt Pleasant; Mrs. W!lh pnzes to he awarded
Gerald Gtbbs, Mason; Otllo Refreshments
will
be
Wade, Pomt Pleasant; Mrs avatlable. Bob Jones of WMOV
Jeffery Patterson, Point wtll be emcee The public ts
Pleasant, Dav1d Roush, Hart- mvtted
ford; Mrs. Mll'a Amsburgey,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Elsie
R.!Jrdm , Pomt Pleasant; Mrs
EXTENDED FORECAST
Sheldon Durst, Leon; Darrell
Thursday through
Blackwell, Ravenswood; Mrs.
Saturday, cloudy with a
Thomas Parsons, New Haven;
chance of rain or snow
Mrs. Glen Ferrell, CotThursday and a chance of
lagevtUe, and Mrs. Eugene
rain Friday and Saturday.
Cossm
Warming through the period.
Highs will he In the 40s
Thursday and In the 50s
Friday and Saturday.
Overnight lows will be In the
upper 20s or the lower 30s
Continued from page I
early Thursday and in the
market.
lower 40s by early Saturday.
The shenff has arrested and :=::m=?.:.-::::=:~:::::::::::g.'$t;;:-;;:::.~&gt;.~
Jatled Thomas Wells, 75, of 110
Condor Sl , Pomeroy, for
LOC!\L TEMPS
causmg phystca l harm to h1s
Temperature m downtown
w1fe, Irene Wells was arrested Pomeroy today at II a.m. was
at 9 a m today
31 degrees wtth snow fallmg

Wife held

News.

••

in Briefs

Continued from page 1
surgents fired a barrage of rocket and artlllery rounds at
downtown Phnom Penh Mooday'afternoon, killing 17 persons and
wounctmg 17 others.
They said the Khmer Rouge guerrillas, firing from
camouflaged positions on the outskirts of the cap1tal, fired eight
shells at Phnom Penh and seven at nearby Pochentong Airport.
One of the roUilds exploded m front of the Monorom Hotel, killing
at least 10 persons Another rtpped mto a hilltop Buddhist
pagoda, killing seven persons

Continued frun page 1
tlle police department, asked
council II they would consider a
raise for the dispatchers,
statmg the work load ts heavy.
Council agreed there was a lot
of work involved and will take
the Issue to the Finance lll!d
Ordinance conuruttee.
Tom Grueser, a little league
coach m Pomeroy, asked for
Little League Tag Day Aprtl 5,
and Ram-Out Day on the 12th.
He also requested that council
not let teams from other
villages solicit the town before
Pomeroy's little league.
Counctl agreed. Mike Marlm
was granted pemuss10n to hold
tag day for the Babe Ruth
League April 19
Charles Wyatt asked council
for penn1ssion to Widen his
dr! veway on SR 7 in order that
he may put a trailer on his
property . To Widen the
driveway, a porlton of a wall
will have to he removed. The
mayor pointed out that the
State Htghway Department
erected the wall and contact
would have to he made with
them. If the highway department approves Wyatt 1s to
proceed with the project under
superviSion of McKenZie.,
Mrs. Walton reported that a
good grade of cold m1x could 1)e
purchased from Shelly Sands
Co., Martetta, at a cost of $13.80 '
a yard.
Council agreed to have D&amp;D.
Tree Service, Pomeroy,
remove a tree on Union Ave at
a cost of $60.
Council also voted to transfer
$3,000 from the parking meter
fund to street fund .
Bob Jacobs met With councU
m regard to a yellow line
patnted in front of the barbecue
stand on the parking lot. He
sa1d that he parked in the area
to allow additional parking
space, smce he hs already
purchased a parking pemut.
He said he would not pay for
the parking ticket, that th1s
was not his complaml, but
wondered why people could not
park in the area wh1le the
barbecue stand is not in use. It
was JUst a suggestion on the
part of Jacobs. He thought he
was doing the village a favor
parking tn the area and leaving
his parking place for another
motorist.
Attendtng were Mayor
Srmth, Lou Osborne, Manley,
DaviS, Globokar, Werry and
William Snouffer, councibnen,
Mrs. Walton , McKenzie and
Henry Werry.

JUST ARRIVED
MEN'S DEPARTMENT, 1ST FLOOR

Men's Knit Dress Slacks

See our

now

TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY. THURSDAY
MARCH 4-5-6

New Selection Men's Shirts

8:30 TIL 12:30

RON BRINKER
USE OUR LAY AWAY PLAN

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY
STORE
Court St., Pomeroy

Stop in and see the new look men ' s Leisure Jackets and Pants to
match or mix. Make up the combination you like best . Select shirts
in solid colors . smart patterns · polka dots .
.
BUYWHATYOUNEEDNOW

f'or Your Ustening Pleasure
GUITAR&amp; PERCUSSION

The MEIGS INN
Ph. 992-3629

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

l'omeroy

•

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By Bob Hoeffich
"They've got an awful lot of coffee m Braztl," so
the song says
And Marla Vll'gmta Eggers, 17, a nahve of Brazil ,
who is currently altendmg Metgs Htgh School, says
that It 's !rue.
The problem, however, accordmg to Ma na, 1s
that Americans don't know what to do wtth coffee
wliich, she says, IS the best Brazil produces
Maria, who thinks Amertca ts JUSt great, doesn 'l
mean to he crittcal, but she does call the heverage
that Americans dr111k as coffee, "black water"
The difficulty, the South AmeriCan vtstlor clauns,
IS in the brewing. Miss Eggers recommends tllal
mstead of usmg old standby coffee pots, bot! water
for coffee, and then lower the coffee, measured mto
a cloth sack, 111lo the bmling water ThiS makes,
Miss Eggers says, "a good cup of coffee "
A resident of Sao Leopolda, Brazil, Miss Eggers
completed her htgh school educatiOn al Porto
Alegra m 1974 and 1s m Amertca as a part of tlle
Youth for Understand111g Program which IS
headquartered al Ann Arbor, Mtch .
Durmg her stay m Me~gs Colll1ty, Mtss Eggers is
residing with Mr. and Mrs. Dan Meadows and
family, 417 Lincoln St., Middleport
Mrs . Martha Vennar1 , a guidance counselor at
Me~gs High School, was advised of the Youth for

Heating up

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Earrmg s. chams,

destgns

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admtttcd
Sherwood
Meredtth, Pomeroy; Matthew
Van Vranken, Pomeroy ;
Mar gar et Cas to , Mason;
Margaret Hess, Pomeroy
Discharged
Oswell
Durham , Sharon Wnght,
Raym ond Jushs, Johnny
Gould, Gene Thompson,
Beulah Roush, Floyd Bush,
Valanche Pamter Goldte
La&gt;~son, Diana Patterson.

Student visitor from Brazil has
beuer idea how to make coffee

projects to determine If
policies such as "pealt-load"
pricing can help Ohioau
reduce utility bJlls and CQIIo
serve energy resources. -.
-O'eate an Obio EnetV
Development Center to plaot
the state in the forefront .Ia
attracting federal money fGr
energy development. The CliP'
ter also would play a key role II
attracting new energy rela~
industries to Ohio, said Sweet.
Federal Help Avllllable
Carney said llle progr1111
would be introduced In Ieg!Do
tive fonn to the Ohio Generll
Assembly m several weeks.
The program would coot $511
rrullion, Sweet said, with $300
millioo to be provided by the
federal government.
"Governor (James A.)
Rhodes has identified a altical
need for Industrial expansl9,11
as crucial to Ohio's growth,"
srud Sweet . "Industry requirel
energy, and we must move
quickly to ensure that sutftclent energy IS available ~
mamtain current Ohio industry
and also attract new industry
to our state.

Men's Leisure Suits

neck laces,, pen
dants
many
new
elegant

collectton

provements. Sweet said the
energy saving improvements
would reduce utility billa by 20
to 30 per cent, saving $51
million in utility bllls over 10
years and creatmg additiooal
jobs for Ohioans.
- Provide mcentives to all
electrtc home owners to mstall
"energy efficient" equipment
to reduce utility bllls 30 to 40
per cent, create new jooo and
conserve energy resources.
- Build plants to burn solid
waste as an alternative fuelfor
the generation of electrtclty.
Use solar energy to reduce
the healing costs for proposed
state-local government office
buildings in f1ve major Ohio
Cities.
- Launch demonstration

Hartford has fulltime cop

MASON, W Va - Mason 's msuran ce a nd Co un ctlmen
proposed water works Im- Raynes and Roush moved to
provement project may be a parhctpale in the program ll
step closer, although s!tll only was approved
A spectal meeting IS to be
prelimmary aclwn has been
called
later to diScuss the flood
taken
msurance
pr og ram further
Monday otght Counctl ac·
cepled two proposals on the Also last mghl Co unctl agreed
feastbtlity of construction of a to the purchase of a new 12 volt
portable water plllllp for the
150,000 gallon water lank.
Maur1ce Renneker, a con- Water Dept
sul! tn g eng1neer fr om the
LeFeber and Assoc , Limt!ed.
presented the two proposals
that council accepted on a
motton by Lawrence Roush
(Continued from page 2)
seconded by Dayton Raynes.
In other actwn , co un cil colored egg 11181de the basket Both the raw egg and dough were
authonzed Mayor Fred Taylor baked at the same lime So one could almost eat tlle whole thmg
For further information call one of the qualifted ladJes
to submit and s1gn the
necessary forms for the water named above .
Attendmg the dinner meeting were Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Velma
works Improvement project In
Luckeydoo,
Mrs. Manlyn Stadola, Mrs. Clara Wilhams, Mrs
the absence of Mayor Taylor
last mghl, who was 111 , Kennetll BeSSie Ingels, Mrs. U'Jral Alexander, Mrs. Matilda Noble, Mrs
Mary Thabet, Mrs. Charlotte Jenks, Mrs. Lucy Johnson, Mrs.
Reynolds , recorder , preSided
Charles Yeager of Mason DoriS Roberts, Mrs. Laurene Lewis, Mrs. Roberta Young, Mrs
dtscussed with counct! openmg Evelyn Stewarl, Mrs. Joy Foreman, Mrs Lawrence Roi!Sh and
exiStmg streets 111 Mason , and Mrs. J Marshall.
&gt;~as advtsed tllat counctl would
LETART, W. Va.- Cherokee ExtensiOn Homemakers Club
lake the request under study.
met
at the home of Mrs. David Dewhurst Tuesday evening,
Co un cilwoman Charlo tte
Jenks reported a meetmg m February 25th for tllell' regular meeting. Prestdent, Mrs Ollie
Manetta co n ce rmn~ flood Browrung, called the meeting to order and the Salute to the Flag
was giVen. The devotionals were gtven by Mrs. Luther Srruth and
her theme was "Love." The thought for the day - our love is
n~ver known until we giVe 11 away. The devotionals were closed
wtth prayer.
Help Wanted
LA 01 E 5 needed for good pay 1ng
Regular club reports were g.ven. .
temporary off1ce like work
The
Cherokee club members are quilting every Thursday at
about 3 days No exper1 ence
necessary A l so need lad 1es
the home of Mrs. Ollie Browrung The selling of q1111ts IS a money
w1 11'1 car for d e l 1very m
M idd leport
Pomeroy area
makmg proJCCt of the club.
Apply to Mrs ca n er , DAV
Mrs. Davtd Dewhurst, County Chairman of the Citizenship
Ha ll
124 Butternut Ave
Committee, read a letter from Mildred Horner, State
Pome roy 9 to 10 am Tt'IU rS
day March 6
Representative of the Citizenship Comrmttee, rn regards to the
3 4 2tp
Planning Conference at Jackson's Mill April 23-25th.
The secretary annoUilced that anyone having suggestions for
future lessons should call the office or mail suggestions to the
Mason County ExtensiOn Office m Pl. Pleasant
Mrs K. K. Sc1tes taught the club lesson, "Lighting Beautiful
Many New
and Brtght."
Mrs. Oscar Casto IS the lesson leader for March and Mrs
Arrivals Now!
Luther Smith will serve as hostess .,
Refreslunents were served by Mrs. Dewhurst to Mrs Ollie
Browning, Mrs. Oscar Casto, Mrs. Gerald Clark, Mrs. K. K
Scttes, Mrs Luther Smith, Mrs Charles Stone and guests, Mrs
Emma Jane Paugh aod daughter

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By DAVID !lARDING
Department 'or Natural
COLUMBUS 1UP! ) - Dav1d Resources, said the program
Sweet, a member of tll e Public could be implemented imUtilities Comm1ss10n of Ohto, mediately .
srud today he would submit to
The program would create or
tlle stale Emergency Energy save 15,000 energy-related JOOO
U'Jmmisswn a seven-pomt pro- for Ohtoans m the first year,
gram to create or save 800,000 about 100,000 JObs by 1978 and
Jobs for Ohioans, reduce the more than 800,000 jobs by the
cost of utiltty servtce and help end of 10 years, said Sweet.
make the stale ·'energy 111- ~
Proposals Usted
dependent."
l'roposals m the progrann
Sweet, who appeared at a mcluded
news conference wtth slate
-ConstructiOn of coal gasiflRep. Thomas J Carney , D- ca lion factlities to convert
Youngstown, a member of the Ohto's vast coal reserves mto
Energy Emergency Cornnus- clean energy
s10n srud hiS Jl).year proposal
- Provtde low mterest (5 per
wtl! requtre no new taxes and cent)loans for all Ohtoans and
would not create an additional mterest free loans to low mbureaucracy
come and senior cilizens for
Sweet, former director of the ene rgy sav mg home tm-

Marshall news

m gs to chec km g accoun ts c.; asl11er c hec k s

MIDDLEPORT,

Sweet outlines energy-saving plan

~::&lt;:::&gt;~·:·:·:·:·:·:':·:=~:=:·:·:·:·:=:·:······

Understandmg Program but took 1t all a btl hghlly,
never dreammg that any local fam1hes &gt;~ o uld be
mterested m parllctpaling. However, Mrs. Vennart
was adviSed by tlle Meadows ' daughter, ll&gt;-year-&lt;J!d
Ca thy, that her fanuly mdeed was mterested
The Meadows family completed the necessary
forms and M1ss Eggers was selected as thetr
'vts!tmg student" on the basts of mutual mlerests
as shown on the papers completed not only by tlle
Meadows family but also MISs Eggers
All arrangements completed, Marta left Braztl
via plane w1th some 240 young people from her
country on Jan 20. After an overmght sta} m
Detrott, she traveled by way of bus to Col111nbus
where she was met on Jan. 26 by the Meadows
famtly
Marla clearly adores the Meadows family She
calls Mr and Mrs. Meadows "Dad" and "Mom"
She loves the family's way or hie
Elll'olled al Metgs High School where she IS
studying French, Spanish, Amertcan government
and history and art, Marta has found that hfe here
and m Brazil has great contrasts from about every
standpoml.
She ts seen frequently mun chmg a ca ndy bar
, durmg school breaks to tide her over unt1I lunch
' tune She's used to a huge breakfast about 10 every
morning, and can't make her now earlier breakfast

last unltllunch time In Braz1l, she say s, more fresh
foods are cons111ned, particularly fresh frUits which
are eaten after meals as Amertcans eat a dessert
cou rse
Practically' a vegetartan by chotec, Mana just
doesn 'l eat meat She does eat ftsh and one of her
favortle treats IS strawberry Jelly on toast " She
hkes Amencan tce cream and the breads and rolls
which are avatlable Apples are also a great
favorite
In Braztl, MISS Eggers, who IS the daughter of a
medtcal doctor, sa ys she eats approxmtately 10
apples a day
M1ss Eggers IS not fond of hard rock 'n roll mustc
but likes Amertcan entertamers who are a btl more
qutet, such as Roberta Flack and Carol King
She likes American clothes and has spent some
$200 oo clothin g smce her arnva l a httle over a
month ago. In L'O nlr~st to American shops where
clothes are selected from racks, her clothes are
mostly made by a seamstress Clolhmg of young
ladtes 10 Brazil fits "more tightly" than that of
young women m AmertcH Jeans are a "no-no 11 as
far as she IS concerned. Gll'!s of Braztl do like to
keep up on the latest m fashions and makeup,
frequently buymg new clothmg so they 'II be 111 tlle
( Contmued on page 16 1

•

·•.:;:::::::·:·:::·:·:::-»:·:·:·:··· ·:·:::·:·: ,•, ··:·:·:·:·:·:·:•,•' • :·

ews.. in .Briefsli

,,

at

'•'

International
ALGIERS - KUWAIT ANNOUNCED TODAY 1t is
nationalizing all Bntish Petroleum and Gulf Oil property m tlle
country. The National Kuwait Petrolewn Company had already
owned 60 per cent of BP and Gulf operations m Kuwait and the
annoUilcement by Kuwatt Oil Mmtster Abdel Moutaleb Kazuru
completed the takeover.
Between them, BP and Gulf produce 95 per cent of Kuwatt's
annual oU output. The announcement came durmg the sumrrut
meetrng of the Orgamzat10n of Petrolewn Exportmg Countries.

By Uulted Press

I

(.&gt;

I

WASHINGTON - SEEKING 1'Q AVOID charges they are
delaymg tax rebates for 80 rrullion Amertcans, Senate leaders
now appear ready to pass a tax cut biD wtthout an amendment
endlng the oil depletion allowance. The Senate Finance Comrruttee, which was to heg.n hear111gs today on a House-passed
$21.3 billion tax cut btll, voted tentatively Tuesday to drop the
depletion issue until this spring or summer.
Cornnuttee members also mdicated they would add further
cuts to the House bill, whtch grants $8.1 billion in rebates of $100
to $200for ahnost every taxpayer, $8 I billion m tax cuts later this
year and $5.1 billiOn m bi!Smess mvestment mcentives and cuts
BUFFALO, N. Y. - U.S CUSTOMS AGENTS arrested Anne
Randolph Hearst, younger sister of mtssmg newspaper hell'ess
Patricia Hearst, on a rrusdemeanor narcolics charge Tuesday as
she returned from an auto trtp to Canada.
Miss Hearst, 19, was arrested at the Rainbow Bridge m
Niagara Falls, N Y., whUe travelmg with two men . One of the
men, Donald Moffett, 21, of Denver, Colo., also was charged. The
charges were for possession of amphetamines. There have been
numerous unconfirmed' reports in recent weeks that Patr1c1a
Hearst, kidnsp victim-turned-renegade who has been missmg for
more than a year, would attempt to cross the border near the
same location. Authonties would not commenl, however
PHNOM PENH - REBEL GUNNERS CLOSED Phnom
Penh's airport to ctvilian traffic today with 50 rounds of artillery,
rocket and recoilless rtfle f1re , al.l'line sources satd. Military
sources sa1d the shelling killed f1ve persons ahd wounded about
10 others.
The deciSIOn does not affect military traffic or the planes of
the U. S. airlift, whtch land and take off at Pochentong al.l'porl at
the rate of one every eight mmules. Government troops were
ordered to pull out of hesieged Long Vek, 16 miles north of the
capital, because of heavy CommuniSt pressure, the officers said.
BERLIN - LEFTIST KIDNAPERS RELEASED political
leader Peter Lorenz today but hinted at more abducllons to
spring comrades from West German Jails. F1ve freed prisoners
flown to Aden to meet the kidnapers' demands vowed to f1ght
until "a day as beaulHul as today will dawn" for guernllas still 111
jail.
They sent a hand-scrawled note back to West Germany with
Heinrich Albertz, a former West Berlin mayor who volunteered
to go along With the prisoners Monday on the flight to Aden. The
government of Soulll Yemen, a Marxist nation on the ArabJan
Gulf, said the f1ve leftists could slay in Aden only if Lorenz were
set free.
Albertz read the note on televiSIOn as soon as he arnved m
West Berlin, addlng, "Now the kidnapers must, without delay,
redeem their word of honor." Police launched a masstve
manhunt for the ktdnapers as soon as Lorenz was released at
midnight in a small park not far from where he was abducted
seven days ago.

ATLANTA - FORMER ASTRONAUT JOHN GLENN,
newly elected to the U. S. Senate, told GC&lt;Jrgla Democrats
~ Tuesday night the nation has been "over-Watergated" to the
point where few politicians enJOY much public trust. Glenn spoke
to about 1,000 party members who paid $50 each to hear the
freslunan Ohio Democrat dlscuss the party's 1976 prospects over
prime rib and baked potatoes at the annual "Jefferson .Jackson
Day" banquet.
He said the nauon 's recent scandals have hurt the
(Contmued on page 16)

MARIA VIRGINIA EGGERS, right, from Brazil is attending Meigs High School. With her
are, I to r, Cathy Meadows, a Meigs High student, and Mrs. Martha Vennari, guidance counselor Mtss Eggers is a guest at tlle Meadows home during her stay m the Uruted States .

Devoted To Th e
VOL XXVI NO 227

en tine
lntere.~ts

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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

New fire
trucks
approved

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday,
chance ol sno" m northern

counties and rain or snow In
the soulhem part of the stale
on Friday "ith a chance of
sno\\ flurnes m northeastern
areas on Saturday. Fair
Sunday. A cooling trend
dunng the period with highs
Fnday in the mid 40s or the
lower 40s dropping lo highs
m the low or m1d 40s by
Sunday. Overnight lows will
be in the 30s early Friday,
droppmg to the 20s by earl~
Saturday and Sunday.

POINT PLEASANT - An
assistant pruseculmg attorney
was appomted, two beod area
communities wtll recetve new
ftre trucks, and requests for
nursmg home facthties were
heard from a large delega!ton
were a part of Tuesday mght's
mee tmg of the Coun ty CommtssiOn
Davtd Ntbert, a member of
the law ftrm of Dean &amp;
Kmgery, was sworn m as
asstslan t to Don C Kingery,
Mason County Proseculmg
By Mel Cremeans
Alloroey It was explamed m
The Metgs Htgh School
lh1s action that there wtll be no Wreslhn g Team has JUS!
addihonal costs to taxpayers, hn1 s hed the1r rarst season
but tlle addtl!onal offtctal wtll Wlder new head coach Ray
atd m provtdmg "better ser. Goodman and 1t has been a
vtce" to residen ts
very successful season w1th the
Mason and New Haven learn breaking JUSt about every
Volunteer Ftre Departments wrestl mg record the sc hool
Will receive a new tankerhad
pump truck when lhetr
The ftrst rec ord broken IS the
requests were graoled by the fact that the team fmished the
Commtsston. They wtll be year w1th a wmnmg season
purchased at a cost of $37,579 The Marauders hmshed wtth a
each £rom the Amer1can F1re fme 6-3 slate, tlle ftrst Mctgs
Apparatus Company of Battle wresthng squad to wm more
Creek, Mtch Cecil Duncan, matches than tl lost On thetr
Ftre Chief, and Tom Gnnd· way to this wmmng season the
stead, treasurer, of the New team compt!ed 110 &gt;~m s
Haven Volunteer Department aga msl 64 losses Out of th ose
w1th Ross Roush, Mason Ftre 110 w1ns th ere were 69
Chtef, and Howard W. Johnson, Marauder pms whtle the1r
president, diS cussed the opponents managed only 22
project wtth Commisston
pms That perhaps IS the most
A delegation made up of tmpress tve r ecor d set th 1s
semor cittzens from the Pomt year .
Plea s an t , Mason and New
:::::::::::::::::·:;.::::::::::::~·.::::·.:::.•.::::::.:::::::::·:::·::~::
Haven
areas,
wt th
TO MEET LATER
Homemakers Club
The
Committee for the
representatives, asked the
Mentally
Relarded of Meigs
commissiOn to consider nurCounty headed by Mrs.
smg home fac!ltttes for Mason
Harold Sauer will meet at
County Mrs Anna Watkins of
7:30
p.m. Thursday night in
the Fort Randolph Sentor
the
Metgs County Court·
Citizens was appomted to mroom. In an account of the
vesttgale the program for
Monday
mghl meeting of the
agmg lo see what mtghl be
Mctgs
County
Board of
avatlable towa rd such a
Retardation,
It was inprOJect
correctly slated that the
Commissioner Wtlham
meetmg would he held at 7
R.!Jrdm informed the group,
p.m.
(Contmued on page 16 )
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·· :..

oj 'J'Ize

Meigs-Mu,~on

Areu

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1975

PRICE 15'

Fairground building
project given approval
1'he Me~gs County Fatr boatd
Monday mghl voted lo proceed
w1th the constr uctiOn of a new
covered show area on the Rock
Spnogs Fairgrounds
The new structure wtll be 60
by 60 feet and wtll he loca ted

near the present catlle barn on
the hill at the grounds It will
seal about 400 people and can.
be used for a number of events
whtch mtghl he ramed out
without a covered area m
which to be staged Named lo

the cotmmttee for the new
show area were Herman

Carson, chatrm an, Benny
Slawter, David Koblenlz and
Harold Carnahan wtlh officers
Wallace Bradford and Danny
Zirkle to assiSt.

Wrestlers made Meigs records
Meigs also boasts two undefeated wrestlers 10 dual
meet comp ehtwn, MICk Lyons

Mandie Rose
is president
of Jr. board
Mandie Rose of Girls 4-H was
elec ted
preSident
al
orgamzaltonal meetmg of the
Metgs Co unty Juowr Fatr
Board Saturday al the Met gs
Ht gh School Vo-Ag room.
Othet s elected were Jean
Wood, preSident of the AdViso ry Co mmi ttee, v1ce
preSident, Ronme Wood , 4-H
Boys, wtlh Ntck Leonard, vtce
pres 1deot of the Advtsory
Committee; secretary, N1esel
Duval, from FHA , &gt;~tlh
Jan tee Rttchte, secretary of the
Advi s ory Comm it tee,
treasur er , R1 ck Macomber
from F.F A., wtlh Everett
Holcomb , treasure r of th e
AdviSory Commtt!ee, and
publiCity chatrman, Patt}
Dyer fr om Jr. Grange w1th
Maxme Dyer , pubhct! y
chatrman of the Advtsory
Committee
Organtzat1onal
Representa tiOn was discussed The next
meeting will be held Aprtl 2 al
the Metgs High Sehoul Yo-Ag
room at 7 p.m when la st year 's
committees and fa1r books are
to be rev1sed

(16-0) and Jeff Musser (16-1 1
Musser 's only loss came m
tournament competltwn at
Fatrland Lyons becomes the
ftrsl Metgs wresller to remam
undefeated m all matches,
mcludmg toW'naments.
Another record was broken
when an outmanned Fairland
team came to Marauder
Coun try to do battle. The
Dragons fell victim lo a record
settmg number of pms, 9 mall
'!'hiS !ugh number of pms also
help to set another record
whtch was lhc margin of
vtctory, 66-9
These records, especially the
nlllllber of pms, Itt neatly mto
Coa ch Ra y Goodm an 's
philosophy of coachmg wrestho g.
" The best way to wm ts to
pm " The fans who attended
the matches agreed wtlh tlle

wrestlmg "here the boys really
wanted to wm
Th e Marauders are now
prepanng for lhe DIS!nct
Tournament to be held at
Athens Htgh School on Frtday,
March 7 and Sa turday, March
B.

The followmg 1s the record of
the Me1gs Wrestlers for this
season
Meigs 27, Athens 39
Meigs 36, Wahama 27
Meigs 15, Point Pleasant 45
Meigs 18, Point Pleasant 48
lllelgs 38, Logan 27
Meigs 66, Fairland 9
Meigs 52, Wahama 15
Meigs 33, Nelsonville 27
Meigs 78, Ripley 0 !forfeit)
Metgs ftmshed second m the
Fatrland Tournament
Me1gs ftmshed second m the
Nelsonville 1ournameo t
Metgs ftmshed second m the
SEOAL
Tournament
co ach, because they saw

Part of the fmancmg of the
new factli ty IS bemg provided
through the junior fatr The
JUmor fatr will contribute some
$1,800 wh1ch has been ratsed
through livestock sales over
lhe years and the money
turned back over lo the junior
fatr by tlle purchasers Further
help will be needed and anyone
ha ving a con tribution Is asked
to contact the presiden t
Wallace Bradf01 d
It was dectded to send letters
to the three htgh school band
dire ctors in Meigs County ,
askmg them to attend the next
fatr board meeting with the
hope of workmg out arrangements whereby tlle bands of
the county can appear at the
Meigs County Fair on vanous
days m August. Last year for
tlle first lime m many years,
lhe bands were not mvited to
participate at the county fair
Members of Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Pht
Soronty wtll agam sell the
adverttsl ng for the COUll ty fair
premmm book and wtll be m
charge of the gates durmg the
fatr
LOCAL TEMPS
Tempera ture m downtown
Pomeroy Wednesday all! a.m
was 32 degrees under sunny
skies.

Four tractor pulls set
Th e So utheastern OhiO
Trac tor Pullers Assoc1al!on
Tuesday mght scheduled four
tractor pulls lhts year, the ftrst
on May 25 allhe Metgs County
Fatrgrounds ll Will feature,
5,000 lb , 7,000 and 9,000 out-&lt;Jffteld stoc k and 5,000, 7,000 and
9,000 mod lfted stock
_ The next pull wtll be July 4
an d 5, also al the fmrgrounds
Thts pull will feature classes

for 5,000, 7,000, 9,000 and 12,000
lbs out-&lt;Jf-field ~c k ; 5,000 and
9,000 super stock, and 5,000,
7,000 and 9,000 modlfted stock
The fourth pull wtll be Sept
14 and w1ll fea ture the same
classes as the pull May 20
The lhtrd pull wtll be
at the Metgs County Fatr on
Saturday of fatr week. 1'here
has been no decisiOn as to what

classes will be featured.
It was also dectded to give all
new members a hat WhiCh tlas
the club mstgma on tl. Anyone
w1shm g lo JOin the organization
IS welcome to do so
Anyone wlshmg to jom
should attend one of the
mee tmgs whtch are held on the
hrsl Tuesday of every month at
!he Metgs Inn at B p.m.

Plan to reduce precincts from 40 to .28 ignored
By Bob Hoefllch
Recommendation that Meigs U'JUilty's voting precincts be
reduced from 40 to 28 Wllh the resultant savmgs to taxpayers
being an estimated $8,000 annually as made Tuesday night by E.
A. W'mgett, a member of the Meigs County Board of Elections.
1
However, Wingett's recommendations, embodied m 11
motions, died for lack of seconds.
In presenting his recommendation to other board members,
Wingett explained that )le has foUild that the poll workers m the
40 precincts over the past years have done a "good job."
However, he S81d riSmg costs and the fact that few precmcts
comply with state reconunendations that a precmct should vote
from 2$0to 400 votes at an election, led him to study the reduction
In the number of precincts. He stressed these points
-The minlmum pay scale thiS year will be $2 an hour and
nell\ year workers will receive $2.20 an hour. The polls are open
from !3to 18 houn and the rate of pay makes the elections costly.
-Athens County has 69 precincts and votes 22,000 peoples,
Gallia County has only 34 precincts and a greater voter
population and that Jackson county has the same number of
lftdncla as Meip but has one-tllird more voters .
•
-The law, read to bolirdmembers, indicates that the Meigs
County Bi&gt;ard has the sole authority to combine or mcrease
precincts within the county.

- Small precmcts have high costs of about $3 for each vote
cast, he stated. He asked that the nwnber of precmcts be reduced
by 12 in order to provide a better unifomuty m the nwnher of
votes handled by each on an election day. He stated that the Nov
5 election cost $15,893.46 for workers, poD books and other expenses not counting the operation of the county headquarters.
- The Meigs Local School District has 23 precincts and not
one complies With the rrununwn 250 votes recommended by the
state. A special election m areas such as the Me1gs Local School
Dlstrlct IS elltremely costly to the district because of the large
nwnherofprecmcts mvolved and the cost would be considerably
less if some of the precincts were combined.
(The board members reported that Pomeroy Vi!Wge has
sent a request to the board of eiections aaklng that the number of
precincts in the town be reduced from six to four.)
- If 1975 costs correspond to 1974 costs in elections, the
county will spend $15,000 m June and $15,000 in November plus
$12,000 for the operation of the co!Dlty headquarters. "There will
he about 7,700votescast and this will add up to an average cost of
between $5 and $6 a vote," W'mgett said. He stated also that the
budget comnussion has allowed only $29,800 for elections in 1975,
Indicating that a deficit will exiSt.
- There are presently six poll workers, three from each

party, at each precmct - or a tote! of 240 workers for each
election. Under his plan, 28 precmcts reqllll'mg six persons each
would reduce the number of workers to 168. Cutting costs would
reflect also m tbe training sessions which are now reqllll'ed for
poll workers prior to each election. Under Wingett's plan 168
persons would be patd for the,trammg sessions rather than 240.
Wingett told the other board members, who are Leslie F.
Fultz, Bill U'Jzart and Joseph Quivey, that everyone drives an
automobile today and going a little farther to vote would be a
m1110r problem. He also pointed out that anyone 62 or older can
vote at borne very eastly under the election laws whtch were
eased last year .
,
Wmgett offered the foilowmg reduction recommendatiOns m
the various sub-diviSions wtth the figure used mdicatmg largest
vote cast m the precincts as they now funcllon Bedford, two precincts, 401, highest vote, reduce to one
precinct.
Qlester, two precincts, 7&amp;1 largest vote, no change recommended.
ColwnbJa, two prectncts, 2M votes the largest, recommended one precmct.
Lebanon, two precmcts, largest vote 404, recommended one
precmct.
Letart, two precmcts, largest vote, 349, recommended ~ne

.

•

precinct
Olive, three precmcts, largest vote 535, recommend reduce
to two precincts.
Orange, two precincts, largest vote 368, recommend one
precmct
Rutland, two precmcts, 426 largest vote, no change
recommended.
Salem, two precmcts, largest vote 291, reconunend one
precinct.
Sahsbury, three precincts, largest vote 721, recommended
reduced lo two precincts
Sc!p!O, two precincts, largest vote 387, reduce to .one
precinct.
Sutton, two precrncts, largest vote, 584, no change recommended.
Rutland village, 272 largest vote, no change recommended.
R.!Jcme village, one precinct, largest vote 334, no chapge
recommended.
Syracuse Vmage, 3871argest vote, no change recommonded.
Pomeroy village, siX precincts, largest vole 1,208, reduce to
four ~cincts.
Middleport village, largest vote 1,216, reduce the precincts
from f1ve to four.

I'

'

I

/,

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