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                  <text>10 - The Datly Sentinel , Mtddleport-Pornero). 0 . Tuesday, Feb. 24, l97h

Mine workers union wants
to amend black lung bill
By ANDREW GALLAGHER
CHARLESTON , W Va
( UPI ) - Dissaltstfled wtth a
"black IWlg" btU pendmg 1n
Congress, tlle Uruted Mme
Workers Wlton is marshalling
its forces for an all-out push
to amend tl
And , looking ahead to the
1977 coal
talks w1th
operators, UMW Pres1dent
Arnold MtUer dtsclosed at a
news conference Monday his
union is planmn• a fall
convention, probabl y m
Cincmnati
"I have supported and w11l
continue to support any black

lung bills Which I thmk Will
benefit substantial numbers
of our members," Mtller told
reporters "I don't like the
btll bemg reported out on the
fl oor and we 'll tr; to amend
Li "

The legtslation ts to amve
on the House floor March 2,
and Mtller srud hts union
would present a number of

amendments
The UMW has wantro a btll
which cames an automattc
assumptton that a miner had
the cnpphng breath-stealmg
disease after 15 years of
underground servtce

The leg•slahon before Con-

Chinese
{Contmuoo from page l l
SerVIce agents and Chinese
bodyguards as well as
reporters and photographers,
Ntxon stopped frequently,
particularly when he spottoo
a chtld

gress carnes a 30-year automatic assumption prov1s1on

for soft-&lt;!oal mmers and 25
years for hard-&lt;!oal workers.
The benefits would be patd by
the industry through a tax on
coal

M11Ier sa1d the UMW \\ ants
prOVISIOns m the btll to treat
soft and hard coal miners
ahke , a better defmed way

He told one man, ''I hope

you wtll come to the Urutoo
States some day. I wtll greet
you then ."
1
'How old are you?" he
asked. The man rephoo he
was 30
"You have plenty of tune,"

he srud Then movmg hts
arms m a sweepmg gesture
be satd, "You're all young.
You all have time to vtstt the
United States. I'm sure you
will some day."
While touring the htstortca I
mus eum, a JOVIal Ntxon

qmpped about Secretary of
State Henry Ktssmger
Wang Yen-&lt;!hm, director of
China's
Bureau
of
Archeologtcal Research,
explamed the exhtbits to
Nixon and his wife, Pat.
When he showoo Ntxon a
sample of the first Chinese
writing characters, datmg
back about 5,000 years, he
smd, " You w11l notice some of

them look like letters of your
alphabet "
Yes," Ntxon satd, ''I see.
There's an '0," a 'C' and an
'S.'"
11

"There's alSo a 'K', Wang

satd, powtmg to one of the
largest and most promment
characters
"That's how far' Kissmger
goes back," NIXon satd of hts
former adVIser
Foreign Mintster Chtao
Kuanhua , who speaks perfect
English,
roared
with
laughter

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE
Tues ., Feb. 24

Fr1 thru Sun
Feb 27 29
Walt D1sney's

BAMBI
Show starts 7 00 p m.

loa ]Udgmg clamJS for wtdows
of mmers kiUed m mtrung ac-

cidents, and elunmation of

the re-readmg of x-rays if the
ort~tnal doctor was a radiologist
The union leadership is
sharply split over the bla ck
lun g 1ssue. Mtller has
accusal UMW V1ce President
Mtke 'l'rbovtch of attempting
to sabotage the unwn's
efforts to pass the bill.
Mtller satd Trbovich encouraged mmers rrom

Veterans Mcmorral Hospital
ADMITTED Henry
Phelp s. Ractne , T nno t~y
Lawrence, MmersvillP. Jo
Ann
Ward ,
Pomeroy;
Truneda Bra ~ g. Vtnton ;
Nelhe Roush , New Marshfield ; Ahce Johnston, Middle port ,
Ava
Gtlk ey,
Harrtsonv1tte ; Sarah Congo ,
Portland
DISCHARGED - Dorothy
Brewer, Raymond Hartley.
Mamte Buchanan , Eum ce
Nutter , Edna Morgan, Kenny
Lunsford, Steven Ohlinger

Holzer Medical Cente r
I Discharges, Feb. 23)
northern West V1rgm1a this
Susan Adam s, Peggy
sprmg to 1gnore calls for a Ch tld ers , Jenny Clark,
UMW black lung rally 1n Charlotte Coon , Trevert
Washmgton .
Cnder, Barbara Dunn , R1iey
Trbovtch
denied Edmonds , Margaret Ftnsabotagmg the rally. He satd mcum, Vernon Grumbling,
the btll, as the union envtstons Margaret Hardtn , Edgar
tt, is unrealistic and doesn't
stand a chance for passage. Hawks, Pamela Holley, Mrs.
M1ller sa1d the unwn wtll Jimmy Jenktns and son,
Marcus Johnson, Michael
hold another convention Melissa Marcum,
Johnson,
the second smce his electton
McDamel
, Carla McJohn
- thts September, probably
Farlah~ Mrs Gary Mm n s
in Cmcmna ti. The last
meetmg was in Pittsburgh 10 and son, Jo Patterson,
Kenneth Reed, Mary R1ffie ,
1973
The convention ts bemg Donna Sand s, Verna Shafer ,

E vans opens COmternal
OS\i!U tlOn, de al With
problems and
prepare collective bargaining
restaurant positions
ca lled to revtse the umon's

number 21 Racine
Bob Evans, farm er ,
Social
re.sta ur a nteur , h as anBob Evans Restaurant m a
Events
s au s agem a ke r

HOSPITAL NEWS

and

Leo

Sw is her ,

Geor~e

Thomas, Annabelle Ttllon
James

Vthtoe,

Wtlm c:

Wetmann, Helen Wtlliams
Jeffrey Wtsecup
Births, Feb 23)
Mr and Mrs. Mtchael J
Grueser, daughter, Rutland;
Mr. and Mrs Randy E
Halley, son, Crown C1ly; Mr
and Mrs Gary L Scarrett,
son, Wellston

Mayer

PL EASANT VALLE\'
DISCHARGES - Mary
Harns. Ma son: Mrs George
Holley , Gall1polts; Leland
Walter s, Pmn t Pleasant ;
Bncte Sergent, Henderson ;

three-slate area The newest

mtersecbon of Route 125 and
1-275 on Ctncmhatl 's east

Hobson

John W Clark, dec to Alice
M Cla t k, Flo; d Clark,
Mtldred Milhorn , Mabel
Wtckltne , Paul P. ugen e Cla rk ,
AH for trans , Sulton ·R,,cme

Side, opened February 2.1
Th1s lS the fourth Bob
Evan s Restaurant 10 the
greater Cmcmnatt area.
In addttton to lhetr 21
res tau rant s In

operatiOn

through Ohio, mlnd•anapolts,
Ind1ana and m Florence,

Kentucky, Bob Evans Farms
has two others curren tly
under constructiOn They are

located 10 Dayton and Elyna,
Ohto Evans 10d1cated that
both should be open by early
Summer
POSTTOMEE1
RUTLAND - Plans for the
b1centenmal

observance

m

July at Rutland wtll be made
at a meehng to be held at the
ru tl and Amer tca n Leg ton
Post home, 7 30 p m thts
evemng Anyone tn teres ted 1n
he)ptng IS IOVIted
PROGR~M NOTED
ROCK SPRINGS - Area
studcn Is of h1gh school and
college age and thc1r parents
ate mv1ted to attend an
Eur opean Summer stud; tour
at Metgs H1gh Sc hool m room
202 Monday, March I, at 7

p m

for additiOn al mfm matJOn persons may call

992-2158

Carpenter Personals

Ry Mrs. FrancHi Murris

Mrs Berm ce The1ss ha s
returned home from Holzer

Medical Center
Approximately ftfty persons enJoyed a fellows1hp 10
lhe
ch ur ch
basement
fo ll ow~ng prayer meeting at
th e Ftrs t Bapt1st Church
Wednesday evenmg, Feb 11
Weeke11d guests of Rev

and Mrs Don Walker were
Mr
and
Mr s
Larry
Gov. throp and children, Mr
and Mrs Don .Jr Wi:il ker ;:md

Michelle, Delber t Walk e1,
Norma Woods, Cat ol and
Mary Gaw throp, all of
Swnmersvtlle, W Va. , and
Mrs Walker 's mother and
brother. Mrs Gay Cogar and
Harold Cogar of D1x1e, W Va
Mr and Mrs Leon Jordan,
Mon 1ca and Matt of
Columbus vtstted Mr and
Mrs Dw1gh t Oltver 1n
Pomeroy and Mr and Mrs
Clarence Bradford, Racme,
over the weeke nd

Mr and Mrs Ben Pe trel
and son , T1 evor , and Mrs

Addle Petrel spent th e
at
holtday
weekend

Mr and Mrs Bob Coates of IHs v.1fe , Jete , ftve daughters,
Albany Route 2 vtst ted her Mrs
LOIS Poe, Suulh
{'oqsms, Mr and Mrs Reed Char les ton, W Va
Mrs
Jeffers
Mvrlc Rie hm dson. Albany ,
Mrs Elba McKmght and Mrs
Eulah
Cheva l1 er ,
Sharo n , Co lumbu s , we r e Charles lon, W Va , Mrs
ove1mght guests uf her Wed1th rr al&lt;•y , Balon Rouge.
La und Mrs Jewell Mon Is.
and Mrs Harold C1llogly and Culumbus Al so survtvml-( a re
attended the fun eral o( he. l!l g1&lt;Jnlicluldren, 4 grea Lmothfr-m-law Mrs Elizabeth gl unclchii dren, 9 s1sters and 4
McKmght m Pomer oy
hruth ers fllileral services

Mr
a nd Mrs
Leun
Woodrum, McArthur , spent
SWlday afl ernoon wtth her
mother, Murl Galaway.
The February meetmg of
the '{emple Umted MethodiSI
Women ,.as held at the hom e
of Mrs Robe rt Ma tt ox

\\ ere held at th e Mt Unwn
Church "1 lh Rev. Ccctl Cox
DfflcJatmg. Burt al was m

Alhen s

County

Mem ory

Gardens by B1gonv-Jordan

runeral Home, Albany
Mr and M1 s Ed Woods and
Angela, Colwrr bus, brought

her gr!l ndm oth cr , Zelia
Perry , from Umve 1s 1ty
wCjs rn ade Devotion s were Hospi tal tn the home uf a son ,
led by Leah Crabtree asststed V1ctor Perry M1 s Pen y.
by Rose Mary Mtller, Betty who underwent sur gery to
Mattox, Lucy Thoma s and ha ve a pacemaker tn slalled ,
P.l1zabeth J ordan Guests, 15 l onvalesctng satisfacPayment of the P en swrr
Cl usa de mstallmcnt for 1976

Debbie and Laura Miller.
asststed the hostess m servmg refreshments m keep mg

lonly.
Columbus Grange No 24'15
met on Fr1 day ev emng wttll

and Mt s Robert Feuerbach
1 Ruth Ann Petrel)
Bobby .Joe Adams and
daughter, Melame , were

tendance

SWlday dmner guests or hiS
parents. Mr and Mrs .Jack
Adams at L€tart Falls
Weekend guests of Mr and
Mrs. Blythe Th etss were Mr
and Mrs Vern on Harrrson
and famtl y of South Carolina
and Mrs George Wallace and
daughter of Columbus
Mr and Mrs Chrtste
Po\\ ell spent the holtd ay

Mr and Mrs Reed Jeffers
called un Rev and Mrs Seth
Huntl ey 1n Vtnton Rev
Huntley " as pastor at Carpenter Bapt1st Church a few

Harn sonvtlle on Feb

years ago
Many 1 elatlves and fne nds
tncludmg those rrum West
VIrgmta, LouJ stana and

nesday mght baton classes at

weekend w1th their gra ndson,

Mr and Mrs Carl Rubmsnn

m Norfolk, Va

[nsura nce Program

The ~ham ber also IS urging
c1ltzens to wn te to them on
the ISSUe
Morr ov. extended h1s

thanks to Caroly n Thomas for
a JOb well done as secretary
Thts ts Mrs Thomas' last
week to work for th e
cham ber
Attending were Morr ow,
Mayor Andrews , Wendell
Hoover, V1rg11 Teaford, Btll
Voung, George Hobstetter,
Ralph Graves, Don Thomas,
Bob J acobs, Ca rsey, Crow,
Mrs Thomas, Beulah Jones
and Kahe Crow

brothel and sJste r· m-law, Mr

wtlh the valen ltn e theme
The Angelatre Slll gtng
group led spec1al serv ices at
rhe Temple Umted Method1st
Church on Sunday eventn g A
large crowd was Ill at-

Mornstown , 'lenn with Mr

government telling you what

to do, and felt tt was
Albert Htll Jr , Dmts H1 llto nd1cul ous He added that no
Albert Htll Jr , Dons H1 ll, 75 federal money can be used tf
acr·e. Chester
property 1s locatoo tn the
1'resste Hendrtcks, extrx , flood plato. He urged the
l.ulher V Caldwell, dec'd, to chamber to wrtte to Cong
P.veretl Paul Smti h, Sharon Mtller and Rep. Ron James m
Kay Sm1th, I.ot , Sali sbw-y- regard to the Nat19nal Flood

noun ced opemng of the 21st

restaurant, located at the

let ter would be directed to
Cong Mtller and Rep. Ron
James.
Morr ow named Ja ck
Carsey general chairman of
the Regatta committee with
Ja ck Kerr , Btll Grueser,
Ralph Graves and Wendell

Mrs Rtchard McCartney ,
Potnt Pleasant, Robert
Baker, Pomt Pleasant , Mrs .
Clovis Doerffer , West
Col urn bia , Arthur McCoy, Hoover also on the cum~
Henderson: Mrs Willie Cook, m1ttee
Morrow sta ted that the
Pomeroy; Mrs Fred Gaul,
Regatta
would be a challenge
Po111t Pleasant ; Albert
thts
year
w1th the bndge
Mtddleton, Pornt Pleasant;
bemg
closed
He stated that
Mrs Randy Stone, daughter ,
he
had
contacted
the Juntor
West Columbta ; Orvtlle Eilts ,
Chamber
of
Commerce
P01nt Pleasant, Mrs John
IJayceest to take charge of
Zembry, Potnt Pleasant.
BIRTH - A son to Mr. and the parade However, Btll
Mrs Roy Bennett, Cot- Young , a Jaycee member,
tageville, and a son to Mr sa1d h1s group d1d not want
and Mrs Harold Vreeland of the re sponstbtltty of the
parade The parade th1s year
Galhpolis, Feb 24
Will be tn keepmg wtth the
B•centenmal theme
Crow brought up the rules
governt ng persons who butld
10 flood plato areas He satd 1f
a bustoess put up a new
bwldmg m a flood area tt
~ ould have to be 15feet above
the Sidewalk level He felt
that th1s 1s an example of the

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Co lumbus were called here
by the trag1c death of Van
Buzzard. Mr Buzzard , wh o
had hved tn th1s commulllly
for 29 years, 1s survtved by

homemade valentmes as a
spcc1al part of the litera ry
pr ogr am planned by the
lecturer , Arthur Crabtree .
Plans were announ ced to help
with servtn g refreshments at
lh e ntuah s t1c con test at

Detente fine, but

&lt;t 'on•rnuc&lt;l from page I)
Morrow md1ca lcd th a t a

DENVER I UP!) - The
Professional Rodeo Cowboy
Assoctallor sa1d Mond ay
Howard Hunter clunbed to
the top of the standings m the

MOSCOW 4UP[l -Sa viol leader Leonid Brelllllev
today haDed detente u u addevemeat af "everluiJac
slpHiellllce," but warned the Ualllld ~teo 1101 to ad
tough with Moscow.
Referring 1o auempts "to put preuare oa oar
home JII)Ilcy" by me11111 of a U. S. trade bill, Btellmev
said : " We Clluld not put up with tbat aad we are DOt
\ going to put up with \bat. 'lbls Ia not the Jaacw!ge to with us."
"We are planning to Improve our relatiolll with the
United States," be aald, "but It must be doae otrldly..,
tbe basis of our ag....,meoto 1111d treatlts."
Brezbnev's remart• came In a keynote 1peeeb at
tbe opening of the 2Stb Commlllllot Party Colll"ll that
will chart Kremlin policy lor tbe110KI five yean.
Brellmev also &amp;aid tbe Commllllllt ltalt1 woold
continue to strengthen the Warsaw mllltary pact,
attacked Peking's " Inn tic effort&amp; to torpedo detellle,"
and de&lt;lared "the changes toward detente ud more
; solid peace are probably eopeclaUy langlble In
. Europe.''

News •. in Briefs
1Contmuoo from page I l
Cuba, $61.6 millton, Egypt, $58 millton ; PakiStan, $35 million,
and Iran $35 mtUion.

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT FORD has ordered a
stronger effort by the government to crack down on illegal
drug trafftckers, which he termed "merchants of tragooy and
death."
Peter E. Bensmger was sworn in Monday as chief of the
Justice Department's Drug Enforcement Administration.
Ford told him, "We've got to move ahead more effectively and
faster in this problem of hard drugs " rord sald the hard drug
problem has become "more acute" on the Mexican border and
m the na\lon 's larger cities.
BOSTON - LOCUSTS , TERMITES AND OTHER msects
were proposed today as a htgh-protein food tllat man may need
to exploit m the future as growmg populations compete for
conventional foods.
Dr Dean F. Gamble, deputy director of the National
Agrtculture Ubrary ln Washington, said insects virtuaUy have
been •gnored as potential foods because of a psychological
blo ck on the part of the people mvestigating diets. "Western
culture vtrlually forbtds eating msects tllough tlley are a
potential source of nutrition of great importance ," Gamble
said tn a paper at the closmg day of a week-long meeting of the
Amencan Association for the Advancement of Sctence

PLANT STRUCK
YOUNGSTOWN
, Oh1o
saddle bronc r1dmg event
1
UPil
Local
734
of the
dunn g tlle wt~eke nd, earrung
$2,311 , fo r a total of $5,380 10 ln te rnattonal Unton of
Electncal Workers struck tl)e
wmmngs this year
General
Eleclrtc Co. lamp
"I want to go all the way to
the Nat10nal Ftnals thts year, plant here early today About
and eventuall y wm a BOO workers walked off the
cham ptonshtp," he sa td. JOb 1n a dispute over
' That 's my ulltmate goal " unresolved gnevances.
Th e PHCA sa td other Workers compla10ed that the
w1nners at San Antomo were com pany swt khes workers
.Joe Alexander, $2,014, m from Jlrb to job without
bareba ck rtdmg; Don Ga), r egard
to
thetr
job
$3,344 bull nding; and .John classJftcatJons
Edmondson , $2,:l93 tn calf
ropmg
CLOTHING OrFERED
Free
clothin g day wtll be
LOCAL TEMPS
held at the Salvation Army ,
The
temperature
tn
downtown Pomeroy at 11 Pomeroy, Thursday , Feb 26,
from 10 a.m. unttl noon All
a m Tuesday was 57 degrees
area restden ts in need or
under sunny sk1es
clothmg are welcome . •

Royal Oak Park hav e been
moved to Chester Elemen·
tary School due to resurfactog of the floor m the

we'll give you
special loan
service when you need it!
Whateve r your part rc ular ftnanc•al problems,

SORORITY TO MEET
Jean Werry Will be cohostess when Preceptor
Chapter of Beta Stgma Pht
Sororlty meets at 7.45 p m.
Thursday at the home of Ann
Rupe

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET

recreatwn room at the park

satd mstructor Judy Rtggs
today. Class It me remams the
same , 6 to 9 p m

REVOLUTIONARY
VAWES inWilirlpool
WASHERS and DRYERS

THE INN PLACE
WEDNESDAY NIGHT

SPECIAL

ness. personal. home Installment or automot rve loan

**********************~~
:
"The Friendly
i. .,

*

Bank Since 1906 ''

&lt;&gt;.

~***********************~

";/

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

HILO TEMPS
NEW YORK {UP!) - The
h1ghest temperature reported
Monday to the Nallonal
Weather Servtce, excludmg
Ala ska and Hawan, was 80
degrees at Gila Bend, Al'tz
Today 's low was 14 degrees
below zero at Gunmson, Colo
V1sit Our Salad Bar

TRY OUR

POLISH

Lasagna
Vegetable
Rolls-Coffee-Tea or Mrlk •

SAUSAGE

•
2 95
plu s tax

The Tn County 's Most

SANDWICH

I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
DEPOSITS INSURED TO •40,0C..O

CROW'S
STEAK HOUSE
Pomeroy, Ohio

E KCtting Night Spot

THE MEIGS INN

Model LOA 5700
• 2 washing and 2 sp1n speeds
• 4 cycles NORMAL, KNIT,
PERMT PRESS and GENTLE
• 4 wash l nnse water temps
o 3 loa d-siZe water-savmg
selector
• Easy-to-clean filter
• Heavy-d uty V2 hp mo tor
• Cool -down care for
f?ermt Press fabncs
• Po r ce l am -ena m~led top
and lrd
• SURGILATOR ' agrtator
• Available m decorato r colors
• Bac -Pak Laund ry In form ation Center

Model LDE 5700
• Spec•al cool-down care for
Permanent Press and Kmt
fabrics
, • 3 drymg temperature
selections

•
•
•
•
•
•

TUMBLE PRESS' control
E•tra large l1nt screen
Large 5.9 cu ft. drying drum
Push-to-start button
Automatic door shut off
Bak-Pak Laundry lnformat•on Center

WAREHOUSE-MAIN STORE- AND
HOME FURNISHINGS ANNEX
Open Mon.through Tllun 9:30a.m. to 5 p.m.
Friday 9:30a.m. Ia 1 p.m.
Saturday 9:)0 a.m. to 5 p.l'll.

Phone 992-362 9
Pomeroy, Ohio

e

•

at

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
I

One student sta!OO that a lel!cher told him that he was not
to open his mouth as tf he weregomg to whiSper.
The board was asked about the rule of not gotng to lockers :
due to vandalism, or passing of drugs
It was pointed out that the school has a drug program
underway One parent wonderro if drugs were in the school.
Adams replioo that they did not have any first hand knowledge
tllere are drugs "We have no proof, JUSt rumors, " he said.
Several persons insistoo the rules were punishment. The
board expJained over and over that it was not punishment.
Robert Sayre, board member, observed tllat the students
that obey aren 'I being punished.
Evans pointed out that tllere IS no rule listed where a
student 1s bemg punishoo, whtch brought a _loud applause.
There was objection to limiting students going to locker room
when necessary
It was pomted out that there wtll be exceptions The board
stated that students would be allowoo to go to Uleir lockers four
times a day . In tlle mornmg, before and after lunch and at the
close of the school day, When teachers were asked why they
were writing down names of students gomg to lockers, it was
explamoo and for !bose violatmg the rules.
_
It was pomted out that it would be sunpler if the teachers
patrolloo tbe halls and ptckoo out the problems.
Bostick commented that if you have an orderly line it JS
much easter to hnd out who is breakmg the laws.
On the day of the walkout , approxunately 100 students
participated, Adams told the students followmg the assembly
to return to tlleir classes. When he went back mto the gym
some of the students were still there He informed them they
Contmued on page 14

Bosttck answered by saying they were not gomg to change
the rules. "We were elected to run the school as we saw lit," he
said .
Denny Evans, board member, replioo that if the smoking
rules contmue to be broken smoking will be abolishoo.
Ramona Yonker spoke up and addro that no teacher is
narrow mindoo, addmg tllat when the kids pay taxes then they
can run the school.
One man - unidentified - agreoo witll the rules but statal
tllat attention should be given to upcoming graduation and
addoo that he thought it was a poor time to start imposing rules
when school isahnost over for the year. "You have thts turnout
because of the turmml caused by the rules," he warnoo
Evans satd people approach him about what IS going on m
the school. The problems have been discussed many times at
board meetmgs. The board decided what they expected and
informed' Ord and Adams, Evans said.
One parent stated that she was disappoin!OO in all of the
board members. Site sa id that if they had taken a little tune to
tllink ahout the matter before hand and contactoo parents
before httting the children wtth the crackdown they would not
have bad a walk out.
This also was followed by applause.
Several tunes two or more persons trtoo to voice thetr
opinions at the same time, forcingOrd to warn the crowd about
conduct. He managed to keep the meeting orderly.
Bostick commented that teachers are evaluated on
discipline and morals. He also statal that the supermtendent
will also be evaluated
,
Someone mentioned there are problems at Syracuse
Elementary.

en tine

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 27, No. 221

Ford just edges
Reagan in test
•

Quality Print Shop in Middleport on Monday, March l
These beenses plus truck
licenses may also be purchased at the regtstrar's
offtee at Gtbbs Grocery tn
Pomeroy.

you'll f1nd that you're someo ne very spec ral
to us when you drsc uss your need for. a busi-

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, Feb. 25, 1976

vote when the student counctl and members of the student
body met wtth the board to ask thattl be retnstated He said the
non-Qilokers backoo tlle smokers to have the smoking
reinstated.
Bostick went on to explain, m regard to orderly class
changes, that it is so noisy at the schooltt is unposstble to hear
durmg class changes There is destruction 1n restrooms, too
much smokmg outside the smokmg area and too much
llttertng
"We owe you as taxpayers all we can give," Bostick said
A parent a Mr Deeter asked about the word, "March,"
while gotng to class and not bemg allowed to communicate m
any way. He addoo, "Don't force them too hard as Uus wtll
ca!ISI' things to be worse, and a loud applause followed .
Jun Adams, princtpal, volunteeroo to answer the questton.
Adams said they had been misinformed. At ftrst the board
did say "march," but this was cha nged following the last
basketball game on Friday rught when the board changoo it to
"orderly fashion ."
Askoo about not talking, Adams replied that they (the
teachers) were told that tf someone were caught whispertng,
no punishment would be administeroo.
Bostick spoke up and said if they had been told they could
whisper the students would see how loud a whisper could get.
A student, Dreman Jenkins, said the rules presented to
everyone Tuesday evemng were different from tllose
presen!OO earlier. She satd they were told that if they were not
back in class the first pertnd they would be suspended The
students wanted the rules changed or abolished so they left the
school. She also comrnentoo that the students felt tbey should
not have to serve detentions.

regtslrar's offiCe at the

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

In g1am uf Columbus call ed

••• so

By Katie Crow
RACINE - The SOutllern Local DistriCt School Board
Tuesday mght confronted an estunated 400 parents, teachers
and students, some of them unhappy over board policy and two
bours later had stood firm on every pomt The meeting was
called to discuss rules laid down by tlle board last Wednesday.
Bobby Ord, supermtendent, was moderator and the board
members were a panel.
Ord welcomoo the large crowd made up of parents,
teachers and students.
Ord statal m prellnunary remarks "this IS the proper way
to discuss the problems at hand, to brmg them out in the open,
and have them diScuSsed."
Ord explamed the board and faculty were trying to
maintain discipline in the school to protect school property
and main tam the right kind of discipline in the classroom. He
t also observoo that a meeting "such as this" COI!ld get out of
hand.
lie adVIsed ground rules that persons could express
thetr opimons, then listen to replies
The specific problems at hand to be discussed were
students going to classes in an orderly fashion, abuse of the
smoking area, and the times a student goes to hts locker which
is relata! to orderly beheavior, Ord said.
In regard to other complamts, Ord suggestoo that persons
call or attend the board meetings
Ord sta!OO that the meeting would last two hours. Persons
were pernuttoo to ask the board as a whole or any board
member a question.
Jack Bosttck, president of the board, stated that the
smoking area was taken away but was reinstated by a 3 to 2

LICENSES ON SALE
Whtle 1976 passenger car
registration will not get
underway unhl Apnl, license
plates for tra1lers, house
vehides and motorcycles can
be purchased at the

1~

CLASS CHANGED
CHESTER - The Wed·

School ·board holds firm on strict discipline

COLUMBUS - THE OHIO ENVIRONMENTAL
ProtectiOn Agency will investtga te the possibility that a cancer
producmg agent which prunarUy comes from burnmg coal
ma y be polluting the air of Ohio's steel producing areas, an
EPA olftctal satd Monday
The agent, known as BAP - Ben:w a Pyrene - was found
m Johnstown , Pa , and Pennsylvama environmental offtctals
satd 11 came from the Bethlehem Steel plant in that city.

Mr .md Mrs Tum O'Neil
and fcumly an d Mr s Evelyn

on I he Hobet t l.ce fam ily on
Salw da) .
Mary Roush vlstted wtth
Hali te Roush on Sa turday
Mr and M1 s George Ctrcle
of New Haven called on Mary
Cu de SWlday
Mr and Mrs Wtlham
Perry of Hollan d, Ohto spent
Sunday ntgh t wtth Ma1·y
Ctrclc

'

••••

By Uoltoo Press International
WASHINGTON - THE FORD ADMINISTRATION
Tuesday demoo a claim by Rabbt Baruch Korff that Richard
M. Nixon went to Ch10a at the urging of the State Department.
Korff told a news conference Nixon was "stiU a stck man" and
went to Pekmg for the good of the country.
"!don't think he wanted to go," said Korff, who has been
Nixon's chief legal fundraiser. "His trip is for the good of the
country and it was a great sacrifice." He said the State
Department wantoo Nixon to scout the current political
upheaval In Chma.
But White Honse Press Secretary Ron Nessen, asked about
Korff's remarks, said "Thts administration was oot involvoo
many way m the tnp," and Secretary of Slate Henry Kiss10ger
told a news conference 10 Costa Rica he did not even know of
the trtp until an hour before it was announced and did not
urge him to go
WASHINGTON - SECRETARY OF STATE Henry A
Kissinger has returnro home from his six-nation Latin
American tour and now begms preparmg for a week of
appearances before congressional committees. Kissinger
arrival at Andrews Atr Force Base late Tuesday night and is
scheduled. to appear today before a subconumttee of the House
International Alfatrs Commtttee on matters relating to the
State Department budget.
Kisalnger endro hts nine-day tour wttll a stop 10
Guatemala where he saw some of the damage caused by the
earthquakes that have claunoo nearly 23,000 lives. He
promised Guatemala mcreased U. S. atd for relief and
reconstruction and aMounced that a U S. Army battalion wtll
go to Guatemala in the next lew days to help rebuild a several
link in that Central American country 's main highway to the
Atlantic Ocean.

TAKE BOW WITH MCCOMAS - Charles Stobart,
varsity assistantfootball coach under B Schombechler at
the University of Mtchigan, fourth left, was the featured
speaker Tuesday evemng at Me1gs High School for the
annual Rotary Athletic Banquet. From left are Golf Coach
Bob Ohver, Meigs Head Football Coach and Athlettc
Director Charles Chancey, Lee McComas (holding
plaque ), Stobart, Ron Logan, head basketball coach, and
Atty. Bernard Fultz, master of ceremomes McComas,
rettrmg this year as board clerk, was bonored for 10 yea rs
of exemplary serVIce to ooucallon by the Metgs Local
Board See account on page 3 - J1mHamm ptcture.

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
CONCORD, N.H (UPI) President Ford narrowly defeated Ronald Reagan early
today and J unmy Carter
whtpped
four
other
Democrats m a New
Hampshtre pnmary that
gave no one an open road to
tlle 1976 presidential nominations.
The Republican contest
was the closest in the
primary's history and lookoo
for some tune lilie a replay of
the state's no-decision 1974
Senate election. But Ford
fmally selzoo and held a
SD)all lead in the fmal hours
of unofftctal vote-counting
today. Carter Ia! from the
start and now becomes the
man to catch in the crowded
Democratic race.
Ford nearly swept the
boards in separate balloting
for selection of 21 national
convention delegates, but he
scored no knockout over tlle
former California governor,
his only challenger More
tike!y, , tt was only the first
skirnush of the grinunest
battle for
the
GOP
prestdential nomination since
the Taft-Eisenhower struggle

of 1952.
lot of hard work - It's going
Carter, the former Georgia to be a very quick decision. I
governor . who pledged to think (I'll win) on the first
wage war on Washington roo ballot."
tape and bureaucratic waste,
In separate ballotr.ng for
openoo a wtde early lead and national convention delegates
whipped runner-up Rep. in Amertca's bicentenmAI
Morris Udall, [).Ariz., Sen. prestdential year, the
Bll'ch Bayh, D-lnd., former indicated results witll threeSen. Fred Harrts of quarters of the votes counted
Oklahoma and Sargent were 19 for Ford and 2 for
Shriver, tlle party's 1972 vice Reagan; 13 for Carter and
presidential candidate.
four for Udall.
At 5:15 a.m. ES'I:, with 92
Carter got four delegates at
per cent of the vote countoo, the
MISSISSippi
state
the Republican tally was Democratic convention last
Ford 53,297 - 51 per cent; weekend, for a total of 17 to
Reagan 51,829 - 49 per cent. date Gov. George Wallace
On the Democratic stde, got nine and Shrtver three at
wtth 88 per cent, Carter had the same conventwn No
30 per cent with 21,866 votes; other GOP nattonal conUdall 24 per cent and 17,515; venlton delegates have been
Bayh 16 per cent and 11,991, chosell'
HarriS II per cent and 8,389,
The real shakeout awatts
and Shriver 9 per cent and future prtmaries - notably
6,283
Massachusetts, Flortda and
Leadmg a handful of Illmms m the next three
Democr11hC write-in efforts, weeks and New York m the
an unauthorized campaign first week of Apnl when
for Sen. Hubert Humphrey, maJor contenders such as
D-MIIBI , got 5 per cent With Wallace and Jackson wtll be
3,999 votes.
m action.
Carter, to Chants of "We're
Before Ford took the lead
No. 1, we're No. 1!" said, " I bnefly after m1dnight,
beheve when we get to the Reaean told suooorters "We
convention in July - after a
Continued on page 14

Pauy made into dependent child says witness
By DONALD B. THACKREY
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Ftfty-&lt;~even days in a closet
turned Patrtcta Hearst into a
completely dependent
"child" eager to please her
ktdnapers ,
says
a
psychiatrist testifym~ in her
defense.
Dr . Louis West, a
bramwashmg expert from
UCLA, satd the newspaper
heiress ' first words after
shooting up a Los Angeles
sporting goods store to rescue
two of her captors were, "Did
I do it right?"
"She was hke a child
perfornung for parents,'' &amp;1td
West , who spent the day on
the stand Tuesday and was
still undergomg crossexammation when Mtss
Hearst's hank robbery trial
recessed until today.
He said the 22-year-old
defendant had suffered a
"personality regresston to
chlldishness "
and
a

MOSCOW - DESPITE THE SUPERPOWER split over
strategic arms, the Middle East and Angola , Soviet leader
Leorud Brezhnev has told the United States his country shU
wants to ease tensions. Appearmg Itt and much the man in
charge, the 69-year-old Brezhnev told the opening session of
the 25th Conununist Party Congress Tuesday detente ts of
"everlasting significance."
"The turn for the better 10 our relations with the Unital
States, the largest power of the capitalist world, has of course
been decisive ln rooucing the danger of soother world war and
consolidating peace," he said. Brezhnev's live-hour, 20-mlnute
Two thefts of tools and
speech to the 5,000 appla~ding party elite also attackal
Washington for not agreemg to ban two new types of dnllmg su ppli es were
American weapons in exchange for hans on undisclosoo Soviet reported to Shet 1ff Robert C
Harten bach 's
Department
counterparts.
Western analysts satd none of Brezhnev's speech, today.
Kenneth Eilts and l..ewts
deliveroo in tllree so.sslons, represented a shift in position for
the SoVIet government. They called the tone of the address Morrts of Elhs and Morns
Drtlllng Co., Rt . 2, Albany ,
generally mild.
drtllmg on lhe Dan Stanley
COLUMBUS-"WE'RE BACK tn the ratding business," property, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
srmlro Gov. James A Rhodes. And with that, "Rbodes said between Tuesday at 6
Raiders," brought back to active service from the governor 's p.m. and Wednesday at B
first-administration drive for jobs, flew into De!rolt Tuesday, a.m. 15 gallons of gas and a
cornered 45 retail and manufacturing executtves and klckoo new batlerv wilh terlllumls to
a rtg were iaken and a lock on
Continued on page 14

"childlike dependency upon
her captors," especially
Symbtonese Uberation Army
leader Donald " Cinque"
DeFreeze
West, who studied Korean
War
prtsoners
who
l'Ollaboratoo with the enemy,
said Miss Hearst was "a
classtc example of coercive
persuasion" who regressed
because of a constant fear of
death, prolonged loss of
vtsion
from
being
blindfolded, and "humiliating
and
pamful
sexual
molestation "
He satd she sttll has a

David Bancroft,
West
admittoo he had written Miss
Hearst's parents while she
was m captivity telling them
not to despair because she
might be "restored to health"
if she was returnoo to them

Two fined by
Mayor Andrews

Two defendanL• were fined
and three forfetted hoods in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews Tuesday
· 'tralUilatic neurosts, '' whlch
mght.
eventually may be curro
Mtke Mulhns, Galhpolis,
smce she has shown was fmed $350 and costs and
constderable unprovement in was g1ven a 90 day jatl senrecent weeks. Her IQ, which tence on each of two bad
dropped 20 points during her check charges and Carl E
capttvity, has returned to Its Moore, Racine, was fmed $50
ortginallevel of about 130, he and costs for dtsorderly
said.
conduct
Under cross-exarrunation
Forfeiting bonds were
by prosecutmg attorney Ronald Vance, Pomeroy, and
Albert Dixon, Albany, $38.70
each, posted for speedmg,
and Shtrley P Wtne, Copen,
W. Va . $50 for dnvtng wtth
a suspended license, and $30,
for passmg on a double yellow
a gas cap a nd wmg wmdow on hne
a truck were drunaged
.James Htll, Rt 2, Ractne,
........ •' '•''•'•'•''•' •' ' ·. ·::::·.:· •:,·,·:····
reported that a Black and
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Dec ker grtnder was taken
Friday through Sunday,
from a tool shed between 5·30
lair
Friday and Saturday
a 111 and 12 30 p m on the
and
a chance of rain on
2llh
Sunday.
Highs Frtday will
Steve Kock who had
he In the 40s north lo the 50s
reported earher that 12 of hts
south
and by Sunday In the
cnws were mi ssmg, nollfted
40s north to ncar 60
upper
the shertff that the cows have
south.
Lo" s "ill he In the
been found 'They were not
30s
to
the
mid 40s.
slnlen · just strayed away

Thefts reported

alive.
"Yes," he said. "I wrote to
them as one parent to
another. I got no reply and I
expected none."
The psychiatrist also satd
that during 23 hours of
questioning Miss Hearst, she
gave htm vtrtually no
information a bout her
activities during her last year
underground. She took the 5th
Amendment 42 times Monday
to keep from testifying about
.:·.:. :..: •.·· :· :· ;. : ·:: ·:· :· ::· :' ': •, ::: •. . ··.
LEVIES FAIL
WARREN, Ohio UPI Three additional school
levies were defeated
Tuesday In two Trumbull
County school districts.
Voters In the Hubbard
School District turned
down, 1,338-1,581, a 4.5 mlll
levy and voters in the
Champion School District
rejected a 4 mill levy and a
2 mill levy. The first
Champion levy
was
deleale'd by a 560-1,4ll vote
and the second lost by a
624-1,341 margin.
All three leyles are expected to he resubmitted to
voters in June.

. '•'•

COMEANDGETIT!
A ftsh fry and bake sale will
be held by the Mtddleport
F..e Dept at the station
bwlding beginmng at II a.m.
Satw-day
WCAL TEMPS
The
temperature
m
downtown Pomeroy at II
a m Wedn esday was 62
dcgr ees under sunny skies
\II

tllat period.
Before beginning hiS questtOnmg, Bancroft sought to
have West's testimony tossed
out on grounds psychiatric
fmdings were not admissible
10 the case because the bank
robbery indictment does not
go mto intent.
U.S. DJStrict Court Judge
Oliver Carter turnoo down
the malton, saymg Miss
Hearst's entire defense was
basoo on the question of
duress.
Defense attorney F. Lee
Bailey asked West, the fll'st of
three psychiatrists he
planned to call, about Miss
Hearst's reaction when she
was
first
questioned
concerning the robbery, for
whioh she is on trial.
11
After the usual tears and
sulking, her first words were
that 1t was 'like a dream' and
she couldn't believe she had
done it - 11 was as if
everythmg had happenoo to a
different person other than
herself," the psychlatrtst
satd

BERNARD FULTZ
Bernard V. Fullz, R., Meigs
County Prosecuting At·
torney, Tuesday !Ued his
petition of candidacy to run
for
the
Republican
nomination to be a candidate
for the prosecutor's post at
the June primary ele.tlon.
Fultz was the only candidate
to file with the hoard of
elections TuesdaY.
'

Winner
showing
delight
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford today
expressed delight with his
narrow New Hampshire
prunary victory over Ronald
Reagan and told atdes it was
" a great spri~tgboard"
toward election m November,
his chief spokesman satd.
Prestdential Press
Secretary Ron Nessen said
Ford arose before dawn,
heard the results on the radio
and made an unscheduled
appearance at an 8 a.m.
White House staff meeting
where he praised atdes with
"congratulations for your
maximum effort and your
staWlch coolness."
"If we win a couple mm
(primaries), and I think w•.
will, we will be ready for too
finals- and I think we will
win there too," Nessen
quoted Ford. He sald the
President called New
Hampshire
"a
great
springboard ."
Nessen also no too that Ford
was not only ahead in the
New Hampshire popular vote
but "he 's leading wtth 19 out
of 21 delegates" to the GOP
convention.

" He (Reagan ) gave 1t
ever yth ing he had and
couldn't win it," said Nessen,
who told reporters that Ford-told his Whtte House chief of
staff "he was dellghtro."
Ford planned to make his
ftrst public statement on the
prtmary in an address to
some 200 members of the
··: : .. :''•' .· •. :··········, =··=··· ·: ·· -:··::·:: Inland
Press
Daily
Association late m the
afternoon The association
represents
small
and
MONTitEAL, ~' eb.
stze
newspapers.
medtwn
!5 Slow-moving
In a mood of elation,
lien . Wooster notified
Nessen told reporters Ford
Washington that he
arose about &gt;:30 a.m.-his
usual hour- turnoo on the
had !ailed to receive
radio
and heard the latest
ar·tillery to attack
tabula
lion
of prunary votes.
l,!uebcc but promised

Dateline: 1776

that he intended to
join
Henedict
.\rnold 's
besieging
1111 ,.,. in a few days.
'••' •' •'''

NOW YOU KNOW
In the last 3,500 year there
have been only 230 years of
peace throughout the world.

'•

�2- The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesdav. Feb.~ . 1976

TOM TIEDE

Editorial comTnent,
.
opinion, feafures

Company stores,
•
game zn
town

By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - Few
things in the long struggle
t!&gt;...::....:&gt;c_....:::&gt;-&lt;o-oo-o...:;.....::""::&gt;&lt;::&gt;-&lt;:::&gt;-&lt;o-.o-oo-o&gt;&lt;:""""'""":::&gt;-&lt;o-o-o-..:::;.....::""r:J between labor and industry
have 1rntaled the working

Wrong! even for the right reasons
"Saving the Queen," a first novel by journalist, editor and eloquent conservative
spokesman William L. Buckley, deals with the leaking of atom bomb s;ocrets to the Russians
bock in the 1~ .
At one point, the hero, a CIA agent, muses that "We (the good guys ) might in secure
conscience lie and steal in order to secure the escape of human beings from mlSer; and death ;
Stalin has no right to lie and steal in order to bring misery and death to others ."
The operative word, it should be noted, is "might." And as long as it is left in the realm of
fiction, it is the age-&lt;Jld philosophical question of the enil justifying the means restated in
entertaining form.
Citing the passage in an adulatory view, however, columnisl Holmes Alexander :;ays that
"here Buckley has Jtiven us the right retort to the moral shock we feel when the CIA ts caught
doing what is wrong and ill~gal . Alter aU, motives do crunl, There's a difference between
actions taken to enslave people and actions taken to provide and guard thetr (reedom.••
Unfortunately, there is little in the recent revelations about the CIA to suggest that
anything the intelligence agency has been caught doing has enhanced anybody's freedom.
But even accepting the argument that evil may sometimes legitimately be used to serve a
higber good -that the United States might, for example, "in se&lt;.-ure conscience" plot the
assassinations of leaders of foreign countries with whom we are not at war - the great
difficulty with this kind of moral pretentiousness is that anybody can employ it, including a
dedicated Conununlst.
Buckley's hero's statement, or Holme's reading of it, could just as easily justify the
excesses of antiwar activists in the 1960s who, in their own eyes at least, burned draft board
office files or stole papers from the Pentagon "in secure conscience."
.
If Americans should ever learn to overcome their moral shock at wrong and illegal actions.
by whomever committed and from whatever motives, we will have gone a long way towards
becoming undistinguishable from our enemies.
.

Lawyer, defend thyself
Doctors, as everyone who reads the newspapers knows, have become the favorite targel&lt;
of malpractice suits. The resulting skyrocketmg of medical malpractice insurance has reached
the proportions of a national crisis.
But now lawyers, who have had something to do with making Americans possibly the most
lawsult.prone people in the world, are experiencing a "quiet crisis" of their own, reports the
Wall Street Journal.
It Ia a quiet crisis because legal malpractice is still pretty much swaddled in secrecy , with
few cases ever seeing the light of a courtroom. Most are discreetly settled by insurers.
Today, however, people are suing their attorneys almost twice as often as they were only a
few years ago, and the cost of settlement has also roughly doubled. Like the doctors, the
la!"Yers are beginning to worry that Insurers may be driven out of the legal malpractice
market altogether.
Reasons for this development, besides an apparent decline in public esteem for or awe of
professionals in general, include the fact that recent court rulings have weakened some of the
obstacles to legal malpractice suits.
Courts have ruled, for example, that the statute of limitations on legal malpractice starts
from the time tbe malpractice Is discovered by tbe client. Thus an attorney who, say, botched a
will or contract through an error 20 years ago can be sued, even as a surgeon who left a sponge
inside a patient's abdomen can be held accountable long after the event.
Lawyers should file the above under "H"- for hoist with their own petard.

Bill for vandalism is .h igh
UPJ Edueatlea Editor

The bill for vandalism;

arson and theft in the nation's
schools runs over $600 mlllion
a year now . .
. The schools, creeping along
on dollars shriveled by infia·
lion, must divert some funds
to
improved
security
systems,
to repairing
damage and such.
At the National Congress of
Parents and Teachers in
Chicago school violence and
vandalism is a priority

concern.

In testimony before the

U.S. Senate Subcommittee to
Investigate Juvenile
DeUnquency, Mrs. Walter G.
Kimmel, PTA president,
talked
about
curbing
violence.
The seveiHIIIllion-member
Pl'Awants the government to
help schools to;
-Determine the causes of
violence and vandalism.
-Develop and
fund
alternate programs for
students who do not seem to
benefit from the regular
school setting.
- Provide assistance to
schools for teacher training
and necessary security
measures.
Mrs. Kimmel has some
possible explanations for the
rapid Increase in school vio-

lence over the last ten years.
To wit:
- Many students don't want
to lie in school. It must be
made possible for students to
"stop out" of school without
being labeled failures.
Compulsory school
attendance and child labor
laws must be revised to
accomplish this.
- In some big cities, school
personnel say violence in
schools follows a pattern of
what the television programs
have shown the week before.
The students are given excellent instruction In how to
create disturbance and
destruction both of hwnan
beings and property.
-The use or pushing of
drugs or alcohol in school
often is a part of the violence
or vandalism that follows.
-The need for money to
buy drugs often IS a part of
the robbery or shakedown
operations in schools.
-Why would students have
any reason not to believe that
"might makes rlglit" when
they see adults stoning buses
or striking illegally. What is
the real difference between
that and youngsters setting
fire or breaking windows
because they don't like
school, the principal or the
teachers'

Berrys World

nation," Mrs. Kinunel sa1d.
wr'he PTA," she said, "has

long believed in the home as
the basic element of society.
We still do.
"We believe that if children
are to achieve at a higher
level, be better educated in
good health habits, develop
better emotional health, tbe
family umt must be
strengthened !''
Dr. Wilson C. Riles,
superintendent of public
instruction in California,
believes that this must begin
in the early grades and
parents must be a part of the
program.
Last year, more than
100,000 parents worked in tbe
Galifornia schools in the early
cHildhood educa lion program
as volunteers under a
teacher's supervision.
"Not only does this reduce
the adult-pupil ratio, it helps
parents to be better parents,''
Mrs. Kimmel said.
"We must begin in early
childhood to prepare young
people to be better parents.
"If we wait until high
school, many have had their
first or second child. Last
year more than 250,000 girls,
17 or under, gave birth to
babies, many to their second
child.
''Lastyear, one out of three
mothers
or preschool
children were in single parent
homes.

The Daily Sentinel ·
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
Exec;. E:d.

ROBEI!T HOEFLICH

City EditOr
,Published do!!ily exc'ept
Saturday by The Ohio
Valley PublishlnQ Com .

•

01916tlyNEA, I~~
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I,

Court

111

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i

the stores became in many
In stan ces devices for his

economic bondage . American
history is sluffed wtlh the
ironies of men who have been
bo th employes of, and
customers for , their bosses ,

wtth guess who enjoying the
profits of the arrangements .
All of this is, of course,
supposed to be behind us . The
modern working stiff is no

fool. For one thing, he knows
that if all he does with hlS
company pay is turn it over to
his company store he is going
nowhere· rapidly Besides ,
today there are alternative

ways of falling into debt. The
company
stores
look
ridi culous in the age of
shopping plazas, and the only
real compehhon between the

company luncheonette and
McDonald's is that both serve
rubber on sesame seed buns.
Still, there are in the nation
obscure . pockets which
company stores conhnue to

ptck. One reportedly is 10 the
tucked-away coal regton of
the Virginia panhandle .
There four locals of the
United Mine Workers have
filed sui l against the Westmoreland Coal Co. 10 protest
against the practices and
philosophy of the company 's
stores .
The miners have apparently been gruntbmling
abo ut lhe Westmoreland
situation smce the days when
coal cooked the eggs of the
nahon , but the arguments
have only recently been
formalized . Attorney
Strother Smtlh says al least
one Westmoreland store, the
Andover Shopping Center
near Appalachia, Va.,
operates as if rl was still
acceptable "for men to owe
thelr souls to the company

The long range solution to
violence and vandalism in the
schools hinges on "a change
of attitude in the people of the

~any ,

man more than the fearsome
implica tions of the company
store . Originated os tensibly
for the laborer's convenience,

store." Smtlh says he knows
no other labor issue 10 the
area as sensitive as this one .
L1ke voices from the
medieval past of the coal
bLL&lt;iiness ) rnmers say

tbe

Andover store uses tts credit
and its serv1ces as an extension of company hostility
towards them Roger Barker.
for example, a 28-year-&lt;Jld
who 1rratates the company
wi lh endless safety complaints, says that he was fired
for his mtlitancy one time and
within minutes his company

An esttmated 250 sport fans
and Charles Stobart assistant
varsity football coach at the
University of Michigan ,
honored Meigs High School
football, basketball and golf
athletes Tuesday evening at
the annual Middleport·
Pomeroy Rotary Club
Football Banquet.
A native of Racine, Stobart
persuaded his family to move
to Middleport at the end of his
elementary school years "so
he could play football ."
There he came under the
coaching of the late Forest
Bachtel to whom he gave
tribute Tuesday night as one
of the "truly greatest men I

store credit was revoked. He
had a paycheck pending from
which the store could deduct
his charges, "but all they
wanted to do was hurl me as
much as they could, in this
case by denymg me
grocertes.''
There is no argument that

the Andover company store
can , when it wishes, hurt its

mining customers. I,awyer
Smith says the store has been
known to garnishee full
paychecks of miners who
have gotten behind m their
bills. " We say this is in
violation of federal anligarnishment laws; stores
have the right to garnishee
for collection, but not excessively, the law says a man
has to have part of his pay to
live on ."
Beyond this, Smith adds,

have ever known."

Stobart became a 135 lb.

before his retirement from

coaching because of his
health (lateral sclerosis 1.
Weighmg under 160 lbs.,
Stobarl was at Ohio

the Andover company store

may be in vtolahon of federal
anlttrusl rules. He says one
way the store eliminates
competition is by forcing
some miners to trade with it
even though they may prefer
not to. Barker, again, is an
example. Smith says that
when Barker was hurl on the
job once his fellows
authorized the company to
take $600 from their com.
"Just make sure you always elect
bined pay for his benefit. The
company did, but then would
not give the money directly to
Barker, and instead made
hun use it up in credtl at the
company store.
DETROIT (UP!) - A gradual and steady return to
Wtlh all of the charges report that domestic new car stronger
automotive
against the Andover com- sales jumped 21 per cent in markets," said Chrysler
pany store, not the least of midFebruary
was Chairman John Riccardo and
which is its prices are so overshadowed Tuesday by a President Eugene A. Cafiero,
much as 20 to 30 per cent Chrysler Corp. financial .the two men who assumed top
htgher than al other markets, report revealing the deepest leadership posts in an
many miners agree it 1s not losses in automotive· industry executive changeover last
fall.
so abusive as its predecessors history.
With the exception of the
of decades ago. One miner
Pointing up Chrysler's
. remembers trading at a Feb. 11·20 record in 1973, this comeback, the finn said its
company store whose clerks year's mid-February sales midFebruary sales were up
handed out premarked were the highest of the 14 per cent over last year,
ballots for UMW electwns, decade and continued the
and culthe aredil of those not industry's accelerating
accepting. "Those were the recovery from a twoyear
days," adds amother old slump. Chrysler was hardest
timer, "when the best part of hit among the U.S. auto
striking was to socmer or later eompanles.
But even with the report
watch the company store go
that it lost a record $~.5
up in yellow names."
And yet, the llmes around million In 1975 and an even
Appalachia haven't changed higher $341 million in the six
overly much at lhal. A story consecutive quarters, in
in the UMW Journal of some which it reported deficits,
months ago reported that there we,re some bright notes
abuses by the Andover in the Chrysler report.
The No. 3 automaker said
company store still fire
terrtble tempers in the mines. Its $27.7 million fourthA black man named John quarter loss would have been
Bogus, for example, got so a higher-thanexpected $35
mad at a clerk's racml slur million profit if it hadn't
that he drew a 25 automatic incurred a one-time $55
and chased the fellow into the mlllion loss in the sale of its
streets. Bogus was fired for money~osing nonautomotive
it : he left with no remorse . · Airtemp heating and air
conditioning division. Iri the
final quarter of 1974, Chrysler
lost a record $73.5 million.
Most
analysts
had
predicted a turnaround $18
million profit in the final
three months. Chrysler's top
two executives predicted that
stringent cost-aJtting, whlch
Included massive layoffs and
the shedding of moneylosing
disclosed.
operations, would put the No.
"I don't think Mr. NIXon's 3 auto company In the black
visit to China did anything," in the first three months of
Goldwater said in an this year.
interview on ABC's "Good
"Alter the extraordinary
Morning America" show . problems of 1975, we expect a
"And if he wants to do this
country a favor, he might
stay over there.
what he did at the time he did
He's violating the law. Tbe it."
Logan Act prohibits any Assessing the impact of
American and that's all he Nixon's trip on the American
is- be's an ex-President and voter, Goldwater said, "I
a private citizen-the Logsn don't think it hurt Ford. I
Act says no one but the don't think the average
President and the secretary American has arly respect for
.E XAMPLE:
of state can discuss foreign Mr. Nixon anymore to really
policy-and he made a believe that what he's doing
tremendous mistake in doing Ia in anyboey's interests but
Mr. Nixon."

University as its starting

quarterback in 1956 after a
hitch 10 the serviee.
Besides Bachtel, Stobart
credited Nolan Swackhamer
and Marshall Boggs Of
Gallipolis and many others
with big assists in
coaching career ,

Apparently Ute scheme -

his

Slobarl's description nf
what it's like to coach at
Bo
Michigan
under
Schembechler wa s en·

big Presidents."

Chrysler sets loss record

thusiastic. Enthusiasm, he

said,

is

one

of

the

master of ceremonies Ber-

nard Fultz, of the Rotary
C1ub, following the welcome
by Rotary President Vern
Weber and introducl!on of
special guests and school
administrators.

Head Football Coach
Charles Chancey, who is a
first cous10 of June Chancey
Stobart, wife of the speaker,
said when he introduced his
1975 squad it was the smallest
physically Meigs has had
s mce consohdat10n in 1967,

but nevertheless gave a
respectable account of itself
in all games but one. That
was lhe Gallipolis game.
Coach Chancey extended
appreciation to Doctors Ray
R. Pickens and Roger
Daniels, to the camera crew
of George Hackett Jr .. Bill

Turkey talk

when it was kicked off cash
rebates to boost sagging
sales.
General Motors again led
automakers with a 30 per cent
gain and accounted for a
higher-than-normal 55 per
cent share of domestic sales.
Ford sales were up II per
cent and American Motors,
with small car sales faDing,
topped last year's midFetruary by just 14 cars.

By Greg Bailey
A total of 1,263 turkey permits were
;;. issued in 1975 for Ohio's tenth modern
:: · turkey season , For the sixth consecutive
::' year th~ season was ap1it into two hunting
- periods iApril 28-May 3, and May 5-10) . Two
:'. addihonal days were added to each period

: for the first ltme this year. A fee of $10.50
•• was charged for each permtt m addition to
• the $4.50 hunting li c~nse. Permits were
:· :. issued on a first-come, first-served basis
- - prior to the second, and applicants were
..,: , allowed lo select thetr huntmg penod. No
"" ' more than 1,000 people were allowed to hunt
"' • in each period. Permittees received a
.:. ', brochure telling where and how to hunt
+,: : turkeys in Ohio, a list of checking station
, , locations, and a sel f-addressed question~ naire postcard
._ •
For the 1975 turkey season 996 hunters
·:;, : were ehg1ble for the first penod, 267 for the
~ , second. Each hunter was allowed one
;; : bearded turkey, to be taken by sho tgun or
·• · longbow between 6 a.m. and II a.m. Every
:: : successful hunter was required to bring his
...., : turkey to an offtcial chcckmg sta tion for

... .

....

SPECIAL

8 x 10 PORTRAIT IN

LIVING COLOR

®

IF YOUR CHILD
wEIGHS 12 LBS.
YOUR COST IS· ••

ticipants.
.
The catch, however,
Bring all the Children
according Treasury and
postal officials is that the
No IIIPOintmont noco111ry • limrt· Ono IPttiol 8x 10 Pll 'child
initiators of the scheme
Twa I* fomil1 • Atll Four woolro through laur111n 11111 • Ad·
generally profit the most
dHianol porhoill millblo 11 1111onoblo priCII.
since their names are the
first on the list , and they
receive their bonds relatively
quickly.
As interest wanes, the
chain is broken and many ol
the individuals who get In the
project late lose their
money.
"Rather than encouraging
persons to make genuine
investments, they create the
illusion that participants are
both aiding their goverrunent
and themselves," Hlntgen
11
said.
"Even ln the rare case
where an Individual receives
some return, it is likely thai
he would quickly redeem the
Pl Pleasant, Ripley, Athens and Belp11
bonds, thereby placing
further burden ' on the
l'ltole .._., ~~~~~I DAM _, Pll.l·ll'lll ·ll'll 1n 10.111 -1I'II.I·UD I'll
Treasury."
••

5 DAYS ONLY"

Tu&amp;L Feb. 24 thru Sat. Feb. 28

iiiiliiiiiiiiiililiiiiiiiiliiiililllilliilllilllll•lll•ll•

Managers were Rick
Chancey, Mike Owens, Greg
Players laking their bows Taylor, Tim Scttes and Ch uck
at the front of th e cafeteria Kennedy.
Varsity cheerleaders inwere George Gum, Kelly
troduced
were Merri Aull,
Win e brenner , Mike
Jan
S1sson.
Melanie SunMagnotta , Allen Stewart, Jtm
mons
,
Jtll
Baity,
Marci
Anderson. Steve Randolph,
Bego
Dillard,
Stephanie
Terry Qualls. Charlie Mar!Mascot),
Becki
Bego,
and
shall, Ron Coats
Pam
North.
Jtm Rosenbawn . Richard
Reserve cheerleaders were
Cole, Tim Coals, Rtck
Cathy
B1aettnar, Stephanie
George, Kevin McLaughlin,
Rought,
Patge Smith, Sheila
Dan Buffington. Jim Howard,
Sargent,
Denise Marshall,
Jerry Cremeans, Dave
Mel
Snouffer
(Mascot).
Williamson .
John Blake Rtck Johnson
Freshman cheerleaders Mark Mitch ' Brent stanley' Sherri Osborne, Vi ckt
Wheeler Thomas Slev~ · Blankenship, Shari Milch,
Pickens , Wayne Cotterill, Sandy Hamilton, Pam
Dave Miller Jim Clark.
Brauer, Sharon Karr .
Randy simpson Blaine
Coaching staff introduced
Qualls Brent Arnold Duane included John Bentley,
Weber ' Don Folme~ Ray Fenlon Taylor, Don Dixon
Wtllfo~d . Stan Sla~cher, and Mtke Bar, varsity and
George Carper
Kenny Sam Crow, John Krawsczyn
Wyant.
'
and Jim Crow.
Mickey Davenport Mitch
BASKETBALL
Chapman, Dan Granda! , Bob
Head Basketball Coach
Williamson, Bruce Reed, Ron Logan presented hlS
Jimmer Soulsby , Tim learn (9·9) but preceded
Rawlings Dennis Wolfe Bill hts team (9·9) but preceded
Stone, ~ndy George. '
introductions with his
The Freshmen squad in- predtclwq of better thmgs to
eluded Randy Arnold, Greg come m Marauder baske'tBecker David Blake Brent ball. He satd how far hlS
Bolin, Bruce Carman', Doug returning j~iors. go next
Clelland, Kim Dewhurst, year as semors wtll depend
Danny
Edwards
Jeff altogether on how hard they
Grueser.
'
work at learning basketball
Rick Hovatter, Don Karr, sk1lls this spring, summer
Robert (Din k) Kennedy, and ~ext fa ll. Presented were
Mark Magnotta, Mike varSity, Mtck Davenport,
Musser. Todd Rawlings, Bob Terry
Qualls,
Jerry
Seelig, Randy Tackett, Mike Cremeans. Mttch Meadows,
Trtplelt
Steve Randolph, Allen
Stewart.
Jeff Martm , Alan Dodson,
Tim Scites, Dale Browning,
Brian Hamilton, Ron Coats,
Dan Granda!.

Childs and Don Wilson, and
others .

1,263 permits issued
to hunt Ohio turkeys

A PENNY
A POUND

under way in Masaachusetts,
F1orida, Virginia, Maryland
and parts of the Midwest works pretty much the way
all chain ~etters work.
An individual receives a
letter In the mall aaking him
to purchase a savings bond
for the person on the top of s
list. After ptirchasil!ll and
mailing a bond to that person,
he then crosses the
individual's name off the list
and puts his name on the
bottom of lt.
Then he mails eopies ol the
revised chain letter to three
or four friends who are
Instructed to follow the same
procedure.
The rationale behind all
this maiUng and revisi1111 is
ihat
eventually
an
individual's name wiU appear
on the top of the llat and
presumably he will receive
several hundred dollars in
savings bonds from the
gr~win\ number of par·

said, "but you also have to be
enthusiastic, a total team
player, and willing to work
hard to play al Michigan."
Stobart predicted the
Wolverines ' young football
team of 1975 which lost only
its last two games, to Ohio
State and to Oklahoma in the
Orange Bowl, would make
itself known 10 the nation .
He did not exactly predict a
vtctory over Ohio Stale in
1976. but he left no doubt that
smart money should be on
Michigan .
Stobarl was presenied by

Middleport Yellow Jacket
championship squad of 1949,
the last coached by Bachtel

Fast huck folks busy again
By ANDREW NmLEY
WASHINGTON ( UPI)
Fast-buck speculators are
using the BicenteMial theme
to promote chain~etter sales
of U.S. Savings Bonds, postal
authorities and Treasury De·
partment officials report.
H.
J:
Hintgen,
commiSSioner
of
the
Treasury's Bureau of the
Public Debt, said Tuesday ·
evidence has been uncovered
by postal authorities that
would indicate get.;ich-quick
promoters are soliciting
individuals to buy U.S.
Savings Bonds through the
mail, a practice that violates
antifraud laws.
The promoters are falsely
claiming Treasury
endorsement of the project,
as weD as "cloaking their
appeals In Bicentennial and
other patriotic labels,"
Hintgen said.

"You need abiltty , yes," he

starter at center on the

Nixon told to
stay in China
WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. Barry M. Goldw~ter, R·
Ariz.,
today
strongly
criticized former President
Richard Nixon for taking his
trip to China, saying if Nixon
wanted to do the nation a
favor "he might stay over
there.''
Goldwater also charged
that Nixon was "violating the
law" by discussing foreign
policy with his Chinese hosts.
Nixon has met with top
Chinese leaders over the past
few
days,
including
Communist Party Chairman
Mao Tse-tung and acting
premier, Hua Kuofeng. No
details of the talks have been

reqwrements of an athlete.
businessman , hod carrier. or
whatever'.

~

: permanent tagging .

· ~,

"'
....•
..
::
:

•
•.
•
;
:

~

-

l

::; ' period helped to produce a record harvest of
::;: :· 94 turkey gobblers. The previous high
harvest was 71 in 1973 and 1974. One gobbler
.. , was bagged by a bow hunter, a first for the
.,. ' Ohio-hunt. Eighty-seven of the successful
.,. •' hunters used a caller lo bring their bird

,. , I

l'

\

•
'
~
~

For the first hme, checking stations
were operated at four pnvate business
establishments. All eligible hunters were
asked to answer the self-addressed
questionnaire postcard .
The two extra huntmg days m each

3:

..=

i within shooting range. Many of the un-

: : successful hunters hear9 and-or saw
"' • turkeys; Sldeen shot at turkeys and missed.
~
Undressed weights of 78 turkeys
';! brought to the checking stations in 1975
_: : ranged from 8 to 24 pounds. Twenty food
: : items were identified in crops collected at

e&lt; :,'
~

"

~

!'

~••
~

-'
1

two stations.

,. ·
The record harvest of 94 turkeys m 1975
::: : probably could have been higher. Rain and
" :'. fog hindered some hunters on two mornings
of tbe first period, and 16 hunters shot at
turkeys and missed. Nevertheless. one
::1 : hunter in 10 was successful in bagging a
.. . bird, the best success rate in 10 years.
The 9,416 hunters who have participated

~

Reserves

Dwayne

Qualls, Chuck Follrod, Greg
Witte, Kenny Young, Brent
Stan ley, Randy Marshall,
Gene
Halley,
Kelly
Winebrenner. Tim Coats.
Freshman - Dave Blake ,
Todd RaWlings, Tom Hawley ,

Chuck Kennedy, Ch ris
Yeauger. Raymond Andrews,
many in tere sting experiences m matching Chris Taylor, Troy Gnffilh,
wtts with the wary turkey gobbler. Although · Vincent Mossman, John
tl is not essen hal to use a turkey caller in the Story, Greg Becker.
spnng. the proper use of one enhances the
Managers - Jeff Walburn,
chance of success and adds much enjoyment Dave Harri s and Mark
to the hun t. Only 47 of the 500 successful Magnotta.
hunU!rs did not use a caller.
Coach Logan said his
Some tow nshtps conttnue to stand out as sq uad, beginning tournament
good hilnlmg areas. In 10 spring seasons, play at Federal Hocking at
Benton and Laurel Townships in Hocking 7:30p.m. Saturday could win
County have recorded harvests of 29 and 53, that sectional. He B$ked for
respectively . There have been 41 turkeys fan support at Federal
harvested in Brown Township, Vmton Hocking: saying that tickets
Coun ty, and 40 and 47 harvested in Franklin for the game are on sale now
and Harrison Townshtps, respectively. Ross at the high school.
County . Forty-two percent of the total
GOLF TEAM
turkey harvest over the past 10 years has
Coach Bob Oliver'had five
been made in these five townships.
All of these townsh ips fall within four vars1ty and five reserve
large fo,esled areas I Hocking, Zaleski, golfers lake bows, includ10g,
Sc10to Trail , and Tar Hollow State Forests ). VarSlly Dale Browning,
Hunhng pressure in each township has been Chuck Follrod, Crenson
htgh compared with pressure in townships Pratt , Mark Gilkey, and
wtlh fewer kills, or with none at all. Whether Steve Bachner , Reserves ,
or not the high harvests are a reflechon of David Burt, Bob Powers,
hunhng pressure, hunting skill, or turkey Homer Smith, Jeff Couch and
Ron Casct.
habitat is not known
.
SchllOI cooks prepared the
, For the second year, the issuing of
permtl' on a first-com e, first-served basis baked steak dmner and gtrls
wtth the apphcanl able to select the hunting of the band served tables.
period produced some inU!resting results. Head waiter was band
Only 267 of lhe ·I,OOO ful\ quota of 1,000 was director Dwight Goins
Each squad presented gifts
reached for the first period . Hunting success
for both periods was practically the same to their coaches through
(first period, one in 10 hunters successful ; selec ted squad members.
Lee McComas, retiring
second period, one in II successful). These
Meigs
Local School Board
results were similar to those of 1974.
clerk,
was
presented a plaque
The turkey season was first split into
in
commemoration
of his 10
two 4-day periods in 1970, to provide more
years
of
"exemplary
service
people an opportunity to hunt Through the
to'
educalton"
by
District
1973 season, hunters did not have a choice of
hunting period. Questtonnatre commen\s Supt. Charles Dowler from
showed that many who hunted in the second the school board. McComas
period thought the season was too late. The had completed one career m
major complaints were that turkeys did not education as a teacher and
seem to respond lo a caller, and that the for many years superinvegetation was too advanced, thus reducing tend en t of Middleport
exempted schools before
chances of huntmg success. ,
The overwhelmmg selection of period I consolidation.
by hunters ~~ 1974 and 1975 reflects these
opinions, but harvest success data for these
years does not substantiate them. To be
continued .
in Ohio's 10 spring turkey hunl' have had

'

stomped 103-58!

Vistling Kyger Creek ran
into a buzz saw Tuesday night
.. •' as Buffalo of Putnam County
; : raced to a 103-58 non-

=
=

;( : conference victory .

Coach Rudolph Raynes'
Blsons Increased their season
record to '1H whtle Kyger
:
Creek completed its regular
season al S.l3. It was the
•
second lime this season,
Buffalo hit the century mark
In scoring.
The Bisons used a hot: ; shooting, fast-breaking of·
: : fenae, to take .a 24-12 lead . .
From that point on. the game
was out of reach . Buffalo
scored 32 poln t.s during a
torrid stretch In the second
period. Everything the
Bisons threw up seemed to go
• in.
Buffalo continued its fast·
: break tactics in the third
q";ter connecting for 26

i=..
•

b

some rocks at it as an auUtor.
When he had the Cleveland Indians, he engaged one band to
parade through the stands playing for the customers and
another one to entertain in a special wigwam he had built in
center field. He also hired a baseball clown, Max Patkin, to
coach at first base, and another one, Jackie Price, to stand on
his head in a jeep and catch balls thrown to him by the
Cleveland players.
With the St. Louis Browns, he reached his promotional peak
the day he sent up a 43-incl], 65-pound midget to pinch hit m a
regular season game with Detroit. The little fellow's name was
Eddie Gaede! and never having played in a professional game
before, he was petrified, scared witless, facing Detroit curveballer Bob Cain, but as far as Veeck was concerned, this was
simply a great stunt, one which gained nation-wide pubhcity
for his ball club.
"The trouble with this business is too much dignity and not
enough fun," Veeck has said more than once.
He certainly won't have much fun if he goes ahead with this
plan of his to open the White Sox camp Monday in defiance of
all the other clubs. If he does that, he'll be committing what
will amount to economic suicide because he can be sure none of
the other clubs wiU forget what he did, or forgive him, after the
present deadlock with the players is resolved.
The only possible company he may have tf he does open
camp ahead of the rest is Atlanta's new owner, Ted Turner,
who also has said he's eager to gel started.
That still would make il 22 to 24lot good odds In any league,
even for a grealstunl man like Bill Veeck .
MAY COST VOTES
SANTA ANA, Gatif. (UPI)
- Rep. Andrew Hinshaw
intends to continue his
campaign for reelection
although he has been
sentenced to one to 14 years
for taking bribes.
Hinshaw , 53, blanched
when he heard the sentence
imposed Tuesday by Superior
Court Judge Robert Kneeland
but vowed to remain in tbe
race.

"I recognize that this is
certainly going to hann my
chances of election," he said 1

but "it is certamly not going
to pers~;ade me to resign."
Hinshaw, a first-term
Republican, was convicted of ·
laking stereo equipment and
campaign contributions from
an electronics firm to lower
the company's lax bill in 1972,
when he was the Orange
County tax assessor. He
remains free pending appeal.

PIPE DREAM
WASHINGTON (UP! ) President Ford enjoys pipe
smoking too much to give it
up.
Chattinp in the White House
Oval Of: .ce with visiting
FrancolS-Xavier Ortoli,
president of the European
Common Market , Ford
compared pipes with his
guest and said, "It was a
habit I picked up In the Navy
back in World War II. I would
like to get rid of it but I really
enjoy it. n
Ortoli nodded.

FEB. 27-28-29

::: :

;t.;.

hustler." The admission, though, came later during an
extended period when he wasn't in the game and was tllrowmg

STAR SUPPLY

down on

Property
Transfers

turnovers 1 and

BUY NOW ~ SAVE

GOODIYEAR

to resist rough terrain twisting and tearing!

TRACTION mRQUE
12 4-2 84PR

ptus S4.32
Fed h . Ta•

Ala ce M. Clark, Floyd
Clark, Lea G. Clark to Paul
Eugene Clark, Mary Clark,
Lot 52, Racine.Sullon .
Mabel Wickline, Russell
Wicklme, Mildred Milhorn to
Paul Eugene Clark, Mary
Clark, Lot 52, Racine-Sutton.
Jerry Hawk, Geraldine
Hawk to Jimmy W. Queen,
Debra Queen , Lot 265,

and hre off
yo ur tractor
~ARGER SIZES PRICED
SLIGHTLY HIGHER

• Trip le te mp ered Pe rma co rd
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long·lasflng st rength .

• AnHic tuaced luHs slow rale
o f wea r by gett ing wider
as they wear . .

g1~·e

super

p·u1h ng·s lrength
• Heav~• -du t y r1m shw1d of
tough rubber helps protccl
from roo t, rock , and sl ub blc
damage for dur!lbill ty.

Pomeroy

Coloma! F10ancial Service
Inc . to Richard H. Stewart,
Betty L. Stewart, .3A,
Salisbury.
Jaymar Coal Co. Inc. to Jay
Hall Jr ., Parcels, Salisbury.
William Nally lo James
Nally, Kathleen Nally ,
Parcels, Orange.
Edward Sycks, June Sycks
to Randy Lee Sycks, Jonna ·
Joy Sycks, 110.782 A Bed·
ford .
Warren P Pickens, Lillian
E Pickens to Warren P.
Pickens, Lillian E. Pickens,
Parcels, Ohve.

75

$

Also
Special Prices
On Front
Tractor Tires

MEIGS..
TIRE CENTER
992 -2101

POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN HOUSE

.". ''

~. ; KC

NEW YORK (UP!) - can you picture Paul Richards, with
those skinny, knobby knees of his, managing in short pants?
Bill Veeck can, and the picture breaks him up a little. Only
he doesn't show it because it wouldn't look·good for him to fall
over laughing at his own publicity stunts.
Publicity has always been important to Bill Veeck because
publicity sells tickets. It's probably more important lo him
now than il ever has been because he's trying lo do everything
he can to breathe a little tile into the inanimate Chicago White
Sox.
One day the White Sox announce they're going to try wearing
shorts. The next day Bill Veeck says he doesn't care if all the
other clubs aren't going to open their camps for spring training
'March I because of their labor problem with the players, he 's
thinking of opening the White Sox camp all by himself.
The fact that he probably won '1, doesn 'I matter. What does is
that all this could help the White Sox sell some e.tra tickets,
and selling tickets is how Bill Veeck makes his living .
Years ago, someone labeled him the "new P.T. Barnum,"
and called him "Baseball's Greatest Showman." Veeck
reveled in those descriptions, cheerfully admitting he was "a

The Meigs ' ~iri s basketball be more &lt;Jlert to open shots .
team extended their winning
Th e las t game before
record to to wins and one loss
Cont10ued on page 4
as they eas rl y defeated
Jackson 52-37.
The frrst quarter wa s slow
for Meigs as .Jackson took a
DO ITlOURSELR
surprising 8-2 lead . Meigs
"STEAM"QEAN 'roUR
buun ce 4 bnck with two
CARPfTS ...
THE PROfESSIONAL WAY.
buckets to end the frr sl
H f- nl tlw (ttnllls ti(' nt;\N Up &amp;
quarter wtth a score of 6-6.
Ou t ll yd ro· M ist Mac hine for
Meigs got psyched up the
supnmr carpf'l l'l t&gt;l'lnm g l-!,.l{l!!l' fl jj a nJ
second quarter as they
remuv!•B d1rt , p rl'vi
outscored J ackson 18-9. Pam
o us shamrwo r l'stdlle,
anrl up t .. 90% fl( 11u~
Vaughan found her range and
m oistuttJ in JU!:I l o ne
scored ftve baskets, while her
step Sn~c money ..
sister, Pal, had two baskets. ~et rl:!lull~; JU!olt hke a
pro rt!Sstonal !
Meigs went. into the locker
room with a 24-1 7 lead
Metgs got fired up the third
quarte r by oulsconng
Jackson 15-ll. Pam Vaughan
made the difference 'the
second half by scori ng · 17
poi nts Beth Vaughan was
tough on rebounds by pulhng
down 17 rebounds.
The fourth quarter saw
AVAILABLE FOR RENTAL
Meigs forcing Jackson into
turnovers and Meigs scoring
on the fast break The coach
felt that despite the fact that
lhe girls got off to a slow
start, they shll were all able
RACINE, OHIO
to score; nevertheless. the
girls are going to have to cut

points then finished out the
game wtth 21 big ones in the
final stanza .
John Stone, a 6-1 senior
forward , led Buffal6's
scoring attack with 29 points.
Three other Bison players hit
double figures with Doug
Greenlaw , an All-Slater,
connecting for 25 points :
Mike Boles had 16 and Chuck
Noffsinger, a tall sophomore,
dumped in 15.
Kyger Creek's offense was
led by senior Bill Metzner and
junior forward Doug Sands.
Metzner pumped in 16 points.
Sands had 14 and Ralph
Baylor added II .
Buffalo shot a blistering 55
pet. from the floor while
sinking 11 of 2.1 at the foul
line . The Bobcats hit only
eight of 23 at the charity
stripe.
Kyger Creek's next outing
~

wtll be in the Class A Sec·
tiona! Tournament al Meigs
March 4.
Buffalo also took the
preliminary game, 60-57.
Martin and Little led Buffalo
with 21 and 17 pomts
respec tively. Ed Mollohan
topped KC wi l~ 18, Jon
Thompson added 17.
Box score :

Kyger Creek (58) - Sands
7 0 14 ; Metzner 8 0 \6 : Arm .
bruster 2-1 6 , Brown 1 0 2,
Lucas 2 0 4 , Salem ~ 1 5
Baylor 3·5· 11 Totals H -8-ss
Buffalo ( 103) Boles 6 ·1
16 ; Green law II 3 25 : C
Noffsin ger 7115 . Slone 14 I
29 , Whittington I 0 2. Bur ch
J .&lt;J 6; A
Noffs inger 2 0 4;
Marlm 0 2 2, Rayburn 2 0-4,
Totals 46 -11 -103 .
By Quarters .
KC
12 13 19 14
58
Buffa lo
24 3~ 26 21 103
Reserves : Buffalo 60 Kyg er

Hours 11 to 7 p.m .

COMPARE OUR
QUALITY .AND PRICE

SAVE NOW DURING
OPEN HOUSE
Last of winter pricing on 20-28 ft .
travel trailers and fold downs. We
sell service and quality. Financing
. arranged. Register f'lr free gifts.

White
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Gallon
ONE COAT

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FlAT FINISH LATEX

ENAMEL
quart 2.98

I.

STARCRAFT
MINI-MOTOR HOMES
Camp Conley Starcraft Sales
Rt. 62 -

North of Pt. Pleasant

ON ALL PAINTING ACCESSORIES

MOORE'S
992-2848

American Hardware

Pomeroy

Creek 57 .

l)

'

�2- The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesdav. Feb.~ . 1976

TOM TIEDE

Editorial comTnent,
.
opinion, feafures

Company stores,
•
game zn
town

By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - Few
things in the long struggle
t!&gt;...::....:&gt;c_....:::&gt;-&lt;o-oo-o...:;.....::""::&gt;&lt;::&gt;-&lt;:::&gt;-&lt;o-.o-oo-o&gt;&lt;:""""'""":::&gt;-&lt;o-o-o-..:::;.....::""r:J between labor and industry
have 1rntaled the working

Wrong! even for the right reasons
"Saving the Queen," a first novel by journalist, editor and eloquent conservative
spokesman William L. Buckley, deals with the leaking of atom bomb s;ocrets to the Russians
bock in the 1~ .
At one point, the hero, a CIA agent, muses that "We (the good guys ) might in secure
conscience lie and steal in order to secure the escape of human beings from mlSer; and death ;
Stalin has no right to lie and steal in order to bring misery and death to others ."
The operative word, it should be noted, is "might." And as long as it is left in the realm of
fiction, it is the age-&lt;Jld philosophical question of the enil justifying the means restated in
entertaining form.
Citing the passage in an adulatory view, however, columnisl Holmes Alexander :;ays that
"here Buckley has Jtiven us the right retort to the moral shock we feel when the CIA ts caught
doing what is wrong and ill~gal . Alter aU, motives do crunl, There's a difference between
actions taken to enslave people and actions taken to provide and guard thetr (reedom.••
Unfortunately, there is little in the recent revelations about the CIA to suggest that
anything the intelligence agency has been caught doing has enhanced anybody's freedom.
But even accepting the argument that evil may sometimes legitimately be used to serve a
higber good -that the United States might, for example, "in se&lt;.-ure conscience" plot the
assassinations of leaders of foreign countries with whom we are not at war - the great
difficulty with this kind of moral pretentiousness is that anybody can employ it, including a
dedicated Conununlst.
Buckley's hero's statement, or Holme's reading of it, could just as easily justify the
excesses of antiwar activists in the 1960s who, in their own eyes at least, burned draft board
office files or stole papers from the Pentagon "in secure conscience."
.
If Americans should ever learn to overcome their moral shock at wrong and illegal actions.
by whomever committed and from whatever motives, we will have gone a long way towards
becoming undistinguishable from our enemies.
.

Lawyer, defend thyself
Doctors, as everyone who reads the newspapers knows, have become the favorite targel&lt;
of malpractice suits. The resulting skyrocketmg of medical malpractice insurance has reached
the proportions of a national crisis.
But now lawyers, who have had something to do with making Americans possibly the most
lawsult.prone people in the world, are experiencing a "quiet crisis" of their own, reports the
Wall Street Journal.
It Ia a quiet crisis because legal malpractice is still pretty much swaddled in secrecy , with
few cases ever seeing the light of a courtroom. Most are discreetly settled by insurers.
Today, however, people are suing their attorneys almost twice as often as they were only a
few years ago, and the cost of settlement has also roughly doubled. Like the doctors, the
la!"Yers are beginning to worry that Insurers may be driven out of the legal malpractice
market altogether.
Reasons for this development, besides an apparent decline in public esteem for or awe of
professionals in general, include the fact that recent court rulings have weakened some of the
obstacles to legal malpractice suits.
Courts have ruled, for example, that the statute of limitations on legal malpractice starts
from the time tbe malpractice Is discovered by tbe client. Thus an attorney who, say, botched a
will or contract through an error 20 years ago can be sued, even as a surgeon who left a sponge
inside a patient's abdomen can be held accountable long after the event.
Lawyers should file the above under "H"- for hoist with their own petard.

Bill for vandalism is .h igh
UPJ Edueatlea Editor

The bill for vandalism;

arson and theft in the nation's
schools runs over $600 mlllion
a year now . .
. The schools, creeping along
on dollars shriveled by infia·
lion, must divert some funds
to
improved
security
systems,
to repairing
damage and such.
At the National Congress of
Parents and Teachers in
Chicago school violence and
vandalism is a priority

concern.

In testimony before the

U.S. Senate Subcommittee to
Investigate Juvenile
DeUnquency, Mrs. Walter G.
Kimmel, PTA president,
talked
about
curbing
violence.
The seveiHIIIllion-member
Pl'Awants the government to
help schools to;
-Determine the causes of
violence and vandalism.
-Develop and
fund
alternate programs for
students who do not seem to
benefit from the regular
school setting.
- Provide assistance to
schools for teacher training
and necessary security
measures.
Mrs. Kimmel has some
possible explanations for the
rapid Increase in school vio-

lence over the last ten years.
To wit:
- Many students don't want
to lie in school. It must be
made possible for students to
"stop out" of school without
being labeled failures.
Compulsory school
attendance and child labor
laws must be revised to
accomplish this.
- In some big cities, school
personnel say violence in
schools follows a pattern of
what the television programs
have shown the week before.
The students are given excellent instruction In how to
create disturbance and
destruction both of hwnan
beings and property.
-The use or pushing of
drugs or alcohol in school
often is a part of the violence
or vandalism that follows.
-The need for money to
buy drugs often IS a part of
the robbery or shakedown
operations in schools.
-Why would students have
any reason not to believe that
"might makes rlglit" when
they see adults stoning buses
or striking illegally. What is
the real difference between
that and youngsters setting
fire or breaking windows
because they don't like
school, the principal or the
teachers'

Berrys World

nation," Mrs. Kinunel sa1d.
wr'he PTA," she said, "has

long believed in the home as
the basic element of society.
We still do.
"We believe that if children
are to achieve at a higher
level, be better educated in
good health habits, develop
better emotional health, tbe
family umt must be
strengthened !''
Dr. Wilson C. Riles,
superintendent of public
instruction in California,
believes that this must begin
in the early grades and
parents must be a part of the
program.
Last year, more than
100,000 parents worked in tbe
Galifornia schools in the early
cHildhood educa lion program
as volunteers under a
teacher's supervision.
"Not only does this reduce
the adult-pupil ratio, it helps
parents to be better parents,''
Mrs. Kimmel said.
"We must begin in early
childhood to prepare young
people to be better parents.
"If we wait until high
school, many have had their
first or second child. Last
year more than 250,000 girls,
17 or under, gave birth to
babies, many to their second
child.
''Lastyear, one out of three
mothers
or preschool
children were in single parent
homes.

The Daily Sentinel ·
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
Exec;. E:d.

ROBEI!T HOEFLICH

City EditOr
,Published do!!ily exc'ept
Saturday by The Ohio
Valley PublishlnQ Com .

•

01916tlyNEA, I~~
"My wife understands me!"

I,

Court

111

St

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i

the stores became in many
In stan ces devices for his

economic bondage . American
history is sluffed wtlh the
ironies of men who have been
bo th employes of, and
customers for , their bosses ,

wtth guess who enjoying the
profits of the arrangements .
All of this is, of course,
supposed to be behind us . The
modern working stiff is no

fool. For one thing, he knows
that if all he does with hlS
company pay is turn it over to
his company store he is going
nowhere· rapidly Besides ,
today there are alternative

ways of falling into debt. The
company
stores
look
ridi culous in the age of
shopping plazas, and the only
real compehhon between the

company luncheonette and
McDonald's is that both serve
rubber on sesame seed buns.
Still, there are in the nation
obscure . pockets which
company stores conhnue to

ptck. One reportedly is 10 the
tucked-away coal regton of
the Virginia panhandle .
There four locals of the
United Mine Workers have
filed sui l against the Westmoreland Coal Co. 10 protest
against the practices and
philosophy of the company 's
stores .
The miners have apparently been gruntbmling
abo ut lhe Westmoreland
situation smce the days when
coal cooked the eggs of the
nahon , but the arguments
have only recently been
formalized . Attorney
Strother Smtlh says al least
one Westmoreland store, the
Andover Shopping Center
near Appalachia, Va.,
operates as if rl was still
acceptable "for men to owe
thelr souls to the company

The long range solution to
violence and vandalism in the
schools hinges on "a change
of attitude in the people of the

~any ,

man more than the fearsome
implica tions of the company
store . Originated os tensibly
for the laborer's convenience,

store." Smtlh says he knows
no other labor issue 10 the
area as sensitive as this one .
L1ke voices from the
medieval past of the coal
bLL&lt;iiness ) rnmers say

tbe

Andover store uses tts credit
and its serv1ces as an extension of company hostility
towards them Roger Barker.
for example, a 28-year-&lt;Jld
who 1rratates the company
wi lh endless safety complaints, says that he was fired
for his mtlitancy one time and
within minutes his company

An esttmated 250 sport fans
and Charles Stobart assistant
varsity football coach at the
University of Michigan ,
honored Meigs High School
football, basketball and golf
athletes Tuesday evening at
the annual Middleport·
Pomeroy Rotary Club
Football Banquet.
A native of Racine, Stobart
persuaded his family to move
to Middleport at the end of his
elementary school years "so
he could play football ."
There he came under the
coaching of the late Forest
Bachtel to whom he gave
tribute Tuesday night as one
of the "truly greatest men I

store credit was revoked. He
had a paycheck pending from
which the store could deduct
his charges, "but all they
wanted to do was hurl me as
much as they could, in this
case by denymg me
grocertes.''
There is no argument that

the Andover company store
can , when it wishes, hurt its

mining customers. I,awyer
Smith says the store has been
known to garnishee full
paychecks of miners who
have gotten behind m their
bills. " We say this is in
violation of federal anligarnishment laws; stores
have the right to garnishee
for collection, but not excessively, the law says a man
has to have part of his pay to
live on ."
Beyond this, Smith adds,

have ever known."

Stobart became a 135 lb.

before his retirement from

coaching because of his
health (lateral sclerosis 1.
Weighmg under 160 lbs.,
Stobarl was at Ohio

the Andover company store

may be in vtolahon of federal
anlttrusl rules. He says one
way the store eliminates
competition is by forcing
some miners to trade with it
even though they may prefer
not to. Barker, again, is an
example. Smith says that
when Barker was hurl on the
job once his fellows
authorized the company to
take $600 from their com.
"Just make sure you always elect
bined pay for his benefit. The
company did, but then would
not give the money directly to
Barker, and instead made
hun use it up in credtl at the
company store.
DETROIT (UP!) - A gradual and steady return to
Wtlh all of the charges report that domestic new car stronger
automotive
against the Andover com- sales jumped 21 per cent in markets," said Chrysler
pany store, not the least of midFebruary
was Chairman John Riccardo and
which is its prices are so overshadowed Tuesday by a President Eugene A. Cafiero,
much as 20 to 30 per cent Chrysler Corp. financial .the two men who assumed top
htgher than al other markets, report revealing the deepest leadership posts in an
many miners agree it 1s not losses in automotive· industry executive changeover last
fall.
so abusive as its predecessors history.
With the exception of the
of decades ago. One miner
Pointing up Chrysler's
. remembers trading at a Feb. 11·20 record in 1973, this comeback, the finn said its
company store whose clerks year's mid-February sales midFebruary sales were up
handed out premarked were the highest of the 14 per cent over last year,
ballots for UMW electwns, decade and continued the
and culthe aredil of those not industry's accelerating
accepting. "Those were the recovery from a twoyear
days," adds amother old slump. Chrysler was hardest
timer, "when the best part of hit among the U.S. auto
striking was to socmer or later eompanles.
But even with the report
watch the company store go
that it lost a record $~.5
up in yellow names."
And yet, the llmes around million In 1975 and an even
Appalachia haven't changed higher $341 million in the six
overly much at lhal. A story consecutive quarters, in
in the UMW Journal of some which it reported deficits,
months ago reported that there we,re some bright notes
abuses by the Andover in the Chrysler report.
The No. 3 automaker said
company store still fire
terrtble tempers in the mines. Its $27.7 million fourthA black man named John quarter loss would have been
Bogus, for example, got so a higher-thanexpected $35
mad at a clerk's racml slur million profit if it hadn't
that he drew a 25 automatic incurred a one-time $55
and chased the fellow into the mlllion loss in the sale of its
streets. Bogus was fired for money~osing nonautomotive
it : he left with no remorse . · Airtemp heating and air
conditioning division. Iri the
final quarter of 1974, Chrysler
lost a record $73.5 million.
Most
analysts
had
predicted a turnaround $18
million profit in the final
three months. Chrysler's top
two executives predicted that
stringent cost-aJtting, whlch
Included massive layoffs and
the shedding of moneylosing
disclosed.
operations, would put the No.
"I don't think Mr. NIXon's 3 auto company In the black
visit to China did anything," in the first three months of
Goldwater said in an this year.
interview on ABC's "Good
"Alter the extraordinary
Morning America" show . problems of 1975, we expect a
"And if he wants to do this
country a favor, he might
stay over there.
what he did at the time he did
He's violating the law. Tbe it."
Logan Act prohibits any Assessing the impact of
American and that's all he Nixon's trip on the American
is- be's an ex-President and voter, Goldwater said, "I
a private citizen-the Logsn don't think it hurt Ford. I
Act says no one but the don't think the average
President and the secretary American has arly respect for
.E XAMPLE:
of state can discuss foreign Mr. Nixon anymore to really
policy-and he made a believe that what he's doing
tremendous mistake in doing Ia in anyboey's interests but
Mr. Nixon."

University as its starting

quarterback in 1956 after a
hitch 10 the serviee.
Besides Bachtel, Stobart
credited Nolan Swackhamer
and Marshall Boggs Of
Gallipolis and many others
with big assists in
coaching career ,

Apparently Ute scheme -

his

Slobarl's description nf
what it's like to coach at
Bo
Michigan
under
Schembechler wa s en·

big Presidents."

Chrysler sets loss record

thusiastic. Enthusiasm, he

said,

is

one

of

the

master of ceremonies Ber-

nard Fultz, of the Rotary
C1ub, following the welcome
by Rotary President Vern
Weber and introducl!on of
special guests and school
administrators.

Head Football Coach
Charles Chancey, who is a
first cous10 of June Chancey
Stobart, wife of the speaker,
said when he introduced his
1975 squad it was the smallest
physically Meigs has had
s mce consohdat10n in 1967,

but nevertheless gave a
respectable account of itself
in all games but one. That
was lhe Gallipolis game.
Coach Chancey extended
appreciation to Doctors Ray
R. Pickens and Roger
Daniels, to the camera crew
of George Hackett Jr .. Bill

Turkey talk

when it was kicked off cash
rebates to boost sagging
sales.
General Motors again led
automakers with a 30 per cent
gain and accounted for a
higher-than-normal 55 per
cent share of domestic sales.
Ford sales were up II per
cent and American Motors,
with small car sales faDing,
topped last year's midFetruary by just 14 cars.

By Greg Bailey
A total of 1,263 turkey permits were
;;. issued in 1975 for Ohio's tenth modern
:: · turkey season , For the sixth consecutive
::' year th~ season was ap1it into two hunting
- periods iApril 28-May 3, and May 5-10) . Two
:'. addihonal days were added to each period

: for the first ltme this year. A fee of $10.50
•• was charged for each permtt m addition to
• the $4.50 hunting li c~nse. Permits were
:· :. issued on a first-come, first-served basis
- - prior to the second, and applicants were
..,: , allowed lo select thetr huntmg penod. No
"" ' more than 1,000 people were allowed to hunt
"' • in each period. Permittees received a
.:. ', brochure telling where and how to hunt
+,: : turkeys in Ohio, a list of checking station
, , locations, and a sel f-addressed question~ naire postcard
._ •
For the 1975 turkey season 996 hunters
·:;, : were ehg1ble for the first penod, 267 for the
~ , second. Each hunter was allowed one
;; : bearded turkey, to be taken by sho tgun or
·• · longbow between 6 a.m. and II a.m. Every
:: : successful hunter was required to bring his
...., : turkey to an offtcial chcckmg sta tion for

... .

....

SPECIAL

8 x 10 PORTRAIT IN

LIVING COLOR

®

IF YOUR CHILD
wEIGHS 12 LBS.
YOUR COST IS· ••

ticipants.
.
The catch, however,
Bring all the Children
according Treasury and
postal officials is that the
No IIIPOintmont noco111ry • limrt· Ono IPttiol 8x 10 Pll 'child
initiators of the scheme
Twa I* fomil1 • Atll Four woolro through laur111n 11111 • Ad·
generally profit the most
dHianol porhoill millblo 11 1111onoblo priCII.
since their names are the
first on the list , and they
receive their bonds relatively
quickly.
As interest wanes, the
chain is broken and many ol
the individuals who get In the
project late lose their
money.
"Rather than encouraging
persons to make genuine
investments, they create the
illusion that participants are
both aiding their goverrunent
and themselves," Hlntgen
11
said.
"Even ln the rare case
where an Individual receives
some return, it is likely thai
he would quickly redeem the
Pl Pleasant, Ripley, Athens and Belp11
bonds, thereby placing
further burden ' on the
l'ltole .._., ~~~~~I DAM _, Pll.l·ll'lll ·ll'll 1n 10.111 -1I'II.I·UD I'll
Treasury."
••

5 DAYS ONLY"

Tu&amp;L Feb. 24 thru Sat. Feb. 28

iiiiliiiiiiiiiililiiiiiiiiliiiililllilliilllilllll•lll•ll•

Managers were Rick
Chancey, Mike Owens, Greg
Players laking their bows Taylor, Tim Scttes and Ch uck
at the front of th e cafeteria Kennedy.
Varsity cheerleaders inwere George Gum, Kelly
troduced
were Merri Aull,
Win e brenner , Mike
Jan
S1sson.
Melanie SunMagnotta , Allen Stewart, Jtm
mons
,
Jtll
Baity,
Marci
Anderson. Steve Randolph,
Bego
Dillard,
Stephanie
Terry Qualls. Charlie Mar!Mascot),
Becki
Bego,
and
shall, Ron Coats
Pam
North.
Jtm Rosenbawn . Richard
Reserve cheerleaders were
Cole, Tim Coals, Rtck
Cathy
B1aettnar, Stephanie
George, Kevin McLaughlin,
Rought,
Patge Smith, Sheila
Dan Buffington. Jim Howard,
Sargent,
Denise Marshall,
Jerry Cremeans, Dave
Mel
Snouffer
(Mascot).
Williamson .
John Blake Rtck Johnson
Freshman cheerleaders Mark Mitch ' Brent stanley' Sherri Osborne, Vi ckt
Wheeler Thomas Slev~ · Blankenship, Shari Milch,
Pickens , Wayne Cotterill, Sandy Hamilton, Pam
Dave Miller Jim Clark.
Brauer, Sharon Karr .
Randy simpson Blaine
Coaching staff introduced
Qualls Brent Arnold Duane included John Bentley,
Weber ' Don Folme~ Ray Fenlon Taylor, Don Dixon
Wtllfo~d . Stan Sla~cher, and Mtke Bar, varsity and
George Carper
Kenny Sam Crow, John Krawsczyn
Wyant.
'
and Jim Crow.
Mickey Davenport Mitch
BASKETBALL
Chapman, Dan Granda! , Bob
Head Basketball Coach
Williamson, Bruce Reed, Ron Logan presented hlS
Jimmer Soulsby , Tim learn (9·9) but preceded
Rawlings Dennis Wolfe Bill hts team (9·9) but preceded
Stone, ~ndy George. '
introductions with his
The Freshmen squad in- predtclwq of better thmgs to
eluded Randy Arnold, Greg come m Marauder baske'tBecker David Blake Brent ball. He satd how far hlS
Bolin, Bruce Carman', Doug returning j~iors. go next
Clelland, Kim Dewhurst, year as semors wtll depend
Danny
Edwards
Jeff altogether on how hard they
Grueser.
'
work at learning basketball
Rick Hovatter, Don Karr, sk1lls this spring, summer
Robert (Din k) Kennedy, and ~ext fa ll. Presented were
Mark Magnotta, Mike varSity, Mtck Davenport,
Musser. Todd Rawlings, Bob Terry
Qualls,
Jerry
Seelig, Randy Tackett, Mike Cremeans. Mttch Meadows,
Trtplelt
Steve Randolph, Allen
Stewart.
Jeff Martm , Alan Dodson,
Tim Scites, Dale Browning,
Brian Hamilton, Ron Coats,
Dan Granda!.

Childs and Don Wilson, and
others .

1,263 permits issued
to hunt Ohio turkeys

A PENNY
A POUND

under way in Masaachusetts,
F1orida, Virginia, Maryland
and parts of the Midwest works pretty much the way
all chain ~etters work.
An individual receives a
letter In the mall aaking him
to purchase a savings bond
for the person on the top of s
list. After ptirchasil!ll and
mailing a bond to that person,
he then crosses the
individual's name off the list
and puts his name on the
bottom of lt.
Then he mails eopies ol the
revised chain letter to three
or four friends who are
Instructed to follow the same
procedure.
The rationale behind all
this maiUng and revisi1111 is
ihat
eventually
an
individual's name wiU appear
on the top of the llat and
presumably he will receive
several hundred dollars in
savings bonds from the
gr~win\ number of par·

said, "but you also have to be
enthusiastic, a total team
player, and willing to work
hard to play al Michigan."
Stobart predicted the
Wolverines ' young football
team of 1975 which lost only
its last two games, to Ohio
State and to Oklahoma in the
Orange Bowl, would make
itself known 10 the nation .
He did not exactly predict a
vtctory over Ohio Stale in
1976. but he left no doubt that
smart money should be on
Michigan .
Stobarl was presenied by

Middleport Yellow Jacket
championship squad of 1949,
the last coached by Bachtel

Fast huck folks busy again
By ANDREW NmLEY
WASHINGTON ( UPI)
Fast-buck speculators are
using the BicenteMial theme
to promote chain~etter sales
of U.S. Savings Bonds, postal
authorities and Treasury De·
partment officials report.
H.
J:
Hintgen,
commiSSioner
of
the
Treasury's Bureau of the
Public Debt, said Tuesday ·
evidence has been uncovered
by postal authorities that
would indicate get.;ich-quick
promoters are soliciting
individuals to buy U.S.
Savings Bonds through the
mail, a practice that violates
antifraud laws.
The promoters are falsely
claiming Treasury
endorsement of the project,
as weD as "cloaking their
appeals In Bicentennial and
other patriotic labels,"
Hintgen said.

"You need abiltty , yes," he

starter at center on the

Nixon told to
stay in China
WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. Barry M. Goldw~ter, R·
Ariz.,
today
strongly
criticized former President
Richard Nixon for taking his
trip to China, saying if Nixon
wanted to do the nation a
favor "he might stay over
there.''
Goldwater also charged
that Nixon was "violating the
law" by discussing foreign
policy with his Chinese hosts.
Nixon has met with top
Chinese leaders over the past
few
days,
including
Communist Party Chairman
Mao Tse-tung and acting
premier, Hua Kuofeng. No
details of the talks have been

reqwrements of an athlete.
businessman , hod carrier. or
whatever'.

~

: permanent tagging .

· ~,

"'
....•
..
::
:

•
•.
•
;
:

~

-

l

::; ' period helped to produce a record harvest of
::;: :· 94 turkey gobblers. The previous high
harvest was 71 in 1973 and 1974. One gobbler
.. , was bagged by a bow hunter, a first for the
.,. ' Ohio-hunt. Eighty-seven of the successful
.,. •' hunters used a caller lo bring their bird

,. , I

l'

\

•
'
~
~

For the first hme, checking stations
were operated at four pnvate business
establishments. All eligible hunters were
asked to answer the self-addressed
questionnaire postcard .
The two extra huntmg days m each

3:

..=

i within shooting range. Many of the un-

: : successful hunters hear9 and-or saw
"' • turkeys; Sldeen shot at turkeys and missed.
~
Undressed weights of 78 turkeys
';! brought to the checking stations in 1975
_: : ranged from 8 to 24 pounds. Twenty food
: : items were identified in crops collected at

e&lt; :,'
~

"

~

!'

~••
~

-'
1

two stations.

,. ·
The record harvest of 94 turkeys m 1975
::: : probably could have been higher. Rain and
" :'. fog hindered some hunters on two mornings
of tbe first period, and 16 hunters shot at
turkeys and missed. Nevertheless. one
::1 : hunter in 10 was successful in bagging a
.. . bird, the best success rate in 10 years.
The 9,416 hunters who have participated

~

Reserves

Dwayne

Qualls, Chuck Follrod, Greg
Witte, Kenny Young, Brent
Stan ley, Randy Marshall,
Gene
Halley,
Kelly
Winebrenner. Tim Coats.
Freshman - Dave Blake ,
Todd RaWlings, Tom Hawley ,

Chuck Kennedy, Ch ris
Yeauger. Raymond Andrews,
many in tere sting experiences m matching Chris Taylor, Troy Gnffilh,
wtts with the wary turkey gobbler. Although · Vincent Mossman, John
tl is not essen hal to use a turkey caller in the Story, Greg Becker.
spnng. the proper use of one enhances the
Managers - Jeff Walburn,
chance of success and adds much enjoyment Dave Harri s and Mark
to the hun t. Only 47 of the 500 successful Magnotta.
hunU!rs did not use a caller.
Coach Logan said his
Some tow nshtps conttnue to stand out as sq uad, beginning tournament
good hilnlmg areas. In 10 spring seasons, play at Federal Hocking at
Benton and Laurel Townships in Hocking 7:30p.m. Saturday could win
County have recorded harvests of 29 and 53, that sectional. He B$ked for
respectively . There have been 41 turkeys fan support at Federal
harvested in Brown Township, Vmton Hocking: saying that tickets
Coun ty, and 40 and 47 harvested in Franklin for the game are on sale now
and Harrison Townshtps, respectively. Ross at the high school.
County . Forty-two percent of the total
GOLF TEAM
turkey harvest over the past 10 years has
Coach Bob Oliver'had five
been made in these five townships.
All of these townsh ips fall within four vars1ty and five reserve
large fo,esled areas I Hocking, Zaleski, golfers lake bows, includ10g,
Sc10to Trail , and Tar Hollow State Forests ). VarSlly Dale Browning,
Hunhng pressure in each township has been Chuck Follrod, Crenson
htgh compared with pressure in townships Pratt , Mark Gilkey, and
wtlh fewer kills, or with none at all. Whether Steve Bachner , Reserves ,
or not the high harvests are a reflechon of David Burt, Bob Powers,
hunhng pressure, hunting skill, or turkey Homer Smith, Jeff Couch and
Ron Casct.
habitat is not known
.
SchllOI cooks prepared the
, For the second year, the issuing of
permtl' on a first-com e, first-served basis baked steak dmner and gtrls
wtth the apphcanl able to select the hunting of the band served tables.
period produced some inU!resting results. Head waiter was band
Only 267 of lhe ·I,OOO ful\ quota of 1,000 was director Dwight Goins
Each squad presented gifts
reached for the first period . Hunting success
for both periods was practically the same to their coaches through
(first period, one in 10 hunters successful ; selec ted squad members.
Lee McComas, retiring
second period, one in II successful). These
Meigs
Local School Board
results were similar to those of 1974.
clerk,
was
presented a plaque
The turkey season was first split into
in
commemoration
of his 10
two 4-day periods in 1970, to provide more
years
of
"exemplary
service
people an opportunity to hunt Through the
to'
educalton"
by
District
1973 season, hunters did not have a choice of
hunting period. Questtonnatre commen\s Supt. Charles Dowler from
showed that many who hunted in the second the school board. McComas
period thought the season was too late. The had completed one career m
major complaints were that turkeys did not education as a teacher and
seem to respond lo a caller, and that the for many years superinvegetation was too advanced, thus reducing tend en t of Middleport
exempted schools before
chances of huntmg success. ,
The overwhelmmg selection of period I consolidation.
by hunters ~~ 1974 and 1975 reflects these
opinions, but harvest success data for these
years does not substantiate them. To be
continued .
in Ohio's 10 spring turkey hunl' have had

'

stomped 103-58!

Vistling Kyger Creek ran
into a buzz saw Tuesday night
.. •' as Buffalo of Putnam County
; : raced to a 103-58 non-

=
=

;( : conference victory .

Coach Rudolph Raynes'
Blsons Increased their season
record to '1H whtle Kyger
:
Creek completed its regular
season al S.l3. It was the
•
second lime this season,
Buffalo hit the century mark
In scoring.
The Bisons used a hot: ; shooting, fast-breaking of·
: : fenae, to take .a 24-12 lead . .
From that point on. the game
was out of reach . Buffalo
scored 32 poln t.s during a
torrid stretch In the second
period. Everything the
Bisons threw up seemed to go
• in.
Buffalo continued its fast·
: break tactics in the third
q";ter connecting for 26

i=..
•

b

some rocks at it as an auUtor.
When he had the Cleveland Indians, he engaged one band to
parade through the stands playing for the customers and
another one to entertain in a special wigwam he had built in
center field. He also hired a baseball clown, Max Patkin, to
coach at first base, and another one, Jackie Price, to stand on
his head in a jeep and catch balls thrown to him by the
Cleveland players.
With the St. Louis Browns, he reached his promotional peak
the day he sent up a 43-incl], 65-pound midget to pinch hit m a
regular season game with Detroit. The little fellow's name was
Eddie Gaede! and never having played in a professional game
before, he was petrified, scared witless, facing Detroit curveballer Bob Cain, but as far as Veeck was concerned, this was
simply a great stunt, one which gained nation-wide pubhcity
for his ball club.
"The trouble with this business is too much dignity and not
enough fun," Veeck has said more than once.
He certainly won't have much fun if he goes ahead with this
plan of his to open the White Sox camp Monday in defiance of
all the other clubs. If he does that, he'll be committing what
will amount to economic suicide because he can be sure none of
the other clubs wiU forget what he did, or forgive him, after the
present deadlock with the players is resolved.
The only possible company he may have tf he does open
camp ahead of the rest is Atlanta's new owner, Ted Turner,
who also has said he's eager to gel started.
That still would make il 22 to 24lot good odds In any league,
even for a grealstunl man like Bill Veeck .
MAY COST VOTES
SANTA ANA, Gatif. (UPI)
- Rep. Andrew Hinshaw
intends to continue his
campaign for reelection
although he has been
sentenced to one to 14 years
for taking bribes.
Hinshaw , 53, blanched
when he heard the sentence
imposed Tuesday by Superior
Court Judge Robert Kneeland
but vowed to remain in tbe
race.

"I recognize that this is
certainly going to hann my
chances of election," he said 1

but "it is certamly not going
to pers~;ade me to resign."
Hinshaw, a first-term
Republican, was convicted of ·
laking stereo equipment and
campaign contributions from
an electronics firm to lower
the company's lax bill in 1972,
when he was the Orange
County tax assessor. He
remains free pending appeal.

PIPE DREAM
WASHINGTON (UP! ) President Ford enjoys pipe
smoking too much to give it
up.
Chattinp in the White House
Oval Of: .ce with visiting
FrancolS-Xavier Ortoli,
president of the European
Common Market , Ford
compared pipes with his
guest and said, "It was a
habit I picked up In the Navy
back in World War II. I would
like to get rid of it but I really
enjoy it. n
Ortoli nodded.

FEB. 27-28-29

::: :

;t.;.

hustler." The admission, though, came later during an
extended period when he wasn't in the game and was tllrowmg

STAR SUPPLY

down on

Property
Transfers

turnovers 1 and

BUY NOW ~ SAVE

GOODIYEAR

to resist rough terrain twisting and tearing!

TRACTION mRQUE
12 4-2 84PR

ptus S4.32
Fed h . Ta•

Ala ce M. Clark, Floyd
Clark, Lea G. Clark to Paul
Eugene Clark, Mary Clark,
Lot 52, Racine.Sullon .
Mabel Wickline, Russell
Wicklme, Mildred Milhorn to
Paul Eugene Clark, Mary
Clark, Lot 52, Racine-Sutton.
Jerry Hawk, Geraldine
Hawk to Jimmy W. Queen,
Debra Queen , Lot 265,

and hre off
yo ur tractor
~ARGER SIZES PRICED
SLIGHTLY HIGHER

• Trip le te mp ered Pe rma co rd
nylon cord construction gives
long·lasflng st rength .

• AnHic tuaced luHs slow rale
o f wea r by gett ing wider
as they wear . .

g1~·e

super

p·u1h ng·s lrength
• Heav~• -du t y r1m shw1d of
tough rubber helps protccl
from roo t, rock , and sl ub blc
damage for dur!lbill ty.

Pomeroy

Coloma! F10ancial Service
Inc . to Richard H. Stewart,
Betty L. Stewart, .3A,
Salisbury.
Jaymar Coal Co. Inc. to Jay
Hall Jr ., Parcels, Salisbury.
William Nally lo James
Nally, Kathleen Nally ,
Parcels, Orange.
Edward Sycks, June Sycks
to Randy Lee Sycks, Jonna ·
Joy Sycks, 110.782 A Bed·
ford .
Warren P Pickens, Lillian
E Pickens to Warren P.
Pickens, Lillian E. Pickens,
Parcels, Ohve.

75

$

Also
Special Prices
On Front
Tractor Tires

MEIGS..
TIRE CENTER
992 -2101

POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN HOUSE

.". ''

~. ; KC

NEW YORK (UP!) - can you picture Paul Richards, with
those skinny, knobby knees of his, managing in short pants?
Bill Veeck can, and the picture breaks him up a little. Only
he doesn't show it because it wouldn't look·good for him to fall
over laughing at his own publicity stunts.
Publicity has always been important to Bill Veeck because
publicity sells tickets. It's probably more important lo him
now than il ever has been because he's trying lo do everything
he can to breathe a little tile into the inanimate Chicago White
Sox.
One day the White Sox announce they're going to try wearing
shorts. The next day Bill Veeck says he doesn't care if all the
other clubs aren't going to open their camps for spring training
'March I because of their labor problem with the players, he 's
thinking of opening the White Sox camp all by himself.
The fact that he probably won '1, doesn 'I matter. What does is
that all this could help the White Sox sell some e.tra tickets,
and selling tickets is how Bill Veeck makes his living .
Years ago, someone labeled him the "new P.T. Barnum,"
and called him "Baseball's Greatest Showman." Veeck
reveled in those descriptions, cheerfully admitting he was "a

The Meigs ' ~iri s basketball be more &lt;Jlert to open shots .
team extended their winning
Th e las t game before
record to to wins and one loss
Cont10ued on page 4
as they eas rl y defeated
Jackson 52-37.
The frrst quarter wa s slow
for Meigs as .Jackson took a
DO ITlOURSELR
surprising 8-2 lead . Meigs
"STEAM"QEAN 'roUR
buun ce 4 bnck with two
CARPfTS ...
THE PROfESSIONAL WAY.
buckets to end the frr sl
H f- nl tlw (ttnllls ti(' nt;\N Up &amp;
quarter wtth a score of 6-6.
Ou t ll yd ro· M ist Mac hine for
Meigs got psyched up the
supnmr carpf'l l'l t&gt;l'lnm g l-!,.l{l!!l' fl jj a nJ
second quarter as they
remuv!•B d1rt , p rl'vi
outscored J ackson 18-9. Pam
o us shamrwo r l'stdlle,
anrl up t .. 90% fl( 11u~
Vaughan found her range and
m oistuttJ in JU!:I l o ne
scored ftve baskets, while her
step Sn~c money ..
sister, Pal, had two baskets. ~et rl:!lull~; JU!olt hke a
pro rt!Sstonal !
Meigs went. into the locker
room with a 24-1 7 lead
Metgs got fired up the third
quarte r by oulsconng
Jackson 15-ll. Pam Vaughan
made the difference 'the
second half by scori ng · 17
poi nts Beth Vaughan was
tough on rebounds by pulhng
down 17 rebounds.
The fourth quarter saw
AVAILABLE FOR RENTAL
Meigs forcing Jackson into
turnovers and Meigs scoring
on the fast break The coach
felt that despite the fact that
lhe girls got off to a slow
start, they shll were all able
RACINE, OHIO
to score; nevertheless. the
girls are going to have to cut

points then finished out the
game wtth 21 big ones in the
final stanza .
John Stone, a 6-1 senior
forward , led Buffal6's
scoring attack with 29 points.
Three other Bison players hit
double figures with Doug
Greenlaw , an All-Slater,
connecting for 25 points :
Mike Boles had 16 and Chuck
Noffsinger, a tall sophomore,
dumped in 15.
Kyger Creek's offense was
led by senior Bill Metzner and
junior forward Doug Sands.
Metzner pumped in 16 points.
Sands had 14 and Ralph
Baylor added II .
Buffalo shot a blistering 55
pet. from the floor while
sinking 11 of 2.1 at the foul
line . The Bobcats hit only
eight of 23 at the charity
stripe.
Kyger Creek's next outing
~

wtll be in the Class A Sec·
tiona! Tournament al Meigs
March 4.
Buffalo also took the
preliminary game, 60-57.
Martin and Little led Buffalo
with 21 and 17 pomts
respec tively. Ed Mollohan
topped KC wi l~ 18, Jon
Thompson added 17.
Box score :

Kyger Creek (58) - Sands
7 0 14 ; Metzner 8 0 \6 : Arm .
bruster 2-1 6 , Brown 1 0 2,
Lucas 2 0 4 , Salem ~ 1 5
Baylor 3·5· 11 Totals H -8-ss
Buffalo ( 103) Boles 6 ·1
16 ; Green law II 3 25 : C
Noffsin ger 7115 . Slone 14 I
29 , Whittington I 0 2. Bur ch
J .&lt;J 6; A
Noffs inger 2 0 4;
Marlm 0 2 2, Rayburn 2 0-4,
Totals 46 -11 -103 .
By Quarters .
KC
12 13 19 14
58
Buffa lo
24 3~ 26 21 103
Reserves : Buffalo 60 Kyg er

Hours 11 to 7 p.m .

COMPARE OUR
QUALITY .AND PRICE

SAVE NOW DURING
OPEN HOUSE
Last of winter pricing on 20-28 ft .
travel trailers and fold downs. We
sell service and quality. Financing
. arranged. Register f'lr free gifts.

White
,
Colors
Gallon
ONE COAT

Chief 4-Hour

FlAT FINISH LATEX

ENAMEL
quart 2.98

I.

STARCRAFT
MINI-MOTOR HOMES
Camp Conley Starcraft Sales
Rt. 62 -

North of Pt. Pleasant

ON ALL PAINTING ACCESSORIES

MOORE'S
992-2848

American Hardware

Pomeroy

Creek 57 .

l)

'

�~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pon1eroy, 0 ., WedllPsday, Feb. 25. 1976

EXTRA TOP VALUE
STAMPS WITH COUPONS IN lHIS

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 25,1976

Tar.Heels clinch ACC
crown with -91-79 win
United Press International
The
patented North
Carolina " four corner
offen se" is becoming as
symbolic of basketball
success as Red Auerbach's
victory cigars.
The Tar Heels went to the
corners again Tuesday night
and, like Auerbach 's famous
cigar-lighting routine with
the championship Boston
Celtic teams of the 1961E, that
spelled impending defeat for
18th-ranked North Carolina
Stale. Behind Phil Ford's 26
points, North carolina put
away State, 91-79, and in
doing so, clinched the regular
season Atlantic Coast
Conference crown.
"It is the earliest I can
remember we went to the
four corners this year," said
Coach Dean Smith, "but I
can' t remember (Mitch)
Kupchak and (Tommy )
LaGarde with four fouls that
early either." (Kupchak got
his fourth foul with 15:37left,
LaGarde 13:29) .
Walter Davis added 20
points for the Tar Heels, now
~2 and 10-1 in the ACC, while
State's Kenny carr led all
scorers with 33.
Characteristically, Smith
praised N.C. State but left no
question he felt his own team ,
has greatly developed since
early season too . .
"N.C. State has improved
since we played them in
Chapel Hill ," he said, "but I
think we've improved too.
We 're in better shape
defensively . The tournament
is still our real goal, though.
We want to win the
tournament.''
In the only other games
involving top 20 teams, 16thrated Texas A&amp;M wrapped
up the Southwest Conference
championship by routing
Rice , 98-67, and No . 17
Florida Stale vanquished

Kent State's
Collins is ·
MAC horwree
COLUMBUS (UPI) - MidAmerican Conference Player
of fhe Week Jim Collins
earned the honor by scoring
24 points in Kent State's 10&amp;75 win over Ohio University
and a like number in the
Golden Flashes' 77-54 loss at
Miami.
The 6-5 forward hit 21 of 39
shots from the floor in the two
games and is Kent's leading
scorer with a 17.9 average.
An Indianapolis ·Northwest
High School graduate, Collins
edged out Toledo guard Larry
Cole for this week's laurels.
Cole scored 23 points in the
Rockets' only game of the
week, an 88-87 overtime win
at
Central
Michigan,
including a decisive basket
with 55 seconds left m the
extra period.
Also nominated this week
were Randy Boarden of Ball
State, Tommy Harris of
Bowling Green, Ben Poquette
of Central Michigan, Archie
Aldridge of Miami, Matt
Hicks of Northern flllnols,
Scott Love of OU and Jimmie
Harvey of Western Michig~n .

Valdosta State, 106-01, to inch
closer to an independent
NCAA tourney bid.
Ray Roberts scored 22 •
points as Texas A&amp;M (21-5)
raced to its fifth straight
victory and second straight
SWC regular season crown.
Karl Godine . and Jarvis
Williams, the two A&amp;M
freshmen who Thursday face
a conference hearing to
dete rmine whether they
violated any recruiting

The long road to St. John
Arena will become less
crowded this weekend with
the beginning of the Class
AAA , AA and A sectional
Tournaments around the
Buckeye State. A month from
now, all marbles will be on

Girls
Continued from page 3
sectionals is at Logan this
Thursday at 5:00. The team
hopes to end the,ir season with
an ll-1 record.
Meigs - Pam Vaughan 133-29, Beth Vaughan 2~1-5,
Demaris Ash 1-2-4, Mary
Boggs 2-0-4, Cathy Meadows
1-0-2, Pat Vaughan 2-0-4,
Glenda Brown 1-2-4. Totals
22-&lt;i-52.
6 18 15 13-52
Meigs
8
9 11 9- 37
Jackson
·

Annhrister latest

Red t 0

•

Sigll Up

to fourth

in III ratings

J

There is a big savings coupon tor

N ew Yo rk at San An tonio
Thur sda y's Gam es
{ No ga mes schedu led )

••

every department in the store.
All you have to do is bring them
in and redeem them on purchase ~

I
Cor. Pearl &amp; locust- Middleport, 0.

night in the Class A Sectional
record .
at
Ironton. The Vikings of
Next week, the winner of
Coach
Gary Salyers are 4-14
the North Gallia-Eastern
while
St.
Joe has a 9-7 record.
game plays Southwestern
Oak
Hill
,
17-1 is favored to
March 3 while the Kyger
win
the
Ironton
Sectional.
Creek Bobcats meet the
The
Oaks
open
tournament
·-:~~~
winner of the Southernplay
Thursday
night
agains
t
"
Hannan Trace tilt the
Coal
Grove,
3-15.
following eve nin g. ·. The
championship game is slated
CLASS A SECTIONAL
(Thur sd a y)
March 6 at . 7: 30p.m.
A den a v ·s . Paint v a lley , at
Symmes Valley, the other Ch il lic olh e .
Lu casvi ll e v s . C l ay , al
member of the SV AC. plays
Portsmou t h
Ironton St. Joe Thursday
Oak H i ll vs . Coal Grove : at

the line at the State
Basketball Tournament in
Columbus.
Friday night, some teams
will advance to further
competition while others will
hang up their uniforms.
In Class A circles, Southern
Valley Athletic Conference
champion, North Gallia, will
Ohio High School
battle punchless Eastern in
Baske tball R es ult s
the opening round of the
United Pre ss International
Meigs Sectional
Tour- Mass jl lo n Per r y 56 Green 41
A llia nce .u Gle n Oak 39
nament.
Claymont 47 Dover 45
Coach Jim Foster, veteran Ak ron · N 56 Co pl ey 53
Ak r on Buch tel 54 WaCsworth
Pirate mentor , will be 41
seeking his 99th" coaching Bu ffalo Pu tna m W . Va . 103
victory. North Ga llia fi nished Kyge r Creek 58
Sectional Tournam e nts
regular season play with an
Cla ss AA
·
(At Warren )
outstanding 16-2 record.
68 Painesville
Eastern, under first year Champion
Ha r vey 57
head coac h Duane Wolfe, was l iberty 40 Jefferson 33
Class A
the basement team of the
( At Warsaw }
SVAC this year with a 1-15 Indian V al le y So ut/1 66 Lo re
record overall and 1-11 mark Cit y Madison JJ
in the league.
Saturday nigh t, Southern,
second seeded in the tourney ·
ABA Sta ndings
behind North Gallia, battles By Un ited
Pres s !nterna tiondl
Hann an Trace, the 1975
w . L. Pct. l gb
Den ver
42 15 .737 tournament champ. Coach New
Y ork
38 21 .644
5·
Carl wolfe's Tornados had a San Anton io 34 23 .596 B
33 28 . . 541 11
fine year winning 12 games Kentu cky
Indiana
Jl 30 .508 13
while dropping 4.
St. Lou is
27 35 .435 17 1 ,
·Hannan Trace had a good V ir gin ia
10 50 . 167 3J 1 .,
esda y's R es ult s
year considering the many New YoTu
rk 111 V i rginia 100
obstacles Coach Dan Cor- St . Louis .11 6 Kentuck. y .102
Wednesday 's Game s
nell 's team' overcome . The
Louis at Vir:glnia
'Wildcats finished with an 11-7 51.
Indiana at Den ver

Tigers drop

J

Florida Stale, which made
its first appearance in the
UPI top 20 this week, ran its
record to 19-5 with a lopsided
victory ove r outgunned
Valdosta State. David
Thompson led the Seminoles'
onslaught with 21 points and
:&gt;-foot-a guard Carlton Byrd
added 17.
Elsewhere, Joey Hassett
scored 24 points to lead

UP! Sports Writer
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
hich school basketball notes
frarn around the state:
Columbus Walnut Ridge
.Uor guard Mark Dudley
baa linally recovered from a
broken linger on his right
(llbootlng) hand and just in
time for tournament play.
Dudley, who began the
lleasm with 31 and 35 'point
performances, but broke the
flllger in the second contest,
1100red 30, 33, 30 and 35 in the
Scots' final four games and
finished with 20.5 average for
!be season .
In the final game against
Columbus South, the 6-foot,
155-pound Dudley had 35
points, nine assists and six
oteals. He led the Columbus
City League in 11ssists, seven

Store Hours
Monday - Fri . 9-8
Sat. 9-9
Sun. 11 -5

Providence to an 115-ro romp
over Rhode Island , freshman
George Walker's free thfow
with 21 seconds left lifted
Houston to a Iro-98 decision
over SMU and kept the
Cougars' hopes alive fo r a
home court advantage in the
SWC post-season tournament .
and freshman
Sidney
Moncreif scored 25 points in
sparking Arkansas to an ~
over Bay lor.

points in reserve roles .

By -GENE CADDES

we've grown a

Sectional tournament
play to start Friday

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Ed
Armbrister, involved in the
most controversial play in
last year's World Series, is
among the latest Cincinnati
Reds players to sign 1976
contracts.
Signing
along
with
outfielder Armbrister
Tuesday were outfielder Joel
Youngblood and pitcpers
Lcrin Grow, Tom Hmile,
MISSION, Kan. (UP!) Philadel phia
Textile Larry Payne, Mac Scarce
(Division II) and Coe College and Raul Ferreyrra.
The Boston Red Sox com(Division III ) unanimously
retained their leads Tuesday plained to no avail that
In the weekly basketball Armbrister interfered with
ratings conducted by the catcher carlton Fisk on a
National Collegiate Athletic sacrifice bunt play that
helped the Reds win the third
Association.
Textlle received the ma'x- game of the World Series.
Armbtister, who also
imwn 120 points in balloting
knocked
in the winning run in
as il rode a 23-2 record in a
the
final
game of· the Reds'
top rating for the third
National
League playoff
consecutive week. Coe
victory
over
the ~ttsburgh
(iowa )', is 20-0, has been No. I
Pirates,
got
into only 55
in its division for five straight
games
in
the
regular
season
weeks.
last
year.
hitting
.185.
Nicholls State (La.)
Youngblood batted .263
replaced Tennessee State as
with
the Reds' Indianapolis
Division II runnerup, Morgan ..
farm
team last year and
State moved up two notches
Grow
posted
an 8-10 record .
to third place. In Division lll,
for
Indianapolis.
Scranton (Pa.) retllined its
Hume
was
9-8 at
No. 2 rating behind Coe- and
Indianapolis
and
Three
Widener (Pa.) replaced
Rivers,
Payne
was
9-12
at
Wittenberg (Ohio) in tbe
Indianapolis,
Scarce
was
5-3
tblrd positioo. Wittenberg is
at Indianapolis and Ferreyrfourth this ·week.
Two other Ohio teams are ra was 7-4 at Tampa.
The Reds so far have
also listed among the lop ten
in Dlv!Bion liT. Ashland is . announced the signing of 20
sixth and Otterbein is eiRhtll. players for the 1976 season.
(

regulations, combined for 25

n~

CABBAGE

l'
•
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•••
••

PHILADELPHIA ( UPI) Duane Putman and Ken
lman, two former standout
NFL linemen, have joined the
staff of new Philadeljlhia
Eagles Coach Dick Vermeil.
Vermeil said Putnam, 47, a
former All-Pro guard, wiU be
offensive Jibe coach while
lman, 37, who had a 14-year
playing career, will coach the
special teams and assist with
ihe offensive line.

•••
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Feb. 25.'hru Feb. 28

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SE ATTL E (UP I)
Washington foo tball Coach
Don James says the recent
.
coachmg
cha nge at UCLA
apparently didn't hurt tbe
Bruins much in the final days
of recruiting.
James said Washington has
signed 31 players for the
coming year after visits by 71

•

•••

Por t!)mo u t h v s . Miam i ,....
Tr ace , a t OU g ym
Mar iella v s . Chi ll ico th e. al
OU gym .

The Athens County
Snlngs &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.

"'

••

at

@

QUEBEC CITY, canada
tU PJ) - The World Hockey
Association Tuesday imposed
its stiffest penalty ever-a
$1,000 fine and a six .game
suspension against
forward Steve Sutherland of
the Quebec Nordiqucs for his
part in a stick-swihging fight
Sunday with Doug Roberts of
the New England Whalers.
WHA Vice President Bud
p 01'Ie announced the penalty
Tuesday night after talks
with Sutherland, Quebec
Coach Jean-Guy Gendron and
Referee
Bob
Kolari.
Sutherland
would not
comment on the league

ill•ia•m•s•,~ a c.ti•o•n.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .t•o•lh•e•H•u•s•~•y•c•a.m.pu• s•.. . . . . ~

AND
SWEET

GREEN

CLASS "AAA $E CTIONAL

Ce darv il le 92 Wilmington · 86
(2 ot)
Hiram 100 Th iel ' 72
Xavier 9 0 ln d -PurdU e ( In
d ia napo ll~) 76
Wr i g hl 51 86 Thoma s Mor e 74

a defen sive end from
Cleveland St. Edward.

••
••

CLASS AA S EC TIONAL
· (Friday )
Porlsmo ulh
WE! st
vs
Northwest , at Lu cas v i ll e .
Ne l sonvi l l e York
vs
Sheridan , at S tewart
I ronton v s . Roc k H il l. at
Coa l Grove- .
Washington C
H . vs
G r een f i eld . at Ch illicot h e
\ Uniolo) .
(Sa t urday)
Wheelersburg vs . U n io iO ,
al Lucasvil l e .
M eigs vs . N ew L·ex inqton ,
i'll 5 t ewa r t
"':;:::S?~
Ga ll ipo l is v s . W ell ston . at r
Coa l Grove .
wav erlY . vs .· Hill s boro , at
Unioto .

OU gy m .

PlTTSB URG H ( UP! 1
Three Ohio high school
football players have signed letters of intent to attend tbe '
University of Pittsburgh thl$
fall .
They are Fred Jacobs, a
halfback from Wyoming High
School in Cincinnati and UPI
Oass AA Back of the Year ·
Mike Linn, a linebacker and .:
offensive gua rd
from •
Steubenville, and Jeff Pelusi,
a
linebacker
from
Youngstown Chaney High
School.

Tomatoes

SOLID

OHIO COLLEGE

Virginia University has beet!
added to San Diego State's
football schedul~ for th~ 1979
season, it was announced
Tuesday·
The Mountaineers will visit
the Aztecs Nov. 17 in San
Diego Stadium. Last season,
the Mountaineers finished
With a lG-2 mark and a
victory over North Carolina
State in the Peach Bowl.

ru•n•ru•·n~g•ba

••
•

BASKETBALL RESULTS
United Pre ss International

SAN DIEGO (UPI) - West

OXFORD, Ohio (UPI) _ •igned "letters of intent" to ~·orest Park , and Tom King ,
three
seconds
remaining
Twenty-two
Ohio high school attend Miami t of Ohio ) an offensive tackle from
per game, and also averaged
to
give
senior
football
players have University tllis fall, Miami Youn gstown AustintownFriday
night
5.2 steals per contest.
football coach Dick crum Fitch .
To show the value of Cambridge a 78-74 win over
announced Tuesday .
Also, Matt Mazur, an off enDudley's scoring, the Scots Bridgeport. It was the lOth
win
in
a
row
and
!3th
in
New
London
's
Herb
They
are
John
Anderson,
a
sive
tackle from Qeveland
lost eight in a row while he
17 Gregory scored a career-high d f ·
t
kl
f
St
Edward ;
J ohn
e enSJve
ac e
rom
.
was mending before winning games for Coach AI Joseph's 42
pointsFriday
night
to
lead
Oeveland
Central
catholic;
Mcca
fferty,
a
middle
guard
Bobcatsinoneoftheseason's
handily over East and South
better comebacks . The Cats the Wildcats to an 84-lill win Rod Barndollar, a defensive from Ueveland West Tech ;
the last two games.
were _ last season.
over Black River . He hit 16 of tackle from Newark ; Perry Harve y McCloskey , a
"Mark is one of the best
1 17
Six.footMike
Huebner
~f;:~!~sfloor and also had Belcastro, a running back linebacker from Dayton
guards I've ever coached and
10
scored
points
and
grabbed
from Columbus Franklin Belmont : Doug Noxsel a
I've had some good ones,"
47
rebounds
Friday
night
to
Field
snapped
a
two-year,
Heights ; Dave crowder, an 1 in e ba c k er
fr~m
said . Ridge Coach Jack lead
19 pa ulding to an
~ 20·game
losing string offensiv e guard from Wh ee I e r s burg ; Joe
Moore,
82 Saturday night with a 65-58 Columbus Malrion Franklin , Pequignot, a defensive back
victory over Upper Scioto
NOTES: Delphos St. John's Valley.
victory over crestwood. The and Len Ferg uson, . an from Kettering Alter, and
Bob Arnzen completed the
Defiance
finished
its
tackle from Dayton Bob Petrus, a fullba ck from
first perfect season in his 26 regular season with a Ill.jilj ~~~~~!~~~lost 16 in a row offensive
Trotwood-Madison .
Lakewood St . Ignatius.
years as coach when the Blue
St .Henryfinishedwitha 17Also, Alvin Hall, a running
Also , Steve Ruhe , a center
Jays whipped Lima Central romp over Elida Friday night I record after burying ba k f
Da
.
f
"Iandorf; Kirk
first cousins Denny
c rom ylon Fau-view; rom Ott awa-u
Catholic 84-55 Sunday with
11
and
Mark
Hetz
Ansonia
6-44
in
the
season's
Chuck
Hauck,
a
quarterback
Springs,
a
defensive
back
Shannon
aflernoon for their 18th combining for points and
finale Saturday night. Steve from Williamsburg; Kaiser from Cincinnati Woodward ;
straight win. St. John's fell rebounds. ShannOn
57
had 30 Schwieterman led the Holman, a running back from Willie Steffan , a defensive
behind 6-G at the beginning, points and rebounds, while
30 Redskin$ with 31 points, while Ashtabula Harbor ; Mark end from New Carlisle ; Ron
but ran off 18 straight points. the
17
Hetz scored
and Joe Niekamp and Dave Stahl Hunter, a running back from Wilkinson, a defensive back
Junior Mark Green canned hauled
27
641 down
rebounds.
had 19 each. St. Henry led 7G- Whitehall Yearling; Frank from Dayto n Trotwooda pair of free !brows with
13
, .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1•6•a•t•th•e•h•alf
. ... . . . . . . . . . . H.ut
. •h•,•a. .
. .c•k•fr•o•m
. . .M.a•d•is•on•,•a•n•d•D
•an
. ..
W.

•
•••
•
•••
••

Ironton .
Ironton 5 1. J oe vs. Symmes
Va l ley , at Iro nton .
CFrida·vt
Crooksvi ll e vs . T ri mble , ill
Buch lel.
North Gal li a vs . Ea s tern. at
Rock Sp r ing s
Pee bles vs . Mancheste r , a t
Hillsboro .
Lync h burg v s . Wes t Union ,
at Hi lt sbor:o .
BiShop F l age l vs . H un t ing
Ross , at Chil l icolhe .
Eastern of Pi k e vs . Po rl s .
Eas t . at Port smo uth .
Chesap ea k e v:&gt; . Fai r l and . ';:::;;::::!:;:-,~
at Iron to n .
....

f Saturdily l
L ancas t e r ·vs . A thens.

22 sign letters to attend Miami in fall

High .school notes

PAPER AND REQl!IRED PURDtASES

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LB.

�~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pon1eroy, 0 ., WedllPsday, Feb. 25. 1976

EXTRA TOP VALUE
STAMPS WITH COUPONS IN lHIS

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 25,1976

Tar.Heels clinch ACC
crown with -91-79 win
United Press International
The
patented North
Carolina " four corner
offen se" is becoming as
symbolic of basketball
success as Red Auerbach's
victory cigars.
The Tar Heels went to the
corners again Tuesday night
and, like Auerbach 's famous
cigar-lighting routine with
the championship Boston
Celtic teams of the 1961E, that
spelled impending defeat for
18th-ranked North Carolina
Stale. Behind Phil Ford's 26
points, North carolina put
away State, 91-79, and in
doing so, clinched the regular
season Atlantic Coast
Conference crown.
"It is the earliest I can
remember we went to the
four corners this year," said
Coach Dean Smith, "but I
can' t remember (Mitch)
Kupchak and (Tommy )
LaGarde with four fouls that
early either." (Kupchak got
his fourth foul with 15:37left,
LaGarde 13:29) .
Walter Davis added 20
points for the Tar Heels, now
~2 and 10-1 in the ACC, while
State's Kenny carr led all
scorers with 33.
Characteristically, Smith
praised N.C. State but left no
question he felt his own team ,
has greatly developed since
early season too . .
"N.C. State has improved
since we played them in
Chapel Hill ," he said, "but I
think we've improved too.
We 're in better shape
defensively . The tournament
is still our real goal, though.
We want to win the
tournament.''
In the only other games
involving top 20 teams, 16thrated Texas A&amp;M wrapped
up the Southwest Conference
championship by routing
Rice , 98-67, and No . 17
Florida Stale vanquished

Kent State's
Collins is ·
MAC horwree
COLUMBUS (UPI) - MidAmerican Conference Player
of fhe Week Jim Collins
earned the honor by scoring
24 points in Kent State's 10&amp;75 win over Ohio University
and a like number in the
Golden Flashes' 77-54 loss at
Miami.
The 6-5 forward hit 21 of 39
shots from the floor in the two
games and is Kent's leading
scorer with a 17.9 average.
An Indianapolis ·Northwest
High School graduate, Collins
edged out Toledo guard Larry
Cole for this week's laurels.
Cole scored 23 points in the
Rockets' only game of the
week, an 88-87 overtime win
at
Central
Michigan,
including a decisive basket
with 55 seconds left m the
extra period.
Also nominated this week
were Randy Boarden of Ball
State, Tommy Harris of
Bowling Green, Ben Poquette
of Central Michigan, Archie
Aldridge of Miami, Matt
Hicks of Northern flllnols,
Scott Love of OU and Jimmie
Harvey of Western Michig~n .

Valdosta State, 106-01, to inch
closer to an independent
NCAA tourney bid.
Ray Roberts scored 22 •
points as Texas A&amp;M (21-5)
raced to its fifth straight
victory and second straight
SWC regular season crown.
Karl Godine . and Jarvis
Williams, the two A&amp;M
freshmen who Thursday face
a conference hearing to
dete rmine whether they
violated any recruiting

The long road to St. John
Arena will become less
crowded this weekend with
the beginning of the Class
AAA , AA and A sectional
Tournaments around the
Buckeye State. A month from
now, all marbles will be on

Girls
Continued from page 3
sectionals is at Logan this
Thursday at 5:00. The team
hopes to end the,ir season with
an ll-1 record.
Meigs - Pam Vaughan 133-29, Beth Vaughan 2~1-5,
Demaris Ash 1-2-4, Mary
Boggs 2-0-4, Cathy Meadows
1-0-2, Pat Vaughan 2-0-4,
Glenda Brown 1-2-4. Totals
22-&lt;i-52.
6 18 15 13-52
Meigs
8
9 11 9- 37
Jackson
·

Annhrister latest

Red t 0

•

Sigll Up

to fourth

in III ratings

J

There is a big savings coupon tor

N ew Yo rk at San An tonio
Thur sda y's Gam es
{ No ga mes schedu led )

••

every department in the store.
All you have to do is bring them
in and redeem them on purchase ~

I
Cor. Pearl &amp; locust- Middleport, 0.

night in the Class A Sectional
record .
at
Ironton. The Vikings of
Next week, the winner of
Coach
Gary Salyers are 4-14
the North Gallia-Eastern
while
St.
Joe has a 9-7 record.
game plays Southwestern
Oak
Hill
,
17-1 is favored to
March 3 while the Kyger
win
the
Ironton
Sectional.
Creek Bobcats meet the
The
Oaks
open
tournament
·-:~~~
winner of the Southernplay
Thursday
night
agains
t
"
Hannan Trace tilt the
Coal
Grove,
3-15.
following eve nin g. ·. The
championship game is slated
CLASS A SECTIONAL
(Thur sd a y)
March 6 at . 7: 30p.m.
A den a v ·s . Paint v a lley , at
Symmes Valley, the other Ch il lic olh e .
Lu casvi ll e v s . C l ay , al
member of the SV AC. plays
Portsmou t h
Ironton St. Joe Thursday
Oak H i ll vs . Coal Grove : at

the line at the State
Basketball Tournament in
Columbus.
Friday night, some teams
will advance to further
competition while others will
hang up their uniforms.
In Class A circles, Southern
Valley Athletic Conference
champion, North Gallia, will
Ohio High School
battle punchless Eastern in
Baske tball R es ult s
the opening round of the
United Pre ss International
Meigs Sectional
Tour- Mass jl lo n Per r y 56 Green 41
A llia nce .u Gle n Oak 39
nament.
Claymont 47 Dover 45
Coach Jim Foster, veteran Ak ron · N 56 Co pl ey 53
Ak r on Buch tel 54 WaCsworth
Pirate mentor , will be 41
seeking his 99th" coaching Bu ffalo Pu tna m W . Va . 103
victory. North Ga llia fi nished Kyge r Creek 58
Sectional Tournam e nts
regular season play with an
Cla ss AA
·
(At Warren )
outstanding 16-2 record.
68 Painesville
Eastern, under first year Champion
Ha r vey 57
head coac h Duane Wolfe, was l iberty 40 Jefferson 33
Class A
the basement team of the
( At Warsaw }
SVAC this year with a 1-15 Indian V al le y So ut/1 66 Lo re
record overall and 1-11 mark Cit y Madison JJ
in the league.
Saturday nigh t, Southern,
second seeded in the tourney ·
ABA Sta ndings
behind North Gallia, battles By Un ited
Pres s !nterna tiondl
Hann an Trace, the 1975
w . L. Pct. l gb
Den ver
42 15 .737 tournament champ. Coach New
Y ork
38 21 .644
5·
Carl wolfe's Tornados had a San Anton io 34 23 .596 B
33 28 . . 541 11
fine year winning 12 games Kentu cky
Indiana
Jl 30 .508 13
while dropping 4.
St. Lou is
27 35 .435 17 1 ,
·Hannan Trace had a good V ir gin ia
10 50 . 167 3J 1 .,
esda y's R es ult s
year considering the many New YoTu
rk 111 V i rginia 100
obstacles Coach Dan Cor- St . Louis .11 6 Kentuck. y .102
Wednesday 's Game s
nell 's team' overcome . The
Louis at Vir:glnia
'Wildcats finished with an 11-7 51.
Indiana at Den ver

Tigers drop

J

Florida Stale, which made
its first appearance in the
UPI top 20 this week, ran its
record to 19-5 with a lopsided
victory ove r outgunned
Valdosta State. David
Thompson led the Seminoles'
onslaught with 21 points and
:&gt;-foot-a guard Carlton Byrd
added 17.
Elsewhere, Joey Hassett
scored 24 points to lead

UP! Sports Writer
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
hich school basketball notes
frarn around the state:
Columbus Walnut Ridge
.Uor guard Mark Dudley
baa linally recovered from a
broken linger on his right
(llbootlng) hand and just in
time for tournament play.
Dudley, who began the
lleasm with 31 and 35 'point
performances, but broke the
flllger in the second contest,
1100red 30, 33, 30 and 35 in the
Scots' final four games and
finished with 20.5 average for
!be season .
In the final game against
Columbus South, the 6-foot,
155-pound Dudley had 35
points, nine assists and six
oteals. He led the Columbus
City League in 11ssists, seven

Store Hours
Monday - Fri . 9-8
Sat. 9-9
Sun. 11 -5

Providence to an 115-ro romp
over Rhode Island , freshman
George Walker's free thfow
with 21 seconds left lifted
Houston to a Iro-98 decision
over SMU and kept the
Cougars' hopes alive fo r a
home court advantage in the
SWC post-season tournament .
and freshman
Sidney
Moncreif scored 25 points in
sparking Arkansas to an ~
over Bay lor.

points in reserve roles .

By -GENE CADDES

we've grown a

Sectional tournament
play to start Friday

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Ed
Armbrister, involved in the
most controversial play in
last year's World Series, is
among the latest Cincinnati
Reds players to sign 1976
contracts.
Signing
along
with
outfielder Armbrister
Tuesday were outfielder Joel
Youngblood and pitcpers
Lcrin Grow, Tom Hmile,
MISSION, Kan. (UP!) Philadel phia
Textile Larry Payne, Mac Scarce
(Division II) and Coe College and Raul Ferreyrra.
The Boston Red Sox com(Division III ) unanimously
retained their leads Tuesday plained to no avail that
In the weekly basketball Armbrister interfered with
ratings conducted by the catcher carlton Fisk on a
National Collegiate Athletic sacrifice bunt play that
helped the Reds win the third
Association.
Textlle received the ma'x- game of the World Series.
Armbtister, who also
imwn 120 points in balloting
knocked
in the winning run in
as il rode a 23-2 record in a
the
final
game of· the Reds'
top rating for the third
National
League playoff
consecutive week. Coe
victory
over
the ~ttsburgh
(iowa )', is 20-0, has been No. I
Pirates,
got
into only 55
in its division for five straight
games
in
the
regular
season
weeks.
last
year.
hitting
.185.
Nicholls State (La.)
Youngblood batted .263
replaced Tennessee State as
with
the Reds' Indianapolis
Division II runnerup, Morgan ..
farm
team last year and
State moved up two notches
Grow
posted
an 8-10 record .
to third place. In Division lll,
for
Indianapolis.
Scranton (Pa.) retllined its
Hume
was
9-8 at
No. 2 rating behind Coe- and
Indianapolis
and
Three
Widener (Pa.) replaced
Rivers,
Payne
was
9-12
at
Wittenberg (Ohio) in tbe
Indianapolis,
Scarce
was
5-3
tblrd positioo. Wittenberg is
at Indianapolis and Ferreyrfourth this ·week.
Two other Ohio teams are ra was 7-4 at Tampa.
The Reds so far have
also listed among the lop ten
in Dlv!Bion liT. Ashland is . announced the signing of 20
sixth and Otterbein is eiRhtll. players for the 1976 season.
(

regulations, combined for 25

n~

CABBAGE

l'
•
••

•••
••

PHILADELPHIA ( UPI) Duane Putman and Ken
lman, two former standout
NFL linemen, have joined the
staff of new Philadeljlhia
Eagles Coach Dick Vermeil.
Vermeil said Putnam, 47, a
former All-Pro guard, wiU be
offensive Jibe coach while
lman, 37, who had a 14-year
playing career, will coach the
special teams and assist with
ihe offensive line.

•••
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79~

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With purchase of 4 lb. bag
of Pinto Beans

of Tomatoes

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100 EXTRA
TOP VALUE STAMPS

Pomeroy, Ohio

l•gl

With purchase of

a gallon of Paint
Coupon Good
Feb. 25.'hru Feb. 28

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II

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With purchase of box of 24 ct.
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coupon Good
Feb. 25 thru Feb. 28 .

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TOP VALUE STAMPS
With purchase of 4 qts. of

Coupon Good
Feb . 25 thru Feb. 28

of Coca-Cola

Ohio
Coupon Good
Feb . 25 thru Feb. 28

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With purchase of 40
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oz.

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Feb. 25 lhru Feb. 28

PCS.

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Valvoline Motor Oil

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With purchase of 2-64 oL bottles

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PlAZA

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Feb - 25 thru Feb. 28

0

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With purchase of 6 cans

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HAM
QUARTERS

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303

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Coupon Good
Feb.2Sihru Feb.28

Coupon Good
Feb . 25thru Feb. 28

24 oz.
box

CHIP STYLE

GRAPEFRUIT· ARGO PEAS

50 EXTR~ \
TOP VALUE STAMPS

With purchase of 3 lb. tray

Meip Co. Branch

Hrs . 9 a .m. tit 5:30p.m. Closed Sun.
Pecul Ash 992 -3323, Roger Davis, 992-1671

or more Beef Roast

50 EXTRA
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Ninety day interest peno tty
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992-7034

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With purchase ot" 3 lb.

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Kingsbury Mobile Homes
Pomeroy

lOO .EXTRA
TOP VALUE STAMPS

With pu rch~ of fam i~ pack

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Installation price includes all labor and '
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Month of February Only .

LB.'l

39

$

INTEREST

12x52- '225.00 14x60-'260
12x60
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Average heighl28 inches. if higher slightly
more.
Choice of Avacado or While.

1

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--=~~:4

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Pinning For Your Mobile Home

SE ATTL E (UP I)
Washington foo tball Coach
Don James says the recent
.
coachmg
cha nge at UCLA
apparently didn't hurt tbe
Bruins much in the final days
of recruiting.
James said Washington has
signed 31 players for the
coming year after visits by 71

•

•••

Por t!)mo u t h v s . Miam i ,....
Tr ace , a t OU g ym
Mar iella v s . Chi ll ico th e. al
OU gym .

The Athens County
Snlngs &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.

"'

••

at

@

QUEBEC CITY, canada
tU PJ) - The World Hockey
Association Tuesday imposed
its stiffest penalty ever-a
$1,000 fine and a six .game
suspension against
forward Steve Sutherland of
the Quebec Nordiqucs for his
part in a stick-swihging fight
Sunday with Doug Roberts of
the New England Whalers.
WHA Vice President Bud
p 01'Ie announced the penalty
Tuesday night after talks
with Sutherland, Quebec
Coach Jean-Guy Gendron and
Referee
Bob
Kolari.
Sutherland
would not
comment on the league

ill•ia•m•s•,~ a c.ti•o•n.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .t•o•lh•e•H•u•s•~•y•c•a.m.pu• s•.. . . . . ~

AND
SWEET

GREEN

CLASS "AAA $E CTIONAL

Ce darv il le 92 Wilmington · 86
(2 ot)
Hiram 100 Th iel ' 72
Xavier 9 0 ln d -PurdU e ( In
d ia napo ll~) 76
Wr i g hl 51 86 Thoma s Mor e 74

a defen sive end from
Cleveland St. Edward.

••
••

CLASS AA S EC TIONAL
· (Friday )
Porlsmo ulh
WE! st
vs
Northwest , at Lu cas v i ll e .
Ne l sonvi l l e York
vs
Sheridan , at S tewart
I ronton v s . Roc k H il l. at
Coa l Grove- .
Washington C
H . vs
G r een f i eld . at Ch illicot h e
\ Uniolo) .
(Sa t urday)
Wheelersburg vs . U n io iO ,
al Lucasvil l e .
M eigs vs . N ew L·ex inqton ,
i'll 5 t ewa r t
"':;:::S?~
Ga ll ipo l is v s . W ell ston . at r
Coa l Grove .
wav erlY . vs .· Hill s boro , at
Unioto .

OU gy m .

PlTTSB URG H ( UP! 1
Three Ohio high school
football players have signed letters of intent to attend tbe '
University of Pittsburgh thl$
fall .
They are Fred Jacobs, a
halfback from Wyoming High
School in Cincinnati and UPI
Oass AA Back of the Year ·
Mike Linn, a linebacker and .:
offensive gua rd
from •
Steubenville, and Jeff Pelusi,
a
linebacker
from
Youngstown Chaney High
School.

Tomatoes

SOLID

OHIO COLLEGE

Virginia University has beet!
added to San Diego State's
football schedul~ for th~ 1979
season, it was announced
Tuesday·
The Mountaineers will visit
the Aztecs Nov. 17 in San
Diego Stadium. Last season,
the Mountaineers finished
With a lG-2 mark and a
victory over North Carolina
State in the Peach Bowl.

ru•n•ru•·n~g•ba

••
•

BASKETBALL RESULTS
United Pre ss International

SAN DIEGO (UPI) - West

OXFORD, Ohio (UPI) _ •igned "letters of intent" to ~·orest Park , and Tom King ,
three
seconds
remaining
Twenty-two
Ohio high school attend Miami t of Ohio ) an offensive tackle from
per game, and also averaged
to
give
senior
football
players have University tllis fall, Miami Youn gstown AustintownFriday
night
5.2 steals per contest.
football coach Dick crum Fitch .
To show the value of Cambridge a 78-74 win over
announced Tuesday .
Also, Matt Mazur, an off enDudley's scoring, the Scots Bridgeport. It was the lOth
win
in
a
row
and
!3th
in
New
London
's
Herb
They
are
John
Anderson,
a
sive
tackle from Qeveland
lost eight in a row while he
17 Gregory scored a career-high d f ·
t
kl
f
St
Edward ;
J ohn
e enSJve
ac e
rom
.
was mending before winning games for Coach AI Joseph's 42
pointsFriday
night
to
lead
Oeveland
Central
catholic;
Mcca
fferty,
a
middle
guard
Bobcatsinoneoftheseason's
handily over East and South
better comebacks . The Cats the Wildcats to an 84-lill win Rod Barndollar, a defensive from Ueveland West Tech ;
the last two games.
were _ last season.
over Black River . He hit 16 of tackle from Newark ; Perry Harve y McCloskey , a
"Mark is one of the best
1 17
Six.footMike
Huebner
~f;:~!~sfloor and also had Belcastro, a running back linebacker from Dayton
guards I've ever coached and
10
scored
points
and
grabbed
from Columbus Franklin Belmont : Doug Noxsel a
I've had some good ones,"
47
rebounds
Friday
night
to
Field
snapped
a
two-year,
Heights ; Dave crowder, an 1 in e ba c k er
fr~m
said . Ridge Coach Jack lead
19 pa ulding to an
~ 20·game
losing string offensiv e guard from Wh ee I e r s burg ; Joe
Moore,
82 Saturday night with a 65-58 Columbus Malrion Franklin , Pequignot, a defensive back
victory over Upper Scioto
NOTES: Delphos St. John's Valley.
victory over crestwood. The and Len Ferg uson, . an from Kettering Alter, and
Bob Arnzen completed the
Defiance
finished
its
tackle from Dayton Bob Petrus, a fullba ck from
first perfect season in his 26 regular season with a Ill.jilj ~~~~~!~~~lost 16 in a row offensive
Trotwood-Madison .
Lakewood St . Ignatius.
years as coach when the Blue
St .Henryfinishedwitha 17Also, Alvin Hall, a running
Also , Steve Ruhe , a center
Jays whipped Lima Central romp over Elida Friday night I record after burying ba k f
Da
.
f
"Iandorf; Kirk
first cousins Denny
c rom ylon Fau-view; rom Ott awa-u
Catholic 84-55 Sunday with
11
and
Mark
Hetz
Ansonia
6-44
in
the
season's
Chuck
Hauck,
a
quarterback
Springs,
a
defensive
back
Shannon
aflernoon for their 18th combining for points and
finale Saturday night. Steve from Williamsburg; Kaiser from Cincinnati Woodward ;
straight win. St. John's fell rebounds. ShannOn
57
had 30 Schwieterman led the Holman, a running back from Willie Steffan , a defensive
behind 6-G at the beginning, points and rebounds, while
30 Redskin$ with 31 points, while Ashtabula Harbor ; Mark end from New Carlisle ; Ron
but ran off 18 straight points. the
17
Hetz scored
and Joe Niekamp and Dave Stahl Hunter, a running back from Wilkinson, a defensive back
Junior Mark Green canned hauled
27
641 down
rebounds.
had 19 each. St. Henry led 7G- Whitehall Yearling; Frank from Dayto n Trotwooda pair of free !brows with
13
, .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1•6•a•t•th•e•h•alf
. ... . . . . . . . . . . H.ut
. •h•,•a. .
. .c•k•fr•o•m
. . .M.a•d•is•on•,•a•n•d•D
•an
. ..
W.

•
•••
•
•••
••

Ironton .
Ironton 5 1. J oe vs. Symmes
Va l ley , at Iro nton .
CFrida·vt
Crooksvi ll e vs . T ri mble , ill
Buch lel.
North Gal li a vs . Ea s tern. at
Rock Sp r ing s
Pee bles vs . Mancheste r , a t
Hillsboro .
Lync h burg v s . Wes t Union ,
at Hi lt sbor:o .
BiShop F l age l vs . H un t ing
Ross , at Chil l icolhe .
Eastern of Pi k e vs . Po rl s .
Eas t . at Port smo uth .
Chesap ea k e v:&gt; . Fai r l and . ';:::;;::::!:;:-,~
at Iron to n .
....

f Saturdily l
L ancas t e r ·vs . A thens.

22 sign letters to attend Miami in fall

High .school notes

PAPER AND REQl!IRED PURDtASES

SEl.fX.T P r!T

15

CATSUP

32 oz.

14

FAMILY PAK

U.S. NO. 1 IDAHO

RED
RADISHES
.

MEDIUM
ONIONS

29~ pkg.

FAMILY PAK

oZ.

c
LB.

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wt&gt;dnesday, Feb. 25, 1976

'Laurel Cliff

New Giant era begins
By JOE SARGIS
UP! Sports Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) When National League
owners anmW&gt;ced they had
approved sale of the San
Francisco Giants to a
combine headed by Bob
Lurie, it brought to an end
Stoneham family ownership
in a franchise that produced
10 championships in 57 years
and once was baseball's most
glamorous team.
It was in 1919 that Charles
A. Stoneham purchased
controlling interest in the
Giants-then based in New
York-&lt;111d made them the
best team in the National
League in the 2Qs wtder John
J. McGraw.
When Charles Swneham
died in 1935, his son Horace,
then only 32, asswned control
and the Giants continued as a
power in the NL, until
changing times and habits
forced the club to move West
in 1958.
Under Charles Stoneham,
the Giants won pennants in
1921. 22, 23, 24 and 33, beating

the New. York Yankees of
Miller Huggins' fame in the
1921 and 1922 World Series
and losing to the Yankees in
1923 and the Washington
Senators , led by Bucky
Harris , in 1933.
BiU Terry was the Giants'
manager when they won
again in 1936 and 1937 and he
gained a World Series split
against Joe McCarthy and
the Yankees . Those two
seasons probably were
Horace ~toneham's best as
Giants' president.
It wasn 't until Bobby
Thomson hit his dramatic
homer in the ninth inning of
the final playoff game
against the Brooklyn Dodgers
in 1951 that the Giants won
another pennant.
Leo Durocher was then
manager and still the field
leader when the Giants won
the pennant in 1954 and then
rolled over the Cleveland
Indians, who had won an
American League record ·lll
games, four straight in the
World Series.
Durocher was ·long gone

News Notes

when Alvin Dark, who played
shortstop for Leo on the 1951
and 1954 championship
teams, led the Giants to their
only San Francisco pennant
in 1962. After that the Giants
always seemed to be on the
verge of winning only to lose
out until Charlie Fox
produced a division flag in
1971.
All those also-ran clubs, the
decline of .super stars Willie
Mays, Willie McCovey and
Juan Marichal plus the
winning A's across the Bay in
Oakland figured in the
decline of the Giants and
eventually forc ed Horace
Stoneham to seU his father 's
club.
Now, Bob Lurie, a to-yearold San Francisco sportsman,
who has owned a small piece
of the Giants since they came
West, is the principal owner
and more than likely will
become the president. When
he does he will be only the
eighth club president since
John B. Day launched the
team in 1883.
Now a new era begins.

Miller in mid-season form
PHILADELPHIA (UP! ) Major league baseball
players haven 't been able to
start spring training yet but
Marvin MiUer already is in
mid-season form.
With the shadow of the
reserve clause hanging over
major league baseball's con·
tract dispute, club owners
have decided to postpone the
March I opening of spring
training camps until a
settlement is reached.
MiUer , executive director
of the Major League Baseball
Players Association, says the
owners'
decision
is

got no response ."
Miller said the recent court
ruling, which allowed
pitchers Andy Messersmith
and Dave McNally to
negotiate. with new teams
after playing out the options
in their con(l'acts, defused tbe
owners' argument in the
contract disputes.
"The owners think they
cannot live with the Messers-

reserve clause issue.

American League
President Lee MacPhail and
National League President
Charles Feeney annoW&gt;ced
jointly Monday that owners
would not open spring
training until a new basic
agreement can be reached
with the Players Association.
"We feel this is the
quickest, surest way wreach
an agreement," MacPhail
said.

"I think it is comical,"
Miller coW&gt;tered. "For the
first time in history, an
industry that is not
threatened by a strike action
from its employes is shutting
itself down of its own
volition."

'He added, "They (the ow·
ners) pushed us Saturday to
give them some ideas on the
reserve rules problems. We
gave them some very specific
propcisals. On other matters,
we withdrew a whole raft of
proposals and at the end we

want something in return ."
"We are doing our best to

achieve
a
prompt
settlement," MacPhail said.
"But the progress thus far
has been most discouraging."

7- The Daily Senti~ I,_Middleport-Poineroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Feb. 25, 1976

Polly's Pointers
r

BOWLING
Pomeroy Bowlin9 Lanes
Early Sunday Mixed
Fet&gt;. 1 s, 1976
W L
Pul l ins Exc cu:ating
44 . 20
Ja ck s Dairy Bar
40 24
Team 6
31 33
Tom 's Carry Ou1
27 37
Pomeroy F lower Shop 26 38
Hi ll &amp; Mayer Barbers 24 40
High individui!tl game
Ed . Voss 203 , Bess .H.en dr ic ks
22 6 : second h ig h individua l
gam e Jeff W i lson 202 .
Marlene WllsQ n 199 .
High ser ies ...... Ed Voss 564,
~\"arlene Wilson 520; second
hig h series Bill Wilfford
560 , Bess Hendricks SOB.
Team
h i gh
ga~e
Pomeroy F low er Shop 698.
team high series ~ Pomeroy
Flower Shop 2,01 2.
Pom eroy. Bowling Lanes
Tuesday Triplicate League
Feb.17, 1976
Royal Oak Park
39
Dew Drops
36
Rac ine Home Natl . Bk
32
New York Cloth . House
25
Da ir y Valley
20
Mi1chell Painting Co .
16
High ind iv idual game
A l ma Pooler , Pai Carson 178 ;
second h ig h i nd ivid ual game
- Connie Chapman 1.67 .
Hi9h series - Pat Carson
475 , second high ser ies _:
· Con n ie Chapma n 469.
Team high gar:n e Mit ·
chel l Pain t ing Co. 484 , team
h ig h serieS Royal Oak
Park 1 ,282 .

Polly,s r•roblem
do have are soon gone and the
DEAR POLLY - Could I poor pencils look helpless.
paint the white burner bowls The rubber eraser should be
on my gas stove? I would like double the present length for
to paint them black since they practical use . - LOUISE.
always look dirty but· wonder
DEAR POLLY - At home
if this would be dangerous so . we were a lways encouraged
near the flam e. - LUCILLE. to brush our long hair over
DEAR LUCILLE - A Fire the side of the bathtub, so the
Prevention offi cer says this Is loose hair fell on the white
not rea lly a fire hazard. Of surface where it could be

,

'
!

r'Ourse, you would r emove
them from the sJnve and

away from the pilot light to do
the painting. He had done this

HOME TO MOTHER
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Elizabeth Taylor, newly
separated from Richard
Burwn, flew in from New
York Tuesday night. •
She emerged from the
plane smiling and carrying a
small dog . Friends said Miss
Taylor planned to spend some
time with her ailing and
elderly mother , form er
actress ' Sara Sothern , in
Palm Springs, a dese rt

"SEE YOU LATER ... "
LOS ANGEl.ES (UP! )
BiU Haley and the Coll'\ets, a

pioneer rock n' roll ban a, was

Comets rlow were living in
Veracruz, Mexico .

1973, s.he said, alleging the
musicians consistently
negotiated contracts without
paying her commission and
charged almost $250,000 in
expenses to her.
The band, which recorded
the hits "Rock Around the
Clock" and "See You Later
Alligator" in the 1950s, has

resort.

Miss Taylor, 44, is
separated again this week
from Burton, 49, twice her
husband.

since the surface underneath

is baked enamel. Just wlptng
them off is all right, bui there
comes a day when a scoUring

with cleanser is needed and

2 PIECE LIVING ROOM

SUITE

EXERSOLE
SHOES

year cont"'c/ with her in

off as easily as it went on

GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S
BUDGET SHOP

been b&lt;ised in Mexico City
since the mid 19605. The
lawsuit said Haley and the

sued for $250,000 Tuesday by
Sandra Shekell, the group's
manager.
The Comets signed a three-

in his own home, howeve r,
ot .nd found it most unsatisfactory. The paint comes

ANOTHER .................... .

KYGER CREEK'S FRESHMEN team finished second in the Eastern Invitational
Basketball Tournament hel d last weekend. The club, coached by first year mentor Tom
Weaver, finished. regular season play at 3-&lt;i. Team members are, first row, left to right,
David Payne, Luke Amos, Keith Veith, Terry Rothgeb, and Jim Misner . Second row, left to
right, Coach Tom Weaver, Keith Tyler, Dennis Mollohan, Dan Chapman, Stacy Johnson and
Phil Baird.

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Morning Glories
Feb . 11 , 1976
Gibbs Grocery
125

. LEXINGTON, Ky. (UP! )
- The oldest equine seminar
in the nation, the Stud
Managers Course, will be
held at the Keen eland Race
Course here Sept. 20-23. ·
The
· seminar
will
immediately follow th e
Keeneland Fall Yearling
Sales, Sept. 13-16. The Stud
Managers Course will
provide lecture sessions and
panel discussions in the
Keeneland Sales PaviUion.

Nylon Fabric and

•2 49

Coil Springs
.
Compare At 1350.. -......

FOR THE
. ENTIRE FAMILY

Middleport, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

W M P .O .

121
91

the television se t has now

been installed in the hosptial

DRESS
SOCKS
Meil'a bulkY knit orlun

JERSEY GLOVES

SLICKS

lire.
aoclla In 1110rted rtellllr and
. 0..• •• fll Ill.

Men' s brown Jt!rteY work Mlova. Knit

wrtlt lt}llt. Lay lll• •owly oow •l thll
low Dollar P.,y prlce.

SPECIAL SALE ASSOITIEIT
LADIES POPULAR

SPECIAL SALE CIGI' LOIS'
IIOIII.Eim POl YEmR

DENIM JEANS
Take your choice of r111ullr bli.Ml denim or
l!l"t"••hod deNm In double dpper o.r lidr
winder 11~111 · rtiJlllr aile e to 11. Slii:IIC
lmt:ullrt.

$ 00

White, Mrs. Ne ttie Ha)•es,
Hilda Baxter and Mrs.

Mrs.

but the heat must be the
mischief maker as it peels
and starts to eome off alter a
time. Remove one of your
burner pan s, take to the

dealer who sells that line and
see if he · can order some
black ones for you. I really
unde rstand your .problem.
Those on rrty gas stove are
white and nee d constant

cleaning. '- POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve has peeved me for
years, and even more so

when I was in school. Why do
pe ncils have such short
erasers? The small ones they

DOLLAR

24"x45" .RAINBOW

AREA RUGS

8', Don't mill Ulll .

- SllFFUI'S IILLIR IIYI-

AIIITHER SRL-OUT!
MEN'S ORLON

announced with Mrs. Jess'ie

W11h1bl1 pl.. tlc 111pported
window t.lw:le.lll •hite, grt!l!:n or
tvory- full ..tndow me. !711." •

9:30A.M.
REPEAT OF ASELL·DUI!
MEN'S BROWN

Hospital

Assoc iation convention i11

SHADES

SOISSDIS

" Sn.er Dtlit ht '' ttn, ~~~~l!li l ll lnt. .....
· medium 'NelgMI Ft=ll~. perfiC't ~ .. , ,.,..
SftwlniJ ~~. H.•l ,.,,nl*'ed !01 Uf.t..,.
$1\e,!lrlniJ.

.,..-- .----1

- STIFFLER'S

Ohio

Cincinnati April 12-14 was

31W' l 6' ·WIRlioW

LITE·IIEICHT4TAISS Sl

TERRY SCUFFS

ward.
The

Frieda Mossman to attend .
Games were played and
refreshments se.rved. Others
attending were Mrs. Velsia
Roush, Mrs: Alma Newton.
Mrs. Jestie Molden, Mrs.
Bertha Parker, Mrs. Mildred
With ee, Mrs. Emogene
Simms, Mrs. Clara Burri:
and Mrs. Mildred Fry.

then comes soil and some
p:iint, too. There a re paints
ad\·ertised fur such finishes

GEORGETOWN, GALLIPOLIS, MIDDLEPORT, OHIO AND PT. PLEASANT, WEST VA.

lUI-

86

G . &amp;J .A ul o
85
Spencer's Market
44
H igh in div id ua l game
Marlene Wilson 207; secon d
high individual game .,.....
Carolyn McDaniel 19 1.
High series -:- Marlene
Wilson 548, second high seri es
- Donna McFarland 534 . '
High tea m game E&gt;&lt; ·
cels ior Oil Co . 825 , high team
series Exce lsi or Oil Co .
2,374 .

Mrs . Jani ce Daniels
presided with Mrs. Carrie
Kennedy giv ing the opening
prayer . Officers reports were
given and it was noted that

'd

SHOP OUR STORES IN: JACKSON, WELLSTON, McARTHUR, NEW LEXINGTON, LONDON, WAVEiH \'

LADIES' POPULAR

left to right, front, are Usa Pullins and Tiunmy Stone of
Salisbury Brownie Troop accepting a flag from Jennifer
Couch, a junior American Legion Auxiliary member and
also a Brownie scout; Robin Campbell, junior
Americanism chairperson, presenting a flag to Sherrie
Marshall and Angelia Clifford for the Salisbury Junior
Troop, and Meigs Bicentennial Minuteman Keith Circle.

Auxiliary welcomes members
Three new members were

BAKER FURNITURE

heritage house

AMERICANISM MONTH was observed Tuesday
night at a meeting of the American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39. Two American flags were
presented to Girl Scout Troops, and a bicentennial slide
presentation was given by Meigs Minuteman Keith Circle.
Mrs. Marjorie Goett, Americanism chairperson, back
row, left, and Pam Powers, Eighth District Junior
Auxiliary president, had charge of the program . Picturerl

welcomed at ' the recent
meeti ng of the Veterans
Memorial Hospital Auxiliary.
They are Mary I..ongenette,
Shortie Wright and Mae

STANFORD, calif. (UPI)
- Stanford distance runners
Tony Sandoval and Roy
Klssin have been named w
the U.S. team that will
compete in the International
Cross
Country
Championships in Chepstow,
Wales.
They left Tuesday for
Wales to begin preparation
for the 12-kilometer race. The ·
field will include runners
from 26 countries.
E xcelsi or O il Co .
Newel l Sunoco

,

Painting stove burners
safe but temporary

$100
EACH

OPEN TIL 8

SNEAKERS

Lldill' and mlllel Auler!CIII ttl.lde
aport IMIUrt in navy aad whtte . Made
•lth m~ld IDIM. C ~hton«&lt;d Inner
soiM In Jl&amp;ta &amp; tO 10. Don't mlA thll

0

Dolllt Illy Value .

PAITY HOSE

KIEE-HI HOSE

WASH CLOTHS

12" 1 I!" aiR cotton terry wutl
cl~bllrlaiiOfted colora. Lay lrl
atupply now,

SII£1CIIIYI.GII

6 $

-DEAL NO.112"x25' ALUMINUM

. 6 lbs. Pork Roast
6 lbs. Pork Chops

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

FOIL .

50 lbs.
ONLY

4$

3 lbs. Dutch Loaf
3 lbs. Ground Beef

Hardwood
blocU 1n your
dlotet ol two lt)'les. l "J:IO"JJO"
Ryle or rope f handle lype.

3 lbs. English Roast
2 Fryer Chickens
-·
3 lbs. Cube Steak

IIIMtl cf t at a .,eelal low Dolllr

Day Prtee. Avallabllln ...-1

colon and patterN.

~. $100

RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE

Pomerov. Ohio
Open 8-5 Mon. thru Sat. Closed Sunday

STIIDY MARSHALLEI .
THREE TIEl METAL

USDA FOOD
STAMPS
GLADLY

ACCEPTED

I'

•

UTILITY SHELF \.f~
nn. mttal utllJt)' lbllftl
..-ut
llnWI. 111111
Ull Ill lilY
Jto.Jf·'
room bl thl hoUII. Spei;:lal nou.r
:
till'

In

.

.... $

ElCII

- ITIPPUI'I

SUPEI BEAM C.BO

PLATE
HOLDERS
Fancr WOYtn nuan JM• IMMin

LANTEIU•

Hand, auper bMm oomho llnWn.
Complltl wttb two D Bllterill.

....

5" x7" 01 8"
COLI FIIISH METAL

FRS ALL HAIR STYLES!
mOl ' PDLYESIEI

POPULAR ZIPPERED VINYL ·

PILLOW COVERS

Rill BOIIETS

,

...

$

2 $. 00

00

II COIIIIT PtiB.
..,_X" IIlLO

POPIUI RACK
RUBBER WElCOME

32 oz........
DISHIA-

SOAP PADS

MATS

LIQUID

fDI
llfl-

finance

chairperson,

presented Mrs . Stanrlff an
award for having 100 per cent
in ail phases of Eight and
Forty work completed during
her year as chapeau.
Mrs. Peoples talked on
nurses schola rsh ip 1 noting

that there is $337 in the fund .
Mrs . Balzhiser announced
her theme is ''For ward
Together in '76," and extended thanks to Eight and
Forty for efforts to provide
good hea lth for children.
Also giving reports were
Mrs . Louise Veshosky,
constituti on and by-laws ;

Delores Kilgore, partnership; Catherine Baker,
history; Iris Shields, ritual
and emblems. Annual report
forms were distributed. Mrs.
Amelia Moore noted that
chapeau dues are payable to
her now.

QUEEN
CHEESE
32 oz. box

$ 29

5 I'ICE ftl.LY

L. . PlASTIC

$ 00
EACII

HOME MADE
HAM SALAD

IllS-

3&amp; liCK FliiCY

31"114" ftl.l y
L.D PLASTIC

SHIRTWAIST

IEAIIY
COTTDI IERIY

FABRICS

DRAPES

A Flnl llttCUon of ftnfl
:f:llty
pr111tect fabrla In
rt wallt ~attlrna . •
I:IJI:t. wldl. ut colort.

.•

ENDS
A tdi lot of readr btmnlld
C1)1ton t~rry towel e•d•·
AalurU!d • •

coltlfl.

JIIIWnl•nd

BOYS I YOUTHS
CANVAS GYM

SPECIAL PURCHASE
WASHABLE WOVEN

OXFORDS

MATS

Amerlean mid•
Olkirdlln ..,., U to

IJm
tor

"""" 1nd ~Blick
wtth wtlitl
...
1114 ellltUDned lnltllll.

T1ke r•r cholceol'a variety
r6 woven plaee matl now at
thll loW prtee. Shelp SUfflen
Dollar Dlye.

1

\

GO
EACH

GO ·. ,fa WI

Ethel Spiker chairpersons for
the departemental chapea u
passe luncheon to be held at
the summer convention .
Mrs. Martin, national

early.

Alwayallletlld at haml • Ill.

:?.

·•

brought greetings and named
Mrs . Grace Evans and Mrs,

· (lOc off)
49 oz.
'l 29
nde Detergent ••••••
•••••.
••••..
••
•
(
i Oc om
JOJ Dish
. Deterge nt ••••••••••••••••••• 75~

FuU 11M dpptr llJ\1 JW~je pWOW
COVIn. Spidal DoU. Day Vllue. Shop

for

Dar YaiiM .

Stanriff,

Going to the pouvior from
here were Mrs. Walker, .Mrs.
Catherine Welsh, Mrs. I..ula
Hampton, chapeau, Mary
Martin and Mrs . Pearl
Knapp, ail of Meigs County
response.
Salon 710, and Mrs. Mabel
Chapeaux passes in - Brown of the Gallipolis Salon .
make such nice little personal
gifts, especially when you tr od uced were Evaline
Next mee ting was a nchoose and dry the flowers Berkley, Ethel Van Fossen, nounced for May I and 2 at
yourself. They can also be Helen Cotler, Virginia Rahe, Cincinnati .
Doris
filled with layers of colored Violet Aichholz,
Stanriff,
Louise
Kranembuhl,
sand that some use in
Airee Marshall and Mary
terrariums. - MRS. J .B.
Martin. Each one brought
greetings. The deaths of three
RALLY PLANNED
in 1975 including Esther
FAIRVIEW
- A youth
Edgar and Helen Kilworth
PAIR TO CELEBRATE
rally
will
be
held at the
CHESTER
Mabel were noted. ,
Fairplay
Chapel,
located on
VanMeter, Chesler, and her
Chapeau Day a t tbe
Meigs
County
Road
I, March
brother, Eldon Kraeuter, of National Jewish Hospital was
9,
7:30
p.m.
with
the
Rev .
Racine, are a brOther and annoW&gt;ced for May 15-18.
Ruth
Appleman,
McArthur,
sister pair who were born on Mrs. Audrey Glaub , first
the same dayl2 years apart. demi chapeau premiere, speaker. There will be special•
Friday she will celebrate her reported that the state needs singing by youth groups. The
87ih ·birthday and he will be 330 to reach the goal of 1,849. rally is sponsored by the
75. She was the oldest of the She reported that 19 salons churches whose pastors are
children in her family and he have already reached goal. ordained by the Trinity
the youngest. Cards would be Mrs.' Betty Horvath talked on Gospel Mission of Logan. The
appreciated and niay be sent the publicity scrapbooks and Rev. Tbereon Durham is
to the above addresses.
Mrs . ~orothy Brady, Ia pastor. The public is invited.

Red Radishes
6oz.pkgs. 2/25C
Florida Oranges
s lb. 69C

lllu pLIItic truh ..... ll'ltlllflt
prbafe 1:1.111. Comp11W1 wtth

00

$

SET OF 4 COLORFUl RATTAN

ONLY'

DltD MEATS
992-3502

I

'

28 COIIIIT·2&amp; GALLON

TRASH BAGS
PIC·bp ul . . ....lion Jumbo

IJ"J:U" double 41117 b&amp;lllltln buud
and. cl!&amp;lk botl'd eomt~U~~Uon . ~
black board, 'rll chalk board.

$

$

needed for one meal so there

are no leftovers. - JOAN 1...
DEAR POLLY - Never
throw away those cute glass
vitamin bottles with stoppers.
Scrub off the label and make
one of those popular dried
flower arrangements to go
inside. A pretty bow can be
tied around the bottle. These

Doris

TEEN

SPORT TOPS

BLOCKS
chlippfnl

-DEAL NO.2-

their favorite soups as often
as they like and no one ge ts
stuck with an objectional
dish. We make only wha t is

GIRL'S FANCY PllmD
POLYESTER

HARDWOOD CHOPPING

'4900

endless so people can have

Mrs .

national pouvio r member ,

with meal or plain

12"d!l' rolla handy huuaehold
1111mlnum foU, Heavy quaU1y , Lly
1na1upply .

2 lbs. Bacon
2 lbs. Sausage
6 lbs. Hot Dogs

these with plain tom a to soup
or canned mixed vege table
juice. The combinations that
can be made are almost

Bowman .

Among those reporting
were Mrs. Myrtle Walker of
Racine, the Departementai
children and youth chairperson . Mrs. Walker spoke of
the need for re cords and
clothing at the Na tiona l
Jewish Hospital in Denver,
and also reported on the
swimming pool being constructed at the Soldiers and
Sailors Orphans Home at
Xenia. Partners were asked
to complete dime cards with
the money to be used for
cystic fibrosis research.
During the meeting it was
voted to send $1,000 to the
National Jewish Hospital for
the 1976 bed endowment.
The pouvior opened with a
breakfas t with guests from
the
American
Legion
Auxiliary includin g Mrs .
· Jane Balzhiser, Department
of Ohio president; Mrs. Ruth
Roush, treasurer; Mrs. Mary
Jane Petro , first vice
president ; Mrs . Helen
Peoples ,
secon d
vice
president
and
Ann
Eschleman , secre tary.
Mrs. Marzella Huston,
chapeau, presided at the
meeting which opened in
ritualistic form . The welcome
was extended by Louise
Pailey, chapeau of Franklin
County 333, with Mrs. Betty
Horvath, second demi
chapeau duexieme giving the

Wagner's Orange or Grape Drink• .. ~ !2•0~ -• • 2/89~
Green Giant Peas• •••••••••••• ~ 7• ~-. ,2/79e
Kraft Grape Jelly • • • • • • • •••••••• ~ :~ • ••69e
.
22 oz.
., ~59
Coff~ Mate••••••••••••••••••••••
Taster's 01oice Instant Coff~ ••••• : ~~ •• • •2.89
Dinty Moore Beef Stew •••••••••• 2~ ~~ • • • 89e
Ragu Spaghetti Sauce ••••••• • • •• ~ ~~. ,'1.29 ·

12"112" COTIOM TERRY

FREEZER STOCK-UP SALE

in the freezer and combine

in Columbus.

hooks from each salon to go
into the children 's hospitals
of the state. Flag etiquette
was discussed by Mrs. Joy

LADIES' MOULDED SOLE
AMERICAN MADE SPORT

MEN'S DELUXE VINYL

IJIIS' fiST UITY

thrown away. The bathroom
floor was always relatively
clean of hair.
In our gues t ba throom we
have a fancy container (a
talcum powder hox could be
used ) filled with detergent so
,that guests can wash out their
small things like hose.
For instant and economical
soup making we keep a wide
variety of frozen vegetables

awnanier, asked for prayer

- STIFFLER'S IOLLU IUS-

- STIFFLER'S DOLLAR DUS-

LADIES' 1111E SIZE FITS ALL
mrnll IYI.IIII

easily seen, picked up and

Progress reports on
assistance to children were
presented at the midwinter
pouvior o( Eight and Forty
held Sunday at the Neil House

! THREE BIG DAYS TO SHOP AND SAVE!

FOR

RAINCOATS

Progress reports
presented at pouvior

By Polly Cramer

J)a

"com.ica1."

MiUer charges that the
owners' action to shut down
training camps was intended
purposely w mislead the
public into believing the
Players Association is
holding up the 1976 season
because of its demands on the

mith · ruling, " . said Detroit
outfielder Rusty Staub.
"They have closed the
camps. They want us to give
up that right ; We are willing
w give up that right but we

Attendance at Feb. 15
services at the Free
Methodist Church was 94.
Mr. and Mrs . J oseph
Higginbotham of Columbus
and · Mr. and Mrs . Jerry
Whitaker of Newark spent a
weekend with Rev. and Mrs .
Floyd Shook.
Paul Archer of Columbus
recently visited his mother,
Georgia Diehl.
Fritz Stahl, New Marshfield, visited recently with
Mr . and Mrs . Norman
Schaefer.
Mr . and Mrs . William

•

Jacobs, Mr. and Mrs. Bru~e
Jacobs of Columbus spent a
·weekend with Mr . and Mrs.
Pearl Jacobs.
Mrs. Edna Howell of
Columbus rec'Cntiy spent a
week with her mother, Mrs.
Nancy Walker and brother,
Frank Dill.
Mrs. Margie Goetl was
hostess Thursday evening
to eight members of the
Laurel Cliff Health Club. A
donation was given to the
Meigs County Fire Depart·
ment. The treasurer's report
was given by Bertha Parker.
Games were played and
prizes won by Polly
Eichinger and Georgia Diehl.
Refreshments were servt&gt;d .
The March meeting will !Je
held at the home of Bertha
Parker.

- -

,,

v

., :

lb.

99~

BONRELESS HAMS $} 39
Whole or lb. s1,79 SLICEI~. Sl,89
AGAR
lb. $1.39
SLICED BACON
Half

I

\
'

I

BOOTH'S '
FISH
·poRTIONS

$ 39
2 lb.

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wt&gt;dnesday, Feb. 25, 1976

'Laurel Cliff

New Giant era begins
By JOE SARGIS
UP! Sports Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) When National League
owners anmW&gt;ced they had
approved sale of the San
Francisco Giants to a
combine headed by Bob
Lurie, it brought to an end
Stoneham family ownership
in a franchise that produced
10 championships in 57 years
and once was baseball's most
glamorous team.
It was in 1919 that Charles
A. Stoneham purchased
controlling interest in the
Giants-then based in New
York-&lt;111d made them the
best team in the National
League in the 2Qs wtder John
J. McGraw.
When Charles Swneham
died in 1935, his son Horace,
then only 32, asswned control
and the Giants continued as a
power in the NL, until
changing times and habits
forced the club to move West
in 1958.
Under Charles Stoneham,
the Giants won pennants in
1921. 22, 23, 24 and 33, beating

the New. York Yankees of
Miller Huggins' fame in the
1921 and 1922 World Series
and losing to the Yankees in
1923 and the Washington
Senators , led by Bucky
Harris , in 1933.
BiU Terry was the Giants'
manager when they won
again in 1936 and 1937 and he
gained a World Series split
against Joe McCarthy and
the Yankees . Those two
seasons probably were
Horace ~toneham's best as
Giants' president.
It wasn 't until Bobby
Thomson hit his dramatic
homer in the ninth inning of
the final playoff game
against the Brooklyn Dodgers
in 1951 that the Giants won
another pennant.
Leo Durocher was then
manager and still the field
leader when the Giants won
the pennant in 1954 and then
rolled over the Cleveland
Indians, who had won an
American League record ·lll
games, four straight in the
World Series.
Durocher was ·long gone

News Notes

when Alvin Dark, who played
shortstop for Leo on the 1951
and 1954 championship
teams, led the Giants to their
only San Francisco pennant
in 1962. After that the Giants
always seemed to be on the
verge of winning only to lose
out until Charlie Fox
produced a division flag in
1971.
All those also-ran clubs, the
decline of .super stars Willie
Mays, Willie McCovey and
Juan Marichal plus the
winning A's across the Bay in
Oakland figured in the
decline of the Giants and
eventually forc ed Horace
Stoneham to seU his father 's
club.
Now, Bob Lurie, a to-yearold San Francisco sportsman,
who has owned a small piece
of the Giants since they came
West, is the principal owner
and more than likely will
become the president. When
he does he will be only the
eighth club president since
John B. Day launched the
team in 1883.
Now a new era begins.

Miller in mid-season form
PHILADELPHIA (UP! ) Major league baseball
players haven 't been able to
start spring training yet but
Marvin MiUer already is in
mid-season form.
With the shadow of the
reserve clause hanging over
major league baseball's con·
tract dispute, club owners
have decided to postpone the
March I opening of spring
training camps until a
settlement is reached.
MiUer , executive director
of the Major League Baseball
Players Association, says the
owners'
decision
is

got no response ."
Miller said the recent court
ruling, which allowed
pitchers Andy Messersmith
and Dave McNally to
negotiate. with new teams
after playing out the options
in their con(l'acts, defused tbe
owners' argument in the
contract disputes.
"The owners think they
cannot live with the Messers-

reserve clause issue.

American League
President Lee MacPhail and
National League President
Charles Feeney annoW&gt;ced
jointly Monday that owners
would not open spring
training until a new basic
agreement can be reached
with the Players Association.
"We feel this is the
quickest, surest way wreach
an agreement," MacPhail
said.

"I think it is comical,"
Miller coW&gt;tered. "For the
first time in history, an
industry that is not
threatened by a strike action
from its employes is shutting
itself down of its own
volition."

'He added, "They (the ow·
ners) pushed us Saturday to
give them some ideas on the
reserve rules problems. We
gave them some very specific
propcisals. On other matters,
we withdrew a whole raft of
proposals and at the end we

want something in return ."
"We are doing our best to

achieve
a
prompt
settlement," MacPhail said.
"But the progress thus far
has been most discouraging."

7- The Daily Senti~ I,_Middleport-Poineroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Feb. 25, 1976

Polly's Pointers
r

BOWLING
Pomeroy Bowlin9 Lanes
Early Sunday Mixed
Fet&gt;. 1 s, 1976
W L
Pul l ins Exc cu:ating
44 . 20
Ja ck s Dairy Bar
40 24
Team 6
31 33
Tom 's Carry Ou1
27 37
Pomeroy F lower Shop 26 38
Hi ll &amp; Mayer Barbers 24 40
High individui!tl game
Ed . Voss 203 , Bess .H.en dr ic ks
22 6 : second h ig h individua l
gam e Jeff W i lson 202 .
Marlene WllsQ n 199 .
High ser ies ...... Ed Voss 564,
~\"arlene Wilson 520; second
hig h series Bill Wilfford
560 , Bess Hendricks SOB.
Team
h i gh
ga~e
Pomeroy F low er Shop 698.
team high series ~ Pomeroy
Flower Shop 2,01 2.
Pom eroy. Bowling Lanes
Tuesday Triplicate League
Feb.17, 1976
Royal Oak Park
39
Dew Drops
36
Rac ine Home Natl . Bk
32
New York Cloth . House
25
Da ir y Valley
20
Mi1chell Painting Co .
16
High ind iv idual game
A l ma Pooler , Pai Carson 178 ;
second h ig h i nd ivid ual game
- Connie Chapman 1.67 .
Hi9h series - Pat Carson
475 , second high ser ies _:
· Con n ie Chapma n 469.
Team high gar:n e Mit ·
chel l Pain t ing Co. 484 , team
h ig h serieS Royal Oak
Park 1 ,282 .

Polly,s r•roblem
do have are soon gone and the
DEAR POLLY - Could I poor pencils look helpless.
paint the white burner bowls The rubber eraser should be
on my gas stove? I would like double the present length for
to paint them black since they practical use . - LOUISE.
always look dirty but· wonder
DEAR POLLY - At home
if this would be dangerous so . we were a lways encouraged
near the flam e. - LUCILLE. to brush our long hair over
DEAR LUCILLE - A Fire the side of the bathtub, so the
Prevention offi cer says this Is loose hair fell on the white
not rea lly a fire hazard. Of surface where it could be

,

'
!

r'Ourse, you would r emove
them from the sJnve and

away from the pilot light to do
the painting. He had done this

HOME TO MOTHER
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Elizabeth Taylor, newly
separated from Richard
Burwn, flew in from New
York Tuesday night. •
She emerged from the
plane smiling and carrying a
small dog . Friends said Miss
Taylor planned to spend some
time with her ailing and
elderly mother , form er
actress ' Sara Sothern , in
Palm Springs, a dese rt

"SEE YOU LATER ... "
LOS ANGEl.ES (UP! )
BiU Haley and the Coll'\ets, a

pioneer rock n' roll ban a, was

Comets rlow were living in
Veracruz, Mexico .

1973, s.he said, alleging the
musicians consistently
negotiated contracts without
paying her commission and
charged almost $250,000 in
expenses to her.
The band, which recorded
the hits "Rock Around the
Clock" and "See You Later
Alligator" in the 1950s, has

resort.

Miss Taylor, 44, is
separated again this week
from Burton, 49, twice her
husband.

since the surface underneath

is baked enamel. Just wlptng
them off is all right, bui there
comes a day when a scoUring

with cleanser is needed and

2 PIECE LIVING ROOM

SUITE

EXERSOLE
SHOES

year cont"'c/ with her in

off as easily as it went on

GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S
BUDGET SHOP

been b&lt;ised in Mexico City
since the mid 19605. The
lawsuit said Haley and the

sued for $250,000 Tuesday by
Sandra Shekell, the group's
manager.
The Comets signed a three-

in his own home, howeve r,
ot .nd found it most unsatisfactory. The paint comes

ANOTHER .................... .

KYGER CREEK'S FRESHMEN team finished second in the Eastern Invitational
Basketball Tournament hel d last weekend. The club, coached by first year mentor Tom
Weaver, finished. regular season play at 3-&lt;i. Team members are, first row, left to right,
David Payne, Luke Amos, Keith Veith, Terry Rothgeb, and Jim Misner . Second row, left to
right, Coach Tom Weaver, Keith Tyler, Dennis Mollohan, Dan Chapman, Stacy Johnson and
Phil Baird.

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Morning Glories
Feb . 11 , 1976
Gibbs Grocery
125

. LEXINGTON, Ky. (UP! )
- The oldest equine seminar
in the nation, the Stud
Managers Course, will be
held at the Keen eland Race
Course here Sept. 20-23. ·
The
· seminar
will
immediately follow th e
Keeneland Fall Yearling
Sales, Sept. 13-16. The Stud
Managers Course will
provide lecture sessions and
panel discussions in the
Keeneland Sales PaviUion.

Nylon Fabric and

•2 49

Coil Springs
.
Compare At 1350.. -......

FOR THE
. ENTIRE FAMILY

Middleport, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

W M P .O .

121
91

the television se t has now

been installed in the hosptial

DRESS
SOCKS
Meil'a bulkY knit orlun

JERSEY GLOVES

SLICKS

lire.
aoclla In 1110rted rtellllr and
. 0..• •• fll Ill.

Men' s brown Jt!rteY work Mlova. Knit

wrtlt lt}llt. Lay lll• •owly oow •l thll
low Dollar P.,y prlce.

SPECIAL SALE ASSOITIEIT
LADIES POPULAR

SPECIAL SALE CIGI' LOIS'
IIOIII.Eim POl YEmR

DENIM JEANS
Take your choice of r111ullr bli.Ml denim or
l!l"t"••hod deNm In double dpper o.r lidr
winder 11~111 · rtiJlllr aile e to 11. Slii:IIC
lmt:ullrt.

$ 00

White, Mrs. Ne ttie Ha)•es,
Hilda Baxter and Mrs.

Mrs.

but the heat must be the
mischief maker as it peels
and starts to eome off alter a
time. Remove one of your
burner pan s, take to the

dealer who sells that line and
see if he · can order some
black ones for you. I really
unde rstand your .problem.
Those on rrty gas stove are
white and nee d constant

cleaning. '- POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve has peeved me for
years, and even more so

when I was in school. Why do
pe ncils have such short
erasers? The small ones they

DOLLAR

24"x45" .RAINBOW

AREA RUGS

8', Don't mill Ulll .

- SllFFUI'S IILLIR IIYI-

AIIITHER SRL-OUT!
MEN'S ORLON

announced with Mrs. Jess'ie

W11h1bl1 pl.. tlc 111pported
window t.lw:le.lll •hite, grt!l!:n or
tvory- full ..tndow me. !711." •

9:30A.M.
REPEAT OF ASELL·DUI!
MEN'S BROWN

Hospital

Assoc iation convention i11

SHADES

SOISSDIS

" Sn.er Dtlit ht '' ttn, ~~~~l!li l ll lnt. .....
· medium 'NelgMI Ft=ll~. perfiC't ~ .. , ,.,..
SftwlniJ ~~. H.•l ,.,,nl*'ed !01 Uf.t..,.
$1\e,!lrlniJ.

.,..-- .----1

- STIFFLER'S

Ohio

Cincinnati April 12-14 was

31W' l 6' ·WIRlioW

LITE·IIEICHT4TAISS Sl

TERRY SCUFFS

ward.
The

Frieda Mossman to attend .
Games were played and
refreshments se.rved. Others
attending were Mrs. Velsia
Roush, Mrs: Alma Newton.
Mrs. Jestie Molden, Mrs.
Bertha Parker, Mrs. Mildred
With ee, Mrs. Emogene
Simms, Mrs. Clara Burri:
and Mrs. Mildred Fry.

then comes soil and some
p:iint, too. There a re paints
ad\·ertised fur such finishes

GEORGETOWN, GALLIPOLIS, MIDDLEPORT, OHIO AND PT. PLEASANT, WEST VA.

lUI-

86

G . &amp;J .A ul o
85
Spencer's Market
44
H igh in div id ua l game
Marlene Wilson 207; secon d
high individual game .,.....
Carolyn McDaniel 19 1.
High series -:- Marlene
Wilson 548, second high seri es
- Donna McFarland 534 . '
High tea m game E&gt;&lt; ·
cels ior Oil Co . 825 , high team
series Exce lsi or Oil Co .
2,374 .

Mrs . Jani ce Daniels
presided with Mrs. Carrie
Kennedy giv ing the opening
prayer . Officers reports were
given and it was noted that

'd

SHOP OUR STORES IN: JACKSON, WELLSTON, McARTHUR, NEW LEXINGTON, LONDON, WAVEiH \'

LADIES' POPULAR

left to right, front, are Usa Pullins and Tiunmy Stone of
Salisbury Brownie Troop accepting a flag from Jennifer
Couch, a junior American Legion Auxiliary member and
also a Brownie scout; Robin Campbell, junior
Americanism chairperson, presenting a flag to Sherrie
Marshall and Angelia Clifford for the Salisbury Junior
Troop, and Meigs Bicentennial Minuteman Keith Circle.

Auxiliary welcomes members
Three new members were

BAKER FURNITURE

heritage house

AMERICANISM MONTH was observed Tuesday
night at a meeting of the American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39. Two American flags were
presented to Girl Scout Troops, and a bicentennial slide
presentation was given by Meigs Minuteman Keith Circle.
Mrs. Marjorie Goett, Americanism chairperson, back
row, left, and Pam Powers, Eighth District Junior
Auxiliary president, had charge of the program . Picturerl

welcomed at ' the recent
meeti ng of the Veterans
Memorial Hospital Auxiliary.
They are Mary I..ongenette,
Shortie Wright and Mae

STANFORD, calif. (UPI)
- Stanford distance runners
Tony Sandoval and Roy
Klssin have been named w
the U.S. team that will
compete in the International
Cross
Country
Championships in Chepstow,
Wales.
They left Tuesday for
Wales to begin preparation
for the 12-kilometer race. The ·
field will include runners
from 26 countries.
E xcelsi or O il Co .
Newel l Sunoco

,

Painting stove burners
safe but temporary

$100
EACH

OPEN TIL 8

SNEAKERS

Lldill' and mlllel Auler!CIII ttl.lde
aport IMIUrt in navy aad whtte . Made
•lth m~ld IDIM. C ~hton«&lt;d Inner
soiM In Jl&amp;ta &amp; tO 10. Don't mlA thll

0

Dolllt Illy Value .

PAITY HOSE

KIEE-HI HOSE

WASH CLOTHS

12" 1 I!" aiR cotton terry wutl
cl~bllrlaiiOfted colora. Lay lrl
atupply now,

SII£1CIIIYI.GII

6 $

-DEAL NO.112"x25' ALUMINUM

. 6 lbs. Pork Roast
6 lbs. Pork Chops

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

FOIL .

50 lbs.
ONLY

4$

3 lbs. Dutch Loaf
3 lbs. Ground Beef

Hardwood
blocU 1n your
dlotet ol two lt)'les. l "J:IO"JJO"
Ryle or rope f handle lype.

3 lbs. English Roast
2 Fryer Chickens
-·
3 lbs. Cube Steak

IIIMtl cf t at a .,eelal low Dolllr

Day Prtee. Avallabllln ...-1

colon and patterN.

~. $100

RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE

Pomerov. Ohio
Open 8-5 Mon. thru Sat. Closed Sunday

STIIDY MARSHALLEI .
THREE TIEl METAL

USDA FOOD
STAMPS
GLADLY

ACCEPTED

I'

•

UTILITY SHELF \.f~
nn. mttal utllJt)' lbllftl
..-ut
llnWI. 111111
Ull Ill lilY
Jto.Jf·'
room bl thl hoUII. Spei;:lal nou.r
:
till'

In

.

.... $

ElCII

- ITIPPUI'I

SUPEI BEAM C.BO

PLATE
HOLDERS
Fancr WOYtn nuan JM• IMMin

LANTEIU•

Hand, auper bMm oomho llnWn.
Complltl wttb two D Bllterill.

....

5" x7" 01 8"
COLI FIIISH METAL

FRS ALL HAIR STYLES!
mOl ' PDLYESIEI

POPULAR ZIPPERED VINYL ·

PILLOW COVERS

Rill BOIIETS

,

...

$

2 $. 00

00

II COIIIIT PtiB.
..,_X" IIlLO

POPIUI RACK
RUBBER WElCOME

32 oz........
DISHIA-

SOAP PADS

MATS

LIQUID

fDI
llfl-

finance

chairperson,

presented Mrs . Stanrlff an
award for having 100 per cent
in ail phases of Eight and
Forty work completed during
her year as chapeau.
Mrs. Peoples talked on
nurses schola rsh ip 1 noting

that there is $337 in the fund .
Mrs . Balzhiser announced
her theme is ''For ward
Together in '76," and extended thanks to Eight and
Forty for efforts to provide
good hea lth for children.
Also giving reports were
Mrs . Louise Veshosky,
constituti on and by-laws ;

Delores Kilgore, partnership; Catherine Baker,
history; Iris Shields, ritual
and emblems. Annual report
forms were distributed. Mrs.
Amelia Moore noted that
chapeau dues are payable to
her now.

QUEEN
CHEESE
32 oz. box

$ 29

5 I'ICE ftl.LY

L. . PlASTIC

$ 00
EACII

HOME MADE
HAM SALAD

IllS-

3&amp; liCK FliiCY

31"114" ftl.l y
L.D PLASTIC

SHIRTWAIST

IEAIIY
COTTDI IERIY

FABRICS

DRAPES

A Flnl llttCUon of ftnfl
:f:llty
pr111tect fabrla In
rt wallt ~attlrna . •
I:IJI:t. wldl. ut colort.

.•

ENDS
A tdi lot of readr btmnlld
C1)1ton t~rry towel e•d•·
AalurU!d • •

coltlfl.

JIIIWnl•nd

BOYS I YOUTHS
CANVAS GYM

SPECIAL PURCHASE
WASHABLE WOVEN

OXFORDS

MATS

Amerlean mid•
Olkirdlln ..,., U to

IJm
tor

"""" 1nd ~Blick
wtth wtlitl
...
1114 ellltUDned lnltllll.

T1ke r•r cholceol'a variety
r6 woven plaee matl now at
thll loW prtee. Shelp SUfflen
Dollar Dlye.

1

\

GO
EACH

GO ·. ,fa WI

Ethel Spiker chairpersons for
the departemental chapea u
passe luncheon to be held at
the summer convention .
Mrs. Martin, national

early.

Alwayallletlld at haml • Ill.

:?.

·•

brought greetings and named
Mrs . Grace Evans and Mrs,

· (lOc off)
49 oz.
'l 29
nde Detergent ••••••
•••••.
••••..
••
•
(
i Oc om
JOJ Dish
. Deterge nt ••••••••••••••••••• 75~

FuU 11M dpptr llJ\1 JW~je pWOW
COVIn. Spidal DoU. Day Vllue. Shop

for

Dar YaiiM .

Stanriff,

Going to the pouvior from
here were Mrs. Walker, .Mrs.
Catherine Welsh, Mrs. I..ula
Hampton, chapeau, Mary
Martin and Mrs . Pearl
Knapp, ail of Meigs County
response.
Salon 710, and Mrs. Mabel
Chapeaux passes in - Brown of the Gallipolis Salon .
make such nice little personal
gifts, especially when you tr od uced were Evaline
Next mee ting was a nchoose and dry the flowers Berkley, Ethel Van Fossen, nounced for May I and 2 at
yourself. They can also be Helen Cotler, Virginia Rahe, Cincinnati .
Doris
filled with layers of colored Violet Aichholz,
Stanriff,
Louise
Kranembuhl,
sand that some use in
Airee Marshall and Mary
terrariums. - MRS. J .B.
Martin. Each one brought
greetings. The deaths of three
RALLY PLANNED
in 1975 including Esther
FAIRVIEW
- A youth
Edgar and Helen Kilworth
PAIR TO CELEBRATE
rally
will
be
held at the
CHESTER
Mabel were noted. ,
Fairplay
Chapel,
located on
VanMeter, Chesler, and her
Chapeau Day a t tbe
Meigs
County
Road
I, March
brother, Eldon Kraeuter, of National Jewish Hospital was
9,
7:30
p.m.
with
the
Rev .
Racine, are a brOther and annoW&gt;ced for May 15-18.
Ruth
Appleman,
McArthur,
sister pair who were born on Mrs. Audrey Glaub , first
the same dayl2 years apart. demi chapeau premiere, speaker. There will be special•
Friday she will celebrate her reported that the state needs singing by youth groups. The
87ih ·birthday and he will be 330 to reach the goal of 1,849. rally is sponsored by the
75. She was the oldest of the She reported that 19 salons churches whose pastors are
children in her family and he have already reached goal. ordained by the Trinity
the youngest. Cards would be Mrs.' Betty Horvath talked on Gospel Mission of Logan. The
appreciated and niay be sent the publicity scrapbooks and Rev. Tbereon Durham is
to the above addresses.
Mrs . ~orothy Brady, Ia pastor. The public is invited.

Red Radishes
6oz.pkgs. 2/25C
Florida Oranges
s lb. 69C

lllu pLIItic truh ..... ll'ltlllflt
prbafe 1:1.111. Comp11W1 wtth

00

$

SET OF 4 COLORFUl RATTAN

ONLY'

DltD MEATS
992-3502

I

'

28 COIIIIT·2&amp; GALLON

TRASH BAGS
PIC·bp ul . . ....lion Jumbo

IJ"J:U" double 41117 b&amp;lllltln buud
and. cl!&amp;lk botl'd eomt~U~~Uon . ~
black board, 'rll chalk board.

$

$

needed for one meal so there

are no leftovers. - JOAN 1...
DEAR POLLY - Never
throw away those cute glass
vitamin bottles with stoppers.
Scrub off the label and make
one of those popular dried
flower arrangements to go
inside. A pretty bow can be
tied around the bottle. These

Doris

TEEN

SPORT TOPS

BLOCKS
chlippfnl

-DEAL NO.2-

their favorite soups as often
as they like and no one ge ts
stuck with an objectional
dish. We make only wha t is

GIRL'S FANCY PllmD
POLYESTER

HARDWOOD CHOPPING

'4900

endless so people can have

Mrs .

national pouvio r member ,

with meal or plain

12"d!l' rolla handy huuaehold
1111mlnum foU, Heavy quaU1y , Lly
1na1upply .

2 lbs. Bacon
2 lbs. Sausage
6 lbs. Hot Dogs

these with plain tom a to soup
or canned mixed vege table
juice. The combinations that
can be made are almost

Bowman .

Among those reporting
were Mrs. Myrtle Walker of
Racine, the Departementai
children and youth chairperson . Mrs. Walker spoke of
the need for re cords and
clothing at the Na tiona l
Jewish Hospital in Denver,
and also reported on the
swimming pool being constructed at the Soldiers and
Sailors Orphans Home at
Xenia. Partners were asked
to complete dime cards with
the money to be used for
cystic fibrosis research.
During the meeting it was
voted to send $1,000 to the
National Jewish Hospital for
the 1976 bed endowment.
The pouvior opened with a
breakfas t with guests from
the
American
Legion
Auxiliary includin g Mrs .
· Jane Balzhiser, Department
of Ohio president; Mrs. Ruth
Roush, treasurer; Mrs. Mary
Jane Petro , first vice
president ; Mrs . Helen
Peoples ,
secon d
vice
president
and
Ann
Eschleman , secre tary.
Mrs. Marzella Huston,
chapeau, presided at the
meeting which opened in
ritualistic form . The welcome
was extended by Louise
Pailey, chapeau of Franklin
County 333, with Mrs. Betty
Horvath, second demi
chapeau duexieme giving the

Wagner's Orange or Grape Drink• .. ~ !2•0~ -• • 2/89~
Green Giant Peas• •••••••••••• ~ 7• ~-. ,2/79e
Kraft Grape Jelly • • • • • • • •••••••• ~ :~ • ••69e
.
22 oz.
., ~59
Coff~ Mate••••••••••••••••••••••
Taster's 01oice Instant Coff~ ••••• : ~~ •• • •2.89
Dinty Moore Beef Stew •••••••••• 2~ ~~ • • • 89e
Ragu Spaghetti Sauce ••••••• • • •• ~ ~~. ,'1.29 ·

12"112" COTIOM TERRY

FREEZER STOCK-UP SALE

in the freezer and combine

in Columbus.

hooks from each salon to go
into the children 's hospitals
of the state. Flag etiquette
was discussed by Mrs. Joy

LADIES' MOULDED SOLE
AMERICAN MADE SPORT

MEN'S DELUXE VINYL

IJIIS' fiST UITY

thrown away. The bathroom
floor was always relatively
clean of hair.
In our gues t ba throom we
have a fancy container (a
talcum powder hox could be
used ) filled with detergent so
,that guests can wash out their
small things like hose.
For instant and economical
soup making we keep a wide
variety of frozen vegetables

awnanier, asked for prayer

- STIFFLER'S IOLLU IUS-

- STIFFLER'S DOLLAR DUS-

LADIES' 1111E SIZE FITS ALL
mrnll IYI.IIII

easily seen, picked up and

Progress reports on
assistance to children were
presented at the midwinter
pouvior o( Eight and Forty
held Sunday at the Neil House

! THREE BIG DAYS TO SHOP AND SAVE!

FOR

RAINCOATS

Progress reports
presented at pouvior

By Polly Cramer

J)a

"com.ica1."

MiUer charges that the
owners' action to shut down
training camps was intended
purposely w mislead the
public into believing the
Players Association is
holding up the 1976 season
because of its demands on the

mith · ruling, " . said Detroit
outfielder Rusty Staub.
"They have closed the
camps. They want us to give
up that right ; We are willing
w give up that right but we

Attendance at Feb. 15
services at the Free
Methodist Church was 94.
Mr. and Mrs . J oseph
Higginbotham of Columbus
and · Mr. and Mrs . Jerry
Whitaker of Newark spent a
weekend with Rev. and Mrs .
Floyd Shook.
Paul Archer of Columbus
recently visited his mother,
Georgia Diehl.
Fritz Stahl, New Marshfield, visited recently with
Mr . and Mrs . Norman
Schaefer.
Mr . and Mrs . William

•

Jacobs, Mr. and Mrs. Bru~e
Jacobs of Columbus spent a
·weekend with Mr . and Mrs.
Pearl Jacobs.
Mrs. Edna Howell of
Columbus rec'Cntiy spent a
week with her mother, Mrs.
Nancy Walker and brother,
Frank Dill.
Mrs. Margie Goetl was
hostess Thursday evening
to eight members of the
Laurel Cliff Health Club. A
donation was given to the
Meigs County Fire Depart·
ment. The treasurer's report
was given by Bertha Parker.
Games were played and
prizes won by Polly
Eichinger and Georgia Diehl.
Refreshments were servt&gt;d .
The March meeting will !Je
held at the home of Bertha
Parker.

- -

,,

v

., :

lb.

99~

BONRELESS HAMS $} 39
Whole or lb. s1,79 SLICEI~. Sl,89
AGAR
lb. $1.39
SLICED BACON
Half

I

\
'

I

BOOTH'S '
FISH
·poRTIONS

$ 39
2 lb.

�8- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-P_omeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, F• 1

Mrs. Moore speaks
at ·Friday meeting

Enchanting concert
given by harpists
By Sarah Carsey

tuning. The harp has more

An enchanting mu sica l
program was presented by
doo-harpists Longstreth an d
Escosa Tuesday evenin g at
the Gallia Academy High
School auditorium in the final
event of the Tri-County
Community Concert
Association's 1975-76 season.
The harpists, natives of
Indiana, delighted the
audience with their en·
tertaining
performa nce.
Their selections included
Passacaglia, Andante
Allegro (Concerto in B flat,
Opus 4, No. 6) Handel ; Largo
(Violin Sonata No. 5), Jesu,
Joy of Man's Desiring,
Toccata with Fugue in D
minor, Bach; La Cathedrale

than 2,000 mov ing parts, and
four fingers are used to play.
Three fin gers pull while the
thumb pushes . Long streth

englotilie , La Fille auK

Mrs . Harry s . Moore ,
Middleport, director of the
Southeast Region, Episcopal
A Tale of Two W.en
Church Wom~n was guest
Dear Helen :
1 am a bar dancer, stripper, etc., and I also do some speaker at the Chillicothe
nonconunercial dating away from work, mostly when I'm mad Church Friday. From there,
at my boyfriends. I haven't been a real moral person, but I do Mrs . Moore, her husband,
the best I can with what! have. What I DON'T have is a man to and Miss Kathryn Hysell
went to Colunnbus to attend
lean on . My guys all lean on ME.
I lived with R. five years, paying most of our expem;es. the Episcopal Convention
Finally he asked me to marry him, and after I.spent $500 on held at the Ohio Union.
wedding clothes, etc. he backed out. l was so outraged I moved Others there for the conin with his friend J. who turned outto be even stingier. I put out vention were the Rev. and
for rent, food, his clothes, and also loaned him money he never Mrs. Harold Deeth, Mrs."!
repays. Besides, I don't like him as well as R, who wants me Mildred Fowler and Mrs.
Norma Amsbary.
"
back.
I won't last forever in my profession, and I'd like to setUe
While in Colunnbus Mr. and
down. Do you think R. would change if I quit working and he Mrs. Moore visited Mr. and
had to support me• Or would J? They don't like the idea of jobs Mrs. Ernest A. Jones and
Miss Grace Sauvage and
very well. - C. J.
Mrs. Harry E. Hoagland.
Dear C.:
Monday Mrs. Mpore, Mrs.
My frank opinion is that if you quit your job and hook up Fowler, Miss Hysell, Mrs. J.
with ai.ther one of these scroungers, they'll get you into 0. Roedel, Mrs. Nancy Reed,
"commercial" dating ... and then you can call the boyfriend Mrs. Freda Hartinger, Mrs.
"p" (for pimp) .
.
Mildred Deeth and Mrs.
Forget •em 1 - fl.
Helen Hayes attended a

said since few composHions

are made for the harp, most
selections for the · instrument
are transcriptions .

The duo completed their
concert with selections from
" The Sound of Music," and
·~ Pot-pourri." a variety of
melodies which included four
variations of Yankee Doodle,

a J apanese folk lWle, and the

theme from "The Sting" by
Scott Joplin .
Since the 1969-70 season,
Longstreth and Escosa have

presented over 600 performances . They have
tra'o'eled to every state but

one in the continental United
States, and to every province
of Canada.
Ravel, and Escosa 's own
Escosa studi ed · at the
compos iti on , ; Tr ompe · Juilliard School in New York
l'Oeil. "
while Longstreth gained his
Following in termission , musical background at the
Longstreth and Escosa gave Conservatorio di Santa
a brief oral history of the Cecelia in Rome . They are
harp citing differences known for the variety of their
between the traditional and musical presentations, the
modern. Escosa described powers and strength of their
the harp as being one of the tra nscriptio ns and peroldest instrunnents . He said formances, .f!.lld the }enewed
cbeveux de lin, Clair de lune,
Debussy ; Laideronelte,
lmperatrice des !'agodes,

the strings exert more than a

prominence they are bringing ·

ton of pressure. The standard
harp weighs 100 pounds and
has 47 strings.
The top strings are nylon;
the middle, gut, and the

to the harp. Appearances in
New York's Town Hall and
Carneg ie Recital Hall have
brought requests for retw-n
engagemen ts.
They have recorded two
albums. "Longstreth and
Escosa in Conce rt " and "The
Sound of Music."

bottom, steel wrapp(!d in
copper or silver . Escosa said

a harp is susceptible to all
changes in temperature ,
therefore requiring constant

Meigs representatives
attend ·41st conference
Meigs County American
Legion Auxiliary members
were in Colunnbus Friday and
Satw-day for the 41st annual
Midwinter Conference of the
Department of Ohio at the
Neil House Motor Hotel.
Mrs. Arnold Richards,
Middleport, Eighth District
president, was an active
participant in t he conference
and received several awards
for district units to be
presented by her at a later
time . AlSo presen t and
participating in the various

activities was Pam Powers,
Middlep;ort, the Junior
Auxiliary
Distr.ict
8
president.
Other local persons attending were Mrs. Myrtle
Walker , Racine Unit 602;
Mrs .
Mabel
Brown,
Gallipolis; Mrs . Pearl
Knapp, Mrs. Mary Martin,
Mrs. Veda Davis, Mrs. Grace
Prall and Mrs. Marjorie
Goeti, Pomeroy Unit 39, and
Mrs. Lula Hampton, Mid·
dleport Unit 263.
At the opening session of
the conference Friday, Mrs .
Jack Balzhiser, Department
president, gave a welcome.
Reports from the Department chairperson~ were
glven and the seSsion was
followed by a social how- and
sing-a-long hos ted by the 14
district presidents. Mrs.
R.ichard was als.o a guest that
evening at the Past District
Presidents' Parley.
Highlighting the Satw-day

morning session was an
address by Mrs. Melvin
Junge, national chairperson

of the national security
committee. She spoke on the
United States' involvement
around the world with special
emphasis on detente , and of
decreasing fighting forces of
the United States.
Also speaking was Col. L. S.

Department

of

Ohio,

+++

Mrs. Charles R. Hoffman

Nuptial vows repeated
in November ceremony
Miss Melissa

Jaloqueline

Justis, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs . Raymond Justis of
Middleport, became the bride
of Charles Richard Hoffman,
son of Mrs. Clarence Roush,
and the late Winfred f!offman
against a background of
while carnations at the
Fairview Bible Church. The .
Reverend Ge.orge Hoschar

were take n fr om the bouquet

and given to the mothers of
the bride and groom at the
end of the ceremony .

Mrs. Kimberley Hall was
matron of honor . She wore a
red and green gown and

carried a bouquet of red and
white carnations. Kelly
Renee Sawyer, niece of the
groom, was flow e r girl and

American Leg ion commander, and Mrs. J ames
Warde.r, chairperson of
"Spirit of '76."
Among thos,e receiving

performed th e double ring- carried a· white basket
ceremony at 7:30p.m ., Nov . . trimmed with red ribbon .

awards for being in the first
100 .goal units in Ohio were
seven in the Eighth District
including Racine 620, Mid·
dleport 263, Pleasantville 9,
Wilkesville 476, Vint.on 161,
Crooksville 222 and Millersport 637. Two units, Millersport and Wilkesville, also
received the 100 per cent plus

molee Kearns.
Given in marriage by her

awards for membership.

At th e Saturday night
program a recepiion was held
honoring Mrs. Lynn Ransdell, national vice president
of the Central Division, with

28 .

Nuptial

music

was

presented by Mrs. Arline
McDerm itt and Mrs. Em·
fath er the bride wore a gown
of po lyester and a lace
covered bodice with a scoop
neckline. She wore a necklace

Auxiliary, 6:30 p. m. potluck
dinner, meeting at 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday. Plans to be mad&lt;
for the legion birthday ob·

Mrs .

128, American Legion , and

servance.

Balzhiser; Mrs. Robert R.iley,
THURSD AY
national executive Co!J)mittee
RIVERVIEW
Garden Club,
woman, Commander Scholl,
Thw-sd~y. 7;30 p. lil. at the
Mrs. Junge, Mrs. George
Sallot, vice chairperson of home of Mrs . Warren
national community s·ervice; Pickens .
Hos tesses, Mrs . Don a ld
Mrs. Ar-thur Hrabak, central Putnam and Mrs. Lyle
division legislative chair· Baiderson . Guest speaker
person; Mrs. Roland Huston, will be George Pi~kens with
chapeau dep ar temen ta l the program on the bicenEight and Forty; Paul tennial.
Southern, grand chef de gare,
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Eight and Forty, and Kathy
Conservation
League, 6:30
Glanzman, Department
p.m.
Thursday
at
Seddon 's on
junior president. The banquet
the
Mall
,
Parkersburg
.
address was given by Mrs.
Husbands
will
be
guests.
Ransdell.
MIDDLEPORT CUB Scout
Pack 245, 7 p.m. Thursday at
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,

Social
Calendar

at' Drew Webster Post 39,
Arner i c~n Legion Hall.
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
7:30p.m . Wednesday at lhe
home of Mrs . Vernon Nease

with Mrs. Dwight Milhoan ,

·'

'

---------------------~
WHY NOT GO ON A

SPRING SEWING SPREE
SEW FOR
-SPRING
-EASTER
-PROMS

MEIGS COUNTY Women's
Fellowship of Churches · of
Christ, 7::10p.m. Thursday at .
Bradbury Chw-ch of Christ
with installation of offi cers to
be held.
TWIN CITY Shrinettes,
7:30
p.m.
Thursday,
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
FREE CLOT HING Day
Thursday at Salvation Army,
Pomeroy, from 10 a.m. until
noon. Those in need of
clothing are welcome.
!'RECEPTOR CHAPTER,
Beta Sigma !'hi Sorority, 7:45
p.m . Thursday at home of
Ann Rupe with Jean Werry,
cO-hos tess .
FRIDAY
REGULAR MONTHLY
meeting of Parents Without
Partners Rolling Hills
Chapter No. 838 Friday, 7:30
p.m. at Grace United
Methodist Church. Rev. Paul
Hawks will speak on the

Dear Helen :
You've sa id that young people who write to you dislike the
word "teenager," but complain there's no good substitute .
Ukewise, there's no adequate wor&lt;l for us who are getting on.
"Goldenager" is in a category with "little homemaker" siicky sweet. "Senior Citizen," and "The Geriatric Set" puts
us in mental wheelchairs. "Mature" implies younger people

Superiors Polish

NEW
SPRING
FABRICS

·aren't. "Venerable" is too prett!ntious.

0

l--

-

l '•"" "'•~ ol

GROUND CHUCK ••••• !b:.89~
~

Baby Beef .
ROUND STEAK ••••••••}~·•••
$
Baby Beef
T-BONE STEAK •••••••• ~~· •••
Baby 'Beef
PORTERHOUSE .••••••• .'~·•••

N BP, s;an dijng s

By United Prc5os t nfernallonal
E11 !. 1ern Confer-ence
Atlantic Di v ision
W . L .· Pet . gb
BQSIOn
37 18 673
Bu fl ato
35 t .t 593
•I
Ph ll,1d !" lph ,a
3·1 ?6 557
51.
New Yo rk
29 31 483 10 '.
CenJra r D iv ision

The Fabric Shop

w.

TH( SINGE A CO PII,AN'f'

L.

Pet.

qb ,

Clevel an d
35 23 603
Wa sh ing ton
35 24 59:1
Houston
29 2';1 500
6
N ew Orl ean s 76 J t 456 8 ' ,
At lan ta .~...
26 33 .441. 91,
W es t e rn Con t e.r enc e
Midwes t Divi sio n
W . l. Pet. gb
Mil wauk ee
'15 34 .•124
~!r O il
23 )J 411
I )
K'itn sa s Ci ty
22 31 .373
3
Ctt ic ago
18 dO .310 6' '
PiH; ilic Divi;i on

Go td en Stat e

W. L. Pet . gb

.n t

A2 16
.S ea TTl e
·
30 29 508 111,
L o s A ngeles
29 31 483 IJ
PhO en ix
25 3 1 .4 46 16
Por tland
25 35 ,&lt;T ill 18
Tues ctay• s Resull s
BUffalo 109 New Yo rk 103
Wa shi ngton 92 Chic ago BJ
Kfln Ci ty 120 Pt, oenix 11 71 ot
~ h i lad el ph i a 106 Por!land 102
Wednes day 's Games
Hou ston at Bos ton
Sealll &lt;; at Bu ff alo
W qshi ng to n al N ew Or lean s
Cl ev eland at De troi t
,
Thur sday' s Gam es
1\ll ant.\ at Pho f! n i x
N cw ·Or l ca ns at Wash ington

39

49

'

3 lb.
"YELLOW
bag
ON IONS ...................

'By Unifed
NHL Sta ndings ·
Press International

Wednesday, February 25, 1976

Campbc tl Conf eren ce
Pa t rick Divi sion
'
. W L T Pts g f ga
P'tli lad Ctpt1 i 38 10 13 89 268 170
r-fv tstander s 32 11 12 76 234 147
Aitlanta
17 28 a 62 199 189
N Y Rang ers 23 32 6 52 203 250
:
Sm~lhe Di v ision
1
W l T Pts gf ga
Gh i cago
25 19 17 67 187 181
Va ncouver
25 25 11 61206 206
St. L ouis
22 29 9 53 186215
~ i nne so t a
17 40 .1 38 149 228
Kan sa s City 12 40 8 32 144 258
!
Wales Con ference
Norri s Division
t.
WLTPtsgfga
MOrdr ca l
44 9 9 97 263 .137
o s Arige les 30 25 7 67 204 204
ilt sburgh
76 ?5 lO 62 25 5 232
e troi !
19 J.t 8 46 164 233
a shing to n
7 ..19 a 22 173 314
Adams Division
W L T Pts gf ga
a ston
38 11 10 86 23&lt;1 168
utfa lo
J3 18 10 76 252 I Btl
oronl o
~6 211 11 63 22 4 213
allforn ia
22 32 7 51 194 210
Tuesday's Results
• v tsla nder s 1 Minneso ta 2
h ilad el ph ia 5 Wash ington 5
on tr eat 6 St . Loui s 2
1ic ago 4 Vancouver 1 ·
,.
Wed nesday 's Games
al i forn i a at NY Rangers
llanta at Pitt sburgh
ontrcat a t K an sas Ci ty
etroil at To ronto
·
Tt1ur sday'!&gt; Games
an sas City at NY t stan·del"s
tnneso t a at Phitaeletphia
ali forn ia &lt;Jt De troit
hi cago al Los Ang eles
•
. Lou is at Bos ton
·
•nrnnt n al Butfato

community.

Dear Friends:

Thank you for all the kind remarks you have made expressing your
sorrow at our Pomeroy store loss. We appreciate it more than words
'
can express.

16 oz. bottles

!

8PAK

7-UP or PEPSI ••••••••

~l

As we stated earlier. we plan to rebuild a beautiful modern store on ·
our present site. But, as you can imagine. this will take time.

t

On an interim basis, we have r!!nted a store on the corner of Main
and Sycamore for a STIFFLER' S TEMPORARY STORE. Because,
it is temporary . it will be clean and well run even if it isn't fancy .

f
f.

We will stock first quality merchandise with emphasis on basic
needs-and hope that our friendly service and popular prices will
make up for any inconvenience It might cause you .

Kraft Miracle l-Ib.

~

We hope to open for business formally .by the end of March, but we
may. in fact , open our doors to you even before the formal opening .
Please watch this newspaper for further news.

Cash Saver

;

Paradise Strawberry

:
WHA St andi ng s
:sy United Press Int ernat ional
~

Sincerely,
\ bigger diamond for a
Starfire.

~

John F. Stiffler, Sr.

~

PreSident

i
I

ec~st

W l T Pts gf ga
ew Englnd 26 29 .~ 57 189 213
incinnatl
28 31 1 57 228 '253
;, leveland
25 29 5 55 199 206
ndlan a pot s 23 35 ? 48 174 187
til
West
•
W L. T Pts gt ga
ouston
37 2? 0 711 236 200
30 24 4 64 210 210
innesota
hOen i)(
29 24 6 64 219 199
an Diego
2'il 27 4 62 232 211
.
Canadian
W L T Pis g f ga
i nnip e:g
41 20. 2 IIJ 268 189
uebec
·
38 I B !I RO ~69 224
a tgary
29 26 4 62 220 ~02
dmonton
22 36 5 .49 213 264
oronto
15 39 .c; 35 711,'2 303
Ot t.!we
14 26 1 29 134 172
K· Team di sband ed
Tuesday's Results
uebec " HoUstan 1..
Cincinnat i 9 Toronlo 6
algary J Edmonton 3, ot
Wedn es daY's Games
Edmon ton at Cat gary
Cleveland at Winnipeg
New E.ngland. al Cincinnali
~n)~je.~.~.ill. ~;nD~~ola
._

.

•

Tlilii'"sday' ~

'G ame

Houston a1 N ew Eng land

... l
.
· -' ·l ·l.e.r~

. · -.,., ·

25 lb.

$

2

99
·

DOG FOOD ..........~.... .

~

Again , thanks for your understanding and continued patronage .

Guaran[ced in wri ling &lt;-~nd
permi.lnently registered . Bea l ·
iful 14K ~o ld settings.

~

Fresh, Lean

l
l
:Standin~s l

opening gi fts, the new Mr .
and Mrs. Hoffman were
showered with grains of rice

.. maller price with

lb

I

....._ P ••-• ot"&lt;!~

"A

·

9~

SAUSAGE •••••••••••••••• ~.79

l . · Pro

yourself a sewing
spree. Choose our colorful
fabrics in prints , plaids,
patterns and plains . All
inspirational . . . 111 pin
cushion prices. Buy yards.

SATURDAY
GOSPEL SING, Guysville
Commu nity Church, 7:30
p.m., Saturday featuring
Sommerville and Brady
Families of Mineral Wells , W.
Va.

'

BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••~~.5

~- -------- ---,

+++

Kearns, Mrs. Ruth Lewis and
Mrs. Stella Morgan . il!ter

"108.9:\ car ats
Bri tish Crown Jewels

Tastee Chunk ·

San Jose St, 84 Portlond St 83

wedding recep tion were Mrs .
Connie Gibbs, Mrs . Emmolee

afford the Kohinoor*
diamond, you can still
have a diamond
everyone will be
talking about.

NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY R
RESERV::O

Pug e t Sound 85 Pa c . Lutheran

while they cut their cake.
Those who assisted at the

I

POMEROY, OHIO

56

angel on a music box and

I Even if you can't

298 Second St.

50

white doves wa s served. An
a r chway
covered
wi th

as they left for their new
home.
The bride and groom are
1975 graduates of Wahama
High School. They are now
residing in th e Fairview

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

V.ass . 81 New Harnp . 72
NY Maritime 79 Yeshiva 56
PtatiSblJ rgh 77 Potsdam 75
0
rovidnce 85 Rl1de Isind 66
~ uinnipia c: 63 Bry ant 61
Rochstr T~ch 88 Alfred 76
Tu f ts Itt Trin ity Co n n .1 82
Utica 96 Eisen hower •46
...Vl.'Si fl d St. 88 No . Adms St
South
Cl ark 93 Knoxvil le 92
Coppin St 106 Fed Ci t y 64
Fl a . St.. 106 Valdosta St 61
F la . Tech 93 Rol lin s 78
Hrnp Syd 10 1 B' watr Va 83
Ki ng 7'J Belmont 65
Ft . Valley 102 M orehse 95
NE La . 90 L amar 67
No . Ala . SB Tenn . Mart in so
North Car . 91 N.C. St . 79
Radford 91 Maryvitte .7B
Savan nah Sl. 106 Waters 87
Se wan.ee 7~ A ugusta 6l
Tra nsy lvan ia 6S Centre 57 ·
Vfl!ll 85 Central w esleyan dB
Mtdwest Car t hage 93 Northl and
77
Carroll Wis. 92 S t . N rbrt 90
Cedarvi ll e 92 W i lmington 86
Evan svi ll e 90 DePauw 87
Indiana Cen tra l 95 Wabash 82
M an c hester 83 Bethel 75
Mil ton as L aK eland 62
Ta ylor 79 Gos hen 1;,
Va l para iso 81;1 BUtler. 8 1
Vi n cennes 112 Pad ucah 94 ,
Wr ight S t 86 T hos More 74
Xavie r 0 90 lnd ·furdu e 76
Southwest
A rkan sas 86 Baylor M
Houston 100 SM u 98
H Pa yne 74 Ang el o St. 68
Mi ss . Cot I 75 L eTrneau 73
TCU 89 Tm(ilS 81
T exas A&amp;.M 98 Ric ~ 67
W.est
aio la 101 Cal Lui h 6&lt;1
Cal Bap t 92. Azusa Pa t n
La Verne 130 Cal tec h 511
Mem,Ohs St . 85 Sl a Barbar a 81
Occiden tal 7a Redlands 70 . ·
Pomona Ptu 54 Cl ar m nt Mudd

21b.

99~

PRESERVES •••••••• ~~· •••••
·~-~-J·i" ..._~
!!1' ~ · -- ·

.........

-.a.,•

-~
. ' .. ·~ ...

COUPON

. ·.

DOMINO

- : -::

~ ; - .-

CHARM IN

·f .

'

~~: TOILET TISSUE [: ~

r

·f

With Coupon

r.
1'

·~

59 e

4 Roll Pkg.

:~

'••
••
·r~

Limit 1 Coupon Per Customer
Good At Pow ell's Super Valu
Coupon ~xpires: 2·28-76 ·

~I

'· i

J .

.

. •

~

•

·············
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

'

........__,_..,...__,.,~...,....

r·

}

_.,_----..:..
•

•

•

•

•

•

'

99¢

5 Lb. Bag
With Coupon

Limit 1 Coupon Per Customer
Good At Powell's Super Valu

Coupon

~.xpires :

·I .
~

I

2.28-76

FOR .

MARGARINE ••••••••••••
·Fresh Bakery

DOUGHNUTS.••••••••~••
­
..~----. ' .....
I.

COUPON

FOLGER'S

SUGAR

••

&amp;.

February 28, 1976

n

,,

decorated with a miniature

American Legion Home.

WEDNESDAY
the Sailors and Soldiers
FREE CWTHING Day by
Orphans Home at Xenia. He
was accompanied by a chorus . Galli a-Meigs Commun ity
from the school which Action Agency, 9 a .m. to ·2
presented a program entitled p.m. Wednesday at clothing
cen ter in old high school at
"Sing Out America.''
Mrs. Raym ond Sloon, Cheshire. All persons of row
department field service income welcome.
MIDdirector presented · service
POMEROY
pins with three going to DLEPORT Lions Club ,
members in the Eighth Wednesday noon , at the
District . These will be Meigs Inn.
OHIO VALLEY Comawarded later to the
recipients by Mrs. -Richards. mandery, Knight.. Tempiar ,
At noon Saturday both Mrs. stated conclave, 7:30 WedR.ichards and Miss Powers nesday night at the Pomeroy
atlended a luncheon honoring Masonic Temple.
POMEROY WOMEN'S
d.istrict presidents, and then
took part in a program "Busy Christian Temperance Union ,
Buzzln' Bees," fea turin g annual Frances Willard tea to
bumble and honey bee be held at 2 p.m. at the
!'urneroy United Methodist
cost\lming for a sq uare
Church. Mrs.' Joseph Cook to
dance.
topic, " Person to Person .11
Speaking at the aFternoon have the program.
Election of officers will be
session was Dean Schull,
lliNNER for all past held. ,
commanders and trustees
and wives, 7 p.m . Wednesday

EAST MEIGS - N~tlonal
FFA Wellk, Feb. 23-27, is
being observed by the
Eastern Chapter of the
Futw-e Farmers of America.
Various activities have
been planned for the week
including poster displays
pointing up FFA Week,
speaking to the Eastern
eighth grade about FFA and
vocational agriculture,
wearing the FFA jackets to
bring attention to membership, and publicl21ng the
week through newspaper
articles. The ~lim ax of the
week wtU be a banquet.

bride and groom s tood Urider

FEENEY•BENNETT Post

C Conn . St. JOJ R I CoW 95
Cotgare 78 sf. Lawrence 57
Cf?ncordia N Y 71 Cathdrl65
~· c kn s n 65 Elizabth twn 62
::; Strol.ld SbQ 78 Mansfld 77
:. Conn . 85 Con n . Coli
F a irfield 87 lana 62 •
riartwick 92 Montc lair St_ 70
Hartford 80 W i lliams 79
Providem:e 80 W illiams 79
Hiram 100 Thi el 72

Husson 97 Maj nc Frm ngt.n 65
King's NY 9l Bl oomfie ld 77
Lowe ll 92 B' wat er Mass . 80

wedding bells, rosebuds and
lily-of-the-va lley which the

special recognition bein g

were

FFA week
being observed'

white carnations tinted with

given to the Department and
District officers. Toastmistress was Mrs. Homer
Smith, a past Department
president.
Introduced and bringing
greetings

Can isl us 77 St.Jos.. fla 11

white
was the color
scheme
A three-tiered
wedding
cake. . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .

red and wh ite rosebuds which

Prices
Effective Thru

Amherst 68 Coast Guard ~a
Army 84 Mirr ima c ts, 73

Dear wah: .
Perhaps Mr. X. understands his wife better than you do.
Secw-ity-oriented women aren't about to leave the safe nest for
an uncertain future - not when they can have the nest and tbe
love nest too. I think this answers both of your questions,
except to add, Mr. X may be weathering the storm becailse he
has experienced such storms before. - H.

Who has a good descriptive word for lis - OLD PARTII&lt;;S
'Serving as best man was
Danny Rickard . Mrs. Denise
Sawyer, sister of the groom, Dear O.P .:
Perhaps no word is really needed. If you don't think of
and Scott D. King registered .
yourselves as "old p~rties," then you won't be set apart by
guests.
A reception was held labels. Be a PERSON until the day you die. That's the only
loiiowing the wedding in the "matw-e" way to manage ag ing. - H.
church basement. Red and ,

........

East

luncheon meeting at the
Galllpolls Episcopal Church.

.

llll••••••••••••••

.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.liilliililii.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Colle.ge Btnkefball Resu lls

By Un1led Pres s l"ternational

given to her by her father and
mother . Her head piece was a ·
veil of lace ending in the
traditional long train. The
bride carried a bouquet of

assisting hostess.

Stephan, superintendent of

TO HOLD SUPPER
Deacons of the Middleport
First United Presbyterian
ChiU'ch will have a pancake
supper Sunday night at 6 p.m.
at lhe church for members
and their friends .

Dear Helen :
.
Hell in love with a girl we can call Mrs. X. She's expecting
my baby.
Now enter Mr. X. There's been no hope for their marriage
for a long tinne, but Mr. Xhas Mrs. X so brainwashed that she's
afraid to make a decision.
He has her believing that no matter what she does, she 'll
fall on her face , so she'd better settle for his overpowering
security.
He knows the baby is mine. We haven't hidden our love
from a nyone. Friends accept us as a couple . .
How can a man live with a woman who obviously loves
someone else? How can I persuade her to leave ? - WALT

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov. 0 .. Wednesday,

COFFEE
$399

3 Lb . Can

With Coupon

COUPON

HAVILAND

SUGAR BOWL
Reg . S6.99
With Coupon .

$599

limit 1 Coupon Per \..UStomer
Good At Powell 's Super Valu
Coupon EKpires: 2-28·76

�8- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-P_omeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, F• 1

Mrs. Moore speaks
at ·Friday meeting

Enchanting concert
given by harpists
By Sarah Carsey

tuning. The harp has more

An enchanting mu sica l
program was presented by
doo-harpists Longstreth an d
Escosa Tuesday evenin g at
the Gallia Academy High
School auditorium in the final
event of the Tri-County
Community Concert
Association's 1975-76 season.
The harpists, natives of
Indiana, delighted the
audience with their en·
tertaining
performa nce.
Their selections included
Passacaglia, Andante
Allegro (Concerto in B flat,
Opus 4, No. 6) Handel ; Largo
(Violin Sonata No. 5), Jesu,
Joy of Man's Desiring,
Toccata with Fugue in D
minor, Bach; La Cathedrale

than 2,000 mov ing parts, and
four fingers are used to play.
Three fin gers pull while the
thumb pushes . Long streth

englotilie , La Fille auK

Mrs . Harry s . Moore ,
Middleport, director of the
Southeast Region, Episcopal
A Tale of Two W.en
Church Wom~n was guest
Dear Helen :
1 am a bar dancer, stripper, etc., and I also do some speaker at the Chillicothe
nonconunercial dating away from work, mostly when I'm mad Church Friday. From there,
at my boyfriends. I haven't been a real moral person, but I do Mrs . Moore, her husband,
the best I can with what! have. What I DON'T have is a man to and Miss Kathryn Hysell
went to Colunnbus to attend
lean on . My guys all lean on ME.
I lived with R. five years, paying most of our expem;es. the Episcopal Convention
Finally he asked me to marry him, and after I.spent $500 on held at the Ohio Union.
wedding clothes, etc. he backed out. l was so outraged I moved Others there for the conin with his friend J. who turned outto be even stingier. I put out vention were the Rev. and
for rent, food, his clothes, and also loaned him money he never Mrs. Harold Deeth, Mrs."!
repays. Besides, I don't like him as well as R, who wants me Mildred Fowler and Mrs.
Norma Amsbary.
"
back.
I won't last forever in my profession, and I'd like to setUe
While in Colunnbus Mr. and
down. Do you think R. would change if I quit working and he Mrs. Moore visited Mr. and
had to support me• Or would J? They don't like the idea of jobs Mrs. Ernest A. Jones and
Miss Grace Sauvage and
very well. - C. J.
Mrs. Harry E. Hoagland.
Dear C.:
Monday Mrs. Mpore, Mrs.
My frank opinion is that if you quit your job and hook up Fowler, Miss Hysell, Mrs. J.
with ai.ther one of these scroungers, they'll get you into 0. Roedel, Mrs. Nancy Reed,
"commercial" dating ... and then you can call the boyfriend Mrs. Freda Hartinger, Mrs.
"p" (for pimp) .
.
Mildred Deeth and Mrs.
Forget •em 1 - fl.
Helen Hayes attended a

said since few composHions

are made for the harp, most
selections for the · instrument
are transcriptions .

The duo completed their
concert with selections from
" The Sound of Music," and
·~ Pot-pourri." a variety of
melodies which included four
variations of Yankee Doodle,

a J apanese folk lWle, and the

theme from "The Sting" by
Scott Joplin .
Since the 1969-70 season,
Longstreth and Escosa have

presented over 600 performances . They have
tra'o'eled to every state but

one in the continental United
States, and to every province
of Canada.
Ravel, and Escosa 's own
Escosa studi ed · at the
compos iti on , ; Tr ompe · Juilliard School in New York
l'Oeil. "
while Longstreth gained his
Following in termission , musical background at the
Longstreth and Escosa gave Conservatorio di Santa
a brief oral history of the Cecelia in Rome . They are
harp citing differences known for the variety of their
between the traditional and musical presentations, the
modern. Escosa described powers and strength of their
the harp as being one of the tra nscriptio ns and peroldest instrunnents . He said formances, .f!.lld the }enewed
cbeveux de lin, Clair de lune,
Debussy ; Laideronelte,
lmperatrice des !'agodes,

the strings exert more than a

prominence they are bringing ·

ton of pressure. The standard
harp weighs 100 pounds and
has 47 strings.
The top strings are nylon;
the middle, gut, and the

to the harp. Appearances in
New York's Town Hall and
Carneg ie Recital Hall have
brought requests for retw-n
engagemen ts.
They have recorded two
albums. "Longstreth and
Escosa in Conce rt " and "The
Sound of Music."

bottom, steel wrapp(!d in
copper or silver . Escosa said

a harp is susceptible to all
changes in temperature ,
therefore requiring constant

Meigs representatives
attend ·41st conference
Meigs County American
Legion Auxiliary members
were in Colunnbus Friday and
Satw-day for the 41st annual
Midwinter Conference of the
Department of Ohio at the
Neil House Motor Hotel.
Mrs. Arnold Richards,
Middleport, Eighth District
president, was an active
participant in t he conference
and received several awards
for district units to be
presented by her at a later
time . AlSo presen t and
participating in the various

activities was Pam Powers,
Middlep;ort, the Junior
Auxiliary
Distr.ict
8
president.
Other local persons attending were Mrs. Myrtle
Walker , Racine Unit 602;
Mrs .
Mabel
Brown,
Gallipolis; Mrs . Pearl
Knapp, Mrs. Mary Martin,
Mrs. Veda Davis, Mrs. Grace
Prall and Mrs. Marjorie
Goeti, Pomeroy Unit 39, and
Mrs. Lula Hampton, Mid·
dleport Unit 263.
At the opening session of
the conference Friday, Mrs .
Jack Balzhiser, Department
president, gave a welcome.
Reports from the Department chairperson~ were
glven and the seSsion was
followed by a social how- and
sing-a-long hos ted by the 14
district presidents. Mrs.
R.ichard was als.o a guest that
evening at the Past District
Presidents' Parley.
Highlighting the Satw-day

morning session was an
address by Mrs. Melvin
Junge, national chairperson

of the national security
committee. She spoke on the
United States' involvement
around the world with special
emphasis on detente , and of
decreasing fighting forces of
the United States.
Also speaking was Col. L. S.

Department

of

Ohio,

+++

Mrs. Charles R. Hoffman

Nuptial vows repeated
in November ceremony
Miss Melissa

Jaloqueline

Justis, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs . Raymond Justis of
Middleport, became the bride
of Charles Richard Hoffman,
son of Mrs. Clarence Roush,
and the late Winfred f!offman
against a background of
while carnations at the
Fairview Bible Church. The .
Reverend Ge.orge Hoschar

were take n fr om the bouquet

and given to the mothers of
the bride and groom at the
end of the ceremony .

Mrs. Kimberley Hall was
matron of honor . She wore a
red and green gown and

carried a bouquet of red and
white carnations. Kelly
Renee Sawyer, niece of the
groom, was flow e r girl and

American Leg ion commander, and Mrs. J ames
Warde.r, chairperson of
"Spirit of '76."
Among thos,e receiving

performed th e double ring- carried a· white basket
ceremony at 7:30p.m ., Nov . . trimmed with red ribbon .

awards for being in the first
100 .goal units in Ohio were
seven in the Eighth District
including Racine 620, Mid·
dleport 263, Pleasantville 9,
Wilkesville 476, Vint.on 161,
Crooksville 222 and Millersport 637. Two units, Millersport and Wilkesville, also
received the 100 per cent plus

molee Kearns.
Given in marriage by her

awards for membership.

At th e Saturday night
program a recepiion was held
honoring Mrs. Lynn Ransdell, national vice president
of the Central Division, with

28 .

Nuptial

music

was

presented by Mrs. Arline
McDerm itt and Mrs. Em·
fath er the bride wore a gown
of po lyester and a lace
covered bodice with a scoop
neckline. She wore a necklace

Auxiliary, 6:30 p. m. potluck
dinner, meeting at 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday. Plans to be mad&lt;
for the legion birthday ob·

Mrs .

128, American Legion , and

servance.

Balzhiser; Mrs. Robert R.iley,
THURSD AY
national executive Co!J)mittee
RIVERVIEW
Garden Club,
woman, Commander Scholl,
Thw-sd~y. 7;30 p. lil. at the
Mrs. Junge, Mrs. George
Sallot, vice chairperson of home of Mrs . Warren
national community s·ervice; Pickens .
Hos tesses, Mrs . Don a ld
Mrs. Ar-thur Hrabak, central Putnam and Mrs. Lyle
division legislative chair· Baiderson . Guest speaker
person; Mrs. Roland Huston, will be George Pi~kens with
chapeau dep ar temen ta l the program on the bicenEight and Forty; Paul tennial.
Southern, grand chef de gare,
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Eight and Forty, and Kathy
Conservation
League, 6:30
Glanzman, Department
p.m.
Thursday
at
Seddon 's on
junior president. The banquet
the
Mall
,
Parkersburg
.
address was given by Mrs.
Husbands
will
be
guests.
Ransdell.
MIDDLEPORT CUB Scout
Pack 245, 7 p.m. Thursday at
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,

Social
Calendar

at' Drew Webster Post 39,
Arner i c~n Legion Hall.
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
7:30p.m . Wednesday at lhe
home of Mrs . Vernon Nease

with Mrs. Dwight Milhoan ,

·'

'

---------------------~
WHY NOT GO ON A

SPRING SEWING SPREE
SEW FOR
-SPRING
-EASTER
-PROMS

MEIGS COUNTY Women's
Fellowship of Churches · of
Christ, 7::10p.m. Thursday at .
Bradbury Chw-ch of Christ
with installation of offi cers to
be held.
TWIN CITY Shrinettes,
7:30
p.m.
Thursday,
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
FREE CLOT HING Day
Thursday at Salvation Army,
Pomeroy, from 10 a.m. until
noon. Those in need of
clothing are welcome.
!'RECEPTOR CHAPTER,
Beta Sigma !'hi Sorority, 7:45
p.m . Thursday at home of
Ann Rupe with Jean Werry,
cO-hos tess .
FRIDAY
REGULAR MONTHLY
meeting of Parents Without
Partners Rolling Hills
Chapter No. 838 Friday, 7:30
p.m. at Grace United
Methodist Church. Rev. Paul
Hawks will speak on the

Dear Helen :
You've sa id that young people who write to you dislike the
word "teenager," but complain there's no good substitute .
Ukewise, there's no adequate wor&lt;l for us who are getting on.
"Goldenager" is in a category with "little homemaker" siicky sweet. "Senior Citizen," and "The Geriatric Set" puts
us in mental wheelchairs. "Mature" implies younger people

Superiors Polish

NEW
SPRING
FABRICS

·aren't. "Venerable" is too prett!ntious.

0

l--

-

l '•"" "'•~ ol

GROUND CHUCK ••••• !b:.89~
~

Baby Beef .
ROUND STEAK ••••••••}~·•••
$
Baby Beef
T-BONE STEAK •••••••• ~~· •••
Baby 'Beef
PORTERHOUSE .••••••• .'~·•••

N BP, s;an dijng s

By United Prc5os t nfernallonal
E11 !. 1ern Confer-ence
Atlantic Di v ision
W . L .· Pet . gb
BQSIOn
37 18 673
Bu fl ato
35 t .t 593
•I
Ph ll,1d !" lph ,a
3·1 ?6 557
51.
New Yo rk
29 31 483 10 '.
CenJra r D iv ision

The Fabric Shop

w.

TH( SINGE A CO PII,AN'f'

L.

Pet.

qb ,

Clevel an d
35 23 603
Wa sh ing ton
35 24 59:1
Houston
29 2';1 500
6
N ew Orl ean s 76 J t 456 8 ' ,
At lan ta .~...
26 33 .441. 91,
W es t e rn Con t e.r enc e
Midwes t Divi sio n
W . l. Pet. gb
Mil wauk ee
'15 34 .•124
~!r O il
23 )J 411
I )
K'itn sa s Ci ty
22 31 .373
3
Ctt ic ago
18 dO .310 6' '
PiH; ilic Divi;i on

Go td en Stat e

W. L. Pet . gb

.n t

A2 16
.S ea TTl e
·
30 29 508 111,
L o s A ngeles
29 31 483 IJ
PhO en ix
25 3 1 .4 46 16
Por tland
25 35 ,&lt;T ill 18
Tues ctay• s Resull s
BUffalo 109 New Yo rk 103
Wa shi ngton 92 Chic ago BJ
Kfln Ci ty 120 Pt, oenix 11 71 ot
~ h i lad el ph i a 106 Por!land 102
Wednes day 's Games
Hou ston at Bos ton
Sealll &lt;; at Bu ff alo
W qshi ng to n al N ew Or lean s
Cl ev eland at De troi t
,
Thur sday' s Gam es
1\ll ant.\ at Pho f! n i x
N cw ·Or l ca ns at Wash ington

39

49

'

3 lb.
"YELLOW
bag
ON IONS ...................

'By Unifed
NHL Sta ndings ·
Press International

Wednesday, February 25, 1976

Campbc tl Conf eren ce
Pa t rick Divi sion
'
. W L T Pts g f ga
P'tli lad Ctpt1 i 38 10 13 89 268 170
r-fv tstander s 32 11 12 76 234 147
Aitlanta
17 28 a 62 199 189
N Y Rang ers 23 32 6 52 203 250
:
Sm~lhe Di v ision
1
W l T Pts gf ga
Gh i cago
25 19 17 67 187 181
Va ncouver
25 25 11 61206 206
St. L ouis
22 29 9 53 186215
~ i nne so t a
17 40 .1 38 149 228
Kan sa s City 12 40 8 32 144 258
!
Wales Con ference
Norri s Division
t.
WLTPtsgfga
MOrdr ca l
44 9 9 97 263 .137
o s Arige les 30 25 7 67 204 204
ilt sburgh
76 ?5 lO 62 25 5 232
e troi !
19 J.t 8 46 164 233
a shing to n
7 ..19 a 22 173 314
Adams Division
W L T Pts gf ga
a ston
38 11 10 86 23&lt;1 168
utfa lo
J3 18 10 76 252 I Btl
oronl o
~6 211 11 63 22 4 213
allforn ia
22 32 7 51 194 210
Tuesday's Results
• v tsla nder s 1 Minneso ta 2
h ilad el ph ia 5 Wash ington 5
on tr eat 6 St . Loui s 2
1ic ago 4 Vancouver 1 ·
,.
Wed nesday 's Games
al i forn i a at NY Rangers
llanta at Pitt sburgh
ontrcat a t K an sas Ci ty
etroil at To ronto
·
Tt1ur sday'!&gt; Games
an sas City at NY t stan·del"s
tnneso t a at Phitaeletphia
ali forn ia &lt;Jt De troit
hi cago al Los Ang eles
•
. Lou is at Bos ton
·
•nrnnt n al Butfato

community.

Dear Friends:

Thank you for all the kind remarks you have made expressing your
sorrow at our Pomeroy store loss. We appreciate it more than words
'
can express.

16 oz. bottles

!

8PAK

7-UP or PEPSI ••••••••

~l

As we stated earlier. we plan to rebuild a beautiful modern store on ·
our present site. But, as you can imagine. this will take time.

t

On an interim basis, we have r!!nted a store on the corner of Main
and Sycamore for a STIFFLER' S TEMPORARY STORE. Because,
it is temporary . it will be clean and well run even if it isn't fancy .

f
f.

We will stock first quality merchandise with emphasis on basic
needs-and hope that our friendly service and popular prices will
make up for any inconvenience It might cause you .

Kraft Miracle l-Ib.

~

We hope to open for business formally .by the end of March, but we
may. in fact , open our doors to you even before the formal opening .
Please watch this newspaper for further news.

Cash Saver

;

Paradise Strawberry

:
WHA St andi ng s
:sy United Press Int ernat ional
~

Sincerely,
\ bigger diamond for a
Starfire.

~

John F. Stiffler, Sr.

~

PreSident

i
I

ec~st

W l T Pts gf ga
ew Englnd 26 29 .~ 57 189 213
incinnatl
28 31 1 57 228 '253
;, leveland
25 29 5 55 199 206
ndlan a pot s 23 35 ? 48 174 187
til
West
•
W L. T Pts gt ga
ouston
37 2? 0 711 236 200
30 24 4 64 210 210
innesota
hOen i)(
29 24 6 64 219 199
an Diego
2'il 27 4 62 232 211
.
Canadian
W L T Pis g f ga
i nnip e:g
41 20. 2 IIJ 268 189
uebec
·
38 I B !I RO ~69 224
a tgary
29 26 4 62 220 ~02
dmonton
22 36 5 .49 213 264
oronto
15 39 .c; 35 711,'2 303
Ot t.!we
14 26 1 29 134 172
K· Team di sband ed
Tuesday's Results
uebec " HoUstan 1..
Cincinnat i 9 Toronlo 6
algary J Edmonton 3, ot
Wedn es daY's Games
Edmon ton at Cat gary
Cleveland at Winnipeg
New E.ngland. al Cincinnali
~n)~je.~.~.ill. ~;nD~~ola
._

.

•

Tlilii'"sday' ~

'G ame

Houston a1 N ew Eng land

... l
.
· -' ·l ·l.e.r~

. · -.,., ·

25 lb.

$

2

99
·

DOG FOOD ..........~.... .

~

Again , thanks for your understanding and continued patronage .

Guaran[ced in wri ling &lt;-~nd
permi.lnently registered . Bea l ·
iful 14K ~o ld settings.

~

Fresh, Lean

l
l
:Standin~s l

opening gi fts, the new Mr .
and Mrs. Hoffman were
showered with grains of rice

.. maller price with

lb

I

....._ P ••-• ot"&lt;!~

"A

·

9~

SAUSAGE •••••••••••••••• ~.79

l . · Pro

yourself a sewing
spree. Choose our colorful
fabrics in prints , plaids,
patterns and plains . All
inspirational . . . 111 pin
cushion prices. Buy yards.

SATURDAY
GOSPEL SING, Guysville
Commu nity Church, 7:30
p.m., Saturday featuring
Sommerville and Brady
Families of Mineral Wells , W.
Va.

'

BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••~~.5

~- -------- ---,

+++

Kearns, Mrs. Ruth Lewis and
Mrs. Stella Morgan . il!ter

"108.9:\ car ats
Bri tish Crown Jewels

Tastee Chunk ·

San Jose St, 84 Portlond St 83

wedding recep tion were Mrs .
Connie Gibbs, Mrs . Emmolee

afford the Kohinoor*
diamond, you can still
have a diamond
everyone will be
talking about.

NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY R
RESERV::O

Pug e t Sound 85 Pa c . Lutheran

while they cut their cake.
Those who assisted at the

I

POMEROY, OHIO

56

angel on a music box and

I Even if you can't

298 Second St.

50

white doves wa s served. An
a r chway
covered
wi th

as they left for their new
home.
The bride and groom are
1975 graduates of Wahama
High School. They are now
residing in th e Fairview

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

V.ass . 81 New Harnp . 72
NY Maritime 79 Yeshiva 56
PtatiSblJ rgh 77 Potsdam 75
0
rovidnce 85 Rl1de Isind 66
~ uinnipia c: 63 Bry ant 61
Rochstr T~ch 88 Alfred 76
Tu f ts Itt Trin ity Co n n .1 82
Utica 96 Eisen hower •46
...Vl.'Si fl d St. 88 No . Adms St
South
Cl ark 93 Knoxvil le 92
Coppin St 106 Fed Ci t y 64
Fl a . St.. 106 Valdosta St 61
F la . Tech 93 Rol lin s 78
Hrnp Syd 10 1 B' watr Va 83
Ki ng 7'J Belmont 65
Ft . Valley 102 M orehse 95
NE La . 90 L amar 67
No . Ala . SB Tenn . Mart in so
North Car . 91 N.C. St . 79
Radford 91 Maryvitte .7B
Savan nah Sl. 106 Waters 87
Se wan.ee 7~ A ugusta 6l
Tra nsy lvan ia 6S Centre 57 ·
Vfl!ll 85 Central w esleyan dB
Mtdwest Car t hage 93 Northl and
77
Carroll Wis. 92 S t . N rbrt 90
Cedarvi ll e 92 W i lmington 86
Evan svi ll e 90 DePauw 87
Indiana Cen tra l 95 Wabash 82
M an c hester 83 Bethel 75
Mil ton as L aK eland 62
Ta ylor 79 Gos hen 1;,
Va l para iso 81;1 BUtler. 8 1
Vi n cennes 112 Pad ucah 94 ,
Wr ight S t 86 T hos More 74
Xavie r 0 90 lnd ·furdu e 76
Southwest
A rkan sas 86 Baylor M
Houston 100 SM u 98
H Pa yne 74 Ang el o St. 68
Mi ss . Cot I 75 L eTrneau 73
TCU 89 Tm(ilS 81
T exas A&amp;.M 98 Ric ~ 67
W.est
aio la 101 Cal Lui h 6&lt;1
Cal Bap t 92. Azusa Pa t n
La Verne 130 Cal tec h 511
Mem,Ohs St . 85 Sl a Barbar a 81
Occiden tal 7a Redlands 70 . ·
Pomona Ptu 54 Cl ar m nt Mudd

21b.

99~

PRESERVES •••••••• ~~· •••••
·~-~-J·i" ..._~
!!1' ~ · -- ·

.........

-.a.,•

-~
. ' .. ·~ ...

COUPON

. ·.

DOMINO

- : -::

~ ; - .-

CHARM IN

·f .

'

~~: TOILET TISSUE [: ~

r

·f

With Coupon

r.
1'

·~

59 e

4 Roll Pkg.

:~

'••
••
·r~

Limit 1 Coupon Per Customer
Good At Pow ell's Super Valu
Coupon ~xpires: 2·28-76 ·

~I

'· i

J .

.

. •

~

•

·············
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

'

........__,_..,...__,.,~...,....

r·

}

_.,_----..:..
•

•

•

•

•

•

'

99¢

5 Lb. Bag
With Coupon

Limit 1 Coupon Per Customer
Good At Powell's Super Valu

Coupon

~.xpires :

·I .
~

I

2.28-76

FOR .

MARGARINE ••••••••••••
·Fresh Bakery

DOUGHNUTS.••••••••~••
­
..~----. ' .....
I.

COUPON

FOLGER'S

SUGAR

••

&amp;.

February 28, 1976

n

,,

decorated with a miniature

American Legion Home.

WEDNESDAY
the Sailors and Soldiers
FREE CWTHING Day by
Orphans Home at Xenia. He
was accompanied by a chorus . Galli a-Meigs Commun ity
from the school which Action Agency, 9 a .m. to ·2
presented a program entitled p.m. Wednesday at clothing
cen ter in old high school at
"Sing Out America.''
Mrs. Raym ond Sloon, Cheshire. All persons of row
department field service income welcome.
MIDdirector presented · service
POMEROY
pins with three going to DLEPORT Lions Club ,
members in the Eighth Wednesday noon , at the
District . These will be Meigs Inn.
OHIO VALLEY Comawarded later to the
recipients by Mrs. -Richards. mandery, Knight.. Tempiar ,
At noon Saturday both Mrs. stated conclave, 7:30 WedR.ichards and Miss Powers nesday night at the Pomeroy
atlended a luncheon honoring Masonic Temple.
POMEROY WOMEN'S
d.istrict presidents, and then
took part in a program "Busy Christian Temperance Union ,
Buzzln' Bees," fea turin g annual Frances Willard tea to
bumble and honey bee be held at 2 p.m. at the
!'urneroy United Methodist
cost\lming for a sq uare
Church. Mrs.' Joseph Cook to
dance.
topic, " Person to Person .11
Speaking at the aFternoon have the program.
Election of officers will be
session was Dean Schull,
lliNNER for all past held. ,
commanders and trustees
and wives, 7 p.m . Wednesday

EAST MEIGS - N~tlonal
FFA Wellk, Feb. 23-27, is
being observed by the
Eastern Chapter of the
Futw-e Farmers of America.
Various activities have
been planned for the week
including poster displays
pointing up FFA Week,
speaking to the Eastern
eighth grade about FFA and
vocational agriculture,
wearing the FFA jackets to
bring attention to membership, and publicl21ng the
week through newspaper
articles. The ~lim ax of the
week wtU be a banquet.

bride and groom s tood Urider

FEENEY•BENNETT Post

C Conn . St. JOJ R I CoW 95
Cotgare 78 sf. Lawrence 57
Cf?ncordia N Y 71 Cathdrl65
~· c kn s n 65 Elizabth twn 62
::; Strol.ld SbQ 78 Mansfld 77
:. Conn . 85 Con n . Coli
F a irfield 87 lana 62 •
riartwick 92 Montc lair St_ 70
Hartford 80 W i lliams 79
Providem:e 80 W illiams 79
Hiram 100 Thi el 72

Husson 97 Maj nc Frm ngt.n 65
King's NY 9l Bl oomfie ld 77
Lowe ll 92 B' wat er Mass . 80

wedding bells, rosebuds and
lily-of-the-va lley which the

special recognition bein g

were

FFA week
being observed'

white carnations tinted with

given to the Department and
District officers. Toastmistress was Mrs. Homer
Smith, a past Department
president.
Introduced and bringing
greetings

Can isl us 77 St.Jos.. fla 11

white
was the color
scheme
A three-tiered
wedding
cake. . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .

red and wh ite rosebuds which

Prices
Effective Thru

Amherst 68 Coast Guard ~a
Army 84 Mirr ima c ts, 73

Dear wah: .
Perhaps Mr. X. understands his wife better than you do.
Secw-ity-oriented women aren't about to leave the safe nest for
an uncertain future - not when they can have the nest and tbe
love nest too. I think this answers both of your questions,
except to add, Mr. X may be weathering the storm becailse he
has experienced such storms before. - H.

Who has a good descriptive word for lis - OLD PARTII&lt;;S
'Serving as best man was
Danny Rickard . Mrs. Denise
Sawyer, sister of the groom, Dear O.P .:
Perhaps no word is really needed. If you don't think of
and Scott D. King registered .
yourselves as "old p~rties," then you won't be set apart by
guests.
A reception was held labels. Be a PERSON until the day you die. That's the only
loiiowing the wedding in the "matw-e" way to manage ag ing. - H.
church basement. Red and ,

........

East

luncheon meeting at the
Galllpolls Episcopal Church.

.

llll••••••••••••••

.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.liilliililii.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Colle.ge Btnkefball Resu lls

By Un1led Pres s l"ternational

given to her by her father and
mother . Her head piece was a ·
veil of lace ending in the
traditional long train. The
bride carried a bouquet of

assisting hostess.

Stephan, superintendent of

TO HOLD SUPPER
Deacons of the Middleport
First United Presbyterian
ChiU'ch will have a pancake
supper Sunday night at 6 p.m.
at lhe church for members
and their friends .

Dear Helen :
.
Hell in love with a girl we can call Mrs. X. She's expecting
my baby.
Now enter Mr. X. There's been no hope for their marriage
for a long tinne, but Mr. Xhas Mrs. X so brainwashed that she's
afraid to make a decision.
He has her believing that no matter what she does, she 'll
fall on her face , so she'd better settle for his overpowering
security.
He knows the baby is mine. We haven't hidden our love
from a nyone. Friends accept us as a couple . .
How can a man live with a woman who obviously loves
someone else? How can I persuade her to leave ? - WALT

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov. 0 .. Wednesday,

COFFEE
$399

3 Lb . Can

With Coupon

COUPON

HAVILAND

SUGAR BOWL
Reg . S6.99
With Coupon .

$599

limit 1 Coupon Per \..UStomer
Good At Powell 's Super Valu
Coupon EKpires: 2-28·76

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 25, 1976
&lt;":=::;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::.:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;;:::;:;:;;:.;;;.:::~:·:~::::::::::~:

.
;

•

'
'

•
MAKING PREPARATIONS - pr s are being
completed lor a Lay Witness Mission a .1e New Haven
United MethodistChurch Friday, Saturday a nd Sunday,
March 5-7. Planrung the event are, seated left to right ,
Evelyn Danbury, housing, welcome and tra nsportation
corrunittee ; Achsah Miller, chairperson lor Prayer; John
Campbell, Pastor ; Loueva Kent, general chairman of the
Lay Witness Mission ; standing Venus Ward, coffee
hostes·s; Harry Pickens, visitation ; Harold Bumgarner,

Rho~es
By LEE LEONARD

-

publicity ; Mar; Ingles, coffee hostess, and Mary Lieving
food chairperson. Other chairpersons, but not present fo~
the photo are Mar; Hoffman, literature corrunittee·
~eanine Larch, nursing corrunittee; Jerry and Phylli~
Scott, youth committee; Mr. and Mrs. Longanacre,
assistants of the youth committee and Connie Carter
attendance committee. Over 25 Lay Witness Missio~
peoplefromOhioand West Virginia will attend the event.

suffers only veto loss
The override came 13 \2
months into Rhodes' third
term
as
governor.
Democratic lawmakers had
previously come up short this
session with attempted
overrides of vetoes on eight
other bills. Rhodes has made
vetoes on ·16 bills in 1975-76.
Seven have not been challenged .
.
It was the first time in 15
years the General Assembly
has overridden a governor's

Braves .edge
Knicks ·by 6

..
'

.,,

For over a year the nation
has been subjected to a series
of very sensationa l investigations into the CIA and
other informalion.gathering
agencies . Each week brought
a formerly secret document
or fact into the public li ght ~
and in so doing almost
br ought our e ntire jntelligence appara tus to ruin .
Much of the blame for this
slate of affairs must fall on
the con gress iona l committees which were formed to
handle these inves ti gations.
Now President Ford has
sought to wind up all of this
by annou ncin g plans for
br inging America 's intelligence opera ti ons under
tighter White Hou se control
but at the same time prevent
leaks of vital , secret information.
The President 's proposals
involve a three -s tep pjan,
much of it accomplished by
executive orders. First, a

committee will be set up ,
he aded by Cen tr a l Intelligence Director George
Bush, which will manage all
of the Intelli gence agencies,
not just the CIA. in the past
the
many
intelligence
ga th erin g age ncies were
often not coordinated in their
actions . An Oversight Board,
composed of three prominent
private
c itize ns ,
is
es tablished to monitor the
actions of th e in telligence
agencies . SeCond , gui delines
are established which will
help protect citizens agai nst
the abuses which have occurred in the past. This includes domestic measures
such as electronic su rveillance and mail openings
as well as fore ign operations.
Lastly - and this will require
congressi onal action - the
President requ es t e d
legislation which will guard
our vital intelligence secrets.
Th e approa ch suggested
would make it a crime for a
government employee to leak
sec ret in lell igence
in formation .
Implementation of all of
these proposals will put an
end to a job that should have
been completed months ago :
effective re s tructurin g of
Am er ican
intelli genc e
CINCINNATI ( UPI)
Delta Queen officials say the ' operations. By this time there
change
of is little doubt in anyone's
impending
oWnerShip will not mean any mind that abuses of citizen 's
change in operation of rigl!l' were committed by the
America's only overnight CIA and oth~r agenci es. In
passenger
carrying forei gn operations there were
instances where they also
paddlewheel steamboat.
The Coca-Cola Bottling Co. s tepped outside their charter.
of New York has agreed in But this is no rea son to
principle to buy Overseas destroy those agencies or
National Airways, of which di scredit th eir imp ortant
the Delta Queen Steamboat mi ssion. In order to protect
the national in terests of our
Co. is a subsidiary.
coun
try , both econ om ic and
The deal, still subject to
political,
our leadtJrs have to
approval by directors of both
have
a
knowledge
of what is
companies and the Civil
happening
in
foreign
counAeronautics Board, would
tri
es,
With
the
many
mean the Queen would have
its third out-of-town owner in totalila'ri an- ·gover nmen ls
abroad, thi~ inforrr.lation is
the last 18 years.
The 192-passengef Queen, not easy to obtain and CO\'ert
built 50 years ago , is a inte lligence 9perations are
Cincinnati institution listed in
the National Registrar of
Historic Places.
The steamboat was sold by
the founding Greene family in
·1958 to two Cali fornia
investors ,·who later sold it to
ONA , which flies a 19-plane
fleet of ~arg o and charter
cra ft out of Kennedy
International Airport in New
York City.
A modern sister ship of the
Delta Queen, the Mississippi
Queen, is nearing completion
and ·Is to have its maiden ·
voyage this spring.

Utility reform bill is
step closer to passing
By J.R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
second major utility reform
bill in the Ohio General
Assembly moved a step
closer to enactment Tuesday
when the House Utilities
Committee sent to the full
chamber a bill to prevent
homeowners from being
charged for natural gas used
only by Industries .
Also pending before the
conunittee is a Senate-passed

.

continuous cleaning oven
~~~electric rang;

keep 'Queen'

veto.
The successful override on
the
nursing
home
commission proposal came
on a 20-10 party line vote in
the Senate. The Houi;e had
voted to override the same
veto last Wednesday, 70 to 22.
Althnugh the House had
previously voted to override
four vetoes and the Senate
had taken similar action on
three others, the two
chambers
had
not
collaborated on the same
vetoes . '
Not since 1961, when Democrat Michael V. DiSalle was
governor, had the General
Assembly completed an over.
ride.
The Republican-controlled
legislature canceled seven of
DiSalle 's 23 vetoes that year.
The House voted to override
Rhodes once in 1965, but the
Senate never completed the
action.

.

'.

•

in operation

Rocky Handley, Point
Pleasant, one of the two
' victims of Sunday's alleged
armed robbery at Save More
Service Station in Kanauga ,
told the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company this
morning his version a s to
what happened durin g
Sunday's robbery.
Handley a lso accused the
· Gallia County Sheriff's
Department of harrassment.
Handley gave the following
account of the armed robbery.
Working as a ss istant
manager at the station
located near the Intersection
of Rt. 7 and 35, Handley
received a phone call
, Saturday afternoon from a
• man requesting a job application . He told the caller to
come in and pick-up an application
blank . Later
Saturday , the man, described
as 6-0, 180 pounds with red
hair, came in for . an application .
At . that time, the man ·
(~arne not given ) asked
several pertinent questions
concerning the operation of
the service station . He said
Ural he had worked in a
similar station .
At 11 :30 a .m. Sunday, the
man returned with a friend

...

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--

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cleans 1tsel l every. t 1me you
use it . plus aulorna!i.c t1mcd
coo king . oven window .
Minul e Minder. and limed
appliance outlel.

INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

Open Fri. Til8 - Sat . Til5
Middleport

ANOTHER FIRST OF '76 SALE

No. 2.Grade

c

Now
EACH

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
M~TERIALS CO.

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773-5554

'

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CITY

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lb.
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MILK ••••••• ·.

.10%01. can

Golden Isle

5j$.100
Open 1

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32 oz. bot. 89~
SYRUP······ • •• • • •
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16 oz. loaf

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VEGETABLE

SOUP

9til7
Mon.-Sat •
Sun. 10 to 5
.Prices Effective
·Th1jrsday thru !)unday
~.c Rese~ve' Right to limit

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Fresh

Campbell•s

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BROUGHTON'S

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F
•
j LI"

lb.

ggt

IS

described

described as 6-0, 200 pounds
with brown hair and brown
beard . He requested another
application form and began
filling it out.
Accordin g t o Handl ey,
around 12:10 p.m . during a
slack period in business, the
bearded subject pulled a gun
on the other attendant Dwight
Martin, motioning him to go
to the station 's back room .
The other man pulled a .32
chrome pla ted automati c
pistol on Handley. The
gunmen forced th e two
station attendants to li e face
down on the floor . They
placed ma sking tape over
Martin 's mouth and tied his
hands be hind his back.
Handley was handcuffed to a
water pipe , after he was
forced to turn over the keys to
the stati on's sale. He too was
gagged with masking tape.
The men opened the sa fe
which contained a money
bag co ntaining $2,386 .31.
They also returned to the
back room and look Martin 's
-.·allet containing $60-$70 in
his personal money.
ACcordi ng to Handley , he
was physicall y threatened
before he handed over the
keys to Ihe safe and th e key to
an.other cash drawer.
In the meantime , several
Cus tome rs came to th e

station for gasoline. Handley
said one od the alleged
rob~Jert went out and pumped
gasoline. After the robbers
left on foot , station manager
Dave Cole, returning from
Hurrican e, W. Va . stopped in
and found the two attendants
tied up. He called the
Gallipolis Police Department
who notified both the Galtia
CoWlty Sheriff's Department
and Ohio Highway Patrol.
Handley said this morning
he has been questioned by
Sheriff Oscar Baird a nd ~is
deputies and has been asked
to take a polygraph test.
" They are harrassing me,
mstead of looking for them ,"
he sa id.
Handley, Martin and
staUon ma nager Cole have
been placed on suspension by
Ure Ashland Oil Company
pending
further
investigation .
Sheriff Oscar Ba ird this
morning
de nie d
any
harrassment on Ihe part of
his department.
According to Sheriff Baird,
" Handley
was
a sked
voltmtarily to come in . He
agreed to take a polygraph
tes t. I told him a polygraph
was not permi ss lble in
evidence and he did not have
to take il if he didn't want to .
' No accusations were made."

tough strip mine bill

STUDS

Many Uses

•

Utilities Commission of Ohio
order last month allowing
Columbia Gas Co, ol Ohio to
" roll in" to residential
customers$17.1 million of the
utility's
$33
million
emergen cy industrial
purchase.
Surcharges of about $1 a
month began appearing on
Columbia Gas bills earlier
this month, and were to
continue for the next 12
months unW the boost was

Congress·has another·

2x4x8

For

bill repeal the method
utilities use to compute their
rate base. That bill was
referred to a seven-member
subcommittee.
Rep . Mike Stlnziano, DColumbus, only introduced
his bill Jan. 15 to prevent
homeowners from bearing a
portion of the cost of
emergency., 60-day gas
purchases which reduce
industrial curtaihnents.
Stinziano introduced his bill
in response to the Public

Robbery

New owner to

sel(ishness to help Ure people
in these nursing homes."
COJ,UMBUS (UPI) - The
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter ,
Ohio General Assembly has
R-Ashland
, said four other
overridden a veto of Gov .
state
agencies
already deal
James A. Rhodes for the first
with
nursing
home
· time in his nine years as
regulation,
a
nd
'that
to
create
governor .
a permanent commission
The Democratic-dominated
would mean overlapping
legislature administered the
areas
of responsibility .
coup de grace Tuesday to
Senate Minority Leader
Rhodes' veto of a bill setting '
Michael J . Maloney, Rup a state Nursing Home
Cincinnati,
who voted for the
Advisory CounciL
legislation .when it cleared
the Senate 30 to !last August,
said the state would be unable
to finance the commission.
"We are committing a vain
act
in overriding this veto ,'-'
•
said Maloney , noting the
..
.. ' .
conunission would require
.
$300,000. .' 'The commission ·
will be appointed, but there
will be no money to operaie
. By
United
Press his 32points in the second half
it."
Internatlooal
to pace Washington . Chicago
"I ·see no real problem in
On the court or off, Buffalo took a 42-41 halftime lead as
finding the money to fund the
Braves guard Randy Smith is Mickey Johnson scored 14
commission," rep1ied Sen.
always ''out front. "
straight points to put him
override means Harr y
Meshel,
D·
''l know I'm the fastest within one of the NBA record theTUesday's
11-member advi~ory Youngstown, chairman of the
player in the NBA, " said for consecutive points held by
commission
will
be Senate Finance Corrunittee .
·
Smith, who was out front on Wilt Cllamberlain.
established in 90 days to
The commission will
Ure fast break often enough to Kings 120, Suns 117:
study
nursing
home consist of four legislators,
t
match
teammate
Bob
Rookie Bill Robinzine came
standards and financing.
two from each political
•• McAdoo's 34 points in a 109- off the bench to score five
Rhodes vetoed the proposal party ;
two
members
103 victory over Ure New overtime JXJints for Kansas
Aug. ·29 on grounds it would representing the general
York ~c ks Tuesday night. City . Robinzine replacell
" I also . believe I'm the Ollie Johnson, who fouled out . cost too mueh and would public appointed by the
to
state governor; two members of
• fastest with or without the with 3:29 left in overtime and con\rlbute
bureaucracy by creating the nursing home industry;
ball ," said the candid Smith. the score tied at 109, the same
another agency . He said the state director. of health; ·
' . ''The next two speedsters are as at the end of regulation
I r., '
Cal Murphy and Tiny (Nate) play. Alvan Adams led existing agencies are already the state director of public
empowered to regulate welfare; and the executive
•• Archibald."
Phoenix with 30 points,
nursing homes.
• !
director of the Ohio
Smith alld McAdoo , the including a jump shot with
•• • league-leading
But Sen. William F . Bowen, Commission on Aging .
scorer who two seconds left in regulation
D-Cincinnati , floor manager
The commission will study
has averaged 38 points in the to tie the score .
of
the
bill,
said
the
nursing
home
care
last five games, are the 76ers 106, Blazers 102 :
commi$si
on
is
needed
to
standards,
Medicaid
prime reasons for Coach Jack
Doug Collins notched 25
study the entire nursing home payments for patients, health
Ramsa y confidently points and George McGinnis
problem in Ohio and set forth · and safety standards and
predicting "we'll be in the added 23 points, 22 rebounds,
recommendations.
inspections, nursin g home
playoffs" even Urough that 10 assists and five steals to
Bowen rounded up 20 licensing, and existing
issue i.s far from settled.
stop Philadelphia ' s fiveDemocratic votes - the regulations.
However , the Braves were game losing streak llnd hand
exact number needed for an
The agency would function
losing, 103-100, with just over Portland its lith loss in the
override in the Senate. AIIIO at least through 1978, making
a minute to play before last 13 games.
Republicans on the floor rec()mmendation s on a
blowing open Ure game with Nets lll, Squires 100:
voted
to support Rhodes.
formula for· reimbursement
nine straight points. Smith
Julius Erving scored 23
key
figure in the Senate to
A
provide
financial
.opened and closed Buffalo 's points and hauled down 13
action was Sen. Anthony 0 . incentives for quality care;
scoring in the fo urth quarter rebounds to lead New York.
Calabrese, D-Cleveland, who guidelines for patient care;
with nine of his points.
Rich Jones added 22points, 18
has helped block several and long-range ·plans lor
Elsewhere in the NBA, of them in the third quarter,
previous override attempts in upgrading care, protecting
WaShington beat Chicago, 92- as the Nets outscored
the
Senate.
83, Kansas City edged Virginia 34-24 and led 92-&lt;19
patients' rights, noting
Following
a 15-minute violations, relocating
Phoenix, 120-117 in overtime going into the final period.
Democratic caucus, patients and rating the
and Philadelphia down ed Spirits ll6, Colonels 102 :
Calabrese
arose on the -floor nursing homes.
'
Portland, 106-102.
Marvin Barnes' 33 points
to
announce
he was voting to
In the ABA, the New York helped St. Louis snap a threeMeanwhile, the House
override despite the fact he passed 56 to 34 and sent to the
· Nets ripped Virginia, lll-100, game losing streak and give
felt
his own legislation to help Senate a bill creating three
and St. Louis whipped Ure Spirits their first victory
'
nursing
homes had been new state agencies to assist
! '
Kentucky, 116-102.
. in Kentucky .in 12 attempts
I ~ '
stalled.
Spanish-speaking Ohioans .
92, Bulls 83:
over two seasons.
• Bullets
He said he was putting
Phil Chenier scored 20 of
aside
" ambition
and
UP! Statehouse Reporter

Washington
,]~
Report By ~~::nr•~ '~

11 - The D!ily_Sentwi, MiddleJIOrt-l'omeroy, u ., weanesaay, r ·eo. ;,;,, '"'b

ne~ess ary . Of necessity,
many parts of the world has • .
these covert oper ations increased . They see this time _
cannot be ma de kn own to the of division and discord over ,
public, either at home or our intellige nce agencies as a •
abroad. For this reason, · time to make substantial '
effective oversig ht
by gains. Our own atlies have far
responsible
government le ss confidence In the
leaders is needed. However , credibility of the CIA. Inthis must definite ly be formation sou r ces ha ve
balanced by pr eventive disappeared for lear of being ,
mea sures against constant revealed . The mutual trust :
exposure of secrets in the that is necessary among •
media . The system which the allied intelligence services is
President
has
now no longer present.
es tablished will accomplish
It is time to reverse this ~
those ends.
dange rous trend. An effective
11 is vital that the new intelligence system ca n be ·
program lake effect quickly, compatibl e
wi th
our ~~•
with the minimum of democra ti c system. The '
con gr essiona l sq uab blin g. Congress should act quickly ' '
While the mora le of the CIA to pu t the final touches on ..
has been sha ttered by the legislation tha t will protect '
experiences of the past year , citizen 's righ ts a nd vita l '"'
the COJ11munist threat ;"' national secrets.
',''

AMERICAN CHEESE
Individual~

Wrapped
Sl.ices 12 oz.

age

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stopped by court order last
week.
The Franklin County Common Pleas Court temporary
injunction is currently being
fought belore the state
SUpreme Court by Columbia
Gas .
Stinziano's bill now goes to
the House Rules committee,
where floor action will be
scheduled.
The rate-base bill, which
passed the Senate, 26-5, two
weeks ago, now goes to the
same subcommittee which
heavily amended similar
legislation last month . The
subcommittee, chaired by
Rep. Vernon F . Cook, DFalls,
was
Cuyahoga
expected to hold its first
hearing on the Senate bill
today .
Stimiano's bill would mandate that utilities use "in·
cremental" natural gas
pricing policies rather than
"roU in" policies spreading
the cost of emergency
purchases to all customer
classes.
The bill, if passed by the
legislature , would take effect
upon
the
governor' s
signature, Surcharges added
to homeowner bills before the
bill became law would not be
subject to a refund.
Eight'
opponents
to
Stinziano's bill appeared
before the conunittee before
Ure bill was recorrunended for
passage. The opponents,
representing Columbia Gas,
several Ohio industries and
the · Ohio Manufacturers
Association, warned that the
legislation would result in a
decrease in the state's
natural gas supply.
Columbia Gas general
counsel James Fullin argued
that the bill was a "backward
step" for the legislature and
bypassed the PUCO, which
the general assembly created
to deal with rate making.
Sheldon Taft, representing
the Ohio Manufacturer's As·
sociation,
warned
the
committee that the bill would
create an '"administrative
nightmare" by bureaucratic
juggling of natw-at gas rates . .
The
industrial
representatives said the bill
was unfair to industry and
" created a 41 favored class" of
consumers at the expense of
homeowners who did not u.Se
natural gas.

apptoved by the House
WASHINGffiN (UP! ) - needless step ."
"The states now have strin- committee is that the Senate
Interior
The
House
Committee has approved a gent reclamation laws, many version would apply only to
strip mw regulation bill of them updated since the federal lands , while the
similar to two versions · national deba,te over surfat-e House bill would•apply to all
President Ford vetoed last mining began," Bagge said in l&lt;lnds.
If the committee's strip
year .
a statement. "These laws are
min!hg
biU is passed by the
The committee Tuesday · more than adequate to do the
,
House,
the conferees would
voted 28 to 11 In favor of a necessary job of assuring
be
free
to
seek inclusion of tbe
measure sponsored by Rep . .. good land reclamation."
tougher
House
provisions in
John Melcher, D-Mont.,
Less far-reaching strip
the
·compromise
coal leasing
which would impose strict mining
controls
were
bill
.
environmental regulations on inCluded by the Senate in a
surface mining and create a federal coa l leasing bill
fund for restoring land passed earlier by both houses
already scarred by such and sent to a conference
HIHTH ANNOUNCED
operations.
committee.
Mr.
and Mrs . Larry
Reclamation funds would
Rep . Allan Howe, D-Utah, a
Marshall,
6732 North Cour t,
be built up from fees on coal member of the House Interior
Columbus
are
announcing the
prnduced after Jan . I, i977. Committee,
sai d
the
birth
of
their
first child, a
The legislation now goes to conferees have delayed final ·
nine
pound,
eight
ounce son ,
the House Rules Committee, action on the coa l leasing bill
James
Phillip,
on
Feb. 14 .a l
which will decide whether to pending House action on the
St.
Ann's
Hospital
in
send
lt
along
for strip mining bill.
Col.umbus.
Grandparenls
are
consideration by the full
A key difference between
Reva
Vaughan,
House.
the surface mining provlsioos Mrs .
Pomeroy;
Phillip
G. MarIt Is along the general lines of the Senate eoalleaslug blll
shall,
Austin,
Tex.,
and
Mrs.
of two bills Ford rejected on and the strip mining bill
J
.
W.
Hall,
Chesapeake,
Ohio.
grounds which reflected
Mrs. Marshall, a registered
objections by the coal
nurse, is on leave as a
industry - that the controls
surgical nurse from St. Ann's
would increase mining costs
Hospital. Mr . Marshall is
and thus add to consumer
employed
with the security
electric bills .
police at
Before the final vote, the
Ohio State ·
University .
conunittee added an amendment to bar strip mining in
alluvial valleys of Ure West
ncept In areas "here mining
EXPENSIVE PUI:'CH
already Is in process or where
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
perml\8 have peen granted.
Movie
director
Sam
Rep. Morris K. Udall, DPeckinpah, known for the
Ariz., a key supporter of the
violence in his films, was
measure and a candidate for
sued Tuesday for $300,000 by
the presidential nrnnination ,
a Continental Airlines worker
said he believed there was "a
who said Peckinpah punched
good chance" another veto
him In the mouth.
could be overridden despite
Steven Jackson filed suit in
continuing "fierce
Superior Court over .an
opposition"
by
the
incident last July . Pollee said
administration .
Peckinpah was ordered off an
"I would be surprised if Mr .
airliner bound for Hawaii
Ford doesn't give In to the
TROY
MA'\'THEW because he had been drinking
coal companies' pre!!Sure to STEWART,
son of Mr . and and was disruptive .
veto the bill," Udall said.
He allegedly punched
Mrs. Earl Stewart, New ·
"The , bill's opponents are
Jackson
when Jackson told
Haven, w·. Va. celebrated his
pretty cynical about our
him
it
was
too late to get his
seventh birthday Friday . A
ablUty to override a veto but
baggage
off
the plane . ·
family get-together was held
we have made some good
modifications that may wipe Sunday aft~rnoon at his home
with Mrs·. Viola Stewart,
out Mr. Ford's transparent
In 1920, a group of Germans
argumenta Jlll&amp;lnst the bill." Hartford; Harold and Naomi
Bumgarner, New Have n ; organized the ' National
Reacting
to
the
Earl Delores and Henee Socialist party, forerunner of
committee's action,
New Haven . Sending the Nazi party that was in
Stewart,
President Carl E. Bagge of
gifts
were
Dick and Mary power when World War II
the National Coal Association
New
Haven .
Thompson
,
started .
caUed It "a radical and

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Cost Cutters Help
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Firm Ripe

Golden
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Document's
value .cut
hy .opinion
MENTOR, Ohio (UP!)
Mrs. Richard M. Ahlstrom
said Tuesday an autograph
expert's opinion on her
husband's historical find, a
sheepskin advertised as
George Washington's copy of
his
commission
as
corrunander-in-chief of the
Continental Army, may have
damaged the worth of the
'document.
The Sotheby Parke Bernet
auction house in New York
withdrew the document from
bidding Tuesday because
Charles Hamilton challenged
the authenticity of the
handwriting of Charles
Thomson. Thomsom wrote
the original as secrelary of
the Continental Congress in
1775.
Hamilton said the writing
was " probably not contempo. rary with the American
Revolution." Sotheby's said
more research must be
conducted on the document's
authenticity.
41
He has never seen the
document, other than in Sothe by'
ca talog,"
Mrs.
Ahlstrom said, speaking for
her husband . Richard
Ahlstrom, vice president and
treasurer
of Diamond
Shamrock Corp. , is out of the
country .
She said the copy had been
expected to bring $40,000 to
$60,000.
"Mr. Hamilton may have
damaged the value of it," she
said, adding that her husband
spent five years researching
the document and had it
authenticated by George
l'fashington University and
the University of VIrginia.
Ahlstrom bought the document seven years ago for
$12.50 at a flea market held
by the Lake County Historical
Society at Lawnfield, the
home of President James A.
Garfield, h1 Mentor .

=:. ..... "... ~ .•2 ~::a:' ."
=~~cl~ ... -...... ~: 78c ~!n~n~ .
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her~thi"O

AL ·SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
you blf)' ot

Kr09er II 9110ronM.d fer
your lotol t otitfoction

rtvardltll of 11'\an ..fo ct ~·• er.
If you ore not 1o!iltiad ,
Kroger will replace your
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cit&amp;
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We alto g11arontet th~ •• .. ;u do ,.,..rythirtg In 0\lf po-•
to hove ample wpplitl of all odvtll~~d ~peclolt on 0\!r
tlltl~t• when rou thop tor them If, d.,. to condition•
beyond ovr conrrol, wt run out ol on odyltfll..d 1peciol,
we will wbtt!llll t the w111e itelh in a comparab le brond
(.. hen tuch on h!!'m" available) refl ecti r.o tl'le taint 10Yifl91
or, if yov preftr. give
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Kroger Welcome~
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�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 25, 1976
&lt;":=::;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::.:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;;:::;:;:;;:.;;;.:::~:·:~::::::::::~:

.
;

•

'
'

•
MAKING PREPARATIONS - pr s are being
completed lor a Lay Witness Mission a .1e New Haven
United MethodistChurch Friday, Saturday a nd Sunday,
March 5-7. Planrung the event are, seated left to right ,
Evelyn Danbury, housing, welcome and tra nsportation
corrunittee ; Achsah Miller, chairperson lor Prayer; John
Campbell, Pastor ; Loueva Kent, general chairman of the
Lay Witness Mission ; standing Venus Ward, coffee
hostes·s; Harry Pickens, visitation ; Harold Bumgarner,

Rho~es
By LEE LEONARD

-

publicity ; Mar; Ingles, coffee hostess, and Mary Lieving
food chairperson. Other chairpersons, but not present fo~
the photo are Mar; Hoffman, literature corrunittee·
~eanine Larch, nursing corrunittee; Jerry and Phylli~
Scott, youth committee; Mr. and Mrs. Longanacre,
assistants of the youth committee and Connie Carter
attendance committee. Over 25 Lay Witness Missio~
peoplefromOhioand West Virginia will attend the event.

suffers only veto loss
The override came 13 \2
months into Rhodes' third
term
as
governor.
Democratic lawmakers had
previously come up short this
session with attempted
overrides of vetoes on eight
other bills. Rhodes has made
vetoes on ·16 bills in 1975-76.
Seven have not been challenged .
.
It was the first time in 15
years the General Assembly
has overridden a governor's

Braves .edge
Knicks ·by 6

..
'

.,,

For over a year the nation
has been subjected to a series
of very sensationa l investigations into the CIA and
other informalion.gathering
agencies . Each week brought
a formerly secret document
or fact into the public li ght ~
and in so doing almost
br ought our e ntire jntelligence appara tus to ruin .
Much of the blame for this
slate of affairs must fall on
the con gress iona l committees which were formed to
handle these inves ti gations.
Now President Ford has
sought to wind up all of this
by annou ncin g plans for
br inging America 's intelligence opera ti ons under
tighter White Hou se control
but at the same time prevent
leaks of vital , secret information.
The President 's proposals
involve a three -s tep pjan,
much of it accomplished by
executive orders. First, a

committee will be set up ,
he aded by Cen tr a l Intelligence Director George
Bush, which will manage all
of the Intelli gence agencies,
not just the CIA. in the past
the
many
intelligence
ga th erin g age ncies were
often not coordinated in their
actions . An Oversight Board,
composed of three prominent
private
c itize ns ,
is
es tablished to monitor the
actions of th e in telligence
agencies . SeCond , gui delines
are established which will
help protect citizens agai nst
the abuses which have occurred in the past. This includes domestic measures
such as electronic su rveillance and mail openings
as well as fore ign operations.
Lastly - and this will require
congressi onal action - the
President requ es t e d
legislation which will guard
our vital intelligence secrets.
Th e approa ch suggested
would make it a crime for a
government employee to leak
sec ret in lell igence
in formation .
Implementation of all of
these proposals will put an
end to a job that should have
been completed months ago :
effective re s tructurin g of
Am er ican
intelli genc e
CINCINNATI ( UPI)
Delta Queen officials say the ' operations. By this time there
change
of is little doubt in anyone's
impending
oWnerShip will not mean any mind that abuses of citizen 's
change in operation of rigl!l' were committed by the
America's only overnight CIA and oth~r agenci es. In
passenger
carrying forei gn operations there were
instances where they also
paddlewheel steamboat.
The Coca-Cola Bottling Co. s tepped outside their charter.
of New York has agreed in But this is no rea son to
principle to buy Overseas destroy those agencies or
National Airways, of which di scredit th eir imp ortant
the Delta Queen Steamboat mi ssion. In order to protect
the national in terests of our
Co. is a subsidiary.
coun
try , both econ om ic and
The deal, still subject to
political,
our leadtJrs have to
approval by directors of both
have
a
knowledge
of what is
companies and the Civil
happening
in
foreign
counAeronautics Board, would
tri
es,
With
the
many
mean the Queen would have
its third out-of-town owner in totalila'ri an- ·gover nmen ls
abroad, thi~ inforrr.lation is
the last 18 years.
The 192-passengef Queen, not easy to obtain and CO\'ert
built 50 years ago , is a inte lligence 9perations are
Cincinnati institution listed in
the National Registrar of
Historic Places.
The steamboat was sold by
the founding Greene family in
·1958 to two Cali fornia
investors ,·who later sold it to
ONA , which flies a 19-plane
fleet of ~arg o and charter
cra ft out of Kennedy
International Airport in New
York City.
A modern sister ship of the
Delta Queen, the Mississippi
Queen, is nearing completion
and ·Is to have its maiden ·
voyage this spring.

Utility reform bill is
step closer to passing
By J.R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
second major utility reform
bill in the Ohio General
Assembly moved a step
closer to enactment Tuesday
when the House Utilities
Committee sent to the full
chamber a bill to prevent
homeowners from being
charged for natural gas used
only by Industries .
Also pending before the
conunittee is a Senate-passed

.

continuous cleaning oven
~~~electric rang;

keep 'Queen'

veto.
The successful override on
the
nursing
home
commission proposal came
on a 20-10 party line vote in
the Senate. The Houi;e had
voted to override the same
veto last Wednesday, 70 to 22.
Althnugh the House had
previously voted to override
four vetoes and the Senate
had taken similar action on
three others, the two
chambers
had
not
collaborated on the same
vetoes . '
Not since 1961, when Democrat Michael V. DiSalle was
governor, had the General
Assembly completed an over.
ride.
The Republican-controlled
legislature canceled seven of
DiSalle 's 23 vetoes that year.
The House voted to override
Rhodes once in 1965, but the
Senate never completed the
action.

.

'.

•

in operation

Rocky Handley, Point
Pleasant, one of the two
' victims of Sunday's alleged
armed robbery at Save More
Service Station in Kanauga ,
told the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company this
morning his version a s to
what happened durin g
Sunday's robbery.
Handley a lso accused the
· Gallia County Sheriff's
Department of harrassment.
Handley gave the following
account of the armed robbery.
Working as a ss istant
manager at the station
located near the Intersection
of Rt. 7 and 35, Handley
received a phone call
, Saturday afternoon from a
• man requesting a job application . He told the caller to
come in and pick-up an application
blank . Later
Saturday , the man, described
as 6-0, 180 pounds with red
hair, came in for . an application .
At . that time, the man ·
(~arne not given ) asked
several pertinent questions
concerning the operation of
the service station . He said
Ural he had worked in a
similar station .
At 11 :30 a .m. Sunday, the
man returned with a friend

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use it . plus aulorna!i.c t1mcd
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Minul e Minder. and limed
appliance outlel.

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Middleport

ANOTHER FIRST OF '76 SALE

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VEGETABLE

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~.c Rese~ve' Right to limit

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Fresh

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F
•
j LI"

lb.

ggt

IS

described

described as 6-0, 200 pounds
with brown hair and brown
beard . He requested another
application form and began
filling it out.
Accordin g t o Handl ey,
around 12:10 p.m . during a
slack period in business, the
bearded subject pulled a gun
on the other attendant Dwight
Martin, motioning him to go
to the station 's back room .
The other man pulled a .32
chrome pla ted automati c
pistol on Handley. The
gunmen forced th e two
station attendants to li e face
down on the floor . They
placed ma sking tape over
Martin 's mouth and tied his
hands be hind his back.
Handley was handcuffed to a
water pipe , after he was
forced to turn over the keys to
the stati on's sale. He too was
gagged with masking tape.
The men opened the sa fe
which contained a money
bag co ntaining $2,386 .31.
They also returned to the
back room and look Martin 's
-.·allet containing $60-$70 in
his personal money.
ACcordi ng to Handley , he
was physicall y threatened
before he handed over the
keys to Ihe safe and th e key to
an.other cash drawer.
In the meantime , several
Cus tome rs came to th e

station for gasoline. Handley
said one od the alleged
rob~Jert went out and pumped
gasoline. After the robbers
left on foot , station manager
Dave Cole, returning from
Hurrican e, W. Va . stopped in
and found the two attendants
tied up. He called the
Gallipolis Police Department
who notified both the Galtia
CoWlty Sheriff's Department
and Ohio Highway Patrol.
Handley said this morning
he has been questioned by
Sheriff Oscar Baird a nd ~is
deputies and has been asked
to take a polygraph test.
" They are harrassing me,
mstead of looking for them ,"
he sa id.
Handley, Martin and
staUon ma nager Cole have
been placed on suspension by
Ure Ashland Oil Company
pending
further
investigation .
Sheriff Oscar Ba ird this
morning
de nie d
any
harrassment on Ihe part of
his department.
According to Sheriff Baird,
" Handley
was
a sked
voltmtarily to come in . He
agreed to take a polygraph
tes t. I told him a polygraph
was not permi ss lble in
evidence and he did not have
to take il if he didn't want to .
' No accusations were made."

tough strip mine bill

STUDS

Many Uses

•

Utilities Commission of Ohio
order last month allowing
Columbia Gas Co, ol Ohio to
" roll in" to residential
customers$17.1 million of the
utility's
$33
million
emergen cy industrial
purchase.
Surcharges of about $1 a
month began appearing on
Columbia Gas bills earlier
this month, and were to
continue for the next 12
months unW the boost was

Congress·has another·

2x4x8

For

bill repeal the method
utilities use to compute their
rate base. That bill was
referred to a seven-member
subcommittee.
Rep . Mike Stlnziano, DColumbus, only introduced
his bill Jan. 15 to prevent
homeowners from bearing a
portion of the cost of
emergency., 60-day gas
purchases which reduce
industrial curtaihnents.
Stinziano introduced his bill
in response to the Public

Robbery

New owner to

sel(ishness to help Ure people
in these nursing homes."
COJ,UMBUS (UPI) - The
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter ,
Ohio General Assembly has
R-Ashland
, said four other
overridden a veto of Gov .
state
agencies
already deal
James A. Rhodes for the first
with
nursing
home
· time in his nine years as
regulation,
a
nd
'that
to
create
governor .
a permanent commission
The Democratic-dominated
would mean overlapping
legislature administered the
areas
of responsibility .
coup de grace Tuesday to
Senate Minority Leader
Rhodes' veto of a bill setting '
Michael J . Maloney, Rup a state Nursing Home
Cincinnati,
who voted for the
Advisory CounciL
legislation .when it cleared
the Senate 30 to !last August,
said the state would be unable
to finance the commission.
"We are committing a vain
act
in overriding this veto ,'-'
•
said Maloney , noting the
..
.. ' .
conunission would require
.
$300,000. .' 'The commission ·
will be appointed, but there
will be no money to operaie
. By
United
Press his 32points in the second half
it."
Internatlooal
to pace Washington . Chicago
"I ·see no real problem in
On the court or off, Buffalo took a 42-41 halftime lead as
finding the money to fund the
Braves guard Randy Smith is Mickey Johnson scored 14
commission," rep1ied Sen.
always ''out front. "
straight points to put him
override means Harr y
Meshel,
D·
''l know I'm the fastest within one of the NBA record theTUesday's
11-member advi~ory Youngstown, chairman of the
player in the NBA, " said for consecutive points held by
commission
will
be Senate Finance Corrunittee .
·
Smith, who was out front on Wilt Cllamberlain.
established in 90 days to
The commission will
Ure fast break often enough to Kings 120, Suns 117:
study
nursing
home consist of four legislators,
t
match
teammate
Bob
Rookie Bill Robinzine came
standards and financing.
two from each political
•• McAdoo's 34 points in a 109- off the bench to score five
Rhodes vetoed the proposal party ;
two
members
103 victory over Ure New overtime JXJints for Kansas
Aug. ·29 on grounds it would representing the general
York ~c ks Tuesday night. City . Robinzine replacell
" I also . believe I'm the Ollie Johnson, who fouled out . cost too mueh and would public appointed by the
to
state governor; two members of
• fastest with or without the with 3:29 left in overtime and con\rlbute
bureaucracy by creating the nursing home industry;
ball ," said the candid Smith. the score tied at 109, the same
another agency . He said the state director. of health; ·
' . ''The next two speedsters are as at the end of regulation
I r., '
Cal Murphy and Tiny (Nate) play. Alvan Adams led existing agencies are already the state director of public
empowered to regulate welfare; and the executive
•• Archibald."
Phoenix with 30 points,
nursing homes.
• !
director of the Ohio
Smith alld McAdoo , the including a jump shot with
•• • league-leading
But Sen. William F . Bowen, Commission on Aging .
scorer who two seconds left in regulation
D-Cincinnati , floor manager
The commission will study
has averaged 38 points in the to tie the score .
of
the
bill,
said
the
nursing
home
care
last five games, are the 76ers 106, Blazers 102 :
commi$si
on
is
needed
to
standards,
Medicaid
prime reasons for Coach Jack
Doug Collins notched 25
study the entire nursing home payments for patients, health
Ramsa y confidently points and George McGinnis
problem in Ohio and set forth · and safety standards and
predicting "we'll be in the added 23 points, 22 rebounds,
recommendations.
inspections, nursin g home
playoffs" even Urough that 10 assists and five steals to
Bowen rounded up 20 licensing, and existing
issue i.s far from settled.
stop Philadelphia ' s fiveDemocratic votes - the regulations.
However , the Braves were game losing streak llnd hand
exact number needed for an
The agency would function
losing, 103-100, with just over Portland its lith loss in the
override in the Senate. AIIIO at least through 1978, making
a minute to play before last 13 games.
Republicans on the floor rec()mmendation s on a
blowing open Ure game with Nets lll, Squires 100:
voted
to support Rhodes.
formula for· reimbursement
nine straight points. Smith
Julius Erving scored 23
key
figure in the Senate to
A
provide
financial
.opened and closed Buffalo 's points and hauled down 13
action was Sen. Anthony 0 . incentives for quality care;
scoring in the fo urth quarter rebounds to lead New York.
Calabrese, D-Cleveland, who guidelines for patient care;
with nine of his points.
Rich Jones added 22points, 18
has helped block several and long-range ·plans lor
Elsewhere in the NBA, of them in the third quarter,
previous override attempts in upgrading care, protecting
WaShington beat Chicago, 92- as the Nets outscored
the
Senate.
83, Kansas City edged Virginia 34-24 and led 92-&lt;19
patients' rights, noting
Following
a 15-minute violations, relocating
Phoenix, 120-117 in overtime going into the final period.
Democratic caucus, patients and rating the
and Philadelphia down ed Spirits ll6, Colonels 102 :
Calabrese
arose on the -floor nursing homes.
'
Portland, 106-102.
Marvin Barnes' 33 points
to
announce
he was voting to
In the ABA, the New York helped St. Louis snap a threeMeanwhile, the House
override despite the fact he passed 56 to 34 and sent to the
· Nets ripped Virginia, lll-100, game losing streak and give
felt
his own legislation to help Senate a bill creating three
and St. Louis whipped Ure Spirits their first victory
'
nursing
homes had been new state agencies to assist
! '
Kentucky, 116-102.
. in Kentucky .in 12 attempts
I ~ '
stalled.
Spanish-speaking Ohioans .
92, Bulls 83:
over two seasons.
• Bullets
He said he was putting
Phil Chenier scored 20 of
aside
" ambition
and
UP! Statehouse Reporter

Washington
,]~
Report By ~~::nr•~ '~

11 - The D!ily_Sentwi, MiddleJIOrt-l'omeroy, u ., weanesaay, r ·eo. ;,;,, '"'b

ne~ess ary . Of necessity,
many parts of the world has • .
these covert oper ations increased . They see this time _
cannot be ma de kn own to the of division and discord over ,
public, either at home or our intellige nce agencies as a •
abroad. For this reason, · time to make substantial '
effective oversig ht
by gains. Our own atlies have far
responsible
government le ss confidence In the
leaders is needed. However , credibility of the CIA. Inthis must definite ly be formation sou r ces ha ve
balanced by pr eventive disappeared for lear of being ,
mea sures against constant revealed . The mutual trust :
exposure of secrets in the that is necessary among •
media . The system which the allied intelligence services is
President
has
now no longer present.
es tablished will accomplish
It is time to reverse this ~
those ends.
dange rous trend. An effective
11 is vital that the new intelligence system ca n be ·
program lake effect quickly, compatibl e
wi th
our ~~•
with the minimum of democra ti c system. The '
con gr essiona l sq uab blin g. Congress should act quickly ' '
While the mora le of the CIA to pu t the final touches on ..
has been sha ttered by the legislation tha t will protect '
experiences of the past year , citizen 's righ ts a nd vita l '"'
the COJ11munist threat ;"' national secrets.
',''

AMERICAN CHEESE
Individual~

Wrapped
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age

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stopped by court order last
week.
The Franklin County Common Pleas Court temporary
injunction is currently being
fought belore the state
SUpreme Court by Columbia
Gas .
Stinziano's bill now goes to
the House Rules committee,
where floor action will be
scheduled.
The rate-base bill, which
passed the Senate, 26-5, two
weeks ago, now goes to the
same subcommittee which
heavily amended similar
legislation last month . The
subcommittee, chaired by
Rep. Vernon F . Cook, DFalls,
was
Cuyahoga
expected to hold its first
hearing on the Senate bill
today .
Stimiano's bill would mandate that utilities use "in·
cremental" natural gas
pricing policies rather than
"roU in" policies spreading
the cost of emergency
purchases to all customer
classes.
The bill, if passed by the
legislature , would take effect
upon
the
governor' s
signature, Surcharges added
to homeowner bills before the
bill became law would not be
subject to a refund.
Eight'
opponents
to
Stinziano's bill appeared
before the conunittee before
Ure bill was recorrunended for
passage. The opponents,
representing Columbia Gas,
several Ohio industries and
the · Ohio Manufacturers
Association, warned that the
legislation would result in a
decrease in the state's
natural gas supply.
Columbia Gas general
counsel James Fullin argued
that the bill was a "backward
step" for the legislature and
bypassed the PUCO, which
the general assembly created
to deal with rate making.
Sheldon Taft, representing
the Ohio Manufacturer's As·
sociation,
warned
the
committee that the bill would
create an '"administrative
nightmare" by bureaucratic
juggling of natw-at gas rates . .
The
industrial
representatives said the bill
was unfair to industry and
" created a 41 favored class" of
consumers at the expense of
homeowners who did not u.Se
natural gas.

apptoved by the House
WASHINGffiN (UP! ) - needless step ."
"The states now have strin- committee is that the Senate
Interior
The
House
Committee has approved a gent reclamation laws, many version would apply only to
strip mw regulation bill of them updated since the federal lands , while the
similar to two versions · national deba,te over surfat-e House bill would•apply to all
President Ford vetoed last mining began," Bagge said in l&lt;lnds.
If the committee's strip
year .
a statement. "These laws are
min!hg
biU is passed by the
The committee Tuesday · more than adequate to do the
,
House,
the conferees would
voted 28 to 11 In favor of a necessary job of assuring
be
free
to
seek inclusion of tbe
measure sponsored by Rep . .. good land reclamation."
tougher
House
provisions in
John Melcher, D-Mont.,
Less far-reaching strip
the
·compromise
coal leasing
which would impose strict mining
controls
were
bill
.
environmental regulations on inCluded by the Senate in a
surface mining and create a federal coa l leasing bill
fund for restoring land passed earlier by both houses
already scarred by such and sent to a conference
HIHTH ANNOUNCED
operations.
committee.
Mr.
and Mrs . Larry
Reclamation funds would
Rep . Allan Howe, D-Utah, a
Marshall,
6732 North Cour t,
be built up from fees on coal member of the House Interior
Columbus
are
announcing the
prnduced after Jan . I, i977. Committee,
sai d
the
birth
of
their
first child, a
The legislation now goes to conferees have delayed final ·
nine
pound,
eight
ounce son ,
the House Rules Committee, action on the coa l leasing bill
James
Phillip,
on
Feb. 14 .a l
which will decide whether to pending House action on the
St.
Ann's
Hospital
in
send
lt
along
for strip mining bill.
Col.umbus.
Grandparenls
are
consideration by the full
A key difference between
Reva
Vaughan,
House.
the surface mining provlsioos Mrs .
Pomeroy;
Phillip
G. MarIt Is along the general lines of the Senate eoalleaslug blll
shall,
Austin,
Tex.,
and
Mrs.
of two bills Ford rejected on and the strip mining bill
J
.
W.
Hall,
Chesapeake,
Ohio.
grounds which reflected
Mrs. Marshall, a registered
objections by the coal
nurse, is on leave as a
industry - that the controls
surgical nurse from St. Ann's
would increase mining costs
Hospital. Mr . Marshall is
and thus add to consumer
employed
with the security
electric bills .
police at
Before the final vote, the
Ohio State ·
University .
conunittee added an amendment to bar strip mining in
alluvial valleys of Ure West
ncept In areas "here mining
EXPENSIVE PUI:'CH
already Is in process or where
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
perml\8 have peen granted.
Movie
director
Sam
Rep. Morris K. Udall, DPeckinpah, known for the
Ariz., a key supporter of the
violence in his films, was
measure and a candidate for
sued Tuesday for $300,000 by
the presidential nrnnination ,
a Continental Airlines worker
said he believed there was "a
who said Peckinpah punched
good chance" another veto
him In the mouth.
could be overridden despite
Steven Jackson filed suit in
continuing "fierce
Superior Court over .an
opposition"
by
the
incident last July . Pollee said
administration .
Peckinpah was ordered off an
"I would be surprised if Mr .
airliner bound for Hawaii
Ford doesn't give In to the
TROY
MA'\'THEW because he had been drinking
coal companies' pre!!Sure to STEWART,
son of Mr . and and was disruptive .
veto the bill," Udall said.
He allegedly punched
Mrs. Earl Stewart, New ·
"The , bill's opponents are
Jackson
when Jackson told
Haven, w·. Va. celebrated his
pretty cynical about our
him
it
was
too late to get his
seventh birthday Friday . A
ablUty to override a veto but
baggage
off
the plane . ·
family get-together was held
we have made some good
modifications that may wipe Sunday aft~rnoon at his home
with Mrs·. Viola Stewart,
out Mr. Ford's transparent
In 1920, a group of Germans
argumenta Jlll&amp;lnst the bill." Hartford; Harold and Naomi
Bumgarner, New Have n ; organized the ' National
Reacting
to
the
Earl Delores and Henee Socialist party, forerunner of
committee's action,
New Haven . Sending the Nazi party that was in
Stewart,
President Carl E. Bagge of
gifts
were
Dick and Mary power when World War II
the National Coal Association
New
Haven .
Thompson
,
started .
caUed It "a radical and

f

.I

\

y,-Gol. Chr. Notroral Flo•"
lr..., lu CreaM

Get One

Y,...._ Chr. Nmrol Flnor

Kroger Ice Cream

FREE
With Thi1 Co.,., &amp; $10 or More PurchoM
Void After Sat., hb . 28, 1976

Subjed ro

Stott &amp; Local

Ta ~~:"

Ct['ri&amp;tlt 1t7'-TIIt lriJtr Ct. It••• n• Pr ic:n 1"11 tlln1
Sa ., Fttl. 21, ms ia all Wut Virlil ll Infer Stern , t11s

ll11tfie'• . Vir&amp;;lia, Pilleuillt, 11,., hlli11alis •
PtMetlfJ , Dll lt•
Wa reune tilt ~i~t tt liMit .uatlitits. NONE SOLD TO DULUIS.

Cost Cutters Help
Trim Your
Food
Whole 5- To 7 -lb.

Smoked
Picnics

Moat or

Ball Park
Franks

1·111.88c

Pkc.
Ll•lt

~

With Coupon

W'oth Coupon and $10 or Moro PurclN1114
Void After Sat., Feb. 28, 1976
'
State &amp; Local Tax11

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Grade AA
Large
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Gr~ll A

Firm Ripe

Golden
Bananas

Large Eggs

Document's
value .cut
hy .opinion
MENTOR, Ohio (UP!)
Mrs. Richard M. Ahlstrom
said Tuesday an autograph
expert's opinion on her
husband's historical find, a
sheepskin advertised as
George Washington's copy of
his
commission
as
corrunander-in-chief of the
Continental Army, may have
damaged the worth of the
'document.
The Sotheby Parke Bernet
auction house in New York
withdrew the document from
bidding Tuesday because
Charles Hamilton challenged
the authenticity of the
handwriting of Charles
Thomson. Thomsom wrote
the original as secrelary of
the Continental Congress in
1775.
Hamilton said the writing
was " probably not contempo. rary with the American
Revolution." Sotheby's said
more research must be
conducted on the document's
authenticity.
41
He has never seen the
document, other than in Sothe by'
ca talog,"
Mrs.
Ahlstrom said, speaking for
her husband . Richard
Ahlstrom, vice president and
treasurer
of Diamond
Shamrock Corp. , is out of the
country .
She said the copy had been
expected to bring $40,000 to
$60,000.
"Mr. Hamilton may have
damaged the value of it," she
said, adding that her husband
spent five years researching
the document and had it
authenticated by George
l'fashington University and
the University of VIrginia.
Ahlstrom bought the document seven years ago for
$12.50 at a flea market held
by the Lake County Historical
Society at Lawnfield, the
home of President James A.
Garfield, h1 Mentor .

=:. ..... "... ~ .•2 ~::a:' ."
=~~cl~ ... -...... ~: 78c ~!n~n~ .
lpotlltht

Am riM

Colon

88

16-oz. Returnable Btls.

-....;~1,;1

Pepsi-Cola

8P•k
All Kroger Stores

Now Open
24
Hours
a
Day
(Except Satur.ay Mi.night '!til 9 a.m. Sunllay)
cept Ashland (Winchester Ave.), Gouaway, Hinton, Ironton
Pikeville, Rainelle, Summersville anti White Sulphu,r)

her~thi"O

AL ·SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
you blf)' ot

Kr09er II 9110ronM.d fer
your lotol t otitfoction

rtvardltll of 11'\an ..fo ct ~·• er.
If you ore not 1o!iltiad ,
Kroger will replace your
item with the tome bro Md
or a comp(lroble brond or
yo~n pur.cho\1!! price .

cit&amp;
/{O
i s.
•

/..

1

l,..

We alto g11arontet th~ •• .. ;u do ,.,..rythirtg In 0\lf po-•
to hove ample wpplitl of all odvtll~~d ~peclolt on 0\!r
tlltl~t• when rou thop tor them If, d.,. to condition•
beyond ovr conrrol, wt run out ol on odyltfll..d 1peciol,
we will wbtt!llll t the w111e itelh in a comparab le brond
(.. hen tuch on h!!'m" available) refl ecti r.o tl'le taint 10Yifl91
or, if yov preftr. give
o ".RAIN CHECK " which entitle•
~u to the wm11
I
ot the tomt 1pitciol
pti&lt;t any time

I

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Kroger Welcome~
Your Federal
Food Stamps

�-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 25, 1976

12 - The ll;!iily Sentinel, Mid&lt;jleport-Pomero~·. o., Wednesday , ~'eb . 25.1976

-For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

11nscramblr lht.'il' foor Jumhlts.

one lrttrr to earh square, tu
form ro u r ordinary ~· ords.

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5
P M
Day
Before
Publication
Monday Deadline Y
am
Cancellation
Co rr ections wilt be ac
Cf"pted until 9 a m fo,Day of Publica!ion
REGULATIONS
The Pub I is Mer reserves
th t: ,-ight t o edit or reje ct
,1ny ads deemed ob
je.ctional
The publisher
will not tJ e responsi ble tor
more than Cine in co rrect
insertion .
RATES
For W ant Ad Sen• ice
5 cen1s per wOrd one
insertion
Min i rnum Cha ,- ge S1 .00
14 ce nt s per word tnree
consecutive
insertion s.
76 cents pe,- word six
consccurive
Insertio n s.
7S Per Cent Disc oun t on
pa i d ads and ad s pai d
within 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;. OBITUARY
S7 00
for
50
word
m inimum .
Each additional word J
ce nts
BliND ADS
A dditional 25c Charge
per Advertisement .
OFFICE HOUR S
8 · 30 a m to 5 · 00 p m
Daily . 8 . 30 a .m to 12 :00
Noon Saturday
Phone today 992 2156

I I J
[ ) [) [j
tKLINTE

)0

I

~HUGA T!

J I

1..=.t. 1rI

Now arran•e the circled letten

CDI

to form the aurpri~e 1.1\JWt:r, u
su&amp;ae•te4 by the above cartoon.

xxo GET r xx rxx I J
("-twe n to . .rrowl

Jumhlf'~&lt; CRUSH

l'e•terd•,-'•

I

.tuuwr r: M.ht n a

•

LILAC
knif~

JOCUND

GENTLE

grindrr'• bu1in et1 i1 bt&gt;tl - WHEN

THINGS ARE DULL

Notice

Notice

MAKE. SURE you get eve r ¥

TH ERE will be an Auction
Sa l e , F r iday rlight a t 1 p .m .
New and used me r chandise
al Mason Aucl ion. Mason ,
w . Va . Consignment s
Phone (30~) 773 5471.
2 25 Jtc

poss1 bl e deduction th is yea r .
H ave you r Federal and
Sra t e Income Ta,.; rerurn by
an accoun tant. Phon e 992
6 173 ,

1 7\ 52tc

--------BASEMENT

Sale,

Moving :

I ND OOR Yard Sal e, Feb . 26,
27 , and 28 . Clothes, toy s,
hou sehold goods . Phone 992
39 05 . Watch fo.r signs In
Sy ra cuse .

Must sell a tot o f c lothing
and househa·td i te ms ch eap .
Tu esday_ l hru F r iday, 10 : 00
ti l l 6 : 00 , 57? S . Th ir d,

WE WA N T to ex t end our
than-ks to all our fr ie nds and
r elatives who sent food,
cards. prayers and hel p ed i n
any way at the lime ot the
d ea th of A l berta Nothst ine
of l itho pol is . We espe cially
th ank th e E w ing F un er a l
Home . Racine Chapter No .
134 ,
O . E .S.
tor
th eir
b e aut i f u l ceremony, an d
Rev . F r eelan d Nor ris f or h is
com for ti ng word s at th e
bur i al o f ou r loved on e.
Husband ,
M elvin
No ths tin e, Daug h ters , Mrs .
Dorothy Krohn , Mrs . Hilda
A ndra x, and Mr s. Paulin e
F ram e. Sister , Mrs . Cora
Webb .
2-25 -llc

'} 23

]lp

SWEE PER
M ac h i n es

A Low Cost
Want Ad
Will Cut
Cost of

Uving ••••..
WRITE YOUR
OWN AD!

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NON COMMERCIAL
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Each
initial
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of
figures
counts as one word.
Be sure to count
name and address, if
used, and your phone
number .
Including
prices for items offered in your want ad
will
increase
response .

1. _ _ _ _ __
2, ______
3. _ _ _ __
4, _ _ _ __

5. ---..- - -- 6. _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ __
8. _ __ _ _
9, _ _ _ __
lQ. _ _ _ __

11.- - - - 12. ~,-------

NAME -_ __ _

and
Sewi ng
Repair P arts
ar'ld
Sup plies .
Davis
Vacuum C l eane r , ' ~ m ile up
George's Creek Rd . off St at e
Route

7. Phon e

(6141

&lt;146

029·1.
2 25 11c

IN COME

Tax.

SerY ice,

Federal o-r St a te la)(es .
Pho n e 992 7228 or
see
Wa ll ace Russe ll , Bradb ur y .
1-30-261(

-------------- --for Rent

~-..--

ATTENT IO N!
Widowed? Oi vorced 1

MAIL WITH

1.25

1

TO THE

POMEROY, OHIO
45769

1974 DATSUN 710 CPE .
a nd

bumper

Ph . q92 · 21 74

---- -------

-------

-----·

______ __ __

___ _

-

Wanted

Now at Landmark

-Heip Wanted

·~&amp;-~

-

SO MEONE
to l i\lc in Wi lt,
e l d e rl y l ady
For inorc·
informatio n , call 9.19 2291.
'I 20 6tc

-

J -

-·

'

,,\

CO-OP

- - Automatic Water

(

EXPERIENCED

·SECRETARY

szgg

CALL

}·---:J_, Reg. S339.oo Val .

.- - .

POMEROY LANOMARI&lt;.
··~- Jick W. C.noy, Mgr.
~
Phone9f1-1111

Gallipolis, Ohio

SAVE MONEY?
Take advantage of our ;.
prices .
Quality
built
homes. Nice lots available.
in nice locations .

2-12-1 mo:

lijSTAAT
srARTit.lh

TOI£TTQ

ba c. khoe
and
dl t ch er .
Charles R . Hatfie ld Back
Hoe Se rvice , Rut l and . Ohio .
Phone 742 2008
1tJ078tc

- - --

TREE Ti-imminQ :- 20
year s ex pe r ience . I nsured.
tree estim ate s. Call 992 :(38d
or ( 614) 69A !'157 1\lban y .
10 15 lfc
...,.._
-S E W I~ G MA C H'lNE Repa ir s, ·
serv•ce. all makes . 997 2284 .
The F abric Shop , Pom eroy .1\ut horize d Singer Sa l es and
Ser vice
We · s h a rp en
Scisso r s.
3-29 tt c
----;;-,.-,;--""0-e:-;- - _, - I F YOU nee-d yo·ur grave l
hau l ed, c all { 614 ) 98 5 4119
any tirne .
2 18 · 12tp
...:_

--

___

2023 .

2 18 12tp

.....

----·---·---. ...... -

A SPH AL, T l-N G dr i vt;ways i.~n d
par k in g lot s, s.eplic tank s
ins t all e d , c on c r eting and
backhoe work
Fo wl c ,- · s
Cons t r u c t iO n . Phone qq7
7-tR 1 or 741 2593 .

!'? BUILDING lots . no l ess
tha n .'iO' )( 150' eac h , has
q u ic k access to cl tv wa te r
:
and
san it ary
sewage ,
Com pt e_l e
f inanci ng
to
quali f ied in teres ted buyf" r ~ ! RED DOG , limeston e, g r avel
and lilt dirt d e l i vered .
Call 992 5786 .
Phone Bill P ull in s. 99 2-24 78.
2 n Me
2 19 -26tc

THI~5NIIEiiiRL

t«::JH, MCNJ~

1o1110E YOU TIIAT
~d:H?8E5.. T
LOOKt.-.. RIG 'IOU
EVER HAD, HfLEI&lt; 1

mo .

YOU CAH 1"T

IHFLUEI'ICE

HA'l NO PLACE

ON 1HE lli'NC~!

'

Yard

·

~UBBER BACK
We have hundreds Of
c a rp et v al u£'S 'YOU f" job CiJ n
be com p le!ed 1n I 10 2
weeks . N o long waiting
per iod . JhJr in s tal ler ha s 28.
years ex p erience , .. E)(pert
in. ~al l at lo n
You' ll _l ike
what you get ,

••

CALL741 -2211
I
TALK TO WENDELL '

GRATE

CAR PET CONSUL TAN

'

RUTLAND ,
FURNITURE ,
142.-2211

R uttand_

TEAFORD

Virgil B., Sr ., Broker
tlOMechanic Pomeroy , O .

Phone 992-3325
'
NEW LISTING - 6 Aores

6 : oo-Sunrlse Semester 10.

6: 1s---Farm Report 13.
6:21&gt;-Patterns lor Living 13.
6:»--Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8,
Urban League 10,
6 :o40---&lt;lunce of Preventlolj 10.
6 :·4s---Mornlng Report 3,
6:5s---chuck White Rports 10; Good Morning, Trl State
13.

with freak hand s. We c an im-

7:00-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
8:00-Lassle 6 ; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
. 8:30-Big Valley 6.
9:00-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9:3D-A.M. 3; One Life to Live 6; Taltletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
IO : ~elebrlty Sweepstakes 3.4, IS; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Right 8, 10.
10:30---High Rollers; 3,4, 15; Dinah 6.
I~TMlT
11 :OD-Wheel of Fort'un, 3,151 W¥kday 4; GarY' bit
~PLA'/o;
· 8,10; Farmer's b~UIIhler 13; Elec, Co. 20.
11
130---joilywood Squares 3,4.,.15;_; Happy Oays 13;
?TARlltJb TO
West North Eo_st South
Lo of Llf~ 8,10; Setame St. ""· ·
.
bBTTO
11 :ss- ·aile Kerr 8; Dan Imel's w~rld 10.
12:00-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, IS; Lei's Make a
A Calif~rnia reade'r wants to
MB!
Deal13; Bob Braun's$0-SOCiub4i News6,8,10.2to
~N. T . 6to
know il there is .a bridge
Pass Pass Pass
12
:30---Take
My Adjllce •• 15; All My Chlldr&amp;n 6,13;
player 's Hall of Fame.
Search
for
TomQrrov.t 8,10.
Opening lead - K •
One was started 1963. but
12
:oi.S-Eiec.
Co.
33.
·
never took on. Six \members
12:55-NBC News 3~'15 . ,
were elected , They include
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
1:00-News 3; Rya 's Hopo 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8;
lour now dead - Ely CulbertYoung &amp; the Re&amp; less 10; Not For Women Only 15.
:t:;;.,..
The chances are that almost son, Milton Work , Sidney Lenz
I :3D-Days of Our Llves3,4, IS; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, 13;
every one who has played and Harold Vanderbilt - and
As Tho Wrrld Turns 8, 10.
rubber bridge has run across two living - Charles Goren
2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13. 6, 13.
today's extremely freakish and Oswald Jacoby .
2:3G-DOj:lors 3,4,15; Neighbors 6,13; (;uldlng Light
AM D ·In' I' II: C T
hand . The reason is that if you
8, 10.
take a new deck of cards, cut
(Do you have a question
3:00-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6, 13; All
I'VE GOT Ali
for the experts? Write "Ask
THEJUVUE it as often as you wish, give it
In The Family 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
APPOINTME~T
IS LATE-- one absolute ly perfeci shuffle,
the
Jacob
ys"
care
of
this.
3:30'-0ne
Life to Llvel3; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
10 SEE THE
. H'VER
JUDGE IN
Game 8, 10; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
HAPPENED cut it some more and then newspapar. The Jscobys will
CHAMBERS -- ·
BE~Eifoi deal it out you will produce
answer individual questions
4:00-Mister Cartoon; 3; Merv Grifffil 4; Somenel 15;
lWENTI this monstrosity .
if stamped, self-addressed
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
YEARS If the dealer happens to hold anvelopes are enclosed. The
20,33; Movie "Glrls\GirlsiGirlsl" 10; Dinah 13.
4:30---Bewltched 31 Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
the spade suit and he and· his most interesting · questions
Sesame St. 20,33; 'To Be Announced 15.
partner are using the grand will be used in this · column
5:00-Bonanza 3; Famity 1Affalr 8; Star Trek 15.
slam force . the bidding i~ like- ' and will receive copies of
5 : 3G-Adam · 1~ 4,131 Ne'i\11 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
· ly to proceed along the lines I JACOBY MODERN.)I
•
I
Ele~ Co. :j0.33. . .
6 :00- ews 3,4,8, 10, 13,!5; I!IBC News 6; Zoom 20; lTV
·
Utili atlon 33 . .
6:30- B!= N~lys
15; A!~l;: News 13; Andy Griffith •.· ;
by THOMAS JOSEPH
CBS Nis 8, IO;,IItl"(dg~~ Lodge 20; l,lllas Y~· .
&amp; You 3.
.
ACROSS
38 Guided to
7;00-Tru
or
Cons.
3;
To
Tell
the
Truth
t
,iowllng
lfr
I Exclamation
lllfety
Dollars 6; Spase: 1999 8; News 10; Let Make
of '
(2 wds.)
. Oeal 13; FamilY Affair 15; Anyone for ennyson
· contempt
39 Old ·
20; Family at War 33.
"The BottemTurkish
7:311---Hollywood S~uares 3,4; Ohio Slate (atfery 6)
ian Girl"
nag .
Evening Edllloit with Martin Agronsky 20; Wild
Kingdom 10; Tc Tell the Truth 13; Music City USA
CQJilPOBer
to ''- Macabn 11
15.
10 Trot
II Chrlalianla
II Menacing
DOWN
8 : ~ovle "The Lindbergh Kidnaping Caase" 3,4,15;
words
I Farming
Welcome· Back, Kolter 6,13; Waltons 8, 10; Play of
Y
estenlay'• Auwer
13 Pabn leaf
implement
the Month 20; The Way It Was 33.
U Monetary
2 Kansas city
9 Alienate
25 Adriatic
&amp;:3D-Barney Miller 6,13; Lowell Thomas Remembers
unit of
3.Fleet of
12 Preexlatent
wind
33.
Spain
1588
16 Gift for
Z7 Cross
9:00-Streetsof Son Francisco 6, 13; Hawalll Flve-0 8;
Hollywood Television Theatre 33.; Movie "Bullllt''
15 PaWd
( 2 wds. )
junior
out
10.
16 Place to
4 "-, Jealoua
19 Climb In
29 - flytr...
10:00-Harry
06,13; ~ arnaby Jones&amp;; News 20.
recuperate
Lover"
a way
33 Ruaxian
10:
Is-Art
Conservator
33.
17 ~reas
5 S!r)lck
Zl Idle~';
city
I0;3Q-Realldac:tes 331
spendthrift 3t Note ·
"'E~"SC;;N~Jr;;:l118
Holma
(II.)
11:00-News· 3,A,6,8,1,,13,15; ABC ·News 33.
'
20 Indian
8 Tracls
22 Sought
31 Molecule
11: 30---Johnny Carscori 3,4, 15; Mannix 6, 13; Movie
cymbals
7 - Paul
aid
31 Red '
"Kelly's Heroes" A; Movie "The Spy Who Came In
21 Laved
8 Naval VIP' s 23 Cowpoke's
Orlnue
from the Cold" IQ; Janak! 33.
Z3 Mrs., In
( 2 wds.)
12:4G-Lngstreet 6,13!
sidekick
chalrlllll1
I; 00-Tomorrow 3,4.
Poland
I:~News
13.
24 Plant pest
FIVE
CHANNEL
25 LaWman's
7:00-Bozo the Clown (c)
slalwl
7:30---New Day (c)
symbol
a:OO:...Outdoor SpOrtsman (cl
Reach
8:30---Rex Humberd (1:)
9:30---Wyatt Earp
10:00-700 Club ( cl

· ~~~~

H

· Something advantageous, but
quite unexpected , may

,,! ,'

o f nice la ying f en ced la nd , 5
room r enova t ed home, 2
Br s . ·modern bath , mod .
ki t .. gas F.A. Furnace and

suddenly pop up.
SCORPIO (Oct. . 24·Nov. 22)

toren ·

BEEr-.! ALL OVER 'THE
OH composer
;V\ASTER. OF MY lNIVEf&lt;SE. I HAllE::::: :::;~t
&lt;;:---"I Nt:::Vt::K SEEN ANYTii lNG 1...1/&lt;E
note

ou tbids. $16,500 .
~EARLY 4 acres Has 2
sep tic tank s, c ity wate r , on

THAT!!-

124, iu sl off Rt . 7, On-ly
$8,500 .

For Thu.....,., Ftlb. 21, 1171

32 Kind of type

-+--lf---1

(abbr.)

35 II Astolat"

~A~HIUNAiiLt.

- j tlrS·.,
s1ea m heat, nice kit . la rg e
d ining , fu ll ba seme nt , and
view o f r ive r . $29.500 .
Country home Like n ew
3 Brs ., bath, utility , por ch ,
F .A . fu rnace and 1 acr e.

maid
3'1 Stallion's
mate

. 12 ACRES Cit y wa t er
and ga s. La rg e utility
building
fo'r
hobb y .
Renova1ed 3 s,- s . A sking

Is

LOOK &amp; SAVE

In lhe counlr y

COULDN'T

Another Money Saving Coupon For You

on hard r oa d . drilled well
a nd septic tank .

-.. ...----..:....'--~
... . . .......

OLD RESIOENTER Bea utiful 1 acre. Good 5
br s, &amp; "'2 bath s. Nat . ga s
f u rn ace. Good g ar d en

COUPON

Good through
Fen . S, 1976

gro"nd S35,000.
157 ACRES - Large older

=-+-+---'-il---1

t;-;--f--t-t--i

TAURUS (April 20,Moy 20)

._...__..__.";:;!1

Today, you can work your way
around conditions that have

flood . Only 18,500.
WE ARE SE LLER S OF
GOOD PROPERTY. CALL
US TO SEL L.

..... ..

WORTH

•3..

KBVMNBKVRXH
MBW

.KHWN

GFHW
BK

R

KFN
TRVH

·d!ii~Jtl I

'

SERVICE ACUT ABOVE THE BEST
e 3 NIASE Certified Mechanics

.•••' •.
'

I

e Very Friendly People

•

H~

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc. .
DO BUSINESS WITH A LEADER

'

SOO E. Main St.

Ph. 992-2174

JH

NMH

XFN

FZ

LEO (Julr 23· AII!I- 22) You'll
gel surprising cooperation to~
day If you are the first to show
you 're willing to compromise.

TMBTIW . - IRMXBX VIRGO (Aug. U·Sopt, 22)
Frivolous activities are likely to

Use of this Coupon

e 20 Years Service MJtnagement EKperience.
e All Work Guaranteed
e Reasonable Rates

WXRUHCE

things 'have been a trifle boring
lately, get In toUch with that
friend who always has
sOmething Interesting afoo~ .

VBJCRK
be a drag on you today. Turn
Ye~~tenlay's Cryptoquole: MY FATHER WAS NOT A your attention to more In - ·
FAILURE. AFTER ALL, HE WAS THE FATIIER OF A dustrlous productive pursuits.
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. HARRY S. LIIIRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 23) Con-

SpeciaL .liO.SO Plus Freon

.___,..-

I

1\IMH

B N W

Keep watching our ads for more money.saving coupons, ,
coming your way weekly.

·or Month

GEMINI IM•r · a1-Jun1 20)

CANCER (June 21-Julr 22) II

SRIH

' • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • fjl\('jlljjll'..:.~. ·~1

Special Rates
by Week

LONGFELLOW

CRYPTOQUOTES

Includes: Checking Complete System lor Leaks
Add Freon il Necessary·
Check Air Condition for proper operation

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

the solutions are

You'll be easily mot,vated to~
day If you think In terms of personal gain . look tor unusual
opportunities to add to your
resources.

XHWN

Free Car Wash with

ROOITIS, '5.00 up

WHEN HElDLDYOU
I HADTW/Nll
AGAIN!

AJIYDLIIAAXR
One letter oimp.ly stands for another. In this sample A Ia
used lor the three L's, X lor ihe two O's, etc. Single letters.
ap01trophes, the lengUi and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the rode letlen are different.

Complete Air Condition Operational Check
Reg. Price ... Sll. SO

La Salle
HOTFI

PERRY 'TOLD ME 1HE:
PHONE: WENT DEAD

had you stymied . Apply
yourself there.

ON A

•'

hom e w i1h ba th , barn and
tra ctor land .. Som e t i mber .

EIELfEVE
'lOUR EARS,
. EH?'

'' '

•ARIES (Morch a1·Aprll 11)
Don't be disappointed today If
you miss on the first try. Your
second effort Is your best one.
The results should please you .

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

Only $19,500.

$29,500.
3 ACRES -

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY26, 1976

s

square .

i·

Channel 5.
7:00-Bozo the Clown (cl
7:30)- PPHS-Ripley Basketball (c)
9:00-8111 Cosby (c)
9:30---Wyatt Earp
10 :00-700-Ciub (c)

~~ ... ~'t~ll"

501 NYLON

$499

A

JUDGE? SfHnMEMT

Carpeting

CO NSTRUCTIO N,

P A PER h a ngi n g, pa i nti n g ,
panel ing , etc
Phon e 949

AMMIII:-PAVIII:

'l,-----------...,
LET US DO IT!!

fr ee estirnafes , Greg ~oush .
997 7583 ,
2 18 12tc

LU CKE TT Fa rm Eq uip m ent,
west
Washington
SL,
A. l bany . P hone (6r4J 698 3032
or 698 788 1.

LITTLII:

OP ENE D! ! ! Hun t's Pet Shop ,
2' ~
miles no rtheast of
Chester , Ohio on R t. 2&lt;1 8. We
sp ecia li ze in t·rop ica_l fiih
&lt;tnd supplies . Sp eci al s a'tt
th is week!
2 2s '6_tP

I F INTERE STED in building
a -ne w nome . con t ac t

ROU SH

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

or 843 -2667
2 19- 1

__

Movie " Inside Daisy Clover•• 10; Janakl 33.
1:00-Tomorrow 3.4; News 13.

....

F r om a shelf to a house, all
typ es of building and
r e modeling
from
the
foundation up. Addit ions,
carpeting, pamting , siding ,
roofing , pan eling , paper
hang ing etc .
941} - ~0 23

Movie "Str ange

Homecoming " 6, 13; Mov ie ''Kelly's Heroes" 8;

ii\

CONSTRUCTION

Ph .

II ; 3D-Johnny Carson 34,15 ;

agine tens of thousands of bid·
tAKJ 9753
ding sequences. Some people
may ev.e n stop short of a slam .
WEST
EAST
Others will double thei r opponents so mewhere along lhe
¥AKJ 9H3 .Ql08642
way.
The one thing we oan be cer·
• Q 10 8 6 4 2
to A K J 9 7 53
tain
ol is that. irrespective ol
SOUTH fD I
who
gets to bid first the side
·
loA KJ96~ 3
with the spades is likely lo
wihd up playing the hand and
tQ108'642
il they ge t , pushed into seven
they are likely to be doubled.
Both vulnerable

m;

fi.!"PI.A'IS ARE

D&amp;D

'
EX CA ~ ~ T~ N G ~-- ;;z-; r ,

H OME for sale , spacio us
living room , di n ing room . ·2
h cdrooms , la r-ge kil ch CrL
1 ~1mi t y
room. n ew bath .
P ho n e -997 7394 .

Brs ., 2 ba1hs, ci ty wate r
a nd ga s. Corner lot ou t of

Gallipolis, Ohio

' , . . . . . - - - - -r - -·

R.!;PI.A~' ~T&lt;;
F.&amp;.l$ 1

Ph . (614) 985 -4102

"

ACRES , 7 roorn house ,
natur al gas , ci t y wate r ,
tarqe ba r n Phone 992 5058 .
7 24 Sic

lois Pauley
Branch Manager

RIVERSIDE
AM C.JEEP

' iio'ltN LOSER

l.eT'o1 Wi'.T(,fl lAAT
Alo/&gt;.JtJ OtJ lf.l'7111N1

BISSEll BUILDERS

-·------

Middleport, 0. • h, 9t2 -2771

446-5189

WANT TO

Modern

REM~DELING ,
Plumb ing.
heatmg an d all t ypes rJ f
general
r e p air .
Work
guaranteed . 20 years ex
p erience . Ph one 992 2409 .
5 1 lfc

ACRES on Sal e m
St ,
Rutl-and , sm all pond , o ld
hou se, all f e nced in Ph on e
7.1] 7784.

160,000 .
NEW LISTING - 8 rrY's., 4

'C.B.' SPECIAL

toQ108 ~ 42

Me!

D &amp; D

···-·- ·-···-

shown in the box.
Then , anything can happen

NORTll

·Ph . 1}92 -3993
;:.
d 10 1 mo,a.•

EXCAVAT I NG , dozer, loa"toeo and b a ckhoe wor k ; sep tic
la nk s
insta lled ;
d u mp
tr ucks and lo ·bov s tor hire :
will haul f i ll d ir.t , to p soil ,
limestone and gravel. Call
Bob or Roger Je ffer s, da y
phone 992 7089 , night ph one
992 3525 or 992 5232 .
7 11 tf c

Rul Esbte tor Sale

CONTACT:

MEDICAL

Condilloner
Model UCXXX,
210,000
. Weekly Grain
Capacity

·Mobile Homes For Sale
]4 )( 70 MOB I LE HO me , tota l
0 1c c :'! 100 ce ntra l ai r co n
rlilionv r . cx~elle nt con
dition . Pnone 2d7 26 84 or
2-H 266&lt;1
2 74 1tc

WANTED

LARRY
LAVENDER .::
Syrac;use, Ohio
•;.

MODERN CHEMICALS
100 K e r,- Street ·
Pomerov , Ohio4S169
U14) 992 -27'113, Dii::k Sevier
1 29 -1 mo .

O'DELL Alinement located
b ehi nd
Rut l and
Grade
Sc hool . Tuneup , brak es.
whe_cl ba l an ci n g , alinemenL
Phone 74 2 200.&lt;1
1.1 16 lie

77

Freakish new deck slam

'

EXCAVAT tN .G , BACK H OES
A ND DOZER . LA RGE A ND
SMALL , SEPT I C TAN KS
IN S T ALLED .
BI LL
PULLINS . PHO N E 997 2478.
D AY OR N IGHT
2 22 521p

8

StOtNG -SOFFITT
GUTTERS- AWNINGS •

We Buv Antiques

C. BRA Dr.ORD. Auc tioneer .
Complete Service
Phone
949 2487 or .9J9 7000 . Ra ci n e ,
Ohio . Cr itt Brad ford
\0 9 li e

WIN AT BRIDGE

1'1,' l&lt;:lk!O OF AN X. tOUS MVSEL-F

TO 5EEc HOW WELL
llE·IINIIIIIATIN&amp;

ALUMINUM

FUR NITUR E
STR;IPPIPo.!G SERVIC E
Remo"a l
of
Pa in t s
Pla st ics - Varnishes , etc.
Wood or Metal.
Repai r s
R efi nishing of
Furn i ture .
Burnish in g Poli shin g ot
Co pper &amp; Brass

19 70 DODGE Challenge r , 10
m ,p.g, $850with stee t b et t ed
radia ls, $750 wi th glass •
belled tires . MuS! se ll
QUtC~Iy . Phone 99'1 6 t 69 .
2 24 5tp ONt:: A(t&lt;t::, 6 rms an d palh,
Rt . 3, Pom ~ r oy, Rose H ill .
1967 CH EVY 1 _, ton Pickup ,
Dick Dav is proper ty, f u ll
lo ng bed , $500 . Phone 992
basem e nt ,
alum i nu m RE ADY MIX CON~~e.~ ·
3684 .
siding , ps-neled . 'iilO,OOO . Ca ll
de l ive r ed right · to your
2 24 3tc.
Oak Hi ll 68 5 6576 evenings ;
project. Fast and easy . Free
Jackson '186 3004 days
es t imates . Phone -1J92 3284.
1973 MONTE Ca rlo , pow er
2 5 JOtp
Goegte in Ready M i )( 'C o .~
w indows an d Cloor t oc~s , air ,
Middleport , Ohio .
$3,000 . P h on e 99 2-2243 .
J "BR-"1=1vr~•o, 1usr t1ni sh ed
6 30 -t f c
2 25 6t p
remode l ing . Sa lem · St.,
Rutlan d . P hone 742 7306 ELWOOD BOWERS REPA I R
197 1 MONTE Ca rl o wi th air
alter d p ni . or see M ilo B .'
s weepe r s , toasters , irons,
and mags. $2, 000 . Phon-e 992
Hu tc hinson .
a ll sma ll applian ces Lawn
567 1.
10 9 ttc
m ow er . ne)(t to State H igh
7 22 dip
way Gdrage On Route 7 .
MODERN home in Chester , 8
Phone 985 3825 .
1963 CHE VRO L ET cab over
roo.ms , 2 bath s, 7 por ches.
4 16 t t c
truck ,
power
stee r ing,
1
sun por ch , ? basement , city
would make a good tog
and we ll water . natural gas, S EPT I C T A NK S c l e aned .
truck . First $ 1.200 takes it
g a rage . Priced to se ll .
Modern Sa n i tation . 992 -3954
L andm ark , E a st Mil i n St .,
Phone (61 4 ) 98 5 4102 .
or 992 7_3.:19 .
Pom er oy .
2 4 tfC
9 18 I fC
2 20 6t c

For Sale

tO SPEED bi c v c te. Exce llent
co n d ition, $60 . Phon e 99 2
5864 .
.
2 24 6tp

AO!i q ue

Free estimates on car p ef"i ng and installation.
We'll bring samples to your
hom e with no obtigation .
See how you can really
save. ·
M ike Young , Manager
Sales and Installation
Rt . 3, Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
Phone day or night
614 -99'2 -2206
) H _1 m o

196 3 FORD Ga lax it' , good
condition A lso. 196·1 rord
for parts . Both l or ')1 50
Phon e 16 1.1\ 985 J2Q,t
7 70 61C

Financing Ava ila ble •
Blown in to Walls &amp; Att ic:s
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOW S

. ,.

SLOAN'S
.
CARPETING

Realty~

-- ___________

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

4 speed , radio , w-s tires. like new 6. 000 miles, whi t e
finish

Strout

SEW IN G 01 ell I kinds . dres ~cs
for all occasi on s, sla c k s,
sh ir ts, ne wborn _layettes,
curt ain s, drap es . Phon e 992 3035 and ask for Dorothy .
2-19 -26tc
•
____.

N atha n Bigg s
Radiator Specialis t

S289S

Wanted To Buy

---"------~-~----

Siding - Vinvl
&amp;
Aluminum . Window Glass
&amp; Glazing . On the Job or in
Shop
P ick. vp and delivery
service .
Call Collect l81 -82J9
Sp ecialile
in
build - up
roo fing &amp; hot roo f s. Fre e
Estimates - 10 years ex ·
perien ce .
Har ve F errell
B i dw ell, OhiO
2 6 1 mo .

From th e largest Tru ck or
B1JIIdozer" Ra d iato r to the
smalles t Hea t er Core .

S269S

197S FORO PINTO

19 73 CH ARGER: S E . black
with white p in st ripes
$2 ,300. Phone 949 24 17
2 24 31p

WEDNESDAY , FEBRUARYlS, i976
1:3D-Lasl ol the Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Wild Wild
World of Animals 6; Match (;ame PM 8; Evening
Edl llon with Marlin Agronsky 20 ; The Judge 10; To
Tell the Truth 13 ; Wltd Kingdom 15; Book Beat 33.
8:3D-Li ttle House on the Prairie 3,4, 15; Bionic Woman
6,13; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8, 10; The Way It Was
20; Images of Alng 33, '
9_: ~hlco &amp; the Man 3,4, IS; Barelta 6, 13; Cennon
8,10; (;real Performances 33; Images of Aging 20.
9:30---Dumpllngs 3,4, 15;.
. 10:00-Petrocelll 3,4, IS; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13; Blue
Knight 8. 10; News 20; To Be Announced 33.
10 :30---Aimanac 20.
·
. 11 :00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15; ABC News 33.

Blown
lnsulatioll Services.'

HOME MAINTENANCE

4 speed tr ans, radio , good f ir es, green finish , low
mileage .

Au to trans . , radio , deluxe bumper.s
guards , good tires. grey fini sh.

f6 BAKER STREET,

FREE ESTIMATES .

Pt ex aglus - Tab te Tops •
M irrars - Storm &amp; Stre v ns .
FERRELL'S GLASS &amp;

S249S

--.,------

DAILY SENTINEL
111 COURT ST.

1974 OPEL MANTA CPE .

Trade

ADDRESS---------- Employment Wanted
PHONE ~--­

OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

For Rent

---··~---

RISE APARTMENT

Business Services

Pomeroy

-·

--

CIJY _ _ __

2 SIGNS

Television log for easy viewing

SHE LIVES ON THE

7fh FLOOR OF A HIGH
-I T SAYS HERE.

For Sale

Pets

....

l'(r

BEDRM
hom-e ,
iu s t
3 A N D 4 RM . f urni sh ed and 19 75 DA T SUN B2 10 Hat chback J fin i'shc d . r emodeling ; ~a t em
Separated?
with
st
an
da
,-d
transmission
unfurn ish ed ap ts . Phone 992 St., Ru tla nd Phone 742 230 6
and air con d i tioning . $3 . 300
5&lt;134
PWP inv ites you to come
after &lt;1 p .m . or see Milo B .
Ca ll 992 3453 .
11 -9-t f c
Hut ch ison
hear
7 lfi 6tc
9 23 tf c
R ~v. Pau l W. H awks
COU N T R Y Mobi l e
Ho mP.
" Person to Person"
Par k, Rt 3] , ten m il es n or t h
of Pome r oy .. Larg e lOt s wi th'.
Fr iday, Feb. 27 , 1976
c on cr ete patio s. sid ewa lks,
7; 30 P -11:'1 ·
runn e r s a nd ott street '~G R A PE F R UIT Pill" with
Diad a x plan mo re c on
Grace United Methodist
park ing. Phon e 99 2-7479.
venient than grap efru i t s
·
l'2 -3 t -tf c
Church
E at sat is f ying mea ts and
------.---- -·-----......o
Corner of Second &amp; Cedar,
lose we ig h t. N elson Drugs .
UNFURN
IS
HED
ap
t.
in
Gallipolis
2 25 lip
P omeroy 2 bedrm newly
--- -·- - - ' - - - -·-~
Open to th e ~ublic
608 E.
redeco rat ed, f ull y c arp ete d . L O SE weight with New Sh ape
Or Write to Box 312, Rio
Call in the early a .m . 992·
T abl ets and H ydrex Wa t er
MAIN
228 8.
Grande, 0 .
·
Pill s at
Dut t on
Drug ,_
2·22 -tfc
POMEROY, 0.
Mid'dl e po r t. a nd N ~ l son
- - - '-- ---'--'---.------Drug
~ MALL
e ff icien c y apt . for
277 ACRES - Hom e 3 BR
2 25 3t p
si ng le male occupant , no
ranc h type , ni ce k itche n Wanimals Phone 99 2-5786 .
1. 000 BALES o t hay . Ph onP.
ref. r an ge FORCE D A i,2-22 -6tc
Ha rold R o u sh , P ortland ,
l u rnace , l u ll basemen t ,
84 3 2255 .
ow n wa t er, ( t a p paid)
FURN I SHED
and
un 2 25 6t c
furn -ish ed modern apl. , 2
St orm doors &amp; win dow s, '
HO US E i n Ru t lan·d . Call 9"92
an d 3 bedrm s . , all elect ri c,
La rge ga r age W -wOrkshop .
GOO
D
h
ay,
never
we!.
Phon
e
5A'iB
br i ck bu i lding , deco rated
9d9 252J .
· Ca r por t. 'J tra iler ~ook u'p s.
l J tf c
plast ered walls', complete
'J 25 6tc
$28, 000 .
Youngstown kitchens, with
Ro.ute 143_:_ 11'7 Ac r es - 1
disposal units . storm door s P O R CH Swin '&gt;i, co mp lete be d ,
and windows , compl ete l y
BR.
ba th , own &amp; city wafer,
01
p lai n gu i tar and c ase , g irl 's
i nsulated , front a·nd r ear
garage , Cellar for fruit s.
2-4 " bi ke , Thre e 13 in ch tires,
entran ce, bf"a uti f u ll y la n d F OR sale or tra de for pic k up
wooden rock e r . d ishes o f art
landscaped . $8,300.
sc aped , p r i vate pa,-kin g,
of eq u al va l ue, a Gra vely
k ind s. Ca ll 7d2 2078 .
REEDSVILLE AREA special
low
rent.
The
Haven
tra c tor wi th atta chmen ts .
2 25 -4tc
Terrace
A
p
ts
.,
N
ew
H
aven
,
135
ACRES . M inerals , Cit y
Phon e 992 -736:;3..
w. VA, . Phon e CJO·Il 882
wciter avai l able . So m e
2-22 -4tp
19
74
75 T RIUMP H Tr ide nt
2433 .
2· 15-9tc
t i mber. Si23 .00 per acre
-~--'-- "'- --motorcycle , 2, 800 mit.es,
e)( ce lleht c ond i tion . $2, 000 .
POMEROY
La rger
ENJOY gra c 1ou s t1v 1n g at A lSo , 1966 v .w.-, good con
home, Has n ew siding ,
Village Manor in Mid :
d it ion a nd pr ice d to se l l.
turnacc, t ile &amp; pa neli ng ,
d lepo rt for as low as $130
PhOn e 9d9 -2133 .
per
month
wi t h
all
ca r pe tin g , storm door s and
I 25 4tc
20 HOR SE Merc ury or 25
u tili tie s
p ai d .
Th ese
w indo ws . 'J ca r ga r age.
horse Evi nr ude ou t boa rd .
:. MOB IL E hom es. gas an d
are bran d n ew high quatt1y
Low u tili ti es . $18, 500.
C.a ll 992 278 1 after 4 p .m .
water
pa id,
depo s it
apa,- t m en ts at prices you
2 24 Jt c
POMEROY 2 s lory
r equired . JOB P a ge St . .
c-an . afford . Yo Ur rent in lram e w ith al m ost new
M
i
ddl
eport
.
Phon
e
99'1
7tl
l
6
c lude s m o nth to mon t h
H OU SEBOA T in good con
r oo f . ·siding a nd cnr port. 3
2 2,t 6t c'
di tion . Ca ll collec t &lt;3 04) 727
l ea ses, all e te c . liv in g,
b edroOm s, bath . Sma l l
c arpetin g,
range
a ri d -·
8723, N i tro, W . Va . a ft E'r 7
f' t RCO
H e li I R C we ld ing.
p .m .
refrigerator: , free trash
ya r d , $8,000.
mac hine . new c l cc
.1 11
pickup, ca bl e TV at your
2-24 5t c
HOW TO SEL L YOUR
n ecessaries inclu ded Phone
ex p en se,
and
o n -s it e.
HOM E &gt;CALL US.
Q92 3-110
LI VE p1geons in good con
l a u ndry Uc l l i t i es . Con 992 -2259 or 992 -2568
10 2Hi f c
dition , will pay 50c apiece .
ve nientto shopping on Th ird
Phone 992 7687
an d M i ll St r ee ts in Mid dleport. See the manager at CUI\L FO R SALE . C/10 Coa l
2-24 4tp
Company, 1 mi le north o f
R i ver si de Apartments or
Ches hir e , on Rt . 7. P ick your
cal l 992 -327 3 . Furni s h e d
OLD t urnllu r e, ice bo)(eS~
o wn , $20 p er to n . Op en 6 Cl ays
apa r t men t s
a re
also
bra ss
b e ds,
old
wall
per week , or ca ll (6 1·11 367
·available
telep hon es and parts , o r
7330 for furt her info r m at ion .
comple t e h o usehold s. W rit e
2-2-78tC
'
1 8 7Atc
-- ------'-~----- -·-M . 0 . Mill er,
Rt .
2,
Pomeroy , Ohio . Ca ll 992
I NCO II;I'OR "TEP
7760.
COAL. li m es ton e a nd allty~es
ot sa lt and ro ck sa lt lor ice
10 -7.7 ~
NO. l68 .-- 36a ., 5 r . home,
and sn ow remov a l . E )(
A LUMIN U M b Uii"d ing 8 " x 8' x
ca rp e t e d , m od . ki1 ch en.
9 TO 10 f t dump b ed . Phone
ce lsior Sa l t Work s, East
6' in e xcell ent cond i tioQ ,
(61-t ) 367 "l-11 1
Main St ., Pomer oy, Ohio .
firepla ce, forced ai r fur . ,
$1 00. Phon e 992 -5786 .
Phone 992 -38 91 .
2 20 6t c
2-22 -6tc
fr .
ce ll ar,
sev eral
12-7-tf c
outbldg s., quiet cou ntr y
--~ - -..,....-~~CAS H paid tor· al l rna~ es and T WO c alves. mixed Here ford setting , $32,000 .00 .
c ow Wi th calL P hon e 843 F I REWOOD , phon e 949 2o89~
models of mobile homes .
Phone area co de 614 423
2353.
2 18 -12 tc
953 1.
NO, 140 - 1.72 a ., v acan t.
2-22 -Stc
---~
c
lear ed , good loc . for
4. 13-tf c
MOD E RN. Wl!ll nv t c o ns ol t!,
c ountry
home
or
A M . FM radio , 4 sp ee d
ONE kit ch en ca r t, on e Ken
.cha nger . Balanc e $ 101.1 0 or
recreationa l.
more aut o . w ash er , Norge
terms . Call 992 -3965 .
drye~;,
Magic Che f cook
P e ts To Give AWay
2 19 -tf c
s tove , d i n ette se t , dish
NO. 142 - 9.-4 a ., 6 i'. home,
-F REE to good hom e, t ema l e
ca bin et, Moto r ol a. b w t . v ., 2 -·.--=:::----"new
,-oof. be ing r e modeled .
'
M
c
D
A
NIEL
Cu
s
to
_m
Bu
t
.
part Beeg le dog , 1 yr . o ld ,
dr.esser s, d ishes, c lothing
lge . b a rn , garage, 2 a , la'ke ,
ch erlng, w est Columbia , w.
mLII"ed br eed p·u ps, 3 m on th s
and o the r h ous ehold it ems .
o ld . Phon e 7&lt;12 ·2960
va . We but cher c attle and
Phone 992 3090 or 99 2 2770 .
stoc k ed; several woo ded
h ogs .
S10
c attle
2 25 3t c
2 24 3t c
ac r es, good buy , $40,000.00 .
slaughter ; $7 tor hogs ; 12c
- - - -.--'---- -~
t or cutti ng and wrapping .
1967 CHE VRO L ET Bel ai r , 283
PET S TO GtVE A.tJiA,-y
25 a ., lge .
St ate and f ederal tn sp ected ; . NO. 144 eng in e; _Reg . Beegle pup s,
PURE BR ED Grea t Dane,
Open 6 days p er week .
counhy
hom e f
barn ,
H arle qu tn ro m an ce boo ks .
ma l e. 1 y r o ld . P hone 992
Phon e 1304 J 88:?· 3224 .
Ph one 949-28-49 after 6 p .m .
poultry house, other bldQs .,
38 32 or 99 2-2639, Meigs Co.
,..;..;
1-30-26f c
2-24 Jtc
$25,000 .00 . Owner w ill take
Hu m an e Societ y .
__,_,_
2-22 -6tc
land contract .
PER A, F armal l, n ew pain t
. : :;.;__--.-- ---- - -=::::::...-==-- SL!10.b,
n
ew
ballery
,
cult
ivat
or
.
P ets To Give . Away
804W. Main
f e rt i l ize r
at t ac hm e nt .
PUREBRED Grea t Dan e-,
Hi
llers
,
i·n
g
ood
condition
.
Pomeroy
992 -2298
fema le, 5 yrs . ol d . Ge n tl e,
Pri ce d to s~ ll . Phon e 949
n eeds good home . Call 99 2After Hours Call
226 1, Albe r t H ill. R acine
3832 or 992 -2639 , Meigs c o .
Ohio
'
9'12-7133
Humane Soc ie ty.
2. 24 6t c

For Sale

.,.

Auto Sales

Real Estate For Sale

Card of Thanhs

Middlepor t .

Auto Sales

SILENCE

,,

' I
o•

'

I

I

'

' '
Pomeroy , o. -1

l. HEAR ·TELL
TH' STORK

FLEW DOWN
1.{0RE CHIMBLEY
LAST NIGHT,
ARKV·-

'IE HEERED
WRONG,
SNUFFY

TRUMAN

(C) 1176 Klf!l . . . . . . . Syndl~at.e, Int.)

dllions In general should lm·
prove as the day prot:~resses .

You might feel slightly uncer·
taln about something until you
lace the challenge. Your
positive attitude will prevail.

BABITTARIUS (Nov, 23·0tte.
21) You're a pretty good investigator today. If there's a
situation you'd like to get to the
bottom of; start probing.

CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-Jen 11)
If you 're Inspired today to do
something thoughtfu l for one
you're fond o1, do so. It will give
you joy as well ,

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Feb. 11)
Restrictions that have stowed
you doWJl the past few days
should be alleviated today. especially concerning your
career and finances.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch 20)
.Something may occur tad&amp;~·
that you' ll find d isappointing at
tirst . If you study II mo~e
thoroughly you 'll see the 'brtght
side.

®~
Feb. 21, 1171

You m~;~y s"ee a .hoPed·for
return this coming year from
gomething you've devot&amp;d considerable effort to. What you
receive should be to proportionate your eHort.
tNfo:WSI'At•t-;H l-:N1't:HI' HISE AS.'iN . I

THI!i l!i

601N61b
TAKE A
UTTLi

PRAcnq

�-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 25, 1976

12 - The ll;!iily Sentinel, Mid&lt;jleport-Pomero~·. o., Wednesday , ~'eb . 25.1976

-For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

11nscramblr lht.'il' foor Jumhlts.

one lrttrr to earh square, tu
form ro u r ordinary ~· ords.

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5
P M
Day
Before
Publication
Monday Deadline Y
am
Cancellation
Co rr ections wilt be ac
Cf"pted until 9 a m fo,Day of Publica!ion
REGULATIONS
The Pub I is Mer reserves
th t: ,-ight t o edit or reje ct
,1ny ads deemed ob
je.ctional
The publisher
will not tJ e responsi ble tor
more than Cine in co rrect
insertion .
RATES
For W ant Ad Sen• ice
5 cen1s per wOrd one
insertion
Min i rnum Cha ,- ge S1 .00
14 ce nt s per word tnree
consecutive
insertion s.
76 cents pe,- word six
consccurive
Insertio n s.
7S Per Cent Disc oun t on
pa i d ads and ad s pai d
within 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;. OBITUARY
S7 00
for
50
word
m inimum .
Each additional word J
ce nts
BliND ADS
A dditional 25c Charge
per Advertisement .
OFFICE HOUR S
8 · 30 a m to 5 · 00 p m
Daily . 8 . 30 a .m to 12 :00
Noon Saturday
Phone today 992 2156

I I J
[ ) [) [j
tKLINTE

)0

I

~HUGA T!

J I

1..=.t. 1rI

Now arran•e the circled letten

CDI

to form the aurpri~e 1.1\JWt:r, u
su&amp;ae•te4 by the above cartoon.

xxo GET r xx rxx I J
("-twe n to . .rrowl

Jumhlf'~&lt; CRUSH

l'e•terd•,-'•

I

.tuuwr r: M.ht n a

•

LILAC
knif~

JOCUND

GENTLE

grindrr'• bu1in et1 i1 bt&gt;tl - WHEN

THINGS ARE DULL

Notice

Notice

MAKE. SURE you get eve r ¥

TH ERE will be an Auction
Sa l e , F r iday rlight a t 1 p .m .
New and used me r chandise
al Mason Aucl ion. Mason ,
w . Va . Consignment s
Phone (30~) 773 5471.
2 25 Jtc

poss1 bl e deduction th is yea r .
H ave you r Federal and
Sra t e Income Ta,.; rerurn by
an accoun tant. Phon e 992
6 173 ,

1 7\ 52tc

--------BASEMENT

Sale,

Moving :

I ND OOR Yard Sal e, Feb . 26,
27 , and 28 . Clothes, toy s,
hou sehold goods . Phone 992
39 05 . Watch fo.r signs In
Sy ra cuse .

Must sell a tot o f c lothing
and househa·td i te ms ch eap .
Tu esday_ l hru F r iday, 10 : 00
ti l l 6 : 00 , 57? S . Th ir d,

WE WA N T to ex t end our
than-ks to all our fr ie nds and
r elatives who sent food,
cards. prayers and hel p ed i n
any way at the lime ot the
d ea th of A l berta Nothst ine
of l itho pol is . We espe cially
th ank th e E w ing F un er a l
Home . Racine Chapter No .
134 ,
O . E .S.
tor
th eir
b e aut i f u l ceremony, an d
Rev . F r eelan d Nor ris f or h is
com for ti ng word s at th e
bur i al o f ou r loved on e.
Husband ,
M elvin
No ths tin e, Daug h ters , Mrs .
Dorothy Krohn , Mrs . Hilda
A ndra x, and Mr s. Paulin e
F ram e. Sister , Mrs . Cora
Webb .
2-25 -llc

'} 23

]lp

SWEE PER
M ac h i n es

A Low Cost
Want Ad
Will Cut
Cost of

Uving ••••..
WRITE YOUR
OWN AD!

.-

IrS EASY TO

ORDER BY
MAIU
-SPECJAL!-

12 WORDS
4DAYS
$125

ONLY

CASH WITH
ORDER

'AVAILABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
NO REFUNPS.
Each
initial
and
group
of
figures
counts as one word.
Be sure to count
name and address, if
used, and your phone
number .
Including
prices for items offered in your want ad
will
increase
response .

1. _ _ _ _ __
2, ______
3. _ _ _ __
4, _ _ _ __

5. ---..- - -- 6. _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ __
8. _ __ _ _
9, _ _ _ __
lQ. _ _ _ __

11.- - - - 12. ~,-------

NAME -_ __ _

and
Sewi ng
Repair P arts
ar'ld
Sup plies .
Davis
Vacuum C l eane r , ' ~ m ile up
George's Creek Rd . off St at e
Route

7. Phon e

(6141

&lt;146

029·1.
2 25 11c

IN COME

Tax.

SerY ice,

Federal o-r St a te la)(es .
Pho n e 992 7228 or
see
Wa ll ace Russe ll , Bradb ur y .
1-30-261(

-------------- --for Rent

~-..--

ATTENT IO N!
Widowed? Oi vorced 1

MAIL WITH

1.25

1

TO THE

POMEROY, OHIO
45769

1974 DATSUN 710 CPE .
a nd

bumper

Ph . q92 · 21 74

---- -------

-------

-----·

______ __ __

___ _

-

Wanted

Now at Landmark

-Heip Wanted

·~&amp;-~

-

SO MEONE
to l i\lc in Wi lt,
e l d e rl y l ady
For inorc·
informatio n , call 9.19 2291.
'I 20 6tc

-

J -

-·

'

,,\

CO-OP

- - Automatic Water

(

EXPERIENCED

·SECRETARY

szgg

CALL

}·---:J_, Reg. S339.oo Val .

.- - .

POMEROY LANOMARI&lt;.
··~- Jick W. C.noy, Mgr.
~
Phone9f1-1111

Gallipolis, Ohio

SAVE MONEY?
Take advantage of our ;.
prices .
Quality
built
homes. Nice lots available.
in nice locations .

2-12-1 mo:

lijSTAAT
srARTit.lh

TOI£TTQ

ba c. khoe
and
dl t ch er .
Charles R . Hatfie ld Back
Hoe Se rvice , Rut l and . Ohio .
Phone 742 2008
1tJ078tc

- - --

TREE Ti-imminQ :- 20
year s ex pe r ience . I nsured.
tree estim ate s. Call 992 :(38d
or ( 614) 69A !'157 1\lban y .
10 15 lfc
...,.._
-S E W I~ G MA C H'lNE Repa ir s, ·
serv•ce. all makes . 997 2284 .
The F abric Shop , Pom eroy .1\ut horize d Singer Sa l es and
Ser vice
We · s h a rp en
Scisso r s.
3-29 tt c
----;;-,.-,;--""0-e:-;- - _, - I F YOU nee-d yo·ur grave l
hau l ed, c all { 614 ) 98 5 4119
any tirne .
2 18 · 12tp
...:_

--

___

2023 .

2 18 12tp

.....

----·---·---. ...... -

A SPH AL, T l-N G dr i vt;ways i.~n d
par k in g lot s, s.eplic tank s
ins t all e d , c on c r eting and
backhoe work
Fo wl c ,- · s
Cons t r u c t iO n . Phone qq7
7-tR 1 or 741 2593 .

!'? BUILDING lots . no l ess
tha n .'iO' )( 150' eac h , has
q u ic k access to cl tv wa te r
:
and
san it ary
sewage ,
Com pt e_l e
f inanci ng
to
quali f ied in teres ted buyf" r ~ ! RED DOG , limeston e, g r avel
and lilt dirt d e l i vered .
Call 992 5786 .
Phone Bill P ull in s. 99 2-24 78.
2 n Me
2 19 -26tc

THI~5NIIEiiiRL

t«::JH, MCNJ~

1o1110E YOU TIIAT
~d:H?8E5.. T
LOOKt.-.. RIG 'IOU
EVER HAD, HfLEI&lt; 1

mo .

YOU CAH 1"T

IHFLUEI'ICE

HA'l NO PLACE

ON 1HE lli'NC~!

'

Yard

·

~UBBER BACK
We have hundreds Of
c a rp et v al u£'S 'YOU f" job CiJ n
be com p le!ed 1n I 10 2
weeks . N o long waiting
per iod . JhJr in s tal ler ha s 28.
years ex p erience , .. E)(pert
in. ~al l at lo n
You' ll _l ike
what you get ,

••

CALL741 -2211
I
TALK TO WENDELL '

GRATE

CAR PET CONSUL TAN

'

RUTLAND ,
FURNITURE ,
142.-2211

R uttand_

TEAFORD

Virgil B., Sr ., Broker
tlOMechanic Pomeroy , O .

Phone 992-3325
'
NEW LISTING - 6 Aores

6 : oo-Sunrlse Semester 10.

6: 1s---Farm Report 13.
6:21&gt;-Patterns lor Living 13.
6:»--Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8,
Urban League 10,
6 :o40---&lt;lunce of Preventlolj 10.
6 :·4s---Mornlng Report 3,
6:5s---chuck White Rports 10; Good Morning, Trl State
13.

with freak hand s. We c an im-

7:00-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
8:00-Lassle 6 ; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
. 8:30-Big Valley 6.
9:00-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9:3D-A.M. 3; One Life to Live 6; Taltletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
IO : ~elebrlty Sweepstakes 3.4, IS; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Right 8, 10.
10:30---High Rollers; 3,4, 15; Dinah 6.
I~TMlT
11 :OD-Wheel of Fort'un, 3,151 W¥kday 4; GarY' bit
~PLA'/o;
· 8,10; Farmer's b~UIIhler 13; Elec, Co. 20.
11
130---joilywood Squares 3,4.,.15;_; Happy Oays 13;
?TARlltJb TO
West North Eo_st South
Lo of Llf~ 8,10; Setame St. ""· ·
.
bBTTO
11 :ss- ·aile Kerr 8; Dan Imel's w~rld 10.
12:00-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, IS; Lei's Make a
A Calif~rnia reade'r wants to
MB!
Deal13; Bob Braun's$0-SOCiub4i News6,8,10.2to
~N. T . 6to
know il there is .a bridge
Pass Pass Pass
12
:30---Take
My Adjllce •• 15; All My Chlldr&amp;n 6,13;
player 's Hall of Fame.
Search
for
TomQrrov.t 8,10.
Opening lead - K •
One was started 1963. but
12
:oi.S-Eiec.
Co.
33.
·
never took on. Six \members
12:55-NBC News 3~'15 . ,
were elected , They include
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
1:00-News 3; Rya 's Hopo 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8;
lour now dead - Ely CulbertYoung &amp; the Re&amp; less 10; Not For Women Only 15.
:t:;;.,..
The chances are that almost son, Milton Work , Sidney Lenz
I :3D-Days of Our Llves3,4, IS; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, 13;
every one who has played and Harold Vanderbilt - and
As Tho Wrrld Turns 8, 10.
rubber bridge has run across two living - Charles Goren
2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13. 6, 13.
today's extremely freakish and Oswald Jacoby .
2:3G-DOj:lors 3,4,15; Neighbors 6,13; (;uldlng Light
AM D ·In' I' II: C T
hand . The reason is that if you
8, 10.
take a new deck of cards, cut
(Do you have a question
3:00-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6, 13; All
I'VE GOT Ali
for the experts? Write "Ask
THEJUVUE it as often as you wish, give it
In The Family 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
APPOINTME~T
IS LATE-- one absolute ly perfeci shuffle,
the
Jacob
ys"
care
of
this.
3:30'-0ne
Life to Llvel3; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
10 SEE THE
. H'VER
JUDGE IN
Game 8, 10; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
HAPPENED cut it some more and then newspapar. The Jscobys will
CHAMBERS -- ·
BE~Eifoi deal it out you will produce
answer individual questions
4:00-Mister Cartoon; 3; Merv Grifffil 4; Somenel 15;
lWENTI this monstrosity .
if stamped, self-addressed
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
YEARS If the dealer happens to hold anvelopes are enclosed. The
20,33; Movie "Glrls\GirlsiGirlsl" 10; Dinah 13.
4:30---Bewltched 31 Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
the spade suit and he and· his most interesting · questions
Sesame St. 20,33; 'To Be Announced 15.
partner are using the grand will be used in this · column
5:00-Bonanza 3; Famity 1Affalr 8; Star Trek 15.
slam force . the bidding i~ like- ' and will receive copies of
5 : 3G-Adam · 1~ 4,131 Ne'i\11 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
· ly to proceed along the lines I JACOBY MODERN.)I
•
I
Ele~ Co. :j0.33. . .
6 :00- ews 3,4,8, 10, 13,!5; I!IBC News 6; Zoom 20; lTV
·
Utili atlon 33 . .
6:30- B!= N~lys
15; A!~l;: News 13; Andy Griffith •.· ;
by THOMAS JOSEPH
CBS Nis 8, IO;,IItl"(dg~~ Lodge 20; l,lllas Y~· .
&amp; You 3.
.
ACROSS
38 Guided to
7;00-Tru
or
Cons.
3;
To
Tell
the
Truth
t
,iowllng
lfr
I Exclamation
lllfety
Dollars 6; Spase: 1999 8; News 10; Let Make
of '
(2 wds.)
. Oeal 13; FamilY Affair 15; Anyone for ennyson
· contempt
39 Old ·
20; Family at War 33.
"The BottemTurkish
7:311---Hollywood S~uares 3,4; Ohio Slate (atfery 6)
ian Girl"
nag .
Evening Edllloit with Martin Agronsky 20; Wild
Kingdom 10; Tc Tell the Truth 13; Music City USA
CQJilPOBer
to ''- Macabn 11
15.
10 Trot
II Chrlalianla
II Menacing
DOWN
8 : ~ovle "The Lindbergh Kidnaping Caase" 3,4,15;
words
I Farming
Welcome· Back, Kolter 6,13; Waltons 8, 10; Play of
Y
estenlay'• Auwer
13 Pabn leaf
implement
the Month 20; The Way It Was 33.
U Monetary
2 Kansas city
9 Alienate
25 Adriatic
&amp;:3D-Barney Miller 6,13; Lowell Thomas Remembers
unit of
3.Fleet of
12 Preexlatent
wind
33.
Spain
1588
16 Gift for
Z7 Cross
9:00-Streetsof Son Francisco 6, 13; Hawalll Flve-0 8;
Hollywood Television Theatre 33.; Movie "Bullllt''
15 PaWd
( 2 wds. )
junior
out
10.
16 Place to
4 "-, Jealoua
19 Climb In
29 - flytr...
10:00-Harry
06,13; ~ arnaby Jones&amp;; News 20.
recuperate
Lover"
a way
33 Ruaxian
10:
Is-Art
Conservator
33.
17 ~reas
5 S!r)lck
Zl Idle~';
city
I0;3Q-Realldac:tes 331
spendthrift 3t Note ·
"'E~"SC;;N~Jr;;:l118
Holma
(II.)
11:00-News· 3,A,6,8,1,,13,15; ABC ·News 33.
'
20 Indian
8 Tracls
22 Sought
31 Molecule
11: 30---Johnny Carscori 3,4, 15; Mannix 6, 13; Movie
cymbals
7 - Paul
aid
31 Red '
"Kelly's Heroes" A; Movie "The Spy Who Came In
21 Laved
8 Naval VIP' s 23 Cowpoke's
Orlnue
from the Cold" IQ; Janak! 33.
Z3 Mrs., In
( 2 wds.)
12:4G-Lngstreet 6,13!
sidekick
chalrlllll1
I; 00-Tomorrow 3,4.
Poland
I:~News
13.
24 Plant pest
FIVE
CHANNEL
25 LaWman's
7:00-Bozo the Clown (c)
slalwl
7:30---New Day (c)
symbol
a:OO:...Outdoor SpOrtsman (cl
Reach
8:30---Rex Humberd (1:)
9:30---Wyatt Earp
10:00-700 Club ( cl

· ~~~~

H

· Something advantageous, but
quite unexpected , may

,,! ,'

o f nice la ying f en ced la nd , 5
room r enova t ed home, 2
Br s . ·modern bath , mod .
ki t .. gas F.A. Furnace and

suddenly pop up.
SCORPIO (Oct. . 24·Nov. 22)

toren ·

BEEr-.! ALL OVER 'THE
OH composer
;V\ASTER. OF MY lNIVEf&lt;SE. I HAllE::::: :::;~t
&lt;;:---"I Nt:::Vt::K SEEN ANYTii lNG 1...1/&lt;E
note

ou tbids. $16,500 .
~EARLY 4 acres Has 2
sep tic tank s, c ity wate r , on

THAT!!-

124, iu sl off Rt . 7, On-ly
$8,500 .

For Thu.....,., Ftlb. 21, 1171

32 Kind of type

-+--lf---1

(abbr.)

35 II Astolat"

~A~HIUNAiiLt.

- j tlrS·.,
s1ea m heat, nice kit . la rg e
d ining , fu ll ba seme nt , and
view o f r ive r . $29.500 .
Country home Like n ew
3 Brs ., bath, utility , por ch ,
F .A . fu rnace and 1 acr e.

maid
3'1 Stallion's
mate

. 12 ACRES Cit y wa t er
and ga s. La rg e utility
building
fo'r
hobb y .
Renova1ed 3 s,- s . A sking

Is

LOOK &amp; SAVE

In lhe counlr y

COULDN'T

Another Money Saving Coupon For You

on hard r oa d . drilled well
a nd septic tank .

-.. ...----..:....'--~
... . . .......

OLD RESIOENTER Bea utiful 1 acre. Good 5
br s, &amp; "'2 bath s. Nat . ga s
f u rn ace. Good g ar d en

COUPON

Good through
Fen . S, 1976

gro"nd S35,000.
157 ACRES - Large older

=-+-+---'-il---1

t;-;--f--t-t--i

TAURUS (April 20,Moy 20)

._...__..__.";:;!1

Today, you can work your way
around conditions that have

flood . Only 18,500.
WE ARE SE LLER S OF
GOOD PROPERTY. CALL
US TO SEL L.

..... ..

WORTH

•3..

KBVMNBKVRXH
MBW

.KHWN

GFHW
BK

R

KFN
TRVH

·d!ii~Jtl I

'

SERVICE ACUT ABOVE THE BEST
e 3 NIASE Certified Mechanics

.•••' •.
'

I

e Very Friendly People

•

H~

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc. .
DO BUSINESS WITH A LEADER

'

SOO E. Main St.

Ph. 992-2174

JH

NMH

XFN

FZ

LEO (Julr 23· AII!I- 22) You'll
gel surprising cooperation to~
day If you are the first to show
you 're willing to compromise.

TMBTIW . - IRMXBX VIRGO (Aug. U·Sopt, 22)
Frivolous activities are likely to

Use of this Coupon

e 20 Years Service MJtnagement EKperience.
e All Work Guaranteed
e Reasonable Rates

WXRUHCE

things 'have been a trifle boring
lately, get In toUch with that
friend who always has
sOmething Interesting afoo~ .

VBJCRK
be a drag on you today. Turn
Ye~~tenlay's Cryptoquole: MY FATHER WAS NOT A your attention to more In - ·
FAILURE. AFTER ALL, HE WAS THE FATIIER OF A dustrlous productive pursuits.
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. HARRY S. LIIIRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 23) Con-

SpeciaL .liO.SO Plus Freon

.___,..-

I

1\IMH

B N W

Keep watching our ads for more money.saving coupons, ,
coming your way weekly.

·or Month

GEMINI IM•r · a1-Jun1 20)

CANCER (June 21-Julr 22) II

SRIH

' • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • fjl\('jlljjll'..:.~. ·~1

Special Rates
by Week

LONGFELLOW

CRYPTOQUOTES

Includes: Checking Complete System lor Leaks
Add Freon il Necessary·
Check Air Condition for proper operation

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

the solutions are

You'll be easily mot,vated to~
day If you think In terms of personal gain . look tor unusual
opportunities to add to your
resources.

XHWN

Free Car Wash with

ROOITIS, '5.00 up

WHEN HElDLDYOU
I HADTW/Nll
AGAIN!

AJIYDLIIAAXR
One letter oimp.ly stands for another. In this sample A Ia
used lor the three L's, X lor ihe two O's, etc. Single letters.
ap01trophes, the lengUi and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the rode letlen are different.

Complete Air Condition Operational Check
Reg. Price ... Sll. SO

La Salle
HOTFI

PERRY 'TOLD ME 1HE:
PHONE: WENT DEAD

had you stymied . Apply
yourself there.

ON A

•'

hom e w i1h ba th , barn and
tra ctor land .. Som e t i mber .

EIELfEVE
'lOUR EARS,
. EH?'

'' '

•ARIES (Morch a1·Aprll 11)
Don't be disappointed today If
you miss on the first try. Your
second effort Is your best one.
The results should please you .

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

Only $19,500.

$29,500.
3 ACRES -

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY26, 1976

s

square .

i·

Channel 5.
7:00-Bozo the Clown (cl
7:30)- PPHS-Ripley Basketball (c)
9:00-8111 Cosby (c)
9:30---Wyatt Earp
10 :00-700-Ciub (c)

~~ ... ~'t~ll"

501 NYLON

$499

A

JUDGE? SfHnMEMT

Carpeting

CO NSTRUCTIO N,

P A PER h a ngi n g, pa i nti n g ,
panel ing , etc
Phon e 949

AMMIII:-PAVIII:

'l,-----------...,
LET US DO IT!!

fr ee estirnafes , Greg ~oush .
997 7583 ,
2 18 12tc

LU CKE TT Fa rm Eq uip m ent,
west
Washington
SL,
A. l bany . P hone (6r4J 698 3032
or 698 788 1.

LITTLII:

OP ENE D! ! ! Hun t's Pet Shop ,
2' ~
miles no rtheast of
Chester , Ohio on R t. 2&lt;1 8. We
sp ecia li ze in t·rop ica_l fiih
&lt;tnd supplies . Sp eci al s a'tt
th is week!
2 2s '6_tP

I F INTERE STED in building
a -ne w nome . con t ac t

ROU SH

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

or 843 -2667
2 19- 1

__

Movie " Inside Daisy Clover•• 10; Janakl 33.
1:00-Tomorrow 3.4; News 13.

....

F r om a shelf to a house, all
typ es of building and
r e modeling
from
the
foundation up. Addit ions,
carpeting, pamting , siding ,
roofing , pan eling , paper
hang ing etc .
941} - ~0 23

Movie "Str ange

Homecoming " 6, 13; Mov ie ''Kelly's Heroes" 8;

ii\

CONSTRUCTION

Ph .

II ; 3D-Johnny Carson 34,15 ;

agine tens of thousands of bid·
tAKJ 9753
ding sequences. Some people
may ev.e n stop short of a slam .
WEST
EAST
Others will double thei r opponents so mewhere along lhe
¥AKJ 9H3 .Ql08642
way.
The one thing we oan be cer·
• Q 10 8 6 4 2
to A K J 9 7 53
tain
ol is that. irrespective ol
SOUTH fD I
who
gets to bid first the side
·
loA KJ96~ 3
with the spades is likely lo
wihd up playing the hand and
tQ108'642
il they ge t , pushed into seven
they are likely to be doubled.
Both vulnerable

m;

fi.!"PI.A'IS ARE

D&amp;D

'
EX CA ~ ~ T~ N G ~-- ;;z-; r ,

H OME for sale , spacio us
living room , di n ing room . ·2
h cdrooms , la r-ge kil ch CrL
1 ~1mi t y
room. n ew bath .
P ho n e -997 7394 .

Brs ., 2 ba1hs, ci ty wate r
a nd ga s. Corner lot ou t of

Gallipolis, Ohio

' , . . . . . - - - - -r - -·

R.!;PI.A~' ~T&lt;;
F.&amp;.l$ 1

Ph . (614) 985 -4102

"

ACRES , 7 roorn house ,
natur al gas , ci t y wate r ,
tarqe ba r n Phone 992 5058 .
7 24 Sic

lois Pauley
Branch Manager

RIVERSIDE
AM C.JEEP

' iio'ltN LOSER

l.eT'o1 Wi'.T(,fl lAAT
Alo/&gt;.JtJ OtJ lf.l'7111N1

BISSEll BUILDERS

-·------

Middleport, 0. • h, 9t2 -2771

446-5189

WANT TO

Modern

REM~DELING ,
Plumb ing.
heatmg an d all t ypes rJ f
general
r e p air .
Work
guaranteed . 20 years ex
p erience . Ph one 992 2409 .
5 1 lfc

ACRES on Sal e m
St ,
Rutl-and , sm all pond , o ld
hou se, all f e nced in Ph on e
7.1] 7784.

160,000 .
NEW LISTING - 8 rrY's., 4

'C.B.' SPECIAL

toQ108 ~ 42

Me!

D &amp; D

···-·- ·-···-

shown in the box.
Then , anything can happen

NORTll

·Ph . 1}92 -3993
;:.
d 10 1 mo,a.•

EXCAVAT I NG , dozer, loa"toeo and b a ckhoe wor k ; sep tic
la nk s
insta lled ;
d u mp
tr ucks and lo ·bov s tor hire :
will haul f i ll d ir.t , to p soil ,
limestone and gravel. Call
Bob or Roger Je ffer s, da y
phone 992 7089 , night ph one
992 3525 or 992 5232 .
7 11 tf c

Rul Esbte tor Sale

CONTACT:

MEDICAL

Condilloner
Model UCXXX,
210,000
. Weekly Grain
Capacity

·Mobile Homes For Sale
]4 )( 70 MOB I LE HO me , tota l
0 1c c :'! 100 ce ntra l ai r co n
rlilionv r . cx~elle nt con
dition . Pnone 2d7 26 84 or
2-H 266&lt;1
2 74 1tc

WANTED

LARRY
LAVENDER .::
Syrac;use, Ohio
•;.

MODERN CHEMICALS
100 K e r,- Street ·
Pomerov , Ohio4S169
U14) 992 -27'113, Dii::k Sevier
1 29 -1 mo .

O'DELL Alinement located
b ehi nd
Rut l and
Grade
Sc hool . Tuneup , brak es.
whe_cl ba l an ci n g , alinemenL
Phone 74 2 200.&lt;1
1.1 16 lie

77

Freakish new deck slam

'

EXCAVAT tN .G , BACK H OES
A ND DOZER . LA RGE A ND
SMALL , SEPT I C TAN KS
IN S T ALLED .
BI LL
PULLINS . PHO N E 997 2478.
D AY OR N IGHT
2 22 521p

8

StOtNG -SOFFITT
GUTTERS- AWNINGS •

We Buv Antiques

C. BRA Dr.ORD. Auc tioneer .
Complete Service
Phone
949 2487 or .9J9 7000 . Ra ci n e ,
Ohio . Cr itt Brad ford
\0 9 li e

WIN AT BRIDGE

1'1,' l&lt;:lk!O OF AN X. tOUS MVSEL-F

TO 5EEc HOW WELL
llE·IINIIIIIATIN&amp;

ALUMINUM

FUR NITUR E
STR;IPPIPo.!G SERVIC E
Remo"a l
of
Pa in t s
Pla st ics - Varnishes , etc.
Wood or Metal.
Repai r s
R efi nishing of
Furn i ture .
Burnish in g Poli shin g ot
Co pper &amp; Brass

19 70 DODGE Challenge r , 10
m ,p.g, $850with stee t b et t ed
radia ls, $750 wi th glass •
belled tires . MuS! se ll
QUtC~Iy . Phone 99'1 6 t 69 .
2 24 5tp ONt:: A(t&lt;t::, 6 rms an d palh,
Rt . 3, Pom ~ r oy, Rose H ill .
1967 CH EVY 1 _, ton Pickup ,
Dick Dav is proper ty, f u ll
lo ng bed , $500 . Phone 992
basem e nt ,
alum i nu m RE ADY MIX CON~~e.~ ·
3684 .
siding , ps-neled . 'iilO,OOO . Ca ll
de l ive r ed right · to your
2 24 3tc.
Oak Hi ll 68 5 6576 evenings ;
project. Fast and easy . Free
Jackson '186 3004 days
es t imates . Phone -1J92 3284.
1973 MONTE Ca rlo , pow er
2 5 JOtp
Goegte in Ready M i )( 'C o .~
w indows an d Cloor t oc~s , air ,
Middleport , Ohio .
$3,000 . P h on e 99 2-2243 .
J "BR-"1=1vr~•o, 1usr t1ni sh ed
6 30 -t f c
2 25 6t p
remode l ing . Sa lem · St.,
Rutlan d . P hone 742 7306 ELWOOD BOWERS REPA I R
197 1 MONTE Ca rl o wi th air
alter d p ni . or see M ilo B .'
s weepe r s , toasters , irons,
and mags. $2, 000 . Phon-e 992
Hu tc hinson .
a ll sma ll applian ces Lawn
567 1.
10 9 ttc
m ow er . ne)(t to State H igh
7 22 dip
way Gdrage On Route 7 .
MODERN home in Chester , 8
Phone 985 3825 .
1963 CHE VRO L ET cab over
roo.ms , 2 bath s, 7 por ches.
4 16 t t c
truck ,
power
stee r ing,
1
sun por ch , ? basement , city
would make a good tog
and we ll water . natural gas, S EPT I C T A NK S c l e aned .
truck . First $ 1.200 takes it
g a rage . Priced to se ll .
Modern Sa n i tation . 992 -3954
L andm ark , E a st Mil i n St .,
Phone (61 4 ) 98 5 4102 .
or 992 7_3.:19 .
Pom er oy .
2 4 tfC
9 18 I fC
2 20 6t c

For Sale

tO SPEED bi c v c te. Exce llent
co n d ition, $60 . Phon e 99 2
5864 .
.
2 24 6tp

AO!i q ue

Free estimates on car p ef"i ng and installation.
We'll bring samples to your
hom e with no obtigation .
See how you can really
save. ·
M ike Young , Manager
Sales and Installation
Rt . 3, Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
Phone day or night
614 -99'2 -2206
) H _1 m o

196 3 FORD Ga lax it' , good
condition A lso. 196·1 rord
for parts . Both l or ')1 50
Phon e 16 1.1\ 985 J2Q,t
7 70 61C

Financing Ava ila ble •
Blown in to Walls &amp; Att ic:s
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOW S

. ,.

SLOAN'S
.
CARPETING

Realty~

-- ___________

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

4 speed , radio , w-s tires. like new 6. 000 miles, whi t e
finish

Strout

SEW IN G 01 ell I kinds . dres ~cs
for all occasi on s, sla c k s,
sh ir ts, ne wborn _layettes,
curt ain s, drap es . Phon e 992 3035 and ask for Dorothy .
2-19 -26tc
•
____.

N atha n Bigg s
Radiator Specialis t

S289S

Wanted To Buy

---"------~-~----

Siding - Vinvl
&amp;
Aluminum . Window Glass
&amp; Glazing . On the Job or in
Shop
P ick. vp and delivery
service .
Call Collect l81 -82J9
Sp ecialile
in
build - up
roo fing &amp; hot roo f s. Fre e
Estimates - 10 years ex ·
perien ce .
Har ve F errell
B i dw ell, OhiO
2 6 1 mo .

From th e largest Tru ck or
B1JIIdozer" Ra d iato r to the
smalles t Hea t er Core .

S269S

197S FORO PINTO

19 73 CH ARGER: S E . black
with white p in st ripes
$2 ,300. Phone 949 24 17
2 24 31p

WEDNESDAY , FEBRUARYlS, i976
1:3D-Lasl ol the Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Wild Wild
World of Animals 6; Match (;ame PM 8; Evening
Edl llon with Marlin Agronsky 20 ; The Judge 10; To
Tell the Truth 13 ; Wltd Kingdom 15; Book Beat 33.
8:3D-Li ttle House on the Prairie 3,4, 15; Bionic Woman
6,13; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8, 10; The Way It Was
20; Images of Alng 33, '
9_: ~hlco &amp; the Man 3,4, IS; Barelta 6, 13; Cennon
8,10; (;real Performances 33; Images of Aging 20.
9:30---Dumpllngs 3,4, 15;.
. 10:00-Petrocelll 3,4, IS; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13; Blue
Knight 8. 10; News 20; To Be Announced 33.
10 :30---Aimanac 20.
·
. 11 :00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15; ABC News 33.

Blown
lnsulatioll Services.'

HOME MAINTENANCE

4 speed tr ans, radio , good f ir es, green finish , low
mileage .

Au to trans . , radio , deluxe bumper.s
guards , good tires. grey fini sh.

f6 BAKER STREET,

FREE ESTIMATES .

Pt ex aglus - Tab te Tops •
M irrars - Storm &amp; Stre v ns .
FERRELL'S GLASS &amp;

S249S

--.,------

DAILY SENTINEL
111 COURT ST.

1974 OPEL MANTA CPE .

Trade

ADDRESS---------- Employment Wanted
PHONE ~--­

OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

For Rent

---··~---

RISE APARTMENT

Business Services

Pomeroy

-·

--

CIJY _ _ __

2 SIGNS

Television log for easy viewing

SHE LIVES ON THE

7fh FLOOR OF A HIGH
-I T SAYS HERE.

For Sale

Pets

....

l'(r

BEDRM
hom-e ,
iu s t
3 A N D 4 RM . f urni sh ed and 19 75 DA T SUN B2 10 Hat chback J fin i'shc d . r emodeling ; ~a t em
Separated?
with
st
an
da
,-d
transmission
unfurn ish ed ap ts . Phone 992 St., Ru tla nd Phone 742 230 6
and air con d i tioning . $3 . 300
5&lt;134
PWP inv ites you to come
after &lt;1 p .m . or see Milo B .
Ca ll 992 3453 .
11 -9-t f c
Hut ch ison
hear
7 lfi 6tc
9 23 tf c
R ~v. Pau l W. H awks
COU N T R Y Mobi l e
Ho mP.
" Person to Person"
Par k, Rt 3] , ten m il es n or t h
of Pome r oy .. Larg e lOt s wi th'.
Fr iday, Feb. 27 , 1976
c on cr ete patio s. sid ewa lks,
7; 30 P -11:'1 ·
runn e r s a nd ott street '~G R A PE F R UIT Pill" with
Diad a x plan mo re c on
Grace United Methodist
park ing. Phon e 99 2-7479.
venient than grap efru i t s
·
l'2 -3 t -tf c
Church
E at sat is f ying mea ts and
------.---- -·-----......o
Corner of Second &amp; Cedar,
lose we ig h t. N elson Drugs .
UNFURN
IS
HED
ap
t.
in
Gallipolis
2 25 lip
P omeroy 2 bedrm newly
--- -·- - - ' - - - -·-~
Open to th e ~ublic
608 E.
redeco rat ed, f ull y c arp ete d . L O SE weight with New Sh ape
Or Write to Box 312, Rio
Call in the early a .m . 992·
T abl ets and H ydrex Wa t er
MAIN
228 8.
Grande, 0 .
·
Pill s at
Dut t on
Drug ,_
2·22 -tfc
POMEROY, 0.
Mid'dl e po r t. a nd N ~ l son
- - - '-- ---'--'---.------Drug
~ MALL
e ff icien c y apt . for
277 ACRES - Hom e 3 BR
2 25 3t p
si ng le male occupant , no
ranc h type , ni ce k itche n Wanimals Phone 99 2-5786 .
1. 000 BALES o t hay . Ph onP.
ref. r an ge FORCE D A i,2-22 -6tc
Ha rold R o u sh , P ortland ,
l u rnace , l u ll basemen t ,
84 3 2255 .
ow n wa t er, ( t a p paid)
FURN I SHED
and
un 2 25 6t c
furn -ish ed modern apl. , 2
St orm doors &amp; win dow s, '
HO US E i n Ru t lan·d . Call 9"92
an d 3 bedrm s . , all elect ri c,
La rge ga r age W -wOrkshop .
GOO
D
h
ay,
never
we!.
Phon
e
5A'iB
br i ck bu i lding , deco rated
9d9 252J .
· Ca r por t. 'J tra iler ~ook u'p s.
l J tf c
plast ered walls', complete
'J 25 6tc
$28, 000 .
Youngstown kitchens, with
Ro.ute 143_:_ 11'7 Ac r es - 1
disposal units . storm door s P O R CH Swin '&gt;i, co mp lete be d ,
and windows , compl ete l y
BR.
ba th , own &amp; city wafer,
01
p lai n gu i tar and c ase , g irl 's
i nsulated , front a·nd r ear
garage , Cellar for fruit s.
2-4 " bi ke , Thre e 13 in ch tires,
entran ce, bf"a uti f u ll y la n d F OR sale or tra de for pic k up
wooden rock e r . d ishes o f art
landscaped . $8,300.
sc aped , p r i vate pa,-kin g,
of eq u al va l ue, a Gra vely
k ind s. Ca ll 7d2 2078 .
REEDSVILLE AREA special
low
rent.
The
Haven
tra c tor wi th atta chmen ts .
2 25 -4tc
Terrace
A
p
ts
.,
N
ew
H
aven
,
135
ACRES . M inerals , Cit y
Phon e 992 -736:;3..
w. VA, . Phon e CJO·Il 882
wciter avai l able . So m e
2-22 -4tp
19
74
75 T RIUMP H Tr ide nt
2433 .
2· 15-9tc
t i mber. Si23 .00 per acre
-~--'-- "'- --motorcycle , 2, 800 mit.es,
e)( ce lleht c ond i tion . $2, 000 .
POMEROY
La rger
ENJOY gra c 1ou s t1v 1n g at A lSo , 1966 v .w.-, good con
home, Has n ew siding ,
Village Manor in Mid :
d it ion a nd pr ice d to se l l.
turnacc, t ile &amp; pa neli ng ,
d lepo rt for as low as $130
PhOn e 9d9 -2133 .
per
month
wi t h
all
ca r pe tin g , storm door s and
I 25 4tc
20 HOR SE Merc ury or 25
u tili tie s
p ai d .
Th ese
w indo ws . 'J ca r ga r age.
horse Evi nr ude ou t boa rd .
:. MOB IL E hom es. gas an d
are bran d n ew high quatt1y
Low u tili ti es . $18, 500.
C.a ll 992 278 1 after 4 p .m .
water
pa id,
depo s it
apa,- t m en ts at prices you
2 24 Jt c
POMEROY 2 s lory
r equired . JOB P a ge St . .
c-an . afford . Yo Ur rent in lram e w ith al m ost new
M
i
ddl
eport
.
Phon
e
99'1
7tl
l
6
c lude s m o nth to mon t h
H OU SEBOA T in good con
r oo f . ·siding a nd cnr port. 3
2 2,t 6t c'
di tion . Ca ll collec t &lt;3 04) 727
l ea ses, all e te c . liv in g,
b edroOm s, bath . Sma l l
c arpetin g,
range
a ri d -·
8723, N i tro, W . Va . a ft E'r 7
f' t RCO
H e li I R C we ld ing.
p .m .
refrigerator: , free trash
ya r d , $8,000.
mac hine . new c l cc
.1 11
pickup, ca bl e TV at your
2-24 5t c
HOW TO SEL L YOUR
n ecessaries inclu ded Phone
ex p en se,
and
o n -s it e.
HOM E &gt;CALL US.
Q92 3-110
LI VE p1geons in good con
l a u ndry Uc l l i t i es . Con 992 -2259 or 992 -2568
10 2Hi f c
dition , will pay 50c apiece .
ve nientto shopping on Th ird
Phone 992 7687
an d M i ll St r ee ts in Mid dleport. See the manager at CUI\L FO R SALE . C/10 Coa l
2-24 4tp
Company, 1 mi le north o f
R i ver si de Apartments or
Ches hir e , on Rt . 7. P ick your
cal l 992 -327 3 . Furni s h e d
OLD t urnllu r e, ice bo)(eS~
o wn , $20 p er to n . Op en 6 Cl ays
apa r t men t s
a re
also
bra ss
b e ds,
old
wall
per week , or ca ll (6 1·11 367
·available
telep hon es and parts , o r
7330 for furt her info r m at ion .
comple t e h o usehold s. W rit e
2-2-78tC
'
1 8 7Atc
-- ------'-~----- -·-M . 0 . Mill er,
Rt .
2,
Pomeroy , Ohio . Ca ll 992
I NCO II;I'OR "TEP
7760.
COAL. li m es ton e a nd allty~es
ot sa lt and ro ck sa lt lor ice
10 -7.7 ~
NO. l68 .-- 36a ., 5 r . home,
and sn ow remov a l . E )(
A LUMIN U M b Uii"d ing 8 " x 8' x
ca rp e t e d , m od . ki1 ch en.
9 TO 10 f t dump b ed . Phone
ce lsior Sa l t Work s, East
6' in e xcell ent cond i tioQ ,
(61-t ) 367 "l-11 1
Main St ., Pomer oy, Ohio .
firepla ce, forced ai r fur . ,
$1 00. Phon e 992 -5786 .
Phone 992 -38 91 .
2 20 6t c
2-22 -6tc
fr .
ce ll ar,
sev eral
12-7-tf c
outbldg s., quiet cou ntr y
--~ - -..,....-~~CAS H paid tor· al l rna~ es and T WO c alves. mixed Here ford setting , $32,000 .00 .
c ow Wi th calL P hon e 843 F I REWOOD , phon e 949 2o89~
models of mobile homes .
Phone area co de 614 423
2353.
2 18 -12 tc
953 1.
NO, 140 - 1.72 a ., v acan t.
2-22 -Stc
---~
c
lear ed , good loc . for
4. 13-tf c
MOD E RN. Wl!ll nv t c o ns ol t!,
c ountry
home
or
A M . FM radio , 4 sp ee d
ONE kit ch en ca r t, on e Ken
.cha nger . Balanc e $ 101.1 0 or
recreationa l.
more aut o . w ash er , Norge
terms . Call 992 -3965 .
drye~;,
Magic Che f cook
P e ts To Give AWay
2 19 -tf c
s tove , d i n ette se t , dish
NO. 142 - 9.-4 a ., 6 i'. home,
-F REE to good hom e, t ema l e
ca bin et, Moto r ol a. b w t . v ., 2 -·.--=:::----"new
,-oof. be ing r e modeled .
'
M
c
D
A
NIEL
Cu
s
to
_m
Bu
t
.
part Beeg le dog , 1 yr . o ld ,
dr.esser s, d ishes, c lothing
lge . b a rn , garage, 2 a , la'ke ,
ch erlng, w est Columbia , w.
mLII"ed br eed p·u ps, 3 m on th s
and o the r h ous ehold it ems .
o ld . Phon e 7&lt;12 ·2960
va . We but cher c attle and
Phone 992 3090 or 99 2 2770 .
stoc k ed; several woo ded
h ogs .
S10
c attle
2 25 3t c
2 24 3t c
ac r es, good buy , $40,000.00 .
slaughter ; $7 tor hogs ; 12c
- - - -.--'---- -~
t or cutti ng and wrapping .
1967 CHE VRO L ET Bel ai r , 283
PET S TO GtVE A.tJiA,-y
25 a ., lge .
St ate and f ederal tn sp ected ; . NO. 144 eng in e; _Reg . Beegle pup s,
PURE BR ED Grea t Dane,
Open 6 days p er week .
counhy
hom e f
barn ,
H arle qu tn ro m an ce boo ks .
ma l e. 1 y r o ld . P hone 992
Phon e 1304 J 88:?· 3224 .
Ph one 949-28-49 after 6 p .m .
poultry house, other bldQs .,
38 32 or 99 2-2639, Meigs Co.
,..;..;
1-30-26f c
2-24 Jtc
$25,000 .00 . Owner w ill take
Hu m an e Societ y .
__,_,_
2-22 -6tc
land contract .
PER A, F armal l, n ew pain t
. : :;.;__--.-- ---- - -=::::::...-==-- SL!10.b,
n
ew
ballery
,
cult
ivat
or
.
P ets To Give . Away
804W. Main
f e rt i l ize r
at t ac hm e nt .
PUREBRED Grea t Dan e-,
Hi
llers
,
i·n
g
ood
condition
.
Pomeroy
992 -2298
fema le, 5 yrs . ol d . Ge n tl e,
Pri ce d to s~ ll . Phon e 949
n eeds good home . Call 99 2After Hours Call
226 1, Albe r t H ill. R acine
3832 or 992 -2639 , Meigs c o .
Ohio
'
9'12-7133
Humane Soc ie ty.
2. 24 6t c

For Sale

.,.

Auto Sales

Real Estate For Sale

Card of Thanhs

Middlepor t .

Auto Sales

SILENCE

,,

' I
o•

'

I

I

'

' '
Pomeroy , o. -1

l. HEAR ·TELL
TH' STORK

FLEW DOWN
1.{0RE CHIMBLEY
LAST NIGHT,
ARKV·-

'IE HEERED
WRONG,
SNUFFY

TRUMAN

(C) 1176 Klf!l . . . . . . . Syndl~at.e, Int.)

dllions In general should lm·
prove as the day prot:~resses .

You might feel slightly uncer·
taln about something until you
lace the challenge. Your
positive attitude will prevail.

BABITTARIUS (Nov, 23·0tte.
21) You're a pretty good investigator today. If there's a
situation you'd like to get to the
bottom of; start probing.

CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-Jen 11)
If you 're Inspired today to do
something thoughtfu l for one
you're fond o1, do so. It will give
you joy as well ,

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Feb. 11)
Restrictions that have stowed
you doWJl the past few days
should be alleviated today. especially concerning your
career and finances.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch 20)
.Something may occur tad&amp;~·
that you' ll find d isappointing at
tirst . If you study II mo~e
thoroughly you 'll see the 'brtght
side.

®~
Feb. 21, 1171

You m~;~y s"ee a .hoPed·for
return this coming year from
gomething you've devot&amp;d considerable effort to. What you
receive should be to proportionate your eHort.
tNfo:WSI'At•t-;H l-:N1't:HI' HISE AS.'iN . I

THI!i l!i

601N61b
TAKE A
UTTLi

PRAcnq

�H ~ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Feb . 25,1976

·

School hoard holds

Scranton subs v!!.~~~~~~~L ~!:M!~enler Building closed
by
bomb
threat
for Moynihan
WASHINGTON (UP! ) President Ford today announced the appointment of
former PeMsylvania Gov .
William W. Scranton to be
U.S. amba ssa dor to the
United Nations.
Ford, who personally made
the announce ment, said
Scranton has a "big job to
do " in defending the United
States "against unfair
attacks" in the world
organization.
Scranton, 58, will succeed
outgoing U.N. Ambassador
Daniel P . Moynihan who was
expected to attend the
ceremonial ahnouncement in
the Oval Office but had to bow
ou t in order to chair a U.N.

Security Council meeting
today.
Ford stood beside Scranton
and told reporters, "Let me
say how pleased I am that my
longtime friend Bill Scranton
is going to be the next
ambassador to the United

Nations."

"He is a personal friend
and a friend in many, many
other ways," he added.
He said Secretary of Slate
Henry A. Kissinger bad been
trying to get Scranton to lake
a diplomatic job for the past
seven years.
"He's got a big job to do
and great responsibility, "
said Ford.

(Continued from page I)
off the 1976 version of "Sell Ohio."
Goal of the Michigan foray was to obtain new automotive
branch fa ctories and expansions of existing Ohio plants to
bring more work to the Buckeye State.
CHINA HAS ANNOUNCED A NEW GOVERNMENT
PROGRAM placing heavy emphasis on agriculture over
industry. The move appears to be another political victory for
acting Premier Hua Kuo-feng. The program bore all the signs
of the thinking of both Hua and Chainnan Mae Tse-tung, who
have always emphasized the agrarian sector of the economy.
The development program is an apparent revision of a
plan presented by the late Premier Chou En-lai in a speech In
January 1975, in which he spoke of the need for a
comprehensive mddernization of China's economy - light and
heavy industry as well as agriculture. Th;lt program was
backed by Teng Hslao-ping, vice premier under Chou, who
apparently hes fallen into disfavor in the current revival of the
Cultural Revolution.
CINCINNATI - ARTHUR FLETCHER, assislant to
President Ford for urban affairs, says the administration will
turn to private hnsiness in an effort to help reduce the nation's
un.employment rate rather create public employm~~t. .
"I don 't think we'D try another Johnson administration
effort or a 'war on poverty.' The decision has been made to
revive the cities and we'll do it by the private enterprise
approach," he said . Fletcher was here Tuesday to address a
meeting designed for a background report on efloriB to
establish a Cincinnati bank controlled by black persons.

MEIGS THEATRE

FIREMEN.CALLED
The Middleport Fire Dept.
answered a call to Route 554
near Kyger at 2:10 p.m.
Tuesday to extinguish a
brush fire . Firemen were on
the scene about I 'k hours. At
10:04 p.m. Tuesday, the E·R
squad went to 137 Pearl St.
for Roy Sears, who was iU. He
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted.

Tonite fhru Thurs .

Feb. 25-26
NOT OPEN .

Fri . thru Sun .
Feb. 27-29
Walt Disney's

BAMBI
Show starts 7: 00p.m .

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Ronda!
Brwnfield, Ashton ; Luanna

Patterson , Ivan Newell,
Willie Star, Charles Wilson,
Mrs. Howard Smithson, Mrs.
George
Waugh,
Mr s.
Franklin McDad, son, all
Point Plea sant ; Robert
Wood, Long Bottom ; Dandra
Smith, Henderson; Mrs. Roy
Smith , Gallipolis; Ellen
Nelson , Glenwood;

News •• in Briefs

LEAGUE TO MEJ::T
There :.,ill be a' meeting of
th e Men 's M&amp;M Softball
League Sunday, Feb. 29, at 3
p.m. at the Royal Crown
Bottling co. garage on North
Second Ave. , Middleport.
Teams that wish to par·
ticipate are asked to have a
representaUve present.

. ADMITTED _ Char les
Bailey, Portland ; Ca roly n
King, Long Boltom; James
Eakins, Racine ; J essie Bush,
Long Boltom ; Deborah Ash·
craft, Coolville ; Violet Me·
Donald, Dexter; Keith Tyler,
Vinton; Chester Foully, Long
Bottom . Roy Sears, Middl rt ' ·
~CHARGED _ Dordy
Call, Grace Roch, Vera
Dr h 1
ee·

WEATHER
Continued mild today and
tonight. Lows tonight in
upper 40s. Cloudy, chance of
showers Thursday afternoon
or night. Highs will be in
upper oOs. Probability of ram
. 20 per cent tonight, 30 per
cent Thursday.

How rich
aren't you?

Mr s .

Danny Giliispie, daughter ,
New Haven, Mrs. Carl Hill,
Gallipolis; Mr . and Mr s.
Charles Durst, Lelart.
BIRTH - Feb, 25, a son to
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Baird,
Southside.

I Discharges, Fe b. %4)

.

Ruby Burton, Mrs. Charl~s
Conner and son,. Judy. Denms,
Mrs. Roger Gtlhland and son ,
Mrs. Grover Gtllum and son,
Betty Goff, Mrs. John Hager
and daught er , Ktmberley
Hammond, Helen Headley,
Lame. Howard, Mary Hysell,
Debbte John son, Lmes
Kingery . David Lovejoy,
Irene Maynard , Henry
McCoy , John McDamel ,
Samuel McKinney, Barbara
Null. Eul a Park, Lois
Peoples, Juanita saunders,
Nellie Sayre, Mary Shrop·
shire, Minnie Stover, Mrs.
Mi chael Warrens and
daughter.
1Births, Feb. 211
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Fir·
man, son , Patrlot ; Mr. and

Mrs . Elmer
Gothard ,
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs . James Malone, son,
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Rose, son, Jackson ; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry L. Spires, son,
Jackson.

PEKING (UP!) - Former
President Richard Nixon
today strongly denied he
intended any direct or
implied
criticism
of
President
Ford
and
Secretary of SIBle Henry
Kissing er in remarks he
made
at a welcoming
" Americans still have big
banquet
here.
hearts."
In
his
Sunday
night banquet
That's the conclusion of
toast,
Nixon
said
, "There. are
Gerard Seton, pastor of the
of
course
some
who belteve
Pom eroy Seventh-day Ad·
that
the
mere
act
of signing a
ventist Church when people
of
principle
or a
statement
began
ca lling
his
diplomatic
conference
will
den omination 's wor ld
bring
inslant
and
lasting
headquarters . They wer e
deluged with hundreds of
telephone calls fr om would- Everybody come!
be adoptive parents of
Guatemalan orphans.
The Middl eport Citiz ens
The telephone lines began Recreation Committee . will
to bw-n ·shortly after a news hold a public meeting at 7:30
story appeared stating that p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 25 in
representatives of the the old coun cil chambers of
chur ch '.s relief progr am, Middleport Village Hall to,
discuss Railroad Days, Bi·
Seventh~ay Adventist World
Services (SAWS), reported Centennial , and other ac·
Ute Guatemalan government ti vi ti es for th is summer .
was strugglin g to kn ow what More citi zen mvolve!Jlent is
to do ·with some 3,400 infants needed, th commit tee
and· children orphaned as a believes and the public is
invited .
result of the earthquake.
The church is not set up to
give this kind of assistance MEETING SET
brin gin.g orphans and
ROCK
SPRINGS - Area
volunteer parents together .
high
school
and college age
Furthermo're. th e U.S.
students
and
their parents
Government would need to
are
invited
to
attend a
take special action before any
meeting
to
learn
delails
of an
children could be brought into
European
summer
study
tour
this country for adoption.
at
Meigs
Hi
gh
School
at
7
"SAWS is doing everything
p.m.
Monday.
The
meeting.
possible to help with the
feeding , clothing and healing will be in room 202. Anyone
wishin g additio nal in·
of the Guatemala victims .
. The church has a team of . formation prior to the
physicians and nurses fr om meeting may call 992-2158.
-its Lorna Linda University at
work in Guatemala. and has
provided thousands of meals

Americans are

· apparent still

since the first quake struck,
as well ·as tents, blankets ,

Too late
to classify

lanterns and clothing . The
financial investment to date
on the part of SAWS is well
over $150,000.
Citizens of the Meig sMason area have had a part
in the Guatemalan relief
through contributions to the
annual Christmas
Inga thering Appe al sponsored by the Adventist
Church, Seton said.

Card of Thank s
WE WI S H to ex p ress ou r
sin ce re th an k s to our many
friend s
a nd
n eighbors
dur ing th e d ea th of o ur
fat h er , Otis A rn ot l. To th e
Ewing
F un e ral
H ome ,
Ra ci n e Em erg ency Squad ,
pallb eare rs and for th e f oOd
and beautiful fl owe r s , R ev
Co ff man for h i~ consoling
words , a ll who he lped in any
way , it was g r e atly ap
p re c1a ted .
·
The A rn ott Family
2-25. ltp

United Pr01alulel'IIJitlonal
· KWEILIN CHINA - FORMER PRESIDENT Richard
Nixon today r~fused to comment on criticism by poUticians in
the United States on his current visit to China. Nixon stared
blankly at reporters who asked him for comment on highly
critical statements by Sen. Barry Goldwater, R·Ariz., and
others regarding his eight-day visit to China to commemorate
the fourth anniversary of his 1972 trip to Peking as president.
That visit opened the door to Sino-American relations after
almost 25 years of hostility. The f~r President paused
briefly, then rushed brusquely past reporters aft~r they
confronted him on his arrival from Pelting at this scenac south
China city, the second st~ of his three-city tour of China.
Later, one of his aides, John Brennan, told reporters who
asked him if Nixon would make any comment: "He would be
stupid to say anything."

George Johnson died Tuesday

No harm intended
says Mr. Nixon

Big hearts of

Rhodes criticizes Assembly,
wants $129 million funding

(Continued from page I )
would be suspended and they must leave the school grounds .
He dld tell them first to call their parents, to which a student
agreed that he did advise them to call borne.
RACINE - Bobby Ord , and three deputies from the
The students were told they have rights if they follow the
Superintendent of Southern sheriff's department checked
rules.
local School District, said the school but found nothing .
Roonie Salser commented that he believed in discipline
Ord said that there are no and education and had faith in the board members.
today that he was called by
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach classes at the high school
He observed that he would send his children to school
•at 2 a .m. today and told that today , however , he and under the rules laid down by the board and he added "I have
the sheriff had received a call Adams were to return to the nothing against young people." He also commented that 20
that a bomb had been placed school at II a.m. today to , years from now the student would come back to thank the
in the high school.
make another check. Ord board.
,
The caller told the sheriff stated that classes will
Gayle Price said that the board is setting a good policy
he had been in the service and resume tomorrow. Ord ex- and, " You are sticking a pi,n in them ."
was familiar with explosives; pressed his thanks to Sheriff
He fw-ther noted that he was surprised that there were not
the bomb would go off when Hartenbach and his officers more people in attendance speaking up for the board . "A child
school began today.
for their assistance.
shouldn't expect a teacher to sit on him like a baby," Price
Ord , Jim Adams, principal,
argued .
Dan Smith told .the board it was doing a good job and
Adams was doing a good job but needed help . He told the board
to hang in there, you are doing a good job." Applause
.
WEST COLUMBIA , W. Va.
Funeral services will he followed.
Mrs. John Davis stated that if students L'OUid not follow
-George Johnson, 82, West 1:30 p.m. Thw-sday at the
Columbia, died Tuesday in West Columbia U. M. Church rules now they certainly could not later on.
At this point the two hours were up and Ord ended the
Holzer Medical Center. He o(which he was a member .
was a retired employe of the The Rev. 0 . B. Hatcher will meeting. Each board member made a statement.
Bostick, as stated earlier was not going to hack down on
New York Central Railroad officiate and bw-ial will be in
at the Hobson yards and a · Ute Suncrest Cemetery at the rules . Sayre, said, "We have a great nati'on and want to
carpenter.
Point Pleasant. Friends may stand up and do what is right"; Evans, "Love the school and
call at the Foglespng Funeral district and respect the people in the area"; Dallas Hill stated
Home in Mason after 2 p.m. that he thought as much of everyone in Southern District and
today. The body will he taken he was a promoter of education,. and Roger Adams commented
to the church one hour prior that he has lived under a lot more strict rules aud he was
going to stand by the rules the board had agreed on.
to services .
He was born Dec. 8, 1893, at
Letart Falls, Ohio to the late
Jacob and Mary Katherine
Chapman Johnson. Sw-vivors
peace. This is naive."
include his widow, Maggie M.
Some news reports (not Johnson, six daughters, Mrs.
UPJ ) interpreted that remark Doris Roberts and Mrs .
as a cr iticism of some Pauline Cu nnin gham,
(Continued from page I)
poli cies of Ford and Mason; Mrs. Mary Capehart,
A contrast in th e sales tax
Kissinger , with particular Mound sville; Mrs . Ruth collections of Meigs County is came her believing that if we
reference to last summer's Cuber, Toledo; Mrs. Georgia shown in the monthly report could achieve 40 per ce nt of
Helsinki conference, at which Shumake, Denver , Colo.; and of Mrs. Gertrude Donahey, tl1e votes. it would make us a
a number of documents Miss Lorna Johnson , West state treasurer, showi ng viable candidate. II ' it conrelating to East-West detente Columbia ; fow- sons, Dana general reta il sales tax tinues the way it is , we of
were signed by the United and Earl , of Mason; Alton, receipts as being down 18.08 course have far exceeded our
States , the Soviet Union and Chester, W. Va., and Don, of pet. and automotive sales tax expec tations."
other countries.
West Columbia. He is also increased 46 .26 pet . m
Ford went to bed without
Referring
to
that survived by one brother, January this yea r , compared
iss
uing a s tat eme nt. But
interpr etation, Nixon said
Oscar Johnson, Clifton ; two to January , 1975. ·
Stuart
Spencer, one of his
"My God, I've made that
General sales tax re ceipts
Mrs. Carrie Gibbs ,
campa
ign
aide s , said
statement more than a dozen sisters,
Athens , and Mrs. Esta R~ush , in January, !975 amounted to publi city ab(lut the Nixon
times. That could apply to the .
Portland ; 26 grandchildren $61 ,383 .82 cq mp ared to
U.N. charter or the Shanghai and 22 great-grandchildren. rece ipts of $50 ,227.44 in China trip had hur t Ford. " If
communique or any other
January, 1974 . In .January, President Ford loses in New
documents. I used· that A son, Ralph, a daughter , 1975 auto sales tax receipts Hampshire, Ri ch ard Nixon
Leah Nell, preceded him in
thought in a general death.
amounted to $18,601. 07 ·while wiII he the reason ."
· context."
the receipts for Janu ary . this
For th e Republicans, the
Nixon's rerharks on his
TWO GIVEN AID
year. totaled $27.206.59.
look s long and hard ,
battle
toast were relayed to
Two calls were answered
perhaps
i-ivallng the 1952
reporters through one of hls Wednesday morning by the
str
ugg
le
be twe en Dwight
aides, John Brennan.
Racine E·R squad; at 3:30
Eisenh
ower
and Sen. Robert
and
at
7:40
a
.m.
to
pick
up
The former president a.m. to Route 1, Racine , for
Taft
that
went
all the way to
Etta
Mae
Hill,
ill
at
her
visited Tsinghua University Maxine Sellers, a medica l
th
e
GOP
National
Co n·
!Wcine
home
,
atld
transport
today and saw wall posters patient, w~o was taken to
ven
tion
.
her
to
Holzer
Medi
cal
Center.
criticizing Vi ce Premier Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Teng Tsiao1&gt;ing, the man
who served ·as host dw-ing
President Ford's vi sit to
China last December.

People buying
more cars now

WASHINGTON - ACTING ON ORDERS from President
Ford, Agriculture Department officials plan to annoWJce
regulations for sweeping refonns In the food stamp program
without a new law. The proposals, anticipated today, are
expected to follow the general outlines of a bill approved by the
Senate Agrlcultw-e Conunlttee Wednesday. But they
reportedly will go beyond the congressional plan In tightening
eligibility rules for the S5.6 billion stamp program.
The outlook for the administration's propo68ls, however ,
wu clouded by threats of court action. Officials of the Food
Research and Action Center of New York said earlier they
would seek to tie any new administrative propo68ls up in court
until Congress could complete action on its own food stamp
bills.

Ford just

COLUMBUS - THE OHIO Senate baa unanimously
passed and sent to the House a bill naming the nursing borne at
the Ohio Soldiers' and Sailors' Home in Sandusky the "Robert
T. Secrest Nursing Home" in honor of the retiring state
senator from Cambridge. The bill, spo1110red by all senators
except Secrest, was adopted during an emotional portion of
Wednesday 's floor session.
•'There i.s no one In the House or Senate wbo bas done more
for the soldiers and sailors than Robert T. Secrest," salt
Senate president Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek of the veterat
legislator who served three terms In Congress and has been b
the Ohio Senate since 1969. "You could name anything for mt
- a dam or a lake even the Capitol - but nothing would mear
as much to me as' this,. ' said Secrest, who dabbed at his eye!
with a handkerchief following a standing ovation and passagE
of the biD . Secrest, 72, Is retiring at the end of this year.

MONTHLY FINANCIAL

STATEMENT

Special Purchase and Sale

Prescribed By Th e
Burea u of Insp ec tion
and SuperviSIOn of
Public Offic es

Bala nces Dec . 31, 1975
C ou n t y Ge ne ral
$26 ,082 .53
Oog &amp;Kcnnel
~ . 1 88 . 74
Boar d of E duc at ion
64 ,450 J6
Me ntal Re tarded
10,71 7.20
Eduation

Home

l mpro, eme n t
32 1. 79
Meigs Co unf y Alcoholic
Program
2.095 49
Food Ser v ice
i , 180 .87
U n d . Ci gar ettes
74 ~ . 90
U n d . Gener al R eal
Estate
183. 021.10
Und . Trailer Ta x
5. 9.66,66
Und . General P ersona l
Tax
1,894 40
U n d. Genera l Classi fi ed

Tax

Judge John C. Bacon announced today he wifi be a
candidate for reelection to
the Meigs County Common
Pleas eow-t for the term
commencing January, 1977.
Judge Bacon opened law
offices in Pomeroy in 1948;
conducting a practice until a
brief tenure as Probate Judge
and appointed by Governor,
now Chief Justice, C. William
'O'Neill, in 1957 as Common
Pleas Judge .
In active practice Judge
Bacon served fow- years as
Prosecuting Attorney, and
Ute Villages of Pomeroy and
Middleport as solicitor. A
Navy Veteran of World War
II, he graduated from George
Washington Law School,
Washington, D. C., where he
was student editor of the Law
Journal.
A past pre ~ ident of
Pomeroy Lions, Middleport
Rotary, past commander of
Meigs Disabled Veterans,
past master of Pomeroy
Lodge 164 F&amp;AM, Royal Arch
Masons, Bosworth Council
R&amp;SM, Judge Bacon is also
affiUated with Ohio Valley
Commandery, Shrine's

~urnlshlngs .

Annex

9 45

Esta t e Ta x Char ge 10 1,883 84
Revenu e Sh aring
f2,173 .80
Loc al Gov ' t
I n t an gibl es
46,710 .99
Public Ass is tan ce
52,889 .69
Cen tral Hos pita l
157. 29
I nsuran ce
Colonial I nsuran ce
6.00
52 .90
Globe lr)surance
51•i. 04
State Income Ta x
Publ ic Employees
R eti r e . System
7, 174.03
Crippl ed Chi ldren
641 .68
So l i Conservat iOn
1. 436.31
Uncla im ed Money s
12,581.95
Memorial Bld g Bond
Retire .
19 ,605.52
Vetera n s Mem . Hosp .
F a c ilit ies
239 .08
Tu berculosis
13 ,294.93
Workmen 's Comp ensat ion

74.65

THE INN PLACE
THURSDAY NIGHT

SPECIAL ·'

They've been adding
to their piggy bank.
Watch your savings grow too! With a
sa vings plan from The Racine Home
Nat ional Bank.

A Home Bank
For
Meks County
People

RACINE

HOME NATIONAL

BANK

RACINE

OHIO

;.

Visit Our Salad Bar
Cabbage &amp; Ham
Potatoes
Hot Rolls
Coffee. Tea or Milk

•2.95
plu s t ax

The Tri -County 's

Mo~t

Exciting Night Spot

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 91'2-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

f"! eal Esla te

A5sess m ent
Adv . Re a l Esia t e
Rio G rand e Co ll ege
Landfill
C ETA .
J uv . Probation

Jail Renovation
M en! . R et. T .l
C E . T .A.
E E A

2,074 .85
9.90

.0.

5,225.26
2,540 . 19
5, 635 .35
4,05 1.30
3,892 .02
1 !.559 .33
473 18

Assess ing Real
P 'r op .
20 ,000 00
Total
636,089 19
Balance Less
.
Overdraft
590.100 .18
Outstanding warrant
AccoUnt
25~.450 . 64
To ta l
849 ,550.82
County Treasur e r
12,836·11
County Depository 836,714 .71
Tota l
, 849,550.82
OverdTafts
D P.t:. 31. 1975
Auto Li ce nse &amp;
Gas .
43, 175 .95
~ - 1, 4£1! . 4~
Bd Of Hea t It"\ ,
- 57 .00
State
.. 409 .65
Cervical Can c er
Cen tral H ospi tal
- 133.35
I nsuran ce
Payrotl T ax
- 784 .61
- 45,98 9.01
T ota l
Au d itor ' s Offi ce
M eigs County ,
Pomeroy , Ohio ,
Jan uary , 1976
IT
I S HEREB V CER
Tlf t to That the for egoing is
a tru e an d a cc ura le statem ent
of
lhe · fin ances of M eigs
County , Oh io. tor lhl' tn Orllh Of
December , \ CfH, showing th e
balance on hand in each fund
~nd ac c ount at th e beginni n g
of the m onth , th e amoun t
re ceive d to each , t he amount
disbursed fr om eac h , th e
balan ce r emai n ing to the
c r edit at each . and th e ba lan ce
of mon ey in the treasury and

~~~~~~deposilorv Ho:0~'9~c~~~~\
" ' 7'.. li e

r

Auditor

- WASHABLENON-SLIP-FRINGED

•

By Bob HoeHich
Me igs County, through
cooperation of the Meigs
CoWJty Commissioners, the
Meigs County Sheriff's
Department, and the Big
Bend Citizens Band Radio
Club this week put into
operation a channel 9
emergency radio monitoring
station.

cases .

Since the Supreme Court
has inaugurated close
superintendence of the Ohio
lrlal courta, Judge Bacon has
been awarded annual commendations for outslandtng
judicial service.

70x40 Slze ..............Sale 8.99
70x120 Size ........... Sale 7.99

Another threat
RACINE - Jim Adam~.
prineipal al Soulhem High
School, reported today the
sehool had lis s..,ond bomb
threat this morning.
Students were evacualed
In a lire drill and the
building was searched by
the Meigs Counly Sheriff's
Dept.
There was no
evidence of a bomb.
' Classes were resumed
following the search.

. · Weather

70x90 Slze ... ~·····•····Sale 6.99
60x70 Slze ............... Sale 3.99

.

On Sale At The Home Furnishings Annex
~

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

WIRE MISSING
Pomeroy Pollee are investigating theft of a roll of
barbed wire and possible
breakl~t~~and enlerlng of the
Modern Supply, Wut Mala
St., overnight. The wire 'II'U
taken from a atorage area
outside the store buildl~t~~ . It
Is believed that enlrance was
not gained to the Inside of the
store.

SHOP ENTERED
A breaking and entering
was reported at the Fife Gun
Shop at the . corner of Third
FIRE PUTOUT
Ave. and Hamilton St.
The Middleport Fire Dept. overnight.
was called to Shotgun Hollow
Road near Middleport at 9:46
LOCAL TEMPS
p. m. Wedneaday to ex·
The
temperature
in
tlngulsh a brush fire . The downtown Pomeroy a t II a.
department was on the scene m. Thursday was 65 &lt;leMrees
about an hour and a half.
under partially cluwl ~ .skit•s.
1

t

".

PRICE FIFfEEN CENTS

•
AEP will move river
operations. center to
site near Gavin plant

RUTLAND - Mrs. Tom were taken.
(Joann) Stewart reported
Entrance was gained by
today that person or persons prying iron bars off a back
broke Into Stewart's Gun window . Bruce Davis, .;:::: : ::; ::::::::~::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::~::;:;:; :;:; :; :; :;:;:; :
Shop owned and operated by Rutland Chief of Police and
Tom' Stewart, sometime · Herman Henry are inCloudy and cooler tonight,
Tuesday night.
vestgating .
Mrs. Stewart said ap·
lows
in the low tos. Fair
Mrs . Stewart said her
proximately S2,000 worth of husband was in the process Of Friday, highs 55 . to 60.
guns at the shop for repair moving his business from Probabll!ty of precipi,tation
Main Street in Rutland to 20 per cent today, 10 per cent
tonight and Friday.
their residence.

SAVE UP TO 40%

ELBERFELDS
IN
POMEROY
~~--..,;,.;;;,;;;,;;;.,;;;.;.;

Alladin Temple and the
American Legion . He resides
at Route 4, Pomeroy, with his
wile, the former Ora M.
Graham .
During tenure on the Meigs
CoWl ty Common Pleas bench
Judge Bacon has completed a
docket of more than 3,400
civil cases and · 595 criminal

enttne
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1976

Monitoring station in
service this ·week

Guns are' stolen

Use On Clairs, Sofas, Sectionals, Car Seats

'

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

AT THE MONITORING STATION of the new citizen band radio system established in
the offices of Sheriff Robert Hartenbach are seated, Becky Tannehill and standing, Juanita
Thomas, both dispatchers and Guy Hysell , president of the Big Bend Citizens Band Radio
Club.

JUDGE JOHN BACON

•

at

Judge Bacon·is
bench candidate

All-Purpose Furniture Throws

w ·ater Su pp l y

e
VOL XXVII · NO. 1.22

DON NELSON, MANAGER of the Tuppers Plains branch of the Pomeroy National
Bank, examines a display placed in the bank by Tuppers Plains-Chester •Scout Pack 235
this month in observance of National Scout Week. The display features articles made by
pack members dw-ing the year and includes such items as tomahawks , masks , toy boats,
Christmas decorations, beads and bird bouses. Cubmaster is Uoyd Brooks and den mothers
are Jean Smith and Sharon Heines with Ruth Brooks, Linda Edwards and Selma Call "
serving as assistants. ·

•

OOLUMBUS - THE OHIO HOUSE WEDNESDAY, with
21 votes to spare, overrode Gov. JI!Jilts A. Rhodes ' veto of a bill
Increasing dally jury pay from S3 to $12. The bl.partisan vote
was 81·10 with 60 votes needed to override. It wu the fourth
time th~ session that the House had overridden a
gubernatorial veto. But only once have both the House and
Senate agreed to override a veto of the same bill.
The bill Increases jury pay to a maximum of $12 and
doubles mileage rates from 5 cents to 10 cents per mile. lu hil
veto mesaage, Rhodes agreed that jury pay is inadequate, but
he said the flacal impact of bill on local government would
be too grest. Advocates ..ld much of the jury COlt could be
pall!led on to WISIIccessful litigants, except In cases where
delendanla are sent to prison.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Decembe r 197S

By LEE LEONARD
intended for the Department reopened an examination of
UPl StatebOUH Reporter
of Public Welfare in fi scal the state's $12.1 billion budget
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The 1977 for immediate use to for fiscal197&amp;-7'1 on a limited
office of Republican Gov. maintain
mandated basis last month after the
James A. Rhodes has asked programs through next June. administration complained it
the General Assembly for at
He also said at least $1 was underfunded.
least $129 million worth of .millioo should be furnished to
In his · letter , Moyer
supplemental funding , the Ohio Department of Com· assailed the legislative
harshly criticizing merce to cover examination Democrats for inaccurate
Democratic legislative of hanks and savings and loan r e venue
estimates.
leaders in the process.
associations.
" harassment " ·Of cabinet
The request was issued
In addition, Moyer said an members dw-ing the recent
Wednesday in a bluntly Wldetermined amount should budget
h earings,
worded seven-page letter to be provided the Department misrepresentation of
legislative leaders from of
Rehabilitation and administration requests and
Thomas J . Moyer, the Correction
to
support an "ilkoncelved" budget . .
governor's executive assis- expanding prison popuMoyer a lso defended state
lant .
lations.
agency heads for adhering to
Moyer
said
the
Moyer said the prison Rbodes' 2 per cent cutback in
supplemental appropriations, budget is underfunded by 40 spending. !Democrats have
chiefly a money transfer to per cent. A 40 per cent c 'o mpl ~ ined
the
finance existing public increase in the department 's administration is ordering
welfare programs, could be budget for one year would be cutbacks and asking for extra
supported with no increase in roughly $21 million.
money at the same time.
!axes.
Moyer 's letter was in re"The cabinet agencies have
He said most of the a ppro· sponse to a request from not only done an outstanding
priations could be made legislative finance committee job of tightening their belts,"
without reducing spending in chairmen las t week for wrote Moyer, "but they are
for
other government recommendations
on also providing a level of
programs.
supplementBI funding of state service at least as good, or
Moyer said the legislature programs.
better, than was provided two
should allocate $128 million
Majority
Democrats
(Continued on page 10)

The station located in the
offi ce of Sheriff Robert
Hartenbach, brings frequent
benefits to the people of
Meigs and Mason Counties .
Fires, traffic ac cidents,
situations
where
an
emergency rescue unit is
needed, highway directions

and other sudden problems
can be handled quickly and
efficiently by the use of the
;:;:;:::;.;:::::;:;:;;;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday
through
Monday, fair Saturday and
Monday bul a chance of
rain Sunday, mainly In the
southeast portion. Highs
will be in the 40s to the low
50s Salurday and Suadoy,
dropping to the 30s Monday. Lows will be In the 30s
Saturday and Sunday and
in the low 20s and teens
. Monday.
;::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::.;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::

citizens band radio through
direct contact with the
shieriff's office.
However, it is pointed out
that only through the
cooperation of residents and
citizen band radio people can
the station be a success. Due
wthe growing interest in CB
radios as a hobby, many of
the channels have become
heavily cluttered.
Sheriff Hartenb.a ch
therefore asks that all CBers
on the channels that neighbor
channel9, especially 10 and 8,
use courtesy in respecting the
national emergency channel
9.

The radio term , "bleed
wer", or signals from a
fr equency being received
over another frequency,
causes much interference. If
this problem can he CW'·
tailed, the monitoring station
will have the effectiveness
that it was meant to have.

Nixon party in K weilin
By CHARLES R. SMITH
UPI Senior Editor
KWEILIN, China (UPI ) Former President Richard
Nixon arrived in this scenic
southern city from Peking
tuday on the second leg of his
three-city tour of China.
Nixon flew the I, tOO miles ,
from Peking on a British·
made Trident belonging to
China's civil aviation fleet .
He was accompanied by Yao
Lien-wei, vice chairman. of
th e SIBnding Committee of
the
Na tional
P&lt;•ople 's
Congress and Huang Chen.

chief of the Chinese liaison
office in Washington.
It was raining lightly when
the plane arrived in Kweilin
and a heavy overcast
prevented NiXon and his wife,
Pat, from viewing rock
formations that make the city
one of the most beautiful
spots in China.
Chiao Hsiao-kuang, vice
chairman of the Kwangs.l
Reg ional
Revolutionary
Committee, led a group of
local offi cials who welcomed
thr~ fnrn~f' r

prcsirinnt.

I

POINT PLEASANT - The American
Electric Power System Wednesday an·
notinced it will move Its river transportation
operations center from Cedar Grove on the
Kanawha River to a new facility at Lakin Qn
the Ohio River near llere.
Peter R. Steenland, vice president · fuel
procurement, for the AEP Service Corporation in New York, said the · move Is
being made to keep pace with the AEP
System's growing requirements to move
large tonnages of coal to iiB power plants
along the Ohio and tributaries.
Work on the new facilities is expected to
take 18months and will he started following
approvals by the Corps of Engineers.
The site extends 3,000 feet along the
river just north of and on the opposite bank
from the AEP System's new 2.&amp;-million·
kilowatt General James M. Gavin Plant at
Cheshire, Ohio.
The new installation will incorporate
facilities and equipment to handle major
maintenance for AEP's present and future
river fleet, which by late 1977 is expected to
comprise 27 towboats and over 500 coal
barges. These facilities will .include a new
drydock, 90feet wide and 200 feet long, and a
new mobile crane. In addition, two smaller
drydocks wiD be moved to the location frorri

Lions learn of
improvements

Cedar Grove, approximately 20 miles
southeast of Charleston .
The office building will house the river
transportation operations headquarters,
including facilities for maintaining com· -.
municatlmi.S with AEP -river tows over the
length of the Ohio. It will also house a

machine an~ repair shop and storerooms.
· The present operations center in Cedar
Grove employs approximately 40 persons.
The new center near here is expected to
employ 50 people and up to 90 when fulL
operation is attained.
The AEP System at present has 15 coa1· ·
burning generating stations in operation and
several sites for potential power plants on
the Ohio River and its tributaries. Seven of
the existing 15 plants receive all or part of
their coal supply by river barge.
Steenland said the Lakin site was
se lected because of its central location
·among the Ohio River plants ·and its
proximity to the Kanawha R1ver . It IS also
closer by. about 80 river-iniles to the AEP
System's new coal-tran sfer facility under
construction at Metropolis, nl., where AEP
unit trains will deliver low-sul!w- coal from
the West for trans-shipment by barge to
power plants in Indiana and Ohio.

:::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:=:·:=:·:=:·:=:-::;.:::.:·:·:·

Dateline 1776
MOOHE'S CREEK,

N. C.. Feb. 26 Another contingent of
Americans led by Col.
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence ltichard Caswell
Andrews was guest speaker arrived at Moore's
at the Wednesday noon Creek and joined Col.
luncheon of the PomeroyMiddleport Lions Club at the Alexander Lillington in
Meigs Inn with the Rev. fortifying both banks
William Middles warth , of the slow-moving
president, presiding.
stream. The bridge
Mayor Andrews told Lions was
partially
Immediate projects of
Pomeroy VIUage are paint· dismantled and the
ing of trash drums red, white · girders greased to
and blue by the Boy Scouts, prevent the loyalist
repair of the viUage sweeper, Highland e rs
from
better supervision of parking crossing.
lots, and painting and
renovating of city hall.
Lion Boggess , 13 K
chairman of Albany, was a
guest. He announced the zone
Five defendants were fin ed
social will be in Athens.
and two forfeited bond in the
court of Middleport Mayor
$193,456 comes Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were Harley Saylor ,
65,
Middleport, $15 and costs,
in lor schools
disorderly manner ; Charles
Following deductions for Tyree, 19, Pomeroy, and
re tirement, the three Meigs Mi c hae l Smith, 19, Mid·
County Local School Districts dleport, $25 and costs and five
jail
sentences,
received $193,456.11 as the day
trespassing
;
Virgil
Phillips,
February payment of the
state school foundation 24, Shade, $10 and costs,
program according to State spinning tires, and Harold
Auditor
Thomas
E . Darst, 35, Rutland . $150 and
Ferg uson. Amounts received costs and three days in jail
by each distric l include for driving while intoxicated.
Forfeitin g bonds were Jack
Eastern, $39,620.38 ; Southern
Local, $41,045.04, lind Meigs D. Hendricks , 53, Point
Local, $ll2,790.69. In addition Pleasant, $300, OWl, and
the Meigs Coun ty Board of Gary· L. Queen, 24, Mid·
Education received a direct dleport. $25, failing to yield
allotm ent of $1~ .567 2r..
right of way.

being planned

Five are fined

'

Firemen
are busy
The Pomeroy Fire Dep
made four more runs Wet'
nesday to bri'ng the total thi,
year to 27.
AI 1:45 p. m. on Old Chester
Road ( the Dark Hollow
area ) a 1965 car owned by
Randy Riffle, Rou te 1,
Minersv ille, was demolished
by [ire. The 'fire started
arourid wiring , Chief Charles
Legar said.
At 5:05 p. m. the department went to the Manning
Webster famt of&lt; Route 33
where a quantity of hay
owned by Horace Karr , was
burning near a barn . The
department stood by· for six
hours to keep the blaze from
spreading to the structure.
Value 'of the hay destroyed
was ahout $1200, the owner
said.
Just after 5 p. m. another
unit of the department was
dispatched to Wolfe Drive in
Pomeroy to extinguish a
brush fire .
At 11 :30 p. m. firemen went
to the courthouse as they
were retur ni ng from the
Webster fire , A telephone call
has been received tha t a
bomb would go off in the
courthouse at I a . m. The
departments of Sheriff
Robe rt Hartenb ach and
Pomeroy Police searched the
courthouse . No bomb was
found .
)

~

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