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                  <text>Carter joins
Leadingham's
Gallia agency

Seven indicted in B&amp;E
of phartnacy for drugs

GAI.I.IPOI.IS - .l Men·l!l

'

iliJ
Till l .cHdmghtUII Ht·~t l f.:stdl t•
&lt;'Hl tl Jni:i uJanct·
Agent;y ,
lncatt•tl cJI 512 Second Ave. ,
oiiTOnhn g
I()
WJihs
(',Jrfl'l IS llUW .tSSOt ' W!t•tJ y,

NUMEROUS qut'~hons were .tsk('d by cont-erned c1ty
Willer customers dunng Wednesday's monthly meetmg of the
c:tt lhpolis C'tt~· t'omnuss10n . One of the fmal questions was
~ uhmitted b\' For l l'Sl Burrle n, Sr It \\ ti S " HO\\ many of you
l1erP tonight ''ouid lww ltked to h;:we been m Mr Mills'
shoes ~ " Hord~' l was 1cfC'rrmg to Ct ty Mm•ctger H1chard T
dJlt'k ) Mills, \\ho is .L(m ng all out to he lp get the Old French
f'lt \ bark on a ~ ouncl fn\ancial basts
I ·H
APPHOX IMATEI.Y 60 rcs1dents were on hctiHI We were
p1o ud the wil~ mdJvtdua ls conductl"&lt;i tllemsel\•es lt was a far

cry fr om tl sumlar sesswn held in the same building last spring
l&gt;t•fore M1lls .1 ssmnecl (·omma nd of ctty opernuons
MILL..~. ,ts !)ome rcnmt ked after the rneetmg, ·was we ll
prepared fur .m unpleasant ta sk of askmg for an mcrease m

wat er rates .. It was Galhpolis f1rst water ra te mcrease
request s1nce Jan 1. 1960

+1-'
~ll l.LS ho~d to start from the bottom of the barrel. He hopes
t'1 work his WflV to the top m order to turn thmgs around for
ti.lllipohs. A~ he stated ea1 lier th1s year, it's gomg to take lots

of tune and cooperatJort from everybody to get the job done,

bul he feel s tt e;m be done In etght short months. Mtlls has put
a stop to many thmgs wluch were causing headaches for
n e Hrl~ everybody He conducts himself m a busmess manner
not seen !let e m severa l years We believe he' ll get the job
ncr-mnplt shed He hHS unhnng energy and versatile abili ties.
-H -1
ONE of M1lls' greatest assets, we feel, 1s Ins abtll ty to
mmmumcate \\ 1th peopl e He may be blunt at tunes There are
ltmes when be doesn't know the answer to a problem. But he
ldkes tune to fmd the answer , and that's somethmg which has
pleased residents durmg the past feVt months Keep up the

I.t•admgham, Broker
Ca rt er has spen t Ius hfe m
Gcdlla Co un ty except for
set v1ec m World War II .
11 wst of whc1h wu s an the
So uth Sea Is lands and
Aus tralia
After Ius di scharge from
SCI'\'I C:(I he \\ &lt;Js employed as a
IJ.arl&gt;er at Glassburn's Burber
Shop fm five years but for the
pa st 25 years he has operated
a dmry farm w1th hts w1fe ,
M&lt;-~rg u eJate ,

and two sons,

Davrd and Grego ry ,
Wclinut Twp .
CCi rt er

ha s

se rved

1n

on

st•veJa! farrn -tJ nented boards
In C'Iudm g the Farm Bureau

F'cder·ation Board , nme years
il COBA director and

as

repre sentativ e for Ga llia

County. as a member of th e
Gal ha Sml and Water Con-

.I.
'

.J. MERRIJ. CARTER

servatmn Board, and &lt;J!l a
director o£lhe local Farmers'
Horne Ad ministration .
He has recently completed
s tudies 1n real estate a t Rw
Gr an de Co ll e ~e mc ludmg
courses ul real es tate Jaw,
appra~ sa l , finance and real
estate prmc1ples and pracll ces . Ca rter's famili arJty
w1th Gallta County will be uf
value to lhe publt~ said
Leadingham.

PO INT P I.Jo:ASA NT
Only Pun n and Paerce are
lndu·tments were handed m Jail at this lime. 'l'he other
d&lt;,wn Thun1u y Hgamst seven fuur had pCJsted bund shortly
persuns tn connection w1th e:tftcr Ihey were .arrested a nd
Ihe burglarr la&gt;l Dec. 10 of char~ed by l01w enforceme nt
the V1llage Pharmacy of New .tgenl'les .
Haven by the MHsun Coun ty
II was Ponn and Plerte who
Grand Jury
Cp J I. F1tzwatcr and
S1x of the seven were felony Shenff ~~ lvm " Pe te" Wedge
counts, one a misdemeanor br r1ughl ba ck lo West
Four md1 cted for the Vir~mta from Flond&lt;J when
fclumuus breaking and en. they waived exlradahon in
tering of the pili! I macy " ere Jan uary
P&lt;:~mela .lea n Pclry, 19, ur :m5
Cilrpcnter Place.
New
Haven; Rocky L Hall , 24, uf
Ew mgton, Ohio; Randall
Lindsay Ponn , 18, of Wilke~·
v11le , Ohw and Terry Lee
Pierce, 18, of Radcliff, Ohio.
Donald Wade Peve to, 24,
ATHENS
Pubhc
Millwood , was Indicted for hcanng.s on the an nual Area
possess aon uf a controlled Plcw for Programs on Agwg
substance w1lh the intent of fur the Buckeye Hill sdelivery , and Larry Hess, 21, Hockmg Va lley Regwnal
of New Haven ror dchvery Development DISln d 1 BH·
and daspensmt: of a con trolled HVRDD ) w11l be held
substance .
Tuesday , Feb 17 at th e
The misdemeanor count Athens City-County Health
was agams l Cunlcy Dav ld Bu1ldmg m lhe 2nd flour
Dudley Jr . 22, Mason, for me etin g 1 uum , and un
possessiOn of a con trolled Wednesday, Fe b 18 1n the
substance. The mdlctrncnt.s co urtr oom of the Nobl e
showed the con trolle d su b- County Cour thouse, both m
stance was phenobar bital sessiOn from lt a rn . to :l p tn

Judge Ju~e

Drop ip unemployment
'marvelous' says Ford.

candidate for
supreme court
.Juhn n .Judge, Nw turt,
Olnu, JIJ, 1s a t andtddlc for the
Supt erne CuUI·t uf Ohw 111 the
May Pnmar y ·o..,('lctt1on
Edut;&lt;:t led ill Bar bcrtmt lhg h

J

.•

&amp; hool, U mvers 1t y uf Akrun,

Ohw Stale College uf Law,
Rutgers Umvers1ty Summer
Sc hntt l uf Alt:ohul Sluches, and
Nalwn~I· College of State
JudiCiary 1197:1), he engaged
m Ihe pn v&lt;:~te pracllce of law
fr nm 19G2 c111d 1967 as a sole
.JtJI)(;E J UDGE

Hearings on plans for Aging
in Athens and Noble Counties
al leshmuny
w1ll be CJC&lt;:cp tcd . Persons
mtcres led m r ev ie\o\ 111g the
Pl;tn fi hould contact a to ~:al
progr am funde d thro ugh
Till e Ill nf th e Old e r
Amc n cans t\ ct, or the BH
HVHDD offi ce
Writt en ,md

f !l

IN HOSP ITA l.
COOLVILI.I-: - M1 s Patty

Ju Durs t MC:!ssey IS collflned
to Room :ll~N Ca md en Clark
Hospital , Parke rsllln g, W
Va , where she rs H surgll'Hl
pCJiic nl.

pra&lt;l1tt oncr and thereafter
fr nrn 19(17 to l!l70 as a partner
111
the fmn of Gadanac ,
Headl&lt;:y , .Judge and Deibe l.
Fn•m l%4 until 1967 Judge
he! ved a s police prosecu tor
ond ad vtsnr fttr tbc Ci ty uf
B:tt bertun. In 1%9 .Judge was
elected JUdge of the Bar·
berf(tll Mun tt ipal Court and
111 )!175 reunvcd an award
ft om the Ohw Supreme Cour t
f&lt;n supcr wr lttdJ cHtl ser vtce s

UP TO AGE SIX- In the 0 through 6 age group, I tor , Sunday in Middleport at the first
Miss Majorette of Ohio Valley Pageant were Brooke Amodid, Clarksburg, W. Va ., third,
Sherree Boles, Youngstown , first runner up ; Michelle Sylvester, Canton, champion; Debbie
Barnett, Willard, second runnerup, and Christy Ann Bennett, Route I, Addison, fourth
See Page 2.

''marvelous ."

l.()Dfil·. '10 MEET
MIDIJJ.EPORT - While
Hose l. t ul~c "'Il l meet
Wcdncs&lt;.hn .11 l ·m p m at the
Middleport l.e ~ ion llall

0

j

~r_;

good work, D10k 1

+++
RGCE lVED a letter recenlly from Mrs. Ruth l'fann Root ,
Toledo. lellmg about her son's hockey achievements
Acc01 din g to the Jan 2Bed 1t10n of the Toledo Blade, Mike Root
1s a ftrst-yea1 ho ckey coach a l Bowsher High School. Bowsher
IS ru• re nlly m fu·st place tn the Ramsey Dtv1sion of the Northwestern Oh10 H1gh School Hoc key League. Root was born m
&lt;lal hpoh~ . He moved to Toledo when he was 6 With h1s new
I estdence necll' the Ottawa Rtvel , Root developed lns hockey
sk11ls so well that h~ played three varsity seasons for Bowlmg
Green State Umversily . He was the only Amencan.born player
on d tealll rm ed among: the na uon 's best in h1s JUntor a nd
sr mm yea1s
-1 -1 -1
MRS. Root sa td she ta ught at Holzer Hospital from 1934
untll l944 She marned Clarence tPmky ) Root Th ey were m
the funet al busmess m Chtlhcothe for several years Her
children were born a t Holzer Hospital In Gallipolis The Roots
moved to Toledo m 1957
+ -1 -1
LOOSE NOTES - Galha Academy Htgh School Principal
James N M Davts, m one of h1s news releases recently,
rettunded area residents of GAHS' educallonal goal It reads ·
Lea• n about and try lo unders tand the changes that take place
Ill tile world, develop ab1hly to adjust to the changing demands
of soC'Jety. rlrvPiop an awareness and the ab1hty to adjust to a
changmg '\orld and 1ts problem s and develop an
understandmg of the past. Identify With the present and have
the abthty to meet the future
Stan Bahmer, d1stn ct
conserva tlomst, m the Galha Sml &amp; Water Conse1vatwn
D1stn ct s .Januar~ News Bulletm, dtSCussed agnculture taxes.
&amp;t 1d Bahmer " I refer to this subject with much hesitation.
Bud Ca rte: and I have developed tables usmg variOus soils m
Gallia Cou nty and values established for use with this system .
These tables are ava Llable at our offiCes or the a,ud1tor 's office .
Smee your taxes have surely gone up, you are looking for a
way ro reduce them. This sys tem Will help only a few people m
GHl ho County However, sm l maps are needed to make the
eva luation of yoUI property va lue otherwise, I must make a
faun VISit and delermme land capabtlilles. This IS almost
Impossible to do tf many req uests are received. You may wish
to cont.act Bud Cat ter at the cou ntyextenswn off tee If you have
fur ther questiOns "
:::···::::·:·:::·:;:::·:·.::·.;:::·:;.;:::·:.:;:::·:·:::'·!·!·!·!~!·!·!·!·!·!·!·'·!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!·!·:·:·:·:·.·:·:·.·!·!·!·!·:

Pam Vaug han
l:kth Vilughan

'

Dernarts Ash
MMy Boggs
C11thy Meadows
Par Vaugi1~Hl
G lendo Brown
Kathy Howar C
Tracy Burdette
f\;'\arc Ja Holcom b

Sally Ca rl e ton

Pillty Dyer
Tota ls

MEIGS STATISTICS
FG A FT A RB PF TO TP
9 IJ
60
2
5
18
78
o.o 10
I
2
4
17
o.o 5 0 5 2
03
22
I
0
3
2
23
00
1
3
4
0
04
I
00
3
4
0
4-5
00
5
r
0
8
07
00
0
0
0
0
0 0 00
2
1
2
0
00
00
I
0
0
0
0 1 00
0
1
2
0
or
00
0
0
0
0
18 -47

2-2

29

13

23

38

Carrol K . Snowden
Sta te 51 , Ga tttpol1s
Phone 446-4290
Hom e 446-4518

"Seemefor allyourf~

insurance Deeds~-----..

POMEROY - Saturday IS St. Valentine's Day - a time for
hearts and flowers
If you can't manage the hearts and flowers, say somethmg
sweet to your "sweetie." That might gel you off the hook. I
mean, £or a starter how about "Gee, Hon, how do you do it?
You look younger every day ." Or you might try something
like, "Gee! What a body! You look like you've lost 10 or 12
pounds and jm.t in the nght places "
Now, 1f this bit of psychology doesn't work, you can treat
your valentmes to free cookies and coffee at the Pomeroy
National Bank on either Friday and Saturday Employes will
be servmg both days m observance of Valentine's Day :
PAUL KWES OF THE FARMERS BANK and Savings
Co. is co-chairing the Heart Fund Drive m Meigs County along
with MICk Childs. Kloes has nothing but comp~ments for
Me1gs residents, who, he says, have been wonderful m
responding to reauests ·to help conduct the dr1ve
DURING THE RECENT MAJOR FIRE in Pomeroy, the
Chesler and Rutland F1re Deparlments stood by m their areas
at the suggestion of Pomeroy Ftre Chief Charles Legar in case
they were needed for other fires . That's why they weren 't on
the Pomeroy scene, we're informed

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

~
BERKUNE'

Al ong w11h ho rn e ba ked bread apple p1e an d
Thanksgtv mg /lay , one of those th tngs mo st
Am e nca ns e nJoy 1s the " fa von le ea sy chair a nd
among lh use lha t a re toda ys lop favonles 1s
fam ous Berklme Rock·A-Loungers and Wal/away
Recliners S hop these great ch~ir val ue s today
and choose o ne o f todav &gt; swee t' p leas ur~s fo r
you r ve ry ownl

SEVEN THROUGH TEN - Wmners in the 7 through 10 age gro~p competition Sunday

In Middleport at the first Miss Majorette of Ohio Pageant were I to r, Mtssy Townsend,
Franklin, thtrd runnerup ; Bernadette Nemeth, Homestead, ftrsl runnerup ; Cindy McAvee,
.Fort Recovery, champion ; Came Carr, New Eagle, Pa , second runnerup; She11li Bradley ,
Gallipolis , fourth runnerup See Page 2

BERKLINE CHAIRS
RECLINERS, ROCK-A-LOUNGES AND
WALLAWAY RECLINERS. AN EXCELLENT SELECTION.

·:::::::::!!~=:::::::=:i::::::;.;:;:;.;: ;.;.;.· ····: :·:··

~

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';j

~

~-

. ·.

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and relax.

~y

~~

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and relax.

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

YOUR
HEADQUARTERS
FOR FLEXSTEEL 1 1
FINE
1.11fm
FURNITURE P,.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES ~ Waller
Bailey, Wes t Columbia. Mrs .
Charles
J e ffe r s ,
Mrs
Michael Allen , son. Gene
Williams, Mrs Harley Burn,,
Mervin Rice, Mrs . Alv1n
Bowles , Cecil Smes. Mrs
Carrol Casto, all Point
Pleasant ;
Mrs . Harry
r:arnes, son, Middleport;
Mrs
Allen
Wheeler ,
r:alhpohs, Richard La kr.
J

~

SOVIET·BACKED TROOP.S TODAY CLAIMED to have
seized their rivals' capttal ctty, Huambo, a major goalm their
weeks-long southern drive for a miliary vic tory in the Angolan
civil war. The pro-Western National Union for the Total
Independence of Angola denied the claim. But its president,
Jonas SaVliTibi, conceded Sunday his forces might have to
evacuate Huambo, Angola's second largest and a key railroad
junction.
He also said the National Uruon might have to abandon its
military headquarters at S•lxa Porto, 100 rrules to the east.
News ol the setback came amid reports of a mysterious
mercenary "Col. Callan ," accused of ordering a mass
execution ol mutmous British mercenaries m northern Angola
and of slaying eight Popular Movement (H'isoners of war .

.

'

-· ~·

-HOSPITAL NEWS
Mason; Cani e J-hggLn·
botham , Hed House ; Mrs .
Forrest Lee , Glouster, 0. ,
Richard Clonch, Gallipolis
Ferry : Bernard Rossttcr,
Galhpolis, Mrs. James
Marshall, Mason ; Mrs Jake
Greer, New Haven; Mrs .
Richard Eblin, Pomerov.
Mrs. Robert Byer, Gallipohs;
George Muycs, Henderson ,
Terry Livingston, Bidwell,
o ; Rand;~ II Henry, Gallipolis
Ferr) ; Wendel
Estep,
Suu!ll:side.

.;.·.··:· ···:·:·:·:·:···:·:·:::::·:·:·.·.·:·.·:::·:·:::::::·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:;:·:::·:::::::

WASHINGTON - THE TESTIMONY OF OHIO Gov.
James A. Rhodes and others in a 1975 clyll trial stemmmg from
the killing of four Kent State University students, Is being
reviewed for determination of perjury by the U. S. Justice
Department, a department olliciBI confirmed Sunday.
Government lawyers for "awhile ... some weeks" have
been reviewing testimony witnesses gave before a federal
grand jury, as compared wtth their courtroom statements In
the civil trial, said John Wilson, a department spokesman.
Parents of persons killed or wounded at May 4, 1970, Kent Slate
student antiwar demonstration sought $46 million damages in
the snit flied against Rhodes and several National Guard
officers and enlisted men. The jury declined to award any
damages.

£

Vrterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Charles
Werry , Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Avanell
Aleshire. Lena Sampson,
C1ndy Stearns, Btadley
Pooler

·POMEROY-MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

By United Press International
COLUMBUS - DAMAGE L~ EXPECTED to rea ch $1
million in a lire early Sunday that destroyed four stores m the
doiVOtovvn area.
The fire destroyed Russell's Tall girls Shoes, Air Step Shoes,
Big 10 Restaurant and Soul Shuck No 3, a record shop. Bud
Capuano Sr., president of the firm that leased the building
housing the stores, said merchant.&lt;; lost up to $500,000 in
Inventory and damage to the bUilding was at least that great.

FOR CLARIFICATION PURPOSES, do let me point out
that Don.Mullen, Middleport, called " Mike" by many friends
and his son, Mtke, are not the defendants in recent cases
p 758 1Swe r~,m lns~•dPr e Cg~·un·" Kr""~ 011""' 6 1o~ "' "~ '(ll'l llh"U&lt;I
I PHUIAN C ~
_:___::::::_~~-,-------------'---..:.L.J involving some bad check charges. Having a name slmilar to
the defendant has been a bit ol a problem to the Middleport
"Mullen' ' family.

BAKER
FURNITURE

at

IINews. • •in Briefs\\

IN CASE YOU MISSED THE FACT in the news
columns,let me advise you that soon the ftne for violation of a
parkmg meter m Pomeroy ts gotng up from 50 cents to $1. That
really will mcrease the high cost of parking for many who must
park m town and let's face it, no matter how careful you are,
that "expired" flag is going to pop up and catch you
m viOlation

\111.11 UIM

Likl&gt; a good neighbor, Slate Farm is there

•

e

•

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____ ___ ____
.__

.._

,__,..,.._

,

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY
___
_________
""!i--11111.----------------.--.. •

WOMAN KILLED
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
1lJPl 1 - Judilh White, 28,
\'uun~stown, was killed and
.mother person was wounded
lale Friday in a tavern
shuoling.
. ._ _.,..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,._ _ _ _ _

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

Government, and some
privat e, economists
continued
to
regard
developments as indicating
steady progress out ol the
recessiOn, but with inflation
shU a problem.
A summary of the latest
figures ·
UNEMPWYMENT : Unemployment Jell from 8.3
per cent In Decemher to 7.8
per cent in January as 450,000
nonfarm workers returned to
work. The still unemployed

totaled 7.3 million, with 78.1
million working . There were
gains in all categories except
teenagers, whose jobless rate
rose 0.3 per cent, to 19.9.
INFLATION: 'Measured at
6.5 per cent durmg the last
three months of 1975, the
secondlowest quarterly rate
In three years. The Conswner
Price Index, the measure of
inflation, stood at 166.3 In
December, meaning goods
which cost $1110 m 1967 cost
$166.30 in Decemher .
REAL
EARNINGS:
Average worker's "real"
spendable earnings - weekly
pay after inflation and
deductions - rose only 0.2
per cent faster than the cost
of living in 1975. But the one.
shot tax cut gave him a 3.8

Weather
Partly cloudy lomght, lows
in the m1d 30s . Cloudy
Tuesday, htghs in the upper
50s. Probability of precip·
tatwn near zero today, 10
percent tonight and 20 per·
cen l Tuesday.

per cent rise.
WHOLESALE
PRICES :
The cost of living rose 0.5 per
cent in December, floating
upw9rd on Increases lor
public transportation, autos,
medical services and some
foods. The Wholesale Price
Index was 178.7 from a 1967
base of 100, meaning goods

CREWMEN KILLED
LOS ANGELES IUPI)A 0(,'6 airliner blew an

engine on takeoff, then flew
low In the rain seven miles
over populated residential
areas and crash landed on
a golf course In the San
Fernando Valley, kllllng
three crewmen.
Three
other
crew
members survived the
crash Sunday with minor
Injuries, but 10 firemen
were burned in a flash lire
that erupted as lhey tried
to pry the victims, possibly
dead already, out of the
crushed cockpit.

Three hired for Title I in Southern

THE FIRE WHICH HIT POMEROY'S lower business
block forced the retirement of long-time barber, Ollie Scholl.
Ollie's locatiOn in the Jones bwlding was too badly damaged
for him to return there and he couldn 't locate any other
quarters he could afford. So, Otlle is "out " His barber shop
was really a social center for anyone who wanted to drop by
and pass the time of the day, so he'll be missed on Court St.

THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR BOARD is looking for the
county's oldest married couple who will be honored at this
swnmer's county fair ,
The couple will hold a (losil10n ot nonor m a parade planned
for the fair to observe the bicentennial. Of course, the couple
must be tn health good enough to tolerate the extra activity
wh1ch will be involved. If you would like to be that couple why
not contact Mrs. Muriel Bradford, lair board secretary,
Coolville, Ohio, phone 98!&gt;-3974 and let her know your ages and
physiCal condition. Pleasant Mrs. Bradford will be glad to hear
£rom you
The commtttee for the parade which really should be a
dandy is composed of Danny Zll'kle, chairman; Lucille
Le1lheit, William Smith and Hank Douglas. Some $300 in cash
prizes will be awarded to the top three entries in four
categories of the parade. The details we will pass along to you
as soon as they are available since some preparation is
certamly necessary in gettmg entries ready.
By the way, the canmng and baking contests for the coonty
fair we mentioned earliP.I' are definitely scheduled now. Mrs.
Leifheit, one of the busiest of board members, will head those
two events. The flower shows and school displays are gmng to
be moved to the former Meigs Athletic Boosters food building
to prov1de space lor the canning and baking contests in the
semor fair building. Oh - and the fair board IS going to order
signs to place on various buildings on the grounds . The former
Meigs Athletic Boosters building is gmng to be named " Floral
Hall " How about them elassy apples, Bunky? !!

'

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT 3RD FLOOR

Special Purchase
and Sale

WASHINGTON IUPI) The welcome drop in
unemployment is the big
n'ews as the economy
continues a slow recovery in
the early months of 1976.
The increase in those
workmg was the kind of data
sure to be paraded before the
body politic, with presidential
elections coming up.
Democrats have been on
the attack because of unemployment, but President Ford
hailed Friday's news about
nearly one-half million
persons back on the JOb as

.__,

COLUMBUS - THE OHIO LOTIERY COMMISSION
today revealed figures for the period ending Dec 31, 1975,
which show $59,577,572 was returned to the state's general fund
in prolits since the inception of the lottery. More than $67
million bas been patd in prizes, with gross sales amounting to
$149,362,280.
Unclaimed (H'ize money lolaled $548,HO lor the period
•
from Aug. 22, 1974, through Nov. 30, 1974, was also added to the
general fund. Ofllcials noted tickets are vahd for one year
following the drawing date printed oo each ticket. After the
deadline, the unclaimed prize money is returned to the slate.
UNION BOSSES ARE CALLING 1976 a "catchup" year a year to catch up with 10118e8 suffered during the recession .
Truckers, rubber and electrical workers, building tradesmen
and 80me 15 mllllon public employes are bucking for increases
in pay and fringe benefits.
Economists say the demands could result tn more
inflation. "Most forecasters are calling for Inflation between 5
and 7 per cent," said Dr. Joseph Seneca, chairman of the
economics deparunent at Rutgers College,
"But I think you could see a marked upward change if
Utese contract settlements run higher - II labor unions (H'ess
very hard for significant wages. C'.ertatnly there's a good case
. that~ unions may feel there's some catching up to be done•!\'

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wcndcsday through
Friday, chance of ram
snuth and rain or sno"
1wrth portion Thursday,
clearing Friday. Highs
Wednesday and Thursday
in the upper 30s and lo"' 40s
north and mid to upper lOs
south. dropping to the 30s
or 20s F'nd;1y. Lows In the
20s and the low 30s Wed·
ncsday and m the 20s or
teens F'nday.
·=·=·:=:=·=:=:·::::::x:::::::·:~::::::::·:::::·:::·:·:·:·:·:=:=:·:·~:

Gas firm
"
changes
policy
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - A
Columbia Gas of OhiO
reqwrement that residential
gas
servtce,
once
disconnected, be
reestablished within 24
months has been dropped,
notice,
without pubhc
olliciais confirmed during the
weekend.
The firm had required
residential serVlce be reconnected within 24 months and
bUsiness service within 12
months - or future gas
service would be denied.
Under the new policy,
reconnection is allowed at
anytime
as
long
as
consumptiOn 1s less than one
million cubic feet of gas per
month.
SerVIce, however, would be
derued when a new home or
building is buill on a site
during
the period of
disconnection or new types of
furnace s or fu el· burning
eqUipment 1s mstalled.
Wllliam Chaddock, a public
relations
ollicer
for
Columbia, said the cbange
was made because hardship
and legal appeals out of
proportion to potential gas
savings had been noted m
cases where service had been
·
denied.
Pubhc
Uttlities
The
Commission of Ohio has
scheduled a March I hearing
to determine
whether
reconnection deadlines
should he abolished . The
also wants
a
PUCO
prohibitiOn on transferrng
gas entitlemems from tnner
c1ty buildmgs to new
suhurban homes tl /'i ;1 wa ~ to
ent·QuraV:l' dow mown reno\ dlwns

RACINE - Three teachers
were hired for the Title I
program by the Southern
Local Board of Educatwn
Saturday mght
They were Suzanne Wolfe,
Palncw Flekher and Cheryl
Hook, all begmmng work
today.
Perm1ss1on was granted to
derk-custod1an
Maril yn
Powell and clerk.treasurer

Jane Wagner to attend a
seminar in Nelsonville Feb.
19 on the lop1c, "The Student
Achv1ty Account "
In other business the board
agreed lo purchase liabtlily
msurance £rom the Republic
Franklin Insurance Co . and
conlracted with Nelsonville·
York City &amp;hool D1slncl
winch will provide mail-out

services to handicapped
persons who live m the
district.
The next meetmg will be
Feb 18, at 7· 30 p.m. Atlending were Jack Bostick,
president ; Robert Sayre,
Denny Evans, Roger Adams,
Dallas Hill, board memhers;
Bobby Ord, superintendent,
and Mrs . Wagner, clerk

•

enttne
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1976

involvement m undeclared
war and build a strong
national defense.
Putting heavy emphasis on
individual freedoms, Tall
pledged "to serve my
country, to protect the
individual
rights,
opportunities and liberties ol
each of our citizens so that we
remain a nat1on where the
Individual is the key unit ol
society. n
This is the time, he said, for
Amencans "to probe and oo
question, a time to search for
and demand the quality of
government that is in the
i\rnencan tradition "
"We should ask why we
need to add more expensive
and burdensome levels of
bureaucracy to our federal
system, a system that
already intrudes so deeply
mto the lives of every
Amertcan," he added. "We
are suffocating- suffocating

in this perversion of
American tradition.
"We should ask why the
Central Intelligence Agency's
abuses can not be corrected
without our vital intelligence
arm being crippled by
Irresponsible and dangerous
leaks and abuse from elected
publle
officials.
They
undermine this nation and
our tradition when they
compromise us abroad."
Criticizing persons who are
"chipping away" at the
nation's military defenses,
Taft asked, "Is it m the
American tradition to stand
quivering, weak and naked,
in the face of a hostile world?
It is not. It is a threat to and a
perversion of that tradition."
The senator said continuing
that "the wornout federal
giveaway
programs
constitutes a legalized
embezzlement of every
(Continued on page 8)

Whites boo, jeer at blacks
PENSACOLA, Fla. ( UPI)
- White students booed and
jeered the lew black students
who arrived today at
Esc~mbia High school when
classes reswned for the first
lime since a Thursday riot
over the name of the school
athletic teams left four
students
wounded
by
gunshots, six injured and at
least nine arrested.
None ol the first mne buses
bringing black students for
the starl of classes had more
than 10 students aboard.
School ollieials said the buses
normally carry 40 to 50

students each.
Seventy uniformed police,
wearing riot helmeta and
equipped with riot sticks,
were around the school and
inside its corridors. White
students with bulky objects In
their pockets were aearched.
There were no lnunediate
reports ol violence, but some
students said the atmosphere
inside, where newsmen were
prohibited, was tense, and
there were rumors of a
(l'ojected mass walkout by
whites.
Greg Pinney, 17, a senior,
said he was lr1sked and

Fonnal request
made for grant

The county board of
commissioners thts morning
signed an application lor a
block grant for house nwnberlng throughout rural
areas of the county.
Th~ grant 1s a community
development block grant
whtch had been approved
storage. Tile upstairs was ear her .
gutlrd and the stairway
The commission will meet
bW'Ih.' cl .
Pt&gt;Xl \H•ek fln Tuesday due to
Fire111cn \I ere calleri to the l\l ••l'da? hl' mg a natwnal
scene about 4 lO i).lll. and hohda y
Allendmg the
\\ crc uul about two hours session were Henry Wells,
There was no monetary Belflard Gilkey and Warden
rlgurc set on losses as o£ this Our~
commissioners ,
11 :ol'lllll~ . und the cause or the
Weslc1
Buehl,
county
engineer . and
Martha
blaze \H IS wdetermined
Ch·1mber,. 1~erk .

House damaged by fire
HPavy
da1 ... t::e
was
reported tu the upstaars of an
unon up1ed two-story frame
lwmc along CR 2 tn Salem
Twp. as the result uf fire
S1U1day mghl
The Rutland "nd Pumeruy
Fire I:&gt;epls. were on the scene
to check the fire in the house
O\\tl e d by lh~ late All ee WHrd
:1 nd used rtm\ JlrHnEfll} f111

followed down a hallway
because he had a bulky hair
brush in his back pocket.
Robert Moore, 16, a
sophomore, said, "I'm going
(Contmued on page 8)

Dateline 1776
LONDON, Feb. 9 - '
Th e
French
ambassador
in formed his governm e nt in Paris: "This
war is dis like d by
everyone.
R e cruits
for the army as well
as for the fleet are
difficult lo find . " But
he
not e d
Lord

Germain

was

becoming
more
inlluential in pressing
his pro-war views.

Utilities
want delay
COLUMBUS (UPI) - An attorney representing the East
Ohio and West Ohio Gas Co. suggested today that any
modification of residential natural gas customers paying for
em~rgency gas bought for industries should he delayed until
the matter is decided by the Ohio Su(H'eme Court.
Lanty Smith, Cleveland, made the suggestion as the Public
Utilities Commission ol Ohio heard fmal arguments m a
hearing on whether industrial or home owner gas customers
would pay for the industrial purchases .
"The purchases were made in good faith," said Smith, who
pr~dieted that "one or more" of the two score attorneys
arguing the case would take the matter- what ever the
conunission's decision- to the Ohio Supreme-Court.
John Fullen, Colwnbus, representing Colwnbia Gas Co. of
Qhio, told the commission that Ohio's 1ndustnes would be
"seriously affected" by any change in 1ts order.
Columbia Gas has given the corrunission a Tuesday deadline
to prevent $10.7 million . out of the total $33.7 million In
emergency gas purchase from being tacked on to February
residential natural gas bills.
.

President asks 3% boost
in social security taxes

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Taft would continue
conservative policies
CINCINNATI IUP() - Sen .
Robert A Taft Jr., R.Ohio,
pledged to contmue his fight
against big spending and
government
today
ln
announcmg his candtdacy for
reelectiOn during a whirlwind
tour of six Ohio cities starting
here.
His scheduled called for
other stops at Colwnbus,
Cleveland,
Youngstown,
Toledo and Dayton in behalf
of his reelection ellorts.
"I will contmue to support
(H'ograms which will help
those who need help," the
Republican senator said .
"But I will continue to fight
those programs which do
little more than fatten those
who govern."
He noted lhal he had taken
" many key legislative
initiatives" and cited as
examples the measures to
(H'Otccl pensiOn nghts, create
new housing, insure against

costing $10 in 1967 cost $17.87
now.
TRADE - The Umted
States had a record $11 billion
annual trade surplus in 1975.
Exports exceeded imports in
December for the lith
straight month. The previous
yearly high was $7.1 blllion in
1964; the trade delicit for 1974
was $2.4 billion.
INDICATORS : The index
.of leading business indicators
finished the fourth quarter of
1975 down by 0.2 per cent, to
102.2. It had riSen 0.4 m
December.
GNP: The Gross National
Product rose 5.4 per cent in
the last quarter of 1975, but
not enough to ollset the year's
losses - 2 per cent after
1974's 1.8 per cent drop .

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Ford asked
Congress today to mcrease Social Security payroll taxes
by 0.3 per cent for both employes and their employe~• and
to e'l[tend Medicare benefits to cover "catastrophic"
hea!Lh costs.
Ford said his proposals are auned at "helping all .
Americans to live in dignity, security and gOod health."
At a ceremony in the Oval Ollice, Ford signed a special
message to Congress urging passage of the legislation. He
first outlined the proposals m his State of the Umon
Address Jan. 19.
"As President, I intend to do everything in my power to
help our nation demoostrate by Its deeds a deep concern
for the dignity and worth of our older persons," Ford said.
"By so doing, our nation will continue to benellt from the
contributions that older persons can make to the
strengthening of our nation."
Ford said the Increase in the Social Security tax was
necessary to build up a trust fund that is being depleted
because benefit payments are increasmg faster than
revenues. Under his plan, the tax would increase from 5.85
per cent to 6.15 per cent Jan. 1, 1977.
The President said the increase would cost no more than
$1 a week for each worker .
Ford's proposal for revision of the Medicare program is
designed to provide protection against "catastrophic"
health costs for about 24 million elderly Americans who
(Contmued on page 8)

•
Child killed m
Gallia accident
Gallia County recorded Its
first lraffic fatality of 1976
Saturday evening when fouryear.old Michelle Dawn
Miller, daughter of Larry and
Cheryl Teresa Miller, Rt. 2,
Patriot, died in the Holzer
Medtcal Center of mjunes
suffered in an accidental 3 50
p.m.

,

paren ts and s1sler , Lisa, she
IS survived by the paternal
grandparents, Mr . and Mrs
O•land Miller, Rt 2, Paino!;
the maternal grandparents,
Mr and Mrs Mar t Miller,
Rl 2, Patriot; ll1e great
grandparenls , Mr . and Mrs.
Sam Miller aod Mrs Bibbie
Provens, Rt 2, Pa tn ot.
Funeral serv1ces Will be
held at I p.m. Wednesday
from the McDamel - Cross·
roads Pen tecostal Ch urc h
w1lh Rev. Glen Carmon of.
fic1ating Burial will be in
Fla gs pnn gs Ce m e tery
Fnends may call at Phillips
Funeral Home m Ironton
from 6 to 10 p m Tuesday

Accordmg to the Galha .
Meigs Pos t Slate Highway
Patrol, the child was a
passenger m a car dn ven by
her mother on Cadmus Crossroads one and one tenth
, miles west of Rt 141.
Oflleers said the Miller car
was traveling east when tl
met an oncommg vehicle that
forced it off the road Mrs
Miller's car, out of control,
BOTII DRIVERS CITED
rolled over on its top. The '
Two
cars had light
other vehicle did not slop
damages
man accident at th e
According to Dr . Donald R
corner
of
Mam and South
Warehime , Gallla County
Second
Sis.
in Middlepor t at
Coroner, the child died from
B.
05
a
m
today
Middleport
mternal llemorrhagmg. Mrs.
sa1d
a
car
dnven by
pohce
Mtller and another d~ughler ,
Patrick
A
Hill
,
22, Mid ·
11-yearo()ld Lisa Miller, were
dleporl,
turned
from
Second
admitted to th e Holzer
onto
MaJn
and
struck
a car
Medical Center
driven
by
Tomm
y
Walters,
Mrs . Miller s uffered a
£ractured arm . Ltsa had a Mtddleporl Wal te rs had
lacerated hand. She was stopped al the slop street,
then pulled forward for hetter
treated and released .
v1s10n
. Both drivers will he
The vichm was born May
ci
ted
to
court, Chief of Poh ce
18. 1971 at the Holzer Medical
J
J
Cremefl.ns
said .
Center In additl!fn to her

�2- The Dati) Sentmel. Middleport Pomcro), 0, Monday, Feb 9,1976
3- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Feb 9, 1976

Harris, Carter making

.Bucks drop 83-82 overtime tilt

it close in Oklahoma
By Laurence McQutllon
Uolted Press International
Fred HarriS and Junmy
Ca rter are r unmn g a
photofimsh race m the
Democrall c Oklahoma
caucuses, but 11 IS apparent
both will ftmsh well behind
the uncommitted support
sought by Oklahoma Gov
Dav1d Boren
Sen Uoyd Bentsen, D·
Tex , ran so poorly tn
Oklahoma - wtth less than 12
per cent - that he canceled a
campaign appearance slated
for today m Missouri and
111Stead retlred to his home
state of Tex.as to "reevaluate ' hts campa ign
While m New Hampshire,
President Ford was so
buoyed by hts two-day
campaign swmg that he
planned another foray to the
state and predicted he will
wm Its GOP prunary
In Oklahoma , more than a
third of the de legates were

uncommttled
to
any
ca ndidate after a count of
about 70 per cent of the
precmcts, accordmg to
unofhc tal result s Boren
sought an uncommitted
delegatiOn to the natiOnal
conventiOn
The latest figures showed
HarriS and Carter With JUSt
under 20 per cent, followed by
Bentsen and Alabama Gov
George Wallace wtth Just less
than 12 per cent Wallace had
kept hiS efforts m lhe state to
a muumum but Bentsen had
pmned much of hts hopes to a
strong showmg
After hts swmg through
New Hampshire, Ford satd "J
Uunk we're gomg to wm" and
mdtcated he may make
another trip lhere before the
Feb 24 prunary But he ruled
out a debate With hts
opponent, Ronald Reagan
Aides satd Ford was happy
about the large crowds and
was pleased w1th hiS dialogue

Rocky's machine
oiled and ready
WASHINGTON (UP!) As It has been smce 1958, the
machinery IS mled and ready
to go for Nelson Rockefeller's
prestdentlal camprugn It has
never been dismantled smce
Rockefeller was ftrst elected
governor of New York
The machinery restdes m
three places

' Room 5600,"

Rockefeller Center - the
euphe1n1sm for lhe two floors
that house Rockefeller
Farmly and Associates, m a
Albany
brownstone m
housmg the Republican State
Committee, and m a law
office m Bmghamton, N Y
Mannmg the machmery
are an ex-college professor,
Dr Wilham Ronan, who
spends the off season as the
$100,000 a year or more semor
adviser to the Rockefeller
family , Richard Rosenbaum,
an ex-state supreme court
JUdge who Is state GOP
chairman. and Georl:!e
Hmman , a Bmghamton
lawyer and the state Repubh·

can National comrmtteeman
No , Rockefeller IS not
runmng for president, yet
But tt was Ronan who
advised hun to drop out of the
VIce pres1dcnllal race JUSt m
case And It Is Rosenbaum
who
Is
holdmg
the
uncommitted New York
delegation m readiness for

the convention And 1t IS
Hmman who travels the
country at Rockefeller 's stde
wtth the black book hstmg
every Republican - and a lot
of Democrats - who count
At 69 Nelson Rockefeller IS
ready for hts last hurrah
The Dtslrtcl of Columbta,
which JUSt got home rule last
year , IS struggling to get Its
act together as far as
el~tions are concerned
Last week's ballotmg for
Advtsory Neighborhood Com·
mtsstons brought these
developments
- Two ballot boxes fell off

trucks taking them to a hotel
to be counted One was ptcked
up near the National Zoo by a
cab drtver and taken to a
police station 'The second,

wrapped m a plashc trash
bag to protect 11 from ram,
was found by a former CIA
courier who after a dela)
turned m when he dtscovered
It wasn 't garbage
- Shelley Lynne Tonnkm
won a seat because she cared
enough to vote She was
elected 1-0 bo;cause nobody
else showed up durmg the II
hours the polling place was

open
- Two candidates for one
seat m Ward 8 lost the
opporturuty for easy victory
when they didn 't care enough
to vote Neither dtd anyone
else m the ward
W1U10ut a VIetnam \\ ar,
candidates m the Feb 24 New
Hampshtre pnmary are
haymg a hard tune fmding an
Issue that will 1gmte their
campaign
What they are lmdmg are
three ISsues they wiSh would
go away - school busmg,
abortion and gun control •
At every stop one or more
of these tssues ts bemg ratsed
by New Hampshire voters
The same 1s happenmg
~cross
the border m
Massachusetts, which votes a
week later
''There

IS

no way you can

wm on ISsues like that," satd
Rep Moms Udall, D·Artz , a
DemocratiC candidate "No
matter where you stand, you
lose some of lhe voters on
every one "
Last week President Ford
was meetmg at the White
House with big ctty mayors
when Charles Wheeler of
Kansas City shook hts hand
and said, " Mr President,
we're looking forward to
seemg you thts summer "

DR. LAMB

wtth hostile demonstrators at
Durham Sunday
" A crJ mony
and
antagomsm left over from

another day only undermmes
lhe future ," he told them
In other developments
- Sen Birch Bayh, 0-Ind ,
campaigned m upstate New
York State Sunday and called
for a uhalt to economic and
energy pollctes lhat place an
u n fa 1 r burden on the
Northeast " He backed a
federal takeover of welfare
costs and called poverty "a
natwnal problem that
reqwres a nat tonal solution "
- Reagan won a pair of
prestdenttal straw polls over
Ford m Flortda, toppmg the
President by an almost 3-to-1
margm rn votes taken b) the
traditionally conservative
Flonda Jaycees and the
Florida Conservatives Umon
- In Kansas City, Mo ,
Republican offtcials told the
c1 ty they wtll move the 1976
convention if hotels do not
proVIde lhe nearly 16,000
rooms promised last fall
They satd several hotels
committed all of thetr rooms
to the conventLon but now are
savmg some for other
customers
Pennsylvama Gov
Milton Shapp, m a whirlwmd
weekend tour of Flortda, said
Sunday
the
Ford
admtmstratlOn was tsswng
'cruel and mtsleadmg "
unemployment statistics to
boost the PreSident's can·
didacy
. :·:. . :

QUEENS NAMED - Queens of tbe Mtss Majorette of
Ohto Valley Pageant 1-r, are Mtchelle Sylvester, Canton,
~years, Cindy McAvee, Fort Recovery 7-10, Sandra
Dee Thomas, SteubenVIlle, 11-14, and Robm Elmore, West
Chester, lf&gt;.20 The queens received banners, crowns and
trophies

professiOn has never

con

cerned Itself wtth cholesterol,
taking for gran ted the local
dtet that has kept the natwns
gmng for thousands of years
They dte from mfec huns,
chtldbtrth , btles and cun
sumptwn, but not !rum heart
d1'fase
v

In the btg ctttes statisllcs
are different I m talkmg
aboul Eastern Ew ope and

not Western Europe whtch
has ptcked up Amencan life
styles
I am sendmg your some
chppmgs !hal show that hard
ph ys ical \\ ork works off
choles terol I have never seen
any of your colunms where
you discussed the relatiOn be

tween
exerctse
and
chole sterol and you only
mentwn dtets II you would
tell people that they could use
people would
feel free to eat their ethmc
exe1 c1se many

exerc1se and
avmd stress to prevent 'a
btuldup m cholesterol
DEAR READER - You
cerlamly have nussed a lot uf
my columns Askmg me to
stand up for exercise IS about
like askmg Barry Goldwater
to say somethmg good for
foods and use

conservatives One uf
public services Is, an~
been for many years
turm~ at climes f01
Pre.s1dcnr s

Phystcal

Cuu11~1 l

!i tln css

m}
has
lee·

the
on

and Sp"' Is

ELEVEN THROUGH FOURTEEN - In the II through 14 years age category, 1 tor,
Tammy Eichinger, Pomeroy, third runnerup , Susan Schimpf, Newark, ftrst runnerup ,
Sandra Dee Thompson, SteubenVIlle, champwn, Jennifer Gilbert, Trenton, Ohio, sec&lt;~nd
runnerup, Peggy Thorne, Clarksburg, W Va , fourth runnerup

Twirlers of four states
competed in Middleport
abbreviated costumes, or more tatlored mtlttary costwnes used m competition mto ''dressup " gowns to recetve thetr awards at the close of the long day
Sunday's event, sanctioned by the National Batpn Twtrlers' AssocJatlon, was sponsored
by the Glo·Ettes of Metgs and Galba Counties was under the direction of Mrs Glorta Buck
Wallace, Galbpohs, Glo-Ette mstructor Top girls m the several age groups are p1ctured
wtth t~etr trophtes I Pictures by Bob Hoeflich )

White House in losing battle with the birds
Hou se grounds bangmg two pie pan hke tambourmes

' Look "hat happens, ' he said
Haney clanged the pans under a tree outside the
wmdows of the East Room A cloud of starlings sprang ··
from the tree, swooped over to a tree 1n the Kermedy Rose
Garden and sa t down agam 'Fat lot of good that did ,"
said Haney
Haney puts more faith m a tape recordmg of what the
maker calls "a btrd m dtstress " Haney satd, ' It sounds
bke a btrd bemg hanged "
··
He played tl on the outdoor loudspeaker system used to ~
summon bmousmes to the South Portico drtveway alter a
state dinner Through the Whtte How;e grounds a ·~
s hrieking b1rd \HIS

hee~rd

"
FIFTEEN THROUGH TWENTY - Best twirlers lll
the 15 through 20 age group, 1 to r, are Anne GIVen,
Monroe, first runnerup , Robm Elmore, West Chester,
champiOn , Juamta English, ZanesVIlle, second runnerup ,
Usa Bradshaw, West Portsmouth, third runnerup

••

O\'er the speakers

Told by a vtsttor that he could not nottce much dtffer- .:
must have faith ," he srud
~
Upstairs 10 her East Wmg office Shetla Wetdenfeld the
Ftrst Lady's press secretary, peered through a wmdow as '•
darkness fell
"Oh, God, she smd It s 5 25 p m Het e they come "
Squadrons of birds began perchmg on branches outside

"

the "mdow

for

teachers

of

health

educa twn an the nah an's
schools
You can't separ&lt;:~te exe r~
ctse and dJet The body ts
merel}' an energy converter
The food puts energy m and
we use 1l to run our body at
rest or for physJcal achv1ty

If you lake m more energy
than your body use::; there 1s

an mcrease m hody fat and
w1th 1t 111 many people an
mcrease m blood cholesterol
levels and even mcreased
blood pressure I hate to lhmk
h O\\ mitny tunes I have told
people that wetght con trol
mvolves lht s baste prmctple

'''"''''''' ' ' ;:::::::::::::::::::::

"

Sunday mght placed the
dealh toll at 15,043, wtth
37,000 InJUred smce the mtbal
quake rumbled through
Guatemala and other parts of
Central Amertca Wednesday
The committee satd at least
220,000 Guatemalans lost
thetr homes m the quakes,
but reports had not amved
from many small towns left
Isolated by landslides and
conunumcatlons failures
Sunday's tremors began at
3 20 a m EST , heavtly
damaging
th e
Neuropsychiatric Hos{lltal m
the capital and se ndmg
patients runnmg m paruc
Patients from three other
hospitals were sent to a
trealment center at the trade
1esull of food available and fairgrounds
Sporadic lootmg prompted
energy eKpended makes a
lhm tndiVIdual ObviOusly several neighborhoods to
such a hie style Is not suited
to our modern hvmg habits so
we must pay a lot more at
The Daily Seminaltentwn to our dtet Jt takes an
DEVOTED TO THE
erwrmous amount of work to
INTEREST OF
compensate for a htgh fat
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER l TANNEHILL
htgh-cholesterol dtet
Exec Ed
The !mal answer for each
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1ty Edtlor
Individual really rests m hiS
Publtshed datly except
own sla te If the blood
Satu rday by The Ohio
Valley Publ l shtng Con •
cholesterol 1s lo\\, 1n the
pany
111
Court
St
ophmal 1ange, and stays
Pomeroy
O hio
45769
Business Off i ce Phon e 992
there and the blood pressure
2156 Edltortal Ph,one 991
1s low , fme If e1 tiler arc
2 151
Se c ond class postag e
elevated then d1et, exercise
patd i!lt Pomerot Ohto
and some limes medacme are
Nat i onal
adverttstng
representative
Ward
all unportanl tu achieve the
Griffith ComiJany Inc
opltonal results
Bolttnell1 &amp; Galla2her C/v
757 Th trd Ave New York
For an formahun un daelar)
N Y 10017
S ub sc rtpl tOn
rates
prtnctples to prevent htgh
Deh\lere&lt;:l by carrier where
c.: holeslrrol send 50 cents for
ava1lable 75 ce nrs •per
week
By Motor Rou te
Tl1 c Hea lth Letter number 13
where earner servtce no t
D1el
prev e nltr1g
available
One montl'l
~3 25 By mail '" Ohio and
Atherosclerosts Send a long
W Va 1 One Year 52 ~ 00
stamped
sell-addressed
Su: months lll SO Three
months S7 00 Elsewhere
envelope for mathng Ad·
526 00 year
Stx months
dress y(1ur leiter to me m
S IJ 50 thre e months S7 so
Subscnptron pr tte Includes
care of tlus new spaper, P 0
'ivnday T •mes sen line I
Box 1551 Radi&lt; lily Slatwn

If you don ! cxt!rc ase much

.

organtze
v1g1lante
committees
Roman Ca thohc pnests
celebrated open air masses
outside thetr wre cked
churches, repeating Cardinal
Marlo Casartego's words that
the quakes were 'the wtll of
lhe all.powerful one " and
urgmg Guatemalans to
repent their sms
Some diStricts m the
cap1tal reported outbreaks of
diarrhea People lined up at
outdoor mftrmartes to get
Inoculations
agatnst
dtphthena, tetanus and
typhoid
Outstde
the capital,
bulldozers and tractors
worked to remove tons of
earth that fell across the PanAmencan Highway
m
landslides following the
Wednesday quake an&lt;! tbe
ftrst powerful aftershock
Fnday
At Chimaltenango, 40 nules
from the capital, offiCJals
satd they had been unable to
reach seven or eight hillside
hamlets Chimaltenango,
With 5,110 dead, was believed
to be the hardest hit
muniCipality m lhe country

NOW YOU KNOW
As many as 1,652languages
and dialects are spoken
among India 's 600 mtlhon
populatiOn

CLUB TO MEET
The Middleport Amateur
c.ardeners Club\\ Ill meet at 8
p m Wednesday at the home
of Mrs Ferman Moore,
Uncoln Htll Road, Pomeroy
A btcentenmal program w1ll
be ,presented and handmade
Valenhnes wtll be exchanged

...
'"
""

'"
QUITE ACCUSTOMED TO WINNING - Wlnnmg a
trophy ts not such a great spectal event lhese days for
Tammy Etchmger. daughter of Mr and Mrs Paul
Etchmger, Pomeroy, who has won hundreds durtng her 11
years, many oJ them m baton CQmpetition However,
Sunday mght Tammy won this huge trophy, taller lhan
she, as htgh pomt contestant In the Mtss Majorette of Ohio
Valley Pageant m Middleport 0!1 the left IS Mrs Glorla
Buck Walla~..,, contest dtrector

"

..

Ualted Preoslnternadooal
The New York Kmcks had
to look back a long way to fmd
the last time they had beaten
lhe Boeton Celtics Their 97-89
victory Sunday, they hope,
will give them the needed
confidence to avOid such a
long lapse again
Earl Monroe, playmg wtth
an inflamed right mstep,
scored 32 points as lhe Knlcks
snapped a five-game losing
streak and tbe Celdcs' sevengame win skein The last time
New York beat Bostlln was 12
games ago, a 96-88 triumph
Nov 29, 1974
"I didn't know how many
times 1n a row we had loot to
Boston but I was thinkmg on
the bus on tbe way over here
that It had been a long, long
time," said Monroe "It was

Malpractice plan goes

High school cage scores
Un•led Press lnltrnaf•onal

Akron N 59 Akron St Vm cent
St Mary 56
Ashland
Mapleton
70
Plymouth 66
Ash tabula Harbor 48 Con

to California voters
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) The Cahforma Medical
Association has dectded to let
lhe voters dectde whether Its
radical plan to end the state's
malpractice msurance crtsts
should be made a part of the
state constitution
The doctors want to place
an tmtlahve, contamlng
detatls of lhe plan, on the
November ballot They need
499,846 Signatures by mid·
June to qualify the measUI'e
If adopted, tbe plan would be
written mto California's
constitution
The strategy was worked
out durin8 tbe weekend by tbe
executive council of the state
association, the nation's
second largest, at Its 105th
annual convention
Details may be changed
after debate between militant
and moderate physicians
expected this week But its
intent was to revolutionize
medical liability law
The main provisions were
J

an unporl8nt vtctory because
tt broke our lostng streak
And 11 was good for our
morale because lhe Celttcs
are a team we're gomg to
have to beat later on m the
season (to gam a playoff
berth) and now we know we
can beat them "
Bill Bradley scored alliS of
his points ln the second half,
rncludlng his first SIX In an
eight-point run to open tbe
thtrd pertod The streak
opened New York's lead from
ooe to nme
John Gianelli scored a
season-high 20 points mcludlng 16 in the first half
Jo Jo White led Boeton w1th 28
and Dave Cowens added 16.
"We didn't play defense,
we didn't hustle, we dtdn't
run, we threw the ball away

'"

- To aholish trial by jury of '
malpractice claims Cases ..
would be arbitrated by "a ,'
qualified expert or panels of
e1perts" to be set up by the
legislature - The amount of
noneconoliUc damages for
physical Impairment, disfigurement,
pam
and ..
suffering would be llmited to
$100,000
~
- DeciSions could be re- •
VIewed by appellate courts :
ooly "as to questions of law." ~
- Lawyers' fees, which '
now range up to 50 per cent In ~
difficult cases, would be on a
sliding scale providing attor- _
neya with 10 per cent of any '
amount between fSO,OOO and ~
the UOO,OOO limit
,_
Some doctors have have :~
seen their malpractice Insurance premiWllS triple "'
this year
They have .' ~
dramatized tbelr case with , :
work stoppages In both v ~
northern and southern "
California
~

...,
;

-'

nuut 47
A\lon 56 Ftr elancts 41
Barberlon 66 Canton Lincoln
64
Beachwood 45 Fai rport 44
Bellefonflllne 75 Stdney 67

Berne Union 71 Tr i mble 60
Bloom Carroll 61 Amanct(!l
C learcreek
Botkms 80 R i ver si de 72
Brooklyn 61 Falr\lleW 53

ss

Cambridge 61 Dover 50

Canal

Winchester

Millersport 51
Canton

Cent

Cath

95
88

Mltrllnglon 73
Canton
71 (of)
Canton
4S
Canton
Canton

Lehman 77 Ma ss •l lon
McKmtev 79 Akron

s

'6

S 51 Glen Oak 43
T•mken
Wooster 57
Cle E Tech. 73 Cle John
Adams u
Cle Kennedy 44 UniiJ Sc hool
43 lot l
Cle Sl IgnatiUS 81 Lakewood

.

ss

cor

Col DtSalts 60

Cot Mohawk

Sl

17

Academy

Weslcr~Jtl lc

N

Col Wehrle 42 Mansfield 5 1
Peters 49
Columb•a 73 Highland 66
Columbus Grove 79 Miller

Clly 60
Connonon Valley 65 Mal ve rn

60

Coshocton 87 Tuscaraw~s
Valley 58
Danville 16 New Albany 75
Eastern P ike 61 Portsmouth

E SJ
Falrfler!
Union 60

Un10n

91

lll..t '" I IV

Federal Hoc kmg 94 Miller 70
Geneva 55 Madtson S2
Groveport 80 Col W es tlanel SJ
H1 c: ksvdle 72 Montpelier 68
(OI )

~

tnd •an Valley N 90 Carrollton
Edwards AO
Jefferson
Unton
12
Steubenville Cent Cath 42
Kenston 61 G i lmour Academy
St

48

Keystone 70 Buckeye 64
Kirtland
75
M id dlefield
Card.nat 47
Liberty Benton 65 Pandora
Gilboa 64
Licking Volley 62 Newark
Calh 60
L lns !ey IW Va 1 96 Buckeye
N 60
Ldgan Elm 65 P• ckenngton 57
Loudomdlle 63 Hill sdale 60
Lutheran I; 76 NewbUry 62
Lutheran W 63 s Amherst 51
Mansfield Malabar 75 New
Philadelphia 58
McMechen CW Va l Donohu e
67 Skyvue 57
Middletown 85 Portsmouth 56
N Canton Hoover 52 Jackson

49

Ottawa Glandorf 78 L•ma
cent Cath 77
Pa.nesvdte Har vey 70 Brusl'1
6S
Perry 66 Fa•rless 52
He i QhiS
68
Berkshire 52
Rtdgewood SA lakeland AB
Stro ng~vlll e 63 Brun sw iCk 47
T o ledo 51 F ranc•s 76 L1m a
Sr 75 (Of)
R IChm Ond

wapakoneta 66 Coldwater 61

warren Local 99 Ft Frye 75
Warr:enS;vllle 57 Cle Holy
Nam e 48
Wick liffe 71 Eucl•d 67
Willoughby s 63 Orange 58
Zanesville
Rosecrans 59
Guernse~ Cath ~0

and we didn't use any smart
play- ! doo t think I saw any
savmg grace ln the game,"
said Boston Coach Tom
Hemsohn "The only thing
that showed up today were
the umforms. ''
Elsewhere m tbe National
Basketball Association,
Pluladelphia edged Buffalo
ltJ0.97, Los Angeles downed
Atlanta 97-89, Cleveland beat
Washington 83-78, Chicago
edged New Orleans !IS-92,
Detroit mpped Kansas Ctty
94-93, Golden State defeated
Portland 109-105 and PhoeniX
took Seattle 107·101.
In the ABA, Denver edged
Kentucky 116-114, New York
topped Indiana 11(1.104 and
San
Antonio
defeated
Vtrgmia 112·105
Warriors 109, Blazers 105
Ketth Wtlkes and Phtl
Smith had 24 pomts aptece as
Golden State, tratling by 17 at
tbe start of the last period,
held Portland to just slll
pomts In the final five
rmnutes and rallied to wm
71ers 100, Braves 97
George McGmms' 38 pomts
led Philadelphia, with hiS last
two free throws putting the
76ers ahead to stay with 39
seconds left Doug Collins
added two more free throws
for the final margin as tbe
Sixers scored tbe !sst eight
p01nts whtle shutting out
Buffalo for the final 4 15
Laken 97, Hawks 89
Gat! Goodrich scored four
of his game-lttgh 24 points to
stave off Atlanta's late surge
after Los Angeles had opened
up a IG.point lead Kareem
Abdu!llabbar added 22 for the
Lakers and Lou Hudson
topped the Hawks with 22

Sport Parade

Malone beats Rio, 92-84

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
In OC dl VIsional a chon,
Ohio Northern beat Baldwin·
Wallace 70.66, Kenyon
downed Heidelberg 60-51 and
Mount Umon beat Oberlin 9280 m the Northern DiviSion,
while Muskingum dumped
Capital 58-$1, Wittenberg
beat Ohto Wesleyan '/3.59 and
Demson edged Martella 53-61
rn the Soulhern Dtvlsion.
In other games Saturday
mght, Kentucky State beat
Central
State
92-71,
NebraskaOmaha downed
Youngstown State 68-55,
Ashland buned Adrtan
(Mich.) 91·66, St LOUIS
tripped Xavter ~I , Chattanooga edged Dayton ~.
Defwnce beat Findlay 91-87,
Wilmington defeated Bluffton
71-68, Wilberforce took
Cedarville 79-75, Malone beat
Rio Grande 92414, Carnegie·
Mellon ( Pa ) outscored John
Carroll 102-80, Urbana
crushed Ohto Dom101can 10280 and Tiffin rolled over

hole and a five looter on the second Btrdtes at ftve and etght
enabled him to make lhe turn at Indian Wells, a tight htUe
desert layout, m 32 And when he birdied the lOth wllh a 3~
footer, that put John m front
He never looked back, ptckmg up btrdies as well on the 12th,
14th, 16th and 18th holes to wm 1tgomg away
Rik Massengale and BriBn Allln gave Miller a run for hts
money But once Johnny turned It oo commg back, they never
had a chance As it was, both shot 67 wtth Massengale finishing
closest to Mtller with 347• and wmmng hts biggest check' on
Tour420,52Q....and Allm another shot back and wuuung
$12,780
Miller, who says whatever IS on hts mmd, first suggested he
won the Hope because "a mce htUe old lady told me she had a
dream I won tbe tournament," and later said he knew he was
gmng to Win because he ''felt super and I knew I could beat
these guys "
Then, 1t was time to talk about Ntck!aus, whom Mtller uses
as a yardstick to measure his own accompUshrnents
"Nicklaus IS lhe best and I'm never gomg to catch him rn the
majors (Jack has won 16 major titles)," said Miller, "but I
could catch h1111 oo total wms (Jack has 58) so he can't rest on
his laurels
" I'm not afraid of Jack Nicklaus I'll play him any tune but
he has accomplished more than I have, and I don't think I'm
g01ng to catch him Actually, I'm flattered when people
compare me to hun, but I don't hold hun in awe ''

Knicks get past Celtics

car polka-dotted, '' she sa1d

churchmen to call on their
parishiOners to repent
Aftershocks rtppled
through the ctty late m the
day Ctltzens refused to enter
thetr damaged homes,
prefernng to camp out m
makeshift tents despite gusty
wtnds, a temperature drop to
the low 50s and the city's first
ramstorrn smce tlle tremors
began
The olflctal National
Emergency Committee

you ~an t eat much \\tthoul
ge! Hng fat &lt;:md havmg these
comph&lt;.: ataons
There are num ero us
&lt;Kamples 111 the world of
people "hu do eat iugh f"l
IHgh llwlestet ul diets and
have no hear! and vascular
problems Part of 1t IS
heredtlary bul "nother part IS
the high level of actimty The
Mas1 WHik or trot more than
211 lllll(•s d day1 ancl fhe nel No&gt;\\ \ '' k \ Y IIKIW
'

PALM SPRINGS, Calif (UP!) - Until someone more
animated comes along, Johnny Miller will have to do as the
most outspoken and fortllright player on lhe PGA tour
When Miller misses a shot- which 1811't often- he says, 'I
hacked it," or"! played 1t badly," or' It was as dumb a thing
as anyone could do "
But when he makes a good shot, espec18lly if he smks a long
putt, the good~ookmg blond Califorman says, "that was
ridiculous "
Ridiculous or not, Miller ll'lllde a strmg of nme birdies
Sunday m about as spectacular and powerful a closing round
as one could hope lor, for a nme under 63 and a tllree shot
victory in the $180,000 Bob Hope Desert Classic
The 63 gave Miller a !!Q.bole score o( 16-under.par 344, won a
prize of ~,000, boosted his 1976 eanungs to $84,370, hts career
earnings to $1,031,522 and accounted for hts 17th career
victory
Miller called It hts best tournament vtctory , and It well 1n1ght
have been He went Into the final round with a 72-ltole score of
seven urder 281 and hts putting stroke erra tic at best
"I knew I had a chance when after four medtocre rounds I
was only two shots back," said the 28-year-&lt;&gt;ld Mtller, who now
IS the mnth player m tbe $1 million club and the youngest "I
figured if I could drop a few putts, I would wm it I didn't
expect to make as many birdies as I dtd, but that wtll happen
once I get It started "
Miller got off wmging wtth a three foot btrdte putt on the first

She raced out under the sl8rhngs, hopped mto her
automobile and drove It out from under a tree full of btrds
"If I lea ' e the car thet e It will get coated agam " she said
"Past droppmgs have eaten awa} the pamt and left my

Guatemala death toll above 15,000
GUATEMALA
CITY,
Guatemala (UP! ) - Govern
ment offtctals say the death
toll has reached more than
15,000 10 this Central
Amertcan
republic,
hammered by three series of
earth tremors 10 ftve days of
devastatiOn
A new se t of shocks
battered the capital early
Sunday, swaymg buildings,
drtvmg pamcked-ctttzens mto
the streets and promptmg

..

enee - the birds were not charmed out of the trees , Hane y .
professed to behevc at least a few were scared off tOne ::

~:,:::;:;:;::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;,;:.;:::,:.;::::::::::::::::;-,:,:,:,:,:::::::~;:.,:, :::':,:,::::,:::.:::'

II

Bolden, hospitalized wtth an
Illness unbl Thursday, and
his presence was especially
nuased when hoth Wood and
Daugherty fouled out
Saturday's Mld·Amertcan
Conference action saw the
lhree contenders for the tiUe,
Western Mlchtgan, Miami
and Toledo, all post wms
Toledo pushed 1ts Mld·Am·
rect~rd to 7-2 wtth a ~
VIctory over Kent State.
The Rockets trailed 32-16 at
one time m tbe ftrst half alter
Kent hit 13 oltts first 16 shots
from the floor But, by
halfbme,
Toledo
had
narrowed tl to 3&amp;-32
Cincinnati, agam getting
double figure scormg from
ftve players, ptcked up Its
17th win m 20 games wtth 'lin
87-62
decision
over
Jacksonville
Mike Jones led lhe way for
the 19th ranked Beareats wtth
16 pomts and Br18n Williams
added 14
Otterbem, the Ohto Conference Southern DIVlSion
leader, won 1ts lOth In a row
wtth a 58-57 squeaker at
Wooster m a non-league
game.

birdies by Miller wins

...

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Durmg the day the White
House belongs to the people At mght It's for the birds
'I really don't lhmk there 's anythmg we can do about
the starlmgs," satd Dale Haney, chtef White House b1rd
chaser 'No, there's no way to beat them "
Ltke the Blitz bombers of World War II, the sta rlings
come at dusk and leave at dawn They are commuters
,. • Dunng the day they feed m the countryside around
Washmgton but come swarmmg m at sunset," sa1d
:.. Haney 0 1t's horrtble n
The starlings by the thousands settle mto the e\ er·
greens, thetr favontes bemg the twm gtant magnolia trees
·· on the White House south lawn They also turn the
Executive Manswn 's eaves and '-' mdow Jedges mto
feathe&lt;y tenements
' I thank It's the lights of the White House that attract
.•
them
' They make an awful lot of nmse They talk and talk
and talk ," srud Haney He satd former Prestdent RIChard
Ntxon used to complam the b1rd chatter kept h1m a\\ake
Worse than the nmse 1s the tb-oppmgs, according to
Haney 'The sticky whtte stuff smears the trees , blankets
the sidewalks gets up to an mch thick on the wmdow Sills
and It gets on cars and wtll eat through the pam t," he satd
0
The smelltsn't beautiful," Haney sa1d
Haney satd various remedies fatted They tned
spreadmg a substance of remarkable odor and stickmess
that was btlled as dtsgustmg to even the most boortsh and
unmoveable starling "No good at all, " satd Haney
The t4-year-&lt;&gt;ld btrd chaser took to roammg the White

But Terry Furlow, tbe Btg
Ten's
leadmg scorer,
scorched the nets with a long
Jumper wtth ooly a second
remaimng to de~tde the
contest
Furlow's wmnmg basket
came after Dan Reiwald's
corner jumper bounced off
the rtm . The Spartans,
however, got the rebound and
fed Furlow who cashed 11 m
"! really thought we had tt
woo when that first shot
didn't go m," said Taylor
"But they poured over tbe top
of US
Furlow, held to four pomts
m the first half by the sticky
defense of Mike Daugherty,
finished wtth a game high
26 •
Mike Clme, a sophomore
walkon from West Holmes
Htgh Schbol, came off the
bench midway !through the
first half to spark the
Buckeyes wtlh 23 points and
Mark Bayless added 19
Mike 's (Clme) a battier, no
doubt about that," said
Taylor " He just gets better
every t1me out "
The Buckeyes agam played
wtthout leadmg scorer Larry

Incredible string of 9

The action m Middleport Sunday was at the Metgs Jr Htgh School where baton
twtrlers from Ohio, West V~rgmta Penns)lvama and Kentucky spent over mne hours
competmg m the ftrst Mtss MaJorette of Oh10 Valley Pageant
Last mght twtrlers changed from their ong matly deSigned, spark ling and qrnte

Doctor stresses exercise need
Ry La"rence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - I
enJOY your column m the
paper but one thtng bothers
me and my European
fnends your emphasis on the
relationship be twee n
cholesterol and diet, totally
tgnonng the effect of
vigorous exercise upon
cholesterol
I was a medtcal student m
Poland I VISited other
Eastern European countnes
and against my Will lived m
several parts of the Sovtel
Umon These people eat an
extremely htgh saturated fa t
dtel, everythmg swtmmmg m
buller sour cream lard, salt
pork Yet these people have
few cases of heart attacks 1r1
the rural populatton
The
local
medical

Uolted Press International
After another ln a series of
bitter defeats Saturday mght,
Ohio state Coach Fred Taylor
Isn't worrying about anybody
else's problems
The veteran Buckeye
coach, who announced hts
resignation laat week, saw hiS
final Ohio State team go do to
Its 12th loss In 18 games
Saturday mght, dropping an
~ overtime decunon to
Mtchigan State
The
Buckeyes
host
Michigan tomght and the
Wolverines are conung off an
equally tough overtime loss
to toJ&gt;'fanked Mtchtgan
Taylor was asked if tbe
Wolvermes migh~ not have
much left after their near
rmss against the HOOSiers
"I don't really care," sa1d
the disappotnted Taylor
"I'm more concerned about
what we've got left."
The Buckeyes scored the
laat five pOints m regulation
play to send the game into
overtime at 72-all and led 8281 when reserve guard Terry
Sluelds dropped m a pair of
free tllrows with 21 seconds to
go

Today's

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

:I

Pro

!' Standin~s

:I
l

Amencan Basketball Assoc•a
t1on Stand1ngs
By Umted Press lnternallonal
W l Pet
GB
Denver
37 12 755
New York
32 18 6AO 51 •
San Anton•o
'29 '20 592 8
Kentucky
29 23 558 91 ,
lnd •ana
28 25 52 8 10 ~
S! LOUIS
21 31 404 171 ~
V~rg n1a
8 42 160 29 I 2 ,
~~- _ Sunday s Results
New York 110 lnd1ana 104
San An tonto 11 2 Vlrgm 1a 105
Den ve r 116 Ke ntu c k~ 11 4
Monday s Games
Denver at New York
Sl LOUIS at Vtrgm1a
Tue$dtly's Game
51 LOUIS at lnd 18na

Indtana-Purdue (Ft Wayne ) Kentucky, Wheelmg at Ohio
114-78.
Domtmcan, Pmnt Pa•k (Pa )
Bestdes Mtchigan at Ohio at Steubenville and Rto
State, tomght 's schedule Grande at Walsh
fmds Dayton at Western

American pair

has small hope
of gold medal
INNSBRUCK (UP!) When you survtve a tornado
whtch ktlls hve of your
friends You have to be
lucky But Colleen O'Connor
and partner Jun Mtllns of
Colorado Sprmgs will need
more than luck today 1! they
are to wm the Olympic tee
dancmg gold medal
Ftgure skatmg JUdges,
drawn mainly from the East
bloc countries, traditionally
favor champions Tius was
dtsplayed ail too plamly
Saturday when Russia's Irma
Rodnma and Aleksandr
Zattsev were marked high,
desptte
a
mediocre
performance, en route to the
gold medal m the pairs event
O'Connor and Mtllns were
lhird after the compulsory
program to Ludmila Pak·
homova and Aleksandr
Gorshkov, the hve-hme
world champiOns from
Russta, and another Russtan
pair, retgnrng world hUe
holders Irma Motseeva and
Andrey Mmenkov
"I would not be realistiC to
expect us to wm lhe gold
medal, but we hope to attract
the
JUdges'
attentwn
sufficiently so we can score
high enough to split the
Russians, " satd O'Connor
Colleen IS enJoymg her ftrst
Olympics, desptte the stiff
competition
and
the
queshonable JUdgmg Life IS
to be hved and even
Innsbruck, a sleepy town m
lhe foothills of the Alps, can
be an exctting place for a gtrl
from suburban Chicago
Back m 1967, Colleen, then
16, was lucky to surVIve a
tornado which struck when
she was practlcmg for a
roller skating competition
She was hospitalized for three
weeks and left with 32
stitches In her head, tbe
result of bemg bur ted for over
45-mrnutes under a pile of
rubble.
The only other !mal on a
Ught day of competillon was
the Nor die Comb10ed m

Vermeil signed to coach Eagles

PHILADELPffiA (UP!) The Phtladelph18 Eagles' exhaustive and sometimes
embarrassmg search for a
new head coach ended lhts
National Basketball Assoctatlon weekend when Dtck Vermeil
Slandmgs
did what Joe Paterno and
B~ Un•ted Preu International
Eastern Conference
Frank Kush wouldn't do
Allant1c DivisiOn
Vermeil, who coached
W L Pet
GB
Boston
35 14 714 UCLA to an upset win over
Buffalo
31 21 596 51 •
Ohto State m the Rose Bowl
Philadelphia
30 '2 1 SBB 6
last New Year's day, Signed a
New York
25 28 4n 12
Central DIVI$10n
five-year contract to coach
W L Pet
GB
the Eagles, replacmg Mike
Washington
29 22 569
Cleveland
29 22 569
McCormack, who was fired
Houst on
24 24 500 31~
at !he erd of last season.
New Orleans 24 25 490 4
Eagle Owner Leonard Tose
Atlanta
2A ~a 462 s• ~
') Western Conference
would
not &lt;llsclose terms of
Midwest DIVISIOn
W L Pet
GB the contract but called It "a
Milwaukee
21 30 412
fatr
and
generous
Detro11
20 29 408
Kansas C1ty
19 33 365 21 , agreement."
Ch 1c ago
16 35 314 S
The Eagles' announcement
Ptlcthc Otvts•on
Sunday
came as a surprise
W L Pet
GB
because Vermeil's name was
Golden Slat e 37 14 125 Los Angeles
26 27 491 12
not among lhose who had
Por tland
23 28 45 1 lA
been mentioned as leading
Se altle
23 29 442 141
Phoen•x
21 27 43il • 14' 1 candidates. And tbe Eagles'
_ _ ...Saturda~'s Resulls
willingness to make lucrative
Boston 106 New York 98
WaSI'1•ngton 103 Atlanta 90
offers had fatled to lure
1

Houston 89 Ch1 ca go 87
Mtlwaukee 114 Detroit 106
Golden Slate 127 Seattle 100
Sunday s Reiulh
New York 97 Boston 89
Philadelphia 100 Buffalo 97
los Angeles 97 Atlanta 89
ChiCago 96 New Orleans 92
Detrofl 94 Kansas C1ty 93
Cleveland 83 Wash ington 78
Golden State 109 Portland 105
Phoennc 107 Seattle 101
Mondays Game
Kansas C1ly at Houston
Tuesday's. Games
Kansas City at Atlanta
Wash,ngton at Buffalo
Philadelphia ar Ct11cago
New York 11 M1lwaukee
New Orleans 11 Golden Slate
Detroit at Los Angeles

~-

OFFICE
9:30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.l-EAST COURT

,,

whtch East Germany's
Ulrich Wehling was favored
to repeat as champiOn He
scored 225 5 pomts on the 7~
meter hill Sunday to outdts·
lance the opposition A If&gt;.
kilometer cross country race
completes the event
James G~lanes of Bratt.
leboro, Vt , was the best
placed American m the held
of 34 m 25th spot with 184 I
pomts Teammates Walter
Malmqmst of Post Mtlls, Vt ,
was one place back, while
Mtke Devecka of Bend, Ore ,
was 32nd
Elsewhere m the program,
the men 's ftrst heat of the
gtant slalom was scheduled
along with the compulsory
program 10 women 's figure
skatmg m whtch Dororthy
Hamtll of of RiverSide, Conn ,
faced a stiff challenge m
world champion Dianne de
Leeuw, a nahve Califorruan
representing Holland
Sunday's heche action produced an upset victor m the
women's downhill and a
bronze medal for C10dy
Nelson of Lutsen, Mmn
Cmdy, rn a comparallve
slump durmg the World Cop
season preceedmg the Olympics, htt back wtth a great
run, but 1t was not qmte good
enough to stop RoSI
Mtttermater
of
West
Germany and Bngttte
Totschmg of Aijstrta from
fmtshmg ahead of her
M1tterma1er, the current
World Cup leader, won her
ftrst ever downhill m over
etght years of compettttve
skimg wtth a tune of 1 46 16
after 11 looked as tf pre-race
favortte Bngttte Totschrug of
Austria would wm
Nelson, 20, clocked I 47 50
She satd later, "I wanted to
wm a medal or medals Thts
IS lhe ftrst I am happy, but,
of course, I would have been a
lot more sattsfted With a gold
"! realize I have to ski a lot
better than I did today to get
one"

NEW YORK (UP!) - This fellow IS a btg league pttcber, he
has been around awhile, and If he had to be perfectly honest,
he'd tell you 1975 wasn't exactly a vantage year for hun.
If he was leveling wtth you completely, he'd have to go a
htUe further and confess he has been up SIX years now and
never has had the kind of year he'll be able to boast about to hiS
grandchildren Closest he ever came to that was his ftrst
season up when he fimshed barely a shade this side of 500
Last summer, he fatled to wm as many as a dozen games He
lost a half dozen more than he won and his earned run average
was closer to f1 ve runs a game than tl was tn four, so be wasn't
lhe least bit shocked upon nohcmg he dtdn't get any votes at all
for the Cy Young Award
He did a slow burn, though, when he recetved hiS 1978
contract not tong ago and saw where the figures wrttten m It
were the same as last season He sat r1ght down and fired off a
bhstermg letter to lhe ball club threatening-get this- to play
out his option unless he received an $11,000 raiSe He probably
breaks 1t down to $10,000 for that exciting performance of his
last summer plus an extra $1,000 for betng ready to do It all
over agam m this, a Btcentenrual year
There IS no mtentton here of embarrassing the pitcher by
tdentifymg him, but this IS to let hun know that his "tllreat" of
piaymg out hiS option ehctted from management the hope be
would not forget his promtse at the end of tbe cormng season
The maJority of maJor league owners feel they have gone as
far as they can go msofar as agreeing to the players' salary
demands Dl,U'mg that period when they had tile benefit of the
reserve clause and wanted so much to retam tt, the owners
understandably were willing to make concessions to the
players, hopmg to mamtam the status quo and retam thetr
untque advantage
Now that It's gone,the owners feel they have nothmg more to
lose
For once they're united m common purpose There IS no
'gentlemen's agreement" among them that I can see- there
does 't have to be when they feel they're fightmg for their very
existence- yet 11 IS significant that free agent Andy
Messersrmth, playmg golf m Califorma, has not been approached by a smgle club bent upon stgnmg h1111 What happens if no one does' What do you think happens' He goes back
wtlh the same club he was so mtent upon wmnlng his freedom
frol'(l- the Los Angeles Dodgers
Tradihooally, sprmg trammg offtC18lly opens March 1 It
may get underway late thiS year and then again It could start
on tune through some sudden compromise because the laat
lhmg either •stde wants Is a strike Both stdes know how
resentful lhe public would be
So eager are the owners and players to reach SOIOe kind of
written agreement - they've been operatmg without one for
more lhan a month now-a meeting between them was held
Sunday mght hopmg to put together some ktnd of working
formula before today's special meeting of the maJOr league
owners alone.
Lately, I've been gtvmg lhe player-owner problem a good
deal of thought, and berng umlaterally m favor of making
everybody happy, I couldn't help but think it might not be a
bad tdea at all to provide every ballplayer wtth what he wants
most- hiS free agency Declare them all free agents You know
what \\Ould happen lhen' Alot of of the same players who were
so unhappy about bemg tied down before now would suddenly
become unhappy about bemg free. Too free. Many of lhem I
suspect would wind up stgrung for constderably less than
they ve been gettmg and a number ~n~ght not even get JObs at
all Supply and demand, you know
In all thts tug-&lt;&gt;f-war between the owners and players m
every sport, mall thiS resortmg to arbitrators and the courts, I
think there's a general tendency to overlook the most
unportant mdtVIdual of all- you, the fan
' There's no question that IneVItably the fmal arbitrator m
conflicts of this sort ts the fan ," offers Bob WooU, the
exceptiOnally capable sports' attorney
"When he can't afford to go to lhe games anymore because
ticket prices have been raJSed too hi2h when he stQDs
watch~ tv because his interest has been turned off by all this
Uttgatton , then you're not gomg to have a viable sports
mdustry The whole sports' mdustry, owners and players
alike, had better start paymg more attention to the fans'
mterest "
I'd have to say negotiators had better start, too You can
negoha te to the pomt of gettmg everylhmg setUed perfecUy
and then dtscover everybody left some tune ago because
nohody cared anymore how the whole thing came out

Paterno, head coach at Penn
State, and Kush, AriZona
State coach, away from
campus life
'It would appear that the
Phtladelphta Eagles has
made Dick Vermeil an offer
he can't refuse,' UCLA
Atlilehc Director J D
Morgan srud
' I would not have thought
of applymg for the JOb,' '
Vermeil satd from hts
Woodland Hills, Calif home
"UCLA IS one of the fmest
schools 10 the country, both m
sports and academtcally "
But Vermetl satd Tose was
conv10cmg "I'm thnlled
wtth
recetvmg
the
opporturuty of workmg for
Leonard Tose, who appears
to be smcere m gettmg a
wanner m Phtladelphla "
" We got the man we
wanted," Tose satd He called

FOR EARLY PLANTING

Vermeil, 39, "a brtlliant
young coach "
" At no time was any one
other than Dtck Vermeil
offered the JOb as Eagles'
head coach," Tose sa1d
General Manager Jtm
Murray admitted that Kush
and Paterno had said they
were not mterested m the job
but Murray said their
rejections came before any
actual offers were made
Before becommg head coach
at UCLA, Vermetl had been
an assiStant under Knox He
had been hired by former
Knox' predecessor, Tommy
Prothro, under
whom
Vermeil had worked at
UCLA When Prothro got tbe
Rams' JOb In 1971, he hired
Vermeil as quarterback
coach

(/)

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DR A J STAEHLI

~ar rnsurance

coverage?

Your present policy may
contain dangeroul gap.
overlaps or loo•• •ndl
lat your NatiOnwide Agent
help review your eover~ge

ca11

P. J. PAULEY
104 W Ma1n
PH

Pomeroy
9f2.~318

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DA f::AEEMAN MALTZ

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PHONE 252·3181 252· 8445
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ONION SETS
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How

}'o u'lf \inu[,

�2- The Dati) Sentmel. Middleport Pomcro), 0, Monday, Feb 9,1976
3- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Feb 9, 1976

Harris, Carter making

.Bucks drop 83-82 overtime tilt

it close in Oklahoma
By Laurence McQutllon
Uolted Press International
Fred HarriS and Junmy
Ca rter are r unmn g a
photofimsh race m the
Democrall c Oklahoma
caucuses, but 11 IS apparent
both will ftmsh well behind
the uncommitted support
sought by Oklahoma Gov
Dav1d Boren
Sen Uoyd Bentsen, D·
Tex , ran so poorly tn
Oklahoma - wtth less than 12
per cent - that he canceled a
campaign appearance slated
for today m Missouri and
111Stead retlred to his home
state of Tex.as to "reevaluate ' hts campa ign
While m New Hampshire,
President Ford was so
buoyed by hts two-day
campaign swmg that he
planned another foray to the
state and predicted he will
wm Its GOP prunary
In Oklahoma , more than a
third of the de legates were

uncommttled
to
any
ca ndidate after a count of
about 70 per cent of the
precmcts, accordmg to
unofhc tal result s Boren
sought an uncommitted
delegatiOn to the natiOnal
conventiOn
The latest figures showed
HarriS and Carter With JUSt
under 20 per cent, followed by
Bentsen and Alabama Gov
George Wallace wtth Just less
than 12 per cent Wallace had
kept hiS efforts m lhe state to
a muumum but Bentsen had
pmned much of hts hopes to a
strong showmg
After hts swmg through
New Hampshire, Ford satd "J
Uunk we're gomg to wm" and
mdtcated he may make
another trip lhere before the
Feb 24 prunary But he ruled
out a debate With hts
opponent, Ronald Reagan
Aides satd Ford was happy
about the large crowds and
was pleased w1th hiS dialogue

Rocky's machine
oiled and ready
WASHINGTON (UP!) As It has been smce 1958, the
machinery IS mled and ready
to go for Nelson Rockefeller's
prestdentlal camprugn It has
never been dismantled smce
Rockefeller was ftrst elected
governor of New York
The machinery restdes m
three places

' Room 5600,"

Rockefeller Center - the
euphe1n1sm for lhe two floors
that house Rockefeller
Farmly and Associates, m a
Albany
brownstone m
housmg the Republican State
Committee, and m a law
office m Bmghamton, N Y
Mannmg the machmery
are an ex-college professor,
Dr Wilham Ronan, who
spends the off season as the
$100,000 a year or more semor
adviser to the Rockefeller
family , Richard Rosenbaum,
an ex-state supreme court
JUdge who Is state GOP
chairman. and Georl:!e
Hmman , a Bmghamton
lawyer and the state Repubh·

can National comrmtteeman
No , Rockefeller IS not
runmng for president, yet
But tt was Ronan who
advised hun to drop out of the
VIce pres1dcnllal race JUSt m
case And It Is Rosenbaum
who
Is
holdmg
the
uncommitted New York
delegation m readiness for

the convention And 1t IS
Hmman who travels the
country at Rockefeller 's stde
wtth the black book hstmg
every Republican - and a lot
of Democrats - who count
At 69 Nelson Rockefeller IS
ready for hts last hurrah
The Dtslrtcl of Columbta,
which JUSt got home rule last
year , IS struggling to get Its
act together as far as
el~tions are concerned
Last week's ballotmg for
Advtsory Neighborhood Com·
mtsstons brought these
developments
- Two ballot boxes fell off

trucks taking them to a hotel
to be counted One was ptcked
up near the National Zoo by a
cab drtver and taken to a
police station 'The second,

wrapped m a plashc trash
bag to protect 11 from ram,
was found by a former CIA
courier who after a dela)
turned m when he dtscovered
It wasn 't garbage
- Shelley Lynne Tonnkm
won a seat because she cared
enough to vote She was
elected 1-0 bo;cause nobody
else showed up durmg the II
hours the polling place was

open
- Two candidates for one
seat m Ward 8 lost the
opporturuty for easy victory
when they didn 't care enough
to vote Neither dtd anyone
else m the ward
W1U10ut a VIetnam \\ ar,
candidates m the Feb 24 New
Hampshtre pnmary are
haymg a hard tune fmding an
Issue that will 1gmte their
campaign
What they are lmdmg are
three ISsues they wiSh would
go away - school busmg,
abortion and gun control •
At every stop one or more
of these tssues ts bemg ratsed
by New Hampshire voters
The same 1s happenmg
~cross
the border m
Massachusetts, which votes a
week later
''There

IS

no way you can

wm on ISsues like that," satd
Rep Moms Udall, D·Artz , a
DemocratiC candidate "No
matter where you stand, you
lose some of lhe voters on
every one "
Last week President Ford
was meetmg at the White
House with big ctty mayors
when Charles Wheeler of
Kansas City shook hts hand
and said, " Mr President,
we're looking forward to
seemg you thts summer "

DR. LAMB

wtth hostile demonstrators at
Durham Sunday
" A crJ mony
and
antagomsm left over from

another day only undermmes
lhe future ," he told them
In other developments
- Sen Birch Bayh, 0-Ind ,
campaigned m upstate New
York State Sunday and called
for a uhalt to economic and
energy pollctes lhat place an
u n fa 1 r burden on the
Northeast " He backed a
federal takeover of welfare
costs and called poverty "a
natwnal problem that
reqwres a nat tonal solution "
- Reagan won a pair of
prestdenttal straw polls over
Ford m Flortda, toppmg the
President by an almost 3-to-1
margm rn votes taken b) the
traditionally conservative
Flonda Jaycees and the
Florida Conservatives Umon
- In Kansas City, Mo ,
Republican offtcials told the
c1 ty they wtll move the 1976
convention if hotels do not
proVIde lhe nearly 16,000
rooms promised last fall
They satd several hotels
committed all of thetr rooms
to the conventLon but now are
savmg some for other
customers
Pennsylvama Gov
Milton Shapp, m a whirlwmd
weekend tour of Flortda, said
Sunday
the
Ford
admtmstratlOn was tsswng
'cruel and mtsleadmg "
unemployment statistics to
boost the PreSident's can·
didacy
. :·:. . :

QUEENS NAMED - Queens of tbe Mtss Majorette of
Ohto Valley Pageant 1-r, are Mtchelle Sylvester, Canton,
~years, Cindy McAvee, Fort Recovery 7-10, Sandra
Dee Thomas, SteubenVIlle, 11-14, and Robm Elmore, West
Chester, lf&gt;.20 The queens received banners, crowns and
trophies

professiOn has never

con

cerned Itself wtth cholesterol,
taking for gran ted the local
dtet that has kept the natwns
gmng for thousands of years
They dte from mfec huns,
chtldbtrth , btles and cun
sumptwn, but not !rum heart
d1'fase
v

In the btg ctttes statisllcs
are different I m talkmg
aboul Eastern Ew ope and

not Western Europe whtch
has ptcked up Amencan life
styles
I am sendmg your some
chppmgs !hal show that hard
ph ys ical \\ ork works off
choles terol I have never seen
any of your colunms where
you discussed the relatiOn be

tween
exerctse
and
chole sterol and you only
mentwn dtets II you would
tell people that they could use
people would
feel free to eat their ethmc
exe1 c1se many

exerc1se and
avmd stress to prevent 'a
btuldup m cholesterol
DEAR READER - You
cerlamly have nussed a lot uf
my columns Askmg me to
stand up for exercise IS about
like askmg Barry Goldwater
to say somethmg good for
foods and use

conservatives One uf
public services Is, an~
been for many years
turm~ at climes f01
Pre.s1dcnr s

Phystcal

Cuu11~1 l

!i tln css

m}
has
lee·

the
on

and Sp"' Is

ELEVEN THROUGH FOURTEEN - In the II through 14 years age category, 1 tor,
Tammy Eichinger, Pomeroy, third runnerup , Susan Schimpf, Newark, ftrst runnerup ,
Sandra Dee Thompson, SteubenVIlle, champwn, Jennifer Gilbert, Trenton, Ohio, sec&lt;~nd
runnerup, Peggy Thorne, Clarksburg, W Va , fourth runnerup

Twirlers of four states
competed in Middleport
abbreviated costumes, or more tatlored mtlttary costwnes used m competition mto ''dressup " gowns to recetve thetr awards at the close of the long day
Sunday's event, sanctioned by the National Batpn Twtrlers' AssocJatlon, was sponsored
by the Glo·Ettes of Metgs and Galba Counties was under the direction of Mrs Glorta Buck
Wallace, Galbpohs, Glo-Ette mstructor Top girls m the several age groups are p1ctured
wtth t~etr trophtes I Pictures by Bob Hoeflich )

White House in losing battle with the birds
Hou se grounds bangmg two pie pan hke tambourmes

' Look "hat happens, ' he said
Haney clanged the pans under a tree outside the
wmdows of the East Room A cloud of starlings sprang ··
from the tree, swooped over to a tree 1n the Kermedy Rose
Garden and sa t down agam 'Fat lot of good that did ,"
said Haney
Haney puts more faith m a tape recordmg of what the
maker calls "a btrd m dtstress " Haney satd, ' It sounds
bke a btrd bemg hanged "
··
He played tl on the outdoor loudspeaker system used to ~
summon bmousmes to the South Portico drtveway alter a
state dinner Through the Whtte How;e grounds a ·~
s hrieking b1rd \HIS

hee~rd

"
FIFTEEN THROUGH TWENTY - Best twirlers lll
the 15 through 20 age group, 1 to r, are Anne GIVen,
Monroe, first runnerup , Robm Elmore, West Chester,
champiOn , Juamta English, ZanesVIlle, second runnerup ,
Usa Bradshaw, West Portsmouth, third runnerup

••

O\'er the speakers

Told by a vtsttor that he could not nottce much dtffer- .:
must have faith ," he srud
~
Upstairs 10 her East Wmg office Shetla Wetdenfeld the
Ftrst Lady's press secretary, peered through a wmdow as '•
darkness fell
"Oh, God, she smd It s 5 25 p m Het e they come "
Squadrons of birds began perchmg on branches outside

"

the "mdow

for

teachers

of

health

educa twn an the nah an's
schools
You can't separ&lt;:~te exe r~
ctse and dJet The body ts
merel}' an energy converter
The food puts energy m and
we use 1l to run our body at
rest or for physJcal achv1ty

If you lake m more energy
than your body use::; there 1s

an mcrease m hody fat and
w1th 1t 111 many people an
mcrease m blood cholesterol
levels and even mcreased
blood pressure I hate to lhmk
h O\\ mitny tunes I have told
people that wetght con trol
mvolves lht s baste prmctple

'''"''''''' ' ' ;:::::::::::::::::::::

"

Sunday mght placed the
dealh toll at 15,043, wtth
37,000 InJUred smce the mtbal
quake rumbled through
Guatemala and other parts of
Central Amertca Wednesday
The committee satd at least
220,000 Guatemalans lost
thetr homes m the quakes,
but reports had not amved
from many small towns left
Isolated by landslides and
conunumcatlons failures
Sunday's tremors began at
3 20 a m EST , heavtly
damaging
th e
Neuropsychiatric Hos{lltal m
the capital and se ndmg
patients runnmg m paruc
Patients from three other
hospitals were sent to a
trealment center at the trade
1esull of food available and fairgrounds
Sporadic lootmg prompted
energy eKpended makes a
lhm tndiVIdual ObviOusly several neighborhoods to
such a hie style Is not suited
to our modern hvmg habits so
we must pay a lot more at
The Daily Seminaltentwn to our dtet Jt takes an
DEVOTED TO THE
erwrmous amount of work to
INTEREST OF
compensate for a htgh fat
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER l TANNEHILL
htgh-cholesterol dtet
Exec Ed
The !mal answer for each
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1ty Edtlor
Individual really rests m hiS
Publtshed datly except
own sla te If the blood
Satu rday by The Ohio
Valley Publ l shtng Con •
cholesterol 1s lo\\, 1n the
pany
111
Court
St
ophmal 1ange, and stays
Pomeroy
O hio
45769
Business Off i ce Phon e 992
there and the blood pressure
2156 Edltortal Ph,one 991
1s low , fme If e1 tiler arc
2 151
Se c ond class postag e
elevated then d1et, exercise
patd i!lt Pomerot Ohto
and some limes medacme are
Nat i onal
adverttstng
representative
Ward
all unportanl tu achieve the
Griffith ComiJany Inc
opltonal results
Bolttnell1 &amp; Galla2her C/v
757 Th trd Ave New York
For an formahun un daelar)
N Y 10017
S ub sc rtpl tOn
rates
prtnctples to prevent htgh
Deh\lere&lt;:l by carrier where
c.: holeslrrol send 50 cents for
ava1lable 75 ce nrs •per
week
By Motor Rou te
Tl1 c Hea lth Letter number 13
where earner servtce no t
D1el
prev e nltr1g
available
One montl'l
~3 25 By mail '" Ohio and
Atherosclerosts Send a long
W Va 1 One Year 52 ~ 00
stamped
sell-addressed
Su: months lll SO Three
months S7 00 Elsewhere
envelope for mathng Ad·
526 00 year
Stx months
dress y(1ur leiter to me m
S IJ 50 thre e months S7 so
Subscnptron pr tte Includes
care of tlus new spaper, P 0
'ivnday T •mes sen line I
Box 1551 Radi&lt; lily Slatwn

If you don ! cxt!rc ase much

.

organtze
v1g1lante
committees
Roman Ca thohc pnests
celebrated open air masses
outside thetr wre cked
churches, repeating Cardinal
Marlo Casartego's words that
the quakes were 'the wtll of
lhe all.powerful one " and
urgmg Guatemalans to
repent their sms
Some diStricts m the
cap1tal reported outbreaks of
diarrhea People lined up at
outdoor mftrmartes to get
Inoculations
agatnst
dtphthena, tetanus and
typhoid
Outstde
the capital,
bulldozers and tractors
worked to remove tons of
earth that fell across the PanAmencan Highway
m
landslides following the
Wednesday quake an&lt;! tbe
ftrst powerful aftershock
Fnday
At Chimaltenango, 40 nules
from the capital, offiCJals
satd they had been unable to
reach seven or eight hillside
hamlets Chimaltenango,
With 5,110 dead, was believed
to be the hardest hit
muniCipality m lhe country

NOW YOU KNOW
As many as 1,652languages
and dialects are spoken
among India 's 600 mtlhon
populatiOn

CLUB TO MEET
The Middleport Amateur
c.ardeners Club\\ Ill meet at 8
p m Wednesday at the home
of Mrs Ferman Moore,
Uncoln Htll Road, Pomeroy
A btcentenmal program w1ll
be ,presented and handmade
Valenhnes wtll be exchanged

...
'"
""

'"
QUITE ACCUSTOMED TO WINNING - Wlnnmg a
trophy ts not such a great spectal event lhese days for
Tammy Etchmger. daughter of Mr and Mrs Paul
Etchmger, Pomeroy, who has won hundreds durtng her 11
years, many oJ them m baton CQmpetition However,
Sunday mght Tammy won this huge trophy, taller lhan
she, as htgh pomt contestant In the Mtss Majorette of Ohio
Valley Pageant m Middleport 0!1 the left IS Mrs Glorla
Buck Walla~..,, contest dtrector

"

..

Ualted Preoslnternadooal
The New York Kmcks had
to look back a long way to fmd
the last time they had beaten
lhe Boeton Celtics Their 97-89
victory Sunday, they hope,
will give them the needed
confidence to avOid such a
long lapse again
Earl Monroe, playmg wtth
an inflamed right mstep,
scored 32 points as lhe Knlcks
snapped a five-game losing
streak and tbe Celdcs' sevengame win skein The last time
New York beat Bostlln was 12
games ago, a 96-88 triumph
Nov 29, 1974
"I didn't know how many
times 1n a row we had loot to
Boston but I was thinkmg on
the bus on tbe way over here
that It had been a long, long
time," said Monroe "It was

Malpractice plan goes

High school cage scores
Un•led Press lnltrnaf•onal

Akron N 59 Akron St Vm cent
St Mary 56
Ashland
Mapleton
70
Plymouth 66
Ash tabula Harbor 48 Con

to California voters
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) The Cahforma Medical
Association has dectded to let
lhe voters dectde whether Its
radical plan to end the state's
malpractice msurance crtsts
should be made a part of the
state constitution
The doctors want to place
an tmtlahve, contamlng
detatls of lhe plan, on the
November ballot They need
499,846 Signatures by mid·
June to qualify the measUI'e
If adopted, tbe plan would be
written mto California's
constitution
The strategy was worked
out durin8 tbe weekend by tbe
executive council of the state
association, the nation's
second largest, at Its 105th
annual convention
Details may be changed
after debate between militant
and moderate physicians
expected this week But its
intent was to revolutionize
medical liability law
The main provisions were
J

an unporl8nt vtctory because
tt broke our lostng streak
And 11 was good for our
morale because lhe Celttcs
are a team we're gomg to
have to beat later on m the
season (to gam a playoff
berth) and now we know we
can beat them "
Bill Bradley scored alliS of
his points ln the second half,
rncludlng his first SIX In an
eight-point run to open tbe
thtrd pertod The streak
opened New York's lead from
ooe to nme
John Gianelli scored a
season-high 20 points mcludlng 16 in the first half
Jo Jo White led Boeton w1th 28
and Dave Cowens added 16.
"We didn't play defense,
we didn't hustle, we dtdn't
run, we threw the ball away

'"

- To aholish trial by jury of '
malpractice claims Cases ..
would be arbitrated by "a ,'
qualified expert or panels of
e1perts" to be set up by the
legislature - The amount of
noneconoliUc damages for
physical Impairment, disfigurement,
pam
and ..
suffering would be llmited to
$100,000
~
- DeciSions could be re- •
VIewed by appellate courts :
ooly "as to questions of law." ~
- Lawyers' fees, which '
now range up to 50 per cent In ~
difficult cases, would be on a
sliding scale providing attor- _
neya with 10 per cent of any '
amount between fSO,OOO and ~
the UOO,OOO limit
,_
Some doctors have have :~
seen their malpractice Insurance premiWllS triple "'
this year
They have .' ~
dramatized tbelr case with , :
work stoppages In both v ~
northern and southern "
California
~

...,
;

-'

nuut 47
A\lon 56 Ftr elancts 41
Barberlon 66 Canton Lincoln
64
Beachwood 45 Fai rport 44
Bellefonflllne 75 Stdney 67

Berne Union 71 Tr i mble 60
Bloom Carroll 61 Amanct(!l
C learcreek
Botkms 80 R i ver si de 72
Brooklyn 61 Falr\lleW 53

ss

Cambridge 61 Dover 50

Canal

Winchester

Millersport 51
Canton

Cent

Cath

95
88

Mltrllnglon 73
Canton
71 (of)
Canton
4S
Canton
Canton

Lehman 77 Ma ss •l lon
McKmtev 79 Akron

s

'6

S 51 Glen Oak 43
T•mken
Wooster 57
Cle E Tech. 73 Cle John
Adams u
Cle Kennedy 44 UniiJ Sc hool
43 lot l
Cle Sl IgnatiUS 81 Lakewood

.

ss

cor

Col DtSalts 60

Cot Mohawk

Sl

17

Academy

Weslcr~Jtl lc

N

Col Wehrle 42 Mansfield 5 1
Peters 49
Columb•a 73 Highland 66
Columbus Grove 79 Miller

Clly 60
Connonon Valley 65 Mal ve rn

60

Coshocton 87 Tuscaraw~s
Valley 58
Danville 16 New Albany 75
Eastern P ike 61 Portsmouth

E SJ
Falrfler!
Union 60

Un10n

91

lll..t '" I IV

Federal Hoc kmg 94 Miller 70
Geneva 55 Madtson S2
Groveport 80 Col W es tlanel SJ
H1 c: ksvdle 72 Montpelier 68
(OI )

~

tnd •an Valley N 90 Carrollton
Edwards AO
Jefferson
Unton
12
Steubenville Cent Cath 42
Kenston 61 G i lmour Academy
St

48

Keystone 70 Buckeye 64
Kirtland
75
M id dlefield
Card.nat 47
Liberty Benton 65 Pandora
Gilboa 64
Licking Volley 62 Newark
Calh 60
L lns !ey IW Va 1 96 Buckeye
N 60
Ldgan Elm 65 P• ckenngton 57
Loudomdlle 63 Hill sdale 60
Lutheran I; 76 NewbUry 62
Lutheran W 63 s Amherst 51
Mansfield Malabar 75 New
Philadelphia 58
McMechen CW Va l Donohu e
67 Skyvue 57
Middletown 85 Portsmouth 56
N Canton Hoover 52 Jackson

49

Ottawa Glandorf 78 L•ma
cent Cath 77
Pa.nesvdte Har vey 70 Brusl'1
6S
Perry 66 Fa•rless 52
He i QhiS
68
Berkshire 52
Rtdgewood SA lakeland AB
Stro ng~vlll e 63 Brun sw iCk 47
T o ledo 51 F ranc•s 76 L1m a
Sr 75 (Of)
R IChm Ond

wapakoneta 66 Coldwater 61

warren Local 99 Ft Frye 75
Warr:enS;vllle 57 Cle Holy
Nam e 48
Wick liffe 71 Eucl•d 67
Willoughby s 63 Orange 58
Zanesville
Rosecrans 59
Guernse~ Cath ~0

and we didn't use any smart
play- ! doo t think I saw any
savmg grace ln the game,"
said Boston Coach Tom
Hemsohn "The only thing
that showed up today were
the umforms. ''
Elsewhere m tbe National
Basketball Association,
Pluladelphia edged Buffalo
ltJ0.97, Los Angeles downed
Atlanta 97-89, Cleveland beat
Washington 83-78, Chicago
edged New Orleans !IS-92,
Detroit mpped Kansas Ctty
94-93, Golden State defeated
Portland 109-105 and PhoeniX
took Seattle 107·101.
In the ABA, Denver edged
Kentucky 116-114, New York
topped Indiana 11(1.104 and
San
Antonio
defeated
Vtrgmia 112·105
Warriors 109, Blazers 105
Ketth Wtlkes and Phtl
Smith had 24 pomts aptece as
Golden State, tratling by 17 at
tbe start of the last period,
held Portland to just slll
pomts In the final five
rmnutes and rallied to wm
71ers 100, Braves 97
George McGmms' 38 pomts
led Philadelphia, with hiS last
two free throws putting the
76ers ahead to stay with 39
seconds left Doug Collins
added two more free throws
for the final margin as tbe
Sixers scored tbe !sst eight
p01nts whtle shutting out
Buffalo for the final 4 15
Laken 97, Hawks 89
Gat! Goodrich scored four
of his game-lttgh 24 points to
stave off Atlanta's late surge
after Los Angeles had opened
up a IG.point lead Kareem
Abdu!llabbar added 22 for the
Lakers and Lou Hudson
topped the Hawks with 22

Sport Parade

Malone beats Rio, 92-84

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
In OC dl VIsional a chon,
Ohio Northern beat Baldwin·
Wallace 70.66, Kenyon
downed Heidelberg 60-51 and
Mount Umon beat Oberlin 9280 m the Northern DiviSion,
while Muskingum dumped
Capital 58-$1, Wittenberg
beat Ohto Wesleyan '/3.59 and
Demson edged Martella 53-61
rn the Soulhern Dtvlsion.
In other games Saturday
mght, Kentucky State beat
Central
State
92-71,
NebraskaOmaha downed
Youngstown State 68-55,
Ashland buned Adrtan
(Mich.) 91·66, St LOUIS
tripped Xavter ~I , Chattanooga edged Dayton ~.
Defwnce beat Findlay 91-87,
Wilmington defeated Bluffton
71-68, Wilberforce took
Cedarville 79-75, Malone beat
Rio Grande 92414, Carnegie·
Mellon ( Pa ) outscored John
Carroll 102-80, Urbana
crushed Ohto Dom101can 10280 and Tiffin rolled over

hole and a five looter on the second Btrdtes at ftve and etght
enabled him to make lhe turn at Indian Wells, a tight htUe
desert layout, m 32 And when he birdied the lOth wllh a 3~
footer, that put John m front
He never looked back, ptckmg up btrdies as well on the 12th,
14th, 16th and 18th holes to wm 1tgomg away
Rik Massengale and BriBn Allln gave Miller a run for hts
money But once Johnny turned It oo commg back, they never
had a chance As it was, both shot 67 wtth Massengale finishing
closest to Mtller with 347• and wmmng hts biggest check' on
Tour420,52Q....and Allm another shot back and wuuung
$12,780
Miller, who says whatever IS on hts mmd, first suggested he
won the Hope because "a mce htUe old lady told me she had a
dream I won tbe tournament," and later said he knew he was
gmng to Win because he ''felt super and I knew I could beat
these guys "
Then, 1t was time to talk about Ntck!aus, whom Mtller uses
as a yardstick to measure his own accompUshrnents
"Nicklaus IS lhe best and I'm never gomg to catch him rn the
majors (Jack has won 16 major titles)," said Miller, "but I
could catch h1111 oo total wms (Jack has 58) so he can't rest on
his laurels
" I'm not afraid of Jack Nicklaus I'll play him any tune but
he has accomplished more than I have, and I don't think I'm
g01ng to catch him Actually, I'm flattered when people
compare me to hun, but I don't hold hun in awe ''

Knicks get past Celtics

car polka-dotted, '' she sa1d

churchmen to call on their
parishiOners to repent
Aftershocks rtppled
through the ctty late m the
day Ctltzens refused to enter
thetr damaged homes,
prefernng to camp out m
makeshift tents despite gusty
wtnds, a temperature drop to
the low 50s and the city's first
ramstorrn smce tlle tremors
began
The olflctal National
Emergency Committee

you ~an t eat much \\tthoul
ge! Hng fat &lt;:md havmg these
comph&lt;.: ataons
There are num ero us
&lt;Kamples 111 the world of
people "hu do eat iugh f"l
IHgh llwlestet ul diets and
have no hear! and vascular
problems Part of 1t IS
heredtlary bul "nother part IS
the high level of actimty The
Mas1 WHik or trot more than
211 lllll(•s d day1 ancl fhe nel No&gt;\\ \ '' k \ Y IIKIW
'

PALM SPRINGS, Calif (UP!) - Until someone more
animated comes along, Johnny Miller will have to do as the
most outspoken and fortllright player on lhe PGA tour
When Miller misses a shot- which 1811't often- he says, 'I
hacked it," or"! played 1t badly," or' It was as dumb a thing
as anyone could do "
But when he makes a good shot, espec18lly if he smks a long
putt, the good~ookmg blond Califorman says, "that was
ridiculous "
Ridiculous or not, Miller ll'lllde a strmg of nme birdies
Sunday m about as spectacular and powerful a closing round
as one could hope lor, for a nme under 63 and a tllree shot
victory in the $180,000 Bob Hope Desert Classic
The 63 gave Miller a !!Q.bole score o( 16-under.par 344, won a
prize of ~,000, boosted his 1976 eanungs to $84,370, hts career
earnings to $1,031,522 and accounted for hts 17th career
victory
Miller called It hts best tournament vtctory , and It well 1n1ght
have been He went Into the final round with a 72-ltole score of
seven urder 281 and hts putting stroke erra tic at best
"I knew I had a chance when after four medtocre rounds I
was only two shots back," said the 28-year-&lt;&gt;ld Mtller, who now
IS the mnth player m tbe $1 million club and the youngest "I
figured if I could drop a few putts, I would wm it I didn't
expect to make as many birdies as I dtd, but that wtll happen
once I get It started "
Miller got off wmging wtth a three foot btrdte putt on the first

She raced out under the sl8rhngs, hopped mto her
automobile and drove It out from under a tree full of btrds
"If I lea ' e the car thet e It will get coated agam " she said
"Past droppmgs have eaten awa} the pamt and left my

Guatemala death toll above 15,000
GUATEMALA
CITY,
Guatemala (UP! ) - Govern
ment offtctals say the death
toll has reached more than
15,000 10 this Central
Amertcan
republic,
hammered by three series of
earth tremors 10 ftve days of
devastatiOn
A new se t of shocks
battered the capital early
Sunday, swaymg buildings,
drtvmg pamcked-ctttzens mto
the streets and promptmg

..

enee - the birds were not charmed out of the trees , Hane y .
professed to behevc at least a few were scared off tOne ::

~:,:::;:;:;::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;,;:.;:::,:.;::::::::::::::::;-,:,:,:,:,:::::::~;:.,:, :::':,:,::::,:::.:::'

II

Bolden, hospitalized wtth an
Illness unbl Thursday, and
his presence was especially
nuased when hoth Wood and
Daugherty fouled out
Saturday's Mld·Amertcan
Conference action saw the
lhree contenders for the tiUe,
Western Mlchtgan, Miami
and Toledo, all post wms
Toledo pushed 1ts Mld·Am·
rect~rd to 7-2 wtth a ~
VIctory over Kent State.
The Rockets trailed 32-16 at
one time m tbe ftrst half alter
Kent hit 13 oltts first 16 shots
from the floor But, by
halfbme,
Toledo
had
narrowed tl to 3&amp;-32
Cincinnati, agam getting
double figure scormg from
ftve players, ptcked up Its
17th win m 20 games wtth 'lin
87-62
decision
over
Jacksonville
Mike Jones led lhe way for
the 19th ranked Beareats wtth
16 pomts and Br18n Williams
added 14
Otterbem, the Ohto Conference Southern DIVlSion
leader, won 1ts lOth In a row
wtth a 58-57 squeaker at
Wooster m a non-league
game.

birdies by Miller wins

...

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Durmg the day the White
House belongs to the people At mght It's for the birds
'I really don't lhmk there 's anythmg we can do about
the starlmgs," satd Dale Haney, chtef White House b1rd
chaser 'No, there's no way to beat them "
Ltke the Blitz bombers of World War II, the sta rlings
come at dusk and leave at dawn They are commuters
,. • Dunng the day they feed m the countryside around
Washmgton but come swarmmg m at sunset," sa1d
:.. Haney 0 1t's horrtble n
The starlings by the thousands settle mto the e\ er·
greens, thetr favontes bemg the twm gtant magnolia trees
·· on the White House south lawn They also turn the
Executive Manswn 's eaves and '-' mdow Jedges mto
feathe&lt;y tenements
' I thank It's the lights of the White House that attract
.•
them
' They make an awful lot of nmse They talk and talk
and talk ," srud Haney He satd former Prestdent RIChard
Ntxon used to complam the b1rd chatter kept h1m a\\ake
Worse than the nmse 1s the tb-oppmgs, according to
Haney 'The sticky whtte stuff smears the trees , blankets
the sidewalks gets up to an mch thick on the wmdow Sills
and It gets on cars and wtll eat through the pam t," he satd
0
The smelltsn't beautiful," Haney sa1d
Haney satd various remedies fatted They tned
spreadmg a substance of remarkable odor and stickmess
that was btlled as dtsgustmg to even the most boortsh and
unmoveable starling "No good at all, " satd Haney
The t4-year-&lt;&gt;ld btrd chaser took to roammg the White

But Terry Furlow, tbe Btg
Ten's
leadmg scorer,
scorched the nets with a long
Jumper wtth ooly a second
remaimng to de~tde the
contest
Furlow's wmnmg basket
came after Dan Reiwald's
corner jumper bounced off
the rtm . The Spartans,
however, got the rebound and
fed Furlow who cashed 11 m
"! really thought we had tt
woo when that first shot
didn't go m," said Taylor
"But they poured over tbe top
of US
Furlow, held to four pomts
m the first half by the sticky
defense of Mike Daugherty,
finished wtth a game high
26 •
Mike Clme, a sophomore
walkon from West Holmes
Htgh Schbol, came off the
bench midway !through the
first half to spark the
Buckeyes wtlh 23 points and
Mark Bayless added 19
Mike 's (Clme) a battier, no
doubt about that," said
Taylor " He just gets better
every t1me out "
The Buckeyes agam played
wtthout leadmg scorer Larry

Incredible string of 9

The action m Middleport Sunday was at the Metgs Jr Htgh School where baton
twtrlers from Ohio, West V~rgmta Penns)lvama and Kentucky spent over mne hours
competmg m the ftrst Mtss MaJorette of Oh10 Valley Pageant
Last mght twtrlers changed from their ong matly deSigned, spark ling and qrnte

Doctor stresses exercise need
Ry La"rence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - I
enJOY your column m the
paper but one thtng bothers
me and my European
fnends your emphasis on the
relationship be twee n
cholesterol and diet, totally
tgnonng the effect of
vigorous exercise upon
cholesterol
I was a medtcal student m
Poland I VISited other
Eastern European countnes
and against my Will lived m
several parts of the Sovtel
Umon These people eat an
extremely htgh saturated fa t
dtel, everythmg swtmmmg m
buller sour cream lard, salt
pork Yet these people have
few cases of heart attacks 1r1
the rural populatton
The
local
medical

Uolted Press International
After another ln a series of
bitter defeats Saturday mght,
Ohio state Coach Fred Taylor
Isn't worrying about anybody
else's problems
The veteran Buckeye
coach, who announced hts
resignation laat week, saw hiS
final Ohio State team go do to
Its 12th loss In 18 games
Saturday mght, dropping an
~ overtime decunon to
Mtchigan State
The
Buckeyes
host
Michigan tomght and the
Wolverines are conung off an
equally tough overtime loss
to toJ&gt;'fanked Mtchtgan
Taylor was asked if tbe
Wolvermes migh~ not have
much left after their near
rmss against the HOOSiers
"I don't really care," sa1d
the disappotnted Taylor
"I'm more concerned about
what we've got left."
The Buckeyes scored the
laat five pOints m regulation
play to send the game into
overtime at 72-all and led 8281 when reserve guard Terry
Sluelds dropped m a pair of
free tllrows with 21 seconds to
go

Today's

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

:I

Pro

!' Standin~s

:I
l

Amencan Basketball Assoc•a
t1on Stand1ngs
By Umted Press lnternallonal
W l Pet
GB
Denver
37 12 755
New York
32 18 6AO 51 •
San Anton•o
'29 '20 592 8
Kentucky
29 23 558 91 ,
lnd •ana
28 25 52 8 10 ~
S! LOUIS
21 31 404 171 ~
V~rg n1a
8 42 160 29 I 2 ,
~~- _ Sunday s Results
New York 110 lnd1ana 104
San An tonto 11 2 Vlrgm 1a 105
Den ve r 116 Ke ntu c k~ 11 4
Monday s Games
Denver at New York
Sl LOUIS at Vtrgm1a
Tue$dtly's Game
51 LOUIS at lnd 18na

Indtana-Purdue (Ft Wayne ) Kentucky, Wheelmg at Ohio
114-78.
Domtmcan, Pmnt Pa•k (Pa )
Bestdes Mtchigan at Ohio at Steubenville and Rto
State, tomght 's schedule Grande at Walsh
fmds Dayton at Western

American pair

has small hope
of gold medal
INNSBRUCK (UP!) When you survtve a tornado
whtch ktlls hve of your
friends You have to be
lucky But Colleen O'Connor
and partner Jun Mtllns of
Colorado Sprmgs will need
more than luck today 1! they
are to wm the Olympic tee
dancmg gold medal
Ftgure skatmg JUdges,
drawn mainly from the East
bloc countries, traditionally
favor champions Tius was
dtsplayed ail too plamly
Saturday when Russia's Irma
Rodnma and Aleksandr
Zattsev were marked high,
desptte
a
mediocre
performance, en route to the
gold medal m the pairs event
O'Connor and Mtllns were
lhird after the compulsory
program to Ludmila Pak·
homova and Aleksandr
Gorshkov, the hve-hme
world champiOns from
Russta, and another Russtan
pair, retgnrng world hUe
holders Irma Motseeva and
Andrey Mmenkov
"I would not be realistiC to
expect us to wm lhe gold
medal, but we hope to attract
the
JUdges'
attentwn
sufficiently so we can score
high enough to split the
Russians, " satd O'Connor
Colleen IS enJoymg her ftrst
Olympics, desptte the stiff
competition
and
the
queshonable JUdgmg Life IS
to be hved and even
Innsbruck, a sleepy town m
lhe foothills of the Alps, can
be an exctting place for a gtrl
from suburban Chicago
Back m 1967, Colleen, then
16, was lucky to surVIve a
tornado which struck when
she was practlcmg for a
roller skating competition
She was hospitalized for three
weeks and left with 32
stitches In her head, tbe
result of bemg bur ted for over
45-mrnutes under a pile of
rubble.
The only other !mal on a
Ught day of competillon was
the Nor die Comb10ed m

Vermeil signed to coach Eagles

PHILADELPffiA (UP!) The Phtladelph18 Eagles' exhaustive and sometimes
embarrassmg search for a
new head coach ended lhts
National Basketball Assoctatlon weekend when Dtck Vermeil
Slandmgs
did what Joe Paterno and
B~ Un•ted Preu International
Eastern Conference
Frank Kush wouldn't do
Allant1c DivisiOn
Vermeil, who coached
W L Pet
GB
Boston
35 14 714 UCLA to an upset win over
Buffalo
31 21 596 51 •
Ohto State m the Rose Bowl
Philadelphia
30 '2 1 SBB 6
last New Year's day, Signed a
New York
25 28 4n 12
Central DIVI$10n
five-year contract to coach
W L Pet
GB
the Eagles, replacmg Mike
Washington
29 22 569
Cleveland
29 22 569
McCormack, who was fired
Houst on
24 24 500 31~
at !he erd of last season.
New Orleans 24 25 490 4
Eagle Owner Leonard Tose
Atlanta
2A ~a 462 s• ~
') Western Conference
would
not &lt;llsclose terms of
Midwest DIVISIOn
W L Pet
GB the contract but called It "a
Milwaukee
21 30 412
fatr
and
generous
Detro11
20 29 408
Kansas C1ty
19 33 365 21 , agreement."
Ch 1c ago
16 35 314 S
The Eagles' announcement
Ptlcthc Otvts•on
Sunday
came as a surprise
W L Pet
GB
because Vermeil's name was
Golden Slat e 37 14 125 Los Angeles
26 27 491 12
not among lhose who had
Por tland
23 28 45 1 lA
been mentioned as leading
Se altle
23 29 442 141
Phoen•x
21 27 43il • 14' 1 candidates. And tbe Eagles'
_ _ ...Saturda~'s Resulls
willingness to make lucrative
Boston 106 New York 98
WaSI'1•ngton 103 Atlanta 90
offers had fatled to lure
1

Houston 89 Ch1 ca go 87
Mtlwaukee 114 Detroit 106
Golden Slate 127 Seattle 100
Sunday s Reiulh
New York 97 Boston 89
Philadelphia 100 Buffalo 97
los Angeles 97 Atlanta 89
ChiCago 96 New Orleans 92
Detrofl 94 Kansas C1ty 93
Cleveland 83 Wash ington 78
Golden State 109 Portland 105
Phoennc 107 Seattle 101
Mondays Game
Kansas C1ly at Houston
Tuesday's. Games
Kansas City at Atlanta
Wash,ngton at Buffalo
Philadelphia ar Ct11cago
New York 11 M1lwaukee
New Orleans 11 Golden Slate
Detroit at Los Angeles

~-

OFFICE
9:30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.l-EAST COURT

,,

whtch East Germany's
Ulrich Wehling was favored
to repeat as champiOn He
scored 225 5 pomts on the 7~
meter hill Sunday to outdts·
lance the opposition A If&gt;.
kilometer cross country race
completes the event
James G~lanes of Bratt.
leboro, Vt , was the best
placed American m the held
of 34 m 25th spot with 184 I
pomts Teammates Walter
Malmqmst of Post Mtlls, Vt ,
was one place back, while
Mtke Devecka of Bend, Ore ,
was 32nd
Elsewhere m the program,
the men 's ftrst heat of the
gtant slalom was scheduled
along with the compulsory
program 10 women 's figure
skatmg m whtch Dororthy
Hamtll of of RiverSide, Conn ,
faced a stiff challenge m
world champion Dianne de
Leeuw, a nahve Califorruan
representing Holland
Sunday's heche action produced an upset victor m the
women's downhill and a
bronze medal for C10dy
Nelson of Lutsen, Mmn
Cmdy, rn a comparallve
slump durmg the World Cop
season preceedmg the Olympics, htt back wtth a great
run, but 1t was not qmte good
enough to stop RoSI
Mtttermater
of
West
Germany and Bngttte
Totschmg of Aijstrta from
fmtshmg ahead of her
M1tterma1er, the current
World Cup leader, won her
ftrst ever downhill m over
etght years of compettttve
skimg wtth a tune of 1 46 16
after 11 looked as tf pre-race
favortte Bngttte Totschrug of
Austria would wm
Nelson, 20, clocked I 47 50
She satd later, "I wanted to
wm a medal or medals Thts
IS lhe ftrst I am happy, but,
of course, I would have been a
lot more sattsfted With a gold
"! realize I have to ski a lot
better than I did today to get
one"

NEW YORK (UP!) - This fellow IS a btg league pttcber, he
has been around awhile, and If he had to be perfectly honest,
he'd tell you 1975 wasn't exactly a vantage year for hun.
If he was leveling wtth you completely, he'd have to go a
htUe further and confess he has been up SIX years now and
never has had the kind of year he'll be able to boast about to hiS
grandchildren Closest he ever came to that was his ftrst
season up when he fimshed barely a shade this side of 500
Last summer, he fatled to wm as many as a dozen games He
lost a half dozen more than he won and his earned run average
was closer to f1 ve runs a game than tl was tn four, so be wasn't
lhe least bit shocked upon nohcmg he dtdn't get any votes at all
for the Cy Young Award
He did a slow burn, though, when he recetved hiS 1978
contract not tong ago and saw where the figures wrttten m It
were the same as last season He sat r1ght down and fired off a
bhstermg letter to lhe ball club threatening-get this- to play
out his option unless he received an $11,000 raiSe He probably
breaks 1t down to $10,000 for that exciting performance of his
last summer plus an extra $1,000 for betng ready to do It all
over agam m this, a Btcentenrual year
There IS no mtentton here of embarrassing the pitcher by
tdentifymg him, but this IS to let hun know that his "tllreat" of
piaymg out hiS option ehctted from management the hope be
would not forget his promtse at the end of tbe cormng season
The maJority of maJor league owners feel they have gone as
far as they can go msofar as agreeing to the players' salary
demands Dl,U'mg that period when they had tile benefit of the
reserve clause and wanted so much to retam tt, the owners
understandably were willing to make concessions to the
players, hopmg to mamtam the status quo and retam thetr
untque advantage
Now that It's gone,the owners feel they have nothmg more to
lose
For once they're united m common purpose There IS no
'gentlemen's agreement" among them that I can see- there
does 't have to be when they feel they're fightmg for their very
existence- yet 11 IS significant that free agent Andy
Messersrmth, playmg golf m Califorma, has not been approached by a smgle club bent upon stgnmg h1111 What happens if no one does' What do you think happens' He goes back
wtlh the same club he was so mtent upon wmnlng his freedom
frol'(l- the Los Angeles Dodgers
Tradihooally, sprmg trammg offtC18lly opens March 1 It
may get underway late thiS year and then again It could start
on tune through some sudden compromise because the laat
lhmg either •stde wants Is a strike Both stdes know how
resentful lhe public would be
So eager are the owners and players to reach SOIOe kind of
written agreement - they've been operatmg without one for
more lhan a month now-a meeting between them was held
Sunday mght hopmg to put together some ktnd of working
formula before today's special meeting of the maJOr league
owners alone.
Lately, I've been gtvmg lhe player-owner problem a good
deal of thought, and berng umlaterally m favor of making
everybody happy, I couldn't help but think it might not be a
bad tdea at all to provide every ballplayer wtth what he wants
most- hiS free agency Declare them all free agents You know
what \\Ould happen lhen' Alot of of the same players who were
so unhappy about bemg tied down before now would suddenly
become unhappy about bemg free. Too free. Many of lhem I
suspect would wind up stgrung for constderably less than
they ve been gettmg and a number ~n~ght not even get JObs at
all Supply and demand, you know
In all thts tug-&lt;&gt;f-war between the owners and players m
every sport, mall thiS resortmg to arbitrators and the courts, I
think there's a general tendency to overlook the most
unportant mdtVIdual of all- you, the fan
' There's no question that IneVItably the fmal arbitrator m
conflicts of this sort ts the fan ," offers Bob WooU, the
exceptiOnally capable sports' attorney
"When he can't afford to go to lhe games anymore because
ticket prices have been raJSed too hi2h when he stQDs
watch~ tv because his interest has been turned off by all this
Uttgatton , then you're not gomg to have a viable sports
mdustry The whole sports' mdustry, owners and players
alike, had better start paymg more attention to the fans'
mterest "
I'd have to say negotiators had better start, too You can
negoha te to the pomt of gettmg everylhmg setUed perfecUy
and then dtscover everybody left some tune ago because
nohody cared anymore how the whole thing came out

Paterno, head coach at Penn
State, and Kush, AriZona
State coach, away from
campus life
'It would appear that the
Phtladelphta Eagles has
made Dick Vermeil an offer
he can't refuse,' UCLA
Atlilehc Director J D
Morgan srud
' I would not have thought
of applymg for the JOb,' '
Vermeil satd from hts
Woodland Hills, Calif home
"UCLA IS one of the fmest
schools 10 the country, both m
sports and academtcally "
But Vermetl satd Tose was
conv10cmg "I'm thnlled
wtth
recetvmg
the
opporturuty of workmg for
Leonard Tose, who appears
to be smcere m gettmg a
wanner m Phtladelphla "
" We got the man we
wanted," Tose satd He called

FOR EARLY PLANTING

Vermeil, 39, "a brtlliant
young coach "
" At no time was any one
other than Dtck Vermeil
offered the JOb as Eagles'
head coach," Tose sa1d
General Manager Jtm
Murray admitted that Kush
and Paterno had said they
were not mterested m the job
but Murray said their
rejections came before any
actual offers were made
Before becommg head coach
at UCLA, Vermetl had been
an assiStant under Knox He
had been hired by former
Knox' predecessor, Tommy
Prothro, under
whom
Vermeil had worked at
UCLA When Prothro got tbe
Rams' JOb In 1971, he hired
Vermeil as quarterback
coach

(/)

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DR A J STAEHLI

~ar rnsurance

coverage?

Your present policy may
contain dangeroul gap.
overlaps or loo•• •ndl
lat your NatiOnwide Agent
help review your eover~ge

ca11

P. J. PAULEY
104 W Ma1n
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Pomeroy
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"'"looowlltii!Mull ''*"'.,1:8 ~r
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ONION SETS
~··v

How

}'o u'lf \inu[,

�•

•

4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , ~'eb. 9,1976

T w 0 Americans Iead
•

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AXAMER UZUM , Austria
(UPl) - The glamor event
over, the first big hattie or the
Alpine Olympics opened
IDday, the giant slalom, with
two Americans slarting in the
top group.
Ingemar Stenrnark, a 19year~ld Swede, Is rated a
slight favorite againat the two
Italians, Gustavo Thoem and
Piero Gros. Although they
have won five World Cup
titles between them, it 's
S!enmark who is the hot
slalomlst right now.
The top U.S. contenders
were Greg Jooes, 21, of Tahoe
City, Calif., and Philip
Mahre, 18, of White Pass,
Wash . Mahre's twin brother,
Steve, and Cary Adgate, 22, of
Boyne City, Mich., are
competing in the second
group. Their counterpart in
the women's downhill,
Minnesota 's Cindy Nelson,
has already claimed a bronze
medal.
So far this season no one
has dominated the slaloms
the way Austrian ace Franz
Klammer, who won his gold
medal last week, dominates
the downhill.
The first run of the giant
slalom was scheduled for 6:30
a.m. EST tnday, the final for
Tuesday.
The 5,050-foot course at a
\lrop of 1,493· feet wound
through 63 gates on a
~ounta1nside
above
Innsbruck.
Thoeni had the advantage

College results

'

~:;

of starting fourth but
Stenrnark came sixth. Gros
was ninth in the lineup.
Stenrnark, a painfully shy
Laplander who considers his
homeiDwn of T~ernaby (pop.
7110) overpopulated, has won
two slaloms and one giant
slalom so far this season and
hasn't once fallen below third
. in either event and leads in
the overall standings.
He ranked first in both last
season and came witlun a
fraction of a second of
beating the veteran Thoeni,
24 , out of his fourth World Cup
championship in a duel by
parallel slaloms.
Thoeni, the 1972 gold medalist, woo the first and the last
giant slaloms of this season
but sometimes didn't even
make the IDp 20 where the
points are. Gros, 21, has had
plenty of second and third
placings but no wins.
The women's downhill
Sunday produced the first
Alpme upset with Rosi
Mittermaier, 25, of West
Germany wuming the gold
medal. Ros1, in her ninth
season of World Cup racing,
had never won a downhill
before.
Favorite Brigitte
Totschnig, 21, of Austria had
to settle for silver and Miss
Nelson, 20, of Lutsen, Minn.,
America's top woman skier,
pulled out of her slump to
collect the bronze.
The next women's event is
the slalom on Wednesday.

NEW YORK ( UPI I - Baseball's spring training 18 at
stake as major league owners hold a special joint meeting
today ID deci~ on a new contract proposaiiD the players
who w1ll consider the offer later this week .
Spring training camps are scheduled to open In less than
three weeks but owners and players are still far from a
basic agreement on how major league baseball will
ope~ate . The last contract between owners and players
exp1red Dec. 31 .
Now that the reserve clause has been knocked down by
arbltraiDr Peter Seitz, and that decision upheld last week
by US. District Judge John W. Oliver in Kansas City, the
o~n.ers must formulate new rules under which they are
Wllllllg to play ball. The COLirl decision means the players
no lopger feel bound b~ the reserve clause, promp.Ung the
owners to lake what 18 expected to be an even stiffer
posture during bargaining.
Whatever proposal the owners draft will be relayed to
the players for C?OSideration during their meeting later
th18 week. But still in the way of agreement are the socalled "freedom issues," similar ID the problems that
triggered a strike hy national football league players
againat their employers prior to the start of the 1974
season.TheNFLplayersstilldonothaveacontract.
Baseball owners have several alternatives. They could
decide to limit or withdraw their contributions to the
pension plan to which they now contribute $6.5 million.
Marvin Miller, executive director of the players
' ti on wants '""
.
assoc1a
u"'\ figure
increased by $1.5 million.
OWners could also eliminate the present maximum
player salary cut of 20 per cent for one year and 30 per
cent over two consecutive years or perhaps lower the
player limit from the present 25.'
In addition to the player,..elations problems, the owners
are expe~ to discuss an American League proposal
that the National League expand to 13 teams in 1977 with
inter.leag~e play. Earlier this week the AmeriCan League
finalized Its expansion to 13 teams in 1977 with the addition
of Seattle .
·

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Tech 78 N c St . 67
Southern 78 N c .
Wilmrngton 53
Hofstra 68 American U 58
Kentucky St 93 Central Sf . 0
71
'
Lambuth 89 Hard ing (Ark )
69
'
Lander 80 Newberry ,_.
Lenoir Rhyne 95 High Point
76
LiviOQiton 79 Shaw 12
G~rgia

57

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i

M 1ch 1gan 51 83 Ohio St 83

Millon •• carroll cw" 1 63
Minn Duluth so MocoteSier
~o Bopt •st 15 Boot" I Bible
"
81
~:;:oouur~i 6 ~olla
NE
Mount Un 1on 92 Oberltn 80

Muskingum sa capr tal 51
Neb .- Omaha 68 Youngstown

WahaJna High J H• h
r e Jg
honor students 1i.Q.ted
and 1 had no idea what 1
'

Q

st ss

MASON , W

Va The
fol!ow•ng
students
of
Wahama
H 1gh
Sc hool
m&amp;tntamed a B or better
average for the f •rs t semester
of 1975 76 school vear
SENIORS- Paula Bocook
Debb •e Branham . L•nda
Bumgarn er, Cathy Curry ,

Teresa Dillon , Rrck Dye,
Crystal Fruth , John Mar cus
Fultz, Shrr ley
Kimberly
Gerlach , Carlotta Gtbbs
Kerth Gibbs, Tammy Gtbbs'
Cindy Gr instead , Paul Mark
Harmon , Ruth Ann Hen
drrckson . Tammy Hoffman .
Borse St . 71 Web~r St 6.,
Cal Baptrst 78 Azusa Pa crfic
58
cat Poly SLO 6 4 Westmont 58
Ca lrt Davrs 98 Stanrslaus St
74
Ca t. Simla Barbara 107 LA
Sf. 85
Carroll (Mont J 80 No Mont
66
Cal Lt.ttheran 11 5 Ca l Tech 61
c
Washington 104 E
Washington 86
Chrco St 68 Saramento St 60
Fullerton 72 Sa n Jose St 56
George FQ)( 97 Lewrs &amp; Clork
M1
Gonzaga 60 Montana 49
Grea t Falls 87 Montana Tech
72
Hayward Sl 59 Humbo ldt 5 1
47
Idah o 77 Montana St 75
Long_ Bea ch St 92 Fresno Sf
61
Missouri 98 Co lorado 78
No , Ariz 59 ldal'lo 51 57
N 1
(o~) hndge 89 Chapman 84
NW Nazarene 91 Warne r
Pacific 77
Oregon 79 California 60
Ore9on Coli 81 oregon Te ch
70
·
Pac Lutheran 77 Whitworth
70
Redlands 81 LaVerne 71
San Otego 73 UC R1vers1de 56
San Francisco 86 Sante Clara
IJ
Seattle 78 St Mary 's (Calif )

72

UCLA 91 wash ington Sf 11
Utah 81 wvming 69
Washington 91 USC 79
W Montana 105 Rocky Min
67
Weslmrnster !Utah ) 65 Regts
62
W Washington 81 So Oregon

"

Whitman 75 Pacifi C (Ore. ) 68
Whltt1er 99 Clar emont Mudd
67
Willamette 101 Western
Baptist 55
Sunday's Results
Pha Textile 89 Bt.tffalo St 78
Gannon 72 St Jo hn FtSher 59
Pa ci fic (Ca l J 70 San Otego
St 64

Mar tv Ho l brook , Cheryl
Huber , Ph•llip Jarrell , D1ana
Johnson , c 1ndy Kay , Rocky
Kearns, Krmberty Kn1ght,
Dal e Lewis , Joe Parsons,
Mmdy Raynes . Dan Rickard ,
Dre&lt;~ma R•fl le, Joy ce Riley ,
Eddie Robinson , Be11ertv
Rousll . Jeff Russell, Betty

Shre ld$ , ~rchard Sr ders .
Robin Stewart , Dan rei
Stodola
Greg Weaver ,
Rrchard Wolf. Mark Wr rght.
De)(ter Zerkle
JUNIORS
Cheryl
Adams , Norma Goodntle ,
Sheila Ohlrnger, Mona
Weaver , CAro lyn 5hrrley ,
Sh rrley
Kearns.
Bob
Nrce wander , Barbara
Johnson. Vrckr e Moore ,
Drnah Myers , Teresa Prof
fttt , J rm Sm1th , Debbie Ord ,
Carrie Lee Hat cher , Lmda
Test , Lora Lea Smtih,
Carolyn Richard. Jennrfer
Weav er , Chrrslt Kearns,
Robert Jarrell , Lo•s Jean
Peters . Carla Me Farland ,
Jay Robert Layn e, Cheryl
Circle , Tim Tucker , Trm
Savre . Jurtv NP.ed s
SOPHOMORES Greg
Bless.ng , KJm Con red , Brell
Hpolbrook KMimkJav r5ns , Aprrt
an.on s, Stodo• lee , Belinda
Ievens ,
Karen
Zerkle , Ketv-tn Ho11aker ,
Gary Srders, Teddy Swartl ,
B•ll welte , Charles Zt.tspan ,
Drane Abet, Ltnd&amp; Hobbs ,
Bob Barni tz. Jenny James,
Rhonda
Kav .
Marla
McGtn!'lrs , Lan ce Olrver.
Kathy Test , Lrsa VanMa tre,
Dwayne While , Ri(:hard
Buzzard. Darla K Fowler ,
tames R Lavender , Mary e
McCFarland , Ben 1am 1n E
Roush . Lours R. Kent, Connre
Burton . Sarah Zuspan . Brent
Hart , Lisa Gilland
FRESHMEN
Mark
F rs her ·,
Mary Oldaker ,
Metan re Srssron , Jeff Staa ts ,
Eric Bumgardner , Ltnda
Gfl!ispre. Cathy Rousr.,
Lyndon R Fields, Patri ck D
kearns , Lisa A Brown, Lesa
C Grimm , Duane Ke1th
Sayre, Susan J Edwards ,
Brenda L Roush , John K
BOnd , Dav•d l Camp, Joni
D Clark, Terri A Johnson ,
Carol Nelson, Mike J Roush ,
Gregery A Stodo la , Crystal
Weaver , Jennrfer Badgley ,
Lora Bryan , Ang re Casto,
Susan
Danny
Fields.
Gerlach , Lrsa Reynolds .
Sheryl ~oush .
EIGHTH GRADE
Yv-onne Coll1er , Nellie
Esque , Julie Gibbs , Mrke
Gnmm, Terri Jehnson ,
Debbte Macknight , Eric
Barnil:z , Relma Goodnlle
Bret t Grinstead , TroY
Hesson . Kevrn Jones. Terry
McCarthy , Allee Rot.t!h, Tim
Roush, Jill Taylor, karen
Brown, Brian Oingey Judy
Hall , T1m Long, Jerry
Oldaker , Jackre Ridgeway ,

Stephe[)S()n ran into some
bogey problems along the

way but hung
6

on for a four·

· h
over-par 7 to gam er first
victory on the LPGA tour by
one shot over defending
championSandraHaynieand
Judy Meister.
Her winnmg 54-hole score
WaS two-over1J&amp;r 218 on the
6,300-yard, par 72 Golden
Gate Country Club course.
The
champion,
who
pocketed$8,500withherwin,
almostshotherwayoutofthe
tournament hy bog . f'
eymg 1ve
outofsixholesfrom the 9th to
the J~th, but settled down
with pars On 16 and 17.
Onthe470-yard,par518th,
he hit he
nd sh t ·
S
r seco
0 Into 8
trap guarding the. green, but
blastedouttowithinlOfeetof
the hole and tWOiJUtted for
the par and the win .
ul feIt better In
. the sand
lhanldidchipping,"saidthe
A tr II bo
h
us a an- rngro, w onow
lives in Palm Springs, Calif.

day . It was the only thing that
let me down."
Stephenson fired a 69
Saturday
to
assume
cornrnand by two strokes
over Haynie and first-round
leader Sally Little after two
rounds, but a strong wind
which sprang up late In the
day and continued throughout
the final 18 holes Sunday sent
scores soaring .
Haynie shot a 7S in the final
round while Meister- one of
just seven contestants who
matched or broke par for the
day - had a 71.
"I learned a lot playmg m
the wind yesterday. It made a
difference today," Meister
said.
Tied for fourth at fouroverpar 220 were Joanne
Carner, Jerilyn Britz and
Judy Rankin, winner of last
weekend's Burdtnes
Invitational in M1ami . Carner
shot a 74 Sunday while Britz
and Rankin had 75s.
l..ittle, who fired a women's
course,..ecord 67 in the first
round, finished with an 80 to
end up at 224, SIX shots behind

than Stott's.
Nascar President Bill
France Jr . would not specify
what the " fuel pressure
assiSts" were. But he did say
they were " additional fuel
sources for improving the •
performance
of
the
automobile. As far as the
description of what we found,
I think we have to stop with
what we have said.' '
The Nascar announcement
came shortly before 9 p.m.
EST, nine hours affter the
time trials ended. Officials
began tearing down the Foyt
and Waltrip cars at 4 p.m.
Earlier, the time of 1975
Rookie of the Year Bruce Hill
was disallowed, with officials
saymg his "fuel did not meet
normal test standards."
Stott, 41, finished fifth In
last year's DayiDna 5110.
His chief mechanic, Dick
Hutcherson , said, "Nascar
has really become proficient
in keeping this an honest ballgame."
NorriS Reed , who owns
Stott's car, said, ''We've
always raced as a hobby, but
I've never cheated."

treasurer.

'

For the Installation Mrs.
Shiveley led the group in
singing, "I'll Go Where you
Want
Me
To
Go,"

you'll never mt ss it.
So be chan tabl e to

your fu ture. And yo ur
co untry'~ futurl!

Tnke stock m America
with US. Savmgs Bonds.
N,.,. l_lo,,MI•P" , .- ,, ,, ,, , , &lt;o i,.•nf,t,l
~

the winner.

I&gt;Jrtl.ll u rllluf. ~ "' " "
1~

I

rlur,,..., ,

.. 1 ol 1, n , d, ., ,,,,.,1 fl , ,,. r,, '"

The tournament was
sponsored by the Sarah
Coventry company.

fw

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ttl rf

1,

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,

'""I ' '' ' ' ""' "'' .J \\ r,, n
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h1111 L li lh "'111 I• 1~ I '" ' ~"I In • I "" "

&lt;111,1Will In~ • • i ll~ I h, l, r ,j I" !II II l o
&lt;llfo l n•l un to l ,,J, '" ' '"'"

f, .

11

Thke ·

.stock.

m~enca.

~ ovce

M

LETART
FALLS
lnotallatlon of officers
highlighted a 19eeting of the
United Methodl.st Women of
the Letart Falla Church at the
horne of Mrs. Andrew CrOIS
Wedneaday.
Installed by Mrs. Howard
Shiveley were Mrs . Bert
Grimm, president; Mrs .
Ern~st
Shuler,
vice
president; Mrs. Don Beii
secretary, and Mrs. Cross'

Another chanty dnve?
No. But we are going to
ask for some of your
money . The difference .s,
we're going to give it uaek .
And more
Justgiveai the office
Buy U.S . Savmgs Bonds
through your Pa yroll
Savings Pian at work .
You see, a little will he
taken out of each check
and set aside to buy Ll S
Sav ing• Bohd•. And
because it 's automat!&lt;' ,

:'My chipping was bad all

St e..,en s ,
Mic kr
Hankmson , Randy wrrght ,
Vicker~ ,
Barbera
kim
Gordon. Mary Hoffman ,
Teresa Jones , Lis a Hrll ,
Angela PrOft itl, John Ben
neiL Tammy Ot) ltng er ,
Rrchard Thornt on, Ter ry
Angel , Jeff Bumgardne~ . Jeff
Fields, Terrr L Johnson ,
Connre Kearns, Jeff Lath ey,
Maureen Morrrson . Garv
Richards, usa Stewar t
SEVENTH GRADE
Donald Roush, Lou Roush ,
Terry Roush , Barrv Van
matre , Jane Wyatt , Trmmy
Sines . Rober t Mossman ,
Todd Kitchen, John Roach ,
Carla Hood , Mary Tripp,
Charles UoeyJ Roush , Cerl
Dugan , Tanowa Hi ll. Conn ie
Hart , Hetdt Hub er. Doll ie
Roush . Rodney Bt.tmgarcrner ,
Sherr r Russ ell , Donald
Roach, Marlrn Zfrkle, Jeffery
VanMeter , Ronald Johnson.
Anna
Parsons ,
Mark
McKniqht, Debra Starr, Kim
Bash, ·TOdd Tucker, Sherr 1
McCarthy, terry Hobson ,
Larry
Gibbs,
Tammy
Williamson , Peggy Fisher
Charlie Goodnlle, Scol l
Barnill , Terri Brown , Mike
Buzzard , Julie Clark, Peggy
Dot.tthit, Jeff Fowler. Tim
Kelly , Scott McDermitt , Lee

Officer installation
highlights meeting

Join Ihe Payroll'Savings Plan.

DUE TO THE GREAT
RESPONSE OF OUR SALE!

WE WILL BE
CLOSED
THROUGH THURS., FEB. 12

accompanied by Mrs. Shuler
on the organ. She streued in·
her talk that no one should
promise to do all their
assigned duties except with
honesty and sincerity. She
read " There's a World Out
There" and asked each one to
use her special talent when
and where needed. In
conclusion, Mrs . Shiveley
gave a prayer for the new
officers, the c hurch and
America.
A service of prayer and
self-denial was conducted by
Mrs. Grinun. She explained
that 50 per cent of the offering
for global endeavors goes for
the overseas underprivileged
while 50 per cent is kept in the
United 's tates to aid in
projects for senior citizens,
disasters and other worthy
efforts.
"And All These Things
Shall Be Added" was the title
of the program with each
member giving a responsive
reading . Organ music was
with
used
throughout
" Amazing Grace" as the
theme. Mrs. Gladys Shields
read " I Am Happy" and Mrs.
Cross, "Sharing Our Gifts."
Mrs. Shiveley sang ''The
Magic Pennies" at which
time each member placed
her offenng on the improvised altar. A prayer of
thanks was given in unison .
Devotions by Mrs. Shuler
were taken from John 7.
During the business meeting
24 shut-in calls were
reported. Members signed a
round,..obin card for Mrs.
Eula Wolfe. Taking part in
the program were Mrs. Bell,
Mrs. Cross, Mrs. Shuler, Mrs.
Shields, Mrs. Grimm, Mrs.
Shiveley, Mrs. Erma Wilson
and Mrs. Erma Hill. Mrs.
Inez Hlll will host the next
meeting. Mrs. Cross, assisted
by Teresa Shuler, served a
salad course.

VISIT ENJOYED
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Grimm
of Letart Falls v1s1ted last
week m Columbus with Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Grimm and
family and Mrs. C. H. Skeels
!Kitty Allen)

BACK HOME
Mr . and Mrs Ardith Barton
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert K
Barton and Scottie , Pomeroy,
have returned home after
spending 10 days in
Jacksonville, Fla with Mr
and Mrs. Terry Wyatt and
Robbie . Mrs. Wyatt is the
former Brenda Barton .

Doubt~ up,

TO RE-GROUP

RE.QPEN FRIDAY AT 9:00

~oach

Sing out for the Yellow Pages!
Whether you want to create 'l charming
melody, or are on the horns of a dilemma
over any product or service ...
Whatever you need IS there at your
fingertips when your fingers do
the walking through the
Yellow Pages.

It fits t...ly·ll11

• .,..., ••••dtr 11

........
I ..

was

going ID do."

No . Dakota st 78 No Dakota
70
No M•chi,S~an 95 Ferr•s St 58
N 'wstrn Iowa 66 St Thomas
65
Notre Dame 111 Davidson 74
Ohio 90 No ttllnors 79
Ohio Nor 10 Ba l dwin wallace
66
Oklahoma 64 Kansas 63
Otterbein 58 Wooster 57
Purdue 85 Wisconsin 74

determine positions 3-40 in
the $342,000 class1c.
Sunday's qualifying was
ooly for the two top starting
pos1tioos.
With the times of the three
fastest cars disallowed,
Ramo Stott of Keokuk , Iowa ,
gets the pole position and its
$5,000 prize, with his "legal"
qualifying speed of 183.456
miles per hour in a Chevrolet.
Terry Ryan of Davenort,
Iowa, gets the outside pole
and $1,000 with his 183.109
m.p.h. lap in a Chevrolet.
Foyt, from Houston; Tex.,
had a 187.477 m.p.h. lap .
Waltrip, of Franklin, Tenn.,
turned his lap at 186.617
m.p.h , and Marcis was
clocked at 186.548 m.p.h.
Their speeds were at least
three miles per hour faster

Jan Stephenson
has first title
night about how she was
going ID cope with strong
winds to preserve her secondround lead In the $60,000
NaplesLPGAClassic,butshe
stillhadnoplanwhenshegot
ID the first tee Sunday.
"I Spent all night trying ID
.work outastrategy," said the
dark ~ha1red 24·year..old
Californian. "Icameouthere

c..llet lily!
_

E-,. frieldairo.loundrr
CAntor - - h 101)' to
_ , and city a family-

lin load witt! 1M -"&lt;!
caro toclay's ..........
fabria •:nand. Yet it
talcn up a llllniftiUIO al
.,._, flts jvil abovt
au,whMa - In thll
kikhan, b.th, ewn ·a
hallway.
Oft)' a4

a-.

Polly's Pointers
Af111kl te Start a Ficht
DEAR HELEN :
I've been reading books on assertiveness trainina.
aggression therapy, etc. which teach you how to stand up for
your rights and fight back.
·
The authors say, "Be honest over what displeases you,"
but this means the other person has a right ID speak out, and I
don't know whether I could lake that.
If I did tell my husband something he does irks me, he'd
retaliate by pointing out things about myself I doo't want ID
hear ... which could lead IDa first-class bramigan, or else hurt
silence. Aa for thoee "fair fight rules, " who thinks of fairness
when tempers flare?
If I practiced my new-found bossiness on siDre clerks or
waitresses, I'd feel like a heel, ev~n though they might seem to
&lt;!eserve it. I've always thought goocklatured tolerance helps
more than snappy comebacks.
Is A. T. (assertiveness training) becoming just another
media hype as I read recently, or does it really offer all those

woo~~r~':."~r~~!!~~.n.-:e~o~:...'~.!:!i all sure I'd
be happier if I snapped hack at people. I get along pretty well
(and don't feel at all downtrndden) being - UITLE OL'
QUIET ME
DEAR QUIET:
If you'repleased with the way you are, don't mess up your
. formula!
Assertiveness Training, Aggression Therapy, all those
"in"ldeas for better living, can help those who need them -if
used the right way.
But when 11 Be assertive" translates "Be obnoxious," it's
time to find another book - or another teacher.
(And that's the trouble with pop psychology - it becomes
so popular tha,t real help gets diluted by a lot of misguided
thinking and pat answers:..in your words, "media hype ." )
Let'sjust say A. T.lsgreatfor doormat types, hut the road
to happiness was never paved with brickbats. - H.
DEAR HELEN:
The question carne up at a cocklail party : How come they
allow navel exposure oo TV (both men and women), when
they're censorshi!H'ity on other strategic parts of the human
anatomy? After all, nudity isn't any great surprise these days.
I finally figured it like this: What males and females
BOTII have (such as belly buttons), gets by the censor's office,
hut if only one sex is equipped, that part of the anatomy is
forbidden viewing by TV audiences.
Smart, huh? -DUKE
DEAR DUKE:
Smart, uh-uh' How about Adam's apples? Or beards ? - H.
DEAR HELEN:
The controversy over thank-you notes for gifts has one
answer from me for the mod generation who thinks they aren't
necessary. After another Christmas with no appreciative
letters or pl)one calls from five teenage relatives, I quietly
announced I was divorcing THEM. They had their way or
thinking,! had mine, and in the future, my checkbook was lost
until their courtesy returned. - NO lONGER THE
BENEVOLENT GRANDPARENT
Got a problem? An adult subject for discussion? You can talk it
over in her column if you write to Helen Bottel, care of this
newspaper.

Scholarship funding
planned by council
Funding for the two PTA
scholarships to be awarded to
Meigs County graduates this
spring was planned at the
Thursday night meeting of
the Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers.
Meeting at the Chester
Elementary School, the
Council
decided
to
supplement scholarship
contributions from the units
hy staging a yard sale on
April2 and 3. Place of the sale
will be announced later. Each
unit is being asked to furnish
items for the sale and to have
them priced before the days
of the sale. Each unit was
also aaked ID assign two or
three people to work at the
sale.
This will be the first year
that the Council has awarded
more than one scholarship.
The second scholarship is a
bicentennial project.
Applic~tions
for
the
scholarships are currently
available from the guidance
counselors of all three high
schools. Recipients are
selected by a conunittee from
the Ohio PTA.
Mrs. Charles Goeglein,
president, amounced that the
cultural arts contest wlll tala:
place aaaln this year hut thai
as yet the slate chairperson
has not announced the theme.
Tentative achedule Is for
judging lo take place in the
units in March, with the
county judging ID lake place
at the April 1 meeting of

Council at the 1\liddleport
Elementary School.
To open the meeting Mrs.
Jean Spencer led in the
pledge to the flag. Mrs. Linda
Bentz gave devotions and
Mrs . Spencer had , the
welcome. A communication
was read from the national
president · on accomplishments of the PTA and the
goals set for 1976. A report
was given on the Sears
study
on
Roebuck
absenteeism m 11 states
including Ohio with the
conclusion
being
that
absenteeism
leads
to
dropouts which increases
delinquency and vandahsm.
Mrs. Goeglein, as a part of
the Council's involvement in
community programs
concerning children,
reported on the Christmas
party for the boys and girls of
the Gallia County Children's
Home at the horne of Mr. and
Mrs. A. R. Knight.
It was noted that the
membership report is due ID
the State PTA office by
March 15. The National
Convention was announced
for May 23 ID 26 in Louisville,
Ky.
Mrs. Wllllam Downie, ~~
president, spoke on PTA
accompllshmenla through the
years. The pro~ram was
presented by Keith Circle,
Meigs minuteman, who spoke
and showed slides on the
growth and development of
America.

MMIILC-1

1

479

Baker
Furniture
MJ•••pDii, Ohio

INFLATION FIGHTER
DEAR POI.!. Y - I cannot
remove an opaque film from
the inside of my three crystal
decanters. I have tried
blea ch, ammonia, d1shwasher detergent, vinegar
and a baking soda solution
with popcorn kernels hoping
the fnction would doslodge
the film None of these
worked so please tell me what
I can do to make them clear

aiid clean. - KATHERINE.
DEAR KATHERINE This film certainly reslsled a
lol of old sta,.a&gt;ys fur such
removal so I am wondering if
anytlling will help. Try fllllng
each of them with hot
detergent suds plus two or
three tablespoons of water
conditioner, let stand over·
night and lhen rinse well. Or,
try shaking tea leaves and
vinegar In each bottle until
the deposit Is loosened and
then use a bottle brush to help
remove it. Good luck to you.
-POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - While
working on my recipe file I
needed some new mdex cards
sol cut up plastic bottles with
fa~rly straight sides - bleach
bottles work fme . I made
these "cards" the same size
as the recipes cards, with
one-half in ch extensions at
the top for the names of the
categories The names such
as ucakes,H "Candy I!! etc.

were put on with embossing
but a markmg pen could be
used. - DORIS.

heritage hc!use

\

'
HEATHER RaeAne Hill
celebrated her first birthday Jan . 26 with a party
at the home of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger E. Hill,
Racine. Served cake and
ice cream were her
brother, Scottie, Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry A. Powell, Mr.
and Mrs Austin Wolfe,
Aimee and Jerry, Mrs. Inez
Hill, and Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Manning. G1rts
were presented to Heather.

DEAR POLLY - One of
my Pet Peeves is with ad·
vertisers who send brochures
and long letters that we do not
have time to read. What I am
most mterested in is "What is
lhedeal?" and " How much?''
The price Is usually almost
invisible, so I just toss them
m the basket, ev~n 1f I m1ght
be interested in the product.
Anolher Pet Peeve is with
those doctors who answer a
patient in medical terms no
ordinary person can un· derstand. Then the dociDr is
annoyed when the patient
.. ~sks ·for an explanation. I
think they are obligated to
explain any treatment or
medicallon so it can be understood . - MILDRED.
· DEAR · POLLY - Annie
could use some of her many
table napkins as guest towels
arranged in different ways In
her bathroom. They could
hang from towel racks or
some m1ght be stacked on a
small tray put on the sink,
counter or anywhere they are
easily accessible for guests.
Some of these napkin-guest
towels could also be put in the
guest room - E.D.H.
DEAR POLLY - At last I
have solved the problem of
remembermg your Pointers.

Whenever I see one that I
thmk may be of use to me
sometime in the future I chp
1! and paste it in a notebook.
At the front of the notebook 1
have a table of contents
lishng the Pointers and the
pages on· which they are
pasted. Some such hooks
have the pages numbered,
and if not do il yourself. This
method helps me to find the
hmts quickly when they are
needed. - LEAH.
You will receive a dollar if
Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet
Peeve, Polly's Problem or
solution to a problem. Write
Pplly in care of this newspaper.

Give Your Valentine

FLOWERS
BEAUTIFUL

Red Tulips
Red Azaleas
Terrariums
Wtth Valentine Trim

20%

OFF

Cash •n Carry

59 N. Second St.
Mi
, Ohio

SPECIAL

GOOD THROUGH SUN .. FEB. 15

SONNY BURGER BASKET

Including Sunny Burger, french tries, and
cole slaw or baked beans .

TOREADOR G3850

lnnovall\le ultramodern styling. Grained
Rosewood color wrth sharply contra&amp;ting
Whrte lrim on top Super Vrdeo Range Tt.tner.

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ADVANCED CHRDMACOLOR-

Anothtr Zenith atep forward
picture brlghtness

in

275V CHASSIS- Most
powerful 2enrth chassis In
17-lnch dragonat TV, wrth
27.500 volts' ot prc:ture power
TITAN

• ttulgn average

Play it oafe and mre _
It may be time to
have your preoent
policy updated,

DALE C. WMNER
f

~.oll)t Cram• r

Social
Calendar

FRIES

l.et's fcrllc Soon

•

\

/

By

HEATH
UNITED
Methodist Women, Heath
Church, Middleport, 7:30
p.m. Monday at the church.
Devotions by Mrs. Charles
Bradbury ; ; program by
Mrs. Robert
Bumgar·
ner ,
and
refresh·
.~.te e:
ments by Mrs. Jack Bechtle,
Mrs. James Brewington,
Mrs. Jessie Houchins and
Mrs. Terry Byer.
MEiGS County AssOCiation
for
Retarded . Citizens
Monday, 7:30p.m. at Mental
Health Center, Pomeroy.
MONDAY
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY PTA, 7:30
POMEROY
Mil).
Monday at the Pomeroy DLEPORT Lions Club,,
Elememtary School. Wednesday noon, Meigs Inn.
Founder's Day ID he observed
POMEROY
CHAPTER,
with past presidents to be Royal Arch Masons, and
honored. The program will be Bosworth Council, Royal and
"America We Love You" by Select Masters, Wednesday,
Mrs. Ben Neutzling, with 7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Mrs. Lois Burl, soloist. Masonic Temple.
Fathers night to be observed
with fathers to count twice in
room
attendance.
Refreshments will be served.
REVIVAL at Free Will
Baptist Church, Ash St.,
Middleport,
beginning
Monday with services at 7:30
Converse Shoes in
each evening and special
many styles and
vocal numbers.
colors.
TALENT
CONTEST
Monday for youngsters up to
14 years of age who live in the
Tuppers Plains School
Middleport, Ohio
District. The event is being
sponsored by the Tuppers
Plains Booster Association,
and will be held following the
regular meeting. First prize
is $10. To enter, phone 9854283 or 98f&gt;-1279.
MEIGS County Salon,
Eight and Forty, Monday,
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Julia Hysell. Members are
reminded to take gifts for
Sherri Marshall 's 11th birthday observance, along with
items for a s1lent auction.

HOT DOG and
FRENOt
ONLY

Two can ride cheaper
than one.

at-cloartt.)

•,_I

at Wellston with registration
to be at 9 a.m ., and the jWlior
distncl conference was
announced for April 24 at·
Pomeroy . Pam Powers IS the
district president, and Myrtle
Walker, the district jWlior
chairperson.
A thank-you note was read
from the Marshall family for
remembrances of Shem on
her birthday. She is a victim
ofcysticfihrosis . A thank-you
nole was also read from Mrs .
Marjorie Goett for a
remembrance
whtle
hospitalized. It was noted
that Ann McCudden, a state
officer, 1s ill. Valentines are
to be sent to Xema for the
children at the orphans home
there . Mrs. Reuter reported
that the un1t has reached the
membership goal.
Flags have been presented
by the unit, two to Meigs High
School, and two to scout
troops. A donation was made
to the Marie Moore perpetual
fund in remembrance of Mrs.
Frances Warner and Mrs.
Eleanor Bates . A $25 contribution was also made to
the Auxiliary president's
special fund.
Mrs . Martin talked on
legislation, particularly the
child family act which is H.
B. 2966 and S. B. 626, and
urged the membership to
express their opposition by
writing their legislators .
Letters
were
written
following the meeting. Mrs.
Martin also talked on
veterans rights and current
bills on this before Congress.
Mrs. Case• reported on a
coloring contest on the theme
"Your Friend, a Policeman"
to he carried out in the local
schools .
Mrs .' Pratt presided at the
meeting with Mrs. Edith
Sauer giYmg the prayer
Refreshments of ice cream
and cake were served.

FOOT lDNG

,...,, ...... (Aha

...... ll In woadvraltt

The annual party in observance of the birthday of
the American Legion and to
honor local legionnaires was
set for March 16 at the hall
when the American Legion
Auxlliary, Drew Webster
Post 39, met Wednesday night
at the hall.
Mrs . Faye Wildermuth ,
community service chairperson, will have charge of
the observanc~ with others on
the committee, Mrs. Marge
Reuter, Mrs. Pearl Knapp,
Mrs . Genevieve Meinhart.
Mrs. Gemma Casci, Mrs.
Ellen Couch, Mrs. Carrie
Neutzllng and Mrs. Grate
Pratt, to ass1st . Mrs. Veda
Davis, Mrs . Isabelle Couch
and Miss Erma Smith were
appointed to have charge of
the table decorations.
Tentative plans were also
made for a special bicentennial celebration to take
place later in the year and
named to that planning
comm1ttee were Mrs. Nfulzing, Mrs. Mary Martin, Mrs .
Knapp, Mrs. Catherine
Welsh, Mrs. Norma Jewell,
Mrs. Iva Powell, Mrs . Ed1lh
Sauer, Mrs. Davis, Mrs .
Pratt, Miss Smith, Mrs .
Marge Goett, Mrs. Cumings,
Mrs. Ruby Marshall and
Cheryl Lehew.
A delegate to Buckeye
Girls' State was selected
during the meeting but will
not be announced until later .
It was noted that Thornville
Unit 342 will host the Girls
State tea this spring.
The unit voted to contribute
$5 for the Junior Auxihary
party at the Athens Mental
Health Center Feb. 19 and
also lo donate some game
pnzes. Mrs. Lula Hampton is
the district chairperson In
charge of the party. The unit
also donated $5 for the senior
party at the Athens Center
March 18 and agreed that
each member will provtde a
game prize.
The midwinter conference
at the neil House m Columbus, Feb. 20-22 was announced and it was reported
that Mrs. Lynn Randall,
Central Division president of
the Auxiliary, will be
honored . Members were
asked to take cookies for a
coffee hour .
A leadership training
session was set for March 27

Water conditioner
ckanS CtySta/

$}19

pages

fl.. atllac.,. colon to ·
match or --.la11w1t

Ga .

LSU~7 Milllll tp~i

if.

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lhe Frigidaire
La•drv Center

Abbey Sl

.
.'

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
rUP!) - In an unprecedented
actioo, Nascar officials disallowed the Daytona 500
qualifying times for A.J .
Foyt, Darrell Waltrip and
Dave Marcis because their
cars were illegally equipped.
Nascar said the Chevrolets
or Foyt and Waltrip "were set
up for use of fuel pressure
assists, which are not
allOwed."
Marcis' Dodge, Nascar
said, "was equipped with a
non-approved
radiator
stoppage."
The unprecedented Nascar
action does not disqualify the
three from the race, but they
'l'ill have to re.quallfy IDday
for twin 125-mlle qualifying
races Thursday that will

NAPLES, Fla. (UP!) _

~

"

Alabama 86 Auburn 75
Anderson 74 No Greenvtlle 64
Athens St 7'2 St . Bernard 70
Austin Peav 89 Murray Sl 78
Averett 86 N . c Wesleyan 82
{at)
Benedict 80 Morris Brown 72
Berry U Piedmont 71
Campbell 82 Francis Marton
58
Catawba 78 Elon 75
Catholic U 97 C Conn . Coli
71
centenary 87 Southern Mrss
67
C . Newport 78 B'water ( Va . J
73
CitaCiel 91 Richmond 79
Coppin St 100 Bowie Sl . 79
Emory &amp; Henry BJ Hamp
Syd . 17
Florida 78, Miss . Sf 71 fa t)
Fla Southern 93 Brscavne 84
Florida St. 18 So Fla . 62
Florida Tech 9A Rollins 11
Gardner w_,bb 69 Belmont

I
I
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,

Hot drivers disqualified

!!:

::;:

SATURDAY'S COLLEGE
Mad rson 102 Roanoke 78
BASKETBALL RESULTS
Midd Tenn 71 W Kentucky
Unrled Press lnternaltonal
65
East
Morehead Sl 72 E Kentucky
Albr rght 77 Muhlenberg 58
53
Alfred 11 Ithaca 70
Morgan St 74 N C A&amp; T 67
Allegl'leny 71 Wash &amp; Jeff 64 Mt St Mary 's 65 Loyola
Allegheny Bovee 95 Potomac (Md) 58
62
Nicholl s Sf 8 1 U Tenn Marlin Qurn cy 101 St Ambrose 65
Babson 91 Norwich 67
64
Rose Hulman 75 SW Tenn 60
Bart.tch 61 John Jay 52
No Carolina 97 Furman 64 St. Fr'ancrs {Ill t 92 Grace 88
Bethany 76 Th ie l 68
N C Central 80 Howard 89 St John 's (Minn J 82 C'dra
CMinn J 62
Boston St 102 R E Coli . 93 No . Car Charlotte 99 Ga St
Bowdoin 63 Middlebury 54 · 64
S t Joseph's {t nd) 78 Butter
Can rsrus 89 Duquesne 81
No Geergra 87 southern Tech 77
StLouis 66 Xavrer {Ohrol 61
Carnegre Mellon 102 J 84
Carroll 80
NE La 87 So Alabama 70
St Norbert's lOB Mt Scenarro
Cheyney 95 Millersville 71
NW La 83 Troy 51 76
66
Clar1on B5 Pitt Johnstown 65 NW Mo St 104 SE Mo 5 1 101 Srlver Lake 94 Wrs Manliwoc
Colgate 45 RPI 40
Old Domrn ron 78 Wash &amp; Lee 83
Concord 85 Dav 1s &amp; Elkins !2 66
Sout hern Colo 60 Wasl'lburn
54
C W Post 71 Southampton 66 Radford 79 Bl uefre ld 60
Tarkio
77 Baker 75
Dartmouth 63 Brown 54
Salisbury Sl 70 Randolph
Trff1n 114 lnd Purdue Ft
Macon 69
,
Delaware 84 Bucknell 73
Domrnrcan (NYJ 17 M'vtll e 68 So Carol rna 65 Temple 58
Wayne 78
Toledo 69 Kent 51 60
Dowling 86 Krng's (NY 1 68 Stetson 12 Flcmda A&amp;M 64
Urbana 82 Oh10 Dominican 58
Drew 74 NY Tech 46
Tennessee 92 Kentucky 85
Fairmont 70 Wtleelrng 65 (otl Transylvanra 65 Centre 60
Vmcennes Ill Pensacola 98
WayneS t 109ChrcagoSt 101
Glassboro 63 Montcl&amp; !r 60
Tulane 86 Dilla rd 80
Glenville 93 West Liberty 76 Vanderbrlt 71 Georgra 69 (2 W Michrgan 76 C Michrgan
Grove Cily -42 Fredonia 39
oil
~abash 74 DePauw 68
Ham rlton 78 Oswego St 59
Vrrginia Tech 80 Geo
Westmar 90 Bethel 87
Harvard 73 Yale 63
Washmgton 73
Haverford 90 Swarthmore 71 Wake Forest 82 Vrrgrnra 7B Wheaton 82 North Park 53
lnd1ana fPa ) 86 Alliance 57 W Maryland 65 Gettysbu rg William Jewell 109 Graceland
85
lona 84 Main e 67
56
Jersey City St. 86 NJ Tec h 52 Wil li am &amp; Mary 68 VMI 62
Wtlm 1ngton 71 Bluffton 68
Keene 51 105 Plymot.tth 83
Midwest
~~s111 eEo u Cla1r e 72 Wts
66
Lafayette 70 ~rder 55
Albion 62 Olivet 60
LeMoyne 99 Roc hester 70
AQurnas 108 Marion 83
Wrs La Crosse 100 W1S
Lmden St. 70 Farming ton 83 Arkansas 75 W lllrno rs 72 {of) Superior 77
Manhattan 79 Fa rrt1eld 69
Ashland 91 Adrian IMich) 60 Wrs Oshkosh 80 Wis . River
Maris! 90 Bloomfi eld 76
Augsburg 85 Sl. Olaf 60
Falls 68
Marshall 58 FDU R: 'ford 52 Augustana Coli 72 Cartha ~ e Wrs Parkside 75 Lakeland 73
W1ttenberg 13 Oh io Wesleyan
Massachusetts 86 Con Coli
neclicu t 73
Aurora 79 Concordra {Ill ) n 59
Mercyhurst 13 Ed inboro 72 Bat[ St 8-4 Eastern Mrch 78 Wright St 76 Cleveland 62
Emery &amp; Henry 83 Harmp
Be tl'lel ( Ka ns J 94 Kans
Southwest
Svd 77
Newman 79
Mo Rolla 81 NE Mo St 64 Bethel (Mtnn) 77 Goshen 71 Cameron 90 Ok la . S&amp;A 99 (OIJ
Dallas Bapt 92 Okla Bllptrst
Monmouth &lt;NJ) 95 Upsa la 84 Cal vrn 64 Hope 56
Muskrngum Tech 70 Ohio C M'drst 93 Mtd Amerrca 76
Esn
N
M
88
Okla
Valley 68
Naz . 78
Panhandl e 66
Muskrngum Tech 70 Ohio Chattanooga 65 Dayton 63
Valley 68
Cincinnat r 87 :Jacksonvrlle 62 Houston 99 R rce 79
Le Tourneau 88 Trm ity 86 (2
New Hampshire 63 Boston Cornell (Iowa) 67 knox {!2
ols)
Coli 61
Defrance 91 Findlay 87
Memphis Sl 87 Oklahoma
New Paltz 89 Yeshiva 83
Dentson 53 Mar1etta 51
Niagara 51 Army 50
Doane 101 Mrdland Lutheren Crty 10
New Me&gt;r:ico 69 Texas El
No . Adams 92 Fitchburg 66 72
Oneonta Sf 54 York INY J 38 E lilinor s 63 lnd T. Haute 61 Pa.so 58
Penn 94 Columbta 70
Emporia St 90 Kearnev St 78 N M Highland s 108 Wsn
Pha . Te)(frle 8.5 El iZabeth Evansville 76 Valpararso 70 Co lo 87
NE Okla 72 5W Okla 58
town 59
Grinnell 92 Lawrence 84
Prttsburgh 71 Sy ra cuse 67
Hamlrne 56 Gustavus 47 (ol) Oral Roberts 107 Lamar 92
Por t Gorham 75 St Franc 1s Illinois 61 Northwestern 55 Pan Amer.can 111 Denver 83
San ta Fe 102 Colorado Coli 93
(Mel 65
Ill. B'tine 95 Trinity (Ill l 75
Potsdam 102 Clarkson 77
tltrnors St 68 SIU Ed 'vi lle 59 SE Okla 84 NW Okla 54
Princeton 53 Co rnell 35
Indiana 72 Mrch rgan 67 (ol) S F Austrn 78 Sam Houston
Providence 103 Holy Cross 85 Indiana Central 68 Franklin
SMU 79 Texas 16
Rhode Island 71 DePaul 70 60
Roch Tech 82 Genesco St 63 Indiana Tech 110 Anderson TeKas A&amp;M 75 Baylor 63
Texas Sot.t lhern 109 Southern
Rutgers 86 Navy 71
lOS
u 90
Shepflerd 95 Bluefie ld 51 90 Iowa 65 Minnesota 58
TeKas Tech 82 TCU 15
St Bonaventure 98 LIU 87
Nebrasks 66 Iowa Sl 56
St Francrs (Pa ) so 51 Iowa Wesleyan 74 Wtllram Wayland Bapt 85 Ok!a
C' ltan 61
Vrncent 61
Penn 60
West Texas 68 N M St 66
St JOhn's 77 Fordham 67
Kenyon 61 Hetdelberg 50
(Of)
St Lawrence 73 Hobart 63
Lou rsvtlle 74 Bradley 71
Wsn New Mex1co 56 Mesa
St Michael 's (Vt J 84 AIC 78 Malone 92 Rio Grande 84
Coil 53
Scranton 53 Junrala 52 (otJ Manchester 100 Taylor 99
Springtreld 77 Brandeis 63
Mankato 80 No . lwa 66
Wichrta St 70 Tulsa 61
Stevens Tech (NJ ) 87 PraN o , Miii"quette 68 Detrort 66
West
Stony Brook 82 Brooklyn Colt . Mramr IOhrol 70 Bowlmg
Arizona 51 67 Arrzona 63
63
Green 48
Susquehanna 81 Del Y'!ley
67
Un ton (NY) 89 Kings Point 69
Utrca 75 Castleton 49
Vrllanova 75 West Vtrgmia 58
Wagner 61 Stonehlll 59
west Chester 82 Lehigh 63
w va Wesleyan 83 Sa lem eo
W
Va Teen 61 Morr1s
Harvey 56
w Va St. 83 Beck lev 71
Soyth

I
«

~

5- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Feb. 9,1976

'f'f2 ·214l

tn2 W Matn

Pomerov
I

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DAIRY ISLE
Mo ao II! port,

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SENTRY

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MIDDLEPORT

�•

•

4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , ~'eb. 9,1976

T w 0 Americans Iead
•

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AXAMER UZUM , Austria
(UPl) - The glamor event
over, the first big hattie or the
Alpine Olympics opened
IDday, the giant slalom, with
two Americans slarting in the
top group.
Ingemar Stenrnark, a 19year~ld Swede, Is rated a
slight favorite againat the two
Italians, Gustavo Thoem and
Piero Gros. Although they
have won five World Cup
titles between them, it 's
S!enmark who is the hot
slalomlst right now.
The top U.S. contenders
were Greg Jooes, 21, of Tahoe
City, Calif., and Philip
Mahre, 18, of White Pass,
Wash . Mahre's twin brother,
Steve, and Cary Adgate, 22, of
Boyne City, Mich., are
competing in the second
group. Their counterpart in
the women's downhill,
Minnesota 's Cindy Nelson,
has already claimed a bronze
medal.
So far this season no one
has dominated the slaloms
the way Austrian ace Franz
Klammer, who won his gold
medal last week, dominates
the downhill.
The first run of the giant
slalom was scheduled for 6:30
a.m. EST tnday, the final for
Tuesday.
The 5,050-foot course at a
\lrop of 1,493· feet wound
through 63 gates on a
~ounta1nside
above
Innsbruck.
Thoeni had the advantage

College results

'

~:;

of starting fourth but
Stenrnark came sixth. Gros
was ninth in the lineup.
Stenrnark, a painfully shy
Laplander who considers his
homeiDwn of T~ernaby (pop.
7110) overpopulated, has won
two slaloms and one giant
slalom so far this season and
hasn't once fallen below third
. in either event and leads in
the overall standings.
He ranked first in both last
season and came witlun a
fraction of a second of
beating the veteran Thoeni,
24 , out of his fourth World Cup
championship in a duel by
parallel slaloms.
Thoeni, the 1972 gold medalist, woo the first and the last
giant slaloms of this season
but sometimes didn't even
make the IDp 20 where the
points are. Gros, 21, has had
plenty of second and third
placings but no wins.
The women's downhill
Sunday produced the first
Alpme upset with Rosi
Mittermaier, 25, of West
Germany wuming the gold
medal. Ros1, in her ninth
season of World Cup racing,
had never won a downhill
before.
Favorite Brigitte
Totschnig, 21, of Austria had
to settle for silver and Miss
Nelson, 20, of Lutsen, Minn.,
America's top woman skier,
pulled out of her slump to
collect the bronze.
The next women's event is
the slalom on Wednesday.

NEW YORK ( UPI I - Baseball's spring training 18 at
stake as major league owners hold a special joint meeting
today ID deci~ on a new contract proposaiiD the players
who w1ll consider the offer later this week .
Spring training camps are scheduled to open In less than
three weeks but owners and players are still far from a
basic agreement on how major league baseball will
ope~ate . The last contract between owners and players
exp1red Dec. 31 .
Now that the reserve clause has been knocked down by
arbltraiDr Peter Seitz, and that decision upheld last week
by US. District Judge John W. Oliver in Kansas City, the
o~n.ers must formulate new rules under which they are
Wllllllg to play ball. The COLirl decision means the players
no lopger feel bound b~ the reserve clause, promp.Ung the
owners to lake what 18 expected to be an even stiffer
posture during bargaining.
Whatever proposal the owners draft will be relayed to
the players for C?OSideration during their meeting later
th18 week. But still in the way of agreement are the socalled "freedom issues," similar ID the problems that
triggered a strike hy national football league players
againat their employers prior to the start of the 1974
season.TheNFLplayersstilldonothaveacontract.
Baseball owners have several alternatives. They could
decide to limit or withdraw their contributions to the
pension plan to which they now contribute $6.5 million.
Marvin Miller, executive director of the players
' ti on wants '""
.
assoc1a
u"'\ figure
increased by $1.5 million.
OWners could also eliminate the present maximum
player salary cut of 20 per cent for one year and 30 per
cent over two consecutive years or perhaps lower the
player limit from the present 25.'
In addition to the player,..elations problems, the owners
are expe~ to discuss an American League proposal
that the National League expand to 13 teams in 1977 with
inter.leag~e play. Earlier this week the AmeriCan League
finalized Its expansion to 13 teams in 1977 with the addition
of Seattle .
·

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Tech 78 N c St . 67
Southern 78 N c .
Wilmrngton 53
Hofstra 68 American U 58
Kentucky St 93 Central Sf . 0
71
'
Lambuth 89 Hard ing (Ark )
69
'
Lander 80 Newberry ,_.
Lenoir Rhyne 95 High Point
76
LiviOQiton 79 Shaw 12
G~rgia

57

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i

M 1ch 1gan 51 83 Ohio St 83

Millon •• carroll cw" 1 63
Minn Duluth so MocoteSier
~o Bopt •st 15 Boot" I Bible
"
81
~:;:oouur~i 6 ~olla
NE
Mount Un 1on 92 Oberltn 80

Muskingum sa capr tal 51
Neb .- Omaha 68 Youngstown

WahaJna High J H• h
r e Jg
honor students 1i.Q.ted
and 1 had no idea what 1
'

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st ss

MASON , W

Va The
fol!ow•ng
students
of
Wahama
H 1gh
Sc hool
m&amp;tntamed a B or better
average for the f •rs t semester
of 1975 76 school vear
SENIORS- Paula Bocook
Debb •e Branham . L•nda
Bumgarn er, Cathy Curry ,

Teresa Dillon , Rrck Dye,
Crystal Fruth , John Mar cus
Fultz, Shrr ley
Kimberly
Gerlach , Carlotta Gtbbs
Kerth Gibbs, Tammy Gtbbs'
Cindy Gr instead , Paul Mark
Harmon , Ruth Ann Hen
drrckson . Tammy Hoffman .
Borse St . 71 Web~r St 6.,
Cal Baptrst 78 Azusa Pa crfic
58
cat Poly SLO 6 4 Westmont 58
Ca lrt Davrs 98 Stanrslaus St
74
Ca t. Simla Barbara 107 LA
Sf. 85
Carroll (Mont J 80 No Mont
66
Cal Lt.ttheran 11 5 Ca l Tech 61
c
Washington 104 E
Washington 86
Chrco St 68 Saramento St 60
Fullerton 72 Sa n Jose St 56
George FQ)( 97 Lewrs &amp; Clork
M1
Gonzaga 60 Montana 49
Grea t Falls 87 Montana Tech
72
Hayward Sl 59 Humbo ldt 5 1
47
Idah o 77 Montana St 75
Long_ Bea ch St 92 Fresno Sf
61
Missouri 98 Co lorado 78
No , Ariz 59 ldal'lo 51 57
N 1
(o~) hndge 89 Chapman 84
NW Nazarene 91 Warne r
Pacific 77
Oregon 79 California 60
Ore9on Coli 81 oregon Te ch
70
·
Pac Lutheran 77 Whitworth
70
Redlands 81 LaVerne 71
San Otego 73 UC R1vers1de 56
San Francisco 86 Sante Clara
IJ
Seattle 78 St Mary 's (Calif )

72

UCLA 91 wash ington Sf 11
Utah 81 wvming 69
Washington 91 USC 79
W Montana 105 Rocky Min
67
Weslmrnster !Utah ) 65 Regts
62
W Washington 81 So Oregon

"

Whitman 75 Pacifi C (Ore. ) 68
Whltt1er 99 Clar emont Mudd
67
Willamette 101 Western
Baptist 55
Sunday's Results
Pha Textile 89 Bt.tffalo St 78
Gannon 72 St Jo hn FtSher 59
Pa ci fic (Ca l J 70 San Otego
St 64

Mar tv Ho l brook , Cheryl
Huber , Ph•llip Jarrell , D1ana
Johnson , c 1ndy Kay , Rocky
Kearns, Krmberty Kn1ght,
Dal e Lewis , Joe Parsons,
Mmdy Raynes . Dan Rickard ,
Dre&lt;~ma R•fl le, Joy ce Riley ,
Eddie Robinson , Be11ertv
Rousll . Jeff Russell, Betty

Shre ld$ , ~rchard Sr ders .
Robin Stewart , Dan rei
Stodola
Greg Weaver ,
Rrchard Wolf. Mark Wr rght.
De)(ter Zerkle
JUNIORS
Cheryl
Adams , Norma Goodntle ,
Sheila Ohlrnger, Mona
Weaver , CAro lyn 5hrrley ,
Sh rrley
Kearns.
Bob
Nrce wander , Barbara
Johnson. Vrckr e Moore ,
Drnah Myers , Teresa Prof
fttt , J rm Sm1th , Debbie Ord ,
Carrie Lee Hat cher , Lmda
Test , Lora Lea Smtih,
Carolyn Richard. Jennrfer
Weav er , Chrrslt Kearns,
Robert Jarrell , Lo•s Jean
Peters . Carla Me Farland ,
Jay Robert Layn e, Cheryl
Circle , Tim Tucker , Trm
Savre . Jurtv NP.ed s
SOPHOMORES Greg
Bless.ng , KJm Con red , Brell
Hpolbrook KMimkJav r5ns , Aprrt
an.on s, Stodo• lee , Belinda
Ievens ,
Karen
Zerkle , Ketv-tn Ho11aker ,
Gary Srders, Teddy Swartl ,
B•ll welte , Charles Zt.tspan ,
Drane Abet, Ltnd&amp; Hobbs ,
Bob Barni tz. Jenny James,
Rhonda
Kav .
Marla
McGtn!'lrs , Lan ce Olrver.
Kathy Test , Lrsa VanMa tre,
Dwayne While , Ri(:hard
Buzzard. Darla K Fowler ,
tames R Lavender , Mary e
McCFarland , Ben 1am 1n E
Roush . Lours R. Kent, Connre
Burton . Sarah Zuspan . Brent
Hart , Lisa Gilland
FRESHMEN
Mark
F rs her ·,
Mary Oldaker ,
Metan re Srssron , Jeff Staa ts ,
Eric Bumgardner , Ltnda
Gfl!ispre. Cathy Rousr.,
Lyndon R Fields, Patri ck D
kearns , Lisa A Brown, Lesa
C Grimm , Duane Ke1th
Sayre, Susan J Edwards ,
Brenda L Roush , John K
BOnd , Dav•d l Camp, Joni
D Clark, Terri A Johnson ,
Carol Nelson, Mike J Roush ,
Gregery A Stodo la , Crystal
Weaver , Jennrfer Badgley ,
Lora Bryan , Ang re Casto,
Susan
Danny
Fields.
Gerlach , Lrsa Reynolds .
Sheryl ~oush .
EIGHTH GRADE
Yv-onne Coll1er , Nellie
Esque , Julie Gibbs , Mrke
Gnmm, Terri Jehnson ,
Debbte Macknight , Eric
Barnil:z , Relma Goodnlle
Bret t Grinstead , TroY
Hesson . Kevrn Jones. Terry
McCarthy , Allee Rot.t!h, Tim
Roush, Jill Taylor, karen
Brown, Brian Oingey Judy
Hall , T1m Long, Jerry
Oldaker , Jackre Ridgeway ,

Stephe[)S()n ran into some
bogey problems along the

way but hung
6

on for a four·

· h
over-par 7 to gam er first
victory on the LPGA tour by
one shot over defending
championSandraHaynieand
Judy Meister.
Her winnmg 54-hole score
WaS two-over1J&amp;r 218 on the
6,300-yard, par 72 Golden
Gate Country Club course.
The
champion,
who
pocketed$8,500withherwin,
almostshotherwayoutofthe
tournament hy bog . f'
eymg 1ve
outofsixholesfrom the 9th to
the J~th, but settled down
with pars On 16 and 17.
Onthe470-yard,par518th,
he hit he
nd sh t ·
S
r seco
0 Into 8
trap guarding the. green, but
blastedouttowithinlOfeetof
the hole and tWOiJUtted for
the par and the win .
ul feIt better In
. the sand
lhanldidchipping,"saidthe
A tr II bo
h
us a an- rngro, w onow
lives in Palm Springs, Calif.

day . It was the only thing that
let me down."
Stephenson fired a 69
Saturday
to
assume
cornrnand by two strokes
over Haynie and first-round
leader Sally Little after two
rounds, but a strong wind
which sprang up late In the
day and continued throughout
the final 18 holes Sunday sent
scores soaring .
Haynie shot a 7S in the final
round while Meister- one of
just seven contestants who
matched or broke par for the
day - had a 71.
"I learned a lot playmg m
the wind yesterday. It made a
difference today," Meister
said.
Tied for fourth at fouroverpar 220 were Joanne
Carner, Jerilyn Britz and
Judy Rankin, winner of last
weekend's Burdtnes
Invitational in M1ami . Carner
shot a 74 Sunday while Britz
and Rankin had 75s.
l..ittle, who fired a women's
course,..ecord 67 in the first
round, finished with an 80 to
end up at 224, SIX shots behind

than Stott's.
Nascar President Bill
France Jr . would not specify
what the " fuel pressure
assiSts" were. But he did say
they were " additional fuel
sources for improving the •
performance
of
the
automobile. As far as the
description of what we found,
I think we have to stop with
what we have said.' '
The Nascar announcement
came shortly before 9 p.m.
EST, nine hours affter the
time trials ended. Officials
began tearing down the Foyt
and Waltrip cars at 4 p.m.
Earlier, the time of 1975
Rookie of the Year Bruce Hill
was disallowed, with officials
saymg his "fuel did not meet
normal test standards."
Stott, 41, finished fifth In
last year's DayiDna 5110.
His chief mechanic, Dick
Hutcherson , said, "Nascar
has really become proficient
in keeping this an honest ballgame."
NorriS Reed , who owns
Stott's car, said, ''We've
always raced as a hobby, but
I've never cheated."

treasurer.

'

For the Installation Mrs.
Shiveley led the group in
singing, "I'll Go Where you
Want
Me
To
Go,"

you'll never mt ss it.
So be chan tabl e to

your fu ture. And yo ur
co untry'~ futurl!

Tnke stock m America
with US. Savmgs Bonds.
N,.,. l_lo,,MI•P" , .- ,, ,, ,, , , &lt;o i,.•nf,t,l
~

the winner.

I&gt;Jrtl.ll u rllluf. ~ "' " "
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The tournament was
sponsored by the Sarah
Coventry company.

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&lt;111,1Will In~ • • i ll~ I h, l, r ,j I" !II II l o
&lt;llfo l n•l un to l ,,J, '" ' '"'"

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Thke ·

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m~enca.

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M

LETART
FALLS
lnotallatlon of officers
highlighted a 19eeting of the
United Methodl.st Women of
the Letart Falla Church at the
horne of Mrs. Andrew CrOIS
Wedneaday.
Installed by Mrs. Howard
Shiveley were Mrs . Bert
Grimm, president; Mrs .
Ern~st
Shuler,
vice
president; Mrs. Don Beii
secretary, and Mrs. Cross'

Another chanty dnve?
No. But we are going to
ask for some of your
money . The difference .s,
we're going to give it uaek .
And more
Justgiveai the office
Buy U.S . Savmgs Bonds
through your Pa yroll
Savings Pian at work .
You see, a little will he
taken out of each check
and set aside to buy Ll S
Sav ing• Bohd•. And
because it 's automat!&lt;' ,

:'My chipping was bad all

St e..,en s ,
Mic kr
Hankmson , Randy wrrght ,
Vicker~ ,
Barbera
kim
Gordon. Mary Hoffman ,
Teresa Jones , Lis a Hrll ,
Angela PrOft itl, John Ben
neiL Tammy Ot) ltng er ,
Rrchard Thornt on, Ter ry
Angel , Jeff Bumgardne~ . Jeff
Fields, Terrr L Johnson ,
Connre Kearns, Jeff Lath ey,
Maureen Morrrson . Garv
Richards, usa Stewar t
SEVENTH GRADE
Donald Roush, Lou Roush ,
Terry Roush , Barrv Van
matre , Jane Wyatt , Trmmy
Sines . Rober t Mossman ,
Todd Kitchen, John Roach ,
Carla Hood , Mary Tripp,
Charles UoeyJ Roush , Cerl
Dugan , Tanowa Hi ll. Conn ie
Hart , Hetdt Hub er. Doll ie
Roush . Rodney Bt.tmgarcrner ,
Sherr r Russ ell , Donald
Roach, Marlrn Zfrkle, Jeffery
VanMeter , Ronald Johnson.
Anna
Parsons ,
Mark
McKniqht, Debra Starr, Kim
Bash, ·TOdd Tucker, Sherr 1
McCarthy, terry Hobson ,
Larry
Gibbs,
Tammy
Williamson , Peggy Fisher
Charlie Goodnlle, Scol l
Barnill , Terri Brown , Mike
Buzzard , Julie Clark, Peggy
Dot.tthit, Jeff Fowler. Tim
Kelly , Scott McDermitt , Lee

Officer installation
highlights meeting

Join Ihe Payroll'Savings Plan.

DUE TO THE GREAT
RESPONSE OF OUR SALE!

WE WILL BE
CLOSED
THROUGH THURS., FEB. 12

accompanied by Mrs. Shuler
on the organ. She streued in·
her talk that no one should
promise to do all their
assigned duties except with
honesty and sincerity. She
read " There's a World Out
There" and asked each one to
use her special talent when
and where needed. In
conclusion, Mrs . Shiveley
gave a prayer for the new
officers, the c hurch and
America.
A service of prayer and
self-denial was conducted by
Mrs. Grinun. She explained
that 50 per cent of the offering
for global endeavors goes for
the overseas underprivileged
while 50 per cent is kept in the
United 's tates to aid in
projects for senior citizens,
disasters and other worthy
efforts.
"And All These Things
Shall Be Added" was the title
of the program with each
member giving a responsive
reading . Organ music was
with
used
throughout
" Amazing Grace" as the
theme. Mrs. Gladys Shields
read " I Am Happy" and Mrs.
Cross, "Sharing Our Gifts."
Mrs. Shiveley sang ''The
Magic Pennies" at which
time each member placed
her offenng on the improvised altar. A prayer of
thanks was given in unison .
Devotions by Mrs. Shuler
were taken from John 7.
During the business meeting
24 shut-in calls were
reported. Members signed a
round,..obin card for Mrs.
Eula Wolfe. Taking part in
the program were Mrs. Bell,
Mrs. Cross, Mrs. Shuler, Mrs.
Shields, Mrs. Grimm, Mrs.
Shiveley, Mrs. Erma Wilson
and Mrs. Erma Hill. Mrs.
Inez Hlll will host the next
meeting. Mrs. Cross, assisted
by Teresa Shuler, served a
salad course.

VISIT ENJOYED
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Grimm
of Letart Falls v1s1ted last
week m Columbus with Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Grimm and
family and Mrs. C. H. Skeels
!Kitty Allen)

BACK HOME
Mr . and Mrs Ardith Barton
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert K
Barton and Scottie , Pomeroy,
have returned home after
spending 10 days in
Jacksonville, Fla with Mr
and Mrs. Terry Wyatt and
Robbie . Mrs. Wyatt is the
former Brenda Barton .

Doubt~ up,

TO RE-GROUP

RE.QPEN FRIDAY AT 9:00

~oach

Sing out for the Yellow Pages!
Whether you want to create 'l charming
melody, or are on the horns of a dilemma
over any product or service ...
Whatever you need IS there at your
fingertips when your fingers do
the walking through the
Yellow Pages.

It fits t...ly·ll11

• .,..., ••••dtr 11

........
I ..

was

going ID do."

No . Dakota st 78 No Dakota
70
No M•chi,S~an 95 Ferr•s St 58
N 'wstrn Iowa 66 St Thomas
65
Notre Dame 111 Davidson 74
Ohio 90 No ttllnors 79
Ohio Nor 10 Ba l dwin wallace
66
Oklahoma 64 Kansas 63
Otterbein 58 Wooster 57
Purdue 85 Wisconsin 74

determine positions 3-40 in
the $342,000 class1c.
Sunday's qualifying was
ooly for the two top starting
pos1tioos.
With the times of the three
fastest cars disallowed,
Ramo Stott of Keokuk , Iowa ,
gets the pole position and its
$5,000 prize, with his "legal"
qualifying speed of 183.456
miles per hour in a Chevrolet.
Terry Ryan of Davenort,
Iowa, gets the outside pole
and $1,000 with his 183.109
m.p.h. lap in a Chevrolet.
Foyt, from Houston; Tex.,
had a 187.477 m.p.h. lap .
Waltrip, of Franklin, Tenn.,
turned his lap at 186.617
m.p.h , and Marcis was
clocked at 186.548 m.p.h.
Their speeds were at least
three miles per hour faster

Jan Stephenson
has first title
night about how she was
going ID cope with strong
winds to preserve her secondround lead In the $60,000
NaplesLPGAClassic,butshe
stillhadnoplanwhenshegot
ID the first tee Sunday.
"I Spent all night trying ID
.work outastrategy," said the
dark ~ha1red 24·year..old
Californian. "Icameouthere

c..llet lily!
_

E-,. frieldairo.loundrr
CAntor - - h 101)' to
_ , and city a family-

lin load witt! 1M -"&lt;!
caro toclay's ..........
fabria •:nand. Yet it
talcn up a llllniftiUIO al
.,._, flts jvil abovt
au,whMa - In thll
kikhan, b.th, ewn ·a
hallway.
Oft)' a4

a-.

Polly's Pointers
Af111kl te Start a Ficht
DEAR HELEN :
I've been reading books on assertiveness trainina.
aggression therapy, etc. which teach you how to stand up for
your rights and fight back.
·
The authors say, "Be honest over what displeases you,"
but this means the other person has a right ID speak out, and I
don't know whether I could lake that.
If I did tell my husband something he does irks me, he'd
retaliate by pointing out things about myself I doo't want ID
hear ... which could lead IDa first-class bramigan, or else hurt
silence. Aa for thoee "fair fight rules, " who thinks of fairness
when tempers flare?
If I practiced my new-found bossiness on siDre clerks or
waitresses, I'd feel like a heel, ev~n though they might seem to
&lt;!eserve it. I've always thought goocklatured tolerance helps
more than snappy comebacks.
Is A. T. (assertiveness training) becoming just another
media hype as I read recently, or does it really offer all those

woo~~r~':."~r~~!!~~.n.-:e~o~:...'~.!:!i all sure I'd
be happier if I snapped hack at people. I get along pretty well
(and don't feel at all downtrndden) being - UITLE OL'
QUIET ME
DEAR QUIET:
If you'repleased with the way you are, don't mess up your
. formula!
Assertiveness Training, Aggression Therapy, all those
"in"ldeas for better living, can help those who need them -if
used the right way.
But when 11 Be assertive" translates "Be obnoxious," it's
time to find another book - or another teacher.
(And that's the trouble with pop psychology - it becomes
so popular tha,t real help gets diluted by a lot of misguided
thinking and pat answers:..in your words, "media hype ." )
Let'sjust say A. T.lsgreatfor doormat types, hut the road
to happiness was never paved with brickbats. - H.
DEAR HELEN:
The question carne up at a cocklail party : How come they
allow navel exposure oo TV (both men and women), when
they're censorshi!H'ity on other strategic parts of the human
anatomy? After all, nudity isn't any great surprise these days.
I finally figured it like this: What males and females
BOTII have (such as belly buttons), gets by the censor's office,
hut if only one sex is equipped, that part of the anatomy is
forbidden viewing by TV audiences.
Smart, huh? -DUKE
DEAR DUKE:
Smart, uh-uh' How about Adam's apples? Or beards ? - H.
DEAR HELEN:
The controversy over thank-you notes for gifts has one
answer from me for the mod generation who thinks they aren't
necessary. After another Christmas with no appreciative
letters or pl)one calls from five teenage relatives, I quietly
announced I was divorcing THEM. They had their way or
thinking,! had mine, and in the future, my checkbook was lost
until their courtesy returned. - NO lONGER THE
BENEVOLENT GRANDPARENT
Got a problem? An adult subject for discussion? You can talk it
over in her column if you write to Helen Bottel, care of this
newspaper.

Scholarship funding
planned by council
Funding for the two PTA
scholarships to be awarded to
Meigs County graduates this
spring was planned at the
Thursday night meeting of
the Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers.
Meeting at the Chester
Elementary School, the
Council
decided
to
supplement scholarship
contributions from the units
hy staging a yard sale on
April2 and 3. Place of the sale
will be announced later. Each
unit is being asked to furnish
items for the sale and to have
them priced before the days
of the sale. Each unit was
also aaked ID assign two or
three people to work at the
sale.
This will be the first year
that the Council has awarded
more than one scholarship.
The second scholarship is a
bicentennial project.
Applic~tions
for
the
scholarships are currently
available from the guidance
counselors of all three high
schools. Recipients are
selected by a conunittee from
the Ohio PTA.
Mrs. Charles Goeglein,
president, amounced that the
cultural arts contest wlll tala:
place aaaln this year hut thai
as yet the slate chairperson
has not announced the theme.
Tentative achedule Is for
judging lo take place in the
units in March, with the
county judging ID lake place
at the April 1 meeting of

Council at the 1\liddleport
Elementary School.
To open the meeting Mrs.
Jean Spencer led in the
pledge to the flag. Mrs. Linda
Bentz gave devotions and
Mrs . Spencer had , the
welcome. A communication
was read from the national
president · on accomplishments of the PTA and the
goals set for 1976. A report
was given on the Sears
study
on
Roebuck
absenteeism m 11 states
including Ohio with the
conclusion
being
that
absenteeism
leads
to
dropouts which increases
delinquency and vandahsm.
Mrs. Goeglein, as a part of
the Council's involvement in
community programs
concerning children,
reported on the Christmas
party for the boys and girls of
the Gallia County Children's
Home at the horne of Mr. and
Mrs. A. R. Knight.
It was noted that the
membership report is due ID
the State PTA office by
March 15. The National
Convention was announced
for May 23 ID 26 in Louisville,
Ky.
Mrs. Wllllam Downie, ~~
president, spoke on PTA
accompllshmenla through the
years. The pro~ram was
presented by Keith Circle,
Meigs minuteman, who spoke
and showed slides on the
growth and development of
America.

MMIILC-1

1

479

Baker
Furniture
MJ•••pDii, Ohio

INFLATION FIGHTER
DEAR POI.!. Y - I cannot
remove an opaque film from
the inside of my three crystal
decanters. I have tried
blea ch, ammonia, d1shwasher detergent, vinegar
and a baking soda solution
with popcorn kernels hoping
the fnction would doslodge
the film None of these
worked so please tell me what
I can do to make them clear

aiid clean. - KATHERINE.
DEAR KATHERINE This film certainly reslsled a
lol of old sta,.a&gt;ys fur such
removal so I am wondering if
anytlling will help. Try fllllng
each of them with hot
detergent suds plus two or
three tablespoons of water
conditioner, let stand over·
night and lhen rinse well. Or,
try shaking tea leaves and
vinegar In each bottle until
the deposit Is loosened and
then use a bottle brush to help
remove it. Good luck to you.
-POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - While
working on my recipe file I
needed some new mdex cards
sol cut up plastic bottles with
fa~rly straight sides - bleach
bottles work fme . I made
these "cards" the same size
as the recipes cards, with
one-half in ch extensions at
the top for the names of the
categories The names such
as ucakes,H "Candy I!! etc.

were put on with embossing
but a markmg pen could be
used. - DORIS.

heritage hc!use

\

'
HEATHER RaeAne Hill
celebrated her first birthday Jan . 26 with a party
at the home of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger E. Hill,
Racine. Served cake and
ice cream were her
brother, Scottie, Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry A. Powell, Mr.
and Mrs Austin Wolfe,
Aimee and Jerry, Mrs. Inez
Hill, and Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Manning. G1rts
were presented to Heather.

DEAR POLLY - One of
my Pet Peeves is with ad·
vertisers who send brochures
and long letters that we do not
have time to read. What I am
most mterested in is "What is
lhedeal?" and " How much?''
The price Is usually almost
invisible, so I just toss them
m the basket, ev~n 1f I m1ght
be interested in the product.
Anolher Pet Peeve is with
those doctors who answer a
patient in medical terms no
ordinary person can un· derstand. Then the dociDr is
annoyed when the patient
.. ~sks ·for an explanation. I
think they are obligated to
explain any treatment or
medicallon so it can be understood . - MILDRED.
· DEAR · POLLY - Annie
could use some of her many
table napkins as guest towels
arranged in different ways In
her bathroom. They could
hang from towel racks or
some m1ght be stacked on a
small tray put on the sink,
counter or anywhere they are
easily accessible for guests.
Some of these napkin-guest
towels could also be put in the
guest room - E.D.H.
DEAR POLLY - At last I
have solved the problem of
remembermg your Pointers.

Whenever I see one that I
thmk may be of use to me
sometime in the future I chp
1! and paste it in a notebook.
At the front of the notebook 1
have a table of contents
lishng the Pointers and the
pages on· which they are
pasted. Some such hooks
have the pages numbered,
and if not do il yourself. This
method helps me to find the
hmts quickly when they are
needed. - LEAH.
You will receive a dollar if
Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet
Peeve, Polly's Problem or
solution to a problem. Write
Pplly in care of this newspaper.

Give Your Valentine

FLOWERS
BEAUTIFUL

Red Tulips
Red Azaleas
Terrariums
Wtth Valentine Trim

20%

OFF

Cash •n Carry

59 N. Second St.
Mi
, Ohio

SPECIAL

GOOD THROUGH SUN .. FEB. 15

SONNY BURGER BASKET

Including Sunny Burger, french tries, and
cole slaw or baked beans .

TOREADOR G3850

lnnovall\le ultramodern styling. Grained
Rosewood color wrth sharply contra&amp;ting
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Anothtr Zenith atep forward
picture brlghtness

in

275V CHASSIS- Most
powerful 2enrth chassis In
17-lnch dragonat TV, wrth
27.500 volts' ot prc:ture power
TITAN

• ttulgn average

Play it oafe and mre _
It may be time to
have your preoent
policy updated,

DALE C. WMNER
f

~.oll)t Cram• r

Social
Calendar

FRIES

l.et's fcrllc Soon

•

\

/

By

HEATH
UNITED
Methodist Women, Heath
Church, Middleport, 7:30
p.m. Monday at the church.
Devotions by Mrs. Charles
Bradbury ; ; program by
Mrs. Robert
Bumgar·
ner ,
and
refresh·
.~.te e:
ments by Mrs. Jack Bechtle,
Mrs. James Brewington,
Mrs. Jessie Houchins and
Mrs. Terry Byer.
MEiGS County AssOCiation
for
Retarded . Citizens
Monday, 7:30p.m. at Mental
Health Center, Pomeroy.
MONDAY
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY PTA, 7:30
POMEROY
Mil).
Monday at the Pomeroy DLEPORT Lions Club,,
Elememtary School. Wednesday noon, Meigs Inn.
Founder's Day ID he observed
POMEROY
CHAPTER,
with past presidents to be Royal Arch Masons, and
honored. The program will be Bosworth Council, Royal and
"America We Love You" by Select Masters, Wednesday,
Mrs. Ben Neutzling, with 7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Mrs. Lois Burl, soloist. Masonic Temple.
Fathers night to be observed
with fathers to count twice in
room
attendance.
Refreshments will be served.
REVIVAL at Free Will
Baptist Church, Ash St.,
Middleport,
beginning
Monday with services at 7:30
Converse Shoes in
each evening and special
many styles and
vocal numbers.
colors.
TALENT
CONTEST
Monday for youngsters up to
14 years of age who live in the
Tuppers Plains School
Middleport, Ohio
District. The event is being
sponsored by the Tuppers
Plains Booster Association,
and will be held following the
regular meeting. First prize
is $10. To enter, phone 9854283 or 98f&gt;-1279.
MEIGS County Salon,
Eight and Forty, Monday,
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Julia Hysell. Members are
reminded to take gifts for
Sherri Marshall 's 11th birthday observance, along with
items for a s1lent auction.

HOT DOG and
FRENOt
ONLY

Two can ride cheaper
than one.

at-cloartt.)

•,_I

at Wellston with registration
to be at 9 a.m ., and the jWlior
distncl conference was
announced for April 24 at·
Pomeroy . Pam Powers IS the
district president, and Myrtle
Walker, the district jWlior
chairperson.
A thank-you note was read
from the Marshall family for
remembrances of Shem on
her birthday. She is a victim
ofcysticfihrosis . A thank-you
nole was also read from Mrs .
Marjorie Goett for a
remembrance
whtle
hospitalized. It was noted
that Ann McCudden, a state
officer, 1s ill. Valentines are
to be sent to Xema for the
children at the orphans home
there . Mrs. Reuter reported
that the un1t has reached the
membership goal.
Flags have been presented
by the unit, two to Meigs High
School, and two to scout
troops. A donation was made
to the Marie Moore perpetual
fund in remembrance of Mrs.
Frances Warner and Mrs.
Eleanor Bates . A $25 contribution was also made to
the Auxiliary president's
special fund.
Mrs . Martin talked on
legislation, particularly the
child family act which is H.
B. 2966 and S. B. 626, and
urged the membership to
express their opposition by
writing their legislators .
Letters
were
written
following the meeting. Mrs.
Martin also talked on
veterans rights and current
bills on this before Congress.
Mrs. Case• reported on a
coloring contest on the theme
"Your Friend, a Policeman"
to he carried out in the local
schools .
Mrs .' Pratt presided at the
meeting with Mrs. Edith
Sauer giYmg the prayer
Refreshments of ice cream
and cake were served.

FOOT lDNG

,...,, ...... (Aha

...... ll In woadvraltt

The annual party in observance of the birthday of
the American Legion and to
honor local legionnaires was
set for March 16 at the hall
when the American Legion
Auxlliary, Drew Webster
Post 39, met Wednesday night
at the hall.
Mrs . Faye Wildermuth ,
community service chairperson, will have charge of
the observanc~ with others on
the committee, Mrs. Marge
Reuter, Mrs. Pearl Knapp,
Mrs . Genevieve Meinhart.
Mrs. Gemma Casci, Mrs.
Ellen Couch, Mrs. Carrie
Neutzllng and Mrs. Grate
Pratt, to ass1st . Mrs. Veda
Davis, Mrs . Isabelle Couch
and Miss Erma Smith were
appointed to have charge of
the table decorations.
Tentative plans were also
made for a special bicentennial celebration to take
place later in the year and
named to that planning
comm1ttee were Mrs. Nfulzing, Mrs. Mary Martin, Mrs .
Knapp, Mrs. Catherine
Welsh, Mrs. Norma Jewell,
Mrs. Iva Powell, Mrs . Ed1lh
Sauer, Mrs. Davis, Mrs .
Pratt, Miss Smith, Mrs .
Marge Goett, Mrs. Cumings,
Mrs. Ruby Marshall and
Cheryl Lehew.
A delegate to Buckeye
Girls' State was selected
during the meeting but will
not be announced until later .
It was noted that Thornville
Unit 342 will host the Girls
State tea this spring.
The unit voted to contribute
$5 for the Junior Auxihary
party at the Athens Mental
Health Center Feb. 19 and
also lo donate some game
pnzes. Mrs. Lula Hampton is
the district chairperson In
charge of the party. The unit
also donated $5 for the senior
party at the Athens Center
March 18 and agreed that
each member will provtde a
game prize.
The midwinter conference
at the neil House m Columbus, Feb. 20-22 was announced and it was reported
that Mrs. Lynn Randall,
Central Division president of
the Auxiliary, will be
honored . Members were
asked to take cookies for a
coffee hour .
A leadership training
session was set for March 27

Water conditioner
ckanS CtySta/

$}19

pages

fl.. atllac.,. colon to ·
match or --.la11w1t

Ga .

LSU~7 Milllll tp~i

if.

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Abbey Sl

.
.'

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
rUP!) - In an unprecedented
actioo, Nascar officials disallowed the Daytona 500
qualifying times for A.J .
Foyt, Darrell Waltrip and
Dave Marcis because their
cars were illegally equipped.
Nascar said the Chevrolets
or Foyt and Waltrip "were set
up for use of fuel pressure
assists, which are not
allOwed."
Marcis' Dodge, Nascar
said, "was equipped with a
non-approved
radiator
stoppage."
The unprecedented Nascar
action does not disqualify the
three from the race, but they
'l'ill have to re.quallfy IDday
for twin 125-mlle qualifying
races Thursday that will

NAPLES, Fla. (UP!) _

~

"

Alabama 86 Auburn 75
Anderson 74 No Greenvtlle 64
Athens St 7'2 St . Bernard 70
Austin Peav 89 Murray Sl 78
Averett 86 N . c Wesleyan 82
{at)
Benedict 80 Morris Brown 72
Berry U Piedmont 71
Campbell 82 Francis Marton
58
Catawba 78 Elon 75
Catholic U 97 C Conn . Coli
71
centenary 87 Southern Mrss
67
C . Newport 78 B'water ( Va . J
73
CitaCiel 91 Richmond 79
Coppin St 100 Bowie Sl . 79
Emory &amp; Henry BJ Hamp
Syd . 17
Florida 78, Miss . Sf 71 fa t)
Fla Southern 93 Brscavne 84
Florida St. 18 So Fla . 62
Florida Tech 9A Rollins 11
Gardner w_,bb 69 Belmont

I
I
''
,

Hot drivers disqualified

!!:

::;:

SATURDAY'S COLLEGE
Mad rson 102 Roanoke 78
BASKETBALL RESULTS
Midd Tenn 71 W Kentucky
Unrled Press lnternaltonal
65
East
Morehead Sl 72 E Kentucky
Albr rght 77 Muhlenberg 58
53
Alfred 11 Ithaca 70
Morgan St 74 N C A&amp; T 67
Allegl'leny 71 Wash &amp; Jeff 64 Mt St Mary 's 65 Loyola
Allegheny Bovee 95 Potomac (Md) 58
62
Nicholl s Sf 8 1 U Tenn Marlin Qurn cy 101 St Ambrose 65
Babson 91 Norwich 67
64
Rose Hulman 75 SW Tenn 60
Bart.tch 61 John Jay 52
No Carolina 97 Furman 64 St. Fr'ancrs {Ill t 92 Grace 88
Bethany 76 Th ie l 68
N C Central 80 Howard 89 St John 's (Minn J 82 C'dra
CMinn J 62
Boston St 102 R E Coli . 93 No . Car Charlotte 99 Ga St
Bowdoin 63 Middlebury 54 · 64
S t Joseph's {t nd) 78 Butter
Can rsrus 89 Duquesne 81
No Geergra 87 southern Tech 77
StLouis 66 Xavrer {Ohrol 61
Carnegre Mellon 102 J 84
Carroll 80
NE La 87 So Alabama 70
St Norbert's lOB Mt Scenarro
Cheyney 95 Millersville 71
NW La 83 Troy 51 76
66
Clar1on B5 Pitt Johnstown 65 NW Mo St 104 SE Mo 5 1 101 Srlver Lake 94 Wrs Manliwoc
Colgate 45 RPI 40
Old Domrn ron 78 Wash &amp; Lee 83
Concord 85 Dav 1s &amp; Elkins !2 66
Sout hern Colo 60 Wasl'lburn
54
C W Post 71 Southampton 66 Radford 79 Bl uefre ld 60
Tarkio
77 Baker 75
Dartmouth 63 Brown 54
Salisbury Sl 70 Randolph
Trff1n 114 lnd Purdue Ft
Macon 69
,
Delaware 84 Bucknell 73
Domrnrcan (NYJ 17 M'vtll e 68 So Carol rna 65 Temple 58
Wayne 78
Toledo 69 Kent 51 60
Dowling 86 Krng's (NY 1 68 Stetson 12 Flcmda A&amp;M 64
Urbana 82 Oh10 Dominican 58
Drew 74 NY Tech 46
Tennessee 92 Kentucky 85
Fairmont 70 Wtleelrng 65 (otl Transylvanra 65 Centre 60
Vmcennes Ill Pensacola 98
WayneS t 109ChrcagoSt 101
Glassboro 63 Montcl&amp; !r 60
Tulane 86 Dilla rd 80
Glenville 93 West Liberty 76 Vanderbrlt 71 Georgra 69 (2 W Michrgan 76 C Michrgan
Grove Cily -42 Fredonia 39
oil
~abash 74 DePauw 68
Ham rlton 78 Oswego St 59
Vrrginia Tech 80 Geo
Westmar 90 Bethel 87
Harvard 73 Yale 63
Washmgton 73
Haverford 90 Swarthmore 71 Wake Forest 82 Vrrgrnra 7B Wheaton 82 North Park 53
lnd1ana fPa ) 86 Alliance 57 W Maryland 65 Gettysbu rg William Jewell 109 Graceland
85
lona 84 Main e 67
56
Jersey City St. 86 NJ Tec h 52 Wil li am &amp; Mary 68 VMI 62
Wtlm 1ngton 71 Bluffton 68
Keene 51 105 Plymot.tth 83
Midwest
~~s111 eEo u Cla1r e 72 Wts
66
Lafayette 70 ~rder 55
Albion 62 Olivet 60
LeMoyne 99 Roc hester 70
AQurnas 108 Marion 83
Wrs La Crosse 100 W1S
Lmden St. 70 Farming ton 83 Arkansas 75 W lllrno rs 72 {of) Superior 77
Manhattan 79 Fa rrt1eld 69
Ashland 91 Adrian IMich) 60 Wrs Oshkosh 80 Wis . River
Maris! 90 Bloomfi eld 76
Augsburg 85 Sl. Olaf 60
Falls 68
Marshall 58 FDU R: 'ford 52 Augustana Coli 72 Cartha ~ e Wrs Parkside 75 Lakeland 73
W1ttenberg 13 Oh io Wesleyan
Massachusetts 86 Con Coli
neclicu t 73
Aurora 79 Concordra {Ill ) n 59
Mercyhurst 13 Ed inboro 72 Bat[ St 8-4 Eastern Mrch 78 Wright St 76 Cleveland 62
Emery &amp; Henry 83 Harmp
Be tl'lel ( Ka ns J 94 Kans
Southwest
Svd 77
Newman 79
Mo Rolla 81 NE Mo St 64 Bethel (Mtnn) 77 Goshen 71 Cameron 90 Ok la . S&amp;A 99 (OIJ
Dallas Bapt 92 Okla Bllptrst
Monmouth &lt;NJ) 95 Upsa la 84 Cal vrn 64 Hope 56
Muskrngum Tech 70 Ohio C M'drst 93 Mtd Amerrca 76
Esn
N
M
88
Okla
Valley 68
Naz . 78
Panhandl e 66
Muskrngum Tech 70 Ohio Chattanooga 65 Dayton 63
Valley 68
Cincinnat r 87 :Jacksonvrlle 62 Houston 99 R rce 79
Le Tourneau 88 Trm ity 86 (2
New Hampshire 63 Boston Cornell (Iowa) 67 knox {!2
ols)
Coli 61
Defrance 91 Findlay 87
Memphis Sl 87 Oklahoma
New Paltz 89 Yeshiva 83
Dentson 53 Mar1etta 51
Niagara 51 Army 50
Doane 101 Mrdland Lutheren Crty 10
New Me&gt;r:ico 69 Texas El
No . Adams 92 Fitchburg 66 72
Oneonta Sf 54 York INY J 38 E lilinor s 63 lnd T. Haute 61 Pa.so 58
Penn 94 Columbta 70
Emporia St 90 Kearnev St 78 N M Highland s 108 Wsn
Pha . Te)(frle 8.5 El iZabeth Evansville 76 Valpararso 70 Co lo 87
NE Okla 72 5W Okla 58
town 59
Grinnell 92 Lawrence 84
Prttsburgh 71 Sy ra cuse 67
Hamlrne 56 Gustavus 47 (ol) Oral Roberts 107 Lamar 92
Por t Gorham 75 St Franc 1s Illinois 61 Northwestern 55 Pan Amer.can 111 Denver 83
San ta Fe 102 Colorado Coli 93
(Mel 65
Ill. B'tine 95 Trinity (Ill l 75
Potsdam 102 Clarkson 77
tltrnors St 68 SIU Ed 'vi lle 59 SE Okla 84 NW Okla 54
Princeton 53 Co rnell 35
Indiana 72 Mrch rgan 67 (ol) S F Austrn 78 Sam Houston
Providence 103 Holy Cross 85 Indiana Central 68 Franklin
SMU 79 Texas 16
Rhode Island 71 DePaul 70 60
Roch Tech 82 Genesco St 63 Indiana Tech 110 Anderson TeKas A&amp;M 75 Baylor 63
Texas Sot.t lhern 109 Southern
Rutgers 86 Navy 71
lOS
u 90
Shepflerd 95 Bluefie ld 51 90 Iowa 65 Minnesota 58
TeKas Tech 82 TCU 15
St Bonaventure 98 LIU 87
Nebrasks 66 Iowa Sl 56
St Francrs (Pa ) so 51 Iowa Wesleyan 74 Wtllram Wayland Bapt 85 Ok!a
C' ltan 61
Vrncent 61
Penn 60
West Texas 68 N M St 66
St JOhn's 77 Fordham 67
Kenyon 61 Hetdelberg 50
(Of)
St Lawrence 73 Hobart 63
Lou rsvtlle 74 Bradley 71
Wsn New Mex1co 56 Mesa
St Michael 's (Vt J 84 AIC 78 Malone 92 Rio Grande 84
Coil 53
Scranton 53 Junrala 52 (otJ Manchester 100 Taylor 99
Springtreld 77 Brandeis 63
Mankato 80 No . lwa 66
Wichrta St 70 Tulsa 61
Stevens Tech (NJ ) 87 PraN o , Miii"quette 68 Detrort 66
West
Stony Brook 82 Brooklyn Colt . Mramr IOhrol 70 Bowlmg
Arizona 51 67 Arrzona 63
63
Green 48
Susquehanna 81 Del Y'!ley
67
Un ton (NY) 89 Kings Point 69
Utrca 75 Castleton 49
Vrllanova 75 West Vtrgmia 58
Wagner 61 Stonehlll 59
west Chester 82 Lehigh 63
w va Wesleyan 83 Sa lem eo
W
Va Teen 61 Morr1s
Harvey 56
w Va St. 83 Beck lev 71
Soyth

I
«

~

5- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Feb. 9,1976

'f'f2 ·214l

tn2 W Matn

Pomerov
I

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

McClure's
DAIRY ISLE
Mo ao II! port,

Ohio

Phone

POWER

SYSTEMVirtually el i m•nr~tas effects ol
flousehold volltge varrat1ons
SENTRY

.....................................
CHROMATIC ONE -BUTTON

TUNING-For your color
tuning conventenee.

992-5248
OPEN FRI. TIL8-SAT. TILS

INGELS FURNITURE
9\12-1635

MIDDLEPORT

�\

'

7 - 'lbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-POPteroy, 0 ., Monday, Feb. 9,1976

DICK TRACY

:- 6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monojay , Feb . 9,_1976

~ ~d~~~ff;:~;~~~o~t~.~~~~,~ ~!~·.':.:~~::~:~~N~:;;:;'.1,~ For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

•

proposlll to r a Co m m unity
Oe \o'eto pm en t Bloc k Gr an t in
l he Co mmissio n ers off ice
Tuesday , F ebru l!ry 11 , 19 76 a l
9 00
:
a .m
11 1 9 , lie

N Ot iCe is her eb y gi v en that
Edward Che val ier of R eed s
vtlte . Ohto , ha s been d ulv
app oi n ted A d mi n ts tra t or of
th e
E ~ t atc
of
Wa y n e
Ch e v alier . decea se d . l a te of
O live
T o w ns h l p ,
M eigs
Coun t y , O hio
Cr edit or s ar e r e Qu i r ed t o
fil e th ei r c l a i ms w it h sa i d
f tduc tary wt lh tn f o ur months .

world Hock e y Assoctahon
Standing s

Da t ed th is
Jan u ary 1976

Bv United Press International

Mann in g 0

Eas t
W
New England
Cleveland
Cincinnati
lndianapolts

21 27

5

J .:~

ta

26 20
26 23
25 22
Cancu:lia n

0

54

T . Pts.
38 19
I
17
33 P '
70

W L

Winn 1peg
Quebec
Ca lgary
16
Edri'lon ton
20
Toronto
15
x onawa
l.t
x Team disband ed

23
34
J2
26

3
3
5
I

55
43

79

S a tu rday ' ~ Re~ull!&gt;

A Low Cost
Want Ad
Will Cut
Cost of
Living ••••••
WRITE YOUR
OWN AD!
IrS EASY TO
ORDER BY
MAIU
-SPECIAL!--

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4 DAYS
ONLY

sps

CASH WITH
ORDI;R

AVAILABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
NO REFUNDS.
l;ach
in.itial
and
group
of
figures
counts as one word .
Be sure to count
name
and address, if
'
used, and your phone
number.
Including
prices for items offered in your want ad
wi II
increase
response.
'

1.

2.

3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.

11.
12.
NAME
'ADDRESS

CITY
PHONE
MAIL WITH
.
'
. '1.25
lO THE
I
'

.•• DAILY SENnNEL
111 COURT ST.

'
'
•
'

'~

POMEROY, OHIO
45769
~

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
For Fiscal Year Ending
D ecembe r Jl , 1975
Scipto Townsh ip
Meigs Count y
Rt. 2 Albany , Ohio
Januarv 27 , 1976
I cc- rllfy 1he following report
to b e corre c t

35

W1nn 1peg 4 Cleveland 4
, New England 1 Toront o 3
In dianapol is 5 Cincinnati 1
Quebec J Calgary ~
Phoen 1x J Mtnneso t a 2
Sunday '!. R esult s
Minneso t a 3 Phoen1x J
Winn ipeg 8 Ca lgary 1
Quebec 5 Edmon t01'1 ~
Cl evelan d 6 N ew England 1
Houslon 5 San Diego 1
\No games today)
Tue sday 's Games
Toronto at Calg&lt;Hy
San Diego at Minn esota

.

W ebs te r
Ju dg e

41

' Ph".
'4 "5856
4

of

45

1

T

day

( I ) 26 (2J 2, 9, 3tc

55

5

'27 ]0
21 JO
West
L

Pts .

T

25 25

W

Houston
Phoen tx
San Dieg o
Mmnesota

L

21s t

'

I

Glenn E . Jewell
Town ship Cl erk
Rt . 2 Atbanr · Ohio
45 710 )
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
Balance Jan . 1. 1915General
Fund
S S,J4S.55
Motor Ve h ic le License
Tax Fu nd
3 14 84
Gasoline T a;.t Fund
1,399. 75
F1re Distr 1ct F und
351.01
Federa l Re v Sharing
F und
210 83
Totals
7,681.98
Total Rece1pts
Gene ra l F und
7,406 24
Motor Ve h ic le License
Tal&lt; Fur:1d
6,79-4 .57
Gaso ltn e Ta )( Fund
12 ,472 5 1
Fi r e Dis! Fund
1,204 96
Fe d era l Re v Sharing
F und
2.021.00
Total s
29 ,899 .28
Total Receipt s &amp; Balances
Gener a l Fund
12,751.79
Motor Vehtcle L1cense
T ax Fu n d
7, 109 41
Gaso lin e Ta x Fund
13,872 .26
F i r e Ois t Fund
l.555 .97
Fed e ral Rev Sha rtng
F und
2,291 83
Totals
37.581.26
Expendttures
General Fun d
5,806 67
Motor Vehicle Lic en se
Ta x Fund
6.593 .36
Gasoline Tax Fund
12 ,002 .07
F i re D i stnc t Fu nd
1, 232 48
Federa l Rev Sharing
F und
2, 125 .79
To tals
2.7 ,75 0.37
Balance Dec. 31 , ~75
General F un d
6,945 . 12
Motor Vehicle L1 cense
Ta x F un d
526 05
Gaso l in e Tax Fu nd
1,870 19
Ftre D tst r ict Fund
323 .49
Federa l Rev . Shart ng
Fund
2,125 79
Tota ls
27,750 37
Balance Dec . 31,1975
General F und
6,945 . 12
Mot or Vehicle License
Ta x Fund
526 .05
Gasoline Tax Fu nd
1.870. 19
Fire Ot slri c t Fund
323 .49
Federal Rev Shar tng
Fund
166 04
To t al s
9, 830.89
CASH BALAN.CE ,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
BY FUND
General Fund
Bal.. Jan 1. 1975
5,345 .55
·Receipts
General Property Ta x ~
R eal Estate and
Trail er (Gross~
2.885 .24
Tangib le Personal Proper ty
Tax (Gr oss )
44 93
Local Government and
State Incom e Tax
2,666.40
Liquor Permit Fees
149.00
Oth e r Intangibles
1,660 67
To t a l R ece ipt s
7,406 .24
To t a l Beginntng Balance
Plus Rece tpts
12 ,751.79
Expenditures
To t a l E ,..;pendi t ures
- Admin istrati ve
3,737 .31
- Town Halls, Memorial
Bui l ding s and
Grounds
1,323. 04
- Ce m e tenes
700 .0C
- Lig hting
46 32
G ra nd To ta l EKp
G en eral Fund
5. 806 .67
Bal , Dec . 31, 1975
6,945 . 12
To t a l E xp Pl us Bal ,
D ec 31,1975
12,751.7 9
Motor Vehicle License
TU Fund
Bal , J a n 1, 1975
l 14 84
Receipts
•
Motor Vehicle Licens e
Tax
6,794.57
Total Rec e ipts
6,794 51
Total Begmning Ba l an ce
Plu s Receipts
1,109.4 1
Expenditures
Total Exp enditures
- Misce llan eous
4.2 06 .81
- Maintenance
2,J76 .55
Grand Total Exp Mot or Vehicle Lic e nse
Tax Fund
6.583.36
Bal., Dec 31, 1975
526.05
Total Exp Plus Bal ,
De c . 31.1975
7, 109.41
Ga soline Tax Fund
Bal. , J an . 1, 197 5
1,399 .75
Recetpls
Ga so l i ne Tax
12, 400 00
Other
72 .51
Total Recetpts
l -2, d72 .51
Total Beginning Balan ce
Plu s Re ce ipts
13,872.26
ElCpenditures
Total Expenditures
- Mi sce llaneous
7, 384 96
- Ma i ntenance
4,6 17 11
Grand Total E x p . G a so ttne Ta x Fund 12,002 07
Bat , Dec 31, 1975
1,8 70 19
Tot a l E x p . ' P l us Bat •
Dec 31, 1975
13,812 26
Fire District Fund
Bal , Jan 1, 1975
351 01
Receipts
Ge neral Property Ta x Real Estate and Trail e r
(Gross)
1, 184 00
Tangib le Personal Proper t y
Tax {Grossl
20.96
Total Re ce ipt s
1,204 .96
Total Begmnlng Ba l ance
Plus Re ceip ts ·
1,555.97
E x penditures
Contracts
1,200.00
Auditor &amp; Tr eas
Fees
32 .48
Total Expenditures
1,232 .48
Bal , Dec 31, 1975
J2J.49
Total Exp Plus Bal ,
De c . 31. 1975
1,555 .97
Federal Revenue Sharing
Fund
Bat , J an 1, 1975
27 0 83
Receipts
Grants- Federal
2.021 .00
Total Rece ipt s
2.021 .00
Total Be g inning Balan ce
P l u s Receipts
2.291 .83
Expenditures
Mainr. And Operation
Salaries - Employees 2, 125 79
To tal Expenditures
2,125 79
Bal. , Dec 31. 1975
166 04
TOtal Exp . Plus Bal ..
Dec 31, 1975
2,2 91 83
TOWNSHIP DEBT- Note
Purpose F or Wh ich Note
Debt was Created
Motor Grad er
Ou tst and 1ng J an I ,

1915

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

Auto Sales

P .M .
Day
Before
Publ icat ion
Monda y Dea d lin e 9 a . m
Can c ellation - Corr ec tions
will be accepted unt tl 9 a . m .
for Day o f Publ tcat ton
REGULATIONS
The Publi Sher reserves the
r 1g hl to edit or r ejec t anv ads
deemed ob jectiona l . The
publ is h e r
wtll
not
be
r esponsible for more than one
1n c orrec t inserlion
RATES
For Want A a Ser1J1Ce
5 ce n ts per word on e insert ton
M in i mum Charge Sl.OO
\4 cents per word thr ee
consecut iv e i nsert 10 n s
16 cents per word six c on .
secu 11ve inser t ion's
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ad s paid within 10
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 .00 l or 50 word minimum '
Each addttional word J
c en ts
BLIND ADS
A dd 1tlona1 25c Charge per
A dvertisement
OFFICE HOURS
8 · 30 a m
to 5 00 p m
Daily , B: 30a m . to 12 .00 Noon
Saturd ay

Notice
A SH ST
Freewill Bapt is t
Ch urch , corner of As h and
Plum St in Middleport Will
hold a reviva l starti ng
Monday, Feb 9. Preaching
each night by Rev G l en
Co ll in s , N elsonv i ll e . Sta r ts
at 7· 30 p .m . The " Yo uth For
Chris t "
Choi r
will
be
si n ging Pastor ls Rev Noel
Hermann .
2·6 7tc

-

CAREER awaits you with
Luzter
Cosmeftcs .
" a
quality product tor 53
yea r s "
No
terrttory
rest r ictton , wo rk from you r
h ome St tlt lime to Wtn your
tr 1p to N ass au
For ap
p o mtm ent , ca ll Madylon
St on e
( 304)
727 926 9
(collect)
2 J . 12 t c

@)

'

tires, frame reinforCed ,
work .

v.a engine,

hea t er, ready

------------FOR SALE

1972 CHEV. 1-TON C&amp;C

1976 Sliver Proof Set (3
pcsJ S1S.OO: 1976 Silver

102" C. A . heavy dt~ly spring s, 297 ·6 cyl. engin e, 15,000
lb. 2 sp eed rear ax le. toam sea t , mirrors, clean cab .

197,\ CHE VY
tan '' wheel
drtve Pickup
Gala n ce of
f ac tory w a rr a nty Ch eck
this b efore yo u buy .a new
on e Phon e af te r 'l p m . o r on
we elo. end s, 991 3.196

AntiQue

I 9 l fC

J EE P Wagoneer. 6 cy l
std .• lock out hu bs Phon e
Harold
Brewer ,
Long
Boltom . Ohio (614) 985 3554 .
2· 1,-ttc

---- · -~---------

FORD , 4 whee l d r ive truck , v
B. good condition . Ha ro ld
Brewer ,
Long
Bo tt om .
Phone {6 14 1 985 J554
2 1 tfc

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

\971 MONTE CARLO w!lh air
and mags , S7 ,000 Phone 992
567 1.
2 6 31c

For Rent

ENJOY gra cious l1 ving al ~
-·- -- - ~V tllage Manor -- In Mtd ·
dleport for as low as $130
per
month
w1th
all
ut i l it i es
p ai d
These 1974 1 TON Chev d um p truc k .
- ~ ----~--v .a, 454 , 4 sp , p .s , p b .,
are brand n ew high q ual1 ty
MAKE SURE you get every.
16.00 0 actual m i les $3,800
apartments at pr i ces you
poss i bte d educ t ion this year .
Ph one (6 14) 985 35 94 .
can afford Your rent in
Ha ve your Fe d ~ ral and
2·8 7tp
e lud es month to month
State In come Ta x relurn by
leases
,
all
e
l
ec
l
1v1
ng
,
an accountant Phon e 99 2
19 7 1 COMET
G T , V 8,
ran ge
and
c arp etin9.
611 3.
standard , new tires and
refr
,
gerator,
free
tr
ash
1 2 I 52 t c
pa1nt , sh ock s, brake Shoes.
p ick up , cab le TV al your
- - ~---- ~-~·----·--49, 000 mil es, $1 ,000 Phon e
expense .
and
on .s ,t e
(614 ) 985 ·3594 .
H AVE your income ta xes
laundry facilities . Con
pr ep a r ed by Steve Cleland
2-8 7tp
venten
t
to
shoppin'g
On
T
hi
rd
R acine Phone 949 ·2883
'
a n d Mill Str ee t s in M td
2 6· 12tc
d l epo rt . See t he manager at
- - -- - -------~~-R~vers1de
A partm ents or
INCOME
Ta x
Se rv ice,
call 992 JV3 . Furnis h ed
Federal or St ate taxes .
a par tments
ar e
also
Phone 992 . 7228 o r see
avai l able .
COAL , lim es tone and a ll t ypes
Wallace RusSell, Bradbury
of salt and roc" sal t for tee
2 · ~ 7Btc
'
1 302 6t c
·and sn ow r emova l
Ex .
-- -~
celsior Salt Works , Easl '
Ma tn St .• Pomeroy , Ohto
I W ILL b e g iving piano lessons
Ph one 992 3891.
in my home st ar t ing Feb 1 3 A ND 4 RM furnished and
unfurn 1sh.ed apts . Phone 992
12 7 t f c
For info r mation call 991
54J.4
3278 .
1\ 9 lfC CO AL F OJ.1 SA L E . CA B Coa l
12 18 50t c
--- -~~---'-·---.- ---~.~~ Company , I m 1le nor lh o f
COU NT RY
Mobi l e HemP.
Ch eshire . on Rt 7 Pick yo ur
Park R t . 3;1 , t en m tieS nor t h
own S20 p er to n . Open 6 ttays
o f Pomeroy Large lo t s Wtlh.
p er week or c all (6 1&lt;11 367
D EA LER S 'in scra p , 1ron ,
con crete p a t ios, side walk s,
7330 l or f ur th er information .
metals. ivnk autos R 1ct er's , runners and off st r eet
1 8 781C
Savage ' Phone 99 2 5 ~ 68
parking Phone 992 747 9
I 2 29 1p
~2 31 lie

----

-----

----- - -

For Sale

-·

-------

Mcldern

FURNITURE
STRIPPING SERVICE
Removal
of
Paints
Plas tics · Varnishes, etc .
Wood or M e tal .
Repairs . Refinishing of
Furniture .
Burn1Shing Pol ish ing of
cop per &amp; Bress

1~68

1968 OLDSMOB I LE 98, needs
repatr . S200 Phone 992 6162 .
2 4·6tc

La Salle
HOTEL
o.

~

-~ - ·---~----- -- - -

OLD fur nit ure. r I CE' bO )(eS,
brass beds , stone 1 ars, or
com p lete househol ds Writ e
M
D . Miller ,
Rt
2,
Po m eroy , Ohio
Cal l 99 2.
1760
10
-- --·
_,
- 7 74

____ _____

Rooms, '5.00 up

-

Special Rates
by Week
or Month

Wanted
C.: AS H paid for all mak es and
m o dels o f mobile home5
Phone area co d e 61 4 423
95] 1
4 13 lfc

--- -~------

Help Wanted

H O US E in Rutland
5858 .

Call 992
1 4 ttc .

l{f::Tt~ E D or s~m i r e t 1r e d
lady Ia live tn . r r ee room
and board and sma l l wages
for lig ht duties See at JOB
Page St , Mi ddl eport , Ohto
1 11 t f c

Employment Wanted
SEWING of all kinds, dresses
for all occo!lsions, slacks,
Sh~rts_. new born laye t t es ,
curtatns, drapes . Phone 992
3035 and ask for D orothy
2·4-12 t c

-----·---- ------

UNFURNI Sf1ED, 2 bedrm
apt . newly red ecor at ed ,
tu lly carpet ed Call before 9
a m 992 .2286 .

A PT ., 4 rm balh, furntshed
Phone 99 2 5908 .
2 .ot . tfc

---

-~ ----

----- - -

2 BI;DRM . mobil e h ome, real
n i ce Phone 992 3324
2 4 tfc
-·- - - - - - - - - - - - · -

lost

Real Estate For Sale
HOU SE for' sa le, ex tra large
l 1v1n g room , dtntng room ,
la rg e kitchen , family room ,
2 b edrooms , bath , all car .
p e t ed , except ki tc h en , n ice
ya rd , good loc ation May be
see n at 332 Grant St . ,
Middl eport
2.9 Ot c
4 RM . HOU SE W1lh b ath in
Sy r.acuse on Se cond St
Phone 992 7553
2·6 6tc

-

P~ 992-2711

Middleport,

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

H A LF Collie , half German
Sh eph e rd , reddt sh brown
ar:td white. Beagl e, wllite
wtlh black and br own spots
Lost tn Langsville area . Ph
742 2805 or 742 2864
2 8·31p

iOsr-, ; -sasha~ ~;~;,--,;a , e

-·-·----·'----- ---

1970 350 JOHN D ee r e Doze r , 6
II
b lad e. ca nap e , c om
pl e t ely rebut II S5,950 Phone
(614 ) 98 5.3594
2·8 71p

--- -•- ---,......----•·r

1964 JOHN Deere Doze r , gas
engine, 6 tt blade , cana pe ,
W1nch,
r eve r ser
bar ,
com ple te !-,. rebuilt . S5 ,000
Phone (6 141 985 3594 .
2 8 7lp
--~-----------

1'164 J O HN D ee r e dozer. 10 10
diese l eng m e , B fl . bla d e,
good
condition,
S4,000 .
Phone· (6 1&lt;1 ) 9B5 3594
2 8·71p

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

PI G S tor~, sat e, appro x 65 lb s.
Ph o n e 992 3640
2 B 7tp
STORM WindOWS , four 34 x 91.
thr ee 28 x 71, three 28 x 90, S7
each . Phone 992 5171
,
2 B·4tp
CO RN for sat e Phone 16141
985 3538 , Paul Ka rr.
2 8·6tp
BED , Mallr e s s
and
tn ·
nerspring mattress Good
condition, Want S175 . F&gt;hone
992 -5833
2·5·41p

Now at landmark

Plo tt h o und , nam e of Duke
Name ta g on collar Phone
(6l.tJ 98 5 4248 or 992·3d08 .
.
2 6 6t c

- - --A-~-.,....

..,...

CO-OP

___ ___ -·-

Automatic Water

For Rent or Sale

Conditioner
Model Ucxxx,
210,000

2 BEDRM mobil e hom e. Cal l
after 4 p .m 992 ·7791.
2 8·3tc

Weekly Grain

-- -·-- ---------

Capo city

J]{!U100[3)1)£;-UwJ .... w'w-J ,_.
loy &gt;IINIIIAilNClll&gt;

Unseramble theae four Jumbles_
one letter to each "uart, lo
form four ordinary words .

Reg. 5339.00 Val.
POMEROY LANDMAR"
. . . _Jack
Carsey, Mgr .
4litl ,.,.,.,. m-2111

w.

I

I

(J

THORCC

I

GOOD qutllllty m lxed hay ior ·
sale . Call 992 -3658 after 5
p . m.
2·" ·6tc

01

...
COULD BE GlUA~ANTINEO
IN THE NAVY.

FOUR L78x15. white watl reg .
lreect , Uni royal Gin belt
raln tires . pract i cally new .
Two fo·r S60 or ell 4 for S 110.
Also ,
1969
Rambler
Amer ican, 4 dr . standard
shift, radio , good sttal)e, S500
firm . Vernon Weber , Phone
992 3345 or home , 742· 2143 ,
2·4 Otp

--------------TRUMPET , good
Phone 949 2853
"---·-~-

(Aeew•n ,to-row»
~huwnl•,'•

.

l

lomhl"' BROIL SUITE

CLOTHE CHOSEN

.

An•wrrl ..M'IIra lllrotlWMa rf'911irn, ,_,, rin1
"1(.,. Rrrirr -CHURCH IlEUS

cond ition

---- .

STEREO RADIO ,
modern
design , 8 track tape, am fm
radio c ombinatiOn . Ba l anc e
597 40 or 1erm s Call 992

3965.

f

2 6 tfc

YOU SAY THE5E H IE~O­
GLYPH1C5 0~ THE? FL~k
TELL U$ TO I~JEC T THE
FLUID INrO THE MUMMY-

WIN AT BRIDGE

Three NT doesn't cut it

WHAT HAPPE'IJ$!

NORTH llll
4 AK.I7

I

FREE ESTI,.,ATES

¥ H5

. AQ

Plex•glan - Table Tops •
MtrrtJrs - Storm &amp; Screens .
FERRELL'S GLASS &amp;

Blown
lnsulatio11 Services

W£ST

EAST

4052
• K 10 6

4 10 6 3
¥ K Q64
• J98a2

o'-8 7 6

4 J
SOUTH

HOME MAINTENANCE

Blowd' into Walls &amp; A Hies

LARRY lAVENDER

9

"" KQ5 J 2

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

100 Kerr Street
Pomerov, Ohio 45769
(614) 992 2798, Dick Seyler
·
1· 29 1m o.

I

S..... aCU\1, OfliD
Ph. 992-l993

Sidi ng - Viny l
&amp;
AlUminum Window Glass
&amp; Gl ai: lnQ . On the Job or in
Shop .
Ptck up and delivery
service
Call Collect l88· 82l9
Specialize In
build -up
roofing &amp; hot roofs. Free
Estimates - 10 years ex ·
perience.
H arve Ferrell
Bidwell, Ohio
2 6 1 mo .

4 9 H4

• J 10 7
• 74 3
• A 10 9 4

BOttN LOSER

'SURe, INCRe,l61tJ6 M~ 1~7URA~
WILL COST A LOT /JaE ~
EN.H /.'DNTIC

...SIJT IT''7 TO PROTECT ~OU
f..t.lD WIL-BfRfOR(.ec 11-1 (.Jo€;€ r

AlJO WHAT 00 W6 Lilli; ON

Netther vulner ablt'

IF ~OU oo.l'T... OOIJ'T..

West

... UH ...SI-\a!LD.,, ~"':~;/

Pass

No rth

~as t

Sou th

1 "'"

Pass

INT

3NT

Pass
Opemng lead -

4 10 1· m~:

Pa ss

Pass

2•

1

chuck two s pades from durnmy . However, the dmmond
rin('SSe was won and he came
home with h1s poor cuntr&lt;Jct
only to find tha t he had los.!
two 1nternat 1onal mat c h

SLOAN'S
CARPOING

lARRY WHOBREY
PUBLIC

Free estimates on car.
peting and installation .
We'll bring samples to your
home with no o&amp;li9ation .
See how you can , really
save .
Mike Young , Manager
Sales and lnsta Ita lion

ACOOUNTANT
Now accepting clients
for bookkeeping and
tax service .

Rl . 3; Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

PH. 992-6173

Phone day or night
614-992·1206
J 14 ·' mo .

Real Estate For Sale
' . 6 yr s,
4 BR Brt c k horne

21,
baths . garage on 2.8 acres
on paved r oad necr r or ked
Ru n State Fore st
Ph one
( 614 ) 667 37 87 $38,000
I 15, 271p

·

EXCAVAT I NG , do zer , loa'i..t,
and b ackhoe work , septt c
tanks
in sta ll ed ;
dump
trucks and lo boy s l or hire ,
Wtl l haul fill dtrl. to p soi l.
l tm es tone and g ra vel C&amp; ll
Bo b or Roger Jeffers , day
phone 992 7089 . night phon e
99 2 'J :S 25 or 992 5232 .
· 2 11 1fc

------'I--

EXCAVA TIN G .
dozer ,
backhoe
and
ditcher ,
Cha rl es R Hatfield Back
Hoe Service . R utland , Ohio
Phone 7&lt;~2 · 2008 .
113078t c

SYRACUSE

Newer

$22,500 .
POMEROY 11'4 a cres,
200 ft frontage, originally
ha d 2 houses. Ideal f or
home or trail er . $3,000 .

RUTLAND -

2 BR , bath,

din1ng
R.. was h R ,
por ch es, garage . A good

buy at $8 ,500 .
RUTLAND - 2 BR , bath ,
dtning
R..
ca rp e t e d ,
paneled tiled , ga rag e, close
to shopping . $9,500

151 ACRES -

0 &amp; 0 TREE Tri mming , 20
yea r s exp rr ien ce I n sured ,
t r ee estimates Ca ll 992 238.t
or (614 1 69B 7257 Al b an y .
10 15 tic

- ==- ~~ . . . - -----

SEWING MACHINE Repairs ,
service . all mak es 992 2284
Th e F a br tc Sh op , Pomer oy
A u tho ri zed Singer Sa l es and
Servi c e
We
!.harpe n
Sciss or s
3 29 lf c
O ' DELL Allneme nt locat ed
behind
Rutland
Grade
Sc h ool . T un e up , b r ake s,
wllee l balancing , a linemen!
Ph one 742 20011 .
11 16 lfc

other bldg~. $38,000 .
OWNER
HAVE A
SELLING PROBLEM?
LET US SOLVE IT CALL
NOW.
WE
NEED
LISTING S.
991-2259 or 991·2568

6.2D-Rev. Cl!!ophus Robinson 13,
6: 3()-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Con cern s &amp; Comments 10.
6: 4D--Ounce of Prevention 10.
6: 45- Morning Report 3

points."

Jim ' " At !he o ther tab le
North wound up at the reall y
s1lly contract of fou r spades.
Hearts were opE"ned and con·
t onued and he decided to ruff
!he thi 'd lead . He entered
dummy wtth the ace of cl ubs,
took e~ tr ump fmesse , played
Ius ace and kmg and was hom e
when the su1t broke. Fi na lly,
he go t to dummy w1th th e
fourth club and took a dia·
mond finesse to score an over·
tnck "

6:5&gt;-Chuck White Repo,ts tO; Good Mo'"lng, Tri State 13.
7:QO-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bug s Bunny and Friends 10.
7: 3D-Schoolles 10.

8:0D-Lassle 6; Captain Kanga&lt;oo 8, 10; Sesame Street
33 .
8.30-Big Valley 6.
9:ro-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13. ·
9.3D-A.M . 3; ,0ne Life to Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Dougla s 13.

10 :ro-Celebrlly Sweepslakes 3,4, 15,; Edge ol Night 6;
Price is Right 8, 10.
10:30-High Rollers 3,4,15; Dinah! 6.
11 :00-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4; Gambit
8, 10; Farmer's Daughter 13; Electric Company 20.
11 : 3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Happy Days 13;
Love of Llle 8,10; Sesame Street 20.
11:55-Take Kerr 8; Dan I mel 's World 10.
12 :00-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15; Let's Make
A Deal 13; Bob Braun' s 50-50 Cflub 4; News 6,8, 10.
12 :30-Take My Advice 3, 15; All My Children 6, 13;

~~@i)ISI~

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

For Sale

REDUCE safe and fast wi th
GoB es e Tablets &amp; E vap
"w aler p i lls /' N elson Drug .
2 9- lip

'COMMI:::~~ CIAL
OUTDOOR
SIGN with t imer, mounted
, on • 4"X30 ft . steel pipe Cost
1875 ' new , onry SlOO . Phoni

992 5786 .

2·5 6tc

--·- ---------- - -I~ U l

tt ~&lt; li
, !.! (. wel d1nQ
n1&lt;1Ch1ne . new c tc c . all
accessories included Phone
Y92 31 10
10 28 ttc

1o6c. r0RD L T·o . New 12 ga .
Wi n c h es1~r 37 /&gt;.Si ngle Si tot
Phone 742 235 9
) . 1J26tp
HAY for sale , St bale or trade?
Phone
Frink
Dichel.
Lead ing Creek Rd . 742 ·2085
2=1· 1611)

~U

Real Estate For Sale
3 BEDRM

14 Less

s-EPTIC-l'AN KS -cle:;~d

TWO roTS AND

"TWO ROSES
~H!M!

992 . 3 95 &lt;~

Mod ern Sanitation
Or, 992 7349

9 18 tf c

house i n Mtd
d le po rt , cor n e r lo t . New
bath , $lOry and hc: lf . ut i lity
room , new carpe ti ng and
new root 1 garage anef work
r oom , fr uit c ellar Cl ose to
sc h ool
and
sho p pi n g .
\ 17.500 Phone 992 -76'24 .
1·21 '2 61C

TEAFORD

Hold tiqht' We're
qoin' acrosi'

3 B'Rs .,

water hea1,1arge mod. kit .,
oak trim , carpeting, etc .
$60,000.

WE 5LI66ES7ED

MtiR6A.REr
.41~

BUT
HE SAID NO-

ITSYOU HE'S
WAITING FOR-

ENTER, OH
SCRAWNY ONE rt

nicely remod e led, with
central air c.nd heat . 2 car
garage .
Picnic
cave.

$31,000.
MIDDLEPORT older

home with

large

d1stnbutwn

an d

1: 3Q-Days of our Live s 3,,.,15; Rhyme and Reason

6,]3; As lhe World Tums 8,10.
2:QO- $20,000 Py,amld 6, 13;.
2:30-Doclors 3,4,15; Neighbors 6,13; GuldlfW Light
8,1 0.
3:ro-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospltal6,13; AI\
in the Family 8, 10; Lil ias, Yoga and You 20.
·
3:3D-One Life to Live 13; Mickey Mousf Club; Malch
Game 8, 10; You Can Do II 20; lTV Utilization JJ.
4 . 0~Speclal Treat 3,4, 15; Bewitched 6; Mkkf!y Mouse

few

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN . send $1 fo "Wm

at Br i dge ," cl o th is
newspaper. P 0 Box 489,
Radio C1ly Station. New York,
N Y 10019/

Cl ub 8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie "Tarzan Goes

lo India" 10; Dinah! 13.
4:3D-Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8; Sesame
Slreel 20,33.
S·OO-Bonanza 3, Valley Forge . The Young Spy 4;
Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5: 3D-Adam -12 4; News 6; Beverly H illblllles 8;
EledricCompany 20,33; Adam -12 13.

6:0D- News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; lTV
Utilization 33,
.6 ,30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,)0; Your Future Is Now 33;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
7:QO- Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth,.;

H Setting for

22 Super \'isor
23 Subdue
rrura cle
25 Seetlle
(2 wds .)
27 Irasci II Goaded
bility
12 Very swee l ; 29 Ethiopian
cloymg
lake
16 Penny
33 Garnish19 Zeus's
ment
s1ster
34 Field
21 Press
36 Immerse
s\3tement
37 For shame'
Christ's
first

forle
28 Shrew
29 Shoplifter
or burglar
30 Fnend

··--

ForTuesday,Feb. 10,1176

ARIES (March 21-April 19)

31 Musical

Th1s could be an e xc tltng d ay
e specially tf you 're worktng on
a large. ni w project. Your
en thu stasm w11l ge t o th ers tn ~
va lved

HMMM ... ~U5T

MANY YEARo r;EFORE
HER MARRIAGE 11J

Ao L THOUGHT.

STAN I

TAURUS (April 20-Mar . 20)

footwear
Weather
word

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- II ere·, ho" lo work il :
AXYDLBAAXR
is I.ONGFEJ.LOW

YEB,BHfOI\ORKED HERE

9.3D-One Day AI a time8, 10; Wyatt Earp 5.
IO:OD-City of Angels 3,4, 15; Switch 8, 10; News 20;
Woman Allvel 33; Target: ~orruptors 5.
10 :3Q---Woman Alive! 20:
Woman 33.
11 .OD-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mystery of the Week
6, 13; Movie "The California Kid," 8; Movie "The
Deleclor" 10; Janak! 33.
1:oo--- Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

( Fr. )

:rr
.,,... - .... - .OM,

Bowling for Dollars 6; Country Placee8; News 10;
Name Tha t Tune 13; Family Affair 15; Antiques
20; Wild, Wild World ol Annlmals JJ; Changed
Lives lcl 5.
7·3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal With II 6;
$25.000 'Pyramid 8; National Geographic 20,33;
P'ice is Righi 10; To Tell The Truth 13; High
School T.V. Honor Society 15; Bill Cosby Show (c) ,
8:0D-Movln' On 3,4, 15; Happy Oays 6, 13; Good Times
8, 10; Plxanne (c) 5.
8:3D-Daytlme (c ) 5; Laverne and Shirley 6,13; Popl
8, 10; Consumer Survival Kit 20,33.
9:0D-Pollce Woman 3,4,15 ;
XII Winter Olympic
Games 6, 13; M-A-S-H 8, 10; Adams Chronicles
20,33 .

• Berntce Bede Osol

One l etter si m p l y st ;mds for ano t he r In t his sample A IS
used for the three L's, X for t he t wo O's. etc Sin!; lc letters .
apostrophes, the length and formation of the w ords :-~ rc all
hints. Ea&lt;'h rl ay 1he l'ode let1 crs ar~ d ifferent

('R\'PTOQUOTES
MV C BA

Z VC

WFG

NFTJ

$16,500.

TURN YOUR SELLING
PROBLEMS OVER TO US .

12:5&gt;-NBC News 3,15.
1:0D-News 3; Ryan' s Hope 6.13; Phil Donahue B;
Young and the Restless 10; Nol For Women Only 15.

h1gh ca rds

GCSSPQM

Q p K-

MVA

hot water heat, and large

lol out of flood area. Only

Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
12:45-Eiectrlc Company 33.

AstraGraph

Nice

living, l'h baths , dining,

Good

note

home, 5 BR s .. 2 nice baths ,

On city
utilities, 8 rooms , 1'12 bath s,

that it was a

32 Highest
note
35 Style of

condition, 3 BRs .. bath, gas
furnace, dining , nice kit ..
full
basement,
near'
business sec. Only 51 7.000.
12 ROOMS - Large older

lois . S25,000.
4'11 ACRES -

IS

very good bid Partner may
not make four spades. but he
IS n' t gomg to be hur t. And if
he can ' t make it. the op ponenl s probably have a game
ur even a slam Incid~11taHy.
Uu s is &lt;J imos t '&lt;~book r esporJse .

Simon's

LIL ABNER

OLD HOME - In exce llent

cook and bake units, inod .
kit ., gas furnace. wood .
burning hearth, and 2 large

7 Macaw

23 )3aby
soother
21 Chris of
tennis
25 Lox associate
26 Swanfancier
27 Neil

3 BR s ..

Only $25.000.
68 ACRES - R enovated 8
rms ., .e BRs ., 21/ 4 baths, hot

Mrs. in ·

Madrid
6 Greek
ISland

mountain

l'h

4 BRs , 1'1&gt;
bath s, larg e ktl
with
d i n i ng , oil furna ce , 2 car
garage and one level acre

5

21 " Ivanhoe"
heroine

110 Mectwlnlc Pomeroy. 0 .
PtooMm-3325

$21.500.
MODERN -

locomotive
39 So !hat's
the way!
(2 wds .)
lO Box
U Spirit
lamp
DOWN
I Heavy
volwne
2 Seaweed
derivative
3 The ladies
do
(3 wds. )
l Ceylon
export

so!
20 Crete

Virgil B.. Sr., B,olt.,.

$25.000.
RENOVATED -

bad bid when she raised her
partner 's openi ng spade b1d to
four with :
• K9xxx • x •Q xxxxx 6 x

38 Railroad

remote
IS Memoryfilled time
16 Bedstead
17 Caddoan
Indian
18 I told you

GASOUNF. ALLEY

Joel! No!

lots o f st orage, gas F .A .
furna ce ,
2
concret e
porches , dr y basemen! ,
garde n ,
and
garage .

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

I 'LL GIVE

wants to know if it was a very

The answer

News 13.

6· 0G---Sunrlse Semester 10.
6 · ls-Farm Report 13.

~
.."'ta'
by THOMAS JOSEPfi

ALLEY OOP

ACROSS
I Diplomatic
trait
5 Confidence
game (sl.) ,
9 Bugbear
10 Knightly
descriptive
13 Novelist
Angelou

EXCAVATING , BACK H Oi:s"
AND DOZER . LARGE A ND
SMALL
SE PTIC TANKS
IN S T A LLED .
BIL L
P ULL IN S, PHONE 992 2478,
OAV O R N IGH T
11 11 78t p

-·-------------

----

E L WOOD BO WERS REPA I R
- Sweepers , toast er s, 1ron s .
all small appliances Lawn
mowe r , next t o State High
way Gal'age on Route 7.
Phone • s5 38 25
4 16 t f c

Oswald "Som e years ago I
made headhnes by saying the
perfect partner wuuld De right
?5 per cent of the time · ·
Jtm "I guess yo u were a
W
0
R
K
tnfle
severe , but •I IS a cer·
ANNIE-PEACE
r;;~s~~v;;.;;~':" ;tainty tha t the da rnd es t things
11
t40, AH~IE- '""uot'n 1n to p ~ f ll ght c om ~
'--..,;;:;;~ I I
' r eEFER
petillior
10 FOL LOW
lHE WAYS
Oswald "The (ma l match
oF PEACE- tQ determine th e Amen can
-, ,-~ team for the 1976 world c ha m pionship produced a lot of.
great bridge and a lot of miS ·
ta kes. AI the forst tab le South
was very unha ppy w1th h1s
three·notrump contract. The
defense started w t t h fou r
heart tric ks Hnd South ll c~d to

~~~Dl

READY M I X CO N ~~c · ~
del i vered rigllt to vour
~roje c1 Fas t and easy F ree
estimat es Phon e "992 p 84,
C.o egl em Ready M i x Co ..
Middle p or t , Ohio
630tfc ·

BRADFORD , Au c l to n ee r .
Compte l e Servic e . Phon e
949 .2487 or 949 .2000. Racine,
Oh io , Crill Bradford .
10.9 .Jt c

Rill &amp;tate for Sale

ORPHAN

Pom~roY

b a th s . TV
room ,
· solarium,
basement,
garage and
ni ce lot .

MODERN hom e in Chester, 8 ,
rooms, 2 baths , 2 porches,
sunporch . 14 basement , city
10 RM HOU SE, 2 bath s , lull
and well wafer , natural gas ,
basement, glasse-d in porch ,
garage . Priced to sell .
c arpe t
and
garage · In
P h on e 1614 ) 985 -.41 02 .
Middleport. S2l.OOO . Phone
2·4·tf C
992 -3319
2·6 6tc
8 RM HOU SE , 2 baths , on
corner lot In Middleporl
FOUR acres of land , n i ce
Phone 992 ·3427 after 6 p .m
loca t ion for house or trailer
2 4 6tc
n ear !.C hOOI Call ( 61 4) 669.
--- - ---..---~ --4723 or 669 .3764 .
2·6 61p
HO USE on Lincoln Hgts 2
b edrm , large kitchen, full
basement , exce llen t b uy tor 'ONE ACRE. 6 rms and bath ,
$8.900 . with n ew f ur n i lure ,
Rt . 3, Pom er oy , Rose Hill
only $10,300 Phone 992 7648 .
Die~ Davis property , full
1·6·26tc
baument.
aluminum
.-~-·---~- - - - ~ - .......
siding, Pt~neled . SIO, OOO. Call
Oak Hill 685 . 6576 evenings ;
3 • BEDRM .
home ,
l ust
Jackson '286 300.4 days ·
finished, remodeling, Salem
' 2·5·30tp
St , Rutland . Phone 7.42 ·2306
alter 4 p .m or see M i lo B
NEAR LY fini shed , bl .level.
Hutchison .
·
split en try . 5 bedrms . 3
9·2311c ·
bo!lths , equl_pped kitchen,
fam i l Y room , 2 car garage ,
3 BR H OME , just finished
S4.4 ,000 . Phone 16141 985 .
remodeling
Sa lem
$t
3810
Rutland
Phone 742 · 23o'6
2·5·6tc
afte-r 4 p .m . or !. ee Milo B .
Hutc hinson
5 ROOMS and bath on
10-9.tfc
150'x iOD' lot, 16500. Com plete financing . Phone 992 ·
5786

LITTLE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

STEAM HEAT C

Ll'l'l1JO: ORPHAN ANNIE

Nalhln Biggs
Radiator Spec1alt!.l

-- --- ·---..------

Co lumbia &amp;

Twps. 35 A
for
c t~ll iv at i on , 50 A timbe r 1
bal. pa sture, (a ll f en ced) .
Home has 3 BR , barn &amp;
Salem

Fr om the la rgest. Truck or
Butldozer" · Radiator to the ·
al lest Heater Core

1 22d mo .

REMODELING ,
P l umbing ,
heating and all tv~es o t
genera l
repatr
Work
guarailleed
10 y ears ex
perl ence
Phone 992 2409
5 1 tt c

ho me, 3 BR, bath, some
panel i ng &amp; til~ . hardwood
floor s. N g as F A. furnace,
partial bas em ent , garage.

By Oswald &amp; James J acoby

.oo--Tomorrow 3,4;

TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 10, 1976

A New Hampshire reader

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

""111!&gt;11111

•

MODERN CHEMICALS

Wanted To Buy

A SMALL, used piano Phone
99 2 3161 or 992 7639
2 5·61c

OF COU~%. P ~OF£'550~'

1· 12- 1 mo.

we Buy Antiques

--- --

M c D A NIE L
Custo m
But
chertng , West Columbia , w .
V a We butcher cattle and
h ogs
S10
ca ll le
slaug ht er , !7 far n og s , 12c
f or· culling an d wrapp tng
Sta te and federal Inspec ted ;
Open 6 days per week .
Phon e ( 304) 882 3224
1-30 26t c

CAPTAIN EASY

¥ A 932

POMEROY, OHIO

1969 VOLK SWAGEN wilh
Baja kit , $650 Phone 992
5663 .
2 8 6tc

Call 992-7537
Pomeroy, Ohio

Roger Wamsley
1· 23 1 mo .

POM0~~!v,~~~ CO.@)
1968 250 FORD Pi c kup ; 43,000
act u a l m i les
Phone 992
3640
2 1:1 71p

Kuhl Calle Decor

UNC Set (3 pes .) sa.so.
Call Rutland, 742-2JJ1
R&amp;J COINS

$1995

pom eroy Office
lOS Butternul
992-3345
Farmerly we ed Wholesale.
Featuring :
Delux zerox Copy S e~vtce ,
Off i ce
Supp l tes ,
Su pplies .
M i meograph
largest se lec t ion of wed ·
ding sub~!ies in sout tt ·
east e rn
to .
The P rint Shop Complete
(Still in bu si ness in Mid dleporU
~ 2 · 8 · 2 mo . .

licensed • baker
and
decorator.
Kitchen State Inspected

t975S Proof Set (6 pcs.l
525 .00 ; t975 Mint Sel SUO;

to

Quality Print Shop

and Decorated
To Your Order

Currency and Supplies
Buy, Sale or Trade

191JINTE RNATIONAL 1600 SERIES
$3895
102" cab to axle , 2 speed, R . axle, 6 speed, good 900x20

5,200 00

Redeemed D uring Year
1975
5.200 .00
Rate of In t .
6 Pet .
Date of Final Mal.
1 6-76
Total -~ Ou ts tanding
J an . 1. 19 75
5, 200 00
:rotal - R edeemed During
Year 1975,101
5.200 00
(21 9, H e 4

Cakes, Balled

COINS

Bicentennial Coins

TIMBER . lop
price
fo r
st and1n g saw ltmber Call
(6141 446 857d day or n ight .
2·4 12tc

50 'V AFTE'~ WHICH· · OUR
HERE ~EXT MOVE W"L SE TO
GOE$!
WAIT AND 0 15$E~VE

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1976
6:ro-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, IS; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 ;
Specl~l Education JJ.
8 :00-Bobby' Vtnton 3; On The Rocks 13; Rich Little 3;
6 · 31f-NBC News 3, 4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy G'ifflth 6;
•College Basketball 6; Gunsmoke 8; Six Hundred
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
Millennia 20.33; Rhoda 10.
7 : 00-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth &lt;t ; Bowling for
8:3D-We Think You Should Know 3; XII Wlnler
Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; News 10; Candid Camera
Olympic Games 13; Phyll is 10
13; Family Altair tS ; On Aging 20; Resourceful
9:00-Joe Forrester 3,4,15; All 'In The Family 8,1 0.
West VIrginia 33.
9:3D-Maude 8,10; World Press 20; Emphasis 33.
7:3D-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Don Adams
10:ro-J lgsaw John 3,4, 15; R lch Man, Poor Man 6, 13;
Screen Test 4; Match Game PM 6; Price is Rlohl8 ;
Medical Center 8, 10; News 20; BI.Ways 33.
Evening Edition with Ma rtin Agronsky 20; High
10 : 3()-Freedom : A Continuum 20; American Issues
Road fo Adventure 10 ~ To Tell the Truftt 13; Friends
Forum 33.
of Man 15; Marco Sportltte 33 .
11 : OD-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11. 3D-Johnny Ca&lt;son 3,4, 15; Unofficial Miss Las
Vegas Showglrl Pageant 6, 13; Movie " One Is a
Lone ly Number" 8, Movie " A Fine Madness" 10;
Janakl 33.

Business Services

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
..
OF
Motor Co.
QUALITY

197lCHEV. 'h TON FLEETS! DE
$2695
H duty tires, springs , boost er brakes , ste·p bumper, V8 engine, s td . trans., t inted gla,ss Clean int.

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

Television log for easy viewing

DITCHED

Auto Sales

O ~ ADLINES

5

TH&amp;M~

HB

MVCBA

QPKW~'G

HSA

UP BM

ZVC · BMAHW

HB

ALFW

XSCN

MVA

BMAlr

ATB C T
Yesterday's Cryptoquote, I HAVE MADE MISTAKES, BUT I
HAVE NEVER MADE THE MISTAKE OF SAYING THAT I
HAVE NEVER MADE ONE. - JAMES GORDON BENNETI'

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No¥. 22) A
maJor change that could affect
your "lifestyle is ready to surface toda y. provtded you've
though! tl lhrough carefully.
SAGITTARIUS (No¥.

23-D~

21) A good day for you to sil
down at the bargainmg table.
You'll be sharp enough to get a
good deal. yet you'll be
scrupulous ly fair

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jtn.

Your prospe cl s look ve r y
p ro m1 s1 ng tod ay . If there 's
som e thtng long due to you
fro m a l n end . perhaps you can
c ollec J - with A !title tn l eresl

19) Condtttons affecting your
work or career are still tn a very
profitable cycle Don 't overlook
anything.

GEMINI (Mar 21·June 20)

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 18)
Yo u make a good impression

You 're lu c k t er t oday for
yo ur self than y o u are f or
o theres, Concen tra te on advanctng yo ur self- Interests

CANCER (June 21 -Julr 22)
Tr y to do som e lht n g today
wh ere y ou help someo n e
you 're fond ot Be h1 s act1ve
booster.

LEO (Jutr 23-Aug . 22) A person ts fortunate when he has
good lnends. Yo u are doubly
b lessed 1oday You have two
oals you CM really count on.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept, 22)
QPSBA . - HJWHF

and humorous. you 'll be sur~
pn sed at the exceptional daY
you'll have. Your ·good spirtts
.vtll be In fectious .

Though you have to wo r k a bit
Iange r nlfl n u sual loday , do
things th at wttl Please th e boss
H e II Q1v e · you cr edt t a nd .
p er h ap s a bon us.

LIBRA (Sept 23-0c1. 23) If
you r o utlook is broad positive

today Don 't be amazed it
someone who hAs been unc ommumcative sud denly has a
lot to talk over

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
You can bring things to a hap.
py conctus1on today. 11 you
have any problems hanging,
' press a ltttle harder to resolve
them .

&amp;w~
Feb. 10, 1976

Th e urge to travel th 1s year wtll
be s t ro ng er tha n usual
be c au s e you' ll be among
fnends who love to go. You
m ight e11en tind a fun place
11hal's a home away from home.

�\

'

7 - 'lbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-POPteroy, 0 ., Monday, Feb. 9,1976

DICK TRACY

:- 6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monojay , Feb . 9,_1976

~ ~d~~~ff;:~;~~~o~t~.~~~~,~ ~!~·.':.:~~::~:~~N~:;;:;'.1,~ For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

•

proposlll to r a Co m m unity
Oe \o'eto pm en t Bloc k Gr an t in
l he Co mmissio n ers off ice
Tuesday , F ebru l!ry 11 , 19 76 a l
9 00
:
a .m
11 1 9 , lie

N Ot iCe is her eb y gi v en that
Edward Che val ier of R eed s
vtlte . Ohto , ha s been d ulv
app oi n ted A d mi n ts tra t or of
th e
E ~ t atc
of
Wa y n e
Ch e v alier . decea se d . l a te of
O live
T o w ns h l p ,
M eigs
Coun t y , O hio
Cr edit or s ar e r e Qu i r ed t o
fil e th ei r c l a i ms w it h sa i d
f tduc tary wt lh tn f o ur months .

world Hock e y Assoctahon
Standing s

Da t ed th is
Jan u ary 1976

Bv United Press International

Mann in g 0

Eas t
W
New England
Cleveland
Cincinnati
lndianapolts

21 27

5

J .:~

ta

26 20
26 23
25 22
Cancu:lia n

0

54

T . Pts.
38 19
I
17
33 P '
70

W L

Winn 1peg
Quebec
Ca lgary
16
Edri'lon ton
20
Toronto
15
x onawa
l.t
x Team disband ed

23
34
J2
26

3
3
5
I

55
43

79

S a tu rday ' ~ Re~ull!&gt;

A Low Cost
Want Ad
Will Cut
Cost of
Living ••••••
WRITE YOUR
OWN AD!
IrS EASY TO
ORDER BY
MAIU
-SPECIAL!--

12 WORDS
4 DAYS
ONLY

sps

CASH WITH
ORDI;R

AVAILABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
NO REFUNDS.
l;ach
in.itial
and
group
of
figures
counts as one word .
Be sure to count
name
and address, if
'
used, and your phone
number.
Including
prices for items offered in your want ad
wi II
increase
response.
'

1.

2.

3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.

11.
12.
NAME
'ADDRESS

CITY
PHONE
MAIL WITH
.
'
. '1.25
lO THE
I
'

.•• DAILY SENnNEL
111 COURT ST.

'
'
•
'

'~

POMEROY, OHIO
45769
~

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
For Fiscal Year Ending
D ecembe r Jl , 1975
Scipto Townsh ip
Meigs Count y
Rt. 2 Albany , Ohio
Januarv 27 , 1976
I cc- rllfy 1he following report
to b e corre c t

35

W1nn 1peg 4 Cleveland 4
, New England 1 Toront o 3
In dianapol is 5 Cincinnati 1
Quebec J Calgary ~
Phoen 1x J Mtnneso t a 2
Sunday '!. R esult s
Minneso t a 3 Phoen1x J
Winn ipeg 8 Ca lgary 1
Quebec 5 Edmon t01'1 ~
Cl evelan d 6 N ew England 1
Houslon 5 San Diego 1
\No games today)
Tue sday 's Games
Toronto at Calg&lt;Hy
San Diego at Minn esota

.

W ebs te r
Ju dg e

41

' Ph".
'4 "5856
4

of

45

1

T

day

( I ) 26 (2J 2, 9, 3tc

55

5

'27 ]0
21 JO
West
L

Pts .

T

25 25

W

Houston
Phoen tx
San Dieg o
Mmnesota

L

21s t

'

I

Glenn E . Jewell
Town ship Cl erk
Rt . 2 Atbanr · Ohio
45 710 )
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
Balance Jan . 1. 1915General
Fund
S S,J4S.55
Motor Ve h ic le License
Tax Fu nd
3 14 84
Gasoline T a;.t Fund
1,399. 75
F1re Distr 1ct F und
351.01
Federa l Re v Sharing
F und
210 83
Totals
7,681.98
Total Rece1pts
Gene ra l F und
7,406 24
Motor Ve h ic le License
Tal&lt; Fur:1d
6,79-4 .57
Gaso ltn e Ta )( Fund
12 ,472 5 1
Fi r e Dis! Fund
1,204 96
Fe d era l Re v Sharing
F und
2.021.00
Total s
29 ,899 .28
Total Receipt s &amp; Balances
Gener a l Fund
12,751.79
Motor Vehtcle L1cense
T ax Fu n d
7, 109 41
Gaso lin e Ta x Fund
13,872 .26
F i r e Ois t Fund
l.555 .97
Fed e ral Rev Sha rtng
F und
2,291 83
Totals
37.581.26
Expendttures
General Fun d
5,806 67
Motor Vehicle Lic en se
Ta x Fund
6.593 .36
Gasoline Tax Fund
12 ,002 .07
F i re D i stnc t Fu nd
1, 232 48
Federa l Rev Sharing
F und
2, 125 .79
To tals
2.7 ,75 0.37
Balance Dec. 31 , ~75
General F un d
6,945 . 12
Motor Vehicle L1 cense
Ta x F un d
526 05
Gaso l in e Tax Fu nd
1,870 19
Ftre D tst r ict Fund
323 .49
Federa l Rev . Shart ng
Fund
2,125 79
Tota ls
27,750 37
Balance Dec . 31,1975
General F und
6,945 . 12
Mot or Vehicle License
Ta x Fund
526 .05
Gasoline Tax Fu nd
1.870. 19
Fire Ot slri c t Fund
323 .49
Federal Rev Shar tng
Fund
166 04
To t al s
9, 830.89
CASH BALAN.CE ,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
BY FUND
General Fund
Bal.. Jan 1. 1975
5,345 .55
·Receipts
General Property Ta x ~
R eal Estate and
Trail er (Gross~
2.885 .24
Tangib le Personal Proper ty
Tax (Gr oss )
44 93
Local Government and
State Incom e Tax
2,666.40
Liquor Permit Fees
149.00
Oth e r Intangibles
1,660 67
To t a l R ece ipt s
7,406 .24
To t a l Beginntng Balance
Plus Rece tpts
12 ,751.79
Expenditures
To t a l E ,..;pendi t ures
- Admin istrati ve
3,737 .31
- Town Halls, Memorial
Bui l ding s and
Grounds
1,323. 04
- Ce m e tenes
700 .0C
- Lig hting
46 32
G ra nd To ta l EKp
G en eral Fund
5. 806 .67
Bal , Dec . 31, 1975
6,945 . 12
To t a l E xp Pl us Bal ,
D ec 31,1975
12,751.7 9
Motor Vehicle License
TU Fund
Bal , J a n 1, 1975
l 14 84
Receipts
•
Motor Vehicle Licens e
Tax
6,794.57
Total Rec e ipts
6,794 51
Total Begmning Ba l an ce
Plu s Receipts
1,109.4 1
Expenditures
Total Exp enditures
- Misce llan eous
4.2 06 .81
- Maintenance
2,J76 .55
Grand Total Exp Mot or Vehicle Lic e nse
Tax Fund
6.583.36
Bal., Dec 31, 1975
526.05
Total Exp Plus Bal ,
De c . 31.1975
7, 109.41
Ga soline Tax Fund
Bal. , J an . 1, 197 5
1,399 .75
Recetpls
Ga so l i ne Tax
12, 400 00
Other
72 .51
Total Recetpts
l -2, d72 .51
Total Beginning Balan ce
Plu s Re ce ipts
13,872.26
ElCpenditures
Total Expenditures
- Mi sce llaneous
7, 384 96
- Ma i ntenance
4,6 17 11
Grand Total E x p . G a so ttne Ta x Fund 12,002 07
Bat , Dec 31, 1975
1,8 70 19
Tot a l E x p . ' P l us Bat •
Dec 31, 1975
13,812 26
Fire District Fund
Bal , Jan 1, 1975
351 01
Receipts
Ge neral Property Ta x Real Estate and Trail e r
(Gross)
1, 184 00
Tangib le Personal Proper t y
Tax {Grossl
20.96
Total Re ce ipt s
1,204 .96
Total Begmnlng Ba l ance
Plus Re ceip ts ·
1,555.97
E x penditures
Contracts
1,200.00
Auditor &amp; Tr eas
Fees
32 .48
Total Expenditures
1,232 .48
Bal , Dec 31, 1975
J2J.49
Total Exp Plus Bal ,
De c . 31. 1975
1,555 .97
Federal Revenue Sharing
Fund
Bat , J an 1, 1975
27 0 83
Receipts
Grants- Federal
2.021 .00
Total Rece ipt s
2.021 .00
Total Be g inning Balan ce
P l u s Receipts
2.291 .83
Expenditures
Mainr. And Operation
Salaries - Employees 2, 125 79
To tal Expenditures
2,125 79
Bal. , Dec 31. 1975
166 04
TOtal Exp . Plus Bal ..
Dec 31, 1975
2,2 91 83
TOWNSHIP DEBT- Note
Purpose F or Wh ich Note
Debt was Created
Motor Grad er
Ou tst and 1ng J an I ,

1915

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

Auto Sales

P .M .
Day
Before
Publ icat ion
Monda y Dea d lin e 9 a . m
Can c ellation - Corr ec tions
will be accepted unt tl 9 a . m .
for Day o f Publ tcat ton
REGULATIONS
The Publi Sher reserves the
r 1g hl to edit or r ejec t anv ads
deemed ob jectiona l . The
publ is h e r
wtll
not
be
r esponsible for more than one
1n c orrec t inserlion
RATES
For Want A a Ser1J1Ce
5 ce n ts per word on e insert ton
M in i mum Charge Sl.OO
\4 cents per word thr ee
consecut iv e i nsert 10 n s
16 cents per word six c on .
secu 11ve inser t ion's
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ad s paid within 10
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 .00 l or 50 word minimum '
Each addttional word J
c en ts
BLIND ADS
A dd 1tlona1 25c Charge per
A dvertisement
OFFICE HOURS
8 · 30 a m
to 5 00 p m
Daily , B: 30a m . to 12 .00 Noon
Saturd ay

Notice
A SH ST
Freewill Bapt is t
Ch urch , corner of As h and
Plum St in Middleport Will
hold a reviva l starti ng
Monday, Feb 9. Preaching
each night by Rev G l en
Co ll in s , N elsonv i ll e . Sta r ts
at 7· 30 p .m . The " Yo uth For
Chris t "
Choi r
will
be
si n ging Pastor ls Rev Noel
Hermann .
2·6 7tc

-

CAREER awaits you with
Luzter
Cosmeftcs .
" a
quality product tor 53
yea r s "
No
terrttory
rest r ictton , wo rk from you r
h ome St tlt lime to Wtn your
tr 1p to N ass au
For ap
p o mtm ent , ca ll Madylon
St on e
( 304)
727 926 9
(collect)
2 J . 12 t c

@)

'

tires, frame reinforCed ,
work .

v.a engine,

hea t er, ready

------------FOR SALE

1972 CHEV. 1-TON C&amp;C

1976 Sliver Proof Set (3
pcsJ S1S.OO: 1976 Silver

102" C. A . heavy dt~ly spring s, 297 ·6 cyl. engin e, 15,000
lb. 2 sp eed rear ax le. toam sea t , mirrors, clean cab .

197,\ CHE VY
tan '' wheel
drtve Pickup
Gala n ce of
f ac tory w a rr a nty Ch eck
this b efore yo u buy .a new
on e Phon e af te r 'l p m . o r on
we elo. end s, 991 3.196

AntiQue

I 9 l fC

J EE P Wagoneer. 6 cy l
std .• lock out hu bs Phon e
Harold
Brewer ,
Long
Boltom . Ohio (614) 985 3554 .
2· 1,-ttc

---- · -~---------

FORD , 4 whee l d r ive truck , v
B. good condition . Ha ro ld
Brewer ,
Long
Bo tt om .
Phone {6 14 1 985 J554
2 1 tfc

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

\971 MONTE CARLO w!lh air
and mags , S7 ,000 Phone 992
567 1.
2 6 31c

For Rent

ENJOY gra cious l1 ving al ~
-·- -- - ~V tllage Manor -- In Mtd ·
dleport for as low as $130
per
month
w1th
all
ut i l it i es
p ai d
These 1974 1 TON Chev d um p truc k .
- ~ ----~--v .a, 454 , 4 sp , p .s , p b .,
are brand n ew high q ual1 ty
MAKE SURE you get every.
16.00 0 actual m i les $3,800
apartments at pr i ces you
poss i bte d educ t ion this year .
Ph one (6 14) 985 35 94 .
can afford Your rent in
Ha ve your Fe d ~ ral and
2·8 7tp
e lud es month to month
State In come Ta x relurn by
leases
,
all
e
l
ec
l
1v1
ng
,
an accountant Phon e 99 2
19 7 1 COMET
G T , V 8,
ran ge
and
c arp etin9.
611 3.
standard , new tires and
refr
,
gerator,
free
tr
ash
1 2 I 52 t c
pa1nt , sh ock s, brake Shoes.
p ick up , cab le TV al your
- - ~---- ~-~·----·--49, 000 mil es, $1 ,000 Phon e
expense .
and
on .s ,t e
(614 ) 985 ·3594 .
H AVE your income ta xes
laundry facilities . Con
pr ep a r ed by Steve Cleland
2-8 7tp
venten
t
to
shoppin'g
On
T
hi
rd
R acine Phone 949 ·2883
'
a n d Mill Str ee t s in M td
2 6· 12tc
d l epo rt . See t he manager at
- - -- - -------~~-R~vers1de
A partm ents or
INCOME
Ta x
Se rv ice,
call 992 JV3 . Furnis h ed
Federal or St ate taxes .
a par tments
ar e
also
Phone 992 . 7228 o r see
avai l able .
COAL , lim es tone and a ll t ypes
Wallace RusSell, Bradbury
of salt and roc" sal t for tee
2 · ~ 7Btc
'
1 302 6t c
·and sn ow r emova l
Ex .
-- -~
celsior Salt Works , Easl '
Ma tn St .• Pomeroy , Ohto
I W ILL b e g iving piano lessons
Ph one 992 3891.
in my home st ar t ing Feb 1 3 A ND 4 RM furnished and
unfurn 1sh.ed apts . Phone 992
12 7 t f c
For info r mation call 991
54J.4
3278 .
1\ 9 lfC CO AL F OJ.1 SA L E . CA B Coa l
12 18 50t c
--- -~~---'-·---.- ---~.~~ Company , I m 1le nor lh o f
COU NT RY
Mobi l e HemP.
Ch eshire . on Rt 7 Pick yo ur
Park R t . 3;1 , t en m tieS nor t h
own S20 p er to n . Open 6 ttays
o f Pomeroy Large lo t s Wtlh.
p er week or c all (6 1&lt;11 367
D EA LER S 'in scra p , 1ron ,
con crete p a t ios, side walk s,
7330 l or f ur th er information .
metals. ivnk autos R 1ct er's , runners and off st r eet
1 8 781C
Savage ' Phone 99 2 5 ~ 68
parking Phone 992 747 9
I 2 29 1p
~2 31 lie

----

-----

----- - -

For Sale

-·

-------

Mcldern

FURNITURE
STRIPPING SERVICE
Removal
of
Paints
Plas tics · Varnishes, etc .
Wood or M e tal .
Repairs . Refinishing of
Furniture .
Burn1Shing Pol ish ing of
cop per &amp; Bress

1~68

1968 OLDSMOB I LE 98, needs
repatr . S200 Phone 992 6162 .
2 4·6tc

La Salle
HOTEL
o.

~

-~ - ·---~----- -- - -

OLD fur nit ure. r I CE' bO )(eS,
brass beds , stone 1 ars, or
com p lete househol ds Writ e
M
D . Miller ,
Rt
2,
Po m eroy , Ohio
Cal l 99 2.
1760
10
-- --·
_,
- 7 74

____ _____

Rooms, '5.00 up

-

Special Rates
by Week
or Month

Wanted
C.: AS H paid for all mak es and
m o dels o f mobile home5
Phone area co d e 61 4 423
95] 1
4 13 lfc

--- -~------

Help Wanted

H O US E in Rutland
5858 .

Call 992
1 4 ttc .

l{f::Tt~ E D or s~m i r e t 1r e d
lady Ia live tn . r r ee room
and board and sma l l wages
for lig ht duties See at JOB
Page St , Mi ddl eport , Ohto
1 11 t f c

Employment Wanted
SEWING of all kinds, dresses
for all occo!lsions, slacks,
Sh~rts_. new born laye t t es ,
curtatns, drapes . Phone 992
3035 and ask for D orothy
2·4-12 t c

-----·---- ------

UNFURNI Sf1ED, 2 bedrm
apt . newly red ecor at ed ,
tu lly carpet ed Call before 9
a m 992 .2286 .

A PT ., 4 rm balh, furntshed
Phone 99 2 5908 .
2 .ot . tfc

---

-~ ----

----- - -

2 BI;DRM . mobil e h ome, real
n i ce Phone 992 3324
2 4 tfc
-·- - - - - - - - - - - - · -

lost

Real Estate For Sale
HOU SE for' sa le, ex tra large
l 1v1n g room , dtntng room ,
la rg e kitchen , family room ,
2 b edrooms , bath , all car .
p e t ed , except ki tc h en , n ice
ya rd , good loc ation May be
see n at 332 Grant St . ,
Middl eport
2.9 Ot c
4 RM . HOU SE W1lh b ath in
Sy r.acuse on Se cond St
Phone 992 7553
2·6 6tc

-

P~ 992-2711

Middleport,

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

H A LF Collie , half German
Sh eph e rd , reddt sh brown
ar:td white. Beagl e, wllite
wtlh black and br own spots
Lost tn Langsville area . Ph
742 2805 or 742 2864
2 8·31p

iOsr-, ; -sasha~ ~;~;,--,;a , e

-·-·----·'----- ---

1970 350 JOHN D ee r e Doze r , 6
II
b lad e. ca nap e , c om
pl e t ely rebut II S5,950 Phone
(614 ) 98 5.3594
2·8 71p

--- -•- ---,......----•·r

1964 JOHN Deere Doze r , gas
engine, 6 tt blade , cana pe ,
W1nch,
r eve r ser
bar ,
com ple te !-,. rebuilt . S5 ,000
Phone (6 141 985 3594 .
2 8 7lp
--~-----------

1'164 J O HN D ee r e dozer. 10 10
diese l eng m e , B fl . bla d e,
good
condition,
S4,000 .
Phone· (6 1&lt;1 ) 9B5 3594
2 8·71p

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

PI G S tor~, sat e, appro x 65 lb s.
Ph o n e 992 3640
2 B 7tp
STORM WindOWS , four 34 x 91.
thr ee 28 x 71, three 28 x 90, S7
each . Phone 992 5171
,
2 B·4tp
CO RN for sat e Phone 16141
985 3538 , Paul Ka rr.
2 8·6tp
BED , Mallr e s s
and
tn ·
nerspring mattress Good
condition, Want S175 . F&gt;hone
992 -5833
2·5·41p

Now at landmark

Plo tt h o und , nam e of Duke
Name ta g on collar Phone
(6l.tJ 98 5 4248 or 992·3d08 .
.
2 6 6t c

- - --A-~-.,....

..,...

CO-OP

___ ___ -·-

Automatic Water

For Rent or Sale

Conditioner
Model Ucxxx,
210,000

2 BEDRM mobil e hom e. Cal l
after 4 p .m 992 ·7791.
2 8·3tc

Weekly Grain

-- -·-- ---------

Capo city

J]{!U100[3)1)£;-UwJ .... w'w-J ,_.
loy &gt;IINIIIAilNClll&gt;

Unseramble theae four Jumbles_
one letter to each "uart, lo
form four ordinary words .

Reg. 5339.00 Val.
POMEROY LANDMAR"
. . . _Jack
Carsey, Mgr .
4litl ,.,.,.,. m-2111

w.

I

I

(J

THORCC

I

GOOD qutllllty m lxed hay ior ·
sale . Call 992 -3658 after 5
p . m.
2·" ·6tc

01

...
COULD BE GlUA~ANTINEO
IN THE NAVY.

FOUR L78x15. white watl reg .
lreect , Uni royal Gin belt
raln tires . pract i cally new .
Two fo·r S60 or ell 4 for S 110.
Also ,
1969
Rambler
Amer ican, 4 dr . standard
shift, radio , good sttal)e, S500
firm . Vernon Weber , Phone
992 3345 or home , 742· 2143 ,
2·4 Otp

--------------TRUMPET , good
Phone 949 2853
"---·-~-

(Aeew•n ,to-row»
~huwnl•,'•

.

l

lomhl"' BROIL SUITE

CLOTHE CHOSEN

.

An•wrrl ..M'IIra lllrotlWMa rf'911irn, ,_,, rin1
"1(.,. Rrrirr -CHURCH IlEUS

cond ition

---- .

STEREO RADIO ,
modern
design , 8 track tape, am fm
radio c ombinatiOn . Ba l anc e
597 40 or 1erm s Call 992

3965.

f

2 6 tfc

YOU SAY THE5E H IE~O­
GLYPH1C5 0~ THE? FL~k
TELL U$ TO I~JEC T THE
FLUID INrO THE MUMMY-

WIN AT BRIDGE

Three NT doesn't cut it

WHAT HAPPE'IJ$!

NORTH llll
4 AK.I7

I

FREE ESTI,.,ATES

¥ H5

. AQ

Plex•glan - Table Tops •
MtrrtJrs - Storm &amp; Screens .
FERRELL'S GLASS &amp;

Blown
lnsulatio11 Services

W£ST

EAST

4052
• K 10 6

4 10 6 3
¥ K Q64
• J98a2

o'-8 7 6

4 J
SOUTH

HOME MAINTENANCE

Blowd' into Walls &amp; A Hies

LARRY lAVENDER

9

"" KQ5 J 2

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

100 Kerr Street
Pomerov, Ohio 45769
(614) 992 2798, Dick Seyler
·
1· 29 1m o.

I

S..... aCU\1, OfliD
Ph. 992-l993

Sidi ng - Viny l
&amp;
AlUminum Window Glass
&amp; Gl ai: lnQ . On the Job or in
Shop .
Ptck up and delivery
service
Call Collect l88· 82l9
Specialize In
build -up
roofing &amp; hot roofs. Free
Estimates - 10 years ex ·
perience.
H arve Ferrell
Bidwell, Ohio
2 6 1 mo .

4 9 H4

• J 10 7
• 74 3
• A 10 9 4

BOttN LOSER

'SURe, INCRe,l61tJ6 M~ 1~7URA~
WILL COST A LOT /JaE ~
EN.H /.'DNTIC

...SIJT IT''7 TO PROTECT ~OU
f..t.lD WIL-BfRfOR(.ec 11-1 (.Jo€;€ r

AlJO WHAT 00 W6 Lilli; ON

Netther vulner ablt'

IF ~OU oo.l'T... OOIJ'T..

West

... UH ...SI-\a!LD.,, ~"':~;/

Pass

No rth

~as t

Sou th

1 "'"

Pass

INT

3NT

Pass
Opemng lead -

4 10 1· m~:

Pa ss

Pass

2•

1

chuck two s pades from durnmy . However, the dmmond
rin('SSe was won and he came
home with h1s poor cuntr&lt;Jct
only to find tha t he had los.!
two 1nternat 1onal mat c h

SLOAN'S
CARPOING

lARRY WHOBREY
PUBLIC

Free estimates on car.
peting and installation .
We'll bring samples to your
home with no o&amp;li9ation .
See how you can , really
save .
Mike Young , Manager
Sales and lnsta Ita lion

ACOOUNTANT
Now accepting clients
for bookkeeping and
tax service .

Rl . 3; Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

PH. 992-6173

Phone day or night
614-992·1206
J 14 ·' mo .

Real Estate For Sale
' . 6 yr s,
4 BR Brt c k horne

21,
baths . garage on 2.8 acres
on paved r oad necr r or ked
Ru n State Fore st
Ph one
( 614 ) 667 37 87 $38,000
I 15, 271p

·

EXCAVAT I NG , do zer , loa'i..t,
and b ackhoe work , septt c
tanks
in sta ll ed ;
dump
trucks and lo boy s l or hire ,
Wtl l haul fill dtrl. to p soi l.
l tm es tone and g ra vel C&amp; ll
Bo b or Roger Jeffers , day
phone 992 7089 . night phon e
99 2 'J :S 25 or 992 5232 .
· 2 11 1fc

------'I--

EXCAVA TIN G .
dozer ,
backhoe
and
ditcher ,
Cha rl es R Hatfield Back
Hoe Service . R utland , Ohio
Phone 7&lt;~2 · 2008 .
113078t c

SYRACUSE

Newer

$22,500 .
POMEROY 11'4 a cres,
200 ft frontage, originally
ha d 2 houses. Ideal f or
home or trail er . $3,000 .

RUTLAND -

2 BR , bath,

din1ng
R.. was h R ,
por ch es, garage . A good

buy at $8 ,500 .
RUTLAND - 2 BR , bath ,
dtning
R..
ca rp e t e d ,
paneled tiled , ga rag e, close
to shopping . $9,500

151 ACRES -

0 &amp; 0 TREE Tri mming , 20
yea r s exp rr ien ce I n sured ,
t r ee estimates Ca ll 992 238.t
or (614 1 69B 7257 Al b an y .
10 15 tic

- ==- ~~ . . . - -----

SEWING MACHINE Repairs ,
service . all mak es 992 2284
Th e F a br tc Sh op , Pomer oy
A u tho ri zed Singer Sa l es and
Servi c e
We
!.harpe n
Sciss or s
3 29 lf c
O ' DELL Allneme nt locat ed
behind
Rutland
Grade
Sc h ool . T un e up , b r ake s,
wllee l balancing , a linemen!
Ph one 742 20011 .
11 16 lfc

other bldg~. $38,000 .
OWNER
HAVE A
SELLING PROBLEM?
LET US SOLVE IT CALL
NOW.
WE
NEED
LISTING S.
991-2259 or 991·2568

6.2D-Rev. Cl!!ophus Robinson 13,
6: 3()-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Con cern s &amp; Comments 10.
6: 4D--Ounce of Prevention 10.
6: 45- Morning Report 3

points."

Jim ' " At !he o ther tab le
North wound up at the reall y
s1lly contract of fou r spades.
Hearts were opE"ned and con·
t onued and he decided to ruff
!he thi 'd lead . He entered
dummy wtth the ace of cl ubs,
took e~ tr ump fmesse , played
Ius ace and kmg and was hom e
when the su1t broke. Fi na lly,
he go t to dummy w1th th e
fourth club and took a dia·
mond finesse to score an over·
tnck "

6:5&gt;-Chuck White Repo,ts tO; Good Mo'"lng, Tri State 13.
7:QO-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bug s Bunny and Friends 10.
7: 3D-Schoolles 10.

8:0D-Lassle 6; Captain Kanga&lt;oo 8, 10; Sesame Street
33 .
8.30-Big Valley 6.
9:ro-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13. ·
9.3D-A.M . 3; ,0ne Life to Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Dougla s 13.

10 :ro-Celebrlly Sweepslakes 3,4, 15,; Edge ol Night 6;
Price is Right 8, 10.
10:30-High Rollers 3,4,15; Dinah! 6.
11 :00-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4; Gambit
8, 10; Farmer's Daughter 13; Electric Company 20.
11 : 3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Happy Days 13;
Love of Llle 8,10; Sesame Street 20.
11:55-Take Kerr 8; Dan I mel 's World 10.
12 :00-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15; Let's Make
A Deal 13; Bob Braun' s 50-50 Cflub 4; News 6,8, 10.
12 :30-Take My Advice 3, 15; All My Children 6, 13;

~~@i)ISI~

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

For Sale

REDUCE safe and fast wi th
GoB es e Tablets &amp; E vap
"w aler p i lls /' N elson Drug .
2 9- lip

'COMMI:::~~ CIAL
OUTDOOR
SIGN with t imer, mounted
, on • 4"X30 ft . steel pipe Cost
1875 ' new , onry SlOO . Phoni

992 5786 .

2·5 6tc

--·- ---------- - -I~ U l

tt ~&lt; li
, !.! (. wel d1nQ
n1&lt;1Ch1ne . new c tc c . all
accessories included Phone
Y92 31 10
10 28 ttc

1o6c. r0RD L T·o . New 12 ga .
Wi n c h es1~r 37 /&gt;.Si ngle Si tot
Phone 742 235 9
) . 1J26tp
HAY for sale , St bale or trade?
Phone
Frink
Dichel.
Lead ing Creek Rd . 742 ·2085
2=1· 1611)

~U

Real Estate For Sale
3 BEDRM

14 Less

s-EPTIC-l'AN KS -cle:;~d

TWO roTS AND

"TWO ROSES
~H!M!

992 . 3 95 &lt;~

Mod ern Sanitation
Or, 992 7349

9 18 tf c

house i n Mtd
d le po rt , cor n e r lo t . New
bath , $lOry and hc: lf . ut i lity
room , new carpe ti ng and
new root 1 garage anef work
r oom , fr uit c ellar Cl ose to
sc h ool
and
sho p pi n g .
\ 17.500 Phone 992 -76'24 .
1·21 '2 61C

TEAFORD

Hold tiqht' We're
qoin' acrosi'

3 B'Rs .,

water hea1,1arge mod. kit .,
oak trim , carpeting, etc .
$60,000.

WE 5LI66ES7ED

MtiR6A.REr
.41~

BUT
HE SAID NO-

ITSYOU HE'S
WAITING FOR-

ENTER, OH
SCRAWNY ONE rt

nicely remod e led, with
central air c.nd heat . 2 car
garage .
Picnic
cave.

$31,000.
MIDDLEPORT older

home with

large

d1stnbutwn

an d

1: 3Q-Days of our Live s 3,,.,15; Rhyme and Reason

6,]3; As lhe World Tums 8,10.
2:QO- $20,000 Py,amld 6, 13;.
2:30-Doclors 3,4,15; Neighbors 6,13; GuldlfW Light
8,1 0.
3:ro-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospltal6,13; AI\
in the Family 8, 10; Lil ias, Yoga and You 20.
·
3:3D-One Life to Live 13; Mickey Mousf Club; Malch
Game 8, 10; You Can Do II 20; lTV Utilization JJ.
4 . 0~Speclal Treat 3,4, 15; Bewitched 6; Mkkf!y Mouse

few

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN . send $1 fo "Wm

at Br i dge ," cl o th is
newspaper. P 0 Box 489,
Radio C1ly Station. New York,
N Y 10019/

Cl ub 8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie "Tarzan Goes

lo India" 10; Dinah! 13.
4:3D-Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8; Sesame
Slreel 20,33.
S·OO-Bonanza 3, Valley Forge . The Young Spy 4;
Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5: 3D-Adam -12 4; News 6; Beverly H illblllles 8;
EledricCompany 20,33; Adam -12 13.

6:0D- News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; lTV
Utilization 33,
.6 ,30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,)0; Your Future Is Now 33;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
7:QO- Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth,.;

H Setting for

22 Super \'isor
23 Subdue
rrura cle
25 Seetlle
(2 wds .)
27 Irasci II Goaded
bility
12 Very swee l ; 29 Ethiopian
cloymg
lake
16 Penny
33 Garnish19 Zeus's
ment
s1ster
34 Field
21 Press
36 Immerse
s\3tement
37 For shame'
Christ's
first

forle
28 Shrew
29 Shoplifter
or burglar
30 Fnend

··--

ForTuesday,Feb. 10,1176

ARIES (March 21-April 19)

31 Musical

Th1s could be an e xc tltng d ay
e specially tf you 're worktng on
a large. ni w project. Your
en thu stasm w11l ge t o th ers tn ~
va lved

HMMM ... ~U5T

MANY YEARo r;EFORE
HER MARRIAGE 11J

Ao L THOUGHT.

STAN I

TAURUS (April 20-Mar . 20)

footwear
Weather
word

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- II ere·, ho" lo work il :
AXYDLBAAXR
is I.ONGFEJ.LOW

YEB,BHfOI\ORKED HERE

9.3D-One Day AI a time8, 10; Wyatt Earp 5.
IO:OD-City of Angels 3,4, 15; Switch 8, 10; News 20;
Woman Allvel 33; Target: ~orruptors 5.
10 :3Q---Woman Alive! 20:
Woman 33.
11 .OD-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mystery of the Week
6, 13; Movie "The California Kid," 8; Movie "The
Deleclor" 10; Janak! 33.
1:oo--- Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

( Fr. )

:rr
.,,... - .... - .OM,

Bowling for Dollars 6; Country Placee8; News 10;
Name Tha t Tune 13; Family Affair 15; Antiques
20; Wild, Wild World ol Annlmals JJ; Changed
Lives lcl 5.
7·3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal With II 6;
$25.000 'Pyramid 8; National Geographic 20,33;
P'ice is Righi 10; To Tell The Truth 13; High
School T.V. Honor Society 15; Bill Cosby Show (c) ,
8:0D-Movln' On 3,4, 15; Happy Oays 6, 13; Good Times
8, 10; Plxanne (c) 5.
8:3D-Daytlme (c ) 5; Laverne and Shirley 6,13; Popl
8, 10; Consumer Survival Kit 20,33.
9:0D-Pollce Woman 3,4,15 ;
XII Winter Olympic
Games 6, 13; M-A-S-H 8, 10; Adams Chronicles
20,33 .

• Berntce Bede Osol

One l etter si m p l y st ;mds for ano t he r In t his sample A IS
used for the three L's, X for t he t wo O's. etc Sin!; lc letters .
apostrophes, the length and formation of the w ords :-~ rc all
hints. Ea&lt;'h rl ay 1he l'ode let1 crs ar~ d ifferent

('R\'PTOQUOTES
MV C BA

Z VC

WFG

NFTJ

$16,500.

TURN YOUR SELLING
PROBLEMS OVER TO US .

12:5&gt;-NBC News 3,15.
1:0D-News 3; Ryan' s Hope 6.13; Phil Donahue B;
Young and the Restless 10; Nol For Women Only 15.

h1gh ca rds

GCSSPQM

Q p K-

MVA

hot water heat, and large

lol out of flood area. Only

Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
12:45-Eiectrlc Company 33.

AstraGraph

Nice

living, l'h baths , dining,

Good

note

home, 5 BR s .. 2 nice baths ,

On city
utilities, 8 rooms , 1'12 bath s,

that it was a

32 Highest
note
35 Style of

condition, 3 BRs .. bath, gas
furnace, dining , nice kit ..
full
basement,
near'
business sec. Only 51 7.000.
12 ROOMS - Large older

lois . S25,000.
4'11 ACRES -

IS

very good bid Partner may
not make four spades. but he
IS n' t gomg to be hur t. And if
he can ' t make it. the op ponenl s probably have a game
ur even a slam Incid~11taHy.
Uu s is &lt;J imos t '&lt;~book r esporJse .

Simon's

LIL ABNER

OLD HOME - In exce llent

cook and bake units, inod .
kit ., gas furnace. wood .
burning hearth, and 2 large

7 Macaw

23 )3aby
soother
21 Chris of
tennis
25 Lox associate
26 Swanfancier
27 Neil

3 BR s ..

Only $25.000.
68 ACRES - R enovated 8
rms ., .e BRs ., 21/ 4 baths, hot

Mrs. in ·

Madrid
6 Greek
ISland

mountain

l'h

4 BRs , 1'1&gt;
bath s, larg e ktl
with
d i n i ng , oil furna ce , 2 car
garage and one level acre

5

21 " Ivanhoe"
heroine

110 Mectwlnlc Pomeroy. 0 .
PtooMm-3325

$21.500.
MODERN -

locomotive
39 So !hat's
the way!
(2 wds .)
lO Box
U Spirit
lamp
DOWN
I Heavy
volwne
2 Seaweed
derivative
3 The ladies
do
(3 wds. )
l Ceylon
export

so!
20 Crete

Virgil B.. Sr., B,olt.,.

$25.000.
RENOVATED -

bad bid when she raised her
partner 's openi ng spade b1d to
four with :
• K9xxx • x •Q xxxxx 6 x

38 Railroad

remote
IS Memoryfilled time
16 Bedstead
17 Caddoan
Indian
18 I told you

GASOUNF. ALLEY

Joel! No!

lots o f st orage, gas F .A .
furna ce ,
2
concret e
porches , dr y basemen! ,
garde n ,
and
garage .

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

I 'LL GIVE

wants to know if it was a very

The answer

News 13.

6· 0G---Sunrlse Semester 10.
6 · ls-Farm Report 13.

~
.."'ta'
by THOMAS JOSEPfi

ALLEY OOP

ACROSS
I Diplomatic
trait
5 Confidence
game (sl.) ,
9 Bugbear
10 Knightly
descriptive
13 Novelist
Angelou

EXCAVATING , BACK H Oi:s"
AND DOZER . LARGE A ND
SMALL
SE PTIC TANKS
IN S T A LLED .
BIL L
P ULL IN S, PHONE 992 2478,
OAV O R N IGH T
11 11 78t p

-·-------------

----

E L WOOD BO WERS REPA I R
- Sweepers , toast er s, 1ron s .
all small appliances Lawn
mowe r , next t o State High
way Gal'age on Route 7.
Phone • s5 38 25
4 16 t f c

Oswald "Som e years ago I
made headhnes by saying the
perfect partner wuuld De right
?5 per cent of the time · ·
Jtm "I guess yo u were a
W
0
R
K
tnfle
severe , but •I IS a cer·
ANNIE-PEACE
r;;~s~~v;;.;;~':" ;tainty tha t the da rnd es t things
11
t40, AH~IE- '""uot'n 1n to p ~ f ll ght c om ~
'--..,;;:;;~ I I
' r eEFER
petillior
10 FOL LOW
lHE WAYS
Oswald "The (ma l match
oF PEACE- tQ determine th e Amen can
-, ,-~ team for the 1976 world c ha m pionship produced a lot of.
great bridge and a lot of miS ·
ta kes. AI the forst tab le South
was very unha ppy w1th h1s
three·notrump contract. The
defense started w t t h fou r
heart tric ks Hnd South ll c~d to

~~~Dl

READY M I X CO N ~~c · ~
del i vered rigllt to vour
~roje c1 Fas t and easy F ree
estimat es Phon e "992 p 84,
C.o egl em Ready M i x Co ..
Middle p or t , Ohio
630tfc ·

BRADFORD , Au c l to n ee r .
Compte l e Servic e . Phon e
949 .2487 or 949 .2000. Racine,
Oh io , Crill Bradford .
10.9 .Jt c

Rill &amp;tate for Sale

ORPHAN

Pom~roY

b a th s . TV
room ,
· solarium,
basement,
garage and
ni ce lot .

MODERN hom e in Chester, 8 ,
rooms, 2 baths , 2 porches,
sunporch . 14 basement , city
10 RM HOU SE, 2 bath s , lull
and well wafer , natural gas ,
basement, glasse-d in porch ,
garage . Priced to sell .
c arpe t
and
garage · In
P h on e 1614 ) 985 -.41 02 .
Middleport. S2l.OOO . Phone
2·4·tf C
992 -3319
2·6 6tc
8 RM HOU SE , 2 baths , on
corner lot In Middleporl
FOUR acres of land , n i ce
Phone 992 ·3427 after 6 p .m
loca t ion for house or trailer
2 4 6tc
n ear !.C hOOI Call ( 61 4) 669.
--- - ---..---~ --4723 or 669 .3764 .
2·6 61p
HO USE on Lincoln Hgts 2
b edrm , large kitchen, full
basement , exce llen t b uy tor 'ONE ACRE. 6 rms and bath ,
$8.900 . with n ew f ur n i lure ,
Rt . 3, Pom er oy , Rose Hill
only $10,300 Phone 992 7648 .
Die~ Davis property , full
1·6·26tc
baument.
aluminum
.-~-·---~- - - - ~ - .......
siding, Pt~neled . SIO, OOO. Call
Oak Hill 685 . 6576 evenings ;
3 • BEDRM .
home ,
l ust
Jackson '286 300.4 days ·
finished, remodeling, Salem
' 2·5·30tp
St , Rutland . Phone 7.42 ·2306
alter 4 p .m or see M i lo B
NEAR LY fini shed , bl .level.
Hutchison .
·
split en try . 5 bedrms . 3
9·2311c ·
bo!lths , equl_pped kitchen,
fam i l Y room , 2 car garage ,
3 BR H OME , just finished
S4.4 ,000 . Phone 16141 985 .
remodeling
Sa lem
$t
3810
Rutland
Phone 742 · 23o'6
2·5·6tc
afte-r 4 p .m . or !. ee Milo B .
Hutc hinson
5 ROOMS and bath on
10-9.tfc
150'x iOD' lot, 16500. Com plete financing . Phone 992 ·
5786

LITTLE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

STEAM HEAT C

Ll'l'l1JO: ORPHAN ANNIE

Nalhln Biggs
Radiator Spec1alt!.l

-- --- ·---..------

Co lumbia &amp;

Twps. 35 A
for
c t~ll iv at i on , 50 A timbe r 1
bal. pa sture, (a ll f en ced) .
Home has 3 BR , barn &amp;
Salem

Fr om the la rgest. Truck or
Butldozer" · Radiator to the ·
al lest Heater Core

1 22d mo .

REMODELING ,
P l umbing ,
heating and all tv~es o t
genera l
repatr
Work
guarailleed
10 y ears ex
perl ence
Phone 992 2409
5 1 tt c

ho me, 3 BR, bath, some
panel i ng &amp; til~ . hardwood
floor s. N g as F A. furnace,
partial bas em ent , garage.

By Oswald &amp; James J acoby

.oo--Tomorrow 3,4;

TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 10, 1976

A New Hampshire reader

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

""111!&gt;11111

•

MODERN CHEMICALS

Wanted To Buy

A SMALL, used piano Phone
99 2 3161 or 992 7639
2 5·61c

OF COU~%. P ~OF£'550~'

1· 12- 1 mo.

we Buy Antiques

--- --

M c D A NIE L
Custo m
But
chertng , West Columbia , w .
V a We butcher cattle and
h ogs
S10
ca ll le
slaug ht er , !7 far n og s , 12c
f or· culling an d wrapp tng
Sta te and federal Inspec ted ;
Open 6 days per week .
Phon e ( 304) 882 3224
1-30 26t c

CAPTAIN EASY

¥ A 932

POMEROY, OHIO

1969 VOLK SWAGEN wilh
Baja kit , $650 Phone 992
5663 .
2 8 6tc

Call 992-7537
Pomeroy, Ohio

Roger Wamsley
1· 23 1 mo .

POM0~~!v,~~~ CO.@)
1968 250 FORD Pi c kup ; 43,000
act u a l m i les
Phone 992
3640
2 1:1 71p

Kuhl Calle Decor

UNC Set (3 pes .) sa.so.
Call Rutland, 742-2JJ1
R&amp;J COINS

$1995

pom eroy Office
lOS Butternul
992-3345
Farmerly we ed Wholesale.
Featuring :
Delux zerox Copy S e~vtce ,
Off i ce
Supp l tes ,
Su pplies .
M i meograph
largest se lec t ion of wed ·
ding sub~!ies in sout tt ·
east e rn
to .
The P rint Shop Complete
(Still in bu si ness in Mid dleporU
~ 2 · 8 · 2 mo . .

licensed • baker
and
decorator.
Kitchen State Inspected

t975S Proof Set (6 pcs.l
525 .00 ; t975 Mint Sel SUO;

to

Quality Print Shop

and Decorated
To Your Order

Currency and Supplies
Buy, Sale or Trade

191JINTE RNATIONAL 1600 SERIES
$3895
102" cab to axle , 2 speed, R . axle, 6 speed, good 900x20

5,200 00

Redeemed D uring Year
1975
5.200 .00
Rate of In t .
6 Pet .
Date of Final Mal.
1 6-76
Total -~ Ou ts tanding
J an . 1. 19 75
5, 200 00
:rotal - R edeemed During
Year 1975,101
5.200 00
(21 9, H e 4

Cakes, Balled

COINS

Bicentennial Coins

TIMBER . lop
price
fo r
st and1n g saw ltmber Call
(6141 446 857d day or n ight .
2·4 12tc

50 'V AFTE'~ WHICH· · OUR
HERE ~EXT MOVE W"L SE TO
GOE$!
WAIT AND 0 15$E~VE

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1976
6:ro-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, IS; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 ;
Specl~l Education JJ.
8 :00-Bobby' Vtnton 3; On The Rocks 13; Rich Little 3;
6 · 31f-NBC News 3, 4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy G'ifflth 6;
•College Basketball 6; Gunsmoke 8; Six Hundred
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
Millennia 20.33; Rhoda 10.
7 : 00-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth &lt;t ; Bowling for
8:3D-We Think You Should Know 3; XII Wlnler
Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; News 10; Candid Camera
Olympic Games 13; Phyll is 10
13; Family Altair tS ; On Aging 20; Resourceful
9:00-Joe Forrester 3,4,15; All 'In The Family 8,1 0.
West VIrginia 33.
9:3D-Maude 8,10; World Press 20; Emphasis 33.
7:3D-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Don Adams
10:ro-J lgsaw John 3,4, 15; R lch Man, Poor Man 6, 13;
Screen Test 4; Match Game PM 6; Price is Rlohl8 ;
Medical Center 8, 10; News 20; BI.Ways 33.
Evening Edition with Ma rtin Agronsky 20; High
10 : 3()-Freedom : A Continuum 20; American Issues
Road fo Adventure 10 ~ To Tell the Truftt 13; Friends
Forum 33.
of Man 15; Marco Sportltte 33 .
11 : OD-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11. 3D-Johnny Ca&lt;son 3,4, 15; Unofficial Miss Las
Vegas Showglrl Pageant 6, 13; Movie " One Is a
Lone ly Number" 8, Movie " A Fine Madness" 10;
Janakl 33.

Business Services

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
..
OF
Motor Co.
QUALITY

197lCHEV. 'h TON FLEETS! DE
$2695
H duty tires, springs , boost er brakes , ste·p bumper, V8 engine, s td . trans., t inted gla,ss Clean int.

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

Television log for easy viewing

DITCHED

Auto Sales

O ~ ADLINES

5

TH&amp;M~

HB

MVCBA

QPKW~'G

HSA

UP BM

ZVC · BMAHW

HB

ALFW

XSCN

MVA

BMAlr

ATB C T
Yesterday's Cryptoquote, I HAVE MADE MISTAKES, BUT I
HAVE NEVER MADE THE MISTAKE OF SAYING THAT I
HAVE NEVER MADE ONE. - JAMES GORDON BENNETI'

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No¥. 22) A
maJor change that could affect
your "lifestyle is ready to surface toda y. provtded you've
though! tl lhrough carefully.
SAGITTARIUS (No¥.

23-D~

21) A good day for you to sil
down at the bargainmg table.
You'll be sharp enough to get a
good deal. yet you'll be
scrupulous ly fair

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jtn.

Your prospe cl s look ve r y
p ro m1 s1 ng tod ay . If there 's
som e thtng long due to you
fro m a l n end . perhaps you can
c ollec J - with A !title tn l eresl

19) Condtttons affecting your
work or career are still tn a very
profitable cycle Don 't overlook
anything.

GEMINI (Mar 21·June 20)

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 18)
Yo u make a good impression

You 're lu c k t er t oday for
yo ur self than y o u are f or
o theres, Concen tra te on advanctng yo ur self- Interests

CANCER (June 21 -Julr 22)
Tr y to do som e lht n g today
wh ere y ou help someo n e
you 're fond ot Be h1 s act1ve
booster.

LEO (Jutr 23-Aug . 22) A person ts fortunate when he has
good lnends. Yo u are doubly
b lessed 1oday You have two
oals you CM really count on.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept, 22)
QPSBA . - HJWHF

and humorous. you 'll be sur~
pn sed at the exceptional daY
you'll have. Your ·good spirtts
.vtll be In fectious .

Though you have to wo r k a bit
Iange r nlfl n u sual loday , do
things th at wttl Please th e boss
H e II Q1v e · you cr edt t a nd .
p er h ap s a bon us.

LIBRA (Sept 23-0c1. 23) If
you r o utlook is broad positive

today Don 't be amazed it
someone who hAs been unc ommumcative sud denly has a
lot to talk over

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
You can bring things to a hap.
py conctus1on today. 11 you
have any problems hanging,
' press a ltttle harder to resolve
them .

&amp;w~
Feb. 10, 1976

Th e urge to travel th 1s year wtll
be s t ro ng er tha n usual
be c au s e you' ll be among
fnends who love to go. You
m ight e11en tind a fun place
11hal's a home away from home.

�.
•

-

8- The Daily Sen till&lt;' I, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday , Feb. 9, 1971;

President asks

51 pupils on honor listing
The Hadnr

Bnn·p Wulft&gt;, '1\u nmy Wvlfe.

Elcn1entary Schuoll1onur l'ol l
for the 3rd six weeks gradmg

Wl1 ndv \\lulfe.
Gra·d(' Twu
Lori Adams ,
Tr·acy
Cle land,
Tina
Furesl£'1,
Mandy
Hill ,
Melissa Ihle, /\lana Lyons,
Lisa Parsons, Kelly Rizer,
Kenda Rizr r . Brad Hnbmson ,

RACINE -

t&gt;&lt;•riod lis ted 51 puplles.
Grade Onr

-

MHtthe\\

Jewell, Ltsa Pape, Hal' hel
Reiber,

Dtana

Stmpson ,

McDaniels
host meet

"The single greatest threat to the quality of life of older
Americans is inflation," he said. "Our first priority
continues to be the fight against inflation."
Ford said that allhongh double digit inflation had been
cut nearly in half, the retired, living on fixed incomes
"have been particularly hard hit and the progress we
have made in reducing inflation has not benefited them
enough .
"The partiCular vulnerablility of the aged to the burdens
of inflation requires that specific improvements be made
in two major federal programs, Social Security and

Meter.
Grade Three

Alan Crisp ,

S.mdra HardNl, Lo is Illle,
D;JV!d Powe ll , Luri Simpson ,
Lori Wolfe.

Pomeroy Church nf Chri st .

Mrs. Jerr)• Fields pres1ded
with Mrs. Lewis Osborne
giving devotwns from 1 Cor .
13 on the "Love" theme. She
re:_1d a poem , " A Lovely

Day", and Richard Evanson
led in prayer. There was a
discussion on how to increasP
the class attendance.
The March meeting w11l be

at the church . Mrs. Richard
F.v:mson conducted B1ble
games with prizes going to
Mr. and Mrs. McDaniel, Mrs
Edward Venoy, Mrs. Elwood
Bowers and Mrs. Denver
Kapple . Refreshments were
served to those na med and
.Jerry Fields and Mrs .
Charles Eskew .

VISIT BIDWELL
Mrs. Virgil Roush and Mrs.
Myrtle Walker were in
Bidwell Thu1·sday to visi l Mr .
and Mrs. Sam Marrs, Sr. and
family. They called at the
Walker Funeral Home in
Wilkesville to pay last
respects to Jim Bill Marrs
who d1ed unexpectedly of a
heart attack. Mr. and Mrs.
He~ Marrs of Lafayette, Ind.
and Mrs . Paul 1Je an )
Hothacker of Los Angeles
\\iere here for the services.
Burial was m Greenwood
Cemetery at Hacine.

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE THRU THURS .

FEB 9,12
NOT OPEN

Grade Four - Jcunes Bush ,

Ke vin

Curfman ,

Becky

Juhn so n, Lindu Proffitt,
Katrin:J S110llgrass, La ren

Wolfe. Tony Wolfe.
Grad e Five - · Kat hy
BHker, Zane Rceglc , Angie
Glenn , Scutl .Justis, Becky

Lee, J ohn Porter, Clair
Morris, Tonja Salser. Lori
Ward en, Melanie Weese,
Terry Pa tter son , David
Salmon s.

Grade SIX -- Vicky Deem,
Kim
Follrod , Melinda
Salmons, Ri Ia Sloler, La ura
Wolfe . Kent Wolfe

Taft
( Contmuc&gt;d from page I)
consumer in this country."
"We should ask why it is
more important to play partisan politics than to face up to
the tragedy of street crime,
the degradmg Impact of
catastrophic illness and to the
near bankruptcy of our
energy resources - to face
the reality that those taxes
are too high and the quatlty of

Medicare."

Mrs. Filson
died Sunday
POINT PLEASANT - Mrs.
Bertha S. Filson, 92, of Pomt
Pl eas ant died Sunday in
Pleasant Valley Hospital
followi ng a brief 1llncss. She

was well known in the Ohio
Valley for her c1vic mterests,
Funeral services will be
conducted a t 11 a . m.
Wednesday

at

t he

Presbyterian Church with the
!lev. Hufus Cromartie officiating. Burial will follow in
Ihe Lon e Oak Cemetery .
Fnends will be received at

the Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home after 6 p. m. Tuesday
until 9 p. m. when memorial
services will be held by the
OES Chapter 75.
She was born Aug. 19, 1883,
goverrunent service too low,''
m Middleport, and was a
he said.
"11Jese are the kmds of daughter of the late William
and Sophia Munch Steinbach.
questions I hope all Ohioans Her husband William C.
will ask of our candidates. Filson, d1ed 111 19:ll.
These are the kinds of issues .
Survivors mclude one
on which we should base our
daughter,
Mrs . Ja mes
judgments of the candiates."
1Eleanor) McComb, of Point
Pleasant ; three sisters, Mrs.
Harry D. 1Ernihe ) Roush and
Mrs. Hilda Pmkslon, both of
Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Leon
1 H e len 1 Spaulding,
Hollywood, Fla ., and a
granddaughter, Juliu Lee
90~PINT
McComb ) a student at
Marshall
Univers1ly.
CARRYOUTONL~

Fresh Ham Hock
Navy Bean Soup

Hospital News

I Continued from page I)
to school but I don 't know if
I'm going to · stay there .
There's talk of a mass
walkout by the whites. I don't
know who's organizing itit's all by word of mouth. But
if things get tense , I'm
going."
A student, who asked that
his name be withheld,
watched a nearly empty bus
arrive with black students
and said, "Good. As long as

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
-- Elmer Kautz, Pomeroy;
Joseph Prof!i tt , · Racine ;
Mary
Derenberger,
Pomeroy; Lena Heilman,

they don't come, there won't

be any violence. Let them
stay home.u

Despite efforts of black
community leaders during
ille weekend, few of tbe
blacks, who number about
Sarah McKnight one-fourth of the student
body, were on hand for
died Saturday
classes.
Escambia High's nickname
Sarah Elizabeth McKnigh t,
77, of 71 ,
Depot St., was Rebels until a federal
Pataskala, who died at her judge in Pensacola responded
residence Saturday, was to black protests in 1973 and
preceded in death by two ruled a name change. The
sons, one sister and her nickname was changed to
Raiders.
parents.
The 5th U.S. Ctrcuit Court
She is survived by her
of
Appeals overturned the
Otho
husband,
David
lower
court ruling and told
McKnight, Pataskala; a
the
school
board to Jet
sister,
Wilda
Huning ,
students
decide
on a name. In
Downmgton; three brot her~,
a
surprise
election
last
Ross Boring, Johnstown;
Wednesday,
Rebels
was
Lloyd Boring, Columbus, and
William Boring, Downing ton ; selected, but principal Chris
eight grand£'1llldren and Banakas said the change
the
necessary
seven great-grandchildren . lacked
approval
by
twothirds
of the
Funeral serv1ces will be
student
body.
held Tuesday at I p, m. at the
Ewing ~·uncral Chapel wilh
i!Je Hev . Cecil
Cox officiahng. Friends mt:~y COJII at
the funeral home one howprior to services.
No charges have been flied ,
Mrs McKnight wa s a
and
no ruhng has been made
former resident nf the
in
the
shuotmg dealh of Hollis
Oownington area .
Miller, Jr ., 22, Bidwell, early
Saturday morni~g .
Ga lha Cou nty shenff's
questioned 18department
FIREMEN UN JOB
year-o
ld
Beth
Morri so n,
RUTLAND
1'he
Eagle
Rd
.,
Rt
2,
Bidwell,
Rutland Fire Dept. had il•
severa
l
hours
Sa
tw·day
aftrucks and men on the

Jacqueline Susann's
ONCE IS NOT
ENOUGH
( No1 shown Jan 9 11 due to

Crow's
Steak House

scene of the recent fire in
the lo\\-cr blol'k uf i&gt;(Jmero)

ter no on

and stayed there for man)'
hours. The Chester Dept
stood by In case of fires
developing in other areas
Two

SATURDAY
DISCHAHGES
Nellie
Price, Orpha Hussell, Okey
Kiser, Sr ., Charles Withee,
Gilbert Mees, Charles Werry,

Penny Landers , Norman
Neece.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Lionel Gilmore, Cheshire ;
Otis Arnott, Racine ; Martin

P1erce , Middleport; Ernie
Rood, Reedsville; Janet
Jeffers, Pomeroy,
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Harold King, Dana Halfhill,
Jesse Bush, Leona Stewart,
Halcigh Sayre.
Hulzer Medical Center

(Hirth, Feb. 6)
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Sayre, daughter, Henderson,
W. Va .
(Births, Feb. 71
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Cheek,
daughter, Coallon; Mr. and
Mrs. Hoger Gilliland, son,
Jackson ; Mr . and Mrs . Minor
Leach, daughter, Wellston ;
Mr . and Mrs. Roger
Hutherford, daughter,
Rodney .
(Births, Feb. 8)
Mr. and Mrs. Steven McManus, danghter, Hamden;

The Pomeroy Alumni

A~sn .

pr&gt;rrn 1 ~S 10n

nf

members

of

lhl'

answered a calf to R"ovte 1,

Mlddleporl, al 4: 59 p.m .
Sunday for Mrs. Sophie
Thomas, a medical pallent,

who was taken to Hoi zer

Medical Center. AI 8:08p.m.
Saturday. the squad wentlo a·
Middleport ca fe for Helen,
Marlow who was Ill . She was
taken to Ve1erans Memorial

Hospital.

about

th e

ci r-

meet at 7 JO p m. Tuesday at

lhe home of Susan Baer, 408 ·
S Flflh, Middleport. Judy

Crooks and Marilyn An derson will present 1he
program on "A Woman

Alone."
marriage license was
issued to Donald Edward
A

Vaughan , 19, Middleporl and
Pamela Leigh Nlclnskv. 17, •
Rultand.
Filing for dlssolulion of

marriage in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court have

been Margie E. Schoonov~r.
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, and Norman
J . Schoonover, Pomeroy , and

Galli E. Bradford, Rf. 3,
Racine, and Clara Jean
Bradford, Racine .

The Racine E·R squad was

called Sunday 12 · 15 p.m. for
Ott Arnott, 91, Racine, who
was taken to Veterans

Memorial Hospital.

lured nose, right index finger, Gallla County Coroner, said
dislocated shoulder and an autopsy was being permultiple
bruises
and formed today at the Holzer
Miss Morns, mother of four abrasions.
Medical Center.
sm all children, and the
In additiOn to the sheriff's
Miller died from gunshot
victim had been in some kind wourds of the chest and face department, Prosecutin~
of domestic quarrel prior to fired from a .25 caliber Attorney Gene Weillcrholt,
the shooting. Miss Morrison revolver. The shooting oc- Dr. Warehime and the
was treated and released curred at the Morrison home Southeastern Ohio Reigonal
from the Holzer Medical located near Tycoon Lake. Crime Lab at Nelsonville are
Cen ter for a possible fracDr. Donald R. Warehime, assisting in the investigation.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Just Arrived
Another
Shipm,ent Of

Playtex·

Social I
~1
~
1 Calendar 1
,,

.

BRAS

.....

TUESD,\Y
MEIGS County Chapter 53
Tuesday, 7::10 p.m. at DAV
home on Butternut Ave .,
Pomeroy,

and

GIRDLES
•18-Hour
eCross· Your-Heart
•Support Can Be
Beautiful
•Instead
eNo Visible Means

II II

•Living
\

Farmers Bank
,..,._._.,

eFree Spirit Pants
Liner
'

eDouble Diamonds

FOUNDATIONS DEPARTMENT

SECOND FLOOR
Main Store, Annex and Wlllhouse •
Open Monday thru Thursday
and Saturday 9:30 to 5

lot ol little
repair s
accumulated
around the house"&gt; Think
it's abouf time to ge1
r1

started? Our " FRIENDLY
ONES" have the tools and

Shop Fridays 9:30 to 8 p.m.

materials you need . TRY

US - YOU'LL LIKE US!

POMEROY, OHIO
lnsurenc:e For Eedl Dlpasltor
Mlmber Fec:lerel Ol!poslt lnlurenct Corporation

eFree Spirit
•I Can't Believe It's
A Girdle

Have you got

Sewage, water tap fees raised, in Middleport
An ordinance lncreasiJII! sewage and water tap fees from
"as given final approval on a ~2 vote when
. Middleport VI.IJage Council met In regular oeulon Monday
night.
Votlnc In favor on the final reading of the ordinance and Its
adoption "ere Counclbnen George Meinhart, Marvin K~Uy

f75 to

and Carl Horky. Voting against were Councilmen Allen Lee
King and James Brewer, The dissenters had stated \hey feel
the Increases are a discouraging factor to building in the town .
At the same vote, with the same council members
approving and disapproving, an ordinance providing for a $S
lldd!Uonal automotive license fee charge in the community
.. l'I'BS approved on Its second reading.
Councllman Brewer said that he ''wants it made perfectly
clear" to the public that tbe additional license plate charge,
"hlch would ra~ about $10,000 a year in town, is not a "cure

Cole guilty
COLUMBUS - Homer A.
Cole, 57, president, general
manager and a principal
stockholder of the Ohio
Valley
Manufacturing
Corporation, Tuppers Plains,
Monday changed his plea to
guilty of failing to deposit
weekly
payroll
taxes
' collected from employes for
'' i!Je week ending Nov. I, 1974,
· Cole originally pleaded in.
nocent Jan. 16, 1976.
· A bill of information filed in
U. S. District Cow-l Dec. 30,
"1975 showed Cole failed to
make nine weekly deposits
hltalling $5,21~.09 of taxes
withheld from employes of
'i!Je corporation from Nov. I,
1974 through Dec. 27, 1974 as
required by Section 7215 of
the Internal Revenue Code.
Cole faces a maximum
penalty of one year imprisonment
and-or
a
maltimum $5,000 fihe. Judge
Robert M. Duncan delaved

Sheriff cites

The Department Stor• of
SutldinQ SincP "l5 .

·----~

ELBERFELDS IN

EROY

sentencing pending a report
from the probation department
The inveshgation was
conducted by th.e Columbus
office of the Internal Revenue
Service .

A single car accident was
mvestigated by the Meigs
County Shenff's Dept.
Monday at 5:25p.m. tn ScipiO
Twp, or TR 386.
: James I. Morgan, Jr ., 17,"
Albany 1 traveling west, went
off on the left and struck and
broke off a utility pole
disrupting electrical service.
Morgan was cited to court on
· charges of failure to keep
vehicle on the right half of the
road
and
fictihous
registration. There was
heavy damage.

all " for the financial problems of the town. It was brought out

i!Jat the town will have to raise additional funds for paying the
light bill. Receipts from the auto license fee would be
ea rmarked exclusively for street maintenance and repair.
The discussion again brought out that the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. will discogtinue at Ule end of July
collection of fees from residents and business houses used to
pay for the town's street lights. The company has agreed to
continue the collection of the money for an additional year on
the provision i!Jat village officials accept without dissent rate
hikes approved by the Public Utilities Conunisslon of Ohio and
make an effort to set up means by which the village can pay for
the street lights. Both King and Brewer criticized the company
for that provision.
It was reported that the charge which the company is
collecting from residents and business houses totals a little
over $500 a month at the present time with street lighting
running about $1,000 a month. After July 31, this year, there is
no plan - so far - in collecting !unds for payment of the street
lighting. Mayor Fred Hoffman said some proposal on how
money is to be collected from townspeople should be forthcoming.
Council approved the mayor's report for January showing
$500.85 collected in fines and fees and $170 in merchant police
collections for a total of $670.85.
The group reviewed lhe by-laws of the proposed
Middleport Police Auxiliary with Councilman King leading the
discussion and noting changes he recommended for the bylaws. King changed all words in the by-laws which he felt
discriminated against women and left the ultimate authority
on the operation of the organization up to the mayor. The
by-laws as changed by King will be typed with copies going to
councilmen for study and consideration at the next meeting.
Also attending the meetmg besides those named above
was Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate.

I"'-

Dateline 1776
l'llii.AU EU'IIJA,

Feb. Ill - Benjamin
Fl'anklin suggested
that the American
army consider using
hows and arrows in
view of the gunpower
shortage. In his view,
they were accurate as
. muskets, inexpensive
to obtain, provided
rapid fire and created
no smoke to blind the
marksman.

UNIT CALLED
RACINE - The Racine ER squad was called at 12:40
a .m. today for Tessie Wells,
Portland, a medical patient,
and at 3 a,m. for Margaret
Houdashelt, Racine, who was
suffering back pains. Both
were taken to Holzer Medical
Center.

Weather
Cloudy, chance of showers
tonight and Wednesday. Lows
tonight in the upper 30s and
highs Wednesday tn the upper
40s .
Probability
of
precipitation is 20 per cent
today, 50 per cent tonight, 30
per cent Wednesday.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, fair Thursday
and a chance of rain or
snow Friday and Saturday.
Highs will be 35 to 45 north
and 45 to 55 south. Lows
mostly will be In the upper
teens to the 20s.

Albany youth

•

e
VOL XXVII

NO. 209

A high speed chase - up to
110 miles per hour - by West
Virginia, GaUia County and
Middleport lawmen ended in
Middleport about 4:20 a .m.
Tuesday.

INews. . . in Briefs\\!

•

enttn e

at

POMEROY,MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Radiator shot in
high speed chase

Middle'pol't polfce were
asked by Wesl Virginia State
Police and Gallia County
officers to stop a bla ck
Camaro traveling on Route 7
toward Middleport ~ ~ a
reported 110 miles an hour.
::::::::.-:::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::,:::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:::::·:·:·:::·:::·:::·:::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::
Middleport officers David
Ward and Wilham Miller
went to the Middleport
business loop and the black
~
~
Camaro appeared.
They fired into the ground
By UDlted Presslnternall&lt;IDal
but
the car did not stop. They
THE DtrrCH GOVERNMENT TODAY NAMED A
I!Jen
fired into the radiator .
THREE-MAN Independent commission to investigate
The
driver
turned m at the
allegatlona that Prince Bernhard received $1.1 mllllon from
loop
and
got
as far as the
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. for help 111 selling warplanes.
The national newspaper De Volkskrant quoted
parliamentary circles Monday as saying a ruling against
Bernhard, consort of Queen Juliana of the Netherlands, "could
entail the abdication" · of the monarch, Constitutional law
IJ'Ofessor Jan Prakke said Bernhard could face criminal
Van W. Buzzard , 7:! , Hl. 4,
(l'osecution lf special investigators found he had accepted a Pomeroy, was killed m an
li-lhe from i!Je US. aerOSJI!!IIce firm, Premier Joop Den Uyl , in apparent logging accident on
a:le\ter to Parllamenl, announced the makeup of the three- his property some tim e
man team of Investigators, expected to take about six weeks to Monday .
report findings in the case.
Accordmg lo the Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept. Mr .
. COLUMBUS - THE SJ'ATE EDUCATION Dept is Buzzard went on a h11l to cut
concerned that a Seilate bill sponsored by Sen. Charles Butts, logs at 12: JOp .m. When he d1d
Weveland, which Is aimed at mandating there he no more not return by 4 p.m. Mrs.
than a 27-1 teacher-pupil radio In grades I, 2and 3, would strain Buzzard sent her grandson,
school budgets by forcing some school districts to hire more Steve Frat ley, on the !Jill to
teachers.
find him ,
•
The department said the bill only clouds an already
He found the bod; and
perplexing financial picture, The department said a recent returned to the residence
cost per pupil study which shows the proportion schools spend from where the Pomeroy E-R
for teachers is ,decreasing as costs soar. A Leglsla live Service
Conunission study (LSC) supports Butts and a host of cosponsors who contend that only Cleveland, amoJII! the top 10
school dla\rlcts, "ould be adversely affected.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Tie up dogs
Dogs will not be pel'
mitled to run loose In
Pomeroy, Mayor Clarence
Andrews warned today.
Mayor Andrews said that
dogs mnst be lied or confined. Those running loose

Pomeroy may join
in ·county project

are in violation of a village
Middleport swim pool area
Pomeroy council in special
ordinance.
Such dogs will
before the vehicle's motor
session Monday night passed
be
picked
up
and
taken
to
failed.
a resolution to cooperate with
the dog pound and the
Two persOns in the car
Meigs County in the
ov.ncrs
wiU
bt!
prosecuted.
were turned over to Gallia
construction of a combined
County officials.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: senior citizens community
Ja1led in Gallia County
· center with final passage for
today was David Cheeseactual construction to be
brew, 21, Pomt Pleasant. . A
approved following a meeting
companion was released .
of Mayor Clarence Andrews,
Cheese brew, Gallia officers
council, and Francis Leighty,
said1 was wanted in West
consultant.
VIrginia. He was booked in
Pomeroy council has made
Ohio for fleeing an officer of
pre-application for a block
the law and driving under
grant of $400,000 with $100,000
suspension
to be used for a conununity
center.
Eleanor Thomas, executive
The Pomeroy Volunteer
director
of the Meigs County
f'1re Department has elected
Council
on
Aging met with the
Fire Co mpany and Lme
commissioners
as did Fred
squad a nd Sheriff's Dept. Officers for the year 1976 .
Crow,
Jr.,
their
solicitor, to
Elected as president of the
were called .
regard
to
the
proposal.
The last t1me anyone heard fire company was longtime
Mrs. Thomas pointed out
Mr Buzzard usmg his chain member i\lbert Woodard; that if the county and city
saw was approximately 2:30 vice president, Dw1ght would combine their money it
Parker; se&lt;iretary treasurer.
p.m .
Joseph
Struble and i!Jree would be a much better
Dr. R. R Pickens, coun ty
project.
coroner. was OJt the scene at yea r tr ustee ) Mike Hamm .
Mrs. Thomas explained
Line Offt cers are, flrc
7:20p .m. The body was taken
i!Jat
the 648 Gallia - Meigs to the Bigony-Jordan Funeral ch1ef, Charles Legar !four Jackson Mental Health Board
Home in Albany . Deputy year term); Isl Assistant has mental health dollars for
Randall Carpenter was the Chief , Jim Sisson; 2nd capital improvement and is
lnvesligating officer. Mr. Assistant Ch1ef, Tum Werry; willing to put this money Into
Buzzard's properly is loca ted captams, Joe Struble, Bobby i!Je Meigs County project.
in Colun1bia Township on CR C. Hysell, Jack Follrod, and
The proposed project would
William
Lambert:
10.
provide
a senior cillzens
lieutenants, Jeff Shank, Don
center,
city community
Mayer ) George Korn Jr , and
recreatiOn
facility , county
Sleven Hartenbach.
community
facihty and
Officers elected by the
health
center
mental
Pomeroy
Volunteer
Emergency Squad for 1976
are, Chief, Tom Werry;

Firemen
elect

Woodard

Elderly man is killed

. EXETER, N. H. - RONALD REAGAN attacked the
a&lt;jmlnlstratloo's foreign policy today, criticizing the
l'teslden\, Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger and U. S.
policy on Angola, Russia, China and the Panama Canal.
• "One 1"onders if we even have a foreign policy, for It is
impossible to detect a coherent global view," the GOP
presidential candidate told a student audience at Phlllips
Exeter Academy,
••
.. DETROIT - CHRYSLER CORP. AND GENERAL
~RS are recalling 22,000 cars and nearly 600 motor homes
because of defects Involving automatic speed controls, transmlssiotll and steering syatem.S.
' Cbry&amp;ler said Monday It has had 12 reports of throttles
:!licking on 1975 Chrysler Cordoba and Dodge Cbarger SE
models because of Improperly assembled automatic speed
controlaylleml. In t"o inltances, the cars were involved in
acddents, butlberewere no Injuries, O!rysler said. GM said It
l!trecaiUng a 19'16&lt;nodel Buick Regal, Century, LeSabre and
Electra models and some Oldsmobile Cutlass models because
about 300 may have a defective transmission linkage.
CLEVELAND - REGisrRATION OF HANDGUNS Is

nQW required by law In Ohlo'slargest city, home of the state's
hljlllest homicide rate, City ColDlcll voted 24 to 8 Monday night
10 approve a !IUD registration ordinance and It was

lnlnllicliately signed Into Ia" by Mayor Ralph J. Perk, who
vetoed almllar legislation t"o years ago "bile running for the
U'. 8. Senate,
'
Under the lew Ia", handgun owners have 00 days to
a\ the nearest district police station or at central
p6Uce station. 'l1ley wlllp\ a registratioo card and pay a $S
IIi. "In an orderly society we must regulate," said John
Jl!lmes, CCHpOn80I' of the legislation with Council President
Gjlorlle Forbes.

,.later

POMEROY
BLOCK 00.

m:;

XI Gamma Mu Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sororlly will

omd was released .
According to inves tigation,

I

Som.eti nus,
We have many reasons for protesting against British action s these clays. But nur most heated protest is against one
especially otlimsive practice. The British have been blockading France and French-controlled ports. Now, they're im pressing our sa ilors. They have an excuse, they say, A lot of
their sa ilors are deserting the Royal Navy. They don't like
the duty, the discipline , the pay or even the food. So they
jump s hip in our ports and sign on with us. We don't mind.
Om· merchant sh ips can use them. So can our navy . We give
them papers that officially ca ll them Americans. But
British law says no English man can ever be anything but an
Englishman. Britam seizt:&gt;s her sa tlurs from our ships. But
she all too often se izes our sai lors, too. Says the language
makes it impossible to tell the difference. She even fires on
our Chesapeahe and ldll s three Americans. That's an act of
war. We'i'e thinkin g war is on the way .~]

'

The Mlddleporl E,R squad

cumstances of the shooting

Service, Joan Utslngcr and
Marvel Quillen, prepared

1807: 1'0nce an Englishman, alii1ays an Englu;hman."

UI.OOO.OO Maximum

Memorial Hospital.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Vance
Jenkins, Glenwood; Mrs .
William Watson, son, Apple
Grove ; Herschel Jeffers,
Glenwood; Leroy Hill ,
Buffalo; Edith Simkins,
William Wiillers, Mrs. Doris
Ronecutter, Anthony Cemini,
'ames Bragg, Eva Clonch,
all PL Pleasant; Robert
Kense, Ashton; Mrs. James
Nibert, Gallipolis; Mrs .
Russell Cummins, daughter,
Racine; Sandra Roush,
Mason, and Dorsel Russell,
Delaware, Ohio.
BIRTH - Feb. 6, a son to
Mr . and Mrs. Carey
Newman, Gallipolis.

LEWIS
MANLEY
AMERICAN
LEGION
AUXILIARY, 2p m. Tuesday
al the home of Mrs. Ruth
Brown.
RACINE MA~UNIC Lodge
461, F&amp;i\M , Tuesday, 7·30
p.m. at hall ; work in all three
degrees;
all
Masomc
members we lcome.
MIDDLEPORT MASONIC
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, Tuesday, 7
p.m . to present Ma s ter
Masons Degree ; all Master
Masons invited.
by

Roosevelt Branham who was
111. He was taken to Veterans

and Mrs. Richard C.
Wh1te ,
daughter,
Pt.
Pleasant.

. :~·:~:;:;:~:::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:::;.; :;.:::·:::::::·

''

made a run 1o Harrisonville
at 9:52 p.m. Sundav lor

Mr:

Pomeroy fire distributing
the
refreshml•nts
to
firefighters.

'\

The Pomerov E·R squad

GETS LIFE SENTENCE
FREMONT, Ohio (UPI) A Bettsville man Saturday
was sentenced to life In prison
for the stabbing death last
November of a state highway
patrolman.

sand1\iches and coffee and
~ere on the scene al the

From a Great American Bank

nounced.

will meet Thursday, Feb. 12,
at 7: JO p.m. at lhe home of
Mrs. Gene Milch. Mulberry
Heigh", Pomeroy .
The BIQ Bend c;111;~ns
Radio Club will meet al 7: JO
p,m. Tuesday al the Rock
Springs Grange hall rather
than Friday night as an .

Rutland unit of the
Southeastern Ohio
Emerg&lt;•ncy Medi ca l

The
tempera lure
in
downtown Pomeroy at 1l
a.m. Monday w~:~ s :UI degrees
lll\der sunny sk1es .

Pomeroy , Ot'lio

Pomeroy .

Local news, notices

Woman questioned, released

of the county.

FRI.· SUN .
FE.B.Il·15

tcy road s)

financing the insurance program .

Rubin &amp;tva~c. HcL"ky Van-

Mr. and Mrs. Bill MeDame!
hos ted a recen t meeting of
the Golden Rule Class of the

',

(Continued from page I)
have thl' utsurance coverage.
Under his plan, Ford said no one would have to pay
more than $500 a year for hospital and nursing bills a nd no
one would pay more than $250 annually for doctor fees.
But he also proposed some changes in the method of

Whites boo

••

.

I

'

Rockefeller will
come to Hartford
HARTFORD, W. Va .- The
center here
which opened its doors to the
public last week will have a
rare, special guest soon .
Meeting over the weekend
the Hartfor~ Town Council
planned a reception for
gubernatorial candidate Jay
Rockefeller IV who will be a t
the center Feb 2lat I :30 p.m.
on a swing through Mason
County,
Council also issued a
warning against the use of
steel animal traps and dogs
left loose, and granted a
building perm:t to Larry
Roush.
Council
thanked
all
community

business organizations and

individuals who aided in l~e
open house at the community
center. Among those were the
American LEgion of New
Haven, Rutland Furmture,
Frulh Pharmacy, Marguerite
Shoe Shop, Elber!elds ,
Pickens Hardware, Mason
Counly Bank, Sayre's liardware. Farmers Bank, Green

Captam,

hardware, Hogg and 'Zuspan,
Jan's Ceramics, Gregg's Key
Markel, I and . S Supermarket, King's Laundromat,
Tookie 's Fash10ns, Pomeroy
Flower Shop,
Francis
Florists, Hardman's Forget
Me Not Florists, Ben Franklin, Hair Harbor, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Black, Rosalee
Kearns, Cheryl Flowers,
Louise Gibbs, Eileen Anderson, and W. H Lomon .
Present al the meeting
were Mayor Charles Black,
recorder Maxine Arnold, and
Council members Vernon
Grinstead, Rupert Howard,
Kenneth Green and Arthur
Gibbs Jr.

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport E-R squad
went to Route 7 below
Middleport at 8:59 p.m.
Monday for David Grueser,
70, who was ill. He was taken
to Holzer Medical Center,
'I

Don

Mayer;

Lieutenan t, Joe Struble, and
secretary-treasurer for the
squad is Charles Legar.
During 1975 lhe fire
department responded to 62
fire runs and the emergency
squad logged 487 runs for a
grand total of 549 fire-squad
runs.

acfordmg to Mrs. Thomas.
She also stated that other
county services could be
incorporated if they so
desired .
Council pointed out !hal the
county conunissioners have
iJpproved an option and
easemenl to lease for 99 years
beginning Feb. 9, 1976 real
estate owned by the county
near Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
·
Fred Crow said the purpose
of the resolution is to combine
the city building with the
county community building.
He said the building if built on
county owned properly would
be under the control of the
county. It would have lo be
taken under considera lion if
combined momes would do a
better JOb than separate
opera lions, Crow pointed out.
Council members brought
up
the
problem
of
maintenance of the fac1lity,
staling i!Jat they "in no way"
could afford to pay utihties
and maintenance , Council
discussed the issue at great
length .
Crow noted that the facility
is to be used for recreation
purposes but the question or
upkeep could be a. problem.
Mrs. Thomas commented
that if Pomeroy did not want
w parti.cipate in the county
project it would not affect the

senior citizens grant to go
ahead with their building.
Harold Brown and Harry
Davis stated that IIJey did not
want additiOnal expenses
while Lou Osborn&lt;l observed
that council was going to
have to take a chance on,
"hqw else 1s Pomeroy going
to advance?"
Crow had two resolutions
prepared, one fur the county
conumssioners to cooperate
with the village of Pomeroy
in lhe construction of a
combined se nior citizens
community center and the
other for village of Pomeroy
to cooperate with the county
m the project.
Henry Wells was called by
phone durmg the meeting by
Mrs. Thomas as to what were
the intentions of the
connnissioners, to sign the
resolution , or not.
Wells told Mrs, Thomas
there would be no problem,
he felt the resolution would be
taken care of, and that the
commissioners would
cooperate.
Council will mee t again on
the issue Wednesday at 2 p,m.
Attending were Ma yo1
Clarence Andrews, Brown ,
Davis, Os borne , Ralph
Werry, Chuck Bartles ,
councilmen; Jane Walton ,
clerk, Mrs. Thomas, and
Crow.

Blood given Monday
Eighty-two
presented

pe r sons

themselves as

blood donors Monday at the
Pomeroy Elementary School,
noon to 6 p.m. From them 67
pints were ta ke n, 41 w
replacement.
There were seven first time
donors, Ruth Karr and Shelia
Taylor became gallon
donors; Harry Clark, Rosella
Birchfield and Ellis Myers ,
two gallon ;
Lawrence

$12,500 COMES IN
The February distributions
of $5,089,351.83 in loca l
government fund money to
Ohio's 88 counties and 367 1
cities and villages levying
local income taxes was an·
nounced by State Auditor
Contributions towards the
Thomas E. Fergusoo . Meigs purchase of an aerial ladder
County received $12,500
!ruck for Meigs County fire
departments have reached
$400.
CLOSING FOR DAY
Contributors include Mrs .
, The Gallia - Jackson
Beulah Jones, Mr. and Mrs.
Meigs Co mmunity Mental William Dunfee, Lucille R.
Health Center, 236 W. Second Leifheit, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
/\_venue, Pomeroy, will be H. Hamm, Mrs . Marie
closed feb . 16, in, observance II&lt;~ u ck. Minersv ille Umted
of
Lm coln 's
and Mellwdi s l Churc' h. Marie
Washington's birtHdays.
Biclunan, Margaret Vadish ,

Leonard, three gallon ; Mace!
Barton, four gallon ; Charles
Searls, 8 gallon; Richard
Barton, 14 gallon and Marty
Wilcnx , 7 gallon .
Nurses serv ing were Betsy
Molden,
R.N .;
Lela
Weatherby, LPN; Mrs . Vern
Story, R.N ., Diana Milliron ,
LPN: Wilma Tillis, LPN
and Naomi London, LPN .
Physicians were L. D.
Telle, MD ; Esberdado

Ladder fund is at ·$400

,,

and
V1IIaneuva,
M.O.
Raymond Bmce , M.D. The
canteen wa s served by the
Catholic Church women. 1
Loading and un loading was
by Volunteer Retired Senior
Citizens and Boy Seoul Troop
No. 249
Clenca l work was done by
Mary Nease, .Jean Nease ,
Juanita Sayre , Beulah
Strauss , Martha Lou Beegle,
Mace!
Barton ,
Helen
P1ckens. Grace Drake, J oyce'
Hoback , Emm a K. Cla tworthy , Mildred Belzing ,
Erma Roush, Eloise White,
Vernon Nease , E1ean or R
I..awson 1 .Jea nne Braun , Ahce
Struble, D1ck Karrn, Neva
Seifn ed, Dorothy Will . '
Donalions were by Qual ity
(Contmued on page 10)

Fa bric
Shop ,
Cad di e
Wickham, Lilhe R. Ledile,
Elo1se Adams , Mr. and Mrs
Don Thomas and one
anonymous donor
Donations are to be sent to
Mrs. Don Thomas , 289
Mulberry Ave, Pomeroy,
LOCAL TEMPS
and checks are to be made
The
temperature
in
payable to " Meigs County
downtown
Pomeroy
at
II
F1re Departments Ci tizens
am
.
Tuesday
was
58
degrees
Fund."
unde r s unny

~ kies .
~

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