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•••

8- The Daily Senti"!' I. Mlddleport-l'omeroy. 0., Monday, ~'eb . 2, 1976
7

;

7

',.'

~ ~ ~:§.::~:::.:::::::;:::.
..

Workers

..........

TWO EloECTED
NEW YORK 1UP!) Roger Connor, a slugger
from a dead boll era of the
1890s, and Fred Lindstrom ,
a
hord·hlttlng
third
baseman for the New York
Giants In the 1920s, were
elected to the Hall of Fame
today along with Umpire
Cal Hubbard by tht•
Baseball Veterans Committee.

IContinued from page I)
j w·asdic tion

BOWLING
Po m r- r o.v Bow l ing Lan es
·

E ~ r l y Su nda y

M ixe d Le agu e
J a n . 18 , 1976
Tea m
Jack 's Da iry Bar
Pu ll •n S Ex c av a t in Q
TeitrTl N o 6
Hill &amp; M aye r Barb ~ r s

Pome ro y F low er Shop

To rn ·s Ca r r y Out.
High in d iv i du al

MONE\' COMES
Stale Auditor Thomas E .
Ferguson 's ofFice an nounced
the February distribulion of
$34,897,692 in Aid to Dependent Children to 569 ,521
recipients in O hi o's 88
c ounties . Meig s Count y
received $45 ,497 for 799
recipients.

W . L.
16 6
16 16
16 16

14 18

14 18

10 22

qam e

Lar.r y D ug ;u, 708 Mary voss

113

Second f1 19h ind ga me
Ed VO!&gt; S 70 -' • Mil Mi n e Duga n

1)8

H lqll ser rcs

E d Voss 558 .

Mary Voss .tqq
Seco nd ll ig h ser i es
L arry
D ug an 53 8 Bess H endr ed s
,]98

l Cd fTl h ig h q a me

Torn 's

l e a m h 1gh se r •es

Jac ~ · s

Carry Ou t 709

Oa i1 y B ar ?0?0 .

HILOTEMPS
1\ EW YORK IUPII - The
highest temperature re ported
Sund ay to the National
Weather Serv1ce, excluding
Alaska and Hawaii , was 86
degrees at Palm Springs .
Calif. Toda y's low was 38
degrees below zero at In ·
ternational Falls, llnm .

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE THRU TUES.
Walt Dtsn ey ' s
APPLE DUMPLING
GANG

Show star1s at 7: 00 p m.

SPECIAL

Good Through Sun. 2/8

HAMBURGER, FRENCH FRIES

94~

AND A SMALL

. DRINK

FISH SANDWICH,
FRENCH
FRIES,
SMAU
DRINK

McClure's

Phone
992-5248

DAIRY ISLE
Midd l~porT,
Ohio

over

hirin g or

firing of anyone at the county
garage , tha t it is the duty or
the engineer .
Als o mee ting with the
com mi ssi oner s were men
from the Tuppers Pla ins area
and Hilton Wolfe of the
county health department in
regard to private installation
of sewage systems in Tuppers
Plai11s area that will meet
sta le
and
county
requireme nt s. The commissi oners approved the
plan .
Barbara Leadingham who
al so met with the c om-

missioners . announeed that
the application for a community development block
gran t had been approved.
Lou Osborn e , P omeroy
counc ilman , a sked the
commi ss ioners to pass a
resol ution providmg a 99 year
lease to Pomeroy on property
where the new proposed
community center will be
located. others attending
wer e Bernard Gilkey and
Martha Chambers, clerk.

•

Over 300
1Continued from page I )
served coffee and cookies
from Maxine F ields a nd
Debb ie Sevy .
At
right,
Hartford
Elementary School Principal
Mildred Gibbs explains the
features of a painting she
presented to th e town which
is hanging in a prominent
place in the mayor's office of
the new building. In addition
to Mayor Black and Mrs.
Gibbs above are Cou nty
Com mi ss ioner s
William
Rardin and Michael Whale n.
shows
The
pai n ting
businesses and other landmarks in Hartford that have
contributed significantly to
ils history.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
Bessi e
Barnhar t,
P omeroy ; Harold King,
Pomer oy ; Edna Morgan ,
Pomeroy ; Okey Kiser, Sr.,
Rac ine; Ve nida Knight,
Racine ; Be rtha Zamorano,
Shade.
SATURDAY
DISCHARGES
Frieda

Mossman ,
Denise
Lit:
tie,
Pamela
Imboden,
Little, Pame la Imboden,
Kathleen Counts, Harry
Pickens , Sr., Mildred Milch,
Barbara Douglas, Mary J o
Pooler, Bernice Clarke, Mary
Arms, Orpha Waddell ,
Clirford Holler. Okey Barber,
William Kennedy , Diana
Pettit.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Penny Landers, Pmeroy;
Linda Bailey , Rutland ;
James Autherson , Racine .
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Ronda Dempsey, Waller
Ellis.

PLEASANl VALLEY
DISCHARGED - P . R.
Clevenger, Bidwell; George
Clonch , Gallipolis; Mrs.
Kenneth Elliott, Buffalo ;
Mrs. Harold Davis, Minersvi lle ; Gladys Huffman ,
Robert Knaul , Gertrude
Bateson, Charles Chapman ,
Robert Barker, Ronald
Bostic,
Amanda
Neal ,
Riclwrd Cheesebrew, all
Point Pleasant; Shelly Davis,
Apple Grove; Mrs. Will
Wrigh t, New Haven ; Judith
Young. New Haven ; Mrs .
Homer Jonsqn , Lakin.

Births, Jan. 31, a son to Mr.
a nd Mrs . Larry Watson,
Apple Grove ; a son to Mr.
a nd Mr s . J ac k Caldwe ll,
Gallipolis , Feb. l.

Holzer Medical Center
1Births, Jan. 30)
Mr . a nd Mrs . Dani e l
Buechner. son, Pl. Pleasant;
Mr. and Mrs. J ack Fain,
daughter. McArll1ur ; Mr. and
Mr s . John Fellers, son,
Wate rloo; Mr. a nd Mrs .
Sny de r.
so n ,
Ken neth
DIVIDEND DECLARED
EXTON, Pa. - The Board Chesapea ke .
of Directors of Foote Mineral
Company Friday declared a
quarterly dividend of 55 cents
per share on the company 's
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO ,
convertible preferred stock ,
Jan. 3!, 1976
$2.20 C\mJ ulalivc if Earned
Sales
Report of
payable on March 31, 1976 to
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
shareholders of record on
STOCKER CATTLE Marc h 12, 1976.
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 20
to 28.50; 300 to 400 lbs . 20 to
30 ; 400 to 500 lbs. 20 to 32; 500
to 600 lbs. 20 to 33; 600 to 700
lbs. 2t to· 33.50; 700 lbs . and
Over 22 'to 35.
.
HEIFER CALVES- 250 to
300 lbs. l8to 25; 300 to·400 lbs.
20 to 24.50; 400 to 500 lbs. 20 to
29.50; 500 to 600 lbs. 20 to 30;
600 to 700 lbs. 20 to 28 .50 ; 700
lbs. and Over 20 to 28.50.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS
1By The Head) -Stock Cows
165 w 230; Stock Cows and
Calves 165 to 275 ; Stock Bulls
170 to. 230; Baby Calves 12 to
30 ; (By The Pound} Canners &amp; Cutters Cows 19 to
24; Holstein Cows 22.50 to
27.75; -Commercial Bulls
. (1 ,000 lbs. and Over) 23 to 31.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 220
lbs. to 250 63 to 68 ; Medi urn
200lbs . to 300 40 to 51; Culls 30
Down .
PIGS - 15 to 32.50.

Market Report

From a Great American Bank

TAKEN TO HOLZER
The Pomeroy E-R squad
went to the Robert J ones
residence in Burlingham at
8:25 p.m. Sunday for Emily
Johnson, who was ill. She was
taken to Holzer Medi c al
Cen~r .

' b} pernm•I•Hi "f "I HI IU.T I MA t\' N ARUII VI·

1807: The humble boat that tames the wild rivers .
We h ave one eye on the co mmerc ia l war betwee n
Napol eon and Great Britain . And a nother on making
our own way in t he world. We have the talent. The
Yan kee ingen ui ty. And a crew of bright men who've put
themselves to the task of ~o l vi ng one of our biggest
probl e ms: com merc ia l riv er traffic. One of them is
Robert Fulton . We can 't give him credit for inventing
the steamboat. But he does develop the first successful
one. She's no beauty , h is Cle rmont. Not much more than
a barge with padd le-w heels. We laugh at her from the
riverbank in New York. Ca ll her "F ulton's Folly. ' But
she ch urns into the Hudson, aims for Albany , and beats
sa iling sloops by about fiv e days. Now , thanks to ·:root'
Fulton , our West can use our rivers to get to the sea.51

Farmers ank
8

. _us
. ._ A A 1

POMEROY, OHIO

SAO,DOO.OO Maximum Insurance For EK11 DlpOIItor
Nllmblr F.-et ~It tnsurence C'«por-'lon

•

1Birth, Jan. 31)
Mr . and Mrs. James Bailes,
daughter , · Robertsburg, W.
Va .
1Births. Feb. I)
Mr. and Mrs . Glennard
Davis, daug h~r , Gallipolis ;
Mr . and Mr s . Donald
Crabtree , daughter , Jackson ;
Mr . and Mrs. Philip Hill, son ,
Athens; Mr . and Mrs. George
Hoschar , Jr . , son, New
Haven, W. Va .

Legal doubt blamed in ~
paying idle GSI staff

•
•

•

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Dr.
Timothy Moritz, director of
the state Mental HeallJJ and
Mental
Retardation
Department, said Sunday he

knew 44 employes at
Gallipolis State Institute
were reeelvlng pay while not
working but "conflicting
legal opinions" prevented

TOM .T IEDE

Congress immune to
inflation's effects?
annual percentage hike, Increases of from $6,000 to
By Tom Tiede
CONCORD, N.H. - When Johnson says separation of $12,000. " As before, this is
being done as sWTeptitiously
members of Congress failed powers is ignored .
as
possible, so that the
But beyond the legalities,
to win support last year for a
primary
anger
is
Johnson's
taxpayers will .not know
straightforward pay raise,
they resorted in tbeir greed to , moored to lbe sinking thought what hit them."
legislative trickery. Using that "Congress has shown · It is to awake tbe public,
stealth, secrecy and the utter contempt for the people then, that Wallace Johnson
subsection of an abscure bill · of thi~ country." He says lbat campaigns In New Hampwhich t hey knew would draw for 180 years, since the days shire. He says it is his
no public scrutiny , the when congressmen were paid Bicentennial project ,
lawmakers established an with $6 per day stipends, no something he can start but
unprecedented cost of living Congress save the present lbat everybody must finish .
salary increase that will be one has voted a salary In this respect he is a unique
automatic qn an annual basis. increase for itself . "It's and admirable candidate
Thus the nobles have a t the always been done by one indeed, the only one on the
expense of their souls Co ngress for the next ballot here who is soliciting
insulated themselves from Congress, that way members votes for the system rather
llle bother of inflaUon . And up for reelection were than for himself.
thu s,
too , . have
they thereby answerable to the
PAY OFF DEBTS
established the fundamentals voters."
BEREA, Ohio (UP!) - The ·
What's more, Johnson
for what could and should
become a major issUe in this adds, the congressional Obio TUrnpike Commission
year's federal election. Is con tempt of last year may be has high hopes of paying off
Congress the master or the just the beginning. He says the northern Ohio toll road
servan I of the public good? both houses are already debt far ahead of schedule.
The commission says it
It's not a new argument, but co nsidering a measure
may
be able to _pay off all
in the Bicentennial year one granting niembers "special
debts
in 1980 or 1981.
tax
that should be .settled and formula" · income
Originally
the payoff date '
deductions which would in
closed .
Wa!;
targeted
for 1992.
effect
amount
w
1976
salary
man pushing the point
The
commission
said
is Wallace Johnson, 62-year·
revenue
on
the
U&gt;ll
road
in
old !ormer mayor of
1975
staged
a
comeback
after
Berkeley, _Ca li! . He has
suffering its first ever decline
entered himself on the New SHIPMENTS INCREASE
CLEVELAND (UP!) in 1974 ,
Hampshire ballot as a vke
Shipments of iron ore, coal
presidential candidate solely
and grain on the Great Lakes
BOOSTERS TO MEET
concerned with the repeal of
in . December iotalled 11.4
Meigs High Athletic
The
the congressional . cost of
million tons, the second Boosters will meet Tuesday,
living escalator. " I'm not
highest figure e~er recorded Feb. 3, at 7:30 p.m . at the
interested in the vice
for a December.
high schoo l. Everyone is
presidency," he says, "but
The
Great
Lakes
Carriers'
welcome to attend.
it's the only way I ca n present
Association said the high
a kind of referendum to the
volume reflected unusually
LOCAL TEMPS
people. Are we still in control
late navigation by the Great
The
temperature
in
of our Congress? That's what
Lakes fleets .
downtown Pomeroy at I!
I'm asking here .,;
Iron ore shipments alone in a .m . Monday was 18 degrees
The .question is not
1975 totaled 6.'l million tons. under sunny skies.
rhetorical. After voting in the
cost of living increase last
summer, - some
un comfortable legislators
said it was done in such a way
as to keep the. public ignorant
and quiet. The measure was
ramrodded through Congress
in five days .- When it
for g..irls who ~now the nom• of fhe gome
appeared to be in trouble In
the House, a recorded vote
actually showing it defeated,
cries of electronic miscount
echoed the floor, the balloting
process was forced Into
ex~ntion, and the shouting
ended only when the matter
passed by a single vote.
Obviously, not every
legislator favored the fraud
1only 272 of 535 voted yea).
Many feared the risks
involved , particularly in view
of the elections (the no vote
was weighted with members
facing reelec tion ). Others
agreed willl lbe congressman
who argued. thusly against
the
implica lions
of
congressional immunity from
inflation : ~ ' The American
people would be better off if
Congress got a pay decrease
when the cost of living went
up and a pay increase when it
\vent down . Then we might
see more fiscal responsibility
here In Washington ."
For his part, Johnson (a
slender bald man whose
trouser cuffs are held above
his ankles by the electricity of
his executive length hose )
believes the congressional
action was as much legally as
legislatively
pun·k-:Accordingly, he has filed suit
in a California federal court
asking that the cost of living
statute be stricken lor
consti(utional reasons . One,
he spys, it violates due
process of law, .in that
Congress has given to itself a
privilege
which
most
Americans can not get. Two,
since the law allows the
President· to determine the

One

him from stopping it.
•·
Oblo Auditor Thomas E . •
Ferguson, last week, ordered •
[IByment stopped on some •
$16,000 In check£ for the
employes, members of the
CornmunlcaUons Workers of
American.
~
The CW A struck the
institute in November . The
followln8 month, Gallla
County Common Pleas Court
Judge Ronald Calhoun
ordered the strikers back tq
work .
The
Institute's
superintendent, Dr. Bernard
Nlehm, fearing the employes
might be dlsrupUve if they
returned to their jobs, placed
them on " administrative

Moritz said he was
inforined of the acUon, which
Feguaon said was Ulegal, a
short tbne a~r it occurred.
Moritz said he neither ap·
proved or disapproved of the
decision .
"We thought we were JI'Oceeding In a legal course of •
action, pending the court 7
decision and the personnel •
board of review decision,"
Moritz said.
He said he "suggested"
alternatives, bu( did not
order Nlehm to comply. He •
said he suggested the "
employes be placed in special ~
training programs or on
conununity asslgrunents.
Moritz said that after
learning of Nlehm 's decision,
he " personally convened a
meeting of the general staff "
and the department legal
staff .l&lt;l discuss it. At that
tbne, it was not clear what
the legal situation was.
"!was not going to overrule
a superintendent's action
until they told me it was •
improper," Moritz said.
'

COAL RECORD SET
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Coal production in the Uni~
States reached a record 640
million tons in 1975, up six per
cent from a year earlier, the
In~nor Department says.

To ,1 1Jd '• P · I f ,. It ! yo ur offi ce
or
work 5hop,
the
"F RIENDLY ONES" have
ALL -PURPOSE
STE EL
SHELVING .
Adju stable
shelf heights with sway
braces are furnished for
e).;tra rigidity .

Sprrng-lnto ·summer long . Statu s shape~ nterpreted by Queen Casuals in

Pull -on pant,

Crow's
Steak House
Pomeroy , Ohio

frui ts and flowers ·print sh~r t,
~

solid gauze shirt,
blazer,

To mix

or match in nat ural or bro wn . Size; 8 to 20.

·ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

.

located. The commasswners ceme~ry building will be
deferred ac tion pending checked into.
Mayor Andrews said a new
advice of Prosecuting Ally.
Bernard Fultz.
clutch has had to be placed in
The mayor agreed to tlie city truck at a cost of $430
provements.
arra nge a meeting on Feb . 6, and two sets of c hains bought
Mayor Clarence Andrews with the commissioners, their at a cost of $320. Parts to
presented to .council the attor ney a nd Pomeroy's re pair the street sweeper,
resolution for submission of a solicitor , Fred Crow to which have arrived, cost
" pre-application" for a discuss the 1ssue.
$1,118.40. The street comfederal commun ity developln other business council, mittee had decided to repair
ment
block
grant
of on a motion by Councilman the swee per with Jack
discretionary fund s under Harold Brown, agreed to Kraut~r doing the work.
Tille I.
The severe winter already ·
remove " no loading zone"
The mayor said an earlier signs on Main and Second Sis . has cos t the village a great
required application is In at the discretion of the street deal of money in salt, cinders
" the clearing house." The committee .
and labor . The cost in
grant, if fina lly approved
Council also voted to raise January for street depart.
would provide a community fines on ·parking meter men! operations was $2,400,
building, repair of streets, violations from 50 cents to $1 . when it usually is around $850
se wer s , recreation and
Council discussed the a month . The village has used
demolition · of old houses.
lighting sys tem at the thus far 20 tons of salt, 43
Councilman Lou Osborne . cemetery, which presently loads of cinders and has
said he asked the coun ty does not exis t. They learned replaced 14 loads borrowed
t'ummissioners for a 99·year that placing four poles would from the cowi ty.
·
lease to Pomeroy of properly cost between $800 and $900.
Harry Davis report on tools
where the proposed com- Purchase of a portabl e the village owns and admunity cen te r would be gene rator to be used in the di tional tools needed . Davis

said members o! llle stree t
can do the repair work if they
have proper tools . A decisi on
oo adqitional tools to be
purchased will be made later .
Mayor Andrtws said he will
mail letters to the fire
departments and police units

that a ssi s ~d Pomeroy during
the Stiffler fire last week
thanking !hem for their
assistance . Council agreed
the cooperation of everyone
was ·'tremendous: •
1\ lel~r from Mrs . Edison
1 O •ntmu c&lt;l on page 10)

•

e

at
en tine
r;v;;;:~~:T;;,B;i;/sj Three men· fired
VOL. XXVII NO. 205

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

By Unlted Press Internallooal
SAN FRANCISCO - THE RADICAL NEW WORLD
Libera tion Front has declared war against a list of
"scumlords," warning that failute to heed its demands will
result in terrorist attacks. The discovery of a number of bombs
at loca tions in San Fran cisco, Marin county and Pebble Beach
ga ve credence to an NW!F statement delivered to the San
Francisco Chronicle Monday.
The message ordered that all rental dwellings in San
Francisco , which do not meet fire and safety standards,
inunediately he improved . Failure to comply, the NWLF
hinted, might lead to the planting of more bombs.

Leon man killed

Fresh , exuberant knits breaking On th e scene now ~nd sure to make an impa ct oil

matc hing short sleeved gauze T·shirt,

GARY FORBES OF The General Telephone Co. of Ohio was riding high on Pomeroy 's
West Main St., Monday working with a crew from the company replacing telephone lines
damaged by last week's fire.

ATHENS, GREECE - AN AMERICAN archeologist says
he has idenUfied the prison building where Socrates drank
hemlock and dies more lllan 2,000 years ago. For years, guides
have labeled a small cave on a hill opposite the Acropolis as
the prison of the ancient philosopher.
But now Eugene Vanderpool, retired professor of
archeology at Alllens' American School of Classical Studies,
says a stone building discovered 20 years ago near the city's
ancient Agora - or marketplace - served as the slate jail.
The professor, associated wlth Agora excavations for more
lllan 30 years, said a rereading of Plato's account of Socrates's
last days, including details of the prison and its furnishings, led
to his conclusions.

Non-stop $af~ri Knits by Queen Casuals . . . a whole new way to go

print sk irt,

.,;&gt;" •

YOUNGSTOWN , OHIO .,-- SEVEN AREA ALUMINUM
plan'ts were struck Monday by the l,Jniled Steelworkers of
America when no agreement was reached on a new contract
covering more than 700 workers at the plants.
The strike affected Superior Industries Inc . of Austintown ,
F . A. Pilgram Co. of Boardman, Benada Aluminum Products
Co. of Warren, General Extrusions Inc. of Boardman Twp .,
Aerolite Extrusion Co. of Boardman, Saramar Aluminum Co.
of Warren and Aluminum Billets Inc. of Niles. Director Frank
Lesengaruch of USW District 26 said the workers want higher
wages, improved fringe benefits and a cost-o!-living escalator.
No contract talks were scheduled.

machine-was hab le, textured double knits o f Encron® polyester and co tt on. Swvlv •. sprig
CARRY OUT ONLV

(

,,~

WASHINGTON - THE ADMINISTRATION won't say
whether Richard Nixon promised in writing to give North
Vietnam $3.25 billion in postwar aid. But it won 't deny· it either,
saying the issue doesn 't matter anymore.
White House press secretary Ron Nessen said Monday
Hanoi's continued drive to capture Soutlr Vietna m after the
1973 peace accord automatically ruled out U. S . aid.
" Therefore the whole question becarqe moot ." But he did not
deny the existence of a Nixon memo to Communist leader
.P bam Van bong promising the reconstruction aid, a memo
four congressmen say North Vietnamese of!icials told them
about during their recent trip to Hanoi to pick up the bodies of
three missing U. S. servicemen.
WEST ORGANE , N. J. - WOODROW K. CHUCK, chief
woodchuck at the Turtle Back Zoo, looked out his hole in the
frozen earth Monday but did not see his shadow .
Despite the folklore story, however , the creature's
experience does not necessarily mean spring will be early this
year. It was snowing Monday , and Richard Ryan , the zoo
director , sa id : ''Not only didn't he see his shadow - he tried to
make a run for the heated office."
·

UEEN
CASUALS

Fresh Ham Hock
Navy Bean Soup

·Pomeroy council Monday
night approved a resolution
asking the Iepera! government for a $400,000 block
grant for community im-

•

leave"

CHWI

Manv a m a n 1s torced tO
turn over a' new leaf
because his wife reads him
like a book .

Pre-Application approved for
$400,000 community grant

••

LEON - Tragedy struck
early today on Rt. 87 near
here when a Leon area man
was killed instantly a nd his
. wife waS injured in a single
car accident.
Doyle Brooks Scarberry,
32, of Rt. I Leon, a native of
Ravenswood, father of five
children, became Ma son
county's first traffic fatality
&lt;i the year when the car he
was driving went out of
control and off the road,
turning over severallinres, at
approximately 4:30 a.m.
Trooper M. S. Smith of the
Slate Police said his wife,
Nancy Lou Scarberry, 32,
was taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital where she wa s
treated for minor abrasions
and released .
Mason County Coroner Dr .
John Grubb said that the
victim died lnstarilly . Ted
Stevens, whose ambulance
transpor!ed the body to
Pleasant Valley Hospi tal ,
said Scurberry was tlea d
when be arrived at the sce ne
i

and pulled .the body from the
wreck .
Mrs . Scarberry apparently
freed herself and walked to a
nearby home to telephone for
help .
The
Straight- Tucker
Funeral Home in Ravenswood
will
announce
a rrangements.

Talent contest
is announced
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains Booster Assn .
will sponsor a tale nt contes t
Monday, Feb. 9, following
their regular meeting .
Any child from orie to fom·
yea rs of age living in Tuppers
Plains School District may
enter. The First prize is $10.
Persons are to contact
Libby Sayre at 985-4283 or Pal
Shrivers at 985-4279 before
Feb . G. The Boos~rs extend
ti1eir thanks to all members
fur cooperation. Donations
are bein~ accepted tu cover
expenses.

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1976

Three men were notifi ed by
letter today of the ir lerm.ination with the Countv
Hi ghway Department
Engineer Wes ley B. ueh l.
Fired were Mike Oiler,
Richard E . Liter and Evan
Edward Humphrey .
Their le tiers said : " This

hi·

will inform you that your
employment with the Meigs
County Highway Department
has bee n · terminated today,
Feb. 2, 1976, lor failure to
report for work at regular
li me of employment or call
in."
These three men, it was

reported, met with the county
commissioners on Monday in
regard to payroll deductions
of dues into the Ohio Civil
Service Employes

Assoc iation .
Mik e
Clifford,
staff
representative of the Ohio
Civil Service Employes Assn .

Johnson reelected to
chair ·of SWCD board
There on J ohn so n was
reelected c hairman when the
Meigs Soil a nd Wa ter Conse rvati on District ( SWCD )
board uf s upervisors and
the ir gues ts me t recently to
reorganize and plan its 1976

program .
Other officers elecU,d we re
Shenefield , vice c hairman ,
and
M11ier
secre tary -

u·easure r. Johnson was also
relained _as fiscal ager:~t.
Attendi ng were Johnson,
Roy Miller , Rex Shenefield,
David Gloeckner , i:1nd Jue
Bailey, ·s upervi so rs: John
Rice, extens ion agent;
Bernard Gilkey , and Hen ry
W ~:: ll s.
co mmi ss ioner s;
George Collins, · treasurer ;
Jam es L . Bu sh, ODNR ;
Donald Mora and Virgil King ,
ASCS; Boyd Ruth and Reid
Young , SCS, and Leota
Young , distri ct secre tary.
Th e
rinanci a l
report
showed a bala11ce of $4,448.9!
in the special fund and $206 .06
in the distric t fund . Reports
were made on the Ohio
Federation of SWCD's annual
meeting held in Columbus in
January which Roy Miller,

Rex Shenefield, Boyd Ruth,
Horace Karr and Leota
Young al ~ nded .
The board is arranging an
agreement
with
the
Agricultural Stabilization
a nd Conservation Service
t ASCS)
which
would
recognize the coOperation between them and make the
SWCD an official part of the
ASCS progra m development
comm1llee. Las t month an
'a greemen t betWeen Letart
Township and the Distri ct
was signed which will allow
technical assistance to be
given to the township trustees
when requested . .
Par t of the youth program
for the coming year will be
film presen ta ti ons in the
schools, poster contest, and
scholarships to 4-H Conservation Camp, Fores try
Camp, and Youth and Science
Day.
Program possi bilities fOI'
adult e duca tion discussed
included a forestry fieid day ,
clinid,
pastur e
pond
no-till
d e monstration,
demonstration, hay show,
mining reclamation tour,

Caldwell tes't farm tour, and
an open meeting w explain
llle new Dredge &amp; Fill laws,
with the Corps of Engineers
providing the program.
Program priorities and
commil~e
responsibilities
will be decided at the
February meeting.
Five
new
District
coopera tors' applications
approved were Dave Diles ,
Sutton Twp.; Virgil_ Windon ,
Chester Twp.; Archie Stegall,
Bedford Twp.; James Lucas,
Rutland Twp .; and Richard
Buckley, Orange Twp.
The district is taking orders
for wildlife planting packets
until February 20. For fur.
tiler information call 992-3628
or write Box 432, Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Technical assistance is
provided by Soil Conservation Service and is
available to anyone, regardless of race, color, religion,
national origin, age, or sex .
Regular board meetings held
the fourth Wednesday of each
month at B p.m. are open to
the public.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

said the let~r is in violation
of Sec. 124.34 of the. Ohio
Revised Code . According to
Clifford, the code says that an
employe must be absent
three consecutive days
without leave . The men
notified were off only one
day. Clifford insis~d Buehl's
ac tion is "defini~ly illegal."
He said he would meet with
Prosecuting Atl&lt;lrney Ber.
nard Fultz this afternoon in
regard to the mat~r .

Dateline 1776
NEW

LONDON.
~'eb. :1 Gov.

Conn.
Tr·umbull
was
informed
that
a
patriot sloop had
arrived with 8,000
pounds of powder .
swivel guns, muskets
and pistols purchased
in Martinique. The
ship's
captain
reported,
however,
that British cruisers
were patrolling the
West Indies to cut off
such trade.

THE RIGHT PLACE
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!)
- A woman was placed oo
"hold"
when
she
telephoned lhe Internal
Revenue Service for information.
Then
she
heard
background music, and the
song was "Hey, Big
Spender."

More.money wanted for MR school
An application .for ad·
ditional gov!!rnment funds to
build a school for men tally
retarded in Meigs County will
be made it was decided
Monday night by the Meigs
County Board of Retarda tion .
Gary · Barton, who heads
the ·Gallia County program
for the re tarded, and Judge
Marmmg We bster, chairman
of the Meigs Board, will
prepare the application . Such
funds would in addi lion to

proceeds from a bond issue
approved by voters two years
ago, and stale !unds which
have a lready been promised
for the new building.
However , the board is
without operating funds due
to the failure of vo~rs in
Meigs Coun ty to approve. a
levy . The bond issue levy for
the new building has not been
put on the lax books .
The Meigs Board has been

notified that af~r this year
Gallia cannot provide for
smne 30 Meigs students at the
Gallia facility at Cheshire.
There has been discussion
tliat Meigs County's board
use the construction funds to
purchase the Gallia County
facility in Cheshire , but lllere
is doubt as to the legality of
us ing building funds to
purchase an already existing
building.

The board reviewed what
accommodations a new
structure should include for
mentally retarded students,
as was a joint program with
Gallia
County
to accmnmodate Gallia pupils in a
qew facility in Meigs County .
A!tending 'the meeUng were
Judge Webster, Rick Crow.
Richard Chambers, Rev . W.
H. Perrin , Wilma Parker and
Grace Weber .

CAROL PIERCE OF The Columbus and Soulllern
Ohio Electric Co., r&lt;J?e In this 'bucket In Pomeroy Monday
afternoon working "ith street lights near tbe scene of last
week's Stiffler fire. Some of the light covers had a
considerable amount of water in them as a result of fire
,fighting activities, a member of tbe work crew repor~.

Loss won't ·g o
to $112 million
Property loss in las!
Wednesday's lire in the lower
business block of Pomeroy is
expec~d to run well under
the S'k million mark ,
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
Legar said today.
Chief Legar said that loss in
!he Stiffler Dept. s tore
building has been set at
$100,000, $90,000 for the
merchandise and $10,000 for
fixtures . Legar indicated
store structure will be
rebuilt.
Proposals to secure federal
funds - long ~rm , low in·
tereslloans - to help owners
&lt;i struc tures damaged in the
fire have been discarded ,
Chief Legar indicated. He
said the uninsured losses
must exceed 25 perce nt to
q~alify for such funds ,
Chief Legar said he is
seeking accurate loss figures
on other s tructures affected
by the fire . The Davis In·
surance Co. a nd the law firm
&lt;i James B. O'Brien each had
about $2,000 in smoke and
water damage ; llle Court St.
Grill structure had some
smoke damage, Scholl's
Barber Shop had fire, smoke
and water damages . Three

·Why, how of public health explained
The rule of the Me igs
County H"alth Department in
matn tainin g a nd -or im proving public health was
distu sse ~
bv
Health
Department personnel a t a
recent mee ting or the Hunra n
Resources Council at the
Meigs Inn .
Sharon lhle , R.N., county
health nurse, explai ned the
three main divisions of 1he
department
administration hand led by Mr s.
Beulah Strauss and Mr s.

Gene Lyons ; sanitation, J oan
Culp and Hilton Wolfe, and
public heal~h nlirsin~ , Sharon
!hie, R. N. and Doris Bailey,
LPN.
Dr . Selim Blazewicz,
county hea llh commissiol~~' r,
has charge of the nursing
department which has iis
main emphasis, prevention .
She listed in this categor y,
fo llow-up s s ubse que nt to
l'cferrals from doctors on
cases of rheumatic fever
where fur ther damt~gc may

·~

I"' expected. cancer test menl.
pro g rams , orthopedic
She said plans are under'
thera py, a nd speech lberapy, way to move the department
noting that the department to the basement of llle former
works in cooperation with --Children's Home building on
Crippled Children Services Mulberry Heights. An adfor financial and follow-up visory committee is being
aid .
formed to meet with the
Mrs . !hie reviewed the department to determine
immur1izalion program in the ways of bet~r serving the
schools and the Early · county.
Periodic Screening,
A history of the 'departD1 ag nus is, and Tr eatment men t, organized in 1927, was
program , a ('O&lt;IJlerative effor t given by Mrs . Strauss .
wi lh the Welfare D•.'part- Established by the Hughes -

.

"'

j

Griswold Act it first was
under supervision
of the
· township trustees and the
U&gt;wn mayors. She said that
now there is a governing
Meigs County Health Board
consisting of five members - Bob Beegle, Kermit Walton ,
Dale Dutton, Carl Gorby, and
Dr . John Ridgway , with Dr .
Blazewicz as commissioner .
Mrs. Strauss stressed that
the Heal\h Department ac ls
as a preventive , not a
1C'nn linu" l "n n:tue 101

'

buildings owned by Amy
Kingsland Jones of Jackson
were damaged by fire, smoke
and water, and two buildings
owned by Franklin Rizer had
fire, smoke and water
damage.
The three Jones buildings
were unoccupied with the
exception of Scholl 's Barber
Shop . One of Rizer's
buildings,
the
former
Gilmore Hardware Store ,
was vacant. The other Rizer
building on W. Main St.,
housed Simon's Pick·A·P.air
Shoe · Store and there was
stock loss there besides the
damages to the building .

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday
through
Saturday, a chance of snow
north and rain or snow
south Thursday and Friday
and

a

chance of snow

flurries Saturday. Highs·
Will average In the 20s'
north 1o !he 30s and low 40s
south ; Lows will be In the
teens Thursday and again
Saturday morning and in
!he mid 20s to mid 30s
Friday.
·

Weather
In c r easing c lo udin ess
tonight, lows 20 to 25 . Cloudy,
chance o! light sn.ow or r ain
· Wednesday, highs in th~ 30s.
Probability of proc ipi tali on
near zer o per cent today, 20
per cent tonight, ~0 per cent
Wednesday.

MEETING CHANGED
RACINE - The regular
meeting of Racine Village
Council will be held at 7:30
p.m . Wednesday, Feb. 11,
rather than this week .

�3

2- The Dally Sent nel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday Feb

~

Safeguards ignored in
tax hill says sponsor
By LEE LEONARD
Meanwh le the House was
UPI StateltoUJe Reporter
til vote today on leglslatton
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Tbe which would b unt the effect
chief sponsor of the 1972 law ol Senate B 11 455 by
phasmg
n
un form henceforth grantmg credits
assessment of real estate til homeowners for unvoted
taxes said today 11 was never real estate tax Increases
Intended to result
n brought about by future
astronomical tax bills for reappraisals
homeowners
I hope any such dec s on
In fa ct satd Senate on th s ts made on the bas s of
Minor ty Leader Mtchael J reason and not poltttcal
Maloney
RCtncmnati
pressure
satd Maloney
safeguards
aHatnst who s not up for re-elect on
unjustified tax hikes were thsyear lthmkthsbU
wrllll!n mto lbe law but may flirts w th the danger of
have been disregarded by Vlolatmg Ute Const tutton
vartous county budHet
Maloney satd the btll has
commtss ons
1n the pract cal effect of
adnllnistermg the law
ncreas ng the tang ble
Etther the restraints personal property tax patd by
weren I built m properly or busmess w thout a vole of the
they were abused
sa d people Th s s
Maloney adding that he has uncon st tut onal he
asked for research on believes
whether local governments
The current leg slat on
and school distrtcts have House B U 920 sponsored by
recetved windfall mcome as a Rep John E Johnson (}.
result of taxes inflated by Orrville ts Ute result of
reawralsals
complamts from taxpayers

GOP to
reverse
'71 work
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS UP[) - The
five-member state legtslaltve
Apportionment Board now
donllnated by Republicans s
til meet later th s month til
fbnnaUy seek a court order
overturning the 1971 reappor
Uonment plan whtch put tbe
Democrats m firm control of
the Ohio General Assembly
A swtft court d rect ve
could enable the board which
went Republican When Gov
James A Rhodes took office
a year ago to revtse
legislative districts In tllne to
affect the 1976 General
Assem!lly elections and start
the GOP on the road back til
power
Any new apportionment
plan would have to be
approved by March 25 - the
deadline for
entermg
legJslallve races m order to
affect thiS year s elect ons
Rhodes announced Monday
that on Feb 9 he will give tbe
constitutionally reqwrM two
weeks notice for convenmg
the board to lay the
groundwork for picking up

outraged by real estate tax
b lis doublmg and treblmg
the r hab hty because of
reappra sals mandated by SB
455
I thmk there was a
real zatton that In some cases
there would be a rather
severe d slocat on of the tax
structure sa d Ma Ion ey
But I never expected to see
any
property
values
mcreased by SO per cent or
mo e even w th mflabon
w th the controls we had
wr lien mto the bill sa d
Maloney
I m sattsf ed that at the
time the General Assembly
made a consctous deciSion
that un form appl cat on was
n
the
long
run
advantaHeous
The
senator
sa d
complamts may be com ng
from solated areas where
property
wa s
e ther
underassessed pr or tb 1972 or
where Wide dJSpar t es
between res denttal and com

House has center stage in
move to abate tax boosts
COLUMBUS (UP[) - The Ohio Senate k eked off
leg slallve work Monday rught passing two btlls m a i
short sesston but the Oh o House took center stage
tiJday cons dermg maJor leg~sla 10n to halt unvoted ~
real estate tax ncreases
::::
The property tax btll was the only leg~slatwn on :.;:
tiJday s calendar It s constdered to be the legiSlature s
answer to an executive order freezmg real property
values at Jan 1 1975 levels
House Democrats and Republ cans were to caucus
before today s 11 a m floor session o diScuss the
controversial b U which s a med at stopp ng
inflaltonar} mcreases m real p ope ty taxes by ::::
reduc ng them as mflatton mcreases a property s ~
valuat on
Several amendments are expected oo be introduced
til ehmmate fears the btll may prompt a reduct on n
pubhc school funding

the task of apport on ng the
state of Oh o House of
Representatives and Senate
districts
His armouncement carne m
a letter til the other four
members
of
the
Apportionment Board
Repubhcan Secretary of
State Ted W Brown state
E
Auditor
Thomas
Fergoson a Democrat Sen
Anthony 0 Calabrese ])..
Cleveland and former state
Rep Robert A Mann ng an
Akron Republican
Before realignmg the d s
tncts the Apportionment

Board would have til ga n
court perrruss on heretofore
blocked by Judge Frank J
Batttslt of Cleveland a
Democrat who upheld the
current plan m 1972
The current plan drafted
by a board dom nated 3 to 2
by Democrats and headed by
former Gov John J G lligan
combmed the distrtcts of
three pa rs of Republ can
senators and 10 patrs of GOP
House
members
and
generally mproved the
chances of Democrat c
cand dates

me ret al
property
assessments were corrected
to the detnment of
homeowners by the untform
assessment rule
I can I beheve th s was the
case satd Maloney
He sa d he plans to check
mto the possib Uty that some
count es did not comply With
the requ rement m SB 455 til
roll back m llage alter
upward reapprmsals brought
m too much money
When s a e legislators
enacted the law m 1972
spacmg out unplementat on
of um form real estate
taxation over a stx year
pertod they thought Utey
were domg the voters a favor
Few lawmakers stood up
and opposed SB 455 as t
breezed through tbe Senate
28to 3Jn mtd May and sailed
through the House 82 to 5
three weeks later
All 99 House seats and half
the Senate seats were up for
elect on n the fall and SB 455
was one of the few maJor
terns standmg n the way of a
summer adJournment
The legtslalion seemed I ke
a good dea at the tune It was
to forestall wholesale real
estate tax hikes at a tune
when the lawmakers were
promts ng homeowners they
would recetve a 10 per cent
reduction as a result of a
rol back wrtllen mlo the 1971
state ncome lax law
Thts
s the only
reasonable and orderly
means to reach tax
un lormlly sa d Rep E W
Lampson R.Jelferson the
House s prune tax expert on
the maJor ty s de at the tune
There seemed no other
way Stx months before the
state Board of Tax Appeals
responding til an order of the
Ohto Supreme Court had
directed that all real estate
be assessed for tax purposes
at 35 per cent of true value
The high court had ordered
m 1971 at the end of a str ng
of court dec s ons datmg back
oo 1962 that the assessment
be set un fornlly for all
property at no more than 50
per cent of true value
The BTA chose 35 per cent
and the General Assembly
agreed wtlh the prov so that
excess revenues be returned
til the taxpayers AI that
tune only four counties were
assessmg at more than 35 per
cent of market value so tax
mcreases were expected n
the other 84 counties

Wallace presses Florida campaign
By IRA R ALLEN

Jackson predicted he w U
United Press International
make a good showmg m the
George WaUace sprained a North Carolma prunary
knee Monday but tl dtdn I
Wallace s knee was IDJUred
stop the wheelchatr-bound when aides dropped his
candidate from contmwng wheelchair as they were
hts campatgn tn Flortda llftmg hun ontil an mrplane
against other Democrats
But the Alabama governor
Elsewhere m the South the showed up on schedule at a
filing deadlme for the May 1 rally m Panama Ctty Beach
Texas prtmary passed with Fla
and sa d he was
President Ford Ronald Rea
perfectly all r ght
gan native son Sen Uoyd
I was gett ng on an
Bentsen
and
Wallace rurplane and the people lifted
qualifying delegates m aU me and dropped me he told
districts and Sen Henry his audience I guess I was

Ute v clim of a case of problem they have a c I zen
stumbl tis but I m perfectly problem the governor satd
all rtght
They ve Ignored people I ke
The prestdent of the you for a number of years
Uruted Stales doesn I run the
Wallace expects to caSh n
country w th h s feel and legs Thursday on a dec ston by the
he runs 1t w th his head
Federal
Elect on
Wallace sad
Comm sston whtch satd
In hiS speech Wallace sa d Monday that s nee 11 may be
other pres denttal candtda tes for ed out of ex stence soon
were gnorlng the mtddle and beca use of a Supreme Court
lower classes He ctted Rep dec s on I should hand out
MorriS Udall ])..Ar z as federal camprugn funds til
declarmg the country has a el g ble candtdate on a
Wallace problem
weekly nstead of btweekly
They don I have a Wallace

DR. LAMB

Spastic colon needs care
By L.awrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB
Should a person who has had
ulceraltve cobt sand now has
a spastic colon problem go
through wtth a hemorrho d
operat on? Or should they try
the ln)ecllon method'
The hemorrhoids aren t so
pamful but they bleed a lot
and lhts IS very frustrat ng
DEAR READER
The
first pBinl s to clartly your
dtagnosts
Your letter
suggests that you have mild
ulcerahve coht s f you had 11
at all Sometunes a number
of dtseases of the colon are
confused w1th what ts
basically a spast c colon
Spasltc colon may con
tribute
to
developing
hemorrhoids Before any
treatment for hemorrhmds I
would recommend that you
solve the spastic colon
problem There are a number
of Utmgs you can do for th s
High on the hst of pos I ve
lhlnss to do 1s to increase the
bulk In your diet parhcularly
cereal fiber found m bran

'

The Daily Sentmel MidcDeport-Pomeroy 0 Tuesdax Feb 3 1976

1976

and 11 hole wheat cereals and pe son s f rst awa e of the
by usmg real whole wheat mlernal hemorrho ds when
bread (not half wh te flour they start bleed ng
and half whole wheat flour or
Cont nued blood loss from
colored m at ons often sold any cause from any loca on
to the unwary)
even n small amollllts can
Then you should have a lead o a loss of tron
bowel Ira n ng program so producmg an ron del c ency
you develop normal funct on
w h anemia
The procedure sn t d lftcult
Ex e nal
hemorrho ds
but nvolves your habtt cause symptoms The nerve
pattern and d et For spectf c f bers for pa n and tch ng are
details send SO cents for The under the skin You do not
Health Letter number 2 I
have hese pam f bers ns de
Irr Is ble or Spastic Colon
the sph ncter where nternal
Send a long stamped self
hemorrho ds are ocated
addressed envelope for Thus when a person com
mat! ng Add! ess your let er pia ns of pa nt and tch ng
to me n care of th s news
from hemorrhoids It usually
paper P 0 Box 1551 Rad o tnvolves external
City Statton New York N Y hemorrho ds at least as part
10019
of the p clure
The cho ce of techmque for
lnctdentallv smce the
treatment of hemorrho ds pa nful lch ng area IS outs de
depends on their extent and the sph ncter those •up
locahon Some tnternal pos tor es mserted nto the
hemorrho ds can be treated rectum
above
the
by Inject on It 1s he nternal hemorrhotds sold to the
hemorrho ds that tend to unsuspect ng publj r a
bleed and they may not cause
otally "orthless Ex e nal
any o her svt pi n such as apphca ton no
erna s
pa n ur lchmg Often " needed to rel eve an symp
~

toms a person has from ex

lerna! hemorrho ds
The external hemorrho ds
that cause symp oms can be
removed They cannot be
reated by n)eclton A
d c s on as to the adv sab I ty
to lrea or no depends on
the r extent and the amount
of symptoms they cause
Somet mes both nternal
and e&lt;ternal hemor rho ds
are p esent Elunmat on of
bemorrho ds then reqwres
surgery
Small externa lags an
even be removed by ty ng a
rubber band around hem bu
obv ously his procedure w ll
not be sat sfactory for larger
hemorrhotds or those 1n
volv ng hoth nternal and
external vems
Hemorrho ds are noth g
more than var cose ve ns

around the rectwn Good
bowel habtls helps preven
pressure on the ve ns m th s
area and reduces the
hkehhood of hemor ho ds or
the r comphcahons

»

i

Mason Coun ty

I

News Notes

By Alma Marshall

MASON - The Mason City HIStorical Soc ely meetm~
Jan 29 at the V rgil A Lew s home d scussed hav ng sl des
made from old pictures wh ch can be sho1m soon to the pub! c
Leonard Dav s of the Htstor c Preservat on Morgantown had
proposod at a prev ous meetmg the poss b llty of haVIng slides
made of ndustr es m the Oh10 Va ley such as the o d salt
furnace and others

Mrs Delwon Roberts treasurer reported that there IS
$145 65 m the treasury Mrs Fred Taylor read I..amentat ons
chapter 3 23-26th verses
Mrs Landon Srruth pres dent of the soc ely pres ded She
announced that a Craft Workshop on macrame and
embrmdery sponsored hy the Mason Extenswn Homemakers
w II be held Thursday Feb 5 at the home and a potluck d nner
w ll be served at noon The publ c s tnVItod to tour the home
from 1 to 3 p m on the same day
Mrs Delwon Roberts volunteered to see about gettmg
p cture post cards nade of the Lew s home for pub! c sale
Items g ven to the soctely wh ch are bemg used n the
home nclude Mrs HazelL evmg sold pitcher and wash bowl
Mr and Mrs Norman Reynolds desk and cha r and Mrs
Evelyn Kronnllller contrtbu ed a rocking cha r
The upstmrs of the home remams unfurmshed for wh ch
the soc ely would apprec ate furn ture
A West V rgm a Flag was presented to the soctety by
Mayor Fred Ta) lor The letter from Gov Arch A Moore Jr
smd
Dear Mayor Taylor
I apprec ate so very much your nterest n havmg a West
V rg ma Flag for your ne\\ I brary and hiStorical home
AiJ your Governor I w sh to assu e you that one w II be
forwarded til you shortly w th r y compliments and I m sure
you wtll proudly d splay th s banner m a prorrunent place for
all to enJOY
Thts flag s bemg d reeled to you under separate cover
and I would I ke to take this oppor urn y to tell you that your
dedicated efforts n th s behaH are most grat fy ng
Kindness regards and best w shes
The next meet ng of the society w Ube held on February
12th at 10 am
Attendmg were Mr and Mrs Norman Reynolds Mrs
Russel Barton Mrs Ray Proff I Mrs Evelyn Marmg Mr
and Mrs Fred Taylor Mrs Landon Smith Mrs John
Marshall Mrs Delwon Roberts Mrs WII am Ze kle and
Mrs Earl Ingels
MASON
MISs Dense McDanel a 17 year-&lt;&gt;ld PPHS
Seruor and he mother Mrs CalVIn Me Dan el returned
Wednesday !rom he Make It YourseH Wool Contest n
Wtch ta Kan The contest was sponsored by the Sheep
Growers Assoc alton n coope a t on w th teh Dept of
Agr culture
AiJ a result of the M d Atlant c contest n December
Den se won the all expense r p oW chi a Although no a top
w nner she was amon~ the 18 part c pants chosen m the Seruor
D v s on to ece ve an awa d wh h was a cus om s lver r ng
w th three cultured pear ls In add I on to U e honor award she
was presented Luz er Cosmet cs
Profess onal models gave the g rls ttps on modelmg On
Tuesday everung a fashton show was he d and reportedly after
Vlewmg all the beaut fu clo hes by Mrs McDamel she satd
every g rl was a w nner
Top w nners were Barbara Ellen Drevlow of Ada M nn
Nancy Gosch Webster C ty Iowa and Mrs James A Sm th
Waurtka Okla
Wh le m W chlta the g rls were lw1eheon guests shopped
at Shepler s Inc world s largest 1&gt;este n store and also
shopped at Towne East the larges shopp ng center n the
west
Mrs McDaruel smd the r p was marvelous and that they
had never flown before They went by Uruted 747 out of P tts
burgh and the memor es of the tr p and show are pr celess The
11 ght took approxunately 5 ~ hours !rom Charleston
Den se s the granddaughter of Mr and Mrs Calvm
McDamel Mason and Mr and Mrs Carl Lanham Pt
Pleasant Mtss McDaniel has been a member of the Happy
Hustlers 4 H Club for 9 years a p nwearer an\l a Juruor
Leader
LETART Mr and Mrs I ru } E Rousl of Letart W
Va are announc ng the btrth of a son Jodie Todd on January
28th at Holzer Medical Center Hosp tal The nfant "e ghed 7
pounds and 1 ounce
Mr a td Mrs Roush are also the parents of another son
Jarrue age&gt; Grandparents are Mr and Mrs Charles Yonker
Letart Mr and Mrs Lawrence Roush Mason and paternal
great grandparents are Mr and Mrs John Campbell
Gall polls and s ep grea grandmo her Mrs Helen
Gr nstead
RACINE Mr and Mrs Kennetb Turley ol Racme (Ohio
are announc ng the birth of a son Kev n Andrew The nfant
born on January 16th at Pleasant Valley Hospttal we ghed 9
pounds and 2' ounces The Turleys have another son Kenneth
Tur ey Jr age 6 vears Grandoarents are Mr and Mrs
Sher dan Russell Jr Mason Mr and Mrs Clarence Turley
Gall pohs Great grandmothers are Mrs El zabeth Jeffers
Mason and Mrs Emma B ewer Jackson
MASON - The Young Adult Class of Mason Uruted
Method st Church meetmg recenUy at the church enJOYed a
ptzza dinner and plans to have a fish fry on February 21 from
4 30 to 7 p m at the churCh The dinner w Ube $1 SO for adults
and 75 cents for ch ldren
Attendmg tbe regular month y meet ng ncluded Mr and
Mrs WilliS Bentley and children Mr and Mrs Ray Redman
and children Mr and Mrs Gary Gregory and daughter Mr
and Mrs Dennis Harr s Mr and Mrs Wesley Roush Mrs
Carol Hickman and daughters Mrs Ralph Ross and son Mr
Dav d SmlUt M ss Nancy Proffitt Rev and Mrs Robert
Maring and Mrs Fred Spencer
Mason aud Clifton Area News
Mrs Betty Ault of Columbus v s ted over the weekend
w th ber s ster and brother n Ia w Mr and Mrs Lester
Johnson
Davtd Blake of Pomeroy v s ted on Sunday w th Mark
Gilkey at Clifton
Mrs Laurene Lewts and Mrs Clara Williams of Cltfton
VISited Mrs Emmett Elias at Lakin State Hospital
Mr and Mrs Alva Luckeydoo vis ted thetr son and
dimghter In law Mr and Mrs Larry Luckeydoo and family at
St Albans

Natural gas
at showdown

Sport Parade

By Wll..LIAM E CLAYI'ON
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Accusations and crtllcisms mil
I ons of words arid thousands of charts were coming to an
emotional showdown tilday wben the House takes up a multi
b II on dollar proposal to deregulate the prtce of natural gas
Rep Robert Krueger f}.Tex wanted the HOU!eto agree to a
long-term permanent removal of federal controls on nalur.al
gas prtces Rep John Dmgell f}.Mlch wanted the House to
deal only w th short-term emergency needs for gas and deijly
the long-term matter for full comnllttee consideration
Behind them are congressmen grouped pretty much u they
were m the ml pr clng debate of last fall conservative and oU
state members pushmg for deregulation liberals and
members from consummg states opposmg I
The House Commerce Conurutteeapproved a short-term bill
late last year It would open up the unregulated mtrasta'te
market (gas sold n the same state as produced ) to certain
mterstate p pelmes that are short of gas They could bid at
whatever pr ce they needed to gel the gas but only for ll1ls
wmter and next
Krueger s b II has emergency provistons but It would lift
federal regolation altogether by steps on grounds hlgller
pr ces will brmg htgher supply
W th the help ol Speaker Carl Albert Krueger got Ute House
Rules Corruruttee to permtl debating his long-term tdea along
wtth the short-term b U by-passmg usual parliamentary
procedures The House wtll declde whether to approve tlijt
shortcut
That vote w ll be a b g test of the pr cmg ssue !sell
The Senate already has passed a btl! similar to Krueger s
and the admuustrat on favors 11
No one IS content wtth present policy Krueger satd The
fact IS deregulation wtll save the people a great deal J1f
money By generating new supplies deregulation wlll fore
stall swttches til more expens ve fuels be sa d
D ngell called l}te deregulat on bill one of the purest p eces
of spectal mteresl legtslalton He satd he IS not coovmcild
there sa real shortage or that the addtllonal money willl~d
oo new gas supples
Krueger accused Dmgell of be ng both player and referee
m the House subcomm ttee by attempt ng til blo(',k
l'tmstderatwn of long-term deregolation Dingell accu~
Krueger of working for the mterests of a ruthless and
monopol sllc mdustry gas producers

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Edtlor
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The shock wave Is over for Rusty
Staub and he rmds It s not the end of the world Detro t tsn I tbe
end of Ute earth etlher He has made a trtp there and diScovers
'1te likes the aty and Ute people n 11
Staub did an unusual thmg for a ball player last spring He
kept bearing how tbe New York Mets were of a nl1nd til trade
him so m what amounted to a personal appeal he let them
'know publicly how much he wanted til stay here
The Meta nearly closed a couple of deals for Staub one wtth
Montreal and another wtth Phlladelph a but both fell through
Finally during the baseball meetings m HollyWood F1a two
months ago 1t happened Staub was dealt to the Tigers and
:1.1 ckey Lolich the 35-year-&lt;&gt;ld left hander came to the Mets
At first the trade hurt Staub mstde the same way trades
QCCasionaUy upset many ball players-,some actually have
been known to cry-.but now he s anxious even eager to get
going with the Ttgers
The people m Detroit w II see Rusty Staub the same way
~veryone else bas seen him m the National League says the
• red.lJalred left handed slugger They re gonna see hun g ve
everything be has I mean everything m the f eld You know
!low I play ball I don I care what club I m with the fans love
ine wherever I ve been Why Because I bust my back out
there I play well I generally have a relationsh p wtth the fans
that goes beyond merely playmg the game I always try to
relate til them I never cons der myself above tbem I never
1ook down on them
Rusty Staub wtll be starting h s 14th maJor league season if
there ts a season and every c ty be s played m Houston
Montreal and here he developed a tremendous followtng
among the fans Here m New York youngsters and frequently
older adnllrers alike trailed after hlln as they never had for
anyone else smce such players as Joe DiMaggio Mtckey
l!!fantle and WUe Mays The fans went for him n a btg way
and It was like that also when he played n Montreal and
Houston
That s the thmg Utat hurts so much when you re traded
~aub says
You feel sorry to leave tbe ctty because of the
$lose relationships you ve bwlt Some of the people I got to
Know here felt worse about my bemg traded than I did
Staub s life style always was a cause of conversation durmg
his four seasons w th the Mets The 31 year-&lt;&gt;ld bachelor out
f elder IS a gourmet cook and a good one who can turn out a
mfty souffle or a succulent r b roast Along w th that he s a
shrewd mvestor w th a myr ad of busmess Interests
I thmk he says the reason for my getting along so well
w th so many different kmds of people Is lha t despite my so
called progress ve attitudes about life n general I st ll have
the old approach to the game of baseball
Staub had a good year w th the Mets last season at least
from a statistical pomt of view f n sh ng wtth a 105 rbts 19
ltome runs and a 282 batt ng average n !55 games
Next to p lching ace Tom Seaver he was the highest pa d
player on the ball club draw ng $120 000 a year He had a
threeyear contract w th the Mets wh ch expired at the end of
last year Had he rema ned With the Mets another season he
would have had the opt on of okaymg or rejecung any trade
for hlln under baseball s l().and-5 rule n which a player has to
g~ve his consent til any deal after 10 years m tbe league and
f ve consecutive years w th the same club
I was well aware of the fact I was vulnerable expla ns
Staub I was so aware I didn t renew the lease on nly
'!p3rlment here n New York I was aware of my salary I was
(lop ng the Mets would not trade me but t JUSt didn t work out
lhat way
Staub presently Is n the process of negot at ng his new
contract w th the Tigers He already has met and talked w th
Q)"Jler John Fetzer and General Manager Jun Campbell
They ve been extraord nar1ly strmghtforward and honest
wtth me he says although he hasn t stgned his contract yet
Insofar as the s tuat on between the owners and the players
~lsts now Staub has thts oo say
There sa dual problem Ownership must real ze I does not
bave a sacred cow n the reserve clause and by the same token
tae players must understand that the owners have the r
problems too
I d like to see the owners and players stt down and solve
lh s problem tilgether !think they can solve t much qwcker
by themselves tban tf we have lawyers on both s des match
Wits aga lnst each other

Arson charged in
destructive fire
BOSTON UP!) - A $1
rrull on f re which Injured five
persons left I50 others home
less and requ red more men

and equipment than any f re
n the ctty s h story was
caused by arson accord ng to
Ftre Comm ss oner George
Paul
ln~est gatilrs w U try to
determ ne who shut off he
manual valves to the
sprmkler system and why
fires were burnmg m several
remote sections of the
sprawling fivestory butlding
when men and equ pment
arrtved Sunday Paul sa d
The f re apparently smold
ered n the wails of a 700-foot
long converted shoe lac ory
m the Jama ca Plain sect on
late Sunday before burstmg
nto flames which took 500
I reftghters until Monday
afternoon to control
The res den al ndustrial
comp ex: was home for a
more than 100 art sts
sculptors and wr ters It wits
reduced to cecaked rums
Most lost the work ol year.s
F re Commtsstoner George
Paul srud there was evidence
the ftre was the work of
arsomsts The state ftre mar
shal s off ce Jomed the Boston
arson squad n
mvesttgat ng
We dtdn t think t was
gomg to be that bad We
didn t take our thmgs out I
lost everything
Rtccardo
Torres sad
I was n bed at the tllne of
the ftre smd photographer
and pamter Felipe Flores
My wtfe and I were able to
grab a couple of drawmgs

and leave the buildmg
He estllnated he lost mo~
than $35 000 worth of
pam mgs and photography
equipment
One res dent sa d he lost a
$4 000 grand piano Others
S81d they lost all they had
AUTRY RIDES AGAIN
BEVERLY HILLS Calif
UP!) - Former smgmg
cowboy Gene Autry wall
gtven the free enterpr~
award of the Amertcamsm
Educational League Monday
Autry 68 has bUilt if
financtal emp re of etght
corporatiOn n the years smce
he ret red from show
bus ness wtlh mterests In
broa dcast ng
hotels
ranchmg o I and other held!
The conservative group
gave Its guardtan of liberty
award to Adm U S Grant
Sharp and the law and orde~
award til l,os Angeles Pol ~
Ch ef Edward DaviS
CEUJST HONORED
WS ANGELES (UP!) •~
Celltst Gregor Ptatlgorsl
was named today til recetve
the annual University Ill
Southern California Frlentli!
of Mustc Award for an
extraordmary contribution til
the world of mustc
The award will be
presented at a banquet April
18 A fund namod for
Platlgorskl will provld~
scholarshtps for young
cell sts to the USC School of
Music where he has taught
stnce 1962

-------- ---------------t
Lctlcrs of opinion are wei omed Tbey should
be

~

less thm 300words long ror be subject to reduction by
the editor) and must be signed with the signee s ad
dress Na nes may be withheld upon publication
However on noquest names will be dlscloaed Letters
should be In good taste addressing Issues not per
sonallties

1
I
\

r

~

1
~

f

I
I

t

1

Agrees with Susan Clarke
basts
AiJ a result as much as $2 2

million more may go out
Thursday wtth Wallace
gettmg $1 8 mtllton of 11
In
Texas
Wallace
Bentsen Ford and Reagan
had
enough
petition
signatures to field delegate
slates across the stale
Former Georg a (Sov Junmy
Carter IS expected to qualify
m all 31 Democratic primary
districts while fellow Demo
crats Sargent Shriver and
Fred Harr s quallfted
delegates n some but not all
of the dtstrtcts
Sen Henry Jackson cam
patgning
n
Raleigh
predicted he would make a
o d show ng
n North

Carolina s March 23 primary
which s shapmg up as a
battle between Carter and
Wallace He decl ned to
estunate what percentage of
the vote he would get or to
predict hts flntsh m the siX
candidate field whtch also
Includes Bentsen Udall and
Harris
The Udall campaign whtch
accordmg to reports was m
some flnanctal trouble ts
actually taking n an average
of $10 000 a day from :rmall
contnbutors according to
campa gn director Jack
Qumn He satd Monday that
In Ute preVIOUS eight days
more than 22 000 persons
donated an average of $21
each

Rutgers rolls over Princeton

Today's

Dear Edttor
About a year ago I had a letter published In the Sentinel ln.
regard the killing of Alaskan wolves At that lime the Slerrra
Club had been Instrumental m obtaining an Injunction
prohlbttlng this slaughter of the wolves from helicopters b:y
high powered rifles
I agree wiUt Susan Clarke s letter In Sunday 1 &amp;10Unel Tha
killing of the wolves Is cruel and umeceuary
As a lover of natural things and Ute out-of-doors I revolt at
Utts mass klll1ng and the stated reasons glVl!ll for it
Often as possible we visit the western stales and go out to
hear the coyotes serenade To me this Is a blood stirring.,
experience I once saw a white timber wolf In a cage on ahibl~
at a service station in a western state He was a magnificent
Individual and lvhen I loolted Into his deep brown eyes I was so~
saddened hy what I read Utere that I wanlod to lllp the latdt oa.";;
his cage and set him free
"
Wolves fltlnto nature s plan No group of men lhould lak~
t upon themselves til extennlnate them In the ll8ple of
conservaUon or for Utat matter to plan a 111181 secutlon ol
part of them In the manner these Alaskan authorities do
Gayle Price Porlland Ohio

Loyola defeats
OU in overtime
Unltod Preosloteroatiooal
The Ohio Unlvers ty
fu!bcats seemed to have
things well n hand at
halftllne Monday mght n
lheir conteot against Loyola
9t Chicago
The Cats held a 45 35
margm at tbe mterm ss1on
but Loyola roarod back In the
tina! 20 minutes to t e the
Score 74-74 with five seconds
remaining and went on til
Iland OU an &amp;HI2 defeat m
6vertime
It tonk some hot shootmg at
!pe loulllne and herotcs from
Tony Parker and backcourt
mate Tad Duffellneler for
Loyola to chalk up 118 sixth
win In 17 outings
Parker scored 30 po nts and
Dutfellneter added 20 w th
4ach getting 12 at the free
throw line
The Bobcats 8-8 dldn t
belp their ?wn cause much
either They committed 20
turnovers m the game ftve of
them In the overtime period
Scott l&lt;lve led the host
BObcats with 19 points
'Elsewhere Rio Grande
downed Codarville 72 62
Chicago State edged Central
State 79 72 Ste~benvllle
defelllod Allegheny ( Pa l 8371 and West VIrginia Tech
overwhelmed Wilberforce 9&amp;-

dropped til II 9
Wtlberforce managed oo
score only 21 pomts durmg
the first half of ts contest
agamst West Vtrgm a Tech at
Montgomery WVa and tl
was all downh II from there
Tech 14-1 steadily pulled
away from ts 41 21 haillune
lead wtth Allen Dye scormg
24 pomts m tbe lopstded wm
for the West VltgllUans
Gary Brown paced tbe
losers 5-16 w th 18 po nts
TAMPA Fla UP!
Coach John McKay of the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Monday filled out h s
defensive coaching staff wtth
the appo ntment ol D1ck
Voris
as
defensive
coordinatilr a post n whtch
he served last season wtlh the
New York Jets
Vorts 54 IS the sevenUt
assistant coach hired by
McKay for the Naltonal
Football League expansion
club McKay has one more
offenst ve aSSistant yet to
hire

MOSCOW (UP!) - Soviet
jumper Vlktor Saneyev
Monday set a world indoor
mark m the triple JUmp the
60;
Tass
hews agency sa d
Rio Grande down 35-.'11 at
Tass
satd Saneyev bettered
haUtlme alsO had to fight
tbe
old
performance on each
blck Jlln Stewart IICOred 20
of
two
tries
at the final day of
po1n1a to lead the Redmen to
the
U
S
S
R
open track and
their 11th win In 21 games this
field champlonlhlp Saneyev
Cedarville s Pon Smtih jumped 56 feet 3'.11 Inches
tiJdk game hlgll honors with Tass satd The old mark was
22 polntl u his host team 56 feet 1 mches

-

BY JOE CARNICEW
UPI Sports Writer
II was billed as The BatUe
of New Jersey seventh
ranked and unbeaten Rutgers
agaUISt No 19 l'l!mceton the
tilp defensive team m the
nat on What it turned out til
be was just a little skirrrush
for Rutgers
The Scarlet Knights
scormg machme w th Phtl
Sellers and Mike Dabney
combmmg for 40 po nts
rolled to a 7~2 v ctory
Monday mght and raiSed tiS
record til 17-G Prmcetiln fell
to 12-t
There was one btg scare for
Rutgers That came w th 11
mmutes til go when tbe
Scarlet Kmghts led S!Hi3
Princeton stalled for four
rrunutes hoping to throttle
Rutgers high-scoring attack

but Dabney stole the ball and
drove the length of the court
for a layup The basket
sparked a 12-t spurt and
Prmceton never threatened
agam
I think theY. went mto the
stall too soon sa d Rutgers
Coach Tom Young We JUSt
laid back and I knew it was
JUSt a matter of time before
one of our guys stole tbe
ball
I Just antictpated the ball
and there 11 was
sa d
Dabney who fmished wtth 18
points We were laying back
to guard agamst the back
door play a b t and let tbem
hold the ball But we were
just wattmg for
an
opportunity
Sellers hitl2 of his 22 pomts
m tbe frst half to lead
Rutgers til a 42-36 lead Wtth

Htll and Hauptfuhrer leading
the way Prmceton closed tbe
gap to two before Dabney s
key steal of Frank Sow nski s
pass
In the only other act on
Monday mght nvolvmg
ranked teams
No
8
Tennessee beat MISSISSipp
State 75-66 No 14 Mtchtgan
whipped Wlsconsm 107-86
and No 15 Alabama edged
Georg a ~ n overtone
Errue Grunfeld s 22 pomts
earned Tennessee over
MJSS sstpp Stale
The
Bulldog
defense
held
Tennessee star Bernard
King the Southeastern Con
ference s leadmg scorer to
just seven pomts tbe lowest
output of his two year varSity
career
R cky Green s 32 pomts
earned M chigan to an easv

w n over W sco nsin and
Ala barna down lour po nts
w th just 40 seconds left tted
the game on two long ump
shots by Tommy Bonds
before Winning in ove lime
In other major games
Furman edged Appalachian
77 76 Georg a Tech beat
V rg ma M I ary 66 56
~en lucky whipped Lou Slana
State 85 71 Vanderbtl1
mpped M ss ss ppt 61 60
Vtrgmla Tech trounced
Oklahoma Ctty
87 66
Cre ghtiln dumped S LouiS
76-{iB Loyola fll ) toppled
Ohto Uruvers ty 116-l12 n
overt me M chtgan State
drubbed Northwestern 91 71
Mmnesota stopped lllmoiS
7U2 Purdue r pped Iowa 91
76 and Ar zona State
defeated Montana 79 71

26th NBA All-Star tilt tonight
By STEVE Wll..SfEIN
advisory committee of
UPI Sports Writer
owners and player-counsel
PHILADELPHIA UPI) Larry Fleisher hammered
On the eve of the 2fith out !mal detruls of the plan
Nattonal Basketball that won approval Monday
Assocta lion All-star Game from tbe NBA Board of
Comm ss oner Larry 0 Brten Governors for settlement of
worked out a deal that may the swt filed ln the name of
lead to an oul-&lt;&gt;f court former Players AssocJ&amp;tlon
settlement of a siX year-&lt;&gt;ld Prestdent Oscar Robertson
players class actton sutl
If
the
player
rep
0 Brten and a f ve-man resental ves meetmg ap

Caldwell star in
Rio's 72-62 win
Do11n 35 31 dur ng the
halfllme nterm ss on Coach
Ar Lanham s Rto Grande
Col ege Jledmen came back
strong n the second half oo
hand host Ceda v lie a 72~2
M d-Oh o Conferen e defeat
Monday n ght
R o Grande placed four
men n double f gures ed by
J m Stewarts 20 po nts but t
was he f ne defens ve play of
guards Bob Caldwell and
Paul Albanese and the r
excellent ball hand! ng
dur ng the f na m nu es of
pia] wh ch enabled he
vts tors to return to the w n

column af~r two slra ght
osses
R o s now II 10 overal and
S-3 ns de he Moe h rd
p ace Cedarvt e dropped to
11 9 overall a nd 5-l ns de the
eague

the second half enroule ~o Is
v ctilry
Caldwell tallied all II of h s
po nts m the second half and
Albanese tall ed seven of h s
n ne p01n IS Ia e n the game
nclud ng four clutch free
throws n he f nal mmute

The two R o guards he d
Cedarv lie s Kev Wa ters to
hree
pomts
Ro
ou rebounded the home team
29 23 and had 27 turnovers
compared o Cedarvtlle s 21
R o was 18 of 24 a the foul
line
Other Redmen n doub e
f gures ncluded G I Pr ce
w th 15 and J mmy Noe wtth
11 Gary Swam tossed n
seven for he wtnners
Don Smt h led Cedarville
w h 22 po nts
Box score
RIO GRANDE

12

Noe

8 4 20 P
e
Wednesday R o 11 II v stl 54 0 05 S ewa
Abanese
259
Oh o Dom mean 2 7 at St Ca dw e
Swa n 3
27 I 72
Charles H gh School gym TOTALS
CEDARV LLE
62
Co umbus Cedarv I e w II Wa e s
3 Coomes 5
hos T ff n 6 3 th s even ng Wood s o a Lon es 6 o
Bu ne 0 4 4 Sm
9 4 22
Las n ght R o Grande TOTALS
26 062
Sco e
a
ha f me
held the Yellow Jackets
c s R o G and e 3
scoreless he f rst four and Ced a
one half m nu es of play n

Olympic notes
By
United
Press
International
The rat o of medtcal
personnel to aUtletes at the
12th W nter Olymptcs
openmg Wednesday wtll
allnost be I to 1
For the estiipaled I 075
mternal onal
competitilrs
there wtll be 1 000 doctors
nurses and other medical
staff to attend til any possible
IDJurtes suffered at the five
sites
Sk ers cUpped more than
stx seconds off the track
record n lhetr ftrst offlctal
practice for the Wmter
Olymptcs despite late
changes to slow the course
Most of the tilp skters raced
down the 3 145 meter track m
less than 1 mmute SO seconds
far better than tbe previous
record set by Austria s Franz
!Gammer m 1 55 78
The last qua!Htcatlon for
women partlapatmg In tbe
W nter Olymp cs is the
!em mly test All the female
alhieles must take the test
Fatlure means automatic
diBqualiftcation from games
To avoid a repltltloo of past
scandals Dr Eva Marberger
admmlsters a quick painless
test by scrapmg cells from
the mslde of the mouth til
check Ute chromosomes
The Anter can Nordic team
has high hopes for Its chances
1D the 1976 Winter OlympiCS
although Europeans are sure
to dominate the evehts
I think I might come In In
MondiV sOh o Co ege

lasketb• Sco es
Un ed Preu nterna ona
Loyo a

86 Oh o U 82 o

Wes
v g n a
W be o ce 60
s euben
e BJ
Pa
R

o

e h

96

A eg h eny

e

62

prove the plan tiJday 1 wtll
be presented to U S Dtslr ct
Court Judge Robert Carter
for f nal settlement
If a settlement
s
reached
satd 0 Br en
obviously I s then an open
sttuat on to dtscuss any
aspect of consol dalton or
merger (w th he ABA ) or
anyth ng else that m ght
come along ThiS has been
tiltally m the hands of the
players for a long ume
Because of he mjunct on
obtamed by the players

which g ves a team r ghts to
an uns1gned player for only
two years a one year non
perpeluatmng option clause
and the r ght of f rst refusal
where n a team would be able
til match or refuse to match
another team s offer lor a
player who wants to change
teams
The tentat ve agreement
comes after a long battle that
brought several NBA teams
to the verge of bankrup cy m
recent years wh le average
player salar es soared over
aga nst the owners we $100 000 per season and seats
couldn even talk about m some arenas c mbed as
merger
high as htgh as $12 to $ 5 per
Chances of a settlement game
are better than ever sa d
Three ABA teams folded
Fletsher
thts season leav ng seven
The two s des reportedly and w th the 18 NBA
agreed til a modi! ed draft franchises the scene seems
se fo a 24-25 team super
league next yea
However
ton ght s
College ratings
nat onally telev sed game to
be played m Phtladelphta
was never threatened except
perhaps by he weather
Golden State s A Allies
coach ol the West All-Stars
spent 14 hours w th h s young
son en route to Ph ladelph18
startmg out m San Franc sco
and stopp ng along the way
because
of
weather
cond t ons
n
Dallas
Memph s and P tt sburgh
He nsohn and h s three
Boston
players
Dave
Cowens John Havl cek and
JoJo While had to go from
Detro I to Ph ladelph a vta
Wash nglon By late Monday
5
6
rught however most of the
7
players had amved wtth Los
8
Angles
Kareem Abdul
Jabbar among the m ss ng

•

''

get sixth wm

the top 10 and there may be a
medal for B ll Koch--be s
ski ng real well satd cross
country skter Chr stopher
Haines ol Pullman Wash
But the Amertcans who
f mshed cons stently at the
bottom m 1972 at Sapporo
Japan are hkely to be
oulskted agam this year by
the Fmns Russ ans and East
Germans

National hgure skahng
champton Dorothy Hanllll
US hopeful for a gold at the
1976 Olympic Games, said
When I was a little gtrl I
wanted Peggy Flemmg s
autograph but she kind of
snubbed me I was upset and
went crying to my mother
The 19 year-old from
Rivers de Conn satd thst s
why she always gtves
autilgraphs to Ions
There are no fat slobs on
Ute U S bobsled team
Team Manager Forrest
Morgan countered charges
from tbe U S luge squad
saying there are no fat slobs
on my team AU 12 are fully
trained physical specllnens
One member of the luge
team reportedly commented
that the bobbers were
nothmg but big fat people
who are there just to add
weight to tbe sled

Mam

8 5

To edo
Oh o U
Ken S
Bwg
G een
CM h
Ba s
EM h
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7
4

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8

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9

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Game

W l Pet W L Pc
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3

85
5

Three games
setton~ght

Two league games and a
non league affair are slated
tiln ght n the Southern Val ey
Athie lc Conference League
games feature second place
Hannan Trace a South
western and lh rd place
Southern host ng Eastern
North Gall a s league
lead ng P rates host Wahama
m a non league battle North
Gall a w II go after Its 3th
victory n 14 games Hannan
Trace wlll seek tis 11th wm m
15 games and Southern w II
try for Its lOth n 4 out ngs

6 6-4
96600

5

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TEAM

NEW HAVEN

W VA

2 867
S 688

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8 600

W

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3 824
3 5 722
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•

••

Monday n ght a North
Call a the Eastern H gh gals
evened he r record a I I by
eas 1 defeat ng the Lady
Prates 45 0
V ck Epple led the w nne s
" h a b g 30 pont per
lormance and Den se Dean
threw n f ve Teresa Ed
"ards hauled m n ne of her
team s rebounds After an
n e est ng f rs t qua rter
Easle n took off and lei
everyone beh nd Hunt led all
P ate scorers w th th ee
s

Tuesday n ght at Hannan
Trace and Wednesday the]
!rave o Southwestern
Scor ng Eastern V ck
Epple 30 Den se Dean 5
Te esa Edwards 4 Jan
W1 son 4 Sherr Epple 2
Total 45
North Call a Hunt 3
Mu hond 2 Ho com b 2
Johnson 2 0 ler I Tota 10
By Quarters
E
14293945
NG
6 7 8 10

Eaglets win at
Warren, 30-27
Monday n ghl at Warren
the Eastern Freshmen of
Coach Joe Mtlchum won a
th ller 30-27 After tak ng a
f ve po nt f rst quar er lead
the Eagles go t cold and d dn t
ge hot unt I the la_:;l canto
when they ou scored Warren
I~ to ga n the lead .nd
v ctory
Dan Spencer led Eastern
w h 10 markers and Jell
Goebel and Steve Ll tle each
had sx
As a team Eastern shot 27
pc but tossed n 6 of 13
hrows compared o Warren s
I 3 The Eagles had 22 tu
novers Warren had 33

w

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Ro G ade
Cec a
e

9
692
9
691
3 6 6..
0 5 661
0 6 615
3 8 69
8 579
550
516
0 524
0 514
9 500
8 8 500
8 8 500
8
462
8 2 400
6
353
2 250
3
6
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45-10 winners

E

3 833

13

I

Eastern gn-ls

Eas ern s next game

15

286
9 -431
:186 8 0
U4
Oh o We
6
.43 4 2 250
M dOh o Conte enu

By Quarters
113 20 30
6 14 21 27

••

•

"

'

•

}Uillor High
in split Monday
Arch Rose s Eas~rn Jr
Htg b spl t a pa r of games at
Federa Hockmg Monday
even ng

The e ghth grade trailing
all the way put on a f nal
surge but ran out of lime
bowtng 37 35
Coach Rose wasn I pleased
saytng h s team dtdn I move
the ball well shot only 34 pel
and collected 18 rebounds
Brtan Bssell aga n led the
way w1th 17 po nts and Tun
Enevoldsen had 9 Driggs and
Lavelle had 10 lor Federal
Hock ng Quarter scores
were 7 9 14 17 20..27 35-37
The seventh grade came
out on lop 39-23 But they
were ha d pressed unt I the
htrd quarter when they
outscored the hosts 14-4
Eastern had three hot
shooters h ttmg 50 pet (Joe
Bowers R ck Long and Gene
Cole Cole led all scorers
w th 13 pomts Garrell had 11
for Federal Hocking Eastern
led all the way 5-S 19-14 3318 39-23

vour
GOOd
NeigHBOr

Bill Fletcher
1258 Powell St
Mrddleporl 0

PH 992-7155
See

hm

o al you ramly

nsurance needs

This is
the house
that Jack
built ...
Poor Jack!

Wben he moved tn ~e bought the best fire io
surance avatlable tbe trouble s tbal was 1$
years ago and nettber Jack or but agent bOth
ered to update his policy Well you lutow the
rest - Jack s property Increased 1n vahle over
the years and when fire struck be fouod out
tbe bard way that his Insurance was lnade
quate Poor Jack Don t you be a poor Jack ~ee us today for a free evaluation of your
Insurance
When you see us aon I thmk of msurance
but when you lhmk of msurance see us

'45.95

SAYRE HARDWARE

000

857

Ove 11
W L Pet

5
333

8 59

UNIONDALE NY UPI)
Monday n ghl s ABA game
Ho" e Caldwell s Southern between the New York Nets
Freshmen cage club p eked and Denver Nuggets was
up Is s xth wm aga nst wo postponed due to mclement
losses Sa urday by dowmng weather and rescheduled for
Kyger Creek 34 32 The Feb 9
To nados Ira led the s ors
The Nnggets played at
ali the way un I Dave F n Kentucky Sunday n ght and
dley s corne sho w lh 4 we e unable to leave
seconds lelt gave them the Lomsv Uefor New York when
VIctory They outscored the snow and Ice closed all three
Bobk tens 14 9 n he last New York metropol tan area
a rports
quar er
Sou hern won t at the foul
line s nkmg 8-24 wh e Kyger
In 1966 the Russ ans pu an
ma naged only 4 14 T m
unmanned
satellte on he
B nager ed he I tie Tor
moon
wtth
a
soft landing
nados 11 II 8 po nts J m
In
1975
Prestdent
Ford
0 Br en I ad 6 The tea n had
submttted
h
s
recess
on
19 turnovers
budget
to
Congress
and
Coach Weaver s team was
p edicted !bat the nat on s
led by Ke th Tay o s mne unemployment rate would hit
markers whtle Dan Chapman 8 per cent n 1975-76
had etght The earn had 30
turnovers
Quar er scores were Sou h
ern 5-6 11-5 20 23 and 3l 32

WANT TO PLAY
Al gtr Is n teres ed 10
Pay ng on the Pan the ettes
Sen or softball ean th s
swnmer are asked to attend a
meelmg af er school or
Monday Feb 9a Me gs H gh
School If they are unab e to
attend call 992 50 8 or 992
7092

0

353 Ma one
15 T ff n

Oh o Confe ence

Conf

Cant
W L Pet

533

3

No he n 0

J A .429 1 9 431
J .4 .-29 1 1 500
2 A JJJ 5
3 3
Kenyon
2 S 286 9 9 500
Sou hern D v son

615

5
5

8

M r Un on
Obe n
Ba d wa

6A

Southern Frosh

• • •

U S Alpme sk er Andy Mlll
hit a patch of tce m practice
Monday for the 1976 Wmler
Olymp cs and Injured hts
right leg H 8 coach thinks he
will be aU rtght for the
openmg Thursday
Mlll from Aspen Colo
said tbe course tsn t all Uta!
drastically dangerous and I
tried til go too fast I h t some
Ice spun around and my skt
came off

Oh o Co eve
Baske ba R eco d1
U n ed P en n erna1 on a
Through gam es o Jan J
M d Ame c:an Conte ence
con
A Gam«!s
W L Pc
W L Pc
WM h 8000060000

~ MIDDUP0.-1
~ 'fiHONI M2·2M2

�3

2- The Dally Sent nel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday Feb

~

Safeguards ignored in
tax hill says sponsor
By LEE LEONARD
Meanwh le the House was
UPI StateltoUJe Reporter
til vote today on leglslatton
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Tbe which would b unt the effect
chief sponsor of the 1972 law ol Senate B 11 455 by
phasmg
n
un form henceforth grantmg credits
assessment of real estate til homeowners for unvoted
taxes said today 11 was never real estate tax Increases
Intended to result
n brought about by future
astronomical tax bills for reappraisals
homeowners
I hope any such dec s on
In fa ct satd Senate on th s ts made on the bas s of
Minor ty Leader Mtchael J reason and not poltttcal
Maloney
RCtncmnati
pressure
satd Maloney
safeguards
aHatnst who s not up for re-elect on
unjustified tax hikes were thsyear lthmkthsbU
wrllll!n mto lbe law but may flirts w th the danger of
have been disregarded by Vlolatmg Ute Const tutton
vartous county budHet
Maloney satd the btll has
commtss ons
1n the pract cal effect of
adnllnistermg the law
ncreas ng the tang ble
Etther the restraints personal property tax patd by
weren I built m properly or busmess w thout a vole of the
they were abused
sa d people Th s s
Maloney adding that he has uncon st tut onal he
asked for research on believes
whether local governments
The current leg slat on
and school distrtcts have House B U 920 sponsored by
recetved windfall mcome as a Rep John E Johnson (}.
result of taxes inflated by Orrville ts Ute result of
reawralsals
complamts from taxpayers

GOP to
reverse
'71 work
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS UP[) - The
five-member state legtslaltve
Apportionment Board now
donllnated by Republicans s
til meet later th s month til
fbnnaUy seek a court order
overturning the 1971 reappor
Uonment plan whtch put tbe
Democrats m firm control of
the Ohio General Assembly
A swtft court d rect ve
could enable the board which
went Republican When Gov
James A Rhodes took office
a year ago to revtse
legislative districts In tllne to
affect the 1976 General
Assem!lly elections and start
the GOP on the road back til
power
Any new apportionment
plan would have to be
approved by March 25 - the
deadline for
entermg
legJslallve races m order to
affect thiS year s elect ons
Rhodes announced Monday
that on Feb 9 he will give tbe
constitutionally reqwrM two
weeks notice for convenmg
the board to lay the
groundwork for picking up

outraged by real estate tax
b lis doublmg and treblmg
the r hab hty because of
reappra sals mandated by SB
455
I thmk there was a
real zatton that In some cases
there would be a rather
severe d slocat on of the tax
structure sa d Ma Ion ey
But I never expected to see
any
property
values
mcreased by SO per cent or
mo e even w th mflabon
w th the controls we had
wr lien mto the bill sa d
Maloney
I m sattsf ed that at the
time the General Assembly
made a consctous deciSion
that un form appl cat on was
n
the
long
run
advantaHeous
The
senator
sa d
complamts may be com ng
from solated areas where
property
wa s
e ther
underassessed pr or tb 1972 or
where Wide dJSpar t es
between res denttal and com

House has center stage in
move to abate tax boosts
COLUMBUS (UP[) - The Ohio Senate k eked off
leg slallve work Monday rught passing two btlls m a i
short sesston but the Oh o House took center stage
tiJday cons dermg maJor leg~sla 10n to halt unvoted ~
real estate tax ncreases
::::
The property tax btll was the only leg~slatwn on :.;:
tiJday s calendar It s constdered to be the legiSlature s
answer to an executive order freezmg real property
values at Jan 1 1975 levels
House Democrats and Republ cans were to caucus
before today s 11 a m floor session o diScuss the
controversial b U which s a med at stopp ng
inflaltonar} mcreases m real p ope ty taxes by ::::
reduc ng them as mflatton mcreases a property s ~
valuat on
Several amendments are expected oo be introduced
til ehmmate fears the btll may prompt a reduct on n
pubhc school funding

the task of apport on ng the
state of Oh o House of
Representatives and Senate
districts
His armouncement carne m
a letter til the other four
members
of
the
Apportionment Board
Repubhcan Secretary of
State Ted W Brown state
E
Auditor
Thomas
Fergoson a Democrat Sen
Anthony 0 Calabrese ])..
Cleveland and former state
Rep Robert A Mann ng an
Akron Republican
Before realignmg the d s
tncts the Apportionment

Board would have til ga n
court perrruss on heretofore
blocked by Judge Frank J
Batttslt of Cleveland a
Democrat who upheld the
current plan m 1972
The current plan drafted
by a board dom nated 3 to 2
by Democrats and headed by
former Gov John J G lligan
combmed the distrtcts of
three pa rs of Republ can
senators and 10 patrs of GOP
House
members
and
generally mproved the
chances of Democrat c
cand dates

me ret al
property
assessments were corrected
to the detnment of
homeowners by the untform
assessment rule
I can I beheve th s was the
case satd Maloney
He sa d he plans to check
mto the possib Uty that some
count es did not comply With
the requ rement m SB 455 til
roll back m llage alter
upward reapprmsals brought
m too much money
When s a e legislators
enacted the law m 1972
spacmg out unplementat on
of um form real estate
taxation over a stx year
pertod they thought Utey
were domg the voters a favor
Few lawmakers stood up
and opposed SB 455 as t
breezed through tbe Senate
28to 3Jn mtd May and sailed
through the House 82 to 5
three weeks later
All 99 House seats and half
the Senate seats were up for
elect on n the fall and SB 455
was one of the few maJor
terns standmg n the way of a
summer adJournment
The legtslalion seemed I ke
a good dea at the tune It was
to forestall wholesale real
estate tax hikes at a tune
when the lawmakers were
promts ng homeowners they
would recetve a 10 per cent
reduction as a result of a
rol back wrtllen mlo the 1971
state ncome lax law
Thts
s the only
reasonable and orderly
means to reach tax
un lormlly sa d Rep E W
Lampson R.Jelferson the
House s prune tax expert on
the maJor ty s de at the tune
There seemed no other
way Stx months before the
state Board of Tax Appeals
responding til an order of the
Ohto Supreme Court had
directed that all real estate
be assessed for tax purposes
at 35 per cent of true value
The high court had ordered
m 1971 at the end of a str ng
of court dec s ons datmg back
oo 1962 that the assessment
be set un fornlly for all
property at no more than 50
per cent of true value
The BTA chose 35 per cent
and the General Assembly
agreed wtlh the prov so that
excess revenues be returned
til the taxpayers AI that
tune only four counties were
assessmg at more than 35 per
cent of market value so tax
mcreases were expected n
the other 84 counties

Wallace presses Florida campaign
By IRA R ALLEN

Jackson predicted he w U
United Press International
make a good showmg m the
George WaUace sprained a North Carolma prunary
knee Monday but tl dtdn I
Wallace s knee was IDJUred
stop the wheelchatr-bound when aides dropped his
candidate from contmwng wheelchair as they were
hts campatgn tn Flortda llftmg hun ontil an mrplane
against other Democrats
But the Alabama governor
Elsewhere m the South the showed up on schedule at a
filing deadlme for the May 1 rally m Panama Ctty Beach
Texas prtmary passed with Fla
and sa d he was
President Ford Ronald Rea
perfectly all r ght
gan native son Sen Uoyd
I was gett ng on an
Bentsen
and
Wallace rurplane and the people lifted
qualifying delegates m aU me and dropped me he told
districts and Sen Henry his audience I guess I was

Ute v clim of a case of problem they have a c I zen
stumbl tis but I m perfectly problem the governor satd
all rtght
They ve Ignored people I ke
The prestdent of the you for a number of years
Uruted Stales doesn I run the
Wallace expects to caSh n
country w th h s feel and legs Thursday on a dec ston by the
he runs 1t w th his head
Federal
Elect on
Wallace sad
Comm sston whtch satd
In hiS speech Wallace sa d Monday that s nee 11 may be
other pres denttal candtda tes for ed out of ex stence soon
were gnorlng the mtddle and beca use of a Supreme Court
lower classes He ctted Rep dec s on I should hand out
MorriS Udall ])..Ar z as federal camprugn funds til
declarmg the country has a el g ble candtdate on a
Wallace problem
weekly nstead of btweekly
They don I have a Wallace

DR. LAMB

Spastic colon needs care
By L.awrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB
Should a person who has had
ulceraltve cobt sand now has
a spastic colon problem go
through wtth a hemorrho d
operat on? Or should they try
the ln)ecllon method'
The hemorrhoids aren t so
pamful but they bleed a lot
and lhts IS very frustrat ng
DEAR READER
The
first pBinl s to clartly your
dtagnosts
Your letter
suggests that you have mild
ulcerahve coht s f you had 11
at all Sometunes a number
of dtseases of the colon are
confused w1th what ts
basically a spast c colon
Spasltc colon may con
tribute
to
developing
hemorrhoids Before any
treatment for hemorrhmds I
would recommend that you
solve the spastic colon
problem There are a number
of Utmgs you can do for th s
High on the hst of pos I ve
lhlnss to do 1s to increase the
bulk In your diet parhcularly
cereal fiber found m bran

'

The Daily Sentmel MidcDeport-Pomeroy 0 Tuesdax Feb 3 1976

1976

and 11 hole wheat cereals and pe son s f rst awa e of the
by usmg real whole wheat mlernal hemorrho ds when
bread (not half wh te flour they start bleed ng
and half whole wheat flour or
Cont nued blood loss from
colored m at ons often sold any cause from any loca on
to the unwary)
even n small amollllts can
Then you should have a lead o a loss of tron
bowel Ira n ng program so producmg an ron del c ency
you develop normal funct on
w h anemia
The procedure sn t d lftcult
Ex e nal
hemorrho ds
but nvolves your habtt cause symptoms The nerve
pattern and d et For spectf c f bers for pa n and tch ng are
details send SO cents for The under the skin You do not
Health Letter number 2 I
have hese pam f bers ns de
Irr Is ble or Spastic Colon
the sph ncter where nternal
Send a long stamped self
hemorrho ds are ocated
addressed envelope for Thus when a person com
mat! ng Add! ess your let er pia ns of pa nt and tch ng
to me n care of th s news
from hemorrhoids It usually
paper P 0 Box 1551 Rad o tnvolves external
City Statton New York N Y hemorrho ds at least as part
10019
of the p clure
The cho ce of techmque for
lnctdentallv smce the
treatment of hemorrho ds pa nful lch ng area IS outs de
depends on their extent and the sph ncter those •up
locahon Some tnternal pos tor es mserted nto the
hemorrho ds can be treated rectum
above
the
by Inject on It 1s he nternal hemorrhotds sold to the
hemorrho ds that tend to unsuspect ng publj r a
bleed and they may not cause
otally "orthless Ex e nal
any o her svt pi n such as apphca ton no
erna s
pa n ur lchmg Often " needed to rel eve an symp
~

toms a person has from ex

lerna! hemorrho ds
The external hemorrho ds
that cause symp oms can be
removed They cannot be
reated by n)eclton A
d c s on as to the adv sab I ty
to lrea or no depends on
the r extent and the amount
of symptoms they cause
Somet mes both nternal
and e&lt;ternal hemor rho ds
are p esent Elunmat on of
bemorrho ds then reqwres
surgery
Small externa lags an
even be removed by ty ng a
rubber band around hem bu
obv ously his procedure w ll
not be sat sfactory for larger
hemorrhotds or those 1n
volv ng hoth nternal and
external vems
Hemorrho ds are noth g
more than var cose ve ns

around the rectwn Good
bowel habtls helps preven
pressure on the ve ns m th s
area and reduces the
hkehhood of hemor ho ds or
the r comphcahons

»

i

Mason Coun ty

I

News Notes

By Alma Marshall

MASON - The Mason City HIStorical Soc ely meetm~
Jan 29 at the V rgil A Lew s home d scussed hav ng sl des
made from old pictures wh ch can be sho1m soon to the pub! c
Leonard Dav s of the Htstor c Preservat on Morgantown had
proposod at a prev ous meetmg the poss b llty of haVIng slides
made of ndustr es m the Oh10 Va ley such as the o d salt
furnace and others

Mrs Delwon Roberts treasurer reported that there IS
$145 65 m the treasury Mrs Fred Taylor read I..amentat ons
chapter 3 23-26th verses
Mrs Landon Srruth pres dent of the soc ely pres ded She
announced that a Craft Workshop on macrame and
embrmdery sponsored hy the Mason Extenswn Homemakers
w II be held Thursday Feb 5 at the home and a potluck d nner
w ll be served at noon The publ c s tnVItod to tour the home
from 1 to 3 p m on the same day
Mrs Delwon Roberts volunteered to see about gettmg
p cture post cards nade of the Lew s home for pub! c sale
Items g ven to the soctely wh ch are bemg used n the
home nclude Mrs HazelL evmg sold pitcher and wash bowl
Mr and Mrs Norman Reynolds desk and cha r and Mrs
Evelyn Kronnllller contrtbu ed a rocking cha r
The upstmrs of the home remams unfurmshed for wh ch
the soc ely would apprec ate furn ture
A West V rgm a Flag was presented to the soctety by
Mayor Fred Ta) lor The letter from Gov Arch A Moore Jr
smd
Dear Mayor Taylor
I apprec ate so very much your nterest n havmg a West
V rg ma Flag for your ne\\ I brary and hiStorical home
AiJ your Governor I w sh to assu e you that one w II be
forwarded til you shortly w th r y compliments and I m sure
you wtll proudly d splay th s banner m a prorrunent place for
all to enJOY
Thts flag s bemg d reeled to you under separate cover
and I would I ke to take this oppor urn y to tell you that your
dedicated efforts n th s behaH are most grat fy ng
Kindness regards and best w shes
The next meet ng of the society w Ube held on February
12th at 10 am
Attendmg were Mr and Mrs Norman Reynolds Mrs
Russel Barton Mrs Ray Proff I Mrs Evelyn Marmg Mr
and Mrs Fred Taylor Mrs Landon Smith Mrs John
Marshall Mrs Delwon Roberts Mrs WII am Ze kle and
Mrs Earl Ingels
MASON
MISs Dense McDanel a 17 year-&lt;&gt;ld PPHS
Seruor and he mother Mrs CalVIn Me Dan el returned
Wednesday !rom he Make It YourseH Wool Contest n
Wtch ta Kan The contest was sponsored by the Sheep
Growers Assoc alton n coope a t on w th teh Dept of
Agr culture
AiJ a result of the M d Atlant c contest n December
Den se won the all expense r p oW chi a Although no a top
w nner she was amon~ the 18 part c pants chosen m the Seruor
D v s on to ece ve an awa d wh h was a cus om s lver r ng
w th three cultured pear ls In add I on to U e honor award she
was presented Luz er Cosmet cs
Profess onal models gave the g rls ttps on modelmg On
Tuesday everung a fashton show was he d and reportedly after
Vlewmg all the beaut fu clo hes by Mrs McDamel she satd
every g rl was a w nner
Top w nners were Barbara Ellen Drevlow of Ada M nn
Nancy Gosch Webster C ty Iowa and Mrs James A Sm th
Waurtka Okla
Wh le m W chlta the g rls were lw1eheon guests shopped
at Shepler s Inc world s largest 1&gt;este n store and also
shopped at Towne East the larges shopp ng center n the
west
Mrs McDaruel smd the r p was marvelous and that they
had never flown before They went by Uruted 747 out of P tts
burgh and the memor es of the tr p and show are pr celess The
11 ght took approxunately 5 ~ hours !rom Charleston
Den se s the granddaughter of Mr and Mrs Calvm
McDamel Mason and Mr and Mrs Carl Lanham Pt
Pleasant Mtss McDaniel has been a member of the Happy
Hustlers 4 H Club for 9 years a p nwearer an\l a Juruor
Leader
LETART Mr and Mrs I ru } E Rousl of Letart W
Va are announc ng the btrth of a son Jodie Todd on January
28th at Holzer Medical Center Hosp tal The nfant "e ghed 7
pounds and 1 ounce
Mr a td Mrs Roush are also the parents of another son
Jarrue age&gt; Grandparents are Mr and Mrs Charles Yonker
Letart Mr and Mrs Lawrence Roush Mason and paternal
great grandparents are Mr and Mrs John Campbell
Gall polls and s ep grea grandmo her Mrs Helen
Gr nstead
RACINE Mr and Mrs Kennetb Turley ol Racme (Ohio
are announc ng the birth of a son Kev n Andrew The nfant
born on January 16th at Pleasant Valley Hospttal we ghed 9
pounds and 2' ounces The Turleys have another son Kenneth
Tur ey Jr age 6 vears Grandoarents are Mr and Mrs
Sher dan Russell Jr Mason Mr and Mrs Clarence Turley
Gall pohs Great grandmothers are Mrs El zabeth Jeffers
Mason and Mrs Emma B ewer Jackson
MASON - The Young Adult Class of Mason Uruted
Method st Church meetmg recenUy at the church enJOYed a
ptzza dinner and plans to have a fish fry on February 21 from
4 30 to 7 p m at the churCh The dinner w Ube $1 SO for adults
and 75 cents for ch ldren
Attendmg tbe regular month y meet ng ncluded Mr and
Mrs WilliS Bentley and children Mr and Mrs Ray Redman
and children Mr and Mrs Gary Gregory and daughter Mr
and Mrs Dennis Harr s Mr and Mrs Wesley Roush Mrs
Carol Hickman and daughters Mrs Ralph Ross and son Mr
Dav d SmlUt M ss Nancy Proffitt Rev and Mrs Robert
Maring and Mrs Fred Spencer
Mason aud Clifton Area News
Mrs Betty Ault of Columbus v s ted over the weekend
w th ber s ster and brother n Ia w Mr and Mrs Lester
Johnson
Davtd Blake of Pomeroy v s ted on Sunday w th Mark
Gilkey at Clifton
Mrs Laurene Lewts and Mrs Clara Williams of Cltfton
VISited Mrs Emmett Elias at Lakin State Hospital
Mr and Mrs Alva Luckeydoo vis ted thetr son and
dimghter In law Mr and Mrs Larry Luckeydoo and family at
St Albans

Natural gas
at showdown

Sport Parade

By Wll..LIAM E CLAYI'ON
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Accusations and crtllcisms mil
I ons of words arid thousands of charts were coming to an
emotional showdown tilday wben the House takes up a multi
b II on dollar proposal to deregulate the prtce of natural gas
Rep Robert Krueger f}.Tex wanted the HOU!eto agree to a
long-term permanent removal of federal controls on nalur.al
gas prtces Rep John Dmgell f}.Mlch wanted the House to
deal only w th short-term emergency needs for gas and deijly
the long-term matter for full comnllttee consideration
Behind them are congressmen grouped pretty much u they
were m the ml pr clng debate of last fall conservative and oU
state members pushmg for deregulation liberals and
members from consummg states opposmg I
The House Commerce Conurutteeapproved a short-term bill
late last year It would open up the unregulated mtrasta'te
market (gas sold n the same state as produced ) to certain
mterstate p pelmes that are short of gas They could bid at
whatever pr ce they needed to gel the gas but only for ll1ls
wmter and next
Krueger s b II has emergency provistons but It would lift
federal regolation altogether by steps on grounds hlgller
pr ces will brmg htgher supply
W th the help ol Speaker Carl Albert Krueger got Ute House
Rules Corruruttee to permtl debating his long-term tdea along
wtth the short-term b U by-passmg usual parliamentary
procedures The House wtll declde whether to approve tlijt
shortcut
That vote w ll be a b g test of the pr cmg ssue !sell
The Senate already has passed a btl! similar to Krueger s
and the admuustrat on favors 11
No one IS content wtth present policy Krueger satd The
fact IS deregulation wtll save the people a great deal J1f
money By generating new supplies deregulation wlll fore
stall swttches til more expens ve fuels be sa d
D ngell called l}te deregulat on bill one of the purest p eces
of spectal mteresl legtslalton He satd he IS not coovmcild
there sa real shortage or that the addtllonal money willl~d
oo new gas supples
Krueger accused Dmgell of be ng both player and referee
m the House subcomm ttee by attempt ng til blo(',k
l'tmstderatwn of long-term deregolation Dingell accu~
Krueger of working for the mterests of a ruthless and
monopol sllc mdustry gas producers

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Edtlor
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The shock wave Is over for Rusty
Staub and he rmds It s not the end of the world Detro t tsn I tbe
end of Ute earth etlher He has made a trtp there and diScovers
'1te likes the aty and Ute people n 11
Staub did an unusual thmg for a ball player last spring He
kept bearing how tbe New York Mets were of a nl1nd til trade
him so m what amounted to a personal appeal he let them
'know publicly how much he wanted til stay here
The Meta nearly closed a couple of deals for Staub one wtth
Montreal and another wtth Phlladelph a but both fell through
Finally during the baseball meetings m HollyWood F1a two
months ago 1t happened Staub was dealt to the Tigers and
:1.1 ckey Lolich the 35-year-&lt;&gt;ld left hander came to the Mets
At first the trade hurt Staub mstde the same way trades
QCCasionaUy upset many ball players-,some actually have
been known to cry-.but now he s anxious even eager to get
going with the Ttgers
The people m Detroit w II see Rusty Staub the same way
~veryone else bas seen him m the National League says the
• red.lJalred left handed slugger They re gonna see hun g ve
everything be has I mean everything m the f eld You know
!low I play ball I don I care what club I m with the fans love
ine wherever I ve been Why Because I bust my back out
there I play well I generally have a relationsh p wtth the fans
that goes beyond merely playmg the game I always try to
relate til them I never cons der myself above tbem I never
1ook down on them
Rusty Staub wtll be starting h s 14th maJor league season if
there ts a season and every c ty be s played m Houston
Montreal and here he developed a tremendous followtng
among the fans Here m New York youngsters and frequently
older adnllrers alike trailed after hlln as they never had for
anyone else smce such players as Joe DiMaggio Mtckey
l!!fantle and WUe Mays The fans went for him n a btg way
and It was like that also when he played n Montreal and
Houston
That s the thmg Utat hurts so much when you re traded
~aub says
You feel sorry to leave tbe ctty because of the
$lose relationships you ve bwlt Some of the people I got to
Know here felt worse about my bemg traded than I did
Staub s life style always was a cause of conversation durmg
his four seasons w th the Mets The 31 year-&lt;&gt;ld bachelor out
f elder IS a gourmet cook and a good one who can turn out a
mfty souffle or a succulent r b roast Along w th that he s a
shrewd mvestor w th a myr ad of busmess Interests
I thmk he says the reason for my getting along so well
w th so many different kmds of people Is lha t despite my so
called progress ve attitudes about life n general I st ll have
the old approach to the game of baseball
Staub had a good year w th the Mets last season at least
from a statistical pomt of view f n sh ng wtth a 105 rbts 19
ltome runs and a 282 batt ng average n !55 games
Next to p lching ace Tom Seaver he was the highest pa d
player on the ball club draw ng $120 000 a year He had a
threeyear contract w th the Mets wh ch expired at the end of
last year Had he rema ned With the Mets another season he
would have had the opt on of okaymg or rejecung any trade
for hlln under baseball s l().and-5 rule n which a player has to
g~ve his consent til any deal after 10 years m tbe league and
f ve consecutive years w th the same club
I was well aware of the fact I was vulnerable expla ns
Staub I was so aware I didn t renew the lease on nly
'!p3rlment here n New York I was aware of my salary I was
(lop ng the Mets would not trade me but t JUSt didn t work out
lhat way
Staub presently Is n the process of negot at ng his new
contract w th the Tigers He already has met and talked w th
Q)"Jler John Fetzer and General Manager Jun Campbell
They ve been extraord nar1ly strmghtforward and honest
wtth me he says although he hasn t stgned his contract yet
Insofar as the s tuat on between the owners and the players
~lsts now Staub has thts oo say
There sa dual problem Ownership must real ze I does not
bave a sacred cow n the reserve clause and by the same token
tae players must understand that the owners have the r
problems too
I d like to see the owners and players stt down and solve
lh s problem tilgether !think they can solve t much qwcker
by themselves tban tf we have lawyers on both s des match
Wits aga lnst each other

Arson charged in
destructive fire
BOSTON UP!) - A $1
rrull on f re which Injured five
persons left I50 others home
less and requ red more men

and equipment than any f re
n the ctty s h story was
caused by arson accord ng to
Ftre Comm ss oner George
Paul
ln~est gatilrs w U try to
determ ne who shut off he
manual valves to the
sprmkler system and why
fires were burnmg m several
remote sections of the
sprawling fivestory butlding
when men and equ pment
arrtved Sunday Paul sa d
The f re apparently smold
ered n the wails of a 700-foot
long converted shoe lac ory
m the Jama ca Plain sect on
late Sunday before burstmg
nto flames which took 500
I reftghters until Monday
afternoon to control
The res den al ndustrial
comp ex: was home for a
more than 100 art sts
sculptors and wr ters It wits
reduced to cecaked rums
Most lost the work ol year.s
F re Commtsstoner George
Paul srud there was evidence
the ftre was the work of
arsomsts The state ftre mar
shal s off ce Jomed the Boston
arson squad n
mvesttgat ng
We dtdn t think t was
gomg to be that bad We
didn t take our thmgs out I
lost everything
Rtccardo
Torres sad
I was n bed at the tllne of
the ftre smd photographer
and pamter Felipe Flores
My wtfe and I were able to
grab a couple of drawmgs

and leave the buildmg
He estllnated he lost mo~
than $35 000 worth of
pam mgs and photography
equipment
One res dent sa d he lost a
$4 000 grand piano Others
S81d they lost all they had
AUTRY RIDES AGAIN
BEVERLY HILLS Calif
UP!) - Former smgmg
cowboy Gene Autry wall
gtven the free enterpr~
award of the Amertcamsm
Educational League Monday
Autry 68 has bUilt if
financtal emp re of etght
corporatiOn n the years smce
he ret red from show
bus ness wtlh mterests In
broa dcast ng
hotels
ranchmg o I and other held!
The conservative group
gave Its guardtan of liberty
award to Adm U S Grant
Sharp and the law and orde~
award til l,os Angeles Pol ~
Ch ef Edward DaviS
CEUJST HONORED
WS ANGELES (UP!) •~
Celltst Gregor Ptatlgorsl
was named today til recetve
the annual University Ill
Southern California Frlentli!
of Mustc Award for an
extraordmary contribution til
the world of mustc
The award will be
presented at a banquet April
18 A fund namod for
Platlgorskl will provld~
scholarshtps for young
cell sts to the USC School of
Music where he has taught
stnce 1962

-------- ---------------t
Lctlcrs of opinion are wei omed Tbey should
be

~

less thm 300words long ror be subject to reduction by
the editor) and must be signed with the signee s ad
dress Na nes may be withheld upon publication
However on noquest names will be dlscloaed Letters
should be In good taste addressing Issues not per
sonallties

1
I
\

r

~

1
~

f

I
I

t

1

Agrees with Susan Clarke
basts
AiJ a result as much as $2 2

million more may go out
Thursday wtth Wallace
gettmg $1 8 mtllton of 11
In
Texas
Wallace
Bentsen Ford and Reagan
had
enough
petition
signatures to field delegate
slates across the stale
Former Georg a (Sov Junmy
Carter IS expected to qualify
m all 31 Democratic primary
districts while fellow Demo
crats Sargent Shriver and
Fred Harr s quallfted
delegates n some but not all
of the dtstrtcts
Sen Henry Jackson cam
patgning
n
Raleigh
predicted he would make a
o d show ng
n North

Carolina s March 23 primary
which s shapmg up as a
battle between Carter and
Wallace He decl ned to
estunate what percentage of
the vote he would get or to
predict hts flntsh m the siX
candidate field whtch also
Includes Bentsen Udall and
Harris
The Udall campaign whtch
accordmg to reports was m
some flnanctal trouble ts
actually taking n an average
of $10 000 a day from :rmall
contnbutors according to
campa gn director Jack
Qumn He satd Monday that
In Ute preVIOUS eight days
more than 22 000 persons
donated an average of $21
each

Rutgers rolls over Princeton

Today's

Dear Edttor
About a year ago I had a letter published In the Sentinel ln.
regard the killing of Alaskan wolves At that lime the Slerrra
Club had been Instrumental m obtaining an Injunction
prohlbttlng this slaughter of the wolves from helicopters b:y
high powered rifles
I agree wiUt Susan Clarke s letter In Sunday 1 &amp;10Unel Tha
killing of the wolves Is cruel and umeceuary
As a lover of natural things and Ute out-of-doors I revolt at
Utts mass klll1ng and the stated reasons glVl!ll for it
Often as possible we visit the western stales and go out to
hear the coyotes serenade To me this Is a blood stirring.,
experience I once saw a white timber wolf In a cage on ahibl~
at a service station in a western state He was a magnificent
Individual and lvhen I loolted Into his deep brown eyes I was so~
saddened hy what I read Utere that I wanlod to lllp the latdt oa.";;
his cage and set him free
"
Wolves fltlnto nature s plan No group of men lhould lak~
t upon themselves til extennlnate them In the ll8ple of
conservaUon or for Utat matter to plan a 111181 secutlon ol
part of them In the manner these Alaskan authorities do
Gayle Price Porlland Ohio

Loyola defeats
OU in overtime
Unltod Preosloteroatiooal
The Ohio Unlvers ty
fu!bcats seemed to have
things well n hand at
halftllne Monday mght n
lheir conteot against Loyola
9t Chicago
The Cats held a 45 35
margm at tbe mterm ss1on
but Loyola roarod back In the
tina! 20 minutes to t e the
Score 74-74 with five seconds
remaining and went on til
Iland OU an &amp;HI2 defeat m
6vertime
It tonk some hot shootmg at
!pe loulllne and herotcs from
Tony Parker and backcourt
mate Tad Duffellneler for
Loyola to chalk up 118 sixth
win In 17 outings
Parker scored 30 po nts and
Dutfellneter added 20 w th
4ach getting 12 at the free
throw line
The Bobcats 8-8 dldn t
belp their ?wn cause much
either They committed 20
turnovers m the game ftve of
them In the overtime period
Scott l&lt;lve led the host
BObcats with 19 points
'Elsewhere Rio Grande
downed Codarville 72 62
Chicago State edged Central
State 79 72 Ste~benvllle
defelllod Allegheny ( Pa l 8371 and West VIrginia Tech
overwhelmed Wilberforce 9&amp;-

dropped til II 9
Wtlberforce managed oo
score only 21 pomts durmg
the first half of ts contest
agamst West Vtrgm a Tech at
Montgomery WVa and tl
was all downh II from there
Tech 14-1 steadily pulled
away from ts 41 21 haillune
lead wtth Allen Dye scormg
24 pomts m tbe lopstded wm
for the West VltgllUans
Gary Brown paced tbe
losers 5-16 w th 18 po nts
TAMPA Fla UP!
Coach John McKay of the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Monday filled out h s
defensive coaching staff wtth
the appo ntment ol D1ck
Voris
as
defensive
coordinatilr a post n whtch
he served last season wtlh the
New York Jets
Vorts 54 IS the sevenUt
assistant coach hired by
McKay for the Naltonal
Football League expansion
club McKay has one more
offenst ve aSSistant yet to
hire

MOSCOW (UP!) - Soviet
jumper Vlktor Saneyev
Monday set a world indoor
mark m the triple JUmp the
60;
Tass
hews agency sa d
Rio Grande down 35-.'11 at
Tass
satd Saneyev bettered
haUtlme alsO had to fight
tbe
old
performance on each
blck Jlln Stewart IICOred 20
of
two
tries
at the final day of
po1n1a to lead the Redmen to
the
U
S
S
R
open track and
their 11th win In 21 games this
field champlonlhlp Saneyev
Cedarville s Pon Smtih jumped 56 feet 3'.11 Inches
tiJdk game hlgll honors with Tass satd The old mark was
22 polntl u his host team 56 feet 1 mches

-

BY JOE CARNICEW
UPI Sports Writer
II was billed as The BatUe
of New Jersey seventh
ranked and unbeaten Rutgers
agaUISt No 19 l'l!mceton the
tilp defensive team m the
nat on What it turned out til
be was just a little skirrrush
for Rutgers
The Scarlet Knights
scormg machme w th Phtl
Sellers and Mike Dabney
combmmg for 40 po nts
rolled to a 7~2 v ctory
Monday mght and raiSed tiS
record til 17-G Prmcetiln fell
to 12-t
There was one btg scare for
Rutgers That came w th 11
mmutes til go when tbe
Scarlet Kmghts led S!Hi3
Princeton stalled for four
rrunutes hoping to throttle
Rutgers high-scoring attack

but Dabney stole the ball and
drove the length of the court
for a layup The basket
sparked a 12-t spurt and
Prmceton never threatened
agam
I think theY. went mto the
stall too soon sa d Rutgers
Coach Tom Young We JUSt
laid back and I knew it was
JUSt a matter of time before
one of our guys stole tbe
ball
I Just antictpated the ball
and there 11 was
sa d
Dabney who fmished wtth 18
points We were laying back
to guard agamst the back
door play a b t and let tbem
hold the ball But we were
just wattmg for
an
opportunity
Sellers hitl2 of his 22 pomts
m tbe frst half to lead
Rutgers til a 42-36 lead Wtth

Htll and Hauptfuhrer leading
the way Prmceton closed tbe
gap to two before Dabney s
key steal of Frank Sow nski s
pass
In the only other act on
Monday mght nvolvmg
ranked teams
No
8
Tennessee beat MISSISSipp
State 75-66 No 14 Mtchtgan
whipped Wlsconsm 107-86
and No 15 Alabama edged
Georg a ~ n overtone
Errue Grunfeld s 22 pomts
earned Tennessee over
MJSS sstpp Stale
The
Bulldog
defense
held
Tennessee star Bernard
King the Southeastern Con
ference s leadmg scorer to
just seven pomts tbe lowest
output of his two year varSity
career
R cky Green s 32 pomts
earned M chigan to an easv

w n over W sco nsin and
Ala barna down lour po nts
w th just 40 seconds left tted
the game on two long ump
shots by Tommy Bonds
before Winning in ove lime
In other major games
Furman edged Appalachian
77 76 Georg a Tech beat
V rg ma M I ary 66 56
~en lucky whipped Lou Slana
State 85 71 Vanderbtl1
mpped M ss ss ppt 61 60
Vtrgmla Tech trounced
Oklahoma Ctty
87 66
Cre ghtiln dumped S LouiS
76-{iB Loyola fll ) toppled
Ohto Uruvers ty 116-l12 n
overt me M chtgan State
drubbed Northwestern 91 71
Mmnesota stopped lllmoiS
7U2 Purdue r pped Iowa 91
76 and Ar zona State
defeated Montana 79 71

26th NBA All-Star tilt tonight
By STEVE Wll..SfEIN
advisory committee of
UPI Sports Writer
owners and player-counsel
PHILADELPHIA UPI) Larry Fleisher hammered
On the eve of the 2fith out !mal detruls of the plan
Nattonal Basketball that won approval Monday
Assocta lion All-star Game from tbe NBA Board of
Comm ss oner Larry 0 Brten Governors for settlement of
worked out a deal that may the swt filed ln the name of
lead to an oul-&lt;&gt;f court former Players AssocJ&amp;tlon
settlement of a siX year-&lt;&gt;ld Prestdent Oscar Robertson
players class actton sutl
If
the
player
rep
0 Brten and a f ve-man resental ves meetmg ap

Caldwell star in
Rio's 72-62 win
Do11n 35 31 dur ng the
halfllme nterm ss on Coach
Ar Lanham s Rto Grande
Col ege Jledmen came back
strong n the second half oo
hand host Ceda v lie a 72~2
M d-Oh o Conferen e defeat
Monday n ght
R o Grande placed four
men n double f gures ed by
J m Stewarts 20 po nts but t
was he f ne defens ve play of
guards Bob Caldwell and
Paul Albanese and the r
excellent ball hand! ng
dur ng the f na m nu es of
pia] wh ch enabled he
vts tors to return to the w n

column af~r two slra ght
osses
R o s now II 10 overal and
S-3 ns de he Moe h rd
p ace Cedarvt e dropped to
11 9 overall a nd 5-l ns de the
eague

the second half enroule ~o Is
v ctilry
Caldwell tallied all II of h s
po nts m the second half and
Albanese tall ed seven of h s
n ne p01n IS Ia e n the game
nclud ng four clutch free
throws n he f nal mmute

The two R o guards he d
Cedarv lie s Kev Wa ters to
hree
pomts
Ro
ou rebounded the home team
29 23 and had 27 turnovers
compared o Cedarvtlle s 21
R o was 18 of 24 a the foul
line
Other Redmen n doub e
f gures ncluded G I Pr ce
w th 15 and J mmy Noe wtth
11 Gary Swam tossed n
seven for he wtnners
Don Smt h led Cedarville
w h 22 po nts
Box score
RIO GRANDE

12

Noe

8 4 20 P
e
Wednesday R o 11 II v stl 54 0 05 S ewa
Abanese
259
Oh o Dom mean 2 7 at St Ca dw e
Swa n 3
27 I 72
Charles H gh School gym TOTALS
CEDARV LLE
62
Co umbus Cedarv I e w II Wa e s
3 Coomes 5
hos T ff n 6 3 th s even ng Wood s o a Lon es 6 o
Bu ne 0 4 4 Sm
9 4 22
Las n ght R o Grande TOTALS
26 062
Sco e
a
ha f me
held the Yellow Jackets
c s R o G and e 3
scoreless he f rst four and Ced a
one half m nu es of play n

Olympic notes
By
United
Press
International
The rat o of medtcal
personnel to aUtletes at the
12th W nter Olymptcs
openmg Wednesday wtll
allnost be I to 1
For the estiipaled I 075
mternal onal
competitilrs
there wtll be 1 000 doctors
nurses and other medical
staff to attend til any possible
IDJurtes suffered at the five
sites
Sk ers cUpped more than
stx seconds off the track
record n lhetr ftrst offlctal
practice for the Wmter
Olymptcs despite late
changes to slow the course
Most of the tilp skters raced
down the 3 145 meter track m
less than 1 mmute SO seconds
far better than tbe previous
record set by Austria s Franz
!Gammer m 1 55 78
The last qua!Htcatlon for
women partlapatmg In tbe
W nter Olymp cs is the
!em mly test All the female
alhieles must take the test
Fatlure means automatic
diBqualiftcation from games
To avoid a repltltloo of past
scandals Dr Eva Marberger
admmlsters a quick painless
test by scrapmg cells from
the mslde of the mouth til
check Ute chromosomes
The Anter can Nordic team
has high hopes for Its chances
1D the 1976 Winter OlympiCS
although Europeans are sure
to dominate the evehts
I think I might come In In
MondiV sOh o Co ege

lasketb• Sco es
Un ed Preu nterna ona
Loyo a

86 Oh o U 82 o

Wes
v g n a
W be o ce 60
s euben
e BJ
Pa
R

o

e h

96

A eg h eny

e

62

prove the plan tiJday 1 wtll
be presented to U S Dtslr ct
Court Judge Robert Carter
for f nal settlement
If a settlement
s
reached
satd 0 Br en
obviously I s then an open
sttuat on to dtscuss any
aspect of consol dalton or
merger (w th he ABA ) or
anyth ng else that m ght
come along ThiS has been
tiltally m the hands of the
players for a long ume
Because of he mjunct on
obtamed by the players

which g ves a team r ghts to
an uns1gned player for only
two years a one year non
perpeluatmng option clause
and the r ght of f rst refusal
where n a team would be able
til match or refuse to match
another team s offer lor a
player who wants to change
teams
The tentat ve agreement
comes after a long battle that
brought several NBA teams
to the verge of bankrup cy m
recent years wh le average
player salar es soared over
aga nst the owners we $100 000 per season and seats
couldn even talk about m some arenas c mbed as
merger
high as htgh as $12 to $ 5 per
Chances of a settlement game
are better than ever sa d
Three ABA teams folded
Fletsher
thts season leav ng seven
The two s des reportedly and w th the 18 NBA
agreed til a modi! ed draft franchises the scene seems
se fo a 24-25 team super
league next yea
However
ton ght s
College ratings
nat onally telev sed game to
be played m Phtladelphta
was never threatened except
perhaps by he weather
Golden State s A Allies
coach ol the West All-Stars
spent 14 hours w th h s young
son en route to Ph ladelph18
startmg out m San Franc sco
and stopp ng along the way
because
of
weather
cond t ons
n
Dallas
Memph s and P tt sburgh
He nsohn and h s three
Boston
players
Dave
Cowens John Havl cek and
JoJo While had to go from
Detro I to Ph ladelph a vta
Wash nglon By late Monday
5
6
rught however most of the
7
players had amved wtth Los
8
Angles
Kareem Abdul
Jabbar among the m ss ng

•

''

get sixth wm

the top 10 and there may be a
medal for B ll Koch--be s
ski ng real well satd cross
country skter Chr stopher
Haines ol Pullman Wash
But the Amertcans who
f mshed cons stently at the
bottom m 1972 at Sapporo
Japan are hkely to be
oulskted agam this year by
the Fmns Russ ans and East
Germans

National hgure skahng
champton Dorothy Hanllll
US hopeful for a gold at the
1976 Olympic Games, said
When I was a little gtrl I
wanted Peggy Flemmg s
autograph but she kind of
snubbed me I was upset and
went crying to my mother
The 19 year-old from
Rivers de Conn satd thst s
why she always gtves
autilgraphs to Ions
There are no fat slobs on
Ute U S bobsled team
Team Manager Forrest
Morgan countered charges
from tbe U S luge squad
saying there are no fat slobs
on my team AU 12 are fully
trained physical specllnens
One member of the luge
team reportedly commented
that the bobbers were
nothmg but big fat people
who are there just to add
weight to tbe sled

Mam

8 5

To edo
Oh o U
Ken S
Bwg
G een
CM h
Ba s
EM h
N

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4

750 0

7
4

6

6

9

B

579

500

8

9

4

5

385 7 0 •

2

6

250

9

25 '
0 8 000 2

Oh

o No

Hde be g

Woos e

438

s on
A

Game

W l Pet W L Pc
6

3

85
5

Three games
setton~ght

Two league games and a
non league affair are slated
tiln ght n the Southern Val ey
Athie lc Conference League
games feature second place
Hannan Trace a South
western and lh rd place
Southern host ng Eastern
North Gall a s league
lead ng P rates host Wahama
m a non league battle North
Gall a w II go after Its 3th
victory n 14 games Hannan
Trace wlll seek tis 11th wm m
15 games and Southern w II
try for Its lOth n 4 out ngs

6 6-4
96600

5

.,.•

TEAM

NEW HAVEN

W VA

2 867
S 688

.-

8 600

W

L

6

J

2

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u bana

3

0 Oom
an
M
Ve on

3

2

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Othen
W L Pel
3 833
3 824
3 5 722
2 5 706

s

•

••

Monday n ght a North
Call a the Eastern H gh gals
evened he r record a I I by
eas 1 defeat ng the Lady
Prates 45 0
V ck Epple led the w nne s
" h a b g 30 pont per
lormance and Den se Dean
threw n f ve Teresa Ed
"ards hauled m n ne of her
team s rebounds After an
n e est ng f rs t qua rter
Easle n took off and lei
everyone beh nd Hunt led all
P ate scorers w th th ee
s

Tuesday n ght at Hannan
Trace and Wednesday the]
!rave o Southwestern
Scor ng Eastern V ck
Epple 30 Den se Dean 5
Te esa Edwards 4 Jan
W1 son 4 Sherr Epple 2
Total 45
North Call a Hunt 3
Mu hond 2 Ho com b 2
Johnson 2 0 ler I Tota 10
By Quarters
E
14293945
NG
6 7 8 10

Eaglets win at
Warren, 30-27
Monday n ghl at Warren
the Eastern Freshmen of
Coach Joe Mtlchum won a
th ller 30-27 After tak ng a
f ve po nt f rst quar er lead
the Eagles go t cold and d dn t
ge hot unt I the la_:;l canto
when they ou scored Warren
I~ to ga n the lead .nd
v ctory
Dan Spencer led Eastern
w h 10 markers and Jell
Goebel and Steve Ll tle each
had sx
As a team Eastern shot 27
pc but tossed n 6 of 13
hrows compared o Warren s
I 3 The Eagles had 22 tu
novers Warren had 33

w

I

Ro G ade
Cec a
e

9
692
9
691
3 6 6..
0 5 661
0 6 615
3 8 69
8 579
550
516
0 524
0 514
9 500
8 8 500
8 8 500
8
462
8 2 400
6
353
2 250
3
6
' 18 no

45-10 winners

E

3 833

13

I

Eastern gn-ls

Eas ern s next game

15

286
9 -431
:186 8 0
U4
Oh o We
6
.43 4 2 250
M dOh o Conte enu

By Quarters
113 20 30
6 14 21 27

••

•

"

'

•

}Uillor High
in split Monday
Arch Rose s Eas~rn Jr
Htg b spl t a pa r of games at
Federa Hockmg Monday
even ng

The e ghth grade trailing
all the way put on a f nal
surge but ran out of lime
bowtng 37 35
Coach Rose wasn I pleased
saytng h s team dtdn I move
the ball well shot only 34 pel
and collected 18 rebounds
Brtan Bssell aga n led the
way w1th 17 po nts and Tun
Enevoldsen had 9 Driggs and
Lavelle had 10 lor Federal
Hock ng Quarter scores
were 7 9 14 17 20..27 35-37
The seventh grade came
out on lop 39-23 But they
were ha d pressed unt I the
htrd quarter when they
outscored the hosts 14-4
Eastern had three hot
shooters h ttmg 50 pet (Joe
Bowers R ck Long and Gene
Cole Cole led all scorers
w th 13 pomts Garrell had 11
for Federal Hocking Eastern
led all the way 5-S 19-14 3318 39-23

vour
GOOd
NeigHBOr

Bill Fletcher
1258 Powell St
Mrddleporl 0

PH 992-7155
See

hm

o al you ramly

nsurance needs

This is
the house
that Jack
built ...
Poor Jack!

Wben he moved tn ~e bought the best fire io
surance avatlable tbe trouble s tbal was 1$
years ago and nettber Jack or but agent bOth
ered to update his policy Well you lutow the
rest - Jack s property Increased 1n vahle over
the years and when fire struck be fouod out
tbe bard way that his Insurance was lnade
quate Poor Jack Don t you be a poor Jack ~ee us today for a free evaluation of your
Insurance
When you see us aon I thmk of msurance
but when you lhmk of msurance see us

'45.95

SAYRE HARDWARE

000

857

Ove 11
W L Pet

5
333

8 59

UNIONDALE NY UPI)
Monday n ghl s ABA game
Ho" e Caldwell s Southern between the New York Nets
Freshmen cage club p eked and Denver Nuggets was
up Is s xth wm aga nst wo postponed due to mclement
losses Sa urday by dowmng weather and rescheduled for
Kyger Creek 34 32 The Feb 9
To nados Ira led the s ors
The Nnggets played at
ali the way un I Dave F n Kentucky Sunday n ght and
dley s corne sho w lh 4 we e unable to leave
seconds lelt gave them the Lomsv Uefor New York when
VIctory They outscored the snow and Ice closed all three
Bobk tens 14 9 n he last New York metropol tan area
a rports
quar er
Sou hern won t at the foul
line s nkmg 8-24 wh e Kyger
In 1966 the Russ ans pu an
ma naged only 4 14 T m
unmanned
satellte on he
B nager ed he I tie Tor
moon
wtth
a
soft landing
nados 11 II 8 po nts J m
In
1975
Prestdent
Ford
0 Br en I ad 6 The tea n had
submttted
h
s
recess
on
19 turnovers
budget
to
Congress
and
Coach Weaver s team was
p edicted !bat the nat on s
led by Ke th Tay o s mne unemployment rate would hit
markers whtle Dan Chapman 8 per cent n 1975-76
had etght The earn had 30
turnovers
Quar er scores were Sou h
ern 5-6 11-5 20 23 and 3l 32

WANT TO PLAY
Al gtr Is n teres ed 10
Pay ng on the Pan the ettes
Sen or softball ean th s
swnmer are asked to attend a
meelmg af er school or
Monday Feb 9a Me gs H gh
School If they are unab e to
attend call 992 50 8 or 992
7092

0

353 Ma one
15 T ff n

Oh o Confe ence

Conf

Cant
W L Pet

533

3

No he n 0

J A .429 1 9 431
J .4 .-29 1 1 500
2 A JJJ 5
3 3
Kenyon
2 S 286 9 9 500
Sou hern D v son

615

5
5

8

M r Un on
Obe n
Ba d wa

6A

Southern Frosh

• • •

U S Alpme sk er Andy Mlll
hit a patch of tce m practice
Monday for the 1976 Wmler
Olymp cs and Injured hts
right leg H 8 coach thinks he
will be aU rtght for the
openmg Thursday
Mlll from Aspen Colo
said tbe course tsn t all Uta!
drastically dangerous and I
tried til go too fast I h t some
Ice spun around and my skt
came off

Oh o Co eve
Baske ba R eco d1
U n ed P en n erna1 on a
Through gam es o Jan J
M d Ame c:an Conte ence
con
A Gam«!s
W L Pc
W L Pc
WM h 8000060000

~ MIDDUP0.-1
~ 'fiHONI M2·2M2

�4 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, Feb. ~ . 1976

~~r=:::==&gt;:::::~::::::=:::::::::=:::::::;=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·:~=·=:=:=~=·======================================:===·===·=·:·=====·=·&gt;:·=·=·=·=·=·=r

Iii

Generation Rap

:::

By lldt·n and ~tit' Buttt·l

~

~ ~!
:,:,
~

•

' 'Talent" Keeps Him Broke

Rap :

Polly's Pointers

I do magic tricks and I'm good at them . The word gels
around . So I'm much in demand for serv ice clubs , PTA 's,
church benefits, parties, vetera ns' homes , hospiU!Is, etc ., etc.
This is great for m y ego, but hard on my wa llet. No one
offers to even buy m y hungry car its gasoline cocktails. Wben
my equipment wears oull've got to replace it. And the time I
take at freebies sometimes comes off my paycheck . {I work
odd hours at a lumberyard. )
How do you turn down some of these invitations and acce pt
others without making people mad ? And how do you get it
across that while you 're all helping shut-ins gratis, a small
honorarium would be a ppreciat ed from clubs that can afford
. it. - THE GREAT 1;10W-DID-HE ? ! Age 17)

lly Poll)' Cramer

POLLY'S PRO,BLEM
DE AR P OLLY - I would
like to know how I can get my
African violets to bloom . The
fl oris! ca n give me no help . ELSIE.
DEAR ELSIE - I find
African violets a re mos t
temperamental. I ean obtain
a beautiful one and before too
long It Is a disaster - som e
people seem to have a way
with them and others do not.
A friend of mine who has
beautiful ones that bloom
profusely says they like sun,

Dear How :
Get businesslike! You 're in de mand . Therefore you can
ask a price, just as any other enterU.iner would . SU!rt with a
· reasonable fee ($10 to $25 perhaps ? ) and raise it as your fame
grows. You'll lose a few clubs, but you'll gain others, because
there's something about a pa id performer that attracts
program chairpersons . Cl'hey often figure if you 'r e for free you
can't be much good .) - HELEN

+++
NOTE FROM SUE : About being selective: Give yourself a
monthly quota (so many charity freebies, th e res t paid ) and
when it's filled, tell people you've got a full calendar .
You've got a hobby he re that could put you through
·
college . Don't give it a way - except to shut-ins!

+++

Rap :

Recently I was fired from a job I'd held over two years
without any complaints about my work before . The reason was
they put in a new manager who goofed off and was a real jerk.
Everybody groaned about him, but I was the one that went to
the boss .
He shaped up a little after that , but you can guess I was on
his list. He kept after me tillllost my temper and before I had
a chance to qUit, he fired me .
I went to the boss, but he said "That's it - you're
through." I don't belong to a union, so !don't have a comeback,
Without a recommendation, and with a black mark against
me, I will have a tough time getting a job. I'd worked up to
night relief manager in this fa st foods resU!urant (my first
after-school job) a nd I don't think it's fair to bri ng in a new guy
that hassles employees because he's so lazy, then fires them ANY HELP?
A.H. :
Not fair, but it happens. Very few people get through a
working life without meeting a stinker or two who
(temporarily ) does them in.
But few employers depend entirely on " recommendations" from former bosses. If you have good
references In the community, you'U find new work . Don't let
one toss-&lt;Jut throw you . - HELEN

+++

NOTE FROM SUE: Maybe the new manager was a
relative of the boss. Or maybe there was a personality clash
here which meant one of you would have to go - and top dog
U!kes preference , even if he's a real dog. Let's hope this had
break leads loa better job. That's often the case , you know. ·

HERE FOR VISIT In 1926, Woodrow Wilson,
Mr . and Mrs . Jerry Da vis, 28th President of the United
the former B. liachtle , a nd States, died at his home in
children Tracie Lynne a nd ·Washington , D.C. He was 68.
Kari Anne of G,oldsbdr o, N.
C., are visiting wi th Mrs .
Audria Arnold, Billy Jeffers
an d Mt . and Mrs. Ron nie
Casto, all of Pomeroy. The
oevoTEP TO THE
Davis family wi ll · return
INTERE ST OF
home Wednesday .
MEIGS-MASON :AREA

The Daily SeMinal-

SEND 'rH E
REFRESHING

Breath of Spring

BOUQUET
For Hospila l,
For Birthday ,
For Anniversary
Now . $ ~
SJo.oo Value · delivered

7

It;:. ~ij)\i'ldf}Jh~
~'~p"'C7'U
59 N. Second St.
Middleport, Ohio

CHESTER L TANN E HILL
Exec . Ed .
ROBERT 'H.OE F L I CH
,
City Editor
P u blis h e d daily ex Cept
Sat u rday by T he Ohio
Va l l e y

P u blish i n g Com
p any , - Ill
Cour t
St

Po me r oy ,

O h io

457 69 '

B usin ess O ff ice P h one 992 2156. Ed i to r i a l Ptwn e 99 2

2157 .

~ econ d

c la ss

po s t a ge

p atd at P o m ero y, Oh io

N a t ional
ad v er t i s.in g
repres e nt at ive
W a rd ·G rit_t i th . C o m p a ny , In c. ,
Bo t l tn el lt &amp; Ga llaQher Di y
757 Third A ve .• N e w York '
N . Y . 100 17.
'
S \Jb s cr i ption
rat es :
Del 1.ver ed by carri e r whe r e
ava1 t ab t e 75 cen t s •per
we e k . By Mo tor
Rout e
w here carr ier se r Vic e not
available , One
month
$3 . 25 . By m a i l i n Oh io and

W. ·

Va , One Year , $22.00;
S•x month s., $1 1. 50 ; Three

mo n th s , $7 oo . El s ewhe r e
$26 .00 ye ar ; Si x months
S 1J .50 ; thr e e m ont h s , S7 .50 .
Su bs cr ipt ion pr ice inc l udes
Sunda y T im es Sentine L

but not too , much or too hot,

SHERR! MARSHALL

Sherri Marshall honored
Sherri Marsha ll , a victim of
cystic fibrosi s was honored
Saturday with ~ surprise
party in observa nce of her
lith birthday . The par ty was
hos ted by the Juniors or the
American Legion Auxiliary ,
Drew We bster P os t 39, a nd
held at the home of Mrs.
Harry Davis, Sprin g Ave .
A valenti ne theme was
carried Out in the decorations
arranged by Anna Wiles.
Games were conducted by
Mrs . Robert Cou c h with
prizes goi ng to Robin Camp ·
bell, Anna Wile s, P a ula
Kloes, Sh err i Mars ha ll,
Adam Edgar , a guest, and
Denise Marshall.
Gifts were presented to
'Sherri a nd pictures were
taken. The r efre shment table
was centered with a birthday
cake pre sented by Mrs .
David Cumings . The ca ke

decora tions featured a birthday girl in blue bib overa lls
and r e~ shirt looking a t a
large red hea rt and was in ,.c ribed "Our Birth day Girl is
also our Valentine ." The cake
was fl a nked with white ta pers
in red velvet r ose holders.
Mr s . Couc h se r ved th e
cake , Mrs. Grace PriJ lt, the
punch , and Cheryl Le hew , the
ice cream snowm en. The
birthday na pkins a nd par ty
ha ts we re di stribu ted b y
J ennifer Couch. Others atlen din g wer e Mrs. Ma ry
Martin, Pam Powe rs, Mrs.
Charl es Ma rshall, Pe ggy
Snider and Paula Kloes . ·
gif ts
we re
Se ndin g
America n Leg ion Auxilia ry,
Unit 39, the JuJiior Auxiliary
members. Peggy Girolam i,
,Jil Ba rker , Mrs . Frank
Powe r s a nd Mr s. Clara
Hower y.

Mrs. King entertained
fl. layette shower honori ng
Mrs . Jim King was he ld
Friday night at the home of
Mrs. Clare nce Ki ng, Middleport. Hostesses were Mrs.
Neulzling , Mrs .
Nan cy
Barbara Warden , Mrs. Kathy .
Elias, Mrs . Sharon King and
Mrs . Ma rtha King.
Pin k , wh ile a nd blu e
s treame r s with a s tork were

suspended over the basinette
where the gif ts were placed .
Games were pla yed with
prize s
going
to Mrs .
Rosemary Hysell , Mrs . Sarah
Fowler , Mrs ..Jean nie Wells ,
Mrs . Margaret Jus tis a nd
Mrs . Sharon Neu tzling. The
door prize was won by Mrs.
Garnet Ashley.
Cakes decorated with pihk
and blue bootie re plicas, ice
cream . poU!to c hips , Kooi
Aid·, donuts and coffee were
served .
Other g uesl' at the shower
were Mrs. Ruth Smith, Mrs.
Mary McCar ty, Mrs. Marie

Stein er , Janelle l'eutzling ,
Mrs. Nancy Manley, Cr ystal
a nd Tra c y, Mr s . Cri nni.e
Swi s he r , Mrs . Fran ces
Ma nl ey, Su s ie ari d Li sa ,
Rowena Dun n, Law-a Sc ott ,
Mrs . Dorothy Br yan , Mrs.
Marie Manley , Di xie Cadle ,
Mrs . Sharon Ashley, Zelia
Rile v, Mrs. Dollie Dav is ,
Mrs : Sue Metzger and Shelly,
Mrs. Pal sy Ogd in and
Melissa, Mrs. Merle Ma nl ey,
Lis a We ll s, Mr s. Be tty
Frede rick and Beth, J oyce
Gu thri e and Ta ra, Mrs .
Brenda Hyse ll, Mrs . She lly
Murray ,
Mrs .
Di a ne
Fre der ick , Missy King and
Erica Elias.
Se nd1ng gifts we re Mrs .
El oise Stile s, Mr s . Edith

since U will burn the leaves.
Do. you feed yours with a good
fertilizer'! Some are sold that
are just for violets. Fish
emulsion Is also guud . I was
also told that they seem to
nourish better in house s with
steam heat rather than gas .
Water with warm water and
do not wet the leaves . Do not
let water stand in the sa ucer
under the pot. My friend says
she has also done a rather
unorthodox thing when hers
are not doing too well . She
puts the plant under the
faucet with the water running
very " . arm and washed the
plant. Th is provides such a
shock that they usually start
to bloom. She knows of no
profe ssional authority for this

SERVICES ATTENDED
Mr . and Mr s. Ev e r e tt
Bachner were in Hilliard
Friday to a tte nd funer a l
se1vices for Jon Schaaf, 41 ,

former Middlepor t res ident.
The serv ices were conducted
at the .Junk Funeral Home .
While in Columbus Mr . a nd
Mrs . Bachner visi ted Miss
Mary Sc haaf and Mr. and
Mrs . Donald Br own a n d
ch il dr e n Chri s toph e r a nd
Stacey of Westerville. Th ey
were Ft i d;;~ y ev e n i n ~ gues l'i
of . Mr. and Mrs . Euge ne
Scha af, Ar lington . Miss Mary
Scha af accompan ied Mr . and
Mrs. Bac hner lo Middleport
for a weekend visit .
SALE PLAN NED
The Meigs High School
cos me tology &lt;:I C:J ss w ill
sponsor a r ummage sa le
Friday and Sat urday, 9 a .m .
to 6 p.m ., in lhe baseme nt of
tllf~ Mason ic Templ e, Mid·
dleporl.

Dudding.

200 ct. box

FOOD
~~~·.$339

COTTAGE CHEESE

No. 2lfz can

Middleport; Ohio

CAROLINA

HEAD

LETTUCE
FOR

ORANGES

$1 5

II.

69~

PEACHES
No.2%

49

~

,

You' ll Like Ovr Qvallty
Wa y of Doing Business.
GMAC FINANCING
992 ·5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'lil6 : 00

LB.

992-5 130

•

FRESH

" Tri-Part it e ' ' Frenc h Pu rse . . .

KEY GAR D" . .

" QUALITY and
SERVICE "

...... .. .

$10. 00

Court Sl.

HEAD

Pomeroy

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

CUBED PORK
~1.59
PORK STEAK lb. sl

3/'1

Reg. Garlic &amp; Thick Sliced
Dubuque Bologna .... ..... lb. 99c
Dubuque Sliced
BACON .... ...... .... .. 12oz. 1.29

PAPER
CORONET

TOILET TISSUE
8~~$139

--

FRI ONI Y
- ltil"

PEPSI and 7-UP
Regular or Diet

Qua r l Ja r

box

2 Ca n
lb.

I r,

I·

TOWN HOUSE CRACKEl
16 oz..

3 17 oz . $}00
G&amp;W
Cil ns .

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

Golden Isle

v:-

~~ ;
.. 1.
1

,

69

J-Ib . .

tan

'
!'I'. ·.

t

-&gt;_,

'

•

•

•••

· ·

DAIRY LANE

CHUNK
TUNA

ICE CREAM

59~

6 112 oz . Can

$}29 With
Coupon

Ex~i~es 2-7-76
Twm Clites Gateway

89~

Gal.

GOLDEN ISLE

TOILET
TISSUE

CUT
GREEN BEANS
4 15111 $100

FRENCH
FRIES
2 ~~~ 69~

'

BETSY ROSS
WHOLE WHEAT
BREAD

DRY
TRASH BAGS
NAVY BEANS
· 10 ct. Pkg . 3g:
I2 oz . P~q. 49~

OZ •.

Cans

GOLDEN ISLE
FROZEN
ORANGE JUICE

.6

ss~

APPLE
SAUCE
3 16Can&lt; 8 9
·

oz.

_ ....___...

COUPON

1-LB.

LOAF
GOLDEN ISLE

MACARONI &amp;
CHEESE DINNER

GOLDEN ISLE

$}39

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Cans

. 7% OZ. BOX

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FOLGER'S COFFEE ·:r

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12

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8-16 oz. bottles

STARKIST

TEEN QUEEN

2112 Ca n

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Coca-Cola

3/99~

$159

GAL.

LIBBY'S
PEACHES

$100

oz.

MILK

CHARM IN

4 Roll Pack . 79~

Golden Isle
W.K.Corn

PURE VEGETABLE
SHORTENING

¢With
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, , GAL 59~

3 17Cans

HOMOGENIZED

TEEN QUEEN

TOMATO
SOUP
5 lOoz. $}00

OLOROX
BLEACH

GATEWAY
BREAD
l -ib. Loaves

BROUGHTON

CAMPBELLS

5-lb.
Bag

$}59

COUPON

.

SUGAR

89~

QUIK

00

KEEBLER

NO. IDS

PEAS ·

29~

NESTLES

COUPON

49

TEEN QUEEN

MIRACLE
WHIP

LETTUCE

Any Amount ... Our Good
GROUND BEEF.......... lb. 79c
Sewanee Bacon
ENDS&amp; PIECES .•. 31b.bx . .l.S.9

49e

MILK

GOLD MEDAL
FLOUR
5 ~~g 99~

FRESH CRISP

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GoesSier's Jewelry Store

FRENCH CITY.
USDA CHOICE

jumbo roll

10 oz. Can

21bs.29e

•

HOMOGENIZED

YELLOW
POPCORN

CABBAGE

A rose is a rose is a rose! And these arc pretly c ratty.
Btendinq the b,J3Ju'1ifully deta iled .look or pe tit point wi th
s leek Finesse Co wh1 de . In g lowm g c o lOrs!

LB.

YOU'LL
SAVE
WITH
US! '
en Isle
C.S: Corn
3 I7Canozs. $}00

BROUGHTONS

BETTY ZANE

SOLID HEADS

f'OMEROY

49e

BROUGHTON
2% MILK

·GARDNER"
cv_'"''/it 6})oiJJt I

oz.

can

2
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We've reduced the following items
to an everyd~y low shelf price.
-SHOP AND COMPARE.

DOZ.

You will recdvc a dollar if
Po ll y use s your favorite
homemaking
idea ,
Pet

Reuter-Bropn lnsuranc;e

12

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

LARGE
CALIFORNIA
ORANGES

Peeve, Polly's Problem ur
solution to ·a · problem . Write
Polly' in care of this newspnper.

STANDARD
OYSTERS

STEAK

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$}19
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NO. 105
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MEAT LOAF

CHUCK ROAST
ENGLISH ROAST
POT ROAST
STEW BEEF
LB.

CHUCK

traded by original owner .

~---------' · - -_,;Till p.m. S~t.

~·159

49e

power , a 1r, good ,t ires,

Arriving Daily

heritage house

BONELESS

U.S.DA OIDICE

Wh i te wit~ b lack V-roof.

CRISCO OIL

PORK &amp; BEANS

24 oz.

CHUCK ROAST
c

SUPREME CPE.

9-S Mon. lhru
Thurs. &amp; Sal .
9-8 Fri.

BEEF

CHOICE

72 OLDS CUTLASS

Spring Shoes

GROUND

U.S.D.A.

The Meigs County United retreat will be for ConMethodist Youth Council , in a firma lion
Classes
and
meeting Sunday a t the Meigs Spiritua l Renewal
and
Youth Center in Rutland, Growth .
appointed a committee to
All Unite d Methodist
plan for a Bicentennial Bike- youths or young adults inHike that will involve each terested should contact the
United Methodist Church in Meigs Ministries Office ai
Me igs County.
992-7400.
Committee members are
Laura Hoover (chairperson ),
Gene Shively, Ellen Rice,
This Week·s specl•l
Steve Trussel , Jim Jeffers
(president of the council) and
I he Rev . William Sydenstri cke r (Y outh Coun.cil
coordinator) .
Another activity of the
USED CARS
Council will be a weekend
retreat for Jr .-Sr . high youths
and young adul Is on March
19-21 at Camp Franci s
Asbury at Rio Grande. The

HANOVER
VALLEY BELL

FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE
D SUNDAYS
FRESH

Committee to plan hike

11~JJ

PUFFS
FACIAL TISSUES

DOG

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with.the ver y small
ty pe news pap e r s use for
printing legal notices . It is so
small one . ha s to use a
magnifying glass to read
them . I do enjoy the part you
play in making a newspaper
more enjoyable to read . CARRIE.
Thanks for the compliment,
Carrie.
DEAR POLLY - My
Pointer is for Phyllis and
others who have star chy food
burned on good pans . Fill pan
with wa rm w a ter , a dd
several tablespoons laundry
pre-soak and let stand all
night. That black will rinse
right off with no r e al
scrubbing nee ded . - MRS. F .
W. M.
DE AR POLLY - Wben
feeding baby his soup , do .you
get as much outside as inside? Try foldin g a paper
towel and tuck it inside the
pocket to his bib so it collects
any puddl es that mi ght
collect in the pocket.
In stead of buy ing e xpensive foot powders and
deodoran ts for your shoes use
ordinary ba king soda. Put it
in and lea ve over night. Then
sha ke out any sw-plus before
putting the shoes on next
time . - MARY T.
DEAR POLLY - I live in a
mobile home . When my
automatic wa sher is on its
fin a l spin cycle, it causes a lot
of vibration. Th is in turn
makes some of m y lighter
home accessories "walk."
Now I put a sma ll amount of
norists ' clay on the bottom of
statues, vases , etc. to ho ld
them secure . ThJS clay can
a lso be used. to hold some
types of pictures s trai&amp;ht on
U1e wall. Apply a little dab on
a coup le of corners of the
back of the fr a me. I find
many uses for th is cla y and it
is inex: pensive and can be
bo ug ht at .must '' dime "
stores. - PENNY .

OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9:00

INSURANCE SERVICE

RE VIVAL PLANNED
ROC K SPR INGS A
re vi va l is plan ned at the Rock
Spr in gs Unite d Me thod ist
Churc h beginning Munday
~'eb . 8 through Sunday, Feb.
VISIT ENJOYED
Weeke nd gues ts of Mrs. 15 a t 7 :30 ni g htly . Th e
Sylvia Carm a n and son s e van gelist will be the Rev.
Br uce and Dan , Roc k Robert }laydn, pa stor of the
Springs, were Mr . and Mrs . Pomeroy a nd Ches ter United
Gary Carman and children Me thodist Chur ches . There
Rhonda, Donald, Da vid and will be specia l si nging each
Gary, Jr ., Pataskala. Other evening. The Rev. Willia m
recent visitors were Mr . and · Syd e ns lri c ker , pa s tor at
Mrs .
Rona ld
Ca r man , Rock Springs , invi tes the
publi c to a ttend .
Columbus .

CASH SAVER

I

but it has worked for her- POLLY .

•

plans
for
distributing
religious materials in Mid·
dleport, Pomeroy, A~/lens,
Gall i poli s , Wilkesville ,
Tuppers Plains and New
Haven, W. Va . In the group
working with the materials
will be Rockfor~ ·Spurlock,
Danny Richards, Jeannine
Craft, Tommy Kelly, Dale
Saxton, Roy Northup and
Frank Welles .

Officers were elec ted at a
recent meeting of the Middleport United PentecosU!I
Churc h Youth .
They are Mark Satllers,
president ; Jane ll Kelly,
secreU!ry ; Teresa Shaffer,
treas ure r ; Paul J ones ,
prom oti on and publicity
direc tor , and Michae l Zirkle,
youth director .
Re ports were giv e n on
,

COMPLETE

Hermann and Mrs. Marie

I

l

New ways to treat
troublesome violets

Middleport group
elects new officers

·1

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Expires 2-7-76 Coupon. · ~
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�4 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, Feb. ~ . 1976

~~r=:::==&gt;:::::~::::::=:::::::::=:::::::;=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·:~=·=:=:=~=·======================================:===·===·=·:·=====·=·&gt;:·=·=·=·=·=·=r

Iii

Generation Rap

:::

By lldt·n and ~tit' Buttt·l

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' 'Talent" Keeps Him Broke

Rap :

Polly's Pointers

I do magic tricks and I'm good at them . The word gels
around . So I'm much in demand for serv ice clubs , PTA 's,
church benefits, parties, vetera ns' homes , hospiU!Is, etc ., etc.
This is great for m y ego, but hard on my wa llet. No one
offers to even buy m y hungry car its gasoline cocktails. Wben
my equipment wears oull've got to replace it. And the time I
take at freebies sometimes comes off my paycheck . {I work
odd hours at a lumberyard. )
How do you turn down some of these invitations and acce pt
others without making people mad ? And how do you get it
across that while you 're all helping shut-ins gratis, a small
honorarium would be a ppreciat ed from clubs that can afford
. it. - THE GREAT 1;10W-DID-HE ? ! Age 17)

lly Poll)' Cramer

POLLY'S PRO,BLEM
DE AR P OLLY - I would
like to know how I can get my
African violets to bloom . The
fl oris! ca n give me no help . ELSIE.
DEAR ELSIE - I find
African violets a re mos t
temperamental. I ean obtain
a beautiful one and before too
long It Is a disaster - som e
people seem to have a way
with them and others do not.
A friend of mine who has
beautiful ones that bloom
profusely says they like sun,

Dear How :
Get businesslike! You 're in de mand . Therefore you can
ask a price, just as any other enterU.iner would . SU!rt with a
· reasonable fee ($10 to $25 perhaps ? ) and raise it as your fame
grows. You'll lose a few clubs, but you'll gain others, because
there's something about a pa id performer that attracts
program chairpersons . Cl'hey often figure if you 'r e for free you
can't be much good .) - HELEN

+++
NOTE FROM SUE : About being selective: Give yourself a
monthly quota (so many charity freebies, th e res t paid ) and
when it's filled, tell people you've got a full calendar .
You've got a hobby he re that could put you through
·
college . Don't give it a way - except to shut-ins!

+++

Rap :

Recently I was fired from a job I'd held over two years
without any complaints about my work before . The reason was
they put in a new manager who goofed off and was a real jerk.
Everybody groaned about him, but I was the one that went to
the boss .
He shaped up a little after that , but you can guess I was on
his list. He kept after me tillllost my temper and before I had
a chance to qUit, he fired me .
I went to the boss, but he said "That's it - you're
through." I don't belong to a union, so !don't have a comeback,
Without a recommendation, and with a black mark against
me, I will have a tough time getting a job. I'd worked up to
night relief manager in this fa st foods resU!urant (my first
after-school job) a nd I don't think it's fair to bri ng in a new guy
that hassles employees because he's so lazy, then fires them ANY HELP?
A.H. :
Not fair, but it happens. Very few people get through a
working life without meeting a stinker or two who
(temporarily ) does them in.
But few employers depend entirely on " recommendations" from former bosses. If you have good
references In the community, you'U find new work . Don't let
one toss-&lt;Jut throw you . - HELEN

+++

NOTE FROM SUE: Maybe the new manager was a
relative of the boss. Or maybe there was a personality clash
here which meant one of you would have to go - and top dog
U!kes preference , even if he's a real dog. Let's hope this had
break leads loa better job. That's often the case , you know. ·

HERE FOR VISIT In 1926, Woodrow Wilson,
Mr . and Mrs . Jerry Da vis, 28th President of the United
the former B. liachtle , a nd States, died at his home in
children Tracie Lynne a nd ·Washington , D.C. He was 68.
Kari Anne of G,oldsbdr o, N.
C., are visiting wi th Mrs .
Audria Arnold, Billy Jeffers
an d Mt . and Mrs. Ron nie
Casto, all of Pomeroy. The
oevoTEP TO THE
Davis family wi ll · return
INTERE ST OF
home Wednesday .
MEIGS-MASON :AREA

The Daily SeMinal-

SEND 'rH E
REFRESHING

Breath of Spring

BOUQUET
For Hospila l,
For Birthday ,
For Anniversary
Now . $ ~
SJo.oo Value · delivered

7

It;:. ~ij)\i'ldf}Jh~
~'~p"'C7'U
59 N. Second St.
Middleport, Ohio

CHESTER L TANN E HILL
Exec . Ed .
ROBERT 'H.OE F L I CH
,
City Editor
P u blis h e d daily ex Cept
Sat u rday by T he Ohio
Va l l e y

P u blish i n g Com
p any , - Ill
Cour t
St

Po me r oy ,

O h io

457 69 '

B usin ess O ff ice P h one 992 2156. Ed i to r i a l Ptwn e 99 2

2157 .

~ econ d

c la ss

po s t a ge

p atd at P o m ero y, Oh io

N a t ional
ad v er t i s.in g
repres e nt at ive
W a rd ·G rit_t i th . C o m p a ny , In c. ,
Bo t l tn el lt &amp; Ga llaQher Di y
757 Third A ve .• N e w York '
N . Y . 100 17.
'
S \Jb s cr i ption
rat es :
Del 1.ver ed by carri e r whe r e
ava1 t ab t e 75 cen t s •per
we e k . By Mo tor
Rout e
w here carr ier se r Vic e not
available , One
month
$3 . 25 . By m a i l i n Oh io and

W. ·

Va , One Year , $22.00;
S•x month s., $1 1. 50 ; Three

mo n th s , $7 oo . El s ewhe r e
$26 .00 ye ar ; Si x months
S 1J .50 ; thr e e m ont h s , S7 .50 .
Su bs cr ipt ion pr ice inc l udes
Sunda y T im es Sentine L

but not too , much or too hot,

SHERR! MARSHALL

Sherri Marshall honored
Sherri Marsha ll , a victim of
cystic fibrosi s was honored
Saturday with ~ surprise
party in observa nce of her
lith birthday . The par ty was
hos ted by the Juniors or the
American Legion Auxiliary ,
Drew We bster P os t 39, a nd
held at the home of Mrs.
Harry Davis, Sprin g Ave .
A valenti ne theme was
carried Out in the decorations
arranged by Anna Wiles.
Games were conducted by
Mrs . Robert Cou c h with
prizes goi ng to Robin Camp ·
bell, Anna Wile s, P a ula
Kloes, Sh err i Mars ha ll,
Adam Edgar , a guest, and
Denise Marshall.
Gifts were presented to
'Sherri a nd pictures were
taken. The r efre shment table
was centered with a birthday
cake pre sented by Mrs .
David Cumings . The ca ke

decora tions featured a birthday girl in blue bib overa lls
and r e~ shirt looking a t a
large red hea rt and was in ,.c ribed "Our Birth day Girl is
also our Valentine ." The cake
was fl a nked with white ta pers
in red velvet r ose holders.
Mr s . Couc h se r ved th e
cake , Mrs. Grace PriJ lt, the
punch , and Cheryl Le hew , the
ice cream snowm en. The
birthday na pkins a nd par ty
ha ts we re di stribu ted b y
J ennifer Couch. Others atlen din g wer e Mrs. Ma ry
Martin, Pam Powe rs, Mrs.
Charl es Ma rshall, Pe ggy
Snider and Paula Kloes . ·
gif ts
we re
Se ndin g
America n Leg ion Auxilia ry,
Unit 39, the JuJiior Auxiliary
members. Peggy Girolam i,
,Jil Ba rker , Mrs . Frank
Powe r s a nd Mr s. Clara
Hower y.

Mrs. King entertained
fl. layette shower honori ng
Mrs . Jim King was he ld
Friday night at the home of
Mrs. Clare nce Ki ng, Middleport. Hostesses were Mrs.
Neulzling , Mrs .
Nan cy
Barbara Warden , Mrs. Kathy .
Elias, Mrs . Sharon King and
Mrs . Ma rtha King.
Pin k , wh ile a nd blu e
s treame r s with a s tork were

suspended over the basinette
where the gif ts were placed .
Games were pla yed with
prize s
going
to Mrs .
Rosemary Hysell , Mrs . Sarah
Fowler , Mrs ..Jean nie Wells ,
Mrs . Margaret Jus tis a nd
Mrs . Sharon Neu tzling. The
door prize was won by Mrs.
Garnet Ashley.
Cakes decorated with pihk
and blue bootie re plicas, ice
cream . poU!to c hips , Kooi
Aid·, donuts and coffee were
served .
Other g uesl' at the shower
were Mrs. Ruth Smith, Mrs.
Mary McCar ty, Mrs. Marie

Stein er , Janelle l'eutzling ,
Mrs. Nancy Manley, Cr ystal
a nd Tra c y, Mr s . Cri nni.e
Swi s he r , Mrs . Fran ces
Ma nl ey, Su s ie ari d Li sa ,
Rowena Dun n, Law-a Sc ott ,
Mrs . Dorothy Br yan , Mrs.
Marie Manley , Di xie Cadle ,
Mrs . Sharon Ashley, Zelia
Rile v, Mrs. Dollie Dav is ,
Mrs : Sue Metzger and Shelly,
Mrs. Pal sy Ogd in and
Melissa, Mrs. Merle Ma nl ey,
Lis a We ll s, Mr s. Be tty
Frede rick and Beth, J oyce
Gu thri e and Ta ra, Mrs .
Brenda Hyse ll, Mrs . She lly
Murray ,
Mrs .
Di a ne
Fre der ick , Missy King and
Erica Elias.
Se nd1ng gifts we re Mrs .
El oise Stile s, Mr s . Edith

since U will burn the leaves.
Do. you feed yours with a good
fertilizer'! Some are sold that
are just for violets. Fish
emulsion Is also guud . I was
also told that they seem to
nourish better in house s with
steam heat rather than gas .
Water with warm water and
do not wet the leaves . Do not
let water stand in the sa ucer
under the pot. My friend says
she has also done a rather
unorthodox thing when hers
are not doing too well . She
puts the plant under the
faucet with the water running
very " . arm and washed the
plant. Th is provides such a
shock that they usually start
to bloom. She knows of no
profe ssional authority for this

SERVICES ATTENDED
Mr . and Mr s. Ev e r e tt
Bachner were in Hilliard
Friday to a tte nd funer a l
se1vices for Jon Schaaf, 41 ,

former Middlepor t res ident.
The serv ices were conducted
at the .Junk Funeral Home .
While in Columbus Mr . a nd
Mrs . Bachner visi ted Miss
Mary Sc haaf and Mr. and
Mrs . Donald Br own a n d
ch il dr e n Chri s toph e r a nd
Stacey of Westerville. Th ey
were Ft i d;;~ y ev e n i n ~ gues l'i
of . Mr. and Mrs . Euge ne
Scha af, Ar lington . Miss Mary
Scha af accompan ied Mr . and
Mrs. Bac hner lo Middleport
for a weekend visit .
SALE PLAN NED
The Meigs High School
cos me tology &lt;:I C:J ss w ill
sponsor a r ummage sa le
Friday and Sat urday, 9 a .m .
to 6 p.m ., in lhe baseme nt of
tllf~ Mason ic Templ e, Mid·
dleporl.

Dudding.

200 ct. box

FOOD
~~~·.$339

COTTAGE CHEESE

No. 2lfz can

Middleport; Ohio

CAROLINA

HEAD

LETTUCE
FOR

ORANGES

$1 5

II.

69~

PEACHES
No.2%

49

~

,

You' ll Like Ovr Qvallty
Wa y of Doing Business.
GMAC FINANCING
992 ·5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'lil6 : 00

LB.

992-5 130

•

FRESH

" Tri-Part it e ' ' Frenc h Pu rse . . .

KEY GAR D" . .

" QUALITY and
SERVICE "

...... .. .

$10. 00

Court Sl.

HEAD

Pomeroy

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

CUBED PORK
~1.59
PORK STEAK lb. sl

3/'1

Reg. Garlic &amp; Thick Sliced
Dubuque Bologna .... ..... lb. 99c
Dubuque Sliced
BACON .... ...... .... .. 12oz. 1.29

PAPER
CORONET

TOILET TISSUE
8~~$139

--

FRI ONI Y
- ltil"

PEPSI and 7-UP
Regular or Diet

Qua r l Ja r

box

2 Ca n
lb.

I r,

I·

TOWN HOUSE CRACKEl
16 oz..

3 17 oz . $}00
G&amp;W
Cil ns .

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Golden Isle

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DAIRY LANE

CHUNK
TUNA

ICE CREAM

59~

6 112 oz . Can

$}29 With
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89~

Gal.

GOLDEN ISLE

TOILET
TISSUE

CUT
GREEN BEANS
4 15111 $100

FRENCH
FRIES
2 ~~~ 69~

'

BETSY ROSS
WHOLE WHEAT
BREAD

DRY
TRASH BAGS
NAVY BEANS
· 10 ct. Pkg . 3g:
I2 oz . P~q. 49~

OZ •.

Cans

GOLDEN ISLE
FROZEN
ORANGE JUICE

.6

ss~

APPLE
SAUCE
3 16Can&lt; 8 9
·

oz.

_ ....___...

COUPON

1-LB.

LOAF
GOLDEN ISLE

MACARONI &amp;
CHEESE DINNER

GOLDEN ISLE

$}39

.6 oz._
Cans

. 7% OZ. BOX

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FOLGER'S COFFEE ·:r

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12

Teen Queen Frozen

- .__._-.. . .""'.
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8-16 oz. bottles

STARKIST

TEEN QUEEN

2112 Ca n

.

Coca-Cola

3/99~

$159

GAL.

LIBBY'S
PEACHES

$100

oz.

MILK

CHARM IN

4 Roll Pack . 79~

Golden Isle
W.K.Corn

PURE VEGETABLE
SHORTENING

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, , GAL 59~

3 17Cans

HOMOGENIZED

TEEN QUEEN

TOMATO
SOUP
5 lOoz. $}00

OLOROX
BLEACH

GATEWAY
BREAD
l -ib. Loaves

BROUGHTON

CAMPBELLS

5-lb.
Bag

$}59

COUPON

.

SUGAR

89~

QUIK

00

KEEBLER

NO. IDS

PEAS ·

29~

NESTLES

COUPON

49

TEEN QUEEN

MIRACLE
WHIP

LETTUCE

Any Amount ... Our Good
GROUND BEEF.......... lb. 79c
Sewanee Bacon
ENDS&amp; PIECES .•. 31b.bx . .l.S.9

49e

MILK

GOLD MEDAL
FLOUR
5 ~~g 99~

FRESH CRISP

. . I S.OO

GoesSier's Jewelry Store

FRENCH CITY.
USDA CHOICE

jumbo roll

10 oz. Can

21bs.29e

•

HOMOGENIZED

YELLOW
POPCORN

CABBAGE

A rose is a rose is a rose! And these arc pretly c ratty.
Btendinq the b,J3Ju'1ifully deta iled .look or pe tit point wi th
s leek Finesse Co wh1 de . In g lowm g c o lOrs!

LB.

YOU'LL
SAVE
WITH
US! '
en Isle
C.S: Corn
3 I7Canozs. $}00

BROUGHTONS

BETTY ZANE

SOLID HEADS

f'OMEROY

49e

BROUGHTON
2% MILK

·GARDNER"
cv_'"''/it 6})oiJJt I

oz.

can

2
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We've reduced the following items
to an everyd~y low shelf price.
-SHOP AND COMPARE.

DOZ.

You will recdvc a dollar if
Po ll y use s your favorite
homemaking
idea ,
Pet

Reuter-Bropn lnsuranc;e

12

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

LARGE
CALIFORNIA
ORANGES

Peeve, Polly's Problem ur
solution to ·a · problem . Write
Polly' in care of this newspnper.

STANDARD
OYSTERS

STEAK

i

Electra Per k, Reg . Drip

$}19
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NO. 105
1·lb .
Can

$1
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LIQUID DETERGENT
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69

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LB.

LES'S
HOMEMADE
MEAT LOAF

CHUCK ROAST
ENGLISH ROAST
POT ROAST
STEW BEEF
LB.

CHUCK

traded by original owner .

~---------' · - -_,;Till p.m. S~t.

~·159

49e

power , a 1r, good ,t ires,

Arriving Daily

heritage house

BONELESS

U.S.DA OIDICE

Wh i te wit~ b lack V-roof.

CRISCO OIL

PORK &amp; BEANS

24 oz.

CHUCK ROAST
c

SUPREME CPE.

9-S Mon. lhru
Thurs. &amp; Sal .
9-8 Fri.

BEEF

CHOICE

72 OLDS CUTLASS

Spring Shoes

GROUND

U.S.D.A.

The Meigs County United retreat will be for ConMethodist Youth Council , in a firma lion
Classes
and
meeting Sunday a t the Meigs Spiritua l Renewal
and
Youth Center in Rutland, Growth .
appointed a committee to
All Unite d Methodist
plan for a Bicentennial Bike- youths or young adults inHike that will involve each terested should contact the
United Methodist Church in Meigs Ministries Office ai
Me igs County.
992-7400.
Committee members are
Laura Hoover (chairperson ),
Gene Shively, Ellen Rice,
This Week·s specl•l
Steve Trussel , Jim Jeffers
(president of the council) and
I he Rev . William Sydenstri cke r (Y outh Coun.cil
coordinator) .
Another activity of the
USED CARS
Council will be a weekend
retreat for Jr .-Sr . high youths
and young adul Is on March
19-21 at Camp Franci s
Asbury at Rio Grande. The

HANOVER
VALLEY BELL

FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE
D SUNDAYS
FRESH

Committee to plan hike

11~JJ

PUFFS
FACIAL TISSUES

DOG

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with.the ver y small
ty pe news pap e r s use for
printing legal notices . It is so
small one . ha s to use a
magnifying glass to read
them . I do enjoy the part you
play in making a newspaper
more enjoyable to read . CARRIE.
Thanks for the compliment,
Carrie.
DEAR POLLY - My
Pointer is for Phyllis and
others who have star chy food
burned on good pans . Fill pan
with wa rm w a ter , a dd
several tablespoons laundry
pre-soak and let stand all
night. That black will rinse
right off with no r e al
scrubbing nee ded . - MRS. F .
W. M.
DE AR POLLY - Wben
feeding baby his soup , do .you
get as much outside as inside? Try foldin g a paper
towel and tuck it inside the
pocket to his bib so it collects
any puddl es that mi ght
collect in the pocket.
In stead of buy ing e xpensive foot powders and
deodoran ts for your shoes use
ordinary ba king soda. Put it
in and lea ve over night. Then
sha ke out any sw-plus before
putting the shoes on next
time . - MARY T.
DEAR POLLY - I live in a
mobile home . When my
automatic wa sher is on its
fin a l spin cycle, it causes a lot
of vibration. Th is in turn
makes some of m y lighter
home accessories "walk."
Now I put a sma ll amount of
norists ' clay on the bottom of
statues, vases , etc. to ho ld
them secure . ThJS clay can
a lso be used. to hold some
types of pictures s trai&amp;ht on
U1e wall. Apply a little dab on
a coup le of corners of the
back of the fr a me. I find
many uses for th is cla y and it
is inex: pensive and can be
bo ug ht at .must '' dime "
stores. - PENNY .

OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9:00

INSURANCE SERVICE

RE VIVAL PLANNED
ROC K SPR INGS A
re vi va l is plan ned at the Rock
Spr in gs Unite d Me thod ist
Churc h beginning Munday
~'eb . 8 through Sunday, Feb.
VISIT ENJOYED
Weeke nd gues ts of Mrs. 15 a t 7 :30 ni g htly . Th e
Sylvia Carm a n and son s e van gelist will be the Rev.
Br uce and Dan , Roc k Robert }laydn, pa stor of the
Springs, were Mr . and Mrs . Pomeroy a nd Ches ter United
Gary Carman and children Me thodist Chur ches . There
Rhonda, Donald, Da vid and will be specia l si nging each
Gary, Jr ., Pataskala. Other evening. The Rev. Willia m
recent visitors were Mr . and · Syd e ns lri c ker , pa s tor at
Mrs .
Rona ld
Ca r man , Rock Springs , invi tes the
publi c to a ttend .
Columbus .

CASH SAVER

I

but it has worked for her- POLLY .

•

plans
for
distributing
religious materials in Mid·
dleport, Pomeroy, A~/lens,
Gall i poli s , Wilkesville ,
Tuppers Plains and New
Haven, W. Va . In the group
working with the materials
will be Rockfor~ ·Spurlock,
Danny Richards, Jeannine
Craft, Tommy Kelly, Dale
Saxton, Roy Northup and
Frank Welles .

Officers were elec ted at a
recent meeting of the Middleport United PentecosU!I
Churc h Youth .
They are Mark Satllers,
president ; Jane ll Kelly,
secreU!ry ; Teresa Shaffer,
treas ure r ; Paul J ones ,
prom oti on and publicity
direc tor , and Michae l Zirkle,
youth director .
Re ports were giv e n on
,

COMPLETE

Hermann and Mrs. Marie

I

l

New ways to treat
troublesome violets

Middleport group
elects new officers

·1

, :

:!:

With : 'I
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1 Soc1al \ uxt zary p ns
I Calendar I valentine project
S- The.DaUy Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Feb. 3, 1976

t"".;,..~~"''*'l'~"~'!':'=-&lt;:&lt;;,,.,.,,\~

TUESDAY
POMEROY Garden Club
Tuesday. 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Irving Karr ,
Mason.
POMEROY Chapt;&gt;r 186,
Order of Eastern Star, 7:45
Tuesday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple . The dues of
S4 are payable by those who
have not already paid .
CHESTER Co un cil 323,
Daught;&gt;rs of America, 7:30
Tuesday at the hall. Good of
the order committee will
have a silent auction.
SOUP Supper, Tuesday , 4
p.m. to 6:30p.m. at Southern
High School ca fe U&gt;ria before
Southern-Eastern

game;

chili, bean and vegetable
soup; pies, sandwiches,
drinks . Sponsored by senior
class.
RAILROAD
DISPLAY
Tuesday, Thursday, Friday,
10 to II a.m. and 2 to 4 p. m.
and Sunday, 2to 4 p. m. at lhe
Meigs County Museum.
Display to be continued
through February.
MEIGS Athletic Boosters
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
high school. Everyone
welcome .
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster
Post 39, 7:30p.m. at the hall .
MIDDLEpORT Firemen's
Auxiliary, 7:30 p. m . at the
firemen's headquarters .
Jacket and Christmas picture
orders to be taken. Kitty
Darst and Mrs. Don Stivers,
hosU&gt;sses.
MIDDLEPORT Uterary
Club, 2 p. m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs . Sibley
Slack. Mrs. Bert Grimm to
review . "The Trees ,; by
Conara Richter, and Mrs.
Richard Owen to review
"Abigal Adams" by Janet
Whitney. Roll call will be "A
Pioneer J'vP. Known".
THURSUA 1
EVANGELINE
Chapter
172, O.E.S., 7:30p.m. Thurs·
day at the Masonic Temple,
Middleport.
GALLIA Countv Salon 610,
Eight and Forty, ;.m meet at
7:30 p.
Thursday at the.
home of Mrs. Carrie Neut·
zling in Pomeroy.
REVIVAL now ih progress
at the United Pent;&gt;costal
Church, Third Ave., Mid dleport, through Feb. 18,
Services 7:30 nightly, The
Rev . Richard MasU&gt;rs of
Indiana will be the speaker.
Rev . Masters has a special
talent in music and workingwith young people.
REVIVAL , Thur sday
through Sunday, 7:.30 each
evening at Guysville Com·
munity ·· Church with Lee
Hammond of Portsmouth
speaking; music by Gospel
Tones
Quar tet;
the
Joyful aires, and the New Life
Quartet. John Elswick,
pastor, welcomes the public.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7:30 Thursday at the nail .
Degree work to be presented.
TUESDAY
OHIO Eta Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the ·
Columbus and Southern Ohi o
Electric Co.
·

m.

.,

I

Valentines for veterans
were among the several

projects planned at the
Saturday meeting of the
Juni or American Legion
Auxiliary. Drew Webster
Post 39, at the home of Mrs.
Harry Davis. advisor.

Th e

juniors

prepared

valentine mint cups and

signed va len tine cards for
those wilD will be attending
the junior community sen•ice
party at the Athens Mental
Health Center on Feb. t9.
They also packed a box of
miscellaneous items to be
used for s-ame prizes at the
party .
Valcn Unes were also signed
for Bill Rovnak, the juniors'

Poppy Days in May.
Read at the meeting were
thank.you notes from the
Veterans

Hos pital

in

Chillicothe for · a book of
prayers to be placed in the
chapel, ditty bags, favors and
treats for the De cember
birthday party there, and for
oth er thoughtfulness extended the hospitalized
veterans . (...etters were -also
read from Sister Mary
Laurent for a large box of
cancelled stamps sent to
Mount Carmel Hospital for a
special project, and from Sue
Penny for a ward partv at the

a pen pa] from Belize, . formerly British Honduras. It

was noted that the bicentennial dolls have been or.
dered .
For the district and department competition, the new
bicent;&gt;nnial coloring books
were distributed to Sherri
Marshall, Robin Lehew and
Jennifer Couch, The junior
conference was discussed .

Service by SEOEMS will be expanded
Meigs Countians · will expecU&gt;d prior to December
receive expanded medical and will enable SEOEMS to
service from the Southeast supply emergency victims
Ohio Emergency Medical with life·sustaining drugs and
Services technicians (EMTs) electrical counter-shock
as members of the Pomeroy when required, in addition to
staff recently completed I. V .'s.
training in use of intravenous
In other developments
(luids H.V.'s) at Holzer concerning emergency
Medical Center.
service, SEOEMS has an ·
Giving of I. V. fluids at the , nounced that its vehicles
scene of an emergency in· have passed the one million
creases the survival chances

mile mark in serving area

of injured persons by
replacing lost blood and
reducing the effects of shock.
This
training
brings
SEOEMS seryice one step
closer_ to its goal of
patamedia status~ the most
intensive medical care
available outside of a
hospital.
Inplcmentation of the total
paramedical program is

residents, in less than three
years of operation.
Over 21,000 runs have been
made by SEOEMS crews to
date, year,.,nd reports in·
dicate, including,9,417 in 1975, '
a one thousand rWl increase
over 1974, or a 12 percent
increase.
Persons who at any time
feel they may require the
services an am ambulance

may call SEOEMS at I~
282·7777 toll free . Three
vehicles serve Meigs County.

Two are located behind
Veterans Memorial Hospital
in Pomeroy and the other In
Rutland. The vehicles are
manned 24 hours, seven days
weekly.

A Message From

AI! accounts receivable can be
pard at our Middleport Store.

Stiffler's, Middle

Ohio

" adopted'' veteran at Ar·
Nursing Home ) along

$233 million

va lentine party to be held
Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m. at
the American Legion hall.
Each junior is permitted to
take a guest.
Elected at the meeting
were Lit tl e Mi ss Poppy,
Robin Campbell ; Little
Poppy .Princess, Jil Barker ;
Junior Miss Poppy, Anna
Wiles , and Junior Poppy
Princess, Sherri Marshall.
The girls will preside through

ADVERTISED PRICES IN EFFECT WEDNESDAY, 10 A.M.

KODAK FILM

MEN'S
POLYESTER
PANTS

WHITE COTTON

MEN'S WORK SOCKS

Regular Values to $14.95

ANKLE
LENGTH

Solid cqlors or neat checks .
Flare legs . Sizes 31 to 40.
Great savings Of! our famous
· "Leggs " brand .

~et

36c

Harper said Americans'
main dietar y probl em Was
not too· few vit &lt;~ m in s but too
many calOries. And he advised against quick solutions
to losin g weight, including
fasting practices. ·
"I can't keep up with all the
quackery. A total fast is
simply destructive ... unless

4

FOR

99~
BOYs• ·

what 's it for''"

· WOVEN YARN

COLORING
BOOKS

7'h. FT. X 2 FT.

LEISURE SLIPPERS

9~
.

Dark

Colors ·
Stretches
To Fit

47!.

'RUNNER

.
Each

Rubber · Low Cut . All Sizes

· New Spring- · Easy Care Polyester

WOMEN'S
PRINT SHIRTS

Ju ~t arrive~ , Size 32 to 38 in light'

rs·

bnght prmt designs for your

'200

$

KNIT
SHIRTS
Size 6 to 16
Values to 52.98

$169

Turtle n ecK, crew

'347

MEN'S OVERSHOES

ISPECIAL SALE I

·~~~=· '$

LONG SLEEVE

·Made
Regular 19c

neck. moe turtle.
Solids or stripes.

'Size 4 to 1 -

$1.33

·KIDS

34 Valenllnes willl
envetop&amp;s, plus one
for teacher~ 'A
Value.

Select from Sandy McGee or
Johnsonians, Includes our
entire stock. Re9ular values to
I 14.87 . Save a couple of bucks

now.

4 Ft. Wood Handle

WET

Fits lY. lo 5X

MOP

A DISCOUNT

"VINING"

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

DfPARTMf.NT STO.Itt

618 l MAIN ST.
OPEN : ' ·' WEEKDAYS, 9·SSAT.

iLVER a ·RIDG
PLAZA

Ph. 992-3795 .
NO APPOINTMENT-lli£CEUARY

'

'

lb69~

. .

me4t

MASON ·

WEST
VIRGINIA

POINt
PLEASANt

I

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

s·1r 101•n stea k ..•.......~~·...'1

.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

29

ROUND STEAK

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

T-Bone Steak.......... ~~~ 1.

49

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

• y·IP Stea k ....lb;...'149
S •If IOln
Bucket Steaks........ ~~! 149
• y·1p Roast.....lb~..'129·
S•1r I01n
SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

' !

.

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE BEEF

Superiols USDA CHOICE

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE BEEF

19

lb.

.

09

.,

Ground Round ....... lb..~b~.
e
Ground Chuck......... . 99
79
Cube Steak ...
~~-~ 1.
Beef Stew Meat . lb. • 19

RUMP ROAST

poli c i e!:i

.

.

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE BEEF

H

........

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE BEEF

TENDER
JUICY

·

Delmon1co Steaks.~~ ..
BROUGHTON'S

Cottage Cheese

59e

l-Ib.

crt.

FROZEN FOODS

ALL PURPOSE

MORTON'S
TV '
INNER

UNCLASSIFIED

each

BROUGHTON'S

2% MILK
FROZEN
VEGETABLES

plaStic

.

restrictions ,between the U.S.
and Canada. ,
He sa id seve ral meat
producers in the Midwest
have told him they are now
receiving !63 per hundred·
weight for dressed beef,
compared with $74 one month ,
ago.,Nolan sai d the producers
told him day to day prices are
fluctuating between 60 and 65
per cent of parity.

TRAIL_BLAZER

QUEEN OF SCOT

·gallon

trade

A srrnNG OVATION
NEW YORK ( UPI) - Lorin
Maazel, conductor of the
aeveland Orchestra, won a
lengthy ovation from the
audience at Carnegie Hall
Monday night for the group's
performance of Mahler's 2nd
Symph&lt;&gt;ny . He dld It all
sitting down.
It was announced before
the concert thai Maazel
would conduct 'the orchestra
from a chair because he had
Injured his leg In a fall. He
stood up gingerly a few times
during the symphony to lead
the musicians through
dlfllcult passages.
At the r.vncluslon, the audience applauded his efforts for
five minutes. Maazel stood
agalli - with dlfflculty - to
take his bows.

PHONE 992·3480
We reserve the right to limit quantities.

Superiors USDA Choice·
FULL CUT

WASH INGTON iUPIJ Rep . Ri chard Nolan, D·
Minn ., said Sunday he is
alarmed by the fact that
prices for dressed beef have
dropped from $74 to $63 per
hun dredweight in the Mid·
west during the past month.
Nolan said th e formUla by
which meat from abroad is
allowed into the Un ited States
market may have to be
chan ged.
Nolan , a freshman member
of the House Agrieulture
Comm ittee, sa id the falling
prices are probably being
caused by a combination of
inequity in the import quota
formula and poor ad·
ministration liming in concluding an agreement to
all

SUPER MARKET · Open Daily 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to 10
Corner Mill and Second Sts.

JUg
BROUGHTON'S

BUITERMILK

CRACKERS
l·lb.

~

lh
gal.

49°
20 oz.

and

COLA.

DIET
RITE

8

89~

~6

oz.

~ts.,
pak

99°
·-

ON SALE ALL WEEI&lt;
-

l)IET RITE
COLA

G ..ADE
Solid 6 oz. size

PEPSI-COLA

WINCHESTER

· ~CIGARS o.~$219
•,

bag

RC

EGG·S

REGULAR 49'

:·

64 oz. bot.

Grade B

box

bag

,
97

25 lb.

DOG FOOD

CORN &amp; PEAS

Krispy Saltine

ON ANY PAIR
OF MEN'S
DRESS SHOES

PANTY HOSE

5 lbs.
or more

We Accept Federal Food Smmps

which are identified by the
prefix letter "K" 1USG LI World War I, "V" I NSI.I World War II ) imd "RS" or
" W' 1 ( VSLI - Korean Con·
flict l. Merritt poin ted ou~ itwt
this is only the second year
that dividends are being paid
on Korean Conflict insuran ce
policies.

remove

l':R.

OFF

i n sm~nce

REGULAR PRICE

WOMEN'S EXTRA LARGE

GROUND BEEF

CHOICE

in beef price
to producers

now .

.jumbo savfngs

$100 ·

USDA

Alarm sounded

in a var'ietY ·of
colors. A $2 .29 valu e .
Bv "Cones" . Stock up

Irregulars

·yo u have a martyr complex, .

H&amp;R BLOCK®

wanted bouquet

~ttern

DISH CLOTHS

raw foods. n

If you
you r taxes. our preparers are specially
· trained to determ in e if it's be.st for you,
If it is, we 'll complete it at a very loW
price ... and our charge always includes
your resident state return .

(he

Accelerated payments of
$233 million in Gl insurance
dividend checks for ap·
proxima tely three million
veteran s, nationwide ; Will be
completed by the latter par t
of February, L. M. Merritt,
director of the Cleveland
Veteran s' Administration
Reg ional Office, ann ounced
today. Merritt sa id the VA 's
accelerated dividend project
is part of a record $376.8
million payout to veterans
who have kept th eir policies
in force from World War l
World War ·u, and the Korea~
Confi ct.
About 199,965 Ohio veterarls
· · of these wars will share a
record windfall of $16,716,000
in Government Life "J In su ran ce dividends d urinf:l
1976. pr oviding ce rtain
policies arc still in force.
Merritt emphasized U1at
the dividends arc payable to
those veterans who 'have
·ontinued to keep in . force
iJei r

PRINTED .TERRY
BATH TOWELS

$~R.

Regular

enough of it."
"It's easy to get enough
Vitamin C if you eat some

'

PR.

SUPER LOW PRICE

can get 8ll the vitamins he

,.1
.
Short Form for fi ling

Regular 74c- Limit 4

2

Univ er~ i ty

Henry Block has
a special reason why
ou should come to us
for income tax help.

JERSEY GLOVES

Size 18x27

can get all tile vitamins they
need from their daily diet, a

person could not

CARPET RUGS

CX126·12
C620
C127
Cl10·12
limit 4

SAN FRANCISCO ( UP!) Most Americans need no
vitamin pills because they

li~ing

MEN'$ BROWN

SHORT SHAG

Quackery in
Vitamin pills,
. diets charged

From USDA Choice Beef

Ease., Olive.
Clyde J. Marian , Ethel M.
Marian to David E . Millh one,
Debbie D. Millhone, Lot,
Orange .

will pay out

Plans were made for a

needs fr om his food, " said

Clarence E. Fraley,
Jacqueline Fraley to Harold
Clinton Oxley, Jr ., Lots,
Columbia.
·
Freeman Aleshire, Fannie
Aleshire to Ralph Cundiff,
Lois Cundiff, 'II A., Salisbury.
l'atricia Ann Brooks,
Harry Brooks, Jr., James
Michael Sapp to William H.
Pugh, Jr. , Marie Brooks
Pugh, I A., Salisbury.
Herbert Edward Ric~. Ill,
Sandra
K.
Rice
to

GI insurance

w1th the eight other veU&gt;rans
there, and Dayton Pierce, a
resident a t the Syracuse
Nursing Horne. They also
signed ca rds for the boys in
Harding Co ttage at the
Soldiers and Sailors' Home
for Oprhans at Xenia, and for
Dorothy Leifheit, a former
resident, a nd nine other
patients at the Orient State
Hospital.

Harold
A.
Harper ,
biochemistry professor and
chairman of the School of
Medicine.
' He told a meeting of dentists ·that the fad which calls
for more and more Vitam in
pills was "foolishness ."
" Vitamin E is so widely
distributed in all foods that
it 's difficult to see how a

Meigs
Property
·Transfers·

BEST BUY IN TOWN!

Monqngahela Power Co .,

c~dia

of · Califo rn ia
nutrition expert said SU(l day.
"The average, reasonably
healthy person. quite simply ·

.

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Tuesday, Feb . ~. 197G
Orient State Hospital with
Christmas favors, mint cups
and cards being provided.
Mrs . Davis present;&gt;d a
certificate from Paul Casci
for a contributi on to the
"Gifts for the Yanks Who
Gave." Paula Kloes presided
at the meeting with Denise
Marshall leading a prayer.
The pledge and preamable
were repeated 1n unison .
In observance of legislation
TJlOnth, Mrs. Davis read an
article on how a bill becomes
Jaw. The juniors are securing

alL:..AK 99~
'•

16 oz.
PAK

$}19,.

�A

.l.
Ia
1 Soc1al \ uxt zary p ns
I Calendar I valentine project
S- The.DaUy Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Feb. 3, 1976

t"".;,..~~"''*'l'~"~'!':'=-&lt;:&lt;;,,.,.,,\~

TUESDAY
POMEROY Garden Club
Tuesday. 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Irving Karr ,
Mason.
POMEROY Chapt;&gt;r 186,
Order of Eastern Star, 7:45
Tuesday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple . The dues of
S4 are payable by those who
have not already paid .
CHESTER Co un cil 323,
Daught;&gt;rs of America, 7:30
Tuesday at the hall. Good of
the order committee will
have a silent auction.
SOUP Supper, Tuesday , 4
p.m. to 6:30p.m. at Southern
High School ca fe U&gt;ria before
Southern-Eastern

game;

chili, bean and vegetable
soup; pies, sandwiches,
drinks . Sponsored by senior
class.
RAILROAD
DISPLAY
Tuesday, Thursday, Friday,
10 to II a.m. and 2 to 4 p. m.
and Sunday, 2to 4 p. m. at lhe
Meigs County Museum.
Display to be continued
through February.
MEIGS Athletic Boosters
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
high school. Everyone
welcome .
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster
Post 39, 7:30p.m. at the hall .
MIDDLEpORT Firemen's
Auxiliary, 7:30 p. m . at the
firemen's headquarters .
Jacket and Christmas picture
orders to be taken. Kitty
Darst and Mrs. Don Stivers,
hosU&gt;sses.
MIDDLEPORT Uterary
Club, 2 p. m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs . Sibley
Slack. Mrs. Bert Grimm to
review . "The Trees ,; by
Conara Richter, and Mrs.
Richard Owen to review
"Abigal Adams" by Janet
Whitney. Roll call will be "A
Pioneer J'vP. Known".
THURSUA 1
EVANGELINE
Chapter
172, O.E.S., 7:30p.m. Thurs·
day at the Masonic Temple,
Middleport.
GALLIA Countv Salon 610,
Eight and Forty, ;.m meet at
7:30 p.
Thursday at the.
home of Mrs. Carrie Neut·
zling in Pomeroy.
REVIVAL now ih progress
at the United Pent;&gt;costal
Church, Third Ave., Mid dleport, through Feb. 18,
Services 7:30 nightly, The
Rev . Richard MasU&gt;rs of
Indiana will be the speaker.
Rev . Masters has a special
talent in music and workingwith young people.
REVIVAL , Thur sday
through Sunday, 7:.30 each
evening at Guysville Com·
munity ·· Church with Lee
Hammond of Portsmouth
speaking; music by Gospel
Tones
Quar tet;
the
Joyful aires, and the New Life
Quartet. John Elswick,
pastor, welcomes the public.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7:30 Thursday at the nail .
Degree work to be presented.
TUESDAY
OHIO Eta Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the ·
Columbus and Southern Ohi o
Electric Co.
·

m.

.,

I

Valentines for veterans
were among the several

projects planned at the
Saturday meeting of the
Juni or American Legion
Auxiliary. Drew Webster
Post 39, at the home of Mrs.
Harry Davis. advisor.

Th e

juniors

prepared

valentine mint cups and

signed va len tine cards for
those wilD will be attending
the junior community sen•ice
party at the Athens Mental
Health Center on Feb. t9.
They also packed a box of
miscellaneous items to be
used for s-ame prizes at the
party .
Valcn Unes were also signed
for Bill Rovnak, the juniors'

Poppy Days in May.
Read at the meeting were
thank.you notes from the
Veterans

Hos pital

in

Chillicothe for · a book of
prayers to be placed in the
chapel, ditty bags, favors and
treats for the De cember
birthday party there, and for
oth er thoughtfulness extended the hospitalized
veterans . (...etters were -also
read from Sister Mary
Laurent for a large box of
cancelled stamps sent to
Mount Carmel Hospital for a
special project, and from Sue
Penny for a ward partv at the

a pen pa] from Belize, . formerly British Honduras. It

was noted that the bicentennial dolls have been or.
dered .
For the district and department competition, the new
bicent;&gt;nnial coloring books
were distributed to Sherri
Marshall, Robin Lehew and
Jennifer Couch, The junior
conference was discussed .

Service by SEOEMS will be expanded
Meigs Countians · will expecU&gt;d prior to December
receive expanded medical and will enable SEOEMS to
service from the Southeast supply emergency victims
Ohio Emergency Medical with life·sustaining drugs and
Services technicians (EMTs) electrical counter-shock
as members of the Pomeroy when required, in addition to
staff recently completed I. V .'s.
training in use of intravenous
In other developments
(luids H.V.'s) at Holzer concerning emergency
Medical Center.
service, SEOEMS has an ·
Giving of I. V. fluids at the , nounced that its vehicles
scene of an emergency in· have passed the one million
creases the survival chances

mile mark in serving area

of injured persons by
replacing lost blood and
reducing the effects of shock.
This
training
brings
SEOEMS seryice one step
closer_ to its goal of
patamedia status~ the most
intensive medical care
available outside of a
hospital.
Inplcmentation of the total
paramedical program is

residents, in less than three
years of operation.
Over 21,000 runs have been
made by SEOEMS crews to
date, year,.,nd reports in·
dicate, including,9,417 in 1975, '
a one thousand rWl increase
over 1974, or a 12 percent
increase.
Persons who at any time
feel they may require the
services an am ambulance

may call SEOEMS at I~
282·7777 toll free . Three
vehicles serve Meigs County.

Two are located behind
Veterans Memorial Hospital
in Pomeroy and the other In
Rutland. The vehicles are
manned 24 hours, seven days
weekly.

A Message From

AI! accounts receivable can be
pard at our Middleport Store.

Stiffler's, Middle

Ohio

" adopted'' veteran at Ar·
Nursing Home ) along

$233 million

va lentine party to be held
Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m. at
the American Legion hall.
Each junior is permitted to
take a guest.
Elected at the meeting
were Lit tl e Mi ss Poppy,
Robin Campbell ; Little
Poppy .Princess, Jil Barker ;
Junior Miss Poppy, Anna
Wiles , and Junior Poppy
Princess, Sherri Marshall.
The girls will preside through

ADVERTISED PRICES IN EFFECT WEDNESDAY, 10 A.M.

KODAK FILM

MEN'S
POLYESTER
PANTS

WHITE COTTON

MEN'S WORK SOCKS

Regular Values to $14.95

ANKLE
LENGTH

Solid cqlors or neat checks .
Flare legs . Sizes 31 to 40.
Great savings Of! our famous
· "Leggs " brand .

~et

36c

Harper said Americans'
main dietar y probl em Was
not too· few vit &lt;~ m in s but too
many calOries. And he advised against quick solutions
to losin g weight, including
fasting practices. ·
"I can't keep up with all the
quackery. A total fast is
simply destructive ... unless

4

FOR

99~
BOYs• ·

what 's it for''"

· WOVEN YARN

COLORING
BOOKS

7'h. FT. X 2 FT.

LEISURE SLIPPERS

9~
.

Dark

Colors ·
Stretches
To Fit

47!.

'RUNNER

.
Each

Rubber · Low Cut . All Sizes

· New Spring- · Easy Care Polyester

WOMEN'S
PRINT SHIRTS

Ju ~t arrive~ , Size 32 to 38 in light'

rs·

bnght prmt designs for your

'200

$

KNIT
SHIRTS
Size 6 to 16
Values to 52.98

$169

Turtle n ecK, crew

'347

MEN'S OVERSHOES

ISPECIAL SALE I

·~~~=· '$

LONG SLEEVE

·Made
Regular 19c

neck. moe turtle.
Solids or stripes.

'Size 4 to 1 -

$1.33

·KIDS

34 Valenllnes willl
envetop&amp;s, plus one
for teacher~ 'A
Value.

Select from Sandy McGee or
Johnsonians, Includes our
entire stock. Re9ular values to
I 14.87 . Save a couple of bucks

now.

4 Ft. Wood Handle

WET

Fits lY. lo 5X

MOP

A DISCOUNT

"VINING"

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

DfPARTMf.NT STO.Itt

618 l MAIN ST.
OPEN : ' ·' WEEKDAYS, 9·SSAT.

iLVER a ·RIDG
PLAZA

Ph. 992-3795 .
NO APPOINTMENT-lli£CEUARY

'

'

lb69~

. .

me4t

MASON ·

WEST
VIRGINIA

POINt
PLEASANt

I

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

s·1r 101•n stea k ..•.......~~·...'1

.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

29

ROUND STEAK

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

T-Bone Steak.......... ~~~ 1.

49

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

• y·IP Stea k ....lb;...'149
S •If IOln
Bucket Steaks........ ~~! 149
• y·1p Roast.....lb~..'129·
S•1r I01n
SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE

' !

.

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE BEEF

Superiols USDA CHOICE

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE BEEF

19

lb.

.

09

.,

Ground Round ....... lb..~b~.
e
Ground Chuck......... . 99
79
Cube Steak ...
~~-~ 1.
Beef Stew Meat . lb. • 19

RUMP ROAST

poli c i e!:i

.

.

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE BEEF

H

........

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE BEEF

TENDER
JUICY

·

Delmon1co Steaks.~~ ..
BROUGHTON'S

Cottage Cheese

59e

l-Ib.

crt.

FROZEN FOODS

ALL PURPOSE

MORTON'S
TV '
INNER

UNCLASSIFIED

each

BROUGHTON'S

2% MILK
FROZEN
VEGETABLES

plaStic

.

restrictions ,between the U.S.
and Canada. ,
He sa id seve ral meat
producers in the Midwest
have told him they are now
receiving !63 per hundred·
weight for dressed beef,
compared with $74 one month ,
ago.,Nolan sai d the producers
told him day to day prices are
fluctuating between 60 and 65
per cent of parity.

TRAIL_BLAZER

QUEEN OF SCOT

·gallon

trade

A srrnNG OVATION
NEW YORK ( UPI) - Lorin
Maazel, conductor of the
aeveland Orchestra, won a
lengthy ovation from the
audience at Carnegie Hall
Monday night for the group's
performance of Mahler's 2nd
Symph&lt;&gt;ny . He dld It all
sitting down.
It was announced before
the concert thai Maazel
would conduct 'the orchestra
from a chair because he had
Injured his leg In a fall. He
stood up gingerly a few times
during the symphony to lead
the musicians through
dlfllcult passages.
At the r.vncluslon, the audience applauded his efforts for
five minutes. Maazel stood
agalli - with dlfflculty - to
take his bows.

PHONE 992·3480
We reserve the right to limit quantities.

Superiors USDA Choice·
FULL CUT

WASH INGTON iUPIJ Rep . Ri chard Nolan, D·
Minn ., said Sunday he is
alarmed by the fact that
prices for dressed beef have
dropped from $74 to $63 per
hun dredweight in the Mid·
west during the past month.
Nolan said th e formUla by
which meat from abroad is
allowed into the Un ited States
market may have to be
chan ged.
Nolan , a freshman member
of the House Agrieulture
Comm ittee, sa id the falling
prices are probably being
caused by a combination of
inequity in the import quota
formula and poor ad·
ministration liming in concluding an agreement to
all

SUPER MARKET · Open Daily 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to 10
Corner Mill and Second Sts.

JUg
BROUGHTON'S

BUITERMILK

CRACKERS
l·lb.

~

lh
gal.

49°
20 oz.

and

COLA.

DIET
RITE

8

89~

~6

oz.

~ts.,
pak

99°
·-

ON SALE ALL WEEI&lt;
-

l)IET RITE
COLA

G ..ADE
Solid 6 oz. size

PEPSI-COLA

WINCHESTER

· ~CIGARS o.~$219
•,

bag

RC

EGG·S

REGULAR 49'

:·

64 oz. bot.

Grade B

box

bag

,
97

25 lb.

DOG FOOD

CORN &amp; PEAS

Krispy Saltine

ON ANY PAIR
OF MEN'S
DRESS SHOES

PANTY HOSE

5 lbs.
or more

We Accept Federal Food Smmps

which are identified by the
prefix letter "K" 1USG LI World War I, "V" I NSI.I World War II ) imd "RS" or
" W' 1 ( VSLI - Korean Con·
flict l. Merritt poin ted ou~ itwt
this is only the second year
that dividends are being paid
on Korean Conflict insuran ce
policies.

remove

l':R.

OFF

i n sm~nce

REGULAR PRICE

WOMEN'S EXTRA LARGE

GROUND BEEF

CHOICE

in beef price
to producers

now .

.jumbo savfngs

$100 ·

USDA

Alarm sounded

in a var'ietY ·of
colors. A $2 .29 valu e .
Bv "Cones" . Stock up

Irregulars

·yo u have a martyr complex, .

H&amp;R BLOCK®

wanted bouquet

~ttern

DISH CLOTHS

raw foods. n

If you
you r taxes. our preparers are specially
· trained to determ in e if it's be.st for you,
If it is, we 'll complete it at a very loW
price ... and our charge always includes
your resident state return .

(he

Accelerated payments of
$233 million in Gl insurance
dividend checks for ap·
proxima tely three million
veteran s, nationwide ; Will be
completed by the latter par t
of February, L. M. Merritt,
director of the Cleveland
Veteran s' Administration
Reg ional Office, ann ounced
today. Merritt sa id the VA 's
accelerated dividend project
is part of a record $376.8
million payout to veterans
who have kept th eir policies
in force from World War l
World War ·u, and the Korea~
Confi ct.
About 199,965 Ohio veterarls
· · of these wars will share a
record windfall of $16,716,000
in Government Life "J In su ran ce dividends d urinf:l
1976. pr oviding ce rtain
policies arc still in force.
Merritt emphasized U1at
the dividends arc payable to
those veterans who 'have
·ontinued to keep in . force
iJei r

PRINTED .TERRY
BATH TOWELS

$~R.

Regular

enough of it."
"It's easy to get enough
Vitamin C if you eat some

'

PR.

SUPER LOW PRICE

can get 8ll the vitamins he

,.1
.
Short Form for fi ling

Regular 74c- Limit 4

2

Univ er~ i ty

Henry Block has
a special reason why
ou should come to us
for income tax help.

JERSEY GLOVES

Size 18x27

can get all tile vitamins they
need from their daily diet, a

person could not

CARPET RUGS

CX126·12
C620
C127
Cl10·12
limit 4

SAN FRANCISCO ( UP!) Most Americans need no
vitamin pills because they

li~ing

MEN'$ BROWN

SHORT SHAG

Quackery in
Vitamin pills,
. diets charged

From USDA Choice Beef

Ease., Olive.
Clyde J. Marian , Ethel M.
Marian to David E . Millh one,
Debbie D. Millhone, Lot,
Orange .

will pay out

Plans were made for a

needs fr om his food, " said

Clarence E. Fraley,
Jacqueline Fraley to Harold
Clinton Oxley, Jr ., Lots,
Columbia.
·
Freeman Aleshire, Fannie
Aleshire to Ralph Cundiff,
Lois Cundiff, 'II A., Salisbury.
l'atricia Ann Brooks,
Harry Brooks, Jr., James
Michael Sapp to William H.
Pugh, Jr. , Marie Brooks
Pugh, I A., Salisbury.
Herbert Edward Ric~. Ill,
Sandra
K.
Rice
to

GI insurance

w1th the eight other veU&gt;rans
there, and Dayton Pierce, a
resident a t the Syracuse
Nursing Horne. They also
signed ca rds for the boys in
Harding Co ttage at the
Soldiers and Sailors' Home
for Oprhans at Xenia, and for
Dorothy Leifheit, a former
resident, a nd nine other
patients at the Orient State
Hospital.

Harold
A.
Harper ,
biochemistry professor and
chairman of the School of
Medicine.
' He told a meeting of dentists ·that the fad which calls
for more and more Vitam in
pills was "foolishness ."
" Vitamin E is so widely
distributed in all foods that
it 's difficult to see how a

Meigs
Property
·Transfers·

BEST BUY IN TOWN!

Monqngahela Power Co .,

c~dia

of · Califo rn ia
nutrition expert said SU(l day.
"The average, reasonably
healthy person. quite simply ·

.

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Tuesday, Feb . ~. 197G
Orient State Hospital with
Christmas favors, mint cups
and cards being provided.
Mrs . Davis present;&gt;d a
certificate from Paul Casci
for a contributi on to the
"Gifts for the Yanks Who
Gave." Paula Kloes presided
at the meeting with Denise
Marshall leading a prayer.
The pledge and preamable
were repeated 1n unison .
In observance of legislation
TJlOnth, Mrs. Davis read an
article on how a bill becomes
Jaw. The juniors are securing

alL:..AK 99~
'•

16 oz.
PAK

$}19,.

�~i~l!Jr.'~"'::::;;:;;::•'For Fast Results Use The Senti-,wl Classifieds

DICK TRACY

one letter to ra.ch squart, to
w o r~ t.

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

OE/\OLINES

._
p M
Day
B e fore
Pub I icat ion
Monday DC&lt;I dllll C 9 a . m .

Ccmcelt at ,on

2 SIGNS

Corr ec tions

will be accepted until 9 a . m .
REGULATIONS

IESSMYTl

Th e Publisher rese rves the
r ioh ' tn ~" dit or r c iec t anv ads
deemed objeclionaL Th e
publi s her
will
no t
be

NO I&lt;:EPUTA!SLE
LUNCH COUNTER
WOULD SERVE THEM .

r espons ibl e for more than on e
incor-rect tnserlion

I I

Now &amp;rTBnlflt the.cirded letters
to form the surprise anawer. u
aucreated by the abon cartoon.

j

"t I I 1KI I I ]"
Jumblt•• PURGE

I

OFTEN

MODIF Y HAIRDO

.htvni11htd U'hl'n ht• !law tlu•

An•wrr:

dentiJJt ., bill -"OPEN MOUTHED"

Long Bottom News Notes
By Ruth Larkins
A bridal shower was held in
the basement of the Long
Bottom Methodis t Churc h for
Mr . and Mrs . Douglas
Hauber . They were 24 persons in attendance. They
received many nice gift s.
Phyllis
New lun
ha s
return ed
home
from
Veterans Memorial Hospital

A Low Cost
Want Ad
Will Cut
Cost of
Uving ••••..
WRITE YOUR
OWN AD!
'

IrS EASY TO
ORDER BY

MAIL!
-SPECIAL!--

12 WORDS
4 DAYS
$}25

ONLY

CASH WITH
ORDER

AVAILABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
NO REFUNDS.
Each
initia I
and
group
of
figures .
counts as one wprd.
Be sure to count
name and address, if
used, and your phone
number .
Including
priCes for items of fered in your want ad
w iII
increase
response.

afte r eme r ge n cy s urg ery.
She is m uch improved.
Mr. Raymond Larkins and
famil y visited his pare nts ,
Mr . a nd Mrs. Fred Larkins
uver the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs . Gera ld
Stethem and son of Canton,
visited his parents , Mr. a nd
Mrs. Emmet Stehem uve r the
weekend.
Mae McPeek and Leona
He nsley took supper with Mr .
and Mrs . Emmet Stethem
0 ne night last week. Also
v1siting we re Elza a~d Sadie
Larkins.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Holter
a nd baby visited his paren ts,
Mr. and Mrs . Hank Holte r
a nd fam ily over the weekend .
Mr. and Mrs . Doug Ball a nd
f amily of West Virg inia
v isited his parents, Mr. and
Mrs . Millard Ball.
Visit in g Mr. and Mrs .
E r nest Griffin ove r th e
•eekend we re Mr . and Mrs.
I ,arr y Gri ffin of Gallipolis
and Mr . and Mrs . J im Ste tler
0f Reedsv ille .
Mary Pierce has returned
horne from Beckley , W. Va .
Vi si tin g Ernestine Hayman
ver
the weekend were Mr .
0
and Mrs. Elbert F itzpa trick,
Mr . and Mr s. Richard
Hayman, Mr . a nd Mrs.
Robert L. Bos ton and family
0 f Vincent , Oh io. and Mr. and
Mrs. Marti n Nesse lr oa d .
E r nestin e Hayman s pen t
SWJday with Mr . and Mrs.
Nesselroad .

.

"

Reedsville
News Notes
l)y Mrs. l.yle Baidersun
Dale Smith has returned
llOme afte r attending an
electri c al scho ol at Fort
Worth , Texas.
Chester MWldry Sr. has
been a pat ient at Veterans
Hospital in HWJ ling ton , W.
Va.
Mr s. Alpha Smith visited
with Mrs. Bert Smith of
Reedsville Rd. , recently.
Mr s . Ka thryn Di e tz of
Belpre , Mrs. Lillian Pickens,
Mrs. Ruth Anne Balderson
and Kay visited at the Bob
evans F arms near Gallipolis.
Grant Boring has been a
patie nt at the St. Joseph
Hospital , Parkersburg , W.
Va .

wdhin

1974 PLY . CUDA

tO

day s

2.
3.
4.
5.

6.
7.
8.
9.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$2 DO for 50 wo rd rninimum
Each addittonat word 3

NAME
ADDRESS
-

CITY
PHONE

'

MAIL WITH

1.25

1

TO ntE

Notice

1972 PLYMOUTH Cri cket,
c u stomized. ru n s gr e a t .
Good work c ar : 4 cy l , body
da m age ~.ear . $350. Phone
949 2225 ,
I 30 3t c

CAREER awaits you with
Luzier
Cos m etics,
" a
quali ty prod uc t f or 53
y ears"
No
territo ry
restri c tion , work fr om your
home . St il l t1m e to w 1n your 197 5 C UTLA SS Sa lon , full y
trip to Na ss a u . For ap
equ ip p e d , exce pt pow e r
p ointment. cal l Madylon
wi n dows
Call between . 9
Stone
(3041
7279269
a .m . and 11 noon Phone 99 2
(c ol lec t ) .
5013 .
2 3 12tc
1 30 3 tc

FABRIC Sal e Co ntinued . Du e 1969 CHEVEL LE 396, 4 sp . , ·I
to ba d w eath er , our sa l e wil l
el even
gears.
positive
be extend ed for anot he r
tr ac l ion . e~~:tra parts , S695 .
Phone 742 3076 af ter 6 p .m .
Fe b . " 7
w ee k
e nding
1 28 6\C
Carot1na Fabrics on RL 7 ,
one h alf m i te n orth of
Chester , Ohio . Henry iH) d
1974 F01&lt;D v an , I ton tong
Mary Hunter, owne r s
wheel base , auto . wi t h P S
2 1 61p
and brakes , radio. set up to
pull c amp er Phone 99 2- 7320 .
2 I 61 c
1~.\CUME
T AX
prepared,
F-e dera l and st at e tax es
Wi ll be done bY appl onl y
Plea se p hone 997 ?772 , or sec
Mrs . Wanda Eblin . Laurel
Cli ff R d . . Pomeroy .
12 J l 301C ENJOY graci o u s .l iving at Vi ll age Manor
in Mid
~- - -dleJ10rl for as low as $104 per
MA K E SURE you get e v ery
month , p lus e lectric. T hese
poss ib l e dedu c tion this year
are brand new high ~ualitY .
Hav e your Feder.al and
apar t m en ts at pr ice s you
St a te Inco m e Tax retu rn by
c an alford . Y our r ent in
an ac coun tan I . Phone 992
e l u d es month to month
6 173 .
leases , all e l ec: . l i ving ,
1 21 521 c
c ar peti ng ,
rang e
and
refrigerato r, fr ee tras h
SHOOTING Match , Sunda·y ,
p ic kup , c able TV at y~ur
Feb . I , 12 : 30 p .m . Just of!
expe n se,
an d
on S1l e
R 1. 7 by pa s s. Sponsored by
laundry faci l ities . Con
th e Lu c ky 7 Gu n Cl ub . Call
ven ic nt to sh opp ing on Third
99 2 5335 for fur t h er details .
and Mill Stree ts in Mid
t .306tc . dl eport . See the manager at
Riv erside Apa rt t;n ents · or
IN COME
Ta K
Se rvi ce,
cJ)II 992 3273 . F urn ls h e ~
Fe dera l or S tate t axes .
a.pa r tme nt s
are
also
Phon e 992 7228 or see·
availabl e .
Wa ll ace Rus se tt ·, Bra dbu ry .
2 2 78 tc
,
1·30 16t c
--,-----,__
2 BE DRM . tra i l e r dOub l e
1 w tL L be g iv ing piano lessons
w1de , f ur n i shed , utiliti es
in my hom e star t i.n g Feb . 1.
.Pa id , no c h ildre n or peL
N ear Pam ero y . Phon e 99 2
for in fo r mation ca ll 992
J27B
70 t7 or 992 7666
1 3 5tp .
12 18 501C

For Rent

-

--

__

H AV-E YOU R -in co me ta xes
p repareel by St ev e Cle land ,
Ra ci ne . Phone 949 2883 .
l 29 6t c

lll COURT ST.

~ooms,

POMEROY, OHIO

45769

ages\ "

1969 MER CU R Y wagon , auto .
A M and F M radio , run ~
good , Aln1ost ha lf ot book
pr 1cc . Phone 992 361'1' be f or e,
2 p .m .
t 2 31c

Mobile Homes For Sale
MOB IL E H ome , 10 x 60 , 'l
br W1th addil1onal room ,
gas heat , furni ~ h e d . Ex
cc- lle n t co nditi o n , $4,3 00
Phone I JQ,I J 773 5886 .
1 30 61p
1972~
CHAMPION
Mobile
Home 11 )( 60 comp lete l y
fur nishe d . e"'ce lt en t co n
dit 1on Ph one 992 3 189 . 1
2· 1 61 P

Ca ll 992

!.

l·.::,'!,.

J A ND 4 I&lt;NI . rurni shed and
unfurn is h ed ap ts . Phon e 992
54 34 '
11 9 t fc

----·

-~

·--

--...,.._-

3

1 27 6tp

BEDRM .
home ,
j us t
f inishe d , remod e ling , Sale m
St , Rutland . Ph one 742 2306
a l t er 4 p ,m . or see Milo B.
H utchison .
9 23 ti c

H OU SE on L in coln Hg IS 2
b edrrn , large k itc hen . l ul l
b 'asement , excet ten 1 buy lor
S8 ,90 D. with n ew t urnilu r e .
on ly $10 .300 P hone 99? 76.18
1 6 261c
ROOM house . bath . l ull
ba seme n! in good co nd ition,
g arage and sma ll barn . s~ ~
a cres n ear Chester ..Phone
( 61~ ) 985 4 140 .
'} . 1 1/t c

5

3

'}.

B'R HOME . iust fi ni sh ed
r emo del ing
Sil l em
St .
Rutlan'd . Ph one i47 230 6
a f t er 4 p . m . or see Milo B.
H Utc h inson .
10 9 1f c
AC RE S with
f i n ished
ba seme nt
Call (6 1·1l 985
,1203 a f t er 5 p m
1 28 610
Br~ c k home . 6 yr s , 2 1 ,
baths . q a-r ag e o n 2 H acres
on paved r oad n ear I orked
Ru n St at e 1 orest
Phone
( 6 1 4~ 667 3787 . $)!! ,000.
'
11 5?7 tp

.1 B R

1 RM . and bath , -; ullable f or
office , or apt ., no chi ldren .
very nice . 118 ' • E . Ma in St. ,
P om e roy , Sec on(:l f loor , E
F . Robilison . 992 284 6.
1 30 6tc
3 RM f urnis h ed apt .. ulil1ties
p a id , 356 N o rth F ourth .
M iddl eport .
1 30 6tp
WA REHOU SE or store roo m,
25 x: 75 at 3 1I Condo r St. .
( R ea r 610 E ~ Main ) . Ph . 992
7178 .
1 30 -61c

Business Opportunilies

Automatic Water
Conditioner

3 BEDRM hom e, li ving rm ..
kit ch en and d in ing, rm . Ba th
and half i n M i d dlepo r t .
PhOn e 99 2 3 129 or 992591•1.
2 1 Jtc
3

BEDRM . hou se in Mid
d l eport , co rn er lo t . N ew
bath , stor y a nd hal f . uti l ity
room , n ew c arp eling and
new root , garage and wor k
room , f ruit cella r . Close to
SC hO Ol
and
Sh Opp i n g ,
$ 17,500. Phone 992 7624 .
I 27 26tc

•
'•

Cakes, Baked
and Decorated
To Your Order

Modern

FURN ITUR E
STR!PP ING SERVICE
Remova l of
Pa in t s
P lastics . Varnis hes , etc .
Wood or Metal.
Repa irs
R efln lshjng Of
Furniture .
Burn 1shing Polishing of
Copper &amp; Brass

•

Kuhl Cake Decor

EASY
'lOlii&lt;. NOTE

PRvM10' ~D
~EVICAL

Call 992·7537
Pomeroy , Ohio

100 Kerr Street
Pomerov ,. Oh io 45769
(614) 992 - 2798, D ic k Seyl er
1·29 -l mo .

TO

THIC

SECRET OF
THE MUMMY

NOT QUITE ~ I T

TO LEA~N
THE SECRET, MEte T
ME HERE !

'299
....____----1'
_ -'Y Reg . 133'-00 Val.
POMEROY LANDMARk
· ·~-Jack W . Carsey , Mgr .
...
Phone 992-2181
CO A L . l imestone an d al l types
of sa i l and ro c k salt for ice
and snow r e m ova l . E)ol.
c elsi Or Salt Wo rk s, East
Main St., Pomer oy , Ohi o .
Phone 99 2' 389 1.
12 7 1f c
McDAN IEL
Custom Bu t
c h ering , west Co lu mbia, w .
Va . We bu t cre r ca llle and
hogs .
Sl O
c allle
sta ug rt ter ; $7 f or h ogs ; 1~c
' for cutt ing and wrap p in g .
State and f ederal In spec te d :
Open 6 days per week .
P h one (3041 882 3224 .
1·30 26tc

----' - ---

Locat ion P lus C..harm Plu s
Durab i l i t y . St one face d ,
lo'lle ly slated fl oors, idea l
level lot , needs 2 or 3
parti1 ions a nd a shower . N.
gas FA . furnace , ce ntral
air . $7 ,000 .

New

N. gas

F.A. furna ce &amp; .

lots of other NEWS. GOOD
CONDITION 110,000 .
ONE FLOOR PLAN - Ful l
ba sement with 1 BR. TV

AGE OR EXPERIENCE
NOT A FACTOR

lot. 19,500.
A LOOK WI LL CO NVINCE
YOU - 2 BR . bath , NEW

SA DOLE
and
matching
brid le . Will f i f large pony .
Phone 742 .2809 .
1-30 ·41p

perma pan e win dow s,
carpeting,
p a n e ling ,
ki't c h en ,
carp ort .
Fu l l
basement, N . gas furna ce,

~

stereo, 8
lrrlCk I ' rlpC. am fm rad iO
co mb matlon . Oa lan ce S98 .60
or t erJllS . Call 992 3965 ,
.
·
1 7 t tc

- -·----·· - =:.:,.--- -; ,-....:::...:;____
.C t' l' L fl7T.'SALE . CA(l C-o al
c·omp,M ·,
1 mi l e north ot
Cheshi r e. on Rt 7. Pick your
o wn , }20 per ton . Open 6 da ys
pe r week , or cal l I 61JI 367
7330 lor j urt h er information .
1 8 78 t c

Ph . 992·,!993

tW;MM

.

4 10 - 1 mo

I

.A

~DrHA~

50 .. .

HADA

t A

1\APf"/

COINS

\\'est

•
lJ1'fLE ORPHAN ANNIE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.. •
Ph . 992 -2114'
P om eroy . !

~. .~LITTL-8~~~

' TEAFORD
Virgil B., Sr ., Broker
110 Mec hanic Pomeroy, 0 .

Phone 99H325
NEW LI ST IN G -

3 Br s ,

l arge
kit . , n ew
F .A.
furn ace .
ba se m e nt.
porch es a nd ni ce lo t in
Rutland . $ 12,500.

4 BEDROOMS -

Steam

he at. 2 l ivi ngs. 2 'porch es.
c ook a nd bak e · u n i t s ,
b asemen t w ith garage

$20, 000.
5 BEDROOMS -

Living ,

dining , g lasse d·in porch .
st ea m heal \gas f ired), _
ba sem e nt on la rge lof.

$16,500 .
NEW LISTING

"

n a t . gas furna ce, c 1ty wa t er
acre .
a nd 2 ba th s,

l,,

3 ni ce

:::...._

T~A;'S

Al-JD TARL

found

a

GASOlJNE

The a nswer · is yes. Sp.ades
arc our luckv sui t. This isn't a

K•

ACROSS
I Audacious
5 \I.M .W.

ALLEY

A

man's
life
maL!
be

Joel. LJOU an' Rufus

qo alonq t' make sure

he come back'

at

~L~l~L~A~n~··~~~·~n~~----------------~--~~~~~~~~~~~~::~-r----r-~~~~~~~~::~~~y--01--l MERCIRJLSHEIK!'r- CYI&lt;IL THE SWINE'S
HMMr- MY GREATl oAur..r-.. I 1
5 ,.:..n:;r, IOF56T TALL-- BlJT-g;8~- THE ~r 6RANDFATHER SAID,
Crv-vm-1Vl"
'-'" ""'"'
E
THING 15 Tf-DSE INNU!v\ER.ABL.E N&lt;!AS EMER&lt;Sif'..G
'M-IEN IN TROUBL /
FR:IV\ HIS BEARDCALL ON THE U.S A. " r
___.-

are

l uck y

fo r

organisms
6 " Clive of - "

7 Greek island
8 Medieval
shield
9 on ·pension
ran~ed
( abbr.)
( 2 'w ds. )
II Character·
13 Ra dioman 's
Yesterday's 1\u•w'"
istic
sign-off
31 Leporide
14 Nautch girl 23 Wrest
( 3 wds.)
26 Eyelid
35 Vaudeville
17 Peerce or
15 Spelling
proble m
features
Smuts
contest
18 Appellation
28 Target for 36 Old card
16 Jai 19 Coloring
Bob
game
17 See 37
expert
McAdoo
37 Exclamation
Across
20 Evergreen
29 Gaelic
38 Caddoan
(2 wds .)
30 Centra l
Indian
trees
21 Buccaneers 21 - Alto,
American 39 Second Mrs.
24 Yes,
Sinatra
parrot ·
Calif.
skipper!
22 Temple
32 Play a
10 Patient
25 Arab !arid
trick on
sufferer
26 Pintail duck .,-..;;,,--,.,...."'T'!:'27 - Chaney
28 Electrical·
appliances
31 One name
for Satan
(2 wds. )
33 Thessalian

34 Po~e~
37 Humdinger

mountain

41 Theatrical
presentation
12 Main artery
43 Brewery
by-product
44 Outdo

- -+--=-+-f--1

util ity , workshop . St3 ,000 .
135 ACRES - Good clean

us

HTD

0 Hl S

Fl. ED

E l. S. O F I. A l S

TO

us

grouttd, 3 BR home ; water,

HEAR NEWS FIRST

(no bath!. ba(n 13. other
bldgs . On good. ro~d close

to mines : $17,500..;
WE CAN SELL YOU~
PROPERTY HERE ' S
WHY - E XP ERIENCE
SI;RVICE l. ACTION
HONESTY .
992-2259 or 99&lt;-&lt;561

.

'

AT

8 A.M., The Noon Report,

and. 5 P.M.

News 13 .

AstroGrapM
Bede Osol

You may have some ~roblems
today gelling o thers to cooperate. Do n't be as unyielding
as they are or noth ing wtl l get
done .

is dellnilely not the day to buck
Be tng the lone
dissenter will p ro bably le ~ve
yo u st randed
Play down yoU r role in joint
end.eavors today . Blowing your
own horn too loud ly wi ll only
turn associates agai nst you .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) II would
be a m 1stake to ch a iiMge one
whose vi ew con flicts wi th yours
today. Th e sympa th y 'is ltkety to
be w1th yo ur opponent. ·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)

If

yo u 're operating tn a strange
commercia l arena today. be
sure the deal is clear lo you . so
yo u 'll ha ve recourse tf you ' re
hoodwi nked .

LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23)
Matters hav ing a far-reaching

ON

EXPANDED WEEK DAY NEWSCASTS

:oo--- Tomorrow 3,~;

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

A X Y ll I, B, A A X 1t
\ , 0 N G F E I. I, 0 W

floor ha s 2 BR , bath , k it. ,

WMPO AM-FM

11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8 ,10, 13, is; ABC News 33.
·11 : 31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie " The Str~~ger
Within'" 6, 13; Movie "The Power" 8; Movie Key
Largo" 10; Janak! 33 .

._..J._.l.._L,.~ the major ity

CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it :

HTERI. Z

Ourstorv 33 .
10 : 3().....-.Anyone for Tennyson? 33 ; Almanac 20,

=-+--~-+--1 GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) This

GFU H ERA I S

R ., u tility , workshop . lst

Merv Griffin 4; Bewitched 6;
s·o merset 15; Mickey Mouse Club 8: Mister Rogers
20,33; Movie "Go West" 10; Call it Macaronl13.
4:31&gt;-Bew ltched 3; Afferschool Special6. 13; Partridge
Family 8; sesame St. ~0, 33 ; Get Smart 1.5.
5:0D-Bonanza 3; Fam ily Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3t&gt;-Adam .t2 4,13; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
E lee. Co. 20,33 .
6:01&gt;-News 3,4,8,10, t3,1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Business 33 .
6:3D-NBC News 3.4.15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlftlth 6;
CBS News 8,10 ; Crop Game 20.
7:1l0-Truth or Cons . 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Pop Goes t he Country 8;News 10;; Wild ·
Kingdom 13; Fam ily Affair 15; Book Beat 20; Know
Your School 33.
·
7:31&gt;-Last oft he Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Wild Wild
World of Animals 6; Match Game PM 8; Evening
Edition with Maritn Agronsky 20; The Judge 10; To
Tell the Truth t3; Wild Kingdom 15; B.ook Beat 33 .
8:01&gt;-Litlle House on the Prairie 3.4.15; Six Million
Dollar Man 6 ,t3 : Tony Orlando &amp; Down 8.10 ; The
Way It Was 20; I moges of Aging 33.
8:30-Lowell Thomas Remembers 20 .
9:1l0-Chlco &amp; The Man 3,4,1S; XII Winter Olympic
Games 6, t3; Cannon 8,1 0; Fine Music Special 33;
Images of Aging 20.
9:31&gt;- Dumpllngs 3,4, 15.
tO :Ot&gt;-Petrocelli 3,4, 15; Blue Knight 8.10; News 20;

nice to b e he lpl u l. but be
c ar ef ul who you vo lun tee r to
aid today . You ma y h i t
=-+-+-+--1-~ som eone who's wailing to un·
load all lheir burden s:

(' RYPTOQliOTES

Mason. W.Va.

4 : o~!.:\fst~i 0cartoon 3;

TAURUS (April 2Q, May 20) ll's

O n e lei t e r sim ply st ;:a nds fnr anol her. In t his sam ple A is
u se d f or the' three I. 's, X for I h e tw o{)")'~, l'll'. ·Sin)JIC l c tt~rs,
ap ostr oph es. the h•1tg l h ;md fornwl inn n f tiH~ w ords &lt;'Ire all
hints. Each day th e cnde ll'tl cr~ a rc diiTl•n:nt.

MASON FURNITURE

.

For Wednesday , Feb. 4, 1976

is

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

8, 10.

3: 1l0-Another World 3.4. IS; General Hospllal6,13; All
In The Family 8, 10; Kup's Show 20.
3 : 3~ne Lile to Live 13; M ickey Mouse Clul&gt;6; Mafch

ARIES (March 21-April 19}

Appropriate L.....l..-l-..L---1-

DA JLY

•

12 :45-Eiec. Co. 33.
12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
1 :Ot&gt;-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1 :31&gt;-Days of Our Lives 3,4, t5 ; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, t3 ;
As The World Turns 8,t o.
2:1l0-S20.000 Pyram id 6,13.
2:31&gt;-Doctors 3,4,t5; Neighbo rs 6,13; Guiding Light

• Be mice

'=-+---+--

•

•

'

NEITHER SNOW1:VER
RAIN NER GlOOMV
NIGHTS STA'IS
THIS MAIL-TOTER
FROM HIS

I CAN'T WRIT€ WITH 'IOVR
ELBOW IN M'-1 W/&gt;H, CHUCK ...
AND STOP WIGGLINGAROUND
50 MUCH ! 1{0\J MAKE THE

i!~Mm"!

APPOiNTED

••

ROUNDS

l

a, 10.

Search for Tomorrow

everyo n e

5 Simple

DOWN
·t Caustic
comment
2 Woodwind
3 Theater box

S:OO

12 :01&gt;-Maanlficent Marble Machine 3.15; Let's Make"
Deal13; Bob Braun' s 50-50 Cflub 4; News 6,8.10·
t2 :3o-Take lt)y Advice 3,15; . All My Children 6,13;

pa r -

ticular su1t to be luc ky for us .

tJ~~~=1~~~~~~=-~:~----~!:~~~~==~~---~~~L~~~f:;. •

STORE HOURS

Herman Grale

know if we have

by THOMAS JOSEPH

WIT~

H11.11'

2·3

C. B RAD F ORD , Auc tioneer
Co mplet e Ser'IIICe . Phone
949, '1 487 or 949 .2000. Racine ,
Oh ro , Crltt B:radfOrd ,
10-9 ./fc

Sal.-8:301il
THURSDAY TIL12 NOON

Pa ss

card carrier

---

Mon ., Tues., Wed. &amp;

Pass

Pass

4 N.T
64

tO More or
less
12 Prear -

MASON FURNITURE

773-5592

HIM

SitiZEET NOW.'

SEW I NG MA CHINE Repa ir s .
ser"Jce , all mak~s . 992 2284 .
Th&amp;'l ab ri c Shop . Pome roy .
Authorize d Si nger Sa l es and
Se r vice .
We
s harpen
Sc is sors

Modern 3

5t

tt :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imet's World 10.
A Loui siana reade r wants to

4¥

~

J5 l'HA; ZIGGY.

D &amp; 0 T RE 'E Tr imm in g , 20
years cxp tri ~ n c e . I nsured .
fr ee esti m a tes . Call 99 7 238 4
or I 6 14J 6YB 7257 Alba ny .
t o· tslfc

bedr ooms , ba t h. gas h ea t.
and large 1I \li ng at a very
low price o f $8500 .
•
BR s . , ho t wa ter h ea t , very
n i ce kitchen w ith ran g e,
r et rigera t 9 r . f ami ly room ,
patio and 2 car garage . 2
lot s . $46 ,900 .

OF FACT

COMIN ' IX'I-I'N ;H'

EXCAVATI N G ,
d oze r ,
b ackhoe
and
ditcher .
Char' tes R . t-t at t ietd Back
Hoe Serv ice . R u tl an d , Ohio .
Phon e ·747 2poa .
11 307Btc

5 BEDROOMS - Lots o f
ne w paneling , ca rpe t ing,

CHESHIRE -

YEP ! AS A. MATTE-=

REMODELI N G .
Ptumbirt9.'
h eat ing and al l types . of
gen era l
rep a ir
Wor k
Quarant eed 20 year s ex
p er ien ce
Ph one 99 2 7409_
5 1 tfc

SPECIAL .

$18.500 .
FAMILY ROOM -

ALLEY OOP

O'DELL A linement loca t ed
betl i n d
RvttanO
Grade
Sc h ool
Tu n eu p . brakes ,
whee l balancil'] g, ali n em~ nt.
Ph one 741 2004
t l 16 He

Large old 12 r ooms w ith
ba th . gas &amp; city water near
st ore s. On ly $5500.

Pas ~

Pass

,1¥

rn,

WOUL D YO U BEL I EVE ?
Build an a ll steel building at
Pole Bar n pri ces? Go ld en
Gian t A ll Steel Build in g.s,
R t .s . Box 148 , Waverly ,
Oh io Ph one 947 219 6
7 24.t l c

5

3•
Pa ss
3 N.T. Pass.
4A
Pass

By Oswald &amp; .Ia mes Jacoby

E LWOO D BOWER S REPAIR
Swee per s. toa s ter s. ir ons .
al l small appliances . Lawn
mower . n ex t to 'st ate H igh .
way Garage on · Route 7.
Pnon e 98 5 3825 .
/ 16 lf c

-EXC AVAT IN G , doler , lo.J'ut',.
an d ba c kh oe work ; septi c
1a11 k s
Ins t a lled ;
du.mp
tru ck!. and lo boys lor h tr e ;
wi ll ha ul t i ll d irt , top soil.
limes!one an d grav el. C. all
Bob or Roge r Je ff er s. day
ph on e 99'2 7089 , night ptt one
992 3515 or 992 5232 .
2 11 lfc

tt :31&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3.4. 15; Happy Days 13; Love

m atter of superstitio·n. They

READY MI X CO N ~ W~ ' i c ~
de live r e d right t o y o u r
project. Fast and easy . F ree
estimates Ph one '992 ~ 2 84 ,
Goegtein R eady Mil( ·co ., ,.
Mid dl eport. Oh io .
-"~~
630tfc '

b e droo m s,
21 1
bath s.
fami l y room , mod . kit .,. 2
car gar age a nd riice lot.

$45,000 .
WINTER

South

beca use t hey outra nk th e
other
three .
Wa nda White of Dallas lets
(Do you , have a question
her adva nced pupils have the
fu n of bidding a nd playing lor the expe rts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys " care ol this
today 's hand .
At least the bidding is fun . newspaper. The Jacobys will
Practically a ll of them arrive answer mdividual questio ns
at six spades The slam con-. 11 stamped. sell-a ddressed
trac t is not a good one . but envelopes are enClosed.
mos t of the world 's bes t most in teres ting questio ns
playe rs would a lso find their will be used in th is column
way to that unsound cont ract. and will receive co p;es of
'!'he play is no fun fo r them . JA COBY MODERN.)

SEP l i C TANK S c leaned .
Mode r n Sani ta tion . 99 2·3954
or 992 73 d9 .
9 18 l f c

Real Estate For Sale

Pass
Pass
Pass

Openi ng lead -

~

or r e modeling by
hour or contract . Phone 992
3511 or 99? 7573 after .5 p .m .
1 ~s 12tp

1&lt;-:ast

in

t he East ha nd . East m ight not
cove r the jack with t hat
holding .

of Life 8,10; Sesame Sl . 20.33 .

Nathan B i ggs
Radiator Specialist

Rog e r Wamsley
1 23 I mo .

N-EW HOME

North

queen -nine· sma ll

Douglas 13 .

tO :Ot&gt;-Ce lebrlty Sweepstakes 3.4.15; Edge ol Night 6;
Price Is Right 8,10.
10 :3D-High Rol lers 3,4,15; Dinah 6.
11 :01&gt;-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Wee kda y 4; Gambit
8, 10; Farmer' s Daughter 13.

24

From th e larg est Truck or
Buttdozu· ' Radia t or to th e
sma lles t H e at ~r Core .

Bic entennial Coins

1975S Proof Set (6 pes . )
125.00; 197S Mint Set 19.00 ;
1976 Silv er Proof Set tJ
pes . I l lS .OO ; 1976 Silver
UNC Set 13 pes.) 18.50.
Call Rutland. 742.2331
R&amp;J COINS

E XCAVATI NG , BACKHOES
A ND D OZER , Lt'\ R GE A ND
SMA LL
SEPT IC T A N KS
IN S T A LLE D
B I L L
P U L LI N S, PHO NE ~97 2478 ,
D AY O R N IC t~T
II II l8 tp

against

0

FOR SALE

The jack of trumps is led
f rom dummy at trick two . If
East ducks th e jack is allowed
to ride . If East cove rs South
wins p i cks up We s t ' s
double ton 10·9 a nd m a kes the
con tract
Th e play might a lso work

Nor th-South vulnerable

10.

6 :55-'-hutk Whllel&lt;eports 10; Good Morning Trl State
13.
7:1l0-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning , America 6, t3; CBS
N ews 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Fr iends 10.
7:31&gt;-Schoolles tO .
s :oo-Lassle 6 ; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St . 33.
8 : 3~Bi g Valley 6.9:1l0-Not For Women Only 3; Phil
Donahue 4,1 5: Lucy Show 8; Mike Douglas 10;
Morning with D.J . 13 . .
9:31&gt;-A .M. 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike

some cha nce tu make a con·
tract is better than no chance
and thC contract can be made .

"''

GH\l.DilW?...

Currencv and Supplies
Buy , Sa le or T r ade

acres. CALL TODAY .
AN AMAZING VALUE Large hom e. 5 BR. 2 baJhs,

l i vi ng R ., H .W . floors, large

~ "-' :.1 4n

lOSER
.. .47 ... 49 ... 40 ...

s...-acuse, Ohio

1 22 1 mo .

home, own water 1 1 nice 2
BR ap ts ., mobile home, 22

CO LE CO Deluxe Je t a i r
hock ey tabl e . 311, by 6Jl ~.
$125. Pho ne 99 2·5171.
1·30.41p

: 1 ,, · .

•'

·

6 : 3o-Columbus Today 4; News 6 ; Bible Answers B;
Farmtime 10.
6: 4G-Ounce of Prevention 10.
6 : 45--Mornl ng Report 1

They all lose a hea rt tri ck and
trump trick .
·
Then Wa nda points ou t t hat

• t\J8 7. 4 2
WF:ST
EAST
.10 9
4 Q62
¥ 7543 2
¥ A6
tK to
• J865 3~
o!oK Q109
olo 63
'
SOUTH ID I
K8 754
¥ K Q .I 9 8

"10

6 : 15-Farm Report 13.
6 : 2~T he Story 13.

WIN AT BRIDGE

• 10
t '/97 4

LARRY LAVEND_(R

PH.992-6173

FREE GAS - 'Lovely 3 BR

CO RN for sale . Phone 247
2664 , Dallas H i ll.
1
' 1.30-51 p

fl.'

Now accepting clienls
for bookkeeping and
Ia x service.

6 :oo-Sunr ise Semester

NO RTH
• •J 3

·'

OPERATE YOUR
OWN BUSINES~

Own and manage ven din '::,.
r oute d is pen sing nut. g um
and c andy con f ections in
Pomeroy or \llci n i ty . Hig h
profit lf ems . Car needed to
se rv ice ,-our vendi ng r ou t e .
' Id eal part lime or full t ime
buF&gt;iness . Cash In ves tmen t
$ 1J9 5 10 $J795 and up . Fo r
details ca ll our toll . f r e;·e
n um ber 1 BOO 328 6648 or
wri t e Dept . BVV , 393 8
Meado wbrook Rd ,, Min
neapolis , M N . 55426.

Blown
Insulation Services
BIOwrf into Walls &amp; AHic s'
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING .SOFFITT
GUTTERS.AWNINGS

ovt

WEDNESDAY . FEBRUARY 4,1976

Some chan&lt;:e beats none

FREE ESTIMATES

L

Channel Five
7 p.m . - Changed Lives (c)
7:30 - Bill Cosby Show tel
B:llO--Outdoor Sportsman It)
8 : 3~Daytlme lei
9:31&gt;-Wyatt Earp
10 ,oo-washingtoo Debates tel

33.

YO~ W~li

Quest for

l : oo--Tomorrow J ,.t ; News. 13.

Angels 3.4, 15; ~ews 20; Woman Alive!

Ot

10: 00-- City

. ..

12 ; 3o-Movie " Watusl" 8; Movte

20,33 .
9: 3()-NB A AII .Star Game 8, 10.

SAID MERHV IF

CASE!

1· 121 mo.

LARRY WHOBREY
PUBLIC
ACCOUNTANT

6,13: Jana~1 33.
12 ·1J0-News 8,10.

a.

CAPTAIN

MODERN CHEMICALS

10 : 3o-W oman Alive! 20; Woman 33.

11 :IJO-News 3,4.6. t3.1 5; ABC News J3 . of the Week
ll : 3o-J ohnnv Carson 3,4, 15; Mystery

7: 30-- HOIIywood Squares 3, 4, Lei's Deal W ith n 6;
\1) ,000 t-'yram id 8; Evening Edition with Martin
Agronsky 70; Pr ice Is Right 10; To Tell The r,.uth
13; Hiqh School T .V . Honor Society 15; Family
T heat, e ·33.
8 :00----Movin ' On 3, 4, 15 ; H appv Davs 6, 13 ; Good Times
10; lntemalional Animlat io n Fest i va l 20 ; Is It
Your Time ? 33
8 : 30-Laverne and Sh irley 6, 13 · Pop ! 8.10; Consumer
Survival Kit 10,33 .
9 : 00---- Police Woman 3,4. 15; X II W in ter Olympics
Pre 'lli ew 6 , 13 ; M A S H 8, 10_; Adams Chrq nlcles

licensed
baker
and
decorator .
Kitchen State Insp ec ted

We Buy Ant iques

50
WITH
OVER
WE
PROPERTIE S.
OUGHT TO HAVE IT.

.,

'

Ph o ne 992 -

110,000
Weekly Grain
Capacity

~2 - 3 1 - tf c

-

CO-QP
Model UCXXX .

COUNTRY
Mo bi l e Hom e
Park , Rt 33 , len mites north
of Pomeroy . L arg e lots with
con cr ete pa t io s, si dewa lks,
runner s and o ft s tre e t
par k ing . Phon e 99 2 7479 .

,i ii makes · a nd

1-

be e't .

Rill Estate for Sale

10 28 l i e:

197 3 PROWLER Camper . 21
'&gt;B ~H
ft . se lf .conta in ed, sleeps 7.
·I I f c .
EHeltent c ondi tio n . Cal l
9&lt;n .7J ?O.
2 BR Furnish ed mobi le •h ome
2 1 6tc
on pr iva t e lo t in Syra C·u se.
w ee k , p lu s
$22 . 50 . per
Call
ut i lities . adu l ts only
Now at Landmark
Geo
Donavan , (6 14) 985
35 04 or 992 55 96 .
I 79 6tc

Th e
Da i l y
Sentinel ,
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769.
·
2 3 3tc

AKC Mal e Dach shund, house
br,oken and loves Chi ldren .
Price 550. Phone 742 ·2809 .
' ·30 .ttp

FREEZER
56 16.

,

'

Antique

TUESDAY . FEBRUARY l, 1976

•

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

'5.00 up

HO U ~ E in R ull and

lost

Pets

For Sale

For Sale

- -- -----'--

----------

I 2 261p

or Month

DE1\ LER S in sc r a p, ~ron .
meta ls, tunk autos R idN's
Savage Phon e 99'1 5-168 .
1 2 29tp

-

19 71 CHEV Y ', !On I whee l
drive p ic l.. up
nn1.1n cc o t
ln c.t ory w a rril n ly Ch ec k
1nis be fore you buy a new
one Ph on e .;lf lc r ',p mo r on
We ~;•l&lt;. e ncJs , 9Q'! 3 196
\ 9 1fc

b uilding
d e rrick .

by Wee~

G tN&lt;;"ENG , -~72 p er lb . Phone
'(6 11 1 371{ 6? :!9
I 16 • fc:

-

19 73 CJ ~JEEP. 25,000 m ile s,
excellent co ndit 1on . $2.600 .
Phon e 949 2860 .
2 r 3t c

CR A NE Ser\li ce ,
erectio n , 4b II
Phone 99 7 54 68.

Special Rates

The state of Washin'g ton,
King CoWJty and the city of LADY to do hou se wo rk 1 or 2
Seattle are suing for up to
day s u week , S2 hou r,
r e f e r ences . Phon e 949 2774.
$32.5 million over the loss of
~ I 3tc
the Seattle Pilots in 1970.
P"ARTT TM_E_ 1-;;;e-r-; i-;.,;~;~-for
The other m a in condition of
ar ea survey . Avai la bl e
the franchise award is
Mar c i'J , Apr ! t. Must provid e
ow n transportation . Apply
acquisition of a satisfactory
in
h and .writing
g i ving
lease on the King County
per sona! background . Send
to Box 729 E. c -o The Daily
domed stadium, popularly
Sentin e l , Po me ro y , Ohio
called the Kingdome.
45769.
Gorton said he had not
'} , 1-41p
heard from the league .
WEi1R ~l~ : ;-~1:!-;:~;c-;-1-;:-~d
" It is strange. I have not
lady to live in . 1 ree roOm
an d board a nd sma ll wages
heard a word," he said.
tor nght du ties . 5ee at 308
" They haven't called me. It
Pag t St ., Middlepo r l , Ohio .
makes yo u l"oncler about the ·
1 11 lfc

A thought for the day:
Horace Greeley said, " The
Ulusion that times that were
are better than those that are
has probably pervaded all

F ORD , 4 w h eel drive tru ck, V
Ha r ol d
8 , good condition
L o ng
Bott om .
B rew er ,
Phon e ~ 614 1 985 355 4.
2 1 I tc

196 S F ORO L TO N ew 12 g a .
W inch es ter 37 A Sin gle Sho t
? BEDR OOM mo bil e home
Phon e 7•12 ?.359
wi l h 3 1 .1 a c r es o t g roun d .
1 13 261p
Phon e 2J7 ? 16 1 Letar t. Otli o .
1 23 17tc
HAY lor sal e. $1 ba l e or trad e?
Phone
F r a nk
Dache l. 1 . A CRE . b ig g a rd en , 5 rooms
L eading Cre e k Rd 742 .2085 .
· and ba th tiome , n ew drill ed
') I 161p
w e l l and fu r[lace , new
bathroom , 2 f ir ep taces , good
loc at ion i n L e tar t Fa Hs,
CR I B . good co nd itio n . mat
Ohio . '!.7 ,50 0. Phone 2.t 7 3853 .
tr. ess , like n ew . S.35 . Phone
1 23 t2tc
992 SBJJ .
I 29 ri le
t OR RENT OR SA LE . 3
3. 11 ACR E S build ing si te 1n
bedrm mo bil e hom e. un
Bas nan . Water and gas,
f urnish ed . util i tie s pa id on WALNUT Cons ole , modern ,
S5 ,00 0 Phone Che! ter (6 141
am lm
rad io, .t sp ee d
R t 33 in Bu r l ingham Ph one
985 '1245.
. 992 7751
.
c hanger Ba l a_ n cc $101.3 1 or
. l 3041c
terms . Call 99 2 39 65.
123 1 tfc
1 27 1fc

OL D f urniture . ice bo xes.
br ass be ds , sto ne iar s, or
compl el e h ousehol ds . Wr it e
M
D . Mi l ler , R l
2,
Pome r oy, Ohio . Call 992
7760 .
10"7 7!J

rnodels of mol:ji l e home5 .
Phon e ar ea code 614 423 ·
953 1.
4· 13 .1fc
-- - ·

-

Middleport, o '. Ph. 992· 2171

WANTED old . upri g ht p ia nos
i n an y co nditio n . Wi l l pay
$10 eac h . F irst floor only .
Wrire giving direc t ions to
W1tten P ia no Co ., Box 188 ,
Sard is, Ohio 43946 .
1 21 . l Ot p

DAILY SENTINEL

-

1968 JEEP Wagoneer , 6 c y l
st d , lock out hubs . Phon e
Ha ro ld
B r e w er ,
Long
Boll om Ohio {614) 985 3554 .
'
2 1 ttc

'J?? l ll ll

HOTEL

WANTED old up rig ht pia no s
i n any condition Wi ll pay
$ 10 eac h ', First floor on l y ,
Wri t e giving d i reclio n s to
Wi11e n Piano Co .• Bo ,.; 188.
Sardis . Ohi o 0946 .
,
1 25 lOtp

Free estimates on car·
Peting .i nd installation .
W e' ll bring samples t.o your
home with _no obligation .
See how y~u can r ea lly
sa \I e.
Mike Young , Manager
Sales and In stallation
Rt . 3, Pom ero y , Qhio. 45769
Ph one day or night
j ) •t ..1 mo .
614 . 9 n -l206

1974 DODGE Colt. 4 dr ., s.w .,
a ut o . . 10 .000 miles. $3. 000.
Also . 1966 Fal con .t dr a uto .
6 cyl. $250 . Ca ll 992 2776
after 7 p .m
"! I Jt p

/ I R CO Hrli
f RC
wclt:linq
milchine . new c t c c ; n il
accessor ies i n cluded PhOn e

La Salle

Wanted To Buy

Wanted
'( fi.5 H p aid •vr

SLOAN'S
CARPETING

I

MALE , b l ack and White
walk er coon ho und in Shade
area . Call . Paul Si nc lair , R t.
1, Shad e, Ohio, 161 4) 696 1032
c ollect. r eward .
2-1 61 p

deal."

12695

BLIND ADS
1\dditional 25c Charg e per
1\ d v er t isernen t
OFFICE HOUR S
8 JQ . a . m to 5 00 p m .
Dai l y . 8 JOa m to 1( .00 Noon
Sa tu rday

that " the trial is on ."

11.
12.

.'••

•

Television .log for easy vzewzng

CiOOO OLD PUCKER PUSS ,
THWE!:.T ABOUT EVERYTHINO•NIC:E BOY~

ce nt~

Help Wanted .

10.

Pom eroy Office
105 Butternut
992 -3345
Formerly w eed Wholesa le.
F c a t unng :
De l u"" Zero .... Co p y Serv ice ,
O ff ice
S upplies ,
Mimeograp~
Su p plie s ,
largest selection o f wed
ding sup plies in South
ea sl ern Oh io ..
· The Pr i nt Sho p Complet e
(Still 1n busin ess in Middl epor t)
1282 m o .

Dark maroon f inish, blk . bucket v in-yl sea t s, radio, V-8
e ngine, au tomatic. power st eering, good tires, a
sportsman's dream.

EVERETT, Wash . !UP!)
- Despite Seattle being
awa rded
an
American PART Aireda l e dog, bla ck and
League expansion franchise
brown , Shaggy . Lo st in urea
of Pomeroy , Middleport or
for
1977, trial · of a
Ma so·n Coun t y , W . va . area .
multimillion d ollar s ui t
Answe r s to t h e name of
"B eiu ." F amily p e t . Phone
against the le ague is ·
992 7832 or 992 3671. Ask tor
resuming today .
Ore lla Hy se ll .
One of the main conditions
2-1·6t C
of the franchise award to a
g r o up headed by Lester
3 FULL TIME c l erk positions ;
Smith and entertain er Danny
1 i n ·Off ice worker , 2 f ie ld
Kaye was dropping the suit
wo r k e r s, for 1em porar y
State Program fro m m id
against the league but the
Fe bruar y t hr o u g h June .
word from Slade Gorton,
Equal Opp o r tunity Em
state a ttorney general, was
p !oyer . Apply Box 7298, c o

1.

$3895

1972 CHEVROLET2 ·TO N C&amp;C
.
12995
102d C. A . heavy duty spri ngs, 292-6 cyl. eng 1ne, 15, 000
l b . 2 speed rear ax le, foam sea t , mirrors, c lea n ca b .

c on scc ur lv c insert ions
26 ce 1'1 1S per wo rd six con
sc cutivc i nsertion's
.
25 Per Cent Disco un t on patd

(Auwen lolllorTOwJ

Yu•l!rday'•

Min tmum Charge \ I DO
ce nts per worel three

ads and ad s paid

Quality Prinl Shop

101" c ab to ax le, 1 speed, R . ax le, S speed, good 900x20
tires, fr ame reinforced , V-8 engine, hea t e r , ready to
wo r k .

RATES

,

-

o.

1973 INTERNATIONAL 1600SE RIE S

F o r want Ad S e r vi c e
s ce n t s per word on e tnsertton
J.r

C

.JUST THE CUS'TOMARY
TO CHECK

•

Business Services

Pomeroy

· OF
QUALITY _Motor

tor oay o f P ublica ! ion

[]

-

Auto Sales

Auto Sales

•

•

Un~eramble these foor Jumbles,

form rour ordinary

'

9 - The Daily Sentinel , Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesdav. F:eb . 3, 1976

effect on · th e hou se hold or
famil y m ust be thoroughly understood by you an d y our mate
tod ay.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A
person whO has neg lected to
thank you for past tavor.s wil l
knock on yo ur door aga1n today. Don 't look fo r a different
ending .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc:.
21) Normally. Lady Luck smiles .
upon yo u. Today, you cou ld
ven ture where you know the
odds are against you ·- a nd
lose your shirt .

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan .
19) Timing is aU-important to-d-ay. It would be f oolish to
make conces1ion s an d upset ·
your we ll played inten1ions.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 1tl
Just because lhe person who
present s a plan to you is
st r ong- wi lled and forceful
doesn 't mean he's right. Use
yo ur own ju dgment.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 201
Yo ur gene rous nature can be a
detriment today if you find
yo u'll be-gtvtng more th an you
ca n alford. Don'l overextend

&amp;~
Feb. 4, 1976

Yo u' re going l o be more
footloose and tancy-tree thi s
coming year than you have
been l or some time . Sail away
so mething now tor those fre ~
ouent short trips.

S tGf-15 CAN START
ARGUMENTS, TOO, CHUCK 1

�~i~l!Jr.'~"'::::;;:;;::•'For Fast Results Use The Senti-,wl Classifieds

DICK TRACY

one letter to ra.ch squart, to
w o r~ t.

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

OE/\OLINES

._
p M
Day
B e fore
Pub I icat ion
Monday DC&lt;I dllll C 9 a . m .

Ccmcelt at ,on

2 SIGNS

Corr ec tions

will be accepted until 9 a . m .
REGULATIONS

IESSMYTl

Th e Publisher rese rves the
r ioh ' tn ~" dit or r c iec t anv ads
deemed objeclionaL Th e
publi s her
will
no t
be

NO I&lt;:EPUTA!SLE
LUNCH COUNTER
WOULD SERVE THEM .

r espons ibl e for more than on e
incor-rect tnserlion

I I

Now &amp;rTBnlflt the.cirded letters
to form the surprise anawer. u
aucreated by the abon cartoon.

j

"t I I 1KI I I ]"
Jumblt•• PURGE

I

OFTEN

MODIF Y HAIRDO

.htvni11htd U'hl'n ht• !law tlu•

An•wrr:

dentiJJt ., bill -"OPEN MOUTHED"

Long Bottom News Notes
By Ruth Larkins
A bridal shower was held in
the basement of the Long
Bottom Methodis t Churc h for
Mr . and Mrs . Douglas
Hauber . They were 24 persons in attendance. They
received many nice gift s.
Phyllis
New lun
ha s
return ed
home
from
Veterans Memorial Hospital

A Low Cost
Want Ad
Will Cut
Cost of
Uving ••••..
WRITE YOUR
OWN AD!
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afte r eme r ge n cy s urg ery.
She is m uch improved.
Mr. Raymond Larkins and
famil y visited his pare nts ,
Mr . a nd Mrs. Fred Larkins
uver the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs . Gera ld
Stethem and son of Canton,
visited his parents , Mr. a nd
Mrs. Emmet Stehem uve r the
weekend.
Mae McPeek and Leona
He nsley took supper with Mr .
and Mrs . Emmet Stethem
0 ne night last week. Also
v1siting we re Elza a~d Sadie
Larkins.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Holter
a nd baby visited his paren ts,
Mr. and Mrs . Hank Holte r
a nd fam ily over the weekend .
Mr. and Mrs . Doug Ball a nd
f amily of West Virg inia
v isited his parents, Mr. and
Mrs . Millard Ball.
Visit in g Mr. and Mrs .
E r nest Griffin ove r th e
•eekend we re Mr . and Mrs.
I ,arr y Gri ffin of Gallipolis
and Mr . and Mrs . J im Ste tler
0f Reedsv ille .
Mary Pierce has returned
horne from Beckley , W. Va .
Vi si tin g Ernestine Hayman
ver
the weekend were Mr .
0
and Mrs. Elbert F itzpa trick,
Mr . and Mr s. Richard
Hayman, Mr . a nd Mrs.
Robert L. Bos ton and family
0 f Vincent , Oh io. and Mr. and
Mrs. Marti n Nesse lr oa d .
E r nestin e Hayman s pen t
SWJday with Mr . and Mrs.
Nesselroad .

.

"

Reedsville
News Notes
l)y Mrs. l.yle Baidersun
Dale Smith has returned
llOme afte r attending an
electri c al scho ol at Fort
Worth , Texas.
Chester MWldry Sr. has
been a pat ient at Veterans
Hospital in HWJ ling ton , W.
Va.
Mr s. Alpha Smith visited
with Mrs. Bert Smith of
Reedsville Rd. , recently.
Mr s . Ka thryn Di e tz of
Belpre , Mrs. Lillian Pickens,
Mrs. Ruth Anne Balderson
and Kay visited at the Bob
evans F arms near Gallipolis.
Grant Boring has been a
patie nt at the St. Joseph
Hospital , Parkersburg , W.
Va .

wdhin

1974 PLY . CUDA

tO

day s

2.
3.
4.
5.

6.
7.
8.
9.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$2 DO for 50 wo rd rninimum
Each addittonat word 3

NAME
ADDRESS
-

CITY
PHONE

'

MAIL WITH

1.25

1

TO ntE

Notice

1972 PLYMOUTH Cri cket,
c u stomized. ru n s gr e a t .
Good work c ar : 4 cy l , body
da m age ~.ear . $350. Phone
949 2225 ,
I 30 3t c

CAREER awaits you with
Luzier
Cos m etics,
" a
quali ty prod uc t f or 53
y ears"
No
territo ry
restri c tion , work fr om your
home . St il l t1m e to w 1n your 197 5 C UTLA SS Sa lon , full y
trip to Na ss a u . For ap
equ ip p e d , exce pt pow e r
p ointment. cal l Madylon
wi n dows
Call between . 9
Stone
(3041
7279269
a .m . and 11 noon Phone 99 2
(c ol lec t ) .
5013 .
2 3 12tc
1 30 3 tc

FABRIC Sal e Co ntinued . Du e 1969 CHEVEL LE 396, 4 sp . , ·I
to ba d w eath er , our sa l e wil l
el even
gears.
positive
be extend ed for anot he r
tr ac l ion . e~~:tra parts , S695 .
Phone 742 3076 af ter 6 p .m .
Fe b . " 7
w ee k
e nding
1 28 6\C
Carot1na Fabrics on RL 7 ,
one h alf m i te n orth of
Chester , Ohio . Henry iH) d
1974 F01&lt;D v an , I ton tong
Mary Hunter, owne r s
wheel base , auto . wi t h P S
2 1 61p
and brakes , radio. set up to
pull c amp er Phone 99 2- 7320 .
2 I 61 c
1~.\CUME
T AX
prepared,
F-e dera l and st at e tax es
Wi ll be done bY appl onl y
Plea se p hone 997 ?772 , or sec
Mrs . Wanda Eblin . Laurel
Cli ff R d . . Pomeroy .
12 J l 301C ENJOY graci o u s .l iving at Vi ll age Manor
in Mid
~- - -dleJ10rl for as low as $104 per
MA K E SURE you get e v ery
month , p lus e lectric. T hese
poss ib l e dedu c tion this year
are brand new high ~ualitY .
Hav e your Feder.al and
apar t m en ts at pr ice s you
St a te Inco m e Tax retu rn by
c an alford . Y our r ent in
an ac coun tan I . Phone 992
e l u d es month to month
6 173 .
leases , all e l ec: . l i ving ,
1 21 521 c
c ar peti ng ,
rang e
and
refrigerato r, fr ee tras h
SHOOTING Match , Sunda·y ,
p ic kup , c able TV at y~ur
Feb . I , 12 : 30 p .m . Just of!
expe n se,
an d
on S1l e
R 1. 7 by pa s s. Sponsored by
laundry faci l ities . Con
th e Lu c ky 7 Gu n Cl ub . Call
ven ic nt to sh opp ing on Third
99 2 5335 for fur t h er details .
and Mill Stree ts in Mid
t .306tc . dl eport . See the manager at
Riv erside Apa rt t;n ents · or
IN COME
Ta K
Se rvi ce,
cJ)II 992 3273 . F urn ls h e ~
Fe dera l or S tate t axes .
a.pa r tme nt s
are
also
Phon e 992 7228 or see·
availabl e .
Wa ll ace Rus se tt ·, Bra dbu ry .
2 2 78 tc
,
1·30 16t c
--,-----,__
2 BE DRM . tra i l e r dOub l e
1 w tL L be g iv ing piano lessons
w1de , f ur n i shed , utiliti es
in my hom e star t i.n g Feb . 1.
.Pa id , no c h ildre n or peL
N ear Pam ero y . Phon e 99 2
for in fo r mation ca ll 992
J27B
70 t7 or 992 7666
1 3 5tp .
12 18 501C

For Rent

-

--

__

H AV-E YOU R -in co me ta xes
p repareel by St ev e Cle land ,
Ra ci ne . Phone 949 2883 .
l 29 6t c

lll COURT ST.

~ooms,

POMEROY, OHIO

45769

ages\ "

1969 MER CU R Y wagon , auto .
A M and F M radio , run ~
good , Aln1ost ha lf ot book
pr 1cc . Phone 992 361'1' be f or e,
2 p .m .
t 2 31c

Mobile Homes For Sale
MOB IL E H ome , 10 x 60 , 'l
br W1th addil1onal room ,
gas heat , furni ~ h e d . Ex
cc- lle n t co nditi o n , $4,3 00
Phone I JQ,I J 773 5886 .
1 30 61p
1972~
CHAMPION
Mobile
Home 11 )( 60 comp lete l y
fur nishe d . e"'ce lt en t co n
dit 1on Ph one 992 3 189 . 1
2· 1 61 P

Ca ll 992

!.

l·.::,'!,.

J A ND 4 I&lt;NI . rurni shed and
unfurn is h ed ap ts . Phon e 992
54 34 '
11 9 t fc

----·

-~

·--

--...,.._-

3

1 27 6tp

BEDRM .
home ,
j us t
f inishe d , remod e ling , Sale m
St , Rutland . Ph one 742 2306
a l t er 4 p ,m . or see Milo B.
H utchison .
9 23 ti c

H OU SE on L in coln Hg IS 2
b edrrn , large k itc hen . l ul l
b 'asement , excet ten 1 buy lor
S8 ,90 D. with n ew t urnilu r e .
on ly $10 .300 P hone 99? 76.18
1 6 261c
ROOM house . bath . l ull
ba seme n! in good co nd ition,
g arage and sma ll barn . s~ ~
a cres n ear Chester ..Phone
( 61~ ) 985 4 140 .
'} . 1 1/t c

5

3

'}.

B'R HOME . iust fi ni sh ed
r emo del ing
Sil l em
St .
Rutlan'd . Ph one i47 230 6
a f t er 4 p . m . or see Milo B.
H Utc h inson .
10 9 1f c
AC RE S with
f i n ished
ba seme nt
Call (6 1·1l 985
,1203 a f t er 5 p m
1 28 610
Br~ c k home . 6 yr s , 2 1 ,
baths . q a-r ag e o n 2 H acres
on paved r oad n ear I orked
Ru n St at e 1 orest
Phone
( 6 1 4~ 667 3787 . $)!! ,000.
'
11 5?7 tp

.1 B R

1 RM . and bath , -; ullable f or
office , or apt ., no chi ldren .
very nice . 118 ' • E . Ma in St. ,
P om e roy , Sec on(:l f loor , E
F . Robilison . 992 284 6.
1 30 6tc
3 RM f urnis h ed apt .. ulil1ties
p a id , 356 N o rth F ourth .
M iddl eport .
1 30 6tp
WA REHOU SE or store roo m,
25 x: 75 at 3 1I Condo r St. .
( R ea r 610 E ~ Main ) . Ph . 992
7178 .
1 30 -61c

Business Opportunilies

Automatic Water
Conditioner

3 BEDRM hom e, li ving rm ..
kit ch en and d in ing, rm . Ba th
and half i n M i d dlepo r t .
PhOn e 99 2 3 129 or 992591•1.
2 1 Jtc
3

BEDRM . hou se in Mid
d l eport , co rn er lo t . N ew
bath , stor y a nd hal f . uti l ity
room , n ew c arp eling and
new root , garage and wor k
room , f ruit cella r . Close to
SC hO Ol
and
Sh Opp i n g ,
$ 17,500. Phone 992 7624 .
I 27 26tc

•
'•

Cakes, Baked
and Decorated
To Your Order

Modern

FURN ITUR E
STR!PP ING SERVICE
Remova l of
Pa in t s
P lastics . Varnis hes , etc .
Wood or Metal.
Repa irs
R efln lshjng Of
Furniture .
Burn 1shing Polishing of
Copper &amp; Brass

•

Kuhl Cake Decor

EASY
'lOlii&lt;. NOTE

PRvM10' ~D
~EVICAL

Call 992·7537
Pomeroy , Ohio

100 Kerr Street
Pomerov ,. Oh io 45769
(614) 992 - 2798, D ic k Seyl er
1·29 -l mo .

TO

THIC

SECRET OF
THE MUMMY

NOT QUITE ~ I T

TO LEA~N
THE SECRET, MEte T
ME HERE !

'299
....____----1'
_ -'Y Reg . 133'-00 Val.
POMEROY LANDMARk
· ·~-Jack W . Carsey , Mgr .
...
Phone 992-2181
CO A L . l imestone an d al l types
of sa i l and ro c k salt for ice
and snow r e m ova l . E)ol.
c elsi Or Salt Wo rk s, East
Main St., Pomer oy , Ohi o .
Phone 99 2' 389 1.
12 7 1f c
McDAN IEL
Custom Bu t
c h ering , west Co lu mbia, w .
Va . We bu t cre r ca llle and
hogs .
Sl O
c allle
sta ug rt ter ; $7 f or h ogs ; 1~c
' for cutt ing and wrap p in g .
State and f ederal In spec te d :
Open 6 days per week .
P h one (3041 882 3224 .
1·30 26tc

----' - ---

Locat ion P lus C..harm Plu s
Durab i l i t y . St one face d ,
lo'lle ly slated fl oors, idea l
level lot , needs 2 or 3
parti1 ions a nd a shower . N.
gas FA . furnace , ce ntral
air . $7 ,000 .

New

N. gas

F.A. furna ce &amp; .

lots of other NEWS. GOOD
CONDITION 110,000 .
ONE FLOOR PLAN - Ful l
ba sement with 1 BR. TV

AGE OR EXPERIENCE
NOT A FACTOR

lot. 19,500.
A LOOK WI LL CO NVINCE
YOU - 2 BR . bath , NEW

SA DOLE
and
matching
brid le . Will f i f large pony .
Phone 742 .2809 .
1-30 ·41p

perma pan e win dow s,
carpeting,
p a n e ling ,
ki't c h en ,
carp ort .
Fu l l
basement, N . gas furna ce,

~

stereo, 8
lrrlCk I ' rlpC. am fm rad iO
co mb matlon . Oa lan ce S98 .60
or t erJllS . Call 992 3965 ,
.
·
1 7 t tc

- -·----·· - =:.:,.--- -; ,-....:::...:;____
.C t' l' L fl7T.'SALE . CA(l C-o al
c·omp,M ·,
1 mi l e north ot
Cheshi r e. on Rt 7. Pick your
o wn , }20 per ton . Open 6 da ys
pe r week , or cal l I 61JI 367
7330 lor j urt h er information .
1 8 78 t c

Ph . 992·,!993

tW;MM

.

4 10 - 1 mo

I

.A

~DrHA~

50 .. .

HADA

t A

1\APf"/

COINS

\\'est

•
lJ1'fLE ORPHAN ANNIE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.. •
Ph . 992 -2114'
P om eroy . !

~. .~LITTL-8~~~

' TEAFORD
Virgil B., Sr ., Broker
110 Mec hanic Pomeroy, 0 .

Phone 99H325
NEW LI ST IN G -

3 Br s ,

l arge
kit . , n ew
F .A.
furn ace .
ba se m e nt.
porch es a nd ni ce lo t in
Rutland . $ 12,500.

4 BEDROOMS -

Steam

he at. 2 l ivi ngs. 2 'porch es.
c ook a nd bak e · u n i t s ,
b asemen t w ith garage

$20, 000.
5 BEDROOMS -

Living ,

dining , g lasse d·in porch .
st ea m heal \gas f ired), _
ba sem e nt on la rge lof.

$16,500 .
NEW LISTING

"

n a t . gas furna ce, c 1ty wa t er
acre .
a nd 2 ba th s,

l,,

3 ni ce

:::...._

T~A;'S

Al-JD TARL

found

a

GASOlJNE

The a nswer · is yes. Sp.ades
arc our luckv sui t. This isn't a

K•

ACROSS
I Audacious
5 \I.M .W.

ALLEY

A

man's
life
maL!
be

Joel. LJOU an' Rufus

qo alonq t' make sure

he come back'

at

~L~l~L~A~n~··~~~·~n~~----------------~--~~~~~~~~~~~~::~-r----r-~~~~~~~~::~~~y--01--l MERCIRJLSHEIK!'r- CYI&lt;IL THE SWINE'S
HMMr- MY GREATl oAur..r-.. I 1
5 ,.:..n:;r, IOF56T TALL-- BlJT-g;8~- THE ~r 6RANDFATHER SAID,
Crv-vm-1Vl"
'-'" ""'"'
E
THING 15 Tf-DSE INNU!v\ER.ABL.E N&lt;!AS EMER&lt;Sif'..G
'M-IEN IN TROUBL /
FR:IV\ HIS BEARDCALL ON THE U.S A. " r
___.-

are

l uck y

fo r

organisms
6 " Clive of - "

7 Greek island
8 Medieval
shield
9 on ·pension
ran~ed
( abbr.)
( 2 'w ds. )
II Character·
13 Ra dioman 's
Yesterday's 1\u•w'"
istic
sign-off
31 Leporide
14 Nautch girl 23 Wrest
( 3 wds.)
26 Eyelid
35 Vaudeville
17 Peerce or
15 Spelling
proble m
features
Smuts
contest
18 Appellation
28 Target for 36 Old card
16 Jai 19 Coloring
Bob
game
17 See 37
expert
McAdoo
37 Exclamation
Across
20 Evergreen
29 Gaelic
38 Caddoan
(2 wds .)
30 Centra l
Indian
trees
21 Buccaneers 21 - Alto,
American 39 Second Mrs.
24 Yes,
Sinatra
parrot ·
Calif.
skipper!
22 Temple
32 Play a
10 Patient
25 Arab !arid
trick on
sufferer
26 Pintail duck .,-..;;,,--,.,...."'T'!:'27 - Chaney
28 Electrical·
appliances
31 One name
for Satan
(2 wds. )
33 Thessalian

34 Po~e~
37 Humdinger

mountain

41 Theatrical
presentation
12 Main artery
43 Brewery
by-product
44 Outdo

- -+--=-+-f--1

util ity , workshop . St3 ,000 .
135 ACRES - Good clean

us

HTD

0 Hl S

Fl. ED

E l. S. O F I. A l S

TO

us

grouttd, 3 BR home ; water,

HEAR NEWS FIRST

(no bath!. ba(n 13. other
bldgs . On good. ro~d close

to mines : $17,500..;
WE CAN SELL YOU~
PROPERTY HERE ' S
WHY - E XP ERIENCE
SI;RVICE l. ACTION
HONESTY .
992-2259 or 99&lt;-&lt;561

.

'

AT

8 A.M., The Noon Report,

and. 5 P.M.

News 13 .

AstroGrapM
Bede Osol

You may have some ~roblems
today gelling o thers to cooperate. Do n't be as unyielding
as they are or noth ing wtl l get
done .

is dellnilely not the day to buck
Be tng the lone
dissenter will p ro bably le ~ve
yo u st randed
Play down yoU r role in joint
end.eavors today . Blowing your
own horn too loud ly wi ll only
turn associates agai nst you .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) II would
be a m 1stake to ch a iiMge one
whose vi ew con flicts wi th yours
today. Th e sympa th y 'is ltkety to
be w1th yo ur opponent. ·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)

If

yo u 're operating tn a strange
commercia l arena today. be
sure the deal is clear lo you . so
yo u 'll ha ve recourse tf you ' re
hoodwi nked .

LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23)
Matters hav ing a far-reaching

ON

EXPANDED WEEK DAY NEWSCASTS

:oo--- Tomorrow 3,~;

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

A X Y ll I, B, A A X 1t
\ , 0 N G F E I. I, 0 W

floor ha s 2 BR , bath , k it. ,

WMPO AM-FM

11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8 ,10, 13, is; ABC News 33.
·11 : 31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie " The Str~~ger
Within'" 6, 13; Movie "The Power" 8; Movie Key
Largo" 10; Janak! 33 .

._..J._.l.._L,.~ the major ity

CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it :

HTERI. Z

Ourstorv 33 .
10 : 3().....-.Anyone for Tennyson? 33 ; Almanac 20,

=-+--~-+--1 GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) This

GFU H ERA I S

R ., u tility , workshop . lst

Merv Griffin 4; Bewitched 6;
s·o merset 15; Mickey Mouse Club 8: Mister Rogers
20,33; Movie "Go West" 10; Call it Macaronl13.
4:31&gt;-Bew ltched 3; Afferschool Special6. 13; Partridge
Family 8; sesame St. ~0, 33 ; Get Smart 1.5.
5:0D-Bonanza 3; Fam ily Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3t&gt;-Adam .t2 4,13; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
E lee. Co. 20,33 .
6:01&gt;-News 3,4,8,10, t3,1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Business 33 .
6:3D-NBC News 3.4.15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlftlth 6;
CBS News 8,10 ; Crop Game 20.
7:1l0-Truth or Cons . 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Pop Goes t he Country 8;News 10;; Wild ·
Kingdom 13; Fam ily Affair 15; Book Beat 20; Know
Your School 33.
·
7:31&gt;-Last oft he Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Wild Wild
World of Animals 6; Match Game PM 8; Evening
Edition with Maritn Agronsky 20; The Judge 10; To
Tell the Truth t3; Wild Kingdom 15; B.ook Beat 33 .
8:01&gt;-Litlle House on the Prairie 3.4.15; Six Million
Dollar Man 6 ,t3 : Tony Orlando &amp; Down 8.10 ; The
Way It Was 20; I moges of Aging 33.
8:30-Lowell Thomas Remembers 20 .
9:1l0-Chlco &amp; The Man 3,4,1S; XII Winter Olympic
Games 6, t3; Cannon 8,1 0; Fine Music Special 33;
Images of Aging 20.
9:31&gt;- Dumpllngs 3,4, 15.
tO :Ot&gt;-Petrocelli 3,4, 15; Blue Knight 8.10; News 20;

nice to b e he lpl u l. but be
c ar ef ul who you vo lun tee r to
aid today . You ma y h i t
=-+-+-+--1-~ som eone who's wailing to un·
load all lheir burden s:

(' RYPTOQliOTES

Mason. W.Va.

4 : o~!.:\fst~i 0cartoon 3;

TAURUS (April 2Q, May 20) ll's

O n e lei t e r sim ply st ;:a nds fnr anol her. In t his sam ple A is
u se d f or the' three I. 's, X for I h e tw o{)")'~, l'll'. ·Sin)JIC l c tt~rs,
ap ostr oph es. the h•1tg l h ;md fornwl inn n f tiH~ w ords &lt;'Ire all
hints. Each day th e cnde ll'tl cr~ a rc diiTl•n:nt.

MASON FURNITURE

.

For Wednesday , Feb. 4, 1976

is

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

8, 10.

3: 1l0-Another World 3.4. IS; General Hospllal6,13; All
In The Family 8, 10; Kup's Show 20.
3 : 3~ne Lile to Live 13; M ickey Mouse Clul&gt;6; Mafch

ARIES (March 21-April 19}

Appropriate L.....l..-l-..L---1-

DA JLY

•

12 :45-Eiec. Co. 33.
12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
1 :Ot&gt;-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1 :31&gt;-Days of Our Lives 3,4, t5 ; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, t3 ;
As The World Turns 8,t o.
2:1l0-S20.000 Pyram id 6,13.
2:31&gt;-Doctors 3,4,t5; Neighbo rs 6,13; Guiding Light

• Be mice

'=-+---+--

•

•

'

NEITHER SNOW1:VER
RAIN NER GlOOMV
NIGHTS STA'IS
THIS MAIL-TOTER
FROM HIS

I CAN'T WRIT€ WITH 'IOVR
ELBOW IN M'-1 W/&gt;H, CHUCK ...
AND STOP WIGGLINGAROUND
50 MUCH ! 1{0\J MAKE THE

i!~Mm"!

APPOiNTED

••

ROUNDS

l

a, 10.

Search for Tomorrow

everyo n e

5 Simple

DOWN
·t Caustic
comment
2 Woodwind
3 Theater box

S:OO

12 :01&gt;-Maanlficent Marble Machine 3.15; Let's Make"
Deal13; Bob Braun' s 50-50 Cflub 4; News 6,8.10·
t2 :3o-Take lt)y Advice 3,15; . All My Children 6,13;

pa r -

ticular su1t to be luc ky for us .

tJ~~~=1~~~~~~=-~:~----~!:~~~~==~~---~~~L~~~f:;. •

STORE HOURS

Herman Grale

know if we have

by THOMAS JOSEPH

WIT~

H11.11'

2·3

C. B RAD F ORD , Auc tioneer
Co mplet e Ser'IIICe . Phone
949, '1 487 or 949 .2000. Racine ,
Oh ro , Crltt B:radfOrd ,
10-9 ./fc

Sal.-8:301il
THURSDAY TIL12 NOON

Pa ss

card carrier

---

Mon ., Tues., Wed. &amp;

Pass

Pass

4 N.T
64

tO More or
less
12 Prear -

MASON FURNITURE

773-5592

HIM

SitiZEET NOW.'

SEW I NG MA CHINE Repa ir s .
ser"Jce , all mak~s . 992 2284 .
Th&amp;'l ab ri c Shop . Pome roy .
Authorize d Si nger Sa l es and
Se r vice .
We
s harpen
Sc is sors

Modern 3

5t

tt :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imet's World 10.
A Loui siana reade r wants to

4¥

~

J5 l'HA; ZIGGY.

D &amp; 0 T RE 'E Tr imm in g , 20
years cxp tri ~ n c e . I nsured .
fr ee esti m a tes . Call 99 7 238 4
or I 6 14J 6YB 7257 Alba ny .
t o· tslfc

bedr ooms , ba t h. gas h ea t.
and large 1I \li ng at a very
low price o f $8500 .
•
BR s . , ho t wa ter h ea t , very
n i ce kitchen w ith ran g e,
r et rigera t 9 r . f ami ly room ,
patio and 2 car garage . 2
lot s . $46 ,900 .

OF FACT

COMIN ' IX'I-I'N ;H'

EXCAVATI N G ,
d oze r ,
b ackhoe
and
ditcher .
Char' tes R . t-t at t ietd Back
Hoe Serv ice . R u tl an d , Ohio .
Phon e ·747 2poa .
11 307Btc

5 BEDROOMS - Lots o f
ne w paneling , ca rpe t ing,

CHESHIRE -

YEP ! AS A. MATTE-=

REMODELI N G .
Ptumbirt9.'
h eat ing and al l types . of
gen era l
rep a ir
Wor k
Quarant eed 20 year s ex
p er ien ce
Ph one 99 2 7409_
5 1 tfc

SPECIAL .

$18.500 .
FAMILY ROOM -

ALLEY OOP

O'DELL A linement loca t ed
betl i n d
RvttanO
Grade
Sc h ool
Tu n eu p . brakes ,
whee l balancil'] g, ali n em~ nt.
Ph one 741 2004
t l 16 He

Large old 12 r ooms w ith
ba th . gas &amp; city water near
st ore s. On ly $5500.

Pas ~

Pass

,1¥

rn,

WOUL D YO U BEL I EVE ?
Build an a ll steel building at
Pole Bar n pri ces? Go ld en
Gian t A ll Steel Build in g.s,
R t .s . Box 148 , Waverly ,
Oh io Ph one 947 219 6
7 24.t l c

5

3•
Pa ss
3 N.T. Pass.
4A
Pass

By Oswald &amp; .Ia mes Jacoby

E LWOO D BOWER S REPAIR
Swee per s. toa s ter s. ir ons .
al l small appliances . Lawn
mower . n ex t to 'st ate H igh .
way Garage on · Route 7.
Pnon e 98 5 3825 .
/ 16 lf c

-EXC AVAT IN G , doler , lo.J'ut',.
an d ba c kh oe work ; septi c
1a11 k s
Ins t a lled ;
du.mp
tru ck!. and lo boys lor h tr e ;
wi ll ha ul t i ll d irt , top soil.
limes!one an d grav el. C. all
Bob or Roge r Je ff er s. day
ph on e 99'2 7089 , night ptt one
992 3515 or 992 5232 .
2 11 lfc

tt :31&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3.4. 15; Happy Days 13; Love

m atter of superstitio·n. They

READY MI X CO N ~ W~ ' i c ~
de live r e d right t o y o u r
project. Fast and easy . F ree
estimates Ph one '992 ~ 2 84 ,
Goegtein R eady Mil( ·co ., ,.
Mid dl eport. Oh io .
-"~~
630tfc '

b e droo m s,
21 1
bath s.
fami l y room , mod . kit .,. 2
car gar age a nd riice lot.

$45,000 .
WINTER

South

beca use t hey outra nk th e
other
three .
Wa nda White of Dallas lets
(Do you , have a question
her adva nced pupils have the
fu n of bidding a nd playing lor the expe rts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys " care ol this
today 's hand .
At least the bidding is fun . newspaper. The Jacobys will
Practically a ll of them arrive answer mdividual questio ns
at six spades The slam con-. 11 stamped. sell-a ddressed
trac t is not a good one . but envelopes are enClosed.
mos t of the world 's bes t most in teres ting questio ns
playe rs would a lso find their will be used in th is column
way to that unsound cont ract. and will receive co p;es of
'!'he play is no fun fo r them . JA COBY MODERN.)

SEP l i C TANK S c leaned .
Mode r n Sani ta tion . 99 2·3954
or 992 73 d9 .
9 18 l f c

Real Estate For Sale

Pass
Pass
Pass

Openi ng lead -

~

or r e modeling by
hour or contract . Phone 992
3511 or 99? 7573 after .5 p .m .
1 ~s 12tp

1&lt;-:ast

in

t he East ha nd . East m ight not
cove r the jack with t hat
holding .

of Life 8,10; Sesame Sl . 20.33 .

Nathan B i ggs
Radiator Specialist

Rog e r Wamsley
1 23 I mo .

N-EW HOME

North

queen -nine· sma ll

Douglas 13 .

tO :Ot&gt;-Ce lebrlty Sweepstakes 3.4.15; Edge ol Night 6;
Price Is Right 8,10.
10 :3D-High Rol lers 3,4,15; Dinah 6.
11 :01&gt;-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Wee kda y 4; Gambit
8, 10; Farmer' s Daughter 13.

24

From th e larg est Truck or
Buttdozu· ' Radia t or to th e
sma lles t H e at ~r Core .

Bic entennial Coins

1975S Proof Set (6 pes . )
125.00; 197S Mint Set 19.00 ;
1976 Silv er Proof Set tJ
pes . I l lS .OO ; 1976 Silver
UNC Set 13 pes.) 18.50.
Call Rutland. 742.2331
R&amp;J COINS

E XCAVATI NG , BACKHOES
A ND D OZER , Lt'\ R GE A ND
SMA LL
SEPT IC T A N KS
IN S T A LLE D
B I L L
P U L LI N S, PHO NE ~97 2478 ,
D AY O R N IC t~T
II II l8 tp

against

0

FOR SALE

The jack of trumps is led
f rom dummy at trick two . If
East ducks th e jack is allowed
to ride . If East cove rs South
wins p i cks up We s t ' s
double ton 10·9 a nd m a kes the
con tract
Th e play might a lso work

Nor th-South vulnerable

10.

6 :55-'-hutk Whllel&lt;eports 10; Good Morning Trl State
13.
7:1l0-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning , America 6, t3; CBS
N ews 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Fr iends 10.
7:31&gt;-Schoolles tO .
s :oo-Lassle 6 ; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St . 33.
8 : 3~Bi g Valley 6.9:1l0-Not For Women Only 3; Phil
Donahue 4,1 5: Lucy Show 8; Mike Douglas 10;
Morning with D.J . 13 . .
9:31&gt;-A .M. 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike

some cha nce tu make a con·
tract is better than no chance
and thC contract can be made .

"''

GH\l.DilW?...

Currencv and Supplies
Buy , Sa le or T r ade

acres. CALL TODAY .
AN AMAZING VALUE Large hom e. 5 BR. 2 baJhs,

l i vi ng R ., H .W . floors, large

~ "-' :.1 4n

lOSER
.. .47 ... 49 ... 40 ...

s...-acuse, Ohio

1 22 1 mo .

home, own water 1 1 nice 2
BR ap ts ., mobile home, 22

CO LE CO Deluxe Je t a i r
hock ey tabl e . 311, by 6Jl ~.
$125. Pho ne 99 2·5171.
1·30.41p

: 1 ,, · .

•'

·

6 : 3o-Columbus Today 4; News 6 ; Bible Answers B;
Farmtime 10.
6: 4G-Ounce of Prevention 10.
6 : 45--Mornl ng Report 1

They all lose a hea rt tri ck and
trump trick .
·
Then Wa nda points ou t t hat

• t\J8 7. 4 2
WF:ST
EAST
.10 9
4 Q62
¥ 7543 2
¥ A6
tK to
• J865 3~
o!oK Q109
olo 63
'
SOUTH ID I
K8 754
¥ K Q .I 9 8

"10

6 : 15-Farm Report 13.
6 : 2~T he Story 13.

WIN AT BRIDGE

• 10
t '/97 4

LARRY LAVEND_(R

PH.992-6173

FREE GAS - 'Lovely 3 BR

CO RN for sale . Phone 247
2664 , Dallas H i ll.
1
' 1.30-51 p

fl.'

Now accepting clienls
for bookkeeping and
Ia x service.

6 :oo-Sunr ise Semester

NO RTH
• •J 3

·'

OPERATE YOUR
OWN BUSINES~

Own and manage ven din '::,.
r oute d is pen sing nut. g um
and c andy con f ections in
Pomeroy or \llci n i ty . Hig h
profit lf ems . Car needed to
se rv ice ,-our vendi ng r ou t e .
' Id eal part lime or full t ime
buF&gt;iness . Cash In ves tmen t
$ 1J9 5 10 $J795 and up . Fo r
details ca ll our toll . f r e;·e
n um ber 1 BOO 328 6648 or
wri t e Dept . BVV , 393 8
Meado wbrook Rd ,, Min
neapolis , M N . 55426.

Blown
Insulation Services
BIOwrf into Walls &amp; AHic s'
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING .SOFFITT
GUTTERS.AWNINGS

ovt

WEDNESDAY . FEBRUARY 4,1976

Some chan&lt;:e beats none

FREE ESTIMATES

L

Channel Five
7 p.m . - Changed Lives (c)
7:30 - Bill Cosby Show tel
B:llO--Outdoor Sportsman It)
8 : 3~Daytlme lei
9:31&gt;-Wyatt Earp
10 ,oo-washingtoo Debates tel

33.

YO~ W~li

Quest for

l : oo--Tomorrow J ,.t ; News. 13.

Angels 3.4, 15; ~ews 20; Woman Alive!

Ot

10: 00-- City

. ..

12 ; 3o-Movie " Watusl" 8; Movte

20,33 .
9: 3()-NB A AII .Star Game 8, 10.

SAID MERHV IF

CASE!

1· 121 mo.

LARRY WHOBREY
PUBLIC
ACCOUNTANT

6,13: Jana~1 33.
12 ·1J0-News 8,10.

a.

CAPTAIN

MODERN CHEMICALS

10 : 3o-W oman Alive! 20; Woman 33.

11 :IJO-News 3,4.6. t3.1 5; ABC News J3 . of the Week
ll : 3o-J ohnnv Carson 3,4, 15; Mystery

7: 30-- HOIIywood Squares 3, 4, Lei's Deal W ith n 6;
\1) ,000 t-'yram id 8; Evening Edition with Martin
Agronsky 70; Pr ice Is Right 10; To Tell The r,.uth
13; Hiqh School T .V . Honor Society 15; Family
T heat, e ·33.
8 :00----Movin ' On 3, 4, 15 ; H appv Davs 6, 13 ; Good Times
10; lntemalional Animlat io n Fest i va l 20 ; Is It
Your Time ? 33
8 : 30-Laverne and Sh irley 6, 13 · Pop ! 8.10; Consumer
Survival Kit 10,33 .
9 : 00---- Police Woman 3,4. 15; X II W in ter Olympics
Pre 'lli ew 6 , 13 ; M A S H 8, 10_; Adams Chrq nlcles

licensed
baker
and
decorator .
Kitchen State Insp ec ted

We Buy Ant iques

50
WITH
OVER
WE
PROPERTIE S.
OUGHT TO HAVE IT.

.,

'

Ph o ne 992 -

110,000
Weekly Grain
Capacity

~2 - 3 1 - tf c

-

CO-QP
Model UCXXX .

COUNTRY
Mo bi l e Hom e
Park , Rt 33 , len mites north
of Pomeroy . L arg e lots with
con cr ete pa t io s, si dewa lks,
runner s and o ft s tre e t
par k ing . Phon e 99 2 7479 .

,i ii makes · a nd

1-

be e't .

Rill Estate for Sale

10 28 l i e:

197 3 PROWLER Camper . 21
'&gt;B ~H
ft . se lf .conta in ed, sleeps 7.
·I I f c .
EHeltent c ondi tio n . Cal l
9&lt;n .7J ?O.
2 BR Furnish ed mobi le •h ome
2 1 6tc
on pr iva t e lo t in Syra C·u se.
w ee k , p lu s
$22 . 50 . per
Call
ut i lities . adu l ts only
Now at Landmark
Geo
Donavan , (6 14) 985
35 04 or 992 55 96 .
I 79 6tc

Th e
Da i l y
Sentinel ,
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769.
·
2 3 3tc

AKC Mal e Dach shund, house
br,oken and loves Chi ldren .
Price 550. Phone 742 ·2809 .
' ·30 .ttp

FREEZER
56 16.

,

'

Antique

TUESDAY . FEBRUARY l, 1976

•

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

'5.00 up

HO U ~ E in R ull and

lost

Pets

For Sale

For Sale

- -- -----'--

----------

I 2 261p

or Month

DE1\ LER S in sc r a p, ~ron .
meta ls, tunk autos R idN's
Savage Phon e 99'1 5-168 .
1 2 29tp

-

19 71 CHEV Y ', !On I whee l
drive p ic l.. up
nn1.1n cc o t
ln c.t ory w a rril n ly Ch ec k
1nis be fore you buy a new
one Ph on e .;lf lc r ',p mo r on
We ~;•l&lt;. e ncJs , 9Q'! 3 196
\ 9 1fc

b uilding
d e rrick .

by Wee~

G tN&lt;;"ENG , -~72 p er lb . Phone
'(6 11 1 371{ 6? :!9
I 16 • fc:

-

19 73 CJ ~JEEP. 25,000 m ile s,
excellent co ndit 1on . $2.600 .
Phon e 949 2860 .
2 r 3t c

CR A NE Ser\li ce ,
erectio n , 4b II
Phone 99 7 54 68.

Special Rates

The state of Washin'g ton,
King CoWJty and the city of LADY to do hou se wo rk 1 or 2
Seattle are suing for up to
day s u week , S2 hou r,
r e f e r ences . Phon e 949 2774.
$32.5 million over the loss of
~ I 3tc
the Seattle Pilots in 1970.
P"ARTT TM_E_ 1-;;;e-r-; i-;.,;~;~-for
The other m a in condition of
ar ea survey . Avai la bl e
the franchise award is
Mar c i'J , Apr ! t. Must provid e
ow n transportation . Apply
acquisition of a satisfactory
in
h and .writing
g i ving
lease on the King County
per sona! background . Send
to Box 729 E. c -o The Daily
domed stadium, popularly
Sentin e l , Po me ro y , Ohio
called the Kingdome.
45769.
Gorton said he had not
'} , 1-41p
heard from the league .
WEi1R ~l~ : ;-~1:!-;:~;c-;-1-;:-~d
" It is strange. I have not
lady to live in . 1 ree roOm
an d board a nd sma ll wages
heard a word," he said.
tor nght du ties . 5ee at 308
" They haven't called me. It
Pag t St ., Middlepo r l , Ohio .
makes yo u l"oncler about the ·
1 11 lfc

A thought for the day:
Horace Greeley said, " The
Ulusion that times that were
are better than those that are
has probably pervaded all

F ORD , 4 w h eel drive tru ck, V
Ha r ol d
8 , good condition
L o ng
Bott om .
B rew er ,
Phon e ~ 614 1 985 355 4.
2 1 I tc

196 S F ORO L TO N ew 12 g a .
W inch es ter 37 A Sin gle Sho t
? BEDR OOM mo bil e home
Phon e 7•12 ?.359
wi l h 3 1 .1 a c r es o t g roun d .
1 13 261p
Phon e 2J7 ? 16 1 Letar t. Otli o .
1 23 17tc
HAY lor sal e. $1 ba l e or trad e?
Phone
F r a nk
Dache l. 1 . A CRE . b ig g a rd en , 5 rooms
L eading Cre e k Rd 742 .2085 .
· and ba th tiome , n ew drill ed
') I 161p
w e l l and fu r[lace , new
bathroom , 2 f ir ep taces , good
loc at ion i n L e tar t Fa Hs,
CR I B . good co nd itio n . mat
Ohio . '!.7 ,50 0. Phone 2.t 7 3853 .
tr. ess , like n ew . S.35 . Phone
1 23 t2tc
992 SBJJ .
I 29 ri le
t OR RENT OR SA LE . 3
3. 11 ACR E S build ing si te 1n
bedrm mo bil e hom e. un
Bas nan . Water and gas,
f urnish ed . util i tie s pa id on WALNUT Cons ole , modern ,
S5 ,00 0 Phone Che! ter (6 141
am lm
rad io, .t sp ee d
R t 33 in Bu r l ingham Ph one
985 '1245.
. 992 7751
.
c hanger Ba l a_ n cc $101.3 1 or
. l 3041c
terms . Call 99 2 39 65.
123 1 tfc
1 27 1fc

OL D f urniture . ice bo xes.
br ass be ds , sto ne iar s, or
compl el e h ousehol ds . Wr it e
M
D . Mi l ler , R l
2,
Pome r oy, Ohio . Call 992
7760 .
10"7 7!J

rnodels of mol:ji l e home5 .
Phon e ar ea code 614 423 ·
953 1.
4· 13 .1fc
-- - ·

-

Middleport, o '. Ph. 992· 2171

WANTED old . upri g ht p ia nos
i n an y co nditio n . Wi l l pay
$10 eac h . F irst floor only .
Wrire giving direc t ions to
W1tten P ia no Co ., Box 188 ,
Sard is, Ohio 43946 .
1 21 . l Ot p

DAILY SENTINEL

-

1968 JEEP Wagoneer , 6 c y l
st d , lock out hubs . Phon e
Ha ro ld
B r e w er ,
Long
Boll om Ohio {614) 985 3554 .
'
2 1 ttc

'J?? l ll ll

HOTEL

WANTED old up rig ht pia no s
i n any condition Wi ll pay
$ 10 eac h ', First floor on l y ,
Wri t e giving d i reclio n s to
Wi11e n Piano Co .• Bo ,.; 188.
Sardis . Ohi o 0946 .
,
1 25 lOtp

Free estimates on car·
Peting .i nd installation .
W e' ll bring samples t.o your
home with _no obligation .
See how y~u can r ea lly
sa \I e.
Mike Young , Manager
Sales and In stallation
Rt . 3, Pom ero y , Qhio. 45769
Ph one day or night
j ) •t ..1 mo .
614 . 9 n -l206

1974 DODGE Colt. 4 dr ., s.w .,
a ut o . . 10 .000 miles. $3. 000.
Also . 1966 Fal con .t dr a uto .
6 cyl. $250 . Ca ll 992 2776
after 7 p .m
"! I Jt p

/ I R CO Hrli
f RC
wclt:linq
milchine . new c t c c ; n il
accessor ies i n cluded PhOn e

La Salle

Wanted To Buy

Wanted
'( fi.5 H p aid •vr

SLOAN'S
CARPETING

I

MALE , b l ack and White
walk er coon ho und in Shade
area . Call . Paul Si nc lair , R t.
1, Shad e, Ohio, 161 4) 696 1032
c ollect. r eward .
2-1 61 p

deal."

12695

BLIND ADS
1\dditional 25c Charg e per
1\ d v er t isernen t
OFFICE HOUR S
8 JQ . a . m to 5 00 p m .
Dai l y . 8 JOa m to 1( .00 Noon
Sa tu rday

that " the trial is on ."

11.
12.

.'••

•

Television .log for easy vzewzng

CiOOO OLD PUCKER PUSS ,
THWE!:.T ABOUT EVERYTHINO•NIC:E BOY~

ce nt~

Help Wanted .

10.

Pom eroy Office
105 Butternut
992 -3345
Formerly w eed Wholesa le.
F c a t unng :
De l u"" Zero .... Co p y Serv ice ,
O ff ice
S upplies ,
Mimeograp~
Su p plie s ,
largest selection o f wed
ding sup plies in South
ea sl ern Oh io ..
· The Pr i nt Sho p Complet e
(Still 1n busin ess in Middl epor t)
1282 m o .

Dark maroon f inish, blk . bucket v in-yl sea t s, radio, V-8
e ngine, au tomatic. power st eering, good tires, a
sportsman's dream.

EVERETT, Wash . !UP!)
- Despite Seattle being
awa rded
an
American PART Aireda l e dog, bla ck and
League expansion franchise
brown , Shaggy . Lo st in urea
of Pomeroy , Middleport or
for
1977, trial · of a
Ma so·n Coun t y , W . va . area .
multimillion d ollar s ui t
Answe r s to t h e name of
"B eiu ." F amily p e t . Phone
against the le ague is ·
992 7832 or 992 3671. Ask tor
resuming today .
Ore lla Hy se ll .
One of the main conditions
2-1·6t C
of the franchise award to a
g r o up headed by Lester
3 FULL TIME c l erk positions ;
Smith and entertain er Danny
1 i n ·Off ice worker , 2 f ie ld
Kaye was dropping the suit
wo r k e r s, for 1em porar y
State Program fro m m id
against the league but the
Fe bruar y t hr o u g h June .
word from Slade Gorton,
Equal Opp o r tunity Em
state a ttorney general, was
p !oyer . Apply Box 7298, c o

1.

$3895

1972 CHEVROLET2 ·TO N C&amp;C
.
12995
102d C. A . heavy duty spri ngs, 292-6 cyl. eng 1ne, 15, 000
l b . 2 speed rear ax le, foam sea t , mirrors, c lea n ca b .

c on scc ur lv c insert ions
26 ce 1'1 1S per wo rd six con
sc cutivc i nsertion's
.
25 Per Cent Disco un t on patd

(Auwen lolllorTOwJ

Yu•l!rday'•

Min tmum Charge \ I DO
ce nts per worel three

ads and ad s paid

Quality Prinl Shop

101" c ab to ax le, 1 speed, R . ax le, S speed, good 900x20
tires, fr ame reinforced , V-8 engine, hea t e r , ready to
wo r k .

RATES

,

-

o.

1973 INTERNATIONAL 1600SE RIE S

F o r want Ad S e r vi c e
s ce n t s per word on e tnsertton
J.r

C

.JUST THE CUS'TOMARY
TO CHECK

•

Business Services

Pomeroy

· OF
QUALITY _Motor

tor oay o f P ublica ! ion

[]

-

Auto Sales

Auto Sales

•

•

Un~eramble these foor Jumbles,

form rour ordinary

'

9 - The Daily Sentinel , Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesdav. F:eb . 3, 1976

effect on · th e hou se hold or
famil y m ust be thoroughly understood by you an d y our mate
tod ay.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A
person whO has neg lected to
thank you for past tavor.s wil l
knock on yo ur door aga1n today. Don 't look fo r a different
ending .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc:.
21) Normally. Lady Luck smiles .
upon yo u. Today, you cou ld
ven ture where you know the
odds are against you ·- a nd
lose your shirt .

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan .
19) Timing is aU-important to-d-ay. It would be f oolish to
make conces1ion s an d upset ·
your we ll played inten1ions.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 1tl
Just because lhe person who
present s a plan to you is
st r ong- wi lled and forceful
doesn 't mean he's right. Use
yo ur own ju dgment.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 201
Yo ur gene rous nature can be a
detriment today if you find
yo u'll be-gtvtng more th an you
ca n alford. Don'l overextend

&amp;~
Feb. 4, 1976

Yo u' re going l o be more
footloose and tancy-tree thi s
coming year than you have
been l or some time . Sail away
so mething now tor those fre ~
ouent short trips.

S tGf-15 CAN START
ARGUMENTS, TOO, CHUCK 1

�10 - The Dailv Senttnel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 . Tuesday . reb. 3. 1976

Public health

Heller succeeds
Bien at Canton
CANTON - Charles A.
Heller, J r has been elected

•, , 'lll!r" l ',~ f l'r •ll l p.l~t'

executive vice president and
a director of Ohio Power

Compan y and wa s named
operating head of the company. He had been a vice
president.

He wtll asswne the new
pos t here Feb. 19, th e same
date his predecessor , Frank
N. Bien, wtll become vil:c

cha1rman . operattons of the
Ame rica n Electnc Power
Service Corporation in New
York C1ty. Ohm Power 1 ~ an
operahng company 111 lhe
seven-state AEP System.
A veteran of 20 years
service with four compames
of the AEP System, Heller ts
a nattve. of New Jersey who
holds a BA degree in business

a SS I SI&lt;inl

dl

Wh ee ling

Eleclrtc Company m 1968,
and then executive ass istan t
back in Oh io Power in 1970.
He was elected a v1ce
pres tdent of the company m
earl v 1974
Heller is a member of the
board of directurs of the
Ce ntral Trust Com pa ny,
Can ton, a mernber ... of the
Welfare Federation Board of
the United Way, and IS cochalnnan of the State
l ~gtslattve Commtttce of the
Can ton Cham ber of Commerce. He is also collll cll
member al large of the
Buckeye Counctl Boy Sco uts
of Amenca.
He and hts wtfe, Helen, a nd
thetr three childre n restde m
Nor th Can ton

administration from Rutgers
He also has two master 's
degrees 1 one m finan ce and

banking from the Wharton
School of Business and
Finance , Umver s ity of
Pennsylvania , and another in

mdustnal management as a
Sloan
Fellow
at
Massachusetts Jnshtute of
Technology .
'Heller jomed the AEP

Nellie R. Betz died Tuesday
stx great -grandchildren and
six step-grandchtldren
Funeral servtces will be
l1eld a t 2p.m. Thursday at the
Rawllng s~Cuals
Fun e ral
Home wLth burwl m River·
v1ew Cemetery. Mr. George
Glaze will officiate. Fnends
may call at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9
p.m. Wednesday

Mrs. Nellie R. Walters
Betz, 84, Hysell St., Mtd·
dleport, died early Tuesady
at
Vete ran s
morning
Memonal Hospttal
She was born July 9, 1891 m
Gallia County. the daughter
of the late James and Sarah
Blosser Walters. She was also
preceded m death by her
husband, Jacob (Jake I Betz
m 1970, a sister and five
brothers
Mrs. Betz, a member of the
Mtddleport Church of Chrtst,
belonged to the Phllathea
Society of that church. She
had operated a grocery store
on Locust St severa l years
durtng her ltme m Mtddlepor't.
Mrs. Betz is survt ved by a
son , Woodrow Wilson Hoyt,
Constableville , N. Y.; two
step-&lt;laughters, Mrs. Jack
(Eva ) Robson, Pomeroy, and
Mrs Genevteve Ward of
Columbus; a stsler, )\Irs.
John
(Hazel )
Walter
Columbus ; a gra nd son,
James Hoyt, Pomeroy; a
granddaughter, Mrs . Ira
(Jane ) Butcher of Jacksonville, Fla. i two s1sters-m-lawj
Mrs. Ruth Walters and Mrs .
Kathleen Walters, Columbus,

Funeral servtces for Erml
Kaptema , 78, found dead al
his ~ast Matn St restderice tn
P.orncroy Monday afternoon ,
were held a l 1 p m today at
Beech Grove Cemetery wtth
the Rev . W. H. Perrin offictating.
· Mr. Kaptema who had been
dead several days, dted of
natural cause::; , off1cials said
The son of the la te Gottlteve
a nd Emma Sattler Kaptema ,
he was also preceded tn death
by two stslers , Freda Smith
and Be tty Moore, and a
br other , Henry. Surv1v1ng
are three brothers, Hugo and
Charles of Pomeroy, and

MEIGS THEATRE

Frank of Cha rleston, W Va.,
and several mel' es and
nephews.

r---------·

Mr. Kapteina
buried today

TONITE
TUES. FEB. J
Watt Disney's

APPLE DUMPLING
GANG
Show starts at 7:00p .m.

LOCAL TEMPS
The
temperature
m
downtown Pomeroy at 11
a .m.'Tuesday was 32 degrees
under cloudy skies

SMALL
CAR?

CHARLES HELLER JR.

Johnson
• 1 ,,rL t!/111~ '&lt; ! from JMgl' 1 )
Hobstctter was read commendmg the street crew, the
\\-a te r departme nt , ftre ,
and poltce
e me rg ency
departments for thetr work
during the mclement weather
and durmg the fire
Mayor Andrews disclosed
that the electnc "demand
met€r' ' at the new ftre station
pwduced 1Lo;; mnst recen t bill
of $505 fo r one month 1 The
mayor IS to not1fy the power
company to remove it.
Ma yo r Andrews re ad
Police Clue£ J ed Webster 's
monthly report winch showed
the depar tmen t mveshgated
20 accidenls, made 33 arresls ,
issued I ,324 tickels, coll ec ted
$3,908 50 from the parkmg
meters :.md drove lhe CrUiser
3.969 miles
Mee ting w1 lh council '"as
Bob Arm s on beh alf of
Pomeroy Scout Troop 249,
who asked council for perllUSS IOn for the res t uf the
year to sell popcorn one day a
mon th up to" n. Cnunct 1 ap·
proved the reques t and
another by Arms. to sell
vegetable soup tilts Sa turday
The meetmg was opened
wt th prayer by the Rev
Harold Deeth
Atte nd1n g were Mayor
Andrews, Ralph Werry ,
Davts , Chuck Bartles,
Osborne , Brown ,
Phtl
Globokar, council members,
Mrs J ane Walton, clerk, and
Chief Webster

Easterday is
boss examiner
State Audttor Thomas E.
Ferguson ha s announced
a ppotnlm ent of Marltn
Easterday as cxammer-m·
charge of a 10 county dtstrict
m southern Ohio for the
Coun ty and Township Audi t
Dtviston He wtll be at the call
Of any coun ty ur township
offictal in Hocktng, Ross,
Pike , V1nton , Jac.kson,
Lawrence. Athens , Metgs or
Gallla Coun lies who needs
accounting assistance. H1s
offt ce will be 111 Chtlllcothe

Lyons heads
fire fighters
TUPPERS PLAINS-Officers elected at the recent
January mee tin g of the
Orange Township Volunteer
Ftre Dept. were L L. Lyons,
presi 'd ent ;
Clifford
Longene ~te, v1ce president;
La. wrence Balser , secretary,
James Watson , treasurer :
Larry Milhone , chtef ;
Richard Spencer, assistant
chief; Robert Tnpp, 1st Lt.,

BIG CAR?

NEW OR LATE MODEL USED CARS
We have a plan for any kind of car! Use our

Low Rate Auto Loans.
,QN /j /!'t_

***********~~~~********2~0'\

"The Friendly Bank"
•
...
s·mce 19061
«
i

;4

~

•

~

~
•• ,,•.if

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

Wall-Up Teller Window and Auto Teller Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.

.T!Je dHp--lnc, lon1·laltlnl cornfoll
of ,..mHI'a line furniture atarta wtth
the unique FlentHt aprlnaa. lormtd
from tilt !!nut wttchaprinl atttl and
aua,.ntttcl lor lift.
FtllllltHI craltamtin lnahot on motorlola
of the flnut quottty to mete~ t~tlr
Mltlt!l worllmonllllp. Framtia are of lop
quality klln-drted herdwoOd, doubtll·
-lied and corner btoclwd for extra·
ll,.nath tnd ltablllly. The beautiful up•
hottdllry of Flext~IHI furniture 11 tht
rttutt of
lltantiOn to detllt/htndtlnt of the lint FttKtOtetl fabriCs,
end aklltlul ttllorlns.

••l*t

UfEI'IItll ......mo
• ..... CIIIIMTIGII

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

By BRUCE W. MUNN
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.
tUPI ) - Dante! Moynihan,
who resigned Monday as the
n a t Ion ' s o u t s Po k_e n
ambassador to the Uruted
Nations, said today he is
''leaving the door open" to
run for the Senate this year.
Moynihan sa id agam hts
main reason for quitting is to
take up hts lon~-negl~ted

BAKER FURNITURE

·DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000

MIDDL£PORT

I

,,;

. and
Harvard professorship
that he was not "pushed" out
of the U.N . job due to '?me
State Department oppos1t1on
to hts tough talk.
" I'm going back to teach . H
things like this come up later
1guess I'd have to thmk about
it." he said when asked about
reports he rrught run on the
Democralt c t1cket against
,

Sen. James Bucki ey, R•N.y .
" I'm leaving the doo~ open
without many way trymg to
open tt myself. No per_son tn
Ule party has spoken w,lth me
about thts subject. Its that
posstbtlity that any one of us
... could say maybe.
.
''It see~ to me !bat .~Ice
prestdent 1s the best job, he
joked . " You get that b1g

Mon.tz denies accusations
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Dr.
Timothy Moritz, director of
the Ohio Department of
Mental
Health
and
Retardation , satd today
accusations by State Auditor
Thomas
F e rguso n
in
reference to pay to suspended
workers at Gallipolis State
Institute we re " absurd,
ridiculous and for obvious
motivations."
Ferguson, a Democ rat,
said last week that the pay to
the e mployes wa s " no
different than that of the socalled phantom employes last
year."
Montz, in a statem ent
toda y, satd he was "shocked
and disappomted "
by
Ferguson 's comments.
Moritz said the workers,
members of the Commumcatwns Workers of America ,
who were on strtke 1n
December, were paid when
they were placed on
admintslrattve leave after
they had ftrst been ftred for
parttctpatmg m the work
stoppage.
Moritz said the workers
were paid pendmg rev Lcw of
thetr appeals by the state's
Personnel Board of Revtew .
Ferguson last week stopped
payment of salaries to the
employes m questiOn.
The actton to p\ar• the

employes on admirustraltve
leave was taken by Institute
supermtendent Dr. Bernard
Niehm.
" All fired workers had
abandoned their jobs for
more than 72 hours and
particicpated tn the blockade
of deliverties at Gallipolis
State Institute, jeopardizing
the Jives of patjents until a
court order was obtained
guaranteemg free access to
the institution, " said Moritz.
" Dr Niehm placed the
employes on admi ni~trative
leave tn order to comply wtth
a Gallia County Common
Pleas Court order to restore
the employees to the payroll
pendmg thetr appeals.
"The employes were sent
home rather than back to
work due to fears of a
r ef:urren ce of vwlence
associated with the recent
tllegal work stoppage," he
smd " Dr. Niehm belteved
that the safety of patients and
em ployes
would
be
jeopardized if the fired
workers returned to thetr
jubs prior to action on the ir
appeals "
Morttz satd the department
also fo llowed the adv tce of the
office of Ohi o Attorney
General Wilham J Brown
when tt made the payn1ents to
the
employes
on

administrative leave

•

Sen~te
airplane
, • you know, and that
be~ir I had chosen to stay in
this 'ob, he would have been
enti.!el happy to have me do
so .. M~ ihan said of reports
• h yn
disliked by
th~~et e w:rs State Henry
~ . ary
.~~er ieaving In good
't , he said
sp~~:~an was· interviewed
on the CBS Morning News

Pomeroy. Middleport. Ohio
Wednesday. Feb. ~ - 1!176

Veterans M~·mnriLII Hospital
ADMITTED ~- Carl Hyse ll,
Rutland; Tamn'li Hun ne ll,
Pomeroy, J ohn !hie, Racine;
Orpha
Hussell.
Potnt
Pleas ant; Mtldt ed Scar berry , Roc1ne; Lena Samp·
son, Rt!edsvd le
DISCHARGED - Ralph
Stsson , Raymond Ha rtley,
Glad ys Go uldtn g, .Joh n
Puwcll , Ida Wh1 te , Chn st1
Adams. Florence Heilman .

J

anteS

W M
• arrs
M da

died OD

On

asked

about

NOW YOU KNOW
The Gaboon vtper has the
longest fangs of any snake.
The specimen kept in the
Philadelplna Zoo in 1963 was
a little careless and bit
himself to death .
IN HUSI'ITAL
RACINE - Opal Curmnins
is a heart patient at
Untv e rsity Hospital in
Colwnbus. Cards may be sent
to her at Means Hall, room
54:1

\

en tine
NEW YOHK . Feb. 4
i\lartn s pread
through the city
becaus e
of
the
simultaneous arriva l
of Gen. Clinton and a
detachment of British
regulars by ship from
Boston and Gcn. Lee
at the head of a large
Ioree of Connecticut
troops . The citizenry
was in near panic
ovct' the possibility ol
an armed clash .

an~;~~~:~l~~~~~r~~
politics out of his future when
opposmg

Hanes

OPERATING A CASSETTE U.pe recorder will be necessary for these volunteers who will assist classroom
teachers.

\

.'t i

Bowen has
new 5 year
contract

Au pocktfl~ sc:at rn
bor!y warrml1 ;met kcnp

out the

colo 00 \

co tt o n and om,
potvosrer shm11o.·
resrS t&lt;'lr.ll Thermnt

,s

~asrty

wasnect

H ea t resrs wnr r:! l&lt;'l str c
wars! brmd antt th e
rdmed c~d fs kceo th a i
nefl t 1rrr.,. 111 Na lurat
color
Srzcs Small Medrum
Larql? an ct E~lr~·La r q~

Men's
Department
First Floor

Elberfelds In Pom

•

GUATEMALA CITY (UP! )
- A devastating earthquake
rocked Guatemala, El
Salvador a nd Honduras
today, destroying hundreds of
houses
and
sendin g
thousands of citizens running
through the streets in paruc.
Heavy casualties were
feared .
First reports said 50
persons were reported dead,
but a Guatemala City radio
station reported that firemen
bad recovered at least .JOO
bodies and tbat both the Hotel
Intercontinental and the
Roman Catholic Cathedral of
Guatemala had collapsed.
Ftremen and Red Cross
workers reported at least
2,000 injured.
The quake registered 7.5
points on the open-ended
Richter Scale compared to 8.5
for the Dec. 23, 1972 quake
which virlually destroyed the
city of Managua, Nicaragua.
The tremors began in thts
tropical city of one million
population at 4:06a.m. EST
and aftershocks were still
being felt four hours later.
On Jan . 6 Guatemala Ctty
had
celebrated
its
bicentenmal - the former
Guatemalan capital of
Antigua was destroyed in an
earthquake in 1773 and the
new capital of Guatemala

Robert Bowen was given a
new five year contract as
Meigs County Superintendent
of Schools when the county
board of education met tn
regular sesston Tuesday
night at tls Pomeroy offices
Bowen's contract as
supermtendent expires m
July , and the new contract
becomes effecltve Aug. 1 this
year . The board also adopted
for its employes the new state
salary schedule which ts
reqwred to go into effect on
July I. The new schedule
locally wtll go mto effect
March 1
The board issued a bus
VOLUNTEERS IN THE TEACHER-AIDE program
for their roles as aides m two Metgs Local School District
dr1ver's certificate
to
receive Instruction through a readmg lab m preparation
schools .
Rtchard Blessing and pur·
chased habtltty insUfance for
board members. The boat·d
approved
the ' Sunshme Law
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
policy
providing
that the
Friday through Sunday,
medta
be
advised
of board
a chance of snow during the
sesston
.
period, possibly mixed with
Allendtng the meetmg were
rain in the south portion.
George Perry, Gordon
Highs will be in the 20s
Colhns, Robert Burdette and
north to the 30s and low 40s
Harold
Roush,
board
south. Lows will be tn the
Three defendants forfeited
and
Surt
Bowen.
members
,
teens and 20s.
bonds and two others were
fined in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday mgh l.
Forfethng bonds were Billy
R. Ferguson, 39, West
Columbia, W. Va., $300,
posted for drivmg while inBy Uolted Press International
toxicated ; Elmont Bosworth,
DJIBOUTI, AFARS AND THE ISSAS- FRENCH troops 81 , Dexter, $25, faihng to
have freed a group of French children held hostage by
yteld rtght of way, and Paul
nationaltst gunmen in a battle in which one child was killed,
E. Spencer, 18, Middleport,
several wounded and six nationalist gunmen shot to death,
$50. tllegal license plates .
. French officials said.
Fined
were Sammie
French troops remforced by elite fJeld gendarmerie sharpPlants, 43, Mtddleport, $100
shooters stormed a school bus in which the gun111en held 30
for leaving the scene of an
French boys and girls and the bus driver, since Tuesday,
offictals said. French authorities ordered the troops to storm accident, and $100 and costs
the bus after the guM'ten rejected unspecified French political for reckless operation of a
concessions to win a peaceful release of the hostages - boys vehicle, and Earl N. Rtchman , 69, Point Pleasant, $150
and _girls aged 6 to 12 years- and their driver, offtcials said.
and costs and three days in
GETTING TRAINING IN a number of areas so they can assist teachers at Rutland and
FRESNO, CALIF. - ONE OF THE DRIEST years in jatl for drivmg whtle mBradbury Elementary Schools are tbese volunteers workmg wtth a movte projector
California's history could mean disaster for cattle raisers and toxtcated.
Poltce said that Plants was
dry field crop growers in the nation's most productive
the
driver of a car which
agrtcultural state- and there's no relief in sight. They are the
struck
a car tn the rear
ones who farm without irrigation. For those farmers using
drtven
by Betty Pooler,
water from the state's network of irrigation canals, the outlook
Middleport, on Ash St , at
wsa a little brighter .
'i
·
The weatherman offers little encouragement. The 3!klay 8.16 p.m. Frtday. Plants left
outlook through February indicates "no major change in the the scene followmg the accurrent weather patterns." Many state and federally ctdent. Mrs. Pooler and a
By Bob Hoeflich
'Thursday, the 23 volunteers
passenger, Mrs . Beatrice
Meigs Countians have wtll wrap up the course of who wtll recetve absolutely controlled reserv01rs have been opened to help farmers get Stewart, were taken to
always been good about study and wtll be presen ted no pay - are not to asswne water to their crops by irrigation, which normally doesn't Veterans Memonal Hospital
answering the call for eertiftcates They w1ll then be 1nstruclional powers nor begin until March but was started in JanuarY in many areas. via private auto followmg the
volunteers and the 23 persons ~sled for calls to work tn admtn1ster d1sciplme .
In Apnl - wtth volun teers
WASHINGTON - W. J. USERY JR ., a veteran of labor- accident where they were
taking part in the teacher e tther
the
Rutland starting their dut1es eacH management relations, was assured confirmation today as treated for in]llfies
aide program of the Meigs Elementa~y or the Bradbury
week - the program will be secretary of labor. Usery's swearing-in, expected to follow
Local-Ohio Universtty Teach- Elementary School
Ch anges found soon after Senate confirmation, wlll bring President Ford's
evaluated.
er Corps are a Jivmg
Bestdes the fact that they necessary wtll be made and if Cabinet to full complement.
example
have completed the course, the program IS found to be
Confirmation by the Senate was expected to be routine and
Following a study, it was whtch qualifies them as
overwhelming.
He was approved 15-1 by the Senate labor
successful, tits hoped that tt
decided by the Corps to volunteer autcs, special
will be picked up for use CotnD)tttee, with only Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev ., casting a
establish the program tu · talents wtll be listed for each
throughout the enltre Metgs negative vote.
train atdes who would work in individual m the ftles . A Lo~ul District.
Dorothy Whtte, Pomeroy,
the schools on a volunteer classroom teacher at etther
Volllilteers who are mNEW YORK - EIGHT CHIWREN AND two adults were was fined $350 and costs and
basis to give the classroom school can request vol unvolved tn the prog ram are asphyxiated early today by carbon monoxide III the acrid
teocher a sometimes much- teers, perhaps, who havE' Pat Arnold, Peggy Arnott, smoke of a three-alarm fire that engulfed a six-story walkup was giVen a 30 day jail 'senneeded hand .
special talents whtch would · Rose Ellen Carson, Gemma 'tenement on Manhattan's Upper West Side, ftre officials said . tence when she was convicted
in the court of Pomeroy
As a result , 23 residents of be beneficial tn carrymg ou t a Cast:l , Carl Dcmson, Jo Ann
Fire Conunissioner John O'Hagan said, "A fire on the Ma yo r Clarence Andrews
the county have been at- special project.
Eads, Margaret Edwards, wound spead through some pipe recesses to U1ree rooms on
lending classes - two hours a
The volunteers have Margaret Goett. Vtrgtnia the second floor ~nd continued to the upper floors. "It appears Tuesday night of a charge of
giving false statements to a
day, twtce a week - at the receiVed training tn school
Gulley, Helen handley, Kay it was carbon monoxide poisoning that killed them. "
pohce offt cer.
Rutland Elementary School rules and procedures , use or
The bodies of two of the children were found on the first
King, Rachel LeFebre, ·
According to police , the
since Jan. 13 to Jearn how to the cassette tape recorder ,
Margare t
Ella
Lewts , floor and two adults and Sll&lt; children were discovered dead in a defendant had lied to officers
be aides. The course of study the film project of and record
Vtrginia Michael. Rose sixth-floor apartment, O'Hagan said. O'Hagan said all the durmg an mv~sllgahon of a
was developed by Mrs . player, preparing trans Patterson , Pearl Reynolds, children apparently were less than 10 years old.
breaking and entering on
Jeonne Bowen and Mrs. parencies, using the recl·to·
Jane Sn ouffe r , Florence
'
East Main St. recently .
Betsy Horky, who are team reel type recorder and earWASHINGTON - REP JOHN ASHBROOK. R-Ohio, said
Snowd en. Doro lh} Wtll.
Also fined Tuesday mght
leaders of the Teacher Corps phones. Of course, there has
Shirley Priddy , Bonnte Tuesday regulatiOn by government has taken on "awesome were Sigle Chafin, Vinton, $30
progJam. Mrs Bowen and been instruction tn aidtng
Ptckens, Wanda Stewart and dimensions" as federal agenctes bave steadily grown in and
costs,
speeding ;
Mrs. ·Horky dtd some of the ' children in using workbooks, Loutse Eads
number, in size and m complexity. "The costs of federal Raym ond Nowak , South
teaching of the volunteers , checking the workbooks ,
As far as the volunteers are regulation are astounding," said Ashbrook. "It bas been
but much of the actual in- aiding children in using labs concerned, Mr s. Bowen estimated that government regulations and restrictions cost Rtver, $25 and costs,
struction was done by interns and checking the lab work comments·
· American conswners $130 btllion per year or about an average overloaded vehicle, and
Rtchard
Hogg,
Point
who are employed wtth the and progress
"11tey've been just great. of $2,000 per family.
$15
and
costs,
tn·
Pleasant,
overoll
rea~tng
corps
The volunteers have They've been cooperative
"Even some of the agencies doing the regulating admit
I
program.
learned how to conduct oral and have worked hard to that tbelr agencies add more dollars to the price tags of goods toxication
Enrollees include such readmg lessons , how to help complete the collfse '
and services," Ashbrook smd. "The tssue is clear," said the
people as Margaret Ella children select books , how to
Johnstown congressman. "The consllfner pays for the
BLOOD VISIT
Lewis and Pearl Reynolds, tutor an tndivtdual child, how
regulations not only in htgher prices on goods and services but
Restdents are reminded
both of whom have been long- to administer tests a nd
also by seeing more of his tax dollars going to pay the of the upcoming BloodUme classroom teachers, and qwzzes and other function s
LOCAL TEMPS
burPaucrats and fund the agencies domg the regulating. "
mobile visit that will be
ran•ge to interested residents which might be beneftcial to
The
tempcr;1Lur e
Ln
held Monday, Feb. 9 at the
who have never been tn · the classroom teachers .
downtown Pomeruj &lt;11 11
COLUMBUS, OHIO - AN ADVISOR TO THE U S. Pomeroy Elementary
volved In the classroom
It has bee11 stressed. of a 111 . Wedn esday \las 42
l'nergv Research and Development Admtnistralion said School from I to 6 p.m.
excepl us students.
course, that the vol unteers - degrees under cloudy sktes
I CnniHIUt'l:i 11!1 page 16)

Teacher aide volunt~ers
complete study Thursday

Fine levied
for lieing

•

Fiflt•en Ce nts
Vol. 27 , :'1/o. lHfj

Guatemala quake
destruction high

Driver
hit with
2 fines

Y

$53,280 RAISED
WASHINGTON ( UP! )
fhe Cttizens for John Glenn
Committee ra1sed $5o,280
during the last three mon ths
of 1975, primarily through
fund raising functi ons here
and in Cincmna lJ , to reduce
the Qlu o se na tor's 1974 ou tstandmg campaign debt to
$59,260.

a1

Dateline 1776

HOSPITAL NEWS

Jose ph , Thelma
Ki11 g ,
Hebecca
Rule ,
Bcrrry
Saunde rs, Mrs. Du nald
Shecls and son. Ernes t Smith,
Vtckie Spradltng, Ltda Swa111 .
Taylor,
Coe ll
Bna n
We therh olt, C;trl us Whtte,
Ha rry Whtte.
1Hirth s. F'eh. 1 )
Mr . and Mrs . Joe Akers,
da ughte r, Poi nt Pleasa nt, W.
Va , Mr and Mrs Berna rd
Caruthers, d&lt;Hrghte! , Ractne ;
Mr a nd Mrs. Tho mas
Holzer Mcdi&lt;'al Center
Da nford, 'on, C r o ~&gt; n Ci ty.
! Daschargcs, Feb. 2)
Mr .' and Mrs Aaron Sayre.
Tta Armstron g, Bomer daughter , Syracuse
Batley-, Della Bell, Allhte
Bond, Rtta Breedtng, Gary
Brown ,
Mt s.
Micha el
PLEASANT VALLEY
Campbell and son, Debra
DISCHARG ES - l.ydta
Carnes.
Mary
Li sbeth Cornell , Harold Htttmgton,
Chern nglon , Parker Cla rk , Don s Dt ll on , all of Pmnt
Ja n Clicks, Marvtn Coltrtll , Pleasa nt ; Terry Groves, Hto
Floyd Da vts, Chnstophcr Grande ;
Mrs
!.an y
F'tsher, Gr over Fulks. Whobrcv . son, Mtddlc pOJI ;
Ma r gar e t J ohnson, J oa n Rtchar;J Da nbury, New
Haven; M
Vin{on Coss1n,
Leon
BIRTHS - ~'e b . 2, a sun tu
,
Mr. and Mrs Michael Allen.
Potnt Pleasant. a daughterto
Mr . and Mrs. Clifton Lucas,
BIDWELl.
,. Jam es Vmton, and a son to Mr and
Wtlham Marrs, "'· Route I , Mrs Harry Garnes, MtrlBtdwell , dtcd unex pectedly tn dle ort
Wtlkesv tll e Monday after
P
su ffen ng a hear t a ttack.
Mr. Ma rrs was born June
27, 1919 tn Berwind, W. Va .,
and Larry Spencer, 2nd Lt. tlle son of Sam and Grace
A JUniOr flref1ght e rs' Wil so n Marr s, Route 1,
league ts to be started m. Btdwell, who survtve. Other
February open to all young survtvors are a brother, Rex
men H through 18 years of B. Marrs, of La fa ye tte, Jnd,
age who are interes ted tn the and a sister , Mrs. Paul
Tuppers Platns area. Those (Gerald me 1 Rothacker, tn
wishing to take part ate to Cahfornta He was preceded
contact Clifford l,ongenettc&gt;, tn death by a brother , Sam
Ma rrs, Jr .
667-3890.
Mr Marrs was employed ·
as a guard al the Southern
Oh10 Coal Co and belonged to
Orphans Fnends Lodge 275,
F&amp;AM, at Wilkesville.
Funeral arrangemen ts are
bemg made a t the Wtlkesville
Chapel of the Walker Funeral
Home.

fnJm fluslnl
-tc

Moynihan may go for

Whlla• Your Taste
In Fumibn, You t1n
OICIOSI With Canfidence

AUTO LOANS

i

agcn t.:y
Fundwg
comes f1 om both local e:tnd
st&lt;tte , but prunm·tly loca l
snurCC$
Rir1 h 1eg1strat10ns after
1909 arc tn the Hea lth
Dc pe~rtm cn t offtces , Mr s .
Slrauss reported. whil e those
before that lime are tn the
Probate Court Offi ce. Deaths
are also recorded by · the
Hea lth Department
Mrs . Slr~mss satd heann g
i:lnd VISIO n climes star ted m
1969 wtth a ftve year federal
grant. These now are sponsore d loc ally Pediatric
Otolog1ca1. D1agnosttc chnk
teams come fr om columbus
an d Otuo University, and the
Dtagnostic Ocular Pedia tric
clini cs are co nducted by
Athen s and
Galltpol ts
physwtans.
Of the two climes, the
P 0 D and the C 0 P , Mrs
Strauss noted that Mrs. Don s
Batley. LPN, has th e
responslblhty of going Into
the schools to screen chtldren
a nd make referrals t'u lhe
chmcs. Referrals can also be
made b) teachers and speech
therapisls
The Crippled Ch ildr e n' s
Snciety, the Uons Club a nd
the churches help tn purchasmg glasses a nd hea nng
aids for needy chtldr en.
Another speaker was Mrs
Joan Culp of lhe San ita tion
Dt viston of the Health
Department tn cha rge of the
food serv ice mspection in
restau rant s , sc hool s, a nd
public booths where foods IS
served One phase of the
sant tallon dtvtsLOn 's work ts
to follow-up complaints about
cleanhness
and
food
poisonin~ posstbil1 lles
Wa ter punty ~ ~ also among
the dlvtswn 's responsibilities
Mrs. Culp satd th ere IS a
new :-;ewage program tn the
county w1f h regulati ons for
contractors mstalhng septic
tanks as well as for the home
owners
Prestding a t the mee ting in
U1e absence of John Rice ,
chairman , was Mrs . Lea fy
Chastee n. She announced the
nex Lmeeltng for Feb 17 wtth
Malcolm Oreba ugh of the
Gallipolis Commumty Men~ \
Health Center presenting the
program .
Others attendtng were Mrs
Elotse Smtih, Meigs County
He alth Depar tment ; Mrs
Mary Skmner , Me1gs County
P e r so nal
Advo c a e y
Prog ram , Mrs. Helen Bailey,
Mental Hea lth Ce nte r .
Jeffrey
Merkl e,
Ohto
Umvers1l~ graduate student
dotng fteld work at the Sen1or
Ctltzens Ce nte r ; Mrs . Donna
Willtam sson Out Rea c h
worke r , Sent or Citizens
Center ; Suste Cas to and Mr s
Phylhs Bearhs, Plann ed
Parenthood; Le tha Proffitt ,
and Bobbie Leadt ngham,
Gallia-Me tgs Communtty
Aclton ; Jtm Cleland, Oluo
Valley Fellowshtp , In c ;
Vernon Nease, Red Cross
Blood Program ; Gle nna
Crtps, Leadtng Creek Conse rvancy Distncl; Chesler V
Ktn g,
MCJ gs Chapter.
Amertcan Red Cross, and
Margacel Ella l.e~&gt;ts , Counctl
secretary.
('Urettlvc ,

Service Corp . m New York m
!956 as a bust ness tramee. He
was transfe rred to Ap·
pa]a(' hian Power Company's
R oanok e off1 ce ' 111 195 7,
retUfned to New York 1n 1959
and then jOI ned 01110 Power
as
an
adHum s lr ative
assistant in 1963 He was
made manager of that
company 's East L!verpool
Dtstrict in 1967, executive

1f

City was officially opened on
Jan . 6, 1776
When the quake struck,
thousands of persons in bed
clothes poured mto the
streets, some seeking refuge
in the1r parked cars .
Shattered
glass
from
smashed windows covered
the streets. In the area where
thts correspondent lives, wide
cracks open" d :n the
streets.
Light, telephone and water
services were knocked out by
the qua ke, but they were
resumed two hours later.
Reports from Mexico said
there was no telephone communication with Guatemala
Ctty but this correspondent
was able to get calls through
to New York.
In Caracas~ Director
Gunther Fiedler of the
Venezuelan Seismological
Institute registered an
earthquake of 6.1 on the
Richter scale. But readings
from other locations put the
quake's mten stty as high as 8
"The earthquake was very
powerful and must have had
considerable effect on
Guatemala 1s Pacific coast ,"
Ftedler said.
The U.S . National Earthquake InformatiOn Service in
Golden, Colo., reported tbat a
major earthquake occurred
125 miles northeast of
Guatemala City and on the
Guatemale-Honduras border
and placed the time of the
temblors at 4:02a.m. EST . It
put. the magnitude at 7.5 on

the Richter scale
Setsmologwt Roger Hunter
said he had been in telephone
contact with t he U.S.
embassy m Guatemala City
and an embassy spokesman
told him everyone at the
embassy was safe.
As soon as the initial
tremor subsided, brigades of
pollee took to the streets of
Guatemala City to prevent
Iootmg
Firemen and Red Cross
workers removed the tnjured.
Most of the tnjured were in
the poorest sections of the
ctty where the shack houses
could least withstand the
quake.
Ham operators said the
highwa y which co nnec ts
Guatemala to the E l Salvador
town of Apulo was badly
damaged and that residents
of the town had run panicstrtcken into the streets.
Guatemala Ctty IS the
largest city in Central
America and was made tbe
capttal of the country in 1176
following the destruction of
the previous ,capital of
Antigua in 1773. Guatemala
City nearly destroyed by
earlier earthquakes in 1917
and 1918 but was rebuilt on
the same site.
The city is located at an
altitude of nearly 5,000 feet
and near some of the most
spectacular archaeological
ruins in the Western Hemisphere, including the Mayan
temple of Tlkal.

Municipalities
askfug for grant
James
Foster , held dispatcher service .
representati ve with the
Letters of in tent from each
Federal Admmtstralion of village must be submitted
Jusltce Divtston, tnvited law listmg the radto eqwpment
enforcement officers of needed . Cost to each village ts
Pomer oy,
Middleport, 5 percent of the total price.
Rutland ,
Ractne
and Deadline for the pr eSyracuse Tuesday afternoon apphcatton ts Feb. 6.
to parttctpate in a county
Pete Simpson , who has
wide commwucahon grant. been work in g on the
It was dectded at the program , hopes lo have the
meeting to make a pre- pre-apphcatwn m the mall
appltcation for the grant · today .
whtch
wtll
take apAttending were Foster,
proximately 12 months Simpson , Pomeroy Mayor
before, tf approved, equip- Clarence Andrews, Vernon
ment requested ts dehvered . Weber, Shenff Robert C.
Equipment available in- Hartenbach , J, J. Cremeans,
cludes mobiles, base and Harry Davis, B. Vaughan,
portable radw untts Foster Ron Jeffers , Steve Harsuggested the base stahon be l&lt;!nbach , Juamta Thomas and
at the shertff's department, Kahe Crow
providing he has 24 hour

Directors and officers
of hank are reelected
Shareholders
of
the
Pomeroy National Bank ,
after hearing a report of
growth tn 1975 , Tuesday
reelected all directors m their
annual meettng and the
directors in a foll owing
meeltng reelected all thetr
officers .
'
Edts o n
Hobslelter,
chairman and pre sident ,
reported year-end assets
totaled $22,167,000.
He said, " We believe the
prtme reason for nur growth
IS servtce to our customers
and involvement m our area.
In September, the Tuppers
Plams Branch was opened .
This office is a full servtce
bank and has the latest and
most modern equtpment
Including safe depostt boxes ,
night deposttory , a dnve-m
window , and ample parking.
Thts conventently located
factlity wtll prov tde our
customers in that area with
fast efftcient servtce. Wtth
the opening of this new
branch, Pomeroy National
now has 4 bankin g localtons
w s~rve the public. ,
" In this bicentennial )ca r,
the Pomeroy Nattonal Bank
completes 104 years of serVICe as a nattonal bank It ts
with pride that we refer tu
this length of service anc:l
contmued growth .
"Our directors . officers ,
and staff have been oriented
to progress and growth . We
look forward to 1976 wtlh
I•

great optinusm. We wtll
str1ve to contmue to se t new
standards of se rvice for our
customers.''
Directors reelected were
Dr. R. E. Botce, Mr. Hobstetter, Horace Karr , Roger
Morgan, Warren Pickens and
Orton W Roush
Officers reel ected by the
board are Edison Hobstetter ,
prestdent , George S. Hob·
stett er , vi ce president ;
Dennis E Keney, vt ce
prestdenl; Maxine Grifftth ,
cashier ; Lera K. Jones,
asst stant cashtcr: Hi chard
Poulm. assistant cas hter;
Joan
Wolfe,
ass ist ant
cashier ; Marilyn Wo lfe ,
ass1stant cashier ; and at the
Rutland Branc h, Wtlltam J.
Hobs te tter , vtce pr es tdent
and branch manager . Joan
May , assts lant
branch
manage r. and DonE Nelson,
assistant v1cc presiden t and
branch ma nager at the
Tupper~ Platns Branch.
Employees at the Main
Offtce al-e Cheryl Abbott,
Irene Baxter, Rond a Dcmp~
sey , Em tha Mtdktff, Arthur
W. Nease. Jr., Donna Nelson,
Linda
Spencer,
Dori s
Snowden, and Bonnie Wel sh.
F:mployees at the Rutland
Bran ch are Ruth Ann
Graham, Sharon Lee Barr,
and Saundra Tillts, and at the
Topper s Plains Bra nch.
Martlyn Robtn son , Ma ry
C. rover , and Judy Weber

•

1

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