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                  <text>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

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~ - The

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2- The Datly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feh. 4, 1976

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, Feb. I, 1976

Tornadoes stomp Eagles

Tax relief bill held up for drastic revision
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - The
House Ways and Means Committee today was to
reconsider a drastically
revised real estate tax relief
bill aimed at reducing the
burden of future unvoted
JFOperty taxes on Ohio ho-

The purpose of the delay
was to "clean up" the btll, to
famiharize House members
with tt.s unpacl m their areas

and to tnsure agamst revenue
losses by school districts and
local governments.
But by the time the
subcommittee had flmshed
with it, about half the tax
relief for homeowners had
been cut out and the btll had
been chopped from 172 pages
to a dozen.
Rep. John E Johnson, DOrrville, chief sponsor,
indicated his enthustasm for
the bill had dwindled,
although he said it still would
furnish $70 mtllion worth of
real estate tax relief m
counties where sexenmal
reappraisals have taken

meowners.

The comnuttee planned an
afternoon meetmg to push the
bill to the House floor, where
Its timetable for a vote was
set back to at least Thursday,
and perhaps to next week.
The measure was to have
been taken to the floor
Tuesday,
but
House
Democratic leaders had it
pulled back at the last minute
for revisions in comm•ttee.

place and more in the other 30
counties.
Sliced from the btl! was an
addttwnal $14S million worth
of tax rebel whtch would have
severely reduced income to
school districts and loca l
governments.
None of the tax credits
would apply to this year's tax
btlls. They would begin wtth
btlls recetved in January,
1977.
The General Assembly and
the admmistration of Gov.
James A. Rhodes are usmg
different methods to relieve
who
have
taxpayers
complamed of skyrocketing
real estate taxes resulting
from mflated annual land
appraisals.
The

administratwn,

Culprit in high gas hill
may he winter's fickleness
Col umbt a Gas of Ohw
customers - parttcularly
those who use natural gas for
home healing - appear to be

1975 Also depending upon

overlookmg the significant

effect that Old Man Wmter's
fickle nature may have on
monthly fuel btlls.
J . M. Koebel, manager for

accounts mveshgated have

increased consi derably m
recent weeks
''This tndtcates to us, " he

said, "that while customers
1may have expected to pay
more to heat their homes lhts
wtnter as a result o! mcreases
in gas costs over the past
year, they apparently aren't
taking mto account how much
additional effect changes m
weather and the number of
days tn a bilhng perwd can
have on fuel bills 'from one
month to the next
"Based on aviulable
weather data" he continued,
''the weather in December m
this area was 7 6 percent
warmer than normal , while
last month I January) was 6 9
per c~n l colder than normal.
January also was 15 6 per
cent colder than January,

urgmg

amendments

to

Johnson's btU on a 4 to I vote.
The net effect was to strip 160
pages of tax appeal
procedure out of the btll,
make 11 strictly a tax rebel
plan and msure a minimum
of revenue losses for school
'
dislncts
and
local
goverrunents.
As rewritten, the bill would
offer credits to real estate
taxpayers on any future
unvoted tax increases
resulting from reappraisals
BY BERNARD BRENNER
inflalmg land values.
The subcommittee adopted
UPI FARM EDITOR
an amendment disallowing
WASHINGTON IUJ'I) t.he credit for increases on the International aid loanli partly
first 10 unvoted mills of underwntten by American
taxalton to save local taxpayers have ftnanced part
governments and school of a tropical palm oil
districts from heavy revenue production boom which
currentl y IS replac mg
losses
Local governments receive Amertcan-grown soybean otl
about 60 per cent of the in some domestic markets,
revenues from those 10 "in- an Agriculture Department
side" mills , while school sta ff study says
The report, made available
dislrtcls receive the other 40
per cent.
Johnson
said
the
amendment would save local
governments about $100 to newsmen here, S8ld in!lllllion a year, and school terna twnal finan cia l atd
districts another $4~ million. already has boosted world
production of palm oil by
more than 300,000 tons, or
more than a quarte. of total
growth in palm ml production
m recent years.
More than two-thirds of the
mcreased production fueled
by the md m Malaysl3 and
other countnes IS bemg exported, much ol it to the
United States, the report
added
Dale Sherwm, a deputy
asststan t secretary of
agriculture, satd m an mte rview that agnculture
offtctal s. have made no
proposals yet for any steps to
counter the increase in aJdsubsidtzed imports He sa1d,

Nohng that other factors,

such as the chtll factor I effect
o! wmd) and number o! days
in each customer's btlhng
perwd 1fr om 29 to 33 depending • un weekends and
holidays mcluded l alsq can
effect monthly fu el b11ls,
Koebel emphastzed that
t'llstomers can ease the effect
of

mcreased

costs

by

reducmg gas usage through
conservation .

the £ann front

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chronic!~ of America
February 4, 1776:
Lead mg Con nectJcut and New Je rsey troops, MaJOr
General Charles Lee, dispatched from Cambndge by
General Washmgton to forttfy the New York area, enters
New York City. A soldier of fortu ne born m England, and
currently the lhtrd-rankmg of!tcer m the Continental Army, Lee is a rrogant, profane,

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Charles Lee

L----------------...;.----....1
-By Ross MackenlJe &amp; Jeff MacNelly/otl\976 Um tP.d Feat ure SyndJ c ate

DR. LAMB

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B.Y Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
interested m kn owmg how
one contracts arlhnlis. Is lhts
a hereditary dtsease ? Is It
caused by a low - grade infection ? How can one keep
from getting thts affltcllon'
DEAR READER - There
are several types of arthrills.
Rheumatoid arthnlis is inflammatory arlhrths and the
exat'l cause of th e mflammahon is not known It
has never been established
that it is caused by a laiown
bacteria or virus
You can have gonococcal
arthritis on the bas1s of
gonorrhea, or tubercular
arthrills from tuberculosis.
Gouty arthritis is caused by
the accumulation of a salt of
uric acid. The overproduction
of uric acid in the body is an
Inherited tendency. Uric acid
is a byproduct of normal cell
regeneration which 1s a
constant process in a healthy

body.
Health Letter number 4-11,
Os leoa rlhrtlis or Rbewnaloid Arthritis. Endegenerative arthnt1s 1s close a long , stamped, selfthought to be related ~o wear addressed envelope for
and lear !actors and affects matbng.'Address your letter
mos tly the weight bearing to me in care of thts
jomts in the body.
newspaper, P.O. Bo• 1551,
As you can see from thts Ra dio City Station, New
there is no good way to York, NY 10019.
prevent all forms of arthnlls,
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
particularly when we don 't husband and I are on a
know what ca uses some lll1lited income so I wonder 1f
types such as rheumatoid you could help me I'm 5 feet
arthnlis.
S and SO pounds overweight.
As a general rule the The very word diet makes me
pri nct~les of good health will
hungry although I've tned to
help Avoid obesity decreases slay ~ ~~ one time and agam.
wear' and tear on jomts.
Lately I have been e•Controlling the level of uric periencl ng a light headed
actd with medicines when tl is feeling 1not always). Often
too high will help prevent dizzy spells are expenenced
gouty arlhrtlts and o! course not long after meals. Can
pr ompt treatment of the · U1ese be htgh blood pressure
varwus infections that may symptoms ? Do you have a
have arthrihs as a com- dtet to control tt ?
plication also helps
DEAR READER - I wish I
For more infonnation on could just solve your problem
arlhnl1s ~rn rJ 50 cents for 'Ill~ ~&gt;llh a letter bur It Isn't that

sunple You need to know
exactly what ts causmg' the
dizzy spells. They are just a
sym ptom, and they can be
caused by a list of things as
long as your arm.
Yes, you can have dizzy
spells from mvolvement of
the circulation related to htgh
blood pressure because not
enough blood gels to the
brain They can be from
severe anemia or from
dieting, parltcularly from
overdoing it with any number
of unsound fad diets touted to
the public.
Dizziness can be caused by
the ears, the eyes and from
anxiety so as you can plamly
see I can't just send you a
diet
and relieve yo ur
problem. You will need to see
a doctor and I think you
absolutely must do this.
Remember your health is
your musl VHiuablc asset 1 so
safeJ.(wwrl Jt Hhfwe all else

said.

" In terms of cottonseed oil,
the 725,000 ton expansion in
palm oil Imports during the
next 10 years could mean
displacement of virtually all
domestic consumption of
cottonseed oil." experts
added

Cleveland almost $~ . 7
million.
Other large gains would go
to Toledo, $3. 1 milhon;
Cincinnati, $1.4 miUlon; and
Akron, Panna and South
Western School District in
Franltlln County, $1 miUlon
each.
The largest loss from
current
income
was
projected for Middletown by
figures from the Ohio
Education Association $928,000. Other major llll'l8es
shown were $2112,~I6 for Ohio
Valley Local School District,

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Dear Helen :
In response to the man who wants to be a "househusband,"
this ian 't new! I'm 34, have a couple of kids and have always
supported my family. Have been married twice to men so lazy
that they wouldn't stir themselves to get jobs.
Am beginning to think there are no men left who want an
old-fashioned housewife and mother to lend the home fires
while they make the family living. It's gettin&amp; 80 men
EXPECT their wives to work outside the h(JfiiC and If they
refUJe they think they got cheated. - BREADWINNER NOT
BREADMAKER (and wants a change)

in Summit . County; and
$250,482 for Arcadia Local
School District In Hancock
County.
However, thole losses were
111111fled by an amendment
protectinl the 51 school dlstrlcttl receiving less under the
new plan than currently.
01 the &amp;I dlstrlct.a, five were
In Montgomery County and
lour each In &amp;lmmit and
Allen counties.
Total cOlt to the state for
this
"hold harmless''
provision was pegged at ~
mllllm a year.
Johnlion·· pointed out that
although the Sl dtstricts
would not 1oee money , they
still would have to reduce
their espectations for state
aid under the "equal yield"
school foundation formula
next year because their local
tu
collections
would

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COURTESY CALL
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UP!) - Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger vtsited with
former President Richard
Nixon for an hour at Nixon 's
oceanside retreat. A Stale
Department spokesman
dtsclosed Tuesday th at
Kissinger paid a "courtesy
visit" to Nixon Monday ·

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SAN FRANCISOO (UP!)The questioning of jurors was
over and Patricia Hearst's
bank robbery trial was
almost ready to begin two
years to the day after her
kidnaping.
The granddaughter of
newspaper magnate William
Randolph Hearst was carried
halfnude and screamin8 from
her
Berkeley,
Calif.,
apartment two years ago
today. In the following 19
months, she joined her
Symblonese Uberation Army
kidnapers as the revolutionary ''Tania" and eluded a
nationwide FBI manhunt.
u.s. District CDurt Judae
Oliver Carter completed six
days
of
Interrogation
Tuesday with approval of 38
members of the panel. All
that remained was the
seating of the tlna112 jurors
and four alternates.
The tentali\'ll panel of 18
men and 18 women included
several bank employes,
postal workeu, a street
sweeper, housewives ,
widows , retired men, an
aitllne hOBteu, a carpenter
and an Army en&amp;iJ*r.
Defense attorney F. 1M
Bailey aald ~tiDn and
defen.e lawyers would use 10
peremptory challe!tgea each
to winnow the panel down to
the final 16.
Another defense lawyer,
Albert
Johnson,
told
reporters Miu Hearst had
helped her attorney• in the
jury selection proceu.
"She looks at the back,
grounda of the jurors and
commentl on tbem," he ulcl.
"Her comments are laken
into conalderatiDn."
Bailey aprana a surprlae
Tuesday with motions to
dl.smlll the armed bank robbery charges and to ban
evidence about Miu Hearst's
behavior after the April 15,
1974, holdup of a San
Francisco blnk. Detalll of
the moliona were sealed and
not made public.
The defenll! attonley alaJo
requestad
be taken ol

Miu

kidnaping and the bank
holdup.
The prosecution wanted to
get in 111t:h evidence as a tape
recording Miu Hearst made
lour dar- after the robbery In
which !lhe said she acted of
her oWII free wiU and had not
been brainwashed.
The government wanted to
lntrnduce another tape made
after the sbootout between six
SLA members and Los
Aogelea pollee May 17, 1974,
In which the terrorists were
slain. In the recording, Miss
Hearst announced she would
ftght on as "Tania ," a soldier
In the St.A.
That was the last word
frCIII her unW her capture
last Sept. II in San Francisco.

4, I974.
approvll.
The defense alaJo would like
to restrict the eW1ence to the
events between Mila Hearst•a

,

"
.,
"
,

By Kell ee Burdette
The visi ting Galbpolis Blue
Devils had all they could
han dle in the ftrsl half
Tuesday m a league freshman game agamst Metgs at
Larry MorriSon gym but put
on a thtrd quarter rally to run
the score out of reach, wmning 39-24
Leadtng the Marauders
offense was Tom Hawley wtth
8 points, followed closely by
Todd Rawlings Wi th 1.
Lead111g rebounder for the
baby Marauders was Dave
Blake who pulled m 7 carom s,
followed closely by teammate
Tom Hawley wtth 6.
The Marauders had ball
control trouble, turntng 11
over 12 times.
Meigs - Rawbngs 2-3-7,
Becker 2-1-5, Blake 0-0-0,
Ha wley 4-0-8, Kennedy 0-0-0,
Yeauger 1-0-2, Taylor 1-0-2
Gal bpohs - Hetns 7-4-18,
Smith 1-0-2, Sterrett 2-0-4:
Lanham 1&gt;4-4, Harrts 2-0-4,
Oark 2-3-7
Metgs
9 14 20 24
Gallipohs
B 13 25 39

A1TEND SHOWER
Bobbl PaUley and Mrs.
Hilda McDaniel were among
the gu..llall! layette shower
honortna Mrs . Jim King
Friday night at the home of
Mrs. Clarence Kina , Middleport. Their names were
unintentionally omitted !rom
an earlier account of the
shower. Also among those
sending gifts were the Rev .·
and Mrs. Odell Manley and
Steve.
IN Jl'WRIDA
MI'JI. Ell&amp;• beth Fisher ,
after residing In Middleport
lor the pasl year and a half,
has returned to Florida. She
wu taken to the Charleston,
W. Va. airport a week ago by
Mr , · and Mrs. Robert
Rinehart. Mrs. Fisher will
reside ln Clearwater.
HYMN SING SET
MASON W.
A
wUI be
at 7:30

Baptist

v,.:o.n
linlll'l
the Countey
Hymn Timers and the Joint
Heirs. The public Ia invited t&lt;
attend.

.

f

the 'l'Hrnadoes l ook c harge to

reel off t6 pomls answered by
U1c Eagles JUSt once, on a free
throw . The first pertod ended
\IIlli the score 22-7 In that
span , junior Dave Roush had
four points on hts patented
corner shots and had two key

to Belpre 7th
"

RACINE - Coach Howte
Caldwell's Southern Freshmen dropped to 6-3 on ,the
" season as they succumbed to
a much l&lt;tller and l&lt;tlented
squad from Belpre Monday
score was 66-52.
Caldwe ll sa id he was
pleased wtth h1s boys' per' form ance, especially Dwtghl
Hill as he tossed m 20 pom ts
., Ttm Brinager and Dave
Findley a,dded 12 and II,
respecllvely, The team made
10 ol 21 free throws Their
nex t game is Thursday at
, Racine agamst Eastern
T Blake led Belpre wtlh 28
markers. They canned i3-20
free throws
M

••

_, Bidwell boys

. down 48 to 18
, RACINE - Southern Jr.
'" High 7th grade upended
Bidwell 7th grade 48-18 in a
no-con test sor t of game
Monday at Bidwell. For
Southern, Talbott had 14
, poinls, M. Wolfe 10 and Mtller
; . 7. All of Southern's squad
,'. played at least six minutes.
o.
Nine Bidwell boys had one
' " basket each.
... Sot&amp;lhern's boys shot 36 pel.
: from the field .
"
By quarters:
s
13274048
B
4 6 14 18

"" BIRMINGHAM,
Ala.
"'· tUPI) - The Btrmtngham
:., Americans of the defunct
C" World Football League have
'"' filed suit against Pittsburgh
I"' Sleeler defensive end L. C.
• " Greenwood to recover II
;,, $50,000 bonus paid him to jom
" · the team.
•

North Galba reigns today was forced to stt on the bench
as the 1975-76 champion of the a large portwn of the ftrst
Southern Valley Athletic half J umor Robert Neal
Conference £ollow1n g came off the bench to can
Tuesday's 53-50 upset wm by eig ht po10ts dunng the Pirate
Southwestern over Hannan ons laught Spoon Mtnms
Trace. North Galba has a added 13 polO ts
three game lead w1lh JUSt two
Terry Tucker and Marty
games to go. Whtle South- Holbrook led Wahama with 11
western was pulbng the btg and 14 pom ts 1especltvely
upset, Coach Jim Foster 1s
North Gal ba ht l 34 of 87
Pirates " ere runmng and fl oor shots for 39 pel. and Just
gunnmg. The v1cbms th1s 11 of 29 free throws Wahama
time were the Wahama Wh1te lut 17 of 32 at the foul line.
Falcons North Galha won
The wm was North Calha's
the non-league battle, 79-61. 13 in i4 outmgs thts wmter
The P~rales opened up their Wahama 's record dipped to :toffensive with a b1g 21 poml 10. The Little Bucs posted a
first q uarler. Before the horn 59-57 vt clory over the
sounded for the halfttme Wahama Lit tle Btrds
break, the Ptrales had roll ed
Doug Sisson led the way
to an unsurmounl&lt;tble 45-20 wtth 18 pmn ts Steve Mundell
lead.
Coach Jtm Scherr's Wht le
Falcons slowed the pace
somewhat dunng the second
hall.
Leadmg the Ptrale all&lt;tck
Col lege Basketball Results
B y Un1ted Press Internatio nal
as usual was 6-4 All-State
East
ca nd1da te Greg Jame s
Assm pln 109 Stoneh1l l 85
James ripped the cords for 21 Babson 85 Coast Guard 77
Bluef ltl 99 L1b Bapt 82
pomts, grabbed 30 rebounds Can1S1Us
102 S1ena 94
Colby 101 Me Pllnd 81
and blocked stx shots
52 Rochester s 1
Fred Logan, 6-2 ]umor, Colgate
E Conn St 82 Fl chbg 51 81
ltmshed with i6 points but Framngh m 74 Bos to n St 64
It haca 59 Hobart 57

Coach criticizes
Athens official
The Metgs Htgh School
wrestling team fe ll vtctim to
the Athens' Bulldogs in a
recenl match thal Marau(lct
Coach Ray Goodman called
' the wors t offtciated [ have
ever seen "
The coc1 c h's remarks
re£erred pnmanly to the
con troverstal 145 lb match
between Metgs ' Duane
McLaughhn and Athens'
Gary Veller m which lhe
referee refused to call a pm m
favor of McLaughbn even
though the undefeated
Athe ns' \Hesller was clearly
pmned on th ree separate

, Frosh lose one

eve mng at Racme . The ftnal

MARK, Not MIKE
It wu Mark Oller whose
aervlces were terminated
with the County Highway
Dept. not Mike OUer as was
reported Tue!day.

out :Jo secund s

aSSISts

In the second canto, the
Eag les slowed the pace of the
game for awhtle and lhe hosts
seemed to lose thetr touch as
the Eagles ' defense sltffened
But in the last two mmutes,
they got hot agam, and went
mto the liJCker room leadmg
38-11. In that mtltal half,

had 17 and Rex Jusltce, 12
Kevm Scott topped Wahama
with 16. Rtck Buzzard had 15.
North Galha 's reserves are
9-5 th ts season
The Ptrales host Kyger
Creek Friday m thetr last
home game this season.
Box score ·
Wahama (61 ) - T Tucke r
6517
S mll h
2 1 5,
Neswander 1 J 5 , Dav1s 1 1 3,
J Tucker d 0 8 Lambert 2 J
7, Hol brook 5 t1 14 and Sayr e
1 0 2 Totals 22 -11 61
N or th
Gall1~
(79)
Runyon 4 2 10 , C Minn1s 2 o
4 , l ogan 8 0 - 16 , Tackett 0 o
0 . James 6 5 2 1 Neal 3 2 8 s
M 1nn 1s 6 1 13 , Thetss 2 1 s,
We lc h I 0 2 Totals 34- 11 -7 9.
By Quarters .
Wahama
14 6 17 24 - 6 1
Nor!h Ga tl1 a 27 18 8 26- 79
Reserves . North Gal l1 a 59
Wahama 57

Basketball Results

.. by 39-24 edge

trial almost
ready to start
By DONALD B. THACXREY

LET'S DANCE - Well, 001 ,..,lly, but Eric DuMing (12) of Southern, and Eastern's
Gary Nelson ( 4S / seem to be about to try tlon the Southern High gym floor Tuesday mght. At
r.•ghlts Eastern s Joe Kuhn .(35 ), With the victory, Southern kept pace for a second place
ftmsh In the Class A SV AC Jun Hamm picture.

Gallia Frosh
rally to win
,,

ttun~s

later HS he ca nned a long
Jw-nper uf his own
lifter the ball had chan~cd
hands a nwnber of hmcs
because of the tenston m th1s
annual elash, the Tornadoes'
Chtp Brauer netted a short
jwnper a mmute later to put
Southern ahead 4-2 But 11
seemed like the underdog
Eagles were determined to
make a game of 1t as semor
playmaker Bnan Conde
knotted the score on a long
one w1lh 5 20 showtng on the
lst quarter clock.
But In the next four nunutes

Pirates bomb Falcons

'"

..

evened

RACINE - The Southern
Tornadoes were host to the
Eastern Eagles Tuesday
mght and sent the Eagles
home on lhe short end of the
basketball 74-31 score. The
fifth straight time the Tornadoes had defeated Eastern.
The cross-county match
started wtth the Eagles
getting the opemng lip, but
after a turnover, Southern 's
all-leag ue gua1 d Mike
Roberts started the scm1ng
wtlh one of hts patented long
jumpers at the 7. IS mark.
Eastern's Bruce Riffle

v.

dimintsh .

lhe
Dear B Not B:
frac:tart
When a woman draws TWO leaches, it appears she's etther rifle butt

a poor judge of character or she enjoys being the dominant
one.
Don't judge aU men by your choices. Most are weD aware
that tending the home fires burns a man out faster than would
a regular ontstde job. - H.

By Grl!g Raile;

Patty Hearst's

us ...

Dear J .:
Most large cities have Centers for Women, though names
vary with areas. In San Francisco, there's the Single Parents
Resource Center, which provides workshops, advice, rap
sesmons and even helps locale child care lor working mothers.
MOMMA In Santa Ana, Calif., offers similar IM!I'vices, and
N.O.W. (National Organization for Women) has outlets In
many cities.
Your library lists all local organizations and their
addresses. Good luck. - H.

e

production boom which
began in the 1900's - principally in Malaysia but also In
other countries mcluding
Indonesia and the Ivory
Coast.
In Malaysia alone, experts
added, increased production
during the next decade from
trees already planted wiD be
nearly 140 per cent. They satd
most of the new oil wtll be
poured mto export markets
and current trends indicate
that the United States which has no import controls
- would get "a burdensome
and disproportionate share"
of the increasing shipnents.
" If palm 011 imports into
the U.S: market expand as
projected, the implication is
that oil production from 15
mtllton bushels of soybeans more than half a million
acres of soybeans - will be
displaced each year for the
next 10 years," tbe report

·jj

Different types of arthritis

•'
••

.••

ment end their assistance to
palm ml expansion.
The report SBid it would be
impossible to trace spectfic
UruledStates contributions to
the IBRD and similar
agencies mto palm oil loans.
But it added that American
contri butions and Hcallable"
captlal pledges make up a
stgmftcan t share of the
resources of such agencies.
Some domestic industry
sources, Sherwm said, have
been
suggestmg
consideration of a voluntary
import control program
simtlar to understandmgs the
government has worked out
with major textile producmg
nations which voluntarily
llmtt sales to the United
States. No s uch step ts
currentl y under active
consideration in the government for palm oil, he SBid.
The staff report noted that
palm otl prices m the United
States currently are above
soybean oil prices. American
Imports under contracts
rrtade mohths ago are expected to remam heavy lor
several more months, and
long range forecasts indicate
continued he avy Imports,
experts said.
American ll1lports of the

Helen Help

ili

•

e

of a "Save Gas, Save Jobs"
campatgn to keep mdustnal
gas delwe~ cutbacks as low
as poss1ble, he satd and gave
Ulis example ·
"II a ·customer who heats
w1th gas had hts thermostat
set at 72 degrees last wmter
and sets it at 67 degrees 1five
degrees lo\\. er) this v.mter, It
wou ld mean that the
customer's gas conswnption
could be approximately 15
per cent less and his btl!
lower than 1f he had not
conserved,' '
Sufftcient msulatwn, storm
doo rs
and
wmdows.
weather s trtppin g and
caulking all were ctled as
ways to keep cold a1r out and
warm air m. "'iou also can
save gas through care in
ot l , whtrh can re place
cookin g, careful use of hot
soybean and cottonseed oils
however , that the agency in shortening and other uses,
water, closmg off unused
may suggest a request that reached over 400,000 tons m
areas, and many other
agenctes hke th e In- 1975, double the 1974 volume,
ways /' he satd.
te rna tio na l
Ba nk
fur the study showed. Experts
Koebel
remtnded
Rel'Onstrucllon and Develop- said this was the result o! a
cus tomers that the gas
company has pamphlets and
Mike Walker, Pomeroy, ~~~:·:·:&gt;:·:!::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::.:-:·:·:·:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::·:::·:::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:-:·:-".~
hterature on conservatiOn
has JOined the staff of the
steps to take, and even offers
National Ufe and Accident
to
special
counse ling
Insurance Co. The com- Jl:
customers on effective mpany has 39 agents out of
s ul ahon measures and
the Huntington District and
" h om e
ltghtening"
techmques.
Walker"lll be agenlfor the
By lldt&gt;n Buttel
Middleport, Rutland and
"The natural gas shortage
will con tnrue tn be critical for
Cheshire area. lle Is a 1969 ·!·:
graduate of Meigs High
several years yet," accordtng
Hazards &gt;Of Uving Together
School and re sides wtth his
to Koebel, "a nd conservatwn
Dear Helen
\\ ife, Sandy, and daughter,
and proper ulihzalion are
"Ltving together" sounds glamorous, but there are
Stephanie, on Bailey Run
ways Y.e can stretch our
hazards too .l moved m wtlh John when I was 19 and he was 21
present short supplies and
Road.
He wanted me to give away my baby (by a former marriage )
keep our gas btlls as low as
as he said we were too young to be tied down. Finally he let me
possible."
keep her, provided I kept on workmg and hired a babysitter.
He also noted that the gas
Etghteen months later we moved to bls home town. I was
company's Budget Payment
pregnant, and his mother was mortified. She made us tell
Plan - whtch spreads yearly
everyone we were rrtarrted, but the ceremony didn,'t take
gas costs 111 equal monthly
place. (We were "free, " remember?)
Namath
gets
payments fo r 11 months wtth
We conlmued this lie lor 12 years. Meanwhile, with much
a custom er's account brought
help and financial assistance from me, we got a farm and a
into adJustment in the 12th
going business. He also had a "wife" who would put sugar in
cold shoulder
month - ca n help home
his coffee and stir tt with her finger if he wanted it.
heat tng customers avoid
Aod what happened ? He started having affairs. Said these
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
unusually htgh winter btlls,
mamed women were unha~py and he couldn't dejJrive them .
whtch often are ca used by Joe Namath, wbo has been That's when I finally insisted we gel mamed, in a distant ctty.
pet'lods of extremely cold hinting he would like to join
The day we got home !rom our honeymoon, he spent the
the lAs Angeles Rams, got night with one of his town lerrtales. The affairs continued,
weather
the cold shoulder from owner several at a time.
Carroll
Rosenbloom
BOARD TO MEET
I had a nervous breakdown, took an overdose. John's
Ohw Valley Health Ser- Tuesday
mother moved in and they took my children away from me via
The 69-year-&lt;&gt;ld owner gave court order . I'm bemg diVorced. And I'm penniless, except for
vices Foundation , Inc., w1U
a
vote of confidence to hiS a job that pays $75 a week. The courls dectded that everything
hold a Board of Trustees
meelln g Feb. 12, at the head coach, Chuck Knox, and
we had was bought before the marriage, and I could not prove I
Hohday Inn m Galhpolis. The to his current quarterbacks In earned part of it. At least if there had been a license, I wouldn't
busmess session beginning at a statement ISSued to the
be startmg all over agam, broke, sick, deprived of my
7·15 p.m •s open to the public news rnedta saying he wanted children, and dam near lmlshed at age 33.
for observation The main "to end speculation that the
Be smart, girls, that "worthless scrap ol paper" means a
agenda item · will be the Rams will make a trade lot if property, children and money are Involved. - P D.S.
Hea lth Systems Agency mvolvmg a quarterback."
However, Rosenbloom dtd
(HSA) application Persons
Dear Helen :
de s iring further details not mention Namath by
I need advice and counsel occasionally, as do some of my
concerning the Agenda name.
divorced friends . However, we can't afford legal help. We are
should call 614-592-4457
all working mothers and we are faced with business deals,
leases, settlements, etc .
Ia there any agency that can help us ? We don't qualify for
Legal Aid as we aren't destitute. Actually, we don't need
mvolved law advice, but just "steering" In the right directiona.
1 - J. L

con hnue to be less th an other

John&lt;!on
said
reorgaruzation of the tax
appeals system will be dealt
with In another bill next
week.
As amended, the bill would
Increase state and local
funding for most school
districts, with Columbus
gainin&amp; $5.1-milllon over l~
current allocation and

American taxpayers found
subsidizing own competition =f::~~·~~

sumptlon could be as much as
76 per cent higher than the
December cons umptlon

fuels."
Rates will have a continutng effect, but rtght now ,
Old Man Win ter is the btgger
culprtt, Koebel pmnted out.

ugly, and followed by hts
pn vate pack of dogs
wherever he goes. He IS a
capable mthtary commanoer , but vastly overrated, for
Washmgton and Congress, he
causes little but trouble and
constantlrntatton. Captured
m December, 1776, he ts exchanged tn Apnl, 1778. He
behaves miserably at Monmouth in June of that year, •s
court-marlla!ed, vtndtcated ,
and suspended .!rom command. He dies , largely an
enigma, in Philadelphia m
!782

Appeals and replace it with a
state Tax Court of Appeals
and a new Division of Tax
Equa lizalion .
Johnson explained creating
a new state court would have
required 66 votes • in the
House. As rewritten, it will
need only SO votes and should
be easier to sell on the floor,
he satd.

customers to set thermostats
at 67 degrees or lower as part

ferenres alone .' '
II one is compartng
January's gas bill to
December's, a fuel cost mcrease of 6.2 per cent 1 or
about three doll ars lor the
average customer, also IS
involved
" EverythinJl has been
gomg up , tt seems, and
energy pnces are no exceplton," Koebel satd, " but
natural gas IS , and wtll

reports that htgh b1ll
inqwries comwg mto hts
office a nd requests by
householders to have thetr

is

five

Another amendment
adopted by the subcommittee
protects school districts
agamsl further losses in stale
schoolatd which would occur
if their tax effort were eroded
by the bill.
The bulk of the language In
the bill was removed by
eluninating Johnson:s plan to
abolish the Board of Tax

which date your meter was
read , your January con·

based on temperature dif·

the gas company m this area ,

Colu mbi a

through the stale Board of
Tax Appeals, has frozen land
Yalues for tax purposes at
January, 197~. levels.
The subcommittee adopted

occaswns.

ON HIS WAY - Carl Johnston ( 10) Is on his way to the
basket Tuesday night at Racine having gotten a step on
Eastern 's Brian Conde, defendmg. Southern won lhts
SIXth stratght meetmg between the county nvals 74-31.
Jtm Hamm picture.

SW upsets H-T
Coach Rtchard Hamilton's
Southwestern
Htghlanders
weathered a late rally by
visiting Hannan Trace
Tuesdya mghl to pos t a 53-50
upset vtclory over the 197S
de!endmg SVAC champs .
Southwestern led all the way
before Hannan Trace lied the
score at at leas t three limes
dunng a fra ntic fou rth
quarter.
Wtlh the score lied 48-48,
semor Rick Crouse's Jumper
gave the Htghlanders a S0-48
lead . Later Crouse connected
on tw o foul shots for a 52-50
lead and then hit a techmcal
foul to seal the wm. Crouse
and jumor guard Don Bush
were the big offenst ve
weapons for the Highlanders'
fourth quarter herOICS Both
dumped 1n seven points each.
Kip Lewts had two pomts
and Jeff Banks and Jack
Walker each canned a foul
shot.
Kevin Petrie, semor gua rd,

who had 25 potnts agatnsl
Southwestern m an earlier
outmg, !~ad six pomts during
the fourth pertod to lead
Hannan Trace
Three other ltmes, Southwestern came close onlv to
see defeat at the end. Durmg
the 1974-7S season , Han nan
Trace 's champ10nsh'p learn
defeated the Highlanders by
three poinls at Southwestern
and on ly nine at Mercerville .
Earher lhts season, SW
forced the game mto over·
time where Han nan Trace
posted a 52-48 vtclory
Hannan Tra ce {SO) P etne S 5 15 Sha ff er 6 1 13
Gibson 1 2 4 .' McGu1re I 2 4
Halley 3 5 11. wooayard o 1
1 Totals 16· 16· 50 .
Southwestern ( 531 - Mi l ler
1 ~ J , Crouse 2 3 7, L ew1s 1 4
6 Gr.,le 4 3 11 , Bvsh 10 2 22.
Banks 1 1 3 a nd Wa lker o 1 1
Totals 19· 15·53
av Quarters
Han na n Trace 10 13 12 IS50
Sou thwes t ern 13 14 12 18- 53
Reserves Hannen T r.ace 47
Southwestern 36

~~---------------THE SHOP

, Pleasant Ridge Road
!:Ius. 992 -3426

Followmg the match the
referee broke down m tears
when · confronted by Meigs
fans ask1ng for some explanatton of why he had nul
called the pms
The Marauders' John Elbs
was ptnned in 3:21 of the
second period by Athens'
Gary Noel Tins was Ebhn 's
second loss m the 98 pound
weight class.
Mtcky Lyons, the 105 pound
Ma1 a uder ace , pmned Bob
Mann tn 3 14 of the second
period.
In the 112 pound we1ght
class Bulldog Phil Taylor
dectsJOned Carl Ghee n 9-S m a
hard fought match
Kevin McLaughbn won a
close rna tch for Metgs m the
119 pound weigh t class by
declsJOmng Jm1 Evener 4-2.
Marauder Fr ~shman Garv
Pnddy was the loser of the
126 pound weight class to
Larry Hawk by a score of 134
Mike Harn son wo n a
superior dec1s10n for Me1gs
when he thum ped Steve Elhs
12-2 in the 132 pound wetgul

class
The Marauders dropped
the 1:18 pound we1ghl class
when Jeff Gnffln of Athens
dectstoned Butch Roush 12-6
The coo l1'ove rs1al 115
pound we tgh t class ,saw
Athens' Gary Keller w111a 13
to 12 dectswn over Metgs ·
Mcl.aug hhn 1n the match that
saw the Marauder "pm" the
Bulldog three limes 111 front
of the Metgs bench .
In the 155 lb class Loran
lpacs of Athens dec tswned
Bobby Musser 11-2 in a match
marred by hoi tempers a nd
Illegal holds
Da n Buffmgton of Metgs
lus t by a pm to Jeff Con !&lt;tnt of
Al hens 111 the i67 poun d class
Me1gs Stan Starcher lost a
9-4 deci siOn to Cl atg Cum .
mmgs 1n the 175 pound class
and Ray Wtllford was
decisioned 11-4 by Dwtghl
Wesl m the 185 pound wetght
class
A thens 1 Roger Bat I won the
unhm1 ted class by forfetl.
The Marauders, now 4-3 on
the season , will host Wahama
at 2 p m. m the Mornson Gym
Wednesday , Feb. 4.

SPORTING GOODS - BOATS FREE LIVE ENTERTAINMENT.

Mass Martm e 73 Curry 70
Mansi 75 New Pal1z 68
Merr1m ac k 111 Lowel l 60
Pr0111dence 81 Brown 59
RP \ 79 Clark son 70
Su ffolk 81 St Anselm's 79
Tnn1ty 92 Wesleyan 85
Tufts 83 Benn e y 81

So uth

Al bny Ga 91 M Brown 66
Berry 78 Columbus 76
Bllrmne 72 D Lpscmb 62
Clark Ga 74 Svnnh Sl 69
Chns Nwpri 56 Meth 52
Del ta 51 64 Lambu t h 59
L1nco ln Tenn 89 King 17
N C St 97 Clemson 89
P•kevil te 87 Berea 85
S Fla 74 Fla Southn 72
Shaw 74 E t1 z C1ty 67
W Va 67 St F=ran Pa 59
Sha w 57 Ke n tucky St 55
Wash&amp;Lee 87 Lynchbur g 81
Wm&amp;Ma r y 56 E . Ca r 54
M1dwest
Btdwn Wllce 69 Woostr 64
DePavl 89 Duq uesne 75
Doan e 82 Dana 66
F mdly l iS Anderson 80
Geo Wms 62 Rockfor d 57
Ill Colt 79 Greenvl 68
McKndr ee 75 Pr1nc1pia 53
Mnmut h Ill 56 Wm Penn 42
Neb Wstyn 101 Concrd 1a 68
Otterbe m 81 Cap1ta t 69
Ros e Hulmn 79 B lackbrn 58
St Xav 86 Trnty Il l 65
Ster ling 88 Kan Ws lyn 75
Tabor 16 S W Ka ns 70
Tark•o 6d Be l levue 60
T1ffm 95 Cedar vl 82
Urbana 12 1 Mt V r nn Naz 87
Wi!tenber g 59 Kenyon 53
W1s Prksd e 97 M 1lton 73
Southwest
Okl a St 65 Ph illi ps 64
P Oumn 84 Hstn Ttltsn 81
SMU 108 Rtce 71
St Mry 's Te)( 74 SW Te)( 66
Sui Ross 79 Lub Chr1s 64
Texas Tec h 86 Arkansas 78
Tex Chns 65 Bay lor 63
Texas A&amp;.M 85 Texas 69
W est
A1r Force 66 N o Co lo 46
BIO la 72 POint Loma 49
Loyola 70 Pepp r dne 67
NW N az 80 Eas t Ore 67
PtiM St 122 warnr Pac , 60
Seat tl e Pac 83 Redlnds 62
UC Davis 82 UC R1v r sde 77
Westmont 98 Ca l L ut h 76

Roberts had 14 pom ts and by R1ffles' 11 and Conde had
Brauer and Roush had eight mne The learn shot 26 pera p1 ece Conde and Phil cent from the field and san'·.
LaComb had lour each for the 7·16 free throws . They had 21
Eag les.
turnovers. No one fouled out
The second half was all for the Eagles, but Southern 's
down lull for the Tornadoes
Brauer exited with five
Th ey ope ned it wtth 10 mmutes remaimng 1n the
slratght potnts before Riffle game .
added a Jumper for the
The reserve contest was a
Eagles
hllle closer, but the Ullle
Helghth Vital
Tornadoes agam came out on
In thts traditional en- top, 46-31. Eastern scored
coun ter, the height of the first, but Southern lied 1t and
hosts proved to be the from tnen on, they were
downfall of the Eag les. never headed.
Southern pulled down a
Rtchard Teaford led the
whoppmg 47 rebounds while Little Tornadoes wtth 19
Eastern
managed
28 .points while Tim Thored had
Brauer led the Tornadoes etghl. They had 39 rebounds ,
wtth 17 big caroms and 13 each by Wayne Satlerfteld
Danny Brown pulled m 12 and Teaford. The team shot
Rtffle had 10 caroms for the 32 percent from the field and
visitors .
cpnned 7-12 chan ty tosses
Brauer also led the mtors
The Baby Eagles were led
m scnring as he canned 24 by Doug Brownmg's len
pomts whtle teammates points, and D Brown had
Roberts and Roush were mne They shot 12-42 from the
adding 16 and 13, respec- field for 28 per cent and sank
tively. The team shot a warm 7-10 lree tosses . They had 22
4 per cent fr om the field (31- caroms, seven by Davis.
76 ) and netted 12 of 23 free
Eastern 1S next game ts
throws They had on ly five Fnday when they host Southturnovers the enhre contest. western , whtle the Tornadoes
Roberts had eight of hts travel to Symmes Valley to
team 's IS assists
encoun ler the Vikings.
Eastern was led m scormg
Officials for the contest
we re Thompson, Schwartzel,
and Fmslerwald
Oh1o Co lleg e
Basketball Resulh
Un1t e d Press tn1 erna 11o nal
W1tte n berg 59 Kenyon 53

E A:iil ERN - Conde
R1ff le 5 1 11. N elson
Kuh n 0 0 0, E 1chmger
LaComb 2-2 6, Hawk

Baldwm Wal l ace 69 wooste r

64

Otterbe1n 81 Cap1tal 69
H e1delberg 72 M t Un 1on 6'1

SOUTHERN -

Johnston 2

6, Brauer 10 4 24, Rou sh 6 1
13, Fmdtey 1 o 2, Cross 0 I 1.
6rown 2 1 5, Dun n m g 1 0 2
Totals 31 12 -74.
Quarter Scoru
South
22 38 58 74
Eas t
7 11 19 31

T•ffm 95 Cedarvil l e 82
U r bana 121 Mt
Vernon
N azarene 87
Fmdlay 115 Anderson 80
Manchester 97 Wilmi ng ton 93
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.

2- The Datly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feh. 4, 1976

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, Feb. I, 1976

Tornadoes stomp Eagles

Tax relief bill held up for drastic revision
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - The
House Ways and Means Committee today was to
reconsider a drastically
revised real estate tax relief
bill aimed at reducing the
burden of future unvoted
JFOperty taxes on Ohio ho-

The purpose of the delay
was to "clean up" the btll, to
famiharize House members
with tt.s unpacl m their areas

and to tnsure agamst revenue
losses by school districts and
local governments.
But by the time the
subcommittee had flmshed
with it, about half the tax
relief for homeowners had
been cut out and the btll had
been chopped from 172 pages
to a dozen.
Rep. John E Johnson, DOrrville, chief sponsor,
indicated his enthustasm for
the bill had dwindled,
although he said it still would
furnish $70 mtllion worth of
real estate tax relief m
counties where sexenmal
reappraisals have taken

meowners.

The comnuttee planned an
afternoon meetmg to push the
bill to the House floor, where
Its timetable for a vote was
set back to at least Thursday,
and perhaps to next week.
The measure was to have
been taken to the floor
Tuesday,
but
House
Democratic leaders had it
pulled back at the last minute
for revisions in comm•ttee.

place and more in the other 30
counties.
Sliced from the btl! was an
addttwnal $14S million worth
of tax rebel whtch would have
severely reduced income to
school districts and loca l
governments.
None of the tax credits
would apply to this year's tax
btlls. They would begin wtth
btlls recetved in January,
1977.
The General Assembly and
the admmistration of Gov.
James A. Rhodes are usmg
different methods to relieve
who
have
taxpayers
complamed of skyrocketing
real estate taxes resulting
from mflated annual land
appraisals.
The

administratwn,

Culprit in high gas hill
may he winter's fickleness
Col umbt a Gas of Ohw
customers - parttcularly
those who use natural gas for
home healing - appear to be

1975 Also depending upon

overlookmg the significant

effect that Old Man Wmter's
fickle nature may have on
monthly fuel btlls.
J . M. Koebel, manager for

accounts mveshgated have

increased consi derably m
recent weeks
''This tndtcates to us, " he

said, "that while customers
1may have expected to pay
more to heat their homes lhts
wtnter as a result o! mcreases
in gas costs over the past
year, they apparently aren't
taking mto account how much
additional effect changes m
weather and the number of
days tn a bilhng perwd can
have on fuel bills 'from one
month to the next
"Based on aviulable
weather data" he continued,
''the weather in December m
this area was 7 6 percent
warmer than normal , while
last month I January) was 6 9
per c~n l colder than normal.
January also was 15 6 per
cent colder than January,

urgmg

amendments

to

Johnson's btU on a 4 to I vote.
The net effect was to strip 160
pages of tax appeal
procedure out of the btll,
make 11 strictly a tax rebel
plan and msure a minimum
of revenue losses for school
'
dislncts
and
local
goverrunents.
As rewritten, the bill would
offer credits to real estate
taxpayers on any future
unvoted tax increases
resulting from reappraisals
BY BERNARD BRENNER
inflalmg land values.
The subcommittee adopted
UPI FARM EDITOR
an amendment disallowing
WASHINGTON IUJ'I) t.he credit for increases on the International aid loanli partly
first 10 unvoted mills of underwntten by American
taxalton to save local taxpayers have ftnanced part
governments and school of a tropical palm oil
districts from heavy revenue production boom which
currentl y IS replac mg
losses
Local governments receive Amertcan-grown soybean otl
about 60 per cent of the in some domestic markets,
revenues from those 10 "in- an Agriculture Department
side" mills , while school sta ff study says
The report, made available
dislrtcls receive the other 40
per cent.
Johnson
said
the
amendment would save local
governments about $100 to newsmen here, S8ld in!lllllion a year, and school terna twnal finan cia l atd
districts another $4~ million. already has boosted world
production of palm oil by
more than 300,000 tons, or
more than a quarte. of total
growth in palm ml production
m recent years.
More than two-thirds of the
mcreased production fueled
by the md m Malaysl3 and
other countnes IS bemg exported, much ol it to the
United States, the report
added
Dale Sherwm, a deputy
asststan t secretary of
agriculture, satd m an mte rview that agnculture
offtctal s. have made no
proposals yet for any steps to
counter the increase in aJdsubsidtzed imports He sa1d,

Nohng that other factors,

such as the chtll factor I effect
o! wmd) and number o! days
in each customer's btlhng
perwd 1fr om 29 to 33 depending • un weekends and
holidays mcluded l alsq can
effect monthly fu el b11ls,
Koebel emphastzed that
t'llstomers can ease the effect
of

mcreased

costs

by

reducmg gas usage through
conservation .

the £ann front

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chronic!~ of America
February 4, 1776:
Lead mg Con nectJcut and New Je rsey troops, MaJOr
General Charles Lee, dispatched from Cambndge by
General Washmgton to forttfy the New York area, enters
New York City. A soldier of fortu ne born m England, and
currently the lhtrd-rankmg of!tcer m the Continental Army, Lee is a rrogant, profane,

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Charles Lee

L----------------...;.----....1
-By Ross MackenlJe &amp; Jeff MacNelly/otl\976 Um tP.d Feat ure SyndJ c ate

DR. LAMB

..

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B.Y Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
interested m kn owmg how
one contracts arlhnlis. Is lhts
a hereditary dtsease ? Is It
caused by a low - grade infection ? How can one keep
from getting thts affltcllon'
DEAR READER - There
are several types of arthrills.
Rheumatoid arthnlis is inflammatory arlhrths and the
exat'l cause of th e mflammahon is not known It
has never been established
that it is caused by a laiown
bacteria or virus
You can have gonococcal
arthritis on the bas1s of
gonorrhea, or tubercular
arthrills from tuberculosis.
Gouty arthritis is caused by
the accumulation of a salt of
uric acid. The overproduction
of uric acid in the body is an
Inherited tendency. Uric acid
is a byproduct of normal cell
regeneration which 1s a
constant process in a healthy

body.
Health Letter number 4-11,
Os leoa rlhrtlis or Rbewnaloid Arthritis. Endegenerative arthnt1s 1s close a long , stamped, selfthought to be related ~o wear addressed envelope for
and lear !actors and affects matbng.'Address your letter
mos tly the weight bearing to me in care of thts
jomts in the body.
newspaper, P.O. Bo• 1551,
As you can see from thts Ra dio City Station, New
there is no good way to York, NY 10019.
prevent all forms of arthnlls,
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
particularly when we don 't husband and I are on a
know what ca uses some lll1lited income so I wonder 1f
types such as rheumatoid you could help me I'm 5 feet
arthnlis.
S and SO pounds overweight.
As a general rule the The very word diet makes me
pri nct~les of good health will
hungry although I've tned to
help Avoid obesity decreases slay ~ ~~ one time and agam.
wear' and tear on jomts.
Lately I have been e•Controlling the level of uric periencl ng a light headed
actd with medicines when tl is feeling 1not always). Often
too high will help prevent dizzy spells are expenenced
gouty arlhrtlts and o! course not long after meals. Can
pr ompt treatment of the · U1ese be htgh blood pressure
varwus infections that may symptoms ? Do you have a
have arthrihs as a com- dtet to control tt ?
plication also helps
DEAR READER - I wish I
For more infonnation on could just solve your problem
arlhnl1s ~rn rJ 50 cents for 'Ill~ ~&gt;llh a letter bur It Isn't that

sunple You need to know
exactly what ts causmg' the
dizzy spells. They are just a
sym ptom, and they can be
caused by a list of things as
long as your arm.
Yes, you can have dizzy
spells from mvolvement of
the circulation related to htgh
blood pressure because not
enough blood gels to the
brain They can be from
severe anemia or from
dieting, parltcularly from
overdoing it with any number
of unsound fad diets touted to
the public.
Dizziness can be caused by
the ears, the eyes and from
anxiety so as you can plamly
see I can't just send you a
diet
and relieve yo ur
problem. You will need to see
a doctor and I think you
absolutely must do this.
Remember your health is
your musl VHiuablc asset 1 so
safeJ.(wwrl Jt Hhfwe all else

said.

" In terms of cottonseed oil,
the 725,000 ton expansion in
palm oil Imports during the
next 10 years could mean
displacement of virtually all
domestic consumption of
cottonseed oil." experts
added

Cleveland almost $~ . 7
million.
Other large gains would go
to Toledo, $3. 1 milhon;
Cincinnati, $1.4 miUlon; and
Akron, Panna and South
Western School District in
Franltlln County, $1 miUlon
each.
The largest loss from
current
income
was
projected for Middletown by
figures from the Ohio
Education Association $928,000. Other major llll'l8es
shown were $2112,~I6 for Ohio
Valley Local School District,

+++

Dear Helen :
In response to the man who wants to be a "househusband,"
this ian 't new! I'm 34, have a couple of kids and have always
supported my family. Have been married twice to men so lazy
that they wouldn't stir themselves to get jobs.
Am beginning to think there are no men left who want an
old-fashioned housewife and mother to lend the home fires
while they make the family living. It's gettin&amp; 80 men
EXPECT their wives to work outside the h(JfiiC and If they
refUJe they think they got cheated. - BREADWINNER NOT
BREADMAKER (and wants a change)

in Summit . County; and
$250,482 for Arcadia Local
School District In Hancock
County.
However, thole losses were
111111fled by an amendment
protectinl the 51 school dlstrlcttl receiving less under the
new plan than currently.
01 the &amp;I dlstrlct.a, five were
In Montgomery County and
lour each In &amp;lmmit and
Allen counties.
Total cOlt to the state for
this
"hold harmless''
provision was pegged at ~
mllllm a year.
Johnlion·· pointed out that
although the Sl dtstricts
would not 1oee money , they
still would have to reduce
their espectations for state
aid under the "equal yield"
school foundation formula
next year because their local
tu
collections
would

'"

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COURTESY CALL
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UP!) - Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger vtsited with
former President Richard
Nixon for an hour at Nixon 's
oceanside retreat. A Stale
Department spokesman
dtsclosed Tuesday th at
Kissinger paid a "courtesy
visit" to Nixon Monday ·

'

SAN FRANCISOO (UP!)The questioning of jurors was
over and Patricia Hearst's
bank robbery trial was
almost ready to begin two
years to the day after her
kidnaping.
The granddaughter of
newspaper magnate William
Randolph Hearst was carried
halfnude and screamin8 from
her
Berkeley,
Calif.,
apartment two years ago
today. In the following 19
months, she joined her
Symblonese Uberation Army
kidnapers as the revolutionary ''Tania" and eluded a
nationwide FBI manhunt.
u.s. District CDurt Judae
Oliver Carter completed six
days
of
Interrogation
Tuesday with approval of 38
members of the panel. All
that remained was the
seating of the tlna112 jurors
and four alternates.
The tentali\'ll panel of 18
men and 18 women included
several bank employes,
postal workeu, a street
sweeper, housewives ,
widows , retired men, an
aitllne hOBteu, a carpenter
and an Army en&amp;iJ*r.
Defense attorney F. 1M
Bailey aald ~tiDn and
defen.e lawyers would use 10
peremptory challe!tgea each
to winnow the panel down to
the final 16.
Another defense lawyer,
Albert
Johnson,
told
reporters Miu Hearst had
helped her attorney• in the
jury selection proceu.
"She looks at the back,
grounda of the jurors and
commentl on tbem," he ulcl.
"Her comments are laken
into conalderatiDn."
Bailey aprana a surprlae
Tuesday with motions to
dl.smlll the armed bank robbery charges and to ban
evidence about Miu Hearst's
behavior after the April 15,
1974, holdup of a San
Francisco blnk. Detalll of
the moliona were sealed and
not made public.
The defenll! attonley alaJo
requestad
be taken ol

Miu

kidnaping and the bank
holdup.
The prosecution wanted to
get in 111t:h evidence as a tape
recording Miu Hearst made
lour dar- after the robbery In
which !lhe said she acted of
her oWII free wiU and had not
been brainwashed.
The government wanted to
lntrnduce another tape made
after the sbootout between six
SLA members and Los
Aogelea pollee May 17, 1974,
In which the terrorists were
slain. In the recording, Miss
Hearst announced she would
ftght on as "Tania ," a soldier
In the St.A.
That was the last word
frCIII her unW her capture
last Sept. II in San Francisco.

4, I974.
approvll.
The defense alaJo would like
to restrict the eW1ence to the
events between Mila Hearst•a

,

"
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,

By Kell ee Burdette
The visi ting Galbpolis Blue
Devils had all they could
han dle in the ftrsl half
Tuesday m a league freshman game agamst Metgs at
Larry MorriSon gym but put
on a thtrd quarter rally to run
the score out of reach, wmning 39-24
Leadtng the Marauders
offense was Tom Hawley wtth
8 points, followed closely by
Todd Rawlings Wi th 1.
Lead111g rebounder for the
baby Marauders was Dave
Blake who pulled m 7 carom s,
followed closely by teammate
Tom Hawley wtth 6.
The Marauders had ball
control trouble, turntng 11
over 12 times.
Meigs - Rawbngs 2-3-7,
Becker 2-1-5, Blake 0-0-0,
Ha wley 4-0-8, Kennedy 0-0-0,
Yeauger 1-0-2, Taylor 1-0-2
Gal bpohs - Hetns 7-4-18,
Smith 1-0-2, Sterrett 2-0-4:
Lanham 1&gt;4-4, Harrts 2-0-4,
Oark 2-3-7
Metgs
9 14 20 24
Gallipohs
B 13 25 39

A1TEND SHOWER
Bobbl PaUley and Mrs.
Hilda McDaniel were among
the gu..llall! layette shower
honortna Mrs . Jim King
Friday night at the home of
Mrs. Clarence Kina , Middleport. Their names were
unintentionally omitted !rom
an earlier account of the
shower. Also among those
sending gifts were the Rev .·
and Mrs. Odell Manley and
Steve.
IN Jl'WRIDA
MI'JI. Ell&amp;• beth Fisher ,
after residing In Middleport
lor the pasl year and a half,
has returned to Florida. She
wu taken to the Charleston,
W. Va. airport a week ago by
Mr , · and Mrs. Robert
Rinehart. Mrs. Fisher will
reside ln Clearwater.
HYMN SING SET
MASON W.
A
wUI be
at 7:30

Baptist

v,.:o.n
linlll'l
the Countey
Hymn Timers and the Joint
Heirs. The public Ia invited t&lt;
attend.

.

f

the 'l'Hrnadoes l ook c harge to

reel off t6 pomls answered by
U1c Eagles JUSt once, on a free
throw . The first pertod ended
\IIlli the score 22-7 In that
span , junior Dave Roush had
four points on hts patented
corner shots and had two key

to Belpre 7th
"

RACINE - Coach Howte
Caldwell's Southern Freshmen dropped to 6-3 on ,the
" season as they succumbed to
a much l&lt;tller and l&lt;tlented
squad from Belpre Monday
score was 66-52.
Caldwe ll sa id he was
pleased wtth h1s boys' per' form ance, especially Dwtghl
Hill as he tossed m 20 pom ts
., Ttm Brinager and Dave
Findley a,dded 12 and II,
respecllvely, The team made
10 ol 21 free throws Their
nex t game is Thursday at
, Racine agamst Eastern
T Blake led Belpre wtlh 28
markers. They canned i3-20
free throws
M

••

_, Bidwell boys

. down 48 to 18
, RACINE - Southern Jr.
'" High 7th grade upended
Bidwell 7th grade 48-18 in a
no-con test sor t of game
Monday at Bidwell. For
Southern, Talbott had 14
, poinls, M. Wolfe 10 and Mtller
; . 7. All of Southern's squad
,'. played at least six minutes.
o.
Nine Bidwell boys had one
' " basket each.
... Sot&amp;lhern's boys shot 36 pel.
: from the field .
"
By quarters:
s
13274048
B
4 6 14 18

"" BIRMINGHAM,
Ala.
"'· tUPI) - The Btrmtngham
:., Americans of the defunct
C" World Football League have
'"' filed suit against Pittsburgh
I"' Sleeler defensive end L. C.
• " Greenwood to recover II
;,, $50,000 bonus paid him to jom
" · the team.
•

North Galba reigns today was forced to stt on the bench
as the 1975-76 champion of the a large portwn of the ftrst
Southern Valley Athletic half J umor Robert Neal
Conference £ollow1n g came off the bench to can
Tuesday's 53-50 upset wm by eig ht po10ts dunng the Pirate
Southwestern over Hannan ons laught Spoon Mtnms
Trace. North Galba has a added 13 polO ts
three game lead w1lh JUSt two
Terry Tucker and Marty
games to go. Whtle South- Holbrook led Wahama with 11
western was pulbng the btg and 14 pom ts 1especltvely
upset, Coach Jim Foster 1s
North Gal ba ht l 34 of 87
Pirates " ere runmng and fl oor shots for 39 pel. and Just
gunnmg. The v1cbms th1s 11 of 29 free throws Wahama
time were the Wahama Wh1te lut 17 of 32 at the foul line.
Falcons North Galha won
The wm was North Calha's
the non-league battle, 79-61. 13 in i4 outmgs thts wmter
The P~rales opened up their Wahama 's record dipped to :toffensive with a b1g 21 poml 10. The Little Bucs posted a
first q uarler. Before the horn 59-57 vt clory over the
sounded for the halfttme Wahama Lit tle Btrds
break, the Ptrales had roll ed
Doug Sisson led the way
to an unsurmounl&lt;tble 45-20 wtth 18 pmn ts Steve Mundell
lead.
Coach Jtm Scherr's Wht le
Falcons slowed the pace
somewhat dunng the second
hall.
Leadmg the Ptrale all&lt;tck
Col lege Basketball Results
B y Un1ted Press Internatio nal
as usual was 6-4 All-State
East
ca nd1da te Greg Jame s
Assm pln 109 Stoneh1l l 85
James ripped the cords for 21 Babson 85 Coast Guard 77
Bluef ltl 99 L1b Bapt 82
pomts, grabbed 30 rebounds Can1S1Us
102 S1ena 94
Colby 101 Me Pllnd 81
and blocked stx shots
52 Rochester s 1
Fred Logan, 6-2 ]umor, Colgate
E Conn St 82 Fl chbg 51 81
ltmshed with i6 points but Framngh m 74 Bos to n St 64
It haca 59 Hobart 57

Coach criticizes
Athens official
The Metgs Htgh School
wrestling team fe ll vtctim to
the Athens' Bulldogs in a
recenl match thal Marau(lct
Coach Ray Goodman called
' the wors t offtciated [ have
ever seen "
The coc1 c h's remarks
re£erred pnmanly to the
con troverstal 145 lb match
between Metgs ' Duane
McLaughhn and Athens'
Gary Veller m which lhe
referee refused to call a pm m
favor of McLaughbn even
though the undefeated
Athe ns' \Hesller was clearly
pmned on th ree separate

, Frosh lose one

eve mng at Racme . The ftnal

MARK, Not MIKE
It wu Mark Oller whose
aervlces were terminated
with the County Highway
Dept. not Mike OUer as was
reported Tue!day.

out :Jo secund s

aSSISts

In the second canto, the
Eag les slowed the pace of the
game for awhtle and lhe hosts
seemed to lose thetr touch as
the Eagles ' defense sltffened
But in the last two mmutes,
they got hot agam, and went
mto the liJCker room leadmg
38-11. In that mtltal half,

had 17 and Rex Jusltce, 12
Kevm Scott topped Wahama
with 16. Rtck Buzzard had 15.
North Galha 's reserves are
9-5 th ts season
The Ptrales host Kyger
Creek Friday m thetr last
home game this season.
Box score ·
Wahama (61 ) - T Tucke r
6517
S mll h
2 1 5,
Neswander 1 J 5 , Dav1s 1 1 3,
J Tucker d 0 8 Lambert 2 J
7, Hol brook 5 t1 14 and Sayr e
1 0 2 Totals 22 -11 61
N or th
Gall1~
(79)
Runyon 4 2 10 , C Minn1s 2 o
4 , l ogan 8 0 - 16 , Tackett 0 o
0 . James 6 5 2 1 Neal 3 2 8 s
M 1nn 1s 6 1 13 , Thetss 2 1 s,
We lc h I 0 2 Totals 34- 11 -7 9.
By Quarters .
Wahama
14 6 17 24 - 6 1
Nor!h Ga tl1 a 27 18 8 26- 79
Reserves . North Gal l1 a 59
Wahama 57

Basketball Results

.. by 39-24 edge

trial almost
ready to start
By DONALD B. THACXREY

LET'S DANCE - Well, 001 ,..,lly, but Eric DuMing (12) of Southern, and Eastern's
Gary Nelson ( 4S / seem to be about to try tlon the Southern High gym floor Tuesday mght. At
r.•ghlts Eastern s Joe Kuhn .(35 ), With the victory, Southern kept pace for a second place
ftmsh In the Class A SV AC Jun Hamm picture.

Gallia Frosh
rally to win
,,

ttun~s

later HS he ca nned a long
Jw-nper uf his own
lifter the ball had chan~cd
hands a nwnber of hmcs
because of the tenston m th1s
annual elash, the Tornadoes'
Chtp Brauer netted a short
jwnper a mmute later to put
Southern ahead 4-2 But 11
seemed like the underdog
Eagles were determined to
make a game of 1t as semor
playmaker Bnan Conde
knotted the score on a long
one w1lh 5 20 showtng on the
lst quarter clock.
But In the next four nunutes

Pirates bomb Falcons

'"

..

evened

RACINE - The Southern
Tornadoes were host to the
Eastern Eagles Tuesday
mght and sent the Eagles
home on lhe short end of the
basketball 74-31 score. The
fifth straight time the Tornadoes had defeated Eastern.
The cross-county match
started wtth the Eagles
getting the opemng lip, but
after a turnover, Southern 's
all-leag ue gua1 d Mike
Roberts started the scm1ng
wtlh one of hts patented long
jumpers at the 7. IS mark.
Eastern's Bruce Riffle

v.

dimintsh .

lhe
Dear B Not B:
frac:tart
When a woman draws TWO leaches, it appears she's etther rifle butt

a poor judge of character or she enjoys being the dominant
one.
Don't judge aU men by your choices. Most are weD aware
that tending the home fires burns a man out faster than would
a regular ontstde job. - H.

By Grl!g Raile;

Patty Hearst's

us ...

Dear J .:
Most large cities have Centers for Women, though names
vary with areas. In San Francisco, there's the Single Parents
Resource Center, which provides workshops, advice, rap
sesmons and even helps locale child care lor working mothers.
MOMMA In Santa Ana, Calif., offers similar IM!I'vices, and
N.O.W. (National Organization for Women) has outlets In
many cities.
Your library lists all local organizations and their
addresses. Good luck. - H.

e

production boom which
began in the 1900's - principally in Malaysia but also In
other countries mcluding
Indonesia and the Ivory
Coast.
In Malaysia alone, experts
added, increased production
during the next decade from
trees already planted wiD be
nearly 140 per cent. They satd
most of the new oil wtll be
poured mto export markets
and current trends indicate
that the United States which has no import controls
- would get "a burdensome
and disproportionate share"
of the increasing shipnents.
" If palm 011 imports into
the U.S: market expand as
projected, the implication is
that oil production from 15
mtllton bushels of soybeans more than half a million
acres of soybeans - will be
displaced each year for the
next 10 years," tbe report

·jj

Different types of arthritis

•'
••

.••

ment end their assistance to
palm ml expansion.
The report SBid it would be
impossible to trace spectfic
UruledStates contributions to
the IBRD and similar
agencies mto palm oil loans.
But it added that American
contri butions and Hcallable"
captlal pledges make up a
stgmftcan t share of the
resources of such agencies.
Some domestic industry
sources, Sherwm said, have
been
suggestmg
consideration of a voluntary
import control program
simtlar to understandmgs the
government has worked out
with major textile producmg
nations which voluntarily
llmtt sales to the United
States. No s uch step ts
currentl y under active
consideration in the government for palm oil, he SBid.
The staff report noted that
palm otl prices m the United
States currently are above
soybean oil prices. American
Imports under contracts
rrtade mohths ago are expected to remam heavy lor
several more months, and
long range forecasts indicate
continued he avy Imports,
experts said.
American ll1lports of the

Helen Help

ili

•

e

of a "Save Gas, Save Jobs"
campatgn to keep mdustnal
gas delwe~ cutbacks as low
as poss1ble, he satd and gave
Ulis example ·
"II a ·customer who heats
w1th gas had hts thermostat
set at 72 degrees last wmter
and sets it at 67 degrees 1five
degrees lo\\. er) this v.mter, It
wou ld mean that the
customer's gas conswnption
could be approximately 15
per cent less and his btl!
lower than 1f he had not
conserved,' '
Sufftcient msulatwn, storm
doo rs
and
wmdows.
weather s trtppin g and
caulking all were ctled as
ways to keep cold a1r out and
warm air m. "'iou also can
save gas through care in
ot l , whtrh can re place
cookin g, careful use of hot
soybean and cottonseed oils
however , that the agency in shortening and other uses,
water, closmg off unused
may suggest a request that reached over 400,000 tons m
areas, and many other
agenctes hke th e In- 1975, double the 1974 volume,
ways /' he satd.
te rna tio na l
Ba nk
fur the study showed. Experts
Koebel
remtnded
Rel'Onstrucllon and Develop- said this was the result o! a
cus tomers that the gas
company has pamphlets and
Mike Walker, Pomeroy, ~~~:·:·:&gt;:·:!::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::.:-:·:·:·:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::·:::·:::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:-:·:-".~
hterature on conservatiOn
has JOined the staff of the
steps to take, and even offers
National Ufe and Accident
to
special
counse ling
Insurance Co. The com- Jl:
customers on effective mpany has 39 agents out of
s ul ahon measures and
the Huntington District and
" h om e
ltghtening"
techmques.
Walker"lll be agenlfor the
By lldt&gt;n Buttel
Middleport, Rutland and
"The natural gas shortage
will con tnrue tn be critical for
Cheshire area. lle Is a 1969 ·!·:
graduate of Meigs High
several years yet," accordtng
Hazards &gt;Of Uving Together
School and re sides wtth his
to Koebel, "a nd conservatwn
Dear Helen
\\ ife, Sandy, and daughter,
and proper ulihzalion are
"Ltving together" sounds glamorous, but there are
Stephanie, on Bailey Run
ways Y.e can stretch our
hazards too .l moved m wtlh John when I was 19 and he was 21
present short supplies and
Road.
He wanted me to give away my baby (by a former marriage )
keep our gas btlls as low as
as he said we were too young to be tied down. Finally he let me
possible."
keep her, provided I kept on workmg and hired a babysitter.
He also noted that the gas
Etghteen months later we moved to bls home town. I was
company's Budget Payment
pregnant, and his mother was mortified. She made us tell
Plan - whtch spreads yearly
everyone we were rrtarrted, but the ceremony didn,'t take
gas costs 111 equal monthly
place. (We were "free, " remember?)
Namath
gets
payments fo r 11 months wtth
We conlmued this lie lor 12 years. Meanwhile, with much
a custom er's account brought
help and financial assistance from me, we got a farm and a
into adJustment in the 12th
going business. He also had a "wife" who would put sugar in
cold shoulder
month - ca n help home
his coffee and stir tt with her finger if he wanted it.
heat tng customers avoid
Aod what happened ? He started having affairs. Said these
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
unusually htgh winter btlls,
mamed women were unha~py and he couldn't dejJrive them .
whtch often are ca used by Joe Namath, wbo has been That's when I finally insisted we gel mamed, in a distant ctty.
pet'lods of extremely cold hinting he would like to join
The day we got home !rom our honeymoon, he spent the
the lAs Angeles Rams, got night with one of his town lerrtales. The affairs continued,
weather
the cold shoulder from owner several at a time.
Carroll
Rosenbloom
BOARD TO MEET
I had a nervous breakdown, took an overdose. John's
Ohw Valley Health Ser- Tuesday
mother moved in and they took my children away from me via
The 69-year-&lt;&gt;ld owner gave court order . I'm bemg diVorced. And I'm penniless, except for
vices Foundation , Inc., w1U
a
vote of confidence to hiS a job that pays $75 a week. The courls dectded that everything
hold a Board of Trustees
meelln g Feb. 12, at the head coach, Chuck Knox, and
we had was bought before the marriage, and I could not prove I
Hohday Inn m Galhpolis. The to his current quarterbacks In earned part of it. At least if there had been a license, I wouldn't
busmess session beginning at a statement ISSued to the
be startmg all over agam, broke, sick, deprived of my
7·15 p.m •s open to the public news rnedta saying he wanted children, and dam near lmlshed at age 33.
for observation The main "to end speculation that the
Be smart, girls, that "worthless scrap ol paper" means a
agenda item · will be the Rams will make a trade lot if property, children and money are Involved. - P D.S.
Hea lth Systems Agency mvolvmg a quarterback."
However, Rosenbloom dtd
(HSA) application Persons
Dear Helen :
de s iring further details not mention Namath by
I need advice and counsel occasionally, as do some of my
concerning the Agenda name.
divorced friends . However, we can't afford legal help. We are
should call 614-592-4457
all working mothers and we are faced with business deals,
leases, settlements, etc .
Ia there any agency that can help us ? We don't qualify for
Legal Aid as we aren't destitute. Actually, we don't need
mvolved law advice, but just "steering" In the right directiona.
1 - J. L

con hnue to be less th an other

John&lt;!on
said
reorgaruzation of the tax
appeals system will be dealt
with In another bill next
week.
As amended, the bill would
Increase state and local
funding for most school
districts, with Columbus
gainin&amp; $5.1-milllon over l~
current allocation and

American taxpayers found
subsidizing own competition =f::~~·~~

sumptlon could be as much as
76 per cent higher than the
December cons umptlon

fuels."
Rates will have a continutng effect, but rtght now ,
Old Man Win ter is the btgger
culprtt, Koebel pmnted out.

ugly, and followed by hts
pn vate pack of dogs
wherever he goes. He IS a
capable mthtary commanoer , but vastly overrated, for
Washmgton and Congress, he
causes little but trouble and
constantlrntatton. Captured
m December, 1776, he ts exchanged tn Apnl, 1778. He
behaves miserably at Monmouth in June of that year, •s
court-marlla!ed, vtndtcated ,
and suspended .!rom command. He dies , largely an
enigma, in Philadelphia m
!782

Appeals and replace it with a
state Tax Court of Appeals
and a new Division of Tax
Equa lizalion .
Johnson explained creating
a new state court would have
required 66 votes • in the
House. As rewritten, it will
need only SO votes and should
be easier to sell on the floor,
he satd.

customers to set thermostats
at 67 degrees or lower as part

ferenres alone .' '
II one is compartng
January's gas bill to
December's, a fuel cost mcrease of 6.2 per cent 1 or
about three doll ars lor the
average customer, also IS
involved
" EverythinJl has been
gomg up , tt seems, and
energy pnces are no exceplton," Koebel satd, " but
natural gas IS , and wtll

reports that htgh b1ll
inqwries comwg mto hts
office a nd requests by
householders to have thetr

is

five

Another amendment
adopted by the subcommittee
protects school districts
agamsl further losses in stale
schoolatd which would occur
if their tax effort were eroded
by the bill.
The bulk of the language In
the bill was removed by
eluninating Johnson:s plan to
abolish the Board of Tax

which date your meter was
read , your January con·

based on temperature dif·

the gas company m this area ,

Colu mbi a

through the stale Board of
Tax Appeals, has frozen land
Yalues for tax purposes at
January, 197~. levels.
The subcommittee adopted

occaswns.

ON HIS WAY - Carl Johnston ( 10) Is on his way to the
basket Tuesday night at Racine having gotten a step on
Eastern 's Brian Conde, defendmg. Southern won lhts
SIXth stratght meetmg between the county nvals 74-31.
Jtm Hamm picture.

SW upsets H-T
Coach Rtchard Hamilton's
Southwestern
Htghlanders
weathered a late rally by
visiting Hannan Trace
Tuesdya mghl to pos t a 53-50
upset vtclory over the 197S
de!endmg SVAC champs .
Southwestern led all the way
before Hannan Trace lied the
score at at leas t three limes
dunng a fra ntic fou rth
quarter.
Wtlh the score lied 48-48,
semor Rick Crouse's Jumper
gave the Htghlanders a S0-48
lead . Later Crouse connected
on tw o foul shots for a 52-50
lead and then hit a techmcal
foul to seal the wm. Crouse
and jumor guard Don Bush
were the big offenst ve
weapons for the Highlanders'
fourth quarter herOICS Both
dumped 1n seven points each.
Kip Lewts had two pomts
and Jeff Banks and Jack
Walker each canned a foul
shot.
Kevin Petrie, semor gua rd,

who had 25 potnts agatnsl
Southwestern m an earlier
outmg, !~ad six pomts during
the fourth pertod to lead
Hannan Trace
Three other ltmes, Southwestern came close onlv to
see defeat at the end. Durmg
the 1974-7S season , Han nan
Trace 's champ10nsh'p learn
defeated the Highlanders by
three poinls at Southwestern
and on ly nine at Mercerville .
Earher lhts season, SW
forced the game mto over·
time where Han nan Trace
posted a 52-48 vtclory
Hannan Tra ce {SO) P etne S 5 15 Sha ff er 6 1 13
Gibson 1 2 4 .' McGu1re I 2 4
Halley 3 5 11. wooayard o 1
1 Totals 16· 16· 50 .
Southwestern ( 531 - Mi l ler
1 ~ J , Crouse 2 3 7, L ew1s 1 4
6 Gr.,le 4 3 11 , Bvsh 10 2 22.
Banks 1 1 3 a nd Wa lker o 1 1
Totals 19· 15·53
av Quarters
Han na n Trace 10 13 12 IS50
Sou thwes t ern 13 14 12 18- 53
Reserves Hannen T r.ace 47
Southwestern 36

~~---------------THE SHOP

, Pleasant Ridge Road
!:Ius. 992 -3426

Followmg the match the
referee broke down m tears
when · confronted by Meigs
fans ask1ng for some explanatton of why he had nul
called the pms
The Marauders' John Elbs
was ptnned in 3:21 of the
second period by Athens'
Gary Noel Tins was Ebhn 's
second loss m the 98 pound
weight class.
Mtcky Lyons, the 105 pound
Ma1 a uder ace , pmned Bob
Mann tn 3 14 of the second
period.
In the 112 pound we1ght
class Bulldog Phil Taylor
dectsJOned Carl Ghee n 9-S m a
hard fought match
Kevin McLaughbn won a
close rna tch for Metgs m the
119 pound weigh t class by
declsJOmng Jm1 Evener 4-2.
Marauder Fr ~shman Garv
Pnddy was the loser of the
126 pound weight class to
Larry Hawk by a score of 134
Mike Harn son wo n a
superior dec1s10n for Me1gs
when he thum ped Steve Elhs
12-2 in the 132 pound wetgul

class
The Marauders dropped
the 1:18 pound we1ghl class
when Jeff Gnffln of Athens
dectstoned Butch Roush 12-6
The coo l1'ove rs1al 115
pound we tgh t class ,saw
Athens' Gary Keller w111a 13
to 12 dectswn over Metgs ·
Mcl.aug hhn 1n the match that
saw the Marauder "pm" the
Bulldog three limes 111 front
of the Metgs bench .
In the 155 lb class Loran
lpacs of Athens dec tswned
Bobby Musser 11-2 in a match
marred by hoi tempers a nd
Illegal holds
Da n Buffmgton of Metgs
lus t by a pm to Jeff Con !&lt;tnt of
Al hens 111 the i67 poun d class
Me1gs Stan Starcher lost a
9-4 deci siOn to Cl atg Cum .
mmgs 1n the 175 pound class
and Ray Wtllford was
decisioned 11-4 by Dwtghl
Wesl m the 185 pound wetght
class
A thens 1 Roger Bat I won the
unhm1 ted class by forfetl.
The Marauders, now 4-3 on
the season , will host Wahama
at 2 p m. m the Mornson Gym
Wednesday , Feb. 4.

SPORTING GOODS - BOATS FREE LIVE ENTERTAINMENT.

Mass Martm e 73 Curry 70
Mansi 75 New Pal1z 68
Merr1m ac k 111 Lowel l 60
Pr0111dence 81 Brown 59
RP \ 79 Clark son 70
Su ffolk 81 St Anselm's 79
Tnn1ty 92 Wesleyan 85
Tufts 83 Benn e y 81

So uth

Al bny Ga 91 M Brown 66
Berry 78 Columbus 76
Bllrmne 72 D Lpscmb 62
Clark Ga 74 Svnnh Sl 69
Chns Nwpri 56 Meth 52
Del ta 51 64 Lambu t h 59
L1nco ln Tenn 89 King 17
N C St 97 Clemson 89
P•kevil te 87 Berea 85
S Fla 74 Fla Southn 72
Shaw 74 E t1 z C1ty 67
W Va 67 St F=ran Pa 59
Sha w 57 Ke n tucky St 55
Wash&amp;Lee 87 Lynchbur g 81
Wm&amp;Ma r y 56 E . Ca r 54
M1dwest
Btdwn Wllce 69 Woostr 64
DePavl 89 Duq uesne 75
Doan e 82 Dana 66
F mdly l iS Anderson 80
Geo Wms 62 Rockfor d 57
Ill Colt 79 Greenvl 68
McKndr ee 75 Pr1nc1pia 53
Mnmut h Ill 56 Wm Penn 42
Neb Wstyn 101 Concrd 1a 68
Otterbe m 81 Cap1ta t 69
Ros e Hulmn 79 B lackbrn 58
St Xav 86 Trnty Il l 65
Ster ling 88 Kan Ws lyn 75
Tabor 16 S W Ka ns 70
Tark•o 6d Be l levue 60
T1ffm 95 Cedar vl 82
Urbana 12 1 Mt V r nn Naz 87
Wi!tenber g 59 Kenyon 53
W1s Prksd e 97 M 1lton 73
Southwest
Okl a St 65 Ph illi ps 64
P Oumn 84 Hstn Ttltsn 81
SMU 108 Rtce 71
St Mry 's Te)( 74 SW Te)( 66
Sui Ross 79 Lub Chr1s 64
Texas Tec h 86 Arkansas 78
Tex Chns 65 Bay lor 63
Texas A&amp;.M 85 Texas 69
W est
A1r Force 66 N o Co lo 46
BIO la 72 POint Loma 49
Loyola 70 Pepp r dne 67
NW N az 80 Eas t Ore 67
PtiM St 122 warnr Pac , 60
Seat tl e Pac 83 Redlnds 62
UC Davis 82 UC R1v r sde 77
Westmont 98 Ca l L ut h 76

Roberts had 14 pom ts and by R1ffles' 11 and Conde had
Brauer and Roush had eight mne The learn shot 26 pera p1 ece Conde and Phil cent from the field and san'·.
LaComb had lour each for the 7·16 free throws . They had 21
Eag les.
turnovers. No one fouled out
The second half was all for the Eagles, but Southern 's
down lull for the Tornadoes
Brauer exited with five
Th ey ope ned it wtth 10 mmutes remaimng 1n the
slratght potnts before Riffle game .
added a Jumper for the
The reserve contest was a
Eagles
hllle closer, but the Ullle
Helghth Vital
Tornadoes agam came out on
In thts traditional en- top, 46-31. Eastern scored
coun ter, the height of the first, but Southern lied 1t and
hosts proved to be the from tnen on, they were
downfall of the Eag les. never headed.
Southern pulled down a
Rtchard Teaford led the
whoppmg 47 rebounds while Little Tornadoes wtth 19
Eastern
managed
28 .points while Tim Thored had
Brauer led the Tornadoes etghl. They had 39 rebounds ,
wtth 17 big caroms and 13 each by Wayne Satlerfteld
Danny Brown pulled m 12 and Teaford. The team shot
Rtffle had 10 caroms for the 32 percent from the field and
visitors .
cpnned 7-12 chan ty tosses
Brauer also led the mtors
The Baby Eagles were led
m scnring as he canned 24 by Doug Brownmg's len
pomts whtle teammates points, and D Brown had
Roberts and Roush were mne They shot 12-42 from the
adding 16 and 13, respec- field for 28 per cent and sank
tively. The team shot a warm 7-10 lree tosses . They had 22
4 per cent fr om the field (31- caroms, seven by Davis.
76 ) and netted 12 of 23 free
Eastern 1S next game ts
throws They had on ly five Fnday when they host Southturnovers the enhre contest. western , whtle the Tornadoes
Roberts had eight of hts travel to Symmes Valley to
team 's IS assists
encoun ler the Vikings.
Eastern was led m scormg
Officials for the contest
we re Thompson, Schwartzel,
and Fmslerwald
Oh1o Co lleg e
Basketball Resulh
Un1t e d Press tn1 erna 11o nal
W1tte n berg 59 Kenyon 53

E A:iil ERN - Conde
R1ff le 5 1 11. N elson
Kuh n 0 0 0, E 1chmger
LaComb 2-2 6, Hawk

Baldwm Wal l ace 69 wooste r

64

Otterbe1n 81 Cap1tal 69
H e1delberg 72 M t Un 1on 6'1

SOUTHERN -

Johnston 2

6, Brauer 10 4 24, Rou sh 6 1
13, Fmdtey 1 o 2, Cross 0 I 1.
6rown 2 1 5, Dun n m g 1 0 2
Totals 31 12 -74.
Quarter Scoru
South
22 38 58 74
Eas t
7 11 19 31

T•ffm 95 Cedarvil l e 82
U r bana 121 Mt
Vernon
N azarene 87
Fmdlay 115 Anderson 80
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�1 - The Da1ly Sent mel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, Feb. 4, 1976

Expect decision
on Giants soon

Meigs girls
undefeated
The Me1gs g1rls basketball
team Monday mght at Me1gs
H1gh School contmued 1ts
undefeated wmn111g streak
when they defeated Athens by
a score or 38-29
The Me1gs' g1rls rolled to a
12·3 r.rst quarter lead The
second quarter brought
Me1gs Glenda Brown out
from under the basket from
\\here she scored four qu1ck
baskets. The Me1gs' g1rls
went mto the locker room
w1th 28-9 lead
In the third quarter, Athens
attempted unsuccessfully to
press. Everyone on the Me1gs
team saw action 111 the th1rd .
and fourth quarters

Pam Vau ghn' led the
sconn g with 18 pomls ,
followed by Glenda Brown
With e1ght pomts , Beth
Vaughan and Cathy Meadows
both •had row po111ts and
Demaris Ash and Mary
Boggs each 2
Beth Vaughan was too
rebounder, pulhng down 10
The Me1gs ' g~rls record IS!).
ow1th SIX games left to play
before the secllonal tourney
They have a game Thursday
a t 6 30 p m
agamst
Gallipolis
Bv quarters
M
12 16 6 4- 38
A3 6 10 J0-29

FIGHT FOR BALL - The Marauder lasses,
undefeated th1s season (111 hght Jerseys), put 11 to Athens
H1gh G1rls Monday evemnR. 38-29 Identifiable above are

DemariS Ash ( 44), Mary Boggs (30) , Pam Vaughan (10)
battl111g for the ball, and Glenda Brown (12) An Athens
g~rl1s Karen Ble1gh ( 22) - Jun Hamm p1cture

Today's

Cutter named
player-of-week

Sport Parade
By MIL TON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
MANCHESTER, N H (UPI) - Everyone else already bad
begun eat111g and Carlton F1sk was hungry, too, but h1s m111d
wasn't on any of the food 111 front or h1m this rmnute, 1t was on a
bunch of kids s1tt111g 1\ ay 111 the back.
The b1g Boston catcher got up , excused Iumself and made h1s
way to the rear of the huge state Armory here where more than
a dozen youngsters troubled by cerebral palsy and muscular
dystrophy were seated at a pa1r of adJOimng tables.
You should've seen !herr expressiOns when they saw h1m
commg He moved mto the1r m1dst and they ate 11 up
Carlton F1sk went around to each k1d , shaking hands w1th
some, puttmg his arm affectwnately around others, the same
way a father does w1th a child. He talked w1th all of them,
patiently hsten111g to their questwns and answer111g them, then
ask111g some of his own He was havmg more fun than the k1ds
were and they were hav111g a party.
Up at the head table, there were some pretty llllpressiVe
personalities like Lws Tiant, J1m RICe, George SCott, W1ll1e
Horton and Sparky Anderson but as far as the k1ds were
concerned, they only had eyes for husky, good-lookmg Carlton
F1sk
"He has made th1s dmner seven of the past e1ght years and
every tune he comes, the people here mob him," sa1d one
locallte about F1sk "They really like hun, and he patiently
answers all their questwns, but sometime durmg the everung
he's sure to break away and make Ita pomt to spend some time
w1th those afflicted k1ds He never miSses."
Carlton F1sk likes k1ds and they like him. That was perfectly
obVIous at the 28th annual Baseball Dmner for the Manchester
Uruon Leader's Chanty Fund. Fisk, who overcame a broken
arm last sprmg to help the Red Sox wm the pennant and then
squared the World Senes at three ap1ece w1th h1s stupendous
I2th-1nnmg bell-rmger before the Reds preralled 10 the seventh
game, was bemg honored at the dinner as New Hampshire's
)\lano(lf -the-Year.
' )'ve been named Male Athlete of the Year," he joked, "by
my wife ''
The 2,400 guests at the dinner laughed heartllv
There was no question how they felt about Carlton F1sk.
Tremendous ear-p1ercmg applause rocked the Armory when
the 6-foot-2, 210-pound rece1ver was mtroduced New Hamp.
sh~re w11l be the hrst state to conduct a presidential prunary 10
a few weeks and Gerald Ford of Michigan, Ronald Reagan of
Cahforma , MorriS K Udall of Arizona , Fred R Harris of
Oklahoma, J1mmy Carter of Georg1a and Senator B~rch Bayh
of Indiana all are among the candidates, but Carlton E F1sk, a
Bellows ' Falls, Vt, native, who now makes h1s home 111
Raymond, N H , probably would out-poll them all m this state
The people here go for h1m . He has a way of knock111g over
the apple-&lt;:art sometimes when he talks , say111g some things
that maybe he shouldn't, like how he thinks some of h1s Red
Sox teammates aren't workmg hard enough and how nobody
actually knows how much phys1ca! suffer111g he has gone
though, but saymg things like that doesn't disturb most of h1s
New Hampshire ne1ghbors
F1sk emerged a key figure m one of the great baseball
controversies of all tune when he and Reds' p111ch hitter Ed
ArmbriSter became entangled m tha t celebrated bunt dw-111g
the f1fth World Ser1es game last October F1sk threw Wildly to
second base, trymg to head off the runner there, after Arm·
briSter momentanly got 111 h1s way and the Reds took
advantage of that to wm the game
''I think a lot more was made of that 111terference play than
shoilld've been, by the players, the media and everyone," sa1d
F1sk "I don't th1nk 11 had that much effect on the outcome I
don't thmk it turned the s~r1es around I thought the turmng
pomt was 1n the second game when we let 'em off the hook
after a 28-mmute ra1n delay at the end of the seventh 111mng.
We had a 2-llead, but the rain gave them a chance to regroup
and they won 11, 3-2 I know we had the same chance they had,
but the ram worked as a negative effect on us We lost our
momentum"

Otterbein fifth in
Division III ratings
un chan~w 1rom last week 's
MISSION, Kan (UP!) hst111g
With Monmouth
Rollins College (Fla )
College
(N
J) (16-2) No 2
rega111ed the No. 1 spot 111
and
Lake
Supenor State
DIVIsiOn II, wh1le Coe College
College
(MICh.)
( 14-2) still
(Iowa) held on to Its
holding
down
the
No 3
leadership 111 DiVISIOn III 111
position.
this
week's
Natwnal
Collegiate
Athletic
M I SSI O N
Kan (UP ! )
Drvrs ron
I &amp;
Drvrsro n
11
Association's basketball college
basketball ratmgs a s
ratings
com pli ed by the NCAA
D IIIIS IOn II
Rollins ( 12-3) led the first
Pts
weekly rat111gs by the NCAA, School
I Rol lin s CF ia l ( 12 31
117
108
but dropped to fourth the 2 Kentu~ky Sf ( 14 2 )
J Vrrg rn ra St (\4 1)
follo101ng week, and JUmped 4 Phdadelph ra Te xt ile IPa95)
to th1s week's leadership
( 14?)
84
82
after occupying the No 3 slot 5 Tennessee St ( 15 4)
6 Nrcholls St {La l (16 11 78
last week.
7 F tor rda So ut he rn (15 2) 69
Florida Southern College 8 Wrnston Salem 51 INC J
3)
62
(1&gt;-2), leader in Division II 9(16North
Oal&lt;ota ( JS 3)
48
the past two weeks, dropped 10 North Alabama I 14 31 40
DIVISIOn Ill
to seventh m this week 's poll
School
Pis
Kentucky State University
1 Coeflowa J IJSOl
170
2 Monmouth I N J J (16 2 1 112
(14-2) 1s No 2, up from fourth
3 Lake Supen or 51 ( Mr c h )
last week.
(1421
96
95
Coe
increased
1ts 4Scranton 1Pa ) fl35l
fOtilo) (IS 3)
91
undefeated str111g to liHl and 65 Otterbem
Alaska , Farrban k s ( 17 3) 76
heads the DIVISion III ra lings 7 Ashland IOhro l { 14 J J
73
for the second consecullve 8 Wrllenberg IOhrol ( 13 2 J 65
9 W•den e r ( Pa ) (13 5)
60
week The top three slots are
10 Glassboro St (N J J (13
4J

40

COLUMBUS, Oh10 (UP!) Tom Cutter, Western Ml·
ch1gan's fMl JuniOr center who
led the Broncos to a pa1r of
unportant league wms last
"eek, has been unan1r11ously
selected the M1d-Amen ca n
Confe1 ence player of the
1\eek
Cutler, of Lafayette, Ind,
Central Catholic H1gh School,
scored 36 pomts and hauled
down 26 rebounds 111 VIctories
over M1am1 and OhiO UmverSity, but 11 was more the way
m wh1ch he scored those 36
po111ts
Cutter, the MAC's leadinR
TRIALS ON SUNDAY
The Me1gs County Reagle
Club '"" hold its Southern
Federation Derby Trial
this Sunda) Feb 8 on lhe
club grounds The tnals
"'11 st•rt at 8 a.m. and
breakfast "Ill be served
bel ore the Ina! Lunch "111
also be served.
Anyone mtere s ted in
fwld tr1al bcaglmg ts Ill·

BlOCKING OUT - Me1gs Marauderlasses have
Athens about boxed out 111 th1s scramble for the ball
Monday ng1ht when Me1gs girls defeated Athens High
g1rls 38-29 to remam undefeated No 22 1s Beth Vaughan
andNo 101sPamVaughan - JlmHammplcture

v1ted to attend. The r!ub
grounds is located bark of
Harrisonv.llc oil Rt 143
For more mformatwn on
the Mc1 gs County Bt'agle

Club rontaet Frankhn
Wilson at 949-2322.
·.· ..•: : ::· :: :: .':':'• :·. :: • :· ·:·:· :·:· ·= ···::

f1eld goal percentage shooter,
hit on 15 of 18 shots 111 the two
games, mcludmg 8 of 8 111 the
battle lor f1rst place against
M1am1 He had 20 pomts, 11
rebounds, three ass1sts and a
pa1r of blocked shots aga1nst
the Redskins
In the OU game, Cutter hit
7 of LO from the held, pulled
dol\ n 15 rebounds , had three
ass1sts and also blocked two
shots
Other nom111ees for th1s
week's honor were J1m F1elds
of Ball State; Russ Dav1s of
Central M1ch1gan, Dan Hoff
of Eastern Michigan, Corteze
Brown of Kent State; Archie
Aldr~dge of M1am1, Matt
H1cks of Northern lllmOIS,
Mike Corde of Oh10
Uruvers1ty and Larry Cole of
Toledo Bowl111g Green had
no nommee.
Ohto H 1gh School
Scores
E a st Canton 55 Mm erva J 6
Sandy ,VaHey 54 Cla'tl mo nt 39
Lake 69 Tuslaw 6 1
Carr o l l ton 75 NorT hw es t 46
North G all 1a 79 W aha ma ( W
Va J 61
V1n ton Coun ty 87 Tr 1mb le 6 !
Southern CM e1 g sJ 7 t Ea ste rn
{ M eigs) 31
Bexley 57 Co l R eaoy 411
Col Central 80 Co l E as t mo or
71
Col East 67 COl M1ftlln 58
CoiLmden 93 Col Brookhaven

59

Col Mar1on •Frank l1n 59 Co l
So uth 57

By RICK DU BROW
SAN FRANCISCO (UP! )Baseball fans who want the
San Francisco G1ants to stay
and owners who would move
the club north of the border
still awaited a Judge 's word
today on whether there w11I
be an extenswn of an
inJunction that prevenf-'1 sale
of the NatiOnal League team.
Supenor Court Judge John
E.
Benson
Tuesday
postponed his deeiswn on the
city's request to extend an
inJunCtion that stops sale of
the G1ants to a Canadian
group in Toronto Backed by
Mayor George Moscone, the
city seeks a buyer who would
keep the club here.
Benson indiCated
to
newsmen
outside
the
courtroom that his deciSIOn
would probably be made
w1th1n the next few days too soon for the City to fmd a
buyer w1ll111g to keep the club
m California.
While ins1de the courtroom,
Benson had asked attorneys
for the club and the city of
San Francisco if they could
let his decisiOn " ride" for as
long as two or three weeks.
C1ty Attorney Thomas
O'Connor naturally agreed,
but attorneys for the club and
the NatiOnal League sa1d no
San Francisco seeks lime
to determ111e whether an $11
million offer from former
sports entrepreneur Robert
Short IS VIable. But Giants'
owners are opposed, warnmg

Home team in
winning rally
RACINE - Coach Connee
Andrews ' Souther n High
G1rls Team p1cked up the1r
second v1ctory w1thout a loss •
Tuesday when Kyger Cree k
came here . The home gals
won 54-35
Kyger Creek led 8·6 at lhe
f~rst buzzer, but by half-hm c
Southern's offense wa s
beg111mng to move as &lt;h ey
went 1nto the locker room
leadmg 22-16 They blew 1!
open 111 the third pen od ,
outscormg the losers 17-8
Jean
R1tchhart
led
Southern w1th 18 pomts
Che ryl l.arkms had 12 and
Brenda l.1mrence 10 Mary
Rollins of Ky ger led all
scorers w1th 23
s
6223954
KC
8 )(, 24 .15

that the 1916 season IS nearly
here , contracts must be
signed and team traveling
schedules must be finalized
- either in Canada or
Califorma .
In addition, the G1ants have
no manager or co&amp;ches - a
comodity
they
will
undoubtedly need if they're to
open spring training in two
weeks.
After O'Connor made his
appeal for the extension of
the mjunction, Benson asked
the attorney If he could
respond to the v1ew that "the
Giants are on the verge of
financial disaster "
O'Connor sa1d the Giants
were
not
bankrupt,
cons1der111g that there was a
bonafide offer from Short
However, Benson said,
f111anc1al records mdicated
the team had lost more than
$6 million m eight years, all
its cash reserves were
e&lt;hausted, 11 had borrowed to
a lurut of $1 nullion from the
Bank of America and 1ts
liabilities exceeded 1ts assets
by $2 million as of December

Co l North 79 Col Wes t 78
Col Whet s to ne 64 Col No r lh
land 56
F ran k i m Ht s 8'2 T eay s Val l ey

55

AMARILLO, Tex. (UPI) - Parker County officials say bond lor Pittsburgh Sleeter
defensive tackle Ernie Holmes on a cocaine possession charge was set at $1,000 because they
beheve he will return for court If ordered.
Police arrested Holmes Saturday in a motel restroom and charged him with possession of
250 mtU1grams of cocaine. At his arraignment Tuesday he posted $1,000 bond and left town to
attend a Fellowship of Christian Athletes meeting in Phoenix, Ariz.
The bond was set at $1,000 followiog an argument between District Attorney Tom Curlis
and Justice of the Peace Roy Byrd. Byrd had wanted a bond of $100,1100 set because he d1d not
believe Holmes would return for further court appearances. Curtis argued the bond was
excessive and would be reduced on appeal.

NBA refuses to merge
By STEVE WH..STEIN
UP! Sports Writer
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Player hberahon, yes.
Merger, no
Those were the dec1s1ons of
the NatiOnal Basketball As·
socmtion owners Tuesday as
the players agreed to accept
an ou\-(1£-&lt;:ourt settlement of
the
6-year-old
Oscar
Robertson antitrust su1t with
new freedom rules that may
"change the whole future of
sports "
Shortly afterward,
however,
Commtsswner
Larry O'Bnen announced the
league was ready to fight
another $3 rrulhon swt rather
than merge w1th· the
Amer1can Basketball
AsSOCia liOn
After stat111g for weeks that
the settlement of the players'
class action sUit would clear
the way for merger negotla·
lions, O'Bnen sa1d, "At th1s
time, the NBA Board of
Governors IS unequivocally
opposed to merger or
consolidatiOn with the ABA "
NBA owners obviously are
hopmg the ABA , wh1ch has
lost three of 1ts 10 learns to
fmanc1al rum already th1s
year and the Virgmia Squires
on the verge of becommg the

fourth, w1ll see 1.,; fm• •
demise soon
The NBA owners feel conf•·
dent they can successfully
meet the challenge of a swt
by the ABA Should the ABA
fold, the NBA owners will be
wa1tmg eagerly to snap up 1ts
players 1n a barga111 sale
The proposed 10-year
settlement With the players IS
both
hi stone
and
complicated
The three key 1ssues are:
I. Elunmat1on begmrung at
the end of next season of the
controversial option clause
1or reserve clause, as II IS
called in other sports)
bmding a player to a team
one year beyond the actual
term of h1s contract
However, a rookie signing for
only one year w1ll still have a
one-year option clause on t"'
theory that 11 may take two
years for a team to evaluate a
new player's talent and
worth
2 Begmnmg m 1980, the
ex1stmg compensatiOn plan
1sunllar to football's Rozelle
Rule) will be replaced by the
"rlght of f~rst refusal," 111
which a team with a player,
whose contract has expired,
w11l have the opportumty for
30 days to match another

team's offer. If the Original
team refuses to match the
offer, the second team must
g1ve 1t no compensation. Over
the next four years, the
compensahon rule w1ll
remam 111 effect
3 Beg1nn111g llllmedlately
with this year's coflege draft,
a player who falls within a r
year to s1gn w1th the team
selectmg him IS subJect to
another draft If two years
pass without hiS s1gn111g, he
becomes a free agent
These three conoesswns by
the owners represent a nearly
complete victory by the
players and are the Critical
parts of a still-mcomplete
total collective barga1mng
contract between the owners
and the Players Association
The players had hoped to
•solate the gams they won 111
regard to the Robertson swt
, from collective bargaining
for a new contract but the
Natwnal Labor RelatiOns
Board ruled against the
players on that Issue by
declarmg , them part of the
collective bargaimng process. Thus the entire !().year
package will not ~ finalized
until other aspects are
solved
'

The US team of 120 was
the largest contmgent among
the estlf118ted 1,500 athletes
drawn from 36 countries
Cmd y Ne !son, a pnme
prospect for an Alpme medal,
earned the American Oag
But perhaps the proudest of
the Amencans wa s the 18man hocke y tea m which
defeated Yugoslavia, 8-4,
Tuesday evenmg to qualify
for the champwnsh•p bracket
and an opemng match with
the SoVIet Umon, a 16-3 victor
over Austna
The Iun1ted schedule today
called for the f1rst round of
1ce danc111g 111 the figure
skat111g competitiOn and the
f~rst runs 111 the men's and
women's luge
The hockey team worked
SIX months to get 111to the
tournament and afterwards
Coach Bob Johnson sa1d, "!
ca n honestly say that I don 't
thmk I've ever been so scared
of a game 111 19 years of

coaching. You play almost 60
games to get to the Olympics,
and then it all comes down to
60 m111utes of hockey "
The f1rst real medal chance
comes Thwsday when two·
lime world spnnt champiOn
She1la Young takes the start
111 the 1,500 meters.;;peed
skating event along w1th
teammate Leah Poulos
Nelson , getting edgy and
more withdrawn as her
competition approaches, gets
her first chance for a medal
Sunday m the women 's
downhill She fell on her first
run
dunng
Tuesday's
pra ctice but fmished with the
eighth fastest t1r11e m the
second.
"I don't want to talk to
anyone," she sa1d after
completing tra111mg. "If I wm
a medal, I'll talk to
everyone' '
In the 1ce dancmg Colleen
O'Connor and partner Jim
Mills hope to spht two

season
But he sa1d
some
111d1viduals m1ght sue 1f they
are placed 111 the expansion
pool and taken by the two new
teams
Garvey sa1d, "The association will not get involved even
though an mdiVIdual rrught .
Most player representatives
feel we should not impose any
obstacles."
He noted that probably a
predommant majonty of
players selected by Tampa
Bay or Seattle would be

for comment, Robert Brown,
a member of the local law
firm
that
represents
Robertson, said he had
discussed the setUement with
the " Big 0" and Robertson
had told him, "I'm pleased."
Because Robertson headed
the players group when the
suit was filed m 1970, the case

2

Heidelberg semor Mark
Chrislip hasn't missed
starUng a single game for the
Student Princes smce scor111g
32 points in hiS frrst~tring
debut as a freshman.
The 6-1, l~und guard 's
endurance paid off Tuesday
rught when he bounded over
the 1,000-pomt mark against
Mount Umon The SeVIlle
nat1ve tallled 22 po111ts for a
career total of 1,011 m leading
Heidelberg to a 7U2 Ohio
Conference overtime v1ctory.
In other games involving
OhiO college teams, Baldwin·
Wallace defeated Wooster 6964, Wittenberg downed
Kenyon 59·53, Otterbem
stopped Capital 81-69,
Findlay whipped Anderson
115-80, Tiffin topped Cedar.
VIlle 95-82, Urbana clobbered
Mount Vernon Nazarene 121·
87 and Manchester outlasted
Wilmington 97-93 m an extra
penod.
" I was fairly pleased w1th
the game overall, pleased
that they came out shooting
well 1n the overtlflle and
playing
good
defen se
throughout the whole game,
but I would like to have seen
better shooting dunng
regulatiOn play," sa1d
Pr111ces coach Dave Grube
"Overall, I was glad to see
the team hang together and
wm
after
two
very
d1sappo1nt1ng conference

losses (to Oh10 Nort.r.ern by
one point and to Oberlin by
silt pomts last week) ," Grube
S81d.

W1th the score tied 58-58 at
the end of regulatwn play,
Heidelberg reeled off 10
unanswered po111ts at the
start of the overtune penod.
Chuck Walker added 12
Student Prmces markers,
ChriS Reichert 11 and Dave
W1nck 10.
Mount was led by Don
Fnedrich and Art Kunkle
with 14 po111ts each and Ed
Pohjala w1th II.
Heidelberg 1s now 10-6
overall and 5-3 111 the league.
The Raiders are 6-10 for all
games and 3-5 aga111st confer·
ence opposition
Rob Wmton scored 17
points and grabbed mne
rebounds Tuesday to lead
BaldwinWallace to its come·
frombehind OhiO Conference
VIctory over Wooster
Wooster led 38-32 at
halft1r11e but went scoreless
for e1ght and one-half
rrunutes early 111 the second
penod. The F1ght1ng Scots
were ahead 44·35 and then
tra1led 47-44 before they
f111ally got another basket
Preston Burroughs had 16
points to top Wooster
The v1ctonous Yellow
Jackets are now 3-4 111 the
conference Wooster 1s 4-4 m
the OAC

Wittenberg's Tigers,
beh1nd
the
22-polnt
performance of Tom Dunn
and 13 points by RICk White,
defeated Kenyon for the 22nd
consecutive t1r11e
The Lords took a 43-42 lead
With 9:32 rema111mg m the
game, but Wittenberg
rega111ed the advantage for
good w1th 6 14 left on a Jump
shot by Dllnn.
Kenyon was paced by T1m
Appleton with 17 po111ts and
Mark Leonard With 14.
The 'l'lgersarenow 14-2 and
the Lords 9-10 The game d1d
not count in the Ohio Conference diVISional stand111gs
Otterbem, ranked fifth th1s
week 1n NCAA D1vls1on Ill,
picked
up 1ts mnth
consecutive VICtory with the
OhiO Conferenee wm over
Capital Tuesday mght
Dave Bromley had 20
po1nts and Ed Williams 13 for
the w1nn111g Card111als, 16-3
overall and ~ m the OAC.
Otterbem led all the way,
111cludmg a 37·30 halftlllle
advantage.
Jim Cloud and RICky Lee
each had 18 po111ts for
Capital, 12·9overall and 2-5111
the OAC.
F111dlay forward Dale
Creager bounced back from
an 111JUry last week to pop 111
24 points and lead the Oilers
to their Hoos1er-Buckeye
Conference
w1n
over

Anderson.
Ed Urbamak and Dan
Grothouse added 18 points
apiece for Fmdlay, 7-4 m the
league and IU overall
The Ravens, 3-10 m the
CirCUit and &gt;15 agalllSt all
comers, were paced by guard
Jeff Jenness' 21 markers and
Jim Scolby's 13
01lers
coach
J1m
Houdeshell went to h1s bench
and put four junior varsity
players in the game after his
team took a 25-point lead w1th
5 30 left to play.
R1ck Blasllck scored 29
points, mcluding a half dozen
m overtime, to lead
Manchester to 1ts HoosierBuckeye Conference v1ctory
over Wilmington.
The host Spartans ralbed
from a 45-39 halftime deflc1t
to take a two-point lead with
I 40 to go in the game before
Bryan
Bicke rstaff
deadlocked the score 82-82
w1th I :05 remam10g.
Manchester missed Its shot
for a winner 10 the Glosmg
seconds.
The
v1ctory
ra1sed
Manchester's league mark to
7-5 and its overall slate to 118.
Wilmin gton , led by 19
points each from Bob Blanton
and B1ll Shoecraft, 1s 1·11 111
the HBC and 2-19 for all
games.

East topples West, 123-109
The Daily Sentintlo
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Sunday T1m es Sent ne!

PHILADELPHIA ( UPI) There was v1rtual agreement
among NBA All-star players
and coaches - as well as
among MVP voters- tha t
Washington Bullet Da ve Bmg
was the Most Valuable
Player of the East-West
ClaSSIC Tuesday
The most notable doubter
was Dave B111g himself. He
sa1d before the game he
hadn't even felt worthy of
bemg chosen to h1s seventh
All-8\ar team, let alone the
All-stars' all-star
And he didn't seem to feel
any different after he scored
16 second-half pomts and
rallied the East to a 123-109
VICtory over the West, the
conference's 17th 10 the 26year series.
..
"I felt very fortunate to be
selected to the team because
there were lots of other

outstanding guards 111 the
East who deserved to be
here/' smd Bmg, among the
top vote-getters of the 10
starters chosen by the fans
The coaches picked the
rema111111g 14 players
" I've been an All..Star s1x
times and there are other
guys 11 would have meant a
lot to ," Bing co ntmu ed
"When I came here
yesterday, the MVP never
crossed my mind All I
wanted to do was do my best
and play on the w111mng
team."
Bmg h1mself was the key to
that goal
The East, gwlty of sloppy
and maccurate shoot111g the
f1r st half, was tra1llng, 5().45,
when
B111g
prov1ded
1nsp~rat•on With a l().po111t
third-quarter productiOn and

some savvy quarterbacking
· I thought he tu rned it
around," sa1d losmg West
Coach AI Attles of Golden
Stale
" I think B111g really controlled the game," agreed
East Coach Tom Hemsohn of
Boston " He made it happen
and (Buffalo's Bob) Mc(ldoo
found the hole. "
McAdoo scored 22 pomts to
share game-scormg honors
w1th Kareem Abdul.Jabbar
but flmshed a distant second
to B111g 111 the MVP ballot111g
McAdoo , a crowd favorite,
didn 't obJect
" I agree that Bmg deserves
the MVP," he sa1d " He kept
the b1g guys happy by dishmg
the ball off "
Both teams presented loose
defenses and suffered from
lengthy cold spells. The All·
Stars tended to blame th1s on

the lack of expenence on the
two squads, A record 11
players were playmg 111 their
first league class1c, the
majority of them for the
West
Barry's steal and threepoint play at the end of the
second stanza capped a West
rally that resulted 111 1ts
halftune lead.
Then the West went cold
"It was a well-played ball
game except for a stretch m
the th1rd penod when we
couldn't hit the broad s1de of
the barn
the ball JUSt
wouldn't go down," sa1d All·
les.11
But Attles took 111 stnde h1s
second loss m as many allstar coach111g appearances
" I hope they kee~ mv1t111g
me back until I get 11 nght,"
he sa1d Iaugh111g.

Wolfpack trims Clemson five, 97-89
Russ1an teams, who have
won the world title SIX times
between them m the last SIX
years
Ljudm1Ia Pakhomova and
Alexander Gorschkov, a husband and w1fe team who won
the world champfonship betw een 1970-74, are the
favontes.
The luge team w1ll have
achieved a maJor success 1f 11
can avoid last place
- Life.;;ize ice sculptures are
the welcomiog committee for
the Nordic competitors.
Sculptures of a mountain
goat, a woman hold1og the
OlympiC torch and a stnding
cross-&lt;:ountry skier look out
over a spectacular Alp111e
VISta and pose obligingly for
photographers.
"It's my hobby ," said
Engelbert Hattenberger, a
wroughtiron worker from
Uenz in the Tyrol

willing to JOI11 the new teams.
Garvey sent letters to NFL
Commissioner Pete Rozelle
and to congressmen from
Arkansas, Mississippi,
Tennessee and Alabama,
spellmg out the associatiOn's
position on expansion.
The letter said: " We favor
... expansion because, among
other reasons, additional
teams will mean new
positions and additional
employment opportuniUes
for professiOnal football
players."

Big '0' is pleased with settlement
CINCINNATI (UPI) Oscar Robertson, whose
name has always been linked
with the NBA Players
Association anhtrust suit
agamst the NBA, was
reported " pleased" with
Tuesday's out-of-court
settlement.
Although Robertson could
not immediately be reached

Tiffin, Urbana triumph!sta!';:. s!

58

Union will not oppose '76 draft
WASHINGTON (UPI ) 'rhe pro football players
union extended an oll ve tw1g
to the owners today by
announcmg 11 would not
oppose an expansiOn draft of
veterans.
Etl Garvey, executive
director of the NFL Players
Association,
said
the
orgamzation would avoid any
legal challenge to the
league's plan to draft veteran
players out of a pool to stock
the two new teams, Tampa
Bay and Seattle, for the 1976

r ___ --_-----I r--:~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!~~~~===~:---1

Gahanna 73 Whtle h al l 66
Grandv•ew 83 West Jefferson

American hockey team successful
By MIKE HUGHES
foothills of the Alps and promised a no-fnlls 12-day
UPI Executive Sports Ed1tor already the Amencan hockey competition Fulfillment of
INNSBRUCK,
Austna team has registered a maJor that prom1se bega n with
fUPI) - The Olympic Games success
today's s1mple 90-mmute
that were to have been held 111
Innsbruck stepped m after ceremony pres1ded over by
Denver opened today 1n th1s the games had been reJected Federal President Dr Rudolf
Tyrolean town nest1111g 111 the by the c1t1zens of Denver and K~rchschlaeger.
-:·:-:-:-~:·: :-:-::·:~·!·!·! :·:·::::: ::·: :· : ·:: :: ·:: ·: ·:: .:: ::... :..:..:·:·····:·:·:···:·:·:···:·::·:::~·:::::::::::::::::::::·::::::::·:::~~~·:::::;·:':':·:;-m:-:·:·:·:·:-:·:

5- TIE Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , WWnesday, ~·eb. 4, W76

has come to be known as the
"Oscar Robertson suit."
Robertson, who starred at
the University of Cincinnati
and later with the old
Clnclnna II Royals of the
NBA, now makes h1a home
here and heads a construction
company, Oscar Robertson &amp;
Associates.

United Press lnlernational
North Carolina State, the
lOth-ranked tea m 111 the
nation, 1s considered an
unlikely participant m the
NCAA playoffs.
But Wolfpack Coach Norm
Sloan, whose team IS not
expected to heat out either
North Carolina or Maryland

High school notes.

for one of the two Atlantic
Coast Conference berths 111
the championship tourney,
had a word of warnmg
Tuesday mght for those
over!ook111g N C State.
Follow111g the Wolfpack's
97.j)9 victory over Clemson,
Sloan said, "Maybe we:re
better than some of you folks

Texas Tech rema111ed a
The VIctory over the Tigers half-game beh111d the Agg1es
was N C State'sflfth in seven at 11-2 with an 86-78 tr1umph
ACC games. Thrrd-ranked over Arkansas. The Raiders,
North Carolma has lost only p!aymg without two regulars
one conference game, but hospitalized w1th the flu,
that was to the Wolfpack on were led by Mike Russell's 23
the Tar Heel's homecourt m points.
SMU
Improved
liS
Chapel H•ll
And Maryland currently IS conference record to 8-3 with
saddled
w1th
three a 108-71 romp over R1ce ,
conference losses , although w111Iess in the SWC Ira
..
the Terps won each regular Terrell led the Mustangs with
season meeting w1th the 23 po1nts.
Wolfpack by 18 po111ts.
TCU edged Baylor,~. 1n
W1th 6-foot-7 sophomore the other conference game
Kenny Carr capable of some Tuesday night
exceptional mghts, though,
Ron Norwood scored 31
the Wolfpack are a threat to pomts to lead DePaul to an 89any team. He scored 38 po111ts 75 victory over Duquesne
111 leading the Wolfpack past
In other games, Providence
deleated Brown, 81-59, Okpo111ts and m1ke 20 to lead the the Tigers.
Carr connected on 15-&lt;lf·23 lahoma State edged Phillips,
attack
Sebrmg rang up 1ts 62nd shots and from the foul !me 65-&amp;4, and Air Force topped
Northern Colorado, 66-46
straight home court VIctory made good on lk&gt;f-12
In
the
Southwest
under coach RICk Bro;;k
Friday
night, burying Conference race, Texas A&amp;M
Southern
Local
96-63. ma1ntamed its sllfll lead with
OXFORD, Ohio (UP!) Domm1c Corb1sello led the an 85-69 VIctory over Texas
while
Texas
Tech
and
SMU
Mike
Domemco, the MIBml
way for the Trojans with 30
remained
1n
close
purswt.
Uruveristy
football player m·
pomts
Freshman
Karl
Godme
Jured
when
struck by a car
Groveport (12-1), tradmg
scored
24
pomts
and
seruor
last
weekend,
was listed m
42-33 at the end of three
Sonny
Parker
added
21
to
"serious"
condition
Tuesday
quarters Friday night,
lead
the
Aggtes
to
their
eighth
at
a
nearby
hosp1tal
exploded for 36 pomts 111 the
Despite the "serious"
final e1ght mmutes lor a 69-56 VICtory m n111e conference
games.
liSting,
officials at Mercy
wm over Hilliard. Mike
Rogers, Frankl111 County's
leading scorer, sat out half
the contest with foul trouble,
but scored 10 of his 16 po111ts
lop scorer 111 the 1930's, the
SPRINGFIELD, Mass
m the f111al quarter as d1d UP! - Bill Sharman and Tom Hall 's Honors Committee
forward Jeff W1lls.
Gola, • two stars from the announced Tuesday
Ironton assured itself of at NBA's setshot era , have heen
least a share of the elected to the Nahonal
Southeastern Oh•o League Basketball Hall of Fame.
champiOnship ~riday mght
Also selected were Harry
With a 61-67 VIctory over Litwack, Temple's coach for
RIO DE JANEIRO, ( UPI l
Me1gs The wm was the 14th 20 years, and Notre Dame - The "Ch1ca Tic a" of Costa
10 a row lor the Tigers, led 111
Rica had the best corrected
scoring by Ed Howard 's 20 Ath!ehc D~rector Edward time Tuesday, accordmg to
"Moose" Krause, the Irish's
pomts.
the official list of the first 47
Kent Roosevelt reeled of 18
yachts to croSs the fmishline
straight third quarter pomts
of
the Capetown-RIO race .
Friday night enroute to a 74- Mogadore to an ~ victory
Chlca
T1ca, skippered by C
65 v1ctory over Ravenna. The over Streetsboro. Vaughn, diMottola, had 1ts corrected
who also hauled down 13
Rough Riders twned a tight rebounds,
scored 25 of his time calculated at 16 days,
35-34 game into a 53-34 spread
f1ve hours, 13 minutes and 19
With the W~Jrl. Ravenna, ~Hi, total m the second half when seconds.
had the upper hand the rest of the Wildcats overcame a 32The second best time so far
the way, but the nearly five- 29 intermission defiCit
was
registered by Cloud
Second rank•d 1AA )
minute dry spell was too
N1rr
oi South Africa Tllird
much for the Ravens to Delphos St. John's p1ckeo up W'tS Red Amber of South
victories 13 and 14 ov~r. tiE
overcome
ilfnca and Verwoerdberg ,
Jumor Bert Vaughn scored weekend but not wlthbut a a!so of South Africa, was
a career h1gh 40 po1nts Saturday night scare from tour th.
Saturday mght 111 leadmg Fort Wayne (Ind.) Elmhurst.
thmk."

Timberlake., Best
.pace Lincoln five
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Ohio
high school basketball notes
from around the state.
Art T1r11berlake, of Canton
Uncoln, scored 68 points in a
pair of Lion VICtories over the
weekend to take over the
scoring leadership of Stark
County. Timberlake tallied 35
Friday mght as Lmcoln
downed Cuyahoga Falls 61Hil
and 33 Saturday mght 111 an
8HI6 win over Youngstown
South.
The &gt;-ll junior now has 3n
points m 16 games, while
teammate Kevm Best has
386. Canton Tlmken's S-7
Mike Miday, held to 15 m a 7674 win over Ravenna
Saturday night, IS third With
_ 358. Miday , however, has
• played one less game and
leads In average with 23 9 to
23.6 for Timberlake and 22 9
lor the 6-5 Best.
Defending Class A state
champion Manon Local, With
four returning regulars, fell
lor the thlrd ume in !3 games
Friday night and the second
time this season to St Henry,
53-60. The Flyers led 42-35
'IIDI.r!8 into the final quarter,
but were outscored 18-8 111 the
'!Ina! eight minutes
· Unbeaten Bellefontaine
hitting on all cylmders
Friday night In a 94-43 victory
'over a good London club (104) The Chieftains, hard
pressed to win 53-61 earlier in
' the season at London, rolled
to a 60-15 halftime margin 111
;posting their 14th straight
Win Dan Shumaker scored 26

was

,.

N BA Standmgs
By Untted Press International
E•stern Conference
Atlant1c D•v•s•on
W L Pet
GB
Boston
34 13 123
Buffalo
30 '10 600 5 1
Phile~d e lph•a

79 70

592

6

New York
24 27 471
Central OIVISIOft

12

W L Pet
GB
Wa shmgton
28 21 57 1
Cle veland
'J7 22 55 1 1
Hous ton
23 23 500 3 1 1
Atlanta
24 25 490 4
NeW Orl ean s 22 24 478 4' 1
western Conference
Midwest OiVI510ft
W L Pet
GB
Milwaukee
20 29 408 1 ;
De tro II
18 28 391
Kansas C1ty
IB 31 367
2
Ch•cago
14 34 292
51 ~
PaCifiC DIVISIOn

W. L

Pet

Golden St at e
35
Los Angeles
25
Seattle
23
Portland
22
PhOe nu(
19
Tuesday's

13 729
25 500
26 469
27 449
27 41 3
Result
All Star Game
Ea st 123 west 109
Wednesday ' s Games
(No games scheduled )
Thursday's Games
Detr011 at Atlanta
New Orlean s at Houston
Los Angeles at K an City
(Only games scheduled)

GB
11
12 1 1
IJ' •
15

8 AM-10 PM

MON.-SAT.

JO A.M.-1 0 P.M. SUNDAY

Prices Effective
298 SECOND ST.

Thru Feb. 7, 1976

POMEROY, OHIO

ABA Standtng s
By Un1ted Press lnt~rnat•on al
W L Pet GB
Denver
3J 12 739
New York
30 · 17 639
4' 1
Kentucky
29 21 580
7
San Anton1o
27 20 574
7' 1
lnd 1ana
26 24 520 10
St LOU IS
2 1 29 420 15
Vlfg 1n 1a
8 39 170 26' ~

Kentuc!~elsl~a~;s ~o~~~~~~ '
San Anton o 118 lnd•Ma ll 2
Wedn esday 's Games
New Yo rk it! St LOUIS
V 1rg 1n1a at Denver
Kentucky at lnd •ana
Thur sday's Game
New Yo rk at Sa n Anton•o
NH L srandmgs
By Uneted Press International
Campbell Conference
Palnck DIVI SIOn
W L T Pts gf ga
Phda
30 10 10 70 216 142
NY lldr s
27 12 10 64 194 114
Atlanta
24 23 a 56 179 165
NY Rng r s
19 26 6 44 165 2 10
Smythe DIVIS IOn
W L T Pts gt ga
Ch1cago
21 14 16 58 157 tJ5
Vn cu vr
20 20 10 so 167 163
18 25 7 43 156 177
Sf LOU IS
Mmn
16 30 ~ 36 126 175
Kan C1ty
11 35 5 21121 224
Wales conferenc e
Norns DIVISIOn
W L T Pis gf ga
Montreal
36 7 8 80 210 110
Los Ang
28 22 3 59 176 173
Pttsbgh
2024 7 47 2o1:wo
Detro1 t
16 28 7 39 135 192
Wa sh
5 42 5 15 141 266
Adaf1lS DIV ISIOn
W L T Pi s gf ga
Boston
31 10 9 71 193 142
Buffalo
28 15 B 64 218 151
Toronto
~ 1 20 10 52 172 175
Calif
19 27 5 43 1.54 167
T uesday 's R es ults
Atlanta 2 NY Islanders 2
Cali forn ia 4 St LOU IS 4
Va n co u ver 2 Buffalo 1
Wednesday 's Gam es
NY l slndrs at NY Rangers
Ca l1f0rn1a at A t lanta
Ch1 cago at Montreal
Wash mgton at Toronto
M1nnesota a t Detro t
St LO UIS at Kan C1ly
Buffalo at Los Angel es
Thursday 's Games
vancouver at Ph 1la
PittSburgh at Boston
(Onl y games SGhedulcd)

Baby Be~f

']3'
9
ROUND STEAK ••~~·••••
Superiors Wieners
79e
12 oz.

FRANKl E.S •••••P~·•••

WHA Standmgs
B y Un1ted Press International
East
W L T Ph gf ga
23 2 4 5 51 165 175
New Eng
Cleve
20 25 • J 44 168180
C1nc1
21 29 I 43 189 228
lndpls
19 29 2 40 IJ 6 157
Wes t
W L T Pts hg ga
Houston
32 18 0 64 209 173
Mmn
25 20 3 53171 175
San D1ego
24 22 4 52 200 178
23 20 5 51 181 169
Phoen1 x
Canad1an
W L T Pis gf ga
Wnn1pg
36 19 0 72 226 154
Quebec
32 16 3 67 231 197
Ca lgary
26 2 1 2 54 186 158
Edmntn
20 31 3 43 188 226
Toronto
15 30 5 35 206 248
x Ottawa
14 26 I 29 134 172
x Team disbanded
Tuesday's Results
Houston 8 M inn eso ta J
Quebec 5 Wtnn1peg 4
Calgary 3 C~ncmnat1 2
Edmon ton 4 New Eng 0
Wednesday 's Gam es
Cleve lan d al Phoen x
M 1nnesota at San D1 ego
Thursday's Gam es
New England at Calgary
Quebec at lndla napol ts
Edmonton at Phoen1x

Domenico in serious condition

Select 4 for hall of fame

STORE HOURS

Hospital 111 Hamilton sa1d
they were encouraged
because Domeruco had a
"fairly good mght" Monday
night He is bemg treated 1n
the hospttaPs intensive care
un1t
Domemco, 21, a Junior from
Washmgton Court House,
Ohio, suffered two broken
legs, a deep cut on h1s
forehead and a severe
concussion when struck by an
auto at 4 a.m Saturday as he
walked along U S 27 near
campus.
The driver of the car, who
has not been cited, said
Domenico crossed the road in
front of him. The accident
rema1ns
under
investigation
Domenico, called by coach
Dick Crum "very intelligent
and a very deep th111ker,"
was used as a messenger
guard and backup center on
the Miami football team
Crum sa1d he feared
Domenico's football career
was through because of the
accident

9e
CRACKERS•• }~ ~·.~:
All
9
9
e
POTATOES ••••••~~.~~~.
Keebler's Zesla

1

Purpose
COUPON

BATH SIZE

FLOUR

DIAL SOAP
Save

48c

4

L1m1l I Coupon Per Custom
Good at Powell's Super Valu
Coupon Exp1res. 2-7-76

COUPON

COUPON

. ·I
10 oz .
Jar

:-~I

Coupon ·

.

.· 1' I

. ·I

:~

Groveport 51 OelawMe 41
Ham l ll on Twp 85 Marysvill e

75

H1ll l ard 65 Co\ W es tla nd 61
Otentang y 60 Dutl•n ~1
wa sh1 nqton C H 59 London Sl

•••

NAPKINS
Reg. 14.99
Pkg. of 4

$J§9w,th
Coupon

mit 1 Coupon Per Customer
mil 1 Coupon Per Customer:
)tc;oo'd
Powell's Super Valu , - )G,ood at Powell's Super Valu
1 Coupon Expires. 2-7-76 •
res. 2-7-7 6
·

�1 - The Da1ly Sent mel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, Feb. 4, 1976

Expect decision
on Giants soon

Meigs girls
undefeated
The Me1gs g1rls basketball
team Monday mght at Me1gs
H1gh School contmued 1ts
undefeated wmn111g streak
when they defeated Athens by
a score or 38-29
The Me1gs' g1rls rolled to a
12·3 r.rst quarter lead The
second quarter brought
Me1gs Glenda Brown out
from under the basket from
\\here she scored four qu1ck
baskets. The Me1gs' g1rls
went mto the locker room
w1th 28-9 lead
In the third quarter, Athens
attempted unsuccessfully to
press. Everyone on the Me1gs
team saw action 111 the th1rd .
and fourth quarters

Pam Vau ghn' led the
sconn g with 18 pomls ,
followed by Glenda Brown
With e1ght pomts , Beth
Vaughan and Cathy Meadows
both •had row po111ts and
Demaris Ash and Mary
Boggs each 2
Beth Vaughan was too
rebounder, pulhng down 10
The Me1gs ' g~rls record IS!).
ow1th SIX games left to play
before the secllonal tourney
They have a game Thursday
a t 6 30 p m
agamst
Gallipolis
Bv quarters
M
12 16 6 4- 38
A3 6 10 J0-29

FIGHT FOR BALL - The Marauder lasses,
undefeated th1s season (111 hght Jerseys), put 11 to Athens
H1gh G1rls Monday evemnR. 38-29 Identifiable above are

DemariS Ash ( 44), Mary Boggs (30) , Pam Vaughan (10)
battl111g for the ball, and Glenda Brown (12) An Athens
g~rl1s Karen Ble1gh ( 22) - Jun Hamm p1cture

Today's

Cutter named
player-of-week

Sport Parade
By MIL TON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
MANCHESTER, N H (UPI) - Everyone else already bad
begun eat111g and Carlton F1sk was hungry, too, but h1s m111d
wasn't on any of the food 111 front or h1m this rmnute, 1t was on a
bunch of kids s1tt111g 1\ ay 111 the back.
The b1g Boston catcher got up , excused Iumself and made h1s
way to the rear of the huge state Armory here where more than
a dozen youngsters troubled by cerebral palsy and muscular
dystrophy were seated at a pa1r of adJOimng tables.
You should've seen !herr expressiOns when they saw h1m
commg He moved mto the1r m1dst and they ate 11 up
Carlton F1sk went around to each k1d , shaking hands w1th
some, puttmg his arm affectwnately around others, the same
way a father does w1th a child. He talked w1th all of them,
patiently hsten111g to their questwns and answer111g them, then
ask111g some of his own He was havmg more fun than the k1ds
were and they were hav111g a party.
Up at the head table, there were some pretty llllpressiVe
personalities like Lws Tiant, J1m RICe, George SCott, W1ll1e
Horton and Sparky Anderson but as far as the k1ds were
concerned, they only had eyes for husky, good-lookmg Carlton
F1sk
"He has made th1s dmner seven of the past e1ght years and
every tune he comes, the people here mob him," sa1d one
locallte about F1sk "They really like hun, and he patiently
answers all their questwns, but sometime durmg the everung
he's sure to break away and make Ita pomt to spend some time
w1th those afflicted k1ds He never miSses."
Carlton F1sk likes k1ds and they like him. That was perfectly
obVIous at the 28th annual Baseball Dmner for the Manchester
Uruon Leader's Chanty Fund. Fisk, who overcame a broken
arm last sprmg to help the Red Sox wm the pennant and then
squared the World Senes at three ap1ece w1th h1s stupendous
I2th-1nnmg bell-rmger before the Reds preralled 10 the seventh
game, was bemg honored at the dinner as New Hampshire's
)\lano(lf -the-Year.
' )'ve been named Male Athlete of the Year," he joked, "by
my wife ''
The 2,400 guests at the dinner laughed heartllv
There was no question how they felt about Carlton F1sk.
Tremendous ear-p1ercmg applause rocked the Armory when
the 6-foot-2, 210-pound rece1ver was mtroduced New Hamp.
sh~re w11l be the hrst state to conduct a presidential prunary 10
a few weeks and Gerald Ford of Michigan, Ronald Reagan of
Cahforma , MorriS K Udall of Arizona , Fred R Harris of
Oklahoma, J1mmy Carter of Georg1a and Senator B~rch Bayh
of Indiana all are among the candidates, but Carlton E F1sk, a
Bellows ' Falls, Vt, native, who now makes h1s home 111
Raymond, N H , probably would out-poll them all m this state
The people here go for h1m . He has a way of knock111g over
the apple-&lt;:art sometimes when he talks , say111g some things
that maybe he shouldn't, like how he thinks some of h1s Red
Sox teammates aren't workmg hard enough and how nobody
actually knows how much phys1ca! suffer111g he has gone
though, but saymg things like that doesn't disturb most of h1s
New Hampshire ne1ghbors
F1sk emerged a key figure m one of the great baseball
controversies of all tune when he and Reds' p111ch hitter Ed
ArmbriSter became entangled m tha t celebrated bunt dw-111g
the f1fth World Ser1es game last October F1sk threw Wildly to
second base, trymg to head off the runner there, after Arm·
briSter momentanly got 111 h1s way and the Reds took
advantage of that to wm the game
''I think a lot more was made of that 111terference play than
shoilld've been, by the players, the media and everyone," sa1d
F1sk "I don't th1nk 11 had that much effect on the outcome I
don't thmk it turned the s~r1es around I thought the turmng
pomt was 1n the second game when we let 'em off the hook
after a 28-mmute ra1n delay at the end of the seventh 111mng.
We had a 2-llead, but the rain gave them a chance to regroup
and they won 11, 3-2 I know we had the same chance they had,
but the ram worked as a negative effect on us We lost our
momentum"

Otterbein fifth in
Division III ratings
un chan~w 1rom last week 's
MISSION, Kan (UP!) hst111g
With Monmouth
Rollins College (Fla )
College
(N
J) (16-2) No 2
rega111ed the No. 1 spot 111
and
Lake
Supenor State
DIVIsiOn II, wh1le Coe College
College
(MICh.)
( 14-2) still
(Iowa) held on to Its
holding
down
the
No 3
leadership 111 DiVISIOn III 111
position.
this
week's
Natwnal
Collegiate
Athletic
M I SSI O N
Kan (UP ! )
Drvrs ron
I &amp;
Drvrsro n
11
Association's basketball college
basketball ratmgs a s
ratings
com pli ed by the NCAA
D IIIIS IOn II
Rollins ( 12-3) led the first
Pts
weekly rat111gs by the NCAA, School
I Rol lin s CF ia l ( 12 31
117
108
but dropped to fourth the 2 Kentu~ky Sf ( 14 2 )
J Vrrg rn ra St (\4 1)
follo101ng week, and JUmped 4 Phdadelph ra Te xt ile IPa95)
to th1s week's leadership
( 14?)
84
82
after occupying the No 3 slot 5 Tennessee St ( 15 4)
6 Nrcholls St {La l (16 11 78
last week.
7 F tor rda So ut he rn (15 2) 69
Florida Southern College 8 Wrnston Salem 51 INC J
3)
62
(1&gt;-2), leader in Division II 9(16North
Oal&lt;ota ( JS 3)
48
the past two weeks, dropped 10 North Alabama I 14 31 40
DIVISIOn Ill
to seventh m this week 's poll
School
Pis
Kentucky State University
1 Coeflowa J IJSOl
170
2 Monmouth I N J J (16 2 1 112
(14-2) 1s No 2, up from fourth
3 Lake Supen or 51 ( Mr c h )
last week.
(1421
96
95
Coe
increased
1ts 4Scranton 1Pa ) fl35l
fOtilo) (IS 3)
91
undefeated str111g to liHl and 65 Otterbem
Alaska , Farrban k s ( 17 3) 76
heads the DIVISion III ra lings 7 Ashland IOhro l { 14 J J
73
for the second consecullve 8 Wrllenberg IOhrol ( 13 2 J 65
9 W•den e r ( Pa ) (13 5)
60
week The top three slots are
10 Glassboro St (N J J (13
4J

40

COLUMBUS, Oh10 (UP!) Tom Cutter, Western Ml·
ch1gan's fMl JuniOr center who
led the Broncos to a pa1r of
unportant league wms last
"eek, has been unan1r11ously
selected the M1d-Amen ca n
Confe1 ence player of the
1\eek
Cutler, of Lafayette, Ind,
Central Catholic H1gh School,
scored 36 pomts and hauled
down 26 rebounds 111 VIctories
over M1am1 and OhiO UmverSity, but 11 was more the way
m wh1ch he scored those 36
po111ts
Cutter, the MAC's leadinR
TRIALS ON SUNDAY
The Me1gs County Reagle
Club '"" hold its Southern
Federation Derby Trial
this Sunda) Feb 8 on lhe
club grounds The tnals
"'11 st•rt at 8 a.m. and
breakfast "Ill be served
bel ore the Ina! Lunch "111
also be served.
Anyone mtere s ted in
fwld tr1al bcaglmg ts Ill·

BlOCKING OUT - Me1gs Marauderlasses have
Athens about boxed out 111 th1s scramble for the ball
Monday ng1ht when Me1gs girls defeated Athens High
g1rls 38-29 to remam undefeated No 22 1s Beth Vaughan
andNo 101sPamVaughan - JlmHammplcture

v1ted to attend. The r!ub
grounds is located bark of
Harrisonv.llc oil Rt 143
For more mformatwn on
the Mc1 gs County Bt'agle

Club rontaet Frankhn
Wilson at 949-2322.
·.· ..•: : ::· :: :: .':':'• :·. :: • :· ·:·:· :·:· ·= ···::

f1eld goal percentage shooter,
hit on 15 of 18 shots 111 the two
games, mcludmg 8 of 8 111 the
battle lor f1rst place against
M1am1 He had 20 pomts, 11
rebounds, three ass1sts and a
pa1r of blocked shots aga1nst
the Redskins
In the OU game, Cutter hit
7 of LO from the held, pulled
dol\ n 15 rebounds , had three
ass1sts and also blocked two
shots
Other nom111ees for th1s
week's honor were J1m F1elds
of Ball State; Russ Dav1s of
Central M1ch1gan, Dan Hoff
of Eastern Michigan, Corteze
Brown of Kent State; Archie
Aldr~dge of M1am1, Matt
H1cks of Northern lllmOIS,
Mike Corde of Oh10
Uruvers1ty and Larry Cole of
Toledo Bowl111g Green had
no nommee.
Ohto H 1gh School
Scores
E a st Canton 55 Mm erva J 6
Sandy ,VaHey 54 Cla'tl mo nt 39
Lake 69 Tuslaw 6 1
Carr o l l ton 75 NorT hw es t 46
North G all 1a 79 W aha ma ( W
Va J 61
V1n ton Coun ty 87 Tr 1mb le 6 !
Southern CM e1 g sJ 7 t Ea ste rn
{ M eigs) 31
Bexley 57 Co l R eaoy 411
Col Central 80 Co l E as t mo or
71
Col East 67 COl M1ftlln 58
CoiLmden 93 Col Brookhaven

59

Col Mar1on •Frank l1n 59 Co l
So uth 57

By RICK DU BROW
SAN FRANCISCO (UP! )Baseball fans who want the
San Francisco G1ants to stay
and owners who would move
the club north of the border
still awaited a Judge 's word
today on whether there w11I
be an extenswn of an
inJunction that prevenf-'1 sale
of the NatiOnal League team.
Supenor Court Judge John
E.
Benson
Tuesday
postponed his deeiswn on the
city's request to extend an
inJunCtion that stops sale of
the G1ants to a Canadian
group in Toronto Backed by
Mayor George Moscone, the
city seeks a buyer who would
keep the club here.
Benson indiCated
to
newsmen
outside
the
courtroom that his deciSIOn
would probably be made
w1th1n the next few days too soon for the City to fmd a
buyer w1ll111g to keep the club
m California.
While ins1de the courtroom,
Benson had asked attorneys
for the club and the city of
San Francisco if they could
let his decisiOn " ride" for as
long as two or three weeks.
C1ty Attorney Thomas
O'Connor naturally agreed,
but attorneys for the club and
the NatiOnal League sa1d no
San Francisco seeks lime
to determ111e whether an $11
million offer from former
sports entrepreneur Robert
Short IS VIable. But Giants'
owners are opposed, warnmg

Home team in
winning rally
RACINE - Coach Connee
Andrews ' Souther n High
G1rls Team p1cked up the1r
second v1ctory w1thout a loss •
Tuesday when Kyger Cree k
came here . The home gals
won 54-35
Kyger Creek led 8·6 at lhe
f~rst buzzer, but by half-hm c
Southern's offense wa s
beg111mng to move as &lt;h ey
went 1nto the locker room
leadmg 22-16 They blew 1!
open 111 the third pen od ,
outscormg the losers 17-8
Jean
R1tchhart
led
Southern w1th 18 pomts
Che ryl l.arkms had 12 and
Brenda l.1mrence 10 Mary
Rollins of Ky ger led all
scorers w1th 23
s
6223954
KC
8 )(, 24 .15

that the 1916 season IS nearly
here , contracts must be
signed and team traveling
schedules must be finalized
- either in Canada or
Califorma .
In addition, the G1ants have
no manager or co&amp;ches - a
comodity
they
will
undoubtedly need if they're to
open spring training in two
weeks.
After O'Connor made his
appeal for the extension of
the mjunction, Benson asked
the attorney If he could
respond to the v1ew that "the
Giants are on the verge of
financial disaster "
O'Connor sa1d the Giants
were
not
bankrupt,
cons1der111g that there was a
bonafide offer from Short
However, Benson said,
f111anc1al records mdicated
the team had lost more than
$6 million m eight years, all
its cash reserves were
e&lt;hausted, 11 had borrowed to
a lurut of $1 nullion from the
Bank of America and 1ts
liabilities exceeded 1ts assets
by $2 million as of December

Co l North 79 Col Wes t 78
Col Whet s to ne 64 Col No r lh
land 56
F ran k i m Ht s 8'2 T eay s Val l ey

55

AMARILLO, Tex. (UPI) - Parker County officials say bond lor Pittsburgh Sleeter
defensive tackle Ernie Holmes on a cocaine possession charge was set at $1,000 because they
beheve he will return for court If ordered.
Police arrested Holmes Saturday in a motel restroom and charged him with possession of
250 mtU1grams of cocaine. At his arraignment Tuesday he posted $1,000 bond and left town to
attend a Fellowship of Christian Athletes meeting in Phoenix, Ariz.
The bond was set at $1,000 followiog an argument between District Attorney Tom Curlis
and Justice of the Peace Roy Byrd. Byrd had wanted a bond of $100,1100 set because he d1d not
believe Holmes would return for further court appearances. Curtis argued the bond was
excessive and would be reduced on appeal.

NBA refuses to merge
By STEVE WH..STEIN
UP! Sports Writer
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Player hberahon, yes.
Merger, no
Those were the dec1s1ons of
the NatiOnal Basketball As·
socmtion owners Tuesday as
the players agreed to accept
an ou\-(1£-&lt;:ourt settlement of
the
6-year-old
Oscar
Robertson antitrust su1t with
new freedom rules that may
"change the whole future of
sports "
Shortly afterward,
however,
Commtsswner
Larry O'Bnen announced the
league was ready to fight
another $3 rrulhon swt rather
than merge w1th· the
Amer1can Basketball
AsSOCia liOn
After stat111g for weeks that
the settlement of the players'
class action sUit would clear
the way for merger negotla·
lions, O'Bnen sa1d, "At th1s
time, the NBA Board of
Governors IS unequivocally
opposed to merger or
consolidatiOn with the ABA "
NBA owners obviously are
hopmg the ABA , wh1ch has
lost three of 1ts 10 learns to
fmanc1al rum already th1s
year and the Virgmia Squires
on the verge of becommg the

fourth, w1ll see 1.,; fm• •
demise soon
The NBA owners feel conf•·
dent they can successfully
meet the challenge of a swt
by the ABA Should the ABA
fold, the NBA owners will be
wa1tmg eagerly to snap up 1ts
players 1n a barga111 sale
The proposed 10-year
settlement With the players IS
both
hi stone
and
complicated
The three key 1ssues are:
I. Elunmat1on begmrung at
the end of next season of the
controversial option clause
1or reserve clause, as II IS
called in other sports)
bmding a player to a team
one year beyond the actual
term of h1s contract
However, a rookie signing for
only one year w1ll still have a
one-year option clause on t"'
theory that 11 may take two
years for a team to evaluate a
new player's talent and
worth
2 Begmnmg m 1980, the
ex1stmg compensatiOn plan
1sunllar to football's Rozelle
Rule) will be replaced by the
"rlght of f~rst refusal," 111
which a team with a player,
whose contract has expired,
w11l have the opportumty for
30 days to match another

team's offer. If the Original
team refuses to match the
offer, the second team must
g1ve 1t no compensation. Over
the next four years, the
compensahon rule w1ll
remam 111 effect
3 Beg1nn111g llllmedlately
with this year's coflege draft,
a player who falls within a r
year to s1gn w1th the team
selectmg him IS subJect to
another draft If two years
pass without hiS s1gn111g, he
becomes a free agent
These three conoesswns by
the owners represent a nearly
complete victory by the
players and are the Critical
parts of a still-mcomplete
total collective barga1mng
contract between the owners
and the Players Association
The players had hoped to
•solate the gams they won 111
regard to the Robertson swt
, from collective bargaining
for a new contract but the
Natwnal Labor RelatiOns
Board ruled against the
players on that Issue by
declarmg , them part of the
collective bargaimng process. Thus the entire !().year
package will not ~ finalized
until other aspects are
solved
'

The US team of 120 was
the largest contmgent among
the estlf118ted 1,500 athletes
drawn from 36 countries
Cmd y Ne !son, a pnme
prospect for an Alpme medal,
earned the American Oag
But perhaps the proudest of
the Amencans wa s the 18man hocke y tea m which
defeated Yugoslavia, 8-4,
Tuesday evenmg to qualify
for the champwnsh•p bracket
and an opemng match with
the SoVIet Umon, a 16-3 victor
over Austna
The Iun1ted schedule today
called for the f1rst round of
1ce danc111g 111 the figure
skat111g competitiOn and the
f~rst runs 111 the men's and
women's luge
The hockey team worked
SIX months to get 111to the
tournament and afterwards
Coach Bob Johnson sa1d, "!
ca n honestly say that I don 't
thmk I've ever been so scared
of a game 111 19 years of

coaching. You play almost 60
games to get to the Olympics,
and then it all comes down to
60 m111utes of hockey "
The f1rst real medal chance
comes Thwsday when two·
lime world spnnt champiOn
She1la Young takes the start
111 the 1,500 meters.;;peed
skating event along w1th
teammate Leah Poulos
Nelson , getting edgy and
more withdrawn as her
competition approaches, gets
her first chance for a medal
Sunday m the women 's
downhill She fell on her first
run
dunng
Tuesday's
pra ctice but fmished with the
eighth fastest t1r11e m the
second.
"I don't want to talk to
anyone," she sa1d after
completing tra111mg. "If I wm
a medal, I'll talk to
everyone' '
In the 1ce dancmg Colleen
O'Connor and partner Jim
Mills hope to spht two

season
But he sa1d
some
111d1viduals m1ght sue 1f they
are placed 111 the expansion
pool and taken by the two new
teams
Garvey sa1d, "The association will not get involved even
though an mdiVIdual rrught .
Most player representatives
feel we should not impose any
obstacles."
He noted that probably a
predommant majonty of
players selected by Tampa
Bay or Seattle would be

for comment, Robert Brown,
a member of the local law
firm
that
represents
Robertson, said he had
discussed the setUement with
the " Big 0" and Robertson
had told him, "I'm pleased."
Because Robertson headed
the players group when the
suit was filed m 1970, the case

2

Heidelberg semor Mark
Chrislip hasn't missed
starUng a single game for the
Student Princes smce scor111g
32 points in hiS frrst~tring
debut as a freshman.
The 6-1, l~und guard 's
endurance paid off Tuesday
rught when he bounded over
the 1,000-pomt mark against
Mount Umon The SeVIlle
nat1ve tallled 22 po111ts for a
career total of 1,011 m leading
Heidelberg to a 7U2 Ohio
Conference overtime v1ctory.
In other games involving
OhiO college teams, Baldwin·
Wallace defeated Wooster 6964, Wittenberg downed
Kenyon 59·53, Otterbem
stopped Capital 81-69,
Findlay whipped Anderson
115-80, Tiffin topped Cedar.
VIlle 95-82, Urbana clobbered
Mount Vernon Nazarene 121·
87 and Manchester outlasted
Wilmington 97-93 m an extra
penod.
" I was fairly pleased w1th
the game overall, pleased
that they came out shooting
well 1n the overtlflle and
playing
good
defen se
throughout the whole game,
but I would like to have seen
better shooting dunng
regulatiOn play," sa1d
Pr111ces coach Dave Grube
"Overall, I was glad to see
the team hang together and
wm
after
two
very
d1sappo1nt1ng conference

losses (to Oh10 Nort.r.ern by
one point and to Oberlin by
silt pomts last week) ," Grube
S81d.

W1th the score tied 58-58 at
the end of regulatwn play,
Heidelberg reeled off 10
unanswered po111ts at the
start of the overtune penod.
Chuck Walker added 12
Student Prmces markers,
ChriS Reichert 11 and Dave
W1nck 10.
Mount was led by Don
Fnedrich and Art Kunkle
with 14 po111ts each and Ed
Pohjala w1th II.
Heidelberg 1s now 10-6
overall and 5-3 111 the league.
The Raiders are 6-10 for all
games and 3-5 aga111st confer·
ence opposition
Rob Wmton scored 17
points and grabbed mne
rebounds Tuesday to lead
BaldwinWallace to its come·
frombehind OhiO Conference
VIctory over Wooster
Wooster led 38-32 at
halft1r11e but went scoreless
for e1ght and one-half
rrunutes early 111 the second
penod. The F1ght1ng Scots
were ahead 44·35 and then
tra1led 47-44 before they
f111ally got another basket
Preston Burroughs had 16
points to top Wooster
The v1ctonous Yellow
Jackets are now 3-4 111 the
conference Wooster 1s 4-4 m
the OAC

Wittenberg's Tigers,
beh1nd
the
22-polnt
performance of Tom Dunn
and 13 points by RICk White,
defeated Kenyon for the 22nd
consecutive t1r11e
The Lords took a 43-42 lead
With 9:32 rema111mg m the
game, but Wittenberg
rega111ed the advantage for
good w1th 6 14 left on a Jump
shot by Dllnn.
Kenyon was paced by T1m
Appleton with 17 po111ts and
Mark Leonard With 14.
The 'l'lgersarenow 14-2 and
the Lords 9-10 The game d1d
not count in the Ohio Conference diVISional stand111gs
Otterbem, ranked fifth th1s
week 1n NCAA D1vls1on Ill,
picked
up 1ts mnth
consecutive VICtory with the
OhiO Conferenee wm over
Capital Tuesday mght
Dave Bromley had 20
po1nts and Ed Williams 13 for
the w1nn111g Card111als, 16-3
overall and ~ m the OAC.
Otterbem led all the way,
111cludmg a 37·30 halftlllle
advantage.
Jim Cloud and RICky Lee
each had 18 po111ts for
Capital, 12·9overall and 2-5111
the OAC.
F111dlay forward Dale
Creager bounced back from
an 111JUry last week to pop 111
24 points and lead the Oilers
to their Hoos1er-Buckeye
Conference
w1n
over

Anderson.
Ed Urbamak and Dan
Grothouse added 18 points
apiece for Fmdlay, 7-4 m the
league and IU overall
The Ravens, 3-10 m the
CirCUit and &gt;15 agalllSt all
comers, were paced by guard
Jeff Jenness' 21 markers and
Jim Scolby's 13
01lers
coach
J1m
Houdeshell went to h1s bench
and put four junior varsity
players in the game after his
team took a 25-point lead w1th
5 30 left to play.
R1ck Blasllck scored 29
points, mcluding a half dozen
m overtime, to lead
Manchester to 1ts HoosierBuckeye Conference v1ctory
over Wilmington.
The host Spartans ralbed
from a 45-39 halftime deflc1t
to take a two-point lead with
I 40 to go in the game before
Bryan
Bicke rstaff
deadlocked the score 82-82
w1th I :05 remam10g.
Manchester missed Its shot
for a winner 10 the Glosmg
seconds.
The
v1ctory
ra1sed
Manchester's league mark to
7-5 and its overall slate to 118.
Wilmin gton , led by 19
points each from Bob Blanton
and B1ll Shoecraft, 1s 1·11 111
the HBC and 2-19 for all
games.

East topples West, 123-109
The Daily Sentintlo
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PHILADELPHIA ( UPI) There was v1rtual agreement
among NBA All-star players
and coaches - as well as
among MVP voters- tha t
Washington Bullet Da ve Bmg
was the Most Valuable
Player of the East-West
ClaSSIC Tuesday
The most notable doubter
was Dave B111g himself. He
sa1d before the game he
hadn't even felt worthy of
bemg chosen to h1s seventh
All-8\ar team, let alone the
All-stars' all-star
And he didn't seem to feel
any different after he scored
16 second-half pomts and
rallied the East to a 123-109
VICtory over the West, the
conference's 17th 10 the 26year series.
..
"I felt very fortunate to be
selected to the team because
there were lots of other

outstanding guards 111 the
East who deserved to be
here/' smd Bmg, among the
top vote-getters of the 10
starters chosen by the fans
The coaches picked the
rema111111g 14 players
" I've been an All..Star s1x
times and there are other
guys 11 would have meant a
lot to ," Bing co ntmu ed
"When I came here
yesterday, the MVP never
crossed my mind All I
wanted to do was do my best
and play on the w111mng
team."
Bmg h1mself was the key to
that goal
The East, gwlty of sloppy
and maccurate shoot111g the
f1r st half, was tra1llng, 5().45,
when
B111g
prov1ded
1nsp~rat•on With a l().po111t
third-quarter productiOn and

some savvy quarterbacking
· I thought he tu rned it
around," sa1d losmg West
Coach AI Attles of Golden
Stale
" I think B111g really controlled the game," agreed
East Coach Tom Hemsohn of
Boston " He made it happen
and (Buffalo's Bob) Mc(ldoo
found the hole. "
McAdoo scored 22 pomts to
share game-scormg honors
w1th Kareem Abdul.Jabbar
but flmshed a distant second
to B111g 111 the MVP ballot111g
McAdoo , a crowd favorite,
didn 't obJect
" I agree that Bmg deserves
the MVP," he sa1d " He kept
the b1g guys happy by dishmg
the ball off "
Both teams presented loose
defenses and suffered from
lengthy cold spells. The All·
Stars tended to blame th1s on

the lack of expenence on the
two squads, A record 11
players were playmg 111 their
first league class1c, the
majority of them for the
West
Barry's steal and threepoint play at the end of the
second stanza capped a West
rally that resulted 111 1ts
halftune lead.
Then the West went cold
"It was a well-played ball
game except for a stretch m
the th1rd penod when we
couldn't hit the broad s1de of
the barn
the ball JUSt
wouldn't go down," sa1d All·
les.11
But Attles took 111 stnde h1s
second loss m as many allstar coach111g appearances
" I hope they kee~ mv1t111g
me back until I get 11 nght,"
he sa1d Iaugh111g.

Wolfpack trims Clemson five, 97-89
Russ1an teams, who have
won the world title SIX times
between them m the last SIX
years
Ljudm1Ia Pakhomova and
Alexander Gorschkov, a husband and w1fe team who won
the world champfonship betw een 1970-74, are the
favontes.
The luge team w1ll have
achieved a maJor success 1f 11
can avoid last place
- Life.;;ize ice sculptures are
the welcomiog committee for
the Nordic competitors.
Sculptures of a mountain
goat, a woman hold1og the
OlympiC torch and a stnding
cross-&lt;:ountry skier look out
over a spectacular Alp111e
VISta and pose obligingly for
photographers.
"It's my hobby ," said
Engelbert Hattenberger, a
wroughtiron worker from
Uenz in the Tyrol

willing to JOI11 the new teams.
Garvey sent letters to NFL
Commissioner Pete Rozelle
and to congressmen from
Arkansas, Mississippi,
Tennessee and Alabama,
spellmg out the associatiOn's
position on expansion.
The letter said: " We favor
... expansion because, among
other reasons, additional
teams will mean new
positions and additional
employment opportuniUes
for professiOnal football
players."

Big '0' is pleased with settlement
CINCINNATI (UPI) Oscar Robertson, whose
name has always been linked
with the NBA Players
Association anhtrust suit
agamst the NBA, was
reported " pleased" with
Tuesday's out-of-court
settlement.
Although Robertson could
not immediately be reached

Tiffin, Urbana triumph!sta!';:. s!

58

Union will not oppose '76 draft
WASHINGTON (UPI ) 'rhe pro football players
union extended an oll ve tw1g
to the owners today by
announcmg 11 would not
oppose an expansiOn draft of
veterans.
Etl Garvey, executive
director of the NFL Players
Association,
said
the
orgamzation would avoid any
legal challenge to the
league's plan to draft veteran
players out of a pool to stock
the two new teams, Tampa
Bay and Seattle, for the 1976

r ___ --_-----I r--:~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!~~~~===~:---1

Gahanna 73 Whtle h al l 66
Grandv•ew 83 West Jefferson

American hockey team successful
By MIKE HUGHES
foothills of the Alps and promised a no-fnlls 12-day
UPI Executive Sports Ed1tor already the Amencan hockey competition Fulfillment of
INNSBRUCK,
Austna team has registered a maJor that prom1se bega n with
fUPI) - The Olympic Games success
today's s1mple 90-mmute
that were to have been held 111
Innsbruck stepped m after ceremony pres1ded over by
Denver opened today 1n th1s the games had been reJected Federal President Dr Rudolf
Tyrolean town nest1111g 111 the by the c1t1zens of Denver and K~rchschlaeger.
-:·:-:-:-~:·: :-:-::·:~·!·!·! :·:·::::: ::·: :· : ·:: :: ·:: ·: ·:: .:: ::... :..:..:·:·····:·:·:···:·:·:···:·::·:::~·:::::::::::::::::::::·::::::::·:::~~~·:::::;·:':':·:;-m:-:·:·:·:·:-:·:

5- TIE Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , WWnesday, ~·eb. 4, W76

has come to be known as the
"Oscar Robertson suit."
Robertson, who starred at
the University of Cincinnati
and later with the old
Clnclnna II Royals of the
NBA, now makes h1a home
here and heads a construction
company, Oscar Robertson &amp;
Associates.

United Press lnlernational
North Carolina State, the
lOth-ranked tea m 111 the
nation, 1s considered an
unlikely participant m the
NCAA playoffs.
But Wolfpack Coach Norm
Sloan, whose team IS not
expected to heat out either
North Carolina or Maryland

High school notes.

for one of the two Atlantic
Coast Conference berths 111
the championship tourney,
had a word of warnmg
Tuesday mght for those
over!ook111g N C State.
Follow111g the Wolfpack's
97.j)9 victory over Clemson,
Sloan said, "Maybe we:re
better than some of you folks

Texas Tech rema111ed a
The VIctory over the Tigers half-game beh111d the Agg1es
was N C State'sflfth in seven at 11-2 with an 86-78 tr1umph
ACC games. Thrrd-ranked over Arkansas. The Raiders,
North Carolma has lost only p!aymg without two regulars
one conference game, but hospitalized w1th the flu,
that was to the Wolfpack on were led by Mike Russell's 23
the Tar Heel's homecourt m points.
SMU
Improved
liS
Chapel H•ll
And Maryland currently IS conference record to 8-3 with
saddled
w1th
three a 108-71 romp over R1ce ,
conference losses , although w111Iess in the SWC Ira
..
the Terps won each regular Terrell led the Mustangs with
season meeting w1th the 23 po1nts.
Wolfpack by 18 po111ts.
TCU edged Baylor,~. 1n
W1th 6-foot-7 sophomore the other conference game
Kenny Carr capable of some Tuesday night
exceptional mghts, though,
Ron Norwood scored 31
the Wolfpack are a threat to pomts to lead DePaul to an 89any team. He scored 38 po111ts 75 victory over Duquesne
111 leading the Wolfpack past
In other games, Providence
deleated Brown, 81-59, Okpo111ts and m1ke 20 to lead the the Tigers.
Carr connected on 15-&lt;lf·23 lahoma State edged Phillips,
attack
Sebrmg rang up 1ts 62nd shots and from the foul !me 65-&amp;4, and Air Force topped
Northern Colorado, 66-46
straight home court VIctory made good on lk&gt;f-12
In
the
Southwest
under coach RICk Bro;;k
Friday
night, burying Conference race, Texas A&amp;M
Southern
Local
96-63. ma1ntamed its sllfll lead with
OXFORD, Ohio (UP!) Domm1c Corb1sello led the an 85-69 VIctory over Texas
while
Texas
Tech
and
SMU
Mike
Domemco, the MIBml
way for the Trojans with 30
remained
1n
close
purswt.
Uruveristy
football player m·
pomts
Freshman
Karl
Godme
Jured
when
struck by a car
Groveport (12-1), tradmg
scored
24
pomts
and
seruor
last
weekend,
was listed m
42-33 at the end of three
Sonny
Parker
added
21
to
"serious"
condition
Tuesday
quarters Friday night,
lead
the
Aggtes
to
their
eighth
at
a
nearby
hosp1tal
exploded for 36 pomts 111 the
Despite the "serious"
final e1ght mmutes lor a 69-56 VICtory m n111e conference
games.
liSting,
officials at Mercy
wm over Hilliard. Mike
Rogers, Frankl111 County's
leading scorer, sat out half
the contest with foul trouble,
but scored 10 of his 16 po111ts
lop scorer 111 the 1930's, the
SPRINGFIELD, Mass
m the f111al quarter as d1d UP! - Bill Sharman and Tom Hall 's Honors Committee
forward Jeff W1lls.
Gola, • two stars from the announced Tuesday
Ironton assured itself of at NBA's setshot era , have heen
least a share of the elected to the Nahonal
Southeastern Oh•o League Basketball Hall of Fame.
champiOnship ~riday mght
Also selected were Harry
With a 61-67 VIctory over Litwack, Temple's coach for
RIO DE JANEIRO, ( UPI l
Me1gs The wm was the 14th 20 years, and Notre Dame - The "Ch1ca Tic a" of Costa
10 a row lor the Tigers, led 111
Rica had the best corrected
scoring by Ed Howard 's 20 Ath!ehc D~rector Edward time Tuesday, accordmg to
"Moose" Krause, the Irish's
pomts.
the official list of the first 47
Kent Roosevelt reeled of 18
yachts to croSs the fmishline
straight third quarter pomts
of
the Capetown-RIO race .
Friday night enroute to a 74- Mogadore to an ~ victory
Chlca
T1ca, skippered by C
65 v1ctory over Ravenna. The over Streetsboro. Vaughn, diMottola, had 1ts corrected
who also hauled down 13
Rough Riders twned a tight rebounds,
scored 25 of his time calculated at 16 days,
35-34 game into a 53-34 spread
f1ve hours, 13 minutes and 19
With the W~Jrl. Ravenna, ~Hi, total m the second half when seconds.
had the upper hand the rest of the Wildcats overcame a 32The second best time so far
the way, but the nearly five- 29 intermission defiCit
was
registered by Cloud
Second rank•d 1AA )
minute dry spell was too
N1rr
oi South Africa Tllird
much for the Ravens to Delphos St. John's p1ckeo up W'tS Red Amber of South
victories 13 and 14 ov~r. tiE
overcome
ilfnca and Verwoerdberg ,
Jumor Bert Vaughn scored weekend but not wlthbut a a!so of South Africa, was
a career h1gh 40 po1nts Saturday night scare from tour th.
Saturday mght 111 leadmg Fort Wayne (Ind.) Elmhurst.
thmk."

Timberlake., Best
.pace Lincoln five
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Ohio
high school basketball notes
from around the state.
Art T1r11berlake, of Canton
Uncoln, scored 68 points in a
pair of Lion VICtories over the
weekend to take over the
scoring leadership of Stark
County. Timberlake tallied 35
Friday mght as Lmcoln
downed Cuyahoga Falls 61Hil
and 33 Saturday mght 111 an
8HI6 win over Youngstown
South.
The &gt;-ll junior now has 3n
points m 16 games, while
teammate Kevm Best has
386. Canton Tlmken's S-7
Mike Miday, held to 15 m a 7674 win over Ravenna
Saturday night, IS third With
_ 358. Miday , however, has
• played one less game and
leads In average with 23 9 to
23.6 for Timberlake and 22 9
lor the 6-5 Best.
Defending Class A state
champion Manon Local, With
four returning regulars, fell
lor the thlrd ume in !3 games
Friday night and the second
time this season to St Henry,
53-60. The Flyers led 42-35
'IIDI.r!8 into the final quarter,
but were outscored 18-8 111 the
'!Ina! eight minutes
· Unbeaten Bellefontaine
hitting on all cylmders
Friday night In a 94-43 victory
'over a good London club (104) The Chieftains, hard
pressed to win 53-61 earlier in
' the season at London, rolled
to a 60-15 halftime margin 111
;posting their 14th straight
Win Dan Shumaker scored 26

was

,.

N BA Standmgs
By Untted Press International
E•stern Conference
Atlant1c D•v•s•on
W L Pet
GB
Boston
34 13 123
Buffalo
30 '10 600 5 1
Phile~d e lph•a

79 70

592

6

New York
24 27 471
Central OIVISIOft

12

W L Pet
GB
Wa shmgton
28 21 57 1
Cle veland
'J7 22 55 1 1
Hous ton
23 23 500 3 1 1
Atlanta
24 25 490 4
NeW Orl ean s 22 24 478 4' 1
western Conference
Midwest OiVI510ft
W L Pet
GB
Milwaukee
20 29 408 1 ;
De tro II
18 28 391
Kansas C1ty
IB 31 367
2
Ch•cago
14 34 292
51 ~
PaCifiC DIVISIOn

W. L

Pet

Golden St at e
35
Los Angeles
25
Seattle
23
Portland
22
PhOe nu(
19
Tuesday's

13 729
25 500
26 469
27 449
27 41 3
Result
All Star Game
Ea st 123 west 109
Wednesday ' s Games
(No games scheduled )
Thursday's Games
Detr011 at Atlanta
New Orlean s at Houston
Los Angeles at K an City
(Only games scheduled)

GB
11
12 1 1
IJ' •
15

8 AM-10 PM

MON.-SAT.

JO A.M.-1 0 P.M. SUNDAY

Prices Effective
298 SECOND ST.

Thru Feb. 7, 1976

POMEROY, OHIO

ABA Standtng s
By Un1ted Press lnt~rnat•on al
W L Pet GB
Denver
3J 12 739
New York
30 · 17 639
4' 1
Kentucky
29 21 580
7
San Anton1o
27 20 574
7' 1
lnd 1ana
26 24 520 10
St LOU IS
2 1 29 420 15
Vlfg 1n 1a
8 39 170 26' ~

Kentuc!~elsl~a~;s ~o~~~~~~ '
San Anton o 118 lnd•Ma ll 2
Wedn esday 's Games
New Yo rk it! St LOUIS
V 1rg 1n1a at Denver
Kentucky at lnd •ana
Thur sday's Game
New Yo rk at Sa n Anton•o
NH L srandmgs
By Uneted Press International
Campbell Conference
Palnck DIVI SIOn
W L T Pts gf ga
Phda
30 10 10 70 216 142
NY lldr s
27 12 10 64 194 114
Atlanta
24 23 a 56 179 165
NY Rng r s
19 26 6 44 165 2 10
Smythe DIVIS IOn
W L T Pts gt ga
Ch1cago
21 14 16 58 157 tJ5
Vn cu vr
20 20 10 so 167 163
18 25 7 43 156 177
Sf LOU IS
Mmn
16 30 ~ 36 126 175
Kan C1ty
11 35 5 21121 224
Wales conferenc e
Norns DIVISIOn
W L T Pis gf ga
Montreal
36 7 8 80 210 110
Los Ang
28 22 3 59 176 173
Pttsbgh
2024 7 47 2o1:wo
Detro1 t
16 28 7 39 135 192
Wa sh
5 42 5 15 141 266
Adaf1lS DIV ISIOn
W L T Pi s gf ga
Boston
31 10 9 71 193 142
Buffalo
28 15 B 64 218 151
Toronto
~ 1 20 10 52 172 175
Calif
19 27 5 43 1.54 167
T uesday 's R es ults
Atlanta 2 NY Islanders 2
Cali forn ia 4 St LOU IS 4
Va n co u ver 2 Buffalo 1
Wednesday 's Gam es
NY l slndrs at NY Rangers
Ca l1f0rn1a at A t lanta
Ch1 cago at Montreal
Wash mgton at Toronto
M1nnesota a t Detro t
St LO UIS at Kan C1ly
Buffalo at Los Angel es
Thursday 's Games
vancouver at Ph 1la
PittSburgh at Boston
(Onl y games SGhedulcd)

Baby Be~f

']3'
9
ROUND STEAK ••~~·••••
Superiors Wieners
79e
12 oz.

FRANKl E.S •••••P~·•••

WHA Standmgs
B y Un1ted Press International
East
W L T Ph gf ga
23 2 4 5 51 165 175
New Eng
Cleve
20 25 • J 44 168180
C1nc1
21 29 I 43 189 228
lndpls
19 29 2 40 IJ 6 157
Wes t
W L T Pts hg ga
Houston
32 18 0 64 209 173
Mmn
25 20 3 53171 175
San D1ego
24 22 4 52 200 178
23 20 5 51 181 169
Phoen1 x
Canad1an
W L T Pis gf ga
Wnn1pg
36 19 0 72 226 154
Quebec
32 16 3 67 231 197
Ca lgary
26 2 1 2 54 186 158
Edmntn
20 31 3 43 188 226
Toronto
15 30 5 35 206 248
x Ottawa
14 26 I 29 134 172
x Team disbanded
Tuesday's Results
Houston 8 M inn eso ta J
Quebec 5 Wtnn1peg 4
Calgary 3 C~ncmnat1 2
Edmon ton 4 New Eng 0
Wednesday 's Gam es
Cleve lan d al Phoen x
M 1nnesota at San D1 ego
Thursday's Gam es
New England at Calgary
Quebec at lndla napol ts
Edmonton at Phoen1x

Domenico in serious condition

Select 4 for hall of fame

STORE HOURS

Hospital 111 Hamilton sa1d
they were encouraged
because Domeruco had a
"fairly good mght" Monday
night He is bemg treated 1n
the hospttaPs intensive care
un1t
Domemco, 21, a Junior from
Washmgton Court House,
Ohio, suffered two broken
legs, a deep cut on h1s
forehead and a severe
concussion when struck by an
auto at 4 a.m Saturday as he
walked along U S 27 near
campus.
The driver of the car, who
has not been cited, said
Domenico crossed the road in
front of him. The accident
rema1ns
under
investigation
Domenico, called by coach
Dick Crum "very intelligent
and a very deep th111ker,"
was used as a messenger
guard and backup center on
the Miami football team
Crum sa1d he feared
Domenico's football career
was through because of the
accident

9e
CRACKERS•• }~ ~·.~:
All
9
9
e
POTATOES ••••••~~.~~~.
Keebler's Zesla

1

Purpose
COUPON

BATH SIZE

FLOUR

DIAL SOAP
Save

48c

4

L1m1l I Coupon Per Custom
Good at Powell's Super Valu
Coupon Exp1res. 2-7-76

COUPON

COUPON

. ·I
10 oz .
Jar

:-~I

Coupon ·

.

.· 1' I

. ·I

:~

Groveport 51 OelawMe 41
Ham l ll on Twp 85 Marysvill e

75

H1ll l ard 65 Co\ W es tla nd 61
Otentang y 60 Dutl•n ~1
wa sh1 nqton C H 59 London Sl

•••

NAPKINS
Reg. 14.99
Pkg. of 4

$J§9w,th
Coupon

mit 1 Coupon Per Customer
mil 1 Coupon Per Customer:
)tc;oo'd
Powell's Super Valu , - )G,ood at Powell's Super Valu
1 Coupon Expires. 2-7-76 •
res. 2-7-7 6
·

�' '

6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, •'eb. 4, 197ti

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy ,0., Wednesday, Feb. t, 1971

Auxiliary plans
several projects
A del egat e to Bu ckeye
Girls' State was selected and
se vera l proj ects
wer e
plan ned at a recent mee tin ~
of the American

Legi on

Auxiliary of Feeney-Benne!!
Post 128 at the hall .
The name of the junior girl
selected to attend Girls' State
which again this year will be
held ~n June at Ca pit al
University , Columbus. will be
announced · later. Currently
the unit is cont ac tin g
organizations who migh t
serve as co-sponsors for
additional students.
The unit discussed the Feb .
19 community service party
to be held at the Athens
Mental Health Center by the
junior auxiliary and made
arrangements to assist with
tha t. Approximately 40
women will attend and
already the unit has gifts for
them. However, items for gift
r;Packages for the men are
~ needed . Several members of
1. the unit will attend .
Cancelled stamps, bottle
..caps and Christmas cards are
..,still to be collected for special
~projects . It was reported that
P,$25 worth ·· of good used
~clothing had been donated for
"needy children of the Rutland
;::u,ea, and that clothin g, linens
:.Od food, valued at $150 had
:l&gt;een prov ided for several
'1amilies who lost their homes
by fire.
Used .men's clothing has
been sent to Sand usky ·
Veterans Hospital along with
shaving cream and razor
blades. A package of gifts
was also .sent to Miller's
Cottage at Dayton.
Thank-you notes were read
~fr o m Ve teran s Mem ori al

t

tin gton, Cincinna ti , Brecks-

Each one was sent a package
valued at $90.

report was given on the
December birthday party at
th e Chillicoth e Veterans
Hos pital with items valued at
$270 being taken to the party.
Contributions were made to
the Cancer Socie ty and the
March of Dimes. Mrs. Andy
Batey was welcomed as a
new member . Correspondence was read announcing
the candidacy of Eleanor
Hartline for De9artmenl of
Ohio treasurer . The mid·
winter conference was announced for Feb. 21 and 22 at
Colwnbus.
Mrs. Erma Hendri cks
presided at the meeting. ·
Officers' reports were given.
The meeting opened in
ritualistic form . A dinner
with the legionnaires and
jun tor members preceded the
meeting.
Reported ill were Mr. and .
Mrs. Dale Kennedy, Mrs.
Patty Might, Mrs . Rosa
Searls, Mrs. Fern Bradbur y,

· A

Orville

Graham ,

·

·

ATHENS In the
a romantic ope ra " Madame
-?- Butterfly " by Giacomo
~ Pucctm, Navy Lteutenant B.
~ F . Pmkerton IS completely
_ entranced by a . yo ung
Japanese getsha gtrl. Thts
entrancement has extend~,d
beyond the pages of PucCini s
score to Include a total of mne
dtrectors , desig ners a nd
c~~hes from OhiO Umverstty s Schools of Muste and
Thea ter who are the gutdmg
forces behmd a lull scale
prodllchonof thts opera to be
__presented m Enghsh on Feb.
and 15 at 8 p.m. ~n
-1 Memonal Audtlon um In
:: Athens.
;:: Wtth a full orch~s tra, sets
:: a.nd co~~wnes, thts produ~;
,. lion of Madame Butterfly
IS headed by musical dtrector
.. Ira Zook of the School. of
~ Music
an d production
:1: dtrector Robert L. Wmters, of
" the School of Theater. Robert
:!L. Winters, director of the
: Ap~alachian G~een parks
· ·ProJect, also dtrected the
:rock opera "Jesus Christ
:supersl&lt;lr" last ·year and the
:;ohio Val!ey Swnm~.r Thea ter
;wroductt.~n . of
Naughty
:;Marteti&lt;J thts past summer.
• As actmg opera workshop
':director for the School of
Music, Ira Zook produced
" The Barber of Seville" l a~t
year. wtth assiStance m
stagmg fr om Robert L.
Wmters.
,
,
The score of · Madame
Butterfly" WiU be played by
the Ohto Umverstty S~mphony . Orches tra whtch
completed a popular AllAm e rt~an Music Concert
Tour In Ma~ch of l974.
Conductor Adrtan Gnam has
performed world premieres
of '!~_any Amertcan compositions and twtce served as

ifl3. 14
E

guest conductor of the _Ohi o
String Teachers' Assoctah on
Orhcestra .
Traditional Japanese architecture and artforms have
been incorporated into the
set, lighting and costumes by
Jeff Walker and Pat Nielsen,
both from the School of
Theater.
J eff · Walk er
received a Bachelor of Arts
Deg ree in Theater fr om
Slippery Rock College, Pa.
and was chosen by the faculty
of the School of Theater to be
production de signer for
"Madame Butterfly ." As
costume designer for the
Scho ol of Theater , pal
Nielse n's past design efforts
have included the regular
season
production
of
"Seagull " last year and the
Ohio Valley Swnmer Theater
production of "Na ughty
Marietl&lt;l" this past summer,
· The unusual procedure of
double-ca stin g will give
audiences a chance to see two
different interprel&lt;ltions of
" Madame Butterfly" and
allow twice as many cast
members to stud y under
vocal coaches Nancy Beebe
and Margaret Ste ph enson
from the School of Music and
'movement coaches Sarah
Barker and Jane Ridley from
the School of theater .
" Madame Butterly " was
chosen over other grand
operas because of its theme
of American imperialism in
Japan , which ties in with the
School of Theater's Season of
American Plays, and because
it allows students of both
schools to exe rcise their
I&lt;Jients in all areas of performance. All tickets are
$2.50 a'nd reservations may
be made at .Memorial
Auditori um lwx office
Monday through Friday, 1-4
p.m., or by phoning 594-5010.

Date for annual project
set for February 12
The annual "heart!in e"
project of remembering shut ·
ins and elderly res idents with
trays of cookies and ca ndles
for Valentine 's Day -has been
set for Feb. 12 at the Heath
United Method ist Church,
Middleport.
The project will be carried
out by the women of the
chureh under th e direction of
" the Afternoon Circle with
: ; Mrs . Emma Wayland and
: Mrs . Beulah Hayes in charge .
;
Plans for the activity were
discussed at the Aftern oon
• Circle meeting Thursday .
:: Women are to have the
: homemade cookies and
: candies at the church at 1

t

~ P·~~s .
f opened

Mary Rin ehart
the meeting with a
" piano prelude, " When Earth
': Leaves Me Lonely." Mrs.
Nan Moore presided with
,,
•

Everett Davis being reported
hospitalized and Mrs . Mae
Lambert, ill at home. Mrs.
Moore read '·Doin ' Good is a
Pleasure."
Mrs. Beulah Hayes gave
th e lesson, " Decision of
Destiny, " .written by reques t
of the women of the United
Meth odist Chur ch and
published on the eve of the
Bicentennial. ll made
referenc'e tq the progress in
punishment for crime, of the
lack of love, of . war around
the world and of the lack of
control of the rich and
powerful. Object of the book,
Mrs . Hayes said , was to
connect the past with· this
bicentennial year,
The birthday of Mrs. Freda
Mitch was observed. Mrs. B.
B. Ziegler and Mrs . Nan
Moore were hostesses.

•

•'

EXCLUSIVE BARGAINS IN HI-FI, RADIOS, KITS, PARTS, AND MUCH MORE!

SAVE $ 40 r-·

SAVE S100

I

REALISTIC ® FULL-FEATURE
AM-FM DIGITAL
CLOCK RADIO

199~~

1
I

59~:;

IT

N n pr,,i)l •'i 11'&gt; tm trotrqn I '

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Lilrqr&gt; t ?-Chi.t ldC:I!~r di';,Pii1y

tnth

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or~ •ld , ·d carty •n q C&lt;t!&gt;J· r~clnpr "' Ch drq'-·r

i l\11&lt; 1

At Radio Shack

·I
I
I
I

, •••

••

..•

I

..

II
I

, r.·~.:r:-

··"·

I
I
I
I
I
I

, . . . .. . ."'
-#"•
CHOICE
REALISTIC ~ TAPE

VOUR

•
• CONCERTAPE ""
• SUPERTAPE "'

Get 50¢ o fl our.ev&amp;ryUay low p r 1ce:
on any one open ree l casse tT e or
8-track tape w1 th thts co upon at
oart tct oa1 1ng Ra cl 10 Shacks
Save SOc a net d1Scovw the bett e r
rec o rrJtng tape thai s custom-made
by or fo r Radt O Shi:i d , anrl solrt
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~~~~~.... Advice on many do-it.yourself projects is availac;:;
ble; electrical, plumbif11, paintinl. etc.

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are interested In your welfare.

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•••••••••

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••

REGULAR 2.79

j

Aad•o S hack Introd uced •I s famous low-cost Realis tic
CB lin e in· 1960 and has been a world leader tn Cit izens
Band lor 16 years. While some o f Rea listic s 16 radios
mav be in short supply at limes. it' ll be worth your
while to .WAI T FOR REALISTI C (it you have to) ana
avo id the hassle and prob lems o f dealing with Store X
and Brand X. We also make our own Archer l ine of CB
antenna s. c rysta ls. coa~ cables and accessories . These
are in ta1rly good su-pply loda~ Aealtslic CB is sold anQ
se r&gt;J iccd ONLY by Aad lo Shack through our .over 4000

shops in the USA and Canad a. J3uy from a r ea lly
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20 GALLON TRASH CAN LINERS

••

44 QUART KITCHEN CAN LINERS
30 count. In dispe11ser poet

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••

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•
••
•••

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••
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..
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•

'' •
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••••••••••••••••••••

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new toasler convenience foods I

OR BLACK

eludes cord, handle ond hook .

14%

113 cup for top lood , 1/4 cl.ip

for front I~ washers .

2 SLICE TOASTER

plants ., ' ICIIily "' liW&gt;t .

motol

988

From steam to dry at the tout~
of a button. Wrinkles disappear
like magic I High cord lift for easy
Jell or righf liond operation.

sat.

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CEILING
..001

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STEAM &amp; DRY IRON

sale
ends

WALLIUCIIT

REG. 3.79

wash possible. 20 lb. box.

REGULAR .49• EACH

hoodoood l.f1il willl trim. 7" . Holds pianiJ up to 12"

SAVE
'

phosphate -free, gives whitest

winter

·PLANTER PUWY ',

BUILD YOUR OWN
METAL
LOCATOR

Inside frost light bulb$ in lots

Otluxe

ANTIQUE BRASS
ORBLACX

••
••
••
. ~;ltw
••
597
•••••••••••••••••••••

LIGHT BULBS
~~~~~~~;,:or IOOW. Stock

•

CONCENTRATE
Biodegradeable conc:tntrate is

DECOIAIOI

12·773

55

•••••••••••
LAUNDRY

SUN HOOKS

'
'

PATROLMAN·~ -5
BAND BATTE~Y ­
~C RADIO

79 .95

EACH

33 QUART TRASH CAN LINERS

•

•

1

66

2o count . Upped-for toSY opening.

•
••
••
•

•

. Reg .

1688

'

ADDRESS

'

SAVE S2

REGULAR 24.95

I

ATTENTION CB BUYERS!

Reg . 49 .95

Replaces your old shower ·head .
Gives fabulous mossage. Adjusts
for brisk massage, gentle mos·
sage, shower spray or cambino·
lions.

)'OU .

I

NAME

SAVE

REALISTIC
BATTERY-AC
CASSETTE ·RECORDER
WITH BI,J!L T-IN MIKE

by 'Mlter PiR

It we don't have the item or service part you
need, we will I'NI~ eve,.,. effort to secure it for

1

•••"'

s1o

Hold s 24 tap e s. locka bl e!

S.Nis people well trained ln produet knowledp,
rudy to help answer your Question s.

er thon regular batteries.

,,

'

'" ' THE
SHOWER
tnftSSR8E

GOOD SERVICE!

Alkoline

r

Reg. 99 .95

STURDY S-TRACK
CARRYING CASE

Mr. Friendly's guarantee of

SIZE "C"
BAnERIES
batteries lost long-

•

DELUXE 3-PC.
STEREO S-TRACK
PLAYER SYSTEM

SAVI:ss

~

1

CHARGE

fe \ l \1 \ 1 ~

.

•••

I
I

'II (·•:N
. '\1\\:"'' e
1

and you ca n

Our CI'Fi rJnP.!!C- 85 15 :1 cnrnplete ho nw str _· rr:o
cn tcr t:'llnmen t n:n tP- r' A ll l hP fr.FltJir'·.., yrJJJ vr~
co mn t(J cxoect !rom Rs&gt;allst tc Otr"&gt;l CIJv':r
tncludr.tl 1\33 •J fl .1 ~ ;m mrr • c' ll bl f ; illl'llf, hrr /

SAVE S30

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' OUR FINEST
I
SCIENTIFIC SLIDE RULE I
I
CALCULATOR
I

A superb per forrne' at an unbeatabl~! low
pn ce ' ll lumtnatcd flip -type nume (al s an(!
sl 1d1; rutc d1 ~l 60-rntnute :,lof'p swr tc h ':. ll0U£ l-!
bar 24-hu ur alarm sct ltng Rad to o r buuP.r
al rH nl drd t- fn: •· FM Earph one 1ac h SlrnJJi atAd
wnlnut gra•n flntsh U L lt ':. !Od Th rJr" :,
only o n 1~ olacu yut; c &lt;1r !1nrl 11
R&lt;1d1o Shad

Reg. 299.95

I

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OUR BLANK CASSETTE
8-TRACK OR OPEN
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REEL TAPE

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':· \tl'A
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34~~

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RECORD &amp; PLAY SYSTEM

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WITH THis couPoN--.

: soe OFF:

I
'

and

Raymond Justice. Mrs. Lelah
Weatherby and Mrs. Lucy
McKinney both lost relatives
by death recen tly .
The door prize donated by
Gerry Kessinger was won by
Christi Smith .

: Roman~ic opera
"'
~ to be ·performed ..·
C

-

Hos pital for tray fa vors and
napkins provided at Chri st·
mas, from the ve teran s
hos pital at Dayton, Hunvill e, Chi llico the,· from the
Childr en's
Home
at
Gallipoli s, an d from the
Pe c k- of -W ee- On es
in
Colwnbus for fruit, treats and
money at Christmas time.

--

L391E

3 SPEED MIXER

REG. 1.29

Handy portable mixer wifh automatic beater ejector,
chrome-plaled ·beoters, convenient heel rest and detach·
able cordsef. 130W motor. H&lt;l'vesf gold.

MICRONTA ®
CORDLESS
PLUG -IN TIMER

~

SALE PRICE

9!,

SAVE 5 3

Reg . 9.95

8!.~01
SAVE 25%
3-WAY
ANTENNA CLIPS

Reg.
SET
OF 2

79~

SAVE 34% SAVE 25%
PENLIGHT
BATTERIES
Reg .

19~

Each

59~5832 F~R 25~3468

AUTO POWER
CONNECTOR
Reg: 1.99

1 ~70·017
4

&lt;!!•v.o.~

SAVE?%

SAVE 10%

2'!. " ALLIG~JOR
. CLIPS
.
'
Reg . 1.29

'j

'

PACK
OF 10

119

270 ·375

'

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UNIVERSAL
AC ADAPTER
Reg . 9.95

1" CERAMIC ·
MAGNETS

•

••

9

8 2~·1531

...•

RADIO SHACK PRICES ON AVERAGE HAVE INCREASED LESS THAN 1% SINCE JULY, 19741

••

•

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
·· GALLIPOLIS, ·o HIO

:.=
PAN

NtR.COOEE

•
•

COFFEE
•EWER
Ma1&lt;01 up to ion C"'ff of cloctr,

Su!itt-toug~

frolhly bmNd coffu. lncl-

WISI'IIeNO.

I QUART

COOKER SERVER

aluminum pon with

10" wide stonewort crock; stoycooJ Lexon case. Detachable heat

ltlot .. ~., ~·· glaU dtcan·
lit', poly- ond 25 fllten .

SALE PRICE

SALE PRICE

SALE PRICE

SALE PRICE

1497

2388

1188

2488

lllf.IICIII!ftl plcet and racl..

1818

control /cord. Take to picnics and

potlucks. Harvesf or avocado.

.

......

1ri your n&amp;ilhborhOOdllio:
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M

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ll A TANDY CORPORATION COMPANY

"

Pepper fin ish oh.Jminum
pot heats instont beverooes

ltu-tic ltrtltsure control,

Most 1terr\s also avaitalle
.a t Radio Sttac" Oe_
a tar.,
Look for tht• sfln ·:

--...... -

•

INSTANT
HOTPOT .
Hot

RT. 2 BYPASS, POINT PLEASANT

PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIV IDUAL STORES

/

baby's bottle. Cord dttocllos. '

4QUAIT

CORN POPPER

"l'wptr ~.. glass I
Heat-proof

trim .

cord.

Detottd:i•

SALE PRICE

488

EUaRIC
CAN OPENER
High-impact

white styrene case.
CuNing unit removes for elton·

IOQ. lold-oway table rest.

SALE PRICE

888

•

'

�' '

6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, •'eb. 4, 197ti

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy ,0., Wednesday, Feb. t, 1971

Auxiliary plans
several projects
A del egat e to Bu ckeye
Girls' State was selected and
se vera l proj ects
wer e
plan ned at a recent mee tin ~
of the American

Legi on

Auxiliary of Feeney-Benne!!
Post 128 at the hall .
The name of the junior girl
selected to attend Girls' State
which again this year will be
held ~n June at Ca pit al
University , Columbus. will be
announced · later. Currently
the unit is cont ac tin g
organizations who migh t
serve as co-sponsors for
additional students.
The unit discussed the Feb .
19 community service party
to be held at the Athens
Mental Health Center by the
junior auxiliary and made
arrangements to assist with
tha t. Approximately 40
women will attend and
already the unit has gifts for
them. However, items for gift
r;Packages for the men are
~ needed . Several members of
1. the unit will attend .
Cancelled stamps, bottle
..caps and Christmas cards are
..,still to be collected for special
~projects . It was reported that
P,$25 worth ·· of good used
~clothing had been donated for
"needy children of the Rutland
;::u,ea, and that clothin g, linens
:.Od food, valued at $150 had
:l&gt;een prov ided for several
'1amilies who lost their homes
by fire.
Used .men's clothing has
been sent to Sand usky ·
Veterans Hospital along with
shaving cream and razor
blades. A package of gifts
was also .sent to Miller's
Cottage at Dayton.
Thank-you notes were read
~fr o m Ve teran s Mem ori al

t

tin gton, Cincinna ti , Brecks-

Each one was sent a package
valued at $90.

report was given on the
December birthday party at
th e Chillicoth e Veterans
Hos pital with items valued at
$270 being taken to the party.
Contributions were made to
the Cancer Socie ty and the
March of Dimes. Mrs. Andy
Batey was welcomed as a
new member . Correspondence was read announcing
the candidacy of Eleanor
Hartline for De9artmenl of
Ohio treasurer . The mid·
winter conference was announced for Feb. 21 and 22 at
Colwnbus.
Mrs. Erma Hendri cks
presided at the meeting. ·
Officers' reports were given.
The meeting opened in
ritualistic form . A dinner
with the legionnaires and
jun tor members preceded the
meeting.
Reported ill were Mr. and .
Mrs. Dale Kennedy, Mrs.
Patty Might, Mrs . Rosa
Searls, Mrs. Fern Bradbur y,

· A

Orville

Graham ,

·

·

ATHENS In the
a romantic ope ra " Madame
-?- Butterfly " by Giacomo
~ Pucctm, Navy Lteutenant B.
~ F . Pmkerton IS completely
_ entranced by a . yo ung
Japanese getsha gtrl. Thts
entrancement has extend~,d
beyond the pages of PucCini s
score to Include a total of mne
dtrectors , desig ners a nd
c~~hes from OhiO Umverstty s Schools of Muste and
Thea ter who are the gutdmg
forces behmd a lull scale
prodllchonof thts opera to be
__presented m Enghsh on Feb.
and 15 at 8 p.m. ~n
-1 Memonal Audtlon um In
:: Athens.
;:: Wtth a full orch~s tra, sets
:: a.nd co~~wnes, thts produ~;
,. lion of Madame Butterfly
IS headed by musical dtrector
.. Ira Zook of the School. of
~ Music
an d production
:1: dtrector Robert L. Wmters, of
" the School of Theater. Robert
:!L. Winters, director of the
: Ap~alachian G~een parks
· ·ProJect, also dtrected the
:rock opera "Jesus Christ
:supersl&lt;lr" last ·year and the
:;ohio Val!ey Swnm~.r Thea ter
;wroductt.~n . of
Naughty
:;Marteti&lt;J thts past summer.
• As actmg opera workshop
':director for the School of
Music, Ira Zook produced
" The Barber of Seville" l a~t
year. wtth assiStance m
stagmg fr om Robert L.
Wmters.
,
,
The score of · Madame
Butterfly" WiU be played by
the Ohto Umverstty S~mphony . Orches tra whtch
completed a popular AllAm e rt~an Music Concert
Tour In Ma~ch of l974.
Conductor Adrtan Gnam has
performed world premieres
of '!~_any Amertcan compositions and twtce served as

ifl3. 14
E

guest conductor of the _Ohi o
String Teachers' Assoctah on
Orhcestra .
Traditional Japanese architecture and artforms have
been incorporated into the
set, lighting and costumes by
Jeff Walker and Pat Nielsen,
both from the School of
Theater.
J eff · Walk er
received a Bachelor of Arts
Deg ree in Theater fr om
Slippery Rock College, Pa.
and was chosen by the faculty
of the School of Theater to be
production de signer for
"Madame Butterfly ." As
costume designer for the
Scho ol of Theater , pal
Nielse n's past design efforts
have included the regular
season
production
of
"Seagull " last year and the
Ohio Valley Swnmer Theater
production of "Na ughty
Marietl&lt;l" this past summer,
· The unusual procedure of
double-ca stin g will give
audiences a chance to see two
different interprel&lt;ltions of
" Madame Butterfly" and
allow twice as many cast
members to stud y under
vocal coaches Nancy Beebe
and Margaret Ste ph enson
from the School of Music and
'movement coaches Sarah
Barker and Jane Ridley from
the School of theater .
" Madame Butterly " was
chosen over other grand
operas because of its theme
of American imperialism in
Japan , which ties in with the
School of Theater's Season of
American Plays, and because
it allows students of both
schools to exe rcise their
I&lt;Jients in all areas of performance. All tickets are
$2.50 a'nd reservations may
be made at .Memorial
Auditori um lwx office
Monday through Friday, 1-4
p.m., or by phoning 594-5010.

Date for annual project
set for February 12
The annual "heart!in e"
project of remembering shut ·
ins and elderly res idents with
trays of cookies and ca ndles
for Valentine 's Day -has been
set for Feb. 12 at the Heath
United Method ist Church,
Middleport.
The project will be carried
out by the women of the
chureh under th e direction of
" the Afternoon Circle with
: ; Mrs . Emma Wayland and
: Mrs . Beulah Hayes in charge .
;
Plans for the activity were
discussed at the Aftern oon
• Circle meeting Thursday .
:: Women are to have the
: homemade cookies and
: candies at the church at 1

t

~ P·~~s .
f opened

Mary Rin ehart
the meeting with a
" piano prelude, " When Earth
': Leaves Me Lonely." Mrs.
Nan Moore presided with
,,
•

Everett Davis being reported
hospitalized and Mrs . Mae
Lambert, ill at home. Mrs.
Moore read '·Doin ' Good is a
Pleasure."
Mrs. Beulah Hayes gave
th e lesson, " Decision of
Destiny, " .written by reques t
of the women of the United
Meth odist Chur ch and
published on the eve of the
Bicentennial. ll made
referenc'e tq the progress in
punishment for crime, of the
lack of love, of . war around
the world and of the lack of
control of the rich and
powerful. Object of the book,
Mrs . Hayes said , was to
connect the past with· this
bicentennial year,
The birthday of Mrs. Freda
Mitch was observed. Mrs. B.
B. Ziegler and Mrs . Nan
Moore were hostesses.

•

•'

EXCLUSIVE BARGAINS IN HI-FI, RADIOS, KITS, PARTS, AND MUCH MORE!

SAVE $ 40 r-·

SAVE S100

I

REALISTIC ® FULL-FEATURE
AM-FM DIGITAL
CLOCK RADIO

199~~

1
I

59~:;

IT

N n pr,,i)l •'i 11'&gt; tm trotrqn I '

Ill'

Lilrqr&gt; t ?-Chi.t ldC:I!~r di';,Pii1y

tnth

EC -490 1
~CIPrl t i f iC.

nn tdl lOn fully addrcss&lt;i OI1• m Hnor·~
con:, tant fl oatrnq ·tr-c1ma1 lnc lwtP&lt;,
or~ •ld , ·d carty •n q C&lt;t!&gt;J· r~clnpr "' Ch drq'-·r

i l\11&lt; 1

At Radio Shack

·I
I
I
I

, •••

••

..•

I

..

II
I

, r.·~.:r:-

··"·

I
I
I
I
I
I

, . . . .. . ."'
-#"•
CHOICE
REALISTIC ~ TAPE

VOUR

•
• CONCERTAPE ""
• SUPERTAPE "'

Get 50¢ o fl our.ev&amp;ryUay low p r 1ce:
on any one open ree l casse tT e or
8-track tape w1 th thts co upon at
oart tct oa1 1ng Ra cl 10 Shacks
Save SOc a net d1Scovw the bett e r
rec o rrJtng tape thai s custom-made
by or fo r Radt O Shi:i d , anrl solrt
VfOr lrlwt (fe ONLY by 1h P. Shac k ~

I

I

-..

I

IUt'JIIU• I l ' H

S~PI~

Reg . 99.95

..,

•
•

•

REALISTIC STEREO
S-TRACK PLAY DECK

I

~~~~~.... Advice on many do-it.yourself projects is availac;:;
ble; electrical, plumbif11, paintinl. etc.

1
I
I
I

are interested In your welfare.

•

..I ___________ ..I

•••••••••

-

YOUR CHOiCE

••

REGULAR 2.79

j

Aad•o S hack Introd uced •I s famous low-cost Realis tic
CB lin e in· 1960 and has been a world leader tn Cit izens
Band lor 16 years. While some o f Rea listic s 16 radios
mav be in short supply at limes. it' ll be worth your
while to .WAI T FOR REALISTI C (it you have to) ana
avo id the hassle and prob lems o f dealing with Store X
and Brand X. We also make our own Archer l ine of CB
antenna s. c rysta ls. coa~ cables and accessories . These
are in ta1rly good su-pply loda~ Aealtslic CB is sold anQ
se r&gt;J iccd ONLY by Aad lo Shack through our .over 4000

shops in the USA and Canad a. J3uy from a r ea lly
Qualified specia list - your fr iendly neighborhood

J

RarJio S llack!

t

I

20 GALLON TRASH CAN LINERS

••

44 QUART KITCHEN CAN LINERS
30 count. In dispe11ser poet

••

IS ~rge, heovy dvty 1&gt;9gs .

•

i•

••
••
••
••

••
•.
•
••
•••

...••
'' .
.
'.

••
I

..
.
•

'' •
''
'
•

6995

SAVE

f!lHWI;
4/99c
~·Z71W
••••••••••••••••••••

wide. fltxlble swi.......... "*'"'·

3'!!

Holds "" "' .., lbO . !vtn heovy

SWIVEL LOCIIIIO

Easy 2·p,... installatiOII .

ANTIQUf BRASS

""'loy. In·

8RAS$1

ANTIQUE
OIII!I.ACK

REG.

RSTMASTI!R'

~

Sleek, compact model wifh block phenolic end po~ls,
Superflex timer and voltage compensator. Great for the
new toasler convenience foods I

OR BLACK

eludes cord, handle ond hook .

14%

113 cup for top lood , 1/4 cl.ip

for front I~ washers .

2 SLICE TOASTER

plants ., ' ICIIily "' liW&gt;t .

motol

988

From steam to dry at the tout~
of a button. Wrinkles disappear
like magic I High cord lift for easy
Jell or righf liond operation.

sat.

SWIVEL
CEILING
..001

~

Hardwaoct •""

SALE PRICE

STEAM &amp; DRY IRON

sale
ends

WALLIUCIIT

REG. 3.79

wash possible. 20 lb. box.

REGULAR .49• EACH

hoodoood l.f1il willl trim. 7" . Holds pianiJ up to 12"

SAVE
'

phosphate -free, gives whitest

winter

·PLANTER PUWY ',

BUILD YOUR OWN
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...Vocational students gather"'
Pointers
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~

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Feb . 4, 197l

Mrs. Walter Grueser presents
Pomeroy gardeners program
MASON, W. Va : - A
program on "The Symbolism
of Flowers" presented by
Mrs .
Walter
Grue ser
highlighted the Tuesday night
meeting of the Pomeroy
Garden Club held at the home
of Mrs. Irving Karr here.
Mrs . Grue se r ' said the
language of flowers began in
the Far East, and writers
Chaucer , Shakespeare and
Ben Johnson used it in their
works for symbolism . Mrs.
Grueser noted that one red
rose meant ' 'I love you .''
Other symbols were a white
rosebud , a ymmg girl; a white
rose in full bloom, jealousy ;
mixture of white and pink
roses, a mutual bond between

Blaet tnar, who r.eported UJat
the Christmas gifts of
homemade candy
and
cookies had been delivered to
friends.''
Mrs. Karr gave devotions shut-in members of UJe club.
H was aimounced Mrs.
using a meditation from
Janel
Bolin has requested the
"Sermon on the Mount " · by
club
fun\ish
an arrangement
Norman Vineent Peale, and
for
one
of
the
homes to be
the group repeated The
included
on
the
spring home
l&lt;Jrd's Prayer in unison .
tour
sponsored
by Beta
Roll call was a homemade
Sigma
Phi
Sorority.
valentine . The business
Mrs. Karr served a salad
meeting was conducted by
club president Mrs. Fred course during the social hour.
m{"aning

· ·t

have

k in~d

thoughts of you ," and an oak
leaved geranium, " let us be

Polly's
'I!J' Polly

Pests plague
stored foods

Cramer

Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY - HELP ! I
hope you can print an idea for
getting rid of pests in cereals,

from nne open package, bag
or can to another. It may be

aMnrsd .LoK!~sn_ neUJ Eblln, Jimmy :

Vocational stu dents of Scott and Jeff , Mr. and Mrs.
Meigs High School had a get- Bryan Yonker, and Mr. and
together recently at the Rock
Springs gran ge hall .
The group listened to tapes ,
had some outdoor activities
and tben roasted wieners and
venison burgers over an open
fire.
Attending were Jim An·
derson , Deanna Baker, Dave
Bass, Jeff Beaver, Brenda
Bishop, Tana Burbridge,
Susan
Burns,
Rodne.v
Childress, Wayn e CottriLl,
Bruce Cottrill, Debbie Drake,
Tony Eblin , John Eblin,
Brenda George, Randy
George, Rick George , Cheryl
Haning, Beth Hayes, Jim .
Jeffers, Brian Kizzee, Marty
Krawsczyn, Bill Lavender,
Randy Lyons, Richard Mora,
Mike Owens , John Partlow,
J eff Patterson, Darrell
.Puckett, Stan Starcher, Don
Smith, Tom Tucker, Jack
Well , Ray Wilford, E rnie
... DIAMOND
Will, Eddie Will , Ronnie
Woed, Edie Woodard , Mr ..
;&lt; HEART
and Mrs. Richard Roseberry,
: :. PENDANT

•

best; even though exjlenslve,
to throw out all the things that
noodles, fl our and even may be so infected. Then put
spices . These are all too the new supply in airtight
expensive to have to keep glass jars 1labeled ), like
throwing them awa y. I have mayonnaise or other s uch
that
you
have
cleaned out my spice cabinet, jars,
and even sprayed it, but still thoroughly cleaned and thai
have to get all new spices. have screw-on tops. The bugs
How do I get rid of these pests cannot go from one thing to
permanently? I have tried another. What have you
UJe bay leaves in flour and readers done about this'! noodles, but the pests are still POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
there even in new items I
Peeve
is with the waxed
have bou gh l in different
paper
or
cellophane wrapstores. I am at my wit's end .
A candlelight installation of presenU,d a sk1l on "The
ping
that
the
butcher leaves
Many of my friends have the
lovers to keep a secret;
officers hi ghli ghed the Meigs Birth of Cl~ri s l" .
lun
ch
meat
when he slices
on
same problem with these long
snowdrops,
hopeful Coun ty youth ral ly and
Miss Gerard presented the
it.
It
is
so
hard
to pick this
expectance; ret tulip, the inaugural banquet held Bradbury Church of Christ bugs, and it is really gelling
slivered
wrappin
g off thin
con.fession of passionate love; rece ntly at the Bradbury with a plaque awarding the to me. -· ANN .
slices
just
when
I
arn
ready Lo
DEAR ANN - As I have
peach blossom , "I am your Church of Christ. .
youth for the best attendance
make
the
sandwiches
. said previously, I have had
slave"; ivy geranium, " I
Jn
the
installation at rallies of the churches in great luck with th e bay lea1•es MRS. A.B.A.
engage you for the next ceremony the retiring of. 1975.
with gso .
DEAR POLLY - Do tell
and many readers have
dance ." A bunch of blue fl ee rs. Wilma Davidson,
Sp1nel
:
An offeri ng was taken by
violets and bluebells said, "I president; Danny Harrison, Kevi n King and Rodney written tr.e same. Are you Mrs. M. K. who has probl ems
assure you of my undying vi ce president ; Tammy Bai ley. Haynes had roll call, sur e the contain ers such with pockets wearing out in
devotion and l will always be Stan ley, treasurer, and Linda and it was an nounced tha t items are In were spotlessly coals and slacks, that I
clea n and free of the bugs replace them with pieces of
faithful to you."
·
Gerard, secretary, lighted you th of the Ga llipolis
According to Mrs. Grueser, the candles of the 1976 of. Christian Church were in- when the new supply was polyester material. I save
this when shortenin g slacks ,
a bashful country lad would firers , Randy Ha ynes, terested in joining the rallies. added'!
or
cut it out of the hesl parts
CHESTER - New o(ficers
are
going
Perhaps
the
bugs
have sent a bouqu et president; John Blake, vice All members voted iri favor of
of
siacks
that
are
to
be
were
elected at the January
composed of amaryllis, president ; Ta.mmy Stanley, their fellowship.
Three Diam ond
thrown
away
that
is,
if
the
meeting
of the Young Wives
.!:~=~::::::~!:!:!:!:!:::::::::: ::::::::::::::;:::;;::::::.:;::;;;~:~ ::::·
pinks, peonies and some treasurer, and J ane· WiSe,
Heart Necklace
Rally sponsors for 1976
material is soft. I have done Club held at the horne of Mrs.
The new, ligh t ch ain
··.:.
with
the se sec retary. Each of the new were introduced and include
c hi ckw eed
\ new p o pular
nec Klace with 3
this
several
times
and
even
Lila
Van
Meter.
·oCcl&lt;lace
1n
wh
i
te
diamond s. Wnlte or
grouped around a sunflower officers renewed a confession Kathy Girton, Kitty Perry
o r yel lo w gold f i llea .
sew the pieces in by hand .
yellow ; ol d filled .
Elected were Mrs. Lila Van
and enriched with a sprig of of faith and Mike Girton , and Karen Pingley. The •X
.
These
pockets
never
se
em
to
Meter
,
president;
Mrs.
Sara
hawthorne. She said the minister of the Zion Church of at tendan ce banner for the
1750
wear out. I agree with Mrs . Bailey, vice presid e nt ~ Mrs .
message would have been Christ, gave prayer .
evenin g was won by the
M. K. that the material s used Avi ce Spencer , treasurer ,
clear. It would have read;
The meeting was held Bradbury Church of Christ
for
sli t pockets seem almost and Mr s. Karen Young,
"Forgive my boldness if I following a turkey dinner youth with 16 present.
·:-:
~...
like
pa per and last about th at secretary and news reporter.
timidly offer you my love whic h featured a bicentennial
Lucas presented another
long,
too. ~ ANNE .
Names for secret pals were
(amaryllis and pinks ) and theme in the decorations , The skit
WEDNESDAY
enti li ed,
"The
DEAR
POLLY
I
made
a
drawn
and hostesses for the
bashfully (peonies) say that I youth went to the chun·h Crucifixion" and the meeting
AMERICAN
Le gi on follish error the other day,
-G-'1\
-""~
•
coming
months were named .
adore you (sunflower). Will sancluarv for a devoti onal closed with prayer.
Auxilia ry, Drew Webster and it turn ed out to be such a
Several projects to be carried
you mee t me I chickweed )?
message from Doug Lucas
The next meeting will be Posl39, 7:30p . m. a t the hall . great idea that I want to out during 'the year were
Mrs. Grueser said an and · a business meeting. Sun day afternoon at2 p.m. at
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's share il with all the ladies
discussed .
uncommitttal reply might
~~ "0.~
Kathy Gir ton led in the Bradford Chur c h of Auxi liary, 7:30 p. m . at the wh o may have large tummys
\~..,r
The
door
prize
was
won
by
well have been a pansy co ngrega ti on a) singing. Christ. Bob Millon, assistant firemen 's
headquarters . (lik e me) or whO are
Mrs. Young , Mrs . Van Meter
Lucas, a s tudent and basketball coach at Kentucky Jacket and Christmas picture pregnant . I accidentally· put a nd the co-hostess, Mr s.
Sterling 's ilver
Di amo ntl
evangelist fro1J1lhe Kentucky Christian College will be the orders to pe taken . Kitty my pan tyhose on with lhe Norm a Haw thorne , served
or
Gold locket
Locket
Christian College at _G rayson , speaker and both he and his Darst and Mrs . Don Stivers , back to the front and wow refreshments. Mrs . l.ind a ,
S imple bea uty with
Anllque llnlsh . PICtiJrt ,
a d i am o nd in center .
o f L ovea o n e l mlae .
Ky. had two songs, played a . wife will be presenting hostesses.
what a great fi t. I wear the Flinner will be hostess for the
Pi ctu re of Lo ved
S pace for engr•vlng ,
MIDDLEPORT Uterary queen size .pantyhose with a
piano solo, "Bridge Over -special music. All area youth
O ne imide.
February meeti ng Others
Club , 2 p. m . Wednesday at special back gusset and it
'l'roubi ed Water".
ann are invited to a ttend.
attending were Mrs. Marilyn
A motion picture about
the home of Mrs. Sibley a ccomodated my tummy
Spencer,
Susie Bocler, Mrs.
Bible prophecy , "A Thief In
Slack. Mrs. Bert Grimli1 to beauti full y. I do hope others
Jane
Coates,
Mrs . Unda Well
the Night" will be shown at
re vie w " The Tree s" by find thi s as comfortable as I
and
Mrs.
E.sther
Mays.
the Rock Spr ings United
Conara Richter, and Mrs . do and I wi ll never wear th em
Guests fr om seven area
of
the
World
is
Jesus"
and
a
Methodist Church on Sunday,
churches attended the annual welcome by Mrs. Manning Ri chard Owen to review any other way from now on.
REVIVAL TO START
Feb. 6 at 7:30 p.m.
" Abigal Adams '' by Janet - ANICE.
fellowship tea of the B. H1. Kloes, president.
A revival will be held al the
The- film shows what can
Whitney
.
Roll
call
will
be
"
A
Mrs . Peter Granda! gave
Freewill Baptist Church, Ash
happen when ·Jesus Christ Sanborn Missionary Society
of the Middleport First devotiol}s us in g scripture Pioneer I've Known" .
, St. , Middleport, beginning
returns. The story centers Baptist Church . ·
. THURSDAY
from St. Matthew and St.
Monday at 7:30 p.m. There
around a young girl named
Speaker
for
the
tea
atEVANGELINE
Chapter
John
.
Mrs
.
Kloes
appointed
will
be special vocal numPatty who is ca ught up in
tended by 74 persons was
172,
O.E.S.,
7:30
p:n1.
ThursMrs.
Charles
Searles,
Mrs.
bers.
living for the presen t with
Mrs. Charles Lusher . . Her
Beulah While and Mrs . David day a( the Masonic Temple,
· little co ncern abo ut th e
tnpic was " Fajth''. Women · Darst to the nomin-a ting Middleport.
future.
from th e Pomeroy First committee which ivill report
GALL!A Coun ty Salon 610,
Filmed on location in Iowa,
Baptist Church, the Cheshire at the next meeting,
Dr .. Lewis Palmer Young,
Eight
and Forty, will meet. at
th is picture portrays the
Chilrch,
the
HeathBaptist
Mrs
.
White
conduc
ted
the
of Kentucky
president-elect
7:30
p.
m
.
Thursday
at
the.
Bible prop hecy " there will be
Methodist Church of Mid- love gift dedication assisted home of Mrs. Carrie Neul- Chris han College , Grayson,
no place' to hide ".
dleport, and the Middleport by Mrs. Gwinme While, Mrs. zling in Pomeroy.
Ky, wi ll speek at the
The film was given the best
Church of Christ, the Mount Leora Sig!Tian and Mrs. Allen
Gallipolis
Christian Church,
film of the year award by the
REVIVAL now in progress
Moria!&gt; Baptist Churc h, the Hughes. Her topic was " Feed
Feb.
6,
7
and
6.
National Evangelical Film
Middlepor t First United My Sheep" . A hymn and at the United Pentecosial
The
three
-d
ay r ev ival .•
Foundation . The lead actress ,
Presbyterian Ch ur ch and prayer by the Rev. Peter Church, Third Ave., Mid- meetings will be held at 7
Miss Patty Dunning, received
Tri nity Chur ch, Pom ero y Granda! conclude d the dleport, through Feb. 18. each evening . Dr. Young was
UJe outstanding female acServices 7:30 nightly. The
were in a ttendance .
mee ting.
tress award at the same time .
Rev. Richard Masters of born. July 17, 192t in DunnA piano-or gan prelude by
Sandwiches
,
cooki
es,
tea,
The Rev. William SydenIndiana will be the speaker. ville, Ky. He is the son of Dr.
Mrs.
Gerald
Anthony
and
her
coffee
and
mints
were
served
st.ricker ex tends invitation
Rev. Masters has a special L. C. Young , well-known
daughter,
Barbara,
opened
in
the
church
dining
room.
· Kentucky minister . He atto the public to attend this
the program. There was Among the guests wa s the talent in music and working tended Casey County , Ken~~~-~~~ ~~. ~~P.P.~r!l':'i... . ?~ '!L ........ ...~1.G9
Christian film .
with you~ g people .
group singing of "The Light Rev. Charles Lusher.
REV IV AL, Thursday tucky public _schools an d
Lind say Wilson College in
~~.P.~·..............
Sunday, 7:30 each· Columbia , Ky . He did special
evening at Guysville Cum- ,·
'?r.iP:•.
..........
muni ly Ch ur ch with Lee s tudies at the Universi ly of
Hamm ond of Portsmouth Louisville and the University
1
...... ....... : : ·
speaking ; music by Gospel of Kentucky. He received an
hon
orary
Doctor
of
Divinity
To nes
Quartet;
the
?~ '!~: .... .. · .... ·
'
lb.
J oy ful aires, and the New Life Degree from Milligan College
Quartet. John E lswick, in Tennessee in 1954, and has
pastor, welcomes the publi c. been a minister of the Gospel
lb.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange , of Christ since 1941. Dr.
~~~ -~.~.- ~~.~~
7:30 Thursday at the hall . Young is pr ofessor of
1
· Degree work to be presented . Christian Ministries at KCC,
lb.
.~-~~:..... . ........
and will assum e the
POMONA
GRANGE presiden cy at the college
lb . . special mee tin g, 7 p.m. Aug. 7, 1977. In 1953 he was
Thursday, practice for fifth named president of th e
U.S. D. A. CHOICE
.
degree
work; 8 p.m. meeting Southern Christian Con·
•
• ••••••••••••••••••••• ••e:••• •
.
at Rock Springs grange hall. vention, and in 1967 was
MEIGS COUNTY Coun cil
cHoicE
elected president of the North
1111111111111111111111111111 lllliollllllllll 1111 II 1111 II
I
•
of Parents and Teachers, 7:30 American Christia n Conp.m. at
the
Chesler vention.
3
Elementary School. Past - For the three days of · his
lb.
presidents to be honored and visit a t the Gallipolis
.a bicenteimial program to be Christian Church, Dr. Young
presented.
will not be !ectufing, bu t
lib. Pk&amp;CATHOLIC
Women's
Club
preaching. The public and all
(4 to a lb.)
Thursday
.
Hostesses
are
Meigs
Coun
ty
Churches
ot
Fresh~
Jan e Frymyer , Marilyn Christ are invited to attend.
Epple, Jo Ellen Roui sh, The church is located on SR
Jan ice Deem. Mass will be 586, just off Mi tchell Road.
held at 7:30 p.m. preceding The chur ch offi ce phon e
UJe meeting.
number is 446-1863. Denny
MIDDLEPORT Chamber Coburn is minister.
of Commerce Thursday at
Limit 4 lib.
?
12·: 15 p .m . at Martin
Per Customer
Restaurant.
, uu n n
•• 4W- n
u
SATURDAY
IIIRTH ANNOUNCED
RUMMAGE, BAKE and
S. Sgl. and Mrs. Kenneth
soup sa le sponsored by
M. Matson of Grarltl Forks
Mason Chapter lii7, OES,
Air Force Base, Nor th
PIECE .•1.29 lb.
Satw-day at the Clifton Lodge
Dakota announ ce the birth of
located at the corner of ·
a son on Jan . 23 , He weighed
'1.35 lb.
Pomeroy St. and Rt. 33 in
seve n pounds and nine
Gibson Old Fashion
Mason . Rummage sale will
ounces, .and has been named
begin at 8:30 ·a.m. and the
Freddie Allen. Paternal
food will be sold beginnin g at grandparepts are Mr. and
II a.m .
Mr s. Kenrieth Ma ison of
piece .........................•~ .25 lb.
Rutland, and m&amp;lernal
SUNDAY
. grandparents are M1 . and
sllced ......... : ............... •1.29 ·lb.
Songfest at church of Christ
RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE
Mrs
.
Charles
•Bush
,
Racine.
tiLADLY
in Christian Union , Point Great-grandparents are Mr.
992-3502
PomeroY. Ohio
Pleasant, Sunday at I :30 p.m. James Matson, Malta , and
Pastor Rev . James Bunn
lb.
Roy H. Bush, Racine. The
Open 8-S Mon . lhru Sal , Closed Sunday
extends an invitation to the couple has another son, twopublic to attend.
year old Norman Scott.

Candlelight installation
highlights youth ral~y

1995

Club elects
officers

;,; Social Ll_~·-;
Calendar ;

I

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Improved pop·vp tr immer
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CtDTNIIIG

Dr. Young
_to speak

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Guests attend annual tea

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Compared to leading irons tested u sing lop water,
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Motion picture
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�..

...Vocational students gather"'
Pointers
•

~

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Feb . 4, 197l

Mrs. Walter Grueser presents
Pomeroy gardeners program
MASON, W. Va : - A
program on "The Symbolism
of Flowers" presented by
Mrs .
Walter
Grue ser
highlighted the Tuesday night
meeting of the Pomeroy
Garden Club held at the home
of Mrs. Irving Karr here.
Mrs . Grue se r ' said the
language of flowers began in
the Far East, and writers
Chaucer , Shakespeare and
Ben Johnson used it in their
works for symbolism . Mrs.
Grueser noted that one red
rose meant ' 'I love you .''
Other symbols were a white
rosebud , a ymmg girl; a white
rose in full bloom, jealousy ;
mixture of white and pink
roses, a mutual bond between

Blaet tnar, who r.eported UJat
the Christmas gifts of
homemade candy
and
cookies had been delivered to
friends.''
Mrs. Karr gave devotions shut-in members of UJe club.
H was aimounced Mrs.
using a meditation from
Janel
Bolin has requested the
"Sermon on the Mount " · by
club
fun\ish
an arrangement
Norman Vineent Peale, and
for
one
of
the
homes to be
the group repeated The
included
on
the
spring home
l&lt;Jrd's Prayer in unison .
tour
sponsored
by Beta
Roll call was a homemade
Sigma
Phi
Sorority.
valentine . The business
Mrs. Karr served a salad
meeting was conducted by
club president Mrs. Fred course during the social hour.
m{"aning

· ·t

have

k in~d

thoughts of you ," and an oak
leaved geranium, " let us be

Polly's
'I!J' Polly

Pests plague
stored foods

Cramer

Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY - HELP ! I
hope you can print an idea for
getting rid of pests in cereals,

from nne open package, bag
or can to another. It may be

aMnrsd .LoK!~sn_ neUJ Eblln, Jimmy :

Vocational stu dents of Scott and Jeff , Mr. and Mrs.
Meigs High School had a get- Bryan Yonker, and Mr. and
together recently at the Rock
Springs gran ge hall .
The group listened to tapes ,
had some outdoor activities
and tben roasted wieners and
venison burgers over an open
fire.
Attending were Jim An·
derson , Deanna Baker, Dave
Bass, Jeff Beaver, Brenda
Bishop, Tana Burbridge,
Susan
Burns,
Rodne.v
Childress, Wayn e CottriLl,
Bruce Cottrill, Debbie Drake,
Tony Eblin , John Eblin,
Brenda George, Randy
George, Rick George , Cheryl
Haning, Beth Hayes, Jim .
Jeffers, Brian Kizzee, Marty
Krawsczyn, Bill Lavender,
Randy Lyons, Richard Mora,
Mike Owens , John Partlow,
J eff Patterson, Darrell
.Puckett, Stan Starcher, Don
Smith, Tom Tucker, Jack
Well , Ray Wilford, E rnie
... DIAMOND
Will, Eddie Will , Ronnie
Woed, Edie Woodard , Mr ..
;&lt; HEART
and Mrs. Richard Roseberry,
: :. PENDANT

•

best; even though exjlenslve,
to throw out all the things that
noodles, fl our and even may be so infected. Then put
spices . These are all too the new supply in airtight
expensive to have to keep glass jars 1labeled ), like
throwing them awa y. I have mayonnaise or other s uch
that
you
have
cleaned out my spice cabinet, jars,
and even sprayed it, but still thoroughly cleaned and thai
have to get all new spices. have screw-on tops. The bugs
How do I get rid of these pests cannot go from one thing to
permanently? I have tried another. What have you
UJe bay leaves in flour and readers done about this'! noodles, but the pests are still POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
there even in new items I
Peeve
is with the waxed
have bou gh l in different
paper
or
cellophane wrapstores. I am at my wit's end .
A candlelight installation of presenU,d a sk1l on "The
ping
that
the
butcher leaves
Many of my friends have the
lovers to keep a secret;
officers hi ghli ghed the Meigs Birth of Cl~ri s l" .
lun
ch
meat
when he slices
on
same problem with these long
snowdrops,
hopeful Coun ty youth ral ly and
Miss Gerard presented the
it.
It
is
so
hard
to pick this
expectance; ret tulip, the inaugural banquet held Bradbury Church of Christ bugs, and it is really gelling
slivered
wrappin
g off thin
con.fession of passionate love; rece ntly at the Bradbury with a plaque awarding the to me. -· ANN .
slices
just
when
I
arn
ready Lo
DEAR ANN - As I have
peach blossom , "I am your Church of Christ. .
youth for the best attendance
make
the
sandwiches
. said previously, I have had
slave"; ivy geranium, " I
Jn
the
installation at rallies of the churches in great luck with th e bay lea1•es MRS. A.B.A.
engage you for the next ceremony the retiring of. 1975.
with gso .
DEAR POLLY - Do tell
and many readers have
dance ." A bunch of blue fl ee rs. Wilma Davidson,
Sp1nel
:
An offeri ng was taken by
violets and bluebells said, "I president; Danny Harrison, Kevi n King and Rodney written tr.e same. Are you Mrs. M. K. who has probl ems
assure you of my undying vi ce president ; Tammy Bai ley. Haynes had roll call, sur e the contain ers such with pockets wearing out in
devotion and l will always be Stan ley, treasurer, and Linda and it was an nounced tha t items are In were spotlessly coals and slacks, that I
clea n and free of the bugs replace them with pieces of
faithful to you."
·
Gerard, secretary, lighted you th of the Ga llipolis
According to Mrs. Grueser, the candles of the 1976 of. Christian Church were in- when the new supply was polyester material. I save
this when shortenin g slacks ,
a bashful country lad would firers , Randy Ha ynes, terested in joining the rallies. added'!
or
cut it out of the hesl parts
CHESTER - New o(ficers
are
going
Perhaps
the
bugs
have sent a bouqu et president; John Blake, vice All members voted iri favor of
of
siacks
that
are
to
be
were
elected at the January
composed of amaryllis, president ; Ta.mmy Stanley, their fellowship.
Three Diam ond
thrown
away
that
is,
if
the
meeting
of the Young Wives
.!:~=~::::::~!:!:!:!:!:::::::::: ::::::::::::::;:::;;::::::.:;::;;;~:~ ::::·
pinks, peonies and some treasurer, and J ane· WiSe,
Heart Necklace
Rally sponsors for 1976
material is soft. I have done Club held at the horne of Mrs.
The new, ligh t ch ain
··.:.
with
the se sec retary. Each of the new were introduced and include
c hi ckw eed
\ new p o pular
nec Klace with 3
this
several
times
and
even
Lila
Van
Meter.
·oCcl&lt;lace
1n
wh
i
te
diamond s. Wnlte or
grouped around a sunflower officers renewed a confession Kathy Girton, Kitty Perry
o r yel lo w gold f i llea .
sew the pieces in by hand .
yellow ; ol d filled .
Elected were Mrs. Lila Van
and enriched with a sprig of of faith and Mike Girton , and Karen Pingley. The •X
.
These
pockets
never
se
em
to
Meter
,
president;
Mrs.
Sara
hawthorne. She said the minister of the Zion Church of at tendan ce banner for the
1750
wear out. I agree with Mrs . Bailey, vice presid e nt ~ Mrs .
message would have been Christ, gave prayer .
evenin g was won by the
M. K. that the material s used Avi ce Spencer , treasurer ,
clear. It would have read;
The meeting was held Bradbury Church of Christ
for
sli t pockets seem almost and Mr s. Karen Young,
"Forgive my boldness if I following a turkey dinner youth with 16 present.
·:-:
~...
like
pa per and last about th at secretary and news reporter.
timidly offer you my love whic h featured a bicentennial
Lucas presented another
long,
too. ~ ANNE .
Names for secret pals were
(amaryllis and pinks ) and theme in the decorations , The skit
WEDNESDAY
enti li ed,
"The
DEAR
POLLY
I
made
a
drawn
and hostesses for the
bashfully (peonies) say that I youth went to the chun·h Crucifixion" and the meeting
AMERICAN
Le gi on follish error the other day,
-G-'1\
-""~
•
coming
months were named .
adore you (sunflower). Will sancluarv for a devoti onal closed with prayer.
Auxilia ry, Drew Webster and it turn ed out to be such a
Several projects to be carried
you mee t me I chickweed )?
message from Doug Lucas
The next meeting will be Posl39, 7:30p . m. a t the hall . great idea that I want to out during 'the year were
Mrs. Grueser said an and · a business meeting. Sun day afternoon at2 p.m. at
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's share il with all the ladies
discussed .
uncommitttal reply might
~~ "0.~
Kathy Gir ton led in the Bradford Chur c h of Auxi liary, 7:30 p. m . at the wh o may have large tummys
\~..,r
The
door
prize
was
won
by
well have been a pansy co ngrega ti on a) singing. Christ. Bob Millon, assistant firemen 's
headquarters . (lik e me) or whO are
Mrs. Young , Mrs . Van Meter
Lucas, a s tudent and basketball coach at Kentucky Jacket and Christmas picture pregnant . I accidentally· put a nd the co-hostess, Mr s.
Sterling 's ilver
Di amo ntl
evangelist fro1J1lhe Kentucky Christian College will be the orders to pe taken . Kitty my pan tyhose on with lhe Norm a Haw thorne , served
or
Gold locket
Locket
Christian College at _G rayson , speaker and both he and his Darst and Mrs . Don Stivers , back to the front and wow refreshments. Mrs . l.ind a ,
S imple bea uty with
Anllque llnlsh . PICtiJrt ,
a d i am o nd in center .
o f L ovea o n e l mlae .
Ky. had two songs, played a . wife will be presenting hostesses.
what a great fi t. I wear the Flinner will be hostess for the
Pi ctu re of Lo ved
S pace for engr•vlng ,
MIDDLEPORT Uterary queen size .pantyhose with a
piano solo, "Bridge Over -special music. All area youth
O ne imide.
February meeti ng Others
Club , 2 p. m . Wednesday at special back gusset and it
'l'roubi ed Water".
ann are invited to a ttend.
attending were Mrs. Marilyn
A motion picture about
the home of Mrs. Sibley a ccomodated my tummy
Spencer,
Susie Bocler, Mrs.
Bible prophecy , "A Thief In
Slack. Mrs. Bert Grimli1 to beauti full y. I do hope others
Jane
Coates,
Mrs . Unda Well
the Night" will be shown at
re vie w " The Tree s" by find thi s as comfortable as I
and
Mrs.
E.sther
Mays.
the Rock Spr ings United
Conara Richter, and Mrs . do and I wi ll never wear th em
Guests fr om seven area
of
the
World
is
Jesus"
and
a
Methodist Church on Sunday,
churches attended the annual welcome by Mrs. Manning Ri chard Owen to review any other way from now on.
REVIVAL TO START
Feb. 6 at 7:30 p.m.
" Abigal Adams '' by Janet - ANICE.
fellowship tea of the B. H1. Kloes, president.
A revival will be held al the
The- film shows what can
Whitney
.
Roll
call
will
be
"
A
Mrs . Peter Granda! gave
Freewill Baptist Church, Ash
happen when ·Jesus Christ Sanborn Missionary Society
of the Middleport First devotiol}s us in g scripture Pioneer I've Known" .
, St. , Middleport, beginning
returns. The story centers Baptist Church . ·
. THURSDAY
from St. Matthew and St.
Monday at 7:30 p.m. There
around a young girl named
Speaker
for
the
tea
atEVANGELINE
Chapter
John
.
Mrs
.
Kloes
appointed
will
be special vocal numPatty who is ca ught up in
tended by 74 persons was
172,
O.E.S.,
7:30
p:n1.
ThursMrs.
Charles
Searles,
Mrs.
bers.
living for the presen t with
Mrs. Charles Lusher . . Her
Beulah While and Mrs . David day a( the Masonic Temple,
· little co ncern abo ut th e
tnpic was " Fajth''. Women · Darst to the nomin-a ting Middleport.
future.
from th e Pomeroy First committee which ivill report
GALL!A Coun ty Salon 610,
Filmed on location in Iowa,
Baptist Church, the Cheshire at the next meeting,
Dr .. Lewis Palmer Young,
Eight
and Forty, will meet. at
th is picture portrays the
Chilrch,
the
HeathBaptist
Mrs
.
White
conduc
ted
the
of Kentucky
president-elect
7:30
p.
m
.
Thursday
at
the.
Bible prop hecy " there will be
Methodist Church of Mid- love gift dedication assisted home of Mrs. Carrie Neul- Chris han College , Grayson,
no place' to hide ".
dleport, and the Middleport by Mrs. Gwinme While, Mrs. zling in Pomeroy.
Ky, wi ll speek at the
The film was given the best
Church of Christ, the Mount Leora Sig!Tian and Mrs. Allen
Gallipolis
Christian Church,
film of the year award by the
REVIVAL now in progress
Moria!&gt; Baptist Churc h, the Hughes. Her topic was " Feed
Feb.
6,
7
and
6.
National Evangelical Film
Middlepor t First United My Sheep" . A hymn and at the United Pentecosial
The
three
-d
ay r ev ival .•
Foundation . The lead actress ,
Presbyterian Ch ur ch and prayer by the Rev. Peter Church, Third Ave., Mid- meetings will be held at 7
Miss Patty Dunning, received
Tri nity Chur ch, Pom ero y Granda! conclude d the dleport, through Feb. 18. each evening . Dr. Young was
UJe outstanding female acServices 7:30 nightly. The
were in a ttendance .
mee ting.
tress award at the same time .
Rev. Richard Masters of born. July 17, 192t in DunnA piano-or gan prelude by
Sandwiches
,
cooki
es,
tea,
The Rev. William SydenIndiana will be the speaker. ville, Ky. He is the son of Dr.
Mrs.
Gerald
Anthony
and
her
coffee
and
mints
were
served
st.ricker ex tends invitation
Rev. Masters has a special L. C. Young , well-known
daughter,
Barbara,
opened
in
the
church
dining
room.
· Kentucky minister . He atto the public to attend this
the program. There was Among the guests wa s the talent in music and working tended Casey County , Ken~~~-~~~ ~~. ~~P.P.~r!l':'i... . ?~ '!L ........ ...~1.G9
Christian film .
with you~ g people .
group singing of "The Light Rev. Charles Lusher.
REV IV AL, Thursday tucky public _schools an d
Lind say Wilson College in
~~.P.~·..............
Sunday, 7:30 each· Columbia , Ky . He did special
evening at Guysville Cum- ,·
'?r.iP:•.
..........
muni ly Ch ur ch with Lee s tudies at the Universi ly of
Hamm ond of Portsmouth Louisville and the University
1
...... ....... : : ·
speaking ; music by Gospel of Kentucky. He received an
hon
orary
Doctor
of
Divinity
To nes
Quartet;
the
?~ '!~: .... .. · .... ·
'
lb.
J oy ful aires, and the New Life Degree from Milligan College
Quartet. John E lswick, in Tennessee in 1954, and has
pastor, welcomes the publi c. been a minister of the Gospel
lb.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange , of Christ since 1941. Dr.
~~~ -~.~.- ~~.~~
7:30 Thursday at the hall . Young is pr ofessor of
1
· Degree work to be presented . Christian Ministries at KCC,
lb.
.~-~~:..... . ........
and will assum e the
POMONA
GRANGE presiden cy at the college
lb . . special mee tin g, 7 p.m. Aug. 7, 1977. In 1953 he was
Thursday, practice for fifth named president of th e
U.S. D. A. CHOICE
.
degree
work; 8 p.m. meeting Southern Christian Con·
•
• ••••••••••••••••••••• ••e:••• •
.
at Rock Springs grange hall. vention, and in 1967 was
MEIGS COUNTY Coun cil
cHoicE
elected president of the North
1111111111111111111111111111 lllliollllllllll 1111 II 1111 II
I
•
of Parents and Teachers, 7:30 American Christia n Conp.m. at
the
Chesler vention.
3
Elementary School. Past - For the three days of · his
lb.
presidents to be honored and visit a t the Gallipolis
.a bicenteimial program to be Christian Church, Dr. Young
presented.
will not be !ectufing, bu t
lib. Pk&amp;CATHOLIC
Women's
Club
preaching. The public and all
(4 to a lb.)
Thursday
.
Hostesses
are
Meigs
Coun
ty
Churches
ot
Fresh~
Jan e Frymyer , Marilyn Christ are invited to attend.
Epple, Jo Ellen Roui sh, The church is located on SR
Jan ice Deem. Mass will be 586, just off Mi tchell Road.
held at 7:30 p.m. preceding The chur ch offi ce phon e
UJe meeting.
number is 446-1863. Denny
MIDDLEPORT Chamber Coburn is minister.
of Commerce Thursday at
Limit 4 lib.
?
12·: 15 p .m . at Martin
Per Customer
Restaurant.
, uu n n
•• 4W- n
u
SATURDAY
IIIRTH ANNOUNCED
RUMMAGE, BAKE and
S. Sgl. and Mrs. Kenneth
soup sa le sponsored by
M. Matson of Grarltl Forks
Mason Chapter lii7, OES,
Air Force Base, Nor th
PIECE .•1.29 lb.
Satw-day at the Clifton Lodge
Dakota announ ce the birth of
located at the corner of ·
a son on Jan . 23 , He weighed
'1.35 lb.
Pomeroy St. and Rt. 33 in
seve n pounds and nine
Gibson Old Fashion
Mason . Rummage sale will
ounces, .and has been named
begin at 8:30 ·a.m. and the
Freddie Allen. Paternal
food will be sold beginnin g at grandparepts are Mr. and
II a.m .
Mr s. Kenrieth Ma ison of
piece .........................•~ .25 lb.
Rutland, and m&amp;lernal
SUNDAY
. grandparents are M1 . and
sllced ......... : ............... •1.29 ·lb.
Songfest at church of Christ
RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE
Mrs
.
Charles
•Bush
,
Racine.
tiLADLY
in Christian Union , Point Great-grandparents are Mr.
992-3502
PomeroY. Ohio
Pleasant, Sunday at I :30 p.m. James Matson, Malta , and
Pastor Rev . James Bunn
lb.
Roy H. Bush, Racine. The
Open 8-S Mon . lhru Sal , Closed Sunday
extends an invitation to the couple has another son, twopublic to attend.
year old Norman Scott.

Candlelight installation
highlights youth ral~y

1995

Club elects
officers

;,; Social Ll_~·-;
Calendar ;

I

•OMLYJ!!!!!j "'""
G. E. SELF CLEANING
STEAM SPRAY IRON
e

"

H:~::s
$24.56

$16

Made

"''·

Coming Ware
10 Cup
PERCOLATOR

23CHANNEL
• RF power output 4 watts (FCC max. limit)•23
channels-oil crystals supplied • Illuminated chon·
nel selector • Volume control /on -off power
switch •Adjustable squelch control• Illuminated
S/RF meter.

. Heck's' Reg.

HECK'SREG.

•26.99

7l·C

$21.96

Jewell} Dept.

--

HECK'S
REG.

...

$139 .96

SUNBEAM

HAND MIXER
Compact! Beautiful styling! Lorge, lull size
beaters give foster, better results. Thumb -tip
3-speed control and on-off switch . Beater
ejecter outomoticolly releases beaters.

e

36 Rotary razor' blodei,.. t,..,ice as rn~ny

e

e

e

Dli'T.

e ,Nine cloWJne~r/comfQrl ~tiings e
e

use eOn/Off ,,..;l&lt;h

· HP

1301

LADIES' EXTRA WIDE

PANTYHOSE

HICK'S REG.

99•

99c

HICK'S

$10.96

RJG.
'49.88

,.,

JIWitRY

HECK'S REG.

$1.58
"01111/1(.

191.

General Electric

., ••

1-------MfAB--------,

Pocket Radio

GUT BOLOGNA

.USDA FOOD
STAMPS

D&amp;D MEATS

HOMEMADE

ACCEPTED

•

•

•

1/

'

•

. LADIU' NORELCO
IRIPLI HIAD .

SlAYER
Heck's Reg.

FISH

SLAB BACON SliCED

dinner the talk of the town

JIWEI.RY DEPT.

c. rru .. unon, and brown. Heck's own " Princess
Sue." lo sizes l X, 2X , 3X , and 4X .

2/59C

Wlfne and Larry. We carry U.S.DA
Choice Beef and can make your

8'7

I od in ' e)(fra wide panty l:lose in pacific,

'19.88

'17'76

N.

BATTER

2oz.

(

•·

Heck's Reg. $5.96

Jewelry Dept.

. ,
-~

GET
SEVERAL
AT THIS
LOW PRICE

.

Come in and talk to our butchers,

;~~?~: $

e

Sho.,·e , vp to two weeks'· per charge'
Improved pop·vp tr immer
OeluJIIe· travel
wollet
110/ 220 voltage for ~arid-wide

e·

WITH CUBE EXTENDER

JIWB.IY .

a s ever before
No nicks
No cull
Rotor dose, rozor sharp, razor sn'icio th
shove

ARGUS

POCKET CAMERA

MAN'S SHAVER

TEEN QUEEN
.
MARGARINE

Having :A Party? Special Dinner Guests?

GREAT
SELECTION!
GREAT
BUY!

C. B. RADIO

$1999

99

LONGHORN
DfEESE

2/59~

HECK'S REG.
$7.99

67'

· Shatter-proof mica heot element, ind estruc·
tible body • 100% American-mode port\ •
Full color retail package

Red Skin Midget

HEADLmUCE

$688

HECK'S REG.

• 1000 watts , 1 speed, 4 heat settings •

..

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

G reat for the coming Spring,
ere these ladie s' denim skirh,
i n novy ond pastel colon .
~ugged jean make with zip
front and two pocke t
~ty les . Sizes 5 · 15 .

HECK'S REG.
S7.99

$.1999

Kraft Miracle Whip ............................... ..
Smuckers Strawbeny Jam ...................... ??.~~: ..... .....~1.3?
Mighty Dog Food ... ...........................
.. .... 5/'1.15
Nestle's Chocolate

SKIRTS

$688

BLOW STYLER DRYER

Wagner's Orange Drink .................. ,.......
59•
Folgers Coffee. ~.1~«::. ~~r~....
~~9:
~. !~: ............ ~4.39
. · Hines Cake Mix ~~~.~~!!~.f. ~'!'!l.~L.~!.?.z:

SHORT RIBS •••••••• .-•••.••••••••.••••••••••.49c
ARM ROAST. •••••.•:~~.E.:~: .................. 99c
ENGLISH ROAST•••••••• ~·······-············.89~
CHUCK ROAST................................ 7~
$2 49lb
TBONE STEAK.
$2 591b
P.ORTERHOUS. E. u.s.o.A.
GROUND BEEF••. .~b~.~:~~~~~ ............... .75c
GROUN_DBEEF PATTIES.!.~~~.s.o.x•••••••••• sgc lb.

REG .-MENTHOL-LIME

GRANDINEnl

an

D&amp;D MEATS

INSTANT SHAVE
CREAM
e
e

DENIM

leaders in the fash ion
scene! Perf ec t fOr Spring
wea ther . Styled i n
brushed denim and tw ills
in novy a nd pmtel co ·
,. lors. Sizes 5-15 .

CtDTNIIIG

Dr. Young
_to speak

•••~•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• u~rough

e

LADIES'

.JEANS

.

Guests attend annual tea

..

LA IDES

Helps pre'lient clo gging and brow n spo tting
5teams Better long er
U~s Most Top Wa t er
Compared to leading irons tested u sing lop water,
ONLY theGE SElf ·CLEANING \ro n keep s the stec.;m
vents ' st eam chamber wa ter tank s, and water valve
cleaner!

Motion picture
to be shown

Jeno's Double Pizza

oz.

COLGATE

v

~~

11

USE YOUR
HECK'S
CHARGE-A-CARD

LADIES' POLYESTER

KNIT TOPS
Great go-togethen w it h
ski rh or, ponh. Choose
from our gredt assort ment o f mock , crew ,
V-neck styles, with 5hort
sleeves. In sizes S•M·l.

$299
HECK'S REG .

$3.88

�·-,_••... .•
,..,....

....
1' ~

"'

•••
1 u.
1

r-

FREE

PARKINO

PRICES II EFFECT THROUGH

••
.... •

' ""
E
,_

FEB. 8, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

··---.. .
ALAIDII

TWIN PACK
ANDWARMER

FRABILL
BACKBOARD
AID GOAL
COMBO

Jon -e sel f -st ar t ing ha nd
wa rmer wt rk flannel cor ry
b a g . Also included is the
Jon-e wormer f lu id

Eo~y t o in stall. Du rob le
constructed rim an d net.

COLEMAN
PROPANE
FUEL

PISTOL
16.4 oz.
·pouCHES $149

' HECK'S
'144
REG. s1.99

HECK'S REG.

$5.99

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

ALL

. OUTERS
. GUN
SOLVENT

FOOTBALLS
'

25%

HAND WARMER

G•vr1 co n•lort• ng ht"ot oil day With one
!o llong , Nt'w imp roved bvrnvr. Chrome .
pl a ted Steel ond p ol o ~ he d W1th .
d row ~ lr'mg co•ry•ng bog .

$1 ~44

SPORTS DEPT.

SIDRTS DIPT. ·

SPOITS DEPT.

.22CAL.COUNT . . . .

2

.177CAL. COUNT

----------1
RUBBERMAID

........

SINKIASII
HECK' S REG .
$1 .99

GALLON DECANTER LA'::;:~a;:~\r ·
$1 09

$1 09

sac

H;~;:s

HECK'S REG.
TO $1.44

$2.03

$144

$166

llox

CUTLERY
TRAY

$109
HECK' S

REG.

SPORTS DEPT.

SPDRTSDIPT.

14" OUTDOOR BROOM

'HIC! ~~~I

99c

VANITY

SltMTS

WASTDASKET

•r.

20"x24"

l9"x2 5" ·

24"x24"

$399

$399
.

HECK'S REG.

.NOUSIWARE DII'T.

$6.99

NOUSIWA/11 DIPT.

··. 23"x29"

1.4 "x50''
'

WAll MIRROR

I;

..'

I

i

DOOR MIRROR

•.

$109
HECK'S REG .
$1.49

·$]33

$399

,.,

...

:;;.

TUCKER PLASTIC

HECK'S REG. $6.99

14QUART
. RECTANGULAR

HOI/SEWAII DIPT.

.

\_

~

NOUSIWARE DEPT.

FOLDING DOORS

HECK'SRIG.$1.99 .

HECK'S
REG.
$1.99

10 Qt.
TULIP
WASTE
BASKET

TUCKER PLASTIC

3-PC. r-'IXINCi BOWL SET
$1 09
HECK'S REG.

$1.99 .

HeaVy vinyl OUisicfe."· 'Full-

SPOITS DEPT.

TUCKER PLASTIC

ROUND DISH PAN
,-

88,.,.

Heck's
Reg. 11.99

HECK'S REG.
$5.99

.

EASTERN

$109

. $109

.

.'

;L
'
J

WASTEBASKET

99
$16

TUCKER PLASTIC

DELUXE DISH DRAINER

$399

HECK'S REG . $6,99

r··-·

-Jifl-·r.

WALL MIRROR WALL MIRROR
WALL
'
NOUSIWAll DEPT.

· RUIIIIERMAID

.

REG.
·•2..66

HECK'S REG . $6.99.

$1.49

HECK'S
R.G.
$1 .49

09

WASTDASKET

RUIIIIERMAID

HECK'S REG. $2.19

lOX

$

HECK'S REG.
$1.49

bly anywhere,. It is filled with acry fil fi ber, and ·the lin ing is
100% c:ot:t on· fla nnel .

HICK'S
REG.
. $22.99

16QT.

WASTE IASKET

$109

~

POWER LETS

TUCKER PlASTIC

$109

This Col eman sle ep ing bog is ready for you to sleep comf orto·

CROSMAN

TUCKER

VANITY

3 LB. SLEEPING BAG

REBEL LURE

$109
PLASnC
12 OT. PAll

F=Or"rrr-- - , . ----.

COLEMAN

.PELLETS
s1 e 18

IUIIERMAID

TUCKER PLASTIC

HECK'S REG.
$1.49

WITH BELT LOOPS

HECK'S REG.
$1.29

'

$109

BELT AND
BAIT BOX

GUN
CASES

CROSMAN

COLANDER

Heck's Reg. '1.79

.

HECK'S REG. 110.99

~V'J

===I

· HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG. o•r

RUBBERM AID

SPORTS
DI#T.

99c •6••

33~

~--...:::::---1l1..-------=,.,

length steef panels. ·in~e.
Other dtlu~~: t fi¥:U'' inthadft
a permantntty ' lubr icoJ~"
track. Quality unmatcht!fd o t
tll i5. low p'r ict! eo5il y in- .

.. ~:·
~-. ' .' ·· .

--

20 qt.
BOUDOUIR·.

.......,

'' .

stalled.

$109
4¥4

2 112 oz.

OLD SPICE

STICK DEODORANT
REG.-LIME

HECK ' S REG.

69

HECK'S
REG .
$1.14 EA.

1

SIMTSDIPT.

77~
"

EA.

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

OLD SPICE

AFTERSHAVE

HAMPER

'159

Heck's Reg. '12.99
•

Houseware Dept.

'

Heck's Reg.

•3.99

REG. 4 LIME

".~::s
$1.59
EACH

$1 o•IA..

•

KENDALL

••UP·
o, g• A·
a ~&lt;

GILLETTE TRA CII
BLADES

KENDALL

e 9 CARTRIDGES

· 10W300R

GTl-30

OIL

$139 .

LIMIT 6 QUARTS

CHOICE

44CQt.

HECK'S REG.
$1 . 89

HICK '5 RIG.

COSIIETit DEPT.

,

'

69' QT.

Am-T.

J

'

J

I

,,

'"

.

I

,

�·-,_••... .•
,..,....

....
1' ~

"'

•••
1 u.
1

r-

FREE

PARKINO

PRICES II EFFECT THROUGH

••
.... •

' ""
E
,_

FEB. 8, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

··---.. .
ALAIDII

TWIN PACK
ANDWARMER

FRABILL
BACKBOARD
AID GOAL
COMBO

Jon -e sel f -st ar t ing ha nd
wa rmer wt rk flannel cor ry
b a g . Also included is the
Jon-e wormer f lu id

Eo~y t o in stall. Du rob le
constructed rim an d net.

COLEMAN
PROPANE
FUEL

PISTOL
16.4 oz.
·pouCHES $149

' HECK'S
'144
REG. s1.99

HECK'S REG.

$5.99

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

ALL

. OUTERS
. GUN
SOLVENT

FOOTBALLS
'

25%

HAND WARMER

G•vr1 co n•lort• ng ht"ot oil day With one
!o llong , Nt'w imp roved bvrnvr. Chrome .
pl a ted Steel ond p ol o ~ he d W1th .
d row ~ lr'mg co•ry•ng bog .

$1 ~44

SPORTS DEPT.

SIDRTS DIPT. ·

SPOITS DEPT.

.22CAL.COUNT . . . .

2

.177CAL. COUNT

----------1
RUBBERMAID

........

SINKIASII
HECK' S REG .
$1 .99

GALLON DECANTER LA'::;:~a;:~\r ·
$1 09

$1 09

sac

H;~;:s

HECK'S REG.
TO $1.44

$2.03

$144

$166

llox

CUTLERY
TRAY

$109
HECK' S

REG.

SPORTS DEPT.

SPDRTSDIPT.

14" OUTDOOR BROOM

'HIC! ~~~I

99c

VANITY

SltMTS

WASTDASKET

•r.

20"x24"

l9"x2 5" ·

24"x24"

$399

$399
.

HECK'S REG.

.NOUSIWARE DII'T.

$6.99

NOUSIWA/11 DIPT.

··. 23"x29"

1.4 "x50''
'

WAll MIRROR

I;

..'

I

i

DOOR MIRROR

•.

$109
HECK'S REG .
$1.49

·$]33

$399

,.,

...

:;;.

TUCKER PLASTIC

HECK'S REG. $6.99

14QUART
. RECTANGULAR

HOI/SEWAII DIPT.

.

\_

~

NOUSIWARE DEPT.

FOLDING DOORS

HECK'SRIG.$1.99 .

HECK'S
REG.
$1.99

10 Qt.
TULIP
WASTE
BASKET

TUCKER PLASTIC

3-PC. r-'IXINCi BOWL SET
$1 09
HECK'S REG.

$1.99 .

HeaVy vinyl OUisicfe."· 'Full-

SPOITS DEPT.

TUCKER PLASTIC

ROUND DISH PAN
,-

88,.,.

Heck's
Reg. 11.99

HECK'S REG.
$5.99

.

EASTERN

$109

. $109

.

.'

;L
'
J

WASTEBASKET

99
$16

TUCKER PLASTIC

DELUXE DISH DRAINER

$399

HECK'S REG . $6,99

r··-·

-Jifl-·r.

WALL MIRROR WALL MIRROR
WALL
'
NOUSIWAll DEPT.

· RUIIIIERMAID

.

REG.
·•2..66

HECK'S REG . $6.99.

$1.49

HECK'S
R.G.
$1 .49

09

WASTDASKET

RUIIIIERMAID

HECK'S REG. $2.19

lOX

$

HECK'S REG.
$1.49

bly anywhere,. It is filled with acry fil fi ber, and ·the lin ing is
100% c:ot:t on· fla nnel .

HICK'S
REG.
. $22.99

16QT.

WASTE IASKET

$109

~

POWER LETS

TUCKER PlASTIC

$109

This Col eman sle ep ing bog is ready for you to sleep comf orto·

CROSMAN

TUCKER

VANITY

3 LB. SLEEPING BAG

REBEL LURE

$109
PLASnC
12 OT. PAll

F=Or"rrr-- - , . ----.

COLEMAN

.PELLETS
s1 e 18

IUIIERMAID

TUCKER PLASTIC

HECK'S REG.
$1.49

WITH BELT LOOPS

HECK'S REG.
$1.29

'

$109

BELT AND
BAIT BOX

GUN
CASES

CROSMAN

COLANDER

Heck's Reg. '1.79

.

HECK'S REG. 110.99

~V'J

===I

· HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG. o•r

RUBBERM AID

SPORTS
DI#T.

99c •6••

33~

~--...:::::---1l1..-------=,.,

length steef panels. ·in~e.
Other dtlu~~: t fi¥:U'' inthadft
a permantntty ' lubr icoJ~"
track. Quality unmatcht!fd o t
tll i5. low p'r ict! eo5il y in- .

.. ~:·
~-. ' .' ·· .

--

20 qt.
BOUDOUIR·.

.......,

'' .

stalled.

$109
4¥4

2 112 oz.

OLD SPICE

STICK DEODORANT
REG.-LIME

HECK ' S REG.

69

HECK'S
REG .
$1.14 EA.

1

SIMTSDIPT.

77~
"

EA.

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

OLD SPICE

AFTERSHAVE

HAMPER

'159

Heck's Reg. '12.99
•

Houseware Dept.

'

Heck's Reg.

•3.99

REG. 4 LIME

".~::s
$1.59
EACH

$1 o•IA..

•

KENDALL

••UP·
o, g• A·
a ~&lt;

GILLETTE TRA CII
BLADES

KENDALL

e 9 CARTRIDGES

· 10W300R

GTl-30

OIL

$139 .

LIMIT 6 QUARTS

CHOICE

44CQt.

HECK'S REG.
$1 . 89

HICK '5 RIG.

COSIIETit DEPT.

,

'

69' QT.

Am-T.

J

'

J

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,,

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.

I

,

�13 - Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesd;ov . Feb. 4, 1976

12 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport -Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday , l'eb. 4, 1976

ElectiOns

on presidential

•

politirs to hold

Impact
Israeli Foreign Polley : A
Calculated Gamble
World leaders each year

fare crises that call for great
derisions. This Is the first of a
series of eight weekly articles
major
dealing
with
Internation-al problems.
By JACK R. PAYTON
TEL AVIV (UPI) - Israeli
leaders are banking on the
' presidential elections in the
United States to hold off
American pressure oh them
for sweeping Middle East
peace initiatives in 1976.
After two years of
negotiating with the Arabs
imd er almost constant U.S.
pressure, fsrael's leaders are
looking for a year, of what an
American diplomat once
called "benign neglect ."
Their biggest fear is that
President
l'ord
and
Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger won't give it to
them.
Israeli Defense Minister
Shimon Peres .recently
predicted no new or major

developments in Middle East
diplomacy in 1976 because of
the November elections.
According to Isr aeli
thinking, the grind of election

off pl'a&lt;·e pressure

the West Bank and Gaza Strip
is the Rabin government's
pledge to hold national
elections
before
any
on
these
settlement
territories

a

risk

government sources say
Rabin is not ready to take.
Rather than bilateral peace
accords with each of Israel 's
neighboring Arab states, government leaders re cently
have been talkin g more ·of
moving toward a ·one-time
over-all settlement with them
all.
Israeli and American
offic ials have avoided
speaking about the shape of
any over-all Middle East
settlement
and
the
diplomatic debate has
centered on the forum of
possible overall pea ce
negotiations.
On e forum
rejected
outright by Israel was the
U.N. Security CoWJcil.
Israeli officials boycott ed
the Security Council 's
general Middle East debate
last month because the PLO
took part. Instead, .Israeli
officials sought to present
their case in speect)es outside
the Security Council.
While Kissinger's step-by.
step Middle East diplomacy
was in full swing during 1974
and 1975, Rabin and other
Israeli leaders said the
secretary's mediation was
the key to progress toward

year campaigning would
keep Ford ~ and Kissinger from devoting too much time
and energy to the problems of
one far away region .
The unspoken core of the
Israeli theses is the belief
that Ford, fighting a close peace.
battle for the Republican
During the Kiss inger
party nomination as well as negotiations, Rabin and other
the presidency, would be Israeli leaders tended to
wary of offending America's downgrade the utility of the
Jewish voters by leaning too Geneva Middle East peace
hard on Israel.
co nference , the over -all
After
a
new
U.S. framework for the peace
administration is installed, negotiations co-sponsored by
the scenario goes. Israel will the United States and the
be in better military, Soviet Union.
diplomatic and econ omic
Israeli officials then said
shape to handle ·American the government would not
desires for .new peace seek a . reconvening of the
i'nitiatives in th e reg ion .
Geneva talks because Israel
Prime Minister Yilzhak would be facing a solid bloc of
Rabin has all but ruled out hostile Arab states.
any more interim settlements
This line changed after the
like the ones Kis singer interi.rh peace accord with
negotiated with Syria and Egypt in September 1975, and
Egypt in 1974 and 1975.
especially after Washington
Though gove rnment tacitly agreed to the Security
officials have been talking Council Middle East debate
.about the possibility of an with PLO participation .
agreement with Jordan ,
Over the past six weeks,
Israel's eastern neighbor , Israeli leaders have said the
. officials say privately there is Geneva conference would be
little chance Jordan's Ki!lg the ideal forum to discuss an
Hussein is ready
to over-all settlement .Provided
jeopardize his increasingly it was reconvened with its
friendly relations with other original participants.
Arab states by opening
The PLO was excluded
negotiations• with Israel any from the only Geneva talks
time soon.
session two months after the
Jordan has been locked out October 1973 Middle East
of the
Middle
East 'war.
negotiating arena since late
Israe li leaders want it
1974 when the Arab heads of reconvened the same way ,
state ·decided the Palestine though some officials have
Liberation Organization hinted obliquely the PLO
and not Hussein - represents might be able to join at a later
the estimated 1 million stage.
Palestinians living on the
Egypt, the most .moderate
lsraeli-&lt;Jccupied West Bank Arab state from the Israeli
of Jordan and Gaza Strip.
point of view, has said it is
Another factor working prepare~ to go back to
against any fresh attempt at Geneva and then demand
negotiating with Jordan over · that a delegation from the
PLO be allowed to attend.
Assuming that the issue of
Palestinian representation at
Geneva ca n be resolved.
FORI TO 14
TUPPERS PLAI NS - The
talent contest Monday, Feb.
9, sponsored by the Tuppers
Plains Booster Assn . is for
any child from one up to 14
years of age living in Tuppers
Plains School District, not
one to loW' as was reported .

TO MEET TUESDAY
A meeting 4J f the Eastern
Local School Di strict Board
of Education .will be held
Tuesday at 7 p.m . rather than
7:30p .m ., the regular time, at
the high school.

Israeli officials have let it be
known that months of
preparation

are

needed

By AL ROSSITER JR.

Research going back to

UPI Science Editor

1847 has shown cholesterol to

flifi1

~

DENTI TRY

00

w

a:
::&gt;

zw

0

ANOTHER FIRST OF '76 SALE

5/8"

~

By Bob Hoe fli ch

4/'1
.
00
CUT GREEN BEANS.••••••• ~~~.~.~~ ••
STOKELY'S . .

WAGNER'S
I

HEAD
LITTUCE

U.S.D.A. Choice

RIB STEAKS

.

HILTON'S
pkg.

'129

MILK

lb.

•

.

.

.

32oz.

37~

·

5/'1
00
VEGETABLE SOUP......................
·
CAMPBEll'S

39~

10% oz.

OYSTER STEW •••••••••••••••••••••••••~~~-~•••49~

,_),

GOES WITH BANK - Gary Norris, 23, Rt. I, Racine ,
assumed his duties as loan officer with the Racine Home
Natiooal Bank Monday. Gary, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Norris, RD, Racine, is married to tbe former
Donna M. Cross . He is a'1970 graduate of SOuthern High
School and a 1972 graduate of Hocking Technical College,
NelsonviUe, where he received an associate degree in
retail mid-management.
He was employed at the Jones Boys, Inc., Gallipolis
from July 1972 until the present. The last position he held
was assistant store manager in charge of the non-foods
depariment and company assistant non-foods buyer for
the Gallipolis Jones Boys store.

Suit should end today

gal.

We Reserve Right lo Limit Quantity

'

\ioo~ .lltt• So• , l eh 7 l97b
$YbitUto App hco blt St o lll ond l e&gt;(ol Ta•t-\

Coprriailt un - Th Mrtcer to. Hems ani Pr ices

~ooa

tnru

Spotlight

Sat., ht;. 1, 1976 in al l Callipo lis ani flomerow l(rocer Stms. Wt

Bean
Coffee

remvt the rt &amp;M to tilllil ~~ll\l1l i es . "OHl SOLO 1~ OEALUS .

Cost Cutters Help
Tri111 Your
Food
et

3-lb.$289
Bag

With Coupon
Limit t Coupon With S10 or More Purchase
Voorl Ai lt 1 Sol , l t·h 7, 1971&gt;
Subtett to Appl«obl1• Sto le and l oH•I To.u

Big K
Drinks

9

12·oz.$1
Cans

With Coupon

~ith S10 or More .Purchai e
vo;d •he• Sol, F.. b 7 lil16·
Ap,II&lt;Obil• S \o ! ~ e~od l owl le&gt;~e!

Limit 1 Coupon

OOo/o Pure,
Regular or Chub Pack

Californio

~~;.;~aa

Iceberg

••••

LeHuce.

Select
Mart..et Batket

Grade AA
Large
Eggs

\

Singer Gives America
The Value of'76!

'13CJ95
GREAT NEW ZIG·ZAG WITH
BUILT ·IN BLINDSTITCH AND
16 OTHER SEW ·EASY
FEATURES INCLUD ING:
• Exclui ivcly designed front
drop-in bobbin . ·
~S i mpl e di al cO nt ro ls.
• Snap·on presser fee t, mo re!
Carrying case or cabinet extra.

Open Friday Til 8 pm
Saturday Til 5 pm

The Fabric ·Shop

Prices Effective

Thursday ijlru Sunday

Wilh Coupon
limit 1 Coupo n With S10 cH Mon Purchase

MRS. LILLIAN DUFFY, SYRACUSE, who died recently,
CLEVELAND (UPI) perpetuating racial divisions
was
a niece of the late Frank E . Holmes and was a cousin of
The federal judge bearing the in all sectors of the
Alice
Holmes Freeland of Syracuse.
NAACP desegregation suit community .
against the Cleveland school · The suit charges that the ·
WORD COMES FROM ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., that
system hoped to wind up the city schools have been
Howard
E. Graham, former lockmaster at several area dams,
trial
today
following segregated as a matter of
the
last
being Lock 23 at Apple Grove, is having health
testimony by final witnesses, policy. It ~eeks integration
problems.
·
including former Mayor Carl. through busing or other
Graham was having at first some back problems and after
B. Stokes.
methods.
many x-rays it was discovered that he had collapsed bone in
U.S. District Court Judge
The school hoard rested its the back. He was sent home and was in bed for four weeks
Frank J . Battisti gave the case Tuesday with a second
NAACP pernnission Tuesday appearance by Sc hools when he suffered a heart attack and had to be rushed back to
hospital. At the hospital , it was found that he has internal
to call Stokes as a witness Superintendent Dr. Paul the
bleeding the source of which has not been located. He has. been
when Charles
Atkins , Briggs. Atkins charged that
given \2 pints of blood and a bout the same number will be
attorney for the civil rights Briggs neglected to integrate
required in the future .
group, ·Said Stokes had been certain schools by pairing
Mr. Graham is a patient at Meace Hospital, Room 309-D,
unable to appear earlier but white and black sc hools
Dunedin, Fla., 33528 for friends who would like to send a card.
. would be avallaqle today . The simply because transporting
. Mr. and Mrs. Graham also are hoping that some donors at the
NAACP rested its case students would have been bloodmobile at the Pomeroy Elementary School, 12 noon to 6
several days ago.
irivolved.
p.m. next Monday, will give in his name. The clerk must be
Stokes, now a newsman
Briggs
resta ted · the given the information that donors are giving for him in order to
with a televi sion station in system 's policy of building
get the records correct.
New York City , has on neighborhood schools within
several . occasions charged walking distance of their
Cleveland leaders with students.

Sun. 10 to !I

$ 39

Pkg.

AND GENE COLEMAN OF Ashland Oil Is due a big vote of
thanks for his contribution during tbe Stiffler fire .
Middleport Fire Chief Bob Byer said that at one point in
the fire , Middleport had only about 20 minutes of fuel left It
takes fuel to operate the equipment. Byer got two men· wtth
pickup trucks to bring in five gallon cans of gasoline. One of tbe
trucks went to the Ashland Bulk station where Coleman
volunteered to send a tanker to service all of the trucks.
As a result Coleman donated all of the fuel '=- 362 gallons of
gasoline and 15 gallons of diesel fuel used by the two aerial
ladder trucks .
ROY MILLER, OUT CHESTER way, would like to koow
just how much interest tllere is about on the establislunenl of
an air strip in Meigs County. Miller says there are some vague
possibilities that some federal money might be available for
such a strip. If you do have interest and would like to see such a
strip developed, get in touch with Miller. He wa~ts to know the
· degree of interest before he spends a lot of tune and effort
pursuing a project.

Open ·
9 til7
Mon.-Sal

VALLEY BELL

2%

.·

ORANGE DRINK ...........................,.......

head

FRESH

PARSNI.PS

.

l·lb.$129

THE LATEST WORD Is that Pomeroy-Mason Bridge will
be closed for the new floor about March 31.
At numerous meetings or' groups in the area recently,
merchants had hoped that the bridge would remain open until
after Easter, April18, so that businesses could benefit from the
Easter shopping which is coosidered near the Christmas
shopping season in volume. Apparently, however, the request
for the after-Easter closing the bridge is oot feasible .

'5.9

MATERIALS CO.

N~ ~ l

CARL HYSELL, MEIGS County Juvenile Officer, is
confined to Veterans Memorial Hospital and will undergo
surgery Tuesday . Everyone wishing Carl a speedy recovery
can send cards to Room 145, a!!be hospilal in Pomerpy. ·

8'

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Gunnoe's
Sausage

Mrs. Dale Kautz is having a card shower for her father-inlaw Elmer Kautz, who will observe his 82nd birthday Friday
at his home, Route 3, Pomeroy. Mr. Kautz is confined to tbe
home and moves a bout with a wheelchair or a walker.

CD PLYWOOD

lb.

J

4'

r

l Of the Bend . - '

5.75%

public's cholesterol con- Houston heart surgeon, says
sumption.
One is labeled, "A rigid diets are likely to help
WASH INGTON r UP I)
be a constituent of artery fatc
o
nt
rol l ed. low only a small number of
Or . Robert 1. Levy, director blocking material. It has long
On 90-Day
cholesterol
meal plan to Americans whose basic
ol the National Heart and been kn own, too, that
Lung Institute, hasn't eaten children with extra ord inarily reduce the risk of heart at- metabolic abnormaliti es
tack."
make them more susceptible
Certificates
an egg in several years . high blood levels of
The
eviden
ce
also
wa
s
to
artery
disease
than
others.
Hearl sur geon Michae l Cholestero l because of
sufficient in 1972 to prompt a For patients with abnormal 5.75 per cent paid on
and to seek Ani erfcan DeBakey
eats
them inherited defects had heart
commi ssion representing 29 cholesterol blood levels, he ~0 day Certificates of
willin gness to coordinate regularly .
. attacks at ea rly ages.
medical
organizations to recommend s
a
low- 'Deposit .
$1,000 .00
policy with Israel on a
Eggs have become the
In the past 40 yea rs ,
recommend
that
the
public
cholesterol
diet.
common ove r-all peace foca l point of a growing various studies have . tied
Minimum .
Interest
lower the cholesterol in its
"
In
normal
individuals
plan.
.Payable Quart4ti'IY.
controversy over the role cholesterol Lo corona ry
with normal lipoprotein
These sources said Rabin cholesterol plays in heart disease in one way or diet.
The government doesn't go metabolism, there is no
A S:ubstanlial penalty Is
wa s seeki ng co nsu ltations disease, which kills more another. Perhaps the best
invoked on all ce rt i l ica te
that
far .
evidence that eating eggs can accoun
with Washington on a plan than twi ce as many evidence of a connection has
ts withdrawn pr.lor
that would stretch well past Americans as cancer.
"Until we prove, at least in cause those people to have
to Jhe date of matur ity .
come from studies in which
the elections . Under this
hi gh-ri sk pa tients, that heart attacks," DeBakey
Cholesterol .is a tasteless, originally hea lthy people
proposa l. they said, no
lowerin g chol este rol is said .
speci fi c peace initiativ es odorless , white fatty sub- have been followed for a beneficial or doesn't have
He considers himself in tbe
could be made until well into stance whi ch enters the body number of years.
side effects associated with low-r isk category and ~ats
in the foods we ea t. It is
One of the most famous was
1977.
it, it's hard to make those eggs regularly .
Such consultations would especia lly abundant in egg conducted ·in Framingham, agg ressive (econunendations
Dr. Christiaan Barnard.
be beneficial to Israel , they yolks, some meats, milk, Mass .. where the medical · to the entire communi ty," th e South Afri ca n heart
said, whether Ford, another bu tter and cheese, but is history of 5,127 residents was says the Heart and Lung transplant pioneer, said in a
Republican or a Democrat absen t in vegetable fats and watched for years . Dr . Institute'S Dr. Levy .
The Athens county
recent interview it is difficult
Thomas Dawber, architect of
wins the election because any -oils.
savings &amp; Lo11n Co.
" I personally haven 't eaten to advise peopl e when the
zu seCond St.
The body needs cholesterol the study, said in an innew U.S. administration
an
egg for severa l years, but cause of atherosclerosis is
Pomerov, Ohio
install ed in January 1977 for some bas ic chemical terview at Boston Un iversity
would be obliged to carry tasks and, in fact, makes Medical Center that blood because of the science and unknow n. Person~Jly, he
through with the policy line most of the cholesterol it cholesterol was proved to be econorriy involved, il is not believes inherited factors
appropriate for us to recom- play the greatesi role in heart
worked out with Israel.
uses . The tr ouble is , a heart disease risk.
mend lowering everyone's disease .
The big test of Israel's cholesterol also has been
"The higher the level of
cholesterol,"
he said in an
What would he tell people
diplomatic gamble in 1976 implicated in hardening of cholesterol in the blood, the
interview
.
couid come in May when the the a rteries or
greater the probability th at
" We recomm end strongly
mandate allowing U.N. atherosclerosi s , the silent individuals would devel op
troops to police the cease-fire forerunner of heart attacks coronary heart disease at an choles terol-l owering diets to
patients that are clearly at
along the Syrian Golan
and strokes.
earli er age than people who
Heights frontier expires.
risk. It 's worth bett ing on, To
OR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
Arteries become tl1ickened didn 't ha ve thi s ab U Syria refuses to extend the
those wtmse cholest erol is not
PR A J STAEHL I DR. FREEMAN MAlTZ
Golan HeightS peace-keeping and rough ened by deposits of normality," he sa&gt;d.
elevated, We 'd rather wait. "
Th e Fr;lmingham study,
CALL COLLECT ARE~ ,CODE (614)
mandate for another s ix cholesterol and other fats,
When doctors talks about
cellular
debris
and
ca
lcium
.
,
however,
did
not
find
a
PlfJNE ; 252·3181 252·8445
months, the threat of war
risk factors in heart disease,
would be in11Tlinent and the As the buildup continues, the relationship between what cholesterol by no means
One oc Two Day Ful l Den ture
diplomatic progress of the · bl ood chan nel narrows, people ate and thei r stand s alon e . High bl ood
Service. Parti als , Extra ct ion s,
past two years could collapse makin g it easier for a clot to cholesterol levels. Da wber pressure and smoking also
~
X- Hay s, Cle 2ntng
form and shut off the flow said the diets of the people
overnight.
are
known
to
play
importa
nt
altogether. If that happens, studied did not va ry
roles, and th e stresses of
the result is a heart attack or, markedly in terms of choles·
modern
life are attracting
if the plugged vessel is in the terol consumption.
incre ased , att ention as
brain , a stroke.
But it is known th at
TWINS BUliN
anot her possibl e cause.
Whether cholesterol from cholesterol levels in the blood
Twins, H son and CJ
As a
re su lt , some
daugh ter. \\'i:!re born to Mr . foods is the guilty party has can be lowered to some exspecia li s ts di s~ou n t the
and Mrs. Doyle E. Multi not been pro ved. Some other tent . by .dru gs or by a ·importance of lowcholesterol
1Donna R. Circle 1 at th e · factor - or eombinalion of , carefully ·s elec ted , low.
diets in reducing the 'dan ger
Mansfield General Hospital factors ~ might be the real cholesterol diet.
MONDAY THROU GH FR IDAY
of heart disease for most
on .Jan. 29. Mrs. Multi is a culprit. · After years of
Th e big qu estion is this : if people.
, A.M. TO 6:30P.M . .
former resident of the Racine research, no one knows for
you reduce the cholesterol in
DeBakey.
the
notrd
area . The family resides at sure·
your blood, do you reduce
627 Dirlam Lane , Mansfield.
your ri sk of developing
Grandparents are Mr. and
If coronary heart disease
coronary
heart disease ?
Mrs . Hom er Circl e of RL I, could be Wiped out, the
"The
answer
is, we don't
Racine.
aver age life span of know, " said Dr . . Basil
American men could be in· Rifkind, chief of the National
crea sed by eight to 10 years,
Heart and Lung Institute's fat
RALLY SET
by
some
estima tes . metabolism branch.
Th e Meigs Coun ty Youth Elimination of canc;er would
" There have been many
Rally will be held at 2 p.m. extend the avera ge life by st udles in the U. S. and
Sunday at th e Bradford about 2.5 years.
abroad, a~d many point in an
Church of Chri st with Mr. and
Despite vast improvements encouraging direction ," tie
Mrs . Bob Millon as speakers . . in medic'ine in this century,
told an inte rviewer in hi s
Milton is assistant basketball the average life expectancy
office
on the spnJWling
coach at Kentucky Christian fcir men who reach age 40 is
Bethesda,
Md., campus of tl)e
College. Both he and Mrs. only six mon ths longer today
Nationallnstitules
of Health.
Milton are also musicall y than it was in 1900.
"But
none
of
them
has been
inclined. All area youth are
" Whatever social affluence
substantially
well
condu
cted
invited.
and medicine have achi eved,
or sufficiently free of doubts
something else ha s been
to reach , a definitiv e con·
TROOP TO MEET
taken away," says Dr. Henry
elusion
lha l yes, lowering
POJneroy Boy Seoul Troop Blackburn of the University
lipids
rfat
s ) does help , or no,
249 will meet this evening at 7 of
Minnesota .
"That
lowering
lipids doesn 't help
X
X
p.m. at the Pomeroy Junior something else is prinCipally
you.
High Building. Boys between
the ath erosclerotic, co~onary
"My own personal bias Is
the ages of 11 and 18 or who
and
cardiovascular
di
sease
·
that the abu nd ant cirhave com pl eted the fifth
epidemic."
cumstantial evidence makes
grade are welcome to join.
Hardening of the arteries is
it very likely that lowering
The · troop meets each
a
peculiarly
Western disease. · ch olesterol will be sure to be
Wednesday.
!MILL CERTIFIEDI
•
It is not a maj or health of benefit. But there's a great
NOW
probl em in Japan, some other
jump to be taken between
4x8 SHEET
ONLY
MONITORS NAMED
Asian nations Or Africa .
saying tha t I believe on the
Riverby monitors for this
Because the incidence of
basis of my " scientific
wee kend have been 'an- coronary heart disease varies
judgment
and on the evidence
nounced. _ Saturday 's with cultures, it must not be
to
date
that
this likely will be '
monitors are Mr s. Jackie part of the natural process of
and
for
it defini tely lo
shown
Cuonen, Mi ss Connie Powers, human agi ng. So, the
be
shown
to
be
true."
I to 3 p.m.; Mrs. Mildred reasoning goes, something
Bush, Mrs. Nellie Scarberry, else must be causing it, and
The evidence is good
3 to 5 p.m. Monitors for
there mus t be ways to
enough for the American
Sunday are Mrs. Mary Derks, prevent it.
Heart Association to publish
Miss Lorena Derks, 1 to 3
low -Cholesterol cookbooks
p.m .; Mrs. Coell Wetherhold , Therein lies the con773-5554
MASON, W.VA.
and other dietary Information
Mrs. Nell Noble, 3 to 5 p.m. troversy over cholesterol.
· aimed at redu cing the
before the conference could
be reconvened.
Israeli sources have said
that a major purpose of
Rabin 's visit to Washington
was to lay the groundwork for
reconvening the Geneva talks

~

:;::

Our Interest rs
Greater For You

PURE PORK
SAUSAGE

BEEF
.SHORT RIBS

.r(.:::======~o;~;:-:·:«::=:&gt;.:::::::::::::;,:;,:;,:,::=:=:=:::::===='=o
===::;:;:;:;:::;:~::::;,,,,,,,::::;,:,:,:,~

who are concerned about
bear! disease?
"I would suggest that they
lead a life they can enjoy,"
Barnard replied.
(Next : The Question of Diet )

Is ra l'li emm tin g

. _

McCall' s, kwick· Sew, Siinpficitv Patterns
SINGI:R SAL !OS&amp; SERVICE
tiS

W. Second

992 -2284

Pomeroy, Ohio

the Umted States but at the ·
same time making every
effort to minimize defense
e xpenditures without harming co mbat capability.
There is no question that $101
billion is a · great deal of
money. However, that figyre
should be put in its proper
perspective. In the last 10
years, outlays for national
defense have shrWJk from
more than 40 per cent to
slightly over 25 percent of the
total federal budge\. In
contrast, social welfare
programs now take twice the
money spent on defense, As a
percen tage of the Gross
National Product, defense
spending fell from 9.4 percent
in 1968 to 5.8 percent in 1976,
the lowest figure sin ce 1940.
These figures clearly refute
the claims of those critics
who say defense spending is
taking more of the budget
each year.
At a time when Arr\erican
defense spending is declining
in real terms, that of the
Soviet Union is on the in·
crease.
For
example,
military analysts point out
tllat the SOviet Union has
outspent tbe United States by
50 per cent on naval ship·
buildiJlg over the past 10
years . This has led to a
Russian navy that can obviously be utilized in more
than a defensive role . Overall
Soviet defense spending has
been rising roughly 5 percent
a year in uninflated currency
while that of the United
States lias been declining
about 1.5 P.,rcent a year.
All of this is not to say that
the defense budf!e! should not
be subje d ed to intense
scrutiny. Any wasteful
spending in the name of
defense actually weakens the
nation rather than strengtll·
ens it. In my opinion the
United States has too many
troops stationed abroad .
These could be reduced
substantially, helping our
balance of payments and
lowering the chances of
Americans being caught in a
flash-war . These steps can be
safely taken without any
weakening of our defense
posture.
Few Americans wish the
United Slates to act as
policeman for the world any
lonuer, but that docs not
1Continued on p~ge 16)

•

Oo • .

Kr,er

Kroger

73¢ &amp;raae A

HI-Nu 2%.

Large Eggs

Lowfat Milk
19
Gtit.
Ct.

lolly

Rich

Stokely
Applesauce

Stokely
CatSUP' •

••

• • • •

Cut 01 Shollies Stokely

Dolklous

• • • • • • •

•

Green
Beans
Quarters

Fresh

Eahnore
Margarln•
1-lb. $
Pkgs.

Sungold
Bread
16-oz.
Loaves

All Kroger

Now Open

24 Hours a Day
(Except Saturday Midnight 'til 9 a.m. Sunday)

xupt Ashland (Winchester Ave.), Gassaway, Hinton, Ironton
Pikeville, Rainelle, Summenville Dlld White SuiJphuiF)
TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
We ol10 ~~mrantee that we wi ll do tvt r¥thing In 01.11 pn..,er
to ho&gt;'e um ple lvppl iru oJ all ad ~ er! i ,.,d •ped al, on our

( ,,., 1 rh•nQ tOV buy at
l(rgg er h guaranteed lor

'fDYr tolol IOi itloction
r-vordlen of monul oci&lt;KI!r
Iff yoU o re not soti1fied ,
l(rover will replou! your
Item wrth the 1ome brond
0• o comptuobl~ brood 01

yovr pu rtha'e pnte

~
..-/~
\'1
(. J
, \.C

.,

~hel"et "' he n yo u ~hop f!)t them If, dvt to conditi on•
beyond our ronhol , we ' " " au! at o n od~el hted 1peciol.
we w illsubsti!ule the 101M item tl\ a tom poroble b&lt;ond
{when lU( h of'! ite m i 1 o • orlob le) reHe&lt;ting the lame IO¥ iriQS
o r, ll ycu prl!!er , Ql"ll ycv o "R-AIN ( HECK'' wluch e ntitle•

you to tile tome odve rlrltd \petrol or the tomt \ P&lt;f dol
pme any lim• within :lO d a~1
·

Kroger Welcomes
Your Federal
Food Stamps

�13 - Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesd;ov . Feb. 4, 1976

12 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport -Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday , l'eb. 4, 1976

ElectiOns

on presidential

•

politirs to hold

Impact
Israeli Foreign Polley : A
Calculated Gamble
World leaders each year

fare crises that call for great
derisions. This Is the first of a
series of eight weekly articles
major
dealing
with
Internation-al problems.
By JACK R. PAYTON
TEL AVIV (UPI) - Israeli
leaders are banking on the
' presidential elections in the
United States to hold off
American pressure oh them
for sweeping Middle East
peace initiatives in 1976.
After two years of
negotiating with the Arabs
imd er almost constant U.S.
pressure, fsrael's leaders are
looking for a year, of what an
American diplomat once
called "benign neglect ."
Their biggest fear is that
President
l'ord
and
Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger won't give it to
them.
Israeli Defense Minister
Shimon Peres .recently
predicted no new or major

developments in Middle East
diplomacy in 1976 because of
the November elections.
According to Isr aeli
thinking, the grind of election

off pl'a&lt;·e pressure

the West Bank and Gaza Strip
is the Rabin government's
pledge to hold national
elections
before
any
on
these
settlement
territories

a

risk

government sources say
Rabin is not ready to take.
Rather than bilateral peace
accords with each of Israel 's
neighboring Arab states, government leaders re cently
have been talkin g more ·of
moving toward a ·one-time
over-all settlement with them
all.
Israeli and American
offic ials have avoided
speaking about the shape of
any over-all Middle East
settlement
and
the
diplomatic debate has
centered on the forum of
possible overall pea ce
negotiations.
On e forum
rejected
outright by Israel was the
U.N. Security CoWJcil.
Israeli officials boycott ed
the Security Council 's
general Middle East debate
last month because the PLO
took part. Instead, .Israeli
officials sought to present
their case in speect)es outside
the Security Council.
While Kissinger's step-by.
step Middle East diplomacy
was in full swing during 1974
and 1975, Rabin and other
Israeli leaders said the
secretary's mediation was
the key to progress toward

year campaigning would
keep Ford ~ and Kissinger from devoting too much time
and energy to the problems of
one far away region .
The unspoken core of the
Israeli theses is the belief
that Ford, fighting a close peace.
battle for the Republican
During the Kiss inger
party nomination as well as negotiations, Rabin and other
the presidency, would be Israeli leaders tended to
wary of offending America's downgrade the utility of the
Jewish voters by leaning too Geneva Middle East peace
hard on Israel.
co nference , the over -all
After
a
new
U.S. framework for the peace
administration is installed, negotiations co-sponsored by
the scenario goes. Israel will the United States and the
be in better military, Soviet Union.
diplomatic and econ omic
Israeli officials then said
shape to handle ·American the government would not
desires for .new peace seek a . reconvening of the
i'nitiatives in th e reg ion .
Geneva talks because Israel
Prime Minister Yilzhak would be facing a solid bloc of
Rabin has all but ruled out hostile Arab states.
any more interim settlements
This line changed after the
like the ones Kis singer interi.rh peace accord with
negotiated with Syria and Egypt in September 1975, and
Egypt in 1974 and 1975.
especially after Washington
Though gove rnment tacitly agreed to the Security
officials have been talking Council Middle East debate
.about the possibility of an with PLO participation .
agreement with Jordan ,
Over the past six weeks,
Israel's eastern neighbor , Israeli leaders have said the
. officials say privately there is Geneva conference would be
little chance Jordan's Ki!lg the ideal forum to discuss an
Hussein is ready
to over-all settlement .Provided
jeopardize his increasingly it was reconvened with its
friendly relations with other original participants.
Arab states by opening
The PLO was excluded
negotiations• with Israel any from the only Geneva talks
time soon.
session two months after the
Jordan has been locked out October 1973 Middle East
of the
Middle
East 'war.
negotiating arena since late
Israe li leaders want it
1974 when the Arab heads of reconvened the same way ,
state ·decided the Palestine though some officials have
Liberation Organization hinted obliquely the PLO
and not Hussein - represents might be able to join at a later
the estimated 1 million stage.
Palestinians living on the
Egypt, the most .moderate
lsraeli-&lt;Jccupied West Bank Arab state from the Israeli
of Jordan and Gaza Strip.
point of view, has said it is
Another factor working prepare~ to go back to
against any fresh attempt at Geneva and then demand
negotiating with Jordan over · that a delegation from the
PLO be allowed to attend.
Assuming that the issue of
Palestinian representation at
Geneva ca n be resolved.
FORI TO 14
TUPPERS PLAI NS - The
talent contest Monday, Feb.
9, sponsored by the Tuppers
Plains Booster Assn . is for
any child from one up to 14
years of age living in Tuppers
Plains School District, not
one to loW' as was reported .

TO MEET TUESDAY
A meeting 4J f the Eastern
Local School Di strict Board
of Education .will be held
Tuesday at 7 p.m . rather than
7:30p .m ., the regular time, at
the high school.

Israeli officials have let it be
known that months of
preparation

are

needed

By AL ROSSITER JR.

Research going back to

UPI Science Editor

1847 has shown cholesterol to

flifi1

~

DENTI TRY

00

w

a:
::&gt;

zw

0

ANOTHER FIRST OF '76 SALE

5/8"

~

By Bob Hoe fli ch

4/'1
.
00
CUT GREEN BEANS.••••••• ~~~.~.~~ ••
STOKELY'S . .

WAGNER'S
I

HEAD
LITTUCE

U.S.D.A. Choice

RIB STEAKS

.

HILTON'S
pkg.

'129

MILK

lb.

•

.

.

.

32oz.

37~

·

5/'1
00
VEGETABLE SOUP......................
·
CAMPBEll'S

39~

10% oz.

OYSTER STEW •••••••••••••••••••••••••~~~-~•••49~

,_),

GOES WITH BANK - Gary Norris, 23, Rt. I, Racine ,
assumed his duties as loan officer with the Racine Home
Natiooal Bank Monday. Gary, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Norris, RD, Racine, is married to tbe former
Donna M. Cross . He is a'1970 graduate of SOuthern High
School and a 1972 graduate of Hocking Technical College,
NelsonviUe, where he received an associate degree in
retail mid-management.
He was employed at the Jones Boys, Inc., Gallipolis
from July 1972 until the present. The last position he held
was assistant store manager in charge of the non-foods
depariment and company assistant non-foods buyer for
the Gallipolis Jones Boys store.

Suit should end today

gal.

We Reserve Right lo Limit Quantity

'

\ioo~ .lltt• So• , l eh 7 l97b
$YbitUto App hco blt St o lll ond l e&gt;(ol Ta•t-\

Coprriailt un - Th Mrtcer to. Hems ani Pr ices

~ooa

tnru

Spotlight

Sat., ht;. 1, 1976 in al l Callipo lis ani flomerow l(rocer Stms. Wt

Bean
Coffee

remvt the rt &amp;M to tilllil ~~ll\l1l i es . "OHl SOLO 1~ OEALUS .

Cost Cutters Help
Tri111 Your
Food
et

3-lb.$289
Bag

With Coupon
Limit t Coupon With S10 or More Purchase
Voorl Ai lt 1 Sol , l t·h 7, 1971&gt;
Subtett to Appl«obl1• Sto le and l oH•I To.u

Big K
Drinks

9

12·oz.$1
Cans

With Coupon

~ith S10 or More .Purchai e
vo;d •he• Sol, F.. b 7 lil16·
Ap,II&lt;Obil• S \o ! ~ e~od l owl le&gt;~e!

Limit 1 Coupon

OOo/o Pure,
Regular or Chub Pack

Californio

~~;.;~aa

Iceberg

••••

LeHuce.

Select
Mart..et Batket

Grade AA
Large
Eggs

\

Singer Gives America
The Value of'76!

'13CJ95
GREAT NEW ZIG·ZAG WITH
BUILT ·IN BLINDSTITCH AND
16 OTHER SEW ·EASY
FEATURES INCLUD ING:
• Exclui ivcly designed front
drop-in bobbin . ·
~S i mpl e di al cO nt ro ls.
• Snap·on presser fee t, mo re!
Carrying case or cabinet extra.

Open Friday Til 8 pm
Saturday Til 5 pm

The Fabric ·Shop

Prices Effective

Thursday ijlru Sunday

Wilh Coupon
limit 1 Coupo n With S10 cH Mon Purchase

MRS. LILLIAN DUFFY, SYRACUSE, who died recently,
CLEVELAND (UPI) perpetuating racial divisions
was
a niece of the late Frank E . Holmes and was a cousin of
The federal judge bearing the in all sectors of the
Alice
Holmes Freeland of Syracuse.
NAACP desegregation suit community .
against the Cleveland school · The suit charges that the ·
WORD COMES FROM ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., that
system hoped to wind up the city schools have been
Howard
E. Graham, former lockmaster at several area dams,
trial
today
following segregated as a matter of
the
last
being Lock 23 at Apple Grove, is having health
testimony by final witnesses, policy. It ~eeks integration
problems.
·
including former Mayor Carl. through busing or other
Graham was having at first some back problems and after
B. Stokes.
methods.
many x-rays it was discovered that he had collapsed bone in
U.S. District Court Judge
The school hoard rested its the back. He was sent home and was in bed for four weeks
Frank J . Battisti gave the case Tuesday with a second
NAACP pernnission Tuesday appearance by Sc hools when he suffered a heart attack and had to be rushed back to
hospital. At the hospital , it was found that he has internal
to call Stokes as a witness Superintendent Dr. Paul the
bleeding the source of which has not been located. He has. been
when Charles
Atkins , Briggs. Atkins charged that
given \2 pints of blood and a bout the same number will be
attorney for the civil rights Briggs neglected to integrate
required in the future .
group, ·Said Stokes had been certain schools by pairing
Mr. Graham is a patient at Meace Hospital, Room 309-D,
unable to appear earlier but white and black sc hools
Dunedin, Fla., 33528 for friends who would like to send a card.
. would be avallaqle today . The simply because transporting
. Mr. and Mrs. Graham also are hoping that some donors at the
NAACP rested its case students would have been bloodmobile at the Pomeroy Elementary School, 12 noon to 6
several days ago.
irivolved.
p.m. next Monday, will give in his name. The clerk must be
Stokes, now a newsman
Briggs
resta ted · the given the information that donors are giving for him in order to
with a televi sion station in system 's policy of building
get the records correct.
New York City , has on neighborhood schools within
several . occasions charged walking distance of their
Cleveland leaders with students.

Sun. 10 to !I

$ 39

Pkg.

AND GENE COLEMAN OF Ashland Oil Is due a big vote of
thanks for his contribution during tbe Stiffler fire .
Middleport Fire Chief Bob Byer said that at one point in
the fire , Middleport had only about 20 minutes of fuel left It
takes fuel to operate the equipment. Byer got two men· wtth
pickup trucks to bring in five gallon cans of gasoline. One of tbe
trucks went to the Ashland Bulk station where Coleman
volunteered to send a tanker to service all of the trucks.
As a result Coleman donated all of the fuel '=- 362 gallons of
gasoline and 15 gallons of diesel fuel used by the two aerial
ladder trucks .
ROY MILLER, OUT CHESTER way, would like to koow
just how much interest tllere is about on the establislunenl of
an air strip in Meigs County. Miller says there are some vague
possibilities that some federal money might be available for
such a strip. If you do have interest and would like to see such a
strip developed, get in touch with Miller. He wa~ts to know the
· degree of interest before he spends a lot of tune and effort
pursuing a project.

Open ·
9 til7
Mon.-Sal

VALLEY BELL

2%

.·

ORANGE DRINK ...........................,.......

head

FRESH

PARSNI.PS

.

l·lb.$129

THE LATEST WORD Is that Pomeroy-Mason Bridge will
be closed for the new floor about March 31.
At numerous meetings or' groups in the area recently,
merchants had hoped that the bridge would remain open until
after Easter, April18, so that businesses could benefit from the
Easter shopping which is coosidered near the Christmas
shopping season in volume. Apparently, however, the request
for the after-Easter closing the bridge is oot feasible .

'5.9

MATERIALS CO.

N~ ~ l

CARL HYSELL, MEIGS County Juvenile Officer, is
confined to Veterans Memorial Hospital and will undergo
surgery Tuesday . Everyone wishing Carl a speedy recovery
can send cards to Room 145, a!!be hospilal in Pomerpy. ·

8'

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Gunnoe's
Sausage

Mrs. Dale Kautz is having a card shower for her father-inlaw Elmer Kautz, who will observe his 82nd birthday Friday
at his home, Route 3, Pomeroy. Mr. Kautz is confined to tbe
home and moves a bout with a wheelchair or a walker.

CD PLYWOOD

lb.

J

4'

r

l Of the Bend . - '

5.75%

public's cholesterol con- Houston heart surgeon, says
sumption.
One is labeled, "A rigid diets are likely to help
WASH INGTON r UP I)
be a constituent of artery fatc
o
nt
rol l ed. low only a small number of
Or . Robert 1. Levy, director blocking material. It has long
On 90-Day
cholesterol
meal plan to Americans whose basic
ol the National Heart and been kn own, too, that
Lung Institute, hasn't eaten children with extra ord inarily reduce the risk of heart at- metabolic abnormaliti es
tack."
make them more susceptible
Certificates
an egg in several years . high blood levels of
The
eviden
ce
also
wa
s
to
artery
disease
than
others.
Hearl sur geon Michae l Cholestero l because of
sufficient in 1972 to prompt a For patients with abnormal 5.75 per cent paid on
and to seek Ani erfcan DeBakey
eats
them inherited defects had heart
commi ssion representing 29 cholesterol blood levels, he ~0 day Certificates of
willin gness to coordinate regularly .
. attacks at ea rly ages.
medical
organizations to recommend s
a
low- 'Deposit .
$1,000 .00
policy with Israel on a
Eggs have become the
In the past 40 yea rs ,
recommend
that
the
public
cholesterol
diet.
common ove r-all peace foca l point of a growing various studies have . tied
Minimum .
Interest
lower the cholesterol in its
"
In
normal
individuals
plan.
.Payable Quart4ti'IY.
controversy over the role cholesterol Lo corona ry
with normal lipoprotein
These sources said Rabin cholesterol plays in heart disease in one way or diet.
The government doesn't go metabolism, there is no
A S:ubstanlial penalty Is
wa s seeki ng co nsu ltations disease, which kills more another. Perhaps the best
invoked on all ce rt i l ica te
that
far .
evidence that eating eggs can accoun
with Washington on a plan than twi ce as many evidence of a connection has
ts withdrawn pr.lor
that would stretch well past Americans as cancer.
"Until we prove, at least in cause those people to have
to Jhe date of matur ity .
come from studies in which
the elections . Under this
hi gh-ri sk pa tients, that heart attacks," DeBakey
Cholesterol .is a tasteless, originally hea lthy people
proposa l. they said, no
lowerin g chol este rol is said .
speci fi c peace initiativ es odorless , white fatty sub- have been followed for a beneficial or doesn't have
He considers himself in tbe
could be made until well into stance whi ch enters the body number of years.
side effects associated with low-r isk category and ~ats
in the foods we ea t. It is
One of the most famous was
1977.
it, it's hard to make those eggs regularly .
Such consultations would especia lly abundant in egg conducted ·in Framingham, agg ressive (econunendations
Dr. Christiaan Barnard.
be beneficial to Israel , they yolks, some meats, milk, Mass .. where the medical · to the entire communi ty," th e South Afri ca n heart
said, whether Ford, another bu tter and cheese, but is history of 5,127 residents was says the Heart and Lung transplant pioneer, said in a
Republican or a Democrat absen t in vegetable fats and watched for years . Dr . Institute'S Dr. Levy .
The Athens county
recent interview it is difficult
Thomas Dawber, architect of
wins the election because any -oils.
savings &amp; Lo11n Co.
" I personally haven 't eaten to advise peopl e when the
zu seCond St.
The body needs cholesterol the study, said in an innew U.S. administration
an
egg for severa l years, but cause of atherosclerosis is
Pomerov, Ohio
install ed in January 1977 for some bas ic chemical terview at Boston Un iversity
would be obliged to carry tasks and, in fact, makes Medical Center that blood because of the science and unknow n. Person~Jly, he
through with the policy line most of the cholesterol it cholesterol was proved to be econorriy involved, il is not believes inherited factors
appropriate for us to recom- play the greatesi role in heart
worked out with Israel.
uses . The tr ouble is , a heart disease risk.
mend lowering everyone's disease .
The big test of Israel's cholesterol also has been
"The higher the level of
cholesterol,"
he said in an
What would he tell people
diplomatic gamble in 1976 implicated in hardening of cholesterol in the blood, the
interview
.
couid come in May when the the a rteries or
greater the probability th at
" We recomm end strongly
mandate allowing U.N. atherosclerosi s , the silent individuals would devel op
troops to police the cease-fire forerunner of heart attacks coronary heart disease at an choles terol-l owering diets to
patients that are clearly at
along the Syrian Golan
and strokes.
earli er age than people who
Heights frontier expires.
risk. It 's worth bett ing on, To
OR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
Arteries become tl1ickened didn 't ha ve thi s ab U Syria refuses to extend the
those wtmse cholest erol is not
PR A J STAEHL I DR. FREEMAN MAlTZ
Golan HeightS peace-keeping and rough ened by deposits of normality," he sa&gt;d.
elevated, We 'd rather wait. "
Th e Fr;lmingham study,
CALL COLLECT ARE~ ,CODE (614)
mandate for another s ix cholesterol and other fats,
When doctors talks about
cellular
debris
and
ca
lcium
.
,
however,
did
not
find
a
PlfJNE ; 252·3181 252·8445
months, the threat of war
risk factors in heart disease,
would be in11Tlinent and the As the buildup continues, the relationship between what cholesterol by no means
One oc Two Day Ful l Den ture
diplomatic progress of the · bl ood chan nel narrows, people ate and thei r stand s alon e . High bl ood
Service. Parti als , Extra ct ion s,
past two years could collapse makin g it easier for a clot to cholesterol levels. Da wber pressure and smoking also
~
X- Hay s, Cle 2ntng
form and shut off the flow said the diets of the people
overnight.
are
known
to
play
importa
nt
altogether. If that happens, studied did not va ry
roles, and th e stresses of
the result is a heart attack or, markedly in terms of choles·
modern
life are attracting
if the plugged vessel is in the terol consumption.
incre ased , att ention as
brain , a stroke.
But it is known th at
TWINS BUliN
anot her possibl e cause.
Whether cholesterol from cholesterol levels in the blood
Twins, H son and CJ
As a
re su lt , some
daugh ter. \\'i:!re born to Mr . foods is the guilty party has can be lowered to some exspecia li s ts di s~ou n t the
and Mrs. Doyle E. Multi not been pro ved. Some other tent . by .dru gs or by a ·importance of lowcholesterol
1Donna R. Circle 1 at th e · factor - or eombinalion of , carefully ·s elec ted , low.
diets in reducing the 'dan ger
Mansfield General Hospital factors ~ might be the real cholesterol diet.
MONDAY THROU GH FR IDAY
of heart disease for most
on .Jan. 29. Mrs. Multi is a culprit. · After years of
Th e big qu estion is this : if people.
, A.M. TO 6:30P.M . .
former resident of the Racine research, no one knows for
you reduce the cholesterol in
DeBakey.
the
notrd
area . The family resides at sure·
your blood, do you reduce
627 Dirlam Lane , Mansfield.
your ri sk of developing
Grandparents are Mr. and
If coronary heart disease
coronary
heart disease ?
Mrs . Hom er Circl e of RL I, could be Wiped out, the
"The
answer
is, we don't
Racine.
aver age life span of know, " said Dr . . Basil
American men could be in· Rifkind, chief of the National
crea sed by eight to 10 years,
Heart and Lung Institute's fat
RALLY SET
by
some
estima tes . metabolism branch.
Th e Meigs Coun ty Youth Elimination of canc;er would
" There have been many
Rally will be held at 2 p.m. extend the avera ge life by st udles in the U. S. and
Sunday at th e Bradford about 2.5 years.
abroad, a~d many point in an
Church of Chri st with Mr. and
Despite vast improvements encouraging direction ," tie
Mrs . Bob Millon as speakers . . in medic'ine in this century,
told an inte rviewer in hi s
Milton is assistant basketball the average life expectancy
office
on the spnJWling
coach at Kentucky Christian fcir men who reach age 40 is
Bethesda,
Md., campus of tl)e
College. Both he and Mrs. only six mon ths longer today
Nationallnstitules
of Health.
Milton are also musicall y than it was in 1900.
"But
none
of
them
has been
inclined. All area youth are
" Whatever social affluence
substantially
well
condu
cted
invited.
and medicine have achi eved,
or sufficiently free of doubts
something else ha s been
to reach , a definitiv e con·
TROOP TO MEET
taken away," says Dr. Henry
elusion
lha l yes, lowering
POJneroy Boy Seoul Troop Blackburn of the University
lipids
rfat
s ) does help , or no,
249 will meet this evening at 7 of
Minnesota .
"That
lowering
lipids doesn 't help
X
X
p.m. at the Pomeroy Junior something else is prinCipally
you.
High Building. Boys between
the ath erosclerotic, co~onary
"My own personal bias Is
the ages of 11 and 18 or who
and
cardiovascular
di
sease
·
that the abu nd ant cirhave com pl eted the fifth
epidemic."
cumstantial evidence makes
grade are welcome to join.
Hardening of the arteries is
it very likely that lowering
The · troop meets each
a
peculiarly
Western disease. · ch olesterol will be sure to be
Wednesday.
!MILL CERTIFIEDI
•
It is not a maj or health of benefit. But there's a great
NOW
probl em in Japan, some other
jump to be taken between
4x8 SHEET
ONLY
MONITORS NAMED
Asian nations Or Africa .
saying tha t I believe on the
Riverby monitors for this
Because the incidence of
basis of my " scientific
wee kend have been 'an- coronary heart disease varies
judgment
and on the evidence
nounced. _ Saturday 's with cultures, it must not be
to
date
that
this likely will be '
monitors are Mr s. Jackie part of the natural process of
and
for
it defini tely lo
shown
Cuonen, Mi ss Connie Powers, human agi ng. So, the
be
shown
to
be
true."
I to 3 p.m.; Mrs. Mildred reasoning goes, something
Bush, Mrs. Nellie Scarberry, else must be causing it, and
The evidence is good
3 to 5 p.m. Monitors for
there mus t be ways to
enough for the American
Sunday are Mrs. Mary Derks, prevent it.
Heart Association to publish
Miss Lorena Derks, 1 to 3
low -Cholesterol cookbooks
p.m .; Mrs. Coell Wetherhold , Therein lies the con773-5554
MASON, W.VA.
and other dietary Information
Mrs. Nell Noble, 3 to 5 p.m. troversy over cholesterol.
· aimed at redu cing the
before the conference could
be reconvened.
Israeli sources have said
that a major purpose of
Rabin 's visit to Washington
was to lay the groundwork for
reconvening the Geneva talks

~

:;::

Our Interest rs
Greater For You

PURE PORK
SAUSAGE

BEEF
.SHORT RIBS

.r(.:::======~o;~;:-:·:«::=:&gt;.:::::::::::::;,:;,:;,:,::=:=:=:::::===='=o
===::;:;:;:;:::;:~::::;,,,,,,,::::;,:,:,:,~

who are concerned about
bear! disease?
"I would suggest that they
lead a life they can enjoy,"
Barnard replied.
(Next : The Question of Diet )

Is ra l'li emm tin g

. _

McCall' s, kwick· Sew, Siinpficitv Patterns
SINGI:R SAL !OS&amp; SERVICE
tiS

W. Second

992 -2284

Pomeroy, Ohio

the Umted States but at the ·
same time making every
effort to minimize defense
e xpenditures without harming co mbat capability.
There is no question that $101
billion is a · great deal of
money. However, that figyre
should be put in its proper
perspective. In the last 10
years, outlays for national
defense have shrWJk from
more than 40 per cent to
slightly over 25 percent of the
total federal budge\. In
contrast, social welfare
programs now take twice the
money spent on defense, As a
percen tage of the Gross
National Product, defense
spending fell from 9.4 percent
in 1968 to 5.8 percent in 1976,
the lowest figure sin ce 1940.
These figures clearly refute
the claims of those critics
who say defense spending is
taking more of the budget
each year.
At a time when Arr\erican
defense spending is declining
in real terms, that of the
Soviet Union is on the in·
crease.
For
example,
military analysts point out
tllat the SOviet Union has
outspent tbe United States by
50 per cent on naval ship·
buildiJlg over the past 10
years . This has led to a
Russian navy that can obviously be utilized in more
than a defensive role . Overall
Soviet defense spending has
been rising roughly 5 percent
a year in uninflated currency
while that of the United
States lias been declining
about 1.5 P.,rcent a year.
All of this is not to say that
the defense budf!e! should not
be subje d ed to intense
scrutiny. Any wasteful
spending in the name of
defense actually weakens the
nation rather than strengtll·
ens it. In my opinion the
United States has too many
troops stationed abroad .
These could be reduced
substantially, helping our
balance of payments and
lowering the chances of
Americans being caught in a
flash-war . These steps can be
safely taken without any
weakening of our defense
posture.
Few Americans wish the
United Slates to act as
policeman for the world any
lonuer, but that docs not
1Continued on p~ge 16)

•

Oo • .

Kr,er

Kroger

73¢ &amp;raae A

HI-Nu 2%.

Large Eggs

Lowfat Milk
19
Gtit.
Ct.

lolly

Rich

Stokely
Applesauce

Stokely
CatSUP' •

••

• • • •

Cut 01 Shollies Stokely

Dolklous

• • • • • • •

•

Green
Beans
Quarters

Fresh

Eahnore
Margarln•
1-lb. $
Pkgs.

Sungold
Bread
16-oz.
Loaves

All Kroger

Now Open

24 Hours a Day
(Except Saturday Midnight 'til 9 a.m. Sunday)

xupt Ashland (Winchester Ave.), Gassaway, Hinton, Ironton
Pikeville, Rainelle, Summenville Dlld White SuiJphuiF)
TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
We ol10 ~~mrantee that we wi ll do tvt r¥thing In 01.11 pn..,er
to ho&gt;'e um ple lvppl iru oJ all ad ~ er! i ,.,d •ped al, on our

( ,,., 1 rh•nQ tOV buy at
l(rgg er h guaranteed lor

'fDYr tolol IOi itloction
r-vordlen of monul oci&lt;KI!r
Iff yoU o re not soti1fied ,
l(rover will replou! your
Item wrth the 1ome brond
0• o comptuobl~ brood 01

yovr pu rtha'e pnte

~
..-/~
\'1
(. J
, \.C

.,

~hel"et "' he n yo u ~hop f!)t them If, dvt to conditi on•
beyond our ronhol , we ' " " au! at o n od~el hted 1peciol.
we w illsubsti!ule the 101M item tl\ a tom poroble b&lt;ond
{when lU( h of'! ite m i 1 o • orlob le) reHe&lt;ting the lame IO¥ iriQS
o r, ll ycu prl!!er , Ql"ll ycv o "R-AIN ( HECK'' wluch e ntitle•

you to tile tome odve rlrltd \petrol or the tomt \ P&lt;f dol
pme any lim• within :lO d a~1
·

Kroger Welcomes
Your Federal
Food Stamps

�14 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Feb. 4, 1976

:

~~~~~;-a.t4o·-~IJ-J,_
one letter to euh aquare. to
form four ordinary w-ordt .

-·-·

~ E WI N G

ot al l k i nds , dresses
tor all occ.-.sions , Slac k s
shirts , new born la yelles .
cu rta ms . dran es Phone 99 2
3035 and ask. tor Do roth y
1 4 12tc

j I I
•••

rULBOYI

t

I

GIZAHN ~~

Y

V"

Now arT&amp;nfO tho circled loltors
to form the
u

1urpri1e uuwer.
~~~~~Ll=:;::~;;~;:~~;::dJ~..,•;•:•~1e1ted by the above cartoon.

!:.."::.":..liT'S "[

I

I I I X)-( I I

Jumble.: CABLE

l'esl,rda•'•

'

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GUILD

SYSTEM

)-[I]"

CAuwer-. 1o•orrowJ
NOGGIN

Ann·er: No rf'pulablt• lun4"1r rounlt'r would
lil!rt' t'

them -"BAD EGGS .. .

WANT ADS
INFORMAT ION
DEADLINES
5
P M .
Day
Before
P ub I icat Ion .
M onday' Dead l in e 9 a m .
Cancel l ation - Corre c11ons
Wil l be accep ted until 9 a . m
tor Day of P ub l ic a ti on ,
REGULATIONS
The P u blisher reserve s the
r ight 10 ed il or reject any ads
ob jectio nal . The
d ee med
publ is h~r
will
not
be
r es pon sible fo r more tha n one
Incorrec t ins ert ion .
RATES

For Want Ad Sendee
5 ce nts per word one i nser t ion
M inimum Ch ar ge SLOO
14 ce nts per word thre e
consecut,ve 1nser1 ion s
26 cent s per word six c on
sec ullve in sertio n's
25 Per Cent Oisco un t on pa1d
ads an d ads pa1d with in 10
days .
CARD OF THANK S
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 .00 for 50 word minimum
Each additional word J
cents .
BLIND ADS
. Add itional 25c Charge p er
Advert isement.
OFFICE HOUR S
8 30 a . m . to 5 00 p . m .
Da i l y . a : JO a m . to 12 :00 N oon
Saturday .

Notice

NEW197l CHEV. SUBURBAN

MEMORY of Clyde G .
Bayles . In ap preci at io n to
th e Vete ra ns Memor1al
Hospital , Or . R . R . P ic k ens
and s t aff , R ev Floyd Sh ook ,
Rawlings &amp; Coals Funeral·
Ho me,
Edna
Max i n e
(Co ats ) Gaskill and ' a l l
p eo pl e w h o showed pat ience
and und erstanding thru my
husband 's
i lln ess
and
pa ssi ng . H e is sadly m issed
by h i s w i f e . Viola a n d
da ughler , Mrs . Don Pa y.ne
and a host of loved ones .

IN

D eath is just the Gateway ,
Ou r loves on es pass lh r oug h ,
On t he ir way lo the lan d where
we're all born anew .
And while we ca n 't see whal 's
on death's oth er S1de .
We know t hai our Fat her w ill
ri ch ly provid e.
Al l that He p r omised to those
who be l ieve
And His kmgdom is wa.i ting
t or us to r eceive
2 4 11 p

1974 PLY . CUDA

2 BED RM . mobile home . real
n1ce . Phone 99 2 332J
2 4 1t c

POM!~?!vE~?!~~- CO.~
~

E N JOY g ra CI OU S livi ng al
Villag e Manor
in M 1d
dleport f or as low as Si04 per
month , plu s e lec tr ic . T hese
ar e brand ne w h igh qual it y
apan rnen ts ar pr ices you
c art afford . Your rent in
etudes month ro m onth
leas es , al l el e c, l tv1ng .
carp eti n g ,
rang e
and
r ef ri g e r ato r . fr ee trash
p ic k up, ca bl e TV at your
ex p ense .
an d
on -si t e
la un dry ta clilfies . Con
ve n ientto shopping on Th i r d
and Mi l l St r ee ts in M id
dtepor t . See the manager ar
Riverside Apartrnents or
call 992 3273 . Furnish ~ d
apartm ents
ar c
al so
ava i labl e
1 2 781C

HOTEL

T AX
p r epared .
F1:d eral a n d st ale taxes .
Wil l be done b y appt on l y .
Pl ease phone 99 2 2272 , or see
M r s . Wa nd a Eblin . Laure l
Cl1 ff Rd , P omero y
12 31 30 1c

1968 OLD SMOBILE 98 . need s
repair , '5200 Phon e 992 6162 .
2 4 6tc

FOR SALE I 1968 Oldsmobile
To ran ado , A 1 shape , $750 .
Phone 992 3992 .
2 4 41 p
1969 NOV A VEL 350 4 speed .
A lso . 1969 Camaro V 8. 307 4
sp ee d . Phone 247 2541.
2·4 31c
19 6'7 DODGE Dart . 6 cy l in der .
new batt ery and snow ti res .
Good ru n ni ng condi tion .
$1tJ5 Phon e (614i 667 3031.
2 4 Jl p
19 74 FO~O van , 1 ton lon g
wheel ba se , auto with P S
and bra!&lt;es , ra d io , se l up l o
pull ca m per Phon e 99 2 - 7320
2 1 61c
CHEV Y '• lon d w 11cc l
n11 1an cc o f
d t' 1V c p1cl&lt;-up
t e~c•o r v warr f! nty
Checl.
' h1 'l tH~ f o r c you buy .1 new
one Phonea l lcr 'i p mo r on
wprt...cnos QfrJ ] 1'16
I 9 of c .
Mt::I&lt;CURY wa gon . auto .
AM and FM rad to . run s
goo(! Almos t hal f o f book
pr ice Phone 992 36H' be f ore
2 p m

! YO'&gt;'

Rooms, '5.00 up

l 2 ]Ic

FABR IC . Sal e Continued Du e
to bad weathe r . cur sa le wi l l
be e)(tended for another
week
ending
F eb ,
7 M AKE SUR E you get eve r y
H AY for sal e. $1 bal e or trade ?
Carol ina. F abr 1cs on Rl . 7,
Ph o n e
F rank '
Da c h eL
possible ded uc tion fh1S year
one half mile north o f
Lead1n g Creek Rd 742 208 5
Hav e vo u r . Federal and
Ch es ter . Ohio . H en ry and
.
2 1 16tp,
Slate In come T ax re1ur-n by · . . . . . . . . . . . .IMIMM"4"4_.
Mary Hunt er , owners .
an acc oun t ant Phone 992 · _..
_
·- • •-.a , •._.___ __ ___,..
2- 1·61p
617 3
t-O R R!::NT OR SA LE , 3 WA LN UT c on sole . m od ern .
am f m
rad i o , . t s peed
1-:? 1-.'i2tc
bedrm . mob il e home , un
c hanger Balan ce 5.101 .31 or
CA REER awaits you with
furn ishc d . u lilit i E'S pa1d o n
ter mS . Call 992 3965
Luz 1er
Cosmetics .
"a SHOOTIN G Match , Sunday .
Rl 33 i n Bu r lingham Phone
1 27 He
q u ality produ c t f o r 53
99'27751
•
Fe b 1. 12 JO p.m . Just off
years ."
No
terr1t orv
17 3 1 1f c
Rt. 7 by -pa ss . Sponso r ed by
GOOD qu a lity mixed hav for
restrict ion . work from your
th e Lucky 7 Gun Club . Cal l
sale . Call 992 3658 a ft er 5
home . Still t ime to win your
99 2·5335 f or f ur t her d etai l s. HO U~ E in R ut land . Ca ll 992
p ,m .
t r i p to Na ss au . For ap
1. J0 .6tc
sese
2 tl 61C
poi ntm e n t , call Madylon
1 J IIc
Stone
( 30 41
7 '27 9269
I NCOME
T~x
Se rvice .
F OUR L7BK l 5, wh ite wall reg
(!=Oi te c l )
2 BR F urnish ed mob ile hom e
F e de ral o r St a t e t a:w:e s
tread . Uni r oyal Glas belt
2·3. 121 C
pr
ivate
101
in
Syr
acuse
,
an
P ho ne 992 .7228 or
see
ra in· tires , pra c lica tl y n ew
S2
2.
50
p
er
week
,
p
t
u.sWal la ce Russell , Bradbury .
Tw o t or $60 or all tl tor S.1 10
ut ilities , ad ult s on lv . Call
l. 30 ·26tc
Rambl er
A l So .
1969
Geo
.
Donavan
,
(
614)
98
5
--'-----~
---~-Ame r ic an . J dr s tanda rd
3504 or 99 2·5596 .
NOTICE OF
stl•fl . radio . good sha p e . S500
I W IL L b e g i ving p iano l esso n s
1 29 61C
APPOINTMENT
firm vernon W rbe r . Ph one
in my hom e sta r ling Feb . 1
99 2 3.345 or honie , 7.1'Z 2143.
Case No . 21717
r or intor m a1 10n c all 992
3 fu'!D &gt;1 RM t urnis hed and
2 4 61p
Estate
of
WILLIAM
F.
3278 .
unturn1 shed a pl s. Phdn e 99 2
WINEBRENNER
D ece a se d.
17 18 501C
5:134
Not 1ce
is
given
that
W IN CHE STER 37, S150 . 30
t1 9 t tc
Ma r garet Ellen Winebrenner
in ch Br ownin g ba r re l. $100.
H
AV
E
Y6UR
1ncome
tax
es
Of Syra cuse, M etgs County .
Phone 9~9 2789 .
prepared by Sieve Cleland , COUNTRY
Mobile Hom e
2 4 41C
Ohio . has b een duly appo in ted
Ra
ci
n
e.
Phone
949
-288
3.
Par k Rt . 33. te n mi tes nor th
Executr i x of the Estate of
1-29 -61 C
of Pomeroy . L arge lots with
Wi ll iam
F
Wi nebr en ne r ,
concret e Patios . Side wa lk ~ . CO A L . l im es to n e an d all typ eS
deceased , l at e of Sy r acuse ,
ot salt and ro c k salt tor ic c
runn er s and o ff s tr eet
M ei9s Coun ty , Ohio
a n d snow r emov al . E )(
park ing . Phone 992 74 19 .
cred 1tOr.s ar e re qu ired lo
celsior Sal t Works , Ea sf
12 31 Jf C
file their c la ims w i th said TIM BER , tO p p r i c e tor
Main 51. Pom er oy . Oh io
f iduci ary w it h 1n fo ur mo nth s.
sta nd ing saw timber . Call
Phon e 992 38 9 1.
Dated th,s 23rd
day of
( 614) 446 85 70 day or nigh t. 4 RM . an d bath , su i tabl e tor
12 7 t f c
offi ce , or apl ,, no chil,dre n,
Janu ary 1976 .
2 4- 12t c
very nice . 118 1; E Ma in 5 1 .
Pomeroy , Seco n d fl oor . E
Mann ing D . We b s ter WANTED o l d . upr ig ht p1anos
F ROb inson . 992 ·2846 .
Judge
Now at Landmark
in any condit ion . Wi l l pay
1 30 61 C
Courl of Common P l eas .
$10 each Fi r st floor only .
Probate Div 1sion
Writ e giv tng dtr ecf 1ons fo
( I ) 28 (21 &lt;1 , II , Jlc
Wi t ten P1ano Co .. Box 18 8. 3 RM f urn1shed a p r., uti l i t te s
pa i d . 356 North Fo urlh ,
CO-OP
Sardis , Oh io 43946
Middl epo r t .
_..-:_..._
1-21 101p
Automatic Watet
1 30 6tp
Condi1ioner
Model UCXXX.
WAREHOU SE or s!ore r oo m ,
210,000
25 x 75 ar 311 Condor St.
( Rear 61 0 E Main ). Ph 992
Weekly Grain
7178 . S25 $50 per mo n th .
Capacity
I 30 61C

Special Rates
by Week
or Month

For Sale

- ---

--

Wanted To Buy

~- ~

~

-

G I N ~ t:: N G ,

-

$299

Business Opportunities
' """ -

---~

$17 per 1u

(6 1.t l 37A 62 .19

..._ ·---:J, Reg . $339 .00 V~l.

1 16 lie

revealed
"
"
I'

,,

f

'
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•

COLUMBUS (UPJ) - What
is believed to be a widespread
scandal involving scores of
state employes 011 welfare
rolls has been uncovered by
the Ohio Division
of
Personnel, it was reported
Wednesday.
The investigation has revealed the names of 140 state
employes in Cuyahoga,
Summit
and
Franklin
Counties, some who earn
more than $10,000 annually
and at the same time receive
.welfare checks ranging from
$-409-a-month,
$168
to
according to , Tlie Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
There are 41 · cases in
Cuyahoga County, seven in
Summit County and 92 in
Franklin County, according
to ODP Chief Philip S.
Hamilton, former Cleveland
perSIIPnel director.
Evidence uncovered will be
turned over to county
prosecutors for grand jury
acti011, according to the chief,
who says Hamilton County
will be checked next lor
suspected fraud cases.

••
. ,.
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I

I

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I

'

DE /\ LEk S in scrap, iron ,
me tals . junk autos . R ider's
Savag e . Phone 992 5468
1 2 29tp

Lost

PART A~d'afe"dog , black and
brown , shaggv . Lost in area
of Pomeroy , Middleport or
Ma son County , W . Va . area .
Answers to the name of
" Beju •· F a mi ly pel . Phon e
992 -7832 or 992 ·3671 A sk for
Orella Hy sell
....._ 2 1 6t c

____________ __

Own an d manage ve ndm g
roule di spensin g n ul , gu rn
and candy co nf ec t ions i n
Pomeroy or vicinitY . H ig h
profil i tems . c ar needed to ·
serv ice your vending route .
Ideal part time or full t i rne
business . cash inves tm enf
$1495 to S4795 and up . For
deta ils c all our loll f ree
number 1-800 328 ·6648 or
wrile O ep 1. BVV , 3938
Meadowbrook Rd , Min .
neapo l is , ~N 55 426 .

Help Wantell
3F UL L TIME c lerk posit ions ,
1 in ·offlce worker . 2 field
workers , f or temporary
Sla t e Progrem from mid ·
February through June .
Equal Oppor tuni ty Em
plo yer . A pp l y Box 729B , C·O
The
Daily
Sentinel ,
Po me ro y , Oh io 45769
2-3·31c
PAR T T IME 1nterv iewers tor
area survey . Available
• March , A pr i l. Must provide
own transportation . Apply
i n hand writing
g i v i ng
per son al barkground . Send
to Bo)C 72 9 E , c o The Daily
Sent ine l , Pomer oy , Oh io

Mobile Homes For Sale
·MOBiiTHome .

10 )( 60. 2
br . with addi t ional room ,
gas heal , furn ish ed . Ex
cel le nl condit ion , $d , 300 .
Phone (304 ) 773 5986 .
1 J0-61p

1972
CH AM P I ON
Mobile
Hom e , 12 :.c 60 com p lete ly
f urn is hed . excetle n t co n
dil1on . Phone 99 2·3 189
2 1 6tp ·

For Sale

I l 't 1 1

•· O

lady to I111C 111 1 rt.,!tr ruo111
and board and sma ll wages
for l ight du t ies ~. ~cat 308
Pag e Sl ., Middle port . Oh io .
I 11 I fc

4

1~ tfc

POMEROY LANDMARK
··~-Jack W. Carsey , Mgr .
...
Phone 9'12-2111
M e DANIEL Cus t o m
Bu t
c herin g, W es l Col umbia, W .
va we but c he r cattle an d
hog s .
$10
c allle
sla ugh1er , $7 f or hog s ; 12c
tor cutting and wrapp ing .
State and fed eral In spec ted :
Open 6 day s per week .
Phon e (30 41 882 3224
1 30 -261c
CORN for sa l e . Phon e 247
2664 , Da l las H i lt
J.JQ 51 p
MO D I:: RN d esig n st ereo . 8
tr ack 1ape . am fm radi o
co mbination . 13a tan ce $98 .60
or terms . Cal l 992 3965 .
1 1 'fc
CUAL f OR SA LE . Ct1!3 , Coa t
Comp,lny , 1 m i l e norrt'1 o t
Cheshir e r o!'1 Rl 7 . Pick your
ow n , $20 p er ·lon . Open 6 days
per week , or ca ll [ 614 ) 3Q7
73 30 f or furt he r Informat io n .
1 8 78tc

Real Estate For Sale
J

Now accepting clients
for bookkeeping and
lax service.

FORD . 4 wheel dr i v e tru c k , V
8, good con d i!io n . Harold
B r ewer ,
Lo n g
Bottom ,
Phon e ( 6 14 ) 985 3554 .
2 1 1t c

/ IR CO t i f' t• • h'(. Wl' l rH nq
ltli1 Ch 1n c
new {'IPC
J ll
OCCCS SO ri CS inc lud CCI Phclll e

Kuhl Cake Decor
Call 992 -7537
Pomeroy , Ohio
1- 12- 1 mo .

FREE ESTIMATES

Sy\-acu se , Ohio
.l

10 1

mo .

··--

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Radiata
Service

608 E.
MAIN
POMEROY, 0,
LOCaTiOn P lus Charm Plu s
Durab • l i t y . Ston e f aced.
lo vely slctfed f loor s, id ea l
le vel lot. need s '2 or 3
pctrt tt 10ns and fl sho we r . N.
ga s F .A . l urnace , cen tral
ctir . 57 ,000.
FREE GA S- Lovely 3 BR
home, own wa ter , 'l n ice 2
BR ap t s .• mobile hom e, 22
ac re s. CALL TODA Y

AN AMAZING VALUE
L arge home. 5 BR . 2 ba th s,
New N . gas FA f urna (:e &amp;
tot s of other NEWS. GOO D

CO NDITION $10;000 .
ONE FLOOR PLAN - Full
baseme n t Wit h 1 B R. TV
R.. utility, wo rk shop . 1st
lloor has 1 BR. bath . kil ..
t1 v mg R . H .W . floo r s. large

lot. $9 ,500 .
A LOOK WIL L CONVI NCE
YOU - 2 BR , bath . NEW
perma
pa ne wi n dows,
ca r peli ng ,
pan e l 1n g,
kit chen , · carpor t·.
F u ll
ba seme nt. N . gas furnac e ,
ut ility. wo rk shop , S1 3.000 .
135 ACRES - Good clecm
ground . 3 BR l1o i'ne . w at er ,
(no ba th ), barn &amp; oth er
bldg s. On gopd r oa d close
to min es S17,500 .

WE CAN SE LL YOUR
PROPERT Y - HER E'S
WHY - EXPERIE NCE
SER VICE
ACT ION
HONE STY .
992 -2259 or 992 -2S68

TEAFORD

Virgil B ., Sr ., Broker
110 Mechanic Pomero y , 0 .

Phone 992-3325
NEW LIST IN G -

3 Brs ..

larg e
kit..
n ew
F A
fu rn a ce ,
ba se m e n1.
porches and nice lot in
Rutland . $12,500.

4 BEDROOMS -

Stea m

heat. ? l ivi ng s, 2 porch es.
cook a nd ba ke un 1ts ,
baseme n t wi th garage .

$20,000.
S BEDROOMS -

EXCAVATING .
do Ler.
backhoe
and
ditc h er .
Ha t t 1eld Ba c k
Charl es R
Hoe Se rv ice . Rutl an d . Oh 10
Phon.e 1.1'2 7008
11 ]Q 7BIC
D &amp; D TREE Tr im rning , 70
)"e ar s exp er 1en ce I nsured .
tr ee estimQres Call qrn_ IJH 4
or 161.1 ) 69 1:1 7?57 1\l banv
10 15 I IC
SE W IN G M J'l. ( HIN E Re pat rs ,
serv ice , all m akes 997 228 4
The 1 abr ic Sh op , Pomer oy',
1\ ulhor izcd Si nger Sales an d
~e r v1cc
We
sharpen
SCiSSo r s
..,
J '19 1t c

Real Estate for Sale
3. BR HOME . iusl tlni~ h e d
r emo dcl tng
Sa le m St ,
P hone 7&lt;~ 2 2306
R utl and
aft er 4-p m o r see Milo B
H utc h in son
I Q 9 I f(

3

l

BE6R~A:- -h"O-;s;in M id
dl epor! . co r ner · lot
N ('w
balh . s tory and half , utilit y
r oo m , new c a rp c l lny J nd
nf'w r oo t. ga ra ge and wor lo.
r oo m , fru it cell ar , Close 10
SC hOOl
ilnd
ShOp(.l•ng
Sl! ,SOO P hone 99176h
1 77 76 1(

RM house on 30 acr es 1n
co un tr y . Ban. of Le tart ,
Ohio Phon e 7.17 278 6
7 &lt;l 61 c

MODERN home in Ch CSICr 8
r ooms , ? balhs , 1 por ches.
su n porch . 1, ba se men t. city
an d w ell wa te r . na tu r al gas,
ga r ag e . Pr ic ed ro se l l
P hon e ( 61:! 1 9 8~ &lt;~ 10 7 .
? o1 tf c
8 RM HOU SE . 'l baths . on
co rner lot in M iddl epon .
Phone 9~ '2 3J2 7 a tier 6 p m
2 " 6t c
LOT JO )(. 100 close l o KroqN 'S
in Pomt: roy . P hone 1 8,t6
74 90, R eyno l dsbu r g . Oh io
atler 3. 30 p . m SJOO Wi ll
cons1der off er .

1 .1 3 1c.

Strout,.
Realty

Uvi ng .

dining, gla sse d i n porch ,
steam heat (ga s fired).
basem e nt on large lot

116,500.
NEW LISTING
1'

bedrooms ,
2
bath s,
fa mily room, m od . ki t ., 2
car gara ge and ni ce lot.

$45, 000 .
WINTER

SPECIAL -

Large old 17 room s w ith
bath, ga s &amp; ci ty w at er nea r
stores. On l y $5500.

5 BEDROOMS -

Lois ol

new panel ing, cprpetlng .
nat . gas furn ace , ci ty wa ter
and 2 bath s, 11 acre .

$18.500 .
FAMlL Y ROOM - 3 nice
bedrooms, bath . ga s hea t.
and large llving at a very
low price of $8500.

CHESHIRE -

Modern 3

BRs ., hot wa ter heat , very
nice k ttch en Wi th range,
refrig era tor . family room.
patio and '2 car garage . 2

lot s. $46,900.
50
WITH
OVER
PROPERTIES,
WE
OUGHT TO HAVE IT.

... .

1975S Proof Set (6 pes.)
$25 .00; 1975 Mint Sel $9 .00;
1976 Silver Proof SOt (3
pes . ) $15 .00 : 1976 Silver
UNC Sel (3 pcs.l 58 .50.
Call Rutland, 742-2331
R&amp;J COINS

.'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

NO. 114 - 115 a .. new ga!&gt;
Wel l. lar ge bctrn , so·m e
tim ber , quiet
cou ntry
se tting .
farrn
pond,

$32 ,300.00.
NO. 166

~

3 BR home.

alum .
51d1ng .
storm
w indows. quiet street. close
to tow n , owner wa nts to
sell. leav ing area . Worth
look i ng at l or $10,500.00.

Have buyel' ·for lot on
river. Do you have
one? Call us.
804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2298
Alter Hours Call
992-7133
CONTACT :
lois Pauley
Branch Manager

'-------------,. --

full
basement in good con d ition ,
qarage and small oarn 5 1 ~
a cres near Ch es ler . Phon e
(6 1J } YB5 ~140 .
7 1 121 c

"'K10 32

SOUTH
• K Q J 10 9 B
• A 8 54

t A6
.9
West

Pomeroy Office
105 Butternut
9?2 -3345
Former-ly Weed Whol esale .
Featuring :
De lu)( Zcro:w: Copy Se r v11:e ,
S uppli es .
O f! ice
Mimeogr aph
Suppli es.
lur geSt s(llecti on o f w ed ·
ding su ppl ies in
South
eastern Oh10
Th e Pr i nt Shop Complete
( Stil l in business i n Mid dleportl
1282 m o.

P.a ss

E7[

your
rree
379 J ,
Co ,

6 30

t tc

EL VJOQ O BOW ER S REPA I R
Sw ee p £&gt;r s . toa sters, 1r o n s.
all sm al l appl i anc es Lawn
mo wer . ne)(.l 10 Sta te High
wuy Garag e on Route 7
Pt10 ne 985 3825
4 16 H e
~ EPTIC · I A N K S c leaned
Modern Sunitation 992 395·1
or 99 ? 73.t9
9 18 lie

WOULD YOU B ELIEVE "'
Build an all stee l build inq at
Pole 0!3rn pr 1c es ? Golden·
Gi an t fil l St eel Buil d 1ngs ,
R I ' o~ , 8 0 K 148, Wave r ly,
0~-ti o Ph on e 9,17 2296
7 24 l fc
O'DELL /1 li nemen t lo cated
behi nd
R u llanP
Gra d e
Schoo l . Tune u p . bra kes .
whee l ba l an c in g. al 1n en1 ent
P hone 7J ? 20 0·L
11.16 lf C

.

C ~I\ NE

5e r-..7T(e ,
l.'rcCifon . .10 11
Pho n e 992 5.t68

·- - -

bu i lding
dcrr 1c k

1 1 26tp

Real Estate For Sale
HOU , i: on Li n co ln Hq iS 7
DCctrm , latQ(' ld l chen , lull
ba se111 cnt , e:w::ce llcn t b uv l or
$8 ,900. with n l'!w f urn it ur e .
on l y ":. 10,300 Ph one '19'1 7 6~8
1 6 261C

C

~-----.--~
OF OOURSE IT
WOIJ~P

106 ~

F' ORD L TO N f'w 12 Qa .
Wi n chest er 37 I• !Ji tH! IC 5 o10 I
Phone 7·12-2359
1 13 261p

19 73 PR O"WLER Camper , 2 1
fl . se lf co nt a in ed , sleeps 7.
Exce ll en t co nd ition•. Call
992 7:t20.
2 1 61c

'

l : l:.. ld-&lt;'1)•
l• cll ' ll..'
w it h j
au ~:', 0 1 'I I oun d .
Phon e 247 116 ) Le tar t , Ohio .
1 23 121c

• P.,"''""ftl

P•~t

~ IIQUII'

.,t1A" rW
IICY&lt;II' ' r,.,....,,
~&gt;to ~t.a tlo1&lt;&gt;&lt;1l &gt;'nl t~o.~t
'"'"' "'"' "' ~ui&gt;WI&gt; Hoo~
""'COOIU'1 "" ' ""'' &lt;l'um *Hft
IIOo'f&lt;l ~

1\ CRE , bi g garden . 5 rooms
and balh home , new drill ed
well and fur n a ce , n ew
bathroom , 2 f i r ep laces, good
location in L cl art r alls,
Oh io !i7.500. Phone 247 3853.
1 23 12tc

C&lt;&gt;JU ~&lt;I

..,I,~·''"'' ' l•ftG

•lee! ,•• ,.,.,fl • •1 ft

TO SHWEL - ·

Ot-4 , lo!EL..LO,

PEC. --

AU..EY OOP

'

•

Square
Yard
GASOUNE AlLEY

RUBBER BAc;K

II never malt.e

•

we ha ve h undred s of
cMpe t va lu es Your job c an
be comp l ete d in 1 to 2
No lo ng walling
w ee ks
pl' r iod Our in st aller ha s.7B
yeat s e lC.per lence . E~~opert
i n&lt;;,iallat i on
Vo u ' ll l i ke
what you get .
CALL 742 -2211
TALK TO WEN·DELL
GRATE

it to the Arena
in timer

•

•
•

.•
•

'

-..
•

•

..

=Tico&gt;1r~~:;;JIJ:~iM:':N~~:-;;::u;Q;:::-n
32 Ending
I
imp or

/&lt;i.vN 1~

•

••
•

••

~IIIL.:;:ilii - - - ~~~::::_;8.1

•

•

••
••
••

.

WHAT!

',IIREN'T 'rOU GONG

N0, 5TAN , I
.JUoT WANT

AND
5A:ltL1'HE8£0W

TO eAWL ME OUT
R)&lt;"(;EING A.W.O.L.

IOFINIBH
YOUR 60UP.

IT TOOK ME: ALL
AFTERNOON TO
GET?,_.--

F~BONNA"Z?

Yesl~rday's

Aoswer
19 Poe's "- in 27 Realm
Paradise"
30 Of a forearm bone
( 2 wds. )
20 Fine
31 NRA
"symbol
porcelain
23 Meal
33 Syrian
24 Having
city
teeth,
36 Mrican ·
humorously
antelope
37 Novel
speaking
ZS Tra about

2 wds.)

••
•

•

~

6 :40-Qunce of Prevention 10.

6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
6 :55-Chuck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
State 13.
/ :Do-Today 3,A,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8: Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
8:QO-Lassle 6; Capt . Kangaroo 8.10; Sesame Si. 33.
8:3o-Big Valley 6.
9:oo-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9:3o-A.M. 3; One Lite to Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
IO :oo-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,15,4; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Right 8,10.
10 :3o-High Rollers 3,4,15; Dinah 6 .
11 :oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4; Gambit
8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13; Elec. Co. 20.
11 :Jo-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15) Happy Days 13; Love
ot Life 8,10; Same St. 20.
II :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan mel ' s World 1012 :ooMagnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15; Let's Make a
Deal13; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club A; News 6,8, 10.
12.3o-Take My Advice 3.15; Ali My Children- 6,13;
Search for Tomorrow B, 10.
12· 45-E lee . Co . 33.
12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
I :oo-News 3; Ryan's H~pe 6, 13; Phil Donohue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:3o-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15: Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13:
As the World Turns 8. 10.
2:Do-$20,000 Pyromld 6,13 .
2:Jo-Doctors 3,A,15; Neighbors 6,13; Guiding Light
8. 10.
3·oo-Another World,3,4,15; General Hosplfal6,13 ; all
In The Family 8,10; Ltlas Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:3ll-One Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game 8, 10; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
4:QO-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6; Mic'key Mouse Club 8: Mister ~ogers
20,33; Movie "Batman" 10; Dinah 13.
4:3o-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,3j; Get Smart 15.
5·oo-Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek IS.S:JoAdam -12 4,13; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33.
6:0o-NewsJ,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News6; Zoom 20; lTV
Uti I izatlon 33.
6:Jo-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; .Your Future Is Now 33; In-School
Programs 20.
7:oo-Truth or Cons . 3; To Tell the Truth A; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Space : 1m 8; News 10; Let's Make a
Deal 13; Family Affair 15; Anyclfle For Tennyson?
20; Family af War 33.
.
&lt;:3()--Hollywood Squares 3.4: Ohio State Lottery 6;
I; venlll!l Edlllon wllh Martin AQronskv 20; Wild
Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Music City U.s.A .
15 . .
B:oo-Movle "Dark VIctory" 3.4,15; Welcome Back •
Kotter 6,13: Waltons 8,10: Lincoln Center 20: The
Way It Was 33.
8:3o-XII Winter Olympic Games 6.13;
Lowell
Thomas Remembers 33.
9:oo-Hawaii .Five-O 8; Movie "Cool Hand Luke" 10;
Hill Country SOunds 33.
lO:Oo-Barnaby Jones 8; News 20; Selling of Abe
Lincoln 1976 33 . ·
ll :oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :J().....Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mannix 6,13; Movie " The
McKenzie Break " 8; Movie "Seb~sflan" 10; Janak!
33.
12 : 4()--Longstreet 6.13.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,.4.
1:so-News 13.

tKm'K.wG

NEVER SO!.Io£D

A PROeLEM1
&amp;TAN .. .
'

... IT ONLY
CREATE&amp;

MORE
PROBLEMS!

OH·OH .... HERE IT
COMES ...TIME: FOR

Far Thurllrloy, Feb. 5, 1971
ARIES CMOICh 21-Ap,lll 11)
Leadershtp, judgment and ln ..
tt1at1ve are your dom tnant
qualtttes today Don 't let the
s1ze of a proJeCt lnghten you ,

TAURUS (April 20·May 20)
Things may be movmg behind
the scenes today that you 're
not aware of. Wilen they surface , they could bolster your
career or finances .

GEMINI (May . 21·Junt 201

d'-

DAILY CRYPTOqUOTE- Here's how to work It:
is

6ERMONETTE!

AXYDI.BAAXR
I. 0 N G F E I. L 0 W

One lelter :simply stunds (or ;mother. In this sample A is
used fnr th(' thr('&lt;' L'-:- . X £t1r thl' lwo o·~. l'lc. SinJA\c l etter s.
:'l [lOStrophcs. the kn~tll :md form:1tion of the wonts an• aU
hints. Earh da~· !he rode letters arc different .

UO

QGOJ
MKAA

YKUC
UO

EPY

UQGOKQKBJ

(CH976 Kinl Features

CANCER {Juno 21-July 22) A
poslliv~ attitude IS Important
lor you today If you go lnt9 a
situation knowmg you can win ,
you will.

very persuasive toda~ . One
sure way to success is lsotattng
the key person In a slluatlon
and making him your ally.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Bept. 22)

VKBYD
M.
TKKLVKY
Yeslerday's Cryptoquole: A PLOUGHMAN ON HIS I..EGS IS
HIGHER THAN A GENTLEMAN ON HIS KNEES. - BEN

~----------------ll~-r~,.----~~~~~--------~----~----~FRANKUN

Your e nthusiasm is contagious
today . 11 won 't take much for
you to arouse people. They 'll
ju mp on your bandwagon once
you blow the whistle.

LEO (Julr 23·Aut. 22) You'•e

EPY

MOVE OVER,
CfWCK ..!Jtlii'RE
TAKIN6 Uf' TOO
I{OOM!

•

6 :20-Patterns for Living 13 .

6:3o-columbus Today 4; News 6; Bible Answers B;
Urban League 10.

ICORPIO (OcL 24-Nov. 22)

0 Raison

QKB

••
•••

6: 15-Farm Report 13.

tor

CRYPTnQunn:s

.•

6 ;0G-Sunrlse Semes1er 10.

Partnership siluations look
very prom1sing today. Do what
you do best - select a compe' lent ally and an ambitious goaL
Watch the sparks fly!

ramp
33 Got you!
34 Ending lor
spat or
form
35 Unmarried
37 TroU
38 Youngster
39 Cure
40 Cherry or
peach

•

'

(Do you have a question
lor rhe experts? Write "As k
the Jacobys" care of this
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer mdividuaJ questions
il stamped. self-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
mosr mterestmg questions .
will be used in this column
and will rsceive copies at
JACOBY MODE'RN)

Your ·school 33:
7·3o-Last of the Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Wild Wild
World of Animals 6; Match G~me PM 8; Evening
Edition with Martin Agronsky 20: The Judge 10; To
T•ll the Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Book Beat 33.
8:QO-Little House on the Prairie 3A,15; Six Million
Dollar Man 6,13; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10: The
Way It Was 20; Images of Aging 33.
8:3o-Lowell Thomas Remember$ 20.
9:QO-Chlco &amp; The Man 3,4,15; XII Winter Olympic
Games 6.13: Cannon 8, 10; Fine Music Special JJ;
Images of Aging 20.
9:Jo-Dumpllngs 3,4, IS.
IO :oo-Petrocelll 3,4,15; Blue Knight 8, 10; News 20;
O~rstorv 33
10: Jo-Anyone lor Tennyson? 33; Almanac 20.
ll :Do-News 3,4,6,8,lO;iJ,i5 ; ABC News 33.
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie "The Stranger
Within" 6, 13; Movie " The Power" 8; Movie "Key
Largo" 10; Janak! 33.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY; 1916

rative

•

•

A Massachusetts reader
wants to know 1f there is or
ever was a rule that allows a
player wilh no ace-k1ng·
queen· jack or 10 to demand a
new deal.
The answer is a decided no.
When you play rubber bridge
and p1ck up a bad hand you are
stuck with 11.

vie~ing

tablet

YES-I WANT'E)
BE THE FIRSI 10
RAISING THE
$
A

••

Collection of the delinquent 1ists
publicized will be enforced as
prescribed under Sec. 5719.08 R.C.

HOWARD E. FRANK
MEIGS COUNTY AUDilOR

city
2 Popeye's
10 Potpourri
girl
Jl Lustrous
3 Certain
13 Stack
business
14 Pontius associate
15 Apple
(2 wds. )
4 Ballerina's
giver .
pivot
16 Storage
box
5 Tippling
17 Written
6 Hibernia
letter
i Odometer
18
Texas
city
reading
Hop on' 20 Copper
(abbr.)
Time's
21 Secret
8 Tranquility
awastin'!
society
(3 wds.)
22 Abominate 9 - cordillle
'""I 23 GOP
12 Stagger
society
16 German
Ocean .
greyhound
~!tj;;:26 Author, Hunter
27 Beach
covering
28 Aperture
29 Conunemo-

UL ABNER

w

In compliance with provisions of
Sec . 5719.04 R.C., there will be
published during the next few
weeks, in this newspaper, a list of
delinquent personal property taxpayers in Meigs County, Ohio.

Pa~s

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Party giver I Took
5 Arizona
heart

•••

Carpeting
501 NYLON
$499

Property''
Taxpayers
NOTICE

l'&lt;.~ss

~~J1·wd'

"10 'TALl&lt; 10 YOU, GUZ!

LET US DO IT!!

~'Personal

P&lt;.~ ss

Bridge teacher. Sally John·
son of Weslport. looked over
the dummy happily. Not only
h"d she reached a good slam ,
but the play she inlended to
,......-... adopt would be fine for
teaching her advanced pup~ls .
She could try for seven
That would require a 3-3 club
break and a 3· 1 or 2-2 trump
split. She hadn ' t bid seven so
she discarded that line
Then there was the simple
line . Try to ruff ·two hearts .
She would ruff one low and the
last one high and be home

ZIGGY .AN' TAR:L. WANI

IO&lt;IG~I&lt; .. h&lt;"-"''1"'•&gt;1

'

lHATJS ll-··
!&lt;OW 6TAAT

MILLIOHSf

IJ91 ) .1 ] ()

10 2H •fc

~~~~~

8E RlGliT,

AS YOU PUT IT HE'O IE THE
CIJ~T CHILD

N EW HOME or r em odel ing by
hour or contract Phone 99'2
35 11 or 997 7523 a t t~ r 5 p.m .
1 25 121p

Delinquent

Pass
Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

'I' ROUBLE

E:.&lt;CAVAT I N G . BACKHOE S
A ND DOZER , LA RGE AND
SMf.LL
SEPTIC T A NK S
IN STA L L E D
OI L L
PUL LIN S. PHONE 992 .'2 .1 78,
DA Y 0 ~ NI G HT
11 11 781p

Rutland

P;:tss

safely again st all4·3 and some .
5·2 hear! brea ks.
Then she found the best and
winning line . She won the first
diamond . cashed the king and
"ce of hearts , led a third heart
a nd carefully discarded dummy 's second diamond .
This loser-on -loser play
e nabled her to ruff her la st
diamond wilh one of dummy 's
low trumps and her last heart
with dummy 's ace of trumps
and make her contract
Of course. it would have
failed il diamonds broke 8-1
but 8·1 breaks are most unlike ly while 5·2 breaks occur
some 30 per cent of the time .

~~~~~

Pass

24
5¥

.

1.1'1''1'1.11: OBPB.Aif

BRADFO RD , A uc t ton eer
Complete Serv1ce . Phon e
049 2487 o r 949 2000. Rac ine,
Oh io . Cr il l Bradf o rd .
'
10·9 tfc

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

1•

South

Opening lead - Qt

CARPET CONSULTANT
.\ BR B r ic k h Onll' , 6 \:r s .. 71;
t) aii1 S. QM &lt;Hl e on 7 8 Jeres
on p i'l ved road n car 1 or k ed
R un 5'1a te 1 b r est
Phone
1 61~ 1 M l 37 87 . S3B,000 .
1 15 11t p

NorCh East

ORPHAN ANNIE

STA~-MAKE

RE A D Y MIX CON~ W
d elive r ed r ig ht ro
pro1e c1 tast an d f'&lt;'ISV
cst i ma1es P hone •992
Goeg1e1n Ready Mix
Mid dleport , Oh tO

EAST
416 4
• J9
tK987 52
.Q7

.Q 10 73 "2
tQ.llO

Quality Print Shop

All persons, partnerships, companies and corporations currently
I is ted on the delinquent classified
and or general personal property tax
duplicates may avoid publication of
such delinquency and subsequent
property tax liens by paying said
taxes in full prior to Feb. 6, 1976.

I'L llRM .
ho m e ,
iust
f in ished ..remodeling . Sa lem
~ ~ , R ut lan d Ph one 742 -2306
af te r -&lt;1 p .m . or see Milo B .
Hutchison .
9 23 -lfc

BOtlN LOSER

Pom eroy

Ph . 992 ·2114

WEST
4 5

Nt•il hf."r vulnerable

INCO R.ORAT EI&gt;

5

• AJ8654

Roger Wamsley
1 '2 3· 1 mo .

EXC A VATING . doz er, lo&lt;iu c,
and backhoe worK , sep11c
t ank s
installed .
dump
truc ks and lo boys for h ir e ,
will ha ul f il l d ir t . top soil , 1
11 m esrone and g r ave l Ca ll
Bo b or Roger Jc f f r r s. day
phone 992 7089, n 1g ht phon e
992 35 25 or 992 5237
from the larg es t Tru clo. or
2 11 I I G:
Bu lld ozer Rildiato r to the
sm alle st H C' at er (o re
REM ODELING .
PlumO inq ,
he at i ng an d all t ypes of
Nathan B l gg ~
ge n er a l
r e pai r
Work
Radiator Speclal1st
gU a r an teed
20 ye ars ex
perience
Ph one 99 2 '}.\09
5 1 I fc

liXPERIENCED

• A32

Bicentennial Coins
.·

4

• K6
t4 3

-...:.----------FOR SALE

LARRY LAVENDER
Ph . 992-3993

NORTH ID)

Currency and Supplies
Buv , Sale or Trade

Blowri mto Wall s &amp; Aff1cs

STORM .
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING -SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

WIN AT BRIDGE
Soundest play for slam

COINS

Blown
Insulation Services

·-

Real Estate For Sale

estimates on carinstallation.
We'll bring samples to your
home with no o~liQat.ion .
See how you ca" really
save .
Mike Young , Manager
Sales and Installation
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769
Phone day or night
614-99l-'l71l6
1- 14 -J nio .

Free

peting and

.

1 2'1 1 m o

Somerset 15; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers .

20,33; Movie " Go West" 10; Calli! Macaroni 13.
4:3o-Bewitched 3: Afferschool Speclal6, 13: Partridge
Family 8; sesame St . 20,33 ; Get Smart J5.
5:QO-Bonanza 3; Family Affa ir 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3o-Adam-12 4,13 ; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8:
Elec . Co. 20,33.
6:oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,1 5; ABC News 6: Zoom 20;
Business 33. '
6:3o-NBC News3,4, 15 ; ABC Nows 13; Andy Grlf!lth 6;
CBS News 8,10; Crop Game 20 .
7: oo-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4: Bowling for
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country B: News 10;; Wild
Kingdom 13; Family Affair IS; Book Beat20; Know

SLOAN'S
CARPETING

Licensed
baker
and
decorator .
Kttchen State Inspected

PH. 992-6173

5 ROOM house , bath ,

'57 69 .

MERV'S BOULEVARD
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) Merv Griffin Boulevard was
the street •of broken dreams Wanted
't:l\ !!l-i l)a fct tor all m a k es r~nd
~ or busted wallets - · for
mod els o f mo h i le home&lt;;
many gamblers Monday, or
Phon e a r ea codc 6 1-l H J
953 1
Easy Street for any big

winners.

OPERATE YOUR
OWN BUSINESS
AGE OR EXPERIENCE
NOT A FACTOR

MALE , bla c k and white
walker coon hound in Shade
area . Cal l Paul Si nclair . Rt .
1, Stlade , Oh10 , (6 14 ) 696 · 103 2
collect. rewa r d .
2-J.61p

1968 JEEP Wagoneer , 6 cyl .
st d , lo ck ou t hub s Phon e
Harol d
Br ew e r ,
Lo ng
Bottom . Ohio (61 ·1l 98 5 355 4.
2 1 tf c

~.-

_________ _

Welfare
scandal

LARRY WHOBREY
PUBLIC
AtroUNTANT

L..----------------------....1

Middleport, 0 . Fl'h . 992 -2771

~

MODERN CHEMICALS
100 Kerr Str ee t
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
~61 4 ) 992-2798 , Dick Seyl er
1 291 mo ,

POMEROY, OHIO

197~

Noticll

We Buv A n tiques

$2695

Dar k maroon f intsh , blk . bucke t vi nyl sea t s, rad io, V-8
engine, a utomati c, power steerin g , good iires,
sportsm an ' s dream .

La Salle
1 1 ~ COME

$2295

HO USE in Mason , 5 roon1s a·n d
bath , nice location Phon .c
99 2 512 6.
2 4 3t p

double
w i de f u rn ished , utilit ies
paid , no c hi l dre n or pet.
Near Pomer oy Phon e 99 2
7017 or 992 7666 .
1 3 5tp

~- UR N I TURE

STRIPPING SERVICE
Removal
of
Pa i 1i! ~
P last ics varn i shes , etc .
Wood or Metal .
Reoal r s
Ref10 iS h 1ng of
Furn it ur e .
B Urnishi ng ~ olishi n g of
Copper &amp; B ra ss

350 V 8, a u t o, P.S .. radio , l ike new tires, less than
38,000 miles by or rginal owner , clean inside &amp; ou t

2 4 Tf c

Cakes, Baked
and Decoiated
To Your Order

Modern

Ant i que

$6144

1972 OLDS CUT . 4 DR .

APT , 4 r m . baltl , t urn .s tled
Phon e 992 5908 .

2 BEDRM . trai l er

In Memory

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

4 wh . drive , 3-t T .. Cus tom deluxe tr im , 350 v.a, au t o ..
P.S, P B .. center seat , full length headl iner , out si de
mirror s, r adio. gauges. H. D. shocks N ow On l y $6144

FO R REN T near 'Ra c.ine ,
houserra 11cr . 3 BR , 1 bafh .
no pe ts, 1 sma ll c h ild o.k . S25
deposil. SI OO p lus utlli1 1es .
PhOne 9.19 2093
2 4 3tc

:OOMEONE
BORIW\'6 ,\'lONEY.

~

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

For Rent

WHA'T 500El"IM E5
HAPPEN!':&gt; WHEN

Business Services

· ---------------~~---------------,

Television .-log for. easy
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY~. 1976
3:QO-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6,13: A It
In The Family 8,10; Kup's Show 20.
3 :3o-&lt;lne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game 8.10
.4:QO-Mister i:artoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Bewitched 6;

Auto Sale$

Auto Sales

Employment Wanted

..
l'ACKT ~ .........···-···
~

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

M~EONLY

Syndiut~t,

Inc.)

Interests wh ich you share are
very rewarding today . The
aspects are eKcellenl in projects where yo-u contnbute
your talent o r time.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 23)

What you start out to do today ,
yoU will probably fin ish . The
conclusion will both please and
honor you.

SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Today you are In a fun loving cycle Associates will
find you charismatrc and able
to see the lighter side of life .

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jen.
19)· Your loved ones today wtlt
f1nd you're the person who can
tre things together for them and
come up with a profit.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 211-Ftb. 1t)
Break away from your routine
today wtth physical or mental
activities . You 'll enjoy yourself
more and reap some lasting
benefits.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
There are excellent oppor tunities for you to accu mulate
gains 1oday. Be alert, ready to

&amp;~
Ftb. 5, 1871

Look for a definite upsw ing In
your social activities th is coming year. Interesting new people may be coming your way.
You 'll be the loser if you don't
link up .

M'l DESK PARTNER, HERE,
ISN'T VE~ COORDINATED...

�14 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Feb. 4, 1976

:

~~~~~;-a.t4o·-~IJ-J,_
one letter to euh aquare. to
form four ordinary w-ordt .

-·-·

~ E WI N G

ot al l k i nds , dresses
tor all occ.-.sions , Slac k s
shirts , new born la yelles .
cu rta ms . dran es Phone 99 2
3035 and ask. tor Do roth y
1 4 12tc

j I I
•••

rULBOYI

t

I

GIZAHN ~~

Y

V"

Now arT&amp;nfO tho circled loltors
to form the
u

1urpri1e uuwer.
~~~~~Ll=:;::~;;~;:~~;::dJ~..,•;•:•~1e1ted by the above cartoon.

!:.."::.":..liT'S "[

I

I I I X)-( I I

Jumble.: CABLE

l'esl,rda•'•

'

'

GUILD

SYSTEM

)-[I]"

CAuwer-. 1o•orrowJ
NOGGIN

Ann·er: No rf'pulablt• lun4"1r rounlt'r would
lil!rt' t'

them -"BAD EGGS .. .

WANT ADS
INFORMAT ION
DEADLINES
5
P M .
Day
Before
P ub I icat Ion .
M onday' Dead l in e 9 a m .
Cancel l ation - Corre c11ons
Wil l be accep ted until 9 a . m
tor Day of P ub l ic a ti on ,
REGULATIONS
The P u blisher reserve s the
r ight 10 ed il or reject any ads
ob jectio nal . The
d ee med
publ is h~r
will
not
be
r es pon sible fo r more tha n one
Incorrec t ins ert ion .
RATES

For Want Ad Sendee
5 ce nts per word one i nser t ion
M inimum Ch ar ge SLOO
14 ce nts per word thre e
consecut,ve 1nser1 ion s
26 cent s per word six c on
sec ullve in sertio n's
25 Per Cent Oisco un t on pa1d
ads an d ads pa1d with in 10
days .
CARD OF THANK S
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 .00 for 50 word minimum
Each additional word J
cents .
BLIND ADS
. Add itional 25c Charge p er
Advert isement.
OFFICE HOUR S
8 30 a . m . to 5 00 p . m .
Da i l y . a : JO a m . to 12 :00 N oon
Saturday .

Notice

NEW197l CHEV. SUBURBAN

MEMORY of Clyde G .
Bayles . In ap preci at io n to
th e Vete ra ns Memor1al
Hospital , Or . R . R . P ic k ens
and s t aff , R ev Floyd Sh ook ,
Rawlings &amp; Coals Funeral·
Ho me,
Edna
Max i n e
(Co ats ) Gaskill and ' a l l
p eo pl e w h o showed pat ience
and und erstanding thru my
husband 's
i lln ess
and
pa ssi ng . H e is sadly m issed
by h i s w i f e . Viola a n d
da ughler , Mrs . Don Pa y.ne
and a host of loved ones .

IN

D eath is just the Gateway ,
Ou r loves on es pass lh r oug h ,
On t he ir way lo the lan d where
we're all born anew .
And while we ca n 't see whal 's
on death's oth er S1de .
We know t hai our Fat her w ill
ri ch ly provid e.
Al l that He p r omised to those
who be l ieve
And His kmgdom is wa.i ting
t or us to r eceive
2 4 11 p

1974 PLY . CUDA

2 BED RM . mobile home . real
n1ce . Phone 99 2 332J
2 4 1t c

POM!~?!vE~?!~~- CO.~
~

E N JOY g ra CI OU S livi ng al
Villag e Manor
in M 1d
dleport f or as low as Si04 per
month , plu s e lec tr ic . T hese
ar e brand ne w h igh qual it y
apan rnen ts ar pr ices you
c art afford . Your rent in
etudes month ro m onth
leas es , al l el e c, l tv1ng .
carp eti n g ,
rang e
and
r ef ri g e r ato r . fr ee trash
p ic k up, ca bl e TV at your
ex p ense .
an d
on -si t e
la un dry ta clilfies . Con
ve n ientto shopping on Th i r d
and Mi l l St r ee ts in M id
dtepor t . See the manager ar
Riverside Apartrnents or
call 992 3273 . Furnish ~ d
apartm ents
ar c
al so
ava i labl e
1 2 781C

HOTEL

T AX
p r epared .
F1:d eral a n d st ale taxes .
Wil l be done b y appt on l y .
Pl ease phone 99 2 2272 , or see
M r s . Wa nd a Eblin . Laure l
Cl1 ff Rd , P omero y
12 31 30 1c

1968 OLD SMOBILE 98 . need s
repair , '5200 Phon e 992 6162 .
2 4 6tc

FOR SALE I 1968 Oldsmobile
To ran ado , A 1 shape , $750 .
Phone 992 3992 .
2 4 41 p
1969 NOV A VEL 350 4 speed .
A lso . 1969 Camaro V 8. 307 4
sp ee d . Phone 247 2541.
2·4 31c
19 6'7 DODGE Dart . 6 cy l in der .
new batt ery and snow ti res .
Good ru n ni ng condi tion .
$1tJ5 Phon e (614i 667 3031.
2 4 Jl p
19 74 FO~O van , 1 ton lon g
wheel ba se , auto with P S
and bra!&lt;es , ra d io , se l up l o
pull ca m per Phon e 99 2 - 7320
2 1 61c
CHEV Y '• lon d w 11cc l
n11 1an cc o f
d t' 1V c p1cl&lt;-up
t e~c•o r v warr f! nty
Checl.
' h1 'l tH~ f o r c you buy .1 new
one Phonea l lcr 'i p mo r on
wprt...cnos QfrJ ] 1'16
I 9 of c .
Mt::I&lt;CURY wa gon . auto .
AM and FM rad to . run s
goo(! Almos t hal f o f book
pr ice Phone 992 36H' be f ore
2 p m

! YO'&gt;'

Rooms, '5.00 up

l 2 ]Ic

FABR IC . Sal e Continued Du e
to bad weathe r . cur sa le wi l l
be e)(tended for another
week
ending
F eb ,
7 M AKE SUR E you get eve r y
H AY for sal e. $1 bal e or trade ?
Carol ina. F abr 1cs on Rl . 7,
Ph o n e
F rank '
Da c h eL
possible ded uc tion fh1S year
one half mile north o f
Lead1n g Creek Rd 742 208 5
Hav e vo u r . Federal and
Ch es ter . Ohio . H en ry and
.
2 1 16tp,
Slate In come T ax re1ur-n by · . . . . . . . . . . . .IMIMM"4"4_.
Mary Hunt er , owners .
an acc oun t ant Phone 992 · _..
_
·- • •-.a , •._.___ __ ___,..
2- 1·61p
617 3
t-O R R!::NT OR SA LE , 3 WA LN UT c on sole . m od ern .
am f m
rad i o , . t s peed
1-:? 1-.'i2tc
bedrm . mob il e home , un
c hanger Balan ce 5.101 .31 or
CA REER awaits you with
furn ishc d . u lilit i E'S pa1d o n
ter mS . Call 992 3965
Luz 1er
Cosmetics .
"a SHOOTIN G Match , Sunday .
Rl 33 i n Bu r lingham Phone
1 27 He
q u ality produ c t f o r 53
99'27751
•
Fe b 1. 12 JO p.m . Just off
years ."
No
terr1t orv
17 3 1 1f c
Rt. 7 by -pa ss . Sponso r ed by
GOOD qu a lity mixed hav for
restrict ion . work from your
th e Lucky 7 Gun Club . Cal l
sale . Call 992 3658 a ft er 5
home . Still t ime to win your
99 2·5335 f or f ur t her d etai l s. HO U~ E in R ut land . Ca ll 992
p ,m .
t r i p to Na ss au . For ap
1. J0 .6tc
sese
2 tl 61C
poi ntm e n t , call Madylon
1 J IIc
Stone
( 30 41
7 '27 9269
I NCOME
T~x
Se rvice .
F OUR L7BK l 5, wh ite wall reg
(!=Oi te c l )
2 BR F urnish ed mob ile hom e
F e de ral o r St a t e t a:w:e s
tread . Uni r oyal Glas belt
2·3. 121 C
pr
ivate
101
in
Syr
acuse
,
an
P ho ne 992 .7228 or
see
ra in· tires , pra c lica tl y n ew
S2
2.
50
p
er
week
,
p
t
u.sWal la ce Russell , Bradbury .
Tw o t or $60 or all tl tor S.1 10
ut ilities , ad ult s on lv . Call
l. 30 ·26tc
Rambl er
A l So .
1969
Geo
.
Donavan
,
(
614)
98
5
--'-----~
---~-Ame r ic an . J dr s tanda rd
3504 or 99 2·5596 .
NOTICE OF
stl•fl . radio . good sha p e . S500
I W IL L b e g i ving p iano l esso n s
1 29 61C
APPOINTMENT
firm vernon W rbe r . Ph one
in my hom e sta r ling Feb . 1
99 2 3.345 or honie , 7.1'Z 2143.
Case No . 21717
r or intor m a1 10n c all 992
3 fu'!D &gt;1 RM t urnis hed and
2 4 61p
Estate
of
WILLIAM
F.
3278 .
unturn1 shed a pl s. Phdn e 99 2
WINEBRENNER
D ece a se d.
17 18 501C
5:134
Not 1ce
is
given
that
W IN CHE STER 37, S150 . 30
t1 9 t tc
Ma r garet Ellen Winebrenner
in ch Br ownin g ba r re l. $100.
H
AV
E
Y6UR
1ncome
tax
es
Of Syra cuse, M etgs County .
Phone 9~9 2789 .
prepared by Sieve Cleland , COUNTRY
Mobile Hom e
2 4 41C
Ohio . has b een duly appo in ted
Ra
ci
n
e.
Phone
949
-288
3.
Par k Rt . 33. te n mi tes nor th
Executr i x of the Estate of
1-29 -61 C
of Pomeroy . L arge lots with
Wi ll iam
F
Wi nebr en ne r ,
concret e Patios . Side wa lk ~ . CO A L . l im es to n e an d all typ eS
deceased , l at e of Sy r acuse ,
ot salt and ro c k salt tor ic c
runn er s and o ff s tr eet
M ei9s Coun ty , Ohio
a n d snow r emov al . E )(
park ing . Phone 992 74 19 .
cred 1tOr.s ar e re qu ired lo
celsior Sal t Works , Ea sf
12 31 Jf C
file their c la ims w i th said TIM BER , tO p p r i c e tor
Main 51. Pom er oy . Oh io
f iduci ary w it h 1n fo ur mo nth s.
sta nd ing saw timber . Call
Phon e 992 38 9 1.
Dated th,s 23rd
day of
( 614) 446 85 70 day or nigh t. 4 RM . an d bath , su i tabl e tor
12 7 t f c
offi ce , or apl ,, no chil,dre n,
Janu ary 1976 .
2 4- 12t c
very nice . 118 1; E Ma in 5 1 .
Pomeroy , Seco n d fl oor . E
Mann ing D . We b s ter WANTED o l d . upr ig ht p1anos
F ROb inson . 992 ·2846 .
Judge
Now at Landmark
in any condit ion . Wi l l pay
1 30 61 C
Courl of Common P l eas .
$10 each Fi r st floor only .
Probate Div 1sion
Writ e giv tng dtr ecf 1ons fo
( I ) 28 (21 &lt;1 , II , Jlc
Wi t ten P1ano Co .. Box 18 8. 3 RM f urn1shed a p r., uti l i t te s
pa i d . 356 North Fo urlh ,
CO-OP
Sardis , Oh io 43946
Middl epo r t .
_..-:_..._
1-21 101p
Automatic Watet
1 30 6tp
Condi1ioner
Model UCXXX.
WAREHOU SE or s!ore r oo m ,
210,000
25 x 75 ar 311 Condor St.
( Rear 61 0 E Main ). Ph 992
Weekly Grain
7178 . S25 $50 per mo n th .
Capacity
I 30 61C

Special Rates
by Week
or Month

For Sale

- ---

--

Wanted To Buy

~- ~

~

-

G I N ~ t:: N G ,

-

$299

Business Opportunities
' """ -

---~

$17 per 1u

(6 1.t l 37A 62 .19

..._ ·---:J, Reg . $339 .00 V~l.

1 16 lie

revealed
"
"
I'

,,

f

'
I

•

COLUMBUS (UPJ) - What
is believed to be a widespread
scandal involving scores of
state employes 011 welfare
rolls has been uncovered by
the Ohio Division
of
Personnel, it was reported
Wednesday.
The investigation has revealed the names of 140 state
employes in Cuyahoga,
Summit
and
Franklin
Counties, some who earn
more than $10,000 annually
and at the same time receive
.welfare checks ranging from
$-409-a-month,
$168
to
according to , Tlie Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
There are 41 · cases in
Cuyahoga County, seven in
Summit County and 92 in
Franklin County, according
to ODP Chief Philip S.
Hamilton, former Cleveland
perSIIPnel director.
Evidence uncovered will be
turned over to county
prosecutors for grand jury
acti011, according to the chief,
who says Hamilton County
will be checked next lor
suspected fraud cases.

••
. ,.
' I
I

,.

I

I

~

I

'

DE /\ LEk S in scrap, iron ,
me tals . junk autos . R ider's
Savag e . Phone 992 5468
1 2 29tp

Lost

PART A~d'afe"dog , black and
brown , shaggv . Lost in area
of Pomeroy , Middleport or
Ma son County , W . Va . area .
Answers to the name of
" Beju •· F a mi ly pel . Phon e
992 -7832 or 992 ·3671 A sk for
Orella Hy sell
....._ 2 1 6t c

____________ __

Own an d manage ve ndm g
roule di spensin g n ul , gu rn
and candy co nf ec t ions i n
Pomeroy or vicinitY . H ig h
profil i tems . c ar needed to ·
serv ice your vending route .
Ideal part time or full t i rne
business . cash inves tm enf
$1495 to S4795 and up . For
deta ils c all our loll f ree
number 1-800 328 ·6648 or
wrile O ep 1. BVV , 3938
Meadowbrook Rd , Min .
neapo l is , ~N 55 426 .

Help Wantell
3F UL L TIME c lerk posit ions ,
1 in ·offlce worker . 2 field
workers , f or temporary
Sla t e Progrem from mid ·
February through June .
Equal Oppor tuni ty Em
plo yer . A pp l y Box 729B , C·O
The
Daily
Sentinel ,
Po me ro y , Oh io 45769
2-3·31c
PAR T T IME 1nterv iewers tor
area survey . Available
• March , A pr i l. Must provide
own transportation . Apply
i n hand writing
g i v i ng
per son al barkground . Send
to Bo)C 72 9 E , c o The Daily
Sent ine l , Pomer oy , Oh io

Mobile Homes For Sale
·MOBiiTHome .

10 )( 60. 2
br . with addi t ional room ,
gas heal , furn ish ed . Ex
cel le nl condit ion , $d , 300 .
Phone (304 ) 773 5986 .
1 J0-61p

1972
CH AM P I ON
Mobile
Hom e , 12 :.c 60 com p lete ly
f urn is hed . excetle n t co n
dil1on . Phone 99 2·3 189
2 1 6tp ·

For Sale

I l 't 1 1

•· O

lady to I111C 111 1 rt.,!tr ruo111
and board and sma ll wages
for l ight du t ies ~. ~cat 308
Pag e Sl ., Middle port . Oh io .
I 11 I fc

4

1~ tfc

POMEROY LANDMARK
··~-Jack W. Carsey , Mgr .
...
Phone 9'12-2111
M e DANIEL Cus t o m
Bu t
c herin g, W es l Col umbia, W .
va we but c he r cattle an d
hog s .
$10
c allle
sla ugh1er , $7 f or hog s ; 12c
tor cutting and wrapp ing .
State and fed eral In spec ted :
Open 6 day s per week .
Phon e (30 41 882 3224
1 30 -261c
CORN for sa l e . Phon e 247
2664 , Da l las H i lt
J.JQ 51 p
MO D I:: RN d esig n st ereo . 8
tr ack 1ape . am fm radi o
co mbination . 13a tan ce $98 .60
or terms . Cal l 992 3965 .
1 1 'fc
CUAL f OR SA LE . Ct1!3 , Coa t
Comp,lny , 1 m i l e norrt'1 o t
Cheshir e r o!'1 Rl 7 . Pick your
ow n , $20 p er ·lon . Open 6 days
per week , or ca ll [ 614 ) 3Q7
73 30 f or furt he r Informat io n .
1 8 78tc

Real Estate For Sale
J

Now accepting clients
for bookkeeping and
lax service.

FORD . 4 wheel dr i v e tru c k , V
8, good con d i!io n . Harold
B r ewer ,
Lo n g
Bottom ,
Phon e ( 6 14 ) 985 3554 .
2 1 1t c

/ IR CO t i f' t• • h'(. Wl' l rH nq
ltli1 Ch 1n c
new {'IPC
J ll
OCCCS SO ri CS inc lud CCI Phclll e

Kuhl Cake Decor
Call 992 -7537
Pomeroy , Ohio
1- 12- 1 mo .

FREE ESTIMATES

Sy\-acu se , Ohio
.l

10 1

mo .

··--

-

-

'

Radiata
Service

608 E.
MAIN
POMEROY, 0,
LOCaTiOn P lus Charm Plu s
Durab • l i t y . Ston e f aced.
lo vely slctfed f loor s, id ea l
le vel lot. need s '2 or 3
pctrt tt 10ns and fl sho we r . N.
ga s F .A . l urnace , cen tral
ctir . 57 ,000.
FREE GA S- Lovely 3 BR
home, own wa ter , 'l n ice 2
BR ap t s .• mobile hom e, 22
ac re s. CALL TODA Y

AN AMAZING VALUE
L arge home. 5 BR . 2 ba th s,
New N . gas FA f urna (:e &amp;
tot s of other NEWS. GOO D

CO NDITION $10;000 .
ONE FLOOR PLAN - Full
baseme n t Wit h 1 B R. TV
R.. utility, wo rk shop . 1st
lloor has 1 BR. bath . kil ..
t1 v mg R . H .W . floo r s. large

lot. $9 ,500 .
A LOOK WIL L CONVI NCE
YOU - 2 BR , bath . NEW
perma
pa ne wi n dows,
ca r peli ng ,
pan e l 1n g,
kit chen , · carpor t·.
F u ll
ba seme nt. N . gas furnac e ,
ut ility. wo rk shop , S1 3.000 .
135 ACRES - Good clecm
ground . 3 BR l1o i'ne . w at er ,
(no ba th ), barn &amp; oth er
bldg s. On gopd r oa d close
to min es S17,500 .

WE CAN SE LL YOUR
PROPERT Y - HER E'S
WHY - EXPERIE NCE
SER VICE
ACT ION
HONE STY .
992 -2259 or 992 -2S68

TEAFORD

Virgil B ., Sr ., Broker
110 Mechanic Pomero y , 0 .

Phone 992-3325
NEW LIST IN G -

3 Brs ..

larg e
kit..
n ew
F A
fu rn a ce ,
ba se m e n1.
porches and nice lot in
Rutland . $12,500.

4 BEDROOMS -

Stea m

heat. ? l ivi ng s, 2 porch es.
cook a nd ba ke un 1ts ,
baseme n t wi th garage .

$20,000.
S BEDROOMS -

EXCAVATING .
do Ler.
backhoe
and
ditc h er .
Ha t t 1eld Ba c k
Charl es R
Hoe Se rv ice . Rutl an d . Oh 10
Phon.e 1.1'2 7008
11 ]Q 7BIC
D &amp; D TREE Tr im rning , 70
)"e ar s exp er 1en ce I nsured .
tr ee estimQres Call qrn_ IJH 4
or 161.1 ) 69 1:1 7?57 1\l banv
10 15 I IC
SE W IN G M J'l. ( HIN E Re pat rs ,
serv ice , all m akes 997 228 4
The 1 abr ic Sh op , Pomer oy',
1\ ulhor izcd Si nger Sales an d
~e r v1cc
We
sharpen
SCiSSo r s
..,
J '19 1t c

Real Estate for Sale
3. BR HOME . iusl tlni~ h e d
r emo dcl tng
Sa le m St ,
P hone 7&lt;~ 2 2306
R utl and
aft er 4-p m o r see Milo B
H utc h in son
I Q 9 I f(

3

l

BE6R~A:- -h"O-;s;in M id
dl epor! . co r ner · lot
N ('w
balh . s tory and half , utilit y
r oo m , new c a rp c l lny J nd
nf'w r oo t. ga ra ge and wor lo.
r oo m , fru it cell ar , Close 10
SC hOOl
ilnd
ShOp(.l•ng
Sl! ,SOO P hone 99176h
1 77 76 1(

RM house on 30 acr es 1n
co un tr y . Ban. of Le tart ,
Ohio Phon e 7.17 278 6
7 &lt;l 61 c

MODERN home in Ch CSICr 8
r ooms , ? balhs , 1 por ches.
su n porch . 1, ba se men t. city
an d w ell wa te r . na tu r al gas,
ga r ag e . Pr ic ed ro se l l
P hon e ( 61:! 1 9 8~ &lt;~ 10 7 .
? o1 tf c
8 RM HOU SE . 'l baths . on
co rner lot in M iddl epon .
Phone 9~ '2 3J2 7 a tier 6 p m
2 " 6t c
LOT JO )(. 100 close l o KroqN 'S
in Pomt: roy . P hone 1 8,t6
74 90, R eyno l dsbu r g . Oh io
atler 3. 30 p . m SJOO Wi ll
cons1der off er .

1 .1 3 1c.

Strout,.
Realty

Uvi ng .

dining, gla sse d i n porch ,
steam heat (ga s fired).
basem e nt on large lot

116,500.
NEW LISTING
1'

bedrooms ,
2
bath s,
fa mily room, m od . ki t ., 2
car gara ge and ni ce lot.

$45, 000 .
WINTER

SPECIAL -

Large old 17 room s w ith
bath, ga s &amp; ci ty w at er nea r
stores. On l y $5500.

5 BEDROOMS -

Lois ol

new panel ing, cprpetlng .
nat . gas furn ace , ci ty wa ter
and 2 bath s, 11 acre .

$18.500 .
FAMlL Y ROOM - 3 nice
bedrooms, bath . ga s hea t.
and large llving at a very
low price of $8500.

CHESHIRE -

Modern 3

BRs ., hot wa ter heat , very
nice k ttch en Wi th range,
refrig era tor . family room.
patio and '2 car garage . 2

lot s. $46,900.
50
WITH
OVER
PROPERTIES,
WE
OUGHT TO HAVE IT.

... .

1975S Proof Set (6 pes.)
$25 .00; 1975 Mint Sel $9 .00;
1976 Silver Proof SOt (3
pes . ) $15 .00 : 1976 Silver
UNC Sel (3 pcs.l 58 .50.
Call Rutland, 742-2331
R&amp;J COINS

.'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

NO. 114 - 115 a .. new ga!&gt;
Wel l. lar ge bctrn , so·m e
tim ber , quiet
cou ntry
se tting .
farrn
pond,

$32 ,300.00.
NO. 166

~

3 BR home.

alum .
51d1ng .
storm
w indows. quiet street. close
to tow n , owner wa nts to
sell. leav ing area . Worth
look i ng at l or $10,500.00.

Have buyel' ·for lot on
river. Do you have
one? Call us.
804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2298
Alter Hours Call
992-7133
CONTACT :
lois Pauley
Branch Manager

'-------------,. --

full
basement in good con d ition ,
qarage and small oarn 5 1 ~
a cres near Ch es ler . Phon e
(6 1J } YB5 ~140 .
7 1 121 c

"'K10 32

SOUTH
• K Q J 10 9 B
• A 8 54

t A6
.9
West

Pomeroy Office
105 Butternut
9?2 -3345
Former-ly Weed Whol esale .
Featuring :
De lu)( Zcro:w: Copy Se r v11:e ,
S uppli es .
O f! ice
Mimeogr aph
Suppli es.
lur geSt s(llecti on o f w ed ·
ding su ppl ies in
South
eastern Oh10
Th e Pr i nt Shop Complete
( Stil l in business i n Mid dleportl
1282 m o.

P.a ss

E7[

your
rree
379 J ,
Co ,

6 30

t tc

EL VJOQ O BOW ER S REPA I R
Sw ee p £&gt;r s . toa sters, 1r o n s.
all sm al l appl i anc es Lawn
mo wer . ne)(.l 10 Sta te High
wuy Garag e on Route 7
Pt10 ne 985 3825
4 16 H e
~ EPTIC · I A N K S c leaned
Modern Sunitation 992 395·1
or 99 ? 73.t9
9 18 lie

WOULD YOU B ELIEVE "'
Build an all stee l build inq at
Pole 0!3rn pr 1c es ? Golden·
Gi an t fil l St eel Buil d 1ngs ,
R I ' o~ , 8 0 K 148, Wave r ly,
0~-ti o Ph on e 9,17 2296
7 24 l fc
O'DELL /1 li nemen t lo cated
behi nd
R u llanP
Gra d e
Schoo l . Tune u p . bra kes .
whee l ba l an c in g. al 1n en1 ent
P hone 7J ? 20 0·L
11.16 lf C

.

C ~I\ NE

5e r-..7T(e ,
l.'rcCifon . .10 11
Pho n e 992 5.t68

·- - -

bu i lding
dcrr 1c k

1 1 26tp

Real Estate For Sale
HOU , i: on Li n co ln Hq iS 7
DCctrm , latQ(' ld l chen , lull
ba se111 cnt , e:w::ce llcn t b uv l or
$8 ,900. with n l'!w f urn it ur e .
on l y ":. 10,300 Ph one '19'1 7 6~8
1 6 261C

C

~-----.--~
OF OOURSE IT
WOIJ~P

106 ~

F' ORD L TO N f'w 12 Qa .
Wi n chest er 37 I• !Ji tH! IC 5 o10 I
Phone 7·12-2359
1 13 261p

19 73 PR O"WLER Camper , 2 1
fl . se lf co nt a in ed , sleeps 7.
Exce ll en t co nd ition•. Call
992 7:t20.
2 1 61c

'

l : l:.. ld-&lt;'1)•
l• cll ' ll..'
w it h j
au ~:', 0 1 'I I oun d .
Phon e 247 116 ) Le tar t , Ohio .
1 23 121c

• P.,"''""ftl

P•~t

~ IIQUII'

.,t1A" rW
IICY&lt;II' ' r,.,....,,
~&gt;to ~t.a tlo1&lt;&gt;&lt;1l &gt;'nl t~o.~t
'"'"' "'"' "' ~ui&gt;WI&gt; Hoo~
""'COOIU'1 "" ' ""'' &lt;l'um *Hft
IIOo'f&lt;l ~

1\ CRE , bi g garden . 5 rooms
and balh home , new drill ed
well and fur n a ce , n ew
bathroom , 2 f i r ep laces, good
location in L cl art r alls,
Oh io !i7.500. Phone 247 3853.
1 23 12tc

C&lt;&gt;JU ~&lt;I

..,I,~·''"'' ' l•ftG

•lee! ,•• ,.,.,fl • •1 ft

TO SHWEL - ·

Ot-4 , lo!EL..LO,

PEC. --

AU..EY OOP

'

•

Square
Yard
GASOUNE AlLEY

RUBBER BAc;K

II never malt.e

•

we ha ve h undred s of
cMpe t va lu es Your job c an
be comp l ete d in 1 to 2
No lo ng walling
w ee ks
pl' r iod Our in st aller ha s.7B
yeat s e lC.per lence . E~~opert
i n&lt;;,iallat i on
Vo u ' ll l i ke
what you get .
CALL 742 -2211
TALK TO WEN·DELL
GRATE

it to the Arena
in timer

•

•
•

.•
•

'

-..
•

•

..

=Tico&gt;1r~~:;;JIJ:~iM:':N~~:-;;::u;Q;:::-n
32 Ending
I
imp or

/&lt;i.vN 1~

•

••
•

••

~IIIL.:;:ilii - - - ~~~::::_;8.1

•

•

••
••
••

.

WHAT!

',IIREN'T 'rOU GONG

N0, 5TAN , I
.JUoT WANT

AND
5A:ltL1'HE8£0W

TO eAWL ME OUT
R)&lt;"(;EING A.W.O.L.

IOFINIBH
YOUR 60UP.

IT TOOK ME: ALL
AFTERNOON TO
GET?,_.--

F~BONNA"Z?

Yesl~rday's

Aoswer
19 Poe's "- in 27 Realm
Paradise"
30 Of a forearm bone
( 2 wds. )
20 Fine
31 NRA
"symbol
porcelain
23 Meal
33 Syrian
24 Having
city
teeth,
36 Mrican ·
humorously
antelope
37 Novel
speaking
ZS Tra about

2 wds.)

••
•

•

~

6 :40-Qunce of Prevention 10.

6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
6 :55-Chuck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
State 13.
/ :Do-Today 3,A,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8: Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
8:QO-Lassle 6; Capt . Kangaroo 8.10; Sesame Si. 33.
8:3o-Big Valley 6.
9:oo-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9:3o-A.M. 3; One Lite to Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
IO :oo-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,15,4; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Right 8,10.
10 :3o-High Rollers 3,4,15; Dinah 6 .
11 :oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4; Gambit
8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13; Elec. Co. 20.
11 :Jo-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15) Happy Days 13; Love
ot Life 8,10; Same St. 20.
II :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan mel ' s World 1012 :ooMagnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15; Let's Make a
Deal13; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club A; News 6,8, 10.
12.3o-Take My Advice 3.15; Ali My Children- 6,13;
Search for Tomorrow B, 10.
12· 45-E lee . Co . 33.
12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
I :oo-News 3; Ryan's H~pe 6, 13; Phil Donohue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:3o-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15: Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13:
As the World Turns 8. 10.
2:Do-$20,000 Pyromld 6,13 .
2:Jo-Doctors 3,A,15; Neighbors 6,13; Guiding Light
8. 10.
3·oo-Another World,3,4,15; General Hosplfal6,13 ; all
In The Family 8,10; Ltlas Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:3ll-One Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game 8, 10; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
4:QO-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6; Mic'key Mouse Club 8: Mister ~ogers
20,33; Movie "Batman" 10; Dinah 13.
4:3o-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,3j; Get Smart 15.
5·oo-Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek IS.S:JoAdam -12 4,13; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33.
6:0o-NewsJ,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News6; Zoom 20; lTV
Uti I izatlon 33.
6:Jo-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; .Your Future Is Now 33; In-School
Programs 20.
7:oo-Truth or Cons . 3; To Tell the Truth A; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Space : 1m 8; News 10; Let's Make a
Deal 13; Family Affair 15; Anyclfle For Tennyson?
20; Family af War 33.
.
&lt;:3()--Hollywood Squares 3.4: Ohio State Lottery 6;
I; venlll!l Edlllon wllh Martin AQronskv 20; Wild
Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Music City U.s.A .
15 . .
B:oo-Movle "Dark VIctory" 3.4,15; Welcome Back •
Kotter 6,13: Waltons 8,10: Lincoln Center 20: The
Way It Was 33.
8:3o-XII Winter Olympic Games 6.13;
Lowell
Thomas Remembers 33.
9:oo-Hawaii .Five-O 8; Movie "Cool Hand Luke" 10;
Hill Country SOunds 33.
lO:Oo-Barnaby Jones 8; News 20; Selling of Abe
Lincoln 1976 33 . ·
ll :oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :J().....Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mannix 6,13; Movie " The
McKenzie Break " 8; Movie "Seb~sflan" 10; Janak!
33.
12 : 4()--Longstreet 6.13.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,.4.
1:so-News 13.

tKm'K.wG

NEVER SO!.Io£D

A PROeLEM1
&amp;TAN .. .
'

... IT ONLY
CREATE&amp;

MORE
PROBLEMS!

OH·OH .... HERE IT
COMES ...TIME: FOR

Far Thurllrloy, Feb. 5, 1971
ARIES CMOICh 21-Ap,lll 11)
Leadershtp, judgment and ln ..
tt1at1ve are your dom tnant
qualtttes today Don 't let the
s1ze of a proJeCt lnghten you ,

TAURUS (April 20·May 20)
Things may be movmg behind
the scenes today that you 're
not aware of. Wilen they surface , they could bolster your
career or finances .

GEMINI (May . 21·Junt 201

d'-

DAILY CRYPTOqUOTE- Here's how to work It:
is

6ERMONETTE!

AXYDI.BAAXR
I. 0 N G F E I. L 0 W

One lelter :simply stunds (or ;mother. In this sample A is
used fnr th(' thr('&lt;' L'-:- . X £t1r thl' lwo o·~. l'lc. SinJA\c l etter s.
:'l [lOStrophcs. the kn~tll :md form:1tion of the wonts an• aU
hints. Earh da~· !he rode letters arc different .

UO

QGOJ
MKAA

YKUC
UO

EPY

UQGOKQKBJ

(CH976 Kinl Features

CANCER {Juno 21-July 22) A
poslliv~ attitude IS Important
lor you today If you go lnt9 a
situation knowmg you can win ,
you will.

very persuasive toda~ . One
sure way to success is lsotattng
the key person In a slluatlon
and making him your ally.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Bept. 22)

VKBYD
M.
TKKLVKY
Yeslerday's Cryptoquole: A PLOUGHMAN ON HIS I..EGS IS
HIGHER THAN A GENTLEMAN ON HIS KNEES. - BEN

~----------------ll~-r~,.----~~~~~--------~----~----~FRANKUN

Your e nthusiasm is contagious
today . 11 won 't take much for
you to arouse people. They 'll
ju mp on your bandwagon once
you blow the whistle.

LEO (Julr 23·Aut. 22) You'•e

EPY

MOVE OVER,
CfWCK ..!Jtlii'RE
TAKIN6 Uf' TOO
I{OOM!

•

6 :20-Patterns for Living 13 .

6:3o-columbus Today 4; News 6; Bible Answers B;
Urban League 10.

ICORPIO (OcL 24-Nov. 22)

0 Raison

QKB

••
•••

6: 15-Farm Report 13.

tor

CRYPTnQunn:s

.•

6 ;0G-Sunrlse Semes1er 10.

Partnership siluations look
very prom1sing today. Do what
you do best - select a compe' lent ally and an ambitious goaL
Watch the sparks fly!

ramp
33 Got you!
34 Ending lor
spat or
form
35 Unmarried
37 TroU
38 Youngster
39 Cure
40 Cherry or
peach

•

'

(Do you have a question
lor rhe experts? Write "As k
the Jacobys" care of this
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer mdividuaJ questions
il stamped. self-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
mosr mterestmg questions .
will be used in this column
and will rsceive copies at
JACOBY MODE'RN)

Your ·school 33:
7·3o-Last of the Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Wild Wild
World of Animals 6; Match G~me PM 8; Evening
Edition with Martin Agronsky 20: The Judge 10; To
T•ll the Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Book Beat 33.
8:QO-Little House on the Prairie 3A,15; Six Million
Dollar Man 6,13; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10: The
Way It Was 20; Images of Aging 33.
8:3o-Lowell Thomas Remember$ 20.
9:QO-Chlco &amp; The Man 3,4,15; XII Winter Olympic
Games 6.13: Cannon 8, 10; Fine Music Special JJ;
Images of Aging 20.
9:Jo-Dumpllngs 3,4, IS.
IO :oo-Petrocelll 3,4,15; Blue Knight 8, 10; News 20;
O~rstorv 33
10: Jo-Anyone lor Tennyson? 33; Almanac 20.
ll :Do-News 3,4,6,8,lO;iJ,i5 ; ABC News 33.
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie "The Stranger
Within" 6, 13; Movie " The Power" 8; Movie "Key
Largo" 10; Janak! 33.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY; 1916

rative

•

•

A Massachusetts reader
wants to know 1f there is or
ever was a rule that allows a
player wilh no ace-k1ng·
queen· jack or 10 to demand a
new deal.
The answer is a decided no.
When you play rubber bridge
and p1ck up a bad hand you are
stuck with 11.

vie~ing

tablet

YES-I WANT'E)
BE THE FIRSI 10
RAISING THE
$
A

••

Collection of the delinquent 1ists
publicized will be enforced as
prescribed under Sec. 5719.08 R.C.

HOWARD E. FRANK
MEIGS COUNTY AUDilOR

city
2 Popeye's
10 Potpourri
girl
Jl Lustrous
3 Certain
13 Stack
business
14 Pontius associate
15 Apple
(2 wds. )
4 Ballerina's
giver .
pivot
16 Storage
box
5 Tippling
17 Written
6 Hibernia
letter
i Odometer
18
Texas
city
reading
Hop on' 20 Copper
(abbr.)
Time's
21 Secret
8 Tranquility
awastin'!
society
(3 wds.)
22 Abominate 9 - cordillle
'""I 23 GOP
12 Stagger
society
16 German
Ocean .
greyhound
~!tj;;:26 Author, Hunter
27 Beach
covering
28 Aperture
29 Conunemo-

UL ABNER

w

In compliance with provisions of
Sec . 5719.04 R.C., there will be
published during the next few
weeks, in this newspaper, a list of
delinquent personal property taxpayers in Meigs County, Ohio.

Pa~s

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Party giver I Took
5 Arizona
heart

•••

Carpeting
501 NYLON
$499

Property''
Taxpayers
NOTICE

l'&lt;.~ss

~~J1·wd'

"10 'TALl&lt; 10 YOU, GUZ!

LET US DO IT!!

~'Personal

P&lt;.~ ss

Bridge teacher. Sally John·
son of Weslport. looked over
the dummy happily. Not only
h"d she reached a good slam ,
but the play she inlended to
,......-... adopt would be fine for
teaching her advanced pup~ls .
She could try for seven
That would require a 3-3 club
break and a 3· 1 or 2-2 trump
split. She hadn ' t bid seven so
she discarded that line
Then there was the simple
line . Try to ruff ·two hearts .
She would ruff one low and the
last one high and be home

ZIGGY .AN' TAR:L. WANI

IO&lt;IG~I&lt; .. h&lt;"-"''1"'•&gt;1

'

lHATJS ll-··
!&lt;OW 6TAAT

MILLIOHSf

IJ91 ) .1 ] ()

10 2H •fc

~~~~~

8E RlGliT,

AS YOU PUT IT HE'O IE THE
CIJ~T CHILD

N EW HOME or r em odel ing by
hour or contract Phone 99'2
35 11 or 997 7523 a t t~ r 5 p.m .
1 25 121p

Delinquent

Pass
Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

'I' ROUBLE

E:.&lt;CAVAT I N G . BACKHOE S
A ND DOZER , LA RGE AND
SMf.LL
SEPTIC T A NK S
IN STA L L E D
OI L L
PUL LIN S. PHONE 992 .'2 .1 78,
DA Y 0 ~ NI G HT
11 11 781p

Rutland

P;:tss

safely again st all4·3 and some .
5·2 hear! brea ks.
Then she found the best and
winning line . She won the first
diamond . cashed the king and
"ce of hearts , led a third heart
a nd carefully discarded dummy 's second diamond .
This loser-on -loser play
e nabled her to ruff her la st
diamond wilh one of dummy 's
low trumps and her last heart
with dummy 's ace of trumps
and make her contract
Of course. it would have
failed il diamonds broke 8-1
but 8·1 breaks are most unlike ly while 5·2 breaks occur
some 30 per cent of the time .

~~~~~

Pass

24
5¥

.

1.1'1''1'1.11: OBPB.Aif

BRADFO RD , A uc t ton eer
Complete Serv1ce . Phon e
049 2487 o r 949 2000. Rac ine,
Oh io . Cr il l Bradf o rd .
'
10·9 tfc

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

1•

South

Opening lead - Qt

CARPET CONSULTANT
.\ BR B r ic k h Onll' , 6 \:r s .. 71;
t) aii1 S. QM &lt;Hl e on 7 8 Jeres
on p i'l ved road n car 1 or k ed
R un 5'1a te 1 b r est
Phone
1 61~ 1 M l 37 87 . S3B,000 .
1 15 11t p

NorCh East

ORPHAN ANNIE

STA~-MAKE

RE A D Y MIX CON~ W
d elive r ed r ig ht ro
pro1e c1 tast an d f'&lt;'ISV
cst i ma1es P hone •992
Goeg1e1n Ready Mix
Mid dleport , Oh tO

EAST
416 4
• J9
tK987 52
.Q7

.Q 10 73 "2
tQ.llO

Quality Print Shop

All persons, partnerships, companies and corporations currently
I is ted on the delinquent classified
and or general personal property tax
duplicates may avoid publication of
such delinquency and subsequent
property tax liens by paying said
taxes in full prior to Feb. 6, 1976.

I'L llRM .
ho m e ,
iust
f in ished ..remodeling . Sa lem
~ ~ , R ut lan d Ph one 742 -2306
af te r -&lt;1 p .m . or see Milo B .
Hutchison .
9 23 -lfc

BOtlN LOSER

Pom eroy

Ph . 992 ·2114

WEST
4 5

Nt•il hf."r vulnerable

INCO R.ORAT EI&gt;

5

• AJ8654

Roger Wamsley
1 '2 3· 1 mo .

EXC A VATING . doz er, lo&lt;iu c,
and backhoe worK , sep11c
t ank s
installed .
dump
truc ks and lo boys for h ir e ,
will ha ul f il l d ir t . top soil , 1
11 m esrone and g r ave l Ca ll
Bo b or Roger Jc f f r r s. day
phone 992 7089, n 1g ht phon e
992 35 25 or 992 5237
from the larg es t Tru clo. or
2 11 I I G:
Bu lld ozer Rildiato r to the
sm alle st H C' at er (o re
REM ODELING .
PlumO inq ,
he at i ng an d all t ypes of
Nathan B l gg ~
ge n er a l
r e pai r
Work
Radiator Speclal1st
gU a r an teed
20 ye ars ex
perience
Ph one 99 2 '}.\09
5 1 I fc

liXPERIENCED

• A32

Bicentennial Coins
.·

4

• K6
t4 3

-...:.----------FOR SALE

LARRY LAVENDER
Ph . 992-3993

NORTH ID)

Currency and Supplies
Buv , Sale or Trade

Blowri mto Wall s &amp; Aff1cs

STORM .
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING -SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

WIN AT BRIDGE
Soundest play for slam

COINS

Blown
Insulation Services

·-

Real Estate For Sale

estimates on carinstallation.
We'll bring samples to your
home with no o~liQat.ion .
See how you ca" really
save .
Mike Young , Manager
Sales and Installation
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769
Phone day or night
614-99l-'l71l6
1- 14 -J nio .

Free

peting and

.

1 2'1 1 m o

Somerset 15; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers .

20,33; Movie " Go West" 10; Calli! Macaroni 13.
4:3o-Bewitched 3: Afferschool Speclal6, 13: Partridge
Family 8; sesame St . 20,33 ; Get Smart J5.
5:QO-Bonanza 3; Family Affa ir 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3o-Adam-12 4,13 ; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8:
Elec . Co. 20,33.
6:oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,1 5; ABC News 6: Zoom 20;
Business 33. '
6:3o-NBC News3,4, 15 ; ABC Nows 13; Andy Grlf!lth 6;
CBS News 8,10; Crop Game 20 .
7: oo-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4: Bowling for
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country B: News 10;; Wild
Kingdom 13; Family Affair IS; Book Beat20; Know

SLOAN'S
CARPETING

Licensed
baker
and
decorator .
Kttchen State Inspected

PH. 992-6173

5 ROOM house , bath ,

'57 69 .

MERV'S BOULEVARD
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) Merv Griffin Boulevard was
the street •of broken dreams Wanted
't:l\ !!l-i l)a fct tor all m a k es r~nd
~ or busted wallets - · for
mod els o f mo h i le home&lt;;
many gamblers Monday, or
Phon e a r ea codc 6 1-l H J
953 1
Easy Street for any big

winners.

OPERATE YOUR
OWN BUSINESS
AGE OR EXPERIENCE
NOT A FACTOR

MALE , bla c k and white
walker coon hound in Shade
area . Cal l Paul Si nclair . Rt .
1, Stlade , Oh10 , (6 14 ) 696 · 103 2
collect. rewa r d .
2-J.61p

1968 JEEP Wagoneer , 6 cyl .
st d , lo ck ou t hub s Phon e
Harol d
Br ew e r ,
Lo ng
Bottom . Ohio (61 ·1l 98 5 355 4.
2 1 tf c

~.-

_________ _

Welfare
scandal

LARRY WHOBREY
PUBLIC
AtroUNTANT

L..----------------------....1

Middleport, 0 . Fl'h . 992 -2771

~

MODERN CHEMICALS
100 Kerr Str ee t
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
~61 4 ) 992-2798 , Dick Seyl er
1 291 mo ,

POMEROY, OHIO

197~

Noticll

We Buv A n tiques

$2695

Dar k maroon f intsh , blk . bucke t vi nyl sea t s, rad io, V-8
engine, a utomati c, power steerin g , good iires,
sportsm an ' s dream .

La Salle
1 1 ~ COME

$2295

HO USE in Mason , 5 roon1s a·n d
bath , nice location Phon .c
99 2 512 6.
2 4 3t p

double
w i de f u rn ished , utilit ies
paid , no c hi l dre n or pet.
Near Pomer oy Phon e 99 2
7017 or 992 7666 .
1 3 5tp

~- UR N I TURE

STRIPPING SERVICE
Removal
of
Pa i 1i! ~
P last ics varn i shes , etc .
Wood or Metal .
Reoal r s
Ref10 iS h 1ng of
Furn it ur e .
B Urnishi ng ~ olishi n g of
Copper &amp; B ra ss

350 V 8, a u t o, P.S .. radio , l ike new tires, less than
38,000 miles by or rginal owner , clean inside &amp; ou t

2 4 Tf c

Cakes, Baked
and Decoiated
To Your Order

Modern

Ant i que

$6144

1972 OLDS CUT . 4 DR .

APT , 4 r m . baltl , t urn .s tled
Phon e 992 5908 .

2 BEDRM . trai l er

In Memory

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

4 wh . drive , 3-t T .. Cus tom deluxe tr im , 350 v.a, au t o ..
P.S, P B .. center seat , full length headl iner , out si de
mirror s, r adio. gauges. H. D. shocks N ow On l y $6144

FO R REN T near 'Ra c.ine ,
houserra 11cr . 3 BR , 1 bafh .
no pe ts, 1 sma ll c h ild o.k . S25
deposil. SI OO p lus utlli1 1es .
PhOne 9.19 2093
2 4 3tc

:OOMEONE
BORIW\'6 ,\'lONEY.

~

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

For Rent

WHA'T 500El"IM E5
HAPPEN!':&gt; WHEN

Business Services

· ---------------~~---------------,

Television .-log for. easy
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY~. 1976
3:QO-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6,13: A It
In The Family 8,10; Kup's Show 20.
3 :3o-&lt;lne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game 8.10
.4:QO-Mister i:artoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Bewitched 6;

Auto Sale$

Auto Sales

Employment Wanted

..
l'ACKT ~ .........···-···
~

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

M~EONLY

Syndiut~t,

Inc.)

Interests wh ich you share are
very rewarding today . The
aspects are eKcellenl in projects where yo-u contnbute
your talent o r time.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 23)

What you start out to do today ,
yoU will probably fin ish . The
conclusion will both please and
honor you.

SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Today you are In a fun loving cycle Associates will
find you charismatrc and able
to see the lighter side of life .

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jen.
19)· Your loved ones today wtlt
f1nd you're the person who can
tre things together for them and
come up with a profit.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 211-Ftb. 1t)
Break away from your routine
today wtth physical or mental
activities . You 'll enjoy yourself
more and reap some lasting
benefits.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
There are excellent oppor tunities for you to accu mulate
gains 1oday. Be alert, ready to

&amp;~
Ftb. 5, 1871

Look for a definite upsw ing In
your social activities th is coming year. Interesting new people may be coming your way.
You 'll be the loser if you don't
link up .

M'l DESK PARTNER, HERE,
ISN'T VE~ COORDINATED...

�.•

.

.

•

16 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, F'eb. 4, 1976

~

Roberts argues against
any formula rate change

Jody Lynn McCarty, infant
daoghter of Joseph and Mary
Smith McCar ty, Rt . 2,
Pomeroy, died shortl y alter
of the Attorney General's ·birth Tuesd ay night at Holzer
office, argued in favor of the Medical Center .
pending bill today .
In addition to her parents
Szolosi said the bill; spon- llle infant is survived by
sored by Sen . John T. ma ternal g randmo ther, Mrs .
McC orma ck, D-E uclid , Olg a McCar ty, Ches hire ;
would :
maternal grandparents , Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis J . Smith,

By J .R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS t UP! ) - John
R. Roberts, a lobbyist for

he avily amended in a House
commi ttee two weeks ago ,
Roberts
and
aft er
r e prese ntatives of Oh io's
major utilities told the House
committee that lower rates
would not resul t with
enactment of the bill .
Further hearings on the
House committee legislation
DONATIONS MADE
have heen suspended.
Latest contributors to !he
Assistant Attorney Genera l Walter Cleland Me mor ia l
Michael R. Szolosi, chief of
the special litigation section Fun d are Fred Shane, Myrtle
Walker , Cla ra Adam s, Grella
Simpso n, Virg il Roush,
Ullian Lee and Harry Curtis,
Jo
Ann Tuttl e reported. The
SUIT FILED
Racine
E-R Squad will meet
C~pital Savings and Loan
Monday,
Feb. 9. All members
Co .. Pomeroy, today filed suit
are
ur
ged
to attend.
for money in the amoun t of
$1,800. 91 in Meigs County
Common Pl eas Court against
VISIT IN RA CIN E
William J. Halley, Auburn RACINE - Mr . and Mrs.
dal e, Fla.
Ri char d As hl ey an d son

Ohio
utili ties
whose
arguments were among those

persuading

a

House
a
similar pending bill, argued
hefore a Senate commillee
today against any change in
the formu la used to compute
utilitv rate bases.
" I · don 't know where the
notion came from that an
origina l cost formula would
result in lower utility rates,"
said Roberts .
.
The Senate Wa ys and
Means Committee is studying
a bill to repeal the current
method Ohio utilities use to
compute the va lue of their
investments, and substitute
arl "original Cost " formula.
committ ee to

Infant died
Tuesday night

cha nge

Sim ilar legislation wa s

Open meeting set
Feb. 23 by chamber

Chris , Bradenton, Fla ., are
visitir).g her e with Mr . a nd

Mrs. Robert Beegle. Mrs.
Ashley is the former J ody
Gilmore of Syr acuse, and a
sister of Mrs. Beegle.

POST TO MEET
Mrs . Ve ra Van Meter was
RA
CINE
Racin e
appointed to fill a ""caney
Am
erican
Legion
Post
602
left on the board by a

The .Pomeroy Chamber of
Comm er ce will ha ve an (Jpen
meeting Monday , Feb. 23 at
llle Meigs Inn, the board of
directors decided Monday .
Mr s. Russe ll Es hl e m a n,

me m ber wh o ha s m oved will meet in r egular session

at the hall at 8 p.m. Thursaway.
William Grueser gave a day . Oyster slew will be
report of the Ohio Festivals served.
Assoeiation meeting which he
SOUP SALE SET
attended Sunday , Jan. 25. He
Pomeroy Boy Scouts will
broug ht a supp ly of Ohio
Fes ti va ls Broc hures back stage a vege table soup sale
wi th him . They_can he picked Saturd av at th e bar becue pit
up at the Chamber of Com- on the· upper parkm g lol
merce offi ce. These list the sta rli ng a t 9 a .m . All
festivals and their dates and proceeds will go to the
locations wh ich belong to the Pomeroy tr oop .

"'1fc of the night watchman,

asked the directors meeting:
at the Meigs Inn for permiss ion to in creas e th e
minimum charge of $7 for her
hus ba n d 's se r v ices. Th e
bo3rd gave their permiss ion

for him to contact the merch?n ts concerning this in-

crease .

Oh io Festival

Associa tion .

The recent fire iil Pomeroy

MEIGS THEATRE

was discussed and letters of

commendation will be sent to
all fi re departmen ts assisting
in the saving of the ' lower
block of town.
The l'em ainder of th e

TONIT E THRU
THUR S.

FEB . 4-S
NOT OPEN
FRt. -SAT .. SUN .

mee ting was spent discuss1ng

FEB . 6-7-B

llle 1976 Big Bend· Regat ta .
Committees will be named
soon to begin work on the
Festival.

POSSE .
Show starts a17 : DOp. m .

Pomeroy , and several aWl ts
and w1 cles .

Fun eral services will he
held Friday at 2 p.m. at the
Wesleyan Holi ness Church
with the Rev. O'Dell Manley
offi ciating . Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemet ery ,
Cheshire . Friends may call at
llle Ewing Funeral Home
Thur sday from 6 to 9.

Marrs service
is on Friday
BIDW ELL -

Funeral

services for .J ames William
Marrs, 57, Rt. I , Bidwell, wh o

died Monday, will be held at
10 a.m·. Friday al the Wilkesville Chapel of the Walker
Funeral Home with the Rev .
Elmer Geiser officiatin g.
Bunal will be in the Greenwood Cemetery at Racine .
Friends m ay call at the
chapel an y Hme after 2 p.m .

Thursday . Tlie family will
re ceive vis itors from 2 to 4
p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Th ursday
at the chapel.

NOT HURT IN FALL
The Middleport E-R Squad
answered a call lo 244 North
Second Ave ., at 9:14 a.m.
Wednesday for Mrs . Essie
Russell.. Mrs. Russell had
fall en, but was not injured. At
3:21 p.m. Tuesda y, the squad
was
called to the welfare
CALL ANSWERED
offi ce for Richard Hogg , 49,
The Pomeroy E-R Squad
Rt. I, Poin t Pleasant. Hogg
answered a ca ll to Hysell Run was ill with stomach pa ins
at 6:42 p.m. Tuesday for
a nd ha d stopped in the
Donna Grueser who was ill .
welfare office for help . He
She was taken to Holze r was taken to Pleasant Valley
Medi cal Center .
Hospital.

Big Fooze too
much for losers
By Jim Cleland
Th e O.V.F . Po llikkers ,
. mee ting stubborn resistance
fr om a .South ern Local
Faculty team, we re defea ted
42 to 41 Sunda y at the Racine
Jr . High Gym:
Although Big Fooze Wol fe
could no t field an all teacher
l&gt;!ijm, his player Coa oh role
was enough to overcome the

HABIT
We all have habits,

coa chless and

but one of the most
promable of them
can be saving money..

MAKING IT A HABIT TO STICK AWAY
PART OF YOUR INCOME IN A SAVINGS
ACCOUNT IS A CONSERVATIVE AND
PROFITABLE
MOVE.

manag eless

Potl ikkers.
About !he only good thing
the Potlikkers did wa s to slow
the facul ty team down so they
los t the .second game to the
Portland. Bandi Is by " score
of 33 to 29.
Due to the recent article in
the · Daily sentinel, about 10
youngsl&gt;!rs turned out, eager
wplay and demanding .equal
time on !he flom·. It made us
wonder what these kids would
be doing if we did not have
thi s athleti c program.
Thanks to the School Board
and officials at Southern who
allow us to use the fa cilities.
We belie ve .we a r e furni shing
llle best all&gt;!rna tive to alcohol
and drug abuse possible.
We strictly enforce the
rul es agains t alcohol, drugs,

and vulgar lan gua ge, so

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL
BANK
RACINE

OHIO

ATTENTION
LADIES!
Lei me help you to a more beautiful
appearan ce. I can show you how to
accent your cheek bones. pick the
perf ec t fr agrance . and the most
becoming hair shade, ]USI for you .
I' m not an expert. but we ' ll let you·
be th e judg e of the res ult .

OOME IN TO DUITON DRUG STORE AND ASK FOR ME,
TERESA DAVIS. I THINK IT WILL BE ALOT OF FUN.
~DunoN'S

DRUG STORE

COLUMBUS ( UPii - Real
estate taxpayers in 23 reap·
praised counties have paid a
total of $20 million a year in
wmecessary taxes because ·
county auditors failed to
red uce tax rates in
compliance with state law on
land appraised upward as a
result of inflation, a ccording

Arbitrator
ruHng is
supported

" We hand checked some of

Miller

and to

submit it to attorneys for the.
anyone ca n be proud of these club own er s for their
young people.
approval. He said If there was
We need adult coa ches, any disa greement a hearing
referees and monitors to help would he held Saturday to
with the program, so come on ·work out the final matters.
all you ex-basketball players · Oliver said he was sure his
and get involved.
.
ruling would be appealed
Next Suriday we will play a soon because its fin al
U.am fr om Syracuse . We · disposition will have a
ha ve been advised by School hearing cin contract talks
offici als to restrict our in- hetween the owners and the
vitation to the Southern Local Players Association, whose
area to make sure we ea11 working a greement expired
mainta in control over Dec. 31. There has been a
behavior and expenditures, threat of an own ers' lockout
1ST GAME
durin g spring train ing if a
Potiikkers ~ Tim Hill, 11 , new agreement is not
Dave Snod grass 12, Squeaky reached .
Johnson 2, John Salser 6,
Brady Hoffman 8, Gerald
Hendricks 9, Tim Bentz 9,
THANKS ~'OR LABELS
Cork Cleek 2. Total 41.
Rober! Beegle, principal .at
Faculty - Big Fome Wolfe Racine Elementary, and. the
9, Speed Johnson 2, Bill Baer teachers extend thank s to the
9, Bill Maynard 11 , Hubbard many people wh o sa ved and ·
10, Mike Boring I. Total 42. sent to the school Campbell
2ND GAME
So up labels. Th e school
Bandits - Max Knapp 22, received 6,500 labels whi ch
B. McKelvey 2, Scrap Van will . enable the school to
Mel&gt;!r 4, Paul Shultz 3, Fred obtain two cassette ret.;Yrd ers
Miller 2. Total 33.
and have labels to spare .
Faculty - Big Fooze Wolfe Beegle a sked 'people to
21, Arron Wolfe 1, J . Hubbard continue to save the lahel s for
2, Mike Borin g 2, Bell the school for next year ·~
Maynard 3. Total 29.
project.

UJ,:,L il...:\. 1\lit;IJ

-

Linda

Bailey, Cla ric e Randolph , .
Ver a Kr e imer, Franklin
Lemley , Elizabeth Jackson ,
Jack Smith.
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Feb. 3)
Clineda Austin, Herman
Borland, Leslie Brewer, Mrs.
D.aniel Buechner and son,
Philip Burgess lll, Naomi
Clark, Sabra Clark, Robert
Coffey, Anthony Cook, Alice
Daogherty , William Davis,
Correne Deluz, Michael Frye,
Albert Gibson, Wilma Houck,
Tammy John sl9n , Mary
Layne , Rober! McDaniel,
Mrs. Danny ' Missen and
daughter, Denise Miichell,
Bias Montez, Sarah Morgan,
Mrs. Thomas Rainey and son,
Genevi eve Rhea , David
Roberts , Juanita Runyon,
Elsie Shaffer, Julia Shelton,
Wallace Smith IV, Mrs. Ken
Snyder and son , Mary
Spencer, John Thompson,
Anna Welch, Fletcher Welch,
Marshall Wolfe, Nada Wolfe.
(Births, Feb. 3)
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Deal ,
daughter, Point Pleasant, W.
Va .; Mr. ~nd Mrs. Jimmie
Deem , son, Racine ; Mr . and
Mrs. Charles Ewing , son,
Cnal lon; Mr . and Mrs. Arnold
i .t:,.is, dauglttcr . Ironton.

to testimony from a school
lobbyist.
·
John H. Hall, assistant
executive secretary of the
Ohio Education Association,
revealed the figures Tuesday
in testimony before the House
Ways and Means Committee .
He said he was not prepared
w name the counties, but
hoped to have them by today.
Hall said he and Rep. J ohn
E. Johnson, D.Orrville, chief
sponsor of a tax relief bill no w
under
study
in the
comm ittee. made
the
"as tounding"
discover y
whe n review ing comp uter
printouts of the effects of the
bill on various sct10ol
distr icts.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) these school districts and
- A federal judge !Qday they checked ou t," said Hall.
upheld an arbitrator 's ruling "All or some of the school
th at
pi tchers
Andy districts in 23 counties did not
Messersmith and Dave have their rates rolled back
McNally were free agents , a as far as they should have ."
decision ending the indefinite
cont rol by ma jor league
baseball club owners over
pla yers contracts.
(Continuer! from pa ge 13
Arbitrator Peter Seitz had
ruled Messersm ith of the Los mean that we sh oul d deny
A0 geles
Dodger s
and sufficient flmd::; to pr otect our
McNally of the Montreal nntioital inter ests. We live in
Expos were free agents after an int erdependent wor ld
they played the past season econom y, a nd our foreigh
without
signing
new economic inte rests are
contracts. The Kansas City . substan tial. U. S. assets
Royals, later joined by major abr oad amoun t to more tha n
league baseball's 23 other $180 billion . Annuall y, we
clubs,liled suit Oct. 28 asking expor ( more than $70 billion
the federal court to vacate in goods and ser vices. These
the arbi trator 's decision.
in te rests
p re clude
cw
Distri ct Judge John W. a bandonmen t uf all of our
Oliver ruled any doub ts overseas commitments. We
expressed about the validity canno't draw into a· shell ,
of Seitz's award should he hopin g that our adversaries
resolved in his favor because wil l eventuall y go away. A
' 'this court cannot review the clear signal must be gh:en to
meri ts
of
substantive the RusSia ns a nd othe r
disputes that were submitted potential adversari es that we
to the arbitration panel."
H r~ nut about to give up . Th e
Oliver said the only reason best way to accomplish t~is is
he could ove rturn the through a !iound, ildcquate
arbitrator 's award was if nati on~! defense program. If
Seitz had failed to follow the we fa il to prov ide for this 1
c oll ec tiv e b ar ga inin g Russia may fcellh'\lt the time
agreem ent betw ee n the is r ight for cOnfrontation in
owners and the Major League some .r emol e pa rt of the
Ba s eball
Pla ye r s world . It is far better to pay
Association .
· the cost for a sound defense t(J
. Oliver ordered the Players m.ain tain peR ce nvw., ra the r
Association to prepare what than the terrible cusl in li ves
it felt ·was an appropriate and dollars tor a wilr in the
final judgment enforcing the f uture .
arbitration award

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorlalllospltal
ADMITTED - Paulette
Van Meter, Min ersvill e ;
Charles Withee, Pomeroy;
Bradley Pooler, Pomeroy;
Dav id Acree, Pomer oy;
Clarence Wolfe , Chesler ;
Mary Cleek, Racin e.

Lobbyist says someone goofed!

Fresh Ham Hock
Navy Bean Soup
90~PtNT

News .. in Briefs
(Continued from pa ge 1)

HENRY KISSINGER,
above, will testify today.

&gt;

a::

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY ·

Whether the plan! - expecl&gt;!d to be started in 1979 will the foss il or nuclear
fueled has not been decided
accordin g to !he spokesman.
While discussions with
company officials in the past
have evolved around a fossil
fuel plant, the utility has
indicated that in the overall
plans, whiCh enco mp ass
se veral plan t sites to be
acq uired,
there
are

Struggle goes
on over how to
control spying

.:

••

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The House Intelligence eoirunittee
labored today on its recommendations for controls on spy
agencies and formation of a permament oversight committee
to see that the strictures hold.
.
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger wa s to testify today in' an
open session of the Sena te Government Operations Committee,
which also is formulating rules on how better to monitor the
CIA and other · intelligence organiza tions and prevent
recurrence of pas! mistakes.
The House committee Wednesday voted 8-5 to recommend
the proposed committee he empowered to make public any
information that comes into its possession.
In Kissinger, the Senate committee had the most expert
witn ess available on covert operations,
·
But his own role in the selection process has he en criticized ,
with charges !be ma chinery he presided over often was
bypassed to get operations in motion wi thout the knowledge of
top officials.
·
\
Kissinger was the top securit y adviser to Richard Nixon
!rom 1969 until Aug. 9, 1974, wh"l' Nixon resigned. He
continued his security duties for President Ford until last Nov.
· 3when he relinquished the White House advisory post to devote
his time to the State Department ..
He has held, among others, the posts ol special assistant to
the President lor National Security Affairs, chairman of the
National Security Council, chairman of !he Defense Program
Review Committee and chairman of the Intelligen ce
C&lt;fnmittee which set general policy for the entire intelligence
Coinmunity.
He still sits on the Na tional Security Council.
-The s!Ul unpublis~ed House intelligence report, according to
news leaks , is strongly critical of Kissinger for employing
secrecy lo conceal mistakes and refuse information.

I n celf'lbl&lt;I IJ O!i ol OUI natiOn·s 20011\ apniVCrSOty , Wfi! I(C 901 gteat Arnedcan T V vai UCS 101 vou !
RCA XL· tOQ co lo( lV , blac k and w)·ute 'TV and labulous new RCA XL - 100 T V Wllh 1t1e Co lo rTra k System
A t specmllow pncus' Nvw s I he tull e lo bvy and see TV pr og1arns a t then co loilul besl l

·llOII
XL-100

~ruu ndbrea ki ng

with completion of construe hun in the
mid 1984Js.

however, may "put a dam - nati onal forests and because
per " on present plans, a of the proximity of the Li ttle
spokesma n
said .
Th e Hocking sil&gt;! to the Wayne

Proposed a mendmen ts to

the Federa l Clea n Air Act,

e
VOL. XXVII

NO. 207

proposed amendme nts place

National Fores t could wipe

a buffer zone around certain

out plans for any power plant

•

POM EROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1976

only come out after a very
The !rains collided shortly
extensive investigation .''
after midnight EST about
Gilhert said about 20 ca rs five miles east of this
derailed. He said both !rains community of 3,000 which is
carried general freight. The in the northwest corner of the
fire and explosion was caused state near both the Michigan
when one of the fuel tanks on and Indiana borders.
one of the engines exploded,
"One engine was off on the
Gilbert said.
north side of the tra cks and
the other engine ended up on
the south side of the tracks,"
Peeps said. "They were both

Jolm Wining
dies on road .

Mini-park gets·
Legion assist
Websl&gt;!r Pos t 39,
America n Legion , as a
bicentennial projec t Tuesday
night voted lo pay up to $500
in expenses to cooperate with
llle Meigs Coun ty Jaycees in
Drew

James Soulsby was appoinl&gt;!d
commissioner .

The pos t decided that it will
purchase' three life memberships al a fi gure of $2!){)
this year w(th iwo to go to

thei r deve lopment of the mini

past commande rS a nd one to

. a World Wa r I vel&gt;!ran.
The observ ance of Four
Chaplain Sunday this Sunday
was announ ced and all posl
members wer e asked to
attend worship services at
Trinity Church at 10 a. m.
Sunday.
It was a nnounced that
residents ha ving Ame rica n

fl ags which have bee n
prese nted them at the time of
a death can !urn th em over to
the local pos t which will later
prese nt them to schools and
or ga ni zati ons

if

pers on s

. havin g such flags wish.
A mee ting of tr usl&gt;!es and
pas t commande rs a nd their

wives was se t for Feb. 25 at
the post home with dinner to
he served at 7 p.m. Refreshmen Is were served by Robert
Vaughan .

multiengine tra ins .''

At least two fire-companies
from nearby communities
John F. Wining, 67, of 235 S were sent to fight a blaze that
Fourth St. , Middleport, diec followed the explosion.
Wednesday afternoon whilE
Gilbert said the eastbound
riding or pushing his bicycle train was headed for Selkirk,
on the Hiland Church Road N.Y., from Elkhart, Ind. and
near Route 7.
the westbound train was
The Pomeroy emergency destined for Elkhart from
squad went to the scene at Syracuse, N.Y.
" We have no other
3:16p.m. but Mr. Wining wa'
dead on arrival. Death was information as to the speed or
attributed to a heart attack. why they were both on .the
He was the son of the late same track," Gilbert said.
The
Penn
Central
Noah and Elizabeth Wining.
· A man authorities iden- spokesman said the track
tified only as Willi a m where the crash occurred
Morrison, a ddress unknown, also is used for passenger
phoned the sheriff's depart- trains but that all passenger
men! that he bad seen a man carriers had heen routed
fa·ll off his bicycle on the around the area.
road .
Surviving are a brother,
Ra y 1 of P omer oy; two

· sisl&gt;!rs, Mrs. E!sie Steffy,
Charles ton, S. C., and Miss
Stella Wining, in Nevada ; a
niece, Mrs . James (Patricia )
Reynolds, Middleport, with
whom he made·his home, and
two nephews, Bob and Dick
Sle[fy in South Carolina.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. Satl)fday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with
the Rev. William Knittel
officiating . Burial will he in
Beec h Gr ove Ceme tery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home any time a fter 3
p.m. Friday.

Dateline 1776
NEW BEHN , N.C.,
Feb. :; - Brig. Gen ..
i\ llan .
McDonald
publicly pelitioned all
loyal subjeCts to join
his Highland units ,
promising them their
families and property
would be protected
while in se rvice .

Driver held for
reckless actions
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. arrested Harold Aden
Reeves, 42, Rt. 4, Pomer.oy,

on a charge of reckless
operation · following a single
car accident Wednesday at
9:45p . m .
.
The department said
Reeves, driving east on SR
124 in Rutland wen! off the
road on the right, struck a
garage, then broke off a
utility pole and gas mel&gt;!r. He
was not inj ured.

ACTIONS FILED
A sui! for partition of real
es tate has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
by Wanda and Franklin
Rizer , Pomeroy , agairist
Harry Potts, Jr., ·Laurens, S.
c:, el al. The properly is
located in Syracuse. Janel E.
Nease, Minersville , has filed
suit for divorce from Claude
K. Nease, Rt . I, Minersville,
charging gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty.

aoluUon ."
Ford also believes his election to a full term in the
presidency would "have an impsct on my relations with the
Congress" and show his programs "are acceptable to the
American people." The President's remarks were made
during a 'recent interview with CBS correspondent Walter
t:ronklte but not aired because of the sh~ of time,
. network sources ·said.

llCn

:.t~,~·wg;w

25" diagonal

With

RCA XL-100
SPECIAL

100% Solid State

'59

00

'

On Sale at the Mechanic Street Wuehouse

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

CAMBRIDGE, MASS . - MASSACIIUSETI'S Institut~ of
Tecmology engineers say they have developed an
experimental automobile engine which uses less gas and .
spen out fewer pollutants !han Ute internal combustion
iltglne. It's called the "valve, hot11as engine." It differs from
Ute internal combustion enR!ne because combustion takes
(Continued .on page 12)
.

specul ating on what the
outcome will be," the utility
compa ny r e pre senta t ive
sai d.

PRICE FIFTEEN GENTS

Union wins
deductions
For the fi rs t lime in history woi-k for the county are back
employes of the Meigs Coun ty w work , Clifford said today .
Highway Dept. belong to a
Clifford said the OCSEA
union - The Ohio Civil has 35,000 members in the
Serv i ce E mpl oyes state, th e largest un ion
Assoc ia tion - according to rep resenting public em Mike
Clifford ,
sta ff ployes .
representative.
The local OCSE A chapl&gt;!r is
Clifford told The Daily the lar ges t in Ohio . It
Se ntinel "all differences have represenls Meigs and Gallia
been resolved" and Wesley workers .
Buehl , county engineer, told
Clifford, a n ~tive of Midllle men Wednesday he is dclport, the son of the late
authorizing payroll deduction Pinil ( Moon) Clifford, said
of dues inw the employ es members of the union work in
ass ociat ion .
the
Workm en's
ComThe action followed con- pensa ti on a nd
Un emferences of !he adversaries ploym en t a ge ncies , in
with Prosecuting Attorney Welfare Depar tments, the
Bernard Fultz. Meeting with Stale Highway Patrol, and
Fultz were Clifford and the State Highway Garage .
Buehl , then Clifford and The union also represenls 400
Buehl met separately, and workers at the Gallipolis
then Buehl met with the State Institute, he said. Union
employes. Three who go! Presi dent is Bill Cleland.
le tters terminating their

State's drivers
pr()ve too wild
claims come in !rom the
COLUMBUS ( UP! )
Drivers of slate-owned that it became too difficult to
· vehicles are so acddent . handle," he said. "Coupled
prone, no irunD"ance c~pany with a very had loos ratio, you
is willing to sell vehicle know why we do not want to
continue Insuring state
insurance to the state.
Officials today said after vehicles."
Administrative Services
Feb. 15 the state will be
Ri chard
L.
without insurance on its Director
12,000 vehicles, unless it ca.n Krabach, in charge of tbe
· get an extension from the state's motor pool, said tbe
state has no alternative but to
current premium holder . .
Scripps - Howard news- consider "self ins\trlng" its
papers report only one vehicles.
"I don't koow what to do
firm, an out of state company
which is not licensed in Ohio, about il, " said Krabach when
has said it would sell asked why so many claims
insurance w the state for are filed by the state, "Do you
nearly $2.7 million annually, take a man's driver's license
a 500 per cent increase over away ? I don't know."
When asked how many
the current premium charged
by Reliance Insurance Co., state vehicles were involved
in auto accidents last year,
Philadelphia.
That bid was rejected · Krabach said, "It's not my
the job to chase down a story for
Wednesday
by
Department
of the newspapers.' '
He said he doesn't know of
Administrative Services.
A Reliance IllSI!rance Co. any file the state keeps to
executive said he is dropping record accidents involving
the state as a client hecause state vehicles, and added, ·
" I'm not concerned with
his company has lost $140,000
insuring state vehicles last details. I am concerned only
with
wa ys
lo solve
year.
He said the state was prOblems."
The only Company to bid on
paying $500,000 a year in
premiwns and last year the state vehicle insurance was
company paid out more than · All Star Insurance Co., of
Milwaukee, Wis., which is not
$&amp;10,000 in claims.
"We have had so many authorized to sell insurance
in Ohio , This company
wanted to charge $222 per
vehicle, compared with the
$36 per vehicle now charged
by Reliance Insurance Co.
This represents a premium
of $2,664,000, compared with
Mrs. Mary E. Butcher, 77, the $500,000 the state · is now
former Middleport resident, paying.
died Thursday morning at
Mercy Hospital in . Porlsmoulh following a lingeri ng
illness.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
• Mrs. Butcher was born '
Saturda y
lhrough
Feb. 22, 1898 in West Virginia,
Mond ay, cold Saturday
a daughter of the late Mr. and
followed by a moderating
Mrs. James Knight. She was
temp erature trend. A
also preceded In dea th by her
chance of snow north and
husband , Archie, in 1951 ; a
rain or snow south Sunday
sisl&gt;!r, Mrs. Mabel Pettit,
and Monday. Highs will be
about a week ago, and two
In the upper 20s to the mid
brothers, George a nd Jaines
. 30• Saturday, wannlng to
Knight.
the 30s and low 40s by
A member of the MidMonday. Lows will he 10 to
dleport Church of Christ,
20 S•turday morning,
Mrs. Butcher is survived by a
rising lo lhe lows In the mid
daughter , Mrs . Woodrow
30s by Monday.
(Norma Kathleen) Wilcox of
Sandusky ; two son s, Virgil H. $:.":::=:~::::::.~-:::::::::::::::::::::~as:&amp;::::::::.:
Butcher of Portsmouth and
Edgar Eugene Butcher of
Akron, and several grandchildren.
Funera l services will be
Rain
lik ely
tonight ,
held al 2 p.m. Sunday at the hecoming mixed wi th snow
Rawlin gs-Co ats · Funeral later. Lows will be in the
Home with Mr. George Glaze lower 30s. Cloudy, chance of
offici ating . Burial will be in snow flurries early Friday,
Middleport Hill Cemetery. hig hs in the upper 30s .
Friends may call at !he Probability of precipiation 70
fun eral home from 2 to 4 and per cent today and tonight, 30
from 7 lo 9 p.m. Sa turday.
per cent Friday.

Mary Butcher
· died Thursday

WASHINGTON - GEARING FOR A CAMPAIGN foray
q.Js weekend into New Hampshire, President Ford says he
does not believe he has any "serious philosophical
differences" with Ronald Reagan . But since he must face the
problems every day, he says, he "can't use rhetoric as a

TilE CONTROVERSIAL CONCORDE SUPERSONIC
lransport plane has won a gO-ahead to fly dally to Washington
from France and Great Britain , but it may be denied entry into
New York. Transportation Secretary William Coleman
llfanted permlasion w land the 1,300-mile-an-ltour plane at
Wuhlngton's Dulles Airport and gave federal approval for
landing at New York's Kennedy Airport.
Coleman's permission Is ,all that's needed at •Dulles
because the federal goverrunent operates the airport. But New
York Gov. Hugh Carey has veto power over whether the plane
can land at Kennedy and he has been outspoken in his
opposition. "My position has not changed," Carey said after
Coleman's deciAion. "I am concerned about the Concorde
flights beCause of envtronmen!al problelllB, Inc lading noise;
safety considerations, particularly in the llkeoff; and !he
economla~ In owating the flights."

"But nei ther proposal has
reached the fl oor ol the
Se nate or the House and a t
this po in t we are only

enttne

Four crewmen killed in collision
of Penn Central freight trains
ARCHBOLD, Ohio (UP! ) - head brakeman on the westTwo Penn Central freight bound train who jumped off
tr a ins,
una cc oun ta bl y just hefore the collision.
switched onto the same track,
"This is the worst accident
collided headon with a I've seen in 12 years," said
tremendous explosion near Ohio Highway Sgt. Howard
this nor thwes tern Ohio Peeps, a 12-year veteran of
community early today. Four the force. " When I arrived at
crewmen were killed.
the scene both the head
Two crewmen on each train engines were enguHed in
were killed, said Howard fl a mes and they were
Gilbert,
direc tor
of shooting approximately 45 to
infor mation se rvices for 50 feet in the air ."
Penn Central, and two other
"I did oooerve parts of
crewmen were injured.
huuman bodles laying around
Gilhert identified the dead the area, a couple of legs and
crewmen as W.H. Davis, 41, a couple of arms," Peeps
Toledo, Ohio, the head brake- said.
man; Eugene 0 . Fuller , 60,
Gilhert saidhe didnot know
Brookl yn,
Mich.,
t.he . how both trains got on the
engineman on the eastbound same track.
train ; Roher! E . Green, 60,
"In the operation of a busy
Elkhart, Ind ., the engineman ra ilroad you sometimes
on the westbound train; and switch trains fr om one track
Page Spray IT , 30, Elkhart, to the other but we haven't
Ind., a fireman .
any idea what happened,"
The injured were identified said Gilhert ."There could he
as Howard PhiUips, Maumee , a number of reasons why two
Ohio, the conductor on the tra ins were on the ·same
eastbound train and Billy track, crossing over and that
Fuson, Walbridge, Ohio, the sort· of thing. But that will

there of significant size .

•

at

park projec t in P ~ m eroy.
The Jaycees poured conere~&gt;!
in the firs t phase of the
·a:::::::::::::::;:;::::::~:;;;:;:;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;.;::·:·:·:·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~
park laslyea r . The legion will
work with the Jaycees now in
comple ting it .
t:
:,:; Durin g the meeti ng,
·pr es ided ·over by Commander Raymond Jewell, it
By United Pres&amp; International
WASHINGTON - THE NATION WOULD use daylight was also dec ided to consavings time for eight months a year, rather than the present tribute $500 again to operate
six, under a two-year experimental bill approved by the Senate the Meigs County Ame rica n
Legion baseball tea m.
Conunerce Committee.
an d
team
The measure calls lor daylight savings time to he in effect Legionaire
manage
r
George
Nesselroad
from the first Sunday in March until the second ,Sunday in
a nd Homer Smith and J ameS
November for calendar years 1976 and 1977.
·
Suulsby atl&gt;!nded a departGUATEMALA CITY, GUATEMALA - AN earthquake ment base ball meeting in
lhal turned adobe homes· to dust as it rumbled through Newark re centl y . Do n
Guatemala City and !he surrounding countryside has left more Hunnel, wh o was commended
than 1,200 dead and 2,000 injured, a Red Cross official said for his . work a s legion
ba se ball co mmi ssi one r ,
today.
submill&gt;!d
his resignation and
Centuries-old cathedrals collapsed, hotels split open and
upon
his
recommendation
!Ires broke out across the capital after the 36&lt;lecond 'quake
rocked this Central American nation shortly helore dawn
Wednesday . Smaller waves of the 'quake hit neighboring
Honduras, El Salvador, Belize and southern Mexico but
damage In those places were reported light.
Jose Alvarado, Red Cross general director lor Guatemala,
said , "The estimated total of dead In the country Is aboull,200
and about 2,000 to 2,300 injured. The dead include 400.450 in the
city .''
·

INews. . ·.in Briefsl\t

Cl£AN RUGS

Middlei)Ort
Open Fri. Til8

acreages in the area .

•

COLUMBUS - NEARLY 5,000 TEMPORARY sta te:
employes were given special preference wpass_ctvtl ~' ""';
exams for permanent state jobs in la te 1974 whtl~ appli_cants.
from the general public were excluded from constderatton,
specia l legisla tive committee was wid Tuesday . The charges•
were made before the Select Conunittee on Civil Servi"!'
Abuses chaired by Sen. Marigene Valiquette, D-Toledo.
Mrs. Sharon Downs, an office manager wtth the state
Department of Administrative Services, told the eommittee
that 4 723 " provisional" state employes were tested from Nov.
25, 1974. through Dec. 7, 1974. Mrs; Downs further testified that
applicants from the general publtc for the full-tune jobs were
not tested at the sante time, since the general public had nor
heen given adequ ate notice of the administration of the tests.

possibilities of an atomic
plant, dependent up on future
developmenls.
II wa s indicat ed the utility
is s till anticipating a 1979

C&amp;SOE may build an atomic
power plant.
.
A company spokesman has
disclosed the purchase of
approxima !ely 210 acres
from George W. Oakes in the
Newberry secUon at Little
Ho cki ng . He in dicated
negotiations are proceeding
in the purchase of other

...

manunoth proportions" in the energ! c~tsis . He satd one::
answer to the problem may he coal. ' I thmk we are face to .
fa ce with an enemy far more deadly than Hitler was in 1942,":
said Chalmer K. Kirkbride , science advisor to Dr. Rohert;
Seamans, administrator of the ERDA In a speech here. "A\::'
that time the nation could see the mortal enemy. Because of~
that the nation could be mobilized to fight.
.
:
" But today people simply do no! believe that thts ener~y :
shortage is real " he told a conference at Battelle Memortal·
Institute. "Nor do they seem to care a bout its elf"'.'t upop our~
future. They seem to take for granted that etttJ&lt;:r mdustry or.
the gover nment will provide for them. In my op~on the natwn ~
faces an economic crisis of manunolh proportions unless we~
mobilize and come to grips immediately wt~ our energy:
shortage " he said. "I suspect that the most crttical pertod '"•
the nation. 's history will be 1977 to 1980...
••

Pomeroy, Ohio

BAKER
FURNITURE

acre site near here on whic h

Tuesday night tl1e na tion "faces an e ~onomic cr~ is of.,

Steak House

SHAMPOOERS
FOR RENT

BELPRE - Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
this week acquired the first
parcel in an estimated 1,000-

Ban proposed
on steel traps

Crow's

BLUE WSTRE

·Atomic plant possible on Little Hocking site

Such a function was up to total windfall was about S20 :
~
the county auditors,llall said million a year, he said.
Hall's
discovery
confinned
;
questioning
by
under
committee members. The an earlier statement by •
Senate Minority Leader ;
Michae l J . Ma loney, R· ;
Ci!K:innati, who said it was ;
never the Intent of the •
legislature when enacting a ~
uniform real estate tax ~
MASON , W. Va. - Mason assessment law in 1972 to :
wwn council Monday night drive Individual tax bills to "
considered an ordinance 'that the levels they have reached . :
would preven t use of steel
Maloney said safeguards ,;
an ima l tra ps within the town against unjustified tax hikes ;;
limits on dry land.
jVere written into the law (SB ~
In other action at the short · 455) but may have been ~
session coun ctl approved the disregarded by var•_ous :
first reading of an ordmance county budget commissions ,
updating the town building and auditors in adlilinistering •
codes , It specifically amends the law.
•
the section on granting of
"Eilher the r estraints
buildi ng permi ts. Co uncil weren't built in properly or ,
also approved the repor t of they were abus ed," said ~
John Bush, water superin- Maloney, adding that he has :
tendent 1 and payment of town asked for resea rch on ;
bills. Present besides the . whether local governments •
mayor were coun cil mem- and school districts have ;
bers Char lotte Jenkin s , received windfa ll income as a :
Edwa rd Per ry, La wr ence result of taxes inflated by ;
loush and Catherine Smith. reappraisals.
•

CARRY OUT ONL ~

BEAUTIFULLY

'

Weather

STATE WlNNERS - Members of !he Southeastern
Ohio Tractor Pullers Association were presented awards
at li banquet In C.olumbus on Jan. II. The area state
winners were chosen on result of last year's pulls. First
place winner in the 7000 lb. out of field stock was Jim
Carnahan, Rt . l, Racine ; second place inlhe!lOOO lb. out of
field, Grover Salser Jr. , Rt . 1, Racine; first place winner,
7000 lb. modified, Clarence Bauerbach, Lowell, Ohio, and
second place winner in the same class was Mike Holden

..

also of Lowell. First place winner in lite oooO lb. modified
was Clarence Bauerbach and second place winner in the
same class was Neil Wagner of Lowell. Bauerhack was
one of the lop 20 in the nation who was invited to
participate in the Indianapolis Super Pull. Shown with
their trophies are, front, 1-r, Clarence Bauerbach and
Mike Holden; back row , Tony Carnahan bolding !roph_ies
in the absence of his father , Jim ; Grover Salser, Jr., and
Mr. Wagner.

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