<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16178" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16178?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-11T10:11:59+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49313">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/ab1c500ae05d7abfe547b980d2203348.pdf</src>
      <authentication>ec2d4f7634752edd45c4dea07c2acf53</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="51774">
                  <text>JO - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Feb. JO, 1976
H•.,»"·'•'•'
•..·····,v.•.•......._,..._..,,..,_._..:_,•._o,•.:,.::.·~··«~:·,.,••osv~~-~-~
-,.M~·"·'v...·,.. -:...·.··..··..··..··..·..(•,
·:.·.
0
•'• '•'•'•'-""'•''oWN~Wo'o&gt;Wo"''""''~'-, -vYN~~

J hn Denney *-"-

News Notes

died Tuesday [ Mason CDunty
\\~

By

[\~
\~

J ohn William Denney, 62, of
Alma Marshall
::~
Milestone Rd ., Ga ll ipolis :;::
·-·
Ferry , W. Va ., died early this
MASON - As a token of appreciation , Mason Ubrary is
morning at his home .
holding Ubrary Appreciation Day the week of February 9
Among his survi\'Or s are a th~ough Feb. 13th. The hours on Monday , Wednesday and
daughter ,
Mrs .
Alice Fnday are from II a .m . to 5 p .m . and the hours Tuesday and
Geraldine J erry, of Cheshire . Thursday are from I to 7 p.m.
He was a member of Loca l
Mrs. Ray Proffitt is Mason 's Librarian. Refreshments will
AFL-CIO 652, and Amateur be. served.
Trap Sh oo ting Assn . of
Ubrary Appreciation Day is celebrated in behalf of w. Va .
Vandalia , 0 .
Leg1slatnrs, Senatnrs and Delegates whose interest in libraries
Funeral services will be extends throughout the year. Mrs . Proffitt asks the public to
Thursday at 2 p.m . fr om the come m durmg th1s week and register your appreciation.
Wilcoxen Funeral Home in
Point P leasant with I he Rev .
. MASON - Mason Busy Bees 4-H Club members are selling
.Tommy Kinniard offi ciating . B1centenmal candles as a money-malting project. Two of their
Burial will be in the Beale leaders are Mrs. Dorothy Oliver and Mrs. Jackie Sisson. If a 4·
Chapel Cemetery at Apple Her ca lls on you- remember- buying some of their candles
Grove . Friends will be Will go for a good cause.
received at the fun eral home
Wednesday after t p.m .
WEST COLUMBIA - Nine brothers and sisters attended
th~ f uneral of their brother, Ralph Johnson , 59, of West
M1mster, Colo., held on Friday in Colorado. Mr. Johnson died
on Wednesday , in a Colorado hospital, apparenily of
pneumoma. He is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. G . P .
YOUTH HELD
Johnson, West Columbia; his wife, Marie, and a daughter,
Middleport Police Chief J . Mrs. Terry Bethurum of Colorado and these brothers and
J. Cremeans said today a
sisters, Georgaanna Shumate, Earl, Dana, Don, Alton and
Middleport juvenile has been
l&lt;Jrna Johnson ; Pauline Cunningham, Doris Roberts, Mary
arrested and is being
Capehart and Mrs. Ruth Cuber.
detained in the juvenile
facility at the coun ty ja il on
MASON . - Nineteen ladies attended a workshop on
charges of breaking a nd
macrame and embroidery on Thursday at the Virgil A. Lewis
entering Foreman a nd Abbott home In Mason. Instructors were Mrs . Russell Bartnn, Mrs.
Appliance Store on Jan. 30. Ear! Ingels, Mrs . Laurene Lewis and Mrs . Laura Johnson .
The youth has confesse d
Another workshop will be held on Thursday February 12th
entering the establishment at the Lewis home.
'
and will appear in the county
Attendi~g the dinner meeting this past Thursday were
juvenile
court ,
Ch ief lhose mentioned and Mrs. Helen Williams, Mrs. Roberta
Cremeans said.
Young, Mrs. Charlotte Jenks, Mrs . Calherine Smith, Mrs. A:
Marsha ll, Mrs . Delores Taylor, Mrs. Zelma Hunter , Mrs.
Sarah Spencer, Mrs. Evelyn Stewart, Mrs. Gladdie Stewart,
Mrs. Hazel Smith, Mrs . Judy Reynolds, Mrs. Evelyn Proffitt ,
Mrs. Matilda Noble and Mrs. ulah Zerkle.

Marauderlasses win 8th straight
The Meigs Girls ' basketball
team tromped the gals from
Jackson 53 to 36 Monday
night a t Larry Morri son
Gym .
Meigs pulled ahead 12·3 in
the first quarter as Jackson
had trouble breaking the fullcourt press of Meigs . The
Mara uders never Jet up and
forced Jackson into counUess
turnovers.
Mary Boggs, junior guard ,
provJded the spark the second
quarter as she broke loose for
four successful last breakS.
Meigs went into the locker
room at halftime with a
commanding 21-point lead.
The Marauders kept the
game goin g at a fast pace the
third qua.rter, Captain .
Demari s As h had three

·Carpenter
Personals

baskets and provided good
defensive rebounding.
Meigs emptied its bench in
the fourth quarter .
This was the eighth victory
for Meigs with no losses.
Their next game is against
Gallipolis at home on Monday
at 6 p.m. This is the last home
game and it is also Parents'
Night .
Pam Vaughan led her team
with 17 points, Mary Boggs
had 10, Beth Vaughan 8,
Demaris Ash 6, Glenda
Brown 4, Cathy Meadows,'
Kathy
Howard , Trac y
Bu rd ette
and
Marcia
Holcomb,' 2 each .

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veteraas Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Mabel
Hennessy, Pomeroy; Amy
Sehuler, Middleport; Jamie
Schuler, Middleport ; Henry
Beaver, Chester; Nellie
Hatfield, Dexter; George
Carter, Mason, W. Va.; Glenn
Tucker, Racine; Mark
Markham, Pomeroy; James
Meadows, Long Bottom ;
Fred Larkins, Long Bottom;
Claude Nease, Minersville;
Donna Knapp, Syracuse;
Debqrah Grueser, Minersville; Charles Schoonover,
1M land ; Ida M. Dudding,
Middleport.
.
DIS,CHARGED Ira
Roach, Mary Cleek, Lela
Forrest, Ronald Dailey
Cloise Badgeley, Donald
Roush, Lawrence Stewart,
Edward Griffith, Catherine

Hamlin; Mrs. Sheldon .Durst
Leon; Mrs. William Dye;
Haven;
Gladys
New
Williamson, Southside, and
James
Johnson,
Jr .,
Middleport.
BIRTH - A son Feb. 9 to
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffery Hill
Addison.
'

NOT JAILED
Harold Aden Reeves, 42,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, who was
with
reckl«s
c harged
..,eralion of a motor vehicle
following a single car accident last Wednesday, was
not jailed as lhe report tn.
dicaled . According to Sheriff
Robert C. Hartenbach,
Reeves pos led bond and wiD
appear in Meigs -county
Court.

Meigs Local clei-k hired by
board; . smoking lamp is lit

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

A new board clerk was hired and a committee report
recommending reinstatement of the srnol&lt;iJig area at Meigs
High School was aOO!pted when Meigs Local School District
Board of EducaUon met in regular session Tuesday night.
Employed as new clerk was Jolm Triplett, 26, Wellston .
Triplett, a business education teacher in the Wellston schools,
was recommended by Meigs Local Supt. Cl!arles Dowler.
Dowler said there had be.en many applicants but only sb;
remained after he explained the position Is full time and the ·
duties involved, l!oard President Wendell Hoover and board
member Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, worked with Dowler in
Interviewing the candidates.
Dowler s&amp;ld Triplett is weD qualified for the position, can
start oo March 1 and will relocate. He will receive $10,000
annuaUy, 10 cents a mile for trav.el expenses, two weeks
vacatlo.n and some remuneration for handling Title I and
CETA1unds. Triplett was given a two year contract.
The hoard voted unanimously to accept tbe
implementation plan for the reinstatement of a smoking area
at the high school. The plan was drawn up by representatives
of the board, administration, teachers and students. During a
lengthy disclL!!slon, It was again stressed that the board Is not
condoning smoking but is reinstating the smoking area in
order to get the smoking outside.
It was reported earlier by teachers that smoking has been
occurring in restrooms of the high school and creating

Wood.
MORITZ TO SPEAK
Dr. Timothy
Moritz,
director
of the Ohio
Department of Mental
Heallh, will speak at 11 a.m.
Wednesday at the Nelsonville
Children's Center. He will
discuss the future of the
center and a psychiatric
program for children of
Southeastern Ohio.

Holzer Medical Center
t Di scharges, Feb. 9)
Jamie Allen, Cli nedda
Austin, Paul Berkley, Brenda
Brown, Doris Cole man ~ Mrs .
Charles Beid and daughter ,
Raymond Dillon , Sab rina
Graham, Br ad
Haggy ,
Jennifer Hy se ll , Robin
Kinnaird, Carolyn Lambert ,
Pansy Mayes, Theresa
Miller, Mary Morrison,
Thomas Scott Moulton , Jr.,
David Mullens 11, Allen Pape,
Audrey Poore, Cheryl Robie,
Margaret Sheli ne, Rodney
Shilot , Thelma
Sibley ,
William Stephenson. Martha
Young.
.(Births, Feb. 9)
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hewitt ,
daughter , Long Bill tom; Mr .
and Mrs . Dennis Walters,
son. Jackson .

ala

Ida Dennison has returned
home after spending a week
with her niece and husband,
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Queen
at McConnelsviUe.
DIVORCE GRANTED
Mr . and Mrs. Lewis Smith
Laura C. Autherson was
attended the wedding of his gra nted a divorce from
Eureka high performance features
niece in Lancaster on Sunday Junior E . Autherson and Cora
make this uprig ht a bargain hunter's
afternoon and then visited his Ann Salser from Charles M.
best buy! Steel motor hood protects
parents , Mr . and Mrs. Salser, each on . charges of
the powerful motor. Big 560 cu. ln.
Manford Smilh a t Carroll.
capacity disposable dust bag, Wrap
gross neglect of duty and
around vinyl furniture guard. Edge
Services were held at tbe extreme cruelty, in Meigs
Kleener cleans Up to baseboards.
BEND AREA PERSONALS
Bigony.Jordan Funeral Hme County Common Pleas Court
(Continued from page I)
Mr . and Mrs. James R. Romine of Anchorage Alaska are
in Albany for Mrs. Frank
Print Shop, Meigs Local
visiting
his
sisters,
Mrs.
Harry
Hoffman,
New
Haven;
Mrs
.
.
(Edith) Throckmorton, who ·
BASIC COMPLETED
School , Daily Sentinel, .
M~vm
Marr
at
West
Columbia
and
his
niece,
Mrs.
Brenda
passed
away
at
lhe
home
of
a
LONG
BOTTOM - Marine
Athens Messenger , WMPO·
JlVlden,
Mason
.
This
is
the
first
lime
the
Romines
have
visited
foster
daughter
,
Carabel
Private
Steve
B. Schmucker
Radio; Pomeroy Emergency
here in eight years.
Landers,
in
Columbus.
The
son
of
Mr
.
and
Mrs . Clarenc~
Squad, Veterans Memorial
Guests
Throckmortons
had
moved
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
J
ohn
R.
Roach
and
sons
on
Friday
to
Complete with
H.
Schmucker
of Route I
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Hospital.
Attachments
were : Reverend and Mrs. Walter Cloud, Pastor George and
Columbus last week. She is Lon g Bottom, has . ~ra duat ed'
DISCHARGES - Mrs .
Pomeroy Har r y E. Ahce Hoschar, Mrs. Dale Roach, David Roach Pastor James
survived by her husband, from recruit trainiilg al the Carey Neuman , Gallipolis·
4 W•'f DI•I· A·N•p '
Clark, Phy ll is M . Gainer,
Lewis, Bill Zuspan, Sr. , Mr . Rolfe Lee, Paul Randolph , Tom
Frank, the foster daughter, Marine Corps Recruit Depot , Mrs. James Roush, Mason ;
adJusts cleaner to
Harlan H. Wehrurlg , Homer
difle re nt carpet
King, K1p Pauley and Doug Martin.
Carabel
Landers,
and
two
Parris
Island
,
S.
C.
Robert
Fartin,
Leon·
Harold
E. Hysell , Robert W. Vaughn ,
helghl s, even sh1g$
J . Robert Mcintosh of Manchester, Tenn. and daughter,
foster granddaughters,
Virgil K. Windon , Howard P.
Smithson, Point Pleasant·
- ,.,. ., Drl¥tn ....... hr
Rosemary and Edith, who
logan , Rupe Gordaia , Ma ry Mrs. Wilham Crofflin and son Mark of Knox ville Tenn
..,.,. 1oo1en1 deeJ)Iy
George Kerwood, Jr , West
TRIO TO SING
Above· the·fl oor c tean1ng tools
Imbedded dirt, fluffe ug
Houda she lt, La re n ce D. visited their cousins, Thursday,' Misses Ruth and Eiizabeth
lived in the home for several
availaor
e
a1
small
ad
d
illonol
cml.
cru lhed n•P
'
The !Iea venly Hi ghway
Lenord , William Brad ford , Mcintosh at Mason .
years. She was preceded in Trio will sing Wednesday at
William Bradford , Norman
Mrs. Ora Fowler, 91, of Rl. 1, Point Pleasant and the
death by a son, Leslie Frank. lhe Freewill Baptist Church, ..
C. Will. Clifford D. Ashley,
mother
of Mrs . Albert Roush , 4tart, fell recently and broke
Mrs. Throckmor:to11 was a corner of Ash lind Plumb Sts.,
Marg ie
R e ut~i- .
Ho mer
Bax fer , Gerald Rought , her nght leg . Previously this elderly lady broke an arm and
retired school teacher and Middleport , as part of a
Lorraine P. Aelker, Ki!Hileen
hoth hips . She is hoSpitalized at Holzer Medical Center' Her
had
spent most of her life in revival service which begins
L. Wells, Ge~ald Pullln s1 room is 334.
· · ·
·
this
area. Burial was in at 7:30 p.m . Speaker is the
Marvi n E. Taylor , Sheila J .
·
Mrs. Eva Kn_opp is a patient at Ple.asant Valley Hospital
Ta ylor .
Al eJU~nder Cemetery.
Rev. Glenn Collins of
Syracuse Jan et K . Dorothy Russell1s also hospitalized there for observation and
Guests of Mr . and Mrs. Nelsonville.
Pi c k en s, Do rthy Dug las , tests.
90$PINT
Robert Stout were th eir
Shop the Main Floor for a ··
KaW1y Frye , Victor Couts.
Mrs.
Harry
Clarke
and
Miss
Anna
Allen
have
returned
children
and
grandchildren,
CARRY OUT ONL ~
Middl eport Eric A.
complete selection of Hallmark
.· Mr. and Mrs. James Willis,
Pearch, Charles W. Searles, from a Florida vacation .
TICKETS GO UP
Ken ne th Imboden, Peg gy L.
Mrs . Mollie Fox is visiting her daughter and son-in-law
Sr. and daughters; Lena and
In accordance with an
Lew is , Joyce V. Bartrum, Mr. and Mrs. John Forshee at Barberton.
Cards .and Fanny Farmer Candles
'
Tilly, and Mr. and Mrs. agreement reached recently
Claren ce McDan ie·l s, Ber of
Letart,
visited
with
her
grandmother
Valerie
Blake
James
Willis,
Jr.,
all
of
the
nade tte · Anderson, Ruby A
by Pomeroy Village Council,
'
Macon, Ga. area.
Vaughan. Mr s. Charles Mrs. Wilma Blake over the weekend.
fmes lor violation of parking
Bra dbury , Edwa.rd W. Durst,
Mr. and Mrs . Curtis McDaniel visited on Sunday with their
Mr . and Mrs. Dale Jordan meters in Pomeroy wfl! be
Sarah J. Flower, Norma G. daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Stan SOunders and
and daughter accompanied increased from 50 cents to $1 ·
Pomeroy, Otlio
Wilc ox , Gemma M . Casci, family in Columbus. ·
Buddy 'Fraley here for the per overtime ticket beginnfng
Charles T. Wayland , James
Mrs. E, S. (Necie ) Moore of New Haven ·has returned
weekend and they . visited Feb. 17.
R. Dail ey, Jam.es Butcher,
Mary . Bact;&gt;n·;· Richard P. home after visiting relatives at Natural Bridge va .' and at
with their parents, Mr. and
Gres$ .
Clara
FranCe, F~quay-Varina, N. C.
·
'
Mrs. Clifton Fraley, Sr. and
Clarence Molden. Ernest D.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Clay Jordan.
Barnhart .
The
young folks are now
Long Bottom - Richard S.
Bqrton, George A . Wolf ,
living in the Anniston, Ala.,
Wonderful Time to Give Her Special Valentine Gift
Mace! S. Barton , Ruth . Karr,
area .
Howard Parker , Henry E .
EAST MEIGS The 6. Scoring for Kyger Creek
Mrs, Zelia Perry has
. Bahr , Oris Smith, Jerry E.
Eastern
High
School
girls
16,
Clay
14,
Amos
were
Rollin
undergone
surgery
at
Frederick .
defeated lhe Kyger Creek 4, Harrison 2, and Bailey 1. University Hospital in
Minersville - Carolyn A.
Girls basketball team 44..J7
Charles, Lloyd Henderson .
Top rebounders for Eastern Columbus and reportedly is
Rac ine Roy F . Van here Monday night. Scorers were Denise Dean 10, Teresa convalescing satisfactorily,
M e ter , Harold E . Hager,
for Ea stern were Vickie Edwards 9, Jan Wilson 8, and
Mrs . Orley Rife
of
Dorothy
P.
Badgley ,
Epple with 26, Jan Wilson Janet Ambrose 6. The Dyesville is doing well and is
Dorothy . M . Sayre, Martha
with 12 and Teresa Edwards Eastern girls team now has at · home following eye
L . Beegle 1 Wi l lia m
H.
Hob~ck, Karert L. Lemley,
lour wins and one loss.
surgery.
Linda L. Patterson, C·lifford
TOURNEY
SET
Ashley .
·
There will be a FreshRutland -- Rosella F .
man Basketball Tour·
Birchfi e ld , Norman C. Wil l,
Mark J . Matson .
namcnt at Eastern, Feb.
Chester - Albert Martin .
16·21 . Team s include
Racine Rich a rd P .
Hannan Trace, North
Dugan, Geo rge Neigle r,
Gallia, Southern, Eastern,
Rhonda L. Dailey, Lorence
M. Wilcoxen , Larence Roy,
and Kyger Creek. There
Don B;eeQi e, Susan Wo l f ,
will be a meeting WedMichael Brown . ·
nesday at 7:30 for the
Langsv ille - Elli s E .
drawing 'at Eastern.
Myers .

Blood

Fresh Ham Hock
Navy Bean Soup ·

orice

•

at
VOL. XXVII NO. 211

·REMEMBER SATURDAY,
FEBRUARY 14 IS VALENTINE'S DAY

WASHING'ION - THE WlUTE HOUSE SAYS President
Ford will veto a public works projects bill designed to &lt;;reate
800,000 jobs. The HoUBe, meanwhile, wants to send him more
legislation to provide additional jobs for the unemployed.
A oeto within a few days was promised by the White House
for leglslaUon providing to.2 billion for projects such as
construction of municipal buildings and sidewalks , and aid to
preventlllate and local governments from laying off another
100,000 employl!ll. Undaunted, the House voted 239 to 154
Tueaday to elpalld the public service job program from 320,000
penons to 600,000 and continue It through the next fiscal year .

MU..ITARY EXPERTS IN ZAMBIA SAY THE NINEMONTH dvU war in Angola is all but over, with pro-Western
factions fleeing in disorder froin the advancing Soviet-backed
troop!.
·
The ezperts said Tuesday the Cuban~ed Marxists were
still receiving a massive arms buildup from the Soviet Union
and broadening their push into former pro-Western strongholds. The Mamst Popular Movement for the Uheratlon of
Angola said Tueaday it had captured the key Atlantic ports of
l&lt;Jbltn and Benguela without relilstance, after seizing the proWestern capital of Huambu.
·

Eastern girls defeat Kyger

Cheshire - Rodney Spires.
Hem lock Grove - Stlaron

M.

Wel~ er .

Bidwell -

Mary_Sea.rls.

Women's Wednesda\1
Afternoon Bowling
League - WIBC
Ma son Bowling Center
Mason , w . Va .
February 4, 197C
(J man t eams)

·T eam h ig h tot al pin s·

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE THR\J THURS.
FEB . 10-12
NOT OPEN
FRI .- SUN.

FEB. Il-lS
Jacqueline Su sann'~
ONCE IS NOT
ENOUGH
(Not shown Jim. 9-11 due to
icy roads )

.

'

3

Egnor 427 .

gam e Dia ne Pyatt 190 ,· D ian e PyatT
116 ; Bun n y Estes 175.
Team Stand i ng
Sec;ond Half

think you're
worth these
extra special servi(es! ·

CLEVELAND- THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT does not
expect to do anything even If It finds Irregularities in the
testimony Oblo Gov. James A. Rhodes gave last year during
the Kent St8le llhootlnga clvU IIIII trial, it was reported today.
The Qeveland Plain Dealer quoted a justice department
aource aa saying : "People write In and ask us what we're
doq, and ~still teD them we're reviewing II (the testimony)
- bat nothing's going to happen.''
The unldenUfled aources said \he Justice Department's
clvU r!ghtli dlv!mon has decided the Irregularities are
irrelevant and has not recommended that the criminal division
take IDY action . .

And do we ever have them! A full range of bank·
ing services for your co nvenience: Pa ssbook

h igh

Lat ec omers
Rookies
G lobe trott ers
Three G 's

All ey c ats
H its &amp; Misses

TUES.-WED.-THURS.

The Inn-Place Presents

W. L .
28 I 2
28 I 2
26 14
]6 , 24

12
10

28
30

Savings. Certificate Savings. Compl.ete Loan
Department for home, business, personal,
installment and auto.

********
. ***********1&lt;***~0
"The Friendly Bank" · ' \
..•
s·rnce .1906
.
•..,.,,..:,r*
****************************

:

,.

'

'

w;.

Guitarist with Percussion·Vocalist

8:30-12:30

THE MEIGS INN
POMEROY, OHIO

RUTLAND

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

742-2211

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corpwatiou

Best In Live EntertainmPnt
'(

RNITURE

surr FILED

Delmar Bllum, DBA, Baum
Lumber Co;, Olester. ,f]Jed a
lllitln Melp County Conunon
Pleu Courtacainat Fred anc1

RUTLAND, 0.

DEPO!.ITS INSURED TO '40,000

r

FOin'ER REINSTATED

CHESTER William
F01ter, Cheater, has been
notified by letter from Wesley
A. Buehl, county engineer, he
baa been reinstated for
. e~q~loyment with the Meigs
COWity Highway Department
with no loa of time. The
Ieite!:
written on Feb. 6
and postmarked Feb. 9.
F01ter waa notified on Feb. 2
that he was fired.

Walk·Up Teller Window and Auto Teller Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.

RON BRINKER

\

WASHINGTON - WCKHEED AIRCRAFT CORP.'S
bribery revelations, which causes political crises in some
foreJcn counlries, have led the Ford administration In shift
from playing down corporate scandals to plaMing lull
lnvestlptlon and punishment ,
President Ford Tuesday condemned the payment of bribes
overllllal by U. S. firms and began a review of ways to punish
them, polldliiY Including the lou of federal contracta. l&lt;Jck·
heed lathe nation's top defense contractor, but is not alone
BmOII&amp; thole allesedly maldng foreign payoffs. Of the top 20
defense contractors, 10 have lleen convicted of, charged withh,
or adm!Ued makln&amp; questionable overseas payments.

••• we

games ·- Latecomers 1181:
Rook i es 1159 ; Three G's 1085 .
Team
high
game Rookies 409 : HHs &amp; Misses
40 5 ; Latecomers 402 .
Individual high series : J
games - D ian e Pyatt 498 ;
Nan cy Neut zling 444 ; Ellen
l ndividufl

GUATEMALA CITY, GUATEMALA - ONE WEEK after
a deadly earthquake rocked this Central American nation,
rescue workers otlll struggled to reach victims and survivors
in remote mountain areas. A government spcikesman
predicted the finll dea'th toll may reach 24,000.
International aid - Including urgently needed food and
medical ·~Des - has helped alleviate some of the most
a'UCial problema In populous regions. But offlclals hav~ not
beep able to reach many,isolated villages, where thousands
may still be burled In the delris of their shattered homes.

Barbara Goegleln, DBA,
Great American Homes, for

t

the amount of t3,63UO.

\

'·

EXTENDED OUTWU~
Friday through Sunday,
a cbaaee of snow flurries
Friday. A chance of ra.n or
snow north and a cluince of
sbowen Saturday and
Sunday. Highs will be In the
30a to the low too Friday
.ad In the upper 30a and tOs
north to the 50a south
portloa Saturday · aod
Sllllday. Lowa mo11ly wiD
be In the upper Ztla to the

301.

LOCAL TEMPS
The
temperature
In
downtown Pomeroy at 11
a .m . Wednesday was 47
degrees under cloudy skies.

.•·

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio has decided In add about $1a month In residential natural
!!"s bills ' to help pay for $33.7 million in 1975 emergency
induslr18l gas purchasa.
·
The surcharge goes into effect lnunediately arnl will be
reflected on homeowner bills for the next 12 months.
·
Commission Chairman Luther Heckman and
commissioner Sally. ffioomfleld voted Tueaday to allow the
surcharge roll-in apparently desplie a' . PUCO staff
recoh)mendation that the cost of the emergency allocations be
·
added to Industrial gas bills.
The staff. recoinmendatlon Borrows testified during the
prepared by hearing office; hearl,ngs that in his opinion
Helen Uebman, will ' not be- ooly those . customers who
available to the public until directly benefited from the
. the official order authorizing emergency purchases should
lhe ~&gt;&lt;Ira homeowner charges pay their cost.
is signed by Heckman and
But Borrows, under crQ,SS
ffioomfield later this week. examinatioo, admitted that
Ms. Uebmari said after the some curtailed, industrilll
conunl.ssion vote that legal custmners did not receive
problems prevented her from any eztra natural gas. Sweet
disclosing the contents of her argued that a reduction 'i n
three-part recommendation curtailments was a benefit,
lintil the order is signed,
but this line of reasoning was
Conunisslo11er David Sweet rejected by Heckman and
said he would draft and sign a Bloomfield.
dissenting opinion.
·
The decision only covers
60-day
~mergency
The purchases were made the
for industrial natural gas purchases made m 1975. On
customers · to
reduce March 10, PUCO begins a
curtailments ordered when second hearing to discuss
natural
gas
demand commission pricing policy on
outstripped supplies.
future emergency purchases,
Rolling in the charge of the If needed.
emergency purchases tn aU
Sweet said Tuesday's
classes of customers Is decision ought not be a
allowed under Federal Power precedent lor the March
Commission price gas hearing, which he said would
adjustment provisions.
be far, more extensive than
The decision came after a the . just-&lt;:oncluded hearings
six-day hearing before Ms. which began Jan. 28 and
Uehman on which ' class of ended Feb. 4, ·
natural gas customer would
pay for the 13.1 billion cubic
feet of gas bought late last
48 CALLS ANSWERED
year to reduce industrual
The Middleport· Fire
curtailments.
Department answered 48
The order can be appealed calls during January · in·
directly to the Ohio Supreme eluding nine fire calls, 37 first .
Court.
aid calls, a false alarm and a
"I have to take the position miscellaneous call. Of the
of the chairman," said emergency calls 28 were In
Bloomfield before she cast town and nine out of town.
the deciding vote . "I have to The fire deparbnent was
reclutantly go along with roD· given a 38 hour training
.ln pricing to all classes of course during January with
· custmners, I don't see how 75 percent of the mel)'lbers·
the record can supporl any completing the course . There
other decision ."
was one fire drill held during
PUCO chief engineer John the month.

R. RAY PICKENS
Dr. RaDklo Ray Pickens,
R., baa flied bla petition of
candidacy
for
the
nomination of his parly to
run for county coroner, a
position wblcb be _now
holds. · A resident of
Pomeroy, Dr. Pickens
maintains
offices
In
Middleporland Is active on
the staff of Veterans
Memorial Hoaplla!. FUing
a Jl"titlon of candidacy also
on Tuesday for Democratic
central committeeman of
Olive Precinct was Franels
H. Andrew.

PRICE FIFTFFN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1976

:;tate Rep. Ron James (D)
ProctorviUe, said today
anyone with complaints
relating to lhe evaluation of
asSessments of real property
have a right to appeal In the
county board of revision .
James said a taxj)ayer
dissatisfied wilh his present
assessment should go to the·
county auditor's office by·
·Feb . 1.3 and request an appeal
form .
. After the form is completed
and returned, the audltnr's
office will then schedule a
hearing, conducted by the ·
county auditor , county
treasurer
and
county
prosecutor.
Rep . James stated, "On a
statewide basis, the usual
experience after such an
appeal is that taxes are
somewhat reduced although
there is no guarantee of this."
Rep. James also announced
that House BiD 920, of which
he is en-sponsor, -passed the
house and if acted upon
favorably by the senate,
property taxes next year will
·
be reduced.

,,

./

CANING CHAIRS AND weaving baskets are 811101111
the talents 79-year-old Uncoln Russell - I n the Retired
Senior Volunteer Program at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center. This year for the first time handcrafted
Easter baskets made by Russell will be offered at lhe
AprU bazaar for $3 empty or $6.50 with colorful chenille
bunnies or rabblta.
Chair caning Is done lor the cost of the materlals and a
nominal labor charge. Any resident Interested ln having a
chair caned is invited to either cOntact the Center for
further Information or bring lhe chair by for a price
quotation.
·
•

Canter jailed
following chase

· A Minersville man is
lodged in lhe county jail on
seven charges resulting from
a high speed chase which
began in Pomeroy at 11 :29
· p.m. Tuesday.
Pomeroy Pollee Chief Jed
" Notwithstanding
any Webster said Charles Canter,
other provisions ·of law or 22, Minersville, left the center
regulatloo, the management of the parking lot in Pomeroy
or sponsor of any Ohio
exhibition shall, prior to
permitting the exhibition of
any equine animal, ascertain
.Clearing and cooler tonight
that the animal has been
tested and classes 'negative' with lows In the low .30s.
to an official test for Equine Partly cloudy Thursday,
Infectious Anemia within a 12 highs in lhe upper 40s In the
month period Inunediately low 50s. Probability of
preceding lhe closing date of precipitation 20 per cent
the exhibition. A copy of the today, 10 per cent tonight and
Equine Infectious Anemia 20 per cent Thursday.
lest report shall be on file and
main talned by the exhibition
management until the closing
PTOTOMEET
of the exhibition. Upon
l'he Salisbury PTO will
request, the exhibltio·n meet at 7,30 p.m . Tuesday at
management or sponsor shall the school. The program will
permit
an
approved be by · the minutemen and
veterinarian ,
or
an
past presldenll of the former
authorized representative . of PTA will be honored.
the deparbnent, In ezamine
lhe Equine Infectious Anemia
test reports and entry records
SERVICES SUNDAY
related thereto."
Special services will he
Mrs. Bradford said the held Sunday at the Antiquity
regulation may affect par- Baptist Church with Rev .
Ucularly ponies which ·have Curtia Seven of South Point
been taken to the county fair speaking at 10•30 a .m. and
every year wilhout the test. 7,30 p.m .

Equine tests required
this year by new law
Mrs. Muriel Bradford,
secretary of the 1\l:eigs
County Fair Board, said
today horses, mules, and
ponies must he tested for
"Equine Infectious Anemia"
before they can be in the
Meigs County Fair this
swnmer .
The law governing the
situation says:

Public transport program
recommended in Columbus
. ·~\llhirlisiJ'atiun in ColwnbWJ,
recommending approval,
funding and early lm·
plementatlon of lhe projects.
Included is the sevencounty Appalachian Ohio
Regional Transit Association
(AORTA) which would
receive $369,584 to help
finance a three year
demonstration project. It
would combine many of the
present transportation

$4,080WANTEb
A letter requesting $4,000 by the Meigs band boosters to be
used on the cost of the new band unllonns was read. It was the
consensua of the board that it was at least morally committed
to aDProve the amount. The letter was from Patrick. WOOd.
Band Booster president, who W1l8 president and eztended
thanks when the board acted. The new unifol'lll8 cost fZO,OOO
and the band boosters have had no hi!lp to this point fi'IJID the
board. The hoard also approved the payment of t300 to belp
delray the expenses of the high school cheerleaders.
The hoard heard complainia by a delegation of the
Snowville area in reference to a bus ~liver . They charged that
the driver travels too fast, Will not turn on the heater, doe! not
(Continued on page 16\
·

en tine

ITEMS STOLEN
MASON, W. Va . - An
estimated $400 worth of items
were stolen from the Mason
Auction House, Horton St., .
late Monday evening or early
SENTENCE GIVEN
Tuesday morning, according
Guy C. Bing, 59, Midto a spokesman for the Mason dleport, was fined $150 and
Police Deparbnent. Police cnsts ahd given a three day
lhis morning had no suspects · jail sentence when he ap-:
in the case, and they were not peared upon. conviction of
sure how entry was made. DWI charges m the court of
Among the items stnlen were Middleport Mayor Fred
an amplifier, microphone, an Hoffman Tuesday night .
S-track stereo tape player Assessed costs on a charge of
and a clock radio. The Mason failing to yield the right of
Auction House Is owned by way was Patrick A. Hill, 22,
Howard Beasley of Mason. Middleport.

'

COLUMBUS
State
Transportation
Director
Rlchprd D. Jackson has
reported the mid-December
hearings on three Ohio Rural
Highway Public Transportation Demonstration
Projects, one Involving
southeastern Ohio, have been
approved by the di!JI8:rtment.
Copies of the hearing Iran·
scripts have been forwarded
to the Federal Highway

The ares will alao be spot cheeked by administration IIIII
teachers.
It was stressed lhat the smoking area Ia subject to
revocation at any time. It wa.s _.., streued by the board that
members expect better restrooms and redJ!Ction of reltl'Oom
vandalism as a result of establlslunents of the smoking 111'1111.
The smoking area Is to be u5ed before and aftec IICbOol and
at noon, The board discussed requesting parental letters
giving students permiaslon to smoke. However,lt wu deddad
that those without letters would smoke anyway and IIIey
probably would be using restroom areas which would defeat
the whole purpose of the smoking area.

Protest
process
advised

Residential
__:::,:~=~- natural gas
fNew::.:..:..~riefsi billS U . ·$1
p

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Maxey .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

BULLDOG SENIOR Arnie Chonko, S-6 and 205 lbs.,
went up here for the ball against Meigs senior center 6-8
Mitch Meadows Tuesday night in the Marauders' brilliant
51-45 victory, the second time this season such a revolting
development was Imposed on Coach Charles McAfee by
Meigs Coach Ron logan. - Picture by Jim Hamm.

Crow's
Steak House

Reedsvil le - Bulah Ma :x.~y.
Mary Lee Maxey, Kathy

problems for non-111110klng stUdents.
The commiUee report lodiC8ted tbatthen are 113 amoken
at the blpaebool and Showed thlll 71% at adenII are In favor of a
smokJDi area and U agalall.
According to the plan for Implementation, James Diehl,
principal, and Dowler will designate ana mark off an area
behind the l:uildlng for use as a smoking area. The
Envlromnental Awareness Club will be responsible for
providing and maintaining sand buckets in the area and
posters in the school encouraging proper use of the area. The
student council, Environm!'lltal Club and Spanish Club
members have stn!ssed that studenis shall be responsible for ·
cleanliness of the area and have offered their assistance in
working with feUow students to encourage adherence to two
primary rules, clealiness and .no smoking In any other area .
Diehl is to schedule teachers for intensive policing of rest·
rooms to eliminate smoking in these areas and " no smoking"
signs provided by the Slate Fire MarshaU's office will be
posted ln the restrooms. The local fire authority will be asked
to explain to the student body posting of signs. Students will be
notified of the smoking area by Diehl, and a representative of
the student council will speak to students in each homeroom to
ask their support and cooperation in keeping the area clean
and eliminating smoking ln other areas.
The location of the smoking area behind the office pennits
easy and continual observation by high school administration .

programs
m
three
southeastern Ohio coun•
ties (Athens, Hocking and
Perry) Into one comprehensive system and
provide for expansion of
service into Meigs, Jackson,
Vinton and Gallia Collhties
where public transii service
is nonexistent.
The system is expected to
establish self-fiufflciency by
the end of lhree years.

Weather

,

at 11:29 p.m. He crossed over
center line and struck a
parked pickup truck owned
by Donald L. Sheela, Rt. I,
Reedsville. Canter left the
scene at a high rate of speed,
The
·Pomeroy
Police
Department, Syracuse pollee
and the deparlment of Me!ga
County
Sheriff
Robert
Hartenhach were involved In
trying to get the vehicle
slopped.
The car went out of control
in Syracuse and struck a
utility pole, clipping It off.
The car then went BC1'0118 the
highway and struck the home
of Mrs. Adelbert Lee. A
fireplace inside the home wa
reported damaged by the·
Impact.
Put Into lhe Pomeroy polilll!
cruiser, Canter and II
passenger In his car, Jerrr
Hnbbard, Syracuse, who
were not injured, were taken
to jail. Canter allegedl)'
kicked out a left rear window
in the pollee cruiSer.
Canter IS being charged
wilh destruction of proper!)',
· resis tlng arrest, drlvllltl
while intoxicated, reck!•.
..,eratlon, neelng a pollew
officer, leaving the scene Ill
an accident and driving
under suspension , Hubbard Ill
charged with fleeing p pollee
officer.
l

•

�3

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. ll, 1976

- The DaUy SenUnei,Middleport-Pomeroy, Q., Wednesday, Feb. II, 1976

defeats Athens 51-45
'
Meigs-Athens box

•
Girl basketball m
thing today

N1me
Quollo

Cremeans
Meadows

Davenport

Randolph
Browning
Dodson
TOTALS
Meigs

Athens

Name
Heady
Faulkner
Greer

Chonko
Black lord
Goldsberry
Meek
'

'

GOING ALL THE WAY? - The . Meigs Girls
Basketball team, 7~ begiMing this week, is off to its
strongest start ever. Some followers believe the lellm
could stay alive aU the way to Columbus in post.;;eason
tournaments. To top it off, there's only one Senior on the
lellm, Demaris ABh, four juniors, five sophomores, and

two freshmen . Front, 1-r, Patty Dyer, Mary Boggs,
Demaris Ash, Sally carleton, Tracy Burdette; back row,
Coach Mary Jane Deeley, Pat Vaugban, Pam Vaughan,
Beth Vaughan, cathy MeadDWI, Marcia Holcomb, Glenda
Brown, Kathy Howard, and the managers, Kim Grueaer
and Kellee Burdette.

EASTERN HIGH GffiLS BASKETBALL T·EAM kneeling (1-r) Laurie Matthews, Terri Stevens, Tanuny
Fitch, Jewell Blake, Teresa Buckley, and Lori Yflllll8;

'

standlng, Juli Whitehead, Janet Ambrose, Teresa
Edwards, Vickie Epple, Sherry Epple, Jan Wilson, Denise
Dean, Kim Batey. Jim Hamm picture.

ONLY SENIOR - Demaris
Ash is the only senior on ihe 70 Marauder Girls Basketball
team.

••

THE VAUGHAN GIRLS - It makes It easy (or a coach when the Vaugban fllllily "
supplies such talented athletes . These girls play every sport the school and community have
to offer and they do them aU well. Twins Pam and Pat compete in Volleyball, basketball,
and track for Meigs High School. Their cousin Beth also parUdpale8 in the same sports.
Perhaps their athletic ability is hereditary, because these girls have brothers who also
played a variety of sports for Meigs High School,

The Daily~-

.

I

oEvoTeo TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER
L. TANNEHILL
.

hoc. Ed.

ROBERT HOEfLICH
City Editor
Publl.shed dally except
Saturday by The Oh10
Va l ley Publ i Shing Com pany , Ill Court St .,
Pomeroy , Ohio
45769 .
Business Office Phone 992 ~lU: Editorial PI'\One 992 -

Secohd

class

postage

paid at Pomeror , Ohio.

National
aOvertislng
representative Ward .
Griffith Company, Inc . ,
Bottlnel ll S. Ga ll •gher Div ,
757 Third Ave ., New York,

N.Y. 10017.

Subscription

rates :

Deliverect by carrier where
available 75 cen.ls ~er

week . Sy Motor Route
where carrier service not
available , One mon t h,
S3 .25 . By mail In Ohio and
w . va ., ·one Year , ·$22 .00;
Six months~ $11 .50; Three
monthS , S7 .00 . Elsewhere
$26.00 year ; ·Six months
S13 .50 ; three months , S7 .SO .
Subscription price indudes
Sunday Times -S entinel.

SOI.JTIIERN ffiGH GIRLS TEAM - Front, 1-r,
Cheryl Roseberry, Cel Jenkins, Nancy Roy, Becky Crow,

TORNADORETTE SENIORS - Southern High School girls basketball team seniors
·'
are,l-r, Nancy Roy, Cheryl Larkins, Becky Sayre ancl Mel Waldnig.
~:::::::::::::~:;;;:::;;.:::::::::::!:::::~3*J8::?.:::S"~

BEST OF WEEK
COLUMBUS, OHIO UPI
In 1945, President Franklin
The Mid-American
D. Roosevelt, British Prime Conference
Player of lhe
Mlnfster Winston Churchill Week
Is
Western
and Soviet dictator Josef
Michigan's
Jeff
Tyson,
who
Stalin ended · a week-long
hit a career-high 29 poiats
World War II conference at
In tbe Broncos' 76-73
Yalta.
,
decision
over Central
In 1985, U.S. and South
Michigan
Saturday,
but
VIetnamese planes staged the
first bombing raids on North Norlhern Illinois' Malt
VIetnam ln retaUatlon for a ·Hicks remains the league's
leading scorer.
·VIet Cong attack.
Tyson, a 6-3 senior forIn 1974, U.S. Setrtary of
ward
from Fostoria, Ohio
State Henry Kissinger
wbo
had
16 points and
proposed a seven-point
seven
rebounds
In
program of cooperaUon with
Western's
80-73
victory
other oil-consuming and
over Loyola 01. last week,
producing nations to cope
wltb worsening energy prob- hit on 13 ofl7 from the field
against Central.
lems.

~=:::-·&gt;. '',t.-.:.::::8:8!:m·~·:.::

'

"

--

Mel Waldnlg; back row, Coach Connei Andren, Uu ;:,:
Allen, Jean Rltchhart, Shelly Ward, Brenda Lawreace,
Jaye Ord, Cheryl Larkins and Becky Sayre.
' ..,

...

,

Sectional Tourney at Meigs

NEW YORK (UPI) -Four
National Football League
players, including · two
members of the Super Bowl
champion Pittsburgh
Steelers, wlll visit U.S.
military bases in K91'ea,
Okinawa, the Ph'lipplnes and
Hawaii during a 21-day tour
beginning Feb. 25.
The NFL office announced
Tuesday
that
Steeler
linebacker Jack Lambert and
wide receiver Lynn Swann,
linebacker D. D. Lewla of the
Dallas
Cowboys
and
quarterback James Harris ol
the l.ol Angeles Ram8 wUI
participate in the tour, sponsored by the USO and the U.S.
Department of Defense.

.:::i

Homecoming program at KC is set:1

CHESHIRE
Kyger
Creek High School will observe its first basketball
homecoming festivities
Friday night during halftime
of the KC..Symines Valley
league contest.
The lull schedule of events
begins at 6:30 p.m. with the
reserve game .
Durin~ half-time the J 1V.
game
players
and
cheerleaders wlll be introduced during the ParentsTownsl;ip willi four assistant Nl&amp;ht Activities. Then,
callS answered in Orange starting aroWld 8 p.m. the
Township and one assistant Bobcat varsity wiD tangle
run In Carthage Townshrp. with the Vikings In KC's laat
The $165 loss figure was In home appearance of the 197:176 baSketball season. The
Chester Township only.
varsity al1111 owns a victory

The AA Girls Basketball Sectional Tourney
will be held this year at Meigs High School.
Tournament director I ~ Joy Bentley. Teams
will be: Belpre. Chesapeake, Gallipolis,
Vinton County, Nelsonville·York, New
Lexington, Meigs, Fairland, Thornville
'Sheridan, and Warren. One leam will qualify
to the District.

FIRE LOSS SET
CHESTER - Lossea in
fires fo1111ht by the Chester
Fire Department In 1975
totaled $16li, Fire Chief Ross
Cleland reports. Ten calls
were an!JWered in Ches~

~tALS

7-16
7-8

2-5

~-4

0-~

0-0

~

4

17

2
3
0

s

:
~o

13

o

5~
51
45

TP
5
8

16
1~

0-0

o.o

1

2

0

0-0

0-0
0-0
0·0

3
0

~

20-S 1

S-11

0
0
33

0
0
45

0-0
o.o

0

21

0
0

again hit for two-pointers and Bulldogs were busy taking
the lead went to 8-5. But then two or three . Athens' zone
the Marauders hit one of their was very effect! ve , con irritating cold spells and tinually
forcing
the
didn 't score for five minutes, Marauders to take the outside
the rest of the quarter, and to shot.
the 6:20 mark of the second
Athens got the second half
period . Meanwhile, Athens tip, but Davenport was the
was rolling of! 13 to go out in first to score as the
front , 18-8.
Marauders took the lead once
But once Meigs got star~ again, 27-26, but it was short- .
again, they took command lived as the Bulldogs bounced
and held Chonko to only two back to go ahead by I. f rom
points that · second period then until that last minute of
while Steve Randolph was the game, neither team was
busy burning the nets for nine ever ahead by more than two
points in four minutes to points as fans stayed on the
bring his team back into edge of their seats.
co ntenti on . Meigs still
Two Davenport foul shots
coul dn 't get back the lead as at the 2:53 mark of the third
the buzzer sounded, Meigs canto sent the Marauders
trailing 26-25.
ahead, 34-32, but once again it
Senior Terry Qualls went was short-lived as Faulkner
into the locker room with hit two field goals In a row to
three fouls. The story of that give the Bulldogs a 36-34 lead
firs t half was the men under at the end of that period.
the boards; Meigs seemed to
BIG FOURTH
· ~el only one shot while the
The fourth quarter was the

Gallians whip Ironton
Gallipolis hit nine of 14 field
A superb ~am effort gave
::Oach Jim Osborne's visiting goal at~mpts in the first
Gallipolis Blue Devils a 59-49 period for an 18-7 advantage.
Southeas~n Ohio League Ironton was three of 10 from
victory over host Ironton in the field in the initial stanza.
GAHS connected on .six of
the Tigers' sparkling new
3,000-seat sports center nine field goal attempts in the
second period. Ironton was
Tuesdy night.
The triumph kept the Blue · one of eight as the visitors
Devils
alive , increased their lead to 30-11
mathematically, for at least a during the halftime inshare of the 197f&gt;.76 SEOAL termission.
Gallla's biggest advantage
cage crown.
Ironton clinched a share of was Zl points, 32-11 with 7:20
the championship earlier this · left in the third period and 34month. All Coach Buddy 13, with 6:34 left In that
Bell's lads have to do to win it stanza.
Ironton outscored GAHS 16outright Is defeat Logan at
10
in the third period to cut
Ironton Friday night.
Gallia's
lead to 13 points, 40In order for GAHS to gain
27.
at least a share of the
Bren t Johnson 's layup at
championship, the Blue
the.
7:04 mark was the Blue
Devils must defeat Athens at
Devils'
only . field goal at. Athens Friday in the regular
tempt
in
the .last stanza.
~M:uon finale. Logan must
GAHS
forced
Ironton to go
topple the Fighting Tigers.
after
the
ball
and
the result
Iron ton dropped to 14-2
was
20
Tiger
personals
in the
following Tuesday's loss.
last
period
.
GAHS
sank
17 of
Inside the SEOAL, the
27
charity
tosses
in
that
Bellmen remain one full
stanza
..
game ahead of GARS with a
The Tigers look 23 shots
11-2 record.
from
the field in the fourth
Gallipolis upped its season
period,
hitting on eight.
record to 11-6. Inside the
For
the
night, 'Gallipolis hit
: onference 1 the Osbornemen
20
of
33
field
goal attempts for
are 10-3.
60.6
percent.
The Gallians
Two quick goals by senior
were
19
of
30
at
the foal line
:;_AHS guard Gary Snowden.
for
63.3
percent.
GAHS
had 21
gave Ga!Upolis a 4-j) lead. Th.e
personals
and
30
rebounds,
ll
· Blue Devils never loo~ ed
back.

· Lou Holtz gets

,..
_,

&lt;f.,l

over the Syinmes Valley
EscortawUI beGretJSmlthl "'
team, as they posted a Mike Baird, Tony Slwnblln 1&gt;&lt;l
thriUing 66 to 64 overtime Wealey Lee, Tom stump.a
victory.
George Thompson, Terry, &amp;
During hall-~ of the Lucaa and Orland ()en-:!')
varsity
game,
the
FoUowinR lhe lntrotlucUon '-l
Homecoming Queen can· of q,_n cantlldates, Coach •&gt;
tlldates and their escorts will Jim Sprague' a Phyalcal.;\
be introduced. Candidates Education claana wtU·
are Su111n Roush (Junior preaent
a
tumbllns:-;
Band), Kim Gunnell (FHA), : exhibition. Following tbe
Kay · Hager (Senior Band), same, the Homecomlng•H
Sandy VanSickle (Senior Sweetheart Dance wUI be.O:
Chorua), .Dawn Martin held unW 11:30 p.m.
::1
(Keywanettes), Lee Ham·
Kner Qeek lfilb Scbool&gt;'!
mond (Ubrary Club), Penny offlclallwould llkl to alatltt"
Hall (National Honor an Invitation to all "f
Society), Pam Haye (Art rerfdents to CGIIIe for a fult;;
Club), and Donna Fllnt ev~nlng of enjoyment at:;
(Latln Club).
Kyger Creek.
·
,..,.

·•

by Brent Saunders and 10 by with eight.
Keith McGuire. GaUia had 13
Snowden , the Gallians' top
ttu"novers .

scorer

Ironton finished with 19 of
54 shots from the field for 35.1
percent. The Tigers were cold
at the foul line, sinking only
ll ol25 for44 percent. Ironton
had 28 personals and 28
rebounds. Dean Fitzpatrick
picked off 13 caroms for the
winners, six In the final
period. Ironton had 10 turnovers.
Senior forward Tony
Folden paced GAHS with 30
points. Junior forward Gary
Swain, who replaced senior
Gary Snowden .with 3:57 left
in the first period, chipped in

suffered a ·sprained ankle on
a driving layup. He sat out
the remainde,r of the first half
and started the second half,
but left the contest for good
with 6:10 remaining in the
third ·stanza.
Mike Brown , Ironton's
junior playma~er, missed
Tuesday's game due to an
injury suffered in the Jackson
game last Friday.
· Dean Fitzpatrick, Ironton's
6-6 senior cen ter, led the ·
Tigers attack with 20 points.
Dean Royal , 6-2 junior forward, added 11 .

BY JOE CARNICEI.Ll
UPI Sporta Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)- The
burning question among New
York's pro foot~ll fans todsy
is, 11 Lou Who?"
The New York Jets f!Ued
the last coaching vacancy in
the National Football League
Tuesday, bypassing some of
the premier names in college
football and aelecilng Lou
Holtz, the highly successful
but litUei)ubliclzed coach at
North CaroUna State.
The 3$-ye&amp;rilld Holtz, wbo
said he accepted the job at I
a.m. Tuesday, received a
five-year contract estimated
at f\00,000 ~nnually.
Holtz, a fraU, scholarly
looking type, who speaka ln
rapid-fire, !Dachine-gun
burlll and considers himself
an accompllahad amateur
ma,lclan,
made
his
reputation In the college
ranka by lurnlng losers into
winners. He'll have another
opportunity to work his
wllanlry In New York.
Holtz, wbo turned both
Wllllam &amp; Mary and N.C.
state lnlo instant winners in
his laat tw.o coaching
ualgnmenla, takett over a Jet
club that llnllhed , as the
pooreet daferllive team in the
NFL. The s-u record and
lui-place f1nllh In the AFC
Eut marlred the Jell' wont
ever. Head Coach
Olarley Winner wu fired ln
November and offenaive
coordinator Ken Shipp
flJiJihld the year.
Rolli, natW'IIlly, Ia quite
Gl(lbnllllc.
"I hlvell'tBt confidence In
lllllllf," r. ultl. "I believe
Jn, God, .Lou Holla •ncl the
New YOit Jell in that order.
·Coaching Ia coachlnl no
1111tter what level )'Otl(ao:at.
Yltl need 1 good ttaff anayou
111111 athletett and you need
PIOPlt wbo want to win.
1'1111'1 what I intend to have

and ·assist leader,

:;:::;:;:;:::;;:~~~;:::::;;;:::::;;:;::::;:•:o:·:·:·:·:·:·&gt;:·~:-::·1,··~·=·:::::.:·:·:;~·~:·;::·:·:•:•:•:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·
··············=-··;:::
•••••.: ..............•.•.•... .•.-.•.•.-.;...................•;:.;.•.;-··=-~
i...s~.~~····
...•·~·~·'·•.•.•;.o,•,•.•;o.•.o:.·;~·.o;•;.o.!;,•.•.•
=·~·~O:o!•:o!·:.:;:-:-:.o:·:·:·:-:·:-:::-: ·:-: • ·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:-:·;-.-:~·: -:-:~.·:-:-:·:·:·:-:·:·:~:·.•,•:·,.;.....

GAHS-Ironton box.
GALLIPOLIS ' BLUE DEVILS !59)
PLAYER-Pus.
FG-A FT-A PF RB
Tony Folden, f
1~ - 17 6·8
3 6
Brent Saunders, f
1-2 3-5
~
11
Gary Swain, f
3-3. n
5
0
Keith McGuire, c
0- ~
H
4
10
Rn:mt Johnson, Q
] .J
4-8
3 1
Gary Snowden, g
3-6
o.o 3 ~
Terry Wa ll, g
0-0 0-1 1 0
TOTALS
20-33 19-30 21 30 ·
IRONTON TIGERS (49)
PLAYER- Pos.
FG-A FT-A PF RB
Ed Howard, f
2•5 0·0 4 s
Dean Royal , f
4-8 3· 4
4
3
Dean Fitzpatrick, c
B-18 " 4·11 4 13
Dave Sesher, f
0-0 0 - ~
0 1
c;huck Brown, g
0-5 0-0 ~ 6
Rick Howard. g
2·9
~- ~
s 0
Bob Crockrel. g
~· 4
2-5 4 0
Bob Thomas. g .
1-4 0-1 5 0
Robin Fitzpatrick, c
0-1 0-0 0 0
l:OTALS
19-54 11-25 28 28
Score

bb quarters :

GAHS Blue evils
Ironton Tl~ers

OFFI IALS Chillicothe Chapter.

Jets coaching job

A thought for the day:
American inventor Thmnas
Edison said, ''There is no
substitute for hard work."

.I

Wheoley

!.

TP

By Greg Bailey
The Athens Bulldogs came
to Marauder territory
Tuesday night looking for
revenge for an earlier season
loss. lns~ad, they took the
long ride home again as
losers, 51-45. •
The large crowd saw Mick
"Snake" Davenport lead a
Marauder fourth period
charge that outscored the
visitors 17-9, Davenport
getting eight of them. The
Marauders scored eight
points the last four by Snake
in the last minute and ten
seconds, holding the visitors
scoreless.
Meigs drew first blood as
Davenport hit a jumper, but
Athens ' bit 6'5" Arnie
Chonko, after a foul shot, hit a
jumper to put the Bulldogs
out in front, 3-2. Then Meigs
looked like they were going to
lake charge as Davenport,
Randolph and Davenport

same way as the lead see-

..

EAGLELASSES SENIORS - These pretty senior basketball players at Eastern High
had led their team to a perfect ~ record after Monday's victory over Kyger Creek by a
score of 56 to 27. Left to right are Sherry Epple, Denise Dean and Jan Wilson. - Picture by
Jim Hamm.

MEIGS MARAUDERS
FG-A FT-A RB PF
2·6 1-2 5
4
~- 11
0- ~
6
~
3-11
3-S
7·
. 7-14
6-8
1.
6
6- 1~
1·4 1 ~
0-0 0-0 0 o
0-0
0-0 0
20-54 11-21 25 1
QUARTER SCORE
a 11 9 11
13 13 10 9
ATHENS
FG-A FT-A RB PF
~ · 10
1-2 3 3
4-15 0-0 7
s

....
"

Pictures of Girls' basketball in Meigs
County's high schools are by Jim Ha mm with
notations by Greg Bailey.

'

f&gt;.ll free throws and didn't
fare much bet~r !rom the
field as they sank only 20-51
•ilots for a roo! 39 percent.

Jim Detil lion

18
and

1~

' Larry
4

10 19
16

22

• •
TO TP .
~
30
1 5
4

8
4 ·

~

6
6

3
1
0

1.3

0
59

TO TP
0 4
3 '11
4 20
1 0
0 0
1 6
1 6
0 ~
0
0
10 49

-

59
49

Wi lliamson,

sawed until Meigs' Mitch
Meadows hit on a rebound to
knot the score at 45-all at that
I: lQ mark. Athens tried to
slow it down for a good shot,
but Terry Qualls stole the ball
and put it through the hoop.
When Davenport hit on a
rebound at the :17 mark to
make it49-'15, it was all over.
With one second remaining,

Snake sank two foul shots to imp o rt a nt mark e r s.
ice the viclory .
Meado.os was pretty much
It was one of the rare times held in check by the burly
an Athens team has lost to the Bulldogs as he canned nine
same team twice in the same points. and got only seven
season .
It
was
the caroms , both below his
Marauders ' third care.er season's average. But he
victory over the Bulldogs, made his presence felt as he
and raised Meigs' record to pleased the crowd and in.500 on the season .
timidated the Bulldogs by
Coacl1 Ron Logan said he blocking six or their shots .
was "very please~ " with the
Qualls made that allvictory, but not at all important steal and chipped
satisfied with his team's in five poin ts. Jerry
performance . Meigs shot only Cremeans, although getting
37 percent from the field an d only four pqints, played fine
can ned only 11-21 foul shots. defense and hauled ·in ·six
And he wasn't pleased that important rebounds over the
his team got outrebounded, much taller visitors.
33-25.
Athens was led by Chonko
Davenport led all scorers and Greer as they dropped in
with 20 big ones as he raised 16 points apiece . The big
his ·season's average! JW1ior statis tic was Chonko 's 17
Steve Randolph tossed in 13 rebounds. The team hit on ly

INTEREST

On
Of Dlpc 't

$1,000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term
NIM!y .... y

·

Interest ~~~":

wlthdrown

Imo1tUt'ltY date.

Marauders reserves in
upset win over Athens

b

Tile Alllent County
S.vlngt &amp; l.oM C..
2"S.cendSt.
Famorov, Ohio

By Greg Bailey
Score by quarters :
The Meigs Marauders ' Meigs
6 14 28 36
Reserve team , behind the Athens
10 18 26 34
eight second-half points' of r------....;;..._______~----...,
Brian Hamilton, scored a
.
.
o
· o
major
and knocked
Athensupset
Bullpups
out of a the
tie
for first place Tuesday night.
Final score was 36-34.
Meigs didn't take the lead
'
until the second half when
Hamilton broke loose for his
game total eight markers. It
was 28-26 at the third buzzer,
and the fourth period was nipand-tuck, but the Marauders
As low as
held out. That dropped the
HARRISONViLLE - The Bullpups to 9-3 inside the
Southern Federation Derby league and raised the
Trials were held Sunday, Marauders' record to 3-10.
Feb. 8, at the Meigs Coun ty
Meigs' balanced scoring
Beagle Cl ub grounds at attack was led by Kelly
Harrisonville with ap - Winebrenner's 9 .markers ,
with old battery
proximately 22 dogs entered. followed by Hamilton 's eight.
Size XLI AW72ST
Placing in the 13 inch class, The well-played game saw
Beag les, first through fifth only nine fouls called on
Fits GM Cars . ..
plaCe respectively were, Key
Other sizes low priced too
Meigs, .11 on Atheris. Meigs
Line Amos, own~d by Harlan hit ,6-8 free throws (the difWhitlatch; Key Line Timmy, ference in the game) and'
Free Installation ...
owned by Mike Whitlatch; Athens hit 4 of 5. The
Well Run Fascination, owned Marauders hit 34 percent
by Henry Wells; Radar Line from the field.
Leroy, owned by Franklin
Free Battery ·Power Check
Athens' attack was headed
Wilson, and Oak Ridge by Walton 's 12, while Chonko
• S u;de d and lor. kt:d lc rmi na l!i protect ngain s t·c:o rro s io ri
Melody, owned by Bob added 10. They hit 15-44 field
and po,wc r los fl. • To ugh po lypropy lene r. nse • Ex ce ll en t
Bailey.
cold c ra nk ing po,vcr und rcscn·c ca pacity
attempts, also for 34 percent.
In the 15 inch class ,
Meigs - Winebrenner 3-3-9,
Side Terminafs also available in
Beagles, first through fifth Witte 2-0·4, Young 1-1-3,
our
maintenance tree "Power Gerd"
place, were' Oak·' Ridge Hamilton 4-0-8, Follrod 3-().6,
OFFER ENDS MA!ICH 31
Ma jor, owned by Bob Bailey ; Halley '2-0-4, R. Coats 0-2-2.
Mound Hill Buddy, owned by· Totals 15-6-36.
Fred Burdette ; John's Creek
Athens - Hensler 1-0-2,
Bando B owned by John Huff; Topping 1-0-2, Walton 4-4-12,
Honey Run Bandit, owned by, Chonko 5-0-10, Blower 3-0-6,
Charlie Findley, and .Mound Sapp l-0-2. Totals 15-4-34.
Hill Sandy, owned by Fred
Pomeroy, Ohio
Burdette.
Judges in the 13 inch class
were John Huff, Ironton and
Charlie Finley, Ashland, Ky.
In the 15 inch class judges
were Jack Hancock. Jackson,
and Cletue Blankens hip ,
Russell , Ky .

I
SJO Tirade n. ' er
"Extra Life All-Weather"
Battery

Winners in
trials Feb. 8
are announced

MEIGS
TIRE CENTER, INC.

Taylor's fall pinpointed

here."
One of Holtz first undertak- ·
ings wlll be to Ol!tabliah .a
By GENE CADDES
years," said the 18-year Michigan, the Buckeyes were
rapport
with
star
UPI Sports Writer
' ·Buckeye coach, "and free whistled for 32 personal fouls
quarterback Joe Namath,
COLUMBUS,Ohio(UPI) - • throws decide a lot of close v,:hile the Wolverines were
who has openly campaigned Although
Ohio
State . games."
called for only 18.
to be traded.
' A look at past records
basketball coach Fred Taylor
The Buckeyes went lnto the
"You read different things res1gned only last week, there indicates Taylor is right
game
with a . 4~ conference
about Joe Namath but I ,is strong · evidence the '.• about the fouls .
mark
and
12-2 overaU. They
believe Joe Namath is a downfall of his program . · During the four seasons
lost
by
10
points and were
winner and I want him on my began on Jan. 25, 1972 in · from 1968 through 1971, the
outscored
from
the free throw
team," Holtz said. " I believe Minneapolis, Minn.
Buckeyes had 1,802 fouls line 32-20·. That has been a
Joe Naffi!I!Jl is a guy who
That was _the rught of the called
against
them, familiar . pattern since then.
desperately wants to win and hlghly-pubhcized
melee compared with 1,956 for the
"They. (the officials) were
~at's the kind of player I'm
ln~olvfng ~hio State and opponents.
scared
to death," a source
looking lor. I look forward to Minnesota m which several . ln. the last three plus years·,
close
to
the team remembers
working with him. I think Buckeye players were the figures are 1,951 against·
about
the
game at Michigan.
we're capable of playing injured and resulted in the the Buckeyes and 1,815
"They
were
afraid of another
winning football with Joe suspension of two of the against the qpponents, a
Nainath ' a·s our quarter~ Gophers for the rest of the swing of some 290 personal incident."
there are those wbo would
·back."
season.
fouls from the other four point to a lack of recruiting as
-Despite-his reputation as an
Taylor has always felt years.
the major reason for the
offensive innovator, Holtz things were never the same
Why such a difference ? Buckeye problems, and
says defense wiD be the since that game (won by OSU Were tile officials afraid of
major local point lor him as 50-44) and some dll!glng into another incident? Did the rightfully so. Ohio State has
he prepares lor his !frat pro before and after statistics Buckeyes really all of a not been getting the blue chip
athle~s the last few years.
assignment.
Indicates he may be right, sudden start committing
What part the Minnesota
"My lint area of attention allbough they provide no more fouls?
incident
might hav~ had in
wiD be the defense," he said. specl.ffc reason for the
No one will ever really the recruiting problems could
"A great team staris with demise.
know, but Taylor has a be debated. But it is obvious
defense, You're not going to
The most starillng of the theory.
io those who spend any time·
win a lot of games in the NFL figures Is in Ohio State's
He points out that in the around
.the
Buckeye
by trying to outecore people." winning percentage In the game
following
the basketball camp that the
HOltz was born Jan. 6, 1937, close games, those decided Minnesota contest, against
atmosphere has changed.
In Follansbee, W.Va., and by five points or less.
I!J'ew up in East Uverpool,
In the four and a half
Ohio. He wu an undersized seasons prior to Jan. 25, 1972,
center and middle Unebacker the Buckeyes were involved
TUES.-WED.-THURS.
at Kent Slate ln 1857-68 and ln 31 games decided by live
began his coaching career at points or leas: They won 18
his alma mater as a student 1111d lost 13 for a .580
fllllstant in 19611. He aerved percentage. Since that night,
toun u an alliltant at Iowa, there. hive been 40 games of
William
and
Mary, ftve points or lesa, but the
Connecticut, South Carolina Buckeyes have wun ooly 13 of
and Ohio State and became them while lolinl 27, a t326
head coach at Wlllillm and mark.
Guitarist with Percussion-Vocalist
Mary ln 1869.
The overall record durin11
He was amember of Woody thoae two perioda waa .87-30
8130-12130
~· Ohio State llaff at the
(.743) before and 48-611 ( .488)
111111 Roae Bowl and led afterward&amp;.
Willllm and Mary lnlo the · . Taylor believes personal
Tlncerlne Bowl In 1970.. the fouls may hive been the
Indians'
flrat
bowl calprlt for l..utg many of the
appearance in 24 years. Holtz cloae ones.
POMEROY, OHIO
was named ACC Coach of the
"There Ia no question we've
Year in 1972.
Best In Live Entertainment
committed more fouls than
our opponenla the last lour

/.f·.,·x thon yo u i·i'OIIId r' .\ 'fn•tf lrJ JW\ '
./~ ' r ;Jro!llo/ionol q1wlity fHlltaio;

ONLY FROM

• Parts
Plus
Del co Depe ndability for Instant St iJ rtin~ Powe r .. Ev en at Deep-Freeze Temp era tur es. Delco's Top:Oualily Batl ery Numbers Y-49, Y·55. Y-59 and Y-89
Now o n Sale al your PARTS PLUS OUTLETS.
(Sal e pr.ce do es not include acid.)
See you r inclep e nd ~ n t Pan s Plus Auto Parts St ar., or Serv ice Dea ler for his price.
THESE ( :

The Inn-Place Presents

p~~\5 AUT~ PARTS STORES ARE

FEATURING

THIS DELCO DEEP -FREEZE SPECIAL OFFER

G&amp;J Auto Parts

.RON BRINKER

144 W. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Rt. 33

Mason, W. Va.

vour Q,:!cu
tt:r y ; ,, s tall~:d, JJi us al:ld and J smal
111 s tall &lt;11 'o n t:tHirq,:, at an y o f 111~·s~ ~ • Paris RELIAB LE SERVICE DEALERS

· ·
1:-'omeroy Motor Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio
,
Bailey's As~land Station
Tuppers Plains, -Ohio

THE MEIGS INN

~

.... Plus
·

,
Burton Sunoco
Muon, w. Va .

Offer good thru Saturday!

�3

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. ll, 1976

- The DaUy SenUnei,Middleport-Pomeroy, Q., Wednesday, Feb. II, 1976

defeats Athens 51-45
'
Meigs-Athens box

•
Girl basketball m
thing today

N1me
Quollo

Cremeans
Meadows

Davenport

Randolph
Browning
Dodson
TOTALS
Meigs

Athens

Name
Heady
Faulkner
Greer

Chonko
Black lord
Goldsberry
Meek
'

'

GOING ALL THE WAY? - The . Meigs Girls
Basketball team, 7~ begiMing this week, is off to its
strongest start ever. Some followers believe the lellm
could stay alive aU the way to Columbus in post.;;eason
tournaments. To top it off, there's only one Senior on the
lellm, Demaris ABh, four juniors, five sophomores, and

two freshmen . Front, 1-r, Patty Dyer, Mary Boggs,
Demaris Ash, Sally carleton, Tracy Burdette; back row,
Coach Mary Jane Deeley, Pat Vaugban, Pam Vaughan,
Beth Vaughan, cathy MeadDWI, Marcia Holcomb, Glenda
Brown, Kathy Howard, and the managers, Kim Grueaer
and Kellee Burdette.

EASTERN HIGH GffiLS BASKETBALL T·EAM kneeling (1-r) Laurie Matthews, Terri Stevens, Tanuny
Fitch, Jewell Blake, Teresa Buckley, and Lori Yflllll8;

'

standlng, Juli Whitehead, Janet Ambrose, Teresa
Edwards, Vickie Epple, Sherry Epple, Jan Wilson, Denise
Dean, Kim Batey. Jim Hamm picture.

ONLY SENIOR - Demaris
Ash is the only senior on ihe 70 Marauder Girls Basketball
team.

••

THE VAUGHAN GIRLS - It makes It easy (or a coach when the Vaugban fllllily "
supplies such talented athletes . These girls play every sport the school and community have
to offer and they do them aU well. Twins Pam and Pat compete in Volleyball, basketball,
and track for Meigs High School. Their cousin Beth also parUdpale8 in the same sports.
Perhaps their athletic ability is hereditary, because these girls have brothers who also
played a variety of sports for Meigs High School,

The Daily~-

.

I

oEvoTeo TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER
L. TANNEHILL
.

hoc. Ed.

ROBERT HOEfLICH
City Editor
Publl.shed dally except
Saturday by The Oh10
Va l ley Publ i Shing Com pany , Ill Court St .,
Pomeroy , Ohio
45769 .
Business Office Phone 992 ~lU: Editorial PI'\One 992 -

Secohd

class

postage

paid at Pomeror , Ohio.

National
aOvertislng
representative Ward .
Griffith Company, Inc . ,
Bottlnel ll S. Ga ll •gher Div ,
757 Third Ave ., New York,

N.Y. 10017.

Subscription

rates :

Deliverect by carrier where
available 75 cen.ls ~er

week . Sy Motor Route
where carrier service not
available , One mon t h,
S3 .25 . By mail In Ohio and
w . va ., ·one Year , ·$22 .00;
Six months~ $11 .50; Three
monthS , S7 .00 . Elsewhere
$26.00 year ; ·Six months
S13 .50 ; three months , S7 .SO .
Subscription price indudes
Sunday Times -S entinel.

SOI.JTIIERN ffiGH GIRLS TEAM - Front, 1-r,
Cheryl Roseberry, Cel Jenkins, Nancy Roy, Becky Crow,

TORNADORETTE SENIORS - Southern High School girls basketball team seniors
·'
are,l-r, Nancy Roy, Cheryl Larkins, Becky Sayre ancl Mel Waldnig.
~:::::::::::::~:;;;:::;;.:::::::::::!:::::~3*J8::?.:::S"~

BEST OF WEEK
COLUMBUS, OHIO UPI
In 1945, President Franklin
The Mid-American
D. Roosevelt, British Prime Conference
Player of lhe
Mlnfster Winston Churchill Week
Is
Western
and Soviet dictator Josef
Michigan's
Jeff
Tyson,
who
Stalin ended · a week-long
hit a career-high 29 poiats
World War II conference at
In tbe Broncos' 76-73
Yalta.
,
decision
over Central
In 1985, U.S. and South
Michigan
Saturday,
but
VIetnamese planes staged the
first bombing raids on North Norlhern Illinois' Malt
VIetnam ln retaUatlon for a ·Hicks remains the league's
leading scorer.
·VIet Cong attack.
Tyson, a 6-3 senior forIn 1974, U.S. Setrtary of
ward
from Fostoria, Ohio
State Henry Kissinger
wbo
had
16 points and
proposed a seven-point
seven
rebounds
In
program of cooperaUon with
Western's
80-73
victory
other oil-consuming and
over Loyola 01. last week,
producing nations to cope
wltb worsening energy prob- hit on 13 ofl7 from the field
against Central.
lems.

~=:::-·&gt;. '',t.-.:.::::8:8!:m·~·:.::

'

"

--

Mel Waldnlg; back row, Coach Connei Andren, Uu ;:,:
Allen, Jean Rltchhart, Shelly Ward, Brenda Lawreace,
Jaye Ord, Cheryl Larkins and Becky Sayre.
' ..,

...

,

Sectional Tourney at Meigs

NEW YORK (UPI) -Four
National Football League
players, including · two
members of the Super Bowl
champion Pittsburgh
Steelers, wlll visit U.S.
military bases in K91'ea,
Okinawa, the Ph'lipplnes and
Hawaii during a 21-day tour
beginning Feb. 25.
The NFL office announced
Tuesday
that
Steeler
linebacker Jack Lambert and
wide receiver Lynn Swann,
linebacker D. D. Lewla of the
Dallas
Cowboys
and
quarterback James Harris ol
the l.ol Angeles Ram8 wUI
participate in the tour, sponsored by the USO and the U.S.
Department of Defense.

.:::i

Homecoming program at KC is set:1

CHESHIRE
Kyger
Creek High School will observe its first basketball
homecoming festivities
Friday night during halftime
of the KC..Symines Valley
league contest.
The lull schedule of events
begins at 6:30 p.m. with the
reserve game .
Durin~ half-time the J 1V.
game
players
and
cheerleaders wlll be introduced during the ParentsTownsl;ip willi four assistant Nl&amp;ht Activities. Then,
callS answered in Orange starting aroWld 8 p.m. the
Township and one assistant Bobcat varsity wiD tangle
run In Carthage Townshrp. with the Vikings In KC's laat
The $165 loss figure was In home appearance of the 197:176 baSketball season. The
Chester Township only.
varsity al1111 owns a victory

The AA Girls Basketball Sectional Tourney
will be held this year at Meigs High School.
Tournament director I ~ Joy Bentley. Teams
will be: Belpre. Chesapeake, Gallipolis,
Vinton County, Nelsonville·York, New
Lexington, Meigs, Fairland, Thornville
'Sheridan, and Warren. One leam will qualify
to the District.

FIRE LOSS SET
CHESTER - Lossea in
fires fo1111ht by the Chester
Fire Department In 1975
totaled $16li, Fire Chief Ross
Cleland reports. Ten calls
were an!JWered in Ches~

~tALS

7-16
7-8

2-5

~-4

0-~

0-0

~

4

17

2
3
0

s

:
~o

13

o

5~
51
45

TP
5
8

16
1~

0-0

o.o

1

2

0

0-0

0-0
0-0
0·0

3
0

~

20-S 1

S-11

0
0
33

0
0
45

0-0
o.o

0

21

0
0

again hit for two-pointers and Bulldogs were busy taking
the lead went to 8-5. But then two or three . Athens' zone
the Marauders hit one of their was very effect! ve , con irritating cold spells and tinually
forcing
the
didn 't score for five minutes, Marauders to take the outside
the rest of the quarter, and to shot.
the 6:20 mark of the second
Athens got the second half
period . Meanwhile, Athens tip, but Davenport was the
was rolling of! 13 to go out in first to score as the
front , 18-8.
Marauders took the lead once
But once Meigs got star~ again, 27-26, but it was short- .
again, they took command lived as the Bulldogs bounced
and held Chonko to only two back to go ahead by I. f rom
points that · second period then until that last minute of
while Steve Randolph was the game, neither team was
busy burning the nets for nine ever ahead by more than two
points in four minutes to points as fans stayed on the
bring his team back into edge of their seats.
co ntenti on . Meigs still
Two Davenport foul shots
coul dn 't get back the lead as at the 2:53 mark of the third
the buzzer sounded, Meigs canto sent the Marauders
trailing 26-25.
ahead, 34-32, but once again it
Senior Terry Qualls went was short-lived as Faulkner
into the locker room with hit two field goals In a row to
three fouls. The story of that give the Bulldogs a 36-34 lead
firs t half was the men under at the end of that period.
the boards; Meigs seemed to
BIG FOURTH
· ~el only one shot while the
The fourth quarter was the

Gallians whip Ironton
Gallipolis hit nine of 14 field
A superb ~am effort gave
::Oach Jim Osborne's visiting goal at~mpts in the first
Gallipolis Blue Devils a 59-49 period for an 18-7 advantage.
Southeas~n Ohio League Ironton was three of 10 from
victory over host Ironton in the field in the initial stanza.
GAHS connected on .six of
the Tigers' sparkling new
3,000-seat sports center nine field goal attempts in the
second period. Ironton was
Tuesdy night.
The triumph kept the Blue · one of eight as the visitors
Devils
alive , increased their lead to 30-11
mathematically, for at least a during the halftime inshare of the 197f&gt;.76 SEOAL termission.
Gallla's biggest advantage
cage crown.
Ironton clinched a share of was Zl points, 32-11 with 7:20
the championship earlier this · left in the third period and 34month. All Coach Buddy 13, with 6:34 left In that
Bell's lads have to do to win it stanza.
Ironton outscored GAHS 16outright Is defeat Logan at
10
in the third period to cut
Ironton Friday night.
Gallia's
lead to 13 points, 40In order for GAHS to gain
27.
at least a share of the
Bren t Johnson 's layup at
championship, the Blue
the.
7:04 mark was the Blue
Devils must defeat Athens at
Devils'
only . field goal at. Athens Friday in the regular
tempt
in
the .last stanza.
~M:uon finale. Logan must
GAHS
forced
Ironton to go
topple the Fighting Tigers.
after
the
ball
and
the result
Iron ton dropped to 14-2
was
20
Tiger
personals
in the
following Tuesday's loss.
last
period
.
GAHS
sank
17 of
Inside the SEOAL, the
27
charity
tosses
in
that
Bellmen remain one full
stanza
..
game ahead of GARS with a
The Tigers look 23 shots
11-2 record.
from
the field in the fourth
Gallipolis upped its season
period,
hitting on eight.
record to 11-6. Inside the
For
the
night, 'Gallipolis hit
: onference 1 the Osbornemen
20
of
33
field
goal attempts for
are 10-3.
60.6
percent.
The Gallians
Two quick goals by senior
were
19
of
30
at
the foal line
:;_AHS guard Gary Snowden.
for
63.3
percent.
GAHS
had 21
gave Ga!Upolis a 4-j) lead. Th.e
personals
and
30
rebounds,
ll
· Blue Devils never loo~ ed
back.

· Lou Holtz gets

,..
_,

&lt;f.,l

over the Syinmes Valley
EscortawUI beGretJSmlthl "'
team, as they posted a Mike Baird, Tony Slwnblln 1&gt;&lt;l
thriUing 66 to 64 overtime Wealey Lee, Tom stump.a
victory.
George Thompson, Terry, &amp;
During hall-~ of the Lucaa and Orland ()en-:!')
varsity
game,
the
FoUowinR lhe lntrotlucUon '-l
Homecoming Queen can· of q,_n cantlldates, Coach •&gt;
tlldates and their escorts will Jim Sprague' a Phyalcal.;\
be introduced. Candidates Education claana wtU·
are Su111n Roush (Junior preaent
a
tumbllns:-;
Band), Kim Gunnell (FHA), : exhibition. Following tbe
Kay · Hager (Senior Band), same, the Homecomlng•H
Sandy VanSickle (Senior Sweetheart Dance wUI be.O:
Chorua), .Dawn Martin held unW 11:30 p.m.
::1
(Keywanettes), Lee Ham·
Kner Qeek lfilb Scbool&gt;'!
mond (Ubrary Club), Penny offlclallwould llkl to alatltt"
Hall (National Honor an Invitation to all "f
Society), Pam Haye (Art rerfdents to CGIIIe for a fult;;
Club), and Donna Fllnt ev~nlng of enjoyment at:;
(Latln Club).
Kyger Creek.
·
,..,.

·•

by Brent Saunders and 10 by with eight.
Keith McGuire. GaUia had 13
Snowden , the Gallians' top
ttu"novers .

scorer

Ironton finished with 19 of
54 shots from the field for 35.1
percent. The Tigers were cold
at the foul line, sinking only
ll ol25 for44 percent. Ironton
had 28 personals and 28
rebounds. Dean Fitzpatrick
picked off 13 caroms for the
winners, six In the final
period. Ironton had 10 turnovers.
Senior forward Tony
Folden paced GAHS with 30
points. Junior forward Gary
Swain, who replaced senior
Gary Snowden .with 3:57 left
in the first period, chipped in

suffered a ·sprained ankle on
a driving layup. He sat out
the remainde,r of the first half
and started the second half,
but left the contest for good
with 6:10 remaining in the
third ·stanza.
Mike Brown , Ironton's
junior playma~er, missed
Tuesday's game due to an
injury suffered in the Jackson
game last Friday.
· Dean Fitzpatrick, Ironton's
6-6 senior cen ter, led the ·
Tigers attack with 20 points.
Dean Royal , 6-2 junior forward, added 11 .

BY JOE CARNICEI.Ll
UPI Sporta Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)- The
burning question among New
York's pro foot~ll fans todsy
is, 11 Lou Who?"
The New York Jets f!Ued
the last coaching vacancy in
the National Football League
Tuesday, bypassing some of
the premier names in college
football and aelecilng Lou
Holtz, the highly successful
but litUei)ubliclzed coach at
North CaroUna State.
The 3$-ye&amp;rilld Holtz, wbo
said he accepted the job at I
a.m. Tuesday, received a
five-year contract estimated
at f\00,000 ~nnually.
Holtz, a fraU, scholarly
looking type, who speaka ln
rapid-fire, !Dachine-gun
burlll and considers himself
an accompllahad amateur
ma,lclan,
made
his
reputation In the college
ranka by lurnlng losers into
winners. He'll have another
opportunity to work his
wllanlry In New York.
Holtz, wbo turned both
Wllllam &amp; Mary and N.C.
state lnlo instant winners in
his laat tw.o coaching
ualgnmenla, takett over a Jet
club that llnllhed , as the
pooreet daferllive team in the
NFL. The s-u record and
lui-place f1nllh In the AFC
Eut marlred the Jell' wont
ever. Head Coach
Olarley Winner wu fired ln
November and offenaive
coordinator Ken Shipp
flJiJihld the year.
Rolli, natW'IIlly, Ia quite
Gl(lbnllllc.
"I hlvell'tBt confidence In
lllllllf," r. ultl. "I believe
Jn, God, .Lou Holla •ncl the
New YOit Jell in that order.
·Coaching Ia coachlnl no
1111tter what level )'Otl(ao:at.
Yltl need 1 good ttaff anayou
111111 athletett and you need
PIOPlt wbo want to win.
1'1111'1 what I intend to have

and ·assist leader,

:;:::;:;:;:::;;:~~~;:::::;;;:::::;;:;::::;:•:o:·:·:·:·:·:·&gt;:·~:-::·1,··~·=·:::::.:·:·:;~·~:·;::·:·:•:•:•:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·
··············=-··;:::
•••••.: ..............•.•.•... .•.-.•.•.-.;...................•;:.;.•.;-··=-~
i...s~.~~····
...•·~·~·'·•.•.•;.o,•,•.•;o.•.o:.·;~·.o;•;.o.!;,•.•.•
=·~·~O:o!•:o!·:.:;:-:-:.o:·:·:·:-:·:-:::-: ·:-: • ·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:-:·;-.-:~·: -:-:~.·:-:-:·:·:·:-:·:·:~:·.•,•:·,.;.....

GAHS-Ironton box.
GALLIPOLIS ' BLUE DEVILS !59)
PLAYER-Pus.
FG-A FT-A PF RB
Tony Folden, f
1~ - 17 6·8
3 6
Brent Saunders, f
1-2 3-5
~
11
Gary Swain, f
3-3. n
5
0
Keith McGuire, c
0- ~
H
4
10
Rn:mt Johnson, Q
] .J
4-8
3 1
Gary Snowden, g
3-6
o.o 3 ~
Terry Wa ll, g
0-0 0-1 1 0
TOTALS
20-33 19-30 21 30 ·
IRONTON TIGERS (49)
PLAYER- Pos.
FG-A FT-A PF RB
Ed Howard, f
2•5 0·0 4 s
Dean Royal , f
4-8 3· 4
4
3
Dean Fitzpatrick, c
B-18 " 4·11 4 13
Dave Sesher, f
0-0 0 - ~
0 1
c;huck Brown, g
0-5 0-0 ~ 6
Rick Howard. g
2·9
~- ~
s 0
Bob Crockrel. g
~· 4
2-5 4 0
Bob Thomas. g .
1-4 0-1 5 0
Robin Fitzpatrick, c
0-1 0-0 0 0
l:OTALS
19-54 11-25 28 28
Score

bb quarters :

GAHS Blue evils
Ironton Tl~ers

OFFI IALS Chillicothe Chapter.

Jets coaching job

A thought for the day:
American inventor Thmnas
Edison said, ''There is no
substitute for hard work."

.I

Wheoley

!.

TP

By Greg Bailey
The Athens Bulldogs came
to Marauder territory
Tuesday night looking for
revenge for an earlier season
loss. lns~ad, they took the
long ride home again as
losers, 51-45. •
The large crowd saw Mick
"Snake" Davenport lead a
Marauder fourth period
charge that outscored the
visitors 17-9, Davenport
getting eight of them. The
Marauders scored eight
points the last four by Snake
in the last minute and ten
seconds, holding the visitors
scoreless.
Meigs drew first blood as
Davenport hit a jumper, but
Athens ' bit 6'5" Arnie
Chonko, after a foul shot, hit a
jumper to put the Bulldogs
out in front, 3-2. Then Meigs
looked like they were going to
lake charge as Davenport,
Randolph and Davenport

same way as the lead see-

..

EAGLELASSES SENIORS - These pretty senior basketball players at Eastern High
had led their team to a perfect ~ record after Monday's victory over Kyger Creek by a
score of 56 to 27. Left to right are Sherry Epple, Denise Dean and Jan Wilson. - Picture by
Jim Hamm.

MEIGS MARAUDERS
FG-A FT-A RB PF
2·6 1-2 5
4
~- 11
0- ~
6
~
3-11
3-S
7·
. 7-14
6-8
1.
6
6- 1~
1·4 1 ~
0-0 0-0 0 o
0-0
0-0 0
20-54 11-21 25 1
QUARTER SCORE
a 11 9 11
13 13 10 9
ATHENS
FG-A FT-A RB PF
~ · 10
1-2 3 3
4-15 0-0 7
s

....
"

Pictures of Girls' basketball in Meigs
County's high schools are by Jim Ha mm with
notations by Greg Bailey.

'

f&gt;.ll free throws and didn't
fare much bet~r !rom the
field as they sank only 20-51
•ilots for a roo! 39 percent.

Jim Detil lion

18
and

1~

' Larry
4

10 19
16

22

• •
TO TP .
~
30
1 5
4

8
4 ·

~

6
6

3
1
0

1.3

0
59

TO TP
0 4
3 '11
4 20
1 0
0 0
1 6
1 6
0 ~
0
0
10 49

-

59
49

Wi lliamson,

sawed until Meigs' Mitch
Meadows hit on a rebound to
knot the score at 45-all at that
I: lQ mark. Athens tried to
slow it down for a good shot,
but Terry Qualls stole the ball
and put it through the hoop.
When Davenport hit on a
rebound at the :17 mark to
make it49-'15, it was all over.
With one second remaining,

Snake sank two foul shots to imp o rt a nt mark e r s.
ice the viclory .
Meado.os was pretty much
It was one of the rare times held in check by the burly
an Athens team has lost to the Bulldogs as he canned nine
same team twice in the same points. and got only seven
season .
It
was
the caroms , both below his
Marauders ' third care.er season's average. But he
victory over the Bulldogs, made his presence felt as he
and raised Meigs' record to pleased the crowd and in.500 on the season .
timidated the Bulldogs by
Coacl1 Ron Logan said he blocking six or their shots .
was "very please~ " with the
Qualls made that allvictory, but not at all important steal and chipped
satisfied with his team's in five poin ts. Jerry
performance . Meigs shot only Cremeans, although getting
37 percent from the field an d only four pqints, played fine
can ned only 11-21 foul shots. defense and hauled ·in ·six
And he wasn't pleased that important rebounds over the
his team got outrebounded, much taller visitors.
33-25.
Athens was led by Chonko
Davenport led all scorers and Greer as they dropped in
with 20 big ones as he raised 16 points apiece . The big
his ·season's average! JW1ior statis tic was Chonko 's 17
Steve Randolph tossed in 13 rebounds. The team hit on ly

INTEREST

On
Of Dlpc 't

$1,000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term
NIM!y .... y

·

Interest ~~~":

wlthdrown

Imo1tUt'ltY date.

Marauders reserves in
upset win over Athens

b

Tile Alllent County
S.vlngt &amp; l.oM C..
2"S.cendSt.
Famorov, Ohio

By Greg Bailey
Score by quarters :
The Meigs Marauders ' Meigs
6 14 28 36
Reserve team , behind the Athens
10 18 26 34
eight second-half points' of r------....;;..._______~----...,
Brian Hamilton, scored a
.
.
o
· o
major
and knocked
Athensupset
Bullpups
out of a the
tie
for first place Tuesday night.
Final score was 36-34.
Meigs didn't take the lead
'
until the second half when
Hamilton broke loose for his
game total eight markers. It
was 28-26 at the third buzzer,
and the fourth period was nipand-tuck, but the Marauders
As low as
held out. That dropped the
HARRISONViLLE - The Bullpups to 9-3 inside the
Southern Federation Derby league and raised the
Trials were held Sunday, Marauders' record to 3-10.
Feb. 8, at the Meigs Coun ty
Meigs' balanced scoring
Beagle Cl ub grounds at attack was led by Kelly
Harrisonville with ap - Winebrenner's 9 .markers ,
with old battery
proximately 22 dogs entered. followed by Hamilton 's eight.
Size XLI AW72ST
Placing in the 13 inch class, The well-played game saw
Beag les, first through fifth only nine fouls called on
Fits GM Cars . ..
plaCe respectively were, Key
Other sizes low priced too
Meigs, .11 on Atheris. Meigs
Line Amos, own~d by Harlan hit ,6-8 free throws (the difWhitlatch; Key Line Timmy, ference in the game) and'
Free Installation ...
owned by Mike Whitlatch; Athens hit 4 of 5. The
Well Run Fascination, owned Marauders hit 34 percent
by Henry Wells; Radar Line from the field.
Leroy, owned by Franklin
Free Battery ·Power Check
Athens' attack was headed
Wilson, and Oak Ridge by Walton 's 12, while Chonko
• S u;de d and lor. kt:d lc rmi na l!i protect ngain s t·c:o rro s io ri
Melody, owned by Bob added 10. They hit 15-44 field
and po,wc r los fl. • To ugh po lypropy lene r. nse • Ex ce ll en t
Bailey.
cold c ra nk ing po,vcr und rcscn·c ca pacity
attempts, also for 34 percent.
In the 15 inch class ,
Meigs - Winebrenner 3-3-9,
Side Terminafs also available in
Beagles, first through fifth Witte 2-0·4, Young 1-1-3,
our
maintenance tree "Power Gerd"
place, were' Oak·' Ridge Hamilton 4-0-8, Follrod 3-().6,
OFFER ENDS MA!ICH 31
Ma jor, owned by Bob Bailey ; Halley '2-0-4, R. Coats 0-2-2.
Mound Hill Buddy, owned by· Totals 15-6-36.
Fred Burdette ; John's Creek
Athens - Hensler 1-0-2,
Bando B owned by John Huff; Topping 1-0-2, Walton 4-4-12,
Honey Run Bandit, owned by, Chonko 5-0-10, Blower 3-0-6,
Charlie Findley, and .Mound Sapp l-0-2. Totals 15-4-34.
Hill Sandy, owned by Fred
Pomeroy, Ohio
Burdette.
Judges in the 13 inch class
were John Huff, Ironton and
Charlie Finley, Ashland, Ky.
In the 15 inch class judges
were Jack Hancock. Jackson,
and Cletue Blankens hip ,
Russell , Ky .

I
SJO Tirade n. ' er
"Extra Life All-Weather"
Battery

Winners in
trials Feb. 8
are announced

MEIGS
TIRE CENTER, INC.

Taylor's fall pinpointed

here."
One of Holtz first undertak- ·
ings wlll be to Ol!tabliah .a
By GENE CADDES
years," said the 18-year Michigan, the Buckeyes were
rapport
with
star
UPI Sports Writer
' ·Buckeye coach, "and free whistled for 32 personal fouls
quarterback Joe Namath,
COLUMBUS,Ohio(UPI) - • throws decide a lot of close v,:hile the Wolverines were
who has openly campaigned Although
Ohio
State . games."
called for only 18.
to be traded.
' A look at past records
basketball coach Fred Taylor
The Buckeyes went lnto the
"You read different things res1gned only last week, there indicates Taylor is right
game
with a . 4~ conference
about Joe Namath but I ,is strong · evidence the '.• about the fouls .
mark
and
12-2 overaU. They
believe Joe Namath is a downfall of his program . · During the four seasons
lost
by
10
points and were
winner and I want him on my began on Jan. 25, 1972 in · from 1968 through 1971, the
outscored
from
the free throw
team," Holtz said. " I believe Minneapolis, Minn.
Buckeyes had 1,802 fouls line 32-20·. That has been a
Joe Naffi!I!Jl is a guy who
That was _the rught of the called
against
them, familiar . pattern since then.
desperately wants to win and hlghly-pubhcized
melee compared with 1,956 for the
"They. (the officials) were
~at's the kind of player I'm
ln~olvfng ~hio State and opponents.
scared
to death," a source
looking lor. I look forward to Minnesota m which several . ln. the last three plus years·,
close
to
the team remembers
working with him. I think Buckeye players were the figures are 1,951 against·
about
the
game at Michigan.
we're capable of playing injured and resulted in the the Buckeyes and 1,815
"They
were
afraid of another
winning football with Joe suspension of two of the against the qpponents, a
Nainath ' a·s our quarter~ Gophers for the rest of the swing of some 290 personal incident."
there are those wbo would
·back."
season.
fouls from the other four point to a lack of recruiting as
-Despite-his reputation as an
Taylor has always felt years.
the major reason for the
offensive innovator, Holtz things were never the same
Why such a difference ? Buckeye problems, and
says defense wiD be the since that game (won by OSU Were tile officials afraid of
major local point lor him as 50-44) and some dll!glng into another incident? Did the rightfully so. Ohio State has
he prepares lor his !frat pro before and after statistics Buckeyes really all of a not been getting the blue chip
athle~s the last few years.
assignment.
Indicates he may be right, sudden start committing
What part the Minnesota
"My lint area of attention allbough they provide no more fouls?
incident
might hav~ had in
wiD be the defense," he said. specl.ffc reason for the
No one will ever really the recruiting problems could
"A great team staris with demise.
know, but Taylor has a be debated. But it is obvious
defense, You're not going to
The most starillng of the theory.
io those who spend any time·
win a lot of games in the NFL figures Is in Ohio State's
He points out that in the around
.the
Buckeye
by trying to outecore people." winning percentage In the game
following
the basketball camp that the
HOltz was born Jan. 6, 1937, close games, those decided Minnesota contest, against
atmosphere has changed.
In Follansbee, W.Va., and by five points or less.
I!J'ew up in East Uverpool,
In the four and a half
Ohio. He wu an undersized seasons prior to Jan. 25, 1972,
center and middle Unebacker the Buckeyes were involved
TUES.-WED.-THURS.
at Kent Slate ln 1857-68 and ln 31 games decided by live
began his coaching career at points or leas: They won 18
his alma mater as a student 1111d lost 13 for a .580
fllllstant in 19611. He aerved percentage. Since that night,
toun u an alliltant at Iowa, there. hive been 40 games of
William
and
Mary, ftve points or lesa, but the
Connecticut, South Carolina Buckeyes have wun ooly 13 of
and Ohio State and became them while lolinl 27, a t326
head coach at Wlllillm and mark.
Guitarist with Percussion-Vocalist
Mary ln 1869.
The overall record durin11
He was amember of Woody thoae two perioda waa .87-30
8130-12130
~· Ohio State llaff at the
(.743) before and 48-611 ( .488)
111111 Roae Bowl and led afterward&amp;.
Willllm and Mary lnlo the · . Taylor believes personal
Tlncerlne Bowl In 1970.. the fouls may hive been the
Indians'
flrat
bowl calprlt for l..utg many of the
appearance in 24 years. Holtz cloae ones.
POMEROY, OHIO
was named ACC Coach of the
"There Ia no question we've
Year in 1972.
Best In Live Entertainment
committed more fouls than
our opponenla the last lour

/.f·.,·x thon yo u i·i'OIIId r' .\ 'fn•tf lrJ JW\ '
./~ ' r ;Jro!llo/ionol q1wlity fHlltaio;

ONLY FROM

• Parts
Plus
Del co Depe ndability for Instant St iJ rtin~ Powe r .. Ev en at Deep-Freeze Temp era tur es. Delco's Top:Oualily Batl ery Numbers Y-49, Y·55. Y-59 and Y-89
Now o n Sale al your PARTS PLUS OUTLETS.
(Sal e pr.ce do es not include acid.)
See you r inclep e nd ~ n t Pan s Plus Auto Parts St ar., or Serv ice Dea ler for his price.
THESE ( :

The Inn-Place Presents

p~~\5 AUT~ PARTS STORES ARE

FEATURING

THIS DELCO DEEP -FREEZE SPECIAL OFFER

G&amp;J Auto Parts

.RON BRINKER

144 W. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Rt. 33

Mason, W. Va.

vour Q,:!cu
tt:r y ; ,, s tall~:d, JJi us al:ld and J smal
111 s tall &lt;11 'o n t:tHirq,:, at an y o f 111~·s~ ~ • Paris RELIAB LE SERVICE DEALERS

· ·
1:-'omeroy Motor Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio
,
Bailey's As~land Station
Tuppers Plains, -Ohio

THE MEIGS INN

~

.... Plus
·

,
Burton Sunoco
Muon, w. Va .

Offer good thru Saturday!

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, F•' " ,o,.

,., arl &amp; Locu1t Sf.
Middleport, Ohio

Bobcats Cf!P
•
fifth wzn

•

Senior forward Bill Metzner carried the hot hand
dw-ing the fourtl. quarter
Tuesday night as the Kyger
Creek Bobcats defeated host
Hannan , W. Va. 55-45.
The vicl()ry was th e Bobcats filth of the season, the
most wins by a KC cage team
since the 1969-70 season. That
year, John Sang's Bobcats
finished wi th a 6-13 slate.
Coach Keith Carter's
Bobcats. 5-11 this year, have
Symmes Valley and Buffalo,
W. Va . le!l on their regular
season schedule.
Tuesday night, the Bobca ts
led all the way but had to
fight off a late rally by Coach
Bo Napora 's Wildcats .
During the franti c fourth
period, the Bobcats led 42-39
with 2:53 remaining when
senior Greg Hill converted
IDw foul shots to cut the lead
ID 42-41.
With 2:17left, the Bobcats'
Ralph Baylor connected at
the charity stripe giving KC a
three-poin t lead . From that
point on, Metzner dominated
play connecting on a reserve
layup, a jWJior and ·foul shot.
Little jWJior guard Mitch
Salem added the final two
points on two foul shots.
Kyger Creek jumped into a
14.,1\lead at the end of the first
stanza on the sholting of
Baylor and Doug Sands.
Baylor had eight points while

Sands canned four .
Hannan pulled within five
points at the half behind "the

Hann an

ca ptured · the

Kyger Cre e k l55J - Sa nds .
2-2-6 : Met zn er , 7 -1-15 ; Arm br us ter , l -2-8 : Lu cas. 4 1-9 ;
Sa lem, 0 -2-2; and Baylo r , 4 715 . TOTALS 20 -15· 55 .
Hannan, W. Va . 145) Richardson , 8-2-18 ; Villa r s , J .
2-8 ; HilL 1-4-6 , Bl !!ke , 0 -2 -2 ;
Edmond s, 2-0 4 ; Chapman . 13-5
and
Chapman
1-0 -2. TOTALS 16- ll-45 .

By quarters :
Kyge r Creek
· Hann an

14 9 13 19- 55
8 10 12 15- 45

Reserv es- Hannan H KC

26

ahead , 60-59. Shoemaker_'s
two charity tosses at the :36
mark upped Waverly 's lead
to 64-59. Jackson bounced
back with goals by Marty
Cooper and George Schmid in
the final 30 seconds, and had
the ball after Thompson's last
free throw but couldn't get a
shot off during the final nine
seconds of play.
Jackson hit 27 of 63 field
goal attempts for 47 percent.
JHS was nine of 14 at the foul
line . The lronmen ·had 36
r ebounds, nine by Bob .
Holsinger .
Waverly is at Wellston
Friday. Jackson will host
Meigs.

Box score :
'

JACK SON (6 3) - O sbor ne
3-0 -6 ; Co nro y 3 -2-8 ; Schmid 9 -

0-18 ; Morrow 5 -3 -13; Dorsey

romp, 74-49
Logan rolled over Wellston
74-49 in a Southeastern Ohio
League contest at Hilltop
Court Tuesday night.
J'he victory left the Chiefs
with a 7·9 season record and
5-7
co nference
mark .
Wellston dropped to 3-12 on
the year and 2-11 in the
leag ue .
The Chiefs led 15-11, 26-17
and 49-31 at the quartermarks.
Mike McBroom · netted 19
points for the winners . Randy
Peoples had 12· for WellsiDn .
Logan hit 28 of 56 field goal
attempts for' 50 percent and
canned IB of 25 charity losses.
The ChiefS: picked off 35
rebounds, nine by Tim
Mulholland. Wellston hit 20 of
52 field goal attempts for 38.5
percent. The Rock~ts were
nine of 14 at the foul line and
had 22 reboWJds .
Logan is at Iron'ton Friday.
Wellston will host Waverly.
Bos score:
WELLSTON ( 4~1 - G ill J. J.
3; Barnett 2 0-4; McKinniss 3
0-6 ; Peoples 5-2-12; Arnold 2-

4-8 ; Gilliland 11 -0-B; Swong er
1-0-2 ; Derrow 1-0-2 ; Watts 1 2
4. TOTALS 20·9-49 .
LOGAN (74}- Clark l -1-3;
Lanning 0-4 -4 ; Mulholllln d 1-

0-2; Se e! 2-0-4; Davidson 1-0-

2; McBroom 9-1-19; Myers 22-6 ; Russell 2-0-4: Hawk 6-719 ; Gasser 2-0-4; Braglin 2-J7 . TOTALS 28 -18 -14.

Score · by quarters :
Wellston
· Logan
Reserves

11 6 14 18- 49
IS 11 2.3 25- 74
-

Logan

61

Wellston J 9 .

Property
Tr~sfers
•

N'orman' J . Schoonover to
Margie E . Schoonover 1 .77A.,
Chester.
Elizabeth Howell Templeton, Edward TempleiDn to
Ada Bays 1-10 A. Syracuse.
Clara Jean Bradford to
Gail Eldred Bradford, Sec.
35, Lebanon.
Roy Franklin Riffle, Frona
K.. Riffle, Frona Kathryn
Riffie to Roger L. Bissell,
Mary S . . Bissell 31r, A.,
Chester.
Michael· L. Wright, Sharon
K. Wright to Clarence M.
Swauger,
Mamie
E.
Swauger, Lot 27, Middleport.

.~'J\NGS

points, six of those came in

reserve contest, 32-26. Fugate
led the Wildcats with 10 while
Ed Mollohan toped the
Bobkittens with 11.

WAVERLY
(65)
Holsin ger 5-3-13; Dav_ena 3-0•
-6 ; ThompSo n 8- 1·- 17 ; Whal~y
2 -0 -4 ;
Workman
5 -0: l o:
Shoemaker 0-2-2; Fyff e 4-2
10 ; S. ThQm as ld -3 . TOTALS:
28 -9-6.5 .

Score by quarters :
Jac kson
19 14 12 18- 63
Wa\l'erly
21 12 15 17- 65
Reserves Jac kson 38.

Waverly

56

Cage standings
ALL

TEAM
Whee l ersburg

W L P

0 104 1 783
2 890 769
6 955 867
7 925 942
s 882 853
6 9 19 B 8~
Meigs
B 9 9 27
So uth Poin t
8 9 1061 1052
Loga n
7 9 943 10 15
Athen s
6 10 762 82.11
Jac kso n
6 11 943 945
Wellston
J 12 788 923
Non - SEOAL results :
P 1. Pleasa n t 57 Park e r sb ur g

Ironton
Ga llipoli s
wav e rly
P-ortsmouth·
Pt . Pl easan t ,

15
14
11
10
9
9

OP

90

56

South Point 88 Fair land 65

SEOAL VARSITY
TEAM
W L P

IrOnton

11
10
8
6

709
Gallipo li s
749
Waverly
679
Athens:
558
Logar
s
71 5
Meig s
5 8 76 1
Jackson
4 9 700
Wellston
2 11 67 1
TOT A'LS
51 51 5542
Tuesday ' s results :
2
J
5
6
7

OP

608
65 1
693
582
693
778

733
804
5542

Gal l ipol i s 59 IrontOn .119
Meigs 5 1 Athens .115
Waverly 65 Jackson 63
Lo gan 74 Wells to n 49

SEOAL RESERvEs
W L P OP
II 2 649 427
10 3 562 475

TEAM

Ironton
Wave rly

9
8

539 425
528 466
J a c k son
4 9 d90 607
GallipOliS
3 10 d8 3 605
Meigs
J 10 46 4 528
Wellston
3 10 514 666
TOTALS
51 51 4199 4199
Tuesday's results :
Ir onto n 49 Gallipolis 35
Meigs 36 Athens Jd
Waverly
Jackson 36
Logan 61 Well sto n 39
Friday's games :
Gallipol is at Athe n s
Logan at Iron to n
Meig s at Jec kson
Waver l y at Wellston
South Point at Chesap eake
P ort smouth at Mason , Ky .
Athen s
Logan

3
4

ORANGE
JUICE

6 Ol.$139
6.CANS

GOOD WITH GUN, TOO Cincinnati Reds star pitcher Will McEnaney (standing. far
right ), famed for his strong right arm throwing a baseball was Bob Evans ' guest at a
hunting party this past weekend on the Bob Evans Farm, Rio Grande. This was
McEnaney's first time grouse hunting, and he bagged the first ruffed grouse he raised I rom
the brush, a feat for even an experienced grouse hunter. McEnaney allowed as haw
"Baseball's my first love, hunting's illy second." Other members of the hiUiting party were
ilmeeling, left ) David l..effel, McEnaney's brother-in-law ; Gary Waits ; (standing, 1-r) State
Senior Ganoe Protector Ken Tomlinson ; Charles McKean, (unknown ), Bob Evans and
McEnaney .

Ice time makes a champion
UPI Executive Sports Editor
INNSBRUCK ,
Austria
1UP!) - John CUrry was a
good figure skater when he
lived in Britain, but the day
he decided to shift to the
United States two years ago,
he became a potential
Olympic chanopion.
Figure skating people point
out that CUrry has wQn the
European championship
since moving to New York ,
and Denver, where he trains
Wlder Carlo Fassi, and that
be probably will be crowned
Olympic champion tonight.
CUrry , 26, has no doubts .
"The best move I ever
made," he said . "I get all the
ice time I need thanks to the
money provided by my

sponsor, and fhat- ice timeNavaree of West Germany
was the purpose or the led after the compulsories but
move.''
she has no tradition as a free
Curry and Canada's Toller skater and the title was
Cranston are probably the expected to be contested by
best free skatefll in the field, Dorothy and Dianne de
and with the free skating Leeuw, the reigning world
counting 50 per cent of the champion Erom Calirornia ,
marks, the BriiDn should representing HollaDd. Dianne
.hang on to beat Russia's . is third .
Sergei Volkov, the reigning
Other finals down for
world champion.
decision wer·e the men's 5,()()()..
On the other hand, Dorothy meter speed skating, the 40Hamill is as American as kilometer biathlon relay and
apple pie and she probably the women's slalom .
will win the next U.S. gold
With the exception of the
Friday when the wOmen's slalom, in which the U.S. was
figure skating is concluded. given an outside chance of a
Dorothy, of Riverside, medal, Americans were not
Conn., was in second place expected
to
figure
after
Tuesda y's
thr ee prominently.
compulsory figures . Isabel de
It will be up to Lindy
Cochran to uphold the
tradition of the skiing
Eochrans of Richmond , VI.
She does not appear w have
the class, but the Olympics
are a great leveler . It's one
race and anything can
happen,
conference and 7-11 overall.
There is also Cindy Nelston
Oberlin 's Jimmy Jones of Lutsen, Minn . The
stole the ball near the end of pressure is off her now that
the game and handed it off to she has won an Olympic
freshman Tony Thomas, ivho medal -a bronze in the
scored the final basket in the downhill-and she may come
Yeomen win over BaJdwin- through, although she does
W3llace.
not particularly like slalom
The Yeomen are now 10..7 racing.
on the season, 5-4 lrt
Head Coach. Hank Tauber
conference play . The Yellow said, "I think Cindy and
Jackets slipped to 5-13 overall Lindy both have a very good
and 2.0 in the OAC.
chance. We'll see what
The score was tied 38-38 at happens ."
halftime, but Oberlin pulled
lri the speed skating, Dan
ahead by outrebouncling B-W Carroll or St. Louis held tbe ·
45-38.
best U.S. credentials, but
The game's high scorer they could not compare with
was Dave. Long of Baldwin- the likes of DutChman Hans
Wallace with 26 points. He van Heiden, Victor Varlamov
was also top rebounder with of Russia and Sten Stensen of
13.
Norway.
Merlin Friend sank 22
In the Nordic relay, lhe
points and had eight rebcunds U.S. 'will have Bill Koch of
for Oberlin.
Guilford, Vt., to pace them,
Capital 's Crusaders but with the other members
connected on 21 of 28 foul of the team two classes below
shots,
com_p ared . with him, there iS no way the team
Denison 's six of 12, and led all can challenge the Russians,
the way to a victory over the Finns and East Germans .
Big Red.
Tuesday's highlight was
Napoleon Allen, a 6-4 fresh- the silver medal won by Dan
man, led the Capital attack lnunerfall of Madison, Wis.,
with l4 points. Ricky lee in the 500-meter speed
added II and Scott Ballinger skating and the stunning 5-4
10. Denison's Gil Spencer also hockey upset registered by
scored 10 )lliints.
the United States over
Cap is now 13-10 overall and Finland , which put the
3-0 in the league. The Big Red Americans in line for a
is 9-10
for all I games and 4.0 bronze medaL
.
agarnst OAC opponents.

STOKLEY

PEAS
3 LB.

Ohio College
Basketball Round-up
United Press International
Wittenberg is tied with
Otterbein for first place in the
Ohio Conference South today
by virtue of the Tigers' 53-48
vi c~Dry over Marietta and the
Cardinals' 67-$) defeat at the
hands of Muskingum.
Elsewhere in the OAC
Tuesday ni ght, Wooster
defeated MoWlt Union 118-06,
Oberlin beat BaldwinWallace 75-72 and Capital
downed Denison 65-48.
Also, Central State whipped
Defiance 79-64, Cedarville
topped Urbana BJ-78 and
Hiram outlasted Allegheny
Muskingum, powered by
Greg Riggar 's 14 points and
Larry Hall's 13, outscored
Otterbein 11-2 in a dosing
three-minute period to break
open the game.
The loss ·was Otterbein's
first in the league, against
eight wins, and left the Cards
17-4 overall.
The Muskies ·are now 13.0
on the season and 6-4 in the
OAC.
Dave Bromley led all
scorers with 23 Muskingum
markers.
Wittenberg, behind by six
points early in tbe game,
came back to boost its record
ID Il-l in the OAC South with
its win over Marietta.
The Pioneers jumped out to
a 14-8 leaq with strong
rebounding, but the Tigers
managed ID chip away and
take a 26-22 halftime
advantage and stretch their
edge to !Opoints in the second
period.
Maoietta closed within
three counters with :30 left to
play , but Tom Dunn stepped
[() the free throw line and
sank one to put a Pioneers

win out of reach.

CAN

LARGE

u. S. No._1 Winesap, Homes or Red Delicious

100 Extra
Top Value Stamps
WITH ~URCHASE OF 1 LB.
MORE LEAN SLICED
..........lELICJITESSAN HAM

5 LB. 8 OZ.

TRAY
SOLID GREEN

L8~:'•

MAGIC

BLEACH

PKG.OF:
2 HEADS . :

GAL

TEEN QUEEN OLEO
8 oz.

PArnES

Anderson likes
Reds' chances
DENVER
( UPI )
Cincinnati Reds manager
gparky Anderson says you
have to hit in order ID win
baseball games .
"I'll never put silly things
ahead of hitting, " said the
manager of the wcrld
champion Redsc ·"That's the
No. 1 thing. You can't score
or win without hitting .
"We use a lot of film study,
and it's been very helpfUl. If a
good hitter isn't hitting, it 's
one of two things: either he 's
pulling off the ball or he's
lazy with his hands. The
latter usually means you 've
got a ,tired ballplayer. Most
often the cause of a 'slump Is
that a player Is pulling off the
ball and doesn't realize it.
"My club plays aggressive
baseball and hitting Is our
trademark . We'll be right up
there . aga in this year,
providing we don't have too

·

Anderso n, who was in
Denver · to attend the
Colorado gports Hall of Fame
annual banquet Monday, said
be thinks his Reds could win
another title "if we play well
and get continued good
performances from our key
people.
"To win, you have w have
everything going for you,' he
said. "There are so many
good clubs, headed by the
L.A. Dodgers , a fine team
which was hurt by injuries
last year. Most improved
club is going to be Atlanta .
· They had to do some
wholesale trading, and it has
helped them."
A record 1,300 persons
a !tended the 12th annua 1
banquet as Pat Panek, Harry
Carlson , J&lt;ie "AWful" Coffee
and the' late Dr. Erviln Hinds
were Inducted Into the
Colorado Sports Hall of
Fame.

CRIS.CO

STALKS

Tigers tied for
top in the South

With 17 points, Dunn was
· thegame'shlghscorer . Mitch
Miracle put in 14 (llarkers for
Marietta.
Wittenberg is ~ow 16-2 on
the season. Marietta 's record
stands at 9:12, 3-7 in the
conference.
SEOAL FRESHMEN
Led by D.ave Frye's 16
Team
W L P OP
points
and Tim Shetzer's 14,
Loga n
10 2 602 374
A thens
9 2 475 367 Wooster 's Fighting Scots
Gallipolis
9 2 445 355 never trailed in rolling to
Waverly
6 5 369 362
Me igs
2 8 297 d23 victory over Mount Union.
J ackson
2 8 313 429
Except at the outset of the
Wellston
0 11 29 9 490
TOTALS
38 31 2800 2800 game, the Purple Raiders,
Monday ' s results :
paced by Don Friedrich's 18
LOQli!O S.t Wellston 13
markers,
never got closer
Athens 5.t Mei gs 32
than five points to Wooster.
waverly 27 Jackson 21
G ~ltipoli s - Open
The Scots now own a 5-4
Thursday ' s games :
rerord in the legaue and a 12A lhen s a l Ga lli polis
Ja c kson a t Me igs
10 mark for the season.
Waverly at Wellston
Mount is now 4.0 in the many injuries."
Logan -· Open

sa

GOLDEN ISLE
FROZEN

LB.

6f..60 in overtime . ..

GAME~

$119
LB.

-

Richardson had eight points
in the quarter, ending it with
a bank shot at the buzzer . The
game reme)ined close. during
the third period as the score
stood , 36-30 going into the
final eight min utes.
Richardson finished as the
game 's top scorer with IB
the fourth quarter.
Metzner and Baylor led the
Bobcats with IS points each,
Kyger Creek sank 20 of 47
field goal attempts for 42 pet.
and IS of 20 free throws .
Hannan hit 13 or 19 at the foul
line . Kyger Creek grabbed 36
rebciUids with Baylor getting
21.

SPARE RIBS

LB.

"'wned &amp; Operated
9y Loca I People

)

shooting of se nior guard
W ayne
Richardson.

' l-4- 6 ; M c Donald 1'0-2 ; Cooper
4-0 -8 ; Jon es 1-0 -2. TOTALS 27 9-63 .
'

Cheiltains

FRESH
PORK

Store Hours: ,
Monday -Fri. 9-8
Saturday 9-9
Sunday 11-S

Waverly nips Jackson
Steve Shoemaker 's two
charity tosses with 36 seconds
remaining and one by Chuck
Thompson with nine seconds
left in · the game carried
Waverly to a thrilliqg 65.03
Southeastern Ohio League
victory over visiting Jackson
Tuesday night.
The Tiger win snapped
Jackson's four-game winni~g
streak. Waverly is now 10-7 .
overHll and 8-5 inside the
league. Jackson is 6-11
overall and 4-9 in the loop .
Waverly led 21-19 after
one periOd. It was 33-all
during halftime. Waverly led
48-45 going into the final
period.
Chuck Thompson' s goa l
with 1:24 left put Waverly

5- The Dolly Se!Jtlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Feb.

JOAN OF ARC
.·

FOR

FANCY RED

FOLGER'S COFFEE

KIDNEY
BEANS

ALL

DIAMOND

ENGLISH WALNUTS

PKG.

'

,,

~

.

GRINDS

2-LB.
CAN

30 oz.

--

--·w-- ....-- .. ........

~

•

•

~

WITH PURCHASE OF A
3 BANQUET
9 OZ. MINI PIES
GOOD FEB. 11-14

100 Extra
Top Value
Stamps
.
'

WITH PURatASE OF
GALLON VALVOLINE
ANTI.fREEZE

-' ..

..M-,.
•

1
Extra .
Top Value Stamps

'

.

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, F•' " ,o,.

,., arl &amp; Locu1t Sf.
Middleport, Ohio

Bobcats Cf!P
•
fifth wzn

•

Senior forward Bill Metzner carried the hot hand
dw-ing the fourtl. quarter
Tuesday night as the Kyger
Creek Bobcats defeated host
Hannan , W. Va. 55-45.
The vicl()ry was th e Bobcats filth of the season, the
most wins by a KC cage team
since the 1969-70 season. That
year, John Sang's Bobcats
finished wi th a 6-13 slate.
Coach Keith Carter's
Bobcats. 5-11 this year, have
Symmes Valley and Buffalo,
W. Va . le!l on their regular
season schedule.
Tuesday night, the Bobca ts
led all the way but had to
fight off a late rally by Coach
Bo Napora 's Wildcats .
During the franti c fourth
period, the Bobcats led 42-39
with 2:53 remaining when
senior Greg Hill converted
IDw foul shots to cut the lead
ID 42-41.
With 2:17left, the Bobcats'
Ralph Baylor connected at
the charity stripe giving KC a
three-poin t lead . From that
point on, Metzner dominated
play connecting on a reserve
layup, a jWJior and ·foul shot.
Little jWJior guard Mitch
Salem added the final two
points on two foul shots.
Kyger Creek jumped into a
14.,1\lead at the end of the first
stanza on the sholting of
Baylor and Doug Sands.
Baylor had eight points while

Sands canned four .
Hannan pulled within five
points at the half behind "the

Hann an

ca ptured · the

Kyger Cre e k l55J - Sa nds .
2-2-6 : Met zn er , 7 -1-15 ; Arm br us ter , l -2-8 : Lu cas. 4 1-9 ;
Sa lem, 0 -2-2; and Baylo r , 4 715 . TOTALS 20 -15· 55 .
Hannan, W. Va . 145) Richardson , 8-2-18 ; Villa r s , J .
2-8 ; HilL 1-4-6 , Bl !!ke , 0 -2 -2 ;
Edmond s, 2-0 4 ; Chapman . 13-5
and
Chapman
1-0 -2. TOTALS 16- ll-45 .

By quarters :
Kyge r Creek
· Hann an

14 9 13 19- 55
8 10 12 15- 45

Reserv es- Hannan H KC

26

ahead , 60-59. Shoemaker_'s
two charity tosses at the :36
mark upped Waverly 's lead
to 64-59. Jackson bounced
back with goals by Marty
Cooper and George Schmid in
the final 30 seconds, and had
the ball after Thompson's last
free throw but couldn't get a
shot off during the final nine
seconds of play.
Jackson hit 27 of 63 field
goal attempts for 47 percent.
JHS was nine of 14 at the foul
line . The lronmen ·had 36
r ebounds, nine by Bob .
Holsinger .
Waverly is at Wellston
Friday. Jackson will host
Meigs.

Box score :
'

JACK SON (6 3) - O sbor ne
3-0 -6 ; Co nro y 3 -2-8 ; Schmid 9 -

0-18 ; Morrow 5 -3 -13; Dorsey

romp, 74-49
Logan rolled over Wellston
74-49 in a Southeastern Ohio
League contest at Hilltop
Court Tuesday night.
J'he victory left the Chiefs
with a 7·9 season record and
5-7
co nference
mark .
Wellston dropped to 3-12 on
the year and 2-11 in the
leag ue .
The Chiefs led 15-11, 26-17
and 49-31 at the quartermarks.
Mike McBroom · netted 19
points for the winners . Randy
Peoples had 12· for WellsiDn .
Logan hit 28 of 56 field goal
attempts for' 50 percent and
canned IB of 25 charity losses.
The ChiefS: picked off 35
rebounds, nine by Tim
Mulholland. Wellston hit 20 of
52 field goal attempts for 38.5
percent. The Rock~ts were
nine of 14 at the foul line and
had 22 reboWJds .
Logan is at Iron'ton Friday.
Wellston will host Waverly.
Bos score:
WELLSTON ( 4~1 - G ill J. J.
3; Barnett 2 0-4; McKinniss 3
0-6 ; Peoples 5-2-12; Arnold 2-

4-8 ; Gilliland 11 -0-B; Swong er
1-0-2 ; Derrow 1-0-2 ; Watts 1 2
4. TOTALS 20·9-49 .
LOGAN (74}- Clark l -1-3;
Lanning 0-4 -4 ; Mulholllln d 1-

0-2; Se e! 2-0-4; Davidson 1-0-

2; McBroom 9-1-19; Myers 22-6 ; Russell 2-0-4: Hawk 6-719 ; Gasser 2-0-4; Braglin 2-J7 . TOTALS 28 -18 -14.

Score · by quarters :
Wellston
· Logan
Reserves

11 6 14 18- 49
IS 11 2.3 25- 74
-

Logan

61

Wellston J 9 .

Property
Tr~sfers
•

N'orman' J . Schoonover to
Margie E . Schoonover 1 .77A.,
Chester.
Elizabeth Howell Templeton, Edward TempleiDn to
Ada Bays 1-10 A. Syracuse.
Clara Jean Bradford to
Gail Eldred Bradford, Sec.
35, Lebanon.
Roy Franklin Riffle, Frona
K.. Riffle, Frona Kathryn
Riffie to Roger L. Bissell,
Mary S . . Bissell 31r, A.,
Chester.
Michael· L. Wright, Sharon
K. Wright to Clarence M.
Swauger,
Mamie
E.
Swauger, Lot 27, Middleport.

.~'J\NGS

points, six of those came in

reserve contest, 32-26. Fugate
led the Wildcats with 10 while
Ed Mollohan toped the
Bobkittens with 11.

WAVERLY
(65)
Holsin ger 5-3-13; Dav_ena 3-0•
-6 ; ThompSo n 8- 1·- 17 ; Whal~y
2 -0 -4 ;
Workman
5 -0: l o:
Shoemaker 0-2-2; Fyff e 4-2
10 ; S. ThQm as ld -3 . TOTALS:
28 -9-6.5 .

Score by quarters :
Jac kson
19 14 12 18- 63
Wa\l'erly
21 12 15 17- 65
Reserves Jac kson 38.

Waverly

56

Cage standings
ALL

TEAM
Whee l ersburg

W L P

0 104 1 783
2 890 769
6 955 867
7 925 942
s 882 853
6 9 19 B 8~
Meigs
B 9 9 27
So uth Poin t
8 9 1061 1052
Loga n
7 9 943 10 15
Athen s
6 10 762 82.11
Jac kso n
6 11 943 945
Wellston
J 12 788 923
Non - SEOAL results :
P 1. Pleasa n t 57 Park e r sb ur g

Ironton
Ga llipoli s
wav e rly
P-ortsmouth·
Pt . Pl easan t ,

15
14
11
10
9
9

OP

90

56

South Point 88 Fair land 65

SEOAL VARSITY
TEAM
W L P

IrOnton

11
10
8
6

709
Gallipo li s
749
Waverly
679
Athens:
558
Logar
s
71 5
Meig s
5 8 76 1
Jackson
4 9 700
Wellston
2 11 67 1
TOT A'LS
51 51 5542
Tuesday ' s results :
2
J
5
6
7

OP

608
65 1
693
582
693
778

733
804
5542

Gal l ipol i s 59 IrontOn .119
Meigs 5 1 Athens .115
Waverly 65 Jackson 63
Lo gan 74 Wells to n 49

SEOAL RESERvEs
W L P OP
II 2 649 427
10 3 562 475

TEAM

Ironton
Wave rly

9
8

539 425
528 466
J a c k son
4 9 d90 607
GallipOliS
3 10 d8 3 605
Meigs
J 10 46 4 528
Wellston
3 10 514 666
TOTALS
51 51 4199 4199
Tuesday's results :
Ir onto n 49 Gallipolis 35
Meigs 36 Athens Jd
Waverly
Jackson 36
Logan 61 Well sto n 39
Friday's games :
Gallipol is at Athe n s
Logan at Iron to n
Meig s at Jec kson
Waver l y at Wellston
South Point at Chesap eake
P ort smouth at Mason , Ky .
Athen s
Logan

3
4

ORANGE
JUICE

6 Ol.$139
6.CANS

GOOD WITH GUN, TOO Cincinnati Reds star pitcher Will McEnaney (standing. far
right ), famed for his strong right arm throwing a baseball was Bob Evans ' guest at a
hunting party this past weekend on the Bob Evans Farm, Rio Grande. This was
McEnaney's first time grouse hunting, and he bagged the first ruffed grouse he raised I rom
the brush, a feat for even an experienced grouse hunter. McEnaney allowed as haw
"Baseball's my first love, hunting's illy second." Other members of the hiUiting party were
ilmeeling, left ) David l..effel, McEnaney's brother-in-law ; Gary Waits ; (standing, 1-r) State
Senior Ganoe Protector Ken Tomlinson ; Charles McKean, (unknown ), Bob Evans and
McEnaney .

Ice time makes a champion
UPI Executive Sports Editor
INNSBRUCK ,
Austria
1UP!) - John CUrry was a
good figure skater when he
lived in Britain, but the day
he decided to shift to the
United States two years ago,
he became a potential
Olympic chanopion.
Figure skating people point
out that CUrry has wQn the
European championship
since moving to New York ,
and Denver, where he trains
Wlder Carlo Fassi, and that
be probably will be crowned
Olympic champion tonight.
CUrry , 26, has no doubts .
"The best move I ever
made," he said . "I get all the
ice time I need thanks to the
money provided by my

sponsor, and fhat- ice timeNavaree of West Germany
was the purpose or the led after the compulsories but
move.''
she has no tradition as a free
Curry and Canada's Toller skater and the title was
Cranston are probably the expected to be contested by
best free skatefll in the field, Dorothy and Dianne de
and with the free skating Leeuw, the reigning world
counting 50 per cent of the champion Erom Calirornia ,
marks, the BriiDn should representing HollaDd. Dianne
.hang on to beat Russia's . is third .
Sergei Volkov, the reigning
Other finals down for
world champion.
decision wer·e the men's 5,()()()..
On the other hand, Dorothy meter speed skating, the 40Hamill is as American as kilometer biathlon relay and
apple pie and she probably the women's slalom .
will win the next U.S. gold
With the exception of the
Friday when the wOmen's slalom, in which the U.S. was
figure skating is concluded. given an outside chance of a
Dorothy, of Riverside, medal, Americans were not
Conn., was in second place expected
to
figure
after
Tuesda y's
thr ee prominently.
compulsory figures . Isabel de
It will be up to Lindy
Cochran to uphold the
tradition of the skiing
Eochrans of Richmond , VI.
She does not appear w have
the class, but the Olympics
are a great leveler . It's one
race and anything can
happen,
conference and 7-11 overall.
There is also Cindy Nelston
Oberlin 's Jimmy Jones of Lutsen, Minn . The
stole the ball near the end of pressure is off her now that
the game and handed it off to she has won an Olympic
freshman Tony Thomas, ivho medal -a bronze in the
scored the final basket in the downhill-and she may come
Yeomen win over BaJdwin- through, although she does
W3llace.
not particularly like slalom
The Yeomen are now 10..7 racing.
on the season, 5-4 lrt
Head Coach. Hank Tauber
conference play . The Yellow said, "I think Cindy and
Jackets slipped to 5-13 overall Lindy both have a very good
and 2.0 in the OAC.
chance. We'll see what
The score was tied 38-38 at happens ."
halftime, but Oberlin pulled
lri the speed skating, Dan
ahead by outrebouncling B-W Carroll or St. Louis held tbe ·
45-38.
best U.S. credentials, but
The game's high scorer they could not compare with
was Dave. Long of Baldwin- the likes of DutChman Hans
Wallace with 26 points. He van Heiden, Victor Varlamov
was also top rebounder with of Russia and Sten Stensen of
13.
Norway.
Merlin Friend sank 22
In the Nordic relay, lhe
points and had eight rebcunds U.S. 'will have Bill Koch of
for Oberlin.
Guilford, Vt., to pace them,
Capital 's Crusaders but with the other members
connected on 21 of 28 foul of the team two classes below
shots,
com_p ared . with him, there iS no way the team
Denison 's six of 12, and led all can challenge the Russians,
the way to a victory over the Finns and East Germans .
Big Red.
Tuesday's highlight was
Napoleon Allen, a 6-4 fresh- the silver medal won by Dan
man, led the Capital attack lnunerfall of Madison, Wis.,
with l4 points. Ricky lee in the 500-meter speed
added II and Scott Ballinger skating and the stunning 5-4
10. Denison's Gil Spencer also hockey upset registered by
scored 10 )lliints.
the United States over
Cap is now 13-10 overall and Finland , which put the
3-0 in the league. The Big Red Americans in line for a
is 9-10
for all I games and 4.0 bronze medaL
.
agarnst OAC opponents.

STOKLEY

PEAS
3 LB.

Ohio College
Basketball Round-up
United Press International
Wittenberg is tied with
Otterbein for first place in the
Ohio Conference South today
by virtue of the Tigers' 53-48
vi c~Dry over Marietta and the
Cardinals' 67-$) defeat at the
hands of Muskingum.
Elsewhere in the OAC
Tuesday ni ght, Wooster
defeated MoWlt Union 118-06,
Oberlin beat BaldwinWallace 75-72 and Capital
downed Denison 65-48.
Also, Central State whipped
Defiance 79-64, Cedarville
topped Urbana BJ-78 and
Hiram outlasted Allegheny
Muskingum, powered by
Greg Riggar 's 14 points and
Larry Hall's 13, outscored
Otterbein 11-2 in a dosing
three-minute period to break
open the game.
The loss ·was Otterbein's
first in the league, against
eight wins, and left the Cards
17-4 overall.
The Muskies ·are now 13.0
on the season and 6-4 in the
OAC.
Dave Bromley led all
scorers with 23 Muskingum
markers.
Wittenberg, behind by six
points early in tbe game,
came back to boost its record
ID Il-l in the OAC South with
its win over Marietta.
The Pioneers jumped out to
a 14-8 leaq with strong
rebounding, but the Tigers
managed ID chip away and
take a 26-22 halftime
advantage and stretch their
edge to !Opoints in the second
period.
Maoietta closed within
three counters with :30 left to
play , but Tom Dunn stepped
[() the free throw line and
sank one to put a Pioneers

win out of reach.

CAN

LARGE

u. S. No._1 Winesap, Homes or Red Delicious

100 Extra
Top Value Stamps
WITH ~URCHASE OF 1 LB.
MORE LEAN SLICED
..........lELICJITESSAN HAM

5 LB. 8 OZ.

TRAY
SOLID GREEN

L8~:'•

MAGIC

BLEACH

PKG.OF:
2 HEADS . :

GAL

TEEN QUEEN OLEO
8 oz.

PArnES

Anderson likes
Reds' chances
DENVER
( UPI )
Cincinnati Reds manager
gparky Anderson says you
have to hit in order ID win
baseball games .
"I'll never put silly things
ahead of hitting, " said the
manager of the wcrld
champion Redsc ·"That's the
No. 1 thing. You can't score
or win without hitting .
"We use a lot of film study,
and it's been very helpfUl. If a
good hitter isn't hitting, it 's
one of two things: either he 's
pulling off the ball or he's
lazy with his hands. The
latter usually means you 've
got a ,tired ballplayer. Most
often the cause of a 'slump Is
that a player Is pulling off the
ball and doesn't realize it.
"My club plays aggressive
baseball and hitting Is our
trademark . We'll be right up
there . aga in this year,
providing we don't have too

·

Anderso n, who was in
Denver · to attend the
Colorado gports Hall of Fame
annual banquet Monday, said
be thinks his Reds could win
another title "if we play well
and get continued good
performances from our key
people.
"To win, you have w have
everything going for you,' he
said. "There are so many
good clubs, headed by the
L.A. Dodgers , a fine team
which was hurt by injuries
last year. Most improved
club is going to be Atlanta .
· They had to do some
wholesale trading, and it has
helped them."
A record 1,300 persons
a !tended the 12th annua 1
banquet as Pat Panek, Harry
Carlson , J&lt;ie "AWful" Coffee
and the' late Dr. Erviln Hinds
were Inducted Into the
Colorado Sports Hall of
Fame.

CRIS.CO

STALKS

Tigers tied for
top in the South

With 17 points, Dunn was
· thegame'shlghscorer . Mitch
Miracle put in 14 (llarkers for
Marietta.
Wittenberg is ~ow 16-2 on
the season. Marietta 's record
stands at 9:12, 3-7 in the
conference.
SEOAL FRESHMEN
Led by D.ave Frye's 16
Team
W L P OP
points
and Tim Shetzer's 14,
Loga n
10 2 602 374
A thens
9 2 475 367 Wooster 's Fighting Scots
Gallipolis
9 2 445 355 never trailed in rolling to
Waverly
6 5 369 362
Me igs
2 8 297 d23 victory over Mount Union.
J ackson
2 8 313 429
Except at the outset of the
Wellston
0 11 29 9 490
TOTALS
38 31 2800 2800 game, the Purple Raiders,
Monday ' s results :
paced by Don Friedrich's 18
LOQli!O S.t Wellston 13
markers,
never got closer
Athens 5.t Mei gs 32
than five points to Wooster.
waverly 27 Jackson 21
G ~ltipoli s - Open
The Scots now own a 5-4
Thursday ' s games :
rerord in the legaue and a 12A lhen s a l Ga lli polis
Ja c kson a t Me igs
10 mark for the season.
Waverly at Wellston
Mount is now 4.0 in the many injuries."
Logan -· Open

sa

GOLDEN ISLE
FROZEN

LB.

6f..60 in overtime . ..

GAME~

$119
LB.

-

Richardson had eight points
in the quarter, ending it with
a bank shot at the buzzer . The
game reme)ined close. during
the third period as the score
stood , 36-30 going into the
final eight min utes.
Richardson finished as the
game 's top scorer with IB
the fourth quarter.
Metzner and Baylor led the
Bobcats with IS points each,
Kyger Creek sank 20 of 47
field goal attempts for 42 pet.
and IS of 20 free throws .
Hannan hit 13 or 19 at the foul
line . Kyger Creek grabbed 36
rebciUids with Baylor getting
21.

SPARE RIBS

LB.

"'wned &amp; Operated
9y Loca I People

)

shooting of se nior guard
W ayne
Richardson.

' l-4- 6 ; M c Donald 1'0-2 ; Cooper
4-0 -8 ; Jon es 1-0 -2. TOTALS 27 9-63 .
'

Cheiltains

FRESH
PORK

Store Hours: ,
Monday -Fri. 9-8
Saturday 9-9
Sunday 11-S

Waverly nips Jackson
Steve Shoemaker 's two
charity tosses with 36 seconds
remaining and one by Chuck
Thompson with nine seconds
left in · the game carried
Waverly to a thrilliqg 65.03
Southeastern Ohio League
victory over visiting Jackson
Tuesday night.
The Tiger win snapped
Jackson's four-game winni~g
streak. Waverly is now 10-7 .
overHll and 8-5 inside the
league. Jackson is 6-11
overall and 4-9 in the loop .
Waverly led 21-19 after
one periOd. It was 33-all
during halftime. Waverly led
48-45 going into the final
period.
Chuck Thompson' s goa l
with 1:24 left put Waverly

5- The Dolly Se!Jtlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Feb.

JOAN OF ARC
.·

FOR

FANCY RED

FOLGER'S COFFEE

KIDNEY
BEANS

ALL

DIAMOND

ENGLISH WALNUTS

PKG.

'

,,

~

.

GRINDS

2-LB.
CAN

30 oz.

--

--·w-- ....-- .. ........

~

•

•

~

WITH PURCHASE OF A
3 BANQUET
9 OZ. MINI PIES
GOOD FEB. 11-14

100 Extra
Top Value
Stamps
.
'

WITH PURatASE OF
GALLON VALVOLINE
ANTI.fREEZE

-' ..

..M-,.
•

1
Extra .
Top Value Stamps

'

.

�r -----------'-""1 Cage scores
1
Pro
1

6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. II, 1976

f .. 1St . d•
~ !
aJl IU~S
•

1

I

• ' I

I

:
•
"
1

Lincetsler ,, Lanesv ille 52
Newark 67 Ch i ll i cothe S6
Mar l ttta 51 Upper Arlington

I

~ ~~nesv i ll e

·

'

DiVISIOn
• • al.

•
"
:
•
:. '

Atlanti c Division
W. l. Pet. G8

Boston
Bu ffal o
Ph il adelphia
New Yor k

35 l.t .7 14
32 21 .604
31 21 .596

"a '
Centrai::.'.L.'~_·•. ~. \f,.
?I. .

? ,A .

ratmg"S noted

s
51 "1
111

M ISS I ON , Ka n . f UPII _
N CAA
College
D i vision
rat ings :
0 ivisi on II
Team
Pts .
1, Ph i ladelph ta Te-..:tile ! Pa ,)
(17 2 120
2. Kenlucky Slate ( 16-J l 97
3. T enn essee St at e ( 17-4 ) 85
4 . Morgan State (Md . )
( 16 J) 73
5, N icMo ll s Sta l e I La .J
11 8
2 ~ ~3
6 . W i n s ton , Sa l e m
Stat e
(N .C. l
( 17-3) • 59
7. F lo r ida Tech
( 15 ·3} 58
8. North A labam a ( 17 Jl 49
{1 3,4} 39
9. Rollins (P ia .J
IO . V i rgi n i aState
(14]1 35
11 , North Dakota
115 ..4 ) 2a
12 Evansvi lle ( In d . )
( 14 -.

~

G•B"

-

•

Cleveland
19 22 .569
1
Washington
29 23 .558
1
Houston
25 24 .510 J
1
i.
New Orleans
25 25 ,500 3 )
Atlan ta
25 28 .472 5
Western Conference
\
Midwest Div ision
W . L . Pet . GB :
Milwaukee
21 31 .. &lt;104
•
• • Oetroil
20 30 .400
: ... Kansas Citv
19 35 .352 J
16 36 .308 5
•
CMicago
•
Pa ci f ic Divi si on
'f "
W. l. Pet . GB
Golden St at e
37 15 .712
'
Los ~ligeles
27 21 .500 11
'
Portland
23 28. .451 131 1
•
.,.
'r

•t
~

!

~ ~~~t~~~-

:

~~ ~; ::;~ l!

6)

• •
Tuesday 's Results
.,
Atlanta 111 Kansas City 89
~
Buffa lo 115 Wash ingt on 105
,
Ph iladelph ia as Chicago 84
r
New York 104 M il waukee 97
New Orlns 130 Golden St 124 ot
,
Los Angeles 106 De troit BB
jl"
Wednesday ' s Games
•
Milwaukee at New York

z

:

~~~:~~ ~'; ~~~~~j~

:

··~

:
•
•
•

~

•
ABA Standings
.. By United Press Intern ational
""
W. L. Pet. GB
• Denver
38 12 .760
: New Yor k
32 19 627 61 1
San Antonio
29 20 .592
81 1

r•
~ = ~~%~~ky

~~ ~~

3)

r

• , Portland at PMitadelphia
" • New Or leans at Seattle
' ' "'"
Thursday's G'ames
~ :, Ch icago at Cleveland
i&gt;
Por tlan d at Washington
~ ..._ Atlanta at Go lden State

:n:

~g

• " St . L ouis
23 31 .426 17
• • Virginia
a 43 . 157 30 1 2
111 •
Tuesda y's Resu lt
'"S t . L ou is 127 Indiana 126
~ .
Wednesday's Gam es
• • st Louis at New York
• Denver at San Anto nio
•.
Thursday ' s Game s
::
I No games scheduled )

C:

~

., •
.. ..
~

NHL Standings
B y United Press International
campbell conference
~
Pilfrick D ivision
..
w. L. T. Pts .. gf ga
•
PM il adelpMi 33 10 10 76 234 147
'"'
NY Islanders 28 15 10 66 207 130
.,. A tl anta
25 24 8 sa 184 168
~ NY Rangers 20 2~ _6. 46 175 223
~
Smythe Dtvts1on
~
W. L T. Pts. gf ga
"'
Chicago
23 15 16 62 166 146
•
Vancouver
21 23 .10 52 177 183
~ .. st . Lou is
19 27 B 46167 197
"t .. Minneso ta
16 33 4 36 130 18a
: !:' KansasC itY 12 35 6 ~ 01 29228
••
Wales -Conference.
.! Norris Division
~".:,
W; LT. Pts . gf ga
~ * Montrea l
40 7 8 88 2341 15
~ • Los Ange les 28 24 4 60 184 186
"'
Pittsburgh
22 25 7 51 216 211
•
Detroit
1830 7 431482.07
wasn ington
5 44 7 17 150 28 1
Adams Division
w. L. T. Pts. gt ga
33 11 9 75 209 154
:
Boston
•
Buffa lo
30 15 9 69 23 1 162
.,
Toronto
23 20 11 57 191 18 4
•
Californ ia
19 29 6 44 161 183
•
Tuesday 's Results
Montre"'l 6 St. L ouis 1
Los Ange les 2 Washington 2
va n cou ver J N Y Isl anders 2
~
's Games
,• ToronWedf'lesday
to at At lanta
• Pittsburgh
at Cal ifo r nia
~.
Detroit at BuHalo
• Los Angeles at Chi Cago
Bost on at M ir:mesota
Thur'sday •·s Garnes
NY Rangers ·at PMihadelphi.: o
NY' Islander s at j{ansas Ci ty
~ Vancouver
at Mon treal
••

••

••
•
•
'"
:•
•

••
-~
C
:

WHA Stand ing s
;. .. By Uniled Press International
"'~ •
East
.., ""
w. L. T . Pt s. gf ga
' New Engln d 25 25 5 55 179 188
~ Cleve land
21 27 5 47 181 19 3
Cinc
inna
ti
22
1 45 197 233
~ lndianapols 21 30
30 2 44 148 164
West
W. L. T, Pts . gf ga
Houston
34 18 0 68 218 17a
Phoenix
26 20 6 58 198 176
Minnesota
26 22 4 56 1a3 189
San Diego
26 24 4 56 212 192

=

41
l l.Union ( N .Y .l
( 11-41 3.7
12. Mansfield State I Pa . l (13 -·
11 )
30
13 . Augustan! { Ill. )

•

6)

15. Miles (Ala . )
C16 -6 l 12
Others ;
Boston
St ate :
Ca l vin
(Mich . ) ;
Cornel l
( Ia . ) ; Doan e (Neb .): ·Glass .
boro St at e (N .J . ); G r ove City
{ Pa ); H pmi ll o n IN . y _.);
Il li nois · Be n edic tin e;
LeMo y n e -Owen
(Ten n . ) ;
Lyn chb urg (Va . J; Oneon1a
( N Y. / ;
R. e nns -e laer
Polyt ec hnic I ns titut e IN .Y .);
RMode
I sla nd
Co l leg e;
Rochester
In s t i t ut e
of
T ecM nology (N .Y .); Suf-fol k
( Mass ); Transy lvania {Ky . );
Was h ing to n ah d L ee (Va . ) ;
Wes t f ield State IMass .J:
York (N .Y . J.

Canad ian
w. L. T. Pts. gf ga
Win nipeg
38 19 1 77 245 168
Quebec
33 17 4 70 242 209
Calgary
27 23 3 57 202 179
Edm onton
20 3&lt;1 3 43 193 243
Tor on to
15 33 5 35 218 266
)( -Ottawa
14 26 1 29 134 172
X· Team d isba nded
Tue sday's Re su lts
Calgary 4 Toronto 3
Minnesota 6 San Di ego 3
Wednes day's Games
Quebec at W inni peg
Ci ncinnati at Clevelanc:t
Phoenix at Ind ianapol is
Mi nnesota a t San Diego
Thur s day's Games
Quebec at Minnes ota
Houston a t f:)hoenix

'

RACINE - Coach Howie
Caldwell's Southern Freshmen picked ·u p two wins in

:

three days by defeatin g
~ Kyger Creek and Hannan• Trace .
~
Saturday at Racine , the
: hosts' well-balanced scoring
: attack proved too much for
· ~ Kyger Creek as the Tornados
~ came out on top , 57-40.
:.Southern led all the way.
4 ~ The hosts were hea~ed by
~ Tim Brinager's II points. Jim
• O'Brien had 10 and Dwight
: Hill nine. The team hit 12-17
: free throws.
~ · Kyger was led by Keigh
• Tyler 's big 18 markers, while
Luke Amos tossed in 12. They
~ canned 6-16 free tosses.
Quarter scores: '·

.

: Southern
20 II 14 13--57
• Kyger Creek 6 10 10 14-40
: ; Monday night, also at
.; : Racine, The Tornados stayed
; ~ in stride as they sent the
~ • Hannan-Trace
Wiidki !tens
••
home on the wrong end of a
• ;64-35 score. Once again, the
: : hosts were never threatened.
: · Southern again had a
• balanced scoring attack, led
: ' by Hill and O'Brien with 10
; 'apiece. Every Tornado broke
£:into the scoring coiwnn. They
~ 'hit 4-8 free throws.
• ' Rick Clary led Hannan·
• •Trace with 10 points, Paul
: :Schaeffer and Alan Waugh
: :each had eight The team hit .
· ; only 7 of 20 free tosses.
; ·All three teams wm see
%action in the SV AC Freshman
:~ Tourney at Eastern, Feb. 16• 21.
: Quarter scores :
• Southern
17 16 13 16-64
':.Hannan-Trace 5 10 8 12- 35

t•

.

•

"

.

MEN'S
HOUSE
SUPPERS
MEN'S
ALL
DRESS
MARKED
SHOES
DOWN

PLACE: SHOPPERS MART ·
MASON, W. VA•

SLING BAGS.
VALUE

•' .

~

•

INFANTS &amp; LADIES
FASHION BOOTS t

ONLY

VALUES TO 17.95

'2000

3 lbs. Cube Steak
------------~----· -FISH- . ·

HEADLESS SAGGER••••••• ,......... .'~~. 5:~
(Limited CHANNEL CAT•••••••••••••••• ~b;.6 ~
Supply) BLACK BASS ••••••••••••••••• !~·. 69~

TEENS

TUBE SOX

SIZES

9 to 12

Din Thompson Ford
Bowling Leaeue .
week of Feb . J , _1976

sox

NO . 3

6 to 11

2 PRS.

•

JNFANrs TO TEENS

2

BOYS &amp;GIRLS

DRESS SHOES

VALUES TO

'2
'3

..

•

20

34
34

·'22
22

4
32

24

3

No . 12

32
30
30

22

24

RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE
992 -3502

Pomerov. Ohio

Open 8-5 Mon. lhru Sat. Closed Sunday

..

..

Team

wu

11 . Harold t..ookado

hiOh

tor Team 1 wltl't 4149

pins and Te1m 11 forfeit .
Team 16 took 8 points from
Team 3. Bill aechttl was high
tor Team 16 with -491 pins an~
Jan Robinson was high for

•"
..'
•

GLADLY

~85

pins .

Team 10, Jack Ferauson was
high for.TIIm t2 wilh 511 pins
1
and • · .Jenks was high for
r .. m 10 wlttt .tfS pins .

s

rea·rn took 6 polntl from
Tllm .. lurl Cook was high
for Tea.;, 1J_,wnh Sl5 pins and

L.

p~rrlck

was h1gh lor Teem

4 wl"' 492 pins .

•

Team 13 took 6 points from
Teem lS: () 1 RoaCh was high
for Team 13 Witt\ •tO p lf\1 and

ACCEPTED

J . Boyd wao hl9h for Ttom 15

wllh
400 ('"'
· 6 points from
Team
'ook

e. v.

1/

served as the artist's pencil,

shader and chisel.
It would be impossible to
soy from what period your
picture c&lt;rmes but it is considered a desirable collector's item today.
Send your questions to
Today's Treasures in care. of
this newspaper. Questions of
a general interest will be
answeretl in this column .
However, monetary appraisals wiU not be given.

the inside of the bus with
glass and literally covering
everyone aboard with slivers
d glass from two broken
windows.
Driver Emerson Corbin
pulled arowtd the corner and
slopped. The team coaches
and cheerleaders embarked
into the front lawns of two
nearby houses .
Trainer Bo~by Cornwell
and Manager Pat O'DonneU,
along with coaches Buddy
Moore and Norm Persin,
administered first aid
treatment lo the two most

Ironton cage Coach Buddy
Bell said, "This was done by

long be remembered here."
Nameth continued ~ " We

shall make every effort to
find out who did this and they
will be taken care of effectively by our administration . We will not let
this thing pass and be
forgotten , because your kids
were injured, and our pride In
uur City is at .a low ebb right
now. I . assure you, we will
know soon who the guilly
persons are and 'they will be
dealt with severely. "
Coach Beii, his staff. and
Mr. Nameth personaii¥
wanted the pe9ple of
Gallipolis to kn ow how sorry
they were over the Incident
and their deep concern for the
well-being of the injured
students was born out by
their constant presence at the
scene and later at the
h&lt;&gt;;pital.
The GARS Pep Club Bus
was the first to be hit with
rocks thrown .from a
darkened alley two · blocks
from the multi-million 4oilar
Tiger complex.
The Gallipolis City Schools
bus carrying the reserve

'·

w ith 525 pin s .
Georgia Cook had h ig h
gam t for the ladles with 201
pins and Jan Robinson (s ~b)
had h igh series with -485 pms .
Ralph Johnston had high
game tor the men with 208
pins and Jack Mink had high
series with 561 pins .
Other h i gh games and
strl&amp;!. bowled were Burt Cook
20 1-535; carlile oew i rt &lt;subl
50 2" Dave Holley 505 , ~ack
Ferguson 511 , Joe Will 525 .
Georgia Cook received h er
Bicent~nnlal
pat c h from
Skyline Lanes tor Mer first 200

severely

game .
Thur'sday Afternoon
Swlngen low lint

Lugue

·Feb. 5,1976

Void At.., Sot., Feb. 1... 1
Subject to AppUutbl• Sroe. &amp; LHIII

injured ,

Cost Cutters Help
Trim Your
Food

~

Flour

s~~·sac
With Coupon

11•11 1

c",.. W1tlt $10 or More,.,,.. . .

Void Aft•r Sot., feb . 14, 1976
Svbjtct to AppliCCibl• Stat. &amp; Local

U.S. Govl. Graded C)la
People's Choice 17- To 23-lb.
First 5-Ribs-7-lnch Cut

(Ron

Whole
RIB ROAST

assistance.

The Pep Club bus had
moved on down one block to a
service station where it was
discovered
that
four
passengers had suffered
minor injuries from flymg
glass and from the baseballsize rocks that had been
hurled through the bus
windows.
Coach Bell , Assistant
Principal Nameth, assistant
coaches Lynn Shrikei, and
Phil Rice also arrived upon
the scene, and immediately
directed 'tha.t all injured
persons be taken to Lawrence
General Hospital for treatment.
.
At the hospital, all Gi\HS
injured were. taken immediately to treatment
rooms where the highly efficient staff of dootors and
nur~~es (who were loaded with
other routine emergency
cases) treated lhe GAHS
'students,
Time of arrival at the
h&lt;&gt;;pital was about 9:30p.m.
Students who were not
injured were transferred
from one bus to the Pep Club
• bus which was then escorted
out ' of the city by a police
crui~~er. The team bus went to
the hospital to await the other
students.
Coach Bell per&amp;onally
checked each of the GAHS
students and fans and even
led one reserve cheerleader
into a treatment room for

.........
Pillsbury

c..yriQt 1111 - TH lrlltr Ct. lttal •• Prltlf IIQ ttln1
Sit., .... 14, 1111 i1 111 Wnt V i~llil INitl lttrll, 11111
lllllfhftl Yi'lil11 P'iUnlllt, lr., lttlt,lllt aM Pt•trtJ, Olllt.
Wt resent tH rlittt tt liail •••titttl. IIIONE IIU TD DIAUII,

Jackson .and Diane Ward).
The Iron ton police were
swnmoned and dispatched
two cruisers to the scene.
Meanwhile, GAHS Coach Jim
Osborne, Coach Gene Oesch,
and the Blue Devil varsity
team arrived on the scene in
cars. They also rendered

81-ch

D•l·39c
With Coupon

llnolt I Coupoa WI.. $10 or Mon hr...oo
Void Afttr Sot., feb. 14, 1976

Subitct to Applicable Stat. &amp; Local Tu•

Holly Farms
Grode

Regular

U.S .D.A.

or Chub

10Ki;,,

Ground.Beef

· · Sel..t
Markel Bookol

Grade AA

Lar&amp;e

KTr

£c&amp;S .
o••.

Graae A

73;

Large

treatment of a minor cut on

SALES REPORT
Ohio Valley Li•estock Co.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Feb. 7, 19&lt;6
STOCKER CATTLE
Steers - 250 to 301) ibs 18 to 27, '
300 to 400 lbs 20 to 30.75, 400 to
500 lbs 21 to 31, 500 to 600 lbs 22
to 31.75, 600 to 700 lbs 24 to
33.50, 700 lbs and Over 31. to
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
300 lbs 18 to 21, 300 to 400 ibs
19.50 to 23.50, 400 to 500 ibs 21
to 25, 500 to 600 lbs 21 to 26, 600
to 700 lbs 22 to 27.75, 700 lbs
and Over 24 to 28.50.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULL.') (By The Head) - Stock Cows
110 to 240, Stock Cows and
Calves 165 to 280, Stock Bulls.
170 to 255, Baby Calves 5 to 40.
(By '!be Pound) - Canners
&amp; Cutlllrs Cows 18 to 21.50,
Holstein Cows 24.75 to 27,
Commercial Bulls 24 to 28.50.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 220
ibs to 250 62 to 67.75, Mediwn
200 lbs to 300 50.25 to 61.85,
Culls 16,50 to 30, Pigs and
shoatit 24 to 50.

With Coupon
Utolt 1 Coo,.. Willi $10orM_Pwo_

tier knee that required only a
bond-aid, but his concern
cannot be described.
Also, coaches Rice.· .and
Shrike I and Mr . Nameth
remained at the hospital until
all GAHS students boarded
the bus at 10:45 p.m. to begin
the long, drafty trip home ·
with

two

side

windows

sma,shed.
The Ironton coaches
provided an escort caravan
with their cars for the bus up
to Rt. 52.

Yollow Cling su.., or

Kroger
Poaches
A"""""loCut

Groen
loans

••••

Fresh

HAR!USONVILLE
Mr . and Mrs. Bob Allen of
Lanesville were Sunday
guests of her parentS Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Epple.
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop
are going to attend Eastern
Star meeting at Stockport
Sunday.

Sungolcl
Bread ·
l~lb.

Lea was

$

113 Size

California
Oranges
Each

!:

'feam 12 took 6 points from

D&amp;D .MEATS

The caddy spoon is
valuable and pretty scarce.
We have a picture burned
on a piece of wood. It Is a
fairly well done piece but I
can't lind out anything about
lL Can you help? - S.T.,
WbiHfer, Calif.
You have an example of
pyrography - the art of wood
burning. It was first popular
in the 1840s and has been
revived periodically since
that tlme. Early works were
done with a red hot poker and
required a great deal of
dexterity since the poker

u

Team 3 with

USDA FOOD
STAMPS

cannister.

W L
26
26 · comm . &amp; Savi ngs Bk . 118 42
Johnsons Mkt .26 30 Henderson
103 57
No . 11
J2
t-i~iner•s Bekery
101 59
No . 13
24 32
90 70
22 34 Star lite Inn
6
Burg~r Chef
•
83 77
NO-.
'
1a 38
No.
u
Evelyn's Beauty Shop 81 79
No. 15
:~
B . J , Builders .
79 81 ·
' NO , 7
Rardlns Shoe Center
1a 82
Team 6 took 2 points from Pt
. Pit . Register
78 82
Teem 1. Joyce Rob le was
Johnson 's Mkt.- Pt.
hiOh for Team 1 with 392 PII'!S
.
62 9 B
and Sh'aron TaVf'ney was hl9h Pit
Robbins &amp; Meyers
51 109
ror Team 6 with 458 pins .
Holley Bros . Cons!.
' 36 12,•
Team 2 took 6 points rrom
H igh bowler for Star lite Inn
Tum 14 . Jack Mink wn high
for Team 2 with S6l p ins and Wes Glor i a Whittington with
139-358 . For B . J . Builders
Tom Skinner w:as high tor
was Carol Hannon with 151 ·
Tum 141 with 4152 pins .
·
Team 1 took 1 points from 4Q9. Holley Bros . Con .

~=: ~0

'

12

36

No . 2
No ; 16
No. 4
No . 8

"

w, L

44

No . 5

PRS.

STOCK NO. 544

Standlnu

Tum
1
No.

'1.50 VALUE

MEN'S STROCH
CUSHION SOX

BOWLING

BOYS
THICK CREW

1,0 0
z

Wichita, Kan . Coleman
tamps changed very lilUe in
basic style from the early
1900!1 until the 1940s. However
early models were equipped
with glass shades and those
from the 1930s and '40s had
fluted
parchment
or
decorative paper shades.
Acompany spokesman said
that Coleman' will still repair
these old lamps.
What Is Caddy spoon? Is it
valuable? - B.N. Colorado
Spring, Colo.
A caddy spoon might he
mistaken for a miniature
ladle . lt is about two inches in
length with a large bowl and
short handle. It was designed
for use in a tea cannister or
caddy. The caddy spoon dates
from the early 18th century.
These early examples had
· shell-shaped bowls with a
small hook on the rever~~e
side of the handle so that they
could 1M! fastened inside the

Plea.

the bus windows 1 spraying

man said .

some of our punks who
probably did not even attend
the game. I am terribly sorry
that this should happen to a
group of fine kids like this
from GalllpoUs." He continued "We had this happen
'
Ill our ' bus following our w1ri
over Ashland, Ky . earlier this
year. We know from first
hand experience how these
pe ...le feel. "
Assistant Principal Andrew
Nameth said, "The pe... le in
Gaiilpolis wfll pr oba bly
blame everyone in Ironton for
this incident and they have
every right to be bitter, but
please do not let this isolated
incid~nt hurt
the fine
relationship between the two
schools . We truly enjoy
competing against Gallipolis
and our sorrow and embarrassment over this will

··-b
~:~·~-

BuHered

team and cheerleaders was
also rocked from the same
ioc:ation by as yet unidentified persons.
GAHS Athletic Director Ed
Stewart and Principal James
N. M. Davis were in a car
dlrecUy behind the team bus
when the rocks went through

were taken on tour of the new
structure by the lrontonians
prior to Gallipolis' 59-49
Southeasllln. Ohio League
victory.
Today, Gallipolis school
officials were quick to praise
Ironton officials, bOosters
and fans for their quick
assistance following the
Incident. Those responsible
for last night's incident are
not a true representative of
Ironton's successful athletic
program, on Ironton spokes-

36 .

(

.*j(~-ili'......

-DEAL NO. 2_:_

*500
BUY EARLY
FOR EASTER

•

ONLY

In 1775 the State of
' Mai!S8chll8etts attempted to
secure uniformity of buttons
throughout a large number of
troops. The state decreed that
the buttons be made of
pewlllr with the regimental
number stamped on the face.
Abilve the
regimental
number wu the abbreviation
MAS and below II was REG .
I have a Coleman lamp lhat
Is about 50 yean old. llblnk II
1 bad 1ome elolb maatel• I
collld tile II for an autuary
UghL Dli they still . make
these? - J.O.D., Wiafle,ld,
Kaa.
,
Yes. You can order the~~e
from The Coleman Co .,

LADIES
WHITE PATENT
$~.95

6 lbs. Pork Roast
6 lbs. Pork Chops
2 lbs. Bacon
2 lbs. Sausal!e
6 lbs. Hot Dogs

~iforms ,

STOCK NO. 3235

Photo's by Honey Portraits

2 Fryer Chickens

11
•

10%0FF

PHOTO HOURS: U AM TO 7 PM

3 lbs. Dutch Loaf
3 lbs. Ground.Beef
3 lbs. English Roast

By JEAN BARNES
Judging by the amount of
inail received from " old
bouse owners, there is a
great deal of inlllrest in
restoring these relics from
!he past.
• Th011e of you who requested
ihe address of the Old-House
:JGurnal may write to : The
Old-House Journal, 199
l!erkeley Place, Brooklyn,
fi.Y. 11217.
• OUr old house baa what
ippears to be embossed
lealberelle coverins on the
Jl'all• of tbe ealry and
11alrway. Wbat Ia It and can I
hod II on the market?- G.A.,
lao Aalonfo, Te•.
; It is probably Uncrusta'jValton, popular in the late
1800s. It is similar to linolewn
and was imported from both
England and Belgiwn. It was
~ very durable materiaL It is
no longer available in the
\Jnited States,
; 1 have a pewter button with
Romao numerals oa ft. It has
beea Ia 011r family for several
ceoeratloos. Wbat Is It? - .
8.0., Eliaabelb, N.J.
"This
could
be
a
R evolutionary War
regimental button. It was just
Prior to the Revolutionary
War that buttons were used
as distinguishing marks ori

ALL AMERICAN MADE

9~ Per Subject

Treasure quest

•

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

MEN'S
WORK SHOES

50 lbs.

3

I '

SECOND BIG WEEK
PRICES TO SAVE YOU MONEY

-DEAL NO.l-

.;• wm. two games

r·. ·1

Q.OSED MONDAY

DATE: FRI., FEB. 13

8 lbs. Ground Beef
6 lbs. Chuck Roast
6 lbs. Fryer Chickens
6 lbs. Rib Steaks
2 lbs. Swiss Steaks

--

SAT. 9 to 5

FREEZER STOCK-UP SALE

~

i
••

9

~ ---·-·
.....

lHURS. 12 to 5
FRI. 10 to 8

GIANT
BARGAINS

Diane Ward, Dotty Jones,
Debbie Swisher and Bridgett
Hennessey .
Injured but not treated
were Lisa Niday, varsity
cheerleader and Jim Enyart,
GAHS instructor.
.None of the injuries
required stitches.
The incident was un fortunate in that Ironton
school officials, Tiger
!Wosters Varsity I Club
members and Ironton news
media representatives, went
all out to welcome Gallipolis
fans and players to their
beautiful new facility.
Several Gallipolis officials

..
____ Today 's Treasures

-

STORE HOURS:

No age limi.t
Limit .1 Per Subject
2 Special Per Family
Groups taken at the low

'

sa GaliJa Academy High I
School students and one
GAHS instructor received
minor cuts and bruises from
fiylng glass broken by rocks
thrown at two Gallipolis
school buses In an unfortunate incident following
Tuelday night's GallipolisIronton baskelbali game in
Ironton's new $1.5 million
·sporta center.
: Treated and released at
'Lawrence General Hospital
.by Ironton High School Tiger
;team physician Dr. John Dole
'Were Ron Jackson, a GAHS
reserve player who suffered a
:gu~~ on the bock of his head:

PICK-A-PAIR

PLUS SOc
HANDLING

Price of

Unfortunate rock-throwing
incident mars GAHS victory

SIMON'S

88t

21
( 15-

16

~ Tornado
Frosh
,

I

115 -5 )

7- The Ilally Sentinel, Mlddleport.POOleroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb.!l,1976

the Players Association, .is reserve system.
likely to reject the proposals . The appeal W88 announced
"out of hand " and one in a joint statement which
baseball executive said : "despillllhe dedi! on to
commented, "they won 't get appeal the clubs wilh to
their
down to serious negotlaUng emphasize
detenninatlon
to
continue
untO a week before · spring
serious bargaining.
training."
:
"The clubs are . pr~pared to
The owners announced
Tuesday they plan to appeal offer the Players Association
Judge John W. Oliver's several proposals to the basic
decision upholding Peter agreement, including the reSeitz' arbitration making serve system, in the hope of
Andy Messersmith and Dave narrowing the gap between
McNally free agents. The the two sides and making
owners' position is that the progress !Qward a JrOIIIpl
of
our
arbitraUon panel did not have settlement
differences."
juriBdicUon to deal with the

NEW YORK (UPI) - ASsociaUon.
Major league baseball's
Informed sources,
clubowners are expected to however, said that Marvir
offer several proposals today, Miller, executive director of
including one concerning the
reserve clause. which they
hope wiU bfing about an
agreement with the Players
PRACTICE UNDERWAY
The Senior Citizens Chorus
under the direction of Mrs.
Carrie Neutzli ng has started
Dom Ht11s 85 Cat Luth 08
Ft . L ew is 97 Sa nta Fe 56
practice for an Easter canNorthr idge 84 UC trvne 68
tata, "The Seven Last Words
Ore . Colt . Mw . wash . 63
Pepprdne 87 L yola Cal. 70
of Christ on the Cross" to be
P t. Loma 57 U.S . Inti 52
presented at 2:30 on Palm
Ut ah St. 96 Mesa 77
Wash . St . 87 Ca l Poly ·SLO 6 1
Sunday afte rnoon at the
west. Bapt 69 Multn mh Bib le 67
Pomeroy First Baptist
Westm ont 102 LA Baptist 64
Church.

IN LIVING
COLOR

4)

14 . Occ iden tal I Cal it .

Owners' offers sr.~gesting optimism

Speci~l

Photo
8xl0

3) 72
9. T u fls ( Mass . I
( 11 -3) 46
10. Al aska , Fa irban ks
( 19 "

.•

~

10

Di visi on Ill
Team
.
Pts .
1.Coe ( la . J
{17 -0 l 120
2. La ke Super ior { MicM .
( 15.2) 109
3. Sc r an ton 1 Pa . l ( 16.' 5) 103
4 . Otterbe in ( Ohlo l
{17 .
3) 90
5. Widener ( Pa . J ( 16 51 87
6. As hland (O hio I ( 16 -3) 79
7. Wittenbe r g (Oh io)
( 15 ·
2) 76
a. Monmouth f N .J.l
( 18 -

•
c.•

:

Bridgeporl { Con n . )
(14 23
Ki ng ' s IPa . )
fl5 ·6 l 13
F lorida Sou!Mern
( 16 -

Oth ers : Bakers f ield St ate
(Ca lif , ): Bellann ine , (Ky .J
B u ffal o
St ate
( N .Y .J:
Ca l ifornia . Dav is ; Cat Poly ,
Po m ona ; Ca me r o n (Okla .;
Cheyney St at e (Pa ) ; E din boro St et e (Pa ) ; Gui lford
( N .C ; t-t ar l wick ( N .Y . ) ;
I Mo . l ; Mad is on
L i n co ln
IVa .l; M er r imack ( Mass .- );
M issouri, Rolla ( N ebraska ,
Omaha ; North Dakota St ate 1
Norlhern
Ke ntu ck y ; O l d
Domin ion
IVa .);
P u get
So und ( Was h ) ; St . Jo seph ' s
( In d . ); Wisconsin , G re en
Bay ; Wr ight State ( Qhi~ J.

"'"'•

=
~

t ~onton

25

13 .
3)
14.
15.

n

~eadowbrook

Rose c rans 67 Co l

W!!tt erson 57

NOA St d .
an mgs
Bv Ur:tited
Preu
International
Eastern
Conference

!

South
6 1Scyn e 6J Pdlm Bch fdl 62
Carsn Nw mn 91 Tenn lmplc 66
Citadel 76 1 urman
Geo1wn Ky 'il.t Ber ea BO
Geo Mason 84 Sal isbury 17
Jacksonvt 57 Stetson 51
Madison 17 Hmpdn SyQny Sa
1'1 Shenandoah
NQrflk St. Il l rvtv l St 95
Ri chmond 68 va C' mweaflh 66
Un ion L ocal 5 1 Barn esvi ll e 40
Roll in! 94 F la . Southern 17
Belpre 57 Fl Fr ye 56
SE Louisiana 78 So. M iss . 7S
M iner va 69 w Branch 65
Massillon Christian 62 canto n
CathOl ic U 64 Towson St. 60
wasM&amp;Lee 80 Chris Newp l 69
Brunnerdale 56
Wm Care y 69 Wes! Fla . 68
Wintersvil le 53 John Marshall
Midwe st
W . v a 51
Ander son 71 Hanover 70
Waverly 65 Ja c kson 63
Capital 65 Denison 48
Me igs 51 Athens 45
Cent. St. 79 Def ian ce 64
Logan 74 W el lston &lt;19
Cedar vi lle 83 Urbana 78
Gallipolis 59
49
Chi. 74 Lake F or est 65
Creighton 75 Tulas 69
Clvr Stcktn 92 Mo . Val 83
Col lege Bask etball Results
Doane 97 Cncrd ia Neb. 75
h United Press lnt e rn~Jtj onat E . Ill. 77 No. Iowa 69
East
,
Elrnhurs1 a1 No . Cent . 77
Adelphi 46 Stony Brook 42
Friends 81 Sterl in g H
Amer . U . 63 La Sa lle 6!
Hiram 64 Alleg heny 60
Beckl ey 79 Ohio V~l 6a
111. Wstyn n N. Park 66
Bryant 8 1 S tonehitl 711
Iowa 7 1 Dra ke 65
BrQckpt 70 Fredon ia 53
Lewis' 71 Tr init y: Chris 58
Bfl o St. 60 Ge11eseo St. 55
Monmth Ill . 76 Ma cMrra y 66
Concor d 76 W . \(a . St, 71
Musking um 61 Otterbein 60
Colgate 75 Al fr ed 54
Neb . W' yan 75 Md lnd L u tM 62
Dav is&amp; Elkin s 9&lt;1 Salem 78
Oberlin 75 Bldwn -W!I ce 72
E . Nazarene 89 Nasson 66
Oshkosh 103 WMitewater 89
Elm ir a 88 Eisenhower 65
Peru St . 45 Bellevue 42
F ran k&amp; Mar.s h 62 W . Md . 59
Tri -St. 74 Bethel Ind . 68
Glenvi lle 75 W, Va . Tech 65
Wayn e St . 72 Neb ·Omaha 71
Hartwick 60 ttna ca 5 1
Wheaton 75 Carroll Wis . 68
Jersey Ci t y St. 75 Kean 66
· wis . Prksde8 1 W . Il l. 70
King 's NY 100 Nya ck 74
Wittenberg 53 Mariett a 48
Kin gs Pt . 70 Damincn NY 63
Wooster 88 Mount UnlQn 66
Mass . aa Boston u. 73
Southwest
Manha ltan 70 Temple 64
Creighton 75 Tulsa 69
Mercy Mst 71 Slp pry Ro ck 48
Houston 103 T CU 95
M IT 70 N icMols 68
Le Trneau 85 Sap . Chri s. 69
Morav ian 68 Wayne 52
Lub. Chr is. 66 Wylnd Bapt . 54
Navy 99 wash . Md . 68
SMU 69 T exas A&amp;M 65
N E . 84 St . Anselm's 74
Tex . Wsl yn 81 Amn . CMr is 75
Roch . TeeM 76 Hobart 67
Texas Tech 71 Te xas 60
St , John 's 56 RIU 47
West
Suffolk 94 Gordon 72
Azu sa 65 Pac . CMris 48
West Lib 96 M . Harvey 91
Ca l Bapt 102 San Dieg o 66
Willia m s 78 RP I 71 ot
W Musk. i ngum 77 Ph ilO 5J
M org an 7'1 N e w Concord
Gle nn 69 2 o•
.
~follksvitle os N r w L e)(lngron
Caldwell 76 Skyvue 59
Woods f ie ld 95 Beallsville 66

Ttlm
Graver Wll h1gh
for Teem 9 with •91 pins and
Joe Will was high for Teem 8

structlon was Jtan

Kroger
FEBRUARY 14

Holley

with 134-398, Rard lns St- oe
Center was Winn ie Martin
with 171 -512, Pt . Pleasant
Register was Karen Nott with
16., and Dotty Nott wltl'l •16.
JoMnsons Pt. Pleuant was
Nancy Marcum with 169 and
Vonde J ordan with 413 .
Heintrs Blktry w1s Pam
Simpkins
with
170 ·•U6 .
Johnsons Market Hen
deraon
wa&amp;
Marilyn
· Q,rowning
wltl'l . 113 · 451 .
Evelyns Bea utv Shop was
· Jane&amp; Bawln with 170 -429.
· Robbins &amp; Meyers was Pat

Bevin · with

165·439.

Com .

mercia! &amp; Savings Bank

Mev . Wtrd with

Burger Chef was

Grimm with
Marcum with

w•s

229 551 .

Linda
169 end Hazel

•u.

Splits picked

up

by

Va

Grover 5-9 -7, Jene Bowln • ·57, Pat Frye S 10 and S 7. Jean
Holley 4 1 10 .

AT THE

POMEROY B.EMENTARY SCHOOL
- 9TIIlMusicby

$ s:ouple

OpeD
a Day

(EXcept Sat.rday Mklnight 'til 9 a.m. SIIMay)

ARMAND ·
Tickets
On Sale. .

And The
"Garfield

lunch"

'

At

NEW YORK CLOJHING HOUSE
·DUnON DRUG STORE

•
I

...... WeiCOIMI
Your hd11'8l
Food StaMps

�r -----------'-""1 Cage scores
1
Pro
1

6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. II, 1976

f .. 1St . d•
~ !
aJl IU~S
•

1

I

• ' I

I

:
•
"
1

Lincetsler ,, Lanesv ille 52
Newark 67 Ch i ll i cothe S6
Mar l ttta 51 Upper Arlington

I

~ ~~nesv i ll e

·

'

DiVISIOn
• • al.

•
"
:
•
:. '

Atlanti c Division
W. l. Pet. G8

Boston
Bu ffal o
Ph il adelphia
New Yor k

35 l.t .7 14
32 21 .604
31 21 .596

"a '
Centrai::.'.L.'~_·•. ~. \f,.
?I. .

? ,A .

ratmg"S noted

s
51 "1
111

M ISS I ON , Ka n . f UPII _
N CAA
College
D i vision
rat ings :
0 ivisi on II
Team
Pts .
1, Ph i ladelph ta Te-..:tile ! Pa ,)
(17 2 120
2. Kenlucky Slate ( 16-J l 97
3. T enn essee St at e ( 17-4 ) 85
4 . Morgan State (Md . )
( 16 J) 73
5, N icMo ll s Sta l e I La .J
11 8
2 ~ ~3
6 . W i n s ton , Sa l e m
Stat e
(N .C. l
( 17-3) • 59
7. F lo r ida Tech
( 15 ·3} 58
8. North A labam a ( 17 Jl 49
{1 3,4} 39
9. Rollins (P ia .J
IO . V i rgi n i aState
(14]1 35
11 , North Dakota
115 ..4 ) 2a
12 Evansvi lle ( In d . )
( 14 -.

~

G•B"

-

•

Cleveland
19 22 .569
1
Washington
29 23 .558
1
Houston
25 24 .510 J
1
i.
New Orleans
25 25 ,500 3 )
Atlan ta
25 28 .472 5
Western Conference
\
Midwest Div ision
W . L . Pet . GB :
Milwaukee
21 31 .. &lt;104
•
• • Oetroil
20 30 .400
: ... Kansas Citv
19 35 .352 J
16 36 .308 5
•
CMicago
•
Pa ci f ic Divi si on
'f "
W. l. Pet . GB
Golden St at e
37 15 .712
'
Los ~ligeles
27 21 .500 11
'
Portland
23 28. .451 131 1
•
.,.
'r

•t
~

!

~ ~~~t~~~-

:

~~ ~; ::;~ l!

6)

• •
Tuesday 's Results
.,
Atlanta 111 Kansas City 89
~
Buffa lo 115 Wash ingt on 105
,
Ph iladelph ia as Chicago 84
r
New York 104 M il waukee 97
New Orlns 130 Golden St 124 ot
,
Los Angeles 106 De troit BB
jl"
Wednesday ' s Games
•
Milwaukee at New York

z

:

~~~:~~ ~'; ~~~~~j~

:

··~

:
•
•
•

~

•
ABA Standings
.. By United Press Intern ational
""
W. L. Pet. GB
• Denver
38 12 .760
: New Yor k
32 19 627 61 1
San Antonio
29 20 .592
81 1

r•
~ = ~~%~~ky

~~ ~~

3)

r

• , Portland at PMitadelphia
" • New Or leans at Seattle
' ' "'"
Thursday's G'ames
~ :, Ch icago at Cleveland
i&gt;
Por tlan d at Washington
~ ..._ Atlanta at Go lden State

:n:

~g

• " St . L ouis
23 31 .426 17
• • Virginia
a 43 . 157 30 1 2
111 •
Tuesda y's Resu lt
'"S t . L ou is 127 Indiana 126
~ .
Wednesday's Gam es
• • st Louis at New York
• Denver at San Anto nio
•.
Thursday ' s Game s
::
I No games scheduled )

C:

~

., •
.. ..
~

NHL Standings
B y United Press International
campbell conference
~
Pilfrick D ivision
..
w. L. T. Pts .. gf ga
•
PM il adelpMi 33 10 10 76 234 147
'"'
NY Islanders 28 15 10 66 207 130
.,. A tl anta
25 24 8 sa 184 168
~ NY Rangers 20 2~ _6. 46 175 223
~
Smythe Dtvts1on
~
W. L T. Pts. gf ga
"'
Chicago
23 15 16 62 166 146
•
Vancouver
21 23 .10 52 177 183
~ .. st . Lou is
19 27 B 46167 197
"t .. Minneso ta
16 33 4 36 130 18a
: !:' KansasC itY 12 35 6 ~ 01 29228
••
Wales -Conference.
.! Norris Division
~".:,
W; LT. Pts . gf ga
~ * Montrea l
40 7 8 88 2341 15
~ • Los Ange les 28 24 4 60 184 186
"'
Pittsburgh
22 25 7 51 216 211
•
Detroit
1830 7 431482.07
wasn ington
5 44 7 17 150 28 1
Adams Division
w. L. T. Pts. gt ga
33 11 9 75 209 154
:
Boston
•
Buffa lo
30 15 9 69 23 1 162
.,
Toronto
23 20 11 57 191 18 4
•
Californ ia
19 29 6 44 161 183
•
Tuesday 's Results
Montre"'l 6 St. L ouis 1
Los Ange les 2 Washington 2
va n cou ver J N Y Isl anders 2
~
's Games
,• ToronWedf'lesday
to at At lanta
• Pittsburgh
at Cal ifo r nia
~.
Detroit at BuHalo
• Los Angeles at Chi Cago
Bost on at M ir:mesota
Thur'sday •·s Garnes
NY Rangers ·at PMihadelphi.: o
NY' Islander s at j{ansas Ci ty
~ Vancouver
at Mon treal
••

••

••
•
•
'"
:•
•

••
-~
C
:

WHA Stand ing s
;. .. By Uniled Press International
"'~ •
East
.., ""
w. L. T . Pt s. gf ga
' New Engln d 25 25 5 55 179 188
~ Cleve land
21 27 5 47 181 19 3
Cinc
inna
ti
22
1 45 197 233
~ lndianapols 21 30
30 2 44 148 164
West
W. L. T, Pts . gf ga
Houston
34 18 0 68 218 17a
Phoenix
26 20 6 58 198 176
Minnesota
26 22 4 56 1a3 189
San Diego
26 24 4 56 212 192

=

41
l l.Union ( N .Y .l
( 11-41 3.7
12. Mansfield State I Pa . l (13 -·
11 )
30
13 . Augustan! { Ill. )

•

6)

15. Miles (Ala . )
C16 -6 l 12
Others ;
Boston
St ate :
Ca l vin
(Mich . ) ;
Cornel l
( Ia . ) ; Doan e (Neb .): ·Glass .
boro St at e (N .J . ); G r ove City
{ Pa ); H pmi ll o n IN . y _.);
Il li nois · Be n edic tin e;
LeMo y n e -Owen
(Ten n . ) ;
Lyn chb urg (Va . J; Oneon1a
( N Y. / ;
R. e nns -e laer
Polyt ec hnic I ns titut e IN .Y .);
RMode
I sla nd
Co l leg e;
Rochester
In s t i t ut e
of
T ecM nology (N .Y .); Suf-fol k
( Mass ); Transy lvania {Ky . );
Was h ing to n ah d L ee (Va . ) ;
Wes t f ield State IMass .J:
York (N .Y . J.

Canad ian
w. L. T. Pts. gf ga
Win nipeg
38 19 1 77 245 168
Quebec
33 17 4 70 242 209
Calgary
27 23 3 57 202 179
Edm onton
20 3&lt;1 3 43 193 243
Tor on to
15 33 5 35 218 266
)( -Ottawa
14 26 1 29 134 172
X· Team d isba nded
Tue sday's Re su lts
Calgary 4 Toronto 3
Minnesota 6 San Di ego 3
Wednes day's Games
Quebec at W inni peg
Ci ncinnati at Clevelanc:t
Phoenix at Ind ianapol is
Mi nnesota a t San Diego
Thur s day's Games
Quebec at Minnes ota
Houston a t f:)hoenix

'

RACINE - Coach Howie
Caldwell's Southern Freshmen picked ·u p two wins in

:

three days by defeatin g
~ Kyger Creek and Hannan• Trace .
~
Saturday at Racine , the
: hosts' well-balanced scoring
: attack proved too much for
· ~ Kyger Creek as the Tornados
~ came out on top , 57-40.
:.Southern led all the way.
4 ~ The hosts were hea~ed by
~ Tim Brinager's II points. Jim
• O'Brien had 10 and Dwight
: Hill nine. The team hit 12-17
: free throws.
~ · Kyger was led by Keigh
• Tyler 's big 18 markers, while
Luke Amos tossed in 12. They
~ canned 6-16 free tosses.
Quarter scores: '·

.

: Southern
20 II 14 13--57
• Kyger Creek 6 10 10 14-40
: ; Monday night, also at
.; : Racine, The Tornados stayed
; ~ in stride as they sent the
~ • Hannan-Trace
Wiidki !tens
••
home on the wrong end of a
• ;64-35 score. Once again, the
: : hosts were never threatened.
: · Southern again had a
• balanced scoring attack, led
: ' by Hill and O'Brien with 10
; 'apiece. Every Tornado broke
£:into the scoring coiwnn. They
~ 'hit 4-8 free throws.
• ' Rick Clary led Hannan·
• •Trace with 10 points, Paul
: :Schaeffer and Alan Waugh
: :each had eight The team hit .
· ; only 7 of 20 free tosses.
; ·All three teams wm see
%action in the SV AC Freshman
:~ Tourney at Eastern, Feb. 16• 21.
: Quarter scores :
• Southern
17 16 13 16-64
':.Hannan-Trace 5 10 8 12- 35

t•

.

•

"

.

MEN'S
HOUSE
SUPPERS
MEN'S
ALL
DRESS
MARKED
SHOES
DOWN

PLACE: SHOPPERS MART ·
MASON, W. VA•

SLING BAGS.
VALUE

•' .

~

•

INFANTS &amp; LADIES
FASHION BOOTS t

ONLY

VALUES TO 17.95

'2000

3 lbs. Cube Steak
------------~----· -FISH- . ·

HEADLESS SAGGER••••••• ,......... .'~~. 5:~
(Limited CHANNEL CAT•••••••••••••••• ~b;.6 ~
Supply) BLACK BASS ••••••••••••••••• !~·. 69~

TEENS

TUBE SOX

SIZES

9 to 12

Din Thompson Ford
Bowling Leaeue .
week of Feb . J , _1976

sox

NO . 3

6 to 11

2 PRS.

•

JNFANrs TO TEENS

2

BOYS &amp;GIRLS

DRESS SHOES

VALUES TO

'2
'3

..

•

20

34
34

·'22
22

4
32

24

3

No . 12

32
30
30

22

24

RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE
992 -3502

Pomerov. Ohio

Open 8-5 Mon. lhru Sat. Closed Sunday

..

..

Team

wu

11 . Harold t..ookado

hiOh

tor Team 1 wltl't 4149

pins and Te1m 11 forfeit .
Team 16 took 8 points from
Team 3. Bill aechttl was high
tor Team 16 with -491 pins an~
Jan Robinson was high for

•"
..'
•

GLADLY

~85

pins .

Team 10, Jack Ferauson was
high for.TIIm t2 wilh 511 pins
1
and • · .Jenks was high for
r .. m 10 wlttt .tfS pins .

s

rea·rn took 6 polntl from
Tllm .. lurl Cook was high
for Tea.;, 1J_,wnh Sl5 pins and

L.

p~rrlck

was h1gh lor Teem

4 wl"' 492 pins .

•

Team 13 took 6 points from
Teem lS: () 1 RoaCh was high
for Team 13 Witt\ •tO p lf\1 and

ACCEPTED

J . Boyd wao hl9h for Ttom 15

wllh
400 ('"'
· 6 points from
Team
'ook

e. v.

1/

served as the artist's pencil,

shader and chisel.
It would be impossible to
soy from what period your
picture c&lt;rmes but it is considered a desirable collector's item today.
Send your questions to
Today's Treasures in care. of
this newspaper. Questions of
a general interest will be
answeretl in this column .
However, monetary appraisals wiU not be given.

the inside of the bus with
glass and literally covering
everyone aboard with slivers
d glass from two broken
windows.
Driver Emerson Corbin
pulled arowtd the corner and
slopped. The team coaches
and cheerleaders embarked
into the front lawns of two
nearby houses .
Trainer Bo~by Cornwell
and Manager Pat O'DonneU,
along with coaches Buddy
Moore and Norm Persin,
administered first aid
treatment lo the two most

Ironton cage Coach Buddy
Bell said, "This was done by

long be remembered here."
Nameth continued ~ " We

shall make every effort to
find out who did this and they
will be taken care of effectively by our administration . We will not let
this thing pass and be
forgotten , because your kids
were injured, and our pride In
uur City is at .a low ebb right
now. I . assure you, we will
know soon who the guilly
persons are and 'they will be
dealt with severely. "
Coach Beii, his staff. and
Mr. Nameth personaii¥
wanted the pe9ple of
Gallipolis to kn ow how sorry
they were over the Incident
and their deep concern for the
well-being of the injured
students was born out by
their constant presence at the
scene and later at the
h&lt;&gt;;pital.
The GARS Pep Club Bus
was the first to be hit with
rocks thrown .from a
darkened alley two · blocks
from the multi-million 4oilar
Tiger complex.
The Gallipolis City Schools
bus carrying the reserve

'·

w ith 525 pin s .
Georgia Cook had h ig h
gam t for the ladles with 201
pins and Jan Robinson (s ~b)
had h igh series with -485 pms .
Ralph Johnston had high
game tor the men with 208
pins and Jack Mink had high
series with 561 pins .
Other h i gh games and
strl&amp;!. bowled were Burt Cook
20 1-535; carlile oew i rt &lt;subl
50 2" Dave Holley 505 , ~ack
Ferguson 511 , Joe Will 525 .
Georgia Cook received h er
Bicent~nnlal
pat c h from
Skyline Lanes tor Mer first 200

severely

game .
Thur'sday Afternoon
Swlngen low lint

Lugue

·Feb. 5,1976

Void At.., Sot., Feb. 1... 1
Subject to AppUutbl• Sroe. &amp; LHIII

injured ,

Cost Cutters Help
Trim Your
Food

~

Flour

s~~·sac
With Coupon

11•11 1

c",.. W1tlt $10 or More,.,,.. . .

Void Aft•r Sot., feb . 14, 1976
Svbjtct to AppliCCibl• Stat. &amp; Local

U.S. Govl. Graded C)la
People's Choice 17- To 23-lb.
First 5-Ribs-7-lnch Cut

(Ron

Whole
RIB ROAST

assistance.

The Pep Club bus had
moved on down one block to a
service station where it was
discovered
that
four
passengers had suffered
minor injuries from flymg
glass and from the baseballsize rocks that had been
hurled through the bus
windows.
Coach Bell , Assistant
Principal Nameth, assistant
coaches Lynn Shrikei, and
Phil Rice also arrived upon
the scene, and immediately
directed 'tha.t all injured
persons be taken to Lawrence
General Hospital for treatment.
.
At the hospital, all Gi\HS
injured were. taken immediately to treatment
rooms where the highly efficient staff of dootors and
nur~~es (who were loaded with
other routine emergency
cases) treated lhe GAHS
'students,
Time of arrival at the
h&lt;&gt;;pital was about 9:30p.m.
Students who were not
injured were transferred
from one bus to the Pep Club
• bus which was then escorted
out ' of the city by a police
crui~~er. The team bus went to
the hospital to await the other
students.
Coach Bell per&amp;onally
checked each of the GAHS
students and fans and even
led one reserve cheerleader
into a treatment room for

.........
Pillsbury

c..yriQt 1111 - TH lrlltr Ct. lttal •• Prltlf IIQ ttln1
Sit., .... 14, 1111 i1 111 Wnt V i~llil INitl lttrll, 11111
lllllfhftl Yi'lil11 P'iUnlllt, lr., lttlt,lllt aM Pt•trtJ, Olllt.
Wt resent tH rlittt tt liail •••titttl. IIIONE IIU TD DIAUII,

Jackson .and Diane Ward).
The Iron ton police were
swnmoned and dispatched
two cruisers to the scene.
Meanwhile, GAHS Coach Jim
Osborne, Coach Gene Oesch,
and the Blue Devil varsity
team arrived on the scene in
cars. They also rendered

81-ch

D•l·39c
With Coupon

llnolt I Coupoa WI.. $10 or Mon hr...oo
Void Afttr Sot., feb. 14, 1976

Subitct to Applicable Stat. &amp; Local Tu•

Holly Farms
Grode

Regular

U.S .D.A.

or Chub

10Ki;,,

Ground.Beef

· · Sel..t
Markel Bookol

Grade AA

Lar&amp;e

KTr

£c&amp;S .
o••.

Graae A

73;

Large

treatment of a minor cut on

SALES REPORT
Ohio Valley Li•estock Co.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Feb. 7, 19&lt;6
STOCKER CATTLE
Steers - 250 to 301) ibs 18 to 27, '
300 to 400 lbs 20 to 30.75, 400 to
500 lbs 21 to 31, 500 to 600 lbs 22
to 31.75, 600 to 700 lbs 24 to
33.50, 700 lbs and Over 31. to
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
300 lbs 18 to 21, 300 to 400 ibs
19.50 to 23.50, 400 to 500 ibs 21
to 25, 500 to 600 lbs 21 to 26, 600
to 700 lbs 22 to 27.75, 700 lbs
and Over 24 to 28.50.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULL.') (By The Head) - Stock Cows
110 to 240, Stock Cows and
Calves 165 to 280, Stock Bulls.
170 to 255, Baby Calves 5 to 40.
(By '!be Pound) - Canners
&amp; Cutlllrs Cows 18 to 21.50,
Holstein Cows 24.75 to 27,
Commercial Bulls 24 to 28.50.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 220
ibs to 250 62 to 67.75, Mediwn
200 lbs to 300 50.25 to 61.85,
Culls 16,50 to 30, Pigs and
shoatit 24 to 50.

With Coupon
Utolt 1 Coo,.. Willi $10orM_Pwo_

tier knee that required only a
bond-aid, but his concern
cannot be described.
Also, coaches Rice.· .and
Shrike I and Mr . Nameth
remained at the hospital until
all GAHS students boarded
the bus at 10:45 p.m. to begin
the long, drafty trip home ·
with

two

side

windows

sma,shed.
The Ironton coaches
provided an escort caravan
with their cars for the bus up
to Rt. 52.

Yollow Cling su.., or

Kroger
Poaches
A"""""loCut

Groen
loans

••••

Fresh

HAR!USONVILLE
Mr . and Mrs. Bob Allen of
Lanesville were Sunday
guests of her parentS Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Epple.
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop
are going to attend Eastern
Star meeting at Stockport
Sunday.

Sungolcl
Bread ·
l~lb.

Lea was

$

113 Size

California
Oranges
Each

!:

'feam 12 took 6 points from

D&amp;D .MEATS

The caddy spoon is
valuable and pretty scarce.
We have a picture burned
on a piece of wood. It Is a
fairly well done piece but I
can't lind out anything about
lL Can you help? - S.T.,
WbiHfer, Calif.
You have an example of
pyrography - the art of wood
burning. It was first popular
in the 1840s and has been
revived periodically since
that tlme. Early works were
done with a red hot poker and
required a great deal of
dexterity since the poker

u

Team 3 with

USDA FOOD
STAMPS

cannister.

W L
26
26 · comm . &amp; Savi ngs Bk . 118 42
Johnsons Mkt .26 30 Henderson
103 57
No . 11
J2
t-i~iner•s Bekery
101 59
No . 13
24 32
90 70
22 34 Star lite Inn
6
Burg~r Chef
•
83 77
NO-.
'
1a 38
No.
u
Evelyn's Beauty Shop 81 79
No. 15
:~
B . J , Builders .
79 81 ·
' NO , 7
Rardlns Shoe Center
1a 82
Team 6 took 2 points from Pt
. Pit . Register
78 82
Teem 1. Joyce Rob le was
Johnson 's Mkt.- Pt.
hiOh for Team 1 with 392 PII'!S
.
62 9 B
and Sh'aron TaVf'ney was hl9h Pit
Robbins &amp; Meyers
51 109
ror Team 6 with 458 pins .
Holley Bros . Cons!.
' 36 12,•
Team 2 took 6 points rrom
H igh bowler for Star lite Inn
Tum 14 . Jack Mink wn high
for Team 2 with S6l p ins and Wes Glor i a Whittington with
139-358 . For B . J . Builders
Tom Skinner w:as high tor
was Carol Hannon with 151 ·
Tum 141 with 4152 pins .
·
Team 1 took 1 points from 4Q9. Holley Bros . Con .

~=: ~0

'

12

36

No . 2
No ; 16
No. 4
No . 8

"

w, L

44

No . 5

PRS.

STOCK NO. 544

Standlnu

Tum
1
No.

'1.50 VALUE

MEN'S STROCH
CUSHION SOX

BOWLING

BOYS
THICK CREW

1,0 0
z

Wichita, Kan . Coleman
tamps changed very lilUe in
basic style from the early
1900!1 until the 1940s. However
early models were equipped
with glass shades and those
from the 1930s and '40s had
fluted
parchment
or
decorative paper shades.
Acompany spokesman said
that Coleman' will still repair
these old lamps.
What Is Caddy spoon? Is it
valuable? - B.N. Colorado
Spring, Colo.
A caddy spoon might he
mistaken for a miniature
ladle . lt is about two inches in
length with a large bowl and
short handle. It was designed
for use in a tea cannister or
caddy. The caddy spoon dates
from the early 18th century.
These early examples had
· shell-shaped bowls with a
small hook on the rever~~e
side of the handle so that they
could 1M! fastened inside the

Plea.

the bus windows 1 spraying

man said .

some of our punks who
probably did not even attend
the game. I am terribly sorry
that this should happen to a
group of fine kids like this
from GalllpoUs." He continued "We had this happen
'
Ill our ' bus following our w1ri
over Ashland, Ky . earlier this
year. We know from first
hand experience how these
pe ...le feel. "
Assistant Principal Andrew
Nameth said, "The pe... le in
Gaiilpolis wfll pr oba bly
blame everyone in Ironton for
this incident and they have
every right to be bitter, but
please do not let this isolated
incid~nt hurt
the fine
relationship between the two
schools . We truly enjoy
competing against Gallipolis
and our sorrow and embarrassment over this will

··-b
~:~·~-

BuHered

team and cheerleaders was
also rocked from the same
ioc:ation by as yet unidentified persons.
GAHS Athletic Director Ed
Stewart and Principal James
N. M. Davis were in a car
dlrecUy behind the team bus
when the rocks went through

were taken on tour of the new
structure by the lrontonians
prior to Gallipolis' 59-49
Southeasllln. Ohio League
victory.
Today, Gallipolis school
officials were quick to praise
Ironton officials, bOosters
and fans for their quick
assistance following the
Incident. Those responsible
for last night's incident are
not a true representative of
Ironton's successful athletic
program, on Ironton spokes-

36 .

(

.*j(~-ili'......

-DEAL NO. 2_:_

*500
BUY EARLY
FOR EASTER

•

ONLY

In 1775 the State of
' Mai!S8chll8etts attempted to
secure uniformity of buttons
throughout a large number of
troops. The state decreed that
the buttons be made of
pewlllr with the regimental
number stamped on the face.
Abilve the
regimental
number wu the abbreviation
MAS and below II was REG .
I have a Coleman lamp lhat
Is about 50 yean old. llblnk II
1 bad 1ome elolb maatel• I
collld tile II for an autuary
UghL Dli they still . make
these? - J.O.D., Wiafle,ld,
Kaa.
,
Yes. You can order the~~e
from The Coleman Co .,

LADIES
WHITE PATENT
$~.95

6 lbs. Pork Roast
6 lbs. Pork Chops
2 lbs. Bacon
2 lbs. Sausal!e
6 lbs. Hot Dogs

~iforms ,

STOCK NO. 3235

Photo's by Honey Portraits

2 Fryer Chickens

11
•

10%0FF

PHOTO HOURS: U AM TO 7 PM

3 lbs. Dutch Loaf
3 lbs. Ground.Beef
3 lbs. English Roast

By JEAN BARNES
Judging by the amount of
inail received from " old
bouse owners, there is a
great deal of inlllrest in
restoring these relics from
!he past.
• Th011e of you who requested
ihe address of the Old-House
:JGurnal may write to : The
Old-House Journal, 199
l!erkeley Place, Brooklyn,
fi.Y. 11217.
• OUr old house baa what
ippears to be embossed
lealberelle coverins on the
Jl'all• of tbe ealry and
11alrway. Wbat Ia It and can I
hod II on the market?- G.A.,
lao Aalonfo, Te•.
; It is probably Uncrusta'jValton, popular in the late
1800s. It is similar to linolewn
and was imported from both
England and Belgiwn. It was
~ very durable materiaL It is
no longer available in the
\Jnited States,
; 1 have a pewter button with
Romao numerals oa ft. It has
beea Ia 011r family for several
ceoeratloos. Wbat Is It? - .
8.0., Eliaabelb, N.J.
"This
could
be
a
R evolutionary War
regimental button. It was just
Prior to the Revolutionary
War that buttons were used
as distinguishing marks ori

ALL AMERICAN MADE

9~ Per Subject

Treasure quest

•

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

MEN'S
WORK SHOES

50 lbs.

3

I '

SECOND BIG WEEK
PRICES TO SAVE YOU MONEY

-DEAL NO.l-

.;• wm. two games

r·. ·1

Q.OSED MONDAY

DATE: FRI., FEB. 13

8 lbs. Ground Beef
6 lbs. Chuck Roast
6 lbs. Fryer Chickens
6 lbs. Rib Steaks
2 lbs. Swiss Steaks

--

SAT. 9 to 5

FREEZER STOCK-UP SALE

~

i
••

9

~ ---·-·
.....

lHURS. 12 to 5
FRI. 10 to 8

GIANT
BARGAINS

Diane Ward, Dotty Jones,
Debbie Swisher and Bridgett
Hennessey .
Injured but not treated
were Lisa Niday, varsity
cheerleader and Jim Enyart,
GAHS instructor.
.None of the injuries
required stitches.
The incident was un fortunate in that Ironton
school officials, Tiger
!Wosters Varsity I Club
members and Ironton news
media representatives, went
all out to welcome Gallipolis
fans and players to their
beautiful new facility.
Several Gallipolis officials

..
____ Today 's Treasures

-

STORE HOURS:

No age limi.t
Limit .1 Per Subject
2 Special Per Family
Groups taken at the low

'

sa GaliJa Academy High I
School students and one
GAHS instructor received
minor cuts and bruises from
fiylng glass broken by rocks
thrown at two Gallipolis
school buses In an unfortunate incident following
Tuelday night's GallipolisIronton baskelbali game in
Ironton's new $1.5 million
·sporta center.
: Treated and released at
'Lawrence General Hospital
.by Ironton High School Tiger
;team physician Dr. John Dole
'Were Ron Jackson, a GAHS
reserve player who suffered a
:gu~~ on the bock of his head:

PICK-A-PAIR

PLUS SOc
HANDLING

Price of

Unfortunate rock-throwing
incident mars GAHS victory

SIMON'S

88t

21
( 15-

16

~ Tornado
Frosh
,

I

115 -5 )

7- The Ilally Sentinel, Mlddleport.POOleroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb.!l,1976

the Players Association, .is reserve system.
likely to reject the proposals . The appeal W88 announced
"out of hand " and one in a joint statement which
baseball executive said : "despillllhe dedi! on to
commented, "they won 't get appeal the clubs wilh to
their
down to serious negotlaUng emphasize
detenninatlon
to
continue
untO a week before · spring
serious bargaining.
training."
:
"The clubs are . pr~pared to
The owners announced
Tuesday they plan to appeal offer the Players Association
Judge John W. Oliver's several proposals to the basic
decision upholding Peter agreement, including the reSeitz' arbitration making serve system, in the hope of
Andy Messersmith and Dave narrowing the gap between
McNally free agents. The the two sides and making
owners' position is that the progress !Qward a JrOIIIpl
of
our
arbitraUon panel did not have settlement
differences."
juriBdicUon to deal with the

NEW YORK (UPI) - ASsociaUon.
Major league baseball's
Informed sources,
clubowners are expected to however, said that Marvir
offer several proposals today, Miller, executive director of
including one concerning the
reserve clause. which they
hope wiU bfing about an
agreement with the Players
PRACTICE UNDERWAY
The Senior Citizens Chorus
under the direction of Mrs.
Carrie Neutzli ng has started
Dom Ht11s 85 Cat Luth 08
Ft . L ew is 97 Sa nta Fe 56
practice for an Easter canNorthr idge 84 UC trvne 68
tata, "The Seven Last Words
Ore . Colt . Mw . wash . 63
Pepprdne 87 L yola Cal. 70
of Christ on the Cross" to be
P t. Loma 57 U.S . Inti 52
presented at 2:30 on Palm
Ut ah St. 96 Mesa 77
Wash . St . 87 Ca l Poly ·SLO 6 1
Sunday afte rnoon at the
west. Bapt 69 Multn mh Bib le 67
Pomeroy First Baptist
Westm ont 102 LA Baptist 64
Church.

IN LIVING
COLOR

4)

14 . Occ iden tal I Cal it .

Owners' offers sr.~gesting optimism

Speci~l

Photo
8xl0

3) 72
9. T u fls ( Mass . I
( 11 -3) 46
10. Al aska , Fa irban ks
( 19 "

.•

~

10

Di visi on Ill
Team
.
Pts .
1.Coe ( la . J
{17 -0 l 120
2. La ke Super ior { MicM .
( 15.2) 109
3. Sc r an ton 1 Pa . l ( 16.' 5) 103
4 . Otterbe in ( Ohlo l
{17 .
3) 90
5. Widener ( Pa . J ( 16 51 87
6. As hland (O hio I ( 16 -3) 79
7. Wittenbe r g (Oh io)
( 15 ·
2) 76
a. Monmouth f N .J.l
( 18 -

•
c.•

:

Bridgeporl { Con n . )
(14 23
Ki ng ' s IPa . )
fl5 ·6 l 13
F lorida Sou!Mern
( 16 -

Oth ers : Bakers f ield St ate
(Ca lif , ): Bellann ine , (Ky .J
B u ffal o
St ate
( N .Y .J:
Ca l ifornia . Dav is ; Cat Poly ,
Po m ona ; Ca me r o n (Okla .;
Cheyney St at e (Pa ) ; E din boro St et e (Pa ) ; Gui lford
( N .C ; t-t ar l wick ( N .Y . ) ;
I Mo . l ; Mad is on
L i n co ln
IVa .l; M er r imack ( Mass .- );
M issouri, Rolla ( N ebraska ,
Omaha ; North Dakota St ate 1
Norlhern
Ke ntu ck y ; O l d
Domin ion
IVa .);
P u get
So und ( Was h ) ; St . Jo seph ' s
( In d . ); Wisconsin , G re en
Bay ; Wr ight State ( Qhi~ J.

"'"'•

=
~

t ~onton

25

13 .
3)
14.
15.

n

~eadowbrook

Rose c rans 67 Co l

W!!tt erson 57

NOA St d .
an mgs
Bv Ur:tited
Preu
International
Eastern
Conference

!

South
6 1Scyn e 6J Pdlm Bch fdl 62
Carsn Nw mn 91 Tenn lmplc 66
Citadel 76 1 urman
Geo1wn Ky 'il.t Ber ea BO
Geo Mason 84 Sal isbury 17
Jacksonvt 57 Stetson 51
Madison 17 Hmpdn SyQny Sa
1'1 Shenandoah
NQrflk St. Il l rvtv l St 95
Ri chmond 68 va C' mweaflh 66
Un ion L ocal 5 1 Barn esvi ll e 40
Roll in! 94 F la . Southern 17
Belpre 57 Fl Fr ye 56
SE Louisiana 78 So. M iss . 7S
M iner va 69 w Branch 65
Massillon Christian 62 canto n
CathOl ic U 64 Towson St. 60
wasM&amp;Lee 80 Chris Newp l 69
Brunnerdale 56
Wm Care y 69 Wes! Fla . 68
Wintersvil le 53 John Marshall
Midwe st
W . v a 51
Ander son 71 Hanover 70
Waverly 65 Ja c kson 63
Capital 65 Denison 48
Me igs 51 Athens 45
Cent. St. 79 Def ian ce 64
Logan 74 W el lston &lt;19
Cedar vi lle 83 Urbana 78
Gallipolis 59
49
Chi. 74 Lake F or est 65
Creighton 75 Tulas 69
Clvr Stcktn 92 Mo . Val 83
Col lege Bask etball Results
Doane 97 Cncrd ia Neb. 75
h United Press lnt e rn~Jtj onat E . Ill. 77 No. Iowa 69
East
,
Elrnhurs1 a1 No . Cent . 77
Adelphi 46 Stony Brook 42
Friends 81 Sterl in g H
Amer . U . 63 La Sa lle 6!
Hiram 64 Alleg heny 60
Beckl ey 79 Ohio V~l 6a
111. Wstyn n N. Park 66
Bryant 8 1 S tonehitl 711
Iowa 7 1 Dra ke 65
BrQckpt 70 Fredon ia 53
Lewis' 71 Tr init y: Chris 58
Bfl o St. 60 Ge11eseo St. 55
Monmth Ill . 76 Ma cMrra y 66
Concor d 76 W . \(a . St, 71
Musking um 61 Otterbein 60
Colgate 75 Al fr ed 54
Neb . W' yan 75 Md lnd L u tM 62
Dav is&amp; Elkin s 9&lt;1 Salem 78
Oberlin 75 Bldwn -W!I ce 72
E . Nazarene 89 Nasson 66
Oshkosh 103 WMitewater 89
Elm ir a 88 Eisenhower 65
Peru St . 45 Bellevue 42
F ran k&amp; Mar.s h 62 W . Md . 59
Tri -St. 74 Bethel Ind . 68
Glenvi lle 75 W, Va . Tech 65
Wayn e St . 72 Neb ·Omaha 71
Hartwick 60 ttna ca 5 1
Wheaton 75 Carroll Wis . 68
Jersey Ci t y St. 75 Kean 66
· wis . Prksde8 1 W . Il l. 70
King 's NY 100 Nya ck 74
Wittenberg 53 Mariett a 48
Kin gs Pt . 70 Damincn NY 63
Wooster 88 Mount UnlQn 66
Mass . aa Boston u. 73
Southwest
Manha ltan 70 Temple 64
Creighton 75 Tulsa 69
Mercy Mst 71 Slp pry Ro ck 48
Houston 103 T CU 95
M IT 70 N icMols 68
Le Trneau 85 Sap . Chri s. 69
Morav ian 68 Wayne 52
Lub. Chr is. 66 Wylnd Bapt . 54
Navy 99 wash . Md . 68
SMU 69 T exas A&amp;M 65
N E . 84 St . Anselm's 74
Tex . Wsl yn 81 Amn . CMr is 75
Roch . TeeM 76 Hobart 67
Texas Tech 71 Te xas 60
St , John 's 56 RIU 47
West
Suffolk 94 Gordon 72
Azu sa 65 Pac . CMris 48
West Lib 96 M . Harvey 91
Ca l Bapt 102 San Dieg o 66
Willia m s 78 RP I 71 ot
W Musk. i ngum 77 Ph ilO 5J
M org an 7'1 N e w Concord
Gle nn 69 2 o•
.
~follksvitle os N r w L e)(lngron
Caldwell 76 Skyvue 59
Woods f ie ld 95 Beallsville 66

Ttlm
Graver Wll h1gh
for Teem 9 with •91 pins and
Joe Will was high for Teem 8

structlon was Jtan

Kroger
FEBRUARY 14

Holley

with 134-398, Rard lns St- oe
Center was Winn ie Martin
with 171 -512, Pt . Pleasant
Register was Karen Nott with
16., and Dotty Nott wltl'l •16.
JoMnsons Pt. Pleuant was
Nancy Marcum with 169 and
Vonde J ordan with 413 .
Heintrs Blktry w1s Pam
Simpkins
with
170 ·•U6 .
Johnsons Market Hen
deraon
wa&amp;
Marilyn
· Q,rowning
wltl'l . 113 · 451 .
Evelyns Bea utv Shop was
· Jane&amp; Bawln with 170 -429.
· Robbins &amp; Meyers was Pat

Bevin · with

165·439.

Com .

mercia! &amp; Savings Bank

Mev . Wtrd with

Burger Chef was

Grimm with
Marcum with

w•s

229 551 .

Linda
169 end Hazel

•u.

Splits picked

up

by

Va

Grover 5-9 -7, Jene Bowln • ·57, Pat Frye S 10 and S 7. Jean
Holley 4 1 10 .

AT THE

POMEROY B.EMENTARY SCHOOL
- 9TIIlMusicby

$ s:ouple

OpeD
a Day

(EXcept Sat.rday Mklnight 'til 9 a.m. SIIMay)

ARMAND ·
Tickets
On Sale. .

And The
"Garfield

lunch"

'

At

NEW YORK CLOJHING HOUSE
·DUnON DRUG STORE

•
I

...... WeiCOIMI
Your hd11'8l
Food StaMps

�.·8- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday. Feb. II, 1976

PTA celebrates .Pounder's Day

Polly's Pointers
Salt and roast nuts
in one-step process

By Poll'): Cramer

Polly's Problem
DEl\R POLLY - Perhaps
some other husbands are like
mine, and like to sleep on
over-size pillows·. Many of my
pillowcases are on the small
side, so I always had a time
gelling them on the pillows. ·
One day r took each side of a
case and worked it in my
hands like I do when putting
on pantyhose . This worked
like magic and l have no
more trouble .
I do hope someone can tell
me how to roast or poa ch
peanuts in the shell and salt
them at the same lime . MRS. D.I..N .
DEAR MRS . D.L.N. - A
nut. processing company
advised me that you might
soak the peanuts 1in their
shells) in strong salt water
for a couple of days, dry out
thoroughly and then roast
them. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My main
Pet Peeve is that being an
avid coupon. user I think the
customer should be protected

ln some way from those

fish . - MRS. S.F.
DEAR POLLY - a nd Ruth

who wan Lc; to removr slains
fr om her fish tan.k -- l gave
the following hint to a woman
who raises fish and needed to
clean a 55 ga llon tank on
which
she
had
tried
everything with no luck. Use
vinega r I told her. She
dampened a cloth with it and
let stand against the sides to
soak. This also works for
lhose. nasty

lime

sta in s

around s ink faucets. SHARON .
DEAR POLLY ~ Lighter
fluid put on a cotton ball will
remove that sticky glue that
labels leave on any surface as
the stove, dishes, etc. ,...
JOYCE .
BIRTHDAY NEAR
Mrs .
Zora
Rockwell
Walker. form e r Pomeroy
resident, will be 91 years of
age on Feb . 16. Cards may be
sent to her at the Hill Haven
Convalesce nt Center, 2120 E.
Fifth Ave. , Colw11bus , Ohio
432!9.

coupon$ that appear on boxes
a nd become outdated while
still on the shelf. Also, l do
hope the man ufacturers are
listening as fitted top sheets
are every bit as desirable as
the fitted bottom ones. As far
Global mtss10ns and the
as l know a mail order
chlU'ch's
responsibility was
company is the only supplier
lite
program
topic discussed
of these and then only for
the
Rev
.
Robert
regular size beds . Why not by
Bumgarner
at
the
Monday
.
king size beds too ;
When I hard boil eggs and night meeting of the Heath
hctve more than I use at one Uni ted Methodist Women of
time, l crack the shells, let Middleport.
Us in g the bo ok, " Why
stand for ~ bit in cold water ,
do
not
remove
the
shells
Global
Missions? 11 as the
but
minister defined
basis,
the
until I am ready to use the
glob.a] missions as meaning
eggs. - MRS . J.A.G .
DEAR POLLY - I ac- helping and shanng all over
cidentally made a fantastic Ute world, no ting that it indiscovery that should solve volves not.only ministers, but
Ruth 's problem· with clean ing all men and women . He said
her fish tank . While cleaning it includes not only foreign
one of ours, I decided to stop missions and churches , but
standing at the si nk scrub- also local churches , and said
bing with a brush trying to Ute Christian's responsibility
clean the cas tle, etc. that are is to reach out to all nations.
kept in the tank. Neglect had · May has been set aside as
CJUsed tliem to turn green. I lite mon tit for special' emput some water in an enamel phasis on global missions, he
pan. poured in a generous repor!ed, and t~en e~plain~d
•amount of bleach and popped Ute fun ctions of the various
the castle , ceramic turtle and boards of the church in
all parts of the filter into the carrying out the program.
Mrs . Earl Knight presided
water and left them for about
an hour. · Everything was at the meeting \"h ich ope ned
clean as new. There is one with a medley of patriotic
warning: everything inust be songs by Mrs . Beulah Jones,
well soaked and rinsed in pianist. Mrs. Knig ht gave a
clear wate r before being put meditati on e ntitled "T hi s
back in the water with the Land is My Land " with

Burt.
James Soulsby presided
with the Rev. Clyde Henders on of the Pomeroy
Nazarene Church giving
devotions.
It was reported that the
Rev . W. H Perrin has completed the bulletin board for
the reading room . Tile Rev .
Mr . Perrin con~r ucted the
board with supplies being
purchased by the PTA . A
filing cabinet for PTA papers
will be purchased .
A rwnrilage sale in March
by the ways and means
committee was announced
with the money to be used to
pay for trophies awarded the
safety patrol in the spring.
Residents with Hems to
contri bute are to contact
Soulsby.
It was also reported tha t
another parachute had been
donated for the students.
George Wright talked on the
VISIT HERE
cub scouting program and
Mr . and Mrs . Woodrow announced an open house to
t Norma Butcher) Wilcox of be at the Church of Christ on
Sandusky were weekend Feb . 19,7:30 p.m. Any adults
guests of Mr . and Mrs . Ed- interested in becoming inward Stiles, South Third, volved in scouting are enMiddleport. Others visiting couraged to attend.
during the weekend were Mr .
and Mrs . Bill Miller and
Mark, Larry Lacey, Mr. and
Mrs. James Wilson and
daughter , Sandusky ; Mr . and
Mrs. Allen Missler; Mr . and
Mrs. Larry Dale and
childre n, Bellevue, a nd Mr.
and Mrs . Virgil Butcher,
Portsmouth. Mr . and Mrs .
Infants
Woodrow Wilcox and Larry
Lacey returned to their home
Boys &amp; G irls
ill Sandusky Monday after
attending · the funeral services for her mother, Mrs.
Middleport. 0 .
Mary Elizabelit Butcher.

Recognition
of
pa st
presidents and a program on
the Ebersbach family and
U1eir contribution to the coa l
industry in Meigs County
highligh ted lhe annua l
Founder 's Day celebration of
the Pomeroy Elementary
School PTA Monday night.
Recognized and presented
gifts were Ted Downie , Mrs .
Carrie Neutzling, Mrs . Clara
Thomas, Mrs . Ada Warner,
Mrs . Wilma Terrell , Mrs .
Ula 1\!.itch and Mrs. Annette
Knight.
The program presented by
Mrs. Neutzling was entitled
" America , We Lov.e You ".
and was the story of the coal
industry developed in Meigs
County by the Ebersbach
family . Soloi s t for the
program was Mrs. · Marvin

(

,'
COUPLE TO PERFORM- Mr . and Mrs. Curt Davis
will appear at the Pomeroy United Methodist Church at
7:30 each evening from Sunday, Feb. 15lhrough Sunday,
Feb. 22. Mr. Davis is a nationally known organist who
received his training for the concert st.age at the
Metropolitan School of Music, Indiana College of Music
and Fine Arts, the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music
and Indiana University . He began playing the piano for
Sunday school and church at the age of 9. He went into
radio and television work and taught briefly at a Bible
institute in Detroit, Mich. Mrs. Davis, contralto soloist,
received most of her training in Indiana. The couple
records for Zondervan Publishing House of Grand Rapids,
Mich . The public is invited to attend .

Church responsibility is topic
IJ'ays was discussed and i"t
ba~kground music by Mrs.
Jones . She also gave a prayer was decided that the charge
" Be Thankful for An1erica." wi ll be $5. The punch bowl
Devotions by Mr s. John will not be rented .
The valenti ne projec t to be
Krawsczyn were on the
"Heart " theme . She noted carried out Thursday was
Refreshments
titat heart is mentioned 21 announced.
times in the Bible and gave were served by Mrs. Euvetta
Mrs.
Jessi e
several scripture readings. Bechtle,
Gle n
Lambert Houchins, Mrs. Teresa Byer
Mrs.
Mrs.
Fl'ances
reported on th e Middleport · and
Baptis t.
Churc h Brewington . The valentine
F:irst
fe llowship tea_ attended by Uteme was us€ll in the table
four of the Un ited Methodist decorations.
Women. Rental of serving

heritage house

slate of officers at the March
meeting . Soulsby noted that
the unit still has light bulbs
for sale.
The room count was won by
Ute first grade . Refreshments
were served by the executive
committee.

DIAMOND
HEART
' PENDANT
:· :

'•

1995

Diamond Love
Neck lac e
A new p opular
ne c klace In wh1te
or yelloW gol d filled .

Three Diamond
Heart Neck lace
T he new, 1\ght c t1cli n
necKlace with J

diam pn.di. W hite or
yellow qold filled.

.

Diamond
Locke.t
·., Si mple t'.leauty w it h
:&lt;l
a di amon d In center.

··

Pictu re ol L.ov ed
O ne inside.

Sterl ing Silver
o r Gold locket
;hi

AntiQue finish . Pic ture

·~

o f L 0 \18&lt;1 O ne Imide.
S pac e l o1 e n(paylng .

~

'
1495

··'.'

Sill

"

.

a-Digit Pocket Calculator

Special14.95
Specia I 4.95
3 rolls 49c

AC Adapter

Req . 47c roii 2S ft . Aluminum Foil
Reg . 97c Roll75 fl .
Roll79c
Reg . 1.49bag Brach'sCtioc. Trea1s
lb.bag99c
Reg . S9c Paper mate Flair Pens
3 for 99c
Reg . 59c Papermate Elmarko Markers 2 for 79c
Reg . 89c Pk . Wrigley's Gum , 1-5 s ti ck pkgs.

pkg . 79c

Reg. 4.99 Me tal Porta File

Just 3.89

Reg. 69c Onward Envelopes

. Pkg . 39c

Reg. 67c Bo xed Greetmg Cards
10 in box . 39c
Reg . 3.59Metal File Box ~ 12lf:tX IOXS'I'a in .
2.79
Reg. 1.00 Onward The me Books
each 69c
Req . 49c Floral &amp; Thank You Notes, 10's
2 bxs.
·
49c·
Reg , 3.59 Metal Check File, 9xh4•h in .
2.79
Reg . 77c 1000-in. Tuck Cellophane Ta pe 4 tor 99c
Reg . 17c ea . Scente~ 10-hc&gt;ur Votive Candles ea.

li••i4 WOOLITE •

told Waltr WASH

9C

'

f6-~z.
Sill

Reg.. Sl Craftmaster Super 4 Paint by No. Sets ea .

·

119
...

79c

Re g . S9c Built Rite Punle Games

ea. 39c
Reg. $1.59 M. B. 1,000 pc . Oevqn Jigsaw Punleea .

1.29

Qeq . 99c M.S. SOOpc . Scenic Jigsaw Puzzle
Reg . 1.19 M. B. 750-pc. Essex Jigsaw Puzz le

ea.

99c
1. 99

I

Reg. 79c Lindberg Model Kits

ea.S9c

Reg . 1.00 Built Rite Children's Games.
e a . 79c
Reg . 1.00 Play more Giant Size Color Books
ea .

59c
Reg . 1.00 Lindberg Larger size Model Kits ea. 79c
Reg . 3.49 16 inch Gym Sports Bag
""· 2.99

Reg . 1.00 Built Rite.Fafnily Games

Reg. 69c Box of 24 Crayola Crayon•
Reg. 39c Bridge Size Playing Card•
Reg . 79c to 1.49 Vat. Bakeware Sate
Reg . 69c to 1.29 Val. Kitchen Gadgets

41-0r. WI-FLUSH .
Tllltt , ...

e.....,

ea. 79c

2 bx5. 99t
deck 29c
2 for 99c
2 for 99c

Everyt hing For Your Valentine O.y Including

Cards and Candy - tf In The Store Ask For A
Sate Bill We Reserve Right to Limit
Quantities.

·~79~

~EN
.
~
PH.
o~.i~.
.

8

.......

Iii&lt;~'-'' (9~\
·..
..
*•

letllr- liSSIE

Ht79t

Rea .

Reg . .79c Ekco Kitchen' Tools

2 tor 99c

Reg . J7c each Decorative Straw Hot Pads 2 for 99c
Reg . 69c Screen Printed Kitchen Towels 2 for 99c
Reg . t ,29 Cannon pkg . S Washcloths
pkg, 99c
Reg . 1:27 Bubble Bath Shampoo , Rin~es ea. 99c

Reg . 1.49 Polyester Fiber Fill

1-lb. bag 99c

Re g . 1.29 Jumbo Storage Chest
Reg . 1. 19 Convert -A-Pillow
Reg . 1.89 Early Am . Hanging Planter
Reg . 1. 49 Hanging Planter. w-rope

ea. 99c
ea. 99c
ea . 99c
ea . 99c

R'eg. 1.49 See-lhru Covered Cake Pan

ea. 99c ·

will give you a

Reg . 49c ea . 8 oz. Decorated Mugs
Reg . 3.99 IS-gallon Trash Can
Reg . 2,59 Pkg . ol 40 Trash Bags
Reg . 3.99 IP/1 qt . Big Stu Cooking Pot
Reg . 5.99 t9'h qt. Bi' Stu Cooking Pot
Special Buys! Plastic Housewares

Reg . 3.99 to in. Telton Fry Pan

Reg . 29c ea. Wooden Kitchen Utensils

3tor 99c
Only 1.99
pkg . 1.99
2.99
4.99

$1!~ND

SHEER KNEE-Ir1
• 2 Pr ; per Pfrg
,

SPECIAL SUNDAY
Four Chaplains Sunday
wa s observed at Trinity
Church Sunday with members of Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, attending
services in a group. Special
music by the choir was Fred
Waring 's arrangement of
''The Battle Hymn of the
Republic ."

choice 99c

ea . 1.99
ea . 19c

Reg . 1.25' 8 oz . sizes Elmer's Glue
ea. 69c
Reg. 4Jc ea . Westmore Lipstick .. Nail Enamel
Reg . soc ea. Bandana Handkerchiefs.
Reg . 2.09 Tinkles Davtim e 30's

Reg . 1.29 Overnighl'l2's
Reg . !.44 Toddler t2'5
Reg . !.89 Newborn 30'5
Reg. S'lc Terry Training Pants
Reg . ~9c Wom . Bikinis &amp; Briefs
Reg . 99c pr . Sheer Panty Hose
Reg . 89c Stretch K~ee- Highs

Reg . 39c Fashion Earrings
,
Reg . 1.2'9 pr . Queen Size Panty Hose

3lor 99c
ea . 79c
ea. 39t
box 1.59

boxB9c
box 99c
box 1.29
ea. 39c
ea. 39c

2 pr. 99c
pair 69c
4 for 99c
pr. 79c

Reg . l1 Men's Striped Tube Socks
Pf· 69c
Reg . 89c Boys' Striped Tube Socks
pr . 59c
Reg . 11 .69 Bath Size Floral Print Towels ea . 99c
1.09 Hand Towel, 69c
79c Wash Cloth, 49&lt;
Reg~ H&amp; Rug Runners
ea. 1.99
Reg. 2.99 Trilnslucent Window Shades

ea. 1.99

Reg. 8.99 24&gt;36" Framed Pictures
Reg . 4.49 40 qt . Plastic Sit.on Hamper

ea . 6.99
H . 2.99

POMEROY

THURSDAY
.
BRADBURY PTA, 7:30 p .
m. Thursday at the school.
Bicentennia l program:
MEIGS COUNTY Hun1ane
Socie ty, 7:30 Th ursday night
at Middleport Village Hall.
Everyone welcome.
PRECEPTOR BETA
BETA Chapter, Bet.a Sipma ,
Ph i Sorority, 7: 30 p .m.
Thursday at the home of Mrs .
June Van Vranken .
MEIGS
COUNTY
CHAPTER of American Red
Cross Thursday 7:30 p.rri . in
Ute cafeteria · at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
POM EROY
ALUMNI
ASSOCIATION Thursday,
7:30p.m·. at the home of Mrs .
Gene
Mitc h, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.
LAUREL Cliff Better
Health Club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the home of Mrs .
Marjorie Goett. Members
will have a valentine exchange.
FRIDAY
MARY Shrine No. 37 Order
of the White Shrine of
Jerusale m
Friday
at
Pomero} Masonic Temple 8
p.m. Potluck refreshmimts .
RETURN Jonatlu!n Meigs
Chapter , Daughters of the
American Revolution, 1:30
p.m. Friday at the Pomeroy
First
Baptist
Churc h .
Members are to contribute a
hLtorica l fact in response to
roll call. Keith Circle,
bicentennial minuteman, will
be the speaker. Delegates to
the Continental Congress to
be elected. Hos tesses, Mrs.
George Skinner, Mrs . Mark
Grueser and Mrs . Ed Foster.
HAPPY Harvesters Class,
7:30 Friday a t Trinity
Church.
·

• Dote Jtre Flrt BVt

Reg . 39c to 89c Vat. Kenilwo rth Flatware ea. 29c

Reg . 9ic Nylon Chiffon Scarfs

MakePomeroyy
Shopping Cenro':''

200·202 E. MAIN ST.
Use Our Conveniont Lay-Away Plan

NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS 'RESERvED

POMEROY, OHIO

l 39
Center Loin . . .
' 1 49
PORK CHOPS ••••••••• 1~·....

Center Rib

·· '
PORK CHOPS ••••••••• ~~·••••

Rib End ·
PORK ROASt•••••·•••• ~~-.

.....
.....

.,NUUIIIUJR

'~'''"

!69•

'
WEEKEND
VISITORS
· Mr . and Mrs . Terry Knight
tjpd son Stevie, Qlledonia,
were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Ches!er Knight.
Joining the family also for the
weekend were Mr . aJtd Mrs .
Dick Knight of Win!ersville,
?ouseguests of Mrs. Dorothy
Young, Middleport. A dinner
was held in celebration of the
lllrthdays of Chester Knight
and Mrs . Terry Knight. Aloo
present for the dinner were
r,tr.1 and Mrs . BID Matlack.

.

...

990

31bs. or More

GROUND BEEF••••••• ~~-.
Ballard's Sage

SAUSAGE ••••••••••••••• ~~~

29

Superiors Dart

SLICED BACON •••••••••••• ib~.

Yellow Cooking

3-lb.

ONIONS.•••••••••••••~ ••
Thank You Cherry
20oz.

PIE FILLING •••••••••~~-

MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER in honor of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Ziegler Friday, 7:30
p.m. at Modern Woodmen
Hall, Burlingham.
SA11JRDAY
SONGFEST Saturday, 7:30
p.m. at Rutland Church of
God, SR 124, this side of
Rutland . Gospel Tones will _be
featured .

Reg. to 89c Val . Glassware Specials
2 for 99c
Reg. to 2.19 Val . Fire-King Ovenware Choice 99c
Reg . 1.4936 oz . Apothecary Jars
Choice 99c

'FRANKLI..._.
:
ltiW
v

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

.......

• 41 Payer
•I• lO Y. 111 Sire

•••

ea.

79c

Reg . 1.49 M,B. 1500 pc . Devon Jigsaw Puzzle ea.

Ht19~.

..,....,..
89~

IWES-S's

SALE STARTS
FRIDAY MORNING

89~

It-Oz.

..

..,....,..
•-+1~!

'

Bargains
and Save

298 Second St.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners Club, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at home of Mrs.
Ferman Moore, Uncoln lliU
Road, Pomeroy. Bicentennial
program to be presented a nd ·
~n exchange of homemade
'alentines is planned .
POMEROY
M!DlLEPORT Lions Club,
Wednesday noon, Meigs Inn.
POMEROY
CHAPTER,
Royal Arch Masons, and
, Bosworth Council , Royal and
~lect Masters, Wednesday,
7:30 p.m . at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.

TNIIPAX ·

willt tlrtf'l'

Store Hours:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

Social
J Calendar

,.._tf 40

SlllllltttStHI

February 14, 1976

1

Q.IP ntESE OOUPONS AND SAVE

Wlllll1110a ·

Members of the Pomeroy
Seventh-day
Adventist
Church enjoyed a vegetarian
potluck buffet supper in the
church basement on a recent
Sunday evening . Bob Pickett
asked the blessing ,
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Burdell Black, Conley
Cole, Mrs. Sara [)rake, Mr .
and Mrs. Bob Pickett and
daughter, Lori, Mrs. Rhonda
Ables, Bob Upscomb and
·sons Eyri~ and Robert, and
friend; Douglas Seyler, Mrs.

~..-..-:...•.:-:·.........:-:·~:·~:i'•!O:•:O'•~·;,_.,.·.····:·;·,·······
§'•'•
...... ,y.-.·.••.•. ,.,y................. '·' •.

FINE

Oteck These

Effective Thru

Irma Bales, Miss Diana

f: _

FAVORITE
CANIW BAliS

Prices

.

YOUR
HEADQUARTERS
FOR FLEXSTEEL 1 tY\" 't l: r
r--·

potluck held

Spires, Mr . and Mrs . Joseph
White 'and the church pastor
and his wife, Mr . and Mrs.
Gerard Seton of Athens .
Following supper the group
enjoyed games.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

SHOP EARLY WHILE SELECTIONS ARE COMPLfTE

BEN*FRANK~ID-1

6 .

BAKER
FURNITURE

ANNUAL DINNER SET
VISIT ENJOYED
CHESTER - The annual
A
visit
to Radio Station
blue and gold . dinner of
WMPO
was
made recently by
Plains
Cub
Chester-Tuppers
Plains
Cub Scout
Tuppers
Scout Pack 236 will be held
Den
4
of
Pack
235
. ln the
Feb. 28 at 6 p.m . a t the
~ro up touring
the
s tation
. C~est~r " \'ji.e~enta r y School.
were'
Johnny
Davis,
Jim
The dmner will honor scout
Brooks
,
Jeff
Wyers,
Ray
parents in a gesture of ap-Smith
,
Bob
Brouks,
Greg
preciation
for
the ir
coopera tion and su'ppOrt . Collins, Roger Baker , Todd
duri ng the. past year. A Clemson, Mrs . Ruth Brooks,
spaghetti · dinner has been den mother, and daughter
planned .
Ac h ievement Debra, Joan Smith and son
awards will be prese nted to -Michael, and Kevin Brooks
the scouts by Uoyd Brooks, and Rob Smith of Chester Boy
Scout Troop 2:15.
cub master .

POMEROY

Three television sets in
need of repair are to be taken
to the Meigs High School
vocational class. Appointed
to the nominating committee
were Mrs. Charles Goeglein, ,
Mrs. Mark Tannehill and Don
Mayer . They will present a

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

ir:::~~~:dc~,~~~~~~~~l~~&amp;~~~~~~--~~

Wagner's
54~

Kounty Kist. 16 oz.
'

;

Whole Kemel or Cream Style

CORN~ ••••••·••••••••••••.

s
· cans

17 Ounce Cans

ARGO

PEAS._,.~ ••••••••

-Sweepstakes 16 oz.

MACKEREL •.••••••• ~ •••• ,
,

cans

s
cans

ORANGE DRINK ••••• ~.
Joan of Arc 30 ·oz.

KIDNEY BEANS
HILTON'S
OYSTER
STEW

2-$1

cans

.HAVILAND

TABLECLOTHS
REG.
1
14.99

$}199wtc

Umlt I Coupon Per Cilstomer '
Good at Po-ll'• Suotr Valu
Coupon ·.

�.·8- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday. Feb. II, 1976

PTA celebrates .Pounder's Day

Polly's Pointers
Salt and roast nuts
in one-step process

By Poll'): Cramer

Polly's Problem
DEl\R POLLY - Perhaps
some other husbands are like
mine, and like to sleep on
over-size pillows·. Many of my
pillowcases are on the small
side, so I always had a time
gelling them on the pillows. ·
One day r took each side of a
case and worked it in my
hands like I do when putting
on pantyhose . This worked
like magic and l have no
more trouble .
I do hope someone can tell
me how to roast or poa ch
peanuts in the shell and salt
them at the same lime . MRS. D.I..N .
DEAR MRS . D.L.N. - A
nut. processing company
advised me that you might
soak the peanuts 1in their
shells) in strong salt water
for a couple of days, dry out
thoroughly and then roast
them. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My main
Pet Peeve is that being an
avid coupon. user I think the
customer should be protected

ln some way from those

fish . - MRS. S.F.
DEAR POLLY - a nd Ruth

who wan Lc; to removr slains
fr om her fish tan.k -- l gave
the following hint to a woman
who raises fish and needed to
clean a 55 ga llon tank on
which
she
had
tried
everything with no luck. Use
vinega r I told her. She
dampened a cloth with it and
let stand against the sides to
soak. This also works for
lhose. nasty

lime

sta in s

around s ink faucets. SHARON .
DEAR POLLY ~ Lighter
fluid put on a cotton ball will
remove that sticky glue that
labels leave on any surface as
the stove, dishes, etc. ,...
JOYCE .
BIRTHDAY NEAR
Mrs .
Zora
Rockwell
Walker. form e r Pomeroy
resident, will be 91 years of
age on Feb . 16. Cards may be
sent to her at the Hill Haven
Convalesce nt Center, 2120 E.
Fifth Ave. , Colw11bus , Ohio
432!9.

coupon$ that appear on boxes
a nd become outdated while
still on the shelf. Also, l do
hope the man ufacturers are
listening as fitted top sheets
are every bit as desirable as
the fitted bottom ones. As far
Global mtss10ns and the
as l know a mail order
chlU'ch's
responsibility was
company is the only supplier
lite
program
topic discussed
of these and then only for
the
Rev
.
Robert
regular size beds . Why not by
Bumgarner
at
the
Monday
.
king size beds too ;
When I hard boil eggs and night meeting of the Heath
hctve more than I use at one Uni ted Methodist Women of
time, l crack the shells, let Middleport.
Us in g the bo ok, " Why
stand for ~ bit in cold water ,
do
not
remove
the
shells
Global
Missions? 11 as the
but
minister defined
basis,
the
until I am ready to use the
glob.a] missions as meaning
eggs. - MRS . J.A.G .
DEAR POLLY - I ac- helping and shanng all over
cidentally made a fantastic Ute world, no ting that it indiscovery that should solve volves not.only ministers, but
Ruth 's problem· with clean ing all men and women . He said
her fish tank . While cleaning it includes not only foreign
one of ours, I decided to stop missions and churches , but
standing at the si nk scrub- also local churches , and said
bing with a brush trying to Ute Christian's responsibility
clean the cas tle, etc. that are is to reach out to all nations.
kept in the tank. Neglect had · May has been set aside as
CJUsed tliem to turn green. I lite mon tit for special' emput some water in an enamel phasis on global missions, he
pan. poured in a generous repor!ed, and t~en e~plain~d
•amount of bleach and popped Ute fun ctions of the various
the castle , ceramic turtle and boards of the church in
all parts of the filter into the carrying out the program.
Mrs . Earl Knight presided
water and left them for about
an hour. · Everything was at the meeting \"h ich ope ned
clean as new. There is one with a medley of patriotic
warning: everything inust be songs by Mrs . Beulah Jones,
well soaked and rinsed in pianist. Mrs. Knig ht gave a
clear wate r before being put meditati on e ntitled "T hi s
back in the water with the Land is My Land " with

Burt.
James Soulsby presided
with the Rev. Clyde Henders on of the Pomeroy
Nazarene Church giving
devotions.
It was reported that the
Rev . W. H Perrin has completed the bulletin board for
the reading room . Tile Rev .
Mr . Perrin con~r ucted the
board with supplies being
purchased by the PTA . A
filing cabinet for PTA papers
will be purchased .
A rwnrilage sale in March
by the ways and means
committee was announced
with the money to be used to
pay for trophies awarded the
safety patrol in the spring.
Residents with Hems to
contri bute are to contact
Soulsby.
It was also reported tha t
another parachute had been
donated for the students.
George Wright talked on the
VISIT HERE
cub scouting program and
Mr . and Mrs . Woodrow announced an open house to
t Norma Butcher) Wilcox of be at the Church of Christ on
Sandusky were weekend Feb . 19,7:30 p.m. Any adults
guests of Mr . and Mrs . Ed- interested in becoming inward Stiles, South Third, volved in scouting are enMiddleport. Others visiting couraged to attend.
during the weekend were Mr .
and Mrs . Bill Miller and
Mark, Larry Lacey, Mr. and
Mrs. James Wilson and
daughter , Sandusky ; Mr . and
Mrs. Allen Missler; Mr . and
Mrs. Larry Dale and
childre n, Bellevue, a nd Mr.
and Mrs . Virgil Butcher,
Portsmouth. Mr . and Mrs .
Infants
Woodrow Wilcox and Larry
Lacey returned to their home
Boys &amp; G irls
ill Sandusky Monday after
attending · the funeral services for her mother, Mrs.
Middleport. 0 .
Mary Elizabelit Butcher.

Recognition
of
pa st
presidents and a program on
the Ebersbach family and
U1eir contribution to the coa l
industry in Meigs County
highligh ted lhe annua l
Founder 's Day celebration of
the Pomeroy Elementary
School PTA Monday night.
Recognized and presented
gifts were Ted Downie , Mrs .
Carrie Neutzling, Mrs . Clara
Thomas, Mrs . Ada Warner,
Mrs . Wilma Terrell , Mrs .
Ula 1\!.itch and Mrs. Annette
Knight.
The program presented by
Mrs. Neutzling was entitled
" America , We Lov.e You ".
and was the story of the coal
industry developed in Meigs
County by the Ebersbach
family . Soloi s t for the
program was Mrs. · Marvin

(

,'
COUPLE TO PERFORM- Mr . and Mrs. Curt Davis
will appear at the Pomeroy United Methodist Church at
7:30 each evening from Sunday, Feb. 15lhrough Sunday,
Feb. 22. Mr. Davis is a nationally known organist who
received his training for the concert st.age at the
Metropolitan School of Music, Indiana College of Music
and Fine Arts, the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music
and Indiana University . He began playing the piano for
Sunday school and church at the age of 9. He went into
radio and television work and taught briefly at a Bible
institute in Detroit, Mich. Mrs. Davis, contralto soloist,
received most of her training in Indiana. The couple
records for Zondervan Publishing House of Grand Rapids,
Mich . The public is invited to attend .

Church responsibility is topic
IJ'ays was discussed and i"t
ba~kground music by Mrs.
Jones . She also gave a prayer was decided that the charge
" Be Thankful for An1erica." wi ll be $5. The punch bowl
Devotions by Mr s. John will not be rented .
The valenti ne projec t to be
Krawsczyn were on the
"Heart " theme . She noted carried out Thursday was
Refreshments
titat heart is mentioned 21 announced.
times in the Bible and gave were served by Mrs. Euvetta
Mrs.
Jessi e
several scripture readings. Bechtle,
Gle n
Lambert Houchins, Mrs. Teresa Byer
Mrs.
Mrs.
Fl'ances
reported on th e Middleport · and
Baptis t.
Churc h Brewington . The valentine
F:irst
fe llowship tea_ attended by Uteme was us€ll in the table
four of the Un ited Methodist decorations.
Women. Rental of serving

heritage house

slate of officers at the March
meeting . Soulsby noted that
the unit still has light bulbs
for sale.
The room count was won by
Ute first grade . Refreshments
were served by the executive
committee.

DIAMOND
HEART
' PENDANT
:· :

'•

1995

Diamond Love
Neck lac e
A new p opular
ne c klace In wh1te
or yelloW gol d filled .

Three Diamond
Heart Neck lace
T he new, 1\ght c t1cli n
necKlace with J

diam pn.di. W hite or
yellow qold filled.

.

Diamond
Locke.t
·., Si mple t'.leauty w it h
:&lt;l
a di amon d In center.

··

Pictu re ol L.ov ed
O ne inside.

Sterl ing Silver
o r Gold locket
;hi

AntiQue finish . Pic ture

·~

o f L 0 \18&lt;1 O ne Imide.
S pac e l o1 e n(paylng .

~

'
1495

··'.'

Sill

"

.

a-Digit Pocket Calculator

Special14.95
Specia I 4.95
3 rolls 49c

AC Adapter

Req . 47c roii 2S ft . Aluminum Foil
Reg . 97c Roll75 fl .
Roll79c
Reg . 1.49bag Brach'sCtioc. Trea1s
lb.bag99c
Reg . S9c Paper mate Flair Pens
3 for 99c
Reg . 59c Papermate Elmarko Markers 2 for 79c
Reg . 89c Pk . Wrigley's Gum , 1-5 s ti ck pkgs.

pkg . 79c

Reg. 4.99 Me tal Porta File

Just 3.89

Reg. 69c Onward Envelopes

. Pkg . 39c

Reg. 67c Bo xed Greetmg Cards
10 in box . 39c
Reg . 3.59Metal File Box ~ 12lf:tX IOXS'I'a in .
2.79
Reg. 1.00 Onward The me Books
each 69c
Req . 49c Floral &amp; Thank You Notes, 10's
2 bxs.
·
49c·
Reg , 3.59 Metal Check File, 9xh4•h in .
2.79
Reg . 77c 1000-in. Tuck Cellophane Ta pe 4 tor 99c
Reg . 17c ea . Scente~ 10-hc&gt;ur Votive Candles ea.

li••i4 WOOLITE •

told Waltr WASH

9C

'

f6-~z.
Sill

Reg.. Sl Craftmaster Super 4 Paint by No. Sets ea .

·

119
...

79c

Re g . S9c Built Rite Punle Games

ea. 39c
Reg. $1.59 M. B. 1,000 pc . Oevqn Jigsaw Punleea .

1.29

Qeq . 99c M.S. SOOpc . Scenic Jigsaw Puzzle
Reg . 1.19 M. B. 750-pc. Essex Jigsaw Puzz le

ea.

99c
1. 99

I

Reg. 79c Lindberg Model Kits

ea.S9c

Reg . 1.00 Built Rite Children's Games.
e a . 79c
Reg . 1.00 Play more Giant Size Color Books
ea .

59c
Reg . 1.00 Lindberg Larger size Model Kits ea. 79c
Reg . 3.49 16 inch Gym Sports Bag
""· 2.99

Reg . 1.00 Built Rite.Fafnily Games

Reg. 69c Box of 24 Crayola Crayon•
Reg. 39c Bridge Size Playing Card•
Reg . 79c to 1.49 Vat. Bakeware Sate
Reg . 69c to 1.29 Val. Kitchen Gadgets

41-0r. WI-FLUSH .
Tllltt , ...

e.....,

ea. 79c

2 bx5. 99t
deck 29c
2 for 99c
2 for 99c

Everyt hing For Your Valentine O.y Including

Cards and Candy - tf In The Store Ask For A
Sate Bill We Reserve Right to Limit
Quantities.

·~79~

~EN
.
~
PH.
o~.i~.
.

8

.......

Iii&lt;~'-'' (9~\
·..
..
*•

letllr- liSSIE

Ht79t

Rea .

Reg . .79c Ekco Kitchen' Tools

2 tor 99c

Reg . J7c each Decorative Straw Hot Pads 2 for 99c
Reg . 69c Screen Printed Kitchen Towels 2 for 99c
Reg . t ,29 Cannon pkg . S Washcloths
pkg, 99c
Reg . 1:27 Bubble Bath Shampoo , Rin~es ea. 99c

Reg . 1.49 Polyester Fiber Fill

1-lb. bag 99c

Re g . 1.29 Jumbo Storage Chest
Reg . 1. 19 Convert -A-Pillow
Reg . 1.89 Early Am . Hanging Planter
Reg . 1. 49 Hanging Planter. w-rope

ea. 99c
ea. 99c
ea . 99c
ea . 99c

R'eg. 1.49 See-lhru Covered Cake Pan

ea. 99c ·

will give you a

Reg . 49c ea . 8 oz. Decorated Mugs
Reg . 3.99 IS-gallon Trash Can
Reg . 2,59 Pkg . ol 40 Trash Bags
Reg . 3.99 IP/1 qt . Big Stu Cooking Pot
Reg . 5.99 t9'h qt. Bi' Stu Cooking Pot
Special Buys! Plastic Housewares

Reg . 3.99 to in. Telton Fry Pan

Reg . 29c ea. Wooden Kitchen Utensils

3tor 99c
Only 1.99
pkg . 1.99
2.99
4.99

$1!~ND

SHEER KNEE-Ir1
• 2 Pr ; per Pfrg
,

SPECIAL SUNDAY
Four Chaplains Sunday
wa s observed at Trinity
Church Sunday with members of Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, attending
services in a group. Special
music by the choir was Fred
Waring 's arrangement of
''The Battle Hymn of the
Republic ."

choice 99c

ea . 1.99
ea . 19c

Reg . 1.25' 8 oz . sizes Elmer's Glue
ea. 69c
Reg. 4Jc ea . Westmore Lipstick .. Nail Enamel
Reg . soc ea. Bandana Handkerchiefs.
Reg . 2.09 Tinkles Davtim e 30's

Reg . 1.29 Overnighl'l2's
Reg . !.44 Toddler t2'5
Reg . !.89 Newborn 30'5
Reg. S'lc Terry Training Pants
Reg . ~9c Wom . Bikinis &amp; Briefs
Reg . 99c pr . Sheer Panty Hose
Reg . 89c Stretch K~ee- Highs

Reg . 39c Fashion Earrings
,
Reg . 1.2'9 pr . Queen Size Panty Hose

3lor 99c
ea . 79c
ea. 39t
box 1.59

boxB9c
box 99c
box 1.29
ea. 39c
ea. 39c

2 pr. 99c
pair 69c
4 for 99c
pr. 79c

Reg . l1 Men's Striped Tube Socks
Pf· 69c
Reg . 89c Boys' Striped Tube Socks
pr . 59c
Reg . 11 .69 Bath Size Floral Print Towels ea . 99c
1.09 Hand Towel, 69c
79c Wash Cloth, 49&lt;
Reg~ H&amp; Rug Runners
ea. 1.99
Reg. 2.99 Trilnslucent Window Shades

ea. 1.99

Reg. 8.99 24&gt;36" Framed Pictures
Reg . 4.49 40 qt . Plastic Sit.on Hamper

ea . 6.99
H . 2.99

POMEROY

THURSDAY
.
BRADBURY PTA, 7:30 p .
m. Thursday at the school.
Bicentennia l program:
MEIGS COUNTY Hun1ane
Socie ty, 7:30 Th ursday night
at Middleport Village Hall.
Everyone welcome.
PRECEPTOR BETA
BETA Chapter, Bet.a Sipma ,
Ph i Sorority, 7: 30 p .m.
Thursday at the home of Mrs .
June Van Vranken .
MEIGS
COUNTY
CHAPTER of American Red
Cross Thursday 7:30 p.rri . in
Ute cafeteria · at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
POM EROY
ALUMNI
ASSOCIATION Thursday,
7:30p.m·. at the home of Mrs .
Gene
Mitc h, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.
LAUREL Cliff Better
Health Club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the home of Mrs .
Marjorie Goett. Members
will have a valentine exchange.
FRIDAY
MARY Shrine No. 37 Order
of the White Shrine of
Jerusale m
Friday
at
Pomero} Masonic Temple 8
p.m. Potluck refreshmimts .
RETURN Jonatlu!n Meigs
Chapter , Daughters of the
American Revolution, 1:30
p.m. Friday at the Pomeroy
First
Baptist
Churc h .
Members are to contribute a
hLtorica l fact in response to
roll call. Keith Circle,
bicentennial minuteman, will
be the speaker. Delegates to
the Continental Congress to
be elected. Hos tesses, Mrs.
George Skinner, Mrs . Mark
Grueser and Mrs . Ed Foster.
HAPPY Harvesters Class,
7:30 Friday a t Trinity
Church.
·

• Dote Jtre Flrt BVt

Reg . 39c to 89c Vat. Kenilwo rth Flatware ea. 29c

Reg . 9ic Nylon Chiffon Scarfs

MakePomeroyy
Shopping Cenro':''

200·202 E. MAIN ST.
Use Our Conveniont Lay-Away Plan

NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS 'RESERvED

POMEROY, OHIO

l 39
Center Loin . . .
' 1 49
PORK CHOPS ••••••••• 1~·....

Center Rib

·· '
PORK CHOPS ••••••••• ~~·••••

Rib End ·
PORK ROASt•••••·•••• ~~-.

.....
.....

.,NUUIIIUJR

'~'''"

!69•

'
WEEKEND
VISITORS
· Mr . and Mrs . Terry Knight
tjpd son Stevie, Qlledonia,
were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Ches!er Knight.
Joining the family also for the
weekend were Mr . aJtd Mrs .
Dick Knight of Win!ersville,
?ouseguests of Mrs. Dorothy
Young, Middleport. A dinner
was held in celebration of the
lllrthdays of Chester Knight
and Mrs . Terry Knight. Aloo
present for the dinner were
r,tr.1 and Mrs . BID Matlack.

.

...

990

31bs. or More

GROUND BEEF••••••• ~~-.
Ballard's Sage

SAUSAGE ••••••••••••••• ~~~

29

Superiors Dart

SLICED BACON •••••••••••• ib~.

Yellow Cooking

3-lb.

ONIONS.•••••••••••••~ ••
Thank You Cherry
20oz.

PIE FILLING •••••••••~~-

MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER in honor of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Ziegler Friday, 7:30
p.m. at Modern Woodmen
Hall, Burlingham.
SA11JRDAY
SONGFEST Saturday, 7:30
p.m. at Rutland Church of
God, SR 124, this side of
Rutland . Gospel Tones will _be
featured .

Reg. to 89c Val . Glassware Specials
2 for 99c
Reg. to 2.19 Val . Fire-King Ovenware Choice 99c
Reg . 1.4936 oz . Apothecary Jars
Choice 99c

'FRANKLI..._.
:
ltiW
v

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

.......

• 41 Payer
•I• lO Y. 111 Sire

•••

ea.

79c

Reg . 1.49 M,B. 1500 pc . Devon Jigsaw Puzzle ea.

Ht19~.

..,....,..
89~

IWES-S's

SALE STARTS
FRIDAY MORNING

89~

It-Oz.

..

..,....,..
•-+1~!

'

Bargains
and Save

298 Second St.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners Club, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at home of Mrs.
Ferman Moore, Uncoln lliU
Road, Pomeroy. Bicentennial
program to be presented a nd ·
~n exchange of homemade
'alentines is planned .
POMEROY
M!DlLEPORT Lions Club,
Wednesday noon, Meigs Inn.
POMEROY
CHAPTER,
Royal Arch Masons, and
, Bosworth Council , Royal and
~lect Masters, Wednesday,
7:30 p.m . at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.

TNIIPAX ·

willt tlrtf'l'

Store Hours:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

Social
J Calendar

,.._tf 40

SlllllltttStHI

February 14, 1976

1

Q.IP ntESE OOUPONS AND SAVE

Wlllll1110a ·

Members of the Pomeroy
Seventh-day
Adventist
Church enjoyed a vegetarian
potluck buffet supper in the
church basement on a recent
Sunday evening . Bob Pickett
asked the blessing ,
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Burdell Black, Conley
Cole, Mrs. Sara [)rake, Mr .
and Mrs. Bob Pickett and
daughter, Lori, Mrs. Rhonda
Ables, Bob Upscomb and
·sons Eyri~ and Robert, and
friend; Douglas Seyler, Mrs.

~..-..-:...•.:-:·.........:-:·~:·~:i'•!O:•:O'•~·;,_.,.·.····:·;·,·······
§'•'•
...... ,y.-.·.••.•. ,.,y................. '·' •.

FINE

Oteck These

Effective Thru

Irma Bales, Miss Diana

f: _

FAVORITE
CANIW BAliS

Prices

.

YOUR
HEADQUARTERS
FOR FLEXSTEEL 1 tY\" 't l: r
r--·

potluck held

Spires, Mr . and Mrs . Joseph
White 'and the church pastor
and his wife, Mr . and Mrs.
Gerard Seton of Athens .
Following supper the group
enjoyed games.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

SHOP EARLY WHILE SELECTIONS ARE COMPLfTE

BEN*FRANK~ID-1

6 .

BAKER
FURNITURE

ANNUAL DINNER SET
VISIT ENJOYED
CHESTER - The annual
A
visit
to Radio Station
blue and gold . dinner of
WMPO
was
made recently by
Plains
Cub
Chester-Tuppers
Plains
Cub Scout
Tuppers
Scout Pack 236 will be held
Den
4
of
Pack
235
. ln the
Feb. 28 at 6 p.m . a t the
~ro up touring
the
s tation
. C~est~r " \'ji.e~enta r y School.
were'
Johnny
Davis,
Jim
The dmner will honor scout
Brooks
,
Jeff
Wyers,
Ray
parents in a gesture of ap-Smith
,
Bob
Brouks,
Greg
preciation
for
the ir
coopera tion and su'ppOrt . Collins, Roger Baker , Todd
duri ng the. past year. A Clemson, Mrs . Ruth Brooks,
spaghetti · dinner has been den mother, and daughter
planned .
Ac h ievement Debra, Joan Smith and son
awards will be prese nted to -Michael, and Kevin Brooks
the scouts by Uoyd Brooks, and Rob Smith of Chester Boy
Scout Troop 2:15.
cub master .

POMEROY

Three television sets in
need of repair are to be taken
to the Meigs High School
vocational class. Appointed
to the nominating committee
were Mrs. Charles Goeglein, ,
Mrs. Mark Tannehill and Don
Mayer . They will present a

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

ir:::~~~:dc~,~~~~~~~~l~~&amp;~~~~~~--~~

Wagner's
54~

Kounty Kist. 16 oz.
'

;

Whole Kemel or Cream Style

CORN~ ••••••·••••••••••••.

s
· cans

17 Ounce Cans

ARGO

PEAS._,.~ ••••••••

-Sweepstakes 16 oz.

MACKEREL •.••••••• ~ •••• ,
,

cans

s
cans

ORANGE DRINK ••••• ~.
Joan of Arc 30 ·oz.

KIDNEY BEANS
HILTON'S
OYSTER
STEW

2-$1

cans

.HAVILAND

TABLECLOTHS
REG.
1
14.99

$}199wtc

Umlt I Coupon Per Cilstomer '
Good at Po-ll'• Suotr Valu
Coupon ·.

�11-The DallY Sentinei,Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. WedneldaY, Feb. II, 1t76
10 - The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 11. 1976

Editor.ial comment,
opinion, features

Report

DON OAKLEY

'Hot' ideas to cut rising fuel bills
'

''

'
•

•

••
•

•.

..
•

~

•
•
•

-"

"

•

Not only has the high cost of housing placed home ownership out of reach for millions of
Americans, but many people whO already own homes are finding the cost of running them
taking Increasingly large chunka out of their household budgets.
Addressing a meeting of the National Association of HomeBuilders in Dallas the other day,
Guy 0 . Mabry, vice president of Owens-Coming Fiberglass Corp., died the case of a New
Jersey homeowner whose annual fuel bills jllere almost as high as his mortgage payments_an,d
warned that "heating and cooling a house may soon become a luxury, unless the natron s
builders take immediate steps·to effectively reduce home energy consumption."
Mabry calls for a home energy efficiency rating system., similar to Detroit's milesi)er·
~~ 197BCy NEA. Inc
gallon designation, to help consumers. Just as m.p.g. has become the watchword of new car
buyers, "e.p.m." (energy-per-month) costs are fast becoming the major concern of today 's
"Hubert looks good, even though he must be
new home buyer, he says.
, ·
going through a very difficult time-being a
For starters, a doubling of current Federal Housing Administration minimum standards
'noncandidate 'I"
for insulation in attics, walls and floors "would have an immediate impact in lowering home
energy consumption."
. ·
This, of course, would mean more business for the makers of insulation and less business
for the energy utilities. But the latter are in titUe danger of running out of cUSiomers fur all the
'energy they can provide in the foreseeable future .
There are also other energy-llBvlng steps builders can take, such as double-paned windows,
insulated doors with magnetic weatherstripping and tighter construction to reduce air
"It's equal rights-· I have a right to smoke and.you have infiltration.
Nor need the low "e.p.m ." bouse cost more, says Mabry. For instance, the use of 2-by.fi
·
a right to wear a mask!"
studs on 24-inch centers, Instead of the traditional 2-by-4 studs on 16 in.ch centers, would both
accommodate thicker insulation and save significantly on lumber costs.
·
In addition, i!ecause of a more efficient "thermal envelope", heating , ventilating and airconditioning equipnent could be a much lower capacity.
There is a public as well as a jl'ivate stake in the more efficient use of our energy
The Almanac
resources.
Taxpayers are turning down bond issues. Sch.ools are closed to community use during offUnited Press International
hours.
Public building:unust close early. Not ali of this is due to the cost of energy, to be sure,
Today is Wednesday, Feb. but energy
is an important factor .
·
11, the 42nd day of 1976 with
It
will
take
ingenuity
If money.B!Jort communities are to survive this era of scarce and
324 to follow .
The moon is between its expensive energy, and architects and builders are, in fact, developing new concepts in
first quarter and the full structural design, furnishing and maintenance to meet the challenge, as well as making more
use of old ones.
phase.
By Ray Cromley
· The substitution of plastic plumbing pipe for metal can .save a substantial amount of
'l'he morning stars are ·
WASHINGTON - A wide ranging series of studies ~y
energy
because plastics requir.e only a fraction of the energy it takes to produce metal
Congressional committees and the General Acc01mting Office Mercury anll Venus . .
products.
.
The evening stars .are
are learning why the average citizen puts little trust in the
The
insulating
properties
of
carpet~ can save up to an eighth of heating fuel
Mars, Jl!piter nd Saturn.
bureal!cracy.
.
'
requirements. Substitution of fluorescent tights for incandescent bulbs cuts down on electrical
Those born on this date are consumption
Though it has been estimated that fraud and bumbling in
and lighting cost .
·
·
'
Medicare, Medicaid, Soda! Security, Supplementary Security under the sign of Aquarius.
Buildings
with
exteriors
of
mirror
giass
can
bring
about a 44 per cent heat reduction . HeatAmerican inventor Thomas
Income and other Health Education and WeUare programs run
transfer
systems
are
being
designed
coupling
air-conditioning
and heating units to pump warm
into the multi-billions, one report concludes that HEW takes as Alva Edison was born Feb. or cold air from areas where It is not needed to those where it is.
long as five years to take corrective action against discovery IJ, 184?.
Then there is the use of solar energy for healing and cooling, the possibilities of which we
• convertibility, built -in buttonholer,
of the deficiencies.
.Flat to 'free arm'
have scarcely begun to explore.
The . ~EW Office and Security Investigations has a !().year
exciusi,.ty designed SINGER' front drop·in bobbin,
backlog of uninvestigated cases.
pushbutton snap-in conversion plate . Carrying case
The organizational structure of HEW's fraud and abuse
or cabinet extra .
units was described as "fragmented and confused." Numbers
of investigators are said to have little training or experience.
No meaningful attempt has been made to even evaluate the
extent of fraud or other abuse.
A look into the operation of the Guaranteed student Loan
McCaWs, Kw!ck -Sew, Simplidt-, Patterns·,
program diselosed that defaults were ruruiing at 24 per cent
and at all times defines would . beget; · he talks of do with our probiems,.aild-lhe
-By Tom Tiede
SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE .
and that accumulated defaults now exceed $400 million. A
dialogue as one-way com- "forcing" auto Companies to best thing candidate Harris
MANCHESTER, N. H.
liS W. Second
992 -2284
Pomeroy, Ohio
federal report handed to Congress was so constructed that $300 Fred Harris, the chunky, munications . As to con .. do this, of "forcing'; oil can do for his version of the
million in deficits were hidden.
jowly candidate of the frontation, he can be abruptly companies to do that , of common people is to abolish
•A Trademark
THE SINGER COMPANY
Investigators found that the Interior Department knows so common people, was holding rough, once reportedly telling "restricting," of "man· them.
little about the oil leases it offers for sale on the continental a reception here _ when a a critic to "shut up and get dalin.g ," of '~breaking up/'
•
shelf that officials have no way of being even reasonably sure genuine _common person out of here. ''
without pausing to remember
they are receiving fair market value for properties worth emerged from the audience
More than this, Harris can this is not Uganda b·ut
billions.
to ask a ,question. Un- be insulting intellectually. America.
Though coosiderable sums l•ave been spent by the Small fortunately, the commoner His speeches before the
Assuredly, Harris is not·
Business Adniinistration to help disadvantaged firms become emerged at an inopportune common people suggest he alone in this kind of nonsense.
self-611fficient and competitive, the program has been a flop. In time - that is, when Harris views them as less than Most politicos think· of and
six years, the program's success totaled a mere 31 small firms was too busy talking to do any comprehensive. "If we take talk to the people as if they
nationwide.
the rich off welfare," he told are pinwheels . Yet Harris,
listening.
Recidivism is perhaps the major problem in crime control
"Just a minute!" Jlarris an audience here, "we 'll have because he makes so m.udi of
today. Thol!gh the Ulbor. Department has been. spending told the questioner sharply, plenty of money to do what populism' is more vulnerable
cOnsiderable · sums on pilot rehabilitatiort programs, the sarcastically, and thereafter needs to be done · in this than most when his hypocrisy
management of these projects is so lax and the records kept proceeded to give the com- co.un try for e'veryone else.'' becomes apparent. He seems
are so incomplete it is impossible to evaluate and compare mon man a very common "Most people ," he said later, to believe that common
results. Much of the money spent on these programs therefore cold shoulder.
"would be back at work if people have pot bellies, itchy
is wasted.
It would be unfair to con- they had an adequate tax cut rumps and limited lnThe Energy Research and Development Administration is clude from one incident that !llld it was coupled with in- leUigence . He has obviously
assuring Congress it will need less than. $2 billion for a there is a touch of the crudity creases for the Rockefellers been overnightlhg in the
~.?.~·.
demonstration Clinch River .Breeder Reactor, no mean sum. in former Senator Harris' and the Johrt Paul Gettys." wrong private homes .
Yet investigators looking into the basis for ERDA's estimates, beer and pretzels bid for the simplicities. Demogogical.
t t
Fred Harris might have
found them fuzzy. ob'vious costs were slid over, and almost presidency. Yet the incident But apparently he thinks the worked in the 1930s. He might
Milky Way, Snickers, M&amp;M's, 3 Musketeers
certain problems ignored . The investigators, after does not stand alone . In his voters too dumb to know .
then have convinced us that
1
considerable study, were Wlable to come up with any zealous solicitation of what he
Surprisingly, disappoint- we're all hicks In need of
reasonable data from ERDA to determine what price the calls
Fred
Harris better direction, that dumb as
"the
everyday ingly,
project could be built lor or to estimate reasonably when it American," Harris often talks down to the com- we are we can still persevere
!.~~~
could be finished. Congress , in essence, was asked to vote equate.s oafishness with mon people with whom ,i.f we learn how to read his
blindly.
·
T~e
u.~•! .':~~-~--97•
· ordinary. He can be rude with be so loudly rulgns hlrns'4!lf. name on the ballot. But this
Though there has been much criticism of irregularities on the slow witted , ruthless with He tells them that he would isn't lhe 1930s, John Paul
n~_jjlow
~
~~-~~~·.
the commodity futures trading markets, irregularities which those in honest disagreement 1'wipe out tax loopholes," Getty hasn't a damn thin~ to
eventually result in exorbitant prices for consumers with titUe with him. To the extent then without saying how; he says
?.~.&lt;!~~
benefit to producers and high profits for some speculators, a that he tries excessively to be be would "wipe out tax loopteam of government investigators foWld there has been little one of them, candidate
On this day In history :
holes," without saying how;
~.?.~·..
me;mingful attempt by the government to study the major Harris' idea of the common
In
1937, General Motors
he says Ill! would e11force
factors usually believed to be responsible.
1.~ .~~:
people seems to be that they
agreed to recognize the
. The Federal Occupational Safety and l:lealth are W1civil, cantankerous, strict obedience to antitrust United Auto Workers Union
Administration has been so rol!gh with private companies it is egotistic, pushy and quite laws, without mentioning the (CIO) as the bargaining
quantum leap in government
estimated that l.n(lustry has been required to put in from $1 insufferable.
and policing powers this agent for GM workers.
size
billion to $2 billion in equipment of such doubtful value no
He of all the political
appreciable reduction in injuries has been achieved thereby,
By contrast, an investigating team found severe contenders should know .
noncompliance in a sampling of government workplaces better. 'His campaign is
structured as perhaps no
-Producewhere OSHA makes finly spotty, ineffective checks ..
other
.in
mernory
to
tap
the
And as for the federal government's own showplace, the ·
'1 lb.
District of Columbia, Investigators foWld refuse collection spirit of the American citizen.
employes, paid for u !().flour week, worked an average of 24.5 On the stwnp,. Harris sleeps
10 lb. bag
hours. Labor productively for processing individual tax in private homes rather than
motels. At ·his electioneering
returns declined 40 per t-ent between 1968 and 1972.
ONE I)OZEN
stops, 'he sometimes acts as
chairpersons, meaning he
helps set llP the sit-downs.
Then there are the multitude
5 lb. bag
of young, unrelentingly
common people working for
him, for gratis, lor long
AND ONE POUND
hours, for reasons they say
A Chronicle of America
are related to an almost
evangelical belief that the
nation must make better uae
February 6, 7776:
&lt;i iIs limitless reservoir of
human resources.
Virginians under Colonel Robert-Howe remove Norfolk's
HOMEMADE
Yet for all this familiarity
remaining inhabitants and abandon the town -formerly
with the people, Harris seema
Virginl~'s most P?puious. To prevent its use as a base by
unable to do anything but
the British, Howe s men destroy the portion ofit not burnstereotype
them, as did P. T.
ed in the 50-hour lire that was begun January 1 by forces
lb.
~.
'12.50 Value N~
Barnum,
in
that they are
1
under Virginia's Royal Governor John Murray Dunmore.
11)~811
· Cash .. Cany
important so far as they are
'Today, an anonymous writer pens this account, which
numerous, otherwise they are
appears in the Constitutional Gautte (New York) on
SUPERIOR
.
rubes. At speeches he tries to
February 28 : "Thus ... has a town which contained
get the audience to crowd the
upward ol6,000 inhabitants, many of them in arnuent cirfront seats, so that news
cumstances, a place that carried on extensive trade and
photot~raphs will not show
SUPERIOR ASSQRTED
commerce, .. •. been reduced to ashes, and become
empty spaces. In dlalOflue
desolate. through the wicked and cruel machinations" of
sessions wHh voters, he is
the British.
passionate with friendl'y
~d
q~~eries, curt wjl/1 the others:

RAY CROMLEY

Shallow probing

•

•
••
•

•
•·

•

shows problems ·

TOM TIEDE

•

The Fabric Shop

Harris' common touch .is out.of touch

•.

:
~

•
•

I I

•

I I

•

I I I

I I I I I I ,I

I I

I I I I I I I I I

0 I 0 I I I

t I I I I

6/69•

t

Hilton Oyster Stew .................................. .~':'~.~~:.2/97•
Crisco Shortming
... '1.49
Delsey White
................ ;............... .
Mer
Floor care .. ........·.......................
7-r
Dinty Moore Beef .Stew........•..•......
19'
Smucker's Creamy Peanut Butter.....................
19•
I 1 •1 I I I I I

,

I

'1.79

I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 0 I 0 I I ..

I

I

••••••••••••••••

.Frank's Black Pepper......................................

Parkay

VALENTINE'S
DAY SPECIAL

•

We Hold These Truths ...

•••
••"

-

'.

•a9s

59 N.

•

59$

White Grapefruit

69•

HEART SHAPED BOX

•

Margari~e

'1 ..39

SPRING FLOWERS.

WHITMAN CANDY

•

Maine Potatoes

69'

St.

'n

.Middlepod'

99$
Ham Salad.............. .'~·.

F

Fr]r811i .............. .59

$119
Jumbo Franks .... !~:... •
$
Luncheon Meaf~~.. 119
•

Breaded
F"ISh

PortionS
21b. Ia

$J49

. Miller

DR. LAMB
Pain probably
wasn't heart

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

..:Jiy Lanolrenee £. 1.8mb, M.D.

leg . They can, !lnd often do,
: DEAR OR. LAMB - I was ca~se paln i{l the arm,
!Wakened at 4 a.m. with a .shoulder and even in the jaw
~rrlble pain around my but you do not have to have
lhest. I,t was like a giant pain there either with an
~bber band getting tighter attack. For more information
lfld tighter, Most of the pain on symptoms of heart attasln the ctnter of my chest, tacks, send 50 cents for The
P.l behind the breast bone. Health Letter, Number 2-10,
• It wa1 very painful and Heart Attack, Myocardial
Difficult to breathe. I'm not Infarction , Angina Pectoris.
e how long it lasted. ll.ried. Enclose a long, stamped , selfsleep but kept waking up addressed envelope for
h the pain still . there no mailing. Address your letter
fnatter which way I laid.
tD me in care of this news: About 9 a.m. I caUed my paper, P. 0 . Box 1551, Radio
tor's office and the nurse City Station, New York, NY
t told me to take the pills 10019.
.
doctor gave me and to
What do you have? The
Drink my milk (I was being most likely explanation is
teated lor an ulcer). . My that you had an acute spasm
est was sore the rest of the d the esophagus. That will
ay as if my ribs were produce the severe pain you
uised.
describe and be mostly
: That was the first time that behind the breast bone. It is
er happened and I hope the sometimes difficult to
stand I'd like to know if you separate from a heart attack.
Ink it is serious and if. it Your comment about being
lould happen again.
treated for an ulcer makes
~ It was .&lt;mentioned to me It this even more likely.
d have been a heart atIs such an attack serious?
k but I'm only 20, a female Well, it is downright painful
not Overweight. I don 'I at times and I have seen it
lnoke or drink, not even bring tears to strong men's
Dlflee . However, there is eyes. f have never seen it
J'llte a bit of stress in my life darr.age anyone or cause
p I help ralae my younger death or olher serious
irdther alld sister because
lily mother Is alone . .
: I have always heard that
art attacka were supposed
cause pain in the arm or
g and I don't remember any
ln:h pain. I can 'I afford a
flctor unless it is urgent, so I
fOuld really appreciate your
iitply.
: DEAR READER - It is
ost. improbable that you
d pain from your heart for
e very reailOns you !llenn. YoWlg women almost
ver have heart attacks
trless they have high blood
ffessure, kidney disease,
fabetes or some similar
~derlying medical problem.
lnleaa you were born with
e heart defect or had
umatlc hNrl disease or
er dl.lla1111 that you would
ly know about, I think you
E for;aet about ,the heart aa
Ia IOIII'ce of your difficulty.
;Heart attacka do cauae
9JI!Pioml slmUar to what
J!PU delcrlbe, but heart atGrlr~ do not cauae Pain in •i•e
.

t

~

E
£:

E
r.

are expected to try to knock
that provision out in tbe
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Senate, since they would Jose
Housepassed legislation revenues normally collected
designed to curb future from the Inside millage.
Republicans claimed tbe
unvoted real estate tax
increases, chiefly
for bill offered no immediate tax
homeowners, Is on Its way to relief. They proposed an
the Ohio Senate, where spon- amendment applying the lax
sors hope for action within credits to 1976 tax billS, but it
was tabled on a 49-47 vote.
two months ~
The proposal, regarded as· Johnson defended his
the General Assembly 's proposal as offering "slight
response to a freeze on reductions" for taxpayers in
inflated land values imposed the 58 counties which have
at the request of Gov. James undergone property
A. Rhodes, cleared the House reappraisals, and exemptions
handily Tuesday despite from sharp increases for
complaints
it
would taxpayers in the other 30
u~balance
Ohio's
tu counties where land is being
structure and school subsidy revalued in 1970-7?.
" As land valuations go up ,
formula and warnings it
would boost state taxes taxes will continue to go up,
up and up, " said Johnson .
within two years.
The House vote on the bill "This bill is an attempt to
was 75 to 22. Democrats were stop that skyrocketing."
Johnson warned, however,
Wlanirnous in their support
while Republicans split on the the state would have to be
issue, with 171n favor and 22 prepared to furnish more
against.
money for
education.
Under the bill, sponsored Although the legislation
by Rep. John E. Johnson, D- wpuld have no impact on
Orrville,
real
estate school funding in 1976-?7, he
taxpayers would not have to said, "we wiU have to make
pay any additional unvoted adjustments during the first
taxes resulting from upward six months of 197?."
"A vote for this measure
reappraisals of their property
brought about by inflation . lays the foundation for an
The credits, beginning with increase in state taxes of
tax bills of January , 1977: Wlknown amount," said Rep.
would not apply to property W. Bennett R'ose, R-Uma.
upgraded
by
new
Republicans complained
construction
or I dJ d • th I ..., \..
OU Y UriJlg
e Wu·uOUr .
improvements, nor to. voted debate tbat there would
be no
levies in a taxing district .
savings to taxpayers, that
"I'm not predicting what business and public utility
the Senate will do, but I'm taxes would go up and that
hopeful they will act within equity in taxation would be
two months/' said Johnson, destroyed.
adding the biU as passed by
" Nobody in this room
the House contains up to $200 knows the effect this bill will
million worth of real estate bave and how much it will
tax relief.
cost," said Rep. John A.
Prior to passing the bill, the Galbraith, R-Maumee . "The
House voted 68 to 28 to restore attitude around here seems to
up to $120 million in tax relief be, 'Let;s pass this bill and
by allowing taxpayer credits see what happens."'
on so-called "inside" millage,
"You can either pass some
the first 10 unvoted mills.
kind of tax relief or go home
Lobbyists
for and listen to your people
mWlicipalitles and schools gripe," countered Johnson:
Galbraith said the bill
would "play havoc with our
school foWldation formula"
REVIVAL PLANNED
and "have a devastating
A weekend revival will be effect on our economy" by
held at the United Faith saddling businesses and' '
Church near Pomeroy public utiities with additional
Friday, Saturday and Sunday personal property taxes to
at 7:30 each evening with help pay ·for the real estate
'Rev . Herman Stewart of . tax relief.
'
Waverly as speaker . There , Johnson -said the measure
will be special vocal numbers would furnish $70 million
each night . The public is worth of tax relief, starting in
invited.
1977, in the 58 counties
already reappraised and an
unknown amount in the. other
Athens Uvestock Sales, Inc. 30 counties. He said $35
Feb. 7, 1976
million of the cost of this
· Feeder Steers (4(J().j]OO lbs.) relief would be made up by .
23.50 to 30.50, Feeder l:lelfers Increased business and public
(400-760 lbs . ) 20 to 29, utility taxes.
Slaughter Bulls lOVER 1000
Up to $120 million in
lbs. ) 26.25 to 30.25, Feeder additional
relief · was
Bulls (400-800 lbs.) 22.50 to projected
from
the
29.50.
.
amendment restoring tax .
Slaughter ·cows: Utility 23 , credits on the first.10 unvoted
to 27. 75; Canner-Cutter 18 to mills, but taxing districts
23.
would be permitted to
Veals !Choice-Prime) 50 .50 remove the credits by
to 65.50, Feeder Ulmbs 44.25, proving the money is needed
!:logs 50 . 3~ to 50.50, Sows 41 .50 to run the schools or
to 43.75, Pigs (By the !:lead) government.
29 to 35.
s~ id
the
Johnson
amendment, sponsored by
Rep. Dennis E. Ec.kart, DHOSPITALIZED
Euclld,
:would provide
RACINE - Mrs. Kenneth '
Theiss, Dorcas, is a medical
patient at Holzer Medical
Center.
UPJ SlatelloaR Reporter

r-

o•

Maxwell Instant Coffee............. ,.................
Assclted. Candv Bars

By LEE LEONARD ·

By Clarence

The Constitution of the painstaking work often ended
United States Is a document up being overturned on the
that Is 18 years old, 11 years grounds that evidence or a
yoW!gei' than the Declaration confession of the arrest itself
&lt;i Independence. Duririg this had been handled in an unllme the Supreme Court has cons titutional manner .
been the institution which has Throughout this period the
interpreted the meaning of crime rate soared in all parts
the Constitution's language. ci the nation as citizens
While this process has became afraid to walk the
enabled the Constitution to slreets of their own towns and
endure and remain relevant citen were not secure in their
throughout American own home.
Over lhe past several years
history, in recent decades the
interpretations give n its we have seen, fortunately, a
words by the Supreme Court return to a more reasonable
hsve led to controversy and approach by the Burger
division .
Supreme Court. The wideNowhere has the con- ranging and overly-broa d
troversy been more intense verdicts of the Warrl!n Court
than In the area of due are
constantly
being
process for those accused of a narrowed. The tide has
crtme versus the right of our clearly begun to run out on
society to be free of the the permissive period for
criminal element. As Justice criminals. The difference bePotter Stewart stated, the tween the Warren and Burger
Supreme Court should not . Courts is that the presen t
erect "wholly irrational Court is more aware of the
obstacles" for the police. separation of powers between
~ However, there is little doubt the legislative and judicial
t that during the period of the branches . The Warren Court
i Warren Court that was . involved itself in legislating
~ exactly the r~~Sult of many thro11gh its decisions and
t Court decisions. The effect of moved away from deciding
0 decisions which showed issues before it on strictly
., •excessive concern for the constitutional principles . The
r, 'rightS of all criminals versus old idea that "·legislators
: legal authority was to uh- shouldn't judge and judges
; dermine respect for the la w. shouldn't legislate " was
;, As courts at all levels across for gotten . No one can deny
the country followed new that the Suprem·e Court
•• Supreme
· Court guidelines, should interpret and protect
: citizens saw criminals with a the Constitution. In doing so,
: strong case against them however, the Court must take
; repeatedly escape punish- into account the needs and
• ment due to some seeming wishes of modern socie ty .
: technicality. Rather than The Warren Court in many of
: fostering new and increased its decisions seemed divorced
; respect {or the Constitution, fr om a realization of what
: such inlerpretations tended · was happening in the every! to make the Public skeptical day world . The present Court
, &lt;i that document and the seems to be far more in tune
C institutions that supported it. with the times· we live in.
: The frustration that the
Of course, regardless of the
; public experienced over these nature of Supreme Court
• new directions in the law was decisions, crime reduction
:also felt by the police proWld cannot be left to the courts
:the country . Many Supreme alone. A very large burden
:Court decisions imposed fails on . our . social in ; needless burdens on law stitutions, families and
• enforcement efforts; making churches. What we can ask is
:an already tough job that · that the highest court in our
:much more difficult. Arrests iand not hamper the efforts of
:and convictions that were society in preventing and
; achieved after months of dealing with crime.

&lt;

-

Senate gets tax relief bill

Washingto~

·Berrys World

re·actions.
Will it recur? It might.
People prone to these often
have
other
attacks.
Prevention of stomach
acidity may help . If you do
have other attacks and they
1\l'e bad or frequent your
doctor can give you some
medicine that counteracts the
tendency to have spasms.
Such medicines are also used
to prevent nerve stimulation
of acid production by the
stomach . Stress
does
aggravate such conditions.

Uns~ramblt these rour Jumbltt.
Ont letter to tuh squan, to
form four ordinary word5.

-FIRE SALE-

LAIGY

•

Clean up Lot ladies'
footwear . Va I ues to
' $7 . 99 . Broken si zes .
Famous brands. La rge
group . Save now a1
Stiff ler 's.

I ()
rprBEHNI
I I [J
No,. on-anp the cln:led !ellen
to form the eurprite anawer. u
ou"01ted by the above &lt;Utoon.

IA
YeHen:lay'•

IJ_.'-

'll I

)-[I]"

(A.iwert

FUSSY

$388

PAIR

VALUES T0$9.99
Close Out Lot- Large Group

ISTAUNEJ
I K

HONEY

ORCHID

••lliltna•l

FOURTH

Aatwen ft'luo11 fOil IDOUfdn 'I~ u~ded
lo •hi•-DURING "OFF~CE" HOURS

LADIES FOOTWEAR
Va lues to $9.99 in this
special group of ladi.es'
better foo1wear , Out
th ey go. Broken sizes .
St1op ear l y for best
selec tion .

$488
.

.

·

PAIR

VALUES TO $7.99
Clean Up Lot-Save Big Now

MEN'S SHIRTS

$433 ·

Out they go. Values to $7 .99, ih
thi s large group of men's long

sleeve sport and dress shirts .

EACH

.

Good se lection of si zes and
styles.

OUT THEY GO
MEN'S AND BOYS'

WINTER HEADWEAR
SEND !iE R FLOWERS

()/n /Y/olenlr~w JJ 9./Jau
~ j&gt; ('&lt;' inl l"'"i&gt;lr brill~ • ··Ny ·' l'""bl j&gt; lu.u re in lu "uo li•'f&gt; . l'Jw• llc!&gt;OI'I'f

.Ojlf rl• l ll lfnl lon ~~~~ 1 ! JK'd •l mem .. ry ~~ rhb V~ lenlinrM'a&gt;un

'

OFF

Clean Up Lot of men's and
boyS' fa II and wi11h~r kni-t
headwear , Caps · hats . sa·ve lfi
now on this group. Shop Early .

REG.
PRICE

if

SHE'LL LOV E YOU FOR IT!
'

'

VALUES TO $3.99
Close Out Lot-Clean Up

R~mrml~r yum ~~~~ d~ l · ~u m~nllc " il h a. JPfl nl lh&gt;wcn lhat "'' &gt; 11 11 "~" In

rht-ir hn l! lir.t ~ f!ti.'&lt;:IQU.I n1~ m11ey ,

lkr au ...• ~uu ,·un•. unlrr Y""' Jlfl ~art y •nd Main ~ l!rtnti !If"' mtm11r ~ .- Ou r
nu ml •r~o:rla li"' .. illlldp ~uu "'lr,·r &gt;h ~ rifh r ~ lfr . J11~r ~r np in"' c•ll

Roses
Cut Rowers
Bouquets
Terrariums
Gift Ideas

Pomeroy Flower Shop
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Ph. 992-2039
Pomeroy

CHILDREN'S SLEEPWEAR
Values to $3.99 in th is large
group of children 's sleepwear.
Knlt, flannel. Large group .
I; iea~ up: Shop early for best
selection .

$}99
.

.

.

EACH

Special Group Men's &amp; Boys'
First Quality Famous Labels

. SWEATERS
TURRE NECK SHIRTS
0\.Jt .they go men's dnd boys' ·
sweaters . ' Heavy turtl e neck
shir t s. Broken sizes. Shop
early for best selection.

Zerex Anti-Freeze

1h

Ou t th ey go - one large group
of ch ildren '$ and girls' fa l l and
wi r-ter sportswear , Save 112
Now on this close out lot . Be
' here early for best se'i edioti .

VALUES TO $2.99 Yard
60 INCH POL VESTER

DOUBLE KNIT

FABRICS
Va lues to $2 .99 ya rd . One large
table, 60 in ch polyester double knit
fabric . Asst . pl ain colors . Stock up
now at this low price.

1

SJORE HOURS

5 99 YARD

AU. TIL 8

SAT. TILS

'

VALUES TO S7 .99
Close Out Lot Famous Brand

LADIES FOOTWEAR

RE-oPEN FRIDAY AT 9:00

'

·.
..................
·····~··"•&lt;
.. -~·­

MuHier.._s-. Tall Pipes
Snow Tires
Batteries
Generators
Fuel Pumps
Tune-Up Kits

CONTINUATION

..; .. .~ ~

Jlllll~~®"'-'~· ·"J-J,_.

OFF

REG.
PRICE

SPORTSWEAR

TOMORROW'S PAPER

E

we can only do it with this
amendment," said Kurfess.
But the amendment was
tabled by a narrow margin
after Rep . George D.
Tablack, D-Campbell, said it
was unconstitutional because
it applied retroactively. Tbe
first tax bills of 1976 have
already been issued and · in
most cases paid .
Six other Republican
amendments were defe~ted,
tabled or ruled out of order.

SPECIAL GROUP
CHILDREN and GIRLS'

WATCH FOR OUR
SALE AD IN

l

accountability in local
government. House Minority
I eader Charles F. Kurfess,
R·Bowling Green, agreed
with
other
alllng
Republicans.
The
other
major
amendment, offered by
Kurfess, would have apoliert
the tax eredits to 1976 bills by
mandating an adjustment in
tax bills received next July.
"If we really want to do
something for the taxpayers,

I

"

OFF

REG.
PRICE

�11-The DallY Sentinei,Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. WedneldaY, Feb. II, 1t76
10 - The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 11. 1976

Editor.ial comment,
opinion, features

Report

DON OAKLEY

'Hot' ideas to cut rising fuel bills
'

''

'
•

•

••
•

•.

..
•

~

•
•
•

-"

"

•

Not only has the high cost of housing placed home ownership out of reach for millions of
Americans, but many people whO already own homes are finding the cost of running them
taking Increasingly large chunka out of their household budgets.
Addressing a meeting of the National Association of HomeBuilders in Dallas the other day,
Guy 0 . Mabry, vice president of Owens-Coming Fiberglass Corp., died the case of a New
Jersey homeowner whose annual fuel bills jllere almost as high as his mortgage payments_an,d
warned that "heating and cooling a house may soon become a luxury, unless the natron s
builders take immediate steps·to effectively reduce home energy consumption."
Mabry calls for a home energy efficiency rating system., similar to Detroit's milesi)er·
~~ 197BCy NEA. Inc
gallon designation, to help consumers. Just as m.p.g. has become the watchword of new car
buyers, "e.p.m." (energy-per-month) costs are fast becoming the major concern of today 's
"Hubert looks good, even though he must be
new home buyer, he says.
, ·
going through a very difficult time-being a
For starters, a doubling of current Federal Housing Administration minimum standards
'noncandidate 'I"
for insulation in attics, walls and floors "would have an immediate impact in lowering home
energy consumption."
. ·
This, of course, would mean more business for the makers of insulation and less business
for the energy utilities. But the latter are in titUe danger of running out of cUSiomers fur all the
'energy they can provide in the foreseeable future .
There are also other energy-llBvlng steps builders can take, such as double-paned windows,
insulated doors with magnetic weatherstripping and tighter construction to reduce air
"It's equal rights-· I have a right to smoke and.you have infiltration.
Nor need the low "e.p.m ." bouse cost more, says Mabry. For instance, the use of 2-by.fi
·
a right to wear a mask!"
studs on 24-inch centers, Instead of the traditional 2-by-4 studs on 16 in.ch centers, would both
accommodate thicker insulation and save significantly on lumber costs.
·
In addition, i!ecause of a more efficient "thermal envelope", heating , ventilating and airconditioning equipnent could be a much lower capacity.
There is a public as well as a jl'ivate stake in the more efficient use of our energy
The Almanac
resources.
Taxpayers are turning down bond issues. Sch.ools are closed to community use during offUnited Press International
hours.
Public building:unust close early. Not ali of this is due to the cost of energy, to be sure,
Today is Wednesday, Feb. but energy
is an important factor .
·
11, the 42nd day of 1976 with
It
will
take
ingenuity
If money.B!Jort communities are to survive this era of scarce and
324 to follow .
The moon is between its expensive energy, and architects and builders are, in fact, developing new concepts in
first quarter and the full structural design, furnishing and maintenance to meet the challenge, as well as making more
use of old ones.
phase.
By Ray Cromley
· The substitution of plastic plumbing pipe for metal can .save a substantial amount of
'l'he morning stars are ·
WASHINGTON - A wide ranging series of studies ~y
energy
because plastics requir.e only a fraction of the energy it takes to produce metal
Congressional committees and the General Acc01mting Office Mercury anll Venus . .
products.
.
The evening stars .are
are learning why the average citizen puts little trust in the
The
insulating
properties
of
carpet~ can save up to an eighth of heating fuel
Mars, Jl!piter nd Saturn.
bureal!cracy.
.
'
requirements. Substitution of fluorescent tights for incandescent bulbs cuts down on electrical
Those born on this date are consumption
Though it has been estimated that fraud and bumbling in
and lighting cost .
·
·
'
Medicare, Medicaid, Soda! Security, Supplementary Security under the sign of Aquarius.
Buildings
with
exteriors
of
mirror
giass
can
bring
about a 44 per cent heat reduction . HeatAmerican inventor Thomas
Income and other Health Education and WeUare programs run
transfer
systems
are
being
designed
coupling
air-conditioning
and heating units to pump warm
into the multi-billions, one report concludes that HEW takes as Alva Edison was born Feb. or cold air from areas where It is not needed to those where it is.
long as five years to take corrective action against discovery IJ, 184?.
Then there is the use of solar energy for healing and cooling, the possibilities of which we
• convertibility, built -in buttonholer,
of the deficiencies.
.Flat to 'free arm'
have scarcely begun to explore.
The . ~EW Office and Security Investigations has a !().year
exciusi,.ty designed SINGER' front drop·in bobbin,
backlog of uninvestigated cases.
pushbutton snap-in conversion plate . Carrying case
The organizational structure of HEW's fraud and abuse
or cabinet extra .
units was described as "fragmented and confused." Numbers
of investigators are said to have little training or experience.
No meaningful attempt has been made to even evaluate the
extent of fraud or other abuse.
A look into the operation of the Guaranteed student Loan
McCaWs, Kw!ck -Sew, Simplidt-, Patterns·,
program diselosed that defaults were ruruiing at 24 per cent
and at all times defines would . beget; · he talks of do with our probiems,.aild-lhe
-By Tom Tiede
SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE .
and that accumulated defaults now exceed $400 million. A
dialogue as one-way com- "forcing" auto Companies to best thing candidate Harris
MANCHESTER, N. H.
liS W. Second
992 -2284
Pomeroy, Ohio
federal report handed to Congress was so constructed that $300 Fred Harris, the chunky, munications . As to con .. do this, of "forcing'; oil can do for his version of the
million in deficits were hidden.
jowly candidate of the frontation, he can be abruptly companies to do that , of common people is to abolish
•A Trademark
THE SINGER COMPANY
Investigators found that the Interior Department knows so common people, was holding rough, once reportedly telling "restricting," of "man· them.
little about the oil leases it offers for sale on the continental a reception here _ when a a critic to "shut up and get dalin.g ," of '~breaking up/'
•
shelf that officials have no way of being even reasonably sure genuine _common person out of here. ''
without pausing to remember
they are receiving fair market value for properties worth emerged from the audience
More than this, Harris can this is not Uganda b·ut
billions.
to ask a ,question. Un- be insulting intellectually. America.
Though coosiderable sums l•ave been spent by the Small fortunately, the commoner His speeches before the
Assuredly, Harris is not·
Business Adniinistration to help disadvantaged firms become emerged at an inopportune common people suggest he alone in this kind of nonsense.
self-611fficient and competitive, the program has been a flop. In time - that is, when Harris views them as less than Most politicos think· of and
six years, the program's success totaled a mere 31 small firms was too busy talking to do any comprehensive. "If we take talk to the people as if they
nationwide.
the rich off welfare," he told are pinwheels . Yet Harris,
listening.
Recidivism is perhaps the major problem in crime control
"Just a minute!" Jlarris an audience here, "we 'll have because he makes so m.udi of
today. Thol!gh the Ulbor. Department has been. spending told the questioner sharply, plenty of money to do what populism' is more vulnerable
cOnsiderable · sums on pilot rehabilitatiort programs, the sarcastically, and thereafter needs to be done · in this than most when his hypocrisy
management of these projects is so lax and the records kept proceeded to give the com- co.un try for e'veryone else.'' becomes apparent. He seems
are so incomplete it is impossible to evaluate and compare mon man a very common "Most people ," he said later, to believe that common
results. Much of the money spent on these programs therefore cold shoulder.
"would be back at work if people have pot bellies, itchy
is wasted.
It would be unfair to con- they had an adequate tax cut rumps and limited lnThe Energy Research and Development Administration is clude from one incident that !llld it was coupled with in- leUigence . He has obviously
assuring Congress it will need less than. $2 billion for a there is a touch of the crudity creases for the Rockefellers been overnightlhg in the
~.?.~·.
demonstration Clinch River .Breeder Reactor, no mean sum. in former Senator Harris' and the Johrt Paul Gettys." wrong private homes .
Yet investigators looking into the basis for ERDA's estimates, beer and pretzels bid for the simplicities. Demogogical.
t t
Fred Harris might have
found them fuzzy. ob'vious costs were slid over, and almost presidency. Yet the incident But apparently he thinks the worked in the 1930s. He might
Milky Way, Snickers, M&amp;M's, 3 Musketeers
certain problems ignored . The investigators, after does not stand alone . In his voters too dumb to know .
then have convinced us that
1
considerable study, were Wlable to come up with any zealous solicitation of what he
Surprisingly, disappoint- we're all hicks In need of
reasonable data from ERDA to determine what price the calls
Fred
Harris better direction, that dumb as
"the
everyday ingly,
project could be built lor or to estimate reasonably when it American," Harris often talks down to the com- we are we can still persevere
!.~~~
could be finished. Congress , in essence, was asked to vote equate.s oafishness with mon people with whom ,i.f we learn how to read his
blindly.
·
T~e
u.~•! .':~~-~--97•
· ordinary. He can be rude with be so loudly rulgns hlrns'4!lf. name on the ballot. But this
Though there has been much criticism of irregularities on the slow witted , ruthless with He tells them that he would isn't lhe 1930s, John Paul
n~_jjlow
~
~~-~~~·.
the commodity futures trading markets, irregularities which those in honest disagreement 1'wipe out tax loopholes," Getty hasn't a damn thin~ to
eventually result in exorbitant prices for consumers with titUe with him. To the extent then without saying how; he says
?.~.&lt;!~~
benefit to producers and high profits for some speculators, a that he tries excessively to be be would "wipe out tax loopteam of government investigators foWld there has been little one of them, candidate
On this day In history :
holes," without saying how;
~.?.~·..
me;mingful attempt by the government to study the major Harris' idea of the common
In
1937, General Motors
he says Ill! would e11force
factors usually believed to be responsible.
1.~ .~~:
people seems to be that they
agreed to recognize the
. The Federal Occupational Safety and l:lealth are W1civil, cantankerous, strict obedience to antitrust United Auto Workers Union
Administration has been so rol!gh with private companies it is egotistic, pushy and quite laws, without mentioning the (CIO) as the bargaining
quantum leap in government
estimated that l.n(lustry has been required to put in from $1 insufferable.
and policing powers this agent for GM workers.
size
billion to $2 billion in equipment of such doubtful value no
He of all the political
appreciable reduction in injuries has been achieved thereby,
By contrast, an investigating team found severe contenders should know .
noncompliance in a sampling of government workplaces better. 'His campaign is
structured as perhaps no
-Producewhere OSHA makes finly spotty, ineffective checks ..
other
.in
mernory
to
tap
the
And as for the federal government's own showplace, the ·
'1 lb.
District of Columbia, Investigators foWld refuse collection spirit of the American citizen.
employes, paid for u !().flour week, worked an average of 24.5 On the stwnp,. Harris sleeps
10 lb. bag
hours. Labor productively for processing individual tax in private homes rather than
motels. At ·his electioneering
returns declined 40 per t-ent between 1968 and 1972.
ONE I)OZEN
stops, 'he sometimes acts as
chairpersons, meaning he
helps set llP the sit-downs.
Then there are the multitude
5 lb. bag
of young, unrelentingly
common people working for
him, for gratis, lor long
AND ONE POUND
hours, for reasons they say
A Chronicle of America
are related to an almost
evangelical belief that the
nation must make better uae
February 6, 7776:
&lt;i iIs limitless reservoir of
human resources.
Virginians under Colonel Robert-Howe remove Norfolk's
HOMEMADE
Yet for all this familiarity
remaining inhabitants and abandon the town -formerly
with the people, Harris seema
Virginl~'s most P?puious. To prevent its use as a base by
unable to do anything but
the British, Howe s men destroy the portion ofit not burnstereotype
them, as did P. T.
ed in the 50-hour lire that was begun January 1 by forces
lb.
~.
'12.50 Value N~
Barnum,
in
that they are
1
under Virginia's Royal Governor John Murray Dunmore.
11)~811
· Cash .. Cany
important so far as they are
'Today, an anonymous writer pens this account, which
numerous, otherwise they are
appears in the Constitutional Gautte (New York) on
SUPERIOR
.
rubes. At speeches he tries to
February 28 : "Thus ... has a town which contained
get the audience to crowd the
upward ol6,000 inhabitants, many of them in arnuent cirfront seats, so that news
cumstances, a place that carried on extensive trade and
photot~raphs will not show
SUPERIOR ASSQRTED
commerce, .. •. been reduced to ashes, and become
empty spaces. In dlalOflue
desolate. through the wicked and cruel machinations" of
sessions wHh voters, he is
the British.
passionate with friendl'y
~d
q~~eries, curt wjl/1 the others:

RAY CROMLEY

Shallow probing

•

•
••
•

•
•·

•

shows problems ·

TOM TIEDE

•

The Fabric Shop

Harris' common touch .is out.of touch

•.

:
~

•
•

I I

•

I I

•

I I I

I I I I I I ,I

I I

I I I I I I I I I

0 I 0 I I I

t I I I I

6/69•

t

Hilton Oyster Stew .................................. .~':'~.~~:.2/97•
Crisco Shortming
... '1.49
Delsey White
................ ;............... .
Mer
Floor care .. ........·.......................
7-r
Dinty Moore Beef .Stew........•..•......
19'
Smucker's Creamy Peanut Butter.....................
19•
I 1 •1 I I I I I

,

I

'1.79

I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 0 I 0 I I ..

I

I

••••••••••••••••

.Frank's Black Pepper......................................

Parkay

VALENTINE'S
DAY SPECIAL

•

We Hold These Truths ...

•••
••"

-

'.

•a9s

59 N.

•

59$

White Grapefruit

69•

HEART SHAPED BOX

•

Margari~e

'1 ..39

SPRING FLOWERS.

WHITMAN CANDY

•

Maine Potatoes

69'

St.

'n

.Middlepod'

99$
Ham Salad.............. .'~·.

F

Fr]r811i .............. .59

$119
Jumbo Franks .... !~:... •
$
Luncheon Meaf~~.. 119
•

Breaded
F"ISh

PortionS
21b. Ia

$J49

. Miller

DR. LAMB
Pain probably
wasn't heart

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

..:Jiy Lanolrenee £. 1.8mb, M.D.

leg . They can, !lnd often do,
: DEAR OR. LAMB - I was ca~se paln i{l the arm,
!Wakened at 4 a.m. with a .shoulder and even in the jaw
~rrlble pain around my but you do not have to have
lhest. I,t was like a giant pain there either with an
~bber band getting tighter attack. For more information
lfld tighter, Most of the pain on symptoms of heart attasln the ctnter of my chest, tacks, send 50 cents for The
P.l behind the breast bone. Health Letter, Number 2-10,
• It wa1 very painful and Heart Attack, Myocardial
Difficult to breathe. I'm not Infarction , Angina Pectoris.
e how long it lasted. ll.ried. Enclose a long, stamped , selfsleep but kept waking up addressed envelope for
h the pain still . there no mailing. Address your letter
fnatter which way I laid.
tD me in care of this news: About 9 a.m. I caUed my paper, P. 0 . Box 1551, Radio
tor's office and the nurse City Station, New York, NY
t told me to take the pills 10019.
.
doctor gave me and to
What do you have? The
Drink my milk (I was being most likely explanation is
teated lor an ulcer). . My that you had an acute spasm
est was sore the rest of the d the esophagus. That will
ay as if my ribs were produce the severe pain you
uised.
describe and be mostly
: That was the first time that behind the breast bone. It is
er happened and I hope the sometimes difficult to
stand I'd like to know if you separate from a heart attack.
Ink it is serious and if. it Your comment about being
lould happen again.
treated for an ulcer makes
~ It was .&lt;mentioned to me It this even more likely.
d have been a heart atIs such an attack serious?
k but I'm only 20, a female Well, it is downright painful
not Overweight. I don 'I at times and I have seen it
lnoke or drink, not even bring tears to strong men's
Dlflee . However, there is eyes. f have never seen it
J'llte a bit of stress in my life darr.age anyone or cause
p I help ralae my younger death or olher serious
irdther alld sister because
lily mother Is alone . .
: I have always heard that
art attacka were supposed
cause pain in the arm or
g and I don't remember any
ln:h pain. I can 'I afford a
flctor unless it is urgent, so I
fOuld really appreciate your
iitply.
: DEAR READER - It is
ost. improbable that you
d pain from your heart for
e very reailOns you !llenn. YoWlg women almost
ver have heart attacks
trless they have high blood
ffessure, kidney disease,
fabetes or some similar
~derlying medical problem.
lnleaa you were born with
e heart defect or had
umatlc hNrl disease or
er dl.lla1111 that you would
ly know about, I think you
E for;aet about ,the heart aa
Ia IOIII'ce of your difficulty.
;Heart attacka do cauae
9JI!Pioml slmUar to what
J!PU delcrlbe, but heart atGrlr~ do not cauae Pain in •i•e
.

t

~

E
£:

E
r.

are expected to try to knock
that provision out in tbe
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Senate, since they would Jose
Housepassed legislation revenues normally collected
designed to curb future from the Inside millage.
Republicans claimed tbe
unvoted real estate tax
increases, chiefly
for bill offered no immediate tax
homeowners, Is on Its way to relief. They proposed an
the Ohio Senate, where spon- amendment applying the lax
sors hope for action within credits to 1976 tax billS, but it
was tabled on a 49-47 vote.
two months ~
The proposal, regarded as· Johnson defended his
the General Assembly 's proposal as offering "slight
response to a freeze on reductions" for taxpayers in
inflated land values imposed the 58 counties which have
at the request of Gov. James undergone property
A. Rhodes, cleared the House reappraisals, and exemptions
handily Tuesday despite from sharp increases for
complaints
it
would taxpayers in the other 30
u~balance
Ohio's
tu counties where land is being
structure and school subsidy revalued in 1970-7?.
" As land valuations go up ,
formula and warnings it
would boost state taxes taxes will continue to go up,
up and up, " said Johnson .
within two years.
The House vote on the bill "This bill is an attempt to
was 75 to 22. Democrats were stop that skyrocketing."
Johnson warned, however,
Wlanirnous in their support
while Republicans split on the the state would have to be
issue, with 171n favor and 22 prepared to furnish more
against.
money for
education.
Under the bill, sponsored Although the legislation
by Rep. John E. Johnson, D- wpuld have no impact on
Orrville,
real
estate school funding in 1976-?7, he
taxpayers would not have to said, "we wiU have to make
pay any additional unvoted adjustments during the first
taxes resulting from upward six months of 197?."
"A vote for this measure
reappraisals of their property
brought about by inflation . lays the foundation for an
The credits, beginning with increase in state taxes of
tax bills of January , 1977: Wlknown amount," said Rep.
would not apply to property W. Bennett R'ose, R-Uma.
upgraded
by
new
Republicans complained
construction
or I dJ d • th I ..., \..
OU Y UriJlg
e Wu·uOUr .
improvements, nor to. voted debate tbat there would
be no
levies in a taxing district .
savings to taxpayers, that
"I'm not predicting what business and public utility
the Senate will do, but I'm taxes would go up and that
hopeful they will act within equity in taxation would be
two months/' said Johnson, destroyed.
adding the biU as passed by
" Nobody in this room
the House contains up to $200 knows the effect this bill will
million worth of real estate bave and how much it will
tax relief.
cost," said Rep. John A.
Prior to passing the bill, the Galbraith, R-Maumee . "The
House voted 68 to 28 to restore attitude around here seems to
up to $120 million in tax relief be, 'Let;s pass this bill and
by allowing taxpayer credits see what happens."'
on so-called "inside" millage,
"You can either pass some
the first 10 unvoted mills.
kind of tax relief or go home
Lobbyists
for and listen to your people
mWlicipalitles and schools gripe," countered Johnson:
Galbraith said the bill
would "play havoc with our
school foWldation formula"
REVIVAL PLANNED
and "have a devastating
A weekend revival will be effect on our economy" by
held at the United Faith saddling businesses and' '
Church near Pomeroy public utiities with additional
Friday, Saturday and Sunday personal property taxes to
at 7:30 each evening with help pay ·for the real estate
'Rev . Herman Stewart of . tax relief.
'
Waverly as speaker . There , Johnson -said the measure
will be special vocal numbers would furnish $70 million
each night . The public is worth of tax relief, starting in
invited.
1977, in the 58 counties
already reappraised and an
unknown amount in the. other
Athens Uvestock Sales, Inc. 30 counties. He said $35
Feb. 7, 1976
million of the cost of this
· Feeder Steers (4(J().j]OO lbs.) relief would be made up by .
23.50 to 30.50, Feeder l:lelfers Increased business and public
(400-760 lbs . ) 20 to 29, utility taxes.
Slaughter Bulls lOVER 1000
Up to $120 million in
lbs. ) 26.25 to 30.25, Feeder additional
relief · was
Bulls (400-800 lbs.) 22.50 to projected
from
the
29.50.
.
amendment restoring tax .
Slaughter ·cows: Utility 23 , credits on the first.10 unvoted
to 27. 75; Canner-Cutter 18 to mills, but taxing districts
23.
would be permitted to
Veals !Choice-Prime) 50 .50 remove the credits by
to 65.50, Feeder Ulmbs 44.25, proving the money is needed
!:logs 50 . 3~ to 50.50, Sows 41 .50 to run the schools or
to 43.75, Pigs (By the !:lead) government.
29 to 35.
s~ id
the
Johnson
amendment, sponsored by
Rep. Dennis E. Ec.kart, DHOSPITALIZED
Euclld,
:would provide
RACINE - Mrs. Kenneth '
Theiss, Dorcas, is a medical
patient at Holzer Medical
Center.
UPJ SlatelloaR Reporter

r-

o•

Maxwell Instant Coffee............. ,.................
Assclted. Candv Bars

By LEE LEONARD ·

By Clarence

The Constitution of the painstaking work often ended
United States Is a document up being overturned on the
that Is 18 years old, 11 years grounds that evidence or a
yoW!gei' than the Declaration confession of the arrest itself
&lt;i Independence. Duririg this had been handled in an unllme the Supreme Court has cons titutional manner .
been the institution which has Throughout this period the
interpreted the meaning of crime rate soared in all parts
the Constitution's language. ci the nation as citizens
While this process has became afraid to walk the
enabled the Constitution to slreets of their own towns and
endure and remain relevant citen were not secure in their
throughout American own home.
Over lhe past several years
history, in recent decades the
interpretations give n its we have seen, fortunately, a
words by the Supreme Court return to a more reasonable
hsve led to controversy and approach by the Burger
division .
Supreme Court. The wideNowhere has the con- ranging and overly-broa d
troversy been more intense verdicts of the Warrl!n Court
than In the area of due are
constantly
being
process for those accused of a narrowed. The tide has
crtme versus the right of our clearly begun to run out on
society to be free of the the permissive period for
criminal element. As Justice criminals. The difference bePotter Stewart stated, the tween the Warren and Burger
Supreme Court should not . Courts is that the presen t
erect "wholly irrational Court is more aware of the
obstacles" for the police. separation of powers between
~ However, there is little doubt the legislative and judicial
t that during the period of the branches . The Warren Court
i Warren Court that was . involved itself in legislating
~ exactly the r~~Sult of many thro11gh its decisions and
t Court decisions. The effect of moved away from deciding
0 decisions which showed issues before it on strictly
., •excessive concern for the constitutional principles . The
r, 'rightS of all criminals versus old idea that "·legislators
: legal authority was to uh- shouldn't judge and judges
; dermine respect for the la w. shouldn't legislate " was
;, As courts at all levels across for gotten . No one can deny
the country followed new that the Suprem·e Court
•• Supreme
· Court guidelines, should interpret and protect
: citizens saw criminals with a the Constitution. In doing so,
: strong case against them however, the Court must take
; repeatedly escape punish- into account the needs and
• ment due to some seeming wishes of modern socie ty .
: technicality. Rather than The Warren Court in many of
: fostering new and increased its decisions seemed divorced
; respect {or the Constitution, fr om a realization of what
: such inlerpretations tended · was happening in the every! to make the Public skeptical day world . The present Court
, &lt;i that document and the seems to be far more in tune
C institutions that supported it. with the times· we live in.
: The frustration that the
Of course, regardless of the
; public experienced over these nature of Supreme Court
• new directions in the law was decisions, crime reduction
:also felt by the police proWld cannot be left to the courts
:the country . Many Supreme alone. A very large burden
:Court decisions imposed fails on . our . social in ; needless burdens on law stitutions, families and
• enforcement efforts; making churches. What we can ask is
:an already tough job that · that the highest court in our
:much more difficult. Arrests iand not hamper the efforts of
:and convictions that were society in preventing and
; achieved after months of dealing with crime.

&lt;

-

Senate gets tax relief bill

Washingto~

·Berrys World

re·actions.
Will it recur? It might.
People prone to these often
have
other
attacks.
Prevention of stomach
acidity may help . If you do
have other attacks and they
1\l'e bad or frequent your
doctor can give you some
medicine that counteracts the
tendency to have spasms.
Such medicines are also used
to prevent nerve stimulation
of acid production by the
stomach . Stress
does
aggravate such conditions.

Uns~ramblt these rour Jumbltt.
Ont letter to tuh squan, to
form four ordinary word5.

-FIRE SALE-

LAIGY

•

Clean up Lot ladies'
footwear . Va I ues to
' $7 . 99 . Broken si zes .
Famous brands. La rge
group . Save now a1
Stiff ler 's.

I ()
rprBEHNI
I I [J
No,. on-anp the cln:led !ellen
to form the eurprite anawer. u
ou"01ted by the above &lt;Utoon.

IA
YeHen:lay'•

IJ_.'-

'll I

)-[I]"

(A.iwert

FUSSY

$388

PAIR

VALUES T0$9.99
Close Out Lot- Large Group

ISTAUNEJ
I K

HONEY

ORCHID

••lliltna•l

FOURTH

Aatwen ft'luo11 fOil IDOUfdn 'I~ u~ded
lo •hi•-DURING "OFF~CE" HOURS

LADIES FOOTWEAR
Va lues to $9.99 in this
special group of ladi.es'
better foo1wear , Out
th ey go. Broken sizes .
St1op ear l y for best
selec tion .

$488
.

.

·

PAIR

VALUES TO $7.99
Clean Up Lot-Save Big Now

MEN'S SHIRTS

$433 ·

Out they go. Values to $7 .99, ih
thi s large group of men's long

sleeve sport and dress shirts .

EACH

.

Good se lection of si zes and
styles.

OUT THEY GO
MEN'S AND BOYS'

WINTER HEADWEAR
SEND !iE R FLOWERS

()/n /Y/olenlr~w JJ 9./Jau
~ j&gt; ('&lt;' inl l"'"i&gt;lr brill~ • ··Ny ·' l'""bl j&gt; lu.u re in lu "uo li•'f&gt; . l'Jw• llc!&gt;OI'I'f

.Ojlf rl• l ll lfnl lon ~~~~ 1 ! JK'd •l mem .. ry ~~ rhb V~ lenlinrM'a&gt;un

'

OFF

Clean Up Lot of men's and
boyS' fa II and wi11h~r kni-t
headwear , Caps · hats . sa·ve lfi
now on this group. Shop Early .

REG.
PRICE

if

SHE'LL LOV E YOU FOR IT!
'

'

VALUES TO $3.99
Close Out Lot-Clean Up

R~mrml~r yum ~~~~ d~ l · ~u m~nllc " il h a. JPfl nl lh&gt;wcn lhat "'' &gt; 11 11 "~" In

rht-ir hn l! lir.t ~ f!ti.'&lt;:IQU.I n1~ m11ey ,

lkr au ...• ~uu ,·un•. unlrr Y""' Jlfl ~art y •nd Main ~ l!rtnti !If"' mtm11r ~ .- Ou r
nu ml •r~o:rla li"' .. illlldp ~uu "'lr,·r &gt;h ~ rifh r ~ lfr . J11~r ~r np in"' c•ll

Roses
Cut Rowers
Bouquets
Terrariums
Gift Ideas

Pomeroy Flower Shop
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Ph. 992-2039
Pomeroy

CHILDREN'S SLEEPWEAR
Values to $3.99 in th is large
group of children 's sleepwear.
Knlt, flannel. Large group .
I; iea~ up: Shop early for best
selection .

$}99
.

.

.

EACH

Special Group Men's &amp; Boys'
First Quality Famous Labels

. SWEATERS
TURRE NECK SHIRTS
0\.Jt .they go men's dnd boys' ·
sweaters . ' Heavy turtl e neck
shir t s. Broken sizes. Shop
early for best selection.

Zerex Anti-Freeze

1h

Ou t th ey go - one large group
of ch ildren '$ and girls' fa l l and
wi r-ter sportswear , Save 112
Now on this close out lot . Be
' here early for best se'i edioti .

VALUES TO $2.99 Yard
60 INCH POL VESTER

DOUBLE KNIT

FABRICS
Va lues to $2 .99 ya rd . One large
table, 60 in ch polyester double knit
fabric . Asst . pl ain colors . Stock up
now at this low price.

1

SJORE HOURS

5 99 YARD

AU. TIL 8

SAT. TILS

'

VALUES TO S7 .99
Close Out Lot Famous Brand

LADIES FOOTWEAR

RE-oPEN FRIDAY AT 9:00

'

·.
..................
·····~··"•&lt;
.. -~·­

MuHier.._s-. Tall Pipes
Snow Tires
Batteries
Generators
Fuel Pumps
Tune-Up Kits

CONTINUATION

..; .. .~ ~

Jlllll~~®"'-'~· ·"J-J,_.

OFF

REG.
PRICE

SPORTSWEAR

TOMORROW'S PAPER

E

we can only do it with this
amendment," said Kurfess.
But the amendment was
tabled by a narrow margin
after Rep . George D.
Tablack, D-Campbell, said it
was unconstitutional because
it applied retroactively. Tbe
first tax bills of 1976 have
already been issued and · in
most cases paid .
Six other Republican
amendments were defe~ted,
tabled or ruled out of order.

SPECIAL GROUP
CHILDREN and GIRLS'

WATCH FOR OUR
SALE AD IN

l

accountability in local
government. House Minority
I eader Charles F. Kurfess,
R·Bowling Green, agreed
with
other
alllng
Republicans.
The
other
major
amendment, offered by
Kurfess, would have apoliert
the tax eredits to 1976 bills by
mandating an adjustment in
tax bills received next July.
"If we really want to do
something for the taxpayers,

I

"

OFF

REG.
PRICE

�,

-'

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. II, 1976

Senate opens debate today on repeal of utiliti~·s'RCN for~ula
Tuesday passed, 75-22, a bill Orrville, said he hoped for the only amendment planned Woodland, O.Columbus, and
to
reduce
homeowner . "reasonably quick action," with consent of the majority Douglas Applegate, Dproperty taxes .
hopefully
within
two Democrats would str~then Steubenville; would not be
The homeowner property months.
pro-consumer provisions Of pre~nt for the Senate vote .
Woodland apparently
tax relief now goes before the
McCormack said he was the legislation .
would
not vote on the
Senate , where the bill's spon· "shocked" at the Jack of
Senate . Republicans said
sor, Rep. John E:. Johnson . D- problems with his utility rate they planned w offer about measure because of his
making bill in Tuesday's half a dozen amendments of potential conflict of Interest.
He is a $16,000 a year area
caucus.
their own.
MCCormack said his colThe bill repeals the current development representative
leagues "wanted a much formula utilities use to value lor Columbia Gas of Ohio, one
stronger bill than the one I their facilities, which Is based of the utilities affected by the
brought to the caucus.'' and on reconstruction costs to bill.
COLUMBUS (UPI) -State comes and would take on an
responsible atmosphere.
' 'This will cost a lot of reduce the welfare problem,"
Applegate is hospitalized
duplicate all plants and
Welfare Director Raymond added coat, paying for child
He
said
that
county
welfare
money
and
when
you
suggest
he
said.
with
a hack ailment.
equipment, and substitutes
F. McKenna says creating care, II McKenna says. 11 We
deparlments should increase something like this you shock
McKenna said that county
Fourteen
of Gov. Jame~ A.
an "original cost" formula.
jobs lor welfare recipients would have to continue
their budgets to double or people to the roots. But you welfare case · workers now
Rhodes'
appointments
. to
McCormack and a majority
will not cure the stat~'s supplementing their incomes triple their number of case have to invest the money now deal w.ith up to 300 cases at a
various
Ohio
boards
and
of
Public
Utilities
growing welfare problems until they become self- workers .
so in the long run you will lime . He said this makes It
Commission
of
Ohio commissions were approved
becaliae "It's just not that sufficient."
almost impoSsible to properly
members predict the bill wiD by the Senate, but two of
simple."
McKenna , discussing
counsel a welfare client.
By Bertha Parker
• cut the hearing time for rate Rhodes' nominees to the Ohio
"We first have to train welfare problems with
Attendance at all services relief cases, and reduce Racing Commission, were
people so they can work," Scripps-Howard News·
for Feb. 8 at the Free future utility rate increases rejected.
said McKenna. " And just . papers, said that before a
The
Senate
rejected
Joseph
Methodist Church was 104 . because of the adjustment in
because we find them a job, welfare recipient can be
LoPresti by a vote of 3-25 and
The 'Indoor Camp Meeting the formula.
that doesn't mean our moved on to a job, "you must
Sen. Gene Slagle, D-Galion, turned down Mel Witt 12-17.
determine
held at !he local church
what
welfare costs will go down." first
The
Senate
also
·closed Sunday evening with was scheduled to sponsor an
happened to that person .
Me Kenna said:
unanimously
passed
two
bills
amendment
to
make
all
$900
good attendances every
"You've got to have job
-Welfare costs in Ohio
By Mrs. Francis Morris
and
agreed
211-&lt;l
on
House
million
in
pending
rate
cases
have jumped from $202 training available. You need By DON~D B. THACKREY four limes by Hsrris and
Ralph Webb was informed evening. Rev. Janes of Galion
currently before the PUCO amendments to a Senate bill.
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) threatened with death "hun- recently of the death of his · was the gues t speaker.
million in liscal1965 to nearly to teach the person the
Passed by the Senate and
come
WJder provisions of the
Scoutmaster Pat Wood and
$900mlllion in fiscal\975. The discipline to work every day. With Patricia Hearst's trial dreds of times ."
uncles , Amba Sargent of
sent
to the House were two
bill.
projection for fiscal 1977 is You need day care centers for bogged down in legal techShe said she joined in a San Akron and Mila Sargent of a nun1ber ·of Boy Scouts atbills
confinning
land sales in
Present
language
in
the
tended morning services Feb .
children of working parents. nicalities, two of her former Francisco bank robbery, shot Portsmouth. '
more than $1.1 billion.
Fairfield
and
Perry
County.
measure
would
make
the
new
"Once you 've solved all , Symbionese Liberation Army up a Los Angeles sporting
- There are nearly 1.2
Mr . and Mrs . Ralph Webb 8 al the lo:cal church. The Boy
The
Senate
also
accepted
formula
apply
to
all
rate
million Ohioans receiving these problems - and then if comrades denoWJced as "ab- goods store, helped kidnap a were in Columbus to visit Scouts gave their pledge to
cases filed after the bill House amendments to a bill
surd" her story of being high school student and Mrs. Webb's sister, Mrs . God and Country.
some type of welfare there are jobs available allowing school boards to
Mr . and Mrs. Dick Karr became law.
assistance, (including close you can start moving people raped and beaten while a stayed with the Harrises for Alberta Nothsline and went to
advertise adult education
McCormack·
said
two
and Mr. and Mrs . Alien
l'k years out of fear of them
to 500,000 children), ranging off welfare ," McKenna said. captive .
the doctor for a check up.
classes.
He said the state does have
from food stamps for workers
William and Emily Harris and the FBI.
James Auth erson is a Eichinger with several others Democrats, Sens. Donald L.
'She was never sexual1y patient in Veterans Memorial attended church services at
with low incomes, to public a training program, called termed "a series of lies" the
heiress' assaulted," said. Harris .. Hospital du e .to minor Belpre recently. Rev . Hicks,
assistance
for
those Work Incentive (WIN), but newspaper
a former minister of the
!iJysically unable to work . characterized it as only a testimony about her 19 "This is totally absurd ."
surgery.
" She was at no time
-Out of the 1.2 million, "small effort." The WIN months 'underground with the
Gre lla and Isabel Simpson Pomeroy Methodist Church is
" These increases are
· beaten," added his wife . "She spent a couple days with Mr. the pastor at the Belpre • COLUMBUS ( UPI)
McKenna estimates that less program works with the terrorist. band.
They said Tuesday, in a was at no time harmed in any and Mrs. Solon Butcher at Church.
than 90,000 are "potentially Bureau of Employment
Ohio's welfare rolls continued probably seasonal in nature,"
Services to find job training tape recording released in way.
Kathy Pullins has been ill to climb during January, McKenna said. "It is not
employable."
Spencer, W. Va.
Raymond F. McKenna, unusual for welfare rolls to
"She was never forced to do
-Out of the 90,000, nearly and employment for the Los Angeles, she was never
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill the past week.
Mrs . Carl Ba iley un- director of th e Ohio rise during fall and winter
70,000 are mothers or fathers potential · workers now on sexually assaulted, beaten or anything against her will spent· a weekend with their
harmed and could have gone after she said she had joined son-in-law and daughter, Mr. derwent surgery al the· Department of
Public months. They rnight be
receiving Aid to Dependent welfare.
expected to hit a peak in
the
way
to
McKenna
said
home any time after joining the SLA.
O!ildren ( ADC).
and Mrs. Charley Foster and Veterans Memorial Hospital Welfare, said Tuesday.
"She had total freedom of family in Columbus.
McKenna said preliminary March or April ."
and getting along well .
Let's assume, he says, that reduce welfare rolls is to beef the SLA.
He said ADC rolls last year
figures
for January showed
up
training
programs
which
Miss
Hear~t
testified
movement
·after
that
time,
all 70,000 mothers or fathers
Mr . and Mrs. Uoyd Wrigh t,
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace
rose
from 512,000 in October
there
were
Monday
she
was
sexually
will
make
welfare
recipients
and
I
think
this
is
only
582,000
recipients
receiving ADC were to find a
and Mrs. Jack Adams spent Mr . Steve Eblin and
self-sufficient. This, he says, assaulted in a tiny closet by obvious from the fact that she Sunday at Dunbar and St. daughter, Becky, lefl Monday on the Aid for Dependent to 570,000 in April, 1975.
job today.
"We would probably still be will allow children of welfare more ethan one of her did not live with Bill and Albans, W. Va .
with a group of people for the Children program, compared However , by August last
parents
to
grow
up
in
a
more
kidnapers,
punched
in
the
eve
myself.
supplementing their low in- ·
Mrs. Helen Simpson was a Holy Lands for a 10 day trip. to 577,000 in December and . year, rolls dropped to 556,000,
"She had total freedom to guest Sunday of Mr. and Mrs .
571,000 in November.
M cKenn~ said.
do whatever she wanted to
Ronald Har t.
Mr. ilfld Mrs. Loren Nixon
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • do.~H~t~to~=
.
·
to her family."
of New Straitsville were
~~~~k~ Sunday dinner guests
ANOTHE~
I.. , , _{)()
Red Foil Heart trial was still being rece ntly of Mr. and Mrs .
~
A.CJvt/V
I lb. $3.75 . conducted outside the
Ralph Webb.
,
presence of the jury , U.S.
Mr. and Mrs. John
C A N D IE S ·
District Court Judge Oliver Stephenson and family of
Carter was listening to
Beaver, Ohio, spent a day
testimony about incidents with his mother, Mrs . Vivian
that occurred after the Johnson.
holdup in order to decide
Mr . and Mrs . Ed Miller
, whether they can be admitted spent Saturday shopping in
as evidence . .
Gallipolis and visited Mr . and
The jury of seven women
Mrs. Robert Cornwell.
and five men was in co[\rt for
only a half-hour Tuesday, to
hear
two
prosecution
witnesses describe where
they · found cartridges from
Salin Heart
bullets fired in the April 15,
2 lb. $9.45
1974, holdup of a Hibernia
Bank branch.
X
X
The jurors were absent
We are glad to report
earlier in the day when a Luther Friend improving and
oollege Student testified Miss able to make the trip to
Hearst told him she was "a Columbus last week for a
willing participant" · in the checkup with his doctors.
robbery and showed him a
Mrs. Thelma Eddy of
cyanide-coated bullet from Killbuck spent several days
.!M ILL CERTIFIED)
NOW
her gun .
last week here visiting her
"She said she originally sisters, Mrs. Wilma Ballard
4x8 SHEET
ONLY
was kidnaped, bound and and family and Mrs. Doris
gagged but she heard Hill and family and her
·
,
publicity that her father b h
G
Wh'
J
Assorted hocolates didn't do enough to get her
rot er, rover
Ite r.
1 ib $" 95
and family.
· -· '
free and she had changed her
Calling on Mr. and Mrs,
views ,"
said
Thomas Stanley Trussell on Sunday
NO.2 GRADE
Mathews, 20, of Lynwood, were Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Calif., who was kidnaped Carson of Coolville. Mr. and
May 16, 1974, and held for 12 Mrs. Richard Kerns of
hours by the Harrises and Belpre, Mr. and Mrs. John
Miss Hearst.
Ridenour and Jason, Chester,
Anthony Shepard, a clerk Mr. and Mrs . Robert
at Mel's Sporting Goods store Trussell, Reedsville R. D.
in Los Angeles, testified that and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
earlier on May 16 Miss Hearst Trussell and family, local.
fired "two btirsts" Of bullets
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Pitzer
from_a parked van to help the of Beckley, w. Va ., spent
HarrlSes e~c~pe after ~e Wednesday with their son,
caught. Wilham Harris ·· Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Pitzer
773-5554
· MASON, W. VA."
By J. R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A bill
revising the state's utility
rate making process was to
go before the state Senate
todaY with the blessing of
moat - but not all - of the

upper chamber's Democratic their caucusing on the
controversial bill out of the
majority.
·
Debate on the so-&lt;:aUed way in advance with a closed" RCN" formula repealer was door meeting Tuesday
to start when the senate afternoon.
"About 15 Democrats were
convened at 1:30 p.m.
Democratic senators got in the room," said Sen. John

....

13 - Tbe Daily Sentinel; Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 11, 1976

Bill offered
to erase 'step X'

T. McCormack, D-Euclid,
author of the measure which
he says will simplifY the rate
making process.
Democrats hold a 21-12
majority in the Senate.
Meanwhile, the House

Laurel Oiff
News Notes

"'

nounced plans today to offset
alleged defects In the state 's
reclassification and pay plan
with legislation to eliminate
step ''X."
OCSEA-authored House
Bill. 1300 (J . Thompson, Jr.,
D-Cleveland, et al.) was
introduced in the General
Assembly on Tuesday as a
result of defects that surfaced
when
the
state's
reclassification and pay plan
was implemented in January.
"We designed the bill after
analyzing over 4,000 appeals
from OCSEA members," said
OCSEA Executive Director
Karl E . Stewart. " The
number one problem our
members have faced is
alloc~tion to step 'X," or
being locked In a category
outside the usual four-step
pay range at a fixed rate of
pay until other employees in
the same classification reach
that .rate of pay.
''The thousands of employees placed in step 'X'
have no incentive . Their
morale suffers. They are
blOcked from receiving any
salary increases, including
legislated ones, until the pay
rate of other workers reaches
the level' of th,~ step 'X'
worker .
·
In other words, an employee in step 'X' is actually
penalized.for his good service
.,or seniority except that after
five years of service he
receives only one-half of one
percent longevity pay for
each year of service over five
years," Stewart said.
.
· " Our legislation would
remove step 'X' completely
While still guaranteeing a 20cent per hour increase. An
employee would be assigned
to a classifica lion in line with
his pay and skills at step one,
two or three of · the ,
classification, and the
assignment wduld not· be
considered a promotion.
" The bill would restore
incentive to those who were
'X 'd' because the employee

.
'

Racine
Events

,•

•

'

1

Welfare rolls climbing

. . s

FIRST OF '76 SAI.E

+;...,,.L..

Bashan
News

rfor ')!our 'Vafer;tir;e
Saturdag
cfebruarg .14

· 5/8"

4'

8'

CD PLYWOOD

' .95

c_

fA.79~

2x4x8 STUDS

··················~·····

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

DUTTON'S PRESCRIPTION DRUG STORE

MATERIALS CO.

Middleport, Ohio

shoplifting.

NEW
CABBAGE

lb. 124
SLICED

FRENDt CITY
BRAND.

lb.

89~

-·..,,.
' ,,

'

RED DRICIOUS

--..-·
-·
'

......,. -.

·-·- ~

.... . .....

~

•

Thank You Brand
3 lb.

49
HI·C ORANGE
4
DRINK
~:·
49
. . . ...... ,.n. .
Saltine
384
Crackers

APPLES
4

4

bag

• ..--..,~-~·

..,

Golden Isle

lb.
box

.,....

CHERRY PIE
21
FILLING can

oz.

DUNCAN HINES

CAKE MIXES

oz.5 9 ,.

All Flavors
19
Except Angel Food box

.

,, .

....

~i

COLUMBUS (UP!) -The Public Utilities Conunlsslon

~l of Ohio "bowed w the big utilities" in allowing residential

*~ customers to be charged for natural gas used by commer- ,,

i·

fl:
.~:1:::: : : : : : : ::::: : : : : : : : :::::::::::::: : : :;: :~:;:;: : :;:;:;:~:;:~;:;:;~:::::;;:;:::::::=:~::::: : ::::::::::::::~sw.::~f. ~~.~'; :~·. ~~~ss:e~~h!I~~

Committees
are appointed

LOS ANGELES I UP!)
Longtime tennis pro Dennis
Ralston, former coach of the
U.S. Davis Cup team, has
signed a 1976 contract as
player-coach of the World
Team Tennis Los Angeles
Strings.
Ralston,
a
former
University of Southern
California star who reigned
for three straight seasons as
the No. I ranked U.S. player
before turning pro in 1966,
was coach of the Davis Cup
'learn for five years and
helped the Americans win the
title twice.

Trinity Church committees
for 1976 have been appointed .
They are as follows :
Church property : Marvin
Burt, Don Mayer, Benny
Ewing, Dale Smith, Leonard
Jewell, Harley Hendricks , Ed
Kennedy, John W. Blaettnar,
Kenneth Harris, Mike Young
and Joe Struble .
Church finance : Pat Wood,
Paul Nease, Roy Holter and
Mrs. Clarice Krautler.
Communion: Wal te r
Grueser , Joe Struble, Pat
Wood and Robert Buck.
Decorating: Rose Ginther,
Carrie Neutzling , Wilma
Terrell·, Ada Holter and Pat
Holler .
Evangelism and M'em.
bership : Joe Struble and
Patricia Young .
· Ushers : Barbara Offutt.
Publicity : Carrie Neutzling
and the Rev. W. H. Perrin .
Auditing chairman:
Richard Rosen ba urn.

GRANGE TO MEET
Ohio Valley Grahge 2~12,
I.e tart Falls, will meet at the
hal! at 7.:30 p.m. Thursday.
Potluck refreshments will be
· .served.

· ._

..

pkg.

DANIEL E. EVANS
actively involved In regional
industrial development as a
member of Gallia County's
Corrununity
Improvement
Corporation.

lb. , 49
ROUND STEAK .•..............•....•.1
GROUND CHUCK••..•...••• .'~; ••99c
· .................
·
lb:..·99C
CHUCK ROAST
U.S. D.A. CHOICE

.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

.

JOW.L BACON
.BEEF TONGUES·

PEPSI, R.C. or
SEVEN-UP ,

FOLGER'S

Instant·Coffee
10

oz.

8-16

oz.

'259

. bottles

+++

Dear Helen:
With the recent upsurge of broken marriages, it was
refreshing to read the leUer by Mary Ann , describing a good
union : Started me thinking about my own marriage, which
broke up after 13 months. The separation has made me grow
up rapidly (I'm 28, she Is 23). I never tholight about It much .
before, but, based mainly on what I DIDN'T do, these are my
ideas on "What Is a Marriage" from a man's point of view :·
It's doing things together, whether they're washing .the
car, doing the laundry or grocery shopping, just so you can be
with her.
It's thinking about her in all you say and do .
It's coming home tired, having dinner, tben washing the
dishes so she can relax.
It's giving her flowers because you love her .
It's talking weach other and not getting angry.
It's saying "I love you" at unexpected limes, no matter
. ,
.
.
wbere you are.
It's going to a crowded night club and seeing only ber.
. It'sholding her inyOI!f arms while she sleeps.
. ,
It's giving up your SWJday football game to go to the park
with her.
.
It's Uving with the only woman you can ever love - and
now you've lost her. - TED

+++

Clltl had their lights on,

other caq cut In and broke up the
~lon. Ar.e people in IIUi:b a hurry that IIley can't practice
CoiiuDon courte.sy these days? Where'a the respect for the dead

or bereawd?- T. W.

••

and secretary. Ohio Naiional
Bank .
Evans has been associated
with Bob Evans Farms and
its restaurant subsidiary,
Bob Evans Farm Foods Inc.
for the past 19 years. He was
named chairman of lhe board
in 1971. He is serving or has
served on the boards of
directors of Ohio Quarter
Horse Association, Ohio State
Charolais Association ,
National Independent
Meatpackers Associa tion ,
Evans Enterprises Inc.,
Landmark Development Inc
and the Ledaro Corp. of
Gallipolis.

The son of Mr. and Mrs.
Emerson Evans, GaUipolil,
Daniel E. Evans is a native of
Gallia County. He first joined
Bob Evans Farms, Inc., in
their Xenia , Ohio, sausage
plant, then moved to Bidwell,
Galli a County, as manager of
lheir plant there.
With his wife, Yvonne , and
their danghter, Jane Ann,
Evans resides on an 8Cklcre
farm in Canal Winchester,
where he raises quarter
horses and other livestock .
Evan;; has served two
terms on the board of
directors of the Ohio Quarter
Horse Ass_ociation and one
term as a board mernber of
the Ohio State Charolais
Association.
He is past chairman of the
board of trustees and a
present board member of the
First Church of God at
Berwick . While living in
southeastern Ohio, Evans
served on the Gallia-Meigs
Airport Authority and was

Dear Cue :
Men shy away from overt CO!lffietic changes such as face
· lifia, hair dyeing , etc. because they've been programmed to
see them as "female (\.e., sissified) vanity.'!
, I don't think it's excessively "vain" to fight aging any way
;)'UU can. If your husband secretly wants those excess chins
-remoyed, tell him he's in good company. Everyone from the
richest men in the world w favorite aging HoUywood actors
have traveled that route.
(But this type of cosmetic surgery WILL leave a not-verynoticeable scar.) - H.

ix'bc:Uon of can going w the cemetery. Even though these

•'

Dan Evans named
ONB director

mensurate
with
his
· never use, 11 Brown said Tuesday. "The conunission is ~·;:: Mercer , president and chief
classifica lion ," he said .
. unable to accept orie simple fact : The gas was purchased : executive officer has an·
" Under the proposal a
.
· for industrial and commercial customers and they should ;:~ nounced.
worker will be doing a $10,000
·
have
to
pay
'for
it."
!~!
Newly
elected
directors are
job for $10,000 rather than
by
Brown's
office
in
:~;
Daniel
E.
Evans,
chairman of
Consumers
were
represented
being 'X'd' and receiving
hearings
on
the
proposal
to
allow
gas
utilities
to
charge~!!
the
board
and
secrel&lt;!ry·
of
$10,000 for an $8,000 job .
residential
consume.rs
for
some
emergency
gas
i!i
Bob
Evans
Farms
Inc;
"The reclassification afpurchllsed for industry.
;:::. James G. McKee, chairman
fected about 80,000 state,
"Our
arguments
were
good,"
Brown
said,
"and
our
~;:. and chief executive officer of
county welfare and classified
legal
reasoning
was
sound."
Apparently;
essential~;
the seven Columbia Gas
state university workers - a
consumers
just
don't
carry
as
rnuch
inlluential
clout
as
~;:
·massive plan to implement.
th~ utilities."
.
:::!
An onslaught of thousands of
The
PUC:O
"bowed
to
the
blg
utillties
and
disregarded
i~:
complaints, appeals and
the·
Interests
of
Individual
residential
gas
consumers,"
:!~
MONITORS NAMED
questions from workers
said Brown.
~;:
Riverby monitors for this
besieg.ed our office. Many of
~.: "Our position has not changed. Residenital consumers:!:! weekend have been an·
the problems should be an- ~~: don't need this industrial gas , they don't use it, and they ;:;: . n o u n c e d .
Sa turd a Y ' s
swered at the State Personnel
should not be required to pay for it," Brown said.
.;!;! monitors are Mrs. Dorotha
Board of Review since they
concern placement of em·
ployees in classifications
Mrs . Betty McGinness, 3 to 5
which do not reflect the
. p.m. Monitors for Sunday are
employees' duties. The most
Mrs. A. D. Lusk, Mrs . Lucille
prevalent problem, step 'X,'
Brannon , 1 to 3 p.m.; Mrs.
is one that must be solved
Herman Koby , Mrs. Herb
with legisl ation," Stewart
Bush, 3 to 5 p.m.
commented .

near
Helm:
" I recently attended a funeral where there was a long

24 oz.

.

H
Utilities won, says Brown
*
.

'

·~·.

Dear T.:

Here'a a quote from the other side of the fence : "When a
1ang funeral proceulon threatens the success of the most
in\portant appointment In your life, you cut in to save time.
Atl&amp; all, thedeceued Isn't ina hurry, and you are!" - H.

Was $448.00
NOW

Early American

QUEEN ANN CHAIR .

Was $329.00
NOW

$199
$259
TAN VINYL
95
$199 ·RECLINER FLEXSTEEL .
COCKTAIL &amp;
$_}9995 END TABLES·

LOVE SEAT

95

Orange &amp; Blue Plaid

Blue Print

..
'

'

95

Was$259.95
NOW

Was $329.95
NOW

RED &amp; BLACK
SPANISH RECLINER

•
•

'

'

'

Was $299.95
NOW

GOLD STRIPE
RECLINER FLEXSTEEL

Dear Ted:
. Maybe you'll have a second chance ·- If you clip this
column and send It to your wife with a dozen roses. Good luck!

20cnt

,v;o.·.·«-:·:O:·:·

'

....:H.

l

. . . . ,.. .

_.;o:..:..;.;o:·~·;·;·:o;....;-:.,...
...........,.,.,...,..., , .. ,•,o,o,o,yr.o;...-..~.•:-r......-..o.•.•..o.•:£.0.•.
•:.o.o.o;t,.....,..•,•, ;r.•. • • • •

~

Face Lifts forM~o Too!
Dear Helen :
I've decided on plastic surgery as I believe everyone
should put her best face forward, and mine is obscured by sags
and wrinkleS.
·
My husband and I are co-()wners of a rather exclusive
women's wear shop where looks count: He's in favor of my face
lift, but when I silggest that HE consider one, specifically
elimination of his double, double chin, he balks. Says this is
"unmanly," although I've seen him secretly testing his face to
see how be'd look with several inches of excess flab removed .
, . If women can be open about cOSQletic changes, why are
men so reticent? Even on something as minor as dyeing one's
ooir, men re110rt to secrecy (or howls of protest) while women
accept dyeing as a fact of life. -CAN'T UNDERSTAND 'EM

~

•••••••••••••••1!11••••••••••..•••.1

and children.

..

~.:~·~··-=~- ~·-··:-·.;··········

~'·'·'·"-"·•~07":•~··~~-.

COLUMBUS _ Three ;ew Syst~m distribution comCOLUMBUS - The Ohio could look forward to yearly f,g cia! customers, according to state Attorney General
-:~ directors of Ohio National panies, and William 0 . AnCivil Service Employees step increases and job ~ William J . Brown .
Association (OCSEA) an- responsibilities com- ;;~ "There is no rhyme or reason behind charging !!~ Bank were elected at the derson, senior vice president
~ residential oonsumers for gas they don't need and will ::, recent annual meeting w. c.

Creating jobs no sure cure for welfare ills

Patty denounced
by her comrades

.-.:.-.......

~-.:

We have taken a large selection .of

I

lamps and reduced up to % off. ·

Miss Matched Bedding
BoxSpring &amp; Mattress

'

f

•

•

LARRY'S
WAYSIDE
FU.
R
NITURE
·
.
:
Sf"!::~
J

.
Gallipolis, Ohio
....,•.,.,...~·······························***************************************·**

Third &amp; Olive

.'

'

'
''
•

...

�,

-'

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. II, 1976

Senate opens debate today on repeal of utiliti~·s'RCN for~ula
Tuesday passed, 75-22, a bill Orrville, said he hoped for the only amendment planned Woodland, O.Columbus, and
to
reduce
homeowner . "reasonably quick action," with consent of the majority Douglas Applegate, Dproperty taxes .
hopefully
within
two Democrats would str~then Steubenville; would not be
The homeowner property months.
pro-consumer provisions Of pre~nt for the Senate vote .
Woodland apparently
tax relief now goes before the
McCormack said he was the legislation .
would
not vote on the
Senate , where the bill's spon· "shocked" at the Jack of
Senate . Republicans said
sor, Rep. John E:. Johnson . D- problems with his utility rate they planned w offer about measure because of his
making bill in Tuesday's half a dozen amendments of potential conflict of Interest.
He is a $16,000 a year area
caucus.
their own.
MCCormack said his colThe bill repeals the current development representative
leagues "wanted a much formula utilities use to value lor Columbia Gas of Ohio, one
stronger bill than the one I their facilities, which Is based of the utilities affected by the
brought to the caucus.'' and on reconstruction costs to bill.
COLUMBUS (UPI) -State comes and would take on an
responsible atmosphere.
' 'This will cost a lot of reduce the welfare problem,"
Applegate is hospitalized
duplicate all plants and
Welfare Director Raymond added coat, paying for child
He
said
that
county
welfare
money
and
when
you
suggest
he
said.
with
a hack ailment.
equipment, and substitutes
F. McKenna says creating care, II McKenna says. 11 We
deparlments should increase something like this you shock
McKenna said that county
Fourteen
of Gov. Jame~ A.
an "original cost" formula.
jobs lor welfare recipients would have to continue
their budgets to double or people to the roots. But you welfare case · workers now
Rhodes'
appointments
. to
McCormack and a majority
will not cure the stat~'s supplementing their incomes triple their number of case have to invest the money now deal w.ith up to 300 cases at a
various
Ohio
boards
and
of
Public
Utilities
growing welfare problems until they become self- workers .
so in the long run you will lime . He said this makes It
Commission
of
Ohio commissions were approved
becaliae "It's just not that sufficient."
almost impoSsible to properly
members predict the bill wiD by the Senate, but two of
simple."
McKenna , discussing
counsel a welfare client.
By Bertha Parker
• cut the hearing time for rate Rhodes' nominees to the Ohio
"We first have to train welfare problems with
Attendance at all services relief cases, and reduce Racing Commission, were
people so they can work," Scripps-Howard News·
for Feb. 8 at the Free future utility rate increases rejected.
said McKenna. " And just . papers, said that before a
The
Senate
rejected
Joseph
Methodist Church was 104 . because of the adjustment in
because we find them a job, welfare recipient can be
LoPresti by a vote of 3-25 and
The 'Indoor Camp Meeting the formula.
that doesn't mean our moved on to a job, "you must
Sen. Gene Slagle, D-Galion, turned down Mel Witt 12-17.
determine
held at !he local church
what
welfare costs will go down." first
The
Senate
also
·closed Sunday evening with was scheduled to sponsor an
happened to that person .
Me Kenna said:
unanimously
passed
two
bills
amendment
to
make
all
$900
good attendances every
"You've got to have job
-Welfare costs in Ohio
By Mrs. Francis Morris
and
agreed
211-&lt;l
on
House
million
in
pending
rate
cases
have jumped from $202 training available. You need By DON~D B. THACKREY four limes by Hsrris and
Ralph Webb was informed evening. Rev. Janes of Galion
currently before the PUCO amendments to a Senate bill.
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) threatened with death "hun- recently of the death of his · was the gues t speaker.
million in liscal1965 to nearly to teach the person the
Passed by the Senate and
come
WJder provisions of the
Scoutmaster Pat Wood and
$900mlllion in fiscal\975. The discipline to work every day. With Patricia Hearst's trial dreds of times ."
uncles , Amba Sargent of
sent
to the House were two
bill.
projection for fiscal 1977 is You need day care centers for bogged down in legal techShe said she joined in a San Akron and Mila Sargent of a nun1ber ·of Boy Scouts atbills
confinning
land sales in
Present
language
in
the
tended morning services Feb .
children of working parents. nicalities, two of her former Francisco bank robbery, shot Portsmouth. '
more than $1.1 billion.
Fairfield
and
Perry
County.
measure
would
make
the
new
"Once you 've solved all , Symbionese Liberation Army up a Los Angeles sporting
- There are nearly 1.2
Mr . and Mrs . Ralph Webb 8 al the lo:cal church. The Boy
The
Senate
also
accepted
formula
apply
to
all
rate
million Ohioans receiving these problems - and then if comrades denoWJced as "ab- goods store, helped kidnap a were in Columbus to visit Scouts gave their pledge to
cases filed after the bill House amendments to a bill
surd" her story of being high school student and Mrs. Webb's sister, Mrs . God and Country.
some type of welfare there are jobs available allowing school boards to
Mr . and Mrs. Dick Karr became law.
assistance, (including close you can start moving people raped and beaten while a stayed with the Harrises for Alberta Nothsline and went to
advertise adult education
McCormack·
said
two
and Mr. and Mrs . Alien
l'k years out of fear of them
to 500,000 children), ranging off welfare ," McKenna said. captive .
the doctor for a check up.
classes.
He said the state does have
from food stamps for workers
William and Emily Harris and the FBI.
James Auth erson is a Eichinger with several others Democrats, Sens. Donald L.
'She was never sexual1y patient in Veterans Memorial attended church services at
with low incomes, to public a training program, called termed "a series of lies" the
heiress' assaulted," said. Harris .. Hospital du e .to minor Belpre recently. Rev . Hicks,
assistance
for
those Work Incentive (WIN), but newspaper
a former minister of the
!iJysically unable to work . characterized it as only a testimony about her 19 "This is totally absurd ."
surgery.
" She was at no time
-Out of the 1.2 million, "small effort." The WIN months 'underground with the
Gre lla and Isabel Simpson Pomeroy Methodist Church is
" These increases are
· beaten," added his wife . "She spent a couple days with Mr. the pastor at the Belpre • COLUMBUS ( UPI)
McKenna estimates that less program works with the terrorist. band.
They said Tuesday, in a was at no time harmed in any and Mrs. Solon Butcher at Church.
than 90,000 are "potentially Bureau of Employment
Ohio's welfare rolls continued probably seasonal in nature,"
Services to find job training tape recording released in way.
Kathy Pullins has been ill to climb during January, McKenna said. "It is not
employable."
Spencer, W. Va.
Raymond F. McKenna, unusual for welfare rolls to
"She was never forced to do
-Out of the 90,000, nearly and employment for the Los Angeles, she was never
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill the past week.
Mrs . Carl Ba iley un- director of th e Ohio rise during fall and winter
70,000 are mothers or fathers potential · workers now on sexually assaulted, beaten or anything against her will spent· a weekend with their
harmed and could have gone after she said she had joined son-in-law and daughter, Mr. derwent surgery al the· Department of
Public months. They rnight be
receiving Aid to Dependent welfare.
expected to hit a peak in
the
way
to
McKenna
said
home any time after joining the SLA.
O!ildren ( ADC).
and Mrs. Charley Foster and Veterans Memorial Hospital Welfare, said Tuesday.
"She had total freedom of family in Columbus.
McKenna said preliminary March or April ."
and getting along well .
Let's assume, he says, that reduce welfare rolls is to beef the SLA.
He said ADC rolls last year
figures
for January showed
up
training
programs
which
Miss
Hear~t
testified
movement
·after
that
time,
all 70,000 mothers or fathers
Mr . and Mrs. Uoyd Wrigh t,
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace
rose
from 512,000 in October
there
were
Monday
she
was
sexually
will
make
welfare
recipients
and
I
think
this
is
only
582,000
recipients
receiving ADC were to find a
and Mrs. Jack Adams spent Mr . Steve Eblin and
self-sufficient. This, he says, assaulted in a tiny closet by obvious from the fact that she Sunday at Dunbar and St. daughter, Becky, lefl Monday on the Aid for Dependent to 570,000 in April, 1975.
job today.
"We would probably still be will allow children of welfare more ethan one of her did not live with Bill and Albans, W. Va .
with a group of people for the Children program, compared However , by August last
parents
to
grow
up
in
a
more
kidnapers,
punched
in
the
eve
myself.
supplementing their low in- ·
Mrs. Helen Simpson was a Holy Lands for a 10 day trip. to 577,000 in December and . year, rolls dropped to 556,000,
"She had total freedom to guest Sunday of Mr. and Mrs .
571,000 in November.
M cKenn~ said.
do whatever she wanted to
Ronald Har t.
Mr. ilfld Mrs. Loren Nixon
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • do.~H~t~to~=
.
·
to her family."
of New Straitsville were
~~~~k~ Sunday dinner guests
ANOTHE~
I.. , , _{)()
Red Foil Heart trial was still being rece ntly of Mr. and Mrs .
~
A.CJvt/V
I lb. $3.75 . conducted outside the
Ralph Webb.
,
presence of the jury , U.S.
Mr. and Mrs. John
C A N D IE S ·
District Court Judge Oliver Stephenson and family of
Carter was listening to
Beaver, Ohio, spent a day
testimony about incidents with his mother, Mrs . Vivian
that occurred after the Johnson.
holdup in order to decide
Mr . and Mrs . Ed Miller
, whether they can be admitted spent Saturday shopping in
as evidence . .
Gallipolis and visited Mr . and
The jury of seven women
Mrs. Robert Cornwell.
and five men was in co[\rt for
only a half-hour Tuesday, to
hear
two
prosecution
witnesses describe where
they · found cartridges from
Salin Heart
bullets fired in the April 15,
2 lb. $9.45
1974, holdup of a Hibernia
Bank branch.
X
X
The jurors were absent
We are glad to report
earlier in the day when a Luther Friend improving and
oollege Student testified Miss able to make the trip to
Hearst told him she was "a Columbus last week for a
willing participant" · in the checkup with his doctors.
robbery and showed him a
Mrs. Thelma Eddy of
cyanide-coated bullet from Killbuck spent several days
.!M ILL CERTIFIED)
NOW
her gun .
last week here visiting her
"She said she originally sisters, Mrs. Wilma Ballard
4x8 SHEET
ONLY
was kidnaped, bound and and family and Mrs. Doris
gagged but she heard Hill and family and her
·
,
publicity that her father b h
G
Wh'
J
Assorted hocolates didn't do enough to get her
rot er, rover
Ite r.
1 ib $" 95
and family.
· -· '
free and she had changed her
Calling on Mr. and Mrs,
views ,"
said
Thomas Stanley Trussell on Sunday
NO.2 GRADE
Mathews, 20, of Lynwood, were Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Calif., who was kidnaped Carson of Coolville. Mr. and
May 16, 1974, and held for 12 Mrs. Richard Kerns of
hours by the Harrises and Belpre, Mr. and Mrs. John
Miss Hearst.
Ridenour and Jason, Chester,
Anthony Shepard, a clerk Mr. and Mrs . Robert
at Mel's Sporting Goods store Trussell, Reedsville R. D.
in Los Angeles, testified that and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
earlier on May 16 Miss Hearst Trussell and family, local.
fired "two btirsts" Of bullets
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Pitzer
from_a parked van to help the of Beckley, w. Va ., spent
HarrlSes e~c~pe after ~e Wednesday with their son,
caught. Wilham Harris ·· Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Pitzer
773-5554
· MASON, W. VA."
By J. R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A bill
revising the state's utility
rate making process was to
go before the state Senate
todaY with the blessing of
moat - but not all - of the

upper chamber's Democratic their caucusing on the
controversial bill out of the
majority.
·
Debate on the so-&lt;:aUed way in advance with a closed" RCN" formula repealer was door meeting Tuesday
to start when the senate afternoon.
"About 15 Democrats were
convened at 1:30 p.m.
Democratic senators got in the room," said Sen. John

....

13 - Tbe Daily Sentinel; Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 11, 1976

Bill offered
to erase 'step X'

T. McCormack, D-Euclid,
author of the measure which
he says will simplifY the rate
making process.
Democrats hold a 21-12
majority in the Senate.
Meanwhile, the House

Laurel Oiff
News Notes

"'

nounced plans today to offset
alleged defects In the state 's
reclassification and pay plan
with legislation to eliminate
step ''X."
OCSEA-authored House
Bill. 1300 (J . Thompson, Jr.,
D-Cleveland, et al.) was
introduced in the General
Assembly on Tuesday as a
result of defects that surfaced
when
the
state's
reclassification and pay plan
was implemented in January.
"We designed the bill after
analyzing over 4,000 appeals
from OCSEA members," said
OCSEA Executive Director
Karl E . Stewart. " The
number one problem our
members have faced is
alloc~tion to step 'X," or
being locked In a category
outside the usual four-step
pay range at a fixed rate of
pay until other employees in
the same classification reach
that .rate of pay.
''The thousands of employees placed in step 'X'
have no incentive . Their
morale suffers. They are
blOcked from receiving any
salary increases, including
legislated ones, until the pay
rate of other workers reaches
the level' of th,~ step 'X'
worker .
·
In other words, an employee in step 'X' is actually
penalized.for his good service
.,or seniority except that after
five years of service he
receives only one-half of one
percent longevity pay for
each year of service over five
years," Stewart said.
.
· " Our legislation would
remove step 'X' completely
While still guaranteeing a 20cent per hour increase. An
employee would be assigned
to a classifica lion in line with
his pay and skills at step one,
two or three of · the ,
classification, and the
assignment wduld not· be
considered a promotion.
" The bill would restore
incentive to those who were
'X 'd' because the employee

.
'

Racine
Events

,•

•

'

1

Welfare rolls climbing

. . s

FIRST OF '76 SAI.E

+;...,,.L..

Bashan
News

rfor ')!our 'Vafer;tir;e
Saturdag
cfebruarg .14

· 5/8"

4'

8'

CD PLYWOOD

' .95

c_

fA.79~

2x4x8 STUDS

··················~·····

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

DUTTON'S PRESCRIPTION DRUG STORE

MATERIALS CO.

Middleport, Ohio

shoplifting.

NEW
CABBAGE

lb. 124
SLICED

FRENDt CITY
BRAND.

lb.

89~

-·..,,.
' ,,

'

RED DRICIOUS

--..-·
-·
'

......,. -.

·-·- ~

.... . .....

~

•

Thank You Brand
3 lb.

49
HI·C ORANGE
4
DRINK
~:·
49
. . . ...... ,.n. .
Saltine
384
Crackers

APPLES
4

4

bag

• ..--..,~-~·

..,

Golden Isle

lb.
box

.,....

CHERRY PIE
21
FILLING can

oz.

DUNCAN HINES

CAKE MIXES

oz.5 9 ,.

All Flavors
19
Except Angel Food box

.

,, .

....

~i

COLUMBUS (UP!) -The Public Utilities Conunlsslon

~l of Ohio "bowed w the big utilities" in allowing residential

*~ customers to be charged for natural gas used by commer- ,,

i·

fl:
.~:1:::: : : : : : : ::::: : : : : : : : :::::::::::::: : : :;: :~:;:;: : :;:;:;:~:;:~;:;:;~:::::;;:;:::::::=:~::::: : ::::::::::::::~sw.::~f. ~~.~'; :~·. ~~~ss:e~~h!I~~

Committees
are appointed

LOS ANGELES I UP!)
Longtime tennis pro Dennis
Ralston, former coach of the
U.S. Davis Cup team, has
signed a 1976 contract as
player-coach of the World
Team Tennis Los Angeles
Strings.
Ralston,
a
former
University of Southern
California star who reigned
for three straight seasons as
the No. I ranked U.S. player
before turning pro in 1966,
was coach of the Davis Cup
'learn for five years and
helped the Americans win the
title twice.

Trinity Church committees
for 1976 have been appointed .
They are as follows :
Church property : Marvin
Burt, Don Mayer, Benny
Ewing, Dale Smith, Leonard
Jewell, Harley Hendricks , Ed
Kennedy, John W. Blaettnar,
Kenneth Harris, Mike Young
and Joe Struble .
Church finance : Pat Wood,
Paul Nease, Roy Holter and
Mrs. Clarice Krautler.
Communion: Wal te r
Grueser , Joe Struble, Pat
Wood and Robert Buck.
Decorating: Rose Ginther,
Carrie Neutzling , Wilma
Terrell·, Ada Holter and Pat
Holler .
Evangelism and M'em.
bership : Joe Struble and
Patricia Young .
· Ushers : Barbara Offutt.
Publicity : Carrie Neutzling
and the Rev. W. H. Perrin .
Auditing chairman:
Richard Rosen ba urn.

GRANGE TO MEET
Ohio Valley Grahge 2~12,
I.e tart Falls, will meet at the
hal! at 7.:30 p.m. Thursday.
Potluck refreshments will be
· .served.

· ._

..

pkg.

DANIEL E. EVANS
actively involved In regional
industrial development as a
member of Gallia County's
Corrununity
Improvement
Corporation.

lb. , 49
ROUND STEAK .•..............•....•.1
GROUND CHUCK••..•...••• .'~; ••99c
· .................
·
lb:..·99C
CHUCK ROAST
U.S. D.A. CHOICE

.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

.

JOW.L BACON
.BEEF TONGUES·

PEPSI, R.C. or
SEVEN-UP ,

FOLGER'S

Instant·Coffee
10

oz.

8-16

oz.

'259

. bottles

+++

Dear Helen:
With the recent upsurge of broken marriages, it was
refreshing to read the leUer by Mary Ann , describing a good
union : Started me thinking about my own marriage, which
broke up after 13 months. The separation has made me grow
up rapidly (I'm 28, she Is 23). I never tholight about It much .
before, but, based mainly on what I DIDN'T do, these are my
ideas on "What Is a Marriage" from a man's point of view :·
It's doing things together, whether they're washing .the
car, doing the laundry or grocery shopping, just so you can be
with her.
It's thinking about her in all you say and do .
It's coming home tired, having dinner, tben washing the
dishes so she can relax.
It's giving her flowers because you love her .
It's talking weach other and not getting angry.
It's saying "I love you" at unexpected limes, no matter
. ,
.
.
wbere you are.
It's going to a crowded night club and seeing only ber.
. It'sholding her inyOI!f arms while she sleeps.
. ,
It's giving up your SWJday football game to go to the park
with her.
.
It's Uving with the only woman you can ever love - and
now you've lost her. - TED

+++

Clltl had their lights on,

other caq cut In and broke up the
~lon. Ar.e people in IIUi:b a hurry that IIley can't practice
CoiiuDon courte.sy these days? Where'a the respect for the dead

or bereawd?- T. W.

••

and secretary. Ohio Naiional
Bank .
Evans has been associated
with Bob Evans Farms and
its restaurant subsidiary,
Bob Evans Farm Foods Inc.
for the past 19 years. He was
named chairman of lhe board
in 1971. He is serving or has
served on the boards of
directors of Ohio Quarter
Horse Association, Ohio State
Charolais Association ,
National Independent
Meatpackers Associa tion ,
Evans Enterprises Inc.,
Landmark Development Inc
and the Ledaro Corp. of
Gallipolis.

The son of Mr. and Mrs.
Emerson Evans, GaUipolil,
Daniel E. Evans is a native of
Gallia County. He first joined
Bob Evans Farms, Inc., in
their Xenia , Ohio, sausage
plant, then moved to Bidwell,
Galli a County, as manager of
lheir plant there.
With his wife, Yvonne , and
their danghter, Jane Ann,
Evans resides on an 8Cklcre
farm in Canal Winchester,
where he raises quarter
horses and other livestock .
Evan;; has served two
terms on the board of
directors of the Ohio Quarter
Horse Ass_ociation and one
term as a board mernber of
the Ohio State Charolais
Association.
He is past chairman of the
board of trustees and a
present board member of the
First Church of God at
Berwick . While living in
southeastern Ohio, Evans
served on the Gallia-Meigs
Airport Authority and was

Dear Cue :
Men shy away from overt CO!lffietic changes such as face
· lifia, hair dyeing , etc. because they've been programmed to
see them as "female (\.e., sissified) vanity.'!
, I don't think it's excessively "vain" to fight aging any way
;)'UU can. If your husband secretly wants those excess chins
-remoyed, tell him he's in good company. Everyone from the
richest men in the world w favorite aging HoUywood actors
have traveled that route.
(But this type of cosmetic surgery WILL leave a not-verynoticeable scar.) - H.

ix'bc:Uon of can going w the cemetery. Even though these

•'

Dan Evans named
ONB director

mensurate
with
his
· never use, 11 Brown said Tuesday. "The conunission is ~·;:: Mercer , president and chief
classifica lion ," he said .
. unable to accept orie simple fact : The gas was purchased : executive officer has an·
" Under the proposal a
.
· for industrial and commercial customers and they should ;:~ nounced.
worker will be doing a $10,000
·
have
to
pay
'for
it."
!~!
Newly
elected
directors are
job for $10,000 rather than
by
Brown's
office
in
:~;
Daniel
E.
Evans,
chairman of
Consumers
were
represented
being 'X'd' and receiving
hearings
on
the
proposal
to
allow
gas
utilities
to
charge~!!
the
board
and
secrel&lt;!ry·
of
$10,000 for an $8,000 job .
residential
consume.rs
for
some
emergency
gas
i!i
Bob
Evans
Farms
Inc;
"The reclassification afpurchllsed for industry.
;:::. James G. McKee, chairman
fected about 80,000 state,
"Our
arguments
were
good,"
Brown
said,
"and
our
~;:. and chief executive officer of
county welfare and classified
legal
reasoning
was
sound."
Apparently;
essential~;
the seven Columbia Gas
state university workers - a
consumers
just
don't
carry
as
rnuch
inlluential
clout
as
~;:
·massive plan to implement.
th~ utilities."
.
:::!
An onslaught of thousands of
The
PUC:O
"bowed
to
the
blg
utillties
and
disregarded
i~:
complaints, appeals and
the·
Interests
of
Individual
residential
gas
consumers,"
:!~
MONITORS NAMED
questions from workers
said Brown.
~;:
Riverby monitors for this
besieg.ed our office. Many of
~.: "Our position has not changed. Residenital consumers:!:! weekend have been an·
the problems should be an- ~~: don't need this industrial gas , they don't use it, and they ;:;: . n o u n c e d .
Sa turd a Y ' s
swered at the State Personnel
should not be required to pay for it," Brown said.
.;!;! monitors are Mrs. Dorotha
Board of Review since they
concern placement of em·
ployees in classifications
Mrs . Betty McGinness, 3 to 5
which do not reflect the
. p.m. Monitors for Sunday are
employees' duties. The most
Mrs. A. D. Lusk, Mrs . Lucille
prevalent problem, step 'X,'
Brannon , 1 to 3 p.m.; Mrs.
is one that must be solved
Herman Koby , Mrs. Herb
with legisl ation," Stewart
Bush, 3 to 5 p.m.
commented .

near
Helm:
" I recently attended a funeral where there was a long

24 oz.

.

H
Utilities won, says Brown
*
.

'

·~·.

Dear T.:

Here'a a quote from the other side of the fence : "When a
1ang funeral proceulon threatens the success of the most
in\portant appointment In your life, you cut in to save time.
Atl&amp; all, thedeceued Isn't ina hurry, and you are!" - H.

Was $448.00
NOW

Early American

QUEEN ANN CHAIR .

Was $329.00
NOW

$199
$259
TAN VINYL
95
$199 ·RECLINER FLEXSTEEL .
COCKTAIL &amp;
$_}9995 END TABLES·

LOVE SEAT

95

Orange &amp; Blue Plaid

Blue Print

..
'

'

95

Was$259.95
NOW

Was $329.95
NOW

RED &amp; BLACK
SPANISH RECLINER

•
•

'

'

'

Was $299.95
NOW

GOLD STRIPE
RECLINER FLEXSTEEL

Dear Ted:
. Maybe you'll have a second chance ·- If you clip this
column and send It to your wife with a dozen roses. Good luck!

20cnt

,v;o.·.·«-:·:O:·:·

'

....:H.

l

. . . . ,.. .

_.;o:..:..;.;o:·~·;·;·:o;....;-:.,...
...........,.,.,...,..., , .. ,•,o,o,o,yr.o;...-..~.•:-r......-..o.•.•..o.•:£.0.•.
•:.o.o.o;t,.....,..•,•, ;r.•. • • • •

~

Face Lifts forM~o Too!
Dear Helen :
I've decided on plastic surgery as I believe everyone
should put her best face forward, and mine is obscured by sags
and wrinkleS.
·
My husband and I are co-()wners of a rather exclusive
women's wear shop where looks count: He's in favor of my face
lift, but when I silggest that HE consider one, specifically
elimination of his double, double chin, he balks. Says this is
"unmanly," although I've seen him secretly testing his face to
see how be'd look with several inches of excess flab removed .
, . If women can be open about cOSQletic changes, why are
men so reticent? Even on something as minor as dyeing one's
ooir, men re110rt to secrecy (or howls of protest) while women
accept dyeing as a fact of life. -CAN'T UNDERSTAND 'EM

~

•••••••••••••••1!11••••••••••..•••.1

and children.

..

~.:~·~··-=~- ~·-··:-·.;··········

~'·'·'·"-"·•~07":•~··~~-.

COLUMBUS _ Three ;ew Syst~m distribution comCOLUMBUS - The Ohio could look forward to yearly f,g cia! customers, according to state Attorney General
-:~ directors of Ohio National panies, and William 0 . AnCivil Service Employees step increases and job ~ William J . Brown .
Association (OCSEA) an- responsibilities com- ;;~ "There is no rhyme or reason behind charging !!~ Bank were elected at the derson, senior vice president
~ residential oonsumers for gas they don't need and will ::, recent annual meeting w. c.

Creating jobs no sure cure for welfare ills

Patty denounced
by her comrades

.-.:.-.......

~-.:

We have taken a large selection .of

I

lamps and reduced up to % off. ·

Miss Matched Bedding
BoxSpring &amp; Mattress

'

f

•

•

LARRY'S
WAYSIDE
FU.
R
NITURE
·
.
:
Sf"!::~
J

.
Gallipolis, Ohio
....,•.,.,...~·······························***************************************·**

Third &amp; Olive

.'

'

'
''
•

...

�..

•

•

14- The Daily SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. ll, 1970

'

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

DEADLINES

5

P .M .

Oay

Before

Publlcetlon .
Mon day Deadl ine 9 a . m .

Cancellation - Corrections
wil l be accepted unHI 9 a. m .

for Day ot ~ u bllcation .
R:EGULATIONS
The Publi sher reserves the

right to ecrll or reject anv acts

dremed

ob jec t i onal.

publisher

will

The

not

be

respons ible for more than one

Incorrect insertion .

RAT£5

~!:~~;;'Jbr;~"~~~ 10 ~ 1.",9

Ch arle s Edward M iller . who
gave h·h li f e in Luxembourg ,
Feb . 11 , 1945 .

Deep In our heoHI lies a pic

lure ,
Of a loved one gone .to rest.

In mPmory 's frame we shall
keep it,
For he w&lt;ts on e o f the best .

A happv home we once en
joyed ,

For W1nt Ad Service

scen ts per word one in sen ion

Min i mum Charge Sl. OO
14 cents per word t hree
consecutive in ser ti ons.

26 cents per word six con .

secutlve inserti orfs
25 Per Cent Discount on pa id
ads and i!ldS pa i d within 10
days .

.

How sweet the memory sllll ;
But death has le f t a loneliness ,
The wo rld can never f ill .

We ' ll follow close behind you ,
To be brave we ' ll t ry .
For God alone kn ows hQw
muc h we mi ss you .
At t he dawn of another ye ar .
Ed M il ler an d F amily .

&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 ror SO word minimum
Each

lldd illo nat

word

3

·BLIND ADS

Addilionat 1Sc Charge per

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

Notice

SWEEPER
and
Se wing
Machines Repa ir , Parts ,
and

Sup p li es .

Da vis

Advertisement .

Vacuum C)ean er ; 1 1 m i!e u p
GeOrge 's Cr eek Rd . off State

8 : 30 a . m . to 5 : 00 p , m .
Da il y , B:aoa . m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Sa t urday .

R oute 7. Phone
0294 .

. OFFICE HOURS

Card-of Thanks
MY S INCERE thanks to th e

doctors . and
Veter ans

nurses

at

Memorial

Hospital. T ha nk s to all my
fr ien ds and m inist er s tor

the ir prayers . Those who
se nt l ovely flow ers a nd

cards .

Rev . Edward Griffith , S t.
Joseph ' s Hosp it a l, Room

332. Pa rkersb urg , W. Va .
2- 11- He

Lost

LO ST in Bashan area , ma l e
Pl ott hound , name of Duke .
Nem e t ag on c ott ar Phon e
(61.t) 985 · 42 48 or 992 ·3408 .
2-6-6tc

ALow Cost
Want Ad

Will Cut
Cost of
Uving ••••••
WRITE YOUR
OWN AD!
rrs EASY TO
ORDER BY
MAIU
-SPECIAL!-

12 WORDS
4·DAYS
ONLY

446 ·

NEW shipment of irr egul ar
socks at 25c pa ir at D ·J
Hou se of Fabrics , 1 m i le
sou t h of Middleport on Rt. 7.
2-11 ·41C

AsH- sT - F reewTit- B i plist
Ch urc;h , corn'er of As h and
Plum 51. in Middleport. Wi ll
hold a · re11iva l starting
Monday , Fe b . 9 . .Preaching
each n ight by Re11 . Glen
Co l li n s , Ne lsonville . Start s
at 7 : 30p .m . The " Youth For
ChriS t" Choir will
be
singing . Pastor is Rev . Noel
Hermann .

CAREER - i"Wails- ~;;u- ·with
L.uzier
Cosm e t i cs .
'' a
qua l ity produ c t for _53
years ."
No
territo r y
restrictio n , work f rom your
home St i ll t i me to win your
t r ip to Nassau . For ap .
pointment , ca ll Mady lon
Stone
(3041
727 -9269
(collect) .
2-J-12tc

AVAilABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
NO REFUNDS.

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

- ------- --- - -3278 .

12 tS..-50tc

NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT
Case No . 21711
Estat e of WILLIAM
F.
WINEBRENNER D ecease d.
Notice
i s _given
t hat
Margaret Ell en Wineb r.enn er
of Syracuse, Meigs Co unty ,
Ohio, h~s been dut y appo in ted
Executrix ot t he Esta te of
Willia m
F . Wl nebre nn er,
d eceaseq ,. tat e ot Sy racuse ,
Meigs County , Ohio .
Cred i tor s ar e reQuired to
f i le their claims wi th said
f i duciSry within tou r months .
Dat ed this 23rd day of
Janu~ry 1976.

M ~ ddteport ,

GOOD
used
Electrotux
swe eper . Phone 742 28n .
2 11 Jtc
DEAL~RS

3. _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _ __

.5. ---..,--6. _ __ __
7. _ _ _ __

8-·- - - ' - - - 9.-- - - lD.- --'---,..-11.- - ' - - - -

A-

-- --SMALL , used piano.

CITY'- - - PHONE _ _ __

POMEROY. OHIO
45769

S2695

Rt:TI~I:LJ

~

1975 CHEV Y 11 ton 4 whee l 1968 250 F ORD Pickup , 43 ,000
a ct ual m iles. Phon e 99 2d r ive p icku p . Balance of
fa ct o ry· warranly Check
3640
2 8 7tp
this before yo u buy a new
one . Phone a f le r 5 p m . or on
1969 VOLKSWAGEN w i t h
we~;&gt;kenas . 991 3J96
B a j a k i t , ~650 . Phon e 992 ,l911c
5663 .
2 a 6tc
19 69 MERCURY · Wagon ,
-....._
·a utoma t ic , o;~m f m ra di o,
runs
good ,
good
gas 19 741 TON Chev . dump tru c k .
m i leage . Ca ll 992 -36 19 before
V -B, 454 1 4 sp .. _ p .s. , p .b ..
2 p m . or after 6 p .m .
16 ,ooo actua l miles . $3 ,800.
2-10-Jtc
Phone ( 6 H ) 985 3594
2-8-7tp

SEW I NG of al l kinds , dr esses
tor all occasions, slacks ,
sh ir ts . new bOrn layettes,
cu rt ains, drap es PhOne 992 30 35 and ask for Doro t hy .
2-4-12t c

_______

For Rent

------ ____.:___

For Sale
REDUCE sate an d fast with
GoBe-se Table ts and E -Vap
'' water pil l s, '' Nelson Drug.
2-11 -l!p
.
---- ...:. ~ -..-~----~-- -:--

"GRA PEFR U IT· P IL L " wi t h
Diadax plan mo r e con ven ient than grape fruit s -Eat sat is fying meats and
los e we ig h t. Nelson Dr ugs .
2-11 l! p
NEW I mproved '' Zipp les ,"
the great i ron p ill now wi t h
V i ta min C Nel son Dr.u g.
2-11 -1t p

___ _

1968 JE;EP Wa9on eer, 6 c yl .
std .• lo c k out hubs . Phon e
Harold
B rew e r .
l o ng
Bot tom , Ohio { 614) 985 -3554 .
____ _______

2

~'.:"'

FOR
D. • wheel dr ive truck , V
8, gOod condition . Harol d

__

WEST

I.

CORN for sa te . Phon e (6 141
985 ·35 38 , ·P au l Karr .

comp letely rebuil t. S5 ,000 .
Phon e 161 &lt;1 ) 985 -3594 .

2-B ·71p
1964 JOHN Deere doz er, 10 -10
d iese l ,eng ine , 8 ft . bl ad e,
good
co ndi t ion, $4 ,000 .
Phone. (6 14 ) 985 -3594 .
2-8-7tp

--------1L-----HONDA SL350, good con dit ion . Call

Landau' roof.

From t he l argest Truck or
Bulldozer" ' Radia tor lo the
sma ll est Heeter Core .
Nath a n B igg s
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC •.

FOR SALE

75 Chrysler Newport , 4 dr .

5495

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

____
$4495

A MERIC AN Saddle hor se,
filly , 2' ~ years old . 61 in ches , S200 . P hone 949 -2225 .
·
2-10 -3t c

Tom Rue 5ale Price

75 Dodge Coronet2 dr . hardtop , 360·\1·8. ---~$4195
Tom Rue Sale Price75 Plymputh Valiant Custom, 4 dr., 6
cyl. , automatic , air conditioning.
____$
_ 3795
Tom· RUe Sale Price

74 Plymouth Satellite, 9 pass .• Sta .
Wagon .

Tom Rue Sale Price---'Ll695
72 Chev. Impala Custom, 2 dr . H.T.

Tom Rue Sale Price

Tom Rue Sale Price

71 Mercury Montego, Sla . Wagon .

Tom Rue Sale Price

vw Bug " Mechanics Special"

_ _ _.::$2195
_ _ _$,.,1495
-

----:..::.$1495
_____$995

Tom Rue Sale Price

$&amp;95

~~tord Maverick 2 dr., automatic , 6 • _____
Tom R'ue Sale Price

985 -394 7.
2-10 -41p

PIONEER SX525 receive!' ,
$150 . Phon e 9-49 -2225 .
2-10 -3Tc
---~ -----r---- - --

Mi:DAN IEL Custo m
Bu t cheri ng ; West Columbia, W .
Va . We butcher cattle and
h ogs .
SlO
ca_tfle
slaughter ; S7 f or hogs ; 12c
tor cutting and wrapping .
State and fe d eral Inspected ;
Operi 6 day s per week .
Phone (304 ) 882 -3224 .
1-30 -261C
COAL FOR SA LE . CAB Coa l ,
Company , I mite north ot
Cheshire , on Rt . 7. Pick your
own , $20 per to n . Open 6days
per week . or cal l (614 ) 367 7330 tor further i nfor mation .
1-8-781&lt;::

.

.

CO AL , llnn•s ton e and ait lypes
of sal! and rock salt for ico
and snoW re m oval. E)( .
cetsior Sa l t Work s, Eest
Main St ., Pomeroy , Ohio .
Phone 992 · 38~ 1.
,__
12-7 -lfc

Roger Wamsley
1-'23 ·1 mo .

""0~

'"to.. . ~·

qop &amp; LOOI( .

FORD LTD . ,:,;;.;-11QI.
Winchester 37 11 Si n 9 tc sho t.
Phone 7-&lt;41 -2359 .

--

.PH. 992·2594

1 13 261p

,.
'

I

FDUR acres of land , niCe
loc afion for ho use or t railer
near sc t'IOOI. Call ( 614 ) 669 ·
4723 or 669 -3764
2-6-6tp

WINDOWS
ALUMINUM

lARRY lAVENDER

SyriCU$1, Ohio
"h . 99l ·l99l
4· 10 -·1 mo ,

MODERN tiome In Chester , 8
room s, 2 bath s, 2 por ches ,
sunp or ch, ' '2 basement , clly
and well waler , nat ur al g as ,
garage . Pri c ed to ni l.
Phone {61-41 98 5-4102.
2-4-lfc

OLD HOME - In exce lle nt
cond ition, 3 BRs .• bath , gas

f urnace. di ning, nice kit.,
full
b ase ment.
near
bu siness sec . Only $17,000.

home, 3 BR , bath t some

panel ing &amp; tile . hardwood
floors , N . gas F .A. furnace,
partial basement, garage .

$22,500 .
POMEROY - 11/; acres.
200 11. lrontage , originally
had 2 houses . Ideal tor
hom e or trailer . $3,000.

RUTLAND -:- 2 BR . bath.

12 ROOMS - Large older
hom e. 5 BR s., 2 nice baths,

dining

cook and bak e units , mod .
kit.. gas furnace. wood burn i ng hearth, and 2 large

porches. garoge . A good
bu y at S8.500.
RUTLAND - 2 BR, bath,

lots . $25.000.
4'/2 ACRES -

dining
R. ,
carpeted,
paneled tiled , garage, close

On city

utilit ies. 8 room·s, l V:~ baths,
n ice ly re mod eled , wifh
central air and heat . 2 car ·
garag e.
P icnic
ca ve .

$31.000 .
MIDDLEPORT -

Ni ce

old e r home with large
living , 1V2 baths, dining ,
hot water heat, and la rge

lot out of flood area . Only
$16,500.
TURN YOUR SELLING
PROBLEMS OVER TO US .

R .,

wash

R .,

to shopping . $9,500.
157 ACRES - Columbl' &lt;1.
Salem Twps . 35 A. ror
cultivation. 50 A. limber.
bal . pasture, (all fe nced ).
Home has 3 BR . barn &amp;
other bldg,. . S38,000.
OWNER
HAVE A
SELLING PROBLEM?
LET US SOLVE IT . CALL
NOW .
WE
NEEO
LISTINGS .
9~ ·22 59 or 992-2568

•

LIT T L II 0

Rr;P;H~~Aift;;~~~~

l

MIX CON':."'-t:.•~:.
right to vour ..
project . Fas' and easy . Free ·
estimates . Phon e ~92 - }284 , 1
Goeg lein Ready M _
i x Co .• ,
Middleport , O.h lo .
,
6·30_._-lfc ,
.:_

__

__________

'

SEPTIC TANK§."~~;~d .'
Modern Sanitation .
or 991 -7349 .
- - - - - ---

99 2 · 3 9 5-4 ~

AL1£Y OOP

'I

I I..UUIIQI

I ran awa4~
I'm a disqrace!

I

'

CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Man.ger

I can never show
ml.l face an4where
ever aqain!

----------

Yard

RUBBER BACK
We heve hundreds Of
carpet values. Your lob can
be completed tn 1 to 2
weeks . N1J tong · welling
period . P•r installer has 28
years experience ... EJCptrt
ln~allatton . YoU ' ll llkt
wMII t you get.
·
CAL~742·2211

TALK TO WENDI!ELL
GRATE
·
CARPET CONSULTANT

DOWN

I Sew lightly
%Underworld
moniker
3 Kind of talk
(3 wds.)
4 Cap
5 Show one 's
largess
I Speechify
7 Make lace
10 Delicatessen
goody
(2 wds.)
11 Lasso
12 Repeat per"
formance

.I

6:06-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6: 15-Farm Report 13.
6 ·2().-Pallerns for Living 13.
6: 31f-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Urb•n Le•gue 10.
6: 4()-()unce of Prevonllon 10.
6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:S5-Chuck While Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
Stale 13.
7:06-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
1 :3().-Schoolles 10.
8:0Q-Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
8:3().-Big Valley 6.
.
9 :06-Nol For Wome~ Only 3 ; Phil Donahue 4.15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10: Morning with D.J . 13.
9:3().-A.Ni. 3; One Life to Live 6; Tatlloteles 8; Mlko
Douglas 13.
.
.
10:06-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3.4.15; Edge of Nlght6,
Price Is Right 8,10.
10:3().-High Rollers 3,4,1S; Dinah 6.
11 :DO-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4; Gambit
8,1 0; Farmer's Daughter 13; Elec . Co. 20.
11 :3().-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Happy Days 13; Love
of life 8,10; Sesame St . 20.
11 :55-Toke Kerr 8; Dan I mel's World 10 .•
12:06-Mognlflcont Marble Machine 3,15; Lets Make a
Deal13; Bob Bra un' s SO· SO Club 4; News 6,8,10.
12 :3().-Take My Advice 3,15; All My Children 6, 13;
Search lor Tomorrow 8, 10.
12 :45-E iec .
33 .
12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
1:DO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1: 3().-Days of Our Lives 4,1 5; Rhyme &amp; Re•son 6,13;
As the world Turns 8,1 0 . ·
'
2:06-$20,000 Pyramid 6.13 .
2:3().-Doclors ~.4, 15 ; Neighbors 6,13 ; Guiding light

co:

8,10.
3 All
3 :0().-Another World 3,4,15; General Hosplt•l 6,1 ;
In the Family 8,10; Llllos Yoga &amp; You 20 . .
3:3()-()ne Life to Llve13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game 8,10; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
4:06-Misler Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin A; Somerset15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
20,33; Movie " Mutiny on the Bounty" 10; Dinah 13.
4:3().-Bewllched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Gel Smart 15.
5:06-Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3()-Adam·12 4; News 6 ; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33; Adam ·12 13 .
6:06-News 3,4,8.'10,13,1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; lTV
Utlllzollon 33.
6:3().-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Your Future is Now 33;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
•
1·00-Truth or Cons. 3; To. Tell the Truth 4; Bowling
· tor Dollars 6; Space: 199'18; News 10; Let's Make a
Deal13: Family Affair 15; Anyone for Tennyson 20;
Fa mily at War 33.
· 7:3().-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Ohio Stale Lottery 6;
Evening Edition wlth Marlin Agronsky 20; Wild .
Kingdom 10; To Tell. tile Truth 13; Music City
U.S.A. 15.
8:00--Cop &amp; the Kid 3, 15; Welcome Back. Kotter 6,13
Coh.tf11bus Women : You've Come a Long Way 4;

·lured

Yesterday's Aaawer
16 Closely .
confined ·
19 Whitened,
as with
frost
22 Diva's
rendition
23 Cohere
24 Caner's
material

25 David or
Dix
27 More
vociferous
29 BuUock
30 Sluggish
31 Pester
36 Incense
37 Wagnerian

lass

Resiliency
ArmadiUo
Slav
Greek
island
26 Bert 27 Wagered

Waitons 8,10; Play oflhe Month 20; The Way 11 Was
. 33.
8:3().-Grady 3,4,1 5;. Bar ney Miller 6,13; Lowell
Thomas Remembers 33.
9:06-Movie " A Touch of Class" 3,4,15; XII Winter
Olympic Games 6,13; Hawaii Flve·O 8; Hollywood
Television Theatre 33 .; Movie "Castle Keep" 10.
10:06-Barnaby Jones 8.
10:05-News 20.
10 : 3().-hislde Almost Anything Goes 6,13; Realldades
33.
11 :06-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC New• 33.
11 :3().-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Mannix 6,13; Movie
" Hornets' Nest" 8; Movie " Petulla" 10; .Janakl 33.

12 :4().-Longstreet 6.13.
1 :oo-Tomorrow 3,4.

1 :5()-News 13.
CHANNEL FIVE
7:00-Leglslallve Review (c)
7:3().-BIII Cosby Show (c )
8 ' DO-H lgh &amp; Wild (c)
8:3().-Rex Humbard (c)
9:3().-Wyall Earp
10:00-Target: Corruptors
His reCqr d istt ' t
cha nge.

28 Summer, in b--lf--t-

CYR!LTI£

~2-Bl.JT DON'T 70U
WANT 1D 60 11\JTO A
PERIOD
TRAIN ING 2-

SWif\E HAS A CHN/IPION
1-€ DARES N£ TO MEET!!

a=

AH l-EVER
BEEN OUT
OF IT r!-

w ould be unwise to try to sell
others on · something today th at
you don 't totally bel ieve in . It
could back f ire .

32premium
(2 wds.)
33 Male
sheep ,
34 Boniface's
place
3S Diversified
37 Uniform
38 Diliner

i

DIANA 1 Li&amp;TEN( rnlo

15 WINNIE WINKLE

ANDIMUST
5PEAK 10 YOU .&lt;

STAN MI55E5 YOU
50METHING FIERCE 1

DIANA, BUT 1HATI(]

NOTWHYI'N\
CALLING-...

For Thurodoy. Fob. 12, 1976
ARIES (!&gt;torch 21·Aprll19) Be

21) Take care today not to sut-

,..+-+--!

careful today not to take on
more than you can manage.
Jugg ling several large projects
cou ld prove d i~as tr o us .

ter a .toss · due to another' s
cArel ess neSs . or cra lt iness .
Keep str angers aut o f you r af fai rs.

-+-J--i

TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20)

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon.

Proceed cautiously today with
~-+--1--i-4 · p l ans that have yet to prove
their wor th . Mistakes could be
1,.,...4-+-+--1 hard to unravel.

course
l.-11

39 - Beach,
Florida ·

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

L-....L-...L-'-~1 Take extra pains to manage
resources pru den tl y the next

It :

tew days . Set delinite limils on
¥Our spending
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)

One letter si mply st ands fo r another. I n t h is sample A is

Evaluate goats and priorities
wtse ly today'. Don' t chase rain bows that offer no pot of gold

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work
.
A X y D L B A A X R
Is I• 0 N G F E L L 0 W

~lsed for th&lt;' three I.'s. X for the two O's, etc . .Single letter~.

apostroph es. the length nnd f ormati on of the word s are all
hints. Each day th e co de l etters arc different. 1

SJV
KTC

QVNNKT
JKLV
KBS

OR

KQ

F

SJFS
FNTFAR

at the end .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Try not

fRYPTOQUOTES

Rutland

KTCR

JOR

EBRS

JFGXTFGV

RSKGV . .-

to make demands upon. others
today that they'r e not in tl)e
po sition to fulf ill. II co uld create
emba rr assmen t.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 221 It's
good to be optimis tic . bu t it's
also imprac1ica t to ass ume
some thing 's a for~gonE) con. r.lus1on when tl tsn't .

LIBRA (Sap!. 23·0ct. 23) Don't

REAL ESTATE FUR SALE

MAW!!

Now is tho lime to buy your land to build your nel!f
home on. Wildwood Estates, located on the llalwoods
road; with all utililios, oflen you all you desire w1lh Its
beauty and privacy . Our special olftr lhll week Is 15

FETCH ME
MV CO~IN

1cres of woods with cottage, a fresh w•ter cruk

winding i1s way through tho beautiful pines, truly 1
porodise lound. Priced to sell fast at SlS,OOO.OO. For
more information call :

GEORGE $. HOBSTEnER

--~ - ----- -

P. 0 . Box 101, Pomoroy, OIIIo
Phone 9t5·4116 Iller 4; oo

I

'

[.

•

likely to

SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov . 22) It

Dijon
29 African
country

,
'

RUTLAND
FURNiTURE
742·2211

40 Transgress

.n Tres cui- ·

21
22
23
25

•

Carpeting
501 NYLON '·
$ 99 ;
Square ·

ACROSS
1 Siamese
coin
5. Speck
8 Title for
Athena
9 Delphi had
a famous
one
13 Anna
larid
14 Geilrge
Jean 15 Sailor
16 Stroke
17 Whale
18 Lover of
beauty
zo Pious

(!tal. )

LEl US DO ITII

''

(Do you 'have a q uest1o n
lo r the experts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys '' ca re ol this
newspaper. The Jacob ys will
answer individual questions
il sta mped. sell-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
most.;, interesting Questions
wifl be used in this co~umn
and will r eceive copies of
JACOBY MODERN.)

tiettu•"*'r
by THOMAS JOSEPH

The Fabr ic Shop ; Pomeroy .
A uth or ized Singer Sa le. end Service .
we
sharpen ,
Scissors .
'
3-29 -ttCI

We ha ve severa l farm s for
sale .

The answe r is tha.t we
cer ta inly do . You have 10
hi gh -c&lt;.~ rd points i.Jnd a good
spade suit

and instead of cas hi!lg a se·

---- ~ -.....-'--- ----SEWI NG MACHINE Repair. , ~
ser~ice . alt IT\&amp;kea . ~92 - 228-&lt;4 ...

garden spot. 10x10 ul .
bldg ., walking distance of
stores, $20.300.00.

... K J t0 9H ¥ A Q B7 . X X ... XX .

trumps.

sma l l

to know if we recom-

.1

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

kitchen , 1112
base.. sm.

wa nts

mend a spade overcall of an
adverse on e- heart opening
with :

9-18 -tfc ,

-------

4

•

A reader from Dela ware

yo u shou ld lead I he top But
West led th e · deuce. Eas l
deci ded it wa s c-1 fourth bes t

EXCAVATING ,
dozer,
backhoe
end
dltche~: .
Charles R , Hat tfe td BacJc. ~
Hoe Se rv ice. Rutland , Ohio . ,
Phone 742 -2008 ,
t1 -30 -78tc;

NO. 157 - 3 BR .. alum .
siding , carpeting , panelled

Pass

o!' hearts. When you have rais ·

REMODELING .
Plumbing ,
hea ti ng and all tvpes df :
general
rep a lr .
Work
guaranteed . 20 yea rs ex .
per !ence . Phon e 992 -2409 . ~
5- 1-tt c

-

:J •

Pa ss

ed with th ree

UCAVA TING . do~er , lo!"c.:...-. ·,
and backhoe work : uptlc , .
ta n -.s
l nslalled ;
dump
trucks and lo -boys for hire ;
ww haut flU dtrt . tor \all , ~
lim estone end gra 11e . Call ,
So b or Roger Jeffers, day
p none 99 2-7089. night phOn e
992 -3525 or 992 -5232 .
2-1l · ff c ,::

---

3•

makable five·cl ub contract .
but when East slip ped on
.defense Bill y Eise nberg
brought lhe contracl home.
West should ha ve le d ~i s s ix

- sweepers , toasters , Irani , ,
all sma ll appliances . Lawn •
mower , n ext to State High -:
way Garage on Route 7. ,
Phone 985 -3825.
•
4-16 -tfc •

looking at for $10.500.00.

992 -7133

~~·~h~~

2 ..
l'ass
Pass

Jed hi s oppone nts to an un -

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR :

3 BR home,

804 W. Main
99M298
Pomeroy
After Hours Call

South

East's two- hea rt opening
was one or t hose weak twQ
bid s tha t are com m o n in
American exper"t circles. It

dell~ered

alum.
siding,
storm
windows, quiet street, close
to town , owner wants to
sell_, leav ing area. Worth

walls , mod.
baths , f!JII

claimed his contract.

r-,lilll• Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

READY

1MC011'0U.TID '

NO. 1S6 -

North East

to hi s

West shifted to the to of
trumps. but Billy was in co m·
mand . He won with his ace.
ruffed a diamond with the
e ight of trumps , ruffed a
spade back to his hand. ruffed
his las t diamond with the jack
of trumps, cam e to his hand
by ruffi ng another spade and

Ope ning it'ad - 2 •

L-----------~.------..J :

~eelty '

Newer

1..1T1t.E ORPHAN ANNIE ·

SIOING· SOFFtTT

GUTTERS· AWNINOS

Strout&amp;

SYRACUSE

West

di&lt;.~mond

10 spot.

Neither vulnerable

D &amp; . 0 TREE Tr im ming , 20,
yean exp•rltnce . ln1ured ,
40 K100 LOT , UOO , In Po meroy .
free estimates Call 992 -2381_;
Call (614 864 -2490 Revnotds ·
or (614 ) 698 -7257 Albany .
bur g , after 3: 30 p .m .
,
'
10-15 -lfc
2-10-Jtc

$21.500 .
MODERN - 4 BR s .. 111,
baths. large k it . wi th

HAy for sale, $1 bale or trade?
;--•- - .. ,
r,.~nk
Oe che l.
Leadin g cre e11. ••
, ··•· • . .... .
2-1-161..,

See : Tom Rue, Ray Douglas,
G. ( Patl

.

2-6-61C

while a nd led a

t A Q 10 7
... AKQ753

WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT

1975S Proof Set 16 pcs .l
125.00 ; 1975 Mint Sol S9.00 ;
1976 Silver Proof Sol (3
pes .) $15.00; 1976 Silver
UNC Set (3 pcs. l SI.SO .
Call Rutland. 742-2331
R&amp;J COINS

p arc h es, "dry basement.
g arden,
and
ga r age .

______ ______ _

' C'OM M ~ i&lt;C IAL
OUTDOOR
SIGN wi l h timer, mounted
on a .4&lt;~)1;30f1 . steel pipe . Cost.
$875 new, onl y SJOO. Phone
992 -5786.
2-5-6tc

992 ·3319.

Billy hopped up with the ace
of diamonds . look the spade
finesse . discarded a hea rt on
the a ce of spades . s\udied a

STORM

.

10 RM HOU SE . 2 ba t hs , f ull
basement , g lused In porch ,
&lt;; arpet
&amp;nd garage
in
Middle por t , S2 1,000 . Phone

mond .

• B
.. u :1

Financlnt Availabl e
atowM into wans &amp; AUic•

Bicentennial Coins

Real Estate For Sale

$25,000 .
RENOVATED - 3 BR s ..
lot s ol st orage , gas F.A.
furn ace,
2
con cre te

ST ARCRAF T t ra ilers and
dining, oi l furnaCe, 2 car
fold -downs , some 1975 m ode l
garage and one leve l acre .
to l d -downs .
Used
1.974
Only $25,000.
trai l er . Best prices in Tr i 68 ACRES - Renovated 8
State ar.ea . Se r 11 ice what we
sell . f i na ncing ar ran ged .
rm s., 4 BR s., 2 1/:~ baths, hot
Camp Con l ey Sta r cr aft · water heat, large mod. kit. ,
Sa l es , R t. 62 N of Point
oak trim. carpeting.' etc .
"Pleasa n t.
$60.000.
2-10 -41C

$

Tom Rue Sale Price

(61-4)

baths , TV
ro om,
s ol a rium ,
b asement,
g a rag e and nice l ot .

1112

¥ 642
t KJ 9B
... 10 9
SOU Til

Insulation Services

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

--- ---

TEAFORD

21

•

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1916

cond hearl shilled to a dia-

II

F.AST
• J84
¥ AKQIO B
• 542
... 62

6 K 9 32

DA'i'? 1

FREE
ESTIMATES
- -urown-·

Currency and Supplies
Buy , Sale or Trade

----.,.----

Virgil B.. Sr ., Broker
2·B-7tp 110Mechanlc Pomeroy, 0 .
Phone 992·3321
1964 JOHN Deere Doz er, ga s
engine , 6 : . bl ade . cana p e,
STEAM HEAT - 3 BR s ..
r e11erse r
b ar .
w in ch ,

6REAT! 1\0\.IJ MllC.H
H,o\.~6 '/Ol!

PH. 992-6173

---~------

i614 ) 985359• .

STOR M windows . four 34 )( 91 .
three 28 x 7"1, thr ee 28 x 90, $7
eac h . Phone 992 -5171
2-8-4tp

IT WliftEi!

100 Kerr Street
Pomeroy, OhiG457U
c 614) 992 ·2791 , D ick Seyler
1.79 .1 mo .

COINS ·

..____.....

2-8-71p

LITTLif DU5-T'

. 63

Real Estate For Sali

1970 350 JO HN Deer e Dol er , 6·
fl . b lad e, can a pe , cam p letely rebu i I t . $5 1950. Phon e

FOR61VE' US

1-22 -1 mo .

--

$299

YOU'~L
FO!t FLI~e&gt;IN6
1 ~ YOUR

l TRUST

We Buy Antlq_yn
MODERN CHEMICALS

---------- -------- -·

CAPtAIN EASY ·

... J 8 4

OLD PLAYER p ianos N eed
WOULD like to do your
no t be tn working con dition .
hauling . la rge or sm all.
Call 742 2143 .
Phone (6 14 ) 985 -3941 any
.2-ll -61 C ONE AC Rt= , 6- rm san d ba rh . -1 RM . HO USE w ith bath in
li m e.
Syr a cuse o n Sec ond St.
Rt. 3, Pom er oy , Ros e Hil l .·
F. REEZER -b";ef. - ~~- ~d .
2-11 -6tp
Phone 992 755 3.
Dick Da vis properly , full
- - - -ste ers , 800 l b . Ca ll (61 4) 98 5
2·6 6tc
baseme nt.
alum i num
=o~~~c- ~~~-;ent located
.38 05
sidi ng , p(meted . $10,000 . Call
behind
Rutland
Grade
2. 11 41C
Oak H i ll 685 -6576 even inQt ; 3- BR -HOM-E :- T~St- iiniShed
'remode l ing .. Sa l em
St . ,
Sc hool . Tuneup , brakes ,
Jac k son ' 286 -3004 days ,
STE REO R A D I O . mocte rn
Rutland . Pho n e' 742 -2306 ,
wheel ba lan c ing , ali nem ent .
2-5 30tp
CO UNTRY Mo b ile Home
des ign, 8 t rack tape . am -t m
aft er A p m . or see Milo B.
Phone 742 2004 .
Pa rk , Rt . 33. t en mil es nort h
radio combin ation . Balan ce NEARLY fin ished, bi -level ,
11 -16-tf c
Hut ch inson ..
of Pomeroy . Large tot s wi th"
10 -9-t f c -- -- ---~- - -- :--- $97 .40 or terms . Ca ll 992
if
entry
,
5
bedrm
s,
3
sp
l
cen crete patios , sidewa lk s,
3965
C, BRADFORD , Auctloneer .
b a t h s. equipped k i t c hen .
run ner s and oft street
2-6-tt c
Complete Se rvice . Phone
family r oom, 2 car ga rage, J BI::DRM . hou se in M id
parking . Phone 992 -7479.
,
co
rn
er
tot.
~ew
d
l
eport
949 248 7 or 949 -20"00 . Racine ,
\44 .000. Phone (614 ) 985 12 -31-tfc TRUMPET . good co nd iti on
ba th . story and hat~ , ut1!lty
Ohio , Crltt Brad ford .
38 10 .
Phone 949 -2853 .
room , new carp etmg and
10-9-l fc
new r oot. garage an d work
2 BEDRM . m ob ile hom e, real
__, _
.
n ice Phone -992 -3324 .
room , fruit cellar . ~lose to EXCAVA TING , BACK HOES
ba th o n
5 ROOMS and
sc
hool
and
·
shopping
.
2-4· rtc
150'x 100' lo t, $6500 . Com · .
AND DOZER . LARGE AND
$17,500 . PhOn e 992 -7624 .
---'--- -- -- - ~ - -ptet e f inan ci ng . Phon e 992 ·
SMALL. SEP TI C TANK.S
Now at Landmark
1-27
261C
57 86 .
....
HO USE .in Rutland . Cat l992
B IL L
I NSTALLED .2-5-61c
P UL LIN S. PHONE 992 2478 ,
5858 .
1 4 1f c
DAY OR ,NIGHT .
.1 BR Bri ck hom e, 6 v rs ., 2 1 1
IJ -ll -78tp
· balhs . garag e on 2,8 acres
co.oP
NI C E 2 bedr n'l . tiome, bath ,
o n palled r:oa d. nea r F orked
r efr igerat6r • . stov e, washer
Automatic Water
AP T .• 4 rm . bath , f urn ished .
Run State Fares!. Phone
and d rye r , h·ardwood floors ,
Phone 992 -5908 .
Conditioner
{ 614 ) 667 3787 . $38,00.0.
rrew t·hermo pane w inelows .
2-4. rt c
Model UCXXX ,
·1-15-271p
sror m doors , al um . si ding .
-- ------- --~--F.OR sete nea r La nq sv ill f! , 5
210,000
concrete porches·. new nat .
UN F URN IS HED , 2 bedrm .
rm . ftouse . root cella r w i th
Weekly Grain
gas furna Ce. S\0,500 . Phone HOU SE on 1..111co ln H9ts . 1 . r oom .over , 2 b a y d etac hed
ap t. newly r edec orat ed,
'(614 ) 985 4245 , Chester .
CaJNcily
bedrm ., large k i tc hen . full
garage , 11 ~ ac res , no ba t h,
· full y carpeted . Call befo r e 9
2 10 6!C
b as em ent , excellent buy for
hot and co ld water In k it a .m . 992 -2288 ,
$8 ,900 . with new furniture ,
chen . L.P . gas heat , heaters
2-6-1fc
HOU SE tor sa\e , eKtra larg e
on l y Sl0 ,300. PhOne 992,7648 .
w i th house . Call 741 -28 19
l _iv ing room , d in ing room .
1-6-26tc
t!lf te r 5 p .m .
la: r ge k i tchen , ·fa mi l y room , ----,--·---2 bedr ooms , bath, a l l car
• Reg . S339 .00 Va.l.
BEDRM
.
,
h
o
me ,
just ----:------oi-- - - - - - peted . e)(c.ep t kitchen . nice 3
J.\ I K\..U
Hel i /\ RC we ld ing
fi
ni
shed
,
rem
odel
ing,
Sal
em 2 ACRE S mo re or tess In Long
-yard, good lo cat i on . Ma y b~e .
Bottom , ci ty water , new
mac h ine , n e w e tec
all
St
.•
Rutlan
d
.
Phone
742-2306
~ee n
at 332 Gr .a nt St , .
sepllc ·tank , S2 ,5QO . Contact
accessories in cluded . Ph one
aft er 4 p .m . or see MilO B .
Midd
leport,
~ alph Wells . L ong · Bottom ,
992 3--ll O.
·.
Hut chison .
Ohio .
10 28 1fC
2-11-31 p .
--------::..---~- -

Rill Esllte for Sale

Remowa l of Palnfl
Plastics . varnishes , etc .
wood or Met•t . ·
Repairs . ~ef f nlshlng· of ·
F urn lt.JLre.•
Burnishing . Polishing of
Copper &amp; - Br~11

NOR Til
... A Q 10 7 5
.. J 7 5

Brewer , L ong
Bottom .
Ph . 992 _2174
Pom eroy
Ph one { 614 1 985 -355 4.
L.:..:::...:.::_..:;.:_
___~-2· l -Ife · ·

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

!;

Misplay sets up contract

,_

.-.--------

Modern

WIN AT BRIDGE

__ __ _

1971 COMET G . T . . V 8,
sta ndard , new ti r es and
pai n l , shoc ks . brak e shoes .
49 ,000 m i tes , 51. 000. Phone
(6 14 ) 985 -3594 .
2 B-71 p

Janak! 33.
!:DO-Tomorrow 3.4; News 13.
CHANNEL FIVE
7:00-Good News for Today (c)
7:3().-BIII Cosby Show (c)
8:06-Arlwork• (c)
8: 3().-Muslc Connection ( cl
9:06-Speclal Edit ion l cl
9:3().-Wyall Earp
10:00-Target: Corruptors

7:3().-Lasl of the Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Wild Wild
World of Animals 6; Match Game PM 8; Evenng
Edition with Marlin Agronsky 20; The Judge 10; To
Tell the Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Book Beat 33.
8 :06-Litlle House on the Prairie 3,4.15; XII Winter
Olympic Games6, 13; Peanuts 8, 10; The Way II W•s
20; Images of Aging 33.
8: 30-Mowgll ' s Brothers 8,1 0; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 20.
9:06-Chico &amp; the Man 3 3,4, 15; Cannon 8,10; Theater In
America 33 ; Images of Aging 20 .
9:3().-0umpllngs 3,4,15.
JO :OD-Petrocelil 3,4,1S; Blue Kn ight 8,10; News 20;
Almanac 20; Ourslory 33.
11 :DO-News 3.4.6.8.10. 13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :3().-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 ; Movie " All the Kind

FUR .NITURE .
STRIPPING SERVICE

Pomeroy Oft iu
lOS Butternut
992 -3345
Formerly Weed Whalt5•1e .
Featuring :
De tuM. z ero)C Copy Serv lte,
Office
Su pplies ,
Mimeograph
Supplies, .
larges t selection of wed d ing supplies In South eastern Ohio .
The Print Shop Complete
(Stilt in busine ss In Midd!Pport)
12 -8-2 mo .,

Ptexagtas5 · Table Tops
Mirror5 • Storm &amp; Screens .
FERRELL'S GLASS &amp;
HOME MAINTENANCE
Sid i ng - Vinyl
&amp;
A lum in um . Window Gta~s
~ Glazing . On the Jo b or •n
Shop .
Pi ck up and delivery
sen• lee.
call Cottec13BB ·82 39
Specialize
in
build · UP
roofing &amp; hot roofs . Free
. Es1imates - 10 years ell·
perience.
Harve Fer-rell
Bidwell , Ohio
'2 · 6-! mo

1

Employment Wanted

Occurr,nce'' 8; Movie ''Five Branded Women " 10;

7:06-Truth orCons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8: News 10; Wild
Kingdom 13; Family Affair 15; Book Beat 20;

Antique

1-12-lmo.

POM0~~?~vE~~!~.~. co.'i'
POMEROY. OHIO

75 Cordoba, beige with black vinyl_._ _ .

·MANY MORE

Ca II 992· 7537
Pomeroy , Ohio

Dark maroon finish , Plk . buck et v inyl sets, radio, V -8
engine, a utomatic, power steering, good tires, sportsman' s dream .

1

FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS
NEW CAR WARRANTY

iMiLi' SENriNR

Kuhl Cake Decor

Slicker 57300.00. SALE PRICE S6295 .

Help Wanted

TOM RUE
MOTORS

70

licensed
baker
and
decorator .
Kitchen State lnspe ttll!d

S6295

1974 PLY . CUDA

Quality Print Shcip

and Decorated
T.o Your Order

Dark red , si mulated wood trim , 3 sea t , fully equ ipped
with every Chev . option , low mil4!sl. ne w title, boss'~
wife car .

OLD furniture , ice boxes .
brass
beds , old
wall
telephones and part !i , or
com plete households, Wrlle
M . D . M i ller , Rt. 2.
Pomeroy . Oh io. Call 99 277 60
10 7 7~
or s·e mi -retired
lady to live in . F r ee room
and board and sma-l-l wages
for ligh t duties See · a t JOB
Page St ,, Mlddleporl, Ohio .
l - 1-l lf c

Cakes, Baked

S2695

1974CHEV. ESTATE WAGON

TIMBER . tOp pr ice for
st and ing saw t imber . Ca l l
(6 14 1 446 -8570 day or night .
7-4· 12tc

71 Dodge. 9 pass. wa~on.

lll OOURT ST.

~none

Strangers" 6,13; Mov ie " The Strange &amp; Deadly

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11,1976

Know Your School 33 .

Local 1 owner , au tomat ic, blk . vi n yl i n !. trim. silver
f i nish , good tires, rad io, real economy. Book Value
Price S2875 .oo- Clearance .

99 2 3 18 1 or 992 -7639 .

Television log for easy viewing

Business Services

Pomeroy
Motor· co.

1914DATSUN710CPE.

Iron .
metals, junk autos . Rider ' s
Savage . Phone 992 5468 .
1 119t p

2·8·61p

12.- - -NAME
ADDRESS- - -

o . .P h .' 992 ·277 1_

Special Rates
by Wee~
or Month

l, _ ___:.~2. :-·-~--

TO THE

-in ." -rap ,

Rooms, '5.00 up

group . of figures
counts as one word.
Be sure to count
name and address, if
used, and your phone
number.
Including
prices for items of·
fered in your want. ad
will
increa -se
response .

'1.25

OF
QUALITY

For Sale

La Salle
HOTEL

and

MAIL WITH

2 SIGNS

4 13 -lfc

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

E N ~OY gracious liv ing at Vi llage Manor in M id dl eport tor as tow a s S130
per
month
with
all
utilities
pajd .
These
ar e br·a n'd new high quality
apartmen t s at pri ces you
MAKE SU RE you get e11ei-y
ca n afford . Your rent In
possib l e dedu ction this year .
eludes month to month
Have your Federal and •
l eases, a ll etec. l ivi ng ,
State Inc ome Tax r e turn by
carpeting ,
ran ge
and
an a ccount ant . Phone 99 2
refrig erator. free trash
6173 .
pick up , cab le TV at your
1,21 -52tc
expense ,
and
On -s i t e
------- ----~ -laundry facilities . Con HAV E your Income taKes
ve n ient to Shopp in.g on Th ird
prepa red by Steve Cle land ,
and Mill Streets in Mid Rac i ne . Phone 949 -2883..
dl eport , See the man age r at
2-6-121c .
Riverside Apar tm en ts or
c all 992 -3273. · Furn is hed
.IN COME
Tax
Se rvice ,
apartments
are
also
Federal o r Sta t e taxes .
avcillab l e
Phone 992 -7228 or se·e
2-2-78tc
Wallace Russe l L Bradbury .
l -30 -26tc
J AND 4 RM . f urn ished and
un furn i shed apts . Phone 992 I W il .L be glv ing pian o lessons
5434 .
in my ho me start ing Feb. · l.
11 -9 .tfc
For inform atio n ca ll 992

Mann ing D . We bster
Judge
Court of Co m mon Pleas ,
Proba te D ivisio n
Jll .2~ _) 21 4. I I. Jl.&lt;..

sps

initial

(6141

2-11 . lie

CASH WITH
ORDER

Each

/''·r· - - - - - - - - - - ·

CAs·H
·pe idofformob
au ile
makes
and,
models
homes
PhOne area code 614 413
9531 .

I
•

Auto Sales

Auto Sales

2-11 -ltp

CARD OF THANKS

cen ts.

For Fast Results Use The Senti.n el Classifieds
Wanted

!

U- 'l11to.lly SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb.l1,1976

. DICit 'I'IUCY

rely to o he avil y upon an
asso ci ate loday who formerly
had made ·unkept promises.

FINISHED MINE
AFTER DINNER

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc.

19) Select you r companions
di scriminate ly today . Avoid
persons whose aims are not in
accord with ·your high standards.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 19)
Today' s 1deas aren't likely to be
as clever as yesterday' s, es·
pec ially concerning work .
Thi nk each .nove th rough
carefully. ·

PISCES !Fob. 20-Mareh 20) If
at, all possible tr y not to maKe ·
toans or b orrow from friends .
tod ay Complica tions could
tater result .

&amp;wt:rrod
Feb. 12, 1978

~a reer gpals assume a new

ilnportance th is year , Contacts
yo u've developed shou ld prOve
helpful in pulling strings lor yov
behind th e scenes to ad11ance
vo ur alms .

I HATE '{Oll,
CHUCK!

�..

•

•

14- The Daily SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. ll, 1970

'

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

DEADLINES

5

P .M .

Oay

Before

Publlcetlon .
Mon day Deadl ine 9 a . m .

Cancellation - Corrections
wil l be accepted unHI 9 a. m .

for Day ot ~ u bllcation .
R:EGULATIONS
The Publi sher reserves the

right to ecrll or reject anv acts

dremed

ob jec t i onal.

publisher

will

The

not

be

respons ible for more than one

Incorrect insertion .

RAT£5

~!:~~;;'Jbr;~"~~~ 10 ~ 1.",9

Ch arle s Edward M iller . who
gave h·h li f e in Luxembourg ,
Feb . 11 , 1945 .

Deep In our heoHI lies a pic

lure ,
Of a loved one gone .to rest.

In mPmory 's frame we shall
keep it,
For he w&lt;ts on e o f the best .

A happv home we once en
joyed ,

For W1nt Ad Service

scen ts per word one in sen ion

Min i mum Charge Sl. OO
14 cents per word t hree
consecutive in ser ti ons.

26 cents per word six con .

secutlve inserti orfs
25 Per Cent Discount on pa id
ads and i!ldS pa i d within 10
days .

.

How sweet the memory sllll ;
But death has le f t a loneliness ,
The wo rld can never f ill .

We ' ll follow close behind you ,
To be brave we ' ll t ry .
For God alone kn ows hQw
muc h we mi ss you .
At t he dawn of another ye ar .
Ed M il ler an d F amily .

&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 ror SO word minimum
Each

lldd illo nat

word

3

·BLIND ADS

Addilionat 1Sc Charge per

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

Notice

SWEEPER
and
Se wing
Machines Repa ir , Parts ,
and

Sup p li es .

Da vis

Advertisement .

Vacuum C)ean er ; 1 1 m i!e u p
GeOrge 's Cr eek Rd . off State

8 : 30 a . m . to 5 : 00 p , m .
Da il y , B:aoa . m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Sa t urday .

R oute 7. Phone
0294 .

. OFFICE HOURS

Card-of Thanks
MY S INCERE thanks to th e

doctors . and
Veter ans

nurses

at

Memorial

Hospital. T ha nk s to all my
fr ien ds and m inist er s tor

the ir prayers . Those who
se nt l ovely flow ers a nd

cards .

Rev . Edward Griffith , S t.
Joseph ' s Hosp it a l, Room

332. Pa rkersb urg , W. Va .
2- 11- He

Lost

LO ST in Bashan area , ma l e
Pl ott hound , name of Duke .
Nem e t ag on c ott ar Phon e
(61.t) 985 · 42 48 or 992 ·3408 .
2-6-6tc

ALow Cost
Want Ad

Will Cut
Cost of
Uving ••••••
WRITE YOUR
OWN AD!
rrs EASY TO
ORDER BY
MAIU
-SPECIAL!-

12 WORDS
4·DAYS
ONLY

446 ·

NEW shipment of irr egul ar
socks at 25c pa ir at D ·J
Hou se of Fabrics , 1 m i le
sou t h of Middleport on Rt. 7.
2-11 ·41C

AsH- sT - F reewTit- B i plist
Ch urc;h , corn'er of As h and
Plum 51. in Middleport. Wi ll
hold a · re11iva l starting
Monday , Fe b . 9 . .Preaching
each n ight by Re11 . Glen
Co l li n s , Ne lsonville . Start s
at 7 : 30p .m . The " Youth For
ChriS t" Choir will
be
singing . Pastor is Rev . Noel
Hermann .

CAREER - i"Wails- ~;;u- ·with
L.uzier
Cosm e t i cs .
'' a
qua l ity produ c t for _53
years ."
No
territo r y
restrictio n , work f rom your
home St i ll t i me to win your
t r ip to Nassau . For ap .
pointment , ca ll Mady lon
Stone
(3041
727 -9269
(collect) .
2-J-12tc

AVAilABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
NO REFUNDS.

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

- ------- --- - -3278 .

12 tS..-50tc

NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT
Case No . 21711
Estat e of WILLIAM
F.
WINEBRENNER D ecease d.
Notice
i s _given
t hat
Margaret Ell en Wineb r.enn er
of Syracuse, Meigs Co unty ,
Ohio, h~s been dut y appo in ted
Executrix ot t he Esta te of
Willia m
F . Wl nebre nn er,
d eceaseq ,. tat e ot Sy racuse ,
Meigs County , Ohio .
Cred i tor s ar e reQuired to
f i le their claims wi th said
f i duciSry within tou r months .
Dat ed this 23rd day of
Janu~ry 1976.

M ~ ddteport ,

GOOD
used
Electrotux
swe eper . Phone 742 28n .
2 11 Jtc
DEAL~RS

3. _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _ __

.5. ---..,--6. _ __ __
7. _ _ _ __

8-·- - - ' - - - 9.-- - - lD.- --'---,..-11.- - ' - - - -

A-

-- --SMALL , used piano.

CITY'- - - PHONE _ _ __

POMEROY. OHIO
45769

S2695

Rt:TI~I:LJ

~

1975 CHEV Y 11 ton 4 whee l 1968 250 F ORD Pickup , 43 ,000
a ct ual m iles. Phon e 99 2d r ive p icku p . Balance of
fa ct o ry· warranly Check
3640
2 8 7tp
this before yo u buy a new
one . Phone a f le r 5 p m . or on
1969 VOLKSWAGEN w i t h
we~;&gt;kenas . 991 3J96
B a j a k i t , ~650 . Phon e 992 ,l911c
5663 .
2 a 6tc
19 69 MERCURY · Wagon ,
-....._
·a utoma t ic , o;~m f m ra di o,
runs
good ,
good
gas 19 741 TON Chev . dump tru c k .
m i leage . Ca ll 992 -36 19 before
V -B, 454 1 4 sp .. _ p .s. , p .b ..
2 p m . or after 6 p .m .
16 ,ooo actua l miles . $3 ,800.
2-10-Jtc
Phone ( 6 H ) 985 3594
2-8-7tp

SEW I NG of al l kinds , dr esses
tor all occasions, slacks ,
sh ir ts . new bOrn layettes,
cu rt ains, drap es PhOne 992 30 35 and ask for Doro t hy .
2-4-12t c

_______

For Rent

------ ____.:___

For Sale
REDUCE sate an d fast with
GoBe-se Table ts and E -Vap
'' water pil l s, '' Nelson Drug.
2-11 -l!p
.
---- ...:. ~ -..-~----~-- -:--

"GRA PEFR U IT· P IL L " wi t h
Diadax plan mo r e con ven ient than grape fruit s -Eat sat is fying meats and
los e we ig h t. Nelson Dr ugs .
2-11 l! p
NEW I mproved '' Zipp les ,"
the great i ron p ill now wi t h
V i ta min C Nel son Dr.u g.
2-11 -1t p

___ _

1968 JE;EP Wa9on eer, 6 c yl .
std .• lo c k out hubs . Phon e
Harold
B rew e r .
l o ng
Bot tom , Ohio { 614) 985 -3554 .
____ _______

2

~'.:"'

FOR
D. • wheel dr ive truck , V
8, gOod condition . Harol d

__

WEST

I.

CORN for sa te . Phon e (6 141
985 ·35 38 , ·P au l Karr .

comp letely rebuil t. S5 ,000 .
Phon e 161 &lt;1 ) 985 -3594 .

2-B ·71p
1964 JOHN Deere doz er, 10 -10
d iese l ,eng ine , 8 ft . bl ad e,
good
co ndi t ion, $4 ,000 .
Phone. (6 14 ) 985 -3594 .
2-8-7tp

--------1L-----HONDA SL350, good con dit ion . Call

Landau' roof.

From t he l argest Truck or
Bulldozer" ' Radia tor lo the
sma ll est Heeter Core .
Nath a n B igg s
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC •.

FOR SALE

75 Chrysler Newport , 4 dr .

5495

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

____
$4495

A MERIC AN Saddle hor se,
filly , 2' ~ years old . 61 in ches , S200 . P hone 949 -2225 .
·
2-10 -3t c

Tom Rue 5ale Price

75 Dodge Coronet2 dr . hardtop , 360·\1·8. ---~$4195
Tom Rue Sale Price75 Plymputh Valiant Custom, 4 dr., 6
cyl. , automatic , air conditioning.
____$
_ 3795
Tom· RUe Sale Price

74 Plymouth Satellite, 9 pass .• Sta .
Wagon .

Tom Rue Sale Price---'Ll695
72 Chev. Impala Custom, 2 dr . H.T.

Tom Rue Sale Price

Tom Rue Sale Price

71 Mercury Montego, Sla . Wagon .

Tom Rue Sale Price

vw Bug " Mechanics Special"

_ _ _.::$2195
_ _ _$,.,1495
-

----:..::.$1495
_____$995

Tom Rue Sale Price

$&amp;95

~~tord Maverick 2 dr., automatic , 6 • _____
Tom R'ue Sale Price

985 -394 7.
2-10 -41p

PIONEER SX525 receive!' ,
$150 . Phon e 9-49 -2225 .
2-10 -3Tc
---~ -----r---- - --

Mi:DAN IEL Custo m
Bu t cheri ng ; West Columbia, W .
Va . We butcher cattle and
h ogs .
SlO
ca_tfle
slaughter ; S7 f or hogs ; 12c
tor cutting and wrapping .
State and fe d eral Inspected ;
Operi 6 day s per week .
Phone (304 ) 882 -3224 .
1-30 -261C
COAL FOR SA LE . CAB Coa l ,
Company , I mite north ot
Cheshire , on Rt . 7. Pick your
own , $20 per to n . Open 6days
per week . or cal l (614 ) 367 7330 tor further i nfor mation .
1-8-781&lt;::

.

.

CO AL , llnn•s ton e and ait lypes
of sal! and rock salt for ico
and snoW re m oval. E)( .
cetsior Sa l t Work s, Eest
Main St ., Pomeroy , Ohio .
Phone 992 · 38~ 1.
,__
12-7 -lfc

Roger Wamsley
1-'23 ·1 mo .

""0~

'"to.. . ~·

qop &amp; LOOI( .

FORD LTD . ,:,;;.;-11QI.
Winchester 37 11 Si n 9 tc sho t.
Phone 7-&lt;41 -2359 .

--

.PH. 992·2594

1 13 261p

,.
'

I

FDUR acres of land , niCe
loc afion for ho use or t railer
near sc t'IOOI. Call ( 614 ) 669 ·
4723 or 669 -3764
2-6-6tp

WINDOWS
ALUMINUM

lARRY lAVENDER

SyriCU$1, Ohio
"h . 99l ·l99l
4· 10 -·1 mo ,

MODERN tiome In Chester , 8
room s, 2 bath s, 2 por ches ,
sunp or ch, ' '2 basement , clly
and well waler , nat ur al g as ,
garage . Pri c ed to ni l.
Phone {61-41 98 5-4102.
2-4-lfc

OLD HOME - In exce lle nt
cond ition, 3 BRs .• bath , gas

f urnace. di ning, nice kit.,
full
b ase ment.
near
bu siness sec . Only $17,000.

home, 3 BR , bath t some

panel ing &amp; tile . hardwood
floors , N . gas F .A. furnace,
partial basement, garage .

$22,500 .
POMEROY - 11/; acres.
200 11. lrontage , originally
had 2 houses . Ideal tor
hom e or trailer . $3,000.

RUTLAND -:- 2 BR . bath.

12 ROOMS - Large older
hom e. 5 BR s., 2 nice baths,

dining

cook and bak e units , mod .
kit.. gas furnace. wood burn i ng hearth, and 2 large

porches. garoge . A good
bu y at S8.500.
RUTLAND - 2 BR, bath,

lots . $25.000.
4'/2 ACRES -

dining
R. ,
carpeted,
paneled tiled , garage, close

On city

utilit ies. 8 room·s, l V:~ baths,
n ice ly re mod eled , wifh
central air and heat . 2 car ·
garag e.
P icnic
ca ve .

$31.000 .
MIDDLEPORT -

Ni ce

old e r home with large
living , 1V2 baths, dining ,
hot water heat, and la rge

lot out of flood area . Only
$16,500.
TURN YOUR SELLING
PROBLEMS OVER TO US .

R .,

wash

R .,

to shopping . $9,500.
157 ACRES - Columbl' &lt;1.
Salem Twps . 35 A. ror
cultivation. 50 A. limber.
bal . pasture, (all fe nced ).
Home has 3 BR . barn &amp;
other bldg,. . S38,000.
OWNER
HAVE A
SELLING PROBLEM?
LET US SOLVE IT . CALL
NOW .
WE
NEEO
LISTINGS .
9~ ·22 59 or 992-2568

•

LIT T L II 0

Rr;P;H~~Aift;;~~~~

l

MIX CON':."'-t:.•~:.
right to vour ..
project . Fas' and easy . Free ·
estimates . Phon e ~92 - }284 , 1
Goeg lein Ready M _
i x Co .• ,
Middleport , O.h lo .
,
6·30_._-lfc ,
.:_

__

__________

'

SEPTIC TANK§."~~;~d .'
Modern Sanitation .
or 991 -7349 .
- - - - - ---

99 2 · 3 9 5-4 ~

AL1£Y OOP

'I

I I..UUIIQI

I ran awa4~
I'm a disqrace!

I

'

CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Man.ger

I can never show
ml.l face an4where
ever aqain!

----------

Yard

RUBBER BACK
We heve hundreds Of
carpet values. Your lob can
be completed tn 1 to 2
weeks . N1J tong · welling
period . P•r installer has 28
years experience ... EJCptrt
ln~allatton . YoU ' ll llkt
wMII t you get.
·
CAL~742·2211

TALK TO WENDI!ELL
GRATE
·
CARPET CONSULTANT

DOWN

I Sew lightly
%Underworld
moniker
3 Kind of talk
(3 wds.)
4 Cap
5 Show one 's
largess
I Speechify
7 Make lace
10 Delicatessen
goody
(2 wds.)
11 Lasso
12 Repeat per"
formance

.I

6:06-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6: 15-Farm Report 13.
6 ·2().-Pallerns for Living 13.
6: 31f-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Urb•n Le•gue 10.
6: 4()-()unce of Prevonllon 10.
6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:S5-Chuck While Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
Stale 13.
7:06-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
1 :3().-Schoolles 10.
8:0Q-Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
8:3().-Big Valley 6.
.
9 :06-Nol For Wome~ Only 3 ; Phil Donahue 4.15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10: Morning with D.J . 13.
9:3().-A.Ni. 3; One Life to Live 6; Tatlloteles 8; Mlko
Douglas 13.
.
.
10:06-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3.4.15; Edge of Nlght6,
Price Is Right 8,10.
10:3().-High Rollers 3,4,1S; Dinah 6.
11 :DO-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4; Gambit
8,1 0; Farmer's Daughter 13; Elec . Co. 20.
11 :3().-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Happy Days 13; Love
of life 8,10; Sesame St . 20.
11 :55-Toke Kerr 8; Dan I mel's World 10 .•
12:06-Mognlflcont Marble Machine 3,15; Lets Make a
Deal13; Bob Bra un' s SO· SO Club 4; News 6,8,10.
12 :3().-Take My Advice 3,15; All My Children 6, 13;
Search lor Tomorrow 8, 10.
12 :45-E iec .
33 .
12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
1:DO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1: 3().-Days of Our Lives 4,1 5; Rhyme &amp; Re•son 6,13;
As the world Turns 8,1 0 . ·
'
2:06-$20,000 Pyramid 6.13 .
2:3().-Doclors ~.4, 15 ; Neighbors 6,13 ; Guiding light

co:

8,10.
3 All
3 :0().-Another World 3,4,15; General Hosplt•l 6,1 ;
In the Family 8,10; Llllos Yoga &amp; You 20 . .
3:3()-()ne Life to Llve13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game 8,10; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
4:06-Misler Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin A; Somerset15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
20,33; Movie " Mutiny on the Bounty" 10; Dinah 13.
4:3().-Bewllched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Gel Smart 15.
5:06-Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3()-Adam·12 4; News 6 ; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33; Adam ·12 13 .
6:06-News 3,4,8.'10,13,1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; lTV
Utlllzollon 33.
6:3().-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Your Future is Now 33;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
•
1·00-Truth or Cons. 3; To. Tell the Truth 4; Bowling
· tor Dollars 6; Space: 199'18; News 10; Let's Make a
Deal13: Family Affair 15; Anyone for Tennyson 20;
Fa mily at War 33.
· 7:3().-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Ohio Stale Lottery 6;
Evening Edition wlth Marlin Agronsky 20; Wild .
Kingdom 10; To Tell. tile Truth 13; Music City
U.S.A. 15.
8:00--Cop &amp; the Kid 3, 15; Welcome Back. Kotter 6,13
Coh.tf11bus Women : You've Come a Long Way 4;

·lured

Yesterday's Aaawer
16 Closely .
confined ·
19 Whitened,
as with
frost
22 Diva's
rendition
23 Cohere
24 Caner's
material

25 David or
Dix
27 More
vociferous
29 BuUock
30 Sluggish
31 Pester
36 Incense
37 Wagnerian

lass

Resiliency
ArmadiUo
Slav
Greek
island
26 Bert 27 Wagered

Waitons 8,10; Play oflhe Month 20; The Way 11 Was
. 33.
8:3().-Grady 3,4,1 5;. Bar ney Miller 6,13; Lowell
Thomas Remembers 33.
9:06-Movie " A Touch of Class" 3,4,15; XII Winter
Olympic Games 6,13; Hawaii Flve·O 8; Hollywood
Television Theatre 33 .; Movie "Castle Keep" 10.
10:06-Barnaby Jones 8.
10:05-News 20.
10 : 3().-hislde Almost Anything Goes 6,13; Realldades
33.
11 :06-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC New• 33.
11 :3().-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Mannix 6,13; Movie
" Hornets' Nest" 8; Movie " Petulla" 10; .Janakl 33.

12 :4().-Longstreet 6.13.
1 :oo-Tomorrow 3,4.

1 :5()-News 13.
CHANNEL FIVE
7:00-Leglslallve Review (c)
7:3().-BIII Cosby Show (c )
8 ' DO-H lgh &amp; Wild (c)
8:3().-Rex Humbard (c)
9:3().-Wyall Earp
10:00-Target: Corruptors
His reCqr d istt ' t
cha nge.

28 Summer, in b--lf--t-

CYR!LTI£

~2-Bl.JT DON'T 70U
WANT 1D 60 11\JTO A
PERIOD
TRAIN ING 2-

SWif\E HAS A CHN/IPION
1-€ DARES N£ TO MEET!!

a=

AH l-EVER
BEEN OUT
OF IT r!-

w ould be unwise to try to sell
others on · something today th at
you don 't totally bel ieve in . It
could back f ire .

32premium
(2 wds.)
33 Male
sheep ,
34 Boniface's
place
3S Diversified
37 Uniform
38 Diliner

i

DIANA 1 Li&amp;TEN( rnlo

15 WINNIE WINKLE

ANDIMUST
5PEAK 10 YOU .&lt;

STAN MI55E5 YOU
50METHING FIERCE 1

DIANA, BUT 1HATI(]

NOTWHYI'N\
CALLING-...

For Thurodoy. Fob. 12, 1976
ARIES (!&gt;torch 21·Aprll19) Be

21) Take care today not to sut-

,..+-+--!

careful today not to take on
more than you can manage.
Jugg ling several large projects
cou ld prove d i~as tr o us .

ter a .toss · due to another' s
cArel ess neSs . or cra lt iness .
Keep str angers aut o f you r af fai rs.

-+-J--i

TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20)

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon.

Proceed cautiously today with
~-+--1--i-4 · p l ans that have yet to prove
their wor th . Mistakes could be
1,.,...4-+-+--1 hard to unravel.

course
l.-11

39 - Beach,
Florida ·

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

L-....L-...L-'-~1 Take extra pains to manage
resources pru den tl y the next

It :

tew days . Set delinite limils on
¥Our spending
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)

One letter si mply st ands fo r another. I n t h is sample A is

Evaluate goats and priorities
wtse ly today'. Don' t chase rain bows that offer no pot of gold

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work
.
A X y D L B A A X R
Is I• 0 N G F E L L 0 W

~lsed for th&lt;' three I.'s. X for the two O's, etc . .Single letter~.

apostroph es. the length nnd f ormati on of the word s are all
hints. Each day th e co de l etters arc different. 1

SJV
KTC

QVNNKT
JKLV
KBS

OR

KQ

F

SJFS
FNTFAR

at the end .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Try not

fRYPTOQUOTES

Rutland

KTCR

JOR

EBRS

JFGXTFGV

RSKGV . .-

to make demands upon. others
today that they'r e not in tl)e
po sition to fulf ill. II co uld create
emba rr assmen t.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 221 It's
good to be optimis tic . bu t it's
also imprac1ica t to ass ume
some thing 's a for~gonE) con. r.lus1on when tl tsn't .

LIBRA (Sap!. 23·0ct. 23) Don't

REAL ESTATE FUR SALE

MAW!!

Now is tho lime to buy your land to build your nel!f
home on. Wildwood Estates, located on the llalwoods
road; with all utililios, oflen you all you desire w1lh Its
beauty and privacy . Our special olftr lhll week Is 15

FETCH ME
MV CO~IN

1cres of woods with cottage, a fresh w•ter cruk

winding i1s way through tho beautiful pines, truly 1
porodise lound. Priced to sell fast at SlS,OOO.OO. For
more information call :

GEORGE $. HOBSTEnER

--~ - ----- -

P. 0 . Box 101, Pomoroy, OIIIo
Phone 9t5·4116 Iller 4; oo

I

'

[.

•

likely to

SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov . 22) It

Dijon
29 African
country

,
'

RUTLAND
FURNiTURE
742·2211

40 Transgress

.n Tres cui- ·

21
22
23
25

•

Carpeting
501 NYLON '·
$ 99 ;
Square ·

ACROSS
1 Siamese
coin
5. Speck
8 Title for
Athena
9 Delphi had
a famous
one
13 Anna
larid
14 Geilrge
Jean 15 Sailor
16 Stroke
17 Whale
18 Lover of
beauty
zo Pious

(!tal. )

LEl US DO ITII

''

(Do you 'have a q uest1o n
lo r the experts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys '' ca re ol this
newspaper. The Jacob ys will
answer individual questions
il sta mped. sell-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
most.;, interesting Questions
wifl be used in this co~umn
and will r eceive copies of
JACOBY MODERN.)

tiettu•"*'r
by THOMAS JOSEPH

The Fabr ic Shop ; Pomeroy .
A uth or ized Singer Sa le. end Service .
we
sharpen ,
Scissors .
'
3-29 -ttCI

We ha ve severa l farm s for
sale .

The answe r is tha.t we
cer ta inly do . You have 10
hi gh -c&lt;.~ rd points i.Jnd a good
spade suit

and instead of cas hi!lg a se·

---- ~ -.....-'--- ----SEWI NG MACHINE Repair. , ~
ser~ice . alt IT\&amp;kea . ~92 - 228-&lt;4 ...

garden spot. 10x10 ul .
bldg ., walking distance of
stores, $20.300.00.

... K J t0 9H ¥ A Q B7 . X X ... XX .

trumps.

sma l l

to know if we recom-

.1

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

kitchen , 1112
base.. sm.

wa nts

mend a spade overcall of an
adverse on e- heart opening
with :

9-18 -tfc ,

-------

4

•

A reader from Dela ware

yo u shou ld lead I he top But
West led th e · deuce. Eas l
deci ded it wa s c-1 fourth bes t

EXCAVATING ,
dozer,
backhoe
end
dltche~: .
Charles R , Hat tfe td BacJc. ~
Hoe Se rv ice. Rutland , Ohio . ,
Phone 742 -2008 ,
t1 -30 -78tc;

NO. 157 - 3 BR .. alum .
siding , carpeting , panelled

Pass

o!' hearts. When you have rais ·

REMODELING .
Plumbing ,
hea ti ng and all tvpes df :
general
rep a lr .
Work
guaranteed . 20 yea rs ex .
per !ence . Phon e 992 -2409 . ~
5- 1-tt c

-

:J •

Pa ss

ed with th ree

UCAVA TING . do~er , lo!"c.:...-. ·,
and backhoe work : uptlc , .
ta n -.s
l nslalled ;
dump
trucks and lo -boys for hire ;
ww haut flU dtrt . tor \all , ~
lim estone end gra 11e . Call ,
So b or Roger Jeffers, day
p none 99 2-7089. night phOn e
992 -3525 or 992 -5232 .
2-1l · ff c ,::

---

3•

makable five·cl ub contract .
but when East slip ped on
.defense Bill y Eise nberg
brought lhe contracl home.
West should ha ve le d ~i s s ix

- sweepers , toasters , Irani , ,
all sma ll appliances . Lawn •
mower , n ext to State High -:
way Garage on Route 7. ,
Phone 985 -3825.
•
4-16 -tfc •

looking at for $10.500.00.

992 -7133

~~·~h~~

2 ..
l'ass
Pass

Jed hi s oppone nts to an un -

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR :

3 BR home,

804 W. Main
99M298
Pomeroy
After Hours Call

South

East's two- hea rt opening
was one or t hose weak twQ
bid s tha t are com m o n in
American exper"t circles. It

dell~ered

alum.
siding,
storm
windows, quiet street, close
to town , owner wants to
sell_, leav ing area. Worth

walls , mod.
baths , f!JII

claimed his contract.

r-,lilll• Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

READY

1MC011'0U.TID '

NO. 1S6 -

North East

to hi s

West shifted to the to of
trumps. but Billy was in co m·
mand . He won with his ace.
ruffed a diamond with the
e ight of trumps , ruffed a
spade back to his hand. ruffed
his las t diamond with the jack
of trumps, cam e to his hand
by ruffi ng another spade and

Ope ning it'ad - 2 •

L-----------~.------..J :

~eelty '

Newer

1..1T1t.E ORPHAN ANNIE ·

SIOING· SOFFtTT

GUTTERS· AWNINOS

Strout&amp;

SYRACUSE

West

di&lt;.~mond

10 spot.

Neither vulnerable

D &amp; . 0 TREE Tr im ming , 20,
yean exp•rltnce . ln1ured ,
40 K100 LOT , UOO , In Po meroy .
free estimates Call 992 -2381_;
Call (614 864 -2490 Revnotds ·
or (614 ) 698 -7257 Albany .
bur g , after 3: 30 p .m .
,
'
10-15 -lfc
2-10-Jtc

$21.500 .
MODERN - 4 BR s .. 111,
baths. large k it . wi th

HAy for sale, $1 bale or trade?
;--•- - .. ,
r,.~nk
Oe che l.
Leadin g cre e11. ••
, ··•· • . .... .
2-1-161..,

See : Tom Rue, Ray Douglas,
G. ( Patl

.

2-6-61C

while a nd led a

t A Q 10 7
... AKQ753

WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT

1975S Proof Set 16 pcs .l
125.00 ; 1975 Mint Sol S9.00 ;
1976 Silver Proof Sol (3
pes .) $15.00; 1976 Silver
UNC Set (3 pcs. l SI.SO .
Call Rutland. 742-2331
R&amp;J COINS

p arc h es, "dry basement.
g arden,
and
ga r age .

______ ______ _

' C'OM M ~ i&lt;C IAL
OUTDOOR
SIGN wi l h timer, mounted
on a .4&lt;~)1;30f1 . steel pipe . Cost.
$875 new, onl y SJOO. Phone
992 -5786.
2-5-6tc

992 ·3319.

Billy hopped up with the ace
of diamonds . look the spade
finesse . discarded a hea rt on
the a ce of spades . s\udied a

STORM

.

10 RM HOU SE . 2 ba t hs , f ull
basement , g lused In porch ,
&lt;; arpet
&amp;nd garage
in
Middle por t , S2 1,000 . Phone

mond .

• B
.. u :1

Financlnt Availabl e
atowM into wans &amp; AUic•

Bicentennial Coins

Real Estate For Sale

$25,000 .
RENOVATED - 3 BR s ..
lot s ol st orage , gas F.A.
furn ace,
2
con cre te

ST ARCRAF T t ra ilers and
dining, oi l furnaCe, 2 car
fold -downs , some 1975 m ode l
garage and one leve l acre .
to l d -downs .
Used
1.974
Only $25,000.
trai l er . Best prices in Tr i 68 ACRES - Renovated 8
State ar.ea . Se r 11 ice what we
sell . f i na ncing ar ran ged .
rm s., 4 BR s., 2 1/:~ baths, hot
Camp Con l ey Sta r cr aft · water heat, large mod. kit. ,
Sa l es , R t. 62 N of Point
oak trim. carpeting.' etc .
"Pleasa n t.
$60.000.
2-10 -41C

$

Tom Rue Sale Price

(61-4)

baths , TV
ro om,
s ol a rium ,
b asement,
g a rag e and nice l ot .

1112

¥ 642
t KJ 9B
... 10 9
SOU Til

Insulation Services

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

--- ---

TEAFORD

21

•

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1916

cond hearl shilled to a dia-

II

F.AST
• J84
¥ AKQIO B
• 542
... 62

6 K 9 32

DA'i'? 1

FREE
ESTIMATES
- -urown-·

Currency and Supplies
Buy , Sale or Trade

----.,.----

Virgil B.. Sr ., Broker
2·B-7tp 110Mechanlc Pomeroy, 0 .
Phone 992·3321
1964 JOHN Deere Doz er, ga s
engine , 6 : . bl ade . cana p e,
STEAM HEAT - 3 BR s ..
r e11erse r
b ar .
w in ch ,

6REAT! 1\0\.IJ MllC.H
H,o\.~6 '/Ol!

PH. 992-6173

---~------

i614 ) 985359• .

STOR M windows . four 34 )( 91 .
three 28 x 7"1, thr ee 28 x 90, $7
eac h . Phone 992 -5171
2-8-4tp

IT WliftEi!

100 Kerr Street
Pomeroy, OhiG457U
c 614) 992 ·2791 , D ick Seyler
1.79 .1 mo .

COINS ·

..____.....

2-8-71p

LITTLif DU5-T'

. 63

Real Estate For Sali

1970 350 JO HN Deer e Dol er , 6·
fl . b lad e, can a pe , cam p letely rebu i I t . $5 1950. Phon e

FOR61VE' US

1-22 -1 mo .

--

$299

YOU'~L
FO!t FLI~e&gt;IN6
1 ~ YOUR

l TRUST

We Buy Antlq_yn
MODERN CHEMICALS

---------- -------- -·

CAPtAIN EASY ·

... J 8 4

OLD PLAYER p ianos N eed
WOULD like to do your
no t be tn working con dition .
hauling . la rge or sm all.
Call 742 2143 .
Phone (6 14 ) 985 -3941 any
.2-ll -61 C ONE AC Rt= , 6- rm san d ba rh . -1 RM . HO USE w ith bath in
li m e.
Syr a cuse o n Sec ond St.
Rt. 3, Pom er oy , Ros e Hil l .·
F. REEZER -b";ef. - ~~- ~d .
2-11 -6tp
Phone 992 755 3.
Dick Da vis properly , full
- - - -ste ers , 800 l b . Ca ll (61 4) 98 5
2·6 6tc
baseme nt.
alum i num
=o~~~c- ~~~-;ent located
.38 05
sidi ng , p(meted . $10,000 . Call
behind
Rutland
Grade
2. 11 41C
Oak H i ll 685 -6576 even inQt ; 3- BR -HOM-E :- T~St- iiniShed
'remode l ing .. Sa l em
St . ,
Sc hool . Tuneup , brakes ,
Jac k son ' 286 -3004 days ,
STE REO R A D I O . mocte rn
Rutland . Pho n e' 742 -2306 ,
wheel ba lan c ing , ali nem ent .
2-5 30tp
CO UNTRY Mo b ile Home
des ign, 8 t rack tape . am -t m
aft er A p m . or see Milo B.
Phone 742 2004 .
Pa rk , Rt . 33. t en mil es nort h
radio combin ation . Balan ce NEARLY fin ished, bi -level ,
11 -16-tf c
Hut ch inson ..
of Pomeroy . Large tot s wi th"
10 -9-t f c -- -- ---~- - -- :--- $97 .40 or terms . Ca ll 992
if
entry
,
5
bedrm
s,
3
sp
l
cen crete patios , sidewa lk s,
3965
C, BRADFORD , Auctloneer .
b a t h s. equipped k i t c hen .
run ner s and oft street
2-6-tt c
Complete Se rvice . Phone
family r oom, 2 car ga rage, J BI::DRM . hou se in M id
parking . Phone 992 -7479.
,
co
rn
er
tot.
~ew
d
l
eport
949 248 7 or 949 -20"00 . Racine ,
\44 .000. Phone (614 ) 985 12 -31-tfc TRUMPET . good co nd iti on
ba th . story and hat~ , ut1!lty
Ohio , Crltt Brad ford .
38 10 .
Phone 949 -2853 .
room , new carp etmg and
10-9-l fc
new r oot. garage an d work
2 BEDRM . m ob ile hom e, real
__, _
.
n ice Phone -992 -3324 .
room , fruit cellar . ~lose to EXCAVA TING , BACK HOES
ba th o n
5 ROOMS and
sc
hool
and
·
shopping
.
2-4· rtc
150'x 100' lo t, $6500 . Com · .
AND DOZER . LARGE AND
$17,500 . PhOn e 992 -7624 .
---'--- -- -- - ~ - -ptet e f inan ci ng . Phon e 992 ·
SMALL. SEP TI C TANK.S
Now at Landmark
1-27
261C
57 86 .
....
HO USE .in Rutland . Cat l992
B IL L
I NSTALLED .2-5-61c
P UL LIN S. PHONE 992 2478 ,
5858 .
1 4 1f c
DAY OR ,NIGHT .
.1 BR Bri ck hom e, 6 v rs ., 2 1 1
IJ -ll -78tp
· balhs . garag e on 2,8 acres
co.oP
NI C E 2 bedr n'l . tiome, bath ,
o n palled r:oa d. nea r F orked
r efr igerat6r • . stov e, washer
Automatic Water
AP T .• 4 rm . bath , f urn ished .
Run State Fares!. Phone
and d rye r , h·ardwood floors ,
Phone 992 -5908 .
Conditioner
{ 614 ) 667 3787 . $38,00.0.
rrew t·hermo pane w inelows .
2-4. rt c
Model UCXXX ,
·1-15-271p
sror m doors , al um . si ding .
-- ------- --~--F.OR sete nea r La nq sv ill f! , 5
210,000
concrete porches·. new nat .
UN F URN IS HED , 2 bedrm .
rm . ftouse . root cella r w i th
Weekly Grain
gas furna Ce. S\0,500 . Phone HOU SE on 1..111co ln H9ts . 1 . r oom .over , 2 b a y d etac hed
ap t. newly r edec orat ed,
'(614 ) 985 4245 , Chester .
CaJNcily
bedrm ., large k i tc hen . full
garage , 11 ~ ac res , no ba t h,
· full y carpeted . Call befo r e 9
2 10 6!C
b as em ent , excellent buy for
hot and co ld water In k it a .m . 992 -2288 ,
$8 ,900 . with new furniture ,
chen . L.P . gas heat , heaters
2-6-1fc
HOU SE tor sa\e , eKtra larg e
on l y Sl0 ,300. PhOne 992,7648 .
w i th house . Call 741 -28 19
l _iv ing room , d in ing room .
1-6-26tc
t!lf te r 5 p .m .
la: r ge k i tchen , ·fa mi l y room , ----,--·---2 bedr ooms , bath, a l l car
• Reg . S339 .00 Va.l.
BEDRM
.
,
h
o
me ,
just ----:------oi-- - - - - - peted . e)(c.ep t kitchen . nice 3
J.\ I K\..U
Hel i /\ RC we ld ing
fi
ni
shed
,
rem
odel
ing,
Sal
em 2 ACRE S mo re or tess In Long
-yard, good lo cat i on . Ma y b~e .
Bottom , ci ty water , new
mac h ine , n e w e tec
all
St
.•
Rutlan
d
.
Phone
742-2306
~ee n
at 332 Gr .a nt St , .
sepllc ·tank , S2 ,5QO . Contact
accessories in cluded . Ph one
aft er 4 p .m . or see MilO B .
Midd
leport,
~ alph Wells . L ong · Bottom ,
992 3--ll O.
·.
Hut chison .
Ohio .
10 28 1fC
2-11-31 p .
--------::..---~- -

Rill Esllte for Sale

Remowa l of Palnfl
Plastics . varnishes , etc .
wood or Met•t . ·
Repairs . ~ef f nlshlng· of ·
F urn lt.JLre.•
Burnishing . Polishing of
Copper &amp; - Br~11

NOR Til
... A Q 10 7 5
.. J 7 5

Brewer , L ong
Bottom .
Ph . 992 _2174
Pom eroy
Ph one { 614 1 985 -355 4.
L.:..:::...:.::_..:;.:_
___~-2· l -Ife · ·

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

!;

Misplay sets up contract

,_

.-.--------

Modern

WIN AT BRIDGE

__ __ _

1971 COMET G . T . . V 8,
sta ndard , new ti r es and
pai n l , shoc ks . brak e shoes .
49 ,000 m i tes , 51. 000. Phone
(6 14 ) 985 -3594 .
2 B-71 p

Janak! 33.
!:DO-Tomorrow 3.4; News 13.
CHANNEL FIVE
7:00-Good News for Today (c)
7:3().-BIII Cosby Show (c)
8:06-Arlwork• (c)
8: 3().-Muslc Connection ( cl
9:06-Speclal Edit ion l cl
9:3().-Wyall Earp
10:00-Target: Corruptors

7:3().-Lasl of the Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Wild Wild
World of Animals 6; Match Game PM 8; Evenng
Edition with Marlin Agronsky 20; The Judge 10; To
Tell the Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Book Beat 33.
8 :06-Litlle House on the Prairie 3,4.15; XII Winter
Olympic Games6, 13; Peanuts 8, 10; The Way II W•s
20; Images of Aging 33.
8: 30-Mowgll ' s Brothers 8,1 0; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 20.
9:06-Chico &amp; the Man 3 3,4, 15; Cannon 8,10; Theater In
America 33 ; Images of Aging 20 .
9:3().-0umpllngs 3,4,15.
JO :OD-Petrocelil 3,4,1S; Blue Kn ight 8,10; News 20;
Almanac 20; Ourslory 33.
11 :DO-News 3.4.6.8.10. 13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :3().-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 ; Movie " All the Kind

FUR .NITURE .
STRIPPING SERVICE

Pomeroy Oft iu
lOS Butternut
992 -3345
Formerly Weed Whalt5•1e .
Featuring :
De tuM. z ero)C Copy Serv lte,
Office
Su pplies ,
Mimeograph
Supplies, .
larges t selection of wed d ing supplies In South eastern Ohio .
The Print Shop Complete
(Stilt in busine ss In Midd!Pport)
12 -8-2 mo .,

Ptexagtas5 · Table Tops
Mirror5 • Storm &amp; Screens .
FERRELL'S GLASS &amp;
HOME MAINTENANCE
Sid i ng - Vinyl
&amp;
A lum in um . Window Gta~s
~ Glazing . On the Jo b or •n
Shop .
Pi ck up and delivery
sen• lee.
call Cottec13BB ·82 39
Specialize
in
build · UP
roofing &amp; hot roofs . Free
. Es1imates - 10 years ell·
perience.
Harve Fer-rell
Bidwell , Ohio
'2 · 6-! mo

1

Employment Wanted

Occurr,nce'' 8; Movie ''Five Branded Women " 10;

7:06-Truth orCons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8: News 10; Wild
Kingdom 13; Family Affair 15; Book Beat 20;

Antique

1-12-lmo.

POM0~~?~vE~~!~.~. co.'i'
POMEROY. OHIO

75 Cordoba, beige with black vinyl_._ _ .

·MANY MORE

Ca II 992· 7537
Pomeroy , Ohio

Dark maroon finish , Plk . buck et v inyl sets, radio, V -8
engine, a utomatic, power steering, good tires, sportsman' s dream .

1

FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS
NEW CAR WARRANTY

iMiLi' SENriNR

Kuhl Cake Decor

Slicker 57300.00. SALE PRICE S6295 .

Help Wanted

TOM RUE
MOTORS

70

licensed
baker
and
decorator .
Kitchen State lnspe ttll!d

S6295

1974 PLY . CUDA

Quality Print Shcip

and Decorated
T.o Your Order

Dark red , si mulated wood trim , 3 sea t , fully equ ipped
with every Chev . option , low mil4!sl. ne w title, boss'~
wife car .

OLD furniture , ice boxes .
brass
beds , old
wall
telephones and part !i , or
com plete households, Wrlle
M . D . M i ller , Rt. 2.
Pomeroy . Oh io. Call 99 277 60
10 7 7~
or s·e mi -retired
lady to live in . F r ee room
and board and sma-l-l wages
for ligh t duties See · a t JOB
Page St ,, Mlddleporl, Ohio .
l - 1-l lf c

Cakes, Baked

S2695

1974CHEV. ESTATE WAGON

TIMBER . tOp pr ice for
st and ing saw t imber . Ca l l
(6 14 1 446 -8570 day or night .
7-4· 12tc

71 Dodge. 9 pass. wa~on.

lll OOURT ST.

~none

Strangers" 6,13; Mov ie " The Strange &amp; Deadly

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11,1976

Know Your School 33 .

Local 1 owner , au tomat ic, blk . vi n yl i n !. trim. silver
f i nish , good tires, rad io, real economy. Book Value
Price S2875 .oo- Clearance .

99 2 3 18 1 or 992 -7639 .

Television log for easy viewing

Business Services

Pomeroy
Motor· co.

1914DATSUN710CPE.

Iron .
metals, junk autos . Rider ' s
Savage . Phone 992 5468 .
1 119t p

2·8·61p

12.- - -NAME
ADDRESS- - -

o . .P h .' 992 ·277 1_

Special Rates
by Wee~
or Month

l, _ ___:.~2. :-·-~--

TO THE

-in ." -rap ,

Rooms, '5.00 up

group . of figures
counts as one word.
Be sure to count
name and address, if
used, and your phone
number.
Including
prices for items of·
fered in your want. ad
will
increa -se
response .

'1.25

OF
QUALITY

For Sale

La Salle
HOTEL

and

MAIL WITH

2 SIGNS

4 13 -lfc

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

E N ~OY gracious liv ing at Vi llage Manor in M id dl eport tor as tow a s S130
per
month
with
all
utilities
pajd .
These
ar e br·a n'd new high quality
apartmen t s at pri ces you
MAKE SU RE you get e11ei-y
ca n afford . Your rent In
possib l e dedu ction this year .
eludes month to month
Have your Federal and •
l eases, a ll etec. l ivi ng ,
State Inc ome Tax r e turn by
carpeting ,
ran ge
and
an a ccount ant . Phone 99 2
refrig erator. free trash
6173 .
pick up , cab le TV at your
1,21 -52tc
expense ,
and
On -s i t e
------- ----~ -laundry facilities . Con HAV E your Income taKes
ve n ient to Shopp in.g on Th ird
prepa red by Steve Cle land ,
and Mill Streets in Mid Rac i ne . Phone 949 -2883..
dl eport , See the man age r at
2-6-121c .
Riverside Apar tm en ts or
c all 992 -3273. · Furn is hed
.IN COME
Tax
Se rvice ,
apartments
are
also
Federal o r Sta t e taxes .
avcillab l e
Phone 992 -7228 or se·e
2-2-78tc
Wallace Russe l L Bradbury .
l -30 -26tc
J AND 4 RM . f urn ished and
un furn i shed apts . Phone 992 I W il .L be glv ing pian o lessons
5434 .
in my ho me start ing Feb. · l.
11 -9 .tfc
For inform atio n ca ll 992

Mann ing D . We bster
Judge
Court of Co m mon Pleas ,
Proba te D ivisio n
Jll .2~ _) 21 4. I I. Jl.&lt;..

sps

initial

(6141

2-11 . lie

CASH WITH
ORDER

Each

/''·r· - - - - - - - - - - ·

CAs·H
·pe idofformob
au ile
makes
and,
models
homes
PhOne area code 614 413
9531 .

I
•

Auto Sales

Auto Sales

2-11 -ltp

CARD OF THANKS

cen ts.

For Fast Results Use The Senti.n el Classifieds
Wanted

!

U- 'l11to.lly SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb.l1,1976

. DICit 'I'IUCY

rely to o he avil y upon an
asso ci ate loday who formerly
had made ·unkept promises.

FINISHED MINE
AFTER DINNER

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc.

19) Select you r companions
di scriminate ly today . Avoid
persons whose aims are not in
accord with ·your high standards.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 19)
Today' s 1deas aren't likely to be
as clever as yesterday' s, es·
pec ially concerning work .
Thi nk each .nove th rough
carefully. ·

PISCES !Fob. 20-Mareh 20) If
at, all possible tr y not to maKe ·
toans or b orrow from friends .
tod ay Complica tions could
tater result .

&amp;wt:rrod
Feb. 12, 1978

~a reer gpals assume a new

ilnportance th is year , Contacts
yo u've developed shou ld prOve
helpful in pulling strings lor yov
behind th e scenes to ad11ance
vo ur alms .

I HATE '{Oll,
CHUCK!

�16 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb . II , 1976

School ransacked for $450
MERCERVILLE - Over deputies have called in lhe
$4:;(1 in cash was taken and Southeastern Ohio Crime Lab
damages were estimated at to help with the investigation .
According to Paul Dillon,
$1,000 in a breaking and
ent.,ring Tuesday night here principal , entry was made by
at Hannan Trace Hi gh removi ng ·a back door window. Once inside, the inSchool.
Ga llia Count y she riff 's truder or intrudets went to

delayed un ti l the next
meeting.
Parents me t with the board
in regard to a bus stop at
Riggs Crest Addition. which
was approved.
Bea Douglas, principal at
Tuppers Plains Elemen tary,
wa s nam ed com pliance of• fleer under Tille IX.
Attending were Oris Smith,
preside nl; David Sm ith ,
Dorsey Larkins , Doug
Bissell. Dorothy Calaway,
bOa rd members ; Eloise
Boslon, clerk ; Ches ter
Goodi ng , principal, and Supt.
Riebe l.

activity in
past month
Ten accidents were in~
vestigaled and 11 persons
were arrested by the Middleporl Police Department in
January, Police Chief J . J .
Cremeans reported Monday
night to town council.
Of the total arrests , three
cases were transferred to

coun ty court. Three persons
were arrested on charges of
driving wh il e intoxicat ed ';
ass ure~

clear distance

Charges, and one each for
driving under suspe nsion,
leaving the scene of an accident, reckless operation,
failure to ·yield the rig ht of
way, petty theft, disorderly

'

man'ner , assa ult an d batter y

MEIGS lltEATRE

with one case dismissed an d
one referr ed to juve nil e

TONITE THRU THURS .

court .
Parki ng me ter collectitms

FEB. 11 -12
NOT OPEN

(or the mon th totaled $755.50
and the police cruiser was
driven 4. 6 ~5 miles during the

FRI. -SUN .

FEB. 13-IS
Jacqueline Susann 's
ONCE IS NOT
ENOUGH
(Not shown Jan. 9. 11 due to

icy roads)

Veterans Memorial Hospital
(Continued from page 1)
ADMJSliiONS - Ellsworth have inside lights on when students are loading in the dark ,
the ki tehen where a metal Dill, Rceds1•ille; Elizabeth takes out personal retaliation on students, and had children get
Delton off the bus to walk home during a recent snow .
cash drawer was pried open. Gilkey. Shade:
Taken was $50. The kitchen's Fowler, Rac in e; Ma rtha
A discussion brought out that a bus traveling over roads
walk-in cooler was open but Robinson, Pomeroy; Willie which the driver considers unsafe is left to the discretion of the
Collins, Cheshire.
no food was missing .
driver. Following a long discussion with the delegation, it was
DISCHARGES - Minnie decided that Assistant Supt. Dan Morris will investigate the
They then entered the main
office and principal Dillon's Miller, Robert Skaggs, Lester charges al\(1 report back to the next meeting.
offi ce. Two safes were pried Swiger, Ruth Euler.
Leo Morris appeared before the board and suggested that
open with some type of sharp
citizen band radios, a base station and other needed equipment
instrwnents .
he purchased for all of the buses. II was pointed out that the
Holzer Medical Center
Approximately $400 was
radios would be of value when drivers run into difficulty due to
(Discharge&amp;, Feb. 10)
taken from the safes. The
weather
conditions or mechanical problems. Dowler will study
money included lunchroom Hazel Ball, Maggie Barr, the situation as to costs, maintenance of equipment and
funds, student fees and ac- David Blake, Robert Corn- training of personnel on such a project.
well, Mrs. Paul Cox and son,
tivity accoun t fund s.
The board agreed to participate in a Math program which
Mary
Cox, Mrs . Stephen
Dillon ;s desk was forced
is
being
prepared by Ohio University. Called the R plus D
open and $2 was taken from a Crum and son, Mrs. Jimmie Utilization Proposal, it would cost the Mejgs Local District
drawer. There was extensive Deem and son, Lois Denney, nothing. Through the program, trained personnel would study
damage to several office Goldie Durham, Grace Ellis, the math programs from kindergarten through grade 12 and
Remember
Saturday,
doors and the safes were Frederick Fellure, Lenore make reCommendations how they could be made more
destroyed .
No
school Flowers, Christopher effective.
Valentine's
February
eq uipment was taken . Ap- Grueser, Julian Harris, Janet
The
board
accepted
the
resignation
of
Beulah
Casto
as
a
Heaton,
Betty
Hill
,
Ma
x
parently, money was the only
. 14th
Jarre ll, Lila Jones, Esther principal's aide at the Bradbury School and employed Lena
item sought.
Jane
Ja~obs as her replacement. Approved was the payment
Sheriff's deputies Tuesday Kennedy, Daniel Masters , of $294.90 to the Child Identification Fund at Nelsonville-York
im•estigated a break-in ~t Grace Miller, George Petty, City School District for the identification of handicapped
Siloam Baptist Ch urch , Phyllis Ridge, Joan Riffle , students, as required by law. Dowler pointed out that the
flocky Fork Rd . Chief deputy Virginia Russell, Elaine identification processes will be handled by Nelsonville-York at
Ivan Fife said someone look Saunders, John Schilling , no more than about 10 cents per student.
all the church sea ts, the bell Georg e · Steele, Brenda
Board members signed a deed transfering property in
from its lower and kn ocked Swann , John Edgar Wilson. front of the old hig}J school in Rutland to the Volunteer
(Birth, Feb. 10) Mr. an d
off one-fourth of the church's
Mrs
. Gary Hunl ey, son, Emergency Medical Service. The group plans a headquarters
ceil ing.
building on the location. It must act within five years and if
Campaign Freewill Ba ptist Gallipolis.
disbanded , the property including any structures will revert to
Church in Addison Twp. was
the school district.
also broken into Monday
Approval was giv~n Fred W. Crow to use the Meigs
night but nothing was
Football Field in Pomeroy on June 19 in conjWlctimi with the
miss ing.
Big Bend Regatta 's Frog Jumping Contest. However, it was
stressed that Crow will have to be responsible for all clean up
costs and for electricity if lights are used at night.
The resignation o! Harold Sauer, guidance counse lor at the
OFFICERS CHOSEN
high
school, was accepted at the close of the current school
Offi ce rs of the Bashan Fire
year.
Aletter of appreciation was read from the Pomeroy Fire
De partment have been
Dept.
for use of the Pomeroy Elementary Building for the
elected, according to James
annual
New Year's Ball. The department was given use oJ the
NELSONVILLE, Ohio
Bailey. Elected were John
same
building
on July 3 for a Bicentennial dance.
Rose, president; Carl Lee, (UP! ) - Dr . Timothy B.
The
boantinformally
approved a request from the Rotary
vice presiden t; Gary Holter ~ Moritz, ~rector of the Ohio
Club
for
Meigs
Local
to
participate
in an exchange student
of
sec retary; Ralph Bal.Jard, Departm ent
was
pointed
out
that
a
student from a foreign
program.
It
treasurer; Stanley Trussell, Reha bii l itation and country spends several months of each school year in local
trustee ; James Bailey, chief; Correction, today announced homes and attends the local school. Dowler pointed out that
Ralph Trusse ll , ass istan t the closing of the Nelsonville such a student might be invaluable in visiting the various
chief; Winstun Varney, Children's Center.
Moritz,
in
remarks schools to present aspects of life in his own country.
captain ; Charles Bissell, first
The board agreed to proceed with plans for refinishing of
lieutenant ; Danny Bissell, prepared for a new s the high School gymnasium floor during the summer months.
second lieutenan t, and Luke conference here , said the
Staff members given approval to attend state events in the
McDaniel, third lieutenant. flinds used io operate the future or already held were Benny Slawter and Charles
center could be used . to·
establish small residential Frecker, Ohio Industrial Arts Conference, Cleveland, March
group homes for mentally ill 12; Denise Gibson,. Special Education Conference at Ohio
children in Eastern a nd University on March 5 and 6; Dale Harriso.n, Ohio High School
SORORITY TO MEET
Athletic Association Baseball Clinic at Ohio State on Feb. 6.:
Preceptor Beta Beta Southeastern Ohio .
Mildred
Bailey, Ohio Vocational Legislative Seminar in
The center here had by far
·sorority will meet Thursday
Columbus
March 29; Martha Vennari and Sharon Birch ,
al 7 :45 p.m. at the home of the highest cost per patient meeting onon
handicapped
children in Gallipol;,, Feb. 4; Emma
Mrs. June Va n Vranken. day in the state system , Finch, Accommodating the Exceptional Child in the regular
Clarice Krautter will serve as Moritz said. Moritz sa id classroom, Ohio University , March ~: Ron Logan and Bob
department studies have
co-hostess .
indicated that it would not be Oliver, to Ohio State Basketball Tournament on March 26,
Th e board approved the closing of schools in January
p&gt;st-&lt;!ffective to renovate the
·including
Jan. 21, afternoon kindergarten, Snow ; Jan . 22, all
SQUAD CALLED
substa ndard facility to
schools,
snow
; Jan. 28, Pomeroy afternoon kindergarten ,
The Middleport E-R 1mil increase its capacity to meet
Pomeroy
fire
;
Jan. 29 and 30, Bradbury, water break ; Jan. 30,
·wen t to Bailey Run Road at standards of the Joint
Harrisonville
afternoon
kindergarten, snow.
on
12: 13 p.m. Tuesday for Com mi ss i· on
The
board
agreed
to
purchase
three new school buses with
Brenda Templeton who was Accreditiation of Hospitals.
specification
to
be
drawn
up
in
the
near futut~ and it was
The director said this deci'
ill . She was taken to Holzer
·
agreed
to
have
fire
extinguishers
checked
and put into proper Ja ne Colby gives you a·n ea5y , rela )Ced r wCII coordinated look .
sion would result in a more
Medical Ce nter .
They go together or go their separa te ways , whether it 's 1he
o~der. Mrs. Sheets was named legislative control person of the
efficient, more effective ,
smart print shirt, the notched collar blazer or . button troQt
more . humane, conununityski rt . Ttiey ' re a ll washable , of 100 Pet. polyester .
based system of ·children's
Sh ;rt in Sizes : 5-M-L
In Navy , Coral
Blazer in Sizes ; 7· 17, 8-18
mental health services for 25
BOOSTERS TO MEET
RU NN ING AGAIN
Sk irt in SiLes : 7 · 1 7 ~ 8 · 18
or Beige
EARNINGS
UP
counties
in
the
region.
EAST MEIGS - Th e
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - Rep.
AKRON , Ohio I UPI )
Easte rn Athl eti c Boos ters.;
William
H. Harsha, R.Qhi o,
Goodyear Tire and Rubber
will meet Monday , Feb. 16, at
Sportswear Dept .• Second Floor
. SOUP FOR SALE
Co. announced Tuesay tha t ra "kin g Republica n on the
ihe high school at 7:30 p.m.
SYRACUSE
The record 1975 sales of $5.4 House Publi c Work s and
All fans , parents and alunmi SyraCuse Ladies Auxiliar y
Transportation Committee,
are asked to attend this will hold a soup and bake sa le billion, a 3.7 per cent increase announced Tuesday he will
over the prev ious year,
important meeting.
Saturday, Feb. 14, at the yielded earnings of $161.6 seek a ninth consec ufiv e tcl-nl
Syracuse Municipal Building. · million or $2.24 per share.
in Congress .
serving will begin at noon.
LODGE TO MEET
Bring containers for ca rryout
RACINERacin e orders.
ATTACK SUFFERED
Masonic Lodge 461 will hold a
RACINE - Mrs. Ralph .
Webb had a call Tuesday
special meeting Saturday.
MEETING SLATED
Feb. 14, beginning at 4 p.m.
fr om a ·niece in ColW11bus
Candystripers at ·veterans lhat Mrs. Webb 's sister, Mrs.
Work in the Maste r Mason
Memorial
Hospi tal will meet Alberta Nothstine of Grovedegree. All Master Masons
Monday,
Feb.
16, a t 1 p.m . in port, suffered a heart attack
are invited.
the hospital cafeteria .
Monday night. Mrs. Nothsline, the former Alberta
Alexander of Letart Falls, is
in the intensive care unit at
Mt . Carmel East Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Webb went to
Columbus today.

month.

NOW YOU KNOW
Th e fcrm " bfide H is
deri ved from cw ancie nt
teuton ic word meaning ·"to
c.ook."

JaneColl1y

ELBERFELDS ~ N POMEROY

soM~TJI!f.G NEW

••
••
••
••

••
••
••
•r---------------~ •
••
••
•••
••
••
••
••
••
••
day
;lf4tntucky Frlecl Chicken~:
With the purchase of •
~ 21 piece barrel of :
.Kentucky -fried chicken .:
you get...
•

•
•
•

1 PINT OF BAKED BEANS
AND
,1 PINT OF COLE SLAW

:

Visit the Colonel

•

•

=

it's a great

for

CROW'S
STEAK HOUSE

has changed much
By Charlene Hoeftlcb
"Will you be nly valentine?"
This time-bonored question, spanning the decades
from the day when lacy, flowery valentines were in vogue
to today's contemporary cards, remains the sentlrilental
message of St. Valentine's Day.
February 14 - a day designated for lovers, for·
---r1memberir1g beloved famUy members, for instilling in
YOWlgsters an affection one for another.
For those who have difficulty expressing bones!
feelings and love, the well-filled racks and shelves of
stores everywhere are sure to hold the valentine with the
verse that "says it all;'.
Throughout the years of sending valentines, bowever,
the messages haven't always been on the romantic side.
StiU popular are the humorous cards. A few years
back the cards with the subtle, and sometimes not so
subtle, insult were in style.
The story of the beginning of .Valentine's Day goes
back to the legend of Valentinus, I Christian, who was
executed on Feb. 14, 270 A. D. by Emperor Claudius II, of ·
Rome. The legend is that he was imprisoned for aiding
Christians to escape the persecutions of Rome and on the

Day

..

•••
••
••
••
••
••
••
•

Valentine's message never

Nelsonville
children's
---unit closed

Police report

two on

·-Meigs Local

board in conjunction with a request from the Oblo School
~loards Assn. and Dowler waa named to lnvettiglte bavlnc a
4siting poet through the Ohio Arts Council to visit IChoola fl.
the district.
Attending the meeting were board members Wendel.
Hoover, Virgil King, Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, Robert Snowden
and Dr. Keith Riggs; Supt. Dowler and Asat. Supt. Morrla;
clerk L. W. McComas, who has resigned; John TrlpJett, the
new ~Jerk; administrators James Oiehl, Bob Morrla, Pomeroy
and Middleport Elementary; &lt;llarles Downie, Ed Jlartela and
John Arnott of the teaching staff; several oon-eertlfiod ·
employes, and the delegation from' Snowville.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Board to ·s tudy
teacher proposal
EAST MEIGS - The
Eas tern Local Board of
Ed ucation Tuesday night
received for study a proposa l
from the district teachers
according to John Riebel,
superintendent.
Riebel said the board will
be meeting with the teachers
for the next few weeks in a
negotiating process.
In other business the board
finalized an agreemen t with
the Ohio Association of Public
Sc hool Employe s, named
Orva Jean Holter and Grace
Stout to the substitute cooks
list, named Elizabeth Early
to the substitute teachers list,,
passed a resoluti on claiming
Jan. 6, 9, 12, and 22 as
calamity days du e to
ice
and
snow,
approved sponsori ng a fir e
school for the Olive Town ship
Fire Pept., entered into an
agreemen t with NelsonvilleYork School Distric t which
will provide mail .out services
to handicapped persons who
live in the district, approved
Mrs . Ja ne Headl ey and
Eloise Boston to attrend a
workshop, at Hocking Valley
Lodge in Nelsonville on Feb.
19, and agreed to purchase
liability fr om Republic
Franklin Insura nce Cc)mpany .
Meeting with the board
were representatives from
!he Columbus Heating and
Ventilating Co. in regard to
proposed changes at Chester
School. The matter was

Hospital News

•

=

•
POMEROY, OHIO
•
• • •COUPON EXPIRES FEB. 15 • •

MEIGS COUNTY

SUN BOTTLE GAS

Our mooey is the same as anybody
elses. There is one important
difference ... our people. If you
li!re a more personal touch, give us
a tly. We think you'll like the
differenc:e.
A Home Bank
For
Mei!(s County

People

RACI.NE

HOME NAnONAL

. BAN'K

RACINE

OHIO

Sports .Briefs
By
United
Press
International
TORONTO (UP! )
Roscoe Tanner has returned
home to Charleston, S,C.
after defaulting a match at
the Toronto stop on the World
Cup Tennis circuit due to
illness.
Last week, in Richmond,
Va ., Tanner complained of
illness but played anyway
and lost in the first round .
Two
weeks
ago
in
Philadelphia, he withdrew
because of pneumonia.
MOREHEAD, Ky . (UP!) Bill Glaser, head football
coach at Louisville's St .
Xavier High School, has beell
appointed r.;orehead State's
defensive coordinator,
college President Adrian
Doran has announced.
Glaser led St. Xavier to
unbeaten seasons to 1974 and
1975 and the Kentucky Class
AAA state crown in 1974 and'
the AAAA title in 1975. His
teams were 2S-II in two years.
MU.AN, Italy (UP[) Italy's Pietro MeMea won
the men's tJO.rneter dash in
6.71 seconds Tuesday night at
the Italian international
Indoor track and field
championships,
Finland's Mona Lisa Pursiainen took the women's fiO
meters !J' 7.47.

LOCATED ON ST. ROUTE 124, AT MINERSVILLE
PH. 992-5111

•

e
VOL. XXVII

NO. 212

night before his execution penned a farewell note to a
friend and signed it "From your Valentine."
Valentines were sent as early as lf77, history records,
and until 1825. these cards were handwritten and
decorated. Then, apparently, the cutting of lacy bouquets
became too complicated and time consuming, and the
manufacturers got into the !Juslness of making valentines.
Esther Howland is credited with introducing the
valentine to America in the 1840s, with her first shop
being on the third floor of the Howland home in Worcester,
Mass. The first year she grossed $5,000 and in succeeding
years her profits grew until in 1880 when she sold ber ideas
and processes to a greeting card manufacturer, she was'
realizing well over $100,000 a year.
In the mid-111M! valentines appeared in Ohio.
CUrrently on display at the Ohio Historical Society
Museum in Columbus are several which date back to
those early years.
Today the popularity of valentines ranks only behind
Christmas cards. Apparently the sentimentality of both
seasons provides the,push that people $0inetimes need to
send out messages of thoughtfulness.
" Will you be my valentll,e?"

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ·

.

~

en tine
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1976

Pre-application for grant
will be filed by Pomeroy
·;r::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.:-:-:-:-:-:-:~:::-:::::·:·:::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:

Pomeroy Council Wed- center. The special meeting the pre-application , and if the file the pre-application by
nesda.y afternoon voted t0 fil e Wednesday was to deal with grant is approved problems Friday they would have to
its pre-application for " block them.
"probably could be worked wall another year before
grant of $400,000, with
Called to attend th.e out" with the county com- 111aking another application.
$100,000 to be used for a meeting Wedn esday was missioners since the building ll will take approximately 30
community center.
Francis Leighty, consultant, will be located on county to 40 days before council will
Council in' special session and Fred Crow, soliCitor.
owned properly.
be n9lified if the prelast· Monday night passed a
Crow stated that main- . Leighty told council once application is accepted.
resolution to 11 COoperate" tenance and utilities of the the ar.,t.ls oblained'ancl&lt;the\o&gt; • 4.U.!Iding . Vfer~ \'lh•yor,
, with the county in co n- building would pose a " lfl!liding ·~rected' lhe building Andrews, Ralph Werry,
struction of a combined problem, to which Leighty is the sole property of the Chuck Battles, Lou .Osborne, .
senior citizens r:ominunity agreed. Leighty told Mayor village.
Har?ld Brown_. and Harry
center.
'
Clarence Andrews and
Leighty stressed that is Dav1s, councilmen, Jane
There were ques tions council members they had colUlcil's decision. He said it Walton, clerk, Eleanor
raised at that time as to cost Wltll Friday, Feb. 13, to file has to be one council is Thomas, Leighty and Crow.
of the operation and main- lhe pre-application .
comfortable with. He also
tenance of the community
Crow advised the mayor noted that if COWlcil did not
an d council to proceed with

INews. . . in Briefs\t-

'

By United Press International
NEW YORK - W. T. GRANT CO. and its major creditors
bave allked that the variety store chain, which is more than $1
' billion In debt, be formally declared bankrupt and aUowed to
· 10 out of bualneu. an. oi the big three in .variety store chains
- ranking third behind F. W. Woolworth and S. S. Kresge :....
Grant's bankruptcy would be the biggest retail failure in the
. country's history.
AI a hearing In Federal Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan
Wednesday, attorneys for the 711-year-old firm and its llJillljor
bank and trade creditors presented a resoluUon, in which they
agreed it would be virtually hopeless to continue an effort to
reorganize the chain under Chapter II of the bankruptcy laws.
However, Federal Baknkruptcy Court Judge John J. Galgay
said he needed more information "as to the viabillty of W. T.
Grant's future" and ordered an· inunedlate hearing. He said
the session would continue at 10 a. m. Thursday.

WS ANGELES - GRAVEL VOICED ACI'OR Lee J .
Cobb, wbo created the role of Willy Loman iri "Death of a
Salesman" on Broadway and played ihe brawling union leader
In the movie ''On the Waterfront", died of a heart attack
Wednesda t
64 p
edl aU d h' Sa F
d
Ya age · &amp;ra.m cs c e · to 15 .n ernan
Valley home said he was ilead when they arrived.
Cobb gained stature on Broadway • then moved into movies
and waeregardedas a top actor in both. But he became known
to mUIIons because of his role as Judge Garth in television
series, "The Virginian." He brought power and authority to aU
roles. He was outstanding as the tough Wlion boa against
Marlon Brando's longshoreman in ''On the Waterfront", which
won Brando an Academy Award.· -'

JERRY COLEMAN

1

Jerry Coleman is proud to announce that he is now
your local SUN BOTtLE GAS representative.
Jerry is a graduate of Meigs High School and has
three years experience in the bottle gas field. He Is
looking forward to providing the people In Meigs
County and the surroundln9 area with the best
possible service available.

•

railroad unions are blamed
Wi\SHINGroN ,UP!) The · Chessie System early
today withdrew from its
agreement to.purchase more
than 2·000 miles of bankrupt
northeastern railroads after
It failed to reach labor
agreements with the unions
involved.
The Cbessie action was a
serious but not fatal blow io

°·

takeover.
Both
the
11dministration and the U.S.
Railway Assodatlon·, the
. planning and financing
agency for ConRail, hope to
move ahead on schedule
despite the setback. USRA
called a news conference for
· later today to discuss its
plans.
Chessie, a healthy coalhauling road, had agreed to
purchase most of the Erie
Lackawanna and Reading
Railroads, providing direct
Service into the New York,
New Jersey and . Eastern
Pennsylvania
industrial
areas. This me( a mandate by
Congress - and a desire by
shippers - to have at least
two competing railroads in
the East.
However, Chessie 1 S
negotiations with the railroad
brotherhoods broke down

CINCINNATI - PRESIDENTIAL COUNSEWR Rogers the government plan to
C. B. Morton, said Wednesday former California Gov. Ronald consolidate and rehabilitate
Reagan's candidacy for president Is "more sb!lWIIlllnshlp than seven bankrupt railroads.
substance." Morton, in an interview prior to an address to the
The government sponsored
JlamUton County Republican Club's annual Uncoln Day system, ConRall, now wiU be
·dinner, called Reagan a ''philosopher _ a very articulate forced to absorb almust aU of
· phU0110pher. But he said, what ''disturbsme is tbatReaa•n is a the seven bankrupts, leaving
,...
Pennsylvania, New York and
shoot-from-the-hip phlloaopher," Morton, who was appointed other areas of the northeast
Feb. 3 as counselor to President Ford with cabinet rank, dted with only one major rail
Reagan's proposal to invest social security funds in the stock · system .
Left unanswered is whether
inarket. "I don't know of a faster way to nationalize American
industry," he said . "His candidacy always seems to me to be the
breakdown
in
not thought out."
negotiaUons will delay the
scheduled
April I ConRail
YOUNGSTOWN, OIDO - POLICE CHIEF Donald G.
Baker suspended six PQilcemen Wednesday for "condllct
Wlbecoming a pollee officer and a gentleman" In connection
with a Dec. 21 arrest.
Baker said the six witnessed the arrest of James Pruitt,
wi)o is charged with felonious assault for allegedly
By J.R. KIMMINS .
last year to reduce industrial
Involvement In the wounding patrolman Paul Durk"' and
COLUMBUS
(UPI)
.The
curtailinents
.
firing at patrolman Harry WaUet. Pruitt claimed he was
Sp(.cial
Lltigatloo
Section
of
"We
used
some of the
lnlstreated during his arrest.
the Attorney General's Office statements made in the
' WASHINGTON - THE CIVU. AERONAUTICS Board lws today asked the Public PUCO hearing earlier this
pi-opoaed a !Weeping new travel bonanza - a new type of Ulillties Commlssioo to delay week," added Ruzicho. "It
most
of
the
charter fllght with no minimum price and no requirement to any formal decision in seems
charging
residential
natural
did
not
want
commissioners
pay for hotels or meals as part of a tour package. The proposal
Ia based on Advance Booking &lt;llartera that already have gas customers for industrial to charge customers who did
gas purchases.
not use the gas.
proved popular In Europe and Canada.
"We
filed
a
motioo
with
tbe
"We asked that only the
The board said Wednesday it plans a final deciAion
commission
this
morning,"
users
of the emergency gas
sometime afler AprU 5, after a petlod allowed for pilbllc
said
Andrew
Ruzlcho,
chief
of
be
.charged
at a rate, as if all
~nt oo the prOj)Ofled U. S. (ABC) charters. But It said It
the
Attorney
General's
Civil
paying."
customers
were
tentatively plans to put the ABC's Into effect this spring as a
Rights
Section.
Ruzlcho
said
Ruzlcbo
said
his
suggestion
five-year e:~perimenl ending March 31, 1981.
the order was filed on behalf to the PUCO was offered as
WASHlNGTON - SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWS Service of "all Ohio residential an alternative to Tuesday's
said Thursday II has obtaihed the loan portfolio fl. the consumerS and the Attorney conunlsslon decision to allow
all natural gas customers to
leamater's$1.277 biWCil Central States .,_nsion Fwld showing General."
The
attorney
general's
be charged for the $33.7
inGit of the money Invested In rlak;y, low-return loans to
office
Is
seeking
to
block
a
million
in 1975 emergency
pbllng enterprises, resort. lUld land development schemes.
PUCO
decision
earlier
this
industrial
purchases.
'l1le tllllon's Central states Pension Fund II Clll'l'ently under
week,
which
had
not
been
No
formal
order was signed
lnvelllgatlon by the federal government under provisions of
formally
signed
by
a
after
Tuesday's
PUCO
the nw pellllon law, which went Into effect Jan. I, 1875.
majority
of
the
threehearing,
since
commission
'DleCentralStatel (Union) fundhaslnvelted nearly 75 per
g,..t of Ita money In real estate loana. 1bey said the fund has member commission by rnid- attorneys had not drafted a
Cll!ftcentratod ill 101111 among a few favored borrowera llld IIIOI'ninll, which would charge final, legally binding order. A
liecmle a major.bankroUer of casino deals In Las Vegas lUld aU natural gas CWltomers for · fonnal entry was to have
emergency allocations made been prepared and signed by
,'
.
Coallnued 011 (l.lge 1 4)
a
majority
of
the
•

·~

'

. MRS. KAY COX, BUCKEYE Rural Electric 01. olftce
employee, points inside the company vault where thieves
made ·off with approximately $1,500 in cash and an
IDldetermined amount of checks early today.

Three
businesses
hit
Chessie System backs out;
over the questions .of work
rules and the composition of
train crews. The negotiations
earlier were moved from
Chessie headquarters in
Cleveland to Washington
where federal mediators
tried unsuccessfully to patch
up the dispute.
Chessle had until midnight
Wednesday to make a final
commitment to buy the
property.

·Weather
Lows tonight in the upper
30s. Mostly cloudy Friday,
highs in the low to mid 50s.
Probability of precipitation is
10 per cent today and 20 per
cent tonight and Friday.

Rate hike ·delay is sought

I,

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

~

{

commissioners today.
Commissioner David Sweet
scheduled an afternoon news
conference to outline his
objections to residential customers paying for a portion of
the gas.
Adoption of Ruzicho's
alternative would be to
charge in'dustrlal customers
about a third of the actual
cost of the 13 billion cubic feet
fl. the gas - the same rate if
all classes of customers
shared In Its cost.
The remainder of the eost
would be temporarily
absorbed by Ohio's natutal
gas utilities until· a final
deterrninaUon of the merits
of "roll in" pricing to aU
classes of natural gas
customers can be made next
month.
On March 10, the PUCO has
scheduled a second hearing to
work out future pricing
' policies on emergency gas
'allocations, if needed.

Three Gallipolis business
!inns were hit by thieves late
last night or early this
morning according to · the
Gallipolis City Police .
In what looks like a job of
professionals, Buckeye Rural
Electric Co-Op, 143 Third
Ave., Johnson's Markel and
O'Dell Lumber Co., all within
100 yards of each other, wer.
targets of the night intrudersc
Buckeye Rural Electric Co.
office was hit sometime
between 12:30 a . m. and 7 a.

Road rally
announced
by Lions
A road rally in April with
Bruce Teaford in charge ·was
planned Wednesday by the
Pomeroy-Middleport lions
Club following luncheon at
the Meigs Inn.
A road rally is a competitive event in which
drivers - with "pilots" find a series of points through
a succession of riddles, with
the winning driver finding the
most or all of the locations
first. ·
During the
meeting
presided over · by the Rev.
William Mlddleswarth,
president, Larry Brogan and
Lou Osborne were named to
the flag committee for
President's Day. Local
business houses buy the
services from club members
who place and remove the
American Flag from in !ron t
· of business houses on
holidays.
The service Is performed at
least seven Urnes a year . The
club receives a ·fee from the
service and iunds so raised go
into the lions' sight program.
Guests were Frank Harold,
Sr., Route I, Middleport, who
has moved ·to Meigs CoWlly
and formerly belonged to the
East Mountain Club near
Longview, Tex.; the Rev.
Jimm Otterness of Odessa,
Texas, and BiU N• ,1se.

_.

m. according to Manager
Clyde Ramsay .
Thieves pried a side door
q&gt;en n~ar the garage area,
went to one of the company's
!tucks and obtained a night
·light, sledge hammer . and
other tools, moved down the
hallway into a side office and
knocked a huge hole through
a 14~inch concrete wall
surrolUlding the company's
vault.
Once inside the vault,
thieves knocked over filing
cabinets which were located
next to the wall where the
bole was made. After ransacking the vault, thieves
apparenUy made off with
approximately $1 ,500 in cash
and an undetermined amoupt
Of checks. Exact amount will
be detemiined later.
Several desks throughout
the office were also broken
into by the intruders.
Ramsay said the incident
had to take place between
12 :30 a.m. and 7 a. m. today.
Junior Estep was on ·duty
until 12:30 a. m. Workers
report for duty at 1 a. m.
One
Buckeye
Rural
Electric Co. official said a
neighbor reported hearing
dogs barking between 4 and 5
a . .m. this morning . Otherwise ' the breaking and entering remain s a big
mystery.
Those involved apparently
knew the inside office well,
according to Ramsay. One
employe thought it must have
taken at least two or more
hours to drill the hold through
the vault wall.
Office employees were on
duty as usual this morning,
but nothing was touched until
agents from the Bureau of
Criminal Identification
arrived to probe the incident
City police were noUfied of
the B&amp;E around 1 this
morning .
Police were also called at 6
a. m. today to investigate
similar breaking and enterlngs at Johnson 's Market
and O'Dell Lumber on Vine
St.
At Johnson's Market, entry
was made through a door on
the east side of the building.
-~
0

•

Officers found apples and
meat thrown around the
floor . The office safe was
pried open and $175 in cash
and an undetermined amount
of Ohio lottery tickets were
taken.
Police discovered a breakin at O'Dell Luinber Company when officer Jack
Owens noticed the facing on a
door was missing. Owens
went to the door, pushed it
and it fell to the floor. The
office was· ransacked and a
safe was pried open. Nothing
was taken from the safe but
$40 was missing froin a desk.
Meanwhile, Gallla County
sheriff's deputies continue
·investigation into a similar
B&amp;E Wednesday at Hannan
TraCe High School at Mercerville.
Taken in that burglary was
$450 in money taken from a
cafeteria drawer and office
safe . Two safes at Hannan
Trace were pried open .
Damage to the building was
set at $1,000 .

R eterendum
.
~

.

in making

.
agamst tax
'

.

'

'

A referendum · petition
against the· proposed additional automobile license
tax of $5 per vehicle in
Middleport is being prepared,
a reliable source reported
lnday.
Council Monday night
approved the·second of three
required readings to the
additional tax for residenlll of
Middleport. A group has
employed an attorney who Is
preparing the referendum
action which apparently will
again take the matter to the
polls. Twice previously,
Middleport voters turned
down the automotive tax at
elections.
Middleport residents interested in the referendum
may contact · Callie Richmond , 992-3873 or Bill Dunfee,
992-3264.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="774">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11174">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="51776">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="51775">
              <text>February 11, 1976</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
