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14 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 18, 1976

\

~----A~ea -D~~th~---- All funds
I
I
standing
LANGSVILLE - Frank
FR~NKFARLEY

ANNA HARRIS

Mrs.
Anna
Florence
Harris, 76 , Rt. 1 Minersville,
died Tuesday in Holzer
Medical Center . Funeral
services will be held at I: 30
p.m . Fr iday at the Foglesong
Funeral Home In Mason with
Bernlin Raymond and Frank
Porter officiating . Burial will
be in the Graham Cemetery .
VIsitation hour s at the
funeral home will be after 2

Farley, 79, a resident of Rt . 1,
Langsville. died In Veterans
Hospital
In
Huntington
around It p.m. Tuesday.

He was born Dec . 20, 18%,
in Salem Twp.. I~ Meigs

County , son of the late Henry
and Nancy Bishc:&gt;p Farley .
He
married
Sophia
Newman
in 1923.
She
preceded him in death .
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrr. . Tom (Ruby) Lambert,

Rt .

1,

Langsville;

p.m. Thursday.

Mrs. Harris was born June
3, 1899, gin New Haven, a
daughter of the late Ernest
and Eva Quillen Roush . Her

five

grandchildren, nine greatgrandch lldren.
two
stepqreat -qrandchildren ; two
brothers, Fern Farley, Canal
Winchester
and
t-erry
Farley, Akron, and two
sis ters. Mae Simmons, Akron
Catherine
Lucky,
and
Parkersburg .
He was a World War I
ve teran .
Funeral services will be
held 2 p.m . Fr iday at the
McCoy -Moore
Funeral
Home . Burial will be in Salem
Cen ter Ceme tery .
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2-A and 7-9
p.m. Thursday .

husband, Orr is E. Harris. of

Minersville survives, as do
two daughters, Mrs. Mason
(VIrqlnla) Fisher , Miner -

sville, and Mrs . Milton
(Sarah l Roush. Syracuse :
two sons, Ernes I E . and Paul
E. Harr is, both Minersvi lle; a

sister, Mrs . . Burrell (Sara)

Dawson . New Haven; one
brother. Lewis Roush of New
H,c;~ven ; 18 gran~chlldren , and
six great-grandchildren .

JESSIE CARTWRIGHT

CLIFTON -

MYRTLE M. LONG

Long, 81, Route J Pomeroy,
died Tuesday nig ht. The
Pomeroy E-R unit answered
a call for Mrs . Long at 9: 04
p.m . and she was transported
Veterans
M emoria l
to
Hospi tal.

She was the daughter of the
late Millard and Mary

Carolyn
Roush
D av i s.
P,recedinq her in death also
was her' husband, William
Long, In 1919 ; three brothers,
a sister, ct'half-brother and a
· ha lf -sister, and one grandchi ld .
, Mrs. Long was a m ember
of the Enterpr ise Un i ted

p.m.

Pleasant; two sons, Ralph
Cartwright. Mason and Glenn
Cartwright, Glen Dell . W.

Daughters of America.
Surviving are two sons,
Murrian, of Parkersburg,
and Lewis. o1 Middleport ;
two daughters, Mrs. James
(Violet) Walker and Miss

Long , both

· held at

2

Va .; 20 grandchil dren and
several great-grandchildren .
Her husband,
Herm an,
preceded her in death, and .a
son, Chester , was killed in

of

p.m. Friday at the

Ewing Funeral Home where
frl'ends may Ca ll any : t ime
after · 7 this evening. Burial
wi ll be in Rock Springs
Ceme ter y.

World War II.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonlte thru Thurs.
FEB. 18-19
NOT OPEN

.

FRAMED
(Technicolor)

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - An
overaU 11.4 per cent improvement was made in the ratio of
staff-to-residents at state De·
partmenl of Mental · Health
and Mental Retardation
hospitals and Institutions in
the past 13 mOnths.
·Department Direcwr Dr.
Timothy B. Moritz -said Tuesday the greatest . gain was
made In the area of
lnstiluwns for the mentally
retarded, where there was a
;14.4 per cent improvement.
There was a 5.4 per cent gain
in staff-to.patlent ratio in
other mental hosptials.
Moritz said a report shows
Institutional staffs for the
mentally retarded have increased by 740 employes
while the nwnber of residents
have dropped by 593. The
~If in hospitals for the
rilentaly iU has decreased by
1,183 during the period but
patient population has
decreased ·by 1,681.
"staffing levels stUI are
seriously subiltandard," said
Moritz. 'Ho~ever, we intend
to continue lo maintain
steady progress In the next 17
months by developing new
funding soUrces and pressing
·ror better management to

reduce nonessential costs,"

at 7:00p.m .

MAsON, W.Va. - Fees for
building permits in this town
went up today when a new

Active and inactive fw1ds of

ordinance wa~ passed by
town council Tuesday night.

the village of Pomeroy at the
end of January totaled
$164,555.77 according to Jane
Wallon, clerk.
Receipts, expenditures and
balance in the aclive funds

The increases, ranging

-

respectively were , general

I

$8,066.27. $8,230.54, $8,604.47 ;

water wen

improvement, no

receipts, $4,669.96; revenue
shari ng, $3,994 , $1 ,714.04,
$13,512.64; sewer, $4,856.91,
$4,971 .70, $9,863.65; fire, $400,
$1,499 . 18 , $1,217.95 ;
cemet;,ry, no receipts, $99.36,
( $3,481.34); street, $1,049.49,
$1,640.02, $734 .87; state high.
way, $85.09 no expenditures.

$5,451.35; water operating,
$12,048, $7 ,765.72, $16,713.11 ;
guaranty met;,r, $75, $100,
$5,291.72; parking meter,
$1 ,852.50, no expenditures,
$10,040.60;
utility, no
receipts, $1 ,344.40, $9,051.87;
fire house improvement, no

receipts, no expenditures,

from low figures for small
projects to higher figures for
more extensive construction
jobs, are posted al town hall
01' may be obtained by calling
town hall.
While this ordinance

CPL. JAMES YOUNG
&lt;;orporal James .R.
Young, Fort Hood, Tex.,

NBC hit

son of Mr. and Mrs. fames
H. Young of Apple Grove,

husband of the former
Barbara Ann Demosky of

with suit

Middleport,

graduated
primary no&amp;

from the
co mmi ssio ned

UNCOLN, Neb. (UP! ) The Nebraska Educational
Television Commission has
flied suit against the NaUonal
Broadcasting Co. w seek a
permanent injunction against
NBC's use of the "N" logo.
The commission, which
operates the Nebraska
Educational Television
network, also requested a
preliminary injunction
Tuesday. U.s : District Judge
Warren K. Urbom set a
hearing on the preliminary
. Injunction request for March
26.
The lawsuit charges NBC
with trademark Infringement
and unfair competition,
violation of the Lanham
Trademark Act and vlolatlotl
of Nebraska trademark

officer

course of combat arms at
North Fort Hood on Feb. 6

as one of the high e~t In the
class of 74. He will receive
a rank of sergea nt and be
leavin g in March for
Germany where ~e will be

for six months.

$1,877.40. Receipts, expenditures and balance in all

Veleraaa MemoNI H01pltal
ADMITTED - Frances
Hawthorn, PorUand; Je!isle
White , Pomeroy; Wanda
Adams, Pomeroy; Ralph
Parcell, Pomeroy; Edith
wOOuon~,
•-~ Porneroy; Pa'-·
_,
Laudermilt, Racine; Gerald
Drenner, Middleport; Drlssle
Imboden Pomeroy· Harold!
Jeffers 'Pomeroy '
· DISCHARGED - Lena
Hellman, Henry Roney, &amp; .,
Doris Hayman Thomas
Spencer, Charle; Richards,
Erma Rond.

became law another had Its
first reading. It bans steel
animal tr~ps on dry land
inside the corporation limits.
In other action, councU
hired George Hendricks of
the Maintenance Analysis
Operations Services to test
local sewers three limes
monthly to comply with
statutes set down by EPA at a
cost of $50 per month.
Council discussed bids
PLEASANT VALLEY
from Mason County Motors
DISCHARGED - Mrs .
and MOIDltain State Chrysler Gerald Derenberger, Mazie
Plymoalll Co. for a new pollee Durst, Point Pleasant; Hazel
cruiser, and lfanted a trailer Johnson , Point Pleasant ;
permit w Gary Canterbury. Timothy Richard, West
Present were Mayor Fred Columbia; Gerald Campbell,
Taylor, recorder Carl Olne Gallipolis; Mrs. Loyd 'Jbornand council members ton, Letart ; Mrs . James
Charlotte Jenks, Lawrence Davis, Southside ; Tim Crites,
Roush, Edward Perry, and West Cohunbla; Mrs. Ken·
Bernard White.
neth Deweese, Leon; Mrs.
Charles Buck, Robertoburg ;
_Bessie Wheeler, Cottageville ;
OSUFULL
COLUMBUS UPI EstabUsblq lbe earliest
cutafl date iD Ita hlltory,
Ohio Stale Ualvenlly late
Three
requests
for
Tuesday quit .taklllg apdissolution of marriage have
pllcatloas for Its faD 19'16
been filed in Meigs County
freshmen claa for Ita maiD
Common Pleas Court as have
~ampus bere.
a sui I for divorce and another
More than 10,600 apfor support. One divorce was
pllcatloas were received
lor the 7,000 freshman
vacancies iD the laD, accordiag to Adl!lissloas
Director Jewell Vroonland.

Dallas Rou.b, CliiiiJII; Mrs.
Charles Frazier, Bldweii;Mrs . John Cook, HendenCIII;
Mrs. Andrew Lemley,
Middleport; Mrs . Robert
HummeD, Middleport; Mrs.
Robert Wilcox. Chillicothe; .
Carl Jeffers, Buffalo; Nancy&lt;
Bland, Letart; Mrs. Brady,
Knotts, son, Pomeroy, and
Mrs. Jim Fink, Rio Grande.

be said."

"In addition

w

galnlnR

*

Elberfelds In ·Pome

1~7!

THURS.. NIGHT
.

SPECIAL
~.S. D.A. CHOIC~"

·

lb ,

Round Steak .....•.. :....1
• . 5tea'k ••••••••••••
lb. '1 69
5·•1rI01n
49

Reg. 11.50 7«. Net Wt.

00

a box

Ground Chuck •••.• ~•• 99~
plus taJC

The Tri-Caunty•s Most
ExciHrig Night Spof

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

7-UP
16
bottles

~

FRIDAY
ONLY

OL

89C

Main Store, Annex and Warehou..
Open Thunday 9t30 to 5 PM

PEPSI and R.C.
IVIRYDAY
LOW

CAtmES

In Pome

be

8-16 oz. bottles

•
l

held
natural gas

~~ · Mobil ·

. •
~·

Transfers

/tu;
BEN

{

Fifteen Cents
Vol . 27, No. 217

Property

----i.iiiiliiOiiiioiiiiii___.

*2.95

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, Feb. 19. 1976

Reagan

4

Visit Our Salad Bar
Ham
Sweet Potatoes
. Vegetable
Rolls &amp; Drink

'

Four marriages soured

granted.
Filing for dissolution were
$3 2,427 .26, $27,365.05 ,
Phillip W. Houck, Mid·
$83,998.25.
dleport, and Christine M.
Receipts, expenditures and
Houck, Rt. 1, Miners~ille;
balance in the inactive fund
Nancy v. CorneD, Rt. 1 Portrespectively were, bond
land, and Jack Lee Cornell,
retirement, no receipts, no
&amp;., Portland, and Carla J :
expenditur es, $18,848 .26;
Wiles, Minersville, ·and John
-sanitary sewer construction,
H. Wiles, Minersville.
no receipts, no expenditures ,
Filing for support under the
Continued from page 2
$56,175; sewer bond repair
Reciprocal Agreement Act
··:- ..__
--statutes.
would no longer have was Betty J. Hubbard,
and improvemen t , $650, no
........ -.. . . ~.. ........ -."':- ~W "' TI1e suit requested NBC w
lo
dlopense Reedsville, from Willie
authority
expenditures, $5,534.26.
matching federal funds w Alber! Hubbard , Hartford
Receipts, expenditures and '' I find taking up a musical " cease and desist all use " of
money-hungry contenders. City, Ind.
balance in a ll fun ds in st rument \'ery rewardi ng the "N" logo, "delivering up
In othj!r' developments :
respectively were , $33,077.26, c ultu rally, and il also gives me and destroying or, where
Paul H. Ours, Rl. I Port.
tile opportunit y to make a lo l of appropriate, removing (the
Reagan let the deadline land, asks divorce from Mary
$27,365.05, $164,555.77.
Alfred
M.
Conard,
Sally
noi se...
logo) from all signs, prints,
Ann Conard wCharles Stalls, go by to register In Ours, Gallipolis, charging
equipment, tape, film, sta· Terry Lynne Stalls, 3.3 acres, Pennyslvanla's April 2'1 GOP gross neglect of duty and
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) tionary, packages, plates, Bedford.
trlmary, leaving Ford with · extreme c ruelly. . The
·
Outfie ld er Jot)n Briggs molds, matrices or other
110
opposition there.
marriage of George W.
George Caldwell, Hazel
Tuesday was given his items where the mark has Caldwell to . Mudshark
- AU five Democrats In the Cundiff and Viola Cundiff was
unconditional release by the,. been used ... ''
Productions, Inc. 30 A, New Hampshire race are dissolved.
Minnesota Twins at his own
The suit also sought altor- Coumbla. ·
battling to make a dent In
requesl in order lhat he might ney's fees and ''all other
that
state's huge undecided
Mudshark Productions Inc.
sign a contract to play necessary and
proper W Kenneth M. Haller 30 A., vole there, estimated at
base~all in Japan with the
relief."
,
between 40 and 60 per cent Conference is
Columbia.
'
Lotte Orions.
The networks have been
Mudshark Productions Inc. with only a week w go.
more money through efforts
Briggs, 32, came to the using logos Identical in shape
- Sen. Henry Jackson, In held by ASCS
to get more of our facilities Tw ins last June from but different in color. NETV's lo Kenneth )VI. Haller, Par- Florida, flied Income tax
certified for federal aid and Milwaukee in a trade for ."N" is usually red. NBC's Is cels, Columbia.
returns with the secretary of
Donald Mora of the Meigs
health Insurance funds, we outfielder Bob Darwin. He red and blue and replaced Its · Anderson Wooten, Minnie stale for five of the past six Coun ly ASC Committee met
will shift our resources to played 12 years in the major previous
symbol,
the R. Woolen to Dean R. years.
with Ohio farm program
Woot;,n,, Wendelyn S. Wooten
bring the maximum benefit leagues with a career balling peacock.
Leaders
of
nine
activist
officials
from the U.S.
lo our patients and residents. average of .253 . Last year
The Nebraska commission 1.425 Acres, Salem.
women's
groups
In
MassaDepartment
of Agriculture's
Kearney Wickline, Elva
" We will work toward with the Brewers and Twins contends it adopted the
Agri
cultural
chusetts
endorsed
Sen.
Birch
Slabilizatlon
to . James D. Bayh because he "lakes
and
Conservation Service
red~clng the .length! of the Phe~;;;,-.;,·2;,;4.;,6·-----. stylized "N'' May 8, 1975, and Wickline
patient's stay m our acilities
has used it since June 8, 1975. Wickline Parcels, Sutwn .
wpmen seriously.''
(ASCS) at Columbus recently
Dell W. Will, Chester Will
by making every effort to
•L _ A
The logo was registered with
w
appraise the present and
improve the ·quality of
J"r~ the secretary of slate's office lo Gary L. ~hoiderer, Connie
future
farm situation in Ohio
K. Scholderer, 84 sq. rods,
INCOME UP
treatment. t.ntimately, this
Cl
(/
on Jan. 30, the suit said.
and
the
nation.
.
WASHINGTON UPI
will enable us to cut hack on
The suit alleged that NBC Salisbury.
Principal
speak~i' was
William J . Halley, Deborah Personal
income
of Kenneth Frick, a former
the number of operating FRANKLIN has, sinceJan. I,Uiedalogo
wards and bring the overall
"which is ldentrcal to or so Sue Halley w Ruth Ann Americans Increased 1 per California fanner who has
cent in ~anuary w reflect been . ASCS's Wp man in
cost of state hospitals down. "
nearly similar to the Carsey, Parcels, Scipio.
Albert
Goegleln,
Susan
widespread job gains by Washlngwn, D. C. since 1969.
~
Nebraska logo as w create a
Goegieln
to
William
J.
Roush,
workers,
the Commerce Frick challenged Ohio's
likelihood of confusion wtbe
Karen
Sue
Roush
1.02
A.,
Department
said Wday.
public and w dilute the value
coun Iy committeemen lo
Chesler.
and distinctness of the
make Ohio's land better for ·
·Fred Russell, Lorna
HilA) TEMPS
Nebraska mark.
future genera lions of farmers
NEW YORK UP! - The by wisely administering
VALPARAISO, Ind. ( UPI )
NBC contends the two sym- RusileU, Austin F. Russell,
- Mrs. Shirley Finley,
bols will nol be confused. Ruby Russell w Keith M. Wghesl temperature reported . A~CS's Agricultural Conestranged wife of Oakland
The lawsuit was filed Woods, Gertrude Woods, Tuesday to the National • servation ·. Program . ComWeather Service, excluding mitteemen are aU farmers
A's owner Charles 0 . Finley,
Tuesday by Harold Mosher, Parcels, Salisbury.
Oarence
N.
Rupp,
Veva
R.
Alaska ·and Hawaii, was .92 elected by fellow farmers to
has accused him of failing to ·
Nebraska assistant attorney
Rupp
to
Keith
M.
Woods,
degrees
al McAllen, Tex. supervise ASCS programs
file federal income tax
general. Nile has 20 days to
Gertrude
Woods,
Parcels,
Today's
low
was 13 degrees within a coun ly.
returns for the company
file an answer with the
Salisbury.
below
zero
at
Houl!Gn,
Maine, ·
owning his sports franchises.
atwrney general's office.
· In a petition filed in Porter
·
Superior Courl, Mrs. Finley
•·~•m enlargecl hi'&gt;
vocabulary by reasked that Finley be ordered
w appear in court w a nswer
writing Storie"!&gt;
LOCAL TEMPS
from t1ie "English
Temperature in downtown
charges he has "failed on
behalf of Charles 0 . Finley
Spectator" in verse. I PomE"OY Wednesday at II
and Co. Inc. to file with the
a.m. was 53 degrees under
8e.n said:
cloudy skies.
.
Internal Revenue Service any
6etter
corporate income W&lt; returns
for periods ending after Oct.
sl,ip
31, 1971."
Wlfh
A spokesman for Mrs ,
foO't
TO SERVE BEANS
Finley said the action was
1tl81'l
The Iiemolay will sponsor a
. taken after Finley failed to
1'0nc::tue·
bean ·dinner Saturday Jro111 4
to 7 p.m. in the Middlepo
. 'rl
. 1·es
respond to Other inqwr
BEH FRANKLIN SfOI'IlS
concerning his assets.
Masonic Hall basement.
active funds respectively are

rLocal
-Merchants
- -Celebrate
-- - Birthday
- -With
k
s
Washington's
Special
Salesl
•
•
at
enttne

Holzer Medl&lt;al Ce1ter
(Discharges, Feb.l7)
Jewel Brumfield, Mrs.
·Eugene
Cantrell
and
daughter, Ruthie aevinger,
Mary Collins, Henry Cook,
Anita Cordell, George Ger·
man, Waller mvely, Ruth
Hyatt, Roy Johnson, Clayton
Lambert, Nora Utllejohn,
Sandra McCoy , Rose Me·
Dade, Joyce Miller, Audrey
Patterson, Lana Rayburn,
Mrs. William Skaggs and son,
Mildred Taylor, Anthony
Wallace, Mrs; Stephen
Walwn and son.

.

1

Fri. thru Sun .

Show starts

·

at $164,556

HOSPITAL NEWS

Note improvement
past
13 mortths
'

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
MASON- David Williams,
30, of Mason was rushed to ·
Pleasant Valley Hospital at
1: 11 p.m. Tuesday by the
Mason Rescue Squad. At I :13
a.m. this morning the squad
look Carol Carson, 20, also of
Mason, to Holzer Medical
Center. ·
ASKS ABOUT BRIBES
MADRID, Spain UPI The Spanish government has
formally asked the United
States w give it all available
information on alleged bribes
paid by the Lockheed company to Spanish officials, the
new agency Europa Press
.said today.

. .

She Is surv ived by three
daughters , Mrs . ' Eve lyn
Nicholson , Clifton ; Mrs.
Marc el la
Chapman.
Pomeroy ,
and
Mrs.
Marguerite Dar st, Po i nt

Methodist Church and the

Pomeroy ; a sister, Mrs .
Eddie Brown of Pomeroy ; a
brother, Ira Davis of Springfield ; eigh t grandchildren, 15
great-grandchildren, and one
great -great -gra{ldchi ld .
Funeral setvices will be

Jessie Cart-

wright, 84, Clifton , died
Tuesday In Hol·zer Medical
Center. She was born Oct. 5,
111'11. in West Columbia, a
daughter of the late John and
Ntary Edwards VanMeter .
Funeral services will be
conducted Frida y at 11 a.m.
from the Foglesong Funeral
Home in M ason with the Rev.
0 . B. Hatcher and the Rev.
Ira Wellman ·officiat i ng .
Burial will follow i n the
Sun cre st Memorial Park .
Friends will be received at
the fune ral home Thursday
from 2. to 4 p.m . and 7 to 9

Mrs. Myrtle Margaret

Dorothy

Building pennit
•
•
IS costmg more

)'

JARED SHEETS, left and his brother, Aaron, helped
their ,parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Sheets in planting
dogwood trees at the Washington Monument, a project of
the Middleport Amateur Gardeners.

Dogwood trees planted
LONG BOTIOM - Two Jeanetle Thomas.
dogwood lrees plant;,d on . In May a work day wiU be
President's Day at lh e scheduled by the committee
Washington Monument sit;, with planti ngs of red and
here were · part of the con· white
gerani um s
a nd
tlnuing beautification project petunias lo be made then.
there by th e Middleport Flowers
plant;,d at the
Amateur Ga.rdeners.
site last
mer.
Mr. and Mrs. James Sheets
The mo ument locat;,d on a
and their two sons, Jared and plot of land which overlooks
Aaron , planted the trees , the Ohio River marks the
' trs. Sheets is a. member of location where George
.he beautification commitiee Washington and his company
for the garden club with her camped on Ocl. 28 while
II)O lher, Mrs. Elizabeth exploring the Ohio Country in ·
Lohse, chairperson ·and Mrs. 1770.

tie

WASHINGTON (UPI) Mobil Oil Corp. has purposely
held natural gas off the·
market and will he partly w
blame If schools and factories
have to close In New Jersey
and
Ohio, a
House
subcommittee report said
Wednesday.
A Mobil spokesman blamed
the situation on tbe Federal
Power Commission, which he
safd refused the company's
contract
demands for
conditions which have been
applied in similar cases .
'Jbe House Subconunittee
on
Oversight
and
Investigations released a
report on Mobil's operations
In Grand Isle 95, a large gas
field in the Gull of Mexico off
Louisiana.
The report said Mobil
Insisted on certain conditions
for a certificate from the
power commission before
putting the fuel on the
market.
"Mobil 's actions in refusing
to accept either a temporary
or permanent certificate
· from ihe FPC ... were
unreasonable and directly
contrary both io federal
policy on Outer Continental
Shell gas and w the public
interest," the report said.
"Mobil's actions constitute
Intentional withholding of gas
supplies from the interstate
market ... H fac!Gry and

Hearing
set for

f]V;,;;:,:,.,.,.,.:.,.,.,.:,·i'~!, , .Ji;i;t;\\- ~~N~!!
~;

By United Press International
:&lt;
LOS ANGELES - THE PRESIDENT OF PHILLIPS
Petroleum Corp. personally handed a $50,000 illegal corporate
'poiltical contribution w Richard Nixon in Nixon 's New York
City apartment in 1968, according to statement filed by the oil
company in federal court. There was nothing In the document .
windicate that Nixon knew the money was an !Uegal corporate
donation, Instead of a legitimate personal contribution .
The Incident was recounted In a document filed In U. S.
District Court settling a suit against ttte firm over such !Uegal
po,lltical conlrlbulions. The statement said that board
chairman K. S.,Adams wid W. W. Keeler, then president of
Phillips, to give the; money to Nixon. Keeler "contributed
money on Adams' instructions, this time in the amount of
$50,000 to the Nixon campaign. Keeler got this money from
dlrecwr John M. Houchin and delivered It personally to Nixon
at his New York City apartment."
,
NEW YORK - GUS HALL HAS ACCEPI'ED the
tresidentlal nomination of the American Communist Party but
expects w get on the ballot In only about 30 states .. Hall, 65,
•ccepted the nomination· Wednesday as he stood before a ·
. ~o'!~~/~o::O~t:n:h~~~v'::':;a~~~~.\ the biggest

_Ieong .

Clarence E. Miller's office
sa id today a public hearing
will be held in Gallipolts Ap·
ril 7 to hear statements of
impact regarding proposed
abandonment of the 83 miles
of Chesapeake and Ohio
railroad track from Logan to
Pomeroy via Gallipolis.
Cong. Miller urged every
person wishing to .express an
opinion to heal the hearing.
He advised them to come the
first of the three sessions on
successive days conducted by
an officer of the tnt;,rstate
Commerce Commission . No
pre-notice of intent to testify
is needed.
Sessions will begin at 9:30
a. m. in quarters yet to be
announced.

school closings occur In New
Jersey and Ohio this winter,
they are at le!ISI partly
attributable to Mobil's
refusal to accept a certificate
and bring gas on line this
winter pending a bearing."
Fred Halpern, a Mobil
spokesman In New York, Wid
UPI the delay came . about
because Mobil beld out for
conditions. the • power
commission has granted In
other fields, and which are
Identical w those on which
the company was granted a
certificate in another case.
He said Mobil would not
accept
a
temporary
certific.ate because
" whenever you

have

a

temporary certificate, that's
it. It's set in concrete."
Halpern said the biggest
issue was thai Molil wanted a
IO.year sales contract while
the FPC insisted first on a
longer one and then
''reversed itself ... Wo late,"
he said.
. But-' subco111mittee
chainnan John E. Moss, DCallf.; said, '"'be short-term
contract demanded by Mobil
was unreasonable because
there are at least 20 years of
reserves In Grand Isle 95."
Reps. James Collins, R·
Tex. and Robert Krueger, DTex., sided with Mobil in a
dissenting report, saying the
company got the field ready
for production ahead of other
tracts In the same lease sale,
and that ''the subcommittee
... could hardly have picked a
poorer choice to demonstrate
withholding ...

MEIGS GYMNASTICS TEAM, front, 1-r, Vicki
Pickens, Sandi Hamilton, Mary Blaettnar, Becky Thomas
and Cindy McKinney; back row, lilri Wyne, Tonya Wise,
Jackie Brown, Sally Walters, Jonl Murray, and Coach
Kenda Chaney, Absent was Pam Brauer. In a match this
week these girls defeated Belpre girls 61.7 points to 55.05
points.
The events: Floor, Becky Thomas, Meigs; Parsons,
.- Belpre, Dukus, Belpre; Beam,
Becky
Thomas,
Wyatt,
-.

Teachers
answer
survey

.

Belpre, Carpenter, Belpre; Bars, Mary Blaettnar, Meigs;
Chris Hyland, Belpre, Darlene Parson, Belpre ; Vault,
Parsons, Belpre; Mary Blaettnar, Melg.s; Smith, Belpre.
Others contributing points for Meigs were Sa~di
Hamilton, Jackie B1·own, Cindy McKinney, Tonya Wtse,
Lori Wyne, Joni Murray, Vlclti Pickens, Sally Waters.
Meigs ends its season Saturday at the District meet in
Athens at 9 a .m. Picture by Jim Hamm.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
·satur.day . through ·
Monday, ·chance of rain

Saturday,

chaace

of

showers or s_now flurries

Sunday and fair Monday.
Highs wUI be In lbe 40s to
the low 50s Saturday and iD
the upper 30s to the mid 40s
Sunday and Moaday. lilws
mostly will be In the 20s.

Meigs C ounly Education
Association, at the request of
Judge Manning Webst;,r, has 1 .,,,,,:,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
completed a · survey in ail ·
county schools of t;,acher
disdpllne and attitudes
lowil.l:d juvenile. delinquency.
No charges in
Tbe slirvey asked teachers
what methods of corredi~n
Plaza cpllision .
they had used m class w1thm
Mrs. Bessie Darst of
No chirges were filed as a the last two years, and how Middleport can win $1,000 a
result of a collision at 6:50 p. . teachers though schools can month for life in the Ohio
·
m. Wednesday on Rt. 7 at the :nost effective~y combat Lott;,ry.
entrance to the Silver Bridge JUvenile dehnquenc~ .
She had winning number
Teachers were also asked If in the Feb. 12 drawing and
Shopping Plaza .
The Gallia-Meigs Post they though schools can ha.ve she will be among five perState Highway Patrol said an an . effect . on. juvemle sons whose numbers will be
aulo driven by Amedee L. delinquency m Metgs County. in a drawing on Feb. 26 at
Lefebre, 45, Pomeroy, alAn extremely large per· (;leveland. AI worst, she will
t;,mpted w psss on the right centage of teachers believe win $1,000 . Prizes in addition
as a car operated by Donna that they can . Teachers feel to the $l,OOO 8 month for life,
R. Flint, 16, Rl, I, Gallipolis, that very
slro~g . ad- range down from $4,000.
turned right inw the Sohio minlstratlve backmg and
Mrs. Darst purchased her
-'Service Station. There was parental support as well as ticket at the Galeway Markel
teacher involvement are where she is employed and
minor damage.
needed for . a · three-pronged did not bOther io check the
attack agatnst delinquency , ticket until Friday, Feb. 13,
Acopyofthesurveyremdts the day after the drawing.
MAKES RUN
may
be obtatned by cailmg
The Middleport E·R unit
made a run to 383 Ash Sl. at 667-3503 or writing MCEA,
LOCAL TEMPS
9:18 a. m. Thursday for Route I, Box L69A, ReedTemperature in downtown
Wayne Harrison who was ill. sville, Ohio 45772, according Pomeroy Thursday at 11 a.m.
He was taken to Veterans to Mrs. R. M. Jonas , was 55 degrees under sunny
president, MCEA.
Memorial Hospl tal.
skies.

M rs. D arst
b lg
• wmner
•
a

MARY BLAETI'NAR COMPETES on the parallel
bars·on which she W.k a first against Belpre this week.

One mine back

Coal Miners at ~eigs Mine
No. 3 of the Southern Ohio
Coal Co. returned to lheir
jobs on the 8 a.m. shift Wday
ending a three day ·walk out.
However, a spokesman at
the mine said that some 900
workers al Meigs Mines No. I
and No·. 2are still out because
miners will not cross picket
lines sel up by employes of
:;i''::::::::::·:::::·:·:·:•:•::::;::::·:·:·:·:·:-::: ·:::::::: :::::;:::::·:::·:::/,:·:::::::•::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::•:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::•:::::::•:::•:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::: the Peabody Coal Co. at New
Lexington . The spokesman
He said he hoped to get his n8I)Ie on baUots In 25 w30 states ;.;.
said that apparently the
pickets have be"n temove..ct_

~~i~!;:r~!~r:~~F£~~~~~:
because "In many cases the votes are not counted."

SMITHFIELD, R.I. - EDDIE DOWLING, 86, one of tbe
nallon'sleadlng entertainment producers and directors, In the
193Ce and '4&lt;19, died Wednesday. Dowling, who began his career
flinlllng for loose change in barrooms, was credited with
having "discovered" singer Kate Smith and Shakespearean
acwr Maurice EVans.
.
He gave playwrights Tenenssee Wllllams and Wllllam
Saroyan their first big boosts In the theater when he pioneered
troductlon of serious drama In the United Stat~s in the 193Cb
and 194011. He won three New York Drama Critics Awards and
a 1940 Pulitzer Prize for Saroyan's "The Time of Your Ufe''
which he produced and acted ln.
Dowling, a jaunty , little song-and-danee man, appeared In
Ziegfeld Follies productions of 1918, 1919 and 1920.
WASIDNGTON - SEEKING TO HALT leaks of
govenunenl secrets, President Ford has ordered federal
workers and government contractors with access to claaslfled
material w sigll an agreement barring unauthorized
1
•
;disclosures.
'
Ford took the action Wednesday under executive orders
and also uked Congress to legislate malllmiUil penalties of a
f6 000 fine and five years' imprisonment for govermnent
pa~sonnel revealing lnteUigence secrets or methods.
Neither the executive acLion nor the proposed bill would
apply to..members of Congress or their staffs, who may leak
eecrets to reporters who publish lhe :Information.
Congressional leaders supported Ford's call to punish leakers
but agreed his executive action or proposed legislation could
110t affect Capitol Hill. Sen . Jacob Javlta, R·N.Y., said only
CQIIgresslonat ·ethics rules on secrecy- not criminal laws can restrain members from making statements harmful wtbe
Mlional security.
WASHINGTON - TWENTY-THREE CORPORATIONS
and 5() of their present and former executives have been
indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of conspiring to fix
• Jl'lces on folding cardboard cartons.
"
'Jbe indictment named as defendants the three top
Continued on page 9

Th . . h

..t

t

0

J~oa~~e ~::oy ~stde~~~~·To~ Shore~wo

Today 1s Iwo
that
recalls as If yesterday. He observed the famous "raising of Old
Glory" on tbe Island. His 1101es, taken largely from his diary of
tho8e bloody four days foUow (be prefers anonynlmity):

!!·

I

IWOJIMANOTES ·
Our crew boarded ship L.C.S.L-3-53 Sept. 30, 1944 at
Portland, Oregon; went down Columbia River to San Diego,
Calif., where we spent about a month in preparation for
overileas duty. We left San Diego bound for Pearl Harbor. I can
say the buddies who had gone ahead of us had a rougber lime
than we did. By tbe lime we were sa~ the Jap Navy was
somewhat diminished. Had no encounter with any Jap subs or
Jap ships on our way wPearl. However, on our way over In the
convoy one of our shlpa rammed us at 5 minutes after
midnight, making a hole in our ship just above the waterline.
The sailor's bunk where II had hit was not occupied 88 he had
jlist left to go on watch duty. We repaired the hole and
continued on to Pearl Harbor where we had a new piece of steel
welded in.
We spent Christmas Day In Pearl Harbor, then several
weeks dry docking, cruising around, and further preparation.
Then Informed our destination was lwo Jlma. We were w hit
two at dawn Feb. 19. I was on watch after midnight and we
were aU wanUng w know what Iwo looked like. Each of ua
realized we could be a casualty at the lnvallon so my buddies
and I each wrote letters to our l'(lves and the survivors were to
see that the widows would receive the last letter from ber
husband.
I must have had a dozen letters my shipmates gave me to
mail w their wives or sweethearts If they didn 'I ni&amp;ke It
through. In such a situation, we prayed and I read an old
Outdoor Ufe, about a coon hunt In Kentucky. Finally MI.
Surbachi came lnw V\ew. The Island 18 2.,., miles wide and 5
miles long. The Island being so narrow we were careful firing
the big guns, when the ship rolled the ammo would go over the
island and may hit our own ships on the other side. We lost the
Bismark Sea ship by enemy fire , In the four days securing the
Island, I believe I saw the lone Jap priBoner taken. I saw Old
Glory raised atop Mt. Surbachi which was attempted 3 limes
before it was allowed lo remain.
'Jbe casualties were heavy, but the crew and L.C.S.-53
were still sale. We had put flack .burn ointment on our skin in
case of hnrtis of any kind , but no casualties. I have •een the
i1

.

Jima

: ;:

Jlma" and saw. our sWp quJ
plainly; the film taken from the acutal invaSion.
I do know a fr1end of mine from ~omeroy (now deceased
slncelhewar) was a Corpsman onlhe 1sland and he really had
It rough In helping the wounded and dyalng when we started w
shell the island. Within 5minutes It was covered with smoke. It
was estimated we shot up '120,000 worth of ammo. The mine
sweepers went In to 600 yards of the beach, but we had wgo in
·w 300 yards. We made a port turn, fired the rockets and big
guns, then retreated out w safer waters. I have read that aU
the guys who participated In raising the flag on Iwo that day
have since expired.
.
We left Iwo, our destination Okinawa, where we
part!cipated in a mock invasion of which we never drew a shot
from the island.
In a short time I was returning home on Ute Vella Gulf, as
1 was ellglllie for discharge by tbe point system. During this
time peace was declared. Our L.C.S. 53 was ordered w Japan
proper. Some of my shipmates wanted me to stay aboard and
go on wJapan, but I wid them I'd seen enough and was going
home. Since then I have thought II may have been interesting
to see Tokyo while we were so close.
·
One crewman had a small wound which was a piece of
shrapnel above his eye but not Serious. Ihave a diary which I
kept of our many narrow eSCIIpeS from Jap suicide planes and
shipa, but it would take another chapter for that. .
Why I have written this I don't know bill having more lime
110w, I've been thinking on this, Feb. 19, being Iwo Jima
Invasion day, 31 years ago.
Otber wars have come since then (Korea and Vietnam). I
think a veteran of any war, after seeing action could write a
book about their experience but would rather forget than
remember . . J saw country I would never have seen, but I
wouldn't wlint wface II again. A lot of water has gone over the
dam since then. I believe wars are unnecessary. We do need w
have men In all ranks of government in all countries. There are
other ways w settle conflicts a11d problems. People in this
country must adopt the idea wlive and lei live. There is room
for everyone if we will so feel it.
.
I hope and pray what millions of others a nd I have done
has aided in making things better for the United Slates and
generations to come. In the future we must have hope , and
above· all faith in God.
That's how it was at I wo.

from mine No. 3 where

workers star ted this morn-

ing.
Unofficially, it has been
indicated the Peabody strike,
going now into its foUrlh
week ,' originated in a
disagreement over an arbitration finding in the

matter of employing a
mec hanic trainee. -There
were reports the Peabody
pickets intend "to shut down
the en lire district, at least for
a week .'

Increase upheld
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - A 9
lo 25 per cent Columbus-area
rate increase for the
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Elecl~ic Co. was upheld
Wednesday by the Ohio
Supreme Court.
The emergency rate hike,
approved by the Public
Utilities Commission of OWo
last March, pending the
outcome of proceedings on
the utility's request for a
permanent rate . increase,
hiked city customers' bills by
9 per cent and suburban cuswmers' bills by 25 per cent,
The Coalition of Concerned
Utility Users of Central Ohio
had appealed the emergency
rate hike to the high court,
contending the commission
exceeded its jurisdiction.

ROOM DAMAGED
Heavy
damage
was
rep or led to one room of the
firsl fl oor apartment of
James Williams at 237
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, as
the result of a fire at 3:24 a.

m. Pomeroy firemen were on
the scene . Cause of the blaze
was not de termined and a

monelat·y loss figure lo the
one room l a bedroom) has
nol been set. The property is
owned by Helen Lyons of
Pomeroy.

The coalition also claimed
the PUCO findi ngs were
••deficient''

because

t he

commission did not formally
consider evidence offered by
opponents of the emergency
order .
The PUCO held that the
utility had sufficient evidence
to determine an emergency,
and that failure to grant
temporary rate relief would
re sult in "injury to its
business and the pub lic

interest."
In other Wednesday action,
the state 's high co urt
reversed a PUCO ruling and
held a one way radio paging ,
service is not a telephone
company nor a public utility.
The high court decision was
rendered in a 1972 case
brought by Cincinnati
Radiotelephone Systems ,
Inc., against Radio Relay
Corp ., a Cincinnati paging
~

service.-

The court held that while
the
paging
service
broadcasts a radio signal
from its transmitter to· a
c;ubscr ib er 's
receiver,
alerting the subscriber to
phone in, such a signal is not
a "telephone message" as

defined by state law.
Cincinnati Radiotelephone
Systems had com plained
Radio Relay had no author ity
from the PUCO to operate.
•(.

l

�3- The Daily Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb 19, 1976

•

Oak Hill jumps to eighth zn Class A ratings

2- The DallY Sentmel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday. ~·eb. 1~ . J~7ti

More tax relief coming

'

l

/

\

..

•

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•'-I

\ I
~

\

"'

'"" "

v

t """' '

I

l

...

'
f'•

"

.\

·i l·'
f

••11

I'

- .·-""
I

•

--...

--

1

--

.~I
~

~

/

- ·'

AREA RESIDENTS TAKE PART IN FESTIVAL Three southeastern Ohio residents partiCipated in the
recent Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Fishmg Festival. Left to
rtgbt are Bill R. Hall, Wellston, Jerry J Hall, Oteshire
and Jack Hall. Rutland. Durmg the deep sea fishmg

"

his word,

hut when?
SOUTH POINT, Ohto Paul Collins wrote tn the
Hun tmgton Herald Dispatch
today that John Conley,
newly appomted member of
the South Polnt Board of
Educa !ton
surprised
everybody at last mght's
board meeting by vottng
agatnsl reinstatement of
ftred teachers here.
As a result, two motions on
the reinstatements fatled by
~to-2 votes.
Conley was chosen by the
county board Feb 7 to serve
as the fifth, tie-breaking
member of the South Point
board after the vtllage board
fatled by two-two votes to
name a fifth member wtthm a
time ltmtt.
All candtdates the county
board constdered were asked
if they would supper! the
county board's resoluhon to
remstate and pay ret1rement,
accordtng to Wtllts, who
attended the execultve
sesston dunng whtch candidates were questiOned
"Mr . Conley agreed he
would vote to put all the old
teachers who wtshed to
return back on the jOb m
September, and to have the1r
year's retirement fund costs
paid," Wtllts sa1d. "But he
dtdn't say when he'd do tt"
County Supt Thomas Willis
sa1d after last night's
meetwg he was "dtstressed
and dtsappotnted" in the

I

'

-

He'll keep

--

~1

1

outcome of the voting.

Leshe York, president of
the South Pomt Assoctalton of
Classroom Teachers, satd
last mght "From here on out
tl's stnctly up to the courts "
Wtlhs satd lhe county board
had been assured that tf the
teachers fired ·for sinking
were prom1sed fall remstatement, current htlgahon

would be dropped. "That's
what the county board
wanted," he satd
Before the votmg, Conley
told the board and about 110
persons attendtng the
meehng he wanted to check
with hts attorney on the legal
aspects of voting to remstate
while under federal tn·
junctiOn not to employ or
extend contracts.

' •
- ~·

~

1......- ~-

tournament in Babta Mar Yacht Basin, Bill Hall caught an
88-p01md, 79-lnch silkey shark; Jerry Hall a 52-pound, 88mch smlfish and Jack Hall a 102-pound, 74-inch bull shark.
The trio was aboard the charter boat, "Doctors Orders "
All three anglers received a cttation from fishing festival
offtctals.

Fire insurance
covered $265,500

'

Insurance covered losses
as a result of the recent
Stiffler Department Store ftre
m Pomeroy have been of·
ftctalty set at $265,500,
Pomeroy Ftre Chtef Charles
Legar satd today.
Legar satd the ftgure mcludes the Stiffler store, three
buildmgs owned by Amy
Kingsland Jones and two
owned by Franklin Rizer.
Chtef Legar noted that the
loss figure which ts bemg
'submttted m h1s report to the
state does not tndtcate
replacement value, just the

insurance amounts mvolved

Time

5Z4l.ON6fEI.I.GN AVE ,
~·~100.

00\0

MOONLIGHT PRIN·
CESS - Julie Hutchison,
student at Ohio State
selected by the Phi Sigma
Kappa Fraternity as
"Moonlight Princess,
1976". She represented
Alpha Phi Sorority In the
competition and was
presented a trophy and
bouquet of red r004:s. A
graduate of Meigs High
School, Julie is the
daughter of Milo and Betty
Hutchison, Rutland.

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Ohio's U.S.
Senators,
Democrat John Glenn and
Republican Robert Taft Jr ,
both voted among the
-~....,.-m majority Wednesday, as the
Senate, on a 60-30 vote,
approved a $3 billion foretgn
military aid bill.
The blll includes new
regulations on weapons sales
and provisions to halt
assistance to tyrannical
governments.

DR. LAMB

Heart disease, diet and family
quan !tty of meat, !Ish and
pcultry. You would need to
switch to just low fat mtlk
(two per cent fat and 30 per
cent of' tls calones are fat
w1th half of these of the
saturated fat type) or sltim
mtlk.
Over 70 per cent of the
calories in peanut butter are
fat, 13 per cent of the calones
are saturated fat .
The rules to cootrol fat and
cholesterol mtake can be
individualized If you are
thoroughly tested and the
results are favorable as long
as yoy stay that way. For
more informatioo on dtet
prtnctp!es to prevent heart
and vascular dtsease send 50
~enls for The Health Letter,
Number 1-3, Diet Preventing
i\ lltr.rosclerosis F:ncluse a
!tong.
stamped.
seifaddrc:-;scd envelupc for
rnaihn~. Address your lellet
lu Ill(.' m care ,f tins
nulhJ.tram.s a day and !hut ncwsflUpcr, P 0 H11x 1~1,
""uld mean few tf any egg RadiO City Slaltot•. New
yolks 1! you get your needed V•.-k. NV 10019.
.
I

daily (low fat or whole milk) maJor r1sk factors.
Do you smoke' I presume
In vtew of my we1ght, do
you
don't and that makes you
you thmk I'm gettmg too
three
ltmes better off than
much saturated fat, or do you
those
who
smoke two packs a
have any suggestions about
day.
my dtel' Inctdentally, my
Ftnally, what 1s your own
famtly has a bad genettc
cholesterol
and tnglycertde
htstory of heart trouble
tfats)
level
? If your
DEAR READER - Your.
level
ts low, I
cholestrol
diet ts cerltanly not one I
would
not
fuss
too much
would recommend to most
about
your
diet.
However,
I
people, parhcularly mid·
lhtnk
tl
is
absolutely
die-aged coronary prone
Amertcan males. But not necessary that you ftnd out
everyone has your level of what it 1s in view of your
• actiVIty or has been as suc- statement of a bad family
cessful tn avoiding obeSity. A h1story of heart dtsease
If your cholesterol level is
large number of people wtth
high blood pressure and htgh htgh, then despite your
blood cholesterol and fats exerclse program. )UU should
have them because they are make some ('hauges If you
lltr
recomoverwetght. In others thts ts followed
at least a strong, contnbuttng mendalions of the Inter·
Society f'omH isslon for
factor.
The tmportant po1nt 1s yow· Hearl D1scu~~ Hesources. an
Individual nsk factors What lmporfttnl 11alwnal study
~Juup. \HU ~uuld hnut \Our
IS your blood pressure '' I
preswnc 11 Hi Jew. normal w1th r holcslcrul tnl akc fu 300

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR OR. LAMB - 1 am
53 years old, 6-feet-2, and
weigh 148 pounds. My daily
physical achvtty consists of
joggwg a mimmum of ftve
mtles, averaging eight
rnmutes a mtle, 30 push-ups"
and 30 sit-ups. I've followed
tins program for the past 11
years I used to jOg seven
m1Ies but cut back to ftve due
to the time factor
My resting pulse has gone.
from the high 80s to .. an
average of 48 heats a mmute.
I am wnhng about my dtet ,
wh1ch IS the reason fur the
background tnformalton . I
have one egg, bacon, toast,
coffee, 8 ounces of orange
jwce and 11 ounces of whole
milk for breakfast
For dmner I have meat.
vegetables, dessert of peanut
butter on graham crackers r I
average ealtng a pound of
peanut butter a week). AI
ntght I eat one-half sandw1ch vour "''1ght . 1t•stJug lw.111
plus more milk before ~omg ra!ewul cxt•ruSt lt•\·cl Bl• 1'1d
pressure ts one of the tltree
~ bed. I avcr.(JI.:C uhnul 11111'·
I
and-a-half qtlarts Of nuiK

Snow slows up candidates
By LEWIS LORD
United Press International
Heavy snow Is hampering
the schedules of presidential
primary contenders in New
Hampshire but it isn't hurting
the efforts of Democrats who
want a new energy pclicy.
Meanwhtle, full-page ads m
New Hampshire newspapers
today are urging that
Repubhcan John Connally's
name be written m on the
Democratic ballots next
Tuesday. And President Ford
starts a two-day New
Hampshtre vistt later today
A snowstorm delayed
Democrat Jimmy Carter's
campa1gn stops Wednesday
and forced Sen Btrch Bayh,
another Democratic
contender, to cancel a visit to
a home heated by · solar
energy The Indiana senator
jabbed at the adminis-

By DONALD B. THACKREY

~;::::::::::~~~~~==~~~~~~::;-...:.J OHIOANS VOTE

~""'

high
Currently, aanual updates
of land values are requtred,
and property owners have
complamed inflatton has
driven their appraisals
sharply upward.
House Bill 761 also would
defme the amount recetved
for a piece of property m an
armslength sale the "true
value" of the property,
ehminatmg the possibility
that a county auditor could
change the figure on the tax
duplicate.
The bill also creates a state
Department of Tax Equslization to administer real estate
tax laws, and a state Tax
Court of Appeals to have
excluSive jurisdiction over
real property tax appeals.
Commtttee members
ignored complaints by the
Ohio Chamber of Commerce
and the Ohio Manufacturers
Associahoo that the new tax
court would preclude direct
appeals in tax matters to the
Ohio Supreme Court.

tration'senergy program - a
maJor concern In chilly New
England.
" It is outrageous that the
Energy Research and
Development Administration
is willing to spend only a
measly two per cent of its
budget durmg the commg
year on solar energy
research and development,"
Bayh said.
The Ford admuustrattOJJ
w1U push solar energy, Bayh
satd, "only if the maJor 01!
comparues figure out a way to
collect royalhes on the sun "
Democrat Fred Harris
stood m the falling snow
outstde a pcwer company
office at Manchester and satd
"pohltcal talk, especially
now, ts cheaper than electric
b11ls " Harris challenged
other Democrats' to match
his plan to cut ~lectrtc rates

Patty still has
fears of death
Umverslty, was recenlly

~.i~IRLEY
MNWA~BOM

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Legislatioo aimed at further
blunting the future unpact of
mflahon on real estate
taxpayers is on tis way to a
House Door vote, perhaps
next week
The measure, a compamon
to a property tax relief bdl
passed by the House and sent
to the Senate last week, was
given unanimous approval by
tlle House Ways and Means
Conmuttee Wednesday.
House l?peaker Vernal d.
Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, said
11 would probably reach the
floor next week or the
following week.
The proposal, House Bill
761, permits the lowest
poSSible mflationary factor to
he used in calculating land
values for the pUJ'I)Ose of tax
assessments during reviews
every three years.
It also would require the
averaging of property sales
figures over a three-year
period instead of using the
figure for the previous year,
which might be abnormally

-

"It would be dl58strous t
tlle taxpayers of this state t.
he !muted to a single hearllli
before a court of three
judges," satd Shelby V.
Hutchins, representmg the
OMA
But Rep John E. Johnson,
D-Orrv11le, chieF sponsor,
satd the three judges would
be experienced in accounbng
and taxahon, that there
would be more than one
heartng, and that any appeal
could then he taken to the
Supreme Court.
The bill passed last week,
House Bill 920, would prohtbtt
unvoted Increases tn real
estate taxes due to inflation,
begmmng next January,
except on property enhanced
by
construchon
or
unprovements.
The two bills were
originally combtned in a
single measure They were
separated because legislation
creating a new court requires
a two4hirds vote, or 66 votes
in the House.

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)Patrie1a Hearst says she still
has the fear of death that
drove her to violence and
flight during 19 months of
captiVIty.
She completed three days
of direct testimony on her
kidnapmg and life with the
Symbtooese Uberation Army
Wednesday by telling the jury
she tllinks "there's a good
chance that I could be
killed"
At the end of her tale of
abduction, sexual assault,
violence
and
death,
Prosecutor
James
L
Browning Jr. began his crossexammatioo by asking Miss
Hearst about her reading
habits.
His questioning, scheduled
to continue today, centered
on books and a "study list" 011 communism, revolution,
guerilla warfare and bombmaking - found in her
bedroom following her
capture last September.
Brovnrtng won adnrlsmons
from the newspaper hetress,
who turns 22 Friday, that
during her months with the
SLA she became aware of the
problems of poverty and of
minorities and "interested in
social change."
"Violent social chahge 1 "
he asked.

capbvity '
The
pale,
gaunt
granddaughter of newspaper
magnate Wtiltam Randolph
Hearst adnrltted she rescued
the Harrises by firmg a
fustlade of shots at a !As
Angeles sportmg goods store
when William Harrts was
caught shoplifting.
"I was trymg to fire at the
top of the building.lt was just
a reflex. It happened too fast
I trted to see that I dido 'I hit
anybody," she said of the 33
shots she fired from two
separate carbines.
''As we drove away, I
couldn't believe I'd done what
I did.''
She said she had been
drilled in the use of weapcns
by her kidnapers after the
bank robbery and was taught
that she was supposed to help
members of the SLA get
away if IJJey were in trouble
and "anyone who didn't do
that woul&lt;\ he killed."
Mler the shooting, she
testified, the Harrises
kidnaped two motorists and
svntched cars several times
before driving to a lliOtel
across the street from
Disneyland, where they
turned on the television and
watched the live broadcast of
the pclice siege of the SLA
hideout in Watts.
The Harrlses were "crymg
and yelling" as they watched
their six comrades dte In a
holocaust of pclice bullets
and flames, she said. Miss
Hearst said the announcer
said several times that she
was believed to be In the
house.

for the poor and end tax
breaks for utilities
Ford's New Hampshtr~
Vlstt ts his second of the
campatgn As soon as he
leaves Frtday, hts GOP
challenger, Ronald Reagan,
will arrive for two days of
campatgntng before
Tuesday's vote. By the end of
the \Veek Ford will have spent
four days campatgnin~ m the
state and Reagan 15.
The Connally wr1te-m campatgn is bemg fmanced by
Texas native Rtchard
1 V1guerie, a conservative who
says he wants to offer New
Hampshire Democrats "an
alternative to the pack of
hberais"
seeking
the
nommation.
Connally,
a
former
Democratic governor of
Texas who became a
Republican durmg the Ntxon
admmistration, has not
endorsed the effort He.
created more pohtlcal
speculatton Wednesday by
inviting all 50 GOP state
chatrmen to visit h1s Texas
ranch on March 10 - the day
·after the Flortda primary.

COLUMBUS (UP!) _ Delphos St: John's, making 1ts
move wttll ooly one week left
in the United Press
International Ohio Htgh
School Board of Coaches
basketball ratings, has taken
over the No 1 spot 1n Class
M this week from Warsaw
River View in Class M.
. The Blue Jays of Coach Bob
Arnzen. who trailed River
View by 22 points a week ago
showed surprising strength'
collecting 20 of the 34 firsi
place votes cast to only seven
for the Black Bears. Last
week the first place vote
count was 17-15, Delphos.
St. John's, 111-0 on the year,
received
301
points
compared with 284 for t~
River View, also lfi.O. Lorain
Catllolic agam fmished thtrd,
but well behind wtth 223
po!Dts.

•

LEO VAUGHAN
Leo Vaughan, Pomeroy,
above, re~elved an all

expense paid trip last week
to Atlanta, Georgia by bis
Logan Monument Com·
pany. He attended the
Monument Builders of
North America convention
where he studied lbe
newest designs and services of the monument
Industry. The Logan
Monument Company group
was the largest group of
officers and managers
attending
from
any
company In the United
States and Canada.

'
',
·
·;

anonymous so-called "laet"

sheet. This sheet has been
distributed In places of work,
schools and churches around
the nation. Everythln~ that Is
stated as "fact" on Ibis sheet
Is either not true or so
distorted as to make It
completely Inaccurate.
The two examples most
often ctted and that are
creahng the most concern
are a "Chtldren's Charter of
Rights" and a section on chtld
raising
by the state Neither
"No."
of
these
two examples are
Defense attorney F. Lee
contatned at any point in the
Bailey ended his direct
Child and Famtly Services
examination late Wednesday
Act A bill very similar to the
afternoon after asking Miss
present
Chtld and Family
Hearst If she had any
Services
Act was passed by
"present fear" of William
Congress
and vetoed by the
and Emily Harris, her two
President
m 1971. During
surviving kidnapers.
debate
on
the Senate Door,
"Yes, I do."
The
Daily Sentinel
Senator
Carl
Curtis of
"And what Is the reason for
DEVOTED TO THE
Nebraska
mentioned
the
that?"
INTEREST OF
charter
as
an
example
of
how
MEIGS·
MASON
AREA
"Because I think there's a
CttESTER L TANNEHILL
far the Iegislalton could go m
good chance tllat I could be
Exec Ed
its tnlerpretatlon. The
ROBERT HOEFLICH
killed "
children's
charter was
C•IJ
Editor
Batley asked her why, but
Publ•she
dally except
recommended
m England by
before she could answer
Saturday by The Oh!o
Valley
Publishing
Com
an
educahonal
advisory
Brovnnng objected. The jw :1
pany ,
111
Courl
St
comm1sston
It
never
was taken out of court and the
Pomeroy,
Ohio
~576! :
Business
Olfice
Phone
99?
·
received
consideratwn
in the
lawyers engaged in an noisy
2156 Edttorlal Pf\one 997
United
States
and
In
fact
is
7157
argument.
Second class postage
not
even
m
force
in
England.
The defense attorney said
palO al Pomeroy, Ohio
Na!lonat
advertising , Second, the "fact" sheet
Miss HearSt would cite last
representative
Ward
states that the Child and
week's $1 ml1llon bombing at
Grlff1th Company, Inc ,
Family Services Act will give
Botttnelll
&amp;
Gallagher
Div
,
the family estate at San
757 Third Ave, N~w York .
the responsibility for chtld
Simeon and threats against
N Y 10017
-··
raising to the federal
Subscription
rates
her father's life. The judge
oettverea by carrier where
government.
On the basis of
upheld Browning and ruled
avatlabte 75 cents per
what
ts
actually
tn the blll,
week
By
Motor
Roule
the matters were not
where carrier service no1
this
ts
also
entirely
Ulllrue.
admissible
available , One month ,
~3
25
By
mail
In
Ohto
and
Agam,
tt
is
a
distortion
of the
Mis.• Hearst satd Emily
oN va , One Veer, S22 00 ;
debate
from
the
floor
of
Harrts threatened her even
S1x months , Sll SO : Three
months
,
S7
00
Elsewhere
Congress
in
1971.
The
after theJr arrests, warrung
S26 00 year
Six months
statements
from
the
from her adjommg cell "that
'!.13 50 . three months, S7 so.
wbscnplton
price
Includes
CongressiOnal
Record
are
somebody would kill me" if l ·(junday Ttmes Sentinel
taken from an article on
the heiress told attorneys the
L
1
,~ucation
and child raising in
truthljfl-.IUI her kulnapmg and

Morral Rtdgedale and
MIIISter, also lost.
Ridgedale suffered a ~
defeat at the hands of Carey
Fr1day mght and the same
night, Minster was whacked
76-62 by St. Henry.
Toledo Scott ( 16-0).
Bellefontatne ( 17-0) and
Mtddletown remained in the
tllird, fourth and fifth spots in
MA as the first five teams
remained unchanged . But
from there on down, things
were scrambled.
Clevelsnd Heights moved
from eighth to sixth,
Columbus Unden from ntnth
to seventh, Timken feU from
sixth to eighth, Cleveland St.
lgnatlus from seventh to
ninth and Kettermg Alter
went from eleventh to tenth,
exchanging places with
Toledo Macomber.
Unbeaten Wellsville

Semifinals Friday
•
L

The stated purpose is to '
discuss Congressiooal races.
In other developments:
- Jimmy Carter accused
three senators - Bayh, '
Henry Jackson and lloyd':
Bentsen - of using thetr"
congresstonal
ma(llng prtvlleges to send pclitical~
material to voters. The '
former Georgta governor '
satd friends in Georgia had
rece1ved campatgn-related '
material recently from aU
three, mailed free.
- The chairman of Ronald"
Reagan 's
cam paign
conunlttee, Sen . Paul Laxalt, :
dtsputed President Ford's
statement that Reagari'c
favors
maktng
Social •
Security voluntary Laxalt '
sa1d Reagan "has made It :
clear that he favors.:
mandatory Social Security a:r:
the only way to straighten oul"
the mess Washington has :
"::',
gotten 1t into "
- Fred Harris' hackers
said the former Oklahoma
senator will enter the May 2$
Kentucky
presidential
pnmary as a " nonractsl
populist" alternative to
George Wallace.

Blanton 12 6; Gilmore 0 0 o ,
Dalton 11 -5 , Justtce 1-0 2.
Wagner 4-0-8 TOTALS 9· 3·21.
Score by quarters
Waverlv
5 10 10 9- 34
Roc:k H1ll
6 4 9 2-21
(Second Gamel
N E LSONVI LLE · YOR K
(46)- connors, 1· 2 4, Holte I,
0 0-0, Patton, 2 2 6 , Penrod ,
8- 8-24 . Robtnson, 6 0 - 12 ·
McQuaid, 0· 0-0 TOTALS 17
12 46

ATHENS (38) - Bentley , 6·
o 12 , Ward , 1 1-l, Oatley , 3 o
6 , Ttnkham, 4-1 -9, Edwards ,

4 0 8,
Smathers ,
TOTALS 18-2 31

D-o. o

Score b'lt quarters
Nels York
10 8 14 14 - 46
Athens
15 6 6 11 - 38

Rockets roll
over Lakers

"

'J aws are thin to
reach dlfftcult spots .
,Drop forged from
l,ough alloy steel
,Btue cushion grip
handle.

l

"

fltr•1

I

I

Pro

l

STAR
SUPPLY
,,Racine

Ohio

!Jolted Presslntel"lllltlonal
Some heated exchanges
came out m a Houston
Rockets' team meeting
Tuesday mgbt but It resulted
m a dec1s1on that patd off
immediately wtth an unpressJVe 114-98 romp over the
!As
Angeles
Lakers,
includmg 35 asststs
" We found ~omethmg
tomght thai could gtve us a
btg lift," said guard Mike
Newlin, reSident analyst.
"Our btg men moved wtthout
the ball. They dtdn't just
shuffle around 1n the same
area but they moved out and
around and under-constantly. It made a btg
difference
"The
movement
by
(Kevin) Kunnert, (Joe)
Meriweather and (Rudy)
TomJanovlch was hke
starting the offense before
the first pass was made. If 1t
usually tak"!! five or stx
passes tQ tllrow a defense off
balance, with the movement
tt took two or three.''
In the hrst quarter,
Kunnert, the 7-foot center,
burned the Lakers by hitting
S.Of-t before he found himself
tn foul trouble and sat out
most of tlle game. He kepi the
Rockets even with the torrid

.,

Henry
has
a special reason why
· should come to
for income tax help;
\

Lakers tn a 37-37 ftrst quarter
and then turned the show
over to Ed RaJ.leff,
Tomjanovtch and sub John
Johnson, who combined lor 82
pcints
Kareem Abdul..Jabbar had
34 points and 13 rebounds,
both game highs, for the
Lakers but he got ltttle help.
In other NBA games,
Seattle ripped Boston, 124-99,
Kansas City beat Golden
State, 103-91, and Detroit
downed Phoenix, 10$-94.
In the ABA, Kentucky
dropped St. Lows, 11().105,
New York edged Indiana, 112111, m overtime and Denver
walloped San Antoruo, 142111.
So nics 124, Celllcs 99:
Fred Brown, sidelined
recently by the flu, came off
the bench to score 29 pcmts
and lead Seattle past Boston
for its fifth stratght victory.
Brown entered late tn the
ftrst quarter and hit 9-{&gt;f-13
shots In the first half to pace
the Sanies to a 54-44 halftime
lead. Brown and Leonard
Gray then combined lor eight
straight points as Seattle
broke the game open, 72-55.
Kings 103, Warrlon 91:
Jlnuny Walker and Sam
Lacey each scored 24 points
to lead Kansas City, loser of
five of its previous six games,
over Golden State, witmer of
five of tts last six The
Warriors' Rick Barry was 8for-25 for 20 points.
Pistons 105, SUDB 94:
Detroit,
led by
a
recuperating Bob Lanier witJJ
23 points, equaled Its all-time
beAt defensive effort for a
period by holding Phoenix to
e1ght points In the final 12
minutes. The final period
scoring by Phoenix was the
lowest by any NBA team in a
single quarter this season.
Calonels 110, Spirits 105:
Artis Glbnore scored 27
potnts and grabbed 20

Atl41nt1c DIVISIOn
W
L Pel .
gb
Boston
36 17 b79 Buffalo
34 23 596 4
Phtladelphta
33 24 589 5
New .York
28 30 483 101 2
Central DIVISIOn
W L Pet
gb
Cleveland
33 22 600
12
Washtngton
33 23 569
Houston
27 27 500 51 7
New Orleans
25 29 463 71 7
Atlan ta
26 31 456 a
Western Conference
MidWeSt DIVI SIOn
W l
Pet gb
M rlwaukee
24 33 421
Oetro1t
21 33 389 fl 1
Kansas Ctty
21 36 368 3
Ch tcago
l7 38 309 6
Pac1ftc D1vis1on
W L Pel . gb
Go 10e11 Stale
40 16 714
los Angeles
29 29 500 12
Seatt l e
28 29 491 i 21 "
PhoenIX
23 30 434 15' 1
Portland
24 32 429 16
Wednesday's R esulls
Houston 114 Los Angel es 98
Detro1t 105 Phoentx 94
Ka nsas C ty 103 Gol~en 51 91
Se attle 124 Boston 99
Thursday's Gam es
Portland at Cleveland
Fnday 's Games
Phoen1x at New Or l ean s
Portland at Ch tcago
Washtngton at Detrott
Milwaukee at Hou ston
Boston at Los Angeles
Philadelphi a at seatt le

ABA Standrngs
By Untted Press InternatiOnal
W L Pet gb
Denver
41 13 759 New York
35 21 625 7
San Anton1o
32 22 59 3 9
Kentuc.kv
31 26 544 111 t
lnd rana
29 29 500 14
St LOUIS
26 33 441 1711
Vtrgrnla
1il 46 164 321~
Wednesday Results
Kentucky 110 Sl L OUIS 105
New York 112 lndrana 111 ot
Denver 142 San Anton10 111
Thursday ' s Games
Kentucky at V1rgm ra
lnd1ana at Denver
Friday' s Games
New York al Vtrgln ra
San AntOniO al Sl lOUI S
Denver at lnd1ana

NHL Standtngs
Bv Untied Press International
campbell conference
PafrtCk DtVI StOn
t
W L T Pts gf ga
Philadelphr 37 10 11 85 255 158
NY Isl anders 30 16 12 72 222 1-lJ
Atlanta
26 26 8 60 194 178
NY Rangers 23 30 6 52 198 240
Smythe DIVISIOn
WLTPtsgfga
Chrcago
24 17 17 65 160 165
Vancouver
23 24 11 ' 57 193 198
St LOUIS
22 27 9 53 180 204
Mmnesota
16 38 4 36 14 1 2 11
Kansas C1ly 12 38 8 32 140 249
Wales Conference
Norns DIVISIOn
w L T Pts gd ga
Mon treal
41 9 9 91 248 130
Los A ngeles 30 25 6 66 20 1 20 1
Pittsburgh ~ 4 25 9 57 236 224
Detrorl
'! 9 33 7 45 161 226
Washington
6 47 7 19 163 304
Adams DIVISIOn
W L T Pts gf ga
Boston
36 11 10 82 227 165
Buffalo
32 16 to 74 243 173
Toronto
24 23 11 59 206 20 1
CaHforn1a
21 31 7 49 185 203
Wednesday's Results
NY Rangers 11 Washmgton 4
NV Islanders S Detro11 3
Montreal 7 Toron to 5
Boston 3 Kansas Crty 3
Buffalo 4 Ch1cago 4
Calrfornla 6 Mmnesota 3
Sl LOUIS 2 Los Angeles 2
Ph1ladelph1a 6 Vancouver 4
Thursday 's Games
Atlanta at Buffalo
Toronto at Pittsburgh
Friday's Games
NY Rangers at Montrea l
Atlanta at Kansas C1ty
Phtladelphra at California
Mmnesota at Vancouver

Rtverd•le, etghth last
week, tumbled all the way to
13th

~~~;;~:;:~:~;·.:~:;:~~:;:;tr:;~~:~~~1:t:~:~J:=~=~%~It~:::~=~:=~~~::r:~~~.;~:;:~:;::~~::r:f:;:;:~:.:~:;::~:~~~:~:
~::::::

M:
~=·=·=··
).:'•'•'•

lllf
···~,';

~~~~
~~~:;

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

Nelsonville-York shocked the halfttme tntermtsstOn
SEOAL co-champton Athens The Ltttle Ttgers led 25-19
46-38 and Waverly elimmated gomg tnto the final period.
Rock Htll 34-21 m the second
Athens led 15-10 after one
annual French Ctly Fresh- pertod and 21-18 durtng the
man Tournament on the halft1me mtermlss10n .
GAHS hardwood Wednesday Nelsonville-York led 32-27
evemng
gomg tn to the !mal stanza
The Uttle Buckeyes wtll
Box scores:
face Waverly tn Fnday's
( F1rst Gamel
second se1mfmal contest at
WAVERLY Cl4) Mon ·
7 IS p. m. Galhpolls wtll tgamery,
1-3-S, Maple. 0 0 0,
battle South Potnt tn the ftrst Bnder, 1 0 :z, Weeter, 1-0·2.
~ 0-8, Holland, 3· 1
serruftnal contest at 6 p m 1Fredenck,
, Fieser , 0-1· 1 , Sturgtll, 33
Frtday
9 TOTALS 13· 8·3 4
ROCK
HILL
(21)
In Wednesday's ftrst game,
tratled 6-S after one
led 15-10 durmg

•

the Sovtet Union They havi
nothwg to do wtth theUmted
States. They were tnserted in
the Congressional Record are
taken from an article on
education and chtld ratsmg io ,
the Soviet Umon. They hav~ l
nothmg to do wtth the United 1
States. They were mserted In l
the CongressiOnal Record to :
show the extremes to whtch 4 ;
Communist system goes in
controlltng Its children. No 1
legislalton before the United
States Congress would in any l
way take away the rights of ~
Amertean parents to r~
thetr chtldren as they see
including any proviSIOns o :
the Child and Famtly Ser- l
vtces Act
I opposl the Child 111111
Family Sei'vlces Act, but fO!..
legitimate reasons, not
because of the "distortions
raised by the "fact" sh~
The bDI would be far too;:
costly. AI a period when ou~
economy Is returning from
recession, this iegislatlo
would add hundreds 0
tpllltono ol dollars a year tq!!
the budget. Second, It wo~
In many Instances dupllcall.:
already exlotlng federaC::
programs dealing wit~
maternal and child cal
Lastly, there h
th
possibility, however remote
thai euclmenl of thlo b
could lead to further ~
truslono by the federaliii
governlnent Into child ca.,;::
and child developme~
reaponslbUitleo which bolo
to parents. For tqese reosons,
the bUI would not receive m •
support.
~
Finally, there is almost ~
chance that the Ottld an
Famtly Services Act will
voted on by Congress In 1978.!!!
More and more members ~:i
reallzmg the severe proble
with the bill. It will probabl
stay In committee for the rea "'i
ol. the 94th Congreaa. SUII,
incredible nation-wid
dissemination of the lnac
curate "fact" sheet ha
caused the waste
thousands of hours o
congressional time an
thousanda ol. dollars of tax
payen money to be spen
claiming, the lean oxp
In the mountains of !etten
flooding Washington. t

which has strugg led all year
to crack the top ten, flrually
made tl mto tenth.

slipped back into the No 4
spct m AA followmg the ftrst
loss of the year by Wtllard
which dropped the Flashes'
ooe spot to fifth.
Roundmg out the AA top
ten are Rossford, CircleVIlle,
Columbus St. Charles,
Coshocton and Ironton, the
latter two suffering thetr
second defeats of tlle year
The rash of losses among
the top Class A teams shook
up the small school ratings
some, but not as much as
might have been expected.
Arcanum, 17~. shpped into
third, one ahead of Mtnster
with Lockland remaining .~
fifth. St. Henry gained one
spct to sixth wtth tis vnn over
MIIISter, while Pettisvt1Ie fell
one to seventh. Oak Hill
ctimbed from ninth to etghth,
Monroevtlle remamed In
ninth and Lordstown (l!Hl),

Nelsonville- York stuns istandin~s \
Athens,· W.l'averly
wz·nner avu~:~;.~;~m~~f;::••nol
W 4

•

Because of maccurate and
diStorted tnformatton about
the Child and Famtly Servtces Act, citizens across the
country are becoming tn·
creasmgly alarmed.
As I reported one month
ago, this legislation has
serious Raws In it. It at any
time It reaches the floor of the
House of Representatives It
will not receive my support.
However, the public ts being
totally misled on the content
of the bill. Most of the Information
about
this
legislation Is coming from an

The leaders in the other two
classifications, Canton
McKinley tn AAA and Indian
Valley South m A, both
fmished their regular season
schedules and appear to have
things wrapped up.
McKinley clirna•ed an 111-0
regular season record Friday
rught with a solid 72-56 WIQ
over sixth ranked Canton
Timken. The Bulldogs hold a
308-282 lead over runnerup
Barberton
this week,
collecting 21 first place votes
to 8 for the Magics, 17~.
Indian Valley South, which
lost Jls first game of the
season a week ago, bounced
back nicely vnth a 60-44 wm
over Warwood, W.Va., to
finish at 17-1 .
The Rebels, who have held
tlle No. I Class A spot the
entire season, could have
heen in some trouble, but
tlleir top two challengers.

T o d ay ' s

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Sport Parade
!

UPI Sports Editor

NEW YORK iUPI) - Now ihat his ball club the Cleveland
Cavaliers, are up there w first place, BtU Fttch can afford to
laugh If he was a different type, he'd have a good loud laugh at
those who used to ?"'ke jOkes about him and his all-losmg
crew, but that tsn t hts way. Btll Fitch doesn't laugh at
anybody, except maybe htmself once in awhile.
He had to do that when the Cavaliers ftrst came mto
ext~tence six years ago It was the only way he could keep his
santty , says the general manager and coach of the NBA's
Central Diviston leaders.
"We had rough gomg to start wtth," he says "I would tell
my players if we can't laugh at ourselves, we're JUst goana get
mad when other people laugh at us "
Some expansiOn teams are bad at the outset; the Cavalters
were dreadful Oh sure, they tried, but they kept ruanmg too
long tn the same place. They were sunply over-matched when
the¥ entered the league durmg the 1~7().71 season. They lost
thetr ftrst II consecutive games and one evening Bill Fttch
dectded to do somethmg dtfferent, do anything , hopmg to snap
the strmg and win a ball game
"We got to San FranCisco and I told the players to go on out
ahead of me and I'd meet them in the locker room a little
later," says Fttch "They all walked over together and then
when I got there, the guy at the door says to me 'Where are
;,:ou going ?' Inside, I say to htm, and he says ~Wltere's your
Uckel' ' f tell him I don't have a ticket, I'm the Cleveland
coach, and he says 'Prove tt.' llook at th1s guy and say to hun
the Cleveland Cavaliers have lost eleven m a row, they'v~
never won a game yet, do you thmk I'd stand here and say 1
was thetr coach tf I wasn't?''
That dtd tl The guy let Btl! Fttch tn , and now stx years later
he has the Cavalters up there on top m thetr dtvtston. They are
a teamwtthout any stars You won't fmd them among the NBA
scormg leaders, but the Cavalters have Jelled into an
excepttonally well-balanced untt, one that makes few mtstakes
and gtves up nothmg at all on defense
The Cavaliers have six players averagmg double figures m
every game. They don't have anybody like a Bob McAdoo a
Kareem Abdu!Jabbar, a Nate Archibald or a Geo~ge
McGtnrus, but they 're dotng well enough so that they're on
thetr wa~ to thetr best season ever, playing 600 ball with 33
wins agamst 22 losses.
Btll Fttch ISn't cheermg yet, though.
" I feel," he says, "like the guy who JUmped off the Emptre
State Butldtng and just went by the 60th floor So far so good
I've seen a Iotta movtes that looked ltke they were gdnna hav~
happy endmgs, and' dtdn't I take a look at the schedule and I
know we're a long way from home yet."
The cunous thmg about Btll Fttch ts even tbough he taught
his Cleveland players how to laugh at themselves when they
were agomzmg through a 11Hl7 season their first year, he
res1sts any unpulse to laugh at that outclassed old crew of hts
now.
"I'm not so sure they dtdn't do as much as they posstbly
could,'' he says.

Owners asking
for. response
LOS ANGELES (( UPI ) With sprmg trammg right
around the corner, baseball
owners' negotiators have
asked for a response to a
propcsal they made Frtday to
the MaJor League Players
AssoCiation
The two sides held thew
19th negotiatmg sesston
Wednesday
In order to break the
deadlock over the reserve
clause, the owners last week
propcsed a system wheretn a
man who has played etght
major league seasons can
elect to play out a one-year
option penod.
"Baseball needs a system
to guarantee compet1hve
balance and continuity,
which form the basts for fan
loyalty," smd John J .
Gaherm,
chtef
labor
negotiator for the owners.
"The clubs also need some
assurance that thetr mvestmen ts in player development,
which averages $500,000 per
player who makes tl to the
major leagues , wtll be
protected.
"Both the clubs and the
Players Assoctation have a
VItal mterest m getting on
with spring tratnmg and

another successful season.
We look to the association to
offer us a meamngful and
detatled response to our
proposal so we may
successfully conclude these
negotiations "
The next negotiating
sesston between the owners
and Players Assoctalion will
he held at Gaherm's offtce tn
New York Saturday.
The owners have said they
won't open sprmg training
unless a new contract agreement IS reached.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No 21708
Estate of V1vran Maxey
Deceased
Not1ce JS hereby gtven t hat
Bulah F ay Maxey of Reeds
v1l l e. M e1g s County Ohto has
be en
Ou!y
ap pornted
E)(ecu lr x of the Estate of
V1vlan Maxey, deceased fa te
of Reedsv ille Metg s County ,
Oh10
Cred1tors are requtred to
file lh e rr cla tms w 1th sard
f rd ueta ry w 1thm four months
Dat e d th1S 2nd day of
Febru ary 1976
Mann1ng D Webster
J udg e
Court of Common Pleas
Probate Drvrston
Mergs County , Oh10
f 2l

s

12 19 3tc

reboullds to lead Kentucky.
The Colonels hit on 11-of·24
shots 1n the final period while
St. Louis, led by Freddie
Lewis' 29 points, could
manage just 7-of-24.

The Inn-Place Presents

RON BRINKER
Guitarist with Percussion-Vocalist

H&amp;R BLOCK®

8:30-12:30

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

THE MEIGS INN

618 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OHIO
Best In 'Live Entertainment

OPEN· t-6WEEKO.-YS,HSAT.

Ph. 992-379'
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NO APPOINTMENT

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By MILTON RICHMAN

TONIGHT
If you received the
for f11tng
your taxes, our preparers are spec1ally
ned to determtne 11 tl s best for you
IS, we II complete tt at a very low
" 'n•·•~"' .and our charge always includes
your restdent state return.

1:~1

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High School ratings
COLUMBUS IUPII - Tht5
week ' s Untted Pr ess In
lernal,ona ! Oh io H igh School
Board of Coaches' basketball
ratmgs Wtth f 1rst pla ce voles
&amp;nd won lost r eco rd s In
parentheses ,
CLASS AAA
TEAM
POINTS
1 Canton M cKrnley (21 18
0)
JOB
2 Barberton {8 17 Ol
282
3 To l edo Scott ( 2 16 OJ
224
4 Belle fontaine ( 1 17 01
164
5 Mrddletown ( 15 21
139
6 Cleve lan d HeiQhts (15 1 J 113
1 Columbus lin den
Mct&lt;mley (14 31
75
8 Canton T tmken 116 21
67
9 Cl evela nd St Ig natiU S ( 15

21

66

10 Kelten ng Alte r I 14 21
61
Second len
11
Toledo
Macomber 60
12 Lebanon
32 , 13 Groveport 25
14
Ctnctn na li Elder 20. 15
Ctnctnnatt LaSalle 18 , 16
Elyr1a 16. 17 t 1e Canlon
Sou th and Sprmgfr eld South,
15 ea c h 19 Columbus Manon
Franklin 9 , 20 Lancaster 7
CLASSAA
TEAM
POINTS
1 De lphos St J ohn's (20 16
OJ
301
2 Warsaw Fhiler Vtew (7 16
OJ
28~
3 loram Cat hOl iC (117 0) 223
4 Wellsville (14 0 )
185

Flanagan in
third place
GARDEN CITY, N.Y.
( UPI) - Glenn Pterce
mcreased hts lead over
Carmen Salvino slightly
Wednesday night in the
$100,000 AMF Pro Classic
Bowlmg Tournament.
Pierce, of Jacksonville,
Fla., had led Salvmo,
Ch1cago, by 32 pins after the
first round and upped that to
a 40-pin margin folio~ the
second six-game block,
For 12 games, Pierce had
spilled 2, 738 slicks, a 228
average, while Salvino had
knocked down 2,698 plna.
They were followed 1n the top
It ve by Sam Flanagan,
Parkersburg, W.Va., 2,675;
Fred Conner, Mar Vista, Cal.,
2,635, and Curt Schmidt, Ft.
Wayne, Ind., 2,628.

5 Wtllard ( 16 I)
6 RossfOrd f 17 I l

156

li S
Ct r clev1 lle ( 15 21
109
8 Columbus 51 Char les 11'5
2)
12
9 Coshocton ( 15 21
67
10 rronton (1~ · 2)
63
Second ten · 11 Wheeler·
sburg 49 , 12
Cinc1nnat 1
G-reenhtlls 2 44 , 13 Sandy
Valley 33. 14 Delta 1 18 . IS
Trrway I 15 16 Lou i sv i lle
Aqumas 14 , 17 t1e Hann1bat
Rt ver and Br rdgeport. 13
each 19 Akron Sout h 12 . 20
lte Bexl ey and Elmwood , 11
each
CLASS A
TEAM
POINTS
I lnd tan Valley South 11417.
1
287
2 Morral R id geda l e {5 15
I)
224
3 Ar c anum {3 17 OJ
173
4 Mmst er ( 15 1)
151
5 Lockland 12 15 H
126
6 St Henry ( 2 15 1)
114
7 Pet!Jsv ttle (3 16 1J
106
8 Oak H1ll (117 I)
96
9 Monroevil le I 116 ll
93
10 Lo~dstown ( 19 oO }
51
Second ten . 11 . North
Galha 49, 12 Stryker 42 , 13
Rtverdale 32 14 Ada 25 , 15
Marion Local '23, 16
t ie
Sebrmg
and
Frankfort
Adena , 19 each . 18 Hi l l sda le
18 19 Sandusky Sf Mary ' s
14 , 20 Zane Trace Ross 12
1

Bench signed
by Cincinnati
CINCINNATI (UPl) - The
Cincirtnali Reds today announced the signmg of
catcher Johnny Bench who
batted ,283 last year with 28
home runs and 110 runs
batted in.
The Reds, as Is their policy,
refused to say what they will
pay Bench for the 1978 season
but It waa leariled he had
been aakin8 lor $200,000.
The Reds still have to s1gn
IIICb 1tan u third baseman
~le a-, 11ec0nd baseman
Joe Morgan, first baseman
Tony Perez and pitcher Don
Gullet.

Before you buy
your next car,
seehownmch

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISAMENT
The State of Otuo, Me1gs
County, Court of Common
Pleas, Probate DIVISion
To the Executor of the
estate to such of the fOllOWing
as are residents of the State of
Oh10 , viz the surv1v.ng
spouse, tile next of kin, the
benefJcianes under the will.
and to the attorney or at
torneys r e presentmg any of
the aforemenlloned persons
Wllltam Clyde Andrews.
Pomeroy , Oh10, Sa l tSbury
Township, No 21658
You are hereby nottf1ed t hat
the
Inventory
and
Ap
prarsement of the estate of the
aforement ioned ,
deceased ,
tate of sa1d County, was filed
1n th rs Court Satd Inventory
and Appra1sement w111 be for
hearing before t h rs Court on
the 2nd day of March , 1976, at
10 00 o'clock , AM
Any person des.r1ng to f rle
excepllons t hereto must file
them at leastftvedaysprlor to

lhe dale set for hearong

Grven under my hand and
seal of satd Court, th1s 14th
day of February 1976

M annlng D Webster
Judge

you
might

save.

aboulll":~~;:~~'1~~'~:~~

ASk
through a c~

and economical State

losurance.

1258 p

II St

owe
.
Middleport, 0.

PH. 992-7155
AnotherJerVic:e of )lOIII'
•••. • ••••
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State~Aaent.

State Farm lnsurante Gtwnpanin
" •I UIOfOCt
0
By Ann B Watson '--...:JHome
Offices Bloomlnoton 1Nino11
Deputy Clerk
(2 ) 19, 26, 2tc
p 74104

�3- The Daily Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb 19, 1976

•

Oak Hill jumps to eighth zn Class A ratings

2- The DallY Sentmel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday. ~·eb. 1~ . J~7ti

More tax relief coming

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AREA RESIDENTS TAKE PART IN FESTIVAL Three southeastern Ohio residents partiCipated in the
recent Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Fishmg Festival. Left to
rtgbt are Bill R. Hall, Wellston, Jerry J Hall, Oteshire
and Jack Hall. Rutland. Durmg the deep sea fishmg

"

his word,

hut when?
SOUTH POINT, Ohto Paul Collins wrote tn the
Hun tmgton Herald Dispatch
today that John Conley,
newly appomted member of
the South Polnt Board of
Educa !ton
surprised
everybody at last mght's
board meeting by vottng
agatnsl reinstatement of
ftred teachers here.
As a result, two motions on
the reinstatements fatled by
~to-2 votes.
Conley was chosen by the
county board Feb 7 to serve
as the fifth, tie-breaking
member of the South Point
board after the vtllage board
fatled by two-two votes to
name a fifth member wtthm a
time ltmtt.
All candtdates the county
board constdered were asked
if they would supper! the
county board's resoluhon to
remstate and pay ret1rement,
accordtng to Wtllts, who
attended the execultve
sesston dunng whtch candidates were questiOned
"Mr . Conley agreed he
would vote to put all the old
teachers who wtshed to
return back on the jOb m
September, and to have the1r
year's retirement fund costs
paid," Wtllts sa1d. "But he
dtdn't say when he'd do tt"
County Supt Thomas Willis
sa1d after last night's
meetwg he was "dtstressed
and dtsappotnted" in the

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He'll keep

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outcome of the voting.

Leshe York, president of
the South Pomt Assoctalton of
Classroom Teachers, satd
last mght "From here on out
tl's stnctly up to the courts "
Wtlhs satd lhe county board
had been assured that tf the
teachers fired ·for sinking
were prom1sed fall remstatement, current htlgahon

would be dropped. "That's
what the county board
wanted," he satd
Before the votmg, Conley
told the board and about 110
persons attendtng the
meehng he wanted to check
with hts attorney on the legal
aspects of voting to remstate
while under federal tn·
junctiOn not to employ or
extend contracts.

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tournament in Babta Mar Yacht Basin, Bill Hall caught an
88-p01md, 79-lnch silkey shark; Jerry Hall a 52-pound, 88mch smlfish and Jack Hall a 102-pound, 74-inch bull shark.
The trio was aboard the charter boat, "Doctors Orders "
All three anglers received a cttation from fishing festival
offtctals.

Fire insurance
covered $265,500

'

Insurance covered losses
as a result of the recent
Stiffler Department Store ftre
m Pomeroy have been of·
ftctalty set at $265,500,
Pomeroy Ftre Chtef Charles
Legar satd today.
Legar satd the ftgure mcludes the Stiffler store, three
buildmgs owned by Amy
Kingsland Jones and two
owned by Franklin Rizer.
Chtef Legar noted that the
loss figure which ts bemg
'submttted m h1s report to the
state does not tndtcate
replacement value, just the

insurance amounts mvolved

Time

5Z4l.ON6fEI.I.GN AVE ,
~·~100.

00\0

MOONLIGHT PRIN·
CESS - Julie Hutchison,
student at Ohio State
selected by the Phi Sigma
Kappa Fraternity as
"Moonlight Princess,
1976". She represented
Alpha Phi Sorority In the
competition and was
presented a trophy and
bouquet of red r004:s. A
graduate of Meigs High
School, Julie is the
daughter of Milo and Betty
Hutchison, Rutland.

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Ohio's U.S.
Senators,
Democrat John Glenn and
Republican Robert Taft Jr ,
both voted among the
-~....,.-m majority Wednesday, as the
Senate, on a 60-30 vote,
approved a $3 billion foretgn
military aid bill.
The blll includes new
regulations on weapons sales
and provisions to halt
assistance to tyrannical
governments.

DR. LAMB

Heart disease, diet and family
quan !tty of meat, !Ish and
pcultry. You would need to
switch to just low fat mtlk
(two per cent fat and 30 per
cent of' tls calones are fat
w1th half of these of the
saturated fat type) or sltim
mtlk.
Over 70 per cent of the
calories in peanut butter are
fat, 13 per cent of the calones
are saturated fat .
The rules to cootrol fat and
cholesterol mtake can be
individualized If you are
thoroughly tested and the
results are favorable as long
as yoy stay that way. For
more informatioo on dtet
prtnctp!es to prevent heart
and vascular dtsease send 50
~enls for The Health Letter,
Number 1-3, Diet Preventing
i\ lltr.rosclerosis F:ncluse a
!tong.
stamped.
seifaddrc:-;scd envelupc for
rnaihn~. Address your lellet
lu Ill(.' m care ,f tins
nulhJ.tram.s a day and !hut ncwsflUpcr, P 0 H11x 1~1,
""uld mean few tf any egg RadiO City Slaltot•. New
yolks 1! you get your needed V•.-k. NV 10019.
.
I

daily (low fat or whole milk) maJor r1sk factors.
Do you smoke' I presume
In vtew of my we1ght, do
you
don't and that makes you
you thmk I'm gettmg too
three
ltmes better off than
much saturated fat, or do you
those
who
smoke two packs a
have any suggestions about
day.
my dtel' Inctdentally, my
Ftnally, what 1s your own
famtly has a bad genettc
cholesterol
and tnglycertde
htstory of heart trouble
tfats)
level
? If your
DEAR READER - Your.
level
ts low, I
cholestrol
diet ts cerltanly not one I
would
not
fuss
too much
would recommend to most
about
your
diet.
However,
I
people, parhcularly mid·
lhtnk
tl
is
absolutely
die-aged coronary prone
Amertcan males. But not necessary that you ftnd out
everyone has your level of what it 1s in view of your
• actiVIty or has been as suc- statement of a bad family
cessful tn avoiding obeSity. A h1story of heart dtsease
If your cholesterol level is
large number of people wtth
high blood pressure and htgh htgh, then despite your
blood cholesterol and fats exerclse program. )UU should
have them because they are make some ('hauges If you
lltr
recomoverwetght. In others thts ts followed
at least a strong, contnbuttng mendalions of the Inter·
Society f'omH isslon for
factor.
The tmportant po1nt 1s yow· Hearl D1scu~~ Hesources. an
Individual nsk factors What lmporfttnl 11alwnal study
~Juup. \HU ~uuld hnut \Our
IS your blood pressure '' I
preswnc 11 Hi Jew. normal w1th r holcslcrul tnl akc fu 300

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR OR. LAMB - 1 am
53 years old, 6-feet-2, and
weigh 148 pounds. My daily
physical achvtty consists of
joggwg a mimmum of ftve
mtles, averaging eight
rnmutes a mtle, 30 push-ups"
and 30 sit-ups. I've followed
tins program for the past 11
years I used to jOg seven
m1Ies but cut back to ftve due
to the time factor
My resting pulse has gone.
from the high 80s to .. an
average of 48 heats a mmute.
I am wnhng about my dtet ,
wh1ch IS the reason fur the
background tnformalton . I
have one egg, bacon, toast,
coffee, 8 ounces of orange
jwce and 11 ounces of whole
milk for breakfast
For dmner I have meat.
vegetables, dessert of peanut
butter on graham crackers r I
average ealtng a pound of
peanut butter a week). AI
ntght I eat one-half sandw1ch vour "''1ght . 1t•stJug lw.111
plus more milk before ~omg ra!ewul cxt•ruSt lt•\·cl Bl• 1'1d
pressure ts one of the tltree
~ bed. I avcr.(JI.:C uhnul 11111'·
I
and-a-half qtlarts Of nuiK

Snow slows up candidates
By LEWIS LORD
United Press International
Heavy snow Is hampering
the schedules of presidential
primary contenders in New
Hampshire but it isn't hurting
the efforts of Democrats who
want a new energy pclicy.
Meanwhtle, full-page ads m
New Hampshire newspapers
today are urging that
Repubhcan John Connally's
name be written m on the
Democratic ballots next
Tuesday. And President Ford
starts a two-day New
Hampshtre vistt later today
A snowstorm delayed
Democrat Jimmy Carter's
campa1gn stops Wednesday
and forced Sen Btrch Bayh,
another Democratic
contender, to cancel a visit to
a home heated by · solar
energy The Indiana senator
jabbed at the adminis-

By DONALD B. THACKREY

~;::::::::::~~~~~==~~~~~~::;-...:.J OHIOANS VOTE

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high
Currently, aanual updates
of land values are requtred,
and property owners have
complamed inflatton has
driven their appraisals
sharply upward.
House Bill 761 also would
defme the amount recetved
for a piece of property m an
armslength sale the "true
value" of the property,
ehminatmg the possibility
that a county auditor could
change the figure on the tax
duplicate.
The bill also creates a state
Department of Tax Equslization to administer real estate
tax laws, and a state Tax
Court of Appeals to have
excluSive jurisdiction over
real property tax appeals.
Commtttee members
ignored complaints by the
Ohio Chamber of Commerce
and the Ohio Manufacturers
Associahoo that the new tax
court would preclude direct
appeals in tax matters to the
Ohio Supreme Court.

tration'senergy program - a
maJor concern In chilly New
England.
" It is outrageous that the
Energy Research and
Development Administration
is willing to spend only a
measly two per cent of its
budget durmg the commg
year on solar energy
research and development,"
Bayh said.
The Ford admuustrattOJJ
w1U push solar energy, Bayh
satd, "only if the maJor 01!
comparues figure out a way to
collect royalhes on the sun "
Democrat Fred Harris
stood m the falling snow
outstde a pcwer company
office at Manchester and satd
"pohltcal talk, especially
now, ts cheaper than electric
b11ls " Harris challenged
other Democrats' to match
his plan to cut ~lectrtc rates

Patty still has
fears of death
Umverslty, was recenlly

~.i~IRLEY
MNWA~BOM

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Legislatioo aimed at further
blunting the future unpact of
mflahon on real estate
taxpayers is on tis way to a
House Door vote, perhaps
next week
The measure, a compamon
to a property tax relief bdl
passed by the House and sent
to the Senate last week, was
given unanimous approval by
tlle House Ways and Means
Conmuttee Wednesday.
House l?peaker Vernal d.
Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, said
11 would probably reach the
floor next week or the
following week.
The proposal, House Bill
761, permits the lowest
poSSible mflationary factor to
he used in calculating land
values for the pUJ'I)Ose of tax
assessments during reviews
every three years.
It also would require the
averaging of property sales
figures over a three-year
period instead of using the
figure for the previous year,
which might be abnormally

-

"It would be dl58strous t
tlle taxpayers of this state t.
he !muted to a single hearllli
before a court of three
judges," satd Shelby V.
Hutchins, representmg the
OMA
But Rep John E. Johnson,
D-Orrv11le, chieF sponsor,
satd the three judges would
be experienced in accounbng
and taxahon, that there
would be more than one
heartng, and that any appeal
could then he taken to the
Supreme Court.
The bill passed last week,
House Bill 920, would prohtbtt
unvoted Increases tn real
estate taxes due to inflation,
begmmng next January,
except on property enhanced
by
construchon
or
unprovements.
The two bills were
originally combtned in a
single measure They were
separated because legislation
creating a new court requires
a two4hirds vote, or 66 votes
in the House.

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)Patrie1a Hearst says she still
has the fear of death that
drove her to violence and
flight during 19 months of
captiVIty.
She completed three days
of direct testimony on her
kidnapmg and life with the
Symbtooese Uberation Army
Wednesday by telling the jury
she tllinks "there's a good
chance that I could be
killed"
At the end of her tale of
abduction, sexual assault,
violence
and
death,
Prosecutor
James
L
Browning Jr. began his crossexammatioo by asking Miss
Hearst about her reading
habits.
His questioning, scheduled
to continue today, centered
on books and a "study list" 011 communism, revolution,
guerilla warfare and bombmaking - found in her
bedroom following her
capture last September.
Brovnrtng won adnrlsmons
from the newspaper hetress,
who turns 22 Friday, that
during her months with the
SLA she became aware of the
problems of poverty and of
minorities and "interested in
social change."
"Violent social chahge 1 "
he asked.

capbvity '
The
pale,
gaunt
granddaughter of newspaper
magnate Wtiltam Randolph
Hearst adnrltted she rescued
the Harrises by firmg a
fustlade of shots at a !As
Angeles sportmg goods store
when William Harrts was
caught shoplifting.
"I was trymg to fire at the
top of the building.lt was just
a reflex. It happened too fast
I trted to see that I dido 'I hit
anybody," she said of the 33
shots she fired from two
separate carbines.
''As we drove away, I
couldn't believe I'd done what
I did.''
She said she had been
drilled in the use of weapcns
by her kidnapers after the
bank robbery and was taught
that she was supposed to help
members of the SLA get
away if IJJey were in trouble
and "anyone who didn't do
that woul&lt;\ he killed."
Mler the shooting, she
testified, the Harrises
kidnaped two motorists and
svntched cars several times
before driving to a lliOtel
across the street from
Disneyland, where they
turned on the television and
watched the live broadcast of
the pclice siege of the SLA
hideout in Watts.
The Harrlses were "crymg
and yelling" as they watched
their six comrades dte In a
holocaust of pclice bullets
and flames, she said. Miss
Hearst said the announcer
said several times that she
was believed to be In the
house.

for the poor and end tax
breaks for utilities
Ford's New Hampshtr~
Vlstt ts his second of the
campatgn As soon as he
leaves Frtday, hts GOP
challenger, Ronald Reagan,
will arrive for two days of
campatgntng before
Tuesday's vote. By the end of
the \Veek Ford will have spent
four days campatgnin~ m the
state and Reagan 15.
The Connally wr1te-m campatgn is bemg fmanced by
Texas native Rtchard
1 V1guerie, a conservative who
says he wants to offer New
Hampshire Democrats "an
alternative to the pack of
hberais"
seeking
the
nommation.
Connally,
a
former
Democratic governor of
Texas who became a
Republican durmg the Ntxon
admmistration, has not
endorsed the effort He.
created more pohtlcal
speculatton Wednesday by
inviting all 50 GOP state
chatrmen to visit h1s Texas
ranch on March 10 - the day
·after the Flortda primary.

COLUMBUS (UP!) _ Delphos St: John's, making 1ts
move wttll ooly one week left
in the United Press
International Ohio Htgh
School Board of Coaches
basketball ratings, has taken
over the No 1 spot 1n Class
M this week from Warsaw
River View in Class M.
. The Blue Jays of Coach Bob
Arnzen. who trailed River
View by 22 points a week ago
showed surprising strength'
collecting 20 of the 34 firsi
place votes cast to only seven
for the Black Bears. Last
week the first place vote
count was 17-15, Delphos.
St. John's, 111-0 on the year,
received
301
points
compared with 284 for t~
River View, also lfi.O. Lorain
Catllolic agam fmished thtrd,
but well behind wtth 223
po!Dts.

•

LEO VAUGHAN
Leo Vaughan, Pomeroy,
above, re~elved an all

expense paid trip last week
to Atlanta, Georgia by bis
Logan Monument Com·
pany. He attended the
Monument Builders of
North America convention
where he studied lbe
newest designs and services of the monument
Industry. The Logan
Monument Company group
was the largest group of
officers and managers
attending
from
any
company In the United
States and Canada.

'
',
·
·;

anonymous so-called "laet"

sheet. This sheet has been
distributed In places of work,
schools and churches around
the nation. Everythln~ that Is
stated as "fact" on Ibis sheet
Is either not true or so
distorted as to make It
completely Inaccurate.
The two examples most
often ctted and that are
creahng the most concern
are a "Chtldren's Charter of
Rights" and a section on chtld
raising
by the state Neither
"No."
of
these
two examples are
Defense attorney F. Lee
contatned at any point in the
Bailey ended his direct
Child and Famtly Services
examination late Wednesday
Act A bill very similar to the
afternoon after asking Miss
present
Chtld and Family
Hearst If she had any
Services
Act was passed by
"present fear" of William
Congress
and vetoed by the
and Emily Harris, her two
President
m 1971. During
surviving kidnapers.
debate
on
the Senate Door,
"Yes, I do."
The
Daily Sentinel
Senator
Carl
Curtis of
"And what Is the reason for
DEVOTED TO THE
Nebraska
mentioned
the
that?"
INTEREST OF
charter
as
an
example
of
how
MEIGS·
MASON
AREA
"Because I think there's a
CttESTER L TANNEHILL
far the Iegislalton could go m
good chance tllat I could be
Exec Ed
its tnlerpretatlon. The
ROBERT HOEFLICH
killed "
children's
charter was
C•IJ
Editor
Batley asked her why, but
Publ•she
dally except
recommended
m England by
before she could answer
Saturday by The Oh!o
Valley
Publishing
Com
an
educahonal
advisory
Brovnnng objected. The jw :1
pany ,
111
Courl
St
comm1sston
It
never
was taken out of court and the
Pomeroy,
Ohio
~576! :
Business
Olfice
Phone
99?
·
received
consideratwn
in the
lawyers engaged in an noisy
2156 Edttorlal Pf\one 997
United
States
and
In
fact
is
7157
argument.
Second class postage
not
even
m
force
in
England.
The defense attorney said
palO al Pomeroy, Ohio
Na!lonat
advertising , Second, the "fact" sheet
Miss HearSt would cite last
representative
Ward
states that the Child and
week's $1 ml1llon bombing at
Grlff1th Company, Inc ,
Family Services Act will give
Botttnelll
&amp;
Gallagher
Div
,
the family estate at San
757 Third Ave, N~w York .
the responsibility for chtld
Simeon and threats against
N Y 10017
-··
raising to the federal
Subscription
rates
her father's life. The judge
oettverea by carrier where
government.
On the basis of
upheld Browning and ruled
avatlabte 75 cents per
what
ts
actually
tn the blll,
week
By
Motor
Roule
the matters were not
where carrier service no1
this
ts
also
entirely
Ulllrue.
admissible
available , One month ,
~3
25
By
mail
In
Ohto
and
Agam,
tt
is
a
distortion
of the
Mis.• Hearst satd Emily
oN va , One Veer, S22 00 ;
debate
from
the
floor
of
Harrts threatened her even
S1x months , Sll SO : Three
months
,
S7
00
Elsewhere
Congress
in
1971.
The
after theJr arrests, warrung
S26 00 year
Six months
statements
from
the
from her adjommg cell "that
'!.13 50 . three months, S7 so.
wbscnplton
price
Includes
CongressiOnal
Record
are
somebody would kill me" if l ·(junday Ttmes Sentinel
taken from an article on
the heiress told attorneys the
L
1
,~ucation
and child raising in
truthljfl-.IUI her kulnapmg and

Morral Rtdgedale and
MIIISter, also lost.
Ridgedale suffered a ~
defeat at the hands of Carey
Fr1day mght and the same
night, Minster was whacked
76-62 by St. Henry.
Toledo Scott ( 16-0).
Bellefontatne ( 17-0) and
Mtddletown remained in the
tllird, fourth and fifth spots in
MA as the first five teams
remained unchanged . But
from there on down, things
were scrambled.
Clevelsnd Heights moved
from eighth to sixth,
Columbus Unden from ntnth
to seventh, Timken feU from
sixth to eighth, Cleveland St.
lgnatlus from seventh to
ninth and Kettermg Alter
went from eleventh to tenth,
exchanging places with
Toledo Macomber.
Unbeaten Wellsville

Semifinals Friday
•
L

The stated purpose is to '
discuss Congressiooal races.
In other developments:
- Jimmy Carter accused
three senators - Bayh, '
Henry Jackson and lloyd':
Bentsen - of using thetr"
congresstonal
ma(llng prtvlleges to send pclitical~
material to voters. The '
former Georgta governor '
satd friends in Georgia had
rece1ved campatgn-related '
material recently from aU
three, mailed free.
- The chairman of Ronald"
Reagan 's
cam paign
conunlttee, Sen . Paul Laxalt, :
dtsputed President Ford's
statement that Reagari'c
favors
maktng
Social •
Security voluntary Laxalt '
sa1d Reagan "has made It :
clear that he favors.:
mandatory Social Security a:r:
the only way to straighten oul"
the mess Washington has :
"::',
gotten 1t into "
- Fred Harris' hackers
said the former Oklahoma
senator will enter the May 2$
Kentucky
presidential
pnmary as a " nonractsl
populist" alternative to
George Wallace.

Blanton 12 6; Gilmore 0 0 o ,
Dalton 11 -5 , Justtce 1-0 2.
Wagner 4-0-8 TOTALS 9· 3·21.
Score by quarters
Waverlv
5 10 10 9- 34
Roc:k H1ll
6 4 9 2-21
(Second Gamel
N E LSONVI LLE · YOR K
(46)- connors, 1· 2 4, Holte I,
0 0-0, Patton, 2 2 6 , Penrod ,
8- 8-24 . Robtnson, 6 0 - 12 ·
McQuaid, 0· 0-0 TOTALS 17
12 46

ATHENS (38) - Bentley , 6·
o 12 , Ward , 1 1-l, Oatley , 3 o
6 , Ttnkham, 4-1 -9, Edwards ,

4 0 8,
Smathers ,
TOTALS 18-2 31

D-o. o

Score b'lt quarters
Nels York
10 8 14 14 - 46
Athens
15 6 6 11 - 38

Rockets roll
over Lakers

"

'J aws are thin to
reach dlfftcult spots .
,Drop forged from
l,ough alloy steel
,Btue cushion grip
handle.

l

"

fltr•1

I

I

Pro

l

STAR
SUPPLY
,,Racine

Ohio

!Jolted Presslntel"lllltlonal
Some heated exchanges
came out m a Houston
Rockets' team meeting
Tuesday mgbt but It resulted
m a dec1s1on that patd off
immediately wtth an unpressJVe 114-98 romp over the
!As
Angeles
Lakers,
includmg 35 asststs
" We found ~omethmg
tomght thai could gtve us a
btg lift," said guard Mike
Newlin, reSident analyst.
"Our btg men moved wtthout
the ball. They dtdn't just
shuffle around 1n the same
area but they moved out and
around and under-constantly. It made a btg
difference
"The
movement
by
(Kevin) Kunnert, (Joe)
Meriweather and (Rudy)
TomJanovlch was hke
starting the offense before
the first pass was made. If 1t
usually tak"!! five or stx
passes tQ tllrow a defense off
balance, with the movement
tt took two or three.''
In the hrst quarter,
Kunnert, the 7-foot center,
burned the Lakers by hitting
S.Of-t before he found himself
tn foul trouble and sat out
most of tlle game. He kepi the
Rockets even with the torrid

.,

Henry
has
a special reason why
· should come to
for income tax help;
\

Lakers tn a 37-37 ftrst quarter
and then turned the show
over to Ed RaJ.leff,
Tomjanovtch and sub John
Johnson, who combined lor 82
pcints
Kareem Abdul..Jabbar had
34 points and 13 rebounds,
both game highs, for the
Lakers but he got ltttle help.
In other NBA games,
Seattle ripped Boston, 124-99,
Kansas City beat Golden
State, 103-91, and Detroit
downed Phoenix, 10$-94.
In the ABA, Kentucky
dropped St. Lows, 11().105,
New York edged Indiana, 112111, m overtime and Denver
walloped San Antoruo, 142111.
So nics 124, Celllcs 99:
Fred Brown, sidelined
recently by the flu, came off
the bench to score 29 pcmts
and lead Seattle past Boston
for its fifth stratght victory.
Brown entered late tn the
ftrst quarter and hit 9-{&gt;f-13
shots In the first half to pace
the Sanies to a 54-44 halftime
lead. Brown and Leonard
Gray then combined lor eight
straight points as Seattle
broke the game open, 72-55.
Kings 103, Warrlon 91:
Jlnuny Walker and Sam
Lacey each scored 24 points
to lead Kansas City, loser of
five of its previous six games,
over Golden State, witmer of
five of tts last six The
Warriors' Rick Barry was 8for-25 for 20 points.
Pistons 105, SUDB 94:
Detroit,
led by
a
recuperating Bob Lanier witJJ
23 points, equaled Its all-time
beAt defensive effort for a
period by holding Phoenix to
e1ght points In the final 12
minutes. The final period
scoring by Phoenix was the
lowest by any NBA team in a
single quarter this season.
Calonels 110, Spirits 105:
Artis Glbnore scored 27
potnts and grabbed 20

Atl41nt1c DIVISIOn
W
L Pel .
gb
Boston
36 17 b79 Buffalo
34 23 596 4
Phtladelphta
33 24 589 5
New .York
28 30 483 101 2
Central DIVISIOn
W L Pet
gb
Cleveland
33 22 600
12
Washtngton
33 23 569
Houston
27 27 500 51 7
New Orleans
25 29 463 71 7
Atlan ta
26 31 456 a
Western Conference
MidWeSt DIVI SIOn
W l
Pet gb
M rlwaukee
24 33 421
Oetro1t
21 33 389 fl 1
Kansas Ctty
21 36 368 3
Ch tcago
l7 38 309 6
Pac1ftc D1vis1on
W L Pel . gb
Go 10e11 Stale
40 16 714
los Angeles
29 29 500 12
Seatt l e
28 29 491 i 21 "
PhoenIX
23 30 434 15' 1
Portland
24 32 429 16
Wednesday's R esulls
Houston 114 Los Angel es 98
Detro1t 105 Phoentx 94
Ka nsas C ty 103 Gol~en 51 91
Se attle 124 Boston 99
Thursday's Gam es
Portland at Cleveland
Fnday 's Games
Phoen1x at New Or l ean s
Portland at Ch tcago
Washtngton at Detrott
Milwaukee at Hou ston
Boston at Los Angeles
Philadelphi a at seatt le

ABA Standrngs
By Untted Press InternatiOnal
W L Pet gb
Denver
41 13 759 New York
35 21 625 7
San Anton1o
32 22 59 3 9
Kentuc.kv
31 26 544 111 t
lnd rana
29 29 500 14
St LOUIS
26 33 441 1711
Vtrgrnla
1il 46 164 321~
Wednesday Results
Kentucky 110 Sl L OUIS 105
New York 112 lndrana 111 ot
Denver 142 San Anton10 111
Thursday ' s Games
Kentucky at V1rgm ra
lnd1ana at Denver
Friday' s Games
New York al Vtrgln ra
San AntOniO al Sl lOUI S
Denver at lnd1ana

NHL Standtngs
Bv Untied Press International
campbell conference
PafrtCk DtVI StOn
t
W L T Pts gf ga
Philadelphr 37 10 11 85 255 158
NY Isl anders 30 16 12 72 222 1-lJ
Atlanta
26 26 8 60 194 178
NY Rangers 23 30 6 52 198 240
Smythe DIVISIOn
WLTPtsgfga
Chrcago
24 17 17 65 160 165
Vancouver
23 24 11 ' 57 193 198
St LOUIS
22 27 9 53 180 204
Mmnesota
16 38 4 36 14 1 2 11
Kansas C1ly 12 38 8 32 140 249
Wales Conference
Norns DIVISIOn
w L T Pts gd ga
Mon treal
41 9 9 91 248 130
Los A ngeles 30 25 6 66 20 1 20 1
Pittsburgh ~ 4 25 9 57 236 224
Detrorl
'! 9 33 7 45 161 226
Washington
6 47 7 19 163 304
Adams DIVISIOn
W L T Pts gf ga
Boston
36 11 10 82 227 165
Buffalo
32 16 to 74 243 173
Toronto
24 23 11 59 206 20 1
CaHforn1a
21 31 7 49 185 203
Wednesday's Results
NY Rangers 11 Washmgton 4
NV Islanders S Detro11 3
Montreal 7 Toron to 5
Boston 3 Kansas Crty 3
Buffalo 4 Ch1cago 4
Calrfornla 6 Mmnesota 3
Sl LOUIS 2 Los Angeles 2
Ph1ladelph1a 6 Vancouver 4
Thursday 's Games
Atlanta at Buffalo
Toronto at Pittsburgh
Friday's Games
NY Rangers at Montrea l
Atlanta at Kansas C1ty
Phtladelphra at California
Mmnesota at Vancouver

Rtverd•le, etghth last
week, tumbled all the way to
13th

~~~;;~:;:~:~;·.:~:;:~~:;:;tr:;~~:~~~1:t:~:~J:=~=~%~It~:::~=~:=~~~::r:~~~.;~:;:~:;::~~::r:f:;:;:~:.:~:;::~:~~~:~:
~::::::

M:
~=·=·=··
).:'•'•'•

lllf
···~,';

~~~~
~~~:;

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

Nelsonville-York shocked the halfttme tntermtsstOn
SEOAL co-champton Athens The Ltttle Ttgers led 25-19
46-38 and Waverly elimmated gomg tnto the final period.
Rock Htll 34-21 m the second
Athens led 15-10 after one
annual French Ctly Fresh- pertod and 21-18 durtng the
man Tournament on the halft1me mtermlss10n .
GAHS hardwood Wednesday Nelsonville-York led 32-27
evemng
gomg tn to the !mal stanza
The Uttle Buckeyes wtll
Box scores:
face Waverly tn Fnday's
( F1rst Gamel
second se1mfmal contest at
WAVERLY Cl4) Mon ·
7 IS p. m. Galhpolls wtll tgamery,
1-3-S, Maple. 0 0 0,
battle South Potnt tn the ftrst Bnder, 1 0 :z, Weeter, 1-0·2.
~ 0-8, Holland, 3· 1
serruftnal contest at 6 p m 1Fredenck,
, Fieser , 0-1· 1 , Sturgtll, 33
Frtday
9 TOTALS 13· 8·3 4
ROCK
HILL
(21)
In Wednesday's ftrst game,
tratled 6-S after one
led 15-10 durmg

•

the Sovtet Union They havi
nothwg to do wtth theUmted
States. They were tnserted in
the Congressional Record are
taken from an article on
education and chtld ratsmg io ,
the Soviet Umon. They hav~ l
nothmg to do wtth the United 1
States. They were mserted In l
the CongressiOnal Record to :
show the extremes to whtch 4 ;
Communist system goes in
controlltng Its children. No 1
legislalton before the United
States Congress would in any l
way take away the rights of ~
Amertean parents to r~
thetr chtldren as they see
including any proviSIOns o :
the Child and Famtly Ser- l
vtces Act
I opposl the Child 111111
Family Sei'vlces Act, but fO!..
legitimate reasons, not
because of the "distortions
raised by the "fact" sh~
The bDI would be far too;:
costly. AI a period when ou~
economy Is returning from
recession, this iegislatlo
would add hundreds 0
tpllltono ol dollars a year tq!!
the budget. Second, It wo~
In many Instances dupllcall.:
already exlotlng federaC::
programs dealing wit~
maternal and child cal
Lastly, there h
th
possibility, however remote
thai euclmenl of thlo b
could lead to further ~
truslono by the federaliii
governlnent Into child ca.,;::
and child developme~
reaponslbUitleo which bolo
to parents. For tqese reosons,
the bUI would not receive m •
support.
~
Finally, there is almost ~
chance that the Ottld an
Famtly Services Act will
voted on by Congress In 1978.!!!
More and more members ~:i
reallzmg the severe proble
with the bill. It will probabl
stay In committee for the rea "'i
ol. the 94th Congreaa. SUII,
incredible nation-wid
dissemination of the lnac
curate "fact" sheet ha
caused the waste
thousands of hours o
congressional time an
thousanda ol. dollars of tax
payen money to be spen
claiming, the lean oxp
In the mountains of !etten
flooding Washington. t

which has strugg led all year
to crack the top ten, flrually
made tl mto tenth.

slipped back into the No 4
spct m AA followmg the ftrst
loss of the year by Wtllard
which dropped the Flashes'
ooe spot to fifth.
Roundmg out the AA top
ten are Rossford, CircleVIlle,
Columbus St. Charles,
Coshocton and Ironton, the
latter two suffering thetr
second defeats of tlle year
The rash of losses among
the top Class A teams shook
up the small school ratings
some, but not as much as
might have been expected.
Arcanum, 17~. shpped into
third, one ahead of Mtnster
with Lockland remaining .~
fifth. St. Henry gained one
spct to sixth wtth tis vnn over
MIIISter, while Pettisvt1Ie fell
one to seventh. Oak Hill
ctimbed from ninth to etghth,
Monroevtlle remamed In
ninth and Lordstown (l!Hl),

Nelsonville- York stuns istandin~s \
Athens,· W.l'averly
wz·nner avu~:~;.~;~m~~f;::••nol
W 4

•

Because of maccurate and
diStorted tnformatton about
the Child and Famtly Servtces Act, citizens across the
country are becoming tn·
creasmgly alarmed.
As I reported one month
ago, this legislation has
serious Raws In it. It at any
time It reaches the floor of the
House of Representatives It
will not receive my support.
However, the public ts being
totally misled on the content
of the bill. Most of the Information
about
this
legislation Is coming from an

The leaders in the other two
classifications, Canton
McKinley tn AAA and Indian
Valley South m A, both
fmished their regular season
schedules and appear to have
things wrapped up.
McKinley clirna•ed an 111-0
regular season record Friday
rught with a solid 72-56 WIQ
over sixth ranked Canton
Timken. The Bulldogs hold a
308-282 lead over runnerup
Barberton
this week,
collecting 21 first place votes
to 8 for the Magics, 17~.
Indian Valley South, which
lost Jls first game of the
season a week ago, bounced
back nicely vnth a 60-44 wm
over Warwood, W.Va., to
finish at 17-1 .
The Rebels, who have held
tlle No. I Class A spot the
entire season, could have
heen in some trouble, but
tlleir top two challengers.

T o d ay ' s

=·=~:~

:=:=?-:=

:........
:::·:.

Sport Parade
!

UPI Sports Editor

NEW YORK iUPI) - Now ihat his ball club the Cleveland
Cavaliers, are up there w first place, BtU Fttch can afford to
laugh If he was a different type, he'd have a good loud laugh at
those who used to ?"'ke jOkes about him and his all-losmg
crew, but that tsn t hts way. Btll Fitch doesn't laugh at
anybody, except maybe htmself once in awhile.
He had to do that when the Cavaliers ftrst came mto
ext~tence six years ago It was the only way he could keep his
santty , says the general manager and coach of the NBA's
Central Diviston leaders.
"We had rough gomg to start wtth," he says "I would tell
my players if we can't laugh at ourselves, we're JUst goana get
mad when other people laugh at us "
Some expansiOn teams are bad at the outset; the Cavalters
were dreadful Oh sure, they tried, but they kept ruanmg too
long tn the same place. They were sunply over-matched when
the¥ entered the league durmg the 1~7().71 season. They lost
thetr ftrst II consecutive games and one evening Bill Fttch
dectded to do somethmg dtfferent, do anything , hopmg to snap
the strmg and win a ball game
"We got to San FranCisco and I told the players to go on out
ahead of me and I'd meet them in the locker room a little
later," says Fttch "They all walked over together and then
when I got there, the guy at the door says to me 'Where are
;,:ou going ?' Inside, I say to htm, and he says ~Wltere's your
Uckel' ' f tell him I don't have a ticket, I'm the Cleveland
coach, and he says 'Prove tt.' llook at th1s guy and say to hun
the Cleveland Cavaliers have lost eleven m a row, they'v~
never won a game yet, do you thmk I'd stand here and say 1
was thetr coach tf I wasn't?''
That dtd tl The guy let Btl! Fttch tn , and now stx years later
he has the Cavalters up there on top m thetr dtvtston. They are
a teamwtthout any stars You won't fmd them among the NBA
scormg leaders, but the Cavalters have Jelled into an
excepttonally well-balanced untt, one that makes few mtstakes
and gtves up nothmg at all on defense
The Cavaliers have six players averagmg double figures m
every game. They don't have anybody like a Bob McAdoo a
Kareem Abdu!Jabbar, a Nate Archibald or a Geo~ge
McGtnrus, but they 're dotng well enough so that they're on
thetr wa~ to thetr best season ever, playing 600 ball with 33
wins agamst 22 losses.
Btll Fttch ISn't cheermg yet, though.
" I feel," he says, "like the guy who JUmped off the Emptre
State Butldtng and just went by the 60th floor So far so good
I've seen a Iotta movtes that looked ltke they were gdnna hav~
happy endmgs, and' dtdn't I take a look at the schedule and I
know we're a long way from home yet."
The cunous thmg about Btll Fttch ts even tbough he taught
his Cleveland players how to laugh at themselves when they
were agomzmg through a 11Hl7 season their first year, he
res1sts any unpulse to laugh at that outclassed old crew of hts
now.
"I'm not so sure they dtdn't do as much as they posstbly
could,'' he says.

Owners asking
for. response
LOS ANGELES (( UPI ) With sprmg trammg right
around the corner, baseball
owners' negotiators have
asked for a response to a
propcsal they made Frtday to
the MaJor League Players
AssoCiation
The two sides held thew
19th negotiatmg sesston
Wednesday
In order to break the
deadlock over the reserve
clause, the owners last week
propcsed a system wheretn a
man who has played etght
major league seasons can
elect to play out a one-year
option penod.
"Baseball needs a system
to guarantee compet1hve
balance and continuity,
which form the basts for fan
loyalty," smd John J .
Gaherm,
chtef
labor
negotiator for the owners.
"The clubs also need some
assurance that thetr mvestmen ts in player development,
which averages $500,000 per
player who makes tl to the
major leagues , wtll be
protected.
"Both the clubs and the
Players Assoctation have a
VItal mterest m getting on
with spring tratnmg and

another successful season.
We look to the association to
offer us a meamngful and
detatled response to our
proposal so we may
successfully conclude these
negotiations "
The next negotiating
sesston between the owners
and Players Assoctalion will
he held at Gaherm's offtce tn
New York Saturday.
The owners have said they
won't open sprmg training
unless a new contract agreement IS reached.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No 21708
Estate of V1vran Maxey
Deceased
Not1ce JS hereby gtven t hat
Bulah F ay Maxey of Reeds
v1l l e. M e1g s County Ohto has
be en
Ou!y
ap pornted
E)(ecu lr x of the Estate of
V1vlan Maxey, deceased fa te
of Reedsv ille Metg s County ,
Oh10
Cred1tors are requtred to
file lh e rr cla tms w 1th sard
f rd ueta ry w 1thm four months
Dat e d th1S 2nd day of
Febru ary 1976
Mann1ng D Webster
J udg e
Court of Common Pleas
Probate Drvrston
Mergs County , Oh10
f 2l

s

12 19 3tc

reboullds to lead Kentucky.
The Colonels hit on 11-of·24
shots 1n the final period while
St. Louis, led by Freddie
Lewis' 29 points, could
manage just 7-of-24.

The Inn-Place Presents

RON BRINKER
Guitarist with Percussion-Vocalist

H&amp;R BLOCK®

8:30-12:30

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

THE MEIGS INN

618 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OHIO
Best In 'Live Entertainment

OPEN· t-6WEEKO.-YS,HSAT.

Ph. 992-379'
,,

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NO APPOINTMENT

y

II

'

'•'•'•'

~t:?::;:~

By MILTON RICHMAN

TONIGHT
If you received the
for f11tng
your taxes, our preparers are spec1ally
ned to determtne 11 tl s best for you
IS, we II complete tt at a very low
" 'n•·•~"' .and our charge always includes
your restdent state return.

1:~1

•J

High School ratings
COLUMBUS IUPII - Tht5
week ' s Untted Pr ess In
lernal,ona ! Oh io H igh School
Board of Coaches' basketball
ratmgs Wtth f 1rst pla ce voles
&amp;nd won lost r eco rd s In
parentheses ,
CLASS AAA
TEAM
POINTS
1 Canton M cKrnley (21 18
0)
JOB
2 Barberton {8 17 Ol
282
3 To l edo Scott ( 2 16 OJ
224
4 Belle fontaine ( 1 17 01
164
5 Mrddletown ( 15 21
139
6 Cleve lan d HeiQhts (15 1 J 113
1 Columbus lin den
Mct&lt;mley (14 31
75
8 Canton T tmken 116 21
67
9 Cl evela nd St Ig natiU S ( 15

21

66

10 Kelten ng Alte r I 14 21
61
Second len
11
Toledo
Macomber 60
12 Lebanon
32 , 13 Groveport 25
14
Ctnctn na li Elder 20. 15
Ctnctnnatt LaSalle 18 , 16
Elyr1a 16. 17 t 1e Canlon
Sou th and Sprmgfr eld South,
15 ea c h 19 Columbus Manon
Franklin 9 , 20 Lancaster 7
CLASSAA
TEAM
POINTS
1 De lphos St J ohn's (20 16
OJ
301
2 Warsaw Fhiler Vtew (7 16
OJ
28~
3 loram Cat hOl iC (117 0) 223
4 Wellsville (14 0 )
185

Flanagan in
third place
GARDEN CITY, N.Y.
( UPI) - Glenn Pterce
mcreased hts lead over
Carmen Salvino slightly
Wednesday night in the
$100,000 AMF Pro Classic
Bowlmg Tournament.
Pierce, of Jacksonville,
Fla., had led Salvmo,
Ch1cago, by 32 pins after the
first round and upped that to
a 40-pin margin folio~ the
second six-game block,
For 12 games, Pierce had
spilled 2, 738 slicks, a 228
average, while Salvino had
knocked down 2,698 plna.
They were followed 1n the top
It ve by Sam Flanagan,
Parkersburg, W.Va., 2,675;
Fred Conner, Mar Vista, Cal.,
2,635, and Curt Schmidt, Ft.
Wayne, Ind., 2,628.

5 Wtllard ( 16 I)
6 RossfOrd f 17 I l

156

li S
Ct r clev1 lle ( 15 21
109
8 Columbus 51 Char les 11'5
2)
12
9 Coshocton ( 15 21
67
10 rronton (1~ · 2)
63
Second ten · 11 Wheeler·
sburg 49 , 12
Cinc1nnat 1
G-reenhtlls 2 44 , 13 Sandy
Valley 33. 14 Delta 1 18 . IS
Trrway I 15 16 Lou i sv i lle
Aqumas 14 , 17 t1e Hann1bat
Rt ver and Br rdgeport. 13
each 19 Akron Sout h 12 . 20
lte Bexl ey and Elmwood , 11
each
CLASS A
TEAM
POINTS
I lnd tan Valley South 11417.
1
287
2 Morral R id geda l e {5 15
I)
224
3 Ar c anum {3 17 OJ
173
4 Mmst er ( 15 1)
151
5 Lockland 12 15 H
126
6 St Henry ( 2 15 1)
114
7 Pet!Jsv ttle (3 16 1J
106
8 Oak H1ll (117 I)
96
9 Monroevil le I 116 ll
93
10 Lo~dstown ( 19 oO }
51
Second ten . 11 . North
Galha 49, 12 Stryker 42 , 13
Rtverdale 32 14 Ada 25 , 15
Marion Local '23, 16
t ie
Sebrmg
and
Frankfort
Adena , 19 each . 18 Hi l l sda le
18 19 Sandusky Sf Mary ' s
14 , 20 Zane Trace Ross 12
1

Bench signed
by Cincinnati
CINCINNATI (UPl) - The
Cincirtnali Reds today announced the signmg of
catcher Johnny Bench who
batted ,283 last year with 28
home runs and 110 runs
batted in.
The Reds, as Is their policy,
refused to say what they will
pay Bench for the 1978 season
but It waa leariled he had
been aakin8 lor $200,000.
The Reds still have to s1gn
IIICb 1tan u third baseman
~le a-, 11ec0nd baseman
Joe Morgan, first baseman
Tony Perez and pitcher Don
Gullet.

Before you buy
your next car,
seehownmch

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISAMENT
The State of Otuo, Me1gs
County, Court of Common
Pleas, Probate DIVISion
To the Executor of the
estate to such of the fOllOWing
as are residents of the State of
Oh10 , viz the surv1v.ng
spouse, tile next of kin, the
benefJcianes under the will.
and to the attorney or at
torneys r e presentmg any of
the aforemenlloned persons
Wllltam Clyde Andrews.
Pomeroy , Oh10, Sa l tSbury
Township, No 21658
You are hereby nottf1ed t hat
the
Inventory
and
Ap
prarsement of the estate of the
aforement ioned ,
deceased ,
tate of sa1d County, was filed
1n th rs Court Satd Inventory
and Appra1sement w111 be for
hearing before t h rs Court on
the 2nd day of March , 1976, at
10 00 o'clock , AM
Any person des.r1ng to f rle
excepllons t hereto must file
them at leastftvedaysprlor to

lhe dale set for hearong

Grven under my hand and
seal of satd Court, th1s 14th
day of February 1976

M annlng D Webster
Judge

you
might

save.

aboulll":~~;:~~'1~~'~:~~

ASk
through a c~

and economical State

losurance.

1258 p

II St

owe
.
Middleport, 0.

PH. 992-7155
AnotherJerVic:e of )lOIII'
•••. • ••••
·•
..

State~Aaent.

State Farm lnsurante Gtwnpanin
" •I UIOfOCt
0
By Ann B Watson '--...:JHome
Offices Bloomlnoton 1Nino11
Deputy Clerk
(2 ) 19, 26, 2tc
p 74104

�•
~ - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 19, 19i6

~

The llatl ) Senlln&lt;·l. Muldlt•port -Pomeroy, 0 .. ·nmrsday, Feb. l9, l!li6

Scarlet Knights race.
past Syracuse, 93-80
-

l uih' ci Pn·ss lntrrnatiunal
Hut~ers has moved up to
fifth plare in t he college
basketu;tll ranki ngs th is
season by nutnmning and
outmuseling all 22 of its
opponents. Now Coac h Tom
Young is conrerned about his
Scarlet Knights learning to

pace themselves.
l.cd by freshman Abdel
Ander sun's se ason-h ig h 21
points. Rutger s sprinted to a
93-80 t riumph over Syrac use
Wednesday night in a helterskrlter game between two
Fast-Ureakmg teams .
Anderson.
a 6-foot-6
forward, hi! on 8-&lt;&gt;f-13 shots
and 'a lso co llrt'ted nine
r ebounds to hel p Rutgers hold
off a Syracu se rally midway
through the se&lt;,ond half.

The Orangernen, now I~
foll owing
last
year's
s urprising fourth-place fini sh
in the NCAA playoffs, erased
a l8-36 halftime deficit by
cli cking for 13 straight points
to open the second ha If. But
Rutgers, behind Ed Jordan,
Mi·k e Dabney and Phil
Se llet s, regrouped and darted
to a 15-2 spw·t to reestablish
itself.
Young,
however. . is
concerned about sharpening
his team for the NCAA
tournament ahead and hopes
there's enough lime to
develop a greater sense of
control on the court.
"We've been running for 22
games now and will have to
learn how to slow down when
we have to ." said Young .

.

Ross Kinde I sco red 19
points from long range and
Marty Byrnes added 23 to
keep the score close for
Syracuse, which managed
only a 38.6 team shooting

perce: ntage. Kevin James
added 14 points in the losing
effort.
Elsewhere
in college
basketball,
seeond-.-anked
Marquette beat Depaul, &amp;h'iJ,
No. 3 North Carolina survived
a threat by unranked Miami
of Ohio to win , 77-75, seventhranked Maryland downed
Georgetown, 72-li:J, No . 12
Missouri nipped Kansas, 61 ..
60, No . 15 North Carolina
Slate edged Duke, 96-95, in
overtime, Florida State beat
Jacksonville, 74-65, Kansas
State romped over Nebraska,

North Gallia battles SW
in final league contest
Hrgular sN1son actio11 for
all bu l nne team in tlw
Sout!wrn V ~lll e y Athl etic
('onfenmce C(li11CS to a d ose
Frichi) night.
111 the on ly lc(l gue co ntest,
rhc 1975~7G -SVAC Champion

over Ea slern , finish ed m

tournament champ, battles

fourth place .
Overall. North Galha is 15-2
and 11-0 1n tile SVAC. Southwestern bas a 5-12 overall

Southern.

rec ord, 5-6 mark in the
IPng ue .
North C&lt;JIIia Pirates play at .
In uther gwnc.s, Coat.:il Cml

S lJ

U

Ih

W

c·S t

C I II .

'I' l 1C

Higlllandrrs. by v1rtue of
thei r ''idm•y '::ruesday night

Wolfe's Southern Tornados
will try to wrap up a fine
seas on ag ainst Glous ter . The
TOrnados finished second in

Catlett
mum on

OSU job
CINCINNA TI 1UPI) Gale Cl! tlell, the young and
success ful . Unive r ~ity of
CincinMli bas ketba ll t·oach
being mentioned as a possible
cn ndi d&lt;~te for jobs at both
Ohto Sta te Md Iowa Stale,
isn't ta lkin g much about
those possibili ties now - but
he may la ter.
" I will not discuss contract
with a ny othe r school at this
time," said ca tlett, 35, in his
f ou rth

str ::~ig llt

winning

season a t Cincy. "I am loya l
to Cincinna ti throug hou t this

season.''
At 't. hough Ci ncinnati
a thle tic offi cials. said Catlett
.has boen offe red a four-year

extension of his · contract,
Ca tlett pointed out hi s
contm ct expires this June :.n
and he tossed in an

interes ti'ng comment just
prior to Wednesday night' s

an nual crosstown riva lry
game betwee n Cincy and
X;wier .
" Quite frankly, U1is could
be the last time I coach a

Cincinn ati· tea m against
Xa vier, " ~a irl Ca tlett.
catle tt , Who said he has
" heard from a couple of Ohio
Sla te al umni about the
basketball job there," called
Ohio SUite " a great coac hing

opportunity for somebody."
llowevr r, ca tlett said he
ha s ha d "e bsol utely no
co n tact · with
a nybody
con nected officially wit h the
tmiversity.''
Catlett, who played at the
University of West Virginia
and later was an assistant
coa ch under Adolph Rupp at
Kentucky, has posted a 77-26
record in his nearly four

seasons at Ci ncinnati, his
firs t

he ad

coaclling

assignment.

Ohio State is looking for a
replacemenlfor Fred Ta ylor ,
who is resigning after this
season , and Iowa Stale is
seeking a coach to step in for
the alread y- res ig ned Ken
Tri ckey .
Mea nwhile , Catlett's boss
at
Cincinnati , Athletic
Director Hindman Wa ll. said
he was fl ying to eugene,
Ore.. today to talk with
Univ e rsity
of
Oregon
officia ls , who are looking for
a new at hl etic director. · ·
Wall, who said he ''is not
seeking anything and is very
happy at Cincinnati," said
Oregon offi c;ials have been
calling !tim " for months."
"Finally," said Wall , " I did
tell them I 'd go out just to
lis ten to what they had to

say.''
Wall , an assistant aUtletic
dire ctor at Kansas Stale
before coming here two years
ago , also denied he has
appli e d for the athletic
director's job a t Gco~g ia
Tech ·and added, "''ve .been

mrn tioned in connection with
the Kansa s Stale job too, but
that. doesn 't mean I'm job
hunting."

I

tile SVAC a nd hav e an
overall, la-4 record.

Han uan Trace. 10-7 overa ll
a nd third ~lace club in the
league \'&gt;'ill end ils season
;1gainst Waha111a.
Tuesday night,

Kyger
Cr eek 5- 12 travels to Buffalo,
W. Va .
Next weekend, lop-seeded
N,,.·th Gallia will face
E&lt;:~stern in t~e Class A Sec-

ti onal Tournam&lt;?nt at Meigs.
On Saturday, Feb . 26, Han ncnl Tri.ICC, l ast year ' s

SVAC STAN D I NGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P
Nor t h Gallia
15 2 1256
So uthern
13 J JJ J J
Hannan Tra ce
10 7 968
KygerCreek
5 I? ll 71
Soutllw est ern 5 12 · 878
Svm m es Valley
4 IJ 836
Eastern
1 17 676

SVACONLY
TEAM
W L
Norlh Ga tt ia
II 0
South er n
10 '1
Hannan Tr ace 8 4
So u t hw estern 5 6
Symmes Va l l ey
4 8
Kyg e r Cr re k
3 9
Ea s t e rn
I 11

P
791
789
689

OP
918
895

871
111 4

1117

1272
1060

~.&lt;..8

OP
525
590
59'}
635

656
61 0
..t 78

776
778
65.6

P

OP

609
6'11
533.
·IS..t
366
•130

39 7
-:187
J0 2
462
·159
56·1

38t

6 12

RESERVE

W L
TEAM
H a nnan Tri! ce
ll 1
Sou thern
10 2
North G a ll ia
8 J"
Soul hwes tern 5 6
Ea s tern
J 9
K yger Creek
7 10
,Symm es Valley
7 10

BOWLING
Pom e rov Bowlinq Lan e!&gt;
Morninq Glort cs
Fl'b. 10 , 1916
Gtb bs Grocery
ll9
E11. ce l si or O i l Co
Il l
N ew el l .S un oc o
91
W M PO
ii.t
G &amp; J Auto Pftr ls
17
Spencer 's MartH.• I
H igh ind i vidual q ame
JudY Pockllnqton 70 1, sec ond
Eunice Duff 187
H "iq h
i ndi'llidual
t hr ee
qam ~s
Judy Pock lington
.19M . secon d
Ma rtr nc W11son
·1'i' 7 .
T eam
h.igh
qamc
W M P .O
H36 , team hig h
series
w ,M . P o . 7.3 50.

~. and Virginia ripped
Clemson, 90-77.
Earl Tatum. playi ng his
final home game for
Marquette, scored 16 points
to lead the Warriors. The win
was
Marquette's
16th
straight, 21st in 22 games and
17th win in a row over
Pomeroy Bowling Lane!.
DePaul , which is now 16-8.
Tuesday Triplicate
Marquette, up 39-27 at the
February 10 , 1976
JI
half,led by only four points at Roya l Oak Park
Dew DrQpS
30
43-39 with 14 minutes left Racine H ome N a t I. Bk .
.
when Lloyd Walton and N ew York C lo l h ing
73
Da iry Valley
70
Jerome Whitehead scored to Mitch
e ll Painlin q Co
14
H ig h in di'llidual game
make it 47-39. Joe Ponsetto
Pat Carson 181. second
hit a layup for DePaul but Sh
irley M itc h el l 112 .
Bernard Toone dropped in
H ig h se r ies
Pat carson
Dot K nrr .157
two free. 'throws and a jump ·17 8, s~cond
Team high qaml.'
Roya l
shot and Bo ellis scored on a Oak Park .a8 5, teart;~ hiqh
Roya l Oak Park
layup to put the game out of se ries
1.J5 1
reach at 53-41.
North Carolina needed a
Pom('roy Bowlin9 Lane s
pair of free throws by Phil
. F c ~ .r~o~~ ·976
Ford wiUt seven seconds left Ph e lp s
37
for lts slim victory over Pomeroy Blo c k Co ,
33
Roa chS Gun Shop
78
Miami of Ohio. The Tar Se &lt;Jrs Calatog M e r ch ant s 76
Heels, now 21-2, went into H &amp; R Fi re s tone
14
their famed fo ur-corner M ei gs Inn
6
H i9 h individual Qamc
offensewlth 1:07 leftafter the Jerry Van l nwagon no .
Mid-American
Conference secon d
D&lt;Jve Peterson 2 19 ,
th _i rd
Charle s Hy sell 213.
Redskins tied the score at 75H igh
se ri es
Da'll c
a ll with 1:07 remain ing on a P e terson S5 J. secon d
Jerry
Cl ine ~?9,
third
J ack
free throw by Arch ie P e terson an d Charl es Hysell
Aldridge.
" '
Tci!rll
hiqh
Qam e
F or d , a, 6• 2 sop h ~mo~e ~ Pomeroy
ceine n t B loc k Co
guard, was fouled by Miamis 9'12 , team h ig h series

,.

John

Shoemak er

and

conver te db at h ends of a one.
si tuation. Following
a Miami time out with four
seconds left, Shoemaker got
off a 25-footer which missed
as time ran out .
T he Tar Heels were paced
by 6-10 Mitch Kupchak's 24
and~ne

points.

MEET POSTPONED
The reg ular mee ting of the
Kyger
Cree k
Ath letic
Booste r s Club sched uled
tonig ht has bee n postponed .
The session was ca lled off
due to the specia"J meeting of
the Comm ittee For Be tter
Education in Gall ia County
Schools.

Pomeroy Ce mcn l B loc k Co .
7. 616 .
Pomuroy Bowling Lanes
Ea rl y Wed . Mi-.:ed
Feb . . I I, 1976
N e lson Dr u~ Co ."
32
Zidcs sport Shop
Oi le r s Fo ur
Youngs s up er Mkt .
?.f
70
Smit h N e l son Motor
Tcm th rr&lt;~m crs
16
H i g h ind i vidu&lt;JI 9a rn c
Bil l Port er 2 11 , B e lly Smit h
19 8, sec ond
A l Ph elp s J r
'/00 , Be lt y Smith 19 S. third
BOb Couch 191 , Be t ty Smith

""

IH9

High se r 1CS
A L . P he lps
Jr
SSS ,. 13e lly Smith ~ 87 ,
sec ond
Bi ll Port er 5JJ ,
Carolyn Ba c·hnc.r .171 , t hird
Gob Co u c h ~ 06 ,
lsatJC II c
Cou&lt;:h .t6!l
Tcarp h igh qanHJ· · Zj des
Sport Shop 688 . team hi ~H1
se rie s
Zides ' Sporl Shop
I ,968

"

Ma~on

Bowling C enter
Ferry Boat
Feb. J J , J'i'76

Judge nuottle ·candz.date ~~~~e;~~s~rour~~~~nProdu;~s
Sp&lt;~r es
for 4th District Court
W

::
31 37
JO ].1

t

.Judge Darr ell R. Hottle,
Hi ghlan d Coun ty, an nounced
his ca ndidacy for the vacancy
on the 4th District Court of
Appeals ca used by the
re tirment of .Judge Gordon B.
Gray. '111e distr ict incl udes
th e . co unties of Adams,
Athen s, Brown, Gall ia,
Highland , Hockmg , Jackson ,
Lawrence, Meigs, Pickaway,
Pike. Ross, Scioto, Vinton
a nd Wash ington . ·
Judge Hottle began his 22nd
year on the Highland Coun ty
Common Pleas Bench t his
rnunth, having been assigned
by the Ohio Chief J ustice to 25
o th er co unties, incl uding
metropolitan and 12 of the 15
co un ties i n the Fo urth
District and to the First and
Second Dist r icl Cour t of
Appea ls. He se r ved four
years as Prosecuting Attorney, Hig h land Co unty,
a long with a year as Solici tor
of Hillsboro before election to
the Bc ncll .
" It has been an honor to
serve in public capacities for
26 years. and I would. consider it a high privilege to
utilize th is experience for the
Fourth Appe ll ate District
Court ," Judge Hottle said, ~e
he places his name in the
Democratic pr imary elec-

tion.

Born and reared on a
Highland County farm, Judge
Hottle graduated from Hi llsboro Schoo ls , Oh io Slate
Universi t y, i:Jn d Wes te rn
R eser ve
Law
Schoo l ;

married to Catherine, an· R.
N., who have tw o children,
nne teaching school and one
in graduate school. He has
ser ved as executive committeeman of t he Ohio Slate
Bar Association , has served
on its committee to study its
structure, is serv ing on its
J udicial
Adm inistra tio.n
Comm ittee , and is servi ng on
committees of the Oh io
Common P leas J udges
Association to study crim inal
rules and ethics; is ac tive in
and delegate to Genera l a nd
oth er confere nces of th e
United Method is t Church , is
Vice President of Central
Oh io Councii , Boy Scouts , and
recipient of the Silv er Beaver
Award, member of and past
officer in M:i:Jsonic Bodies and
recipient of t he 33 Degree
awarded by Scottish Hite ;
Hillsbor o Elks' Past Exalted
Ruler, Past President of the
Hillsboro Rota r y Club , has
been acti ve in Farm Bureau,
Crippled Children and Adult
Society. Goodwi ll Industries,
T. B. and Hed Cross Chapters, along with ma ny other
com mtmity activ ities.
NEW AID E NAME D
CLEVE LAND UPJ - Peter
Hadhazy, New E ngla nd
Pa tr iots assistant ge nera )
nut nager,
was named
executive assistant to the
president of t he Cleveland
Br owns Wed n esday by
Brow ns'
owner
a nd
Presideni. Ar thur B. Modell .

••
•• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
••

=
•

:•
•

••
•

SHOES FOR THE FAMILY

:
:•30% -40%-50%
•

••

:•

Off•

••

•
: Chapman's Shoes . :
•
•
t ~AIN ST.
POMEROY:
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
,.

L

•

Spencer 's
Ray 's Ca rry Ou t
Gru escr 8. Son Plum
bing
'1 6 38
Team J
20 38
Men ' s hiqh sl nql e qame
Ed d t c Whitt
'17t , Mo ses
Nor m an 70 1. women' s h iq t1
s ingle &lt;~am c
Diana Whi ll
180 , sec ond
Sc!by M ilf1 1Cy
179
Men 's high series
Eddie
W.h i l! 557 . second ·
M oses
N orm an ;] 6 , · wom e n 's lligh
series
Se lby M Bn l cy .tH .I ,
seco nd
Don na M c f- ar l an d
-180

Tar Heels
nip Miami
Ohio College
Basketball Roundup
United Press International
squeaker over Miami, North
carolina Coach Dean Smith
has just about seen enough of
the Redskins .
The Tar Heels, who brought
a 211-2 · record and a No. 3
national ranking to Oxford
with them, just squeezed by
the MAC coleaders in the
final seven seconds, 77-75, on
a pair of free throws by Phil
Ford.
" We were very fortunate to
win," said the Tar l!eel
coach. " We always have
tough games with Miami. "
Three years ago, Miami
shocked
the
college
basketball world with a 102-92
win at Chapel Hill, N.C., a
· victory that is still being
called the greatest in the
hist ory of baske tball at
Miami. A year later, the
Redskins lost 83~9 at North
Carolina.
Wednesday night's game
was a tight one all the way .
North carolina jumped to a
quick 18-10 lead , the Redskins
rallied for a 37-33 ha lftime
advantage and Uten tbe two
teams battled on nearly even
terms the r est of the way .
NorUt Carolina's biggest
lead in t he second half was
four points and Miami led at
onetime by five in the fina l 20
minutes.
A free throw by Miami's
Archie Aldridge tied it a t 75all with I: 07 remaining a nd
tile Tar Heels went into their
famed fo ur corner offense, .
holding the ball for a full
minute before Ford was
fou led by John Shoemaker.
After the 6-2 sophomore
made it 77-75; the Redskins
got off one last shot , a 25footer by Shoemaker , but it
fai led to go .
"I'm proud of my team ,"
said Mia mi Coach Darrell
Hedric. " They can come out
of the locker room wi Ut their
heads high."
lledr ic said he' felt the
game showed the MidAmerica n Conference could
. "play with a nyone."
Mitc h Kupchak, No r th
ca r olina's '6-10 senior cen ter,

led all scorers with 24 points
and Walter Davis added 20
for the Tar Heels.
Aldridge totaled 19, Chuck
Goodyear 17 and Shoemaker
12 for Miami, which fell to 14·
7 on the year.
In a Mid-Am game, Kent
State's Corteze BrowQ poured
in 38 points, a career high , (o
pace the Golden Flashes to an
easy 105-75 victory over Ohio
University.
Brown, James Collins and
Tony Jamison led a blistering
Kent fast break which left the
Bobcats reeling 5().27 at halftime. Collins finished with 24
points and Jamison 23 as the
three combined for 85 points .
OU's top scorer was Scott
Love, who tallied 15 of his 17
from the free throw line .
Kent is now 11-10 overall
and IKi in the conference, OU
is 9-12 and 5-6. It marks the
first time a Kent teams has
won twice in one season over
OU, which held a 44-9 edge

over the Golden Flaohes coming into this year .
•
Cincinnati saw all but two
of a 17-point lead vanish, but
held on for an 81-74 victory
over crossstown rival Xavier .
The !7Ut ranked Bearcats,
now 19-3, led 56-39 early in the second half but Xavier, paced
by the outside shooting of
freshman Nick Daniels, cut it
to
73-71
with
2 :25
remaining .
•·
Daniels led all scorers with
23 poi nts and teammate
Garry Whitfield had 20.
Cinci nnati 's balanced
attack was paced by Mike
Jones with 18, Pat Cununings .
wiUt 15 and Robert Miller
.with 12.
In other games Wednesday ·
night , Cleveland
State ·
surprised Akron
62-50,
Ashland outscored Walsh 9i92, Ohio Dominican beat
Wilberforce 9f&gt;-87, NorUtern ·
Kentucky State dumped
Wright State 85-73, Hiram •
edged John Carroll 76-75, :
Findlay beat Earlham' (Ind .) :
87-80, Manchester ( Ind. );
defeated Bluffton 91~1 and •
case Western whipped Thiel ~
(Pa.) 62-73.
.
:
Tonight's Ohio college :
schedule is a light one with ' ·
two games on tap . Denison !
plays at Salem (W.Va .) and :
Wesley an
hosts :
Ohio
Rochester (N .Y .).

Threeitemsunderconsideration Mrs. Wilson gives program
at Friendly Circle meeting
COLUMBUS Three changes in th~tdocument will in mid-December containing
major items of business will pave the way for revision of the Values and Goal
come before delegates to a the Canons of the diocese Statement and the ProgrJm
Special Episcopal Diocesan during the annual convention Goal Priorities as adopted by
Convention, Feb. 21, at the in November. The Con- Diocesan Council for 1975-76;
Ohio State University Union slitution must be approved · the budget in line item form
in Columbus .
~uring the special convention and the Constitution and
Being considered by and be approved without Rules of Order as printed in
delegates from 90 parishes in changes in November before 1969, as changed between
the Diocese of Southern Ohio it can go into effect. Canons then and now and additional
will he the Program Goal can be revised only during a changes the Committee on
Priorities of the diocese, the regular session of convention Constitution and Canons
1976 Budget and proposed but become effective im- propose for adoption during
changes in the Diocesan mediately .
the convention .
·
Constitution and rules of
Much of the preliminary
While the schedule for -Ute
order of convention.
discu ss ion concerning the convention has not been
Pretiminary plans call for goals, budget and con- finalized, plans call for
the goals of the diocese to be stilution
came
during registration to begin at8 a.m .
reviewed first , followed by an regional
Pre -convention with a Service · of Holy
explanation of the budget meetings held in Cincinnati, Communion commencing at
Dayton, Columbus and 9:30. Adjournment is ten·
process.
Presentation
of
the Athens in January .
tatively set for 4 p.m.
proposed Constitution and
Delegates received packets

•

ONE LOT
LON G SLEE V E

DRESS
SHIRTS

VALUES TO $9.98

DINGO BOOTS
MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

20%. OFF
"

B o l wi n g Leag ue
Fe b . ll ,1976

Late com e r s

SIZES ARE BROKEN
Oth e r item s too nu mer ou s to
m ention at our lowest sa le prices.

Rooki~s

Globetrotters
Thre e G's
Alley (j3tS

**************************·
Marguerite's Shoes

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
Kerm' s Korner
Open Fri. til8
Pome roy

a

BEID OHLINGER
~~ 102 E. Main

~

. FRI. TIL 8 - SAT. TIL 5

7~

SATURDAY, FEB. 21 ·

~~~W~A~S~H=IN~G~T~O~N~'S~~~

WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY
Sale Fabrics!

POLISH

Po rn eroy B owl i n g Lane s
F ircba tl
Feb . 9,1976
W L
tl \
15
Hot Sho ts
38 18
Te&lt;Jm I
Team~

) .j

?'l

7tl 32
Pink Pa n ther s
72 34
F &lt;J bri&lt;: Shop
Team o\
9 ·17
St•lby
High single gam e
N an cy
M&lt;Jn l ey 175, second
Dob bi n s 165 .
Hi g h series
Del ma Ka r r
.17 1, se&lt;:ond
Se lby .Ma nley
-168 .

•

SAUSAGE

5 SPEED SUNBEAM

·SANDWICH

PORTABLE MIXER

CHOW'S
STEAK HOUSE
Pomeroy , Ohio

Converse -

'1299
·

(No . 6)

Black. white,
r e.d ,

green.

Regular '20.99
(No. AP 83)

b l ue,

WOVEN
FABRICS

'1595

COMMODE SEAT
Regular $9.95
SPECIAL

ATHLETIC SUPPORTS
GYM $450
SWEAT PANTS
BAGS
,
WOOL SOCKS
MEIGS T·SHIRTS and SWEAT SHIRTS

MILK CAN
Regular s4.J9
THIS SAL E

BI.OCKBUSTfRI

'595

5 GALLON PLASTIC
TUBE SOX WITH
NUMBERS AND STRIPES

Val. to 2.29

BATHROOM

gold .

'

1 Group 45"

SUNBEAM ELECTRIC

All Star

BASKETBALL SHOES
ma roon,

Reg.
'16.95

All VELVET,
CORDUROY &amp;
VELVETEEN

COFFEEMAKER

MIDilEPORT DEPT. STORE

Fri., Feb. 20
Sat., Feb. 21

IN POMEROY

TRY OUR

JUDG E HOTTLE

Pomeroy

161.

W L

70

TU PPERS PLAINS
· Cha rles (Red ) Carr , Tuppers
P lai ns e ntered U ni v~rsily
Hospital in Coluinbus Feb. 9
for tests and on Fe b. 13 underwe nt open hear t s urgery .
He is in tbe m ai n hospital for
at least two weeks, eighth
fl oor , eas t wing .
,
His wife, Rose , has been in
Columbus with hin for the
pas t week. J oin ing Mrs . Carr
on Friday were Mr . and Mrs.
"·E. Doug las, G. R . Douglas,
Mr. and Mrs. Fr a nk Perry
and Sonia Carr. Visi ting Mr.
Carr on Sunday were his
mother, Mrs . Mary Carr,
Doug las, Ter esa , Sonia ana
Rose Carr .

-...,~ ,

Hit s
M isses
10 ] tl
T (' nm
h1g h
gam e ,
L a teco me r s :17·1, Lal c&lt;; omcr s
·103 . Rookies 398
I ndivid ua l hig h sc r 1c S
.
Nc ll erH' Pe thtel tl ~ l . MMY
Ho fl rnan -1"26. Sr1ndr .1 Grimm
•106 , Bunny E s tes •106.
Individ ua l h ig h qam c
Nan c y N f'ison
11] , lJ unny
E s le s 167 , Nancy N eulzl inQ

FRIDAY, FEB. 20
1tl
18
')'}
7&lt;1

Chark s Carr
. is hospitalized

$6.99 .&amp; 58.99
Men's ShoeS.................$8.99
Children's ...................... ~4.00

THE FABRIC SHOP

3J
30
'} t.
24

.

**************************.
Final Reductions
•
On Sale Groups

M ason Bow ling Cen t er

wo me n's We d . Afl e rno on

CELEBR ATES
BIRT HDAY - Tam ml Lynette
Eblin, daughter of Mr. and
Mr s.
Ric hard
E blin,
· P om eroy, celebra ted her
sixth birthday with a party
a t her hom e on Feb. 17.
Gifts were presented to
Ta mml a nd r efreshments
of cake, Ice ,c ream and
Kool-Aid we re served to
Mr. a nd Mrs. Clay E blin,
Mrs. Walter Wear s, Mrs.
J a n et E blin, Ta mmy
Johnson, Dixie, Kim and
Tracy Ebljn.

Ladies' 53.00 pr. 2 pr. 55.00
EA.

'299

45" Polyester

CLEANER
Reg . $1.98 Cabin e t
Magic Cl ea ner

.ONE TABLE OF

CREPE

SPECIALS
$1.49

KNITS.

Reg . 2.98 yd.

Valu·es
to
'5.98

Reg . 51.98 Applianc e
Magic Cleaner
51.49
Reg . $1.98 Tiie ' n Grout
Magic Clean er
$1. 49
Removes

.,.••

YD.

between·f he.fi le d irt.

FRI. TIL 8
SAT. TIL 5

MOORE'S
l\MERICAN
. IARDWARE.:

. '· J fiJI AIN

POMERO i

the congregation .
A gift of money from Mrs .
Hilda Schmoll was noted with
appreciation . Mrs . Thomas
Young reported on cards sent
to ill and bereaved members .
It was voted to purchase a
gallon of paint to assis t the
youth fellowship of the
church in a r.e decoraling
project.
Mrs . Kenneth Harris and
Mrs. Leonard Jewell served a
dessert course usi ng the
patriotic motif.

generous acts to others , we
put our .love for our fellow
men into service.
Miss Mary V. Reibel
conducted the business
during which time responsibilities of members for the
Lenten breakfast March 3
were reviewed . Since the
January meeting was cancelled due to the inclement
weather, a belated report was
made on thank-your notes for
holiday remembrances to the
and ill members or

I

LACE

TRIMS

1

/30FF

0

The Fabric Shop
Su'nplicity Patterns
SINGER SAL ES&amp; SERVICE
11 5 W. Second
992-2284
Pomeroy. Ohio
M c C·a Ws, l&lt; wi ck · Se w ,

-"""to •••uu\1 ..., .

• A Trademark of T H E SINGER COMPAN Y

CIRCLEVILLE The
February meeting of tbe
South Central Ohio Preser vation Society, Inc. , will be
held in Ute 130 years old
Plcka way Coun ty Courthouse, located a t Sout h Court
a n d F ra n klin Streets in
Circleville , Ohio, a t 2 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 29.
The program will include a
s h ort history of Pieka wa y
County courthouses, a nd a
to ur of t he bic e ntennia l
exhibit in which many Items
of the Revolutionary War era
are on display.
Ano the r feature of the
meeting will have Circleville
members r e lating the story of
the early plan of the town. A
modem day plan calls for an
a ddition to the c ourthouse,
w hich will cos t half a million
dolla rs, and will provide new
offices a nd courtroom s.
· Counties having festivals
this coming summer which
in cl ude de m onstrations of
early cra fts should write
"SCOPS" n ow, giving date
and place. The address is Box
6, Pike ton , Ohio 45661. The
lis t wiU be published in the
April newsletter .
;~~~!!::::~":=~~~:?.!».~::·

I

I

Social
Calendar .

THURSDAY
WILLIN G
WORK E RS '
C la ss, E n te r prise United
M ethodist Church, Thursday,
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Beulah Utt.erbah.
MAGNOLIA CLUB , 7: 30
Thursday a t the home of Mrs .
Doris Grueser .
ROCK SPRINGS Better
H ealth Club, I ; 15 at the Rock
Spr ings Church with Mrs.
L ouise R a dford, hostess.
Mrs. Sharon Bailey to give a
program on cancer ; Mrs.
Barbara Offutt to conduct
g ames.
GRANGE ritualistic and
dr ill
c ontes t
at
the
Harrisonville School , Thursday, 7: 30 p .m. wiUt Meigs
County as host. Meigs County
Pomona Gr ange will present
the fifth degree. Refreshm ents will be sold , Helen and
Bernie Shoma ker, slate youth
dir ectors, and James Ross,
state master will he there.
M E IGS
C OUNTY
, D e mocrat party m eeting,
7 : 30 p.m. Thursday at Grace
E p iscopa l Church paris h
hOf!se, E. Main St., Pomeroy.
SYRACU SE - MINERSVILLE At hle tic Boos te rs
Thursday, 7:30 p.m . at the
Syracuse Municipa l building.

Due to oliro olour buslnoss &gt;Q wilt sella It Hre allll
smoked domogod ond some undtmoged mordiMHIIM.
Lo•oted ot Vo ' 'ey Lumb - Co .. r:; S. 2rd Avo. I•
Middleport, Ohio.
Tools, P~inl, bolts, nuts, r•blnat Urdw•re, aftd all
ather rniscelllneous Items found in 1 h1rdw1re.
Owner: Volley Lumber Co.
Carnohln Auction Co.
D. Smith
9•9-2033

J . CarnahoJ&gt;
9.ot-27111
L. Donoltue

742-3041
~unch

IIVII.IItble

"Not responsible tor •ccidents or Josl of property!'

THURS.,
FRI., SAT. and SUNDAY
•

~**L;NDA LEE ONE SIZE FITS All
PANTY -HOSE
Reg.

Kenneth McCullogh, R. Ph.
Charles Riffl e, R. Ph .
· Mon. th r uSai. 8:00a .m. to 9: 00p. m.
Sunday 10:30 to 12:30 and 5 to 9 p.m.
PR ESCR t PTtON S
PH. 992-2955
F r ien~ty

Sl.()()

Service

TUSSY
CREAM
DEODORANT

- THERAGRAIM

2 OUNCE

·

HIGH POTENCY
. VITAMIN FORMUlA
WITH MINERALS

-'*************

30 FREE WITH 100

Reg. 69' 47~
·.

59C

PR.

POM ERO Y, 0.

112 E. MAIN

ONLY

ONLY

AYDS

RASEPTIC
MOUlliWASH
AND GARGLE
6 oz. with Sprayer
Dr

8oz.

Reg.

REDUCING
CANDY

bottle

$7.89

Reg.
$1.71

24 OUNCE
Rill!. 14.50
ONLY

l*******

: ·Vicks Formula 44

£

t

.

COUGH

-tc

MIXTURE
6 OL

£

Re1. '2.39

TRIAMINIC
EXPECTORANT

iC
iC

-tc

:

:

E x pectorant,
o 'e c ongestant
Antihist am inic

$}39 t R!.~2.52

.
ONlY

BUFFERIN .
100 TABLETS

and

Reg. 11.95

$ 39

i•***************************;.***"'*'"'**"''*"-t*'"**'t*'"'**"''*'t*·***"r/J
ONLY

:

ONLY

ALCO-REX

RUBBING
ALCOHOL

FRIDAY
YOUTH REVIVAL a t
H e mlock G rove Ch r is tia n
Chur ch , Hemlock Grove,
Friday, Saturday and Suhday, 7:30, nig htly, and 9 ;30 a .
m . Sunday. Dick Damron,
s peaker . Public invited .

16 Ol
Reg. 83$

ONLY

ALL

STORE HOURS

Soturdoy, Fob. 21. 1976 at, ,,. A.M.

SCOPS
meet set

••

FRIDAY and SATURDAY

A program, "February and
lts Many Aspects" was
presented by Mrs. Robert K.
Wilson at Tuesday night's
meeting of Friendly Circle at
Trinity Church.
Prayer in unison opened
Ute meeting . Mrs . Wilson
described February as a
month that tries men 's
patience with its un ·
predictable weather. but also
challenges everyone to
measure up to the lives of
Lincoln and Washington.
Mrs. Wilson wiUt readings
and discussion emphasized
heritage from the presidents
noting their faith, courage
and determination, alo ng
with their honesty, kindness
and compassion.
A valentine Utought, " i
Must Go Shopping Today"
brought forth thoughts from
Utose attending that by small

FIRE AUCTION
VAu.EY WMBER CO.

SATURDAY
BEAN DINNER Saturday
from 4 to 7 p .m. a t Middleport
Masonic Hall basement,
s ponsored by DeMolay.
" AGAPE," a teen choir
from Pa rkershurg , W. Va .,
Church of the Nazare ne, will
present , music al , " ' 1 A
Celebration of Hope ," 7:30
p .m . Saturday at Middleport
Church of the Nazarene, 580
Beech St. , Middlepor t . Public

invited.
F ISH FRY at Mason United
Methodis t Chul'th , 4:30 to 7
p .m . Saturday under spon.
sorship of Young Adult Class .

•

I
I

*"'*'t*ilt*'************t***********

JOHNSON'S :
BABY POWDER

FILM

VITAMIN E
200 UNITS

14 OUNCE
Reg. 11.85
ONLY

KODACOLOR

REXALL

100 CAPS
Reg. '3.95

$}09

ONLY

\'

$1

C-110·20 For Color Prints

99

Reg. '2.00
ONLY

'•

'

�•
~ - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 19, 19i6

~

The llatl ) Senlln&lt;·l. Muldlt•port -Pomeroy, 0 .. ·nmrsday, Feb. l9, l!li6

Scarlet Knights race.
past Syracuse, 93-80
-

l uih' ci Pn·ss lntrrnatiunal
Hut~ers has moved up to
fifth plare in t he college
basketu;tll ranki ngs th is
season by nutnmning and
outmuseling all 22 of its
opponents. Now Coac h Tom
Young is conrerned about his
Scarlet Knights learning to

pace themselves.
l.cd by freshman Abdel
Ander sun's se ason-h ig h 21
points. Rutger s sprinted to a
93-80 t riumph over Syrac use
Wednesday night in a helterskrlter game between two
Fast-Ureakmg teams .
Anderson.
a 6-foot-6
forward, hi! on 8-&lt;&gt;f-13 shots
and 'a lso co llrt'ted nine
r ebounds to hel p Rutgers hold
off a Syracu se rally midway
through the se&lt;,ond half.

The Orangernen, now I~
foll owing
last
year's
s urprising fourth-place fini sh
in the NCAA playoffs, erased
a l8-36 halftime deficit by
cli cking for 13 straight points
to open the second ha If. But
Rutgers, behind Ed Jordan,
Mi·k e Dabney and Phil
Se llet s, regrouped and darted
to a 15-2 spw·t to reestablish
itself.
Young,
however. . is
concerned about sharpening
his team for the NCAA
tournament ahead and hopes
there's enough lime to
develop a greater sense of
control on the court.
"We've been running for 22
games now and will have to
learn how to slow down when
we have to ." said Young .

.

Ross Kinde I sco red 19
points from long range and
Marty Byrnes added 23 to
keep the score close for
Syracuse, which managed
only a 38.6 team shooting

perce: ntage. Kevin James
added 14 points in the losing
effort.
Elsewhere
in college
basketball,
seeond-.-anked
Marquette beat Depaul, &amp;h'iJ,
No. 3 North Carolina survived
a threat by unranked Miami
of Ohio to win , 77-75, seventhranked Maryland downed
Georgetown, 72-li:J, No . 12
Missouri nipped Kansas, 61 ..
60, No . 15 North Carolina
Slate edged Duke, 96-95, in
overtime, Florida State beat
Jacksonville, 74-65, Kansas
State romped over Nebraska,

North Gallia battles SW
in final league contest
Hrgular sN1son actio11 for
all bu l nne team in tlw
Sout!wrn V ~lll e y Athl etic
('onfenmce C(li11CS to a d ose
Frichi) night.
111 the on ly lc(l gue co ntest,
rhc 1975~7G -SVAC Champion

over Ea slern , finish ed m

tournament champ, battles

fourth place .
Overall. North Galha is 15-2
and 11-0 1n tile SVAC. Southwestern bas a 5-12 overall

Southern.

rec ord, 5-6 mark in the
IPng ue .
North C&lt;JIIia Pirates play at .
In uther gwnc.s, Coat.:il Cml

S lJ

U

Ih

W

c·S t

C I II .

'I' l 1C

Higlllandrrs. by v1rtue of
thei r ''idm•y '::ruesday night

Wolfe's Southern Tornados
will try to wrap up a fine
seas on ag ainst Glous ter . The
TOrnados finished second in

Catlett
mum on

OSU job
CINCINNA TI 1UPI) Gale Cl! tlell, the young and
success ful . Unive r ~ity of
CincinMli bas ketba ll t·oach
being mentioned as a possible
cn ndi d&lt;~te for jobs at both
Ohto Sta te Md Iowa Stale,
isn't ta lkin g much about
those possibili ties now - but
he may la ter.
" I will not discuss contract
with a ny othe r school at this
time," said ca tlett, 35, in his
f ou rth

str ::~ig llt

winning

season a t Cincy. "I am loya l
to Cincinna ti throug hou t this

season.''
At 't. hough Ci ncinnati
a thle tic offi cials. said Catlett
.has boen offe red a four-year

extension of his · contract,
Ca tlett pointed out hi s
contm ct expires this June :.n
and he tossed in an

interes ti'ng comment just
prior to Wednesday night' s

an nual crosstown riva lry
game betwee n Cincy and
X;wier .
" Quite frankly, U1is could
be the last time I coach a

Cincinn ati· tea m against
Xa vier, " ~a irl Ca tlett.
catle tt , Who said he has
" heard from a couple of Ohio
Sla te al umni about the
basketball job there," called
Ohio SUite " a great coac hing

opportunity for somebody."
llowevr r, ca tlett said he
ha s ha d "e bsol utely no
co n tact · with
a nybody
con nected officially wit h the
tmiversity.''
Catlett, who played at the
University of West Virginia
and later was an assistant
coa ch under Adolph Rupp at
Kentucky, has posted a 77-26
record in his nearly four

seasons at Ci ncinnati, his
firs t

he ad

coaclling

assignment.

Ohio State is looking for a
replacemenlfor Fred Ta ylor ,
who is resigning after this
season , and Iowa Stale is
seeking a coach to step in for
the alread y- res ig ned Ken
Tri ckey .
Mea nwhile , Catlett's boss
at
Cincinnati , Athletic
Director Hindman Wa ll. said
he was fl ying to eugene,
Ore.. today to talk with
Univ e rsity
of
Oregon
officia ls , who are looking for
a new at hl etic director. · ·
Wall, who said he ''is not
seeking anything and is very
happy at Cincinnati," said
Oregon offi c;ials have been
calling !tim " for months."
"Finally," said Wall , " I did
tell them I 'd go out just to
lis ten to what they had to

say.''
Wall , an assistant aUtletic
dire ctor at Kansas Stale
before coming here two years
ago , also denied he has
appli e d for the athletic
director's job a t Gco~g ia
Tech ·and added, "''ve .been

mrn tioned in connection with
the Kansa s Stale job too, but
that. doesn 't mean I'm job
hunting."

I

tile SVAC a nd hav e an
overall, la-4 record.

Han uan Trace. 10-7 overa ll
a nd third ~lace club in the
league \'&gt;'ill end ils season
;1gainst Waha111a.
Tuesday night,

Kyger
Cr eek 5- 12 travels to Buffalo,
W. Va .
Next weekend, lop-seeded
N,,.·th Gallia will face
E&lt;:~stern in t~e Class A Sec-

ti onal Tournam&lt;?nt at Meigs.
On Saturday, Feb . 26, Han ncnl Tri.ICC, l ast year ' s

SVAC STAN D I NGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P
Nor t h Gallia
15 2 1256
So uthern
13 J JJ J J
Hannan Tra ce
10 7 968
KygerCreek
5 I? ll 71
Soutllw est ern 5 12 · 878
Svm m es Valley
4 IJ 836
Eastern
1 17 676

SVACONLY
TEAM
W L
Norlh Ga tt ia
II 0
South er n
10 '1
Hannan Tr ace 8 4
So u t hw estern 5 6
Symmes Va l l ey
4 8
Kyg e r Cr re k
3 9
Ea s t e rn
I 11

P
791
789
689

OP
918
895

871
111 4

1117

1272
1060

~.&lt;..8

OP
525
590
59'}
635

656
61 0
..t 78

776
778
65.6

P

OP

609
6'11
533.
·IS..t
366
•130

39 7
-:187
J0 2
462
·159
56·1

38t

6 12

RESERVE

W L
TEAM
H a nnan Tri! ce
ll 1
Sou thern
10 2
North G a ll ia
8 J"
Soul hwes tern 5 6
Ea s tern
J 9
K yger Creek
7 10
,Symm es Valley
7 10

BOWLING
Pom e rov Bowlinq Lan e!&gt;
Morninq Glort cs
Fl'b. 10 , 1916
Gtb bs Grocery
ll9
E11. ce l si or O i l Co
Il l
N ew el l .S un oc o
91
W M PO
ii.t
G &amp; J Auto Pftr ls
17
Spencer 's MartH.• I
H igh ind i vidual q ame
JudY Pockllnqton 70 1, sec ond
Eunice Duff 187
H "iq h
i ndi'llidual
t hr ee
qam ~s
Judy Pock lington
.19M . secon d
Ma rtr nc W11son
·1'i' 7 .
T eam
h.igh
qamc
W M P .O
H36 , team hig h
series
w ,M . P o . 7.3 50.

~. and Virginia ripped
Clemson, 90-77.
Earl Tatum. playi ng his
final home game for
Marquette, scored 16 points
to lead the Warriors. The win
was
Marquette's
16th
straight, 21st in 22 games and
17th win in a row over
Pomeroy Bowling Lane!.
DePaul , which is now 16-8.
Tuesday Triplicate
Marquette, up 39-27 at the
February 10 , 1976
JI
half,led by only four points at Roya l Oak Park
Dew DrQpS
30
43-39 with 14 minutes left Racine H ome N a t I. Bk .
.
when Lloyd Walton and N ew York C lo l h ing
73
Da iry Valley
70
Jerome Whitehead scored to Mitch
e ll Painlin q Co
14
H ig h in di'llidual game
make it 47-39. Joe Ponsetto
Pat Carson 181. second
hit a layup for DePaul but Sh
irley M itc h el l 112 .
Bernard Toone dropped in
H ig h se r ies
Pat carson
Dot K nrr .157
two free. 'throws and a jump ·17 8, s~cond
Team high qaml.'
Roya l
shot and Bo ellis scored on a Oak Park .a8 5, teart;~ hiqh
Roya l Oak Park
layup to put the game out of se ries
1.J5 1
reach at 53-41.
North Carolina needed a
Pom('roy Bowlin9 Lane s
pair of free throws by Phil
. F c ~ .r~o~~ ·976
Ford wiUt seven seconds left Ph e lp s
37
for lts slim victory over Pomeroy Blo c k Co ,
33
Roa chS Gun Shop
78
Miami of Ohio. The Tar Se &lt;Jrs Calatog M e r ch ant s 76
Heels, now 21-2, went into H &amp; R Fi re s tone
14
their famed fo ur-corner M ei gs Inn
6
H i9 h individual Qamc
offensewlth 1:07 leftafter the Jerry Van l nwagon no .
Mid-American
Conference secon d
D&lt;Jve Peterson 2 19 ,
th _i rd
Charle s Hy sell 213.
Redskins tied the score at 75H igh
se ri es
Da'll c
a ll with 1:07 remain ing on a P e terson S5 J. secon d
Jerry
Cl ine ~?9,
third
J ack
free throw by Arch ie P e terson an d Charl es Hysell
Aldridge.
" '
Tci!rll
hiqh
Qam e
F or d , a, 6• 2 sop h ~mo~e ~ Pomeroy
ceine n t B loc k Co
guard, was fouled by Miamis 9'12 , team h ig h series

,.

John

Shoemak er

and

conver te db at h ends of a one.
si tuation. Following
a Miami time out with four
seconds left, Shoemaker got
off a 25-footer which missed
as time ran out .
T he Tar Heels were paced
by 6-10 Mitch Kupchak's 24
and~ne

points.

MEET POSTPONED
The reg ular mee ting of the
Kyger
Cree k
Ath letic
Booste r s Club sched uled
tonig ht has bee n postponed .
The session was ca lled off
due to the specia"J meeting of
the Comm ittee For Be tter
Education in Gall ia County
Schools.

Pomeroy Ce mcn l B loc k Co .
7. 616 .
Pomuroy Bowling Lanes
Ea rl y Wed . Mi-.:ed
Feb . . I I, 1976
N e lson Dr u~ Co ."
32
Zidcs sport Shop
Oi le r s Fo ur
Youngs s up er Mkt .
?.f
70
Smit h N e l son Motor
Tcm th rr&lt;~m crs
16
H i g h ind i vidu&lt;JI 9a rn c
Bil l Port er 2 11 , B e lly Smit h
19 8, sec ond
A l Ph elp s J r
'/00 , Be lt y Smith 19 S. third
BOb Couch 191 , Be t ty Smith

""

IH9

High se r 1CS
A L . P he lps
Jr
SSS ,. 13e lly Smith ~ 87 ,
sec ond
Bi ll Port er 5JJ ,
Carolyn Ba c·hnc.r .171 , t hird
Gob Co u c h ~ 06 ,
lsatJC II c
Cou&lt;:h .t6!l
Tcarp h igh qanHJ· · Zj des
Sport Shop 688 . team hi ~H1
se rie s
Zides ' Sporl Shop
I ,968

"

Ma~on

Bowling C enter
Ferry Boat
Feb. J J , J'i'76

Judge nuottle ·candz.date ~~~~e;~~s~rour~~~~nProdu;~s
Sp&lt;~r es
for 4th District Court
W

::
31 37
JO ].1

t

.Judge Darr ell R. Hottle,
Hi ghlan d Coun ty, an nounced
his ca ndidacy for the vacancy
on the 4th District Court of
Appeals ca used by the
re tirment of .Judge Gordon B.
Gray. '111e distr ict incl udes
th e . co unties of Adams,
Athen s, Brown, Gall ia,
Highland , Hockmg , Jackson ,
Lawrence, Meigs, Pickaway,
Pike. Ross, Scioto, Vinton
a nd Wash ington . ·
Judge Hottle began his 22nd
year on the Highland Coun ty
Common Pleas Bench t his
rnunth, having been assigned
by the Ohio Chief J ustice to 25
o th er co unties, incl uding
metropolitan and 12 of the 15
co un ties i n the Fo urth
District and to the First and
Second Dist r icl Cour t of
Appea ls. He se r ved four
years as Prosecuting Attorney, Hig h land Co unty,
a long with a year as Solici tor
of Hillsboro before election to
the Bc ncll .
" It has been an honor to
serve in public capacities for
26 years. and I would. consider it a high privilege to
utilize th is experience for the
Fourth Appe ll ate District
Court ," Judge Hottle said, ~e
he places his name in the
Democratic pr imary elec-

tion.

Born and reared on a
Highland County farm, Judge
Hottle graduated from Hi llsboro Schoo ls , Oh io Slate
Universi t y, i:Jn d Wes te rn
R eser ve
Law
Schoo l ;

married to Catherine, an· R.
N., who have tw o children,
nne teaching school and one
in graduate school. He has
ser ved as executive committeeman of t he Ohio Slate
Bar Association , has served
on its committee to study its
structure, is serv ing on its
J udicial
Adm inistra tio.n
Comm ittee , and is servi ng on
committees of the Oh io
Common P leas J udges
Association to study crim inal
rules and ethics; is ac tive in
and delegate to Genera l a nd
oth er confere nces of th e
United Method is t Church , is
Vice President of Central
Oh io Councii , Boy Scouts , and
recipient of the Silv er Beaver
Award, member of and past
officer in M:i:Jsonic Bodies and
recipient of t he 33 Degree
awarded by Scottish Hite ;
Hillsbor o Elks' Past Exalted
Ruler, Past President of the
Hillsboro Rota r y Club , has
been acti ve in Farm Bureau,
Crippled Children and Adult
Society. Goodwi ll Industries,
T. B. and Hed Cross Chapters, along with ma ny other
com mtmity activ ities.
NEW AID E NAME D
CLEVE LAND UPJ - Peter
Hadhazy, New E ngla nd
Pa tr iots assistant ge nera )
nut nager,
was named
executive assistant to the
president of t he Cleveland
Br owns Wed n esday by
Brow ns'
owner
a nd
Presideni. Ar thur B. Modell .

••
•• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
••

=
•

:•
•

••
•

SHOES FOR THE FAMILY

:
:•30% -40%-50%
•

••

:•

Off•

••

•
: Chapman's Shoes . :
•
•
t ~AIN ST.
POMEROY:
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
,.

L

•

Spencer 's
Ray 's Ca rry Ou t
Gru escr 8. Son Plum
bing
'1 6 38
Team J
20 38
Men ' s hiqh sl nql e qame
Ed d t c Whitt
'17t , Mo ses
Nor m an 70 1. women' s h iq t1
s ingle &lt;~am c
Diana Whi ll
180 , sec ond
Sc!by M ilf1 1Cy
179
Men 's high series
Eddie
W.h i l! 557 . second ·
M oses
N orm an ;] 6 , · wom e n 's lligh
series
Se lby M Bn l cy .tH .I ,
seco nd
Don na M c f- ar l an d
-180

Tar Heels
nip Miami
Ohio College
Basketball Roundup
United Press International
squeaker over Miami, North
carolina Coach Dean Smith
has just about seen enough of
the Redskins .
The Tar Heels, who brought
a 211-2 · record and a No. 3
national ranking to Oxford
with them, just squeezed by
the MAC coleaders in the
final seven seconds, 77-75, on
a pair of free throws by Phil
Ford.
" We were very fortunate to
win," said the Tar l!eel
coach. " We always have
tough games with Miami. "
Three years ago, Miami
shocked
the
college
basketball world with a 102-92
win at Chapel Hill, N.C., a
· victory that is still being
called the greatest in the
hist ory of baske tball at
Miami. A year later, the
Redskins lost 83~9 at North
Carolina.
Wednesday night's game
was a tight one all the way .
North carolina jumped to a
quick 18-10 lead , the Redskins
rallied for a 37-33 ha lftime
advantage and Uten tbe two
teams battled on nearly even
terms the r est of the way .
NorUt Carolina's biggest
lead in t he second half was
four points and Miami led at
onetime by five in the fina l 20
minutes.
A free throw by Miami's
Archie Aldridge tied it a t 75all with I: 07 remaining a nd
tile Tar Heels went into their
famed fo ur corner offense, .
holding the ball for a full
minute before Ford was
fou led by John Shoemaker.
After the 6-2 sophomore
made it 77-75; the Redskins
got off one last shot , a 25footer by Shoemaker , but it
fai led to go .
"I'm proud of my team ,"
said Mia mi Coach Darrell
Hedric. " They can come out
of the locker room wi Ut their
heads high."
lledr ic said he' felt the
game showed the MidAmerica n Conference could
. "play with a nyone."
Mitc h Kupchak, No r th
ca r olina's '6-10 senior cen ter,

led all scorers with 24 points
and Walter Davis added 20
for the Tar Heels.
Aldridge totaled 19, Chuck
Goodyear 17 and Shoemaker
12 for Miami, which fell to 14·
7 on the year.
In a Mid-Am game, Kent
State's Corteze BrowQ poured
in 38 points, a career high , (o
pace the Golden Flashes to an
easy 105-75 victory over Ohio
University.
Brown, James Collins and
Tony Jamison led a blistering
Kent fast break which left the
Bobcats reeling 5().27 at halftime. Collins finished with 24
points and Jamison 23 as the
three combined for 85 points .
OU's top scorer was Scott
Love, who tallied 15 of his 17
from the free throw line .
Kent is now 11-10 overall
and IKi in the conference, OU
is 9-12 and 5-6. It marks the
first time a Kent teams has
won twice in one season over
OU, which held a 44-9 edge

over the Golden Flaohes coming into this year .
•
Cincinnati saw all but two
of a 17-point lead vanish, but
held on for an 81-74 victory
over crossstown rival Xavier .
The !7Ut ranked Bearcats,
now 19-3, led 56-39 early in the second half but Xavier, paced
by the outside shooting of
freshman Nick Daniels, cut it
to
73-71
with
2 :25
remaining .
•·
Daniels led all scorers with
23 poi nts and teammate
Garry Whitfield had 20.
Cinci nnati 's balanced
attack was paced by Mike
Jones with 18, Pat Cununings .
wiUt 15 and Robert Miller
.with 12.
In other games Wednesday ·
night , Cleveland
State ·
surprised Akron
62-50,
Ashland outscored Walsh 9i92, Ohio Dominican beat
Wilberforce 9f&gt;-87, NorUtern ·
Kentucky State dumped
Wright State 85-73, Hiram •
edged John Carroll 76-75, :
Findlay beat Earlham' (Ind .) :
87-80, Manchester ( Ind. );
defeated Bluffton 91~1 and •
case Western whipped Thiel ~
(Pa.) 62-73.
.
:
Tonight's Ohio college :
schedule is a light one with ' ·
two games on tap . Denison !
plays at Salem (W.Va .) and :
Wesley an
hosts :
Ohio
Rochester (N .Y .).

Threeitemsunderconsideration Mrs. Wilson gives program
at Friendly Circle meeting
COLUMBUS Three changes in th~tdocument will in mid-December containing
major items of business will pave the way for revision of the Values and Goal
come before delegates to a the Canons of the diocese Statement and the ProgrJm
Special Episcopal Diocesan during the annual convention Goal Priorities as adopted by
Convention, Feb. 21, at the in November. The Con- Diocesan Council for 1975-76;
Ohio State University Union slitution must be approved · the budget in line item form
in Columbus .
~uring the special convention and the Constitution and
Being considered by and be approved without Rules of Order as printed in
delegates from 90 parishes in changes in November before 1969, as changed between
the Diocese of Southern Ohio it can go into effect. Canons then and now and additional
will he the Program Goal can be revised only during a changes the Committee on
Priorities of the diocese, the regular session of convention Constitution and Canons
1976 Budget and proposed but become effective im- propose for adoption during
changes in the Diocesan mediately .
the convention .
·
Constitution and rules of
Much of the preliminary
While the schedule for -Ute
order of convention.
discu ss ion concerning the convention has not been
Pretiminary plans call for goals, budget and con- finalized, plans call for
the goals of the diocese to be stilution
came
during registration to begin at8 a.m .
reviewed first , followed by an regional
Pre -convention with a Service · of Holy
explanation of the budget meetings held in Cincinnati, Communion commencing at
Dayton, Columbus and 9:30. Adjournment is ten·
process.
Presentation
of
the Athens in January .
tatively set for 4 p.m.
proposed Constitution and
Delegates received packets

•

ONE LOT
LON G SLEE V E

DRESS
SHIRTS

VALUES TO $9.98

DINGO BOOTS
MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

20%. OFF
"

B o l wi n g Leag ue
Fe b . ll ,1976

Late com e r s

SIZES ARE BROKEN
Oth e r item s too nu mer ou s to
m ention at our lowest sa le prices.

Rooki~s

Globetrotters
Thre e G's
Alley (j3tS

**************************·
Marguerite's Shoes

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
Kerm' s Korner
Open Fri. til8
Pome roy

a

BEID OHLINGER
~~ 102 E. Main

~

. FRI. TIL 8 - SAT. TIL 5

7~

SATURDAY, FEB. 21 ·

~~~W~A~S~H=IN~G~T~O~N~'S~~~

WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY
Sale Fabrics!

POLISH

Po rn eroy B owl i n g Lane s
F ircba tl
Feb . 9,1976
W L
tl \
15
Hot Sho ts
38 18
Te&lt;Jm I
Team~

) .j

?'l

7tl 32
Pink Pa n ther s
72 34
F &lt;J bri&lt;: Shop
Team o\
9 ·17
St•lby
High single gam e
N an cy
M&lt;Jn l ey 175, second
Dob bi n s 165 .
Hi g h series
Del ma Ka r r
.17 1, se&lt;:ond
Se lby .Ma nley
-168 .

•

SAUSAGE

5 SPEED SUNBEAM

·SANDWICH

PORTABLE MIXER

CHOW'S
STEAK HOUSE
Pomeroy , Ohio

Converse -

'1299
·

(No . 6)

Black. white,
r e.d ,

green.

Regular '20.99
(No. AP 83)

b l ue,

WOVEN
FABRICS

'1595

COMMODE SEAT
Regular $9.95
SPECIAL

ATHLETIC SUPPORTS
GYM $450
SWEAT PANTS
BAGS
,
WOOL SOCKS
MEIGS T·SHIRTS and SWEAT SHIRTS

MILK CAN
Regular s4.J9
THIS SAL E

BI.OCKBUSTfRI

'595

5 GALLON PLASTIC
TUBE SOX WITH
NUMBERS AND STRIPES

Val. to 2.29

BATHROOM

gold .

'

1 Group 45"

SUNBEAM ELECTRIC

All Star

BASKETBALL SHOES
ma roon,

Reg.
'16.95

All VELVET,
CORDUROY &amp;
VELVETEEN

COFFEEMAKER

MIDilEPORT DEPT. STORE

Fri., Feb. 20
Sat., Feb. 21

IN POMEROY

TRY OUR

JUDG E HOTTLE

Pomeroy

161.

W L

70

TU PPERS PLAINS
· Cha rles (Red ) Carr , Tuppers
P lai ns e ntered U ni v~rsily
Hospital in Coluinbus Feb. 9
for tests and on Fe b. 13 underwe nt open hear t s urgery .
He is in tbe m ai n hospital for
at least two weeks, eighth
fl oor , eas t wing .
,
His wife, Rose , has been in
Columbus with hin for the
pas t week. J oin ing Mrs . Carr
on Friday were Mr . and Mrs.
"·E. Doug las, G. R . Douglas,
Mr. and Mrs. Fr a nk Perry
and Sonia Carr. Visi ting Mr.
Carr on Sunday were his
mother, Mrs . Mary Carr,
Doug las, Ter esa , Sonia ana
Rose Carr .

-...,~ ,

Hit s
M isses
10 ] tl
T (' nm
h1g h
gam e ,
L a teco me r s :17·1, Lal c&lt;; omcr s
·103 . Rookies 398
I ndivid ua l hig h sc r 1c S
.
Nc ll erH' Pe thtel tl ~ l . MMY
Ho fl rnan -1"26. Sr1ndr .1 Grimm
•106 , Bunny E s tes •106.
Individ ua l h ig h qam c
Nan c y N f'ison
11] , lJ unny
E s le s 167 , Nancy N eulzl inQ

FRIDAY, FEB. 20
1tl
18
')'}
7&lt;1

Chark s Carr
. is hospitalized

$6.99 .&amp; 58.99
Men's ShoeS.................$8.99
Children's ...................... ~4.00

THE FABRIC SHOP

3J
30
'} t.
24

.

**************************.
Final Reductions
•
On Sale Groups

M ason Bow ling Cen t er

wo me n's We d . Afl e rno on

CELEBR ATES
BIRT HDAY - Tam ml Lynette
Eblin, daughter of Mr. and
Mr s.
Ric hard
E blin,
· P om eroy, celebra ted her
sixth birthday with a party
a t her hom e on Feb. 17.
Gifts were presented to
Ta mml a nd r efreshments
of cake, Ice ,c ream and
Kool-Aid we re served to
Mr. a nd Mrs. Clay E blin,
Mrs. Walter Wear s, Mrs.
J a n et E blin, Ta mmy
Johnson, Dixie, Kim and
Tracy Ebljn.

Ladies' 53.00 pr. 2 pr. 55.00
EA.

'299

45" Polyester

CLEANER
Reg . $1.98 Cabin e t
Magic Cl ea ner

.ONE TABLE OF

CREPE

SPECIALS
$1.49

KNITS.

Reg . 2.98 yd.

Valu·es
to
'5.98

Reg . 51.98 Applianc e
Magic Cleaner
51.49
Reg . $1.98 Tiie ' n Grout
Magic Clean er
$1. 49
Removes

.,.••

YD.

between·f he.fi le d irt.

FRI. TIL 8
SAT. TIL 5

MOORE'S
l\MERICAN
. IARDWARE.:

. '· J fiJI AIN

POMERO i

the congregation .
A gift of money from Mrs .
Hilda Schmoll was noted with
appreciation . Mrs . Thomas
Young reported on cards sent
to ill and bereaved members .
It was voted to purchase a
gallon of paint to assis t the
youth fellowship of the
church in a r.e decoraling
project.
Mrs . Kenneth Harris and
Mrs. Leonard Jewell served a
dessert course usi ng the
patriotic motif.

generous acts to others , we
put our .love for our fellow
men into service.
Miss Mary V. Reibel
conducted the business
during which time responsibilities of members for the
Lenten breakfast March 3
were reviewed . Since the
January meeting was cancelled due to the inclement
weather, a belated report was
made on thank-your notes for
holiday remembrances to the
and ill members or

I

LACE

TRIMS

1

/30FF

0

The Fabric Shop
Su'nplicity Patterns
SINGER SAL ES&amp; SERVICE
11 5 W. Second
992-2284
Pomeroy. Ohio
M c C·a Ws, l&lt; wi ck · Se w ,

-"""to •••uu\1 ..., .

• A Trademark of T H E SINGER COMPAN Y

CIRCLEVILLE The
February meeting of tbe
South Central Ohio Preser vation Society, Inc. , will be
held in Ute 130 years old
Plcka way Coun ty Courthouse, located a t Sout h Court
a n d F ra n klin Streets in
Circleville , Ohio, a t 2 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 29.
The program will include a
s h ort history of Pieka wa y
County courthouses, a nd a
to ur of t he bic e ntennia l
exhibit in which many Items
of the Revolutionary War era
are on display.
Ano the r feature of the
meeting will have Circleville
members r e lating the story of
the early plan of the town. A
modem day plan calls for an
a ddition to the c ourthouse,
w hich will cos t half a million
dolla rs, and will provide new
offices a nd courtroom s.
· Counties having festivals
this coming summer which
in cl ude de m onstrations of
early cra fts should write
"SCOPS" n ow, giving date
and place. The address is Box
6, Pike ton , Ohio 45661. The
lis t wiU be published in the
April newsletter .
;~~~!!::::~":=~~~:?.!».~::·

I

I

Social
Calendar .

THURSDAY
WILLIN G
WORK E RS '
C la ss, E n te r prise United
M ethodist Church, Thursday,
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Beulah Utt.erbah.
MAGNOLIA CLUB , 7: 30
Thursday a t the home of Mrs .
Doris Grueser .
ROCK SPRINGS Better
H ealth Club, I ; 15 at the Rock
Spr ings Church with Mrs.
L ouise R a dford, hostess.
Mrs. Sharon Bailey to give a
program on cancer ; Mrs.
Barbara Offutt to conduct
g ames.
GRANGE ritualistic and
dr ill
c ontes t
at
the
Harrisonville School , Thursday, 7: 30 p .m. wiUt Meigs
County as host. Meigs County
Pomona Gr ange will present
the fifth degree. Refreshm ents will be sold , Helen and
Bernie Shoma ker, slate youth
dir ectors, and James Ross,
state master will he there.
M E IGS
C OUNTY
, D e mocrat party m eeting,
7 : 30 p.m. Thursday at Grace
E p iscopa l Church paris h
hOf!se, E. Main St., Pomeroy.
SYRACU SE - MINERSVILLE At hle tic Boos te rs
Thursday, 7:30 p.m . at the
Syracuse Municipa l building.

Due to oliro olour buslnoss &gt;Q wilt sella It Hre allll
smoked domogod ond some undtmoged mordiMHIIM.
Lo•oted ot Vo ' 'ey Lumb - Co .. r:; S. 2rd Avo. I•
Middleport, Ohio.
Tools, P~inl, bolts, nuts, r•blnat Urdw•re, aftd all
ather rniscelllneous Items found in 1 h1rdw1re.
Owner: Volley Lumber Co.
Carnohln Auction Co.
D. Smith
9•9-2033

J . CarnahoJ&gt;
9.ot-27111
L. Donoltue

742-3041
~unch

IIVII.IItble

"Not responsible tor •ccidents or Josl of property!'

THURS.,
FRI., SAT. and SUNDAY
•

~**L;NDA LEE ONE SIZE FITS All
PANTY -HOSE
Reg.

Kenneth McCullogh, R. Ph.
Charles Riffl e, R. Ph .
· Mon. th r uSai. 8:00a .m. to 9: 00p. m.
Sunday 10:30 to 12:30 and 5 to 9 p.m.
PR ESCR t PTtON S
PH. 992-2955
F r ien~ty

Sl.()()

Service

TUSSY
CREAM
DEODORANT

- THERAGRAIM

2 OUNCE

·

HIGH POTENCY
. VITAMIN FORMUlA
WITH MINERALS

-'*************

30 FREE WITH 100

Reg. 69' 47~
·.

59C

PR.

POM ERO Y, 0.

112 E. MAIN

ONLY

ONLY

AYDS

RASEPTIC
MOUlliWASH
AND GARGLE
6 oz. with Sprayer
Dr

8oz.

Reg.

REDUCING
CANDY

bottle

$7.89

Reg.
$1.71

24 OUNCE
Rill!. 14.50
ONLY

l*******

: ·Vicks Formula 44

£

t

.

COUGH

-tc

MIXTURE
6 OL

£

Re1. '2.39

TRIAMINIC
EXPECTORANT

iC
iC

-tc

:

:

E x pectorant,
o 'e c ongestant
Antihist am inic

$}39 t R!.~2.52

.
ONlY

BUFFERIN .
100 TABLETS

and

Reg. 11.95

$ 39

i•***************************;.***"'*'"'**"''*"-t*'"**'t*'"'**"''*'t*·***"r/J
ONLY

:

ONLY

ALCO-REX

RUBBING
ALCOHOL

FRIDAY
YOUTH REVIVAL a t
H e mlock G rove Ch r is tia n
Chur ch , Hemlock Grove,
Friday, Saturday and Suhday, 7:30, nig htly, and 9 ;30 a .
m . Sunday. Dick Damron,
s peaker . Public invited .

16 Ol
Reg. 83$

ONLY

ALL

STORE HOURS

Soturdoy, Fob. 21. 1976 at, ,,. A.M.

SCOPS
meet set

••

FRIDAY and SATURDAY

A program, "February and
lts Many Aspects" was
presented by Mrs. Robert K.
Wilson at Tuesday night's
meeting of Friendly Circle at
Trinity Church.
Prayer in unison opened
Ute meeting . Mrs . Wilson
described February as a
month that tries men 's
patience with its un ·
predictable weather. but also
challenges everyone to
measure up to the lives of
Lincoln and Washington.
Mrs. Wilson wiUt readings
and discussion emphasized
heritage from the presidents
noting their faith, courage
and determination, alo ng
with their honesty, kindness
and compassion.
A valentine Utought, " i
Must Go Shopping Today"
brought forth thoughts from
Utose attending that by small

FIRE AUCTION
VAu.EY WMBER CO.

SATURDAY
BEAN DINNER Saturday
from 4 to 7 p .m. a t Middleport
Masonic Hall basement,
s ponsored by DeMolay.
" AGAPE," a teen choir
from Pa rkershurg , W. Va .,
Church of the Nazare ne, will
present , music al , " ' 1 A
Celebration of Hope ," 7:30
p .m . Saturday at Middleport
Church of the Nazarene, 580
Beech St. , Middlepor t . Public

invited.
F ISH FRY at Mason United
Methodis t Chul'th , 4:30 to 7
p .m . Saturday under spon.
sorship of Young Adult Class .

•

I
I

*"'*'t*ilt*'************t***********

JOHNSON'S :
BABY POWDER

FILM

VITAMIN E
200 UNITS

14 OUNCE
Reg. 11.85
ONLY

KODACOLOR

REXALL

100 CAPS
Reg. '3.95

$}09

ONLY

\'

$1

C-110·20 For Color Prints

99

Reg. '2.00
ONLY

'•

'

�•

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 19, 1976

Circles plan spring activities

Quadrant meet set ]

1

Th e annual quadrant
It was voted to send a
meeting of the Humane donati on to the Ohio ComSociety of SoutheasU&gt;rn Ohio mitU&gt;e for Humane Trapping
will be held in Pomeroy April to .help further legislation to
3 hosted by the Meigs County ban the steel jaw trap. It was
Society.
reported that animal replica
Plans for the event were coin conll!iners are being
made at a recent meeting of placed in business houses for
the local Society at Mid- donations by the public to the
dleport Village hall . The all- prog ram .
day meeting will be held at
Annua l reports were
the Meigs Inn with John present ed including a .
Inman , Great Lakes Regional financial report showing
Director of the Humane $2,945 spent for animal
Society of the United Sillies, welfare in 1975. This includes
to be the speaker.
vef\'rinarian care and inRepresenllltives of groups vestigative procedures. Mrs .
in Athens, Belmon t, Jackson, Sandra Iannarella is the new
Gallia, Fairfield , Hocking , investigator for the Humane
Washington, Je.fferson, and Society. Also reported were
Muskingum Counties in Ohio; adoptions from 1975 . along
Mason County, W. Va., the with animal claims. All funds
Parker s burg Human e expended by the Humane
Society, and Ohio County in Society were from memW. Va . are expected to at- bership fees and donations:
tend .

First birthday celebrated
Marci
An ne · Carol,
daughter of Dennis a nd
Sa ndy Zerk le Carol of
Weslland, Mich. celebrated
her first birthday recently at
the home of her grandparents, Mr . and · Mrs .
William Zerkle, Syracuse .
Attending were her greatgrandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ross Norris, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Weave r and son,
Brian , Jackie
Zerkle,
Elean or Wingett, Syracuse;

~:

Spring 1&gt;rojects ""d ac-

tivities were planned during,
the Tuesday night meetings
of the circles of the B. H.
Sanborn Missionary Socie ty
of I he Middleport First
Baptist Church .
Announced was the annual

·-·
DUO-HARPISTS SCHEDULED - Duo-harpists Joe
Longstreth and John Escosa will be in concert Tuesday,
Feb 24 at the Gallia Academy High School auditorium.
Scheduled to perform at 8 p. m. the, harpists are the final
concert presentation of the Tri-County COmmunity
Concert Association's 1975-76 season. ·

Mr. and M1 s. Vernon Rizer,
Hartford, W. Va ; Carolyn,
Stephanie and Timothy
Sayre, New Haven, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. John McDermitt and son Scot, Letart,
W.Va .; Bill Zerkle, uncle of
Marci , of San Francisco,
Calif.
Ice cream, cake, mints and
Kool Aid were served with the
birtbday of Marci 's grandfather, William Zerkle, also
being observed.

Generation Rap

~

Polly's Pointers
By Polly .Cramer

Advice needed for
milk carton doll bed

[1~

*

close .

1•

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with the dieter who
comes to my house and does
not touch 'a thing offered in
the way of carefully planned
refreslunents. Don't people
UP
know that today this is an
awful faux pas? lt is their
U and MU :
duty
to. at least "token ·
If Joe is seeing his ex-girlfriend, he wouldn't leU you about
nibble" something rather
·excursions with her son. Maybe he likes the kid ahd wants to
than embarrass .the bosis.
1\elp him. Down, jealousy! ~ HELEN
Those nicely sturdy little
+++
crocks that some fine cheeses
Upset:
•
Why don't·you ask to go along with Joe, when he takes the come in are terrific to use as
holders for bacon grease: The
boy places? Alter all, engagro coUples should share friends wire tightens on the tops and
as well as trust. - SUE
with the rubber between top
·+++
and bottom keep this useful ·
Rap:
.
Please tell me why parentS always have to yell when they
tell you to do something.l'm not deaf! - EARKED
Now the boy calls Joe and wants to see him . Joe thinks he
needs attention, so he takes him places. But I can't help
wondering if he also takes the mother along? I've found Joe In
a few small lies in the past. Should I get'tough about the boy or
believe my fiance is just being kind? - UPSET AND MI)(ED

Earked :
Parents yell because they know from experience nonnal
tones get tuned out. Do it the first time you're asked and there
will be a lot less noise ~ound your house.- HELEN
·

·

+++ -

NOTE FROM SUE: But " Doing it the first time you're ·
asked" means interrupting something much more important
- the thing you're doing for yourself atthatmoment. .
II porents would confine their "bossing" to the times when
kids weren't busy with their own pursuits, there'd also "be a
lot less noise around the house."

+++

LAST WORD FROM HELEN: Hear, bear! TeUme,Sue, is
there EVER a time, when a disliked chore needs attention,
that kids aren't "busy with their own purauits?"

+++

Dear Rap:
I am an average, ordinary junior high school boy. When I
was younger, I tbo.ught sex was for dirty jokes, but as I grew
up, 1 discovered the beauty of love. But I kept up the front
because my friends would tease me if I stopped laughing about
"dirty" sex, and talking that way. I mean like girls are dumb.
I have another problem related to the first, There is a girl
in my class and she is the most beautiful person In the world. I
feU in love with her the first time I saw her a year ago, but
because of the front I have to put up with my friends, I've got to
be Indifferent to her.
How do I getoutofthisact? - IN A RUT
Dear JAR :
Which is more important, sharing unreal dirty jokes with
your friends or finding a girl who will make you see hnw
juvenile this act was?
Start talking to her - never mind the teasing. - HELEN

+++

Dear 1:
You'll be surprised how last the teasing stops, mainly .
because a lot of those girl-haters feel just as you do underneath
their tough ll!lk. They'll be pairing off soon themselves, you 'II
see. - SUE '
-

SPECIALSUNOAY
MASON _"Good Neighbor
Day" will be observed at the
Mason First Baptist Sunday.
There will be sp~ial singing
by the Joint.-.airs for the 7:30

p. m. service.. lo'-ui'o [;·"'"
the church will take part in
. Uie morning and evening
services. Members are asked
to attend and take their
neighbOrs. The Rev. Walter
Cloud is pastor.
·

INSULATION
Blown Into.Your Walls
'Free Estimates'

FOREMAN and ABBOTT
Middleport, Ohio
Jh. 992-5321

Lenten breakfast hosted by
Trinity Church £or women of
the county , and the World
Day of Prayer service of
Church Women United. The
breakfast will be at 7:45 on
March 3, while the Prayer
Service will be on March 5 at
the Minersville United
Methodist Church.
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
Meeting at the home of
Miss Rhoda Hall, the Love
Joy members arranged to
take layetU&gt; article sto the
next meetin g to go to the
Women's Conference in June .
From there they are
distributed to Christian
Centers.
Arrangemen ts were also

.

Cash Bahr ............... Is Still

" Where Have You Been"

wa s the program topic
presenU&gt;d ~y Mrs . Freda
HoO&lt;l at a meeting of the
Eleclll Circle at the home of
Mrs. June Kloes.
Mrs. Alwilda Werner gave
devotions usi ng scripture
from Galatians 5 and tributes
to Lincoln and Washington.
She also read a poem for
th ose having birthdays in

~~i
"C~~::G
~cr:: : :. ~j
~

o!

PRICES

78 Ladie s Pant Suits by Ja.ntzen, Catalina
and Coddington . Sizes 8 to 20.
Misses &amp; Ha If Sizes
Values to $14.00 REDUCED

February, "Birthdays are a

made to remember a resident

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I would
like to know hnw to make a
;~~:::::::::::::::::.~:::~::::::;:::::::;:::::::;:;~:8~!!!~8!:::!:!:!:!:-::!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::~;~:::::::::;:~:::::~::=;!~
bed out of a milk carton for a
Barbie doll, and would be
thankful if you could tell me
how to do this. - KIM .
DEAR KIM - I would
By Helen and Sue Bottel
!I! certainly
tell you U I knew but
~ I am sure ntber young
It's Alia Matter of Trust
readers will be .writing to tell
Rap :
.
· Joe my fiance tells me all the time bow much he loves me you bow this Ia doae and then
but he has this on~ hangup. The woman he went with before · we wiD pus the BDswers on to
has a little boy by her first husband. He and the boy got very you. -POLLY.

!!l

served by the hostess assisted
by her daughters, Lori and
Lynn. Attending besides
those named were Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman, Mrs. Beulah While,
Members si~ned cards for Gift from God ", by Helen
Mrs . Gwinnie While, Mrs.
Mrs . Julia Grim, Mrs . Steiner Rice ,
During the
business Eloise Wilson , Mrs. Clara
Frances Bearhs and Mrs :
Mae Darst, Mrs. Isa belle
Fern Bradbury . It was noted meeting reports were given Win41,brenner, Mrs. Elizabeth
that the White Cross quo Ill is , on the scholarship fund and Searles and Mrs . Loutse
filled. Mrs. Pauline Hoffman the while cross quota .
A de ssert cour se was Davis.
had the program entitled
"When Elsie Saw the Light" .
Refreshments were se rved to
thvse namrd and Mrs. Peter
Granda!, Mrs . Florence
Rhodes, Mrs. Frances Smart,
Mrs . Freda Edwards, Mrs.
Leora Sigman and Mrs .
'
Elizabeth Gardner .
·
ELECT ACIRCLE

SUBS IN PULPIT
The Rev . David Neville will
· fill his father's pulpit at the
Hysell Run Free Methodist
Church at 10:30a. m. and 7:30
p.m. Sunday. His father , the
pastor, is the Rev . Paul .E
Neville.

•
TO CONTINUE
A revival in p'rogress at the
Middleport United Pentecostal Church, Third Ave.,
will be continued through this
week. Services are nightly at
7:30 p . m. with the . Rev.
Richard Masters, guest
speaker. Special music is
featured. The public Is cordially invited.
IN HOLZER
William
E.
Morr is ,
Pomeroy, is a medi cal
patient at Holzer Medical
Center. His room number is
306.

(and
now
expensive)
shortening fresh ;and fine
until used up. It can also be
poured into the crock hot, to
be refrigerated later. - A. L.
DEAR POLLY - I hope to
help Barbara who wants to
make a quilting frame. I am
using a homemade one given
to me by an 115 year old lady
who used it for many many
years.
Buy four pieces of stock
lumber eight feet long, one
inch thick and two incheE
wide. Double four inch wide
strips of heavy canvas (to two
inches), and iack securely to
the two inch flat sides of the
boards, allowing one inch of
material on the board and one
inch extending over the edge .
of the board. The auilt is sewn
to this cloth, so it is held lllul
as one quilts. buy lour C
clamps· in size three inch at
the hardware store. Use these
to hold the four corners
together to form a square or
rectangle as the case may be .
Start quilting at the outside
edges and roll quilt toward
the center as you finish . Then
you are able to do the entire
quilt in this manner since the
boards are adjusted with the
clamps as you proceed. Good
luck to you, Barbara - MRS.
M. R. H.
DEAR READERS - You
never let us .down. Our
sincere thanks to many Who
sent In directions for making
quilting frames. Many said
!bey bore holes, about three
Inches aport, along the wood
strips. With such holes a
large nail can be dropped
through ·holes at corners lo
Wd the sides together. One
church group has such a
frame that Is hinged In the
center to make storing
easier. These side boards
seem to range In size from
two to four Inches In width .
OUr readers rest such frames
on the backs of straight
chairs, on four stools, saw
horses or even hang from the
ceiUng. -POLLY.
You will receive a dollar
U -Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet
Peeve, Polly's Problem or
solution lo a problem. Write
Polly In care of this newspoper.

Spec~afly . Priced
u.

·n

1 ~ROUP

wq.MEN'S DRESS &amp;
CASUAL SHOES
by Connie
Values to 520.99

MEIGS THEATRE ·
TONITE
Thurs . Feb . 19
NOT OPEN

Fri . 1hru Sun .

FRAMED
{Technicolor )

the meetir "' --.:th a poem, ' '1

1h

MEN'S DRESS DINGO

40% OFF :

heritage house
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OPEN FRI. TIL8 : 00p .m .

======··

LADIES DRESS COATS &amp; CAR COATS

II'

,,.td

I

\II

Vlllyl

111111

X.

" ' ' · ' ,,. 10

Beautiful

program leader, reported on

"The New Look in Zaire", a

SPRING ·
FABRICS

missionar y statlon .
Refreshments were served
by the hostess to th ose named

and Mrs . Sara Owen, · Mrs .
Eva Ha rtley, Mrs. ljllie
Hubbard, Mrs. Oicda Chase,
Mrs. Ethel Hughes, r.trs.
EJecta Souders, and Mrs.
Helen Bodimer. DORCAS CIRCLE
Mrs: Jessie Houdashelt and
Mi ss Freddie Huudash elt
hosted · the Dorcas Circle
meeting with Mrs. Elizabe th
Slavin opening with prayer .
Devotion s by Mrs . Tony
Fowler were 'in the Li ght of
God 's Love."

REV IVAL NOTED
A youth revival will begin
at the Hem loc k Gr ove
Christian Church Friday and
con tinu e Sa turd ay and
Sunday, 7:30nigh tl y, and 9:30
a. m. Sunday. The speaker
will he Dick Dmnron from
Kentucky Chris tian College.
The public is invited.

Blouses by Lady Manhattan, Jantzen,
Catalina, and Lori Lynn
in wool, vinyl and nylon . - fur trim and
plain .
,
I .
REDUCED
Sizes 6 Ia 20

Show start s .lt 7: 00p . m .

Sought My Sou l", and
thanked the members for
a~ isli n g at the Fellowship
Tea earlier this month .
Devotions by Miss Hall were
taken· fr om the "Portals of
Prayer". Mrs. Mary Hughes,

ARRIVING
DAILY
"GOOD
SELECTION"

,&lt;11d

1'.

pl.tll

40
REDUCED
%

--

2 RACKS lADIES BLOUSES,
KNIT TOPS, SKIRTS AND
·
SWEATERS
40%
I RACK LADIES COATS, CAR com
SKIRTS, DRESSES AND JACKETS
REDUCED

40%

MANY BARGAINS THROUGHOUT
THE STORE FOR MEN AND WOMEN

V2 PRICE

MIDDlEPORT,
OHI(l -

1

OPEN FRi.
UNTILB : OO

'

..'

•
House approves voter registration in.·all 88 Ohio countzes
By LEE LEONARD
UPI SlllteiiCMUe Reporter
OOLUMBUS (UP!)- The
Cillo House has passed for the
first time in 15 years of
consideration a bill requiring
voter registration In aU 88
Counties .•
The measure , cleared
Wedneaday and sent to the
Senate, would also pennlt
registration by polllcard and
would make a vqter's
registration good lor lour
years, Instead of two, even if
he fails to vote In an election.
Mandatory statewide voter
registration has been studied
In the General Aslembly
since 1961. It failed by four
votes on the House noor In
1969 and received Senate
approval in 1973, only to die in
the House.
The pr oposal made a
narrow eacape ·in the House
Wedneaday, pasoing 52 to 4ll
despite objections to the
ex1ra provisloll8 inserted !Jy
majority Democrats. Fifty
votes are required to pass a
bill In the HoUle.
Another elections bill ,
aimed at eliminating socalled " dirty tricks" in
political campaigna, was not
. so fortlinate. It was returned
to committee when It ran into
a dispute on the House noor
over limiting campaign
references to a candidate 's

between $4,000 and $15,000 tricks" ~ill was designed to
depending on their size and eliminate unfair campaign
how much they already do . practices, such as espionage,
Marsh said counties with sabotage or bribery directed
registration have realized at the enemy political camp.
savings in printing ballots
It also contains a list of
because they can better misrepresentations which
estimate the turnout.
would be prohibited durjng
The campai2n " dirty -campaigns, carrying a jail

RIGHT
GUARD
DRYTALC
DEODORANT

term of up to six months and
a fine of up to $1,000 for
conviction.
Rep. C. William O'Neill, RColumbus, attempted to
remove prohibitions against
falsely representing a
candidate 's
educational
background, occupational

experience and repollltion on
grounds those were matters
of "opinion and conjecture."
When a fight developed
over safeguarding the
reputations of polltical
£andidates, Rep. Richard H.
tYnan,
R-Ci ncinnati ,
ll!ccessfully moved to send
'

VIETTI

GILLETTE

u

wit:... . . .
.

'

the entire bill to the Judiciary
COmmittee. It had been approved last week by the Slllte
Government COmmittee .
In
other
legislative
developments :
- The Senate unanimously
passed and sent to the House
a
bill allowing
all

TRACII
SHAVE
CREAM

HER

OIL OF
OlAV

HOT.
COCOA
MIX

CHIU
With Beans
Nelson ' s
Reg .
59c Ea.

11 oz.
Nelson 's
Reg . 51.32

permanentl y and totally mously and sent to the Senate
disabled veterans to fish, legislation requiring the
hunt or trap without a license. establislunent of school zones
- The House passed and and setting a statewide speed
returned to the Senate for limitof20 m.p.h. in the zones.
The Senate was to
concurrence in amendments
a pair of bills regulating reconvene at 11 a.m . today,
harbering and cosmetblogy. and the House was to meet at
- The House passed unani- I p.m.

4 oz .
Nelson's
Reg .
$3.39

Nelson's
Reg .
88c

'
Nelson's
Reg .
96c
No. ISO

"reputation:" .

The mandatory voter regisblU has long been
favored by Secretary of State
Ted W. Brown and the Ohio
League of Women Voters as a
weapon against fraudulent
elections.
Although voters must
currently register In 62
t'OUnlles, 22 others have no
registration and: four have
partla I registration .
All states except Ohio,
Wisconsin and North Dakota
have
statewide
voter
registration.
The bill; sponsored by Rep.
Ike Thonipson, D-Oevellind,
would require lull voter
regls~allon In all 88 COW!ties
by Nov. 8, 1977, giving boards
of elections time to prepare.
The boarda would have to
estabUsh weekly registration
perioda three days a week for
the rest of this year, as weU
as night and weekend hours
for registering.
The postcard registration
provision was passed, 51 to
37,
over
Republican
ofljections . that It would be
" an open · Invitation to
election fraud."
The GOP alao attempted to
restore
the
two-year
lbnltation on registrations to
prevent what they called
"tombstone voting" and
other fraudulent procedures.
But that amendment was
tabled, 511 to 34.
Also tabled was a provision
which would have required
the state to reimburse
counties lor the cost of
registration .
Assistant Secretary of
State James R. Marsh said
the Initial cost to the counties
to register .voters would be
~ation

WELLA
BALSAM
16 oz.
REG.
OR
EX . BODY
NELSON'S
REG. 52.48

'LI

..

~

®.
Nelson's
Reg. $2.59

8

WELLA
HERBAL
BLOSSOM
SHAMPOO
Normal
Dry
Oily
7 oz.
Nelson's
Reg :
$1.32

~~·n.~
"""

YOUR
CHOICE

99e

99e

oz

oz.

61/ 2
WITH
SOAP

WITH
SOAP

VICKS

Reg . 52.59

Keri $149
· ·R&gt;uon

l

FO~
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: . -~ ..

~:~·on's $
Reg. $2.69

.CAAE

219

.VICKS SINEX

Mrs. Jonas at
conference on
right to read

Model GR590W
.
.
Solid-state AM / FM /Ste reo FM tuner-amplifier, Stereo
Precision Reco rd Chan ger. S-Track Tape Recor~er-P iayer .
. Un iband dial sca le selector, tuning mete r. M•c ro-Touch
tone arm. Allegro 2000 Speakers. Simulated wood cabinet.

Regu lar $369.95

NOW

'29¥

1 PR. •8.00
2 PR. '15.00

All WOMEN AND
QIILDREN'S WINTER
BOOTS
PRICE
BOOTS

at the Meigs .County Infirmary on her birthday .
Donations were made to the
scholarship fund for Richard
Kane, Baptist student at
Judson College. Read was a
letter and card thanking the
Circle for birthday remembrances. A report wcis given
on the white cross quota.
Mrs . Katie Anthony opened

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. 'Thursda y, Fe~ . 19. J97U

U69 .9l
NOW

The Santiago • Model G901 P. Hand some Mediter-.
ranea n-styled console with so lid-state AM/FM/Stereo
FM Tuner-Amplifier wit h Automatic Frequency Control on FM. Stereo Precision Record Changer.&amp;-Track
Tape Playe r wilh program indica tor lights and pushbutton prog ram selector. Si mulated wood cabinet
with grained Peca1 . fin ish.
-----~~
REGULAR 5499 .9$'
, he MOROCCO • Model
F 925 DE ,P - Mediterranean
c;.'oinet in Dark Oak or Pecat1 color . Stereo Precision record
changr.r with Mi cro· Touc h 2G tone arm , 8·track playe r.'
and AM/t: ~/St ereo FM tuner with flywheel tuning. Two Plus
Two 5peaker matr ix for "four di'mensiona l" sound effec t.
Allegro tuned po rt speaker sys tem.

The quality goes in .
·
belore I he name goes on®

TUPPERS PLAINS - Mrs.
R. M. Jonas, Title I reading
teacher at Tuppers Plains
Elementary School, recenUy
· spent a week in Perrysburg
at the Sixth Right to Read
COnference. Mrs . Jonas, with
Mrs. Nina Sat:tders, will be
working with peer group
tutors ; adult volunteers, and
teachers to individualize and ,
improve reading skills. An
assessment of student and
teacher needs and Implementation of a school-wide
reading program has already
been started at Tuppers
l'lains School.
• The Ohio Right td Read
,:'Commission now estimates
that there are 800,000 functional illiterates in this slllte,
,.,eop~ who are unable to read
e!llployment applications,
,1!110' library cards, fill out
Insurance and medical formor understand newspapers . ·
.With federal funding, Ohio
hils trained 575 teachers,
llliPervlsors, and principals
•II Right to Read Directors
With the goal of lmpro~ing
,reading Instruction for ell. By
1~. the Congress has said it
,hopes to have 99 percent of
the young people reading at ·
,functioning levels.
Meigs Countians who have
been trained as Right to Read
Directors are Mrs . Jonas.
'Mrs. Greis Suttle, and Mrs.
.Carolyn Smith .

s,

' ..

THE TOOTH/GUM BRUSH
ORAL B-40
&amp;
ORAL B-60

e End-roynded ,
pol ished bristles
e Multi-luhed
construction
e Recommended by
more lhan lwice
many dentists as
any other brush

1 az .
NELSON'S
REG.
$2.25

1\c&lt;:n ratll\y

0

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BAN~AID

6 oz.
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$'109
L .

HOW NELSON'S SAVES YOU
MONEY ON PRESCRIPTIONS
• Preacrtpt.IONJ

Johnson &amp; Johnson

$169

1. LOW, LOW,
PRESCRIPTIONS PRICES Whether you're a Senior Citizen
or a toddler ... or anywhere in
between
you
get
low
prescriptio.n prices.
2.
DELIVERIES.
Deliveries cost you money.
Pick up your prescriptions and
save at Nelsol)'s .

PLASTIC STRIPS
50+20 FREE
70 TOTAL

3. COUPONS - Periodically
watch for our money -saving
coupons.

Create Your
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4. RECEIPTS We will
supply you with tax deductable
receipts
with
every
prescription filled if requested.

s: "Where you get the best tor
less' '.
If we're not filling
prescription, You're
paying too much.

,..

~

...."
\

�•

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 19, 1976

Circles plan spring activities

Quadrant meet set ]

1

Th e annual quadrant
It was voted to send a
meeting of the Humane donati on to the Ohio ComSociety of SoutheasU&gt;rn Ohio mitU&gt;e for Humane Trapping
will be held in Pomeroy April to .help further legislation to
3 hosted by the Meigs County ban the steel jaw trap. It was
Society.
reported that animal replica
Plans for the event were coin conll!iners are being
made at a recent meeting of placed in business houses for
the local Society at Mid- donations by the public to the
dleport Village hall . The all- prog ram .
day meeting will be held at
Annua l reports were
the Meigs Inn with John present ed including a .
Inman , Great Lakes Regional financial report showing
Director of the Humane $2,945 spent for animal
Society of the United Sillies, welfare in 1975. This includes
to be the speaker.
vef\'rinarian care and inRepresenllltives of groups vestigative procedures. Mrs .
in Athens, Belmon t, Jackson, Sandra Iannarella is the new
Gallia, Fairfield , Hocking , investigator for the Humane
Washington, Je.fferson, and Society. Also reported were
Muskingum Counties in Ohio; adoptions from 1975 . along
Mason County, W. Va., the with animal claims. All funds
Parker s burg Human e expended by the Humane
Society, and Ohio County in Society were from memW. Va . are expected to at- bership fees and donations:
tend .

First birthday celebrated
Marci
An ne · Carol,
daughter of Dennis a nd
Sa ndy Zerk le Carol of
Weslland, Mich. celebrated
her first birthday recently at
the home of her grandparents, Mr . and · Mrs .
William Zerkle, Syracuse .
Attending were her greatgrandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ross Norris, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Weave r and son,
Brian , Jackie
Zerkle,
Elean or Wingett, Syracuse;

~:

Spring 1&gt;rojects ""d ac-

tivities were planned during,
the Tuesday night meetings
of the circles of the B. H.
Sanborn Missionary Socie ty
of I he Middleport First
Baptist Church .
Announced was the annual

·-·
DUO-HARPISTS SCHEDULED - Duo-harpists Joe
Longstreth and John Escosa will be in concert Tuesday,
Feb 24 at the Gallia Academy High School auditorium.
Scheduled to perform at 8 p. m. the, harpists are the final
concert presentation of the Tri-County COmmunity
Concert Association's 1975-76 season. ·

Mr. and M1 s. Vernon Rizer,
Hartford, W. Va ; Carolyn,
Stephanie and Timothy
Sayre, New Haven, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. John McDermitt and son Scot, Letart,
W.Va .; Bill Zerkle, uncle of
Marci , of San Francisco,
Calif.
Ice cream, cake, mints and
Kool Aid were served with the
birtbday of Marci 's grandfather, William Zerkle, also
being observed.

Generation Rap

~

Polly's Pointers
By Polly .Cramer

Advice needed for
milk carton doll bed

[1~

*

close .

1•

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with the dieter who
comes to my house and does
not touch 'a thing offered in
the way of carefully planned
refreslunents. Don't people
UP
know that today this is an
awful faux pas? lt is their
U and MU :
duty
to. at least "token ·
If Joe is seeing his ex-girlfriend, he wouldn't leU you about
nibble" something rather
·excursions with her son. Maybe he likes the kid ahd wants to
than embarrass .the bosis.
1\elp him. Down, jealousy! ~ HELEN
Those nicely sturdy little
+++
crocks that some fine cheeses
Upset:
•
Why don't·you ask to go along with Joe, when he takes the come in are terrific to use as
holders for bacon grease: The
boy places? Alter all, engagro coUples should share friends wire tightens on the tops and
as well as trust. - SUE
with the rubber between top
·+++
and bottom keep this useful ·
Rap:
.
Please tell me why parentS always have to yell when they
tell you to do something.l'm not deaf! - EARKED
Now the boy calls Joe and wants to see him . Joe thinks he
needs attention, so he takes him places. But I can't help
wondering if he also takes the mother along? I've found Joe In
a few small lies in the past. Should I get'tough about the boy or
believe my fiance is just being kind? - UPSET AND MI)(ED

Earked :
Parents yell because they know from experience nonnal
tones get tuned out. Do it the first time you're asked and there
will be a lot less noise ~ound your house.- HELEN
·

·

+++ -

NOTE FROM SUE: But " Doing it the first time you're ·
asked" means interrupting something much more important
- the thing you're doing for yourself atthatmoment. .
II porents would confine their "bossing" to the times when
kids weren't busy with their own pursuits, there'd also "be a
lot less noise around the house."

+++

LAST WORD FROM HELEN: Hear, bear! TeUme,Sue, is
there EVER a time, when a disliked chore needs attention,
that kids aren't "busy with their own purauits?"

+++

Dear Rap:
I am an average, ordinary junior high school boy. When I
was younger, I tbo.ught sex was for dirty jokes, but as I grew
up, 1 discovered the beauty of love. But I kept up the front
because my friends would tease me if I stopped laughing about
"dirty" sex, and talking that way. I mean like girls are dumb.
I have another problem related to the first, There is a girl
in my class and she is the most beautiful person In the world. I
feU in love with her the first time I saw her a year ago, but
because of the front I have to put up with my friends, I've got to
be Indifferent to her.
How do I getoutofthisact? - IN A RUT
Dear JAR :
Which is more important, sharing unreal dirty jokes with
your friends or finding a girl who will make you see hnw
juvenile this act was?
Start talking to her - never mind the teasing. - HELEN

+++

Dear 1:
You'll be surprised how last the teasing stops, mainly .
because a lot of those girl-haters feel just as you do underneath
their tough ll!lk. They'll be pairing off soon themselves, you 'II
see. - SUE '
-

SPECIALSUNOAY
MASON _"Good Neighbor
Day" will be observed at the
Mason First Baptist Sunday.
There will be sp~ial singing
by the Joint.-.airs for the 7:30

p. m. service.. lo'-ui'o [;·"'"
the church will take part in
. Uie morning and evening
services. Members are asked
to attend and take their
neighbOrs. The Rev. Walter
Cloud is pastor.
·

INSULATION
Blown Into.Your Walls
'Free Estimates'

FOREMAN and ABBOTT
Middleport, Ohio
Jh. 992-5321

Lenten breakfast hosted by
Trinity Church £or women of
the county , and the World
Day of Prayer service of
Church Women United. The
breakfast will be at 7:45 on
March 3, while the Prayer
Service will be on March 5 at
the Minersville United
Methodist Church.
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
Meeting at the home of
Miss Rhoda Hall, the Love
Joy members arranged to
take layetU&gt; article sto the
next meetin g to go to the
Women's Conference in June .
From there they are
distributed to Christian
Centers.
Arrangemen ts were also

.

Cash Bahr ............... Is Still

" Where Have You Been"

wa s the program topic
presenU&gt;d ~y Mrs . Freda
HoO&lt;l at a meeting of the
Eleclll Circle at the home of
Mrs. June Kloes.
Mrs. Alwilda Werner gave
devotions usi ng scripture
from Galatians 5 and tributes
to Lincoln and Washington.
She also read a poem for
th ose having birthdays in

~~i
"C~~::G
~cr:: : :. ~j
~

o!

PRICES

78 Ladie s Pant Suits by Ja.ntzen, Catalina
and Coddington . Sizes 8 to 20.
Misses &amp; Ha If Sizes
Values to $14.00 REDUCED

February, "Birthdays are a

made to remember a resident

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I would
like to know hnw to make a
;~~:::::::::::::::::.~:::~::::::;:::::::;:::::::;:;~:8~!!!~8!:::!:!:!:!:-::!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::~;~:::::::::;:~:::::~::=;!~
bed out of a milk carton for a
Barbie doll, and would be
thankful if you could tell me
how to do this. - KIM .
DEAR KIM - I would
By Helen and Sue Bottel
!I! certainly
tell you U I knew but
~ I am sure ntber young
It's Alia Matter of Trust
readers will be .writing to tell
Rap :
.
· Joe my fiance tells me all the time bow much he loves me you bow this Ia doae and then
but he has this on~ hangup. The woman he went with before · we wiD pus the BDswers on to
has a little boy by her first husband. He and the boy got very you. -POLLY.

!!l

served by the hostess assisted
by her daughters, Lori and
Lynn. Attending besides
those named were Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman, Mrs. Beulah While,
Members si~ned cards for Gift from God ", by Helen
Mrs . Gwinnie While, Mrs.
Mrs . Julia Grim, Mrs . Steiner Rice ,
During the
business Eloise Wilson , Mrs. Clara
Frances Bearhs and Mrs :
Mae Darst, Mrs. Isa belle
Fern Bradbury . It was noted meeting reports were given Win41,brenner, Mrs. Elizabeth
that the White Cross quo Ill is , on the scholarship fund and Searles and Mrs . Loutse
filled. Mrs. Pauline Hoffman the while cross quota .
A de ssert cour se was Davis.
had the program entitled
"When Elsie Saw the Light" .
Refreshments were se rved to
thvse namrd and Mrs. Peter
Granda!, Mrs . Florence
Rhodes, Mrs. Frances Smart,
Mrs . Freda Edwards, Mrs.
Leora Sigman and Mrs .
'
Elizabeth Gardner .
·
ELECT ACIRCLE

SUBS IN PULPIT
The Rev . David Neville will
· fill his father's pulpit at the
Hysell Run Free Methodist
Church at 10:30a. m. and 7:30
p.m. Sunday. His father , the
pastor, is the Rev . Paul .E
Neville.

•
TO CONTINUE
A revival in p'rogress at the
Middleport United Pentecostal Church, Third Ave.,
will be continued through this
week. Services are nightly at
7:30 p . m. with the . Rev.
Richard Masters, guest
speaker. Special music is
featured. The public Is cordially invited.
IN HOLZER
William
E.
Morr is ,
Pomeroy, is a medi cal
patient at Holzer Medical
Center. His room number is
306.

(and
now
expensive)
shortening fresh ;and fine
until used up. It can also be
poured into the crock hot, to
be refrigerated later. - A. L.
DEAR POLLY - I hope to
help Barbara who wants to
make a quilting frame. I am
using a homemade one given
to me by an 115 year old lady
who used it for many many
years.
Buy four pieces of stock
lumber eight feet long, one
inch thick and two incheE
wide. Double four inch wide
strips of heavy canvas (to two
inches), and iack securely to
the two inch flat sides of the
boards, allowing one inch of
material on the board and one
inch extending over the edge .
of the board. The auilt is sewn
to this cloth, so it is held lllul
as one quilts. buy lour C
clamps· in size three inch at
the hardware store. Use these
to hold the four corners
together to form a square or
rectangle as the case may be .
Start quilting at the outside
edges and roll quilt toward
the center as you finish . Then
you are able to do the entire
quilt in this manner since the
boards are adjusted with the
clamps as you proceed. Good
luck to you, Barbara - MRS.
M. R. H.
DEAR READERS - You
never let us .down. Our
sincere thanks to many Who
sent In directions for making
quilting frames. Many said
!bey bore holes, about three
Inches aport, along the wood
strips. With such holes a
large nail can be dropped
through ·holes at corners lo
Wd the sides together. One
church group has such a
frame that Is hinged In the
center to make storing
easier. These side boards
seem to range In size from
two to four Inches In width .
OUr readers rest such frames
on the backs of straight
chairs, on four stools, saw
horses or even hang from the
ceiUng. -POLLY.
You will receive a dollar
U -Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet
Peeve, Polly's Problem or
solution lo a problem. Write
Polly In care of this newspoper.

Spec~afly . Priced
u.

·n

1 ~ROUP

wq.MEN'S DRESS &amp;
CASUAL SHOES
by Connie
Values to 520.99

MEIGS THEATRE ·
TONITE
Thurs . Feb . 19
NOT OPEN

Fri . 1hru Sun .

FRAMED
{Technicolor )

the meetir "' --.:th a poem, ' '1

1h

MEN'S DRESS DINGO

40% OFF :

heritage house
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OPEN FRI. TIL8 : 00p .m .

======··

LADIES DRESS COATS &amp; CAR COATS

II'

,,.td

I

\II

Vlllyl

111111

X.

" ' ' · ' ,,. 10

Beautiful

program leader, reported on

"The New Look in Zaire", a

SPRING ·
FABRICS

missionar y statlon .
Refreshments were served
by the hostess to th ose named

and Mrs . Sara Owen, · Mrs .
Eva Ha rtley, Mrs. ljllie
Hubbard, Mrs. Oicda Chase,
Mrs. Ethel Hughes, r.trs.
EJecta Souders, and Mrs.
Helen Bodimer. DORCAS CIRCLE
Mrs: Jessie Houdashelt and
Mi ss Freddie Huudash elt
hosted · the Dorcas Circle
meeting with Mrs. Elizabe th
Slavin opening with prayer .
Devotion s by Mrs . Tony
Fowler were 'in the Li ght of
God 's Love."

REV IVAL NOTED
A youth revival will begin
at the Hem loc k Gr ove
Christian Church Friday and
con tinu e Sa turd ay and
Sunday, 7:30nigh tl y, and 9:30
a. m. Sunday. The speaker
will he Dick Dmnron from
Kentucky Chris tian College.
The public is invited.

Blouses by Lady Manhattan, Jantzen,
Catalina, and Lori Lynn
in wool, vinyl and nylon . - fur trim and
plain .
,
I .
REDUCED
Sizes 6 Ia 20

Show start s .lt 7: 00p . m .

Sought My Sou l", and
thanked the members for
a~ isli n g at the Fellowship
Tea earlier this month .
Devotions by Miss Hall were
taken· fr om the "Portals of
Prayer". Mrs. Mary Hughes,

ARRIVING
DAILY
"GOOD
SELECTION"

,&lt;11d

1'.

pl.tll

40
REDUCED
%

--

2 RACKS lADIES BLOUSES,
KNIT TOPS, SKIRTS AND
·
SWEATERS
40%
I RACK LADIES COATS, CAR com
SKIRTS, DRESSES AND JACKETS
REDUCED

40%

MANY BARGAINS THROUGHOUT
THE STORE FOR MEN AND WOMEN

V2 PRICE

MIDDlEPORT,
OHI(l -

1

OPEN FRi.
UNTILB : OO

'

..'

•
House approves voter registration in.·all 88 Ohio countzes
By LEE LEONARD
UPI SlllteiiCMUe Reporter
OOLUMBUS (UP!)- The
Cillo House has passed for the
first time in 15 years of
consideration a bill requiring
voter registration In aU 88
Counties .•
The measure , cleared
Wedneaday and sent to the
Senate, would also pennlt
registration by polllcard and
would make a vqter's
registration good lor lour
years, Instead of two, even if
he fails to vote In an election.
Mandatory statewide voter
registration has been studied
In the General Aslembly
since 1961. It failed by four
votes on the House noor In
1969 and received Senate
approval in 1973, only to die in
the House.
The pr oposal made a
narrow eacape ·in the House
Wedneaday, pasoing 52 to 4ll
despite objections to the
ex1ra provisloll8 inserted !Jy
majority Democrats. Fifty
votes are required to pass a
bill In the HoUle.
Another elections bill ,
aimed at eliminating socalled " dirty tricks" in
political campaigna, was not
. so fortlinate. It was returned
to committee when It ran into
a dispute on the House noor
over limiting campaign
references to a candidate 's

between $4,000 and $15,000 tricks" ~ill was designed to
depending on their size and eliminate unfair campaign
how much they already do . practices, such as espionage,
Marsh said counties with sabotage or bribery directed
registration have realized at the enemy political camp.
savings in printing ballots
It also contains a list of
because they can better misrepresentations which
estimate the turnout.
would be prohibited durjng
The campai2n " dirty -campaigns, carrying a jail

RIGHT
GUARD
DRYTALC
DEODORANT

term of up to six months and
a fine of up to $1,000 for
conviction.
Rep. C. William O'Neill, RColumbus, attempted to
remove prohibitions against
falsely representing a
candidate 's
educational
background, occupational

experience and repollltion on
grounds those were matters
of "opinion and conjecture."
When a fight developed
over safeguarding the
reputations of polltical
£andidates, Rep. Richard H.
tYnan,
R-Ci ncinnati ,
ll!ccessfully moved to send
'

VIETTI

GILLETTE

u

wit:... . . .
.

'

the entire bill to the Judiciary
COmmittee. It had been approved last week by the Slllte
Government COmmittee .
In
other
legislative
developments :
- The Senate unanimously
passed and sent to the House
a
bill allowing
all

TRACII
SHAVE
CREAM

HER

OIL OF
OlAV

HOT.
COCOA
MIX

CHIU
With Beans
Nelson ' s
Reg .
59c Ea.

11 oz.
Nelson 's
Reg . 51.32

permanentl y and totally mously and sent to the Senate
disabled veterans to fish, legislation requiring the
hunt or trap without a license. establislunent of school zones
- The House passed and and setting a statewide speed
returned to the Senate for limitof20 m.p.h. in the zones.
The Senate was to
concurrence in amendments
a pair of bills regulating reconvene at 11 a.m . today,
harbering and cosmetblogy. and the House was to meet at
- The House passed unani- I p.m.

4 oz .
Nelson's
Reg .
$3.39

Nelson's
Reg .
88c

'
Nelson's
Reg .
96c
No. ISO

"reputation:" .

The mandatory voter regisblU has long been
favored by Secretary of State
Ted W. Brown and the Ohio
League of Women Voters as a
weapon against fraudulent
elections.
Although voters must
currently register In 62
t'OUnlles, 22 others have no
registration and: four have
partla I registration .
All states except Ohio,
Wisconsin and North Dakota
have
statewide
voter
registration.
The bill; sponsored by Rep.
Ike Thonipson, D-Oevellind,
would require lull voter
regls~allon In all 88 COW!ties
by Nov. 8, 1977, giving boards
of elections time to prepare.
The boarda would have to
estabUsh weekly registration
perioda three days a week for
the rest of this year, as weU
as night and weekend hours
for registering.
The postcard registration
provision was passed, 51 to
37,
over
Republican
ofljections . that It would be
" an open · Invitation to
election fraud."
The GOP alao attempted to
restore
the
two-year
lbnltation on registrations to
prevent what they called
"tombstone voting" and
other fraudulent procedures.
But that amendment was
tabled, 511 to 34.
Also tabled was a provision
which would have required
the state to reimburse
counties lor the cost of
registration .
Assistant Secretary of
State James R. Marsh said
the Initial cost to the counties
to register .voters would be
~ation

WELLA
BALSAM
16 oz.
REG.
OR
EX . BODY
NELSON'S
REG. 52.48

'LI

..

~

®.
Nelson's
Reg. $2.59

8

WELLA
HERBAL
BLOSSOM
SHAMPOO
Normal
Dry
Oily
7 oz.
Nelson's
Reg :
$1.32

~~·n.~
"""

YOUR
CHOICE

99e

99e

oz

oz.

61/ 2
WITH
SOAP

WITH
SOAP

VICKS

Reg . 52.59

Keri $149
· ·R&gt;uon

l

FO~
!l~ .

: . -~ ..

~:~·on's $
Reg. $2.69

.CAAE

219

.VICKS SINEX

Mrs. Jonas at
conference on
right to read

Model GR590W
.
.
Solid-state AM / FM /Ste reo FM tuner-amplifier, Stereo
Precision Reco rd Chan ger. S-Track Tape Recor~er-P iayer .
. Un iband dial sca le selector, tuning mete r. M•c ro-Touch
tone arm. Allegro 2000 Speakers. Simulated wood cabinet.

Regu lar $369.95

NOW

'29¥

1 PR. •8.00
2 PR. '15.00

All WOMEN AND
QIILDREN'S WINTER
BOOTS
PRICE
BOOTS

at the Meigs .County Infirmary on her birthday .
Donations were made to the
scholarship fund for Richard
Kane, Baptist student at
Judson College. Read was a
letter and card thanking the
Circle for birthday remembrances. A report wcis given
on the white cross quota.
Mrs . Katie Anthony opened

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. 'Thursda y, Fe~ . 19. J97U

U69 .9l
NOW

The Santiago • Model G901 P. Hand some Mediter-.
ranea n-styled console with so lid-state AM/FM/Stereo
FM Tuner-Amplifier wit h Automatic Frequency Control on FM. Stereo Precision Record Changer.&amp;-Track
Tape Playe r wilh program indica tor lights and pushbutton prog ram selector. Si mulated wood cabinet
with grained Peca1 . fin ish.
-----~~
REGULAR 5499 .9$'
, he MOROCCO • Model
F 925 DE ,P - Mediterranean
c;.'oinet in Dark Oak or Pecat1 color . Stereo Precision record
changr.r with Mi cro· Touc h 2G tone arm , 8·track playe r.'
and AM/t: ~/St ereo FM tuner with flywheel tuning. Two Plus
Two 5peaker matr ix for "four di'mensiona l" sound effec t.
Allegro tuned po rt speaker sys tem.

The quality goes in .
·
belore I he name goes on®

TUPPERS PLAINS - Mrs.
R. M. Jonas, Title I reading
teacher at Tuppers Plains
Elementary School, recenUy
· spent a week in Perrysburg
at the Sixth Right to Read
COnference. Mrs . Jonas, with
Mrs. Nina Sat:tders, will be
working with peer group
tutors ; adult volunteers, and
teachers to individualize and ,
improve reading skills. An
assessment of student and
teacher needs and Implementation of a school-wide
reading program has already
been started at Tuppers
l'lains School.
• The Ohio Right td Read
,:'Commission now estimates
that there are 800,000 functional illiterates in this slllte,
,.,eop~ who are unable to read
e!llployment applications,
,1!110' library cards, fill out
Insurance and medical formor understand newspapers . ·
.With federal funding, Ohio
hils trained 575 teachers,
llliPervlsors, and principals
•II Right to Read Directors
With the goal of lmpro~ing
,reading Instruction for ell. By
1~. the Congress has said it
,hopes to have 99 percent of
the young people reading at ·
,functioning levels.
Meigs Countians who have
been trained as Right to Read
Directors are Mrs . Jonas.
'Mrs. Greis Suttle, and Mrs.
.Carolyn Smith .

s,

' ..

THE TOOTH/GUM BRUSH
ORAL B-40
&amp;
ORAL B-60

e End-roynded ,
pol ished bristles
e Multi-luhed
construction
e Recommended by
more lhan lwice
many dentists as
any other brush

1 az .
NELSON'S
REG.
$2.25

1\c&lt;:n ratll\y

0

Ft\~ ..

BAN~AID

6 oz.
NELSON'S
REG.-$2.49

$'109
L .

HOW NELSON'S SAVES YOU
MONEY ON PRESCRIPTIONS
• Preacrtpt.IONJ

Johnson &amp; Johnson

$169

1. LOW, LOW,
PRESCRIPTIONS PRICES Whether you're a Senior Citizen
or a toddler ... or anywhere in
between
you
get
low
prescriptio.n prices.
2.
DELIVERIES.
Deliveries cost you money.
Pick up your prescriptions and
save at Nelsol)'s .

PLASTIC STRIPS
50+20 FREE
70 TOTAL

3. COUPONS - Periodically
watch for our money -saving
coupons.

Create Your
own Fun .

4. RECEIPTS We will
supply you with tax deductable
receipts
with
every
prescription filled if requested.

s: "Where you get the best tor
less' '.
If we're not filling
prescription, You're
paying too much.

,..

~

...."
\

�8

Tlw I\ul.•. !-i.!

1

,.l \ l I· ttt_·l~ 1rt -l'tutt('l w, • j l .• fl n trsdo~:. , Fl·l•. Hl . H•7t~

~:.~:·~,'.;.:· t~:::IIHIIII;~~.,~.
t
,\f 'l'h

;m ct rlau~tn,-r

... p-t•r:t tLt

C't'&lt;'t' k

P ropetiy
Tt·anst"ers

Th.;~ l .trn• ,-~r· t.rH~ t•w 1

'I'm

U

\lt•vk1•1!d

~1i,'~·~~~ ·:.r',:~ :,:.~'( ,t,~:~'r•. "~::·;!
birt hda~

.---S- c_h_o_o-.ls' fi"ngncm· l p ..ob.le~s
compounde.d by·Ohio Leui~latu~e

Meigs

,1 ''

I'IJ-it'[\,1' I .

1 1
11'

~r

\ll

I .t'lah

For lh e lowes I

-

ED . NOT I·:: Tilt• r u ll u ~\ III J.!.
arBr 1t', \\rillt·n Uy Deem H. ('u-dl'.
pn•srt h•nl uf ti n• CaiJipqlis Ci ty
!

W L'a t lwrh~
lu
ll;t\ is. Vu")-~inia 1..

S&lt;'lloul

DJsl r ifl, c xplun.• s tht•
pl'ubh•Jn uf paying the billti fur lol'al

public L'dllt&lt;lliun . It is a prubit'lll of
I JH Tt·&lt;• ~ •n g ~.:u mplcxity :m d diffrc ull y .
(;cne r a ll y, where he uses
"{ial!lpolis City St:'hools" the lerms
'' Mt'igs Lul'&lt;ti " u;· " Jackson City
Schouls" or olhcrs it1 soutiJCastern
Ohio may be inte rpolated . In Meigs'
t..'ctSf' . local tl tillage to partieipate ifl
1h~ foundatiun prugnmt is 20 mitis
\\."hcrcH s 25 111ills are needed for full
shari ng , Circ le points uut that
Gallipolis le\'ie:s 1!1.7 mills.

lk;Hllt•\" W SJH'IlC(' I' , Fa~!:'
\
Spl'ltL l'r lu lltn\ iiHl 1-: .

In thP ArPa

\h ;IHn·. ,\\·unl'Jl Aleshire ,
I ,\l [ ~ ·!;, , 1)1 lll1l'f"O) .
'J'n Ctlunly
Bank

It's

to

Wt~od t'P \\ Shuffer. Kr•thryn
SlwHt'r, 8."7.1:1!1 f-.•et, Oli ve.
Hil\ i\litdl . dec to Fr~:&gt; da
:\lJtt· il, .!olin ;\1itch, Kathryn
Hl't'\ t·~. nrf. fur tran s_. Sul-

BEND
TIRE CENTER
Ma son, W Va .

hln. Mll\l' I' S\'I lle .

•••••

The dilctnma of

financing Ohio's
schools. particularly the Gallipolis
Cit y Schools . is a (lroblcm rapidly
approae hi11g I he t'fisis point.
Stopgap, po litically motivated
legisla!ion has on ly compounded the
finomcipl pr ob lems which fac e
Ohio's sdwoiS tud&lt;:~v and tomoo·ow.
Leg is lative rhetoric notwiths tanding , it is apparent that the
le gislature ha s dropped th e
edul'aliunal financial burden right
b"ck in the laps of local taxpayers .
A! the tlme the stale income tax
was cHacted Ohio's taxpayers were
led to be li eve that thi s lax would
e&lt;:~se the burden on the local t;Jxpayers' properly . taxes fur the
operation of our local schools.
However , practical results of what
the Leg isla! urc has dQne have been

MASON FURNITURE

,STORE HOURS
'

""

'

I

Mon .. Tues., Wed . &amp; S ai. -B : ~Otil 5:00
THURSDAY Tll11 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

MASON FURNITURE
77 3.5592

He rman Grate

Mason, W. Va.

•••••
Lifetime Aluminum Under
Pinning' For Your Mobile Home

to the contrary.

Cho ice of Av acado or White..

l4x60- -'260 ·
14x65 ~ '285

14x70-

•3 15

In s ta llation p r ice includes all labor and ·
material.
Mont11 of Februa ry Only,

Who fi xes them"
EVER HEAR OF
GUARA{'ITEED
SOLES- BY " KNAPP"
- SHEBOYGAN
L OGGERSWE STERN BOOTS

SALES AND SERVICE
992·7034

Ohio

Hr s. 9 a m. til5 : JO p. m . Closed Sun .
Pe.cu I Ash 992-3323, Roger Oa vis. 992 -7671

('&lt; otllllo "r•·n
' , _, - .
'1'1101 t (JI li· n·s 1axpuyt•rs were
l;t kt•fl 1r1 by lht• stale income lax
ll uax is Uurne•mt by th e fa d that last
No \·e mber ballot requests for
property tax increases l(J meet
sehoul UllCrafing eosts fared wun&gt;e
than ever before . Only 21.3 percent
wer e upp o·ovcd~ This co mpa r e d
unfavorably with the 68 percent of
Ievie" passed in Novei11ber , 1968,
before !he state income ta~.
This problem is further com.
plicalcd by the Legislature 's over·
re&lt;:~ct ion to irate taxpayer·s who have
revul!ed uver U1e results of the
scxc1mial property appraisa ls.
The governor and the legislature
battle for center-stage while Ohio's
schools s uffer. The Ohio House of
Hcpresentatives responded with
passage of H.B. 920 which would
freeze property val ues at the level of
!he year preceeding reappraisal.
The bill is currently awai ting action
in the Ohio Senate. While this action
would appear admirable, th e
proposed freeZe would have the
effect of forci ng local schoo l
districts to see k more voter taxes a t
~l time when
money-weary taxpayers have sel a tre nd toward
rejecting them .
This need for local monies is the
ri!Sult uf double digit inflation due
not only to the increases in the costs
of supplies, tex tbooks, fuel and
utilitit~s: but a lso dur to increases
tlmt ha-n resulted from mandates
on s&lt;'hool s by the legislature that
have not been funded.
The schuo ls belung to the lo~al
people, but Wlder Ohio law the
responsibility for finan cial stability
belongs to the s late lcgislalW'e. The
sta l e is ignoring this responsibility
by shifting the major burden to the
loca l taxpayer.
The stale's share local school
financing is distributed th rough the
"Sc hool F(Jundation Program ",

or

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr . and Mrs. Terr; Evans,
Rt. 4 Pomeroy, announce the
birth of their fi rst child, a
daughter, Megan Beth, Feb.
11, at Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed 6 lbs. and
ounces .
Maternaf
10
gra ndpa rents a re Mr. and
Mrs . Richard
Russe ll ,
Midd l eport ; p ater na I
gra ndmother, Mrs. Arthur
Evans, Gallipoli s,
a nd
materna l
great
grandparents, Mr. a nd Mrs.
M. L. French, Middleport.

\
"Ask the man

Kingsbury Mobile Homes
Pom eroy

·

Over !he ·past 10 years we
ha\-'C see n the state 's contribution
towa rd E lementary and ~condary
education dr.·op from 41 percent of its
J..(eneral revenue in H.lti6-67 to :i:J
percent of I he stat£''s estimated 197677 revenues. These fi gw-es ·were
obtaine d from an independe nt
source: the Ohio Chamber of

Averag'l height 28 inches, if higher s lightly
m ore .

12x52- '225 .00
12x60- - -'250
12x65 - - -'27 5
12x70 ~-· '300

DAN'S

SIMON'S
CONTINUES
GIRLS

NYLON

·FASHION
BOOTS

'1
low Cut

Boys Black -

CONVERSE
TENNIS SHOES
MEN'S
SIZES

$

Boys

$6
$7

.

to$7
DRESS SHOES ........3
ii::sl2

$1295

EARTH SHOES ........... :.

.

CYCLE BOOTS

FOOTEES

pr.

MENS

'7
:~~ =~~ . . "".""""" 2
DRESS
SHOES

Values to $10.99

"$

Ladies &amp;. Teens

~~!~~~. . ~ 3to $12

~~~~~~~~~~~ . . . . . . . . .~ 4

Reg . $2 5 .95
WHILE THEY LAST.

LEATHER

~

Ladies White'

14 inch-All leather
TEENS

LADIES
--~-------+------~

$600

DRESS &lt;~nd •
SPORT

$6 to ~ 11
&amp;

$9.98 'Value s .

By CRAIG A. PALMER
WASHINGTON (UP[) - A
Nobel Prize-winning cancer
researcher said today he is
"shocked" by the lack of
goverrunent action to curb
cigarette smoking. He question ed the government's
credibility as a promoter of
health and fitness.
Dr. Rena to Dulbecco, a
1915 prize winner for cancer
research, said in remarks
prepared
for
Senate
testimony tha t lung cancer is
a prim e example of a
preventable cancer, caused
by a clearly identified and
unessential agent - cigarette
smoke.
" The fact that it has not
been prevented, and that
60,000 Americans are killed
by it every year, must be
squarely attributed to lack of
a dequat e aciion by the
goverlllllent, and its failure to
· heed the many calls made by
responsible scientists over
the last two decades,"
Dulbecco sa id.
0
As a -cancer researcher
and as a medical man I am
shocked by this lack of action,
and I question tire credibility
of . the government as a
promoter or health.!'
Dulbecco's
statements
were contained in prepared
testimony
for
Se nate
subcommittee hea ring s
scheduled today on cigare tte
smoking and disease.
The industry 's Tobacco
Institute also was invited to
testify.
Democratic Sens. Edward
Kennedy of Massachusetts
and Gary Hart of Colorado
have proposed a lour-year,
$9.3 billioo health tax on
ciga r e ttes to pa y for
increased research on cancer
and heart and lung diseases.
Dulbecco said he supports
"a new heavy tax on
cigarettes, · proportional to .
the hazard value." Tobacco
· in come "is a gruesome
revenue , based on the
disease , death and g reat
suffer ing of many people ... "
he said.
Althcugh the Kenriedy-Hart

MAIN ST.

Start losing w ei ght today or
mon ey back . MONADEX Is a
ti ny ta bl et .and easy to take .
MONADEX will help curb
your desire for el(cess food .

Eat le ss - weigh less . Contain s no dangerous drug s and
will not make you ner\l ous . No
strenuous eKe rcise . Change

...

start tod a y .

to h e lp you lo se water -bloat.

AQUATABS - a " wat er pill "
that work s U .OO . Both

quarantced and so ld by :

POMEROY

GIRLS' COATS
ALL REMAINING GIRLS' WINTER COATS
SIZES 4-14. STILL A GOOD GROUP. .
YOUR CHOICE

'1000

GIRLS WEAR
SPORTSWEAR, DRESSE~ .
SLEEPWEAR, SIZES 4-14
YOUR CHOICE

'200
BOYS SHIRTS-SWEATERS
AGOOD SELECTION LEFT. BOYS LONG
SLEEVE SHIRTS AND SWEATERS.
SIZES 4-14.
YOUR CHOICE ·

*200
TODDLERS' WEAR
ASST. TODDLER BOY AND GIRL
SPORTSWEAR, SLEEPWEAR, ETC.
YOUR CHOICE

ALL SALES FINAL

•

Check
These ·
Bargains

Sw 1!o her &amp; Lohse Pharmacy ,
11 2 E . M;tin , Pomeroy &amp;

Dulf o n Drug• Store , Mid ·
dl eport . Mail Ord ers Fi lled .

Reg. 1.25 8 oz . sites Elmer's Blue
ea . 69c
Re g. 4l c ea . Lipstick, Nail Enametl for 99c
Reg . 98c Nylon Chiffon Sc•rh
ea . 79c

R c q. SOt ea . Bandana Handkerchiefs

Reg . 2 .09 Tinkles Daytime :J0 1 s
Reg.1.19 Overnight12 's
Reg . 1.44 Toddler U 's
Reg. 1.89 Newborn 30's

box. 1.59
box l9c
box 99c;
box 1.29
ea.l9c

Reg. 59c Terry Training Panh
Reg . 59c Worn . Bikinis &amp; Briefs
Reg . 99c pr . She'er Panty Host ·
•·

F

' 'N~·

ea.
39c ·

ea.l9c

3 pr . 99c
PAir 69 &lt;:

H i~P'I ·

Reg , 39c Fashion Earrings ·•
4tor 99c
Reg. 1.29 pr. Queen She Panty Hose pr . 79c
Reg . Sl Men's Strir,ed Tube Stocks pr .. 69c
Reg. 89c Boys • Str ped Tube Socks pr . 59c
Reg. 1.69 Bath Size Print Towell
u . 99c
1.09 Hand Towel. 69c
79c Wash Cloth , 49 c ,
Reg . 2.91 Rug Runners
ea . 1.9f
Reg . 2.,9 Translucent Window Shldts ea .

1.99

'

Reg . li.9924 lC36 Framed Pictures
ea. 6.99
Re g . 4,49 40 qt. Pintle Slt·on Hamptr ea . ·
1.99

BEN,FRAN KUDI
PH . 992 -3498

OPEN FRI. TILl
SAT. UJ1TILS

POMEROY

J

200·102 E. MAIN ST.

Make
Pomeroy
Your

Snopptnt
Center

Kissinger, praising the
spirit of cooperation shown
by Peru's military leaders
during his visit,lelt for Brazil
on his Latin-American swing
today as U .S. Embassy
officials assessed the damage

Health· task force will
hold 3 open sessions

no education, i ncome or
experience requirements.
RSVP vo lun teers serve .
without compensation,
although they · may be
reimbursed for such expenses as transportation. .
Curre ntly more than 200
RSVP vollUlteers serve with
the Meigs ColUlly project.
Further information on the
RSVP program can be ob-

tained by contacting RSVP
Director J . Pearl Welker at
the Meigs County Council on
Aging, Inc., E. Main St., in
Pomeroy.
Other ACTION programs
i~clude the Peace Corps,
VISTA (Volunteers in Service
to America} , Foster Grandparents Program, Senior
Companion Program, and
University Year for ACTION .

The Application Task
Force for the new 18 coWJly
Health Systems Agency
sponsored
by
the
Southeastern Ohio Health
Planning Association
(SEOHPA}, will hold the first
of three scheduled meetings
at 9:30 a . m . on ' Saturday,
February 21, at the Ramada
Inn, in Marietta . All sessions
wlll be open to the public.
This 18 member task force
has the responsibility for
inen couragin g public
volvement a nd drafting a n
application for designation as
a Health Systems Agency
(HSA) . The new health
service area consolidates the

II counties currently in the
SEOHPA region and the
seven counties presently
served by the Ohio Valley
Health Service Foundation
IOVHSF }, based in Athens.
This Saturday, the meeting
will cover aspects of the
applica nts relating to ;
Agency Organization, Articles of Incorporation -ByLaws. and the Methodology
for Selecting Board Mem.
bers.
l~ terested individuals or
groups who wish to comment
on the above items are encouraged to prse nt the ir
views in writing or orally at
the mee ling :

--------------------------- 1 News •• in Briefs

Area Deaths

JACQUELINE ELLIS

Mr s . Jacque line Ann
(Mu lf ord) Ellis, Rt. 2,
Cheshire, died at her home
Wednesday afternoon at the

age of a2 .
Mrs . Ellis was born Oct. 3,
1933, al Rl . I, Middleport. She
was preceded in death by her
father, Otto Mulford , twin
boys

In

Infancy , and

a

brother, Char les .
She is survived by her
husband , Maynard H. Ellis ;

her mother, Mrs. Phyllis
Kenne dy Mu lford , Rl . I,
Midd leport; three daughters.
Mrs. Oltie (Sharon) Jarv is,
Rutland : Mrs . Ronald . I Rufh
Ann) Oa le;y , Pomeroy, and
Mrs . Fre~ (Vickie Lynn )
He ldre th , Mason ; two son s,
David Ell[s , Rutland and
Maynard (Eddie) Ellis at
home ; two sister's. Mr s.
Rober! (Betty ! Goodall. Rl. I.
Middl eport,. and Mrs . Roy
(Darlyne) Sayre, Kan aUga ;
a brother , Connie Neil
Mulford , Pom e r oy; five
grandchildren ;
a step daughter , Mrs . Clarence
I Utah I Pey t on. Ne wark ;
th ree s tep-grand chi ldren and
one
grea t-step-grandi:: hl ld .
Funeral services wil l be
he ld Sa lurda y al2 p.m . at the
Rawlings -Coa t s

Funeral

!

(Conti~ued from page 1)
[iroducers in the industry - Container Corporation of Amrica,
I of Chicago; Federal Paper Board Co. Inc., of Montvale, N.J.,
life,
t,aving
li ved
in
and the American Can Co . Of Greenwich, Conn . The folding
P ickerington 11 year s and
carton sales of alllhe defendant corporations totaled alioul $1
Springfield lour years .
She is survived ·by three billion in 1973 and amounted to about 70 per cent of sales for the
sons, Harry , Long Bottom ; entire industry, the Justice Departme~f said.

Donald, Pickerington , and
William, Columbus; six
daughters , Neoma osborn,
Pi cke rington ; Garnet
Stewart, Parkersburg ; Opal
Osborn, Cincinnati : . Audra
Bow mart, Sabina ; Gladys
Ritchie,
Belpre .
and
Elizabeth M iller , St. lou is,
Mo.; 22 grandchildren and 19
great-grandc hi ldren .
Funeral services will be
Saturday at 10: 30 a . m. at the
White Funeral ~om e in

Coolville wllh the Rev. Paul
Knierirri officiating. Burial
will be in SandHill ,Cemetery
a t Long Bottom . Friends may
call at the funeral home a"ffer
noon on· Friday .

ELMER W . KAUTZ
Elmer Wendall Kautz. 82.
Rt. 3, Pom eroy, died Wed nesday afternoon at Veterans
Memoria! Hospital. Mr .
Kautz was born Feb. 6, 1894
the son of the late Henry and
N\ary -Stahl Kautz . He was
also preceded in death by one
son, Carl, a brother, Joe , and
a sister, Clara Dorst . .

Mr . Kautz , a retired far ~
Home wit h Mr . Edgar
Harrop, Galli pol is, of. mer , wcis a member of St .
fieiating . Burial will be In John' s Lutheran Church , a
Midd leport Hill Ceme tery . former member Of the Farm
Fri end s m ay ca ll ·.at 1he Bur ea u , Ch es ter School
tun er at home Friday from 2·4 Board and of · !he ASCS
Chester To wnship Com ·
and 7-9.
mlttee.
He Is s urvived by his wife,
Ina Stobart Kautz ; one son,
CORA E. COLEMAN
Mrs . Cora E . Coleman , 86, Dale, Pomeroy ; a daughter ,
Sprlngfleld. lorm.er ly of Long Grace Sw iderski. Monroe,
Bottom , di ed early Wed · Mich .; eight grandchildren.
nes da v morninCI at the and five great -grandchildren .
Py thian Hom e Hospital,
Funeral services will be
Sprin gf iel d. foll owi ng an hel d Saturda y at 1 p . m . at
extended illness.
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
Mrs . Coleman was born in William Mlddleswarth of .
Me ig s Coun ty, the da ughter fi c iating .
Burial w ill be In Chester
of the lale Franklin and
Melissia Jane Spahn Bailey. Cemetery, Friends may call
Her hu sband, John R. at the funeral ~ome anytime.
Coleman , died In 1947. She th lieu of flowers the family
was a l sQ preceded in death by asks that cOntr ibutions be
a son, Edwin: one daughter, made to St. Johri 's Lutheran
Betty Frank : ·five sisters and Church.
1

five brothers.

Mr s . Co le ma n was a
member of the Long Bottom
Chris tian Church and had
been a

resi dent

of l'kigs

County the greater part of her

CALLED TWICE
At 8:41 p. m . Wednesday,
the Pomeroy E-R squail was
called to 368 bast Main St. for
Kenny LWlsford, age 7, who
was ill. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted. At
6:20 a. m. Thursday the Wlit
went to Bailey Run for
Cla rence Spurrier, who was
ilL He was also taken to
VM!l

r····MoiiiE;its~fo.ui·····.l

CHILDREN'S FASHIONS
S.ILYER BRIDGE PLAZA

BEN*FRAN KLUN

89c Strr 11

. MIJ?DLEPORT - Eighty
seven persons attended the
area Fire an d Emergency
As ~QC i alion meeting Wed·
nesday evening a t the Middleport F'ire Station with Bob
Bycr , chairman . presiding .
Byer made two proposals,
both approved, that ( I } each
department color code all
equipment so each could
identify , a·nd ( 2} each
departmc n t pay $5 dues a
year to cover postage, cards
and expenses.
Dale Tay lor of the sta te fire
marsha ll 's offi ce attended.
Charles Legar , Pomeroy
. fire chief, .di scusse d the
recen t fire in ·P omeroy and
the aerial ladder fund . An
aeria l ladder has been
loca ted in St. Louis for 110,000
Legar said. However, they do
not know its condition.
The next meeting will be
held M Ma sOn fire station on
Tuesday, March 16, at 7:30 p.
m . There a re 17 departments
i11 the association, in Me igs,
Gallia. J ackson, Athe ns and
Mason counties.
.
ASK TOWED
A marriage license has
be en issued to Patr iek
Clarence Clifford , 25, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy , a nd Cathy Darlene
Davis, 18, Rl. 1, Long Bottom.

A SPECIAL SERVICE TO YOU
FROM THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
Mothers-to-be, stop by the KIDDIE
SHOPPE in Middleport, check the
friendly atmosphere and let them
know what you need ·for baby.
They'll keep a record of it. When
shoppers come in for your baby, the
KIDDIE SHOPPE will know what
your baby needs, It costs you
NOTHING! FREE GIFT FOR

EAQI MOTHER-T().BE
THAT REGISTERS
ANOTHER

i
+

NOTE ANNIVERSARY
STIVERSVILLE - Mr .
· and Mrs. Louis DeLuz
marked their 32nd wedding
anniversary today at Holzer
Medical Center . Mrs. DeLuz
(Correne} is a patient at the
h&lt;&gt;;ptial and will undergo
surgery Friday .
·

HOSPITAL Driver cited
NEWS ~!?cu~~ice
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Cloisl
Badgely, Racine;
Ca rl
Greenlees, Pomeroy; Dana
McCai·n, Lon g Bottom;
Thelma Grueser , Pomeroy;
Victoria Cundiff, Syracuse ;
Penny Landers, Pomeroy;
Raymond Hartley, Racine;
Cor nelius Conger, Portland; .
F'rahk Mills, Rutland ; Kenny
LWlsford, Pomeroy ; Mary
Marie J ones, ·syracuse .
DISCHARGES - Ronald
Da iley, Jani ce DeBord ,
Charles Schoonover, Mabel
Hennessy, Gertrude Drake
and George Foss.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES Eva
Knopp, Mason ; Mrs. William
Litchfield , Jame s Hoplite ,
Point
Lilli a n Robbins,
Pleasant ; J.ose ph Ellis,
Cott agevill e;
Yvonne
Wellman , Patriot.
Feb. 18, a
BIRTHS ~aughter to Mr. and Mrs.
Luke Coffee, Vinton; a
daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
David Flowers, Robertsburg ;
Feb . 19, a daughter to Mr .
and Mrs. Randy Stone, West
Columbia ; a son to Mr . and
Mrs. Garry King, Pome roy,

Chief
Milton Varian investigated a
11 :50 p.m . hit-skip Tuesday
in which a car driven by
Patsy G. White, · Racine ,
traveling east on SR 124 ln
Syracuse, left the · highway
going into the yard of Jane
Barnett, struc.k a post a nd
s tump, tore out part of a
hedge fence , spun aroWJd in
the yard , returned through
the hedge fence , struck a
mailbox, a power pole, and a
parked vehicle owned by
Norman
Lee
Deem,
Syracuse , the n con tin ed
toward Racine.
Varian, assisted by Alfred
Lyons located the vehicle in
Racine at 1:30 a . m . Wed·.
nesctay.
' .
Mrs . White was cited to
Syracuse Mayor Herman
London's court on charges of
opera ting a motor vehiCle in
an unsafe m an ne r a nd
leaving the scene of a n accide nt. She posted $250 bond.
There
was
moederate
damage tp her vehicle and
light to Deem 's.

from the attack .
While Kissinger was being
toasted at a banquet at the
Peruvian Foreign Ministry
Wednesday night, about 30
demoostrators hurled rocks
at the embassy in a sudden
attack, smashing about eight
plate glass windows.
Embassy security guards
fired shots into the air and
local police statiooed in the
heavily guarded downtown
area near the embassy
rushed to the scene, breaking
up the disturbance and
making a number of arrests.
The rock-throwing attack
was the first incident during
the Kissinger visit. The
attack took place despite a
heavy disphiy of police
throughout the downtown
area.
It was the first attack of
this nature on the embassy
since the Feb. 5, 1975, riots in
Lima when the embassy was
repeatedly stoned during a
wave of arson, vandalism and
looting that left 86 persons
dead.
Kissinger's air force jet
took off for Brazil at 9:25a.m.
Minutes before, Kissinger
told local newsmen that from
nowoo, " Peru and the United
States will deal with each
other on a basis of equality
and respect."
. Foreign Minister Miguel
Angel de Ia Flor said the visit
"str~ngthened the relations
of the United states with Peni
by informing Kissinger of the
Peruvian revolutioo of the
armed forces'' .
Kissinger, during private
meetings with the ruling
generals of Peru, assured

them
of
Washington's
understanding of their
independent foreign polJC'j
and prolound domestic social

changt-s.
Brazil is the third stop on
his six-day Latin American
trip .

TODAY'S
BIG WATCHES
NEED
WIDE ONE'"
WATCHBANDS

stainless steel.

•9.95

Speidel makes them! Two new Speidel
Twist-O-Fiex 0 watchbands. They look
solid, but stretch. A lorwider than most
other bands. To go with your bigger and
bolder watch.

5~
Goessler Jewelry Store
Court St.
Pomeroy
•

NEW FURNITURE
AT
BUDGET PRICES
BEDROOM SUITE .•.................·...... ........... ~ 118
SOFA BEDS .......................... :........ ................. 198 ·
· RECLINER .................... ....................................... 168
5 PIECE DIN£ms .............. ,............................158
9xl2 LINOL£UM RUGS ..............................19.88
9xl2 RED OZITE CARPET.......................524
BUNK BEDS COMPLETE .................5149

BAKER
FURNITURE
Middleport, Ohio

WANT DIVORCE .
Two suits for divorce have
been iiled in Meigs CoWJty
Common Pleas Court, each
charging gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty.
They were by Ani ta B.
Rutter, Middleport, from
Carolos E. Rutter, Carbon
Hill, and Jeanne D. Blake, Rt.
I, Long Bottom, from Ricky
Lee Blake, Rt. I Reedsville.

IN COLUMBUS NOW
SPEAKER NOTED
The Rev . Ed ward J .
RUTLAND
Marvin .Griffith, Bashan area, has
Markin, Zalesld, will be the been transferred from St.
guest speaker at tbe Rutlimd Joseph Hospital in ParkerFreewill Baptist Church sburg to University Hospital
SWJday at 7:30 p . m . ·The in Columbus. His room
public and s ingers are in- number is 869.
vited. .

[i:K+.fl~
The Friendly Ones

CRESTWALL PANELING
Durable, easily-c leaned panel in
your choice of warm, roomllleasing color tones . Man-made
finish on hardboard . lfA" .x 4' x 8'.

Dateline: 1776
CALLED TWICE
RACINE - The Racine ER squad was called out twice
Wednesday, once at 4:30 p.
m. for Raymond Hartley,
Racine, and at 4:40p . m . for
Cornelius Conger, RD,
Racine,
both
medical
patients taken to Veteran~
Memorial Hospital.

"'J. MASONITE

NEW HAVEN, Feb: 19 William Robinson wrote to
a former Yale classmate In
the army at Cambridge
thatlhe pamphlet Common
Sense had changed his
views as to the need for
separation from England.
The recipient of lhe letter
was ·Nathan Hale.

SALE CONTINUES
(BROKEN SIZES!

ANGEL TREADS :¥z PRICE
1 GROUP MEN'S 4-BUCKL£ ARCTICS

'500
Open Mon. -Thurs. 9-5:30
Fri. 9-8:00, Sat : 9-5:oo ·

POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK

Q:K¥4~

_co~~

The Depe:t11teat Store

The Friendly Ones

of Building Since 1915.

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT

I

'

•

POMEROY

R ~g .

COLUMBUS - ACTION,
the federal agency fo r
volunteer service, · has
awarded a 122,902 grant to the
Meigs County ColUlcil ' on
Aging, lnc . to fund the continuation of a Retired Se nior
VollUlteer Program .
The grant, announced this
week by ACTION Sta te
Program Director Anne C.
Johnson, will be matc hed
with more than $15,000 in nonfede ral local funds, and
enable the RSVP project to
ope rate through January 31,
1977.
Th e
Retired
Senior
Volun teer
Program
is
designed to utilize the tale nts
~nd skills Of retired votun~
leers who arc 60 and older.
VolWl teers serve in privcate
or
public
non-profi t
organizations
such
as scho oLs, libraries, co urts ,
museums, hospitals , nurs ing
hOmes, and day c~ re centers.
Started in 1969 by the U.S.
Department of Hea lth,
Education a nd Welfare,
RSVP came under the administration of ACTION in
Jul y, 197 1. RSVP is planned,
organ ized and operated on
the local level. It is developer(
Wtder the a usp ices Of an
· e s t"bl is hed co mmuniiy
service Org anization or
~gency. Any retirCd person
age 60 and older can become
a HSVP volun teer; there .a re

87 firemen
•
at meetmg

and Save
LOSE UGLY FAT .

\ ...

.~

60 and older agency funded

WINTER MDSE.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
State
University
head
football coach Woodv Hayes
has signed five of the top high
school football players in
Ohio to football letters of
intent at OSU.
They are Mike Strahine, a
IJ.ll, 185 pound UP! ali.Ohio
quarterback from Lakewood:
Ron Barwi~g. a 6-8, 235 pound
UP! ali.Ohio tight end from
Willoughby South; Ttm
Sawicld, 6-1, 215 pllund UP!
all-Ohio linebacker from·
Mayfield Heights, Bill
Harmon a 6-1, 237 fullback
froni Mass illon and Jim
Laughlin a 225 pound fullback
fr om Cleveland Brush.

~

trv"

AGAPE', THE TEEN CHOIR fiom the First Church of the Nazarene in Parkersburg,
W. Va., wiil present the musical "A Celebratioo of Hope" by Otis Skillings and Paul
Johnson, Saturday, at 7:30p.m. at the Middleport Nazarene Church, ii80 Beech St. The
musical, based on Colossians I :27, is directed by Mrs ..Jon Britton. The public is invited .

FINAL CLEARANCE
ON ALL FALL AND

top prospects

,"

LIMA, Peru (UP!} Rockt.hrowing demonstrators
smashed windows in the U.S.
Embassy in Lima late
Wednesday night in a protest
against the visit of Secretary
of State Henry A. Kissinger.

Your FTD Florlsl

SATURDAY

Hayes signs

'

fI

I

I

352 E . Main, Pomerov

and

proposal has received little
public attention since it was
introduced Jan . 29, some
tobacco state senators have
openly attacked it in a " Dear
Colleague" letter .
" What's next ?" asked the
letter
signed
by
six
lawmakers from four of the
six top toba cco-producing
states . "A sugar or starch
tax? A nQn-exerds ing tax? A
tax on people livi~g in urban
ghettoes beeause tbey have
poorer health than the
affluent?"
Signing the letter were
Republican Jesse Helms and
Democrat Robert Morgan of
North Carolina, Democrats
Wendell Ford and Walter
Huddleston of ' Kentucky,
Democrat Ernest Hollings of
SoUth
Ca rolina
and
Republican Howard Baker of
Tennessee.

f

PH. 992-2644

FRIDAY

.Smoking shocks
•
•
cancer scientist

MONAOEX· cost Sl. OO for a 20
day supply . Lar9e economy
site is SS . OO . Al so try
AQUA TABS : th e y work gc ntly

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR

SATURDAY
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order
of DeMolay, th';d annual
bean dinner, Saturday, 4 to 7
p. m. Middleport Masonic
Hall . Tickets available from
any DeMolay member or at
the door

FRANCIS
FLORIST

t

L

Florist Since 1957

•

•

!

Your " Extra Touch"

Social
Calendar

wht"ch operates under a formula
S.B.- 170 enac•~ct
u·'cvclop"''
'-"'-' ""dcr
..... ,
I.C
intu law last year . In order that a
sehool clistricl not be penalized
finandally under Lhc foundatiQn
program. that school district must
have 25 mills of local taxes voted for
operational purposes . The Gallipolis
Cily Schools currently have 19.7
mills for operations. A recent study
based on figures from the Ohio
Public Expenditure Council shows
that of lhe 617 scltool districts in
Ohio, Gallipolis ranks 600th in
millage for school operations. Of the
16 surrounding di stricts in
s outheastern Ohio, only Gallia
CoWlly Local Schools at 13.4, ranks
below Gallipolis in voted millage.
Thus, it is apparent that we are
raughl in a squeeze on both the state
and local levels . UnfortWJalely,
most school districtS in our area find
themselves gripped in this Same
bmd .
The res ults of this financial
dilemma on th e Gallipolis City
Schools will be most strongly felt in
1976·77. To solve the problem the
local school community must exert
pressure. on th e legislature to inucasc the state's s hare of
ed ucational costs, increase local
taxes for operational monies in
order to take better advantage of the
school foundation program, or aecept reductions and cut· ba cks in the
loeal schools' educational programs
and services.
Ou.r ch ildren deserve an
educat ion equal to that of com parable communities, our teachers
and school employees de se rve
salaries that will allow us to attract
the best possible people. These have
always been the goals of the
Gallipolis City Sc hools and the
school comm lUlily and they should
continue to be the top corrununJty
priorities .

•
d
.
h
d
Emb assy wm ows smas e

9 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-PonJProy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 19,1976

~&lt;tt$.~.~:;:=»"?.\.~"..;i-:l'll.-&gt;:~:

ODDS AND ENDS

your life

SHOE STORE

1

~ ~

! iar~tld D
11:1\ ~-;, l.u! t;l, Sutton.

Tire Prrce'

77) 5881

\

1

BACK ATCOLI,EGE
INROOMUl
Sharon Bing has returned
RUTLAND - Ed Thomas
to the Kentucky Christian uf Rutland is a surgical
Colle~e after visiting . her patient at the Holzer Medical
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Center. His room number is
. 217.
lling, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.

\

I

�8

Tlw I\ul.•. !-i.!

1

,.l \ l I· ttt_·l~ 1rt -l'tutt('l w, • j l .• fl n trsdo~:. , Fl·l•. Hl . H•7t~

~:.~:·~,'.;.:· t~:::IIHIIII;~~.,~.
t
,\f 'l'h

;m ct rlau~tn,-r

... p-t•r:t tLt

C't'&lt;'t' k

P ropetiy
Tt·anst"ers

Th.;~ l .trn• ,-~r· t.rH~ t•w 1

'I'm

U

\lt•vk1•1!d

~1i,'~·~~~ ·:.r',:~ :,:.~'( ,t,~:~'r•. "~::·;!
birt hda~

.---S- c_h_o_o-.ls' fi"ngncm· l p ..ob.le~s
compounde.d by·Ohio Leui~latu~e

Meigs

,1 ''

I'IJ-it'[\,1' I .

1 1
11'

~r

\ll

I .t'lah

For lh e lowes I

-

ED . NOT I·:: Tilt• r u ll u ~\ III J.!.
arBr 1t', \\rillt·n Uy Deem H. ('u-dl'.
pn•srt h•nl uf ti n• CaiJipqlis Ci ty
!

W L'a t lwrh~
lu
ll;t\ is. Vu")-~inia 1..

S&lt;'lloul

DJsl r ifl, c xplun.• s tht•
pl'ubh•Jn uf paying the billti fur lol'al

public L'dllt&lt;lliun . It is a prubit'lll of
I JH Tt·&lt;• ~ •n g ~.:u mplcxity :m d diffrc ull y .
(;cne r a ll y, where he uses
"{ial!lpolis City St:'hools" the lerms
'' Mt'igs Lul'&lt;ti " u;· " Jackson City
Schouls" or olhcrs it1 soutiJCastern
Ohio may be inte rpolated . In Meigs'
t..'ctSf' . local tl tillage to partieipate ifl
1h~ foundatiun prugnmt is 20 mitis
\\."hcrcH s 25 111ills are needed for full
shari ng , Circ le points uut that
Gallipolis le\'ie:s 1!1.7 mills.

lk;Hllt•\" W SJH'IlC(' I' , Fa~!:'
\
Spl'ltL l'r lu lltn\ iiHl 1-: .

In thP ArPa

\h ;IHn·. ,\\·unl'Jl Aleshire ,
I ,\l [ ~ ·!;, , 1)1 lll1l'f"O) .
'J'n Ctlunly
Bank

It's

to

Wt~od t'P \\ Shuffer. Kr•thryn
SlwHt'r, 8."7.1:1!1 f-.•et, Oli ve.
Hil\ i\litdl . dec to Fr~:&gt; da
:\lJtt· il, .!olin ;\1itch, Kathryn
Hl't'\ t·~. nrf. fur tran s_. Sul-

BEND
TIRE CENTER
Ma son, W Va .

hln. Mll\l' I' S\'I lle .

•••••

The dilctnma of

financing Ohio's
schools. particularly the Gallipolis
Cit y Schools . is a (lroblcm rapidly
approae hi11g I he t'fisis point.
Stopgap, po litically motivated
legisla!ion has on ly compounded the
finomcipl pr ob lems which fac e
Ohio's sdwoiS tud&lt;:~v and tomoo·ow.
Leg is lative rhetoric notwiths tanding , it is apparent that the
le gislature ha s dropped th e
edul'aliunal financial burden right
b"ck in the laps of local taxpayers .
A! the tlme the stale income tax
was cHacted Ohio's taxpayers were
led to be li eve that thi s lax would
e&lt;:~se the burden on the local t;Jxpayers' properly . taxes fur the
operation of our local schools.
However , practical results of what
the Leg isla! urc has dQne have been

MASON FURNITURE

,STORE HOURS
'

""

'

I

Mon .. Tues., Wed . &amp; S ai. -B : ~Otil 5:00
THURSDAY Tll11 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

MASON FURNITURE
77 3.5592

He rman Grate

Mason, W. Va.

•••••
Lifetime Aluminum Under
Pinning' For Your Mobile Home

to the contrary.

Cho ice of Av acado or White..

l4x60- -'260 ·
14x65 ~ '285

14x70-

•3 15

In s ta llation p r ice includes all labor and ·
material.
Mont11 of Februa ry Only,

Who fi xes them"
EVER HEAR OF
GUARA{'ITEED
SOLES- BY " KNAPP"
- SHEBOYGAN
L OGGERSWE STERN BOOTS

SALES AND SERVICE
992·7034

Ohio

Hr s. 9 a m. til5 : JO p. m . Closed Sun .
Pe.cu I Ash 992-3323, Roger Oa vis. 992 -7671

('&lt; otllllo "r•·n
' , _, - .
'1'1101 t (JI li· n·s 1axpuyt•rs were
l;t kt•fl 1r1 by lht• stale income lax
ll uax is Uurne•mt by th e fa d that last
No \·e mber ballot requests for
property tax increases l(J meet
sehoul UllCrafing eosts fared wun&gt;e
than ever before . Only 21.3 percent
wer e upp o·ovcd~ This co mpa r e d
unfavorably with the 68 percent of
Ievie" passed in Novei11ber , 1968,
before !he state income ta~.
This problem is further com.
plicalcd by the Legislature 's over·
re&lt;:~ct ion to irate taxpayer·s who have
revul!ed uver U1e results of the
scxc1mial property appraisa ls.
The governor and the legislature
battle for center-stage while Ohio's
schools s uffer. The Ohio House of
Hcpresentatives responded with
passage of H.B. 920 which would
freeze property val ues at the level of
!he year preceeding reappraisal.
The bill is currently awai ting action
in the Ohio Senate. While this action
would appear admirable, th e
proposed freeZe would have the
effect of forci ng local schoo l
districts to see k more voter taxes a t
~l time when
money-weary taxpayers have sel a tre nd toward
rejecting them .
This need for local monies is the
ri!Sult uf double digit inflation due
not only to the increases in the costs
of supplies, tex tbooks, fuel and
utilitit~s: but a lso dur to increases
tlmt ha-n resulted from mandates
on s&lt;'hool s by the legislature that
have not been funded.
The schuo ls belung to the lo~al
people, but Wlder Ohio law the
responsibility for finan cial stability
belongs to the s late lcgislalW'e. The
sta l e is ignoring this responsibility
by shifting the major burden to the
loca l taxpayer.
The stale's share local school
financing is distributed th rough the
"Sc hool F(Jundation Program ",

or

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr . and Mrs. Terr; Evans,
Rt. 4 Pomeroy, announce the
birth of their fi rst child, a
daughter, Megan Beth, Feb.
11, at Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed 6 lbs. and
ounces .
Maternaf
10
gra ndpa rents a re Mr. and
Mrs . Richard
Russe ll ,
Midd l eport ; p ater na I
gra ndmother, Mrs. Arthur
Evans, Gallipoli s,
a nd
materna l
great
grandparents, Mr. a nd Mrs.
M. L. French, Middleport.

\
"Ask the man

Kingsbury Mobile Homes
Pom eroy

·

Over !he ·past 10 years we
ha\-'C see n the state 's contribution
towa rd E lementary and ~condary
education dr.·op from 41 percent of its
J..(eneral revenue in H.lti6-67 to :i:J
percent of I he stat£''s estimated 197677 revenues. These fi gw-es ·were
obtaine d from an independe nt
source: the Ohio Chamber of

Averag'l height 28 inches, if higher s lightly
m ore .

12x52- '225 .00
12x60- - -'250
12x65 - - -'27 5
12x70 ~-· '300

DAN'S

SIMON'S
CONTINUES
GIRLS

NYLON

·FASHION
BOOTS

'1
low Cut

Boys Black -

CONVERSE
TENNIS SHOES
MEN'S
SIZES

$

Boys

$6
$7

.

to$7
DRESS SHOES ........3
ii::sl2

$1295

EARTH SHOES ........... :.

.

CYCLE BOOTS

FOOTEES

pr.

MENS

'7
:~~ =~~ . . "".""""" 2
DRESS
SHOES

Values to $10.99

"$

Ladies &amp;. Teens

~~!~~~. . ~ 3to $12

~~~~~~~~~~~ . . . . . . . . .~ 4

Reg . $2 5 .95
WHILE THEY LAST.

LEATHER

~

Ladies White'

14 inch-All leather
TEENS

LADIES
--~-------+------~

$600

DRESS &lt;~nd •
SPORT

$6 to ~ 11
&amp;

$9.98 'Value s .

By CRAIG A. PALMER
WASHINGTON (UP[) - A
Nobel Prize-winning cancer
researcher said today he is
"shocked" by the lack of
goverrunent action to curb
cigarette smoking. He question ed the government's
credibility as a promoter of
health and fitness.
Dr. Rena to Dulbecco, a
1915 prize winner for cancer
research, said in remarks
prepared
for
Senate
testimony tha t lung cancer is
a prim e example of a
preventable cancer, caused
by a clearly identified and
unessential agent - cigarette
smoke.
" The fact that it has not
been prevented, and that
60,000 Americans are killed
by it every year, must be
squarely attributed to lack of
a dequat e aciion by the
goverlllllent, and its failure to
· heed the many calls made by
responsible scientists over
the last two decades,"
Dulbecco sa id.
0
As a -cancer researcher
and as a medical man I am
shocked by this lack of action,
and I question tire credibility
of . the government as a
promoter or health.!'
Dulbecco's
statements
were contained in prepared
testimony
for
Se nate
subcommittee hea ring s
scheduled today on cigare tte
smoking and disease.
The industry 's Tobacco
Institute also was invited to
testify.
Democratic Sens. Edward
Kennedy of Massachusetts
and Gary Hart of Colorado
have proposed a lour-year,
$9.3 billioo health tax on
ciga r e ttes to pa y for
increased research on cancer
and heart and lung diseases.
Dulbecco said he supports
"a new heavy tax on
cigarettes, · proportional to .
the hazard value." Tobacco
· in come "is a gruesome
revenue , based on the
disease , death and g reat
suffer ing of many people ... "
he said.
Althcugh the Kenriedy-Hart

MAIN ST.

Start losing w ei ght today or
mon ey back . MONADEX Is a
ti ny ta bl et .and easy to take .
MONADEX will help curb
your desire for el(cess food .

Eat le ss - weigh less . Contain s no dangerous drug s and
will not make you ner\l ous . No
strenuous eKe rcise . Change

...

start tod a y .

to h e lp you lo se water -bloat.

AQUATABS - a " wat er pill "
that work s U .OO . Both

quarantced and so ld by :

POMEROY

GIRLS' COATS
ALL REMAINING GIRLS' WINTER COATS
SIZES 4-14. STILL A GOOD GROUP. .
YOUR CHOICE

'1000

GIRLS WEAR
SPORTSWEAR, DRESSE~ .
SLEEPWEAR, SIZES 4-14
YOUR CHOICE

'200
BOYS SHIRTS-SWEATERS
AGOOD SELECTION LEFT. BOYS LONG
SLEEVE SHIRTS AND SWEATERS.
SIZES 4-14.
YOUR CHOICE ·

*200
TODDLERS' WEAR
ASST. TODDLER BOY AND GIRL
SPORTSWEAR, SLEEPWEAR, ETC.
YOUR CHOICE

ALL SALES FINAL

•

Check
These ·
Bargains

Sw 1!o her &amp; Lohse Pharmacy ,
11 2 E . M;tin , Pomeroy &amp;

Dulf o n Drug• Store , Mid ·
dl eport . Mail Ord ers Fi lled .

Reg. 1.25 8 oz . sites Elmer's Blue
ea . 69c
Re g. 4l c ea . Lipstick, Nail Enametl for 99c
Reg . 98c Nylon Chiffon Sc•rh
ea . 79c

R c q. SOt ea . Bandana Handkerchiefs

Reg . 2 .09 Tinkles Daytime :J0 1 s
Reg.1.19 Overnight12 's
Reg . 1.44 Toddler U 's
Reg. 1.89 Newborn 30's

box. 1.59
box l9c
box 99c;
box 1.29
ea.l9c

Reg. 59c Terry Training Panh
Reg . 59c Worn . Bikinis &amp; Briefs
Reg . 99c pr . She'er Panty Host ·
•·

F

' 'N~·

ea.
39c ·

ea.l9c

3 pr . 99c
PAir 69 &lt;:

H i~P'I ·

Reg , 39c Fashion Earrings ·•
4tor 99c
Reg. 1.29 pr. Queen She Panty Hose pr . 79c
Reg . Sl Men's Strir,ed Tube Stocks pr .. 69c
Reg. 89c Boys • Str ped Tube Socks pr . 59c
Reg. 1.69 Bath Size Print Towell
u . 99c
1.09 Hand Towel. 69c
79c Wash Cloth , 49 c ,
Reg . 2.91 Rug Runners
ea . 1.9f
Reg . 2.,9 Translucent Window Shldts ea .

1.99

'

Reg . li.9924 lC36 Framed Pictures
ea. 6.99
Re g . 4,49 40 qt. Pintle Slt·on Hamptr ea . ·
1.99

BEN,FRAN KUDI
PH . 992 -3498

OPEN FRI. TILl
SAT. UJ1TILS

POMEROY

J

200·102 E. MAIN ST.

Make
Pomeroy
Your

Snopptnt
Center

Kissinger, praising the
spirit of cooperation shown
by Peru's military leaders
during his visit,lelt for Brazil
on his Latin-American swing
today as U .S. Embassy
officials assessed the damage

Health· task force will
hold 3 open sessions

no education, i ncome or
experience requirements.
RSVP vo lun teers serve .
without compensation,
although they · may be
reimbursed for such expenses as transportation. .
Curre ntly more than 200
RSVP vollUlteers serve with
the Meigs ColUlly project.
Further information on the
RSVP program can be ob-

tained by contacting RSVP
Director J . Pearl Welker at
the Meigs County Council on
Aging, Inc., E. Main St., in
Pomeroy.
Other ACTION programs
i~clude the Peace Corps,
VISTA (Volunteers in Service
to America} , Foster Grandparents Program, Senior
Companion Program, and
University Year for ACTION .

The Application Task
Force for the new 18 coWJly
Health Systems Agency
sponsored
by
the
Southeastern Ohio Health
Planning Association
(SEOHPA}, will hold the first
of three scheduled meetings
at 9:30 a . m . on ' Saturday,
February 21, at the Ramada
Inn, in Marietta . All sessions
wlll be open to the public.
This 18 member task force
has the responsibility for
inen couragin g public
volvement a nd drafting a n
application for designation as
a Health Systems Agency
(HSA) . The new health
service area consolidates the

II counties currently in the
SEOHPA region and the
seven counties presently
served by the Ohio Valley
Health Service Foundation
IOVHSF }, based in Athens.
This Saturday, the meeting
will cover aspects of the
applica nts relating to ;
Agency Organization, Articles of Incorporation -ByLaws. and the Methodology
for Selecting Board Mem.
bers.
l~ terested individuals or
groups who wish to comment
on the above items are encouraged to prse nt the ir
views in writing or orally at
the mee ling :

--------------------------- 1 News •• in Briefs

Area Deaths

JACQUELINE ELLIS

Mr s . Jacque line Ann
(Mu lf ord) Ellis, Rt. 2,
Cheshire, died at her home
Wednesday afternoon at the

age of a2 .
Mrs . Ellis was born Oct. 3,
1933, al Rl . I, Middleport. She
was preceded in death by her
father, Otto Mulford , twin
boys

In

Infancy , and

a

brother, Char les .
She is survived by her
husband , Maynard H. Ellis ;

her mother, Mrs. Phyllis
Kenne dy Mu lford , Rl . I,
Midd leport; three daughters.
Mrs. Oltie (Sharon) Jarv is,
Rutland : Mrs . Ronald . I Rufh
Ann) Oa le;y , Pomeroy, and
Mrs . Fre~ (Vickie Lynn )
He ldre th , Mason ; two son s,
David Ell[s , Rutland and
Maynard (Eddie) Ellis at
home ; two sister's. Mr s.
Rober! (Betty ! Goodall. Rl. I.
Middl eport,. and Mrs . Roy
(Darlyne) Sayre, Kan aUga ;
a brother , Connie Neil
Mulford , Pom e r oy; five
grandchildren ;
a step daughter , Mrs . Clarence
I Utah I Pey t on. Ne wark ;
th ree s tep-grand chi ldren and
one
grea t-step-grandi:: hl ld .
Funeral services wil l be
he ld Sa lurda y al2 p.m . at the
Rawlings -Coa t s

Funeral

!

(Conti~ued from page 1)
[iroducers in the industry - Container Corporation of Amrica,
I of Chicago; Federal Paper Board Co. Inc., of Montvale, N.J.,
life,
t,aving
li ved
in
and the American Can Co . Of Greenwich, Conn . The folding
P ickerington 11 year s and
carton sales of alllhe defendant corporations totaled alioul $1
Springfield lour years .
She is survived ·by three billion in 1973 and amounted to about 70 per cent of sales for the
sons, Harry , Long Bottom ; entire industry, the Justice Departme~f said.

Donald, Pickerington , and
William, Columbus; six
daughters , Neoma osborn,
Pi cke rington ; Garnet
Stewart, Parkersburg ; Opal
Osborn, Cincinnati : . Audra
Bow mart, Sabina ; Gladys
Ritchie,
Belpre .
and
Elizabeth M iller , St. lou is,
Mo.; 22 grandchildren and 19
great-grandc hi ldren .
Funeral services will be
Saturday at 10: 30 a . m. at the
White Funeral ~om e in

Coolville wllh the Rev. Paul
Knierirri officiating. Burial
will be in SandHill ,Cemetery
a t Long Bottom . Friends may
call at the funeral home a"ffer
noon on· Friday .

ELMER W . KAUTZ
Elmer Wendall Kautz. 82.
Rt. 3, Pom eroy, died Wed nesday afternoon at Veterans
Memoria! Hospital. Mr .
Kautz was born Feb. 6, 1894
the son of the late Henry and
N\ary -Stahl Kautz . He was
also preceded in death by one
son, Carl, a brother, Joe , and
a sister, Clara Dorst . .

Mr . Kautz , a retired far ~
Home wit h Mr . Edgar
Harrop, Galli pol is, of. mer , wcis a member of St .
fieiating . Burial will be In John' s Lutheran Church , a
Midd leport Hill Ceme tery . former member Of the Farm
Fri end s m ay ca ll ·.at 1he Bur ea u , Ch es ter School
tun er at home Friday from 2·4 Board and of · !he ASCS
Chester To wnship Com ·
and 7-9.
mlttee.
He Is s urvived by his wife,
Ina Stobart Kautz ; one son,
CORA E. COLEMAN
Mrs . Cora E . Coleman , 86, Dale, Pomeroy ; a daughter ,
Sprlngfleld. lorm.er ly of Long Grace Sw iderski. Monroe,
Bottom , di ed early Wed · Mich .; eight grandchildren.
nes da v morninCI at the and five great -grandchildren .
Py thian Hom e Hospital,
Funeral services will be
Sprin gf iel d. foll owi ng an hel d Saturda y at 1 p . m . at
extended illness.
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
Mrs . Coleman was born in William Mlddleswarth of .
Me ig s Coun ty, the da ughter fi c iating .
Burial w ill be In Chester
of the lale Franklin and
Melissia Jane Spahn Bailey. Cemetery, Friends may call
Her hu sband, John R. at the funeral ~ome anytime.
Coleman , died In 1947. She th lieu of flowers the family
was a l sQ preceded in death by asks that cOntr ibutions be
a son, Edwin: one daughter, made to St. Johri 's Lutheran
Betty Frank : ·five sisters and Church.
1

five brothers.

Mr s . Co le ma n was a
member of the Long Bottom
Chris tian Church and had
been a

resi dent

of l'kigs

County the greater part of her

CALLED TWICE
At 8:41 p. m . Wednesday,
the Pomeroy E-R squail was
called to 368 bast Main St. for
Kenny LWlsford, age 7, who
was ill. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted. At
6:20 a. m. Thursday the Wlit
went to Bailey Run for
Cla rence Spurrier, who was
ilL He was also taken to
VM!l

r····MoiiiE;its~fo.ui·····.l

CHILDREN'S FASHIONS
S.ILYER BRIDGE PLAZA

BEN*FRAN KLUN

89c Strr 11

. MIJ?DLEPORT - Eighty
seven persons attended the
area Fire an d Emergency
As ~QC i alion meeting Wed·
nesday evening a t the Middleport F'ire Station with Bob
Bycr , chairman . presiding .
Byer made two proposals,
both approved, that ( I } each
department color code all
equipment so each could
identify , a·nd ( 2} each
departmc n t pay $5 dues a
year to cover postage, cards
and expenses.
Dale Tay lor of the sta te fire
marsha ll 's offi ce attended.
Charles Legar , Pomeroy
. fire chief, .di scusse d the
recen t fire in ·P omeroy and
the aerial ladder fund . An
aeria l ladder has been
loca ted in St. Louis for 110,000
Legar said. However, they do
not know its condition.
The next meeting will be
held M Ma sOn fire station on
Tuesday, March 16, at 7:30 p.
m . There a re 17 departments
i11 the association, in Me igs,
Gallia. J ackson, Athe ns and
Mason counties.
.
ASK TOWED
A marriage license has
be en issued to Patr iek
Clarence Clifford , 25, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy , a nd Cathy Darlene
Davis, 18, Rl. 1, Long Bottom.

A SPECIAL SERVICE TO YOU
FROM THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
Mothers-to-be, stop by the KIDDIE
SHOPPE in Middleport, check the
friendly atmosphere and let them
know what you need ·for baby.
They'll keep a record of it. When
shoppers come in for your baby, the
KIDDIE SHOPPE will know what
your baby needs, It costs you
NOTHING! FREE GIFT FOR

EAQI MOTHER-T().BE
THAT REGISTERS
ANOTHER

i
+

NOTE ANNIVERSARY
STIVERSVILLE - Mr .
· and Mrs. Louis DeLuz
marked their 32nd wedding
anniversary today at Holzer
Medical Center . Mrs. DeLuz
(Correne} is a patient at the
h&lt;&gt;;ptial and will undergo
surgery Friday .
·

HOSPITAL Driver cited
NEWS ~!?cu~~ice
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Cloisl
Badgely, Racine;
Ca rl
Greenlees, Pomeroy; Dana
McCai·n, Lon g Bottom;
Thelma Grueser , Pomeroy;
Victoria Cundiff, Syracuse ;
Penny Landers, Pomeroy;
Raymond Hartley, Racine;
Cor nelius Conger, Portland; .
F'rahk Mills, Rutland ; Kenny
LWlsford, Pomeroy ; Mary
Marie J ones, ·syracuse .
DISCHARGES - Ronald
Da iley, Jani ce DeBord ,
Charles Schoonover, Mabel
Hennessy, Gertrude Drake
and George Foss.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES Eva
Knopp, Mason ; Mrs. William
Litchfield , Jame s Hoplite ,
Point
Lilli a n Robbins,
Pleasant ; J.ose ph Ellis,
Cott agevill e;
Yvonne
Wellman , Patriot.
Feb. 18, a
BIRTHS ~aughter to Mr. and Mrs.
Luke Coffee, Vinton; a
daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
David Flowers, Robertsburg ;
Feb . 19, a daughter to Mr .
and Mrs. Randy Stone, West
Columbia ; a son to Mr . and
Mrs. Garry King, Pome roy,

Chief
Milton Varian investigated a
11 :50 p.m . hit-skip Tuesday
in which a car driven by
Patsy G. White, · Racine ,
traveling east on SR 124 ln
Syracuse, left the · highway
going into the yard of Jane
Barnett, struc.k a post a nd
s tump, tore out part of a
hedge fence , spun aroWJd in
the yard , returned through
the hedge fence , struck a
mailbox, a power pole, and a
parked vehicle owned by
Norman
Lee
Deem,
Syracuse , the n con tin ed
toward Racine.
Varian, assisted by Alfred
Lyons located the vehicle in
Racine at 1:30 a . m . Wed·.
nesctay.
' .
Mrs . White was cited to
Syracuse Mayor Herman
London's court on charges of
opera ting a motor vehiCle in
an unsafe m an ne r a nd
leaving the scene of a n accide nt. She posted $250 bond.
There
was
moederate
damage tp her vehicle and
light to Deem 's.

from the attack .
While Kissinger was being
toasted at a banquet at the
Peruvian Foreign Ministry
Wednesday night, about 30
demoostrators hurled rocks
at the embassy in a sudden
attack, smashing about eight
plate glass windows.
Embassy security guards
fired shots into the air and
local police statiooed in the
heavily guarded downtown
area near the embassy
rushed to the scene, breaking
up the disturbance and
making a number of arrests.
The rock-throwing attack
was the first incident during
the Kissinger visit. The
attack took place despite a
heavy disphiy of police
throughout the downtown
area.
It was the first attack of
this nature on the embassy
since the Feb. 5, 1975, riots in
Lima when the embassy was
repeatedly stoned during a
wave of arson, vandalism and
looting that left 86 persons
dead.
Kissinger's air force jet
took off for Brazil at 9:25a.m.
Minutes before, Kissinger
told local newsmen that from
nowoo, " Peru and the United
States will deal with each
other on a basis of equality
and respect."
. Foreign Minister Miguel
Angel de Ia Flor said the visit
"str~ngthened the relations
of the United states with Peni
by informing Kissinger of the
Peruvian revolutioo of the
armed forces'' .
Kissinger, during private
meetings with the ruling
generals of Peru, assured

them
of
Washington's
understanding of their
independent foreign polJC'j
and prolound domestic social

changt-s.
Brazil is the third stop on
his six-day Latin American
trip .

TODAY'S
BIG WATCHES
NEED
WIDE ONE'"
WATCHBANDS

stainless steel.

•9.95

Speidel makes them! Two new Speidel
Twist-O-Fiex 0 watchbands. They look
solid, but stretch. A lorwider than most
other bands. To go with your bigger and
bolder watch.

5~
Goessler Jewelry Store
Court St.
Pomeroy
•

NEW FURNITURE
AT
BUDGET PRICES
BEDROOM SUITE .•.................·...... ........... ~ 118
SOFA BEDS .......................... :........ ................. 198 ·
· RECLINER .................... ....................................... 168
5 PIECE DIN£ms .............. ,............................158
9xl2 LINOL£UM RUGS ..............................19.88
9xl2 RED OZITE CARPET.......................524
BUNK BEDS COMPLETE .................5149

BAKER
FURNITURE
Middleport, Ohio

WANT DIVORCE .
Two suits for divorce have
been iiled in Meigs CoWJty
Common Pleas Court, each
charging gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty.
They were by Ani ta B.
Rutter, Middleport, from
Carolos E. Rutter, Carbon
Hill, and Jeanne D. Blake, Rt.
I, Long Bottom, from Ricky
Lee Blake, Rt. I Reedsville.

IN COLUMBUS NOW
SPEAKER NOTED
The Rev . Ed ward J .
RUTLAND
Marvin .Griffith, Bashan area, has
Markin, Zalesld, will be the been transferred from St.
guest speaker at tbe Rutlimd Joseph Hospital in ParkerFreewill Baptist Church sburg to University Hospital
SWJday at 7:30 p . m . ·The in Columbus. His room
public and s ingers are in- number is 869.
vited. .

[i:K+.fl~
The Friendly Ones

CRESTWALL PANELING
Durable, easily-c leaned panel in
your choice of warm, roomllleasing color tones . Man-made
finish on hardboard . lfA" .x 4' x 8'.

Dateline: 1776
CALLED TWICE
RACINE - The Racine ER squad was called out twice
Wednesday, once at 4:30 p.
m. for Raymond Hartley,
Racine, and at 4:40p . m . for
Cornelius Conger, RD,
Racine,
both
medical
patients taken to Veteran~
Memorial Hospital.

"'J. MASONITE

NEW HAVEN, Feb: 19 William Robinson wrote to
a former Yale classmate In
the army at Cambridge
thatlhe pamphlet Common
Sense had changed his
views as to the need for
separation from England.
The recipient of lhe letter
was ·Nathan Hale.

SALE CONTINUES
(BROKEN SIZES!

ANGEL TREADS :¥z PRICE
1 GROUP MEN'S 4-BUCKL£ ARCTICS

'500
Open Mon. -Thurs. 9-5:30
Fri. 9-8:00, Sat : 9-5:oo ·

POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK

Q:K¥4~

_co~~

The Depe:t11teat Store

The Friendly Ones

of Building Since 1915.

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT

I

'

•

POMEROY

R ~g .

COLUMBUS - ACTION,
the federal agency fo r
volunteer service, · has
awarded a 122,902 grant to the
Meigs County ColUlcil ' on
Aging, lnc . to fund the continuation of a Retired Se nior
VollUlteer Program .
The grant, announced this
week by ACTION Sta te
Program Director Anne C.
Johnson, will be matc hed
with more than $15,000 in nonfede ral local funds, and
enable the RSVP project to
ope rate through January 31,
1977.
Th e
Retired
Senior
Volun teer
Program
is
designed to utilize the tale nts
~nd skills Of retired votun~
leers who arc 60 and older.
VolWl teers serve in privcate
or
public
non-profi t
organizations
such
as scho oLs, libraries, co urts ,
museums, hospitals , nurs ing
hOmes, and day c~ re centers.
Started in 1969 by the U.S.
Department of Hea lth,
Education a nd Welfare,
RSVP came under the administration of ACTION in
Jul y, 197 1. RSVP is planned,
organ ized and operated on
the local level. It is developer(
Wtder the a usp ices Of an
· e s t"bl is hed co mmuniiy
service Org anization or
~gency. Any retirCd person
age 60 and older can become
a HSVP volun teer; there .a re

87 firemen
•
at meetmg

and Save
LOSE UGLY FAT .

\ ...

.~

60 and older agency funded

WINTER MDSE.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
State
University
head
football coach Woodv Hayes
has signed five of the top high
school football players in
Ohio to football letters of
intent at OSU.
They are Mike Strahine, a
IJ.ll, 185 pound UP! ali.Ohio
quarterback from Lakewood:
Ron Barwi~g. a 6-8, 235 pound
UP! ali.Ohio tight end from
Willoughby South; Ttm
Sawicld, 6-1, 215 pllund UP!
all-Ohio linebacker from·
Mayfield Heights, Bill
Harmon a 6-1, 237 fullback
froni Mass illon and Jim
Laughlin a 225 pound fullback
fr om Cleveland Brush.

~

trv"

AGAPE', THE TEEN CHOIR fiom the First Church of the Nazarene in Parkersburg,
W. Va., wiil present the musical "A Celebratioo of Hope" by Otis Skillings and Paul
Johnson, Saturday, at 7:30p.m. at the Middleport Nazarene Church, ii80 Beech St. The
musical, based on Colossians I :27, is directed by Mrs ..Jon Britton. The public is invited .

FINAL CLEARANCE
ON ALL FALL AND

top prospects

,"

LIMA, Peru (UP!} Rockt.hrowing demonstrators
smashed windows in the U.S.
Embassy in Lima late
Wednesday night in a protest
against the visit of Secretary
of State Henry A. Kissinger.

Your FTD Florlsl

SATURDAY

Hayes signs

'

fI

I

I

352 E . Main, Pomerov

and

proposal has received little
public attention since it was
introduced Jan . 29, some
tobacco state senators have
openly attacked it in a " Dear
Colleague" letter .
" What's next ?" asked the
letter
signed
by
six
lawmakers from four of the
six top toba cco-producing
states . "A sugar or starch
tax? A nQn-exerds ing tax? A
tax on people livi~g in urban
ghettoes beeause tbey have
poorer health than the
affluent?"
Signing the letter were
Republican Jesse Helms and
Democrat Robert Morgan of
North Carolina, Democrats
Wendell Ford and Walter
Huddleston of ' Kentucky,
Democrat Ernest Hollings of
SoUth
Ca rolina
and
Republican Howard Baker of
Tennessee.

f

PH. 992-2644

FRIDAY

.Smoking shocks
•
•
cancer scientist

MONAOEX· cost Sl. OO for a 20
day supply . Lar9e economy
site is SS . OO . Al so try
AQUA TABS : th e y work gc ntly

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR

SATURDAY
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order
of DeMolay, th';d annual
bean dinner, Saturday, 4 to 7
p. m. Middleport Masonic
Hall . Tickets available from
any DeMolay member or at
the door

FRANCIS
FLORIST

t

L

Florist Since 1957

•

•

!

Your " Extra Touch"

Social
Calendar

wht"ch operates under a formula
S.B.- 170 enac•~ct
u·'cvclop"''
'-"'-' ""dcr
..... ,
I.C
intu law last year . In order that a
sehool clistricl not be penalized
finandally under Lhc foundatiQn
program. that school district must
have 25 mills of local taxes voted for
operational purposes . The Gallipolis
Cily Schools currently have 19.7
mills for operations. A recent study
based on figures from the Ohio
Public Expenditure Council shows
that of lhe 617 scltool districts in
Ohio, Gallipolis ranks 600th in
millage for school operations. Of the
16 surrounding di stricts in
s outheastern Ohio, only Gallia
CoWlly Local Schools at 13.4, ranks
below Gallipolis in voted millage.
Thus, it is apparent that we are
raughl in a squeeze on both the state
and local levels . UnfortWJalely,
most school districtS in our area find
themselves gripped in this Same
bmd .
The res ults of this financial
dilemma on th e Gallipolis City
Schools will be most strongly felt in
1976·77. To solve the problem the
local school community must exert
pressure. on th e legislature to inucasc the state's s hare of
ed ucational costs, increase local
taxes for operational monies in
order to take better advantage of the
school foundation program, or aecept reductions and cut· ba cks in the
loeal schools' educational programs
and services.
Ou.r ch ildren deserve an
educat ion equal to that of com parable communities, our teachers
and school employees de se rve
salaries that will allow us to attract
the best possible people. These have
always been the goals of the
Gallipolis City Sc hools and the
school comm lUlily and they should
continue to be the top corrununJty
priorities .

•
d
.
h
d
Emb assy wm ows smas e

9 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-PonJProy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 19,1976

~&lt;tt$.~.~:;:=»"?.\.~"..;i-:l'll.-&gt;:~:

ODDS AND ENDS

your life

SHOE STORE

1

~ ~

! iar~tld D
11:1\ ~-;, l.u! t;l, Sutton.

Tire Prrce'

77) 5881

\

1

BACK ATCOLI,EGE
INROOMUl
Sharon Bing has returned
RUTLAND - Ed Thomas
to the Kentucky Christian uf Rutland is a surgical
Colle~e after visiting . her patient at the Holzer Medical
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Center. His room number is
. 217.
lling, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.

\

I

�10 - The naily O.•nlinel , Midclleport-P omeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Feb. 19, 1976

JlfJJJ~llirnr® t4ot~e··"'~...J,_For

Unscramble thesefoorJumblts..

on• '•"" to

I' m

o ltw!\poon. nql

• •··"~~·

•••h squa••· ·••

rorm four ordinary ... orde .

•

For Rent

Auto Sales

2 BEDRM mobile h ome, real
nice Phone ~92 3324
1 4 lfc

r-

J

l:-tR/F

I I

Apan

Furnished

av.=.i l able 991 6161

2 18 31C

I

IORCE.4Nt

La Salle
A DRA\YIIo/6 NO ACTO~
CAN !3E .E XPECTED
TO PRODUCE ,

ICOBNEK I

- Now arranre the cirt:led ltlttf'l
[ ] · 1" lo fo:m the aurpriae &amp;niWtr, u
I ( )
~~==~~==-:::-~=:l_,''UJ'(tlled. by the above rartoon..

I ,.~~~ SIMLI!IIl$WIII~~~n I'T I I XI I I T"

(A..wera tomorr-u••

~ENNA

FABLED

Ye•lerd•y'•
.-\ruwoer1

ROO M

ment to r r e nl. Ga rd en space

I (J

Jumb i..-,·BIRCH

Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

.Hade&gt; an imprt'MIIitm

in

PALATE

tht'

lirC'rury wurld - PRINTED

HOTEL
Middleport, 0 . Ph . 992 -2771

Rooms, SS.OO up
, Special Rates
by Week

®

Business Services

2 SIGNS
OF

Pomeroy
QUAL Ill Motor Co.

1975 CHEV . ESTATE WAGON

Dark red , simulated wood trim , 3 seat, fu lly equipped
wi th every Chev. option , low mites, new tile , boss's
wi l e car. '
.

In Memol)'

types

12695

remodel i ng

Dark maroon f i ni sh , bik ·. bUcket vinyl sea t s. ·radio, V-8
engine. automatic. power steer i ng, good t ires, a
sportsman' s dream .

building

and

from

!he

foundat i on up. Addltio"' .
urpeting, patnting, siding ,
roof ing, pi!inellng , paprr
hanging etc •.•.

1972 CHEV. i. TON C&amp;C
12995
102" C. A. heavy duty springs. 292·6 cy l . engine. 15.000

Ph . 949-2021 or 843-2"7

1915S Proof Set (6 pes.)
525.00 ; ms Mint Set S9.00 ;
1976 Silver Proof Set (3
515.00 ; 1976 Silver
UNC Set 13 pcs.l SS.SO.
Call Rutland, 142-2331
R&amp;J COINS

,.,,_,

L..--------------------.....1
For Sale

A Low Cost·_ .
Want Ad

PH. 992-6173

WANT TO

for Sale

Real

12 WORDS
4 DAYS

For Sale

....

$}25

ONLY

..

AVAILABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
NO REFUNDS.

-·- -~ ----- ------

-·---- ---------Employment Wanted

BusineSs SeiVices

Wanted To Buy

your

--

-· -----:-- - ----r---

' ·'" .
1. ____
..
2, _ _ _ _ _..._. '

.

3. -------,~
4,______

TEAFORD

Help Wanted

---

5· ----~

-

6. _ _ _ _ ___.,
7. _ _ _ _ _'.. .':. .

8, ______________
9
10
11

.,

12, _ _____ . . . :__
·NAME _ _ __

_

ADDRESS.- - -

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

LOs-E

--···-•· ---~ _:: ~~8-61 c

MAlt WITH ' "

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

gas furna ce and birch kit .
Large ou1building and 1.4
acres . $31 , 500.00.
4' ACR ::: s - New, 2 brs.,
ba th . n1ce k it. wit h glass
drs . to c arpor t.
Full
basement and dri l led well.

PACER

$31,500.
RAC)NE

APPLICA TI O N S wil l b e ac . t: U f1L fOR SA LE . CAB Coa l
ce pt ed lor s tr eel com
Company . 'I mile north of
m issi oner
posit ion
fOr ~ Ches hi re , on R 1. 7 Pick your
Ra c ine V i llag e ti l l March 1.
own . \ 20 per ton . Open 6 days
Contact Mae Clela nd , cle rk .
per week . o r call f 614 ) 367
2 17 31 c
1330 lor furth e r i nformation .
1 8 781c

CITY·---,--.,-"..:c,..
'·
PHONE .._n·..,.",..--,'...,,.'..,;:',,'m:.~
"

J

Now at Landmark

~· ,

·.,.~_

1.25

Model UCXXX ,
210,000 .

TO THE

··--·-=

... }

Weekly Grain

~ •'Pialrl l

~,._ .,,

·.)~

POMEROY, OHIO ,

Capatlty

, FREE A/C

~

lll COURT ST. :

45769

CO-OP
AutOmatic Water
Conditioner

1

"""'• •·

-

~:

'299

.... '425.00

.Li m i tea T ;me Offe.

'

RIVERSIDE AMC.JEEP
Gallipolis, Ohio

' ·- ---j.- Reg . 5339.00 Val .

----- ---

POMEROY LANDMARK

w... J•ck w. Caroey , Mgr .

...a

Phone 992-2111

-

2

brs .,

re furbished hom e . Ba,th,
gas
heat, mod . ki t . and nice
1
l evel lot for only · $12 ,900 .

POM.EROY - Nice 2 brs ..
br1fh, gas F.A . furnac e,
a lumin um
si ding ,
basemen t and large long

-.~-

-·-----------

ROOF IN&amp; , sidlng , gutters and
downspout s . Storm doors
and wir"ldowS remodeling,
pa int ing and general repa ir .
Sa tisfa ctio n tt uar anteed .
Ca ll (6 141 985 -3803 for fr ee
es timate .
2~ 13-6tp

t

Ph. (614) 985-4.102

- ------"'----------

REMODE LIN G,
Pl um b ing ,
heating and all types Of
g e neral
r ep a i r .
Work
gua rant eed . 20 yea r s ex per i en ce . Phon e 992 2409.
5-l ·lfc

__ _

&amp; D TREE Trimm i ng, 20
yea r s exper ien ce . Insured .
fr ee ~stimates Call 99 2-2384
o r (614) 698 -7157 A lban y .
10 15 -lfc

SEWI NG MACHINE Repairs .
ser"Jice , all m akes . 992 -2284 .
The Fa bric Shop , Pom eroy _
Au thorized Singer Sa les and
Servi ce .
We
sharpen
Sc issors .
3·29 -lf c
READY MIX CO N ~~~·~
deliVered r ight to your
pr o ject . Fas t and easy . Free
es t imat es . Phone 992 -3284 ,
·Goeg lei n Ready M iK :Co ..
Middlepor t, Oh io .
6 -30 -Hc
·- Sweepers, toa sters, irons ,
a ll small appliances . Lawn
mow~r . ne KI t o State High way Garage on Route 7 .
Phone 985 ·3825 .
4-16-lfc
SEPTIC TANKS clea n ed .
Modern Sanilation . 992 -395-4
or 99 2-7349 .
___________

•
•

investment cove'red by stock and guarant,ed by re·

"'$15,000.
A REASONABLE PRICED
HOME AND A GOOD

+
+

t

purchase agreerr,tent .

R t: ........ T :;rc: :-,H2' II ' I"'\ r: I \I~

•
Ji

CALLMr . MethewMuon.MerkttingDirector
(person-to-person collect)
NATIONAL PHARMAceuTICALLABoRAToRtEs
AREA CODE 304-965-1577

.

........ -•.• ,.. . . . .

8 Establlahed
, Tbrob
8 Subway

bUrden

'lll16

YOUR
I'RIENC&gt;

1$

MONA!

SHI!:'S GOING
Wf'TH us !

zAK~

slop

I Molaten the

roast

(abbr. )

1

boy
10Befon
14 ult'a a if you don't
weatken"

u ·~

II Prayer

(2

'2695
1975 OIEVROI.ET SUBURBAN

n Hen

Zl French

a

IIIPel'

a WalllnC ·

Zl AcCwllble
• Be situated

'tm
39 Generadon

river

din's

proof
WCII'd

II A "loll

vounc

Future
lieutenant 41 Astronaut's
colonel
"perfec:t"
DSenesU~e
cent
fabric
H AladU Suma·

or

2Z H8mllton
bW
M Galley-

M Learned-

mer

31

ICI'NI

monkey
Zl Alter

r~~~~;y~~~~~~~~~~aw.
c
sup,pose IJOU
FBITOW

movinq on now!

wd..)

Zl Clpuchln

17 Infuriated
ztUnchalllleable

-folks \viii be

Yesterday'1 ADIW~
Z5Toas ,
35 - on
2S Wallabe
(iDCited)
tree
31 French

word
II Tonie's
companion

weight

Auto ., P .S., P. B.. 8 cyl., ra dio, tiucket seats, good
tires, dark mar.o on finish .

Jones

11 S.A. parrot
1% Troupe
.lfaup
membei'
d lt'sa(how awful)
(2 Wds.)

II Caddoln
IndlaJI

bumper

newspaP.,r. The Jacobys will
ans,..r lndlvlduel questions
it sllmped, sell-addres.ed
envelopes are ~tncloslld. The
most Interesting qu11stlons
will be used in this column
and will receive copies of
JACOBY MODERN.)

loy l!fOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

IS 'THA'T

(Do you MVI 1 question

lor the experts? Write "Ask
the Jecobys" care ol this

~~lt1M1!Jtgl
I Beaat of

1974 PLYMOUTH CUDA CPE.

tran
ape

spirit

:weekend''
1Z Procell of '

Co. demo .. low ml[eage, loa ded with all options, red
and White fini sh .

eoiJI.rnUin&amp;

• Lummcis
Jl Albanian
dialed

'6895
1975 OIEVROLET CAPRICE
ESTATE WAGON
Fu ll y equ ipped,

•

simu la ted

1:co-Tomorrow 3.~.
1:50-News 13.
CHANNELS
7:0G-Speclel Edition lc)
7:»-BIII Co&amp;by Show lei
8 :0G-High and Wild (C)
8 :»-Ro• Humbard (c)
9 :»-Wyatt E erp
10:co-Target : Corruplors
FRI DAY, FE8RUARY20, 1916
6:co-5unrlse Semester 10.
6: 15-Farm Report 13.
6:20-Biue Ridge Quartet 13.
6:30-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Farmtlme 10.
6:oiO-Ovnce of Prevention 10.
6:&lt;15-Mornlng Report 3.
6:55-&lt;:hU.:k White Reports 10; ,Good Morning, Trl
· Stale 13.
7:co-Today 3.~.15; Good Morning, America 6.13 ; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolln 10.
8:t)C)-Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St. 3J,
8:30-Big Valley 6.
9:co-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy
Show I; Mike DouglaslO; Morning with D.J. 13.
9:30-A.M. 3; One Lite to Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Oouglas 13.
IO :co-celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,~. IS; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Right 8, 10.
10:»-High Rollers 3,4,15; Dinah 6. ··
11 :co-Wheel of Fortune 3.15; Weekday ~; Gambit
8.10; Farmer's Daughter 13,
11 : »-Hollywooc1Squares3,~.15; Happy Day•I3; Love
of Life 1, 10; Sosame St. 20,33.
11 :55--Toke Kerr B; Dan !mel's World 10.
I2 :co-Magnlflcent Merblo Machine 3, 15; Let'sMake a
, Deal13; Bob Broun's 50-50 Club~; News6,8,10.;
12 :»-Take My Advice 3,15; All My Children 6.13;
Search lor Tomorrow 8,10.
12 :45--Eiec. Co. 33.
12 : ~NBC News 3,15.
1:co-News 3: Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Resile.. 10; Nat For Women Only 15.
1:30-0ays of Our Lives 3A, 15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13;
As the World Turns 8,10.
2:110--$20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:30-Docton 3,4,1S; Neighbor• 6,13; Guiding Light
~1&amp;
.
3:0G-Anolher World 3.~.15; General Hoepltal6.13; All
In the Family 8.10; Black Journal 20.
3:30-()ne Life to Llve13; Mickey Mouse Club 61 Match
Game 8,10; Black Perspective on the News 20.
~:co-Mister Cartoon 3; Marv Griffin~; Bewitched 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie
"The Pigeon That Took Rome" 101 Dinah I 13.
4:»-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Get Smart 15.
s :co-Bonanu 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:»-Adem-12 ~ ; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co, 20,33; Adem-12 13.
6:0G-News 3A,I,10,13,15; ABC News6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30-NBC News 3A,I5; Andy Griffith 6; CBS News
8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 201 Carrascolendas 33.
7:0G-Trulh or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth~; Lawrence
Welk I; Bowling for Dollars 6; ; Aviation Weather
33; News 10; Doil Adams Screen Test 13; Family
Affair 15; Ohio Journal 20.
7:30-Porter Wagoner 3; Treasur• Hunt 4; Candid_
Camera 6; Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky
20; $25,000 Pyramid 10; To Toll the Truth 13; Pop
Goes the Country 15; Black Penpec:tlv• onNews
News 33, ·
.
l:co-Senlord &amp; Son 3.~.15; Donny &amp; Marlo 6.13; Sere
8,10; Washington Week In Review 20,33 ..
8:30-Practlce 3,~.15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:CG-Rocklord Flies 3.~.15:; Movie "Little Feusa and
Big ftelsy" 6.13; Boxing 8,10; Firing Line 20;
Masterpiece Theatre 33.
10:0G-Pollce Story 3,~.15; News 20; Educational
Impllcatlons 33.. .
10 : 3~Avlallon Weather 20.
11 :0G-New&amp; 3,4,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
.
11 :»-Johnny Car1011 3,~.15; Rook los 6, 13; Movie
" Shaf t" 8; Movie "Dracula's Castle" 10; Janekl33.
12 : 4~Semmy &amp; Co. 6: Ironside 13.
1 :co-Midnight Special 3,4, 15; Movie "A Blueprint lor
Murder'·' 10.
1 :-10-News 13.
2 : ~News 3; Movie "A Gathering of Eaglos" 4.
3:co-Movle "King Kong vs, Godzllla'~ 3. .
~:Is-Movie "Work Is a Four Letter Word" 3.
~:30-Movle "The Smugglers" ~6:co-Movle "She Wrote the Book" 3.

Astro-

lMSr1)11l_IICII.

a

( Jt,pb. wd.)
Unlv. of

Grapt-1

Mall1l lite

~~~~~r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~H~er

'6295

.. hmlctt .... 0101

6-1-l-1-

• Tlc:tet-

1973 Chev. 112 ton 8 cyl auto., P. S., P, B. $2895.
1972 Chev. 112 ton 6 cyl. std.
$2150.
1972 Chev. 2 ton i02" C. A. 292 6 c.vl. 4
speed
$2995.
1972 Chev 2 ton 102" C. A. 2'12 6 cyl., 4
speed
.
·
$3095.
1973 Int. 1600 Series. 8 cyl., 5 speed, 104
C. A.
$3895.

,., ....,..,, 20, 1171
ARIII (M- 21·Aprl 11)

•sumn...t
DOWN
1 Hidden
IIIJIPiy
I !!co!deb

Something
berutflclal
=-+-+--ibuslneaawlae may unexpectedly develop today
f-+-1--lthrough someone you ' re

lllmJ
ILl Guanlla

trlandly with. It could be worth
'"'4-~1-+-~-llooklng Into.
TAUIIUI (April 20-Mor 20)
=+~1--+-~-1 You may have an opportunity

WUOIII

• SIIJnrann
I Swedllh

~

Buy in confidence lrom the right man is
often more imll')rtant than buying for price .

CIIUIIty

.

today to win a new elly who
later prove of value to

.....L--L-...1.-...,d could

DAIIJY CRYPTOQliOTB- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXa
II LONGJ'SLLOW

SEE YOUR SPECIAL SALESMAN
George Harris-Dallas Blevins- Roger
Di liard

YOU MEAN
WORKINC7

WELL J: HOPE

ACI?ff6

5HOPTALK.

WI'TH 'IOU~

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
992-2126

A Maine reader wants to
know what our notrump overcall of an adverse opening suit
bid shows.
It shows the same 16 to 18
high-cord points as an opening
notrump with at least one
stopper in our opponent's bid
suit.

j

ALLEY OOP

new 6,000 miles white

low milea11e, red w ith

~w~

:Ckf

..

IT 16N'T ALL

yoo. Trut atl new contacts
warmly.

ZC

RIER

RIT
OT

DEO

YW

KTGYPT

IEKZRNEDDQ
EFT . PYCEZGC

YW

ZHWDMTHGT
DZST

ELPZFT.
YRITF

ITHFQ . LFNPPYHt.

·

RIYCT

. .

SPOIL 11IEIIl FUN! - M,Uilt TWAJN

you may occur quite auddenly
anc:t unex~edly.

LIO (JUly 11-A... :12) Surprise the family today I either In
what you Hrve or by Inviting
people over they'll aft enjoy.
ohould be a pretty loot tltlnker
toctsy. Your flrttldeasare likely
to be your beat. Put them to a
good uae.

profitable for you look rather

I THINK I'LL

•

EXPANDED WEEK DAY NEWSCA
' STS

I

AT

B A.M., The Noon Report,
and 5 P.M.

I,

'

PLAV A LEETLE
ROCK MUSIC

where you'll be able to meet•

-.w

people wfth dlllerent lnto be

ternta. It lhould prove
fun,

AQUARIUI (J..,_ 10-Feb. 11)
Don't giYO up on your goalo too
quickly today. Evento coutd
take 1 surprlalng turn and put

Yat dly'1 Cli1:Jltl: NEVER RUN AFTER YOUR OWN i.I.RA (lapl. 23-0ct. 23) The
HAT - 011IERII
U: DELIGHTED TO DO IT; WHY chance• or today being

WMPO AM fM

CAPRICORN (Dec. H-.lan.
11) Go somewhere today

victory wtthln your grup.

PT H VIRGO (Aut- 21-lapl. 211) You
PTH. -

14--.

GIMINI (Mor 21-.1- 20) Put

~~~mple

'

good . What you gain may
come In en unUiual manner.
ICORPIO COot.
II)
You11 haYO more tun doing
thlngo today on the opur of the
moment than yoo wilt wtth
planned actMty. Stay 10011.
IAGtnARtUI (110¥, 11-0.0.
21) You should be eblo to olze
up eltuallone quite accurately
today by using anawere you
arrive al both deductively and
Intuitively.

your thinking cap on at work

today. CIIYir Ideas will go a
A II long way to chalk up points
used for the three L'a, X for the two O's. eto. Sln1le letten. with lite boea.
a-tropheo, the length and formotlon of lhe wnrdi are all CANCIR (~uno 21-.lulf II)
hinto. Eaob day the t&lt;&gt;de lettel'l are dtft'erent. .
This Is one of thooa doya when
the best things that happen to
CIIYPI'OQUOTII8

One letter olmpb' otando rar another. In thlo

ZR

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Til B
Pomeroy

&gt;•··········"" ·---------------------...1
...
'·

mAl AGREED!

,.

HEAR N~S FIRST

+

THE KID 111 M'f
. POSSESSION,
YOU'LL SIGM lHE
CONTRACTS- IS

'

wood tr i m .

41

Old man Z was back at the
bridge club again. He wasted
tio time biddilll four spades
alter' Y, his favorite partner,
had opened with a slightly
irregular one notrump and
East had ovm:alled with a bid
of tbree diamonds. East's
three diamond call was one of
those fancy new conventions
designed to show both red
suits.
IU~SS
West " openetJ the killl of
SU91!1Ess - clubs. Z studied the dummy
ll&lt;E 1101 carefully and remarked, "I
C(f:
played a hand just like this for
~ Milton Work's column back In
~ 1924. 01 coorse. the game was

~t:

!~!_lfc ~::::::::::::::::::::::

ONCE -IN-A-LIFETIME OPPORTUNITY

I!Ul WHEii I HAllE

,_

-----.---,-------ELWOOD BOWER S REFJAIR

R e nova'ted 3 brs.. 11 2
bnths , ful l basement , nat.
Qit S furna ce, ci ty wa ter,
and large l o t . Reitsonable

YOU RESULTS .

.

EXCAVATING .
dozer,
backhoe
and
d i tcher .
Ch arle s R Hatfi el ct Bac k
Hoe Serv ice , Rut l and , Ohio .
Phone 742 -2006 .
11 ,30 -78 t c

pharmacies and other relall outlets. NO SELLING
REOU .I RED . Com plete training and continuing
company support . MOVE UP TO MORE MONEY,
SECU RIT Y AND INDEPENDENCE . $4,995 .00

+
•

~~

'2695

EXCAVA TIN G, dozer, loa~~..~., ,
a n d backhoe work ; septic
tanks · i ns la l l ed ;
dump
trucks and l o-boy s for h ire ;
w i ll ha ul f i ll dirt , top soil.
limestone lind gr _
a vet: Ca ll
Bob or Roger )e ff er s. day
ph one · 992 -7089. nlgh 1 phone
99'1 -3525 o·r 992 -5232 .

0

ANNIE
L I T T L;..:ll::.......;:..;:.;..:...;;:,.;;;.;;.;...~;,;. -~---~,.

1- 1 ~ - 1 mo.

Auto trans ., rad io, del u xe bumper s and
guards, good tires, grey finish .

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

1
Individual to distr ibute' well -known line of
vitam i ns and over -the -counter drug products In 'this
area through company established departments in

-

Call9'12-7537
Pomeroy, Ohio

ORPR7iN

'2895
1974 DATSUN 710 CPE.

REO ' OOG •. i imes fone , gravel
a nd f ill dirl d e l i vered .
Phone Bil l Pullins , 992 -2478 .
2-19-261c

t
t
t

lot . SIO,OOO .
NEW
LISTING

Kuhl t1ke Decor

finish~

t

Pass

By Oswold o!o Jomes Jacoby

Licensed
baker
and
decOrator .
Kitchen State Inspected

A speed , rad io, W· S tires, l ike

Pass

Opening lead - K •

Cakes, Baked
and Decotated
To Your Order

'2495
1975 FORD PINTO

' . Pom eroy Office
IDS Buttern ut
992 -3345
Formerly We.ed Wholesale .
F eatu ri ng :
1
I · D e lu x Zero x COpy Se: rvi ce.
Office . S uppl ies ,
Mimeograph
Sup p li es ,
larges t se l ectio n ot wed ding su ppli es In Soutf1 e as ler n Ohio .
Th e Print Shop tompiefe
(Still i n bu si n es~ in Mid·
dleportl
12 -6 2 mo .

----'---'--'--~ ---.,..._

\If~ -"

mileage .

Quality Print Shop

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

Pass

Soot~

Eoot

IN. T.-3

R.~-~

PomeroY

Non~

West

'OI'W' ~- PRA-reR';

4 speed tra ns, rad i o, good tires. green f i n ish. )ow

2- 12 -1 mo.

DISTRIBUlOR

:

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

1974 OPEL MANTA CPE.

MAIL!

-SPECJAL!--

,BORN LOSER

USED CARS - LOWEST PRICES

BISSELL BUILDERS

was continued and West was
allowed to bold tricks with his
queen and Jack. Finally. Z
ruffed the foorth club, drew
trumps and dummy's ace of
club1 became his loth trick.
For the benefit of most of
our readers the four players in
a· newspaper hand back in the
'20s were called A, B, Y and Z.
Z sat South and was always
declarer while Y was dummy
and poor A and B had to defend .

tJ
.1084

Salesmen's Specials

Take advantage of our
price s.
Quality
built
homeS . Nice 1915 available
irl nice locations.

Then Z proceeded to let the
kin1 of clubs hold. The sull

East·West vulnerable

Natflan &amp;igg~
Radiator Specialist

Ph . 992 ·1174

could."

·-

47th ANNIVERSARY

SAVE MONEY?

WRITE YOUR

II A 5
t A 10
IA653Z
WEST
EAST
• 10
II
IIKJ87U
"Q 10 3
t98 52
tKQ7643
• K QJP7
SOUTH
IAQJ75U
¥i6

From the largest Truck or
Bulldoze r" Radiator to the
smallest Heater core .

1-22 -1 mo .

Notice

'--·-------------

4-10- 1 mo .

auction and I was playing just
three spades, but it was important to make four if I

19

1 KP13

car·

Plexaglass • Tab l e Top s
Mirrors . Storm &amp; Screen s.
FER~ELL ' S GLASS &amp;
HOME MAINTENANCE
S ·i eling - Vihyl
8.
Aluminum . Window Gl ass
&amp; Gluing . On lhe Job or in
Shop :
Pick up and delivery
serv i ce .
Call Co lle&lt;lt JBB -8139
Specialize
in
build - up
r oof i ng &amp; hot root !. Free
Estimates
10 years eM perienee . '
Ha rve Ferrell
Bidwell , Ohio
2 6 - 1 mo .

Now accepting clients
for bookkeeping and
tax service.

NORTH IDI

I!XPERIENCED

We 'll bririg sa rnpl~.s t_o your
ttome with no obligation.
See how you can really
save.
Mike Young , Manager
Sales and Installation
Rt . 3, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
· Phone day or night
614 -992 -2206
Ll~.-.1 mo .

lARRY WHOBREY
PUBLIC
ACOOUNTANT

Real Estate For Sale

on

WHY'!:&gt; YOU PUT ZI!RIIIOZ 11&lt;/TO
A &lt;9TATI- OF ~U~PI!'IP&amp;!:&gt;
ANIMATIONl

TH.T'$ 'lOUR.
'-lAM£! ...

Syracuse, OhiO
Ph . 992 -3993

peting and installation .

We Buy Antiques

-----------

estimates

LET ', ; HEiAR
PROM 'r'OU•
pll . FLOO&lt;IEL" IF

lARRY lAVENDER

1-23 1 m o .

' Free

MODERN CHEMICALS
100 Kerr Street
Pomero y , Ohio 45769
(614) 991 -2798, D ick Seyler
1-29 .1 mo .

~-

SIDlNG ·SOFFITT

SLOAN'S•
CARPETING

FURNITURE
STRIPPING SERV-ICE
Removal of
Pa i nts
PlastiCs - Va rn ishes , etc .
W.ood or M etal.
Repairs · RefiniSh i ng of
Fu rniture .
,
Burnishing · Polishing of
Copper &amp; Brass

AT BRIDGE
Fancy convention ahowa red

GUTTER 5- AWNINGS

Roger Wamsley

Modern

AntiQ ue

HAY

OWN AD!
IrS EASY TO
ORDER BY

of

Bicentennial Coins

10:30-Realldades 33.
n :co-News 3.4.6.1.10.13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Johnny Car!IOI1 3,4,15; Mennl• 6,13; Movie
"Grand Prix"' 8; Movie "Cass Tlmberlane•• 10;
Janek! 33.
12:-10-Longstreet 6.13.

IO :OG-Dean Merlin 3,4, 15; H1rry 0 6, 13; News 20.

Financing Ava liable
Blown Into Walh &amp; Attics
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM

FOR SALE

1 ;-,

Will Cut
Cost of
Uving ..••.•

Buy, SaleorTr1de

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

From • she lf to • house, all

Sticker 11300.00 SALE PRICE 54295.
1974 PLY. CUDA

t

Blo.wn
Insulation Services

Currency and Supplies

CONSTRUCTION

THURSDAY, FEIRUARY It, 1976
8:00-Movle " J""'" o...•· 3.~.1 5; Welcome Beck:
Kolter 6, 13; Wallont I, 10; Play of the Month 20; The
Way II Wos 33.
8:»-Barney Miller 6, 13; L-11 Thom1s Remembers
33.
9 :011-Stroets of San Francisco 6.13; People's Choice
Awards I, 10; Hollywood TelevisiOn Theatre 33.

FREE ESTIMATES

COINS

D&amp;D

56295

COUNTRY Mobi l e HemP.
Park . Rt. 33 , 1en mHesnor l h
o f Pome.roy . Larg e lots wi t h'
WANT ADS
1~ I •VI
e pa tios. sidewa l.ks,
1967 F I AT tor parts . Phone
concret
INFORMATION
run ner s and oft s t reet
992 -7826
''
1 f. '
DEADLINE-S
t I RCO Heli / , R (' We ld ing
2-19-3tc
parking . Phone 992 ,7479.
IN LOVIN G memq ry
Of
5
P .M .
Day
Befo r e
mac h in e, new e l ec
all
Beegle
w t1o . Pu bl ication
·
12-31-lfc
T heodore
i'l cce ssQr ies i nc lud ed Phone 1973 BU I CK 4 dr . Cen tury
pa~~ed away J ve.a rs adi:J ',
Monday Dea dlin e 9 a
'111'1 3-tl Q
Lu)(us, l ow mileage . Phone
F~l:! - 19 Sad ly '!11~sed by
Ca n ce llation
Co rre·c~o-ns J
BEORM .
home .
un
10 111 •tc
991 -5131 d ay , o r 992 -3 173 .
wile . Lo~etta , ch ddr e n : a'nd . wil l be acce p led unlil 9 a .
furnished , $175 per month .
2· 18-Jtc
grandchildre n ,
V•
lor Day of Publi cation
m·
Call 1 (304) 768 ·404 1 between
EXTRA
good
purebred
2 1 1p
REGULATIONS
9 am . and 1 p .m .
Hamps h'ire ma le hog . Phone P LY MO U TH
Roadrunner ,
- - - - - ---~ --~
Th e Publi sher reserves the
2 15 61p
( 61.1) 698 -8896 .
1969 , 4 speed. 59 ,000 mi les.
r igt11 10 edi t or r eiec t any ads
2 . 17 .Jtc
S750 . Ph one 992 2975 .
de('med o biecl io n al.
Th e 2 BEDRM . apt ,, parlially
'J -18 -6tp
furni shed , no pets ._ Phone
publ is her
wilt
nol
be
f;r-;.;~;~b;!e~r' t-;-ade !
Rober t H il l , 949 1013 .
respons
i
bl
e
fo
r
more
l
han
one
Ph o n e
F r ank
Oachel , 197'2 VEGA. $800. Phone 949·
'.,
2 15 71 c
incorrecl in se r tion .
l ea ding Creek Rd . 142 . 2 0 8~ .
1220.
II
R·ATES
2-l -l71p
2-18 6fc
E N J OY gracious l iving at For Want Ad Ser~Jice
-·--'·-------·-Village Manor in M id 5 cents per word one insertion
1965 F ORO L Tb . N ew 12 ga . 1969MUSTA NG Fast back, 302
dleport tor as lo w as Sl30
M in imum Cha rg e Sl. OO
Wincheste r 37 A Sing-l e shot .
v 8, Ai r Cond itionin g , Power
per
mo nt h
Wit h
al l
· 14 cents per word three
Phone 142 2J59 .
St eer ing. phone 99 2-6161.
uti l ities
pa i d .
These
cotl Secuti v e insertion s
1 13 261p
2-18-3tc
are br a nd ne w h igh quali ty
26 cen ts per word Six con ~ -·-~ - --·----·.-....,.---·
-c--,--- - - - - - - - ~par t men l s at pr i ces you
secul ive i nserri.ons
..
COAL, limeslone and a l l iypes · 1975 DAT SU N 82 10 Ha tc hba c k
can afford . You r rent in
25 Per Cent -Discount on paid
of sa il and rock sa n for ice
wil h standard tran sm issio n
e
lu
des
month
to
month
ads and ads pa i d w i thi n 10'
and snow remova l . E&gt;o: and .air con d i t ion i ng . S3 ,JOO .
days . .c:~
l eases, a l l e tec. l ivi ng ,
celsio r . Sa i l Wo r ks, East
Cat ( 992 -3453 .
ca rp e t ing,
range
and
CARD OF THANKS
Main S t ., Pomeroy , Oh io.
2- 18 6tc
r e fri gerator . f r ee trash
&amp; OBITUARY
Phone 992 -389 1
- -··~-p ic k up , c able TV at your
$2 00 tor 50 wor d m i nimum
12 7-lfc 19 71 V .W . Su per Beette , ex expense,
and
o n .si te Each addilional wurd 3
c.eltent
co nd itio n .
Law
laundry facilities . Con cen 1 s .
mi leag e, $1, 350 . Phone (6 14 )
venient to shop p ing o n Th ird
BLINOADS
985 -3912 . .
and Mi l l Streets in M id .
"-d d itional 25c Charge p er
'} 18 3t p
d l e~:&gt;ort . See the m anager at
J\ d ve rt isemen t .
3 SE DRM . home- .
jUs!
Riverside
Apartments
or
OFFICE HOUR S
19 71 AMERICAN Mo tors .
fini~hed , remod elin g , Sal em
ca l l 992 . 3273 . Fu rn is h ed
8_: 30 a m . to 5 oo p m.
Matador V 8 au t omatic .
Sl , Rut l and . PhOne 74'1 2306
apartmenls
are
a l so
Daily , 8 · 30 a . m to 12 : 00 Noon
a fler 4 p .m or see M i lo B.
Price reduc ed for qu iC k
avai l able .
Satu rday .
Hutchison .
sal e. Phone (614 ) 667 3956 .
2-2-78 tc
2-J8 .4tp
9 23 -l fc
1 BEDRM . doub l e wide ,
3
., TON I ntern ati ona l Pickup ,
furn i Shed , util i tie s .paid ; 6 RM home . nice yard . g ood
SHOOTIN G MATC H , iust off
location . Phone 992 1'3 9.-t .
4 sp. transmission , approx .
conve nie nt to Gavi n a nd
Rl . 7 near Rock Sp r i ngs
10, 000 miles . Phone 992 -7017 .
2-16-61 c
Mines . Ph one 992 -7017 or
Cemeter y . Every Sunday ,
2-13 -61p
99'1 7666
12"30 p t;n
2- 13-61p FO R SA L E near l an gsvi l l e, 5 .
2- 19 Jtp
rm house . root ce ll ar with
--- - --------""T~---~te
H OLI~E in· Ru t l and . .Cal l 992
room over ; 2 bay det ached
THERE WIL L be an AucliOn
5 fl~8
garage, I ' u ac-res . no ba t h , 8 ACRE S on .Salem S't .,
Sale , Friday night at 7 p . m .
1 4 1tc
Ru.fland , Oh io . Phon e 742 hO t and c old wa ter i n k i t .
New and used mercllandise
2284
chen , l.p , gas heat h eaters
at Mason Auction, Mason . FUR NI SH E D
and
un '1 -17 -61c
wit h /l o u se Cei l l 742 -'18 19
W.
Va _ CCl n s i g nments .
f urnished modern apt., 2
after 5 p .rn .
Phone (3 04) 773 547 1.
arid 3 bedrm s .. all el ec tr ic,
2 18 6l p MODERN hom e in Cheste r . a
2- 19 2tc
bri ck bui lding , decorated
rooms , 2 ba t hs. 2 porches ,
plastered wa l ls , com p lete
su n porch ,' 1 basement , ci ty
MAKE SU RE you get every
Youngsto wn kitchens , with
and wel l wate r , natura l gas ,
po ss i ble deduction th i s ye ar .
d isposa l units , sto rm doors
ga ra ge . Pri ce d to sel l.
Have you r Federal and
and windows , comple tel y
Phone C6 14J 965 -4_
102.
State Income Tax retur n by
insulated , f r on t and rear
2-4 lfc
an ac co untant . Phone 992 en tr ance, beautifully l and -----'--~·-.-----------..----6173 .
ONE AC.td::::, 6 rms and ba t h ,
sca ped , private park in g.
Rt . 3; Pom eroy . Ros_e H i ll.
special lo w re nt : The Hav en
608
~-----'-------'---~-----'--Dick Dav is property , t~o,~ll
Terrace ·Ap ts ., New Haven ,
'I N COME
Tax
Service ;·
basement ,
alum i num
w. VA . Phone (3 041 88.2MAIN
Federal or .s'1a1e t axes .
si d ing , .pJ;~nele d . $10,000 . Ca l l
2433.
2-15-91 (
Phpn e 992 722a o r see
POMEROY, O.
Oa k H il l 685 -65 76 evenings ;
------------ ~ --'-- .......
Wallace Ru ssel l , Br adbu r y .
Jackson '286 -JOOA days .
:BRICK - Live in t he 4 BR.
1-30 ·26 t c
2 5.30 tp
' '
apar-tment
and
rent
th
e
2
----·-----~-'--·
~-..,..-1912 750 HO N DA in exce llent
- -~--------:.~-~
3 BR HOMS , just finished
2 BUILDIN GS. 1 hOuse and
condition . $850 . Phone a ft er
furnish e d
apar tm e nt s .
r emodel i ng . Sa l em St : .
-1 p .{l'l .. 949 2344 .
ware room , t ear down .tor
Garden space. E xce llenf
R u tl a nd . Phon e 742 -23 06
lumber . Phone 99 2 3658 .
2-18 6tc
11eighborhood.
$?1,000.
alt er 4 p .m . or see Milo B .'
2 18 61c
t•;, LOTS - I BR , bath , full
Hut chi n son .
FIREWOOD , phone 9.19 -2089 .
HA·VE yOu r income taxe s
10·9-tfc
2-18 -12tc
basement, porches. { VVh y
CASH WITH
..... '
p r epare d by Si eve Cl eland
.
r
ent?
l
Just
$4,000
.
pay
ORDER
3 BE D RM . /lo use .in Mid
Racine . Phon e 9.i 9 2683 .
' GOO D m i xed hay , Also st ra w .
WALK TO SHOP - La rge 2
dlepor t, corner tol. New
Ph one f 614l 985 4278 or 661 2 6 12tc
bat h , s tory and ha lt , uti l ity
3338.
st ory frame, 4 BR, Ph
r oom , new car peli ng and
2-18-31p
baths, n ice new ki t chen ;
new roof , g a·rag e and work
basemen
t
,
co
al
or
gas
hea
t.
room , fru i t ce lla r . Close lo
19" PORT AB LE Zenith, B . &amp;
BABY SI TT IN G i n my ho me,
$8.500.
sc llool
and
sh opp in g .
w T .V ., excel lent con dition .
Monday
and
Thu r sday
$11.500 . Pll one 992 ·7624 .
550 . Ca ll 99'1 -7207 after 4 p .m .
1•1~ ACR ES - ' close i n . 4
evenings , I nfants to se ven .
1-27 -26 tc
2- 18 ·31p
P hone 992 -3255 ,
BR 1 bat h, ca rp eting.
-·-- ~. -·
-~ ----..,..·- -~
paneling, hot wa ter N . ·gas
1 30 -160 ACRE S loc ated in
- " - - ....... ------·~-'-----Long Bottom ; city wat er,
heat.
part
ba se m e nt ,
SE W I NG of a ll k inds, dresses
se pt ic tan k, good· space for
storage. $ 15. 000.
for a ll occasions , Sl acks.
C. BRA.0 FORD, A uct ioneer
Each initial and ·
tr aile rs . A l so. 1967 Chevy 3 ~
shir ts, newborh lay e tt es 1
S HILLY ACRES - Ni ce 3
Com plet e Se r \lice ' Phon e
1011
283
V
·8
engine,
auto
.
group of figure~ '
c ur l ainS. drapes . Phon e 992 949 -2487 or 949 -2000 Rac i ne
BR
hom e, ba th , niCe
tra n s mission, 4 ne w .t ires .
3035 a nd ask for Dorothy .
Ohio. Crill Brad fo~d .
'
.counts as one word .
$600 . Ph o ne (6 141 985 -.1 11 9.
k i t chen , ·N . gas heat, city
2-19 26tc
10
9-Jfc
2 18 -3tp
water , porche s, stor age
Be sure .· to count -·---- - - - - - - -·--- ----.--- -··--------bldg . $7,900.
WOULD li ke to dO your
name and address , if
AP T . SI ZED. elec . range ,
ha uling, la r ge or smal l.
RT. 143 - CLOSE IN - 2
retrigeralor , k i tchen table ,
used, and
phone OL D f ur niture , ice boxes ,
Phon e ( 6141 985 411 9 any
portabl e dryer , co t si ze bu-nk
ACRES - lovely building
time .
beds ,
ol d
wa l l
beds . Phon e 992 -6161.
br ass
number.
Including
site , utilit i es ava il ab l e.
telephones and parts , or
2 11 61 p
1- 18-3t c
$4,000.
prices for items of-----~-~--- - -comp lele house ho lds . Wr ite
M . D . Miller , Rt . 2,
McDA NIEL Cust om
But QUICK
EFF IC IENT
I F YOU need your g ra ~Je l
fered in your want --ad
Pomeroy , Oh io. Call 992
chering, WeSI Colum b ia , W .
ha ul ed, call 1614 ) 985 -.1 119
SERVICE·
ON
THE
SALE
will
increase
7 760 .
Va . We b ut c h er ca ttl e and
any ti m e.
OF YOUR PROPERTY .
h ogs .
$ 10
callle
10-i -74
2·18 ·12t p
response.
, ~-~ - ' '
LI ST WITH US, :rODAY.
slaught er ; S7 fo r hogs ; 12c
LA SH paid for a1 1 makes and
to r cu lt ing and wrapping .
I F INTERE STED i n building
992-2259 or 992-2568
models of mobile homes .
Sla t e and federa l I nspected ,
a new
home .
co n,ta c t
~--------;~~'.,'~c
Pho n e area code 6 14 423 Open 6 d ays . per week .
ROU SH CON STRUCTION ,
953 1.
Phone ( 304 ) 682 -3224 .
free estimates , Greg Roush ,
.1 . 13 -t·t c
99'1 -7583 .
1·30 -26k '
2·16 -12tc
MODERN. walnu t co n sole ,
---~·---~------·' ,.,_-_.
Virgil B., Sr., Broker
LUCt&lt;,E TT Farm Equipmen t ,
AM · FM rad io, 4 Sp eed
West
Wash i ngton
St . ,
cha
n
ger
.
Ba
l
ance
SI01
.
10
or
llOMechanic
Pomeroy. 0 .
':...'~':,:..
''
IN TE RE STI N G and pleasan t
Albany . Phon e (61-4) 698 ·3032
term s. Call 99 2-3965
Phene 992 -3325
1empora ry . ligh t office work
or 698 -7881.
2-19,1fc
1'' for· l.a dy . Ve r y good pay , no
2-18 -26tc:
---·
-·-----, ex p erience n ecess ary . A_l so, PLA IN GU IT AR and ca se, 4
- -- --------~--~
., ACRES - Off old 33.
' 11.fed lady Wi th Car for light
PAPER ha n ging , painting ,
1:)" tires , girls 2.1 " bike ,
Chester wa ter near . Good
v deltvery wo r k . Ap p l y to
paneling , e tc . Phone 949
wooder:) roc k er , elec. hot
"M'r·s•. Carter . 1 lo 3 p .m . p late , a l l k ind s of d ishes .
building sites. $1 0,000.00.
\.\... u'•.
2023 .
d Monday , Fe b . 23, DAV Ha l l.
MIDDLEPORT - 3 Brs ..
Cal l 742 -2078 .
12.1
Bunernut
A\lenue ,
-~2· 19 -3tc
bath , mod . kit., aluminum
Pom eroy.
IN TER lOR
and
eKteriOr
_:
'~'H.I
siding
,
long
fen
ced
yard
2- 18-4tc
-w-;i;nt;; ilh-N-;; s~Pe '
paint , No iob too small.
_,,.. -· -- ----'-'7 ~ --- -near schoo l s. On l y $12, 500.
Ta bl ets and Hy dreK Water
Phone 949 -2379 .
QUA L IFIED mine inspector ,
P i ll s a1
Dutton
D r ug,
HEARL Y NEW - 3 brs .,
2-18 -.flc
mus l have 6 -,:rs . ex p er i ence
, - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - :·
M i ddl e port and N els on
-~- - -- ~-- - --- ·---bath
,
wall
to
wa
ll
2 yr s. most have been un
Drug .
O ' DELL Alinement loca ted
car p e t ing . Ga r~ g e and
derground in Ohio . Contacl
2-17 -Jtp
behind
Rulland
Grade
•
Relatio n s ,
1 ~ 1nd us lr ial
large leve l lot a f Five
Sc h oo l . Tuneup , brakes ,
Per sonne l Dept .• 2323 w
1975 KAWASAK I 900. 2,450
Po ints. $25,500.
wheel balancing, a linemen!.
Fi fth Ave .• Co lu mbus, Ohio
mi les, $1,950 . Ex . co ndilion .
Phone 742 -2004
UKE NEW 3 · brs.. p;,
'
4310 4 or ca ll 1614 1 446 31 71 · Phone 742 ·2068 ·
11 -16 -lfc
baths
,
full
ba
sem
ent,
nat
.
2-17 .6tc

'

Television log for easy viewing

-----------,

2-19 -1 mo.

3 A ND 4 RM . furnished and
unfurn ished apts . Phone 992 543 4.
11 9-l fC

DICK TRACY

Auto Sales

lb. 2 speed rear a x le, foam seat , mirrors, clean cab.

or Month

11 - The Daily Sentinel, ~~eport-Porneroy, 0 ., Thlll'8day, Feb. 11, 1976

SI-IOULON'T Ti-lE'( 5E IN
A STRAIGHT LlNE ?

P11CII (Feb. 20-- 20)
You msy be the recipient o1
some unusual Information 10-

I

dtiy. It could Itt very neefly Into
some Plans you've formulated . .

®wtrro.!
Fab. 20, 117a

The urge to travel and to acquirt'knowledge from personal
exper i ence• may grow
stronger thil coming yur.
Begin to eave. Plan now to
satisfy your wanderlust.
INKWSPA.Pt:H I!:NT.:JIPKISI!: ASSN.I

�10 - The naily O.•nlinel , Midclleport-P omeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Feb. 19, 1976

JlfJJJ~llirnr® t4ot~e··"'~...J,_For

Unscramble thesefoorJumblts..

on• '•"" to

I' m

o ltw!\poon. nql

• •··"~~·

•••h squa••· ·••

rorm four ordinary ... orde .

•

For Rent

Auto Sales

2 BEDRM mobile h ome, real
nice Phone ~92 3324
1 4 lfc

r-

J

l:-tR/F

I I

Apan

Furnished

av.=.i l able 991 6161

2 18 31C

I

IORCE.4Nt

La Salle
A DRA\YIIo/6 NO ACTO~
CAN !3E .E XPECTED
TO PRODUCE ,

ICOBNEK I

- Now arranre the cirt:led ltlttf'l
[ ] · 1" lo fo:m the aurpriae &amp;niWtr, u
I ( )
~~==~~==-:::-~=:l_,''UJ'(tlled. by the above rartoon..

I ,.~~~ SIMLI!IIl$WIII~~~n I'T I I XI I I T"

(A..wera tomorr-u••

~ENNA

FABLED

Ye•lerd•y'•
.-\ruwoer1

ROO M

ment to r r e nl. Ga rd en space

I (J

Jumb i..-,·BIRCH

Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

.Hade&gt; an imprt'MIIitm

in

PALATE

tht'

lirC'rury wurld - PRINTED

HOTEL
Middleport, 0 . Ph . 992 -2771

Rooms, SS.OO up
, Special Rates
by Week

®

Business Services

2 SIGNS
OF

Pomeroy
QUAL Ill Motor Co.

1975 CHEV . ESTATE WAGON

Dark red , simulated wood trim , 3 seat, fu lly equipped
wi th every Chev. option , low mites, new tile , boss's
wi l e car. '
.

In Memol)'

types

12695

remodel i ng

Dark maroon f i ni sh , bik ·. bUcket vinyl sea t s. ·radio, V-8
engine. automatic. power steer i ng, good t ires, a
sportsman' s dream .

building

and

from

!he

foundat i on up. Addltio"' .
urpeting, patnting, siding ,
roof ing, pi!inellng , paprr
hanging etc •.•.

1972 CHEV. i. TON C&amp;C
12995
102" C. A. heavy duty springs. 292·6 cy l . engine. 15.000

Ph . 949-2021 or 843-2"7

1915S Proof Set (6 pes.)
525.00 ; ms Mint Set S9.00 ;
1976 Silver Proof Set (3
515.00 ; 1976 Silver
UNC Set 13 pcs.l SS.SO.
Call Rutland, 142-2331
R&amp;J COINS

,.,,_,

L..--------------------.....1
For Sale

A Low Cost·_ .
Want Ad

PH. 992-6173

WANT TO

for Sale

Real

12 WORDS
4 DAYS

For Sale

....

$}25

ONLY

..

AVAILABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
NO REFUNDS.

-·- -~ ----- ------

-·---- ---------Employment Wanted

BusineSs SeiVices

Wanted To Buy

your

--

-· -----:-- - ----r---

' ·'" .
1. ____
..
2, _ _ _ _ _..._. '

.

3. -------,~
4,______

TEAFORD

Help Wanted

---

5· ----~

-

6. _ _ _ _ ___.,
7. _ _ _ _ _'.. .':. .

8, ______________
9
10
11

.,

12, _ _____ . . . :__
·NAME _ _ __

_

ADDRESS.- - -

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

LOs-E

--···-•· ---~ _:: ~~8-61 c

MAlt WITH ' "

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

gas furna ce and birch kit .
Large ou1building and 1.4
acres . $31 , 500.00.
4' ACR ::: s - New, 2 brs.,
ba th . n1ce k it. wit h glass
drs . to c arpor t.
Full
basement and dri l led well.

PACER

$31,500.
RAC)NE

APPLICA TI O N S wil l b e ac . t: U f1L fOR SA LE . CAB Coa l
ce pt ed lor s tr eel com
Company . 'I mile north of
m issi oner
posit ion
fOr ~ Ches hi re , on R 1. 7 Pick your
Ra c ine V i llag e ti l l March 1.
own . \ 20 per ton . Open 6 days
Contact Mae Clela nd , cle rk .
per week . o r call f 614 ) 367
2 17 31 c
1330 lor furth e r i nformation .
1 8 781c

CITY·---,--.,-"..:c,..
'·
PHONE .._n·..,.",..--,'...,,.'..,;:',,'m:.~
"

J

Now at Landmark

~· ,

·.,.~_

1.25

Model UCXXX ,
210,000 .

TO THE

··--·-=

... }

Weekly Grain

~ •'Pialrl l

~,._ .,,

·.)~

POMEROY, OHIO ,

Capatlty

, FREE A/C

~

lll COURT ST. :

45769

CO-OP
AutOmatic Water
Conditioner

1

"""'• •·

-

~:

'299

.... '425.00

.Li m i tea T ;me Offe.

'

RIVERSIDE AMC.JEEP
Gallipolis, Ohio

' ·- ---j.- Reg . 5339.00 Val .

----- ---

POMEROY LANDMARK

w... J•ck w. Caroey , Mgr .

...a

Phone 992-2111

-

2

brs .,

re furbished hom e . Ba,th,
gas
heat, mod . ki t . and nice
1
l evel lot for only · $12 ,900 .

POM.EROY - Nice 2 brs ..
br1fh, gas F.A . furnac e,
a lumin um
si ding ,
basemen t and large long

-.~-

-·-----------

ROOF IN&amp; , sidlng , gutters and
downspout s . Storm doors
and wir"ldowS remodeling,
pa int ing and general repa ir .
Sa tisfa ctio n tt uar anteed .
Ca ll (6 141 985 -3803 for fr ee
es timate .
2~ 13-6tp

t

Ph. (614) 985-4.102

- ------"'----------

REMODE LIN G,
Pl um b ing ,
heating and all types Of
g e neral
r ep a i r .
Work
gua rant eed . 20 yea r s ex per i en ce . Phon e 992 2409.
5-l ·lfc

__ _

&amp; D TREE Trimm i ng, 20
yea r s exper ien ce . Insured .
fr ee ~stimates Call 99 2-2384
o r (614) 698 -7157 A lban y .
10 15 -lfc

SEWI NG MACHINE Repairs .
ser"Jice , all m akes . 992 -2284 .
The Fa bric Shop , Pom eroy _
Au thorized Singer Sa les and
Servi ce .
We
sharpen
Sc issors .
3·29 -lf c
READY MIX CO N ~~~·~
deliVered r ight to your
pr o ject . Fas t and easy . Free
es t imat es . Phone 992 -3284 ,
·Goeg lei n Ready M iK :Co ..
Middlepor t, Oh io .
6 -30 -Hc
·- Sweepers, toa sters, irons ,
a ll small appliances . Lawn
mow~r . ne KI t o State High way Garage on Route 7 .
Phone 985 ·3825 .
4-16-lfc
SEPTIC TANKS clea n ed .
Modern Sanilation . 992 -395-4
or 99 2-7349 .
___________

•
•

investment cove'red by stock and guarant,ed by re·

"'$15,000.
A REASONABLE PRICED
HOME AND A GOOD

+
+

t

purchase agreerr,tent .

R t: ........ T :;rc: :-,H2' II ' I"'\ r: I \I~

•
Ji

CALLMr . MethewMuon.MerkttingDirector
(person-to-person collect)
NATIONAL PHARMAceuTICALLABoRAToRtEs
AREA CODE 304-965-1577

.

........ -•.• ,.. . . . .

8 Establlahed
, Tbrob
8 Subway

bUrden

'lll16

YOUR
I'RIENC&gt;

1$

MONA!

SHI!:'S GOING
Wf'TH us !

zAK~

slop

I Molaten the

roast

(abbr. )

1

boy
10Befon
14 ult'a a if you don't
weatken"

u ·~

II Prayer

(2

'2695
1975 OIEVROI.ET SUBURBAN

n Hen

Zl French

a

IIIPel'

a WalllnC ·

Zl AcCwllble
• Be situated

'tm
39 Generadon

river

din's

proof
WCII'd

II A "loll

vounc

Future
lieutenant 41 Astronaut's
colonel
"perfec:t"
DSenesU~e
cent
fabric
H AladU Suma·

or

2Z H8mllton
bW
M Galley-

M Learned-

mer

31

ICI'NI

monkey
Zl Alter

r~~~~;y~~~~~~~~~~aw.
c
sup,pose IJOU
FBITOW

movinq on now!

wd..)

Zl Clpuchln

17 Infuriated
ztUnchalllleable

-folks \viii be

Yesterday'1 ADIW~
Z5Toas ,
35 - on
2S Wallabe
(iDCited)
tree
31 French

word
II Tonie's
companion

weight

Auto ., P .S., P. B.. 8 cyl., ra dio, tiucket seats, good
tires, dark mar.o on finish .

Jones

11 S.A. parrot
1% Troupe
.lfaup
membei'
d lt'sa(how awful)
(2 Wds.)

II Caddoln
IndlaJI

bumper

newspaP.,r. The Jacobys will
ans,..r lndlvlduel questions
it sllmped, sell-addres.ed
envelopes are ~tncloslld. The
most Interesting qu11stlons
will be used in this column
and will receive copies of
JACOBY MODERN.)

loy l!fOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

IS 'THA'T

(Do you MVI 1 question

lor the experts? Write "Ask
the Jecobys" care ol this

~~lt1M1!Jtgl
I Beaat of

1974 PLYMOUTH CUDA CPE.

tran
ape

spirit

:weekend''
1Z Procell of '

Co. demo .. low ml[eage, loa ded with all options, red
and White fini sh .

eoiJI.rnUin&amp;

• Lummcis
Jl Albanian
dialed

'6895
1975 OIEVROLET CAPRICE
ESTATE WAGON
Fu ll y equ ipped,

•

simu la ted

1:co-Tomorrow 3.~.
1:50-News 13.
CHANNELS
7:0G-Speclel Edition lc)
7:»-BIII Co&amp;by Show lei
8 :0G-High and Wild (C)
8 :»-Ro• Humbard (c)
9 :»-Wyatt E erp
10:co-Target : Corruplors
FRI DAY, FE8RUARY20, 1916
6:co-5unrlse Semester 10.
6: 15-Farm Report 13.
6:20-Biue Ridge Quartet 13.
6:30-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Farmtlme 10.
6:oiO-Ovnce of Prevention 10.
6:&lt;15-Mornlng Report 3.
6:55-&lt;:hU.:k White Reports 10; ,Good Morning, Trl
· Stale 13.
7:co-Today 3.~.15; Good Morning, America 6.13 ; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolln 10.
8:t)C)-Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St. 3J,
8:30-Big Valley 6.
9:co-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy
Show I; Mike DouglaslO; Morning with D.J. 13.
9:30-A.M. 3; One Lite to Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Oouglas 13.
IO :co-celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,~. IS; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Right 8, 10.
10:»-High Rollers 3,4,15; Dinah 6. ··
11 :co-Wheel of Fortune 3.15; Weekday ~; Gambit
8.10; Farmer's Daughter 13,
11 : »-Hollywooc1Squares3,~.15; Happy Day•I3; Love
of Life 1, 10; Sosame St. 20,33.
11 :55--Toke Kerr B; Dan !mel's World 10.
I2 :co-Magnlflcent Merblo Machine 3, 15; Let'sMake a
, Deal13; Bob Broun's 50-50 Club~; News6,8,10.;
12 :»-Take My Advice 3,15; All My Children 6.13;
Search lor Tomorrow 8,10.
12 :45--Eiec. Co. 33.
12 : ~NBC News 3,15.
1:co-News 3: Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Resile.. 10; Nat For Women Only 15.
1:30-0ays of Our Lives 3A, 15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13;
As the World Turns 8,10.
2:110--$20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:30-Docton 3,4,1S; Neighbor• 6,13; Guiding Light
~1&amp;
.
3:0G-Anolher World 3.~.15; General Hoepltal6.13; All
In the Family 8.10; Black Journal 20.
3:30-()ne Life to Llve13; Mickey Mouse Club 61 Match
Game 8,10; Black Perspective on the News 20.
~:co-Mister Cartoon 3; Marv Griffin~; Bewitched 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie
"The Pigeon That Took Rome" 101 Dinah I 13.
4:»-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Get Smart 15.
s :co-Bonanu 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:»-Adem-12 ~ ; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co, 20,33; Adem-12 13.
6:0G-News 3A,I,10,13,15; ABC News6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30-NBC News 3A,I5; Andy Griffith 6; CBS News
8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 201 Carrascolendas 33.
7:0G-Trulh or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth~; Lawrence
Welk I; Bowling for Dollars 6; ; Aviation Weather
33; News 10; Doil Adams Screen Test 13; Family
Affair 15; Ohio Journal 20.
7:30-Porter Wagoner 3; Treasur• Hunt 4; Candid_
Camera 6; Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky
20; $25,000 Pyramid 10; To Toll the Truth 13; Pop
Goes the Country 15; Black Penpec:tlv• onNews
News 33, ·
.
l:co-Senlord &amp; Son 3.~.15; Donny &amp; Marlo 6.13; Sere
8,10; Washington Week In Review 20,33 ..
8:30-Practlce 3,~.15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:CG-Rocklord Flies 3.~.15:; Movie "Little Feusa and
Big ftelsy" 6.13; Boxing 8,10; Firing Line 20;
Masterpiece Theatre 33.
10:0G-Pollce Story 3,~.15; News 20; Educational
Impllcatlons 33.. .
10 : 3~Avlallon Weather 20.
11 :0G-New&amp; 3,4,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
.
11 :»-Johnny Car1011 3,~.15; Rook los 6, 13; Movie
" Shaf t" 8; Movie "Dracula's Castle" 10; Janekl33.
12 : 4~Semmy &amp; Co. 6: Ironside 13.
1 :co-Midnight Special 3,4, 15; Movie "A Blueprint lor
Murder'·' 10.
1 :-10-News 13.
2 : ~News 3; Movie "A Gathering of Eaglos" 4.
3:co-Movle "King Kong vs, Godzllla'~ 3. .
~:Is-Movie "Work Is a Four Letter Word" 3.
~:30-Movle "The Smugglers" ~6:co-Movle "She Wrote the Book" 3.

Astro-

lMSr1)11l_IICII.

a

( Jt,pb. wd.)
Unlv. of

Grapt-1

Mall1l lite

~~~~~r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~H~er

'6295

.. hmlctt .... 0101

6-1-l-1-

• Tlc:tet-

1973 Chev. 112 ton 8 cyl auto., P. S., P, B. $2895.
1972 Chev. 112 ton 6 cyl. std.
$2150.
1972 Chev. 2 ton i02" C. A. 292 6 c.vl. 4
speed
$2995.
1972 Chev 2 ton 102" C. A. 2'12 6 cyl., 4
speed
.
·
$3095.
1973 Int. 1600 Series. 8 cyl., 5 speed, 104
C. A.
$3895.

,., ....,..,, 20, 1171
ARIII (M- 21·Aprl 11)

•sumn...t
DOWN
1 Hidden
IIIJIPiy
I !!co!deb

Something
berutflclal
=-+-+--ibuslneaawlae may unexpectedly develop today
f-+-1--lthrough someone you ' re

lllmJ
ILl Guanlla

trlandly with. It could be worth
'"'4-~1-+-~-llooklng Into.
TAUIIUI (April 20-Mor 20)
=+~1--+-~-1 You may have an opportunity

WUOIII

• SIIJnrann
I Swedllh

~

Buy in confidence lrom the right man is
often more imll')rtant than buying for price .

CIIUIIty

.

today to win a new elly who
later prove of value to

.....L--L-...1.-...,d could

DAIIJY CRYPTOQliOTB- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXa
II LONGJ'SLLOW

SEE YOUR SPECIAL SALESMAN
George Harris-Dallas Blevins- Roger
Di liard

YOU MEAN
WORKINC7

WELL J: HOPE

ACI?ff6

5HOPTALK.

WI'TH 'IOU~

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
992-2126

A Maine reader wants to
know what our notrump overcall of an adverse opening suit
bid shows.
It shows the same 16 to 18
high-cord points as an opening
notrump with at least one
stopper in our opponent's bid
suit.

j

ALLEY OOP

new 6,000 miles white

low milea11e, red w ith

~w~

:Ckf

..

IT 16N'T ALL

yoo. Trut atl new contacts
warmly.

ZC

RIER

RIT
OT

DEO

YW

KTGYPT

IEKZRNEDDQ
EFT . PYCEZGC

YW

ZHWDMTHGT
DZST

ELPZFT.
YRITF

ITHFQ . LFNPPYHt.

·

RIYCT

. .

SPOIL 11IEIIl FUN! - M,Uilt TWAJN

you may occur quite auddenly
anc:t unex~edly.

LIO (JUly 11-A... :12) Surprise the family today I either In
what you Hrve or by Inviting
people over they'll aft enjoy.
ohould be a pretty loot tltlnker
toctsy. Your flrttldeasare likely
to be your beat. Put them to a
good uae.

profitable for you look rather

I THINK I'LL

•

EXPANDED WEEK DAY NEWSCA
' STS

I

AT

B A.M., The Noon Report,
and 5 P.M.

I,

'

PLAV A LEETLE
ROCK MUSIC

where you'll be able to meet•

-.w

people wfth dlllerent lnto be

ternta. It lhould prove
fun,

AQUARIUI (J..,_ 10-Feb. 11)
Don't giYO up on your goalo too
quickly today. Evento coutd
take 1 surprlalng turn and put

Yat dly'1 Cli1:Jltl: NEVER RUN AFTER YOUR OWN i.I.RA (lapl. 23-0ct. 23) The
HAT - 011IERII
U: DELIGHTED TO DO IT; WHY chance• or today being

WMPO AM fM

CAPRICORN (Dec. H-.lan.
11) Go somewhere today

victory wtthln your grup.

PT H VIRGO (Aut- 21-lapl. 211) You
PTH. -

14--.

GIMINI (Mor 21-.1- 20) Put

~~~mple

'

good . What you gain may
come In en unUiual manner.
ICORPIO COot.
II)
You11 haYO more tun doing
thlngo today on the opur of the
moment than yoo wilt wtth
planned actMty. Stay 10011.
IAGtnARtUI (110¥, 11-0.0.
21) You should be eblo to olze
up eltuallone quite accurately
today by using anawere you
arrive al both deductively and
Intuitively.

your thinking cap on at work

today. CIIYir Ideas will go a
A II long way to chalk up points
used for the three L'a, X for the two O's. eto. Sln1le letten. with lite boea.
a-tropheo, the length and formotlon of lhe wnrdi are all CANCIR (~uno 21-.lulf II)
hinto. Eaob day the t&lt;&gt;de lettel'l are dtft'erent. .
This Is one of thooa doya when
the best things that happen to
CIIYPI'OQUOTII8

One letter olmpb' otando rar another. In thlo

ZR

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Til B
Pomeroy

&gt;•··········"" ·---------------------...1
...
'·

mAl AGREED!

,.

HEAR N~S FIRST

+

THE KID 111 M'f
. POSSESSION,
YOU'LL SIGM lHE
CONTRACTS- IS

'

wood tr i m .

41

Old man Z was back at the
bridge club again. He wasted
tio time biddilll four spades
alter' Y, his favorite partner,
had opened with a slightly
irregular one notrump and
East had ovm:alled with a bid
of tbree diamonds. East's
three diamond call was one of
those fancy new conventions
designed to show both red
suits.
IU~SS
West " openetJ the killl of
SU91!1Ess - clubs. Z studied the dummy
ll&lt;E 1101 carefully and remarked, "I
C(f:
played a hand just like this for
~ Milton Work's column back In
~ 1924. 01 coorse. the game was

~t:

!~!_lfc ~::::::::::::::::::::::

ONCE -IN-A-LIFETIME OPPORTUNITY

I!Ul WHEii I HAllE

,_

-----.---,-------ELWOOD BOWER S REFJAIR

R e nova'ted 3 brs.. 11 2
bnths , ful l basement , nat.
Qit S furna ce, ci ty wa ter,
and large l o t . Reitsonable

YOU RESULTS .

.

EXCAVATING .
dozer,
backhoe
and
d i tcher .
Ch arle s R Hatfi el ct Bac k
Hoe Serv ice , Rut l and , Ohio .
Phone 742 -2006 .
11 ,30 -78 t c

pharmacies and other relall outlets. NO SELLING
REOU .I RED . Com plete training and continuing
company support . MOVE UP TO MORE MONEY,
SECU RIT Y AND INDEPENDENCE . $4,995 .00

+
•

~~

'2695

EXCAVA TIN G, dozer, loa~~..~., ,
a n d backhoe work ; septic
tanks · i ns la l l ed ;
dump
trucks and l o-boy s for h ire ;
w i ll ha ul f i ll dirt , top soil.
limestone lind gr _
a vet: Ca ll
Bob or Roger )e ff er s. day
ph one · 992 -7089. nlgh 1 phone
99'1 -3525 o·r 992 -5232 .

0

ANNIE
L I T T L;..:ll::.......;:..;:.;..:...;;:,.;;;.;;.;...~;,;. -~---~,.

1- 1 ~ - 1 mo.

Auto trans ., rad io, del u xe bumper s and
guards, good tires, grey finish .

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

1
Individual to distr ibute' well -known line of
vitam i ns and over -the -counter drug products In 'this
area through company established departments in

-

Call9'12-7537
Pomeroy, Ohio

ORPR7iN

'2895
1974 DATSUN 710 CPE.

REO ' OOG •. i imes fone , gravel
a nd f ill dirl d e l i vered .
Phone Bil l Pullins , 992 -2478 .
2-19-261c

t
t
t

lot . SIO,OOO .
NEW
LISTING

Kuhl t1ke Decor

finish~

t

Pass

By Oswold o!o Jomes Jacoby

Licensed
baker
and
decOrator .
Kitchen State Inspected

A speed , rad io, W· S tires, l ike

Pass

Opening lead - K •

Cakes, Baked
and Decotated
To Your Order

'2495
1975 FORD PINTO

' . Pom eroy Office
IDS Buttern ut
992 -3345
Formerly We.ed Wholesale .
F eatu ri ng :
1
I · D e lu x Zero x COpy Se: rvi ce.
Office . S uppl ies ,
Mimeograph
Sup p li es ,
larges t se l ectio n ot wed ding su ppli es In Soutf1 e as ler n Ohio .
Th e Print Shop tompiefe
(Still i n bu si n es~ in Mid·
dleportl
12 -6 2 mo .

----'---'--'--~ ---.,..._

\If~ -"

mileage .

Quality Print Shop

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

Pass

Soot~

Eoot

IN. T.-3

R.~-~

PomeroY

Non~

West

'OI'W' ~- PRA-reR';

4 speed tra ns, rad i o, good tires. green f i n ish. )ow

2- 12 -1 mo.

DISTRIBUlOR

:

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

1974 OPEL MANTA CPE.

MAIL!

-SPECJAL!--

,BORN LOSER

USED CARS - LOWEST PRICES

BISSELL BUILDERS

was continued and West was
allowed to bold tricks with his
queen and Jack. Finally. Z
ruffed the foorth club, drew
trumps and dummy's ace of
club1 became his loth trick.
For the benefit of most of
our readers the four players in
a· newspaper hand back in the
'20s were called A, B, Y and Z.
Z sat South and was always
declarer while Y was dummy
and poor A and B had to defend .

tJ
.1084

Salesmen's Specials

Take advantage of our
price s.
Quality
built
homeS . Nice 1915 available
irl nice locations.

Then Z proceeded to let the
kin1 of clubs hold. The sull

East·West vulnerable

Natflan &amp;igg~
Radiator Specialist

Ph . 992 ·1174

could."

·-

47th ANNIVERSARY

SAVE MONEY?

WRITE YOUR

II A 5
t A 10
IA653Z
WEST
EAST
• 10
II
IIKJ87U
"Q 10 3
t98 52
tKQ7643
• K QJP7
SOUTH
IAQJ75U
¥i6

From the largest Truck or
Bulldoze r" Radiator to the
smallest Heater core .

1-22 -1 mo .

Notice

'--·-------------

4-10- 1 mo .

auction and I was playing just
three spades, but it was important to make four if I

19

1 KP13

car·

Plexaglass • Tab l e Top s
Mirrors . Storm &amp; Screen s.
FER~ELL ' S GLASS &amp;
HOME MAINTENANCE
S ·i eling - Vihyl
8.
Aluminum . Window Gl ass
&amp; Gluing . On lhe Job or in
Shop :
Pick up and delivery
serv i ce .
Call Co lle&lt;lt JBB -8139
Specialize
in
build - up
r oof i ng &amp; hot root !. Free
Estimates
10 years eM perienee . '
Ha rve Ferrell
Bidwell , Ohio
2 6 - 1 mo .

Now accepting clients
for bookkeeping and
tax service.

NORTH IDI

I!XPERIENCED

We 'll bririg sa rnpl~.s t_o your
ttome with no obligation.
See how you can really
save.
Mike Young , Manager
Sales and Installation
Rt . 3, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
· Phone day or night
614 -992 -2206
Ll~.-.1 mo .

lARRY WHOBREY
PUBLIC
ACOOUNTANT

Real Estate For Sale

on

WHY'!:&gt; YOU PUT ZI!RIIIOZ 11&lt;/TO
A &lt;9TATI- OF ~U~PI!'IP&amp;!:&gt;
ANIMATIONl

TH.T'$ 'lOUR.
'-lAM£! ...

Syracuse, OhiO
Ph . 992 -3993

peting and installation .

We Buy Antiques

-----------

estimates

LET ', ; HEiAR
PROM 'r'OU•
pll . FLOO&lt;IEL" IF

lARRY lAVENDER

1-23 1 m o .

' Free

MODERN CHEMICALS
100 Kerr Street
Pomero y , Ohio 45769
(614) 991 -2798, D ick Seyler
1-29 .1 mo .

~-

SIDlNG ·SOFFITT

SLOAN'S•
CARPETING

FURNITURE
STRIPPING SERV-ICE
Removal of
Pa i nts
PlastiCs - Va rn ishes , etc .
W.ood or M etal.
Repairs · RefiniSh i ng of
Fu rniture .
,
Burnishing · Polishing of
Copper &amp; Brass

AT BRIDGE
Fancy convention ahowa red

GUTTER 5- AWNINGS

Roger Wamsley

Modern

AntiQ ue

HAY

OWN AD!
IrS EASY TO
ORDER BY

of

Bicentennial Coins

10:30-Realldades 33.
n :co-News 3.4.6.1.10.13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Johnny Car!IOI1 3,4,15; Mennl• 6,13; Movie
"Grand Prix"' 8; Movie "Cass Tlmberlane•• 10;
Janek! 33.
12:-10-Longstreet 6.13.

IO :OG-Dean Merlin 3,4, 15; H1rry 0 6, 13; News 20.

Financing Ava liable
Blown Into Walh &amp; Attics
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM

FOR SALE

1 ;-,

Will Cut
Cost of
Uving ..••.•

Buy, SaleorTr1de

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

From • she lf to • house, all

Sticker 11300.00 SALE PRICE 54295.
1974 PLY. CUDA

t

Blo.wn
Insulation Services

Currency and Supplies

CONSTRUCTION

THURSDAY, FEIRUARY It, 1976
8:00-Movle " J""'" o...•· 3.~.1 5; Welcome Beck:
Kolter 6, 13; Wallont I, 10; Play of the Month 20; The
Way II Wos 33.
8:»-Barney Miller 6, 13; L-11 Thom1s Remembers
33.
9 :011-Stroets of San Francisco 6.13; People's Choice
Awards I, 10; Hollywood TelevisiOn Theatre 33.

FREE ESTIMATES

COINS

D&amp;D

56295

COUNTRY Mobi l e HemP.
Park . Rt. 33 , 1en mHesnor l h
o f Pome.roy . Larg e lots wi t h'
WANT ADS
1~ I •VI
e pa tios. sidewa l.ks,
1967 F I AT tor parts . Phone
concret
INFORMATION
run ner s and oft s t reet
992 -7826
''
1 f. '
DEADLINE-S
t I RCO Heli / , R (' We ld ing
2-19-3tc
parking . Phone 992 ,7479.
IN LOVIN G memq ry
Of
5
P .M .
Day
Befo r e
mac h in e, new e l ec
all
Beegle
w t1o . Pu bl ication
·
12-31-lfc
T heodore
i'l cce ssQr ies i nc lud ed Phone 1973 BU I CK 4 dr . Cen tury
pa~~ed away J ve.a rs adi:J ',
Monday Dea dlin e 9 a
'111'1 3-tl Q
Lu)(us, l ow mileage . Phone
F~l:! - 19 Sad ly '!11~sed by
Ca n ce llation
Co rre·c~o-ns J
BEORM .
home .
un
10 111 •tc
991 -5131 d ay , o r 992 -3 173 .
wile . Lo~etta , ch ddr e n : a'nd . wil l be acce p led unlil 9 a .
furnished , $175 per month .
2· 18-Jtc
grandchildre n ,
V•
lor Day of Publi cation
m·
Call 1 (304) 768 ·404 1 between
EXTRA
good
purebred
2 1 1p
REGULATIONS
9 am . and 1 p .m .
Hamps h'ire ma le hog . Phone P LY MO U TH
Roadrunner ,
- - - - - ---~ --~
Th e Publi sher reserves the
2 15 61p
( 61.1) 698 -8896 .
1969 , 4 speed. 59 ,000 mi les.
r igt11 10 edi t or r eiec t any ads
2 . 17 .Jtc
S750 . Ph one 992 2975 .
de('med o biecl io n al.
Th e 2 BEDRM . apt ,, parlially
'J -18 -6tp
furni shed , no pets ._ Phone
publ is her
wilt
nol
be
f;r-;.;~;~b;!e~r' t-;-ade !
Rober t H il l , 949 1013 .
respons
i
bl
e
fo
r
more
l
han
one
Ph o n e
F r ank
Oachel , 197'2 VEGA. $800. Phone 949·
'.,
2 15 71 c
incorrecl in se r tion .
l ea ding Creek Rd . 142 . 2 0 8~ .
1220.
II
R·ATES
2-l -l71p
2-18 6fc
E N J OY gracious l iving at For Want Ad Ser~Jice
-·--'·-------·-Village Manor in M id 5 cents per word one insertion
1965 F ORO L Tb . N ew 12 ga . 1969MUSTA NG Fast back, 302
dleport tor as lo w as Sl30
M in imum Cha rg e Sl. OO
Wincheste r 37 A Sing-l e shot .
v 8, Ai r Cond itionin g , Power
per
mo nt h
Wit h
al l
· 14 cents per word three
Phone 142 2J59 .
St eer ing. phone 99 2-6161.
uti l ities
pa i d .
These
cotl Secuti v e insertion s
1 13 261p
2-18-3tc
are br a nd ne w h igh quali ty
26 cen ts per word Six con ~ -·-~ - --·----·.-....,.---·
-c--,--- - - - - - - - ~par t men l s at pr i ces you
secul ive i nserri.ons
..
COAL, limeslone and a l l iypes · 1975 DAT SU N 82 10 Ha tc hba c k
can afford . You r rent in
25 Per Cent -Discount on paid
of sa il and rock sa n for ice
wil h standard tran sm issio n
e
lu
des
month
to
month
ads and ads pa i d w i thi n 10'
and snow remova l . E&gt;o: and .air con d i t ion i ng . S3 ,JOO .
days . .c:~
l eases, a l l e tec. l ivi ng ,
celsio r . Sa i l Wo r ks, East
Cat ( 992 -3453 .
ca rp e t ing,
range
and
CARD OF THANKS
Main S t ., Pomeroy , Oh io.
2- 18 6tc
r e fri gerator . f r ee trash
&amp; OBITUARY
Phone 992 -389 1
- -··~-p ic k up , c able TV at your
$2 00 tor 50 wor d m i nimum
12 7-lfc 19 71 V .W . Su per Beette , ex expense,
and
o n .si te Each addilional wurd 3
c.eltent
co nd itio n .
Law
laundry facilities . Con cen 1 s .
mi leag e, $1, 350 . Phone (6 14 )
venient to shop p ing o n Th ird
BLINOADS
985 -3912 . .
and Mi l l Streets in M id .
"-d d itional 25c Charge p er
'} 18 3t p
d l e~:&gt;ort . See the m anager at
J\ d ve rt isemen t .
3 SE DRM . home- .
jUs!
Riverside
Apartments
or
OFFICE HOUR S
19 71 AMERICAN Mo tors .
fini~hed , remod elin g , Sal em
ca l l 992 . 3273 . Fu rn is h ed
8_: 30 a m . to 5 oo p m.
Matador V 8 au t omatic .
Sl , Rut l and . PhOne 74'1 2306
apartmenls
are
a l so
Daily , 8 · 30 a . m to 12 : 00 Noon
a fler 4 p .m or see M i lo B.
Price reduc ed for qu iC k
avai l able .
Satu rday .
Hutchison .
sal e. Phone (614 ) 667 3956 .
2-2-78 tc
2-J8 .4tp
9 23 -l fc
1 BEDRM . doub l e wide ,
3
., TON I ntern ati ona l Pickup ,
furn i Shed , util i tie s .paid ; 6 RM home . nice yard . g ood
SHOOTIN G MATC H , iust off
location . Phone 992 1'3 9.-t .
4 sp. transmission , approx .
conve nie nt to Gavi n a nd
Rl . 7 near Rock Sp r i ngs
10, 000 miles . Phone 992 -7017 .
2-16-61 c
Mines . Ph one 992 -7017 or
Cemeter y . Every Sunday ,
2-13 -61p
99'1 7666
12"30 p t;n
2- 13-61p FO R SA L E near l an gsvi l l e, 5 .
2- 19 Jtp
rm house . root ce ll ar with
--- - --------""T~---~te
H OLI~E in· Ru t l and . .Cal l 992
room over ; 2 bay det ached
THERE WIL L be an AucliOn
5 fl~8
garage, I ' u ac-res . no ba t h , 8 ACRE S on .Salem S't .,
Sale , Friday night at 7 p . m .
1 4 1tc
Ru.fland , Oh io . Phon e 742 hO t and c old wa ter i n k i t .
New and used mercllandise
2284
chen , l.p , gas heat h eaters
at Mason Auction, Mason . FUR NI SH E D
and
un '1 -17 -61c
wit h /l o u se Cei l l 742 -'18 19
W.
Va _ CCl n s i g nments .
f urnished modern apt., 2
after 5 p .rn .
Phone (3 04) 773 547 1.
arid 3 bedrm s .. all el ec tr ic,
2 18 6l p MODERN hom e in Cheste r . a
2- 19 2tc
bri ck bui lding , decorated
rooms , 2 ba t hs. 2 porches ,
plastered wa l ls , com p lete
su n porch ,' 1 basement , ci ty
MAKE SU RE you get every
Youngsto wn kitchens , with
and wel l wate r , natura l gas ,
po ss i ble deduction th i s ye ar .
d isposa l units , sto rm doors
ga ra ge . Pri ce d to sel l.
Have you r Federal and
and windows , comple tel y
Phone C6 14J 965 -4_
102.
State Income Tax retur n by
insulated , f r on t and rear
2-4 lfc
an ac co untant . Phone 992 en tr ance, beautifully l and -----'--~·-.-----------..----6173 .
ONE AC.td::::, 6 rms and ba t h ,
sca ped , private park in g.
Rt . 3; Pom eroy . Ros_e H i ll.
special lo w re nt : The Hav en
608
~-----'-------'---~-----'--Dick Dav is property , t~o,~ll
Terrace ·Ap ts ., New Haven ,
'I N COME
Tax
Service ;·
basement ,
alum i num
w. VA . Phone (3 041 88.2MAIN
Federal or .s'1a1e t axes .
si d ing , .pJ;~nele d . $10,000 . Ca l l
2433.
2-15-91 (
Phpn e 992 722a o r see
POMEROY, O.
Oa k H il l 685 -65 76 evenings ;
------------ ~ --'-- .......
Wallace Ru ssel l , Br adbu r y .
Jackson '286 -JOOA days .
:BRICK - Live in t he 4 BR.
1-30 ·26 t c
2 5.30 tp
' '
apar-tment
and
rent
th
e
2
----·-----~-'--·
~-..,..-1912 750 HO N DA in exce llent
- -~--------:.~-~
3 BR HOMS , just finished
2 BUILDIN GS. 1 hOuse and
condition . $850 . Phone a ft er
furnish e d
apar tm e nt s .
r emodel i ng . Sa l em St : .
-1 p .{l'l .. 949 2344 .
ware room , t ear down .tor
Garden space. E xce llenf
R u tl a nd . Phon e 742 -23 06
lumber . Phone 99 2 3658 .
2-18 6tc
11eighborhood.
$?1,000.
alt er 4 p .m . or see Milo B .'
2 18 61c
t•;, LOTS - I BR , bath , full
Hut chi n son .
FIREWOOD , phone 9.19 -2089 .
HA·VE yOu r income taxe s
10·9-tfc
2-18 -12tc
basement, porches. { VVh y
CASH WITH
..... '
p r epare d by Si eve Cl eland
.
r
ent?
l
Just
$4,000
.
pay
ORDER
3 BE D RM . /lo use .in Mid
Racine . Phon e 9.i 9 2683 .
' GOO D m i xed hay , Also st ra w .
WALK TO SHOP - La rge 2
dlepor t, corner tol. New
Ph one f 614l 985 4278 or 661 2 6 12tc
bat h , s tory and ha lt , uti l ity
3338.
st ory frame, 4 BR, Ph
r oom , new car peli ng and
2-18-31p
baths, n ice new ki t chen ;
new roof , g a·rag e and work
basemen
t
,
co
al
or
gas
hea
t.
room , fru i t ce lla r . Close lo
19" PORT AB LE Zenith, B . &amp;
BABY SI TT IN G i n my ho me,
$8.500.
sc llool
and
sh opp in g .
w T .V ., excel lent con dition .
Monday
and
Thu r sday
$11.500 . Pll one 992 ·7624 .
550 . Ca ll 99'1 -7207 after 4 p .m .
1•1~ ACR ES - ' close i n . 4
evenings , I nfants to se ven .
1-27 -26 tc
2- 18 ·31p
P hone 992 -3255 ,
BR 1 bat h, ca rp eting.
-·-- ~. -·
-~ ----..,..·- -~
paneling, hot wa ter N . ·gas
1 30 -160 ACRE S loc ated in
- " - - ....... ------·~-'-----Long Bottom ; city wat er,
heat.
part
ba se m e nt ,
SE W I NG of a ll k inds, dresses
se pt ic tan k, good· space for
storage. $ 15. 000.
for a ll occasions , Sl acks.
C. BRA.0 FORD, A uct ioneer
Each initial and ·
tr aile rs . A l so. 1967 Chevy 3 ~
shir ts, newborh lay e tt es 1
S HILLY ACRES - Ni ce 3
Com plet e Se r \lice ' Phon e
1011
283
V
·8
engine,
auto
.
group of figure~ '
c ur l ainS. drapes . Phon e 992 949 -2487 or 949 -2000 Rac i ne
BR
hom e, ba th , niCe
tra n s mission, 4 ne w .t ires .
3035 a nd ask for Dorothy .
Ohio. Crill Brad fo~d .
'
.counts as one word .
$600 . Ph o ne (6 141 985 -.1 11 9.
k i t chen , ·N . gas heat, city
2-19 26tc
10
9-Jfc
2 18 -3tp
water , porche s, stor age
Be sure .· to count -·---- - - - - - - -·--- ----.--- -··--------bldg . $7,900.
WOULD li ke to dO your
name and address , if
AP T . SI ZED. elec . range ,
ha uling, la r ge or smal l.
RT. 143 - CLOSE IN - 2
retrigeralor , k i tchen table ,
used, and
phone OL D f ur niture , ice boxes ,
Phon e ( 6141 985 411 9 any
portabl e dryer , co t si ze bu-nk
ACRES - lovely building
time .
beds ,
ol d
wa l l
beds . Phon e 992 -6161.
br ass
number.
Including
site , utilit i es ava il ab l e.
telephones and parts , or
2 11 61 p
1- 18-3t c
$4,000.
prices for items of-----~-~--- - -comp lele house ho lds . Wr ite
M . D . Miller , Rt . 2,
McDA NIEL Cust om
But QUICK
EFF IC IENT
I F YOU need your g ra ~Je l
fered in your want --ad
Pomeroy , Oh io. Call 992
chering, WeSI Colum b ia , W .
ha ul ed, call 1614 ) 985 -.1 119
SERVICE·
ON
THE
SALE
will
increase
7 760 .
Va . We b ut c h er ca ttl e and
any ti m e.
OF YOUR PROPERTY .
h ogs .
$ 10
callle
10-i -74
2·18 ·12t p
response.
, ~-~ - ' '
LI ST WITH US, :rODAY.
slaught er ; S7 fo r hogs ; 12c
LA SH paid for a1 1 makes and
to r cu lt ing and wrapping .
I F INTERE STED i n building
992-2259 or 992-2568
models of mobile homes .
Sla t e and federa l I nspected ,
a new
home .
co n,ta c t
~--------;~~'.,'~c
Pho n e area code 6 14 423 Open 6 d ays . per week .
ROU SH CON STRUCTION ,
953 1.
Phone ( 304 ) 682 -3224 .
free estimates , Greg Roush ,
.1 . 13 -t·t c
99'1 -7583 .
1·30 -26k '
2·16 -12tc
MODERN. walnu t co n sole ,
---~·---~------·' ,.,_-_.
Virgil B., Sr., Broker
LUCt&lt;,E TT Farm Equipmen t ,
AM · FM rad io, 4 Sp eed
West
Wash i ngton
St . ,
cha
n
ger
.
Ba
l
ance
SI01
.
10
or
llOMechanic
Pomeroy. 0 .
':...'~':,:..
''
IN TE RE STI N G and pleasan t
Albany . Phon e (61-4) 698 ·3032
term s. Call 99 2-3965
Phene 992 -3325
1empora ry . ligh t office work
or 698 -7881.
2-19,1fc
1'' for· l.a dy . Ve r y good pay , no
2-18 -26tc:
---·
-·-----, ex p erience n ecess ary . A_l so, PLA IN GU IT AR and ca se, 4
- -- --------~--~
., ACRES - Off old 33.
' 11.fed lady Wi th Car for light
PAPER ha n ging , painting ,
1:)" tires , girls 2.1 " bike ,
Chester wa ter near . Good
v deltvery wo r k . Ap p l y to
paneling , e tc . Phone 949
wooder:) roc k er , elec. hot
"M'r·s•. Carter . 1 lo 3 p .m . p late , a l l k ind s of d ishes .
building sites. $1 0,000.00.
\.\... u'•.
2023 .
d Monday , Fe b . 23, DAV Ha l l.
MIDDLEPORT - 3 Brs ..
Cal l 742 -2078 .
12.1
Bunernut
A\lenue ,
-~2· 19 -3tc
bath , mod . kit., aluminum
Pom eroy.
IN TER lOR
and
eKteriOr
_:
'~'H.I
siding
,
long
fen
ced
yard
2- 18-4tc
-w-;i;nt;; ilh-N-;; s~Pe '
paint , No iob too small.
_,,.. -· -- ----'-'7 ~ --- -near schoo l s. On l y $12, 500.
Ta bl ets and Hy dreK Water
Phone 949 -2379 .
QUA L IFIED mine inspector ,
P i ll s a1
Dutton
D r ug,
HEARL Y NEW - 3 brs .,
2-18 -.flc
mus l have 6 -,:rs . ex p er i ence
, - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - :·
M i ddl e port and N els on
-~- - -- ~-- - --- ·---bath
,
wall
to
wa
ll
2 yr s. most have been un
Drug .
O ' DELL Alinement loca ted
car p e t ing . Ga r~ g e and
derground in Ohio . Contacl
2-17 -Jtp
behind
Rulland
Grade
•
Relatio n s ,
1 ~ 1nd us lr ial
large leve l lot a f Five
Sc h oo l . Tuneup , brakes ,
Per sonne l Dept .• 2323 w
1975 KAWASAK I 900. 2,450
Po ints. $25,500.
wheel balancing, a linemen!.
Fi fth Ave .• Co lu mbus, Ohio
mi les, $1,950 . Ex . co ndilion .
Phone 742 -2004
UKE NEW 3 · brs.. p;,
'
4310 4 or ca ll 1614 1 446 31 71 · Phone 742 ·2068 ·
11 -16 -lfc
baths
,
full
ba
sem
ent,
nat
.
2-17 .6tc

'

Television log for easy viewing

-----------,

2-19 -1 mo.

3 A ND 4 RM . furnished and
unfurn ished apts . Phone 992 543 4.
11 9-l fC

DICK TRACY

Auto Sales

lb. 2 speed rear a x le, foam seat , mirrors, clean cab.

or Month

11 - The Daily Sentinel, ~~eport-Porneroy, 0 ., Thlll'8day, Feb. 11, 1976

SI-IOULON'T Ti-lE'( 5E IN
A STRAIGHT LlNE ?

P11CII (Feb. 20-- 20)
You msy be the recipient o1
some unusual Information 10-

I

dtiy. It could Itt very neefly Into
some Plans you've formulated . .

®wtrro.!
Fab. 20, 117a

The urge to travel and to acquirt'knowledge from personal
exper i ence• may grow
stronger thil coming yur.
Begin to eave. Plan now to
satisfy your wanderlust.
INKWSPA.Pt:H I!:NT.:JIPKISI!: ASSN.I

�- . - ···-.•

~--

.......

• • •' ' ' "' "'~· tN• • · • Uhol-IIJJ•'' · • ., ,..,.,,,, ,, , • ' "'· , . , "

•••

Cost of gasoline, food, oil,
new cars fell during January
By LEONARD CURRY
WASffiNGTON (UP! )
Declining prices lor food,
gasoline, lt!el oil and new
cars held the cost of living to
an 0.4 per cent increase in
January,
the
Labor
Department reported today.
Tite postal rate Increase

THREE BIG DAYS FRIDAY, SATURDAY and MONDAY
Washinl(trm 's Birthday Sale

CHILDREN'S WEAR
Special Group
SPORTSWEAR· DRESSES. COATS·
SLEEPWE~R

Women's Daytime Dresses
Misses and Half Sizes stock is included

SAVE OVER 50%

SALE PRICES

Wilshin!(tofl 's Birthday Sale

Washin{.,rton 's Birthday Sale

WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR

JUNIOR/MISSES
JEANS

Special Group
FROM OUR WINTER STOCK

SAVE OVER 50%

PRE-WASHED DENIM
(DISOONnNUED BRAND)

ALL SALES FINAL
Washin!(ton 's Birthday Sale

JUNIOR SPORTSWEAR

SALE PRICES

PANTS • SKIRTS • TOPS •
NEW SPRING STYLES

Washin!(ton 's Birthday Sale

SALE PRICES

Mens- Boys -

PRETEEN SPORTSWEAR
Special Group

Junior Boys

TUBE SOCKS

Washin!(ton 's Birthday Sale

A good selection of white with color trim at
lop. Size; 9 to 15 - 7 to 11 and 6'12 to 9112.
·

3

YOUNG JUNIOR SIZES

SAVE .OVER 50%

PAIRS f229

Washi11!(ton 's Birthday Sale

Washiti!((Oit 's Birthday Sale

MEN'S DAVIS 40

SPRING COATS·

CUSHION SOLE
WORK SOCKS

MISSES AND JUNIOR SIZES

I

Entire

SAVE 20%

,. Fits size 10-10'12. 11-11'12 . 12-13. Solid color
grey or white. 2 pair in a package . For this_
Sale.

2

Washington's Birthw1y Sale

JUNIOR DRESSES
All spring styles included during
this sale- dresses, pantsuits, jump
suits, long dresses.

SAVE 20%
Washin!(ton 's Birthday Sale

COSTUME JEWELRY

Earrings - Pendants - Rings
Bracelets- Ropes- All new spring
stvles .

SAVE 20%

Washin!(ton 's Birthday Sale

WOMEN'S BELTS
Our entire stock is included

PAIRS . , ~9

Washin!(t(Jn 's · Bir~hday Sale

MEN'S WRANGLER

$14~

WESTERN
DENIM JACKETS
14 ounce den.im slim fitting
. authentic western style. Sizes 34 to
46.

•1o••
Washin!(ton 's Birthday Sale

MEN'S WRANGLER $1295

WashinKton 's Birthday Sale

FLARE LEG BLUE
DENIM JEANS

HANDBAGS

Sizes 29 to 42 waist - Lengths from
29 to 36. Extra durable 14 oz. plus
blue denim - pre shrunk.

SALE PRICES

Our entire stock of vinyls and
leathers is included in this sale.

SALE PRICES
Wa•shtinl(ton 's Birthday Sale

.WOMEN'S WINTER
SLEEPWEAR
BRUSHED TRICOT · CHALLIS · Fl.ANNEL
ROBES • GOWNS · PAJAMAS

SAVE OVER 50%

'1019
Was/;li11gton 's Birthday Sale

BOYS BLUE DENIM

Washin!(ton 's Birthday Sale

Includes our entire stock of boys denim
jeans - Regular sizes 8 to 18 - Slim sizes 8
to 18 and husk"y sizes. 14 ounce weight-10
ounce Weight and pre washed ·jeans. You
can really save Friday and Saturday.

SALE PRICES

CARPET MILL
ENDS

By Foxcroft Garza
Early American Floral Prints ·

FU~

RAT OR FIITED ........ :..sug
lWIN, RAT OR FIITED ...........s3.49
PILlOWCASES .............. )2.79 PAIR
Home Furnishings Annex

." .
•

"t#t'.

,I

./ '

,

·~ 'l

••

"INTERNATIONAL THINKING DAY" for Girl Scouts (picture at left) around the
world will be observed Sunday with a 2 to 4 p.m. program at the Middleport Elementary
School. Fifteen countries, the costumes, games and songs, and foods, will be presented by 18
participating troops.
Pomeroy JWlior Troop 160 will present India which will include an Indian dance. The
girls will wear native saris Rowns and are heinR instructed by Mrs, Rupa Goradta, who
came to the United States from India three years ago. She has provtded the sariS for the
scouts and will sing while they danre. In the dancin~ group, 1..-, xack row, are Bh~vana
Goradia, Shilpa Goradla, Deanna VanMeter, Angelia Curtis, and Patty Mkhael, asststant
leader; and front, Carolyn Casto, Patty Duffx, Tammy Capehart, and Aniy Sisson. Mrs.
Rupa Goradia is at the left of the dancers.

.•

t

Completely bound, rubber back.
Ideal for Bathrooms. 6'x9' and 7'x10'
·,izes.

REG.IJ9.95

SALE '28"

e

Mechanic Street Warehouse
Wa.~hi11!(ton 's

BATH .ENSEMBLES

Pomeroy, Middleport. Ohio
friday , Feb. 20, 1976

Birthday Sale

BATH TOWEL ............... SALE $1.99
HAND TOWEL ............... SALE $1.39
WASH CLOTH. ..... .. ........... . SALE 89'
Home F~rnishings Annex

BICENTENNIAL
THROW RUGS
. 100% NYLON PILE, 30"x46"
AMERICAN EAGLE, 1776-1976 PATIERN

SALE $7.99
Home Furnishings Annex

Washington 's -Rirthdar Sale

WINTUK YARN
.

.

REG. 51.49 4 Ol SKEIN

SALE '1 19
Washin!(tofl 's Birthday Sale
Reg, $79.95

EUREKA UPRIGHT SWEEPER
With $19.95 Attachments
SALE

'6995

36" LENGTH

SALE $1.99

Complete

I You Save $29.95)

Washinl(tofl 's Birthday Sale

WASH CLOTHS

Washington's Birthday Sale

METAL CABINETS

Dateline 1776

Wardrobes, Utility, China and Base
Cabinets.

SAVE 20%·
Mechanic Street Warehouse
Wa.~hington 's Birthday~ale

MICROWAVE
OVENS

4

FOR

•1 00

Washin!(ton's Birthday Sale

REG. $49~ .......... SALE $41f'
REG. $36~ .........SALE s29f'
REG.' $29~ ........... SALE s24f'
Mechanic Street Ware!'louse

Washington's Birthday Sale

Berkline and
Kroehler Chairs
SAVE UP TO '7000 ON
RECLINERS, SWIVEL ROCKERS

trustees.

OR OCCASIONAL CHAIRS.

YOUR
CHOICE
Washinl(ton 's Birthday' Sale

ONE GROUP OF
GENERAL ELECTRIC
.· BROIL·R·GRILL TABLE LAMPS
REGULAR PRICE '19.95 TO 26.95
39 99
SALE '12"
EASY TO li.SE -:- EASY TO CLEAN

REG. 159.98

1

SALE •

MAIN STORE, HOME FURNISHINGS ANNEX AND MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE OPEN FRIDAY 9:30 TO 8 PM, SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM, MONDAY, 9:30 TO 5 PM

ELBERFELD$· IN POMEROY

J

sharply.,"

first time in six months and

coupled with smaller declines
for beef and fresh vegetables
to contribute to the dip in food

restaurant meals rose 0.8 per
CiOn! for their biggest gains in
nearly a year . But these

11

to

prices.

increases were not enough

Am o n g
n o n .f o o d
commodities , there were

offset the declines in foods
that comprise the largest
part of th e average

prices
increases
£or
appliances, floor cover ings,

American's diet.

tobacco products, used cars,
clothing and grooming goods
suctJ a~ shampoos and
shaving cream. But falling

The re port came after
President
Fo1·d' s
top
economic advis er said
(Continued on page 10)

Fifteen Ce nts
Vol. 27 , No. 21X

.:\[

Malpractice problem solved by surgeon

::aul

~ no~ro~:• ~y::.rn:.~g

:\

~

insurance

::::.says malpractice insurance only
Knoll said reducing or eliminating ;:;,
::::encourages lawsUits aod raises patients' lawyers' contingency fee practices would ;:;:
:;:::bills. The 64-year-old surgeon canceled his end the problem of high-eost malpractice :;;.
:;:::malpractice cove~age two years ago and insurance. He said "greedy" tBwyers are :::
:::;:has continued his practice without it.
· suing because of the promise of high fees. :':
b: Fared with paying $25,000 a year for He recommended replacing malpractice ;::
i;':$300,000 coverage with a $20,000 deductible, · insurance paid by doctors with accident ,::: .
::::Knoll said be rather do without the insurance paid by patients..
;:;; ·
.....·
''So, every time you go to the hospital you ,:;:
:;:;.I.Jl$urance.
.
'ght . $20
[
'd t t"ns ·ance " ·.·
:::: "The people, the patients are the ones ml pay
or so or acct en
ut
• ;::
:;:: suffering," he said. "They shouldn't have to he said. '"I think the patient should buy ;:;:
;:;:pay more for.uMeeessary X -rays and tests insurance rather than th e doctor . ::;
:::: just so the doctor wiD have protection from Everytime I get on an airplane I pay $3 for ::;
;:;: being sued. The costs are bad enough $150,000 flight insurance. The patient could ':'
··
do the same thing."
:::;
Knoll graduated from medical school in :•:
[ aJJ;~~J~e practicing medicine to help
:::: patients, not bankrupt them to pay our 1937 and the suit two years ago was his first. ;:;:
:;:;insurance."
Sinell.he dropped insurance, he has had ·one :';i
Knoll dropped his insurance two years ago suit filed againt him. He said it involves two .::::
:;;:because the insurance company settled a groupsofdoctors.Hisgroupofthreehaveno .::;:
:;:;suit out "of court, without his knowledge, for insurance. 'fhe othel' group does.
:::.
·· 2
" It wiU be interesting to see which group ;:::
,\? ~·?t:i (lawyers) are not protecting me at the (plaintiff's) lawyer goes after," he said. ,,,
:i:i all," he sal&lt;). "I never got any defense. 1 "l guarantee you sir it will he the one with ;:::.
•i;' never met IllY lawyer in that case. Tbat was the money.
\

t

,:~\:~.~:~:~.,~:~.~••~:~:~~.~~,~~~,~~:~.,~:.~.~••:~:~::: :·: :: : : ~:~:.••~.::.:::.::,.~:.:~~.,~:;i:t:••~~:::~:;~:t:i,:::,::,,i,:&gt;

Reagan's proposals attacked by Ford

100% COTTON MADE IN USA
SALE

which dropped

enttne

at

By United Press International
COLUMBUS - PRESS FREEDOM IN THE Western ·
Hemisphere is waning and "we are losing ground" according
to Raymond E. Dix, publisher of the Wooster Daily Record and
president of the Inter-American Press AssociatiOn (!APA).
Dix warned a panel discussion at the 43rd Ohio Newspaper
Association convention Thursday to learn from press
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
charge
residential
censorship In Latin and Souith America because "what temporary restraining or~r. date for a hearing on Brown's to
additional
request
for
a
customers
for
the
gas.
happens down there will eventua Uy affect us." Dix was also a enjoining Coltunbia Gas of
preliminary
and
permanent
If
that
happens,
Brown
said
recipient of 8 Governor's Award at an evening banquet.
Ohio
from
charging fnjunclion against the · he would direct lawyers itl his
residential cus tomecs for
special litigation section to
WASHINGTON - BY A MARGIN OF THREE Senate emergency gas purchased for company. ·
Brown
said
Columbia
may
oppose the gas company's
votes, Congress has upheld President Ford's veto of a $6.2 . industrial and commericai
attempt to seek proper request in hearings before the
billion jobs blli along with an importBnt part of his economic use was obtained Thursday authorization from the PUOO
PUCO.
philosophy. The bill, which Democrats said would create by Ohio Attorney General
655,000 jobs, mostly throogh publk works projects, and which William J. Brown.
Brown said the gas
Ford had denounced as a ••selection year pork barrel" H!ld a
Franklin County Common
company
should only recover
"hoax," was defeated Thursday in ·a see-saw sequence of Pleas Court Judge William T.
LONDON, Feb. 20 - The money from the industrial
voting.
House of Commons voted
Gillie Issued the order, based
and corrunerieal customers.
First the House voted 319 to 96to override Ford's veto, 41 upon Brown's argument the
down a motion by Cha rles
more than the two-thirds needed to override. Hours later, the gas company does not have
James Fox calling fnr a
A spokesman for Columbia
Senate voted 63 to 35 in favor of an override, three votes short the authority to charge
formal inquiry " Into the
Gas said if the firm were
of the requirement.
private· customers ·for gas
causes of the msuccess of
prevented from charging
being used by industrial and
hls Majesty's Arms In . residential customers for the
COLUMBUS - THE AMERICAN PARTY'S AP bid to commerical customers.
North America and also
cost of the exira gas, it would
become Ohio's third major party is in ir.ouble, according to
The attorney general"
into the causes of ihc have to give credits on future
Secretary of State Ted W. Brown. Cleveland attorney Arthur argued the Public Utilities
defection of the people of biDs of !bose customers who
Cain and 14 others on Feb. 9 delivered 311,054 signatures to Commission · of Ohio has
the province of Que bec."
would have been already
Brown's offlre in an effoct to be the first party ewr "to get on . never given Columbia Gas ::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::: charged .
ihe b&amp;Uot by petition."
specific authorization to levy
To qualify for party status In Ohio, Cain and other AP the
charge
against
faithful mu.&gt;t have 30,072 valid signatures, equal to 1 per rent of residential customers.
the votes cast in the lal;t gubernatorial election. "They're in
Brown, as a representative
trouble," Brown said Thursday after analyzing reports from 59 of the state and also of
county boards fo elections that have completed validating individual consumers, ·said
signatures collected by AP members in which 24.92 pel. were the emergency gas was 'United Press International
New England's rail and ma:SS
White
House
press
invalid.
transit
systems.
purchased for industrial and
At least four Nunties - Pike, Jackson, Lawreneil and commerical customers and secretary Ron Nessen says
President Ford told an
Meigs counties - had 100 per cent va lidation rate but the that residential consumers-do Tuesday's primary in New overflow crowd of 6,000 in a
number of signatures co llected in the rural counties ranged not need they gas, will not use Hampshire is "'jus\ one of 31" high school gym at Keene,
from 1 to 4.
. it and t~~ey should, therefore, across the nation but that N.H., Thursday night that
isn't keeping his boss from Reagan had suggested
not have to pay for it.
LOS ANGELES - FOUR YEARS AFTER VISITING GiUie set March 2 as the making the Granite State the investing Social Security
site of · the · campaign's funds in the stock market and
China as president to reverse U. S. policy In one of the most
harshest attack on Ronald this would he "the best route
historic moves of hls administration, Richard Nixon today
Reagan.
begins his return to Peking as a private citizen, honored by the
to back-door socialism I ever
Hartenb ach fil' es
The rhetoric was heating heard."
Chinese and condemned at home.
up on the Democratic side,
Critics accused Nixon of playing Into the hands .of a
Ford had the crowd in
Chlneae plan to embarrass President Ford just before the New for reelection
too. I£ster Maddox, who was Keene cheering when he
Georgia's
lieutenant attacked
Hampshire election.
1
as
rhetoric
Robert C. Hartenbach, governor while Jimmy Reagan "s r• oposal to trim $90
WASillNGTON -A CONGRESSMAN CONTENDS that incumbent Meigs Coun ty Carter was its governor, sent billion from federal social
Blue Cross health care officials travel in luxury automobiles sheriff, Thursday filed his word he would be In programs.
bought with Medicare funds and the premiums of sulxicribers. petition of candidacy to run . Manchester as a "one-man
the
Republican truth squad to inform the
Rep. Pete Stark, 0-Calif., said the purchases of Cadillac for
cars and an airplane for the Ulle of Blue Cross executives were nomination to seek reelec- people of the truth" about
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Carter's record.
turned up by staff investigators for the House Ways and.Means lion.
Also. filing petitions of
Meanwhile, Pennsylvania
Chance of snow In north
oversight subcommittee. " It also appears from our
and rain in south Sunday.
Investigation that these vehicles are being used for personal candidacy with the county Gov. Milton Shapp said in
Fair, Monday and a chance
travel," Stark said, adding that such expenditures were "hard board of elections on Thurs- Tampa an expansion of the
of rain Tuesday. Highs
to justify coosidering the skyrocketing costs of health care." day were Virginia V. food stamp program is
Blazewicz, D., for Pomeroy needed to help the aged, and
from mid 30s to mid 40s
Sunday, warming to mid
COLUMBUS - HARRY R. HORVITZ, president an\1 third ward, central com- another Democratic bopefui,
40s to mid 50s by Tuesday.
publlaher of Horvlt! Newspapers, Valley -VIew, Ohio, was mittee, and Pauline Wolfe, Arizona Congressman Morris
Low In upper 20s and 30s.
elected president of the Ohio Newspaper Association today to D., for Letart Precinct Udall, said in Boston heavy
federal spending should go to :::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::
succeed Wun.tn A. Ott, president and publlsher, Akron central committee post.
Beacon Journal, who becomes chairman of the ONA board of

Home Furnishings Annex

~ale

Birthday

SALE $2.99

prices fo~ new cars, gasoline,
motor 01!, fuel otl and coal
nearly offset these nses.
Th e co n s ume r ' s
pocketb~k was hlt hardest
f~r serVJces wt th unuslJll lly
h1gh tncreases for auto
w sur an ce ,
m e dt c al
insurance. postage stamps,
hospital and doctors' bills.
Within the food category,
baked goods increased for the

•

Spreading costs
of gas held up

84" width - Dot pattern in pink,
yellow, orange or blue.
'

81" LENGTH

sector fell 0.2 per cent from
December . Non -food
commodities
cars,
appliances, clothing
increased only 0.2 per cent lor
the lowest rise in more than a
yea r. But the services
category increased 1.1 per
cent for its most suhstantial
gain sineil at least 1974.
The Labor Department
said.pork and poultry prires,

:~;:·:::·::;:::: ::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::: :::::::::::::::::j:::::::: : ::: ::: :::::::::;:;: ;:: : : :! :::::::: : ::::;:;:;:::::::;:::;: ;:;:;:;: ;:; : ::: :;:;:;: ;:;:;: ;: : :;:;: ;: ;: ;:;: ;:::;:·:: :::: : : : ;:; : ;:;: ;:;:; : ;:::::;:::::: : :::~ :

'

Wa.~hin!(ton 's

•

DACRON CURTAINS

Choose from 2 jacquards in eight
colors.

Price Index compared with
an average monthly increase
of 0.6 per cent lor the final
three months of 1975. Retail
prices in January were 6.6
per cent higher than a year
ago.
The CPI consists of three
broad categories. The food

Girls, in saris, will give Indian program

/ • i.

/

NO-IRON SHEETS
AND PILLOWCASES

Home Frunishings Annex

WESTERN JEANS

.

Washington's Birthday Sale

and boosts in the coSt of
medical care and household
services- with the exception
of rent- accounted for most
of the upward pressure in the
first Inflation report of 1976,
the department said.
It said the January rise of
0.4 per cent in the Constuner

'·

Meigs, Washington, agree

Elected ONA vire president was A. Mooroe Courtright,
publiaher, The Public Opinion, Westerville, with Charles
Glover ,- president, Dayton Newspapers, Inc., named as ONA .
treaaurer. Also named to continue were Paul R. Gingher of
Meigs County and the
Coltunbus as general courisel and William J . Oertel of Federal government got District of the . Corps of
Engineers.
Worthlnston as executive director and secretary.
together lor future com.
The purpose of the memo is
pllance 0! stream bank work to assure cooperation betWASfUNGTON - THE OH!O VOTE BY WHICH the following a meeting Thurs·
ween the Meigs Soil and
~ouae Thursday, on a 319 to 98 roD call, voted to override
day of about 40 persons at a Water Conservation District
: ~('resident Ford's veto of a $6.2 biUlon Public Works..Job BiD. puxlic meeting at the Farm-:Voting to owrride were 263 Democrats and 56 Republicans. ers Bank Building Thurs- ,nd the Corps in planning and
carrying out projects and
"Voting against were 18 Democrats and 82 Republicans.
day night to hear the Army programs for the con·
Ohio Democrats for: Ashley, Carney, Hays, Mottl, Crops of Engineers explain
·Seiberling, Jllf!les Stanton, Stokes, Yanik. Republlcans for : the new "'SecUon 404" federal servation, wise util ization
and efficient development of
Whalen.
·
regulations. The section the land, water and related
, Republicans agalnsl : Ashbrook, Brown, Clancy, .Devine, pertains to persons owning
Gradlson, Guyer, Harsha, Kindness, Latta, MiUer, Mosher, property along streams or resources in Meigs County.
According to Col. Sam
Regula, J . William Stanton, Wylie.
planning any kind of work in Britten, represe ntin g the
or along streams in reference Corps, the Federal Water
· Newsboy may be almost extinct
to the dumping or dredging of Pollution
Contr ol Act
.. COLUMBUS Home increasing nWJIUel" ut worl&lt;- fill material.
amendments of 1972 gave the
· Following the meeting the Corps the responsibility to
l!elivery of dally newspapers men's compensation claims
Meigs
Soil and Water Con- regulate the disposal of
may soon become loo ex· filed bv newsboy carriers.
servation
District initiated dredged or fill material.
,pensive ·for newspapers to Full insurance coverage the
signing
of
the Section 404 of the Act extends
maintain, David CanUon, a with $50,000 a year premiums
memorandtun
of
agreement
the Corps• authority to inapeclallst in employer- - of the home delivery
:employe insurance, told the carriers, said CanUon, could with the Corps. This is the clude waters which have a
.13rd annual Ohio Newspaper force newspapers to use only first memo of agreement normal five cubic feet per
Assoclallon convention adult carriers wilh large signed between the two second flow rate. Col. Britten
Thursday.
delivery routes, or go to agencies within the bound· said this amoun t of water
CanU ·IIl said there is an vending maching circulation . a ri es of the l-ht1 1 tin~ton would be about knee deep and

'·

.,

just wide enough to jtunp
across.
How .eVer,

minor

bulkheading and fills less
than 500 feet in length and 500
cubic yards in volume will not
require individual permits
provided Cilrtain conditions
can be met. There are also
other
exemp ti ons
for
emergency repairs of dams ,
dikes , etc.
A representative of the
Corps will determine if a
permit is needed or not by
viewing the site and planned
alterations. Col. Britten
stBted that the cost of permits
will he $10 for .iObs including
less than 2200 cu. yards and
$100 for jobs over that
amount. The processing
period for the issuaneil of a
permit CO)lld range from two
and a half months to one
year. ·
11 is the hope of the Meigs
t Continued on page 10)

Reagan was scheduled to
arrive In New Hampshire for
his own "last hurrah" before
the primary shortly after
Ford leaves this afternoon.
By the weekend he will have
spent 15 days in New
Hampshire to. Ford's four.
Carter and Maddox were
elected on separate tickets in
Georgia and frequently were
at odds, and Maddox will
campaign against him in New
Hampshire. Carter is considered to he locked in a threeway battle in New Hampaliire
with Udall and Sen. Birch
Bayh of Indiana.
Another candidate, Sargent
Shriver, told 3SO supporters

at a Manchester raUy his points from his all-time low of
canvassers reported 15 per . 30 per cent last November .
cent of the state's Democrats However, it sa id Ford
supporting him and another 11 Carmot be viewed as a
16 per cent leaning his way. strong incumbent trying to
However, Shriver earlier told win an -election in his own
a reporter a fourth-plare right.''
finish would be "fabulous."
- J acqueline Kennedy
A fifth Democrat, former Onassis endorsed Shriver for
Oklahoma Sen. Fred Harris, president, saying he " cares ·
has begun a three-day more about people than about
camper trip through the politics" and can lead the
heavily Democratic southern nation
"out
of
its
part of New Hampshire.
bewildennent, cynicism and
In other developments :
despair." Shriver's wife is a
- The Harris Survey sister of the !at~ John F .
reported 36 per cent of the Kennedy.
voters in a recent poi! gave
President Ford a good job ·
perfurmaneil rating - up six Four bowlers in

Board complies
in S&amp;tshine law
RACINE - The Southern the Language Fair at Ohio
Local Board of Education Universlty on Feb. 28, gave
Wednesday night adopted a permissi on to Parents
policy to assure compliance Without Partners (POP ) to
use the Syracuse Elementary
with the Sunshine Law .
Jane Wagner, clerk. said School on Feb. 29 and March
.local newspapers will be 28, accepted a vido tape
notified in advance of any tnaching from the Athletic
regular or special meeting of Boosters, approved 19 high
the board and any person or sc hool students participating
group may receive" advance in the Ohio Test of Scholastic
notice of uny regular or Achievement, accepted the
special meeting of the board resignation Gordon Proffitt
by providing a sei£-addressed as custodian at Portland
ElementBry, effective today,
envelope.
In other business the board and hired Deibert Ours to
approved Title IX grievance replace him.·
Attending were Ja ck
procedure in regard to sex
Bostick
, president ; Robert
discrimination and ret,Jined
Sayre,
Denny Evans, Roger
services or the legal firm of
Squires , Sanders
ana Adams , and Dallis Hili, board
De mp sey, Cleveland , members; Bobby Ord ,
primarily for the upcoming superintendent; Mar il y
bond issue for Vog-Ag Powell, clerk-eustodian ; Jim
Adams, Jennings Beegle, Jim
facilities.
The boa rd appointed Mrs. · Wi ckline, Bill Baer , and
Carla Shuler senior play Larry Wolfe, principals in the
director, employed Robertta district. The next mee ting of
Maiden as substitute teacher, the board will bk' March 9.
approved the Racine PTO
using the high school kitchen
COFCTOMEET
and cafeteria for
a
The
Pomeroy Chamber of
smorgasbo rd on Apri l 4,
Commerce
wiii meet at the
approved bus transportati on
Meigs
Inn
Monday at noon .
for French students to attend

'76 Midas stakes
League

bowlers

Pomer oy .Bowling

at
Lan es

competed Jan . 26-Feb. 1 in
the Midas National Bowling
!£ague Championship to be
amon g the fi ve na tional
winners in the third annual

-pins-ove r-av e ra ge tour ~
nament sponsored by Midas
and ioical Midas dealers .
Qualifiers at the Pomeroy
Lanes and the ir 3~game pin s~
oVer-ave rage seores) arc :

Judy Pocklington (1 20 ): Ron
Lor rison (122 ) ; Barbara
Lawrence ( 11 3"); Burton
Smith I i09 ) and Henry ·
Clatwor thy &amp; Dave Dobbins,
Sr . (104 ).

, IT'S APRIL 7th .
Gallipolis to be
conducted by tile lntersU!te
Commerce Commission on
the Chesapeake and Ohio
Railroad's proposed aban donment of the l.AJgan to
Pomeroy . via Gallipolis
trackage will be on April 7 as
repor ted Thursday , not on
April I as the hea d capti on
A hearing in

said .

AID COM E~
Slate Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office

reported

wcJfare assistanee in the

amount of $13,644,1ei.07 in
Ohio's 88 counties in January.
Meigs County r ece iv ed
$14,243.67 of the total.

l

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