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,.

32.-

The Sunday pmes - Sentinel, Sunday, Aori127. !975

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L.
I
.
I

1~
I.
I~'

Dateline
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.G8 ll"M

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i·Tuppers Plains area leiter ~ Elmer Jones has
1
I
realtor chief job
;:~

·II

Tuppers Plains is a vil'tml) .Jim Bailey,

+++

+++
HERE, in par\, is the resolution honoring Mr. and Mrs.
Rees :
• WHEREAS, The members of the Senate of the !11th General
&lt;\85embly of Ohio wish to take this opportunity to extend wellctrserved recognition to Mr. and Mrs. Don Rees of Gallia County
upon the memorable and auspicious occasion of their retirement
from public service; and
'. WHEREAS, Mrs. Rees has long been employed by the Gallia
County Health Department as Clerk..-egistrar of Vital Statistics
while Mr. Rees has been associated for many years as an appraiser and weights and measures inspector with· the County
Auditor's Office. In their professional capacities they have been
dedicated ; loyal employees and have provided-many services to
the citizens of Gallia County; and
WHEREAS, During their distinguished careers they have
performed their numerous duties and responsibilities with the
highest degree of efficiency and the utmost competence, thereby
setting an outstanding example which earned them the respect
and admiration of ever,yone with whom they worked ; and . ·
WHEREAS, Not content to take a passive role, but willing to
(9il constructively for the betterment of mankind, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Rees have dedicated much of their lives to the service of
others and this praiseworthy service certainly represents one of

the many building blocks that contribute to Ohio's secure
foundation of self-government; therefore be it
RESOLVED, That we, the members of the Senate of the
111th General Assembly of Ohio, in adopting this Resolution,
wish to extend our best wishes to Mr. and Mrs. Don Rees on their
retirement and, in so doing, salute two of Ohio's finest citizens.
Mr. and Mrs. Dickey's resolution reads:
WHEREAS, The members of the Senate of the 111th GeneraL
Assembly of Ohio take great pleasure in honoring Mr. and Mrs.
Morton I. Dickey of Gallia County upon the momentous and
auspicious occasion of their retirement from public service; and
WHEREAS , Morton Dickey worked in the Sheriff's
Department for twelve years prior to his twenty year tenure as
Gallia County Auditor. During his service ac Auditor his staff
quadrupled and the operating budget increased from $300,000 to
three million dollars. As county government has grown to meet
the expanding needs of our citizenry , men like Morton Dickey
have provided the leadership and flexibility to meet these
challenges; and
, WHEREAS. As Settlement Clerk in the Court. House for
nineteen years, Lora Dickey has performed her numerous duties
and responsibilities witl! U!e highest degree of competence,
thereby setting an outstanding example which earned her the
respect and admiration of everyone with whom she worked; and
WHEREAS, Not content to take a passive role, but willing to
..toil constructively for the betterment of mankind, Mr . and Mrs.
Morton Dickey have dedicated much of their lives to the service
of others and this praiseworthy service certainly represents one
of the many building blocks that contribute to Ohio's secure
foundation of' self-government; therefore be it
RESOLVED, That we, the members of the Senate of the
111th General Assembly of Ohio, in adopting this Resolution,
wish to extend our best wishes to Mr. and Mrs. Morton L. Dickey
on their retirement and, in so doing, salu!e two of Ohio's finest
citizens.
·
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from U!e files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times ... Charles McCormick named
president and Jerry Shelton vice president of GAHS student body
for 195~ school year ... Gallia tobacco growers favor price
supports ... GAHS senior Earl Winters receives college
scholarship from Sohio firm ... Rio Grande College's Donna K.
Bias named editor Ohio Future Teachers of America publication
.. . Gallia Academy to graduate 107 seniors May 26 ... Russ Smith
fans 15 as GAHS baseballers blank Racine, 8-().

DiURCH
Mulberry Ave.
Pomeroy

.Forhmately there is a little

THE PLAINS - Elmer F.
jones of The Plains, Athens
County , has ijeen · appointed
Chief of the Real Estate
Division of the Department of
Natural Resources.
The 60-year-old Athens
County native, who has owned
and operated the Elmer F.
• Jones and Associates Realty
• 1960, will assume his
Co. since
new position Monday, May 5.
"E lmer Jones' 25 years

big day at 'Island'

Estate Division," said Natural
Resources Director Robert W. .
Teater.

The Real Estate Division is
responsible for acquiring and
se !ling land for the Department, which is the largest
single landowner in the ,state.
The Division manages the
leasing of land, grants
easements, issues licenses for
the use of Department land and
executes
other
land
experi ence as a real estate agreements. The Division also
salesman and investor and as a provides land appraisal serland developer will be ex- vices for the Department, is
tremely

valuable

in

hi s

ELMER F. JONES

responsible for land inventury

capacity as Chief of the Real and serves as coordinator of
land survey.
Jones founded Elmwood Co. ,
TWO ARRESTED
a
real estate investment partGALLIPOLIS - Two arrests
nership,
and was fotinder and
were recorded Friday night by
Past
President
of Southeastern
Gallia County Sheriff's
Ohio
Development
Co., Inc.
deputies. William M. Perkivs.
Jones,
a
past
president
of the
20, of Oak Hill, was booked on a
charge, of possession of Athens - Hocking Board of
marijuana and Ray Cox, 26, Realtors, also has been active
alias Ray AmOs of Rt. 2, in si&lt;lte and national realtor
organizations.
Cheshire~ was arrested, on a
He is a member of the A!hens
bad check charge. Both are
expected lo appear in Chamber of Commerce, the
League of Ohio Sportsmen, the
Municipal Court Monday.

O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
Foundation,
the
Ohio
University Green and White
Club and the Nelsonville Elks'
Lodge. Jones also is a Direc tor
and Past President of the.
Wally Byam Caravan Club
International, and is a member
of the First Christian Church of
Athens and the Full Gospel's
Men's
Fellowship
International.

Veterans Memorial Hospilal
ADMISSIONS
Ada
Stigliano, Portland; Jenny
Williamson , Rutland; Alma
Young, Pomeroy; Lois Kerr,
Mingo Junction.
DISCHARGES - Margaret
Gans, Owen Anderson, James
Patterson, Orville Graham,
Mary Randolph, Eugene
Morrison, Paul Sayre, Thelma
Roberts.

Teacher shoots her son in hospital
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Joseph Lombardi, 18, Columbus, an unemployed high
school dropout was shot to
. death by his mother while
being treated for a drug
overdose in the emergency

room of a hospital here, police
said Saturday.
Detective Sgt.James Carr
said Mrs. Mary P. Lombardi,
47, a grade school teacher,
"apparently had been upset"
over her sons use of drugs for
the past several years.
"He was yelling obscenities
(in the emergency room) and
they had to strap him down and
were trying to quiet him," Carr
said. "She apparently went in
and shot him."
Frank Foster, a security
guard at Riverside Hospital,
was standing about 30 feet
from the emergency room door
'

when the shooting occurred
late Friday.
"We heard a noise which
sounded like a 'pop, pop, pop,"
said Foster.
Detective Thomas Strausbaugh said Mrs. l1&gt;mbardi,
who had come to the hospital
with her husband Frank, 51 ,had gone into the emergency
room several times and a
nurse, Mrs.Linda Litziger, told
her that perhaps her son was
upset because she was there
with him.
Mrs. Lombardii asked the
nurse to leave her and her son
alone for a minute so she could
talk to him, Strausbaugh said,
and closed the curtain behind
her.
When she same out she was
holding the gun, Strausbaugh
said U!e nurse told police.
Strausbaugh said the youth

was brought to the hospital
from the Lombardi home by an
emergency ambulance.
Strausbaugh also said Mrs.
Lombardi recently purchased
a .22 caliber listol used in the
slaying. ·
Police had said earlier that it
was belived the youth had
taken an overdose of nebutal
but now they were not sure.
Mrs. Paul Herbeck, a neighbor of the Lombardis, said
Mrs. Lombardi "always talked
fondly of her kids.
"I knew she was having
trouble with her son, but she
was always a very composed
person," said Mrs. Herbeck.
The principal at Sullivant
Elementary School where Mrs.
Lombardi taught expresssed
shock at the incident.
"She's a very fine teacher
and very well thought of," said
Mrs. Doris Carter.

Serta
TWIN BED.
SET

but I would imagine that
visiting the United Nations
would have been a highligh t.
I heard that Ule kids from
Federal-Hocking are taking a
one-(!ay trip to Cincinnati and
King's Island for their class
tcip. That would seem to show
where the kids are who work
hard. Anyway, the current
Junior Class is laboring to fill
its treasury. Its horse show will
he held on May II 'at the Bar-30
show grounds. It will be an
OVHSA approved show and we

in Holzer, Homer Bowen in

Cannden Clark (Vickie Cole
Rood is home from St. Joseph)
John Arbaugh suffered a

LUNCH TIME GOODIE. • •
•HOT DOG
(Regular Size)

eFRENCH FRIES
eDRINK
( Sma II Size l

&amp;~
. ·--.,_-

·...

TO GO OR EAT HERE

No Subt.
No Coupons · No Limit

of your choice

89~·
For Easy Pidup Cal 446-:Ziil2
Your Order Will Be Waiting

A"good

u•n ru10 . .

A · • neighborwho can
protect your

f'JJ!Reel
estate

A Slate Facm MohileHomeownefS
Policy prCJ!ects fOUl" IIIObll ehotne,

its contlfi!S end intludu personal ·
liabili ty coverage.
all in a single, IDW·
COS! p11Ck8QI. CallllJI

Carrol K. Snowden

PfPIUI

IUIIJ

. 24 Stale St.
Gallipolis
44~-4290, Horne 446-4518

--

REG •.$59
SERTA TWIN MATTRESS
REG.·$5995 · SERTA TWIN BOX SPRIN'G
REG.- $3900TWIN MAPLE BED
COMPLETE
· ·117°~
SET
Sale
95

.

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

SEE THE COMPLETE
LINE OF SERTA AND SIMMONS
'
MA nRESSES -:-·TWIN, FULL, QUEEN~ KING

SALE PRICES - . 3rd .floor Furniture Department

Ar

MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND WAREHOUSE OPEN WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5:00
OPEN FRIDAYS AND SATURDAYS 9:30 TO 8:00 P.M.

~tal e l~m

General kw;n;t ~)
Home Qll(t: llloooqlon,Dln&gt;r! '

Gallipolis, 0.

,__.......-

After the short concert the
band was given a well
deserved round of applause by
the many holiday visitors to
the park.
After changing clothes on~
again, the youths spent
another hour getting in a few
final rides on the giant roller
coaster and other favorite
rides before departing for
home.
Arriving at Meigs High
School at about midnight was
a very tired group of young
people .

at y

The Bel-Mon and two loaded barges lodged 1n the
Gallipolis dam Saturday evening, but no damage was
done . The Bobbie Bee III caught the barges after they got
through . Bob Irwin photo .

en tine

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY, APRIL 28, 1975

PRICE 15'

Sltigon airpOrt bombed
by captured airplanes

Rural
store
robbed

:

By United Presslnternatlona1
WASHINGTON- PRESIDENT FORD TODAY called for
a repeal of fair trade laws, saying such a move would save
co~sumers $2 billion a year. But he aLso said he 'opposes
legislation creating a new consumer agency, saying it would
only add another layer of expensive federal bureaucracy .
In a speech prepared for the annual IJleeting of the
&lt;llamber of Commerce of the United States, Ford said
regulation costs consumers money because it prevents
competition that can lower prices. "While we are all accustomed to the open debate on the govenunent's budget, far
too little attention has been focused on the ways 1n which
govenunent regulaUons levy a hidden tax on the American
people," Ford saiC
DETROIT - IF GENERAL MOO'ORS, FORD and
Americans decide to join Chrysler In paying cash rebates
' ag_aln, they will do it only very reluctantly. But it: the usual
spring sales upturn doesn't bellin soon, the other three
automakers' may be forced to join Chrysler in offering new
cash inducements to lure customers Into showrooms.
The seven-week rebate program with cash payoffs of $200
to $600 in January and Felruary OO§t the industry an estimated
$150 million. That cost will be partly reflected in financial
statements the automakers will begin releasing this week.
With the exception ~f a small profit at GM for the first three
months of 1975, the industry will show its deepest losses since
the 19~.
Olrysler, originator of the rebates in mid.January, today
was to begin explaining .to dealers the new cash rebates to lure
customers lnl!l showrooms. Sources indicated the No. 3
automaker will offer $200 payments to buyers of its compact
Dart and Valiant models.

EUREKA - Due to the
rushing high waters of the
Ohio River caused by the
heavy rainfall , the motor
vessel " Bel-Mon " owned by
Bel-Mon Towing Company of
Duffy, Ohio, slammed into the
upper river wall of the
Gallipolis Dam at 6:50 p.m.
Saturday causing two loaded
coal barges and the towboat to
break loose from the rest of
the fleet.
According to a spokesman
at the Gallipolis Locks and
Darn , the boat's captain Paul
Bush was able to line-up the
two barges and guide them
through the dam, but the boat
slammed in to the dam's

roller.
The "Bobbie Bee III" owned
by G&amp;C of Point Pleasant. was
used to catch the barges. A
barge was then used to unsnag
the boat from the roller. There
was no damage to the boat or
dam.
A barge filled with coal n.ear
the area owned by Crouse
Corporation s;;pk. It will be
salvaged later .

One animal had to be
Following the accident, the
destroyed, another was killed,
•
"Bel-Mon" went on to Poin t
in two separate accidents, and
Pleasant for an overall ina breaking and entering is
spection.
being investigated by Sheriff
The Ohio River crested
Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept.
Sunday afternoon at the locks
Deputy Ray Manley said
at 38.6 feet.
Saturday at 10 p.m. in Sutton
eJ'
HENRY KISSINGER; Twp. on SR 124 near Racine,
Secretary of State, whose · Russell Radcliffe, Syracuse,
Asian policy obviously Is was traveling west on SR 124
going up In the smoke of when he struck a yearling
bombs and rockets today in heifer on the highway owned
SAIGON &lt;UPll
Saigon.
by Otis McClintock, Rt. I ,
,
- Military sources said jet . . , . - · - - - - - · - - Racine. The animal had to be
fighter-bombers captured by the Communists at
destroyed. There was medium
the height of their offensive bombed Saigon's Tan
property damage. No citation
Son Nhut airbase today in the first such raid of the
was issued.
Vietnam War.
At 11 :55 a.m. Saturday in
WASHINGTON (UPI) - the combat instinct in Richard
Former President Nixon was Nixon .. . Haig was dealing
Scores of American-built jet bombers and
Salem Twp ., on TR 321 • "unstable" just before his with a time bomb which, if not
other planes were captured intact when South
Hampton Road , Anthony E. resignation, says presidential defused in just the right way,
Vietnam pulled out of Da-Nang and other northern
Caridillo, 18•Ht. 1• Langsville· chronicler Theodore White, might blow the course of all
airfelds ' th ·t f' ht t t t f th C
·
was traveling south when a who saw him at the time as "a American history apart.''
WI ou a 1g a s ar o
e ommumst
buck deer ran into his right
I
White's narrative concludes
offensive. Many pilots chose to flee with their
front fender and was killed . time bomb which, if not
with
a description of a Nixon's
L
faml.l1'es rathe r than s t ay WI'th the p 1anes.
There was moderate damage, defused in just the right way, tearful farewell to a group of
Th bo b'
tt k
might blow the course of all
•
e
m mg a ac s which brought gunfire
no injuries or citation.
American history apart."
Republican loyalists, minutes
throughout Saigon also brought reports of a
At 6:46 a. m., Sunday the
White's day-by-(!ay account before he went on television to
possible coup against Gen. Duong Van "Big"
department was advised of a of how White House insiders announce his resignation .
M'nh
t ft h h d
Mrs. Francis Belpulsi, 19, of breaking and entering at the
. I
momen sa er e a assumed the office of 2128 Chatham Ave., Gallipolis, Hensley Grocery Store on SR led by Chief of Staff Alexander Nixon tried to end the meeting
president with a pledge to begin immediate cease- is listed in good condition at 124. The owner of the store is M. Haig slowly persuaded with an apology, White says .
"Then his composure gave
fire talks with the Communists. It also brought the Holzer Medical Center Lenora Hensley, Rt. I, Long Nixon to resign last year
panic and fears of a final assault on Saigon by where she was admitted Bottom.
appears in the May issue of way entirely, his breath sucki . .
ing into a sob which he con·
t
f
h
s
d
f
11
·
Commums orces t at have reached the suburbs
un ay o owmg an explosion
Lloyd McPeek, brother-in- Readers Digest.
'-'What
the
men
in
tbe
White
trolled
long enough to cononly three miles froin the center of the c1'ty.
'at her . home.
law of Mrs. Hensley, went House were involved in, tinue, 'I just hope ... I haven't
1
1
II
The sources said four A37'
The sources Sbld the a1r Ga lpo is vo unteer firemen down to the store Sunday without ever admitting it to let you down.'
Dragonfly jets carried out a strikes destroyed three F5 said Mrs. BeiRulsi suffered morning and found the front themselves,
was
the
"Now he broke , tea rs
bombing mission on the mili- Freedom Fighter jets, four firhst anthd second degree burns door open.
management of an unstable streaming down his fa ce. He
w en e furnace located in
Upon investigation, they
tried to get up, missed the
personality," White said.
tary section of Tan Son Nhut Cll9 Flying Boxcars, three the basement of he· r home
· t -&lt;lecup led C47 a1rcra
·
It an d a DC3 . exploded while she was at- found
that a person or persons St ar t'mg h'IS narrallve
.
fr om th e Commurus
h
on chair arm, could not rise,
airfield at Phan Rang, 1110 Casualties could not be
ad taken five pounds of July 31, 1974, eight days before finally found the arm and
tempting to light it. Damage bologna, five pounds of Nixon announced his resigllll- rose ... "
miles northeast of Saigon on_ detennined immediately.
was estimated at $100 to the cheese, a gallon of milk,
White is the Pulitzer Prize
the coast of the South Ollna
Tracer rounds fiUed the furnace and chimney.
lion, White describes Nixon's
Sea
skies over the Tan Son Nhut
popcorn, Slim Jims, cakes and behavior as "increasingly er- winning author of the
A fire of undetermined cookies, a loaf of bread, oleo,
Pil.ots of chase planes-F5 area and in the downtown
ratic," with Haig acting as "Making of the President"
Fr ed
Fi h
·
origin at 9:45p.m. Saturday and two cartons of cigarettes.
e om
g ler jets-said sectiOn, where government caused an estimated $150
h
substitute President in many books, which have chronicled
T e incident is under in- matters
of
day-to-(!ay each presidential election ·
the A'Sis piloted by Com- ships berthed on the Saigon
miDlist ainnen returned to the River opened up on the A37s. damage to a large barn owned vestigation.
business.
since 1960.
Air Force commanders by Judge Robert S. Betz on
. NOW YOU KNOW
White says Haig realized
coastal city and were seen
Crocodiles' toothy jaws are Nixon had to leave office as
landing there after the raid. scrambled jets from Tan Son Mill Creek Rd.
The attack on Tan Son Nhut Nhut and the airbase was
Gallipolis firemen were able of no use in chewing' their food soon as he read, on July 31, the
to contain the blaze before it
touched off explosions which sealed, halting all flights by
is digested by "stomach transcripts of a then-secret
rocked Saigon and heavy
spread. Three trucks and 14 stones" - riverbed pebbles .White House tape in which
bursts of anti-aiicraft fire
(Continued on page 8)
men respond.ed to the alarm. that the reptiles swallow. • Nixon ordered aides to stop an
caused 60 minutes of panic in r~.-.-..-.-..-..-- ..-.-.-.-....-..-.-.-..-.-_..-._.._.._._...__.
FBI Watergate investigation.
the South Vietnamese capitaL !
The tape dated from June 23,
The body of Danny L..Smith,
The Viet Cong meanwhile
1972, six days after the Jr., 10, Rt. 1, Guysville, who
all but rejected Minh's call for
·
Watergate burglary.
drowned Thursday evening in
an immediate cease-fire,
+notu
..J-['
Haig's problem, White says, a boating accident in Shade
although it had indicated
J ea
CB ue lCBCY
was to make Nixon realize he River during a flash flood , was
earlier he would be ac· !
·
had to resign without recovered about 4 p.m.
By CARLA. VINFil
wild, mountain delicacy carry with them the
triggering the opposite Saturday.
ceptable.
A statement issued by the
COSBY, Tenn. (UP!)- Picture a grassy tasteoftheirfeast,anditwilllastfordaysto
response.
He was the son of Danny
Viet Cong's Provisional
:~:teainast. the edge of the Great Smoky come. For the rest, it has been a pleasant 1! "If Haig .C'Iuld get the facts Leon and Beverly Boston
Revolutionary Goverrunent In
day in the sun at this most celebrated of the
before tile President clearly, Smith, Route 1, Guysville, ;md
Paris said its two basic conFrom a patch of woods on the western ramp festivals in the Southeast's mountain
he was certain that the was a fourth grader at the
dltionsmustbemetbefore.the
slope, the smell of hardwood smoke, bar- country.
'
! President ·would act beyond Coolville Elementary School.
fighting Is )lalted. These were
becillng chicken and steaming pots of
AI the base of the hill; there's a stage,
himself in the national interest
Also surviving are a sister,
dismantling of Saigon's war
ramps, the mo,st celebrated local delicacy, center of the day's entertainment tha.t will I .and resi!lJl," While says.
, Karen; -·- three brothers ,
machine and U.S. agreement
Bllllmerlng Qn wood stoves, tempts the ap· include gospel singing, country music, a ~
"Yet, with too much press- . Timothy, Scotty and Jeffrey,
to respect the fundamental ~ petite,
beauty pageant and political speechmaking.
ure , something might trigger . all at home; the m
. aternal
"Ramp's tbe tiling," said Mrs. Paul
rpeoighplles. of the Vietnamese . Ewdarly on the last SIDlday in AfX'il, too McAllister of Cosby, who really enJ·oys the
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Buell Boston , Columbus·,
cro gatl!ers for the annual "Cosby·Ramp annual feast of wild leek, prepared with
There was gunfu-e tol)ight
FestivBI."
.
scrambledeggs,iJasweet; succulentsalad, 1
~RCALLED
paternal grandparents,
aroiDld the, U.S. Embassy in
RamP.S are cou9inll to the onion and to the even raw with a pungent onion-like taste.
The Middleport emergency Walter L. -Smith and Mrs.
~esreminiscentofthestart
llly, They grow wild in cool coves of the
One of lbe unexpected attractions of the
squad answered a call to 729 Ruth Hay es, Co-lumbus;
ol the Communist Tel of·
mountainsofTennesseeandNorthCarolina, 1975 festival was a Tennessee Highway
Beech St. at 8:07a.m. Monday pa ternal step-grandfather ,
fenslve in 1988.
mostly .above 2,000 feet.
.
for
Cathy Barker, 1%, who James Hayes, Columbus ;
1 Richard Dawson of
Scattered thunderstonns h't
Patro1 011leer --Co·
drank bleach . She was ' "ken paternal great-grandmother,
1
And each year members of a local club Nashvme. llis resemblance to Telly savalliS
~"'
·
. ,
the cap1tal area during the
ak
ing
to
Veterans Memorial Edith M. Smith, Columbus,·
m e a camp
trip into nearby North is retnarka_))le. He was there as a judge for
late afternoon, filling the sky Ca lin
Hospital where she .was ad- and
maternal
great- .
with thiDlder lind flashes 0 f
ro a.togather80busbelsoframps. Then the beaUty pageant, in which the queen of
mitted.
g· randmothers, Clemma
are two nights of cleaning and the ramp feStival is crowned annually,
Ughtning that did little to ease . ~ there lng
Boston' and Sarah Cox, both of
.
frepar
for the feast
Blit before the day:s over, he bas posed
the nervo\ISIIes prevailing m
·
Gallipolis. Several aunts,
Before dawn Sunday' the fires are lit and witl! dozens of visitors to the festival whn
the city.
th
•...,
uncles and cousins also sur·
The bombing wBII carried
e cooking begins,
want their picture taken with this dead
Chance of heavy rains vive.
out by· five A37 Dragonfly jets
By midmorning Sunday the hillside was ringer for one of television's favorite
tonight. . Cloudy TUesday. - Funeral services will be
crowded with almost 4,000 picnickers and policemen, KDJak.
of the type used by the South spectators -infants in strollers, toddlers
"Where'syour lollipop?" or, "Hi, KoJ'ak,',Showers likely. Low tonight · held at I p.m. Tuesday at the
VIetnamese Air Force
in the low to mid 50s. High Zion EUB Church at Shade
(VNAF), UPI correspondents ~ watched over by anxious mothers and yoiDlg greet him wherever )le goes. "I get that all
Tuesday in the upper 60s with the Rev. WiWam Garren
Frisbees· or baseballs or the time," said the tall, balding highway
reported from Tan ·Son Nhut. people
1 · tosaing
ta
an d 1ow 708 . Pr oba b'l't
11 Y of officiating. Burial will he in
·Mllltary sources said later P ayll!g g.
·
patrol colonel, who has his remaining hair- ~
. 'tat'
60 pe_r cen1 the Orange Cemetery. Friends
The ramp eat ers who come to samp1e the cl'
•• ort at the side and back.
prec1p1_
. 1pped ...
.
tod
d10n
ht d
t
·
they Were flown by Com. 1,
ay an .1omg an 60 per may call a the White FWieral
munists.
·--...•._...,;.._....,.._.._....,...._.._.._ _ .._._.__.._.._.._.._.. _ _.._.._.._.. ...... J cent Tuesday.
- Ho~e in · Coolville any time .

w;;;:'~i~ Coup reported brewing
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.ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
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WASHINGTON- THE CIVIL WAR ENilED 110 years ago
this month, but the Veterans Administratllin"IS still spending
almost half a million dollars a year to support 417 widows and
children of Civil War veterans. A VA spokesman said today
there are still205 widows of Civil War veterans ranging in age
from 60 to 118. There are also 212 children aged 50 to 98 who
have physical or mental disabilities.
Last year the government spent $525,503 on these widows
and children. With deaths, that Is expected to fall below
$500,000 this year, About two-thirds of the survivors are .from
the Union side, the VA said. Confederate did not qualify until
· 1958. Walter WUI!ams, the last veteran, died in 1~ at the age
of 117 1!J Houston.
JOHANNESBURG- UNIDENTIFIED ATrACKERS who
1
holed up 1n the Israeli consulate building during the weekend
seized several hostages today and sprayed machine gun fire at
Sooth African pollee snipers p!!flltloned on nearby rooftops.
Johannesburg general hospital said at least 25 persons were
Injured in the e~tehange of fire, a dozen seriously,
·
The hospital went on emergency alert and called in extra
doctors and nurses. All avaUable ambulances were used to
take the wounded to the hospital. Pollee sources said tbe
~ In the building had "several hOIIIages."
· , 1n Jerusalem, the . Israeli ' goWmmerit called an
emergency cabinet sessloD to ri\Bcu88' the attack. The lsraeU
national radio quoted a South African radio correspondent
near the consulate 88 ·saying the g\uunen appeared to be
holding four women and one man hoitage lnalde the building.
THE CAMBODIAN ' LIBERATION movement
illamnolllly decided that Prince Norodom Slhanouk will be
chief of state of a neutral and no~ Cambodia, Radio
Ftmom P8nh said today.
.
A 'l'hreMaY apeclal national congreu which ended
&amp;mday alia decided to retain 88 prime minister, Penn Nouth,
who Ism In ellle with Slhanouk In Peking, the radio said 1n a
ciiinmunlque read. by Kl!leu Samphan and monitored 1n
Bangkok.
. .

\

,

Fleet broken up

Devoted To The lnte,rests of The Meigs-Mason Area

already anainst Minh, .

Nixon was on
a ·short · fuse

newest Viet president

victim

liSt ed
•goO d"

a.

Boy's body
'

.

for alt the deta1ls.

servers.

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coronary and is in Logan

APRIL 27th THRU MAY 3rd

..

A FLASH FLOOD WATClfFOR WEST CENTRAL and
southwest Ohio was issued today as a band of thundershowers
swept over the area.
The National Weather Service said the watch meant a
flash flood threat existed 1n the area. The Weather Service said
radar at Cincinnati indicated a band of heavy thundershowers
extended across southwest Ohio and moved southeastward.
Showers and thundershowers were reported moving southeastward and heavy
. rainfall was forecast for the area .

hope everyone wHI come out

hospital, J. S. Davis is in a
Florida Hospital recovering
from cataract surgery (J. S.'s
address is General Hospital,
Lakeland, . Fta.,33801) . I understand he is rather homesick
and would welcome hearing
from friends. And finally, Bea
Douglas, out grand school
principal, has been called to
Chillicothe because of her

stopped tO play in front of the
replica of the Eifel Tower.
Several selections were
played there, with the
m~j 0rett~.s ~nd flag corps
domg the1r !lungs to the music
and to the delight of the ob_ _:;..:;:;..;.;_.._._ _ _ __
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through ,
Friday, chance of showers
dally. Mlld. Hlgbs In the 60s
and lows ln the 40s In the
north and highs In the 60s
and lows In the 50s In the
south
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reside at 20 Circle Drive, The
Plain.

and watch the fun.
It would seem that everyone
in Tuppers Plains either is in a
hospital or just home from one.
To name a few in: Sis Murphy

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLl'

.

VOL XXVII NO. 10

in a trailer. After supper, the Their itinerary was impressive

four-walked back to the house
and "SURPRISE !" The cars
had been hidden up on Route 7
and the house was full of
relatives, friends and gifts.
I understand the planning
was the work of daughters,
Diana and Teresa , and what a
good job they did! Marge told
me it was an absolute surprise.
Refreshments were served to
Mr. and Mrs. Ken Hager, Mrs.
Violet Milthone, Cathy Collins,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Tripp,.
Danny and Allen, Mr. and Mrs.

The Meigs High School
Marching Band enjoyed the
rides, then helped kick-off the
1975 season at Kipgs "Island
Amusem~nt Park .ou~ide ,of,,
Ctnc1rnat1 Saturday.
1
Departing from the high
school at 8:30 a. m. and
arriving al the park at 12:30 p.
m. the band enjoyed the rides
and toured the giant fun
center until 5 p. m. when they
returned to the buses to
prepare for their f6rmal
appearance.
At 5 p.m. the band marched
down International St. and

Jones and his wife Eileen

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

+++

SACRED HEART

Lena ,

Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Taylor. good news concerning illneSs
MI'S. Bill Rithcie, Mr . and Mrs. and confinement. Bob Sanders
Charles Barton, Shelby and is oack on the job in the grade
Brei, Mr . and Mrs. Charles school, and Rev . Me"ece will
Weekley, Judy and Bob, Mr. now begln to give one serviCe
resWTJing. I sureJy do wish and Mrs. Tom Weekly and son, per. Sunday as he gradually
someone would do something Mrs. Estel Sampson, Mrs. Rick improves healthwise.
Grandparents just keep
to get it going. My money is Sampson , Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
beginning to pile up and no Benedum, Mr. arid Mrs. Loren getting younger - Marvine
place to stash it !
·Benedum, Sheryl and Janet. · and Howard Blair Caldwell are
, Mr. and ' Mrs. Don Green of the guests of hon or, Marge and very proud of the new grandSouth Charleston , W. Va., Benny, and daughters Diana daughter which Howie and
Christy Caldwell rec ently
spent Sunday with Mr. and. and Teresa.
Mrs. Darrell Landon and Mr.
Kids, may your next 25 be a br ought home ' !rom the
hospit,L Howie and Christy
and Mrs. Everett Par ker . h1rn1dinger!
and
baby make their home in
Esther and Darrell hosted the
Mr . and Mrs. Bryl Griffin
Rio
Grande.
'
group with a sumptuo us and daughter, Sharon, Mrs.
Sunday dinner.
Lola Griffin and ·Mrs. Nile · Vera Weber is enjoying a
Mrs. Vel.ma Newe ll has Sanders went to Columbus to visit with her brother,
returned to her home in attend the graduation of the Raymond Larkins. Raymond,
Tuppers Plains after spending Griffins' son-in-law, Terry a member of the U.S. Army, is
some time with Mrs. Estie Bush,
from
Franklin here from Texas.
A cheerleaders' clinic is
White of Bashan . lthink Velma University College.
got the spring housecleaning
jeffrey, age 5, and Jimmy, being held this week at the
urge and the gardening urge. age 6, sons of Jim and Sally Eastern Hi gh School. ApIf your household is like Caldwell, have en tered ,proximalely 100 girls are
mine, it runs on Pepsi. So I Children's
Hospital
in tcying out for the Eagle cheer
stopped in at the Visl&lt;l to refuel Columbus for surgery on leading squad. Decisions will
and there was Faye Westfall. Thursday, April 24. Both boys probably be announced about
Faye, you will remember, had had their spleens removed; a the third week in May.
Recent visitors of Mrs.
the misfOrtune to suffer a hereditary problem which
concussion during a robbery at mother Sally and · granddad Louisa Newland were a niece,
Mrs. Carrie Stout of Lowell,
the Visi&lt;l. Faye says she is Roland have also had.
Ohio,
and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
feeling much, much better and
I thought the title of grand
B3iley
of Newcomerstown. Mr.
glad to be back on the job. The champion cook was held by
gal has grit, doesn't she' We either Mamie Headley, or Mrs. Bailey is a cousin of Mrs.
need more people with your Okey Pullins, or Peg En- Newland.
The Tuppers Plains Comkind of spiri t, Faye!
voldsen, but there is a new
Have you sent your items to contender. Doris Koenig had munity Club will hav e a
the fire department auction · all of her family with her jewelry par_ty at their June
yet' You haven'(? Well, let's recently and cooked and meeting . . In the meantime,
members will be happy to take
gel busy, lodav. Cle2n out that served dinner to 33 people.
closet or the basement· or the
Visiting Doris were Mr. and your orders or let you look at a
grainery, or look around in the Mrs . Lloyd Koenig, Marie and catalog to choose jewelry. Glve
barn. Who knows , you probably· Marlin from · Mansfield, Mr. any club member a call.
Don't forget the many
will fi nd some thing that and Mrs. Bruce Myers, Linda,
someone is just dying to pay Bruce and Leonard frofn meetings:
Tuppers Plains Community
good mon~y for.
Chester, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
The Fire Department had a Hawk, Nanette , Sherry, Pam Club and the .Fire Department
practice session with the and Kenny from Shelby, Mr. meet the firs t Wednesday of
Chester Fire Department last and Mrs. Donald Koenig from the month; Saddle Sitters 4-H
Monday. And the two depart- Little Hocking, Mr. and Mrs. Club meet the first Tuesday of
ments worked together when Junior Koenig , Leonard , the month, and the ·Bar-30
they answered the fire call on Shelia, Bonnie and Christy Horsemen will have a work
Silver Ridge recently.
from Sumner, Mr. and Mrs. session at their regular
Have you ever had some Dave Baker (granddaughter ) meeting at the ring on the
occasion suddenly'le l you know fr om Mansfield, Charles Wente second Tuesday of the month.
And don 't forget the pony
that time had slipped up on from Mansfield, a guest of
you'' Well, it just happened to Nanette Hawk; Tony West- pull at the Bar-30showgrounds
me. When I learned that Marge john, Linda Myers, fiance ; on Saturday evening, May 3.
You don' t want to mius a lot of
and "Benny" Benedum had Rick Koenig and our Poris.
excitement
and fas t action.
celebrated their 25th wedd ing The only absent member was
anniversary. I kinda caught a grandson , Melvin Koenig,
my breath and sat down. When who is with the United Si&lt;ltes
we first moved to Tuppers Navy stationed in Calfiornia.
Plains and I was a teenager, Doris, who washed all those
our "gang" incJuded Benny dishes?
and Marge. And here all of a
The Senior Class at Eastern
sudden, they are celebrating a High School has returned from
silver wedding anniversary. its trip east. They spent five
It was clever how it was days traveling, leaving last
pulled off. Son Dennis and his Friday night. The class spent
wife, Bonnie, invited Marge one nightinWashin~ton , D. C.,
and Benny to have a quiet one night in New York City, one
anniversary supper with them. night in Lancaster, Pa., and
Dennis and Bonnie live nearby. one night in Winchester, Va,"

-:. LAST week, Dickey and his wife Lora were honored by a
resolution from the Ohio Senate, along with two more Gallia
County retirees - Mr. and Mrs. Don Rees. The S~nate
r1!50lu"tions were authored by Sen. Oakley Collins.

TUESDAYS 7:30

Br~nda ~md

mother's serious illness and

confinement in a hospitaL

beehive of activity now
I housedcan ing ' and gar dening), exce pt for our bank
building. It still stands all
alone, with no sign of work

• EARLIER this spring, former Gallia County Auditor Morton
L. Qickey was honored by a special resolution from the Ohio
lfouse of Representatives upon his retirement.

BINGO

~:~

I

Ry Nnrma Nt•wl:uul
Cecil Caldwell , Mrs. Gladys
TUPPERS PLAINS - Well, Barton. Robin and Jeff, Mrs.

· By Hobart Wilson Jr.

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Meigs High band has

l
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recovered

._..._.._.._..1

Co b R
s y amp Festival in Great Smokies
l b t. d /o [
res a ce e ra e

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Weather

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�3- The Daily Sentmel,.Middleport-Pomeroy.'o., Monday, April28, 1975

2- The Datly Sent mel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy. 0, Monday. Apnl28.1975
•

Dayto~
COLUMBUS (UP!) - An 18year-old student and manager
of a pet shop m Dayton, FWger
Walker, was honored as the
FFA 's
Star
State
Agnbustnessman here
Saturday mght at the 47th
annual Conventton of the Oh10
FF A Assoctallon
Walker, who has been a
student at the Montgomery
Co unt y Jomt Vocational
School the past two years , tuls
excelled m his on-th e-Job
trauung m ordermg of store
merchandtse, bookkeeptng,
health care and feedmg of
anunals, customer serVIce,

aq uartum management and
more.
" FWger has uullated and
Implemented a bookkeepmg
and accountmg system that IS

peculiar to the pet mdustry ,"
mst ructor Robert Jehnng
srud. "He has unproved the
health and dtsplays of anunals
m the store and contributed to
the Improved breedmg
program of small anunals
here at the Montgomery
County J oint Vocattonal
School "
Others m contentton for the
award were Debbie Kemerer
of Canfteld, Mttch Ross of
Delaware, John Orrtson of St
ClatrsVJI!e, Cynthta Finlaw of
Jefferson, Helen Wtlson of
Clayton, Greg Becker of Ma·
nella and Carl Rhoades of
Zanesvtlle
Picked as the top chapter m
the state was the Buckeye
Valley FFA chapter of Delaware County, followed by the

Marysville chapter and the
R1ver V1ew chapter of War·
saw
The state safety award went
to the B1g Walnut FFA
chapter of Sunbury, the
marketmg award to the
Wauseo n chapter and th e
BOAC award to
the
Marlmgton chapter of
Alhance
Indmdual awards went to
Tim Kmef of Lewtstown, star
crop producer; Jean Tugend

high in Cascade Mts.

A Chronicle of America
April-May, 1775:
In the early mornmg hours of April 21. about 16 royal
marmes take about 2tl barrels of powder from the WI I·
hamsburg magaz1ne Drums beating the alarm bnng a
mob to the market square. but cool heads prevail Yet the
Vtrgm•a populace 1s angry When Patnck Henry hears of
thetncldent , he vows to lead the Hanover County militia m
a march on Williamsburg Whereupon V~rg1ma's Governor Dunmore declares that tf any mtllllamen advance
toward Williamsburg. or " by the llvmg God 1f an msult 1s
oflered to me or to thosewhohaveobeyed my orders I wtll
declare freedom to the slaves and lay the town mashes "
As a precauuon, however . on the 29th he puts Lady Dunmore and h1s children aboard the HMS Fowey at
Yorktown On May 4, he re•mburses the colony [300 for
the powder On May 6. he declares Patrick Henry an out~
law

••
u

t

"',e

••

"-

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:;)

&gt;

.0

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!!!
- By Ross Mack'""' and Jell MocNelly

'-----------------------'

DR. LAMB

'

air management ; Mike Ralph

of Morral, fish and wildlife
management; Da vtd A.
Bugay of Belmont, forestry
management ; Bill Mayer of
Wash10gton C. H., accounting;
Dan Wilhams of Sunbury,
home Improvement; Richard
Hutchmson of Lafayette,
speCialty award.
The extemporaneous public
speakmg award was won by
Bruce Shober of Delaware, the
creed speaking contest by
Suste Barrett of Warren and
the prepared public speak~
award by Millard Brown of
Patrick Henry .
FWb Hovis of Kansas wu
elected new president of the
state assoc•at1on. Scott Miller
of Delaware vice president;
&amp;bert W. Groves III of lndlall
Lake, secretary; Dave
Eversole of Baltimore,
treasurer;
Roger
A.
Rhonemus of West Umon,
reporter and Mitch FWss of
Delaware, sentinel.

Carpenter Personals

avalanche after p1tchmg tents
Saturday mght at the 6,500foot level of the volcamc peak
The other 24 h1kers made 11
back sal ely .
A few hours earlier Sallie
Hee, 28 of Corvallis, Ore , d1ed
under a wall of snow and ice
on Mt. Hood. She was an
oceanography mstructor at
Oregon State Uruvers1ty and
was leading members of the
Mazamas Club down the
11,24:&gt;-foot mountrun.
A Forest SerVIce spokesman
srud ground crystals under a
recent three-foot snowfall had
been worn down "like ball
bearmgs." The we~ght of the
hikers or the wind - weekend
gusts were up to 70 miles per
hour -could have triggered
the avalanches, he said.
Uruversity of Puget Sound
V1ce Prestdent Dale Baily srud
bad weather had discouraged
the group on 9,677-foot Mt. St.
Helens from gomg on to
Forsyth Glac~er to practiCe
1ce axe procedures. They
camped 10 1ce caves and tents
at the 6,500-foot level because
they considered 11 safer at the
lower elevatiOn, he satd

We Hold These Truths ...

Ill

of Jeromesvtlle, star dairy
producer ; Mark Goodman of
Bucyrus, star beef producer ,
Lily Jones of Wauseon, star
poultry producer , Barrett,
star sheep producer; Joe
Ryan of Peebles, star swme
producer ; Jodi Peacock of
Medma, star horse producer
Donald Madden of Dresden,
star hvestock producer;
Davtd N
Stemke of
Wapakoneta , placement in
producllon ; Stan Hicks of
Greenville, placement m
sales..service, Ketth Luzadder
of New Lexmgton, agncultural mechanics , Stephen C.
Allen
of
Lancaster,
agncultural electrifiCation,
Kflth , Ott of Delaware,
placement m processmg;
Thomas Green of Alliance,
ornamental horticulture ;
William Molesky of Alliance,
producllon horllculture.
Dan Gerw10 of Pemberville,
MOBILE, Ala. (UP! ) - outdoor recreallon; Jim Noble
Researchers say they may be of Carrollton, sot!, water and
optimistic, but they feel they
have found the way to cure
· T-eell leukemia," the most
common type of blood cell
cancer m chtldren
Mcordmg to Dr Herschel Mr and Mrs Dale Turner of
P Bentley Jr., who heads the Groveport were recent guests
team of doctors · at the of hls mother, Mrs Harold
Uruverstty of South Alabama Oxley Others who visited at
Medical Center, tt is belteved the Oxley home were hiS
that two drugs now under children, Mr and Mrs.
research may be the answer to Charles Oxley and Carolyn
curbing the acllon of the Oxley, London, OhiO
Mr and Mrs Kenny Hutpituitary gland.
Bentley satd the doctors chmson and sons, Bourbeheve the pttuitary over- nesvllle, vts1ted w1th her
stunulates the thymus gland brother-m-law and SISler, Mr
and that T-eel! growth and Mrs Jerry Stansbury and
becomes hke w1ldhre , family and other rela(lves Ill
cro wding and suffocallng the area
other needed cells m the blood- Mr and Mrs Albert Qmvey,
stream
Dover, spent the weekend w1th
Ifthedrugscantrigger body h1s mother, Martha Mays and
harmones mto recogmzmg h1s grandfather, Ney Carleukemta cells and destroying penter Mr and Mrs Robert
them, the disease can be Parker and family, Mid·
controlled.
dleport, also v1s1ted at the
The treatment would not Carpenter home
work on B-eell or adult strruns Mr and Mrs. Larry Stansof leukemta.
bury and sons, Reynolds·
"But the T-eell m children burg, were guests of h1s
has been of most concern," parents, Mr and Mrs Dale
srud Bentley, "and 1f we can Stansbury and other relahves
whip 1!, whtch I believe we here
can, a great part of the battle Mrs Bermce McKmght,
wtll be won."
Sharon and Chrts, v•s•ted Mr.
The project ts working wtth and Mrs D 0 McKmght and
BCG, which 1s flown m from Goldie Gillogly on Saturday
the Pasteur Instttule m PariS Granville Lyons returned
and 1s bemg used on humans, home from O'Bleness Hosp1tal
and with thymosiO, which IS and hts wtfe, Mrs Edllh
bemg tested on lahoratory Lyons, IS now a pallent at the
rats
hospital
"We thmk Thymos10 and . Mrs .Dana Bailey IS conBCG will do the same thmg," fmed to Holzer Med1cal
srud Bentley. "Shut off the Center, Gallipolis
Dorothy
Perry
pituitary
from
over- Mrs
sllmulatmg the thymus. returned to her home m
Everbody has the T-eell Dyesv1lle after havng spent
producllon, but , the body some lime with her children'"
regulates its luncttons.
West V1rgmta. Those who
"You run mto leukenua were here wtth her durmg the
when these normal cell func- weekend were Mr and Mrs
t10ns fail to shut down and the Robert Hodge, Decola, W.
production of T-eells keeps Va , Mr and Mrs. James
on."
Summers, Alum Creek, W.
The drawback to BCG ls Va., and Mr. and Mrs. James
that it must be administered Fraley, Jr., Glen and Kristin,
by cuttmg gr1d lines into the Harr~sburg, W Va
arms and legs of the children Mr. and Mrs Van Buzzard
anditcannotbeglvenuntil the are convalescmg at thetr
victim has undergone two home after both were confmed
years of drug therapy
to O'Bieness Hospital tn
Thymosin, which Bentley Athens
hopes will be available for Murl Galaway was a
hwnan use by August, can be weekend guest of her
mjected as soon as leukemia daughter, Mrs. Rolland
diagnosis IS made.
Crabtree Other callers at the
The program is only four Crabtree home were Mr and
weeks old and many' Mrs . Kenneth Crabtree,
questlOils, such as the side McArthur, and Mr. and Mrs.
effects of the new drugs, must Donald Crabtree and Cmdy,
st11l be answered
local.
"We have much to do but Callers at the home of Mr.
we're very optimiStic," srud and Mrs Walter Jordan and
Bentley "! think we're gomg the~r baby son, Joshua Perry
to conquer leukemia."
Jordan ,' included Mr. and

T-cells
may .be
solved ·

Avalanche traps five
STEVENSON. Wash , (UP!)
- Sprmg avalanches rumbled
dcwn two mountams during
the 11eekend, ktllmg one htker
and trappmg ftve others m the
snow
Ftfty rescuers trted Sunday
to reach the ftve mountameers
lost on the north slope of Mt
St Helens but were forced
back by 70-mlle-an-hour
winds, whiteouts and frigid
temperatures It was not
known tf the h1kers were dead
or altve
Rescue teams were ordered
to make another effort today if
the weather lets up.
"It's uncertain that we'll get
the kind of weather we need,"
a spokesman of the Skamarua
County sheriff's off1ce srud
The f1ve m1ssmg climbers,
all students at the Umverstty
of Puget Sound, were ldenllf•ed as Karen Momot and
Nma Engebertson, both of
Tacoma, Wash ., Er1ck Spurell
of Denver, Colo ; Dick Pfesser
of Federal Way, Wash ; and
Phil Burdick of Eatonville,
Wash
The students were m a 29member mountam ee rmg
class which was struck by the

Meigs draws

youth star agribusinessman

Mrs . Clinton Gilkey and Tad,
V1ck1e Oberholzer, Albany ,
Karen Gilkey, Athens ; Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Crabtree,
McArthur; Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Wood and son, Gene, and
fr1end, Gallipolis; Mr and
Mrs. Norman Shaner, Athens;
Mr and Mrs Mendal Jordan
and Mr. and Mrs. Dwame
Jordan, Bryan, Ke~th and
Sarah Faye, local
_ Mrs Ida. Denmson has
returned to her home after
spendmg ten days wtth the
John Knotts family m
Columbus.
Mr and Mrs Clarence
(Mike) Fraley, Jr, (VIckie
Woodgerd) are announcing
the b1rth of the1r f1rst child, a
son, Dana Edward, born April
20 at O'Bleness Memonal
Hosp1tal, Athens 'I'lje baby
we~ghed 7 lb .. So/, oz. Grandparents are Mr and Mfs .
Carrol Woodgerd and Mr and
Mrs Clarence (Jack ) Fraley,
Sr Great grandparents mclude Mrs T A. Hamilton,
Oak Hill, W. Va ., Mrs. Alma
Wood, Jacksonville, and Mr
and Mrs Denms Fraley, Sr
and Mrs. Zelia Perry . local
IN VA HOSPITAL
Ke~th G. Aetker Jr, Lincoln

Hlll , Pomeroy , is
a
patten!
at
the
Veterans Adm•mstratton Hosp1tal m Huntington, W. Va
Anyone wishing to send cards
may address them to Ward
A), Room 133 , Veterans Ad·
m•mstration Hospital, 1540
Spring Valley Drive, Huntmgton, w Va
REVIVAL ON
RACINE - There IS a
revtval m progress at 7:30
mghtly at the Mt. Mor~ah
Church of God, Rt. 2, Ractne.
The evangelist 1s the Rev. Bill
Daniels of Cll'cleville. The
public IS inv1ted
REVIVAL SET
DEXTER- A reviVal will
beheld at the Old Dexter Bible
Christian Church Thursday
through May 4 wtth services at
7 30 each evemng . The
evangelist will be the Rev. Ted
Glassburn . Special vocal
mus1c will be pro~ided The
pastor, Rev. Ron Perry, mv1tes the publtc
·

South Point
Ironton and Oak Hill drew first round byes m
the 1975 Class AA Southern Sectional Tournament
durmg Sunday afternoon's drawings at Lyne
Center in Rio Grande.
Suggested playing dates !or the six-team
event are Aprtl30, May 6 and May 8
South Pomt w1ll take on
Me1gs at South Pomt m a ftrst
round game. Wmner of that
game wtll play Ironton at
Ironton.
Galhpolls w11l play Rock
Htll 4 30 p.m Wednesday at
Rock Hill Wmner of that
game Will host Oak H1ll.
In the Northwestern Sec-

CEREMONY HELD- The Ritual of Jewels ceremony was held for slx new ple~es ~
the Ohio Eta Phi Soronty of Beta Sigma Phi Sunday afternoon at the home of Mrs Debbl
Buck, Mulberry Ave, Pomeroy New pledges are, front,!-&lt;, Brenda Haggy, Pat Grogan,
Linda King; back, Yvonne Butcher, Pat Shnvers. and Mansha Nelson

•

brother's health 1s good now
Would lhls condition relate to
my brother bemg a twm?
DEAR READER - Your
brother 1s very fortunate to
have h1s problem correctly
diagnosed and treated wtlh no
apparent damage
The spmal cord ]Oms the
bram just as 1tenters the large
hole m the base of the skull,
the powt where the vertebral
column JOins the skull At thls
area there are many nerve
tracf$. hke huge bundles of
electrical w1res, that carry the
signals to and from the brain
to the enllre body below the
head
A bony spur rarely grows
out of the skull opemng and
may create pressure on the
spmal cord Similarly, hone
growth m the cerviCal spme
can narrow the channel where
the cord ts located and cause
pressure on the spinal cord

Whenever the pressure
creates symptoms, the usual
and best approach 1s to reheve
" thepressurebysurgery lttsa
plam mechamcal problem,
reheved by a dtrect
mechamcal approa ch. If
permanent nerve damage
hasn 't occurred before 11 IS
corrected, the patient should
return to h1s normal state
rather qwckly.
Mechamcal pressure m that
area of the cord can affect the
nerve fibers that control the
opemng and closwg of the
small artenes, the blood
pressure, muscular action and
almost all bodily funchons No
wonder your brother had
trouble
What causes 1t? That ls hard
to say The bas1s for 11 may
have been present from b1rth,
and, wtlh bone growth as he
grew ,
the
condition
progressed unlll tt ca used

problems
In. adults, particularly after
age 40, degeneratiOn of the
bones and such thmgs as
cervical arthritis lead to bony
spur
formaltons
that
sometimes cause pressure on
the cord or nerve roots:
One of the astronauts had a
narrowmg of the openmg 1n
the spmal column from an
overgrowth of bone ln that
area He subsequently had
surgery for 11 and apparently
has had no trouble with 11
smce He IS a well-known
pubhc ftgure We debated at
some length about the
queslton of whether the
opemng was so small that we
should not recommend him for
the program. He passed and
fulfilled h1s mtsston m space.
And, I don 't thwk that the
fact that your brother 1s a twm
has anythmg to do w1th the
,cond•IJon 1

HOUSTON (UP!) - Former
18-game winner Gary Nolan IS
back.
That IS the considered
opinion of Cincinnati Reds
manager Sparky Anderson
and the gut feelmg of 11,140
paying customers at the
Astrodome Sunday afternoon.
Nolan d1d not get a wm m a
6-2 game won in the loth inning although hiS etght mnmgs
of four.!Jtl pttchmg was certainly good enough for a first
victory smce Oct. 3, 1972.
"! JUst want to he able to
start every ftfth day, pttcl! as
well as I can, hold the other
team and keep 1t as close as I

ruce "

A lme smgle by Jose Cruz m
the seventh 10rung scored
Cesar Cedeno and lied the
game 2-2 before Nolan was
taken from the game because
of a shff throwmg arm.
Pedro Borhon allowed one
hit the last two innings to
record hiS second v1ctory as
Cincmnati erupted for four
runs w1th JUst three htts
agamst four Astro p1tchers m
the loth mnmg
"Everything 1s going to
depend on us," Anderson said,
eyemghis team's 11-10 record.
"If we start gettmg the ptl·
ching, we're go10g to start
can/' Nolan satd, his once movmg and movmg fast
painful nght shoulder covered
"I wtshed Gary could have
by a huge lee pack.
gotten on the win ledger I
"Sure, 1f I wm, 1t would be know 11 helped Freddie (Nor-

St L OUIS
Philadel ph ia
Montreal

man). They press some when
they're not "
Anderson would have to
admit worrying about Nolan's
pressmg •s eas1er than worrymg about hts achmg arm as
he's done smce a bone spur in
Nolan 's shoulder started
bothermg both of them in
m1dseason 1972.
Nolan won 18 games 10 1970
and was 15-5 m 1972 before
undergomg an operation to
remove the spur last May.
"Gary ts like any other
pitcher now," Anderson said.
Norman got his first win of
the season Saturday and with
the Sunday vtctory, the Reds
flew to San Francisco today
wtth a 2-1 series win over
Houston Cincinnati plays two
games on the Bay before gomg
home

Geologists doubt Rhodes'
shale gas plan feasible
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Several Ohio geologists, while
unpressed With Gov. James A.
Rhodes smcere desire to act
on the state's energy
problems, are not m full
agreement With the governor's latest solution _ the
extraction of oil and gas from
shale.
'
Willtam E Shafer, a Columbus consultmg geologist who
works with mdustr~al clients
searching for new energy
sources, isn't convinced the
technology
has
been
developed that can extract
large amounts of 011 and gas
from the shale.
"The blg problem 10 a
nutshell is that gas and 011 is
essentially trapped 10 shale
and very difficult to get out,"
Shafer sa1d. "He (RhOdes) 19
on the right track. 1 share hts
deep concern, but his claims
seem to be a Little optimistic .
"What good are large
volumes of gas if we can't get
1tout," Shafercontmued. "We
can talk about trillions of
cubic feet of gas, but only a
very Iitle portion of it IS

Berry s world
1

(
/_,'

available. We shouldn't
become oooessed by it and pm
our hopes on tt."
Emphasizes Cooperation
Rhodes last week proposed
Oh1o, Kentucky and West
V1rgm1a combme their efforts
to extract the valuable fuels
from shale in the Appalachia
regions of all three states. The
governor emphasized the lll)·
portance of getting everyone
concerned working together to
solve the energy shortage.
Shafer, however, said he '
would rather emphasize
dr1llmg deeper wells because
these have been the most
producttve and there are very
few deep wells in Ohio.
He satd there also would be
ecological problems m shale
extraction because the only
effective way to get at the oil
and gas would be to mme the
deposits. Hydraulic , atom1c or
gas fracture, Shafer said, still
yields only a small percentage
of the total amount of gas and
Oil "locked" 10 the shale.
Ar1e Janssens, head of the
SUb.,!;urface section of the
state Division of Geological
Survey, satd the tremendous
cost of extracting oil and gas
from shale is the major d1fftculty in projects already
underway m Colorado and
other western states.
Financial Difficulties
"They are runmng mto
difflcu!Ues because of the

" What's the matter wtth me? Why aren't any tmpressiontsts domg me?"

money mvolved," Jansenns
saJd. "People have difficulty
financing 1!."
Janssens suggested Rhodes
may have tnSlde information
on new techniques which may
make shale drilling produclive m the near future. He
noted some private land
owners, especially in the lake
counties of northern Ohio,
have tapped shale for oil and
gas for as long as 30 years
"They get relatively small
quantilles (of oil and gas ), but
the wells tend to he productive
for • a long tune," Janssens
said.
Janssens noted there were
reports about Ohio shale
wntten as long .ago as 1880,
and topographical maps of
Lawrence County drawn in the
early 1960's showed wells
drilled in 1941 were still
producing oll and gas from
shale.
D1ck Struble, assiStant chief
of the Dlvtston of Geologtcal
Sur vey, agr eed 1t would take'
"a lot of money and a lot of
research" before shale
Qt'illing becomes productive.
"There IS some production
but on a very small quantity_
enough to light or heat a single
house," Struble said of
existmg shale eDactlon. "My
own personal opinion is that it
would be very difficult to
release the oil and gas from
the shale."

Fund standing at $213
A public fund drive to a•d m
the hospital expenses of threeyear-old Ryan Jeffers, son of
Mr. and Mrs. David Jeffers
Route I, Pomeroy, confined t~
St Marys Hospttal With foot
and leg m]urles received m a
power mower acctdent
reached $213 Monday mor:
nmg

J

BASEBALL

Gary Nolan is back

Bone growth was problem
By Lawrence E Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - 1
would hke some mformatwn
pleas ~
Last spnng my
brother, age 17, began havmg
bllndmg headaches and occaswnal diZZy spells. As the
summer wore on h1s headaches grew worse He famted
several times, and he lost so
much muscle control that he
stwnbled constantly
At times he could hardly
hold h1s head up. His family
doctor sent h1m to a
neurosurgeon who promptly
operated. The neurosurgeon
removed a p1ece of skull bone
that was pressmg mto my
brother's spmal cord As I
understand 11, the doctor sa1d
the bone was growmg mto hts
spinal cord.
I would like to know what
causes th1s cond1110n How IS tl
treated and what after effects
are there , 1f any• My

honal, Waverl y w1ll play
Sheridan at Waverly The
wmner will
tak e on
Washmgton CHat Washmgton
CH. Hillsboro will battle
Greenfield
In the Central Sectwnal,
Mmforp 1s at Ja ckson, Piketon
at West Portsmouth, Northwest at Vmton County and
Wheelersburg at Wellston m
first round games
Four sectwnal champiOns
w1ll advance to the R10
Grande District
On May 14 at 1 p.m the
Northeastern champton will
battle the Southern champ1on
Ma1or League Standings
At 3 p m. on May 14, the
Sy Untted Press lnlernattonal
Nor thwest champton w•ll
Nattonal Lea gue
East
battle the Central champwn.
w 1 pet gb
Two RIO dlstnct wmners
Ch1 ca go
II
4 7 14
New York
8 6 571
2
"'
w1ll
advance to the regwnals.
P•ttsburgh

,

The drtve got underway
Fnday evenmg to help the
famtly Mr, Jeffers is employed with the Pomeroy
Police Dept and there Is no
hosp•tahzation insurance.
Contributors to the fund
already are Homer Banks
Emmett Hawk , Bernie~
Hawk, Leonard and Carol
Lyons, R W. Thomas, Howard
Mullen, Pearl Jacobs, Roy
Mayer, Reed Wtll, Roger and
j.

Rhea Deem, Dav1d and Ruth
Campbell, Constance Patterson, Debbie Campbell,
Charles Miller, Mrs. Addison
Seaman, Montgomery-Ward,
Inc., Mr. and Mrs. Wllbur
Koenig, Wesley Manley,
Mayor Dale Smith, Warren
Connolly, Dorothy Dav1s,
Ruth Tuc~er, Harold Evans,
Lula Murray, Russell UtUe,
Lucy Taylor, George Holter,
Denrus Moore, and Pearl Ash.
All donatwns will be
welcome. Checks are to be
made payable to the · Ryan
Jeffers Hospital Fund. Contributions may be mailed to
Mrs Dormda Nardei at the
Pomeroy Village Hall or may
be left with Mrs Nardel at
Village Hall .•
J

''

8

6
6 9
6 10
5
9

57 1

21 '~

400
375

5
5 1 '1

357

5 1 '2

Ellis stops · Phils on
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Wrtter
All it took was a little sprtng
weather to brmg Dock ElliS
out of hibernatwn
Ellis, who thrives on warm
weather, was the best pitcher
on . the Pittsburgh Pirates'
staff during sprmg trainmg
but he has had trouble gettmg
untracked m the early part of
the season, mostly because of
the cold weather which

prevents hun from gettmg
loose.
Before Sunday, Elhs had
made three starts for the
Pirates and had lost tw1ce
wtth one no-declston wh1le
fallmg to get farther than the
seventh mrung m any of h1s
o~tmgs In none of those starts
did the temperature approach
the 50-degree mark
However, the thermometer
clunbed to the h1gh 50&lt;1 m

Pittsburgh Sund ay and Elhs
responded With a stx.!Jttter m
pttchmg the P1rates to a 2-0
trmmph ovet the Pluladelphia
Phillies.
Elhs who had not pttched a
shutout smce last June, had
his fastball hopping and
showed pmpomt control as the
Pirates completed a threegame sweep and sent the
Ph1lhes down to their fourth
consecuttve loss The veteran
'

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Jim Hunter did 11 at last and
,T .u Palmer and Vtda Blue did
1 agam
That was the b1g news m the
American League Sunday
when the three pttchers who
probably will most influence
the AL pennant race delivered
sparklmg performances.
Hunter, the Yankees' $2.8mllhon pitcher who had lost
h1s first three decisions ,
hurled 7 2-3 hitless mnmgs and
wound up with a three.!J11ter
as New York defeated the
Milwaukee Brewers, 10-1.

NEW YORK (UP!)- Jack Nicklaus was hitting some balls
on the practice tee, and thiS man standing behind the ropes
watchmg hun, was talking ahout hiS character how 1t's so
much like his game, entirely different from most of the other
pros.
The man who was watching Nicklaus manufactures ~ certain type putter favored by many of the golfers on the tour and
pm
instead of chargmg them, he generally lets them have ;t on
10n!y games scheduled)
him , free of charge
Tuesday's Gam es
"Not Jack, though," he was explammg. "It's like an oooesNew York at Ch•cago
Atlanta at Los Ang , n•ght
s•on
or something with him He refuses to take anythmg for
Houston at San D1ego, n1gh t
nothm~
. Most of these otber guys will take anythin~ you gtve
Montreal at Ph1l a, ntght
St lout s at P1ttsbgh, n ght
'em
for
nothmg, and I'm sure he knows 11, but that doesn't
Ctnc tnnat • at Sa n Fr an n•ght
mean anything to hun. He satd he'd like to try one of my putAm encan League
ters, and I satd okay, I'd send hun one. He wouldn't take it
East
w. I pel g.b. without giving me the money for it, though I told hun forget 1t,
Detr01 l
8 5 615
11 was my pleasure for him to use 11, but he aooolutely would
Balt 1more
7 6 538
l
not accept 11 untU he patd me for 11. You don 't see many guys
M1twaukee
l
8 7 533
Boston
7 8 467
2
like that m golf."
New York
7 9 438
2'1:2
Or anywhere else for that rna tter, either
Cleveland
5 7 417
2 '12
West
Maybe you miSsed 1t watching Jimmy Connors, John
wlpctgb
Newcombe
and George Foreman mmt all that money this past
Oakland
12 8 600
1'7
Kansas C1IY
10 7 588
weekend, but while all th1s was g01ng on Jack Nicklaus'
CaiiiOrnta
10 8 556 1
ch:u-acteriShc integrity surfaced agam Rather typically, he
Texas
7 9 .t38 3
Ch1c ago
7 10 412 J 1h SaJd no to a $1 mtllion offer to play Johnny Miller head-and6 10 375 4
M•nnesota
head 10 a televised wmner.take..aJJ golf match. Miller satd the
Saturday's Results
New York 10 Milwaukee 1
same thing, no, claimmg such a match "gimmicKs up the
Texas 7 Mmnesota 2
game''
Kansas C1ty 8 Chtcago 6
Detrott 3 Boston 2, 10 •nns
Not many people turn their backs on a million dollars It's a
Cleve 3 Balt 1more 0, 1st
lot
of money, even to those m sports who've done well for
Balt 1more 3 Cleve 2, 2nd __
Caltforn1a 1 Oakland 0
themselves like Jack NICklaus, Johnny Miller, Catfish Hunter
Sunday's Results
and
Joe Namath. Nobody comes around offermg ANYBODY a
Mllw 7 New York o, 1st
milliOn bucks every day .
New York 10 Mtlw 1, 2n d
Detro1t 5 Boston 4
"Obviously the offer of so much money IS tempting "
Baltimore 6 Cleveland I
Oakland ? Caltforn•a I, 1st
Nicklaus admitted, saymg he had e1ght similar b1ds, three ~f
California 9 Oakland 1, 2nd
which were for $1 millioQ. "But I am not receptive to such
Ch1cago 8 Kansas C1ty 6
Texas at Mmn 2. ppd , ra1n
proposals It is killing tenrus and it would be bad for goH. We
Today' s Probable Pttchers
have
an obligation to sponsors on the tour. Why should
(All T1mes E OT)
Detrott (Coleman 0 3) at someone else profit• If the sponsors and Tournament Players' •
Balt1more {Cuellar 1 D), 7 30 DIVISion were involved, I might be recepllve "
pm
This latest offer was striCtly leiJIIunate.
Cleveland { Peterson 1 I) at
New York (May 1 1), 8 p m
It was made to the business representatives of both Nicklaus
Ch1cago (Wood 1 4) at Kan sas
C1ty (Busby 2 1) , 8 30 p m
and Miller by Sidney Gathnd for Caesar's World, which IS the
(On ly games scheduled)
parent company of Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas, Nev., s1te of
Tuesday' s Games
Chtcago at Texas , night
last Saturday's $1 mtllwn tenniS match in which Connors beat
Calltornta atKan Ctty , ntght
Newcombe.
OakUmd at Mtnnesota n1ght
Detro•t at Balttmore, n•ght
Gathrid is a responsible advertismg and promotiOn man with
Cleveland at New York, mght
full
fmancial resources behind him. He put together the match
(Only g~tmes scheduled)
between Connors and Rod Laver and the one between Connors
and Newcombe as well. He has not gtven up the tdea of getting
Ntcklaus and Miller to play 18 holes for a mtllion dollars,
planrung to speak to both golfers personally.
"We are not domg this for any altrwsllc reason," says
LATE SIGNUPS
Gathrid,
completely honest in his approach. "The two 'chalAny young men eUglble to
lenge'
matches
we had m tenniS were extravagantly successful
play American Legion
baseball this summer with in the image we were able to create and the public relaltons'
the Meigs Legion team, who benefits we reaped around the world. We want to establish
was unable to attend the Caesar's Palace as the headquarters and site for all future
formal signing up Sunday, tennis challenge matches, and we hope to make these matches
should contact George as unportant to sports as :!By, the Masters, and the Kentucky
Nesselroad, Jr., or Don Derby."
A huge condomimum complex and golf course in Miamt are
Hunoel, both In Pomeroy.
..,..
..........,.,_.- part of his organlZ8tion, and when Galhrtd speaks with
Nicklaus and Miller, he will tell them if they agree to the
match, he doesn't intend it to conflict with any PGA..sponsored
tournament.
"I respect every man's opinion about his own profession,"
The Dai~ sentinel
says Gathrid about NicklallS' and Miller's original rejection.
DEVOTED TO THE
"Perhaps, though, people like Jack Nicklaus and John Miller
INTEREST OF
would like to set up some kind of foundation. They're conMEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
cerned
about helping golfers. This could be qutte a start."
EKeC Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
It certainly could, and maybe now in light of this, Nicklaus
CitY Editor
and Miller may have second thoughts.
Published daily except
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Hearmg of the proposed Nlcklaus-Miller match after his own
Pubt•shmo Company , 111
with Connors, Newcombe observed :
Court , st , Pomeroy , Ohio
A5769 Business Offtce Phone
"I think It would be fantastic to sit with a cool beer in my
992 2156 Editoriat Phone 992
hand
and watch Mlller play Nicklaus for a million dollars."
2157
Second class postage pa i d
Newcombe IS programmed to think that way, particularly as
at Pomeroy. Oh to
National
adverll'5in_r
a tennis player who generally goes on~n-one. Me? I think it's
represe-ntattve ward
more fantastic that any two guys in sports would tum down a
Gr1ffith Company, Inc,
Bottinetli &amp; Gallagher D1 'd,
million bucks. EspeCJal!y for the good of the game.
757 Thtrd Ave , New York ,
They'd better be careful or they're liable to start some kind
N Y 10017
_
SubscriptiOn
rates
of
a trend.
Delivered bY carrier where

Hunter, who pitched a perfect
game m 1968, earned h1s btd
for the second no.!Jltle( of h1s
career mto the e~ghth mnmg
until Sixto Lezcano smgled
That, of course, was great
news for the Yankees but
there was even better news m
the clubhouses of the
Balhmore Onoles and
Oakland A's. The Orioles are
hopmg that Palmer, th e AL's
Cy Young Award wmner m
1973, will resume h1s place at
the head of the1r staff after a 7.
12season m 1974, while the A's
are pmning their hopes for a
f1fth stratght Western IItle to a
large degree on Blue's abthty
to replace Hunter as the
leader of the1r staff
Both Palmer and Blue
looked equal to the task on
Sunday
Palmer, working With an
early 4-0 lead, set down the
Cleveland lndl;lns on seven
hits for a 6-1 vtctory that mcreased hts season mark to J.
1 Palmer has shown no SJgns
of the arm trouble he had last
season and has an 0.77 earned
run average.

Blue fired a five-lutter as
the A's defeated the Califorrua
Angels, 7-1, m the first game
of their doubleheader. The A's
angry young man now has a 51 won-lost record and a 2 51
ERA m support of the hehef
that he will be the new leader
of the Oakland staff.
Hunter ,•who has a 5 66 ERA
desptte his !me performance
Sunday, allowed only a walk m
the f~rst 7 2-3 mrungs before
the no-hitter was broken up by
Lezcano's single. Tim Johnson
followed w•th another hll
before Hunter, who struck out
eight, got out of the mnmg
Robm Yount homered in the
ninth to spot! Hunter 's
shutout
Hank Aaron lied Babe
Ruth's maJor league RBI
record, 2,209, with a two-run
double dunng a five-run

seventh-1nnmg outburst which
brought the Brewers a 7-11 wm
m the f1rst game of the
doubleheader before a crowd
of 41,493. Pete Broberg pll·
ched a three-hitter for the
Brewers
Palmer struck out ftve and
walked one m pitching h1s
th1rd complete game of the
'€ason. Run-sconng smgles
c, Lee May and Brooks
Robmson highlighted a threerun ftrst mmng and Ken
Singleton &lt;tut his first AL
homer to lead the Onoles' 11·
hit attack Jun Perry suffered
h1s th1rd defeat 1n fo ur
deCISIOnS
Blue struck out e~ght and
walked none and was m
trouble only m the seventh

Pro Standings
NBA Pl ayo ff Schedule
By Untted Press International
( All T1m es EDT)
Ea stern Conf Fmals
(Best of Seven)
Boston vs Was hmgton
( Wa sh1ngton leads 1 01
Wed
Aprd 30- at Wash1ng
ton 8 OS p m
Sa t , May 3- at Boston 3 10

p m

Wed • May 7- at Wa shmgton

8 OS p m

x Fn May 9 at Boston 7 30
pm
x Sun May 11 - al Washmg
ton 3 10 p m
x Tu es May 13- at Boston
9 00 p m

Wes tern Conf Fmal s
(Best of Seven)
Golden State vs Ch1cago
(Golden State leads 1 OJ
Sun Apr 1 27 Colden Stat e
107 Ch1 cago 89
Wed Apnl 30 or Th ur s May
1 at Ch 1cago, 8 30 p m
Sun May -' - at Ch 1cago 1 10

pm

Tu es
May 6 at Golden
Stat e 10 30 p m
x Thur s May 8 or Fn , May
9 at Gol den Stat e, y tba
x Gam e 6 (elate to
be
announced) - at Ct11 cago y tba
x Gam e 7 (date to
be
an noun ced )- al Go lden St at e, y
lba
x- lf nec essary
y- T1me to be announced

'·'

N.

was the weather, man, "

when Btl! FWbinson smgled,
moved to th1rd on Al Ohver's
double and scored on Wtllie
Stargell's ground out.
Ellis nursed that lead by
pitching out of Jams m the
fourth and fifth mnmgs, and
the P~rates finally got him a
second rlll) m tile seventh on a
runscormg stngle by Renme
Stennett
The Philltes' biggest threat
came m the fourth when they
collected three s1ngles but
d1dn 't score. tarry Bowa
smgled to start the mnmg but
was caught stealmg Mtke
Schmidt and Greg Luz1nsk1
follow!'&lt;~ w1th Singles but Ellis
got out of trouble by slrikmg
out Willie Montanez

'

In other Nat10nal League
games, Atlanta took two from
San Diego, 12-&lt;1 and 4-1, New
York edged Montreal, 7.0,
Cincmnall topped Houston, &amp;2• 10 10 mnmgs, and Los
Angeles beat San Francisco, 73. St Lows at Chicago was
rruned out.
Detroit edged Boston, 5-4,
Baltimore topped Cleveland,
6-1, Chicago defeated Kansas
defeated the Kansas City C•ty, fl.&amp;, Milwaukee blanked
Royals, fl.&amp;, and the Detro•!
Tigers beat the Boston Red New York, 7~. then lost, 10-1,
.
and
Cahforma
routed
Sox, 5-4, 10 other AL games. Oakland 9-1 after losm 7-1
The Texas-Minnesota double- ,
' '
g, '
m Amer•can League games. A
header was ramed out
In th N t
Le
scheduled
doubleheader,
ague, Texas at Mmnesota was
e a tona 1
scores were Los Angeles 7 San rruned out
'
Franc1sco 3, Atlanta over San
Braves 12-1, Padres 8-1:
D~ego 12-&lt;l and 4-1, Cincinnall 6
Dusty Baker collected four
Houston 2 m 10 mrungs, New
York 7 Montreal 6, and Pitts-• hits, mcludmg a pair of runburgh 2 Philadelphia 0. St scoriOg singles m a nine-run
etghth mning, to spark the
Louts at Chicago was ramed Braves' ftrst game triumph.
out
&amp;ric Harrison, making his
White Sox 8 Royals 6:
first start of the year, pitched
Jun Kaat won h1s lllth a ftve.!Jttter m the nightcap as
straight game over two Atlanta completed the
seasons for the Wh1te Sox as sweep
Btll Melton led a 17-hll attack
Mets 7, Expos 6:
With two runscoring singles
The Mets, trathng 6-1 ,
Ken Henderson and Bnan rallied for SIX runs m the
Downmg had three hits each
and Jorge Orta and BuckY
Dent two each in the White Sox
attack Bruce Dal Canton was
the loser for the Royals
latest Styles Shoes
From Men &amp; Women
Tigers 5 Red Sox 4:
Ben Ogllvte's two-run fifth.
mnmg homer, his f1rst h1t of
TO GRADUATES
the season, helped the Tigers
Hrs Man -Fn 9 001o S:OO
beat the Red Sox and gt ve
Sat 9 ootos ,oo
Lerrm LaGrow h1s th1rd
stra1ght victory. Berme Carho
and Dw1ght Evans htt runthYour Thom MeAn Store
innmg Homers for the Red
Mtddleport, Ohto
Sox.

hits
seventh innmg to defeat the
Expos for thetr SIXth strrught
tnumph Da ve Kmgman
started the rally with a smgle
and capped 1! wtlh another
smgle wh1ch knocked m the
wmnmg run Felix Millan also
contributed a two-run smgle to
the upriSmg
Reds 6, Astros 2:
Johnny Bench's two-run sm·
gle capped a four-run lOth
mnmg which enabled the Reds
to defeat the Astros The Reds
sent mne men to the plate
agamst four pttchers 10 the
lOth and scored the f1rst two
runs of the mnmg on an error
by catcher Milt May, who
neglected to touch home plate
on a force play , and a h1t
batsman wtth the bases
loaded. Bob Watson homered
for Houston
Dodgers 7, Giants 3:
Don Sutton wssed a SIX·
hitter imd-struck out nme m
p1tchmg the Dodgers to VIC·
tory over the Gtants. Sutton,
boostmg h1s record to 4-1, has
won 13 of h1s last 14 regular
season deciSions. W1lhe
Crawford hlt a two-run homer
for Los Angeles to tngger a
three-run SIXth that put Los
Angeles ahead to stay

GRADUATES
20% oH

heritage house

Play it safe and sure.
It may be time to
have your present
policy updated.

Let's Talk Soon

DALE C. WARNER992 2143
10 2 W Mam

Pomeroy

Hot

new source

for gas.

One of the horte1 1 new soluces fat natural gas 1' the fro2:e n north

FOR KIDS -

FUNMEAL'M

Btg She!

Fun Tray

Reg French Fnes
Turnover &amp;
Large Soli OnnK

Fun burger '
Reg French Fnes

Swprlse Puze
Reg SoH Drmk &amp;
a Sweet Treat

WoWcMllRn· ·o.o.

OFFICE HOURS: 9:JO_lo 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS. l-EAST COURT
ST., POMEROY.

mning when the Angels got
three straight smgles to cut
the A's lead to 2-1 The A's
countered with f1ve runs m the
e~ghth mnmg to clinch the
opener
The Angels won the second
game, 9-1, as Bruce Boehle
drove 10 three runs with a
homer and a double Both
benches emplled when Boehle
was hlt on the side of the
heimet by a pitch by Jim Todd
m the siXth mnmg but no one
was tn]ured
The Chtcago White Sox

SIX

An old ttm er IS one who
reca lls when they thre11 the
book at you for dotng a no-no tn·
stead of telling you to go wnte a
best-seller

__ ___

5

~~ n

sa1d Ellis. "It fmally warmed
up It was really cold th1s
year. It was never th1s cold
before
It's JU St been
freeZing ."
Pittsburgh staked Elhs to a
1-11 lead m the first mnmg

Jim Hunter wins first game

West
wlpctgb
Los Angeles
12 a 600
17
Atlant a
12 9 571
San D1eg o
10 8 556 1
Ctncmnat1
1\ 10 524
1112
San Franc1sco 9 10 474 2112
Houston
6 15 286 61 2
Saturday 's Results
Ch1cago 8 St LOUI S 6
Ptttsburgh 7 Phtladelphta 3
Los Angeles 13 San FranCISCO 3
C1ncmnatt 9 Houston 3
Atlanta 6 San D1 ego J
N Y at MontreaJ ppd cold
Sunday's Results
Pittsburgh 2 Phtladelphta 0
New York 7 Montreal 6
Los Angeles 7 Sa n Fran 3
C1ncmnal1 6 Houston 2
Atlanta 12 Sa n Otego 8, 1st
Atlanta -4 Sa n D•ego 1. 2nd
St LOUIS at Cht ppd , ra1n
Today 's Probable P1tchers
( All Times EDT)
Houston (Rober ts 1 2) at San
D•ego (Mcintosh 3 Ol, 10 p m
At lanta (N1ekro 1 2) at Los
Angeles (Rhoden I OJ , 10 30

ava•llble 7S~c ents pee week ,
By Motor Route where
carrier
serv•ce
not
available ' One month , 53 25
ev mall tn Otuo ~r~ow \~ ~
One Years, 11 50
Tfl.ret
months. S7 00 Elsewhere
month S.
ths
U6 oo year. Six mon
S13 50 three months. 57 SO
Subsc~lptlon price .n cludes
1
!Sunday Times Sen_tl_n•_l_ _

nght.!Jander d1d not walk a
batter and struck out f1ve
while outduelmg rookie Tom
Underwood, who allowed only
four hits.

•

PT ' PLEASANT
2J2S Jackson

Ave.

Amenca badly needs supplies of the clean gas energy av,ulab\e thet c
to help solve the energy cri sts
Columbta has gone to the Arcttc to
N dtur,tl ga s pipe lines f ro m th e Arcti C
" tll be bmlt w1t h pro pc.:r rer:md for
ge t thts gas
t he are,1 th ey c ross A study group m
- were finan ctng dnllmg programs m
w h1c h Colt ml bt.t fll rl lltpates h 1 1~
opera ted complex test ~1tcs .1n~l
Alaska and Canada. mcludmg conducted lcngthv field !itUd tes to
on the t'a r tslands of the h•£h Arcttc
cx.mun c. the tm p.1c: t of ;1 ~a:-~ !m e on
- we've gotten the ngh ts to purchase
the l and ••nd w:n erw.1vs .met th e
wildlife that mh.1 b!l the lll
substanttal gas reserves alreadY,
These stud1cs are provJ i..lmg lhc
dt sco vcred on Alask a's North Slope
dnta necessOlry to meet g.row1 nl.!
Once the Alaskan ml p1pehne gets
energy needs w1th mmtm um
1.\t ~ turhan c c o f the l.'nvtro nm cnt
started, a natural gas hne can also be
built from the North Slope We ca n't
produce the gas unul 01~ productiOn is
underway
-we're participating in costly
env~ronmcntal and engmeenng
studies on how to build gas lines from
the froze n north to consumers 111
Columbm's service area
There's much work yet to do , but gas from
the fa r north wilrbc commg along
c
c6UJMBIAGAS
Columbta Gas ts workmg hard t"'l"' to
Gas is pnocious. pun cncrttY •• • use it wisely.
mcctr our cncr~y needs tomorrm1

�3- The Daily Sentmel,.Middleport-Pomeroy.'o., Monday, April28, 1975

2- The Datly Sent mel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy. 0, Monday. Apnl28.1975
•

Dayto~
COLUMBUS (UP!) - An 18year-old student and manager
of a pet shop m Dayton, FWger
Walker, was honored as the
FFA 's
Star
State
Agnbustnessman here
Saturday mght at the 47th
annual Conventton of the Oh10
FF A Assoctallon
Walker, who has been a
student at the Montgomery
Co unt y Jomt Vocational
School the past two years , tuls
excelled m his on-th e-Job
trauung m ordermg of store
merchandtse, bookkeeptng,
health care and feedmg of
anunals, customer serVIce,

aq uartum management and
more.
" FWger has uullated and
Implemented a bookkeepmg
and accountmg system that IS

peculiar to the pet mdustry ,"
mst ructor Robert Jehnng
srud. "He has unproved the
health and dtsplays of anunals
m the store and contributed to
the Improved breedmg
program of small anunals
here at the Montgomery
County J oint Vocattonal
School "
Others m contentton for the
award were Debbie Kemerer
of Canfteld, Mttch Ross of
Delaware, John Orrtson of St
ClatrsVJI!e, Cynthta Finlaw of
Jefferson, Helen Wtlson of
Clayton, Greg Becker of Ma·
nella and Carl Rhoades of
Zanesvtlle
Picked as the top chapter m
the state was the Buckeye
Valley FFA chapter of Delaware County, followed by the

Marysville chapter and the
R1ver V1ew chapter of War·
saw
The state safety award went
to the B1g Walnut FFA
chapter of Sunbury, the
marketmg award to the
Wauseo n chapter and th e
BOAC award to
the
Marlmgton chapter of
Alhance
Indmdual awards went to
Tim Kmef of Lewtstown, star
crop producer; Jean Tugend

high in Cascade Mts.

A Chronicle of America
April-May, 1775:
In the early mornmg hours of April 21. about 16 royal
marmes take about 2tl barrels of powder from the WI I·
hamsburg magaz1ne Drums beating the alarm bnng a
mob to the market square. but cool heads prevail Yet the
Vtrgm•a populace 1s angry When Patnck Henry hears of
thetncldent , he vows to lead the Hanover County militia m
a march on Williamsburg Whereupon V~rg1ma's Governor Dunmore declares that tf any mtllllamen advance
toward Williamsburg. or " by the llvmg God 1f an msult 1s
oflered to me or to thosewhohaveobeyed my orders I wtll
declare freedom to the slaves and lay the town mashes "
As a precauuon, however . on the 29th he puts Lady Dunmore and h1s children aboard the HMS Fowey at
Yorktown On May 4, he re•mburses the colony [300 for
the powder On May 6. he declares Patrick Henry an out~
law

••
u

t

"',e

••

"-

~c

:;)

&gt;

.0

"'....

!!!
- By Ross Mack'""' and Jell MocNelly

'-----------------------'

DR. LAMB

'

air management ; Mike Ralph

of Morral, fish and wildlife
management; Da vtd A.
Bugay of Belmont, forestry
management ; Bill Mayer of
Wash10gton C. H., accounting;
Dan Wilhams of Sunbury,
home Improvement; Richard
Hutchmson of Lafayette,
speCialty award.
The extemporaneous public
speakmg award was won by
Bruce Shober of Delaware, the
creed speaking contest by
Suste Barrett of Warren and
the prepared public speak~
award by Millard Brown of
Patrick Henry .
FWb Hovis of Kansas wu
elected new president of the
state assoc•at1on. Scott Miller
of Delaware vice president;
&amp;bert W. Groves III of lndlall
Lake, secretary; Dave
Eversole of Baltimore,
treasurer;
Roger
A.
Rhonemus of West Umon,
reporter and Mitch FWss of
Delaware, sentinel.

Carpenter Personals

avalanche after p1tchmg tents
Saturday mght at the 6,500foot level of the volcamc peak
The other 24 h1kers made 11
back sal ely .
A few hours earlier Sallie
Hee, 28 of Corvallis, Ore , d1ed
under a wall of snow and ice
on Mt. Hood. She was an
oceanography mstructor at
Oregon State Uruvers1ty and
was leading members of the
Mazamas Club down the
11,24:&gt;-foot mountrun.
A Forest SerVIce spokesman
srud ground crystals under a
recent three-foot snowfall had
been worn down "like ball
bearmgs." The we~ght of the
hikers or the wind - weekend
gusts were up to 70 miles per
hour -could have triggered
the avalanches, he said.
Uruversity of Puget Sound
V1ce Prestdent Dale Baily srud
bad weather had discouraged
the group on 9,677-foot Mt. St.
Helens from gomg on to
Forsyth Glac~er to practiCe
1ce axe procedures. They
camped 10 1ce caves and tents
at the 6,500-foot level because
they considered 11 safer at the
lower elevatiOn, he satd

We Hold These Truths ...

Ill

of Jeromesvtlle, star dairy
producer ; Mark Goodman of
Bucyrus, star beef producer ,
Lily Jones of Wauseon, star
poultry producer , Barrett,
star sheep producer; Joe
Ryan of Peebles, star swme
producer ; Jodi Peacock of
Medma, star horse producer
Donald Madden of Dresden,
star hvestock producer;
Davtd N
Stemke of
Wapakoneta , placement in
producllon ; Stan Hicks of
Greenville, placement m
sales..service, Ketth Luzadder
of New Lexmgton, agncultural mechanics , Stephen C.
Allen
of
Lancaster,
agncultural electrifiCation,
Kflth , Ott of Delaware,
placement m processmg;
Thomas Green of Alliance,
ornamental horticulture ;
William Molesky of Alliance,
producllon horllculture.
Dan Gerw10 of Pemberville,
MOBILE, Ala. (UP! ) - outdoor recreallon; Jim Noble
Researchers say they may be of Carrollton, sot!, water and
optimistic, but they feel they
have found the way to cure
· T-eell leukemia," the most
common type of blood cell
cancer m chtldren
Mcordmg to Dr Herschel Mr and Mrs Dale Turner of
P Bentley Jr., who heads the Groveport were recent guests
team of doctors · at the of hls mother, Mrs Harold
Uruverstty of South Alabama Oxley Others who visited at
Medical Center, tt is belteved the Oxley home were hiS
that two drugs now under children, Mr and Mrs.
research may be the answer to Charles Oxley and Carolyn
curbing the acllon of the Oxley, London, OhiO
Mr and Mrs Kenny Hutpituitary gland.
Bentley satd the doctors chmson and sons, Bourbeheve the pttuitary over- nesvllle, vts1ted w1th her
stunulates the thymus gland brother-m-law and SISler, Mr
and that T-eel! growth and Mrs Jerry Stansbury and
becomes hke w1ldhre , family and other rela(lves Ill
cro wding and suffocallng the area
other needed cells m the blood- Mr and Mrs Albert Qmvey,
stream
Dover, spent the weekend w1th
Ifthedrugscantrigger body h1s mother, Martha Mays and
harmones mto recogmzmg h1s grandfather, Ney Carleukemta cells and destroying penter Mr and Mrs Robert
them, the disease can be Parker and family, Mid·
controlled.
dleport, also v1s1ted at the
The treatment would not Carpenter home
work on B-eell or adult strruns Mr and Mrs. Larry Stansof leukemta.
bury and sons, Reynolds·
"But the T-eell m children burg, were guests of h1s
has been of most concern," parents, Mr and Mrs Dale
srud Bentley, "and 1f we can Stansbury and other relahves
whip 1!, whtch I believe we here
can, a great part of the battle Mrs Bermce McKmght,
wtll be won."
Sharon and Chrts, v•s•ted Mr.
The project ts working wtth and Mrs D 0 McKmght and
BCG, which 1s flown m from Goldie Gillogly on Saturday
the Pasteur Instttule m PariS Granville Lyons returned
and 1s bemg used on humans, home from O'Bleness Hosp1tal
and with thymosiO, which IS and hts wtfe, Mrs Edllh
bemg tested on lahoratory Lyons, IS now a pallent at the
rats
hospital
"We thmk Thymos10 and . Mrs .Dana Bailey IS conBCG will do the same thmg," fmed to Holzer Med1cal
srud Bentley. "Shut off the Center, Gallipolis
Dorothy
Perry
pituitary
from
over- Mrs
sllmulatmg the thymus. returned to her home m
Everbody has the T-eell Dyesv1lle after havng spent
producllon, but , the body some lime with her children'"
regulates its luncttons.
West V1rgmta. Those who
"You run mto leukenua were here wtth her durmg the
when these normal cell func- weekend were Mr and Mrs
t10ns fail to shut down and the Robert Hodge, Decola, W.
production of T-eells keeps Va , Mr and Mrs. James
on."
Summers, Alum Creek, W.
The drawback to BCG ls Va., and Mr. and Mrs. James
that it must be administered Fraley, Jr., Glen and Kristin,
by cuttmg gr1d lines into the Harr~sburg, W Va
arms and legs of the children Mr. and Mrs Van Buzzard
anditcannotbeglvenuntil the are convalescmg at thetr
victim has undergone two home after both were confmed
years of drug therapy
to O'Bieness Hospital tn
Thymosin, which Bentley Athens
hopes will be available for Murl Galaway was a
hwnan use by August, can be weekend guest of her
mjected as soon as leukemia daughter, Mrs. Rolland
diagnosis IS made.
Crabtree Other callers at the
The program is only four Crabtree home were Mr and
weeks old and many' Mrs . Kenneth Crabtree,
questlOils, such as the side McArthur, and Mr. and Mrs.
effects of the new drugs, must Donald Crabtree and Cmdy,
st11l be answered
local.
"We have much to do but Callers at the home of Mr.
we're very optimiStic," srud and Mrs Walter Jordan and
Bentley "! think we're gomg the~r baby son, Joshua Perry
to conquer leukemia."
Jordan ,' included Mr. and

T-cells
may .be
solved ·

Avalanche traps five
STEVENSON. Wash , (UP!)
- Sprmg avalanches rumbled
dcwn two mountams during
the 11eekend, ktllmg one htker
and trappmg ftve others m the
snow
Ftfty rescuers trted Sunday
to reach the ftve mountameers
lost on the north slope of Mt
St Helens but were forced
back by 70-mlle-an-hour
winds, whiteouts and frigid
temperatures It was not
known tf the h1kers were dead
or altve
Rescue teams were ordered
to make another effort today if
the weather lets up.
"It's uncertain that we'll get
the kind of weather we need,"
a spokesman of the Skamarua
County sheriff's off1ce srud
The f1ve m1ssmg climbers,
all students at the Umverstty
of Puget Sound, were ldenllf•ed as Karen Momot and
Nma Engebertson, both of
Tacoma, Wash ., Er1ck Spurell
of Denver, Colo ; Dick Pfesser
of Federal Way, Wash ; and
Phil Burdick of Eatonville,
Wash
The students were m a 29member mountam ee rmg
class which was struck by the

Meigs draws

youth star agribusinessman

Mrs . Clinton Gilkey and Tad,
V1ck1e Oberholzer, Albany ,
Karen Gilkey, Athens ; Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Crabtree,
McArthur; Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Wood and son, Gene, and
fr1end, Gallipolis; Mr and
Mrs. Norman Shaner, Athens;
Mr and Mrs Mendal Jordan
and Mr. and Mrs. Dwame
Jordan, Bryan, Ke~th and
Sarah Faye, local
_ Mrs Ida. Denmson has
returned to her home after
spendmg ten days wtth the
John Knotts family m
Columbus.
Mr and Mrs Clarence
(Mike) Fraley, Jr, (VIckie
Woodgerd) are announcing
the b1rth of the1r f1rst child, a
son, Dana Edward, born April
20 at O'Bleness Memonal
Hosp1tal, Athens 'I'lje baby
we~ghed 7 lb .. So/, oz. Grandparents are Mr and Mfs .
Carrol Woodgerd and Mr and
Mrs Clarence (Jack ) Fraley,
Sr Great grandparents mclude Mrs T A. Hamilton,
Oak Hill, W. Va ., Mrs. Alma
Wood, Jacksonville, and Mr
and Mrs Denms Fraley, Sr
and Mrs. Zelia Perry . local
IN VA HOSPITAL
Ke~th G. Aetker Jr, Lincoln

Hlll , Pomeroy , is
a
patten!
at
the
Veterans Adm•mstratton Hosp1tal m Huntington, W. Va
Anyone wishing to send cards
may address them to Ward
A), Room 133 , Veterans Ad·
m•mstration Hospital, 1540
Spring Valley Drive, Huntmgton, w Va
REVIVAL ON
RACINE - There IS a
revtval m progress at 7:30
mghtly at the Mt. Mor~ah
Church of God, Rt. 2, Ractne.
The evangelist 1s the Rev. Bill
Daniels of Cll'cleville. The
public IS inv1ted
REVIVAL SET
DEXTER- A reviVal will
beheld at the Old Dexter Bible
Christian Church Thursday
through May 4 wtth services at
7 30 each evemng . The
evangelist will be the Rev. Ted
Glassburn . Special vocal
mus1c will be pro~ided The
pastor, Rev. Ron Perry, mv1tes the publtc
·

South Point
Ironton and Oak Hill drew first round byes m
the 1975 Class AA Southern Sectional Tournament
durmg Sunday afternoon's drawings at Lyne
Center in Rio Grande.
Suggested playing dates !or the six-team
event are Aprtl30, May 6 and May 8
South Pomt w1ll take on
Me1gs at South Pomt m a ftrst
round game. Wmner of that
game wtll play Ironton at
Ironton.
Galhpolls w11l play Rock
Htll 4 30 p.m Wednesday at
Rock Hill Wmner of that
game Will host Oak H1ll.
In the Northwestern Sec-

CEREMONY HELD- The Ritual of Jewels ceremony was held for slx new ple~es ~
the Ohio Eta Phi Soronty of Beta Sigma Phi Sunday afternoon at the home of Mrs Debbl
Buck, Mulberry Ave, Pomeroy New pledges are, front,!-&lt;, Brenda Haggy, Pat Grogan,
Linda King; back, Yvonne Butcher, Pat Shnvers. and Mansha Nelson

•

brother's health 1s good now
Would lhls condition relate to
my brother bemg a twm?
DEAR READER - Your
brother 1s very fortunate to
have h1s problem correctly
diagnosed and treated wtlh no
apparent damage
The spmal cord ]Oms the
bram just as 1tenters the large
hole m the base of the skull,
the powt where the vertebral
column JOins the skull At thls
area there are many nerve
tracf$. hke huge bundles of
electrical w1res, that carry the
signals to and from the brain
to the enllre body below the
head
A bony spur rarely grows
out of the skull opemng and
may create pressure on the
spmal cord Similarly, hone
growth m the cerviCal spme
can narrow the channel where
the cord ts located and cause
pressure on the spinal cord

Whenever the pressure
creates symptoms, the usual
and best approach 1s to reheve
" thepressurebysurgery lttsa
plam mechamcal problem,
reheved by a dtrect
mechamcal approa ch. If
permanent nerve damage
hasn 't occurred before 11 IS
corrected, the patient should
return to h1s normal state
rather qwckly.
Mechamcal pressure m that
area of the cord can affect the
nerve fibers that control the
opemng and closwg of the
small artenes, the blood
pressure, muscular action and
almost all bodily funchons No
wonder your brother had
trouble
What causes 1t? That ls hard
to say The bas1s for 11 may
have been present from b1rth,
and, wtlh bone growth as he
grew ,
the
condition
progressed unlll tt ca used

problems
In. adults, particularly after
age 40, degeneratiOn of the
bones and such thmgs as
cervical arthritis lead to bony
spur
formaltons
that
sometimes cause pressure on
the cord or nerve roots:
One of the astronauts had a
narrowmg of the openmg 1n
the spmal column from an
overgrowth of bone ln that
area He subsequently had
surgery for 11 and apparently
has had no trouble with 11
smce He IS a well-known
pubhc ftgure We debated at
some length about the
queslton of whether the
opemng was so small that we
should not recommend him for
the program. He passed and
fulfilled h1s mtsston m space.
And, I don 't thwk that the
fact that your brother 1s a twm
has anythmg to do w1th the
,cond•IJon 1

HOUSTON (UP!) - Former
18-game winner Gary Nolan IS
back.
That IS the considered
opinion of Cincinnati Reds
manager Sparky Anderson
and the gut feelmg of 11,140
paying customers at the
Astrodome Sunday afternoon.
Nolan d1d not get a wm m a
6-2 game won in the loth inning although hiS etght mnmgs
of four.!Jtl pttchmg was certainly good enough for a first
victory smce Oct. 3, 1972.
"! JUst want to he able to
start every ftfth day, pttcl! as
well as I can, hold the other
team and keep 1t as close as I

ruce "

A lme smgle by Jose Cruz m
the seventh 10rung scored
Cesar Cedeno and lied the
game 2-2 before Nolan was
taken from the game because
of a shff throwmg arm.
Pedro Borhon allowed one
hit the last two innings to
record hiS second v1ctory as
Cincmnati erupted for four
runs w1th JUst three htts
agamst four Astro p1tchers m
the loth mnmg
"Everything 1s going to
depend on us," Anderson said,
eyemghis team's 11-10 record.
"If we start gettmg the ptl·
ching, we're go10g to start
can/' Nolan satd, his once movmg and movmg fast
painful nght shoulder covered
"I wtshed Gary could have
by a huge lee pack.
gotten on the win ledger I
"Sure, 1f I wm, 1t would be know 11 helped Freddie (Nor-

St L OUIS
Philadel ph ia
Montreal

man). They press some when
they're not "
Anderson would have to
admit worrying about Nolan's
pressmg •s eas1er than worrymg about hts achmg arm as
he's done smce a bone spur in
Nolan 's shoulder started
bothermg both of them in
m1dseason 1972.
Nolan won 18 games 10 1970
and was 15-5 m 1972 before
undergomg an operation to
remove the spur last May.
"Gary ts like any other
pitcher now," Anderson said.
Norman got his first win of
the season Saturday and with
the Sunday vtctory, the Reds
flew to San Francisco today
wtth a 2-1 series win over
Houston Cincinnati plays two
games on the Bay before gomg
home

Geologists doubt Rhodes'
shale gas plan feasible
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Several Ohio geologists, while
unpressed With Gov. James A.
Rhodes smcere desire to act
on the state's energy
problems, are not m full
agreement With the governor's latest solution _ the
extraction of oil and gas from
shale.
'
Willtam E Shafer, a Columbus consultmg geologist who
works with mdustr~al clients
searching for new energy
sources, isn't convinced the
technology
has
been
developed that can extract
large amounts of 011 and gas
from the shale.
"The blg problem 10 a
nutshell is that gas and 011 is
essentially trapped 10 shale
and very difficult to get out,"
Shafer sa1d. "He (RhOdes) 19
on the right track. 1 share hts
deep concern, but his claims
seem to be a Little optimistic .
"What good are large
volumes of gas if we can't get
1tout," Shafercontmued. "We
can talk about trillions of
cubic feet of gas, but only a
very Iitle portion of it IS

Berry s world
1

(
/_,'

available. We shouldn't
become oooessed by it and pm
our hopes on tt."
Emphasizes Cooperation
Rhodes last week proposed
Oh1o, Kentucky and West
V1rgm1a combme their efforts
to extract the valuable fuels
from shale in the Appalachia
regions of all three states. The
governor emphasized the lll)·
portance of getting everyone
concerned working together to
solve the energy shortage.
Shafer, however, said he '
would rather emphasize
dr1llmg deeper wells because
these have been the most
producttve and there are very
few deep wells in Ohio.
He satd there also would be
ecological problems m shale
extraction because the only
effective way to get at the oil
and gas would be to mme the
deposits. Hydraulic , atom1c or
gas fracture, Shafer said, still
yields only a small percentage
of the total amount of gas and
Oil "locked" 10 the shale.
Ar1e Janssens, head of the
SUb.,!;urface section of the
state Division of Geological
Survey, satd the tremendous
cost of extracting oil and gas
from shale is the major d1fftculty in projects already
underway m Colorado and
other western states.
Financial Difficulties
"They are runmng mto
difflcu!Ues because of the

" What's the matter wtth me? Why aren't any tmpressiontsts domg me?"

money mvolved," Jansenns
saJd. "People have difficulty
financing 1!."
Janssens suggested Rhodes
may have tnSlde information
on new techniques which may
make shale drilling produclive m the near future. He
noted some private land
owners, especially in the lake
counties of northern Ohio,
have tapped shale for oil and
gas for as long as 30 years
"They get relatively small
quantilles (of oil and gas ), but
the wells tend to he productive
for • a long tune," Janssens
said.
Janssens noted there were
reports about Ohio shale
wntten as long .ago as 1880,
and topographical maps of
Lawrence County drawn in the
early 1960's showed wells
drilled in 1941 were still
producing oll and gas from
shale.
D1ck Struble, assiStant chief
of the Dlvtston of Geologtcal
Sur vey, agr eed 1t would take'
"a lot of money and a lot of
research" before shale
Qt'illing becomes productive.
"There IS some production
but on a very small quantity_
enough to light or heat a single
house," Struble said of
existmg shale eDactlon. "My
own personal opinion is that it
would be very difficult to
release the oil and gas from
the shale."

Fund standing at $213
A public fund drive to a•d m
the hospital expenses of threeyear-old Ryan Jeffers, son of
Mr. and Mrs. David Jeffers
Route I, Pomeroy, confined t~
St Marys Hospttal With foot
and leg m]urles received m a
power mower acctdent
reached $213 Monday mor:
nmg

J

BASEBALL

Gary Nolan is back

Bone growth was problem
By Lawrence E Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - 1
would hke some mformatwn
pleas ~
Last spnng my
brother, age 17, began havmg
bllndmg headaches and occaswnal diZZy spells. As the
summer wore on h1s headaches grew worse He famted
several times, and he lost so
much muscle control that he
stwnbled constantly
At times he could hardly
hold h1s head up. His family
doctor sent h1m to a
neurosurgeon who promptly
operated. The neurosurgeon
removed a p1ece of skull bone
that was pressmg mto my
brother's spmal cord As I
understand 11, the doctor sa1d
the bone was growmg mto hts
spinal cord.
I would like to know what
causes th1s cond1110n How IS tl
treated and what after effects
are there , 1f any• My

honal, Waverl y w1ll play
Sheridan at Waverly The
wmner will
tak e on
Washmgton CHat Washmgton
CH. Hillsboro will battle
Greenfield
In the Central Sectwnal,
Mmforp 1s at Ja ckson, Piketon
at West Portsmouth, Northwest at Vmton County and
Wheelersburg at Wellston m
first round games
Four sectwnal champiOns
w1ll advance to the R10
Grande District
On May 14 at 1 p.m the
Northeastern champton will
battle the Southern champ1on
Ma1or League Standings
At 3 p m. on May 14, the
Sy Untted Press lnlernattonal
Nor thwest champton w•ll
Nattonal Lea gue
East
battle the Central champwn.
w 1 pet gb
Two RIO dlstnct wmners
Ch1 ca go
II
4 7 14
New York
8 6 571
2
"'
w1ll
advance to the regwnals.
P•ttsburgh

,

The drtve got underway
Fnday evenmg to help the
famtly Mr, Jeffers is employed with the Pomeroy
Police Dept and there Is no
hosp•tahzation insurance.
Contributors to the fund
already are Homer Banks
Emmett Hawk , Bernie~
Hawk, Leonard and Carol
Lyons, R W. Thomas, Howard
Mullen, Pearl Jacobs, Roy
Mayer, Reed Wtll, Roger and
j.

Rhea Deem, Dav1d and Ruth
Campbell, Constance Patterson, Debbie Campbell,
Charles Miller, Mrs. Addison
Seaman, Montgomery-Ward,
Inc., Mr. and Mrs. Wllbur
Koenig, Wesley Manley,
Mayor Dale Smith, Warren
Connolly, Dorothy Dav1s,
Ruth Tuc~er, Harold Evans,
Lula Murray, Russell UtUe,
Lucy Taylor, George Holter,
Denrus Moore, and Pearl Ash.
All donatwns will be
welcome. Checks are to be
made payable to the · Ryan
Jeffers Hospital Fund. Contributions may be mailed to
Mrs Dormda Nardei at the
Pomeroy Village Hall or may
be left with Mrs Nardel at
Village Hall .•
J

''

8

6
6 9
6 10
5
9

57 1

21 '~

400
375

5
5 1 '1

357

5 1 '2

Ellis stops · Phils on
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Wrtter
All it took was a little sprtng
weather to brmg Dock ElliS
out of hibernatwn
Ellis, who thrives on warm
weather, was the best pitcher
on . the Pittsburgh Pirates'
staff during sprmg trainmg
but he has had trouble gettmg
untracked m the early part of
the season, mostly because of
the cold weather which

prevents hun from gettmg
loose.
Before Sunday, Elhs had
made three starts for the
Pirates and had lost tw1ce
wtth one no-declston wh1le
fallmg to get farther than the
seventh mrung m any of h1s
o~tmgs In none of those starts
did the temperature approach
the 50-degree mark
However, the thermometer
clunbed to the h1gh 50&lt;1 m

Pittsburgh Sund ay and Elhs
responded With a stx.!Jttter m
pttchmg the P1rates to a 2-0
trmmph ovet the Pluladelphia
Phillies.
Elhs who had not pttched a
shutout smce last June, had
his fastball hopping and
showed pmpomt control as the
Pirates completed a threegame sweep and sent the
Ph1lhes down to their fourth
consecuttve loss The veteran
'

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Jim Hunter did 11 at last and
,T .u Palmer and Vtda Blue did
1 agam
That was the b1g news m the
American League Sunday
when the three pttchers who
probably will most influence
the AL pennant race delivered
sparklmg performances.
Hunter, the Yankees' $2.8mllhon pitcher who had lost
h1s first three decisions ,
hurled 7 2-3 hitless mnmgs and
wound up with a three.!J11ter
as New York defeated the
Milwaukee Brewers, 10-1.

NEW YORK (UP!)- Jack Nicklaus was hitting some balls
on the practice tee, and thiS man standing behind the ropes
watchmg hun, was talking ahout hiS character how 1t's so
much like his game, entirely different from most of the other
pros.
The man who was watching Nicklaus manufactures ~ certain type putter favored by many of the golfers on the tour and
pm
instead of chargmg them, he generally lets them have ;t on
10n!y games scheduled)
him , free of charge
Tuesday's Gam es
"Not Jack, though," he was explammg. "It's like an oooesNew York at Ch•cago
Atlanta at Los Ang , n•ght
s•on
or something with him He refuses to take anythmg for
Houston at San D1ego, n1gh t
nothm~
. Most of these otber guys will take anythin~ you gtve
Montreal at Ph1l a, ntght
St lout s at P1ttsbgh, n ght
'em
for
nothmg, and I'm sure he knows 11, but that doesn't
Ctnc tnnat • at Sa n Fr an n•ght
mean anything to hun. He satd he'd like to try one of my putAm encan League
ters, and I satd okay, I'd send hun one. He wouldn't take it
East
w. I pel g.b. without giving me the money for it, though I told hun forget 1t,
Detr01 l
8 5 615
11 was my pleasure for him to use 11, but he aooolutely would
Balt 1more
7 6 538
l
not accept 11 untU he patd me for 11. You don 't see many guys
M1twaukee
l
8 7 533
Boston
7 8 467
2
like that m golf."
New York
7 9 438
2'1:2
Or anywhere else for that rna tter, either
Cleveland
5 7 417
2 '12
West
Maybe you miSsed 1t watching Jimmy Connors, John
wlpctgb
Newcombe
and George Foreman mmt all that money this past
Oakland
12 8 600
1'7
Kansas C1IY
10 7 588
weekend, but while all th1s was g01ng on Jack Nicklaus'
CaiiiOrnta
10 8 556 1
ch:u-acteriShc integrity surfaced agam Rather typically, he
Texas
7 9 .t38 3
Ch1c ago
7 10 412 J 1h SaJd no to a $1 mtllion offer to play Johnny Miller head-and6 10 375 4
M•nnesota
head 10 a televised wmner.take..aJJ golf match. Miller satd the
Saturday's Results
New York 10 Milwaukee 1
same thing, no, claimmg such a match "gimmicKs up the
Texas 7 Mmnesota 2
game''
Kansas C1ty 8 Chtcago 6
Detrott 3 Boston 2, 10 •nns
Not many people turn their backs on a million dollars It's a
Cleve 3 Balt 1more 0, 1st
lot
of money, even to those m sports who've done well for
Balt 1more 3 Cleve 2, 2nd __
Caltforn1a 1 Oakland 0
themselves like Jack NICklaus, Johnny Miller, Catfish Hunter
Sunday's Results
and
Joe Namath. Nobody comes around offermg ANYBODY a
Mllw 7 New York o, 1st
milliOn bucks every day .
New York 10 Mtlw 1, 2n d
Detro1t 5 Boston 4
"Obviously the offer of so much money IS tempting "
Baltimore 6 Cleveland I
Oakland ? Caltforn•a I, 1st
Nicklaus admitted, saymg he had e1ght similar b1ds, three ~f
California 9 Oakland 1, 2nd
which were for $1 millioQ. "But I am not receptive to such
Ch1cago 8 Kansas C1ty 6
Texas at Mmn 2. ppd , ra1n
proposals It is killing tenrus and it would be bad for goH. We
Today' s Probable Pttchers
have
an obligation to sponsors on the tour. Why should
(All T1mes E OT)
Detrott (Coleman 0 3) at someone else profit• If the sponsors and Tournament Players' •
Balt1more {Cuellar 1 D), 7 30 DIVISion were involved, I might be recepllve "
pm
This latest offer was striCtly leiJIIunate.
Cleveland { Peterson 1 I) at
New York (May 1 1), 8 p m
It was made to the business representatives of both Nicklaus
Ch1cago (Wood 1 4) at Kan sas
C1ty (Busby 2 1) , 8 30 p m
and Miller by Sidney Gathnd for Caesar's World, which IS the
(On ly games scheduled)
parent company of Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas, Nev., s1te of
Tuesday' s Games
Chtcago at Texas , night
last Saturday's $1 mtllwn tenniS match in which Connors beat
Calltornta atKan Ctty , ntght
Newcombe.
OakUmd at Mtnnesota n1ght
Detro•t at Balttmore, n•ght
Gathrid is a responsible advertismg and promotiOn man with
Cleveland at New York, mght
full
fmancial resources behind him. He put together the match
(Only g~tmes scheduled)
between Connors and Rod Laver and the one between Connors
and Newcombe as well. He has not gtven up the tdea of getting
Ntcklaus and Miller to play 18 holes for a mtllion dollars,
planrung to speak to both golfers personally.
"We are not domg this for any altrwsllc reason," says
LATE SIGNUPS
Gathrid,
completely honest in his approach. "The two 'chalAny young men eUglble to
lenge'
matches
we had m tenniS were extravagantly successful
play American Legion
baseball this summer with in the image we were able to create and the public relaltons'
the Meigs Legion team, who benefits we reaped around the world. We want to establish
was unable to attend the Caesar's Palace as the headquarters and site for all future
formal signing up Sunday, tennis challenge matches, and we hope to make these matches
should contact George as unportant to sports as :!By, the Masters, and the Kentucky
Nesselroad, Jr., or Don Derby."
A huge condomimum complex and golf course in Miamt are
Hunoel, both In Pomeroy.
..,..
..........,.,_.- part of his organlZ8tion, and when Galhrtd speaks with
Nicklaus and Miller, he will tell them if they agree to the
match, he doesn't intend it to conflict with any PGA..sponsored
tournament.
"I respect every man's opinion about his own profession,"
The Dai~ sentinel
says Gathrid about NicklallS' and Miller's original rejection.
DEVOTED TO THE
"Perhaps, though, people like Jack Nicklaus and John Miller
INTEREST OF
would like to set up some kind of foundation. They're conMEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
cerned
about helping golfers. This could be qutte a start."
EKeC Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
It certainly could, and maybe now in light of this, Nicklaus
CitY Editor
and Miller may have second thoughts.
Published daily except
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Hearmg of the proposed Nlcklaus-Miller match after his own
Pubt•shmo Company , 111
with Connors, Newcombe observed :
Court , st , Pomeroy , Ohio
A5769 Business Offtce Phone
"I think It would be fantastic to sit with a cool beer in my
992 2156 Editoriat Phone 992
hand
and watch Mlller play Nicklaus for a million dollars."
2157
Second class postage pa i d
Newcombe IS programmed to think that way, particularly as
at Pomeroy. Oh to
National
adverll'5in_r
a tennis player who generally goes on~n-one. Me? I think it's
represe-ntattve ward
more fantastic that any two guys in sports would tum down a
Gr1ffith Company, Inc,
Bottinetli &amp; Gallagher D1 'd,
million bucks. EspeCJal!y for the good of the game.
757 Thtrd Ave , New York ,
They'd better be careful or they're liable to start some kind
N Y 10017
_
SubscriptiOn
rates
of
a trend.
Delivered bY carrier where

Hunter, who pitched a perfect
game m 1968, earned h1s btd
for the second no.!Jltle( of h1s
career mto the e~ghth mnmg
until Sixto Lezcano smgled
That, of course, was great
news for the Yankees but
there was even better news m
the clubhouses of the
Balhmore Onoles and
Oakland A's. The Orioles are
hopmg that Palmer, th e AL's
Cy Young Award wmner m
1973, will resume h1s place at
the head of the1r staff after a 7.
12season m 1974, while the A's
are pmning their hopes for a
f1fth stratght Western IItle to a
large degree on Blue's abthty
to replace Hunter as the
leader of the1r staff
Both Palmer and Blue
looked equal to the task on
Sunday
Palmer, working With an
early 4-0 lead, set down the
Cleveland lndl;lns on seven
hits for a 6-1 vtctory that mcreased hts season mark to J.
1 Palmer has shown no SJgns
of the arm trouble he had last
season and has an 0.77 earned
run average.

Blue fired a five-lutter as
the A's defeated the Califorrua
Angels, 7-1, m the first game
of their doubleheader. The A's
angry young man now has a 51 won-lost record and a 2 51
ERA m support of the hehef
that he will be the new leader
of the Oakland staff.
Hunter ,•who has a 5 66 ERA
desptte his !me performance
Sunday, allowed only a walk m
the f~rst 7 2-3 mrungs before
the no-hitter was broken up by
Lezcano's single. Tim Johnson
followed w•th another hll
before Hunter, who struck out
eight, got out of the mnmg
Robm Yount homered in the
ninth to spot! Hunter 's
shutout
Hank Aaron lied Babe
Ruth's maJor league RBI
record, 2,209, with a two-run
double dunng a five-run

seventh-1nnmg outburst which
brought the Brewers a 7-11 wm
m the f1rst game of the
doubleheader before a crowd
of 41,493. Pete Broberg pll·
ched a three-hitter for the
Brewers
Palmer struck out ftve and
walked one m pitching h1s
th1rd complete game of the
'€ason. Run-sconng smgles
c, Lee May and Brooks
Robmson highlighted a threerun ftrst mmng and Ken
Singleton &lt;tut his first AL
homer to lead the Onoles' 11·
hit attack Jun Perry suffered
h1s th1rd defeat 1n fo ur
deCISIOnS
Blue struck out e~ght and
walked none and was m
trouble only m the seventh

Pro Standings
NBA Pl ayo ff Schedule
By Untted Press International
( All T1m es EDT)
Ea stern Conf Fmals
(Best of Seven)
Boston vs Was hmgton
( Wa sh1ngton leads 1 01
Wed
Aprd 30- at Wash1ng
ton 8 OS p m
Sa t , May 3- at Boston 3 10

p m

Wed • May 7- at Wa shmgton

8 OS p m

x Fn May 9 at Boston 7 30
pm
x Sun May 11 - al Washmg
ton 3 10 p m
x Tu es May 13- at Boston
9 00 p m

Wes tern Conf Fmal s
(Best of Seven)
Golden State vs Ch1cago
(Golden State leads 1 OJ
Sun Apr 1 27 Colden Stat e
107 Ch1 cago 89
Wed Apnl 30 or Th ur s May
1 at Ch 1cago, 8 30 p m
Sun May -' - at Ch 1cago 1 10

pm

Tu es
May 6 at Golden
Stat e 10 30 p m
x Thur s May 8 or Fn , May
9 at Gol den Stat e, y tba
x Gam e 6 (elate to
be
announced) - at Ct11 cago y tba
x Gam e 7 (date to
be
an noun ced )- al Go lden St at e, y
lba
x- lf nec essary
y- T1me to be announced

'·'

N.

was the weather, man, "

when Btl! FWbinson smgled,
moved to th1rd on Al Ohver's
double and scored on Wtllie
Stargell's ground out.
Ellis nursed that lead by
pitching out of Jams m the
fourth and fifth mnmgs, and
the P~rates finally got him a
second rlll) m tile seventh on a
runscormg stngle by Renme
Stennett
The Philltes' biggest threat
came m the fourth when they
collected three s1ngles but
d1dn 't score. tarry Bowa
smgled to start the mnmg but
was caught stealmg Mtke
Schmidt and Greg Luz1nsk1
follow!'&lt;~ w1th Singles but Ellis
got out of trouble by slrikmg
out Willie Montanez

'

In other Nat10nal League
games, Atlanta took two from
San Diego, 12-&lt;1 and 4-1, New
York edged Montreal, 7.0,
Cincmnall topped Houston, &amp;2• 10 10 mnmgs, and Los
Angeles beat San Francisco, 73. St Lows at Chicago was
rruned out.
Detroit edged Boston, 5-4,
Baltimore topped Cleveland,
6-1, Chicago defeated Kansas
defeated the Kansas City C•ty, fl.&amp;, Milwaukee blanked
Royals, fl.&amp;, and the Detro•!
Tigers beat the Boston Red New York, 7~. then lost, 10-1,
.
and
Cahforma
routed
Sox, 5-4, 10 other AL games. Oakland 9-1 after losm 7-1
The Texas-Minnesota double- ,
' '
g, '
m Amer•can League games. A
header was ramed out
In th N t
Le
scheduled
doubleheader,
ague, Texas at Mmnesota was
e a tona 1
scores were Los Angeles 7 San rruned out
'
Franc1sco 3, Atlanta over San
Braves 12-1, Padres 8-1:
D~ego 12-&lt;l and 4-1, Cincinnall 6
Dusty Baker collected four
Houston 2 m 10 mrungs, New
York 7 Montreal 6, and Pitts-• hits, mcludmg a pair of runburgh 2 Philadelphia 0. St scoriOg singles m a nine-run
etghth mning, to spark the
Louts at Chicago was ramed Braves' ftrst game triumph.
out
&amp;ric Harrison, making his
White Sox 8 Royals 6:
first start of the year, pitched
Jun Kaat won h1s lllth a ftve.!Jttter m the nightcap as
straight game over two Atlanta completed the
seasons for the Wh1te Sox as sweep
Btll Melton led a 17-hll attack
Mets 7, Expos 6:
With two runscoring singles
The Mets, trathng 6-1 ,
Ken Henderson and Bnan rallied for SIX runs m the
Downmg had three hits each
and Jorge Orta and BuckY
Dent two each in the White Sox
attack Bruce Dal Canton was
the loser for the Royals
latest Styles Shoes
From Men &amp; Women
Tigers 5 Red Sox 4:
Ben Ogllvte's two-run fifth.
mnmg homer, his f1rst h1t of
TO GRADUATES
the season, helped the Tigers
Hrs Man -Fn 9 001o S:OO
beat the Red Sox and gt ve
Sat 9 ootos ,oo
Lerrm LaGrow h1s th1rd
stra1ght victory. Berme Carho
and Dw1ght Evans htt runthYour Thom MeAn Store
innmg Homers for the Red
Mtddleport, Ohto
Sox.

hits
seventh innmg to defeat the
Expos for thetr SIXth strrught
tnumph Da ve Kmgman
started the rally with a smgle
and capped 1! wtlh another
smgle wh1ch knocked m the
wmnmg run Felix Millan also
contributed a two-run smgle to
the upriSmg
Reds 6, Astros 2:
Johnny Bench's two-run sm·
gle capped a four-run lOth
mnmg which enabled the Reds
to defeat the Astros The Reds
sent mne men to the plate
agamst four pttchers 10 the
lOth and scored the f1rst two
runs of the mnmg on an error
by catcher Milt May, who
neglected to touch home plate
on a force play , and a h1t
batsman wtth the bases
loaded. Bob Watson homered
for Houston
Dodgers 7, Giants 3:
Don Sutton wssed a SIX·
hitter imd-struck out nme m
p1tchmg the Dodgers to VIC·
tory over the Gtants. Sutton,
boostmg h1s record to 4-1, has
won 13 of h1s last 14 regular
season deciSions. W1lhe
Crawford hlt a two-run homer
for Los Angeles to tngger a
three-run SIXth that put Los
Angeles ahead to stay

GRADUATES
20% oH

heritage house

Play it safe and sure.
It may be time to
have your present
policy updated.

Let's Talk Soon

DALE C. WARNER992 2143
10 2 W Mam

Pomeroy

Hot

new source

for gas.

One of the horte1 1 new soluces fat natural gas 1' the fro2:e n north

FOR KIDS -

FUNMEAL'M

Btg She!

Fun Tray

Reg French Fnes
Turnover &amp;
Large Soli OnnK

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Reg French Fnes

Swprlse Puze
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a Sweet Treat

WoWcMllRn· ·o.o.

OFFICE HOURS: 9:JO_lo 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS. l-EAST COURT
ST., POMEROY.

mning when the Angels got
three straight smgles to cut
the A's lead to 2-1 The A's
countered with f1ve runs m the
e~ghth mnmg to clinch the
opener
The Angels won the second
game, 9-1, as Bruce Boehle
drove 10 three runs with a
homer and a double Both
benches emplled when Boehle
was hlt on the side of the
heimet by a pitch by Jim Todd
m the siXth mnmg but no one
was tn]ured
The Chtcago White Sox

SIX

An old ttm er IS one who
reca lls when they thre11 the
book at you for dotng a no-no tn·
stead of telling you to go wnte a
best-seller

__ ___

5

~~ n

sa1d Ellis. "It fmally warmed
up It was really cold th1s
year. It was never th1s cold
before
It's JU St been
freeZing ."
Pittsburgh staked Elhs to a
1-11 lead m the first mnmg

Jim Hunter wins first game

West
wlpctgb
Los Angeles
12 a 600
17
Atlant a
12 9 571
San D1eg o
10 8 556 1
Ctncmnat1
1\ 10 524
1112
San Franc1sco 9 10 474 2112
Houston
6 15 286 61 2
Saturday 's Results
Ch1cago 8 St LOUI S 6
Ptttsburgh 7 Phtladelphta 3
Los Angeles 13 San FranCISCO 3
C1ncmnatt 9 Houston 3
Atlanta 6 San D1 ego J
N Y at MontreaJ ppd cold
Sunday's Results
Pittsburgh 2 Phtladelphta 0
New York 7 Montreal 6
Los Angeles 7 Sa n Fran 3
C1ncmnal1 6 Houston 2
Atlanta 12 Sa n Otego 8, 1st
Atlanta -4 Sa n D•ego 1. 2nd
St LOUIS at Cht ppd , ra1n
Today 's Probable P1tchers
( All Times EDT)
Houston (Rober ts 1 2) at San
D•ego (Mcintosh 3 Ol, 10 p m
At lanta (N1ekro 1 2) at Los
Angeles (Rhoden I OJ , 10 30

ava•llble 7S~c ents pee week ,
By Motor Route where
carrier
serv•ce
not
available ' One month , 53 25
ev mall tn Otuo ~r~ow \~ ~
One Years, 11 50
Tfl.ret
months. S7 00 Elsewhere
month S.
ths
U6 oo year. Six mon
S13 50 three months. 57 SO
Subsc~lptlon price .n cludes
1
!Sunday Times Sen_tl_n•_l_ _

nght.!Jander d1d not walk a
batter and struck out f1ve
while outduelmg rookie Tom
Underwood, who allowed only
four hits.

•

PT ' PLEASANT
2J2S Jackson

Ave.

Amenca badly needs supplies of the clean gas energy av,ulab\e thet c
to help solve the energy cri sts
Columbta has gone to the Arcttc to
N dtur,tl ga s pipe lines f ro m th e Arcti C
" tll be bmlt w1t h pro pc.:r rer:md for
ge t thts gas
t he are,1 th ey c ross A study group m
- were finan ctng dnllmg programs m
w h1c h Colt ml bt.t fll rl lltpates h 1 1~
opera ted complex test ~1tcs .1n~l
Alaska and Canada. mcludmg conducted lcngthv field !itUd tes to
on the t'a r tslands of the h•£h Arcttc
cx.mun c. the tm p.1c: t of ;1 ~a:-~ !m e on
- we've gotten the ngh ts to purchase
the l and ••nd w:n erw.1vs .met th e
wildlife that mh.1 b!l the lll
substanttal gas reserves alreadY,
These stud1cs are provJ i..lmg lhc
dt sco vcred on Alask a's North Slope
dnta necessOlry to meet g.row1 nl.!
Once the Alaskan ml p1pehne gets
energy needs w1th mmtm um
1.\t ~ turhan c c o f the l.'nvtro nm cnt
started, a natural gas hne can also be
built from the North Slope We ca n't
produce the gas unul 01~ productiOn is
underway
-we're participating in costly
env~ronmcntal and engmeenng
studies on how to build gas lines from
the froze n north to consumers 111
Columbm's service area
There's much work yet to do , but gas from
the fa r north wilrbc commg along
c
c6UJMBIAGAS
Columbta Gas ts workmg hard t"'l"' to
Gas is pnocious. pun cncrttY •• • use it wisely.
mcctr our cncr~y needs tomorrm1

�(

•.

~--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, April28, 1975

4 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Apnl 2H, 1975

RALPH NOVAK

Geiberger is ·
TOC ·champion

..

·I

.,..'

CARlSBAD, Calif. (UP!) - day three shots ahead of Lee
When AI Geiberger gets in Trevino, who finished one shot
trouble he knows exactly what down with a 71, and Jim
to do .
Colbert, who was fourth two
He just reaches for his strokes back at 71.
secret weapon - a peanut
W)lile Geiberger faltered
with a 73, Player charged in
butter and jelly sandwich.
After munching half a sand- wtth a 67. Geiberger had a
wich of his favorite nutrition , chance to win the tournament
the popular Santa Barbara , on its 72nd hole but threeCalif., veterariknocked in a 10- putted from 30 feet away.
foot birdie putt on the ftrst
Player , who also bogeyed
sudden-death playoff hole the 72nd hole , wound up
Sunday to beat South African missing a 12-foot birdie putt on
Gary Player for ' the $40,000 · the first sudden-death extra
first prize in the MONY hole, the par-four, 369-yard
Tournament of Champions. 15th.
"I ate half a sandwich on 13
" I feel that much of a letduring the round and my wife. down in the playoff," said
Lynn, gave me the second half Geiberger, who now has won
as we were driving in the cart $106,545- the first time in his
to 15 for th e playoffs," 16-year car.eet that he's gone
Geiberger grinned. "She said over the $100,000 mark we needed to pull out all the through the first four months
stoppers. Well I guess it of the year.
worked, didn't it ?"
"I hit a perfect putt on 15 but
Player, who was sitting so did AI," sighed Player, who
waiting to be interviewed, flew back to South Africa after
quipped " Well, I had a this event. "The difference
banana, hut I slipped on the was his went m and mme
skin ."
didn 't."
While Geiberger does have
fun with reporters about his
peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, he does have a serious
problem. He suffers from lo)l'
blood sugar and eats on the
course to keep up his strength .
WHA Pla yo ff Schedule
Johnny Miller shot a final- By Un1tcd Pres s lnter nat.onal
( All Times E OTI
round 65 to come from last
Sem1fmats
Best of Se ve n
place in the elite 30-rnan field
Quebec Vs . Minneso ta
and tie for 15th, but Jack
f Series ti ed 2-2)
Tues, Ap r il 29 - at Quebec ,
Nicklaus was able to dislodge
p m
the blond-haired northern a 05
~ Thurs ,
May 1 at Min
Californian from the top spot nesota , 8 30 p m
11 Sat .. May . 3- at Quebec
in the tour money winnings list 8.05 p m
Hou ston vs . San Diego
for the first time in 16 months.
( Hou ston le ad s 1-0l
By finishing at 257, 10 shots
Tues, Ap ril 29 at Hou ston ,
behind the Geiberger-Player 8 30 p m .
Thurs , May 1- at Houston
totals for. 72 holes, Nicklaus 8 30
p.m
x Sat , May 3- at Houston .
earned $5,945 , giving him
pm
$155,187 for the yea r to 8 30
x Sun , May 4--at San Diego,
Miller's $153,655. Miller shot 10 30pm .
x Tu es, May 6- at Houston .
291.
a· 30 p m
x- 11 necessary
Geiberger started the final

Secret files tell
FBI sex habits
• .

By Ralph Novak
While a lot of people have been upset by the reports that
the FBI CIA and Internal Revenue Service have been spying
on Ame'rican citizen; and compiling secret files filled with
juicy gossip, it doesn'I bother me.
This is not because I think it is none of the gove rnment's
business which of us is drinking what and with whom these
,
days.
1 am not worried because I have a weapon of my own:
while all those sneaky agents have been spying on us, I have
been spying on them.
'
And just to show them I'm not kidding , here are a few
tidbits from the Ralph Novak Seer~! Files:
FBI : Subject obviously are sex fiends. Spend much time
peeking in people's bedroom windows, grinning and writing
down what they see. Younger agents show signs of identity
crisis, not being sure whether first director of the Bureau was
J. Edgar Hoover or Efrem Zimbalist Jr.
No longer so easily spotted as they were when crewcuts
and skinnv ties were mandatory apparel but usuaUy give
themselveS away by self-righteous gleam in their eyes. Subjects are eastly bewtldered by college coeds who run away
from . home and change their names to Oswald Rabbit or
Cucamonga, also confused by anybody calling themselves an
army, as in a symbionese army, an antioobleckian arn\y or a
Jabberwockyish army.
Should be given credit, however, for being able to track
down pro basketball fugitive Bill Walton, who is 6-foot-11, has a
•red beard and wears number 32.
CIA: Subjects in recent years have been responsible for
winning 11 guerrilla wars, rune coups d'etat, five minor insurrections, three brushfire wars and one refugee landing.
Unfortunateiy, they have won them all for the wrong stde,
which has made subjects very defensive. So defensive, in fact ,
that they threaten to hold their breaths and call names
whenever someone wants to write about them.
Subjects show kleptomaniac tendencies, with particular
urges to ransack medical offices. Like to play dress up,
wearing wigs and phony glasses and trying to impersonate
Alan Ladd. Keep walking around saying "Thank heavens for
Uncle Nelson," as yet unidentified further.
Internal Revenue Service : Subjects spend long periods in
kissing and drinking orgies poorly disguised as "training
sessions." Show signs of instability, breaking into raucous
laughter while reading Schedule A's, then cackling
villainously while ordering audits.
Seem to enjoy gambling, flipping coins to determine
whether they will accept deductions. Demonstrate phobias
against answering phones, bothering with tax laws, listening to
reason, doing unto others as they would like to be done unto.
Sometimes confuse themselves with organizatiQns thatsell mailing lists.' Have been adjudged to be delinquent by
millions of Americans, who also question subjects' patriotism,
sanity and parentage .
Toii frrational to be trusted, too dangerous to ignore.

KC hand rated superior
CHESHIRE - The Kyger achieve one of my top goals,
Creek Symphonic Band, under that of a superior rating in
the direction of David · T. state competition . I'm exPhillips, Saturday received tremely . proud of these
the highest (superior) rating students," Phillips said.
in the Class C-2 State ComThe band was given a big
petition at Bexley High School escort on its return trip to
near Columbus.
Gallia County. Members of the
It was reported to be the Gallipolis Fire Department,
first time any Kyger Creek Gallipolis Police Department
Band received the highest and Gallia County Volunteer
honor a concert band can Emergency Squad met tpe bus
receive in state competition. at the Gallia County Junior
In all, 16 bands participated Fairgrounds and escorted it
in the state contest. Kyger down Second Ave. and up
Creek, Strasburg imd. Canal First Ave. The motorcade
Winchester were the only included paren ts of band
bands rated superior in the members.
morning performance.
The Kyger Creek SymThe Kyger Creek band, phonic Band will perform May
composed of· just 41 9 at its annual concert for
musicians, warmed up to "His elementary students at Ad·
Honor" by Fillmore. Its top daville School. The annual
numbers were "Landmark Spring Concert is slated a~
Overture;; by Caudill and 7:30p.m. Friday, May 16, in
"Lethbridge Overture" by the high school gym and · the
Ployhar.
annual. band banquet is set for
The band received three Saturday, May 17, in the high
consecutive superiot ratings
~hool cafeteria.
in concert performance and a
good rating in sight reading.
As a result of its performance, the band was_given
a bronze plaque from the Ohio
Music Education Association,
each band- member will
receive a blue medal denoting
its superior rating, and a
certificate was also presented .
Comments of the judges
State Farm has a pol1cy especial ly
were that despite the size, the des•gned
for renters The cost 1s
, the serv•ce ISgreat . And w•th
Kyger Creek Band had ex- low
our Inflation Coverage your procellent tone quality , fine tection can always stay up-to-date
~ automatiCally. Just what you 'd
balance, and the in· e11pect
from the world 's fH home
strumentation was amazing. msurer Ca ll lor detatls
The band was praised for its
Steve Snowden
overall sound, musicianship
1258 Powell St.
and youth participation .
Moddleport
Judges were James Bair,
Parma; Percy Hall, MansPH. 992-7155
field; Lawrence Griffin ,
IUTI FARM
Newark, and Stewart Long,
Wooster College.
lib ' tD«&lt;nlifiiiJDr.
iJ , ,_
Band Director Phillips
thanked the band for its
outstanding showing and hard STATE FARM FIREAND CASUALTY COMPAN Y
BIO(Im 1ngton, lllinoi$
work during the past year . . Home Othce:
"We just missed it last year,
" ''\.'\.''-'''
p 7409
so we really worked hard to fllllll

Mighty Celtics upset

l

BY. POLLY CRAMER .

Fading of dyes
· spoils her work
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Faded and
dull-looking jeans, shirts and
bedspreads can be dyed easily
or tie-dyed to make them look
like new again. Follow the
direction on the dye package .
However, I would like to know
how to keep a dyed article
from fading when it hs hand
washed. Any suggestions' R.K.
DEAR R. K. - Years ago
• when clothing, etc., was dyed
at home salt was added to set
the dye color. Salt is now
added to the dye and some
packages are so marked.
When first dyed and wet,
material should be a shade
darker than desired wheh it is
dry. Perhaps your garments
were not adequately rinsed
after dyeing. Rinsing must
continue until the water runs
clear. - POLLY.

jar. - MRS. J. J .
DEAR POLLY - Mrs. C. H.
will not have to worry about
having a last year's taste from
pecans if she stores them in
her freezer. Our church group
sells pecans and we find that is
the best storage place for
.them year round and they
always taste fresh. - JUNE.
DEAR POLLY - When
jams or jellies turn to sugar I
found it monotonous · to keep
setting them in hot water. I hit
on something the family likes.
We use them on hot cereals.
The sugar dissolves immediately and the fruit flavor
of the jam or jelly gives a
tasty change to the cereal. Do
try it. - CATHERINE.
DEAR POLLY, - My
mother has a good idea for
these days of high costs. When
she is packing a box of things
to send to my brother's family
back east she uses ·paper
DEAR POLLY - My Pet napkins to fill in spaces. They
Peeve is with those people who are very nice for this. They
leave their television sets on are light in weight, can be
while you are visiting wiih compressed to almost any
them and then you cannot desired thickness, can be used
hear yourself talk or think. so the postage being paid is on
How rude can one be?- MRS. something useful and not just
L. H.
old scrap paper. - CRAIG.
DEAR POLLY - I disagree . DEAR READERS - Betty,
with the compames who told my right-hand helper, was so
you that the taste of pecans impressed with this Idea that
cannot be "freshened." About she is going! to use it when
25 years ago I read how to mailing things .to her two sons
freshen their flavor. Pour at college. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Before
bolllng water over the nut
retiring
my husband worked
meats and let stand five
minutes. Drain water off and on a golf course and was out in
spread them on a heavy cloth all kinds of weather. He
to dry. Put in a frying basket learned to rub his work shoes
and immerse in deep fat long with petroleum jelly about
enough to make them crisp. once a week to "moistureThey can be sal ted or not, as proof"them and keep his feet
preferred, and sealed in a frUit dry. - CURTY . .

You make time \1aymcnts on
practica lly everyt &gt;mg. So whdy not
make a few on your hopes fl n your
dreams'!
.
All yo u have lo rlo IS Slg'tt up fo r
the Payroll Snvi n g~ Plnn \V hcre you
work. Then an c1muunt yo u ~pec1 fy
is se t m:mle fro m \ ' l)ll\' p:t,vcher k and
used to buy U S i;a,·i ngs Bonds.
You wori't miss tlw m0nt'y. And
you' ll get u li ttl&lt;• ridwr every \' ayday.
So dona te p~tr t of your puye leek to
the most desen in ~ ~._·n u ::&gt;f' m the
world: )LOUr futun·.

moue in with
State Farm

Take
. stock, .
tn_Amertca.

Stilt,,,.

Join the Payroll Savings Plan.

INIUUNC ~

SPRI_NG
AROUND THE HOUSE

W1se . Drago (5) and Mont gome r y , LaGrow. Walker (6 ),
Hill er (9) and Freehan WP -LaGrow 13-Ul L P- Wise 11 -2)
HRs-- Carbo 2 ( l st 8. 2nd l.

mer Boston star K.C. Jones, points and Keith Wilkes added LeF lore (2nd ), Oghv.ie (l st J,
Evans (JrdJ
Elvin Hayes asked a !_air held a little more respect for 26.
the opposition.
enough question.
The clubs meet for their
"No way we'll have an easy secQnd gBII\e in--;the. best-&lt;&gt;f"Why does everyone think
Cleve land
000 010 OOo- 1 7 2
the NBA is spellbound by the series, no way ' at all. Hell, seven series Wednesday night Bal t rmore 310 010 Ob:- 6 11 0
J Perry , Kern (5), LaRoche
Celtics?" the 6-foot-9 center of these are the Boston Celtics in Oticago.
(8 1 and Elis . Palmer (3 I I and
the Washington Bullets and they've been on top for a
Bob Love pumped in 37 Hen dr iclo.s LP - J. P erry (1 -Jl.
1st) .
long
tune
.
They'll
adjust
any
points for Chicago but none of HR - Singleton
wanted to know.
,.
-(way
they
think
they
have
to."
the other Bulls managed more ChiCago ' 203 000 300- 8 17 0
Hayes obviously wasn't
300 100 200- 6 6 2
The Celtics started off run- than 10. In the second period, Kan City
.. awed by all the championship
Kaat.
Gossage
(7 J
an d
banners hanging from the ning and gunning, defending LJve had 14points~llbut one· Down 1ng , Dal Can ton , Patl1n
()) , McDan•el Ill and Mar .
rafters of old Boston Garden, their league title in the style of Oticago's total.
t1nez WP - Kaa t (J .QJ LP - Da l
where the Bullets met Boston that won it for •.them and
Canton (0 2) H Rs - Killebrew
13rd ), Martinez (lst l.
in the NBA Eastern Con- building a r£43IJ;ilftirne lead .
But
something
happened
in
ference playoffs Sunday.
Mator Leagu e Results
Hayes showed his contempt the second half.
By United Press International
(1st Gamel
L ea gue
"We were sitting around S t LouisNational
Mil w
000 002 500- 7 11 0
·properly, pouring in 34 points,
a t Chi. ppd , ram
New York
000 000 OOQ-- 0 3 I
pulling down 12 rebounds and like frogs on lily pads, sunning
Broberg (3 -2) and Porter ;
ooo ooo ooo- o 6 1 Medich , Tidrow (7), Lyle (9 )
leading the Bullets to a 100-95, ourselves when we should
100 000 10x- 2 5 1 and Mun son. LP- Medich (3 21 .
come-from-behind victory in · have been playing," was
t;fR - COIUCCIO (1St) .
Under woo d , Sc h Ue l er
[7).
the opening game of the best- Celtics Coach Tom Heinsohn 's McGraw
{8 ) a nd Boone . Ellis (2nd Gam el
explanation.
·nf-seven series.
( 1 21 and
SanQui llen
LP Milw
000 000 001 _::_- 1 3 1
Under.v ood (2 2 )
Washington outscored New
40041100x- 10120
N Y.
However, H~yes' coach, forYork
000 01 0 600- 7 10 0
Champ ron, Colborn (4). Ro
Boston, 13-2, to open the third Montr eal
400 020 000- 6 10 2 drrguez (7), Murphy (8) and
Koosman
,'
Parker
(6),
A
poda
quarter and close within a
Port er ;
Hunter
( 1-Jl
and
ca ( 7 ) and Grote, McNally, Herr mann L P- Ct1ampion (3
Major L ea gue Leaders
point.
Another
10-0
spurt
at
the
Mur r ay
(7) ,
F
ryman
{8),
]} _ HR s ~ Herrmann (ls1) , Mad
By United Pre ss International
(9 ) and Foo te W P ~­ dox { ISO, Yount (3rdl
beginning of the fourth period Taylor
L eadmg Batters
Parker (1 -1) LP - M cNally (3
( Based on 25 at bats)
put the Bullets ahead to stay 11
Naf•onal Lea gue
g. ab r . h . pet . at 80-73.
Los Angeles 000 103 003 ~ 7 9 1 I st gam e)
Reitz, St L
15 57 .5 23 .404
Hayes .was Washington's sa n F ran c1sc 010 200 ooo- 3 6 o (Oakl
MQrgan, Cin 21 71 11 28 394
and
100 100 050- 7 12 1
main weapon in the second
Sutton and Yea9 er ; MontefUS· California
Bocme, Phd
16 53 5 20 .377
000 000 100- 1 50
co.
Moffitt
(61.
Williams
(8l
Monday , Ct1i 15 54 13 20 .370
Blue (51) and Tenace , Fosse
Unser. NY
14 55 14 20 .364 half, keeping t)le Celtics from an d Rader. WP- Sutton 14 11 . (9 ), Singer , Pen a (8) and
getting a second shot, scoring LP--Montetusco 12 21 HR - Rodn g uez L P- Singer (2 -2)
Josh ua . SF
12 33 5 12 364
. .
h'tmae If on"'·' ""'
Oray;ford
Watso n, Hou 15 56 5 20 ,357
and esta bl1shmg
~.
(2nd Game)
Garvey , LA
20 90 13 32 .356
defense.
But
the
victory
truly
~!'1
st
Gam el
W1nfiel d , s o
18 62 14 22 .355
Oakland
100 ooo ooo-- 1 52
.
Atlanta
030
000
090
12
14
3
Stargel l , P1t
14 54 7 19 .352 belonged to the enllre Bullet San Doego
Ca l if
302 004 OOx- 9 10 1
ooo
001
250a
14
2
American L ea gue
Odom, Lindblad ( ll , Todd
team whicll..,played excellent
Reed. Hous e IBl and Correll. (5), F ingers {6l and Fosse ,
g . ab r. h. pet .
'
. , Poco roba (6 ), Spilln er , Fol ker s
Carew , M1 n
11 29 6 13 448
ey {81 ; F1g ueroa ( 1-0) and
defense to stop the Celttcs 181. Gre of 181, Frisella ISJ. Han
Egan . LP - Odom (0 1 ). HR Wh1te, NY
10 36 15 15 .417
Tomlin
(9
)
and
Hundl
ey
WP
running game.
Boch te f lstJ
Cha l k , Cal
18 56 7 23 Jll
Gri c h, Bal
8 25 6 10 400
Boston's main adjustments Reed (2 JJ LP - Folkers (0 3 )
May , Chi
17 61 6 23 377
Hen dersn , Ch 17 69 16 25 .362 ,when the teams meet 'again - 12n~,Gamel
.. .--------~
Lynn , Bos
13 47 6 17 .362
. .m ...
...
•AII
anta
20000000241 100
-, ...·:
Wednesday
mght
Landover,
san
Diego
.
010
ooo
0005
J
Maddox , NY IS 6 1 12 22 361
Md
will
be
to
rtm
mOre'
and
Harr
i
son
(
1-0l
and
Oat
es,
Yount . Mil
15 53 9 19 358
., Ha
d Ph'! f"l.. •
Foster , Gre• f (9) and Kendall
Munson. NY
14 56 6 20 357
stop yes an
1 '-'uemer, LP - Fos ter (0 -1l
Brye, Mm
8 28 6 10 .357
who scored 24 points. The { 10 •nn tngs)
Hom e Runs
Nationai 'L ea gue: Cey. LA 6,
Celtics
won't tamper much c1nci
,.Q20 ooo ooo 4- 6 9 o
Ba ke r and Evan s, All and
with their set offense which Hous
ooo 010 10o o- 2 51
Winfie l d, 50 5 ; Bench . Cin ,
Nolan ,
Borbon
(9..).
and
Wynn , LA.
Ki ngman . NY . freed Jo Jo White for 27 points. Benc
h;
Ko n ieczny,
Granger
L uzinSkl, Phd and Stargell , P1tt
Golden State romped past 1101 Sc herman 1101 Forsch 1101'
4
and May . WP - Borbon (2 . 1) .
American League : May, Ball
Chicago, 107-89, in the opener LP- Konieczny ( 1 Jl ' HR and Burroughs, Te x 4; Evans
of the Western Conference Wa tson (2nd)
and Lynn , Bos, Powell. Clev,
. h
.
American League
Horton , Det , Ki l lebrew an d finals Sunday
mg t In Texas at M inn .. 2. ppd ., ram
Otis. KC, Briggs and Yount.
830 E. Main
Oakland. Rick Barry led the
MiL Blomberg ,
Bonds and
100
100
0024
11
2
Pomeroy, Ohio
White, NY and Jackson, OaK 3
way for the Warriors with 38 g~~~~~t
lOl 120 OOx ~ 5 9 I
By United Press International

Polly's Poinrar. .

Payroll Savings.
Security on the
installment plan.

•renters&lt;

.,.._.._.._.._.._..._...._._.._.._.._..._.._,_.._.._,_.. __._.._.._.._,._._._,_.. ___.._.._.1
J

Regional garden clubs in spring meeting at Marietta

Pence talks often depend on
who gets the biggest piece of
the other fellow's reanstate.

'

•

Lines cores

,....l

OUTDOOR
FOLDING

CLOTHES

,

DRYER
Thirty 6-h

1n

ground

CLOTHESLINE
PROP
7 foot prop has strong steel
clip, grips securelv

i sa·~

1CJ88

plastic -coated

lines. Dryer rotates
box. Installs easily

A shower was held recently
at. the Rock Springs United
Methodist Oturch honoring
Heather MicheUe Kane, six. week-old daUghter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Kane, Wintersville,
formerly of Pomeroy.
Hostess for the shower were
Miss Connie Radford, Mrs.
Mary Radford and Mrs. Paul
Rice. Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. W1lliam
Radford, Mrs. Robert Sloan,
Mrs. Jllll Richmond and Miss
Janice Eastman. The baby
motif combined with spring
floral arrangements.was used
In the decorations.
Presenting gifts to Heather
were .Mrs. William Gruesef, ·
Mrs. Harold Blackston, Mrs.
Arlee Abbott, Mrs. Walter
Wears, Mrs. James Evans,
Pam, Cluisti and Jay Evans,

ALUMINUM

li

SALE
PRICE

Infant given shower

CLOTHESLINE
POST
3"

~

81/J' steel Indudes 4 hook bolts.

SALE
PRICE

1488

.eu.u.nr;,·\

ATTENTION

'

Rutland

'

.

PACKAGE OF 40 20 GALLON

TRASH
&amp; GRASS BAGS
Green plastic bogs come
.
in one-ot-o-time dispenser.

344 .

RESIDENTS

Weatherproof, non-stretc:h1ng
strond. Green lt'tnyl covenng.

AN·D OTHERS!

REGULAR 5.19

. We Can Clean

'QPENe

Your Soiled

M1 f flendly

CARPET

7 DAYS
A WEEK

D&amp;D MEAT

Ru ns Batted In

National L ea gu e: Benc h, Cin
J9 ; Evans, At t 17, Baker , Atl ,
Cey and Wynn , LA 15.
Amefican League : May , Ba tt
17 , Bochte, Ca t and Hisle , Minn
lA : Lynn, Bos , May, Chi and
Burroughs , Tex. 13.

ou.: to Flood Damage

'
24GALLON

TRASH
CAN ,

York
Wire

ALUMINUM

1.orQe copoci!y p~stk

SCREEN
CLOTH
for screenino in

con hos block lock-on
cover.

nci&amp;eless.

Perfect

bock patio for summer d1n1ngl
24 IN. x 72 lN .

REGULAR 2.19

Rust-proof,

· ..

SALE PRICE

147

HEA\IYDUTY
11 QUART • PLASTIC

Pitching ·
( Blstd on most v i ctories)

National League : Morton , Atl
S-0 ; Sutton, LA .t -1; Stone , Chi,
Messersmith . LA and Mcintosh ,
SO 3-0 ; Dierker . Hou and
McNally, Mtl 3-1: Carroll , Cin
J~

.

American League: Blue,
5-l ; Rvan , Cal 4.1; Kaat ,
LaGrow and Lolich , Oet
Pa lmer , Bait, Fitzmorris,
and Champion, Mil 3 1;
Perry, Clev, Brobef';. ~ ..
MediC h, NY 3 2.

Oak
Chi,
l ·O;
KC
G.
and

0=4'·1~
T~ Frrer;tJVOnes

•

SALE
PRICE

"The Depal'tment

.

~VISITED

Aluminum color plastic pail
hos reinforced rim.

POMEROY
-CEMENT BLOCK CO.

Cal 9 ; North, Oak 8; Ot is, KC
alid C. wash ington . Oak 7,
N ett les, CaL Patek, KC and
Nelson , Tex 6

S_

tore o~ Building
'
'J 1915" _
Since

HOME FROM FLORIDA
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Gllkey have returned from
Florida where they spent two
weeks sightseeing including
visits to Disney World and Sea
World, and fishing.

•••
•••
••
••
••

.Wright·

•
•••
••
•••

B•rn•t

I liNCH

GARAGE
BROOM
Heavy block wl!h
polmyro flbors . Inc ludes 60 "

hondlt.

SALE PRICE

388
. ·.

•••
•

communication from State to promote programs geared Mizicko presided at a meeting
Chairman , Mrs . Kenneth to children.
of the presidents of the region,
Bland.
She asked that each county where Mrs. Capps was voted
Mrs. R. H. Capps, Public contact chairman compile a the regional director elect, to
The 1.6 mill operating levy
Beautification, said each list of all newspapers, radio take office in the fall. Those
person should find a spot to and television stations in her serving on the nominating for the Me!gs Community
beautify imd shouid pick up area, compleie with addresses committee were: Mrs. Joe School was endorsed by Xi
litter, that clubs should and call numbers and letters Bolin, chairman, Mrs. Cullen, Gamma Mu Otapter of Beta
contribute to the Highway and send these to her soon. She Mrs. Don Blue.
Sigma Phi Sorority at a
Planting Fund, and reminded reminded that upcoming
Following a noon luncheon meeting Tuesday night at the
that the OAGC will sponsor a activities for the months of served by the church and the Columbus and Southern Ohio
Bicentennial tree sales next October, November and awarding of door prizes by the Electric Co.
Plans were made for the
year.
December should be reported hostess clubs, an excellent
Mrs. Charles Caldwell,' to her by August 1 for in- program was presented by the ritual tea to be beld May 4 at
horticulture, said she had cludmg in the "Garden Path." Judges Guild of Regions 8, 9, the home of Mrs. Becky Anreceived seeds from the state County . con(flct chairmen 10 and 11 on table settings and derson and for the Founder's
chairman,
Mrs .
Fred gave reports on the numerous flower arrangements for Day dinner to be beld WedSchuster, for distribution to activities in each : Athens, flower shows. Judges par- nesday al The Sportsman in
local gardeners who will be Mrs. Miticko ; Meigs, Mrs. tiCipating were Mrs. Vance Athens. Mrs. Annie Chapman
responsible for reporting Bert Grimm, who announced Hendricks, State Treasurer; and Mrs. Jeanette Thomas
growth results in the Top the Regatta Flower Show to be Mrs. Clyde Mitchell, Guild served refreshments.
Others attending were Mrs.
Flight Gardener program. She held June 21 and 22 at the President; Mrs. Jesse Wolfe ;
Evelyn
Knight, sponsor, Mrs.
also chaired an excellent Pomeroy Motors Showroom' in Mrs. Edward Ray; Mrs. E~rl
terrarium display at the Pomeroy, and the Meigs Bender, Mrs. Kenneth Milner , Anderson, Mrs. Susan Baer,
meeting.
County Fair Flower Show to and Mrs . Allen Grossman, Miss Sarah Bechtle, Mrs.
Reporting for Mrs. Kenneth be staged August 13-16 at the State chairman of State and Phyllis Bennett, Mrs. Jane
Frazier, Sears Community Rock Springs Fairgrounds; County Fair Flower Shows. Bourne, Mrs. Donna Byer,
Involvement Program and Mrs. Capps, who anFunctional table settings, Mrs. Debbie Finlaw, Mrs.
chairman, Mrs. Phillips said nounced the Washington where utensils are placed just Vikki Gloeckner , Mrs.
that if more clubs do not enter County Fair Flower show to be as they would be for meal Otarlotte Haming, president,
the contest it is to be dropped, held Labor Day weekend; and servlce, were shown with Mrs. Donna Nease, Mrs . Iris
and reminded that the intent ·Mrs. Phillips for Gallia.
coordi'nating floral Payne, Mrs. Linda Rlffle,
to enter must be sent to the
Mrs. Dwight DeVoss, State arrangements and linens . Mrs. Ruth Rlffle, Mrs. Edwina
state chairman, Mrs. William President, announced plans "Grand Old Flag" was done in Scott, and Mrs. Lynn Shuler.
Cordes, by May I, and the for the convention to be held red, whtte and blue, and the
project book to the regional July 29, 30, 31, at the Perrys- "Chicago Fire" were in ..
chairman, Mrs. Frazier, by burg Holiday Inn, with terpreted in the E,Jilibition
June I.
speakers and demonstrators Table settings, where dishes
State News Media Chair- in the floral arts; as well as or other items are placed in an
man, Mrs. James Carpenter, tours, banquets, and sales unusual
manner
for
reported that little radio or rooms. She also told nf plans decorative effect.
Insure your
television work is being done for a new book to be published
Complete tables included a
insurability
in the region and urged cluha by the OAGC on Floral design , tea service with blue gingham
and requested pictures of accents, called "Boston Tea
"you'tt ~ " ·
NetlonwiO. ha • famlty
artistic arrangements be sent Party"; "Southern
plan lt!at can guarant41t
Hospitality" featuring pin~s
for consideration.
your rtgru to mort lilt ·
lnturanct 11 you grow
Mrs. Quentin Elder, State with roses in old-fashioned
otestr. regardiiN of yol.tf'
first vice president and ad- elegance; "Breakfast at the
Matth. c.u tcksatv.
lives of others.
visor to the region, invited Blennerhassetts" also
P. J. PAULEY
For Christian women this members to come to Nature recalled yesterday with
also means becoming open to Camp in June, where they magnolia trimmed din:11117 Sprt"' Avo., Ponte....;
those who have been damaged may enjoy boat rides and star nerware. Completing the
PH m-2318
by society or cast out because studies, and asked for entries presentation was an elaborate
of past acts, and to those who in the Reed Bird Contest for reception table, "Silver
•
NATIONWIIE
havebeendeprivedbecauseof Juniors and for the Out- Linings," suitable for a 25th
economic circumstances.
standing Regional Gardener ~nniversary celebration, to be
U,~~~~C!
Church Women United is, Award.
adapted to golden an~. OtM·
Mrs. Elder and Mrs . niversaries or weddings .

Fathers:

May Fellowship Day is Friday
Church Women of Meigs
County will celebrate May
Fellowship Day Friday with a
service at the Enterprise
United Methodist Oturch.
A sack lunch at 12:30 p. m.
will be followed by a brief
;;

business session and a
program. beginning at 1:30 p.
m. Featured on the program
will be .a skit, written and
directed by Mrs. Ben Neutzling, entitled "Build on the
Rock".
Everyone is asked to bring
I · ~w.:;:::;:::::~~~~::::~~f Betty Crocker coupons which
II

the proceeds to be used toward
: refurbishing the Xenia High
~::
i;l School gymnasium with
:~
equipment lo~ during th~
»
:&lt;, tornado of April 3, 1974.
MONDAY
May Fellowship Day started
BEND 0' the River Garden in 1933 and since tllat time it
Club, 7:30 Monday at the home has been traditional for
of Mrs. Bernice Carpenter. church women across the
Mrs. James Diehl to have the country to use the first Friday
program, Mrs. Bert . Grimm, in May to emphasize the
the devotions.
creative and healing relations
BLOODMOBILE at Mason that are possible among
Fire Department building, people in every community.
Monday, 1:30 to 5:30 p.m.
This year's theme, "Open to
Persons 18 through 59 urged to Live Flilly", is an invitation to
give blood ; 17-year-&lt;&gt;lds may experience who leness as
do so with parental consent. persons, living life w the
Support urged by Mason fullest, through personal
Mothers Club.
growth and sharing in the
EASTERN P'fSA to meet

in transition. In an agenda
that Includes a full life for all,
they will endeavor to broaden
the consciousness of women,
affirming their full personhood; to strive to reclify
the injustices which saddle
many
women
with
educational, economic, and
physical handicaps; to assist
women in transition situations
- housing and jobs for
families moving from poverty
to control of adequate incomes; re-entry of those
handicapped by prison
records.
All women of Meigs County
churches are invited to attend
the service. Mrs. Cordelia
Bentz is president.

delinquency; all parents of
A donation to the fund for
incoming seventh graders hospital and medical expenses
mvtted.
of Ryan Jeffers whose foot and
OH-KAN Coin Club Monday 7 · leg were mangled in a
p.m. at Columbus and Southern lawnmower accident has
Electric. Auction and refresh- been made by the 'Loyal
ments.
Women's Class of the Mid·
SHADE River Lodge 453 7:30 dleport Olurch of Christ .
p.m. Work in E.A. degree. All
Meeting Thursday night at
master masons invited.
the church, the class decided
POMEROY Chamber of to go ahead with the purchase
Commerce at noon at Meigs of bulletin board letters and
Inn.
Miss Frances Roush was
MEIGS Band Boosters at appointed to do this.
7:30 p.m. at band room, to ~s. Lula Mae Lynch read
complete plans for band · - - - - - - - - - banquet.
Wednesday
MEIGS County Church Soft· MIDDLEPORT Literary
ball League will meet 7 p.m. at Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Mt. Hermon United Brethren home of Mrs. Otarles MeChurch. Those interested in Daniel. Guest speaker will be
joining, send a representative Mrs. Jack E . Thomas, Rio
along with $25 entry fee and Grande College, whose topic
names of players. This is final will be "Mountain Way to
sign-up time.
Health," a report on mountain
TUESDAY
lore research. Roll call,
ANNUAL Spring dinner mountain custom.
THURSDAY
meeting of Meigs County
Teachers Association, 6 p.m. at
MEIGS OOUNTY.Councll of
Pomeroy Elementary School. Parents and Teachers, 7:30
WEDNESDAY
Thursday night at the
WILDWOOD Garden Club, 8 Syracuse Elementary School.
p.m. Meigs Museum, Butternut Judging of school winners in
the cultlD'al arts competition
Ave., Pomeroy.
ted and th
THE POMEROY WCTU to be comp1e
e
meets at 2 p.m. at the United county winners to be annouriced.
Methodist-Church.

scripture from Lev. 2 and used
a meditation and prayer for
devotions. Mrs. Mary Balley
had a reading by Helen
Steiner Rice, "The Windows of
Gold."
Reported ill were Mrs. Mary
Meinhart and Mrs. Do!U18
Russell, both imJroved; Mra.
Margaret Boyer, confined to
her home, and Mrs. Freda
Welling, ill at home .
Miss Roush gave the
program using the theme of
prayer. The group sang
"Sweet Hour of Prayer," and
then Miss Roush read The
U!rd's Prayer, explaining
each part and noting that all
needs are exJressed in lhe
model prayer. She read a
poem, "How Green is My
VaUey" and using excerpts
from a book by Marjorie
Holmes, described Jrayer as
coming to God for communion, forgiveness, and
thanksgiving. She concluded
with a poem, "Not to Seek
God, But to Shar('. Mrs. Alice
Robeson was at the plano.
Refreslunenta were served
by Mrs. Mary Bailey and Mrs.
Lynch wlth Mrs. Mae Swisher
w If
and Mra. Lena o e, conlributing hostesses,

~:::

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·

·

fiund at'ded

CLEANING

. '1" tt.. .oo~l ...
m J..; ""'"' ,.,..

~

·------~----~~~------~·----~----~--~~ ·

If your heart's set on travel we have a way to
make It happen. If you are planning
for next
·,
year, come and talk to us now. Our Vacation
Club I• now open.
\

'

CHOOSE YOUR CLUB
•1.00

•2.00

•3.00 '5.00

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS
CO.
Pomeroy, ·Ohio

•10.00

Vacation'
Club
Now Open .

A FULL
SERVICE
~ANI&lt;

'40;oCJo.OO Maximum Insurance

phone number . ·

. for Each Depositor

~

••
•

VACATION CLU·B

WE PAY THE 50TH

Wanted to own and operate
candy &amp; confection vend in; ,
route . Pomeroy
and
surroundinv area . Pleasant
busi ness . High profit Items .
can start pert time . Age or ·
e)(perience not important.
Requires car and S1395 to
S479S cash lnvntment. For
details write and Include

vour

WE CAN HELP MAKE IT HAPPEN WITH OUR

MAKE 49 PAYMENTS

RESPONSIBLE
PERSON
Gvs:a:w:cW

·--

Soc aI ~-~ ~~ ~':it~u~e =~a~~ :.~~~!n?:t~~=~=~
caI'en dart

t~(::; ·

Ul~~~:J::~.::: to~~ ~u~geM~~~inga~w:~~::
Te&gt;--f-her.J·c
speak on
JUvemle J I ij} C:

Fred Goeglein, Neil Richmood, Mrs . George skinner,
Mrs. Roger Abbott, Miss
Becky Houdashelt, Mrs.
George Sisson, Crystal and
Brent, Mrs. PhUiip Radford,
Stephanie Radford, Mrs.
Belva Sloan, Mrs. Horace
Abbott, Vicki Abbott, Mrs.
Amos Leooard, Mrs. Robert
Burdette, Mrs. Gladys
Morgan,. Mrs. James Clatworthy, Miss Twila Clathad
worthy. · Heather
previously received gifts from
several friends and relatives.
Punch and cookies were
served.
941111BIRniDAY
Meigs Benedum will
celebrate his 90th birthday
anniversary Tuesday at his
Route 1, Reedsville home. A
card shower is being planned
by neighbors and friends.

Mrs. Dwight Wallace spent
two days In McConn.elsville
visiting her mother, Mrs. G. C.
Knox, and her lather who Is a
patient at the Good Samaritan
Hospital ln Zane5'!ille.

UTILITY PAIL

Stolen Bases
National League: Cedeno,
Hou 12 , Morgan . Cin and
Lopes , LA 10. Hernandez, SO
6; Cardenal , Chi 5
American L ea gue : Rivers,

Mrs. Ethel · Gr:ueser, Mrs.
Randy Humphrey, Jay and
Tera, Tim, Angela and
Christopher Sloan, Mrs .
Marlene Johnson, Mrs. Larry
Romine, Mrs. Jeff Folmer,
Mrs. Violet Hysell, Mrs.
Homer Radford, .Mrs. Rollin
Radford, Sally and Judy, Mrs.
Edgar Abbott, Mrs. Levi
Partlow.

By Mrs. James Carpenter
11.
The spring meetmg of
Mrs . Gomer Phillips
Region 11 of the Ohio reported on garden therapy
Association of Garden Clubs work with residents of
was held recently at the Gallipolis State Institute since
Marietta First Baptist 1959, and of this year's Arbor
Church, with the Valley View, Day planting of a grandi!lora
Pioneer and Marietta Garden magnolia . Mrs . Edward
Clubs hosting.
Mizicko reported for· the
Mrs. Aaron Kelton, regional absent
Mrs.
Harry
director, called the meeting to Cokonougher o(_ gar.den
order, and devotions with a therapy work with the Good
floral theme were given by Luck Garden Club at the
Mrs. N. W. Schramm.
Athens Mental Health Center,
Marietta mayor, James F. now in its 14th year, where
Schueikert, welcomed the various activities are enjoyed
group and urged Bicentennial by patients.
Mrs. Mizicko, regional slide
activihes, especially permanent plantings. Mrs. Karl chairman, requested more
Grueser and Mrs . Robert persons to enter the slide
Kuhn gave the secretary 's and competition, as this is the way
treasurer's reports, respec- the sets are updated for use in
lively, and assisted Mrs . public educational programs.
Mrs. Gilber-t Cullen anKelton in conducting the
meeting. Various chairmen nounced
the upcoming
reported on regional ac- Exhibitors and Judges School
tiviltes :
to be held at Scott's Inn,
Mrs. Earl Bender, Flower Columbus, on May 21 and 22,
Show Awards, and former with the topics to include
regional director, encouraged Japanese design, iris, peonies,
more clubs to enter the flower and landscaping, as well as
show competition, checking plant· identification. the handbook and Garden
Mrs . Robert Thompson
Path for current rules. She reported no new Junior
also recognized guests, Mrs . . garden clubs and reminded
Robert Reibel of Morristown, that June 1 is the deadline for
a former regional director of club registration.
this area, Mrs. Charles
Mrs. Reid Young, Program
Phillips, director o( Region 12, Book chairman, called atMrs. William Robinson, and tention to the new score sheet
members of the Malta Me- and urged all clubs to use this
Connelsville Garden Club of as a basis for planning the new
Region 8, formerly in Region year's meetings. She read a

School levy
is endorsed

Department avv
J931 Meadowbrook Rd .
MlftftllpOIII, Mn. 55426

.

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,

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~--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, April28, 1975

4 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Apnl 2H, 1975

RALPH NOVAK

Geiberger is ·
TOC ·champion

..

·I

.,..'

CARlSBAD, Calif. (UP!) - day three shots ahead of Lee
When AI Geiberger gets in Trevino, who finished one shot
trouble he knows exactly what down with a 71, and Jim
to do .
Colbert, who was fourth two
He just reaches for his strokes back at 71.
secret weapon - a peanut
W)lile Geiberger faltered
with a 73, Player charged in
butter and jelly sandwich.
After munching half a sand- wtth a 67. Geiberger had a
wich of his favorite nutrition , chance to win the tournament
the popular Santa Barbara , on its 72nd hole but threeCalif., veterariknocked in a 10- putted from 30 feet away.
foot birdie putt on the ftrst
Player , who also bogeyed
sudden-death playoff hole the 72nd hole , wound up
Sunday to beat South African missing a 12-foot birdie putt on
Gary Player for ' the $40,000 · the first sudden-death extra
first prize in the MONY hole, the par-four, 369-yard
Tournament of Champions. 15th.
"I ate half a sandwich on 13
" I feel that much of a letduring the round and my wife. down in the playoff," said
Lynn, gave me the second half Geiberger, who now has won
as we were driving in the cart $106,545- the first time in his
to 15 for th e playoffs," 16-year car.eet that he's gone
Geiberger grinned. "She said over the $100,000 mark we needed to pull out all the through the first four months
stoppers. Well I guess it of the year.
worked, didn't it ?"
"I hit a perfect putt on 15 but
Player, who was sitting so did AI," sighed Player, who
waiting to be interviewed, flew back to South Africa after
quipped " Well, I had a this event. "The difference
banana, hut I slipped on the was his went m and mme
skin ."
didn 't."
While Geiberger does have
fun with reporters about his
peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, he does have a serious
problem. He suffers from lo)l'
blood sugar and eats on the
course to keep up his strength .
WHA Pla yo ff Schedule
Johnny Miller shot a final- By Un1tcd Pres s lnter nat.onal
( All Times E OTI
round 65 to come from last
Sem1fmats
Best of Se ve n
place in the elite 30-rnan field
Quebec Vs . Minneso ta
and tie for 15th, but Jack
f Series ti ed 2-2)
Tues, Ap r il 29 - at Quebec ,
Nicklaus was able to dislodge
p m
the blond-haired northern a 05
~ Thurs ,
May 1 at Min
Californian from the top spot nesota , 8 30 p m
11 Sat .. May . 3- at Quebec
in the tour money winnings list 8.05 p m
Hou ston vs . San Diego
for the first time in 16 months.
( Hou ston le ad s 1-0l
By finishing at 257, 10 shots
Tues, Ap ril 29 at Hou ston ,
behind the Geiberger-Player 8 30 p m .
Thurs , May 1- at Houston
totals for. 72 holes, Nicklaus 8 30
p.m
x Sat , May 3- at Houston .
earned $5,945 , giving him
pm
$155,187 for the yea r to 8 30
x Sun , May 4--at San Diego,
Miller's $153,655. Miller shot 10 30pm .
x Tu es, May 6- at Houston .
291.
a· 30 p m
x- 11 necessary
Geiberger started the final

Secret files tell
FBI sex habits
• .

By Ralph Novak
While a lot of people have been upset by the reports that
the FBI CIA and Internal Revenue Service have been spying
on Ame'rican citizen; and compiling secret files filled with
juicy gossip, it doesn'I bother me.
This is not because I think it is none of the gove rnment's
business which of us is drinking what and with whom these
,
days.
1 am not worried because I have a weapon of my own:
while all those sneaky agents have been spying on us, I have
been spying on them.
'
And just to show them I'm not kidding , here are a few
tidbits from the Ralph Novak Seer~! Files:
FBI : Subject obviously are sex fiends. Spend much time
peeking in people's bedroom windows, grinning and writing
down what they see. Younger agents show signs of identity
crisis, not being sure whether first director of the Bureau was
J. Edgar Hoover or Efrem Zimbalist Jr.
No longer so easily spotted as they were when crewcuts
and skinnv ties were mandatory apparel but usuaUy give
themselveS away by self-righteous gleam in their eyes. Subjects are eastly bewtldered by college coeds who run away
from . home and change their names to Oswald Rabbit or
Cucamonga, also confused by anybody calling themselves an
army, as in a symbionese army, an antioobleckian arn\y or a
Jabberwockyish army.
Should be given credit, however, for being able to track
down pro basketball fugitive Bill Walton, who is 6-foot-11, has a
•red beard and wears number 32.
CIA: Subjects in recent years have been responsible for
winning 11 guerrilla wars, rune coups d'etat, five minor insurrections, three brushfire wars and one refugee landing.
Unfortunateiy, they have won them all for the wrong stde,
which has made subjects very defensive. So defensive, in fact ,
that they threaten to hold their breaths and call names
whenever someone wants to write about them.
Subjects show kleptomaniac tendencies, with particular
urges to ransack medical offices. Like to play dress up,
wearing wigs and phony glasses and trying to impersonate
Alan Ladd. Keep walking around saying "Thank heavens for
Uncle Nelson," as yet unidentified further.
Internal Revenue Service : Subjects spend long periods in
kissing and drinking orgies poorly disguised as "training
sessions." Show signs of instability, breaking into raucous
laughter while reading Schedule A's, then cackling
villainously while ordering audits.
Seem to enjoy gambling, flipping coins to determine
whether they will accept deductions. Demonstrate phobias
against answering phones, bothering with tax laws, listening to
reason, doing unto others as they would like to be done unto.
Sometimes confuse themselves with organizatiQns thatsell mailing lists.' Have been adjudged to be delinquent by
millions of Americans, who also question subjects' patriotism,
sanity and parentage .
Toii frrational to be trusted, too dangerous to ignore.

KC hand rated superior
CHESHIRE - The Kyger achieve one of my top goals,
Creek Symphonic Band, under that of a superior rating in
the direction of David · T. state competition . I'm exPhillips, Saturday received tremely . proud of these
the highest (superior) rating students," Phillips said.
in the Class C-2 State ComThe band was given a big
petition at Bexley High School escort on its return trip to
near Columbus.
Gallia County. Members of the
It was reported to be the Gallipolis Fire Department,
first time any Kyger Creek Gallipolis Police Department
Band received the highest and Gallia County Volunteer
honor a concert band can Emergency Squad met tpe bus
receive in state competition. at the Gallia County Junior
In all, 16 bands participated Fairgrounds and escorted it
in the state contest. Kyger down Second Ave. and up
Creek, Strasburg imd. Canal First Ave. The motorcade
Winchester were the only included paren ts of band
bands rated superior in the members.
morning performance.
The Kyger Creek SymThe Kyger Creek band, phonic Band will perform May
composed of· just 41 9 at its annual concert for
musicians, warmed up to "His elementary students at Ad·
Honor" by Fillmore. Its top daville School. The annual
numbers were "Landmark Spring Concert is slated a~
Overture;; by Caudill and 7:30p.m. Friday, May 16, in
"Lethbridge Overture" by the high school gym and · the
Ployhar.
annual. band banquet is set for
The band received three Saturday, May 17, in the high
consecutive superiot ratings
~hool cafeteria.
in concert performance and a
good rating in sight reading.
As a result of its performance, the band was_given
a bronze plaque from the Ohio
Music Education Association,
each band- member will
receive a blue medal denoting
its superior rating, and a
certificate was also presented .
Comments of the judges
State Farm has a pol1cy especial ly
were that despite the size, the des•gned
for renters The cost 1s
, the serv•ce ISgreat . And w•th
Kyger Creek Band had ex- low
our Inflation Coverage your procellent tone quality , fine tection can always stay up-to-date
~ automatiCally. Just what you 'd
balance, and the in· e11pect
from the world 's fH home
strumentation was amazing. msurer Ca ll lor detatls
The band was praised for its
Steve Snowden
overall sound, musicianship
1258 Powell St.
and youth participation .
Moddleport
Judges were James Bair,
Parma; Percy Hall, MansPH. 992-7155
field; Lawrence Griffin ,
IUTI FARM
Newark, and Stewart Long,
Wooster College.
lib ' tD«&lt;nlifiiiJDr.
iJ , ,_
Band Director Phillips
thanked the band for its
outstanding showing and hard STATE FARM FIREAND CASUALTY COMPAN Y
BIO(Im 1ngton, lllinoi$
work during the past year . . Home Othce:
"We just missed it last year,
" ''\.'\.''-'''
p 7409
so we really worked hard to fllllll

Mighty Celtics upset

l

BY. POLLY CRAMER .

Fading of dyes
· spoils her work
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Faded and
dull-looking jeans, shirts and
bedspreads can be dyed easily
or tie-dyed to make them look
like new again. Follow the
direction on the dye package .
However, I would like to know
how to keep a dyed article
from fading when it hs hand
washed. Any suggestions' R.K.
DEAR R. K. - Years ago
• when clothing, etc., was dyed
at home salt was added to set
the dye color. Salt is now
added to the dye and some
packages are so marked.
When first dyed and wet,
material should be a shade
darker than desired wheh it is
dry. Perhaps your garments
were not adequately rinsed
after dyeing. Rinsing must
continue until the water runs
clear. - POLLY.

jar. - MRS. J. J .
DEAR POLLY - Mrs. C. H.
will not have to worry about
having a last year's taste from
pecans if she stores them in
her freezer. Our church group
sells pecans and we find that is
the best storage place for
.them year round and they
always taste fresh. - JUNE.
DEAR POLLY - When
jams or jellies turn to sugar I
found it monotonous · to keep
setting them in hot water. I hit
on something the family likes.
We use them on hot cereals.
The sugar dissolves immediately and the fruit flavor
of the jam or jelly gives a
tasty change to the cereal. Do
try it. - CATHERINE.
DEAR POLLY, - My
mother has a good idea for
these days of high costs. When
she is packing a box of things
to send to my brother's family
back east she uses ·paper
DEAR POLLY - My Pet napkins to fill in spaces. They
Peeve is with those people who are very nice for this. They
leave their television sets on are light in weight, can be
while you are visiting wiih compressed to almost any
them and then you cannot desired thickness, can be used
hear yourself talk or think. so the postage being paid is on
How rude can one be?- MRS. something useful and not just
L. H.
old scrap paper. - CRAIG.
DEAR POLLY - I disagree . DEAR READERS - Betty,
with the compames who told my right-hand helper, was so
you that the taste of pecans impressed with this Idea that
cannot be "freshened." About she is going! to use it when
25 years ago I read how to mailing things .to her two sons
freshen their flavor. Pour at college. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Before
bolllng water over the nut
retiring
my husband worked
meats and let stand five
minutes. Drain water off and on a golf course and was out in
spread them on a heavy cloth all kinds of weather. He
to dry. Put in a frying basket learned to rub his work shoes
and immerse in deep fat long with petroleum jelly about
enough to make them crisp. once a week to "moistureThey can be sal ted or not, as proof"them and keep his feet
preferred, and sealed in a frUit dry. - CURTY . .

You make time \1aymcnts on
practica lly everyt &gt;mg. So whdy not
make a few on your hopes fl n your
dreams'!
.
All yo u have lo rlo IS Slg'tt up fo r
the Payroll Snvi n g~ Plnn \V hcre you
work. Then an c1muunt yo u ~pec1 fy
is se t m:mle fro m \ ' l)ll\' p:t,vcher k and
used to buy U S i;a,·i ngs Bonds.
You wori't miss tlw m0nt'y. And
you' ll get u li ttl&lt;• ridwr every \' ayday.
So dona te p~tr t of your puye leek to
the most desen in ~ ~._·n u ::&gt;f' m the
world: )LOUr futun·.

moue in with
State Farm

Take
. stock, .
tn_Amertca.

Stilt,,,.

Join the Payroll Savings Plan.

INIUUNC ~

SPRI_NG
AROUND THE HOUSE

W1se . Drago (5) and Mont gome r y , LaGrow. Walker (6 ),
Hill er (9) and Freehan WP -LaGrow 13-Ul L P- Wise 11 -2)
HRs-- Carbo 2 ( l st 8. 2nd l.

mer Boston star K.C. Jones, points and Keith Wilkes added LeF lore (2nd ), Oghv.ie (l st J,
Evans (JrdJ
Elvin Hayes asked a !_air held a little more respect for 26.
the opposition.
enough question.
The clubs meet for their
"No way we'll have an easy secQnd gBII\e in--;the. best-&lt;&gt;f"Why does everyone think
Cleve land
000 010 OOo- 1 7 2
the NBA is spellbound by the series, no way ' at all. Hell, seven series Wednesday night Bal t rmore 310 010 Ob:- 6 11 0
J Perry , Kern (5), LaRoche
Celtics?" the 6-foot-9 center of these are the Boston Celtics in Oticago.
(8 1 and Elis . Palmer (3 I I and
the Washington Bullets and they've been on top for a
Bob Love pumped in 37 Hen dr iclo.s LP - J. P erry (1 -Jl.
1st) .
long
tune
.
They'll
adjust
any
points for Chicago but none of HR - Singleton
wanted to know.
,.
-(way
they
think
they
have
to."
the other Bulls managed more ChiCago ' 203 000 300- 8 17 0
Hayes obviously wasn't
300 100 200- 6 6 2
The Celtics started off run- than 10. In the second period, Kan City
.. awed by all the championship
Kaat.
Gossage
(7 J
an d
banners hanging from the ning and gunning, defending LJve had 14points~llbut one· Down 1ng , Dal Can ton , Patl1n
()) , McDan•el Ill and Mar .
rafters of old Boston Garden, their league title in the style of Oticago's total.
t1nez WP - Kaa t (J .QJ LP - Da l
where the Bullets met Boston that won it for •.them and
Canton (0 2) H Rs - Killebrew
13rd ), Martinez (lst l.
in the NBA Eastern Con- building a r£43IJ;ilftirne lead .
But
something
happened
in
ference playoffs Sunday.
Mator Leagu e Results
Hayes showed his contempt the second half.
By United Press International
(1st Gamel
L ea gue
"We were sitting around S t LouisNational
Mil w
000 002 500- 7 11 0
·properly, pouring in 34 points,
a t Chi. ppd , ram
New York
000 000 OOQ-- 0 3 I
pulling down 12 rebounds and like frogs on lily pads, sunning
Broberg (3 -2) and Porter ;
ooo ooo ooo- o 6 1 Medich , Tidrow (7), Lyle (9 )
leading the Bullets to a 100-95, ourselves when we should
100 000 10x- 2 5 1 and Mun son. LP- Medich (3 21 .
come-from-behind victory in · have been playing," was
t;fR - COIUCCIO (1St) .
Under woo d , Sc h Ue l er
[7).
the opening game of the best- Celtics Coach Tom Heinsohn 's McGraw
{8 ) a nd Boone . Ellis (2nd Gam el
explanation.
·nf-seven series.
( 1 21 and
SanQui llen
LP Milw
000 000 001 _::_- 1 3 1
Under.v ood (2 2 )
Washington outscored New
40041100x- 10120
N Y.
However, H~yes' coach, forYork
000 01 0 600- 7 10 0
Champ ron, Colborn (4). Ro
Boston, 13-2, to open the third Montr eal
400 020 000- 6 10 2 drrguez (7), Murphy (8) and
Koosman
,'
Parker
(6),
A
poda
quarter and close within a
Port er ;
Hunter
( 1-Jl
and
ca ( 7 ) and Grote, McNally, Herr mann L P- Ct1ampion (3
Major L ea gue Leaders
point.
Another
10-0
spurt
at
the
Mur r ay
(7) ,
F
ryman
{8),
]} _ HR s ~ Herrmann (ls1) , Mad
By United Pre ss International
(9 ) and Foo te W P ~­ dox { ISO, Yount (3rdl
beginning of the fourth period Taylor
L eadmg Batters
Parker (1 -1) LP - M cNally (3
( Based on 25 at bats)
put the Bullets ahead to stay 11
Naf•onal Lea gue
g. ab r . h . pet . at 80-73.
Los Angeles 000 103 003 ~ 7 9 1 I st gam e)
Reitz, St L
15 57 .5 23 .404
Hayes .was Washington's sa n F ran c1sc 010 200 ooo- 3 6 o (Oakl
MQrgan, Cin 21 71 11 28 394
and
100 100 050- 7 12 1
main weapon in the second
Sutton and Yea9 er ; MontefUS· California
Bocme, Phd
16 53 5 20 .377
000 000 100- 1 50
co.
Moffitt
(61.
Williams
(8l
Monday , Ct1i 15 54 13 20 .370
Blue (51) and Tenace , Fosse
Unser. NY
14 55 14 20 .364 half, keeping t)le Celtics from an d Rader. WP- Sutton 14 11 . (9 ), Singer , Pen a (8) and
getting a second shot, scoring LP--Montetusco 12 21 HR - Rodn g uez L P- Singer (2 -2)
Josh ua . SF
12 33 5 12 364
. .
h'tmae If on"'·' ""'
Oray;ford
Watso n, Hou 15 56 5 20 ,357
and esta bl1shmg
~.
(2nd Game)
Garvey , LA
20 90 13 32 .356
defense.
But
the
victory
truly
~!'1
st
Gam el
W1nfiel d , s o
18 62 14 22 .355
Oakland
100 ooo ooo-- 1 52
.
Atlanta
030
000
090
12
14
3
Stargel l , P1t
14 54 7 19 .352 belonged to the enllre Bullet San Doego
Ca l if
302 004 OOx- 9 10 1
ooo
001
250a
14
2
American L ea gue
Odom, Lindblad ( ll , Todd
team whicll..,played excellent
Reed. Hous e IBl and Correll. (5), F ingers {6l and Fosse ,
g . ab r. h. pet .
'
. , Poco roba (6 ), Spilln er , Fol ker s
Carew , M1 n
11 29 6 13 448
ey {81 ; F1g ueroa ( 1-0) and
defense to stop the Celttcs 181. Gre of 181, Frisella ISJ. Han
Egan . LP - Odom (0 1 ). HR Wh1te, NY
10 36 15 15 .417
Tomlin
(9
)
and
Hundl
ey
WP
running game.
Boch te f lstJ
Cha l k , Cal
18 56 7 23 Jll
Gri c h, Bal
8 25 6 10 400
Boston's main adjustments Reed (2 JJ LP - Folkers (0 3 )
May , Chi
17 61 6 23 377
Hen dersn , Ch 17 69 16 25 .362 ,when the teams meet 'again - 12n~,Gamel
.. .--------~
Lynn , Bos
13 47 6 17 .362
. .m ...
...
•AII
anta
20000000241 100
-, ...·:
Wednesday
mght
Landover,
san
Diego
.
010
ooo
0005
J
Maddox , NY IS 6 1 12 22 361
Md
will
be
to
rtm
mOre'
and
Harr
i
son
(
1-0l
and
Oat
es,
Yount . Mil
15 53 9 19 358
., Ha
d Ph'! f"l.. •
Foster , Gre• f (9) and Kendall
Munson. NY
14 56 6 20 357
stop yes an
1 '-'uemer, LP - Fos ter (0 -1l
Brye, Mm
8 28 6 10 .357
who scored 24 points. The { 10 •nn tngs)
Hom e Runs
Nationai 'L ea gue: Cey. LA 6,
Celtics
won't tamper much c1nci
,.Q20 ooo ooo 4- 6 9 o
Ba ke r and Evan s, All and
with their set offense which Hous
ooo 010 10o o- 2 51
Winfie l d, 50 5 ; Bench . Cin ,
Nolan ,
Borbon
(9..).
and
Wynn , LA.
Ki ngman . NY . freed Jo Jo White for 27 points. Benc
h;
Ko n ieczny,
Granger
L uzinSkl, Phd and Stargell , P1tt
Golden State romped past 1101 Sc herman 1101 Forsch 1101'
4
and May . WP - Borbon (2 . 1) .
American League : May, Ball
Chicago, 107-89, in the opener LP- Konieczny ( 1 Jl ' HR and Burroughs, Te x 4; Evans
of the Western Conference Wa tson (2nd)
and Lynn , Bos, Powell. Clev,
. h
.
American League
Horton , Det , Ki l lebrew an d finals Sunday
mg t In Texas at M inn .. 2. ppd ., ram
Otis. KC, Briggs and Yount.
830 E. Main
Oakland. Rick Barry led the
MiL Blomberg ,
Bonds and
100
100
0024
11
2
Pomeroy, Ohio
White, NY and Jackson, OaK 3
way for the Warriors with 38 g~~~~~t
lOl 120 OOx ~ 5 9 I
By United Press International

Polly's Poinrar. .

Payroll Savings.
Security on the
installment plan.

•renters&lt;

.,.._.._.._.._.._..._...._._.._.._.._..._.._,_.._.._,_.. __._.._.._.._,._._._,_.. ___.._.._.1
J

Regional garden clubs in spring meeting at Marietta

Pence talks often depend on
who gets the biggest piece of
the other fellow's reanstate.

'

•

Lines cores

,....l

OUTDOOR
FOLDING

CLOTHES

,

DRYER
Thirty 6-h

1n

ground

CLOTHESLINE
PROP
7 foot prop has strong steel
clip, grips securelv

i sa·~

1CJ88

plastic -coated

lines. Dryer rotates
box. Installs easily

A shower was held recently
at. the Rock Springs United
Methodist Oturch honoring
Heather MicheUe Kane, six. week-old daUghter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Kane, Wintersville,
formerly of Pomeroy.
Hostess for the shower were
Miss Connie Radford, Mrs.
Mary Radford and Mrs. Paul
Rice. Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. W1lliam
Radford, Mrs. Robert Sloan,
Mrs. Jllll Richmond and Miss
Janice Eastman. The baby
motif combined with spring
floral arrangements.was used
In the decorations.
Presenting gifts to Heather
were .Mrs. William Gruesef, ·
Mrs. Harold Blackston, Mrs.
Arlee Abbott, Mrs. Walter
Wears, Mrs. James Evans,
Pam, Cluisti and Jay Evans,

ALUMINUM

li

SALE
PRICE

Infant given shower

CLOTHESLINE
POST
3"

~

81/J' steel Indudes 4 hook bolts.

SALE
PRICE

1488

.eu.u.nr;,·\

ATTENTION

'

Rutland

'

.

PACKAGE OF 40 20 GALLON

TRASH
&amp; GRASS BAGS
Green plastic bogs come
.
in one-ot-o-time dispenser.

344 .

RESIDENTS

Weatherproof, non-stretc:h1ng
strond. Green lt'tnyl covenng.

AN·D OTHERS!

REGULAR 5.19

. We Can Clean

'QPENe

Your Soiled

M1 f flendly

CARPET

7 DAYS
A WEEK

D&amp;D MEAT

Ru ns Batted In

National L ea gu e: Benc h, Cin
J9 ; Evans, At t 17, Baker , Atl ,
Cey and Wynn , LA 15.
Amefican League : May , Ba tt
17 , Bochte, Ca t and Hisle , Minn
lA : Lynn, Bos , May, Chi and
Burroughs , Tex. 13.

ou.: to Flood Damage

'
24GALLON

TRASH
CAN ,

York
Wire

ALUMINUM

1.orQe copoci!y p~stk

SCREEN
CLOTH
for screenino in

con hos block lock-on
cover.

nci&amp;eless.

Perfect

bock patio for summer d1n1ngl
24 IN. x 72 lN .

REGULAR 2.19

Rust-proof,

· ..

SALE PRICE

147

HEA\IYDUTY
11 QUART • PLASTIC

Pitching ·
( Blstd on most v i ctories)

National League : Morton , Atl
S-0 ; Sutton, LA .t -1; Stone , Chi,
Messersmith . LA and Mcintosh ,
SO 3-0 ; Dierker . Hou and
McNally, Mtl 3-1: Carroll , Cin
J~

.

American League: Blue,
5-l ; Rvan , Cal 4.1; Kaat ,
LaGrow and Lolich , Oet
Pa lmer , Bait, Fitzmorris,
and Champion, Mil 3 1;
Perry, Clev, Brobef';. ~ ..
MediC h, NY 3 2.

Oak
Chi,
l ·O;
KC
G.
and

0=4'·1~
T~ Frrer;tJVOnes

•

SALE
PRICE

"The Depal'tment

.

~VISITED

Aluminum color plastic pail
hos reinforced rim.

POMEROY
-CEMENT BLOCK CO.

Cal 9 ; North, Oak 8; Ot is, KC
alid C. wash ington . Oak 7,
N ett les, CaL Patek, KC and
Nelson , Tex 6

S_

tore o~ Building
'
'J 1915" _
Since

HOME FROM FLORIDA
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Gllkey have returned from
Florida where they spent two
weeks sightseeing including
visits to Disney World and Sea
World, and fishing.

•••
•••
••
••
••

.Wright·

•
•••
••
•••

B•rn•t

I liNCH

GARAGE
BROOM
Heavy block wl!h
polmyro flbors . Inc ludes 60 "

hondlt.

SALE PRICE

388
. ·.

•••
•

communication from State to promote programs geared Mizicko presided at a meeting
Chairman , Mrs . Kenneth to children.
of the presidents of the region,
Bland.
She asked that each county where Mrs. Capps was voted
Mrs. R. H. Capps, Public contact chairman compile a the regional director elect, to
The 1.6 mill operating levy
Beautification, said each list of all newspapers, radio take office in the fall. Those
person should find a spot to and television stations in her serving on the nominating for the Me!gs Community
beautify imd shouid pick up area, compleie with addresses committee were: Mrs. Joe School was endorsed by Xi
litter, that clubs should and call numbers and letters Bolin, chairman, Mrs. Cullen, Gamma Mu Otapter of Beta
contribute to the Highway and send these to her soon. She Mrs. Don Blue.
Sigma Phi Sorority at a
Planting Fund, and reminded reminded that upcoming
Following a noon luncheon meeting Tuesday night at the
that the OAGC will sponsor a activities for the months of served by the church and the Columbus and Southern Ohio
Bicentennial tree sales next October, November and awarding of door prizes by the Electric Co.
Plans were made for the
year.
December should be reported hostess clubs, an excellent
Mrs. Charles Caldwell,' to her by August 1 for in- program was presented by the ritual tea to be beld May 4 at
horticulture, said she had cludmg in the "Garden Path." Judges Guild of Regions 8, 9, the home of Mrs. Becky Anreceived seeds from the state County . con(flct chairmen 10 and 11 on table settings and derson and for the Founder's
chairman,
Mrs .
Fred gave reports on the numerous flower arrangements for Day dinner to be beld WedSchuster, for distribution to activities in each : Athens, flower shows. Judges par- nesday al The Sportsman in
local gardeners who will be Mrs. Miticko ; Meigs, Mrs. tiCipating were Mrs. Vance Athens. Mrs. Annie Chapman
responsible for reporting Bert Grimm, who announced Hendricks, State Treasurer; and Mrs. Jeanette Thomas
growth results in the Top the Regatta Flower Show to be Mrs. Clyde Mitchell, Guild served refreshments.
Others attending were Mrs.
Flight Gardener program. She held June 21 and 22 at the President; Mrs. Jesse Wolfe ;
Evelyn
Knight, sponsor, Mrs.
also chaired an excellent Pomeroy Motors Showroom' in Mrs. Edward Ray; Mrs. E~rl
terrarium display at the Pomeroy, and the Meigs Bender, Mrs. Kenneth Milner , Anderson, Mrs. Susan Baer,
meeting.
County Fair Flower Show to and Mrs . Allen Grossman, Miss Sarah Bechtle, Mrs.
Reporting for Mrs. Kenneth be staged August 13-16 at the State chairman of State and Phyllis Bennett, Mrs. Jane
Frazier, Sears Community Rock Springs Fairgrounds; County Fair Flower Shows. Bourne, Mrs. Donna Byer,
Involvement Program and Mrs. Capps, who anFunctional table settings, Mrs. Debbie Finlaw, Mrs.
chairman, Mrs. Phillips said nounced the Washington where utensils are placed just Vikki Gloeckner , Mrs.
that if more clubs do not enter County Fair Flower show to be as they would be for meal Otarlotte Haming, president,
the contest it is to be dropped, held Labor Day weekend; and servlce, were shown with Mrs. Donna Nease, Mrs . Iris
and reminded that the intent ·Mrs. Phillips for Gallia.
coordi'nating floral Payne, Mrs. Linda Rlffle,
to enter must be sent to the
Mrs. Dwight DeVoss, State arrangements and linens . Mrs. Ruth Rlffle, Mrs. Edwina
state chairman, Mrs. William President, announced plans "Grand Old Flag" was done in Scott, and Mrs. Lynn Shuler.
Cordes, by May I, and the for the convention to be held red, whtte and blue, and the
project book to the regional July 29, 30, 31, at the Perrys- "Chicago Fire" were in ..
chairman, Mrs. Frazier, by burg Holiday Inn, with terpreted in the E,Jilibition
June I.
speakers and demonstrators Table settings, where dishes
State News Media Chair- in the floral arts; as well as or other items are placed in an
man, Mrs. James Carpenter, tours, banquets, and sales unusual
manner
for
reported that little radio or rooms. She also told nf plans decorative effect.
Insure your
television work is being done for a new book to be published
Complete tables included a
insurability
in the region and urged cluha by the OAGC on Floral design , tea service with blue gingham
and requested pictures of accents, called "Boston Tea
"you'tt ~ " ·
NetlonwiO. ha • famlty
artistic arrangements be sent Party"; "Southern
plan lt!at can guarant41t
Hospitality" featuring pin~s
for consideration.
your rtgru to mort lilt ·
lnturanct 11 you grow
Mrs. Quentin Elder, State with roses in old-fashioned
otestr. regardiiN of yol.tf'
first vice president and ad- elegance; "Breakfast at the
Matth. c.u tcksatv.
lives of others.
visor to the region, invited Blennerhassetts" also
P. J. PAULEY
For Christian women this members to come to Nature recalled yesterday with
also means becoming open to Camp in June, where they magnolia trimmed din:11117 Sprt"' Avo., Ponte....;
those who have been damaged may enjoy boat rides and star nerware. Completing the
PH m-2318
by society or cast out because studies, and asked for entries presentation was an elaborate
of past acts, and to those who in the Reed Bird Contest for reception table, "Silver
•
NATIONWIIE
havebeendeprivedbecauseof Juniors and for the Out- Linings," suitable for a 25th
economic circumstances.
standing Regional Gardener ~nniversary celebration, to be
U,~~~~C!
Church Women United is, Award.
adapted to golden an~. OtM·
Mrs. Elder and Mrs . niversaries or weddings .

Fathers:

May Fellowship Day is Friday
Church Women of Meigs
County will celebrate May
Fellowship Day Friday with a
service at the Enterprise
United Methodist Oturch.
A sack lunch at 12:30 p. m.
will be followed by a brief
;;

business session and a
program. beginning at 1:30 p.
m. Featured on the program
will be .a skit, written and
directed by Mrs. Ben Neutzling, entitled "Build on the
Rock".
Everyone is asked to bring
I · ~w.:;:::;:::::~~~~::::~~f Betty Crocker coupons which
II

the proceeds to be used toward
: refurbishing the Xenia High
~::
i;l School gymnasium with
:~
equipment lo~ during th~
»
:&lt;, tornado of April 3, 1974.
MONDAY
May Fellowship Day started
BEND 0' the River Garden in 1933 and since tllat time it
Club, 7:30 Monday at the home has been traditional for
of Mrs. Bernice Carpenter. church women across the
Mrs. James Diehl to have the country to use the first Friday
program, Mrs. Bert . Grimm, in May to emphasize the
the devotions.
creative and healing relations
BLOODMOBILE at Mason that are possible among
Fire Department building, people in every community.
Monday, 1:30 to 5:30 p.m.
This year's theme, "Open to
Persons 18 through 59 urged to Live Flilly", is an invitation to
give blood ; 17-year-&lt;&gt;lds may experience who leness as
do so with parental consent. persons, living life w the
Support urged by Mason fullest, through personal
Mothers Club.
growth and sharing in the
EASTERN P'fSA to meet

in transition. In an agenda
that Includes a full life for all,
they will endeavor to broaden
the consciousness of women,
affirming their full personhood; to strive to reclify
the injustices which saddle
many
women
with
educational, economic, and
physical handicaps; to assist
women in transition situations
- housing and jobs for
families moving from poverty
to control of adequate incomes; re-entry of those
handicapped by prison
records.
All women of Meigs County
churches are invited to attend
the service. Mrs. Cordelia
Bentz is president.

delinquency; all parents of
A donation to the fund for
incoming seventh graders hospital and medical expenses
mvtted.
of Ryan Jeffers whose foot and
OH-KAN Coin Club Monday 7 · leg were mangled in a
p.m. at Columbus and Southern lawnmower accident has
Electric. Auction and refresh- been made by the 'Loyal
ments.
Women's Class of the Mid·
SHADE River Lodge 453 7:30 dleport Olurch of Christ .
p.m. Work in E.A. degree. All
Meeting Thursday night at
master masons invited.
the church, the class decided
POMEROY Chamber of to go ahead with the purchase
Commerce at noon at Meigs of bulletin board letters and
Inn.
Miss Frances Roush was
MEIGS Band Boosters at appointed to do this.
7:30 p.m. at band room, to ~s. Lula Mae Lynch read
complete plans for band · - - - - - - - - - banquet.
Wednesday
MEIGS County Church Soft· MIDDLEPORT Literary
ball League will meet 7 p.m. at Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Mt. Hermon United Brethren home of Mrs. Otarles MeChurch. Those interested in Daniel. Guest speaker will be
joining, send a representative Mrs. Jack E . Thomas, Rio
along with $25 entry fee and Grande College, whose topic
names of players. This is final will be "Mountain Way to
sign-up time.
Health," a report on mountain
TUESDAY
lore research. Roll call,
ANNUAL Spring dinner mountain custom.
THURSDAY
meeting of Meigs County
Teachers Association, 6 p.m. at
MEIGS OOUNTY.Councll of
Pomeroy Elementary School. Parents and Teachers, 7:30
WEDNESDAY
Thursday night at the
WILDWOOD Garden Club, 8 Syracuse Elementary School.
p.m. Meigs Museum, Butternut Judging of school winners in
the cultlD'al arts competition
Ave., Pomeroy.
ted and th
THE POMEROY WCTU to be comp1e
e
meets at 2 p.m. at the United county winners to be annouriced.
Methodist-Church.

scripture from Lev. 2 and used
a meditation and prayer for
devotions. Mrs. Mary Balley
had a reading by Helen
Steiner Rice, "The Windows of
Gold."
Reported ill were Mrs. Mary
Meinhart and Mrs. Do!U18
Russell, both imJroved; Mra.
Margaret Boyer, confined to
her home, and Mrs. Freda
Welling, ill at home .
Miss Roush gave the
program using the theme of
prayer. The group sang
"Sweet Hour of Prayer," and
then Miss Roush read The
U!rd's Prayer, explaining
each part and noting that all
needs are exJressed in lhe
model prayer. She read a
poem, "How Green is My
VaUey" and using excerpts
from a book by Marjorie
Holmes, described Jrayer as
coming to God for communion, forgiveness, and
thanksgiving. She concluded
with a poem, "Not to Seek
God, But to Shar('. Mrs. Alice
Robeson was at the plano.
Refreslunenta were served
by Mrs. Mary Bailey and Mrs.
Lynch wlth Mrs. Mae Swisher
w If
and Mra. Lena o e, conlributing hostesses,

~:::

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fiund at'ded

CLEANING

. '1" tt.. .oo~l ...
m J..; ""'"' ,.,..

~

·------~----~~~------~·----~----~--~~ ·

If your heart's set on travel we have a way to
make It happen. If you are planning
for next
·,
year, come and talk to us now. Our Vacation
Club I• now open.
\

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CHOOSE YOUR CLUB
•1.00

•2.00

•3.00 '5.00

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS
CO.
Pomeroy, ·Ohio

•10.00

Vacation'
Club
Now Open .

A FULL
SERVICE
~ANI&lt;

'40;oCJo.OO Maximum Insurance

phone number . ·

. for Each Depositor

~

••
•

VACATION CLU·B

WE PAY THE 50TH

Wanted to own and operate
candy &amp; confection vend in; ,
route . Pomeroy
and
surroundinv area . Pleasant
busi ness . High profit Items .
can start pert time . Age or ·
e)(perience not important.
Requires car and S1395 to
S479S cash lnvntment. For
details write and Include

vour

WE CAN HELP MAKE IT HAPPEN WITH OUR

MAKE 49 PAYMENTS

RESPONSIBLE
PERSON
Gvs:a:w:cW

·--

Soc aI ~-~ ~~ ~':it~u~e =~a~~ :.~~~!n?:t~~=~=~
caI'en dart

t~(::; ·

Ul~~~:J::~.::: to~~ ~u~geM~~~inga~w:~~::
Te&gt;--f-her.J·c
speak on
JUvemle J I ij} C:

Fred Goeglein, Neil Richmood, Mrs . George skinner,
Mrs. Roger Abbott, Miss
Becky Houdashelt, Mrs.
George Sisson, Crystal and
Brent, Mrs. PhUiip Radford,
Stephanie Radford, Mrs.
Belva Sloan, Mrs. Horace
Abbott, Vicki Abbott, Mrs.
Amos Leooard, Mrs. Robert
Burdette, Mrs. Gladys
Morgan,. Mrs. James Clatworthy, Miss Twila Clathad
worthy. · Heather
previously received gifts from
several friends and relatives.
Punch and cookies were
served.
941111BIRniDAY
Meigs Benedum will
celebrate his 90th birthday
anniversary Tuesday at his
Route 1, Reedsville home. A
card shower is being planned
by neighbors and friends.

Mrs. Dwight Wallace spent
two days In McConn.elsville
visiting her mother, Mrs. G. C.
Knox, and her lather who Is a
patient at the Good Samaritan
Hospital ln Zane5'!ille.

UTILITY PAIL

Stolen Bases
National League: Cedeno,
Hou 12 , Morgan . Cin and
Lopes , LA 10. Hernandez, SO
6; Cardenal , Chi 5
American L ea gue : Rivers,

Mrs. Ethel · Gr:ueser, Mrs.
Randy Humphrey, Jay and
Tera, Tim, Angela and
Christopher Sloan, Mrs .
Marlene Johnson, Mrs. Larry
Romine, Mrs. Jeff Folmer,
Mrs. Violet Hysell, Mrs.
Homer Radford, .Mrs. Rollin
Radford, Sally and Judy, Mrs.
Edgar Abbott, Mrs. Levi
Partlow.

By Mrs. James Carpenter
11.
The spring meetmg of
Mrs . Gomer Phillips
Region 11 of the Ohio reported on garden therapy
Association of Garden Clubs work with residents of
was held recently at the Gallipolis State Institute since
Marietta First Baptist 1959, and of this year's Arbor
Church, with the Valley View, Day planting of a grandi!lora
Pioneer and Marietta Garden magnolia . Mrs . Edward
Clubs hosting.
Mizicko reported for· the
Mrs. Aaron Kelton, regional absent
Mrs.
Harry
director, called the meeting to Cokonougher o(_ gar.den
order, and devotions with a therapy work with the Good
floral theme were given by Luck Garden Club at the
Mrs. N. W. Schramm.
Athens Mental Health Center,
Marietta mayor, James F. now in its 14th year, where
Schueikert, welcomed the various activities are enjoyed
group and urged Bicentennial by patients.
Mrs. Mizicko, regional slide
activihes, especially permanent plantings. Mrs. Karl chairman, requested more
Grueser and Mrs . Robert persons to enter the slide
Kuhn gave the secretary 's and competition, as this is the way
treasurer's reports, respec- the sets are updated for use in
lively, and assisted Mrs . public educational programs.
Mrs. Gilber-t Cullen anKelton in conducting the
meeting. Various chairmen nounced
the upcoming
reported on regional ac- Exhibitors and Judges School
tiviltes :
to be held at Scott's Inn,
Mrs. Earl Bender, Flower Columbus, on May 21 and 22,
Show Awards, and former with the topics to include
regional director, encouraged Japanese design, iris, peonies,
more clubs to enter the flower and landscaping, as well as
show competition, checking plant· identification. the handbook and Garden
Mrs . Robert Thompson
Path for current rules. She reported no new Junior
also recognized guests, Mrs . . garden clubs and reminded
Robert Reibel of Morristown, that June 1 is the deadline for
a former regional director of club registration.
this area, Mrs. Charles
Mrs. Reid Young, Program
Phillips, director o( Region 12, Book chairman, called atMrs. William Robinson, and tention to the new score sheet
members of the Malta Me- and urged all clubs to use this
Connelsville Garden Club of as a basis for planning the new
Region 8, formerly in Region year's meetings. She read a

School levy
is endorsed

Department avv
J931 Meadowbrook Rd .
MlftftllpOIII, Mn. 55426

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6- The Daily Sentinel, Middli port-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, April28, 1975

. t Roc]{ '
Pom
News NOtes

"

Fast Results Use Senti~el Classifieds

NOT!CEOF
APPO!NTM,ENT
Case No . 21,423
Estate of Thomas H Crow
Decea sed
Not.ce os hereby g iven th at
ThOmas o Crow of Pomeroy ,
Oh1o and Robert H Crow of
Syracuse , Ohro , have been du ly ME IG S Co un ty F1Sh a nd
.
By Wanetta Radektn
appo1n ted Co -Execu tor s of the
Game ASSOC:: 1af10n Wi ll hol d
Granville 'Lyons IS home and Estat e of Thomas H Crow ,
meetmg 7 30 p m April 30
, late of Pomeroy ,
Syracuse Cl ub Room
h1s condition is improved . He deceased
Me1gs Count y Oh10
4 27 41 C
Cred1tors are requ rred to file
has been confined to O'Bieness
c1
a1ms
w1th
..
.Sa1d
f
rd
uc1
ary
the1r
Hosp1tal with a respiratory w1th1n four mo nths
AQ HA StalliO n Se r'JI Ce
D1amond Ch am · Go Man
lh1S
8th
day
of
Apr
il
Dat
ed
ailment. His wife , Edith, was
Go D1amond CharQe blood
1975
removed to the hospital by the
" ·" fA.
..
l1nes Ex ce ll ent d1SPOS i1 1on
Blown
16 2, live foal. guara nt eed
'
emergency squad . She had a
1
Mann 1ng D Webster
$100 Phone 992 7300
Insulation Services
1974 CHEVROLET IMPALA
S4 1YS
Judge
4 21 ntp
heart condition but IS feeling
Blown into Walls &amp; AHies
-~!
4
door
,
only
10,400
miles,
fu
lly
equipped
including
air,
Court of Common Pl eas , __ -·-~-------_
In Syracuse
STORM
much better at th1s lime .
dark red fini s h A rea l cream puff!
ProbateDrv1S 10n GRANO - 0 ,EN ING
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
season
.
No
w
Now
open
for
From
the
largest
TruCk
or
Proffitt 's Recreation Center
Luther Harvey 1s home from ( 4 ) 14, 71, 28 Jtc
ava il able- most vanet 1es
REPLACEMENT
Bull dozer Ra d1ator to lhe
1Y74CHEVELLE MALIBU CLASSIC
SJBY5
ac ross fr om Port land Park
of vegetable plants &amp;
s mallest Healer Co r e
Holzer Hospital after s ufferi ng
WINDOWS
HT
Cpe
,
350
Y·8,
automatic
t
ra
n
s
,
power
steerin
g
&amp;
NOTICE OF
Open in g May 1, 1975 Mon
flower~ plus pe lted flowe rs
ALUMINUM
an a tta ck of kidney stones
day through Fr 1day , from 4
APPOINTMENT
brakes, fac tory air, t mted glass, whee l covers, AM·FM
Na th an Biggs
OUR SPE CIALTY 011er
StDtNG-SOFFITT
p m until 10 p m Sa turdays
Cas.c No . 21502
Rad1ator Spec1ahst
2.000 hangmg ba's kets of
Mr . a nd Mrs . Mtke Fra ley
rad1o, less tha n 13,000 miles, red vmy l top, wh1te finish,
GUTTERS-AWNINGS
Estate ol W 1111 am Ernest
and Sunday s from 10 a m
Petunias, Ivy, Geran1ums,
a beautiful luxury mid.size car
an nounce the birth of a son. He Sellard $, Dec eased.
till 10 p m
V1nes, a nd Begon 1as
Nolice tS h er eby Q•ven t ha i
4 25 Jfc
has been named Dana Edward.
TOP QUALITY AT
1Y12 DODGE DART4 DOOR
$2345
Ec:lgar Se ll ards ot Rou te 1
Syracuse, Ohio
LOWEST PRICES
The Iris h Leprechauns 4-H Dover , Oh 10 .14622, has been FOR s;ru o - AKC Cocker
IN~.
Local ·own e r &amp; low mileage, good wht te wa ll tir es
Ph. YY2 -3993 ·
992-5176
Ph 992 -2 11 !1
Pomeroy
Spa niel , only to AKC Cocke r
small V 8 e~gi n e, power stee rmg, factory a tr, gold
Club met a t the Star Grange du ly ap po1nted Adm• n• st rat or
4 17 1 mo
4 10 1 mo
Spa n 1el femal es
Good
ol th e Es ta t e o t W•ll •am Er
fm1 sh, blk v myl top, v m yl interior tnm, radio A clean
Hall Monday night Instructors nes t Se llards , dece ased , latE'
persona11ty Ph one 992 3273
car
-4 25 3tc
Mr. Castenzo and Mr Cuneth Of Me1gs County, Oh10
Cred1to rs ar e requ1red to
are teachmg the boys gun fil e th e1r cl a1ms w1th sa1d QUARTER horse a t stud ,
fldU c1 ary w1thm tour months
young son of "T HE OLE
safe ty
Dated th 1S 1Jrd day of Apr il
MAN ,"~ A A. AT , a
leadmg
Mr. and Mrs . James Horn 19 75
S1re of race and show her
ses Ra n W1 th1n 100th of a
have a daughter, born at
Mann1ng D Webste r
second of AAA t1me before
POMEROY, OHIO
on alum mum ' replace ment
O'Bieness Hos pital last week .
Pro b ate Judg e
lle was 2 OffiCia l AA with an
wtndows , s tding , storm
o
f
sa1d
Co
unty
89
speed
lnde
x,
halter,
The little girl has been named
'
doors and windows. railing,
co nformation , and best
"".'r condtfloning, plum .
1970
CH
EVROLE
T.
1·ton
Jenmfer Ann .
phon e
Cttarl es
L1sle ,
b1ng , h ea tmg, roofing ,
( 11 28 lSI 5, 12, Jtc
d1SPOS1t 1on Fee $100 a t time
truck, V8 , 4 speed, p 8 ' 750
Syracuse , Oh1o.
Carl
sp outing , general s he e t
of se r v1ces w1t h 11ve foa l
x 16 t1r.es , good body New
Mrs. Doro thy Perry who has
Jacob
,
Sales
Re
presen
metal
work.
guara n tee P l'1 on e 992 7888 TW O bedroom mobile home,
stake bed, run s gooa, l l , tN~
been living w1th relatives in
tattve
.
4 20 26tc
corner Broadway and E lm ,
Ha rold
Brewer ,
Lo n g
Free Estimates •
Middleport Phone 992 25a o
Bo Hom , Oh ro Phone 985
Dakota, W. Va . has returned to
Phone 949- 5961
AUC T ION, Thur sday n1 ght, 7
355d
4-23 ffc
her home m Dyesv1lle. Several
Pm
at Mason Auction ,
.t 27 tf c
Emergency
949-2211
Horton St 10 Mason , W Va FU RNISHED
members of the fam1ly vis1ted
apar tm e n t. Consig nm en t s w e lcome
or
992-5700
adults on ly in M1ddleport
1974 CHEVROLET Cheyenne,
her over the weekend and
Phon e (30&lt;~) 773 547 1
Phone 992 387 4
20 Po~ ton l auto trans , p b,
4 4 1 mo .
4-2-15
2 2 tfc
· assisted w1t h the spring
'
3 25 -tfc
p s , see at 105 Un 1on A11e
-------~-----Phon e 992 3293 be tween 5
cleaning of ~er house and yard ,
F OR your " 01I of M1nk " FOR re n t 1n Middlepor t
a nd 7 p m
Cosmet i CS
Phone
they are Mr . and Mrs. Robert
down stairs 5 rm furnished
4 24 Ole
BROWN•' S 992 511 3
apar tm ent Washer , d rye r ,
Hoo ge, Dakota, Mr. and Mrs .
1 7 tt c
and uti11t 1es pa1d Phone 992 · ONE G M C V 6 truck W1fl'1
James S!jiilner, Alum Creek,
2616
on ly &lt;1,200 miles Equipped
NOW selli ng Ful ler Bru sh
4 25 3tc
w1 th P 1ckw1ck camper For
W Va., and Mr . a nd Mrs .
Products , phone 992 3410
de tai ls, call 992 3953
F r edenck
J.
Stobart,
Sales &amp; Service
James Fraley Jr . and children ,
I 24 tfc Furnis hed one bedroom apt.
4 22 6t p
Earlene
Stobart
to
Frederick
992- 3092
'Glenn
and
Krtsten,
All ut 11ities pa1d Phone 992
Pleasant Ridge
Rac1ne , 0 .
5436
Y4Y
-3604
J.
Stobart,
Earlene
Stobart,
Harrisburg, W. Va.
4
25
ate
Pomeroy, Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Peck Parcels, Letart, Sut!on, Baum OLD fvrn iture , ice boxes,
12
IN
ALUMINU
M
FTM
brass , beds, or comp lete 3 ROOMS a nd bath P hone 992 .
and son, Albany, have moved V., Le banon .
f1st1mg boat , tra rler , a nd 5
house hold s Wr1te M
D
2931
Nellie
Hyse
ll
,
Lawrence
hp motor, alt for $250
to the former P. A. Wallace
M ill er , Rt. 4, Pom eroy,
4 27 6tc
Charles
Bisse ll,
Long
Hysell
to
Worl
ey
Haley,
Oh
1
0
Call
992
7760.
Reasonable Rates
property on County Road I
- - -~-~ ------ ---BottOm , Oh1o , n ear Bashan
Phone 949 518 2
Al so Repa 1r s On All
Mrs . Edith Talbert of Phyllis Haley, '• Acre, ------------~~7-4 TRAILER space for re nt in
4 27 3tc
Midd leport Ca ll 992 2625
Rtdmg Tractors
HOR SES &amp; PON IES . Phon e
Charleston, S . C., has moved Rutland.
498 Locust St .
4 27 tfc
7
42
3264
3 25 1 mo
·
Worley
Haley,
Phyllis
Haley
1973
HOND
A
Sc
r
amb
ler
350
.
Middleport , Oh1o
59 1 mo
mto a mobile home on State
4 3 tf c -·---~
4-10 -t mo .
Call 992 5914 after 1 p m
to Worley Haley , Ph yllis
Route 689. •
27
6tc
4
CA SH pa1d for a ll makes and
Mr a nd Mrs B1ll St. John , Haley, '1, Acre, Rutland.
models of mobile 1'1omes
MACHINE ,
S EW I NG
HONDA Elsm ore MT 125 McDANIEL Custom But
Eve r et t H. Horner to
Phone area · code 614 423 12'x52' 2 BEDROOM trade r , 19 74
chering , State and Federa l
Jamestown, visited Mr. a nd
Phone
992 72 11
Repairs , se rv1ce , all makes
Water , Electrtc, Gas,
9531
l1ke new $35 week , utllit1es
lnspecled , s laughter , cut,
Pickens,
Joan
992 2284 Tl'1e Fabr1c Shop ,
4 27 61p
Sewer lin es, in s tall e d .
Mrs. Rex Cheadle and family. Francis
pa id Phone 992 332&lt;1
4 13 ttc
and wrap Phone (304 ) 882
Pomeroy Authorrzed Singer
Work guaranteed
3224
d 17 tfc
Mrs. St. J ohn, Bonnie and Picke ns, I ac re, 1.25 acre,
Sales and Se rv1ce
We
JUNK
-a~utos,
comp
le
te
and
4 27 12tp
1966 CHEVROLET Im pala ,
Sharpen SC ISSOrS
Kathy Cheadle and Wanetta Lebanon .
Dozer, Backho e, Trucks
de l1vered to ou r yard We 3 RM and bath furn 1shed apt
good cond1t ron Clarinet , 3 29 tfc
D.
Stansburg,
Golden
Lim eston e &amp; Ftll Dirt
,Asa
p1ck
up
auto
bod1es
and
buy
Ut
1
1i
t1eS
paid
356
NOrth
4th
Radekin shopped m Pomeroy
lik e new Phon e 9d9 41 14
Commercia I· Re sidential
Sl , M1ddt epor1
a ll k1 nds of scra p meta ls and
Faye
Stansburg
to
Trustees
of
4273
tc
DOZER work , land clearmg
a nd Mason , W. Va . , Monday .
Construction &amp; Remodel
1ron ~ id er 's Salvage, St
-4 9 tfc -- -----~ -~ ------by the ac re, hourl y or
Columbi
a
Township,
.348
acre,
Rt
124,
Rt
.
4,
FJ
om
eroy,
~
~
.
J ohn Holliday is h om e
co
ntract
F
arm
pon
ds,
APPALOOSA
ge
ld1ng
Phon
e
Oh1Q Call 992·5-468
3 AND 4 ROOM furn ished and
roads, e tc Large dozer and
667 3730 after 4 p m
recovenng from surgery at Columbia.
10. 17 tfc
unf urni shed
apa rtm en ts
opera t or w1tt1 o'Jer 20 years
-4
22
6tp
Dana
Murray,
Ka_ren
Phone
992
5434
Holzer Medica l Center. Callers
expe r1 ence Pull1ns Ex
O ld UPRIGHT
4 12.tfc 19 74 HONDA X L 350 road and
to Cha rles
R WANTED
cavating , Pomeroy , Oh •o
at the Holliday home ove r the Murray
PIANOS , any cond 1t 10M.
Phone 992 247a
tr
ail
b1ke
Good
condi
tion
Houda
s
helt,
Mary
L,
Payin
g
s
10
each
Fi
r
s
t
floor
PRIVATE
mee
t
rng
room
for
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.
S750 Ca ll 992 7059
12 19 lfc
only
Wr
1t
e
and
g
iv
e
organ,zat1on
.
phone
992
a
n
y
----Oris Coop er , Mrs. Osa Cooper , H oudashe lt, Parcels, Bedford .
4·22·6tc
3975
direc tions to W1tten P1ano
777 P earl Street
CARPET 1ns ta llat10n, $1 25
- ----------Dana W. Murray , Karen 0 .
Co, Box 188, Sardis, Oh10
Mtddleport, Oh10
Columbus, Miss Clemma Vale
3 11 tfc -608 E.
per
yard
Ca
l
l
Richard
LOCUST
posts
,
phone
(3041
43946
~ Phone 992 ·5367 or 992 ·3861
Wes t , Phone 843 ·2667 .
of Cardington, and Mr. a nd Murray to · Charles R.
273 (.566 , or 985 4198
MAIN
4 24 6tp AP T l 1ke n ew , 3 rooms, w1th
4·3
30tp
4 23 6tc
Houdashelt ,
M ary
L'.
la rge bath , tabl e top range ,
Mrs Mon t Bosworth, local.
C BRADFORD , AuctiOneer
POMEROY, 0 .
large c loset East Mam St ,
Houdashelt, 48 acres, 13 acres, AMBER, black , milk g lass or
Comp lete Serv1ce
TAN
KS
CLEA
NED
SEPTIC
Cobalt blue fru1t ja r s Also,
Pomeroy See to appreciate
Phone
949 3821 or 949 316 1
RUTLAND
60
ac
res.
1112
Reasoncible
RATE
S
.
Phone
0~~~
~g~~';na~
cco~:~~
t~hb~~~
,
Bedford .
such names as Re11enna , A
Phone Gar 11polis du r1 ng day,'
Racme, Oh 1o
· d46 ·A782 Ga l itpolls John
story fram e home, 3 BR,
with
plastic
sea
t
,
$20
Phone
Ston
e,
Th
e
Van
Vl1
et
,
Potter
446
9699,
evenmgs
446
95J9
Herman Robe rts, Unda L.
RUssell. owner
Cri t Bradfor d
98 5 3915 bath, uf11ify, some car·
&amp; Bod ine 's, Wm . Pog ue,
4 10 tfc
5 1 ltc
4 9 tfc
Roberts to Sherman R oberts,
Oh iO Fruit jar and Joel
4 27 3fc
pet 1ng, paneling &amp; hie', part
-----~--Hain
es
Phone
992
5460
.
BEDROOM mobi le home,
basement. Garage and
Dorothy Roberts, 35 acres,
WI L L TRIM or cut tr ees and SEP T IC T ANKS c le aned
The Almanac
GOOD fam ily cow , gentle,
4 25 3tp
i20 per week, plus uli1 1t1 es
workshop
24x32, barn
shrubbery
Clean
out
Modern Sanitat 1on 992.3954
Salisbury.
g
1vm
g
abou
t
4
gal
m
ilk
Depos
1
t
requ1red
368
Page
--------~--By Untied Press International
or 992 7349
basements, a ttic, etc Phon e
35X40,
large
buoldong
darly
Als
o,
2
n1
ce
ro
ts
over
1
SMALL
t
a
rm
,
10
to
50
acres,
St
Phon
e
992
3509
Bra dford Massey, Kathryn
949 J22 1 or 74 2 444 1
9 18 tfc
Trxlay is Monday, April 28,
·ac re each Hard road , r ura l
30x200, pond, 2 f•ee gas
fair to good ho use and
4 22 71c
4
8
261c
Marie
Massey
to
Gary
L.
Duff,
water
available,
3
mile
s
outb
u1
ld1ngs
Cash
to
bank
~
well s, tots of bu ild ing sites,
the 118th day of 1975 with 247 to
EXCAVA TING , dozer, loa der
-~----- -------from by pass on Leadmg
loan wr ,te J w weeks, COUNTRY Mo b ile Home
Susan E. Duff, 2.90 acres,
at
' Ut all fenced Mtnerals
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
a nd backhoe wo r k, sept 1c
follow
Cre ek Road Also , old cow
Gen Del , Pom eroy , Oh 10
Park , Rt 33, te n mdes north
oncl ud ed. O NLY $33,000.
-~ Sweepers, toa sters , 1rons,
tanks In sta ll ed,
dump
Columbia
.
45769
.
manur
e
by
bushel
Ptwne
of
Pomeroy
La
rg
e
rots
W1
th
The moon is approaching its
tru clo.s and lo boys for 1'1 1r e ,
a ll srna ll a pp lian ces Lawn
POMEROY - 11J, acres 742
310a
4-15
3tp
conc
rete
pat1os,
sidewalks,
Wanda Sue Gibson, Gary
wil l haul f1ll d 1rt. top soil.
mowe r , next to Stat e High
last quarter.
1 st ory fra me, 2 BR, bath,
4 27 6tc
r unners and off stree t
limeston e a nd g ra vel , Ca I
way Garage on Route 7
Gibson,
Edward Damron Jr .,
--------- - - - - - - - - park1ng P hon e 992 7479
ultl1ty R, Nat ga s furna ce,
The morning stars are Mars
Phone 985 3825
~ob or Roger Jeffers , da,
,J2
31
lfc
Vera Damron, Bob Damron,
.porches, garage. A lot of
phone 992 7089, ni ght phone
.:1 16 tfc
and Jupiter .
~
~
--,.---~-- ---- --992 3525 or 992 5232.
this home IS new $13,000.
EXPER
IEN
CED
IN
P
ARTY
Nancy
Damro
n
to
Bob
• The evening stars are MerLAWN mowe r repa1r , 308
PLAN-;~ BE A MERRIMAC
2 11 tfc
NEAR MIDDLEPORT Damron, Nancy Damron, 6
1-973
BRA NOH AVEN
2
Page St , Midd leport Pholie
SU PERV IS OR
H IGHES T
cury, Venus and Saturn.
60 acr.,s, 25 to ·30 til la ble,
bedroom
tra11er
,
take
over
992 3509
COMM I SS I ON ,
NO
larg e
barn,
s t orage
• Those born on this date are acres, Sc1p10.
payments Phone 992 5121
DELIVERY
OR
.:11 630tc
bu ilding , hom e 1s Ph story
4·27 6tc
COLLEC TIN G
CA LL
-- --- -- ~- --under the sign of Taurus.
lram e , 4 BR. large bath,
CO L LECT TO ANN BAX
P &amp; J Ho me Ma intenance,
James Monroe, fifth president
SELL your mob 1le home for
Re fr1gerat10n ,
A
C
TER , 319 556 888 1 or WRITE
den and li vi ng R. has
ASKS FOR TRADE
cash.
15
homes
wanted
,
1958
Heating Phone 992 3509
MERRIMAC , P 0 BOX
of the United States, was born
fireplaces.
tots
of
bu1ldong
thru
1972
models.
Pho
ne
ATLANT,6; (UP!)- Former
1277, DUBUQUE, IOWA
4 16 JOtc
s 1tes, part ly fe nced. ImApnl28, 1758. This is entertain(614) 446 1425, Gallipolis
5200 1
----~--- ----- - - ~
All-America defensive back
3
9·78tf
mediate
posses
s
1on
on
HOME 1m pro ve m en t and
e r Ann-Margret's 34th birthday.
4 2a ltc
i0"-3th HP
Clarence Ellis asked the - -- --- --- - - - - - - - - so gning deed . $17,000 .
Repa1r Se rvice - Anything
On this day in history:
1954 PACEMA KER trail er ,
f1 Xed a rou nd lhe ho l'ne, from
POMEROY - 12x60 Mob ole
Athmta Falcons last year to
n
1ce
tor
couple
Pt1on
e
378
roof to basement You will
In 1788, Maryland was trade him to another National
Home. 3 BR. bath , Ex629a
l1ke our wo rk and rales
admitted to the Union as the
panda lt v ing R., air cond .,
4 28·1fC
Phone 742 508 1
Football League team ,
22"-3112
HP
1975 T,OBACCO allo tmen t fo r
w ash e r &amp; dryer, all fur
seventh state.
12 29 tfc bedrooms, 2 baths, one e n.
1973 HILL CREST 2 bedrm
On Saturday, the Falcons sa le or ren t 2,350 lb quota . ... .. Self- Propelled
nish ed , new carpeting . A
In 1945, Fascist leader Benito
mobile
home,
12
x
52,
fur
Call 593 7007, Wedn esday or
5~-PTiCt~ks~;d)~'Zhl~es closed. good carpeting, gas
sent Ellis, tbeir No, I draft
BUY AT $4,500
ntshed Pr 1ced to se ll Ca ll
Sat urd ay
ms tal led Also, field ctra1n fireplace, built-In bookcases &amp;
Mussohni was executed by
POMEROY
1973
-14x70
Herman London after 5 30,
choice in 1972, to the Denver
4 27 6tp
l1les
All work. g ua ranteed . c hina closet. Modern kitchen,
Italian patnots.
phone 992 520 1
Mobile Home . 3 BR , 11h
Lew1s Ex cavating , Rt 1,
Broncos for wide receiver - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,POMEROY LANDMARK
4 25 3tc
baths,
d1 s h
washer.
Rutland , Oh1o Phone 742 full basement and garage .
In 1952, the war With Japan
9 • .:.J ack w. Carsev, Mgr.
3742
MODERN
BUSINESS
Jerry Simmons,
safety
compl
ete
ly
furnished,
8x20
was officially ended with
197 2
GREENBRIER,
2
Ail Phone 992 -2 181
BUILDING - Has nearly 2900
4
24
26tc
Charles Greer and a future
awn1ng.
ALL
Ll
KE
NEW.
bedroom, front kitchen ,
signing of a treaty by the
sq. ft., 1100 air condllloned .
$B,900
draft choice.
.,
: 4 RM house and bath , ut rli ty
ra1sed dmmg area , f ue l oil
S HALLOW Wells dug, s pr1ngs Central heat, 2 ceramic ttte .
MAYTAG
portable
washer
,
2
United States and 47 other
furnace,
eye
level
oven
in
ALL
OF
THE
ABOVE
ARE
room , furn ished , sc r een In
developed a nd cisterns
" !guess they J'USt finally got
yrs old . exce llent c ondttion ,
surface unit Can be seen at
porch, forced air hea t ,
NEW LI ST INGS AND ARE
msta ll ed to approximately rest rooms, and lots of parking
nations.
S100
Phone
992
2926.
.
around to it," said Ellis, a 6PhOn e 949 365a
K1ngsbury Homes Sal es and
18 ft Lew1s Exca1Jat1ng, Rt. on Rt. 7,
GOO D BUYS. CALL NOW.
4·22·61p
Serv 1ce, Inc , 1100 E . Ma 1n
1,
Rutland Phone 742 J742
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
In 1969, French President foot-0, 190-pound safety who ----- --- ---~:.:_~tc
992-225¥
St., Pomeroy Phone 992
4·2-4
26tc:
In Pomeroy with a good
VAR
IETY
OF
ca
bbag
e,
Charles de Gaulle resigned earned his All-America honor FURNI SH ED a pt 2 rm and
7034
---~- ----- --- - - tomato
and
pepper
p
lants
trade.
all stock, equipment
38
ACRE
S
of
h
rll
ground
and
4 24 61 c
after being defeated in a playing under Ara Parseghian
~:;~- Moddteporl Phone 992D&amp;O TREE Trimming , 20
Also, caul1flower, bro ccol i,
and living quarte rs .
'
wood s, located 7 m il es fro m
years
ex
p
eri
e
nce,
ms
ured
,
br ussel sprouts, egg plant s
referendum.
at Notre Dame.
4-25 3tp
'
Pom eroy, and 1 mil e soulh
BUILDING
LOTS
Some
fr
ee
es
t1m
a
tes
Call
992
3057
,
Bedding plants - pansies , 1970 CHAMPION tra1ler ,
of Ch este r, Oh 10 If m
Coolv ill e Phone ( 1) 667
with water and nalural gas
petu n 1a , m angold , sa i'J ia ,
partly turn 1shed , inc lud es
terested, wnte to
Olen
30-4 1
laps $1500 .00 up.
air conditioning , 12x60 Ca ll
ph lox , portul aca , agertum ,
Ba iley , Box 146 , Zanesfield ,
4 16 12tp MIDDLEPORT
992 2559 or 992 3538 or see at
a lyffum, Impatiens , cole us,
3
For Sale
Oh10 43860
Fox
vanety of ge ranium s, also ,
828 So u t h Sec ond St ,
HOME
GROWN
toma to
bedroom~ . .,. _ · n. ltural gas
4
2J
6tp
RE
A
DY
MIX
CONCRETE
Middleport
pots of petun1as and m ums
pl a n ts, 1m proved Mex1ca n &amp;
ter, n ice
del1vered rig h t to your furnact l'
Hanging
baskets
.d.?4 .6tc
Heinz 1350, across fr om
pro
1ec
t
Fast
and
easv
F
re
e
panelln~
~g
ti le, and
petun1as
,
ivy
geranium
,
HOUSE for salem Portland , 6
mun 1t 1pa1 park 1n Syracu se
eslimates P hone 992 3284, large lot for garden S8500.00.
lobelia, ferns , wa ndermg AR E YOU In the market for a
Thomas Hayman
rooms !Jn d bath, good well
Goeg lein Rea d y Mix Co ..
1ews, por c h boxes , larg e
large 3 bedroom to p q uality ,
and 2 acres ground $6,200
5 28·3tc
Mtdd leport, Ohio
•
w e ll constru c ted m obil e
hearty red azaleas, Cleland
Phone 843 2292
WHEN YOU ADVERTISE •,
6
30
tic
home., If so , you can save
G re en l'1 ouse, Racine .
4 24 6tc
YOUR PROPERTY, YOU , .
thousand s on this one. We
Geraldine Cleland
-EN YOUR HOUSE TO, .
have
a
W75
70x14
Skyline
4· 13·tfc
Lost
SERV ICE s ta tjolfand garage,
trat(e
in
that
c
ome
s
ERYONE . LIST IT WITH :'
BLACK &amp; WHIT E Border
Rutland . Will financ e or
equipped wit~.Jb ta l electric ,
=-~-~~; ·::-, WE WILL SCREEN • '
lea se . Ca ll 747.5052.
Colli e named " Tippy " lost 1973 HARLEY Oav 1dson 350
Jlh baths, fully furni s hed ,
SX, 1,800 m 1te s . $600 Phone
near Silver Run Road below
LD9KERS. CALL ¥92- ~ :
-4 9 26tc
""
new appliances, n ew bed s
985-3341 between a 'a .m and
Hob so n
Ch 1ld 's
pet
NEW brick home on Stare Rt
6
p
m.
and
c
a
r
peti
ng
in
liv1ng
Reward phone 992 3141
1 72 ACRE S of land and locust
7 between Pomerov:' and
room ,
hall,
master
4-15 12 tp
•:I,
posts P hon e 742 3656
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _J _ _ _
-4 _
2a_ 3tc
'
Che.ste r 3 bedroom s, ~~Lath,
bedroom ,
and
center
._
4·20·
26tp
garage
,
'
basement
,
bedroom . Th is home was
FISH BAIT - fish bait We
"''I
firepla ce, carpeted Phone
lived in less tl'1an 90 days BEAUTIFUL new home on
ha ve our bait in , n ight
'I
9a5
-3365
Yard Sales
You get a full warranty .
crawlers,
large
mea l
l~ke , 3 b ed room s, bath &amp; 1h,
' I
4 27 31p
YARD SALES,Apri/30 , May 1
Home c an be seen at
worms, worms , red worms,
carr eti ng, drapes , big den
'I
and 2. Tues , Wed., and
Ki ng sbury Home Sales, 1100
blood batt , Indian Joe's
Cat 992 3493
Th ur s at 304 Spr1 ng Ave.
E Main Str eet, Pomeroy,
Sport and CB ShoJ' , 308 Page
l ·24 .tf c
Ph one 992.7556.
Ohio
Monday through
"st, Middleport . Phone 992F riday , 10 till 7, and Sa t 9 CIRCLE Mote l &amp; Christy Ann
3509
4.2a Jtc
a .m. t il t 7 p ,m Or call 992
4·9·30tc
Restaurant,
Gall ipolis ,
7034.
Ohlo Phone 4-46 ·2501 or 4-46 ·
1912 HONDA SL 350 CC . ex -4 24-6tc
3964 . Charles K1esling
ce ll e nt cond it 1on Also, 1950
......_
_,__
423
-12tp
NOTICE
OF
F
d
t
it
f
APPOINTMENT
or o se or trade or van
P hone 992 ·3897
2 BEDROOM home , new
Cue No . 21449
4· 11 · 12tc
foundation, roofing, cement
Estate of Nell G. Davts - - - - - - - - - - -- - porches , thermo
Pane
Deceased :
CLOSE OUT on new Zig .Zag I ACRE lots or less, lev e l
windows, storm doors,
Notice 1s hereby g1ven th~t sewing machine s
For
second bottom ground Clem
natural gas furnace, white
Mildred Mc Dan iel of 547 Matn sewing stretch fabrics ,
Cooper , &amp;y racus e, Ohio
aluminum s iding , bla c k
Street, Middleport, Oh10, has buttonholes, fancy des ig ns .
Phone 992.7JJO
shutter, kitchen cabinets, ·
be.e"! dul~ appo.nted Ad
etc .
Paint
s lightly
paneling , ce11ing tHe, floors
mtn1stratrtx With the Will blemished .
Choice
of
refinished, low heating bill. '
Ann e)(ed of the Estate of Nell G carrying case or sew ing
nice location, city water.
Di'JIS, decea sed , late Of M1d
s lana $49 so casl'1 or t er m s "3 BEDROOM , all br 1ck ranch
Phon e 985-4102.
dleport , Me 1gs Count y, Oh1 o
available " Phone 992·7755
1' bath s , all car
s
tyle,
1
Cred 1tors are reQu tred to file ·
12· 18 tfc
• ·• ·26tc
peted , large famil v roo m on
the ir claims with said f1dvc rery - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - 3 lots Phone (614) 367 7552
Within four months
'
- MODERN walnut s t e re o .
2·27 ·6tc s ROOM house located on 12
Dated th ts 7th day of April radio a track tape com
---~- -- --~- acre lo t , 2 outbu1ldlng's,
1975
b1nat1on , am .fm radto .
large ga r den space, in
tra1 1er:a nd tot 1n
Balance $105 45 or te rm s 2 BEDROOM
HarriSOnville. For fur th er
town Ph one 992 3975 or 992
"Arnold, come . down from the atlic and stop this loolish
Mannmg D. Webster Call 992 ·3965
tnfo r mat1on, Phone 742.:1782
1~71
Judge
'
4·21 tfc
noslalaia lor lhe shape I used to have!"
(4J 1-4 , 21. 28 . :ur
4 27 -5tc
4 9 tf c:

Noli'ce

Business

· Pomeroy
Motor Co.

EXPERIENCED
Radiato
Service

i_.._,_.. __ _..._.._..._,__.._,_,_,_... __ .._,.._.-._.._.._____________.___._,________ _

I

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

POME~~! E~E~~~~ co. lit'

~

For Rent

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

WILKINSON
SMALL EN1GifiiE

NEIGLER
Builders Supp~

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

-------------Wanted To Buy

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

SO ME P•ACE WHE.t&lt;:.E YO U
WON'T A?K SO MAN Y FOOLI5H
QUE5TIOI&gt;J$ ABOUT THE GURU
!!&gt;Ae.OO-- YOU DIG ~... G WAt&gt;J,
OPEt.J THE. DOOR.~

YEAH~ YOU R E

GOI N' BYE I'&gt;YE,ALL
RI0HT, SEFOI&lt;E' YA
EVEN GET IN
THE CAR!

NORTH
4KQJ53
• B4
• Q632
4AQ
WEST
• 96

.. :lllEN IIJ5 I.IOJ~TED ~eDARteS
jl.tJD W.'JBL!ED 1\E I-EXT
f®l()J OF c:esscRT' M:) M-IYA .
'0!, OF c:.ouR$'

I CO, M 'OU'D ~n5R
1-:Xf'I.I&gt;.IIJ

IT 10 I:&gt;~~IVI''=&gt; .

I

00Rs€SI

WH/l.T A
Df..OI.'f;DAR'/
IS ..

0. J. LAUDERMILT
ROOFING

Both vulnerable

~

-

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

W~f\1/ 1

llKE A

511 LL

•tJI\ ooY "' 11 wAS Ju sr l iKf

U1At&lt;1N

uP

'

8-K EXCAVATING

COMPANY

'REALTY

TURF TRIM
MOWER

dar!&lt;.,
an'

no

Real Estate For Sale

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

•·104.95CKDJ

siqn
o'

:bel!

us~

she's drt-l .
1t qoin' t' be
ktnda' badr

t' hit
th' ol'

,,.

'

ULABNER

I CAN'T SAY ALL THOSE
To
1- I ADORE HER."

STUPID THIN6S

I WA/'Jf YOU TO KNOW
HOW BRILL.IANT I REALLY

AM!

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

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

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

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

_,.,..,,:..

_____ ________

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

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

':

WHAT&amp;HALL
I DO? WHAT
&amp;HALLI&amp;AY?

¥511115 If&gt; YOUR CHANCE
tu FIND OUT IF HE'S
"THE ONE !lEHIND

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

What 1s your opemng bid?
A - One spade. You should not
open one nolrump with 5-4i-2-2 di s~
tribution smce such hands are loo
likely to play better 1n a suit.
TODA Y'S QUESTION

Your partner rmses you to two
sp,ades What do you do now?
Answer Tomorrow
Send $1 for JA C08 Y MODERN
book to· "Win at Br~dge," (clo thiS
newspaper). P 0 Box 489, Radio
C1ty Station. New York, N.Y. 10019.

REAWN RJR R:ITT/11-6
tiP PRESERVES-..eCtJNOMY,S'ltE 9/YS

•

Yeslerday's Answer
16 Lady
friend (Fr.)

26 Baptismal
basin

19 Countertenor 28 Forerunner 1-r,~~\lf=~!!!~~~T~~~-.,;;;;-;;-~
Heroic
30 Pronoun t

22

narrative
23 Plant a
" bug"
24 Livmg
25 Become
precipitous

31 Feru:Iess
32 Invigorate
33 Corundum
38 Criticize
harshly
39 Coal scuttle

S1tuat1on s tatic for some t1 me
can be turned to your profit if
you take prompt ao t1on Don't
doll y-dally

life ... "
28 Ship's
record
29 Cereal
plant ( obs.)
30 Defensible
34 Scottish
uncle
35 Fedora
36 Edge
Knocked
39 Suffer from

rr-+-11--i
-+-11--i

For Tuotdoy, AJ&gt;rll 2V, 1975
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
Some unusual cond 1t10n s are
developing tha t w1ll brtng about
unexpected career benet1ts
Keep what's happ ening to
yourself

1...-+-f-t--i TAURUS

6--+-1f-+--+-1f-

(April 20-May 201
You're going to ge t a fl ash of
u-+-+---+--lmsplratlon on how to handle
someth1ng that's been d1stur~
btng you Follow your hu nches

_...__,__..-:::!

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

ATHENA rASNION61
'

Here's how to
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Is

'

work it:

GEMINI (May 21 -Juno 20)
Yo u'll dQ well m your business
dealings today If you play
things by ear. Be flexib le Act
qurckly to spot ar'l advantage.

One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A Is CANCER (oluno 21 ·July 22)
used for ,the three L's, X for \he two O's, e tc Single letters, Don 't turn a deaf ear to your
apostrophes, the length and formation o! the words are all . mate or partner's s uggest1ons
today. The ad vice may p resen t
b1ats . Each da y the code letters are dilferent
•
just the solution you're seekIng
CRYPTOQUOTES

."

YMH

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

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

4K Q985 ¥ A2 tK4o~o A987

48 Relaxed
(2 wds. )
41 Beyond

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

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

?

26 Disappeared t..-+--t---1
27 "- each

:rr

n.l.v

-------------Real Estate 'for Sale

South

East

You , South, hold

3 Style of
printing
type
4 Grassland
5 Keyboard
instnunent
6 Fixed the
piano
7 Sprile
8_Gralified
9 Imagine
10 Registered

15 Immovable
16 Chemical
suffix
17 Had dinner
18 Vaporized
20 Big · (Calif. )
21 illuminated
22 Withered
23 Squander

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

by Gill

DOWN
I Gather
.. 2 cap

14 Corrupt

Newt!

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

SIDE GLANCES

Nort h

buy a
duck?"
man
43 Gainsay

Diva~~

tank,

For Rent

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

West

28

6 .0o-Sunri se Semi nar 4, Sunn se Semes ter 10
6 25-Farm Report 13
6 3D-Fi'Je Minutes to L1ve By 4, Ne ws 6, Bible Answers 8;
Concerns &amp; Comments 10 , Rev Cleophu s Robm son 13.
6 35- Co lumbu s Today 4
6 45- Morning Report 3, Farmttme 10
7 00-Today 3,4, 15. AM Amen ca 6, 13 , CB S News B. 10
B OO-Lassoe6, Capt Kangaroos . Schooli es 10, Sesa m eSt 33
B 10-Your Future Is Now 20
8 30-Bog Valley 6; P opeye tO
B 55- Chuck Whole Re port s 10
9 ·00-A M 3, Phil Donahue 4, Rocky &amp; Hos Friends B.
Prtncip les of Bus1 ness Law 9, Capt Kangaroo 10, Morn 1ng
woth D. J 13, P h il Donahue, 15
9 3G-Not For Women On ly 3, D1na h 6 , Gr~l l o ping Gourmet 8;
Ne w Zoo Revue 13.
10 ,00-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15 Jo ker's Wold 8, tO
Dtnah 13 .
10 ·30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15. Gam bot B. 10.
II OQ-High Rollers3,4,15, One Life to Li ve 6; Now You See It
a, 10; Etec . Co. 20
_11 30- Hol lywood Squares 3,15, Blankety Blank s 13. News 4,
Love of L1fe 8,1 0; Sesame St,' 20
11 · 55-Graham Kerr 8, Dan I mel's Wor ld 10
12 · 00-J ac kpol 3, 15, Password 6,13, Bob Bra un 's 50 50 Club 4;
News a, 10
12 30-B iank Check 3. 15. Splot Se cond 6 13, Search lor
Tomorrow 8, 10
12 45-Eiec Co 33.
12 55-NBC News 3,15
1·00-News3, All My Ch oldren6,13, Phil Donahue 8: You ng &amp;
t he Restl ess 10, Not -For Wome n On ly 15
1.30-Days of Our Loves 3,4, 15. Let's Make a Dea l 6, 13, As
The World Turns 8.1 0
2:00-$10,000 Pyramid 6, 13 , Guodong Loght 8,10
2.30-Doctors 3.4.1S, 8 19 Showdown 6,13 , Edge of Ntght 8,10
3·00-Anothe r World 3,4, 15, General Hosp otal 6 13, Pri ce is
Roght B,1 0; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
3:3~ne L1fe to Love 13; Lucy Show 6, Match Game B. 10,
The Romagnolos' Table 20
4·QO---Mr Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeann1e 4, Some rset 15,
Gi ll igan's Is 6, Tattleta les 8; Sesam e St 20,33 , Mov1 e
" The Wonde rfu l Country " 10, Mike Douglas 13
4:30-Bewitched 3; r-t;,er v Gnlfon o, Mod Squad 6; Mic key
AAouse Club 8; Bonanza 15
5:00-FB I 3; Andy Griffith B; Miste r Rogger s' Ne oghborhocxl
20,33; Irons ide 13
S 30-News 6 ; Beverly Hillbillies 8. Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ,
Ge t Smart 1S. E lee. Co 33
6:QO-:.-News 3,4,B,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Elec Co 20 , lTV
Uti lization 33.
6 30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13, Bew otched 6, CBS
News B, 10, Zoom 20.33.
7 00-Truth or Cons 3,4; Bowtong for Doll a r s 6, What's My
Lme B; New s 10; Name That Tune 13, Hogh Sc hool TV
Ho nor Society 15, An t iques 20 , Lil 1as Yoga &amp; You 33
7 :30-Hollywood Squares 3; ,4; Let' s Make a Deal 6, Buck
Owens 8; New Price is Right 10, To Te ll the Truth 13 ,
Sprong Street USA 1S; RFD 20. Marco Sport lite 33
B:OO-Adam -12 3,4,1S; Happy Days 6, 13 , Good T.tmes 8,10 .
Solar Energy 20,33
B:30-Movie " They Only Come Out at Noght" 3,4, 15, Mov1e
"Returning Home" 6, 13 , World Press 20, Nov a 33
9: 00-Hawali Fove-0 B,10
9:30-Woman 20; Arabs &amp; Israel iS 33
10· 00-Poli ce Story 3,4, 15, Marc us Welb y. M D 6, 13, Bi!!' naby
Jones 8, 10; News 20; lnelerface 33
10:30-VIbratlons Encore 33
11 : 00-News 3,4, 6,8, 10.13. 15. ABC News 33
11·30-Johnny Caarson 3,4,15 , Wode World Spe coal 13, FBI 6.
- Madigan B; Movie "Arrowhead" tO , Jan ak• 33
12: 30-Wide Wor ld Specoal 6
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4 ; News 13.

42 " Wanna

manager
12 Make an
arrest
( 2 wds .)
13 Norma's
" Casta

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

'72.9QCKDJ

Pass

Tw ms

•

~·

One of

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

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

3 N T. Pass

ACROSS
1 Biblical
brother
5 Asian
treeless
tract
11 Former
Minnesota
.

GASOUNE AU..EY

Mobile Homes For Sale

--

Pass
Pass

-~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

--..,....----------

For Sale

I NT

possible they try to substitute
certainty for guesswork. "
J1m · ' 'I'm looking at the hand
you are about to bnng up. I suppose South won the first tnc k
wtth the ten of hearts and led a
dtamond "
, ~~~ Oswald . " He certamly did
"'
but only after a lot of agonizing.
dummy's queen held the
he relaxed, remarked, 'I
sure played the nght su1t' and
went happ1ly about the business
of wmnmg game and rubber."
Jim " South's guess ha d

---- -------

For Rent or Sale

·

ro Flf1D Ev~R'T HING

0

-------

Pass

0 swa Jd : " If. you cou Jd guess
nght all the tlffie, YOU WOUldn't
have to, do an~thing else well to
be a wmner. xperts do a lot of
successful guessing, but when

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

Help Wanted

14

.

S W[Atlt-1' AND '~HIIIfRtN' 1HAT
I-IORRI!JLE G~wG .. DEAT H O HL'f
A MIMUTE AWAY • A"' D fH EN

Real Estate For Sale

-----

Pass

Jtm · " T hi s play would
guarantee the contract aga mst
any a nd a ll bad s wt d1v1s1ons
a nd other bludgeomngs of
fate ."

Openmg lead - 5 ¥

~ II' S ~ ~ ~LI ' "' l lol R11 U 5 ~, , 011

TfRR1et.e DRF.f.IM - I'M

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

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

South

r,;==.;~=''=-'"7'"""=0:::: By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

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

----------

Nort h East

The b1ddmg has been-

no----------~L~I~TTLE

-·-------- -~- ------

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

W-est

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

FREE ESTIMATES

-----------

-·-------- - ----

some ment If he had to lead a
s pade or dtamond, the diamond
was correct There was a 68 per
cent cha nce that the s m t would
break 3-2 If it did , II wouldn't
rea lly matter who had which
ace, s in ce three tncks In
d1amonds would be enough to
guaran tee s uccess of the three
notrump contract."
Os wald
" However, there
was no need for any guess at
a ll
ln slea d o f study ing
diamon~ s and spad es South
should have led a club to dumm y 's ace at tnc k two and then
led a s ma ll diamond from dum-

my ,,

lolo

Phone 992-7665

----------

SOUTH ID)
• 82
¥ AQ 10
t K J 75
o1o K J 10 3

!&lt;NOW BEAtJS A6:M AAASWJ

KI-(MJ

Buildin{( Homes

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

"' 7 2

., I'M AFAA!D SHE; CQ;'Sf.i'f

28

EAST
4A1074
• 76 2
• 4
498654

¥KJ9 53
t A 10 9 8

For Sale

We Specialize In

WIN AT BRIDGE
Guarantee better than guess

.
V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 949-5184

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

6ET MOVtlol' WI &lt;; E GUY; YOU
ANr ME ARE GIJ.t N' ~YE-BYE!

lO . Uo-Laribe 6,13; Medical Ce nter 8,10, News 20, Washmgton
Stra og ht Talk 33 .
10 ·30-To Be Announced 33 .
11.00-News 3,4,6,B,10, 13,15; ABC News 33
11.30-John ny Car son 3,4 ,15; Movie " The Heat Wave Lasted
Four Days " 13; FB I 6. Movie "Be tween Heaven and Hell "
10; Janaki 33
12 Jo- Movie " The Heaf Wave Las ted Four Days" 6
1 00-Tomorrow 3,4, News 13.

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES

HElL

ALUMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

.

"

SJAYI

__ _________

YGV
FA

LEO (July 23-Aug.22) Use your

QXHJYHI Y

YMH
0

H L Y . -

Rial Esbte For Sale

Yeaterdly'a Cryptaquote:

IS THE

GVXSO

I Y F

JXH

K D - Ingenuity today where work IS

concerned . Don't be afraid to
RVDYM try
n e w methods or
procedures

L H A W J

K F A VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt.

2~

Someth ing une xpected but
pleasurable will happen today
lo take your mind off your more
·
serious affairs It will be a
SERVING ONE 'S OWN PASSIONS welcome break.

GREATE,ST SLAVERY. - PROVERB

LIIIIIA (Sept.

~3-0ct.

23) A

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You re gomg to make some
qwck rev1s1ons m your plans
regard1ng a maHe r of concern
Your ne w approach w111 be
WISer
SAGITTARIUS (f'lov. 23-Doc.
21) If handled properly, a SituatiOn not totally to yo ur a dvantage will turn out surp rrs1ngly
profitable Be on yo ur toes
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
. 19) You 'll be called upon to
ass1st a fnend who has conSiderable· confidence 1n you
How you handle things w111
Justify h1s f811h rn you
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 19)
You te mucl1 more _up to cop~
mg w1th challengtng task s today tha n yesterday, especially
1n f1nanc1a l or caree r areas
PISCES (Feb. 2U-March 20)
Through a conversatiO n with a
pal you re go1ng to p1ck up a
good 1dea . It wtli fit neatly mto
your
plans .

Your

Birth.day
April 29, 1975
You're l1kely to take an Interesting tnp of, co nstderable
distance lh1s year Also, you'JI
fo rm several unu sual
assoc 1al 10ns of a lasting
nature
INEWSPAPE:R E:NTI:i:RPRISE ASSN l

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

---·-

I

. .

,.

'
•

!
.

TU ESD/1 Y, APR IL29, 1915

9.30- Rhoda B,10, Romanti c Rebe lloon 20,33

LARRY LAVENDER

GLEN R.
Bissell

MONDAY, APRIL28, 1975

B DO-Smothers Brothrs 3,4, 15; Rookoes 6, 13, Gunsmoke B, 10;
Thin Edge 20,33.
9· 00-Movte " Two Mules fo r Sister Sara" )-4, 1S, SWAT 6, 13;
Maude B,1 0; Art In Publoc P laces 20; Thon Edge Follow-Up

FREE ESTIMATES

Hubbatd's.
Greenhouse ·

Television log for easy vieWing

'

Service~

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS,

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

Meigs
Property
Transfers

o., Monday, April 28, 1975

Auto Sales

2 SIGNS
.OF
QUALITY

I

7- The Daily Sentinei,Middleport-Pomeroy,
DICK TRACY

I

�1

'

I

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middli port-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, April28, 1975

. t Roc]{ '
Pom
News NOtes

"

Fast Results Use Senti~el Classifieds

NOT!CEOF
APPO!NTM,ENT
Case No . 21,423
Estate of Thomas H Crow
Decea sed
Not.ce os hereby g iven th at
ThOmas o Crow of Pomeroy ,
Oh1o and Robert H Crow of
Syracuse , Ohro , have been du ly ME IG S Co un ty F1Sh a nd
.
By Wanetta Radektn
appo1n ted Co -Execu tor s of the
Game ASSOC:: 1af10n Wi ll hol d
Granville 'Lyons IS home and Estat e of Thomas H Crow ,
meetmg 7 30 p m April 30
, late of Pomeroy ,
Syracuse Cl ub Room
h1s condition is improved . He deceased
Me1gs Count y Oh10
4 27 41 C
Cred1tors are requ rred to file
has been confined to O'Bieness
c1
a1ms
w1th
..
.Sa1d
f
rd
uc1
ary
the1r
Hosp1tal with a respiratory w1th1n four mo nths
AQ HA StalliO n Se r'JI Ce
D1amond Ch am · Go Man
lh1S
8th
day
of
Apr
il
Dat
ed
ailment. His wife , Edith, was
Go D1amond CharQe blood
1975
removed to the hospital by the
" ·" fA.
..
l1nes Ex ce ll ent d1SPOS i1 1on
Blown
16 2, live foal. guara nt eed
'
emergency squad . She had a
1
Mann 1ng D Webster
$100 Phone 992 7300
Insulation Services
1974 CHEVROLET IMPALA
S4 1YS
Judge
4 21 ntp
heart condition but IS feeling
Blown into Walls &amp; AHies
-~!
4
door
,
only
10,400
miles,
fu
lly
equipped
including
air,
Court of Common Pl eas , __ -·-~-------_
In Syracuse
STORM
much better at th1s lime .
dark red fini s h A rea l cream puff!
ProbateDrv1S 10n GRANO - 0 ,EN ING
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
season
.
No
w
Now
open
for
From
the
largest
TruCk
or
Proffitt 's Recreation Center
Luther Harvey 1s home from ( 4 ) 14, 71, 28 Jtc
ava il able- most vanet 1es
REPLACEMENT
Bull dozer Ra d1ator to lhe
1Y74CHEVELLE MALIBU CLASSIC
SJBY5
ac ross fr om Port land Park
of vegetable plants &amp;
s mallest Healer Co r e
Holzer Hospital after s ufferi ng
WINDOWS
HT
Cpe
,
350
Y·8,
automatic
t
ra
n
s
,
power
steerin
g
&amp;
NOTICE OF
Open in g May 1, 1975 Mon
flower~ plus pe lted flowe rs
ALUMINUM
an a tta ck of kidney stones
day through Fr 1day , from 4
APPOINTMENT
brakes, fac tory air, t mted glass, whee l covers, AM·FM
Na th an Biggs
OUR SPE CIALTY 011er
StDtNG-SOFFITT
p m until 10 p m Sa turdays
Cas.c No . 21502
Rad1ator Spec1ahst
2.000 hangmg ba's kets of
Mr . a nd Mrs . Mtke Fra ley
rad1o, less tha n 13,000 miles, red vmy l top, wh1te finish,
GUTTERS-AWNINGS
Estate ol W 1111 am Ernest
and Sunday s from 10 a m
Petunias, Ivy, Geran1ums,
a beautiful luxury mid.size car
an nounce the birth of a son. He Sellard $, Dec eased.
till 10 p m
V1nes, a nd Begon 1as
Nolice tS h er eby Q•ven t ha i
4 25 Jfc
has been named Dana Edward.
TOP QUALITY AT
1Y12 DODGE DART4 DOOR
$2345
Ec:lgar Se ll ards ot Rou te 1
Syracuse, Ohio
LOWEST PRICES
The Iris h Leprechauns 4-H Dover , Oh 10 .14622, has been FOR s;ru o - AKC Cocker
IN~.
Local ·own e r &amp; low mileage, good wht te wa ll tir es
Ph. YY2 -3993 ·
992-5176
Ph 992 -2 11 !1
Pomeroy
Spa niel , only to AKC Cocke r
small V 8 e~gi n e, power stee rmg, factory a tr, gold
Club met a t the Star Grange du ly ap po1nted Adm• n• st rat or
4 17 1 mo
4 10 1 mo
Spa n 1el femal es
Good
ol th e Es ta t e o t W•ll •am Er
fm1 sh, blk v myl top, v m yl interior tnm, radio A clean
Hall Monday night Instructors nes t Se llards , dece ased , latE'
persona11ty Ph one 992 3273
car
-4 25 3tc
Mr. Castenzo and Mr Cuneth Of Me1gs County, Oh10
Cred1to rs ar e requ1red to
are teachmg the boys gun fil e th e1r cl a1ms w1th sa1d QUARTER horse a t stud ,
fldU c1 ary w1thm tour months
young son of "T HE OLE
safe ty
Dated th 1S 1Jrd day of Apr il
MAN ,"~ A A. AT , a
leadmg
Mr. and Mrs . James Horn 19 75
S1re of race and show her
ses Ra n W1 th1n 100th of a
have a daughter, born at
Mann1ng D Webste r
second of AAA t1me before
POMEROY, OHIO
on alum mum ' replace ment
O'Bieness Hos pital last week .
Pro b ate Judg e
lle was 2 OffiCia l AA with an
wtndows , s tding , storm
o
f
sa1d
Co
unty
89
speed
lnde
x,
halter,
The little girl has been named
'
doors and windows. railing,
co nformation , and best
"".'r condtfloning, plum .
1970
CH
EVROLE
T.
1·ton
Jenmfer Ann .
phon e
Cttarl es
L1sle ,
b1ng , h ea tmg, roofing ,
( 11 28 lSI 5, 12, Jtc
d1SPOS1t 1on Fee $100 a t time
truck, V8 , 4 speed, p 8 ' 750
Syracuse , Oh1o.
Carl
sp outing , general s he e t
of se r v1ces w1t h 11ve foa l
x 16 t1r.es , good body New
Mrs. Doro thy Perry who has
Jacob
,
Sales
Re
presen
metal
work.
guara n tee P l'1 on e 992 7888 TW O bedroom mobile home,
stake bed, run s gooa, l l , tN~
been living w1th relatives in
tattve
.
4 20 26tc
corner Broadway and E lm ,
Ha rold
Brewer ,
Lo n g
Free Estimates •
Middleport Phone 992 25a o
Bo Hom , Oh ro Phone 985
Dakota, W. Va . has returned to
Phone 949- 5961
AUC T ION, Thur sday n1 ght, 7
355d
4-23 ffc
her home m Dyesv1lle. Several
Pm
at Mason Auction ,
.t 27 tf c
Emergency
949-2211
Horton St 10 Mason , W Va FU RNISHED
members of the fam1ly vis1ted
apar tm e n t. Consig nm en t s w e lcome
or
992-5700
adults on ly in M1ddleport
1974 CHEVROLET Cheyenne,
her over the weekend and
Phon e (30&lt;~) 773 547 1
Phone 992 387 4
20 Po~ ton l auto trans , p b,
4 4 1 mo .
4-2-15
2 2 tfc
· assisted w1t h the spring
'
3 25 -tfc
p s , see at 105 Un 1on A11e
-------~-----Phon e 992 3293 be tween 5
cleaning of ~er house and yard ,
F OR your " 01I of M1nk " FOR re n t 1n Middlepor t
a nd 7 p m
Cosmet i CS
Phone
they are Mr . and Mrs. Robert
down stairs 5 rm furnished
4 24 Ole
BROWN•' S 992 511 3
apar tm ent Washer , d rye r ,
Hoo ge, Dakota, Mr. and Mrs .
1 7 tt c
and uti11t 1es pa1d Phone 992 · ONE G M C V 6 truck W1fl'1
James S!jiilner, Alum Creek,
2616
on ly &lt;1,200 miles Equipped
NOW selli ng Ful ler Bru sh
4 25 3tc
w1 th P 1ckw1ck camper For
W Va., and Mr . a nd Mrs .
Products , phone 992 3410
de tai ls, call 992 3953
F r edenck
J.
Stobart,
Sales &amp; Service
James Fraley Jr . and children ,
I 24 tfc Furnis hed one bedroom apt.
4 22 6t p
Earlene
Stobart
to
Frederick
992- 3092
'Glenn
and
Krtsten,
All ut 11ities pa1d Phone 992
Pleasant Ridge
Rac1ne , 0 .
5436
Y4Y
-3604
J.
Stobart,
Earlene
Stobart,
Harrisburg, W. Va.
4
25
ate
Pomeroy, Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Peck Parcels, Letart, Sut!on, Baum OLD fvrn iture , ice boxes,
12
IN
ALUMINU
M
FTM
brass , beds, or comp lete 3 ROOMS a nd bath P hone 992 .
and son, Albany, have moved V., Le banon .
f1st1mg boat , tra rler , a nd 5
house hold s Wr1te M
D
2931
Nellie
Hyse
ll
,
Lawrence
hp motor, alt for $250
to the former P. A. Wallace
M ill er , Rt. 4, Pom eroy,
4 27 6tc
Charles
Bisse ll,
Long
Hysell
to
Worl
ey
Haley,
Oh
1
0
Call
992
7760.
Reasonable Rates
property on County Road I
- - -~-~ ------ ---BottOm , Oh1o , n ear Bashan
Phone 949 518 2
Al so Repa 1r s On All
Mrs . Edith Talbert of Phyllis Haley, '• Acre, ------------~~7-4 TRAILER space for re nt in
4 27 3tc
Midd leport Ca ll 992 2625
Rtdmg Tractors
HOR SES &amp; PON IES . Phon e
Charleston, S . C., has moved Rutland.
498 Locust St .
4 27 tfc
7
42
3264
3 25 1 mo
·
Worley
Haley,
Phyllis
Haley
1973
HOND
A
Sc
r
amb
ler
350
.
Middleport , Oh1o
59 1 mo
mto a mobile home on State
4 3 tf c -·---~
4-10 -t mo .
Call 992 5914 after 1 p m
to Worley Haley , Ph yllis
Route 689. •
27
6tc
4
CA SH pa1d for a ll makes and
Mr a nd Mrs B1ll St. John , Haley, '1, Acre, Rutland.
models of mobile 1'1omes
MACHINE ,
S EW I NG
HONDA Elsm ore MT 125 McDANIEL Custom But
Eve r et t H. Horner to
Phone area · code 614 423 12'x52' 2 BEDROOM trade r , 19 74
chering , State and Federa l
Jamestown, visited Mr. a nd
Phone
992 72 11
Repairs , se rv1ce , all makes
Water , Electrtc, Gas,
9531
l1ke new $35 week , utllit1es
lnspecled , s laughter , cut,
Pickens,
Joan
992 2284 Tl'1e Fabr1c Shop ,
4 27 61p
Sewer lin es, in s tall e d .
Mrs. Rex Cheadle and family. Francis
pa id Phone 992 332&lt;1
4 13 ttc
and wrap Phone (304 ) 882
Pomeroy Authorrzed Singer
Work guaranteed
3224
d 17 tfc
Mrs. St. J ohn, Bonnie and Picke ns, I ac re, 1.25 acre,
Sales and Se rv1ce
We
JUNK
-a~utos,
comp
le
te
and
4 27 12tp
1966 CHEVROLET Im pala ,
Sharpen SC ISSOrS
Kathy Cheadle and Wanetta Lebanon .
Dozer, Backho e, Trucks
de l1vered to ou r yard We 3 RM and bath furn 1shed apt
good cond1t ron Clarinet , 3 29 tfc
D.
Stansburg,
Golden
Lim eston e &amp; Ftll Dirt
,Asa
p1ck
up
auto
bod1es
and
buy
Ut
1
1i
t1eS
paid
356
NOrth
4th
Radekin shopped m Pomeroy
lik e new Phon e 9d9 41 14
Commercia I· Re sidential
Sl , M1ddt epor1
a ll k1 nds of scra p meta ls and
Faye
Stansburg
to
Trustees
of
4273
tc
DOZER work , land clearmg
a nd Mason , W. Va . , Monday .
Construction &amp; Remodel
1ron ~ id er 's Salvage, St
-4 9 tfc -- -----~ -~ ------by the ac re, hourl y or
Columbi
a
Township,
.348
acre,
Rt
124,
Rt
.
4,
FJ
om
eroy,
~
~
.
J ohn Holliday is h om e
co
ntract
F
arm
pon
ds,
APPALOOSA
ge
ld1ng
Phon
e
Oh1Q Call 992·5-468
3 AND 4 ROOM furn ished and
roads, e tc Large dozer and
667 3730 after 4 p m
recovenng from surgery at Columbia.
10. 17 tfc
unf urni shed
apa rtm en ts
opera t or w1tt1 o'Jer 20 years
-4
22
6tp
Dana
Murray,
Ka_ren
Phone
992
5434
Holzer Medica l Center. Callers
expe r1 ence Pull1ns Ex
O ld UPRIGHT
4 12.tfc 19 74 HONDA X L 350 road and
to Cha rles
R WANTED
cavating , Pomeroy , Oh •o
at the Holliday home ove r the Murray
PIANOS , any cond 1t 10M.
Phone 992 247a
tr
ail
b1ke
Good
condi
tion
Houda
s
helt,
Mary
L,
Payin
g
s
10
each
Fi
r
s
t
floor
PRIVATE
mee
t
rng
room
for
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.
S750 Ca ll 992 7059
12 19 lfc
only
Wr
1t
e
and
g
iv
e
organ,zat1on
.
phone
992
a
n
y
----Oris Coop er , Mrs. Osa Cooper , H oudashe lt, Parcels, Bedford .
4·22·6tc
3975
direc tions to W1tten P1ano
777 P earl Street
CARPET 1ns ta llat10n, $1 25
- ----------Dana W. Murray , Karen 0 .
Co, Box 188, Sardis, Oh10
Mtddleport, Oh10
Columbus, Miss Clemma Vale
3 11 tfc -608 E.
per
yard
Ca
l
l
Richard
LOCUST
posts
,
phone
(3041
43946
~ Phone 992 ·5367 or 992 ·3861
Wes t , Phone 843 ·2667 .
of Cardington, and Mr. a nd Murray to · Charles R.
273 (.566 , or 985 4198
MAIN
4 24 6tp AP T l 1ke n ew , 3 rooms, w1th
4·3
30tp
4 23 6tc
Houdashelt ,
M ary
L'.
la rge bath , tabl e top range ,
Mrs Mon t Bosworth, local.
C BRADFORD , AuctiOneer
POMEROY, 0 .
large c loset East Mam St ,
Houdashelt, 48 acres, 13 acres, AMBER, black , milk g lass or
Comp lete Serv1ce
TAN
KS
CLEA
NED
SEPTIC
Cobalt blue fru1t ja r s Also,
Pomeroy See to appreciate
Phone
949 3821 or 949 316 1
RUTLAND
60
ac
res.
1112
Reasoncible
RATE
S
.
Phone
0~~~
~g~~';na~
cco~:~~
t~hb~~~
,
Bedford .
such names as Re11enna , A
Phone Gar 11polis du r1 ng day,'
Racme, Oh 1o
· d46 ·A782 Ga l itpolls John
story fram e home, 3 BR,
with
plastic
sea
t
,
$20
Phone
Ston
e,
Th
e
Van
Vl1
et
,
Potter
446
9699,
evenmgs
446
95J9
Herman Robe rts, Unda L.
RUssell. owner
Cri t Bradfor d
98 5 3915 bath, uf11ify, some car·
&amp; Bod ine 's, Wm . Pog ue,
4 10 tfc
5 1 ltc
4 9 tfc
Roberts to Sherman R oberts,
Oh iO Fruit jar and Joel
4 27 3fc
pet 1ng, paneling &amp; hie', part
-----~--Hain
es
Phone
992
5460
.
BEDROOM mobi le home,
basement. Garage and
Dorothy Roberts, 35 acres,
WI L L TRIM or cut tr ees and SEP T IC T ANKS c le aned
The Almanac
GOOD fam ily cow , gentle,
4 25 3tp
i20 per week, plus uli1 1t1 es
workshop
24x32, barn
shrubbery
Clean
out
Modern Sanitat 1on 992.3954
Salisbury.
g
1vm
g
abou
t
4
gal
m
ilk
Depos
1
t
requ1red
368
Page
--------~--By Untied Press International
or 992 7349
basements, a ttic, etc Phon e
35X40,
large
buoldong
darly
Als
o,
2
n1
ce
ro
ts
over
1
SMALL
t
a
rm
,
10
to
50
acres,
St
Phon
e
992
3509
Bra dford Massey, Kathryn
949 J22 1 or 74 2 444 1
9 18 tfc
Trxlay is Monday, April 28,
·ac re each Hard road , r ura l
30x200, pond, 2 f•ee gas
fair to good ho use and
4 22 71c
4
8
261c
Marie
Massey
to
Gary
L.
Duff,
water
available,
3
mile
s
outb
u1
ld1ngs
Cash
to
bank
~
well s, tots of bu ild ing sites,
the 118th day of 1975 with 247 to
EXCAVA TING , dozer, loa der
-~----- -------from by pass on Leadmg
loan wr ,te J w weeks, COUNTRY Mo b ile Home
Susan E. Duff, 2.90 acres,
at
' Ut all fenced Mtnerals
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
a nd backhoe wo r k, sept 1c
follow
Cre ek Road Also , old cow
Gen Del , Pom eroy , Oh 10
Park , Rt 33, te n mdes north
oncl ud ed. O NLY $33,000.
-~ Sweepers, toa sters , 1rons,
tanks In sta ll ed,
dump
Columbia
.
45769
.
manur
e
by
bushel
Ptwne
of
Pomeroy
La
rg
e
rots
W1
th
The moon is approaching its
tru clo.s and lo boys for 1'1 1r e ,
a ll srna ll a pp lian ces Lawn
POMEROY - 11J, acres 742
310a
4-15
3tp
conc
rete
pat1os,
sidewalks,
Wanda Sue Gibson, Gary
wil l haul f1ll d 1rt. top soil.
mowe r , next to Stat e High
last quarter.
1 st ory fra me, 2 BR, bath,
4 27 6tc
r unners and off stree t
limeston e a nd g ra vel , Ca I
way Garage on Route 7
Gibson,
Edward Damron Jr .,
--------- - - - - - - - - park1ng P hon e 992 7479
ultl1ty R, Nat ga s furna ce,
The morning stars are Mars
Phone 985 3825
~ob or Roger Jeffers , da,
,J2
31
lfc
Vera Damron, Bob Damron,
.porches, garage. A lot of
phone 992 7089, ni ght phone
.:1 16 tfc
and Jupiter .
~
~
--,.---~-- ---- --992 3525 or 992 5232.
this home IS new $13,000.
EXPER
IEN
CED
IN
P
ARTY
Nancy
Damro
n
to
Bob
• The evening stars are MerLAWN mowe r repa1r , 308
PLAN-;~ BE A MERRIMAC
2 11 tfc
NEAR MIDDLEPORT Damron, Nancy Damron, 6
1-973
BRA NOH AVEN
2
Page St , Midd leport Pholie
SU PERV IS OR
H IGHES T
cury, Venus and Saturn.
60 acr.,s, 25 to ·30 til la ble,
bedroom
tra11er
,
take
over
992 3509
COMM I SS I ON ,
NO
larg e
barn,
s t orage
• Those born on this date are acres, Sc1p10.
payments Phone 992 5121
DELIVERY
OR
.:11 630tc
bu ilding , hom e 1s Ph story
4·27 6tc
COLLEC TIN G
CA LL
-- --- -- ~- --under the sign of Taurus.
lram e , 4 BR. large bath,
CO L LECT TO ANN BAX
P &amp; J Ho me Ma intenance,
James Monroe, fifth president
SELL your mob 1le home for
Re fr1gerat10n ,
A
C
TER , 319 556 888 1 or WRITE
den and li vi ng R. has
ASKS FOR TRADE
cash.
15
homes
wanted
,
1958
Heating Phone 992 3509
MERRIMAC , P 0 BOX
of the United States, was born
fireplaces.
tots
of
bu1ldong
thru
1972
models.
Pho
ne
ATLANT,6; (UP!)- Former
1277, DUBUQUE, IOWA
4 16 JOtc
s 1tes, part ly fe nced. ImApnl28, 1758. This is entertain(614) 446 1425, Gallipolis
5200 1
----~--- ----- - - ~
All-America defensive back
3
9·78tf
mediate
posses
s
1on
on
HOME 1m pro ve m en t and
e r Ann-Margret's 34th birthday.
4 2a ltc
i0"-3th HP
Clarence Ellis asked the - -- --- --- - - - - - - - - so gning deed . $17,000 .
Repa1r Se rvice - Anything
On this day in history:
1954 PACEMA KER trail er ,
f1 Xed a rou nd lhe ho l'ne, from
POMEROY - 12x60 Mob ole
Athmta Falcons last year to
n
1ce
tor
couple
Pt1on
e
378
roof to basement You will
In 1788, Maryland was trade him to another National
Home. 3 BR. bath , Ex629a
l1ke our wo rk and rales
admitted to the Union as the
panda lt v ing R., air cond .,
4 28·1fC
Phone 742 508 1
Football League team ,
22"-3112
HP
1975 T,OBACCO allo tmen t fo r
w ash e r &amp; dryer, all fur
seventh state.
12 29 tfc bedrooms, 2 baths, one e n.
1973 HILL CREST 2 bedrm
On Saturday, the Falcons sa le or ren t 2,350 lb quota . ... .. Self- Propelled
nish ed , new carpeting . A
In 1945, Fascist leader Benito
mobile
home,
12
x
52,
fur
Call 593 7007, Wedn esday or
5~-PTiCt~ks~;d)~'Zhl~es closed. good carpeting, gas
sent Ellis, tbeir No, I draft
BUY AT $4,500
ntshed Pr 1ced to se ll Ca ll
Sat urd ay
ms tal led Also, field ctra1n fireplace, built-In bookcases &amp;
Mussohni was executed by
POMEROY
1973
-14x70
Herman London after 5 30,
choice in 1972, to the Denver
4 27 6tp
l1les
All work. g ua ranteed . c hina closet. Modern kitchen,
Italian patnots.
phone 992 520 1
Mobile Home . 3 BR , 11h
Lew1s Ex cavating , Rt 1,
Broncos for wide receiver - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,POMEROY LANDMARK
4 25 3tc
baths,
d1 s h
washer.
Rutland , Oh1o Phone 742 full basement and garage .
In 1952, the war With Japan
9 • .:.J ack w. Carsev, Mgr.
3742
MODERN
BUSINESS
Jerry Simmons,
safety
compl
ete
ly
furnished,
8x20
was officially ended with
197 2
GREENBRIER,
2
Ail Phone 992 -2 181
BUILDING - Has nearly 2900
4
24
26tc
Charles Greer and a future
awn1ng.
ALL
Ll
KE
NEW.
bedroom, front kitchen ,
signing of a treaty by the
sq. ft., 1100 air condllloned .
$B,900
draft choice.
.,
: 4 RM house and bath , ut rli ty
ra1sed dmmg area , f ue l oil
S HALLOW Wells dug, s pr1ngs Central heat, 2 ceramic ttte .
MAYTAG
portable
washer
,
2
United States and 47 other
furnace,
eye
level
oven
in
ALL
OF
THE
ABOVE
ARE
room , furn ished , sc r een In
developed a nd cisterns
" !guess they J'USt finally got
yrs old . exce llent c ondttion ,
surface unit Can be seen at
porch, forced air hea t ,
NEW LI ST INGS AND ARE
msta ll ed to approximately rest rooms, and lots of parking
nations.
S100
Phone
992
2926.
.
around to it," said Ellis, a 6PhOn e 949 365a
K1ngsbury Homes Sal es and
18 ft Lew1s Exca1Jat1ng, Rt. on Rt. 7,
GOO D BUYS. CALL NOW.
4·22·61p
Serv 1ce, Inc , 1100 E . Ma 1n
1,
Rutland Phone 742 J742
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
In 1969, French President foot-0, 190-pound safety who ----- --- ---~:.:_~tc
992-225¥
St., Pomeroy Phone 992
4·2-4
26tc:
In Pomeroy with a good
VAR
IETY
OF
ca
bbag
e,
Charles de Gaulle resigned earned his All-America honor FURNI SH ED a pt 2 rm and
7034
---~- ----- --- - - tomato
and
pepper
p
lants
trade.
all stock, equipment
38
ACRE
S
of
h
rll
ground
and
4 24 61 c
after being defeated in a playing under Ara Parseghian
~:;~- Moddteporl Phone 992D&amp;O TREE Trimming , 20
Also, caul1flower, bro ccol i,
and living quarte rs .
'
wood s, located 7 m il es fro m
years
ex
p
eri
e
nce,
ms
ured
,
br ussel sprouts, egg plant s
referendum.
at Notre Dame.
4-25 3tp
'
Pom eroy, and 1 mil e soulh
BUILDING
LOTS
Some
fr
ee
es
t1m
a
tes
Call
992
3057
,
Bedding plants - pansies , 1970 CHAMPION tra1ler ,
of Ch este r, Oh 10 If m
Coolv ill e Phone ( 1) 667
with water and nalural gas
petu n 1a , m angold , sa i'J ia ,
partly turn 1shed , inc lud es
terested, wnte to
Olen
30-4 1
laps $1500 .00 up.
air conditioning , 12x60 Ca ll
ph lox , portul aca , agertum ,
Ba iley , Box 146 , Zanesfield ,
4 16 12tp MIDDLEPORT
992 2559 or 992 3538 or see at
a lyffum, Impatiens , cole us,
3
For Sale
Oh10 43860
Fox
vanety of ge ranium s, also ,
828 So u t h Sec ond St ,
HOME
GROWN
toma to
bedroom~ . .,. _ · n. ltural gas
4
2J
6tp
RE
A
DY
MIX
CONCRETE
Middleport
pots of petun1as and m ums
pl a n ts, 1m proved Mex1ca n &amp;
ter, n ice
del1vered rig h t to your furnact l'
Hanging
baskets
.d.?4 .6tc
Heinz 1350, across fr om
pro
1ec
t
Fast
and
easv
F
re
e
panelln~
~g
ti le, and
petun1as
,
ivy
geranium
,
HOUSE for salem Portland , 6
mun 1t 1pa1 park 1n Syracu se
eslimates P hone 992 3284, large lot for garden S8500.00.
lobelia, ferns , wa ndermg AR E YOU In the market for a
Thomas Hayman
rooms !Jn d bath, good well
Goeg lein Rea d y Mix Co ..
1ews, por c h boxes , larg e
large 3 bedroom to p q uality ,
and 2 acres ground $6,200
5 28·3tc
Mtdd leport, Ohio
•
w e ll constru c ted m obil e
hearty red azaleas, Cleland
Phone 843 2292
WHEN YOU ADVERTISE •,
6
30
tic
home., If so , you can save
G re en l'1 ouse, Racine .
4 24 6tc
YOUR PROPERTY, YOU , .
thousand s on this one. We
Geraldine Cleland
-EN YOUR HOUSE TO, .
have
a
W75
70x14
Skyline
4· 13·tfc
Lost
SERV ICE s ta tjolfand garage,
trat(e
in
that
c
ome
s
ERYONE . LIST IT WITH :'
BLACK &amp; WHIT E Border
Rutland . Will financ e or
equipped wit~.Jb ta l electric ,
=-~-~~; ·::-, WE WILL SCREEN • '
lea se . Ca ll 747.5052.
Colli e named " Tippy " lost 1973 HARLEY Oav 1dson 350
Jlh baths, fully furni s hed ,
SX, 1,800 m 1te s . $600 Phone
near Silver Run Road below
LD9KERS. CALL ¥92- ~ :
-4 9 26tc
""
new appliances, n ew bed s
985-3341 between a 'a .m and
Hob so n
Ch 1ld 's
pet
NEW brick home on Stare Rt
6
p
m.
and
c
a
r
peti
ng
in
liv1ng
Reward phone 992 3141
1 72 ACRE S of land and locust
7 between Pomerov:' and
room ,
hall,
master
4-15 12 tp
•:I,
posts P hon e 742 3656
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _J _ _ _
-4 _
2a_ 3tc
'
Che.ste r 3 bedroom s, ~~Lath,
bedroom ,
and
center
._
4·20·
26tp
garage
,
'
basement
,
bedroom . Th is home was
FISH BAIT - fish bait We
"''I
firepla ce, carpeted Phone
lived in less tl'1an 90 days BEAUTIFUL new home on
ha ve our bait in , n ight
'I
9a5
-3365
Yard Sales
You get a full warranty .
crawlers,
large
mea l
l~ke , 3 b ed room s, bath &amp; 1h,
' I
4 27 31p
YARD SALES,Apri/30 , May 1
Home c an be seen at
worms, worms , red worms,
carr eti ng, drapes , big den
'I
and 2. Tues , Wed., and
Ki ng sbury Home Sales, 1100
blood batt , Indian Joe's
Cat 992 3493
Th ur s at 304 Spr1 ng Ave.
E Main Str eet, Pomeroy,
Sport and CB ShoJ' , 308 Page
l ·24 .tf c
Ph one 992.7556.
Ohio
Monday through
"st, Middleport . Phone 992F riday , 10 till 7, and Sa t 9 CIRCLE Mote l &amp; Christy Ann
3509
4.2a Jtc
a .m. t il t 7 p ,m Or call 992
4·9·30tc
Restaurant,
Gall ipolis ,
7034.
Ohlo Phone 4-46 ·2501 or 4-46 ·
1912 HONDA SL 350 CC . ex -4 24-6tc
3964 . Charles K1esling
ce ll e nt cond it 1on Also, 1950
......_
_,__
423
-12tp
NOTICE
OF
F
d
t
it
f
APPOINTMENT
or o se or trade or van
P hone 992 ·3897
2 BEDROOM home , new
Cue No . 21449
4· 11 · 12tc
foundation, roofing, cement
Estate of Nell G. Davts - - - - - - - - - - -- - porches , thermo
Pane
Deceased :
CLOSE OUT on new Zig .Zag I ACRE lots or less, lev e l
windows, storm doors,
Notice 1s hereby g1ven th~t sewing machine s
For
second bottom ground Clem
natural gas furnace, white
Mildred Mc Dan iel of 547 Matn sewing stretch fabrics ,
Cooper , &amp;y racus e, Ohio
aluminum s iding , bla c k
Street, Middleport, Oh10, has buttonholes, fancy des ig ns .
Phone 992.7JJO
shutter, kitchen cabinets, ·
be.e"! dul~ appo.nted Ad
etc .
Paint
s lightly
paneling , ce11ing tHe, floors
mtn1stratrtx With the Will blemished .
Choice
of
refinished, low heating bill. '
Ann e)(ed of the Estate of Nell G carrying case or sew ing
nice location, city water.
Di'JIS, decea sed , late Of M1d
s lana $49 so casl'1 or t er m s "3 BEDROOM , all br 1ck ranch
Phon e 985-4102.
dleport , Me 1gs Count y, Oh1 o
available " Phone 992·7755
1' bath s , all car
s
tyle,
1
Cred 1tors are reQu tred to file ·
12· 18 tfc
• ·• ·26tc
peted , large famil v roo m on
the ir claims with said f1dvc rery - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - 3 lots Phone (614) 367 7552
Within four months
'
- MODERN walnut s t e re o .
2·27 ·6tc s ROOM house located on 12
Dated th ts 7th day of April radio a track tape com
---~- -- --~- acre lo t , 2 outbu1ldlng's,
1975
b1nat1on , am .fm radto .
large ga r den space, in
tra1 1er:a nd tot 1n
Balance $105 45 or te rm s 2 BEDROOM
HarriSOnville. For fur th er
town Ph one 992 3975 or 992
"Arnold, come . down from the atlic and stop this loolish
Mannmg D. Webster Call 992 ·3965
tnfo r mat1on, Phone 742.:1782
1~71
Judge
'
4·21 tfc
noslalaia lor lhe shape I used to have!"
(4J 1-4 , 21. 28 . :ur
4 27 -5tc
4 9 tf c:

Noli'ce

Business

· Pomeroy
Motor Co.

EXPERIENCED
Radiato
Service

i_.._,_.. __ _..._.._..._,__.._,_,_,_... __ .._,.._.-._.._.._____________.___._,________ _

I

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

POME~~! E~E~~~~ co. lit'

~

For Rent

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

WILKINSON
SMALL EN1GifiiE

NEIGLER
Builders Supp~

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

-------------Wanted To Buy

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

SO ME P•ACE WHE.t&lt;:.E YO U
WON'T A?K SO MAN Y FOOLI5H
QUE5TIOI&gt;J$ ABOUT THE GURU
!!&gt;Ae.OO-- YOU DIG ~... G WAt&gt;J,
OPEt.J THE. DOOR.~

YEAH~ YOU R E

GOI N' BYE I'&gt;YE,ALL
RI0HT, SEFOI&lt;E' YA
EVEN GET IN
THE CAR!

NORTH
4KQJ53
• B4
• Q632
4AQ
WEST
• 96

.. :lllEN IIJ5 I.IOJ~TED ~eDARteS
jl.tJD W.'JBL!ED 1\E I-EXT
f®l()J OF c:esscRT' M:) M-IYA .
'0!, OF c:.ouR$'

I CO, M 'OU'D ~n5R
1-:Xf'I.I&gt;.IIJ

IT 10 I:&gt;~~IVI''=&gt; .

I

00Rs€SI

WH/l.T A
Df..OI.'f;DAR'/
IS ..

0. J. LAUDERMILT
ROOFING

Both vulnerable

~

-

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

W~f\1/ 1

llKE A

511 LL

•tJI\ ooY "' 11 wAS Ju sr l iKf

U1At&lt;1N

uP

'

8-K EXCAVATING

COMPANY

'REALTY

TURF TRIM
MOWER

dar!&lt;.,
an'

no

Real Estate For Sale

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

•·104.95CKDJ

siqn
o'

:bel!

us~

she's drt-l .
1t qoin' t' be
ktnda' badr

t' hit
th' ol'

,,.

'

ULABNER

I CAN'T SAY ALL THOSE
To
1- I ADORE HER."

STUPID THIN6S

I WA/'Jf YOU TO KNOW
HOW BRILL.IANT I REALLY

AM!

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

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

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

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

_,.,..,,:..

_____ ________

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

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

':

WHAT&amp;HALL
I DO? WHAT
&amp;HALLI&amp;AY?

¥511115 If&gt; YOUR CHANCE
tu FIND OUT IF HE'S
"THE ONE !lEHIND

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

What 1s your opemng bid?
A - One spade. You should not
open one nolrump with 5-4i-2-2 di s~
tribution smce such hands are loo
likely to play better 1n a suit.
TODA Y'S QUESTION

Your partner rmses you to two
sp,ades What do you do now?
Answer Tomorrow
Send $1 for JA C08 Y MODERN
book to· "Win at Br~dge," (clo thiS
newspaper). P 0 Box 489, Radio
C1ty Station. New York, N.Y. 10019.

REAWN RJR R:ITT/11-6
tiP PRESERVES-..eCtJNOMY,S'ltE 9/YS

•

Yeslerday's Answer
16 Lady
friend (Fr.)

26 Baptismal
basin

19 Countertenor 28 Forerunner 1-r,~~\lf=~!!!~~~T~~~-.,;;;;-;;-~
Heroic
30 Pronoun t

22

narrative
23 Plant a
" bug"
24 Livmg
25 Become
precipitous

31 Feru:Iess
32 Invigorate
33 Corundum
38 Criticize
harshly
39 Coal scuttle

S1tuat1on s tatic for some t1 me
can be turned to your profit if
you take prompt ao t1on Don't
doll y-dally

life ... "
28 Ship's
record
29 Cereal
plant ( obs.)
30 Defensible
34 Scottish
uncle
35 Fedora
36 Edge
Knocked
39 Suffer from

rr-+-11--i
-+-11--i

For Tuotdoy, AJ&gt;rll 2V, 1975
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
Some unusual cond 1t10n s are
developing tha t w1ll brtng about
unexpected career benet1ts
Keep what's happ ening to
yourself

1...-+-f-t--i TAURUS

6--+-1f-+--+-1f-

(April 20-May 201
You're going to ge t a fl ash of
u-+-+---+--lmsplratlon on how to handle
someth1ng that's been d1stur~
btng you Follow your hu nches

_...__,__..-:::!

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

ATHENA rASNION61
'

Here's how to
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Is

'

work it:

GEMINI (May 21 -Juno 20)
Yo u'll dQ well m your business
dealings today If you play
things by ear. Be flexib le Act
qurckly to spot ar'l advantage.

One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A Is CANCER (oluno 21 ·July 22)
used for ,the three L's, X for \he two O's, e tc Single letters, Don 't turn a deaf ear to your
apostrophes, the length and formation o! the words are all . mate or partner's s uggest1ons
today. The ad vice may p resen t
b1ats . Each da y the code letters are dilferent
•
just the solution you're seekIng
CRYPTOQUOTES

."

YMH

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

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

4K Q985 ¥ A2 tK4o~o A987

48 Relaxed
(2 wds. )
41 Beyond

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

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

?

26 Disappeared t..-+--t---1
27 "- each

:rr

n.l.v

-------------Real Estate 'for Sale

South

East

You , South, hold

3 Style of
printing
type
4 Grassland
5 Keyboard
instnunent
6 Fixed the
piano
7 Sprile
8_Gralified
9 Imagine
10 Registered

15 Immovable
16 Chemical
suffix
17 Had dinner
18 Vaporized
20 Big · (Calif. )
21 illuminated
22 Withered
23 Squander

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

by Gill

DOWN
I Gather
.. 2 cap

14 Corrupt

Newt!

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

SIDE GLANCES

Nort h

buy a
duck?"
man
43 Gainsay

Diva~~

tank,

For Rent

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

West

28

6 .0o-Sunri se Semi nar 4, Sunn se Semes ter 10
6 25-Farm Report 13
6 3D-Fi'Je Minutes to L1ve By 4, Ne ws 6, Bible Answers 8;
Concerns &amp; Comments 10 , Rev Cleophu s Robm son 13.
6 35- Co lumbu s Today 4
6 45- Morning Report 3, Farmttme 10
7 00-Today 3,4, 15. AM Amen ca 6, 13 , CB S News B. 10
B OO-Lassoe6, Capt Kangaroos . Schooli es 10, Sesa m eSt 33
B 10-Your Future Is Now 20
8 30-Bog Valley 6; P opeye tO
B 55- Chuck Whole Re port s 10
9 ·00-A M 3, Phil Donahue 4, Rocky &amp; Hos Friends B.
Prtncip les of Bus1 ness Law 9, Capt Kangaroo 10, Morn 1ng
woth D. J 13, P h il Donahue, 15
9 3G-Not For Women On ly 3, D1na h 6 , Gr~l l o ping Gourmet 8;
Ne w Zoo Revue 13.
10 ,00-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15 Jo ker's Wold 8, tO
Dtnah 13 .
10 ·30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15. Gam bot B. 10.
II OQ-High Rollers3,4,15, One Life to Li ve 6; Now You See It
a, 10; Etec . Co. 20
_11 30- Hol lywood Squares 3,15, Blankety Blank s 13. News 4,
Love of L1fe 8,1 0; Sesame St,' 20
11 · 55-Graham Kerr 8, Dan I mel's Wor ld 10
12 · 00-J ac kpol 3, 15, Password 6,13, Bob Bra un 's 50 50 Club 4;
News a, 10
12 30-B iank Check 3. 15. Splot Se cond 6 13, Search lor
Tomorrow 8, 10
12 45-Eiec Co 33.
12 55-NBC News 3,15
1·00-News3, All My Ch oldren6,13, Phil Donahue 8: You ng &amp;
t he Restl ess 10, Not -For Wome n On ly 15
1.30-Days of Our Loves 3,4, 15. Let's Make a Dea l 6, 13, As
The World Turns 8.1 0
2:00-$10,000 Pyramid 6, 13 , Guodong Loght 8,10
2.30-Doctors 3.4.1S, 8 19 Showdown 6,13 , Edge of Ntght 8,10
3·00-Anothe r World 3,4, 15, General Hosp otal 6 13, Pri ce is
Roght B,1 0; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
3:3~ne L1fe to Love 13; Lucy Show 6, Match Game B. 10,
The Romagnolos' Table 20
4·QO---Mr Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeann1e 4, Some rset 15,
Gi ll igan's Is 6, Tattleta les 8; Sesam e St 20,33 , Mov1 e
" The Wonde rfu l Country " 10, Mike Douglas 13
4:30-Bewitched 3; r-t;,er v Gnlfon o, Mod Squad 6; Mic key
AAouse Club 8; Bonanza 15
5:00-FB I 3; Andy Griffith B; Miste r Rogger s' Ne oghborhocxl
20,33; Irons ide 13
S 30-News 6 ; Beverly Hillbillies 8. Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ,
Ge t Smart 1S. E lee. Co 33
6:QO-:.-News 3,4,B,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Elec Co 20 , lTV
Uti lization 33.
6 30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13, Bew otched 6, CBS
News B, 10, Zoom 20.33.
7 00-Truth or Cons 3,4; Bowtong for Doll a r s 6, What's My
Lme B; New s 10; Name That Tune 13, Hogh Sc hool TV
Ho nor Society 15, An t iques 20 , Lil 1as Yoga &amp; You 33
7 :30-Hollywood Squares 3; ,4; Let' s Make a Deal 6, Buck
Owens 8; New Price is Right 10, To Te ll the Truth 13 ,
Sprong Street USA 1S; RFD 20. Marco Sport lite 33
B:OO-Adam -12 3,4,1S; Happy Days 6, 13 , Good T.tmes 8,10 .
Solar Energy 20,33
B:30-Movie " They Only Come Out at Noght" 3,4, 15, Mov1e
"Returning Home" 6, 13 , World Press 20, Nov a 33
9: 00-Hawali Fove-0 B,10
9:30-Woman 20; Arabs &amp; Israel iS 33
10· 00-Poli ce Story 3,4, 15, Marc us Welb y. M D 6, 13, Bi!!' naby
Jones 8, 10; News 20; lnelerface 33
10:30-VIbratlons Encore 33
11 : 00-News 3,4, 6,8, 10.13. 15. ABC News 33
11·30-Johnny Caarson 3,4,15 , Wode World Spe coal 13, FBI 6.
- Madigan B; Movie "Arrowhead" tO , Jan ak• 33
12: 30-Wide Wor ld Specoal 6
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4 ; News 13.

42 " Wanna

manager
12 Make an
arrest
( 2 wds .)
13 Norma's
" Casta

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

'72.9QCKDJ

Pass

Tw ms

•

~·

One of

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

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

3 N T. Pass

ACROSS
1 Biblical
brother
5 Asian
treeless
tract
11 Former
Minnesota
.

GASOUNE AU..EY

Mobile Homes For Sale

--

Pass
Pass

-~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

--..,....----------

For Sale

I NT

possible they try to substitute
certainty for guesswork. "
J1m · ' 'I'm looking at the hand
you are about to bnng up. I suppose South won the first tnc k
wtth the ten of hearts and led a
dtamond "
, ~~~ Oswald . " He certamly did
"'
but only after a lot of agonizing.
dummy's queen held the
he relaxed, remarked, 'I
sure played the nght su1t' and
went happ1ly about the business
of wmnmg game and rubber."
Jim " South's guess ha d

---- -------

For Rent or Sale

·

ro Flf1D Ev~R'T HING

0

-------

Pass

0 swa Jd : " If. you cou Jd guess
nght all the tlffie, YOU WOUldn't
have to, do an~thing else well to
be a wmner. xperts do a lot of
successful guessing, but when

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

Help Wanted

14

.

S W[Atlt-1' AND '~HIIIfRtN' 1HAT
I-IORRI!JLE G~wG .. DEAT H O HL'f
A MIMUTE AWAY • A"' D fH EN

Real Estate For Sale

-----

Pass

Jtm · " T hi s play would
guarantee the contract aga mst
any a nd a ll bad s wt d1v1s1ons
a nd other bludgeomngs of
fate ."

Openmg lead - 5 ¥

~ II' S ~ ~ ~LI ' "' l lol R11 U 5 ~, , 011

TfRR1et.e DRF.f.IM - I'M

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

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

South

r,;==.;~=''=-'"7'"""=0:::: By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

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

----------

Nort h East

The b1ddmg has been-

no----------~L~I~TTLE

-·-------- -~- ------

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

W-est

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

FREE ESTIMATES

-----------

-·-------- - ----

some ment If he had to lead a
s pade or dtamond, the diamond
was correct There was a 68 per
cent cha nce that the s m t would
break 3-2 If it did , II wouldn't
rea lly matter who had which
ace, s in ce three tncks In
d1amonds would be enough to
guaran tee s uccess of the three
notrump contract."
Os wald
" However, there
was no need for any guess at
a ll
ln slea d o f study ing
diamon~ s and spad es South
should have led a club to dumm y 's ace at tnc k two and then
led a s ma ll diamond from dum-

my ,,

lolo

Phone 992-7665

----------

SOUTH ID)
• 82
¥ AQ 10
t K J 75
o1o K J 10 3

!&lt;NOW BEAtJS A6:M AAASWJ

KI-(MJ

Buildin{( Homes

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

"' 7 2

., I'M AFAA!D SHE; CQ;'Sf.i'f

28

EAST
4A1074
• 76 2
• 4
498654

¥KJ9 53
t A 10 9 8

For Sale

We Specialize In

WIN AT BRIDGE
Guarantee better than guess

.
V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 949-5184

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

6ET MOVtlol' WI &lt;; E GUY; YOU
ANr ME ARE GIJ.t N' ~YE-BYE!

lO . Uo-Laribe 6,13; Medical Ce nter 8,10, News 20, Washmgton
Stra og ht Talk 33 .
10 ·30-To Be Announced 33 .
11.00-News 3,4,6,B,10, 13,15; ABC News 33
11.30-John ny Car son 3,4 ,15; Movie " The Heat Wave Lasted
Four Days " 13; FB I 6. Movie "Be tween Heaven and Hell "
10; Janaki 33
12 Jo- Movie " The Heaf Wave Las ted Four Days" 6
1 00-Tomorrow 3,4, News 13.

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES

HElL

ALUMINUM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

.

"

SJAYI

__ _________

YGV
FA

LEO (July 23-Aug.22) Use your

QXHJYHI Y

YMH
0

H L Y . -

Rial Esbte For Sale

Yeaterdly'a Cryptaquote:

IS THE

GVXSO

I Y F

JXH

K D - Ingenuity today where work IS

concerned . Don't be afraid to
RVDYM try
n e w methods or
procedures

L H A W J

K F A VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt.

2~

Someth ing une xpected but
pleasurable will happen today
lo take your mind off your more
·
serious affairs It will be a
SERVING ONE 'S OWN PASSIONS welcome break.

GREATE,ST SLAVERY. - PROVERB

LIIIIIA (Sept.

~3-0ct.

23) A

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You re gomg to make some
qwck rev1s1ons m your plans
regard1ng a maHe r of concern
Your ne w approach w111 be
WISer
SAGITTARIUS (f'lov. 23-Doc.
21) If handled properly, a SituatiOn not totally to yo ur a dvantage will turn out surp rrs1ngly
profitable Be on yo ur toes
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
. 19) You 'll be called upon to
ass1st a fnend who has conSiderable· confidence 1n you
How you handle things w111
Justify h1s f811h rn you
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 19)
You te mucl1 more _up to cop~
mg w1th challengtng task s today tha n yesterday, especially
1n f1nanc1a l or caree r areas
PISCES (Feb. 2U-March 20)
Through a conversatiO n with a
pal you re go1ng to p1ck up a
good 1dea . It wtli fit neatly mto
your
plans .

Your

Birth.day
April 29, 1975
You're l1kely to take an Interesting tnp of, co nstderable
distance lh1s year Also, you'JI
fo rm several unu sual
assoc 1al 10ns of a lasting
nature
INEWSPAPE:R E:NTI:i:RPRISE ASSN l

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

---·-

I

. .

,.

'
•

!
.

TU ESD/1 Y, APR IL29, 1915

9.30- Rhoda B,10, Romanti c Rebe lloon 20,33

LARRY LAVENDER

GLEN R.
Bissell

MONDAY, APRIL28, 1975

B DO-Smothers Brothrs 3,4, 15; Rookoes 6, 13, Gunsmoke B, 10;
Thin Edge 20,33.
9· 00-Movte " Two Mules fo r Sister Sara" )-4, 1S, SWAT 6, 13;
Maude B,1 0; Art In Publoc P laces 20; Thon Edge Follow-Up

FREE ESTIMATES

Hubbatd's.
Greenhouse ·

Television log for easy vieWing

'

Service~

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS,

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

Meigs
Property
Transfers

o., Monday, April 28, 1975

Auto Sales

2 SIGNS
.OF
QUALITY

I

7- The Daily Sentinei,Middleport-Pomeroy,
DICK TRACY

I

�' .
.
I.

8- ThO Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday , Aprii 28. 1975

"I
.

HOSPITAL NEWS

Stiversville News Notes

.

'Economic.mdex resumes trend

Alan Middleswart, Florida, and Mrs , Jim Middleswart
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Bonnie Coy, Joe Stanley, Vera
vi~ited his mother, Mrs .· Nell · and family . Miss Middleswart WASHINGTON ,( UPI)
economy. Traditionally, uU, begin to sour;
SATURDAY ADMISSION- Hayman, Joseph Stewart.
the March fall.off.
Mi~dlcswart
,
while
'
his
ship,
is
now
associated
with
a~
The·
'government's
index
of
index has turned up several
The erratic perfonnance of
Ida White, Pomeroy.
Other decreasing indicators
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS future economic trends months before the end of a the past two months reflected were: length of the average
SATURDAY DISCHARGES Denzil Boggess, Racine; The Red Stone, was in port at elEictronics co-op program.
Mrs . Richard Abels , Bashan resllmed its downward slide in recession and begins to fall both positive and negative work week, new'durable goods
.,.- Gloria Reynolds, .. Darla James Rickman , Middleport ; Baltimore, Md., for a few
Road, spent a week with Mrs. March after a brief one month shortly before conditions new~ from the 12 separate order, the price-labor · cost
Ebersbach, Raleigh Sayre , Ricky Smith, Reedsvill e; days.
Thosevisitingatthehomeof John Beck In Kentucky .
upturn , the
Commer.ce
indicators that make up the ratio and building permits.
Unda Dye, Letart, W. Va .;
Market Report
Mr . and Mr~. Lawrence Department reported today.
index. Since most economists
The continuing rally on Wall
Billie Davis, . Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs . Bill Bryant,
The composite index of
.
predict that· the recession will Street, which has pushed stock
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Charles Lawrence , Portland. David and Debra, were Mrs. Theiss, Vinton, visited her
.
end later this year, the prices steadily higher, was the
Aprll%6, 1975
SUNDAY DISCHARGES - Myrtle Lewis and Brenda, mother, Mr. and Mrs. L. R. leading indicators has heen
Plymouth
,
W.
Va.,
Mrs
.
Larry
Gluesencamp,
Sr.,
and
Nicki
falling
virtually
uninterrupted
movement may also indicate biggest contributor plus factor
Sales Report of
Majorie Walburn, Jame s
Fowler
and
children
,
Winfield
,
Dawn,
recently.
since
August
and
·the
0.5
per
that
the index is "feeling for in the index. The. prices of
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Lowe.
W. Va . and Mrs . Violet RitMrs. Alice Adams, . Mrs. cent March decrease largely
· · up industrial rna terials and
STOCKER CA TTLE - · •
The Elfllila Smith Circle of th e b ottom "before t urnmg
chie,
Mrs
.
Barbara
Talbott,
Fannie
Durst
,
local,
and
Mrs.
offset
a
0.6·per
cent
February
the
Reorganized
Church
of
for
good.
·
contracts and orders for plant
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 21 to
Paul
Dean
Evans,
Danny
Elva
Dailey
of
SyracuSe
,
were
r1'se.
A
tr
ti
·
th
Medical
Center
Holzer
25; 300 to 400 lbs . 20 to 25.50;
Jesus Christ of Latter-Day·
con ac on m e amoun t and equlpment also moved up
Black, Mr s. Freda Mid - guests of Mrs . Nell Mid·
Economl'stslooktothe· 1'ndex · Saints met at the church of c onsumer msta
·
11men t d ebt in March. ·
(Births )
\
400 to 500 lbs. 2Q to 28; 500 to
dleswart, recently .
for clues to maJ·or sh1'fts ·,n the Thursday evening in charge of ou 1s t an d 'mg 1as t mon th ,
Friday - Mr. a nd Mrs. dleswart, local.
600 lbs. 20 to 21.50; 600 to 700
Mrs. Fannie Durst spent
Mr. and Mrs. Mac Van
11 t d
t d
f
William
Freeland,
Jackson,
lbs. 21 to 31.50; 700 lbs. ·and
re ec e a en ency or
Ruth Bradford, leader.
son.
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Nelson
Wednesday
and
Thur
sday
Meter
and
daughter
of
Theme
for
this
montli
is
consumers
to
save
and
not Commissioner Resigns
Over 25 to 33.
COLUMBUS (UPI) -It was
Insight • understanding . in- . spend ,')vas the major factor in
HEIFER CALVES - 250 ta Siders, Gallipolis , son. Mr . with her daughter, Mr . and Pomeroy and Mr . and Mrs .
Mrs. Tim Wilkinson and Mike Evans and family spent
a
nd
Mrs
.
Earl
Wa
lters
.
revealed
during the weekend
300 lbs . 17 to 23; 300 to 400 lbs .
Shawn, Columbus .
Saturday with Mrs. Ada Van
tuition ,- etc ., etc. Opening
Gallipolis,
son
.
that
Michael
Joyce, 33, first
16 to 23 ; 400 to 500 lbs. 18 to 22;
Miss Leota Birch attended a Meter.
(Continued from page 1)
prayer was by Ruth , and the
cousin
Saturday
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
of
fonner
Gov. Jolm J .
500 to 600 lbs . 19 to 24; 600 to
Friday
night
supper
at
the
Paul
Evans
and
Paul
Dean,
U.S.
emergency
evacuation
study
book
was
finished
and
Teenagers
Charges
Gilligan, has resigned from
700 lbs. 19 to 26; 700 lbs. and Carl E . Coy, Wellston, son. Sutton Methodist Church arid Nicki VarlMeter, Mrs . Maxine planes which had be f1 ·
during refre shments · and
COLuMBUS (UPI) - Wil· the Ohio Expositions Com·
Mr
.
and
Mrs
.
Donald
Whaley
,
Over 18 to 27.50.
en ymg social hour a rummage sale liam King, 1°, and Eddie
a Sunday dinner at Portland Durst, Mrs. Ruby Bryant,' thousands of Vietnamese from
•
-mission.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS (By Shade, son.
Methodist Church.
Debra, David and Sneaky the co)llltry daily
was planned .
Humphries, both 18 and from
Gilligan named Joyce to the
Sunday
Mr
.
a
nd
Mrs
.
The Head) - - Stock Cows
Mrs
.
Sue
Dailey
and
Snake,
Rudy
Durst,
Danny
A
Cl30
Hercul~
transport
.
A
potluck
banquet
was
had
Colljlllbus,
have
been
charged
Robert
Johnson ,
commlssionJan.llfora term
115 to 160 ; Stock Cows and John
daughter visited relatives and Black, Tom Durst, Mr . and plane of the type'being used to at the church Sunday evening, with aggravated murder in that would have expired Dec.
Hamden
,
daughter
.
Mr
.
and
Calves 135 to 235; Stock Bulls
friends in Hartford, W. Va. , on Mrs. Richard Abels, Louis carry refugees to the Philip· Apnl 20, for a":ards to con~ection .with the rape- I;Im
135 to 185; Baby Calves 15 to Mrs. Clyde Reed , Ray ,
a recent Sunday .
·
DeLuz , Leota Birch,
w. pineswastaklngoffjustasthe ~ugentshof ~~liOhiSpo V~ey sl~~mgofBertha SllUth, 82, a Joyce gave no reason for his
32.50; (By The Pound) - daughter and Mr. and Mrs .
Mrs.
Raymond
Kern
s,
Durst,
Jerry
Neal,
Mrs.
bombing raid was made . The
e ows lp
c
ea ng WI w.
resignation, said !be office of
Canners &amp; Cutters Cows 14 to Brady Turl ey, Pl . Pleasant , Spiller, called on Mr. and Mrs. Mildred Donohew and John plane passed over downtown Course sponsored by · the
Both had been -arrested for Gov . James A. Rhodes.
daughter.
18.50; Holstein Cows 17 to 20;
.
.
burglary and freed on bond
Dale Lawson and family on Klein were recent guests of Saigon at a low altitude with church.
Sommercial Bulls ( 1,000 lbs.
Monday afternoon.
the E. H. Carpenters.
its proJ&gt;:iet engines trailing · After . the mvocatwn the wltl_lln the last two weeks, New FBI Agent
PLEASANT VALLEY
and Over ) 20 to 26.
smokeasifitmighthavebeen welcome was g•~en by JlDl pohce said. Th~y were
Mr . and Mrs. Louis DeLuz
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Carrie
DISCHARGES
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
have spent the past two weeks
hit. There was no report of any Clel~nd, co-ordmator and arrested .at Humphnes' home Thomas W. Kitchens Jr., 51,
lbs . to 250 45 to 49; Medium 200 Higginbotham , Red House ; visting frie1i'ds in Fairfax
crash in the area however president
of
O.V.F . afterawitnessS$wthementer will become the special agent
lbs. to 300 -32 -t!HI; Ctills 30 Samuel Eads, Point Pleasant; Falls Church and Springfield,
.
VietCong troop; advanced orgamzalion :
the house carrying a television in charge of the FBI office
Paul Tickle, Point Pleasant ;
Down .
Virginia .
1\.T
J\.T
to within three miles of
F~eda M1ddleswarl was set.
. , ,
here today.
David O'Dell , Mason ; Mrs .
SHOATS - 12 to 39.50.
Mr. and .Mrs . Victor Durst 1
1
downtown Saigon and fighting Chall'ladrofTable'l'oplcs . One It :was at Ill's! thought Mrs.
Kitchens, previously special
. .- - - - - - - - - . Roy Woomer, Point Pleasant ; and sons , The Plains, spent
raged at the northeast out- mmute Impromptu speakers Smith had been beaten to agent in charge of tbe FBI
Lamar ·Patterson, Gallipolis
Sunday· evening visitors of skirts of the capital near the were Franme Ours, Cheryl death, pollee said, but she
Ferry ; Mrs . Lewis Brady, the weekend with his parents, Mr: and Mrs . Harley Johnson Newport bridge, located on Teaford, Clay Ours, L~cy may have dil:!l of a heart office at Louisville, Ky., succeeds Palmer M. Baken Jr .,
Mason ; Mrs . Charles Wood , Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Durst and were Mr. and Mrs . John the American-built highway Taylor, Roy W. Proffitt, attack .
Tom.
52,
who retired .
Tonighllhru Thurs.
Point Pleasant; Larry Bugg,
Earnheart of Logan, Mr. and stretching to Bien Hoa,
Dannette Weddle , Elson
Miss
Lori
Middleswart,
14
NOT OPEN
Gallipolis Ferry; Hattie
Mrs. Pete Earnheart of miles northeast of here.
Spencer and Denny Evans:
eARNIVi.L
Cincinnati,
spent
a
week
by Dick Tumtr
Jordan, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Columbus, Jake Earnheart · The Communists fired a
Speakers for prepared f1~e
vacation
with
her
parents,
Mr
.
Fri .. Sal ., Sunday ,
Th eodore Stevens, Poinl
and Mr. and Mrs. John Haning salvo of four rockets into the mmute speeches were ~Ill
Walt Disney's
Pleasant ; Goldie Hoschar,
of Deblin.
city early today, injuring a Roush,
Karen
Proffitt,
ISLAND AT THE TOP
Hartford
;
Mrs.
Ricky
PatDolph
Hill,
Point
Pleasant;
William
Boyce
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
child
and · battering Earl~ne Stobart, Pearl
OF THE WORLD
terson, son, Point Pleasant; Mrs . Brady Hughes, Ashton ; of Columbus were Wednesday headquarters of the South Proff~tt and Dorothy Spencer.
and
Roy Ball, Point Pleasant; Mrs. James Caldwell, Crown afternoon callers of Mr. and Vietnamese navy. On Sunday,
MY NAME IS
Assigned evaluators were
NOBODY
Lyndon Fields, Hartford ; City; Douglas Sturgeon, Mrs . Harley Johnson.
rocket attacks killed or T~ Stobart, llah Roush,
Show Starts 7: 00p.m.
Anna Welch , Middleport; A'shton; Barry Marshall,
Mr . Carl Russell, Mr. and wounded scores of civilians in . Lmda Evans, Ru~ll Rad·
._________..I David Darst, Jr. , Mason ; Mrs . Leon.
Mrs . William Boyce were Ololon, the city's Chinese chffe and Golda Gillilan .
visitors of their ·mother, Mrs. quarter. They were the first
J1m Cleland and B1lly Baer
Bertha Russell .
rocket attacks on Saigon since pres_ented the graduahon
Reserve District No.4 State No. Z23X
Mr .
and
Mrs.
Guy the Paris peace accords of cerhf1cates to twe~ty-two
Tuckerman and Guy Junio~ of February 1973
graduates. The meetmg was
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON OF
Springfield were Tuesday
With the e~d of Saigon concluded with a. talk by Billy
evening visitors of Mr . and apparently near, the U.S. and the_ benediCtiOn was giVen
Mrs. Fred Tuckerman and Embassy announced it was by Ball Roush, Branch
Mr . and Mrs. Eugene 'Haning closing the Defense Attache President. ·
.
and family.
of·fice tonight, ending a
In the Sunday mormng
Mrs. Lena Knapp of quarter century of American se~v1ce B11l Roush was orLangsville was a recent military presence in South damed as an elder under the
of Pomeroy, Ohio and Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the ch11e of
visitor of Mr . and Mrs. Doyle Vietnam. Only a ~andful of hands of Joe Stobart w?o was
business April 18, 19'15, a state baoklng Institution orgaolzed and operating
Knapp and family.
officers were among the less speaker and Roy Proffitt and
under the baoklng laws of this State and a member of the Federal Reserve
than 1,000 American still in Clarence W. Proffitt parSystem. Published In accordan« with a caD made by the State Banking
Saigon.
tlclpahng.
Authorities and by tbe Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
Bien Hoa, the Military
There were 90 attending the
Bridge Reopened
Region Ill headquarters post, banque~. A r~mage sale Will
ASSETS
HUNTINGTON,
.
W.
Va.
was
hit overnight witnh more be held m Racme, next door to
Cash and due from banks - • - •• - ••• - - - - - - - ••• $ 1,349,059.17
(UPI) -' A heavily traveled than 400 rounds of 130mm the "Steamboat Inn" on
U.S. Treasury securities • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• • • $3,301,915.98
highway bridge, closed after artillery and 122mm rockets Thursday ,
Friday
and
Obligations of other U.S. Government
being
rammed
by
three
fire. The base was isolated, Saturday, May I through 3,
agencies and corporations • • • • • • • •
. . 253,501.23
runaway barges on the Ohio military sources said.
from 9 a : m. to 5 p. m. by the L.-:::-...,..;"'~·v~•":-"'=·'"';;;·;;;·;;;·=::;;u.s~.'::;;
"·.;;Dll~-----------.1
Obligations of States and political subdivisions . •
I ,367,815.95
River, was reopened to traffic
All roads leading into Saigon Reo:gan1zee Chilrch of Jesus
I
Other securities • • • • - - - • ··• • • . - •
• . . .
• 21,000.00
" may pick ho~~~s by cute names, but at least I don't buy oilSaturday. Officials said there were cut. by fighting which Chmt of Latter Day Samts.
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
was
no
major
damage
to
the
trapped tens of thousandS of r---•--GG.;,;jjlidliieiiCii;i;ea;,;d;;;enln;;;,_.be•c•au•s•e•a•d•a•nc•ln,;g_;p.u_;rp•le-ch_;ip•m•u•nk-bn_TV_te•ll•s•m•e•t•o!.!".
under agreements to resell • - • • - - 1,000,000.00
structure.
refugees in battlegrounds
Other loans • ' • • • • • • • • • • •
8,533,664.16
The bridge, connecting U. S. where they fa~ed crossfire
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
52 and Interstate 64 between between government forces
other assets representing bank premises . . - - "429,485.44
Ohio and West Virginia, was and Communist troops.
Other asoets • • • • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • 270 50
struck late Friday by 'barges
After dark tonight, pollee
TOTAL ASSETS • • • - - - - • • • • • • . • • • • $16,256,692.43
· broke loose from a trucks with loudspeakers
which
LIABH.ITIES
towboat. There were no in· a'Uised the streets of Saigon
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
juries in the accident.
ID'ging all residents to ret1um
and corporations
$3,368,123.06
home. "Stay off the strE,.\s,"
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
the 'people were warned.
partnerships, and corporations • • . • • •
10,615,367.80
WIN
CONTRACTS
U. Gen . Nguyen Van Mili~1l
Deposits of United States Govenunent • • - • • 29,537.20
EASTERN - Awarded one military commander in the
Deposits of States and political subdivisions • • • • • • • • • • 683,416.40
year contracts at Eastern Suigon region·, ordered a 24Deposits of commercial banks • • • • • • • . · • . • • • • 3,789.47
when the Eastern Local Board hour curfew on !be city. His
Certified and officers' checks, etc. • • : • - . - • • • • •
107,255.40
met
Thursday were Nancy edict was broadcast over
Total Deposits in Domestic Offices • • • • • $14.727.489.33
Arnold; Joseph Fields, Jen- radio Saigon only 30 minutes
(a) Total demand deposits - • • - - - - $ 4,052,121.53
nifer
Machir,
Michael before the normal 8 pm. to 6
(b) Total time and savings deposits • • . • • $10,675,367.60
Wilfong
,
Charles
Wills, a.m. curfew would have gone
Total Deposits in Domestic and Foreign Offices • • • • • • • • 10,675,367.80
Pamela
Stecker
,
Karen
into effect.
Other liabilities - - - • - . . • • . . • . • • " • - 525,098.24'
Thomas, Barbara Tripp and · Peopl~ ll'!!.lking around
TOTAL UABIUTIES • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $15,252,587.57 .
·Aaron
Sayre.
downtown streets panicked
RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES
when the gunfire and sounds
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
of bombing erupted. Billowing
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings ) • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $50.773.28
clouds of black smoke could be
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES •
- $50,773.28
seen
from the Tan Son Nhut .
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
$953,331.58
:
•
Equity Capital, Total - - • . - •
area and the city echoed with
the blasts from exploding
Common stock-total par value • - - - 200,000.00
bombs.
No. shares authorized 12,000
No. shares outstanding 12,000
A 2&lt;mm cannon opened up
from a ship docked on the
Sorplus • • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • •
400,000.00
Saigon waterfront and antiair• • • Undivided profits • - - - - •
253,331.58
craft gunners blaze~ away
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
953,331.58
from
the grounds of the
TOTAL UABILITIES, RESERVES, AND
presidential palace. At least
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - • •
.
$16,256,692.43
one elderly woman was killed
MEMORANDA
on a downtown street but there
Average of total deposits for the 15calendar
days ending with call date · . • • • • • - • - were no lnunediate reports of
$14,~18,369.14
other casualties.,
J\,verage of total loans for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date . . • - • • • • • • • • •
Aa darkness feU on 1he
$ 9,717,150.88
'
c
apital,
the sounds of bombs
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
and artillerY 'shells fired into
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value):
Communist · · dominated
U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed
pledged to secure deposits and other liabilities • •
marshlands across the Saigon
~.599.63
river added to the fears that
. TOTAL • • • · •
• . • - • • • • • • . • • •
~.599. 63
m invasion was imminent.
'
The Newport bridge was ·
"Most people 11 Shutter·~
I, Roger, W. Hysell, Cashier, of the above-named bal!k do l)ereby declare
think of all the alh&gt;r·•lintor I open to military traffic late
fix.it problems around
this afternoon. The nearby
that this report of condition Is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
11
•
house
American COiliiiiiSsary store,
Roger W. Hysell, Cashier
~uivaleni to a large U.S.
True!
Spring
fix -it
supermarket, was looted by a
We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of 'this report of
problems are a chore :' But
mob
of Vietnamese citizens.
condition and declare that it has been examined by us and to the .best of our .
our " FRIEN.DLY ONES"
The looiers, estimated at
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
·
will help you to figure just
what you need for the job at
about 500 In nmnber and most
C. Wayae Swisher
prices that won't make you
of them civilians, used
R. C. Follrod· - Dlrecton
"shutter" ...
shopping
carts 'to carry off
Le!!Ue F. Fultz
'
everything from soap to beer.
~
State of Ohio County of Meigs ss:
Americans had been wilrneil
•lier to keep away from the ·
Swom to and subscribed before me this 23rd day of April; i975.
Si-ea arQund the commissary,
Mary P . Young, Notary Public
leaving it wide open to the
My CoDIIIlisllion Expires July 1, 1979
looters.

p OrtIan.d
NewS NoteS

Srug"on

s.

w0 I£pen

t

leWS l0 es ·

MEIGS

~- The

Farmers Bank and Savings Company

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Porch, Lawn and Patio
Furniture Sale

1 BUY

I

·,,

I

EARLY

·Save

DURING 'THIS SALE

On Sale At The Mechanic Street ·Warehouse

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

Main Store, Annex and Warehouse Open Tuesday 9:30

5 pm.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

'f
l

C of C endorses levy
-Judge Manning Webster mental re tardation comes in,"
presented his case Monday · he explained. There are seven
and the Pomeroy Chalnber of ·persoDs on the board who
Commerce approved
it serve without compensation.
. unanimously .
Webster explained present
Webster, judge Of the local arrangements: .
·
Probate Court and president
There is a workshop in an
of the Meigs County Board of old building at Middleport
Mental Retardation , e x- which has nine students and
plairied to the chamber at the the state will not allow ad·
Meigs Inn why a 1.6 mill levy ditional s tudents ' due · to the
to be voted up or down on June lack of space." If we had more
. 3 is needed in order to operate space, we could 'double the
a school for the mentally enrollment," he said.
retarded .
·
At the Rutland Elementary
The Chamber endorsed the School there are 22 students
levy without opposition.
where in the past there have
Webster explained that been the free use of three
although last year the board rooms , electricity and !unasked for a 2.75 mill, the ches. The three rooms were
reduction is due to two things : cut to two, and after school
one, the board has cut the preschool program to · reduce
spending to a minimum, and
two, there has been an increase in tax valuation.
"Frankly, people don ' t
undersland the program . The
retarded aren't like us, but the
majority ol them can be
helped ," Webster said .

started this year the . board
learned only one room would
be available.
.. Next year we cannot have
any class room at Rutland
Elementary, but we have been
offered !be old Rutland Gym ·
which is surrounded by five
rooms; three of them being ·
used for storage and two for
lockers,
showers
and
bathroom facilities." Webster
said this arrangement is not
satisfactory but they will try~
to operate.
·:n takes $115,000 a year to
operate with $13,000 coming
from the state. The only
source we ,have to get the
needed money is from the
(Continued on page 8)

•

e

•

enttne

VOL. XXVII

NO. II

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1975

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday
through
Sa turday ,
chance
of
showers Thursday, ending
Friday and fair Saturday.
Turning cooler with highs
Tbursdayln the 6Gs and low
70s. Lows will be In the 40s
and :low 50s. Highs SatUrday
will be In tbe 50s and lows
will be In the 30s.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Devoted_To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

" They are denied public
. education, denied acceptance
and respect," he said.
" This is where the board of

primary. Members of the board are, 1-r, Richard
Chambers, Manning Webster, the Rev . Wilbur Perrin,
!]race Weber, Wilma Parker and Frederick Crow DI.

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF MENTAL RETAR·
DATION - Members of the board are presently
presenting the facts of th~ much needed 1.6 mill levy to the
people of Meigs County that will be voted on in the June 3

PRICE 15'

----------------------~--.,------------------------------------_:_

NOW YOU KNOW
Smut is a black or brownish
fungus that infests oat , wheat,
barley, c orn and various
fl owering plants .

Saigon surrendered to communists
.
By ALAN DAWSON
SAIGON (UPI) - The United States pulled out of South
Vietnam today and Saigon govenunent liources said the ad·
ministration and the Viet Cong had reached agreement in
principle on a cease.fire. .
The American evacuation on orders of President Duong Van
"Big" Minh set up the surrender of Saigon to the Communists
without a fight, ending 30 years of warfare in Indochina and 14
years of American involvement .
U.S. Marine helicopters plucked groups of 20 and 50
Americans, other foreigners and some Vietnamese from
landing pads at Tan Son N)lut airhase and the U.S. Embassy as
the evacuation continued into the night.
Two senior govenimelit sources said new Vice President
Nguyen Van Huyen had met with VietCong officials in Saigon
today and agreed in principle on a cease-fire to begin Wed·
nesday .
The U.S. Defense Deaprtment said !bat as of 6:30a.m. EDT
4;000 persons had been removed from Saigon . It said
operations were almost complete except for removal of
Marine guards brought In from a fleet of 50 U.S. ships standing

guard in the South China Sea.
Those evacuated included 950 Americans; !be rest were
South Vietnamese.
Na.vy fighter-bombers flew overhead to protect the CH53
Jolly Green Giant choppers, each carrying about 50 Americans, but there was little or no armed opposition to the U.S.
departure. The Viet Cong appeared to have pulled back to
facilitate the departure of the Americans, but mortar shells hit
Tan Son Nhut airport during the day, menacing the airlift.
At one point U.S . Navy Phantom jets fired on a ·Communist
antiaircraft position that had fired on them .
The helicopters took off into skies filled with thunderclouds
and headed southeast toward the coast, escorted by gunships.
The sounds of incoming-fire could be heard as !be big choppers
rose into the clouds from Tan Son Nhut, which early today
underwent the heaviest Communist attack of the war . ·
Two U.S. Marine Guards were kiUed at the U.S. Defense
Attache Office at the airport- the first Americans to die in
South Vietnam in 16 months.
A crowd of Vietnamese , some angry, some frightened ,
pushed against !be gates of the U.S . Embassy as U.S. Marines

were landed inside !be walled compound by helicQpter. Marine
reinforcements kept the crowd outside the compound to pre·
vent !be mob scenes that marked the flight from Da Nang.
Several dozen Americans were trapped on high buildings
around the city.
There were scenes of panic as frightened South Vietnamese
jammed into !be DAO office at the airport, but Marine guards,
pushing and shoving, held them back. Angry South Viet·
namese soldiers, resentful of the evacuation, fired on buses
carrying Americans from downtown Saigon to the airbase.
There were no reports of injuries.
Other South Vietnamese mobbed evacuation buses and
forced Americans off the vehicles .
There was no power in the city as night fell and the two UPI
correspondents remaining, Alan Dawson and Leon Daniel,
used an emergency generator to file this dispatch.
There was no evidence of a direct Viet Cong attack on the
city but eltplosions could be heard in the distance.
It appeared that many of 'the South Vietnamese armed
forces were fleeing and that Saigon would be surrendered
without a fight.

Earl Ingels reported that it
was definite that a fireworks
display will be held on. Friday
night of the Big Bend Regatta,
sky diving on Sunday and
helicopter rides on Friday ,
Saturday and Sunday.
The copter will land on the
bank across from the senior
citizen building, former
Pomeroy Junior High.
Mrs. Thomas· said senior
dtizens -will sponsor the flea
market, and the Friday night
program . during Regatta
Weekend. She also reported
that an otganization is needed
to build the queen's float. It
excursion "Chaperone" are was suggested that the
still available. Tickets liave
been on sale at !be chamber
office only but it was decided
Monday to place them at the
Meigs Inn, Swisher and Lohse,
Pomeroy, the chamber office,
WASI:UNGTON (UPI) - A
and Vlllage Pharmacy,
govenunent study shows that
Middleport. Persons also may
if
production.
reaches
write Mrs. Thomas in care of
currently forecast levels,
the chamber office in
fanners may see average
Pomeroy for tickets.
197!krop wheat prices dipping
The cruise is May 15 and will 23 per cent from last year and
leave Pomeroy Levee at 8
corn prices slwrtJ11iig 'n per
p.m. Admission is $10 a couple cent.
or $6. a single .
Further declines would
foDow in 1976 and lfY/7 .if
·:::~:::::::::&gt;.::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:-::::;::.:·:·:~·:·:::::,:::,:·:·:::·:::,:·::::::::::::::::::::=o:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::1
fanners continue to produce
big
crops,
Agriculture
Departmentanalystsaddedln
the review, · ,whlcn also
predicted lower soybean
United Prell International
WASI:UNGTON- EIGHTEEN DAYS SINCE President prices. They said corn prices
Ford requested congressional action, Congress today ap· which were at $3.07 in January
peared on the verge of aut~orizlng $327 million and clear of this year but have since
·declined, may go to or below a
authority to use Amerlcap troops in evacuation operations in
sea~ average of $2 by ' the
South Vietnam.
· .
1976 crop season.
' .
. Final ieglslatlve action Is expected when ihe House :Votes
The
figures
were
lnclud!!d
ln.
this afternoon on · a House-Senate conference report
authorizing the funds and defining presidential authority to use a report furnished to White
House aides to back up
troops. The admlnlstration has always contended that it has
agrlctilture forecasts of mul·
the power to evacuate Americans. Ford wants Congress to teD
tlbillion dollar subsidy spell·
blm what power he his to evacuate allied VIetnamese, who ding, particularly. In 19'16 and
might face Communilt repri8als.
1977, If Congress forces In·
Congressional liOIII'ces aald the measure, psssed last
creases In support "target"
Friday by the Senate, ~17, was ezpected to win approval . .
prices and large increases in
crop support loan rates.
DETROIT - THERE WON'T BE ANY BALLOONS or
AcCQI'dlng to !be analysis,
cJciwnB In the new cash rebate program Chry~er .Corp. Is
--launcblng to enUce car buyers to use their federal income tax
rebates as down payments on ita small cars.
But the No. 3· automaker. Is hoping the promise of $200
rebates will bil assucceutulu ihe ''CIII'·Clear~ Carnival"
Clear tonight, lows 'in the
tbataddedtheword ''rellate''todealer wcabularies . It's tying
"Rebate n" to the federal tax rebate checks that start going low 50s. Cloudy Wednesday,
chance of showers In !be af·
out In the mall In May· ·
·.
·
Be~ Thurllday, Chrysler will offer the $200 rebates to ternoon. Highs in the mid 70s.
buyers ol Ita Dodge Dart, Pl;ymouth Valiant and Plymouth Probability of precipitation 50
Duller models. The JII'OIII'am runa tbroqgh May 31 and also peE, cent today 20 per cent
o(fen 1200 psymenta to buyent ol ita Tradesman, Sportsman tonlgh t and 40 per cent
Wednesday. ..d Voyager van models.
•
·
Pomeroy Attorney, who wrote
a letter to an attorney in
Washington, D. C., in regard
to opposition ol abandonment.
Ted Reed, president, said he
has written a letter opposing
the abandonment for the
Chamber.
In other business it was
reported by Reed ·that when
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge is
repaired the load limit wiD be
removed, and fila! there is
nothing new to report on the
bus service from Pomeroy to
Athens .
Carolyn Thomas, secretary,
said tickets for a cruise on the

Farmers warned

INews . . .in Brief~
By

Weather

~~

Pomeroy Scout Troop and
Meigs Band Boos ters be
contacted.
It was also reported that the
Women 's Mounted Police
Patrol from Richwood, Ohio,
will participate -in the parade.
Attending were Reef!, Mrs.
Thomas, Carsey, Ingels, Mrs.
Millard VanMe ter, Melvin '
VanMeter, John Koebel,
Manning Webster, Virgil
Teaford , C. E . Blakeslee,
Richard Poulin , Wendell
Hoover, Bill Grueser, Norbert'
Compton, Fred Crow , Bob
Jacobs, Beulah Jones, Melissa
Cori~ and Katie Crow.

l•

~

theseasonaveragefannprice
for wheat is likely to fall from
$4.10 a bushel in the 1974 crop
to $3.15 a bushel for the 1975
crop season which. begins July
1, assuming . production
reaches the,2.1 billion bushels
forecast for Ibis year,
For the 1976 crop, if
production remains high, the
analysis said !be price would
slldeto$2.75a bushel. Experts
said the 1977 price could drop
to $2.50under existing law or
$2.60 with somewhat higher
gov·ernment
supports
provided under a farm bill
wbich President Ford was
expected to veto.
For corn, experts said the
season average prl« may dip
from slightly over $3 a bushel
on the 1974 crop to $2.25 for the
1975 harvesi. For the 19'16
crop, growers could expect an
average of $2 a bushel under
terms of existing law or $1.95
with slightly higher produc·
lion Induced by !be pt!llding
farm bill; the study claimed.
The 1m price average would
go to $1.90 In either case, the
stu~ said.
·

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Meigs High School
Athletic Boosters will hold a
meeting Thursday, May 1 at
7:30p.m. at the high school.
The purpose of t,he meeting
will be to discuss the planning
of the.all sports banquet la\er
in the month.

"concrete negotiations."
Minh called me111bers of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to the
presidential palace today and only one was left -Lt. Gen.
Vang Van Khuyen, the logistic commander whose cousin is
commander of the VietCong in the Mekong Delta.
Lt. Gen. Nguyen Van Minh, Conunander of the Saigon
(Continued on page 8)

Middleport will go
red, white and blue

position needed
Jack Carsey, manager of
!be Pomeroy Landmark Store,
warned
the
Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce
Monday that unless letters are
. received at the Interstate
Commerce Commission in
Washington by tomorrow
atland&lt;inment of the C&amp;O
railroad service in Meig s
County will be inevitable.
In remarks at Meigs Inn
following lunch , Carsey said
lines which service Ohio
Valley Industries, Midwest
Steel, Excelsior Salt Co. and
Landmark, to name a few,
· have nothing to do with Penn
Central. It is strictly the C&amp;o
Railroad which is involved,
which serves towns from
Logan, Ohio , Galllpolis ,
Pomeroy and Middleport, he
said.
He urged the chamber
membership to write to . the
Interstate Commerce Commission, Washington, D. C.,
zip 20423 (be sure zip code is
used) for a detailed environmental impact study to be
made 'Of the situation.
-"Carsey stated that he
contacted Bernard Fultz,

The new South Vietnamese government headed by retired
Gen . Duong Van "Big;' Minh said he ordered the Americans to
leave within 24 hours to meet a VietCong demand for the start
of peace talks.
Minh's information minster, Ly Qui Chung, said on a Radio
Saigon address he believed the Communists had no intention of
attacking the capital, although skirmishing was underway on
the outskirts.
" It's certain all differences and obstacles (between Saigon
and the VietCong) can be ironed out," Chung said.
The order from Minh's administration said only that the
Defense Attache Office which oversees U.S. military activity
and supply in Vietnam, must be closed down. Chung said
Minh's order for the American withdrawal could bring

Middleport will be red , take action in letting parents commission on the matter . If
white and blue in observance know they are responsible for the fence is permitted, the two
of the nation 's 200th birthday the acts of vandalism com- will restore and paint the
if the Middleport Garden Club milled by their children.
caboose.
Council passed an ordinance
has its way.
Milford Hysell asked council
Mrs. Mary Skinner and to use some of the money changing the license charges
Mildred Mc Daniels of !be club which has been donated on coin operated amusement
.meeting with Middleport recently to the community machines. The ordinance· was
Village Council Monday night, park for fill dirt on the ball given all three readings under
received permission to build a diamonds . It wa s pointed out emergency measures . Under
(Continued on page 8)
planting area on the " T" in that the money donated was
Middleport. The club will have designated fot new facilities.
drawings of its proposal made However, Osby Martin and
and will present them to Chief of Police J . J . Cremeans
DR. PING
council for a!)proval. Once the agreed to pay for the dirt
planting area is constructed it requested by Hysell. It was
will be planted in red , white also reported that the Meigs
and blue flowers . Mrs. Skinner Local School Board will see
said that flower boxes in the that a dugout is repaired at the
town will also be planted in park.
red, white and blue flowers
George Arnott and Ken
HUNTINGTON, W. Va . and that other groups will be Gilkey who were instrumental The son of one of Marshall
invited to coperate in a in securing a railroad caboose University's
all-time
program to beautify the town for the Middleport park met ba s keiball greats, Charley
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) - Dr. for the Bicentennial.
with c ouncil and outlined Slack, of Pomeroy, Ohio has
Charles Ping, 44, provost at
Mrs. McDaniels , 547 Main damage done to the vehicle . signed to play at his father 's
Central Michigan University, St., addressing council on the There was a discussion on !be alma mater .
·
Mount Pleasant, Mich., has problem of vandalism, said matter and finally it was
The university 511id today
been named president of Ohio she is not critical of Mid· decided to give Arnott and Joe Slack, 6-4, 183 lb. forward
University effective Sept. I, it dleport, and does not sit in Gilkey permission to see if . of Christi High School in
was announced today.
judgme nt. However, s he they can get the caboose Jackson , Mich ., will enter as a
Ping wiD succeed Claude W. urged the viU.a ge to take fenced. The caboose will be freshman in the fall . Young
Sowle who resigned last year. immediate s teps to curb open to the public during park Slack averaged 22.2 points per
vandalism .
hours. The two young men game !ast season.
Dr. Harry B .. Crewson, an "Something has to be done . said that it is useless to repair His father held the national
OU faculty member . for 25 Are we to be ruled by &lt;Jur the caboose, which has been rebounding record (college
years, has been serving as children?," she asked . "The vandalized already, unless it division) when he played at
interim president since Sept: council chamber is the right is fenced . The two will confer Marshall in !be 1950s . Young
1, 1974.
place for action to curb the later with c ouncil on the space Joe Slack is the grandson of
"Ohio University, mature in vandalism," she said. She said , to be taken up by the fencing . Mrs. M:argar ~ t Slack of
years and ·prop-alns, holds she believes young people ' They also will talk to the park Pomeroy .
rich promise for the future, " · committing vandalism are in
said Ping. "I look forward the
minority .
She
with excitement and en· congratulated councilwoman
.
tbusiasm to sharing this Mrs. Jean Craig ·on her earlier
future." The appplntment of remarks that the village must
A public fund drive for Memorial Church , Jack
Ping was announced by Mrs.
three-year-old Ryan Scott Hawley , Dale M. Jacobs, East
J. Wallace Phillips, charman
Jeffers, son of Mr. and Mrs. · Letart Methodist Sunday
of the OU bOal'd of Trustees.
David Jeffers, Rt. 1, Pomeroy, School , C. 0 . Newland,
Willard Walker, Glen · A.
has reached $573.
..
The fund dri~e for the child, Darling, Middleport Church of
Mrs . Phillips said the
recommendalon of Ping by
The Meigs County Sheriff's who · suffered . mangled foot Christ Loyal Women's Class
both ·
the
university 's Department .investigated a and leg in a power mower and Myrtle Walker .
· The funds are being raised
presidential search com- traffic accident Monday at . accident, got underway only
to
help the parents pay the'
mittee and the trustees search 4: 45 p .m ., . in Salisbury last Frida'y evening. Ryan is
committee
had
been Township on CR 14.
confined to St. Marys hospital costs which will be
unanimous as ·was !be ap·
Deputy Manning Roush said Hospital, Huntington, W. Va. involved in the operations and
proval of t)te full board of Kenneth Allen HaWk, 17, Rt. 4,
Latest contributors to the treatment of the child. Jeffers
trustees which · wlll take Pomeroy, was traveling west fund are Robert Russell, Reed is employed with the P,ilmeroy
formal action on the ap.. when a mouse came from Koenig, Gerald Hoffn~r, Police Department and has no
polntment May 18.
under the seat causing the Middleport Church of Christ, hospitalization insurance.
Ping has been provost at driver to los~ control. The car · William Grueser, Flock Contributions may be sent or
Central ·Michigan since 1989 went off !be road on Ute left Springs United Methodist left at Pomeroy VIllage Hall.
and prior to that was dean of into a creek, coming to a stop Church Adult Class; Harry Checks are to be made out to
faculty and vice president of on its side. There . w~re no . Davis, :charles G. Sheets, Jr., the Ryan Jeffen Hoapltal
Tusculum College in · Ta~- injuries, no citation . ." There R()bert Alkire, Gladys Burson, Fuild. They may be sent to
nessee.
Vincent
Dabo,
Plants Mrs . Dorinda Nardel.
was mod~rate damage .

Joe Slack

to play hall

Dr. Ping

at

M hall U
ars

tO OhiO U

Fund h as reach.e d. $573.'

Mouse bJ.runed
for accident

•

¥

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