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10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u ., 'i'hursc1ay, April J, 'mo

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· ·· ELB·ERFELDS I
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TO 8.

Girls ·
Knee Socks

Coordinate·
Sportswear

Rt!!J. 89c to $1.50

··sAL E-

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Sale

Several groups selection from
our spring stock. (Not all sizes
in all styles-colors) .
Misses-Juni&lt;irs-Womens Sizes

Sale 1h Price
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Special group of misses and
half size dresses from our
regular stock.

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Fashion and basic
styles . .

SALE PRICES
Mens $5.95

Another Shipment

WHITE AND SOLID COLORS

112

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FRIDAY~ SATURDAY SALEI

Short Sleeve ·Dress Shirts

KIMBALL PIANOS

-Neck sizes 14 12 to ' 1:1. Solid white and pastel
shades of blue, maize, green. 60 per cent cotton,
40 per cent polyester permanent press. Seven
_ button front.
.
Friday - Sa~"rday Sale
1

price

UNLINED NYLON JACKETS

4

-".BRAS
Choose from seven styles .

2 for '5.00

Sale!

Sale!
Gun Cabinets

SEED ' PACKET~
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

JEANS
Slim sizes 8 to 18
Regular sires 8 to 18
Husky sizes 8 to 18

Reg . 7.50

Sale

Sale '134.25

'
3eans

Sale '164.25
229.00 8 Gun Cabinet-Oak or
Pine

Sale •17'l.75

~~38

39c
29c
J9c
15c

.~le

269.00 10 Gun Cabinet-Maple

Sale '201..75
279.00 10 Gun Cabinet-Oak

$fi.88

Sale •209.25

Reg. 9.50 Jeans

319.00 12 Gun Cabinet-Pine or
Oak

Sale $7.38

COLOR TELEVISION

Sale! Mens 6.95

25" diagonal picture.
Early American maple cabinet.
Reg. $689.95

Blue Denim

Girls

WORK

Sportswear

DUNGAREES

$564.00

Now Only
sale at the Mechanic ,Street Warehouse.
Headquarters for Lawn Boy Mowers.

Special Purchase

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( Sale

CHAIR CUSHION SETS

Avocado· Red· Gold
Foam tufted - corduroy · two piece for regular
chairs and rockers.
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Our entlr; stock
\'of girls 4-6x and
7.' 14 sportswear
is included In
this sale.

Sale •4~88

Chair Pads, Sale '1.88
On sale in the Home

Furnishi~s

Annex

Pants · Skirts
Shirts · Jackets.
Big select ion of
styles
and
colors.

.8 Track-Stereo Tape Sale
Save this weekend on stereo tapes for
car and home. Our entire stock is included.

Sale
Prices

SALE PRICES
Friday and Saturday Sale .

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MEN'S '49;95 DOUBLE KNIT

SPORT COATs·
Sizes 36 to 46 . Regulars and longs. Solid
colors and plaid~. ~ f·ine selection .
·~

Mens Unlined

NYLON· JACKETS
5?lid colors or :;olid color with Fonfrast trim.
Stzes small , medium, large and extra large.

Mens 6. 95 Ny.lortuackets - "·
Mens 5.95 .Nylon Jackets
Mens 4.95 Nylon Jackets

ELBE FELD
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4.50
3.50

Made of sturdy 10 oz.
sanforized·fine weave
blue denim . Sizes 32
to 46 waist · zipper fly
· rule pocket · 2 deep
front swing pockets.
Reinforced at points
of strain. '

Frid~y : Saturday

ss.89
Sale!
Umited Quantity

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MEN'S· SS.19 "LEE"·

.CASUAL
PANTS
Summer . weight
casual slacks -- 65 per
cent ·cotton, 35 per
cent polyester per - .
manent press . .Olive
green · navy blue and
sun tan. Sizes 32 to 50.
Not every size In
every color .
While T~y .Last
Friday- Saturday
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Sate

99

Sale '239.25
· lrd Floor Furniture Dept.

FRin.~Y-SATURDAY
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Sizes 29 to 44 pants · sizes 14'12 to 17'12
shirts . Famous Lee Permanent Press
Tech Twill for easy care and nigged
wear . '
,
Navy - olive green · forest green . sun
tan · charcoal. Good selection of sizes.

D. A. (KID) CANADAY

'Kid' Canaday
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dies at .age 69
Delmar A. "Kid" Canaday·, 69, one of_Pomeroy's
most colorful personalities, died Friday morning at
the Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Canaday had been in failing health the past .
several months ..
Born June 16, 1905 in Gallia County, a son of the
late Naman Rufus and Anna Switzer Canaday, Mr .
Canaday was twice 'mayor of Pomeroy. He was
widely known as "Kid," a nickname he used in the
1920s when he was a well-known boxer in the tristate area. At one time ·he was the welterweight
champion of West Virginia.
Intensely interested in politics up to the national
level, Mr. Canaday not only served as mayor but
also once unsuccessfully sought the post of Tenth
District representative to congress.
During his two tenns as
mayor of Pomeroy, extensive
sewer improvements wer~
made in the areas of Sugar
Run, Naylor's Run arid Monkey
Run· and parking meters were
installed in the business sec-·
lion . He was the inspirational
force in having the upper
parking lot wal,l repaired after
it had caved into the Ohio
River.
Mr. Canaday had owned and
operated
the
Canaday
Chemical . Works in Pomeroy

since 1932 and spent a grea t
deal of his time traveling a
wide area selling his products.
Surviving are hi s wife,
Bertha Bichman Ca naday,
Lincoln Hill Road,"Pomeroy ;
three. daug hters, Mrs . Anna
Marie Chapman, Pomeroy ;
Mrs. June Tinley, Hacienda
Heights, Calif., and Mrs. Carol
Mulvey , Newport Beach,
Calif.; six brothers, Golden,
Northup ; Cassius, Gallipolis ;
Rober t, Rutland; Marshall.
(Continued on page 10)

PRICE 15'

FRIDAY, APRIL 4: 1975
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Syracuse pool funding closer

SAIGON (UP1) - The
Saigon government today
claimed to have cracked the
second plot in a week lor a
coup agalnsl President
Nguyen Van Thleu and
Roman Ca tholics joined in
the increasing clamor that
Thieu step down.
The u: S. Army chief of
staff, Gen. Frederick C.
Weya nd, said he agrees fully

By KATIE CROW
SYRAC USE
Mayor
Herman London Thursday
night announced this town 's
pre-application for swimming
pool funding has been approved.

Syracuse council made "preapplication" for federal funding of· the · project with the
Housing
and
Urba n
Development Dept. (HUD) . It
will now be necessary for
counci l to file final application
by April 15.
Total cost of the project is
$140,000, with the village's
share.to be $28,000. Coun cil will
apply · for $14,000 (half the
cos t of its share ) with the Ohio
Bureau of Outdoor Recreation.
The swimming pool was one
of fo.ur projects in the Buckeye
Hills District approved. The
other local pre -a pplication
approved was that of the se nior

forces.
There were in creasing
signs that Tbieu, with fuU U.
S. backing, intended to fight
aUattempts to force him out
of office.
·
Public dislrust in his
leader Ship continued in
Saigon. Riot police fired
shots into the air to break up
a '' demonstration Thur.sday
night by · 200 Roman
, Catholi cs calling for Thieu's

Syracuse under\ the Flood counci l and offered two fir
Protec tion Act. Mee ting with . trees that are located on his
council on that problem were property to be placed on the
Carroll Norr is and Jim Titus. town park area. Council agreed
Councilmen said they · have they would add to the park and
no alternative but to adopt the plan ned to work out a way to ·
plan . The deadline for adoption remove them and• place them
is July 1.
at the park.
Without adoption, property
Hubbard also asked counci l
owners in flood prone areas about tearing down a house and
would be unable to borrow &gt; old building located on the
money fro~ any lending in- Putts properly, College Road,
stitulion to build homes or add that is heirs hip proper ty .
to a present home .
Council agreed that .this should
Oris Hubbard also met with be done and ·mentioned other

old houses that must be razed .
Coun cilman Eber Picke~s
said 1,000 trees have arrived
and some have been planted
along the old dump area . The
rest are to be planted at the
park area.
·
Co un ci l ·voted to amend
Ordinanc4\ 24, Section Two to
change the speed limit signs on
village streets fr om 20 to 2!i
miles per hour .
Council plans to begin ordering materials for the ball
field. Federal funding of the

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park pro ject was approved
earlier. The cost of the project
is $12,500 with the village to
provide half of the cost or
$6,250.
The meeting was opened
with prayer by Rev . Howard
Black.
Attending were Mayor
London, Troy
Zwill,ing,
Pickens, Ed Neutzling and
Robert Winge tt, councilmen,
Milton Varian, police chief,
Norris, Titus, Hubbard and
Kathryn crow, clerk.

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In other business, council
approved two 'readings of an ·
ordinance that will include

"' ouster.
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Thien blames
the Americans
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SAIGON (UPil- President Nguyen Van Thieu
said tonight the· South Vietnamese cabinet has
resigned and a new government is being formed .
Thieu ann9unced the resignation of Prime Minister
Tran Thien Khiem a nd the cabil)et in a more than
hour-long address to his bealeagured nation in
which he blamed America for his trouble.
Nguyen Ba Can, chairman of the South Vietnamese National Assembly, has agreed to form the
:,
new government, Thie,u said.
"The Communists cannot possibly fight against
our determination," Thieu declared . Can, considered one of the most astute J)oliticians in Saigon ,
has been chairman of the assembly since the latest
congressional elections in 1972.
Thieu said: "The American

people as well as tbe American
Congress must see now that
they have got to do something
for the people of South Vietnam

9.98 Pants - - - - - • • • Sale 7.89
8.98 Long Sleeve Shirts Sale 6.89
7.98 Short Sleeve Shirts Sale 5.89

LEE

MEN'S ·COVERALLS

Construction of the new branch bank of the Pomeroy
National Bank is underway in Tuppers Plains. The new
facility will contain an office, tellers' counter, a night

depository, a drive-up window, a lobby and restroom
facilities. Completion date wiil be about June I. Construction
is by Leonard Erwin.

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EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday through Tuesday,

chance of showers Monday
and Tuesday. Highs will be
in the upper 40s and lower
50s Sunday and 50s Monday
and Tuesday. Lows wil.l be in
the 30s.

$75,000 given

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College has received a $75,000
con tribution, the income from
which is to be .used for the
::::::;:::::,:,:::::::::::::::::::::::::,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::•:•:•: reha bilita tion and mainl&lt;!nance of f\llen Hall, an admin istrative and c la~s r oom
building at the college.

Weather

· Clear tonight, lows in low 20s.
wa rm er Saturday,
Cloudy,
to keep from earning the label
high
s
in
the upper 40s.
of traitors.''
He said that with reduced Probability of precipitation 10
U.S. military aid it was clearly per cent today, near zero
impossible for 'South 'Vietnam tonight and Saturday. '
to · maintain control of the
entire country .
"We might ·say that the
SQUAD RUNS
direct battlefield situation
Emergency Squad
Pomeroy
which recently occurred came,
made
one
run
today. At -12:56
of course, through weakness/'
'lbieu said. "But you also hav~ a.m. the squad went to the
to admit that the spirit of the Herb Mcintire residence on
people of South Vietnam has Eagle Ridge where they tran sbeen · underinined for more ported Marilyn Harper to
than a year since they saw the Veterans Memorial. She was
admitted as a medical patiept.
(Continued on page 10)

col~ege

The gift was made recently
by Mrs. Esther Greer of Mianii
Beach, Fla., who is the former
Esther Bradbury, a native of
Middleport, Ohio. Mrs. Greer,
who is a member of the Rio
Grande College lioard of .
Trus tees, and her late

Sidewalk sale set
Plans for a sidewalk sale to
be held in the business sec tion
all. day · Saturday. April 12,
were comple ted by the Mid·
dleporl Chamber of Commerce
following a lunch~on Thursday
aH~r n oon
a t the Martin
Restaurant.
Da n
Thompso n
With
presiding in the absence of
Pre sident Don Wil son, the
chamber, acti ng upon the
reques t of the Middleport
Planning Commission, agreed
to pay $300 toward the main-

l&lt;!nance of the Leading Creek
Marina .

The group discussed addi lions to the Christmas
lighting, membership policies,
and of a letter from the Nolan
Amuseme nt Co. in regard to
the pussibili ties of a summer
festival. The chamber will
secure more information from
the company.
Meeting times were changed
from the second Thursday to
the first Thursday of each
month at · 12:30 p.m . at the
Marlin Restaurant.

husband, Don Allen, built Allen
Hall in 1958 in me111ory oi his
pare nts, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Allen of Rio Grande.
Plans are already beihg
made for the rehabilitation of
the building including plumbing repairs , painting and
car peting. Ray ·Roberts ,
director of facilities, has
placed the building on a repair
and m_aintenan ce schedule and
has had consultants inspect the
· structure and recommend a
P.ainting schedule.
Painting of the offices is to
begin immediately, and new
carpet for the halls is to be
instaUed this spring .
Dr. Alphus R. Christensen,
president of the college, said :
"Mrs. Greer has beerl one of
. the coUege's .best supporters
over the years. and we are
thankful we have friends like
this who continue to remember
us."

I' Sizes 36 to 50. Easy action back . double

action zipper. Exceptionally well made .
18.98 Grev Fi~her Stripe

Sale •1·4.99
17.98 Green Herringbone
Sale •13.99
Mens and Young Mens Wra~ler

Denim
Dungarees

$8.95 ~ Biue

10 oz. denim · four patch pockets . flare
leg. Zipper or button· fly .
.
_Sizes 29
length.

to 38 waist. Choose your correct
k
·
Friday - Saturday

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MEN'S ·LEE
WORK UNIFORMS

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Clamor grows
against Thieu

the South Vietnamese armed

219.00 8 _(;.un Cabinet-Maple

Reg. 8. 95 Jeans

RCA Special

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179.00 7 Gun Cabinet-Pine

enttne

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despite massive setbac ks to

hardwood sol ids and veneers. Your
choice of Oak · Pine . Ma~le. All
have hinged glass doors that lock
and doors or drawer at bottom for
storage that also lock.
Barrel rack and stock pits lined with
green felt .

Extra durable 14 oz.
plus denim. Flare leg
· lru.e western style.

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with Thieu's military efforts

7 Gun · 8 Gun · 10 Gun · 12 Gun. Select

. Reg. 7.95 Jeans

Beg selection of flowers and vegetables .
soc Seed Packets - - . - . .
l5c Seed Packets · - . . - .
3,9c Seed Packet · - . · · 25c Seed Packets · - . .. · Housewares Dept., First Floor

BLUE DENIM

Sale $5.88

. Flower and-Vegetable

•1.00

pairs

NO. 249

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WHILE THEY LAST

'3.50

SAVE NOW ON

"Silver Saver''

VOL. XXVl

(DISCONTINUED COLORS)

Sizes 8 to 18. Solid colors with contrast trim .
Concealed zip in hood . snap front . drawstring
bottom.
Friday · Saturday Sale

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Devoted To The Interests of' The Meigs-Mason&lt;-A rea

Pantyhose ~

Women's

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SALE PRICES

BOYS 'WRANGLER"

·Best.f orm

Earlier this week, U.S. AID officials refused to allow the sa me
The first airlift of 52 orphans to the United States arrlwdSAIGON' (UP!) - · A U.S. Air Force C5A Galaxy transport
plunged 'to earth in a swampy area juSt outside the base. HopThursday in San Francisco aboord a privately owned World
plane carrying 3115 persons, most of tl!em Vietnamese war orlured fuel tanks burst into flames, sending up towers of smoke group of orphans to bo.ard a World Airways charter plane
Airways DC8 to a country tOuched by the plight of the milllons of ·
because they fell it was unsafe to fly with the youngsters
phans bourid for the United States on the first flight of President
that ruuld be seen in Saigon, six or seven miles away.
.
refugees fleeing a Communist offensive. Adoption agencies
. Ford's emergency Operation Battfiift, crashed and burned here
The C5A was bound for its first stop at Clark Air Force Base in strapped Ill the floo~ .
It was the first crash of a passenger plane at Tan Son Nhut, ~ throughout the nation were swamped· with requests ftr Viet..
· ' today while attempting an emergency landing.
.
the Philippines and President Ford had .Planned to greet pernitmese children..
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· which-at the height of the Vietnam War was one of the world 's
At least 178 of those aboard the mercy flight were killed; the
B&lt;maHy the ~phans when they arrived in California'.
Thursday, President Ford announced he was eannarking a
U.S. Embassy sa'ld. Embassy' spokesmen said at least 100
The· crash sent a wave of shock through the United States busiest airp&lt;irts~
·
special t2 million fund to fly out 2,000 j)l'phans by military air,children and 15 to 20 adults survived the first crash of the world's
where hundreds of families were awaiting to adopt the 2,000
The area of the c~ash was partially controlled by the VietCong
craft. Today's crash-the first involving a C5A-was the first
largest plane.
orphaqs to be brought there on the military airlift. A White House but there was no indication the C5A had been shot dow n. lniti ~ l
flight of the plan called "Operation Babylift ."
The embassy said the plane carried 243 orphans ranging in age . "aide, awakened at the presidential quarters at Palm Springs, reports said the plane had reac hed an a ltitude of 37,000 feet when
U.S. officials in Washington said they were dismayed by news
from 8 months to 12 years, most of them fathered by U.S. ser- Ca lif., described the crash as "unbelievable aJjd shocking."
the cargo door on tbe plane blew off'-a similar type of incident
of
the crash but there were no plans to discontinue tbe flights.
vicemen fonnerly stationed in South Vietnam. The embassy said
South Vietn~ mese troops quickly sea led off the crash site, an
which caused the crash of a Turkish DC10 near Paris on March 3,
It
was the second incident of the day involving OrPhan flights. A
there also were 44 U.S. Mission escorts, 16 Air Force crewmen area near the Saigon River which is under partial Communist
1974, killing 345 persons in history's..worsl air disaster.
Pan
American World Airways plane with 34 orphans aboard was
control. The Plane was a m1le and a half from the airport when-it
and two flight nurses. (The Pentagon said 10 medics and nurses
The C5A immediately lost pressuriza tion, and the pilot tried to
from the Phillipines were aboard).
fell.
·
return to Saigon. About a mile-and-a-half short of the airfield the grounded today in Guam b~ mechanical difficulties.
Military sources said the area of the crash site of the C5A was
The plane was 40 tO 60 miles out of Saigon when a rear cargo
Many of the dead were children who had been strapped to th'e plane smacked into some muddy rice paddies and skipped acToss ·
door blew out from unknown causes, the embassy said . This . floor of the transport , which arrived here earlier today from the
like a flat rock on a pond. Pentagon officials said fire apparently 50 per cerit controlled by the Communist VietCong and there had
been fighting in the area only Thursday night. Troops were
· damaged the Galaxy's elevators as the plane flew at 31,000 feet.
Philippines carrying artillery pieces and ammunition for hard- broke out in a wing when a fuel ta nk rupttlred on impact.
rushed
to the scene to secure the area as-'llelicopters ferried out
The pilot, Maj. Dennis Traynor, turned back toward Tan Son
presse&lt;tSouth Vietnamese troops struggling against Communist ·
The huge clouds of billowing black smoke could be seen in
· ·
· Nhut airbase but was unable to control the rate of descent and forces' near the city .
(Continued on page 10)
Saigon , seven miles away .

A brand new selection and all at sale prices .
Friday ·and Saturday. Maple · Walnut · Cherry
and Pecan finishes. Stop in ...:... buy the one you ·
want this weekend and save.
·

Boys $4.95

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HANDBAGS

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SH.O P FRIDAY AND SA
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FATRE&amp;80N TEAM- Hlnk Cleland, scoutrnasll!l' pf Pomen.y Troop 249, and his SOil,
Hank will participate In the ''hike-bike" to be held Apr. 19 to raise funds for tbe retarded of
C~ty. Hikers or :riders of any nbn-motorlzed vehicle, including horses, are' invited on
the trip which Will be about Z5 miles. Sponsors of hikers of bikers will make a contribution to
the retarded program of the Meigs Chapter of the Ohio ASS&lt;JCiation for Retarded Adults and
Children. Any SJXlllSOr or hike-bik~ entrant shouid call Mrs. Jessie Might,' 742-4055; Hank .
Cleland, 911$-4209, or Mrs . Hugh Roush, 992-3232.
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transport jets.
United. Press International
All the orphans were quickly spoken for .
The crash of a planeload of war OrPhans near
The
American response developed sponSaigon today stunned a nation 'Preparing a
taneously
Thursday and through the night.
joyous welcome and new homes for the homeless
Families
and
couples besiege'&lt;! Vietnamese
children of Vietnam.
rescue and relief organizations with requests to
"It's the most horrible thing that ·could. hapadopt
a child.
. pen," said Cheryl Markso of ~ Friends of
''My
God. I'm stunned. . What a horrible
. Children of Vietnam, sobbing uncontrollably. " It
tragedy
,"
said the Rev . Robert Charlebois of the doesn't matter whose kids died."
. }.
Catholic
Relief
Services in New York City.
Miss MarksOn's group, based in De~ver, is in
lie was on his way' to morning
Charlebois
said
charge of placing the orPhans with U.S. families
mass and would pray "to those who died in the
· through other adoption agencies.
crash
and that the others get out."
A White House aide awakened at the
He
said
hi~ agency has been swamped with
presidential quarters in Palm Springs, Cal\[.,
requests
to
adopt the Vietnamese OrPhans and
and told of .the crash described it as "unwould·
continue
.its efforts ctespite the tragedy.
believable and shocking."
"We · do God's work in spite of man's
It· was no! immediately known if President
he said.
·
tragedies,"
Ford was awakened or if.the crash would halt or
·
"At
least
two
families
in
our
area
were waiting
delay plans to airlift the rest of an estimated
for
children,"
said
Patricia
Santos
of
the Friends
2,000 children to the United States.
of
Cl)ildren
support
group
in
Little
Compton,
R.I.
Huridreds of Americans had asked to adopt
"We
don't
know
ir'their
children
were
on
the
Vietnamese children soon after President Ford .
plane that crashed. We have not yet told the
announeed Thursday the United States would
families
involv~ ." ·
airlift the orphans on giant U.S. Air Force C5A

In Vienna, Va., more than 400 families fonned
the Emergency Committee to Save the Babies
and offere9 to take in children.
The California Department of Health adopted
emer gency regulations cutting the time
necessary to adopt a foreign child from six
months·to one 'week.
.
Michigan waived all adoption requirements to
permit immediate entry of Vietname!"' orphans;
The first planeload of OrPlliliS had arrived
safely in.San Francisco Wednesday night aboard
a World Airways jetliner, a private airline flying
on contract to tbe U.S. government in Vietnam,
That plane carried 60· Vietnamese children,
who were processed in at. an Army post and then
dispatched to various families around the
country, arriving at final desti.nations Tllirsday
night and early today.
. New adoption offers poured in _to the service
organi!BliOil!l active in the relief effort. IAiuiae
Cooper of the Miami Catholic Service Bureau
said, "The- attitude seems to be, 'Oh my God,
the.epoorchldren, somebody has to take care of
them ."'
·

�I
'

.

,_._xhibition·-season ends Sunday,

More to '
become
jobless

197f&gt;.76 WAHAMA KEYETTE OFFICERS - The
Keyettes have been an extremely busy orgamzallon at
Wallama H1gh School Besides electmg its new off1cers they
have been preparmg to go to the .State Keyette Convention

,

held at Pipestem State Park Pictured from left to nght are
Robm Stewart, semor board member , Cheryl Huber,
secretary, Carolyn Rickard, v1ce president, Cindy Grmstead, president , Mmdy Rames, treasurer and Pam Burton,
JUruor board member

Navy in Asian waters stand. by
to help 'refugees as necessary
PALM SPRINGS, CALIF President Ford has ordered all
available Navy sh ips to stand
by near South V1etnam to
ass1st refugees if necessary
He also set m motwn an
rurlift of 2,000 South VIetnamese orphans to the Umted
States
Ford announced the actions
m a news conference m San
D1ego Thursday and later
returned to Palm Sprmgs to
meet w1th Secretary of State
Henry Kissmger
Officials m Washington sa1d
the sh1ps would be av31lable for
vanous con tmgenc1es mcluding evacuation of 5,000 to
10,000 Amencans and tens of
thousands of South VIetnamese
wbo have worked closely w1th
Amencans, should t hat
become necessary
They stressed that no such

are m the process of bemg would not have been m danger
adopted by American fanmlies But when I see us not carrymg
The Pres1dent told his news through , then 11 raiSes a qmte
conference he w11l ask different questwn "
Congress
for
more
D1d he mean the AmeriCan
"humailltanan" a1d for South hves •were wasted, he was
V1etnam, w11l press his pendmg asked
request for $300 m nmhtary a1d
Ford looked down and then
and may ask for still more qu1ckly retracted any such
nmlitary rud Congress returns ~rnphcahon , saymg " I -1 still
from vacatwn Monday
think there IS an opportumty to
salvage
situation m VIetnam,
Ford assured alhes the
Umted States mtends to keep and if we sa~vage 11 .. there
1ts comrmtments around the was not a sai;nf•ce that was
10a ppropr1ate or unw1se
world
"At the moment I do not
He sa1d a "urnlateral deciSIOn" by South VIetnam 's antiCipate the fall of South
President Nguyen Van Th1eu to V1etnam," Ford sa1d
lndochma dommated the
pull , forces back closer to
nam."
The orphan a1rlift was bemg Sa1gon led to the loss of news conference, but Ford had
flown by g1ant C5A and other temtory to the Communists these commen ts on other
military transport planes from Earlier, Ford told a group of SUbjeCts
- The recesswn w11l begm to
the Phtllppmes and patd for out broadcasters Thien's act10n
get
better by late sunmner, but
was
"
poorly
planned
and
of a $2 nmlhon fore1gn · a1d
meantime
there will be a
chlldrens' fund All the orphans unnecessary "
1
'discouragmg"
rtse m unem
Ford sa1d tl)e 55,000 U S
lives lost there were not wasted ployment
- He will campa1gn for the
"proVIdmg the Umted States
has earned out the solemn presidency m 1976, primarily
comrmtments" -10cluding a1d backmg GOP candidates for
- which 11 made when the other offices who agree w1th
his economic policy
peace accords were signed
- He has seen no eVIdence to
"If we had camed out the
COIJIITIItments that were made dispute the conclusiOn of the
at that time, the trag1c Warren CommiSSion, of which
WINNING NUMBERS
sacrifices that were made by he was a member, that Lee
303 m any box wms 20
many, those who were killed, Harvey Oswald alone killed
262 and 611 In green and · those who were wounded, former President Kennedy
blue wms $500.
262 and 611 In blue box.
es wins $1,000
262 and 611 in green boxes
eligible for $300,000 drawing
and automahcally wms
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
In the apphcallon, f•led
$15,000
Pubhc Utlhties CommiSsiOn of November6, 1974, the company
OhiO Thursday turned down a sought to mcrease the charge
request by the Oh10 Bell for a com call from 10 cents to
CLINIC Ttl OPEN
Telephone
Company for early 20- cents, to charge for all
The Veterans ))lem~•al
consideration
of a $74 million directory ass1stance calls exHospital Speech and Hearmg
Chmc 1s opemng aga10 th1s mcrease and d•sm1ssed the cept for three per month, to
Saturday, Apnl 5, a t the case
replace flat busmess rates w1th
In a deciSion s1gned by charges based on usage, and to
Pomeroy Elementary School
and w11l be open from 9 a m CommiSSIOners Sally W 10crease the charges for serun hi 12 All those persons Bloomfield and Dav1d C VIce connections
prevwusly scheduled should Sweet, the commiSSion s31d 11
The comm1ss10n noted that
attend at their reg ular lime would not be fair to cons1der while 1! views usage and costunless nohfled otherwise by Oh1o Bell's request ahead of senslllve pncmg pohc1es as
Mrs Sus1e He10es, speech and apphcatwns llihJCh were "extremely desirable" 11 would
hear10g coordmator. Anyone pend10g at the tune of Ohw req10re a radical departure
from long -standmg PUCO
mteres ted m diagnostic teshng Bell's apphcatlon
Ohw Bell sa1d the PUCO pracllce to consider Ohio Bell's
should contact Mrs Hemes at
refusal "threatens" continued request ahead of apphcations
98[&gt;.4163
good serVIce to customers
pendmg at the lime the
"The only reason we asked telephone company hied 1ts
for prompt action on a portion application
of our rate request was to
The conmnmiSSion also noted
SALE PLANNED
A bake sale w1ll be held m asssure that our customers that Oh10 Bell has an applicaconJuncllon w1th a rummage contmue to rece1ve gond tele- llon pendmg wh1ch requests an
sale Saturday, &gt;1-pnl 5, phone serv1ce," sa1d Ohio Bell increase totalmg $216 mlllion a
year, and that the matters
begmmng at 9 a m m the President Fred Eckley
"That's why I am shocked ra1sed m the case which was
bu1ldmg next to The Steamboat
Inn 10 Rac10e The sales are that the commissiOn d1d not turned down will be considered
sponsored by Syracuse Boy agree to expedite the request when the comnmsswn decides
and dismayed that 11 took five the $216 nmllwn rf_911.CSt.
Scout Troop 242
months to dec1de only that we
No date t!;J.&amp; yet ¥en set for
have to wa1t m line regardless public nearmgs on the $216
of the ments of our apphca- mdhon request
mass evacuallon has, been
ordered Four US Navy ships
and nme vessels under U S
contract are now m the area,
picking up t/lose refugess put to
sea m small boats
additiOnal
sh1ps
The
probably w1ll mclude two
rurcraft carriers, OffiCials said
In his news conference, Ford
did oot say exactly what their
miSSIOn lS "l have directed all
available naval sh1ps to stand
off lndochma to do whatever IS
necessary to assiSt," he sa1d
But Ford SBid "there are no
plans whatsoever for US
m1htary mvolvement m VIet-

One ticket, a gift, is

lucky $300,000 winner
CLEVELAN D (UPI J- ' I
came m here JUSt to ptck up
$15,000," satd James Macart.
ney, 55, Loram, " but I'll be
picking up money for the next
20 years "
Macartney, a toll gate superVIsor for the Ohio Turnpike at
the Loram-Eiyna eXJt, Thursday became the Ohio lottery's
most recent $300,000 wmner.
"It feels great because my
family IS so happy," Macartney SBid "It probably hasn't
sunk mto me yet "
Macartney sa1d he got his
ticket "free from a gas stabon
which g1ves one tiCket w1th
each f1ll-up "
"I don 't know how I w1ll
spend the money ," he sa1d
The weekly $30,000 winner
was Jack F Manne of Canton.
The week's $15,000 wmners
were Steven E Aller, Columbus, Anme Diamond, RIChmond, Ind , and Thomas L
Gondwm , Toledo
Tins week's wmmng ownhers m the Ohio lottery were
Number 303 (three-zerothree ) many box on hcket w1ns
$20

Numbers 262 (two-siX-two)
and 611 (SIXo{)ne-&lt;me ) m green
and blue wms $500
Numbers 262 and 611 m blue
boxes wms $1,000
Numbers 262 and 611 m green
boxes ehg1 ble for $300,000
drawmg and automatically
"ms $15,000

'

Bell loses

DR. LAMB

tion ."

T~e cook adds too much salt.

hearings
on Monday
State Senator W1lham F
Bowen (D-Cmcmnah ) sa1d
Wednesday hearmgs have been
scheduled on h1s proposed
Senate B1ll 71 for Monday,
Apnl 7, m Senate Hearmg
Room " 0 11 , Sta tehouse,
Columbus, OhiO, begmnmg at 8
P m
Senate Bill 71 would prov1de
for free restroom fac1h lies m
locahons wh1ch also have pay
faCJhlles
In
makmg
h1s
an·
nouncement, Senate Bowen
commented ' It IS most
gralifymg
to
mtroduce
leg•slatwn wh1ch seems to
ehc1l support from such a
broad base Probably the most
s•gmf1cen t response came
from the Federation of Ladles
Under Severe HandiCap
(FLUSH), wh1ch sent me the
followmg poem ,"

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Ed1tor

I

' I

volume cooking when a leclpe
IS 10creased, salt should be
used w1th restramt
•We don't want to hurt
anyone We thmk a med1cal
oplnJOn will gu1de our cook She
•
IS young enough to learn anu1
w11l_ be happ1er knowmg she
can make a beneficial contnbul1on to our health
DEAR READER-You have
a good pomt l11s always easy
to add salt but Impossible to
take 11 out
Many author11les believe too
much salt m the d•et may
contribute to the development
of high blood pressure. It 1s
probably w1se even for young
people to go easy on salt
When the bOdy 1s healthy and
a person dnnks plenty of water
the excess salt 1s s1mply
elimiOaled through the k1dneys A number of med1cal
problems, though , cause the
body to retam salt This leads
to an accurnulallon of water
and can be qmle ser11111s
Women may have salt•reten{

liOn a nd retam fluid 10
response to the1r normal
menstrual cycle Estrogen
sbmulates salt retenhon Birth
control pills have the same
effect and so do the hormones
used after the menopause
When lh1s 1s fa1rly marked,
women need to take p1lls to
cause the kidneys to ehmmate
salt and flmd to reheve the
problem
Progressmg along the way,
anyone who has heart disease
w1th heart failure or reqmrmg
d1g1tahs may have a tendency
to retam salt The flmd that
m1ght accumulate m th1s case
can cause real problems by
literally f1llmg the lungs w1th
flmd and affecting the
breathmg. Cons1dermg the
, frequency of heart disease 10
older ' people, th1s is e very
Important cons1deratwn
· Both hver disease and kidney
disease may cause a retent wn
of salt and, hence, water
These colldlliDns that ca use

•

fluid retenhon can progress to
cause mar~ed sweUmg of the
liver, abdomen, feet, ankles
and flmd m the rungs In short,
the salt retenbon tends to
defeat lhe doctor 's efforts to
prevent these comphcabons
In all, there ISs1mpiy no gond
sound medical reason to add
salt to food for a populatiOn
that has many people w1th
med1cal problems For those
who are healthy and have no
problems there IS always the
salt shaker The rest would
certamly be health1er 1f they
could avo1d the bad effects of
salt m the1r d1et
Send your questwns to Dr
Lamb, 1n ca re of th1s
newspaper, P 0 Box 1551,
RadiO C1ty S!,ahon, New York,
N Y 10019 For a copy of Dr
Lamb 's booklet on Josmg
we1ght, se nd 50 cents and a
long self-addressed stampedenvelope to the same address
and ask for th e ''Losmg
weigh," booklet

Grapefruit
standings

I

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS·MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C•tv Edrtor
l• she d darly exce pt
by The Oh10 Valley
g Company
Ill
Pomeroy Oh10
usm ess Off 1ce P hon ~
" "· ' "" E drtorral Phon e 99')

Secor1d c la ss

postag e paid at
OhlrO
a l ad1Jertls1nQ
atrve
Bottrn e ll 1r
r Inc 12 Ea st 42n4
York , New York
1pl10n
rates
by ear ner where
75 cents per week
Route where carrrer
I s~~;~;:;~ S3not
available One
In
25 By mall n Ohu)
Va One Year $22 00 1
onths
Sll SO
Three
s $7 00
Elsewhere
year
Srx month~
thr ee month s S7 50
pt•on pn ce rnclud eo;
Trm es Sent1nel

Room
It makes you wanta cuss

happen
the

restroom

door

sa rd

When

you gotta

go

v,ou're

nervous
Lrke a puppy wrth the mange
Then you go ~nto the Ladres
Room
And haven t got the change
It's a cnme agamst humamty

A cross that women bear
But 11 s men who run the world
my dear
And less they couldn't care
It's a billion dollar busmess
And their profrt figure soars
White we develop C~arley
Horses.
Crawl•ng under doors'
So liSten good, you plutocrats

You heard about the meekThe day will come when we
refuse
To, turn the other cheek 1
The bill would provide an
equal number of free tmlet
fac1hhes m rest rooms wh1ch
presently employ pay tmlets
Inlerested persons are encouraged to attend the hearmg
and make the1r op1mons known
lo the commrltee
'•
I

Technicali~y

said issue

ATHENS, OhiO (UPI) _ A Center when that mshtution
disf)(lte whether Ohio CIVIl lost two workers due to death
$ervlce laws supercede a and illness
umon's contract prOVISIOns
"They were 10 ser1ous
was revealed today as the trouble over m Nelsonville,"
central 1ssue m a str1ke wh1ch sa1d Davld Caul, former
began Wednesday at the supervisor of the mental health
Athens Mental Health Center fae1hty who res1gned tjlat post
here
Wednesday "They needed
Members of Local1792 of the help and we could prov1de it "
Amencan Federallon of state,
Caul said Ohio CIVIl SerVIce
County and MuniCipal Em- laws supercede the urnon's
ployes umon set up picket lines contract wh1ch does not allow
to protest the transfer of a the transfer of uruon offiCials to
union steward to another state other lnstltutio118.
,
facility
Local 1792 president j'lfike
Th011e who crossed picket Hunter sa1d Caul's interpretalines were members of the Oluo tion of the contract is wrong,
Civil Service Employes As- but, "We can't walt'slx months
soclatlon and the ~ommuruca- for all the legal manuvering on
lions Workers of America after thiS thing "
reportedly bemg told by the1r
Officials of the Department
leaders to diSregard the piCket of Mental Hlljllth and Mental
hoes
Retardation m ColumbUB were
' The steward, Jeff Brock, was reportedly making conferrmg
transferred to the power plant w1th the Oh1o attorney gene.
of the Nelsonv 1Ue Children's

'

ral's office to mvestigate1 the
advisability of obta11111111 a
restrammg order agamst the
pickets.

"'

"

-

•
•

••

!
•l

· SEO standings

SEE

'

1 0
1 a
1 0
D 1
0 1
0 1
0
1

TOTALS

4

4

0
J
J
4
6
8
16

Mon tre al 4 P hlladelph a 3
A tlanta 3 R1chrnon d ( I L ) 2
Ch1cago ( N) 6 M il wauke e 4
Ca1 1torn•a vs Sa n FranCISCO
postpon ed ra n
San D• ego 2 Cl eve land 0

47

47

M1n nes ot a 2 Boston

Add to your dictionary of
collective nouns. A stJ!eh of

surgeons

DAVIS INSURANCE
SERVICE
REPRESENTING

\

!

I'

1J,

--·
I

I

STATE AUTOMOBILE MUTUAL
INSURANCE CO.
LIGlrrNING ROD MUTUAL
INSURANCE tO.
WESTERN RESUH .E
' C:\SUAL1 \' t:O.
FOREMOST IN S. t.

PHONE 992·5120

51 LOU IS 10 HOU Sto n 5

a
6
4
3
3
0
7

Tu esday's r esults
Athens 4 Gallrpol1s 3
Ironton 16 Me1gs 7
1 ogan 8 WellSton 0
Waverly 6 Jac k son 3
Thursdays re sult
MeigS at Gall 1p0I1S ppn d
r esche duled Aprrl 16
Todav's games
Wellston vs waverly
Ironton at L-ogan
Jack son at Athens

!

320
304

Thursday's Results
Baltimore 6 Kansas C dy 4

Logan
wave rl y
• !h ens
7a ll ipOIIS
J ac k son
We ll ston
Me1gS

FOR YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS

I

1

l7
16

PltiSburg h 3 Ch1cago (A ) 2
C.nc:mna ll 3 DetrOit 1

•

'

8

SEOAL BASE BALL
Te a m
W l
R OR
Ironto n
1 0 16
7

114 COURT ST. IN POMEROY

\

SALE PLANNED
The Me1gs High School junior
cosmetology claas b holding a
rumll).age sale today and
Sallll'day In the ba!lement of
the Masonic Temple, Mld·
dleport, from 9 11.m. to 4 p.m.

Atlanta
New York

•

i

.
VOTE SCHEDULED
LANCASTER, Ohio (UPIJ A ratification vote was scheduled today by Local 502 of the
United Gla11 and C«amlc
Workers of North America on a
tentative contract Jieached
Thursday wlth the strike-bound
C E Glilaa plant here.
The union's nearly 100 members struck the finn Feb. 211
when their old conrac~ etqllred.

hlts m seven mmngs as the
Reds beat the Detrmt T1gers, 3-

1, at Tampa, Fla
Nolan, who has been penciled
•n..by Manager Sparky Andel
son to start next Saturday s
game at Sa n D1ego, struck out
f1ve batters and walked two
The only run off hun came m
the s1xlh mnmg when Nate

when the Cd l dm.lis hcdl the
Astros, lll-5 at Sl Petersburg,
James
Fla
ln :l J 1 nn1ng~ thts spr mg
Nolan IS reluctant to discuss
Osteen
h.J s g1vcn up 21 h1t s .uid
h1s troubles of last year ex10 Cd l ned I WIS
pia 1010g, 'Everyone know s
i fee l I 1e p1tche&lt; "cll
how much uncerlam ly r went
throu&amp;h m the past The on!) enou gh to tnake the t rn but
tl)mg I want to tlunk about IS \\ ho knO \\ S \\hdl I Pv II de
ctde, Sd ld Oste
~Ahu 1s
the fu ture "
dueh
ng
w1th
ok
1
e
John
M1ckey Lohch, ano ther
1 sl,t rlln ~ sput
veteran who has had a poor Denn
St
!UI S scm ed st:ven runs
sprmg, went the distance for
m the our th mmng "gwnst
Detrmt and allowed e1ght h1L'
mcludmg a pa1r of smgies to l .a rt y Drerkcr ge Umg 1\\o run
smgles fl urn Eddrc Hrmkrmm ,
Johnny Bench
Osteen, who lost h1s only two Ted S1zem01 e .md H.1kc Me
dec1s10ns w•th St Lows afle1 Ilnde
In uthPr llorttla b: tubttron
be mg traded from Houston ,
games
y~elded seven h1ts and three
The Montrea l I xpos put
runs m flve mmngs Thursday
tog.ct11et fow ht ts and d b£t sPs
loaded 11 aik to score three
tlmes tn the erghth mm ng dnd
edge Philadelphia 4 3
Lee
May drove m thrcr runs v.1th a
home1 and a double &lt;111d Paul
Bia1r added a two-run doub le to
hft Ba It•more to a 6-4 VIdOl)
O\ er Ka nsas C1Ly
Wlihe
Stargeli homered for one run
and lhen smgled home R1ch1e

Co lbert doubled 'home Arl

Ht Ipre 111 &lt;1 tv. mb1ll hcg rnnm g .t t I p m on Mcmorml
I Jt l!l \H &lt;.~ th t! r JJcrmJttmg

c" pped a three-1 Ull rally w1th a
bHJ 1u n

Oakland 10 L os A ng eles 9
1

N ew Y ork (A I 7 N ew Yo r k ( N l J

Today 's games
Bo st on vs
C •nc n nafl at
Tampa F la
Mrnnesota vs M ontr eal at
Da yt ona Beach F la
N ew
Yor k
(Al
YS
)(
P1ftsburgh at Bra denton Fla
x P1tlsburgh vs Ph dadelp h ra
at Cle arwat er F la
Oaklan d vs
Cle vela nd a t
Tu cson A r iz
Ch•cago ( N) vs Mrlwaukeeat
Sun C1ty An z
New Yor k ( N l vs Oetro• t at
Lakeland Fla n1 ght
Ba l trmore vs
A tl an t a a t
J acksonville F la n1ght
Te x as at Hou ston n 1ght
LOS Ange es at caH tornra
nrght
x usrng sp l1 t squad ~

--s;d Potatoes

l

Fertilizer
Onion Sets

left Ten seconds later Jun
Brewer stuffed one to the
dehght of the cheenng fans
'And I even forgot my
handerch1el," smd Cleveland
Coach Bill F1lch, who had to
w•pe the tears away from his
eyes w1th his hand as the
largest crowd ever to w1tness a
smgle NBA game gave the
Cavs the1r first of mne standmg
ovations " It sure IS a lot different than f1ve years ago when
1,800 fans kept tellmg me to go
hack to Mmnesota
"The guys worked hard and
they deserve 1! They opened
the game w1th a lot of p01se and
didn't Jose 11 Cleamons took
charge and the players are
sta rting to think pos11lve
Cleamons, who hit on only
one basket m seven shots m the
f1rst half, connected on 6o{)f·9 m
the fmal 24 m10utes and D1ck
Snyder h1l lklf-10, 1\llh f1ve

Garden Plows

MODERN.
SUPPLY
399 W. Main St

---

Pomeroy, Oh1o

Ill lhe e1ghth

lut a pa1r of home nHt"i for

Ou kl a nd
and
Cia udell
Wd shln gton drove 111 til e
~tn mng run \\llh a lwo-{Ju t
mfleid h1t In the mnth as
O,tkiand beat Los Angeles, 10-

Get Ready
For Spring
Painting With ,
TRUE TEST
from

9

•I he scheduled game between
( &lt;ll!forma and San J"' ranClSCO
c~t Modesto, Ca hf
\HIS can
u ;ted be&lt;.:&lt;.:~usc uf ra m ~

GI BSON SALE
CONTINUES!
Model No
CE30C5

Hebne r w1th the wmner m lhe

st1a 1ght com10g 10 the fmal e1ghth mmng as Ptttsburgh
pet10d that helped the Cavs to a mpped the Chica go Wh1te Sox,
92..'14 bulge 11 1th 5 35 left
3-2
And Dusty B,,ker s two'I was JUS! trymg to do a JOb run home1 m the ttm d cm l ied
and the team d1d what 11 had to Atlanta to a 3-2 vJctol\ O\el 1t'
do,' satd Cleamons, who also Richmond fa 1m club
p1cked up s1x assists
Lou P1mella s t wo~r un home1
The Knicks had cut the Cavs' off Jen ) Koosm.rn cdpped .1
lead to 96-95 w1th I 18 left m the foUl run e1ghth mmng that
game before Cleamons hlt his enabled the New Ymk Yankees '
key foul shot
to bea t the the New York Mels, '
" It was JUS! hke play10g m 7 3, m lhe 1ubber game of thm
the Garden on the road," sa1d sprmg riva lry Bert Bi)ie\en
New York star guard Walt struck oul 10 bailers m se~en
Fraz1er, who f1mshed w1th 20 mmngs m hls tunc up for
pomts
Opemng da) · wh1le p1lclnng

Tt1 :,

Mrnnesota to a

In ABA achon on the f10a i
mght of the regular season, the
New York Nets do wned
V1 gm1a, 116-111, Kentu cky
erased Memphis, 103-93, San
Antomo upended Indiana 137
122, Utah drubbed St Lollis,
128-98, and Denver walloped
San Diego, 1411-121

Gary Nolan
•
•
zmpresszve

con l muou:,
cleanmg
oven
ill so
features
automatiC
cookmg and a
limed appl ance
• outlet Two 6
surfa ce
units
ana t wo IJ, un1ts
w•t h
nf nile
heat
contro l
A v ailable
•n
wh•fe avocado
gold and copper

G1bson

Ja ck!'ion ullil'iall)

nam ed

~ ~u IIH'ntor

.

route but wound up w1th the
loss when mcked for e1ght h1ts
by the Reds, who are now 17·10
Pete Rose's leadoff double a
sac nhce an d the first of
Johnny Bench's two smgles
gave the Reds a run m the f1r st
1nnmg They added another 10
the second when George Foster
doubled and scored when Dan
Meyer fumbled Merv Rettenmund 's smgle to left
A double by John Vukovich,
hls second hit of the game, and
a pmch smgle by Terry
Crowley gave Cmcmnatl 1ts
!mal run m the e1ghth mmng

10

f 1\ e \ e~Hs

year

guaran tee

DAY iON Ohw rUPll M,u ens Jd t kso n hct~d t u,ll h dt

pc1 sl·

TAMPA, Fla IUPI ) - The
Cmc10nat1 Reds, behind Gary
Nolan who turned m h1s most
1mpress1ve performance of the
spnng, defeated the Detrmt
T1gers, 3-1, here Thursday m
an exhibitiOn game
Nolan turned m seven In·
mngs and y1elded one run and
f1ve hils 10 the gam.!" He struck
out five batters and walked
two The only run off Nolan,
who underwent shoulder
surgery last year, came 10 !he
s1xjh when Nate Colbert
doubled home Art James
Mickey Lohch became the
first Tiger pitcher to go the

2 l "'m O\ cr the

SALE

se C~son,

l hursda1 11 as offiCIHil) named
head basket ba ll co.~c h at
W11 gh t Sldle Unl\ eiSII)
.Jackson, \\hu h.1d .1n 8 18
recm d at Dcu tmouth sw.: reells
John Ross 11ho had been he,HI
coac h at W1 Jgl11 Stele fm the

lS

v alue
w1 lh

Boston Red Sox
In Allzona, Jerr) Mora les

Datlmout h College l&lt;1 st

•

b1g

rnod£;;1

1

r e g1 ~ t e nrrg d

15 (Q I CCOId last SC.ISOfl
Ross 1 es1~ n ed to becomf!
assiSlanl athle tic d11 ector
J 8LkSOt1 \\&lt;'IS h Edd ( 0 .t ( h ell

Coc College 1l ( ed&lt;11 R.I)JI(ls
l o we~ fo r tlu ee season~ pr 101 to
cornmg lo Dartmout h
HIS 1ecord at Coe College

(ONLY 4 LEFTJ
2 GREEN AND 2 WHITE

RIDENOUR
APPLIANCE &amp; TV
.GAS SERVICE

Chester, 0'1io

985-3307

wa s 56-14

No games, No g1mm1cs

Sports
notes
An Important girls softball
meetmg will be held Sunday,
AprilS at 4 p m. at the Royal
Crown Garage, North
Second Ave , Middleport All
girls teams in the MeigsMason Area m ~y age group
are mv1ted to attend the
meetmg. Any new teams
mterested m JOining th e
league and also anyone mteresled in heipmg w1th the
~ league are inv1ted to attend
Sunday'•s meeting
SYRACUSE - There will
be a second signup for the
Syracuse Pony League,
Little League and Pee Wee
League lh1s Saturday, April
5 at 10 a.m at the mumc1pal
buildmg, Syracuse.

per pair than reg. fall, 1974 prices!

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ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

90

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Regular Passbook Savm,gs.
No M•mmum Interest from
date of depOSit to date of
withdrawal Interest compounded qu-arterly

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S1ze 878' 13
Blackw•U

Plus s1 84 FE T
and old ttre

.&amp;l")MEIGS

-f!:!Y ~RANCH

FREE MOUNTING

The Alhens County
Sav10gs &amp; Loan Co

.
A meeting

.SYRACUSE is scheduled at the Syracuse
ballpark th1s Sunday, Apni
6, at 2 p 111 for anyone Interested in playing in an
mdependent baseball league
this year

$1060 to si59QLESS

Just Highest
Interest Rates
In The Area

296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohto

All Accounts Insured
$40 000 by FSLIC

~~~·~!

PaCkaged and

Bulk Seeds
Weed Killers
Complete Line
of Ortho Products
Garden Tools

horn ~ 1

•

mrung to hfl the Ch1cago C'ubs
to d 6-4 triumph mer M1l
WdU ke e
Camp) Campanen s

•

•

CHO ICE OFFICIAL
ENGLB'WOOD, N J (UPI)
- B1ll W1lloughby, Englewood,
NJ h1gh school baskiltball
sensatiOn made h1s colleg~
chm ce offlc1al Thursday by
s1gnmg a Southeastern Conference iettero{)f-mtent With the
Umvers1ty o( Kent ucky

Satu rday GAllS \\til host

1

over New York Knicks

•

HONORED - The aenior members of Southern's cheerleadlng squad were honored
Wednesday night at the annual basketball banquet held at Southern-H1g!J School in Racme
Presented trophies were, I..-, V1cki Wolfe, StephameOrd and Ronda Ash

9-11, w1U1 a 3 80 ea rned run
average At the age of 3:&gt;, the
game iefthander IS f1ghtmg for
survaval m the St Lo UI S ca mp
th1s sp rmg
Both pitchers won exhibltwn
games Thursday, w1th Nolan
be mg far the more 1mpress1ve
1he tall, 26-yearo{)ld nghthander y1eided only one run on five

h nrpu aturc J he g&lt;.~ m c hll~
hec u
1 es t hcdul cd
for
Munorml I 1cld on Wuf..
nesdn), ilprij 16 at 1 p 111

20,239 vtew Cavs wm

When you stagger from an
arrplane
Or you totter from the bus,
And you step ms1de the Lad1es

If

I

NEW YORK ~ UPI) - If my moth~· ever knew , 1f she fJad only
the shghtes! susp1cwn how 11 made us feel, there never would ve
been that telephone call
But 11 was somethmg you could count on, almost hke clockwork
My brether, Arthur, who was e1ght at the lime, and h1s 12-yearold b1g brother, that was me, never part•cularly hked the
Yankees because they kept beatmg everybody and acted too high
and mighty at the lime, so even though we hved m the Bronx,
only a fungo dnve from where Lou Gehr1g, Tony Lazzen , Bill
Dickey and Joe D1Magg10 were tearmg all the other clubs apart,
we attached ourselves to the lowly, slowly St Loms Browns
When I say attached, I mean attached
Bill DeW\11, who was the general ma,nager then and later
Osteen's s1tuat10n was a ltttle
owned the c· b, still says the two of us were the most fervent, more mysten ous as he clauned
most loyal St..Lollls Browns' fans m Amenca We loved the to be feelin g fme but sllli
Browns so much, we !ned to get our folks to move to St Lows
turned m h1s worst campaign,
Not a chance They didn't evenJiave enough money to move to
Yonkers
Anyway, brother Arthur, now w1th the Mets, was first, last and
alwoys w1th the Browns back then
_
Young as he was, he d travel w1th the team He had no money
for tram fare, but that was no problem The Browme players,
Jeff Heath, Vern Stephens, John Berardino, Ellis Kmder and
Sam Zoldak would h1de h1rn from the conductor 10 an upper berth
or the wash room He was small then
When the Browns would arnve m New York from Boston,
Washmgton, Philadelphia or someplace m the West, no matter
what tune 1t was, m) brother and I would always be at the tram By Umted Press Internatwnal
' You've come a long way
station to greet them
Then we d go to the hote l w1lh them, and lh1rd baseman baby"
Harland Clift, our 1dol, would InVIte us up to his room to talk
Those were the words of
many of the 20,239 fans that
baseball
That was when the phone would r10g Clift or h1s roommate , Jammed the Cohseum ThursAlan Strange, would piCk up the rece1ver , and my brother and I, day mght to wa tc h the
unbelievably embarrassed, lnslmctively knew who was on the Cleveland Cavaliers keep their
other end It was Mama, always warned The conversatiOn playoff hopes alive by
defeallng the Ne\1 York
generally went the same way
Th1s IS Mrs R1chman Would you please be good enough to Kmcks, 100-95 A victory over
the Kansas C1ly ,Omaha Kmgs
tell me whether my two boys are there'"
at Omaha Sunday afternoon
'Yes, they are"
"Will you please send them home They have school tomor- w1il cement the Cavs' f1rst
playoff berth 10 the Natwnai
row"
"Yes, Mrs Richman They'll be on their way home m a few Basketball ASSOCiatiOn SinCe
JOI010 g th e league as an
mmutes "
•expanswn
club 10 1970
My mother slltched together my first sandlot baseball uniform
W1th Jimmy CleBinons pourand hand-wa&gt;,,ed my later ones when they'd grow so1lejl by my
mg m 17 of h1s 19 pomts m the
amateuriSh slides She did everything she could to fofoler both m;
brother's and my own mterest m the game My Dad, his name second half of the only NBA
was Samuel, was the one who mtroduced us to baseball game played, mcludmg a pa1r
ongmally, tak10g us to Yankee StadiUm and the Polo Grounds of clutch foul shots m the fmal
regularly and to Ebbets F1eld occasiOnally, but when all his 30 seconds, the Cavs Wiped out
resources would only cover the pnce of two bleacher tickets, a 53-49 New York halftune lead
which was more often than not, my mother would prevail upon and 1ced the game when
Cleamons stole the ball from
him to take both h1s sons to the ball game, usher them mto the
park and walt for them outs1de until the ga me was over He d1d 11 Earl Monroe with 12 seconds
many tunes
Durmg the course of her hfet~rne, my mother, Clara, had occasiOn to meet many baseball men She knew people hke B1ll
DeWitt, Joe Brown, Bob Fishel, Frank Lane, Casey Stengel,
Marty Manon, Harry Craft, Danny Murtaugh, Jeff Heath and
1 Don Larsen par'1eularly well and enJoyed VISits Wllh many
others, mcluding Joe DIMaggiO, Jack KrBiner, Ellis Kmder, VIC
Wertz, Moe Berg, Lou Sleater, Ralph Terry, B1lly Hunter, Monte
Un•ted Pr ess International
lrvm, Ralph Kmer and Saul RogoVIn Among those playmg now ( By
Lncl u des On l y Games vs
whom she met and liked were Rusty Staub, Reggie Jackson , Jim Ma ao r L g T eams)
Amencan League
Fregos1, Jerry Koosman and Ken Boswell
w 1 pet
13
8
619
My mother had a good bas1c understandmg of baseball, 1f not a Ca l!forn•a
l d 10
563
Bait m or e
technical one She liked the game tremendously, and when I once Te)(as
1s • n
536
rJ 12 520
Ka n sas C1ty
asked her why, she sa1d
14 \3
519
"It's clean, II'S played outdoors and It g1ves enjoyment IO SO M•nnesota
7
] 500
Cl eve land
13 16
448
New Y ork
many people "
-7
9 4]8
Oa
kland
When my brother went w1th the Mets as promotwn director II Ch 1cago
12 18 400
11 17
393
yeai!S
ago, she became a Mets' fan, but I think, or rather I know , Detro 1t
'I if he had
8 13
38 1
il waukee
sw1tched JObs and gone w1th the Aguascahentes Tigers M
10 17
370
Boston
I m Mex1co, she'd have switched nght over With h1m, too
Nat1onal Leagu e
She was 81, and had been 10 the hospital these past 10 months,
w, 1 pet
18
7 720
but she was lookmg forward to the new baseball season next Los Ang eles
Montr ea l
18
7 720
I week w1th special eagerness
San Fran c•sco
12 6 667
14
8 636
Then came ~at phone call early Thursday morrung The 10tern Ph ladelph1 a
c1nnat r
17 10 630
on duty smd he had some bad news he had to giVe my brother and Cm
P ttsburgh
17 13
567
Sa n o .ego
a
9 471
me We knew what II was
t on
12 15
444
lf my mother ever knew, if she had only the slightest suspiCIOn HStous
LOU IS
10 15 1 400
Ch cage
1 13
350
ho" it made us feel. there never would've been that phone call

A NICKEL'S NOT ENOUGH

There's a lock you cannot open,
And a srgn that says "ten
cents'And you know 1t couldn't

By Umtell Press International
At thls stage of the game,
wmnmg-and_loslng- ls measured by more Important
yardsllcks than mere scores
for such questwn n, rk pitchers as Gary Nolan and
Claude Osteen
Both hurl ers su ff ered
1hrough the m1sery last yea r of
not knowmg 1f the1r careers
were shd10g to an un
spectacular end Nolan underwent shoulder surgery last
May and h1s total output for
Cmcmnatl amounted to SIX
mnmgs m two games

......

By ANN OHUNGER
THE LASLEY HOUSE
Pomeroy durmg the 1871\s was a bustlmg mdustrl81 center aboundmg m salt and coal acl1V11les
Growth and greater mdustry was pred1cted by Important mdustr1ai1Sts such as Samuel Wyllys
Pomeroy, Valentme Baxter Horton, and W1lham H Lasley Of these th~ee W H Lasley IS the least "
kilown or remembered The only remmder of Lasley m Me1gs County IS his large grey stone mansion
The house IS located m Pomeroy on a lot bounded on three s1des by Osborn, Martin and Henry
(also known as Lasley) Streets O!J!l stands at the foot of Lasley Hill and looks up at the somber, grey, "
mansard..-bofed mansron and IS f11led w1th awe and the feelmg that he IS bemg watched
Even on sunny days, the house still seems gloomy as 1! s11:&gt; on 1ts hill towermg above one.
By contrast, as one approaches the house from the back, the mood changes drastically One IS
very surprrsed when he enters the house to find a warm, graciOus intenor
The house IS bmlt m a c1rcle w1th SIX large rooms around a center hall There IS a large stairWay'
at the front of the hall and a small, steep serviCe stBirway at the rear . The second story IS built
exactly as the f1rst except that m every room there are at least two w1ndow seats With ms1de shutters
One of the most mterestmg aspects of the house IS the small, glass-walled, cll'cular room at the third
story level It was used as a lookout for Mr Lasley to see nverboats docking
At the rear of the house 1s a two story barn and stable Lasley, who was known for his fme horses, '
owned two sorrel mares, two gray stallions, a colt, two bay mares, three gray mares and a two-yearold filly named Maud at the tune ofhls death There IS no mentiOn of the legendary white stall1on, but
on a clear moonlight mght, would 1t be poss1ble to m1stake a gray sta llion for a wh1te one'
"
Utile IS known of W1lham H Lasley 's boyhood except that he was born 10 Rutland on Februpry
13, 1832. He was a CIVIl War ve!_eran who around 1860 marned Frances Mana Montague1 daughter of
Theodore Montague Two sons and a daughter were born to them The sons, Theodore and William,
both mamed, but the daughter, Frances Katherme (Katie) Lasley (named for her mother and "
grandmother ) d1ed oftyphmd fever m LeGrand, Ga at the age of 17.
Lasley was an attorney and at one t~rne participated m a famous murder trial He was the
Probate Judge of Me1gs County from 1861 to 1870 and was a councilman from the Th1rd Ward for the "
town of Pomeroy m 1874
The Lasley Estate IS broken up mto five lots In 1865 Lasley bought Lot 446 from Michael Get- "
tmger who had or1gmally bought llfrom S W Pomeroy and V. B Horton
In 1866 Jacob Swartz sold the east half of Lot 448 to Lasley and the west half to George Schreiber
Swartz had bmlt a frame cottage on the lot he sold Schreiber It 1s still standing In the next few years .. •
Lasley bought the rest of the f1ve lots from S W Pomeroy and V B Horton
On October 1, 1877, DaVIdH Lasley, W. H Lasley and WllliBin Lasher f1led for bankruptcy as copartners of the Bank of Middleport, and as individual§ This was granted by the Umted States Court "
Joseph C McElroy, later to serve as county shenff, wiiA'llluned ass1gnee and trustee
On January 4, 1878 Lasley formally deeded the properiy,to McElroy who sold Lot 440 to Alban ,
Dav1es DaVIes, who was born m Wales m 1832, was the county treaourer from 1865 to 1869 He was a •
representative to the Oh10 House from 1876 to 1878 He was, also, superintendent of schools in Racme
and Pomeroy He was the father of Oma Aqnona DaVIes, a well khown wr1ter of the 1920s and 1930s
,McElroy sold the balance of the estate to Theodore Montague m 1879. At the same t1rne the Umted ' '
States Court granted to Frances Lasley the west half of Lot 448 as dower
_, •
Montague died m 1880 and left his property to h1s wife who sold 11 to Mrs Lasley Lasley was "
declared no longer a bankrupt m 1889 and bought back the rest of the property from DaVIes
Lasley d1ed of apoplexy m 1894 He left his he1rs personal property worth $4,000 and real property _
worth $25,000
In 1901 the Lasley heirs sold the house and all the property to Anna Mary Koehler The returned "
to Chattanooga w1th the1r mother and there are no records of the family m Me1gs County smce that ,
t~rne
••
J.
Anna Mary Koehler resided m the Lasley House mne years Her son, Charles Koehler, lived m
the frame cottage
William F Reed bought the property from Mrs Koehler m 1910 Hew as born lrLPomeroy on June
5, 11109, the son of Danus and Eun1ce Curtis Reed He attended Pomeroy H1gh School, Oh1o State " '
Umvers1ty and the Uruvers1ty of MIChigan ; receiVIng h1s law degree m 1882 In 1904 he establiShed the , "
Farmer's Bank and Savings Company
,. ,
In 1938 Wilham Reed , Sl' , deeded the house to William Reed, Jr , w1th the exception of the cot- _
tage which went to D CurtiS Reed Russell Brown bought the property from Reed m 1945 On Lots 445 -- '
and 446 he built a bnck home m which he now res1des Dr Sel1rn Blazew1cz bought the Lasley house·
from Brown m 1949
Modern convemences have made a httle change m the appearance of the house It remams as a ,
good example of the oppulent homes of the penod
It IS the only remmder of a once Important Me1gs County family _
NOTE Based on Boll Hoeflich's "Pomeroy, Boom Town of the 1871\s," Me1gs County Probate
Court records, Edgar Erv10's "Pioneer H1story of Me1gsCounty", mterv1ews by the author w1th Mrs .. ,
Sel1rn Blazewtcz and Mrs! Robert Ashley, abstracts of titles by Ira Graham, the Lasley tombstone m .,
Beech Grove Cemetery, and Me1gs County Recorder, record of deeds

IMI'll ha ll ga me \Hts JJOI'it.
pmu d 1hu rs day due to snow
flurrt t•s a1rrl 3J rlc gn•t•

ajor Leagl,le play ·o pens Monday

Parade \

'

By RICHARD HUGHES
UPI Business Writer
Tbe Ford adm1mstrallon
says that wh1le, the nallon IS
movmg toward econom1c
recovery, lhousa nds more
workers are gomg to lose their
JObS before the recessiOn ends
In an apparent reference to
the government's report today
on March unempl oyment ..
Pres1dent Ford told news
executives m San Diego there
would be udlScouragmg" news •
about unemployment
The natiOn's unemployment
rate m February matched
January's rate of 8 2 per cent
mamly because half a nullion
workers gave up lookmg for
new JObs and were not counted
m the government's survey
In testunony before a congressional comnmttee, Simon
acknowledged for the hrst time
that the nallon's unemployment rate could riSe to 9
per cent - or more than 8
m1lhon persons -by summer
But Sunon and Ford, m a
later news conference, noted
that the nabon was on the way
to ec onomic recovery th1s
year Fo~d sa1d an upturn
should begm after July
Signahng a slower rate of
layoffs, the Labor Department
sa1d 52,100 person were
dropped from state unemployment rolls 10 nmd-March,
as some mdustr1es particularly
autos and textiles, recalled
Idled persons
In further ev1dence of the
trend toward a slower rate of
inflation, the Labor Department reported that wholesale
pr1ces fell 0 6 per cent m
March It was the fourth
monthly decline m a row, the
f1rst t~rne th1s has happened
smce 1966
At the March rate, Ford told
the news conference, mflatmn
thiS year could average 7.2 per
cent compared to last year's
rate of about 12 per cent Simon
had sa1d inflabon was slowmg
faster than the admimstration
had expected

Bowen hill

~port

'

!'OS I PO NED
I htt., !\lt•tgs i.Jt (,alii pulls

\

-'

Gents

By Lawrence E Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB- I am one
of 100 persons workmg 1n a
sheltered em pl oy me nt
s1tuahon Most are senwrs,
women , and men, but some
teenagers also
There 1s a kitchen wh1ch
serves a hot dmner at noon We
all bke the cook but almost
everyday the entree or the
salad and green vegetable are
befvlly salted I have seen the
foOd left on many plates
becall5e 11 IS ' too salty "
Almost all semor c•llzens
have problems w•th salt We
pay for the noon meal wh1ch
cosbl very li tile However, If
you have to l)ay for the lunch
and can't eat It there is money
wasted for the employe and
budget funds are also wasted
Plea"" advise \IS about the
hazards of lo9 much salt m the
diet for old and young ahke
There •• salt shakers on the
tables It Is. SID'elr no problem
to masute salt meagerly In

"'

3- The Da~ly Sen!lnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Friday, Apnl4, 1975

I '

2- The Dally Sentinel, !'.ljddlepor:t-Pomerny, 0 , Friday, April4, 1975

To

•

JOY the D1 stmch ve
Style of the ...

Frank Sisty

• Strong smoot h nd1ng polyester
cord body
•W1de aggresSIVe 7 nbtread for
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• Cross. cu t tread pattern stm1tar
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tre~d tO-road.contBct lor long
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TRIO
Org1m, Drums, Guitar

NITELY
TUES ,WED , THURS .. B·Jo I 00
FRI. &amp; SAT .. 9 30 2&lt;&gt; 00

FRONT END
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POMEROY

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PH 992-3629

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POMEROY

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�I
'

.

,_._xhibition·-season ends Sunday,

More to '
become
jobless

197f&gt;.76 WAHAMA KEYETTE OFFICERS - The
Keyettes have been an extremely busy orgamzallon at
Wallama H1gh School Besides electmg its new off1cers they
have been preparmg to go to the .State Keyette Convention

,

held at Pipestem State Park Pictured from left to nght are
Robm Stewart, semor board member , Cheryl Huber,
secretary, Carolyn Rickard, v1ce president, Cindy Grmstead, president , Mmdy Rames, treasurer and Pam Burton,
JUruor board member

Navy in Asian waters stand. by
to help 'refugees as necessary
PALM SPRINGS, CALIF President Ford has ordered all
available Navy sh ips to stand
by near South V1etnam to
ass1st refugees if necessary
He also set m motwn an
rurlift of 2,000 South VIetnamese orphans to the Umted
States
Ford announced the actions
m a news conference m San
D1ego Thursday and later
returned to Palm Sprmgs to
meet w1th Secretary of State
Henry Kissmger
Officials m Washington sa1d
the sh1ps would be av31lable for
vanous con tmgenc1es mcluding evacuation of 5,000 to
10,000 Amencans and tens of
thousands of South VIetnamese
wbo have worked closely w1th
Amencans, should t hat
become necessary
They stressed that no such

are m the process of bemg would not have been m danger
adopted by American fanmlies But when I see us not carrymg
The Pres1dent told his news through , then 11 raiSes a qmte
conference he w11l ask different questwn "
Congress
for
more
D1d he mean the AmeriCan
"humailltanan" a1d for South hves •were wasted, he was
V1etnam, w11l press his pendmg asked
request for $300 m nmhtary a1d
Ford looked down and then
and may ask for still more qu1ckly retracted any such
nmlitary rud Congress returns ~rnphcahon , saymg " I -1 still
from vacatwn Monday
think there IS an opportumty to
salvage
situation m VIetnam,
Ford assured alhes the
Umted States mtends to keep and if we sa~vage 11 .. there
1ts comrmtments around the was not a sai;nf•ce that was
10a ppropr1ate or unw1se
world
"At the moment I do not
He sa1d a "urnlateral deciSIOn" by South VIetnam 's antiCipate the fall of South
President Nguyen Van Th1eu to V1etnam," Ford sa1d
lndochma dommated the
pull , forces back closer to
nam."
The orphan a1rlift was bemg Sa1gon led to the loss of news conference, but Ford had
flown by g1ant C5A and other temtory to the Communists these commen ts on other
military transport planes from Earlier, Ford told a group of SUbjeCts
- The recesswn w11l begm to
the Phtllppmes and patd for out broadcasters Thien's act10n
get
better by late sunmner, but
was
"
poorly
planned
and
of a $2 nmlhon fore1gn · a1d
meantime
there will be a
chlldrens' fund All the orphans unnecessary "
1
'discouragmg"
rtse m unem
Ford sa1d tl)e 55,000 U S
lives lost there were not wasted ployment
- He will campa1gn for the
"proVIdmg the Umted States
has earned out the solemn presidency m 1976, primarily
comrmtments" -10cluding a1d backmg GOP candidates for
- which 11 made when the other offices who agree w1th
his economic policy
peace accords were signed
- He has seen no eVIdence to
"If we had camed out the
COIJIITIItments that were made dispute the conclusiOn of the
at that time, the trag1c Warren CommiSSion, of which
WINNING NUMBERS
sacrifices that were made by he was a member, that Lee
303 m any box wms 20
many, those who were killed, Harvey Oswald alone killed
262 and 611 In green and · those who were wounded, former President Kennedy
blue wms $500.
262 and 611 In blue box.
es wins $1,000
262 and 611 in green boxes
eligible for $300,000 drawing
and automahcally wms
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
In the apphcallon, f•led
$15,000
Pubhc Utlhties CommiSsiOn of November6, 1974, the company
OhiO Thursday turned down a sought to mcrease the charge
request by the Oh10 Bell for a com call from 10 cents to
CLINIC Ttl OPEN
Telephone
Company for early 20- cents, to charge for all
The Veterans ))lem~•al
consideration
of a $74 million directory ass1stance calls exHospital Speech and Hearmg
Chmc 1s opemng aga10 th1s mcrease and d•sm1ssed the cept for three per month, to
Saturday, Apnl 5, a t the case
replace flat busmess rates w1th
In a deciSion s1gned by charges based on usage, and to
Pomeroy Elementary School
and w11l be open from 9 a m CommiSSIOners Sally W 10crease the charges for serun hi 12 All those persons Bloomfield and Dav1d C VIce connections
prevwusly scheduled should Sweet, the commiSSion s31d 11
The comm1ss10n noted that
attend at their reg ular lime would not be fair to cons1der while 1! views usage and costunless nohfled otherwise by Oh1o Bell's request ahead of senslllve pncmg pohc1es as
Mrs Sus1e He10es, speech and apphcatwns llihJCh were "extremely desirable" 11 would
hear10g coordmator. Anyone pend10g at the tune of Ohw req10re a radical departure
from long -standmg PUCO
mteres ted m diagnostic teshng Bell's apphcatlon
Ohw Bell sa1d the PUCO pracllce to consider Ohio Bell's
should contact Mrs Hemes at
refusal "threatens" continued request ahead of apphcations
98[&gt;.4163
good serVIce to customers
pendmg at the lime the
"The only reason we asked telephone company hied 1ts
for prompt action on a portion application
of our rate request was to
The conmnmiSSion also noted
SALE PLANNED
A bake sale w1ll be held m asssure that our customers that Oh10 Bell has an applicaconJuncllon w1th a rummage contmue to rece1ve gond tele- llon pendmg wh1ch requests an
sale Saturday, &gt;1-pnl 5, phone serv1ce," sa1d Ohio Bell increase totalmg $216 mlllion a
year, and that the matters
begmmng at 9 a m m the President Fred Eckley
"That's why I am shocked ra1sed m the case which was
bu1ldmg next to The Steamboat
Inn 10 Rac10e The sales are that the commissiOn d1d not turned down will be considered
sponsored by Syracuse Boy agree to expedite the request when the comnmsswn decides
and dismayed that 11 took five the $216 nmllwn rf_911.CSt.
Scout Troop 242
months to dec1de only that we
No date t!;J.&amp; yet ¥en set for
have to wa1t m line regardless public nearmgs on the $216
of the ments of our apphca- mdhon request
mass evacuallon has, been
ordered Four US Navy ships
and nme vessels under U S
contract are now m the area,
picking up t/lose refugess put to
sea m small boats
additiOnal
sh1ps
The
probably w1ll mclude two
rurcraft carriers, OffiCials said
In his news conference, Ford
did oot say exactly what their
miSSIOn lS "l have directed all
available naval sh1ps to stand
off lndochma to do whatever IS
necessary to assiSt," he sa1d
But Ford SBid "there are no
plans whatsoever for US
m1htary mvolvement m VIet-

One ticket, a gift, is

lucky $300,000 winner
CLEVELAN D (UPI J- ' I
came m here JUSt to ptck up
$15,000," satd James Macart.
ney, 55, Loram, " but I'll be
picking up money for the next
20 years "
Macartney, a toll gate superVIsor for the Ohio Turnpike at
the Loram-Eiyna eXJt, Thursday became the Ohio lottery's
most recent $300,000 wmner.
"It feels great because my
family IS so happy," Macartney SBid "It probably hasn't
sunk mto me yet "
Macartney sa1d he got his
ticket "free from a gas stabon
which g1ves one tiCket w1th
each f1ll-up "
"I don 't know how I w1ll
spend the money ," he sa1d
The weekly $30,000 winner
was Jack F Manne of Canton.
The week's $15,000 wmners
were Steven E Aller, Columbus, Anme Diamond, RIChmond, Ind , and Thomas L
Gondwm , Toledo
Tins week's wmmng ownhers m the Ohio lottery were
Number 303 (three-zerothree ) many box on hcket w1ns
$20

Numbers 262 (two-siX-two)
and 611 (SIXo{)ne-&lt;me ) m green
and blue wms $500
Numbers 262 and 611 m blue
boxes wms $1,000
Numbers 262 and 611 m green
boxes ehg1 ble for $300,000
drawmg and automatically
"ms $15,000

'

Bell loses

DR. LAMB

tion ."

T~e cook adds too much salt.

hearings
on Monday
State Senator W1lham F
Bowen (D-Cmcmnah ) sa1d
Wednesday hearmgs have been
scheduled on h1s proposed
Senate B1ll 71 for Monday,
Apnl 7, m Senate Hearmg
Room " 0 11 , Sta tehouse,
Columbus, OhiO, begmnmg at 8
P m
Senate Bill 71 would prov1de
for free restroom fac1h lies m
locahons wh1ch also have pay
faCJhlles
In
makmg
h1s
an·
nouncement, Senate Bowen
commented ' It IS most
gralifymg
to
mtroduce
leg•slatwn wh1ch seems to
ehc1l support from such a
broad base Probably the most
s•gmf1cen t response came
from the Federation of Ladles
Under Severe HandiCap
(FLUSH), wh1ch sent me the
followmg poem ,"

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Ed1tor

I

' I

volume cooking when a leclpe
IS 10creased, salt should be
used w1th restramt
•We don't want to hurt
anyone We thmk a med1cal
oplnJOn will gu1de our cook She
•
IS young enough to learn anu1
w11l_ be happ1er knowmg she
can make a beneficial contnbul1on to our health
DEAR READER-You have
a good pomt l11s always easy
to add salt but Impossible to
take 11 out
Many author11les believe too
much salt m the d•et may
contribute to the development
of high blood pressure. It 1s
probably w1se even for young
people to go easy on salt
When the bOdy 1s healthy and
a person dnnks plenty of water
the excess salt 1s s1mply
elimiOaled through the k1dneys A number of med1cal
problems, though , cause the
body to retam salt This leads
to an accurnulallon of water
and can be qmle ser11111s
Women may have salt•reten{

liOn a nd retam fluid 10
response to the1r normal
menstrual cycle Estrogen
sbmulates salt retenhon Birth
control pills have the same
effect and so do the hormones
used after the menopause
When lh1s 1s fa1rly marked,
women need to take p1lls to
cause the kidneys to ehmmate
salt and flmd to reheve the
problem
Progressmg along the way,
anyone who has heart disease
w1th heart failure or reqmrmg
d1g1tahs may have a tendency
to retam salt The flmd that
m1ght accumulate m th1s case
can cause real problems by
literally f1llmg the lungs w1th
flmd and affecting the
breathmg. Cons1dermg the
, frequency of heart disease 10
older ' people, th1s is e very
Important cons1deratwn
· Both hver disease and kidney
disease may cause a retent wn
of salt and, hence, water
These colldlliDns that ca use

•

fluid retenhon can progress to
cause mar~ed sweUmg of the
liver, abdomen, feet, ankles
and flmd m the rungs In short,
the salt retenbon tends to
defeat lhe doctor 's efforts to
prevent these comphcabons
In all, there ISs1mpiy no gond
sound medical reason to add
salt to food for a populatiOn
that has many people w1th
med1cal problems For those
who are healthy and have no
problems there IS always the
salt shaker The rest would
certamly be health1er 1f they
could avo1d the bad effects of
salt m the1r d1et
Send your questwns to Dr
Lamb, 1n ca re of th1s
newspaper, P 0 Box 1551,
RadiO C1ty S!,ahon, New York,
N Y 10019 For a copy of Dr
Lamb 's booklet on Josmg
we1ght, se nd 50 cents and a
long self-addressed stampedenvelope to the same address
and ask for th e ''Losmg
weigh," booklet

Grapefruit
standings

I

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS·MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C•tv Edrtor
l• she d darly exce pt
by The Oh10 Valley
g Company
Ill
Pomeroy Oh10
usm ess Off 1ce P hon ~
" "· ' "" E drtorral Phon e 99')

Secor1d c la ss

postag e paid at
OhlrO
a l ad1Jertls1nQ
atrve
Bottrn e ll 1r
r Inc 12 Ea st 42n4
York , New York
1pl10n
rates
by ear ner where
75 cents per week
Route where carrrer
I s~~;~;:;~ S3not
available One
In
25 By mall n Ohu)
Va One Year $22 00 1
onths
Sll SO
Three
s $7 00
Elsewhere
year
Srx month~
thr ee month s S7 50
pt•on pn ce rnclud eo;
Trm es Sent1nel

Room
It makes you wanta cuss

happen
the

restroom

door

sa rd

When

you gotta

go

v,ou're

nervous
Lrke a puppy wrth the mange
Then you go ~nto the Ladres
Room
And haven t got the change
It's a cnme agamst humamty

A cross that women bear
But 11 s men who run the world
my dear
And less they couldn't care
It's a billion dollar busmess
And their profrt figure soars
White we develop C~arley
Horses.
Crawl•ng under doors'
So liSten good, you plutocrats

You heard about the meekThe day will come when we
refuse
To, turn the other cheek 1
The bill would provide an
equal number of free tmlet
fac1hhes m rest rooms wh1ch
presently employ pay tmlets
Inlerested persons are encouraged to attend the hearmg
and make the1r op1mons known
lo the commrltee
'•
I

Technicali~y

said issue

ATHENS, OhiO (UPI) _ A Center when that mshtution
disf)(lte whether Ohio CIVIl lost two workers due to death
$ervlce laws supercede a and illness
umon's contract prOVISIOns
"They were 10 ser1ous
was revealed today as the trouble over m Nelsonville,"
central 1ssue m a str1ke wh1ch sa1d Davld Caul, former
began Wednesday at the supervisor of the mental health
Athens Mental Health Center fae1hty who res1gned tjlat post
here
Wednesday "They needed
Members of Local1792 of the help and we could prov1de it "
Amencan Federallon of state,
Caul said Ohio CIVIl SerVIce
County and MuniCipal Em- laws supercede the urnon's
ployes umon set up picket lines contract wh1ch does not allow
to protest the transfer of a the transfer of uruon offiCials to
union steward to another state other lnstltutio118.
,
facility
Local 1792 president j'lfike
Th011e who crossed picket Hunter sa1d Caul's interpretalines were members of the Oluo tion of the contract is wrong,
Civil Service Employes As- but, "We can't walt'slx months
soclatlon and the ~ommuruca- for all the legal manuvering on
lions Workers of America after thiS thing "
reportedly bemg told by the1r
Officials of the Department
leaders to diSregard the piCket of Mental Hlljllth and Mental
hoes
Retardation m ColumbUB were
' The steward, Jeff Brock, was reportedly making conferrmg
transferred to the power plant w1th the Oh1o attorney gene.
of the Nelsonv 1Ue Children's

'

ral's office to mvestigate1 the
advisability of obta11111111 a
restrammg order agamst the
pickets.

"'

"

-

•
•

••

!
•l

· SEO standings

SEE

'

1 0
1 a
1 0
D 1
0 1
0 1
0
1

TOTALS

4

4

0
J
J
4
6
8
16

Mon tre al 4 P hlladelph a 3
A tlanta 3 R1chrnon d ( I L ) 2
Ch1cago ( N) 6 M il wauke e 4
Ca1 1torn•a vs Sa n FranCISCO
postpon ed ra n
San D• ego 2 Cl eve land 0

47

47

M1n nes ot a 2 Boston

Add to your dictionary of
collective nouns. A stJ!eh of

surgeons

DAVIS INSURANCE
SERVICE
REPRESENTING

\

!

I'

1J,

--·
I

I

STATE AUTOMOBILE MUTUAL
INSURANCE CO.
LIGlrrNING ROD MUTUAL
INSURANCE tO.
WESTERN RESUH .E
' C:\SUAL1 \' t:O.
FOREMOST IN S. t.

PHONE 992·5120

51 LOU IS 10 HOU Sto n 5

a
6
4
3
3
0
7

Tu esday's r esults
Athens 4 Gallrpol1s 3
Ironton 16 Me1gs 7
1 ogan 8 WellSton 0
Waverly 6 Jac k son 3
Thursdays re sult
MeigS at Gall 1p0I1S ppn d
r esche duled Aprrl 16
Todav's games
Wellston vs waverly
Ironton at L-ogan
Jack son at Athens

!

320
304

Thursday's Results
Baltimore 6 Kansas C dy 4

Logan
wave rl y
• !h ens
7a ll ipOIIS
J ac k son
We ll ston
Me1gS

FOR YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS

I

1

l7
16

PltiSburg h 3 Ch1cago (A ) 2
C.nc:mna ll 3 DetrOit 1

•

'

8

SEOAL BASE BALL
Te a m
W l
R OR
Ironto n
1 0 16
7

114 COURT ST. IN POMEROY

\

SALE PLANNED
The Me1gs High School junior
cosmetology claas b holding a
rumll).age sale today and
Sallll'day In the ba!lement of
the Masonic Temple, Mld·
dleport, from 9 11.m. to 4 p.m.

Atlanta
New York

•

i

.
VOTE SCHEDULED
LANCASTER, Ohio (UPIJ A ratification vote was scheduled today by Local 502 of the
United Gla11 and C«amlc
Workers of North America on a
tentative contract Jieached
Thursday wlth the strike-bound
C E Glilaa plant here.
The union's nearly 100 members struck the finn Feb. 211
when their old conrac~ etqllred.

hlts m seven mmngs as the
Reds beat the Detrmt T1gers, 3-

1, at Tampa, Fla
Nolan, who has been penciled
•n..by Manager Sparky Andel
son to start next Saturday s
game at Sa n D1ego, struck out
f1ve batters and walked two
The only run off hun came m
the s1xlh mnmg when Nate

when the Cd l dm.lis hcdl the
Astros, lll-5 at Sl Petersburg,
James
Fla
ln :l J 1 nn1ng~ thts spr mg
Nolan IS reluctant to discuss
Osteen
h.J s g1vcn up 21 h1t s .uid
h1s troubles of last year ex10 Cd l ned I WIS
pia 1010g, 'Everyone know s
i fee l I 1e p1tche&lt; "cll
how much uncerlam ly r went
throu&amp;h m the past The on!) enou gh to tnake the t rn but
tl)mg I want to tlunk about IS \\ ho knO \\ S \\hdl I Pv II de
ctde, Sd ld Oste
~Ahu 1s
the fu ture "
dueh
ng
w1th
ok
1
e
John
M1ckey Lohch, ano ther
1 sl,t rlln ~ sput
veteran who has had a poor Denn
St
!UI S scm ed st:ven runs
sprmg, went the distance for
m the our th mmng "gwnst
Detrmt and allowed e1ght h1L'
mcludmg a pa1r of smgies to l .a rt y Drerkcr ge Umg 1\\o run
smgles fl urn Eddrc Hrmkrmm ,
Johnny Bench
Osteen, who lost h1s only two Ted S1zem01 e .md H.1kc Me
dec1s10ns w•th St Lows afle1 Ilnde
In uthPr llorttla b: tubttron
be mg traded from Houston ,
games
y~elded seven h1ts and three
The Montrea l I xpos put
runs m flve mmngs Thursday
tog.ct11et fow ht ts and d b£t sPs
loaded 11 aik to score three
tlmes tn the erghth mm ng dnd
edge Philadelphia 4 3
Lee
May drove m thrcr runs v.1th a
home1 and a double &lt;111d Paul
Bia1r added a two-run doub le to
hft Ba It•more to a 6-4 VIdOl)
O\ er Ka nsas C1Ly
Wlihe
Stargeli homered for one run
and lhen smgled home R1ch1e

Co lbert doubled 'home Arl

Ht Ipre 111 &lt;1 tv. mb1ll hcg rnnm g .t t I p m on Mcmorml
I Jt l!l \H &lt;.~ th t! r JJcrmJttmg

c" pped a three-1 Ull rally w1th a
bHJ 1u n

Oakland 10 L os A ng eles 9
1

N ew Y ork (A I 7 N ew Yo r k ( N l J

Today 's games
Bo st on vs
C •nc n nafl at
Tampa F la
Mrnnesota vs M ontr eal at
Da yt ona Beach F la
N ew
Yor k
(Al
YS
)(
P1ftsburgh at Bra denton Fla
x P1tlsburgh vs Ph dadelp h ra
at Cle arwat er F la
Oaklan d vs
Cle vela nd a t
Tu cson A r iz
Ch•cago ( N) vs Mrlwaukeeat
Sun C1ty An z
New Yor k ( N l vs Oetro• t at
Lakeland Fla n1 ght
Ba l trmore vs
A tl an t a a t
J acksonville F la n1ght
Te x as at Hou ston n 1ght
LOS Ange es at caH tornra
nrght
x usrng sp l1 t squad ~

--s;d Potatoes

l

Fertilizer
Onion Sets

left Ten seconds later Jun
Brewer stuffed one to the
dehght of the cheenng fans
'And I even forgot my
handerch1el," smd Cleveland
Coach Bill F1lch, who had to
w•pe the tears away from his
eyes w1th his hand as the
largest crowd ever to w1tness a
smgle NBA game gave the
Cavs the1r first of mne standmg
ovations " It sure IS a lot different than f1ve years ago when
1,800 fans kept tellmg me to go
hack to Mmnesota
"The guys worked hard and
they deserve 1! They opened
the game w1th a lot of p01se and
didn't Jose 11 Cleamons took
charge and the players are
sta rting to think pos11lve
Cleamons, who hit on only
one basket m seven shots m the
f1rst half, connected on 6o{)f·9 m
the fmal 24 m10utes and D1ck
Snyder h1l lklf-10, 1\llh f1ve

Garden Plows

MODERN.
SUPPLY
399 W. Main St

---

Pomeroy, Oh1o

Ill lhe e1ghth

lut a pa1r of home nHt"i for

Ou kl a nd
and
Cia udell
Wd shln gton drove 111 til e
~tn mng run \\llh a lwo-{Ju t
mfleid h1t In the mnth as
O,tkiand beat Los Angeles, 10-

Get Ready
For Spring
Painting With ,
TRUE TEST
from

9

•I he scheduled game between
( &lt;ll!forma and San J"' ranClSCO
c~t Modesto, Ca hf
\HIS can
u ;ted be&lt;.:&lt;.:~usc uf ra m ~

GI BSON SALE
CONTINUES!
Model No
CE30C5

Hebne r w1th the wmner m lhe

st1a 1ght com10g 10 the fmal e1ghth mmng as Ptttsburgh
pet10d that helped the Cavs to a mpped the Chica go Wh1te Sox,
92..'14 bulge 11 1th 5 35 left
3-2
And Dusty B,,ker s two'I was JUS! trymg to do a JOb run home1 m the ttm d cm l ied
and the team d1d what 11 had to Atlanta to a 3-2 vJctol\ O\el 1t'
do,' satd Cleamons, who also Richmond fa 1m club
p1cked up s1x assists
Lou P1mella s t wo~r un home1
The Knicks had cut the Cavs' off Jen ) Koosm.rn cdpped .1
lead to 96-95 w1th I 18 left m the foUl run e1ghth mmng that
game before Cleamons hlt his enabled the New Ymk Yankees '
key foul shot
to bea t the the New York Mels, '
" It was JUS! hke play10g m 7 3, m lhe 1ubber game of thm
the Garden on the road," sa1d sprmg riva lry Bert Bi)ie\en
New York star guard Walt struck oul 10 bailers m se~en
Fraz1er, who f1mshed w1th 20 mmngs m hls tunc up for
pomts
Opemng da) · wh1le p1lclnng

Tt1 :,

Mrnnesota to a

In ABA achon on the f10a i
mght of the regular season, the
New York Nets do wned
V1 gm1a, 116-111, Kentu cky
erased Memphis, 103-93, San
Antomo upended Indiana 137
122, Utah drubbed St Lollis,
128-98, and Denver walloped
San Diego, 1411-121

Gary Nolan
•
•
zmpresszve

con l muou:,
cleanmg
oven
ill so
features
automatiC
cookmg and a
limed appl ance
• outlet Two 6
surfa ce
units
ana t wo IJ, un1ts
w•t h
nf nile
heat
contro l
A v ailable
•n
wh•fe avocado
gold and copper

G1bson

Ja ck!'ion ullil'iall)

nam ed

~ ~u IIH'ntor

.

route but wound up w1th the
loss when mcked for e1ght h1ts
by the Reds, who are now 17·10
Pete Rose's leadoff double a
sac nhce an d the first of
Johnny Bench's two smgles
gave the Reds a run m the f1r st
1nnmg They added another 10
the second when George Foster
doubled and scored when Dan
Meyer fumbled Merv Rettenmund 's smgle to left
A double by John Vukovich,
hls second hit of the game, and
a pmch smgle by Terry
Crowley gave Cmcmnatl 1ts
!mal run m the e1ghth mmng

10

f 1\ e \ e~Hs

year

guaran tee

DAY iON Ohw rUPll M,u ens Jd t kso n hct~d t u,ll h dt

pc1 sl·

TAMPA, Fla IUPI ) - The
Cmc10nat1 Reds, behind Gary
Nolan who turned m h1s most
1mpress1ve performance of the
spnng, defeated the Detrmt
T1gers, 3-1, here Thursday m
an exhibitiOn game
Nolan turned m seven In·
mngs and y1elded one run and
f1ve hils 10 the gam.!" He struck
out five batters and walked
two The only run off Nolan,
who underwent shoulder
surgery last year, came 10 !he
s1xjh when Nate Colbert
doubled home Art James
Mickey Lohch became the
first Tiger pitcher to go the

2 l "'m O\ cr the

SALE

se C~son,

l hursda1 11 as offiCIHil) named
head basket ba ll co.~c h at
W11 gh t Sldle Unl\ eiSII)
.Jackson, \\hu h.1d .1n 8 18
recm d at Dcu tmouth sw.: reells
John Ross 11ho had been he,HI
coac h at W1 Jgl11 Stele fm the

lS

v alue
w1 lh

Boston Red Sox
In Allzona, Jerr) Mora les

Datlmout h College l&lt;1 st

•

b1g

rnod£;;1

1

r e g1 ~ t e nrrg d

15 (Q I CCOId last SC.ISOfl
Ross 1 es1~ n ed to becomf!
assiSlanl athle tic d11 ector
J 8LkSOt1 \\&lt;'IS h Edd ( 0 .t ( h ell

Coc College 1l ( ed&lt;11 R.I)JI(ls
l o we~ fo r tlu ee season~ pr 101 to
cornmg lo Dartmout h
HIS 1ecord at Coe College

(ONLY 4 LEFTJ
2 GREEN AND 2 WHITE

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APPLIANCE &amp; TV
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985-3307

wa s 56-14

No games, No g1mm1cs

Sports
notes
An Important girls softball
meetmg will be held Sunday,
AprilS at 4 p m. at the Royal
Crown Garage, North
Second Ave , Middleport All
girls teams in the MeigsMason Area m ~y age group
are mv1ted to attend the
meetmg. Any new teams
mterested m JOining th e
league and also anyone mteresled in heipmg w1th the
~ league are inv1ted to attend
Sunday'•s meeting
SYRACUSE - There will
be a second signup for the
Syracuse Pony League,
Little League and Pee Wee
League lh1s Saturday, April
5 at 10 a.m at the mumc1pal
buildmg, Syracuse.

per pair than reg. fall, 1974 prices!

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Plus s1 84 FE T
and old ttre

.&amp;l")MEIGS

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Sav10gs &amp; Loan Co

.
A meeting

.SYRACUSE is scheduled at the Syracuse
ballpark th1s Sunday, Apni
6, at 2 p 111 for anyone Interested in playing in an
mdependent baseball league
this year

$1060 to si59QLESS

Just Highest
Interest Rates
In The Area

296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohto

All Accounts Insured
$40 000 by FSLIC

~~~·~!

PaCkaged and

Bulk Seeds
Weed Killers
Complete Line
of Ortho Products
Garden Tools

horn ~ 1

•

mrung to hfl the Ch1cago C'ubs
to d 6-4 triumph mer M1l
WdU ke e
Camp) Campanen s

•

•

CHO ICE OFFICIAL
ENGLB'WOOD, N J (UPI)
- B1ll W1lloughby, Englewood,
NJ h1gh school baskiltball
sensatiOn made h1s colleg~
chm ce offlc1al Thursday by
s1gnmg a Southeastern Conference iettero{)f-mtent With the
Umvers1ty o( Kent ucky

Satu rday GAllS \\til host

1

over New York Knicks

•

HONORED - The aenior members of Southern's cheerleadlng squad were honored
Wednesday night at the annual basketball banquet held at Southern-H1g!J School in Racme
Presented trophies were, I..-, V1cki Wolfe, StephameOrd and Ronda Ash

9-11, w1U1 a 3 80 ea rned run
average At the age of 3:&gt;, the
game iefthander IS f1ghtmg for
survaval m the St Lo UI S ca mp
th1s sp rmg
Both pitchers won exhibltwn
games Thursday, w1th Nolan
be mg far the more 1mpress1ve
1he tall, 26-yearo{)ld nghthander y1eided only one run on five

h nrpu aturc J he g&lt;.~ m c hll~
hec u
1 es t hcdul cd
for
Munorml I 1cld on Wuf..
nesdn), ilprij 16 at 1 p 111

20,239 vtew Cavs wm

When you stagger from an
arrplane
Or you totter from the bus,
And you step ms1de the Lad1es

If

I

NEW YORK ~ UPI) - If my moth~· ever knew , 1f she fJad only
the shghtes! susp1cwn how 11 made us feel, there never would ve
been that telephone call
But 11 was somethmg you could count on, almost hke clockwork
My brether, Arthur, who was e1ght at the lime, and h1s 12-yearold b1g brother, that was me, never part•cularly hked the
Yankees because they kept beatmg everybody and acted too high
and mighty at the lime, so even though we hved m the Bronx,
only a fungo dnve from where Lou Gehr1g, Tony Lazzen , Bill
Dickey and Joe D1Magg10 were tearmg all the other clubs apart,
we attached ourselves to the lowly, slowly St Loms Browns
When I say attached, I mean attached
Bill DeW\11, who was the general ma,nager then and later
Osteen's s1tuat10n was a ltttle
owned the c· b, still says the two of us were the most fervent, more mysten ous as he clauned
most loyal St..Lollls Browns' fans m Amenca We loved the to be feelin g fme but sllli
Browns so much, we !ned to get our folks to move to St Lows
turned m h1s worst campaign,
Not a chance They didn't evenJiave enough money to move to
Yonkers
Anyway, brother Arthur, now w1th the Mets, was first, last and
alwoys w1th the Browns back then
_
Young as he was, he d travel w1th the team He had no money
for tram fare, but that was no problem The Browme players,
Jeff Heath, Vern Stephens, John Berardino, Ellis Kmder and
Sam Zoldak would h1de h1rn from the conductor 10 an upper berth
or the wash room He was small then
When the Browns would arnve m New York from Boston,
Washmgton, Philadelphia or someplace m the West, no matter
what tune 1t was, m) brother and I would always be at the tram By Umted Press Internatwnal
' You've come a long way
station to greet them
Then we d go to the hote l w1lh them, and lh1rd baseman baby"
Harland Clift, our 1dol, would InVIte us up to his room to talk
Those were the words of
many of the 20,239 fans that
baseball
That was when the phone would r10g Clift or h1s roommate , Jammed the Cohseum ThursAlan Strange, would piCk up the rece1ver , and my brother and I, day mght to wa tc h the
unbelievably embarrassed, lnslmctively knew who was on the Cleveland Cavaliers keep their
other end It was Mama, always warned The conversatiOn playoff hopes alive by
defeallng the Ne\1 York
generally went the same way
Th1s IS Mrs R1chman Would you please be good enough to Kmcks, 100-95 A victory over
the Kansas C1ly ,Omaha Kmgs
tell me whether my two boys are there'"
at Omaha Sunday afternoon
'Yes, they are"
"Will you please send them home They have school tomor- w1il cement the Cavs' f1rst
playoff berth 10 the Natwnai
row"
"Yes, Mrs Richman They'll be on their way home m a few Basketball ASSOCiatiOn SinCe
JOI010 g th e league as an
mmutes "
•expanswn
club 10 1970
My mother slltched together my first sandlot baseball uniform
W1th Jimmy CleBinons pourand hand-wa&gt;,,ed my later ones when they'd grow so1lejl by my
mg m 17 of h1s 19 pomts m the
amateuriSh slides She did everything she could to fofoler both m;
brother's and my own mterest m the game My Dad, his name second half of the only NBA
was Samuel, was the one who mtroduced us to baseball game played, mcludmg a pa1r
ongmally, tak10g us to Yankee StadiUm and the Polo Grounds of clutch foul shots m the fmal
regularly and to Ebbets F1eld occasiOnally, but when all his 30 seconds, the Cavs Wiped out
resources would only cover the pnce of two bleacher tickets, a 53-49 New York halftune lead
which was more often than not, my mother would prevail upon and 1ced the game when
Cleamons stole the ball from
him to take both h1s sons to the ball game, usher them mto the
park and walt for them outs1de until the ga me was over He d1d 11 Earl Monroe with 12 seconds
many tunes
Durmg the course of her hfet~rne, my mother, Clara, had occasiOn to meet many baseball men She knew people hke B1ll
DeWitt, Joe Brown, Bob Fishel, Frank Lane, Casey Stengel,
Marty Manon, Harry Craft, Danny Murtaugh, Jeff Heath and
1 Don Larsen par'1eularly well and enJoyed VISits Wllh many
others, mcluding Joe DIMaggiO, Jack KrBiner, Ellis Kmder, VIC
Wertz, Moe Berg, Lou Sleater, Ralph Terry, B1lly Hunter, Monte
Un•ted Pr ess International
lrvm, Ralph Kmer and Saul RogoVIn Among those playmg now ( By
Lncl u des On l y Games vs
whom she met and liked were Rusty Staub, Reggie Jackson , Jim Ma ao r L g T eams)
Amencan League
Fregos1, Jerry Koosman and Ken Boswell
w 1 pet
13
8
619
My mother had a good bas1c understandmg of baseball, 1f not a Ca l!forn•a
l d 10
563
Bait m or e
technical one She liked the game tremendously, and when I once Te)(as
1s • n
536
rJ 12 520
Ka n sas C1ty
asked her why, she sa1d
14 \3
519
"It's clean, II'S played outdoors and It g1ves enjoyment IO SO M•nnesota
7
] 500
Cl eve land
13 16
448
New Y ork
many people "
-7
9 4]8
Oa
kland
When my brother went w1th the Mets as promotwn director II Ch 1cago
12 18 400
11 17
393
yeai!S
ago, she became a Mets' fan, but I think, or rather I know , Detro 1t
'I if he had
8 13
38 1
il waukee
sw1tched JObs and gone w1th the Aguascahentes Tigers M
10 17
370
Boston
I m Mex1co, she'd have switched nght over With h1m, too
Nat1onal Leagu e
She was 81, and had been 10 the hospital these past 10 months,
w, 1 pet
18
7 720
but she was lookmg forward to the new baseball season next Los Ang eles
Montr ea l
18
7 720
I week w1th special eagerness
San Fran c•sco
12 6 667
14
8 636
Then came ~at phone call early Thursday morrung The 10tern Ph ladelph1 a
c1nnat r
17 10 630
on duty smd he had some bad news he had to giVe my brother and Cm
P ttsburgh
17 13
567
Sa n o .ego
a
9 471
me We knew what II was
t on
12 15
444
lf my mother ever knew, if she had only the slightest suspiCIOn HStous
LOU IS
10 15 1 400
Ch cage
1 13
350
ho" it made us feel. there never would've been that phone call

A NICKEL'S NOT ENOUGH

There's a lock you cannot open,
And a srgn that says "ten
cents'And you know 1t couldn't

By Umtell Press International
At thls stage of the game,
wmnmg-and_loslng- ls measured by more Important
yardsllcks than mere scores
for such questwn n, rk pitchers as Gary Nolan and
Claude Osteen
Both hurl ers su ff ered
1hrough the m1sery last yea r of
not knowmg 1f the1r careers
were shd10g to an un
spectacular end Nolan underwent shoulder surgery last
May and h1s total output for
Cmcmnatl amounted to SIX
mnmgs m two games

......

By ANN OHUNGER
THE LASLEY HOUSE
Pomeroy durmg the 1871\s was a bustlmg mdustrl81 center aboundmg m salt and coal acl1V11les
Growth and greater mdustry was pred1cted by Important mdustr1ai1Sts such as Samuel Wyllys
Pomeroy, Valentme Baxter Horton, and W1lham H Lasley Of these th~ee W H Lasley IS the least "
kilown or remembered The only remmder of Lasley m Me1gs County IS his large grey stone mansion
The house IS located m Pomeroy on a lot bounded on three s1des by Osborn, Martin and Henry
(also known as Lasley) Streets O!J!l stands at the foot of Lasley Hill and looks up at the somber, grey, "
mansard..-bofed mansron and IS f11led w1th awe and the feelmg that he IS bemg watched
Even on sunny days, the house still seems gloomy as 1! s11:&gt; on 1ts hill towermg above one.
By contrast, as one approaches the house from the back, the mood changes drastically One IS
very surprrsed when he enters the house to find a warm, graciOus intenor
The house IS bmlt m a c1rcle w1th SIX large rooms around a center hall There IS a large stairWay'
at the front of the hall and a small, steep serviCe stBirway at the rear . The second story IS built
exactly as the f1rst except that m every room there are at least two w1ndow seats With ms1de shutters
One of the most mterestmg aspects of the house IS the small, glass-walled, cll'cular room at the third
story level It was used as a lookout for Mr Lasley to see nverboats docking
At the rear of the house 1s a two story barn and stable Lasley, who was known for his fme horses, '
owned two sorrel mares, two gray stallions, a colt, two bay mares, three gray mares and a two-yearold filly named Maud at the tune ofhls death There IS no mentiOn of the legendary white stall1on, but
on a clear moonlight mght, would 1t be poss1ble to m1stake a gray sta llion for a wh1te one'
"
Utile IS known of W1lham H Lasley 's boyhood except that he was born 10 Rutland on Februpry
13, 1832. He was a CIVIl War ve!_eran who around 1860 marned Frances Mana Montague1 daughter of
Theodore Montague Two sons and a daughter were born to them The sons, Theodore and William,
both mamed, but the daughter, Frances Katherme (Katie) Lasley (named for her mother and "
grandmother ) d1ed oftyphmd fever m LeGrand, Ga at the age of 17.
Lasley was an attorney and at one t~rne participated m a famous murder trial He was the
Probate Judge of Me1gs County from 1861 to 1870 and was a councilman from the Th1rd Ward for the "
town of Pomeroy m 1874
The Lasley Estate IS broken up mto five lots In 1865 Lasley bought Lot 446 from Michael Get- "
tmger who had or1gmally bought llfrom S W Pomeroy and V. B Horton
In 1866 Jacob Swartz sold the east half of Lot 448 to Lasley and the west half to George Schreiber
Swartz had bmlt a frame cottage on the lot he sold Schreiber It 1s still standing In the next few years .. •
Lasley bought the rest of the f1ve lots from S W Pomeroy and V B Horton
On October 1, 1877, DaVIdH Lasley, W. H Lasley and WllliBin Lasher f1led for bankruptcy as copartners of the Bank of Middleport, and as individual§ This was granted by the Umted States Court "
Joseph C McElroy, later to serve as county shenff, wiiA'llluned ass1gnee and trustee
On January 4, 1878 Lasley formally deeded the properiy,to McElroy who sold Lot 440 to Alban ,
Dav1es DaVIes, who was born m Wales m 1832, was the county treaourer from 1865 to 1869 He was a •
representative to the Oh10 House from 1876 to 1878 He was, also, superintendent of schools in Racme
and Pomeroy He was the father of Oma Aqnona DaVIes, a well khown wr1ter of the 1920s and 1930s
,McElroy sold the balance of the estate to Theodore Montague m 1879. At the same t1rne the Umted ' '
States Court granted to Frances Lasley the west half of Lot 448 as dower
_, •
Montague died m 1880 and left his property to h1s wife who sold 11 to Mrs Lasley Lasley was "
declared no longer a bankrupt m 1889 and bought back the rest of the property from DaVIes
Lasley d1ed of apoplexy m 1894 He left his he1rs personal property worth $4,000 and real property _
worth $25,000
In 1901 the Lasley heirs sold the house and all the property to Anna Mary Koehler The returned "
to Chattanooga w1th the1r mother and there are no records of the family m Me1gs County smce that ,
t~rne
••
J.
Anna Mary Koehler resided m the Lasley House mne years Her son, Charles Koehler, lived m
the frame cottage
William F Reed bought the property from Mrs Koehler m 1910 Hew as born lrLPomeroy on June
5, 11109, the son of Danus and Eun1ce Curtis Reed He attended Pomeroy H1gh School, Oh1o State " '
Umvers1ty and the Uruvers1ty of MIChigan ; receiVIng h1s law degree m 1882 In 1904 he establiShed the , "
Farmer's Bank and Savings Company
,. ,
In 1938 Wilham Reed , Sl' , deeded the house to William Reed, Jr , w1th the exception of the cot- _
tage which went to D CurtiS Reed Russell Brown bought the property from Reed m 1945 On Lots 445 -- '
and 446 he built a bnck home m which he now res1des Dr Sel1rn Blazew1cz bought the Lasley house·
from Brown m 1949
Modern convemences have made a httle change m the appearance of the house It remams as a ,
good example of the oppulent homes of the penod
It IS the only remmder of a once Important Me1gs County family _
NOTE Based on Boll Hoeflich's "Pomeroy, Boom Town of the 1871\s," Me1gs County Probate
Court records, Edgar Erv10's "Pioneer H1story of Me1gsCounty", mterv1ews by the author w1th Mrs .. ,
Sel1rn Blazewtcz and Mrs! Robert Ashley, abstracts of titles by Ira Graham, the Lasley tombstone m .,
Beech Grove Cemetery, and Me1gs County Recorder, record of deeds

IMI'll ha ll ga me \Hts JJOI'it.
pmu d 1hu rs day due to snow
flurrt t•s a1rrl 3J rlc gn•t•

ajor Leagl,le play ·o pens Monday

Parade \

'

By RICHARD HUGHES
UPI Business Writer
Tbe Ford adm1mstrallon
says that wh1le, the nallon IS
movmg toward econom1c
recovery, lhousa nds more
workers are gomg to lose their
JObS before the recessiOn ends
In an apparent reference to
the government's report today
on March unempl oyment ..
Pres1dent Ford told news
executives m San Diego there
would be udlScouragmg" news •
about unemployment
The natiOn's unemployment
rate m February matched
January's rate of 8 2 per cent
mamly because half a nullion
workers gave up lookmg for
new JObs and were not counted
m the government's survey
In testunony before a congressional comnmttee, Simon
acknowledged for the hrst time
that the nallon's unemployment rate could riSe to 9
per cent - or more than 8
m1lhon persons -by summer
But Sunon and Ford, m a
later news conference, noted
that the nabon was on the way
to ec onomic recovery th1s
year Fo~d sa1d an upturn
should begm after July
Signahng a slower rate of
layoffs, the Labor Department
sa1d 52,100 person were
dropped from state unemployment rolls 10 nmd-March,
as some mdustr1es particularly
autos and textiles, recalled
Idled persons
In further ev1dence of the
trend toward a slower rate of
inflation, the Labor Department reported that wholesale
pr1ces fell 0 6 per cent m
March It was the fourth
monthly decline m a row, the
f1rst t~rne th1s has happened
smce 1966
At the March rate, Ford told
the news conference, mflatmn
thiS year could average 7.2 per
cent compared to last year's
rate of about 12 per cent Simon
had sa1d inflabon was slowmg
faster than the admimstration
had expected

Bowen hill

~port

'

!'OS I PO NED
I htt., !\lt•tgs i.Jt (,alii pulls

\

-'

Gents

By Lawrence E Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB- I am one
of 100 persons workmg 1n a
sheltered em pl oy me nt
s1tuahon Most are senwrs,
women , and men, but some
teenagers also
There 1s a kitchen wh1ch
serves a hot dmner at noon We
all bke the cook but almost
everyday the entree or the
salad and green vegetable are
befvlly salted I have seen the
foOd left on many plates
becall5e 11 IS ' too salty "
Almost all semor c•llzens
have problems w•th salt We
pay for the noon meal wh1ch
cosbl very li tile However, If
you have to l)ay for the lunch
and can't eat It there is money
wasted for the employe and
budget funds are also wasted
Plea"" advise \IS about the
hazards of lo9 much salt m the
diet for old and young ahke
There •• salt shakers on the
tables It Is. SID'elr no problem
to masute salt meagerly In

"'

3- The Da~ly Sen!lnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Friday, Apnl4, 1975

I '

2- The Dally Sentinel, !'.ljddlepor:t-Pomerny, 0 , Friday, April4, 1975

To

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Style of the ...

Frank Sisty

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THE
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INN
PH 992-3629

~OMti&lt;UT

YOUR COMPLETE
606 E. MAIN

TIRE CENTER
POMEROY

-

•

�'

. .'
•

.,

4 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Apnl4, 1975

f

'

N BA Sf.;t mhnq !io
By Un •t c d Pr ess lnt c rnahonal
eastern Co nf e rence
A t1 .1n1 1c Ot\'I Sto n
w 1 p et
x Bo s ton
SH '11
71~
Buft~ l p
,
JR :12 600

for title May 16
-'

DENVER (UP!)
Thmgs
were Ioot&amp;ig gloomy lor seventh-ranked heavyweight Ron
Lyle.
The last time he.had a lightFeb. II at Honolulu--lie was
outpointed by unknown Jimmy
Young of Ph&gt;ladelphla for his
seco nd loss in 33 pro fights .
Then last month he had· a
brawl wtth his wife Nadine
which resulted in assault
ch~rges bemg !lied agamsl
him.
His
chances
of
a
heavywe&gt;ght tiUe bout were
considered slim, if they existed
at all .
But Thursday morrung all •
that was changed when Lyle
got a phone call from Mike
Hayes, vice president of the Denver Boxing Club, which
handles Lyle's fights
"He sa1d everythmgwas set
for me to meer Muhammad
Ali," Lyle said. "I guess it's
hke they always say, the
darkest moments come just

N e wYo rk

39

.11

g b
10
l'l

JHB

Pllilade lphto:t J &lt;~ 46 .1?5 2.1
C~ntral D•v• S•on

A represe~latt ve of U1e club
m New York stgned the contract for the Lyle-Ali fight
Thursday The bout, to be
teleVIsed hve over ABC, w11l be
staged in La s Vegas, Nev. ,
May 16
And Lyle says he's not gomg
into the f1ght JUSt for a
paycheck, even though he w&gt;ll
p1ck up $100,000 plus $10,000 for
expenses while Ali earns $1
million, the amount ABC has
pa1d for the n ghts Lyle's
preVIoUS biggest pay day was
$46,000 wh1ch when Jerry
Quarry decis10ned h1m in New
York m February, 1973
"I'm not gomg to be JUSt an
opponent," said Lyle, 30.2-1
with 21 knockouts to hls cred&gt;l.
"I'm not looking lor JUSt a
payday I feel ! have the style
that can beat h1m because of
my ab1lity to punch mside.
That will create a problem lor
him."
Lyle has never been knqckM
out or down ; for that matter.

before dawn."

w

x washing ton
Houston
Cleveland
A tlahta
New Orlean s

Weiskopf GGO leader
GREENSBORO, N C. (UP! ) gustmg to 50 m1les per hour
- Tom We1skopf says he's and temperatures m the upper
been "kind of like the country 40s.
'
' II
Hlll, an II -time wmner on the·
... m a recession.
But &gt;f the nat10n's economy PGA tour in 16years, shot what
starts going like Weiskopf's he called h1s best round of the
golf game at the Greater year m carding a 67 for si&gt;Ie
Greensboro Open, unem- possess10n of second place.
ployment lines may soon be a Perry Leslie, an obscure tour
sophomore from Springfield,
thing of the past.
We&gt;skopf, the sensation of Mo., was in third place w1th a
the tour in 1973 when he won three-under 68 after the first
four U.S. titles and the Bntish round.
South African Bobby Cole
Open, has been winless since .
But Thursday he fired a sevr n- shot a 69, two-under, and held
Wlder-par 64 on the 6,700-yard down fourth place. Veteran
Sedgefield Country Club course Jerry Heard and Bnan
for a three&lt;1troke lead over . "Buddy" Allin, both w1th oneDave H11l gomg into today's Wider 70s, were the only other
second roupd of the $225,000 golfers to break par.
Lee Trevmo led a cluster of
GGO.
Commg off a second-place players at even-par 71 Others
finish in last week's Heritage were Bert Yancey, Joe Inman,
Classic and two days of Bobby N1chols, AI Ge~berger,
pract1ce at Augusta, Ga., for Leonard Thompson and Sam
next week's Masters, Weiskopf Adams
Johnny Miller, a three-tune
birdied seven holes and had
WIMer already this year, was
pars on the rest.
"This is one of the fmest within long range at onMver
rounds of golf I've ever had," par 72.
"I just can't pull m the wmd
he sa&gt;d. "There 's no doubt in
that's
all there &gt;s to 1t," sa1d
my mind."
We iskopf has had lower M1ller, whose round included
rounds, but not under the two double bogeys.
Other promment playe rs
conditions that greeted the
GGO f1eld Thursday - wmds were even less fortunate. South
African Gary Player, who Will
be delen.ding champiOn at the
CONVERSE COACH Masters ' tourname nt next
ATHLETIC SHOES ... . week, had a five-over-par 76.
Lee Elper, who w&gt;ll be the first
FOR YOUR KIND
bla ck to compete in the
I
~ OF ACTION!
· ~
Masters
, had a 74
::;&amp;
I~
AVAILABLE IN
Arnold Palmer turned 1n a
-=
SEVERAL STYLES
77, as did eight-time GGO
-=
AND COLORS!
wiMer Sam Snead Defendmg
cham
pion Bob Charles, a
:§ All feature padded ankle
New Zealand,
lefthander
:::%
..--. collars and tongues, heavy managed a from
75.
J
.
C. Snead had
1~
duty toe stnpes, long
a 78 and Lanny WadklnS a 79.
weanng outsoles and
full sponge cushion
A FffiSf
msole and arch.
COLUMBUS, Oh1o iUPI) The United States Trotting
CAN VAS
AssociatiOn annoWiced ThW'sHI -CUT
day that for the flrst t&gt;me m
harness racing history , at least
f1ve races have been scheduled
wttfl estimated or guara nteed
purses of $200,000
The races are the Roosevelt
$ HlCHil FO• UR
U-" lln . . ..: !lAM
Internatwnal Trot, the Hambletonian, the Cane Pace, the
Your Thorn MeAn Store
Yonkers Trot and the MonhcelMiddleport. Oh•o
lo-New York City OTB classic.

I pet g b
21
73&lt;1
41
J81,
41
494 19
50 :1BS 28
57 :lBB :15' ~

58
41
40
31
13

soo

Western Confe r enc e
M i dW es t 0 1VIS IOO

I. pe t
35 563
37 538
4 1 494
43 456

w
45
43
40
36

Chtcago
KC O m aha
Detrotl
Mtlwaukee

g b

&gt;1

x. Go ld en Slate &lt;17 33 588
Sep ltl e
&lt;10 39 50 6
Portland
36 &lt;1 1 -150
PhO('Il iX
32 &lt;18 •100
Lo s Angeles
30 50 375
X· CI1nc h ed diVISIOn flfl('
Thursday 's R es ults
Cl eve land 100 N ew York 95
Fr1day' s Game s
Wash mgton al Boston
Pl'lllad elph 1a at Buff alo
New Orleans at Ch•ca go
New Yor k a t Milwauk ee
Go lden Sta t e at Phoenix
Seatt le a ! Los Ange l es
KC Oma ha at Porfland

61 t
11

15
17

y

26 690
26 690
52 381

58
58

Yo rk

y Ken tu c ky
Sl LOUIS

31
27 57
15 69
Wes t

MemphtS
Vr r g.n1a

w

I
19
33
39
46

65

51

~

pet

g b.

77&lt;1 607 1&lt;1
536 20
452 27

ln drana
45
u tah
38
San D .ego
31 53 36 9 34
x Clinch ed d iV ISIOn T1tl ~
y· Pi ayoH f or dlvts•on cham
p to nsh•p
Thur sday's Result s
New York 11 6 V1 r g m 1a 11 1,o t
San AntoniO 137 l n d 1ana 122
Ke nt ucky 103 Memph ts 93
Utah 128 St LOUIS 98c
Denve r 148 San D1ego 121
Fn d ay's Game s
New York at Ke nt ucky
NH L Stand•ng s
By Un1ted Press 1nternat1onal
011/I SIOn 1
w 1 t pt s gt ga
49 16 11 109 283 178
)( Ph lla
1

NY Ra n ger s 36 28 14 86 3 2 268
NY l sl ande r s32 24 22 86 257213
A l lan t a
34 29 15 83 239 224
DIVI SIOn 2

1 r- pt s gf ga
37 32 10 84 267 253

w

Va n co uver

36 34 8 80 262 237
33 J l 14 80 262 262
Mmnesota
23 48 7 55 220 334
KansasC 1IY 15 5311 41182 325
Chtcago

St LOU IS

DI VISIOn 3

1

w

x Mo nlreal

d5 l4

t pts gf

ga

19 109 360 22 1

Los A n geles 41 17 20
'fll1 tl sbu rgh
3627 15
oer r o 11
23 43 12
WaShington
7 66 5
DIV IS IOn 4

102 263 181
873 15280
58 25 6 324

19 171 £13 1
~

w

1 t pt s g f ga
48 16 15 Ill 350 238

x Bu ff alo
Boston
Toronto
Cal1 fornta
X CltnChe~

&lt;10 26 13 93 341 241
31 32 15 77 21J 301
19 47 12 50 208 310
di VISIOn htl e

Thursday 's Results
B u ffal o 4 Boston 2
NY Rangers 1 Phdadelph ta 1
Chrcago 6 Kansas C •tY 4
Fnda y's Games
NY Rangers a1 A tl anta
Mtnnesota a t Va n couver

WHA Standrng s
Bv Un•h~·d Pre ss tnter na t1o na1
East
w. t. t , pt s gf ga
x New Eng
43 28 ' 5 91 27 1 27 1
Cl eve land
Ch tcago
ln d ranap ols

x

''"""

.._ w

4231
41 31

San D 1ego

Mrnnesota

~

~
~

Phoen1x
Ba ltimore

38 30

Toronto

Wm nrp eg
Edmonton
Vancouver

.1232
38 33

2 86340 298
4 60 311 272

3 4 37

4 72 266 27 0

34 39 2 70 244 26 1
x Cl1nched diVI SIOn t1tl e

Thursday' s R esult s
New Eng land 4 Qu eb ec 1
San D reg o 9 Ba l11 more 2
Fnday's Gam es
Phoen ix at Mmnesota
New Eng land a t Ch 1ca g o
Wmnrpeg at Tor on to
Vancouve r at Edmonton

r Hl

INfO sm PLACE
NEW YORK (UP!) - Los
Angeles Dodger Manager Walter Alston will move into sole
possession of eighth place m
1975 for years of service among
all major league managers,
according to the Baseball
Commissioner's Office.
Alston, entering h1s 22nd
season, tra1ls only Conme
Mack (53 seasons), J ohn
McGraw (33), Bucky Harris
(29) , Bill McKechnie (25 ),
Casey Stengel .(25), Leo
Durocher ( 24) and Joe McCarthy (24 ). At present,
Jmuny Dykes (21 seasons) is
lied ,with Alston.

. , fHI; Ol,..tlLYW IC:G ..... IIfj-r~fj\L

heritage house

DISPLAY and SALE

ln Ninth -ce ntury Engl and
Kmg .Alfred made Ep1phany a
Saxon holiday by decreemg that
U'4H.,. I •· the Chnotmas season should m·
elude Chnstmas day and the 12

SEE

THE
AU NEW

The
scou ter's annual
rec ogmlion dmner to draw
attenlwn to d1stn ct and um l
scoutmasters for trammg , uml
accomplishme nt and spec1al
recognitiOn. will be Fnday,
Apnl 25, at 6·30 p m m

Fellowship Hall, Grace United
Method iSt Church, Galhpohs'
All adults ( ms l&gt; luhona l
representat tves. cubmasters,
scou tmas ters, den leade rs ,
com nult eemen , etc .) connected w1th and-or 1~t eres ted

Area cub packs plan
programs and projects

fAX REIMBURSEMENTS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A total
of $1.95 m1lhon m first half 1974
property tax rollback re&gt;mbursements had been sent to
seven coW!tuls, w1th Geauga
County receiving the largest
amount, $680,439
Other counh es and the
amoW!ts they received were
Tuscarawas, $441 ,951 ; Muskmgu m, $290,409 ; Crawford,
$262,555; Fayette, $121,955 ;
Harrison, $83,545 and Galha,
$78,6!i6.
State Auditor Thomas
Fergu~ sa1d to dale, 13
count&gt;es have rece1ved a total
of $4 2 m11lion in property U!x
rollback reimbursements.
The auditor srud the other
counties would be reimbursed
by the state after they certify
th elf ta x settlements and
property tax rollbacks to his
office.

Crossroad~
~e ld convenl1oru;.

confer ences thi s mon th to
select monthly program
themes and to suggest den and
home proJects, pack achvllies,
and special proJects
Most packs use suggested
themes that have been
carefully researched, planned,
and wnlte n m order to meet
t~e pnmary goals for Scoul!n g
character
buildm g,
c•llzensh1p traimng, and flt.
ness.
Suggested themes are, May,
Thmgs That Go; .June, Sports
Ca rm val; Jul y, Summer
Adve nt ure; Augus t, Model
Boat Regat 18; September, Tall
Tales; October, The World of
Sound ; November, Ind1 an
Fes t1val , December, Cut Scout
G1ves Goodwi ll , January ,
Tou rn ame nt ; Februar y,
Honzo ns US A ; Mar ch,
Hobble s;. and Apn l, Trallblazers of Ainenca.
Cub Seoul packs w1ll continue their b1c en tenm al
prog ram of emphas&gt;s which
w1ll recogmze Cub Scouts who
participate in act1vil!es that
prepare for the lh!fd century.
The Tn-State Area Counc1l also
plans spec1al evenls for Cub
Scouts such as Cu b Camp
Days, Webelos Father Son
Campoul , Cub Learn to Swim
Programs, and a Cub Pack
Recreational Swim Day.

•

If pl ants

delegates would feel at hom e m
the B1g Thicket of east Texas
Called a " bwlog•ca l crossroads
of North Amen ca " the area IS
overlapped by Appa lachian and
southern forests , flor a and
fau na of the West and va nel!Cs
mdt genous to Mlxtco 's sub trop•cs

COURSE COMPLETED
MARION - Andr ew E.
Baley of Rt. I, Long Bottom, a
SW ltchman, has reCeiVed a
cer hficale for complellon of a
course m print readmg and
c~rcm t analysis at General
Telephone co , of Oh10 's

•••••••••••••·~~~---. .~~ Techm cal Traming School
._.

AnnYnuncl"ng
· Sl'oRE HOURS
NEW

SELECTION

NOW!

STARTING nitS WEEK:
'•

. SAVE!

·.

~ALL'S. B'~ fRA~K~IN ,
Middleport, Ohio
OPEN9A.M.to8P.M. FRIDAY
MQN. thru THURS. &amp; SAT. 9 Til S

...

Ingels Furniture

CLOSED SUNDAYS .

Middleport

"2-~5 ·

RALL'S BEN FRANKUN

•

here. A graduate of Middleport
H1gh School, he has been with
the company for mne years. He
works in va rious exchanges m
the r·ompany's ~'!'en~ d1stnct.

FLOWERS

Middleport, Ohio

EM
" s letter

coming into
west Meigs

week off in

April and May
RAVENSWOOD, W. Va. The Ka1ser Alummum &amp;
Chem&gt;cal Co. plant here will be
shut down one week th1s month
and agam m May. Company
offi Cials said members of Local
5668 of the United Steelworkers
o~ Amenca voted Tuesday to
support the shutdowns, similar
to ones that took place last
month. The flrm w1ll try to
reduce 1ts inventory of finished
goods during the closures.
There 1s barely room to work at
the plant because of the mventory, due to dropping
Kaiser sales, accordmg to Ron
Helton of the company.
"We 've really got problems

992-2039
Pomeroy Flower Shop
Mrs. Mollard
Ph. 9n203•

Meter
Ph. 992-51"'

~an

•

•

'

THE REV . Noel Herman IS
now holdmg a reviVal at the
Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Church Smgers and pubhc
i~vllcd Serv1ce at 7 30 p m.
SPECIAL meehng Mid- .
dleporl Masomc Lodge 363, 7
p m. for fell owcraft degree . All
master ma sons Jnv1ted.
TH E HAf:RISONVILLE
INVESTITURE CEREMONY - The members Of new Middleport
Gaspers, Beth ~n.,.olfe, Danelle Reece and Amy ErJin; and stand tng are
Order u£ Eastern ~·ar w1ll hold
Browme Troop Jl74 whose leaders are Mrs. Kay Rupe and Mrs Mary Jo
Downing, Judy Pnce, Kathy Arnott B1lh Jo Gordon
Terri Roush, MelisSa
a rwnmage sale Fnd 1=1.y and
II
I''
Pooler with Mrs. Sh1rley Kauff as assistant, were invested and presented
Jenn1fer
Meadows,
Jolene
Moodispaugh, Rhonda PriCe, Judy Mowery,
Saturd ay at the f01 mer H and
their ,Browrue pins in a ceremony Thursday afternoon at the Middleport
Peggy
Cremeans
and
Carol
Sm1th.
One year pms were also presented to Bllll
R. Block btn lding in Pomeroy-,
Jumor H1gh School. The Brownies invested are p1ctur.ed h~ re seated front
Jo
G,ordon,
Mary
Beth
Long,
Rhonda
and Judy Pnce, Beth Ann Wolle Amv
E. Mam St., from 9 a m. to 4
' .
left to right, Beverly Kauff, Ca role Bailey, Laura Horsley, Ma,ry'Belh Long:
Erwm,
Laura
Horsley,
Zandra
Vaughan,
Mega'\Cale, Sus1e Pooler, Mehssa
p m on Fn day an d from 9 U(Jl!l
Megan Cale, Melissa McM1lhon, Zandra Vaughan , iiusie Pooler, Robin
McMilhorr, JeMifer Meadows, Robm Gaspers and Peggy Cremean'
12 noon on Saturday.
--~
SATURDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS Po ny
Pullers Assn , will hold 1ts flfsl
pony pull contest, 7:30 p m.
Saturday at Bar-30 groW!ds
ATHENS - Nell S1mon 's evenmg of dmner an d t'n- t..:hcu ge. a nHmmunl dmner
nea r Tuppers Plains RefreshcomiC play "TI1e Gmgerbread le rlam ment 1'\ full d tn n~t ( llCll'!'.e or $4 75 wlil be made to
ments avw lable; pubhc mENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Announcement has
Lady" Will be g1ven a spec1al menu, mcludm g .tppettzei s, caeh
pPr SU II
,lttt!!IHifng,
VIted
been made of the engagement of Nancy Lynn Koon, daughter
By Helen Bottel
d1nner-lhealre presentatiOn by entrees cmd dessert s, hCls be('n /\ILuhu\i ( beve l ,1ges \\&gt;Ill also
SPAGHETTI Dmner, II a m.
of Mrs. Rhoda Koon, Ripley, W. Va.,and the late Lewis Koon
Ohw Valley S1unmer Theater plan ned, wtth entt ecs to Ill - be; , v.ulc~bl e )) mne r begtnsat li
to 7 p m. Salurd~y at Pomeroy
to Christopher Lee Sayre, son of Mr. and Mrs. Pearley Sayre:
tOVST ) m the Baker Cen ter el ude cranbe1i y glazed p n~ and the sh1111 Will st.u t at
F1re Statwn w1th proceeds to
Leon. Miss Koon IS a jumor at Point Pleasant High Sc hool.
Bal
lr oom on th e OhiO ch icke n
br east,
Beef l.l p Ill
First Steps for Stepmom
go to lhe fire department Dea r Helen
Sayre graduated from Pomt PleasantH1gh School in 1973 and
Umverstty campus.
StJuganoff, and a se ledtun of
J"he C: 1nge1 b t ead Lad)"
b01 ldmg fund . $2 adults, $1
is employed by Dennie H1ll Construct10 n Co., Inslltute, W
D1ck Stevens, director of stea ks, fi sh and r (1ast beef
\\\\1 · IJe prcsenlcd fu1
two
Th1s letter 1s for "Gomg W1ld ," the stepmother who was .
children Pubhc mv1ted
Va. A JW!e weddmg 1s bemg planned
·
Afl er dtnner , th e Hucltenre 11eekcmb, i\p11l 4-5 and 10·12,
Early i~ our relationship, my husband and I decided that no publ1 c occasiO ns for Oh10
SPAGHETTI S upp e r ,
matter what , we love and need each other. That was unportant, Umvers1ly, IS stagmg the ftrsl w1ll be able to settle back and m till' bdl lr uom of Baker
Rutland
Grade
School , smce we both left bad marriages and each had two children.
spring-t1me OVST productiOn . enJOYone of NCJl Smwn ·s must Ccntl.:!r T1ck eb-i &lt;:Jre ava 1lable
begmnmg 4.30 p.m Saturday
m the Baker Center lobby or
When his children, a boy and a glfl, came to hve w1th us, we A form er ac tor hi mself, sophtstlcated comedtes
w1lh proceeds to Rutland greeted them with open a rms and a united front. Shll, there were Stevens has dtrecled theater
" It 's a tr1cky sho". p1 obabi) call 594-:ltbl
Volw1teer Emergency Sq uad problems w1th lour kids and ste pparents on either slde.
everywhere from Colorado to Strn on's tn cktest, " Stevens
Mrs. Ardella Mc Carty, guard ian an d past associate b01ldm g fund; adults $1.50 ,
Naturally our authonty was questiOned. When the children Pi ltsbur gh to Europe,"'the says, relaxing over coffee aftet
LAY·A·Y/ A Y..
Columbus, grand g01de of the guardian, Bethel I, Columbus ; children, 75 cents. Pubhc m- would run to the "real" parent, they 'd fir¢ honesty,anq fa1rness latter as en tert ainm e nt an evemng's rehew 11al. "' In
V
lled
Bethel of Ohio, InternatiOnal Paul Darnell , Pomeroy, past
on both fronts. Soon they dropped the "real." If my husba nd felt I direc tor for th\ Department of much of S1mon 's later work
Order of Job's Daughters, was assoc1ale grand guard1an , and
such as 'Lady' he has gotten
SQUARE Dan ce 8 30 to 11 ·30 was unreasonably harsh, he 'd talk to me, but not m their hearmg, the Army
tnspectmg officer for Bethel 62 Donna Ba uman, past honored at Pomer oy Jumor JH •gh
Beca use of the great success mlo rnure rnatur e sub jed~
and if !fell I had erred, I'd apologiZe. Same w1th h&gt;m.
Monday mght at the Pomeroy queen and grand marshall of Sponsored by Semor Citizens
I never tned to h1de my fee lmg toward the1r mother. I was of last summer's OVST dmner- wtthoul g1vmg up the comtc
Oh10, Belpre.
Ma sonic Temple.
honest
w1th thl!"stepchildren from the begmrung and that helped theater of "The Last of the Red aspects of hts 'vvntmg "
Ce nter Admi SSIOn $1 for
Also mtroduced were Ben adults, ch1ldren under 12 ad- clear the a!f of resenlment a nd Jealousy. St1ll I never put her Hot Lovers," OVST has once
A potluck dmner preceded
In "G1ngerb1 ead 11.ady ", Ne1l
the inspectiOn attended by Philson , wort hy patr on of m•lted free Refreshmen ts w1ll down, and they don 't use her as a weapon:
Sunon
wrttes aboUt a former
aga 1n dec •ded to offer
about 80 persons. Members of Racme Chapter, OES; John be sold.
They know they can talk to me about any problem ... and theatergoers a co mplete mghtclub stngc r , se p;~rated
• An Elna or
the Bethels of Glous ter , Nash, master of Middleport . S!GNUP Saturday for boys they do. It's not "h1s a nd her " children, but "our family " around
from 116"husband. and the
Manetta , Belpre and Galhpohs Lodge F and AM Margaret Eh- of Rutland VIllage who w1sh to here
d!fhcult~es she laces copmg
Whih- St'wingwere present Barbara Fultz, man , guard1an of Be thel 73, play summer baseball. Boys
w1lh her fmnd s. the world and
Being a good stepparent &gt;s difficult, but 1t 's an imposs&gt;ble
Maehine.
honored queen, presen ted a g1ft Ga lh po hs, Om1e Kuctk , are to be at Rutland gym be- task w&gt;thoutsupport from your mate. If "Going Wild'S" husband
herself. SurroW!ded by a g1oup
to the inspectmg officer and the honored queen of Bethel 40, tween II a.m. and 12 noon Fee won 't help, then perhaps it 's t1me to re~valuate their marriage
of colo rful and mtcresllllf.t
•Con sole
com march and a monetary Mane lUI ; H1lda Kuc1k, · past IS $4.
characlcrs she qu1ps her way
He could be lacking in other respects, too No woman should hve
g&gt;ft from th e Bethel was guard&gt;an of Bethel 40 ; ·K•m
to a fma l conquest of her
Cahint'ls
m a situatiOn that drives her crazy. - SUCCESSFUL STEPSUNDAY
presented for the gran d Ze &gt;gler, ho nored queen of
MOTHER
problems,
thanks
to
Smwn's
TWO
WEEK
r evival
•Hutton Holers
A bnda l shower honon ng breezy dwlogue
guard1an 's proJect wh1ch 1s Belpre 65; Charlene M1lh oan, beg mmng at Freedom Gospel
M1ss Carla Cnsp, bnde ~ lecl of
support o,f the M1d11estern guardian of Bet hel 56, M&gt;ss•on, Bald Knob, 7:30p. m. Dear Helen.
The cast includes a nu sture
eZig·ZagJame
s
Large,
was
,
held
Ch1ldren 's Home m Cincinnati. Glouster;
of local residents and students
"Gomg W1ld" lost the first round by thmking of herself as a
and
Charl es Evang&lt;!hs t Rev. W1llard
D1s l&gt;n g u1 s hed g uests Milhoan, assoc1a te guard1an of Carn ey, Charleston Special "stepmother." We have never used ti)JII,)'iord m our house, and &gt;f recently at the Me~gs Inn.
Ed1e Rol li ns pla; s the t1lle
AIIaeh m e n Is .
yell
ow
and
wh1te
color
A
presented were Kathy K1ng, Belhcl 56.
someone
else
does
we
qu1ckly
correct.
rule,
w•t h Tony Coleman. Mac
s1ngers w1lh Dijn Hayman and
sc heme was carried out
Diane Carsey, Debbie Taylor,
Thayer, Nma Sheeler, Porter
ToG W -your husband 's daughter must feel she belongs A purple and wh1le mum the Hymn t1mers and others.
past honored queens of Bethel cenlerp1ece decorated the Pubh c mvited
that you aren't taking her grudgi ngly JUst so you can get her Hostess for the shower was Srm th and Brian Dcbt tt'lto as
. 62 ; J,ulle F1sher, past honored table. Miss Carsey poured the
featured
pl~l)'CJ s
I.e \\
PRACTICE Session for m- fa ther. Remember the loss of the woman who bore her is rough M1ss An 1ta Kmg
Ga mes were played w1lh Lclllrcu ne ~md J un J l' nkms hcl\ e
' queen of Bethel 71, Groveport ; punch and Mrs. Bernard Fultz s tallat wn, Mary Shn ne 37 (even though she wasn't the best mother) . Try to see her s1de.
Margi Ehman , past honored served the ca ke
Order of the Wh1te Shrme of Remember 1t's the grown-up 's 1dea of what's stupid and what 's pnzes gomg to Miss Anp designed the se t :rnd l1 gh ts
queen of Bethel 73, Galhpohs.
" House of
Jerusalem, 2 p m. at Pomeroy not stup1d that causes the generat10n gap. Accept her feelings Colwell, Miss Cathy Osborne, \\ol t h Peggy I mu .rill('. Alden
Fabrtcs"
and
she'll
accept
yours
.
M1ss
Rayanna
Cole
and
M1ss
Dorothy Hawkins, Columbus,
Dalzell
,
Palm'"'
Black,
D1ana
Masomc Temple
• MONDAY
grand secretary of Oh10 and
We'll be 60 this year, but our children (now grown ) say we Rose Colbw n
Gr1mes an d Peter Mus te
DISTRICT 13, Daughters of
IIIDIUI'OIT
RUTLA ND Freew!ll Baptis t
Refr eshments of cake, assistmg p1 ududwn
have the open-mindedness of youth . And you know? They make
supreme llflh messenger ,
America,
rally prachce at 2
revival
through
Apr!l
Church
mm ts, po tato chips and pop
Hugh Sm1th, grand sen ior
us feel yoWlg' - A.M.t: .•.
In add1t10n to tile $2 25 ticket
OliO
p.m. at the JOOF hall. Rally
were served to those named
custodian a nd assoc&gt;ale , 13, 7·30 p m. There w1ll be
Wedne sday.
Dear Helen .
and to M1ss Marcella Charles,
guardian of Be lhel 64; Wilham spec1al singing each evemng
MONDAY
Fairy tales (and some of your letters) depict a stepmother as M•ss Jane l Neal, M1ss D1ana
Hawkins, v1ce assoc1ate grand and Rev. Waller Pa tterson,
THEODORUS Co unci l 17,
Mason , w1ll be spea kmg. Rev
a w&gt;tc h. Mine, however , doesn 't quite fit th.e.·stereotype. So here, S1mth, M1ss Darla Ebersbach
Daughters
of America, 7 30
Roger Turner , pastor, mvttes
and Mtss Jeanme Harnson
to explam, 1s - WHAT IS A LOVING STEPMOTHER•
p.m at the IOOF hall All
the pulihc .
Sendmg a g,n was Tamm&gt;e
A loving stepmother &gt;s one who as soon as she hears your
RALLY SET
MEIGS Girls Athlet1 c members urged to attend smce , tone of voice on the telephone, asks, "What's wrong , honey •"
Jarrell.
Distnct 13, Daughlers of Boosters, 7 p.m at Me1gs High pract1ce w!ll be held lor the
She IS the one who waits up for yofi when you're commg to
America, rally will at the IOOF School. All mteresled persons district rally.
RETURN HOME
VISit late at night because you've had some trouble at home. She
hall at 2 p.. Wednesday. The invited.
REVIVAL be gmnmg at really CARES.
Mrs Joseph Fosler, Carol,
supper will be served at Trinity
Morgan Cente r Wesleyan
She rearranges her whole family hfe when you decide to Patnc1a, and Anthony,
w~days
TUESDAY
Church at 5·30 p.m. and
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter. Church 7: 30 p.m Rev. Earl leave the person who has made hfe unbearable (your mother) I..Jvoma, M1ch , returned home reservations are to be made Beta S1gma Plli Soron ty , 01ler will be the spea ker. 0 H. and come to hve with your Dad.
Friday after spendmg the past
w1th Mrs. EJna' Reibel by Columbus and Southern Ohw Cart, pasloF, mv&gt;les the pubhc
She's the one who helps you rearrange'the furniture to make , week here w1 lh her parents,
SWlday. Apracllce for the rally Electr1 c Co 7:30p.m. Carolyn to attend.
room for you, even though she's five months pregnant.
Mr and Mrs. Ralph Webb,
will be at the hall Sunday at 2 Satterfield and Edwina Scott,
You can really talk to her and she helps solve your problems. Rac me, and Mrs. Edward
p.m.
POMEROY Ga rden Club Sle's more bke you than you area, so it's routine to have hours of Foster, Pomeroy .
cultural program , "Examples
7:30p.m
at home of Mrs Roy - endless conversations and debates Wlth her. She knows you even
of Fnendship ". Elect10n of the
Dun ng a li fe tim e the girl of lhe year . Susan Baer Bel:tmg, Mulberry Ave.
better than you know yourself
average Amencan consu mes 26 and Debb&gt;e Fmlaw, hostesses.
MIDDLEPORT Garden
She's the one who makes your favorite meals when you 're
m1lhon tons of water, 10.000
Club,
7:30p.m
at
the
home
of
depressed (and hungry) .. . who often takes your side when you
RA,CINE Masomc Lodge 461,
pounds of meat, t4 tons of m•lk
Mrs. M. L. French w1th Mrs and your lather are fighting, but she 's always falf.
7·30
p
m.
at
the
Templl'
and cream. 9,000 pounds of
She's the one who would g1ve you every cent she had lor
and
VISitors M. C. W1lson, assisting hostess
wheal. and grea t qu ant11les of Member s
Book
review
"The
Secret
Life
college
when the time comes. ( If she had a cent.)
welcome .
other products of the earth
I
of Plan is" by Mrs Carl Horky.
Above all, a lovmg stepmother is the one person you love
Spnng arrangement by Mrs. more than anyone else in the world, but It's hard for a guy to
Rita Hamm.
come right out and say it So I'm wr1t1ng 1t ..- A LOVING.SON
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
regular meellng, 8 p.m. at the Dear Son:
WCO-DCO
Maso n1c Templ e. Initiation
Thanks for a great tribute. When your stepmother reads this,
WASHER----..S319.9S
ceremony for one ca ndidate she'll know HER son wrote it. But otber parents will be grateful '
DRYER ______ $224.95
too. I'll bet your letter shows up on several dinner plates tomght
Off1cers to wea r formals.
PAIR ________ $499,00
with a note, "This could be you - Mom'" - H.
TliorO&lt;lgh yet gentle fabric care ts a turn of tho dlol away
CLUB TO MEET
wlttt a Frigidaire Custom Deluxe Laundry Pai r . Wash
The Middleport Ga rden Club
anything, from. a single plec:e to an 18·1b. load without
wasting water and detergent thanks to the Water Level
w1ll meet Monday mght at 7 30
Selector. In tho matching dryer, a Fabrics Selector to dta'
p.m at the home of Mrs. M L
the proper heat setting for virtually every fabric
Frenf h wi lh Mrs. M C. W1lson
as the assisting hostess . The
ROYAL.CROWN
program w1llfeature a rev&gt;ew
by Mrs Carl Horky of the book,
BOTTLING COMPANY
Midilleport
·
"The SecrefLife of Plants" by
Peter
Tompkins
and
••
.'
Mrs
Rita
Christopher
Bird.
'
Hamm will have the spnng
'
arrangement. A nominating
committee will be appointed
and for roll call m~mber.§ are
Smartly-styled
to respond with name's of
flowers and trees in blo~ m
I

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'Gingerbread Lady·' scf?eduled

• •

NOW

FOR
MOniER'S DAY

We have
lots more.
See our complete selection
of styles for men and

Shower fetes
Carla Crisp

women Alt with the
A ccu tron tu ning fork

movem en t that gua rantees

accuracy to within a
minute a month!
From $95 to $1800
lllustr•1ed: Spacev11w model
m stainless steel. SIU.

" ',
I'

•'.

Frigidaire Heavy Duty Automatic Washels.
They combine tough, heavy duty
components and gentle, thorough

''
''
'•

cleaning power to make

•

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easier al"!lllfld any home.

S1zes

35 to 50

·'

Reg.-Short-Long

.,'

and Portly

'
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:

SPORT COATS

'

.EH'I

LF-QUARTS

$45 to $85
SUITS

~0

::~.

Bethel inspected

Just In Time
For Spring
and Graduation.

Gene Richards . "The Inventory is ge tting worse. Our
members approve of the shutdown , but we are all concerned
what will happen after this
summer." He said employes
w1ll lose an average of $60 a
week durmg the shutdowns .

.

FRIDAY
,
Wome n's
POMEROY
Bowlmg Assoc •at10n annual
mee ti ng, Pomeroy Bowlmg
Lanes , 7 p m

•

MEN'S SUITS
and sport
coats

now ," said Local President

'

Us.

OF

'·

to $180

Red Rose

1:&gt;06 FOOD

BAHRMIDDLEPORT
CLOTHIERS
OHIO

Here's a portable
.

STEAMBOAT-liNN

'"

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SUNDAY MENU

,,
l'

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,.'·

MEAT- Turkey &amp; Dressing, 'Roast Beef,
Ham, Flounder Fish. ,
VEGETABLES Lima Beans, Beets, '
Noodles, Potatoes (sweet ·mashed. home
fries) .
SALAD - Fruit &amp; Jello, Slaw, Tossed,
Cottage Cheese.
PIE - Graham Cracker, Peach and Apple.

,.t.
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to
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Sunday, April6, ~· 8:30-~~
. Weekdays 6dl0·8: 30 ""
'
........
' ' '
/
Ph.
949..J551
'
Racine, Ohio
3rd St.

~·•'

.

I

,'•
r

..

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black and white
T.V. perfec1 .for your

Baker. Furniture

kitchen, bedroom,
den, etc. QUAS·AR

Red

. personal size
portable in deluxe
walnut.grain
print cabinet

Dog Food

Dog Nuggets··.-Dog·
·Meal
ALSO SURE WfN &amp;
SAVER DOG MEAL

Model 8P3051LN ·

RNER RADIO &amp; T.V

SUGAR RUN MILLS
992711~)

Mulberry l'.ve.

Middleport, 0.

Pomeroy

I

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:~:

~

.

Miss Nancy Lynn Koon

We W1re F Iowen

Everywhere

~

media,

GREAT SELECTIONS

Kaiser taking

x=

This is a
Bulova
Accutron®
watch.·

RUTLAND - Resident, of
western Me&gt;gs CoWlly soon will
receive by mall an envelope
conU!ming useful information
about th e Southeast Oh10
Emergency Medical Services
(EMS). Joan Stewart. station
ch&gt;ef of the Rutland EMS, sa1d
members of the Rutland squad
have been workmg to prepare
the mailing.
The envelope w1ll contam an
EMS te leph one sticker , a
folder about the EMS system
and
other
mformahve
mate na~. The entire staff of the
all-volunteer Rutland EMS
sU!tion joined in working over
20-man hours on the ma1hng.
The Rutland station began
service in October, 1974 as the
newest member of the EMS
system. " We thought the
maihng would be a good way to
let people m the area know
we're here to help them," Mrs.
Stewart said . Fam1lies
rece iving the matenal live m
the area wh1ch will usually be
serv ed by the Rutland station.
Seven different post ~ff&gt;Ces
were included m th.e mailing,
Rt I Rutland and P 0 boxes,
m the Scouhng program and Rt 1 Langsville and P. 0.
thelf w1ves or husbands should boxes, Rt. 1 Dexter and P. 0.
attend
boxes, Rt. I M&gt;ddleport, Rt. 4,
Awards to be presented Pomeroy , Harrisonville P 0.
mclude Unit Honor Award, boxes, and Rt. I Vinton.
Ro undup ; Adult Traimng ' Anyone on these routes who
Awards, Most Boy Ad- does not get an EMS envelope
vancemenls, Umt Awards, the or who needs more sl&gt;ckers can
D1s tnct Aware of Merit, call Rutland EMS at 742~051 or
Veteran Scouter Recogmt10n, Mrs. Stewart at 742-3191
~ost New Boys Recr01ted and Slickers are also ava1lable
Umt Award.
from EMS Education, 16 State
The cost 1s $3.75 per person. St., Gallipolis, 45631
Reservatwns and money must
be sent to Bill Knigh t before
ApriliB, checks payable to Boy
Scouts of Amenca

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art,

For All Occas10ns

l

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Bank Rate Financing

journahsm,

scouter,'s recognition dinner on 25th

HUNTINGTON- Cub Scouts
m the Tr1-Stale Area Council
U!ke part m a vaned program
the
next 12 months that offers
t pts gl ga
0 102 354 239 fun, var1 ety, act iOn , and
3 673 13260 purpose. Leaders of nearly 100
3 85 299 264 Cub Scout packs are holdmg
the!f annual program plannmg
8 B.t 292 257

20 51 4 44 190 325
Canad•an
" w . L t. pt s gf ga
45 32 0 90 322 294

Quebec

for HMC TV project

3 71 231 256
29 45 I 59 255 JOS
18 55 3 39 210 326

34 40

West
I
51 24

Hou ston

Dtmng Hall made Significant
changes in its ' manner of
operahon th1s week. The public
is still invited -to eat m the
d1nin g hall, however, the
· manner of payment has been
.
.
revised
•
Gallipolis SlrineCiub President, Norman Stewart, right,
Instead of going through the
presents h1s club's contnbution to Earl Neff, accepting for
cafeteria lme and paying the
the Holzer Medical Center's ped1atn cs TV fund ,
·
cashier for each 1tem taken,
there will now be a cashier at
the door to coll~ct a flat fee
whenever a guest enters. The
nat rate for breakfast Will be
$1.50, lWlch and dmner w1ll
each be a $2 flat fee
This w1ll aiJ,ow guests to ,go
through the cafetena line and
The lund to prov1de Gall1pohs Shnne Club, as well choose whatever they desire,
te levisiOn for th e yo ung as e1ghteen busmesses who and will also permit seconds on
patients in Holzer Med1cal have donated to lh1s ped1atn cs everythmg but main en\fees.
Center's ped&gt;atnc nursmg umt television fund.
Children Wider 12 years of age
Earl Neff, a member of the will only be charged $1.50 flat
1s well mto 1ls successful third
Medi cal
Cen ter fee, but !Ins mcludes no second
year wtlh the recent con- Holzer
voru
-nleer
SerVICe
Leag
ue's helpmgs Persons over 62 years
lnbutwn by the Gal hpohs
Steermg
ComCommumly
Shrin e Club who donated $106
old who present their soc1al
for one mo nth's televi siOn mit tee has been solely secur1ty card will pay {)nly
serv1ce w1lhm the children 's respons1ble lor ra1smg all of $1.75 flat rate, and this also
the fWldS lor the enllre perwd mcludes no seconds
room s at Holzer
smce
the free televiswn servtce
Th1s free serv1ce for the
Robert Hoff , dmmg hall
began
hosp1lahzed youngsters began
manager said the new pricing
Any md!VIduals, businesses schedule was estabhshed to
m October, 1972, and it has
been contmuous smce that ttme or orgamzatwns who w1sh to fac1htate service and ehmmate
through the great generos1ty of donate to the most worth y lund delays at the cashier 's cage.
many , many CIVIC and soc1al may do so by contacting Mr. College students will continue
organ1z atwns, such as th e Neff, Teodora Ave , Gallipohs. to·use their I.D. card for meals,
and the College faculty and

Shrine Club donates sum

321
179 43

·l' SOCia
., ·1
t ca·Jendar!l

theatre, dan ce, literature,
folklore, legen d, hlstor~, .
people, and related areas to
augment the traditional school
Engli sh programs Kindergarten through College.
A $6 reg&gt;stration fee for nonmembers and $5 for members
of SCOTE w1ll be charged. The '
lee mcludes workshops,
handouts, morning coffee and
lunch. The registratiOn fee can
be mailed to Mrs. Jean Cooper,
secretary-treasurer of SCOT!' ..
Box 806, Rio Grande College,;
R10 Grande, Ohio 45674.
;

The Rw Grande College-RIO staff procedure will be the
Grande CommWl&gt;ty College • _same as it has been in the past

Fmal ABA Stand•ng s
By Umt ed Pre ss Int erna tional
East
w. I. p(t 9 b

'
New

&gt;C!•:•.:ocoo:o:•:.:.o:o:o:o o''•!•!•:•:O:O'•'•:O'O:o'•'·~~.·.•,•,•,•,::,

teresting and entertaining and '
1s invlred to attend.
•.
The spnng workshop will be
a day of Ideas using the rich :
Appalachian Cultufes of lh?•
'1U'ea to ge n eral~ answers to~~~
question " What do I do n~? ,
Presentations w1ll be 1n 'oelr):,

p.m on the college campus.
Coordinated by Dr Charlotte
Carver, Assistant Dean for
Arts Sciences and Pfofesswnal
Educal1on at Rio Grande, the
one-day event will be a "What
Do I ·no Now'! " session
designed pnmarily ·for Southeastern Ohio educators .
However, the general pub~ic
will find the program m·

Cafeteria payme~~
change announced

5 7
81 r

PaC if iC DI VIS IOn
• w I pet . g . b.

x Den ve r
San An t on16

U

he·. Southeastern Oh10
Counc1l of Teachers of Enghsh
(SCOTE) m cooperat10n with
Rio Grande College-Rio
Grande CommWli ty College
and teh Wood Thrush Folk Arts
CoWlcil , Inc ., will present a
"Fesllval of Ideas" for the
pracllcmg educator Saturday,
Apnl 12 from 8·3fr a m. to 2:30

•

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r-"""""""'· .. .... . . ...- ....,._.

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Rio to ho.st spring workshop-: ·

Pro Standings

Lyle Will .fight

~~~M~iddleport-PomeroJ, 0 ., •!.idl!y, A.Eri14, 1975

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.O.PENe
7 DAYS
A WEEK

.O&amp;D MEAT
830 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

Nelson Giant Print ,Bible
'

Kin James version
.'

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4 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Apnl4, 1975

f

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N BA Sf.;t mhnq !io
By Un •t c d Pr ess lnt c rnahonal
eastern Co nf e rence
A t1 .1n1 1c Ot\'I Sto n
w 1 p et
x Bo s ton
SH '11
71~
Buft~ l p
,
JR :12 600

for title May 16
-'

DENVER (UP!)
Thmgs
were Ioot&amp;ig gloomy lor seventh-ranked heavyweight Ron
Lyle.
The last time he.had a lightFeb. II at Honolulu--lie was
outpointed by unknown Jimmy
Young of Ph&gt;ladelphla for his
seco nd loss in 33 pro fights .
Then last month he had· a
brawl wtth his wife Nadine
which resulted in assault
ch~rges bemg !lied agamsl
him.
His
chances
of
a
heavywe&gt;ght tiUe bout were
considered slim, if they existed
at all .
But Thursday morrung all •
that was changed when Lyle
got a phone call from Mike
Hayes, vice president of the Denver Boxing Club, which
handles Lyle's fights
"He sa1d everythmgwas set
for me to meer Muhammad
Ali," Lyle said. "I guess it's
hke they always say, the
darkest moments come just

N e wYo rk

39

.11

g b
10
l'l

JHB

Pllilade lphto:t J &lt;~ 46 .1?5 2.1
C~ntral D•v• S•on

A represe~latt ve of U1e club
m New York stgned the contract for the Lyle-Ali fight
Thursday The bout, to be
teleVIsed hve over ABC, w11l be
staged in La s Vegas, Nev. ,
May 16
And Lyle says he's not gomg
into the f1ght JUSt for a
paycheck, even though he w&gt;ll
p1ck up $100,000 plus $10,000 for
expenses while Ali earns $1
million, the amount ABC has
pa1d for the n ghts Lyle's
preVIoUS biggest pay day was
$46,000 wh1ch when Jerry
Quarry decis10ned h1m in New
York m February, 1973
"I'm not gomg to be JUSt an
opponent," said Lyle, 30.2-1
with 21 knockouts to hls cred&gt;l.
"I'm not looking lor JUSt a
payday I feel ! have the style
that can beat h1m because of
my ab1lity to punch mside.
That will create a problem lor
him."
Lyle has never been knqckM
out or down ; for that matter.

before dawn."

w

x washing ton
Houston
Cleveland
A tlahta
New Orlean s

Weiskopf GGO leader
GREENSBORO, N C. (UP! ) gustmg to 50 m1les per hour
- Tom We1skopf says he's and temperatures m the upper
been "kind of like the country 40s.
'
' II
Hlll, an II -time wmner on the·
... m a recession.
But &gt;f the nat10n's economy PGA tour in 16years, shot what
starts going like Weiskopf's he called h1s best round of the
golf game at the Greater year m carding a 67 for si&gt;Ie
Greensboro Open, unem- possess10n of second place.
ployment lines may soon be a Perry Leslie, an obscure tour
sophomore from Springfield,
thing of the past.
We&gt;skopf, the sensation of Mo., was in third place w1th a
the tour in 1973 when he won three-under 68 after the first
four U.S. titles and the Bntish round.
South African Bobby Cole
Open, has been winless since .
But Thursday he fired a sevr n- shot a 69, two-under, and held
Wlder-par 64 on the 6,700-yard down fourth place. Veteran
Sedgefield Country Club course Jerry Heard and Bnan
for a three&lt;1troke lead over . "Buddy" Allin, both w1th oneDave H11l gomg into today's Wider 70s, were the only other
second roupd of the $225,000 golfers to break par.
Lee Trevmo led a cluster of
GGO.
Commg off a second-place players at even-par 71 Others
finish in last week's Heritage were Bert Yancey, Joe Inman,
Classic and two days of Bobby N1chols, AI Ge~berger,
pract1ce at Augusta, Ga., for Leonard Thompson and Sam
next week's Masters, Weiskopf Adams
Johnny Miller, a three-tune
birdied seven holes and had
WIMer already this year, was
pars on the rest.
"This is one of the fmest within long range at onMver
rounds of golf I've ever had," par 72.
"I just can't pull m the wmd
he sa&gt;d. "There 's no doubt in
that's
all there &gt;s to 1t," sa1d
my mind."
We iskopf has had lower M1ller, whose round included
rounds, but not under the two double bogeys.
Other promment playe rs
conditions that greeted the
GGO f1eld Thursday - wmds were even less fortunate. South
African Gary Player, who Will
be delen.ding champiOn at the
CONVERSE COACH Masters ' tourname nt next
ATHLETIC SHOES ... . week, had a five-over-par 76.
Lee Elper, who w&gt;ll be the first
FOR YOUR KIND
bla ck to compete in the
I
~ OF ACTION!
· ~
Masters
, had a 74
::;&amp;
I~
AVAILABLE IN
Arnold Palmer turned 1n a
-=
SEVERAL STYLES
77, as did eight-time GGO
-=
AND COLORS!
wiMer Sam Snead Defendmg
cham
pion Bob Charles, a
:§ All feature padded ankle
New Zealand,
lefthander
:::%
..--. collars and tongues, heavy managed a from
75.
J
.
C. Snead had
1~
duty toe stnpes, long
a 78 and Lanny WadklnS a 79.
weanng outsoles and
full sponge cushion
A FffiSf
msole and arch.
COLUMBUS, Oh1o iUPI) The United States Trotting
CAN VAS
AssociatiOn annoWiced ThW'sHI -CUT
day that for the flrst t&gt;me m
harness racing history , at least
f1ve races have been scheduled
wttfl estimated or guara nteed
purses of $200,000
The races are the Roosevelt
$ HlCHil FO• UR
U-" lln . . ..: !lAM
Internatwnal Trot, the Hambletonian, the Cane Pace, the
Your Thorn MeAn Store
Yonkers Trot and the MonhcelMiddleport. Oh•o
lo-New York City OTB classic.

I pet g b
21
73&lt;1
41
J81,
41
494 19
50 :1BS 28
57 :lBB :15' ~

58
41
40
31
13

soo

Western Confe r enc e
M i dW es t 0 1VIS IOO

I. pe t
35 563
37 538
4 1 494
43 456

w
45
43
40
36

Chtcago
KC O m aha
Detrotl
Mtlwaukee

g b

&gt;1

x. Go ld en Slate &lt;17 33 588
Sep ltl e
&lt;10 39 50 6
Portland
36 &lt;1 1 -150
PhO('Il iX
32 &lt;18 •100
Lo s Angeles
30 50 375
X· CI1nc h ed diVISIOn flfl('
Thursday 's R es ults
Cl eve land 100 N ew York 95
Fr1day' s Game s
Wash mgton al Boston
Pl'lllad elph 1a at Buff alo
New Orleans at Ch•ca go
New Yor k a t Milwauk ee
Go lden Sta t e at Phoenix
Seatt le a ! Los Ange l es
KC Oma ha at Porfland

61 t
11

15
17

y

26 690
26 690
52 381

58
58

Yo rk

y Ken tu c ky
Sl LOUIS

31
27 57
15 69
Wes t

MemphtS
Vr r g.n1a

w

I
19
33
39
46

65

51

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pet

g b.

77&lt;1 607 1&lt;1
536 20
452 27

ln drana
45
u tah
38
San D .ego
31 53 36 9 34
x Clinch ed d iV ISIOn T1tl ~
y· Pi ayoH f or dlvts•on cham
p to nsh•p
Thur sday's Result s
New York 11 6 V1 r g m 1a 11 1,o t
San AntoniO 137 l n d 1ana 122
Ke nt ucky 103 Memph ts 93
Utah 128 St LOUIS 98c
Denve r 148 San D1ego 121
Fn d ay's Game s
New York at Ke nt ucky
NH L Stand•ng s
By Un1ted Press 1nternat1onal
011/I SIOn 1
w 1 t pt s gt ga
49 16 11 109 283 178
)( Ph lla
1

NY Ra n ger s 36 28 14 86 3 2 268
NY l sl ande r s32 24 22 86 257213
A l lan t a
34 29 15 83 239 224
DIVI SIOn 2

1 r- pt s gf ga
37 32 10 84 267 253

w

Va n co uver

36 34 8 80 262 237
33 J l 14 80 262 262
Mmnesota
23 48 7 55 220 334
KansasC 1IY 15 5311 41182 325
Chtcago

St LOU IS

DI VISIOn 3

1

w

x Mo nlreal

d5 l4

t pts gf

ga

19 109 360 22 1

Los A n geles 41 17 20
'fll1 tl sbu rgh
3627 15
oer r o 11
23 43 12
WaShington
7 66 5
DIV IS IOn 4

102 263 181
873 15280
58 25 6 324

19 171 £13 1
~

w

1 t pt s g f ga
48 16 15 Ill 350 238

x Bu ff alo
Boston
Toronto
Cal1 fornta
X CltnChe~

&lt;10 26 13 93 341 241
31 32 15 77 21J 301
19 47 12 50 208 310
di VISIOn htl e

Thursday 's Results
B u ffal o 4 Boston 2
NY Rangers 1 Phdadelph ta 1
Chrcago 6 Kansas C •tY 4
Fnda y's Games
NY Rangers a1 A tl anta
Mtnnesota a t Va n couver

WHA Standrng s
Bv Un•h~·d Pre ss tnter na t1o na1
East
w. t. t , pt s gf ga
x New Eng
43 28 ' 5 91 27 1 27 1
Cl eve land
Ch tcago
ln d ranap ols

x

''"""

.._ w

4231
41 31

San D 1ego

Mrnnesota

~

~
~

Phoen1x
Ba ltimore

38 30

Toronto

Wm nrp eg
Edmonton
Vancouver

.1232
38 33

2 86340 298
4 60 311 272

3 4 37

4 72 266 27 0

34 39 2 70 244 26 1
x Cl1nched diVI SIOn t1tl e

Thursday' s R esult s
New Eng land 4 Qu eb ec 1
San D reg o 9 Ba l11 more 2
Fnday's Gam es
Phoen ix at Mmnesota
New Eng land a t Ch 1ca g o
Wmnrpeg at Tor on to
Vancouve r at Edmonton

r Hl

INfO sm PLACE
NEW YORK (UP!) - Los
Angeles Dodger Manager Walter Alston will move into sole
possession of eighth place m
1975 for years of service among
all major league managers,
according to the Baseball
Commissioner's Office.
Alston, entering h1s 22nd
season, tra1ls only Conme
Mack (53 seasons), J ohn
McGraw (33), Bucky Harris
(29) , Bill McKechnie (25 ),
Casey Stengel .(25), Leo
Durocher ( 24) and Joe McCarthy (24 ). At present,
Jmuny Dykes (21 seasons) is
lied ,with Alston.

. , fHI; Ol,..tlLYW IC:G ..... IIfj-r~fj\L

heritage house

DISPLAY and SALE

ln Ninth -ce ntury Engl and
Kmg .Alfred made Ep1phany a
Saxon holiday by decreemg that
U'4H.,. I •· the Chnotmas season should m·
elude Chnstmas day and the 12

SEE

THE
AU NEW

The
scou ter's annual
rec ogmlion dmner to draw
attenlwn to d1stn ct and um l
scoutmasters for trammg , uml
accomplishme nt and spec1al
recognitiOn. will be Fnday,
Apnl 25, at 6·30 p m m

Fellowship Hall, Grace United
Method iSt Church, Galhpohs'
All adults ( ms l&gt; luhona l
representat tves. cubmasters,
scou tmas ters, den leade rs ,
com nult eemen , etc .) connected w1th and-or 1~t eres ted

Area cub packs plan
programs and projects

fAX REIMBURSEMENTS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A total
of $1.95 m1lhon m first half 1974
property tax rollback re&gt;mbursements had been sent to
seven coW!tuls, w1th Geauga
County receiving the largest
amount, $680,439
Other counh es and the
amoW!ts they received were
Tuscarawas, $441 ,951 ; Muskmgu m, $290,409 ; Crawford,
$262,555; Fayette, $121,955 ;
Harrison, $83,545 and Galha,
$78,6!i6.
State Auditor Thomas
Fergu~ sa1d to dale, 13
count&gt;es have rece1ved a total
of $4 2 m11lion in property U!x
rollback reimbursements.
The auditor srud the other
counties would be reimbursed
by the state after they certify
th elf ta x settlements and
property tax rollbacks to his
office.

Crossroad~
~e ld convenl1oru;.

confer ences thi s mon th to
select monthly program
themes and to suggest den and
home proJects, pack achvllies,
and special proJects
Most packs use suggested
themes that have been
carefully researched, planned,
and wnlte n m order to meet
t~e pnmary goals for Scoul!n g
character
buildm g,
c•llzensh1p traimng, and flt.
ness.
Suggested themes are, May,
Thmgs That Go; .June, Sports
Ca rm val; Jul y, Summer
Adve nt ure; Augus t, Model
Boat Regat 18; September, Tall
Tales; October, The World of
Sound ; November, Ind1 an
Fes t1val , December, Cut Scout
G1ves Goodwi ll , January ,
Tou rn ame nt ; Februar y,
Honzo ns US A ; Mar ch,
Hobble s;. and Apn l, Trallblazers of Ainenca.
Cub Seoul packs w1ll continue their b1c en tenm al
prog ram of emphas&gt;s which
w1ll recogmze Cub Scouts who
participate in act1vil!es that
prepare for the lh!fd century.
The Tn-State Area Counc1l also
plans spec1al evenls for Cub
Scouts such as Cu b Camp
Days, Webelos Father Son
Campoul , Cub Learn to Swim
Programs, and a Cub Pack
Recreational Swim Day.

•

If pl ants

delegates would feel at hom e m
the B1g Thicket of east Texas
Called a " bwlog•ca l crossroads
of North Amen ca " the area IS
overlapped by Appa lachian and
southern forests , flor a and
fau na of the West and va nel!Cs
mdt genous to Mlxtco 's sub trop•cs

COURSE COMPLETED
MARION - Andr ew E.
Baley of Rt. I, Long Bottom, a
SW ltchman, has reCeiVed a
cer hficale for complellon of a
course m print readmg and
c~rcm t analysis at General
Telephone co , of Oh10 's

•••••••••••••·~~~---. .~~ Techm cal Traming School
._.

AnnYnuncl"ng
· Sl'oRE HOURS
NEW

SELECTION

NOW!

STARTING nitS WEEK:
'•

. SAVE!

·.

~ALL'S. B'~ fRA~K~IN ,
Middleport, Ohio
OPEN9A.M.to8P.M. FRIDAY
MQN. thru THURS. &amp; SAT. 9 Til S

...

Ingels Furniture

CLOSED SUNDAYS .

Middleport

"2-~5 ·

RALL'S BEN FRANKUN

•

here. A graduate of Middleport
H1gh School, he has been with
the company for mne years. He
works in va rious exchanges m
the r·ompany's ~'!'en~ d1stnct.

FLOWERS

Middleport, Ohio

EM
" s letter

coming into
west Meigs

week off in

April and May
RAVENSWOOD, W. Va. The Ka1ser Alummum &amp;
Chem&gt;cal Co. plant here will be
shut down one week th1s month
and agam m May. Company
offi Cials said members of Local
5668 of the United Steelworkers
o~ Amenca voted Tuesday to
support the shutdowns, similar
to ones that took place last
month. The flrm w1ll try to
reduce 1ts inventory of finished
goods during the closures.
There 1s barely room to work at
the plant because of the mventory, due to dropping
Kaiser sales, accordmg to Ron
Helton of the company.
"We 've really got problems

992-2039
Pomeroy Flower Shop
Mrs. Mollard
Ph. 9n203•

Meter
Ph. 992-51"'

~an

•

•

'

THE REV . Noel Herman IS
now holdmg a reviVal at the
Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Church Smgers and pubhc
i~vllcd Serv1ce at 7 30 p m.
SPECIAL meehng Mid- .
dleporl Masomc Lodge 363, 7
p m. for fell owcraft degree . All
master ma sons Jnv1ted.
TH E HAf:RISONVILLE
INVESTITURE CEREMONY - The members Of new Middleport
Gaspers, Beth ~n.,.olfe, Danelle Reece and Amy ErJin; and stand tng are
Order u£ Eastern ~·ar w1ll hold
Browme Troop Jl74 whose leaders are Mrs. Kay Rupe and Mrs Mary Jo
Downing, Judy Pnce, Kathy Arnott B1lh Jo Gordon
Terri Roush, MelisSa
a rwnmage sale Fnd 1=1.y and
II
I''
Pooler with Mrs. Sh1rley Kauff as assistant, were invested and presented
Jenn1fer
Meadows,
Jolene
Moodispaugh, Rhonda PriCe, Judy Mowery,
Saturd ay at the f01 mer H and
their ,Browrue pins in a ceremony Thursday afternoon at the Middleport
Peggy
Cremeans
and
Carol
Sm1th.
One year pms were also presented to Bllll
R. Block btn lding in Pomeroy-,
Jumor H1gh School. The Brownies invested are p1ctur.ed h~ re seated front
Jo
G,ordon,
Mary
Beth
Long,
Rhonda
and Judy Pnce, Beth Ann Wolle Amv
E. Mam St., from 9 a m. to 4
' .
left to right, Beverly Kauff, Ca role Bailey, Laura Horsley, Ma,ry'Belh Long:
Erwm,
Laura
Horsley,
Zandra
Vaughan,
Mega'\Cale, Sus1e Pooler, Mehssa
p m on Fn day an d from 9 U(Jl!l
Megan Cale, Melissa McM1lhon, Zandra Vaughan , iiusie Pooler, Robin
McMilhorr, JeMifer Meadows, Robm Gaspers and Peggy Cremean'
12 noon on Saturday.
--~
SATURDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS Po ny
Pullers Assn , will hold 1ts flfsl
pony pull contest, 7:30 p m.
Saturday at Bar-30 groW!ds
ATHENS - Nell S1mon 's evenmg of dmner an d t'n- t..:hcu ge. a nHmmunl dmner
nea r Tuppers Plains RefreshcomiC play "TI1e Gmgerbread le rlam ment 1'\ full d tn n~t ( llCll'!'.e or $4 75 wlil be made to
ments avw lable; pubhc mENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Announcement has
Lady" Will be g1ven a spec1al menu, mcludm g .tppettzei s, caeh
pPr SU II
,lttt!!IHifng,
VIted
been made of the engagement of Nancy Lynn Koon, daughter
By Helen Bottel
d1nner-lhealre presentatiOn by entrees cmd dessert s, hCls be('n /\ILuhu\i ( beve l ,1ges \\&gt;Ill also
SPAGHETTI Dmner, II a m.
of Mrs. Rhoda Koon, Ripley, W. Va.,and the late Lewis Koon
Ohw Valley S1unmer Theater plan ned, wtth entt ecs to Ill - be; , v.ulc~bl e )) mne r begtnsat li
to 7 p m. Salurd~y at Pomeroy
to Christopher Lee Sayre, son of Mr. and Mrs. Pearley Sayre:
tOVST ) m the Baker Cen ter el ude cranbe1i y glazed p n~ and the sh1111 Will st.u t at
F1re Statwn w1th proceeds to
Leon. Miss Koon IS a jumor at Point Pleasant High Sc hool.
Bal
lr oom on th e OhiO ch icke n
br east,
Beef l.l p Ill
First Steps for Stepmom
go to lhe fire department Dea r Helen
Sayre graduated from Pomt PleasantH1gh School in 1973 and
Umverstty campus.
StJuganoff, and a se ledtun of
J"he C: 1nge1 b t ead Lad)"
b01 ldmg fund . $2 adults, $1
is employed by Dennie H1ll Construct10 n Co., Inslltute, W
D1ck Stevens, director of stea ks, fi sh and r (1ast beef
\\\\1 · IJe prcsenlcd fu1
two
Th1s letter 1s for "Gomg W1ld ," the stepmother who was .
children Pubhc mv1ted
Va. A JW!e weddmg 1s bemg planned
·
Afl er dtnner , th e Hucltenre 11eekcmb, i\p11l 4-5 and 10·12,
Early i~ our relationship, my husband and I decided that no publ1 c occasiO ns for Oh10
SPAGHETTI S upp e r ,
matter what , we love and need each other. That was unportant, Umvers1ly, IS stagmg the ftrsl w1ll be able to settle back and m till' bdl lr uom of Baker
Rutland
Grade
School , smce we both left bad marriages and each had two children.
spring-t1me OVST productiOn . enJOYone of NCJl Smwn ·s must Ccntl.:!r T1ck eb-i &lt;:Jre ava 1lable
begmnmg 4.30 p.m Saturday
m the Baker Center lobby or
When his children, a boy and a glfl, came to hve w1th us, we A form er ac tor hi mself, sophtstlcated comedtes
w1lh proceeds to Rutland greeted them with open a rms and a united front. Shll, there were Stevens has dtrecled theater
" It 's a tr1cky sho". p1 obabi) call 594-:ltbl
Volw1teer Emergency Sq uad problems w1th lour kids and ste pparents on either slde.
everywhere from Colorado to Strn on's tn cktest, " Stevens
Mrs. Ardella Mc Carty, guard ian an d past associate b01ldm g fund; adults $1.50 ,
Naturally our authonty was questiOned. When the children Pi ltsbur gh to Europe,"'the says, relaxing over coffee aftet
LAY·A·Y/ A Y..
Columbus, grand g01de of the guardian, Bethel I, Columbus ; children, 75 cents. Pubhc m- would run to the "real" parent, they 'd fir¢ honesty,anq fa1rness latter as en tert ainm e nt an evemng's rehew 11al. "' In
V
lled
Bethel of Ohio, InternatiOnal Paul Darnell , Pomeroy, past
on both fronts. Soon they dropped the "real." If my husba nd felt I direc tor for th\ Department of much of S1mon 's later work
Order of Job's Daughters, was assoc1ale grand guard1an , and
such as 'Lady' he has gotten
SQUARE Dan ce 8 30 to 11 ·30 was unreasonably harsh, he 'd talk to me, but not m their hearmg, the Army
tnspectmg officer for Bethel 62 Donna Ba uman, past honored at Pomer oy Jumor JH •gh
Beca use of the great success mlo rnure rnatur e sub jed~
and if !fell I had erred, I'd apologiZe. Same w1th h&gt;m.
Monday mght at the Pomeroy queen and grand marshall of Sponsored by Semor Citizens
I never tned to h1de my fee lmg toward the1r mother. I was of last summer's OVST dmner- wtthoul g1vmg up the comtc
Oh10, Belpre.
Ma sonic Temple.
honest
w1th thl!"stepchildren from the begmrung and that helped theater of "The Last of the Red aspects of hts 'vvntmg "
Ce nter Admi SSIOn $1 for
Also mtroduced were Ben adults, ch1ldren under 12 ad- clear the a!f of resenlment a nd Jealousy. St1ll I never put her Hot Lovers," OVST has once
A potluck dmner preceded
In "G1ngerb1 ead 11.ady ", Ne1l
the inspectiOn attended by Philson , wort hy patr on of m•lted free Refreshmen ts w1ll down, and they don 't use her as a weapon:
Sunon
wrttes aboUt a former
aga 1n dec •ded to offer
about 80 persons. Members of Racme Chapter, OES; John be sold.
They know they can talk to me about any problem ... and theatergoers a co mplete mghtclub stngc r , se p;~rated
• An Elna or
the Bethels of Glous ter , Nash, master of Middleport . S!GNUP Saturday for boys they do. It's not "h1s a nd her " children, but "our family " around
from 116"husband. and the
Manetta , Belpre and Galhpohs Lodge F and AM Margaret Eh- of Rutland VIllage who w1sh to here
d!fhcult~es she laces copmg
Whih- St'wingwere present Barbara Fultz, man , guard1an of Be thel 73, play summer baseball. Boys
w1lh her fmnd s. the world and
Being a good stepparent &gt;s difficult, but 1t 's an imposs&gt;ble
Maehine.
honored queen, presen ted a g1ft Ga lh po hs, Om1e Kuctk , are to be at Rutland gym be- task w&gt;thoutsupport from your mate. If "Going Wild'S" husband
herself. SurroW!ded by a g1oup
to the inspectmg officer and the honored queen of Bethel 40, tween II a.m. and 12 noon Fee won 't help, then perhaps it 's t1me to re~valuate their marriage
of colo rful and mtcresllllf.t
•Con sole
com march and a monetary Mane lUI ; H1lda Kuc1k, · past IS $4.
characlcrs she qu1ps her way
He could be lacking in other respects, too No woman should hve
g&gt;ft from th e Bethel was guard&gt;an of Bethel 40 ; ·K•m
to a fma l conquest of her
Cahint'ls
m a situatiOn that drives her crazy. - SUCCESSFUL STEPSUNDAY
presented for the gran d Ze &gt;gler, ho nored queen of
MOTHER
problems,
thanks
to
Smwn's
TWO
WEEK
r evival
•Hutton Holers
A bnda l shower honon ng breezy dwlogue
guard1an 's proJect wh1ch 1s Belpre 65; Charlene M1lh oan, beg mmng at Freedom Gospel
M1ss Carla Cnsp, bnde ~ lecl of
support o,f the M1d11estern guardian of Bet hel 56, M&gt;ss•on, Bald Knob, 7:30p. m. Dear Helen.
The cast includes a nu sture
eZig·ZagJame
s
Large,
was
,
held
Ch1ldren 's Home m Cincinnati. Glouster;
of local residents and students
"Gomg W1ld" lost the first round by thmking of herself as a
and
Charl es Evang&lt;!hs t Rev. W1llard
D1s l&gt;n g u1 s hed g uests Milhoan, assoc1a te guard1an of Carn ey, Charleston Special "stepmother." We have never used ti)JII,)'iord m our house, and &gt;f recently at the Me~gs Inn.
Ed1e Rol li ns pla; s the t1lle
AIIaeh m e n Is .
yell
ow
and
wh1te
color
A
presented were Kathy K1ng, Belhcl 56.
someone
else
does
we
qu1ckly
correct.
rule,
w•t h Tony Coleman. Mac
s1ngers w1lh Dijn Hayman and
sc heme was carried out
Diane Carsey, Debbie Taylor,
Thayer, Nma Sheeler, Porter
ToG W -your husband 's daughter must feel she belongs A purple and wh1le mum the Hymn t1mers and others.
past honored queens of Bethel cenlerp1ece decorated the Pubh c mvited
that you aren't taking her grudgi ngly JUst so you can get her Hostess for the shower was Srm th and Brian Dcbt tt'lto as
. 62 ; J,ulle F1sher, past honored table. Miss Carsey poured the
featured
pl~l)'CJ s
I.e \\
PRACTICE Session for m- fa ther. Remember the loss of the woman who bore her is rough M1ss An 1ta Kmg
Ga mes were played w1lh Lclllrcu ne ~md J un J l' nkms hcl\ e
' queen of Bethel 71, Groveport ; punch and Mrs. Bernard Fultz s tallat wn, Mary Shn ne 37 (even though she wasn't the best mother) . Try to see her s1de.
Margi Ehman , past honored served the ca ke
Order of the Wh1te Shrme of Remember 1t's the grown-up 's 1dea of what's stupid and what 's pnzes gomg to Miss Anp designed the se t :rnd l1 gh ts
queen of Bethel 73, Galhpohs.
" House of
Jerusalem, 2 p m. at Pomeroy not stup1d that causes the generat10n gap. Accept her feelings Colwell, Miss Cathy Osborne, \\ol t h Peggy I mu .rill('. Alden
Fabrtcs"
and
she'll
accept
yours
.
M1ss
Rayanna
Cole
and
M1ss
Dorothy Hawkins, Columbus,
Dalzell
,
Palm'"'
Black,
D1ana
Masomc Temple
• MONDAY
grand secretary of Oh10 and
We'll be 60 this year, but our children (now grown ) say we Rose Colbw n
Gr1mes an d Peter Mus te
DISTRICT 13, Daughters of
IIIDIUI'OIT
RUTLA ND Freew!ll Baptis t
Refr eshments of cake, assistmg p1 ududwn
have the open-mindedness of youth . And you know? They make
supreme llflh messenger ,
America,
rally prachce at 2
revival
through
Apr!l
Church
mm ts, po tato chips and pop
Hugh Sm1th, grand sen ior
us feel yoWlg' - A.M.t: .•.
In add1t10n to tile $2 25 ticket
OliO
p.m. at the JOOF hall. Rally
were served to those named
custodian a nd assoc&gt;ale , 13, 7·30 p m. There w1ll be
Wedne sday.
Dear Helen .
and to M1ss Marcella Charles,
guardian of Be lhel 64; Wilham spec1al singing each evemng
MONDAY
Fairy tales (and some of your letters) depict a stepmother as M•ss Jane l Neal, M1ss D1ana
Hawkins, v1ce assoc1ate grand and Rev. Waller Pa tterson,
THEODORUS Co unci l 17,
Mason , w1ll be spea kmg. Rev
a w&gt;tc h. Mine, however , doesn 't quite fit th.e.·stereotype. So here, S1mth, M1ss Darla Ebersbach
Daughters
of America, 7 30
Roger Turner , pastor, mvttes
and Mtss Jeanme Harnson
to explam, 1s - WHAT IS A LOVING STEPMOTHER•
p.m at the IOOF hall All
the pulihc .
Sendmg a g,n was Tamm&gt;e
A loving stepmother &gt;s one who as soon as she hears your
RALLY SET
MEIGS Girls Athlet1 c members urged to attend smce , tone of voice on the telephone, asks, "What's wrong , honey •"
Jarrell.
Distnct 13, Daughlers of Boosters, 7 p.m at Me1gs High pract1ce w!ll be held lor the
She IS the one who waits up for yofi when you're commg to
America, rally will at the IOOF School. All mteresled persons district rally.
RETURN HOME
VISit late at night because you've had some trouble at home. She
hall at 2 p.. Wednesday. The invited.
REVIVAL be gmnmg at really CARES.
Mrs Joseph Fosler, Carol,
supper will be served at Trinity
Morgan Cente r Wesleyan
She rearranges her whole family hfe when you decide to Patnc1a, and Anthony,
w~days
TUESDAY
Church at 5·30 p.m. and
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter. Church 7: 30 p.m Rev. Earl leave the person who has made hfe unbearable (your mother) I..Jvoma, M1ch , returned home reservations are to be made Beta S1gma Plli Soron ty , 01ler will be the spea ker. 0 H. and come to hve with your Dad.
Friday after spendmg the past
w1th Mrs. EJna' Reibel by Columbus and Southern Ohw Cart, pasloF, mv&gt;les the pubhc
She's the one who helps you rearrange'the furniture to make , week here w1 lh her parents,
SWlday. Apracllce for the rally Electr1 c Co 7:30p.m. Carolyn to attend.
room for you, even though she's five months pregnant.
Mr and Mrs. Ralph Webb,
will be at the hall Sunday at 2 Satterfield and Edwina Scott,
You can really talk to her and she helps solve your problems. Rac me, and Mrs. Edward
p.m.
POMEROY Ga rden Club Sle's more bke you than you area, so it's routine to have hours of Foster, Pomeroy .
cultural program , "Examples
7:30p.m
at home of Mrs Roy - endless conversations and debates Wlth her. She knows you even
of Fnendship ". Elect10n of the
Dun ng a li fe tim e the girl of lhe year . Susan Baer Bel:tmg, Mulberry Ave.
better than you know yourself
average Amencan consu mes 26 and Debb&gt;e Fmlaw, hostesses.
MIDDLEPORT Garden
She's the one who makes your favorite meals when you 're
m1lhon tons of water, 10.000
Club,
7:30p.m
at
the
home
of
depressed (and hungry) .. . who often takes your side when you
RA,CINE Masomc Lodge 461,
pounds of meat, t4 tons of m•lk
Mrs. M. L. French w1th Mrs and your lather are fighting, but she 's always falf.
7·30
p
m.
at
the
Templl'
and cream. 9,000 pounds of
She's the one who would g1ve you every cent she had lor
and
VISitors M. C. W1lson, assisting hostess
wheal. and grea t qu ant11les of Member s
Book
review
"The
Secret
Life
college
when the time comes. ( If she had a cent.)
welcome .
other products of the earth
I
of Plan is" by Mrs Carl Horky.
Above all, a lovmg stepmother is the one person you love
Spnng arrangement by Mrs. more than anyone else in the world, but It's hard for a guy to
Rita Hamm.
come right out and say it So I'm wr1t1ng 1t ..- A LOVING.SON
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
regular meellng, 8 p.m. at the Dear Son:
WCO-DCO
Maso n1c Templ e. Initiation
Thanks for a great tribute. When your stepmother reads this,
WASHER----..S319.9S
ceremony for one ca ndidate she'll know HER son wrote it. But otber parents will be grateful '
DRYER ______ $224.95
too. I'll bet your letter shows up on several dinner plates tomght
Off1cers to wea r formals.
PAIR ________ $499,00
with a note, "This could be you - Mom'" - H.
TliorO&lt;lgh yet gentle fabric care ts a turn of tho dlol away
CLUB TO MEET
wlttt a Frigidaire Custom Deluxe Laundry Pai r . Wash
The Middleport Ga rden Club
anything, from. a single plec:e to an 18·1b. load without
wasting water and detergent thanks to the Water Level
w1ll meet Monday mght at 7 30
Selector. In tho matching dryer, a Fabrics Selector to dta'
p.m at the home of Mrs. M L
the proper heat setting for virtually every fabric
Frenf h wi lh Mrs. M C. W1lson
as the assisting hostess . The
ROYAL.CROWN
program w1llfeature a rev&gt;ew
by Mrs Carl Horky of the book,
BOTTLING COMPANY
Midilleport
·
"The SecrefLife of Plants" by
Peter
Tompkins
and
••
.'
Mrs
Rita
Christopher
Bird.
'
Hamm will have the spnng
'
arrangement. A nominating
committee will be appointed
and for roll call m~mber.§ are
Smartly-styled
to respond with name's of
flowers and trees in blo~ m
I

I

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'Gingerbread Lady·' scf?eduled

• •

NOW

FOR
MOniER'S DAY

We have
lots more.
See our complete selection
of styles for men and

Shower fetes
Carla Crisp

women Alt with the
A ccu tron tu ning fork

movem en t that gua rantees

accuracy to within a
minute a month!
From $95 to $1800
lllustr•1ed: Spacev11w model
m stainless steel. SIU.

" ',
I'

•'.

Frigidaire Heavy Duty Automatic Washels.
They combine tough, heavy duty
components and gentle, thorough

''
''
'•

cleaning power to make

•

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easier al"!lllfld any home.

S1zes

35 to 50

·'

Reg.-Short-Long

.,'

and Portly

'
I

:

SPORT COATS

'

.EH'I

LF-QUARTS

$45 to $85
SUITS

~0

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Bethel inspected

Just In Time
For Spring
and Graduation.

Gene Richards . "The Inventory is ge tting worse. Our
members approve of the shutdown , but we are all concerned
what will happen after this
summer." He said employes
w1ll lose an average of $60 a
week durmg the shutdowns .

.

FRIDAY
,
Wome n's
POMEROY
Bowlmg Assoc •at10n annual
mee ti ng, Pomeroy Bowlmg
Lanes , 7 p m

•

MEN'S SUITS
and sport
coats

now ," said Local President

'

Us.

OF

'·

to $180

Red Rose

1:&gt;06 FOOD

BAHRMIDDLEPORT
CLOTHIERS
OHIO

Here's a portable
.

STEAMBOAT-liNN

'"

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SUNDAY MENU

,,
l'

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,.'·

MEAT- Turkey &amp; Dressing, 'Roast Beef,
Ham, Flounder Fish. ,
VEGETABLES Lima Beans, Beets, '
Noodles, Potatoes (sweet ·mashed. home
fries) .
SALAD - Fruit &amp; Jello, Slaw, Tossed,
Cottage Cheese.
PIE - Graham Cracker, Peach and Apple.

,.t.
(

to
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Sunday, April6, ~· 8:30-~~
. Weekdays 6dl0·8: 30 ""
'
........
' ' '
/
Ph.
949..J551
'
Racine, Ohio
3rd St.

~·•'

.

I

,'•
r

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black and white
T.V. perfec1 .for your

Baker. Furniture

kitchen, bedroom,
den, etc. QUAS·AR

Red

. personal size
portable in deluxe
walnut.grain
print cabinet

Dog Food

Dog Nuggets··.-Dog·
·Meal
ALSO SURE WfN &amp;
SAVER DOG MEAL

Model 8P3051LN ·

RNER RADIO &amp; T.V

SUGAR RUN MILLS
992711~)

Mulberry l'.ve.

Middleport, 0.

Pomeroy

I

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:~:

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Miss Nancy Lynn Koon

We W1re F Iowen

Everywhere

~

media,

GREAT SELECTIONS

Kaiser taking

x=

This is a
Bulova
Accutron®
watch.·

RUTLAND - Resident, of
western Me&gt;gs CoWlly soon will
receive by mall an envelope
conU!ming useful information
about th e Southeast Oh10
Emergency Medical Services
(EMS). Joan Stewart. station
ch&gt;ef of the Rutland EMS, sa1d
members of the Rutland squad
have been workmg to prepare
the mailing.
The envelope w1ll contam an
EMS te leph one sticker , a
folder about the EMS system
and
other
mformahve
mate na~. The entire staff of the
all-volunteer Rutland EMS
sU!tion joined in working over
20-man hours on the ma1hng.
The Rutland station began
service in October, 1974 as the
newest member of the EMS
system. " We thought the
maihng would be a good way to
let people m the area know
we're here to help them," Mrs.
Stewart said . Fam1lies
rece iving the matenal live m
the area wh1ch will usually be
serv ed by the Rutland station.
Seven different post ~ff&gt;Ces
were included m th.e mailing,
Rt I Rutland and P 0 boxes,
m the Scouhng program and Rt 1 Langsville and P. 0.
thelf w1ves or husbands should boxes, Rt. 1 Dexter and P. 0.
attend
boxes, Rt. I M&gt;ddleport, Rt. 4,
Awards to be presented Pomeroy , Harrisonville P 0.
mclude Unit Honor Award, boxes, and Rt. I Vinton.
Ro undup ; Adult Traimng ' Anyone on these routes who
Awards, Most Boy Ad- does not get an EMS envelope
vancemenls, Umt Awards, the or who needs more sl&gt;ckers can
D1s tnct Aware of Merit, call Rutland EMS at 742~051 or
Veteran Scouter Recogmt10n, Mrs. Stewart at 742-3191
~ost New Boys Recr01ted and Slickers are also ava1lable
Umt Award.
from EMS Education, 16 State
The cost 1s $3.75 per person. St., Gallipolis, 45631
Reservatwns and money must
be sent to Bill Knigh t before
ApriliB, checks payable to Boy
Scouts of Amenca

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art,

For All Occas10ns

l

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Bank Rate Financing

journahsm,

scouter,'s recognition dinner on 25th

HUNTINGTON- Cub Scouts
m the Tr1-Stale Area Council
U!ke part m a vaned program
the
next 12 months that offers
t pts gl ga
0 102 354 239 fun, var1 ety, act iOn , and
3 673 13260 purpose. Leaders of nearly 100
3 85 299 264 Cub Scout packs are holdmg
the!f annual program plannmg
8 B.t 292 257

20 51 4 44 190 325
Canad•an
" w . L t. pt s gf ga
45 32 0 90 322 294

Quebec

for HMC TV project

3 71 231 256
29 45 I 59 255 JOS
18 55 3 39 210 326

34 40

West
I
51 24

Hou ston

Dtmng Hall made Significant
changes in its ' manner of
operahon th1s week. The public
is still invited -to eat m the
d1nin g hall, however, the
· manner of payment has been
.
.
revised
•
Gallipolis SlrineCiub President, Norman Stewart, right,
Instead of going through the
presents h1s club's contnbution to Earl Neff, accepting for
cafeteria lme and paying the
the Holzer Medical Center's ped1atn cs TV fund ,
·
cashier for each 1tem taken,
there will now be a cashier at
the door to coll~ct a flat fee
whenever a guest enters. The
nat rate for breakfast Will be
$1.50, lWlch and dmner w1ll
each be a $2 flat fee
This w1ll aiJ,ow guests to ,go
through the cafetena line and
The lund to prov1de Gall1pohs Shnne Club, as well choose whatever they desire,
te levisiOn for th e yo ung as e1ghteen busmesses who and will also permit seconds on
patients in Holzer Med1cal have donated to lh1s ped1atn cs everythmg but main en\fees.
Center's ped&gt;atnc nursmg umt television fund.
Children Wider 12 years of age
Earl Neff, a member of the will only be charged $1.50 flat
1s well mto 1ls successful third
Medi cal
Cen ter fee, but !Ins mcludes no second
year wtlh the recent con- Holzer
voru
-nleer
SerVICe
Leag
ue's helpmgs Persons over 62 years
lnbutwn by the Gal hpohs
Steermg
ComCommumly
Shrin e Club who donated $106
old who present their soc1al
for one mo nth's televi siOn mit tee has been solely secur1ty card will pay {)nly
serv1ce w1lhm the children 's respons1ble lor ra1smg all of $1.75 flat rate, and this also
the fWldS lor the enllre perwd mcludes no seconds
room s at Holzer
smce
the free televiswn servtce
Th1s free serv1ce for the
Robert Hoff , dmmg hall
began
hosp1lahzed youngsters began
manager said the new pricing
Any md!VIduals, businesses schedule was estabhshed to
m October, 1972, and it has
been contmuous smce that ttme or orgamzatwns who w1sh to fac1htate service and ehmmate
through the great generos1ty of donate to the most worth y lund delays at the cashier 's cage.
many , many CIVIC and soc1al may do so by contacting Mr. College students will continue
organ1z atwns, such as th e Neff, Teodora Ave , Gallipohs. to·use their I.D. card for meals,
and the College faculty and

Shrine Club donates sum

321
179 43

·l' SOCia
., ·1
t ca·Jendar!l

theatre, dan ce, literature,
folklore, legen d, hlstor~, .
people, and related areas to
augment the traditional school
Engli sh programs Kindergarten through College.
A $6 reg&gt;stration fee for nonmembers and $5 for members
of SCOTE w1ll be charged. The '
lee mcludes workshops,
handouts, morning coffee and
lunch. The registratiOn fee can
be mailed to Mrs. Jean Cooper,
secretary-treasurer of SCOT!' ..
Box 806, Rio Grande College,;
R10 Grande, Ohio 45674.
;

The Rw Grande College-RIO staff procedure will be the
Grande CommWl&gt;ty College • _same as it has been in the past

Fmal ABA Stand•ng s
By Umt ed Pre ss Int erna tional
East
w. I. p(t 9 b

'
New

&gt;C!•:•.:ocoo:o:•:.:.o:o:o:o o''•!•!•:•:O:O'•'•:O'O:o'•'·~~.·.•,•,•,•,::,

teresting and entertaining and '
1s invlred to attend.
•.
The spnng workshop will be
a day of Ideas using the rich :
Appalachian Cultufes of lh?•
'1U'ea to ge n eral~ answers to~~~
question " What do I do n~? ,
Presentations w1ll be 1n 'oelr):,

p.m on the college campus.
Coordinated by Dr Charlotte
Carver, Assistant Dean for
Arts Sciences and Pfofesswnal
Educal1on at Rio Grande, the
one-day event will be a "What
Do I ·no Now'! " session
designed pnmarily ·for Southeastern Ohio educators .
However, the general pub~ic
will find the program m·

Cafeteria payme~~
change announced

5 7
81 r

PaC if iC DI VIS IOn
• w I pet . g . b.

x Den ve r
San An t on16

U

he·. Southeastern Oh10
Counc1l of Teachers of Enghsh
(SCOTE) m cooperat10n with
Rio Grande College-Rio
Grande CommWli ty College
and teh Wood Thrush Folk Arts
CoWlcil , Inc ., will present a
"Fesllval of Ideas" for the
pracllcmg educator Saturday,
Apnl 12 from 8·3fr a m. to 2:30

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r-"""""""'· .. .... . . ...- ....,._.

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Rio to ho.st spring workshop-: ·

Pro Standings

Lyle Will .fight

~~~M~iddleport-PomeroJ, 0 ., •!.idl!y, A.Eri14, 1975

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.O.PENe
7 DAYS
A WEEK

.O&amp;D MEAT
830 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

Nelson Giant Print ,Bible
'

Kin James version
.'

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�•
The Daoly Sentinel, Mo&lt;l(lleport Ponw•oy 0 ~'roday, Aprol t, 1975
• 0_

The Datlv :;entmel Mtddleport-Pomeroy , 0 , Fnday, Apnl 4, 1975

POMEROY
POMEROY TRINITY
Re11 W H ~ e rr1n pastor Roy
Mayer Sunday sc hool supt
Ch ur c h schooJ
9 15 am
wo r 5hlp ser"1ce
10 2tl am
Youth cho1 r r ehearsal Mon
day J 30 p m Uf'\der d 1re c t10n
o.t Mary Skmner sen1or cho1 r
r&amp;hear sa l 7 30 p m Thursday
w1th
Mr s
Pa u l
Nea se
d

"

recrhr

•

POMEROY

CHURCH

THE NAZARENE -

OF

Corner

Unl"n an d Mul berr y
Rev
Clyde V Hend ers on pa&amp;.tor
Sunaa y sch ool q JO am . ~ l en
M cCl ung
sup 1
morn1ng
worSh iP 10 30 am
even1ng

service

7 .ao

m id week ser

V1ce Wednesday 7 30 p m

GilACE EP ISCOPAL -

Th€

Rev
Harold Dee th
recto r
Chur c h se rv1ce'S 10 30 am
Holy commun1 on f1rst Sund a)Of month c hurch school 10 30
am for nu rsery throu Qh 12

POMEROY CHURCH OF
CHRIST - T err el l Gr on nger
pa stor B1ble sc hoo l 9 30 a m
worsh1p
10 30 am
ad ult
wo r Ship serv .ce and you ng
peo p les meet mg 7 30 p m
t om b1ned B 1ble st udy and
p~aye r
mee t 1ng Wednesday
1 30 p m
THE SALVA,T ION ARMY En voy Ray W W1n1ng off cer
1n cha rge Su nday 10 am
Hoi mess meet mg 10 30 am
Su nday School Young Peop les
Leg on 7 p m Thursday 1 to 3
p m
L a d1es Home Leaoue 7
p m

Prep c. ta sses
ST
PAUL
LUTHERAN
CHURCH Corne r of Sycamo r e
and Seco nd St s Pome'roy The
Rev W lf1am M cldf eswa rt h
Pastor Sunday Schoo at 9 &lt;15
am an d Chu r ch Se r v1ces 11
a m
SA CRED HEART Rev
Fath er Paul 0 We lton pastor
P hone 992 2825
Sat u r day
even ng Mass 7 30 Sund ay
Mass B and 10 am
Con
f ess 1on Saturday 7 7 30 p m

POMEROY FIRST SAP
TIST - Rob ert Ku hn pastor
W il liam Wat son Sund ay sc hool
supt Sun da y schoo l 9 30 a m

~~{ne:d~y m 7 ~~~l e s~~ ~ ir
pr&lt;l c h ce Wedn esd ay 8 30 p m
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
HOLINESS
CHURCH Harr~so n vd l e
Rev
0 D el l
Manley Pas to r Henry Eb l m
Sunday Scn ool Sup t , Sun day
Sc hool 9 30 am
E ven mg
worship 7 30 p m Prayer and
Pra se se r v1ce Thur sda y 7 30
om

SYRACUSE
FIR6:T
r HUR CH OF GOD
Rev
George Q 11er pas tor Sund ay
sc hool
9 45 am
morn ing
preactu n g
II
a m
eva nge l st c ser v 1c c 7 30 P m
PrayE-r 1iCC 1 nq Th u r o;d :ty
1 30 p 1

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POMEROY
WESTSIDE
CHURCH OF CHRIST, 200 W
Man St
Je r ry Pau l
m 1n,1s t er
phone 992 7666
Conse r va t ive
nan
1ns tr ume n t~l Sunday worsh p
10 a m
B1ble study 11 a m
Worshi p 6 p m
Wed nesday
B1bl e study 7 p m
MIDWAY
COMM UNITY
CHURC H
(non
d en om mat1onal )
Lang s1.1 111 e
Dext er Road the Rev Wo rl ey
Ha l ey pastor Sun day sch oo l
10 am ev en1ng wor sh1p 7 30
p m
P r ayer
mee t i ng
Tuesday
7 30 p m
yo ut h
qroup Fr dav 7 30 p m
RUTLAND
FREEWILL
BAPTI ST Roge r Turner
pastor Sunday sch ool 10 a m
Sunday even mg serv 1ce 7 30
Wednesd ay 81b le stud y 7 30
pm
O LD
DE,XTER
BIBLE
CHRISTIAN CHURCH - Rev
Ron Terry
pasto r
Sun day
school 10 a m
M r s Worley
F ran c1 s
supe r 1nte nden1
Morn 1ng worshiP
11 am
Sunday cvenmg serv ce 7 30

Polly's Pain
BY POLLY CRAMER

Cleaning gtves
her streak 'panes '
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - 1 have
trouble clean mg my glass door
and ~ mdows I have used all
kinds of spray cleaners am
monoa and vmega r but they all
leave lhe gla ss streaked 1
uould loke some help 1 am
embarrassed that they never
look clean - ESTELLE
DEAR ESTELLE- Perhaps
th e streaks are due to the uay
you a re dryong vour \\ondo\\s
Trj dryong and polo shong "oth _
crushed ne"spaper and do one
sode "'th \ ertocal strokes and
tbe other \\lth honzontal ones
so you ca n tell \\here the

maolmg purposes The card
alone • ca n mak e a no ce
deem a loon on the goft package
- LYNN
DEAR POLLY - I have a
large ova l omong table and
co uld r. t ver fwd a mce
lab le c loth
E1 e r yl h1n g
reasooabl) pnced was too
small and !he large ones were
loo ex pensove for mv budget
and to use ever) dav I had the
tdea of usong a new fl at sheet
fo r a clo th The) can be bought
on dofferent SIZes and such
pretlv colors and patterns tha t
one can be fotmd eastly to go
w1lh an) decor I "atch for the

streaks are Ne\er do \\llldO\~t s

sales and buv them and no one

~hen

ever dreams mv cloths are
acluatl) shee ts - KATIE
DEAR KATIE - Indeed you
do ha.e a great Idea I recently
made a fl owered cloth for one
of m) daughters-on-law and cut
ol 10 an oval shape hke her
table Put tn place on the table
and mea sure all around from
the table edge to the length you
want the cloth plus extra for
the hem and put pons along
\\ha l IS lobe the cultong !me
Remove from table and cut
along the pons and have an oval
shape that woll hang JUSt ro ghl
Thos will remove any longenng
look of a sheet I Joked the looks
of sewmg the hem m wo th the
zigzag stolch on m) sewong
maciune - POLLY

the sun Is shining on them
and sonce )OU love on flonda,
th e land of sunShine, perhaps
that os what you have been
doong
lf the trouble still persosts,
try one tablespoon of kerosene
on t" o guarts of " arm water
OR one-half cup denatured
alcohol 1pooson ) to two
quarters of \Iarin water The
lastos es pecoall y good for those
hvong where the weather os
fr eezong cold -POLLy
- DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve 1s "1 th cake bro\\ me
and cookoe moxes that come on
boxes They sa) what soze
~a ke

)

'

how many cooktes one

G?n expect from a box of the
m1x which IS good and we
apprecoate ol But m a small
fam ily where one moght want
W make only half the mox ot
does not stale how many cups

The Almanac
of m tx the box contams so 1t
By Unoted Press International
has to be emplled and spooned
Today os Fnday Apnl 4, the
onto a cup to be measured Such 94th day of 1975 woth 271 to
packages stale the \\oegh l so follow
l&lt;hy not the number of cups The moon IS between 1ls last
M&lt;}RY p
quarter and new phase
DEAR MARY P - Son ce you
The mormng stars are
are gomg through the molwns Mercury, Mars and Jupiter
anfway why not make up the
The evemng stars are Venus
..:'litre box of miX and freeze and Saturn
.,
~t os-, ot needed to have
Those born on thos date are
ready for another tome 7 woder the sogn of Anes
POLLY
Dorothy Lynda Dix, Amen·
DEAR POLLY - Wo th the can piOneer of prison reform,
present need for conservation was born Apnl 4, 1802
and the paper shortage my
On thos day m hostory
famtl) and I ha.e agreed to
In 1841 , President Wolloam
save the envelopes from goft Harroson dted of pnewnoma one
cards that go on g1fls The month after beong maugura ted
enwelope IS destroyed later John Tyler became the forst
anyway so we do not wn te a vtce-president to become choef
nalne on 1t and sa ve ol to use for executive due to a death , ,

"

-japanese theater slated
ATHENS ~ The Kyogen
Nal!onal Theatre of Japan woll
ll!lllear Tuesday, Aprol 6, at
Memorolll AudolQnwn as p~rt
!Jf ' the Ohoo Umverso ty Artost
Ser1es
.,
The Kyogen, whose roots go
back over a thousan d years,
are Japanese comedoes They
contaon many aspects of the
theatre of the absurd,
provoking laughter wollt lheor
sarcasm, Irony and crohcosm
Japanese comedy os fwo ny and
effervescent , whtle bemg
unpudenl and trreverent Yet,
ot os also a thoughlful and
poognant commentaoy on the
hiUTI&amp;n condtUon

The comedy occurs when lhe
audoence reahzes the dosparoty
between the appearances and
the realoty of the sotuallon The
th emes are som ple and
umversal beyond time and
place woth the characters usong
a styhzed speech The range of
chc~rade r s

mclude

go ds.

demons clergy and ordmary
peopl e "1 th one se rvant
' Tar o ' appearong often
lypofyong the sporol of the
Kyogen
Tockets are avaolable at the
Mem oria l Au do tortum box
offoce 1-4 p m weekdays and
by ca lion ~ 594 l471

nesday , 1 30 p m
U M w
GRAH/IM
UNITED
METHODIST
Preachmg \ f~rst Wednesda y 7 30 p m
WESLEYAN (Racm e l 9 30 a m
f1rst and second
sc h oo l
10 a m
Su nd.ly
Sunday s of each month th lrd
w or sh iP 11 am &lt;B ible s-t udy
and lou rth Sundays each
7 p rn , Ch Oir
mon th worshiP se rv1 ce at 7 30 Thur.sday
pract1ce Thur sday 8 p m
p m Wedne sday evenmgs at
fel l ow s hiP
sup p er
f 1r s t
1 30 Praver and B1bl e Stu&lt;l v
Wednesday 6 30 p m U M W
SEVENTH
DAY
AD
fo ur th Monda v 8 p m
VE N T1 ST
Mutberr'Y
H e 1ght s
Pomeroy
Pastor
GREATBEND - Worshlp II
G rard Selon Sabbath sch oo l
a m 2n d and 4th Sundays
eve ry Sat ur day at 2 p m and
Chur c h Sc; hool \.0 a m
worS hi P s~ r v 1 ce follow1ng at
LETART FALLS - Worship
3 15
p m
Open
Btble
10 a m C hu ~ch school 9 a m
diSC USSIOn 1 30 p m at the
B1bl e s tudy 7 30 p m ~"very
ch.u r ch eac n Thur sday
Tu esd ay
MORNING STAR - Wo rsl'l lp
FIRST SOUTHERN SAP
9 30 am
Chul-ch School 10 30
TIST 282 M ulb er ry Ave
a m
Mtd W ~ek
sen 1ce
Pom e roy
aff il iat ed
w1tt1
Wednesday 8 p m
5 B C
th e Rev
B r ad l ey
MORSE CHAPEL Wor
Spen ce r pas tor Tro y Zw ll mg
Sh1p 11 a m
1St and Jrd
Sunday sc hoo l sup! Sunda y
Sundays
Church School
10
schoo l
9 30 a m
mo rn ng
am
worsn 1p
10 30
Su nday
PORTLAND - Wor Sh iP 7 30
ev angei1 St1 c meet mg 7 30p m
p m
Ch ur c;h School 9 30 a m
Prayer meetmg Wednesday
SUTTON - WorSh iP 11 am
7 30 p m
2nd and 4t h Sundays Chur ch
MIDDLEPORT
Sc hool 10 a m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Corner ~ ou rth and Ma 1n
Rev Robert M e:ice
Middl eport Rev Henry Key
Rev Stanley Brandum
Jr pastor Su nday Sc ho ol 9 30
JOPPA - WorShip 10 am
a m
Mr s E:rv n Baum ga rd
Church Sc hool 9 a m
Praye r
ne r supt
Mornmg w or sh ip
Meet1ng Wednesday 8 p m
10 45 am
LONG BOTTOM - Ch ur ch
JEHOVAH ' S WITNESSES sen 1c es
9 am
Sund ay
Larry Carnah an pres d ng
Sc hool 9 45 am B1ble Study
mm 1st er Sun day B1ble tee
every Th ursd ay 7 30 p m
tu re 9, JO am
Wat ch tow er
}IORTH BETHEL Wor
study 10 30 a m
Tuesday
ship 11 am Chur ch Sc hoo l 10
Bib le st udy 7 30 p m
Th urs
am
dc!y m1n1s t ry schoo l 7 30
ALFRED - Sund ay schoo l
p m
serv1ce m ee t ng 8 30
9 45 a m
eac h
Sunday
pm
preachmg a t 11 a m
ea ch
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
Suflday Prayer m ee t ng , 7 45
Chnst m Chnsflan Unionp m Wedn esda y WSCS , 'Sp m
Lawrence Man le y pasto r
on thtrd Tuesday each month
Mrs Russell Young Sonda y
REEDSVILLE Sunday
Sc hool .,S upt Sunday School
sc hoo l 9 30 preachmg 7 30
9 30 am Even 1ng worsh1p
p m Sunday pray er mee t mg
7 30
We dne sday
pray er
7 30 p m Tuesday WSCS 7 30
mee t mg 7 30 p m
f.rst T hursday each month
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF"
SILVER RIDGE - Worsh ip
GOO - Rac1ne Ro ut e 2 the
10 a m
Church Sc hool 9 a m
Rev Ja mes M Muncy pastor
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Sund ay sch ool 9 4~ a m
WorshiP 9 am
Chur ch
morn tng worshIP
11 a m
Sc hool 10 a m
e1.1en 1ng w orsh 1p 7 30 p m
KENO
CHURCH
OF
Prayer meet mg Tu es d ay 7 30
CHRtST - George Fr ederick
p m
You ng peoples meet1ng
supt Serv 1ce weekly 9 30 a m
7 30 o m Th ur sd ay
on Sunda y Preach mg f1r st and
MIDDLEPORT
FIR'"ST
th rd Sundays of mont-h by
B AP TIST ~ Cor ne r S1X Ih ancl
Clifford Sm1th 9 30 am
Palm er the Rev Cl eo Y Boyd
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
pas tor
Da nn y T hom p so n
UN !ON - D a rr ell
Dodd r ill
Sunday sc hool sup l WM PO
pastor
Sunday School 9 30
rad10 pr og r am
7 45 a m
am
Leonard Gilmore f 1rst
S1.1 nda y sc hOol 9 15 a m
el d er
evenmg serv 1ce 7 30
morn ng wo r sh p 10 15 am
p m
Wednesday
pra yer
Y outh act1v lies an d fel lowshiP
meet 1ng 7 30 p m
for tun or and sen or h1g h
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
6 p m
Sunday
st uden t s
GOO - Racine Route 2 The
Ev enmg Wor Ship at 7 JO M1d
Rev
Charles Hand pasto r
week p r ayer ser v ce
Wed
Sunday school 9 45 a m
nesday 7 30 P m
morn1ng worsh 1p 11 am
E1.1enmg serv1ces 'fuesday and
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
Fnday 7 30
M ddleport 5t h and Menn
BEARWALLOW
RIDGE
Ge(]rge
Glaze
mm1 ste r
CHURCH OF CHRIST - Bibl e
James Shee ts supenntendent
Study
9 30 a m
mornmg
B 1ble schoo l
9 30 am
worsh1p 10 30 am
evening
m ornrn g worsh 1p 10 30 am
worsh iP 6 30 p m Wednesday
&lt;e ve n 1ng wors.IHP 7 30 p m
B1ble St udy 7 30 p m
prayer ser i.I I.CE' 7 p m Wed
MT
OLIVE CHURCH nesdav
L ong Bottom Sunday School
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
10 a m w1th W1llard P1gott
OF THE NAZARENE - Rev
sup t Evange l 1st1 c mes sa ge
Dvn Co l e pastor
A lfr ed
e&amp;ch Sunda y even 1ng 7 30 p m
R usc h el Sunda y Sc hool sup t
by
Elder
Russ e ll
Cl 1ne
Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m
m1n1sterof the Aposto l iC Fa1th
mornmg wor sh ip 10 30 am
B1ble Study Wednesday 7 30
Sun da y evange l she mee11ng
pm
7 30 p m
pra yer meet1ng
STIVERSVILLE
COM
Wednesday 7.JOp m
MUNITY CHURCH - Sunday
sch ool serv1ce 10 a m Pray er
THE
UNITED
PRE S
meet1ng
Thursday 7 p m
BYTERIAN
MINISTRY
Sunday evenmg serv 1ce 7 p m
OF MEIGS COUNTY DWight
ZION CHURCH OF CHRI ST
L Zav 1tz Pastor D1rector
Pomer oy H ar r1 so nv1lle
HARRISONVILLE
Road M 1k.e G1 rton
pa stor
Sunda y Chur ch Schoo l 9 30
Steven Stan ley Sunday school
a m Mrs Hom er L ee S ~pt
supt Sun day schoo l 9 30 a m
Mornmg Worsh1p 10 30 am
morn n g worsh1p and com
MlbDLEPORT Sunday
m un10n 10 30 a m
Sunday
Church Schoo l 9 JO am John
evenmg you th Chns 11an en
F
F ultz
Su p t
Morn 1ng
deavor
6 30 p m
wo r sh 1p
WorSh•P 10 30 am
ser v ce 7 30 p m Wednesd ay
SYR:ACUSE
M or nmg
e1.1en1 n g pray er m ee tmg and
WorShip
9 am
Sund ay
B1b l e stud y 7 30 p m
Chur ch Schoo l 10 l!l m
Mrs
Sampson Ha ll SupT
ST
JOHN
LUTHERAN
CHURCH
P1ne Grov e Th e
Rev
W 1\liam M1ddl eswart h
Pa stor Chur ch Serv1 ces 9 30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
am Sund ay Sch oo\ 10 30 am
GOD- Pll1ll 1p Whi t ley pa stor
10 am
Sun da y schoo l
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
w o r s h1p serv 1ce
7 p m
CHRIST - B1b le Sc nool 9 30
Praye r m fl'e t ng Wednesday
am
morn1ng wor ShiP 10 30
7 JO p m
am
Sunday even1ng Wo rSh ip
Serv1ce 7 p m choi r pract1ce
Wednesday 7 p m Rev Je ff
Ranson Pastor
HAZEL
COMMUNITY
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST
CHURCH Near L ong Bot
Rev Freeland Norns pa storh
Edse l Hart
pas t or
tom
Sunday sc hool
10 am
sunday schoo l 10 a ~ed~~~~~Y
Church
7 30 p m
pra ye r
se r v 1ce
7 Pm
meet ng 7 30 p m T hur sd ay
e1ble St udy 1 P m
RACINE
CHURCH
OF
111E NAZARENE Rev
W II am Bartholom ew pastor
Sund ay schoo l
9 JO am
MIDDLEPORT
PEN
morn 1ng
TECOSTAL - Th 1rd Ave the Gerald We lls SI.Jp t
worsh1p
10 30 am
Wed
Rev W ll1am Knittel pastor
nesday serv ce 7 p m
Ropald Dugan Sunday School
RACINE FIRST BAPTISTSupt Classes for all ages
Waller P B 1kacsan pa stor
evenmg serv 1ce 7 30 p m
Ronn1e Salser Sunday sc hool
B1b \e study Wednesday 7 30
su p! Sunday school 9 30 a m
p m
youth ser1.1lces Fr1day
morn1ng
worsh1p
10 40
7 30 p m
Sunday eve n ng worsh1p 7 30
FREEWILL BAPTIST Wednesday even n g B bl e
Carrier Ash and Plum Mtd
study 7 30
dleport
Noel
Herrman
pas t o r
Saturday even ng
DANVILLE WESLEYAN se rv 1ce 7 p m Sunday school Rev Leton Glasu re pastor
10 a m
Su n d ay even n g Sunday Sc hool 9 30 a m
youth and junior yo uth service
worSh i P_ 7 p m
6 45 p m
evenmg worsh1p
7 30 p m
prayer and pra1se
Wednesday 1 30 o m
MEIGS
SI LVER
RVN
FREE
COOPERATIVE
BAPTIST - Rev Ralph Dean
PARISH
pastor Sunday School 10 am
THE UNITED
Leon Miller
supt Even1ng
METHODIST CHURCH
7 30 p m
Prayer
serv1ce
Robert T Bumgarner
mee tmg Thursday • 7 30 o m
Dtrector
CHESTER CHURCH OF
POMEROY CLUSTER
GOO Rev
Dan Avers
Rev CarlE Hicks
pastor
Sun day sc hool 9 30
Rev D Wm Sydenstncke ..
a m wo rs h1p serv 1ce II am
CHESTER - WorShiP 9 15
even m g ser1.1 1ce 7 30 p m
a m
Ch urch School 10 a m
youth serv1ce Wednesday 7 30
ENTERPRISE - WorshiP 9
pm
a m Church School 10 a m
FLATWOODS - WorshiP 11
LANG SVILLE CHRISTtAN
a m
Church School 10 a m
CHURCH
T ed Jones
POMEROY W ors h1p
pa stor Sunday sc hool 9 30
10 30 a m
Church School 9 15
a m
Roy S1gman
supt
am
UMYF 6 30 p m
morn mg
worship
10 30
ROCK SPRINGS - Worsh 1p
Sund ay even1ng ser1.11te 7 JO
10 a m Church Sch ool 9 a m
m1d week
serv 1ce
Wed
UMYF630pm
'
nesday 7 30 p m
MIDOLEPORT CLUSTER
Rev RobertBumgarner
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
HEATH WorSh ip 10 30
THE NAZARENE Rev
Howard C Bl ack pa stor Bob
a m Church School 9 30 a m
UMYF 7 p m
Moore Sunday School Supt
RUTLAND - worship 9 15
Sunday School classes tor all
am
Ch urch School 10 am
&amp;ges
9 30 a m
morn 1ng
UM YF 7 p m
worShip 10 45 NYPS Sunday
SALEM CENTER Wor
6 30p m evange!l st tc service
shtp 9 am , Church School 10
Sunday 1 JO p m Mid week
am UMYF Thursday 7 P m
prayer meeting Wednesd ay
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
7 30p m MISSIOna ry meet1ng
Rev Richard E Jarv1s
sec ond Wednesday 7 30 p m
ASBURY WorShiP 11
UNITED
FAITH
NON
am Church School 9 50 am
DENOMINATIONAL Rev
wscs lst Tuesday
Rober t Sm1th pastor Sunday
FOREST RUN - Worsh ip 9 school 9 30 am ,.c lass l ea der
am
Church School 10 am
Leo Hil l worsh 1p servlc~
wscs 3r d Wednesday 7 30 10 30 am church, 1 J O p m
pm
EDEN UNIIt;D BRETH
MINERSVILLE - Worship
REN IN CKRIST - Elden R
10 a m Church Schoo l 9 a m
Bla ke pastor sundav Schoo l
WSCS 3rd Monday 7 30 P m
lO a m
Howard Mc Coy
SYRACUSE
Church
l1 '
Sc hool, 9 30 a m
wor sh ip
supt
Mof' nmg sermon
lt
ser vt c;., 1 lOP m
m
Sunday night servtces
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Christian Endeaver 7 30 p
Rev Steven Wilson
m
Song service , B P m
Rev Larry Poling
P reach~ng 8 30 p
Mid
R
Howard Shiveley
week
rayer mee ng Wed
BE,liANY (Dorcas) .:l! "t r'tesdaY 7 P m
R.ay Adams
Worship 9 30 am
Churc~
lay l esder
f 'rU'r
School 10 30 am
/
C HUNCH
Of
:t~~us
CARMEL Worsh p
11 CHRIST - L oc ated at Rut Jal'ld
am
1st and 3rd Sundays
on New L 1ma Road pex t to
Church School 10 am
Forest Ac re Par.k Rev Ray
Ro use pastor , Rober t Musser,
APPLE GROVt: - .:;,und ay Sunday School supt Sunday
school
9 30 a m
wor sh1p
school
10 30 a m , worsh i p
f 1rst and t h1 r d Sunda v 7 30 7 30 p m Bible study Wed
p m
prayer m ee t1ng Wed
nesday 7 30 p m ~aturday
nesday 7 30 p m Fellowsh1 p n1ght prayer serv1ce 1 30 p m
supper f1rst S&amp; turdey 6 p m
HEMLOCK
GROVE
U M W second Tuesday 7 30 CHRISTIAN - Roger Watson
pm
pastor , Ray Whal ey supt
Morn1ng worship, 9 30 am
EAST LETART Sunday churc h school
10 30 a m (
scnool , 9 30 am
worsh ip
young people's meeting 6 30
evenmg worsh1p 7 30
second and fourth Sunday 7 30 p m
P rn
prayer meetin g Wed
p m B1ble study Wedne~da y

tt

'

7 30 p m
MT UNION BAPTIST Rev Cecil Cox pastor Sunda y
Sc hool supt
Joe
Sayre
Sunday sc h ool 9 45 a m
Sunday evenmg wor ship 7 30
Wednesday prayer lind 81ble
st udy ~ 7 30 p m
TUPPERS
PLAINS
CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
Eugene Underwood
pastor
1Howard Ca ldwell Jr Sunday
School Supt
Sund ay School
9 30 a m
Morn mg Sermon
10 30 a m
Sund ay even1ng
serv 1ce 7 p m
LETART FALLS UNITED
BRETHREN - Rev Freeland
Norn s pastor Floyd Norn s
supt Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 a m
mornmg sermon 10 30 am
Player serv1ce
Wednesday
7 30 p m
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
GOD Ofi PROPHECY - G P
Sm1th pastor Sun day Schoo l
10 am Arthur Hen son Supt
Mornmg Worsh ip , 11 am
Yo ung People s serv1ce 7
p m
Eventng service 7 30
p m Wednesday M1d W eek
Prayer Serv ce
7 30 p m
Youth m ~fng
6 30 p m
Evenin g w
h1p 7 30 p m
CHESTE
CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE
Rev
Herbert Grate pastor Wor
sh1p ser1.11ce 11 am and 7 30
p m Sundc!Y sunday Sch ool
9 30 a m
R lchard Barton
supt Prayer meetmg Wed
n esday 7 10 p m
la RADFORD CHURCH OF
Cl 1fford Sm th
CHRIST m 1n 1st er Sunday School 9 JO
a m
m orn ng ch urch 10 30
am
Sunday evenmg ser1.1 1Ce
7 30 p m Wed n esday serv 1ce 8

pm

LAUREL CLIFF
FREE
METHODIST Rev FIQyd
F
Sho o k
pastor
Lloyd
Wngh t Sun day • school supt
Su nday schoo l 9 30 am
m orn1ng worstup 10 30 am
even 1n g worShip
7 30 p m
W edn esday Ch n st an Youth
Crusade
6 30 p m
ChOir
pra ct1 ce Th ursday 7 p m
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST Charl es Russ elr
Sr mm 1ster Norman C ~ W il l
supt
Sun d ay sc hool 9 30
a m
Worsh 1p serv1ce 10 30
am
B1ble stu dy Tuesday
7 30 p m
REORGANIZEO CHURCH
OF
JESUS
CHRIST
OF
LATTER DAY SAl NTS Portland
Rac1ne Ro ad
Will1&amp;m Roush pastor Denny
Evans,
Sunda y
Sch.ooT
Dtrector Sunday Sc hool 9 30
Mornmg worsh ip 10 30
a m
a m Sunday evenmg service 1
Wednesday
even1ng
p m
prayer servtces 7 30 p m
BET HLEHEM BAPTIST Rev
Earl Shul er
pasto r
Wo r sh p se rv1ce 9 30 am
Sunda y school
10 30 am
Sunday eventng serv1ces 7 30
p m B 1bl e st ud y and prayer
serv1ce Th ursday 7~ 30 p m
K1 ngsbu ry
Road
:&gt; unoay
Sc hoo l 9 30 am , Ra l ph ca rl
supt WorS hiP serv1ce, 10 30
a m and 7 30 p m altern ately
Prayer meel1ng Wednesday
7 30 p m
Rell
Jay St tte s
pastor
LOOfG
BOTTOM
CHRISTIAN Mr Robert
Wyatt pastor Sunday School
supt
Rona l d Osborne B1ble
preac h m g
School 9 30 a m
10 45 am
Even 1ng serv1ces
7 30 p m
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
METHODIST CHURCH Rev Pau l N e1.1 1l l e pastor
Sunda y Sch ool 9 30 a m
Mornmg serv1ce 10 30 am
youth serv 1ce
6 45 p m
Evange l iSt ic serv1ce 7 30 P m
P r ay er meet1ng Thu r sday
7 30 p m
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
MISSION at Ba ld Kn ob Rev
E J Gr1ff1th sup t of c h ur ch
Re1.1
L
R
G l1.1 esencamp
pastor
Roger Wtllfred Sr
Sunda y School su pl Sunda y
sc hool
9 30 a m
prayer
meet1ng Tuesday 7 30 p m
youth meet1ng 6 p m Sunday
lea d er s A d a Van Meter and
Gr et ta Suttl e Sunday even 1n g
worsh 1p 7 p m thr ough w1nter
months
MT HERMON CHURCH OF
THE UNITED t5RETHREN IN
'CHR 1ST Robert Shook
r aster
Sunday school
9 30
t. m
Russell Spencer supt
worsh iP st!rv 1t'i: 1 ~ &lt;1.':.. o 7i'r
evening worsh 1p a1ternat1ng
With C E at 7 30 p m on
Sunday Prayer meet1n0 7 30
p m Wednesday Alfred Wolfe
Illy lellder
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
Coolv1ll~ R.D Rev Roy Deeter
pastor
Sunday school
9 30
a m
worshiP serv1ce 10 30
a m B1ble study and prayer
serv 1ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
•RUTLAND
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Rod Kasle r pa stor
V H Braley .. Sunday SChOOl
supt SI.Jnday scho ol 9 30 a m
worship serv ce and com
mun1on
10 30 am
youth
meetmg
6 p m
Sunday
e1.1en1ng serv1ce 7
regular
board meetmQ.. t h 1rd Sat urda y
7 p nl
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
CHURCH Sunday School
9 30 am WorshiP servi ce 11
a m
Wednesday prayer
m eetmg
7 30 p m
Sunday
n1ght worship 7 30 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE Rev
Ll oyd D Gnmm Jr
pastor
Su nd ay school 9 30 a m
worsh1p serv ce
ID 30 am
broadcast !1ve over WMPO
young peop (e s serv 1ce 6 45
evan ge l stlc serv ce 7 30 p m
Prayer meet 1ng Wedn esday
7 30p m M1SS 1onary meet 1ng
7 30 p m f trst Wedn es day of
month
MASON COUNTY
THE HILAND CHAPEL,
George Casto pastor Sunday School 9 30 e'Lenm g worsh tp,
1 30 Thur::.ucry evenmg pray~•
servtce 7 30 p m
MASON FIRST BAPTIST Second and Pomeroy Sts Stan
Cra1g, pastor Sunday school
9 A5 am worSh ip serv1ce 11
am
tra tnlng union 6 30
p m evening worship service
7 30 p m Mid week praY.er
serv ice, Wednesday 7 30 p m
MASON
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST, P 0 Box 487, Miller
St
Mason W va
Sunday
Bible Study 10 a m
Worship
11 a m and 7 p m Bible Study
Wednesday 7 ~ m , Vocal
mUSI C
IEIRST SOUTHERN SAP
A TI'T Corner of Second and
Anderson. Mason
Pastor
Walter Cloud Sunday school
9 45 a m worship serv ice, 11
a m and 1 30 p rn
weekly '
, Bible study Wedriesdlly 7 30

773 5133

HARTFORD CHURCH OF
CHR I ST in Ctmstlan Union -.The Re11 William Campbell
pastor Sunday School, 9 30
ti m
James Hughes supt
evening service
7 30 p m
Wednesday evening prayer
meetmg , 7 30 p m
Youth
prayer serv1ce each Tuesday
FAIRVIEW
BIBLE
CHURCH , Letart W Vs Rt
1
Rev
Geprge Hos c har ,
pastor
Sunde; School P 30
a m Prayer and Bibl e study
7 30 p m
Co1tage Preyer
Serv1ce Tu@sday
10 e m
WorShip Service, Thursdlly
7 30 p m

THEN THE SLUG WE DUG
OUT OF THE GROUND WAS
FROM THIS DERRINGER·

''YES, THE GUY ON ;rHE POLE
MI SS~D. 8UT THE GENT
DOWN BE,LO W

,.........................................................1
•

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Tel~vision .log for -easy viewing

DIDN'T.''

I
FRIDAY APRIL4,191S
5 3G-News 6 Beverly Ht ll b• llt es 8 Ge t Sma rt 15 Elec Co 33
6 QO-News 3 4 8 10 1J 15 ABC News 6 Elec Co 20 Per
sonal tty &amp; Behavmral Development 33 6 3D--NBC N ews
3 4 15 ABC News 13 Bew tl ched 6 CBS News 8 10 l:oom 20

7 QO-Truth or Cons 3 • Bowling tor Dollars 6 WCHS TV
Reporf 8

Av1at1on
20 33 news 10 j 1m my Dean
13 t Spy I S
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Ca m era 6 Pop Goes th e Coun t r y 8 Black Perspecf tve on th e

News203J ToTelllheTruthl3 TreasureHuntiO
8 QO-Sanford &amp; Son 3 4 15 .Ntght Slalker 6 13 Comedy Specoa l

CAPTAIN EJASY
MAS TER ' THE 5R/IIN
WAVE 'NICH I ~E SHO WS

THERE os lfBSOWTELY
NOTHING &lt;"0 1N6 ON
I&gt;J THIS YOU&gt;J 6
MAN$ HE:AD 1

8 Washmg ton Week in Rev tew 20 33
perdmc l&lt; 10

&gt;
HI $ MI&gt;JD IS 50 TOTIILLV BllfNI&lt;.
ITS EVEN EMPrtEil. THA&gt;J ANY OF
THE SE Or~ERS WHO VE SPENT
MO&gt;JTHS TRYING TO IM ITATE
VOUR DIVINE E)&lt;.AMPLE!

Engelbert Hum

8 3()-Ch tco &amp; lhe Man 3 4 15 We II Gel By 8 Wall Street Week

20 33

•

9 oo-Rock fOrd Files 3 4,15 Hot L Ba lt imore 6 13 Mov1e The
Oth er ' 8 10 Masterp tece Theatre 2Q Consumer Surv tva l

K11 33

9 JO--Odd Couple 6 13 A sstgnment America 33
10 DO- Po ll ee Wom an 3 4 15 Ge t Chnst 1e Love 6 13
Paul Nuch1ms 33

New s 20

11 30-Johnny Carson 3 4 15

W1de Wor ld Myster y 13 M ovte
The Champagne Murders 6 Mov ie Ramtree Coun ty 8
Mov te ' Robm son Cr.usoe on M ars 10 Jana kt 33

OG-Mtdnoght Specoal 3 4 15 Wtde World Myslery 6 News 13

1 15---Movl e ' Devil Bats D augh ter
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~uife

\{()() Mf;f.l 00 WITI-10UT A

77 /0

@ft @;,//

l.liC\IMI.l

WITHOUT

~~0

iO '%WBU1Tal5 CN

6 00-Sunrise Semester 10
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WG
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10 Kentucky Afoeld 13

1 00--Saturday Report 3 Aware 6 Treehouse Club 10 In Touch

13
7 3G-Jobberwocky 3 Form Front 4 Eddte Saunders 6 Abbolt

Monday
• Ezek1el
37 3 6

and Costello B Man From C 0 S I 10 T ennessee T uxedo 13
Sesam e Street 20

8 OG-Addams Fam•ty 3 4 15 Yogis Gang 13 Jabberwocky

6
M y Favonte Mart 1ans B Popeye 10
B 3Q-Wheel le and T he Chopper Bunch 3 4 15 Bugs B unny 13
Speedracer 6 Speed Buggy 8 M1ster Rogers 20
9 00-Emer gency Plu s 4 3 4 15 Hong Kong Phooey 6 13
Jeann1e 8 10 Sesa m e Street 20
9 30- Run Joe Run 3 4 15 Adventures of G1ll rgan 13 Btg Blue

Tuesday

Aunt Sara looks about as stern as th ey come doesn I she' As they
used to say, "butter wouldn't melt on her mouth " I don't rememb er
the occaston of this pocture, sonce I was the baby But I do remember
Great Aunt Sara very vtvtdly and she was quote a gorlt

• Revelatron
14-8
Wednesday
• Jerem rah

Marbl e 6 Pebbles and Bamm llamm 8 10

31 /0-14

She was what they call a "ptllar of the church" She must have
baked an astronotmcal number of chocken ptes for church suppers and
served on almost every commottee at one time or another You moght
swy she was ptous, a word we doh'! usually care lot What I mean os
that she revered her God and loved Hom

•

Thursday

l

• John
20 19 23

~ll1JWIDM ; Ikolkouc&amp;f.l -.J 94""

I M A~l\) LINNETT
tv\,6.YBE WE COULD Yl:AH, BUT
A 't&gt;INT OOP'
SMUGGLE IT IN
WHAT IF
GETTING &gt;!4E WEAI'ON PiECEMEAl. AND
WE NEED
1N10 niE CASTLE
ASSEM6LE IT
IT IN A. •
1
1
PRESENTS A Pt&lt;OB1.EM
INSIDE
HURRY"
HAS

Fnday
• Acts
2 42-47

She also had a tremendous sense of humor I remember she used
to tell the funnoest storoes

10 oo-Land of t he Los t 3 4,15 Devlm 6 13 Scooby Doo where
Are You' 8 10 Electnc Company 20

AI LEY OOP

Unscramhl~ these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
forn1 (our ordmary words

-1 TEABA

I I

Scrlplures selected by The Am•r can Bible SOCI&amp;Iy

.
Woth the hope ot woll, on some measure. roster and help s us taon that

BUT •euHKEY"I
1 H

II

YOU

l/IEV RE OUT
'1'0U

Do t7T

lH~DERSTA N O

TilEY ~E FREE 1
W~ti&lt;IH AAciiJrW -

JUST ABOU T
PERFfC T SEEM S
LIKE

Jumble• ERUPT
Yrttudey •

' .)Minor Repaors

&amp;

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Beech &amp; Locu st

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quess I os about th'
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worl

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ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION
Ph 949 9591

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Mtddteport
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Moddteport

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'

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YOUR

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WCCN

11 15-Mov e D ecoy for Terror
6
11 Jo--Mov re I Love A Mystery 3
The L ongest H undred
M1les 4 Mov ie A DIStant 1rumph et 8 Mov1e A Rat sln
1n the Sun
Mov 1e Macabree 13 Don K trshner s Rock
Con cert 15 Janak1 33
I 00- 0on K ~rshner s Rock Concert 6 Mov te ' The Raven 13
1 15-Movle If A Man Answers 4
l JD-Mov1e Interr upted Melody 10
7 311--A BC News 13
3 OO- Mov1e Th e Evil of Frankenstein 4
3 JO--Mov 1e Gods L 1ttle Acre 10
4 4~-Mov 1 e Here Come the Nelsons
4

&gt;mettle Saws

For Saturday, Apnl 5 1975
A RIE S (March 21 April 19)
You r 1dea s have the power to
sw ~y other s tod ay You re es
Pt!C ally effect ve m deahng
w1th large g r oups or
o1gan zat1ons
TAURUS (Apr1l 20 May 20)
Th1ngs nov.. happen 1ng thai
you re unaware of w111 a1d your
career ! ater you II lea rn and
uncler stnnd lh e reason for th e

sec 1ecy
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
You r competence comes to the
fo re 11 your creal ve ns!lncts
a1e c hallenged II sa good day
10 use your bra npower

LIBRA (Sopl 23·0ct 23)
Make 1! a po nl Ia do and act
your. best m pubt c today tm

WIN AT BRIDGE

!D I

~ORT H

4

WEST

EAST

&lt;lo KJ
•Q 987 642

• 9 42

• IO
• 10 4 2
.K Ql0976

. 65
No~th ..SOuth vulnerab le

Wesl

Norlh

3.

4.

Pass

4•

Pass

6•

I t

~~

Opemng lea d - 8 ""

PB

ACEDT

ZCEM

H ZHJ DTHJ WCCN
HNYPLM.'
•
M
A
TCAM
YHterday'a Cryplequote: THE NOSE OF A MOB IS ITS
IMAGINATION BV THIS, AT ANY TIME, IT CAN BE
QUIETLY LED.-EJ&gt;9AR AllAN POE
Srndla.tt IDC.l

South

2.. 24 .

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

AXYDLBAAXB
LONGFELLOW

SCORPIO (Ocl 24 Nov 22)
You ve been m the mood to d o
some redecoratmg Plan w1se •
ly You can get thmg s movmg
now Cos ts Wi ll be m1mmal
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
s of
paramount Importance now I
you hope to sell your 1deas
Use you r most 1mag native
conv1nc1ng approach
~

21) Pr esenta t iO n

CAPRICORN (Doc 22 Jan
19) You II be ab le to s pot
bargams oth ers pas s by 1f you
use your 1nS1ght when at the
mark etplac e Heed ns1d e 11"1
form ation
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
You re gomg to be mstrumental
m bnng ng two In ends toge ther
on a ~roJec t of mutua l nterest
to them You II sha re m th e
bene fit s
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20 )
So m e t hmg yo u and clo se
assoc1a tes hope to accomplish
w II succeed I yo u keep 1t fro m
oth ers scrut1ny 1111 H s ready to
break

~yo.x

~~
Aprol 197S
5,

You 11 ma k e a mu t ua l ly
benet c 1al commerc1a co nnec.,
!ton th1s yea r With one wh o 1
doesn 11 1ve m your v1cm11y The
pa rtnersh iP w111 be lastmg and
p rofi tabl e
I NEWSPAPER EN1 ERPRISE ASSN'

¥
5 ""

Pass

pocked up trumps 'and spread
his hand
At another table North amv
ed al sox doamonds East ope~
ed hiS partner s heart smt and
North had no trouble woth tHat
slam
The hand has a most unusual
fea ture If West had opened hos
own hea rt sutt aga mst tb e
spad e slam he would ha ye
gotten,on woth the kong of spades
and goven ho s partner a heart
ruff Then agaonst the doamond
slam 1f East had opened bo.s
ow n cl ub sUit there would have
been no way for declarer to
avood the loss of a spade and a
club trock
There may be a moral here
Don t lead your partner s suotl

u:B;I:J,,MM{D
I

The b1ddong has been
West

North

Ea5 t

4

,.
South

t8y Os,.ald &amp; James Jacoby
Pass
2•
Pass
Pass
Pa'Ss
Pass
'J
In today s ha nd taken from 3 ..,
the qualofyong rounds of the
You South hold
World s champ10nshop North ·K ~965 .A2 •K4 3 .Q87
and South reached a spade slam
What do you do oow "
after East and West had each
A - We slighll} fa\'or a threeput on a nwsance qod West spade btd over a pass We would not
opened hos partner s sutt and crh1c1ze either action
South wasn t at alt happy woth
TODAY S QUESTION
the dummy S!lll, beggars can t
You do b1d three spades Thts IS
be choosers so after wmnmg
around to East ¥oho bids ~ur
the club he led three rounds of passed
clubs What do you do now?
doamonds on order to get rod of
Answer Tomorrow
hos losong club West ruffed on
woth the JOCk of trumps and
S1 lor JACOBY MODERN
thongs were lookong up for Send
~ook to Wtn at Bridge ' (c/o !lois
South
,
P 0 Box 489, Racllb
They looked up ever better newspapei)
City Stat•on New Yarll II Y 10019
after South ruffed a club
dropped West's kong of spades
~NEWSPAPER I!:NTERPRISE ASSN lev

lI

Chester

~ 0
-:up

'"

"

MIDDLEPORT BOOK
- - STORE

NEW YO~K (:UJTHiftG HOUSE
Kermit Watt011
Pomeroy

•'

•
'

.

"

"

'

Kerm 1 t Korntr

Church and Offoce Supplies Gifts
99 Mitt S1
Middleport

·

Nuisance bids thwart best lead

&lt;I&gt; AJ

(C) U71 K1n1

JJ

11 00-News 3 4 8 10 13 ABt: News 6 Pot tee SurgeoQ_ 15

• A J 53

BLHEM

Early Summ er

I

Furnl ure and Hardware

Pn 985 3308

M ary Tyler Moore 8 10 Mov te

9 3G-Bob Newha rl 8 10
10 0()-Corot Bur nett 8 10

I

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

SADIE'S MARKET

9 QO-Mov te Barefoot tn The Park 3 4 15 Movoe Flap 6 13

. 83

CRYPTOQUOTE

BARNEY

Attend the Church of Your Choice
Pomeroy
Ph 992 34911
.

'

8 DO- Emergency ' 3 4 15 Kung Fu 6 13 Allin The Family 8 10
Book Beat 33
B 3()-The Jeffersons 8 10 Boography 33

t A KQ 197
• 53 2

One letter simply atandl for another In thla 111111ple A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Songle letters,
apoatrophea, the lentllh and formation of the word1 are all
hinll Each day the rode letters are dollerent

H

Pro

4

Reasoner Re port 13 News 6 CB S
N ews 10 Zoom 33
7 00- Treasure Hunt 3 Lawre n ce We l k 4 15
Hee Haw 6 8
$25 000 Pyramtd 10 Newsmaker 75 13 World Press 33
7 30-J eopardy 3, Antma l World 10 Call It Macaron11J

SOUTH
• Q to 7 s 3

II

See How They Run '

&lt; OG-I ITakesA Th tef3 To B~tAnnounced 15
4 JQ-Outdoor s w th Ken Ca llaway 15
5 OQ-- Bonan za 3 W1de World of Spor ts 6 13 Bonanza 4 H1gh
School Bowl 8 Mov1e Cougar Count r y
10 B1g T1me
Wres tlmg 15 The RomagnQI~ s T able 33
5 3D-News 8 Co urse Of Our Times 33
6 00- News 3 4 10 Lawrence We lk 8 God Has The Answer 15

... 8 4

SIR.

IN FULL

BEN FRANKLIN STORE

The Finest in Mob1le Homes

Mov1e

• A8 6

DC

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

3 J()-.-.Pro Bow ling 6 13
Ten nt s 8 10

•K

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

.

'The Friendly Folks '
Pomeroy, Ohio

Groceries &amp; Gener.!ll Merchandise

I· Racine

FARING ML/Cfl

STAFFED AND

POWELL'S SUPER VALU

-

-

COMPLAININ0'
ABOUTlHE
LACK OF

7HII'Ir'58 ARE

'

'

'

MEANWHILE

Nationwide Insurance Co of Columbus 0
307 Spring Ave
Pomeroy
Dial 992 2318
.

Of The Metgs-'Ma son Area

C~S ?OWN

HERE HEB BEEN

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

•

Yesterday's Answer
19 Prmce
26 Tamed
Vahant's
29 Lucky
wife
nwnber
20 Vtsotor
30 Tendency
23 ltaloan coty 32 Lug arowod
24 Compamon 35 Man 's
25 Mthlary
ruckname
detachment 36 Toss

36 Endearmg
term
37 lnhertted
38 Candid
39 Partitioned
40 Curve

WTNNIE

TWO LOCATIONS
59 N Second St
Moddteport , 0
46 Court St
Gallipolis 0

THE DAILY SENTINEL

30- Basebal l 15 Other People Oth er Places 13
To Be A nnounced 8
Urban Le ague 10 Bdl Dance Ou tdoors Show 13
2 3Q- F 1sh m Hole 8 Popeye 10 H arold Ens ley Sportsman s
Fr1end 13
3 Oo-Sou l Tram 3 Fnend s of Man 6 Vlewpo1nt 8 Death Valj ey

2 OO-Mov 1e I sland of the Blue Do lphins

VIRGO (Aug 23·5ept 22) You
can do yo ur budget a b1g favor
1f yo u ta ckl e some of the thmg s
around the house you d or
d1nan ly pay to ha1.1e done

(2 wds)

DUDLEY'S

Ph 992 3863

Pomeroy

I 00- College Basketball 3 "tt Takes A Th tef 4 Ch tldren's Film
Festova l 8 10 To Be Announced 15 Hogh School Basketba ll
33

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Your
though tful act1o ns m beh alf of a
fnef1 d w II do much to shore up
a c lose re lat1onsh1p th at was
begmn ng to totter a b1t

-Alone"

Pomeroy

Meigs County Branch

THE ATHErtS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

.12 QO-J e tsons 3 4 15
These are th e Days 6 13t Harlem
G lobetrotters B 10 Bread and Butterflies 20
12 3D--Gree n A c re s 3 American Bandstand 13 Go 4,15 Out
doors W 1th Juli us Boros 6 Fat A lbert 8, 10

CANCER (June 21 July 22)
Snme very l nusual co nd1! 1o ns
a e n ex1stence today They
could resu lt n brmg1ng about
subs tan t a prof11 lor yo u

thud - PERSON

28 Authenticate
31 Prepare
ensilage
32 Allegiance
33 "Leaveto Heaven"
34 Hilton's "We

.

GAULS MARKET

ANKLET

essa)'lSt

US ? - WE IS BtG6&amp;'R N

.

Chester,Oh Jo

!

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Mthtary uno!
1 - soctety
5 Fragrant
2 Foreogn
powder
3 Be hopeful
11 Athena's title (2 wds )
12 Type of fuel 4 Conswne
13 LegiSlature
5 Lose one's
14 Appear
cool (2 wds )
15 Electrical
GVapor
(comb form)
unot
16 N1genan
1 Guevara
trtbesman
8 Trust
17 Vartety
(3 wds)
of Jazz
9 Overeat
18 Sheathe
10 Reservahon
20 Wroter Vtdal
dweUmg
%1 Strong16 A conlment
scented
(Fr)
22 Importwoe
23 Oldtime
dagger
24 Boundary
25 Goofy
26 Lave
27 English

GASOLI NE ALLEY

M iddl eport

Ph 992 2366

I

Buick Ponttac Opel G M C Deater
500 E Maon St
Ph 992 2174

IVORY HIATUS

~rute'6td'

INGLES ASHLAND SERVICE

Ph one 949: 3342

Lou1s W Osborne
Pom eroy

Now &amp;rr&amp;J\1'~ the ctrcled letten
to fonn the t urpnse answer u
surreated by the above cartoon

I rI l l I I I I J

Answer II~ 111 a fiLO!JII IIIl

The Store woth A Heart

Racine

COOLER AT THE
FllONT OF THE CAR,

Prill Ill .wiiGWIII ~

Bakers of Good Bread
Huntmg ton W Va

RACINE FOOD MARKET

Dial 992 3284

••

IPARITE!
rJ I t 1

OO T 0 1'1

9AI L- lHE'f ~I'N E
A F'IX lHAT S

HEINERS BAKERY

Dtal992 2101

Rae me

SU RE~

[] I

( Aiuwen lomorro wl

Pomeroy

D1nosa urs 8 10 Carrascolendas 20

311--Star Trek 3 4 15, Hudson Brolhers Razzle Dazzle Show
8 10 Zoom 1,0
I'

11

press 1ons made on new ac
qua n ta nces wil l b e long
lastm g

IVARMEL]
[I) I

L1 ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

whoch osgood tn fa moly and communofy I ole, thos feature os sponsored by
the busoness forms and organozatoons whose nam es appear below

700 E Main

Rangers 6 13 Shoza m ' 8 10 Zee Cookong School 20 _.
OG-Po nk Panther 3 4,15 Super Friends 6 13 Valley of the

II

Saturday
• A cts
4 32 35

The pomt os thos So often peopl e mo stake rehgoous fervor for a
certaon "holler than thou" attotude They don't believe that humor and
relogoon go together But Aunt Sara proved them wrong The Church
encompasses all of hie--humor and wot-as well as love and compas·
slon
ana so much morel You can easoly find out for yourself

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

10 J~S tgm u nd and The Sea Monst er s 314 15, Lassies Re ~cue

Calch 33 33
6 3G-NBC News 3 4 15

SATURDAY APR!L5 , 1975

fleL.PIP5'S P095'1CAI, WHAT ~L..D

Sunday
• MICah

10

3 30-Movle Bus R1 ley s Back tn Town 4
5 30--Mov te Once Upon a Honeymoon 4

BORN LOSER

n

Days 10 Ce tebrt ly Bowl tng 13 Hogh School Basketball JJ

II OG-News 3 4 6,8 10 13 15 ABC News 33

pm

MASON ASSEMBLY OF
GOD - Second St Mason, W
Va Chester Tennant pastor
Sunday school
10 a m ,
morn 1ng worshiP
11 am
evangel1sfic service 7 30 p m
Bible study. and prayer servlce ~o
Wednesday 7 30 p m Phone

IOENTIFIC.t'. TtoN
RON H IM

•

..."

•.

'

•

�•
The Daoly Sentinel, Mo&lt;l(lleport Ponw•oy 0 ~'roday, Aprol t, 1975
• 0_

The Datlv :;entmel Mtddleport-Pomeroy , 0 , Fnday, Apnl 4, 1975

POMEROY
POMEROY TRINITY
Re11 W H ~ e rr1n pastor Roy
Mayer Sunday sc hool supt
Ch ur c h schooJ
9 15 am
wo r 5hlp ser"1ce
10 2tl am
Youth cho1 r r ehearsal Mon
day J 30 p m Uf'\der d 1re c t10n
o.t Mary Skmner sen1or cho1 r
r&amp;hear sa l 7 30 p m Thursday
w1th
Mr s
Pa u l
Nea se
d

"

recrhr

•

POMEROY

CHURCH

THE NAZARENE -

OF

Corner

Unl"n an d Mul berr y
Rev
Clyde V Hend ers on pa&amp;.tor
Sunaa y sch ool q JO am . ~ l en
M cCl ung
sup 1
morn1ng
worSh iP 10 30 am
even1ng

service

7 .ao

m id week ser

V1ce Wednesday 7 30 p m

GilACE EP ISCOPAL -

Th€

Rev
Harold Dee th
recto r
Chur c h se rv1ce'S 10 30 am
Holy commun1 on f1rst Sund a)Of month c hurch school 10 30
am for nu rsery throu Qh 12

POMEROY CHURCH OF
CHRIST - T err el l Gr on nger
pa stor B1ble sc hoo l 9 30 a m
worsh1p
10 30 am
ad ult
wo r Ship serv .ce and you ng
peo p les meet mg 7 30 p m
t om b1ned B 1ble st udy and
p~aye r
mee t 1ng Wednesday
1 30 p m
THE SALVA,T ION ARMY En voy Ray W W1n1ng off cer
1n cha rge Su nday 10 am
Hoi mess meet mg 10 30 am
Su nday School Young Peop les
Leg on 7 p m Thursday 1 to 3
p m
L a d1es Home Leaoue 7
p m

Prep c. ta sses
ST
PAUL
LUTHERAN
CHURCH Corne r of Sycamo r e
and Seco nd St s Pome'roy The
Rev W lf1am M cldf eswa rt h
Pastor Sunday Schoo at 9 &lt;15
am an d Chu r ch Se r v1ces 11
a m
SA CRED HEART Rev
Fath er Paul 0 We lton pastor
P hone 992 2825
Sat u r day
even ng Mass 7 30 Sund ay
Mass B and 10 am
Con
f ess 1on Saturday 7 7 30 p m

POMEROY FIRST SAP
TIST - Rob ert Ku hn pastor
W il liam Wat son Sund ay sc hool
supt Sun da y schoo l 9 30 a m

~~{ne:d~y m 7 ~~~l e s~~ ~ ir
pr&lt;l c h ce Wedn esd ay 8 30 p m
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
HOLINESS
CHURCH Harr~so n vd l e
Rev
0 D el l
Manley Pas to r Henry Eb l m
Sunday Scn ool Sup t , Sun day
Sc hool 9 30 am
E ven mg
worship 7 30 p m Prayer and
Pra se se r v1ce Thur sda y 7 30
om

SYRACUSE
FIR6:T
r HUR CH OF GOD
Rev
George Q 11er pas tor Sund ay
sc hool
9 45 am
morn ing
preactu n g
II
a m
eva nge l st c ser v 1c c 7 30 P m
PrayE-r 1iCC 1 nq Th u r o;d :ty
1 30 p 1

..

POMEROY
WESTSIDE
CHURCH OF CHRIST, 200 W
Man St
Je r ry Pau l
m 1n,1s t er
phone 992 7666
Conse r va t ive
nan
1ns tr ume n t~l Sunday worsh p
10 a m
B1ble study 11 a m
Worshi p 6 p m
Wed nesday
B1bl e study 7 p m
MIDWAY
COMM UNITY
CHURC H
(non
d en om mat1onal )
Lang s1.1 111 e
Dext er Road the Rev Wo rl ey
Ha l ey pastor Sun day sch oo l
10 am ev en1ng wor sh1p 7 30
p m
P r ayer
mee t i ng
Tuesday
7 30 p m
yo ut h
qroup Fr dav 7 30 p m
RUTLAND
FREEWILL
BAPTI ST Roge r Turner
pastor Sunday sch ool 10 a m
Sunday even mg serv 1ce 7 30
Wednesd ay 81b le stud y 7 30
pm
O LD
DE,XTER
BIBLE
CHRISTIAN CHURCH - Rev
Ron Terry
pasto r
Sun day
school 10 a m
M r s Worley
F ran c1 s
supe r 1nte nden1
Morn 1ng worshiP
11 am
Sunday cvenmg serv ce 7 30

Polly's Pain
BY POLLY CRAMER

Cleaning gtves
her streak 'panes '
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - 1 have
trouble clean mg my glass door
and ~ mdows I have used all
kinds of spray cleaners am
monoa and vmega r but they all
leave lhe gla ss streaked 1
uould loke some help 1 am
embarrassed that they never
look clean - ESTELLE
DEAR ESTELLE- Perhaps
th e streaks are due to the uay
you a re dryong vour \\ondo\\s
Trj dryong and polo shong "oth _
crushed ne"spaper and do one
sode "'th \ ertocal strokes and
tbe other \\lth honzontal ones
so you ca n tell \\here the

maolmg purposes The card
alone • ca n mak e a no ce
deem a loon on the goft package
- LYNN
DEAR POLLY - I have a
large ova l omong table and
co uld r. t ver fwd a mce
lab le c loth
E1 e r yl h1n g
reasooabl) pnced was too
small and !he large ones were
loo ex pensove for mv budget
and to use ever) dav I had the
tdea of usong a new fl at sheet
fo r a clo th The) can be bought
on dofferent SIZes and such
pretlv colors and patterns tha t
one can be fotmd eastly to go
w1lh an) decor I "atch for the

streaks are Ne\er do \\llldO\~t s

sales and buv them and no one

~hen

ever dreams mv cloths are
acluatl) shee ts - KATIE
DEAR KATIE - Indeed you
do ha.e a great Idea I recently
made a fl owered cloth for one
of m) daughters-on-law and cut
ol 10 an oval shape hke her
table Put tn place on the table
and mea sure all around from
the table edge to the length you
want the cloth plus extra for
the hem and put pons along
\\ha l IS lobe the cultong !me
Remove from table and cut
along the pons and have an oval
shape that woll hang JUSt ro ghl
Thos will remove any longenng
look of a sheet I Joked the looks
of sewmg the hem m wo th the
zigzag stolch on m) sewong
maciune - POLLY

the sun Is shining on them
and sonce )OU love on flonda,
th e land of sunShine, perhaps
that os what you have been
doong
lf the trouble still persosts,
try one tablespoon of kerosene
on t" o guarts of " arm water
OR one-half cup denatured
alcohol 1pooson ) to two
quarters of \Iarin water The
lastos es pecoall y good for those
hvong where the weather os
fr eezong cold -POLLy
- DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve 1s "1 th cake bro\\ me
and cookoe moxes that come on
boxes They sa) what soze
~a ke

)

'

how many cooktes one

G?n expect from a box of the
m1x which IS good and we
apprecoate ol But m a small
fam ily where one moght want
W make only half the mox ot
does not stale how many cups

The Almanac
of m tx the box contams so 1t
By Unoted Press International
has to be emplled and spooned
Today os Fnday Apnl 4, the
onto a cup to be measured Such 94th day of 1975 woth 271 to
packages stale the \\oegh l so follow
l&lt;hy not the number of cups The moon IS between 1ls last
M&lt;}RY p
quarter and new phase
DEAR MARY P - Son ce you
The mormng stars are
are gomg through the molwns Mercury, Mars and Jupiter
anfway why not make up the
The evemng stars are Venus
..:'litre box of miX and freeze and Saturn
.,
~t os-, ot needed to have
Those born on thos date are
ready for another tome 7 woder the sogn of Anes
POLLY
Dorothy Lynda Dix, Amen·
DEAR POLLY - Wo th the can piOneer of prison reform,
present need for conservation was born Apnl 4, 1802
and the paper shortage my
On thos day m hostory
famtl) and I ha.e agreed to
In 1841 , President Wolloam
save the envelopes from goft Harroson dted of pnewnoma one
cards that go on g1fls The month after beong maugura ted
enwelope IS destroyed later John Tyler became the forst
anyway so we do not wn te a vtce-president to become choef
nalne on 1t and sa ve ol to use for executive due to a death , ,

"

-japanese theater slated
ATHENS ~ The Kyogen
Nal!onal Theatre of Japan woll
ll!lllear Tuesday, Aprol 6, at
Memorolll AudolQnwn as p~rt
!Jf ' the Ohoo Umverso ty Artost
Ser1es
.,
The Kyogen, whose roots go
back over a thousan d years,
are Japanese comedoes They
contaon many aspects of the
theatre of the absurd,
provoking laughter wollt lheor
sarcasm, Irony and crohcosm
Japanese comedy os fwo ny and
effervescent , whtle bemg
unpudenl and trreverent Yet,
ot os also a thoughlful and
poognant commentaoy on the
hiUTI&amp;n condtUon

The comedy occurs when lhe
audoence reahzes the dosparoty
between the appearances and
the realoty of the sotuallon The
th emes are som ple and
umversal beyond time and
place woth the characters usong
a styhzed speech The range of
chc~rade r s

mclude

go ds.

demons clergy and ordmary
peopl e "1 th one se rvant
' Tar o ' appearong often
lypofyong the sporol of the
Kyogen
Tockets are avaolable at the
Mem oria l Au do tortum box
offoce 1-4 p m weekdays and
by ca lion ~ 594 l471

nesday , 1 30 p m
U M w
GRAH/IM
UNITED
METHODIST
Preachmg \ f~rst Wednesda y 7 30 p m
WESLEYAN (Racm e l 9 30 a m
f1rst and second
sc h oo l
10 a m
Su nd.ly
Sunday s of each month th lrd
w or sh iP 11 am &lt;B ible s-t udy
and lou rth Sundays each
7 p rn , Ch Oir
mon th worshiP se rv1 ce at 7 30 Thur.sday
pract1ce Thur sday 8 p m
p m Wedne sday evenmgs at
fel l ow s hiP
sup p er
f 1r s t
1 30 Praver and B1bl e Stu&lt;l v
Wednesday 6 30 p m U M W
SEVENTH
DAY
AD
fo ur th Monda v 8 p m
VE N T1 ST
Mutberr'Y
H e 1ght s
Pomeroy
Pastor
GREATBEND - Worshlp II
G rard Selon Sabbath sch oo l
a m 2n d and 4th Sundays
eve ry Sat ur day at 2 p m and
Chur c h Sc; hool \.0 a m
worS hi P s~ r v 1 ce follow1ng at
LETART FALLS - Worship
3 15
p m
Open
Btble
10 a m C hu ~ch school 9 a m
diSC USSIOn 1 30 p m at the
B1bl e s tudy 7 30 p m ~"very
ch.u r ch eac n Thur sday
Tu esd ay
MORNING STAR - Wo rsl'l lp
FIRST SOUTHERN SAP
9 30 am
Chul-ch School 10 30
TIST 282 M ulb er ry Ave
a m
Mtd W ~ek
sen 1ce
Pom e roy
aff il iat ed
w1tt1
Wednesday 8 p m
5 B C
th e Rev
B r ad l ey
MORSE CHAPEL Wor
Spen ce r pas tor Tro y Zw ll mg
Sh1p 11 a m
1St and Jrd
Sunday sc hoo l sup! Sunda y
Sundays
Church School
10
schoo l
9 30 a m
mo rn ng
am
worsn 1p
10 30
Su nday
PORTLAND - Wor Sh iP 7 30
ev angei1 St1 c meet mg 7 30p m
p m
Ch ur c;h School 9 30 a m
Prayer meetmg Wednesday
SUTTON - WorSh iP 11 am
7 30 p m
2nd and 4t h Sundays Chur ch
MIDDLEPORT
Sc hool 10 a m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Corner ~ ou rth and Ma 1n
Rev Robert M e:ice
Middl eport Rev Henry Key
Rev Stanley Brandum
Jr pastor Su nday Sc ho ol 9 30
JOPPA - WorShip 10 am
a m
Mr s E:rv n Baum ga rd
Church Sc hool 9 a m
Praye r
ne r supt
Mornmg w or sh ip
Meet1ng Wednesday 8 p m
10 45 am
LONG BOTTOM - Ch ur ch
JEHOVAH ' S WITNESSES sen 1c es
9 am
Sund ay
Larry Carnah an pres d ng
Sc hool 9 45 am B1ble Study
mm 1st er Sun day B1ble tee
every Th ursd ay 7 30 p m
tu re 9, JO am
Wat ch tow er
}IORTH BETHEL Wor
study 10 30 a m
Tuesday
ship 11 am Chur ch Sc hoo l 10
Bib le st udy 7 30 p m
Th urs
am
dc!y m1n1s t ry schoo l 7 30
ALFRED - Sund ay schoo l
p m
serv1ce m ee t ng 8 30
9 45 a m
eac h
Sunday
pm
preachmg a t 11 a m
ea ch
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
Suflday Prayer m ee t ng , 7 45
Chnst m Chnsflan Unionp m Wedn esda y WSCS , 'Sp m
Lawrence Man le y pasto r
on thtrd Tuesday each month
Mrs Russell Young Sonda y
REEDSVILLE Sunday
Sc hool .,S upt Sunday School
sc hoo l 9 30 preachmg 7 30
9 30 am Even 1ng worsh1p
p m Sunday pray er mee t mg
7 30
We dne sday
pray er
7 30 p m Tuesday WSCS 7 30
mee t mg 7 30 p m
f.rst T hursday each month
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF"
SILVER RIDGE - Worsh ip
GOO - Rac1ne Ro ut e 2 the
10 a m
Church Sc hool 9 a m
Rev Ja mes M Muncy pastor
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Sund ay sch ool 9 4~ a m
WorshiP 9 am
Chur ch
morn tng worshIP
11 a m
Sc hool 10 a m
e1.1en 1ng w orsh 1p 7 30 p m
KENO
CHURCH
OF
Prayer meet mg Tu es d ay 7 30
CHRtST - George Fr ederick
p m
You ng peoples meet1ng
supt Serv 1ce weekly 9 30 a m
7 30 o m Th ur sd ay
on Sunda y Preach mg f1r st and
MIDDLEPORT
FIR'"ST
th rd Sundays of mont-h by
B AP TIST ~ Cor ne r S1X Ih ancl
Clifford Sm1th 9 30 am
Palm er the Rev Cl eo Y Boyd
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
pas tor
Da nn y T hom p so n
UN !ON - D a rr ell
Dodd r ill
Sunday sc hool sup l WM PO
pastor
Sunday School 9 30
rad10 pr og r am
7 45 a m
am
Leonard Gilmore f 1rst
S1.1 nda y sc hOol 9 15 a m
el d er
evenmg serv 1ce 7 30
morn ng wo r sh p 10 15 am
p m
Wednesday
pra yer
Y outh act1v lies an d fel lowshiP
meet 1ng 7 30 p m
for tun or and sen or h1g h
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
6 p m
Sunday
st uden t s
GOO - Racine Route 2 The
Ev enmg Wor Ship at 7 JO M1d
Rev
Charles Hand pasto r
week p r ayer ser v ce
Wed
Sunday school 9 45 a m
nesday 7 30 P m
morn1ng worsh 1p 11 am
E1.1enmg serv1ces 'fuesday and
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
Fnday 7 30
M ddleport 5t h and Menn
BEARWALLOW
RIDGE
Ge(]rge
Glaze
mm1 ste r
CHURCH OF CHRIST - Bibl e
James Shee ts supenntendent
Study
9 30 a m
mornmg
B 1ble schoo l
9 30 am
worsh1p 10 30 am
evening
m ornrn g worsh 1p 10 30 am
worsh iP 6 30 p m Wednesday
&lt;e ve n 1ng wors.IHP 7 30 p m
B1ble St udy 7 30 p m
prayer ser i.I I.CE' 7 p m Wed
MT
OLIVE CHURCH nesdav
L ong Bottom Sunday School
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
10 a m w1th W1llard P1gott
OF THE NAZARENE - Rev
sup t Evange l 1st1 c mes sa ge
Dvn Co l e pastor
A lfr ed
e&amp;ch Sunda y even 1ng 7 30 p m
R usc h el Sunda y Sc hool sup t
by
Elder
Russ e ll
Cl 1ne
Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m
m1n1sterof the Aposto l iC Fa1th
mornmg wor sh ip 10 30 am
B1ble Study Wednesday 7 30
Sun da y evange l she mee11ng
pm
7 30 p m
pra yer meet1ng
STIVERSVILLE
COM
Wednesday 7.JOp m
MUNITY CHURCH - Sunday
sch ool serv1ce 10 a m Pray er
THE
UNITED
PRE S
meet1ng
Thursday 7 p m
BYTERIAN
MINISTRY
Sunday evenmg serv 1ce 7 p m
OF MEIGS COUNTY DWight
ZION CHURCH OF CHRI ST
L Zav 1tz Pastor D1rector
Pomer oy H ar r1 so nv1lle
HARRISONVILLE
Road M 1k.e G1 rton
pa stor
Sunda y Chur ch Schoo l 9 30
Steven Stan ley Sunday school
a m Mrs Hom er L ee S ~pt
supt Sun day schoo l 9 30 a m
Mornmg Worsh1p 10 30 am
morn n g worsh1p and com
MlbDLEPORT Sunday
m un10n 10 30 a m
Sunday
Church Schoo l 9 JO am John
evenmg you th Chns 11an en
F
F ultz
Su p t
Morn 1ng
deavor
6 30 p m
wo r sh 1p
WorSh•P 10 30 am
ser v ce 7 30 p m Wednesd ay
SYR:ACUSE
M or nmg
e1.1en1 n g pray er m ee tmg and
WorShip
9 am
Sund ay
B1b l e stud y 7 30 p m
Chur ch Schoo l 10 l!l m
Mrs
Sampson Ha ll SupT
ST
JOHN
LUTHERAN
CHURCH
P1ne Grov e Th e
Rev
W 1\liam M1ddl eswart h
Pa stor Chur ch Serv1 ces 9 30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
am Sund ay Sch oo\ 10 30 am
GOD- Pll1ll 1p Whi t ley pa stor
10 am
Sun da y schoo l
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
w o r s h1p serv 1ce
7 p m
CHRIST - B1b le Sc nool 9 30
Praye r m fl'e t ng Wednesday
am
morn1ng wor ShiP 10 30
7 JO p m
am
Sunday even1ng Wo rSh ip
Serv1ce 7 p m choi r pract1ce
Wednesday 7 p m Rev Je ff
Ranson Pastor
HAZEL
COMMUNITY
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST
CHURCH Near L ong Bot
Rev Freeland Norns pa storh
Edse l Hart
pas t or
tom
Sunday sc hool
10 am
sunday schoo l 10 a ~ed~~~~~Y
Church
7 30 p m
pra ye r
se r v 1ce
7 Pm
meet ng 7 30 p m T hur sd ay
e1ble St udy 1 P m
RACINE
CHURCH
OF
111E NAZARENE Rev
W II am Bartholom ew pastor
Sund ay schoo l
9 JO am
MIDDLEPORT
PEN
morn 1ng
TECOSTAL - Th 1rd Ave the Gerald We lls SI.Jp t
worsh1p
10 30 am
Wed
Rev W ll1am Knittel pastor
nesday serv ce 7 p m
Ropald Dugan Sunday School
RACINE FIRST BAPTISTSupt Classes for all ages
Waller P B 1kacsan pa stor
evenmg serv 1ce 7 30 p m
Ronn1e Salser Sunday sc hool
B1b \e study Wednesday 7 30
su p! Sunday school 9 30 a m
p m
youth ser1.1lces Fr1day
morn1ng
worsh1p
10 40
7 30 p m
Sunday eve n ng worsh1p 7 30
FREEWILL BAPTIST Wednesday even n g B bl e
Carrier Ash and Plum Mtd
study 7 30
dleport
Noel
Herrman
pas t o r
Saturday even ng
DANVILLE WESLEYAN se rv 1ce 7 p m Sunday school Rev Leton Glasu re pastor
10 a m
Su n d ay even n g Sunday Sc hool 9 30 a m
youth and junior yo uth service
worSh i P_ 7 p m
6 45 p m
evenmg worsh1p
7 30 p m
prayer and pra1se
Wednesday 1 30 o m
MEIGS
SI LVER
RVN
FREE
COOPERATIVE
BAPTIST - Rev Ralph Dean
PARISH
pastor Sunday School 10 am
THE UNITED
Leon Miller
supt Even1ng
METHODIST CHURCH
7 30 p m
Prayer
serv1ce
Robert T Bumgarner
mee tmg Thursday • 7 30 o m
Dtrector
CHESTER CHURCH OF
POMEROY CLUSTER
GOO Rev
Dan Avers
Rev CarlE Hicks
pastor
Sun day sc hool 9 30
Rev D Wm Sydenstncke ..
a m wo rs h1p serv 1ce II am
CHESTER - WorShiP 9 15
even m g ser1.1 1ce 7 30 p m
a m
Ch urch School 10 a m
youth serv1ce Wednesday 7 30
ENTERPRISE - WorshiP 9
pm
a m Church School 10 a m
FLATWOODS - WorshiP 11
LANG SVILLE CHRISTtAN
a m
Church School 10 a m
CHURCH
T ed Jones
POMEROY W ors h1p
pa stor Sunday sc hool 9 30
10 30 a m
Church School 9 15
a m
Roy S1gman
supt
am
UMYF 6 30 p m
morn mg
worship
10 30
ROCK SPRINGS - Worsh 1p
Sund ay even1ng ser1.11te 7 JO
10 a m Church Sch ool 9 a m
m1d week
serv 1ce
Wed
UMYF630pm
'
nesday 7 30 p m
MIDOLEPORT CLUSTER
Rev RobertBumgarner
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
HEATH WorSh ip 10 30
THE NAZARENE Rev
Howard C Bl ack pa stor Bob
a m Church School 9 30 a m
UMYF 7 p m
Moore Sunday School Supt
RUTLAND - worship 9 15
Sunday School classes tor all
am
Ch urch School 10 am
&amp;ges
9 30 a m
morn 1ng
UM YF 7 p m
worShip 10 45 NYPS Sunday
SALEM CENTER Wor
6 30p m evange!l st tc service
shtp 9 am , Church School 10
Sunday 1 JO p m Mid week
am UMYF Thursday 7 P m
prayer meeting Wednesd ay
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
7 30p m MISSIOna ry meet1ng
Rev Richard E Jarv1s
sec ond Wednesday 7 30 p m
ASBURY WorShiP 11
UNITED
FAITH
NON
am Church School 9 50 am
DENOMINATIONAL Rev
wscs lst Tuesday
Rober t Sm1th pastor Sunday
FOREST RUN - Worsh ip 9 school 9 30 am ,.c lass l ea der
am
Church School 10 am
Leo Hil l worsh 1p servlc~
wscs 3r d Wednesday 7 30 10 30 am church, 1 J O p m
pm
EDEN UNIIt;D BRETH
MINERSVILLE - Worship
REN IN CKRIST - Elden R
10 a m Church Schoo l 9 a m
Bla ke pastor sundav Schoo l
WSCS 3rd Monday 7 30 P m
lO a m
Howard Mc Coy
SYRACUSE
Church
l1 '
Sc hool, 9 30 a m
wor sh ip
supt
Mof' nmg sermon
lt
ser vt c;., 1 lOP m
m
Sunday night servtces
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Christian Endeaver 7 30 p
Rev Steven Wilson
m
Song service , B P m
Rev Larry Poling
P reach~ng 8 30 p
Mid
R
Howard Shiveley
week
rayer mee ng Wed
BE,liANY (Dorcas) .:l! "t r'tesdaY 7 P m
R.ay Adams
Worship 9 30 am
Churc~
lay l esder
f 'rU'r
School 10 30 am
/
C HUNCH
Of
:t~~us
CARMEL Worsh p
11 CHRIST - L oc ated at Rut Jal'ld
am
1st and 3rd Sundays
on New L 1ma Road pex t to
Church School 10 am
Forest Ac re Par.k Rev Ray
Ro use pastor , Rober t Musser,
APPLE GROVt: - .:;,und ay Sunday School supt Sunday
school
9 30 a m
wor sh1p
school
10 30 a m , worsh i p
f 1rst and t h1 r d Sunda v 7 30 7 30 p m Bible study Wed
p m
prayer m ee t1ng Wed
nesday 7 30 p m ~aturday
nesday 7 30 p m Fellowsh1 p n1ght prayer serv1ce 1 30 p m
supper f1rst S&amp; turdey 6 p m
HEMLOCK
GROVE
U M W second Tuesday 7 30 CHRISTIAN - Roger Watson
pm
pastor , Ray Whal ey supt
Morn1ng worship, 9 30 am
EAST LETART Sunday churc h school
10 30 a m (
scnool , 9 30 am
worsh ip
young people's meeting 6 30
evenmg worsh1p 7 30
second and fourth Sunday 7 30 p m
P rn
prayer meetin g Wed
p m B1ble study Wedne~da y

tt

'

7 30 p m
MT UNION BAPTIST Rev Cecil Cox pastor Sunda y
Sc hool supt
Joe
Sayre
Sunday sc h ool 9 45 a m
Sunday evenmg wor ship 7 30
Wednesday prayer lind 81ble
st udy ~ 7 30 p m
TUPPERS
PLAINS
CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
Eugene Underwood
pastor
1Howard Ca ldwell Jr Sunday
School Supt
Sund ay School
9 30 a m
Morn mg Sermon
10 30 a m
Sund ay even1ng
serv 1ce 7 p m
LETART FALLS UNITED
BRETHREN - Rev Freeland
Norn s pastor Floyd Norn s
supt Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 a m
mornmg sermon 10 30 am
Player serv1ce
Wednesday
7 30 p m
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
GOD Ofi PROPHECY - G P
Sm1th pastor Sun day Schoo l
10 am Arthur Hen son Supt
Mornmg Worsh ip , 11 am
Yo ung People s serv1ce 7
p m
Eventng service 7 30
p m Wednesday M1d W eek
Prayer Serv ce
7 30 p m
Youth m ~fng
6 30 p m
Evenin g w
h1p 7 30 p m
CHESTE
CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE
Rev
Herbert Grate pastor Wor
sh1p ser1.11ce 11 am and 7 30
p m Sundc!Y sunday Sch ool
9 30 a m
R lchard Barton
supt Prayer meetmg Wed
n esday 7 10 p m
la RADFORD CHURCH OF
Cl 1fford Sm th
CHRIST m 1n 1st er Sunday School 9 JO
a m
m orn ng ch urch 10 30
am
Sunday evenmg ser1.1 1Ce
7 30 p m Wed n esday serv 1ce 8

pm

LAUREL CLIFF
FREE
METHODIST Rev FIQyd
F
Sho o k
pastor
Lloyd
Wngh t Sun day • school supt
Su nday schoo l 9 30 am
m orn1ng worstup 10 30 am
even 1n g worShip
7 30 p m
W edn esday Ch n st an Youth
Crusade
6 30 p m
ChOir
pra ct1 ce Th ursday 7 p m
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST Charl es Russ elr
Sr mm 1ster Norman C ~ W il l
supt
Sun d ay sc hool 9 30
a m
Worsh 1p serv1ce 10 30
am
B1ble stu dy Tuesday
7 30 p m
REORGANIZEO CHURCH
OF
JESUS
CHRIST
OF
LATTER DAY SAl NTS Portland
Rac1ne Ro ad
Will1&amp;m Roush pastor Denny
Evans,
Sunda y
Sch.ooT
Dtrector Sunday Sc hool 9 30
Mornmg worsh ip 10 30
a m
a m Sunday evenmg service 1
Wednesday
even1ng
p m
prayer servtces 7 30 p m
BET HLEHEM BAPTIST Rev
Earl Shul er
pasto r
Wo r sh p se rv1ce 9 30 am
Sunda y school
10 30 am
Sunday eventng serv1ces 7 30
p m B 1bl e st ud y and prayer
serv1ce Th ursday 7~ 30 p m
K1 ngsbu ry
Road
:&gt; unoay
Sc hoo l 9 30 am , Ra l ph ca rl
supt WorS hiP serv1ce, 10 30
a m and 7 30 p m altern ately
Prayer meel1ng Wednesday
7 30 p m
Rell
Jay St tte s
pastor
LOOfG
BOTTOM
CHRISTIAN Mr Robert
Wyatt pastor Sunday School
supt
Rona l d Osborne B1ble
preac h m g
School 9 30 a m
10 45 am
Even 1ng serv1ces
7 30 p m
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
METHODIST CHURCH Rev Pau l N e1.1 1l l e pastor
Sunda y Sch ool 9 30 a m
Mornmg serv1ce 10 30 am
youth serv 1ce
6 45 p m
Evange l iSt ic serv1ce 7 30 P m
P r ay er meet1ng Thu r sday
7 30 p m
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
MISSION at Ba ld Kn ob Rev
E J Gr1ff1th sup t of c h ur ch
Re1.1
L
R
G l1.1 esencamp
pastor
Roger Wtllfred Sr
Sunda y School su pl Sunda y
sc hool
9 30 a m
prayer
meet1ng Tuesday 7 30 p m
youth meet1ng 6 p m Sunday
lea d er s A d a Van Meter and
Gr et ta Suttl e Sunday even 1n g
worsh 1p 7 p m thr ough w1nter
months
MT HERMON CHURCH OF
THE UNITED t5RETHREN IN
'CHR 1ST Robert Shook
r aster
Sunday school
9 30
t. m
Russell Spencer supt
worsh iP st!rv 1t'i: 1 ~ &lt;1.':.. o 7i'r
evening worsh 1p a1ternat1ng
With C E at 7 30 p m on
Sunday Prayer meet1n0 7 30
p m Wednesday Alfred Wolfe
Illy lellder
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
Coolv1ll~ R.D Rev Roy Deeter
pastor
Sunday school
9 30
a m
worshiP serv1ce 10 30
a m B1ble study and prayer
serv 1ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
•RUTLAND
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Rod Kasle r pa stor
V H Braley .. Sunday SChOOl
supt SI.Jnday scho ol 9 30 a m
worship serv ce and com
mun1on
10 30 am
youth
meetmg
6 p m
Sunday
e1.1en1ng serv1ce 7
regular
board meetmQ.. t h 1rd Sat urda y
7 p nl
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
CHURCH Sunday School
9 30 am WorshiP servi ce 11
a m
Wednesday prayer
m eetmg
7 30 p m
Sunday
n1ght worship 7 30 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE Rev
Ll oyd D Gnmm Jr
pastor
Su nd ay school 9 30 a m
worsh1p serv ce
ID 30 am
broadcast !1ve over WMPO
young peop (e s serv 1ce 6 45
evan ge l stlc serv ce 7 30 p m
Prayer meet 1ng Wedn esday
7 30p m M1SS 1onary meet 1ng
7 30 p m f trst Wedn es day of
month
MASON COUNTY
THE HILAND CHAPEL,
George Casto pastor Sunday School 9 30 e'Lenm g worsh tp,
1 30 Thur::.ucry evenmg pray~•
servtce 7 30 p m
MASON FIRST BAPTIST Second and Pomeroy Sts Stan
Cra1g, pastor Sunday school
9 A5 am worSh ip serv1ce 11
am
tra tnlng union 6 30
p m evening worship service
7 30 p m Mid week praY.er
serv ice, Wednesday 7 30 p m
MASON
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST, P 0 Box 487, Miller
St
Mason W va
Sunday
Bible Study 10 a m
Worship
11 a m and 7 p m Bible Study
Wednesday 7 ~ m , Vocal
mUSI C
IEIRST SOUTHERN SAP
A TI'T Corner of Second and
Anderson. Mason
Pastor
Walter Cloud Sunday school
9 45 a m worship serv ice, 11
a m and 1 30 p rn
weekly '
, Bible study Wedriesdlly 7 30

773 5133

HARTFORD CHURCH OF
CHR I ST in Ctmstlan Union -.The Re11 William Campbell
pastor Sunday School, 9 30
ti m
James Hughes supt
evening service
7 30 p m
Wednesday evening prayer
meetmg , 7 30 p m
Youth
prayer serv1ce each Tuesday
FAIRVIEW
BIBLE
CHURCH , Letart W Vs Rt
1
Rev
Geprge Hos c har ,
pastor
Sunde; School P 30
a m Prayer and Bibl e study
7 30 p m
Co1tage Preyer
Serv1ce Tu@sday
10 e m
WorShip Service, Thursdlly
7 30 p m

THEN THE SLUG WE DUG
OUT OF THE GROUND WAS
FROM THIS DERRINGER·

''YES, THE GUY ON ;rHE POLE
MI SS~D. 8UT THE GENT
DOWN BE,LO W

,.........................................................1
•

'

Tel~vision .log for -easy viewing

DIDN'T.''

I
FRIDAY APRIL4,191S
5 3G-News 6 Beverly Ht ll b• llt es 8 Ge t Sma rt 15 Elec Co 33
6 QO-News 3 4 8 10 1J 15 ABC News 6 Elec Co 20 Per
sonal tty &amp; Behavmral Development 33 6 3D--NBC N ews
3 4 15 ABC News 13 Bew tl ched 6 CBS News 8 10 l:oom 20

7 QO-Truth or Cons 3 • Bowling tor Dollars 6 WCHS TV
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Av1at1on
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8 QO-Sanford &amp; Son 3 4 15 .Ntght Slalker 6 13 Comedy Specoa l

CAPTAIN EJASY
MAS TER ' THE 5R/IIN
WAVE 'NICH I ~E SHO WS

THERE os lfBSOWTELY
NOTHING &lt;"0 1N6 ON
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MAN$ HE:AD 1

8 Washmg ton Week in Rev tew 20 33
perdmc l&lt; 10

&gt;
HI $ MI&gt;JD IS 50 TOTIILLV BllfNI&lt;.
ITS EVEN EMPrtEil. THA&gt;J ANY OF
THE SE Or~ERS WHO VE SPENT
MO&gt;JTHS TRYING TO IM ITATE
VOUR DIVINE E)&lt;.AMPLE!

Engelbert Hum

8 3()-Ch tco &amp; lhe Man 3 4 15 We II Gel By 8 Wall Street Week

20 33

•

9 oo-Rock fOrd Files 3 4,15 Hot L Ba lt imore 6 13 Mov1e The
Oth er ' 8 10 Masterp tece Theatre 2Q Consumer Surv tva l

K11 33

9 JO--Odd Couple 6 13 A sstgnment America 33
10 DO- Po ll ee Wom an 3 4 15 Ge t Chnst 1e Love 6 13
Paul Nuch1ms 33

New s 20

11 30-Johnny Carson 3 4 15

W1de Wor ld Myster y 13 M ovte
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OG-Mtdnoght Specoal 3 4 15 Wtde World Myslery 6 News 13

1 15---Movl e ' Devil Bats D augh ter
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~uife

\{()() Mf;f.l 00 WITI-10UT A

77 /0

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l.liC\IMI.l

WITHOUT

~~0

iO '%WBU1Tal5 CN

6 00-Sunrise Semester 10
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WG
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10 Kentucky Afoeld 13

1 00--Saturday Report 3 Aware 6 Treehouse Club 10 In Touch

13
7 3G-Jobberwocky 3 Form Front 4 Eddte Saunders 6 Abbolt

Monday
• Ezek1el
37 3 6

and Costello B Man From C 0 S I 10 T ennessee T uxedo 13
Sesam e Street 20

8 OG-Addams Fam•ty 3 4 15 Yogis Gang 13 Jabberwocky

6
M y Favonte Mart 1ans B Popeye 10
B 3Q-Wheel le and T he Chopper Bunch 3 4 15 Bugs B unny 13
Speedracer 6 Speed Buggy 8 M1ster Rogers 20
9 00-Emer gency Plu s 4 3 4 15 Hong Kong Phooey 6 13
Jeann1e 8 10 Sesa m e Street 20
9 30- Run Joe Run 3 4 15 Adventures of G1ll rgan 13 Btg Blue

Tuesday

Aunt Sara looks about as stern as th ey come doesn I she' As they
used to say, "butter wouldn't melt on her mouth " I don't rememb er
the occaston of this pocture, sonce I was the baby But I do remember
Great Aunt Sara very vtvtdly and she was quote a gorlt

• Revelatron
14-8
Wednesday
• Jerem rah

Marbl e 6 Pebbles and Bamm llamm 8 10

31 /0-14

She was what they call a "ptllar of the church" She must have
baked an astronotmcal number of chocken ptes for church suppers and
served on almost every commottee at one time or another You moght
swy she was ptous, a word we doh'! usually care lot What I mean os
that she revered her God and loved Hom

•

Thursday

l

• John
20 19 23

~ll1JWIDM ; Ikolkouc&amp;f.l -.J 94""

I M A~l\) LINNETT
tv\,6.YBE WE COULD Yl:AH, BUT
A 't&gt;INT OOP'
SMUGGLE IT IN
WHAT IF
GETTING &gt;!4E WEAI'ON PiECEMEAl. AND
WE NEED
1N10 niE CASTLE
ASSEM6LE IT
IT IN A. •
1
1
PRESENTS A Pt&lt;OB1.EM
INSIDE
HURRY"
HAS

Fnday
• Acts
2 42-47

She also had a tremendous sense of humor I remember she used
to tell the funnoest storoes

10 oo-Land of t he Los t 3 4,15 Devlm 6 13 Scooby Doo where
Are You' 8 10 Electnc Company 20

AI LEY OOP

Unscramhl~ these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
forn1 (our ordmary words

-1 TEABA

I I

Scrlplures selected by The Am•r can Bible SOCI&amp;Iy

.
Woth the hope ot woll, on some measure. roster and help s us taon that

BUT •euHKEY"I
1 H

II

YOU

l/IEV RE OUT
'1'0U

Do t7T

lH~DERSTA N O

TilEY ~E FREE 1
W~ti&lt;IH AAciiJrW -

JUST ABOU T
PERFfC T SEEM S
LIKE

Jumble• ERUPT
Yrttudey •

' .)Minor Repaors

&amp;

Tune up

Beech &amp; Locu st

--;-

quess I os about th'
...--....\ mos' happoes qorl on th'

e

worl

M&amp;R- SHOPPING CENTER
IGA FOODLIN ER

GOEGLEIN READY MIX
M•ddteporl

Moddlepor l Oho o

•

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

337 N 2nd

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION
Ph 949 9591

E Main

Modd leport

Ph 992 2550

.

..............

.

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

t ' \ .. .. , ..... . . .

Ll L ABNER

Bakers of Gay 90s Bread
Mtddteport
Ph 992 3030

WHY S HOULD Wf=- Lf=-r
A FLEA- BIT LILCOI..NTRY

SEARS CATALOGUE MERCHANT
~ 220

MARK V STORE
Moddteport

Ph 992 2178

Llt&lt;E OOBA-DOO

De-STROY

Oh to

STRONGER, THAN

\_ IIISY IS -

SWISHER
- &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY
We Fill All Doc tors Pre sc riptiOns
992 2955

2'16 W Second

Devoted

To the Interest

'

.
.

WAID CROSS SONS STORE
Ph 949 5772

'

YOUR

INA FEWMORE
IJ'\Y5 WELL BE

OR0ANIZ'ATIONAL

CCIHPLETElY

~RN!IJlE;

ABILI TY 1&amp;

OPERATION I

1100 E. Maln

Pomeroy

Ph 992 7034

.

iMeats and Grocer tes

Syracuse

.

'

o..

WE WUZ.

SAKES ALIVE!!
WHAT HAPPENT

.

'lORE MULE,
LO WEEZY?

TO
.

TOT! IV'

SOME SUPPLIES
BACK FROM TH'

GENERAL STORE

l

- AN TH'CAP
CAME OFF
TH' BLEACH

I
I

'

Ph 992 3986

WCCN

11 15-Mov e D ecoy for Terror
6
11 Jo--Mov re I Love A Mystery 3
The L ongest H undred
M1les 4 Mov ie A DIStant 1rumph et 8 Mov1e A Rat sln
1n the Sun
Mov 1e Macabree 13 Don K trshner s Rock
Con cert 15 Janak1 33
I 00- 0on K ~rshner s Rock Concert 6 Mov te ' The Raven 13
1 15-Movle If A Man Answers 4
l JD-Mov1e Interr upted Melody 10
7 311--A BC News 13
3 OO- Mov1e Th e Evil of Frankenstein 4
3 JO--Mov 1e Gods L 1ttle Acre 10
4 4~-Mov 1 e Here Come the Nelsons
4

&gt;mettle Saws

For Saturday, Apnl 5 1975
A RIE S (March 21 April 19)
You r 1dea s have the power to
sw ~y other s tod ay You re es
Pt!C ally effect ve m deahng
w1th large g r oups or
o1gan zat1ons
TAURUS (Apr1l 20 May 20)
Th1ngs nov.. happen 1ng thai
you re unaware of w111 a1d your
career ! ater you II lea rn and
uncler stnnd lh e reason for th e

sec 1ecy
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
You r competence comes to the
fo re 11 your creal ve ns!lncts
a1e c hallenged II sa good day
10 use your bra npower

LIBRA (Sopl 23·0ct 23)
Make 1! a po nl Ia do and act
your. best m pubt c today tm

WIN AT BRIDGE

!D I

~ORT H

4

WEST

EAST

&lt;lo KJ
•Q 987 642

• 9 42

• IO
• 10 4 2
.K Ql0976

. 65
No~th ..SOuth vulnerab le

Wesl

Norlh

3.

4.

Pass

4•

Pass

6•

I t

~~

Opemng lea d - 8 ""

PB

ACEDT

ZCEM

H ZHJ DTHJ WCCN
HNYPLM.'
•
M
A
TCAM
YHterday'a Cryplequote: THE NOSE OF A MOB IS ITS
IMAGINATION BV THIS, AT ANY TIME, IT CAN BE
QUIETLY LED.-EJ&gt;9AR AllAN POE
Srndla.tt IDC.l

South

2.. 24 .

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

AXYDLBAAXB
LONGFELLOW

SCORPIO (Ocl 24 Nov 22)
You ve been m the mood to d o
some redecoratmg Plan w1se •
ly You can get thmg s movmg
now Cos ts Wi ll be m1mmal
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
s of
paramount Importance now I
you hope to sell your 1deas
Use you r most 1mag native
conv1nc1ng approach
~

21) Pr esenta t iO n

CAPRICORN (Doc 22 Jan
19) You II be ab le to s pot
bargams oth ers pas s by 1f you
use your 1nS1ght when at the
mark etplac e Heed ns1d e 11"1
form ation
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
You re gomg to be mstrumental
m bnng ng two In ends toge ther
on a ~roJec t of mutua l nterest
to them You II sha re m th e
bene fit s
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20 )
So m e t hmg yo u and clo se
assoc1a tes hope to accomplish
w II succeed I yo u keep 1t fro m
oth ers scrut1ny 1111 H s ready to
break

~yo.x

~~
Aprol 197S
5,

You 11 ma k e a mu t ua l ly
benet c 1al commerc1a co nnec.,
!ton th1s yea r With one wh o 1
doesn 11 1ve m your v1cm11y The
pa rtnersh iP w111 be lastmg and
p rofi tabl e
I NEWSPAPER EN1 ERPRISE ASSN'

¥
5 ""

Pass

pocked up trumps 'and spread
his hand
At another table North amv
ed al sox doamonds East ope~
ed hiS partner s heart smt and
North had no trouble woth tHat
slam
The hand has a most unusual
fea ture If West had opened hos
own hea rt sutt aga mst tb e
spad e slam he would ha ye
gotten,on woth the kong of spades
and goven ho s partner a heart
ruff Then agaonst the doamond
slam 1f East had opened bo.s
ow n cl ub sUit there would have
been no way for declarer to
avood the loss of a spade and a
club trock
There may be a moral here
Don t lead your partner s suotl

u:B;I:J,,MM{D
I

The b1ddong has been
West

North

Ea5 t

4

,.
South

t8y Os,.ald &amp; James Jacoby
Pass
2•
Pass
Pass
Pa'Ss
Pass
'J
In today s ha nd taken from 3 ..,
the qualofyong rounds of the
You South hold
World s champ10nshop North ·K ~965 .A2 •K4 3 .Q87
and South reached a spade slam
What do you do oow "
after East and West had each
A - We slighll} fa\'or a threeput on a nwsance qod West spade btd over a pass We would not
opened hos partner s sutt and crh1c1ze either action
South wasn t at alt happy woth
TODAY S QUESTION
the dummy S!lll, beggars can t
You do b1d three spades Thts IS
be choosers so after wmnmg
around to East ¥oho bids ~ur
the club he led three rounds of passed
clubs What do you do now?
doamonds on order to get rod of
Answer Tomorrow
hos losong club West ruffed on
woth the JOCk of trumps and
S1 lor JACOBY MODERN
thongs were lookong up for Send
~ook to Wtn at Bridge ' (c/o !lois
South
,
P 0 Box 489, Racllb
They looked up ever better newspapei)
City Stat•on New Yarll II Y 10019
after South ruffed a club
dropped West's kong of spades
~NEWSPAPER I!:NTERPRISE ASSN lev

lI

Chester

~ 0
-:up

'"

"

MIDDLEPORT BOOK
- - STORE

NEW YO~K (:UJTHiftG HOUSE
Kermit Watt011
Pomeroy

•'

•
'

.

"

"

'

Kerm 1 t Korntr

Church and Offoce Supplies Gifts
99 Mitt S1
Middleport

·

Nuisance bids thwart best lead

&lt;I&gt; AJ

(C) U71 K1n1

JJ

11 00-News 3 4 8 10 13 ABt: News 6 Pot tee SurgeoQ_ 15

• A J 53

BLHEM

Early Summ er

I

Furnl ure and Hardware

Pn 985 3308

M ary Tyler Moore 8 10 Mov te

9 3G-Bob Newha rl 8 10
10 0()-Corot Bur nett 8 10

I

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

SADIE'S MARKET

9 QO-Mov te Barefoot tn The Park 3 4 15 Movoe Flap 6 13

. 83

CRYPTOQUOTE

BARNEY

Attend the Church of Your Choice
Pomeroy
Ph 992 34911
.

'

8 DO- Emergency ' 3 4 15 Kung Fu 6 13 Allin The Family 8 10
Book Beat 33
B 3()-The Jeffersons 8 10 Boography 33

t A KQ 197
• 53 2

One letter simply atandl for another In thla 111111ple A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Songle letters,
apoatrophea, the lentllh and formation of the word1 are all
hinll Each day the rode letters are dollerent

H

Pro

4

Reasoner Re port 13 News 6 CB S
N ews 10 Zoom 33
7 00- Treasure Hunt 3 Lawre n ce We l k 4 15
Hee Haw 6 8
$25 000 Pyramtd 10 Newsmaker 75 13 World Press 33
7 30-J eopardy 3, Antma l World 10 Call It Macaron11J

SOUTH
• Q to 7 s 3

II

See How They Run '

&lt; OG-I ITakesA Th tef3 To B~tAnnounced 15
4 JQ-Outdoor s w th Ken Ca llaway 15
5 OQ-- Bonan za 3 W1de World of Spor ts 6 13 Bonanza 4 H1gh
School Bowl 8 Mov1e Cougar Count r y
10 B1g T1me
Wres tlmg 15 The RomagnQI~ s T able 33
5 3D-News 8 Co urse Of Our Times 33
6 00- News 3 4 10 Lawrence We lk 8 God Has The Answer 15

... 8 4

SIR.

IN FULL

BEN FRANKLIN STORE

The Finest in Mob1le Homes

Mov1e

• A8 6

DC

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

3 J()-.-.Pro Bow ling 6 13
Ten nt s 8 10

•K

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

.

'The Friendly Folks '
Pomeroy, Ohio

Groceries &amp; Gener.!ll Merchandise

I· Racine

FARING ML/Cfl

STAFFED AND

POWELL'S SUPER VALU

-

-

COMPLAININ0'
ABOUTlHE
LACK OF

7HII'Ir'58 ARE

'

'

'

MEANWHILE

Nationwide Insurance Co of Columbus 0
307 Spring Ave
Pomeroy
Dial 992 2318
.

Of The Metgs-'Ma son Area

C~S ?OWN

HERE HEB BEEN

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

•

Yesterday's Answer
19 Prmce
26 Tamed
Vahant's
29 Lucky
wife
nwnber
20 Vtsotor
30 Tendency
23 ltaloan coty 32 Lug arowod
24 Compamon 35 Man 's
25 Mthlary
ruckname
detachment 36 Toss

36 Endearmg
term
37 lnhertted
38 Candid
39 Partitioned
40 Curve

WTNNIE

TWO LOCATIONS
59 N Second St
Moddteport , 0
46 Court St
Gallipolis 0

THE DAILY SENTINEL

30- Basebal l 15 Other People Oth er Places 13
To Be A nnounced 8
Urban Le ague 10 Bdl Dance Ou tdoors Show 13
2 3Q- F 1sh m Hole 8 Popeye 10 H arold Ens ley Sportsman s
Fr1end 13
3 Oo-Sou l Tram 3 Fnend s of Man 6 Vlewpo1nt 8 Death Valj ey

2 OO-Mov 1e I sland of the Blue Do lphins

VIRGO (Aug 23·5ept 22) You
can do yo ur budget a b1g favor
1f yo u ta ckl e some of the thmg s
around the house you d or
d1nan ly pay to ha1.1e done

(2 wds)

DUDLEY'S

Ph 992 3863

Pomeroy

I 00- College Basketball 3 "tt Takes A Th tef 4 Ch tldren's Film
Festova l 8 10 To Be Announced 15 Hogh School Basketba ll
33

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Your
though tful act1o ns m beh alf of a
fnef1 d w II do much to shore up
a c lose re lat1onsh1p th at was
begmn ng to totter a b1t

-Alone"

Pomeroy

Meigs County Branch

THE ATHErtS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

.12 QO-J e tsons 3 4 15
These are th e Days 6 13t Harlem
G lobetrotters B 10 Bread and Butterflies 20
12 3D--Gree n A c re s 3 American Bandstand 13 Go 4,15 Out
doors W 1th Juli us Boros 6 Fat A lbert 8, 10

CANCER (June 21 July 22)
Snme very l nusual co nd1! 1o ns
a e n ex1stence today They
could resu lt n brmg1ng about
subs tan t a prof11 lor yo u

thud - PERSON

28 Authenticate
31 Prepare
ensilage
32 Allegiance
33 "Leaveto Heaven"
34 Hilton's "We

.

GAULS MARKET

ANKLET

essa)'lSt

US ? - WE IS BtG6&amp;'R N

.

Chester,Oh Jo

!

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Mthtary uno!
1 - soctety
5 Fragrant
2 Foreogn
powder
3 Be hopeful
11 Athena's title (2 wds )
12 Type of fuel 4 Conswne
13 LegiSlature
5 Lose one's
14 Appear
cool (2 wds )
15 Electrical
GVapor
(comb form)
unot
16 N1genan
1 Guevara
trtbesman
8 Trust
17 Vartety
(3 wds)
of Jazz
9 Overeat
18 Sheathe
10 Reservahon
20 Wroter Vtdal
dweUmg
%1 Strong16 A conlment
scented
(Fr)
22 Importwoe
23 Oldtime
dagger
24 Boundary
25 Goofy
26 Lave
27 English

GASOLI NE ALLEY

M iddl eport

Ph 992 2366

I

Buick Ponttac Opel G M C Deater
500 E Maon St
Ph 992 2174

IVORY HIATUS

~rute'6td'

INGLES ASHLAND SERVICE

Ph one 949: 3342

Lou1s W Osborne
Pom eroy

Now &amp;rr&amp;J\1'~ the ctrcled letten
to fonn the t urpnse answer u
surreated by the above cartoon

I rI l l I I I I J

Answer II~ 111 a fiLO!JII IIIl

The Store woth A Heart

Racine

COOLER AT THE
FllONT OF THE CAR,

Prill Ill .wiiGWIII ~

Bakers of Good Bread
Huntmg ton W Va

RACINE FOOD MARKET

Dial 992 3284

••

IPARITE!
rJ I t 1

OO T 0 1'1

9AI L- lHE'f ~I'N E
A F'IX lHAT S

HEINERS BAKERY

Dtal992 2101

Rae me

SU RE~

[] I

( Aiuwen lomorro wl

Pomeroy

D1nosa urs 8 10 Carrascolendas 20

311--Star Trek 3 4 15, Hudson Brolhers Razzle Dazzle Show
8 10 Zoom 1,0
I'

11

press 1ons made on new ac
qua n ta nces wil l b e long
lastm g

IVARMEL]
[I) I

L1 ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

whoch osgood tn fa moly and communofy I ole, thos feature os sponsored by
the busoness forms and organozatoons whose nam es appear below

700 E Main

Rangers 6 13 Shoza m ' 8 10 Zee Cookong School 20 _.
OG-Po nk Panther 3 4,15 Super Friends 6 13 Valley of the

II

Saturday
• A cts
4 32 35

The pomt os thos So often peopl e mo stake rehgoous fervor for a
certaon "holler than thou" attotude They don't believe that humor and
relogoon go together But Aunt Sara proved them wrong The Church
encompasses all of hie--humor and wot-as well as love and compas·
slon
ana so much morel You can easoly find out for yourself

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

10 J~S tgm u nd and The Sea Monst er s 314 15, Lassies Re ~cue

Calch 33 33
6 3G-NBC News 3 4 15

SATURDAY APR!L5 , 1975

fleL.PIP5'S P095'1CAI, WHAT ~L..D

Sunday
• MICah

10

3 30-Movle Bus R1 ley s Back tn Town 4
5 30--Mov te Once Upon a Honeymoon 4

BORN LOSER

n

Days 10 Ce tebrt ly Bowl tng 13 Hogh School Basketball JJ

II OG-News 3 4 6,8 10 13 15 ABC News 33

pm

MASON ASSEMBLY OF
GOD - Second St Mason, W
Va Chester Tennant pastor
Sunday school
10 a m ,
morn 1ng worshiP
11 am
evangel1sfic service 7 30 p m
Bible study. and prayer servlce ~o
Wednesday 7 30 p m Phone

IOENTIFIC.t'. TtoN
RON H IM

•

..."

•.

'

•

�8- The DaUy Sentinel, Middle port-Pomeroy,O Frtday, Aprt1 4 1975

•

F INANCIAl R EP ORT I
OF TOWNSHIPS
For F tscal Yea r Endtng
Dece m be" lht 1914
Sa h s bu r v Towrt5h ip
Me1g s County
Middleport Ohto
J a nuar y 31 1ns
I cert ify the IOIIOw tng repor1
to be correct
Richa rd Batley
Townshtp Cle r k

'
~

SUMMARY OF CA SH
BALANCES RECEIPTS

AND EXPEND I TURE S
Balance Jan 1 1914
Genera l Fund
7 614 60

NotiCe

!'tobee
Y Md Sa les

CARPORT sale Thursday
Frtdr.y an d Satu rday April 3
o1 and 5 one mt te off Rt
7
on Rt 1 .0~. Hysell s Phon e 992
5555
o1 2 3t c
I CI\ N n o longer take order s for
cake5 Joan Tutt le
4 2 3tc
-

-

lit

-

' ~HOOT I N G

Corn
H-o llow Gun Clu b tur n ftrsl
rtgh t aft er Mtl es Cem e tery
Rut litnd f fie lory -:hok ed
Qun s on ly Su nday A p rtl fl 1
MI\T(H

J,)lll

• 3 7tc

Help Wanted

For Fa$t Results Use Sentinel
Classifieds
'

CLEAN rugs I ke ne w so easy
to do w• lh Blue Lus tr e Ren t
electrtc shampooer $ 1 Baker
Motor Vehi c le L1cense
Furntf ure Com pany
2 720 70
1 Tax F un d
.l .l 3tc
~Gasoline Tax Fund
2 039 15
~oad

Clnd Brt dge
Fund

279 15 NOW se ll tng ~ u ller Br ush
Produo;..ts phon e 992 3410
1 386 42
1 24 tfc

Ce metery Fund

l=ecleral Reven ue

7 63 1 5&lt;1

Sh ar m g Fun d
-Tota ls

21 73 1 56

Tot a l R ece 1ph
General Fu n d
I I 543 62

~

Motor

Veh •cle L•cense
... Tax F und
5 123 57
Geso lme Tax F und
15 600 00
'Road an d Br idge

F und
Cem etery F und
Sh ilr .n g F und
'tot als

Total Rece 1p h

&amp;

Gener a l Fund

3 31 Sic

30

19 218 22

Mo to r Veh cle L1ce nse
Tax F un d

:Casolln e Tax Fu nd

7 844 27

17 639 15

R oad and Sr 1dg e

... Fund

3 7 12 45

Ce m e t er y Fund

I 867 42

federal Reve nue
S h ar~ng

Loader s lzaak Wa to n Far m
Chester April 5 1 30 p m
Apnt 6 r a tn da le

AUCT ION Thu rsday n gh t 7
48 1 00
pm
at Mason Auct1o n
Horton St tn Mason w va
16 352 50
Cons tgnm en ts welcome
52 53J 99
Phon e (304) 773 .5471
Ba lan c es
2 2 tt c
3

Fed er a l Revenue

~33

------------Pl!'aL IC shoot Metgs Muzzle

F und

w
To ta l s

23 984 04
74 26 5 55

E xpend•t ures
Genera l Fund
13 761 37
Motor Ve htcle Ltcense
•
Ta xFu nd
601032
Ga line Tax Fun d
15 887 29
R a
nd Bn dge
Fund
2 043 90
m e te~ Fund
522 71
li ed era l Revenu e
Shari ng Fund
18 617 23
Totals
56 8&lt;l2 82
Balanc e Dec 31 1974
Ge nera l Fund
s 456 85
Mofor Ve hrc le L•cense
I 83311.9"
Ta x Fund
Gasol ne Tax Fund
I 75 l 86
Road and Br tdge
668 55
1
.. Fun d
Cemetery Fund
1 344 71
Federal Reven ue
Shann g Fund
5 366 81
to tals
17 422 73
CASH BALANCE
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
BY FUND
Gene ral Fund
Ba lance Ja n 1 1974
7 674 60
Rece1pts
qene ral Pr opert y Ta x ~ Rea l Estat e (Gross )
3 5-H 65
"tang tble Perso nal Prope rt y
"'"Tax (Gross)
1 123 69
lnh ent a nce Tax
(Gro!s)
461 22
Loc al Govt Dtst
3 113 71
G1Quor Permit Fees
2 742 78
Ctgar e tt e License Fees
• and F rnes CGross l
1so 00
o"ther
404 48
Tra nsfers
09
Total Rece tpts
11 543 62
Tota l Begmn mg Balan ce
P lus Recetp ts
19 218 22
Expendt tures
Total Expend tt ur es Admt n tstrattve
13 045 27

ME IGS Cou n ty Human e Soc1ety
DOGS FOR ADOP TI ON One
ful l
blooded
German
Sheph erd fe mal e 3 mo n ths
ol d One black and wh t1 e
m xed breed ma le IB mo nths
old Two Col lte and Sh epherd
m xed bla ck an d wh tte
ma tes 31 1 mo nth s old Call
94949 17
3 30 61p

"

ANNOUNC I NG new ho ur s
SKATE A WAY 7 3Qo to 10
P m L We dnesday Frt da y
and ::,a tur day A\la tl a bl e for
p r •vate pa rtt es Mon d ay
T ues d ay
and
Th urs d ay
n tgh ts
We dnesday
a nd
Sund ay a fter noo ns P hone
985 3939 985 9996 or 985 4141
3 30 121C
t-UR yo ur
Ott of M tn k
Cos rn ettcs Pfl.o ne BROWNS
992 511 3 ~
1 7 tfc
GUN SHOOT on Mil e Hill Road
factory choked guns on ly
Spo nsored
by
Rac m e
Amer •can Legton Satu rday
Apr I 5 7 p m
4 3 2tc
__.
MR AND MR S Ronald Dougan
wou ld ltke 10 tnvt te YQ U to
a tt end sund ay Schoo l af th e
M tdd l e por t u n 1te d P en
fecos la Churc h South Tht rd
Aven ue sta rftng a t 10 a m
4 3 2t p

-

_____ _

AS OF AP rt l 1 1975 Th~
Sy r acuse Hom e.J~ Ut tldtes
Company wtll be collect.ng
th etr ga s bdls at lhe former
off ce n Sy racuse
4 1 IOtc

REVIVAL s tar tt ng April 7 at
Mo rgan Cen l er Wesleyan
Chu rch 3 30 eac h even tng
The Rev E arl Ot ler speake r
0 H Car t pastor nv tes the
pub ltc to atten d Everyone
1
~~~~~~mHg~ ~ G~oeu~~~ a l 76 10 welcome
F tre Prot ec tton
640 00
4 2 Stc
Grand Total Expe nd itures Ge ne ral Fund
13 761 37
Bal Dec 31 1974
s 456 85
Total Exp Plus Bal
Dec 31 1974
19 21B 22
4 'l 3tc
Motor Vehtcle Lt ce ns e
SHOOT
IN
G
Mat
ch
Rac
tn
e Gun
Tax Fund
Club Sunday Ap r tl 6 1 p m
Bal J an 1 197.4
2 720 70
4 2 4tp
R ecet pts
Motor Vehtcle L cense
Ta x
5 123 57 ORDE R
YOUR
so uthe rn
Tota l Rece tpts
vegetab le pl ants now for
5 12l 57
Tota l Beg lnntng Ba l
de lt very a roun d May 1
P lus Rece tpts
Char les R Harrts Pho ne B.tJ
7 84.4 27
2693
E xpendttures
Total E)Cpend ttu res 4 3 18tc
Mt sce ll ~ n eo u s
2 918 58
Mam tenance
3 091 74
Gra nd Total Exp
Motor Ve h ic le L ce nse
T~JC. Fund
6 010 32 HORSES&amp; PONIE S Phone 742
Bal Dec 31 1974
1 833 95
326&lt;1
Total E xp Plu s Ba l
4 3 t rc
Dec 31 1974
7 8&lt;1 4 27
Gasoline Ta x Fund
3 R I 0 IN G ho r ses Also 3 sa ddl es
Bat J&amp;n 1 1974
2 039 15
for sale Ph on e 742 4211
Rece tpts
Wenda!\ Gra te
Gasollne Tax
1560000
4 3 6tc
Tot al Receipts
15 600 00
Tot al Beglnmng Balanc e
old upngh t ptan os
Plus Rece1pts
17 639 15 WANTED
any
cond
tt on Paytng SlO
Expenditu res
ea ch Ft r.sl floor only Wr tt e
Total Ex pendtt ur es and Qtve dtr ec ttons to Wttte n
8 426 21
M1 scelf an eous
P ano Co B o ~~: 188 Sardts
Matntenan ce
7 461 08
Oh Jo 43946
Gra n d Tot al Ex p 4 2 61p
Gasoline Ta x Fund 15 887 29
Bat Dec 31 f974
1 75 1 86 STA NDI NG t mbe rs Contact
Total Exp Pl us Bal
Pomeroy Fo rr es t Produ c ts
Dec 31 1974
17 639 15
P 0 Box 726 Pomero y Ohto
Road and Brtdge Fund
Phone 992 5965
Bat Jan 1 1974
279 15
3 30 12tc
Rece1pts
Gene ral Property Ta x Real E state (Gross) 2 686 96 OLD furn iture •ce boxes bra ss
bed s or com plete ho useholds
Tangtble Pe rsona l Property
Wrtte M 0 Mttler Rt .4
Ta x CGross)
74 6 34
Pom ero y Ohio Cal l 992 7760
Total Recetpts
3 433 30
10 7 7.4
TO!ta r Beg •n nmg Balan ce
Plus Recet pt s
3, 71 2 4 5
E xpenditures
JUN K autos complete and
Tota l EJC. penditur es delivered to our ya rd We P•ck
Mtscetlan eou s
I 058 76
up e; uto bod tes and bu y all
Matn tena n ce
985 14
ktnd\ ot scr ap metal s and
Gr and Total Exp - Road
tron Rtder s Sa lvage St Rt
and Br •dg e Fund
2 0&lt;3 90
124 Rt 4 Pom eroy O~to
Bat Dec 31 1974
Cal l 992 5468
1 668 55
Total E xp P lus Bat
10 17 tfc
De c l l 1974
3 712 45
Cemetery Fund
CAS H patd for all makes a nd
Bal Jan I, 1974
1 386 42
mod els of mob ile hom es
Recetpfs
Phon e area code 61f. 423 95 31
Sal e of Lots
48 1 00
4 13 tfc
Total Rece tpts
481 00
1964 AND old er cotn s wlll pay
Tota l Beg!nn ng Balance
24c tor d tmes 60c for q ua r
Plus Rece pts
1 867 .4 2
te rs Sl 20 for halves Wtll
E xpendttures
also buy sell or trad e U S
Selanes
268 55
cotns an d c ur renc y Ca ll
Employer s Re ti rem ent
Roger Wa m sley 742 3651
Contr lbutton
25 38
Tools and Equ ,pm ent
4 4 12tp
II 74
Supplies
86 95
Other E )C pense5
130 09
Total Exp
522 71
e a t Dec 31 1974
1,3.44 71
Tota l Exp Plu s Bal
WIL LI NG to apply my ta lents to
Dec 31 1974
1 867 42
your way of wor ktng Offtee
work , 27 years ex per tence
Federal Revenue
Shartng Fund
Also auto t1tl e cle r k Phone
Sa l Ja n 1 1974
992 3994
7 631 5.4
Rece•pts
4 4 3tc
Gran ts- Federal
15 564 00
Oth e r Re ce tpts
788 50
Total Recet pts
16,3 52 50
Total Beg tnn tllQ Ba lance
Plus Rec e tpts
23 984 04
Expenditures
Maint and Opera h on
In 1933 , 73 crew menbers
S alarles ~ e m ploy ees
2 298 86
Suppttes
2 863 0&lt;1 were lost when the U S Navy
Equtpment
3 5.47 50
Contracts- Repatr
1 573 85 dll'lglble " Akron" foundered m
Contra c ts- Servtees
7 862 78 a storm and fell mto the ocea n
Advert •Smg a nd
Pr tntlng
~
41 se off Barnegat Bay , N J
Public Employees
lt1 1968, Negro civil rig hts
Rettrement System
.429 62
leader
Martm Luther King was
Total Exp
18 617 23
Bat Dec 31, 197.4
assassmated
m Memphts, Tenn
5 355 81
Total Exp PIU S ~ al,
Dec 31 , 1974
23.9&amp;&lt; o• James Earl Ray pleaded guilty
TOWNSHIP DEBT - NOTE
and was con~1Cied 11 months
Purpose for Wh iCh
later and sen tenced to 99 years
Note Debt was creat ed
Grader Purchase
m pnson
OutsUind tng Jan 1
In 1974, the worst rash of
1974
12 250 00
RedHmed Ounng
tornadoes m 49 years killed
Year 1974
6 250 00
nearly
350 in 11 states Also
Balance Outstanding
Doc 31 1974
6 000 00 that day , Atlanta's Hank Aaron
Rate of lnt
6 Pet
Date of F inal Mat
11 9 75 lied Babe Ruth 's home run
record w1th his 1714th at
l tc
Cincmnab

- - ---- --------Wantert To Buy

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

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

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

Employment Wanted

How

dowl

come thoee bus winthat wouldn' t cloee aU

gf8r art
that

f)Ued lhUt J!OW

IJirinl r.

I

here.

A thought for the day British
lecturer J ohn Colhns satd,
" Mistrust a subordmale who
never fmds fault w1th hts

supertor "

•

For Sale

Auto Sales

196tl CHEVELL E SS 396 3 USE D parts, Fr ye s True"- a nd
sp eed cxcc tt c nt co n dtlt on • Auto Pa r ts Rut lan d OhtO
phon~; Y92 1659
Ph one (614) 742- 6094
1
.J 4otp
17278tp

'1"¥

SOMEONE to s tay wtfh eld er ly
ma n weekda ys Wrtt e to Box ~
7290 co The Dat ly Sen ftnel
•
Pomeroy OhtO •
POO DLE groomtn g S5w tth bat h
4 2 6tp
56 Appotntm en t not al ways
necessary Hours 9 to 9 e~ecept
Sun d ay
P oodle
p up
avi1t la bl e Qu a li t y pr iced We
we lcome your bustnl!ss Call
Coolv il le 667 3915
4 2 J IC
ON
GRAVEL HILL
IN
,
MUST sell IY/ 1 2 bed room
mob le home Ca ll 992 2536
MIDDLEPORT
a n y t. me
AND
4 4 lt c
MASON. W VA.
10x50 MOB il F hnme QOO d
CONTACT
condtt on $2 150 250 gallon
ca ttl ~ wat ertn g tank S25 30
~"" n &lt;: n f lim P Phone 992 7330
4 1 6t c
Ph (614) 992-2156
•
(304) 773 5386
~ ELL your mobil e ho me for
ca sh 15 homes wa n ted 1958
thru 1972 models Phone (6 14 )
- D--RAF T SMAN
wanted
Jd6 1425 Ga i1Jpoll s
Preferab ly wtlh tra ck wor k
3 9 78 tc
ex pertence Sen d resume to
P 0 8011: 152 Pomeroy Oh tO
Equal Oppo r t un1 t y em
ploye rs
3 30 7tc
WA NT ED TO REN T wtth tn 20
m •nutes fr om Ph tl tp Spor n
m •ne m ar rt ed coupl e pl us 1
dog Coun tr y or c tl y house
co ttage or apartm ent Call
PAR T TI ME bo olo. kee ptn g
(304) 882 3188 aft er 11 am
fl exab le hours 1 or 2 days a
4 J 6t'c
wee k o r e ven mg s
E;x
per te n ced e~~:cc l l e n t local
r efe r e n ce Phon e 992 70 90
eventngs
3 30 8tc
F U R NI S HE D 60 ~~:12 m obt le
hom e Rou sh Lane cnes h tre
WIL L do 1andor work or
Oh to Phon e (31)4) 773 5423
patn t tng P ho ne 992 2262
4 3 7tp
3 30 6tc

Pels For Sale

CARRIER
WANTED

Mobtle Homes For Sale

lHE DAILYSENnNEL

'

•

1

•

3

REGIS T ERED
Polled
Herefor d bull s one 18 month
ol d one 16 m onth otd ot he r
JJ mon th old Also abo ut 100
bushe l ear corn Phone 98 5
3538
4 3 3tp

2&lt;l 000 BTU Gener al Elec tn c a tr
co nd tt toner not a year old
F'hon e 992 2952
3 26 tfc
CL oSE Our on • new Ztg Zag
sewin g m a c hm~ s For sewmg
s tretch t ab rt cs buttonholes .,
fan cy des tgns e t c Pa rn t
Slightl y blemtshed Cho tc e of
carr ytn g c a s e or se w tn g
stan d S&lt;1 9 80 ca sh or t erm s
ava tlable Phone 992 7755
12 18 tfc

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

TURF TRIM
MOWER

'

Water, Electric, Goa, Sewer
!.lnes, lnstolled
Work
guarantHd
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucka
Llmeatonel Fill Dirt
Commercloi- Resldentlal
Conatructlon 1 Remodel

HEI,L

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
tomplete plumbmg
.

heatmg serv1ce and
general sheet metal
works .
Free
Estimates,
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992 -3995
..
or 992 -5700

-

GLEN R.
BISSELL

.

S.K EXCAVATING
COMPANY
I

777 Poor I Street
Middleport, Ohio
Phone 992.5:167 or 992.;JU1

SAVE on Service
Th1rd m
coupons .

a

Good through
April 12, 1975

-

Radlato
.....
Service -

t

~

I

'

I

I

From the largest Tru ck or
Butl'dozer Radoator to the
smallest Heate r Core •
Nathan B1ggs
Rad&lt;alor Spetlahst

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph 992 2174_

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp;HEATING

Pomeror 1r.

r".._.._.._..__,._._..__.._.._._....__.

FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 949-5184

I

Regular pr1ces ava1lable m Serv1ce Dept

-~~fi@~-~~Qj~~,w
Keep your car serviced and m top runnmg
condihon - use the coupons - and save at the
same t1me .
t-J
Keep watchmg our ads for more money -savmg
coupons, co"':ng your way weekly

STORM
Wmdows &amp; Doors

-

'

Stop In Today or Call for Appo1ntment

ALUMINUM
Sodong Soffll!
~utters Awnoo\gs

DO BUSINESS Willi A LEADER

Free Estimates

Smith Nelson Motors Inc.

Ph, t12 3993

LARRY LAVENDER

500Maon St
Phone992 2174
Pomeroy,Ohoo
Servte e Hours Mon Frt a a m to 4 30, Sat a a m 12 noon

Sl(l'acuse, Oh1o
-·
.
3 10 ,,

4-2 75

USED CARS

3. An AC Oil Filter .. . lnstalled

Blow• onto Walls I AHoes

heatmg roofmg spouttng,
gene ral sheet metal work
Free Estimates
Phone. 949-5961
Emergency 949-2211 or
992-5700

Coupon No. 3

2. S Quarts 011... Installed

20"-3112 HP

For Rent

I

'72.9Q(KDJ
22"- 3112 H P
Self- Propelled

'104.95(K0)

INDIAN JOE'S
CB SALES &amp;PARTS

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES

I'

2 SIGNS

•

Bissell Brothers

Construction Co.

On alummum replacement
wtndows, stdmg, storm doors
and wmdows ra1hng , phone
Charles L&lt;Sie Syracuse,
Ohto Carl Jacob, Sales
Representative

308 Page St .
WANT pa rt or full ftme wo rk as 12x52 TR AILER ltke new 535
p er week
ut lll tes p a td
rece pt tonts t or cle rk typ sf
Middleport,
992 -3509
Phone 992 332.d
Chester , Oh1o
POMEROY LANDMARK
expe rt e n ced on IBM Key
4
2
lf
c
Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Pun ch and otft ce procedur e
Radtos Antenna s, Tower s,
Phone 992 2181
Phone 992 5771
Ph . 985 -4102
Used T v s Buy from the
• ,
4 2 3tp 4 BE DROO M house . wall to wall L_ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _
"lndtan" and sa \I I! " Warn
-~
car pet tng a c fenced m ya rd
....
Pum" We buy used Radto s
Wtth pat o n ce Pho ne 992 GROCER Y busmess fo r sal e
SEEKI NG emp loyme nt ap
Home Bu1ldmg
and Tower s R.adtos r e paired
2780 or 992 3432
Butldtng fo r sale or lease
prox 18 yrs ex per •ence tn
by
FCC
hcensed
servtce
Room
Add1hons
3 19 1fc
Phone 7735618fro m a 30p m
nur sm g servtce In Sta te In
personn el Stop and see the
to 10 p m for appotn tment
s tttut •ons or wtll take an y
and Garages
' Ind ian ' and Bubble~ ­
~
3 10 tf c
type of com mon labor Pho ne TRA ILE R a par tme nts for re nt
M.OJ:Ittor Channel 10 and 20.
.
3-21-75
992 7273
Phon e 992 5248
I '"
GAS cookstove nt ce tor can
4 2 3tp
_ 3 :?~ t c
nmg Phon e 985 }585
4 A 3tc
B A tn Span tSh ( Btl tngua l) and
gene ra l off tce wo r k ftltn g 3 BEDROOM mob le hom e
wa she r and dryer 11 1 ba ths 1971 NIMRO D cam per spec tal
etc Phone 992 71!6
uttl tties pa td 542 50 wee k 308
s •ze extras $950 Phon e (J0d)
4 2 3tp
located on old 33 Just 1112
Pag e St M dd leport Oh 10
675 5453
"
mtle abov e Metgs Fatr
&lt;1 4 3t c
TYP ING genera l Off tCC wor k
3 4 tf c
No s h-ort ha nd Wtll tng to
Ground s on rtght, lUSt across
apply myself to m y work 2 BE DROO M mobtl e hom e rn HAY bal er Manure s pr ea der
from
Grueser 's Ctup M1~l .
Mowtng mac h me Pho ne Paul
d tllgen ll y References Phone
Syr a cuse No chtldren or pe ts
Ractne 0
Put
those
junk autos onto
Kau
ff
992
3174
949
3604
P ear l A Scott 992 5957
Call 992 244 1 aft er 6 p m
308 Page, Mtddleport
4 4 Jtc
cash We pay $13 for stan.4 2 3t p
De pos1t requtred
Heat1ng
Cooltng
.
dard s tze cars w1th frame
3 11 tfc
Refrtgeratton Roof Repatrs
T lfOn tran smtSStOn for
I WILL DO bo okkeep tng n my r
-------- 28967CAS
and rear end We buy steel
Gutters
Plumbing 68 Fo rd Photie 992t6 191
home or you r bu s• ness Call Twp bedroom tr a le r Adulrs
Electrtcal Repatr s and
and
unstrtpped
motors
,
have
&lt;l
4
2tc
Susan P ul l ns 992 7316
onl y Ph one 992 3975 or 992
Ser v1ce
..
&lt;1 2 3tp
scales s o there 1s no
2571
Call992 3509 and
197
2
HOND
A
500
1
900
m
ti
es
guesstng we need m aJ:enal
3 23 tfc
Save on vour repa1r s also
Phon e befor e 5 p m 1.42 421 1
EXPE RI E NCE D s ec re t ary ...
repa tr mowers. comprtssors
to
loll
our
quota
Try
us:
a
ft
er
5
p
m
742
4931
seek1n g
e m p l oyme n t
a nd outboards Brmg 1f m
4 J 3tc
we're s ure our pr1ces wtll
Capabdt t es - typmg short FUR NI S HED a partment
and sa ve
a dult s only m Mtdd lepor t
3 25 1 mo.
ha nd abti tty to wor k wtth
sat1sfy you
Phon e 99 2 387 4
TW O spa ces tn Me tg s Co un ly
ftgu res and ft!l ng Ph one 992
Open 9 Tol4 30
'·
3 25 ff c
Me m ory Ga r d ens
ve r y
5953 fo r res um e
Mon lthru) Fro
-- - - - - - - - rea so nab le Ph on e 992 7077
EXCAVATIN G do zer loader
SEPTI C TANK S cl ean ed
&lt;1 2 3tp
4 4 Jtc
and bac khoe wor k septte
Mode rn San1t at1on 992 395.4 or
9 unl&lt;l2 :30 Sat .
3 and 4 RO OM rur nts t',ed a nd
tan ks tnstall ed dum p tr ucks
992 7J&lt;9
TREE Tr1mm •ng and re mova l
un t u r n1shed apartm e nts
FOR D hay ba ler ha s bal ed less
an~ Ia boys for htre w tll haul
Ho use an d r oof pa nt tng a ll
9 18 tfc
Phone 992 543.&amp;
tl"lan 2 500 ba les of hay $2 250
ftU dtr t top sotl ltm eston e &amp; PLUMB IN G heat tng r epa r - ----------- ---a.work gu a r a n t ee d
Free
4 12 tfc
Pho ne Cha r les Sheets 992
gr a ve l Ca ll Bob or Rog er
eslt mat es Pho ne 992 527 8
RE ADY MI X CON CR ET E de
and tns tallat ton e lect rtcal
252 4
Je ffer s day phone 992 7089
4 2 3tp P RI VATE meettng room for
livered rtgh t to your pro1ec t
wat
e
r
pum
p
repa
tr
roof
mg
4 4 3tc
n tgh t phon e 992 3525 or 992
Fas-t
and
easv
Free
an y organ zat ,on phon e 992
root
and
house
pa
nt
tng
5232
397 5
es ttm &amp;t es Phon e 992 32 8&gt;4
genera
l
re
pa
ir
Reasona
ble
REMODE LIN G
p lu mbt ng
3 11 tf c TWO He re fo r d het ters to
2 11 tfc
Goeg lem Re ady M tx Co
rat es fr ee est tma t es 15 yr
he attng a nd a ll types of - - - - - - - - - - - - - -fr
eshe
n
soon
P
ho
ne
843
2353
Mtddlepor t Ohto
eJC.pe rt ence Ca ll Ch arl es
gene r al
repatr
Work
4 d ] tC
I"'
6 30 tfc
S ncla r 985 412 1 or 992 222 1
guar a nt ee d 20 years ex fR A ILER SP ACE l!.a mt l~
4 4 12t c ---~--------- pe n ence Phone 99 2 '1 409
nort h of Me tgs Htgh Sch oo l on
SEW ING MAC HINE Repairs
FO RD Tra c tor wdh s tde
old Rt 33 Phon e 992 29.41
3 11 tic
ser vte e a ll makes 992228.4
mower r un s good and good
1 23 tic
Th e Fabrtc Shop , Pomeroy
rubb er 5950 985 3594
ciOME
Im pro ve m e nt and
P A.RT TI ME stoc k clerk or DUPLEx - 2j8·-;-- waTnuiS t
Authorized Stn ger Sales and
Repa tr Se rvt ce - r- Anythtn g
3 30 7t p
ca rr y out boy Can wor k ful l
Service We sh arpen Scissor s
Mtddleport Ohto J=lhon e 992
fr xed a round the home from
Itme after sc hool tS out Have
2780 or 992 3432
TWO 12 tn plows 3 pt htf ch
roof to case m e n f ~ You w!ll
3 29 lie
own tran sporta tiOn Call 949
S185 Also 2 14 m p low s J pt
ltke our wor k and r stes
2 19 tfc
4935
Ph one 742 5081
h tch 5200 Phon e 985 3594
4 .4 3tp -•
330
7t
p
12 29tf c DO ZE R wo rk land cleartng by
COU NTRY Mo bile Home&lt;~ Park
the ac re hourl y or contrac t
BABY SITTI NG tn Rutland and
R t 33 ten m ties north of
Farm po nds road s e tc
ELWOOD
BO
WE
RS
REP
AI
R
Lan gsvd le a rea al so ptano
Pomeroy Large lots w•th.
Large
do ze r a nd operat or
- Sweepers toa ste r s rr on s
lessons Phone 742 5734 Rt 1
concre te patros st dewa lks
NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom
Wtfh o ve r 20 yea r s ex
a ll s ma ll appltan ces Lawn
Langsvt ll e Oh to
runners and off s treet
per.ence Pullins E xcavat ing
ho use w1th sho wer bath
mowe rs next to Sta te Htgh
.4 4 3fp
parktn g PDone 992 747 9
Pomeroy Oh to Pho ne 992
Porches and ga rage wtth level
wa y Garage on Route 7
12 31 ft c
2478
Ph one 985 3825
lot $4500 00
SUMM ER e mp loy ment for Oh to
12 19 tfc
3 11 26tc
Un1ve rst ty sentor mechan1cel FA RM house 6 rooms moder n
e ngtnee r tn g s t ude nt Wtl l
RACINE - Mode rn 3 bedroom
c o n v e nr en ces
ga r d e n
wo r k wee ken ds a n d Sh tf t
C B RAD FO ~O Auc t tonee r
0 &amp; D TRE E Trtm mmg 20
garag&amp;
and
ba
rn
on
Tann~r s
home
Large ba th Nat gas
POMEROY
NICe
older
wor k Call (6 14) 98 5 4251 be
Com ple te Se r v tce
year s expe r.ence Insu red
Run Longs worth Hom estead
F A furna ce 7 large closets
hom e overlook tog nver:, 3 or
twee n hours of 3 30 and 10
Phone 9&lt;9 3821 or 949 3161
tre e estt ma tes Call 992 3057
off St Rt 12&lt;z~ Ra ctn e Oh to
w
tth
stora
ge
s
he
l
v
es
Dry
p m or we ek end s
4 B R basement lots of
Ractne Ohio
Coolvtlle, ( I ) 66 7 3041
RF D SlOO month If destr ed
4 4 Jtp
baseme nt garage w1th shop
Crltt B r~dford
storage b1g yard Ntce front
22 a cr es bottom land for
' 2 121p
5 1 ttc.
and la rg e lot
add itional S25 per month
&lt;
porch to watch the nver
EXPER IE NCE D apt
an d
Must furntsh r e fer e nc e s
mote l man ager a nd swt tc h
SI850000
Wrt te or call Cha r les A
NEW LISTING - 2 houses and
boa rd operator Phone 949
CA RPET mst alla tton Sl 25 per
Dob
b
tn
17
Ar
ltng
ton
Std
a tra der One house ts rented
333.4 or cont act Mrs Shtr ley
ya rd Call Rtc har d West
Pawtu c ke t Rhod e ls la n
DOUBLE LOT - about 4 m&lt;
Stevenson at 556 Laur el St
and 3 n1ce but ldtng lots Onl y
Phon e 843 266.Y
02860 or {dOl) 723 4747
from Pome roy water tap
Mtddl eport
4 3 JOt p
$9 500 00
4 4 12tc
4 .4 3tp
S5 000 00
30 ACRES - In lhe boon docks
2 BEDROOM furn isHed apt
on Shade R1v er $6 000
de pos tt requ red No pe ts
HIGH Sc hoo l stude nt wants
BE YOUR OWN BOSS wo r k aft e r sc hool an d
Phon e 949 38 11
Own th1s country grocery
BUSINESS - We have seve ra l
Tuppers Plains, 0.
weekend s Has own tra ns
4 4 6t p
All stoc k and equt pme nt
and locattons w1th butld tngs
portat ton W II do an yth tng
Call 99 2 7649 after 4 p m
HOU S ET RAI LER
a nd
1 Sl6,500 00
LET US DO IT! I
Work for yourself w1th no
bedroo m gar age a pa r tm ent
4 3 2tp
la yoffs 9
uttltfl es fur ntshed 2 m lles
RUTLAND - Brtck olde r
north of shopp ing plaza on
THE MITC HEL LS Patnt tng
WE HAVE NEARL Y 50
home large double lot 3 or 4
Co Free es t tm ates Patn t tng
State Rt 7 Call 446 4170 aft er
dr ywa ll &amp; pa per hangt ng 17
PROP E RTIES FOR SALE
3p m
BR lots of room Owner wtll
yr s ex perte nce Phone 7&lt;1 2
~ A 3tc
WHEN YOU REALLY WANT
tak
e
land
con
tract
3592
2 P&lt; Lovmg Room SUites,
IT SOLD, TRY TEAFORD AT
$ 1&lt; 000 00
.4 3 2tp 3 R M furn, shed apt ut tltt tes
beautiful
"Scotchgard"
992 3325
p a td 356 North .4t h s t ,
floral
maleroals$198 00
GRA DU ATEofOhto In stitute of
RUTLAND AREA - Be the
Mtddleport
Technolog y looking for 10b n
Herculon
or
vmyl
Recliners,
3 '30 6lc
first to live 1n th1s all e lec 3
the capac1t y of Etectronte s
Reg
S69
95-Now
S49
95
BR full ba sement carport
E ngm eertn g
Tec hn tc tan
"3 Grace5" or "4 Cupids "
F lex tbl e hour s
Res um e
ut &lt;loly bld9
on 10 a of
Table lamps, cho1ce of gold
a va tlabl e Phon e (61 4) J78
wooded land Owner wtl l
Yard
6178
or
whole. $17 50 ea or U4 set
take land contract
4 3 2tp MO DE RN ste reo rad tQ am tm
RUBBER BACK
30" foam Bunk Mat
separat e control s &lt;1 speake r •
We have hundr eds of carpet
tresses
S17
307 Sprtng Avenue
w ILL DO la wn mowe r and ca r
s o un d sys t e m
Ba la n ce
valu es Your 10b can be
5
RM
HOUSE
b
ath
2
re pa trr--at my home Rout e
' 103 58 or te rm s Call 992 3965
Good
selection
Mexican
Pomeroy
992-2298
complet ed tn 1 to 2 weeks No
bedrooms gas hea t w tth lot
6.8 1 Wes t 1 mil e off Rt 33
3 31 tfc
Imports Bu I Horns
long wa tt mg pe[tod Our
Efft e Busk1rk 550 South Thtr d
CONTACT
Char les Lyons pho ne 992
A\le nue Mtdd leport
tns
tall
er
has
28
year
s
ex
Hangmg
Flower Pots S4,
1120
Lots Pauley
4
3
3tp
15
FT
F
IBERGLASS
bo
a
t
50
per
lence
Ex
p
e
r
t
tn
Handpamted
vases SB ,
&lt;1 3 2tp
Branch Manager
h p Mercur y moto r tr a der
s tallatt on You II !• ke what
---------- -~ - - statues
Sl2
-----~---- ..... and skung equ tpm e nt
Ex
you ge t
LOOK ING FO R m eat c ult ers
USED GOODS:
ce ll e r.~t cond •!ton S900 Pho ne
10b Ove r 4 yrs ex pert ence tn
BUY
NOW
&amp;
SAVE
Low
low
d.!ys 992 2689 or eve nmg s 992 5 ROOM house wt th bat h 2
R1dong Lawn Mowers $150 up
CALL
742
4211
loca l sto res m eat shop th e
do
wn
pa
yments
a
pet
tn
2941
bedroom s, ful l ba sement hot
last 2 as 1ourn ey man m eat
Several Dmmg Rm SUites,
te res t 30 yr f nanc mg on ne w
wa te r heat wa ll to wa ll
TALK TO WENDELL
4 1 6tc
c utle r Ph one 992 3401
hom es tn 3 Mergs County
_ ____ - - - - - ca rpet upsta1rs down New
oncludong a 6 P&lt; Duncan
GRATE,
locattons or BUILD on you r
' 3 2tp 197 2 K A ~ AS A K I m o to r c ycl ~
Phyfe
ch a tn lmk fence a ll aroun d
CARPET
CONSULTANT
lot Phone 992 5976 or 992 5844
750 cc '1 200 m il es ltke new
Furnts h or un furnt Shed 500
J 13 tic
cond 1t 1on Slssy bar and 4 Pearl St Phon e 99 2 2551
"At Caution L1ght, Rt 7H
lug gage rack 2 helm ets mu st •
4 4 3fp
se ll Phone 985 413 1
; -sED RooM- h-~----Tuppers Pla1ns, Ohio
197 3 CJ5 1ee p 14 000 m tles Ltke
4 1 5t c
ome ne w Phone 667-3158
new $3 000 Phon e 949 5182
foundahon r oofmg cem ent
OPEN WED
porches thermo pane wln
4 3 3tc
742
4211
Rutland
CA P wedg es and fratl e r
dows storm doors natural
1972 PL Y Ouster 318- 2 - bl
wedg es Anv a mou nt Phone
ga s furnace wh tte alumtnum
742 37.43
autom al tc new t.res and
s td tng bla ck s hutters kt tch en
4 1 6tc
cabtn ets paneltng ce tlm g
shocks 51 560 or ta ke ov er
pa yme nt s Call 992 3682 after
- - ---- -·
ttle fl oors r ef m1shed low
5 p m
heatmg b tl! n tce locat ion cit y
STA NL EY Prod UCIS fo r sa le
water Phone 98 5 4102
4 I Sic
Phone 742 3762
MAIN
4 4 26tc
3 9 261 c
POME
l9H MON TE C-ar lo 4 000 mil es
a ll power a tr AM s tereo USED cemeni and c mde r block BEAUTI FUL new hom e on
tape Call 992 7036 after 5 p m
for sa le Pho ne 1A2 3743
lake 3 bedrooms, bath &amp; 2
3 5 tfc
4 1 6tc
carret lng drapes btg de n
.-;
We are in great need of
Cal 992 3•93
1974 CUT LA~ S upre me Am PO TAT OE S brmg own con
3 2.4 tfc
properlles to
sell.
Fm tap e ac supe r sport
to!l•ner S4 for 100 tb Also 1966
wh ee ls exc ell ent con dtt ton
Ford van bus for sal e or trflde
Stnke while the 1ron 15
•
Phone 997 9981
for mo to rcycle Phone 985 6 ROOAII ho use W1lh ba th, 3
hot - Sell Today wh1le
.d 2 3tc
bedroom full bas e ment gas
3849
~·.
heat h w fl oor wal l to wall
4 1 6tc
we have Cash Buyers
~·
. ........... ,"-... ~til
1969 FORO One to n dual wheel
car pet Close to 5Chool in
Air fJUIIC)fdei • F • 50 000 m des one owner cab 197 1 6"50 TRI UMPH
MI'fl~
1-illo-oj-M
.
.
I
d..,.,..
Pomeroy
Phone
992
3097
All
Cash
for
Your
good
......lf\ai.. IIOIIII'OIIoh ..
tn e~~: t r a good cond tlton for
3 9 52t c
cond lf •on Phone 99 2 7054 or
poro;Ntn ..-.ol drll!ll -nh
Property _
mode l Phon e 742 3232
_....., c...., llr l• .. •lonc
99? 5985
co•ted
11&lt;1el qb "411 ,. 111
4 2 4tc
Now 3 bedroom
l01f11&gt;~- fl1'tl lr1otl
o1 1 6tc MASO N
home wtth a tta ched garag e
Mtd 20s good locat to n Phon-e
1967 FO RD Galaxte 500 A I 1973 HONDA motor ~vc l e for
Buyers See Us For Your
sa le Phon e 7.4 2 &lt;129.4
(J04 1 77 3 5.468
sha pe SA 75 Phone 992 /84)
.d I 51 c
Needs &lt;n Real Estate
4 1 6tc
1 J Jtc

o.

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

- ------

-------

----

NEIGLER
BUILDERS SUPPLY

OF
QUALITY

-

HALL'S SALVAGE

p.J
Home Maintenance

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1974 CHEV RDLET IMPALA
54195
• door only 10 AOO m1les Fully equ&lt;pped ln t ludmg air
dark red A REAL CREAM PUFF
1974 CHEVELLE MALIBU
53095
GM DtviSion car air condtf10n1ng 350 V 8 power steering
dark grey ftnt s h radto
1973 PLYMOUTH STA WAGON
52795
Suburban 3 seat V 8 eng1ne, automatic t rans mt sston
powe r st eer ing power brakes factory atr condtttomng
luggag e rac k green fm1sh radto, like ne w wh •te wa ll
t ires

POM!~9!v~~!9.~. CO. ®
POMEROY. OHIO

We Specialize ln

'Working'
reviewed

Building Hom es

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

Real Estate For Sale

j

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

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

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

Strout Realty

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

-- ----~ ~----- ----,_

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

I&lt;URL'S
BARGJ\IN
CENTER

•

Carpeting
501 NYLON

SPRING
SPECIALS

4 9!~are

For Sale

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

Auto Sales

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

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

HELP· HELP

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

'

~

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

CALL 992-2259

TEN YEARS OLD - Mr
and Mn. Eugene Johnston,
Salem Center, entertained
Monday with a party In
observanee of thf lOth birthday annivenary of their son,
Keith. Games were played
with prizes being won by
Curt Smith, R""ky Johnson,
Timmy Spires and Jennifer
Jeues. Others attending
were Chuckle McElroy ,
Sblrley McDonald, Mrs.
Melva Eblln, Kimberly and
Billy Joe, Mn. Sharon Smith
and Dav ey, Mrs . Joyc
Johnston and Date and Mrs.
Beverly Spires. Cake, ice
cream and Kool-Aid were
served Keith's birthday Is
today

Child 's letter
heard by group
LETART FALLS - At the
Wednesday mght m eeting of
the Le tart Falls Umted
Methodl8t Women at the home
of Mrs John Htll, a compasswn
letler from a small H1ndu chUd
sponsored by the group was
read
In her letler , tht child gave a
partial list of her daily actiVihes at the mission A
discussion on the needs of
horne and fore1gq miss1ons was
held by the UMW Special
prayer was gtven for Mr and
Mrs H B Powell, Valrtco,
Fla , who recently lost their
only child, Don The fam1ly
formerly resided in Metgs
County and Mrs Powell was a
member of the Letart Falls

Studs Terkel s latest book,
"Working," was revtewed by
Mrs James Titus, Sr , at the
Wednesday afternoon meetmg
of the Mtddleport Literary Club
-at the hom e of Dr Kathryn
Phtlson.
In her revtew, Mrs T1tus
described the book as Turkel 's
most
ambitious,
most
revealing and ,most tmportant
book, one on wh1ch he spent
three years talkmg to people m
a wtde vartety of occupations
Mrs Tt tus m her rev1ew satd
that Turkel reveals m the book
more about the working hves of
people than those most
closely related to hem
He potnts to the prtde ,
hum1hat1on, boredom, excttement, whom they hate,
whom they respect, and how
they get through the day m hiS
book
The revtewer descrtbed the

~

1
full ~

Bombay yellow ca bnole t e lk gra tn' vmyl roof
power equtp 50 50 dtvtded front seat 6 way power ~
both S1des T&amp;T whee l full ster eo ~ Crut se Control
recllntng seat back R S C C at r ma ny other ex tras
3 700 m tles Mr Ka rr s personal ca r
}

OEPINITELY

L______.J.AY.J___ ~___.J

WIU BE

~

75 Chev. Capnce 4 door ..................... 5595
1

Sold ne w for ove r $6700 Full power
I 500 moles New Ced ol lac trade

a &amp;r

st ereo V roof

73 Olds Cut. S. Cpe., auto., P.S., SS wheels 309'
73 Olds 98 HT Sed., v-roof, pow., air.........'4395
73 Cougar XR7, v-roof, a1r, power ....... ..... '3895
1

73 Vega Hatchback, 4 sp., radio _.......... '2195
73 Dodge Pol. Cus. 4 Dr. Hl, pow., air ... 2895
73 Olds Cut. Sup. HT Cpe., power, a1r...... '2895
1

72 .Oids 98 HT Sed., v-roof power, atr .. ..... !2895
72 -Oids 88, 4 DR, Sedan, v-roof, air ... .. ....'2695
72 Olds 98 HT Sed., v-roof, atr.............. '3295
72 Olds Toronado Cpe., V-roof, pow., a1r .... '309~
72 Chev. Imp Cpe., V.S auto., P.S......... . 12195
72 Pontiac Gat HT Gpe., power, air ........ 12695
72 Chev. Nova Cpe, 6 At., P.S............... '2195
71 Ford Wagon, full power, air.............. .'1895
71 Chev. Cap. H.T. Sed., v-roof, atr ........... '1995
70 Maverick 2 Dr., 6, auto.................. '1195
1

70 Olds 98 Hoi. Sed .. power, air............ 1495
69 Ford LTD HT. Cpe., V roof, air ........... '995
69 Buick LaSabre 4 dr., v-roof, air............'795
68 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille, v.roof, leath,er int. '495
68 Pontiac Bonneville H.T. Sedar., power, atr '595
66 Pontiac Cat 4 Dr., V8, auto, P.S. (as is) 1300

71 DATSUN PICKUP
4 c yl , 4 s pd .
71 FORD CUSTOM PICKUP
302 s td , long Wide bed

THE_DIFFERENCE

I

~

•

FORD RANGER XL T
.V 8, auto , P.S , long w1de bed

65 FORD '14 TON PICKUP
4 s pd w1th topper

LESS

75 MERCURY COMEL ............... 13595

•

1973 FORD PINTO 2 dr sedan..J269s
Auto trans

One ca r e ful local own er

1973 FORD

MAVERICK ~........... }2495

2 Dr

Seda n 302 V 8 en gm e au t o
power s t een n g One loc al own e r

Truth 'Seekers
have meeting
A -bike hike und hayride was
planned for the Aprtl 15

tran s ,

1972 FORD LID 4 dr................ ~2395
Ha r dtop, d a rk green m e t a lli c, ltke ne w , tow
mil eag e, a 1r cond &amp; full e qu1pment Ju st
a rn ved One ca r e ful loca l o wn e r w e s old ne w

cy l a uto 2 Dr 1 100 m tles ba lance of wa rranty good

74 FORD MAVERICK ....-...-........ 12B95
O'

1974 PINTO STA. WAGON. -....~~. 12795
Ch o tce o f t hree m 1le ages

o n e w olh a 1r -

t w o low

Extr a n1 ce fo r mo d e l.

P S, P

B ,

4 Dr H T fac a1r P S P B vtny l roof

73 CHEV. NOVA SS .. -................ $2495
2 Dr

(2) 75 Oldsmobile
I
I Cutlass Supreme Sedans
~ Fullyequ1pped cars w1th 60 40 seat, •AM FM I
i rad1o, steel radial l1res factory a1r 1
I

1

!

$AVE

$AVE

i

t_.._._.._.._.._.._._.._.._.._.._.._.._.._.._,_.._..J

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
" You'll LlkeOurQualttyWay
of Domg Busmess"
992-5342
GMCFINANCING
POMEROY
Open Ev'!lDI!l!ISUntil6· 00-- Til5p m. Sat .
1

PS

73 PONTIAC LeMANS ................$3295
73 FORD GALAXIE 500 ............ _..'2595
2 Dr H T fac atr P S P B, v my t roof

Aut o tra n s. p owe r s t ee rmg &amp; brakes, r a dto
L1 ke n ew con d 1t1 o n Chrome &amp; s tnpes

Im pa la 2 Dr H T V 8 P S P B a uto v1nyl rool

196B CHEV. VB IMPALA ............. 1B95
2 Dr Hardtop , lt ke n ew fm1 sh. a uto t rans
power st ee nn g

SEE: FRED BLAETINAR, DARRELL DODRill
OR DAN THOMPSON

DAN THOMPSON FORD
OPEN EVES. TIL! 00, THURS SAT Tits 00

72 OLDS CUTLASS .....................12295
2 Dr H T , a uto

Auxiliary stages hunt
T he
Oh 1 e
T oll ns h1 p
Auxt h a ry staged a n Easter egg
hunt Saturday at the fire house
Gam es wer e p layed a nd
se ve r a l doo r priZes we r e
a wa rded Wmne rs were P aula
Cow dry , Ke nn y R oc kh ol d ,
Mtke Put na m , Keym Gn ggs,
Lmda Barnabus , Ke1 th Putna m , S us 1e K1mes , Cathy
Rock ho ld, Sha n n on Mood1 s
paugH, Pa t Long, Cmdy Hams
!'!like Gn ggs Dottt Kmsley,
Kei th Harns, Des Durst, Stbyl
F oster , Todd Mo(xbspaugh a nd
R1ch1e Van Meter

Refres hments we re ser ved
a nd each ch1ld rece tved candy
a nd colored eggs to take home
Apprec1a t10 n t o lhose who
coninbuted to the prOJect has
bee n extended by the a ux1hary

PS

P B

72 FORD COUNTRY SQ............... 11B95
4 Dr Wagon

72 FORD PINTO ....................... 11595
4 cyl

4 s p r actng strtpes w mag wheels

72 FORD PINT0 ........................11595
4 cyl

461 S. Thlfd St.

auto vmyl roof

70 A.M. GREMLIN ....... :.............. 1B95
6 cyl

3 sp

67 CADILLAC ...... -.......................SB95
Fleetwood Brougha m 4 Dr

GOOD SELECTION OF CHEAPER CARS
' ~
See Ray R1ggs or Roger Riebel

RIGGS USED CARS
985-4100
Located on St . Rt.

7

The 31st anmversary of the
a ux1ltary of the Middleport
F tre
De pa r tm en t
wa s
l'ele brated Tuesday evemng
wtth a dmner pa rty at Oscar s
m Galhpohs
All€ndmg were Mrs Pat ty
Kloes, Mrs Ka then ne Me tzer,
Mrs P hy ihs Baker, Mrs Kate
Bachner, Mrs 0 •rol Wolfe ,
Mrs Be lly Ohhnger , Mrs Sue
Imbode n, Mrs Donna B) er
and Mrs Besste Dars t
A bnef busmess meetmg was
held wtth plans bemg m ade for
a wh1 te elephant ~ale and a
combmat ton s1ient a uctwn at
the next mee ting The new
offteers "til be hos tesses then
Th ey are
Mr s
Baker ,
president , Mrs Byer, v1ce
pres1de nl , Mr s Imbode n,

Darst,

Followers
•
organtze
An or gamza bonal m eetmg

ATTEND CONVENTION - Students attendmg the SNAO conventiOn were seated , I r
Debbie Bruley and Cathy Glassco, standmg, Suste Budd , Peggy Caudill, Cec1le Ha m s, Sue
Sheets, Joan Little, GUda Jones, Karen Smith and Nanc y Tippens

students
•
attend Conventt.on
and lhe nurses were honored D , Dean of th!YFnances Payne
1
for havmg 100 pe t membership BoHon 1"«c~Olll
Nurs mg a l
m th e SNAO The ih1rd Ca se W e~te rn Um vers1ly,
dt st m ctwn went to Cath y Capta m ~dtnclB A Kennedy,
Glassco, who was elec ted state USA F Nursm g Corps and
secretary of the or gamzallon Milton Dudl ey, m s ura nce
re presentative fo r the Norfor lhe year 1975-76
The featured speake:s at the lhea s te r n Ohio 0 N A , who
CjJIIVenllon we re Dr Fay B1les, spoke on '4gably-Lia bthty 1"
lhe ftrst and only woman to
St uden t s a tt e n d m g t he
hold a v1ce presidency at a conve ntion m Cleveland from
pubhc umverstty ( Kent Slate), lhe Holzer Medical Center
J" nne tta Mac Ph81l , R N , Ph School of Nutsmg were Debbie

ot

u

0.

CAMBRIDGE , Mass (UP!) ' blooded, llke reptiles Some
- Eagles and turkeys may be bones contamed blood vessels
descendants of dinosaurs , ac- and regi ster ed a marked
cording to a patr oil sc1enllsts change accordmg to climatic
who feel the beasts never seasons
•
r eally beca m e extinct
The theory of Bakker and
An article m thiS month's Ostrom may rurne the feath ers
Sc1entiftc Amencan outlines of other scientists, smce they
the d1110saurs-mto-btrds theory want to have btrds reclassified
of Robert T Bakker, of Har.. mto the dinosaur fimny
vard 's Soc1ety of F ellows, and
Dr Nicholas Holten , curator
J ohn H Ostrom of Yale.
ofamphtblanandreptUefossils
They say the btg dmosaurs a t the Srmthsoman Institute,
diedout because they were " h&gt;t cla uns the Bakker .{)strom eV!by a n e nvtronmental zap" of dence 1s mconclus1 ve on
changmg condttions But while several pomts
the TyramosaurllS Rex btt the
preh1stonc dust 65 mtlhon
years ago, a lot of the little
dinos'aurs a nd matrunals llved
on, evolvmg over the centurtes
mto today's btrds
Some of the smaller dinosaurs were warm.blooded and
we1ghed as hUle. as 11 pounds
Bakker and Ostrom satd some
had d eveloped a pnnuli'lle type
of feathers , perha ps more for
protection from the cold than
for flymg However, some
rearly creatures did manage to

LARRY'S

MOBILE HOME
SALES, INC.

Wa llace Brad fo r d Tue sday
evemng
E lecte d preside n t was
Wall ace
Bradford ,
vtce
p res tde n t ,
Mrs
Jam es

~:~:~~~· M~~d Le~~r~~r
Plans were made to have class
m ee tmgs on the thtrd Tuesday
o{ 1each month With the next
'm ee ling m the church soc1ai
r oom s wtth Mrs Ha zelton and
Mrs Sm1 th as hoslesses

NOW
OPEN
.Sunday
1 -• 6 pm

By - or gbde -on fea therless

tist

for th e Fa1thf ul Fol19wers ~) ~~~ "'''
1
Class of the Hemlock 'dr~~e
~ ,~1en S c1a un ana ys1s
Chmllan Churc h was oold a l of foSSils r e veals evtdence not
the home of Mr ahd Mrs
a ll dmos aurs we re cold-

,

&lt;:hester ,

Auxiliary ~Thank sg~vmg
. . D ~
ay ~.east
celebrates JUSt
. a wee ex-dinosaur
.

secretar y

Thtrleen students from the
Holzer Medical Center School
of Nursmg , Galltpolis, attended
lhe 1975 conventiOn of the
Sludent NID'ses Association of
Ohio ( SNAO) whtch was held
d1D'tng Marc h m Cleveland
This year, Holzer's group
brought home three awards
from the- me.ewt g
The
siudents' Hillbilly "Jug " Band
won a trophy for their par h clpa llon m the llllenl contest ,

auto

72 CHEV. IMPALA ... ................ ..'1595

treasurer, and Mrs

'

P S Sharp

73 FORD MAVERICK .................. 12295

2 Dr

!

307 V 8 auto

1974 FORD PICKUP.-................ 13695

M1ddleport, Oh10

r--6RTv'ETfEoucA-iiONC:"AR's'-l

P S fact a tr

2 Dr Sports Coupe extra n tce

1972 FORD VB GRAN TORIN0 .. }2595
Sta W agon
AT

sma ll V 8 a uto

73 CHEV. ·IMPALA ..................... $2495

4 Dr

a s low

Phone 992 2196

35 New '7 5 Olds Ready For Delivel)

6

4 Dr

the1rwork hfe , but the common
factor mvoived m seenungly
different tasks From all of the
hves mvolved , "Working"
emerges as an extraordmary
m!$1C pteced together by a
mas ler craftsman, a mosa1c
whtch descrtbes Amertca as 1t
has never been seen before
Terkel at present lives In
Chtcago with his wife, Ida, and
a son, Paul He has a dally
radto program on WFMT·
Chicago which Is carrted on
numerous staltons throughout
the country.
Mrs
Dwight
Wallace
prestded at the meettng
openmg wtth the club collect,
Members responded to roll call
wtth comments on the
program.
Dr Phtlson asststed by her
SISler, Mrs Thereon Johnson,
served refreslunents

tJI)da

I

~

75 Cadillac Elderado Cpe.

71

book, "Workmg1 as more than
Just mdiv1dual accounts of

Mrs
Ernest
Shuler
pruented the program on
lprtng Mrs Harold Roush
tj!ad " Spring " and Mrs Bert
Danny Harrison presided at
gav~ a meditation _ the meellllll with Tammy
"Eternal Spring " Mrs. Blake giving the secretary's
Bell had a prayer Mrs report, and Linda Hysell the
Slni~er conducted a study of treasurer's report Refresh4 with thoee named and menta were served. Atleqding
Erma Wilson, Mrs Allee _•besides thoee named were
•~~~ and Mrs Inez 1J.!!1... ~vid Blake, John Blake,
ii:
pari
,. ••
Hysell, Glenn Brown ,
Mrs Hill wu allllaled 1n • S~e~cy Ltghtfoot, Bonnie
'aMIIna refreltunenta by ~~ts• Wa, Don Hysell, Mr. and
Mrs. Gladys Shields will Mrs Clifford Smith and
the May meeting
~adeUne Pamler

'

I

----·1

(No add1f1on s
unless a uthonzed
011 No Tr ade
Basis Tra de- m
Acce pted

11

meeting when the Truth
Seekers met Tuesday at the
home of Diana and Becky
Painter

I,JMW.

AS MU C H AS

REBATE

I

1. Complete Chassts Lube

• ·• 1 m o

Atr condtftonmg, plumbmg,

•aoo

WORJH

' -~~ft~~~

On the purchase of a

Blown
Insulation Serv1ces

HElL

-~-

...

COUPO N

'

$90000

VALUE

serv1ce

RATED

-

.

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E«PERIENCED

sertes , of , money-savmg

ALUMINUM &amp;
'
VINYL SIDING

.

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9 - The DaUy Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Fr1day, Apr 1l 4, 1975

l

Business s·ervices

"

IN DI AN J oe s Sport•n g Goods
bu y and se ll gun s am m o
ft shm g eq utpm ent an d after
April I we w il l have ft sh bai t
Stop by at 308 Pag e St
Mtd dleport Phone 992 3509
3' 2 30tc
MOTORCY C L E ~ for sale
1971
Su zuki TM 1100 dtrt btk e and
1973 Yam a SC 500 d trt btkePhone 985 3938
4 3 6tp

Wanted To Rent

Employment Wanted

•

-·

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HOST GUESTS
E aster Sunday dmner gues ts
of Mr a nd Mrs Vtrg tl Roush,
Rt 3, Pom eroy, we re Mr and
Mrs Don Roush , Jeff and
Michael, Rt 3, Pomeroy, Mr
and Mrs Ronme P ooler , J11D
and SuSie , Middleport, Mr. and
Mrs Larry Roush and Jean
Anne, Wmterha ven, Fla , and
Mrs
J ea-. SUI;nmerheld,
Ches ler

I

PH. 992•Tr/7
POMEROY

See Our Special
Sale Ad In .
Sunday's ·
Newspaper

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Batley, Suste Budd, Peggy
Caudtll , Calhy Glassco, Cectle
Harris, Ca th y Hoff, Gthla
Jones, J oan Little, Vtcki R1el,
Susan Sh el!l~, Jane t Slagle,
Karen S nu th a nd Na n c y
Tippens

.,

au to

OFFICE
t:30to12,2T05CCLOSE AT
NOON ON THURS. ) - EAST COURT ST.;

�8- The DaUy Sentinel, Middle port-Pomeroy,O Frtday, Aprt1 4 1975

•

F INANCIAl R EP ORT I
OF TOWNSHIPS
For F tscal Yea r Endtng
Dece m be" lht 1914
Sa h s bu r v Towrt5h ip
Me1g s County
Middleport Ohto
J a nuar y 31 1ns
I cert ify the IOIIOw tng repor1
to be correct
Richa rd Batley
Townshtp Cle r k

'
~

SUMMARY OF CA SH
BALANCES RECEIPTS

AND EXPEND I TURE S
Balance Jan 1 1914
Genera l Fund
7 614 60

NotiCe

!'tobee
Y Md Sa les

CARPORT sale Thursday
Frtdr.y an d Satu rday April 3
o1 and 5 one mt te off Rt
7
on Rt 1 .0~. Hysell s Phon e 992
5555
o1 2 3t c
I CI\ N n o longer take order s for
cake5 Joan Tutt le
4 2 3tc
-

-

lit

-

' ~HOOT I N G

Corn
H-o llow Gun Clu b tur n ftrsl
rtgh t aft er Mtl es Cem e tery
Rut litnd f fie lory -:hok ed
Qun s on ly Su nday A p rtl fl 1
MI\T(H

J,)lll

• 3 7tc

Help Wanted

For Fa$t Results Use Sentinel
Classifieds
'

CLEAN rugs I ke ne w so easy
to do w• lh Blue Lus tr e Ren t
electrtc shampooer $ 1 Baker
Motor Vehi c le L1cense
Furntf ure Com pany
2 720 70
1 Tax F un d
.l .l 3tc
~Gasoline Tax Fund
2 039 15
~oad

Clnd Brt dge
Fund

279 15 NOW se ll tng ~ u ller Br ush
Produo;..ts phon e 992 3410
1 386 42
1 24 tfc

Ce metery Fund

l=ecleral Reven ue

7 63 1 5&lt;1

Sh ar m g Fun d
-Tota ls

21 73 1 56

Tot a l R ece 1ph
General Fu n d
I I 543 62

~

Motor

Veh •cle L•cense
... Tax F und
5 123 57
Geso lme Tax F und
15 600 00
'Road an d Br idge

F und
Cem etery F und
Sh ilr .n g F und
'tot als

Total Rece 1p h

&amp;

Gener a l Fund

3 31 Sic

30

19 218 22

Mo to r Veh cle L1ce nse
Tax F un d

:Casolln e Tax Fu nd

7 844 27

17 639 15

R oad and Sr 1dg e

... Fund

3 7 12 45

Ce m e t er y Fund

I 867 42

federal Reve nue
S h ar~ng

Loader s lzaak Wa to n Far m
Chester April 5 1 30 p m
Apnt 6 r a tn da le

AUCT ION Thu rsday n gh t 7
48 1 00
pm
at Mason Auct1o n
Horton St tn Mason w va
16 352 50
Cons tgnm en ts welcome
52 53J 99
Phon e (304) 773 .5471
Ba lan c es
2 2 tt c
3

Fed er a l Revenue

~33

------------Pl!'aL IC shoot Metgs Muzzle

F und

w
To ta l s

23 984 04
74 26 5 55

E xpend•t ures
Genera l Fund
13 761 37
Motor Ve htcle Ltcense
•
Ta xFu nd
601032
Ga line Tax Fun d
15 887 29
R a
nd Bn dge
Fund
2 043 90
m e te~ Fund
522 71
li ed era l Revenu e
Shari ng Fund
18 617 23
Totals
56 8&lt;l2 82
Balanc e Dec 31 1974
Ge nera l Fund
s 456 85
Mofor Ve hrc le L•cense
I 83311.9"
Ta x Fund
Gasol ne Tax Fund
I 75 l 86
Road and Br tdge
668 55
1
.. Fun d
Cemetery Fund
1 344 71
Federal Reven ue
Shann g Fund
5 366 81
to tals
17 422 73
CASH BALANCE
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
BY FUND
Gene ral Fund
Ba lance Ja n 1 1974
7 674 60
Rece1pts
qene ral Pr opert y Ta x ~ Rea l Estat e (Gross )
3 5-H 65
"tang tble Perso nal Prope rt y
"'"Tax (Gross)
1 123 69
lnh ent a nce Tax
(Gro!s)
461 22
Loc al Govt Dtst
3 113 71
G1Quor Permit Fees
2 742 78
Ctgar e tt e License Fees
• and F rnes CGross l
1so 00
o"ther
404 48
Tra nsfers
09
Total Rece tpts
11 543 62
Tota l Begmn mg Balan ce
P lus Recetp ts
19 218 22
Expendt tures
Total Expend tt ur es Admt n tstrattve
13 045 27

ME IGS Cou n ty Human e Soc1ety
DOGS FOR ADOP TI ON One
ful l
blooded
German
Sheph erd fe mal e 3 mo n ths
ol d One black and wh t1 e
m xed breed ma le IB mo nths
old Two Col lte and Sh epherd
m xed bla ck an d wh tte
ma tes 31 1 mo nth s old Call
94949 17
3 30 61p

"

ANNOUNC I NG new ho ur s
SKATE A WAY 7 3Qo to 10
P m L We dnesday Frt da y
and ::,a tur day A\la tl a bl e for
p r •vate pa rtt es Mon d ay
T ues d ay
and
Th urs d ay
n tgh ts
We dnesday
a nd
Sund ay a fter noo ns P hone
985 3939 985 9996 or 985 4141
3 30 121C
t-UR yo ur
Ott of M tn k
Cos rn ettcs Pfl.o ne BROWNS
992 511 3 ~
1 7 tfc
GUN SHOOT on Mil e Hill Road
factory choked guns on ly
Spo nsored
by
Rac m e
Amer •can Legton Satu rday
Apr I 5 7 p m
4 3 2tc
__.
MR AND MR S Ronald Dougan
wou ld ltke 10 tnvt te YQ U to
a tt end sund ay Schoo l af th e
M tdd l e por t u n 1te d P en
fecos la Churc h South Tht rd
Aven ue sta rftng a t 10 a m
4 3 2t p

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_____ _

AS OF AP rt l 1 1975 Th~
Sy r acuse Hom e.J~ Ut tldtes
Company wtll be collect.ng
th etr ga s bdls at lhe former
off ce n Sy racuse
4 1 IOtc

REVIVAL s tar tt ng April 7 at
Mo rgan Cen l er Wesleyan
Chu rch 3 30 eac h even tng
The Rev E arl Ot ler speake r
0 H Car t pastor nv tes the
pub ltc to atten d Everyone
1
~~~~~~mHg~ ~ G~oeu~~~ a l 76 10 welcome
F tre Prot ec tton
640 00
4 2 Stc
Grand Total Expe nd itures Ge ne ral Fund
13 761 37
Bal Dec 31 1974
s 456 85
Total Exp Plus Bal
Dec 31 1974
19 21B 22
4 'l 3tc
Motor Vehtcle Lt ce ns e
SHOOT
IN
G
Mat
ch
Rac
tn
e Gun
Tax Fund
Club Sunday Ap r tl 6 1 p m
Bal J an 1 197.4
2 720 70
4 2 4tp
R ecet pts
Motor Vehtcle L cense
Ta x
5 123 57 ORDE R
YOUR
so uthe rn
Tota l Rece tpts
vegetab le pl ants now for
5 12l 57
Tota l Beg lnntng Ba l
de lt very a roun d May 1
P lus Rece tpts
Char les R Harrts Pho ne B.tJ
7 84.4 27
2693
E xpendttures
Total E)Cpend ttu res 4 3 18tc
Mt sce ll ~ n eo u s
2 918 58
Mam tenance
3 091 74
Gra nd Total Exp
Motor Ve h ic le L ce nse
T~JC. Fund
6 010 32 HORSES&amp; PONIE S Phone 742
Bal Dec 31 1974
1 833 95
326&lt;1
Total E xp Plu s Ba l
4 3 t rc
Dec 31 1974
7 8&lt;1 4 27
Gasoline Ta x Fund
3 R I 0 IN G ho r ses Also 3 sa ddl es
Bat J&amp;n 1 1974
2 039 15
for sale Ph on e 742 4211
Rece tpts
Wenda!\ Gra te
Gasollne Tax
1560000
4 3 6tc
Tot al Receipts
15 600 00
Tot al Beglnmng Balanc e
old upngh t ptan os
Plus Rece1pts
17 639 15 WANTED
any
cond
tt on Paytng SlO
Expenditu res
ea ch Ft r.sl floor only Wr tt e
Total Ex pendtt ur es and Qtve dtr ec ttons to Wttte n
8 426 21
M1 scelf an eous
P ano Co B o ~~: 188 Sardts
Matntenan ce
7 461 08
Oh Jo 43946
Gra n d Tot al Ex p 4 2 61p
Gasoline Ta x Fund 15 887 29
Bat Dec 31 f974
1 75 1 86 STA NDI NG t mbe rs Contact
Total Exp Pl us Bal
Pomeroy Fo rr es t Produ c ts
Dec 31 1974
17 639 15
P 0 Box 726 Pomero y Ohto
Road and Brtdge Fund
Phone 992 5965
Bat Jan 1 1974
279 15
3 30 12tc
Rece1pts
Gene ral Property Ta x Real E state (Gross) 2 686 96 OLD furn iture •ce boxes bra ss
bed s or com plete ho useholds
Tangtble Pe rsona l Property
Wrtte M 0 Mttler Rt .4
Ta x CGross)
74 6 34
Pom ero y Ohio Cal l 992 7760
Total Recetpts
3 433 30
10 7 7.4
TO!ta r Beg •n nmg Balan ce
Plus Recet pt s
3, 71 2 4 5
E xpenditures
JUN K autos complete and
Tota l EJC. penditur es delivered to our ya rd We P•ck
Mtscetlan eou s
I 058 76
up e; uto bod tes and bu y all
Matn tena n ce
985 14
ktnd\ ot scr ap metal s and
Gr and Total Exp - Road
tron Rtder s Sa lvage St Rt
and Br •dg e Fund
2 0&lt;3 90
124 Rt 4 Pom eroy O~to
Bat Dec 31 1974
Cal l 992 5468
1 668 55
Total E xp P lus Bat
10 17 tfc
De c l l 1974
3 712 45
Cemetery Fund
CAS H patd for all makes a nd
Bal Jan I, 1974
1 386 42
mod els of mob ile hom es
Recetpfs
Phon e area code 61f. 423 95 31
Sal e of Lots
48 1 00
4 13 tfc
Total Rece tpts
481 00
1964 AND old er cotn s wlll pay
Tota l Beg!nn ng Balance
24c tor d tmes 60c for q ua r
Plus Rece pts
1 867 .4 2
te rs Sl 20 for halves Wtll
E xpendttures
also buy sell or trad e U S
Selanes
268 55
cotns an d c ur renc y Ca ll
Employer s Re ti rem ent
Roger Wa m sley 742 3651
Contr lbutton
25 38
Tools and Equ ,pm ent
4 4 12tp
II 74
Supplies
86 95
Other E )C pense5
130 09
Total Exp
522 71
e a t Dec 31 1974
1,3.44 71
Tota l Exp Plu s Bal
WIL LI NG to apply my ta lents to
Dec 31 1974
1 867 42
your way of wor ktng Offtee
work , 27 years ex per tence
Federal Revenue
Shartng Fund
Also auto t1tl e cle r k Phone
Sa l Ja n 1 1974
992 3994
7 631 5.4
Rece•pts
4 4 3tc
Gran ts- Federal
15 564 00
Oth e r Re ce tpts
788 50
Total Recet pts
16,3 52 50
Total Beg tnn tllQ Ba lance
Plus Rec e tpts
23 984 04
Expenditures
Maint and Opera h on
In 1933 , 73 crew menbers
S alarles ~ e m ploy ees
2 298 86
Suppttes
2 863 0&lt;1 were lost when the U S Navy
Equtpment
3 5.47 50
Contracts- Repatr
1 573 85 dll'lglble " Akron" foundered m
Contra c ts- Servtees
7 862 78 a storm and fell mto the ocea n
Advert •Smg a nd
Pr tntlng
~
41 se off Barnegat Bay , N J
Public Employees
lt1 1968, Negro civil rig hts
Rettrement System
.429 62
leader
Martm Luther King was
Total Exp
18 617 23
Bat Dec 31, 197.4
assassmated
m Memphts, Tenn
5 355 81
Total Exp PIU S ~ al,
Dec 31 , 1974
23.9&amp;&lt; o• James Earl Ray pleaded guilty
TOWNSHIP DEBT - NOTE
and was con~1Cied 11 months
Purpose for Wh iCh
later and sen tenced to 99 years
Note Debt was creat ed
Grader Purchase
m pnson
OutsUind tng Jan 1
In 1974, the worst rash of
1974
12 250 00
RedHmed Ounng
tornadoes m 49 years killed
Year 1974
6 250 00
nearly
350 in 11 states Also
Balance Outstanding
Doc 31 1974
6 000 00 that day , Atlanta's Hank Aaron
Rate of lnt
6 Pet
Date of F inal Mat
11 9 75 lied Babe Ruth 's home run
record w1th his 1714th at
l tc
Cincmnab

- - ---- --------Wantert To Buy

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

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

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

Employment Wanted

How

dowl

come thoee bus winthat wouldn' t cloee aU

gf8r art
that

f)Ued lhUt J!OW

IJirinl r.

I

here.

A thought for the day British
lecturer J ohn Colhns satd,
" Mistrust a subordmale who
never fmds fault w1th hts

supertor "

•

For Sale

Auto Sales

196tl CHEVELL E SS 396 3 USE D parts, Fr ye s True"- a nd
sp eed cxcc tt c nt co n dtlt on • Auto Pa r ts Rut lan d OhtO
phon~; Y92 1659
Ph one (614) 742- 6094
1
.J 4otp
17278tp

'1"¥

SOMEONE to s tay wtfh eld er ly
ma n weekda ys Wrtt e to Box ~
7290 co The Dat ly Sen ftnel
•
Pomeroy OhtO •
POO DLE groomtn g S5w tth bat h
4 2 6tp
56 Appotntm en t not al ways
necessary Hours 9 to 9 e~ecept
Sun d ay
P oodle
p up
avi1t la bl e Qu a li t y pr iced We
we lcome your bustnl!ss Call
Coolv il le 667 3915
4 2 J IC
ON
GRAVEL HILL
IN
,
MUST sell IY/ 1 2 bed room
mob le home Ca ll 992 2536
MIDDLEPORT
a n y t. me
AND
4 4 lt c
MASON. W VA.
10x50 MOB il F hnme QOO d
CONTACT
condtt on $2 150 250 gallon
ca ttl ~ wat ertn g tank S25 30
~"" n &lt;: n f lim P Phone 992 7330
4 1 6t c
Ph (614) 992-2156
•
(304) 773 5386
~ ELL your mobil e ho me for
ca sh 15 homes wa n ted 1958
thru 1972 models Phone (6 14 )
- D--RAF T SMAN
wanted
Jd6 1425 Ga i1Jpoll s
Preferab ly wtlh tra ck wor k
3 9 78 tc
ex pertence Sen d resume to
P 0 8011: 152 Pomeroy Oh tO
Equal Oppo r t un1 t y em
ploye rs
3 30 7tc
WA NT ED TO REN T wtth tn 20
m •nutes fr om Ph tl tp Spor n
m •ne m ar rt ed coupl e pl us 1
dog Coun tr y or c tl y house
co ttage or apartm ent Call
PAR T TI ME bo olo. kee ptn g
(304) 882 3188 aft er 11 am
fl exab le hours 1 or 2 days a
4 J 6t'c
wee k o r e ven mg s
E;x
per te n ced e~~:cc l l e n t local
r efe r e n ce Phon e 992 70 90
eventngs
3 30 8tc
F U R NI S HE D 60 ~~:12 m obt le
hom e Rou sh Lane cnes h tre
WIL L do 1andor work or
Oh to Phon e (31)4) 773 5423
patn t tng P ho ne 992 2262
4 3 7tp
3 30 6tc

Pels For Sale

CARRIER
WANTED

Mobtle Homes For Sale

lHE DAILYSENnNEL

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1

•

3

REGIS T ERED
Polled
Herefor d bull s one 18 month
ol d one 16 m onth otd ot he r
JJ mon th old Also abo ut 100
bushe l ear corn Phone 98 5
3538
4 3 3tp

2&lt;l 000 BTU Gener al Elec tn c a tr
co nd tt toner not a year old
F'hon e 992 2952
3 26 tfc
CL oSE Our on • new Ztg Zag
sewin g m a c hm~ s For sewmg
s tretch t ab rt cs buttonholes .,
fan cy des tgns e t c Pa rn t
Slightl y blemtshed Cho tc e of
carr ytn g c a s e or se w tn g
stan d S&lt;1 9 80 ca sh or t erm s
ava tlable Phone 992 7755
12 18 tfc

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

TURF TRIM
MOWER

'

Water, Electric, Goa, Sewer
!.lnes, lnstolled
Work
guarantHd
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucka
Llmeatonel Fill Dirt
Commercloi- Resldentlal
Conatructlon 1 Remodel

HEI,L

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
tomplete plumbmg
.

heatmg serv1ce and
general sheet metal
works .
Free
Estimates,
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992 -3995
..
or 992 -5700

-

GLEN R.
BISSELL

.

S.K EXCAVATING
COMPANY
I

777 Poor I Street
Middleport, Ohio
Phone 992.5:167 or 992.;JU1

SAVE on Service
Th1rd m
coupons .

a

Good through
April 12, 1975

-

Radlato
.....
Service -

t

~

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From the largest Tru ck or
Butl'dozer Radoator to the
smallest Heate r Core •
Nathan B1ggs
Rad&lt;alor Spetlahst

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph 992 2174_

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp;HEATING

Pomeror 1r.

r".._.._.._..__,._._..__.._.._._....__.

FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 949-5184

I

Regular pr1ces ava1lable m Serv1ce Dept

-~~fi@~-~~Qj~~,w
Keep your car serviced and m top runnmg
condihon - use the coupons - and save at the
same t1me .
t-J
Keep watchmg our ads for more money -savmg
coupons, co"':ng your way weekly

STORM
Wmdows &amp; Doors

-

'

Stop In Today or Call for Appo1ntment

ALUMINUM
Sodong Soffll!
~utters Awnoo\gs

DO BUSINESS Willi A LEADER

Free Estimates

Smith Nelson Motors Inc.

Ph, t12 3993

LARRY LAVENDER

500Maon St
Phone992 2174
Pomeroy,Ohoo
Servte e Hours Mon Frt a a m to 4 30, Sat a a m 12 noon

Sl(l'acuse, Oh1o
-·
.
3 10 ,,

4-2 75

USED CARS

3. An AC Oil Filter .. . lnstalled

Blow• onto Walls I AHoes

heatmg roofmg spouttng,
gene ral sheet metal work
Free Estimates
Phone. 949-5961
Emergency 949-2211 or
992-5700

Coupon No. 3

2. S Quarts 011... Installed

20"-3112 HP

For Rent

I

'72.9Q(KDJ
22"- 3112 H P
Self- Propelled

'104.95(K0)

INDIAN JOE'S
CB SALES &amp;PARTS

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES

I'

2 SIGNS

•

Bissell Brothers

Construction Co.

On alummum replacement
wtndows, stdmg, storm doors
and wmdows ra1hng , phone
Charles L&lt;Sie Syracuse,
Ohto Carl Jacob, Sales
Representative

308 Page St .
WANT pa rt or full ftme wo rk as 12x52 TR AILER ltke new 535
p er week
ut lll tes p a td
rece pt tonts t or cle rk typ sf
Middleport,
992 -3509
Phone 992 332.d
Chester , Oh1o
POMEROY LANDMARK
expe rt e n ced on IBM Key
4
2
lf
c
Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Pun ch and otft ce procedur e
Radtos Antenna s, Tower s,
Phone 992 2181
Phone 992 5771
Ph . 985 -4102
Used T v s Buy from the
• ,
4 2 3tp 4 BE DROO M house . wall to wall L_ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _
"lndtan" and sa \I I! " Warn
-~
car pet tng a c fenced m ya rd
....
Pum" We buy used Radto s
Wtth pat o n ce Pho ne 992 GROCER Y busmess fo r sal e
SEEKI NG emp loyme nt ap
Home Bu1ldmg
and Tower s R.adtos r e paired
2780 or 992 3432
Butldtng fo r sale or lease
prox 18 yrs ex per •ence tn
by
FCC
hcensed
servtce
Room
Add1hons
3 19 1fc
Phone 7735618fro m a 30p m
nur sm g servtce In Sta te In
personn el Stop and see the
to 10 p m for appotn tment
s tttut •ons or wtll take an y
and Garages
' Ind ian ' and Bubble~ ­
~
3 10 tf c
type of com mon labor Pho ne TRA ILE R a par tme nts for re nt
M.OJ:Ittor Channel 10 and 20.
.
3-21-75
992 7273
Phon e 992 5248
I '"
GAS cookstove nt ce tor can
4 2 3tp
_ 3 :?~ t c
nmg Phon e 985 }585
4 A 3tc
B A tn Span tSh ( Btl tngua l) and
gene ra l off tce wo r k ftltn g 3 BEDROOM mob le hom e
wa she r and dryer 11 1 ba ths 1971 NIMRO D cam per spec tal
etc Phone 992 71!6
uttl tties pa td 542 50 wee k 308
s •ze extras $950 Phon e (J0d)
4 2 3tp
located on old 33 Just 1112
Pag e St M dd leport Oh 10
675 5453
"
mtle abov e Metgs Fatr
&lt;1 4 3t c
TYP ING genera l Off tCC wor k
3 4 tf c
No s h-ort ha nd Wtll tng to
Ground s on rtght, lUSt across
apply myself to m y work 2 BE DROO M mobtl e hom e rn HAY bal er Manure s pr ea der
from
Grueser 's Ctup M1~l .
Mowtng mac h me Pho ne Paul
d tllgen ll y References Phone
Syr a cuse No chtldren or pe ts
Ractne 0
Put
those
junk autos onto
Kau
ff
992
3174
949
3604
P ear l A Scott 992 5957
Call 992 244 1 aft er 6 p m
308 Page, Mtddleport
4 4 Jtc
cash We pay $13 for stan.4 2 3t p
De pos1t requtred
Heat1ng
Cooltng
.
dard s tze cars w1th frame
3 11 tfc
Refrtgeratton Roof Repatrs
T lfOn tran smtSStOn for
I WILL DO bo okkeep tng n my r
-------- 28967CAS
and rear end We buy steel
Gutters
Plumbing 68 Fo rd Photie 992t6 191
home or you r bu s• ness Call Twp bedroom tr a le r Adulrs
Electrtcal Repatr s and
and
unstrtpped
motors
,
have
&lt;l
4
2tc
Susan P ul l ns 992 7316
onl y Ph one 992 3975 or 992
Ser v1ce
..
&lt;1 2 3tp
scales s o there 1s no
2571
Call992 3509 and
197
2
HOND
A
500
1
900
m
ti
es
guesstng we need m aJ:enal
3 23 tfc
Save on vour repa1r s also
Phon e befor e 5 p m 1.42 421 1
EXPE RI E NCE D s ec re t ary ...
repa tr mowers. comprtssors
to
loll
our
quota
Try
us:
a
ft
er
5
p
m
742
4931
seek1n g
e m p l oyme n t
a nd outboards Brmg 1f m
4 J 3tc
we're s ure our pr1ces wtll
Capabdt t es - typmg short FUR NI S HED a partment
and sa ve
a dult s only m Mtdd lepor t
3 25 1 mo.
ha nd abti tty to wor k wtth
sat1sfy you
Phon e 99 2 387 4
TW O spa ces tn Me tg s Co un ly
ftgu res and ft!l ng Ph one 992
Open 9 Tol4 30
'·
3 25 ff c
Me m ory Ga r d ens
ve r y
5953 fo r res um e
Mon lthru) Fro
-- - - - - - - - rea so nab le Ph on e 992 7077
EXCAVATIN G do zer loader
SEPTI C TANK S cl ean ed
&lt;1 2 3tp
4 4 Jtc
and bac khoe wor k septte
Mode rn San1t at1on 992 395.4 or
9 unl&lt;l2 :30 Sat .
3 and 4 RO OM rur nts t',ed a nd
tan ks tnstall ed dum p tr ucks
992 7J&lt;9
TREE Tr1mm •ng and re mova l
un t u r n1shed apartm e nts
FOR D hay ba ler ha s bal ed less
an~ Ia boys for htre w tll haul
Ho use an d r oof pa nt tng a ll
9 18 tfc
Phone 992 543.&amp;
tl"lan 2 500 ba les of hay $2 250
ftU dtr t top sotl ltm eston e &amp; PLUMB IN G heat tng r epa r - ----------- ---a.work gu a r a n t ee d
Free
4 12 tfc
Pho ne Cha r les Sheets 992
gr a ve l Ca ll Bob or Rog er
eslt mat es Pho ne 992 527 8
RE ADY MI X CON CR ET E de
and tns tallat ton e lect rtcal
252 4
Je ffer s day phone 992 7089
4 2 3tp P RI VATE meettng room for
livered rtgh t to your pro1ec t
wat
e
r
pum
p
repa
tr
roof
mg
4 4 3tc
n tgh t phon e 992 3525 or 992
Fas-t
and
easv
Free
an y organ zat ,on phon e 992
root
and
house
pa
nt
tng
5232
397 5
es ttm &amp;t es Phon e 992 32 8&gt;4
genera
l
re
pa
ir
Reasona
ble
REMODE LIN G
p lu mbt ng
3 11 tf c TWO He re fo r d het ters to
2 11 tfc
Goeg lem Re ady M tx Co
rat es fr ee est tma t es 15 yr
he attng a nd a ll types of - - - - - - - - - - - - - -fr
eshe
n
soon
P
ho
ne
843
2353
Mtddlepor t Ohto
eJC.pe rt ence Ca ll Ch arl es
gene r al
repatr
Work
4 d ] tC
I"'
6 30 tfc
S ncla r 985 412 1 or 992 222 1
guar a nt ee d 20 years ex fR A ILER SP ACE l!.a mt l~
4 4 12t c ---~--------- pe n ence Phone 99 2 '1 409
nort h of Me tgs Htgh Sch oo l on
SEW ING MAC HINE Repairs
FO RD Tra c tor wdh s tde
old Rt 33 Phon e 992 29.41
3 11 tic
ser vte e a ll makes 992228.4
mower r un s good and good
1 23 tic
Th e Fabrtc Shop , Pomeroy
rubb er 5950 985 3594
ciOME
Im pro ve m e nt and
P A.RT TI ME stoc k clerk or DUPLEx - 2j8·-;-- waTnuiS t
Authorized Stn ger Sales and
Repa tr Se rvt ce - r- Anythtn g
3 30 7t p
ca rr y out boy Can wor k ful l
Service We sh arpen Scissor s
Mtddleport Ohto J=lhon e 992
fr xed a round the home from
Itme after sc hool tS out Have
2780 or 992 3432
TWO 12 tn plows 3 pt htf ch
roof to case m e n f ~ You w!ll
3 29 lie
own tran sporta tiOn Call 949
S185 Also 2 14 m p low s J pt
ltke our wor k and r stes
2 19 tfc
4935
Ph one 742 5081
h tch 5200 Phon e 985 3594
4 .4 3tp -•
330
7t
p
12 29tf c DO ZE R wo rk land cleartng by
COU NTRY Mo bile Home&lt;~ Park
the ac re hourl y or contrac t
BABY SITTI NG tn Rutland and
R t 33 ten m ties north of
Farm po nds road s e tc
ELWOOD
BO
WE
RS
REP
AI
R
Lan gsvd le a rea al so ptano
Pomeroy Large lots w•th.
Large
do ze r a nd operat or
- Sweepers toa ste r s rr on s
lessons Phone 742 5734 Rt 1
concre te patros st dewa lks
NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom
Wtfh o ve r 20 yea r s ex
a ll s ma ll appltan ces Lawn
Langsvt ll e Oh to
runners and off s treet
per.ence Pullins E xcavat ing
ho use w1th sho wer bath
mowe rs next to Sta te Htgh
.4 4 3fp
parktn g PDone 992 747 9
Pomeroy Oh to Pho ne 992
Porches and ga rage wtth level
wa y Garage on Route 7
12 31 ft c
2478
Ph one 985 3825
lot $4500 00
SUMM ER e mp loy ment for Oh to
12 19 tfc
3 11 26tc
Un1ve rst ty sentor mechan1cel FA RM house 6 rooms moder n
e ngtnee r tn g s t ude nt Wtl l
RACINE - Mode rn 3 bedroom
c o n v e nr en ces
ga r d e n
wo r k wee ken ds a n d Sh tf t
C B RAD FO ~O Auc t tonee r
0 &amp; D TRE E Trtm mmg 20
garag&amp;
and
ba
rn
on
Tann~r s
home
Large ba th Nat gas
POMEROY
NICe
older
wor k Call (6 14) 98 5 4251 be
Com ple te Se r v tce
year s expe r.ence Insu red
Run Longs worth Hom estead
F A furna ce 7 large closets
hom e overlook tog nver:, 3 or
twee n hours of 3 30 and 10
Phone 9&lt;9 3821 or 949 3161
tre e estt ma tes Call 992 3057
off St Rt 12&lt;z~ Ra ctn e Oh to
w
tth
stora
ge
s
he
l
v
es
Dry
p m or we ek end s
4 B R basement lots of
Ractne Ohio
Coolvtlle, ( I ) 66 7 3041
RF D SlOO month If destr ed
4 4 Jtp
baseme nt garage w1th shop
Crltt B r~dford
storage b1g yard Ntce front
22 a cr es bottom land for
' 2 121p
5 1 ttc.
and la rg e lot
add itional S25 per month
&lt;
porch to watch the nver
EXPER IE NCE D apt
an d
Must furntsh r e fer e nc e s
mote l man ager a nd swt tc h
SI850000
Wrt te or call Cha r les A
NEW LISTING - 2 houses and
boa rd operator Phone 949
CA RPET mst alla tton Sl 25 per
Dob
b
tn
17
Ar
ltng
ton
Std
a tra der One house ts rented
333.4 or cont act Mrs Shtr ley
ya rd Call Rtc har d West
Pawtu c ke t Rhod e ls la n
DOUBLE LOT - about 4 m&lt;
Stevenson at 556 Laur el St
and 3 n1ce but ldtng lots Onl y
Phon e 843 266.Y
02860 or {dOl) 723 4747
from Pome roy water tap
Mtddl eport
4 3 JOt p
$9 500 00
4 4 12tc
4 .4 3tp
S5 000 00
30 ACRES - In lhe boon docks
2 BEDROOM furn isHed apt
on Shade R1v er $6 000
de pos tt requ red No pe ts
HIGH Sc hoo l stude nt wants
BE YOUR OWN BOSS wo r k aft e r sc hool an d
Phon e 949 38 11
Own th1s country grocery
BUSINESS - We have seve ra l
Tuppers Plains, 0.
weekend s Has own tra ns
4 4 6t p
All stoc k and equt pme nt
and locattons w1th butld tngs
portat ton W II do an yth tng
Call 99 2 7649 after 4 p m
HOU S ET RAI LER
a nd
1 Sl6,500 00
LET US DO IT! I
Work for yourself w1th no
bedroo m gar age a pa r tm ent
4 3 2tp
la yoffs 9
uttltfl es fur ntshed 2 m lles
RUTLAND - Brtck olde r
north of shopp ing plaza on
THE MITC HEL LS Patnt tng
WE HAVE NEARL Y 50
home large double lot 3 or 4
Co Free es t tm ates Patn t tng
State Rt 7 Call 446 4170 aft er
dr ywa ll &amp; pa per hangt ng 17
PROP E RTIES FOR SALE
3p m
BR lots of room Owner wtll
yr s ex perte nce Phone 7&lt;1 2
~ A 3tc
WHEN YOU REALLY WANT
tak
e
land
con
tract
3592
2 P&lt; Lovmg Room SUites,
IT SOLD, TRY TEAFORD AT
$ 1&lt; 000 00
.4 3 2tp 3 R M furn, shed apt ut tltt tes
beautiful
"Scotchgard"
992 3325
p a td 356 North .4t h s t ,
floral
maleroals$198 00
GRA DU ATEofOhto In stitute of
RUTLAND AREA - Be the
Mtddleport
Technolog y looking for 10b n
Herculon
or
vmyl
Recliners,
3 '30 6lc
first to live 1n th1s all e lec 3
the capac1t y of Etectronte s
Reg
S69
95-Now
S49
95
BR full ba sement carport
E ngm eertn g
Tec hn tc tan
"3 Grace5" or "4 Cupids "
F lex tbl e hour s
Res um e
ut &lt;loly bld9
on 10 a of
Table lamps, cho1ce of gold
a va tlabl e Phon e (61 4) J78
wooded land Owner wtl l
Yard
6178
or
whole. $17 50 ea or U4 set
take land contract
4 3 2tp MO DE RN ste reo rad tQ am tm
RUBBER BACK
30" foam Bunk Mat
separat e control s &lt;1 speake r •
We have hundr eds of carpet
tresses
S17
307 Sprtng Avenue
w ILL DO la wn mowe r and ca r
s o un d sys t e m
Ba la n ce
valu es Your 10b can be
5
RM
HOUSE
b
ath
2
re pa trr--at my home Rout e
' 103 58 or te rm s Call 992 3965
Good
selection
Mexican
Pomeroy
992-2298
complet ed tn 1 to 2 weeks No
bedrooms gas hea t w tth lot
6.8 1 Wes t 1 mil e off Rt 33
3 31 tfc
Imports Bu I Horns
long wa tt mg pe[tod Our
Efft e Busk1rk 550 South Thtr d
CONTACT
Char les Lyons pho ne 992
A\le nue Mtdd leport
tns
tall
er
has
28
year
s
ex
Hangmg
Flower Pots S4,
1120
Lots Pauley
4
3
3tp
15
FT
F
IBERGLASS
bo
a
t
50
per
lence
Ex
p
e
r
t
tn
Handpamted
vases SB ,
&lt;1 3 2tp
Branch Manager
h p Mercur y moto r tr a der
s tallatt on You II !• ke what
---------- -~ - - statues
Sl2
-----~---- ..... and skung equ tpm e nt
Ex
you ge t
LOOK ING FO R m eat c ult ers
USED GOODS:
ce ll e r.~t cond •!ton S900 Pho ne
10b Ove r 4 yrs ex pert ence tn
BUY
NOW
&amp;
SAVE
Low
low
d.!ys 992 2689 or eve nmg s 992 5 ROOM house wt th bat h 2
R1dong Lawn Mowers $150 up
CALL
742
4211
loca l sto res m eat shop th e
do
wn
pa
yments
a
pet
tn
2941
bedroom s, ful l ba sement hot
last 2 as 1ourn ey man m eat
Several Dmmg Rm SUites,
te res t 30 yr f nanc mg on ne w
wa te r heat wa ll to wa ll
TALK TO WENDELL
4 1 6tc
c utle r Ph one 992 3401
hom es tn 3 Mergs County
_ ____ - - - - - ca rpet upsta1rs down New
oncludong a 6 P&lt; Duncan
GRATE,
locattons or BUILD on you r
' 3 2tp 197 2 K A ~ AS A K I m o to r c ycl ~
Phyfe
ch a tn lmk fence a ll aroun d
CARPET
CONSULTANT
lot Phone 992 5976 or 992 5844
750 cc '1 200 m il es ltke new
Furnts h or un furnt Shed 500
J 13 tic
cond 1t 1on Slssy bar and 4 Pearl St Phon e 99 2 2551
"At Caution L1ght, Rt 7H
lug gage rack 2 helm ets mu st •
4 4 3fp
se ll Phone 985 413 1
; -sED RooM- h-~----Tuppers Pla1ns, Ohio
197 3 CJ5 1ee p 14 000 m tles Ltke
4 1 5t c
ome ne w Phone 667-3158
new $3 000 Phon e 949 5182
foundahon r oofmg cem ent
OPEN WED
porches thermo pane wln
4 3 3tc
742
4211
Rutland
CA P wedg es and fratl e r
dows storm doors natural
1972 PL Y Ouster 318- 2 - bl
wedg es Anv a mou nt Phone
ga s furnace wh tte alumtnum
742 37.43
autom al tc new t.res and
s td tng bla ck s hutters kt tch en
4 1 6tc
cabtn ets paneltng ce tlm g
shocks 51 560 or ta ke ov er
pa yme nt s Call 992 3682 after
- - ---- -·
ttle fl oors r ef m1shed low
5 p m
heatmg b tl! n tce locat ion cit y
STA NL EY Prod UCIS fo r sa le
water Phone 98 5 4102
4 I Sic
Phone 742 3762
MAIN
4 4 26tc
3 9 261 c
POME
l9H MON TE C-ar lo 4 000 mil es
a ll power a tr AM s tereo USED cemeni and c mde r block BEAUTI FUL new hom e on
tape Call 992 7036 after 5 p m
for sa le Pho ne 1A2 3743
lake 3 bedrooms, bath &amp; 2
3 5 tfc
4 1 6tc
carret lng drapes btg de n
.-;
We are in great need of
Cal 992 3•93
1974 CUT LA~ S upre me Am PO TAT OE S brmg own con
3 2.4 tfc
properlles to
sell.
Fm tap e ac supe r sport
to!l•ner S4 for 100 tb Also 1966
wh ee ls exc ell ent con dtt ton
Ford van bus for sal e or trflde
Stnke while the 1ron 15
•
Phone 997 9981
for mo to rcycle Phone 985 6 ROOAII ho use W1lh ba th, 3
hot - Sell Today wh1le
.d 2 3tc
bedroom full bas e ment gas
3849
~·.
heat h w fl oor wal l to wall
4 1 6tc
we have Cash Buyers
~·
. ........... ,"-... ~til
1969 FORO One to n dual wheel
car pet Close to 5Chool in
Air fJUIIC)fdei • F • 50 000 m des one owner cab 197 1 6"50 TRI UMPH
MI'fl~
1-illo-oj-M
.
.
I
d..,.,..
Pomeroy
Phone
992
3097
All
Cash
for
Your
good
......lf\ai.. IIOIIII'OIIoh ..
tn e~~: t r a good cond tlton for
3 9 52t c
cond lf •on Phone 99 2 7054 or
poro;Ntn ..-.ol drll!ll -nh
Property _
mode l Phon e 742 3232
_....., c...., llr l• .. •lonc
99? 5985
co•ted
11&lt;1el qb "411 ,. 111
4 2 4tc
Now 3 bedroom
l01f11&gt;~- fl1'tl lr1otl
o1 1 6tc MASO N
home wtth a tta ched garag e
Mtd 20s good locat to n Phon-e
1967 FO RD Galaxte 500 A I 1973 HONDA motor ~vc l e for
Buyers See Us For Your
sa le Phon e 7.4 2 &lt;129.4
(J04 1 77 3 5.468
sha pe SA 75 Phone 992 /84)
.d I 51 c
Needs &lt;n Real Estate
4 1 6tc
1 J Jtc

o.

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

- ------

-------

----

NEIGLER
BUILDERS SUPPLY

OF
QUALITY

-

HALL'S SALVAGE

p.J
Home Maintenance

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1974 CHEV RDLET IMPALA
54195
• door only 10 AOO m1les Fully equ&lt;pped ln t ludmg air
dark red A REAL CREAM PUFF
1974 CHEVELLE MALIBU
53095
GM DtviSion car air condtf10n1ng 350 V 8 power steering
dark grey ftnt s h radto
1973 PLYMOUTH STA WAGON
52795
Suburban 3 seat V 8 eng1ne, automatic t rans mt sston
powe r st eer ing power brakes factory atr condtttomng
luggag e rac k green fm1sh radto, like ne w wh •te wa ll
t ires

POM!~9!v~~!9.~. CO. ®
POMEROY. OHIO

We Specialize ln

'Working'
reviewed

Building Hom es

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

Real Estate For Sale

j

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

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

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

Strout Realty

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

-- ----~ ~----- ----,_

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

I&lt;URL'S
BARGJ\IN
CENTER

•

Carpeting
501 NYLON

SPRING
SPECIALS

4 9!~are

For Sale

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

Auto Sales

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

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

HELP· HELP

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

'

~

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

CALL 992-2259

TEN YEARS OLD - Mr
and Mn. Eugene Johnston,
Salem Center, entertained
Monday with a party In
observanee of thf lOth birthday annivenary of their son,
Keith. Games were played
with prizes being won by
Curt Smith, R""ky Johnson,
Timmy Spires and Jennifer
Jeues. Others attending
were Chuckle McElroy ,
Sblrley McDonald, Mrs.
Melva Eblln, Kimberly and
Billy Joe, Mn. Sharon Smith
and Dav ey, Mrs . Joyc
Johnston and Date and Mrs.
Beverly Spires. Cake, ice
cream and Kool-Aid were
served Keith's birthday Is
today

Child 's letter
heard by group
LETART FALLS - At the
Wednesday mght m eeting of
the Le tart Falls Umted
Methodl8t Women at the home
of Mrs John Htll, a compasswn
letler from a small H1ndu chUd
sponsored by the group was
read
In her letler , tht child gave a
partial list of her daily actiVihes at the mission A
discussion on the needs of
horne and fore1gq miss1ons was
held by the UMW Special
prayer was gtven for Mr and
Mrs H B Powell, Valrtco,
Fla , who recently lost their
only child, Don The fam1ly
formerly resided in Metgs
County and Mrs Powell was a
member of the Letart Falls

Studs Terkel s latest book,
"Working," was revtewed by
Mrs James Titus, Sr , at the
Wednesday afternoon meetmg
of the Mtddleport Literary Club
-at the hom e of Dr Kathryn
Phtlson.
In her revtew, Mrs T1tus
described the book as Turkel 's
most
ambitious,
most
revealing and ,most tmportant
book, one on wh1ch he spent
three years talkmg to people m
a wtde vartety of occupations
Mrs Tt tus m her rev1ew satd
that Turkel reveals m the book
more about the working hves of
people than those most
closely related to hem
He potnts to the prtde ,
hum1hat1on, boredom, excttement, whom they hate,
whom they respect, and how
they get through the day m hiS
book
The revtewer descrtbed the

~

1
full ~

Bombay yellow ca bnole t e lk gra tn' vmyl roof
power equtp 50 50 dtvtded front seat 6 way power ~
both S1des T&amp;T whee l full ster eo ~ Crut se Control
recllntng seat back R S C C at r ma ny other ex tras
3 700 m tles Mr Ka rr s personal ca r
}

OEPINITELY

L______.J.AY.J___ ~___.J

WIU BE

~

75 Chev. Capnce 4 door ..................... 5595
1

Sold ne w for ove r $6700 Full power
I 500 moles New Ced ol lac trade

a &amp;r

st ereo V roof

73 Olds Cut. S. Cpe., auto., P.S., SS wheels 309'
73 Olds 98 HT Sed., v-roof, pow., air.........'4395
73 Cougar XR7, v-roof, a1r, power ....... ..... '3895
1

73 Vega Hatchback, 4 sp., radio _.......... '2195
73 Dodge Pol. Cus. 4 Dr. Hl, pow., air ... 2895
73 Olds Cut. Sup. HT Cpe., power, a1r...... '2895
1

72 .Oids 98 HT Sed., v-roof power, atr .. ..... !2895
72 -Oids 88, 4 DR, Sedan, v-roof, air ... .. ....'2695
72 Olds 98 HT Sed., v-roof, atr.............. '3295
72 Olds Toronado Cpe., V-roof, pow., a1r .... '309~
72 Chev. Imp Cpe., V.S auto., P.S......... . 12195
72 Pontiac Gat HT Gpe., power, air ........ 12695
72 Chev. Nova Cpe, 6 At., P.S............... '2195
71 Ford Wagon, full power, air.............. .'1895
71 Chev. Cap. H.T. Sed., v-roof, atr ........... '1995
70 Maverick 2 Dr., 6, auto.................. '1195
1

70 Olds 98 Hoi. Sed .. power, air............ 1495
69 Ford LTD HT. Cpe., V roof, air ........... '995
69 Buick LaSabre 4 dr., v-roof, air............'795
68 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille, v.roof, leath,er int. '495
68 Pontiac Bonneville H.T. Sedar., power, atr '595
66 Pontiac Cat 4 Dr., V8, auto, P.S. (as is) 1300

71 DATSUN PICKUP
4 c yl , 4 s pd .
71 FORD CUSTOM PICKUP
302 s td , long Wide bed

THE_DIFFERENCE

I

~

•

FORD RANGER XL T
.V 8, auto , P.S , long w1de bed

65 FORD '14 TON PICKUP
4 s pd w1th topper

LESS

75 MERCURY COMEL ............... 13595

•

1973 FORD PINTO 2 dr sedan..J269s
Auto trans

One ca r e ful local own er

1973 FORD

MAVERICK ~........... }2495

2 Dr

Seda n 302 V 8 en gm e au t o
power s t een n g One loc al own e r

Truth 'Seekers
have meeting
A -bike hike und hayride was
planned for the Aprtl 15

tran s ,

1972 FORD LID 4 dr................ ~2395
Ha r dtop, d a rk green m e t a lli c, ltke ne w , tow
mil eag e, a 1r cond &amp; full e qu1pment Ju st
a rn ved One ca r e ful loca l o wn e r w e s old ne w

cy l a uto 2 Dr 1 100 m tles ba lance of wa rranty good

74 FORD MAVERICK ....-...-........ 12B95
O'

1974 PINTO STA. WAGON. -....~~. 12795
Ch o tce o f t hree m 1le ages

o n e w olh a 1r -

t w o low

Extr a n1 ce fo r mo d e l.

P S, P

B ,

4 Dr H T fac a1r P S P B vtny l roof

73 CHEV. NOVA SS .. -................ $2495
2 Dr

(2) 75 Oldsmobile
I
I Cutlass Supreme Sedans
~ Fullyequ1pped cars w1th 60 40 seat, •AM FM I
i rad1o, steel radial l1res factory a1r 1
I

1

!

$AVE

$AVE

i

t_.._._.._.._.._.._._.._.._.._.._.._.._.._.._,_.._..J

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
" You'll LlkeOurQualttyWay
of Domg Busmess"
992-5342
GMCFINANCING
POMEROY
Open Ev'!lDI!l!ISUntil6· 00-- Til5p m. Sat .
1

PS

73 PONTIAC LeMANS ................$3295
73 FORD GALAXIE 500 ............ _..'2595
2 Dr H T fac atr P S P B, v my t roof

Aut o tra n s. p owe r s t ee rmg &amp; brakes, r a dto
L1 ke n ew con d 1t1 o n Chrome &amp; s tnpes

Im pa la 2 Dr H T V 8 P S P B a uto v1nyl rool

196B CHEV. VB IMPALA ............. 1B95
2 Dr Hardtop , lt ke n ew fm1 sh. a uto t rans
power st ee nn g

SEE: FRED BLAETINAR, DARRELL DODRill
OR DAN THOMPSON

DAN THOMPSON FORD
OPEN EVES. TIL! 00, THURS SAT Tits 00

72 OLDS CUTLASS .....................12295
2 Dr H T , a uto

Auxiliary stages hunt
T he
Oh 1 e
T oll ns h1 p
Auxt h a ry staged a n Easter egg
hunt Saturday at the fire house
Gam es wer e p layed a nd
se ve r a l doo r priZes we r e
a wa rded Wmne rs were P aula
Cow dry , Ke nn y R oc kh ol d ,
Mtke Put na m , Keym Gn ggs,
Lmda Barnabus , Ke1 th Putna m , S us 1e K1mes , Cathy
Rock ho ld, Sha n n on Mood1 s
paugH, Pa t Long, Cmdy Hams
!'!like Gn ggs Dottt Kmsley,
Kei th Harns, Des Durst, Stbyl
F oster , Todd Mo(xbspaugh a nd
R1ch1e Van Meter

Refres hments we re ser ved
a nd each ch1ld rece tved candy
a nd colored eggs to take home
Apprec1a t10 n t o lhose who
coninbuted to the prOJect has
bee n extended by the a ux1hary

PS

P B

72 FORD COUNTRY SQ............... 11B95
4 Dr Wagon

72 FORD PINTO ....................... 11595
4 cyl

4 s p r actng strtpes w mag wheels

72 FORD PINT0 ........................11595
4 cyl

461 S. Thlfd St.

auto vmyl roof

70 A.M. GREMLIN ....... :.............. 1B95
6 cyl

3 sp

67 CADILLAC ...... -.......................SB95
Fleetwood Brougha m 4 Dr

GOOD SELECTION OF CHEAPER CARS
' ~
See Ray R1ggs or Roger Riebel

RIGGS USED CARS
985-4100
Located on St . Rt.

7

The 31st anmversary of the
a ux1ltary of the Middleport
F tre
De pa r tm en t
wa s
l'ele brated Tuesday evemng
wtth a dmner pa rty at Oscar s
m Galhpohs
All€ndmg were Mrs Pat ty
Kloes, Mrs Ka then ne Me tzer,
Mrs P hy ihs Baker, Mrs Kate
Bachner, Mrs 0 •rol Wolfe ,
Mrs Be lly Ohhnger , Mrs Sue
Imbode n, Mrs Donna B) er
and Mrs Besste Dars t
A bnef busmess meetmg was
held wtth plans bemg m ade for
a wh1 te elephant ~ale and a
combmat ton s1ient a uctwn at
the next mee ting The new
offteers "til be hos tesses then
Th ey are
Mr s
Baker ,
president , Mrs Byer, v1ce
pres1de nl , Mr s Imbode n,

Darst,

Followers
•
organtze
An or gamza bonal m eetmg

ATTEND CONVENTION - Students attendmg the SNAO conventiOn were seated , I r
Debbie Bruley and Cathy Glassco, standmg, Suste Budd , Peggy Caudill, Cec1le Ha m s, Sue
Sheets, Joan Little, GUda Jones, Karen Smith and Nanc y Tippens

students
•
attend Conventt.on
and lhe nurses were honored D , Dean of th!YFnances Payne
1
for havmg 100 pe t membership BoHon 1"«c~Olll
Nurs mg a l
m th e SNAO The ih1rd Ca se W e~te rn Um vers1ly,
dt st m ctwn went to Cath y Capta m ~dtnclB A Kennedy,
Glassco, who was elec ted state USA F Nursm g Corps and
secretary of the or gamzallon Milton Dudl ey, m s ura nce
re presentative fo r the Norfor lhe year 1975-76
The featured speake:s at the lhea s te r n Ohio 0 N A , who
CjJIIVenllon we re Dr Fay B1les, spoke on '4gably-Lia bthty 1"
lhe ftrst and only woman to
St uden t s a tt e n d m g t he
hold a v1ce presidency at a conve ntion m Cleveland from
pubhc umverstty ( Kent Slate), lhe Holzer Medical Center
J" nne tta Mac Ph81l , R N , Ph School of Nutsmg were Debbie

ot

u

0.

CAMBRIDGE , Mass (UP!) ' blooded, llke reptiles Some
- Eagles and turkeys may be bones contamed blood vessels
descendants of dinosaurs , ac- and regi ster ed a marked
cording to a patr oil sc1enllsts change accordmg to climatic
who feel the beasts never seasons
•
r eally beca m e extinct
The theory of Bakker and
An article m thiS month's Ostrom may rurne the feath ers
Sc1entiftc Amencan outlines of other scientists, smce they
the d1110saurs-mto-btrds theory want to have btrds reclassified
of Robert T Bakker, of Har.. mto the dinosaur fimny
vard 's Soc1ety of F ellows, and
Dr Nicholas Holten , curator
J ohn H Ostrom of Yale.
ofamphtblanandreptUefossils
They say the btg dmosaurs a t the Srmthsoman Institute,
diedout because they were " h&gt;t cla uns the Bakker .{)strom eV!by a n e nvtronmental zap" of dence 1s mconclus1 ve on
changmg condttions But while several pomts
the TyramosaurllS Rex btt the
preh1stonc dust 65 mtlhon
years ago, a lot of the little
dinos'aurs a nd matrunals llved
on, evolvmg over the centurtes
mto today's btrds
Some of the smaller dinosaurs were warm.blooded and
we1ghed as hUle. as 11 pounds
Bakker and Ostrom satd some
had d eveloped a pnnuli'lle type
of feathers , perha ps more for
protection from the cold than
for flymg However, some
rearly creatures did manage to

LARRY'S

MOBILE HOME
SALES, INC.

Wa llace Brad fo r d Tue sday
evemng
E lecte d preside n t was
Wall ace
Bradford ,
vtce
p res tde n t ,
Mrs
Jam es

~:~:~~~· M~~d Le~~r~~r
Plans were made to have class
m ee tmgs on the thtrd Tuesday
o{ 1each month With the next
'm ee ling m the church soc1ai
r oom s wtth Mrs Ha zelton and
Mrs Sm1 th as hoslesses

NOW
OPEN
.Sunday
1 -• 6 pm

By - or gbde -on fea therless

tist

for th e Fa1thf ul Fol19wers ~) ~~~ "'''
1
Class of the Hemlock 'dr~~e
~ ,~1en S c1a un ana ys1s
Chmllan Churc h was oold a l of foSSils r e veals evtdence not
the home of Mr ahd Mrs
a ll dmos aurs we re cold-

,

&lt;:hester ,

Auxiliary ~Thank sg~vmg
. . D ~
ay ~.east
celebrates JUSt
. a wee ex-dinosaur
.

secretar y

Thtrleen students from the
Holzer Medical Center School
of Nursmg , Galltpolis, attended
lhe 1975 conventiOn of the
Sludent NID'ses Association of
Ohio ( SNAO) whtch was held
d1D'tng Marc h m Cleveland
This year, Holzer's group
brought home three awards
from the- me.ewt g
The
siudents' Hillbilly "Jug " Band
won a trophy for their par h clpa llon m the llllenl contest ,

auto

72 CHEV. IMPALA ... ................ ..'1595

treasurer, and Mrs

'

P S Sharp

73 FORD MAVERICK .................. 12295

2 Dr

!

307 V 8 auto

1974 FORD PICKUP.-................ 13695

M1ddleport, Oh10

r--6RTv'ETfEoucA-iiONC:"AR's'-l

P S fact a tr

2 Dr Sports Coupe extra n tce

1972 FORD VB GRAN TORIN0 .. }2595
Sta W agon
AT

sma ll V 8 a uto

73 CHEV. ·IMPALA ..................... $2495

4 Dr

a s low

Phone 992 2196

35 New '7 5 Olds Ready For Delivel)

6

4 Dr

the1rwork hfe , but the common
factor mvoived m seenungly
different tasks From all of the
hves mvolved , "Working"
emerges as an extraordmary
m!$1C pteced together by a
mas ler craftsman, a mosa1c
whtch descrtbes Amertca as 1t
has never been seen before
Terkel at present lives In
Chtcago with his wife, Ida, and
a son, Paul He has a dally
radto program on WFMT·
Chicago which Is carrted on
numerous staltons throughout
the country.
Mrs
Dwight
Wallace
prestded at the meettng
openmg wtth the club collect,
Members responded to roll call
wtth comments on the
program.
Dr Phtlson asststed by her
SISler, Mrs Thereon Johnson,
served refreslunents

tJI)da

I

~

75 Cadillac Elderado Cpe.

71

book, "Workmg1 as more than
Just mdiv1dual accounts of

Mrs
Ernest
Shuler
pruented the program on
lprtng Mrs Harold Roush
tj!ad " Spring " and Mrs Bert
Danny Harrison presided at
gav~ a meditation _ the meellllll with Tammy
"Eternal Spring " Mrs. Blake giving the secretary's
Bell had a prayer Mrs report, and Linda Hysell the
Slni~er conducted a study of treasurer's report Refresh4 with thoee named and menta were served. Atleqding
Erma Wilson, Mrs Allee _•besides thoee named were
•~~~ and Mrs Inez 1J.!!1... ~vid Blake, John Blake,
ii:
pari
,. ••
Hysell, Glenn Brown ,
Mrs Hill wu allllaled 1n • S~e~cy Ltghtfoot, Bonnie
'aMIIna refreltunenta by ~~ts• Wa, Don Hysell, Mr. and
Mrs. Gladys Shields will Mrs Clifford Smith and
the May meeting
~adeUne Pamler

'

I

----·1

(No add1f1on s
unless a uthonzed
011 No Tr ade
Basis Tra de- m
Acce pted

11

meeting when the Truth
Seekers met Tuesday at the
home of Diana and Becky
Painter

I,JMW.

AS MU C H AS

REBATE

I

1. Complete Chassts Lube

• ·• 1 m o

Atr condtftonmg, plumbmg,

•aoo

WORJH

' -~~ft~~~

On the purchase of a

Blown
Insulation Serv1ces

HElL

-~-

...

COUPO N

'

$90000

VALUE

serv1ce

RATED

-

.

\

'

E«PERIENCED

sertes , of , money-savmg

ALUMINUM &amp;
'
VINYL SIDING

.

r-====---.

9 - The DaUy Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Fr1day, Apr 1l 4, 1975

l

Business s·ervices

"

IN DI AN J oe s Sport•n g Goods
bu y and se ll gun s am m o
ft shm g eq utpm ent an d after
April I we w il l have ft sh bai t
Stop by at 308 Pag e St
Mtd dleport Phone 992 3509
3' 2 30tc
MOTORCY C L E ~ for sale
1971
Su zuki TM 1100 dtrt btk e and
1973 Yam a SC 500 d trt btkePhone 985 3938
4 3 6tp

Wanted To Rent

Employment Wanted

•

-·

•

'

HOST GUESTS
E aster Sunday dmner gues ts
of Mr a nd Mrs Vtrg tl Roush,
Rt 3, Pom eroy, we re Mr and
Mrs Don Roush , Jeff and
Michael, Rt 3, Pomeroy, Mr
and Mrs Ronme P ooler , J11D
and SuSie , Middleport, Mr. and
Mrs Larry Roush and Jean
Anne, Wmterha ven, Fla , and
Mrs
J ea-. SUI;nmerheld,
Ches ler

I

PH. 992•Tr/7
POMEROY

See Our Special
Sale Ad In .
Sunday's ·
Newspaper

ov

'

n

~,
,
:' '
•,

"

·,
''

_.:
"'
,,. ,._..,.,.,;"""'dl

•• c
:~.

'
"

uc

"
'" '

-·
u

u

•' '

'
rl tt~

•

.

o•"
u'

'1

'T

_,., . ,

'

.

'

I

Batley, Suste Budd, Peggy
Caudtll , Calhy Glassco, Cectle
Harris, Ca th y Hoff, Gthla
Jones, J oan Little, Vtcki R1el,
Susan Sh el!l~, Jane t Slagle,
Karen S nu th a nd Na n c y
Tippens

.,

au to

OFFICE
t:30to12,2T05CCLOSE AT
NOON ON THURS. ) - EAST COURT ST.;

�.

.

'

'

)

.It-'l'aDally s.fttinel, Mlddlepi,ft.'Pameroy, 0 .. Frldlf, Aprllt, 1975

Nation's unemployed 'h its 8 ffiillion
WASHii'/GTON (UPI) Unemployment soared ·to 8.7
per cent in March; a.jiimp of 0.5
per cent that meanf nearly 8
million

Ainericans

Were

jobless, the government said
today.
Unemployment increased by
500,000 during March, and 3.1
million over last August, according to statistics released .
by the Labor Department. 'lbe ·
unemployment rate reached its
highest level since 1941.
The ·large increase was
expected after President Ford
predicted in San Diego 'lburs·
day there would be "some
discouraging unemployment
figures'" and Treasury secre' tary William E. Simon predicted joblessness will hit 9 per

Kaiser will

oppose change

in rate. system
CANDY SACKED - In conjunction with the "Spring
Fling" of the Big Bend Minstrel Association on Saturday.
April 12, at the Pomeroy Junjor High School, these members
of Preceptor Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, are sacking over 4,000
pieces of candy for their annual candy sale at the event. Well
over 200 prizes will be awarded in conjunction with the sale.

Mayor

B~ack

will run

HARTFORD , W. Va . Mayor Charles Black received
' the nod to seek reelec tion for
that position on the Citizens
Ticket against Bill Kimes who
will oppose hiin on the Peoples
Ticket in the town 's eJection
May 10.
The decision came Thursday
evening at the Hartford Grade
School when co mmunity
· leaders met to nominate slates
· · of candidates for both tickets . .
, While the Citizens Ticke l was

again~

Advance tickets for the musical at reduced prices can be
secured at the New York Clothing House, Swisher ~ Lohse
Pharmacy, Village Pharmacy and Dutton Drugs. Working
with the candy, llo r, are Shirley Custer, Norma Amsbary,
Theresa Swatzel and Mary Pickens.
. ., .................. .... ..........

.. . ... ..... . . . ..

OAKLAND, Calif. (UP!) An Ohio Power Co. application
lo -end the cost-plus contract
onder which the utility supplies
power to Kaiser Aluminwn's
Ravenswood, W.Va., plant, will
be opposed by the aluminum
firm, Kaiser officials an-

f7\r;·;;::~:·:·-r;~~;;;r;1;it -:~~i~s~i~:b~~t~~:;

~l ~

J ' ;:~

completEd last night, it was not
on til this morning that a full
Commission of Ohio for perroster of candidates, with the
mission to deliver power to the
exception for recorder, was
By United Press Iniernational
plan under a tariff schedule
filed for the Peoples Ticket.
PHNOM PENH -GOVERNMENT FORCES gave up three instead.
·
At the convention the only positions near Phnom Penh under heavy attack today and moved
Kaiser Alwninom officials
two candidates nominated for in reinforcements by helicopter to plug holes in the besieged said Ohio Power's application
the Peoples Ticket were Kimes city's defense tine . In Bali , Indonesia, Cambodian Prime was 'without merit." They
and Tommy O'Bryan for a Minister Long Borel said ther~ would be a bloodbioth if the United added that, if apProved by the
States decided to cut off all aid.
council seat.
PUCO, power costs for operat"It would be a tragedy for the civilian population," he said. ing the Ravenswood facility
The loll sla te of candidates
. •"The other side continues to have unlimited aid from the would increase further over the
for the Citizens Ticket includes
Charles Black, mayor; Gary Communist side. If aid is brutally col off we'll be very much substantial power cost in·
Fields, recorder; Rupert affected. We do not lack determination, bot we need material aid creases already incurred the
Howard , Buddy Gibbs, and urgently," 'lbe Cambodian leader accompanied President Lon past several years.
Donald Fields, all seeking Nol on flight to exile earlier this week. Borel said he would
reelection to council and Kenny return to Phnom Penh in a few days to head tbe government.
Greene and Ray Rietmire ,
runr.!ng for the first lime for
THREE-YEAR.OLD NICHOLAS TODAVCH!CK WOKE up
council.
(Con tinued from page 1)
Besides Kimes ronn.ing for early Thursday and left his suburban Chicago home to play in the Rio Grande; Gerald, · Holt,
mayor,
the councilmen snowdrifts, unbeknownst lo his parents. Two hours later, the
Mi ch. , and Ronald, (:&gt;allipolis,
nominated to run on the child's body was found in the snow, only three feet from the and three sisters, Mrs. Edna
Peoples Ticket include Howard house. The Todavchick boy, who died of exposure, was one of 58
Niday, Mrs . Mary Bailey and
Myers, Gary Gibbs, Virginia persons killed in a tumultuous spring storm that raged from Iowa Miss Blanche Canaday, all of
Roush , Donald Justice and lo New,,t!li:}~nd Wednesday night and Thursday .
Forty-five of those killed were victims of tbe Chicago Gallipolis.
Tom O'Bryan.
Also surviving are 12 grandsnowstorm. Most suffered heart attacks trying 1o free cars from
children,
nine of whom reside
drifts that closed major expressways and shut down the world's
in
California.
Three are local,
'· busiest airport, O'Hare International, for more than 24 hours.
LODGE TO MEET
The Todavchick boy's father was working on an emerg~ncy . and include Jennifer Chapman,
White Rose Lodge will meet snow-removal crew at O'Hare when his son crawled fufu the now attending Marietta
College; · Mitchell Chapman ,
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m . at the snow and died of exposure.
and Anna Margaret Chapman,
•
American Legion Hall, Mid·
CLEVELAND - SAUDI ARABIAN KING KHAUD, who Pomeroy . Ther~ is one greatdleport.
l
,
was reported in excellent health by his American doclors, is a grandchild in California.
will
be
at
2
Funeral
ser.vices
man with a sense of humor and great humility. Dr. Donald B. ..
Sunday
at
the
Ewing
p.m.
Effler, head of the department of cardiovascular disease and
~EVIVALSET
cardiac laboratory at Cleveland Clinic, and his colleague Dr . Funeral Home where friends
RUTLAND- A revival will Mehdi RaU!vi, cardiologist, returned Wednesda)' from a visit may call after 1 p.m. Saturday.
Honorary pallbearers inbegin Sunday, April 6 at the with their former patient King Khalid.
Rutland Freewill Baptis t
Dr. Effler operated on Khalid in January 1972 here to repair clude Eugene Fisher·, Bob
Church. The Rev , Walter scar tissue that resulted from a massive heart attack in May Hoeflich, Aaron Kelton , Errol!
Patterson of Mason, W. Va. 1970. Since then, Khalid, 62, has inade two routine trips to the Conroy, Dr. R. E. Boice, Dr.
Harold Brown, .Bennett Rice,
will be the evangelist. Special clinic for examinations.
.·1
singing is sc heduled for each
"Khalid is a man with an obvious sense of hwnor," Effler Mansfield; Elbert F. Robinson,
night. The . pastor, the Rev. said. "Four days after surgery at the clinic, I was making my Maynard Karns, Columbus;
Roger Turner, and the church , Sunday rounds and found Knalid standing at the foot of the bed. I Gerald Shuster and A. R.
invites the public .
raised my right hand and said 'peace.' Khatid, who speaks no Knight .
English, raised his right hand and said, 'Heil, Hitler.' "

·

1

a

CROW'S
STEAK
HOUSE

•

Home of
,the Fobulous

fomBoy ·
•

•

SANDWICH
Order By Phone
And Toj&lt;e Em Home

992-5432

Delmar A.

COLUMBUS - HOUSE SPEAKER VERNAL G. RIFFE Jr. ,
D-New Boston, today named Rep. Thomas J . Carney, !)..Youngs- ·
town, as chairman of a joint legislative committee assigned to
look into the structure, operations and rate-making procedures
of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio. 'lbe 16-rnember
Hoose-Senat.e ,committee, established by the General Assembly
last month, is to study rising energy costs and declining soppties,
making recommendations by Oct . 15.
Sen. Robert E. O'Shaughnessy, D-Colwnbus, already has
been named vice chairman of the panel. Carney, the Democratic
whip in . the House, also is a member of the Ohio Energy
Emergency Commission.
Riffe also named Democratic Reps. Patril:k A. Sweeney of
Cleveland, C. J . McLin of Dayton, William E. Hinig of New
Philadelphia and John P. Wargo of Lisbon to the PUCO study
corninittee. He said Republican House members would be named
later.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight thru Sunday

· April4-l -6

Ever get that trapped
feeling? Bills! Bills!
A convenient loan from us .
gets your feet back on the grou~d.

All Accounts Insured to $40,000.00 by the
Federal 'De!'osit Insurance CorporatioiJ..

'tuwldoorneiuiJbor.

.·-.

''

•

Margaret

~itchell's

GONE WITH THE WIND
(Technicolor)

Rateq " PG"
ShoW Starts 7:.00 p.m.

SEVERAL FINED
[n. Pomeroy Mayor's court
Doug Borns, Eomeroy, was
fined $23 and costs for
disturbing the peace and $5.and
costs
for
intoxication;
Theodore West, Albany, $125
and costs , driving while in·
toxicated ; Mark ·Haley ,
Pomeroy, U5 an,d costs,
. assault; Coy Nitz, Pomeroy, $5
and costs, infoxication ;
Timothy Roush, Pomeroy
forfeited a $250 bond for
driving while intoxicated.

Some segments of -the February 1o 18.1 per cent in
popolatiM&gt; were hit harder March and the rate. for
manufacturing_ workers· r~
than others.
for
the 1oo, consecutive month
The jobless rate for · blue
.tD
11.4
per cent.
. .
collar workers· rose from 10.9
·
One
.out
of
every
five
teenper cent ·in. February lo a
record 12.5 per cent in March. agers was out of worl\, and the
'lbe unemployment rate for jobless rate for n8nwhlte
HOSPITAL NEWS construction workers· rose workers was 14.2 per cent. 'lbe
sharply from 15.9 per cent in .rate for all adult men was 6.8
Veterans Memorial Hospital
percent, and it was 5.8 per cent
Admissions - Alice Dodson,
for
heads of households.
Long Bot.tom; Stephen Tracy,
The
goveriJillent dsta on the
Pomeroy; Sally Litchfield,
job .situation also included
New Haven ; · Robert Thomp(Continued from page 1)
information
about so-called
son,
Pomeroy;
Ho sea
United States not only did hidden unemployment.
McGraw, Lelart, W.Va .; Dora • nothing to belp but contributed
Counted in this category ar.e
Hamm, Minersville .
to it by allowing the Commu· persons working part-time and .
Discharges - Marguerite nlsts to infiltrate here.
·
those persons so discouraged
Peery, Clarence Might, Violet
"The loss of supPort has they no longer are looking for
McDonald ,- Nancy Deem .
caused a loss of morale. The
jobs.
Unit~ States hBB not been
. PLEASANT VALLEY
The number of persons
replacing military supplies and working part-time but seeking
DISCH ARG I;:S - David
equipment on a. one-for·~me full-time jobS in March was 3.9
Sullivan, Leon';- Mrs . A.
basis as agreed in the Paris million. The nmnber of dis·
Galford, Hamlin ; Elij'i Conley;
agreement.
Point Pleasant; Lucille
cooraged workers was · 1.1
"We saw 500,000 American million, the highest recorded
Moreland, Point Pleasant; ,
soldiers go to war with $30 . since the government began
Mrs. Kc n·te th Tu1ly , Racine ;
billion a year. We have a collecting data in this category
Clarence Meaige, Gallipolis
Ferry; Mrs . Kenneth Williams, million soldiers but much less in '1967.
Gallipolis ; Clarence Herdman , money. We now need to see
"A large proportion of the
Gallipolis ; Mrs. Cleo Holley, whether America will meet its discouraged; are younger or
commitments to Sooth Viet- older workers, women arul
Point Plea san l; Mrs. Michael
.
nam."
Hysell, son, Warren, Ohio;
blacks-groups who ex"We did . not know what perience the greatest difficulty
Mrs. James Bragg and 'son,
American.aid would be coming in finding jobs," the depart_Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Vernon
Miller
and
daughter , in the next two or three years. ment said.
~
Gallipolis ; Mrs. James . How could we not be influenced
by that fact? How could we
Stewart, West Columbua; Mrs .
trust
the Americans?
Floyd Siders, and son, Poin t
"I
hope the people of.
P,Jeasan t; Carl ton Pierce,
America and· the American
NOW YOU KNOW
Letart; Mrs. John Pauley and
The
Chicago sewage system
daughter , Maso n; Christ Congress will :ee our need and
the consequences of the actions was pot into operation after
Runyon, Robertsburg; Ronald
over the last two years. Help us engineers reversed the flow of
While , Chesh.ire; Barbara
more effectively to protect our the Chicago River.
Gibson, Mason; Mrs. Homer
nation."
Blessin g,
Clifton;
Mr s.
Kenn~th Romine, Rutland;
Ellen Perry, Point Pleasant;
(Continued from page 1)
Mrs. Jesse McClure , Leon;
Mrs. A. W. McKinney, Point the dead and living.
The children were from American-run orphanages in Saigon
Pleasant.
BIRTHS - April ~. a and were leaving Vietnam legally for their foster families in the
daughter to Mr . . and Mrs. United States. The survivors were flown lo the 7th Day--Adventist
·
Marvin Bryant, Gallipolis.
· Hospital just outside the gates ofT an Son Nhut.
cent by summer.
It was tl!e third consecutive
month the unemployment rate
has· been above 8 per cent. In
January and February it .was
8.2 per cent.

Americans

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
NIGHTS TIL 8 PM

I

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Special. sale RCA Color TV at the Mechanic
Warehouse.

VOL 10

NO. 10

r,ALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

SUNDAY, APRIL 6, 1975

Elb~rfelds

Question still
•
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IS motivation
•

Jackson&amp;

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PORTSMOUTH - A study report to
determine the feasibitity of providing -an
Adult Corrections Facility to serve \Q
counties in the Ohio Valley Development
District Is scheduled to be completed in
late May.
·'
,

'·

notified of the charges.
"It is axomatic that everybody in the
free world knew of these charges, bot the
accused, the ex-state Senator said .
"I have yet to be notified by the
Federal Judge of these charges. It was
my understanding that the Federal
Judicial system had a dialogue to keep
indictments secret until the accused was
notified of charges, said Dr. Taylor.
Dr . Taylor said his constitutional
rights were violated· by the Internal
Revenue Service and the C.I.A. when they
· came into his clinic, ''Withoul a warrant, .
. and microfilmed some 20,000 patient case
' history cards, containing case history,
clinical findings and diagnosis." Taylor
stated he has abiding faith "in our Judicial
·-system, and when all the facts are oiltained, I will be exonerated from these
charges."

Than 12,000
Families
PRICE 25 CENTS

•

HAMILTON,Ohio (UP!) - At the end of suspect on 11 counts of aggravated murder
a bewildering week that began · Easter . even before the victims were buried.
Sunday with the murder of 11 relatives , the
Bot still there was no answer 1o the
biggest question of all remained unan- question, why?
"To shoot children," figured a neighbor,
swered.
Why ?
"you'd have to be crazy."
Despite the quick arrest of a suspect, an
That's tbe only explanation some people
unceasing police investigation and the could come up with; the murderer,
recollections of neighbors, no solid motive whoever he or she may be, just went
for the crime had been established:
berserk.
The events at 635 Minor Ave., in the . Psychiatric examinations have been
southern end of this southwestern Ohio city ordered for Ruppert, bot his attorneys
of 70,000 stunned the community and the have not indicated what plea they will
enter.
nation.
The 11 shooting deaths represented the
What kind of a man is the suspect?
largest known mass murder of members
Not too well known in the community, it
turns out, although ' he has been around
of the same family.
The awesomeness of the crime became here most of his life.
even more vivid at Friday's funeral, when
An "i.ntelligent lpner" seemed the best
it took 11 hearses and .42 pallbearers to description' neighbors could conjure qp.
bury the victims.
Remembered as a smart student in high
Still locked in the Butler County, Ohio, school, Ruppert became a draftsman but
Jail was the lone suspect, James U. held several different jobs In recent years.
Ruppert, 40, charged with murdering his
The currently unemployed bachelor also
widowed mother, his only brother, his was quite interested in the slock market.
sister-in-law and eight neices and He even had a broker and traded issues on
nephews, ages 3 to 18.
a small scale.
His daily routine consisted mainly of
Although no one can figure out a motive,
the possibility of another suspect has reading bosiness magazines in the library
for an hOur 'br two and then spending the
hardly been mentioned.
The case against Ruppert moved so rest of the day sipping beer at a local
quickly, in fact, that a grand jury was tavern.
ronvened, took evidence and indicted the
Continued on page 2

SV AC TE.AM CHAMPIONSIUP trophies were presented Friday. night at the
Annual SVAC Sports Banquet at Rio Grande College. Jim Sprague, bead football
coach at KY'ger Creek, was presented the SVAC grid c~mpionship trophy. Paul
Diljon, center, head coach and.principal at Hannan Trace High School, received
the SVAC basketball championship trophy. They are shown with Vince
Chickerella, haytball cl'llch at Capital University, the banquet's guest speaker.
Dtllon restgned ~·lttorday as basketball coach. See story and additional pictures on
page 16-18.

Promotion fund needed
POMEROY - Fond raising projects
were tentatively scheduled to finance
promotion of the 1.6 mill operating levy for
the Meigs Community School~~ the·Thurs·
day night meeting of the Committee for the

Mentally Retarded held at the courthouse.
A jitney supper at the Salisbury
Elementary School was planned for
Saturday, April 26. Bottle c~ps are being
collected and are to be turned in at,the next
meeting so that they can be redeemed. A
yard sale and square dance Will also be
held during the next few weeks, date to be
announced. Mrs. George Skinner is
chairwoman for fund raising.
Reports were given by Mrs. Rachel
Downie and Mrs. Maxine Whitehead, cochairpersons of the publicity committee,
Mrs. Grace Weber, member of the
speakers' contact committee, and Manning Webster,. chairman of the speaking
bureau.
It was reported that 1,000 pins have
been ordered for• promotional purposes.
Mrs. ·Fay Sauer presided.
Others attending were Mrs. Pauline
Tillis, Mr . and Mrs. Clarence Might, Mrs.
Cake 'Jarrell, Mrs. Jean Wood, Ronnie
. Wood, Hank Cleland of the Bilrepo of
Vocational RehabiliU.tion, Cathy Cleland,
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis, Meigs Community School administrator; ·Miss Ruby
Diehl, representing the Rutland and Star
Garden Clubs; Mrs. Nora Rice, Mrs.
Wilma Parker, Mr. and ·Mrs. Richard
Grueser, and Mr. and Mrs. George B.
Skinner, parents.

'

Don't J"ump, call
REACH instead

Sturd1! Hardy! Everblooming!
Two year field grown superooted
roses. The most popular and best
growing varieties.

ru6 GRANDE -

1

Reaching More

Regional correctional
facility is under study

\.

CHRYSLER
IMPERIAl--Red
· CRIMSON GLORY-Crimson ·
GOLDEN MASTERPIECE...:_
Yellow ·
·
K. T~ MARSHALL-Pink
MIRANDY-Dark Red •·
NEW YORKER-' Red
PEACE-Yellow-Pink blend
QUEEN ELIZABETH-Pink
STERL.ING . SILVER-Lavender
TIFFANY-Pink
WHITE SWAN-White
BLAZE CLIMBER-Red
VIRGO-White

GRANGED HONORED- Mrs. Ora Proffitt, Albany, wBB honored for 71 years

POINT PLEASANT - Former
Democratic Senator Randall A. Taylor
said Saturday he is · shocked that the
Federal Grand Jury indicted him on
charges that he failed to pay income taxes
totaling $35,255. He categorically denied
the charges made public Friday.
Taylor said these charges are
. politically motivated to make me, as a
former senator, as the likes of ex-president
Richard Nixon, Spiro Agnew, John Mit·
chell, John Dean and all the Watergate
Bad Guys.''
Taylor continued, "What alarms me is
the fact that this inlorjnation was aire.d to
the press, and all the news mec;tia, everi' t~e
N.B.C. today show, had a five minute m!ws
coverage of the Grand Jury indlctllient. all
before I was informed." Dr. Taylor said
the Federal Grand Jur)i verdict should
have been secret material until he was

In Pomeroy

· Your Invited Guest ·

Middleport-Pomeroy

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

•

SHOP FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 8

.

1

.

St.

period of -China 's 4,~year history.
A onetime revolutionary who helll"d
· overthrow China's last imperial dynasty,
the Generalissimo· led the nation against
Japan in World War II, and then was
driven inlo exile by the Communists ·after
one of the century's most tltanlc civil
conflicts.
'
But even after the Nationalists' most
powerful friend , the United States, gave
U.cit rec o~ni tion of the People 's Republic
of China in 1972, Chiang never pobllcly
relinquished Iris dream of returning to the
mainland.
A slender, small-limbed man who
.stood 5 feet 8 inches tall;-bis strong, high·
pitChed voi~e . stubborn jaw and intense
black eyes mirrored 311 inner hardness and
dedication that made him the longtime
· Continued on page 2 · ·
' •

tntint

Sunday mostly sunny, Highs
in upper 30s in north to low 50s
in south. Generally fair Sund'ay
night and Monday. Lows in 20s.
Highs mid 40s in north to low
60s in soutn.

Dirty politics brought
charge says ex-senator

Kimba II Pianos are on sale and also Gun Cabinets on the
3rd floor.

a heart condition, he was in critical con·
·dillon for the last month, spending much of
the time-'\tnder an oxygen tent.
By mid-1974 Coiang, according to some
well-placed sources, often lapsed into
senility , unable to perform any offficial
duties.
·
Chiang is survived by his son and -by
Mme. Chiang Kai-shek, both of whom were
reported to be a\ the bedside when he died.
Mme . Ch iang , th e former Soong
May ling, a Wellesley College graduate and
the daughter of a prominent Chinese
finanCial f.ami)y , married Chiang in 1927.
Her sister was the widow of Son Yat Sen .
Chiang .became a convert · to Protestant
Christianity at the time of his second
cessor. .
marriage. He had divorced his first wife.
TWo months . after his reelection he
Chiang's active public life spanned
became ill with pneumonia complicated by nearly 60 years in the most turbulent

Weather

Meigs County grange banquet held Friday night at the Salisbury Elementary
School. Presenting her a corsage was Earl SU!rkey, lecturer, who served as
~ter of ceremonies, See other pictures on Page 2.
'
.
.

Save now on Spring Dresses for women . Coordinate
Sportswear. - Bestform Bras.

gave tacit, if not formal,.recognition to the
government of his arch rival- Communist
party Chairman Mao Tse-tung .
It was bitter tea, but there "was little
world sympathy for Chiang, the underdog.
Nation after nation broke relations with
Taiwan and recognized Peking,
Even his Asian neighbors switched
sides. ·Japan established diplomatic
relations with Communist China in September, 1972. Malaysia followed suit in
1974, and now other Southeast Asian
nations are taking steps toward selling up
ties with Peking.
After he was reelected in March, 1972,
Chiang appointed his 'eldest · son, Chingkoo, as premier. and in effect his SUC· ·

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of membership in Star Grange, the oldest grange in Meigs County, at the annual

Big savings this week-end on mens Lee Work Uniforms .
Lee Coveralls - Mens Work Dungarees . Mens Sport
Coats - Unlined Jackets for men and boys.

ROSE
B-USHES

--

-

Rio Grande Coilege:
Rio Grande Community College students
In their "Practicom in Psychology" class
have estalillshed a new holline for the
Community College District which In·
,eludes Gallla,. Jackson, Meigs, and Vinton
Counties.
·.
Called REACH, the name ls derived
from Rio Emergency Action Crisis
Headquarters. This. 'ls a crisis ·In·
tervention, referral, and information
telephone service, initiated by the students
oru temporary basis. 'lbe service will be
avawible from April loth through May
30th.
REACH will operate from 7 p.m. Willi
,·1 a.m. seven dayaa week during this ~Ia!
time period. The REACH telephone
number is :us.Gf90. For whatever reason
emergency, one can call REACH at 245'
REACH ll the product ~nUrely of Rio
IGr.anclie COllilge-RJ~ Grande Community
Colliet~e students and is being advised by
SO!ranlto, 88Sistant professor of
Pl)•ch&lt;)locy.

.

Jackson _and Perkins Redi- Planted

PATENTED ROSES
SPELLBINDER-Pink-Ivory
OREGOLD-Yellow
..
FUTURA-r'lral
ANTIQUA.....:~each

JADIS-Pink
ARIZONA-Gold Bronze
TROPICANA-Orange-Red
ROSE PARADE-Pink
TEMPO--Red

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Sam Hughes, chairman of the Ohio
Valley Regional Development Commission said the feasibility study Is being
made by Optimum Governmental
Systems, Inc., of Colwnbus for the 10
member c01111ties served by the OVRDC.
Application for the project was made
by Pike County. The facility, if COD·
structed, would serve Region) including
Adams, Brown, Gallia, Highland, Jackson,
~:~~~·Pike, RosS, Scioto and Vinton
County Commissioners serving on the
' advisory commlttee.for the project Include
Forrest Mason, AdllffiS; Stephen Ernst,
Brown; Joe Stewart, Gallia; John Smart,
Highhind; Joe Conger, Jackson; Louis
Bryant, Lawrence; slim Hughes, Pike;
Pal!l Griffith, Scioto; Grant McDonald,
Ross; and Raymond Cottrill, Vinton. The
study is costing $58,300 with $52,500
provided by the state Departllient of'
Economics and Community Development, ·
Administration of Justice Division. The
State provided $2,917 .and the counties
combined to match the $2,917 figure.
(Conliilued on prige. 2) .

THESE BIG BEND DANCERS .WILL present a fast
moving·routine to "Baby Face" dl!l'inli the "Spring Fling" at
the Pomeroy Junior High School Saturday night. From the
,

(

left are Melanie Snouffer, Ann Pearch, June Wamsley, Susan
Wright, Esther Lowery, Jane Sisson, Cathy Blaettnar and
Debble Osbqrne. See Page 3.
_;
_::_
.
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__________

__

I

prpgrams V(hich pays a large portion of his
salary. He is also the transportation
director for the coon ty schools.
Ha(felt, a graduate of Marshall
University, is principal of Addaville and
Cheshii'e·Kyger Schools. He is completing
his second year of a two-year contract.
Lanning, a graduate of Morehead
. University ·and Xavier University, has
served as principal at Kyger Creek High
School for the past two years.
Sheets, a graduate of Marshall,
University, has been principal at Cadmus
ElemenU.ry School. This year he is
Principal at Cadmus and Centerville
Schools ..
Dillon resigned his coaching position
after 10 years . and a highly successful
career . His reasons for stepping down , as
. Ml~ in his letter were that added
Jlr&lt;oblcms brought by consolidation has

~-------.;-~~ ,

..

,

Key administrators win

GA,LLIPOL!S - Employment of an
assistant superinten.dent and three
.principals and acceptance of the
resignation of Hannan Trace .head
·basketball coach Paul Dillon highlighted
Saturday's regular monthly meeting of tile
.Gallia County Local Board of Education.
The .board, following an executive
session, granted three year contracts to
Assistant Sueperintendent Frank· A.
Cremeans and lo principals Max A.
TANNER BOUND OVER
Haffelt, Robert L. Lanning and Paige
&lt;iALUPOLIS - Mark Hanna Tanner, Sheets.
· 20, Gallipolis, bound over to the.grand jury
Cremeans, a , graduate of ·ohio
here Friday morning in Municipal Court University, ha s been serving on a one-year
on charges of breaking and entering · contract. He was named local soperin·
Gillingham's Drug Store, was released· tendentoftheformerKygerCreek District
from ·custody .Friday ,afternoon after in June 1973 then became an assistant
poslinjl the required part of his ~lid of - soperintend~nt with. the con•nlidated
$1,000. He" asreleased when he made one- Gallia I.X:ai District in January , 1974 .
tenth ~~ that amount in cash, nr $100.
Cremt~ns. i•· In charge uf ,,u fedcrul

•

NEED CLOTHING?
CRESHIRE - Free Clothin~ay for
· low income families of Meigs and Gallia
Counties will be · held Tuesday at the
community center in Cheshire, 9 a.m. to 3
· p:m. The event is sponsored by the GalliaMeigs Commun,tty Action Agency.

3-y~!r

contracts

made it increasingly difficult to serve as
coach, prilicipal and athletic director.
Dillon came to · Hannan Trace
following his graduation from Rio Grande
. College. He was _a former cage star at
Southwestern. In his 10 years as head
coach, the .Wildcats captured three SVAC
titles, two sectional tournament titles and
compiled a 113-&lt;lS won-loss record .
Shirley Palmer of Rt. 1, Cheshire, was
employed for the remainder· of the school
term as a custodian al Kyger Creek High
School. She had been working on a 91klay
probationary period.
Baseball coaches approved for supplementary contracts were Tom Belville, .
Han,nan Trace ;. Ron Janey, Nor\n Gallia;
. Mel~in Carter, Southwestern, and Jllllies
Sprague. Kyger Cree~ .
Track coaches h!r'ed were Robert '
·Shaver, !jan nan Trace; Adam Krahel ,

Kyger . Creek boys, and Patsy Fields,
Kyger Creek, girls. Ron Janey was approved as a par\time coach for tbe North
Gallia track squad.
· The board agreed to meet at Haitnan
Trace, Thursday, April 17 to employ
personnel.
· .J'he boai-d, upon the request of North
Gall'ia High School Principal Cliff Wilson
and the ~ecommendation of County Supt.
C. Comer Bradbury, approved the ex.·
pulsion of a HI-year old boy due · to his
physical assault of another student,
misconduct in school and habitual allsenteeism. The boy will not be allowed In
school until the 1975-76 school term.
Supt. Bradbury teF~ lhllt Dr.
~uelllicksofOhi~U~iveralty,hadbeen
in his office conducllng a suriey f&lt;ir the
Ohio Department of Education concerning
.. · Continued on page 2

. ---..,--'

I
I•

'

a

··

Jackson &amp; Perkins ·

,. ·,

J•

.
Sun's death in 1925, had not' appeared in
public since July 18, 1972. .
The·deteriorallim of Ghiang's health and
his disappearance from the frontline of
leadership began after ail automobile
accident in 1969.
· In July, 1972, only two months ·after
being sworn in as president for his !ifth six. year term, Chiang contracted pneumonia,
whic~ was complicated by a heart condition.
Chiang died in the twilight of his career
on the Island republic of Taiwan, his last
stronghold.
His last few years were a somber study
in futility. His government had been
ousted from the Unit@&lt;~ Nation.'; of which he
was a founding member, and then former
President Richard M. Nixon visited
Communist China i~ February, 1972, and

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

\; I

.•.

TAIPEI (UP!) - Nationalist Chinese strong anti-Communist poticy was ex·
President Chiang Kaishek · the last of the peeled.
' ~jor World War n leaders, died of a
A state funeral will be held for Chiang,
heart attack Saturday night, without but no plans were announced inunediately .
realizing Iris long cherished dream of
Finlt reaction on this Nationalist island
retaking the China mainland. He WBB 87. nation was sketchy because of the late
A government announcement early hoi!" . A telephone operator broke down
Sunday said Generalissimo Chiang died at and cried on hearing the news.
11:50 p.m. (10:50 a.m. EDT) at the Taipei
Chiang was driven frcim the mainlilnd by
Central Hospital, where he WBB taken after· the Chinese Communists in 1949 and had
· suffering a heart attack an hour and a half waged hopeleSs battle to return ever
earlier.
sincl:!.
. C)liang had been msince 1972 wben he
He was the last to die of the Big Five
suffered pneumonia. He had since leaders of World War II - President
relinquished all his official duties to his Franklin D. !(oosevelt, Sir Winston Churson, Premier Chiang Ching-koo. •.
chill of Great BriU!in, Russia's Joseph
He wm be succeeded automatically as Stalin and France's Charles de Gaulle.
president by Vice P,.resldent C.K. Yen, but
Chiang, who took tbe mantle of
the real power was expected to remain in leadership from the founder of the
the hands of his son. No change in Taipei's • Republic of China, Dr . Sun Yaksen, after

,.

die in crash

ELB-ERFELD$

.

Generalissimo Chiang Kai·shek dead

·'

f.

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I

~ -··

'li'

•·

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