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Ford solid for Pentagon spending

Saigon

By RICHARD H. GROWAJ.;D
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) President Ford said today
- rilore congressional cuts in
defense spending will endanger
national security.
"However good their intenAmerica is over-armed and

over-spending on defense are
dead wrong ," he said m a

speech written for the 73rd
annual Navy League convention
Ford sa1d the Russ1ans are
challenging the U.S Navy in
waters where A:menca once
ruled the waves.
"Soviet naval units now
circumnavigating the state of
Hawaii in the Pacific and
ope rating in the Gulf of
Mexico.
"We cannot afford to cu t any

less than 2 per cent. or less
than hall the 4.6 per cen t rate
for the same period last year ,

says the U.S. Department of
Agriculture.
Even so, shoppers this week
in ci ti es like Cin cmnati,
Atlanta and New York City
were still paymg $1.09 to $l.19
per pound for ground ch uck.
One chain m New York's
Manhattan borough made it
cheaper to grind your own
beef. Boneless chuck roast was
selling for 99 cents a pound, 20
cents less than the ground
variety. Cubed for stew, the
same cut was $1.59 per pound.
Only two Cities, Los Angeles
and San Francisco, reported a
low of 69 cents a pound for
ground chuck m UPI's weekly
survey of basic food prices
Elsewhere, the prices ranged
upwards from 89 ce nts.
The USDA expects food price
increases to continue at about
the same speed during the
spring, with most of the advances in red meat and poultry
prices.
It said lighter supplies and
high prices for feed may lead to
price increases for broilers and
turkeys. I;!ut for this week, at
least, broilers were only 41
cents a pound in Dallas, up just
two cents from last week's 39
cents a pound in Buffalo and
Allan ta. They were only 49
cents a pound m Birmingham,
Ala ., St. Louis, San Diego and
Los Angeles, and 51 cents in
Milwaukee. Honolulu's high of
9a cents a pound was 15 cent
above last week's h1gh m
Portland, Ore.
Even at the same price per
pound as chicken, turkeys are
·a better buy because they have
a higher ratio of meat to bone.
Small turkeys make great
barbecues, and larger birds or
turkey parts are a good choice
for stews like Mexican mole or
Hungarian paprikash, sauced
with sour cream and paprika
The USDA reported eggs the
best poultry buy for spring, and
the UP! survey bore this out.
Large grade A eggs sold for
only 51 cents a dozen m Los

br~dge .

Deciding the liability issue
Will be Jud ges Henry L.
Ducker, W. Lyle Jones and
John B Garden. If they rule
the s ta te JS liable , then
separate trials will be held on
the other 56 clauns to determine damages. If tile dec1sion
is in the state's fa vor, the other
suits will be disffilssed.
The attorneys were given until
June 2 to file written briefs
surruning up their arguments.
SUPPER SLATED
Un ited Methodist Men of
Me1gs County will have a
sausage and pancake supper at
the Heath United Method1st
Church in Middleport from 4 to
7 p.m. Fnday. The pubhc IS
invited The price is $1.75 per
person , all one can eat.

MEIGS tHEATRE
Tonight thru Thursday

NOT OPEN

Fri., Sat. and Sunday

THE WHITE DAWN
(Tech nicolor)
Rated " R"
Sho w starts 7: DO p.m .

&lt;CA~~[lf­
QUICK SERVICE· EXPERT INSTALLATION
SAVE •4.00 SQUARE YARD

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REG . '10.95

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standable desire to spend
money on plowshares rather
builders.
than swords - to put our
resources into social programs
1nstead of into defense.
" But to keep America at
peace - to. enable us to make
the kind of soc1al progress we
all want - we must kee p
Arnenca strong," Ford sa id.
As a ~ 'graphic example,"
Ford described a Soviet navy
maneuver that took place
Angeles. 52 cents
in within the past few days.
Jacksonville, Fla., and 55 cents
"More than 220 Soviet ships,
in San Diego. Cheyenne had a deploye_q lD all the oceans of
high of 99 cents. Even at that the world, participated in the
price, eggs are less than nine exercise. More than 50 Soviet
cents each.
ships were deployed m the
News of sugar remained . Atlantic, extending their masweet, with the retail price of a neuvers to the Norwegian Sea
five-pound bag below $2 in 24 and southwest of the British
cities on the UP! list. Birming- Isles," he said.
ham's $1.59 cents was the low,
-.....
New York City's $2.39 and
Philadelphia's $2.09, the highs.
Frozen orange juice concentrate prices may rise a bit, the
USDA said, but this week's low ,
of 21 cents for a 6-&lt;&gt;unce ca n in
Pittsburgh wa s un changed
Lois Frank, age 10, daughter
from last week. It was only 24 of Mr. and Mrs . Howard
to 25 cents a can in Los Frank, Rt. 1, Racine, was
Angeles, Birmingham, Ala., injured Tuesday at 3:45 p.m.
Buffalo and Cheyenne. The whe n she ran into the path of an
high was 37 cents in Cincinnati. auto driven by Linda Ann
Cereal and bakery product Grimm, 27, Racine .
prices may also edge up in
The Me1gs County Sheriff's
coming weeks, the USDA said. Department reported that the
It added that canned fruits
youngster ran from the Vista
such as pears, peaches, apples Statwn in Racine onto SR 124.
and applesauce, fruit cocktail, The driver, Mrs . Grimm,
tart and sweet cherries and swerved to m1ss the child,
plums will be plentiful, but skidded 21 fee t stoppmg in the
their prices are expected to left lane. The child was
r ise because of cost increases dragged 21 feet after being
in farm ingredients, processing struck.
and marketmg.
She was taken to Holzer
Onions were 49 cents a pound Medical Center by the Racine
in Cincinnati, more than double E·R Squad. A hospital spokeslast week's price in that Ohio woman reported that she 1s m
city. The low was 59 cents for a good condition with abrasions
five-pound bag in Jacksonville, and contusions.
Fla., and Buffalo, with wide
Mrs. Grimm was taken to
fluctuations in between.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
The USDA said that Texas' by private car where she was
acreage in onions is sul&gt;- treated for shock and released.
stantially smaller this year, No charges were filed .
which .will curtail supplies and
pusn- up prices. The department added that potatoes are
an economical vegetable
chmce, down more than 12
cents a pound this January
from their peak of about a year
ago.
REEDSVILLE - . Mark
Butter and margarine prices Grossnickle, 16, of Reedsville,
continue to be close, but falling a member of the Eastern High
prices for vegetable oils may School track team, suffered a
lead to more margarme soe- dislocated vertabrae in an
cials, said the USDA.
acc1dent Tuesday during the
Eastern-Kyger Creek tra ck
meet at Cheshtre.
Grossmckle was inj ured
while pule vaulting. He was
(Continued from page 1)
taken to the Holzer Medical
athle!Jc d~rector, Carl Wolfe ; Center by the SEOEMS Am·
cheerleader advisor, Carla bulance. He was listed in
Shuler; marching band , Joy
satisfactory condition this
Bigler; majorette advisor , morning at the Holzer Medical
Connie Andrews ; vanety show,
Center.
Lee Lee ; yearbook and Echo,
Jocelyn Baer; summer
recreatwn , Larry Wolfe.
TRACK DOWN ON
Non-certificated employes,
An effort Is being made by
Gordon Proffitt, custodian, two
the Ohio Valley Publlshlng
year contract; cooks, Alma
Co., to track down the
Johnson, two year co,ntract,
Jumble word game which
and Esther Wolfe, continuing
appears dally In tile local
contract.
Bus
driv~rs,
paper. The puzzle Is mailed
Romaine Frederick, two year
from
New York two weeks In
contract a nd Paul Sellers,
advance.
Apparenlly this
continuing contract.
week and next week's
Extended serv1ce for nonpuzzles have been lost In the
certificated, one year con·
mall. Publication will be
tracts, kindergarten bus route,
resumed once the puzzles
Paul Sellers, Larry Smith ;
arrive
here.
special education route, Larry
Smith; vocational education
route, Paul Seller; lunchroom
supervisor, Anna Grace 01ler.
In other business approved year ; Syracuse Fire Depart·
the following . Purchase of two ment and E-R Squad to use the
!iecretarial desks and chairs kitchen and gym facilities at
lor BOE department; junior Syracuse Elementary April 26
and senior BOE class members for fund raising dmner,
to attend Hocking Tech April Syracuse Brownies to use
21 ; Jane Wagner and Marilyn Syracuse building once a week.
Substitute teachers for 1974Powell to attend clerk75
hired were Howard Nolan,
treasurer clinic June 3;
Clayton
Coffey, Susan Ughrin
Southern Board of Education to
enter into a contractual and Pearl Medors.
agreement with the Meigs · Ralph Wigal and Bobby Ord
County Board of Education for were gran ted permission ~
the purpose of securmg ser- attend a Title I Conference
!lices of a work study coor- May 6 through 8·in Columbus.
A group of parents attended
dinator. for the 1975-76 school

"

Oilld hit by

car in Racine

Vertahrae hurt
in pole vault

Southem

'

Sp~ctal S&gt;AIL[~
HI-LOW

stems from the very under-

mer naval offtcers and ship-

the ftrst quarter this year rose

(Continued from page ! l
and damage resultmg from the
collapse, but argued that the
state was "no more legally
liable" for th~ deaths than it
was responsible for the blood·
shed 10 Southeast Asia."
Attorney Harry A. Sherman
of Pittsburgh, representing the
estate of James White of
Ravenswood, accused the state
of negligence in failing to
undertake • adequate Inspections, in failing to provide
an alternate method of support
in case the !-bar cham broke
and in failing to follow a 1906
federal law in the design of the

~

- still depends on keeping the
sea lanes open . And only a
strong Amencan Navy can
guarantee this," Ford told the
eonvention of active and for-

By JEANNE LESEM
UP! Food Editor
Retail food pnce increases m

Court

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ha ps even American surv ival

The President sa1d the Navy,
like the Army and Air Force, is
Wider fire from "many ser10us,
sincere Americans in and out
of Congress. No doubt some of
th1s questiOning results from
our long and 'tragic experience
m Indochina . No doubt some

Slower price
rises ..forecast

freely roam the world's seas ,

··~

served as a Navy ofllcer in
,World War TI .
"American prosperity - per-

further without endangering
our national secunty, '' he said,
adding that East-West detente
and national defense are
closely tied toge ther.
"In fa ct. the foundation of
detente is the military balance
that eXIsts today ," said the
President who - like predecessors John F Kennedy , Lyndon
Johr)soll and Richard Nixon -

Rich nylon
plush pile .
Blue/Gteen,
Go~ . Blue
and Green

Bold nylon
pile twist
G o~ .

Blue
and Gfeen

(Continued from page 1)
street and covering scattered
vegetables and canned goods .
There was no indication if the
explosion was ~aused by a
bomb or a hand grenade.
The new government of
Presidenl Tran Van Duong
offered to negotiate a powersharing coalition with the Viet
Cong in an attempt'to head off
a full-scale Communist attack
against Sa1gon.
U.S. Air Force planes evacuated thousands of Americans
and endangered South Vietnamese from Saigon in step·pedup flights to U.S. bases in
the Philippmes and Guam.
Military sources said the
beleaguered South Vietnamese
command moved its last
war~lanes from shell-battered
B1en Hoa to Saigon's Tan Son
Nhut Air Base.
The so urces said North
Vietnamese gunners firing
130rrun field pieces bombarded
Bten Hoa again this morning. A
huge column of smoke from the
vicinity of the base was visible
m Saigon.
''Government helicopter pilots
reported sighting a large
convoy of Communist troops
traveling near Bien Hoa in a
column
of
Soviet-built
Molotova trucks.
Government warplanes, including old propeller-driven AI
Skyraiders taken out of mothballs, flew heavy air strikes
against Communist targets
around Bien Hoa.
The pullback from Bien Hoa,
14 miles from the capital, came
as the two-day-old government
called for Immediate, uncondi·
tiona! peace talks based on the
1973 Paris peace agreement.
A Foreign Ministry communique offered to enter
"negotiations on all issues
within the framework of the
Paris agreement...including
the establishment of a National
Council for Reconciliation and
Concord."
The council, as envisaged in
the Paris accord, would represent the Saigon government,
the Viet Cong and independent
"third force" politicians.
The Viet Cong played down
the resignation of President
Nguyen Van Thieu Monday and
called instead on the United
States to "cease all Jts military
interference" in South Vietnam.
the Viet Cong mission in
Paris said Htiong resembles
his prececessor " like a
brother" and demanded the
overthrow of "the whole Thieu
clique.''

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THE MEIGS INN.
PH. 992-3629
POMEROY

·'*----------------.-..---..z-

•·'

Guns go quiet around Saigon
By ALAN DAWSON .
SAIGON (U PI) - President
Tran Van Huong accepted the
resignation of South Vietnam's
war cabinet today and set odt
to form- a peace government
capable of negotiating with the
VietCong.
A battlefield lull settled over
South Vietnam as Huong
worked around the clock to
replace lormer President
Nguyen Van Thieu's cabinet
with a ·Jeft-of-center govern-

TOP PLACE WINN~RS - Taking first place in m~t cultlU'Il arts competition of the
Chester PTA were, left to right, front, Beth Teaford, fourth grade, vtsual arts ; Lort Hud:ron,
second grade, visual arts; back row, Aaron Parker, third grade, literature; Randy Batey, siXth
· grade, visual arts, and Apnl Parker, sixth grade, literature. The students work Will be placed
in county competition. The PTA p 'lentedaU students who participated a small trophy.

c.,.
-~

· HALEY CLAIMED
·-RUTLAND - Rev. Worley
E. Haley, 64, Rt. 1, Middleport,
died Wednesday morning at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
following a lingering illness.
Funeral arrangements are
being completed at the Walker
Funeral Home in Rutland.

RACINE - David Smith, a senior at Southern H1gh
School, received the coveted John Philip Sousa Award as
outstanding bandsman at the recent annual band banquet at
" the' high schoolfrom Joy Bigler, director. The son of Mr. and
•· Mrs. Robert M. Smith, Syracuse, David is a member of
. · Southern High marching band, concert band, pep and stage
band and has been band pres1dent two years. He played a
percussion instrument and played the tim-toms in the
marching band this year.
The banquet was sponsored by the band boosters.
Bill Downie was master of ceremonies and Mike Jones,
former drum major at Wahama High School and West
Virginia University, was the guest speaker.
Mrs. Connee Andrews, majorette advisor, was presented
with a gift by the majorettes. Mrs. Harrison Smith, band
booster presedent, was presented a floral arrangement.
Joy Bigler, band director, presented letters and bars to
members of the band.
·

VOL. XXVII

NO. 8 ·

By VICTOR LANIAUSKAS
UP! Siatehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Pointing to a !().year wait before a
federally funded coal gasification plant in southeastern Ohio
would be productive, the
director of the Ohio Development Center has proposed

\·

UNION TO MEET
United Mine Workers
Local 9856 11,1embers were to
meet this afternoon to
discuss a strike reported in
progress at the Central
Operating Co. Mine near
New Haven. A union official
said the strike resulted from
a work assignment tu one
employee.
The over 170 miners left
their jobs on the evening
shift Monday. A meeting of
th L union membershJp
Tuesday reportedly resulted
in a unanimous strike vote.

Bv PHIL PASTORET
One business that •s
flourishing is the graph paper
manufacturer who supplies
chart material for tracking the
recession.
A depression is what a fellow
stilt working eallo a recession.

SESSIONS SET
Anyone interested in the
development of the Meigs
County Museum is invited to
attend
decision -making
meetings from 10 to 11 a.m. on
the next five Thursday mornings at the museum, C. E.
Blakeslee, president of the
Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society, announces.
The meetings are strictly work
sessions, he commented.

BIG SWING -Don Eichinger, Eastern High School's junior righthanded pitcher, didn't
connect for a hit on this swing but he was supreme on the mound Wednesday, pitchmg 4'' innings of no-hit, no-run baseball against Waterford. The game went in the books as a complete
game although called at that point with Eastern ahead 1-0. See sports section.
'"WIMIIIII!IIII!IIIIII!IIII'mW&lt;'~-·•Lo"a."6..._............_

ustice '
Center isn't a pro football
player whose first name is
'"Justice."
Don't !mock birds by calling
them "birdbrains." Have you
been able to learn how to sit on
a barbed wire fence eomforta~ly?

HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Ed Murphy, formerly
Cecelia Gaul, Tuppers Plaw
is a patient at the Holz,
Medical Center where she
underwent surgery Monday
morning. Her room number is
326.

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LONG SLEEVE

Western
S·hirts

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Briefsl· Swedish

BY Unlte1 Press International
COLUMBUS - THE STATE DIRECI'OR of mental health
and retardation announced his opposition Wednesday- night to a
"biU of rights" for the mentally ill, saying the General Assembly
should first provide the necessary money to finance its
provisions.
Dr. Timothy B. Moritz told a House Judiciary subcommittee
the legislation would cost the state more than $3 million for attorneys, witnesses and psychiatrists to make court appearances
to determine where mentally iU patients should be placed. The
director said the state already "has a total inability to comply"
with similar legislation enacted last session protecting the
mentally retarded.
cOLUMBUS ...:_ A REPRESENTATIVE OF the Ohio housing
industry says solar heating would cost between $3,000 .and $4,000
to Install in a 1,000 square-foot home, but would save the
homeowner about 80 per cent of his fuel costs.
William A. Goldman, vice president and general counsel for
the Homewood Corp., Columbus, told the Senate Energy and
Environment Committee Wednesday installation costs $3 to $4
per square foot in a normal residence.
Goldman, whose firm tiperates a model solar home at the
Ohio State Fairgrounds, said a solar heating system could be
installed in an older home easier in some cases than in a newlyconstructed house because existing ductwork could be used. He
said conventional heating systems could be used as backups
during periods of lack of sunlight. ·
WASHINGTON - HOUSE-SENATE CONFEREES working
on federal strip mining have agreed to revise language on steep
slope mining, a victory for Appalachian mine owners and a blow
for environmentalists. They also 'agreed Wednesday to exclude
Anthracite cOal mining· from the bill. Rep. Morris K. Udall, DAriz., the conference chairman, set another session for today as
he Indicated that several more meetings will be necessary.
The conunlttee Is under pressure from President Ford, who
vetoed an almost identical bill .last December and wrote
congresslpoalleaders Tuesday that a series of eight "critical"
changes and 19 otbers were needed. House members agreed to
allow spOil. from the initial cut of a stripping operation to be
permanentiy pl!tced on the downslope of a hill. House-passed
language said such placement could be only temporary.

Now in ~ the . mens
department 1st floor
meris long sleeve
authentic
western
shirts. Choose blue
.den.i.m
or
bl u,e
chambray.
Neck
sizes 14112 to 17. Snap
fronl - two snap front
pockets - 3 snaps on
sleeve cuffs. Be sure
to see also the big ··
selection of mens and
young mens western
jackets - western cut
jeans - knit shirts and
tank tops for wear
with jeans.

cHiCAGO-A YOUTH ARMED wiiti a carbine opened
·flre at two persons oo a South Side street and then took on police
In an exchange of gunfire late Wednesday, killing one person and
serloosly wounding another. PoUce finally shot the man's _rifle
out of hls hands and captured him.
.
' Officers said the gurunan fired more than 20 shots from the
fifth Door of a South Side apartment building, downing two
civilians an4 pinning down •·about 20 police officers who
~~~ttounded the building .. Police found ope man shot to death in a·
hallway on the first floor of the butidlng. The dead man was
identified as Alvin Lewis, 25, of Chicago. Pollee said Lewis bad
lieen llhot in the mouth.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ISRAEIJ DEFENSE MINISTER SHIMON PERES said the
-United States Is holding up arms shipments It! the Jewish state
and may order a weapons embargo to pressure Israel into
(Continued on pqe ID)

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stay on long enough to organize
a left-of-center government to
nego tiate with Communist
forces ringing the capital.
Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troopg have seized 21
of South Vietnam's 44
provinces since J a nua ry,
capturing more than two-thirds
.of the country and advancing to
within 26 miles of Saigon.
CommuniSt troopg moving on
Saigon from the north and east

have held off any major propaganda rhetoric, called
assaults since capturillg the Wednesday for peace talks
provincial capitals of Xuan Loc ainre'dllt giving the VietCong a
and Ham Tan on Monday.
share in running South VietMilitary strategists said the nam.
outnlUllbered 50,000 government soldiers in the Saigon
In generally ljght battlefield
area would have little chance activity, South Vietnamese pito stop an all-out VietCong and lots reported killing more than
No rth Vietnamese assault 300 Conununists in air strikes
against the capital.
around tbe capital. But the
Sa1gon conunand said there
Huong, m a low-keyed state- was no major ground action in
ment free of the usual the country.

•

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en tine

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

THURSDAY. APRIL 24. 1975

PRi.Cf 15'

Ohio may go alone to gassify coal

SECOND AND THIRD PLACE WINNERS in recent Chester PTA cultural arts competition
were, front row, 1-r, Jennifer Grover, second grade, third visual arts; Pam Riebel, third grade,
second in IiteraturAl; Lee Ann Gaul, second grade, second in visual arts; back ro~, Raeleen
Oliver, fifth grade, second in visual arts; Marcy Sexson, sixth gr~de, second m vtsualarts;
Billy Foste~, fifth grade, third in visual arts, and Pamela Kay ~tller, four(h grade, third m
literature. Second and third place winners work will not be placed m compellhon.

---·s=a-r'b_s____

Despite the rapid pace of the
airlift, U.S. officials reported
about 1,000 persons crowding
Sa1gon 's Tan Son Nhut Air
Base for flights out of South
Vietnam.
Huong, who has been criti·
cized by the Communists as a
member of "the Thieu clique,"
was expected to step down
after naming a new cabinet
acceptable to the Viet Cong.
Western diplomatic sources
said Huong only planned to

lJevoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

I

::::::::==:::~:=======:======::::=======:::::=:::========:::========:::::::==~

ment.
An estimated ·150,000 CommJ\Ilist troopg were poised
within striking distance of
Saigon and thousands of
panicky South Vietnamese
tried desperately to flee the
country.
U.S. Air Force planes flew
dozens of flights from Saigon to
Guam in a stepped-up eva cuation of Americans and South
Vietnamese from the war-torn
country.

e

Sousa awanl to David Smith

Wrang.ler

TRIO

TO ENTERTAIN YOU AT

•

MENS

in regard to problems at the
junior high, and a group of noncerhficated employes asked
the board to consider paying
hospital insurance. Substitute
bus driver pay was discussed
but no action was taken.
Board also, approved FFA
students and advisor to attend
the state FFA convention in
Columbus April 25 and 26 and
approved
students
for
scholarship testing at O.U.
May 3. The board entered into
an agreement with Dale C.
Warner Insurance to provide
insurance for football players.
~-------Ht ' Baccalaurea te
Day wa s
changed to May 23 at 8 p.m.
A\tending were Denny
Evans, Jack Bostick, Denny
Hill, Grover Salser, Jr., David
Nease, board members, Bobby
J:;rd, superintendent and Jane
Wagner, clerk. The board
recessed and will meet Thurs·
Drums, Guitar
day, April 24 at 7: 30p .m.

TUES ., WED., THURS., 8:30-t: OO
FRI. &amp; SAT .. ' :30-2:00

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

NITELY

PH. 992-2635

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China accused the United
States of masterminding
Thieu's resignation "to save
the puppet Saigon administration from collapse."
"No matter what politicial
schemes the U.S. and its
lackeys may resort to, the
Saigon puppet clique cannot be
resrued from complete doom,' '
Peking's New China News
Agency said.
An old-timer is a fellow who
The Conununist forces have
slill
buys a famlty magazine in
captured 21 of South Vietnam's
whicb
to carry one of those no-44 --pi'OVinces since January,
no
publicalions.
seizing more than two-thirds of
the country's territory.
The flight of diploma Is from
Saigon quickened.
Holland sent a plane to pull
out the last Dutch citizens from
the war-torn country. canada
and Malaysia were reported
planning to close their embassies in Saigon.
In Washington, the House
Armed Services Committee with one member saying the
~~chess game is over'' - turned
down President Ford's request
for $722 million in emergency
military aid to South Vietnam.

Frank Sisty
Organ,

INGELS FURNITURE

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20 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Ponwroy. 0 ., Wednesday, Aprii2:J, J975

tlOns, tbose who claim that

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embassy
shot up
...

STOCKHOLM (UP!) - Four
terronsts
ar!lled
with
automatic weapons shot their
way mto the West German
Embassy today and seized
Amba ssador Dietrich Stoecker
as hostage. They threatened to
shoot the military attache
unless police withdrew.
There were reports of some
injur1es as a result of the
shooting and initial reports
sa1d Qne person was killed.
Police kept all onlookers away
from the scene , seahng off a
five square block area.
More than 100 specially
equipped not police ringed the
modern four-story yellow brick
building on~ _,Stockholm's embassy row minutes after the
first alarm went out at 11:49 a.
m. Th~nearby British Embassy
was ordered evacuated when
the terrorists fired their
submachine guns sporadically
at police and newsmen, sending them aucking behind cars
for cover.
Police said that in addition to
the ambassador and the
military attache, Lt .. Col.
Andreas Baron von Mirbach,
other hostages wete also
believed to be taken.

construction of intermediate
gasification plants to prevent
the loss of 70,000 JObs m Oh10 .
"The shortage of natural gas
for ind~try may he Ohio's
most senous econorruc pro[).
lem," ODC Directo_r W.R.
Purcell Jr., told the Oh10 House
Energy · and Environment
Committee Wednesday:
Purcell sa1d desptte the
recent publicity surrounding
the proposed federally funded
coal gasification plant, which
is being contested by several
states including Ohio, the
facility would not be produclive for at least 10 years and
would cost _in the neighborhood
of $500 million. Belmont County
in southeastern Ohio is the
proposed site of the plant.
The head of the ODC was
testifying in favor of legislation
introduced by Rep. Thomas J.
carney, D-Youngstown, crealing an Ohio Energy Development Center which would
receive a $27 million allo&lt;;ation
for research and development
of energy.
Purcell also testified on
behall of legislation introduced
by Rep. A.G. Lanc10ne, DBellaire, which would provide
revenue . bonding for coal
gasification plants and appropriate $10 million for coal
mining research.
He said the ODC was
working towards the construction of
six coal
gasification plants using in·
termediate BTU coal, rather
than tbe high BTU coal planned
for the federally-funded
project. The plants would be
located in Cleveland, Toledo,
Youngstown-Warren, AkronCanton, Dayton, and Mid·
die town.
Purcell said that in the high
BTU· gasification plants the
coal must be methanized and
could eventually supply all gas
users, but not for "at least 10
years." The intermediate BTU
approach would supply only
larger industries, but could be
delivering gas commercially
within three to five years.
"These plants would save at
least 70,000 existing jobs in
Ohio," Purcell said. "The
plants may represent an in·
vestment of $500 million by
industry.''
PW'cell also noted studies
indicate high BTU gasification
is only 60 per cent efficient
compared with tbe 80 per cent
estimate of efficiency in intermediate BTU plants.
He said it would · take between $50 million to $100 million
to build the first intermediate

Accidents
reported

The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department investigated two
accidents Wednesday in which
no personal injuries were
reported and no citations
Issued.
At I : 45 p. m. in Salisbury
Township, CR 21, James
Biesecker, 36, driving a tractor
trailer for Hennis Freight Line,
Winston Salem, N. c., stopped
because of a bridge clearance
and backed up and struck a car
behind the truck driven by
Sandra L. Sargent, 27, ·lU. 2,.
Middleport was without Cheshire. There was medium
·electrical service this morning damage to the Sargent car and
when lightning struck a none to the truck.
.transformer
and ' three
At 2:25 p. m. in ~ter
reclosers.
Township, TR.....ll2t"near
' John Weeks of the Columbus Chester, Linda Kay Ji1inner, 28,
and Southern Ohio Electric Co. Rt 1, Minersville, backed from
said getting service restored a private drtveway and struck
was only a matter of renewing a parked car owned by Charles
fuses and would ·be restored F. Kim, 36, Tuppers Plains.
well before noon. The power
There was medium damage
went off about 10:25 a. m.
to both cars.

.Power was out

plant.
The state Development Cen. ter is cooperating with CNG
•.Energy Co . and Republic Steel
in the engineering for a first
plant. Industry is· contributing
$250,000 and the ODC $100,000
on the engineering project,
Purcell said.
"The important thing is to
get that first plant built
because then industry may be
attracted to invest · in the
building of other such plants
throughout the state " Purcell
said.
'
He said the federal government has expressed an interest
in the intermediate plants and
could provide as much as 67
per cent of the furids for construction. Or, Purcell sa1d, if
tile first plant is successful
industry could decide to fund
the plants independently.
. Purcell said Ohio is the
largest
consumer
of
bitJUlllnous coal in the nation
but several states are fa;
ahead in spending for energy
development. Illinois has
appropriated $70 million for
energy and Kentucky $57
million, he said.

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"FROGGIE WENT A COURTIN' " - In roles of this skit given by Middleport second
graders were Allen Spaulding, the frog , left, and Lisa Hoffman, Miss Mousie, front, w1th Amy
Erwm and Lisa Dewart, singers; Beth Wolle, the white moth; Kathy Arnott, the red hen,
Joleen Moodiswugh, the tree, and Billi Jo Gordon and Kevin Pummel, the cow, 1-r, in back. See
more pictures of program given the PTA and other grades later on Page 2.
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Ford ponders arms problem
By RICHARD H. GROWALD
WASHINGTON . (UP!) President Ford debated today
whether to give up his request
·that Congress approve $722
million in arms aid to Vietnam
in a war in which he has
declared America's role was
finished.
To the standing ovation and
cheers of 6,000 Tulane
University students in New
Orleans Wedne~day night,
Ford called the Indochina
conflict "a war that is finlsbed
-as far as America is concerned." .
On the way home he told
reporters a board Air Fort-e
One of his arms aid request,
"Well, it's still up there (in
Congress). It will depend on
the Circumstances when I get
back ... if there is a significant
change we'll have to reassess
It."
What Ford called "a fluid
situation" included the mood of
Congress. In a session that
lasted until early today, the
House voted to authorize $327
million for humanitarian aid
and evacuation costs. The
Senate passed a $250 million
version. No arms aid has been

WASHING I'ON (UP!) - ' It took 15 hours of almost
continuous debate, but by early today the House had given
President.Ford wbat many liberal Democrats feared : almost
unlimited authority to use American troops in an evacuation
from VIetnam. Shortly before 3 a.m. EOT, the House voted,
23().187, to authorize $327 million for humanitarian aid and
evacuation costs. The Senate Wednesday passed, 75-17, a
similar measure which would authorize $250 million.
There is little prospect of military aid, wbicb the
President says be is reassessing. A conference Is necessary
to work out difference between tbe two aid bills and work was
to begin today.
Meanwhile, in New York a poll by Louis Harris indicated
68 per cent of Americans are against sen&lt;!fng V. S. troopg to
Vietnam to help evacuate Vletniunese citizens. The poll,
released Wednesday, said 22 per cent favor sencling troops
and 10 per cent are undecided, It also indicated Americans
are opposed - 81 per cent to 12 per cent - to President
Ford's request to Congress lor $722 mUUon in military aid' for
Vietnam.
approved for what administration officials privately admit
was a military lost cause.
He had proclaimed an end to
U.S. participation in a lost war.
His feelings emerged in one
statement aboard the plane : "!
had mixed emotions. That's not
the way I wished it had ended.
But you have to be realistic."
Ford said he sensed in
making the speech that he was

government's military plight
in and around Saigon and the
state of the evacuation of
Americans and allied South
VIetnamese.
Ford began his activities in
New Orleans Wednesday by
honoring Rep. F. Edward
Hebert, tbe recently deposed
chairman of the House Armed
Services Conunittee and a
supporter of U.S. involvement
in Vietnam. Breaking ground
for the F. Edward Hebert
Memorial Library, he called
old
colleague
a
his
" courageous and untiring
patriot."

New officers

ending an American era. "I
thinkso,yes.Afterall,it'sbeen
a ·pretty long era."
Ford called meetmgs this
morning with aides including
Secretary of State Henry-"" Omeroy
lOllS
Kissinger and Vice President
Nelson Rockefeller. Aides said
The Rev . William Mid·
Ford was receiving prebreakdleswarth
was
elected
fast briefings on the situation
Pomeroypresident
of
the
in Vietnam. These included
Lions
Club
both the South Vietnamese Middleport
following luncheon Wednesday
at the Meigs Inn . .
Other officers elected were
Larry Brogan, first vice
president ; Gordon Teaford,
Spencerville, Ohio, president of second vice president; James
Ohio Decorative Products, the E. Danner, third vice
parent company of the Sponge president; the Rev. Dwight
Rubber Product, Plant.
Zavitz , lion tamer ; Karl
Also arrested was David N. Krautler,
tail
twister;
Bubar, 47, Memphis, Tenn., a Clarence J. Struble, secretaryBaptist minister and psychic treasurer; Paul Stodola and
.who predicted the catastrophe Norbert Compton, ·directors,
before it occurred at the plant. and Wendell Hoover, director
He was described as a spiritual ex ;Officio. The new officers will
advisor to Moeller.
be installed July I.
Bubar was the subject of the
The club went on record as
book, "You Are a Psychic," endorsing the 1.6.mill operation
and is a native of'Biain, Maine. levy for the retarded school to
He had been pastor of the 00. voted upon June 3. The
Stanton Baptist Church, Stan- club set Monday evemng as a
ton, Tenn., "but resigned in work night to make holders for
1969 in order to utlllze his some two dozen new flag
astonishing clairvoyant a bili· patrons: The members will
ties," according to the book. meet at Pomeroy Village Hall
The federal grand jury in- at 6:30 p. m.
dictinent charged the men with
The report of the nominating
transporting
dynamite, committee accepted by
detonating cord ani! blasting unanimous vote was given by
caps by truck from Pennsyl- Wendell Hoover. Lou Osborne,
vania to a p~nt. The explolilon president, read a note of thanks
and fire at the factory from Drew Webster Post 39,
destroyed the building but American Legion, for the flag
there were no injuries.
display in Pomeroy recentiy
Otbers arrested were Ronald when the cllstrlct American
D. Betres, 32, and Peter Legion spring convention was
(Continued on page 10)
held here. -

are elected by

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8 indicted for conspiracy
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UP!)
- Eight persons, including the
president of a large Ohio firm ,
were arrested toilay in the

Bird Dog Inc.
based in Meigs
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown has issued a charter to
Ohio River Valley Bird Dog
Ass'n, Inc. to operate as a nonprofit c&lt;rporation in the state
of Ohio.
The corpl!fation is locating
its"principal office in Pomeroy.
According to the Articles of
Incorporation, the corporation
was formed "to promote and
improve by training and
hunting the capabilities of bird
dogs...."

James F . •Butcher,
765
&gt;
Broadway, Middl~port; Roger
Birch, Rt. I, Racine, and
Donald E. Nelson, Rt. I, BoK
25, Middleport, are the
trustees. Butcher has . been
appointed to act as. Statutory
Agent for the organization.

March 1 explosion and fire
which destroyed a $14 million
sponge rubber product plant in
Shelton, tbe FBI said.
A 10-count federal indictment named 10 suspects
with conspiracy, violation of
federal bombing statutes and
interstate transportation in.aid
of racketeering.
The ~Fm said two more
persons were being sought by
agents who began making
arrests in Pennsylvania, Ohio
and Tennessee early today.
In addition, nine of those
named in federal indictments
were named,in Superior Court
warrants issued in Bridgeport
.on charges including ~son,
kidnaping and conspiracy_ in
the flre bombing of the Sponge
Rubber Products Co. factory .
State's Attorney Donald
Browne said the warrants,
handed : over to state pollee,
were signed late Wednesday by
Superior Court Judge George
A. Saden.
Among those arrested was
Charles B. Moeller, 48,

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Ellen Marie.Ewing, 59, Rt. 1,
~inton, died this morning at
her residence follbwing a long
Wness. She was born Dec. 28,
·1915, in Tuscarawas County,
llld was the daughter of the
late Belden and Ola Derringer
Meyers.
Mrs . .Ewing. was married to
Robert Ewing Feb. 28, 1935.
She is survived by her
husband; one brother, Russell
Meyers, Sandyville; two
sisters, Mrs. Howard (Ruby)
Johnson, Canton, and Mrs.

William (Evelyn) Harvey,
Bolivar.
Funeral services will be
Sunday, April '!I at the Walker .
Funeral Home, Rutland at I
p.m. with Rev, Lloyd · D.
Grimm in chllrge of the ser·
vice . Burial Mil follow In the
Miles Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home alter 2
p.m. Saturday and the family
will receive friends between
the hours fo 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Saturday.

Health center tours April 30

"UTI'LE WHITE DUCK" - A skit of that title featured .
Carl Moodispaugh as t he frog, Wa)'!le Shrirnplin as the little
white duck, DaMy Thomas as the bug, and Joey Poulin as
the snake, 1-r.

1-r, are Richard MeHaffey, John Bacon, Bobby Staats, Nick
Bush, David Hoover, P. ,J. Harris, Roger Manley, Eddie
Miller, Tim Wamsley, Joe Manley and Tony Welch .

·Athens Mental' Health CeniA!r froin 2--6 p.m. Each to~ Mil
will be open to the public for la_st approxima~ly one hour
tours on Wednesday, April 30, w1th tours sta~ting at 2, 3, 4,
.
·
·
. ~and 5 p.m. Individuals, as well
as groups are invited. For
further details call Mrs. Kay
Davis, Volunteer Servicj!s
Coordinator, at 592-3031, Ex~nl!on 371 from 8 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. daily.
Each tour wiU include all
Eight school bus drivers are areas Qf the hospital with a
beginning an· organized course question and answer pepod at
of instruction to improve their the end. Groups with special
skills and knowledge of iniA!rest should contact Mrs.
driving . ·
Davis In advance so that she
Ray Goodman, Voc-Ed might plan for these interests.
director at Meigs High School,
was instrumen Ia! in obtaining
a certified school bus driver
training instructor who will
Daily
provide 18 clock hours of inlKITOTEDTOTHE
. INTERESTOF
,truction . Weekly sessions will
MEIGS-MASON AREA
end with awards presented to
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
exec. Ed .
those who successfully comROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
plete the course. ·
,Published daily except
The county's three local $aturday by The Ohio Vallel
PubliShing Company , 11
school districts, Meigs Local, (ourl
St., Pomeroy, Ohi
Eastern and Southern, are .45769 . Bus iness Office Phont
992 ·2156. Ed ilorlol Phone 992t
participating.
2157 .
.
.

Eight drivers

under training

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Generation Rap

SKITS PRESENTED
Middleport second graders
entertlllned the PTA Monday
night and returned to the
stage later In the week to ·
present their humorous skits
to .the other pupils of the
Middleport Elementary
School. Miss Barbara Logan
and Mrs. Jane Bourne,
teachers, directed the skits
with Mrs. Gladys Foley
acproviding
piano
companlnfent.

~----~ .;ms-~

By Helen and Sue Bottel
Marriage Between Cousins?
Rap :
.
According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, "Cousin
marriage is accepted in most societies of the world and definitely
enco~raged in a few , with no apparent problems resulting."
But in most of the United States, marriage between first
cousins is prohibited, and second-cousin unions are taboo in a few
slates.
Why?- HOWARD

The

Se:nices set

Howard:
. Olildren of a first-cousin marriage MIGHT suffer from
genetic problems, if the wrong genes got together. In secondcousin unions, chances are remote. Risk isn't great in either case
and I don't think such marriages should be defined as "incest."
- SUE

Second class postage paid at

for Rev. Haley
of Middleport

Howard:
Nor do I! I think second-cousin marriage should be legal in
every state, and I see little reason these days why first cousins
shouldn't wed. If they 're concerned about heredity, they could
agree to remain childless. - HELEN

UMBRELLA CHORUS UNE- "Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head" was sung by these
Funeral services for the Rev .
second graders - front row, 1-r, Lisa Ashley, Peggy Cremeans, Usa Snyder, Zenie Bego, Jody
Worley E . Haley, 64, Route 1,
Miller and Frances Hoffman; and back row, Tracy McMahon, Rhonda Price , Mary Beth Long,
+++
Middleport, who died . WedMelissa Wise, Kristin Bailey and Elizabeth Shamblin.
nesday at VeiA!rans Memorial
Dear Helen and Sue:
Hospital will be held at 2 p.m.
Boy, do I have a problem! My giflfriend wants to get
Saturday at the Hysell Run
married on her 18th birthday (a year away), and I don 'l know · Free Methodist Church.
Quincy, Maine, and Mrs .
DECREE SET ASIDE
how I got into this mess.
Born Oct. 4, 1910, the Rev.
According to an entry in Robert C. Good, Middleport.
We don't even see each other very often, but she's told all her
Mr . Haley was the son of the
Meigs CoiUlty Common Pleas
relatives we're engaged. I sure can't remember asking her!
late George and Julia Romine
Court
the original decree of
What can you do to discourage a girl who threatens to take a
Haley. He married the former
divorce
of Mary Elizabeth
whole bottle of aspirins whenever you break a date ? Think what f hyllis Archer, who survives,
GROVE CITY - Edna Searles and Charles W. Searles
SEOEMSRUNS
she might do if I split?
on Feb. 20, 1930. Surviving .are Bradford , 94, formerly of has been set aside and a new
The
Pomeroy Unit of the
.,, f like her but not that much. - WORRIED AND CON·
five daughters, Mrs. Robert Columbus, died Wednesday at trial will be scheduled .
SEOEMS made one run
CERN ED
(Betty ) Swick, Route 1, Mid- the Monterey Nursing Inn,
Other entries show a suit for Wednesday· at 8:53a.m . to the
dleport; Mrs. Barbara Mc- Grove City.
divorce and one for money Gerald Powell residence,
Wand C:
Daniel, Mrs. Paul (Janet )
Miss Bradford was born in have been filed .
Uncoln Hill. Powell was taken
Truth is the best discourager. Tell this girl you can't marry
Sigman, Miss Unda Haley, Meigs County, the daughter of
to
Holzer Medical CeniA!r as a
Theodore
E.
Smith,
Rl.
1,
her , and make the reasons as gentle as possible - but stay firm.
Middleport, and Mrs. Cloyd the late Otis L. and Ida Mc- Vinton, filed for divorce medical patient .
A girl who threatens suicide over a broken date needs
(Sharon) Ferrell, Bidwell ; two Clain Bradford.
against Susan Smith, same
therapy more than a husband. If you're afraid she might try
brothers , Leland, Rutland. and
She was a retired school . address, charging gross
something foolish, confide in her parents. You won't be popular
Clyde of Middleport ; 13 IA!acher and member of the neglect .of duty and extreme
with them, but at least they'll be alerted for possible trouble.grandchildren; five great- Indianola United Methodist cruelty. Montgomery Ward,
ASK TOWED
HELEN AND SUE
grandchildren, and several Church and the National Charleston, asks for $547.74
Howard Carl Hastings, 44,
nieces and nephews. Besides Retired Teachers Association. plus in IA!rest from Sept. 1974 Coolville , and Lois Carolyn
Rap:
his
parents he was preceded in
She is survived by a nephew, against Robert C. Good, Knowles, ·39, Parkersburg.
I'm 19. The kids I hang around with make fun of me because
death by a daughiA!r and a Wallace Bradford, Coolville,
I've never been on a date. To tell the truth, I'm afraid to be with a
brother.
and a niece , Elizabeth Lohse,
boy. I went on one date, and everything was fine until he tried to
' During his career, the Rev. Pomeroy, and other nieces and
kiss me. I backed away and he never asked me out again.
Mr. Haley, who was ordained nephews .
I'm sure there are other girls with the same problems. How
seven
years ago, was a coal
Friends may call at the
do you get over being -SCARED OF MEN
miner and a school bus driver. Schoedinger Norri s Chapel,
He served as a Rutland 3574 North Broadway, Grove
Dear Scared:
HRS.t 9:15 TIL 8:00 PM
Township
TrusiA!e for 12 years . City, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
To cure fear: track down the cause. Have you been raised to
distrust men• Did you get a bad fright when you were younger? He has pastored churches at Graveside services will be
Morgan CeniA!r, the UniiA!d Saturday at 1 p.m . at Beech
Do you have guilt feelings about sex?
Gospel
Church and the Midway Grove Cemetery .
Or is it just that you're.shy and dread that first kiss because
Community Church for two and
you "don't know how." (You'd be surprised how many girls a
half years.
boys too - ask us for kissing instructions! )
Now Including Double Knits
at Saturday's
Officiating
Why not talk over your problem with your girl friends? They
won't laugh- for at least a few of them have traveled this road services will be the Rev. Cecil
Wise and the Rev. R. D. Brown.
themselves. - HELEN AND SUE
V.alues From
to •90.00
Burial will be in Miles
CONCERT SET
Cemetery. Friends may call at
The Meigs High School Band
the Walker Funeral Home in will give ·its annual spring
Rutland anytime from 10 a.m. concert this Friday, April 25 at
million in net earnings the first Friday to 12 noon on Saturday
PROFITS UP
8p.m.in the Larry R. Morrison
CINCINNATI (UP!) -A 15 nine months compared with when the body will be taken to gymnasium at the high school.
per cent increase in earnings $253 million earned in similar. the church. The family will Various selections will be
for the first nine months of the period last year. Earnings per • receive friends at the funeral presented by the band which is
currerit fiscal year was share wer.e up from $3.90 to home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. directed by Dwight Goins and
Friday.
reported Wednesday by the $3.53.
Fred Ruth .
Corduroy and Wool Ble'lds
ProciA!r &amp; Gamble Co. The $291
Values From $25.00 to $52.50

Edna Bradford

died Wednesday

PTSA MEETS
EASTERN - The Eastern
PTSA will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Monday at the school with
Judge Manning Webster to
speak on juvenile delinquency.
All parents of
incoming
seventh graders are invited to
attend.

Group Ladies'
Dess &amp; Casual

!

SHOES

DR. LAMB
can affect muscles

102 E. Main

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many diseases or medical
problems. That is why the
treatment may vary for the
same apparent condition.
A foot drop is a good
example. To raise the foot ·you
need well-fiUlctioning muscles,
· a good skeletal system for the
muscles to act against as
levers and good nerves that are
able to carry the stimulus to
the · muscles resulting in a
contraction or relaxation.
The muscles may have any
number of diseases that cause
them to be unable to fiUlction
properly. If they fail entirely
the foot drop wiU occur.
Any number of diseases can
·affeCt the nerves and the parts.
of the central nervous system
they connect with. Then the
muscles, depending on the
nerves, may not functior:.
Polio may affect nerve cells
\n the spinal cord and cause the
leg~ or arms to be paralyzed: ..

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The disease is in the spinal
cord. The nerves leaving the
spinal cord may be damaged
by some mechanical factor in
the spinal area, or the nerves
may ·be cut or . injured some
distance from the spinal cord.
Of course one of the disorders that can affect the nerves
is poor nutrition. Vitamin. B-12
deficiency may affect the
spinal .cord and cause
degeneration of cells that
relate to normal posture and
walking. Vitamin B-1 or
thiamin deficiency · is · more
generally relat~d to nerve
function .
When the muscles are the
primary problem, treatment is
directed loward correcting the
muscular disorder, if possible.
To prevent damage from polio,
one needs a preve.ntive
program to proiA!ct against the
infectious disease - taking
vitamins won't do this, nor will
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they correct the nerve damage
that results from infection with
the polio virus.
If there is a mechanical
factor, such as a slipped disc,
making pressure on a nerve the
obvious courS!! is t.o ·treat the
disc· problem.
The girl you asked about no
doubt had vitamin deficiencies
from her slarvation diet. In
these instances or in any
disease that results in vitamin
deficiencies , replaciQg the
vitamins. is a big help. Large
doses of thiamin seem to be·
·particularly usefii in helping
the nerves to regain normal
function quickly .
So. you might get a little
benefit if you happen to have a
low thiamin level in your. body,
but vitamins won 't correct
your basic problem. A
reasonable amount won 't harr.·
you ('ii.J1er.

Pomeroy

SAT. 9: 15 TIL 5:00 PM

1 Rack of Ladies Suits

and Pant Suits .

To

-------------------------1 Lot Men's White Shirts
and Colored Sport Shirts
Values From $5.00 to $8.00
SALE
PRICE

1 Lot of Ladies 01 esses
Misses Jr. and HaH Sizes

$20~

'S00

VALUES 'TO '38.00

Sale
Price

.

UPI Sports
Woody Fryman, that vagabond left-bander, somehow
seems to keep on evading
baseball's junkpile.
.
".
Fryman, you may recall,
" · was once traded for Jim
.: · Bunning some eight years ago.
~ _ Since then, despiiA! a below .500
' ·' lvinning percentage in three
., _. different IJJajor league stops,
'·" he's managed to avoid the
waiver lists and keep his big
.~-· league career alive through a
series of rebirths.
11"
Now, at 35, Fryman is ex• periencing yet another
'- · renaissance in Montreal with
: •. the Expos. Tuesday, he sh~t
:· out his old teammates, the
•" usually hard-hitting Pittsburgh
,. Pirates, for the second time
this season to ron his record to
2-0.
"I've had good and bad
streaks," Fryman said philosphically after limiting the
Pirates to seven hits and
~triking out nine in a 5-0 victory . "Every pitcher has th~m
.~ when you've been playing ten
;, . years. But I guess I'm in better
'. ". sha penow th an I was Iast year.
: : . "I'd have to give credit to the
.: ·• kida who are playing behind
' "· me for both my wins this

• . . season."
~ : Two of those "kids" who
'

.

l : played key roles in

2~%

'

'

Shop us for excellent selection of
men's double knit Suits, Leisure Suits,
&amp; Sport Coats, Knit Pants . &amp; Shirts by ·.
famous brands.
,_

4V2 frames no-hit

~ASTERN
Junior
righthander
Don
Eichinger
·.,,
''. ·.;------::-c:-::."::--pitched four innings of no-hit,
n&lt;&gt;-run baseball here . Wednesday evening against the
Waterford Wildcats before the
contest was called due to rain
after 4% innings with the
Eagies" getting a 1.0 victory.
Eichinger struck out one and
walked nobody in the abbreviated match which had no
score until the bottom of the
fourth when EasiA!rn scored
what proved to be the winning
)

i

because of the near-flawless
defense played by the Eagle's
defense in the field. Victims of
a ball-bobbling habit in earlier
games, this one produced only
one error which proved to be
harmless .
Waterford
000 ll-0 0 3 .
EasiA!rn
000 1-1 8 1
Rauch
and
Tucker.
Eichinger and Winebrenner.

riUI .

N BA Playoff Schedule
To start off that inning, Dave
By United Press International
t
Hannum singled but was out on
{All Times EDT)
Eastern Coni. Semifinals
a fielder 's choice on a ball hit
(Best of Seven)
•
Boston vs Houston
by Joe Kubn. Kuhn reached
$~(Boston leads 3-1 )
second on an error on the flrst
Th urs., April 2.4 - at Boston.
: Insure the good times, too . If baseman on a pickoff atiA!mpt,
7:30pm .
x -Sat. , April :i6- at Houston ,
1 you've taken to off the road travel and moved over to third on a
2 · 10 p .m .
•.. 1or excitement and recreation,
passed bali. Rob Barber then
X·Tues ., Apri l 29- at Boston,
~ you 're likely to need the extra came to the plate to bang out a 7 : 30p . m .
Washington vs . Buffalo
: protection of ou,r Recreational
single to score Kuhn giving
(Series tied J. J)
• Vehicle Polley. C'all or visit 1or all
Fri. , April 25- at Washington,
Eastern
a
one
run
margin
.
8:05p.m .
! the details.
Waterford failed to score in
Western Conf. Semifinals
••
(Best trl seven)
the top of the fifth and with
Golden St. vs seattle
••
EasiA!rn batting in the bottom
( Golden State leads J . 2)
••
s., April 24 - at Sea ttl e,
of the fifth , the game was IJ Thur
·OOp .m .
1258 POWEU ST.
x -Sat., April 26- at Go lden
called because of rain pouring
~
State, y.fba
down.
Chicago vs. KC -Omaha
MIDDLEPORT
Leading hitters for Eastern
(Chicago wins series 4-2)
r
x-if necessary
were Bob . McClure with a v·trme
p
lobe announc ed
•
double and a single in three
trips to the plate, Randy Blake
Like a good neighbor.
·
had
two singles in three trips,
State Farm Is there.
Hannum three singles in three,
IU11 fAIM
and
Kubn and Barber each had
By United Press International
~ STATHAM MU!UAL
National BAsketbal'l Assn .
single,
Barber
collecting
the
a
• ~ IIIUIIICI CWUY
Buffalo 102 Washington 96
•
Home Office
RBI. . '
Chicago 101 KC ·Omal'la 89
: Bloomi ~gto n , Illi nois
The victory was especially .. American Basketball Assn.
heartening · for Eastern Kentucky lOB Sl. Louis 103
p 7,)63.1

Steve Snowden

-•

PH. 992-7155

A

~,.

•••

Don't Miss

SHIPMENT OF

Cash's
Weekena

LEVI'S .

DENIMS IN
REGULAR or FLARE
L....;;.;.;;.;;;;~;.;.;.;;;;.....;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~llllllliliii--~,-- ''

Sale!

' •.

that's ever played. in the NBA
in many people's minds," said
Kansas City-Omaha Kings
coach Phil Johnson . "They are
. the best I've seen, but I hav ~ n 'l
been around that long.''
Whatever the reasons, and it
seems each of the .coaches has

•

Mets 7, Cardinals 1:
Rusty Sl&lt;lub's sixth career
grand slam climaxed a six-run
New York fifth-inning rally and
Tom Seaver held St . Louis to
just four hits in going the
distance for his second win.
Staub connected off loser Bob
Gibson (0-2) after singles by
Jack Heidemann and Jerry
Grote, a walk, .Felix Millan's
two-run double and another
walk.
Padres 7, Dodgers 1:
Randy Hundley 's two-run
double highlighted a four-run
outburst in the fourth inning
and Joe Mcintosh, another of
San Diego's "kiddie korps"
frontline pitchers, scattered
five hits. A crowd of 43,478-.
second largest in San Diego's
history- watched the surprising Padres deal Los
Angeles ace Don Sutton his
first Joss since Aug. 16 of last
year while holding first place
in the NL West.
Cubs 9, Phillles 3:
Bill Madlock drove in four
runs with a bases-loaded
double and a single and George
Mitterwald and Rick Monday
added solo homers as Chicago
snapped a three-game losing
streak by ripping- Philadelphia.
Ray Burris (2-0) gained the
victory but needed two innings
of hitless, scoreless relief from
Oscar Zamora .

a different explanation, the
Chicago Bulls clinched an NBA
Western Conference finals
berth by whipping the Kings,
101-l\9, Wednesday night, ending that best-Of-seven series
in six games .
Motta was pointing out the
defensive job Norm Van Uer
and Jerry Sloan did on Nate
Archibald and Jimmy Walker
in the series and in the final
game as the key to Chicago's
victory. In Wednesday's game,
Archibald had 26 points but
managed only 7-af-21 shots.
Walker scored only 10 points on
3-0f-12.
Johnson gave Love and
Walker ~most of the credit,
though they scored 26 and 1:!
points, respectively. Both kept
. the Kings away from the
·board, thereby helping to slop
their running game. Playing at
Chicago's tempo, the Bulls
methodically wore down the
Kings .
The Bulls'. defense was the

•

SUZUKI OF GALLIPOLIS

..!•

By HERB SPARROW
LEXINGTON, Ky . (UP!) Robert E. Lehmann had a
twofold dream-owning and·
breeding a Kentucky Derby
winner.
Lehmann, who owned Golden
Chance Farm near Paris, Ky .,
realized the first part of that
dream in 1970, when Dust
Commander surprised the raeing world with victories· in the
Blue Grass Stakes at
Keeneland and ' the Kentucky
Derby at Churchill Downs.
But Lehmann died in 1972
before the second part of the
dream had a chance for
completion. Today, Master
Derby, an offspring of Dust

~:~klaus,

Miller
are co-favorites
CAR!..'lBAD, Calif. (UPI) In the money-won category,
Jack Nicklaus, on a three- Miller is out on lop with
tournament winning streak $148,476, but Nicklaus is only
following his win in the $234 back.
Masters, has been picked as a
Weispkop!, who captured the
co-favorite with Johnny Miller Greater Greensboro Open one
to win the $40,000 first-prize week before his fourth runnemoney of the 23•d aMual rup finish in the Masters, is
Tournament of Champions third in money won with
which began today.
$112,488. ·
. The event is open only to
PGA champion Lee Trevino,
winners of major tournaments who finished last in the 1974
since the last TofC.
TofC, and Gene Littler, a
Nicklaus, who is the only threetime winner of · the
man to win five Masters, is also tournament from 1955-'57, were
looking for his fifth triumph made 11-1 chokes.
here over the 6,855--yard La
Eleven pros will be rhaking
Costa Country Club layout.
TofC debuts, including Jerry
Before Nicklaus can coiUlt McGee, winner of last weekthat fifth win , however, he has end's Pensacola Open for his
to beat Miller, the defending first triumph in eight years on
champion.
the pro tour.
But it may be a replay for
Miller won here a year ago
Nicklaus. He won his fifth for a $40,000 payoff with a 280
green coat at Augusta, Ga., in
total, eight-under-par, after
dramatic one-shot victory over shooting a .75 in.the first round.
Miller and Tom Weiskopf. He had a final-round 69 and
Nicklaus and Miller have been finished one shot ahead of
installed as 5--1 choices in this Buddy Allin and John Mahafprestigious event while Weis- • fey.
kopf has been listed 6-1.

a

••
•
•

GT 750

REBATES END
APRIL 30TH

i•

I•
:

6 DAYS TO GO!
.

I

FREE HELMET WITH EACH NEW BIKE
36 Monfh

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you still gel SIOO.OO

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'

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83. 00 tax
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66.00 tax
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Suzuki.
· ·

$1345 .00 .
54 .00 tax
6:oo title
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51120.00 to finance
+ SSO check from
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OPEN MONDAY 10A.M. TILl P.M. TUES.; THUR., FRI. 10 A.M. lit 6 P.M., SATURDAY 9
A.M. Iii 5 P.M.
.
.

.,

•

" J-

LOUISVU,LE, Ky. (UPI) Ted McClain couldn' t be
bothered worrying about the
four-stitch cut on his elbow
Wednesday night. He had other
things on his mind, like helping
the Kentucky Colonels defeat
the Spirits of St. Louis, 1011-103.
The victory boosted Kentucky intp a 2-0 lead in their
best-of-seven American
Basketball Association
Eastern Division playoff finals
as the two teams travel to St.
Louis for the third game
Friday night.
"You've just got to go out
there and forget something like
this," said McClain, holding up
a left elbow encased in an ice
pack. "When you're in .the
playoffs, you can't be thinking
about pain no matter how bad
it may feel later."
The 6-foot-3 Tennessee State
product injured his arm Monday night when it•made contact
with the. mouth of St. Louis
rookie Gus Gerard, loosening a
couple of his teet~.
·What hurt a lot worse in
Monday ·night's game than his
clbow .was McClain's pride
after Freddie Lewis scored 35
points against him. He was·
determined to keep the veteran
guard from having another
game like that 'one.
And he did, holding htm to 18
points until the final41 seconds
when Lewis cut loose with an
eight-point b~.rage that was
too late to matiA!r.

biggest factor, however. The
Kings were held only a 35.3 per
cent shooting . percentage.
Chicago hit 45.6 per cent.
Chicago effectively ended
the Kings' hopes with a 15-6
spurt in lhe first 6:31 of the
third quarter, turning a 50--44
halftime margin into a 6!h\O
lead.
The game reached an explosive point with 8:40 left when
Nate Thurmond and Sam
Lacey engaged in a brief
shoving match and Van Uer
led several players into the
stands behind the Chicago
basket. Apparently no blows
were struck in the stands,
however. Police quickly
jumped between the fans and
the Bulls.
Chicago now goes against the
Golden State-Seattle series
winner in the semifinals.
In the only other action
Wednesday night, Bob McAdoo 's 37 poii! Is-nine in the last
five minutes-helped the Buf-

falo Brayes defeat the
Washington Bullets, 102-96, to
tie their series at three games
apiece. The Bullets will host
Buffalo in the deciding game
Friday night.
McAdoo, the MVP t\Jis
season, was blanked for nearly
seven minules in the final
period before starting his
scoring spree with a pair of
free throws with 5:13 left in the
game to give the Braves an 8987lead. Kevin Porter fouled out
on the play and 15 seconds
later, Washington's Phil Chenier tied it for the 19th and final
time.
McAdoa's three points, Lee
Winfield 's basket and two more
goals by McAdoo were answered by only Elvin Hayes'
follow shot and Buffalo led 91190 with 2:14 left. ·
Jim McMillian added 20
points for Buffalo and Randy
Smith hit 16. Smith also help
limit. Kevin PoriA!r to six.
Hayes, who had 46 points in

Sunday's win ov~ Buffalo,
again paced the Bullets with 29:
Chenier · had 25, 19 in the
opening half.
Boston, holding a 3-1 edge in
games, . can eliminate the
Houston Rockets when they
meet on the Celtics' home court
tonight.
Seattle will be trying to stay
alive for a seventh game when
the Sonics host the Golden
State Warriors in the other
game tonight. Golden StaiA!
leads three games to two .

For Privete Weter Svtt•ml

A great new pump
Myers

Dream rides Master Derby

second victory

ONLY 6 MORE DAYS

j

} .•

~

••
•

TIRE SALE IS STIU ON UNTIL APRIL 30TH

JU~ :~EIVED

Western Con +erence J.+inals .berth

i ................................ Colon·e ls take

'1QOO

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

Eichinger hurls

Fryman's

•100 ON GT 750
•75 ON GT 550
'50 ON GT 380

lLz · ·

By United Press Iniernational
"When you wriiA! the history
of this series," said Chicago
· Coach Dick Motta,. "you'll
write that our guards shut out
their gucirds."
"Chet Walker and Bob Love
are the best set of forwards

latest victory were shortstop bested Texas, 4--1, Oakland
Tim Foli and catcher Barry edged Kansas City, 3-2, and
Foote . .Foli walked, stole Ch1cago and MiMesola were
second and scored the first run postponed because of wet
in the first inning when Pirate grounds.
Braves 5, Reds 4:
second baseman Rennie
Stennett couldn't pick up · Larvell Blanks doubled home
Mike Lum with a two-aut for
Foote's grounder.
Run--scoring singles by Fry- the winning run in the 11th
man, Pepe Mangual and Mike inning and Ron Reed went the
Jorgensen accounted for three route for Atlanta in gaining his
more Expo runs during a four- first victory in three decisions.
run second inhing uprising off Darrell Evans and Vic Correll
belted two-run homers for the
loser Jerry Reuss .
Elsewhere in the National Braves and Johnny Bench had
League, Atlanta edged Cincin- a three-run shot for Cincinnati.
nati, 5-4, the New York Mets Astros 2-0, Giants 2-3
Gary Thomasson's solo home
routed St. Louis, 7-1, the
Chicago
Cubs
drubbed run and a run-scoring single by
Philadelphia, 9-3, San Diego Bruce Miller aided the five-hit
ripped Los Angeles, 7-1, and pitching of rookie left-bander
San
Francisco blanked Pete Falcone in San FrancisHouston, J.&lt;l, after losing the co's second game win. Houston
opener of a doubleheader, 3-2. helped Doug Konieczny to his
In American League games, first major league victory in
Boston outlasted the New York, the opener as Roger Metzger
Yankees, 11·7, Milwaukee beat drove in a pair of runs with a
Baltimore, 8-5, Cleveland squeeze bunt and a sacrifice
shaded Detroit, 4-3, California fly.

,I I &lt;

.

1·
· of Ladles Blouses,
K'nlt Tops, Sweaters ancf
Skirts bv Jantzen
catalina &amp;
Lady Manhattan .
1~ PRICE

MENS CASUAL ·and
DRESS PANTS
Double Knits, Wool and
Dacron Blends.

PRICE

by Jantzen and Catalina

Tapered Legs. Values To $11.50

REDUCED

Betty Ohlinger

House in Pomeroy.
.
His appearance is Sponsored by the United
Methodist Churches of the
Racine area. Kern is a
member of the National
Fellowship of Christian
Athletes.·

::~. Fryman blanks Pirates, 2-0

i•

SAL~ PRICE

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read
the letter in your column from
the 17-year-ald girl who went
on a diet and became really
slim but also developed a foot
·drop. She stated she started
taking vitamins to correct the
foot drop and it worked.
You suggested taking
thiamin for her foot.
.
•. · I have foot drop, too, but I am
suppcled to have "CharcotMarie Tooth"· disease. Doctors
told me the drop went with the
disease. .
Can a fO!Jt drop be so easily
· cOrr-ecled by a certain vitamin
or thiamin-containing foods as
!his girl's was? Or, does having
a mWICIIIar dlaease make It
impoealble to correct a foot
drop with vlt8mins? Would
vllamln B-1 help me?
DEAR READER - A single
.. outward sigll' of a disorder· in
function . can be ·,caused by

..

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIALS

000
..

"

,•

1.Lot Mens Colored Levi's
and Perma Press Pants

.

1

Marguerite's Shoes

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

dis~ses.

-,I

20% OFF TO All GRADS

Soort Coats

SALE
PRICE$1

I1

I lot of
LADIES'

I

Stale University
All~
American quarterback now
playing professionally wilh
the Buffalo Bills, will speak
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
Southern High School in
Racine. The appearance is
open to the public and tickets

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National advertlsin" .·
representative
Bottinelll}
Gallagher, Inc .• 12 East 42n'f
St., New York, New York.
Subscription
rate 's
Del ivered by carrier wher
available 75 cents per week
6v Motor ·Route where carrie;
service not available. On'•
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Six months , 511 .50; Thre
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··. EllenrM. Ewing died Thursday

YELLOW BIRD AND IDS FRIENDS - Max Blake,
icenter front, had the leading role in this skit In the front row,
1-r with him are singers AMe Reece, SllSle Barker, Steve
Crow, Scott McKinley. Boys in the baseball routine, standing,

-~·--

--~ :- Th~ Daily Sentinei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April24, 1975 ·

•

Commander, could lake a big
step toward completing the
dreamas he takes on a field of
etght m the 51st Blue Grass
Stakes.
Master Derby, owned by
Lehmann's widow, will share
lop weight of .123 pounds with
two other prune Derby conIA!nders-Prince Thou Art and
Avatar- in today's ruMing of
the
$50,000-added
Blue
Grass.
The 11-llmile event, just nine
days before the Derby, has
become a prime test for the
"RIUI for the Roses"- with
Master Derby's pop one of
eight Derby winners in the past
13yearstofinishfirstorsecond
m the Keeneland prep.
Also entered in today's race
are Prince Thou Art's Darby
Dan stablemate Sylvan Place,
Harvard Man, Wicked Park,
Honey Mark, Decipher and
Ruggles Ferry.
Master
Derby
has
progressed more quickly than
his father, whose surprise win
in the Blue Grass forced Lehmann to cut short a Tiger
hunting expedition in India and
rush home just in time ·to see
his horse triumph in the Derby.
The chestnut colt has won
four straight races, including
the Louisiana Derby and a 1116 mile prep at Keeneland last
week , and now totals $233,226 in
earnings.
Prince Thou Art, Sylvan
Place and Avatar also bring
good credentials into the
Bluegrass. The Darby Dan duo
combined to finish one-two in
the Florida Derby March 29,
handing Wood Memorial
wiMer Foolish Pleasure his
only defeat so far.
That same day, Avatar was
taking the Santa Anita Derby
to stamp himself the best of the
west.
Honey Mark has also won a
stakes at Keeneland this spring

and Ruggles Ferry, who was
trained by the . veteran Henry
Forrest until his death April 5,
was a strong second to Master
Derby in the Calumet Stakes
last week. Wicked Park
second weighted at 120 pounds:
has won $89,329 in his brief
career.
Master Derby will have the
inside post position, with
Prince Thou Art and Avaiar
drawing into the middle of the
field. Sylvan Prince , who along
with Harvard Man carries low
weight of 114 po~nds, will start
from the far outside on a track
that threatens to be muddy
after day long rains Wednesday .

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•

Nor was McClain content to
rest on his defensive laurels as
he pumped in 24 points to lead
the Colonels in scoriilg.
With all five starters reaching double figures, Kentucky
was able to withstand a sensational 43-point output by
rookie Marvin Barnes and
Railed down its 16th victory in
its last 17 games.
Colonels Coach Hubie Brown
expressed disappointment in
the performance of his front
line. · ·
"OUr front-court people are
going to have to get off their
tails and go to the boards
better," he said. "The fact that
we did not play a good game up
front and still came ou\ with
the win is a credit to our overall
team play."
The Colonels' inside power,
Artis Gihnore and Dan Issei,
bas been their !JUlin strength
most of the time but neither
exactly sparkled Wednesday
night. . Gihnore had 23 points
and 15 rebounds l&gt;ut gave up 43
Jll)ints and 17 . rebounds to
Barnes.
Issei's 15 points .and five
rebounds left much to be
destrl!d in the eyes of Coach
Brown.
The Colonels lost reserve
guard BiJ:d Averitt with a
pulled hamstring muscle iil .the
third quarter and Brown said
he didn't know whether he
would be able to play Friday
night.

MIDDLEPORT·DEPARTMENT STORE
SPRING CLEARANCE

1/3 TO

lf2

OFF

\

1 GROUP OF DEVON
·-----------------------------~'

Spring Coats
and

Sweaters
----------------------1 RACK OF JEANS
AND JR. PANTS

--------------------------1 RACK OF TOPS
OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TIL 8:00

'I

...

�.

.

~-

.

~

...,..

,.

-

~

'

-

~

......,-~~~

~

.

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.

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(
'·

Ellen Marie.Ewing, 59, Rt. 1,
~inton, died this morning at
her residence follbwing a long
Wness. She was born Dec. 28,
·1915, in Tuscarawas County,
llld was the daughter of the
late Belden and Ola Derringer
Meyers.
Mrs . .Ewing. was married to
Robert Ewing Feb. 28, 1935.
She is survived by her
husband; one brother, Russell
Meyers, Sandyville; two
sisters, Mrs. Howard (Ruby)
Johnson, Canton, and Mrs.

William (Evelyn) Harvey,
Bolivar.
Funeral services will be
Sunday, April '!I at the Walker .
Funeral Home, Rutland at I
p.m. with Rev, Lloyd · D.
Grimm in chllrge of the ser·
vice . Burial Mil follow In the
Miles Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home alter 2
p.m. Saturday and the family
will receive friends between
the hours fo 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Saturday.

Health center tours April 30

"UTI'LE WHITE DUCK" - A skit of that title featured .
Carl Moodispaugh as t he frog, Wa)'!le Shrirnplin as the little
white duck, DaMy Thomas as the bug, and Joey Poulin as
the snake, 1-r.

1-r, are Richard MeHaffey, John Bacon, Bobby Staats, Nick
Bush, David Hoover, P. ,J. Harris, Roger Manley, Eddie
Miller, Tim Wamsley, Joe Manley and Tony Welch .

·Athens Mental' Health CeniA!r froin 2--6 p.m. Each to~ Mil
will be open to the public for la_st approxima~ly one hour
tours on Wednesday, April 30, w1th tours sta~ting at 2, 3, 4,
.
·
·
. ~and 5 p.m. Individuals, as well
as groups are invited. For
further details call Mrs. Kay
Davis, Volunteer Servicj!s
Coordinator, at 592-3031, Ex~nl!on 371 from 8 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. daily.
Each tour wiU include all
Eight school bus drivers are areas Qf the hospital with a
beginning an· organized course question and answer pepod at
of instruction to improve their the end. Groups with special
skills and knowledge of iniA!rest should contact Mrs.
driving . ·
Davis In advance so that she
Ray Goodman, Voc-Ed might plan for these interests.
director at Meigs High School,
was instrumen Ia! in obtaining
a certified school bus driver
training instructor who will
Daily
provide 18 clock hours of inlKITOTEDTOTHE
. INTERESTOF
,truction . Weekly sessions will
MEIGS-MASON AREA
end with awards presented to
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
exec. Ed .
those who successfully comROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
plete the course. ·
,Published daily except
The county's three local $aturday by The Ohio Vallel
PubliShing Company , 11
school districts, Meigs Local, (ourl
St., Pomeroy, Ohi
Eastern and Southern, are .45769 . Bus iness Office Phont
992 ·2156. Ed ilorlol Phone 992t
participating.
2157 .
.
.

Eight drivers

under training

.
.
Generation Rap

SKITS PRESENTED
Middleport second graders
entertlllned the PTA Monday
night and returned to the
stage later In the week to ·
present their humorous skits
to .the other pupils of the
Middleport Elementary
School. Miss Barbara Logan
and Mrs. Jane Bourne,
teachers, directed the skits
with Mrs. Gladys Foley
acproviding
piano
companlnfent.

~----~ .;ms-~

By Helen and Sue Bottel
Marriage Between Cousins?
Rap :
.
According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, "Cousin
marriage is accepted in most societies of the world and definitely
enco~raged in a few , with no apparent problems resulting."
But in most of the United States, marriage between first
cousins is prohibited, and second-cousin unions are taboo in a few
slates.
Why?- HOWARD

The

Se:nices set

Howard:
. Olildren of a first-cousin marriage MIGHT suffer from
genetic problems, if the wrong genes got together. In secondcousin unions, chances are remote. Risk isn't great in either case
and I don't think such marriages should be defined as "incest."
- SUE

Second class postage paid at

for Rev. Haley
of Middleport

Howard:
Nor do I! I think second-cousin marriage should be legal in
every state, and I see little reason these days why first cousins
shouldn't wed. If they 're concerned about heredity, they could
agree to remain childless. - HELEN

UMBRELLA CHORUS UNE- "Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head" was sung by these
Funeral services for the Rev .
second graders - front row, 1-r, Lisa Ashley, Peggy Cremeans, Usa Snyder, Zenie Bego, Jody
Worley E . Haley, 64, Route 1,
Miller and Frances Hoffman; and back row, Tracy McMahon, Rhonda Price , Mary Beth Long,
+++
Middleport, who died . WedMelissa Wise, Kristin Bailey and Elizabeth Shamblin.
nesday at VeiA!rans Memorial
Dear Helen and Sue:
Hospital will be held at 2 p.m.
Boy, do I have a problem! My giflfriend wants to get
Saturday at the Hysell Run
married on her 18th birthday (a year away), and I don 'l know · Free Methodist Church.
Quincy, Maine, and Mrs .
DECREE SET ASIDE
how I got into this mess.
Born Oct. 4, 1910, the Rev.
According to an entry in Robert C. Good, Middleport.
We don't even see each other very often, but she's told all her
Mr . Haley was the son of the
Meigs CoiUlty Common Pleas
relatives we're engaged. I sure can't remember asking her!
late George and Julia Romine
Court
the original decree of
What can you do to discourage a girl who threatens to take a
Haley. He married the former
divorce
of Mary Elizabeth
whole bottle of aspirins whenever you break a date ? Think what f hyllis Archer, who survives,
GROVE CITY - Edna Searles and Charles W. Searles
SEOEMSRUNS
she might do if I split?
on Feb. 20, 1930. Surviving .are Bradford , 94, formerly of has been set aside and a new
The
Pomeroy Unit of the
.,, f like her but not that much. - WORRIED AND CON·
five daughters, Mrs. Robert Columbus, died Wednesday at trial will be scheduled .
SEOEMS made one run
CERN ED
(Betty ) Swick, Route 1, Mid- the Monterey Nursing Inn,
Other entries show a suit for Wednesday· at 8:53a.m . to the
dleport; Mrs. Barbara Mc- Grove City.
divorce and one for money Gerald Powell residence,
Wand C:
Daniel, Mrs. Paul (Janet )
Miss Bradford was born in have been filed .
Uncoln Hill. Powell was taken
Truth is the best discourager. Tell this girl you can't marry
Sigman, Miss Unda Haley, Meigs County, the daughter of
to
Holzer Medical CeniA!r as a
Theodore
E.
Smith,
Rl.
1,
her , and make the reasons as gentle as possible - but stay firm.
Middleport, and Mrs. Cloyd the late Otis L. and Ida Mc- Vinton, filed for divorce medical patient .
A girl who threatens suicide over a broken date needs
(Sharon) Ferrell, Bidwell ; two Clain Bradford.
against Susan Smith, same
therapy more than a husband. If you're afraid she might try
brothers , Leland, Rutland. and
She was a retired school . address, charging gross
something foolish, confide in her parents. You won't be popular
Clyde of Middleport ; 13 IA!acher and member of the neglect .of duty and extreme
with them, but at least they'll be alerted for possible trouble.grandchildren; five great- Indianola United Methodist cruelty. Montgomery Ward,
ASK TOWED
HELEN AND SUE
grandchildren, and several Church and the National Charleston, asks for $547.74
Howard Carl Hastings, 44,
nieces and nephews. Besides Retired Teachers Association. plus in IA!rest from Sept. 1974 Coolville , and Lois Carolyn
Rap:
his
parents he was preceded in
She is survived by a nephew, against Robert C. Good, Knowles, ·39, Parkersburg.
I'm 19. The kids I hang around with make fun of me because
death by a daughiA!r and a Wallace Bradford, Coolville,
I've never been on a date. To tell the truth, I'm afraid to be with a
brother.
and a niece , Elizabeth Lohse,
boy. I went on one date, and everything was fine until he tried to
' During his career, the Rev. Pomeroy, and other nieces and
kiss me. I backed away and he never asked me out again.
Mr. Haley, who was ordained nephews .
I'm sure there are other girls with the same problems. How
seven
years ago, was a coal
Friends may call at the
do you get over being -SCARED OF MEN
miner and a school bus driver. Schoedinger Norri s Chapel,
He served as a Rutland 3574 North Broadway, Grove
Dear Scared:
HRS.t 9:15 TIL 8:00 PM
Township
TrusiA!e for 12 years . City, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
To cure fear: track down the cause. Have you been raised to
distrust men• Did you get a bad fright when you were younger? He has pastored churches at Graveside services will be
Morgan CeniA!r, the UniiA!d Saturday at 1 p.m . at Beech
Do you have guilt feelings about sex?
Gospel
Church and the Midway Grove Cemetery .
Or is it just that you're.shy and dread that first kiss because
Community Church for two and
you "don't know how." (You'd be surprised how many girls a
half years.
boys too - ask us for kissing instructions! )
Now Including Double Knits
at Saturday's
Officiating
Why not talk over your problem with your girl friends? They
won't laugh- for at least a few of them have traveled this road services will be the Rev. Cecil
Wise and the Rev. R. D. Brown.
themselves. - HELEN AND SUE
V.alues From
to •90.00
Burial will be in Miles
CONCERT SET
Cemetery. Friends may call at
The Meigs High School Band
the Walker Funeral Home in will give ·its annual spring
Rutland anytime from 10 a.m. concert this Friday, April 25 at
million in net earnings the first Friday to 12 noon on Saturday
PROFITS UP
8p.m.in the Larry R. Morrison
CINCINNATI (UP!) -A 15 nine months compared with when the body will be taken to gymnasium at the high school.
per cent increase in earnings $253 million earned in similar. the church. The family will Various selections will be
for the first nine months of the period last year. Earnings per • receive friends at the funeral presented by the band which is
currerit fiscal year was share wer.e up from $3.90 to home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. directed by Dwight Goins and
Friday.
reported Wednesday by the $3.53.
Fred Ruth .
Corduroy and Wool Ble'lds
ProciA!r &amp; Gamble Co. The $291
Values From $25.00 to $52.50

Edna Bradford

died Wednesday

PTSA MEETS
EASTERN - The Eastern
PTSA will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Monday at the school with
Judge Manning Webster to
speak on juvenile delinquency.
All parents of
incoming
seventh graders are invited to
attend.

Group Ladies'
Dess &amp; Casual

!

SHOES

DR. LAMB
can affect muscles

102 E. Main

I·

--

many diseases or medical
problems. That is why the
treatment may vary for the
same apparent condition.
A foot drop is a good
example. To raise the foot ·you
need well-fiUlctioning muscles,
· a good skeletal system for the
muscles to act against as
levers and good nerves that are
able to carry the stimulus to
the · muscles resulting in a
contraction or relaxation.
The muscles may have any
number of diseases that cause
them to be unable to fiUlction
properly. If they fail entirely
the foot drop wiU occur.
Any number of diseases can
·affeCt the nerves and the parts.
of the central nervous system
they connect with. Then the
muscles, depending on the
nerves, may not functior:.
Polio may affect nerve cells
\n the spinal cord and cause the
leg~ or arms to be paralyzed: ..

,

The disease is in the spinal
cord. The nerves leaving the
spinal cord may be damaged
by some mechanical factor in
the spinal area, or the nerves
may ·be cut or . injured some
distance from the spinal cord.
Of course one of the disorders that can affect the nerves
is poor nutrition. Vitamin. B-12
deficiency may affect the
spinal .cord and cause
degeneration of cells that
relate to normal posture and
walking. Vitamin B-1 or
thiamin deficiency · is · more
generally relat~d to nerve
function .
When the muscles are the
primary problem, treatment is
directed loward correcting the
muscular disorder, if possible.
To prevent damage from polio,
one needs a preve.ntive
program to proiA!ct against the
infectious disease - taking
vitamins won't do this, nor will
~

..

they correct the nerve damage
that results from infection with
the polio virus.
If there is a mechanical
factor, such as a slipped disc,
making pressure on a nerve the
obvious courS!! is t.o ·treat the
disc· problem.
The girl you asked about no
doubt had vitamin deficiencies
from her slarvation diet. In
these instances or in any
disease that results in vitamin
deficiencies , replaciQg the
vitamins. is a big help. Large
doses of thiamin seem to be·
·particularly usefii in helping
the nerves to regain normal
function quickly .
So. you might get a little
benefit if you happen to have a
low thiamin level in your. body,
but vitamins won 't correct
your basic problem. A
reasonable amount won 't harr.·
you ('ii.J1er.

Pomeroy

SAT. 9: 15 TIL 5:00 PM

1 Rack of Ladies Suits

and Pant Suits .

To

-------------------------1 Lot Men's White Shirts
and Colored Sport Shirts
Values From $5.00 to $8.00
SALE
PRICE

1 Lot of Ladies 01 esses
Misses Jr. and HaH Sizes

$20~

'S00

VALUES 'TO '38.00

Sale
Price

.

UPI Sports
Woody Fryman, that vagabond left-bander, somehow
seems to keep on evading
baseball's junkpile.
.
".
Fryman, you may recall,
" · was once traded for Jim
.: · Bunning some eight years ago.
~ _ Since then, despiiA! a below .500
' ·' lvinning percentage in three
., _. different IJJajor league stops,
'·" he's managed to avoid the
waiver lists and keep his big
.~-· league career alive through a
series of rebirths.
11"
Now, at 35, Fryman is ex• periencing yet another
'- · renaissance in Montreal with
: •. the Expos. Tuesday, he sh~t
:· out his old teammates, the
•" usually hard-hitting Pittsburgh
,. Pirates, for the second time
this season to ron his record to
2-0.
"I've had good and bad
streaks," Fryman said philosphically after limiting the
Pirates to seven hits and
~triking out nine in a 5-0 victory . "Every pitcher has th~m
.~ when you've been playing ten
;, . years. But I guess I'm in better
'. ". sha penow th an I was Iast year.
: : . "I'd have to give credit to the
.: ·• kida who are playing behind
' "· me for both my wins this

• . . season."
~ : Two of those "kids" who
'

.

l : played key roles in

2~%

'

'

Shop us for excellent selection of
men's double knit Suits, Leisure Suits,
&amp; Sport Coats, Knit Pants . &amp; Shirts by ·.
famous brands.
,_

4V2 frames no-hit

~ASTERN
Junior
righthander
Don
Eichinger
·.,,
''. ·.;------::-c:-::."::--pitched four innings of no-hit,
n&lt;&gt;-run baseball here . Wednesday evening against the
Waterford Wildcats before the
contest was called due to rain
after 4% innings with the
Eagies" getting a 1.0 victory.
Eichinger struck out one and
walked nobody in the abbreviated match which had no
score until the bottom of the
fourth when EasiA!rn scored
what proved to be the winning
)

i

because of the near-flawless
defense played by the Eagle's
defense in the field. Victims of
a ball-bobbling habit in earlier
games, this one produced only
one error which proved to be
harmless .
Waterford
000 ll-0 0 3 .
EasiA!rn
000 1-1 8 1
Rauch
and
Tucker.
Eichinger and Winebrenner.

riUI .

N BA Playoff Schedule
To start off that inning, Dave
By United Press International
t
Hannum singled but was out on
{All Times EDT)
Eastern Coni. Semifinals
a fielder 's choice on a ball hit
(Best of Seven)
•
Boston vs Houston
by Joe Kubn. Kuhn reached
$~(Boston leads 3-1 )
second on an error on the flrst
Th urs., April 2.4 - at Boston.
: Insure the good times, too . If baseman on a pickoff atiA!mpt,
7:30pm .
x -Sat. , April :i6- at Houston ,
1 you've taken to off the road travel and moved over to third on a
2 · 10 p .m .
•.. 1or excitement and recreation,
passed bali. Rob Barber then
X·Tues ., Apri l 29- at Boston,
~ you 're likely to need the extra came to the plate to bang out a 7 : 30p . m .
Washington vs . Buffalo
: protection of ou,r Recreational
single to score Kuhn giving
(Series tied J. J)
• Vehicle Polley. C'all or visit 1or all
Fri. , April 25- at Washington,
Eastern
a
one
run
margin
.
8:05p.m .
! the details.
Waterford failed to score in
Western Conf. Semifinals
••
(Best trl seven)
the top of the fifth and with
Golden St. vs seattle
••
EasiA!rn batting in the bottom
( Golden State leads J . 2)
••
s., April 24 - at Sea ttl e,
of the fifth , the game was IJ Thur
·OOp .m .
1258 POWEU ST.
x -Sat., April 26- at Go lden
called because of rain pouring
~
State, y.fba
down.
Chicago vs. KC -Omaha
MIDDLEPORT
Leading hitters for Eastern
(Chicago wins series 4-2)
r
x-if necessary
were Bob . McClure with a v·trme
p
lobe announc ed
•
double and a single in three
trips to the plate, Randy Blake
Like a good neighbor.
·
had
two singles in three trips,
State Farm Is there.
Hannum three singles in three,
IU11 fAIM
and
Kubn and Barber each had
By United Press International
~ STATHAM MU!UAL
National BAsketbal'l Assn .
single,
Barber
collecting
the
a
• ~ IIIUIIICI CWUY
Buffalo 102 Washington 96
•
Home Office
RBI. . '
Chicago 101 KC ·Omal'la 89
: Bloomi ~gto n , Illi nois
The victory was especially .. American Basketball Assn.
heartening · for Eastern Kentucky lOB Sl. Louis 103
p 7,)63.1

Steve Snowden

-•

PH. 992-7155

A

~,.

•••

Don't Miss

SHIPMENT OF

Cash's
Weekena

LEVI'S .

DENIMS IN
REGULAR or FLARE
L....;;.;.;;.;;;;~;.;.;.;;;;.....;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~llllllliliii--~,-- ''

Sale!

' •.

that's ever played. in the NBA
in many people's minds," said
Kansas City-Omaha Kings
coach Phil Johnson . "They are
. the best I've seen, but I hav ~ n 'l
been around that long.''
Whatever the reasons, and it
seems each of the .coaches has

•

Mets 7, Cardinals 1:
Rusty Sl&lt;lub's sixth career
grand slam climaxed a six-run
New York fifth-inning rally and
Tom Seaver held St . Louis to
just four hits in going the
distance for his second win.
Staub connected off loser Bob
Gibson (0-2) after singles by
Jack Heidemann and Jerry
Grote, a walk, .Felix Millan's
two-run double and another
walk.
Padres 7, Dodgers 1:
Randy Hundley 's two-run
double highlighted a four-run
outburst in the fourth inning
and Joe Mcintosh, another of
San Diego's "kiddie korps"
frontline pitchers, scattered
five hits. A crowd of 43,478-.
second largest in San Diego's
history- watched the surprising Padres deal Los
Angeles ace Don Sutton his
first Joss since Aug. 16 of last
year while holding first place
in the NL West.
Cubs 9, Phillles 3:
Bill Madlock drove in four
runs with a bases-loaded
double and a single and George
Mitterwald and Rick Monday
added solo homers as Chicago
snapped a three-game losing
streak by ripping- Philadelphia.
Ray Burris (2-0) gained the
victory but needed two innings
of hitless, scoreless relief from
Oscar Zamora .

a different explanation, the
Chicago Bulls clinched an NBA
Western Conference finals
berth by whipping the Kings,
101-l\9, Wednesday night, ending that best-Of-seven series
in six games .
Motta was pointing out the
defensive job Norm Van Uer
and Jerry Sloan did on Nate
Archibald and Jimmy Walker
in the series and in the final
game as the key to Chicago's
victory. In Wednesday's game,
Archibald had 26 points but
managed only 7-af-21 shots.
Walker scored only 10 points on
3-0f-12.
Johnson gave Love and
Walker ~most of the credit,
though they scored 26 and 1:!
points, respectively. Both kept
. the Kings away from the
·board, thereby helping to slop
their running game. Playing at
Chicago's tempo, the Bulls
methodically wore down the
Kings .
The Bulls'. defense was the

•

SUZUKI OF GALLIPOLIS

..!•

By HERB SPARROW
LEXINGTON, Ky . (UP!) Robert E. Lehmann had a
twofold dream-owning and·
breeding a Kentucky Derby
winner.
Lehmann, who owned Golden
Chance Farm near Paris, Ky .,
realized the first part of that
dream in 1970, when Dust
Commander surprised the raeing world with victories· in the
Blue Grass Stakes at
Keeneland and ' the Kentucky
Derby at Churchill Downs.
But Lehmann died in 1972
before the second part of the
dream had a chance for
completion. Today, Master
Derby, an offspring of Dust

~:~klaus,

Miller
are co-favorites
CAR!..'lBAD, Calif. (UPI) In the money-won category,
Jack Nicklaus, on a three- Miller is out on lop with
tournament winning streak $148,476, but Nicklaus is only
following his win in the $234 back.
Masters, has been picked as a
Weispkop!, who captured the
co-favorite with Johnny Miller Greater Greensboro Open one
to win the $40,000 first-prize week before his fourth runnemoney of the 23•d aMual rup finish in the Masters, is
Tournament of Champions third in money won with
which began today.
$112,488. ·
. The event is open only to
PGA champion Lee Trevino,
winners of major tournaments who finished last in the 1974
since the last TofC.
TofC, and Gene Littler, a
Nicklaus, who is the only threetime winner of · the
man to win five Masters, is also tournament from 1955-'57, were
looking for his fifth triumph made 11-1 chokes.
here over the 6,855--yard La
Eleven pros will be rhaking
Costa Country Club layout.
TofC debuts, including Jerry
Before Nicklaus can coiUlt McGee, winner of last weekthat fifth win , however, he has end's Pensacola Open for his
to beat Miller, the defending first triumph in eight years on
champion.
the pro tour.
But it may be a replay for
Miller won here a year ago
Nicklaus. He won his fifth for a $40,000 payoff with a 280
green coat at Augusta, Ga., in
total, eight-under-par, after
dramatic one-shot victory over shooting a .75 in.the first round.
Miller and Tom Weiskopf. He had a final-round 69 and
Nicklaus and Miller have been finished one shot ahead of
installed as 5--1 choices in this Buddy Allin and John Mahafprestigious event while Weis- • fey.
kopf has been listed 6-1.

a

••
•
•

GT 750

REBATES END
APRIL 30TH

i•

I•
:

6 DAYS TO GO!
.

I

FREE HELMET WITH EACH NEW BIKE
36 Monfh

buuo

: 121.10 down
S17.0.00 to finance
you still gel SIOO.OO

+

check from U.S. Suzulci.

With
Rebate

SAVE$ $ $ $ $ $
'

GT750

12095.00
83. 00 tax
, ,00 title

•1995

GT 550

I

.GT 380

$1650.00
66.00 tax
=~6~.0~0 title '
$1722 .00 .
322 .00 ~own
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Suzuki.
· ·

$1345 .00 .
54 .00 tax
6:oo title
$1405.00
285.00 down
51120.00 to finance
+ SSO check from
Suzuki.

u.s.

. 400x18
400x18
350x18
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ROAD REAR TIRE (HI Speed) ............ ~22.95
KNO.IY FOR RACING OR HILL$. ••..~22.95
KNOBBY FOR RACING OR HILLS.....'.lt.95
KNOBBY FOR RACING OR HILL$ ....~20.95 .

OPEN MONDAY 10A.M. TILl P.M. TUES.; THUR., FRI. 10 A.M. lit 6 P.M., SATURDAY 9
A.M. Iii 5 P.M.
.
.

.,

•

" J-

LOUISVU,LE, Ky. (UPI) Ted McClain couldn' t be
bothered worrying about the
four-stitch cut on his elbow
Wednesday night. He had other
things on his mind, like helping
the Kentucky Colonels defeat
the Spirits of St. Louis, 1011-103.
The victory boosted Kentucky intp a 2-0 lead in their
best-of-seven American
Basketball Association
Eastern Division playoff finals
as the two teams travel to St.
Louis for the third game
Friday night.
"You've just got to go out
there and forget something like
this," said McClain, holding up
a left elbow encased in an ice
pack. "When you're in .the
playoffs, you can't be thinking
about pain no matter how bad
it may feel later."
The 6-foot-3 Tennessee State
product injured his arm Monday night when it•made contact
with the. mouth of St. Louis
rookie Gus Gerard, loosening a
couple of his teet~.
·What hurt a lot worse in
Monday ·night's game than his
clbow .was McClain's pride
after Freddie Lewis scored 35
points against him. He was·
determined to keep the veteran
guard from having another
game like that 'one.
And he did, holding htm to 18
points until the final41 seconds
when Lewis cut loose with an
eight-point b~.rage that was
too late to matiA!r.

biggest factor, however. The
Kings were held only a 35.3 per
cent shooting . percentage.
Chicago hit 45.6 per cent.
Chicago effectively ended
the Kings' hopes with a 15-6
spurt in lhe first 6:31 of the
third quarter, turning a 50--44
halftime margin into a 6!h\O
lead.
The game reached an explosive point with 8:40 left when
Nate Thurmond and Sam
Lacey engaged in a brief
shoving match and Van Uer
led several players into the
stands behind the Chicago
basket. Apparently no blows
were struck in the stands,
however. Police quickly
jumped between the fans and
the Bulls.
Chicago now goes against the
Golden State-Seattle series
winner in the semifinals.
In the only other action
Wednesday night, Bob McAdoo 's 37 poii! Is-nine in the last
five minutes-helped the Buf-

falo Brayes defeat the
Washington Bullets, 102-96, to
tie their series at three games
apiece. The Bullets will host
Buffalo in the deciding game
Friday night.
McAdoo, the MVP t\Jis
season, was blanked for nearly
seven minules in the final
period before starting his
scoring spree with a pair of
free throws with 5:13 left in the
game to give the Braves an 8987lead. Kevin Porter fouled out
on the play and 15 seconds
later, Washington's Phil Chenier tied it for the 19th and final
time.
McAdoa's three points, Lee
Winfield 's basket and two more
goals by McAdoo were answered by only Elvin Hayes'
follow shot and Buffalo led 91190 with 2:14 left. ·
Jim McMillian added 20
points for Buffalo and Randy
Smith hit 16. Smith also help
limit. Kevin PoriA!r to six.
Hayes, who had 46 points in

Sunday's win ov~ Buffalo,
again paced the Bullets with 29:
Chenier · had 25, 19 in the
opening half.
Boston, holding a 3-1 edge in
games, . can eliminate the
Houston Rockets when they
meet on the Celtics' home court
tonight.
Seattle will be trying to stay
alive for a seventh game when
the Sonics host the Golden
State Warriors in the other
game tonight. Golden StaiA!
leads three games to two .

For Privete Weter Svtt•ml

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Myers

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JU~ :~EIVED

Western Con +erence J.+inals .berth

i ................................ Colon·e ls take

'1QOO

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

Eichinger hurls

Fryman's

•100 ON GT 750
•75 ON GT 550
'50 ON GT 380

lLz · ·

By United Press Iniernational
"When you wriiA! the history
of this series," said Chicago
· Coach Dick Motta,. "you'll
write that our guards shut out
their gucirds."
"Chet Walker and Bob Love
are the best set of forwards

latest victory were shortstop bested Texas, 4--1, Oakland
Tim Foli and catcher Barry edged Kansas City, 3-2, and
Foote . .Foli walked, stole Ch1cago and MiMesola were
second and scored the first run postponed because of wet
in the first inning when Pirate grounds.
Braves 5, Reds 4:
second baseman Rennie
Stennett couldn't pick up · Larvell Blanks doubled home
Mike Lum with a two-aut for
Foote's grounder.
Run--scoring singles by Fry- the winning run in the 11th
man, Pepe Mangual and Mike inning and Ron Reed went the
Jorgensen accounted for three route for Atlanta in gaining his
more Expo runs during a four- first victory in three decisions.
run second inhing uprising off Darrell Evans and Vic Correll
belted two-run homers for the
loser Jerry Reuss .
Elsewhere in the National Braves and Johnny Bench had
League, Atlanta edged Cincin- a three-run shot for Cincinnati.
nati, 5-4, the New York Mets Astros 2-0, Giants 2-3
Gary Thomasson's solo home
routed St. Louis, 7-1, the
Chicago
Cubs
drubbed run and a run-scoring single by
Philadelphia, 9-3, San Diego Bruce Miller aided the five-hit
ripped Los Angeles, 7-1, and pitching of rookie left-bander
San
Francisco blanked Pete Falcone in San FrancisHouston, J.&lt;l, after losing the co's second game win. Houston
opener of a doubleheader, 3-2. helped Doug Konieczny to his
In American League games, first major league victory in
Boston outlasted the New York, the opener as Roger Metzger
Yankees, 11·7, Milwaukee beat drove in a pair of runs with a
Baltimore, 8-5, Cleveland squeeze bunt and a sacrifice
shaded Detroit, 4-3, California fly.

,I I &lt;

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K'nlt Tops, Sweaters ancf
Skirts bv Jantzen
catalina &amp;
Lady Manhattan .
1~ PRICE

MENS CASUAL ·and
DRESS PANTS
Double Knits, Wool and
Dacron Blends.

PRICE

by Jantzen and Catalina

Tapered Legs. Values To $11.50

REDUCED

Betty Ohlinger

House in Pomeroy.
.
His appearance is Sponsored by the United
Methodist Churches of the
Racine area. Kern is a
member of the National
Fellowship of Christian
Athletes.·

::~. Fryman blanks Pirates, 2-0

i•

SAL~ PRICE

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read
the letter in your column from
the 17-year-ald girl who went
on a diet and became really
slim but also developed a foot
·drop. She stated she started
taking vitamins to correct the
foot drop and it worked.
You suggested taking
thiamin for her foot.
.
•. · I have foot drop, too, but I am
suppcled to have "CharcotMarie Tooth"· disease. Doctors
told me the drop went with the
disease. .
Can a fO!Jt drop be so easily
· cOrr-ecled by a certain vitamin
or thiamin-containing foods as
!his girl's was? Or, does having
a mWICIIIar dlaease make It
impoealble to correct a foot
drop with vlt8mins? Would
vllamln B-1 help me?
DEAR READER - A single
.. outward sigll' of a disorder· in
function . can be ·,caused by

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and Perma Press Pants

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20% OFF TO All GRADS

Soort Coats

SALE
PRICE$1

I1

I lot of
LADIES'

I

Stale University
All~
American quarterback now
playing professionally wilh
the Buffalo Bills, will speak
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
Southern High School in
Racine. The appearance is
open to the public and tickets

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National advertlsin" .·
representative
Bottinelll}
Gallagher, Inc .• 12 East 42n'f
St., New York, New York.
Subscription
rate 's
Del ivered by carrier wher
available 75 cents per week
6v Motor ·Route where carrie;
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Six months , 511 .50; Thre
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. n.~~;~;::~-~~;~:~:m;;;:;~~~::;;;:~:~\~;;~t~ Bul. ls clzn. ch

··. EllenrM. Ewing died Thursday

YELLOW BIRD AND IDS FRIENDS - Max Blake,
icenter front, had the leading role in this skit In the front row,
1-r with him are singers AMe Reece, SllSle Barker, Steve
Crow, Scott McKinley. Boys in the baseball routine, standing,

-~·--

--~ :- Th~ Daily Sentinei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April24, 1975 ·

•

Commander, could lake a big
step toward completing the
dreamas he takes on a field of
etght m the 51st Blue Grass
Stakes.
Master Derby, owned by
Lehmann's widow, will share
lop weight of .123 pounds with
two other prune Derby conIA!nders-Prince Thou Art and
Avatar- in today's ruMing of
the
$50,000-added
Blue
Grass.
The 11-llmile event, just nine
days before the Derby, has
become a prime test for the
"RIUI for the Roses"- with
Master Derby's pop one of
eight Derby winners in the past
13yearstofinishfirstorsecond
m the Keeneland prep.
Also entered in today's race
are Prince Thou Art's Darby
Dan stablemate Sylvan Place,
Harvard Man, Wicked Park,
Honey Mark, Decipher and
Ruggles Ferry.
Master
Derby
has
progressed more quickly than
his father, whose surprise win
in the Blue Grass forced Lehmann to cut short a Tiger
hunting expedition in India and
rush home just in time ·to see
his horse triumph in the Derby.
The chestnut colt has won
four straight races, including
the Louisiana Derby and a 1116 mile prep at Keeneland last
week , and now totals $233,226 in
earnings.
Prince Thou Art, Sylvan
Place and Avatar also bring
good credentials into the
Bluegrass. The Darby Dan duo
combined to finish one-two in
the Florida Derby March 29,
handing Wood Memorial
wiMer Foolish Pleasure his
only defeat so far.
That same day, Avatar was
taking the Santa Anita Derby
to stamp himself the best of the
west.
Honey Mark has also won a
stakes at Keeneland this spring

and Ruggles Ferry, who was
trained by the . veteran Henry
Forrest until his death April 5,
was a strong second to Master
Derby in the Calumet Stakes
last week. Wicked Park
second weighted at 120 pounds:
has won $89,329 in his brief
career.
Master Derby will have the
inside post position, with
Prince Thou Art and Avaiar
drawing into the middle of the
field. Sylvan Prince , who along
with Harvard Man carries low
weight of 114 po~nds, will start
from the far outside on a track
that threatens to be muddy
after day long rains Wednesday .

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•

Nor was McClain content to
rest on his defensive laurels as
he pumped in 24 points to lead
the Colonels in scoriilg.
With all five starters reaching double figures, Kentucky
was able to withstand a sensational 43-point output by
rookie Marvin Barnes and
Railed down its 16th victory in
its last 17 games.
Colonels Coach Hubie Brown
expressed disappointment in
the performance of his front
line. · ·
"OUr front-court people are
going to have to get off their
tails and go to the boards
better," he said. "The fact that
we did not play a good game up
front and still came ou\ with
the win is a credit to our overall
team play."
The Colonels' inside power,
Artis Gihnore and Dan Issei,
bas been their !JUlin strength
most of the time but neither
exactly sparkled Wednesday
night. . Gihnore had 23 points
and 15 rebounds l&gt;ut gave up 43
Jll)ints and 17 . rebounds to
Barnes.
Issei's 15 points .and five
rebounds left much to be
destrl!d in the eyes of Coach
Brown.
The Colonels lost reserve
guard BiJ:d Averitt with a
pulled hamstring muscle iil .the
third quarter and Brown said
he didn't know whether he
would be able to play Friday
night.

MIDDLEPORT·DEPARTMENT STORE
SPRING CLEARANCE

1/3 TO

lf2

OFF

\

1 GROUP OF DEVON
·-----------------------------~'

Spring Coats
and

Sweaters
----------------------1 RACK OF JEANS
AND JR. PANTS

--------------------------1 RACK OF TOPS
OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TIL 8:00

'I

...

�.

~

..

'

•: I

'

.

.. ,-1

'

Reed stops Big Red Machine, 5-4

1

!

·

.

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UPI ) -Sonny Jurgensen has reached the point
of small return, that juncture where a grown man going on 41 as
he is, sits down'aU alone,and says to hiniself this is a game for 21year-&lt;&gt;ld kids, what am I doing beating my brains against Ute
waU ?
With 17 seasons in professional footbaU behind him, and turning it over in his mind whether he should try for 18 or simply
ride off into Ute sunset on his horse because he doesn't own a car,
Sonny Jurgensen has asked himself more than once lately why he
keeps healing his brains against the waD.
He has not signed with the Redskins for this year. Last year
they paid hinn $150,000. His !974 contract has been lying on a
counter in his kitchen since last September and if he doesn't sign
it soon, in another Week, in fact , he automaticaUy will have.
played out his option and be free to sign with any club he chooses.
''I haven 'tintentionaUy played out my option," he says, as if he
has done so already. "I bave the contract at home, and I got so
involved with other things I simply never got around -to it. But
I'm not looking to hold anybody up or go to the other league. Oh
sure, if Ute World Football League was chasing me around like
they are Joe Namalh, I'd have to think about it."
The Redskins' red-haired veteran laughs.
"I'm not sure they're interested in 41-year-&lt;&gt;ld quarterbacks, "
" he says.
·Philadelphia of the new WFL clainns to be interested in him,
though.
Sonny Jurgensen hasn't decided whether he'll play any more
or not. He doesn't know whether he fits into George Allen's plans,
and even if he does, he isn't sure whether he'llquit or go out there
and do it all over again for the 18th straight lime.
"Ho~ many people make the decision at Ute right lime?" he ,
says. "Everybody says 'Come back, play again, play again,' but
I set standards for myself and if I can't maintain them, I'll get
outoflhe game. I'll be 41 in August. Your body may be saying get
out ofthe game, but your heart says go back again."
·
Jurgensen's heart obviously is 8aying to hinn go back again.
He and Allen met in Washington Wednesday and had what was
described as "a good meeting. " The two will meet again next
week. With Jurgensen, Ute Redskins would have four quarterbacks •. TheY. also have Billy Kilmer, Joe Theismann and
Randy Johnson, whom they've just picked up. Without him,
. they'll have to struggle along with three, which is what most
clubs have.
"!understand we have four quarterbacks now," Jurgensen
says a bit drily. "Last year I started as number three and wound
up winning the passing tiUe."
For pure passing, there never has been anybody better in
professional foolbaU than Sonny Jurgensen, and that includes
them all, Johnny Unitas, Joe Namath and Sammy Baugh.
Throwin_g _~ Jootball was never a_problem for Sonny Jurgensen.
What was a problem with him was his general approach to Ute
game. He didn't take it thatseriously. lt wasn't a matter of life or
death with him. You ask him even no'wwhat his basic philosophy
is, and he smiles and says it's the same as Oscar Wilde's- "Life
is much too innportant a thing to talk about seriously. You should
eat, drink and be merry."
·
Yet in the next breath Jurgensen tells you his greatest
disappointment has been the image he has projected, one of
limited dedication and inability to lead others.
"I am Ute most over-rated dissipater in Ute league," he says.
He doesn 't look that way now moving around the various cities
and serving as national spokesman for the Tire Retread Information Bureau. The organization concerns itself with
epucating the public about retreads.
r "I wondered if I got this job because I'm an old retread in
Washington myself and always carry a spare tire around with
me," Jurgensen jokes, patting hismidsectlon, which looks flatter
than usuaL
During his footba!l career, Jurgensen has undergone nine
oi&gt;erations for various injuries. Despite that he managed ·to set
many NFL passing records. He is proud of what he bas accomplished and points out with understandable pride that
George Allen sent him a news clipping the other day showing him
w~ere he had moved into second place behind Otto Graham on
pro football's alltime list of top passers. ·
Allen has had a marked influence on Jurgensen. So did Ute late
Vince lilmbardi, of whom he speaks with great affection.
"Most coaches when they meet y_ou the firstlime, .ask you how
much you weigh. You say 210, and they say they want you to get
down to 200. That wasn't the way it was with hinn, though,"
Jurgensen says of Lombardi. "The first time I ever met him he
said to me 'I've heard many things about you and I'm sure you've
heard many things about me. I have only one thing I'm going to
ask you, and that is to be yourself.'"
Sonny Jurgensen grows thoughtful a moment, then says:
"What nicer way for anyone to approach you than to ask you to
be yourself ?"

Major League Standings
·
By United Press Jnternati.;;nal
National Le-ague

Eas t

w. 1. pet . g .b.

Chicago
Ph il ad el phia

a
6

4
6

New Yq rk
St. Lou is

6

6

Montreal

5

6

Pittsburg h

5

.667
.500
.500
.462
.455
.417

7
6·
7

2
2

2117

21f.-

3

west
San D iego
Atlanta
San Francisco
Los Angeles
Cincinnati

w . 1. pet. g .b .
9 4 .692
9

a
8
a

7 .563
7 .53l

l'h
2

8

2112

.SOO

9 . .471
3
5 12 . 294
6
Wednesday's Results
Montreai..S _P ittsburgh 0
New York 7 St. Louis 1
Chi,c;ago 9 Ph i ladelphi a 3
Alia 5 Cinci 4, 11 innings
San D iego 7 Lo~ Ange l es 1
Houston 3 San Fran 2, 1st
Sa n Fran 3 Hou ston 0, 2nd
Todav's Probable Pitchers
(All Times ·E OT)
Ph iladelph i a (Lonborg 1-0) at
Ch icago (St one 2-0 ), 2:30p.m .
Cincinnati ( B[ll ingh&amp;m Q. J ) at
Atlanta (Niekro 1-lL 7 : 35-p .m .
Los Angeles (Rhoden 0-0J at
San Diego IF re ls\eben 1-1),
!O :OOp .m .

Houston

San fra ncisco &lt;Barr

Ho uston

( R i chard

at

J . l)

1-1) ,

8 : 35

p .m .
(Only games scheduled)

Friday's Games
St. LOUIS at Chicago
New York at Montreal
Phila at Pittsb.urgh, night
Los Ang at San Fran , night
Atlanta at san Crego, night
Cincinnati at Houston ; night

Boston

Milwaul\ee
Baltimore

Detrort
Cleveland
New York

K·ansas c;ity
Oakland
California .

M innesota
TeXas

7
7
5
5

•

5 .583

....... 11,,
.385

•

2'1•

••••
2

:w,
4'h

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
Nothing personal, of course,
but the Oakland A's can argue
that they are better off without
Jim Hunter than they would be
if they still had the man with
the $3 million arm.
The figures tell the story:
Without their 25-game
winner of 1974, the A's have
won 10 of their first 15 games
and are in a virtual lie for first
place in the American
League 's Western Division
race. A year ago after 15
games, they had an 8-7 record
including a 3-0 mark by
Hunter.
Hunter, signed by Ute New
York Yankees as a free agent
New Year's Eve, has an 0-3
mark and Wednesdayblew ·a 73 lead in Ute seventh inning
although reliever Sparky Lyle
was the eventual losing pltcher. Hunter has yet to pitch
effectively in his four starts
with the club which gave him
the biggest contract in Ute

~

Pitching
(Based on most victories)

inning and they added single
runs in the sixth and seventh to
hand Steve Busby his first
defeat. Hal McRae drove in
both Royal runs in Ute fifth
with a double after a double by
Jinn Wohlford and a walk to
John Mayberry.
Angels 4, Rangers 1:
Bill Singer allowed a firstinning homer by Mike Hargrove but pitched a six-hitter
for California. Tommy Harper
had three singles and Tom
Egan added a double and a
single as Singer fanned five
and didn't walk a batter in
winning his second game.
Clyde Wright was the loser for
Texas.

Red Sox 11, Yaukees 1:
Hunter was cruising with a 73 lead and a four-hitter when
Cec il Cooper.. opened Boston's
seventh with a triple. Lyle took ·
over wh~n Bernie Carbo
singled but the Red Sox went on
to take an 8-7 lead with the aid
of key hits by Fred Lynn, Jim

Haddix: · Pitchers must

League : . R1vers ,

Ca l KC and No""r th , Oak 8 ; Oti s.
KC 7; Patek , KC, C.· Washing
ton , Oa k and Ne lson , Tex 6.

(,

National League: Morton , A I
.s .o; M cNall y, Mtl and Mcin to sh , D J.o ; Sutton . LA 3- 1;
carro ll , Ci n J-2.

s

American League : Rvan, Cat

A-0; Blue. Oak 4-1; F itzmorri s,

KC

and

Champion , Mil

3-0;

Medich , NY J -1.

•

SPRING
BARGAINS

Rice and Bob Montgomery.
Roy White hit two homers and
knocked in three runs for New
York.
Indians 4, ·Tigers 3:
Jack Brohamer and George
Hendrick each drove in two
runs for Cleveland as Jim
Perry won his first game and
Joe Coleman suffered his third
straight defeat for.,.Delroit.
Gary Sutherland and Bill
Freehan also homered for Ute
Tigers.
Brewers 8, Orioles 5:
Bobby Mitchell, replacing
Hank Aaron as Milwaukee's
designated hitter, hit two
doubles and scored the winning
run In the Brewers' victory
over Baltimore. Ed Rodriguez
received credit for the win
while Bob Reynolds was Ute
loser.

12-12-12 FERT.ILIZE_R
50 LB. BAG

Bulk Seeds
Tillers, Lawn Mowers,

LEXINGTON, Ky. (UP!) Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes
ple,ded with the Appalachian
Regional Commission (ARC)
Wednesday ior the immediate
development of an estimated
400 trillion cubic feel of natural
gas ·reserves in the 13 Appalachian stales.
Rhodes predicted an "industrial wasteland" unless the
ARC acted to secure research
fund s to extract natural gas for
oil shale from beneath the
Appalachian area - chiefly
Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania
and West Virginia.
The commissio n, after
Rhodes' urgent pleas, voted
$10,000 to fund a meeting within
the next seven days of
governors of Ute 13 states to
draft a formal proposal for up
to $15 million in research
funds.
"We have talked to
everybody and the immediate
answer is shale ·gas," said
Rhodes. "Everybody is doing
everything except answering
Ute problem.
·
1
' We can't wait six years for
coal
gasification
and
liquefaction research. We are
. talking about Ute winter of
' 1975-76 and if we don't do
something we are going to lose
' our industries," added Rhodes.
The Ohio governor said
· environmental concerns over
the shale oil resources wouid
: have to take a back seat.
"If those people (en-

! LOSE

STAR SUPPLY
RACINE, OH'IO

Rhodes wants shale ·gas now for new sewage system

UGLY· fAT

Start losina wtklht today or: money
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lizt is$5.00.AiootrvAOUATABS•
they wort&lt; 111ntly to holp you 1..
Wlltor-bloat. AQUATABS -o"wotor
i&gt;lll" that works - $3.00. Both
guonntlld ond oold by:

Kermit 's 18th

Swisher &amp; Lohse 'Pharmacy,
112 E. Main. Pomeroy: Dutton
Drug Store, Middleport. Mail

or.ders Filled. ·

Going into the recent series
against Detroit, the Tribe had·
used eight pitchers, including
relievers, in their first seven
games. The bullpen, in most
cases, has been ineffective-no
strikes.
"I would say there's nothing
major (wrong) with our pitchers,'' adds Haddix, who runs a
farm in South Vienna, Ohio.
"The biggest thing I see so far
is our guys are having trouble
throwing strikes.
"Of course, you have to
.throw strikes wh~n you come to
Ute major leagues or possibly
anywhere. As far as what I've
seen so far, that has been the
biggest problem this spring. I
can't exactly put my finger on
it. I guess we were kind of
rushing through spring
training and trying to get Ute .
· guys as much work as possible.
Maybe we didn't get quite as
much as we wanted, but I think
Ute boys are ready anyway."
Haddix-who pitched !l 12inning perfect game against

Milwaukee May 26, 1959, but
losll.O on a hit by Joe Adcock
in the 13th inning-has also
served as pitching coach for
the New York Mets, Cincinnati
Reds and Boston- Red ·Sox. He
has already garnered himself a
reputation with his staff.
Some,
like
veteran
righthander Jim Perry, don't ·
like him because he doesn't ask
questions when he comes to Ute
mound to yank a pitcher out of
the game on orders from
Manager Frank Robinson.

•

RACINE - Pupils of Racine
Elementary School in the
recent cultural arts exhibit
used ·painting, crayon, .chalk,
mixed media, ceramics, paper
mache, and collage in their
visual art drawings.
Red ribbon winners were,
first grade, Becky VanMeter,
Kelly Rizer , Teena Rose,
Mandy Hill, Kenda Rizer,
Alana Lyons, Ricky Werry,
Brad Holsinger, Chad Sayre,
Eric Taylor, Melissa !hie, and
Jay Bostick.
Second grade 'students who
received red ribbons were lilis
!hie, Lori Simpson, Vincent
Cleland, Sandy Deem, Melody
West, Scott Gheen, Tony
Frederick , Becky Hudson,
David Powell, Lori Wolfe and
Barbara Rose.
Third . grade · red ribbon
wmners were Te,.r esa Hlll,
. Jason ·llill, Rebecca Johnson,
' La ren W0Ife, Ric har d llill ,
Tony Forester, Terre Wood,
James Bush , v·lCkie Ho1smger,
.
Brend:J Jones Terri· Wood,
J
CJ 1 d' Steven Fisher,
ames e an ,
Sherry Patterson, Katrina
·Snod
d D 'd Wh'le
grass an
avl
l .
Fourth grade red ribbon
winners were Jack Dunaway,
Scott Justice, Terry Patterson,
David Salmon, Lisa Allen,
Oair l\Wrris, ,-Kalhy ,Baker,

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Co"rt St. Pomeroy

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Regular and Steel Toes

Your Thom MeAn Store

Middleport, Ohio

On Every
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In The Store
* Except Fair Trade Items

Sunday School attendance on
April 20 was 44, the offering
$22.43.
Worship services were held
at 11 a.m. with the Rev. Meece
leading and John Sauvage, lay
speaker from Syracuse U. M.
Church speaking from John
3:16. Attendance at this service
was 23, the offering $20.50 and
pledges $47.
Genevieve Guthrie has been
a patient in Veterans Memorial
Hospital , suffering from
congestion of Ute lungs.
A Bible.Study was held last
Wednesday afternoon at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
(Bobby) Burke with an attendance of nine from this community and four from elsewhere. It will be held again this
Wednesday at I p.m. at the
same home.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode
and Conni of Circleville, 0.,
spent la.st Saturday afternoon
and evening at Ute William
Carr and Qlarles D. Woode
homes here and with Mr. and
MrS. Robert White at Keno.
Mr. and Mrs. David Wllliams

A paint party for youngsters
at the Middleport Community
Park Sat urday ha s bee n
ca ncelled beca use of a

invited to come to the park at I
p.m. Saturday to paint the old
time ' caboose installed there.
However, it has been learned
misunderstand ing. However, a that the painting will be done :
"be tter " party ha s been by George Arnott and Ken ~
planned as a replaceme nt.
Gilkey, who secured the '
Youngsters were originally railroad caboose in the first ~
place.

FIRST, SECOND, 1lliRD GRADE- Blue ribbon winners taking top honors in the Racine
PTO Collura! arts program were front, grade one, 1-r, Lori Adams, Robin Savage, Kelly Rizer,
Bill Proffitt, Eric Taylor, Becky VanMeter, Mike Johnson, Dixie Dugan and Alana Lyons ;
second row, second grade, Deborah Holter, Lori Simpson, Lori Wolfe, Barbara Rose, Melody
West, Rodney Beegle; third row, thirdgrade, Vickie Holsinger,David White, Dewayne Dowell,
Rebecca Johnson, James Cleland, Laren Wolfe, Linda Proffitt, Buddy Thompson, Tony
Forester, Steven Fisher, Glen Johnson, and Katrina Snodgrass. Mrs. Jannie Spurlock was th e
advisor.

Oa kland at Cal if., night.
Chicago atKan City, night
Bo s ton at Detroi t. night
Cleve at Baltimore , n i ght
Milwilukee at NeW York , n ight
(Only g'am·es schedul ed)

·1/Y,

/lA.

PAY

ul r(l;

YOUR

FOURTH, FIFTH, SIXTH GRADE - Blue ribbon winners in the Racine PTO Cultural Arts
contest were front row,l-r, fourth grade, Kim White, Tracy Riffle, Lisa Allen, David Salmons,
Angie Glenn, Terry Bell, Becky Lee, Clair Morris, Sherri Bell, and Michell Johnson; second
row, fifth grade, Chris Allen, Brian Cleland, Melinda Salmons and Jay Rees ; sixth grade, third
row, Eric Hill, Della Johnson, Christa Beegle, Becky Rhodes, James Gheen, Bob B. Lee, Paul
Cardone, Sherry Rose, Steve Circle. Absent was Tony Imboden, fourth grader.

SINGERS SCHEDULED
Dan Hayman and the
Country Hymn Timers will be
at the Eagle Ridge Church at
7:30p.m. Friday . The public is
invited.
and Aaron of Belpre, 0 . visited
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Henderson on Sunday.
Mrs. Vera Henderson is
reported to be improving at her
home here.

SIT..VER BRIDGE

PLAZA
•

BEDSPREAD SALE STARTS FRIDAY
MORNING AT 10 AM
REGULAR s14.00 TO s18.00

Our Treat•••

Coffee and Donu1s Served

TELEPHONE
ABA Playoff Schedule
By United Press International
IAIITimesEDT)
.
1 All Series Best of Seven)
Eastern Divn . Finals
Kentucky vs . St . Louis
( Kentucky leads 2-0)
.
F r i., Apri l 25- at St . L OUIS ,
9 : 00
- .
Sun ,, April 27- at St . . LOUIS,

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9.: 00
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x . Sun ., May 4- at \ Ke nt ucky,
y -tba
·. .
western Divn . F1nals
Denver vs. Indiana
(Series tied I -ll
Thursday , Apri l 24 , Denver
Indiana, 9: 05p .m .

Friday, April 25, Denver at

Indiana. 9 :05p .m .
• .
sun day , April 27, l nd1ana at
Denver,4 : 35p .m . .
x .Wednesday , April 30, Den v er at Indiana , 9 :05p .m . - .. .
x .Sct1urday, Ma y 3, Indiana at
Denver, 9 : 35p .m .
.ll - lf necessary
v· Time to be annbunced

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,RIDAY.AND SATURDAY SPECIAL!
( - .·-

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In lieu of the paint party, Ute ;
young people are being Invited .•
to the park at. noon for a wiener :
roast . There will be residents
on hand to cook.
•
Meantime, contributions for · ~
the summer recreation '
program at the park are being :
NEW ORLEANS (UP! )
accepted. Anyone wishing to •
President Ford will seek the contribute is asked to call the '
presidency in 1976 "difinitely village dispatcher at 992-3145 :
and absolutely ," White House and make a pledge .
Press Secretary Ron Nessen
said Wednesday.
Asked on Air Force One, the
presidential jet, why Ford told
television in te rviewers
Monday night he intends to run include having to balance rival
but
has
not sa id so candidates with equal lime on ·'
11
Categorica1ly /' Nessen said broadcasts, setting up election .
"he 's going to run definitely machinery and making various
employment practice reports
and absolutely for sure.'' .
· Nessen said the President required by law.
The second reason Ford has ·
qualified his intentions Monday
not yet announced, Nessen ..•
night for two reasons.
One is that if· Ford officially said, is that to do so wolild :
announ ces his candidacy he mean ~~au his actions and ;
must abide by the laws and statemen ts would become
practices governi ng announced suspect because he was a
candidates, Nessen sa i.d. These presidential can_didate."

It's Ford for
President in
'76 for sure

Spring Time

IN THE

Plenty of
Free
Parking

delayed plans to bqild the '
power plant because of what
the firm has terrned a I poor ·
economic climate." The plant
planning grant for a sewage would employ 200 to 300
collection system which would workers.
serve about 4,000 residents and
The grant, one of several in
the proposed - but delayed West Virginia announced by____1
Appalachian Power Co. plan.! Ute stale's two senators, will be
near here.
used to study the extension of Councilman Bernard Lieving sewer lines to rural ar~as ~·
sa id New Haven , which has sur rounding New Haven.
·
on ly a primary sewe r system,
plan s to buil d a $140,000New Haven has set no
seco nda ry tr eatment plant. completion date for its
The plant would serve New secondary system. The town is
Haven, nea,rby Hartford, and awaiting a building loan Irom
the genera ting plant.
the EPA ' before beginning
Appala ch ia n Power has - construction .

NEW HAVEN,W. Va.- The
fe d eral E nvir onme ntal
Protection Agency Wednesday
awarded New Haven a $22,500

Wiener roast more fun

FRIDAY and SATURDAY

J . \) at

"des troy this st.lte Ohio industrially ."
.
At the news confere nce,
William K. Overbey Jr. , a
geogolist, and . gas researcher
William T. Wertman, both
associated with the Federal
Energy
and
ReSearch
Developm ent Auth ori ty,
agreed with Rhodes that the
Appalachia area contai ned
potentially one of the targ es~
gas deposits in the nation.

Alfred
Social Notes

\

Kerm Says: Just think what it will be when I've
been here 100 years .

Texas (Brown 0-1 or Hargan
California (Ry an 4 ,0) .
lO : JOp .m .
(Only games schedu l ed I
Friday's Games

Terry Patterson, Sherri Bell,
Zane Beegle, Angie Glenn,
Rust~ Cummins, Tony Imboden and Susan' Roseberry,
Tonya Salser and Robin
Johnson.
Fifth grade winners, Patrick
Johnson, Kinn Bickers, Kent
Wolfe, Melinda Salmons, Scott
Frooerick, Brian Cleland and
Chris Allen.
Sixth grade winners, Paula
Wolfe, Christa Beegle, Ricky
Allen, Carl Morris, Jimmy
Werry, Della Johnson, Bob B.
Lee, Eric llill, Peggy Bush,
Denise Manuel, Mary Beth
Obitz, Bill Morris, Mark
Simpson, Dewayne Curfman,
Glen Johnson, Tonya Salser
and Sherri Bell.
Most of Ute students did work
in visual arts with a few in
poetry. The winners will now
compete in county competition.
· Jack Slavin judged the visual
art work and Margaret
Houdashell the poetry.
·

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIALI

OFF

heritage house

accompan ied Rhodes to the
meeling outlined the extent of
the sha le reserves beneath
Appalachia and said immediate research could
provide adequate amounts of
natural gas to the area.
At a news conference in
Columbus , Ohio Tuesday,
Rhodes charged that "footdraging and red tape" on the
part of the federal government
on the energy shortage could

Pupils at Racine
win red ribbons ,

ManyNetD
Arril!ll!. Noll!!

be able to throw strikes
By PETE SPUDICH
CLEVELAND ( UPI) - To a
piicher, throwing strikes is
what baseball's all about.
" U he can't throw strikes
he's not going anywhere
whether he's playing sandlot
ball or whether he's in the
major leagues,'' says Harvey
" Kitten" Haddix , pitching
coach for Ute Cleveland Indll'ns.
Haddix should know. He was
a major league pilcher"good, but not the greatest
ever"- whose best year was
1953 when he was 20-9 with a
.690 winning percentage and a
3.06 earned run average.
Haddix, 49, after a threeyear sabbatical from the
game, now has the task of
making something out of what
In the past has been nothing.
He has to develop an effective
bullpen, a problem the Indians
have had for years.
"It's no secret that our
pitching staff was put together
like patchwork,'' says club
Vice President-General
Manager Phil Seghi. "We had
no farm system to speak of.
"We had to patch it here,
patch it there, take hold of
what~we-oould-get ;. Then we
had to consolidate them all and
work from there and the farm
system. It bas taken time and
we're not yet where we want to
be, but we're getting there."

vironmenta(ist ) want to give step on some toes.''
alone if you don't help."
me $1 billion for those "people
Ohio state Rep. Tom Carney,
'.'When there is no more gas
standing in the unemployment D-Youngstown, said that each in Kentucky, somebody will
line, then that's okay," he ~aid. of the 13 states represented in have to explain to the people in
" But we can't stand for · the final day of a three-day the unemployment line, and
anybody to get in the way of ARC meeting need to become they won't listen to your ex·
people trying to work in in- "self sufficient in energy cuses," conti nued Rh odes.
dustrY."
matters.''
"They 'll know that somebody
Rhodes said environmental
Carney said the Ohio st..te · in government let the people
concerns were a "luxury " and legislature and the executive down ."
that "like an alcoholic - we branch will work together, and
Two Federal
Energy
need all the money we can get echoed
his
governor's Research and Development
- and we are going to·have to statement that Ohio "will go it Administration officials who

I

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history of baseball.
Vida Blue, taking over as the
ace of the Oakland staff in
Hunter's absence, went 6 2-3
innings to re~ive cre.dit for his
fourth victory in five decisions,
as the A's beat the Kansas City
Royals, 3-2, for their fifth win
in their last six games.
Hollie Fingers, Paul Lind·
blad and Jim Todd finished up
for Blue with Todd receiving
credit for the save.
California defeated Texas, 41, Boston rallied for an 11-7
triumph over the. Yankees,
Cleveland beat Detroit, 4-3, and
Milwaukee topped Baltimore,
8-5, in other American League
games .
In the National · League, it
was Montreal 5 Pittsburgh 0,
New York 7 St. Louis I,
Chicago 9 Philadelphia 3,
Atlanta 5 Cincinnati 4, San
Diego 7 Los Angeles I and San
Francisco 3-&lt;1 over Houston
after a 3-2 loss.
Billy Williams singled home
the A's' first run in Ute first

American

Planning funds awarded

1

Dan Driessen followed with a giving up two-run homers to
single and Cesar Geronimo Vic Correll and Darrell Evans
was safe on a rare error by in the second and third innings
Blanks, only his second in 15 ·..respectively, had retired ·24 of ·
games. 'The Braves bullpen 29 Braves batters before
was up and it seemed only a Blanks came through with his
matter of warmup time before double and the way he apd
Reed would be gone.
Reed were going It appeared a
But a double play, with long night was ahead.
Blanks in Ute middle, got Reed
"I was still feeling pretty
out of the inning and the big strong," said Reed. "But I'm
righthander then preceeded to glad 'Sugar Bear' (the Braves'
retire the last 19 batters in a nickname for Blanks) got It
row.
over with."
Loser Don Gullett, after
Nationa I League: . Cede no ,
Hou 11 ; Lopes. LA 9; Morgan .
Cin 8 ; t en play er s t i ed wit~ 3.

blows-- lead, NY
drOps 11-7 tilt to Sox

'

II

hitter, but I've done it!rom Ute
end of Ute bat. 1 had my right
hand a. couple of inches above
my left that last time up -&lt;~nd
you saw what happened."
Reed, now 1-3 and battling to
keep a starting job, almost
went to the showers in the fifth
inning whim he,let a 4-llead go
down the drain.
A double by Dave Concepcion, a walk by Joe Morgan and
a three-run homer by Johnny
Bench tied it up, and still Reed
wasn't out of trouble.

H~nter

at

5 .500 1
5 .500 . 1

Not .that Bianks blames his
coaches for ,trying to change
his style. He's hitting only .167
(he was only .140 before going
2-for-5 Wednesday night) and
he realizes something has to be
done if be wants to stay in the
lineup.
"But, I know what my
trouble is," he said. ("I'm not
'holding my right hand right.
It's because I've been lazy, I
haven't been concentrating on
what I should be doing.
"I've always been a punch

Stolen Bases

y, 8 o05

pc·t . g .b.

5 8
West
w. I. pet.
. 692
9
10 s .667
7 6 .538
• 6 ' 8 .429
5 9 .357

Braves coaches have been
By DAVID MOFFIT
trying to get Blanks, a 5-foot~,
UPI Sports Writer
ATLANTA (UPI) - Atlanta · 165-pound shortstop, to choke
Braves pitcher Ron Reed has up abOut six inches on his bat.
to _be tuippy that teammate Blanks, who'd rather swing
Larvelle Blanks has been away, was down near the end
resisting efforts to change his of the bat Wednesday night
· when he slammed a high
batting style.
Reed had to go ll innings double to left centerlield to
Wednesday night to pick up his drive in the game-winning run .
" I realize that T don 't have
first victory of the season, a 5-4
- decision over· the Cirtcinnati the size or the power to go to
Reds, and if it hadn't been for the fences,'' said Blanks. "l)ut
Blanks, he might still be out I believe that I can hit the ball
into the alley for doubles,
there.

x .Mon ., A pr il 28- at Kentuck.·-

5 .583

s

(All Times EDT)

K &amp;nsas Ci ty (S pl ittorff \ . \J a t
Oa kland (Abbott 1-01.4 : 30 p.m
Chicago ( Bahnsen 0-2J at
M i nnesota · (Biyleven 2-1), 2 : 15
p .m .

8:00

American League
East

w. 1.

Chicago
a 9 .JOB · 5
Wednesday 's Results
Cl eve land 4 Det ro i t 3
Boston 11 New York 7
M i lwaukee B Ba l t i more 5
Ca lifornia 4 T ex as I
Oakland J Kansas City 2
Chi at Minn ., ppct. , wet
Today's Probable Pitchers

. i

.~:-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April24, 1975

4- The Dally Sentlnei, r.fiddleporl'Pomeroy,'O., Thursday, April24, 197_5

Racine Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mrs. George Taylor and Mrs.
Lillian Lee are patients in
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Attending the installation of
officers of the women's
organizations of Rio Grande
Association at Salem Baptist
Church Friday evening, April
18 were Mrs. Bikacsan, Mary
K. Yost, Grella Simpson ,
Marjorie Grimm, Nondus
Hendricks, Phyllis Bailey,
Ollie Mae Cozart, Edna
Pickens, Martha Lou Beegle,
Dorothy Badgley, Helen
Simpson, Linda Grimm.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Grimm of
Letart Falls and Miss Vera
Beegle, local, were dinner
guests Sunday of Mrs. Gretta
Simpson, honoring Mr. Grimm
on his birthday.
Mrs. Clyde Cross, daughter,
Mrs. Lynn Nichols and
daughter, Christine, of
Columbus spent a day with
their mother and grandmother,
Mrs. Frankie Neigler.
Mrs. Frances - Roberts attended
the
Future
Homemakers State Convention
in Columbus the weekend of
April 11 and 12. She was accompanied
by
Pamela
Holcomb of Pomeroy; Ulraine
McElhaney of Middleport; and
· Vicki Johnston of Salem
Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Farra
are visi ling their- son, Joe
Farra in New York for ten·
days.
Miss Grace Ellis, Miss Ruth
Ellis and Mr. Howard Bingman
of Columbus were guests of ·
UNEMPLOYMENT DOWN
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
number of newly unemployed
persons .in Ohio continued
to decline last week, according
to €he Ohio Bureau of Employment Services. ..
Officilils said 20,952 persons
flied for UDI'mploymeni compensation for the first lime last
week, compared: to 24,2611 the
previous weel\ while the
weekly average for April, 1974
was 10,595.'
.
A total of 258,000 Ohioans
were reported out of work last
week, compared to 265,934 Ute
week before and Ute weekly
average of 93,248 in Ajx-il, 1974.

You 'II find a great selection of fine
furniture, floor coverings and
appliances at the lowest possible •
prices. Free delivery, convenient

&gt;

Miss Edith Hayman, Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Spaun
announce ·the birth of a
daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Parry and
daughter, Brenda, of Hillsboro
spent the weekend with his
brother, Mr. knd .Mrs. David
Parry and family .
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle were
guests Thursday of Mr. and
Mrs. Mack Howard and Miss
Helen Riffle at Hartford, W.
Va.

terms, service when you need it.
Se~ing you has been our business

since 1952.

Baker Furniture
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Reed stops Big Red Machine, 5-4

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Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UPI ) -Sonny Jurgensen has reached the point
of small return, that juncture where a grown man going on 41 as
he is, sits down'aU alone,and says to hiniself this is a game for 21year-&lt;&gt;ld kids, what am I doing beating my brains against Ute
waU ?
With 17 seasons in professional footbaU behind him, and turning it over in his mind whether he should try for 18 or simply
ride off into Ute sunset on his horse because he doesn't own a car,
Sonny Jurgensen has asked himself more than once lately why he
keeps healing his brains against the waD.
He has not signed with the Redskins for this year. Last year
they paid hinn $150,000. His !974 contract has been lying on a
counter in his kitchen since last September and if he doesn't sign
it soon, in another Week, in fact , he automaticaUy will have.
played out his option and be free to sign with any club he chooses.
''I haven 'tintentionaUy played out my option," he says, as if he
has done so already. "I bave the contract at home, and I got so
involved with other things I simply never got around -to it. But
I'm not looking to hold anybody up or go to the other league. Oh
sure, if Ute World Football League was chasing me around like
they are Joe Namalh, I'd have to think about it."
The Redskins' red-haired veteran laughs.
"I'm not sure they're interested in 41-year-&lt;&gt;ld quarterbacks, "
" he says.
·Philadelphia of the new WFL clainns to be interested in him,
though.
Sonny Jurgensen hasn't decided whether he'll play any more
or not. He doesn't know whether he fits into George Allen's plans,
and even if he does, he isn't sure whether he'llquit or go out there
and do it all over again for the 18th straight lime.
"Ho~ many people make the decision at Ute right lime?" he ,
says. "Everybody says 'Come back, play again, play again,' but
I set standards for myself and if I can't maintain them, I'll get
outoflhe game. I'll be 41 in August. Your body may be saying get
out ofthe game, but your heart says go back again."
·
Jurgensen's heart obviously is 8aying to hinn go back again.
He and Allen met in Washington Wednesday and had what was
described as "a good meeting. " The two will meet again next
week. With Jurgensen, Ute Redskins would have four quarterbacks •. TheY. also have Billy Kilmer, Joe Theismann and
Randy Johnson, whom they've just picked up. Without him,
. they'll have to struggle along with three, which is what most
clubs have.
"!understand we have four quarterbacks now," Jurgensen
says a bit drily. "Last year I started as number three and wound
up winning the passing tiUe."
For pure passing, there never has been anybody better in
professional foolbaU than Sonny Jurgensen, and that includes
them all, Johnny Unitas, Joe Namath and Sammy Baugh.
Throwin_g _~ Jootball was never a_problem for Sonny Jurgensen.
What was a problem with him was his general approach to Ute
game. He didn't take it thatseriously. lt wasn't a matter of life or
death with him. You ask him even no'wwhat his basic philosophy
is, and he smiles and says it's the same as Oscar Wilde's- "Life
is much too innportant a thing to talk about seriously. You should
eat, drink and be merry."
·
Yet in the next breath Jurgensen tells you his greatest
disappointment has been the image he has projected, one of
limited dedication and inability to lead others.
"I am Ute most over-rated dissipater in Ute league," he says.
He doesn 't look that way now moving around the various cities
and serving as national spokesman for the Tire Retread Information Bureau. The organization concerns itself with
epucating the public about retreads.
r "I wondered if I got this job because I'm an old retread in
Washington myself and always carry a spare tire around with
me," Jurgensen jokes, patting hismidsectlon, which looks flatter
than usuaL
During his footba!l career, Jurgensen has undergone nine
oi&gt;erations for various injuries. Despite that he managed ·to set
many NFL passing records. He is proud of what he bas accomplished and points out with understandable pride that
George Allen sent him a news clipping the other day showing him
w~ere he had moved into second place behind Otto Graham on
pro football's alltime list of top passers. ·
Allen has had a marked influence on Jurgensen. So did Ute late
Vince lilmbardi, of whom he speaks with great affection.
"Most coaches when they meet y_ou the firstlime, .ask you how
much you weigh. You say 210, and they say they want you to get
down to 200. That wasn't the way it was with hinn, though,"
Jurgensen says of Lombardi. "The first time I ever met him he
said to me 'I've heard many things about you and I'm sure you've
heard many things about me. I have only one thing I'm going to
ask you, and that is to be yourself.'"
Sonny Jurgensen grows thoughtful a moment, then says:
"What nicer way for anyone to approach you than to ask you to
be yourself ?"

Major League Standings
·
By United Press Jnternati.;;nal
National Le-ague

Eas t

w. 1. pet . g .b.

Chicago
Ph il ad el phia

a
6

4
6

New Yq rk
St. Lou is

6

6

Montreal

5

6

Pittsburg h

5

.667
.500
.500
.462
.455
.417

7
6·
7

2
2

2117

21f.-

3

west
San D iego
Atlanta
San Francisco
Los Angeles
Cincinnati

w . 1. pet. g .b .
9 4 .692
9

a
8
a

7 .563
7 .53l

l'h
2

8

2112

.SOO

9 . .471
3
5 12 . 294
6
Wednesday's Results
Montreai..S _P ittsburgh 0
New York 7 St. Louis 1
Chi,c;ago 9 Ph i ladelphi a 3
Alia 5 Cinci 4, 11 innings
San D iego 7 Lo~ Ange l es 1
Houston 3 San Fran 2, 1st
Sa n Fran 3 Hou ston 0, 2nd
Todav's Probable Pitchers
(All Times ·E OT)
Ph iladelph i a (Lonborg 1-0) at
Ch icago (St one 2-0 ), 2:30p.m .
Cincinnati ( B[ll ingh&amp;m Q. J ) at
Atlanta (Niekro 1-lL 7 : 35-p .m .
Los Angeles (Rhoden 0-0J at
San Diego IF re ls\eben 1-1),
!O :OOp .m .

Houston

San fra ncisco &lt;Barr

Ho uston

( R i chard

at

J . l)

1-1) ,

8 : 35

p .m .
(Only games scheduled)

Friday's Games
St. LOUIS at Chicago
New York at Montreal
Phila at Pittsb.urgh, night
Los Ang at San Fran , night
Atlanta at san Crego, night
Cincinnati at Houston ; night

Boston

Milwaul\ee
Baltimore

Detrort
Cleveland
New York

K·ansas c;ity
Oakland
California .

M innesota
TeXas

7
7
5
5

•

5 .583

....... 11,,
.385

•

2'1•

••••
2

:w,
4'h

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
Nothing personal, of course,
but the Oakland A's can argue
that they are better off without
Jim Hunter than they would be
if they still had the man with
the $3 million arm.
The figures tell the story:
Without their 25-game
winner of 1974, the A's have
won 10 of their first 15 games
and are in a virtual lie for first
place in the American
League 's Western Division
race. A year ago after 15
games, they had an 8-7 record
including a 3-0 mark by
Hunter.
Hunter, signed by Ute New
York Yankees as a free agent
New Year's Eve, has an 0-3
mark and Wednesdayblew ·a 73 lead in Ute seventh inning
although reliever Sparky Lyle
was the eventual losing pltcher. Hunter has yet to pitch
effectively in his four starts
with the club which gave him
the biggest contract in Ute

~

Pitching
(Based on most victories)

inning and they added single
runs in the sixth and seventh to
hand Steve Busby his first
defeat. Hal McRae drove in
both Royal runs in Ute fifth
with a double after a double by
Jinn Wohlford and a walk to
John Mayberry.
Angels 4, Rangers 1:
Bill Singer allowed a firstinning homer by Mike Hargrove but pitched a six-hitter
for California. Tommy Harper
had three singles and Tom
Egan added a double and a
single as Singer fanned five
and didn't walk a batter in
winning his second game.
Clyde Wright was the loser for
Texas.

Red Sox 11, Yaukees 1:
Hunter was cruising with a 73 lead and a four-hitter when
Cec il Cooper.. opened Boston's
seventh with a triple. Lyle took ·
over wh~n Bernie Carbo
singled but the Red Sox went on
to take an 8-7 lead with the aid
of key hits by Fred Lynn, Jim

Haddix: · Pitchers must

League : . R1vers ,

Ca l KC and No""r th , Oak 8 ; Oti s.
KC 7; Patek , KC, C.· Washing
ton , Oa k and Ne lson , Tex 6.

(,

National League: Morton , A I
.s .o; M cNall y, Mtl and Mcin to sh , D J.o ; Sutton . LA 3- 1;
carro ll , Ci n J-2.

s

American League : Rvan, Cat

A-0; Blue. Oak 4-1; F itzmorri s,

KC

and

Champion , Mil

3-0;

Medich , NY J -1.

•

SPRING
BARGAINS

Rice and Bob Montgomery.
Roy White hit two homers and
knocked in three runs for New
York.
Indians 4, ·Tigers 3:
Jack Brohamer and George
Hendrick each drove in two
runs for Cleveland as Jim
Perry won his first game and
Joe Coleman suffered his third
straight defeat for.,.Delroit.
Gary Sutherland and Bill
Freehan also homered for Ute
Tigers.
Brewers 8, Orioles 5:
Bobby Mitchell, replacing
Hank Aaron as Milwaukee's
designated hitter, hit two
doubles and scored the winning
run In the Brewers' victory
over Baltimore. Ed Rodriguez
received credit for the win
while Bob Reynolds was Ute
loser.

12-12-12 FERT.ILIZE_R
50 LB. BAG

Bulk Seeds
Tillers, Lawn Mowers,

LEXINGTON, Ky. (UP!) Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes
ple,ded with the Appalachian
Regional Commission (ARC)
Wednesday ior the immediate
development of an estimated
400 trillion cubic feel of natural
gas ·reserves in the 13 Appalachian stales.
Rhodes predicted an "industrial wasteland" unless the
ARC acted to secure research
fund s to extract natural gas for
oil shale from beneath the
Appalachian area - chiefly
Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania
and West Virginia.
The commissio n, after
Rhodes' urgent pleas, voted
$10,000 to fund a meeting within
the next seven days of
governors of Ute 13 states to
draft a formal proposal for up
to $15 million in research
funds.
"We have talked to
everybody and the immediate
answer is shale ·gas," said
Rhodes. "Everybody is doing
everything except answering
Ute problem.
·
1
' We can't wait six years for
coal
gasification
and
liquefaction research. We are
. talking about Ute winter of
' 1975-76 and if we don't do
something we are going to lose
' our industries," added Rhodes.
The Ohio governor said
· environmental concerns over
the shale oil resources wouid
: have to take a back seat.
"If those people (en-

! LOSE

STAR SUPPLY
RACINE, OH'IO

Rhodes wants shale ·gas now for new sewage system

UGLY· fAT

Start losina wtklht today or: money
• bock, MONAO'Ell. 11 • tlnv toblot
· ond 111V to toko. MONAD EX will

.

, http c:urb your desire - for ex:c•
food. Eet - -w•lth 1-.ContaiM
' no dln91fOUS dru9i and will not
make you nervous. No strenuous
' uerci11. Chenge your life .•• start

, today. MONAOEX cost $3.00 for
• 20 dey aupply. Lar~ iconomy
lizt is$5.00.AiootrvAOUATABS•
they wort&lt; 111ntly to holp you 1..
Wlltor-bloat. AQUATABS -o"wotor
i&gt;lll" that works - $3.00. Both
guonntlld ond oold by:

Kermit 's 18th

Swisher &amp; Lohse 'Pharmacy,
112 E. Main. Pomeroy: Dutton
Drug Store, Middleport. Mail

or.ders Filled. ·

Going into the recent series
against Detroit, the Tribe had·
used eight pitchers, including
relievers, in their first seven
games. The bullpen, in most
cases, has been ineffective-no
strikes.
"I would say there's nothing
major (wrong) with our pitchers,'' adds Haddix, who runs a
farm in South Vienna, Ohio.
"The biggest thing I see so far
is our guys are having trouble
throwing strikes.
"Of course, you have to
.throw strikes wh~n you come to
Ute major leagues or possibly
anywhere. As far as what I've
seen so far, that has been the
biggest problem this spring. I
can't exactly put my finger on
it. I guess we were kind of
rushing through spring
training and trying to get Ute .
· guys as much work as possible.
Maybe we didn't get quite as
much as we wanted, but I think
Ute boys are ready anyway."
Haddix-who pitched !l 12inning perfect game against

Milwaukee May 26, 1959, but
losll.O on a hit by Joe Adcock
in the 13th inning-has also
served as pitching coach for
the New York Mets, Cincinnati
Reds and Boston- Red ·Sox. He
has already garnered himself a
reputation with his staff.
Some,
like
veteran
righthander Jim Perry, don't ·
like him because he doesn't ask
questions when he comes to Ute
mound to yank a pitcher out of
the game on orders from
Manager Frank Robinson.

•

RACINE - Pupils of Racine
Elementary School in the
recent cultural arts exhibit
used ·painting, crayon, .chalk,
mixed media, ceramics, paper
mache, and collage in their
visual art drawings.
Red ribbon winners were,
first grade, Becky VanMeter,
Kelly Rizer , Teena Rose,
Mandy Hill, Kenda Rizer,
Alana Lyons, Ricky Werry,
Brad Holsinger, Chad Sayre,
Eric Taylor, Melissa !hie, and
Jay Bostick.
Second grade 'students who
received red ribbons were lilis
!hie, Lori Simpson, Vincent
Cleland, Sandy Deem, Melody
West, Scott Gheen, Tony
Frederick , Becky Hudson,
David Powell, Lori Wolfe and
Barbara Rose.
Third . grade · red ribbon
wmners were Te,.r esa Hlll,
. Jason ·llill, Rebecca Johnson,
' La ren W0Ife, Ric har d llill ,
Tony Forester, Terre Wood,
James Bush , v·lCkie Ho1smger,
.
Brend:J Jones Terri· Wood,
J
CJ 1 d' Steven Fisher,
ames e an ,
Sherry Patterson, Katrina
·Snod
d D 'd Wh'le
grass an
avl
l .
Fourth grade red ribbon
winners were Jack Dunaway,
Scott Justice, Terry Patterson,
David Salmon, Lisa Allen,
Oair l\Wrris, ,-Kalhy ,Baker,

special

'

....'

WORK SHOES

'

,,•

and

BOOTS

·GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY
STORE
Co"rt St. Pomeroy

By "Sheboygan"
Regular and Steel Toes

Your Thom MeAn Store

Middleport, Ohio

On Every
·Item*
In The Store
* Except Fair Trade Items

Sunday School attendance on
April 20 was 44, the offering
$22.43.
Worship services were held
at 11 a.m. with the Rev. Meece
leading and John Sauvage, lay
speaker from Syracuse U. M.
Church speaking from John
3:16. Attendance at this service
was 23, the offering $20.50 and
pledges $47.
Genevieve Guthrie has been
a patient in Veterans Memorial
Hospital , suffering from
congestion of Ute lungs.
A Bible.Study was held last
Wednesday afternoon at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
(Bobby) Burke with an attendance of nine from this community and four from elsewhere. It will be held again this
Wednesday at I p.m. at the
same home.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode
and Conni of Circleville, 0.,
spent la.st Saturday afternoon
and evening at Ute William
Carr and Qlarles D. Woode
homes here and with Mr. and
MrS. Robert White at Keno.
Mr. and Mrs. David Wllliams

A paint party for youngsters
at the Middleport Community
Park Sat urday ha s bee n
ca ncelled beca use of a

invited to come to the park at I
p.m. Saturday to paint the old
time ' caboose installed there.
However, it has been learned
misunderstand ing. However, a that the painting will be done :
"be tter " party ha s been by George Arnott and Ken ~
planned as a replaceme nt.
Gilkey, who secured the '
Youngsters were originally railroad caboose in the first ~
place.

FIRST, SECOND, 1lliRD GRADE- Blue ribbon winners taking top honors in the Racine
PTO Collura! arts program were front, grade one, 1-r, Lori Adams, Robin Savage, Kelly Rizer,
Bill Proffitt, Eric Taylor, Becky VanMeter, Mike Johnson, Dixie Dugan and Alana Lyons ;
second row, second grade, Deborah Holter, Lori Simpson, Lori Wolfe, Barbara Rose, Melody
West, Rodney Beegle; third row, thirdgrade, Vickie Holsinger,David White, Dewayne Dowell,
Rebecca Johnson, James Cleland, Laren Wolfe, Linda Proffitt, Buddy Thompson, Tony
Forester, Steven Fisher, Glen Johnson, and Katrina Snodgrass. Mrs. Jannie Spurlock was th e
advisor.

Oa kland at Cal if., night.
Chicago atKan City, night
Bo s ton at Detroi t. night
Cleve at Baltimore , n i ght
Milwilukee at NeW York , n ight
(Only g'am·es schedul ed)

·1/Y,

/lA.

PAY

ul r(l;

YOUR

FOURTH, FIFTH, SIXTH GRADE - Blue ribbon winners in the Racine PTO Cultural Arts
contest were front row,l-r, fourth grade, Kim White, Tracy Riffle, Lisa Allen, David Salmons,
Angie Glenn, Terry Bell, Becky Lee, Clair Morris, Sherri Bell, and Michell Johnson; second
row, fifth grade, Chris Allen, Brian Cleland, Melinda Salmons and Jay Rees ; sixth grade, third
row, Eric Hill, Della Johnson, Christa Beegle, Becky Rhodes, James Gheen, Bob B. Lee, Paul
Cardone, Sherry Rose, Steve Circle. Absent was Tony Imboden, fourth grader.

SINGERS SCHEDULED
Dan Hayman and the
Country Hymn Timers will be
at the Eagle Ridge Church at
7:30p.m. Friday . The public is
invited.
and Aaron of Belpre, 0 . visited
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Henderson on Sunday.
Mrs. Vera Henderson is
reported to be improving at her
home here.

SIT..VER BRIDGE

PLAZA
•

BEDSPREAD SALE STARTS FRIDAY
MORNING AT 10 AM
REGULAR s14.00 TO s18.00

Our Treat•••

Coffee and Donu1s Served

TELEPHONE
ABA Playoff Schedule
By United Press International
IAIITimesEDT)
.
1 All Series Best of Seven)
Eastern Divn . Finals
Kentucky vs . St . Louis
( Kentucky leads 2-0)
.
F r i., Apri l 25- at St . L OUIS ,
9 : 00
- .
Sun ,, April 27- at St . . LOUIS,

BILLS
AT

*

ILCOMATICrM18:,.gona

See Our Odd Lot of Sport

Portable Color TV

SPORT OOATS - fOr

with deluxe Rollabout Stand .

.

Easy pushbutton set-and-lorget tunin~ and automatic
circuits that provide a clear, fine-tuned picture, auto- .
matlcaliy • Ph i lco~ DynaColor '.'85:' chassis- 85% .
solid state for 'peak performance, dependability •
Ph ilco~ 10115 color picture tube • Lighted VHF/UHF
channel indicators • Telescopic dipole VHF, loop UHF
antennas
·

·
x -Thurs'., Ma y 1-' al St. L'ou·ls,
9.: 00
. .·
.
x . Sun ., May 4- at \ Ke nt ucky,
y -tba
·. .
western Divn . F1nals
Denver vs. Indiana
(Series tied I -ll
Thursday , Apri l 24 , Denver
Indiana, 9: 05p .m .

Friday, April 25, Denver at

Indiana. 9 :05p .m .
• .
sun day , April 27, l nd1ana at
Denver,4 : 35p .m . .
x .Wednesday , April 30, Den v er at Indiana , 9 :05p .m . - .. .
x .Sct1urday, Ma y 3, Indiana at
Denver, 9 : 35p .m .
.ll - lf necessary
v· Time to be annbunced

FOREMAN and ABBOTT

Values' .to IJ5. Sizes

current styles.

,.

szo

are broken, all

....

New
York ·Clothing
House
'
.
'

KERM'S KORNER

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. TILl
POMEROY,.OHIO

Middleport, Ohio
'

~~~~

.

{

.

I

· over 110 Becl•preads to soli. Regulor. Values ol 514.00 to Sli.OO.

several styles, woven type spreads and chenille type spreads. All
spread s are mact)ine washable and we have a great selection of
colors : Gold, Avocado , White, Blue and Pink. (Some twin size, but

very few I. The•e Spread• are all Regular 514.00 to 518.00.

Bu~

now

for wedding gifts, Mother'' Day gifts, or just to give your bednom
1

new" look. Hurrv in for best setection!

'

,RIDAY.AND SATURDAY SPECIAL!
( - .·-

..

1 ••- ••

"

:·

In lieu of the paint party, Ute ;
young people are being Invited .•
to the park at. noon for a wiener :
roast . There will be residents
on hand to cook.
•
Meantime, contributions for · ~
the summer recreation '
program at the park are being :
NEW ORLEANS (UP! )
accepted. Anyone wishing to •
President Ford will seek the contribute is asked to call the '
presidency in 1976 "difinitely village dispatcher at 992-3145 :
and absolutely ," White House and make a pledge .
Press Secretary Ron Nessen
said Wednesday.
Asked on Air Force One, the
presidential jet, why Ford told
television in te rviewers
Monday night he intends to run include having to balance rival
but
has
not sa id so candidates with equal lime on ·'
11
Categorica1ly /' Nessen said broadcasts, setting up election .
"he 's going to run definitely machinery and making various
employment practice reports
and absolutely for sure.'' .
· Nessen said the President required by law.
The second reason Ford has ·
qualified his intentions Monday
not yet announced, Nessen ..•
night for two reasons.
One is that if· Ford officially said, is that to do so wolild :
announ ces his candidacy he mean ~~au his actions and ;
must abide by the laws and statemen ts would become
practices governi ng announced suspect because he was a
candidates, Nessen sa i.d. These presidential can_didate."

It's Ford for
President in
'76 for sure

Spring Time

IN THE

Plenty of
Free
Parking

delayed plans to bqild the '
power plant because of what
the firm has terrned a I poor ·
economic climate." The plant
planning grant for a sewage would employ 200 to 300
collection system which would workers.
serve about 4,000 residents and
The grant, one of several in
the proposed - but delayed West Virginia announced by____1
Appalachian Power Co. plan.! Ute stale's two senators, will be
near here.
used to study the extension of Councilman Bernard Lieving sewer lines to rural ar~as ~·
sa id New Haven , which has sur rounding New Haven.
·
on ly a primary sewe r system,
plan s to buil d a $140,000New Haven has set no
seco nda ry tr eatment plant. completion date for its
The plant would serve New secondary system. The town is
Haven, nea,rby Hartford, and awaiting a building loan Irom
the genera ting plant.
the EPA ' before beginning
Appala ch ia n Power has - construction .

NEW HAVEN,W. Va.- The
fe d eral E nvir onme ntal
Protection Agency Wednesday
awarded New Haven a $22,500

Wiener roast more fun

FRIDAY and SATURDAY

J . \) at

"des troy this st.lte Ohio industrially ."
.
At the news confere nce,
William K. Overbey Jr. , a
geogolist, and . gas researcher
William T. Wertman, both
associated with the Federal
Energy
and
ReSearch
Developm ent Auth ori ty,
agreed with Rhodes that the
Appalachia area contai ned
potentially one of the targ es~
gas deposits in the nation.

Alfred
Social Notes

\

Kerm Says: Just think what it will be when I've
been here 100 years .

Texas (Brown 0-1 or Hargan
California (Ry an 4 ,0) .
lO : JOp .m .
(Only games schedu l ed I
Friday's Games

Terry Patterson, Sherri Bell,
Zane Beegle, Angie Glenn,
Rust~ Cummins, Tony Imboden and Susan' Roseberry,
Tonya Salser and Robin
Johnson.
Fifth grade winners, Patrick
Johnson, Kinn Bickers, Kent
Wolfe, Melinda Salmons, Scott
Frooerick, Brian Cleland and
Chris Allen.
Sixth grade winners, Paula
Wolfe, Christa Beegle, Ricky
Allen, Carl Morris, Jimmy
Werry, Della Johnson, Bob B.
Lee, Eric llill, Peggy Bush,
Denise Manuel, Mary Beth
Obitz, Bill Morris, Mark
Simpson, Dewayne Curfman,
Glen Johnson, Tonya Salser
and Sherri Bell.
Most of Ute students did work
in visual arts with a few in
poetry. The winners will now
compete in county competition.
· Jack Slavin judged the visual
art work and Margaret
Houdashell the poetry.
·

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIALI

OFF

heritage house

accompan ied Rhodes to the
meeling outlined the extent of
the sha le reserves beneath
Appalachia and said immediate research could
provide adequate amounts of
natural gas to the area.
At a news conference in
Columbus , Ohio Tuesday,
Rhodes charged that "footdraging and red tape" on the
part of the federal government
on the energy shortage could

Pupils at Racine
win red ribbons ,

ManyNetD
Arril!ll!. Noll!!

be able to throw strikes
By PETE SPUDICH
CLEVELAND ( UPI) - To a
piicher, throwing strikes is
what baseball's all about.
" U he can't throw strikes
he's not going anywhere
whether he's playing sandlot
ball or whether he's in the
major leagues,'' says Harvey
" Kitten" Haddix , pitching
coach for Ute Cleveland Indll'ns.
Haddix should know. He was
a major league pilcher"good, but not the greatest
ever"- whose best year was
1953 when he was 20-9 with a
.690 winning percentage and a
3.06 earned run average.
Haddix, 49, after a threeyear sabbatical from the
game, now has the task of
making something out of what
In the past has been nothing.
He has to develop an effective
bullpen, a problem the Indians
have had for years.
"It's no secret that our
pitching staff was put together
like patchwork,'' says club
Vice President-General
Manager Phil Seghi. "We had
no farm system to speak of.
"We had to patch it here,
patch it there, take hold of
what~we-oould-get ;. Then we
had to consolidate them all and
work from there and the farm
system. It bas taken time and
we're not yet where we want to
be, but we're getting there."

vironmenta(ist ) want to give step on some toes.''
alone if you don't help."
me $1 billion for those "people
Ohio state Rep. Tom Carney,
'.'When there is no more gas
standing in the unemployment D-Youngstown, said that each in Kentucky, somebody will
line, then that's okay," he ~aid. of the 13 states represented in have to explain to the people in
" But we can't stand for · the final day of a three-day the unemployment line, and
anybody to get in the way of ARC meeting need to become they won't listen to your ex·
people trying to work in in- "self sufficient in energy cuses," conti nued Rh odes.
dustrY."
matters.''
"They 'll know that somebody
Rhodes said environmental
Carney said the Ohio st..te · in government let the people
concerns were a "luxury " and legislature and the executive down ."
that "like an alcoholic - we branch will work together, and
Two Federal
Energy
need all the money we can get echoed
his
governor's Research and Development
- and we are going to·have to statement that Ohio "will go it Administration officials who

I

""

,.

'

history of baseball.
Vida Blue, taking over as the
ace of the Oakland staff in
Hunter's absence, went 6 2-3
innings to re~ive cre.dit for his
fourth victory in five decisions,
as the A's beat the Kansas City
Royals, 3-2, for their fifth win
in their last six games.
Hollie Fingers, Paul Lind·
blad and Jim Todd finished up
for Blue with Todd receiving
credit for the save.
California defeated Texas, 41, Boston rallied for an 11-7
triumph over the. Yankees,
Cleveland beat Detroit, 4-3, and
Milwaukee topped Baltimore,
8-5, in other American League
games .
In the National · League, it
was Montreal 5 Pittsburgh 0,
New York 7 St. Louis I,
Chicago 9 Philadelphia 3,
Atlanta 5 Cincinnati 4, San
Diego 7 Los Angeles I and San
Francisco 3-&lt;1 over Houston
after a 3-2 loss.
Billy Williams singled home
the A's' first run in Ute first

American

Planning funds awarded

1

Dan Driessen followed with a giving up two-run homers to
single and Cesar Geronimo Vic Correll and Darrell Evans
was safe on a rare error by in the second and third innings
Blanks, only his second in 15 ·..respectively, had retired ·24 of ·
games. 'The Braves bullpen 29 Braves batters before
was up and it seemed only a Blanks came through with his
matter of warmup time before double and the way he apd
Reed would be gone.
Reed were going It appeared a
But a double play, with long night was ahead.
Blanks in Ute middle, got Reed
"I was still feeling pretty
out of the inning and the big strong," said Reed. "But I'm
righthander then preceeded to glad 'Sugar Bear' (the Braves'
retire the last 19 batters in a nickname for Blanks) got It
row.
over with."
Loser Don Gullett, after
Nationa I League: . Cede no ,
Hou 11 ; Lopes. LA 9; Morgan .
Cin 8 ; t en play er s t i ed wit~ 3.

blows-- lead, NY
drOps 11-7 tilt to Sox

'

II

hitter, but I've done it!rom Ute
end of Ute bat. 1 had my right
hand a. couple of inches above
my left that last time up -&lt;~nd
you saw what happened."
Reed, now 1-3 and battling to
keep a starting job, almost
went to the showers in the fifth
inning whim he,let a 4-llead go
down the drain.
A double by Dave Concepcion, a walk by Joe Morgan and
a three-run homer by Johnny
Bench tied it up, and still Reed
wasn't out of trouble.

H~nter

at

5 .500 1
5 .500 . 1

Not .that Bianks blames his
coaches for ,trying to change
his style. He's hitting only .167
(he was only .140 before going
2-for-5 Wednesday night) and
he realizes something has to be
done if be wants to stay in the
lineup.
"But, I know what my
trouble is," he said. ("I'm not
'holding my right hand right.
It's because I've been lazy, I
haven't been concentrating on
what I should be doing.
"I've always been a punch

Stolen Bases

y, 8 o05

pc·t . g .b.

5 8
West
w. I. pet.
. 692
9
10 s .667
7 6 .538
• 6 ' 8 .429
5 9 .357

Braves coaches have been
By DAVID MOFFIT
trying to get Blanks, a 5-foot~,
UPI Sports Writer
ATLANTA (UPI) - Atlanta · 165-pound shortstop, to choke
Braves pitcher Ron Reed has up abOut six inches on his bat.
to _be tuippy that teammate Blanks, who'd rather swing
Larvelle Blanks has been away, was down near the end
resisting efforts to change his of the bat Wednesday night
· when he slammed a high
batting style.
Reed had to go ll innings double to left centerlield to
Wednesday night to pick up his drive in the game-winning run .
" I realize that T don 't have
first victory of the season, a 5-4
- decision over· the Cirtcinnati the size or the power to go to
Reds, and if it hadn't been for the fences,'' said Blanks. "l)ut
Blanks, he might still be out I believe that I can hit the ball
into the alley for doubles,
there.

x .Mon ., A pr il 28- at Kentuck.·-

5 .583

s

(All Times EDT)

K &amp;nsas Ci ty (S pl ittorff \ . \J a t
Oa kland (Abbott 1-01.4 : 30 p.m
Chicago ( Bahnsen 0-2J at
M i nnesota · (Biyleven 2-1), 2 : 15
p .m .

8:00

American League
East

w. 1.

Chicago
a 9 .JOB · 5
Wednesday 's Results
Cl eve land 4 Det ro i t 3
Boston 11 New York 7
M i lwaukee B Ba l t i more 5
Ca lifornia 4 T ex as I
Oakland J Kansas City 2
Chi at Minn ., ppct. , wet
Today's Probable Pitchers

. i

.~:-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April24, 1975

4- The Dally Sentlnei, r.fiddleporl'Pomeroy,'O., Thursday, April24, 197_5

Racine Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mrs. George Taylor and Mrs.
Lillian Lee are patients in
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Attending the installation of
officers of the women's
organizations of Rio Grande
Association at Salem Baptist
Church Friday evening, April
18 were Mrs. Bikacsan, Mary
K. Yost, Grella Simpson ,
Marjorie Grimm, Nondus
Hendricks, Phyllis Bailey,
Ollie Mae Cozart, Edna
Pickens, Martha Lou Beegle,
Dorothy Badgley, Helen
Simpson, Linda Grimm.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Grimm of
Letart Falls and Miss Vera
Beegle, local, were dinner
guests Sunday of Mrs. Gretta
Simpson, honoring Mr. Grimm
on his birthday.
Mrs. Clyde Cross, daughter,
Mrs. Lynn Nichols and
daughter, Christine, of
Columbus spent a day with
their mother and grandmother,
Mrs. Frankie Neigler.
Mrs. Frances - Roberts attended
the
Future
Homemakers State Convention
in Columbus the weekend of
April 11 and 12. She was accompanied
by
Pamela
Holcomb of Pomeroy; Ulraine
McElhaney of Middleport; and
· Vicki Johnston of Salem
Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Farra
are visi ling their- son, Joe
Farra in New York for ten·
days.
Miss Grace Ellis, Miss Ruth
Ellis and Mr. Howard Bingman
of Columbus were guests of ·
UNEMPLOYMENT DOWN
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
number of newly unemployed
persons .in Ohio continued
to decline last week, according
to €he Ohio Bureau of Employment Services. ..
Officilils said 20,952 persons
flied for UDI'mploymeni compensation for the first lime last
week, compared: to 24,2611 the
previous weel\ while the
weekly average for April, 1974
was 10,595.'
.
A total of 258,000 Ohioans
were reported out of work last
week, compared to 265,934 Ute
week before and Ute weekly
average of 93,248 in Ajx-il, 1974.

You 'II find a great selection of fine
furniture, floor coverings and
appliances at the lowest possible •
prices. Free delivery, convenient

&gt;

Miss Edith Hayman, Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Spaun
announce ·the birth of a
daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Parry and
daughter, Brenda, of Hillsboro
spent the weekend with his
brother, Mr. knd .Mrs. David
Parry and family .
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle were
guests Thursday of Mr. and
Mrs. Mack Howard and Miss
Helen Riffle at Hartford, W.
Va.

terms, service when you need it.
Se~ing you has been our business

since 1952.

Baker Furniture
'

Middleport, Uhio

CALL

OR VISIT ·

VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
3rd Ave.-

Middleport, Ohio _ ,

992-2709

.

�I

r

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middle.port-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April24, 1975

~' - ~ Soci;,~x:l:'~: Rock artists gather Sunday
ca1en dar:.:;:.

.· ~'Scholarship goes to Miss Rei}Jel
I

•••
·
h
t
or is NO CHARGE, either for tne
?;:[
Mrs. Bonnie Jo Campbell can decide w at crea ures
af'-rnoon, the instrucUon, or
reported on ,,
~·aye Kiebel, da~hter of Mr. Girls' State te a for Jun e 5 at be elected at the May meeting. Wildermuth
,, will be the instructor in rock animals the rocks resemble.
"'
and Mrs. Donley Reibel, was Junction City, and the distri~t Appointed to the nominating pr oceeds from the dinner ~
~~ ·art which is sometimes They paint them, glue !hem the materials. Everything is
selected to receive the $100 conven tion for Ju ne 5 at committee were Mrs.
' Veda served at the legion c on- ;,.
~::, referred to as stone painting at wgether, add eyes or other provided. All ~tertals are
scholars hi~ awarded. an nually ' Lancaster. It was noted that Davis, Mrs. Wildermut~ and . vention . A bulletin on
· , THURSDAY
the French Art Colony, Sunday details . lmagi~tl.on is the key. furnished.
.
objective s
by the AmeriCan Legion there will be a reception Mrs. Norma Jewell. The legis lativ e
LETART BASEBALL Assn. from 2 to 4 ·p. m.
Anyone can come. Parents
The first Sunday, April '!1',
Auxiliary of Drew Webster honoring the outgoing district department junior convention presented by Mrs . Frances meets at 7:30p.m. at !he Letart
Smoolh river rocksare used and children who participate the rocks will be prepared,
Hunnel noted that 19 pet. of the El'ementary School. All after being wiishe&lt;!:-From the do NOT have to be members of painted, and the students 'will
Post 39 at a meeting Tuesday · president, Mrs. Devon Tipple. will be at Marion June 7.
A vote of thanks was ex- men who served in Vietnam parents urged to attend .
night.
Mrs. Arnold 'tichard, Midshape of the rocks, the parents the French Art Colony . There decide on their project,
Miss Riebel is a senior at dleport, . has been nominated. tended to Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore are unemployed.
and children working together
precisely what they want to do.
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
The secood Sunday, May 18,
Meigs High School and an
The poppy display was and Mrs. Gemma Casci for
A card of thanks from the
Pack
245
7
p.m.
at
.Middleport
•
same
time and place, will be
Arcadia
Nursing
Home
for
active member of the junior discussed' and M,rs. Faye making the new CJ.lftains for
auxiliary . The juniors of the Wildermutf1 and Mrs. Marge the downstairs of the hall, and fruit, candy and cookies wa s American Legion Post.
~ev~
thefinalsessionwhentherocks
ALL FEMALES, over 10
U~or.:ses
1
will be glued and possibly
unit will be honored for their i{cuter will prepare the win- to 0 . . A. Martin for candy read. Mrs. Carrie Neutzling
mounted on driftwood so that
work with veterans over the dow .· A note of thanks wi ll be donated for various parties. was asked to present !he Poppy through adult, invited to attend
past year at the mother- · sent to James Vennari for a Mrs . Grace Pratt, president, Day story on WMPO in May. meeting
on
Middleport
CHESTER - The Chesrer Mrs. Jean Spencer, president; they can be used as a wall
daughter reception planned for bed to ~se in the display .
also thanked those who Mrs. Veda Davis, junior ac- Community Park softball PTA, meeting Monday night at Mr s. Elsie Folmer, vice hanging or a centerpiece.
May 21 at !he haiL
It was reported that at the assisted or contributed to t he tivities chairwoman, noted that program at 7 p.m. , Middleport the sc hool , endorsed the 1.6 president; Mrs. Linda Hudson , Decorative additions of dry
A hig hlight of the Tuesday district convention a memorial dinner serv ed the di strict Pam Powers has been en- Fire Department head- mill operating levy for tile secretary; Mrs. Linda B.entz, flowers or moss make them
nigh t meeting was a demon- service fur deceased members American Legion convention dorsed tor Eighth District quark!rs.
Meigs Community School for treasurer.
extremely attractive.
RIVERVIEW Garden Club retarded children following a
Mrs. Linda Edwards invited
stration program ,by the will be held. Included in the here ta st ·month.
· junior president. A jitney
workshop sCuden ts of the Meigs memorial ,from . the local unit
A plaque awarded to the unit supper Saturday at the meeting8p.m. at home of Mrs. talk by Manning Webster, all the parents of the sixth
Fof thJi~Lo~sT
Community SchooL Eric will be Mrs . Anna Jones. Mrs. for being goal was presented, Salisbury School beginning at Roy Hannum with Mrs. David president of the Meigs County graders to attend !be PTSA
Board of Mental Retardation. meeting at Easrern Junior
Chambers, instructor, spoke on Gaynelle Fugate, Mrs. Atlanta and Harry Davis was selected 4:30p .m. wa s announced. Mrs. Chadwell as co-hostess.
Tire Pilices .
REVIVAL 7:30 each evening '
The district PTA meeting at High School-April 28.
!he various activities noting Cook and Mrs. Jean Hart . A to receive the award for the Davis introduced Jennifer
.•
The PTA prayer and pledge
that sometime in May an open contribution of Sl5 was made to legionnaire having the mosi Couch, "Little Miss Poppy ". at Faitil Tabernacle Church, the Zaleski Elementary School
irlthe ~a ·
house will be observed with the CARE. The deparlment con- ·•women" in his family inRefreshments of apples and Bailey Run Road, with Rev. May 10 was announced. to the flag opened the meeting.
public to be invited. He also vention was announced for . volved in auxiliary work. A ice cream was served by Mrs. Jerry Stickler as evangelist. Speaker.for the conference will The attendance banner was
spoke of !he 1.6 mill operating J uly JB-21 at Dayton and !he report was given on the flag Wildennuth and Mrs. Neut~ Putilic invited .
be Mrs. Jean Dye, president of won by the first grade of Mrs.
It's
levy to be voted on in the June delegates and alternates will presented to the Pomeroy zling .
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta , !he Ohio PTA . ArrangementS Melanie Beegle, with seccnd
primary.
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority • ·were made to send tile winning place going to tile .combined
Eleme nt ary School. Mrs.
'
The 20 students attending
special meeting, 7:45 p:m. at cultural arts entries into . fourth ~nd fifth grade. It was
worked wi th,instructors at four
the home of Mrs. June Van county competition and noted that !he banner has been
· tables, one showing.J,b.~ . m~.king
Vranken.
trophies and rosettes were won at all meetings this year 772.5881
Mason, w. fa. ;
of lamp shades , annther signs,
EVANGEIJNE Chapter DES presented to the children.
by Mrs. Beegle's first grade.
another loom weaving and
inspection, 7:30 p.m. at
Delegates to the Meigs
another terrariums. Assisting
In spection of Pomeroy matrons of Pomeroy chapter, fund.
Masonic Temple, Middleport, County Council of Parents and
were Re v. W. H. Perrin and Chapter 186, Order of !he Mrs. Joan Vaughan , Mrs.
Initiatory work was held for with Deputy Grand Matron Teachers were selected as
. Richard Chambers, m"mbers Eastern Star was held Friday Dorothy Woodard , Mrs. Marie Patty Well and Diana Carsey. Donna Spring as inspecting follows: Mrs. Wilma Parker,
of Meigs County B&lt;· . 1 of night at the Pomeroy Masonic Curd, Mrs. Ella Smith, Mrs. Soulsby was soloist and sang officer.
Mrs . Judy Eichinger, Mrs.
Mental Retarda ti on, Mrs . Temple with Mrs. Donna Mabel Goeglein, Mrs. Thelma "Prayer is the Key to Heaven"
POMEROY Little League 7 · Becky Pullins, Mrs. Sharon
Margaret Ella Lew&lt;s. cchool Spring, deputy grand matron, Dill, Mrs. Evelyn Lanning, and accompanied by Margaret p.m. at Pomeroy City Hall.
Louks, Mrs. Linda Edwards,
superintendent ; Mrs. Alice as the inspecting officer.
Mrs. Sue Soulsby ; and past . Neuman . Soulsby also served
FRIDAy
with alternates, Mrs. Glenna
Wolfe and Mrs. Eloise Smith.
Mrs. Florence Well, worthy patrons , Th omas Edwards, as escort. Bibles were
SPECIAL meetin g, Mid- Reibel, Mrs. Jackie Starcher,
Others there with the studen ts matron, and Dale Smith, Dale Smith . and Albert presented to the new members dieport Masonic Lodge 363, Mrs . Betty Newell and Mrs.
were Mrs. G._.orge Skinner, Mr. worthy patron, presided at the Woodard , all Knights of !he on behalf of the chapter by F&amp;AM, 7 p.m. for Master Linda Hudson.
and Mrs. Richard Grueser and meeting . Presented a nd York Cross of Honor, and William Hayes , associate Mason degree. All Master
It was reported that !he PTA
Mr . and Mrs. Denver Rice .
escorted to sea ts in the East James Soulsby.
patron.
Masons invited.
has purchased books, carpet,
The auxiliary presented Rev. were Mr s. Spring, Mrs.
Honored Masons recognized
Featured in the decoratio'lS
SPRING Revival in progress · playg~ound equipment, book
Perrin "'ith a check for $25 to Roberta K. Midting, past grand were Clarence Struble, Ralph was the worthy matron 's through April 27 at First shelves, ·kitchen supplies, art
be used for the. school. Refresh- matron ; Howard Shull, Webb , Paul Darnell, Glen theme, "The Open Bible". Her Southern Baptist Church, 7:30 materials and trophies for the
ments were served to the associate grand patron ; Elsie Atkinson and James Wallace. daughter's Bible was used at
p.m. with Lamar O'Bryant as school.
students by the auxiliary and Schoenian, grand represen- Mrs. Clara Thomas , Mrs. the inspection. Her son's Bible evangelist. Nursery open, . Mrs. Maxine Goeglein,
each one was presented 50 tative to Michigan; and Mrs. Louise Carson and Mrs. Evelyn had been used at the in- public welcome.
county council president, incents and a chocolate covered Mary Shull, grand represen- Lewis were recognized for · stallation ceremony. Pin-&lt;Jns
SQUARE dance, 8 p.m . to 12 stalled the 1975-76 officers:
egg.
.,
tative to Oklahoma.
being mell!bers for over 50 were red ribbon roses . midnight at Harrisonville
The open shop Poppy Day at
Welcomed were the visiting years. Also introduced were Registration was handled by Elementary
by
School
,(
the Sandusky
Veterans worthy matrons and worthy · Gordon Qyer, trusree of the Mrs . Myrtle Sisson, Mrs .
Harrisonville.
Senior
Citizens
Hospital was announced for patrons
'At .
of
Ba rtl ett , DES home; Mrs . Maryln Rizer, Mrs. Mabel Moore and Club. Music by Hilltoppers,
REVIVAL SET
April27. The unit was asked to Evangeline, New Marshfield, Wilcox , district president; Thomas Edwards .
A revival will be held May I
public invited.
provide 200 cookies for !he Valley, Harrisonville, Athens , Loella Hayes, secretary for !he
through May 11 at the Hiland
Bouquets of red ribbon roses
HARRISONVILLE Gold- Chapel, 7:30 each evening, wi !h
event. Hospital Day at Webb, Thea, Albany, Racine district; Mrs. Woodard and in white baskets flanked by red
Chillicothe was announced for and Mount. Moriah Chapters. Dean McCutcheon, grand tapers in silver holders were · en Circle Senior Citizens Club Rev. R. D. Brown, Wilkesville,
May 20, the District 6 Buckeye Also presented were the past . pages, and six fonner grand used on the refreshment table. square dance from 6 p.m.-12 as evangelist. There will be
midnight at !he Harrisonville
' appointments and 16 past Mrs. Ruby Vaughan poured the Elementary School. Admission special vocal presentations
a '$6.00 vafue
I matrons and past patrons of punch and Mrs. Charlotte $1 for adults, 50 cents children. each evening. Rev . George
21or
I
other chapters.
Dillard presided at the silver Music by the Hllltoppers . Casto, pastor, invites the
public. ·
Sunshine offering was coffee service. Mrs . . Thelma
LETART, W. Va . - Mrs. Nick Howard, Mitchell and collected by Mrs. Sally Ebers- Dill, Mrs . Shirley Custer, Everyone welcome .
Dewey (Esther) Roush's 80th Shawn, Rollin 'Roush , James bach, Mrs. Wanda Rizer, Miss Maria Fosrer, Avazo Sisson · PAST Matrons, Evangeline
birthday was observed Sunday Thomas and Jimmy, Mr. and Susan Lanning and · Mrs . ·and Jeanie Buckley were on Chapter, OES 7:30p.m. at the
AUCTION DELAYED
when her six sons and four Mrs . Harry Wolfe, Mr . and Shirley Smith. It will be sent to the refreshment committee. Middleport home of Mrs. M. L.
A
public
auctio~ of !he Meigs
French.
daughters and their families Mrs . Wayne Kelly, Randy and !he OES home fire safely code
gathered at her home here and Jeff , Mrs . Terry Davis , Lori
PUBLIC Sausage and Local Band Boosters scheduled
attended church with her at and Michael, Mrs . Alice Gum,
pancake supper at Middleport last Saturday was delayed due
Graham United Methodist Mr. and Mrs . Allan Connelly
Double the value! Your favorite co fognes in solid
Heath United Methodist to the injuries received by
Harold
Carnahan,
father
of
Church. Besides receiving gifts and Holly, Miss Louise Roush,
Church, 4 to 7 p.m. by United
form at solid savings. In classi c Dana fragrances :
and a huge birthday ca ke, Mrs . Mrs. Evelyn Cox, Debbie, Mike
An Easter program was and ·Fred Pullins, treasurer. Methodist Men of. Meigs auctioneer, James Carnahan,
provocative Tabu and exhilarating Ambush .
Roush.rece ived a potted flower and Jeff, Mrs. Susanna King prese nted at the recent
Mrs. Frieda Mossman is the County. $1.75, all you can eat. on Thursday. The auction will
be rescheduled.
from the Women's Society of and Stephen , Mr. and Mrs . meeting of the Adult Class of entertainmen t chairwoman
SATURDAY .
Norris Roush and · Kevin and the Pomeroy Nazarene Church with Barbara Colmer and Mrs.
the church.
FINANCE Committee of
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roush. in the educational building.
Michael on the commitree. In Meigs County. ,Community
After church the family went
Lew Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Readings were given by charge cf refreshments for the School sponsors a Jitney
l'{illiam Bird,· Myra Kay and back to the honoree 's home members of the class and there meeting are Mrs . Freda Supper at the Salisbury
J.ou Ellen Roush , Mr. and Mrs. where they were dinner guests was group singing .and Henderson, Mrs. Paulette Elementary School , 4:30 to 6:30
Dallas Wa lker, Mr . and Mrs. and spent the day .
sc riptures . Mrs. Mamie Farley and Mrs. Janet Reeves. p.m.
Stephenson had the prayer .
CAR WASH beginning 9 a.m.
Attending the meeting were
Elecred to fill the secretary 's Mr. and Mrs. William lasting all day at Middleport
post was Patty Michael. Other Stephenson, Fred Pullins, Fire [)epartment HeadquarKenneth McCuttougl!, R. Ph. Char .. • Riffle, R. Ph.
officers of the class are Mrs . Frieda Mossman, Mr. and Mrs. ters for benefit of fire departOpen Daiiy .,-oila.m. to 9:30p.m .
Sunday 10:30to 12:30 and !to 9 p.m .
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande various graphic techniques of Stepehenson, president, Mrs. James Farley and sons, Jamie ment. $3 for car, inside and out.
ALL children invited to
PRESCRiPTI()NS
PH. 992-29SS
College Student Activities will different artists. The exhibit Mary Plillins, vice president, and Davy, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
takes
place
from
10
:30
a.m
.
to
Colmer,
Nancy
Whittikind,
Middleport
Community
Park
1
sponsor an exhibit and sale of
Fri~&gt;ndlv S..rvice
.
Chester, Ohio
Anita Van Cooney and Janet p.m. to paint caboose. Take'
approximately 600 original 3 p. m.
112 E. MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
Reeves and Trina.
work clothes, paint brush, sack
prints from the famed FerPhone 985-3537
lunch; parents invited to join.
dinand Roten
Galleries
CAR wash at Syracuse
ccllection·Friday, May 2, 10:30
Municipal
building, 10 a.m. to 4
a. m. to 3 p. m. The event will
p.m. by Young Adult Class of
be held at the Rio Grande
ESCAPEE COMES IN
Asbury United Methodist
College Dining Hall.
The Meigs County Sh~riff 's
RACINE - The Southern
Church. $1.50 for outside; $2 for
Along with prints by such
HighSchool Music Department Dept. disclosed Wednesday, in and out.
masters as Picasso, Goy a,
Th
e
Meigs
4-H
Pleasure
will present a concert Sunday, that Dave Darst, 21, Rt. 1,
Renoir and Hogarth , can be
SUNDAY
attended
the
Meridith
Riders
May 4 at 2:30 p. m. at the Middleport, who broke out . of
seen works by many of today's
Middleport
jail
on
March
29,
DAN
HAYMAN
and all his
American arti sts, some Manor horse show in Waverly, high school.
has
surrendered
to
Middleport
Hymn Timers at Letart Falls
The school wind ensemble
famous and some not yet W. Va . Club jackets were
Police
Chief
J
.
J.
Cremeans
cominunity
Hall, 1 p.m. for
distributed and worn.
will include the "Ringmaster
famous.
and.
is
lodged
in
county
jail.
hymn
sing.
Public
invired.
Members
attendin
g
were
March", a n~wly written
· Area residents are invited to
browse th rough this out- Tammy Ervin, Tammy Smith, concert march , and " Deep
standing collection of original Mellisa lhie, Pam Nottingham, River Suite," a collection of
graphics . A knowledgeable Melanie Dillard, Linda Eason, three American traditional
Roten representJativ.Lwii!Ae on Debbie Wood yar d; Christfn songs, among its concert
hand to answer questions about Anderson, Brett Jones, Mike selections.
Corena Rhodes, saxophone
the prints and the artists and to Boggs, Faye Reibel , Julie
Elberfeld,
Brenda
Williams,
sollst,
will perform to Bartok's
discuss other prints not in this
Belinda
Whittington,
·Cheryl
"Evening
in tile CO\llltry." collection but which may be
Arnett
and
advisors,
Mrs
..
Miss Rhodes received a
obblined from !he gallery in
Rachael
Downie
'a
nd
Bill
superior
rating on her
Baltimore .
•
Downie
Jr
.
Guests
attending
performance
of tilis piece at
A wodd-respected authority
on graphics of all types, Roten were Mrs. Charlotte Dillard the sta oo solo and ensemble
holds exhibitions and sales at and Daphne , Mr s. Mary festival.
The concert will also feature
major museums, colleges, art Nottingham, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert
Elberfeld,
Mr.
Donley
"Little Boy Blues'.' a number
5
galleries and art centers
!
Reibel,
Kim
Kraeuter
and
for
swing
combo.
Joy
Bigler
is
throughout the United States
Keith Kraeuter.
director.
and· Canada.
The informal displaying of
....
!he collection allows visitors to
83Ax51fzx3'~--------~ 5
examine at close range !he

PT'.11.A en

fd

7 - The.Daily Sentinel,MiddleiJort-Pomero)', 0. , Thursday;April24,1975

Ohio Valley youih·rally set
A youth rally at the Ohio
Valley Christian Assem.bly
campgrounds at Darwin on
May 4 at 2 p.m. was announ ced
when the Trulh Seekers of the
Bradford Church of Christ met
at the home of Tammy, John
and David Blake.
Danny Harrison presided at
the me eting with Tammy

.

Blake and Linda Hysell giving
the sec reta ry and treasu~er's
reports. A trip to King''s Island
June 23 wa s planned .
Devotions by Tainmy Blake
included a poem, scripture:\
and a ~editation. Next
meeting will be April 29 at the
camp at 6 p.m. for a softball . Spending a weekend Is about
game. A wiener roast was held 1 all we can afford any more.

DIAL

Very- _Dr.y

Gold

Pomeroy OES holds inspection

Young wives have meeting

Science is ·wonderful : It unerringly des igns electric
wristwatch batteries so they
wear out during the nigh before
a major appointment.

8 oz.

Mays home. The door prize
was won by Mrs . Avice
Spencer, w i t h refreshment s
HY POLLY CRAMER
being served by Mrs. Mays and
Mrs. Sara Bailey.
'·"""VOther members attending
were Mrs. Lila Van Meter
Mrs. Marilyn Spencer, Mrs:
POLLY'S PROBLEM
in one place · am:i uJt:u we.,
Karen Youn g, Mrs . Karla
DEAR POLLY - We would moved. There were stains thai
Chevalier Mrs. Li nda Well
Mrs. Nor~a Hawthorne and· - like to know how to remove probably were caused by water
rust stains from an asphalt tile seeping under the cabinet when
Mrs. Brenda LaDeaux .
kitchen floor. A cabinet stood the flo or was washed so
frequently . I have used wax
remover and other household
powders but to no avaiL GERRY .
DEAR GERRY - ,One
maker of asphalt tile suggests
rubbing such stains with a
diluted solution of oxalic acid.
and using No. 00 steel wool.
Handle this acid with EXTREME CARE and caution.
Use self-polishing wa x on
asphalt tile. Do remember that
many solvents soften asPhalt
~ile and cause Colors to run.
Any furniture legs should be
put in rubber, -not metal, cups.
POLLY.
THE U TU STUIIGTN Nlllllfll fV EA .

EXCEDRIN TABLETS

L02 Value

1

60's

HALF-PRICE SALE!

TABU

AMBUSH

SOLID COLOGNE

80th birthday observed

....1_

.~:'fr.J01'

'&lt;Wa"""'""'

"'"100'- ""
-~-

$JOO

$34.9S
VALUE

BOYS TRUNKS,

59~

16 oz.
67'. VALUE

FDS

WORTHALL

heres the sandal
low-down
'BY

..
BLOOD NEEDED
. MASON, W. Va. - A
bloodmobile will be. at the
Mason ' fire Department
building Monday from I :30 to
~ : 30 p.m. o'.ll persons 18
through 59 are eligible to give
blood and !hose 17 can do so
with parenlal cooilent. Mrs.
OlariH Geaget, president of.
the Mason &gt;,tothers· Oub, asks
public ,.support.

•
.

-

,· ,..

'

.

miss america.
' THE THRUSH"
• White
• Navy
• Brown
'

THE SHOE BOX
Middleport, Ohio

SHIRTS TO MATCH
'

by

Carte(s &amp;Rob Roy
Swimming season will s9on be here!
Now is the time to select your suit. We
invite you to use .our lay;a··way plan.

lack ByPopulO~ DemandI

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

BIG 11 A"
GRASS SEED

Middleport, Ohio. ,

'.

· ....

$1 33

41b• .
bag
·

2158 Mini Basket
• 'Att ractive wicker

.

WONDER

CLOTHS

1 QT.

BO'NDWARE

PAPER PlATES
9"

lO's.

'4.50
VALUE

75 CT.

SSe Value

98' .VALUE

49~

BABY

POWDER
14 oz.·

~.

.

· '1.59 VALUE

24" Steel Planter Boxes--------------------•1.44
30" Steel .Planter Boxes.__ _: ____ , _________ '"'...; 1.94

baby
shampoo
BABY LOTION
16

~
lotion
rw
,...._

KIMBIES
DISPOSABLE
DIAPERS
'

oz.

'2.89
VALUE

'1.59

. $159

KIMBIES
DISPOSABLE
DIAPERS
OVERNIGHTS

'1.63 VALUE

'

-= •

7 oz.

VALUE

. TODDLER SIZE

'

'2.18
VALUE

• Light to l&lt;tl, easy to carry

THERMOS BOTTLE

More Great SavJngs This Weelcl

36" Steel Planter BOxes----------------~--- s2.44
Copper Plated Tub Planters
2.33
18"x24" Astro Turf Door Mats-------~-------·· ·3.97
,171fz"x291fz" Astro Turf Door Mats~----_;-----~~•4.97
·u"x36" Astro Turf ·0oor Mats __ _; __ .:. __ ~__ _; ____~5.97
O'Ced•r Sponge Mops, regular 54.69______ ..; _____s3.17
Copper Ute Com Broom, regular •3.39.-~-------- 5257

MINI
LAUNDRY BASKET
. FESCO

7 oz.

Riders at
concert May 4
Manor show

GIRLS INFANTS
lHRU 15
by Carter's &amp;.DiniH!ttes

MENNEN .
PUSH BUTION
'1.59 VALUE

Southern sets

BATHING SUITS

'11.00
VALUE

$695

MARSHMALLOWS ~DEODORANT

Aowe15y etc.

Smalley's Gift Shop

BISSEll

$2·· 3''

CAMPFIRE

Nazarene adults enjoy program

RG plans art sale May 2

-

Oua/ity... a/ a
bargain price

DAISY
o BY

Coffee Never Boils
8 cups of Delicious Coffee
Holds coffee at perlortl
serving temperatures

'

Noveltys, Gifts,

••

NORELCO
COFFEE MAKER

'1.42 VALUE

VISINE

EYE

DROPS

Regular or Mint
5 oz.

Value

Floor tile stains
thwart a cleanup·.

Excedrin

TOOTH PASTE

$1.02

$2 .02 Value

Polly's Pointers

'CHESTER - A film on
cancer was shown by the
Amencan . Cancer Societ.y
representalive at the Apnl
mee!mg of the Young Wives
Cl ub of Chester and Tuppers
Piams at the home of Esther
Mays.
.
Welcomed mto membership
were Mrs. Susie Beeler, Mrs.
Linda Flinner and Mrs. Lois
Kerr . Plans were made for a
garage sale Moy 9 anrl 10 at the

CREST

Air Freshner
Solid
Choice
Of
Frangrances
s oz.

Anti-Perspirant
Bath
Size
37c Value

SLATF:O

GLADE

DIAL

SOAP

.BEND TIRE CEN'(EJI

SUPI'~;H

A jitney supper wi ll be held
fr om 4:30 to6 ;30 p.m. Sa turday
at the Salisbury Elementary
Sc hool under the sponsorship of
following the meeting. Others the finance committee of the
attending were Charles Diehl, Meigs Community School. The
Becky
Painter , Sherry public is invited .
Lightfoot and· Mr. and Mrs .
Clifford S!'nith.

$1.59
Value

lf2 oz .
$1.75 .

Value

DEAR POLLY - Cotton is
good for baiting mouse traps.
Mice like it for nesting. Put the
cott.on in and around the m~_use
trap.
When I wash wool blankeLs I
put one cup of moth bails. or
crystals in the rinse watet to,
protect them from moths.
Also, I find boric acid will
make roaches disappear. OOROTHY.
DEAR POLLY - My
,re frigera tor is a name 1Jr3nd
one and cost plen ty but
cleaning it is the worst job I
ever tackled - even worse
than cleaning an old-fashioned
stove. There arc so many
cracks and crevices tl1at
cannot be reached even by
disassembling parts with a
screw driver. Food collecLs in
these iitUe hiding places and
.cannot be cleaned even witlf a
brush. Even though only three
years oi·d the plastic has
cracked and rust h~s
discolored many places. I think
it is unsanitary and would think
that a civilization that coUld
develop equipment to reach !Jle
muon could build a sanitary
refrigerator that could b~
easily cleaned. I have been
looking around and they all
seem to have these same
disadvantages so th at is my
Pet Peeve.
I use plastic trash can covers
for clothes covers by puncturing a hole in the center o f
the bottom seam and then
pulling th e hanger hoo'k
through the hole. Such covers
are espec ially good for
traveling and also make good
containers for storing blankets
or folded clothes that one wan'is
to keep free of dust. - MRS. G.
B.

DEAR POLLY - When :1
receive a letter with a stick.Q~
name and address label fr om
someone whose address I wiSh
to keep, I just cut or peel the
label off and stick it in rJly
address ,book with a strip of
clear, no shine tai&gt;e. The
nam e and address are
preserved, readable and I can
get more into each section of
my small address book. ,.
MRS. M. D.
DEAR POLLY - With !h~
present high cost of food mosl
of us have to use everything
possi ble to stretch our money.l
have discovered that whe!)
making chocolate chip cookies
I can triple all the recipe e,..
cept the chips and then usc on!~
ONE 12 ounce package of chips.
and they are fin e. Also I us~.
half brown and half whit!!:
sugar as the brown is moreexpeQsive. We think cooki es
made this way are delicious,
and they ca n be stored 1no
plastic bags, alllOO of them, i[,
you have any left to store. I•
never do. - EVELYN.
· '"

..

Bereans

have~

recent meet ..

""

"Faith " was the devotional·"
!heme used by Mrs, Martha.~
Childs · at the Tuesday night," ·
meeting of the Loyal Bereans
·class of the Middleport Church.c
of Christ.
·'
Members sang " In the
Garden" with Marvin Kelly
giving prayer. Mrs. Childs
used the medita tion · theme,
" God Honors Faith " with
scripture 'from Romans 4 and
the poeq1, '"!'he Fallh that
Smil~s" .
•
A donation was made to· a:,..,
needy
family .
Named,.,
hosresses for May were Mrs •\ Ill,)
.
Martha Haggerty, Mrs. Lena McKinley, and Mrs. Regina ' ~:
Swift. The birthdays of Mrs . ~; ~
Haggerty and Mrs. Swift were ;~: ·
noted. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Childs, Mrs. " '.
.
t! iJ
Ca th ryn Ervm,
and Mrs.
,..., ., thia Gohring, with Mrs.
"ivine the or;.vf'r

''

""-~

�I

r

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middle.port-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April24, 1975

~' - ~ Soci;,~x:l:'~: Rock artists gather Sunday
ca1en dar:.:;:.

.· ~'Scholarship goes to Miss Rei}Jel
I

•••
·
h
t
or is NO CHARGE, either for tne
?;:[
Mrs. Bonnie Jo Campbell can decide w at crea ures
af'-rnoon, the instrucUon, or
reported on ,,
~·aye Kiebel, da~hter of Mr. Girls' State te a for Jun e 5 at be elected at the May meeting. Wildermuth
,, will be the instructor in rock animals the rocks resemble.
"'
and Mrs. Donley Reibel, was Junction City, and the distri~t Appointed to the nominating pr oceeds from the dinner ~
~~ ·art which is sometimes They paint them, glue !hem the materials. Everything is
selected to receive the $100 conven tion for Ju ne 5 at committee were Mrs.
' Veda served at the legion c on- ;,.
~::, referred to as stone painting at wgether, add eyes or other provided. All ~tertals are
scholars hi~ awarded. an nually ' Lancaster. It was noted that Davis, Mrs. Wildermut~ and . vention . A bulletin on
· , THURSDAY
the French Art Colony, Sunday details . lmagi~tl.on is the key. furnished.
.
objective s
by the AmeriCan Legion there will be a reception Mrs. Norma Jewell. The legis lativ e
LETART BASEBALL Assn. from 2 to 4 ·p. m.
Anyone can come. Parents
The first Sunday, April '!1',
Auxiliary of Drew Webster honoring the outgoing district department junior convention presented by Mrs . Frances meets at 7:30p.m. at !he Letart
Smoolh river rocksare used and children who participate the rocks will be prepared,
Hunnel noted that 19 pet. of the El'ementary School. All after being wiishe&lt;!:-From the do NOT have to be members of painted, and the students 'will
Post 39 at a meeting Tuesday · president, Mrs. Devon Tipple. will be at Marion June 7.
A vote of thanks was ex- men who served in Vietnam parents urged to attend .
night.
Mrs. Arnold 'tichard, Midshape of the rocks, the parents the French Art Colony . There decide on their project,
Miss Riebel is a senior at dleport, . has been nominated. tended to Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore are unemployed.
and children working together
precisely what they want to do.
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
The secood Sunday, May 18,
Meigs High School and an
The poppy display was and Mrs. Gemma Casci for
A card of thanks from the
Pack
245
7
p.m.
at
.Middleport
•
same
time and place, will be
Arcadia
Nursing
Home
for
active member of the junior discussed' and M,rs. Faye making the new CJ.lftains for
auxiliary . The juniors of the Wildermutf1 and Mrs. Marge the downstairs of the hall, and fruit, candy and cookies wa s American Legion Post.
~ev~
thefinalsessionwhentherocks
ALL FEMALES, over 10
U~or.:ses
1
will be glued and possibly
unit will be honored for their i{cuter will prepare the win- to 0 . . A. Martin for candy read. Mrs. Carrie Neutzling
mounted on driftwood so that
work with veterans over the dow .· A note of thanks wi ll be donated for various parties. was asked to present !he Poppy through adult, invited to attend
past year at the mother- · sent to James Vennari for a Mrs . Grace Pratt, president, Day story on WMPO in May. meeting
on
Middleport
CHESTER - The Chesrer Mrs. Jean Spencer, president; they can be used as a wall
daughter reception planned for bed to ~se in the display .
also thanked those who Mrs. Veda Davis, junior ac- Community Park softball PTA, meeting Monday night at Mr s. Elsie Folmer, vice hanging or a centerpiece.
May 21 at !he haiL
It was reported that at the assisted or contributed to t he tivities chairwoman, noted that program at 7 p.m. , Middleport the sc hool , endorsed the 1.6 president; Mrs. Linda Hudson , Decorative additions of dry
A hig hlight of the Tuesday district convention a memorial dinner serv ed the di strict Pam Powers has been en- Fire Department head- mill operating levy for tile secretary; Mrs. Linda B.entz, flowers or moss make them
nigh t meeting was a demon- service fur deceased members American Legion convention dorsed tor Eighth District quark!rs.
Meigs Community School for treasurer.
extremely attractive.
RIVERVIEW Garden Club retarded children following a
Mrs. Linda Edwards invited
stration program ,by the will be held. Included in the here ta st ·month.
· junior president. A jitney
workshop sCuden ts of the Meigs memorial ,from . the local unit
A plaque awarded to the unit supper Saturday at the meeting8p.m. at home of Mrs. talk by Manning Webster, all the parents of the sixth
Fof thJi~Lo~sT
Community SchooL Eric will be Mrs . Anna Jones. Mrs. for being goal was presented, Salisbury School beginning at Roy Hannum with Mrs. David president of the Meigs County graders to attend !be PTSA
Board of Mental Retardation. meeting at Easrern Junior
Chambers, instructor, spoke on Gaynelle Fugate, Mrs. Atlanta and Harry Davis was selected 4:30p .m. wa s announced. Mrs. Chadwell as co-hostess.
Tire Pilices .
REVIVAL 7:30 each evening '
The district PTA meeting at High School-April 28.
!he various activities noting Cook and Mrs. Jean Hart . A to receive the award for the Davis introduced Jennifer
.•
The PTA prayer and pledge
that sometime in May an open contribution of Sl5 was made to legionnaire having the mosi Couch, "Little Miss Poppy ". at Faitil Tabernacle Church, the Zaleski Elementary School
irlthe ~a ·
house will be observed with the CARE. The deparlment con- ·•women" in his family inRefreshments of apples and Bailey Run Road, with Rev. May 10 was announced. to the flag opened the meeting.
public to be invited. He also vention was announced for . volved in auxiliary work. A ice cream was served by Mrs. Jerry Stickler as evangelist. Speaker.for the conference will The attendance banner was
spoke of !he 1.6 mill operating J uly JB-21 at Dayton and !he report was given on the flag Wildennuth and Mrs. Neut~ Putilic invited .
be Mrs. Jean Dye, president of won by the first grade of Mrs.
It's
levy to be voted on in the June delegates and alternates will presented to the Pomeroy zling .
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta , !he Ohio PTA . ArrangementS Melanie Beegle, with seccnd
primary.
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority • ·were made to send tile winning place going to tile .combined
Eleme nt ary School. Mrs.
'
The 20 students attending
special meeting, 7:45 p:m. at cultural arts entries into . fourth ~nd fifth grade. It was
worked wi th,instructors at four
the home of Mrs. June Van county competition and noted that !he banner has been
· tables, one showing.J,b.~ . m~.king
Vranken.
trophies and rosettes were won at all meetings this year 772.5881
Mason, w. fa. ;
of lamp shades , annther signs,
EVANGEIJNE Chapter DES presented to the children.
by Mrs. Beegle's first grade.
another loom weaving and
inspection, 7:30 p.m. at
Delegates to the Meigs
another terrariums. Assisting
In spection of Pomeroy matrons of Pomeroy chapter, fund.
Masonic Temple, Middleport, County Council of Parents and
were Re v. W. H. Perrin and Chapter 186, Order of !he Mrs. Joan Vaughan , Mrs.
Initiatory work was held for with Deputy Grand Matron Teachers were selected as
. Richard Chambers, m"mbers Eastern Star was held Friday Dorothy Woodard , Mrs. Marie Patty Well and Diana Carsey. Donna Spring as inspecting follows: Mrs. Wilma Parker,
of Meigs County B&lt;· . 1 of night at the Pomeroy Masonic Curd, Mrs. Ella Smith, Mrs. Soulsby was soloist and sang officer.
Mrs . Judy Eichinger, Mrs.
Mental Retarda ti on, Mrs . Temple with Mrs. Donna Mabel Goeglein, Mrs. Thelma "Prayer is the Key to Heaven"
POMEROY Little League 7 · Becky Pullins, Mrs. Sharon
Margaret Ella Lew&lt;s. cchool Spring, deputy grand matron, Dill, Mrs. Evelyn Lanning, and accompanied by Margaret p.m. at Pomeroy City Hall.
Louks, Mrs. Linda Edwards,
superintendent ; Mrs. Alice as the inspecting officer.
Mrs. Sue Soulsby ; and past . Neuman . Soulsby also served
FRIDAy
with alternates, Mrs. Glenna
Wolfe and Mrs. Eloise Smith.
Mrs. Florence Well, worthy patrons , Th omas Edwards, as escort. Bibles were
SPECIAL meetin g, Mid- Reibel, Mrs. Jackie Starcher,
Others there with the studen ts matron, and Dale Smith, Dale Smith . and Albert presented to the new members dieport Masonic Lodge 363, Mrs . Betty Newell and Mrs.
were Mrs. G._.orge Skinner, Mr. worthy patron, presided at the Woodard , all Knights of !he on behalf of the chapter by F&amp;AM, 7 p.m. for Master Linda Hudson.
and Mrs. Richard Grueser and meeting . Presented a nd York Cross of Honor, and William Hayes , associate Mason degree. All Master
It was reported that !he PTA
Mr . and Mrs. Denver Rice .
escorted to sea ts in the East James Soulsby.
patron.
Masons invited.
has purchased books, carpet,
The auxiliary presented Rev. were Mr s. Spring, Mrs.
Honored Masons recognized
Featured in the decoratio'lS
SPRING Revival in progress · playg~ound equipment, book
Perrin "'ith a check for $25 to Roberta K. Midting, past grand were Clarence Struble, Ralph was the worthy matron 's through April 27 at First shelves, ·kitchen supplies, art
be used for the. school. Refresh- matron ; Howard Shull, Webb , Paul Darnell, Glen theme, "The Open Bible". Her Southern Baptist Church, 7:30 materials and trophies for the
ments were served to the associate grand patron ; Elsie Atkinson and James Wallace. daughter's Bible was used at
p.m. with Lamar O'Bryant as school.
students by the auxiliary and Schoenian, grand represen- Mrs. Clara Thomas , Mrs. the inspection. Her son's Bible evangelist. Nursery open, . Mrs. Maxine Goeglein,
each one was presented 50 tative to Michigan; and Mrs. Louise Carson and Mrs. Evelyn had been used at the in- public welcome.
county council president, incents and a chocolate covered Mary Shull, grand represen- Lewis were recognized for · stallation ceremony. Pin-&lt;Jns
SQUARE dance, 8 p.m . to 12 stalled the 1975-76 officers:
egg.
.,
tative to Oklahoma.
being mell!bers for over 50 were red ribbon roses . midnight at Harrisonville
The open shop Poppy Day at
Welcomed were the visiting years. Also introduced were Registration was handled by Elementary
by
School
,(
the Sandusky
Veterans worthy matrons and worthy · Gordon Qyer, trusree of the Mrs . Myrtle Sisson, Mrs .
Harrisonville.
Senior
Citizens
Hospital was announced for patrons
'At .
of
Ba rtl ett , DES home; Mrs . Maryln Rizer, Mrs. Mabel Moore and Club. Music by Hilltoppers,
REVIVAL SET
April27. The unit was asked to Evangeline, New Marshfield, Wilcox , district president; Thomas Edwards .
A revival will be held May I
public invited.
provide 200 cookies for !he Valley, Harrisonville, Athens , Loella Hayes, secretary for !he
through May 11 at the Hiland
Bouquets of red ribbon roses
HARRISONVILLE Gold- Chapel, 7:30 each evening, wi !h
event. Hospital Day at Webb, Thea, Albany, Racine district; Mrs. Woodard and in white baskets flanked by red
Chillicothe was announced for and Mount. Moriah Chapters. Dean McCutcheon, grand tapers in silver holders were · en Circle Senior Citizens Club Rev. R. D. Brown, Wilkesville,
May 20, the District 6 Buckeye Also presented were the past . pages, and six fonner grand used on the refreshment table. square dance from 6 p.m.-12 as evangelist. There will be
midnight at !he Harrisonville
' appointments and 16 past Mrs. Ruby Vaughan poured the Elementary School. Admission special vocal presentations
a '$6.00 vafue
I matrons and past patrons of punch and Mrs. Charlotte $1 for adults, 50 cents children. each evening. Rev . George
21or
I
other chapters.
Dillard presided at the silver Music by the Hllltoppers . Casto, pastor, invites the
public. ·
Sunshine offering was coffee service. Mrs . . Thelma
LETART, W. Va . - Mrs. Nick Howard, Mitchell and collected by Mrs. Sally Ebers- Dill, Mrs . Shirley Custer, Everyone welcome .
Dewey (Esther) Roush's 80th Shawn, Rollin 'Roush , James bach, Mrs. Wanda Rizer, Miss Maria Fosrer, Avazo Sisson · PAST Matrons, Evangeline
birthday was observed Sunday Thomas and Jimmy, Mr. and Susan Lanning and · Mrs . ·and Jeanie Buckley were on Chapter, OES 7:30p.m. at the
AUCTION DELAYED
when her six sons and four Mrs . Harry Wolfe, Mr . and Shirley Smith. It will be sent to the refreshment committee. Middleport home of Mrs. M. L.
A
public
auctio~ of !he Meigs
French.
daughters and their families Mrs . Wayne Kelly, Randy and !he OES home fire safely code
gathered at her home here and Jeff , Mrs . Terry Davis , Lori
PUBLIC Sausage and Local Band Boosters scheduled
attended church with her at and Michael, Mrs . Alice Gum,
pancake supper at Middleport last Saturday was delayed due
Graham United Methodist Mr. and Mrs . Allan Connelly
Double the value! Your favorite co fognes in solid
Heath United Methodist to the injuries received by
Harold
Carnahan,
father
of
Church. Besides receiving gifts and Holly, Miss Louise Roush,
Church, 4 to 7 p.m. by United
form at solid savings. In classi c Dana fragrances :
and a huge birthday ca ke, Mrs . Mrs. Evelyn Cox, Debbie, Mike
An Easter program was and ·Fred Pullins, treasurer. Methodist Men of. Meigs auctioneer, James Carnahan,
provocative Tabu and exhilarating Ambush .
Roush.rece ived a potted flower and Jeff, Mrs. Susanna King prese nted at the recent
Mrs. Frieda Mossman is the County. $1.75, all you can eat. on Thursday. The auction will
be rescheduled.
from the Women's Society of and Stephen , Mr. and Mrs . meeting of the Adult Class of entertainmen t chairwoman
SATURDAY .
Norris Roush and · Kevin and the Pomeroy Nazarene Church with Barbara Colmer and Mrs.
the church.
FINANCE Committee of
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roush. in the educational building.
Michael on the commitree. In Meigs County. ,Community
After church the family went
Lew Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Readings were given by charge cf refreshments for the School sponsors a Jitney
l'{illiam Bird,· Myra Kay and back to the honoree 's home members of the class and there meeting are Mrs . Freda Supper at the Salisbury
J.ou Ellen Roush , Mr. and Mrs. where they were dinner guests was group singing .and Henderson, Mrs. Paulette Elementary School , 4:30 to 6:30
Dallas Wa lker, Mr . and Mrs. and spent the day .
sc riptures . Mrs. Mamie Farley and Mrs. Janet Reeves. p.m.
Stephenson had the prayer .
CAR WASH beginning 9 a.m.
Attending the meeting were
Elecred to fill the secretary 's Mr. and Mrs. William lasting all day at Middleport
post was Patty Michael. Other Stephenson, Fred Pullins, Fire [)epartment HeadquarKenneth McCuttougl!, R. Ph. Char .. • Riffle, R. Ph.
officers of the class are Mrs . Frieda Mossman, Mr. and Mrs. ters for benefit of fire departOpen Daiiy .,-oila.m. to 9:30p.m .
Sunday 10:30to 12:30 and !to 9 p.m .
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande various graphic techniques of Stepehenson, president, Mrs. James Farley and sons, Jamie ment. $3 for car, inside and out.
ALL children invited to
PRESCRiPTI()NS
PH. 992-29SS
College Student Activities will different artists. The exhibit Mary Plillins, vice president, and Davy, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
takes
place
from
10
:30
a.m
.
to
Colmer,
Nancy
Whittikind,
Middleport
Community
Park
1
sponsor an exhibit and sale of
Fri~&gt;ndlv S..rvice
.
Chester, Ohio
Anita Van Cooney and Janet p.m. to paint caboose. Take'
approximately 600 original 3 p. m.
112 E. MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
Reeves and Trina.
work clothes, paint brush, sack
prints from the famed FerPhone 985-3537
lunch; parents invited to join.
dinand Roten
Galleries
CAR wash at Syracuse
ccllection·Friday, May 2, 10:30
Municipal
building, 10 a.m. to 4
a. m. to 3 p. m. The event will
p.m. by Young Adult Class of
be held at the Rio Grande
ESCAPEE COMES IN
Asbury United Methodist
College Dining Hall.
The Meigs County Sh~riff 's
RACINE - The Southern
Church. $1.50 for outside; $2 for
Along with prints by such
HighSchool Music Department Dept. disclosed Wednesday, in and out.
masters as Picasso, Goy a,
Th
e
Meigs
4-H
Pleasure
will present a concert Sunday, that Dave Darst, 21, Rt. 1,
Renoir and Hogarth , can be
SUNDAY
attended
the
Meridith
Riders
May 4 at 2:30 p. m. at the Middleport, who broke out . of
seen works by many of today's
Middleport
jail
on
March
29,
DAN
HAYMAN
and all his
American arti sts, some Manor horse show in Waverly, high school.
has
surrendered
to
Middleport
Hymn Timers at Letart Falls
The school wind ensemble
famous and some not yet W. Va . Club jackets were
Police
Chief
J
.
J.
Cremeans
cominunity
Hall, 1 p.m. for
distributed and worn.
will include the "Ringmaster
famous.
and.
is
lodged
in
county
jail.
hymn
sing.
Public
invired.
Members
attendin
g
were
March", a n~wly written
· Area residents are invited to
browse th rough this out- Tammy Ervin, Tammy Smith, concert march , and " Deep
standing collection of original Mellisa lhie, Pam Nottingham, River Suite," a collection of
graphics . A knowledgeable Melanie Dillard, Linda Eason, three American traditional
Roten representJativ.Lwii!Ae on Debbie Wood yar d; Christfn songs, among its concert
hand to answer questions about Anderson, Brett Jones, Mike selections.
Corena Rhodes, saxophone
the prints and the artists and to Boggs, Faye Reibel , Julie
Elberfeld,
Brenda
Williams,
sollst,
will perform to Bartok's
discuss other prints not in this
Belinda
Whittington,
·Cheryl
"Evening
in tile CO\llltry." collection but which may be
Arnett
and
advisors,
Mrs
..
Miss Rhodes received a
obblined from !he gallery in
Rachael
Downie
'a
nd
Bill
superior
rating on her
Baltimore .
•
Downie
Jr
.
Guests
attending
performance
of tilis piece at
A wodd-respected authority
on graphics of all types, Roten were Mrs. Charlotte Dillard the sta oo solo and ensemble
holds exhibitions and sales at and Daphne , Mr s. Mary festival.
The concert will also feature
major museums, colleges, art Nottingham, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert
Elberfeld,
Mr.
Donley
"Little Boy Blues'.' a number
5
galleries and art centers
!
Reibel,
Kim
Kraeuter
and
for
swing
combo.
Joy
Bigler
is
throughout the United States
Keith Kraeuter.
director.
and· Canada.
The informal displaying of
....
!he collection allows visitors to
83Ax51fzx3'~--------~ 5
examine at close range !he

PT'.11.A en

fd

7 - The.Daily Sentinel,MiddleiJort-Pomero)', 0. , Thursday;April24,1975

Ohio Valley youih·rally set
A youth rally at the Ohio
Valley Christian Assem.bly
campgrounds at Darwin on
May 4 at 2 p.m. was announ ced
when the Trulh Seekers of the
Bradford Church of Christ met
at the home of Tammy, John
and David Blake.
Danny Harrison presided at
the me eting with Tammy

.

Blake and Linda Hysell giving
the sec reta ry and treasu~er's
reports. A trip to King''s Island
June 23 wa s planned .
Devotions by Tainmy Blake
included a poem, scripture:\
and a ~editation. Next
meeting will be April 29 at the
camp at 6 p.m. for a softball . Spending a weekend Is about
game. A wiener roast was held 1 all we can afford any more.

DIAL

Very- _Dr.y

Gold

Pomeroy OES holds inspection

Young wives have meeting

Science is ·wonderful : It unerringly des igns electric
wristwatch batteries so they
wear out during the nigh before
a major appointment.

8 oz.

Mays home. The door prize
was won by Mrs . Avice
Spencer, w i t h refreshment s
HY POLLY CRAMER
being served by Mrs. Mays and
Mrs. Sara Bailey.
'·"""VOther members attending
were Mrs. Lila Van Meter
Mrs. Marilyn Spencer, Mrs:
POLLY'S PROBLEM
in one place · am:i uJt:u we.,
Karen Youn g, Mrs . Karla
DEAR POLLY - We would moved. There were stains thai
Chevalier Mrs. Li nda Well
Mrs. Nor~a Hawthorne and· - like to know how to remove probably were caused by water
rust stains from an asphalt tile seeping under the cabinet when
Mrs. Brenda LaDeaux .
kitchen floor. A cabinet stood the flo or was washed so
frequently . I have used wax
remover and other household
powders but to no avaiL GERRY .
DEAR GERRY - ,One
maker of asphalt tile suggests
rubbing such stains with a
diluted solution of oxalic acid.
and using No. 00 steel wool.
Handle this acid with EXTREME CARE and caution.
Use self-polishing wa x on
asphalt tile. Do remember that
many solvents soften asPhalt
~ile and cause Colors to run.
Any furniture legs should be
put in rubber, -not metal, cups.
POLLY.
THE U TU STUIIGTN Nlllllfll fV EA .

EXCEDRIN TABLETS

L02 Value

1

60's

HALF-PRICE SALE!

TABU

AMBUSH

SOLID COLOGNE

80th birthday observed

....1_

.~:'fr.J01'

'&lt;Wa"""'""'

"'"100'- ""
-~-

$JOO

$34.9S
VALUE

BOYS TRUNKS,

59~

16 oz.
67'. VALUE

FDS

WORTHALL

heres the sandal
low-down
'BY

..
BLOOD NEEDED
. MASON, W. Va. - A
bloodmobile will be. at the
Mason ' fire Department
building Monday from I :30 to
~ : 30 p.m. o'.ll persons 18
through 59 are eligible to give
blood and !hose 17 can do so
with parenlal cooilent. Mrs.
OlariH Geaget, president of.
the Mason &gt;,tothers· Oub, asks
public ,.support.

•
.

-

,· ,..

'

.

miss america.
' THE THRUSH"
• White
• Navy
• Brown
'

THE SHOE BOX
Middleport, Ohio

SHIRTS TO MATCH
'

by

Carte(s &amp;Rob Roy
Swimming season will s9on be here!
Now is the time to select your suit. We
invite you to use .our lay;a··way plan.

lack ByPopulO~ DemandI

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

BIG 11 A"
GRASS SEED

Middleport, Ohio. ,

'.

· ....

$1 33

41b• .
bag
·

2158 Mini Basket
• 'Att ractive wicker

.

WONDER

CLOTHS

1 QT.

BO'NDWARE

PAPER PlATES
9"

lO's.

'4.50
VALUE

75 CT.

SSe Value

98' .VALUE

49~

BABY

POWDER
14 oz.·

~.

.

· '1.59 VALUE

24" Steel Planter Boxes--------------------•1.44
30" Steel .Planter Boxes.__ _: ____ , _________ '"'...; 1.94

baby
shampoo
BABY LOTION
16

~
lotion
rw
,...._

KIMBIES
DISPOSABLE
DIAPERS
'

oz.

'2.89
VALUE

'1.59

. $159

KIMBIES
DISPOSABLE
DIAPERS
OVERNIGHTS

'1.63 VALUE

'

-= •

7 oz.

VALUE

. TODDLER SIZE

'

'2.18
VALUE

• Light to l&lt;tl, easy to carry

THERMOS BOTTLE

More Great SavJngs This Weelcl

36" Steel Planter BOxes----------------~--- s2.44
Copper Plated Tub Planters
2.33
18"x24" Astro Turf Door Mats-------~-------·· ·3.97
,171fz"x291fz" Astro Turf Door Mats~----_;-----~~•4.97
·u"x36" Astro Turf ·0oor Mats __ _; __ .:. __ ~__ _; ____~5.97
O'Ced•r Sponge Mops, regular 54.69______ ..; _____s3.17
Copper Ute Com Broom, regular •3.39.-~-------- 5257

MINI
LAUNDRY BASKET
. FESCO

7 oz.

Riders at
concert May 4
Manor show

GIRLS INFANTS
lHRU 15
by Carter's &amp;.DiniH!ttes

MENNEN .
PUSH BUTION
'1.59 VALUE

Southern sets

BATHING SUITS

'11.00
VALUE

$695

MARSHMALLOWS ~DEODORANT

Aowe15y etc.

Smalley's Gift Shop

BISSEll

$2·· 3''

CAMPFIRE

Nazarene adults enjoy program

RG plans art sale May 2

-

Oua/ity... a/ a
bargain price

DAISY
o BY

Coffee Never Boils
8 cups of Delicious Coffee
Holds coffee at perlortl
serving temperatures

'

Noveltys, Gifts,

••

NORELCO
COFFEE MAKER

'1.42 VALUE

VISINE

EYE

DROPS

Regular or Mint
5 oz.

Value

Floor tile stains
thwart a cleanup·.

Excedrin

TOOTH PASTE

$1.02

$2 .02 Value

Polly's Pointers

'CHESTER - A film on
cancer was shown by the
Amencan . Cancer Societ.y
representalive at the Apnl
mee!mg of the Young Wives
Cl ub of Chester and Tuppers
Piams at the home of Esther
Mays.
.
Welcomed mto membership
were Mrs. Susie Beeler, Mrs.
Linda Flinner and Mrs. Lois
Kerr . Plans were made for a
garage sale Moy 9 anrl 10 at the

CREST

Air Freshner
Solid
Choice
Of
Frangrances
s oz.

Anti-Perspirant
Bath
Size
37c Value

SLATF:O

GLADE

DIAL

SOAP

.BEND TIRE CEN'(EJI

SUPI'~;H

A jitney supper wi ll be held
fr om 4:30 to6 ;30 p.m. Sa turday
at the Salisbury Elementary
Sc hool under the sponsorship of
following the meeting. Others the finance committee of the
attending were Charles Diehl, Meigs Community School. The
Becky
Painter , Sherry public is invited .
Lightfoot and· Mr. and Mrs .
Clifford S!'nith.

$1.59
Value

lf2 oz .
$1.75 .

Value

DEAR POLLY - Cotton is
good for baiting mouse traps.
Mice like it for nesting. Put the
cott.on in and around the m~_use
trap.
When I wash wool blankeLs I
put one cup of moth bails. or
crystals in the rinse watet to,
protect them from moths.
Also, I find boric acid will
make roaches disappear. OOROTHY.
DEAR POLLY - My
,re frigera tor is a name 1Jr3nd
one and cost plen ty but
cleaning it is the worst job I
ever tackled - even worse
than cleaning an old-fashioned
stove. There arc so many
cracks and crevices tl1at
cannot be reached even by
disassembling parts with a
screw driver. Food collecLs in
these iitUe hiding places and
.cannot be cleaned even witlf a
brush. Even though only three
years oi·d the plastic has
cracked and rust h~s
discolored many places. I think
it is unsanitary and would think
that a civilization that coUld
develop equipment to reach !Jle
muon could build a sanitary
refrigerator that could b~
easily cleaned. I have been
looking around and they all
seem to have these same
disadvantages so th at is my
Pet Peeve.
I use plastic trash can covers
for clothes covers by puncturing a hole in the center o f
the bottom seam and then
pulling th e hanger hoo'k
through the hole. Such covers
are espec ially good for
traveling and also make good
containers for storing blankets
or folded clothes that one wan'is
to keep free of dust. - MRS. G.
B.

DEAR POLLY - When :1
receive a letter with a stick.Q~
name and address label fr om
someone whose address I wiSh
to keep, I just cut or peel the
label off and stick it in rJly
address ,book with a strip of
clear, no shine tai&gt;e. The
nam e and address are
preserved, readable and I can
get more into each section of
my small address book. ,.
MRS. M. D.
DEAR POLLY - With !h~
present high cost of food mosl
of us have to use everything
possi ble to stretch our money.l
have discovered that whe!)
making chocolate chip cookies
I can triple all the recipe e,..
cept the chips and then usc on!~
ONE 12 ounce package of chips.
and they are fin e. Also I us~.
half brown and half whit!!:
sugar as the brown is moreexpeQsive. We think cooki es
made this way are delicious,
and they ca n be stored 1no
plastic bags, alllOO of them, i[,
you have any left to store. I•
never do. - EVELYN.
· '"

..

Bereans

have~

recent meet ..

""

"Faith " was the devotional·"
!heme used by Mrs, Martha.~
Childs · at the Tuesday night," ·
meeting of the Loyal Bereans
·class of the Middleport Church.c
of Christ.
·'
Members sang " In the
Garden" with Marvin Kelly
giving prayer. Mrs. Childs
used the medita tion · theme,
" God Honors Faith " with
scripture 'from Romans 4 and
the poeq1, '"!'he Fallh that
Smil~s" .
•
A donation was made to· a:,..,
needy
family .
Named,.,
hosresses for May were Mrs •\ Ill,)
.
Martha Haggerty, Mrs. Lena McKinley, and Mrs. Regina ' ~:
Swift. The birthdays of Mrs . ~; ~
Haggerty and Mrs. Swift were ;~: ·
noted. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Childs, Mrs. " '.
.
t! iJ
Ca th ryn Ervm,
and Mrs.
,..., ., thia Gohring, with Mrs.
"ivine the or;.vf'r

''

""-~

�j

'
I .

·a - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Apn l 24c1975

·Q - ., . . OAUv Sentin

I M ddl
e • 1 eport-Pomeroy, 0., T_hursday, Ap_ril 24, 1975

'Y

APRIL 20th thru 26th

I
/

•
•
- Televis~on log for easy VIewmg
TH.URSDAY, APRIL 24, 1975
7 30-Hollywooc:l Squares 3,4, Ohio Lotlery 6, New Prl&lt;e Is
R1ght 8, Consumer Surv iva l Kit 20, Wild K ingdom 10, To
Te ll the Truth 13 ; Ameri can Outdoorsman 15.

8 oo-sunshiM 3,4,J5; Lights ' Camer a' Monly' 6,13, The
Wallons 8, 10; 8111 Moyer s' Journal20, Evenin g al Symphony
ll
•
8 3D- Bob Crane 3,4, 1s
9 ()()-,-M ac Dv is 3,4, 15; Mov ie " Part 3 of " 08 V I I," 6, 13, Movie

Notice

Card of Thanks
WE WISH to t hank. the Veterans
Memortal Hospttal DoCfor s
Pastor Willtam Mtddlesworlh
and all who sent cards
flowers durtng my stay m the
hospttal Many thanks to
ever yone
Mr and Mrs Elwyn R
Ynst
4 :l4 lfp
~--------------

WIS H

to thank. the staf f of

Ho l zer Medtcal Center fo r
t h et r kmd and efftctent care
d urmg my r ecent stay m the
nos p tta l Spec tal thanks to Dr
Berk tch and the nu r ses for
thetr e&gt;:ce l lent servtce
Wil l tam Fred Sm tth Sr

WE

W I SH

to

th an k

all

our

rel altves , tnends and netgh
t:io r s for the tr prayers cards ,
food an d words of comfort
dvrmg the Il lness and d ea th of
our loved on e, Tenna Russel l
We especta l ly t hank Rot:le r t

Pu rt e ll ,

m tntster

" Eve! Kn 1evel " 8, In Pe rform a n ce at Wolf Tr a p 20,33, Mov te
" Girl sl Girl s! G ~rls' " 10.

Ewtng

F u nera l
H ome.
Btgo n y
Jo r da n F uner a l Home and the
nu r ses
and
do ct ors
of
Vetera n s Memot tal HoSpita l
T he Ru ssell Family
J 2J lip

Campbell's Swap 'n Shop
ya rd sale &amp; Hea market 2
blocks from Da iry Queen,
Jericho Rd., Pt. Pl., W. Va.
Sal &amp; Sun. , Aprll12 &amp; 13. 10
a.m. · 6 p.m. Ever) weekend
through Ocl For in!. call6751239.
SHOOTING MATCH , W1ndy
R1dge Gun Cl ub , star t mg
Sunday April 27 . 1 p m
Factory choked guns only
4 24 Jt p
FLEA
Market.
Th u rsday ,
Fnday, Saturday and Sun
day St Rt 12.4 a t crossroads
10 a m to 6 p m S2 outs1de . S3
tnSide
4 23 3tc
QUART E R horse at stud young
son Of ' THE OLE MAN "
AAAT , a 1ead1ng s1 re of race
and show hor ses Ran W1lh1n
100~h of a second of AAA ttme
befo r e he was 2 OffiCial AA
w tth an 89 speed 1ndex . halter
con f ormat10n
and
best
diSPOSit iOn Fee Sl OO at t1m e
ot se r v1ces w ff h l 1ve foa l
guara n tee
Phon e 992 7688
4 20 26tc
_..._

AlJCTI ON , Th urs day n''Jjl"
,
p m
at Ma son Auct io n ,
Horton St I n M ason, w va
Co n s 1g nm e n ts we l come
· p hon e (304) 773 541 1
2 2 tfc

..

YARD SALE
Curlts Wclfe
res 1dence at Chester OhiO ,
Saturday , Apr1l 25 . N ew
Avon-s-. new"and used c lof,h1ng
new merc hand1s e
4 24 3tc

2 F AM I LY YARD SAL E Jl 2
m lies south ot Midd le po r t
Story s Run Road Aprtl 26
and 2J
4 24 2tp

.-

1971 MA TADOR

$1595

GARAGE SALE - Fr1day and
Saturda y , A prtl 25 &amp; 26 Dal e
Welsh r e s1dence , Tuppers
Plams , Oh1o Turn r1ght a1
fire house
f1rst hou se on
r 19h t
4 24 2t c

I 22 78 1PJ

$1695

.POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES. 8: 00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

YA RD SA LE , mu111 fam1ly , at
V1c tor Bah r res1d ence, 31 1
m1les eas t of T uppers Pla1ns
on Route 68 1 Wa t ch for Signs
Fr1day , Saturday an d Su n
day Aprtl 25 26 , and 27
4 21 M e

Help Wanted
3 TO 7 persons , full or partt1me
for mt ero.new , call 992 3211
before 4 p m
4225tc

For Rent
T WO bedroom mob1l e home
co rner B r oadway and E l m
M1dd lepprt
Phone 992 2580
4 23 lfc

lost
PONY , brown w1th wh 1te ma ne
and tail Rac1ne VIC!ni1y Ph
247 3222 James A l ley
4 23 3tc

WANTED
Old
\JPR I GHT
P I ANOS
an y
con d 1f10n
Paymg $10 eac h F 1rst floor
on l y Wr1 te and g 1ve d1 r ec
11on s to W 1tten P1ano Co BOx
188 Sa rd iS, OhiO 43946

----------~- --- )
1972 HONDA SL 350 CC, e)C

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

SMA L L f arm 10 to 50 acres ,
fa 1r l o good house an d out
bu1l d mgs Cash to bank loan
Wr1te J w wee k s Gen Del ,
Pomeroy , Oh 10 45769
4 22 26tp
NIGHTCRAW LERS and ear1h
worms { f iSh worms I W1 11 pay
to p pr1c e Fife's Ba1t Phone
992 7494
4 22 51 c

be d s, or complet e househo lds
Wr1te M 0
MJI!er , Rt 4
Pomeroy , Oh 10 Call 992 7760
10 7 7 4
HOR SE S &amp; PON I E S Phone 742
3264
4 '3 lfc

PULL type t ractor d 1sc. Hug h
R 1 2 Po m eroy ,
L e1 f he1 t
Oh to Pho ne 99~ 5918
4 23 31c

UNITEDSTATES

OF AM E RI CA
FE D E RAL POWER

c

NOW s e:11 1n g Fu l ler Brush
Flroduc t s, phon e 992 34 10
I 24 tf{

COMMISSION

Public not1 ce 1S hereb y g1ven
that applJcat 1on for prel1m1nary
perm 11 has been fli ed under the
Federal Power Act ( 16 U s c
J91a 825r ) by I he Oh10 Power
Company (correspondence to
Fra n k N B1e n Execut1ve V 1ce
Pres1d ent. Oh10 Power Com ,
pa n y , 30 1 Cl eve land Aven ue
S W Ca nton, Oh 10 44702 and A
Jose p h
O ow d , Esq, VICe
Pres1den t an d Genera l Cou nsel.
A m e r 1ca n
E teclr tc
Powe r
Serv1ce
Corpo r a1 1on,
T wo
Broadway , N ew York , N ew
York
10004)
for proposed
Pro tect No 2751 , 10 be know n as
Ga l l i pOl i S
Hydroelec t riC
Pro1ect , l oca t ed 11'1 Gal l 1a
Coun1y Oh10 on the Oh to R 1ver
The pr orect affects nav1gable
wate r s of the Un1ted States a nd
la nds of the U S and wou ld
util1ze water from a govern
men1 dam
The GalliPOliS Pro1ect wou ld
co ns1s t o f a powerhouse con
structed at the west enel IOh1o
S1de ) of the U S Corps of
Eng1neers ' GaiiJpolts Locks and
Dam T he p r opose d pow er hou se
wou l d t'iave an m st alla t JOn of
tow head ge n er at1ng Un i 1S
to t a l ~ng ap prO)(Imalely
40,000
KW Norma l pool e1ev at 10n of
th e GallipOl iS r eservo 1r 1s 538
feet Appl1cant stales that lhe
1nstallat 10n wou ld be s1 m liar 10
Ap pltcanl s propos ed Racm e
Hydroelectnc Prorect No 2570
located 1mmed1ately upstream
(Mile 237!
The 1nstallahon
would be c oordma te d w1 th the
pr opo s ed rep l ac e me n t and
moder n1zat10n cf the Cor ps
ex 1St 1ng Gall i pOl i S Locks and
Dam r ecommended by the
Boa r d of R 1vers and Har bQr s A
t ou r m 11e l ong 69kV t r ans
m 1Ss1 on l me wou ld co nn ec t th1S
genera t mg t acll1ty With t he
Am e r 1can
E l ect r ic
P owe r
System
N o cons t ructto n 1S
au t hortzed
under
th e
pr el1mmary perm1 t
A PPI1cant proposes t o m a rk et
the e lec:tr1c p owe~..deve lop ed by
lhe pro rect to mee t the toads
and e)(pec t ed loa d grow th of its
cus t omers m the St ate of Oh 10
Any p erson des1r1 ng t o be
hea rd or to make p r otest with
refe r ence to sa 1d app ltcl! f Jon
sh ou l d on or bef or e June 9, 1975,
f il e w 1th the Fe der al Power
CommtSSJon . Was h mg10n , D C
20426. p e t 1t1ons to 1ntervene or
prote s ts 1n accordan ce w1th the
r equ1r e men t s of the Com
miSSIOns Rul es of Pra c t1 ce and
Proc edur e (18 CFR 1 8or 1 10J
All protests filed w1 th the
Comm1SS10n wtll Oe cons1 d ered
by 1t m dete r m1n 1ng 1he ap
prop n ate ac:t1on to be take n , but
Wtll not serye to make th e
pro t estants
part1es
1o
a
procee d mg P ersons w 1sh mg lo
become pa r t 1es to a pr oceed m g
or to p a rt 1cipa l e us 1 a pa rt y m
any heanng there1n must file
pe!Jflons to mter vent 1n accor d
ance w 1th th e Commrss1on ' s
Rul es The app l 1cat1on 1S on file
w11h the Comm1SS 10n and
ava tl able f o r public mspect1on

1974 CH EVROLET Cheyenne,
20 ( J4 ton ) auto tr ans , p b ,
p s , see a t lOS Un to n A v e
P hone 992 3293 be1wee n 5 &amp; 7
p m
.4 24 6tc

ce ll en t co ndition A lso 195J
F or d to sell or t rade for van
PhOne 992 3897
4 11 12t c

'
------- --~-----

For Sale or Trade

Business Opportunities

J57

MAIER PLACE, COLUM
BUS. O H I O TELEPHONE
AR E A CO D E
614 224 51.4 1
o
4186tc

Employment Wanted
WILL ao 1a n 1t or wo r k or
pa tn tmg Ca ll 992 2262
4 20 61C
R E MO D E LI NG,
p l um b tng,
heatmg , and al l t y pes of
general
re p a 1r
Wo rk
gu ar a nt eed
20 yea r s e)(
per te n ce Phone 99 2 2409
3 11 t fc

For Rent
TRA I L ER ap1

BEDROOM mobile hom e
P hone 9.4.2. 226 1 Alber t H1 ll 1954 PACEMAK ER trailer , n 1ce
for cou p le Pno ne 378 6298
4 20 6t c
4 20 tfc
- TRA I L ER space fo r rent m
1972
GREE N BR I E R
2
Midd lepor t Ca l l 992 2625
fr Qnt k tt c h en ,
b e dr oo m ,
4 20 6tc
r a 1sed d 1nmg ar ea 1 f uel o tl
furna ce, eve lev el ove n m
sur f ace un1 l Ca n be seen at
Kin gsb ury H omes Sal es and
Service I n c, 1100 E Ma1n
TWO lots m Me1gs Memcry
St , Porn er oy Ph one 992 70'34
Ga rd ens P hone 949 5 132
4 24 6tc
4 22 4tp
1974 GRE E NBRIER mo bil e
M A Y T AG port abl e was her , 'l
hom e , 2 bed r oo m excellen t
y r s ol d excell en t con d ition.
cond 1t1 on a ll elect n c S6 BOO
S100 P hone 9922926
Ca ll 992 7328 aft er 6 p m
.4 22 61p
4 24 3tc

-

~

Phone 992 5248
4 16 10tc

12'x5 2' 2 bed r oom tra il er l 1ke
n ew $35 we e k, u t 11 11 1es pa 1d
P hone 992 3324
4 11 tt c

1972 F OR D G r and Tor tno , p s, 1970 CH AM PI O N tra der , par tl y
auto , A l so , 197 Su zu ki 90 tust
f urn tSh ed , 1nc lud es a 1r con
over ha uled Phon e (6 14) 59'3
d l fJ On Jng, l2x60 Ca ll 99 2 2559
7390
or 992 3538 or see at 828 ~ou t h •
Se con d St , Mid dl epor t
4 22 3tc
.4 24 6t c
tra d e r s, $4,924 now 53,875 ARE Y OU 1n th e markel for a
F old do wn s $1 495 up A ut o
larg e 3 b ed r oom top qu a 11t y
aw n1n g Reese h ilc h es,ac 20
we ll
co nst r u cted
mo b 1l e
pe t o ff Co mpl et e pa rt s and
hoi'T1e" 11 so you ca n sa ve
serv1ce depar t m ent s
We
tho usand s on th 1s one we
trade. f m anc mg arra nge d
hav e a 1975 70x 14 Sk y li ne
Ca mp Con ley Sta rc rafl Sa tes,
trad e'" t h at comes eq u 1p p ed
Rt 62 N of PI P leasant. w
wil h to t al el ec tr ic , l 11 bat h s.
va
f u ll y f u r n iS h ed , new ap
4
4t c
p l 1a n ces
n ew beds a n d
carp et 1ng 1n l 1vtng r oom , ha ll ,
FA R M eq u, p m ent new 1 r ow 3
mas t er be d r oom an d center
pt
cu l hva tor s, $1 10 , N ew
bedroom
Th 1s home was
l mcoJ p t d iSC,$325 , New5 ft
l tve d 1n less th an 90 da y s You
3 p t Ro t ar y mower , S375,
.get a f ull w arran ty Home can
Used Fe r g uson 3 p i
corn
be see n at K mg sbur y Ho m e
p l an t er S295 Joh n D eere 490
Sal es, 11 00 E M a m St r eeL
4 ro w co rn p l an te r S225, U se d
Po me roy , Otu o
Mo n day
Ford 5 ft 3 pt r otary mower ,
1hrough Fr 1day , 10 t il l 7, an d
$250
U se d 8 ft
Dun ham
Sat 9 a m t 1ll 7 p m Or ca ll
w h ee l d i SC, $400 Ma sse y
99 2 7034
Ferg uson N o 3 h a y b al er ,
4 24 6tc
$ 1, 150
Erm e l
Lu c k e tt
A l ban y, Oh 10 P hon e 698 788 1
or 698 3032
4 23 3t c
4 RO OM HO US E Wlf h ba th , 3
AP P ALOO SA gel d ing
Ph on e
a cr es m c ou ntry on ha rdto p
667 3730 af t er 4 p m
roa d Co Rd 3 Phon e 742
4 22 6t p
3266
4 24 3tc
1974 H ON D A X L 350 ro a d and
trail b1ke Good cond1 110 n HOU SE for sa le 1n Port la nd , 6
$750 Ca ll 992 7059
r oom s an d bat h, good we ll
4 22 6t c
and 2 acr es g r ound $6, 200
Phon e 843 229 2
.4 2.4 -6tc

n

Real Estate For Sale

TURF TRIM
MOWER
20" -31!• H P

'72,9Q&lt;KD)
22"-3112 HP
Sell- Propelled

_, _________ _

3 RM and bath furn1shed a p t
Ut,11it1eS paJd , 356 Nor t h 4th
St, Mtd dleport
4 9 t tc

3~ nd 4 R OO M fur n 1Sh ed ~nd
u n t u r n 1s h ed
a pa rtmen t s
Pho ne 992 5434
4 12 tfc
PRI VA T E m ee t1n g room t or
any or g an 1za t, on , p hone 992
3975
J 11 tf c
A P T l 1ke new , 3 ro om s. w 1th
la r ge bat h , t a b let op r an ge ,
l ar ge c lose t Eas t Main St,
Pom eroy See t o ap pr ec1ate
Ph on e Ga ii J pO IJ~ dur 1ng day ,
446 7699. even 1ngs 446 9539
4 10 tfc

--------------1 BEDROOM mob tle home, S20
per week , plus U1tl tltes
Depos1t requ1 r ed 368 Page St
Phone 992 35 09
4 22 7tc
FOR RENT 1n Middl ep or t.
down st airS 5 r m f ur n1 shed
apartment
washer
dryer ,
and taci11 tt es patd Phone 992
2676
4 n Jtc
-

~------- -

For Sale

SMA L L 2 be droom doub le w 1de
m ob 1l e home nea r Pomero y
o ff Rt 7 by pass No ch1 ldren
or pe t s PhOne 992 70 17 or 992
]666
&lt;1 24 3t c

- -

..

STARCRAF T SPE CIALS. 20 7"

THE GREAT AT L A N T I C &amp;
PAC I F I C TEA COMPA N Y ,
I N C NE E DS BUY E R S FOR
TH E F O L LOW I NG FOOD
STO R E S 786 Sec ond Avenue .
Midd l eport
Oh10
EV E RY T H IN G MUST GOi
EQ U IPME N T
IN
VENTORY - LE A SE H OL D
F IR ST COME F IR ST1
SERVEDt CONTACT
MR
BAZ IL GRABOV SKY REA L

E STAT E DIRECTOR

2

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

2 BEDROOM mob il e. home, a 1r
cond•IIO n 1ng 1n Racme area
Phon e 992 5858
4 22 tfc

,..COUNTRY Mobile Home Park :
Rt 33, ten m1les north of
Pom eroy
Larg e l ots wit h
ccnc ret~
patios , Si dewa lks, •
Kenneth F Pl umb
runners
and off
street 1
Sec r eta r y
pa r kmg Pt;one 992 7479
12 31 tfc
(4) 17, 24 ( 5 ) 1, 8, 4IC
----~--..--~--~ --

'104.95&lt;KD)

f

POMEROY LANDMARK!
9'. _Jack W Carsey, Mgr
6:ial Phone 992 -2 181

2 BE D ROOM home new
fo un da1 •on , r oof 1ng ceme nt
porc hes, thermo pa n ~ w m
do ws , st orm doors, nat ur a l
I NT ER N A TI O N AL Truck 197 0
gas f urnace, whtte al um m um
, , ton , very good
Sl.600
Std Jng, b lack shu tters, k i tC h en
Phone 9.49 3500
ca b i n e 1s, pa ne l 1n g, c er l l n g
t 1l e. f loors r ef lntshed, low
4 I 8 61 P
hea t1 ng b ill , n 1ce loca t 1o n , c 1t y
wate r Ph on e 985 4102
UTILIT Y t r a 1ler fo r sa le P hon e
4 4 26t c
992 52 47
4 18 6tc ~----~--- ------CIR CLE M ote l &amp; Chr1sty A nn
Res t a uran t, Gal li pOl iS, Oh10
LOCUS T pos t s, ph on e (304) 273
Phon e 4.4 6 2501 or 446 3964
2566, or 985 4198
Cha rl es K 1es11ng
4 23 6tc
4 23 12t p
1972 H ON D A CB 450 su p er
sp or t P hone 992 72 10 a ft er 6 B~AUTIF u~-~; -~~; -on·
la ke , 3 bed roo ms , b ath &amp;
pm
carp et m g , drapes, b19 den
4 23 4t p
Ca ll 99 2 3493
3 24 tf c
T W O ntce ptgs, 525 ea ch Phon e
(6 14 ) 667 3493 a ft er 5 30 p m
.4 -24 31C I 72 ACREs Ot Jdno and loc u s t
posts P hone 742 3656
MU ST sell t wo twm b~ds Phone
- - --- - 4 20 26tp
992 2779
4 24 5t c
SERV I CE s ta t ion a nd garage,
Rutl an d
Will fmance o r
lease Ca ll 742 5052
VARIETY of cab ba ge , tomato
a nd pe ppe r p l a n ts
Also ,
4 9 26t c
ca ulif lower brocco l t, bru ssel
sp r ou ts, egg p lan ts Bed d1 ng
p lan t s pans ies, petu n ta , 38 ACR E S of h ill gro und and
Woods, loc a te d 7 m fles from
ma r 1go l d, sal v1 a ,
ph l ox ,
Pom ero y, a nd 1 m il e sou t h o f
po r tulaca , agertum , a l yffum
Chester , 0 1110 lf m te r es t ed ,
tmpat1tms , cole us, V a r1e t y of
w n te to Olen Ba ile y , BoK 1.46,
ge r an 1u ms , also, p ots of
Za n esf,e) d , Oh 10 43360
pet un1as and mums H ang ing
4 2J 61p
b askets -- pet u nias , 1vy
- ~- ---~-----------geran 1um
tobe lla . f erns,
'
wander 1ng 1ews, porch boltes ,
large hearty red azaleas , 2 BED R OOM tra der and lot tn
town Phone 992 3975 or 992
Cle lan d Green house , Racme
2571
.
Ge r a ldme Cle land
4 9 tfc
4 13 ffc

•12 .

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

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

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown into Walls &amp; Attics

Now op en fo r season Now
availab l e - most va r 1et•es of
vegetable plants &amp; f lower s
p lu s potte d fl owers
OUR
SPE CI ALT Y ove r
2, 000
hangmg bask ets of P etun1as,
Ivy , Ger an 1ums, V m es , an d
Begon1as
TOP QUALITY AT

LOWEST PRIC E S

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

I

Syracuse ,

992 -5716

- •·w"~ HlmCAAG~

They'll Do It E-very Time

Ohto

4-4·1

mo.

FOR f:REE
ESTIMATES

ALLEY W.l'

RACINE PWMBING
&amp; HEATING
Air cond1t1onmg , plumbing,

he aftng, roofing , spouttng ,
ge neral sheet meta I work .

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

NEIGLER
BUILDERS SUPPLY

On aluminum replacement
wmdows, stdtng, stor.m doors
and wtndows , ra thng, phone
Char l es lisle, Syracuse ,
Oh1o . Carl

Jacob,

Racrne, 0 .

Sales

Representative

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC;

"

I '

• •

• •

•

1'1

#

••

.

NOW··

SIX YOIJ

LOOK WA1 ••·•ud.OU BU~o
- 4 n 1ce level lots {about I
acre ) c lose to r1 v er, concr et e
blo ck
ga r ag e,
st o r age
bu 1ldmg , larg e house w tt h
basem e nt , d r illed wel l and
pump

END YOUR SEARCH FOR
A
LOVELY ' LARGER
HOME - 4 large SR. 2
ba t h s ,
sew1 ng
ro o m ,
r ecept ion R , f u ll basem ent

w 1fh Rec

R , natu r al G.,

f or ced a 1r heat, carpet ed ,
p a nel ed por c h es, ro o f e d

detached pat 1o $19,900 00
113,500 BUYS THIS NICE 1
STORY FRAME, 1 n1 ce level
a cr e of ground. 2 BR, bath,
lov ely kitchen , dming a r ea,
H W floor s, 112 bas ement,

ut tlify R ALL IN GOOD
SHAP E
IS YOUR CREDIT GOOD?
Her e IS a chance to buy a
br and new hom e 3 love l y
BR s w 1th double c losets, nr ce
krt ch en and dmrng, garage,
a ll e lectr ic, 1 leve l acre ,

$20,000
BE JU ST TO YOUR SE LF,
FEAR NOT TO BUY .

ya rd
Ca ll R tcha rd
Phone 843 2661

0. J. LAUDERMILl

v.,

,,

1\

(jl:

f',

NEW

WH'f, I'D HAVE STOOD
• BY rou eors
WITI10 UT ACEHT -

ESTIMATEs-~

-

SEPTIC tan ks and l eac h lines
A lso , f 1eld d ra in
tn st all ed
t tl es A ll w ork g uarant eed
Le wr s E )(c a v at 1ng, Rt
1,
Ru1l an d, Oh 10
Phon e 74 2
37 42
4 24 26tc

YEARS- tlfl ' ElEFORE I M POlitE
TH EY'LL PI'IV ME Elt'ER'f CEMT THEY
TAkE ~ OR 8U RI'I 11M ·M· • · llli.P
PURH- TH A""i"""ViVULD BE Bf'TTER.-

GASOLINE ALLEY

Bui

one

of us
kin

find
out!

4 24 26tc

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

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

Complete Serv 1ce
o i-J on e'949-382l or 949 316t
LAW N m owe r r epa 1r , 30 8 Pag
R Qc 1ne , Ohio
Stb M iddlep ort P hon e 99~ .
35 9
, Cntt Bradfo rd
5 1 tft
....,..._.,....
.4 16 30tc _....._

--------------P &amp; J Hom e Ma tntenance,
H eattn g.

_____ _

____

'E PT I C ~ TAN KS
c 1eaneo
}liodern San itatlon , 992 395• 0 1

' 992 7349
4 16 30ft

--------":"""'".

ULABNER
Mni. ... SNEAK

'WE'LL 13E IN THI S

Ft&gt;NcY

M~L! -

9-18·1h

OV£::1&lt; AN'
St=E YO'
WHE:NEVI:J::?.

F IRST WE ,MUST MEASIRE
yOU FOR x:tiR WARDROBE.

VERY MODEST- BUr

!HIS IS WHERE

)'oLJ WILL.
LIVE -

,.,

5i1Z~~.l..,KIN -

D &amp; D T R EE T r1 mm m g , 20 years
ex p e r1 e n c e , m sured , free
e s t 1mat es
Call 99 2 3057 ,
Coo1v 111 e Phon e ( I) 667 3041
4 16 12tp

stepson

------ --

LISTING -

WANT A POSITION -

Here

.........

-

WINNIE
IT SEEMS THAT WHOEVER
OWNS ATHENA FABHIONS
15 OUT 10 RI/IN US !

'

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

WHY ELSE WOULD
THEY &amp;ELL H I ~

5ASPl

GREGORY

QUALI1Y MER.CHANDISE 13E·
LDW ~'A NU ·

KONTOS!!

FACTURE~5

Herman Gr a•.:

4Z Abominate
a Leg part

Mason,
. . W.Va.'

FRIDA.Y'S GUEST ON .

r easonabl e price , 9 r oom s, 2

baths.

hot wa ter

base m e nt,

ga rage

2

heal , f ull

po r ches

and

Ve ry reasona bl e

NEW LISTING -

IIAioo:Y

KALEIDOSCOPE

For only $20.000 00 .
12x 60 deluxe

LtBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) In
you r eagern ess to sat1sfy a
whtm yo u re hkel y to pay far
m ore lor something tha n you

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

IS

m ob1l e home w1 th fme fu r nrshmgs, w~ baths, w ashe r '
dryer and di shwasher . Has one
acre of land

STATE "REPRESENTATIVE

NEVER BEFORE HAVE WE
HAD ANY BETTER BUYS
THAN NOW.

RONALD JAMES

.

XJTPWOOQJT :

LJJE

OJYR-CYH

PJK

CFE

PJK
HOW

HOW
DWWR.

- FLTWO
LYQRPJNRW
Yeaterday'a Crjptoqaote: YOU HAVE NOT CONVERTED A
MAN BE_CAUSE YOU HAVE SIIENCED HIM.
CHRISTOPHER MORLEY
IC 1118 Klaa ,.,.,. Sradlcall, .... )

THAR,THAR , PAW ··
IT AII\I'T NO USE
CR'I!N' oveR·
SPILT MILK

8 VOICe

AQUARI US (Jan. 20-Fe b. 19)
A goat you have 1n mtnd tod ~r.
writ not be
assOCiate 's
what s bes t
derstand 1n

1n accord w1th .A.f1:
yet you m ust Ma
for you He II u1,1:
t h~ long run

PISCE S (Feb. 20-March 20) • •
Lrltle lh 1n gs you would normally overloQk 1n others tend 1'0 1
1rntat e you today Be co~~
SC IOU S Oi 1n 1s AVOid ni tpiCking

You r
Birthday-:You II f o r m some unus u al
alliance s th1 s year Tl'1ey II ta k e ~ you ofl on new paths It wWl•
work out welltf you r a ssoc 1at~
know wh ere you re go1ng even
tf you don t
..,,.
11
(NE \\ SPAPEll £NTt:RPR1SE 1\SSL'I J

&lt;IIIlo

WIN AT BRIDGE

- - - - -- - - - -- - ----"",,,
Unlucky expert does it again . . . ... ,.

.3

"The queen My partner too~:
his ace, thought for a wh!le ,a;;it ·
sweated It out and fma lly led .a.
club for me to ruff "
• ··:·
We have to omit the resFof
our fr iend's talk It was all'l!xplehves deleted The substaooeo,
was that at the other table llii!i:
North-South partners bid U!l, !9flve spades w1th their cards alia'
when West bid SIX hearts, North
proceeded to double. Then"fo
complete the rout, South op~w;
ed h1s smgleton diamond Eas~
made h1s heart slam w1th., ~q

o1o K 8 763

oVertrtck

NORTH

24

4 K 75

'11' .108 65
olo A Q1054 2
WEST
EAST
410 9 8 3
4 6

'II'QI09 7

·-

'II' AK65432
. AJ 9

ofoJ 9
SOUTH (D)

4AQ J42
'II' J 8

West

Nortb

Eas&amp; Sou th

Pass

2 o1o

2 'II'

4'11'

44

5'11'

4.1•
54

6•

6•

Pass

Pass

Openmg

CRYPTOQUOTE

sold o r eaten . Nothmg lost

CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22 -J~ (\;
19) Don t try to run the s now
w1lh1n your cl1que today 6e
democratr c Let everyone have

, ....
... I. .

lead -

Q •

.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The unlucky expert had cornered us agam. He started out
with, "Team of four has to be
my most unlucky game I have
three partners to toss me
around there Look at th1s hand
that cost us a match
11
1 sat West I considered a
seven-heart bid for some time,
but finally gave up the idea
I was afraid that if my partner
did not hold the ace of diamonds
the opponents would bid and
make seven spades. Obviously
North was vmd of hearts "
'' Good reason1ng ,'' we
replied "Wbat diamond d1d you
lead'"

24':.:
' -. .
South ...: ._.

The b1ddmg has been ·
West

Nort h

East

Pass

2•

Pass

,.

Pass
Pass
Pass

3 "3•
5•

Pass
Pass
Pass

3•
4•
6t

Pass

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter almply standi for lllother. In this sample A II
used for tho thne L's, X for tho two O's, ete. Slnslo !etten,
apc~stropbeo, the lenllb and formation of the wonll ore all
hints. Each doy the code !etten ore dllferent.

COSTS?

say or d o somet h1ng today that
w111 cause a se11o us b1eadh
be t w een you a nd a c tos'6
fne nd

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Be
ex tra-ca reful when travel1ng t o~
day Keep a sharp eye on those
wh o share tl1e roa d , whet her
you re walkmg or dnv1ng

14

only the stock , which Is ea sily
At a

try to rule the roos t .wtth too
heavy a hand to day the fa mily
may t ake so m e steps to
de th rone you W alk soft ly
Fo rego the big sttck

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. "·
21) Be wa ry Don I unth mkmgly

North-South vul ner able

41 Select

MASON FURNITURE

you l n vest In your future for

CAN YOU BEAT THIS -

LEO IJuly 23-Aug. 22) If you

i;,+-+-1-

39 txchange
premium
41 Guarantee

1, .. ,_ •.,._,..,

773-5592

bus mess tip you may learn ot
from an Influen ti al con tact It
1sn't th at good

•KQ74 2

one'sJICrown

6 room

ho m e, large bath, ne w gas
f urnace, ba se ment , a nt c e
por ch and alummum s1dlng

CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Don t Jump 1n too hashl y on a

35 Out of

3 ni ce

home New gas furnac e and
cen tra l a rr, Jl/2 baths,\ fn.Ht
room , 2 c ar garage- and garden
P lace f or tll e pony

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Porter's
1 - nova
burden
2 WaD St.
5 - counter
tenn
( 2 wds.)
11 Siouan
12 Berate
3 Make time
13 Simon Bol( colloq.,
4 wds.)
ivar, e.g.
(abbr.)
4 Prefix
(2 wds.)
for colon
Yesterday's Answer
14 Crap shoot- 5 Humper16
The
28 Motorer's lucky
dinck
Pequod's
cyclist's
herome
number
headwear
skipper
15 Glut
6 Lamprey
22
King
(
Sp.)
30
Noblemen
17 Adam's rib
catcher
23
vivant
32
Olcl18 Canine talk 7- had it!
womanish
19 Science of 8 See 3 Down 24 Became
overcast,
33
Lady's
genealogies
(4 wds,)
Wlth ••up"
garment
(abbr.)
9 Ennoble
36 "20 Laughing 10 Subscription 25 Transportation
the
sound
department
system
Knife"
21 U.S.S.R.
request
26 Deep mud 36 Appropriate
river
23 Pin / Kappa
24 Biblical spy
26 Luscious
t;;.+-1-t-mushroom
'!I Flower
symbolizing

34 Thor's

1229tf&lt;

plumbing A good buy at
$17,000 00
4 ACRES - Renovated 7 room

~

28 Suggestion
29 Poet's ~ ·~,,~, ,
30 For each
31 Suffers from

'!11

LISTING -

Do n't try to palm-off tasks you
snould be domg Yo u'll o nl y
nave to do them later - w1 th a
poss1ble penalty

purity

EVERY

•1,1111•

lll'l

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

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

C BRAD I"O ~ D . Aucllon eer

4 16 tfc

be d room s, w1 th cl osets, n 1ce
d 1n 1n g, 2 po r ches, m od e rn
k ttchen, ful l baseme nt, and
new g a s furna ce
Copper

NEW

THAT 5 WHAT FRIENDSti iP
Mf"AI'I S 10 ME _..

no t reliable

HA. 1 11A 1 ~ A 1 THEY ' LL Dl6 UP THE

M IL UO H, EH&lt;' 'TllE LUt-! tc. · HfADS- THE:'f
001i' T SU5P ECT THAT I'M THE O ~E
WHO HAO "SNOR1 '1' .11PPED OFF t O
Tl;E BIGiiEST, SO~T!S T rouCH, IN

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

3825

~- -- -­

~-~·

Pl an first as to how yo u'll h an~
di e Important matter s today
Your on- the-spot deCISions are

WI LLTR IM or ~ cu t trees and '"E XCAVATINU , aozer , 1oaaer
sh ru bbe r y
Clea n
out
~nd ba c kh oe w ork , sept ic
baseme nt s, a t hc, etc Ph one
tanks 1nstall ed , dump tr ucks
949 3221 or 74 2-444 1
, and' l o bo ys tor hire , will haul
4 8 261c
nu dirt , top soil , limest one &amp;
gravel, Call Bob or Roger
E L WOO D BOWE R5 R E PA I R
J eff er s, day phone 992 7089 ;
- - Swee per s, to as t ers , 1ron s,
A lght phon e 99 2-352 5 or 992
all sm a ll app 11an ces L a wn
5232
'
m owe r , next to St ate H 1gn w a y
2 11 1fc
Gar age on R out e 7 Ph one 985

R-ep a ir Se rv1 ce Anyth ing
rl xe d around th e hom e, from
r_oof t o base ment You wll
l tk e our wor k and ra t es
Phone 7.4 2 50 81

r\, ' :I( 1 'I

TIHi:-I=IME! BUT

de v elo ped and c ist er ns 1n
st all ed t o appr ox 1ma tely 18ft
Le~ E xcavat1 ng , Rt
1,
Ru~ n d Phone 74 2 37.42

c

For Friday, Apnl 2S, 1975
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-HONOR

--------------SH A LL O W We ll s dug , sprtng s

Refr 1gerat •cn, A
Ph one 992 3509

!.AME. OL.D

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

HA·HP.• NO HU RRV-

fl

destres as1de the ne)(t few da~
'" order to meet dem and s
other s Ju st don 't be a com plete pat sy
~

o1

ThiS cou ld be an expensive day
1! you get 1n vo1ved 1n a
bu smess area yo u're un familiar
with Avo1d com pli cated deals

SE PT IC TA N KS CLE A NED
Re asona bl e R A T ES
Phon e·
John
446 4J82 Ga l liP Ol i S
Ru ssell ow ner
4 9 tfc
----- ---------~

"'

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)
You may have to set y011r..

P!:.r&lt;IOOICAt. ·· ·

4 3 30t p

ifOM~-tri,-J;;:-o~~e-;;-~ -~ c

Teafc;d Real y

iH ~

4 10 1 mo.

West

...

'&gt;OI.l I..OOK F'OR

PHONE 992-7665

1219tfc

ot: ,'

1 15-Movle " Franke nste in's B loo dy Terror " 10

2 3D-Star Trek 4
3 30-Movle " Head of a Tyrant" 4

5o NE.Xi VISI'f

Reasonable Rates

-CAR
- P---=----....-----ET m st all at Jo n , $ 1 25 p er

•.J&lt;

949·3604

FREE

.

would 11 you were m a mo.re
t.. ~
pra ct1cal mood

Pleasant Ridge
Pomeroy, Ohio

24 78

Pro jec t P r esen ts 20
:~ ·~
a ·oo-Mr Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeann1e 4, Somerset 15,
G lll lgan 's-l s 6, Tatt leta les 8 Sesame St 20.33. Mov1e "Ttie
Ri ver 's E dge" 10, M1ke Doug las 13
''
4 JD--Bew ltched 3; M e r v G ri f f ln 4, M od Squad 6, M1ckey Mouse
C lub
B onm an za 15

"'

ROOFING

ooLE R wo r k, land cl ea r mg b y
tne ac r e, hourl y or contr ac t
Farm ponds , road s, et c
L arg e do zer an d operat or
w l tn ov e r 20 y ea r s eK
pen ence Pu l lins E xc avat ing
Pom ero y, Oh 10 P hone 992

3 3D-One l1fe to Li ve 13; L ucy Show 6, M a tch Game 8, 10, Mu'si£

5 · 30-Movle " Moment t o Mom ent" -4

IJTl'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

SEW I NG M A CHINE , Repa1r s
se Pn ce, a l l ma k es, 992 2284
T he F abn c Shop, Po meroy
A ut hon zed Singer Sal es a nd
Ser v 1c e We sharpen Sc 1ssors
3 29 tfc

8t 10

v llles" 10.

3· 25· 1 mo .

6 30 tfc

World Tu r n s

2·QO-S1 0,000 Pyram 1d 6,13 ; Gu id1ng Light 8,10
~ :;;;
2 3D-Doctors 3,4, IS, B1g Showdown 6,13. Edge of Night 8,10
3 DO-Another Wor ld 3,4,15, General Hosp1lal 6, 13, Price 7s"
Right 8, 10, Interface 20

1 oo-M 1dn 1ght Spec1 a l 3,-4, 15, W1de World 1n Concert 6, New; :
13
- - ',

OOP,., ,

Pass
6•
Pass
You South , hold.

'

"' HI~

24

' .u ..

?

4 K Q 9 8 5 'II' A 2 • K 4 ofo Q 9 ' 8'~
What do you do now?
.. ~.~~:.. ·
A - Pass You have done eno)!D.~
blddmg.
. .... ~
'. '
TODAY'S QUESTION oM
I nstead of b1ddmg t hree sp~~"
your partner has Jumped to foUl': ..,
spades over yo ur t hree hea{l~~·!
What do you do now'
~ ~..·
-OJ ...

...

:'':3·
[p &lt;lo\N~

Send $1 lor JACOBY MODE/ilftM
boolc to· "Win at Sri~." (c/o tlllf, .;
Mwspaper), P.O. Box 489, Rodlr; ;

C1ty Stot1011, New Yorlc. NY. 1001_!:~
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

\1:1,

.
He'll Answer Your Questions
Friday at 10:1 5 A.M. On

1~
IU-Ij);

WMPO

~lil;i.

, ... :.!.;.r

.

'

•

Al&lt;i/CL.E. IN OOC'5

HAVE 10 PASS

Building Homes

li Ve r ed ng h t tO yo ur p ro 1ec t
an d
easy
Fre E
F a s't
estima t es Phone 992 329-&lt;
Go egl e 1n R ea dy M1 x Co
Midd leport Ohio

'

.. .

DOC!bl&lt; WI I.L.

BY "mE "lOWER STAIRS,

,,

.-

INT~E.5TW IN ·AN
0~0 IMGAZ IN€.

WAI'T'ING ROOM··

We Specialize In

REA b Y ll\ IX CON CRIOTE-ae:-

Real Estate For 5ale

· ~.WE'LL

12 45-E iec Co 33
12·55-NBC News 3,1S
1 DO-A ll My Children 6,13, News 3, Phil Donahue 8, Yaung &amp;
the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
I 3D-Days of Our L• ves 3.4, 1S, Let's Make a Deal 6, 13; As The

'"
11 30-Johnny Car son 3,4, 15, W 1dw Rold 1n Concert 13; MQ'l/:lft
" Dr . Strange love" 6. Jana k• 33
11 35--M ovle " W il lard " a, M ov 1e " T he Hound of he Baske~:

.

HElL

tor

11 DO-News 3,4, 13, 15. ABC News 33
11 oo-N ews 8,1 0

Ml&lt;

..:J"UST" k; &gt;W C:.E.i

FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 949-5184

- Ph. 992 ·3993
41 01mo .

4 17 1 mo

'WR AFT!if&lt;l.ml wrrn

ALUMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

LARRY LAVENDER

Searc h

Tomorrow 8. 10, To Be An nounced 33

s·oo-F BI 3, Andy Griff ith 20,33. Mister Roger s' Ne1ghborhQQd '.
20,33, l r onst de 13
"'
5 3D-News 6, Beverl y H1 ll b1llies 8; Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Get
6 30-F !ve Mmutes to Li ve By 4, Ne w s 6. B rb l e An swer s 8;
Smar t 15, E lec Co 33
"
r
Publ ic Af fairs 10; Bl ue R1dge Quartet 13 .
6 oo-News3,4,8,1 0,13,15, A BC News6 , E lec Co 20 , PersonaiWy
6 35-Columbus Today 4
&amp; Behav ioral De v elopm en t 33
6 45-Morning R e por1 3, F armt l m e 10.
6 3D-NBC News 3,4, 15. ABC News 13. Bew•tched 6. CBS News
7 DO-Today 3,4,15; AM Ame e~ ca 6,13, CBS New s 8,10.
8, 10, Zoom 20
B 00-Lasste 6. Capt K angaroo 8; Schoolles 10: Sesam e St J3
7 oo- Truth or Cons 3,4, Bow l mg for Dollar s 6, WCH S Specta~ '
8 3D- Big Valley 6; Popeye 10.
Report 8, Av1al1on Wea ther 20,33, News 10, J1mmy Dilah
8 55-C huck White Reports 10
13; 1 Spyl 5
'
9 DO-AM 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15, Rocky &amp; his Fnends 8, Capt
7 3D-Porter Wagoner J, Pop Goes the Country 4, New Ca nclld
Kangaroo 10; Morn ing w1th D.J. 13
Ca mera 6; Pop Goes the Count r y 8; Black Perspect ive on 'J:le
9 3D- Not For Women Only 3, Dinah 6, Ga llop ing Gourm et 8,
Ne ws 20,33. Tr easu r e Hun t 10. To Tell th e Truth 13
n
N e w Zoo Revue 13
- 8 oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3, 4, 15 N• ghl Sl alker 6, 13, Comedy Special
10·oo-Celebnly Sweepstakes 3,4, 15, Joker's Wild 8 10· Dmah
8,10, Washlngton Week i n ReYiew 20,33; Baseball 4, We-'~1
13
' ,
Get By 8. 10. Wall Street Week 20,33 .
•
:.;
10 3D-Whee l of Fo•tune 3,4,15, Ga.,;bil 8,10
9 00-Rock ford F1l es 3, 15: H ot L Baltimore 6,13, Mo v 1e ' ' Planet
11 DO-H1gh Rollers 3, 4,1S, One Life to L•ve 6, Now You See It
of t he Apes" 8, 10,
M aster p iece Th ea tre 20 . Con sumer
8, 10; E lec Co 20
Sur viv al K1t 33
11 3D-Hollywood Squares 3,6,15, Blan ket y Blanks 13, News 4,
9 30-Qdd Couple 6, 13, Ass ign m ent Amerrcq 33
.. ......
L ove of L1fe 8, 10, Sesa me St 20,33
10 oo-P ol 1ce Wo m a n J, 15, Get Chnst1e Love 6, 13, News 2CJ; ·
11 55-Gr ~_!l a m Kerr 8, Dan I mel's World 10
P a ul Nuchim s 33

, Ph 992·2114. ·

GLEN R.
BISSELL

so 50 Cl ub 4.

a

6 oo-Sunn se Se minar 4; Sunrise Sem ester 10
6 15-E ngllsh 505 3
6 25-Farm Repor t 13

!SMITH NILSON
MOtORS. INC.

Also-Reoairs
R1din9. Trac)o ~ s
498

3,.4 , N ews 13
FRIDAY,APRIL 25, 1975

Radla.lllr.SRt.~l@!!sl

'

FREE ESTIMATES

In Syracuse

RM
H O U SE ,
Bath ,
2
bed r oom s, ga s neat W1th tot
550 So uth Third Ave nu e,
Middlepor t Phone 992 50 78
4 24-3t p

BR I CK hc u se on Seco nd Sf ,
Pom ero y, downt own Su1 t abte
to r l iv in g Qu art er s up stair s,
small b us1n ess do wn, Off 1ce or
h ome
W 1fh1n
w al k1 ng
d J!j t anceof al l st or es Cal l 992
3.489
4 2~ 3t c

1 00- T o morrow

~'l!TI rne largesl
B,.dozer Radlafor
smallest Heater C4re.
,
Nlslhan Big••

· Chain
Precision

l

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

Mobile Homes For Sale

For Rent

HMMo WOIVDeR ....
HOW MU CH RED
TAPE I HAVe TO
GO THFi"OU6H FOR
A GLIMPSE OF THe
GURU HIMSE'LF"

~.YJEL!.,~U..,IO.U t1A66

4 G R AV E lots Me 1gs Mem or y
Ga r dens P hone 949 2 179
4 22 3tp

4 24 6tp
- - - - - - - - - - - - - --.O N E G M C V 6 tr uck With o nly
J U N K a utos, c o~mp le t e and ·
4,2 00 m il es E q u1pped w 1th SEL L yo ur m obil e n ome ror
de li vere d to our ya rd W e PICk
p 1ckw!Ck cam per For d et ail s
ca sh 15 homes w an t ed , 1958
call 992 3953
up a uto bo d 1es and buy all
thru 197 2 m odels P hon e ( 614)
ki nds of sc rap met al s and
4 22 6f p
446 1425 G al li pol iS
1ron Ri d er 's Salvage , St Rt
3 9 781 C
124. R t 4, Porn ero y, Oh.1o
Call 992 5468
1973 12x60 SK YL I N E mob il e
10 17 tic
hom e 2 b edroom a 1r cond ,
carpeted, fue l od fu rn ace ,
CASH pa 1d for al l makes an d ' FUR NI SHE D
apar t me n t,
f u r niS h e-d,
un d er p 1n n1ng
m od el s o f m o b 1te h o m es
ad ults only tn Mid dl ep or t
1n cl ud ed S5, 400 Cal l 992 7048
P hone area code 61i423 953 1
Ph one 992 3874
after 4 p m
1
41 3t fc
3 25 t fc
4 22 4tp

WANTED ol d upr1ght p1anos ,
any cond 1t1on
Pay1ng $10
each F1 r st f loor on l y Wr 1te
and g 1ve d1reci 10ns to W1tten
P1ano co , Box 188 , Sard ts
Oh 10 43946
4 23 61 p

'vuJ f ur n iture. 1ceboxes. b?ass

1973 CUT L ASS S 25 000 ac1U al
m tl es , wh1te w 1th v1nyl to p
B ucket sea t s, stereo , p s ,
p b , lots of ex t ras
Pho ne
( 304 ) 882 2023
4 24 3t c

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

Middleport, Ohio
Phone 992.5W or 992~l

NO, IOOJ I JUST SAI D
KEEP !!1M QJ/I OF
I.MJQ!! TIL.!. THE
Le AVI05 TO
'

WILKINSON
SMALLJ!NGIJII

I

777 Pearl Slreel

Cl "'SE O UT o n n ew Z1g Za g
sewmg ma chm es For se wm ~
s tre tc h f abn cs, buttonhol es,
fan cy d e s1gns , e t c
Pa 1n t
slightl y bl em1 shed Cho1ce of
c a r r y1 n g c ase or se w 1n c 1
stantl S.49 80 ca sh or te rm '· \
ava ilabl e Ph on e 99 2 7755
1
12 18 tf

... .

{A . .. •
I

'COMPANY

\1\0DER N wa l nu t ste r eo r ad 10
B tr ack t ape comb1 nat •on . am
fm rad 10 Bala nce $105 &lt;1 5 or
t er ms Call 992 3965
4 2 1 tfc

307 V B. power st eenng, good G70 w td e ova l t rres, r ad 1o,
slive r g r ey f 1n1sh. a utom at rc tran s., m te nor spo tl ess

WantP.tt To Buy

8-K EXCAVATING

YOL! WANT I S HOULD
CLAMP OFF THIS DUDe
EASY'S SOII&lt; YAI.ASHUtJ ~

SALES&amp; SERV
992-3092

Conslrucllon &amp; Remodel

- -------r-----:,--

Nr ce

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE .

r------------,

JSED pa rt s, F r ye s Tru cK and
Au t o Par ts , Rutlan d, Oh •o
Phon e (614) 742 6094
1

1970 CHEV . IMPALA SPT. SEDAN
$159S
V 8. a u toma t 1c, power steenng &amp; br akes , f actory a 1r, good
w w ttres, r ad m , v m yl mt enor , sand st one f m1sh

Business ServicesJ

our ba1 l tn n 1g h t craw l er s .
la rg e mea l wor ms, w or ms 1 !)titer, Etecntc, Gas, Sewer
lnslolled.
Work
r ed wor ms, b loo d ba 1t. l nd 1a n 1 :l:lnes,
guaranteed.
Joe's Spor t and C B Shop , 308
Page St , M idd leport P hon e
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucks
992 3509
• Limestone &amp; Fill Dirt
4 9 30tc
Commercloi-Resldonllol

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

NOT I CE OF A PPLI CAT IO N
FOR PREL I M I NARY P E RMIT
UNCONSTRUCTEO PRO J ECT
( Ma rc h J l, 1975)

c

~s~ ~~T= t:;;;~~-;;;,-;ve

4 door . loca l car, a 1r condrt1oned , fu l l equ 1pment

YARD SALE
Fr1 day and
Sa turaay , Salem St Rut l and ,
Oh 10 Phone 1.n 3363
4 24 21p

Pro tect No 2751
Oheo Po we r Co mpany l

Mr. andMrs. John Dean, Mr
and Mrs. John Walter Dean
and John Jeremy were Sunday
dmner guests of Mr and Mrs
Kenneth Markins at Racme.
Other guests were Mr and
Mrs. Robert Ried and David,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ternll, all
of Pataskala, Ohio and Mr. and
Mrs. BID Spaun and son,
Shannon , of Pomeroy
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl and
Rodney visited with Mr. Clyde
Harrison at Middleport
recenUy.
Mrs Hazel Arnold had as
recent visitors Mr and Mrs
Ronald McNally and da ughter
of Athens, Mr . and Mrs.
Patnck Williams and family of
McArthur
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal
had as VISitors over the
weekend ;Mr. and Mrs. John
Perdas Jr., Mary and Lisa of
Chambe rsburg, Pa Sunday
visitors were Mr and Mrs
Henry Perdas and son of Portsmouth and Mrs. John Perdas,
Sr , Mr and Mrs Russell Well,
Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Cheviler of
Chester and Mr and Mrs
Roger Young, Wesley and
Yevete, local.
Mrs. Wayne Banks an d
daughter, Stephanie, of Maryla'nd visited with Mr . and Mrs
Roy Br1ckles Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Nev White had
as·recent viSitors Mr and Mrs.
HOward White and family of
Madison, W. Va., Mr and Mrs
Robert Sweanngen and Bobby
West, Milton, Ohio, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold White, Langsville,
Mr. and Mrs Sharon Wbite,
Middleport, Mr and Mrs
Warme White and son, Bern,
W. Va., Mary Lou King and
Geneva King, Kankakee, Dl.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. John Walter Dean and son
were Mr. and Mrs. BiD Spaun
arid son, Shannon of Pomeroy,
Mr. and Mrs. BiD Osborn and
daughter of Long Bottom, Mr
.nd Mrs. Allen Gray of Jackville, Florida

QUALITY

,Pomero)' I
:Motor
C:o.
.
--

10 DO-Dean Mart1n 3, 4, 15
11 DO- News 3,4,8,1 0,13, 15, ABC News 33
11 3D-Johnny Ca r son 3,4, 15; Wide World Spec1 al 13, FBI 6,
Mov ie " The Good Guys and t he Bad Guys" 8, Mov ie " The
B r~dges at Koko pRi " 10; Janak l 33 .
12 3D-Wide World Spee~a l 6

_CAPTAIN EASY

973 H ARLEY Dav Jdson 350 SX.
1,800 m 1les, $600 Ph one 985
3341 between 8 a m and 6
p m
.4 15 I 2tp

Yard Sale

-roR YO u r ,.-011 of M.nk
Cosmetics Phone BROWN'~
992 5113 ~
1 7 tfc

Kingsbury

OF

L ARG E yard sal e 706 M1 ll St
on M1ddlepor1 Hdl J ust abov e
th e R C Plant F r 1day and
Sa t urday 9 ttll 5 PhOne 992
3873
5 23 31 C

____________ _ Wanted To Buy

PARASO L Bout1que announ ces
spec1als of 10 percent off on
al l frost1ng f r om Apr 11 15
t hrough JO Located next to
t he Skate A Way Roll1ng
R,..,k
P h one
985 41.41
Operator Sandra Kerns
.4 1J 12tc

2 SIGNS

N O SHOO T ING match Co rn
Ho l low G un Clu b un t il further
no l1 ce F lsh tng l1me 1s here
&lt;1 ~2 51c

-

Notice

For Sale

Auto Sales

GUN SHOOT , Saturday , Aprtl
26. 7 p m Mile Hil l Road
F ac tory cho k ed guns on l y
Spon sored by th e Racme F 1re '
Dept
4 2~ 4tc

12.0&lt;hJackpot 3,15; Password 61.'_3; Bob Braun 's
News 8,10
12.3Q-Biank Check 3, 15; Spill Second 6, 13,

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

.

--

�j

'
I .

·a - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Apn l 24c1975

·Q - ., . . OAUv Sentin

I M ddl
e • 1 eport-Pomeroy, 0., T_hursday, Ap_ril 24, 1975

'Y

APRIL 20th thru 26th

I
/

•
•
- Televis~on log for easy VIewmg
TH.URSDAY, APRIL 24, 1975
7 30-Hollywooc:l Squares 3,4, Ohio Lotlery 6, New Prl&lt;e Is
R1ght 8, Consumer Surv iva l Kit 20, Wild K ingdom 10, To
Te ll the Truth 13 ; Ameri can Outdoorsman 15.

8 oo-sunshiM 3,4,J5; Lights ' Camer a' Monly' 6,13, The
Wallons 8, 10; 8111 Moyer s' Journal20, Evenin g al Symphony
ll
•
8 3D- Bob Crane 3,4, 1s
9 ()()-,-M ac Dv is 3,4, 15; Mov ie " Part 3 of " 08 V I I," 6, 13, Movie

Notice

Card of Thanks
WE WISH to t hank. the Veterans
Memortal Hospttal DoCfor s
Pastor Willtam Mtddlesworlh
and all who sent cards
flowers durtng my stay m the
hospttal Many thanks to
ever yone
Mr and Mrs Elwyn R
Ynst
4 :l4 lfp
~--------------

WIS H

to thank. the staf f of

Ho l zer Medtcal Center fo r
t h et r kmd and efftctent care
d urmg my r ecent stay m the
nos p tta l Spec tal thanks to Dr
Berk tch and the nu r ses for
thetr e&gt;:ce l lent servtce
Wil l tam Fred Sm tth Sr

WE

W I SH

to

th an k

all

our

rel altves , tnends and netgh
t:io r s for the tr prayers cards ,
food an d words of comfort
dvrmg the Il lness and d ea th of
our loved on e, Tenna Russel l
We especta l ly t hank Rot:le r t

Pu rt e ll ,

m tntster

" Eve! Kn 1evel " 8, In Pe rform a n ce at Wolf Tr a p 20,33, Mov te
" Girl sl Girl s! G ~rls' " 10.

Ewtng

F u nera l
H ome.
Btgo n y
Jo r da n F uner a l Home and the
nu r ses
and
do ct ors
of
Vetera n s Memot tal HoSpita l
T he Ru ssell Family
J 2J lip

Campbell's Swap 'n Shop
ya rd sale &amp; Hea market 2
blocks from Da iry Queen,
Jericho Rd., Pt. Pl., W. Va.
Sal &amp; Sun. , Aprll12 &amp; 13. 10
a.m. · 6 p.m. Ever) weekend
through Ocl For in!. call6751239.
SHOOTING MATCH , W1ndy
R1dge Gun Cl ub , star t mg
Sunday April 27 . 1 p m
Factory choked guns only
4 24 Jt p
FLEA
Market.
Th u rsday ,
Fnday, Saturday and Sun
day St Rt 12.4 a t crossroads
10 a m to 6 p m S2 outs1de . S3
tnSide
4 23 3tc
QUART E R horse at stud young
son Of ' THE OLE MAN "
AAAT , a 1ead1ng s1 re of race
and show hor ses Ran W1lh1n
100~h of a second of AAA ttme
befo r e he was 2 OffiCial AA
w tth an 89 speed 1ndex . halter
con f ormat10n
and
best
diSPOSit iOn Fee Sl OO at t1m e
ot se r v1ces w ff h l 1ve foa l
guara n tee
Phon e 992 7688
4 20 26tc
_..._

AlJCTI ON , Th urs day n''Jjl"
,
p m
at Ma son Auct io n ,
Horton St I n M ason, w va
Co n s 1g nm e n ts we l come
· p hon e (304) 773 541 1
2 2 tfc

..

YARD SALE
Curlts Wclfe
res 1dence at Chester OhiO ,
Saturday , Apr1l 25 . N ew
Avon-s-. new"and used c lof,h1ng
new merc hand1s e
4 24 3tc

2 F AM I LY YARD SAL E Jl 2
m lies south ot Midd le po r t
Story s Run Road Aprtl 26
and 2J
4 24 2tp

.-

1971 MA TADOR

$1595

GARAGE SALE - Fr1day and
Saturda y , A prtl 25 &amp; 26 Dal e
Welsh r e s1dence , Tuppers
Plams , Oh1o Turn r1ght a1
fire house
f1rst hou se on
r 19h t
4 24 2t c

I 22 78 1PJ

$1695

.POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES. 8: 00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

YA RD SA LE , mu111 fam1ly , at
V1c tor Bah r res1d ence, 31 1
m1les eas t of T uppers Pla1ns
on Route 68 1 Wa t ch for Signs
Fr1day , Saturday an d Su n
day Aprtl 25 26 , and 27
4 21 M e

Help Wanted
3 TO 7 persons , full or partt1me
for mt ero.new , call 992 3211
before 4 p m
4225tc

For Rent
T WO bedroom mob1l e home
co rner B r oadway and E l m
M1dd lepprt
Phone 992 2580
4 23 lfc

lost
PONY , brown w1th wh 1te ma ne
and tail Rac1ne VIC!ni1y Ph
247 3222 James A l ley
4 23 3tc

WANTED
Old
\JPR I GHT
P I ANOS
an y
con d 1f10n
Paymg $10 eac h F 1rst floor
on l y Wr1 te and g 1ve d1 r ec
11on s to W 1tten P1ano Co BOx
188 Sa rd iS, OhiO 43946

----------~- --- )
1972 HONDA SL 350 CC, e)C

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

SMA L L f arm 10 to 50 acres ,
fa 1r l o good house an d out
bu1l d mgs Cash to bank loan
Wr1te J w wee k s Gen Del ,
Pomeroy , Oh 10 45769
4 22 26tp
NIGHTCRAW LERS and ear1h
worms { f iSh worms I W1 11 pay
to p pr1c e Fife's Ba1t Phone
992 7494
4 22 51 c

be d s, or complet e househo lds
Wr1te M 0
MJI!er , Rt 4
Pomeroy , Oh 10 Call 992 7760
10 7 7 4
HOR SE S &amp; PON I E S Phone 742
3264
4 '3 lfc

PULL type t ractor d 1sc. Hug h
R 1 2 Po m eroy ,
L e1 f he1 t
Oh to Pho ne 99~ 5918
4 23 31c

UNITEDSTATES

OF AM E RI CA
FE D E RAL POWER

c

NOW s e:11 1n g Fu l ler Brush
Flroduc t s, phon e 992 34 10
I 24 tf{

COMMISSION

Public not1 ce 1S hereb y g1ven
that applJcat 1on for prel1m1nary
perm 11 has been fli ed under the
Federal Power Act ( 16 U s c
J91a 825r ) by I he Oh10 Power
Company (correspondence to
Fra n k N B1e n Execut1ve V 1ce
Pres1d ent. Oh10 Power Com ,
pa n y , 30 1 Cl eve land Aven ue
S W Ca nton, Oh 10 44702 and A
Jose p h
O ow d , Esq, VICe
Pres1den t an d Genera l Cou nsel.
A m e r 1ca n
E teclr tc
Powe r
Serv1ce
Corpo r a1 1on,
T wo
Broadway , N ew York , N ew
York
10004)
for proposed
Pro tect No 2751 , 10 be know n as
Ga l l i pOl i S
Hydroelec t riC
Pro1ect , l oca t ed 11'1 Gal l 1a
Coun1y Oh10 on the Oh to R 1ver
The pr orect affects nav1gable
wate r s of the Un1ted States a nd
la nds of the U S and wou ld
util1ze water from a govern
men1 dam
The GalliPOliS Pro1ect wou ld
co ns1s t o f a powerhouse con
structed at the west enel IOh1o
S1de ) of the U S Corps of
Eng1neers ' GaiiJpolts Locks and
Dam T he p r opose d pow er hou se
wou l d t'iave an m st alla t JOn of
tow head ge n er at1ng Un i 1S
to t a l ~ng ap prO)(Imalely
40,000
KW Norma l pool e1ev at 10n of
th e GallipOl iS r eservo 1r 1s 538
feet Appl1cant stales that lhe
1nstallat 10n wou ld be s1 m liar 10
Ap pltcanl s propos ed Racm e
Hydroelectnc Prorect No 2570
located 1mmed1ately upstream
(Mile 237!
The 1nstallahon
would be c oordma te d w1 th the
pr opo s ed rep l ac e me n t and
moder n1zat10n cf the Cor ps
ex 1St 1ng Gall i pOl i S Locks and
Dam r ecommended by the
Boa r d of R 1vers and Har bQr s A
t ou r m 11e l ong 69kV t r ans
m 1Ss1 on l me wou ld co nn ec t th1S
genera t mg t acll1ty With t he
Am e r 1can
E l ect r ic
P owe r
System
N o cons t ructto n 1S
au t hortzed
under
th e
pr el1mmary perm1 t
A PPI1cant proposes t o m a rk et
the e lec:tr1c p owe~..deve lop ed by
lhe pro rect to mee t the toads
and e)(pec t ed loa d grow th of its
cus t omers m the St ate of Oh 10
Any p erson des1r1 ng t o be
hea rd or to make p r otest with
refe r ence to sa 1d app ltcl! f Jon
sh ou l d on or bef or e June 9, 1975,
f il e w 1th the Fe der al Power
CommtSSJon . Was h mg10n , D C
20426. p e t 1t1ons to 1ntervene or
prote s ts 1n accordan ce w1th the
r equ1r e men t s of the Com
miSSIOns Rul es of Pra c t1 ce and
Proc edur e (18 CFR 1 8or 1 10J
All protests filed w1 th the
Comm1SS10n wtll Oe cons1 d ered
by 1t m dete r m1n 1ng 1he ap
prop n ate ac:t1on to be take n , but
Wtll not serye to make th e
pro t estants
part1es
1o
a
procee d mg P ersons w 1sh mg lo
become pa r t 1es to a pr oceed m g
or to p a rt 1cipa l e us 1 a pa rt y m
any heanng there1n must file
pe!Jflons to mter vent 1n accor d
ance w 1th th e Commrss1on ' s
Rul es The app l 1cat1on 1S on file
w11h the Comm1SS 10n and
ava tl able f o r public mspect1on

1974 CH EVROLET Cheyenne,
20 ( J4 ton ) auto tr ans , p b ,
p s , see a t lOS Un to n A v e
P hone 992 3293 be1wee n 5 &amp; 7
p m
.4 24 6tc

ce ll en t co ndition A lso 195J
F or d to sell or t rade for van
PhOne 992 3897
4 11 12t c

'
------- --~-----

For Sale or Trade

Business Opportunities

J57

MAIER PLACE, COLUM
BUS. O H I O TELEPHONE
AR E A CO D E
614 224 51.4 1
o
4186tc

Employment Wanted
WILL ao 1a n 1t or wo r k or
pa tn tmg Ca ll 992 2262
4 20 61C
R E MO D E LI NG,
p l um b tng,
heatmg , and al l t y pes of
general
re p a 1r
Wo rk
gu ar a nt eed
20 yea r s e)(
per te n ce Phone 99 2 2409
3 11 t fc

For Rent
TRA I L ER ap1

BEDROOM mobile hom e
P hone 9.4.2. 226 1 Alber t H1 ll 1954 PACEMAK ER trailer , n 1ce
for cou p le Pno ne 378 6298
4 20 6t c
4 20 tfc
- TRA I L ER space fo r rent m
1972
GREE N BR I E R
2
Midd lepor t Ca l l 992 2625
fr Qnt k tt c h en ,
b e dr oo m ,
4 20 6tc
r a 1sed d 1nmg ar ea 1 f uel o tl
furna ce, eve lev el ove n m
sur f ace un1 l Ca n be seen at
Kin gsb ury H omes Sal es and
Service I n c, 1100 E Ma1n
TWO lots m Me1gs Memcry
St , Porn er oy Ph one 992 70'34
Ga rd ens P hone 949 5 132
4 24 6tc
4 22 4tp
1974 GRE E NBRIER mo bil e
M A Y T AG port abl e was her , 'l
hom e , 2 bed r oo m excellen t
y r s ol d excell en t con d ition.
cond 1t1 on a ll elect n c S6 BOO
S100 P hone 9922926
Ca ll 992 7328 aft er 6 p m
.4 22 61p
4 24 3tc

-

~

Phone 992 5248
4 16 10tc

12'x5 2' 2 bed r oom tra il er l 1ke
n ew $35 we e k, u t 11 11 1es pa 1d
P hone 992 3324
4 11 tt c

1972 F OR D G r and Tor tno , p s, 1970 CH AM PI O N tra der , par tl y
auto , A l so , 197 Su zu ki 90 tust
f urn tSh ed , 1nc lud es a 1r con
over ha uled Phon e (6 14) 59'3
d l fJ On Jng, l2x60 Ca ll 99 2 2559
7390
or 992 3538 or see at 828 ~ou t h •
Se con d St , Mid dl epor t
4 22 3tc
.4 24 6t c
tra d e r s, $4,924 now 53,875 ARE Y OU 1n th e markel for a
F old do wn s $1 495 up A ut o
larg e 3 b ed r oom top qu a 11t y
aw n1n g Reese h ilc h es,ac 20
we ll
co nst r u cted
mo b 1l e
pe t o ff Co mpl et e pa rt s and
hoi'T1e" 11 so you ca n sa ve
serv1ce depar t m ent s
We
tho usand s on th 1s one we
trade. f m anc mg arra nge d
hav e a 1975 70x 14 Sk y li ne
Ca mp Con ley Sta rc rafl Sa tes,
trad e'" t h at comes eq u 1p p ed
Rt 62 N of PI P leasant. w
wil h to t al el ec tr ic , l 11 bat h s.
va
f u ll y f u r n iS h ed , new ap
4
4t c
p l 1a n ces
n ew beds a n d
carp et 1ng 1n l 1vtng r oom , ha ll ,
FA R M eq u, p m ent new 1 r ow 3
mas t er be d r oom an d center
pt
cu l hva tor s, $1 10 , N ew
bedroom
Th 1s home was
l mcoJ p t d iSC,$325 , New5 ft
l tve d 1n less th an 90 da y s You
3 p t Ro t ar y mower , S375,
.get a f ull w arran ty Home can
Used Fe r g uson 3 p i
corn
be see n at K mg sbur y Ho m e
p l an t er S295 Joh n D eere 490
Sal es, 11 00 E M a m St r eeL
4 ro w co rn p l an te r S225, U se d
Po me roy , Otu o
Mo n day
Ford 5 ft 3 pt r otary mower ,
1hrough Fr 1day , 10 t il l 7, an d
$250
U se d 8 ft
Dun ham
Sat 9 a m t 1ll 7 p m Or ca ll
w h ee l d i SC, $400 Ma sse y
99 2 7034
Ferg uson N o 3 h a y b al er ,
4 24 6tc
$ 1, 150
Erm e l
Lu c k e tt
A l ban y, Oh 10 P hon e 698 788 1
or 698 3032
4 23 3t c
4 RO OM HO US E Wlf h ba th , 3
AP P ALOO SA gel d ing
Ph on e
a cr es m c ou ntry on ha rdto p
667 3730 af t er 4 p m
roa d Co Rd 3 Phon e 742
4 22 6t p
3266
4 24 3tc
1974 H ON D A X L 350 ro a d and
trail b1ke Good cond1 110 n HOU SE for sa le 1n Port la nd , 6
$750 Ca ll 992 7059
r oom s an d bat h, good we ll
4 22 6t c
and 2 acr es g r ound $6, 200
Phon e 843 229 2
.4 2.4 -6tc

n

Real Estate For Sale

TURF TRIM
MOWER
20" -31!• H P

'72,9Q&lt;KD)
22"-3112 HP
Sell- Propelled

_, _________ _

3 RM and bath furn1shed a p t
Ut,11it1eS paJd , 356 Nor t h 4th
St, Mtd dleport
4 9 t tc

3~ nd 4 R OO M fur n 1Sh ed ~nd
u n t u r n 1s h ed
a pa rtmen t s
Pho ne 992 5434
4 12 tfc
PRI VA T E m ee t1n g room t or
any or g an 1za t, on , p hone 992
3975
J 11 tf c
A P T l 1ke new , 3 ro om s. w 1th
la r ge bat h , t a b let op r an ge ,
l ar ge c lose t Eas t Main St,
Pom eroy See t o ap pr ec1ate
Ph on e Ga ii J pO IJ~ dur 1ng day ,
446 7699. even 1ngs 446 9539
4 10 tfc

--------------1 BEDROOM mob tle home, S20
per week , plus U1tl tltes
Depos1t requ1 r ed 368 Page St
Phone 992 35 09
4 22 7tc
FOR RENT 1n Middl ep or t.
down st airS 5 r m f ur n1 shed
apartment
washer
dryer ,
and taci11 tt es patd Phone 992
2676
4 n Jtc
-

~------- -

For Sale

SMA L L 2 be droom doub le w 1de
m ob 1l e home nea r Pomero y
o ff Rt 7 by pass No ch1 ldren
or pe t s PhOne 992 70 17 or 992
]666
&lt;1 24 3t c

- -

..

STARCRAF T SPE CIALS. 20 7"

THE GREAT AT L A N T I C &amp;
PAC I F I C TEA COMPA N Y ,
I N C NE E DS BUY E R S FOR
TH E F O L LOW I NG FOOD
STO R E S 786 Sec ond Avenue .
Midd l eport
Oh10
EV E RY T H IN G MUST GOi
EQ U IPME N T
IN
VENTORY - LE A SE H OL D
F IR ST COME F IR ST1
SERVEDt CONTACT
MR
BAZ IL GRABOV SKY REA L

E STAT E DIRECTOR

2

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

2 BEDROOM mob il e. home, a 1r
cond•IIO n 1ng 1n Racme area
Phon e 992 5858
4 22 tfc

,..COUNTRY Mobile Home Park :
Rt 33, ten m1les north of
Pom eroy
Larg e l ots wit h
ccnc ret~
patios , Si dewa lks, •
Kenneth F Pl umb
runners
and off
street 1
Sec r eta r y
pa r kmg Pt;one 992 7479
12 31 tfc
(4) 17, 24 ( 5 ) 1, 8, 4IC
----~--..--~--~ --

'104.95&lt;KD)

f

POMEROY LANDMARK!
9'. _Jack W Carsey, Mgr
6:ial Phone 992 -2 181

2 BE D ROOM home new
fo un da1 •on , r oof 1ng ceme nt
porc hes, thermo pa n ~ w m
do ws , st orm doors, nat ur a l
I NT ER N A TI O N AL Truck 197 0
gas f urnace, whtte al um m um
, , ton , very good
Sl.600
Std Jng, b lack shu tters, k i tC h en
Phone 9.49 3500
ca b i n e 1s, pa ne l 1n g, c er l l n g
t 1l e. f loors r ef lntshed, low
4 I 8 61 P
hea t1 ng b ill , n 1ce loca t 1o n , c 1t y
wate r Ph on e 985 4102
UTILIT Y t r a 1ler fo r sa le P hon e
4 4 26t c
992 52 47
4 18 6tc ~----~--- ------CIR CLE M ote l &amp; Chr1sty A nn
Res t a uran t, Gal li pOl iS, Oh10
LOCUS T pos t s, ph on e (304) 273
Phon e 4.4 6 2501 or 446 3964
2566, or 985 4198
Cha rl es K 1es11ng
4 23 6tc
4 23 12t p
1972 H ON D A CB 450 su p er
sp or t P hone 992 72 10 a ft er 6 B~AUTIF u~-~; -~~; -on·
la ke , 3 bed roo ms , b ath &amp;
pm
carp et m g , drapes, b19 den
4 23 4t p
Ca ll 99 2 3493
3 24 tf c
T W O ntce ptgs, 525 ea ch Phon e
(6 14 ) 667 3493 a ft er 5 30 p m
.4 -24 31C I 72 ACREs Ot Jdno and loc u s t
posts P hone 742 3656
MU ST sell t wo twm b~ds Phone
- - --- - 4 20 26tp
992 2779
4 24 5t c
SERV I CE s ta t ion a nd garage,
Rutl an d
Will fmance o r
lease Ca ll 742 5052
VARIETY of cab ba ge , tomato
a nd pe ppe r p l a n ts
Also ,
4 9 26t c
ca ulif lower brocco l t, bru ssel
sp r ou ts, egg p lan ts Bed d1 ng
p lan t s pans ies, petu n ta , 38 ACR E S of h ill gro und and
Woods, loc a te d 7 m fles from
ma r 1go l d, sal v1 a ,
ph l ox ,
Pom ero y, a nd 1 m il e sou t h o f
po r tulaca , agertum , a l yffum
Chester , 0 1110 lf m te r es t ed ,
tmpat1tms , cole us, V a r1e t y of
w n te to Olen Ba ile y , BoK 1.46,
ge r an 1u ms , also, p ots of
Za n esf,e) d , Oh 10 43360
pet un1as and mums H ang ing
4 2J 61p
b askets -- pet u nias , 1vy
- ~- ---~-----------geran 1um
tobe lla . f erns,
'
wander 1ng 1ews, porch boltes ,
large hearty red azaleas , 2 BED R OOM tra der and lot tn
town Phone 992 3975 or 992
Cle lan d Green house , Racme
2571
.
Ge r a ldme Cle land
4 9 tfc
4 13 ffc

•12 .

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

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

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown into Walls &amp; Attics

Now op en fo r season Now
availab l e - most va r 1et•es of
vegetable plants &amp; f lower s
p lu s potte d fl owers
OUR
SPE CI ALT Y ove r
2, 000
hangmg bask ets of P etun1as,
Ivy , Ger an 1ums, V m es , an d
Begon1as
TOP QUALITY AT

LOWEST PRIC E S

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

I

Syracuse ,

992 -5716

- •·w"~ HlmCAAG~

They'll Do It E-very Time

Ohto

4-4·1

mo.

FOR f:REE
ESTIMATES

ALLEY W.l'

RACINE PWMBING
&amp; HEATING
Air cond1t1onmg , plumbing,

he aftng, roofing , spouttng ,
ge neral sheet meta I work .

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

NEIGLER
BUILDERS SUPPLY

On aluminum replacement
wmdows, stdtng, stor.m doors
and wtndows , ra thng, phone
Char l es lisle, Syracuse ,
Oh1o . Carl

Jacob,

Racrne, 0 .

Sales

Representative

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC;

"

I '

• •

• •

•

1'1

#

••

.

NOW··

SIX YOIJ

LOOK WA1 ••·•ud.OU BU~o
- 4 n 1ce level lots {about I
acre ) c lose to r1 v er, concr et e
blo ck
ga r ag e,
st o r age
bu 1ldmg , larg e house w tt h
basem e nt , d r illed wel l and
pump

END YOUR SEARCH FOR
A
LOVELY ' LARGER
HOME - 4 large SR. 2
ba t h s ,
sew1 ng
ro o m ,
r ecept ion R , f u ll basem ent

w 1fh Rec

R , natu r al G.,

f or ced a 1r heat, carpet ed ,
p a nel ed por c h es, ro o f e d

detached pat 1o $19,900 00
113,500 BUYS THIS NICE 1
STORY FRAME, 1 n1 ce level
a cr e of ground. 2 BR, bath,
lov ely kitchen , dming a r ea,
H W floor s, 112 bas ement,

ut tlify R ALL IN GOOD
SHAP E
IS YOUR CREDIT GOOD?
Her e IS a chance to buy a
br and new hom e 3 love l y
BR s w 1th double c losets, nr ce
krt ch en and dmrng, garage,
a ll e lectr ic, 1 leve l acre ,

$20,000
BE JU ST TO YOUR SE LF,
FEAR NOT TO BUY .

ya rd
Ca ll R tcha rd
Phone 843 2661

0. J. LAUDERMILl

v.,

,,

1\

(jl:

f',

NEW

WH'f, I'D HAVE STOOD
• BY rou eors
WITI10 UT ACEHT -

ESTIMATEs-~

-

SEPTIC tan ks and l eac h lines
A lso , f 1eld d ra in
tn st all ed
t tl es A ll w ork g uarant eed
Le wr s E )(c a v at 1ng, Rt
1,
Ru1l an d, Oh 10
Phon e 74 2
37 42
4 24 26tc

YEARS- tlfl ' ElEFORE I M POlitE
TH EY'LL PI'IV ME Elt'ER'f CEMT THEY
TAkE ~ OR 8U RI'I 11M ·M· • · llli.P
PURH- TH A""i"""ViVULD BE Bf'TTER.-

GASOLINE ALLEY

Bui

one

of us
kin

find
out!

4 24 26tc

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

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

Complete Serv 1ce
o i-J on e'949-382l or 949 316t
LAW N m owe r r epa 1r , 30 8 Pag
R Qc 1ne , Ohio
Stb M iddlep ort P hon e 99~ .
35 9
, Cntt Bradfo rd
5 1 tft
....,..._.,....
.4 16 30tc _....._

--------------P &amp; J Hom e Ma tntenance,
H eattn g.

_____ _

____

'E PT I C ~ TAN KS
c 1eaneo
}liodern San itatlon , 992 395• 0 1

' 992 7349
4 16 30ft

--------":"""'".

ULABNER
Mni. ... SNEAK

'WE'LL 13E IN THI S

Ft&gt;NcY

M~L! -

9-18·1h

OV£::1&lt; AN'
St=E YO'
WHE:NEVI:J::?.

F IRST WE ,MUST MEASIRE
yOU FOR x:tiR WARDROBE.

VERY MODEST- BUr

!HIS IS WHERE

)'oLJ WILL.
LIVE -

,.,

5i1Z~~.l..,KIN -

D &amp; D T R EE T r1 mm m g , 20 years
ex p e r1 e n c e , m sured , free
e s t 1mat es
Call 99 2 3057 ,
Coo1v 111 e Phon e ( I) 667 3041
4 16 12tp

stepson

------ --

LISTING -

WANT A POSITION -

Here

.........

-

WINNIE
IT SEEMS THAT WHOEVER
OWNS ATHENA FABHIONS
15 OUT 10 RI/IN US !

'

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

WHY ELSE WOULD
THEY &amp;ELL H I ~

5ASPl

GREGORY

QUALI1Y MER.CHANDISE 13E·
LDW ~'A NU ·

KONTOS!!

FACTURE~5

Herman Gr a•.:

4Z Abominate
a Leg part

Mason,
. . W.Va.'

FRIDA.Y'S GUEST ON .

r easonabl e price , 9 r oom s, 2

baths.

hot wa ter

base m e nt,

ga rage

2

heal , f ull

po r ches

and

Ve ry reasona bl e

NEW LISTING -

IIAioo:Y

KALEIDOSCOPE

For only $20.000 00 .
12x 60 deluxe

LtBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) In
you r eagern ess to sat1sfy a
whtm yo u re hkel y to pay far
m ore lor something tha n you

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

IS

m ob1l e home w1 th fme fu r nrshmgs, w~ baths, w ashe r '
dryer and di shwasher . Has one
acre of land

STATE "REPRESENTATIVE

NEVER BEFORE HAVE WE
HAD ANY BETTER BUYS
THAN NOW.

RONALD JAMES

.

XJTPWOOQJT :

LJJE

OJYR-CYH

PJK

CFE

PJK
HOW

HOW
DWWR.

- FLTWO
LYQRPJNRW
Yeaterday'a Crjptoqaote: YOU HAVE NOT CONVERTED A
MAN BE_CAUSE YOU HAVE SIIENCED HIM.
CHRISTOPHER MORLEY
IC 1118 Klaa ,.,.,. Sradlcall, .... )

THAR,THAR , PAW ··
IT AII\I'T NO USE
CR'I!N' oveR·
SPILT MILK

8 VOICe

AQUARI US (Jan. 20-Fe b. 19)
A goat you have 1n mtnd tod ~r.
writ not be
assOCiate 's
what s bes t
derstand 1n

1n accord w1th .A.f1:
yet you m ust Ma
for you He II u1,1:
t h~ long run

PISCE S (Feb. 20-March 20) • •
Lrltle lh 1n gs you would normally overloQk 1n others tend 1'0 1
1rntat e you today Be co~~
SC IOU S Oi 1n 1s AVOid ni tpiCking

You r
Birthday-:You II f o r m some unus u al
alliance s th1 s year Tl'1ey II ta k e ~ you ofl on new paths It wWl•
work out welltf you r a ssoc 1at~
know wh ere you re go1ng even
tf you don t
..,,.
11
(NE \\ SPAPEll £NTt:RPR1SE 1\SSL'I J

&lt;IIIlo

WIN AT BRIDGE

- - - - -- - - - -- - ----"",,,
Unlucky expert does it again . . . ... ,.

.3

"The queen My partner too~:
his ace, thought for a wh!le ,a;;it ·
sweated It out and fma lly led .a.
club for me to ruff "
• ··:·
We have to omit the resFof
our fr iend's talk It was all'l!xplehves deleted The substaooeo,
was that at the other table llii!i:
North-South partners bid U!l, !9flve spades w1th their cards alia'
when West bid SIX hearts, North
proceeded to double. Then"fo
complete the rout, South op~w;
ed h1s smgleton diamond Eas~
made h1s heart slam w1th., ~q

o1o K 8 763

oVertrtck

NORTH

24

4 K 75

'11' .108 65
olo A Q1054 2
WEST
EAST
410 9 8 3
4 6

'II'QI09 7

·-

'II' AK65432
. AJ 9

ofoJ 9
SOUTH (D)

4AQ J42
'II' J 8

West

Nortb

Eas&amp; Sou th

Pass

2 o1o

2 'II'

4'11'

44

5'11'

4.1•
54

6•

6•

Pass

Pass

Openmg

CRYPTOQUOTE

sold o r eaten . Nothmg lost

CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22 -J~ (\;
19) Don t try to run the s now
w1lh1n your cl1que today 6e
democratr c Let everyone have

, ....
... I. .

lead -

Q •

.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The unlucky expert had cornered us agam. He started out
with, "Team of four has to be
my most unlucky game I have
three partners to toss me
around there Look at th1s hand
that cost us a match
11
1 sat West I considered a
seven-heart bid for some time,
but finally gave up the idea
I was afraid that if my partner
did not hold the ace of diamonds
the opponents would bid and
make seven spades. Obviously
North was vmd of hearts "
'' Good reason1ng ,'' we
replied "Wbat diamond d1d you
lead'"

24':.:
' -. .
South ...: ._.

The b1ddmg has been ·
West

Nort h

East

Pass

2•

Pass

,.

Pass
Pass
Pass

3 "3•
5•

Pass
Pass
Pass

3•
4•
6t

Pass

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter almply standi for lllother. In this sample A II
used for tho thne L's, X for tho two O's, ete. Slnslo !etten,
apc~stropbeo, the lenllb and formation of the wonll ore all
hints. Each doy the code !etten ore dllferent.

COSTS?

say or d o somet h1ng today that
w111 cause a se11o us b1eadh
be t w een you a nd a c tos'6
fne nd

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Be
ex tra-ca reful when travel1ng t o~
day Keep a sharp eye on those
wh o share tl1e roa d , whet her
you re walkmg or dnv1ng

14

only the stock , which Is ea sily
At a

try to rule the roos t .wtth too
heavy a hand to day the fa mily
may t ake so m e steps to
de th rone you W alk soft ly
Fo rego the big sttck

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. "·
21) Be wa ry Don I unth mkmgly

North-South vul ner able

41 Select

MASON FURNITURE

you l n vest In your future for

CAN YOU BEAT THIS -

LEO IJuly 23-Aug. 22) If you

i;,+-+-1-

39 txchange
premium
41 Guarantee

1, .. ,_ •.,._,..,

773-5592

bus mess tip you may learn ot
from an Influen ti al con tact It
1sn't th at good

•KQ74 2

one'sJICrown

6 room

ho m e, large bath, ne w gas
f urnace, ba se ment , a nt c e
por ch and alummum s1dlng

CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Don t Jump 1n too hashl y on a

35 Out of

3 ni ce

home New gas furnac e and
cen tra l a rr, Jl/2 baths,\ fn.Ht
room , 2 c ar garage- and garden
P lace f or tll e pony

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Porter's
1 - nova
burden
2 WaD St.
5 - counter
tenn
( 2 wds.)
11 Siouan
12 Berate
3 Make time
13 Simon Bol( colloq.,
4 wds.)
ivar, e.g.
(abbr.)
4 Prefix
(2 wds.)
for colon
Yesterday's Answer
14 Crap shoot- 5 Humper16
The
28 Motorer's lucky
dinck
Pequod's
cyclist's
herome
number
headwear
skipper
15 Glut
6 Lamprey
22
King
(
Sp.)
30
Noblemen
17 Adam's rib
catcher
23
vivant
32
Olcl18 Canine talk 7- had it!
womanish
19 Science of 8 See 3 Down 24 Became
overcast,
33
Lady's
genealogies
(4 wds,)
Wlth ••up"
garment
(abbr.)
9 Ennoble
36 "20 Laughing 10 Subscription 25 Transportation
the
sound
department
system
Knife"
21 U.S.S.R.
request
26 Deep mud 36 Appropriate
river
23 Pin / Kappa
24 Biblical spy
26 Luscious
t;;.+-1-t-mushroom
'!I Flower
symbolizing

34 Thor's

1229tf&lt;

plumbing A good buy at
$17,000 00
4 ACRES - Renovated 7 room

~

28 Suggestion
29 Poet's ~ ·~,,~, ,
30 For each
31 Suffers from

'!11

LISTING -

Do n't try to palm-off tasks you
snould be domg Yo u'll o nl y
nave to do them later - w1 th a
poss1ble penalty

purity

EVERY

•1,1111•

lll'l

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

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

C BRAD I"O ~ D . Aucllon eer

4 16 tfc

be d room s, w1 th cl osets, n 1ce
d 1n 1n g, 2 po r ches, m od e rn
k ttchen, ful l baseme nt, and
new g a s furna ce
Copper

NEW

THAT 5 WHAT FRIENDSti iP
Mf"AI'I S 10 ME _..

no t reliable

HA. 1 11A 1 ~ A 1 THEY ' LL Dl6 UP THE

M IL UO H, EH&lt;' 'TllE LUt-! tc. · HfADS- THE:'f
001i' T SU5P ECT THAT I'M THE O ~E
WHO HAO "SNOR1 '1' .11PPED OFF t O
Tl;E BIGiiEST, SO~T!S T rouCH, IN

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

3825

~- -- -­

~-~·

Pl an first as to how yo u'll h an~
di e Important matter s today
Your on- the-spot deCISions are

WI LLTR IM or ~ cu t trees and '"E XCAVATINU , aozer , 1oaaer
sh ru bbe r y
Clea n
out
~nd ba c kh oe w ork , sept ic
baseme nt s, a t hc, etc Ph one
tanks 1nstall ed , dump tr ucks
949 3221 or 74 2-444 1
, and' l o bo ys tor hire , will haul
4 8 261c
nu dirt , top soil , limest one &amp;
gravel, Call Bob or Roger
E L WOO D BOWE R5 R E PA I R
J eff er s, day phone 992 7089 ;
- - Swee per s, to as t ers , 1ron s,
A lght phon e 99 2-352 5 or 992
all sm a ll app 11an ces L a wn
5232
'
m owe r , next to St ate H 1gn w a y
2 11 1fc
Gar age on R out e 7 Ph one 985

R-ep a ir Se rv1 ce Anyth ing
rl xe d around th e hom e, from
r_oof t o base ment You wll
l tk e our wor k and ra t es
Phone 7.4 2 50 81

r\, ' :I( 1 'I

TIHi:-I=IME! BUT

de v elo ped and c ist er ns 1n
st all ed t o appr ox 1ma tely 18ft
Le~ E xcavat1 ng , Rt
1,
Ru~ n d Phone 74 2 37.42

c

For Friday, Apnl 2S, 1975
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-HONOR

--------------SH A LL O W We ll s dug , sprtng s

Refr 1gerat •cn, A
Ph one 992 3509

!.AME. OL.D

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

HA·HP.• NO HU RRV-

fl

destres as1de the ne)(t few da~
'" order to meet dem and s
other s Ju st don 't be a com plete pat sy
~

o1

ThiS cou ld be an expensive day
1! you get 1n vo1ved 1n a
bu smess area yo u're un familiar
with Avo1d com pli cated deals

SE PT IC TA N KS CLE A NED
Re asona bl e R A T ES
Phon e·
John
446 4J82 Ga l liP Ol i S
Ru ssell ow ner
4 9 tfc
----- ---------~

"'

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)
You may have to set y011r..

P!:.r&lt;IOOICAt. ·· ·

4 3 30t p

ifOM~-tri,-J;;:-o~~e-;;-~ -~ c

Teafc;d Real y

iH ~

4 10 1 mo.

West

...

'&gt;OI.l I..OOK F'OR

PHONE 992-7665

1219tfc

ot: ,'

1 15-Movle " Franke nste in's B loo dy Terror " 10

2 3D-Star Trek 4
3 30-Movle " Head of a Tyrant" 4

5o NE.Xi VISI'f

Reasonable Rates

-CAR
- P---=----....-----ET m st all at Jo n , $ 1 25 p er

•.J&lt;

949·3604

FREE

.

would 11 you were m a mo.re
t.. ~
pra ct1cal mood

Pleasant Ridge
Pomeroy, Ohio

24 78

Pro jec t P r esen ts 20
:~ ·~
a ·oo-Mr Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeann1e 4, Somerset 15,
G lll lgan 's-l s 6, Tatt leta les 8 Sesame St 20.33. Mov1e "Ttie
Ri ver 's E dge" 10, M1ke Doug las 13
''
4 JD--Bew ltched 3; M e r v G ri f f ln 4, M od Squad 6, M1ckey Mouse
C lub
B onm an za 15

"'

ROOFING

ooLE R wo r k, land cl ea r mg b y
tne ac r e, hourl y or contr ac t
Farm ponds , road s, et c
L arg e do zer an d operat or
w l tn ov e r 20 y ea r s eK
pen ence Pu l lins E xc avat ing
Pom ero y, Oh 10 P hone 992

3 3D-One l1fe to Li ve 13; L ucy Show 6, M a tch Game 8, 10, Mu'si£

5 · 30-Movle " Moment t o Mom ent" -4

IJTl'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

SEW I NG M A CHINE , Repa1r s
se Pn ce, a l l ma k es, 992 2284
T he F abn c Shop, Po meroy
A ut hon zed Singer Sal es a nd
Ser v 1c e We sharpen Sc 1ssors
3 29 tfc

8t 10

v llles" 10.

3· 25· 1 mo .

6 30 tfc

World Tu r n s

2·QO-S1 0,000 Pyram 1d 6,13 ; Gu id1ng Light 8,10
~ :;;;
2 3D-Doctors 3,4, IS, B1g Showdown 6,13. Edge of Night 8,10
3 DO-Another Wor ld 3,4,15, General Hosp1lal 6, 13, Price 7s"
Right 8, 10, Interface 20

1 oo-M 1dn 1ght Spec1 a l 3,-4, 15, W1de World 1n Concert 6, New; :
13
- - ',

OOP,., ,

Pass
6•
Pass
You South , hold.

'

"' HI~

24

' .u ..

?

4 K Q 9 8 5 'II' A 2 • K 4 ofo Q 9 ' 8'~
What do you do now?
.. ~.~~:.. ·
A - Pass You have done eno)!D.~
blddmg.
. .... ~
'. '
TODAY'S QUESTION oM
I nstead of b1ddmg t hree sp~~"
your partner has Jumped to foUl': ..,
spades over yo ur t hree hea{l~~·!
What do you do now'
~ ~..·
-OJ ...

...

:'':3·
[p &lt;lo\N~

Send $1 lor JACOBY MODE/ilftM
boolc to· "Win at Sri~." (c/o tlllf, .;
Mwspaper), P.O. Box 489, Rodlr; ;

C1ty Stot1011, New Yorlc. NY. 1001_!:~
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

\1:1,

.
He'll Answer Your Questions
Friday at 10:1 5 A.M. On

1~
IU-Ij);

WMPO

~lil;i.

, ... :.!.;.r

.

'

•

Al&lt;i/CL.E. IN OOC'5

HAVE 10 PASS

Building Homes

li Ve r ed ng h t tO yo ur p ro 1ec t
an d
easy
Fre E
F a s't
estima t es Phone 992 329-&lt;
Go egl e 1n R ea dy M1 x Co
Midd leport Ohio

'

.. .

DOC!bl&lt; WI I.L.

BY "mE "lOWER STAIRS,

,,

.-

INT~E.5TW IN ·AN
0~0 IMGAZ IN€.

WAI'T'ING ROOM··

We Specialize In

REA b Y ll\ IX CON CRIOTE-ae:-

Real Estate For 5ale

· ~.WE'LL

12 45-E iec Co 33
12·55-NBC News 3,1S
1 DO-A ll My Children 6,13, News 3, Phil Donahue 8, Yaung &amp;
the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
I 3D-Days of Our L• ves 3.4, 1S, Let's Make a Deal 6, 13; As The

'"
11 30-Johnny Car son 3,4, 15, W 1dw Rold 1n Concert 13; MQ'l/:lft
" Dr . Strange love" 6. Jana k• 33
11 35--M ovle " W il lard " a, M ov 1e " T he Hound of he Baske~:

.

HElL

tor

11 DO-News 3,4, 13, 15. ABC News 33
11 oo-N ews 8,1 0

Ml&lt;

..:J"UST" k; &gt;W C:.E.i

FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 949-5184

- Ph. 992 ·3993
41 01mo .

4 17 1 mo

'WR AFT!if&lt;l.ml wrrn

ALUMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

LARRY LAVENDER

Searc h

Tomorrow 8. 10, To Be An nounced 33

s·oo-F BI 3, Andy Griff ith 20,33. Mister Roger s' Ne1ghborhQQd '.
20,33, l r onst de 13
"'
5 3D-News 6, Beverl y H1 ll b1llies 8; Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Get
6 30-F !ve Mmutes to Li ve By 4, Ne w s 6. B rb l e An swer s 8;
Smar t 15, E lec Co 33
"
r
Publ ic Af fairs 10; Bl ue R1dge Quartet 13 .
6 oo-News3,4,8,1 0,13,15, A BC News6 , E lec Co 20 , PersonaiWy
6 35-Columbus Today 4
&amp; Behav ioral De v elopm en t 33
6 45-Morning R e por1 3, F armt l m e 10.
6 3D-NBC News 3,4, 15. ABC News 13. Bew•tched 6. CBS News
7 DO-Today 3,4,15; AM Ame e~ ca 6,13, CBS New s 8,10.
8, 10, Zoom 20
B 00-Lasste 6. Capt K angaroo 8; Schoolles 10: Sesam e St J3
7 oo- Truth or Cons 3,4, Bow l mg for Dollar s 6, WCH S Specta~ '
8 3D- Big Valley 6; Popeye 10.
Report 8, Av1al1on Wea ther 20,33, News 10, J1mmy Dilah
8 55-C huck White Reports 10
13; 1 Spyl 5
'
9 DO-AM 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15, Rocky &amp; his Fnends 8, Capt
7 3D-Porter Wagoner J, Pop Goes the Country 4, New Ca nclld
Kangaroo 10; Morn ing w1th D.J. 13
Ca mera 6; Pop Goes the Count r y 8; Black Perspect ive on 'J:le
9 3D- Not For Women Only 3, Dinah 6, Ga llop ing Gourm et 8,
Ne ws 20,33. Tr easu r e Hun t 10. To Tell th e Truth 13
n
N e w Zoo Revue 13
- 8 oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3, 4, 15 N• ghl Sl alker 6, 13, Comedy Special
10·oo-Celebnly Sweepstakes 3,4, 15, Joker's Wild 8 10· Dmah
8,10, Washlngton Week i n ReYiew 20,33; Baseball 4, We-'~1
13
' ,
Get By 8. 10. Wall Street Week 20,33 .
•
:.;
10 3D-Whee l of Fo•tune 3,4,15, Ga.,;bil 8,10
9 00-Rock ford F1l es 3, 15: H ot L Baltimore 6,13, Mo v 1e ' ' Planet
11 DO-H1gh Rollers 3, 4,1S, One Life to L•ve 6, Now You See It
of t he Apes" 8, 10,
M aster p iece Th ea tre 20 . Con sumer
8, 10; E lec Co 20
Sur viv al K1t 33
11 3D-Hollywood Squares 3,6,15, Blan ket y Blanks 13, News 4,
9 30-Qdd Couple 6, 13, Ass ign m ent Amerrcq 33
.. ......
L ove of L1fe 8, 10, Sesa me St 20,33
10 oo-P ol 1ce Wo m a n J, 15, Get Chnst1e Love 6, 13, News 2CJ; ·
11 55-Gr ~_!l a m Kerr 8, Dan I mel's World 10
P a ul Nuchim s 33

, Ph 992·2114. ·

GLEN R.
BISSELL

so 50 Cl ub 4.

a

6 oo-Sunn se Se minar 4; Sunrise Sem ester 10
6 15-E ngllsh 505 3
6 25-Farm Repor t 13

!SMITH NILSON
MOtORS. INC.

Also-Reoairs
R1din9. Trac)o ~ s
498

3,.4 , N ews 13
FRIDAY,APRIL 25, 1975

Radla.lllr.SRt.~l@!!sl

'

FREE ESTIMATES

In Syracuse

RM
H O U SE ,
Bath ,
2
bed r oom s, ga s neat W1th tot
550 So uth Third Ave nu e,
Middlepor t Phone 992 50 78
4 24-3t p

BR I CK hc u se on Seco nd Sf ,
Pom ero y, downt own Su1 t abte
to r l iv in g Qu art er s up stair s,
small b us1n ess do wn, Off 1ce or
h ome
W 1fh1n
w al k1 ng
d J!j t anceof al l st or es Cal l 992
3.489
4 2~ 3t c

1 00- T o morrow

~'l!TI rne largesl
B,.dozer Radlafor
smallest Heater C4re.
,
Nlslhan Big••

· Chain
Precision

l

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

Mobile Homes For Sale

For Rent

HMMo WOIVDeR ....
HOW MU CH RED
TAPE I HAVe TO
GO THFi"OU6H FOR
A GLIMPSE OF THe
GURU HIMSE'LF"

~.YJEL!.,~U..,IO.U t1A66

4 G R AV E lots Me 1gs Mem or y
Ga r dens P hone 949 2 179
4 22 3tp

4 24 6tp
- - - - - - - - - - - - - --.O N E G M C V 6 tr uck With o nly
J U N K a utos, c o~mp le t e and ·
4,2 00 m il es E q u1pped w 1th SEL L yo ur m obil e n ome ror
de li vere d to our ya rd W e PICk
p 1ckw!Ck cam per For d et ail s
ca sh 15 homes w an t ed , 1958
call 992 3953
up a uto bo d 1es and buy all
thru 197 2 m odels P hon e ( 614)
ki nds of sc rap met al s and
4 22 6f p
446 1425 G al li pol iS
1ron Ri d er 's Salvage , St Rt
3 9 781 C
124. R t 4, Porn ero y, Oh.1o
Call 992 5468
1973 12x60 SK YL I N E mob il e
10 17 tic
hom e 2 b edroom a 1r cond ,
carpeted, fue l od fu rn ace ,
CASH pa 1d for al l makes an d ' FUR NI SHE D
apar t me n t,
f u r niS h e-d,
un d er p 1n n1ng
m od el s o f m o b 1te h o m es
ad ults only tn Mid dl ep or t
1n cl ud ed S5, 400 Cal l 992 7048
P hone area code 61i423 953 1
Ph one 992 3874
after 4 p m
1
41 3t fc
3 25 t fc
4 22 4tp

WANTED ol d upr1ght p1anos ,
any cond 1t1on
Pay1ng $10
each F1 r st f loor on l y Wr 1te
and g 1ve d1reci 10ns to W1tten
P1ano co , Box 188 , Sard ts
Oh 10 43946
4 23 61 p

'vuJ f ur n iture. 1ceboxes. b?ass

1973 CUT L ASS S 25 000 ac1U al
m tl es , wh1te w 1th v1nyl to p
B ucket sea t s, stereo , p s ,
p b , lots of ex t ras
Pho ne
( 304 ) 882 2023
4 24 3t c

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

Middleport, Ohio
Phone 992.5W or 992~l

NO, IOOJ I JUST SAI D
KEEP !!1M QJ/I OF
I.MJQ!! TIL.!. THE
Le AVI05 TO
'

WILKINSON
SMALLJ!NGIJII

I

777 Pearl Slreel

Cl "'SE O UT o n n ew Z1g Za g
sewmg ma chm es For se wm ~
s tre tc h f abn cs, buttonhol es,
fan cy d e s1gns , e t c
Pa 1n t
slightl y bl em1 shed Cho1ce of
c a r r y1 n g c ase or se w 1n c 1
stantl S.49 80 ca sh or te rm '· \
ava ilabl e Ph on e 99 2 7755
1
12 18 tf

... .

{A . .. •
I

'COMPANY

\1\0DER N wa l nu t ste r eo r ad 10
B tr ack t ape comb1 nat •on . am
fm rad 10 Bala nce $105 &lt;1 5 or
t er ms Call 992 3965
4 2 1 tfc

307 V B. power st eenng, good G70 w td e ova l t rres, r ad 1o,
slive r g r ey f 1n1sh. a utom at rc tran s., m te nor spo tl ess

WantP.tt To Buy

8-K EXCAVATING

YOL! WANT I S HOULD
CLAMP OFF THIS DUDe
EASY'S SOII&lt; YAI.ASHUtJ ~

SALES&amp; SERV
992-3092

Conslrucllon &amp; Remodel

- -------r-----:,--

Nr ce

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE .

r------------,

JSED pa rt s, F r ye s Tru cK and
Au t o Par ts , Rutlan d, Oh •o
Phon e (614) 742 6094
1

1970 CHEV . IMPALA SPT. SEDAN
$159S
V 8. a u toma t 1c, power steenng &amp; br akes , f actory a 1r, good
w w ttres, r ad m , v m yl mt enor , sand st one f m1sh

Business ServicesJ

our ba1 l tn n 1g h t craw l er s .
la rg e mea l wor ms, w or ms 1 !)titer, Etecntc, Gas, Sewer
lnslolled.
Work
r ed wor ms, b loo d ba 1t. l nd 1a n 1 :l:lnes,
guaranteed.
Joe's Spor t and C B Shop , 308
Page St , M idd leport P hon e
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucks
992 3509
• Limestone &amp; Fill Dirt
4 9 30tc
Commercloi-Resldonllol

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

NOT I CE OF A PPLI CAT IO N
FOR PREL I M I NARY P E RMIT
UNCONSTRUCTEO PRO J ECT
( Ma rc h J l, 1975)

c

~s~ ~~T= t:;;;~~-;;;,-;ve

4 door . loca l car, a 1r condrt1oned , fu l l equ 1pment

YARD SALE
Fr1 day and
Sa turaay , Salem St Rut l and ,
Oh 10 Phone 1.n 3363
4 24 21p

Pro tect No 2751
Oheo Po we r Co mpany l

Mr. andMrs. John Dean, Mr
and Mrs. John Walter Dean
and John Jeremy were Sunday
dmner guests of Mr and Mrs
Kenneth Markins at Racme.
Other guests were Mr and
Mrs. Robert Ried and David,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ternll, all
of Pataskala, Ohio and Mr. and
Mrs. BID Spaun and son,
Shannon , of Pomeroy
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl and
Rodney visited with Mr. Clyde
Harrison at Middleport
recenUy.
Mrs Hazel Arnold had as
recent visitors Mr and Mrs
Ronald McNally and da ughter
of Athens, Mr . and Mrs.
Patnck Williams and family of
McArthur
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal
had as VISitors over the
weekend ;Mr. and Mrs. John
Perdas Jr., Mary and Lisa of
Chambe rsburg, Pa Sunday
visitors were Mr and Mrs
Henry Perdas and son of Portsmouth and Mrs. John Perdas,
Sr , Mr and Mrs Russell Well,
Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Cheviler of
Chester and Mr and Mrs
Roger Young, Wesley and
Yevete, local.
Mrs. Wayne Banks an d
daughter, Stephanie, of Maryla'nd visited with Mr . and Mrs
Roy Br1ckles Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Nev White had
as·recent viSitors Mr and Mrs.
HOward White and family of
Madison, W. Va., Mr and Mrs
Robert Sweanngen and Bobby
West, Milton, Ohio, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold White, Langsville,
Mr. and Mrs Sharon Wbite,
Middleport, Mr and Mrs
Warme White and son, Bern,
W. Va., Mary Lou King and
Geneva King, Kankakee, Dl.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. John Walter Dean and son
were Mr. and Mrs. BiD Spaun
arid son, Shannon of Pomeroy,
Mr. and Mrs. BiD Osborn and
daughter of Long Bottom, Mr
.nd Mrs. Allen Gray of Jackville, Florida

QUALITY

,Pomero)' I
:Motor
C:o.
.
--

10 DO-Dean Mart1n 3, 4, 15
11 DO- News 3,4,8,1 0,13, 15, ABC News 33
11 3D-Johnny Ca r son 3,4, 15; Wide World Spec1 al 13, FBI 6,
Mov ie " The Good Guys and t he Bad Guys" 8, Mov ie " The
B r~dges at Koko pRi " 10; Janak l 33 .
12 3D-Wide World Spee~a l 6

_CAPTAIN EASY

973 H ARLEY Dav Jdson 350 SX.
1,800 m 1les, $600 Ph one 985
3341 between 8 a m and 6
p m
.4 15 I 2tp

Yard Sale

-roR YO u r ,.-011 of M.nk
Cosmetics Phone BROWN'~
992 5113 ~
1 7 tfc

Kingsbury

OF

L ARG E yard sal e 706 M1 ll St
on M1ddlepor1 Hdl J ust abov e
th e R C Plant F r 1day and
Sa t urday 9 ttll 5 PhOne 992
3873
5 23 31 C

____________ _ Wanted To Buy

PARASO L Bout1que announ ces
spec1als of 10 percent off on
al l frost1ng f r om Apr 11 15
t hrough JO Located next to
t he Skate A Way Roll1ng
R,..,k
P h one
985 41.41
Operator Sandra Kerns
.4 1J 12tc

2 SIGNS

N O SHOO T ING match Co rn
Ho l low G un Clu b un t il further
no l1 ce F lsh tng l1me 1s here
&lt;1 ~2 51c

-

Notice

For Sale

Auto Sales

GUN SHOOT , Saturday , Aprtl
26. 7 p m Mile Hil l Road
F ac tory cho k ed guns on l y
Spon sored by th e Racme F 1re '
Dept
4 2~ 4tc

12.0&lt;hJackpot 3,15; Password 61.'_3; Bob Braun 's
News 8,10
12.3Q-Biank Check 3, 15; Spill Second 6, 13,

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

.

--

�.. ~

10 -: fhe Daily Sentinel, Midclleporl :Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April24. 1975

Meigs, Point in no contest
POINT PLEASANT - .The
baseball game at Harmon
Field started under lowering
skies when Coach Don Wolfe's
Meigs Marauders had brought

.

·-·- ·

-.

___

,·

Falcons fall to
score of 9-6

House passes wet voting day

th:~~~~~d::rer~~h~~a :J

WOMEN'S

Area league is proposed

M

THOUSANDS OF AMERICAN A!&gt;{D VIE TN AM ESE
EVACUEES poured into the U. S, military base on Guam today

~ ~~~:!~~t~t~~~~~~~~d~~~~:~ ;;;w~~ r:i;:~d movement

M
th
2 000 v· tn
f
d bo t JOO
Ameri":aens .:~ved at th~eG:a%es."apr~~u~r'~g."n: inaa ~-hour
period ending this morning, Military and civilian transport
planes droned in almost hourly'. The ratio of Veitnamese to
Americans aboard the flights was running at about :!().to· I.
Guam Gov. Ricardo BordaUo predicted as many as 130,000
Vietnamese refugees could be brought to Andersen Air base in .
the next few weeks.

DETROIT - WITHTHEffi MID-APRIL SALES at a 14-year
IDeow a~d 18 per cent below last year's already depressed levels,
tro1t's auto e.xecutives are beginning to wonder when- or if , 1 sprmg
· upturn w1'II begm..
,
th e tra dil wna
dm
'
ed
Wedn
d
.
,
Ind ust ry execu IlVoS a 1\t
es ay that they are
, ted tn
' th e Apr1'I ll·•u
~ per formance because deliveries .in
disappotn
the first 20 days of the month were 2 per cent below the first ·20
days of March. The normal trend would have put the April level
up 4 per cent. "We don't really expect a strong spring upturn in
April, but these sales aren't even keeping us up with the normal
tempo," one industry analyst said. " But we'll just have to sweat
it out for one more period to see what happens before we write off
spring.''

;~

There will be a meeting at 7 p.m. Friday, April 20 at
ij: lite Middleport Ffre House to establish a league and rules

t

;(~

j;i

I :::n;n~ {i':l~~=~~~~l ~":.':n:~e~=~~!:!:: .i!l

.
···· season.
:;:
ro date, comritittees showing interest are Middleport,
·:·: four teams ; Rutland, two teams; Harrisonville, one
~1~~ team; Salem Center one team, and Cheshire, one team.
:;:; . All interested representatives are Invited. Anyone
:;:; having questions concerning the meeting may caU
j;j; Richard Hovatter, 992-2606 or Milford HyseU, 992-7177. .

s

E

SS.QQ

MEN'S LEISURE SUITS

Sizes small, medium, large and extra large.
Solid colors ... stripes · plaids. An excellent
selection. This sa le includes our entire stock.

l!l

SALE PRICES

;·&gt;

~

~i

: :l

Mens Long S,leeve

Blue Chambray Work Shirts
Neck sizes 14'h to 17. Two button through pockets
. long tails. Regular price $ 4.95 .,
Special Sale Price

The Mt'ddleport emergency
squad was called to Leading
Creek Road at 3. 49 p. m.
·
Wednesday for Esther Carson
who had nwnbness in her lower
•
1
d
egs an
arms and was having 1·-·-·-·-·-·-·--·-·-·-----~~~~~~""-··-·-·-·-.f
d'ff.
t tc u1 ty breathing. She was
taken to the Holzer Medical
Ce te
n r,
At 5:01p.m. the squad went
to 137 Pearl St , for James Sears
who was having difficulty
A good selection of sizes and all at sale prices
breathing. He was taken to
Friday and ~aturday .
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted. At
18.98 Lee Fisher Stripe Coveralls
Sate 14.99
!2 :30p. m. the fire department
-14.95 Big Ben Fisher Stripe Coveralls Sale 12 .39
went to the Leading Creek area
12.95 Big Ben Short Sieeve· Green or Blue
to extinguisH a brush fire .
Coveralls (Jump Suits) . . . . . Sale 10.39

2 f Or $8 99

SALE! MEN'S COVERALLS

"LEE" WORK UNIFORMS

Weather

BOYS KNIT SHIRTS

Property

Regular Sun Glasses - Clip·Ons. Mens womens and childrens styles. A big
selection . Regular price $2.00 to $8.50.

SALE

1f2 PRICE
Friday· Saturday Sale!

ss9.95 Hoover Custom Convertible

UPRIGHT SWEEPERS
4 level carpet heights -lleadlight.

•69.95
14.95 Cleaning tool kits, Sale 11.00, for
th;s Sweeper.
Spe.cial Purchase!

Lawn Boy Lawn Mowers
19 inch cut · fingertip adjustable height - easy to
start · famous Lawn Boy two cycle engine.
Sale Price

'119.95
On Sale Home Furnishings Annex

.,

AREA .RUGS

:

"BIG BAD ~
MAMA"

TO

~

1

BOYS FASHION JEANS

**

KILL''

•*

Mason Drive-In Theatre

Quints appear .

*
**
*

in good shape

!1

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

4.49
2.99
2.29
2.2,

'ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
ON MECH.ANIC STREET
.,

Good selection of home freezers. Upright ·and
Chest freezers. Whirlpqol and Revco makes, 6,
15,20, 22, 25cu . ft. capacity. Easy way to beat the
high cost of meats, fruits and vegetables.

*********************************'

At the Warehouse · Mechanic Street

WORK DUNGAREES

2 PAIR '11.99

20%

OFF

·s12.95

ON

Sizes 36 to 46 · Slim fitting. 14 oun~e· blue denim.
True western styling . 4 pockets.

PEDWIN
For Men &amp; Young Men

'9.99
Lee 14.49 Blue 'Denim !f\'estern Jackets
Sale Price 11.99

CONNIES &amp; MISS AMERICA
For The Girts

Chapman's

L

All with easy to start Briggs and Stratton
engines. 3, 3112 and 5 horsepower. Choose belt or
cha,in drive. Sturdy construction . Stop at the
warehouse right away and select the Roto· Tiller
/hat's right for you .

SALel NU DEW

OUTSIDE HOUSE.PAINT
Special purchase · while oil base paint . Spreads
eas1ly.
.
Special
Sale Price
•.

'5.95 GALLON
Warehouse- MeChanic Street

'

·THE MEIGS INN

POMEROY

I

.-

.

IN POMEROY

•

at

e

•

enttne

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
VOL. XXVII

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORl OHIO

NO, 9

PRICE 15'

FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1975

Minh wanted to
ask for peace

('

SAIGON (UP!) The South Vietnamese
National Assembly today was called into special
session Saturday to urge appointment of Gen . Duong
Van "Big" Minh as a premier to negotiate a ceasefire with the Communists. Minh already has turned
down the post.
·
U. S. Ambassador Graham Martin and French
Ambassador Jean Marie Merillon conferred
frequently with President Tran Van Huong, apparently trying to persuade him to step down in favor of Minh. Both the Viet Cong and Hanoi have
.]aid_!!uong is not acceptable.
Minh is a proponent of peace, defending the capi tal would
GE'I"''1NG THE FACTS - Rio Grande Commtlllity
neutrality arid cooper'ation have little chance of stopping
College Day was obServed Thursday at Meigs High School
with representatives of !lle college passing out information
with the Communists and the an aii-&lt;Jut North Vietnamese
and explaining to prospective students what the coUege is all
Communists have indicated he and VietCong drive on Saigon .
about and how to gain admission. Shown above, l.r, are Dean
would be acceptable.
U. S. planes flew almost
The North Vietnamese and hourly from Saigon to the
Viet Cong expressed in- Pacific island of Guani in an
creasing annoyance at th o accelerated evacuation of
delays but were holding off'the Americans and Vietnamese.
i4 ,divisions ringing Saigon.
American officials said the
Only minor battlefield action nwnber of U, S. government
)\'aS reported today, Com- workers in South Vietnam was
munist probing actions 35 expected' to drop to 500 by
miles west of Saigon.
nightfall - well below the 1,000
The Viet Cong delegation in target set by President Ford.
A public fund drjve was
At first il was though! that
Paris issued a virtual
The Federal Aviation opened today to help meet amputation
might
be
ultimatum to Huong today to · Agency ordered Pan American hospital and medical expenses necessary. However, doc tors
resign. It said it will not do World Airways to halt flights to of three.year.old Ryan Scott at the Himtington hospital have
business with Huong and his Saigon because of the danger. Jeffers, Laurel Cliff, who set out to save Ryan's foo l ami
aides who, it said, merely want British-run Cathay Pacific suffered a severely mangled leg. If successful, plastic
to prolong the war. It said it Airlines halted earlier in the left foot and leg in a power · surgery would be performed
will hold peace talks with a new week and China Air Lines was . mower accident Monda y later.
Saigon government only if it expected to follow this evening.
Ryan's father , David Jeffers,
breaks off all dependence on weekend.
No one knows how the ac- has worked on the police
ll)e United States, demands the
Pilots of U, S. Air Force cident occurred. Ryan was departments of Middleport and
..acuation or all American planes taking part in the found with his foot and leg Pomeroy (currently with the
mllitary, rejects U.S. ·aid and evacuation have reported under the mower.
latter) and earlier had served
bows to other conditions.
receiving ground fire from
The lad was rushed by family in the department of Sheriff
It said it will settle for Communist gunners around car to Veterans Memorial Robert Hartenbach, ·
nothering less than a full Saigon's Tan Son Nhut Air Hospital where a doctor
There is no insurance to help
compliance with the set of Base, but there were no reports worked on him several hours
demands.
' of planes being hit.
and the next morning had him
Military strategists said the
Most battlegr01•ods around transferred to a specialist at
50,000 government soldiers Saigon were quiet.
St. Marys Hospital in Hun•
tington, W. Va, by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad.

' ' 1ECOLLEGE

S. Brown, Director of Mml"',.. Mid llectlrda, talldng to
Phil Ohlinger, a senior at Meigs, and Duane McLaughlin, a
sophomore, converses with Terry Osborne, is the Field
Admissions Officer.

Public invited to help
save child's foot, leg

(N;~~~~~kftl

Foote's sales,

earmngs up

rost

'I'

pay the hospital costs which
are expected to run into the

thousands of dollars before
Ryan recovers.
Residen~' wishing to con·
tribute to a fund for the child to be used for the hospital
exgenses j nvolved - may mail
donations to Pomeroy Village
Hall, Attention Dorinda
Nardei, Pomeroy. Checks
should be made payable to the
"Ryan Jeffers Hospital Fund.''
Names of contributors will be
listed regularly in The Daily
Sentinel.

RYAN JEFFERS.

Panic threatened

•
. . STOCKHOLM -WEST GERMAN AMBASSADOR Dietrich
Stoecker said t~y the six leftist terrorists who seized.tbe West
~n Embassy 'Thursday executed Conunercial Attache
EXTON, Pa, - Foote
Heinz W, Hildergaart when they-tecarltl!d the Bonn government
had rejected all of their demands. Five of the terrorists were Mineral Company, which
captured early today as they tried to flee the embassy which they . operates a plant at Graham
had turned into an Inferno by exploding dynamite on the top floor .Slaton, W. Va., reported sales
of the four-otory building. A sixth terrorist conunitted suicide by of $31,730,000 during the 1975
first quarter compared with
· $Hltlng himself in the mouth.
·
·:·.~ niree persons died in the 12-hour siege; one terrorist and two $23,!39,000 during \he same
'
German officials. 'J'he terrorists executed the West German period in 1974.
First
quarter
earnings
iniidlltary attache, Lt. Col. Andreas von Mirbach, shortly after
creased
to
·
$4,079,000,
Qiey shot their \vay Into the yellow brick building with sub.Jnlichlrie guns. Hildergaart's body was found today. in the rubble.,. equivalent to 54 cents per
·,
'The guninen, members of West German urban guerrilla common sbare after payment
ioup, aetzed 12 hostages and demanded the release of 26 of the preferred dividend. 1974
nrdllsts held in West German jails, payment of more than earnings on a comparable
.00,000 in ransom and.a Luftansa 7rrl jet to fly them to a place of basis were $1,090,000, equal to
llleir choice. The Bonn government rejected aU their demanda, 12 cents per common sbare.
W. T. Barrett, presiden't and
WASHINGTON- FEDERAL ENERGY CHIEF Frank G. . chief executive officer, said
z8'rb say a strip mine control legislation before Congress would . although first quarter earnings ·
!Wee extra oil ImpOrts coSting $2.3 billion, wipe out up to 36,000 were at an all time high, the
mining jobs and
consumers $:i3:i .million in new taxes and rate of shipments to the steel, .
higher prices.
,
.
aluminum and foundry in. In addition, he says, tbe strict environmental measures .. dustries has declined in recent
puaed by the House and Senate would block the United States weeks, which is likely to result
tram tapping between 9arxl53 per cent of its total137 billion tons . in lower levels of earmngs
of known coal reserves. Joining a chorus of opposition raised by during the next several
ccW!l operators, Appalachian mine~s arxl President Ford, Zarb months.
nleaJed a letter Thursday to Rep. Morris Udall, D-l\riz. It S&amp;id
llie strip mine blll8 now before a House-Senate conference
TIME CHANGED
committee threaten U. S. energy independence efforts and
The Meigs High School Band
lhould be changed.
,
Concert this evening,will begin
.'' "WASHINGTON-REPUBLICANSSAYABILLdesignedtO ' at 7:30 rather than 8 p.m.,
(Cantlnuetl on page 10)
· · Director Dwight Goins . said.

a

SPECIAL SALE PRICES FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY· 9:30 A.M. TO 8 P.M.

TO ENTERTAIN YOU AT

PH. 992·3629 ,

ROTO TILLERS

WRANGLER BLUE DENIM

WESTERN JACKETS ·

ALL SHOES

BIG SELECTION .

the water would stay 'way from their door .

. of Union Ave., was surrounded by water. The family Is

and Mrs. Ben Eblin, whose home ill

located at the bottom of Union Ave. near SR 7 bypass, were
. stranded when their home was completely surrounded by

Uldblll Cll tile fnllt Jllftll 1111!1111 1111 ... WOIItiiiGp, IIIII

'l'RE cmnoN P'AUUt IICIIne allo loeltled•t tile baaam

o

t

"BORN

~-Mr.

·SALEI
, KITCHENRY COORDINATES

Special Sale - Toaster Covers · Can Opener
Covers . Mixer Covers . Barbecue Mitts . Coffee
M k
c
A
F
B a ·1er c overs ·p prons · · ry Pan Covers .
rot er overs · ot Holders. Regular price $1 .29
t
59
o $4. .
While They Last

-·.

,,

Y2 PRICE

Regular 5.99 Size .30x50
·
Regular 3.99 · Size 24x40
Regular ·2.99 Size 24x42
Regular 2.99 Bath Mat Set - - - - · ·

aDOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM ~ Transfers
25-26-27

--

SUN GLASSES

Solid colors and colorful stripes. 10 per cent
polyesters and blends.

SHOE'S
POMEROY, ,OHIO

...

~

S49.99

*********************************

.'

__

!:l t-·-·-----~~~----~-·-·-·--·-·----·-·-·-·---+-·-·------·-·---·---·----·--·-1

Squad called out

8 indicted

:

,

~·=·

,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,~,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,'-'''~''''''''''"'~'''~''"''::::::??

Ernest F. Weber
fp
o omeroy dies

2

=·~
~

HOSPITAL
NEWS

•

..... .....

ORDINATES

WW
rnest . eber, 86, Second
p
Wednesday
att.,theomeroy,
Holzer died
Medical
Center.
The son of \he Ia te Henry and
Mary Ridenour Weber, he was
born April 1, 1889. A sister,
Naomi Allen, also preceded
him in death. Mr. Weber was a
member of the Keno Church of
Christ.
,Surviving are three sons,
NEW ORLEANS - CLAUDWS JAMES BIESICK testified
Wednesday he pusheq his bride into the path of a car as part of a Allen, Akron; Don , Topeka,
scheme to collect $350,000 in insurance benefits. Giesick, 27, said Kan ., and Darrell, Fort Wayne,
he married the former masseuse so he and Samuel Corey could Ind.; a daughter, Ada Lynds,
San Mateo, Calif.; 10 grand·
murder her and share the insurance.
chil
dren and 10 greatGiesick was the' proseCution's star wiiness against Corey, a
grandchildren.
preacher and former massage parlor operator from San Antonio,
•
Funeral services will be at 2
Tex., charged with first.degree murder for the Jan. 16, 1974,
p.m. Sunday at the Ewing
honeymoon death of Patricia Ann Giesick.
According to Giesick·, Corey masterminded the murder Funeral Home with burial in
TWO DAY SALE!
scheme and drove the hit and run car that struck Mrs. Giesick on the Ridenour Cemetery at
Chester. Clifford Smith will
a suburban road. Mrs. Giesick was once an employe at Corey's
officiate. Friends may call at
massage parlor.
the funeral home after 7 p.m.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Friday. In lieu of fiowers,
ADMITTED . - Virginia
Famou s Lee Tech Twill work pants and matching shirts.
friends may contribute to the Hayman, Racin e; Arthur
Permanent press . Very well made. Perf ect f i tting.
(Continued from page I)
Pants in sizes 29 to 44 waist .
Keno
Church
of
Christ.
Stobar
t,
Racine
;
Gloria
MEIGS THEATRE
Shirts
In sizes 141f7 to 17.
Betres, 54, Butler, Pa.; Donald
Reynolds, Pomeroy; Alma
Ton ight , April 24
L. Connors, 40, a truck driver
Rupe, Rutland; Brent PatNOT OPEN
Lee 9.98 Work Pants . . . . . . . . . . Sale 7.49
who allegedly shipped the
terson, Racine; James Sears,
dynamite, also of Butler, Pa.;_- Showers likely tonight, lows Midclleport; Carolyn Reeves,
Lee 8.98 Matching Lang Sleeve Shirts
Sale 6.49
Anthony A. Just, 48, Green· in the low 60s. Cloudy, chance Pomeroy.
Lee 7.98 ,M atching Short Sleeve Shirts Sale 5.49
·sburg, Pa.; John W. Shaw, 28, of showers Friday, highs in lite
DISCHARGED - Dana
Fri. , Sat.and Sunday
Pittsburgh, and Michael J. low 60s. Probability of Glassburn, Betty Ferguson,
THE WHITE DAWN
Tice, 22, Boyers, Pa..
precipitation 80 per cent today, Wilford Roush, Lillian Lee.
SALE!
(Technicolor)
Agents
said
they
were
still
70
per cent tonight, 50 per cent
Rated " R"
Show slarts 7: 00 p.m.
seeking Albert R. Coffee, 43, Friday.
and Dennis Charles Tiche, 28,
Pleasani'Valley Hospital
president of a chemical
This sa le includes our entire stock' of boyS knit shirts . tank
DISCHARGES - Belinda
company in Boyers, Pa .
top
s · crew neck shirts - numbers 5-hir ls . footbal l shirts. Mesh
Bush, Letart ; Brady Gay,
weaves and collared st yles.
Point Pleasant; Mrs. James
Si zes 6 to 20
Lee , Clifton; Mrs, Robert
Freda Wells, W. M. Wells to Hawley and son, Gallipolis;
Sale 2.49
Boys 2.95 Knit Shirts
William Foster Wells, Deborah Bill Campbell, Hartford ;
Sale 2.99
Boys 3.95 Knit Shirts
Bernard Romine, Rutland·' .
Marie Wells, Parcel, Olive.
FRI-SAT-SUN APR.
Sale 3.99
Boys 4.94 Knit Shirts
Lillian J . Triplett, dec. , to Lisa Dudding, New Haven;
Franklin G. Triplett, Nina Rae. Rollings, Point Pleasant;
Louise Haddox, Dorothea Jane Steven Patterson, Point
SALE!
Hendricks , Jo Ann White, Pleasant; Val Bailey, Point ·
Pleasant; Oden Austin, Point
Cert. of Trans., Middleport.
....Ang w Dl cken ':o on
....~
Eugene Durham, Marie Pleasant.
JtW•11iam Shatner
Durham to Columbia Gas
Wilmd gav e her daught ers
r ·v~"r tlhn1g .. their look s ... Jt. Trans. Corp., R·W, Rutland.
An excellent selection. Sizes 8 to 18 in regulars
lh P 11· lovC' r '&gt;
and the lt Garrett A. Circle, Mattie M.
and slims. Solid colors and plaids.
Jt
t n m r&gt; o! 111C'Ir li ves .
Circle to Dale F. Smith, Bonnie
Rat ed R
I. Smith, 26% A., Sutton.
·
BOYS 5.95 JEANS - . . .
SALE 4.69
Franklin G. Triplett,
. CINCINNATI (UP!) BOYS
6.95
JEANS
·
.
SALE
5.29
Frances Triplett, Nina Had- Newborn quintuplets were still
BOYS
7.95
JEANS
.
.
.
.
SALE
5.99
dox , Chester N. Haddox, not out of the "first 72 hour
&lt;
:
MASON , WEST VIRGINIA
Dorothea J. Hendricks, Albert critical period" today, but
K. Hendricks, JoAnn· White, to reports from doctors on the
Mens Blue Denim
Noah
Chasteen,
Leafy health of the infants continued
Cbasteen, Lot, Middleport.
to be positive.
Archie E, Lee, June P. Lee to
ATTENTIONI AREA
"The babies are doing as
Dicky J . Morris, Cindy Mae weU as can be expected,"
Morris, 100 A., Sutton.
physicians at General Hospital
Sizes 32 to 44 waist. 10 ounce blue denim. triple
United States of Am., Far- reported late Wednesday .
stitched. Big ' Ben by the makers of Wrangler .
mers Horne Ad., to Gary D. "They are better than last
Hamon, Carol E. Hamon, 1.467 night and Improving .~' There
A., Scipio,
·
was nothing to indicate the
J, Dillon Cross, Ethel M. lltree girls and two boys should
Cross, Addie E. Petrel · to not survive although doctors
Lee 9.98 Blue Denim Work Dungarees
Please tell us when you mi!ke your purchase.
Sizes 29 to ~6 . . . · :~. . . . Sale price 7.89
Frederick J. Stobart, Earlene empbasized the f!Tst few days
Stobart, Corrective Deed,
were !fie most critical for 1-·-·-----~~~~~------·-·---------·-4
Lebanon .
small, premature quintuplets.
Sale! Mens and Young Mens

:*

......

in Briefs

• •

:.:-:

!;
*

'

.'

-~-~-·-·-~·-·-·--·-·-·-·-·---- -""---~--.,.·-·-·-·-·-·--·--·....:,_,,_.

SALE PRICES

:,

-

.

.

ELBE.R·FELDS IN 'POMEROY
Friday and Saturday ~ale

Buffalo by

a 7 and 4 record to town to face Meigs came back and with the
David Rawson 's 7 and 3 Big . aid of four Big Blacks errors
Blacks. ·
forged 'into a 6-2 lead . It was
Meigs gilt two early runs, .then raining and blowing.
Poor defensive play caused
then PPHS tied it at 2 to 2.
In high school baseball, five the ·Falcons a victory despite
innings must be played before · sonw fine offensive slugging
a game is official in West again st Buffalo Wednesday. 9Virginia.
II.
The question was, could Tim
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The John A. Galbraith, R·Mawnee,
Eleven errors were charged
MAIN STORE - HOME FURNISHING$ - ANNEX - MECHANit
Ohio House has passe.d and cleared Wednesday on a 55·39 , Cundiff, the Meigs pitcher, get
STREET WAREHOUSE OPEN 'THESE. SALE, D.AYS 9•.30 TO 8 DM
sent to the Senate legislation vote, with 50 required for the three outs necessary in the ngainst the r' alcons including
authorizing the sale of approvaL "Today, we have an bottom of the fifth to make it three
ftve inin the
third inning and p~
....
.........,.,,'!",_,_,__.__
the first.
alcoholic beverages on election opportunity to strike a blow for official. Joey Gleason led .off
day ; brushing aside warnings it liberty," said Galbraith. who with a home run shot over dead
co
·
MEN'S T SHIRTS
Mirlr6o MQUatAicRT$59.95
would lead to "buying votes a uthorized legislation in the center for his third straight hit. wus charged with the loss,
with booze" and "stealing past repealing Ohio's Sunday It was now 6-3, Jim Tatterson gave up five walks in the three
WITH POCKETS
PRESSURE
elections'' .
walked, Charles Perry drilled innings, He was replaced in
This sale includes our eotir-e stock. - Famous
"blue laws."
The bill. sponsored by Rep.
a two bagger to the deep left the fourth inning· by Kevin
maker . Slacks· Tops · Vests · Jackets · Blouses .
CANNERS
. t s. Some WI' fh ma t c h 1ng
'
&lt;
Sizes smalL med ium, large
Sk 1r.
field corner~ Tatterson scoring Camp who went t,he rest of the
s h oris.
and e)(tra large. So l id
to make it 6-4.
Holds 7 quart jars or 10
way 1n a fine relief effort
Junior Sizes 5· to 15
colors . black. navy blue,
pints or 26 half pints.
It couldn't be completed, and allowing no runs on two hits.
Misses Sizes 6 to 20
green. lig h1 blue, red,
Get ready now for canning
the score reverted to the four
One of the bright moments
Stout Sizes 32 to 36
mai ze. Regular pr ice $2.95.
(Continued from page I)
this
summer.
innings, and no contest.
for the Falcons came in the
Sale Price
making negotiating concessions.
s ixt~ inning with Gold"~erry
' "There is a definite holdup in the supply of weapons from the
and Lewis both on base; Rick
For· .
NOW YOU KNOW
United States," Peres told students at Tel Aviv University
Thompson comin g off the
The
gian
t
robber
crab
of
lhe
'Wednesday, "We must concern ourselves that this 'does not
Pacific subsists on fallen beneh wrapped a home-run
become an embargo." Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin told an
over the press box.
Sale! Cool· Ray Pillaroid
Friday and Salurday Sale!
cpconuts . ·
. audience in Jerusalem, however , relations between Israel a nd
and Foster Grant
the 1Jnited States are not at the crisis stage.
~:;;::;:::;:::::::::;:::::;:::;:;::~~=;~:i:::;:i8i:~:;:i:i:~!~:!:O::;;:;;;:;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:::~:;:;;::;:;:;~:;:?.i8~::8i:~:~:?.:::
Co)
" It is rather a disagreement about who 'is more right," he ·.•:·
said.
@

News.

'

By CHARLES R. SMITH

SAIGON (UP!) - South
Vietnamese streamed into an
evacuation center at Saigon's
Tan Son Nhut Air Base today
but there weren't enough
planes to handle them all.
Officials ·feared panic.
,
U.S. Air Force planes made
only 22 flights during the past
24 hours, ,down from 28 the
previous day. The usual backlog of about 1,()()() persons
awaiting evacuation appeared
· to be close to 5,000 at midmorning today.
•'•This place is getting so
·tense it could blow at any
minute," one U.S. official
working on the evacuation
·
program said.
A Ford administration of'
ficial in Washington said about
5,000 evacuees were being
flown daily to Guam, a tiny
u.s. island in the Western
Pacific. Most of them were
· Vietnitniese.
· On Guam, U.S. officials said
refugees were arriving at the
rat'e of 400 an hour, severely
taxing military facilities there.
By midday, 12,215 refugees,
the majority of them Vietnamese, had arrived from both
Saigon and the Philippines,
U.S. military. authorities
worked around-the-clock to
build a tent city to shelter up to
,, ~

50,000 newcomers, but'the city
was not expected to be completed for another day.
About 50 doctors and 300
medical corpsmen stood by to
monitor the physical condition
of lite refugees.
. Of more than 6,000
Americans in South Vietnam
before the airlift began, only ·
1,6111 remained Wednesday. A
u.s. Embassy source in Saigon
said the numbet of American
govenment workers in. the
country wouid be· down to 500
today.
A U,5, official at Tan Son
Nhut said that because of the
shortage of planes passengers

School money .is
distributed here
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferg~son 's office distributed
$41,926,463.29 to Ohio's 612 city,
exempted village and "local
school districtS in April.
Amounts received by the
lcical districts after deductions
for retirement include :
Eastern Local, $41,525.87;
Meigs Local, $110,757.16, and
Southern, $40,098.12 for a total
of $192,38Ll5. The allotment to
the county board of education
including a direct allotment of
$5,641.18 totaled $10,362.62,

were being packed' into the
Cl41 Starlifter and C130
Hercules transports.
"We're now ~ying- to get at
least 200 people on each flight
by strapping 'em to the floor,"
he said.
Ford administration officials
said , however , there were

wales- In 1b0111U Fork Creek due to the heavy rains that fell
Thursday. Members of Pomeroy's ER squad went to tbe aid
of the couple in a boat.

Flash·· flood
hits rural
areas·· hard
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Three Meigs County elementary schools were
closed today as the result of high water that still
covered roads from flash flooding which struck the
county Thursday afternoon. School buses were
stranded, some in rural areas carrying undelivered
children. Others were unable to leave schools, the
last children departing for hom€ about 8:30 p.m.
Especially hard hit by the flash flooding was the
Western part of the county with the Rutland Community suffering the worst losses.
However, the public responded beautifully to t~e
situation and there wet,:e no accipents 6r loss of lives
because of the flooding. which became increasingly
worse during the afternoon.
Closed today were the Rutland, Salem Center
and Harrisonville Elementary Schools .
Rutland Mayor Gene Thompson reported that
many homes and businesses on Main, Larkins and
Salem Sts. in Rutland had water in them, some as
much as four feet. Several cars on Salem St. were
caught in the flood . The post office held two feet of
water and the basement of the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Canaday was damaged by the flood waters,
the mayor said.
.
Mayor Thompson said that their homes. Students stranded
"old timers" had advised him were fed at the schools and.lite
lbat it was the most water the last of them left about 8:30 at
town of Rutland has had since the junior high.
"The public responded
lbe 1937 flood.
Many
residents
were beautifully to the situation,"
evacuated from their homes in George Hargraves, superinRutland. Jeff Snowden, Gene tendent of the district, and
Ellis , Perry Kennedy and other administrators said. Not
Jackie Hall operating large only were people helping in
trucks which they own , on a many directions to get the
voluntary basis, worked some children home but many
12 hours In evacuating a telephoned, volunteered to take
nwnber of families and helping stranded youngsters into their
in getting school children who homes for the night There
were stranded at the school to were many offers of food,
llteir homes or to parents who blankets, sleeping bags and
waited on the other side of flood other items to help out.
waters. Furniture was left in Hargraves commended
many of the homes which had residents and school personnel
water in them because the for their response.
Hargraves said that at 12:39
water came so fast and there
p.m.
efforts were being made .
was such a quantity of it.
Students were stranded at to begin picking up students
Sa'lem Center and the when it was indicated that a
Harrisonville Schools in ad- flash flood might he going to
dition to the Rutland School , take place . At litis point,
and in the transportation of however, it was found that
some students who must even some of the busses were
change busses problems were stranded. Due to the comencountered at points of plicated system of busing in the
changing. School personnel · district with one bus serving In
instances several
were on .the job in some in- some
schools,
it was, impossible to
stances untillO p.m. Thursday
beat the fast rising waters.
night.
There were many Stories
At first there were some 400
students at the several schools, circulating of just how various
but little by little, the nwnber residents coped with their
of stranded youths was particular problems during the
reduced as plans progressed flood . Some parents waded
for getting small nwnbers to
(Continued on page 10)

eno ugh aircraft to handle
IO,OOOrefugeesa day if the U.S.
Embassy in Saigon could clear
them. As many as 130,000
refugees could eventually be
evacuated.
But Pentagon officia:ls in
Washington said Conununjst
forces have moved surface .to
air missiles almost within
Danny Smith, Jr., a nine
range of Saigon, threatening · year old, Rl. I, Guysville,
· lift.
youth drowned 'Thursday in the
the atr
· ,
Middle Branch of Shade River,
· Uxli Twp., Athen~ Coimty,
near the Athens·Meigs line.
The Athens County .Sheriff's
Cloudy, cooler tonight, lows
Department
reported that they
in the low 40s. Sunny Saturday,
received
a
call
at 9 p.m . Thurshighs in the mid 60~.
day
that
a
boat
had capsized
· Probability of precipitation· 40
per cent today, 20 per 'cent and a man and small boy were
tonight and near zero Satur- hanging ontO tree branches.
The river is surrounded on
day.
each side by 40 foot cliffs.
Danny was in the boat along
NOW YOU KNOW
Hubert Hwnphrey served as with his father, Danny Smith,
acting president for 68 minutes Sr. The father made it to ·shore
in November , 1966, when but apparently the boy lost hold
President Lyndon Johnson was of the tree branch and current
anesthetized during an swept him down stream.
r Dragging operations began
operation.

Boy, 9, drowned

Weather

•

.immediately; continued all
night arid are In operation ·at
the moment. As of 10:30 a.m.
today the body had not been
recovered. The Chester E·R
' unit was on the scene until
after 3 a.m.
Members of the Athens ,
County Sheriff's Deparlment,
Athens County Sheriff Paul
Brown, Meigs ColJilly Sheriff
Robert C. Harlenbach and
members of his department,
lite Pomeroy E·R Squad, at the
scene !rom 10:57p.m.untiU:36
a.m. today, the Chester E-R
Squad . and SEOEMS all
assisted.
No reason was given as ·to
,.;hy the boy and his lathes-'
we're in the boat.

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