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                  <text>14 _ The Po_meroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 10,1976
New
engine

iii'

Pre~~~ilJr~:::e~::mgJi:,

r!:lion of
;:;; being inefficient, overly e"P"nsive, a harrowing method
:;:; of selecting !he two main parties' candidates for the
;;:: highest office In this most powerful nation In whorld
.... his
~::
tory.
=;;;
Not the least of the signs pointing to this reputation is
=;=; the fact that the candidates, the voters, and the poor
:;;; citizens watchmg the boob tube to see wbo won, take It
';': forgranted that everybody connected with the outcome is
.;.; lying
.fo whit ,
8' - California'sei-Gov. Ronald Reagan spent upwards
;::: of $600,000, lost to Gerald Ford, and said, "We are
{ delighted." Thus, when he said a moment later, "We're in
:;; the campaign to the end," it should be read to mean he
;~; will drop out soon.
:::!
- Sen. Henry (Scoop) Jackson, who ran a distant
:;;; third In Florida behing Jimmy Carter and George Wallace
.;:; said, "We achieved all our goals."
=;:;
Wbo henceforth should believe Reagan or Jackson•
:;:;
Sadly eoough, the people still interested enough to
:;;; vote in llle primary elections - a figure constantly
;;;; shrinkffig - e"P"Ct their candidates to lie in campaign
:;:; matters and then blame them for not telling the truth on
:::: other occasions.

tried out
WASHINGTON (UP!) Rep . ilalph S. Regula , ROhio, says a new design
engine made at Canton, Ohio,
and now being tried out by the
Army prom1ses "impressive
fuel~aving
performance.''
The engine is made by
White Engines, Inc., Canton.
Texaco Inc. developed the
combustion system it uses.
Regula said Tuesday he will
work to promote use of the
enb~ ne in the United States.
The design allows the
engine to use a wide range of
gasoline octanes. he said, in a
fuel injection system called
"stratified charge." Willl the
engine, "It is possible to
obtain up w35 per cent more
transportation miles per
barrel of crude oil," Regula
said.
1
'The inJ ection system
burn s the fuel more
completely, which results in
lower emissions of exhaust
pollutants, thus benefitting
llle environment," he said.
Officials of White said the
engine can replace existing
engines in the Army's Jeeps.

f

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Americans eventually will give their Presidential ::::
;:;; primary system the old heave-ho. Until then, lie on, .:;:.
;:;: gentlemen.
.:;;

.\t.:::::·:~::::::;:;:·:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:::::;:::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::·:::::·:·:::::::::·:::::·:::·.;:::·:::·:::::·:·: -:::·:·:::).:

Local news in briefs
The Syracuse - Minersville
summer sports assn. will
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m.

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

t

History of old churches wanted

·',

~!o~~~:u;:~~lle:~::P~rsao:tory of Meigs

J

at the SyracUse Munic ipa l

Building .

All

parents,

coaches, and persons in terested in coaching a team
are yrged to attend. This
Includes all girls softball
teams, pee wee, little league
and pony league teams .

::1

defendants forfe i ted
:=: County churches 100 years old or older. A brief history of ·::!· $30Three
bonds In the court of
::: churches included In lbe listing will be needed. The ebarcb :;:: Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
structures, of course, do not need to he 100 or more, since ) Andrews Tuesday night.
;:;· many of the older churches In the eoonty have been :;;: They were Ror,ald Grady,
;::: housed In several buildings.
;:;: Racine, running a red light;
Everett Bumgarner, New
·:::
If yuur church fits into the category and someoae can '!:: Haven, W. Va ., assured clear
:;::supply llle historical background, please call 992-2156 or ;:; distance , and Ann Sarg:ent,
Rutland, failure to yield

'l

'!:. ~:,:~,~~:: ,:; ;:· ·: ; .; .;:;.;:; .,:;. ;.;:;.;:;:;:;:;.;:;.;.;:;.;:;:;.;: ;.;:;:;.;:;:;.;:;.;.;:;:;:;.;.;.;.;:;.;.;.;.;.;.;:;.;:;.;.;:;:;.;:;.: ~

'
Ohio Democratic
caucuses
are scheduled Thursday and
Friday this week at selected
places throughout Ohio to
conform to the guidehnes laid
down by the National
Democratic Party, E. A.
Wingett, Me!gs Democratic
chairman , said today.
Each candidate filing In
Ohio has scheduled a
statewide caucus to select 38
delegates on Thursday and
each congresswnal district

MEIGS THEATRE
Ton1fe thru Thurs. '
March 10-11

NOT OPEN
Fri. -Sun .
Mar 12-14
Hearts of the West
( Technicolor)

Star ring · Jeff Bridg es,
Alan Arkin, and Andy
Griff i th.
Show starts at 7. 00 p.m .

right of way.

The Middleport E· R squad

Democrats in
two caucuses

answered a call to Grant St.
at 3: 08p .m. Tuesday for Mrs.
Donna Russell who was taken
to Holzer Medical Center.

Dept. reported a car owned
by Sheila Arnold parked at
for Friday at 8 p.m.
fhe Chesler Church of God
Wingett said that a lOth , Monday had a CB radio stolen
district
caucus
for from II.
Congressman Wayne Hayes,
John Westbrook, Rt . 1,
a favorite son in the IOIJJ Rutland, appeared before
District, will be held at 8 Meigs County Common Pleas
Friday in the Olivedale Jydge John C. Bacon on Feb.
28, on a bill of information
Senior Citizens Center in and
pleaded guilty to charges
Lancaster. Four delegates of breaking and entering. AI
and two alternates are to be !hal lime he was remanded to
selected. The at-large the custody of Sheriff Robert
presidential caucus com- C. Hartenbach. On March 9
was
sentenced
to
mitted to State Treasurer he
Chillicothe
Correctional
Gertrude Donahey
as Institution not less than six
"favorite daughter" will be months nor more than five
held at the Rockside Exit on years .
I-77, south of Cleveland to
Lois A. Taylor. Middleport. ·
select 38 at large delegates filed suit for divorce in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
and 19 alternates.
Ronald D. Taylor,
Any Democrat in the lOth against
Middleport, charging gross
district, 18 or over, is invited neglect of d~ty and extreme
w participate in any one of cruelty.
the
numerous
caucus
Middleport mayor Fred
sessions. Wingett has a list of Hoffman
Tuesday night fined
these sessions several of Billy R. Ferguson, 39, West
which are to be held in CoiYmbla, W. Va ., $200 and
Athens. Anyone wishing to costs and sentenced him to
three days in jail on OWl
know the place of the caucus char.ges.
Tammy Tyree, 19,
for his favorite . candidate Mlddleport, $25 and costs,
may contact Wingett.
petty larceny ; Loretta Lane,
18. Rutland. $25 and costs,
Middleport, 10 days in jail ,
suspended, on a disturbing

FULL
SERVICE BANK

the peace charge, and George

McDahlel, 48, Middleport. SIO
and costs, disorderly manner

charge.
The Pomeroy

went

to

the

E· R unit

and

Funeral servlcH will be

I'LEASANT VALLEY
I
-· I
DISCHARGES :
Mrs .
MRS. SOPHIA THOMAS
years before his retirement.
CHESHIRE - Mrs. Sophia
He Is 5Urvlved by a son.
Danny Missen, Mrs. Adalya
Stewart, Mrs. Henry Hill, Thomas, 81 , Route 2. Charles W. of Route 1,
Cheshire, died Wednesday Ewing ton ; three stepsons,
John Gardner, Mrs . Ted morning
at the Holzer Emerson and Lawrence
M e lrose,
Marceline Le Medical Center following a Lambert, both of Route 1,
Ewlngton ; Lesler Lambert of
Schulb.aj, all Pomt Pleasant; lingering illness.
Mrs . Thomas was born Wilkesville; a daughter, Mrs.
Car rie Sue MarUn, Hen·
March 2, 1885 In Mason Mildred WhiHock of Denver,
derson ; Mrs. Deal Hunter, County,
W. Va .. the daughter Colo: a stepdaughter, Mrs.
Bidwell ; Glenn Lawson, of the late Artisan and Francis tVernle} Cottrill.
a grand·
Minersville; Mrs . Floyd Aimed Ia Sines Yeauger . She Wilkesville ;
Cars on, Middleport: Mrs. was also preceded In death by daughter, three great.
husband, Frederick grandchildren and 12 step·
William Powell, New Haven ; her
Thomas In 1957 ; a sister. a grandchildren.
Imogene Mohr, Henderson; brother and a granddaughter.
Preceding him In death
Surviving
are
two besides his parents and wife
David Somerville, Gallipolis;
Mrs . Emit Jeffers, Grimms daughters , Mrs . Charles A. were two sons, two brothers
MONITORS NAMED
Landmg; Mrs. Benny Adkins, (Phyllis) Sheets of Columbus and two sisters . He was af·
Riverby monitors for this son, Grimms Landing: Mrs. and Mrs . Guy (Rosella) llllated with the Christian
West Columbia ; Church.
weekend have been an. John Bush , Mason , and Mrs. Stewart,
Funeral services will be
three sons, John William
no un ced .
Sat ur day 's james
Stewart ,
West (8111) of Frederick, Ohio; held at 2 p. m . Friday at the
Charles A. and Rlchardo, of Wilkesville Chapel of the
monitors are Mrs . Daniel Columbia .
Route 1. Cheshire ; two Walker Funeral Home with
Whitely, Mrs. Tandy Simpstepsons,
Marion Thomas of Ralph Spires officiating .
Holzer Medical Center
son, 1·3 p.m .; Mrs. Ronald
Chesl'llre, and Benjamin Burjal will be in Vinton
1Discharges, March 9)
Calhoun, Mrs . Judy Evans, 3Thomas of Bell, W. Va .; 11 Memorial Park . Friends may
Mrs.
Warren Bayes and grandchildren and two great. callallhe chapel from 2 p. m.
5 p.m. Sunday's monitors are
Thursday until time of ser.
Mrs . Le o fy'tossman, Mrs. daughter, Shirley Boggess, grandchildren .
Funeral services will be vices. The family will receive
Enid
Brown,
Leota
Chaney,
Howard Saunders, 1-3 p.m.:
held at the Rawlings-Coats fri ends at the chapel from 2 to
Mrs . Charles Cornelius, Mrs. Mrs. Timothy Call and son, Funeral Home at 10 a. m. 4 and 7 to 9 p . m . Thursday .
Charles Gammon, 3-5 p.m. Bertha Craig , Elhan Davis, Friday with the Rev. Noel
Rom a
Fisher,
Lena Herrmann.officlating . Burial
be In Gravel Hill
ROY DAVIDSON
Foglesong, Margaret will
Roy Davidson, 67, of 1048
Ce metery at
Cheshire .
Francis, Samuel Gibbs, Jr ., Friends may call at the Marion Road , Columbus,
Kimberly G1lbert, Leona funeral home from 2 to 4 and tormer Middleport resident,
EXTEND Ell OliTLOOK
died Monday.
Hubbard
, Kathryn Johnson, from 7 to 9 Thursday.
Friday through Sunday,
Mr. Davidson was born
Ruth
Kirkendall.
Betty
fair Friday and Sunday and
Feb. 16, 1909, at Middleport,
Lemley, Mrs. Jess Louden
the son of the late Theodore
CLINTON H. CONGER
a chance of snow Saturday.
and
daughter, Wanda Miller,
Cl1nton H. Conger, 82, Rt~ I, and Ida Bell Davidson .
Highs will be In the 30s to
He was a member of the
Melody Morgan, Elizabeth Ewington, died Monday night
the low 40s and lows will be
at the Holzer Medical Cenler Brotherhood of Carpenters
.
NiH~rl
,
Artha
Peoples,
Ada
ln the 20s.
Union Local 200 and the
following a long Illness .
Poulton, Eva Roush , Lige
Mr. Conger was born Dec . Parsons Avenue Bapt i st
Shield s, Wanda Smith, 31, 1893 m Jackson County, Church.
He is survived by his wlfe,
Nannie &lt;ior rell , De !ores Ohio, the son of the late
Charles and Annie Conger
Eva Bell Casto Davidson ;
GRANGE TO MEET
Steed, Berdie White.
He married the former Etta two sons, Roy Jr ., Grove City,
Ohio Valley Grange 2612
1Births, Ma rr h 0)
McCumber in Oclober, 1922. and Lawrence, of Columbus ;
Letart Falls will meet at the
Mr. and Mrs. William H. She preceded him in death on a daughter , Mrs . Hazel
hall at 7:30 p.m . Thursday. Flesher, son, Wellston ; Mr. Aug. 2, 1974. Mr. Conger was Miller , Columbus; two
Potluck refreshments will be and Mrs. John R Hood, a truck driver, a farmer and brothers, Ben of Middleport,
a school .bus driver for the and Warren; one sister, Mrs .
served.
daughter, Gallipolis.
Wilkesville School for 17 Sam {Aimal Miller. Rutland,

Veterans Memorlalllospltal
ADMITTED Bessie
Sellers, Racine; Tina Moore,
Pomeroy ; EtoiUe Cassell ,
Pomeroy; Ray Buchanan,
Pomeroy: Michael Globokar .
Pomeroy; Doris Buchanan ,
Reedsville ; Donna Randolph ,
Reedsville: Wayne Hubbard .
Syracuse :
Kath erine
Buckner, Logan.
DISCHARGED - Mary
Woods, Katherine Hess.

nieces

Rawlings

Coats

Funeral

Home with the Rev. Allen
Norris of Columbus ol.
flclallng. Burial will be In
Cheshire
Gravel
Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home Thursday
2 to Hnd 7 to 9 and until lime
of services on Friday.

Flo~ce

Weekley

died in lllinois
Florence Weekley, age 74,
ol BeUeville, Ill., died there,
on Tuesday, March 2, after an
illness of several months.
She was born at Letart
Falls, Ohio, June 3, 1901, the
daughter of the late Joseph
and Gertrude Whetstone
Wagner . She was the widow
ol Murray A. Weekley who
died Oct. 29, 1972.
Surviving is one daiU!hter
Mrs . Warren K. (Jean)
Mahoney, of 5 Whiteside
Drive, BeUeville, lll., and
grandchildren Kevin arid
Gwynelll Mahooey.
Funeral services was in
Belleville, on Friday, willl
additional service and burial
on March 8, in Washingwn,
D.C.
TO MEET TONIGHT
POINT PLEASANT, W.
Va . - A new Mason County
sheriff will be selected
tonight when the Mason
County Commissioners meet
in the courthouse at 7 p.m.
The new sheriff will fill the
unexpired term of Sheriff
Elvin E. (Pete) Wedge who
died in last week's explosion.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

p.m. Tuesday for Katheri ne
Buckner who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital

went to the Shamrock Nile

We Put It

Club for Jack Neal, West

Colvmbl,, who was having

chest pains. He was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

All

Together

Weather

For You!
Let Our Full
Service Banking
Help
Your Money

GROW!
A Home Bank
For
MeiRs County
People

RACINE

HOME NAnOIAL

BANK

OHIO

SALE I
•
•

custom
draperies
Save 30%
On Custom Draperies
For Your Home or
Office.
Oloose From Over 700 Fabrics
and Colors in Our Collection.

Hubbard

residence on Rock St. at 8:42

as a medical patient. At I:01
a.m. Wednesady, the squad

RACINE

HOSPITAL NEWS

sever.•t

The Meigs County Sheriff's

petty larceny; Jerry Ward,

'"

--------------------------- , nephews.
! Area Deaths · ! held Friday at 2 p. m. at the
and

f'·'·'~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,;,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,.,,,,\~

Cloudy, a li !tie colder
tonight, lows 30 to 35. Cloudy
Thursday, highs in the upper
40s .
Probability
of
precipitation 30 per cent
today, 20 per cent tonight and
Thursday.

Save 50%
On Matching Custom
Bedspreads During

This Sale.
Please bring window sizes with you.
MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND
WAREHOUSE OPEN
THURSDAY. 9:30 TO 5,
FRIDAY, 9:30 to 8, and

TWO KILLED
CINCINNATI (UPI) -The
drivers of two pickup trucks
were killed Tuesday when
their trucks colUded head.(Jn.
Killed In the crash on U.S.
50 near the western suburb of
Cleves
were
Howard
Hedberg, 511, of the Price Hill
aectlon of Cincinnati, and
Rollie Combs, 57, of Aurora,
Ind.

SATURDAY 9:30 to 5 PM.

••
~

Ohio Girls Basketball
Tournament Results
United Pren lntrrnational
CLASS AAA
. At Mus ilion
Massillon Jackson 53 canfon
McKinley 41
Greensburg
Green
56
Massillon so
i
At Ashland
~
Ashland 33 Marion Harding

25
Bellevue
55
Mansfield
Malabar 26
CLASS AA
At H1rtville Like
Rittman 37 HarfYIIIe Lake 34
Orrvill e 36 Wayndale 35
CLASS A
At Portsmouth
Portsmouth East 43 Man
chester Jl
Ironton St. Joseptt 42 Coal
Grove 16

ELBERFELD$ IN POM

y

to murder and bury child
POINT PLEASANT Law enforcement agencies .
Investigating the tragic
bombing at the Mason County
Jail last week which resulted
In the deaths of five persons
and several others injured,
said this morning a "suicide

note " was found at the rural
mobile home of Bruce and
Harriet Sisk.
The report of the primary
investigative agencies and
Mason County Prosecuting
Attorney Don Kingery, given
lllis morning during a press

conference at the Mason
County Courthouse, also
indicated that a minimum of
IS pounds of dynamite was
used and that the charge was
apparently detonated by an
electric blasting cap, set off
with a Jlh volt , D-eell

into the cell was not fired."

•

e
VOL. XXVII NO. 232

flashlight battery .
"Physi cal ev idence
further reveals,'' the long
statement of law en·
forcemenl officials continued, " the shotgun used by
Bruce Sisk to force his way

The report further said,
"The investigation produced
evide nce that indicated
Harriet Sis k may have
agreed to a suicidal pact ;
lllat both she and her husband
participated in the burial 'of
llle child, and both conspired

in the giving of a false report
to the Mason County Sheriff's
office to the effect lllat the
infant was missing or kidnapped in an attempt to
conceal
the
infant 's
homicide.''
(Continued on page 12)

en tine

at

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1976

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

}]~(:::::;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;.;.;:;.;.;.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·~·:·:·:::·:·:·:::::::::·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::]

tNews. • .zn

»

New showdown
with Wallace

Brze~sij
,~ •

By United Press International
·
BEIRUT, LEBANON - RENEGADE TROOPS battled
loyalists willl tanks and artillery in Lebanon 's second largest
city today and Syrta ordered peacekeeping forces to seize
rebel positions in a desperate effort to avert another round of
civil war.
Premier Rashid Karami warned the fate of the country
was at stake, Lebanese and Syrian mediators worked
desperately to defuse the crisis. Reports from the police and
witnesses said loyaUsts and rebels had started a fWI-scale
battle between the northern costal city of Tripoli and the
rightist stronghold of Zghorta, President Suleiman Franjieh's
fortresa-like hometown.
The fighting spread to the outskirts of Tripoli itself
witn~sses said, when leftist rebel troops attacked two mor~
loyaliSt army barracks - Bahjat Ghanen and Hilayel.

•

1

\I

' II
. PITTSBURGH - U.S. STEEL CORP. REPORTED today
Its 1975 profits reached near record levels despite tlle recession
JAMES R. FRECKER
and the lowest amount of steel shipments in 14 years. "These
results were encouraging for a year in which our shipments of
steel products were the Jo·west in 14 years and during a year in
which the economy was in recession " Chairman Edgar B
Speer said In llle company's annual ;eport.
·
An ov~rall price increase of 3.8 per cent and an upsurge in
nonsteel lines of busmess to 45 per cent of pre-tax income oppos~
be.lped offset a 31 per cent decline in steel shipments from 25.5
mtlllon tons in 1974 to 17.5 mllllon tons in 1975. Profits of $559.6,
•
or $10.33 a share, were second only to 1974 profits of $630.3 •
~illion, or $11.64 a share. Revenues for the year were $8.38
billion, down from $9.33 billion in 1974.
A newcomer to the Meigs
U. S. Steel's annual report urged the government to
provtde "an improved climate lor saving and investment" to Coun ty pohtical scene is
James R. Frecker , Route :l,
provide sufficient capital to replace and expand facilities.
Pomeroy, who has file.d his
petition with the Meigs
WASHINGTON- AMERICAN GRAIN SALES to Russia
which currently stand at 13.3million tons since last July 1 may County Board of Elections to
r.ise by anolller 5 to 6million tons before Sept. 30. But eve~ that seek the nomination to run on
ftgure would be within the level officials consider safe a top llle Republican ticket for the
office of Meigs' Cou nt y
administration farm e"P"rt said Wednesday.
'
Gommissioner.
Asst.s lant Agriculture Secretary Richard ·Bell,
Frecker is runmng for the
summaruang the current trade outlook ala briefing said that
term
wh1ch begins Jan. 2,
despite a drought which has cut deeply into 1976 wi~ter wheat
1977,
the
post now held by
prospects in the southern Plains, global grain exports can
Republican
Warden Ours. A
continue lllrough 1977 at this year's record pace without
of
the former
graduate
lllreatenlng to spur food inflation for Amerioan consumers.
Chester H1gh School, Frecker
LONDON - PRIME MINISTER HAROLD Wll.SON'S served from 1962 into 1965 in
llle U. S. Marines being
Labor government has failed to win approval of its plan to
stationed
111 lhe Far East for
slash $10 billi?n in public spending, touchmg off an opposition
17
months.
call for an unrned1ate vote of confidence. The vote in
He is owner of the J . and R.
parliament on the motion to trim the hudgets of the national
Sports
Shop in Pomeroy and
health system and other social services was voted down
is
a
lifelong
resident of Meigs
Wednesday night 2M to 256. It was the first major defeat for the
County.
Wilson govenunent since winning the last general election in
October, 1974.
The challenge to the government was immediate. As the
vote was announced, opposition Conservative members began
shouting, "Out, out, out." Political observers said it was
extremely unlikely the govenunent would resign. They said it
could always call for a vote of confidence in which the left-wing
Labor members, wbo abstained Wednesday, would most likely
vote for the government.

Frecker to
0 DrS
mpnmary

By LEWIS LORD
United Press International
Jimmy Carter says next
Tuesday's Illinois primary
will be another showdown
between him and George
Wallace, and will show that
" Florida
wasn ' t
an·
accident.''
President Ford, also fresh
off a primary win in Florida
flies to Illinois for a two-day
sweep and a campaign vistl
Saturday to North Carolina;
while Ronald Reagan played
down the importance of
coming in' first and said his
strong showings are reason to
stay in the race.
With Fred Har.ts, Sargent
Shriver and Wallace the only
other Qemocrats on the
filinois ballot, Carter said his
main opponent will be the
Alabama governor he
defeated in Florida Tuesday.
1
'lllinois is my most imJX)rtant state in the nation ''
'
Carter said. " It will show lllat
F1orida wasn't an accident."
Reagan, campaigning in 11linms Wednesday night,
d1dn't
attach
much
importance to beating Ford
in Illinois. His main
objective, he insisted, was
"to establish the fact that we
can make a good showing."
"Getting 49 per cent of the
vote in New Hampshire and
47 per cent in Florida,"
Reagan said, ·'does not mean
that you fold your tent and
silently steal away."
Ford said he assumes
Reagan "w1ll be in the baU
game" until the GOP
convention in August,
although a Chicago Sun.
Times poll showed the

ATLANTA - AUTHORITIES AT TilE NATIONAL Center
for Disease Control may reconunend that the federal
government make a flu vaccine available to the public free of
charge to protect the nation from a possible major epidemic
next fall.
Dr. David Sencer, CDC director, said the agency was
concerned lllal the A..swine virus would strike a large part of
the populatim durmg the next flu season because people would
have no natural protection against il . .
NEW CONCORD, OHIO - REP. LES. ASPIN, D-Wis., a
frl!quent criUc of American defense spendmg, says much of
llle Pentagon's concern over Soviet military superiority is illfounded . "H the Soviets launched a first strike, we could
absorb it and still have left more war heads than llley had
before they started," Aspin said in a speech at Muskingum
College Wednesday night.
He added that much of the superiority claimed for the
Russians consists of weapons of doubtful value. "They are
absolutely bananas about tanks," he said, adding that
armoured equipment which makes up the bulk of Soviet
strength had become ''wlnerable to modern munitions."
Asptn was one of four panelists particlplitlng in a
coUoqulm on defense spending at the school entitled
"Squeezing the Screaming Eagle.'' Other panelists were:
Rear Adm. ret. Gene LaRoque, another critic of defense
apendlng; Brig. Gen James M. Thompson, a Pentagon
11p0kesman and Charles Corddry, military analyst for the
Baltimore Sun and a panelist on public television's
"Washington Week In Review."
COLUMBUS - LACK OF ORDERS in the steel industry
callled nearly 500 new state unemployment claims last week,
booltlngthe total to 17,3l9for a 6.7 per cent gain over the prior
week.
Albert G. Giles, administrator of the Ohio Bureau of
Employment services, Wednesday said initial claims under all
other state •nd federal prosrams last week totaled 7,539, for a
lola! of 24,353, up 4.3 per cent.
·
COLUMBUS- TilE OHIO SENATE passed 32-0 and sent
to the HOUle Wednesday a bill addmg glue which contains
toluene to the 1181 of narcotic subalances contr~lled by Ohio
clnlelawa.
Toluene fumes, when Inhaled, produce an immediate
"hllh," aald Sen. lllarlea L. Butts, !).Cleveland, autbor of the
bill. The "hllh," howevor, also results In permanent damage
to lnln cella, he explained. Butts' bill would ban the sale of
llue, plullc cement or other adhesive products containing
toluene to • minor without hla parenta' permission. the penal!)
far ~ the law would be a 8Cklay Jail tenn or $500 fine

cr botli.
4

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ANIMAL THAI'S OI8PLAY .::_ Thlrty.(Jne animal
traps, a part of the collection of Richard Coleman an
instructor at Meigs High School, are among exhibits t~ be
featured at the·Meigs Museum in a sports display being
prepared by Mike Gerlach. A wide range of articles
including trophies won by local high schools, wooden
handled golf clubs, photos, tennis rackets and related
items will be shown. Here, Dena Rsymond, museum
worker, displays a coyote trap. The trap belonged to John
Ehn of Michigan wbo was the nation's most famous coyote
traPP&lt;I: in the 1920s. Anyon~ having a sporting item they
would hke to include m the display is asked to deliver it on
Friday from 9 a. m.to 4 p. m.

Lions put up $150 on ladder
The Pomeroy-Middleport
Lions Club at its noon lun·
cheon meeting Wednesday at
the Meigo Inn voted to donate
$150 loward the purchase of
an aerial ladder truck lor
Meigs County.
The Rev . William Mid-

dlcS\,&lt;J.tth ,

lJI CS ld~llt,

reviewed plans for a Rally
Race Memorial Day. Bruce
Teaford is chairman of the
committee . It was announced
timt the Zone 13K social will
be held April 10 at Nelson
Commons, Ohio University.

~

President ahead in filinois by
a margin of 53 per cent to 32
per cent.
Wallace agrees lllere are
similarities between the
Florida and Illinois contests.
" The Democratic party
asked the liberals to stay out
of Florida so they could
defeat me there," Wallace
told reporters at Champaign,
m. "So 1think I did very good
in Florida . I think they
mostly are doing the same in
lllinois but I am going to do
well here."
Carter said he would
consider another Arab oil
embargo "a declaration of
economic war" to be met
with a ban on U.S. sales of
food and arms to Arab
nations: and that he would
offer a job to the 10 per cent
welfare recipients who are
capable of working fuU time
and deny them benefits if
llley refuse it.
1
' The
other 90 per cent
ought to be treated with love,
affection, decency and respect," he added.
Henry Jackson, who wmi
tlle- Massachusetts primary
but finished third in Florida,
said Carter's Florida win had
only
"Southern
significance. ••
"Let' him join me in New
York," Jackson Sl!id. "What
industrial state could Carter
carry'!"

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday
through
Monday,
chances of
precipitation are near zero
per cent through the period
with highs In the 40s to the
low 50s and lows in the 30s
Saturday. Colder Sunday
and Monday with highs in
the 30s to the low 40s and
lows In the 20s.
.;:;.:=:·:·:·:·:; :·:~ :·:·:·:· :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::: ;. ;.;.;.;:;.;:;:;:;.;.;:::;:;.;.

Wallace
needed
2 years

By CLAY F. RICHARDS
WASHINGTON (UP!) Fighting intense pain that
drove him into deep
depression and lengthy
crying spells, .Gov. George
Wallace took two years to
recover from near fatal
gunshot wounds, his wife
Cornelia relates in an
autobiography.
Now, she says, she has lost
her own enthusiasm for
politics.
Cornelia Wallace said that
twice on May 15, 1972, llle day
Wallace was shot by Arthur
Bremer, he had considered
calling off .the rally" at the
Laurel, Md. shopping center
because he was tired and
didn 'I think the appearance
was needed to win the
Maryland primary.
The 240-page book, "Cornelia," is an intimate
account of the life of
Alabama's first family, told
by the niece of one Alabama
The executive committee of governor, James ''Big Jim"
the Meigs County Regional Folsom, and the wife of the
Planmng Commission will present governor, She tells of
meet at 3 p. m. Monday in the her arguments with Wallace,
ASCS conference room 1 and of his two-year struggle
second floor of The Farmers back from the wounds lllat
Bank Building in Pomeroy. left him paralyzed.
Mrs. Wallace concludes the
The
committee will
discuss the closing of the book by saying : "I've always
Pomeroy-Mason bridge on called politics the 'king of
March 31, progress on the sports.' I was born in it, I
block grant application and lived it all my life and I've
tax maps , status of the loved every minute of it. Now
Rutland sewage system and I find I've lost my enthusiasm
llle Syl'acuse·Racine sewage for the campaign."
Wallace's
two-year
system . Among the new
recovery
was
painful
and
items of IJ usiness will be a
frustrating.
She
says
he
often
review of clearing house
items and llle presentation of was overtaken by lengthy
a nursing home report by crying spells during moods of
Jennings Associates, depression.
"The pain turned out to be
Columbus.
llle biggest problem of all,
mainly beca!ISe it was neverElection hoard
ending,'' she said. 1 'For a
while George
became
in new quarters
psyChologically dependent on
the pain injections, but when
Offices of llle Meigs County it became obvious he was
Board of Elections have been asking for the shots too often,
moved to adjacent offices on sterile water was substituted
the ground floor in the for the medicine and he never
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. noticed the difference.
The offices, more modern
"Actually he was trying to
and spacious, were formerly avoid facing the paralysis;
occupied by the Meigs County which he was not able to
Agriculture, Stabilization and accept," she said. Spinal
Conservation Service.
Injections, an electronic
stimulator and finally
acupuncture were tried. None
Davis opposing
worked.
"Nothing changed
BoL Hartenbach
overnight, but slowly, as
BrucC Davis, a republican George improved, eve.rything
and a police officer for sot better I H She Said.
several years in Rutland ••George's complete recovery
Village, has filed his petition took two years."
ol candidacy to -'run for llle
;:;.;:;:;:;.;::::.;:;:;:;:;:;:·::::;:::=:·::;.;.;:;.;:;:;:;::::::·:::::::
nomination as Republican
PLAY BALL!
County Sheriff with the Meigs
SYRACUSE - Everyone
County Board of Election.
interested In playing oa the
Davis will oppose Robert C.
Syracuse Independent
Hartenbach, incumbent, who
baseball team this sumis
also
seeking the
mer, should be at the ball
nomination in the June 8 field for the first slgnup on
primary.
Saturday morning atiO:OO.
If you are unable to attend,
contact Jell Hubbard or
Greg Roush.

Meeting called

WP.ather

Cloudiness tonight, chance
of ram late. Lows in mid 30s.
Cloudy, warmer Friday.
showers and thundershowers
likely. Highs around 60.

;.;.;.;.;:;:;.;:;:;.;.,.;:; ;:;:::;:;.;.;:;.:=:·:·:=:·:=··:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;.

NOW YOU KNOW
California's official state
animal , the California gnzzly
bear (Urs us californicus) ,
has been exti'\ct for 44 years.

NEW SHERIFF SWORN IN - Jim Gaskins left who
until Wednesday evening was llle Chief of Poli~e fo~ the
city of P.oinl Pleasa nt, was swom in at the Mason County
Commission meeting of County Clerk L. W. Getty to
replace llle late Sheriff Elvin E. "Pete" Wedge .

Miller's
record
attacked

JAMES PLUMMER
For Congress

James A. Plummber, 46, a
lifetime resident of Jackson
Cou nty, annou nces his
ca ndid acy
lor
the
Democra tic nomination for
U. S. Congress in the Tenlll
Ohio District.
A former automobile
dealer, Plummer attended
Ohio University. He served as
an enlisted man and infantry
officer dunng the • Korean
War . He has been a member
of the UMW , Amencan
Legion· and VFW. His wife,
Martha , IS an elementary
si:hool teacher in Jackson.
The Plwnmers have three
sons, all living 111 Jackson.
Plun1mer says the Tenth
District is being neglected in
that incmbent Congressman
M1ller is Ignor-ing the great
issues that affect people's
problems.
"Look a t his vo ling
record, " said Plwnmer, "He
denoun ces inflation then
voles to deregulate the price
of fuel, gas and oil ; supports
President Ford's restrictive
t.. oconomic policies which will
keep unemployment and
interes t rates high. He was
the only Republican member
of the House who voted not to
impeach Nixon."
Plun1mer says this kind of
record is not in the interest of
the vast majority of citizens
of the Tenlll Distnct.
" If elected," says Plummer,"[ will vote for controls
on gas and oil and uhlity
rates ; for enforcemen t or the
"Full Employment Act of
1946" which guarantees a job
for any person wilD wan Is to
wprk, and I will msis t on
accountability for their actions by all government officials."

Amendment
·
wanted to
end RCN

CLEVELAND (UP!) - A
statewide campaign to force
public utilities to use an
original cost formula as the
basis for their rates was
announced Wednesda y by
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson.
"We want to eliminate"' the
outmoded and unfair Reconstruction Cost New (RCN)
formula the utilities use now
and replace it with one that
the 'utility customers can
understand, " Ferguson said.
Ferguson said the Citizens
for Utility Rate Equality
(CURE) will lead llle effort to
get a vote on an amendment
to the state constitution.
"Actually, only about
308,000 signatures are
needed," he said at a news
conference, 1 'but we are
shooting for 500,000 signatures. That way there will
be no doubt about having
sufficient valid signatures,
nor any doubt as to the
concern of Ohioans ove r
constantly increasing
monthly utility bills."
The auditor adm1lted he
E1ght hundred and twenty
could not guarantee that
certificate
of titl es were
(Continued on page l•l
Issued during February
Larry Spencer , clerk of
courls, reported.
There were 246 notation of
liens, 145 memo titles, 2
salvage titles, 758 ap. The Middleport E-R un1t, pli ca tion s, affadavits and
answering four calls Wed- assignmenls, 51 penalties, 23
certified cop~es . Total title
nesday went:
Al 1:29 p.m. for Joseph fees were in the amount of
Barnhart , ta ken
from $1,999, with the stale to
Veterans Memorial Hospital receive $389.50 and the county
to the Portsmouth Nursing $1,609.50.
There were 102 auto inHome; at 4:41 p.m., William
Klein, Brownell Ave. , was spections , a utomobil e intaken to Holzer Medi ca l spection fees totaled $306, of
Center, experiencing severe Uu s amount the state will
stomach pains; at 8:27 p m. receive $280.55 and the
went to 293 Jo'1sher Sl. for coun ly'sshare is $25.50. There
Keith French who was ill but were 14 salvage insp!!cUons
refused treatment, and 9:37 with receipts totaling $60 aU
p.m. to Hobson for four- going to the state. Tiwre were
month.(J]d Brian Frederick, 7 boat ti tles iss uer!, 2
whose mother had fallen with notations , 2 memos and 8
him and was unable to tell if applications, affadavits and
llle infant was injured or just assignmenls. Total boat fees
frightened, taken to Veterans collected were $16, the state's
Memorial Hospital where he share, $3,25, county's share,was determined upinjured.

Title office

business in
Meigs noted

Four assists
made by squad

12.75.

"

'

..

�3- Tbe Pomeroy Sentinel. MlddlellOrt·P(IlleroyJ 0., Thursday, March 11, 1976
~ _ The

Pmeroy Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, {) .. Thursday , March 11 , 1976

r-

TUM TIEDE

Editorial comment,
• •
opznzon, f~atures

Congress' errant presidential aspirants
amen dmen t " tha t would knees to this body - if you
By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - Two preclude any member of won't face up to yo ur
ye ars ago Rep. Morris Congress fr om taking offi ce re sponsibi II ties there is
Udall 's voting record in the as President or vice president nothing I can do."
House of Representatives until two years after the last
The howling and threats
was an admirable 81.1 per- date of service . in the have gone unheard, however.
cent of the roll calls. Last Congfess ." In short, the As one of John Rhodes'
year his attendance fell by a measure would for ce a assis tants explains it,
member to resign in order to "Legislators seldom legislate
sharp 30 points.
What happened ? He began pursue Chief Executive against themselves." What's
paying more attention .to his hopes.
more, even the angels ocNot surprisingly, Rhodes ' casionally have fun in sin,
campaign for the presidency
than his responsibilities in idea has been greeted on Rhodes, it turns out , was one
Congress, an imbalance of Capitol Hill with all of the of 62 members who last year
priorities that may even- enthusiasm of another visit decided to have the annual
tually prove beneficial to from an eighth grade congressional golf tourUdall but not to the government class. After all, nament on a day, a Monday,
legislatiure he is sworn to absenteeism has been con- when both houses were
sidered a perquisite of the supposed to be hard at it in
champion .
Never more than a legislative industry since session.
sometimes gathering place only eight of 22 senators
Yet if his constitutional
for many o.l its casual showed up at the opening of amendment proposal stands
members , Congress in a the first session of Congress no chance, Rep . Rhodes has
presidential season is treated in 1789. Besides, the subject is at least reminded the nation
almost with contempt by hoary, says one member, of some fairly important unthose of the body aspiring for "Somebody is forever getting finished business. In inhigher things. Udall is not a feather up their rear about creasingly perilous times,
alone in forgetting where it, but in the end nothing is America can't
afford
(and why) his salary is ever done .''
presidential candidates who
Former Sen . Mar~aret are also part-time legislators.
earned, the seats of Scoop
Chase
Smith was the last one A quite easy solution would
Jackson and Birch Bayh are
with
a
tickled behind. She be legislation allowing the
likewise mostly empty these
proposed
(futilely ) a con- Udalls and Jacksons to vote
days. And as for the past,
stitutional
amendment
which by proxy during unavoidable
John Kennedy's attendance
provided
for
the
discharge
of campaign travels.
record feU by hall during the
any
member
presidential
1960 campaign, Barry
It is true that proxy voting
Goldwater's was cut y a third candidate or not - who would not resolve the
in 1964 - and Gene McCarthy missed more than 40 per cent physical
absence
of
went from 66 per cent in 1967 of roil calls. And thi,n there presidential candidates from
to a simply disastrous 5 per has been Mike Mahsfield, the Congress But as Edmund
cent during the 1968 White Senate Majority Leader, who Burke said of the Brl tlsh
in 1972 called the Senate Parliament, legislators owe
House hoopla .
attendance
record not their energies but their
The consequences of this
"abominable''
and
then judgments- and the proxy is
sort of nonsense are entirely
added
a
remarkable
appeal
: a way we could at least
negative, at least according
"l
won
't
get
down
on
my
to the one member of
guarantee that .
Congress who is paying attention to it this quadren-

Energetic solution: recycling garbage
For all the cries of alarm about the energy crisis and the depletion of our resourC«s, :
Americans continue to throw away incalculable quantities of potential energy and mountians
of materials - glass, plastics, rubber, metals - !hat could be reclaimed and recycled.
Greater New York, for example, produces 18,500 tons of garbage a day. Manhattan alone
·company !hat generates electric! power for the nation's largest city has announced it is
steam capacity.
Because of diminishing suppUes of natural gas and !he high cost of fuel oil, the utility
company that generates electrical power for the nation's largest cityhas announced that it is
, "exploring the possibility" of burning some of this garbage as a substitute fuel in its steam
·
plants.
"With fuel oil costing $12 to $13 a barrel, it makes more sense to recycle garbage by
extracting energy from it than it does to bury it in landfills-or to incinerate it with no by-product
benefit," says Charles .F Luce, chairman of Consolidated Edison.
Indeed, it does. And as Luce points out, it can be done without polluting the air by means of
properly dt:~igned plants.
Yet with the exception of a few cities like St. Louis, which is mixing municipal trash with
coal to produce electricity, the nation continues for the most part oil its merry, wasteful ways.
Americans of the next century may well look back and wonder where oor common sense
was.

Antique charts are costly
Men who go down to the sea in ships these days can pinpoint their locations at any time in
any weather, thanks to navigation sate!Utes . Otherwise, however, they are still operating back
in the 19th century.
Ship groundings are occurring at the rate of three a day around !he globe, and many of
these accidents are attributable to outdated ocean charts, says Compass magazine, a
publication ofMOAC, the nation 's largest commercial marine insurance company.
When tbe 73,000-ton ore ship "lgara" ran aground in the South China Sea in 1973, it was
following the ·latest available chart for that area ~ one made in the late 1800s. The most recent
chariofthe Straits of Magelian is dated 1896, based on one of 1830.
Modern tankers cost upwards of $65 million, carry three million barrels of oil and draw
some 90 feet of water. "The size of these ships and the inaccuracy of ocean charts make
another environmental disaster like the Torrey Canyon a real possibility," !be magazine
warns.

Most fantastic flight: dollar's trip
What impresses us most about the plan to orbit 30 electricity-generating satellites to supply
the energy needs of the United States is not the idea itself.
Something like the scheme proposed by Boeing Aerospace Co. engmeers -to capture and
concentrate the sun's heat with gigantic space mirros and beam the electricity to earth by
microwaves - is coming. We have the technology to have the system in operation before the
end of the century.
··
·
Nor are we surprised at the cost of the system, estimated to be equal to the Apollo moon
landing program.
What brings us up short is the statement !hat if we were to undertake the Apollo program
today, it would cost not $24 billion but $60 billion, so great has been the effect of inflation in the
few short years since the last Saturn rocket was launched.
Remember the objections about what a waste of resources it was to put men on the.moon?
. Yet we have permitted the dollar to take off on a fantastic space trip of its own that makes the
Apolloprogram now look like a bargain basement venture.

. Ohio legislative briefs

niwn . House minority leader

John Rhodes believes it is
folly for Americans to pay
legislator-candidates full
time congressional wages for
part

time

By United Press International
PANEL NAMED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Sen. Marigene Valiquette, D-ToledO,
chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, Wednesday n.amed a _three-member subcommittee to study a House·
passed bill offering full credit for any future unvoted real
estate tlll&lt; hik.es broughi about inflation.
Miss Valiquette named herself and Sens. Donald J. Pease, DOberlin, and Donald E. Lukens, R-Mlddletown. She said the

congressio_nal

wurk. Also, Rhodes (eels that
the legislator-&lt;:andidate has
an advantage over the
citizen-&lt;:andidate which Is not
only unfair · (franking
privileges, media access and
50 forth) but taxpayer SUpported.
So it is that Rhodes, a
Republican from Democrat
Udall's home state o(
Arizona, has introduced
legislation designed to put an
end to the bother. He

Monopoly on public interest challenged

subcommittee would ':develop its own figures and stastics"

rather than take for g'ranted the fiscal impact of tbe bill as
estimated by the House, and report back to the full committee
in about a week.
'

I
I

1
1
I

:
1
1
!

.B~J
..Y:~~
~. ~:

The

Dai~

former California governor's loss to President Ford in the
F1orida primary has considerably "dinuned" prospects lor
Reagan's entry into !he June 8 Ohio primary.
Lukens said Reagan "has to win at least one primary"meaning Illinois' voting March 16--to stay viable into June.
MENTAL PATIENU!
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Sen. Harry Meshel, I)-Youngstown,
Wednesday introduced legislation limiting the release of
mental patients under indictment or conviction and on
medication.
Such patients could be released on medical probation,
reporting periodieally to a pubUc hospital or physician. Meshel
said escaped convicts sometimes report to mental hospitals
which release them with orders to continue medication, but oo.
check Is ever made.
INFORMATION REMOVED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The Ohio Senate Wednesday passed,
31 to 1, and sent to !he House legislation requiring the state
Bureau of Motor Vehicles to remove from its records any
information relating to traffic violations incurred by a driver
prior to a five-year license suspension.
Under current law, only "points•· accrued &amp;-om. prio
. violations are removed from bureau records following a

Sentinel

:)n your life

MEIGS - MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANJIIEHILL
e)Cec . Ed.
ROBE~T

HOEFLICH
City Ediror
Published daily elC.cep t
Saturday by Th e Oh i o
Valley Pub l isl'1ing Com .
pany , 111
Co urt
Sl.,
Pomeroy ,
Ohio
45769 .
Busin ess Office Phone 992
2156 . Editorial Phone 992

COLOGNE MIST

2157

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paid at Pomeroy, Ohio
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and premarital sex Is
frowned upon the incidence of
cancer of the cervix Is
relatively low. By contrast In
other . groups with different
moral precepts cancer of the
cervix is about the same as
seen in the general American
population.
Recent studies show that
women who become active
sexually very early in life and
have multiple partners are
the ones who are most likely
to have cancer of the cervix.
Let me say at once that does
not mean that a person who
~las cancer of the cervix has
had a varied and extensive
sexual life. It can and does
occur even In virgins but thla
is relatively rare. The final
analysis of the relationship of
circumcision to cancer of the
cervix reveals that there
seems to be no specific
relationship at aU. If t!Jis is
the only motivation a man
has to be circumclaed or a
motber has to have her male
child circumcised, the
motivation is misplaced.

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LIP OOLORS
by Maybellne

Sport Parade

I
I

Dear Sir:
As probably everyone knows hy now the Meigs High
basketball team is the sectional champ. They played a very
tough opponent in their final game to gain this honor. But I
don't want to sound like a sportscaster. What does thts
accomplishment mean? To some maybe nothing, but to the
students, teachers, coaches, and players It means quite a lot.
Meigs' basketball teams since 1967 have never been much
to talk about but having something to talk about is not the point
I wish to make. I attended the game because I wanted to see
something I had never seen before in my four years of high
school. I saw a team, it's fans, and It's coach wanting
something and want it badly. The desire in those short 32
minutes was more than the team I played on had had In a
whole season. It made me both sad and glad to SOil such desire
and determination. My only hope Is that the students and fans
of Meigs will catch some of that desire in everything they set
out to do.
The school spirit I saw Saturday night Ia the kind !hat
should be seen every time any time a Meigs team piBys an
opponent in any sport. Win or lose' Girls included.
Meigs played another opponent.at Rio Grande this week
(Wednesday night) and whether they win or lose the game,
they have won something much more important, respect, not
only from other people, but for themselves.
To the players, congratulations! To Mr. Logan, my
deepest admiration. He may have brought Meigs High School
aliv.e again. Let's show him by supporting our teams, now and
in the years to come. - Steve Walburn, Former player,
Marietta College, Marietta, Ohio.·

By Greg Halley
Iron ton's spread-out defense
RIO GRANDE
A shook the bali loose too often
·scoreless four minutes in the in that quarter for Meigs had
beginning and a second seven costly turnovers.
The secon d c anto was
quarter with no field goa ls
proved to be the demise of the weird. Meigs scored the firs t
Meigs Marauders in losing a two points on foul shots by
49-45 heartbreaker to the Mick "Snake" Davenport to
Ironton Tigers Wednesday n~rrow the margin to 13-12, at
night at Lyne Center here in the 6: 55 mark, but that's as
close as they got all night.
AA District competition .
It was the third loss this Ironton then hit a streak
year at the hands of the while Meigs was struggling in
Tigers who ended their a cold spell, and before fans
regular season ranked tenth kn ew it, the Tigers had a 23-12
in the state . Meigs, the lead.
"Cinderella team" of the
But as has been typical of
SEOAL this year, gave the the "new look" Marauders,
boys a Coach Buddy Bell a they didn 't give up. Although
they hadn 't scored for four
scare in each contest.
Ironton got the opening tip and one-half minutes, at the
and promptly scored at the 2:26 mark Snake again hit on
6:50 mark on a short jumper a pair of free throws to start
by star Dean Fitzpatrick.· them on their way again . Of
Thirty seconds later, Fitz- the nine points Meigs scored
patrick tipped in a rebound to in that canto, all were foul
make ii4-0, and before Meigs. shots and Davenport made
could get on the board, the seven of them while Meadows
Tigers had opened up an 8-0 canned the other t-wo.
iead.
This kept the Marauders in
At the 4:20 mark, Meigs' the game as they went into
center Mitch Meadows tipped the locker room at half time
in a carom for Marauders' trailing by eight, 27-19.
That first half saw Meigs
first points. The local boys
then got charged up to take only 18 shots, five of
narrow the score to 13-10 by them successfully . The
the first period buzzer. Twice Marauders had 12 turnwers ,
in the last four minutes, they but the Tigers' high-scoring
got to Within two.
Mike Brown had picked up
In that tragic initial four his third personal roul.
minutes of the game, Meigs
The third quarter was one
committed five turnovers in of those. back-and-forth
two !Jiinutes and didn 't get off battles that "saw Meigs
a sbot until the 5:40 mark. narrow it to five, then Ironton

Today's

:

Team gains self respect

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

Marauders how out ·of tourney 49-45

:

providing for a constitutional

FROST &amp; GLO KIT

women who 'were married to
circumcised men had less of
a chance of gelling cancer of
the cervix and I want to know
If that really is true.
DEAR READER- No, It's
not. That's what happens
when you read popular
colunons on medical subjects
by people who are not
medically trained. That's an
old wive's tale. The Idea
began because it was noted
that many Jewish women
seemed to be free of cancer of
the cervix. The inunediate
and erroneous conclusion was
made that because Jewish
males are circumcised that
:this was related to circumcision.
Additional studies since
!hen have shown that it is
more closely related to the
social behavior of the individuals involved. The in·
cidence of cancer of the
cervix in Jewish women
varies greatly depending on
what their individual creeds
are. In groups where the
young girls arr supervised

: ...
:

1

proposes a joint resolution

Youngsters need carbonhydrates
fruits, vegetables and
cereals. The other important
feature is that of course the
diet shollld be balanced aQd
include sufficient meat, milk
arid. protein foods to provide
all the essential amino acids
for the growth process.
The equivalent of a quart of
milk a day (preferably fortified skim milk, second
choice low-fat fortified milk)
and about seven ounces of
meat, chicken or fish a day
wm meet all the protein
needs .
Those who want more Information on the daily
dietary needs can send 50
cents for The Health Letter,
number 4-6, Balanced Diet, ·
Recommended Daily Dietary
Allowances IRDA) . Send a
long,
s tamped,
self·
addressed envelope for
mailing. Address your letter
to me in care of this
newspaper. P. 0 . Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
York , N. Y 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read
in an a~JfiCe coiwnn that

!.etten of opinlon are welcomed, They sboul4 be
less than 300 words long (or be subject to rtducllon by
the edlto•) and must be signed with the stpee's address. Names may he withheld upon publlcalloa.
However, on request, names will be disclosed. Letters
should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personallties.

REAGAN'S QUEST
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Sen. Donald E. Lukens, R·Middletown, one of strong Ohio backers of Ronald Reagan's quest
for the GOP presidential nomination, said Wednesday the suspension .

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M. D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - What
is the danger in a high carbohydrate diet for a fast
growing 13-year-old boy• He
is 6-feet-1 and his diet is not
too varied.
DEAR READER --'- There
is nothing wrong with a high
carbohydrate diet. Most . of
the world has lived on it.
CUltivation of cereal ahd the
use of plant food was the
major source .of food energy
for early man. High carbohydrate diets include all
cereals with needed cereal
fiber, vegetables and fruits
which are important sources
of minerals and vitamins.
When young people are
growing rapidly they need
lots of energy. Thi~ may be
one reason why they like
concentrated carbohydrate
foods such as sweets. The
only rhing I want to add here
Ia thai It's important to be
certain thai the kind of
carbohydrates that growing
people are 1;etllng Include
ad8f!uate an"''l\l" of fresh

:
1
1
I
:
1
1
t

•

Environmentalists, welfare rightists, consumer advocates and the like are learni 0g !hat
nobody holds an ex elusive patent on "the public interest". More and more of these groups are
finding themselves on the defensive end of legal actions.
The list also includes at least qne government agency. Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Chemical
Corp., for example, has filed suit against the U. S. Consumer Product Safety Commission to
prevent the commission from continuing to release "misleading, incomplete, inaccurate and
unfair" information relating to the safety of household alwninum wiring.
The company charges that this information has caused numerous local government
agencies to ban or propose to ban aluminum wiring and has led contractors to stop buying the
product.
Whether this suit is in the public interest as well as that of Kaiser stockholders is for
qualifi!ld, impartial experts to decide. But it does suggest that companies are no longer as
willing as tbey once were to roll over and play dead to please consumer activists.
A better illustration of this turnabout is a "public interest" law firm in California, the
Pacific Legal Foundation, which has scored notable successes against environmentalists and
others, according to Barron's magazine.
The PFL has balked environmentalists trying to halt construction of a Trident missile base
and a flood control and irrigation dam on the American ·River, and has knocked down the
Environmental Protection Agency's "master plan" to force cars off California's streets and
freeways.
Since its founding 1973, tbe PFL has won 25 out of 40 cases it has argued and 15 are still
pending. It has yet to lose a case in final appeal.
The firm's most notable work, however, has been in field of welfare reform. It helped
institute a computerized program to ferret out welfare cbeats by matching tbe Social Security
numbers of recipients with quarterly wage reports filed by employers. The PLF successfully
beat pack attempts by welfare rights groups who attempted to have tbe program enjoined as
an "invasion of privacy."
One year after the system's introduction under former Gov. Ronald Reagan (it has been
continued under Gov. Edmund Brown), there were 785,000 fewer people on welfare in
California and the state had saved $1 billion, yet deserving recipients received benefit hikes of
more than 30 per cent.
This, in anybody's book, is serving ''the public interest.''

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

.,

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
NEW. YORK (UP!) - whether you happen to be a CharUe
Finley fan or whether you don't, you have to give him this he's always In !here thinking.
Ever since haseballwas invented, ballplayers generaily ran
around in working clolhes that were tatUe-tale gray. Charlie
Finley fixed that. He changed the entire concept of baseball
uniforms, stitching half the colors of a rainbow into those of hla
Oalrlantl A's, and after an the other owners got through
laughing at him !hey went out and did the same thing he did.
Maybe you forget how CharUe Finley kept pushing to have
the World Series start on Saturday and for some of the Series'
. games to be played at night, and !here isn't much question he
added to the fans' enjoyment of baseball generally by bringing
in speed specialists like Herb Washington solely to run the
bases.
Wlth the owners and players completely deadlocked over the
reserve clause, and with the training camps shut down,
Olarlle Finley has another proposal now to get baseball
underway again.
•
He suggests that all his fellow owners go along with the
arbitrator's ruling to the letter and give all the players their
free agency after one year. Of course this is the same
conclusion reached by the. U.S. District Court in Kansas City
and the Eighth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis, but
the owners feel they can't possibly operate that way.
They have offered to free the players after seven years, but
Finley has done some thinking about It and come up with some
strong arguments why tbey should go ahead and make them
free agents after one year . .
How often, Finley asks, will a player corrunand a whole lot of
money after he has played only one year in !he majors?
Finley says there generally isn't that much of a market fqr
the great majority of players after !heir first year. Most of
them would be looking for jobs, he says. Under Finley's propo·
sal, however, a player would be able to ask fpr hts free agency
only once and no more.
Charlie Finley has been a busy fellow the past few weeks. He
has been busy trying to sell his fellow owners the Idea they
should agree to granting one year free agency as Marvin
Miller has been clamoring for all along. So far he hasn't gotten
to first base with them.
.
Marvin Miller, the players' spokesman, has publicly hailed
· the arbitrator's ruling making all the players free agents after
one year as a great victory.
Until the Messersmith-McNally decision, Marvin Miller
kept telling !he pwners he wanted free agency for the players
after five years. I wouldn't be surprised if that's what he still
really wants even though all he keeps taking about Is one year. ·
I wouldn't be surprised if Charlie Finley is right and Marvin
Miller knows it.

Ironton will host the 1976
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
, League basketball banquet
on Thursday, April 1,
beginning at 6:30 p. m.
This was approved during
the annual spring meeting of
the SEOAL held at Jackson
High School last week.
In other matters, league
officials recognized Athens
and Logan as c&lt;H:hampions
of the SEOAL freshman
league . Ironton's varsity and
reserves were recognized as
SEOAL cage champions.
It was announced the 1976
l\11-SEOAL track and field
meet will be held at Athens on
• May 4 Instead of May 5 as
previously announced.
Members held . a general
discU88lon of police protection during and especially
after games. The general
agreement of the members
pre~~ent was that protection
should be provided until the
. villi ling team reached the city
limits.
Items members wanted
included on summer agenda
included: ninth grade league
schedule; number of teams
counting toward all-league
troplly; what sports should be
included as league sports,
and should girls teams be
included and If so what
teams.
On a motion by Bob Shamp
and seconded by Joe Murtha,
the league adopted the
baseball schedule presented
by DIU Wooddell (Athens),
with starting times at 4 p.m.,
unless by mutual agreement
between the two schools
Involved. One exception was
made, AprlllB (Good Friday)
was moved back to April Ia.
Presldant James N. M.

the last period on successive

the winner of Thursday's
Wheelersburg - Washington
Court House game to decide
MARAUDERS
FG-A FT-A RB F TP who will advance to the
I6
0· 1
5 4 2 Regionals. The Tigers are
4-6
0· 4
4
4
8
now 2().2 on tbe year.
6- 10
2-2 6 2 14
Meigs finished out its best
l · ll
7-8
7
2 17
season
record ever at 12-10,
2-6
0-0
2 4
4
0-1 0-0
0 0 0 and showed area fans fine
18-40
9-IS 24 16 45
baske !ball.
IRONTON TIGERS
Our hats are off to these
young men who
FG-A FT-A RB F TP fine
3· 11
3-7 4 2 9
represented us so well, and

Quails
Cremeans

Meadows
Davenpor t
Randolph
Br ow ning

buckets by Jerry Cremeans
an d Meado ws, but Fitzpatrick nullified those by T otal s
canning a three-point play,
and a steal and bucket by
Tiger Eddie Howard made E . H owa rd
Brown
the score read 44-37 at the C.
1· 5
1-2 2 0
3
D. F it zpat rick
l -9
1-1 IS 2 II
4:10 mark.
M . Brow n
S-7
1-4
0 3 II
In the next two minutes T hom a s
1-2
0-0
I 3 2
Roya
l
buckets by Randolph ,
2-7
o.o
6
3 4
oc kre l
0-1
3-4
0
I 3
Meadows, and Davenport put Cr
R. Howard
3· B
o.o 1 2 6
the Marauders back Into the Total s
20-SO
1- 18 29 16 49
game with 1:47 remaining 45Quarter Scores
43. Two of those buckets
came as results of fine assists
by Qualls.
Meigs had a chance to tie bucket and he quickly canned
the score with a minute left the shot, Two foul shots by total of 24 caroms, seven by
when a full-cour t press Bobby Crockrel rounde~ out Davenport, but Ironton
collected 29 rebounds, 15 by
enabled them to get a 3 on 1 the scoring.
Fitzpatrick. He was almost
situation after a steal by .
Meigs was led by Daven- unstoppable under th e
Davenport, but the shot port's 17&lt;narkers while
missed. The winning bucket Meadows had 14. Ten of those . boards.
Ir onton was paced by
came a few seconds later as 14 came in the second half.
Brown
and Fitzpatrick with
Meadows blocked a shot by · The Marauders shot a warm
11
each,
and the Tigers
Brown and the ball fell right 18-10 from the field for 45
connected
on
20-50 shots for 40
into the hands of Howard who percent and netted 9-15 from
percent,
and
hit 9-19 foul
was standing right under the the line. They collected a
shots. The Tigers .will play

Lucasville Valley tops
Chesapeake five, 77-65
CHILLICOTHE ~ Mark
and Harold Merritt combined
for 47 points and 35 rebounds
Wednesday night as Valley
High of Lucas HIIe held off the
Chesapeake Panthers, 77-65,
in a Southeastern Ohio Class
A.lower bracket contest.
The Indians , improving
their record to 19-3, will meet
Peebles, 18-3, Saturday night
at 7: 30 at the Chillicothe gym
for the district championship.
The Pan !hers closed their
season at 14-8.
Mark Merritt, a 6-7 jUnior
center, pwnped in 26 points
and grabbed 15 rebounds
while Harold Merritt, a 6-5
forward , had 21 points and 20
rebounds. Lucasville held a
whopping 41-19 edge on the
boards.
Chesapeake led 13-12 after
Robert Johnson took a sharp

only 36-29 at halftime.
After the Indians outscored
Chesapeake 16-14 in the third
period to take a 52-43 lead,
they opened the fourth period
with nine qulck points to take
a commanding 61-43 lead.
Chesapeake, despite a full
court press which worked
well enough to cut sharply
into the lead, finallyran out
of gas in the last couple of
minutes.
The Pan !hers outscored the
Indians 18-6 · to trim the
margi,n to 67-51 with 2:16left
on the clock, but Harold
Merrill and Street each .put in
a missed shot in the next 52
seconds to put ·the game on
ice.
Top scorer for Chesapeake
was 6-2 center Roger Adkins,
who was competing against
three taller players under the
pass from Kevin Rice (or an boards. Adkins had 25 pointS,
easy layup with 59 seconds Dale Russell tossed in 14 and
!ell in the 'first quarter; but D. L. McWhorter came off the
the Indians then ran off their bench to add 10. All three
first 11 point streak in a three- figured · heavily in the Panminute span to take a 23-13 thers final comeback attempt
lead . Mark Merritt and in the last quarter. Russell
Wayne Street had two was Chesapeake's top
buckets apiece in the spurt. rebounder with five.
Street, a strong 6-0 guard,
Johnson broke the spell
·with a driving layup at 5:09 of hus Ued his way to several
the second quarter and the easy baskets in the second
Pan !hers stayed close the quarter and was the only
rest of the quarter, trailin~

Ironton to host·

cage fete April 1

would shoot back into an
eight or ni ne poin t lead. The
third period ended 39-33, but
Meigs' Terry Qua lls had
picked up his fourth personal.
Meigs connected quickly in

..

. Davis informed the group
that circular No. 1550 was
available from the state
depariment on auditing
procedures.
Next meeting will be
Wednesday, June 16, at 1Q: 30
a. m. at Athens High School.
Pomeroy Bowling lanes
Trl County

CHICAGO (UP!) - Tbe
Olicago Cubs have signed
four more players- three
le!t.fianded pllcbers and a
catcher-to 1976 contracts.
The Wednesday addltlon
increased the total number
signed for the upcoming
season to 30.
The pitchers were Ken
Frailing, Jim Kremmel and
Geoff Zahn. Tbe catcher was
George Mltterwald.
PLAY TONIGHT
Class AAA Girls Secllonal Basketball Tournament tonight al Meigs
High School starts at 7 p.m.
with Warren High School
against New Lexington and...1
al8: 15 p.m. Meigs agalast ·
Fairland, In seml·flnal
acllon.

MAsON MIRNITUIE

LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Chris Evert leads the world's
top 16 women tennis players
into the richest tournament in
their sport-the $150,000 Vir·
glnla Slims Championships,
which get underway April 12
at the Sports Arena.
The SUms championship,
the first major test for
women in 1976, has been won
hy only two players in its fiveyear history. Evert won in

1972, 1973 and 1975. Evonne
Goolagong is the only otner
winner, defeating Evert in
the 1974 finals.
Only the top 16 players
after 10 regular-season
Virginia Slims tournaments
qualifo; for ihe championship.
Also expected in the field
were Goolagong, Martina
Navratilova, Olga Morozova,
Nancy Gunter, Rosie C.sals
and Virginia Wade.

.MOHAWK
G-70x14
Super Mag 70s

'

MOn .• Tues•• Wed. &amp; Sat.-&amp;:301115:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIIMY UNTIL 8 PM
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V3~5~
·~ .,~

still get
the beat
value on

car Insurance
at State Farm1
You bet

you 011111
'See:

. 1258 Powell St.

other Indian to finish in
double figures with 29 points.
LUCASVILLE
( 77)
Evans 2·3· 8; Arric k 1·0-2; M .
M erritt 10 -6-26 ; Street 9-2-20 ;
H . Merritt IO . J-21. Total s 32 IJ -77 .
CHESAPEAKE (651 R ice 3·0-6 ; Russell 6-2· 14 ;
Johnson 4-0-8 ,· Adkin s 1.2-1-25 ;
Marshall 1-0-2 ; McWhort er 4
2- 10. Totals 30 -5-65 .
By Quarters:
Lucasville
14 22 16 25- 77
Chesapeake
13 16 14 22- 65

Middleport, 0.

..... ,...

PH. H2·7155

A

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MEADOWS FIRES- Mitch Meadows (33) gets a shot
off against Ironton's junior Dean Royal Wednesday at Rio
Grande in the district AA basketball tournament. - Jim
Hamm picture.

$

STORE HOURS

NElSON'S

everywhere.

Std.

Phelps
61
Roachs Gun Sllop
. · 46
Pomeroy Cement BII'Ck Co . 37
Sear's Cetalog Merchants 32
H &amp; R FIres tone
24
Meigs Inn
14
High individual Qame Lou Sauer 256, .second hlgn
i ndi&gt;Jidual game Bill
Radford 2ol6, third high in dividual ·game ~ Dewey
Sm i th , 223 .
High series - Sill Radford
588 , second high series - '
Dewey Smith 581. third higtl
series - Ed Voss 564 .
Teem high game - Phelps
906, team high series
Phe lps 2,630 .

I

NELSON'S
REG. sz.ag

records. Watch this paper for
some final season statistics .
Good job, Coach Logan!, is
what this reporter hears

Morch 2, 1!16

Team

Raised White Letters

••

who set some new school

,

,,•, j

W.VA.

co.

PHONE ...

. 773-5583

HitS

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Mta.-TIIun.

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Fri.-Sat.
.... :00 .

�3- Tbe Pomeroy Sentinel. MlddlellOrt·P(IlleroyJ 0., Thursday, March 11, 1976
~ _ The

Pmeroy Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, {) .. Thursday , March 11 , 1976

r-

TUM TIEDE

Editorial comment,
• •
opznzon, f~atures

Congress' errant presidential aspirants
amen dmen t " tha t would knees to this body - if you
By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - Two preclude any member of won't face up to yo ur
ye ars ago Rep. Morris Congress fr om taking offi ce re sponsibi II ties there is
Udall 's voting record in the as President or vice president nothing I can do."
House of Representatives until two years after the last
The howling and threats
was an admirable 81.1 per- date of service . in the have gone unheard, however.
cent of the roll calls. Last Congfess ." In short, the As one of John Rhodes'
year his attendance fell by a measure would for ce a assis tants explains it,
member to resign in order to "Legislators seldom legislate
sharp 30 points.
What happened ? He began pursue Chief Executive against themselves." What's
paying more attention .to his hopes.
more, even the angels ocNot surprisingly, Rhodes ' casionally have fun in sin,
campaign for the presidency
than his responsibilities in idea has been greeted on Rhodes, it turns out , was one
Congress, an imbalance of Capitol Hill with all of the of 62 members who last year
priorities that may even- enthusiasm of another visit decided to have the annual
tually prove beneficial to from an eighth grade congressional golf tourUdall but not to the government class. After all, nament on a day, a Monday,
legislatiure he is sworn to absenteeism has been con- when both houses were
sidered a perquisite of the supposed to be hard at it in
champion .
Never more than a legislative industry since session.
sometimes gathering place only eight of 22 senators
Yet if his constitutional
for many o.l its casual showed up at the opening of amendment proposal stands
members , Congress in a the first session of Congress no chance, Rep . Rhodes has
presidential season is treated in 1789. Besides, the subject is at least reminded the nation
almost with contempt by hoary, says one member, of some fairly important unthose of the body aspiring for "Somebody is forever getting finished business. In inhigher things. Udall is not a feather up their rear about creasingly perilous times,
alone in forgetting where it, but in the end nothing is America can't
afford
(and why) his salary is ever done .''
presidential candidates who
Former Sen . Mar~aret are also part-time legislators.
earned, the seats of Scoop
Chase
Smith was the last one A quite easy solution would
Jackson and Birch Bayh are
with
a
tickled behind. She be legislation allowing the
likewise mostly empty these
proposed
(futilely ) a con- Udalls and Jacksons to vote
days. And as for the past,
stitutional
amendment
which by proxy during unavoidable
John Kennedy's attendance
provided
for
the
discharge
of campaign travels.
record feU by hall during the
any
member
presidential
1960 campaign, Barry
It is true that proxy voting
Goldwater's was cut y a third candidate or not - who would not resolve the
in 1964 - and Gene McCarthy missed more than 40 per cent physical
absence
of
went from 66 per cent in 1967 of roil calls. And thi,n there presidential candidates from
to a simply disastrous 5 per has been Mike Mahsfield, the Congress But as Edmund
cent during the 1968 White Senate Majority Leader, who Burke said of the Brl tlsh
in 1972 called the Senate Parliament, legislators owe
House hoopla .
attendance
record not their energies but their
The consequences of this
"abominable''
and
then judgments- and the proxy is
sort of nonsense are entirely
added
a
remarkable
appeal
: a way we could at least
negative, at least according
"l
won
't
get
down
on
my
to the one member of
guarantee that .
Congress who is paying attention to it this quadren-

Energetic solution: recycling garbage
For all the cries of alarm about the energy crisis and the depletion of our resourC«s, :
Americans continue to throw away incalculable quantities of potential energy and mountians
of materials - glass, plastics, rubber, metals - !hat could be reclaimed and recycled.
Greater New York, for example, produces 18,500 tons of garbage a day. Manhattan alone
·company !hat generates electric! power for the nation's largest city has announced it is
steam capacity.
Because of diminishing suppUes of natural gas and !he high cost of fuel oil, the utility
company that generates electrical power for the nation's largest cityhas announced that it is
, "exploring the possibility" of burning some of this garbage as a substitute fuel in its steam
·
plants.
"With fuel oil costing $12 to $13 a barrel, it makes more sense to recycle garbage by
extracting energy from it than it does to bury it in landfills-or to incinerate it with no by-product
benefit," says Charles .F Luce, chairman of Consolidated Edison.
Indeed, it does. And as Luce points out, it can be done without polluting the air by means of
properly dt:~igned plants.
Yet with the exception of a few cities like St. Louis, which is mixing municipal trash with
coal to produce electricity, the nation continues for the most part oil its merry, wasteful ways.
Americans of the next century may well look back and wonder where oor common sense
was.

Antique charts are costly
Men who go down to the sea in ships these days can pinpoint their locations at any time in
any weather, thanks to navigation sate!Utes . Otherwise, however, they are still operating back
in the 19th century.
Ship groundings are occurring at the rate of three a day around !he globe, and many of
these accidents are attributable to outdated ocean charts, says Compass magazine, a
publication ofMOAC, the nation 's largest commercial marine insurance company.
When tbe 73,000-ton ore ship "lgara" ran aground in the South China Sea in 1973, it was
following the ·latest available chart for that area ~ one made in the late 1800s. The most recent
chariofthe Straits of Magelian is dated 1896, based on one of 1830.
Modern tankers cost upwards of $65 million, carry three million barrels of oil and draw
some 90 feet of water. "The size of these ships and the inaccuracy of ocean charts make
another environmental disaster like the Torrey Canyon a real possibility," !be magazine
warns.

Most fantastic flight: dollar's trip
What impresses us most about the plan to orbit 30 electricity-generating satellites to supply
the energy needs of the United States is not the idea itself.
Something like the scheme proposed by Boeing Aerospace Co. engmeers -to capture and
concentrate the sun's heat with gigantic space mirros and beam the electricity to earth by
microwaves - is coming. We have the technology to have the system in operation before the
end of the century.
··
·
Nor are we surprised at the cost of the system, estimated to be equal to the Apollo moon
landing program.
What brings us up short is the statement !hat if we were to undertake the Apollo program
today, it would cost not $24 billion but $60 billion, so great has been the effect of inflation in the
few short years since the last Saturn rocket was launched.
Remember the objections about what a waste of resources it was to put men on the.moon?
. Yet we have permitted the dollar to take off on a fantastic space trip of its own that makes the
Apolloprogram now look like a bargain basement venture.

. Ohio legislative briefs

niwn . House minority leader

John Rhodes believes it is
folly for Americans to pay
legislator-candidates full
time congressional wages for
part

time

By United Press International
PANEL NAMED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Sen. Marigene Valiquette, D-ToledO,
chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, Wednesday n.amed a _three-member subcommittee to study a House·
passed bill offering full credit for any future unvoted real
estate tlll&lt; hik.es broughi about inflation.
Miss Valiquette named herself and Sens. Donald J. Pease, DOberlin, and Donald E. Lukens, R-Mlddletown. She said the

congressio_nal

wurk. Also, Rhodes (eels that
the legislator-&lt;:andidate has
an advantage over the
citizen-&lt;:andidate which Is not
only unfair · (franking
privileges, media access and
50 forth) but taxpayer SUpported.
So it is that Rhodes, a
Republican from Democrat
Udall's home state o(
Arizona, has introduced
legislation designed to put an
end to the bother. He

Monopoly on public interest challenged

subcommittee would ':develop its own figures and stastics"

rather than take for g'ranted the fiscal impact of tbe bill as
estimated by the House, and report back to the full committee
in about a week.
'

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.B~J
..Y:~~
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The

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former California governor's loss to President Ford in the
F1orida primary has considerably "dinuned" prospects lor
Reagan's entry into !he June 8 Ohio primary.
Lukens said Reagan "has to win at least one primary"meaning Illinois' voting March 16--to stay viable into June.
MENTAL PATIENU!
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Sen. Harry Meshel, I)-Youngstown,
Wednesday introduced legislation limiting the release of
mental patients under indictment or conviction and on
medication.
Such patients could be released on medical probation,
reporting periodieally to a pubUc hospital or physician. Meshel
said escaped convicts sometimes report to mental hospitals
which release them with orders to continue medication, but oo.
check Is ever made.
INFORMATION REMOVED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The Ohio Senate Wednesday passed,
31 to 1, and sent to !he House legislation requiring the state
Bureau of Motor Vehicles to remove from its records any
information relating to traffic violations incurred by a driver
prior to a five-year license suspension.
Under current law, only "points•· accrued &amp;-om. prio
. violations are removed from bureau records following a

Sentinel

:)n your life

MEIGS - MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANJIIEHILL
e)Cec . Ed.
ROBE~T

HOEFLICH
City Ediror
Published daily elC.cep t
Saturday by Th e Oh i o
Valley Pub l isl'1ing Com .
pany , 111
Co urt
Sl.,
Pomeroy ,
Ohio
45769 .
Busin ess Office Phone 992
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COLOGNE MIST

2157

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paid at Pomeroy, Ohio
National
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and premarital sex Is
frowned upon the incidence of
cancer of the cervix Is
relatively low. By contrast In
other . groups with different
moral precepts cancer of the
cervix is about the same as
seen in the general American
population.
Recent studies show that
women who become active
sexually very early in life and
have multiple partners are
the ones who are most likely
to have cancer of the cervix.
Let me say at once that does
not mean that a person who
~las cancer of the cervix has
had a varied and extensive
sexual life. It can and does
occur even In virgins but thla
is relatively rare. The final
analysis of the relationship of
circumcision to cancer of the
cervix reveals that there
seems to be no specific
relationship at aU. If t!Jis is
the only motivation a man
has to be circumclaed or a
motber has to have her male
child circumcised, the
motivation is misplaced.

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LIP OOLORS
by Maybellne

Sport Parade

I
I

Dear Sir:
As probably everyone knows hy now the Meigs High
basketball team is the sectional champ. They played a very
tough opponent in their final game to gain this honor. But I
don't want to sound like a sportscaster. What does thts
accomplishment mean? To some maybe nothing, but to the
students, teachers, coaches, and players It means quite a lot.
Meigs' basketball teams since 1967 have never been much
to talk about but having something to talk about is not the point
I wish to make. I attended the game because I wanted to see
something I had never seen before in my four years of high
school. I saw a team, it's fans, and It's coach wanting
something and want it badly. The desire in those short 32
minutes was more than the team I played on had had In a
whole season. It made me both sad and glad to SOil such desire
and determination. My only hope Is that the students and fans
of Meigs will catch some of that desire in everything they set
out to do.
The school spirit I saw Saturday night Ia the kind !hat
should be seen every time any time a Meigs team piBys an
opponent in any sport. Win or lose' Girls included.
Meigs played another opponent.at Rio Grande this week
(Wednesday night) and whether they win or lose the game,
they have won something much more important, respect, not
only from other people, but for themselves.
To the players, congratulations! To Mr. Logan, my
deepest admiration. He may have brought Meigs High School
aliv.e again. Let's show him by supporting our teams, now and
in the years to come. - Steve Walburn, Former player,
Marietta College, Marietta, Ohio.·

By Greg Halley
Iron ton's spread-out defense
RIO GRANDE
A shook the bali loose too often
·scoreless four minutes in the in that quarter for Meigs had
beginning and a second seven costly turnovers.
The secon d c anto was
quarter with no field goa ls
proved to be the demise of the weird. Meigs scored the firs t
Meigs Marauders in losing a two points on foul shots by
49-45 heartbreaker to the Mick "Snake" Davenport to
Ironton Tigers Wednesday n~rrow the margin to 13-12, at
night at Lyne Center here in the 6: 55 mark, but that's as
close as they got all night.
AA District competition .
It was the third loss this Ironton then hit a streak
year at the hands of the while Meigs was struggling in
Tigers who ended their a cold spell, and before fans
regular season ranked tenth kn ew it, the Tigers had a 23-12
in the state . Meigs, the lead.
"Cinderella team" of the
But as has been typical of
SEOAL this year, gave the the "new look" Marauders,
boys a Coach Buddy Bell a they didn 't give up. Although
they hadn 't scored for four
scare in each contest.
Ironton got the opening tip and one-half minutes, at the
and promptly scored at the 2:26 mark Snake again hit on
6:50 mark on a short jumper a pair of free throws to start
by star Dean Fitzpatrick.· them on their way again . Of
Thirty seconds later, Fitz- the nine points Meigs scored
patrick tipped in a rebound to in that canto, all were foul
make ii4-0, and before Meigs. shots and Davenport made
could get on the board, the seven of them while Meadows
Tigers had opened up an 8-0 canned the other t-wo.
iead.
This kept the Marauders in
At the 4:20 mark, Meigs' the game as they went into
center Mitch Meadows tipped the locker room at half time
in a carom for Marauders' trailing by eight, 27-19.
That first half saw Meigs
first points. The local boys
then got charged up to take only 18 shots, five of
narrow the score to 13-10 by them successfully . The
the first period buzzer. Twice Marauders had 12 turnwers ,
in the last four minutes, they but the Tigers' high-scoring
got to Within two.
Mike Brown had picked up
In that tragic initial four his third personal roul.
minutes of the game, Meigs
The third quarter was one
committed five turnovers in of those. back-and-forth
two !Jiinutes and didn 't get off battles that "saw Meigs
a sbot until the 5:40 mark. narrow it to five, then Ironton

Today's

:

Team gains self respect

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

Marauders how out ·of tourney 49-45

:

providing for a constitutional

FROST &amp; GLO KIT

women who 'were married to
circumcised men had less of
a chance of gelling cancer of
the cervix and I want to know
If that really is true.
DEAR READER- No, It's
not. That's what happens
when you read popular
colunons on medical subjects
by people who are not
medically trained. That's an
old wive's tale. The Idea
began because it was noted
that many Jewish women
seemed to be free of cancer of
the cervix. The inunediate
and erroneous conclusion was
made that because Jewish
males are circumcised that
:this was related to circumcision.
Additional studies since
!hen have shown that it is
more closely related to the
social behavior of the individuals involved. The in·
cidence of cancer of the
cervix in Jewish women
varies greatly depending on
what their individual creeds
are. In groups where the
young girls arr supervised

: ...
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proposes a joint resolution

Youngsters need carbonhydrates
fruits, vegetables and
cereals. The other important
feature is that of course the
diet shollld be balanced aQd
include sufficient meat, milk
arid. protein foods to provide
all the essential amino acids
for the growth process.
The equivalent of a quart of
milk a day (preferably fortified skim milk, second
choice low-fat fortified milk)
and about seven ounces of
meat, chicken or fish a day
wm meet all the protein
needs .
Those who want more Information on the daily
dietary needs can send 50
cents for The Health Letter,
number 4-6, Balanced Diet, ·
Recommended Daily Dietary
Allowances IRDA) . Send a
long,
s tamped,
self·
addressed envelope for
mailing. Address your letter
to me in care of this
newspaper. P. 0 . Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
York , N. Y 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read
in an a~JfiCe coiwnn that

!.etten of opinlon are welcomed, They sboul4 be
less than 300 words long (or be subject to rtducllon by
the edlto•) and must be signed with the stpee's address. Names may he withheld upon publlcalloa.
However, on request, names will be disclosed. Letters
should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personallties.

REAGAN'S QUEST
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Sen. Donald E. Lukens, R·Middletown, one of strong Ohio backers of Ronald Reagan's quest
for the GOP presidential nomination, said Wednesday the suspension .

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M. D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - What
is the danger in a high carbohydrate diet for a fast
growing 13-year-old boy• He
is 6-feet-1 and his diet is not
too varied.
DEAR READER --'- There
is nothing wrong with a high
carbohydrate diet. Most . of
the world has lived on it.
CUltivation of cereal ahd the
use of plant food was the
major source .of food energy
for early man. High carbohydrate diets include all
cereals with needed cereal
fiber, vegetables and fruits
which are important sources
of minerals and vitamins.
When young people are
growing rapidly they need
lots of energy. Thi~ may be
one reason why they like
concentrated carbohydrate
foods such as sweets. The
only rhing I want to add here
Ia thai It's important to be
certain thai the kind of
carbohydrates that growing
people are 1;etllng Include
ad8f!uate an"''l\l" of fresh

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Environmentalists, welfare rightists, consumer advocates and the like are learni 0g !hat
nobody holds an ex elusive patent on "the public interest". More and more of these groups are
finding themselves on the defensive end of legal actions.
The list also includes at least qne government agency. Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Chemical
Corp., for example, has filed suit against the U. S. Consumer Product Safety Commission to
prevent the commission from continuing to release "misleading, incomplete, inaccurate and
unfair" information relating to the safety of household alwninum wiring.
The company charges that this information has caused numerous local government
agencies to ban or propose to ban aluminum wiring and has led contractors to stop buying the
product.
Whether this suit is in the public interest as well as that of Kaiser stockholders is for
qualifi!ld, impartial experts to decide. But it does suggest that companies are no longer as
willing as tbey once were to roll over and play dead to please consumer activists.
A better illustration of this turnabout is a "public interest" law firm in California, the
Pacific Legal Foundation, which has scored notable successes against environmentalists and
others, according to Barron's magazine.
The PFL has balked environmentalists trying to halt construction of a Trident missile base
and a flood control and irrigation dam on the American ·River, and has knocked down the
Environmental Protection Agency's "master plan" to force cars off California's streets and
freeways.
Since its founding 1973, tbe PFL has won 25 out of 40 cases it has argued and 15 are still
pending. It has yet to lose a case in final appeal.
The firm's most notable work, however, has been in field of welfare reform. It helped
institute a computerized program to ferret out welfare cbeats by matching tbe Social Security
numbers of recipients with quarterly wage reports filed by employers. The PLF successfully
beat pack attempts by welfare rights groups who attempted to have tbe program enjoined as
an "invasion of privacy."
One year after the system's introduction under former Gov. Ronald Reagan (it has been
continued under Gov. Edmund Brown), there were 785,000 fewer people on welfare in
California and the state had saved $1 billion, yet deserving recipients received benefit hikes of
more than 30 per cent.
This, in anybody's book, is serving ''the public interest.''

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

.,

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
NEW. YORK (UP!) - whether you happen to be a CharUe
Finley fan or whether you don't, you have to give him this he's always In !here thinking.
Ever since haseballwas invented, ballplayers generaily ran
around in working clolhes that were tatUe-tale gray. Charlie
Finley fixed that. He changed the entire concept of baseball
uniforms, stitching half the colors of a rainbow into those of hla
Oalrlantl A's, and after an the other owners got through
laughing at him !hey went out and did the same thing he did.
Maybe you forget how CharUe Finley kept pushing to have
the World Series start on Saturday and for some of the Series'
. games to be played at night, and !here isn't much question he
added to the fans' enjoyment of baseball generally by bringing
in speed specialists like Herb Washington solely to run the
bases.
Wlth the owners and players completely deadlocked over the
reserve clause, and with the training camps shut down,
Olarlle Finley has another proposal now to get baseball
underway again.
•
He suggests that all his fellow owners go along with the
arbitrator's ruling to the letter and give all the players their
free agency after one year. Of course this is the same
conclusion reached by the. U.S. District Court in Kansas City
and the Eighth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis, but
the owners feel they can't possibly operate that way.
They have offered to free the players after seven years, but
Finley has done some thinking about It and come up with some
strong arguments why tbey should go ahead and make them
free agents after one year . .
How often, Finley asks, will a player corrunand a whole lot of
money after he has played only one year in !he majors?
Finley says there generally isn't that much of a market fqr
the great majority of players after !heir first year. Most of
them would be looking for jobs, he says. Under Finley's propo·
sal, however, a player would be able to ask fpr hts free agency
only once and no more.
Charlie Finley has been a busy fellow the past few weeks. He
has been busy trying to sell his fellow owners the Idea they
should agree to granting one year free agency as Marvin
Miller has been clamoring for all along. So far he hasn't gotten
to first base with them.
.
Marvin Miller, the players' spokesman, has publicly hailed
· the arbitrator's ruling making all the players free agents after
one year as a great victory.
Until the Messersmith-McNally decision, Marvin Miller
kept telling !he pwners he wanted free agency for the players
after five years. I wouldn't be surprised if that's what he still
really wants even though all he keeps taking about Is one year. ·
I wouldn't be surprised if Charlie Finley is right and Marvin
Miller knows it.

Ironton will host the 1976
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
, League basketball banquet
on Thursday, April 1,
beginning at 6:30 p. m.
This was approved during
the annual spring meeting of
the SEOAL held at Jackson
High School last week.
In other matters, league
officials recognized Athens
and Logan as c&lt;H:hampions
of the SEOAL freshman
league . Ironton's varsity and
reserves were recognized as
SEOAL cage champions.
It was announced the 1976
l\11-SEOAL track and field
meet will be held at Athens on
• May 4 Instead of May 5 as
previously announced.
Members held . a general
discU88lon of police protection during and especially
after games. The general
agreement of the members
pre~~ent was that protection
should be provided until the
. villi ling team reached the city
limits.
Items members wanted
included on summer agenda
included: ninth grade league
schedule; number of teams
counting toward all-league
troplly; what sports should be
included as league sports,
and should girls teams be
included and If so what
teams.
On a motion by Bob Shamp
and seconded by Joe Murtha,
the league adopted the
baseball schedule presented
by DIU Wooddell (Athens),
with starting times at 4 p.m.,
unless by mutual agreement
between the two schools
Involved. One exception was
made, AprlllB (Good Friday)
was moved back to April Ia.
Presldant James N. M.

the last period on successive

the winner of Thursday's
Wheelersburg - Washington
Court House game to decide
MARAUDERS
FG-A FT-A RB F TP who will advance to the
I6
0· 1
5 4 2 Regionals. The Tigers are
4-6
0· 4
4
4
8
now 2().2 on tbe year.
6- 10
2-2 6 2 14
Meigs finished out its best
l · ll
7-8
7
2 17
season
record ever at 12-10,
2-6
0-0
2 4
4
0-1 0-0
0 0 0 and showed area fans fine
18-40
9-IS 24 16 45
baske !ball.
IRONTON TIGERS
Our hats are off to these
young men who
FG-A FT-A RB F TP fine
3· 11
3-7 4 2 9
represented us so well, and

Quails
Cremeans

Meadows
Davenpor t
Randolph
Br ow ning

buckets by Jerry Cremeans
an d Meado ws, but Fitzpatrick nullified those by T otal s
canning a three-point play,
and a steal and bucket by
Tiger Eddie Howard made E . H owa rd
Brown
the score read 44-37 at the C.
1· 5
1-2 2 0
3
D. F it zpat rick
l -9
1-1 IS 2 II
4:10 mark.
M . Brow n
S-7
1-4
0 3 II
In the next two minutes T hom a s
1-2
0-0
I 3 2
Roya
l
buckets by Randolph ,
2-7
o.o
6
3 4
oc kre l
0-1
3-4
0
I 3
Meadows, and Davenport put Cr
R. Howard
3· B
o.o 1 2 6
the Marauders back Into the Total s
20-SO
1- 18 29 16 49
game with 1:47 remaining 45Quarter Scores
43. Two of those buckets
came as results of fine assists
by Qualls.
Meigs had a chance to tie bucket and he quickly canned
the score with a minute left the shot, Two foul shots by total of 24 caroms, seven by
when a full-cour t press Bobby Crockrel rounde~ out Davenport, but Ironton
collected 29 rebounds, 15 by
enabled them to get a 3 on 1 the scoring.
Fitzpatrick. He was almost
situation after a steal by .
Meigs was led by Daven- unstoppable under th e
Davenport, but the shot port's 17&lt;narkers while
missed. The winning bucket Meadows had 14. Ten of those . boards.
Ir onton was paced by
came a few seconds later as 14 came in the second half.
Brown
and Fitzpatrick with
Meadows blocked a shot by · The Marauders shot a warm
11
each,
and the Tigers
Brown and the ball fell right 18-10 from the field for 45
connected
on
20-50 shots for 40
into the hands of Howard who percent and netted 9-15 from
percent,
and
hit 9-19 foul
was standing right under the the line. They collected a
shots. The Tigers .will play

Lucasville Valley tops
Chesapeake five, 77-65
CHILLICOTHE ~ Mark
and Harold Merritt combined
for 47 points and 35 rebounds
Wednesday night as Valley
High of Lucas HIIe held off the
Chesapeake Panthers, 77-65,
in a Southeastern Ohio Class
A.lower bracket contest.
The Indians , improving
their record to 19-3, will meet
Peebles, 18-3, Saturday night
at 7: 30 at the Chillicothe gym
for the district championship.
The Pan !hers closed their
season at 14-8.
Mark Merritt, a 6-7 jUnior
center, pwnped in 26 points
and grabbed 15 rebounds
while Harold Merritt, a 6-5
forward , had 21 points and 20
rebounds. Lucasville held a
whopping 41-19 edge on the
boards.
Chesapeake led 13-12 after
Robert Johnson took a sharp

only 36-29 at halftime.
After the Indians outscored
Chesapeake 16-14 in the third
period to take a 52-43 lead,
they opened the fourth period
with nine qulck points to take
a commanding 61-43 lead.
Chesapeake, despite a full
court press which worked
well enough to cut sharply
into the lead, finallyran out
of gas in the last couple of
minutes.
The Pan !hers outscored the
Indians 18-6 · to trim the
margi,n to 67-51 with 2:16left
on the clock, but Harold
Merrill and Street each .put in
a missed shot in the next 52
seconds to put ·the game on
ice.
Top scorer for Chesapeake
was 6-2 center Roger Adkins,
who was competing against
three taller players under the
pass from Kevin Rice (or an boards. Adkins had 25 pointS,
easy layup with 59 seconds Dale Russell tossed in 14 and
!ell in the 'first quarter; but D. L. McWhorter came off the
the Indians then ran off their bench to add 10. All three
first 11 point streak in a three- figured · heavily in the Panminute span to take a 23-13 thers final comeback attempt
lead . Mark Merritt and in the last quarter. Russell
Wayne Street had two was Chesapeake's top
buckets apiece in the spurt. rebounder with five.
Street, a strong 6-0 guard,
Johnson broke the spell
·with a driving layup at 5:09 of hus Ued his way to several
the second quarter and the easy baskets in the second
Pan !hers stayed close the quarter and was the only
rest of the quarter, trailin~

Ironton to host·

cage fete April 1

would shoot back into an
eight or ni ne poin t lead. The
third period ended 39-33, but
Meigs' Terry Qua lls had
picked up his fourth personal.
Meigs connected quickly in

..

. Davis informed the group
that circular No. 1550 was
available from the state
depariment on auditing
procedures.
Next meeting will be
Wednesday, June 16, at 1Q: 30
a. m. at Athens High School.
Pomeroy Bowling lanes
Trl County

CHICAGO (UP!) - Tbe
Olicago Cubs have signed
four more players- three
le!t.fianded pllcbers and a
catcher-to 1976 contracts.
The Wednesday addltlon
increased the total number
signed for the upcoming
season to 30.
The pitchers were Ken
Frailing, Jim Kremmel and
Geoff Zahn. Tbe catcher was
George Mltterwald.
PLAY TONIGHT
Class AAA Girls Secllonal Basketball Tournament tonight al Meigs
High School starts at 7 p.m.
with Warren High School
against New Lexington and...1
al8: 15 p.m. Meigs agalast ·
Fairland, In seml·flnal
acllon.

MAsON MIRNITUIE

LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Chris Evert leads the world's
top 16 women tennis players
into the richest tournament in
their sport-the $150,000 Vir·
glnla Slims Championships,
which get underway April 12
at the Sports Arena.
The SUms championship,
the first major test for
women in 1976, has been won
hy only two players in its fiveyear history. Evert won in

1972, 1973 and 1975. Evonne
Goolagong is the only otner
winner, defeating Evert in
the 1974 finals.
Only the top 16 players
after 10 regular-season
Virginia Slims tournaments
qualifo; for ihe championship.
Also expected in the field
were Goolagong, Martina
Navratilova, Olga Morozova,
Nancy Gunter, Rosie C.sals
and Virginia Wade.

.MOHAWK
G-70x14
Super Mag 70s

'

MOn .• Tues•• Wed. &amp; Sat.-&amp;:301115:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIIMY UNTIL 8 PM
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.

~ .MASON

.'' ~ ' 'I

V3~5~
·~ .,~

still get
the beat
value on

car Insurance
at State Farm1
You bet

you 011111
'See:

. 1258 Powell St.

other Indian to finish in
double figures with 29 points.
LUCASVILLE
( 77)
Evans 2·3· 8; Arric k 1·0-2; M .
M erritt 10 -6-26 ; Street 9-2-20 ;
H . Merritt IO . J-21. Total s 32 IJ -77 .
CHESAPEAKE (651 R ice 3·0-6 ; Russell 6-2· 14 ;
Johnson 4-0-8 ,· Adkin s 1.2-1-25 ;
Marshall 1-0-2 ; McWhort er 4
2- 10. Totals 30 -5-65 .
By Quarters:
Lucasville
14 22 16 25- 77
Chesapeake
13 16 14 22- 65

Middleport, 0.

..... ,...

PH. H2·7155

A

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Get ;1.Gravely and see how
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95

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Send your ush ,..itt., riCtiPt.IIMI ttlt front portion of labels for ttdt
eleimtd (as illuSVal.cl on th coupol'l). Quarts"'' tlilitl...
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MON.-FRI. I TIL 5:30
· SAT. 8 TIL 2100

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Can you

MEADOWS FIRES- Mitch Meadows (33) gets a shot
off against Ironton's junior Dean Royal Wednesday at Rio
Grande in the district AA basketball tournament. - Jim
Hamm picture.

$

STORE HOURS

NElSON'S

everywhere.

Std.

Phelps
61
Roachs Gun Sllop
. · 46
Pomeroy Cement BII'Ck Co . 37
Sear's Cetalog Merchants 32
H &amp; R FIres tone
24
Meigs Inn
14
High individual Qame Lou Sauer 256, .second hlgn
i ndi&gt;Jidual game Bill
Radford 2ol6, third high in dividual ·game ~ Dewey
Sm i th , 223 .
High series - Sill Radford
588 , second high series - '
Dewey Smith 581. third higtl
series - Ed Voss 564 .
Teem high game - Phelps
906, team high series
Phe lps 2,630 .

I

NELSON'S
REG. sz.ag

records. Watch this paper for
some final season statistics .
Good job, Coach Logan!, is
what this reporter hears

Morch 2, 1!16

Team

Raised White Letters

••

who set some new school

,

,,•, j

W.VA.

co.

PHONE ...

. 773-5583

HitS

. ,:,.

Mta.-TIIun.

.

Fri.-Sat.
.... :00 .

�. . .. J.Ltics edge Lakers,
.•••.

bar rips official

•••
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ddl'iilC rl 1krnrr 129·119,

nd \ J!tJ

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Kt•ntuek•;
kavoed
San
i\nt .. nw i28-124 ,ind St. Louis
_..,!(,prwd r\('\\ York 99-95.
~t.it: r~ ·1i!5. Swts 108
.Jnr&gt; Br:.anl scored a ca reer

~tl-

1

Jugh :1ti pumts and George

:'1
t·

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fX; t ~u

\1t•l;uuus had ]:~ of hi s 17
poults m the final period to

ht&gt;r

, H

h&lt;'ip l'hiludclphia rally to
dt fl'~l l l'hO'CIIiX.
Bra' t.' :-. 120, Jan lOS
Hob \lcr\dnu and Humly

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t) 1 .~ 111

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S:&lt;turd": ··s talent-rich NCAA
,\llll t•a:, l su bregional that
brings tugethcr three uf the

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No. (\ NorU1 Carolina faces
"\o 7 J\labama Jl.12: 15 p.m.
1EST' wtd No. 2 Marquette
gues against unranked
Wc,tern Kentucky at 2.15
·p 111 The winners advance to
thf' ~1 Hi enst regional serni tJIWl::; \\1arch 18 m Baton
Houj•e. La .
l\'orth C'ar ol ina 125·:l) is a
sl!g ht f~1Vorite to · edge
Alube~mo
l 22·1l,
whJle
Marqueue &lt;25-l i is a so lid
choke to ovt"rpowe r Western
Kentucky 120-81 at the
Uruversity -of Di:lyton Arena

w,llll;,;t

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J!;d.UJCS

ntght,
' l l 'h(.enlx
~blr'jWd \ew

&amp;lurdaj.
"We

we!'e
verv
riisappointed in losing the
AC't'
1 Atlanllc
Coast
Confen•ncr J tourney, blll

tx·ot

.')J&gt;,Jttit•

r

ll•·lt•'

.md

we 're l'Oilfidcnt we'll bounce

('lass

back a nd play well.'' says
Nt rLlt ·'"'llrolina coach Dean
Sn 1ith , whose club was upset
by V1 r gin ia last weekend.·
'·ou r problem.'' adds
Sm ith , "is that we will be
f&lt;lcmg one of I he best teams

uunp
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Sm ith's Tar Heels are Jed
IJ;. ti-10 ce nler Mitch
Kupcha k, &lt;:Jveri:lg ing 18JX1ints
;1 game, a nd guard Phil Ford,
who not only is the club's top
:-iCorer ( 19 po mt aver age) bul
:!lsn the assist leader.
'' We know Ko rth Carolina
i.:; outstandi ng, but we
11elcome the challenge. thai
\\ t-'ve l~arned - the r ha nce to
pl·ay for
the
natio nal
·1 ham!Jions hlp,· 1
sa ys
Alab;m1a coach C.M. Newton .
How~b the Crtmson Tide's
r,.JII cen ter Leon Douglas,
"We believe we can beat
); orth Carolina." Douglas,
l\1ab£&amp;mil 's all·tLme scoring
leader, is averaging 20 points
&lt;md 12 rebound&gt; a game.
'J11is is the fourth straight
~~· oson Alabama has won 22
ga mes , but the Ti de has had a
tough time on the tourn ey
trnit. Ala ba ma lost ~~ tough
~7 94 decision to Ar izo na
State in last year 's NCAA
tou rnament and No rth

's

t 'l

,.

Jazz

kast one of the nation's best
rolll"gl' b..1skctba l1 teams is
gu ;1r ~1ntt't' d
to fall in

od \\ t1 ,tn
:,,HI j. ,lt-J tJ.
t t'ar I
b ll'tr'

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three

lead U1e

ll) HICK \'AN SANT
1lA VTON, Oh io I UP! )- At

11 1t•t tun
1

!Xl111ls in

to

CANDY NOVEL TIES, EG GS, FILLE D
AND
'MPTY
BASKE TS,
TOYS,
FVE:RY'! 'lNG FOR A HA PPY EASTER.

..

...

Whtlt&gt; A~sorf menf Is Complete

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ca. 9c

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A1um1n um Foil .
3 ro ll s 99c
•n lcd 10.hour' Vottve Can dles each 9c

R(•q 1.00 i.lndhcrg lg s1 re Mo del Kits
ea. 79c
~e9 SJ OODt.HI1Ri feFrumlyGa m es
ea. 79c
RPQ. ~Qc 6ndcH' S1re Playing Ca rd ~
d eck 29c
Reg 77 ~.; eM D~'c oratlve Straw Hot P&lt;;~d s
2 for 99c
Reg 1.29 J u1nbo Stor·.1gr Chest
ea . 99c
Rpg. to M eV ·I las swarr Spec ials
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Reg. t o 2 lQ \'.~1 FtreKma Ovenware
Ch oi ce 99c
Re&gt;t;J. ~1.49 J6 o&lt; Apof hecar y Jars
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Reg S9c Wornen BtkllltS &amp; Bnefs
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;.'

•.•:·:·:~ ·:·····:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::~::::~·:·:·:·::::!:!•!:!:!:!:!:!:!·!·:·:::.:·:·:·:·:i:::::::::;;.;::;::::::::;:;.;!;:;:;

.......
. ...
' .'' .
.. ' .

Make Pome roy Your Sho ppmg Lente r

•

,,,

~

BEN ,~RANt&lt;•
PHONE
200-202 East Ma in St. ·
992-14&lt;"
POMEROY, OH '·"'

,

U,p Our Convenient

final s Mar ch ~~.. at Baton
Rouge. c arri e~ a 21-game wm
strea k into tis matchup with
Western Kentucky.
"We' re at the top of our
game and uur bench is really
starting to comt along," says
Warriors coach AI McGuire,
who rea lly doesn't have to go
to the. bench often with the
likes of ve terans Ea rl Tatum,
Bo Ellis and Lloyd Walton
and newcomer jumping j ack
Je rome Wh itehead .
'' I do n't think there could
be a better ba sketball team in
the country right now than
J\.hu qt..&gt;.:Lle, .. curu l.'{:.~s X!:tv1e r
coach Taj' Ba ker, whose club
lost twice to Marquette th is
season by a total of 59 points.
If there is a better club thiln
Marquette, il doeRn't figure

Lav - ~wa y

\

be unheralded Western
Kentucky, which isn 't sure
there's a way it can stop the
Warriors Sa turday.
" With guys like Tatum,
Walton and Ellis, you ca n't
conce ntrate on one of their
players," concedes Jim Ri·
chards, coach of the Ohio
Va lley Conference champs.
"! do.n 't th ink th e;~ have much
chance to be upset, but we're
going to try."
Weste rn's s tr ength is
matu rit y a nd balance
sen iors Johnny Britt, Wilson
.James an d Chuck Rawlings
a re all averaging over 15
po ints a game - but the
Hill toppers can't expect to
get many rebounds aga inst
Marquette.

•

m DoralOpen
. MIAMI !UP! ) - J C. Snead
w1ll admit J ack Nick laus is
the favont e to '.\'in the Doral
Open golf tournamen t but
don 't suggest to him that the
rto ldcn BcHr's prese nce
mearu the rest of the field
will be playing for second
place.
" If we thought. Nicklaus
would wm eve ry week, we' d
just give him the pr ize money
· and go home," Snead sa1 d
hefore toda y'.s first round of
the $200,000 eve nt over
Dora l's
fam ed
"Blue
Monster " course .
''I gel tired of everybody

writing that we're playing for
second money when he's in a
tournament ," the Virginia
golfer said. '·If you bet on him
every week, you'd end up
losin g. There are too m&lt;my
great players .'' ·
IT recent . performance is
an:? indication, Snea d would
have to be cons idered as a
threat to Nicklaus, the 1975
Dora! champion who did not

BOWLING
T h ursda\1 St n k er s
Fe br ua r y '26 , 1976
We lker 's A shland
40 16
S•mon' s Pt clc A Pa i r
39 17
Team 1
36 20
T eam .1
24 32
Team 3
19 37
T eam 2
10 46
T eam hig h series
Team 3
982, second !earn high seri es
Simon's P ic k A ·Pai r 9al,
tll ir d team h igh se r ies Welker 's Ash land 'i65 .
! ndivt d u al hig h se r ies
Patti Wdl 1ams 495 , second
individu al high se r 1es Dre ma Ro ach 481. thtrd 1n
divtduaJ hig h ·se ri es - L ena
H oward 41 0 .
Indiv idual hi!;lh game · ~
Palt i W ill tams 191. se cond
tn dt vidual h igh game Dr emq Roach 11.1 , th 1r d 1n
div·id ua ! h ig h game - L er\a
Howard 171
Th u r sda;y St r i k ers
Marc h 4,197 6
Team
•
Simon's P ic k. A Pa 1r
W e lker 's As h land ·
Team 1

Won

45
JO
38

Pro

National Bask etball A ssocia 1•o n
Standings
By Uni ted Press 1111ernationa l
Eastern Conference
Atlan t ic D ivision
w . L. Pet. GB
Boston
43 21 672
Buffalo
37 '27 578 6
Phila delphia 38 '19 567 6 1,
New York.
32 34 485 17
Central Division
W L. Pet .
GB
Washington
41 26 611
Cleveland
37 26 .587
2
Hou ston
33 33 .500
71 .,
New Orlean s ?9 37 ,439 1J1 1
At lant a
28 36 .438 1J1 2
Wes t er n co nf eren ce
Midwes t D1vision
W . L , Pe t .
GB
M ilwaukee
28 36 .438
Det ro i t
25 39 391
3
Kansa s City
25 40 .385 31 :
20 4·1 .313 8
Ch1cago
Pac ific Divi si on
W . L Pet.
GB
Golden Sta te 47 18 723
Seattle
33 35 .485 15 1 .~
Los A ngeles
32 34 .485 15 1 .1
Phoen iK
30 34 .469 J6l ,
Porttand
?9 38 .433 19
Wed nes day ' s Results
Houston 113 Portlan d 110
Seant e 110 M ilwaukee 105
Bo ston 92 Los Angeles a9
Buffalo 1'20 New Or l eans 105
Phtlad elphia 125 Pho enix 108
T hursday 's G.1 mes
Pho en i x dl Atlant a
Golden Stat e at Cleveland

Am encan Bask etbal l
A ssociat io n Sta ndi n gs
By U ni ted Press International
W L Pet. GB
Den ver
50 17 7d6
New York.
d2 'J6 61 8 8 1 ,
San Ant onio
39 17 59 1 10 1'I
Ke n tuck y
38 31 S5 1 lJ
lnd i.ana
34 37 479 18
S l LOU IS
3 1 Ja 449 20
Virg inia
12 57 17&lt;1 39
Wedn es day's Result s
Indiana 179 Denver 119
St Lo uis 99 New York 95
Ken t uck y 128 San Ant on10 12.1
Th.u r sday•s Gam es
Denver at New Y ork
Sa n Antonio vs . Vlr Qmta at
Nor fotk. '
N a11on al Hock e v
Lepg ue Sta ttd•ng s
By Untte d Pr ess !nt erna t 1ona1
Ca mpl;lel l Confere nce
Patr ick Divi ston
W. l T P IS G F G A
Phtldlph 4] 10 \.t 100 795 17B
NY Isl an ders
37 17 \ .t 88 760 160
At l anta
30 30 10 70 133 :'OB
NY Rn g r s 23 35 9 55 22 3 ?79
Smy the Oivi stOil
'
W. l T P IS G F G A
Chic ag o 26 2·1 17 69 103 109
Vancovr 28 28 13 69 232 135
St. L OU IS J.l 37 12 60 709 7&lt;!7
Mtnnes.ot 16 J6
J J O 1t'l.t 757
Kanss Cty 12 .t5 10 34 157 2B5
Wa les Confer ence
Norr iS DIVI SIOn
W l T Pt s GF GA
Monlr eal 50 ~ 10 110 788 1.17
Los A ngl s J2 2"1
7 7 1 120 116
Pn s. brgh ?9 ?a 11 69 78 6 758
De tro it
20 39
9 .19 174 263
washng tn a 50 9 25 186 J'lB
Ada m s Di vist ol\
W L T Pt s GF GA
Boston
4'1 13 II 95 75tl 195
13ul f alo
3·7 19 12 IJ6 265 70/
. Toront o
31 2S 1:;1 75 259 733
Californ i 25 36 9 59 277 744
Wed nesday 's Result s
Mon t r e &lt;:~l 5 Ch1c ago 1
A tl anta 4 M innesota 1
St. L ouis 2 Toron to 7
Bu ff alo 7 Pittsburgh 6
Cal if ornia 4 De troi t 3
Van c ouver J Kansa s City I
Thu rsday 's Gam es
Toro n to at Bos ton
Bu tt a l o at Ph i lad elphia
NY Ra :-~ge r s at Los Angetc s

com pete in last week's Citrus
Open in ·orlando.
Snead has a wi n in the San
Diego Open plus a second and
a third in the last four weeks
to rank thi rd on the money
list. He is off to one of his best
sta rts ever despit e the fa ct
that he loses 30 yards '•m
length on every hole in whi ch
he uses his driver.
"The courses have n't be en World H !l c k e y ASS OCi at ion
Sl ,lnd tng s
that long and the rest of my B y U n1 t ed Press l nturn ,H I Oilill
Eiis t
·
game is making up for my
w. L T Pt!o GF GA
short dn ving," he J&lt;laid .
Clev tnd 79 37 S 63 na 229
However, at Nicklaus' last Cmcnnt 31 36 1 6J 251 781
outing two weeks ago, he New En g land
28 34 6 6/ / 13 2·19
buried the rest of th e fi eld on lnd inpls 26 37 3 !&gt;5 192 206
We st
the final day of th e
W. L T. Ph GF GA
Pl aye r s Houston 42 23 0 8&lt;1 27 1 220
T o ur name nt
Championship at Ioverrar y Phoen ix J3 27 6 72 '14 4 22.1
D ieg 3? ]0 4 6B 2S5 233
to defeat Snead by lhree x:San
Mnn ht 30 15 4 6 ~ ' 11 21?
shots.
Ca nadian
. GA
'"You ask me who the WmnpgW . .17L 21T . 2Pf s96 GF
306 21 ,1
favorite 1s and I have to say QuebeC 39 2d &lt;1 a~ 2139 ?62
Nicklaus beoause he is the Ca l gary 34 30 rl I? 256 235
Edmntn ?·I 41 5 53 ?37 ?9S
defending champion," Snead Toron to 1a 41 5 dl 771 326
said. "But th at doesn't mean x.O]t aw 1·1 26 I 19 134 172
x t eam disband ed
I think he'll win .''
Wedn esday 's ResulT s
27
Tea m 3
24
Team 4
1a
T ea m 2
T eam
h i gh
se rtes
Simo n ' s P1 c k . A . Pai r 924 ,
Second team h i gh series T eam 2 914, lhird team h ig h
ser ies - Tea m 3 905 .
Individual hig h series Anne Hatfield 472, sc cQ n d
mdividual high se r tes P h ·r llis Cl tne 424 , t hi r d in
d lvidua t high sert es ~ Lena
H oward 416
l ndivicjua l hig h ga m e A nne H a tfield teo, secon d
individua l high game ~ An n
M or ri s 156. thi r d in divid u a l
hig h game - Le na Howard
and An n Hatlfe ld 14 8.
Pom e r oy Bowling Lane s
Ea rly Sunday Mix ed
M;uch 1 , 1976
T eam
Std .
Jac k s D a tr v Bar
60 28
Pul li n s Ex: cava t tng
53 35
Hill &amp; Mayer· Barbers
42 46
Team 6
42 46
Tom s Carry Oul
36 52
Pom e roy F lowe r Shop 3 1 57
High indiv i dual gam£&gt; J oh n T.y r ee 19 3. Ma r y Vo s s
201 , second hig h tn div 1d u al
gam e -- Jeff WiiSOI1 190
Mary Vos s 193.
H ig h ser .es - .Jo hn T y r ee
52 4, Ma r y Voss 57 4, secO n d
high s er ies
Ed Voss 506 ,
Betty Smilh 534.
Team ' high ga m e - Pu l lins
E)(cava t ing 706, t ea m h1gh
series Jac k s D ai r y Bar
1,996 .

Winnipeg 10 Quebec 3
Phoen 1x J New En g lan d 'l
Clevel and 5 Cinci nn at i 1
Thu r~ d ay's Gam es
Edmonton at Ca l ga r y
Hous ton at San Di ego
Tor o nto a t Ind ia n apolis
Int er nati on a l H oc k ey
L eague Sta nd i n g s
Un i t e d Pr ess In ter n atio n a l
N or th
W l T Pt s GF GA
Sagi na w 3a 1 1 9 as 297 24 1
Po rt Huron
31 '25 11 } J '257 142
F l in t
30 26 12 ]2 241 2 18
M·u skcgon
~8 28 12 68 220 213
Ka l amazoo
12 37 9 53 23 9 297

Blown Into Your Walls
'Free Estimates' ·

Ohio H igl'i Sd1oo l

Morn1ny Glo nc!&gt;
M arch 2, 1976
Excclc.1or Oil Co
Gtbbs Gr ocery

IJ 5
' 13

96

W M P 0

N r&gt;wcll Sunoco

G &amp;

J

""

Aulo PM I&lt;,

·spr&gt;nter '; Mar!o:et
~0 '
H lgl'l if\dlv •diJat tJ1HY1C
An n Radford 185 , ~ecofld t1i~ h
•nd•v1du al C/alllc
M a 1v
G.tlilan 18 J

H 1Qh . sc r 1r&lt;,
Ma rl el'\c
Wilson ·191. setun d nigh ~c r~t:o~
e c ck.v Dvn tc c ,t~ O
TPiJrn
l)t Qh ' q;;m,,
Spenc er:; Markt'1 a\9 . IC.&lt;HTl
htq h ~ t:i r ICS
~PC'I!C er '6
M&lt;Jr~el 7 169
Pom eroy 13 ow liny L.t nc!&gt;
Tues d ay fripllca f ('
M arc t1"2 , 1976
T 1'.1 m
Std .
Royal Oa k Par~
51
Ril (tfH ! Ho me, N elli Ilk
J1
Drw Drop'&gt;
38
Dairy Vnll ey
30
N e w York Clotlllr~q
11
M.tchell P a1n t1ng co
14
H 1gh i ndiVIdUal Q&lt;lOH='
Wanda Tealord 190, ~econd
h1gh 10d1V1dUa l qc'ln1('
WtH'Ida 1 PO lord

I S~

H•qh scr1cs
Wanda
Tca lord S?Ci
second high
'&gt;N CS
Pal (drS On 4a9 .
TNHn high qamc
M it
ct11~ ll Patnttnq Co . 471. 1cam
h1qh sertes
MilcheJI
P,1,nlin9 Co \,]&lt;1 6

player be

t~ran ted

30 da ys

termination pay if released
after spring training starts.

sccreh1ry , :~nd

Mrs Jl•:tnnt:

Bm\ en ,

The book fair dt"play '" ll
include attractive fit ' \\ Uoo kti
fro lll

lllHlly

publishers Irl· O:l ll

popular pnce rang('s. Many
of the books &lt;.~r e paperbad'is.

AJJ rft;;uJing mterests will be
r cp r cse11te- d , including

classics. ficilon, Hlh'enturc,
nature, cra fts, and referenc.•e
l.x}(')ks. Tlw book fair

('U f!l -

mi ttee is . wo rkin g with
Ji:rl \ICatioua l f~ ,~ mlin u Se r·
vice, ;i p r ufes~ i onn l book f~1 ir

l'ompan r.
The book fair wil l be open
frl}m 7: (}(Jto B: OO p. 111 , dw·1ng
the mu nth!y meeting of the
Salisbury PTO on Tuestl&lt;1y ,
March i6. P11rents arl' lnvlted
to bro,\•se through the buuks
and llelp their · ch il dr en
choose from the witle
selec lio n lhal will be
available.

48

FOR
BIRTHDAYS

Cin M c N ic holas 56 Readi n g 55~
Greenhi ll s 79 Goshen 51
CL ASS A
A I Co l umbu s
Canal Winches te r 61 Sparta
H ighl an d 53
Ridqeda l e 71 Berne Unio n 36j
At Lima
i
/Ida 67 Mendo n Union 59
'
A I F tn d la y
Rivf'rdale 6 ~ Wocdmorc 55
At Chillico th e
V all e y n Ch esa peake 65
AT Dayton
R tplcy 6] Twin Va l le y South

ACCUTRON
by

BULOVA

51

1\nson•a 43 Tr 1ad 35
Lock l and /6 Fr ank li n Monroe

;6

CLASS AA
At Warren K en n ed y
Brobk. l 1eld 5q Newton Falls 58
AI St eube nv ill e
Coshoc ton 66 Bridgeporl 60

Local Bowlin,g

''
'I

)
SPACEVIEW "Iii"
S,talnteu steel.
Cluoiew tllal.

1150.00

Ne w Wrinkl e Resistan t
Fabrics in Na v y and Ma ny
Other
Plain
Col o r s,
Ch ecks .

$49.50 to $9().00

New York Clothing House
POMEROY, OHIO

'

Goessler's

. I

JeweiiJ Store

.::- , ~

POMEROY,

.....,.

Where Rheumatism Pain Strikes'" a}
--.

768
/58
308

1

I
!

I
[
]

I

~
1

!'IWI=:JMt l1

N&amp;N SPORTSHOP

r.
."f&lt;

~'
:~

•• •
•••
~
·~

,,••. •
·.~

&gt;

••••• •'
'' ~ .

LOHSE

Charles Riffle. R. Ph.

.PR ESCRIPTIONS

PH. 992-2955

Friendly Service

112 E. MAIN
Op enN;ghtsW9 POMEROY.O.
!...._.._.__...._ _ _.._________

·"

.

·«
,.,;

''I;
~·

{\

.........•.•.•••
•

QUITTING BUSINESS
All GOODS TO BE SOLD
AT WHOLESALE. OR LESS
Archery and Fishing Lures at less
than wholesale.

-CONVERSE All STARsCANVAS REGUlARS ........... $9.00
CANVAS IRREGUlARS........ '6.00
SUEDE REGUlARS ........... '13.00 ·
SUED£ IRREGUlARS...... ..!ll.OO

WILSON A2000 BAll GLOVES
DEXTER GOIJ HE$. .... }17.50
BEAR KODIAK MAGNUM BCMS
PING PONG TABI ES
lUBE SOQS_S

·----

Mon . th r u Sat. 8 : 00a .m. to 9 : 00p.m.
Sunda yiO : lOto12 : 30andSto9p . m ,

"clouding the issues and ...
recommending 'business as

usual."'
The FDA delivered the
warning In its bimonthly
Drug Bulletin, mailed to
some
650,000
doctors,
pll8imacilla and hoopllala

across the country. It said it
plans to require a warning on
the labels of estrogen drugs.
Its finding resulted from
four recent studies and it said
uiat, although not warranting
a ban on estrogen now, " the
rial! •llll•ted by these

~
"

'il,,.

e

"'~·~~,

.

CREMEANS DRIVES - Junior Jerry Cn!mearut of the Meigs Marauders penetrated
inside lhe foul circle and let fly Wednesday against Ironton (Meigs lost 49-45) in lhe AA
District basketball wurnament. No. 21 is Terry Qualls, Meigs; No. 33, Mitch Meadows. No.
54 (white) is Ironton's brilliant 6-6 center, Dean Fitzpatrick. -Jim Hamm picture.

By DANIEL F. GILMORE

WASHINGTON (UPI) Richard Nixon says it was ·
Henry Kissinger who chose
the people whose phones
would be tapped w try w
trace securily leaks in 1969.
Kissinger earlier said J.
Edgar Hoover chose them.
"It was Dr. Kissinger's
responsibility w furnish to
Mr. Hoover the names of
individuals that he , Dr .
Kissinger, felt migh1 have
had access w information or
that ,.. might have had a
tendency to be loose mouthed
and have acquired the
information without his
knowledge and have put it
out," Nixon said.
Nixon's statement came in
testimony In a $3 million
lawsuit by Morton Halperin
against Kissinger, his fonner
hoss at the National Securi1y
Council.
Nixon,
for 6'h
hours
at 63,
his testified
San Clemente,
Calif., home Jan . 15, and the
testimony was made public
Wednesday.
Halperin charges Kissinger
gave lhe order to bave his
home phone tapped for 21
months In connection with
leaks to newspapers from the
NSC . At the time, Kissinger
was Nixon's international
security adviser and head of
the NSC.
In a statement filed witb
the U.S. District Court Jan.
12, Kissinger said Hoover had
identified four persons,

including Halperin, as
security risks
to be
wiretapped.
Halperin, at a Wednesday
news conference, said
Nixon 's testimony showed
discrepancies in Kissinger's

studies is, In public health
terms, a hlghiy significant
one.u
" Prolonged
use
of
es trogens
by
postmenopa usa!
women
apparently ·is associated with
a marked increase in risk of
cancer of the endometrium,
to
strong
a ccording
epidemiological evidence
that has emerged within the
last several months," · tbe
FDA said.
Cancer of the endometrium
is a form of uterine cancer
that attacks the organ's
lining . " While further
inf.ormation is needed, these
findings clearly al1er the
benefit-risk relationship of
estrogen therapy lor many
women,'' lhe FDA said.
The least hazardous way 111
prescribe estrogens would
appear to be the "lowest
effective dose for the shortest
possible , time
with
appropriate monitoring for
endometrial cancer," the
FDA said.
Enough estrogen is now
prescribed in the cour~f of a 1
year to treal 6 million
women, the FDA said .
Women take the drugs w
alleviate physical symptoms
"and because of a common
belief that estrogens promote
a feeling of well being and a
youthful appearance." .
The FDA compared older
women having endometrial
cancer to healthy women,
and · found that a markedly
larger percentage of the
afflicted women had used
estrogens.

he hopes will get under way In
a lew months.
Nixon said he ordered the
investigation because the
early months of his ·
administration had been
wracked by 21 national
security leaks at a time when
the U.S. was deeply Involved .
in the Vietnam war.
But he insisted he .did not
piek the victims - didn't
even know Halperin - and
did not speciftcally order
wire1aps.
" As a matter of fact,'• he
said, "I found that the highest
number of wiretaps 'during
lhe previous 20 years had
been during the third year of
the Kennedy administration
... If you will check the
record, you will find lhat the
number of wiretaps for
national security purposes
during the 5'h years I was
president was less than the
average of wiretaps in the
previous eight years."

IJ

Bailey to get speech analysis
evidence
admitted on
grounds
It
was not
Lucy M. Schultz to David L.
scientifically reliable.
Shelburne,
Ellen
C.
Bailey and Fort clashed ShelbU{ne, Parcels, Olive.
repeatedly during two days of
Guy E. Guinther, Lyndla L.
cross examination tn which Guinther w James W. Morris,
the attorney sought to Dorothy J . Morris, Parcel,
discredit the San Francisco Olive.
physician.
Luther C. Friend, Betty J .
The defense produced Friend, Holly Friend to Elden
letters
written
by E. Slack, C&amp;ndlce M. Slack,
pocychlatrlsts on the staff of Part of Lot, Syracuse .
Herrick Memorial Hospital in
Clair W. Giles Jr .. Thelma
Berkeley, Calif., where Fort Giles to James Frederick
was In residency In the Butcher, Jennifer Sue Butpsychiatry department dur- cher, Sec. , Rutland .
ing \957-58.
Vashti M. Grinun w David
One critized Fort for L. Shuler, Carla J . Shuler,
showing resentments, which Sec., Letart.
brought out responding
resentments in patients . •
• f
Another said he was ~------------------.,,
Your " E x tra Touch"
"negative and sulky" and hls
Florlst Since 1951
personal problems Interfered
with hls perfonnance. One
colleague
said
'he
"manipulated people."
Fort told Bailey he had
never seen tile letters before,
but had discussed his
performance
with his
PH, 99~·2644
department head at Herrick
and the man "praised me for
. 352 E. Main, Pomeroy
my longcomings as weD as
Your FTD Florist
my shortcomings."

fRANCIS
·A.ORIST

r
1

Cool Comfort

!
!

tlone up in fashion!

i

'

MEN'S

MAVERICK JEANS
14 oz.
Denim

Ben

Bottoms

BOYS TUBE SOCKS
Stripes or Solids
Size 6·10
Reg. 7'1

~9,851. "

----.-.-SAFE!
Be ...

I
I

I

1

1

,BONE

I

For going everywhere
. coaly
poised with comfort and an accent
on bright design. Divinely soft,

f
t
t
I

I

heavenly cool. In a dazzling array of
colors .

Marguerite's Shoes.
BETTY OHLINGER

L-~~!~~=-

Pomeroy

FERRY-MORSE

MIDDlEPORT DEPARTMENT SlORE

BULK GARDEN SEEDS
Everything Is Heref

Garden Trowls
Hoes
Shovels

MOAL

Spades
FLOWER

Rakes

BOXES

GRASS SEED

protect yo ur feet from danger

'

PACKAGE VEGETABLE &amp;FLOWER SEEDS

Sale will go from March 13 thru
March 27, if the goods last that long.
You will never find another
opportunity like this ....

M1 $11-ES WILL BE FINAL

views and that he hoped W get
a ,new deposition from
Kissinger soon.
Halperin said Nixon would
be called as a witness, as
would Kisslnger, in the trial

HOMCHIK ARRAIGNED
MISSOURIAN ARRESTED
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UP!) CINCINNATI (UPI) - The Robert W. Homchik, 32,
FBI reported that Jesse North Tonawanda, N,Y., who
Jones, 31, of Cape Girardeau, was arrested by the FBI on
Mo., who escaped the U.S. charges of unlawfully fleeing
Penitentiary in Leavenworth, from
Ohio
to
avoid
Kan ., last Oct. 6, was prosecution, was released on
arrested ln a suburban Blue $1,500 bond pending a March
Ash bar Wednesday by FBI 25 hearing when arraigned
agents and Blue Ash police. Wednesday before U.S.
FBI agents said Jones had Magistrate Edmund F .
been ser.ving a three-year MaxweU.
sentence for obstruction of
Homchik was arrested by
mail. Jones is to be sent back FBI agents earlier In the day .
to Leavenworth, agents The FBI said Homchik was
said.
wanted by the Cuyahoga
County sheriff's office on
charges of carrying a
concealed weapon, drug
FORD DELEGATES
violations, housebreaking
COLUMBUS (UPI)
and larceny.
Members of the Republican
Local felony warrants were
Stale Central and Executive issued in Cleveland last Oct. 8
CollUillttee of Ohio are to and a federal warrant was
meet Friday afternoon w issued by U.S. Magistrate
make final recommendations Herber! Maher Feb. 24, the
for candidates for delegates FBI said.
and alternate delegates
pledged to President Ford.
The selections must be
given lhe President for hls
approval prior to the March BIG WSERS
25 filing deadllne for Ohio 's
CINCINNATI (UP!) June primary election, Vulcan Corp. officials report
Republican State Chainnan that the ' locally-based
Kent B. McGough sald.
manufacturer of shoe lasts,
heels and soles, and bowling
pins, lost more than $1 million
last year.
The finn disclosed Wednesday it lost $1,038,440 on sales
of $35,036,282 In 1975,
compared with a loss of
$36,727. on sales of $36,665,144
In 1974.
"The annual results for
1975 include nonrecurring
income of $143,441 from the
sale of assets as compared w
nonrecurring income of
$418,227 in 1974 from lhe sale
of assets;··company officials
pointed out. "The 1975 results
also lnclude write.,ffs due to
the
abandonment
of
equipment in the amount of

TEE SHIRTS

....lliiii. .

Th e suggestion
was
ridiculed by U.S. Attorney
James L. Browning J r ., who
noted the judge had already
rejec ted one attempt by

Property
Transfers

Nixon testimony disputes Kissinger

SOME OF OlJR PRICES

"I

;;l

' \~

POMEROY

( EKcept Compound Bows)

w

Pharmacy
Ke nneth McCuttogh, R. Ph .

OHIO

Action resumes in the
Meigs Elementary School
basketball tournament today
at 6 p. m. at Meigs Junior
High In Middleport.
Monday night in the fourth
and filth grade contest
Pomeroy A defeated Brad·
bury A 43 to 20. High scorer
for Pomeroy was Todd Fife
with 30 points. and for
Bradbury Jackson had 11
points.
In the second game,
SalisblD'y B defeated Rutland
35 10 18. For Salisbury John
Smith had 14 points and
James Evans had 10. For
Rutland Ricky Edwards was
high with 10.
In lhe sixth grade contest
Monday night Salispury
defeated Pomeroy B 31 w 26.
Scoring for Salisbury were
Bill Holcomb with 13 and
Laura Gale Smith with 7. For
Pomeroy Sheets and Miiier
had 8 each .
Tuesday night ln the fourth
and fifth grade contests
Pomeroy
B · defeated
HarrisonviUe '1:1 to 5. For
Pomeroy Mike WhiUatch had
9 and Nicky Riggs 6.
Sallsbury A defeated
Bradbury B 34 to 17. For
SallsblD'y Clifford Icenhower
and Scott Harrison had 10
each and lor Bradbury John
Aeiker had 6 and Scott
Pickens 5.
In fifth grade play 'fuesday
Harrisonville defeated
Rutland 38 to 18 with Larry
Cottrill pwnplng In 18 points
and Duane Jones 10 for lhe
winners . For Rutland Paul
Michaels and T. T. Simons
had 7 each .
Action wlll reswne this
evening at 6 p. m. at Meigs
Junior High in Middleport.

.

OPEN NIGHTS TIL 9

r-----..-------

estrogen drug Premarin,
Ayers! Laboratories, and
describing
them
as
" Irresponsible" lor sending
doctors a letter whlch did not
refer to the studles but
instead had the effect of

play noted

DON'T PASS ntiS ONE UP

~

stiffness. Jus! rub Icy-Hot's crea my balm over the
affected joi nls or musc les, and you can a,ctually feel
lhe pain slart lesseni ng. Begin to s leep peacelully
.again . 11 you don't have relief In 24 hours we'll
refun d your money , $3 .00 for 3\7 oz. jar or ' $5.00 for
7 oz. jar.

determine the authenticity of
"espio nage mesSages."
Bailey said the government
should make such expertise
available to the defense or at
least to Fort.

Results m·

i

,,J

Puts Pain to

By ROBERT KAYLOR
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Women who take female
hormones
to
relieve
menopause symptoms run a
"marked increase" in the
risk of cancer of the womb
according to the Food and
~ Administration.
The agency warned doctors
thai women should be given
the lowest possible dose for
the shortest possible time.
The FDA also took the
unusual step of naming the
manufacturers
of
the

SALE OF SALES

I

2

believe tbey were written In
the defendant's words.
With the Jury excuied,
Bailey argued "speech
analysis " techniques had
been developed by the CIA to

Doctors warned of danger using estrogen

r'~-----------------..

I

Rheumatic and Arthritic
Pain can strike the joints
in any of the indicated
areas (see arro~ on chart)

712

Our Lay-Away Plan

\

bursitis, rh eumatism , soreness,

MEN'S
LEISURE SUITS

U~

'.

n&lt;ght blessed temporary relief
from the pa in of arthritis,

NEW ARRIVALS...

EISTEB

Madei r a 65 Ha milton Ba den

CONFIRM ATION
GRAND FOH KS, N.D. UPI
- Sign on a bus lni!ss
mnrquee here : 1'0n this spot
in 1776 nothi ng happened."

recessed unUIIoday.
Bailey's request for CIA
help came after Fort testified
his study ·of MW. Hearst's
SLA tape recordings and her
"Tania diary " led him to

FOR

.t · '

Pomeroy Bow l 1n g 'L a n es
Euly W ed ~i11e d
Marchl , 1976
Tc,,m
Std .
4l •
YounrJ 'S Su per M ark e t
Oil er ' s I· our
40
N c tson OruQ Co
38 •
7 rdes Sp or t ShO JJ
36 •
TPnlh Frame r s
ll'
'lmtt h N elson Mot or co
28
H1gh 1ndiv1 d ual ga.m c
~ob
Couch 7(''· Caro l vn
Bac h ne r 7 18 second hig h
md1V1 dua1 yame Lar r y
Dugan 714 . Ca ro lv n Ba chner
19"} , lhtrd h ig h •ndivi d ual
Qr1nHI
Charles Smith :i'Oa ,,
Bf' !ly !::.m ilh 191 ,
H 1Qh S r&gt;r• f'S
L a rr y Duga n
~63,
Ci!ro ly n B&lt;lchner 55 4,
S€'~ Ond high series Bob
Co u c h s•,s , H ele n Phelps 507 ,
thr rd 11 1gh "&gt; c r i as ..... Char les
!::.rrlt tll 5.1.1, Be ll y Smit h 498 .
Te.a m h •qh game - N el son
Drug Co
131 , te am hiqh
SP n es
Z•dc.s Spo rt ShOp
1 057

criminally dangerous sex
offenders at Bridgewater
Ma.sa., loUowed Fort Into t~
witness box.
Kozol had barely begun his
. testimony when the trial

schoolhoy

r:

At Ci nc i nnat i

,

Sou th

AT
KERM'S KORNER

.o

...... .••••.••...

W l T Pts GF GA
Dayt on
39 21 9 a7 788
For! Wayne
17 30 12 [1,6 259
To l edo
?J 33 13 59 230
Co lu mbus
23 40 7 53 716
Wednesday 's R es ul t s
Dayton &lt;~ Mus!o:eq on 3
Fltnt 2 Kalam azoo ')
Toledo .l Port Hur on 1
Fort Wayn e J Co lu mbuS
T on•9h t 's Game s
N o games sc h ed u l ed
Fri day 's Game s
Da yto n at Fli nl
t--ort Wayn e at To ledo
M uskego,n at Ka l il mazoo
Sag ina w a t Pcrl H uron

I ' \

SAN FRANCISOO (UPI ) After two days of cross
ezamlning
the
most
damaaing witness against
Patricia Hearst with only
limited success, defense
attorney F. Lee Bailey
suggested he could use some
help from the CIA.
When that failed, BaUey
made one .last attempt w
discredit Dr. Joel Fort by
producing critical letters
wrltfen 18 years ago by
colleagues who called Fort
hostile and inept.
Fort, a physician and
aimlno!ogtst, completed live
days on the stand Wednesday
without modifying hls
testimony that the newspaper
heiress
joined
the
Symfllonese Liberation Army
just a few weeks after her
kidnaping and willingly
participated ln the bank
robbery for which she Is
standing trial.
The second and last
prosecution psychiatric
witness, Dr. Harry L. Kozol,
director ·of a center lor

The 8th U.S. Circuit Court
Tourna m en t Scorn
Un ited Preu lnt ernl ti ona l 1 ,
of Appeals 'fuesda y upheld
Cl A SS AAA
·.
ea rlier arbitration and court
At Can t on
i ~- •
decis ions under wh ich Cant on M cKi n l ey 77 C~nton , ,
Messersmith and McN ally linco ln 68
At B owlin g Green
'" ~"
had be€n granted free agent Ft ndlay 68 Ashland 58
" ' ·,
At Clevela nd Sou th
,r
status regardless of their
Eas t Cle Shaw 69
C!e • •
number of years of major Co
!lin w ood 68
i r. •
At Cleve land Linc oln -weu
;
league service.
6B Pa r ma SB · ~ . J
The owners ) new proposal Cl e StAtIgnatius
Eas tl ake N orth
'·. ! t
gave the players the right w East lal&lt;.e Nort h 71 Gene\l o! so , i .,.;
A t Copl ey
. . 1 "
become free ~1 g ents after si:x
Bar berton 64 Akron Ce n t r al :. t
years, )l'ithout lhe option SB
:' ~ ~t1
At Lor am Ad m i r a l K i ng
year, by requesting a trade .
Souttw iew 13
The player would be allowed LorainLa~ewood
St: Edw ar d 62 1. t '·
to designate four teams to
CLA SS AA
: •r t.
A 1 W ;,rren W es t ern R eserve .._ , ·
whieh he didn't want to be Warren
Kenne dy 58 Warr en t , r .
traded . If he were not traded, Champion 4 ~
L! ·. ·
At R:to G rand e
, •
he would become a free age nt
Pomeroy M eigs 45 J • '
during the next sprin g Ironto n 49AtAs
h l an d
r·,·
Cle arlork 65 Huron .40
training season.
At T o l edo
Under that pr.oposal, a free Tol Car dinal
Strlfcn 55 Oak :"1 ·,·
agent would be selected in a Ha rbo r 37
65 Huron 40
special draft by as many as Clc arfor k At
T o l edo
·,._ !, ;, •.,
eight teams, with the cl ubs Tot Cardin al Strit ch 55 Oa k 1, 1 : ~
choosing in inverted order of HarbOr 37
Ada
'·
the fina l standings . If not St. Ma ry 's At
60 De l ta 59
selec ted by an ;~ dub, a fr ee
A t E l y r ia
agent would be eligi ble to Avo n 6-5 Broo k si de 6d
A t Ch ag r in Fa ll s
deal with all learns.
Twinsburg 58 warrensvil le 51
At Can t on
Also, any player with three _
Akron St . V M 62 San d y
years in the maJOr leagues Valley
oo (2 o t)
. .. "
whose contract js assigned Ca nton Lehm an 63 Ca n ton 1
~
outright · to a minor league AQui na s 53 A I Troy
team could opt instead for ve r sa i ll es 67 Nort hr i dge 52
U rbana 5&lt;~ ln d fan L ake 4&lt;1
i'
free ag.ent status.
At Ste ub envi lle
1.:-1
Tht&gt; owners also proposed a Be1t a 1re 5~ Ri\ler View 56

and vi::;!lurs to attend the fair
Sa li sbury
E l em~nta r )
School will sponsor a student Th e fi:l ir WJ!l enco urage
book fa1r fr tJ m. Moru.la y, student mteres t 10 reading
Mareh 15 th roug h Wed- ;IIHt 1n bwlding home
nesday, March 17. Books will libraries . All prOfits will be
be on di::;play in the gym - given to tho school
MiJrk
McDaniel. the
nasimn during the schoo l
t
ea
cher
cor ps reading
day, and s tuden ts will be a ble
teacher
al
Saltsbw·y , Is the
t(i brnw se and purt:lwsc
bo{)k
fi-l
ir
cha irn ta n . The
books .
cornmhtc
t
&gt;
inCl udes Mrs.
Tile hook !au· comiittee
Don
na
Ohlinge
r . sc hoo l
in vites all stude nts, r'arent~ ,
Pomr r oy Bowltnq Lane!.

II)' DONALD B. TIIACKREY

Now for lh e firs1 time, over·

Middleport, Ohio
Ph. 992·5321
\,

results

School sponsors
pupil book fair

J.oea.l Bowling

Bailey unable to crack hosiile witness' testimony

SLEE' '

FOREMAN and ABBOIT

Pla n

NEW YORK I UPI) - The
''number s game" between
baseball's clubowners and
the Major League Players
Associ ation ge ts mor e
complicated every day.
It was the owners' turn
Wednesda y to throw a new
curve at the playe rs and they
did with an offe r to allow a
player to become a free agent
after seven years of major
league Ser vice. TI1e 0\-\'ners'
pre\1ous proposal would have
allowed a player .to become a
free agent after ei ght years .
Marvln Miller, executive
director of the Major League
Players Association, ha s repeatedly taken the stand that
tile Messer smith ·McNa lly
decision by a fed erai.
arbitrator. supported three
·tim es by co urt r ulin gs,
cannot be bargained away.
He says an y player would
then have the right w sue the
players association ahd
.
.
'
pitcher M1k e Marshall of the
l.os Angeles Dodgers has
alread:; said that's what he'd
do .
Miller has compromised to
tl1e point where he says he
could negotiate a six or seven
yea r reserve clause for
pla yers of the fu ture but that
he lwsn't go !the n ght to clo so
in
regard to ex isting
contracts.

5- The P&lt;meroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 11, 1976

I

Tourney

\t Owners throw
:Stall rl~ngs \ curve in talks

:I

INSULATION

Open Fr,ilav· N1ghl Ttlll-~al. Til 5

•

w

Play underway

G1ro lina poses a big opening

round threat this yea r.
Mai·quette, hoptng for a
showdown agamst No. I In cU an;-1 m the ~ i deas l regional

SHOP NOW FOR EASTER

-'j. '

point performance by Dan
Issei to beat Denver. Don
Buse sparked Indiana with a
team
reeord 19 assists. Buse
Sonks lJO, Bucks 105
Bruce Seals scored 18 of his also added six thefts. Billy
23 points in the game's final Knight led Indiana with 31
16 minutes to lead Seattle. points.
t:olun els 128, Spurs 124
'01e win wa s only the &amp;!nics
Wil Jones scored six of his
second in 22 games at
Milwaukee and snapped a 12 points in overtime w give
four-game Seattl e los in g Kentucky its fourth straight
victory. Joh nn y Neumann
streHk.
paced the Colonels with 31
Ruckcts 113, Blazers 110
Calvin Murphy scored 31 points.
points and killed the final 24 Spirits 99, Nets 95
Marvin Barnes scored 23
seconds witb a dribblin g
}Xlints
and Ron Boone 20 to
ex ldbi tion
to
preserve
pace
Sl.
I,JJuis. J ulius Erving
Houston' s victory over
had
18
of
his 39 points in the
Portland .
in a futile effort
final
quarter
Pace rs 129, Nuggets 119
to
pull
the
Nets
even.
Indiana overcame a 42·
before Coach Butch van
Breda Kolff gave him a rest
in U1~ final period.

North Carolina confident

rrlllll.t!

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r~·nocl~

1 hbat·'&lt;- SIXth
•O ; '\Jl.S\l
I I
I(' t t

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•·.·

Snuth scored 32 points apiece
to 'llwl Buffalo past New
Urllan:-;. P~te Manivich

J"('

.

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

".t-rl.l mtl, \1;\fdJ~ pun-P LtOH.'rcJ~ , 0 ., Thursdiij , 1\larl'h II, l9i6

Ebersbach Hardware
EVEJl YTHING IN HARDWARE
Fri. &amp;Sat. Til 8:00 ·

MAIN STREET
a

POMEROY

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bar rips official

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~t.it: r~ ·1i!5. Swts 108
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dt fl'~l l l'hO'CIIiX.
Bra' t.' :-. 120, Jan lOS
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No. (\ NorU1 Carolina faces
"\o 7 J\labama Jl.12: 15 p.m.
1EST' wtd No. 2 Marquette
gues against unranked
Wc,tern Kentucky at 2.15
·p 111 The winners advance to
thf' ~1 Hi enst regional serni tJIWl::; \\1arch 18 m Baton
Houj•e. La .
l\'orth C'ar ol ina 125·:l) is a
sl!g ht f~1Vorite to · edge
Alube~mo
l 22·1l,
whJle
Marqueue &lt;25-l i is a so lid
choke to ovt"rpowe r Western
Kentucky 120-81 at the
Uruversity -of Di:lyton Arena

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ntght,
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&amp;lurdaj.
"We

we!'e
verv
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AC't'
1 Atlanllc
Coast
Confen•ncr J tourney, blll

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we 're l'Oilfidcnt we'll bounce

('lass

back a nd play well.'' says
Nt rLlt ·'"'llrolina coach Dean
Sn 1ith , whose club was upset
by V1 r gin ia last weekend.·
'·ou r problem.'' adds
Sm ith , "is that we will be
f&lt;lcmg one of I he best teams

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Sm ith's Tar Heels are Jed
IJ;. ti-10 ce nler Mitch
Kupcha k, &lt;:Jveri:lg ing 18JX1ints
;1 game, a nd guard Phil Ford,
who not only is the club's top
:-iCorer ( 19 po mt aver age) bul
:!lsn the assist leader.
'' We know Ko rth Carolina
i.:; outstandi ng, but we
11elcome the challenge. thai
\\ t-'ve l~arned - the r ha nce to
pl·ay for
the
natio nal
·1 ham!Jions hlp,· 1
sa ys
Alab;m1a coach C.M. Newton .
How~b the Crtmson Tide's
r,.JII cen ter Leon Douglas,
"We believe we can beat
); orth Carolina." Douglas,
l\1ab£&amp;mil 's all·tLme scoring
leader, is averaging 20 points
&lt;md 12 rebound&gt; a game.
'J11is is the fourth straight
~~· oson Alabama has won 22
ga mes , but the Ti de has had a
tough time on the tourn ey
trnit. Ala ba ma lost ~~ tough
~7 94 decision to Ar izo na
State in last year 's NCAA
tou rnament and No rth

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Jazz

kast one of the nation's best
rolll"gl' b..1skctba l1 teams is
gu ;1r ~1ntt't' d
to fall in

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ll) HICK \'AN SANT
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to

CANDY NOVEL TIES, EG GS, FILLE D
AND
'MPTY
BASKE TS,
TOYS,
FVE:RY'! 'lNG FOR A HA PPY EASTER.

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Whtlt&gt; A~sorf menf Is Complete

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ca. 9c

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3 ro ll s 99c
•n lcd 10.hour' Vottve Can dles each 9c

R(•q 1.00 i.lndhcrg lg s1 re Mo del Kits
ea. 79c
~e9 SJ OODt.HI1Ri feFrumlyGa m es
ea. 79c
RPQ. ~Qc 6ndcH' S1re Playing Ca rd ~
d eck 29c
Reg 77 ~.; eM D~'c oratlve Straw Hot P&lt;;~d s
2 for 99c
Reg 1.29 J u1nbo Stor·.1gr Chest
ea . 99c
Rpg. to M eV ·I las swarr Spec ials
2 for 99c
Reg. t o 2 lQ \'.~1 FtreKma Ovenware
Ch oi ce 99c
Re&gt;t;J. ~1.49 J6 o&lt; Apof hecar y Jars
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Spend I Bu y!:- 1 Plcls l tc Ho use wares
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•.•:·:·:~ ·:·····:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::~::::~·:·:·:·::::!:!•!:!:!:!:!:!:!·!·:·:::.:·:·:·:·:i:::::::::;;.;::;::::::::;:;.;!;:;:;

.......
. ...
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Make Pome roy Your Sho ppmg Lente r

•

,,,

~

BEN ,~RANt&lt;•
PHONE
200-202 East Ma in St. ·
992-14&lt;"
POMEROY, OH '·"'

,

U,p Our Convenient

final s Mar ch ~~.. at Baton
Rouge. c arri e~ a 21-game wm
strea k into tis matchup with
Western Kentucky.
"We' re at the top of our
game and uur bench is really
starting to comt along," says
Warriors coach AI McGuire,
who rea lly doesn't have to go
to the. bench often with the
likes of ve terans Ea rl Tatum,
Bo Ellis and Lloyd Walton
and newcomer jumping j ack
Je rome Wh itehead .
'' I do n't think there could
be a better ba sketball team in
the country right now than
J\.hu qt..&gt;.:Lle, .. curu l.'{:.~s X!:tv1e r
coach Taj' Ba ker, whose club
lost twice to Marquette th is
season by a total of 59 points.
If there is a better club thiln
Marquette, il doeRn't figure

Lav - ~wa y

\

be unheralded Western
Kentucky, which isn 't sure
there's a way it can stop the
Warriors Sa turday.
" With guys like Tatum,
Walton and Ellis, you ca n't
conce ntrate on one of their
players," concedes Jim Ri·
chards, coach of the Ohio
Va lley Conference champs.
"! do.n 't th ink th e;~ have much
chance to be upset, but we're
going to try."
Weste rn's s tr ength is
matu rit y a nd balance
sen iors Johnny Britt, Wilson
.James an d Chuck Rawlings
a re all averaging over 15
po ints a game - but the
Hill toppers can't expect to
get many rebounds aga inst
Marquette.

•

m DoralOpen
. MIAMI !UP! ) - J C. Snead
w1ll admit J ack Nick laus is
the favont e to '.\'in the Doral
Open golf tournamen t but
don 't suggest to him that the
rto ldcn BcHr's prese nce
mearu the rest of the field
will be playing for second
place.
" If we thought. Nicklaus
would wm eve ry week, we' d
just give him the pr ize money
· and go home," Snead sa1 d
hefore toda y'.s first round of
the $200,000 eve nt over
Dora l's
fam ed
"Blue
Monster " course .
''I gel tired of everybody

writing that we're playing for
second money when he's in a
tournament ," the Virginia
golfer said. '·If you bet on him
every week, you'd end up
losin g. There are too m&lt;my
great players .'' ·
IT recent . performance is
an:? indication, Snea d would
have to be cons idered as a
threat to Nicklaus, the 1975
Dora! champion who did not

BOWLING
T h ursda\1 St n k er s
Fe br ua r y '26 , 1976
We lker 's A shland
40 16
S•mon' s Pt clc A Pa i r
39 17
Team 1
36 20
T eam .1
24 32
Team 3
19 37
T eam 2
10 46
T eam hig h series
Team 3
982, second !earn high seri es
Simon's P ic k A ·Pai r 9al,
tll ir d team h igh se r ies Welker 's Ash land 'i65 .
! ndivt d u al hig h se r ies
Patti Wdl 1ams 495 , second
individu al high se r 1es Dre ma Ro ach 481. thtrd 1n
divtduaJ hig h ·se ri es - L ena
H oward 41 0 .
Indiv idual hi!;lh game · ~
Palt i W ill tams 191. se cond
tn dt vidual h igh game Dr emq Roach 11.1 , th 1r d 1n
div·id ua ! h ig h game - L er\a
Howard 171
Th u r sda;y St r i k ers
Marc h 4,197 6
Team
•
Simon's P ic k. A Pa 1r
W e lker 's As h land ·
Team 1

Won

45
JO
38

Pro

National Bask etball A ssocia 1•o n
Standings
By Uni ted Press 1111ernationa l
Eastern Conference
Atlan t ic D ivision
w . L. Pet. GB
Boston
43 21 672
Buffalo
37 '27 578 6
Phila delphia 38 '19 567 6 1,
New York.
32 34 485 17
Central Division
W L. Pet .
GB
Washington
41 26 611
Cleveland
37 26 .587
2
Hou ston
33 33 .500
71 .,
New Orlean s ?9 37 ,439 1J1 1
At lant a
28 36 .438 1J1 2
Wes t er n co nf eren ce
Midwes t D1vision
W . L , Pe t .
GB
M ilwaukee
28 36 .438
Det ro i t
25 39 391
3
Kansa s City
25 40 .385 31 :
20 4·1 .313 8
Ch1cago
Pac ific Divi si on
W . L Pet.
GB
Golden Sta te 47 18 723
Seattle
33 35 .485 15 1 .~
Los A ngeles
32 34 .485 15 1 .1
Phoen iK
30 34 .469 J6l ,
Porttand
?9 38 .433 19
Wed nes day ' s Results
Houston 113 Portlan d 110
Seant e 110 M ilwaukee 105
Bo ston 92 Los Angeles a9
Buffalo 1'20 New Or l eans 105
Phtlad elphia 125 Pho enix 108
T hursday 's G.1 mes
Pho en i x dl Atlant a
Golden Stat e at Cleveland

Am encan Bask etbal l
A ssociat io n Sta ndi n gs
By U ni ted Press International
W L Pet. GB
Den ver
50 17 7d6
New York.
d2 'J6 61 8 8 1 ,
San Ant onio
39 17 59 1 10 1'I
Ke n tuck y
38 31 S5 1 lJ
lnd i.ana
34 37 479 18
S l LOU IS
3 1 Ja 449 20
Virg inia
12 57 17&lt;1 39
Wedn es day's Result s
Indiana 179 Denver 119
St Lo uis 99 New York 95
Ken t uck y 128 San Ant on10 12.1
Th.u r sday•s Gam es
Denver at New Y ork
Sa n Antonio vs . Vlr Qmta at
Nor fotk. '
N a11on al Hock e v
Lepg ue Sta ttd•ng s
By Untte d Pr ess !nt erna t 1ona1
Ca mpl;lel l Confere nce
Patr ick Divi ston
W. l T P IS G F G A
Phtldlph 4] 10 \.t 100 795 17B
NY Isl an ders
37 17 \ .t 88 760 160
At l anta
30 30 10 70 133 :'OB
NY Rn g r s 23 35 9 55 22 3 ?79
Smy the Oivi stOil
'
W. l T P IS G F G A
Chic ag o 26 2·1 17 69 103 109
Vancovr 28 28 13 69 232 135
St. L OU IS J.l 37 12 60 709 7&lt;!7
Mtnnes.ot 16 J6
J J O 1t'l.t 757
Kanss Cty 12 .t5 10 34 157 2B5
Wa les Confer ence
Norr iS DIVI SIOn
W l T Pt s GF GA
Monlr eal 50 ~ 10 110 788 1.17
Los A ngl s J2 2"1
7 7 1 120 116
Pn s. brgh ?9 ?a 11 69 78 6 758
De tro it
20 39
9 .19 174 263
washng tn a 50 9 25 186 J'lB
Ada m s Di vist ol\
W L T Pt s GF GA
Boston
4'1 13 II 95 75tl 195
13ul f alo
3·7 19 12 IJ6 265 70/
. Toront o
31 2S 1:;1 75 259 733
Californ i 25 36 9 59 277 744
Wed nesday 's Result s
Mon t r e &lt;:~l 5 Ch1c ago 1
A tl anta 4 M innesota 1
St. L ouis 2 Toron to 7
Bu ff alo 7 Pittsburgh 6
Cal if ornia 4 De troi t 3
Van c ouver J Kansa s City I
Thu rsday 's Gam es
Toro n to at Bos ton
Bu tt a l o at Ph i lad elphia
NY Ra :-~ge r s at Los Angetc s

com pete in last week's Citrus
Open in ·orlando.
Snead has a wi n in the San
Diego Open plus a second and
a third in the last four weeks
to rank thi rd on the money
list. He is off to one of his best
sta rts ever despit e the fa ct
that he loses 30 yards '•m
length on every hole in whi ch
he uses his driver.
"The courses have n't be en World H !l c k e y ASS OCi at ion
Sl ,lnd tng s
that long and the rest of my B y U n1 t ed Press l nturn ,H I Oilill
Eiis t
·
game is making up for my
w. L T Pt!o GF GA
short dn ving," he J&lt;laid .
Clev tnd 79 37 S 63 na 229
However, at Nicklaus' last Cmcnnt 31 36 1 6J 251 781
outing two weeks ago, he New En g land
28 34 6 6/ / 13 2·19
buried the rest of th e fi eld on lnd inpls 26 37 3 !&gt;5 192 206
We st
the final day of th e
W. L T. Ph GF GA
Pl aye r s Houston 42 23 0 8&lt;1 27 1 220
T o ur name nt
Championship at Ioverrar y Phoen ix J3 27 6 72 '14 4 22.1
D ieg 3? ]0 4 6B 2S5 233
to defeat Snead by lhree x:San
Mnn ht 30 15 4 6 ~ ' 11 21?
shots.
Ca nadian
. GA
'"You ask me who the WmnpgW . .17L 21T . 2Pf s96 GF
306 21 ,1
favorite 1s and I have to say QuebeC 39 2d &lt;1 a~ 2139 ?62
Nicklaus beoause he is the Ca l gary 34 30 rl I? 256 235
Edmntn ?·I 41 5 53 ?37 ?9S
defending champion," Snead Toron to 1a 41 5 dl 771 326
said. "But th at doesn't mean x.O]t aw 1·1 26 I 19 134 172
x t eam disband ed
I think he'll win .''
Wedn esday 's ResulT s
27
Tea m 3
24
Team 4
1a
T ea m 2
T eam
h i gh
se rtes
Simo n ' s P1 c k . A . Pai r 924 ,
Second team h i gh series T eam 2 914, lhird team h ig h
ser ies - Tea m 3 905 .
Individual hig h series Anne Hatfield 472, sc cQ n d
mdividual high se r tes P h ·r llis Cl tne 424 , t hi r d in
d lvidua t high sert es ~ Lena
H oward 416
l ndivicjua l hig h ga m e A nne H a tfield teo, secon d
individua l high game ~ An n
M or ri s 156. thi r d in divid u a l
hig h game - Le na Howard
and An n Hatlfe ld 14 8.
Pom e r oy Bowling Lane s
Ea rly Sunday Mix ed
M;uch 1 , 1976
T eam
Std .
Jac k s D a tr v Bar
60 28
Pul li n s Ex: cava t tng
53 35
Hill &amp; Mayer· Barbers
42 46
Team 6
42 46
Tom s Carry Oul
36 52
Pom e roy F lowe r Shop 3 1 57
High indiv i dual gam£&gt; J oh n T.y r ee 19 3. Ma r y Vo s s
201 , second hig h tn div 1d u al
gam e -- Jeff WiiSOI1 190
Mary Vos s 193.
H ig h ser .es - .Jo hn T y r ee
52 4, Ma r y Voss 57 4, secO n d
high s er ies
Ed Voss 506 ,
Betty Smilh 534.
Team ' high ga m e - Pu l lins
E)(cava t ing 706, t ea m h1gh
series Jac k s D ai r y Bar
1,996 .

Winnipeg 10 Quebec 3
Phoen 1x J New En g lan d 'l
Clevel and 5 Cinci nn at i 1
Thu r~ d ay's Gam es
Edmonton at Ca l ga r y
Hous ton at San Di ego
Tor o nto a t Ind ia n apolis
Int er nati on a l H oc k ey
L eague Sta nd i n g s
Un i t e d Pr ess In ter n atio n a l
N or th
W l T Pt s GF GA
Sagi na w 3a 1 1 9 as 297 24 1
Po rt Huron
31 '25 11 } J '257 142
F l in t
30 26 12 ]2 241 2 18
M·u skcgon
~8 28 12 68 220 213
Ka l amazoo
12 37 9 53 23 9 297

Blown Into Your Walls
'Free Estimates' ·

Ohio H igl'i Sd1oo l

Morn1ny Glo nc!&gt;
M arch 2, 1976
Excclc.1or Oil Co
Gtbbs Gr ocery

IJ 5
' 13

96

W M P 0

N r&gt;wcll Sunoco

G &amp;

J

""

Aulo PM I&lt;,

·spr&gt;nter '; Mar!o:et
~0 '
H lgl'l if\dlv •diJat tJ1HY1C
An n Radford 185 , ~ecofld t1i~ h
•nd•v1du al C/alllc
M a 1v
G.tlilan 18 J

H 1Qh . sc r 1r&lt;,
Ma rl el'\c
Wilson ·191. setun d nigh ~c r~t:o~
e c ck.v Dvn tc c ,t~ O
TPiJrn
l)t Qh ' q;;m,,
Spenc er:; Markt'1 a\9 . IC.&lt;HTl
htq h ~ t:i r ICS
~PC'I!C er '6
M&lt;Jr~el 7 169
Pom eroy 13 ow liny L.t nc!&gt;
Tues d ay fripllca f ('
M arc t1"2 , 1976
T 1'.1 m
Std .
Royal Oa k Par~
51
Ril (tfH ! Ho me, N elli Ilk
J1
Drw Drop'&gt;
38
Dairy Vnll ey
30
N e w York Clotlllr~q
11
M.tchell P a1n t1ng co
14
H 1gh i ndiVIdUal Q&lt;lOH='
Wanda Tealord 190, ~econd
h1gh 10d1V1dUa l qc'ln1('
WtH'Ida 1 PO lord

I S~

H•qh scr1cs
Wanda
Tca lord S?Ci
second high
'&gt;N CS
Pal (drS On 4a9 .
TNHn high qamc
M it
ct11~ ll Patnttnq Co . 471. 1cam
h1qh sertes
MilcheJI
P,1,nlin9 Co \,]&lt;1 6

player be

t~ran ted

30 da ys

termination pay if released
after spring training starts.

sccreh1ry , :~nd

Mrs Jl•:tnnt:

Bm\ en ,

The book fair dt"play '" ll
include attractive fit ' \\ Uoo kti
fro lll

lllHlly

publishers Irl· O:l ll

popular pnce rang('s. Many
of the books &lt;.~r e paperbad'is.

AJJ rft;;uJing mterests will be
r cp r cse11te- d , including

classics. ficilon, Hlh'enturc,
nature, cra fts, and referenc.•e
l.x}(')ks. Tlw book fair

('U f!l -

mi ttee is . wo rkin g with
Ji:rl \ICatioua l f~ ,~ mlin u Se r·
vice, ;i p r ufes~ i onn l book f~1 ir

l'ompan r.
The book fair wil l be open
frl}m 7: (}(Jto B: OO p. 111 , dw·1ng
the mu nth!y meeting of the
Salisbury PTO on Tuestl&lt;1y ,
March i6. P11rents arl' lnvlted
to bro,\•se through the buuks
and llelp their · ch il dr en
choose from the witle
selec lio n lhal will be
available.

48

FOR
BIRTHDAYS

Cin M c N ic holas 56 Readi n g 55~
Greenhi ll s 79 Goshen 51
CL ASS A
A I Co l umbu s
Canal Winches te r 61 Sparta
H ighl an d 53
Ridqeda l e 71 Berne Unio n 36j
At Lima
i
/Ida 67 Mendo n Union 59
'
A I F tn d la y
Rivf'rdale 6 ~ Wocdmorc 55
At Chillico th e
V all e y n Ch esa peake 65
AT Dayton
R tplcy 6] Twin Va l le y South

ACCUTRON
by

BULOVA

51

1\nson•a 43 Tr 1ad 35
Lock l and /6 Fr ank li n Monroe

;6

CLASS AA
At Warren K en n ed y
Brobk. l 1eld 5q Newton Falls 58
AI St eube nv ill e
Coshoc ton 66 Bridgeporl 60

Local Bowlin,g

''
'I

)
SPACEVIEW "Iii"
S,talnteu steel.
Cluoiew tllal.

1150.00

Ne w Wrinkl e Resistan t
Fabrics in Na v y and Ma ny
Other
Plain
Col o r s,
Ch ecks .

$49.50 to $9().00

New York Clothing House
POMEROY, OHIO

'

Goessler's

. I

JeweiiJ Store

.::- , ~

POMEROY,

.....,.

Where Rheumatism Pain Strikes'" a}
--.

768
/58
308

1

I
!

I
[
]

I

~
1

!'IWI=:JMt l1

N&amp;N SPORTSHOP

r.
."f&lt;

~'
:~

•• •
•••
~
·~

,,••. •
·.~

&gt;

••••• •'
'' ~ .

LOHSE

Charles Riffle. R. Ph.

.PR ESCRIPTIONS

PH. 992-2955

Friendly Service

112 E. MAIN
Op enN;ghtsW9 POMEROY.O.
!...._.._.__...._ _ _.._________

·"

.

·«
,.,;

''I;
~·

{\

.........•.•.•••
•

QUITTING BUSINESS
All GOODS TO BE SOLD
AT WHOLESALE. OR LESS
Archery and Fishing Lures at less
than wholesale.

-CONVERSE All STARsCANVAS REGUlARS ........... $9.00
CANVAS IRREGUlARS........ '6.00
SUEDE REGUlARS ........... '13.00 ·
SUED£ IRREGUlARS...... ..!ll.OO

WILSON A2000 BAll GLOVES
DEXTER GOIJ HE$. .... }17.50
BEAR KODIAK MAGNUM BCMS
PING PONG TABI ES
lUBE SOQS_S

·----

Mon . th r u Sat. 8 : 00a .m. to 9 : 00p.m.
Sunda yiO : lOto12 : 30andSto9p . m ,

"clouding the issues and ...
recommending 'business as

usual."'
The FDA delivered the
warning In its bimonthly
Drug Bulletin, mailed to
some
650,000
doctors,
pll8imacilla and hoopllala

across the country. It said it
plans to require a warning on
the labels of estrogen drugs.
Its finding resulted from
four recent studies and it said
uiat, although not warranting
a ban on estrogen now, " the
rial! •llll•ted by these

~
"

'il,,.

e

"'~·~~,

.

CREMEANS DRIVES - Junior Jerry Cn!mearut of the Meigs Marauders penetrated
inside lhe foul circle and let fly Wednesday against Ironton (Meigs lost 49-45) in lhe AA
District basketball wurnament. No. 21 is Terry Qualls, Meigs; No. 33, Mitch Meadows. No.
54 (white) is Ironton's brilliant 6-6 center, Dean Fitzpatrick. -Jim Hamm picture.

By DANIEL F. GILMORE

WASHINGTON (UPI) Richard Nixon says it was ·
Henry Kissinger who chose
the people whose phones
would be tapped w try w
trace securily leaks in 1969.
Kissinger earlier said J.
Edgar Hoover chose them.
"It was Dr. Kissinger's
responsibility w furnish to
Mr. Hoover the names of
individuals that he , Dr .
Kissinger, felt migh1 have
had access w information or
that ,.. might have had a
tendency to be loose mouthed
and have acquired the
information without his
knowledge and have put it
out," Nixon said.
Nixon's statement came in
testimony In a $3 million
lawsuit by Morton Halperin
against Kissinger, his fonner
hoss at the National Securi1y
Council.
Nixon,
for 6'h
hours
at 63,
his testified
San Clemente,
Calif., home Jan . 15, and the
testimony was made public
Wednesday.
Halperin charges Kissinger
gave lhe order to bave his
home phone tapped for 21
months In connection with
leaks to newspapers from the
NSC . At the time, Kissinger
was Nixon's international
security adviser and head of
the NSC.
In a statement filed witb
the U.S. District Court Jan.
12, Kissinger said Hoover had
identified four persons,

including Halperin, as
security risks
to be
wiretapped.
Halperin, at a Wednesday
news conference, said
Nixon 's testimony showed
discrepancies in Kissinger's

studies is, In public health
terms, a hlghiy significant
one.u
" Prolonged
use
of
es trogens
by
postmenopa usa!
women
apparently ·is associated with
a marked increase in risk of
cancer of the endometrium,
to
strong
a ccording
epidemiological evidence
that has emerged within the
last several months," · tbe
FDA said.
Cancer of the endometrium
is a form of uterine cancer
that attacks the organ's
lining . " While further
inf.ormation is needed, these
findings clearly al1er the
benefit-risk relationship of
estrogen therapy lor many
women,'' lhe FDA said.
The least hazardous way 111
prescribe estrogens would
appear to be the "lowest
effective dose for the shortest
possible , time
with
appropriate monitoring for
endometrial cancer," the
FDA said.
Enough estrogen is now
prescribed in the cour~f of a 1
year to treal 6 million
women, the FDA said .
Women take the drugs w
alleviate physical symptoms
"and because of a common
belief that estrogens promote
a feeling of well being and a
youthful appearance." .
The FDA compared older
women having endometrial
cancer to healthy women,
and · found that a markedly
larger percentage of the
afflicted women had used
estrogens.

he hopes will get under way In
a lew months.
Nixon said he ordered the
investigation because the
early months of his ·
administration had been
wracked by 21 national
security leaks at a time when
the U.S. was deeply Involved .
in the Vietnam war.
But he insisted he .did not
piek the victims - didn't
even know Halperin - and
did not speciftcally order
wire1aps.
" As a matter of fact,'• he
said, "I found that the highest
number of wiretaps 'during
lhe previous 20 years had
been during the third year of
the Kennedy administration
... If you will check the
record, you will find lhat the
number of wiretaps for
national security purposes
during the 5'h years I was
president was less than the
average of wiretaps in the
previous eight years."

IJ

Bailey to get speech analysis
evidence
admitted on
grounds
It
was not
Lucy M. Schultz to David L.
scientifically reliable.
Shelburne,
Ellen
C.
Bailey and Fort clashed ShelbU{ne, Parcels, Olive.
repeatedly during two days of
Guy E. Guinther, Lyndla L.
cross examination tn which Guinther w James W. Morris,
the attorney sought to Dorothy J . Morris, Parcel,
discredit the San Francisco Olive.
physician.
Luther C. Friend, Betty J .
The defense produced Friend, Holly Friend to Elden
letters
written
by E. Slack, C&amp;ndlce M. Slack,
pocychlatrlsts on the staff of Part of Lot, Syracuse .
Herrick Memorial Hospital in
Clair W. Giles Jr .. Thelma
Berkeley, Calif., where Fort Giles to James Frederick
was In residency In the Butcher, Jennifer Sue Butpsychiatry department dur- cher, Sec. , Rutland .
ing \957-58.
Vashti M. Grinun w David
One critized Fort for L. Shuler, Carla J . Shuler,
showing resentments, which Sec., Letart.
brought out responding
resentments in patients . •
• f
Another said he was ~------------------.,,
Your " E x tra Touch"
"negative and sulky" and hls
Florlst Since 1951
personal problems Interfered
with hls perfonnance. One
colleague
said
'he
"manipulated people."
Fort told Bailey he had
never seen tile letters before,
but had discussed his
performance
with his
PH, 99~·2644
department head at Herrick
and the man "praised me for
. 352 E. Main, Pomeroy
my longcomings as weD as
Your FTD Florist
my shortcomings."

fRANCIS
·A.ORIST

r
1

Cool Comfort

!
!

tlone up in fashion!

i

'

MEN'S

MAVERICK JEANS
14 oz.
Denim

Ben

Bottoms

BOYS TUBE SOCKS
Stripes or Solids
Size 6·10
Reg. 7'1

~9,851. "

----.-.-SAFE!
Be ...

I
I

I

1

1

,BONE

I

For going everywhere
. coaly
poised with comfort and an accent
on bright design. Divinely soft,

f
t
t
I

I

heavenly cool. In a dazzling array of
colors .

Marguerite's Shoes.
BETTY OHLINGER

L-~~!~~=-

Pomeroy

FERRY-MORSE

MIDDlEPORT DEPARTMENT SlORE

BULK GARDEN SEEDS
Everything Is Heref

Garden Trowls
Hoes
Shovels

MOAL

Spades
FLOWER

Rakes

BOXES

GRASS SEED

protect yo ur feet from danger

'

PACKAGE VEGETABLE &amp;FLOWER SEEDS

Sale will go from March 13 thru
March 27, if the goods last that long.
You will never find another
opportunity like this ....

M1 $11-ES WILL BE FINAL

views and that he hoped W get
a ,new deposition from
Kissinger soon.
Halperin said Nixon would
be called as a witness, as
would Kisslnger, in the trial

HOMCHIK ARRAIGNED
MISSOURIAN ARRESTED
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UP!) CINCINNATI (UPI) - The Robert W. Homchik, 32,
FBI reported that Jesse North Tonawanda, N,Y., who
Jones, 31, of Cape Girardeau, was arrested by the FBI on
Mo., who escaped the U.S. charges of unlawfully fleeing
Penitentiary in Leavenworth, from
Ohio
to
avoid
Kan ., last Oct. 6, was prosecution, was released on
arrested ln a suburban Blue $1,500 bond pending a March
Ash bar Wednesday by FBI 25 hearing when arraigned
agents and Blue Ash police. Wednesday before U.S.
FBI agents said Jones had Magistrate Edmund F .
been ser.ving a three-year MaxweU.
sentence for obstruction of
Homchik was arrested by
mail. Jones is to be sent back FBI agents earlier In the day .
to Leavenworth, agents The FBI said Homchik was
said.
wanted by the Cuyahoga
County sheriff's office on
charges of carrying a
concealed weapon, drug
FORD DELEGATES
violations, housebreaking
COLUMBUS (UPI)
and larceny.
Members of the Republican
Local felony warrants were
Stale Central and Executive issued in Cleveland last Oct. 8
CollUillttee of Ohio are to and a federal warrant was
meet Friday afternoon w issued by U.S. Magistrate
make final recommendations Herber! Maher Feb. 24, the
for candidates for delegates FBI said.
and alternate delegates
pledged to President Ford.
The selections must be
given lhe President for hls
approval prior to the March BIG WSERS
25 filing deadllne for Ohio 's
CINCINNATI (UP!) June primary election, Vulcan Corp. officials report
Republican State Chainnan that the ' locally-based
Kent B. McGough sald.
manufacturer of shoe lasts,
heels and soles, and bowling
pins, lost more than $1 million
last year.
The finn disclosed Wednesday it lost $1,038,440 on sales
of $35,036,282 In 1975,
compared with a loss of
$36,727. on sales of $36,665,144
In 1974.
"The annual results for
1975 include nonrecurring
income of $143,441 from the
sale of assets as compared w
nonrecurring income of
$418,227 in 1974 from lhe sale
of assets;··company officials
pointed out. "The 1975 results
also lnclude write.,ffs due to
the
abandonment
of
equipment in the amount of

TEE SHIRTS

....lliiii. .

Th e suggestion
was
ridiculed by U.S. Attorney
James L. Browning J r ., who
noted the judge had already
rejec ted one attempt by

Property
Transfers

Nixon testimony disputes Kissinger

SOME OF OlJR PRICES

"I

;;l

' \~

POMEROY

( EKcept Compound Bows)

w

Pharmacy
Ke nneth McCuttogh, R. Ph .

OHIO

Action resumes in the
Meigs Elementary School
basketball tournament today
at 6 p. m. at Meigs Junior
High In Middleport.
Monday night in the fourth
and filth grade contest
Pomeroy A defeated Brad·
bury A 43 to 20. High scorer
for Pomeroy was Todd Fife
with 30 points. and for
Bradbury Jackson had 11
points.
In the second game,
SalisblD'y B defeated Rutland
35 10 18. For Salisbury John
Smith had 14 points and
James Evans had 10. For
Rutland Ricky Edwards was
high with 10.
In lhe sixth grade contest
Monday night Salispury
defeated Pomeroy B 31 w 26.
Scoring for Salisbury were
Bill Holcomb with 13 and
Laura Gale Smith with 7. For
Pomeroy Sheets and Miiier
had 8 each .
Tuesday night ln the fourth
and fifth grade contests
Pomeroy
B · defeated
HarrisonviUe '1:1 to 5. For
Pomeroy Mike WhiUatch had
9 and Nicky Riggs 6.
Sallsbury A defeated
Bradbury B 34 to 17. For
SallsblD'y Clifford Icenhower
and Scott Harrison had 10
each and lor Bradbury John
Aeiker had 6 and Scott
Pickens 5.
In fifth grade play 'fuesday
Harrisonville defeated
Rutland 38 to 18 with Larry
Cottrill pwnplng In 18 points
and Duane Jones 10 for lhe
winners . For Rutland Paul
Michaels and T. T. Simons
had 7 each .
Action wlll reswne this
evening at 6 p. m. at Meigs
Junior High in Middleport.

.

OPEN NIGHTS TIL 9

r-----..-------

estrogen drug Premarin,
Ayers! Laboratories, and
describing
them
as
" Irresponsible" lor sending
doctors a letter whlch did not
refer to the studles but
instead had the effect of

play noted

DON'T PASS ntiS ONE UP

~

stiffness. Jus! rub Icy-Hot's crea my balm over the
affected joi nls or musc les, and you can a,ctually feel
lhe pain slart lesseni ng. Begin to s leep peacelully
.again . 11 you don't have relief In 24 hours we'll
refun d your money , $3 .00 for 3\7 oz. jar or ' $5.00 for
7 oz. jar.

determine the authenticity of
"espio nage mesSages."
Bailey said the government
should make such expertise
available to the defense or at
least to Fort.

Results m·

i

,,J

Puts Pain to

By ROBERT KAYLOR
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Women who take female
hormones
to
relieve
menopause symptoms run a
"marked increase" in the
risk of cancer of the womb
according to the Food and
~ Administration.
The agency warned doctors
thai women should be given
the lowest possible dose for
the shortest possible time.
The FDA also took the
unusual step of naming the
manufacturers
of
the

SALE OF SALES

I

2

believe tbey were written In
the defendant's words.
With the Jury excuied,
Bailey argued "speech
analysis " techniques had
been developed by the CIA to

Doctors warned of danger using estrogen

r'~-----------------..

I

Rheumatic and Arthritic
Pain can strike the joints
in any of the indicated
areas (see arro~ on chart)

712

Our Lay-Away Plan

\

bursitis, rh eumatism , soreness,

MEN'S
LEISURE SUITS

U~

'.

n&lt;ght blessed temporary relief
from the pa in of arthritis,

NEW ARRIVALS...

EISTEB

Madei r a 65 Ha milton Ba den

CONFIRM ATION
GRAND FOH KS, N.D. UPI
- Sign on a bus lni!ss
mnrquee here : 1'0n this spot
in 1776 nothi ng happened."

recessed unUIIoday.
Bailey's request for CIA
help came after Fort testified
his study ·of MW. Hearst's
SLA tape recordings and her
"Tania diary " led him to

FOR

.t · '

Pomeroy Bow l 1n g 'L a n es
Euly W ed ~i11e d
Marchl , 1976
Tc,,m
Std .
4l •
YounrJ 'S Su per M ark e t
Oil er ' s I· our
40
N c tson OruQ Co
38 •
7 rdes Sp or t ShO JJ
36 •
TPnlh Frame r s
ll'
'lmtt h N elson Mot or co
28
H1gh 1ndiv1 d ual ga.m c
~ob
Couch 7(''· Caro l vn
Bac h ne r 7 18 second hig h
md1V1 dua1 yame Lar r y
Dugan 714 . Ca ro lv n Ba chner
19"} , lhtrd h ig h •ndivi d ual
Qr1nHI
Charles Smith :i'Oa ,,
Bf' !ly !::.m ilh 191 ,
H 1Qh S r&gt;r• f'S
L a rr y Duga n
~63,
Ci!ro ly n B&lt;lchner 55 4,
S€'~ Ond high series Bob
Co u c h s•,s , H ele n Phelps 507 ,
thr rd 11 1gh "&gt; c r i as ..... Char les
!::.rrlt tll 5.1.1, Be ll y Smit h 498 .
Te.a m h •qh game - N el son
Drug Co
131 , te am hiqh
SP n es
Z•dc.s Spo rt ShOp
1 057

criminally dangerous sex
offenders at Bridgewater
Ma.sa., loUowed Fort Into t~
witness box.
Kozol had barely begun his
. testimony when the trial

schoolhoy

r:

At Ci nc i nnat i

,

Sou th

AT
KERM'S KORNER

.o

...... .••••.••...

W l T Pts GF GA
Dayt on
39 21 9 a7 788
For! Wayne
17 30 12 [1,6 259
To l edo
?J 33 13 59 230
Co lu mbus
23 40 7 53 716
Wednesday 's R es ul t s
Dayton &lt;~ Mus!o:eq on 3
Fltnt 2 Kalam azoo ')
Toledo .l Port Hur on 1
Fort Wayn e J Co lu mbuS
T on•9h t 's Game s
N o games sc h ed u l ed
Fri day 's Game s
Da yto n at Fli nl
t--ort Wayn e at To ledo
M uskego,n at Ka l il mazoo
Sag ina w a t Pcrl H uron

I ' \

SAN FRANCISOO (UPI ) After two days of cross
ezamlning
the
most
damaaing witness against
Patricia Hearst with only
limited success, defense
attorney F. Lee Bailey
suggested he could use some
help from the CIA.
When that failed, BaUey
made one .last attempt w
discredit Dr. Joel Fort by
producing critical letters
wrltfen 18 years ago by
colleagues who called Fort
hostile and inept.
Fort, a physician and
aimlno!ogtst, completed live
days on the stand Wednesday
without modifying hls
testimony that the newspaper
heiress
joined
the
Symfllonese Liberation Army
just a few weeks after her
kidnaping and willingly
participated ln the bank
robbery for which she Is
standing trial.
The second and last
prosecution psychiatric
witness, Dr. Harry L. Kozol,
director ·of a center lor

The 8th U.S. Circuit Court
Tourna m en t Scorn
Un ited Preu lnt ernl ti ona l 1 ,
of Appeals 'fuesda y upheld
Cl A SS AAA
·.
ea rlier arbitration and court
At Can t on
i ~- •
decis ions under wh ich Cant on M cKi n l ey 77 C~nton , ,
Messersmith and McN ally linco ln 68
At B owlin g Green
'" ~"
had be€n granted free agent Ft ndlay 68 Ashland 58
" ' ·,
At Clevela nd Sou th
,r
status regardless of their
Eas t Cle Shaw 69
C!e • •
number of years of major Co
!lin w ood 68
i r. •
At Cleve land Linc oln -weu
;
league service.
6B Pa r ma SB · ~ . J
The owners ) new proposal Cl e StAtIgnatius
Eas tl ake N orth
'·. ! t
gave the players the right w East lal&lt;.e Nort h 71 Gene\l o! so , i .,.;
A t Copl ey
. . 1 "
become free ~1 g ents after si:x
Bar berton 64 Akron Ce n t r al :. t
years, )l'ithout lhe option SB
:' ~ ~t1
At Lor am Ad m i r a l K i ng
year, by requesting a trade .
Souttw iew 13
The player would be allowed LorainLa~ewood
St: Edw ar d 62 1. t '·
to designate four teams to
CLA SS AA
: •r t.
A 1 W ;,rren W es t ern R eserve .._ , ·
whieh he didn't want to be Warren
Kenne dy 58 Warr en t , r .
traded . If he were not traded, Champion 4 ~
L! ·. ·
At R:to G rand e
, •
he would become a free age nt
Pomeroy M eigs 45 J • '
during the next sprin g Ironto n 49AtAs
h l an d
r·,·
Cle arlork 65 Huron .40
training season.
At T o l edo
Under that pr.oposal, a free Tol Car dinal
Strlfcn 55 Oak :"1 ·,·
agent would be selected in a Ha rbo r 37
65 Huron 40
special draft by as many as Clc arfor k At
T o l edo
·,._ !, ;, •.,
eight teams, with the cl ubs Tot Cardin al Strit ch 55 Oa k 1, 1 : ~
choosing in inverted order of HarbOr 37
Ada
'·
the fina l standings . If not St. Ma ry 's At
60 De l ta 59
selec ted by an ;~ dub, a fr ee
A t E l y r ia
agent would be eligi ble to Avo n 6-5 Broo k si de 6d
A t Ch ag r in Fa ll s
deal with all learns.
Twinsburg 58 warrensvil le 51
At Can t on
Also, any player with three _
Akron St . V M 62 San d y
years in the maJOr leagues Valley
oo (2 o t)
. .. "
whose contract js assigned Ca nton Lehm an 63 Ca n ton 1
~
outright · to a minor league AQui na s 53 A I Troy
team could opt instead for ve r sa i ll es 67 Nort hr i dge 52
U rbana 5&lt;~ ln d fan L ake 4&lt;1
i'
free ag.ent status.
At Ste ub envi lle
1.:-1
Tht&gt; owners also proposed a Be1t a 1re 5~ Ri\ler View 56

and vi::;!lurs to attend the fair
Sa li sbury
E l em~nta r )
School will sponsor a student Th e fi:l ir WJ!l enco urage
book fa1r fr tJ m. Moru.la y, student mteres t 10 reading
Mareh 15 th roug h Wed- ;IIHt 1n bwlding home
nesday, March 17. Books will libraries . All prOfits will be
be on di::;play in the gym - given to tho school
MiJrk
McDaniel. the
nasimn during the schoo l
t
ea
cher
cor ps reading
day, and s tuden ts will be a ble
teacher
al
Saltsbw·y , Is the
t(i brnw se and purt:lwsc
bo{)k
fi-l
ir
cha irn ta n . The
books .
cornmhtc
t
&gt;
inCl udes Mrs.
Tile hook !au· comiittee
Don
na
Ohlinge
r . sc hoo l
in vites all stude nts, r'arent~ ,
Pomr r oy Bowltnq Lane!.

II)' DONALD B. TIIACKREY

Now for lh e firs1 time, over·

Middleport, Ohio
Ph. 992·5321
\,

results

School sponsors
pupil book fair

J.oea.l Bowling

Bailey unable to crack hosiile witness' testimony

SLEE' '

FOREMAN and ABBOIT

Pla n

NEW YORK I UPI) - The
''number s game" between
baseball's clubowners and
the Major League Players
Associ ation ge ts mor e
complicated every day.
It was the owners' turn
Wednesda y to throw a new
curve at the playe rs and they
did with an offe r to allow a
player to become a free agent
after seven years of major
league Ser vice. TI1e 0\-\'ners'
pre\1ous proposal would have
allowed a player .to become a
free agent after ei ght years .
Marvln Miller, executive
director of the Major League
Players Association, ha s repeatedly taken the stand that
tile Messer smith ·McNa lly
decision by a fed erai.
arbitrator. supported three
·tim es by co urt r ulin gs,
cannot be bargained away.
He says an y player would
then have the right w sue the
players association ahd
.
.
'
pitcher M1k e Marshall of the
l.os Angeles Dodgers has
alread:; said that's what he'd
do .
Miller has compromised to
tl1e point where he says he
could negotiate a six or seven
yea r reserve clause for
pla yers of the fu ture but that
he lwsn't go !the n ght to clo so
in
regard to ex isting
contracts.

5- The P&lt;meroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 11, 1976

I

Tourney

\t Owners throw
:Stall rl~ngs \ curve in talks

:I

INSULATION

Open Fr,ilav· N1ghl Ttlll-~al. Til 5

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Play underway

G1ro lina poses a big opening

round threat this yea r.
Mai·quette, hoptng for a
showdown agamst No. I In cU an;-1 m the ~ i deas l regional

SHOP NOW FOR EASTER

-'j. '

point performance by Dan
Issei to beat Denver. Don
Buse sparked Indiana with a
team
reeord 19 assists. Buse
Sonks lJO, Bucks 105
Bruce Seals scored 18 of his also added six thefts. Billy
23 points in the game's final Knight led Indiana with 31
16 minutes to lead Seattle. points.
t:olun els 128, Spurs 124
'01e win wa s only the &amp;!nics
Wil Jones scored six of his
second in 22 games at
Milwaukee and snapped a 12 points in overtime w give
four-game Seattl e los in g Kentucky its fourth straight
victory. Joh nn y Neumann
streHk.
paced the Colonels with 31
Ruckcts 113, Blazers 110
Calvin Murphy scored 31 points.
points and killed the final 24 Spirits 99, Nets 95
Marvin Barnes scored 23
seconds witb a dribblin g
}Xlints
and Ron Boone 20 to
ex ldbi tion
to
preserve
pace
Sl.
I,JJuis. J ulius Erving
Houston' s victory over
had
18
of
his 39 points in the
Portland .
in a futile effort
final
quarter
Pace rs 129, Nuggets 119
to
pull
the
Nets
even.
Indiana overcame a 42·
before Coach Butch van
Breda Kolff gave him a rest
in U1~ final period.

North Carolina confident

rrlllll.t!

1

:,w

r~·nocl~

1 hbat·'&lt;- SIXth
•O ; '\Jl.S\l
I I
I(' t t

&lt;..

•·.·

Snuth scored 32 points apiece
to 'llwl Buffalo past New
Urllan:-;. P~te Manivich

J"('

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".t-rl.l mtl, \1;\fdJ~ pun-P LtOH.'rcJ~ , 0 ., Thursdiij , 1\larl'h II, l9i6

Ebersbach Hardware
EVEJl YTHING IN HARDWARE
Fri. &amp;Sat. Til 8:00 ·

MAIN STREET
a

POMEROY

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�7- the Pomeroy Sentinel Middl
~

6- The Pomeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 11,1976
r

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Beta Alpha, Delta Alpha,
and
Omicron
Ecsilon
chapters of the Delta Kapp~
Gamma
Society,
International Honor Society for
Women Educators , will hold
a luncheon, March 13, 1976, at
I p .m. at Oak Hill St. Paul
United Methodist Church.
Mrs .
Mary
Erwin ,
President of Alpha Delta
State, the Ohio organization,
will be the guest speaker at

ts,:;~s~~,i~r,,,.,.,,,,,i

Calendar

FREE CANCER clinic for
all Meigs women at Veterans
Me m or ia l Hos pita l Thu rs day; phone 992-7531 or 9925832 for a ppointment.

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this occasion. Her topic will
be " Women of the American
Revolution ''.

A native of Cincinnati ,
Mary Erwin is a graduate of
Woodward High School and
Miami University. She has
done graduate work at North·
western University, Miami
University and the University
of Cincinnati. Since 1956, Mrs.
Erwin has been chairman of
the Social Studies Departmen! at Washington Junior
High School in Ham il ton
where she teaches American
and Ohio history.
Mrs. Erwin has been a
superv1smg teacher for
Miami University since 1952.
The Delta Kappa Gamma
Society is an International
Organization of over 130,000
members. Alpha Delta State,
the Ohio organization, has a
membership of over 7,600.
Women who have rendered
distinc tive
service
to
education for m ore than fi ve

I

THU ~DAY

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B&amp;PWconference held Sunday ,·

DKG luncheon speaker named

GALLIA COUNTY lad ies
a uxiliary Post 4464, VFW
regular meeting Thursday.
OHIO VALLEY Gra nge
2612, Letart F a lls, will meet
a t 7: 30 this evening at the
hall ; potluck r efr eshments.
. SYRACUSE-Minersville
Summer Sports Association
Thursday, 7:30 p. m . at
Syracuse Municipal building.
All parents, coaches and
persons
inte rested
in
h'
coac mg a team are urged to
attend . This includes all girls
softball teams, pee wee, little
league and p ony leag ue
te
ams.
MEIGS COUNTY Humane
Society, 7:30 p. m . Thursday
at Middleport village hall .
Public invited.
CE RVI CAL
CA N CER
Clinic Thursday at Veterans
Mem orial Hospital. Fo r
a ppointment call American
Cancer Socie ty a t 992-7531 or
Jan Judge, 992-5832.
· LAURE L CLIF F Better
Hea lth Cl u b , 1: 30
. p .m .
Thursday a t the home of Mrs .
Bertha Parker. ·
BRADBuRy
pTA
•
Thursday, 7:30 at the school.
F RIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, Oraer

years are eligible for
membership and membership is by invitation only.
One of the major functions
of the organization is to
promote women educators .
Two special projects sponsored by Delta Kappa
Gamma are a grants-in-aid
program , which provides
financial assistance to
coll ege women who are
planning a teaching career,
and the A. Margaret Boyd
Fellowship that grants
financial a id to members for
a year's study overseas and
brings foreign students to the
United States to study under
the auspices of the International In stitute of
Education. Local presidents
are Alpha Omicron, Mrs.
Judith Matheney, Hamden;
Delta Epsilon ( J ac kson
Coun ty) Mrs. Peggy Lanier,
Jackson ; Be ta Alpha, Mrs .
Elsie Bradshaw ( Gallia &amp;
Lawrence) Oak Hill .

Mrs. Bachtel gives
program on prayer
A program on prayer was
presented by Mrs. Juanita
Bachtel at the Monday night
m eeting of the Un ited
Methodi s t Women of th e
Heath Church, Middleport.
Taking her scripture from
Mark, Mrs . Bachtel commented on asking through
prayer , notl' ng that too often
people pray for possessions
while God gives what is best.
She said that Christians m ust
bel!'eve that no sufferl·ng
wasted, that while God may
not answer all prayers He
answers all people who pray.
To conclude her comments ,
Mrs . Bachtel read a poem by
Tennyson .
Mrs . Ka thryn Knight
opened the meeting with a
poem on spring as Mrs .
Be ulah Jones played a
medl ey of sprin g songs.
Members were welcomed by
I
. S

Mrs. Knight who encouraged
them to bring other into the

UMW . Mrs. Jessie Vouchins
gave devotions on the topic,
" Prayer Changes Things",
and read the words to " When
You Left Your Room this
·
morrung, Did You Thing to
Pray" as Mrs . Jon es played
the song on the piano. She
described prayer as com. t'10n and fellowship
mun1ea
with God .
Dur ing
th e
busin ess
m eeting ,
Mrs .
J ames
er·lswe U gave a report on the
World Day of Prayer service
with 14 from the church attending. Mrs. Nan Moore
noted that 15 attended the
Lenten breakfast at Trinity
Church. A retreat at Camp
Otterbein was announced for
· Apr1'l ·
Mrs. Freda Miteh , Mrs. M.
C. Wilson, Mrs . Walter Hayes
and Mrs . Norman Wayland
d f
serve re reshmenfs from a
table carrying out the spring
and St. Patrick's Day m otif.

NOTED PHILIPPINE VIOUNIST Gilopez Kabayao
will perform Saturday evening at GaUia Academ y High
School . Ka bayao will be accompanied by his wife,
Corazon . The' concert will begin at . 8 p. . m . For
reservation s, call446-3919 or 441Hl021. Tickets may also be
purchased a t P Js, Bernad ine's, Country Fare or at the
door .

Committee plans
bicentennial projects
Bicentennial projects were is being sold by the Auxiliary
discussed during a meeting of members for $2 a copy.
the bicentennial committee of Arrangements were made to
h
enter a float in the Regatta
tA e T Amefrican
Legion
D
w
b te
UXI lary o
rew e s r parade, and to round out the
bicentennial activities, Mrs.
Post 39 held at the hall.
Carrie
Neutzlin g will produce
It was r e ported that the
a
play
in the fall. Attending
first
project
d
Th is halready f unh
the planning session were
erway. e tras canso t e
village are being pain ted with Mrs. Gra ce Pratt , president;
Mrs. Faye Wildermuth , Mrs.
paint fur nished by th e
Olin Kn a pp , Mr s . Marg e
Auxiliary · The cans will be
placed around the village Goett and Mrs. Veda Davis.
once they have been painted . Mrs. Neutzling was unable to
The unit agreed to plant a ttend due to illness.
some shrubbery at the mini par k and it was noted tha t at
the March meeting a sPeaker
from the park development
committee will be there and
final plans will be m ade for
the planting.
The book , "U.S. Heritage"

Reedsville
women

!~:~1r~;::r~fef%~1~; lf' ' '[;=;d'' ;;j;;:;''' 'di;;:;;;d'~-1 Quil~ing h?f!::i~eti~f
~~r~~:: tu:lo~g~~~gg ~~th t~~
co' m1Jle' ted.

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:-·· Se veral fund ralsm g
. ts .
Ia d d .
Shrine. Potluc k refr esh - ProJec were P nne urmg
ments .
a recent meeting of the Big
RETURN
JONATHAN Bend Citizens Band Radio
Meigs Chapter ' Daughters of Club' s Ladies Auxiliary held.
the American Revolution, in the forrner Children 's
annual charter day luncheon, Home building , Mulb erry
12 : 30 Friday at Trinity Heights .
Church. Good citizenship
A bake sale was set for I(
scholars will be spec ia l a .m . on March 20 at Kroger.
gue s ts and Mrs . Patri ck with a yard sale to be held at
Lo'c hary will present the the Charles Hysell property
on Liberty Ave., AprilS, 9 and
program .
.
10. On April I a housewares
BICENTENNIAL meeting party wiU be held at the
·
Frl'da y· a t R utl an d Am er1ean
p
1
7
·
o
· ·. meeting room in conJ' unction
·
Legl 0n
os , :3 p. m. with the meeting . Members
Everyone weIc 0me.
were asked to take ~uests .
HAPPY HARVESTERS,
Trinity Church, 7:30 Friday
at the church .
PANCAKE AND sall!lage SATURDAY
supper Friday, .4 to 7 p.m . at
HYMN SING Saturday at
Senior Citize ns Cent er, Hazel Community Church,
Pomeroy , sp onsored by 7:30 p.m . Featured singers
Meigs c ounty Council on will be " Point Pleasant
Aging with the Rev . Robert Christian Choir . " Public
Bum garner , chairman . invited.
Meigs
County
Un ited
CHICKEN
DINNER
Methodist Me n furnishin g Saturday beginning at 11 :30
food and handling pancake a .m . a t the Syracuse
making . Tickets, $1. 75 . Municipal building sponsored
adults ; $1 children under 12. by Ladies Auxiliary.
MARY SHRINE 137
JUNIOR
AMERICAN
Order of White Shrine of
Jerusalem, Friday, 8 p.m . at Legio n Auxiliary, Drew
Webster Post 39, Saturday,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Election of officers, turning 1:30 P- m. at the hall.
in of all reports and turning
BOX
SOCIAL
with
over ritualistic item s to husbands as guests when
worthy scribe; potluck Pre cept or Cha pter, Beta
refreshments follow1ng the Sigma Phi Sorority meets at 1
meeting .
p.m. Saturday at the home of
SATURDAY
Lillian
Moore .
Soc ial
SKATE-A-WAY ROLLE R replaces regular · meeting;
rink , 20th
anniversary beverage and dessert to be
celebration Saturday with provided.
owners Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Trussell to serve ice cream to

A booth a t the Mei gs
County Fal' r was dl' scussed.

.
March 16 was set as a day to
_
_
sort and size clothing which is
The quilting on a quilt was
available to fire victims . The completed for a member with
sorting will take place at the · failing eyesight at a recent
home of Mrs. Ella Roush.
meeting of t he Walk -In
It was decided that two Garden Club hosted by Mrs.
meetings will be held each Judy McD onn el. Another
month starting in April. The member will bind th e quilt.
traveling prize donated by
For roll call members gave
Mrs . Etta Will was won ·~y a spring verse. Mrs. Etta
Mrs . Ruth Hysell. A large Cullums and Mrs . Edn a Lee
candy heart provided by the di Ia d
club was awarded to Mrs.
sp ye arrangements of
spring fl ower s. The nexi
Elsie J ones . Twen ty-two mee t'mg WI'II be an open
members and four guests mee t'mg WI'th eac h member to
attended the meeting.
·
t· 1 · ·
g1ve an ar 1c e of interest to
garden club m embers . It was
noted that ir baby gift had
('
E'TT
been sent to Mrs. Maxine
· ~~en
Hart. Mrs . Be lva Willard will
fw-nish the contest for the
next mee ting to be held at the
D.r~
home • of Mrs . Mildred
1.'l J
t:1
Zeigler.

uUe
11

feted

Mr . and Mrs. Jim Fry, Rt.
3, Pomeroy , entertained
re cently with a party
honoring their daughter, Sue
Ellen, on her sixth birthday.
Cake, punch and ice cream
were served to Mr. and Mrs .
Edward Stiles, Mrs . Grace
B b
ea out, Middleport; Mr .
and Mrs. John Fry , New
Haven ; Mrs. Judy Eichinger,
Max and Becky, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Robson , Pomeroy ; Mrs .
Thelma Call and Bill, and
Mrs . Daria Yahya , Chester,
and Sue Ellen's sister, Ruth
Ann.
Sending gifts were Mr . and
Mrs . Doug McPeek, Tammy
and Beth, New Haven ; Rhoda

several fri ends. Forty shut-in
ca.!Is were re ported . A surprise card and hanky showe. r
was given to Mrs . Gladys
Morg a n who is m ovin g.
Refreshments using the St.
Patrick 's Day them e we re
served to those nam ed and
Mrs .' Leon a Ruth , Mrs .
Virginia Walton , Mrs. Sandra
Cowdery, Mrs. Grace Price ,
Mrs. Sue Reed, Mrs . Verna
Rose , Mrs. Gladys Morganand Beverly Wigal (guests) ,
Mrs . Hazel Buckley, Mrs .
Alberta Edwards, Mrs.
Ye auger , Mr . a nd Mrs. Teddy Mundry, Mrs . Dolly
Charles Yeauger , Mason , W. Reed, Mrs. Ruth Dillon, Mrs.
Va .; Mr . and Mrs . Earl Dorotha
Riebel ,
Mrs .
Craddo ck a nd Ma tth ew, 1
·
w·
1
-arrame
1ga and Mrs .
Grovetown , Ga . ; Mrs. Edna · Lill'
Pi k
Doo
·
Stiles, Mr . and Mrs . William
lan
c ens.
r pmes
were awarded to Mrs. Rose ,
Clark and April , P omeroy ; M R th M C d
d
Mr . a nd Mrs . Her sc hel
rs. u • rs . ow ery an
The next
Norris, Racin e. and Mr . and •Beverly · Wigal.
11
meeting
wi
be
with
Mrs .
Mrs. Ca rl Pla tte r , Mid dr
dleport.
Munh ~ -Games dwere played
w1t pmes a war ed.

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Quality Home Furnishings
At The Lowest Possible Prices.

• Aexsteel

• Speed Queen

• Bassett

• Frigidaire

elane

• Hoover

• Admiral

5

Middleport, Ohio
Open fridays n 8:00
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Lucio us
Spring Colo rs
In

WASHABLE
SUEDE

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OHI('I
OP E N FRI.
UNTIL8 : 00

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BOWLING ENJOYED
SYRACUSE - Members of
the Young Adult Class of the
Asbury Un ited Me thodist
Church e njoyed a bowling
party at the Mason Bowling
La·nes recently . Afterward s
they went to the home of Mr .
and Mrs . Russell. Moore for a
meeting and refreshments .
Discussed was the possibility ·
of selling plates with the
church picture, and a committe e was . appointed to
make curtains for the Sunday
School classroom . The next
meeting wiU be March 19 at
6: 30p.m .

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BAHR CLOTHIERS
Middleport, Ohio
Open Fridays Til 8:00

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W&amp;AI&amp;I lA&amp;&amp; 'IV&amp;&amp;&amp;
r
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SAVES20
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LOW-COST 25-FUNCTION
SCIENTIFIC CALCULATOR

B•g once c ui on Aarl• o Shack 's EC·4 75•
Fu ll yad clressable memory system . ttoatmg
rte c• mal. bright 8 -0•g•t display Setttng lor
' - - - - - - - -- " · tng·' aNi eng~r) ee ring apol• ca t•ons Includes
battery . ca rry case

wedding, new baby and so on.
This makes the money a
more personal gift. - MRS.
·
H.F.G.
DEAR POLLY - Do tell
Georgia who has the messed
up stove hood that I cleaned
badly so il ed with grea sy
smoke with a rag soaked in
rubbing alcohol. This will
also polish the chrome on the
stove. - AVIS.
You will receive a dollar If
Polly uses your favorit e
·hom emaking Id ea, Pet
Peeve, Polly's Problem or
solution to a problem. Write
in care of this newspaper .

SAVES30
2 -CHANNEL,
3-STATION WIRELESS
INTERCOM SYSTEM

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Perfe c t for home or offt ce! Eac h Realis tic
Statton is a master to r calli ng . monitoring.
replymg In stant plu g-m •ns tal lation Use on
desk , or wa ll-mount

honors birthday
RACINE - Mrs . Kenneth
Mar kins of Ra c in e wa s
hon ored on her birthday
Sunday at the home of her
daugh te r , Mr . a nd . Mrs ..
Robert Ri ed, Pataskala . .
Din ner guests included Mr .
and Mrs . Kenneth Markins ,
Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Spaun and Shann on, Mr. and
Mrs. J ohn ,Walter Dean and
Jeremy, Mr. and Mrs . J ohn
A. Dean, all of P omeroy ; Mr .
and Mrs . Walter Terrell ,
Billy Ke nd a ll , Pata skala ;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Jones,
J unior Sm alley, Susan, Dale
and Hobart of Weirton, W.
Va ,; Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Weekly, Missy and Shawn,
Kentucky ; Mrs . Anna Mae
Terrell, Rodney Ried, David
Ried, Pataskala, and Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Ried .
Following
dinne r
a
decorated cake was served,
and Mrs . Marklns opened her
many gills. On Monday she
received a phone calf from
ber grandson, Sg t. and Mrs .
Richard Dean of Chandler ,
Ariz .

else drive a drunken guest
home as usually they have
been drinking , too .
Th ose who sew should have
empty rollers of different
sizes from paper towels, etc.
and then instead of foldin g
leftover soraps of ma terial
r oll them around one of these.
This saves pressing when
they are used for quilt
making. Also these rollers
PANCAKE SUPPER SET
are good for holding different
A public pancake supper
sizes of plastic bags inside . will be held at the Senior
Push one Uilder the car seat Citizens Center Friday night
for unexpec ted use . Roll with serving from 4 to 7 p.m .
slacks around such a roll Tbe Meigs County United
when packing a suitcase, too . Methodist Men will have
- MRS. L.R.
charge Of the supper with the
DEAR POLLY - When I Rev . Robert Bumgarner as
send money as a gift in a chairman . All proceeds wiU
greeting card , I put the go into the Senior Citizens
money in an envelope I pr ogram . Tickets , available
construct from gift wrapping from any member of the
paper suitable for the OC· Council on Aging are $1.75 for
casion such as a' birthday , adults and $1 for children.

REALISTIC \11
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WITH FM STEREO RADIO

On ve- t• me mus•ca l pleasu re at 27 ft,
savings 1 Cassette 1n serts s•dewaYs for
mstant " on". eject buhon lor "olf"
Volume , balance. tone slide con trols.
Bui lt-in AFC. stereo light.

---SAVE
25%

Kl '"'' SNo,l
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PH. 992·3586

'

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3795

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SAVE

S4

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OR CASSETTE ·
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Reg . 14.95

299

33 -1054

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ATTENTION

CD BUYERS!

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2. 19

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199~!
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Outstandi ng Radio Shack
exclu sives; Auto- Magic FM tu nin g. Glide-Path !!
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16%

39.95
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3 .29
44-1877 7" REEL. 1800 FT., Reg. 4 .79 ..
3.79
44-1879 1" REEL, 2400 FT., Reg. 6 .49 ..... 5.69

SAVE 58

Radio- Shack lnlrodueed Its famous to w-cost Aeal ist'ic CB line in 1960 and
has been a world leader in Citizens Band tor 16 yearS. While some ot
Realistic's 16 radtos may be in sh&lt;;~rt supply at times. it'll be worth your
while 1o WAIT FOR REALISTIC (If you have to) and avoid lhe hassle and'
problems of deal ing with Store X and Brand X. We also make our own
Archer line of CB antennas, crystals, coax cables and accessories. These are
in fairly good supply today . Real istic CB is sold and serviced ONLY by
Radio Shack through our over 4000 Mops in the USA and Canada . Buy
from· a really qualified .specialist - your friendly neighborhoOd Radio Shack !

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96 PAGE.TRANSISTOR
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BUILDING SPEAKER
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Reg.
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WITH DUAL CONTROLS

75~

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••

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-Reason 15. If you should qualify for the
Short Form. we'll prepare it for you at a
very low price . At H &amp; R Block, the
simpler the return, the less we charge.

2

To your nearest participating
Radio Shack store for $2.00 olf
the regular price .of any CB
antenna in this ad . Limit : one
antenna per coupon .

SET
OF

Reg .
69.95

J

: M

BRIJIG THIS COUPOJI

Mrs. Markins

llenry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax help.
•

ARCHER" CB ANTENNAS
BY RADIO SHACK
The world leader in CB for 16 years, Radio
Shack makes its own fine cit famous low-cost
Archer antennas designed specifically for
the ultimate in communications and rugged
rehab1hty. Save up to 15 % during our
get-acquainted sale. There 's only one place
you can lind it ... Radio Shack.

• S•ve Up To 20%!

Col; ~soo ~

•

Polly's P roblem
DE AR POLLY - Would
you or someone else know
what to do with an old m outon
coat that looks fine but is so
stiff it feels like a board ?
Could it be softened' - MRS .
J.W.F .
DEAR 1\fRS. J .W.F. - I do
not think there Is anything
you can do al home to correct
thi s stiffness. The skins have
evidently dried oul. I recently
has a fur coal renovated and
the furrier took It apart ( 11
was dry but not stiff ) and
oiled the backs of the sklns.
Take the coat to a furrier and
ask his advice. - POLLY.
DE AR POLLY My
mother was an invalid ·for 42
years and of cotirse this
meant a lot Of fetching and
carrying. She had me get a
large pocketbook in which
s he put her cosmetics, comb,
nail file, a notel)ook and
pencil , her glasses , )etters
and ever ything else she
might need during the day.
The bag was put next to her
couch where. she could get to
it easily. It saved me many,
many steps and I do hope it
will help someone else with a
similar · situation . - MRS .
E .H.M.
DEAR POLLY - One of
my Pet Peeves is with impatient people and that includes me for being Impatient
with them . I have lea rned
fr om experience how much
better a person feels both
mentally a nd phys ically,
when they can be patient
under most circumstances .
Anoth er Pet Peeve is
asking a host or hostess to

either drive, or have someone

•

An' you ' re gonna lake t o th is w edge . Covered heel s a r e sitting
pretty on crepe soles, cappe d with ri c h -looking topp ing s . Jus t what
the '75 soph isticate ordered! Strap in w hite o r b rown .

•

PLUS SENSATIONAL BARGAINS ON POPULAR REGULAR STOCK ITEMS FOR HOME, OFFICE, CAR!

No home remedy
for dried out leather

Yd .

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Mrs . Hugh Bearhs, Rock
Springs , is a patient in
University Hospital, Room
886. Friends may send cards
to her there .

president of Beta Gamma
Sig(lla, it was noted that the
recommendation for
membership came from the
Delta of Ohio Chapter at Ohio
University . Miss Mees will be
initiated during the Beta
Gamma Sigma banquet on
May 16.
She attended Ca pital
University, Columbus, two
years before transferring to
Ohio last fall. She Is the
daughter of Mr . and Mrs .
Malcolm Mees.

Polly's Pointers

60 " Wid e

including postage
and handlin~
Jfr(SOc for each Addition•! Child)

Check Our Budget Shop For

BAKER FURNITURE

BE SORRY!

conn·~----~

The Easter Bunny is
coming
to
the
KIDDIE SHOPPE on
March 19th from 4
p.m. to 8 p.m. and
March
20th from
12:30 p.m. to s p.m.
Bring the kids and get
their pictures taken
with the cutest bu
in town.

• Many More

New Furniture At Budget Prices.

YOU ...
YOU WON'T

FOR YOU· ~ ­
FROM

IN HOSPITAL

Edtth Mees selected
Edith Mees, a junior at
Ohio University, has been
selected for membership in
Beta Gamma Sigma, national
scholastic honorary society.
Membership in ,the society
is the highes t scholastic
honor that a student in the
School of Business and
Management can achieve. It
is restricted to schools accredited by the American
Assembl y of Co llegiate
Schools of Business .
In a letter from the national

LET US
PERSUEDE

Sale set

rt p

epo • orneroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 11,1976

for society membership

The fall meeting will be held
Sept. 26 at the Burr Oak
Lodge.

The Easter ll~~n11i'V
Is
Coming!

skaters; races, prizes and
balloons; skating 7: 30 • 10
p.m .
. SPAGHETTI SUPPER, 3
to 7 p .m . Sa turday a t
Pomeroy Fire Station ; $2,
adults ; $1 .25, 12 and under ,
dessert and beverage extra .
. Tickets available from any
fireman , Mayer 's Barber
Shop or New York Clothing
House .
TALENT SHOW , 7:30 p .m .
Saturday
at
Chester
Elementary Sc hool sponsored by Chester P'i'A. Kiffi
Batey, Andrew Batey, New
Ufe Singers, Jean Trussell,
Margaret Tuttle , Doug
Circle , Fay and Jim Weston ,
Nick and Danny Leonard ,
Goapel Tones, Sandy and
Jean Sexson , Bryce Buckley
among talent taking part.
Practice wiU be Friday , 7:30
p.m . Admission is $1 , adults ;
·~ cents children up to 12;
refreshments
will
be
available.

Reedsville U
HMW hme lf with
Mrs. VI vian ump rey or Its
March meeting. Devotions
were led by. Mrs. Mamie
Buckl ey. Th e topi c was
'' Laborers in the Kingdom ."
R~adings were given by Mrs :
Buckley and several members.
During
t he
b us in ess
session dues were paid , and
several le tters read from the
district secretaries. Round
r obin cards were signed for

Miss Freddle Houdashelt, . women.
Mrs. Joan Wood presided at
Mrs. Mary Martin, Mrs .
Eloise Wilson and Terri the meeting which included a
Miller represented the luncheon . Lois Caul of Athens
'Midd leport Business and gave the collect, and Mrs .
Professional Women 's Club Wilma Haycraft of Gallipolis
at the District BPW spring presented devotions using the
conference Sunday at the 23rd Psalm.
The table decorations by
Hocking Hills Motor Lodge,
the Nelsonville club carried
Nelsonville.
Speaker for the meeting out the bicentennial theme.
was Mrs. Delores Chambers The programs were made by
of West Jefferson , Ohio's the Middleport Club.
Connie Wells, Gallipolis,
third vice presiden t o( BPW,
who talked · on the Equal had an article on the flag , and
Righ ts Ame nd ment . She · Red Skelton's interpretation
repor ted that it will lake only of the pledge to the nag was
four more states to ratify the given by Loretta Jones and
ERA to make it a bill , Mrs. Elsie Wooten of Jackson. A
Cha mbers comm ented on skit entitled "Star Spangled "
recent movements to have was presented by Jeri e aten ,
the ratified ERA in two states Peggy Cummings , Serena
rescinded . In her talk Mrs. Fickel, Mar y Ann Goodlive,
Chamber s li sted women Mary Margaret Kaiser and
through the years who have Wanda Schorr , of the Logan
spoken ou t for women's Club.
A movie, "The Changing
rights and their impact on
World
" with emphasis on
br ingi ng r ecognition to
historical spots in Ohio was
show n . The Ironton and
La nca ster
Clubs .were
welcomed into the distriCt. It
A rummage sale has been was announced that the South
set for April 2 and 3 at the Point Club will have a 50th
Pomeroy Elementary School anniversary on April 22 and
with the proceeds to go to buy club members were invited to
the trophies for the school join in the celebrat ion .
Serving on the evaluation
safety patrol.
committee
for the conference
Mee ting Monday night a t
were
Mrs
.
Martin , Karen
the school, the PTA made
Gilkey
and
Helen
Morrison .
arrangements for the sale.
J ames Soulsby, president ,
~ onduc ted the meeting. The
trophies will ~e presented at
the April meeting with the
boys a nd girls to be
recognized at tha t time. New
officers will also be elected at
the April meeting .
It was repor ted that one of
the television sets has been
re paired with the PTA payin g
the cos t involved . Mrs.
Gladys F oley announced a
bicentennial program to be
presented at I p.m . on May 1
at the school . The third grade
won the attendance award ,
and re fr es hments were
served by the kindergarten
mothers .
The film ; "Children in
Trouble" was shown by Carl
Hysell.
_

'

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

H&amp;R BLOCK®

heritage house
MIDDLEPORT, o()HIO
OPEN FRIDAYS TIL8 : 00

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza

618 E. MAIN ST.
Pomeroy, Ohio
OPEN: 9-4 WHicdlys, 9-5 S.t.
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

I
'

A TANDY COIIPORATION C~NY

MOSt item s alSO ev •iiiiOtl

At "adia S t1K k De...,&amp;,
LOOM f Qf' . thi ......

"' your ,., l'loetrP'IOOcll .

PRICES MA Y \fAflY AT INDIVIDUAL STORQ

'

\

�7- the Pomeroy Sentinel Middl
~

6- The Pomeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 11,1976
r

.•
•••
•
••

•
•

•

Beta Alpha, Delta Alpha,
and
Omicron
Ecsilon
chapters of the Delta Kapp~
Gamma
Society,
International Honor Society for
Women Educators , will hold
a luncheon, March 13, 1976, at
I p .m. at Oak Hill St. Paul
United Methodist Church.
Mrs .
Mary
Erwin ,
President of Alpha Delta
State, the Ohio organization,
will be the guest speaker at

ts,:;~s~~,i~r,,,.,.,,,,,i

Calendar

FREE CANCER clinic for
all Meigs women at Veterans
Me m or ia l Hos pita l Thu rs day; phone 992-7531 or 9925832 for a ppointment.

.

•

•
••
•

••

this occasion. Her topic will
be " Women of the American
Revolution ''.

A native of Cincinnati ,
Mary Erwin is a graduate of
Woodward High School and
Miami University. She has
done graduate work at North·
western University, Miami
University and the University
of Cincinnati. Since 1956, Mrs.
Erwin has been chairman of
the Social Studies Departmen! at Washington Junior
High School in Ham il ton
where she teaches American
and Ohio history.
Mrs. Erwin has been a
superv1smg teacher for
Miami University since 1952.
The Delta Kappa Gamma
Society is an International
Organization of over 130,000
members. Alpha Delta State,
the Ohio organization, has a
membership of over 7,600.
Women who have rendered
distinc tive
service
to
education for m ore than fi ve

I

THU ~DAY

•

B&amp;PWconference held Sunday ,·

DKG luncheon speaker named

GALLIA COUNTY lad ies
a uxiliary Post 4464, VFW
regular meeting Thursday.
OHIO VALLEY Gra nge
2612, Letart F a lls, will meet
a t 7: 30 this evening at the
hall ; potluck r efr eshments.
. SYRACUSE-Minersville
Summer Sports Association
Thursday, 7:30 p. m . at
Syracuse Municipal building.
All parents, coaches and
persons
inte rested
in
h'
coac mg a team are urged to
attend . This includes all girls
softball teams, pee wee, little
league and p ony leag ue
te
ams.
MEIGS COUNTY Humane
Society, 7:30 p. m . Thursday
at Middleport village hall .
Public invited.
CE RVI CAL
CA N CER
Clinic Thursday at Veterans
Mem orial Hospital. Fo r
a ppointment call American
Cancer Socie ty a t 992-7531 or
Jan Judge, 992-5832.
· LAURE L CLIF F Better
Hea lth Cl u b , 1: 30
. p .m .
Thursday a t the home of Mrs .
Bertha Parker. ·
BRADBuRy
pTA
•
Thursday, 7:30 at the school.
F RIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, Oraer

years are eligible for
membership and membership is by invitation only.
One of the major functions
of the organization is to
promote women educators .
Two special projects sponsored by Delta Kappa
Gamma are a grants-in-aid
program , which provides
financial assistance to
coll ege women who are
planning a teaching career,
and the A. Margaret Boyd
Fellowship that grants
financial a id to members for
a year's study overseas and
brings foreign students to the
United States to study under
the auspices of the International In stitute of
Education. Local presidents
are Alpha Omicron, Mrs.
Judith Matheney, Hamden;
Delta Epsilon ( J ac kson
Coun ty) Mrs. Peggy Lanier,
Jackson ; Be ta Alpha, Mrs .
Elsie Bradshaw ( Gallia &amp;
Lawrence) Oak Hill .

Mrs. Bachtel gives
program on prayer
A program on prayer was
presented by Mrs. Juanita
Bachtel at the Monday night
m eeting of the Un ited
Methodi s t Women of th e
Heath Church, Middleport.
Taking her scripture from
Mark, Mrs . Bachtel commented on asking through
prayer , notl' ng that too often
people pray for possessions
while God gives what is best.
She said that Christians m ust
bel!'eve that no sufferl·ng
wasted, that while God may
not answer all prayers He
answers all people who pray.
To conclude her comments ,
Mrs . Bachtel read a poem by
Tennyson .
Mrs . Ka thryn Knight
opened the meeting with a
poem on spring as Mrs .
Be ulah Jones played a
medl ey of sprin g songs.
Members were welcomed by
I
. S

Mrs. Knight who encouraged
them to bring other into the

UMW . Mrs. Jessie Vouchins
gave devotions on the topic,
" Prayer Changes Things",
and read the words to " When
You Left Your Room this
·
morrung, Did You Thing to
Pray" as Mrs . Jon es played
the song on the piano. She
described prayer as com. t'10n and fellowship
mun1ea
with God .
Dur ing
th e
busin ess
m eeting ,
Mrs .
J ames
er·lswe U gave a report on the
World Day of Prayer service
with 14 from the church attending. Mrs. Nan Moore
noted that 15 attended the
Lenten breakfast at Trinity
Church. A retreat at Camp
Otterbein was announced for
· Apr1'l ·
Mrs. Freda Miteh , Mrs. M.
C. Wilson, Mrs . Walter Hayes
and Mrs . Norman Wayland
d f
serve re reshmenfs from a
table carrying out the spring
and St. Patrick's Day m otif.

NOTED PHILIPPINE VIOUNIST Gilopez Kabayao
will perform Saturday evening at GaUia Academ y High
School . Ka bayao will be accompanied by his wife,
Corazon . The' concert will begin at . 8 p. . m . For
reservation s, call446-3919 or 441Hl021. Tickets may also be
purchased a t P Js, Bernad ine's, Country Fare or at the
door .

Committee plans
bicentennial projects
Bicentennial projects were is being sold by the Auxiliary
discussed during a meeting of members for $2 a copy.
the bicentennial committee of Arrangements were made to
h
enter a float in the Regatta
tA e T Amefrican
Legion
D
w
b te
UXI lary o
rew e s r parade, and to round out the
bicentennial activities, Mrs.
Post 39 held at the hall.
Carrie
Neutzlin g will produce
It was r e ported that the
a
play
in the fall. Attending
first
project
d
Th is halready f unh
the planning session were
erway. e tras canso t e
village are being pain ted with Mrs. Gra ce Pratt , president;
Mrs. Faye Wildermuth , Mrs.
paint fur nished by th e
Olin Kn a pp , Mr s . Marg e
Auxiliary · The cans will be
placed around the village Goett and Mrs. Veda Davis.
once they have been painted . Mrs. Neutzling was unable to
The unit agreed to plant a ttend due to illness.
some shrubbery at the mini par k and it was noted tha t at
the March meeting a sPeaker
from the park development
committee will be there and
final plans will be m ade for
the planting.
The book , "U.S. Heritage"

Reedsville
women

!~:~1r~;::r~fef%~1~; lf' ' '[;=;d'' ;;j;;:;''' 'di;;:;;;d'~-1 Quil~ing h?f!::i~eti~f
~~r~~:: tu:lo~g~~~gg ~~th t~~
co' m1Jle' ted.

••

•'
1

..'•

~'

•
..•
&lt;

:-·· Se veral fund ralsm g
. ts .
Ia d d .
Shrine. Potluc k refr esh - ProJec were P nne urmg
ments .
a recent meeting of the Big
RETURN
JONATHAN Bend Citizens Band Radio
Meigs Chapter ' Daughters of Club' s Ladies Auxiliary held.
the American Revolution, in the forrner Children 's
annual charter day luncheon, Home building , Mulb erry
12 : 30 Friday at Trinity Heights .
Church. Good citizenship
A bake sale was set for I(
scholars will be spec ia l a .m . on March 20 at Kroger.
gue s ts and Mrs . Patri ck with a yard sale to be held at
Lo'c hary will present the the Charles Hysell property
on Liberty Ave., AprilS, 9 and
program .
.
10. On April I a housewares
BICENTENNIAL meeting party wiU be held at the
·
Frl'da y· a t R utl an d Am er1ean
p
1
7
·
o
· ·. meeting room in conJ' unction
·
Legl 0n
os , :3 p. m. with the meeting . Members
Everyone weIc 0me.
were asked to take ~uests .
HAPPY HARVESTERS,
Trinity Church, 7:30 Friday
at the church .
PANCAKE AND sall!lage SATURDAY
supper Friday, .4 to 7 p.m . at
HYMN SING Saturday at
Senior Citize ns Cent er, Hazel Community Church,
Pomeroy , sp onsored by 7:30 p.m . Featured singers
Meigs c ounty Council on will be " Point Pleasant
Aging with the Rev . Robert Christian Choir . " Public
Bum garner , chairman . invited.
Meigs
County
Un ited
CHICKEN
DINNER
Methodist Me n furnishin g Saturday beginning at 11 :30
food and handling pancake a .m . a t the Syracuse
making . Tickets, $1. 75 . Municipal building sponsored
adults ; $1 children under 12. by Ladies Auxiliary.
MARY SHRINE 137
JUNIOR
AMERICAN
Order of White Shrine of
Jerusalem, Friday, 8 p.m . at Legio n Auxiliary, Drew
Webster Post 39, Saturday,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Election of officers, turning 1:30 P- m. at the hall.
in of all reports and turning
BOX
SOCIAL
with
over ritualistic item s to husbands as guests when
worthy scribe; potluck Pre cept or Cha pter, Beta
refreshments follow1ng the Sigma Phi Sorority meets at 1
meeting .
p.m. Saturday at the home of
SATURDAY
Lillian
Moore .
Soc ial
SKATE-A-WAY ROLLE R replaces regular · meeting;
rink , 20th
anniversary beverage and dessert to be
celebration Saturday with provided.
owners Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Trussell to serve ice cream to

A booth a t the Mei gs
County Fal' r was dl' scussed.

.
March 16 was set as a day to
_
_
sort and size clothing which is
The quilting on a quilt was
available to fire victims . The completed for a member with
sorting will take place at the · failing eyesight at a recent
home of Mrs. Ella Roush.
meeting of t he Walk -In
It was decided that two Garden Club hosted by Mrs.
meetings will be held each Judy McD onn el. Another
month starting in April. The member will bind th e quilt.
traveling prize donated by
For roll call members gave
Mrs . Etta Will was won ·~y a spring verse. Mrs. Etta
Mrs . Ruth Hysell. A large Cullums and Mrs . Edn a Lee
candy heart provided by the di Ia d
club was awarded to Mrs.
sp ye arrangements of
spring fl ower s. The nexi
Elsie J ones . Twen ty-two mee t'mg WI'II be an open
members and four guests mee t'mg WI'th eac h member to
attended the meeting.
·
t· 1 · ·
g1ve an ar 1c e of interest to
garden club m embers . It was
noted that ir baby gift had
('
E'TT
been sent to Mrs. Maxine
· ~~en
Hart. Mrs . Be lva Willard will
fw-nish the contest for the
next mee ting to be held at the
D.r~
home • of Mrs . Mildred
1.'l J
t:1
Zeigler.

uUe
11

feted

Mr . and Mrs. Jim Fry, Rt.
3, Pomeroy , entertained
re cently with a party
honoring their daughter, Sue
Ellen, on her sixth birthday.
Cake, punch and ice cream
were served to Mr. and Mrs .
Edward Stiles, Mrs . Grace
B b
ea out, Middleport; Mr .
and Mrs. John Fry , New
Haven ; Mrs. Judy Eichinger,
Max and Becky, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Robson , Pomeroy ; Mrs .
Thelma Call and Bill, and
Mrs . Daria Yahya , Chester,
and Sue Ellen's sister, Ruth
Ann.
Sending gifts were Mr . and
Mrs . Doug McPeek, Tammy
and Beth, New Haven ; Rhoda

several fri ends. Forty shut-in
ca.!Is were re ported . A surprise card and hanky showe. r
was given to Mrs . Gladys
Morg a n who is m ovin g.
Refreshments using the St.
Patrick 's Day them e we re
served to those nam ed and
Mrs .' Leon a Ruth , Mrs .
Virginia Walton , Mrs. Sandra
Cowdery, Mrs. Grace Price ,
Mrs. Sue Reed, Mrs . Verna
Rose , Mrs. Gladys Morganand Beverly Wigal (guests) ,
Mrs . Hazel Buckley, Mrs .
Alberta Edwards, Mrs.
Ye auger , Mr . a nd Mrs. Teddy Mundry, Mrs . Dolly
Charles Yeauger , Mason , W. Reed, Mrs. Ruth Dillon, Mrs.
Va .; Mr . and Mrs . Earl Dorotha
Riebel ,
Mrs .
Craddo ck a nd Ma tth ew, 1
·
w·
1
-arrame
1ga and Mrs .
Grovetown , Ga . ; Mrs. Edna · Lill'
Pi k
Doo
·
Stiles, Mr . and Mrs . William
lan
c ens.
r pmes
were awarded to Mrs. Rose ,
Clark and April , P omeroy ; M R th M C d
d
Mr . a nd Mrs . Her sc hel
rs. u • rs . ow ery an
The next
Norris, Racin e. and Mr . and •Beverly · Wigal.
11
meeting
wi
be
with
Mrs .
Mrs. Ca rl Pla tte r , Mid dr
dleport.
Munh ~ -Games dwere played
w1t pmes a war ed.

''

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Quality Home Furnishings
At The Lowest Possible Prices.

• Aexsteel

• Speed Queen

• Bassett

• Frigidaire

elane

• Hoover

• Admiral

5

Middleport, Ohio
Open fridays n 8:00
,,

I

Lucio us
Spring Colo rs
In

WASHABLE
SUEDE

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OHI('I
OP E N FRI.
UNTIL8 : 00

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•

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BOWLING ENJOYED
SYRACUSE - Members of
the Young Adult Class of the
Asbury Un ited Me thodist
Church e njoyed a bowling
party at the Mason Bowling
La·nes recently . Afterward s
they went to the home of Mr .
and Mrs . Russell. Moore for a
meeting and refreshments .
Discussed was the possibility ·
of selling plates with the
church picture, and a committe e was . appointed to
make curtains for the Sunday
School classroom . The next
meeting wiU be March 19 at
6: 30p.m .

•

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:r l'
•

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'•

BAHR CLOTHIERS
Middleport, Ohio
Open Fridays Til 8:00

.

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I.
~

X

7

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'1..,:.

W&amp;AI&amp;I lA&amp;&amp; 'IV&amp;&amp;&amp;
r
I

--1

SAVES20
..

LOW-COST 25-FUNCTION
SCIENTIFIC CALCULATOR

B•g once c ui on Aarl• o Shack 's EC·4 75•
Fu ll yad clressable memory system . ttoatmg
rte c• mal. bright 8 -0•g•t display Setttng lor
' - - - - - - - -- " · tng·' aNi eng~r) ee ring apol• ca t•ons Includes
battery . ca rry case

wedding, new baby and so on.
This makes the money a
more personal gift. - MRS.
·
H.F.G.
DEAR POLLY - Do tell
Georgia who has the messed
up stove hood that I cleaned
badly so il ed with grea sy
smoke with a rag soaked in
rubbing alcohol. This will
also polish the chrome on the
stove. - AVIS.
You will receive a dollar If
Polly uses your favorit e
·hom emaking Id ea, Pet
Peeve, Polly's Problem or
solution to a problem. Write
in care of this newspaper .

SAVES30
2 -CHANNEL,
3-STATION WIRELESS
INTERCOM SYSTEM

J

#

;

3

Perfe c t for home or offt ce! Eac h Realis tic
Statton is a master to r calli ng . monitoring.
replymg In stant plu g-m •ns tal lation Use on
desk , or wa ll-mount

honors birthday
RACINE - Mrs . Kenneth
Mar kins of Ra c in e wa s
hon ored on her birthday
Sunday at the home of her
daugh te r , Mr . a nd . Mrs ..
Robert Ri ed, Pataskala . .
Din ner guests included Mr .
and Mrs . Kenneth Markins ,
Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Spaun and Shann on, Mr. and
Mrs. J ohn ,Walter Dean and
Jeremy, Mr. and Mrs . J ohn
A. Dean, all of P omeroy ; Mr .
and Mrs . Walter Terrell ,
Billy Ke nd a ll , Pata skala ;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Jones,
J unior Sm alley, Susan, Dale
and Hobart of Weirton, W.
Va ,; Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Weekly, Missy and Shawn,
Kentucky ; Mrs . Anna Mae
Terrell, Rodney Ried, David
Ried, Pataskala, and Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Ried .
Following
dinne r
a
decorated cake was served,
and Mrs . Marklns opened her
many gills. On Monday she
received a phone calf from
ber grandson, Sg t. and Mrs .
Richard Dean of Chandler ,
Ariz .

else drive a drunken guest
home as usually they have
been drinking , too .
Th ose who sew should have
empty rollers of different
sizes from paper towels, etc.
and then instead of foldin g
leftover soraps of ma terial
r oll them around one of these.
This saves pressing when
they are used for quilt
making. Also these rollers
PANCAKE SUPPER SET
are good for holding different
A public pancake supper
sizes of plastic bags inside . will be held at the Senior
Push one Uilder the car seat Citizens Center Friday night
for unexpec ted use . Roll with serving from 4 to 7 p.m .
slacks around such a roll Tbe Meigs County United
when packing a suitcase, too . Methodist Men will have
- MRS. L.R.
charge Of the supper with the
DEAR POLLY - When I Rev . Robert Bumgarner as
send money as a gift in a chairman . All proceeds wiU
greeting card , I put the go into the Senior Citizens
money in an envelope I pr ogram . Tickets , available
construct from gift wrapping from any member of the
paper suitable for the OC· Council on Aging are $1.75 for
casion such as a' birthday , adults and $1 for children.

REALISTIC \11
CAR CASSETTE PLAYER
WITH FM STEREO RADIO

On ve- t• me mus•ca l pleasu re at 27 ft,
savings 1 Cassette 1n serts s•dewaYs for
mstant " on". eject buhon lor "olf"
Volume , balance. tone slide con trols.
Bui lt-in AFC. stereo light.

---SAVE
25%

Kl '"'' SNo,l
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PH. 992·3586

'

PAIR
12-1843

3795

DELUXE
SURFACE
MOUNT

SAVE

S4

PAIR
12-1847

DURABLE
8-T~ACK

OR CASSETTE ·
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CASE

LOWEDANCE
DYNAMIC CASSETTE MIKE
R.eg . 3.99

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1495

ECONOMY
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MOUNT

Reg . 14.95

299

33 -1054

44·671

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ATTENTION

CD BUYERS!

STOCK UP
NOW ON
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REC:ORDING TAPE!
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2. 19

Reg . 299.95

199~!
Hur ry for our full~l ea ture
STA-82 at 33 % off '
Outstandi ng Radio Shack
exclu sives; Auto- Magic FM tu nin g. Glide-Path !!
vo tume(balance ~ontr o l s . Ouati"avOx llt 4-speake r capab'ility
Ma~ne tl c Ph ono mpu t. tape monito r. mai n/remote spea ker sw1tch
Genuin e wal nut ve neer case

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REALISTIC PERSONAL SIZE
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16%

39.95
Reg .

• B ig 4 " Speaker For Grest Sound'

SUPERTAPE"
B-TRACK
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44-18787" REEL, 1200 FT .. Reg. 3.99 .
3 .29
44-1877 7" REEL. 1800 FT., Reg. 4 .79 ..
3.79
44-1879 1" REEL, 2400 FT., Reg. 6 .49 ..... 5.69

SAVE 58

Radio- Shack lnlrodueed Its famous to w-cost Aeal ist'ic CB line in 1960 and
has been a world leader in Citizens Band tor 16 yearS. While some ot
Realistic's 16 radtos may be in sh&lt;;~rt supply at times. it'll be worth your
while 1o WAIT FOR REALISTIC (If you have to) and avoid lhe hassle and'
problems of deal ing with Store X and Brand X. We also make our own
Archer line of CB antennas, crystals, coax cables and accessories. These are
in fairly good supply today . Real istic CB is sold and serviced ONLY by
Radio Shack through our over 4000 Mops in the USA and Canada . Buy
from· a really qualified .specialist - your friendly neighborhoOd Radio Shack !

REALISTIC'" AM-FM
STEREO RECEIVER WITH
AUTO-MAGIC ®
FM TUNING

1__:~~:::::::::::::::__}_;9~s 69~~o

SAVE25%

~-~· 2~~43
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• In cludes Esrphone .. AC Co;d _
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SAVE 21%

96 PAGE.TRANSISTOR
PROJECTS , VOL. Ill

BUILDING SPEAKER
ENCLOSURES BOOK

Reg.
1.25

99~
62-2082

Reg .
95¢

NOVA-PRO
STEREO HEADSET
WITH DUAL CONTROLS

75~

Reg.
34.95

2995 '
33-1014

62·2055

SAVE 20%
RECORD CLEANER
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Reg . 2.99

239
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SEE OI:IR SELECTION
OF CAR SPEAKERS

Reg,
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PROJECTS KIT

AM RADIO
BROAOCAST KIT
Reg . 7.95

OELUXE
STROBE LIGHT
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Reg. 29 .95

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-Reason 15. If you should qualify for the
Short Form. we'll prepare it for you at a
very low price . At H &amp; R Block, the
simpler the return, the less we charge.

2

To your nearest participating
Radio Shack store for $2.00 olf
the regular price .of any CB
antenna in this ad . Limit : one
antenna per coupon .

SET
OF

Reg .
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J

: M

BRIJIG THIS COUPOJI

Mrs. Markins

llenry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax help.
•

ARCHER" CB ANTENNAS
BY RADIO SHACK
The world leader in CB for 16 years, Radio
Shack makes its own fine cit famous low-cost
Archer antennas designed specifically for
the ultimate in communications and rugged
rehab1hty. Save up to 15 % during our
get-acquainted sale. There 's only one place
you can lind it ... Radio Shack.

• S•ve Up To 20%!

Col; ~soo ~

•

Polly's P roblem
DE AR POLLY - Would
you or someone else know
what to do with an old m outon
coat that looks fine but is so
stiff it feels like a board ?
Could it be softened' - MRS .
J.W.F .
DEAR 1\fRS. J .W.F. - I do
not think there Is anything
you can do al home to correct
thi s stiffness. The skins have
evidently dried oul. I recently
has a fur coal renovated and
the furrier took It apart ( 11
was dry but not stiff ) and
oiled the backs of the sklns.
Take the coat to a furrier and
ask his advice. - POLLY.
DE AR POLLY My
mother was an invalid ·for 42
years and of cotirse this
meant a lot Of fetching and
carrying. She had me get a
large pocketbook in which
s he put her cosmetics, comb,
nail file, a notel)ook and
pencil , her glasses , )etters
and ever ything else she
might need during the day.
The bag was put next to her
couch where. she could get to
it easily. It saved me many,
many steps and I do hope it
will help someone else with a
similar · situation . - MRS .
E .H.M.
DEAR POLLY - One of
my Pet Peeves is with impatient people and that includes me for being Impatient
with them . I have lea rned
fr om experience how much
better a person feels both
mentally a nd phys ically,
when they can be patient
under most circumstances .
Anoth er Pet Peeve is
asking a host or hostess to

either drive, or have someone

•

An' you ' re gonna lake t o th is w edge . Covered heel s a r e sitting
pretty on crepe soles, cappe d with ri c h -looking topp ing s . Jus t what
the '75 soph isticate ordered! Strap in w hite o r b rown .

•

PLUS SENSATIONAL BARGAINS ON POPULAR REGULAR STOCK ITEMS FOR HOME, OFFICE, CAR!

No home remedy
for dried out leather

Yd .

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Mrs . Hugh Bearhs, Rock
Springs , is a patient in
University Hospital, Room
886. Friends may send cards
to her there .

president of Beta Gamma
Sig(lla, it was noted that the
recommendation for
membership came from the
Delta of Ohio Chapter at Ohio
University . Miss Mees will be
initiated during the Beta
Gamma Sigma banquet on
May 16.
She attended Ca pital
University, Columbus, two
years before transferring to
Ohio last fall. She Is the
daughter of Mr . and Mrs .
Malcolm Mees.

Polly's Pointers

60 " Wid e

including postage
and handlin~
Jfr(SOc for each Addition•! Child)

Check Our Budget Shop For

BAKER FURNITURE

BE SORRY!

conn·~----~

The Easter Bunny is
coming
to
the
KIDDIE SHOPPE on
March 19th from 4
p.m. to 8 p.m. and
March
20th from
12:30 p.m. to s p.m.
Bring the kids and get
their pictures taken
with the cutest bu
in town.

• Many More

New Furniture At Budget Prices.

YOU ...
YOU WON'T

FOR YOU· ~ ­
FROM

IN HOSPITAL

Edtth Mees selected
Edith Mees, a junior at
Ohio University, has been
selected for membership in
Beta Gamma Sigma, national
scholastic honorary society.
Membership in ,the society
is the highes t scholastic
honor that a student in the
School of Business and
Management can achieve. It
is restricted to schools accredited by the American
Assembl y of Co llegiate
Schools of Business .
In a letter from the national

LET US
PERSUEDE

Sale set

rt p

epo • orneroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 11,1976

for society membership

The fall meeting will be held
Sept. 26 at the Burr Oak
Lodge.

The Easter ll~~n11i'V
Is
Coming!

skaters; races, prizes and
balloons; skating 7: 30 • 10
p.m .
. SPAGHETTI SUPPER, 3
to 7 p .m . Sa turday a t
Pomeroy Fire Station ; $2,
adults ; $1 .25, 12 and under ,
dessert and beverage extra .
. Tickets available from any
fireman , Mayer 's Barber
Shop or New York Clothing
House .
TALENT SHOW , 7:30 p .m .
Saturday
at
Chester
Elementary Sc hool sponsored by Chester P'i'A. Kiffi
Batey, Andrew Batey, New
Ufe Singers, Jean Trussell,
Margaret Tuttle , Doug
Circle , Fay and Jim Weston ,
Nick and Danny Leonard ,
Goapel Tones, Sandy and
Jean Sexson , Bryce Buckley
among talent taking part.
Practice wiU be Friday , 7:30
p.m . Admission is $1 , adults ;
·~ cents children up to 12;
refreshments
will
be
available.

Reedsville U
HMW hme lf with
Mrs. VI vian ump rey or Its
March meeting. Devotions
were led by. Mrs. Mamie
Buckl ey. Th e topi c was
'' Laborers in the Kingdom ."
R~adings were given by Mrs :
Buckley and several members.
During
t he
b us in ess
session dues were paid , and
several le tters read from the
district secretaries. Round
r obin cards were signed for

Miss Freddle Houdashelt, . women.
Mrs. Joan Wood presided at
Mrs. Mary Martin, Mrs .
Eloise Wilson and Terri the meeting which included a
Miller represented the luncheon . Lois Caul of Athens
'Midd leport Business and gave the collect, and Mrs .
Professional Women 's Club Wilma Haycraft of Gallipolis
at the District BPW spring presented devotions using the
conference Sunday at the 23rd Psalm.
The table decorations by
Hocking Hills Motor Lodge,
the Nelsonville club carried
Nelsonville.
Speaker for the meeting out the bicentennial theme.
was Mrs. Delores Chambers The programs were made by
of West Jefferson , Ohio's the Middleport Club.
Connie Wells, Gallipolis,
third vice presiden t o( BPW,
who talked · on the Equal had an article on the flag , and
Righ ts Ame nd ment . She · Red Skelton's interpretation
repor ted that it will lake only of the pledge to the nag was
four more states to ratify the given by Loretta Jones and
ERA to make it a bill , Mrs. Elsie Wooten of Jackson. A
Cha mbers comm ented on skit entitled "Star Spangled "
recent movements to have was presented by Jeri e aten ,
the ratified ERA in two states Peggy Cummings , Serena
rescinded . In her talk Mrs. Fickel, Mar y Ann Goodlive,
Chamber s li sted women Mary Margaret Kaiser and
through the years who have Wanda Schorr , of the Logan
spoken ou t for women's Club.
A movie, "The Changing
rights and their impact on
World
" with emphasis on
br ingi ng r ecognition to
historical spots in Ohio was
show n . The Ironton and
La nca ster
Clubs .were
welcomed into the distriCt. It
A rummage sale has been was announced that the South
set for April 2 and 3 at the Point Club will have a 50th
Pomeroy Elementary School anniversary on April 22 and
with the proceeds to go to buy club members were invited to
the trophies for the school join in the celebrat ion .
Serving on the evaluation
safety patrol.
committee
for the conference
Mee ting Monday night a t
were
Mrs
.
Martin , Karen
the school, the PTA made
Gilkey
and
Helen
Morrison .
arrangements for the sale.
J ames Soulsby, president ,
~ onduc ted the meeting. The
trophies will ~e presented at
the April meeting with the
boys a nd girls to be
recognized at tha t time. New
officers will also be elected at
the April meeting .
It was repor ted that one of
the television sets has been
re paired with the PTA payin g
the cos t involved . Mrs.
Gladys F oley announced a
bicentennial program to be
presented at I p.m . on May 1
at the school . The third grade
won the attendance award ,
and re fr es hments were
served by the kindergarten
mothers .
The film ; "Children in
Trouble" was shown by Carl
Hysell.
_

'

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

H&amp;R BLOCK®

heritage house
MIDDLEPORT, o()HIO
OPEN FRIDAYS TIL8 : 00

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza

618 E. MAIN ST.
Pomeroy, Ohio
OPEN: 9-4 WHicdlys, 9-5 S.t.
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

I
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A TANDY COIIPORATION C~NY

MOSt item s alSO ev •iiiiOtl

At "adia S t1K k De...,&amp;,
LOOM f Qf' . thi ......

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PRICES MA Y \fAflY AT INDIVIDUAL STORQ

'

\

�,.
t - the AlerQySentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 11, 1976

8- The P~erEy Sentinel, Mi~dleport-Pomeroy, U., Thursday, Mar~h 11,1976
:::::::::::=5:::-:::::::::::::::::::;: ;::;::;~::•:·:•:·:·:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::=:::::;::::: :::: ::.:·:·:·:·:-:·;:~

~:

Generation Rap

:~ :

By Helen and Sut• Roue!

Youngsters, even if drunk, must get Dad's car home

!Ill

f

By PAmiCIA McCORMACK
UPI Health Editor
" Kids tell me they have no
a lternative to driving under
the influence, " says Dwight
Fee, one of Uncle Sam 's
highway safety crusaders.
" They tell me they 'r e

RAP :
I'm attending college in a clty where my aunt lives. I try to
visit her, but she's often not home when I call. Then she
complains to Mom tllat I'm ignoring her. So I travel crosstown
to see her, and she spends the evening making snide remarks
about how the young generation doesn 't care about their
elders. She really lays on the guilt.
How do you get it across to these elders that if they weren't
so quick to take offense and so anxious to rub our noses in our
"neglect" of them, we'dseek out their company, rather than
make du~ visits ? - CRITICIZED .
CRITICIZED:
-llow do you make a frog stop croaking ?
You can hardly ever change an older relative who is
determined to criticize, but an up front discussion with your
,
mother might show her your side.
Maybe an occasional note explaining you called, but Aunty
didn't answer would transfer a bit of the ''blarne" to her . SUE

.

under orders from parents.

+++

NOTE FROM HELEN : A relative who spends your visit laying
on the guilt, proves she enjoys your_=pany as little as you
en joy hers.
What she wants is homage, and I wouldn't waste much
time on it. A duty call is scarcely better than no call at all .

+++
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Our teacher retired due to illness and a new teacher took
her place for two months. In that time, she pulled the low
achievers up to good grades, and made the whole class take
rnore interest.
But we hear she won 't be coming back; I guess because
she doesn't teach like the other teachers do . Instead of dull old
study assignment all the way , she also lets us discuss and
argue.
Should our class tell the principal she's fantastic? Or
would it help ? - HOPEFUL
DEAR HOPEFUL :
Can't hurt; might help . So get all your class members to
sign a petition (then present it to your principal) asking that
the school keep this new teacher on. Good luck! - SUE

+++
DEAR HOPEFUL :
If you can persuade your parents to also sign the petition,
you' ll be a lot closer to winning her for another year, another
group of students . Happy campaigning 1 - HELEN

+++
RAP:
. I have been used, lied to and lied about by my family . Is it
any wonder I'll never make anything of my life ?
I'm 22, and have learned I was born out of wedlock. After
two years, my mother married the man who is supposed to be
my real father . But it turns out he had never gotten a divorce
from 'his first wife, so they're bigamists.
I ,n ever got along with my father , who hated me, S&lt;l I lived
with my aunts who told outrageous lies about me. With my
early life such a rness, how can I be anything but a failure ? ffiNFUSED, ABUSED AND MISUSED,
DEAR C.A. AND M.:
You'll stop being a failure when you stop using your early
life as an excuse for your failures . A had beginning can be
either a ladder or a crutch. It 's your choice. So put the past ·
behind you and start climbing. - HELEN AND SUE

+++

(GOT A PROBLEM ? Or a subject for discussion, twogeneration style ? Direct yoiJr questions to either Sue or He len
Bolte! - or both, if you want a combination mother4mghter
answer - in care of this newspaper.)

Pomeroy club makes donation
A donation from the
Pomeroy Garden Club was
acknowledged during the
Wednesday meeting of the
Meigs County Childre n's
Hom e Citi zens Comm ittee
held at the Pomeroy United

Methodist Church.
The . next meeting was
announced for June 3 at the
church with all organizations
being invited to send a
r e presentative . Attending
were Mrs . Sharon Bailey,
pre sident ;
Mrs,
Janet

Donation made

Pi c k ens,

CHESTER - The Ladies
Auxiliary of the Fire Dept.
voted to donate $25 to the
Meigs county ·ladder truck
fund at their Wedn es day
evening meeting .
President Clarice Alle n
presided a t the meeting
which opened with roll call,
followed with the reading of
the minutes of the previous
meeting by Erma Cleland.
The treasurer's report was
given by Opal Wickham.
Fund raising projects were
di~ussed and gree tlng cards
were to be ordered. Several
remained after the meeting
to tidy up the kitchen .
Present were J oy Clark,
Shella Taylor, Erma Cleland,
Inzy Newell , Clarice Allen,
Clara Conroy, Cleo DeTray
and Opal Wickham .

ASSEMBLY ATTENDED
The
M i ddl e p o rt
congregation of Jehovah 's
Witnesses
resume their
regularly scheduled meeting
this week after returning
from the ir Assembly in
London, Ohio where the
public dl~ourse by John D.
Busby was on the topic, "Art
You Doing What God
Requires of You?" There
were 884 in attendance and 14
were baptized.

will

PAPERS FILED
mLUMBUS .- Articles of
incorporation have been filed
here with &amp;!cretaty of State
Ted W. Brown by the Valley
Lumber and Supply Corporation by Sandra Neal with
Bernard V. F!lltz, agent.

BACK HOME
Mr. and Mrs . Alfred White,
Pomeroy, have returned
from Massillon where they
went lor the funeral of his
mother, Mrs. Lula White .
Acccmpanying them were
Mrs.. Freda Krautter and
Mrs. Lucy Spencer.
(

secretary-

treasurer; Mrs . June Van
Vranken, Bill Young, Mrs .
Evelyn Knight and Mrs.
Maxine Goeglein.

Covered dish
dinner enjoyed ·
Members of the Ladies
Auxiliary met Tuesday at the
United Pentecostal Church of
Middleport for a covered dish
luncheon and meeting.
A yard sale was planned for
the flrst week in April.
Members will sell praying
hand pins . Mrs. Teresa
Shaeffer sang " Not One

Time," and Mrs . James
Saxton sang "One Day at a
Time." The birthdays of Mrs.
Lavena Neal and Mrs . Ethel
Priddy were observed. A
monologue entitled "Talk ,
Talk, Talk" was given by
Mrs. Manda Eastman.
Prayer
concluded
the
meeting attended by 23
persons .

ATTEND KICKOFF
Fifteen Meigs Countians
were in Ironton Monday night
for Rep. Ron James ' campaign kickoff dinner at the
Marting Hotel. Going from
here were Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Wingett, Mr . and Mrs.
Chester Wells, Dr. Harold
Brown, Ted Reed, Mr. and
Mrs. James Roush, Catherine
Welsh, Mr. and Mrs. Osby
Martin, Mrs. Jean Blazewicz,
James
Proffitt ,
Mary
Spencer and Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews.

MEETING SLATED
Meigs County Churches of
Christ Men 's Fellowship will
hold Its monthly meeting
Monday, March 15 at 7:30 p .
m. at the Zion ,Church of
Christ. Representatives from
each church are urged to
attend .

They 'must' get that car
home.
"They dare not call a taxi.
They dare not call Dad or
Mom . They dare not admit
that they're tipsy ."
The drunk youth grips the
steering wheel and tells his
teen-age passengers not to
worry .
Trying to fill the parental
expectation of getting the car
home results in middle-&lt;&gt;fthenight calls to thousands of
parents from police each
year.
Eight thousand hear that
the child they burped,
shielded and guided through
life has died in auto accident
relating to alcohol; 40,000
others hear that the kid they
had fitted with braces, took to
the dermatologist
and
otherwise tenderly ca red for
is hurt.
Fee said in an interview
that if parents and teen-agers
worked out a contract about
driving and drinking a good
many of these fatal and
disfiguring accidents might
be prevented.
He is a special assistant in
the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration of the
U.S.
Department
of
Transportation.
Fee hit on the contract idea
when figuring how to keep his
teen-age daughter from being
a victim in an auto accident
involving young persons and
alcohol.
He was worried tl\at sbe
might have the notion sbe
couldn't call for a ride hOme
or take a taxi when unable to
drive the family car . Many
teen-agers have told Fee
that's the case.
A copy of the contract is in

a free new pamphlet -

11

How

to Talk To Your Teenager
About
Drinking
an d .
Driving. "
" In the contract," Fee said,
" parents and teen-ager agree
' to take certain actions when
he or she is in .a situation

Dallas gets
school plan
from judge
DALLAS (UP!) - When
federal Judge William Taylor
released the city's school
desegration plan, he said not
everybody would be happy
with it. In fact, he said
probably nobody would be ,
entirely .s atlsilled.
He was. right.
" I can tell from the happy
look on so many faces the
black community has been
shafied again," said black
· activist Alfred Lipscomb
after Taylor's lengthy
ex planation of the plan
Wednesday .
" Who is going to be bused ?
Nobody knows yet because
the school district decides
student assignment plans ."
Taylor's plan was drafted
at the end of six weeks of
hearings and six years of
controversy over how to
intergrate the nation's eighth
largest school district. The
plan calls for busing 20,000
students, but may lead to
retention of a large number of
single race scl10ols.
Overall, the plan calls for
the city to be divided into
five, pie shaped subdistricts.
Four of the subdistricts have
racial
mixes
of · approximately 46 per cent
white, 44 per ceni black and
the rest Mexican-American.
The fifth would be about 98
per cent black.
The plan says students in
kindergarden, first, second
and third grades would not be
bused, thus leaving those
schools with high , one-l'ace
majorities.
Students in g rades 4
through 8 would be bused
within their district, no more
than 3¥.. miles for any
student; thus making those
schools multi-l'acial.
High school students also
would not be bused, thus
possibily leaving those
schools primarily one race.
To aid desegregation at tbe
high school level, however,
Taylor· ordered construction
ofa " magnet" school in. each
district - better equipped
schools which theoretically
would provide higher quality
education .
High school students would
be given the option of
enrolling in schools within
their communities , or being
bused to the closest magnet
school.
'

•'

involving drinking and cars." get a 46-page handbook " All
the
Family
A sample contract goes like in
Understanding How We
this :
Teen-ager : "I agree to call Teach and Influence Children
you for transportation if I am About Alcohol."
ever in a situation where I
Send the $1 to U.S.Jaycees,
have had too much to drink or Products Division, Box 7,
if a friend who is driving has Tulsa, Okla., 74102.
had too much to drink."
Authorities remind that
Parent: " I agree to come your sons or daughters can be
and get you at any hour, any victims of fatal and
time, any place, no questions disfiguring drunk-driving
asked, and no argument or I , auto accidents whether or not
will pay for a taxi lo bring you they drink responsibly, In
excess or even not at aU.
home ."
"It is always possible that
Fee and other crusaders for
highway safety .officials have one of their friends or
a hunch that, if parenls and acquaintances who has been
teenagers rap frequently drinking will be behind the
about booze, the increase in wheel, placing your children
teen-age drinking also might at risk of serious accident,"
be curbed, or at least better says tbe free pamphlet from
controlled.
the National Clearinghouse
That 's ooe reason Uncle for Alcohol.
Sam's offering the free
The pamphlet contains a
booklet. For a copy write to helpful wallet..size table preNational Clearinghouse for pared by the National
Alcohol Information, P.O . Highway Traffic Safety
Box 2345, Rockville, Md. Administration . It shows the
20852.
blood alcohol percentages
Spend a dollar and you can after a number of drinks from

as a desire to protect the lives
of their children.
As found in the nationwide
survey
of
teen-agers
conducted for the National
Highway Trafflc Safety
Administration, teen•gers
expect and want their parents
to talk with them about

one to 10. It shows the effect
of so many drinks, from one
to 10, broken down by
bodyweight from 100 to 240
pounds.
The Ia ble is shaded in a
way to indicate: "be careful,
driving impaired, do not
drive ."
~
In a recent n,a tionwide
survey, it was found 50 per
cent of aU youngsters, IS to
19, said they had been in one
or more situations in the
where
previous month
alcohol was present.
Forty per cent of these
were girls; 25 per cent were
15 or younger; three out of
five admitted to ·having been
drun~ one or more times In
the previous month.
fre quently
the
Most
exposure to alcohol was in a
friend's home. Other drinking
places favored included
outdoor places, school
functions, , drive-in movies.
Parents,
authorities
remind, have a legal and
moral responsibility as well

driving and drinldng.
Parents also are reminded
to be a good example.
"Never be afraid to say,
'No thanks, I'm driving,'
when offered that extra
drink.
"If your child is present,
make sure he hears you."

Arriving '

Dally
At•••

Chapman's

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Open Fri. ti 16-Sat. til5

Pomeroy

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3RD PRIZEROOM SIZE LINOLEUM

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$ 95

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$295

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AND DONUTS

54
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TOP QUALITY
lh INCH REBOND.
30 YARD ROU
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CUSTOMER PRICE 4'IJ':Ic FT.

Ohio House approves ·restri~tions on sale of firearms
By LEE LEONARD
UPl Slald!OIIIe Reporter
. COLUMBUS (UPl) - The
Ohio HoUle ha.s for the first
tiine in seven years passed
and sent to .the Senate
legislation restricting the
sale of fin'Brms.
Approval of the measure
came Wednesday in the
House's strong endorsement
of a package of three bills
aimed at reducing the use of
firearms in crimes.
Altholll!h sponsors denied it
during three hours of floor
discUS5ion, a small but vocal
minority of House members
in,sisted two of the measures
were "gun control" bllls in
and
would
disguise
eventually lead to firearms
registration.
Guri control legislation has
been proposed in every
session since 1963. A proposal
In ban cheaphandguns'known
as " Saturday night specials"
was defeated on the House
Door in 1974.
The last gun restrictions
were approved in 1969, when
the General Assembly
enacted a law forbidding the
sale of firearms to ~onvlcted
felons,
drug
addicts,
alcoholics and former mental
patients.
The package sent to the .
Senate
W ednesday
included :
- A bill setting mandatory
two-to-five year terms of
'"actual incarceration" in
prison upon conviction of
carrying a firearm while
commltllng a felony, and
establishing provisions for
licensing firearms dealers by
the state.
- A wide·nnging proposal
requiring three to four years
of "actual incarceration" for
a second conviction of
carrying a concealed weapon
while commltllng a felony
and providing for limitations
on handgun sales.
- A bill increasing the
penalty for impro perly
furnishin g a minor with
firearms and permitting
anyone 15 or older to be tried
as a n adult for any felony
committed while carrying a
gun.
The bill setting mandatory
jail terms for committing
felonies with guns was described by its sponsor, Rep.
Michael G. Oxley, R-F indlay,
as "a serious .a ttempt to curb
the staggering increase in
firearms related crimes." He
said it was a crime control
bill rather than gun control
legislation.
But Rep . George D.
Tablack,
D-Campbell ,
warned that the proposal
would "chew away at the law
until we have gun control."
Mandatory additional jail
terms for carrying a firearm
while commltllng a felony
were enacted in 1972 but were
eliminated shortly thereafter
with enactment of a new Ohio
criminal code .
Osley's bill would require
the courts to impose
minimum prison terms,
which the offender would
have to serve in jail, of twoto-five years, depending upon
the seriousness of the felony .
It alao would set up provisions for the licensing of
firearms dealers by the state
Department of Commerce
and require the state to keep
a list of all licensed firearms
dealers In Ohio.
An attempt to remove the
licenslhg requirement was
tabled, as was an amendment
which would have increased
the minimwn penalty to a
minimum 10 years in jail for
carrying a gun while conunittin&amp; any felony.
Rep. Ronald H. James, 0Proctorvllle, was successful
In reduct11g the firearms
licensing fee for giUI dealers
from $100 to $10, but the
House tabled an amendment
which would have reduced
the mandatory sentences to a
IJ18l[imum three years and
four months for good
behavior.
· The bill limiting handgun
sales · and
providing
mandatory jall terms for
peraons carrying concealed
weapons ,while committing
felonies drew even more fire
frorn an\i·gun-control
advocates.
Sponsored by Rep. Troy L.
James, D-Cleveland, it
passed on a 71 to 22 vote.

James' bill provides for a
five-day "cooling-&lt;&gt;ff" period
dur~g the'sale of a handgun,
durtng which firearms
dealers would be required to
find out if the purChaser is
legally permitted to have a
gun.
The gun dealers would have
to exchange information and
COOJlerate with the state

SCOPE
24 oz.

Bureau
of
Criminal
Identification
and
Investigation tn make that
determination.
Anyone convicted
of
carrying a concealed weapon
a second time would be
subject
to
"actual
incarceration" of at least
tllree years, four if the crime
was carrying a weapon

aboard an aircraft .
The current minimum
terms are one and two years,
respectively, but there is no
guarantee the full time will
be served.
Prior to passing the bill, the
House adopted by 45 to « an
amendment by Rep. James
E. Betts, R-Rocky River,

a

allowing a person to carry
concealed weapon "for
defensive purposes" while
engaged in a legal activity if
he fears an attack on himself,
his home or his family.
Troy James said the
amendment represented "a
perfect loophole wbich the
crimine l will he able to slip

''

biil , Rep. Ike Thom(l!lOn, 0-·
Cleveland, said it was time to
clamp down on gun&lt;arrying
teenagers. He said the use of
firearms at Cleveland schools
is out of control.
"When a kid gets to be 15
years old, he knows what he 's
doing,'' said Thompson.

15 oz .
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• Immersible for easy cleaning
• Detachable cord
• Styled in pretty yellow color

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Cleane·r- Iron· ••ow•
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Tire Prices

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CRUEX
SPRAY ON
POWDER

uean ' it another name,"

the law-.bldlng citizen,"
argued Rtp . Charle~ R .
Sasbe, R-Mechanicsburg .
"lt'a tbne fOr thoee of us who
purport to represent the
lpOrtmlen 1¢ gun collectors
to wake up tbefore we get a
real gun/ control bill
cranuned dclwn our throats."

.

'

VASELINE
INTENSIVE
CARE LOTION

said Rep. Don 8. Maddo, 04ncuter. "Call It a crbnefn.the«reeta bill or a law·
and-order bW, but it's sliD

~ri,:':f~ goinl! to alfect

through."
The third bill, relating to
juveniles carrying firearms,
cleared the House on an 87 In
4 vote after an amendment
was defeated which would
have required, rather than
permitted, such persons to be
tried as adults.
The chief sponsor of the

the Lowest

All of the Favorites
of the little ones.

�,.
t - the AlerQySentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 11, 1976

8- The P~erEy Sentinel, Mi~dleport-Pomeroy, U., Thursday, Mar~h 11,1976
:::::::::::=5:::-:::::::::::::::::::;: ;::;::;~::•:·:•:·:·:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::=:::::;::::: :::: ::.:·:·:·:·:-:·;:~

~:

Generation Rap

:~ :

By Helen and Sut• Roue!

Youngsters, even if drunk, must get Dad's car home

!Ill

f

By PAmiCIA McCORMACK
UPI Health Editor
" Kids tell me they have no
a lternative to driving under
the influence, " says Dwight
Fee, one of Uncle Sam 's
highway safety crusaders.
" They tell me they 'r e

RAP :
I'm attending college in a clty where my aunt lives. I try to
visit her, but she's often not home when I call. Then she
complains to Mom tllat I'm ignoring her. So I travel crosstown
to see her, and she spends the evening making snide remarks
about how the young generation doesn 't care about their
elders. She really lays on the guilt.
How do you get it across to these elders that if they weren't
so quick to take offense and so anxious to rub our noses in our
"neglect" of them, we'dseek out their company, rather than
make du~ visits ? - CRITICIZED .
CRITICIZED:
-llow do you make a frog stop croaking ?
You can hardly ever change an older relative who is
determined to criticize, but an up front discussion with your
,
mother might show her your side.
Maybe an occasional note explaining you called, but Aunty
didn't answer would transfer a bit of the ''blarne" to her . SUE

.

under orders from parents.

+++

NOTE FROM HELEN : A relative who spends your visit laying
on the guilt, proves she enjoys your_=pany as little as you
en joy hers.
What she wants is homage, and I wouldn't waste much
time on it. A duty call is scarcely better than no call at all .

+++
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Our teacher retired due to illness and a new teacher took
her place for two months. In that time, she pulled the low
achievers up to good grades, and made the whole class take
rnore interest.
But we hear she won 't be coming back; I guess because
she doesn't teach like the other teachers do . Instead of dull old
study assignment all the way , she also lets us discuss and
argue.
Should our class tell the principal she's fantastic? Or
would it help ? - HOPEFUL
DEAR HOPEFUL :
Can't hurt; might help . So get all your class members to
sign a petition (then present it to your principal) asking that
the school keep this new teacher on. Good luck! - SUE

+++
DEAR HOPEFUL :
If you can persuade your parents to also sign the petition,
you' ll be a lot closer to winning her for another year, another
group of students . Happy campaigning 1 - HELEN

+++
RAP:
. I have been used, lied to and lied about by my family . Is it
any wonder I'll never make anything of my life ?
I'm 22, and have learned I was born out of wedlock. After
two years, my mother married the man who is supposed to be
my real father . But it turns out he had never gotten a divorce
from 'his first wife, so they're bigamists.
I ,n ever got along with my father , who hated me, S&lt;l I lived
with my aunts who told outrageous lies about me. With my
early life such a rness, how can I be anything but a failure ? ffiNFUSED, ABUSED AND MISUSED,
DEAR C.A. AND M.:
You'll stop being a failure when you stop using your early
life as an excuse for your failures . A had beginning can be
either a ladder or a crutch. It 's your choice. So put the past ·
behind you and start climbing. - HELEN AND SUE

+++

(GOT A PROBLEM ? Or a subject for discussion, twogeneration style ? Direct yoiJr questions to either Sue or He len
Bolte! - or both, if you want a combination mother4mghter
answer - in care of this newspaper.)

Pomeroy club makes donation
A donation from the
Pomeroy Garden Club was
acknowledged during the
Wednesday meeting of the
Meigs County Childre n's
Hom e Citi zens Comm ittee
held at the Pomeroy United

Methodist Church.
The . next meeting was
announced for June 3 at the
church with all organizations
being invited to send a
r e presentative . Attending
were Mrs . Sharon Bailey,
pre sident ;
Mrs,
Janet

Donation made

Pi c k ens,

CHESTER - The Ladies
Auxiliary of the Fire Dept.
voted to donate $25 to the
Meigs county ·ladder truck
fund at their Wedn es day
evening meeting .
President Clarice Alle n
presided a t the meeting
which opened with roll call,
followed with the reading of
the minutes of the previous
meeting by Erma Cleland.
The treasurer's report was
given by Opal Wickham.
Fund raising projects were
di~ussed and gree tlng cards
were to be ordered. Several
remained after the meeting
to tidy up the kitchen .
Present were J oy Clark,
Shella Taylor, Erma Cleland,
Inzy Newell , Clarice Allen,
Clara Conroy, Cleo DeTray
and Opal Wickham .

ASSEMBLY ATTENDED
The
M i ddl e p o rt
congregation of Jehovah 's
Witnesses
resume their
regularly scheduled meeting
this week after returning
from the ir Assembly in
London, Ohio where the
public dl~ourse by John D.
Busby was on the topic, "Art
You Doing What God
Requires of You?" There
were 884 in attendance and 14
were baptized.

will

PAPERS FILED
mLUMBUS .- Articles of
incorporation have been filed
here with &amp;!cretaty of State
Ted W. Brown by the Valley
Lumber and Supply Corporation by Sandra Neal with
Bernard V. F!lltz, agent.

BACK HOME
Mr. and Mrs . Alfred White,
Pomeroy, have returned
from Massillon where they
went lor the funeral of his
mother, Mrs. Lula White .
Acccmpanying them were
Mrs.. Freda Krautter and
Mrs. Lucy Spencer.
(

secretary-

treasurer; Mrs . June Van
Vranken, Bill Young, Mrs .
Evelyn Knight and Mrs.
Maxine Goeglein.

Covered dish
dinner enjoyed ·
Members of the Ladies
Auxiliary met Tuesday at the
United Pentecostal Church of
Middleport for a covered dish
luncheon and meeting.
A yard sale was planned for
the flrst week in April.
Members will sell praying
hand pins . Mrs. Teresa
Shaeffer sang " Not One

Time," and Mrs . James
Saxton sang "One Day at a
Time." The birthdays of Mrs.
Lavena Neal and Mrs . Ethel
Priddy were observed. A
monologue entitled "Talk ,
Talk, Talk" was given by
Mrs. Manda Eastman.
Prayer
concluded
the
meeting attended by 23
persons .

ATTEND KICKOFF
Fifteen Meigs Countians
were in Ironton Monday night
for Rep. Ron James ' campaign kickoff dinner at the
Marting Hotel. Going from
here were Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Wingett, Mr . and Mrs.
Chester Wells, Dr. Harold
Brown, Ted Reed, Mr. and
Mrs. James Roush, Catherine
Welsh, Mr. and Mrs. Osby
Martin, Mrs. Jean Blazewicz,
James
Proffitt ,
Mary
Spencer and Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews.

MEETING SLATED
Meigs County Churches of
Christ Men 's Fellowship will
hold Its monthly meeting
Monday, March 15 at 7:30 p .
m. at the Zion ,Church of
Christ. Representatives from
each church are urged to
attend .

They 'must' get that car
home.
"They dare not call a taxi.
They dare not call Dad or
Mom . They dare not admit
that they're tipsy ."
The drunk youth grips the
steering wheel and tells his
teen-age passengers not to
worry .
Trying to fill the parental
expectation of getting the car
home results in middle-&lt;&gt;fthenight calls to thousands of
parents from police each
year.
Eight thousand hear that
the child they burped,
shielded and guided through
life has died in auto accident
relating to alcohol; 40,000
others hear that the kid they
had fitted with braces, took to
the dermatologist
and
otherwise tenderly ca red for
is hurt.
Fee said in an interview
that if parents and teen-agers
worked out a contract about
driving and drinking a good
many of these fatal and
disfiguring accidents might
be prevented.
He is a special assistant in
the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration of the
U.S.
Department
of
Transportation.
Fee hit on the contract idea
when figuring how to keep his
teen-age daughter from being
a victim in an auto accident
involving young persons and
alcohol.
He was worried tl\at sbe
might have the notion sbe
couldn't call for a ride hOme
or take a taxi when unable to
drive the family car . Many
teen-agers have told Fee
that's the case.
A copy of the contract is in

a free new pamphlet -

11

How

to Talk To Your Teenager
About
Drinking
an d .
Driving. "
" In the contract," Fee said,
" parents and teen-ager agree
' to take certain actions when
he or she is in .a situation

Dallas gets
school plan
from judge
DALLAS (UP!) - When
federal Judge William Taylor
released the city's school
desegration plan, he said not
everybody would be happy
with it. In fact, he said
probably nobody would be ,
entirely .s atlsilled.
He was. right.
" I can tell from the happy
look on so many faces the
black community has been
shafied again," said black
· activist Alfred Lipscomb
after Taylor's lengthy
ex planation of the plan
Wednesday .
" Who is going to be bused ?
Nobody knows yet because
the school district decides
student assignment plans ."
Taylor's plan was drafted
at the end of six weeks of
hearings and six years of
controversy over how to
intergrate the nation's eighth
largest school district. The
plan calls for busing 20,000
students, but may lead to
retention of a large number of
single race scl10ols.
Overall, the plan calls for
the city to be divided into
five, pie shaped subdistricts.
Four of the subdistricts have
racial
mixes
of · approximately 46 per cent
white, 44 per ceni black and
the rest Mexican-American.
The fifth would be about 98
per cent black.
The plan says students in
kindergarden, first, second
and third grades would not be
bused, thus leaving those
schools with high , one-l'ace
majorities.
Students in g rades 4
through 8 would be bused
within their district, no more
than 3¥.. miles for any
student; thus making those
schools multi-l'acial.
High school students also
would not be bused, thus
possibily leaving those
schools primarily one race.
To aid desegregation at tbe
high school level, however,
Taylor· ordered construction
ofa " magnet" school in. each
district - better equipped
schools which theoretically
would provide higher quality
education .
High school students would
be given the option of
enrolling in schools within
their communities , or being
bused to the closest magnet
school.
'

•'

involving drinking and cars." get a 46-page handbook " All
the
Family
A sample contract goes like in
Understanding How We
this :
Teen-ager : "I agree to call Teach and Influence Children
you for transportation if I am About Alcohol."
ever in a situation where I
Send the $1 to U.S.Jaycees,
have had too much to drink or Products Division, Box 7,
if a friend who is driving has Tulsa, Okla., 74102.
had too much to drink."
Authorities remind that
Parent: " I agree to come your sons or daughters can be
and get you at any hour, any victims of fatal and
time, any place, no questions disfiguring drunk-driving
asked, and no argument or I , auto accidents whether or not
will pay for a taxi lo bring you they drink responsibly, In
excess or even not at aU.
home ."
"It is always possible that
Fee and other crusaders for
highway safety .officials have one of their friends or
a hunch that, if parenls and acquaintances who has been
teenagers rap frequently drinking will be behind the
about booze, the increase in wheel, placing your children
teen-age drinking also might at risk of serious accident,"
be curbed, or at least better says tbe free pamphlet from
controlled.
the National Clearinghouse
That 's ooe reason Uncle for Alcohol.
Sam's offering the free
The pamphlet contains a
booklet. For a copy write to helpful wallet..size table preNational Clearinghouse for pared by the National
Alcohol Information, P.O . Highway Traffic Safety
Box 2345, Rockville, Md. Administration . It shows the
20852.
blood alcohol percentages
Spend a dollar and you can after a number of drinks from

as a desire to protect the lives
of their children.
As found in the nationwide
survey
of
teen-agers
conducted for the National
Highway Trafflc Safety
Administration, teen•gers
expect and want their parents
to talk with them about

one to 10. It shows the effect
of so many drinks, from one
to 10, broken down by
bodyweight from 100 to 240
pounds.
The Ia ble is shaded in a
way to indicate: "be careful,
driving impaired, do not
drive ."
~
In a recent n,a tionwide
survey, it was found 50 per
cent of aU youngsters, IS to
19, said they had been in one
or more situations in the
where
previous month
alcohol was present.
Forty per cent of these
were girls; 25 per cent were
15 or younger; three out of
five admitted to ·having been
drun~ one or more times In
the previous month.
fre quently
the
Most
exposure to alcohol was in a
friend's home. Other drinking
places favored included
outdoor places, school
functions, , drive-in movies.
Parents,
authorities
remind, have a legal and
moral responsibility as well

driving and drinldng.
Parents also are reminded
to be a good example.
"Never be afraid to say,
'No thanks, I'm driving,'
when offered that extra
drink.
"If your child is present,
make sure he hears you."

Arriving '

Dally
At•••

Chapman's

SHOES

Open Fri. ti 16-Sat. til5

Pomeroy

RACINE CARPET SHOP

CHOOSE FROM OUR SELECTION OF
FINE _ __

SCULPTURED - SHAG
CUT LOOP - HI . LOW SHAG
OR KITCHEN CARPETING

COMPARE AT $7'TJ ·yo $895
SQUME
YARD
EVERYDAY

40 ROOM SIZE .REMNANTS
SMALl TO ROOM

EXTRA SPECIAL

COMMERCIAL
CARPET

1

~ELOW AS ••••••••• .!t~ ~·
. .

.

REG.

$100

FLOOR MATS .••.•.••••.•.•..•..••••

CASTILlA REG. '6.95
LINOLEUM NOW ONLY

REGISTER FOR
FREE PRIZES

1ST PRIZE BLACK
&amp; WHITE
PORTABLE TV
2ND PRIZEROOM SIZE CARPET
3RD PRIZEROOM SIZE LINOLEUM

4TH

PRIZE SET

OF

~-$rs

8.95

1

TABLE LAMPS

$ 95

12 FEU WIDE

SQ. YD.

SUNDIAL
LINOLEUM

Reg. '7.95
NOW ONLY SO. YD.
.

'

12 FEET WIDE-NO WAXING NEEDED

FREE
COFFEE

ROOM SIZE VINYL LINOLEUM

$295

REG. '12.95 SQ. YD.

AND DONUTS

54
YD.

NOW AS LOW AS
-ALL CARPn DEALERS WELCOME-

TOP QUALITY
lh INCH REBOND.
30 YARD ROU
(by roll only)

PADDIN~

$

5()

1

sa.
YD

CUSTOMER PRICE $1.89 SQ, YD.

PRIME FOAM PADDING
lh INCH X 40 YARD
ROU (by roll on~)

$125

SQ~·

YD.
PRICE SI.SO SQ. Y

TAC STRIP
BOX OF 400 Fr.
(By Box Only I

CUSTOMER PRICE 4'IJ':Ic FT.

Ohio House approves ·restri~tions on sale of firearms
By LEE LEONARD
UPl Slald!OIIIe Reporter
. COLUMBUS (UPl) - The
Ohio HoUle ha.s for the first
tiine in seven years passed
and sent to .the Senate
legislation restricting the
sale of fin'Brms.
Approval of the measure
came Wednesday in the
House's strong endorsement
of a package of three bills
aimed at reducing the use of
firearms in crimes.
Altholll!h sponsors denied it
during three hours of floor
discUS5ion, a small but vocal
minority of House members
in,sisted two of the measures
were "gun control" bllls in
and
would
disguise
eventually lead to firearms
registration.
Guri control legislation has
been proposed in every
session since 1963. A proposal
In ban cheaphandguns'known
as " Saturday night specials"
was defeated on the House
Door in 1974.
The last gun restrictions
were approved in 1969, when
the General Assembly
enacted a law forbidding the
sale of firearms to ~onvlcted
felons,
drug
addicts,
alcoholics and former mental
patients.
The package sent to the .
Senate
W ednesday
included :
- A bill setting mandatory
two-to-five year terms of
'"actual incarceration" in
prison upon conviction of
carrying a firearm while
commltllng a felony, and
establishing provisions for
licensing firearms dealers by
the state.
- A wide·nnging proposal
requiring three to four years
of "actual incarceration" for
a second conviction of
carrying a concealed weapon
while commltllng a felony
and providing for limitations
on handgun sales.
- A bill increasing the
penalty for impro perly
furnishin g a minor with
firearms and permitting
anyone 15 or older to be tried
as a n adult for any felony
committed while carrying a
gun.
The bill setting mandatory
jail terms for committing
felonies with guns was described by its sponsor, Rep.
Michael G. Oxley, R-F indlay,
as "a serious .a ttempt to curb
the staggering increase in
firearms related crimes." He
said it was a crime control
bill rather than gun control
legislation.
But Rep . George D.
Tablack,
D-Campbell ,
warned that the proposal
would "chew away at the law
until we have gun control."
Mandatory additional jail
terms for carrying a firearm
while commltllng a felony
were enacted in 1972 but were
eliminated shortly thereafter
with enactment of a new Ohio
criminal code .
Osley's bill would require
the courts to impose
minimum prison terms,
which the offender would
have to serve in jail, of twoto-five years, depending upon
the seriousness of the felony .
It alao would set up provisions for the licensing of
firearms dealers by the state
Department of Commerce
and require the state to keep
a list of all licensed firearms
dealers In Ohio.
An attempt to remove the
licenslhg requirement was
tabled, as was an amendment
which would have increased
the minimwn penalty to a
minimum 10 years in jail for
carrying a gun while conunittin&amp; any felony.
Rep. Ronald H. James, 0Proctorvllle, was successful
In reduct11g the firearms
licensing fee for giUI dealers
from $100 to $10, but the
House tabled an amendment
which would have reduced
the mandatory sentences to a
IJ18l[imum three years and
four months for good
behavior.
· The bill limiting handgun
sales · and
providing
mandatory jall terms for
peraons carrying concealed
weapons ,while committing
felonies drew even more fire
frorn an\i·gun-control
advocates.
Sponsored by Rep. Troy L.
James, D-Cleveland, it
passed on a 71 to 22 vote.

James' bill provides for a
five-day "cooling-&lt;&gt;ff" period
dur~g the'sale of a handgun,
durtng which firearms
dealers would be required to
find out if the purChaser is
legally permitted to have a
gun.
The gun dealers would have
to exchange information and
COOJlerate with the state

SCOPE
24 oz.

Bureau
of
Criminal
Identification
and
Investigation tn make that
determination.
Anyone convicted
of
carrying a concealed weapon
a second time would be
subject
to
"actual
incarceration" of at least
tllree years, four if the crime
was carrying a weapon

aboard an aircraft .
The current minimum
terms are one and two years,
respectively, but there is no
guarantee the full time will
be served.
Prior to passing the bill, the
House adopted by 45 to « an
amendment by Rep. James
E. Betts, R-Rocky River,

a

allowing a person to carry
concealed weapon "for
defensive purposes" while
engaged in a legal activity if
he fears an attack on himself,
his home or his family.
Troy James said the
amendment represented "a
perfect loophole wbich the
crimine l will he able to slip

''

biil , Rep. Ike Thom(l!lOn, 0-·
Cleveland, said it was time to
clamp down on gun&lt;arrying
teenagers. He said the use of
firearms at Cleveland schools
is out of control.
"When a kid gets to be 15
years old, he knows what he 's
doing,'' said Thompson.

15 oz .
Nelson's

JIF
PEANUT
BUTTER

Nelson's
Reg.
$1 .. 41

REG.

'1.04

G.E. IRON SElF
lNG
you Get
Steam &amp; Ory .Iron

_.:/

IModel Fll8HRT/
gzGO lOG
·

keeps lhe '!team vents,
steam chamber, water

tank, and water nlve

REG.

NELSON'S

'12.99

REG. 1 27.33
CORNWALL

_

,

~

$1·159 !~~~2 DISH
NELSON'S

ele•nerl ·

• Automatically heats entire meal
• Suction bottom avoids spilling
• Immersible for easy cleaning
• Detachable cord
• Styled in pretty yellow color

LAUNDRY BAG

/WARMING TRAY
Keeps food
at servingtemperature .
Ideal for
pa'rties,
banquets or
everyday use .

NELSON'S REiil!i
Giila
. •,1-5.-9 9-··-i-t- •

-

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lrono teote4 using top
water, ONLY the GE
SEL.F CLEANif"'G I ron

NELSON'S
REG. '1.89

9

$ 99
FISHER-PRICE

VACUUM CLEANER
BAGS

AnER TELEPHONE
PHONE RINGS •..
CHAITERS ...
EYES ROLL
NELSON'S
REG. '4.15

srg

JAM PAC
CAR
ASSORTMENT
16 cnt.
NELSON'S
REG. '2.98

•

'189

•
·'.•

Jnthe Area

..

(BEND
nRE CENTER

··;
..

'""
~!::)

M&lt;110n. W. Vo .

.. r..

For
Automatic
Di shwashers
35 oz .

=~"\.i

.

h .....

&gt;o

BATHROOM
CLEANER

Cleane·r- Iron· ••ow•
•p•u;•g
Sleams Beitel- Longe~
As It Empties! .~:~p~~:~ !:~.~:~~~

Tire Prices

It's

773· 5111

~·

..,..'

DOW

--~ ·A

-

...

~· -·

CRUEX
SPRAY ON
POWDER

uean ' it another name,"

the law-.bldlng citizen,"
argued Rtp . Charle~ R .
Sasbe, R-Mechanicsburg .
"lt'a tbne fOr thoee of us who
purport to represent the
lpOrtmlen 1¢ gun collectors
to wake up tbefore we get a
real gun/ control bill
cranuned dclwn our throats."

.

'

VASELINE
INTENSIVE
CARE LOTION

said Rep. Don 8. Maddo, 04ncuter. "Call It a crbnefn.the«reeta bill or a law·
and-order bW, but it's sliD

~ri,:':f~ goinl! to alfect

through."
The third bill, relating to
juveniles carrying firearms,
cleared the House on an 87 In
4 vote after an amendment
was defeated which would
have required, rather than
permitted, such persons to be
tried as adults.
The chief sponsor of the

the Lowest

All of the Favorites
of the little ones.

�~;,;,:.;~~;;~;"'·~·;~;~~'·]:~~Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds.
l

Mason
Auct ion
Hou se ,
1 Muon . W . Va . Bress bed .
Iaroe secretary , mantle

clock with pillars and brass.,
cotf&amp;e

grlnd~r .

oak side
bOud , black. wa lnut china
c tose1. oak t at.lle and .ot
chairs, oak. dresser , watot.~t
dresser , round Ollk ta ble,

P M ,

S

Day

Pub lic~tlion .

Before

Deadl i ne

Mondav

' a rn

9

C a 11 c e 1 1a r i o n

Corrections wit! be ac
cepted un t ll 9 a. m . fo r
Oay of Pub licat ion,
REGULATIONS
Th e Publ iShe r reserves

library tab le . stone ia rs . lots
of alanwere , many othe r
Items . Fred A. Mark.s ,
owner, No t responsible for

the r ig tp to edit or r eject
any ads de eme d ob
iection a l. The publisher

acc i den ts . Ho ward Beas ley ,

w 111 not be responsible for

auc tioneer .

mo re th a n one •nco rre ct
inserti on

3 11 -71c

RATES
For Wan I Ad Service

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

79th ANNUAL Hereford Sal e ·
18 bulls and 15 Femal es ,
Soutl'leastern Oti io Hereford
Associat ion ,
a. tt c lean
pedigrees , ooth horned and
polled . Saturday , March 20,
1'!1'76
Sale 1: 00 P . M .
Rockspr ings Falrgro~Jnds,
Rt. 33, three mites north of
Pomeroy ,
Oh io
For
catalogs write to . lloyd
Blackwood , Sates Mgr .. Ri.
3, Pomeroy , Oh io , 45769 .
J . n .3tc
KODCOT
Cosmet ics has
unlim ited op porllm ity for
sale!'g irls interested • 1n
beauty . Ther e ' s " Beauty
D irector " possib il it ies wi th
organ izat ion ot yo ur own .
Contact : Ann Sauv a,ge,
Syracus e, on io 992 -3272
(Independent Distr ibutor }.
3-5·6tp
MAKE SURE you get every
possible deduc tion thi s year .
Ha ve your Federal and
State Income Ta lC return by
an a cc ountan t. Phon e 997 .
6173
1· 21 -52tc

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

R UTLANO Gun Club meeting
and 22 R ifle Match at New
Lima Road , Friday , 8 p .m .
Everyone we lcome
3-lil · 6tc

For Sale or Trade
REGISTERED
polled
Hereford bull from Royal
Oa~ Farms ,•2 yr old . wou ld
l ike to trade fo r anoth e r
bull . Phon e 9&lt;19-2770
3 10 61 c

5 ce nts

per

word

one

in se r lf on
M inimu m Charge $1 00
14 cents per word three
c oMec~Jt i ve
insert ions
20 ce n rs p er word si,;
c on sec ut ive
insert ions .
75 Per Ce n t Discount on
pa rd ads and ad s paid
wilh1n 10 days ,
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 .&lt;l0
for
50
word
mmrmum ,
Each add it ional word 3
ce n ts
BLIND ADS
Ad d1t1onal 25c Ch arge
per Ad\le rtisem en t.
OFFICE HOURS
8 . 30 a . m 10 5:00 p m
Da ily, 8. 30 am . to 12 00
Noon Saturday .
PhOne today991 '2 150

. .. ~.... .... • •

•

Misc. Sales

Auto Sales

BASEME NT Sale , f='r~ day and
Sa turday . 10: 00 til l 6:0Q . SW
portable TV Wit h stand,
single bed com ple te, 8 pa ir
new men 's pajamas . 13 pair
in good condition Numerous
miSC . lle ms . 572 • S. Third
Ave ., Middleport.
3-ll -21p

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF
Motor Co.
QUALITY

Mobile Homes For Sale

1'73 BUICK LeSABRE
Cust. Cpe. auto, PS, PB, Special wheels,
m11ea9e . green fin ish .

UNFUR NI S HED 14 X 10
mob ile home , total elec ., 3
ton central a ir condition e r ,
exc e~lent c·ond ition
Phone
247 -7684 or 241 -2604
3-10-ttc

Ren~

.Bernice Bode Osol
For Friday, March 12, 1976
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19)
You have a way of making light
ol seriou.s problems today_that
15 disarming . ·Go to 1! - th ose
under Stra rn wr ll be appreciative
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Someone in your fam rfy could
have a problem toda y Your
help and that of others should
e rase it at {he so urc:e If you stay
clOse to til e home front.
GEMINi (May 21-June 20)
You 're a very c reative pe rson
Somethmg you·re Interested 1n
t oday cou l d prov1de a
breakthrough a nd mcite the
adm rration of others.
CANCER (June 21-Julr 22) In·
volved in any k1nd of commercoal deal;ngs loday? Don'l be
bashful about seek1ng your
price . C hances are you ·u get a
· better deal
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22)
Whether or not you 're aware of
1\ , you have a magnetism today
that permits you to gain tne ad·
\lantage 1n your dealings. es·
pecially wrth the opposite sex .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)
Obligations owed to you could
be repa td today. If somethi ng
you expected is not for th com rng , reconsider the valldrty of
your claim
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) This
day you shou ld make 11 a pomt
to miK with people , especiall y
close trrend s. Your most
valuable expe tien ces come
from associating wrth kindr~d
&amp;plrits .
.
SCO RPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Challenging s ttua tions are your
cup of tea today. You'll e n)oy
whal you're doing and . you' ll
be graWied by yo u r accomp lrshments .
'SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) An unexpected developmen! you lea rn of ind1reclly
could jolt your optim is m. V1ew
things philosophically. Your
'progress won't be tmpeded .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· Jen.
19JTodayyou'reagoodhorsetrader. If you have a hunch.
. follow -11 Don't sett'le for
' second - best just because
someone feel s It's the last
Word . ·~
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob, 18)
Diplomacy and tact are second
·nature to . you today You're
able to mad late so ski llfully that
those involved don 't rea lize
What IS happenmg .

....

----

SMALL furnished apartment
for 1 or 7 per sons , ll9
Butternut. Pom eroy, Ohio .
3-ll -6tp

1968 MUSTANG V8 , 302
engine , automat ic, mar.oon
wi t h black vinyl top . Good
condition , easy on gas . Call
(614 ) 985-3596 .
3· 11·31p

3 9 tt c

Card of Thanks

4 ROOM S furn1shed apa r t .
men! , all utilities paid
1909 CHEVELLE Ma l ibu .
WE WISH to thank Veterans
Ph on e 992-3356
Memor ial Hospital , tn e
Phone 992 -7830.
3-9 J lc
3-11 -61C
doctors and n~Jrses , the
Rawtings . coats Funeral
ap1.
in 11i171 INTERNATIONAL 2 ton
Home , Re\1. O'dell Manley , . U NFURN IS HED
Pomeroy 2 bedrm . newly
dump truck . Phone lilliJ2 .J640 .
the pallbearers, and all our
redecorated , ful ly carpeled .
3 11 -0tp
many friend s and neighbors
Call
in
the
early
a
.m
.
99
2
for their k in dness d~Jr i ng the
2288
.
illness and deatn of our
1975 CUTLAS S Salon . tul ly
2-22 -ff c
belo ved son , Roy M. Sears,
equ ipped . must sell. Phone
and to t ho se .wl'to sent food
99 7-5013 or 992 -9981.
and flower s. Your kindness 3 AND 4 RM . furnisl1ed and
3 10-3tc
was deeply appreciated .
unf~Jrnished apl s . Phon e 992 .
May God bless all of you .
5434.
)973 CHEVY Vega GT , 4
Mr and Mrs . James Sear s
11 9 1fc
spe ed , $1.200 . Phone lillil2
and fam il y.
7912 .
3-11 -ltp CO UNTR Y Mobil e HomP.
3·8-6tp
Park , Rt . 33 . ten miles n orth
WE'D LIK E to express our
of Pomeroy . Large lo'IS with" 197 5 DAT SUN Mode l B-710 ,
si ncere thanks to all ou r
c3ncrete patios , sidewalks .
$3 ,000 Pnone 992-3453 or 992 ·
fr iends and re lat ives, to
rur'iners and oft street
33 8 1.
everyone !hal sent, food and
parking Phone 992 -7.!79 .
3-7-0t c
flowers , home nealth nur
12 31 -tfc
ses, employees of Jay Mar ~---------~--Coal Co . to t he Middleport
ENJOY grac1ous l ivi ng at Emerg e n c y
Squad,
Village Manor - in Mid ·
Rawl ing s Coats Funeral
dleporl for as low as $130
Home, the pallbearers. the
per
mont.h
wilh
al l MANURE
loader ,
$175 .
Rev . Jack Perry for his
utilit ies
pa1d .
The se
consoling words and to
Phone (6 14 ) 318 -0311 after 6
are bra nd new hl9 h qua.lity
eveyon e that nelped in any
apa rtm ents at prices you
way , in the loss of our .d e.ar
l ·5·61C
ca n afford , Your rent in · --~-----------· nusband. and father, Jrm
"' e lude s month to month HAY for sale . Phone 992 ·7306.
Lam bert'
leases . all el ec l i\l ing ,
Wife and Family
· 3-5-121p
carpeting,
range
and
3-11 -ltp
ret r 1gera to r. fre e tra s h
LOSE we ig h t with Ne w Shape
pickup , cable TV at your
Tabl e ts and Hydre)( Water
e xpense ,
and
on -site •
Pills at Dullon Drug in
laundry fa ci l ities . Con Midd l eport and Ne lson
venienl to sho ppm g on Third
Drug s .
2 YEAR ma le hound , wh il e
a nd Mill Str eets in Mid ·
3 9-31p
with liver speckling . Found
dleport . See the manage'r at
in Minersville, Ohio area
Ri\lerside Apartments or HAY for sale , JO e per bale .
caug ht in stee l jaw trap . Ha s
c all 992 3273
F urn iShed
Ca ll after 4 p m . 992 7015.
wide black collar With bra ss
apartmenl5
ar e
also
3·9 31p
studding and spikes . ow.ner
available .
may claim by P.ay ing for ad
2 2 78tc MIX ED hay , call 997 -2877
and veterinary fee . Cal l ------....--~----aft e r 7 p m
MASON
CO .
Hu mane
3 9-31c
Soc 1ety , (304 ) 675 -1059 or
675 -4515
197 5 20 F T CH AMPION motor
3 4·61p STRAW , 7Sc bal e, two row
hom e, power stee ring ,
cu tt 1va tors fits Massey
power brake s, till steering
Harri s &lt;14, $50 Phone (0,4 )
wh eel, roof air . 2,400 mil es.
.,85 3581.
' '
sleeps 8 Phone 992 3153
3-11 ·41p
LOST in v lnclnty of Tanner 's
3 9-61 C
Run, black and white ARE YOUR planning cabinet s
spo tted coon hound pup .
VER 77 L PTO . HYD 2
in your home'? We hav e a OLI
Phone 247 ·2280
row cu lti \lato r , r eady to go .
limited
supply
of
new
Phone (614) 9B 5·41J l or 9.:19 3-11 ·6fP
wood'en cabinet doors and
2473 after 6 p m
drawer fronts availab le at a
3 9-3tc
LO ST in Rutland a re a , Ger ,
reasonab le price . Some WHh
. man Sheph erd black, gray
g la ss inserts Some so lid , all 20 F T . SELF CONTAI NED
and tan. nam e ''S il ver ."
top Quality , Can be seen at
camping trailer wilh ext r as
Reward off ered Contact c
Kingsbury Mob1 le Hom e
Excellent condition . Phone
T . Jewett , Rt . I, Middleport ,
Sales , 1100 E . Main St. ,
(3041 773 58 76.
or c a ll 742 -2135.
Pom eroy , Ohio or call 992 3 9 -8tc
7034 .
J . J1 Si c
MIXE D hay , phone 997 3709.
BLACK and while Oa lmill10n
) .9. 31c
dog, spotted, answers to tne OL D FA SHIONED ba t htub .
name of . "Dice ." Reward .
Phone 992.7030 .
19 74 FO RO F250 Rang e r ,
Phone 992 3792 .
J . J 1 3tc
19 ,000 mi les ; 1973 10ft . cab
3 9-6tp
over c amper. lik e n e w
---~----·-----­
HA·
Y
.
never
been
wet.
Phone
Magic Ch ef E lec rang e,
.
(6 14) 378 ·6205 afler 6 p. m .
Co leman oil furnace w1th
3-11 1'21p
tank for mob i le hom e
Phon e (014 ) 698 -7255
SY
LVANIA
Co
lored
TV
Set.
OLD furJlll ur e , ic e boxes .
3 9 Jlp
brass
beds, old
wal l
$85 . Phone 992 -7'262 .
telep hon es and pa rt s, or
23 -tJ .J tc
MODERN Walnut Consol e,
c ompl e te .households Wr1t e
Am Fm Radio , d s pe e d
M . D . Miller . Rt.
2, . FOR SALE . 1h · ton 1965 In ·
changer . Balanc e $102 10 o r
Pom e roy. Ohio Ca II 992
ternational Tru c k . 36.000
t'erms . Call 992 3965
7760 .
miles . sooo. Phone (6141 985
3 10 I tc
4212 .
10-7.74
3· 11 -4tp
':ASH paid for all makes and
HE AVY duty home buiit
models of mobile home s .
tand e m a~ele tr a11er Bed 10
Phone ar ea code 614 423
It long Phone 949-24-tlil .
WE
INSTALL!
9531 .
3 10 3tc
-·--- -------~~~ fc
1'.':; 1,.
hay ·-,~- -s-~le .
Ca ll 992 ·3658.
TIMBER . lop pric e to r
CO-OP
3-5· 121c
s tandi ng timber . Call {61.:1)
__ Automatic Wate•
446 -8570.
FISHING SIN KERS made by
Conditioner
3 7.tfc
mold , 1;, oz . through 2. 1,h oz .
Model UCXXX,
5 TO 20 ACRES w1th or
Very reasonable Phone 992 ·
BUY
110.000
5829
withou t house . Phone 997 .
NOW
Weekly Grain
J .3 . t 2t p
5::15 2 or 9n -2496 .
AND
Capacity
3-9 61C
SAVE
ctiA L FOR. ~A-LE . [A e Coa t
SMA LL~;;;;;,-;~~i;.; ~as
Company , 1 mil e north of
cnc s h lre . on Rt 7. Pick your
cooking range w ith oven .
own , S20 per ton Open 6 days
Pnone 99'2 .5766 or 997 · 2529 .
per w ee k, or ca ll (614 ) 367 .
3-9·6tc
--------------7330 for further informal ion .

PISCES (feb. 20·Mirth 20)
Be on your toes regarding your

For Sale

lost

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

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

Wanted To Buy

~~

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

bd R~ :~~~Val

·POMERO.Y LANDMARk
• • - Jock
Carsey, Mgr .
-'ill Phone 992-2111

w.

--------....-----....-

G~ILL

----and kitchen

-~---

®::: ~ .~~'"'" . . . . .
.~;;:-~~·
VI

border
3640.

coiHe .

Phone 992 ·

3-11 .6tp
•
March 12, 1t76
- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - .
Minia t ure
female
· AKC
Qeing eon9truct l ve an d
Schnauzer .
housebroken .
productive
in
your
Phone 742 .'2050 .
relationships can be eKtremety
31c
- ----· _...._ ____ -3·10·
.---advantageous to you this comIng year. Your good works Will CH IHUAH UAS for sale . ~
femal es , Phone 91i12 2265 ,
go unappreciated or unJ.1.6tp
rewar~ed.

not

' .,7-

r

--~~

l

1 8 78tc

Sa lesperson or Agenl Wanted
TEXA S OIL COMPANY needs
d ependable person M -F who
can work w 1tnout super 1 FORD trac tor , model 2000.
v1sion in MeiQs County area
like new One sorrel gelding
Contact customers . Age
riding horse , gen tle. 6 years
unimportant , bu t maturity
ol~ , Arno ld Grate , Rulll!nd ,
is We tra in . Writ e J . G.
Onio Phone 742 ·22&lt;11 or 742Dick, Pres .. Soutl1western
2240 evenings
Pe tY o leum . Ft Wo rt h , Tx ..
3 5-6tc
E .O . E .
, 1 o . o~t c
3
QUARTER horse w ith saddle
-----------;---Gehtle
Beautiful animal
SOMEONE to serv1ce an ·
$300. Phone 161 41 318 -6311
established msurance sales
after 6 p .m
·
route in the Middleport .
3-5·61C
Cheshire area . very good ------- - ---~-wages. all fringe benefitS,
· an outstand ing opportunity WHITE Leghorns , 75c eacil ,
good layers . Phone 949 ·2043 .
for someone with. a little
3·5-6tc
ambition and a se lf -worker
All inquiries confident ial
Write P . 0 . Bo x 672 ,
Pomeroy , Ohio 45169
:J . 7. 7t c

COOK
c ook
Apply in person
work or career . Good th ings
Crow's
Steak
Hou se ,
·can happen unexpe c ted ly
Pomeroy , OhiQ
You'll want to be able to lake _ - - - - - - - - - - - 3-5
- -6tc

~~· r.

c;oo-o- cWaiiiY

1

.........

_

UNFINI S H-tlJ . furni t ure ·
night stand, full size bed
w1th mattress and bOIC
springs
nine
draw er
dre sser Sell 2 wingback
chair s with ottoman . Sell
separat e or together . Phone
992· 3317 .
3-4·71p
COAL , l imestone and all types
of salt and rock sail for ice
and snow r e mo\lal . Ex .
celsior Salt WorkS. East
Main St ., Pom eroy , Ohio .
Phon e 992-3891
12 7·1fC
1971 YAMAHA 650 Springer.
front
and
tube. fully
chopped. Cal l after 5 p . ni
992 ·59 14
3-7·6t c

FRIDAY'S GUESJ
ON

KALEIDOSCOPE
IS

DR. ROBERJ. HARTJE
Author of ,., Bicentennial U.S.A."
Tune In at 10:15 A.'!'•

ON

WMPO

F ina nclnt Available
Blown inlo Walls &amp; Atl ics
STORM
WINOOWS &amp; DOORS

1968 CHEVY An w ith 1970
molor , 6 c y l . c arpeted ,
pane led , stereo tape de c k
FM rad io , mag wheels, in
good condit ion . $1 ,300
Ph one lil92 J710 .

REPLACEMENT

WINDOWS
.

ALUMINUM

StDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNlNGS

LARRY
LAVENDER
Svracuse. Ohio

1973 DODGE Polara Custom,
fu lly equipped , good shape,
S2.000 Phone 99 2-7797.
3-9· 3tp

For Sale

1974 TSI.B5 S UZUK I A · l
cond illon , 1,100 mites . Call
742 2143 after 5 p .m .
3·8 9t o;
ANTIQUE nome com fort
cookstove . Also qu ick meal
bottled gas and wood or coal
co mb ination stove Good
condition
Phone 9&lt;19 2770 .
3-10 6tc
SEAR S' Craftsman 10 inch
radial arm saw. comp le te
wi th s tand , ligh! and, ad
jUs tabte , dado blade . Phone
9.:!9-2449 .•
3. 1Q.3tc
1974 SUZUKI T .S 185 eKira
h ead , lUg , carburetor and
exhau st pip e, 167 miles good
buy . Phone 9&lt;19 2449 .
3 lO .Jt c
GOOD t1ay, n ever wet . Ph one
949 257 3.
3 10 12tc
8 TRACK s te r eo com ponent
se t, good co nditio n Phone
84 2 7050.
3 10-3tc
LADY 'S Bcnr us watcn , ~6 ;
MODEL
43 0
Polaroid
c am e ra , S70; w ire less ln ·
ler corp S20 , Man ' s pocket
wat c h, needs repa1r, $15 ; F
M co nverted for car , $15 .
Phon e 997 7551.
3-10 -3tc

Real Estate For Sale

R&amp;J. COINS

4 AC RES , 2 b edrm mobi le
home . room added, land
scaped, appliance s, car
pe1ing , ', n e w barn , out
bu ildin gs .
tru1t
trees ,
AleK ander Twp ., 7 miles
s outn of A1 hens . $12.000
Phone (614 I 592 424 5.
3 7 7t c
..,....,....,
_...

____ _

MODERN home in Ches ter , 8
rooms . 2 bath s, 1 porches .
sun porch , 1 'J basement , c ity
and w elt wa te r , natural gas,
garag e
Pr iced to sell
Phone (6 14) lil8 5·4102
2 4.1fc
QEDRM . home ,
lust
finish ed , r emode l1n_g , Salem
St , Rutland . Phone 742· 2306
af te r 4 p .m . or see Milo B.
Hut chison .
9-23 -tfc

Rull1nd 742:-2331
Roger Wam1ley
3-1-1 mo .

J

BR HO~E . tus f finished
remodel ing , Sa lem St ..
Rutland . Pl'1one 742 ·2306
aft e r 4 p m . or see Milo B
Hut c hinson .
10 ·9-lfc

HOME for sale by private
owner,
31 ~
a c res .
&lt;1
bedroom s. barn on blacktop
ro ad . gas and water . Phone
949 -2023 .
3 1. 26fp
-~-----------

' GOoo

NOW HOLD 0.,, SUH!
YOU 1!-XPE-C.T US '!"0
• &amp;ELIE-VE THAT GU .. K.
C:OUL D ti~I.,G A
MUMMY I!&gt;AC:K.

'-.h. U9·2023 or 142· 2467

TO LIFE&lt;'!'

WAS!-&lt;
AND!

I&lt;NOW
WHAT WE-

MAVI'&gt;E lT WASN 'T •A"VE: I'&gt;Uf
THAT MUMMY WAf, CI!IZTAINLY
TWITCHI.,&lt;S WITH 610· ELEC'T"~IC

BULK WATER
AVAILABLE
Tuppers Plains -Chester
Water District now sett ing
bulk water to tanks on
trucks a t our new office!
Located on St . Rt . 1
1 Mile Nor th of
Eastern H l~h School
Serve Yourself Dispenser
Taking q uarters only , one
at a ti m e. for 250 gallons ol
water .
Open all the Time
tor your convenience!
3-1-lmo .

4 A 10 8 2

CARPETING.

t A Q 10 4
ofoJ94
WEST !DI
EAST

Free estimates on car
peting and inolallollon ,
We ' ll bring sarftples to you
home with no obligation
,See how you can realh
save .
Mike Young , Manager
Sales and Jnstallltion
Rt. 3, Pomeroy , Ohio 457"
Phone day or night
614.J191·1106
I 14 · 1 rtio .

4KQJ64

U()KN~R

o!oK

SIVOW 1 L.fi~IIE'
CVT THJ; BlD

-::::~ PU~ISH '00 IF '/QJ

2 - 11 · 11~

-WILL
-· -----------TRIM or cut trees and

shrubbery . Phone 949 7545
or 747 3167 .
1 27 -'26tc

-----------~---;:--

4!

.,

\)J()Il.()'&gt; ~

COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST- Whal? ... S
bedrooms , lovely kitchen with all buill ins, dining room
with sliding glass doors opening to a hugh deck , famll.y
room. lower level patio, central air. total electric.
intercom system; some finishing work required on
first floor . Where? .. . Riggscrest Manor near Tuppers
Plains. One of the finest homes In the area at a
reasonable price. Call for appointment.
BICENTENNIAL SPECIAL 560 N. Second St.,
M iddleport . Sit on the large front porch and watch the
world go by ; step Inside the large foyer arid teel lhe
spaciousness of this thick walled ·brick hom01 open
stairway ; large living room w1n1 a fireplace; "huge
formal dining room ; big kllchen. Upslalrs Is 4
bedrooms with a sun "porch. Plenty of room for real ·
living ala price you can atford, ... Just $29,500. You w,lll
have a home with presllge.
'
POMEROY- High view ... low price, check this 3
bedroom home with large dining room; living room
with fireplace ; kitchen and bath, nat. gas, furniture
goes too ... one • low price $7500.00.

diamonds.
~'inally, Arthur cashed dum·
my"s high diamonds and led
that heart. East took his king,
, but Arthur's queen was his
12th trick.

North-South vulnerable

West

From "the largest TrUCtc; o·r ,
Bulldozer"'"Radiator ro , thE
smallest Heater Core .

Nortl1 East

Sout ..

1•

Pass

Pass

2t
Pass

3ofo
5•

3ofo
Pass

2ofo
4ofo

Pass

~~~~

Pass

A California reader wants to
know the youngest and oldest
players to win the McKenney
trophy.
Oswald Jacoby's fourth and
lasl win occurred in 1962 at
the age of 61. Barry Crane's
first win occurred in 1962 at
the age or 24 or \hereabouts.
Paul Soloway and Peter Rank
each won it at age Tl.

Opening lead- K •

••

Nalhan Bigg1
Rldialor Speciatisl
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

.SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

OM,

Yesterday's hand is
repeated today . Playing in
five clubs, Arthur Robinson ol
o&lt;o-111At's
Philadelphia was able to mark
JUST ~l SAM- West with the king of clubs
I'M ""' OA!Itl
HAPI'Y 1 FE~ because his opening lead of
LIK£ BAWUM- the spade king marked East
(Do you have a quesfion
""..-;:;~ with either the ace or king of lor lhe experts? Write "Ask
' \4)/1.&lt;1'/.;;
hearts . So Arthur dropped the · ' lhe Jacobys"' care ol this
singleton king and was sure to newspaper. The Jacobys will

. . ---"&lt;

LOOK! MV 111111101

AHD MY TIIAIH THAT

RUiiS ·· AHD IT'S
tiOT A WMI9TU!:- N-ID
-.y P\TCHE._, l!tOOIIS
MD·-

make his game contract.
However , the game was
duplicate and Arthur proceed-

ed to make six. The play is
Worthy of note .
At trick three he led a club
lo dummy. then he rulfed a

--~~---,......__

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

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
DOWN
1 Cherished ;
1 Naive
close
person
,
6 Orson of
Z Glad eye
comedy
3 Fly
10 Greek
4 Whale
marketplace 5 Succeed
11 Scan dina( 2 wds. J
vian
6 '"Why Was
1Z German
I-'"
mountain
7 Before
region
8 Dolt
(2 wds. )
9 Aerialist's
14 Suffix lor
safeguard
mountain
11 One of the
15 Merit
Poles
16 Scot's
13 Encounter
ancestor
16 Languish
17 Conswne
17 Smirk
by lire
18 Secondhand
20 Capital of ·19 Dress
Yukon
size
Territory
20 Artlllce
23 Symbol of
Great
Britain
24 Bearing
25 Illinois city
(2 Wds.)
29 Pulpit

a

No,Chip'
Your sister
is ver4
pick4!

tOOill

she
likes,
Slim"

.

monastery

the-''
22 Gen.

33 Clarinet

Bradley
part
23 Dieter's
34 Singer
loss (abbr.)
Williams
26 Foolish
35 Credibility 21 Evening,
3&amp; Caddoan
in Rome
Indian
28 Account
37 Epoch
book
38 Gordon
31 Move about
Mac-

$4295
r~;~~~::::::=;:~~~~~==
::

.~~~~=:.~.:=,.:~"6jlif,Mi,~;~~~;~~::;;_-~------ ----·r""""o""•~

5

llliT WHAT MAKES
yOI.J "THINK MY
DEf;IONS tm&gt;&lt;ND
A CHANa: OF

~lNG
CONCIIDEREDO'

'3595
-USID CAR$1972 Mercury 9 pass. Sta. 52595
1972 OlevJ Impala Custom 52195

BECAUSE

WE

f2 Available

DAILY

CRYPTO(~UOTE- Jlere'•
II

y

how

lo work

it:

A X
D I. 8 A A :ol R
I.ONGFELI.QW

One leller simply stands for anolhcr. In I his sample A is
used for the three L"s. X for I he two O's, etr. Single letters,
apoatrophes. 1he lenglh and formation of the words nre all
hinls. Each day the code letlers are different.
CRYPTOQUDTES

HA~

"THE IN:;! DE

TRI'CK I

9

. TOM RUE - SALE PRICE

Air and wlr.ed for ~.B.
"
TOM RUE SALE PRICE

~.

I

1495

5

•a9s

MANY MORE USED CARS, STOP &amp; LOOK.

PH. 992·2594

Want that FOR , SALE ad t~ read SOLD.
Call Jimmy Deem

See!

Totl,.flue, kay Douglas, ,

G. (Pat) Williamson or Eddlt

'

Fife

"
I

J.

l'

1

.y .j

UK A

YFAUTZ

II

1971 DDclae Coronet Waaan
Air,
TOM RUE SA.LE PRICE .
6 cyl., 2 dr .

U F

I

.

1970 Ford Maverick

6: GO-Sunrise Semesler 10.
6: 15-Farm Report 13.
6 : 20-Biua Ridge Quartet 13.
·
6 :»-Columbus Today A: News 6; Sunrise Semeslw 1.1
Farmtlme 10.
6:..o-oUnce of Prevention 10,
I.:As-Morning R-rt 3.
6:5S....Chuck White R-rts 10; Good Morning, Trl
Stele 13.
7 :GO-Toclay 3,A,15; Good Morning, Amerlca6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Frlonds 10.
7, JO.-Schoolles 10.
8 :GO-Lassle 6; Copt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
8:30-Big Valley 6; Seslma St. 9.
9:GO-Nol For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue A,15; Lucy
Show8; Mlke Douglas10; Morning with D.J. 13. ·
9:»-A .M. 3; One Llle to Live 6i Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
10 : ~elebrlty Sweepstakes 3,A,15; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Right 8,10.
10:31)-High Rollers 3.~.15; Dinah 6.
11: GO-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday ~~ Gambit ·
8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13.
11: :111;-:-Hollvwood SQuares 3,4,15; Happy Days13; L~
of: tllo 8,10; Sesame St. 20.33.
11:55-Take. Ktrr 8; Den lmel's World 10.
.12:GO-Matlfllflcent Marble Machine 3.15; Let's Ma""
.A DNI13;Bob Braun's 50-50 Club .15; Hews 6,1,10.
12:311-Tako My Advice 3,15i All My Chlldr'tn 6,131
Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
12: A5-Eiec. Co. 33.
12: 55-NBC News 3,15,
I :GO-News 3; ~yon's Hope 6.13; Phil Donllhua 8:
Young &amp; tho Restlass 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1 :30-0ays of Our Llves3,~,15; Rhyme &amp; Reasan ,,13;
As the World Turns 8,10.
2: GO-S20.ooo Pyramid 6,13.
2:31)-Doctors 3,4,15; Neighbors 6,13; Guiding Light
8,10.
3: GO-Another World J,A,15; General Hospital 6,13; All
In the Family 6.,10; Block Journal 20.
3:30-0nellfetoLive13; MlckoyMouseCiub6; ~f"h ·
Game 1,10; Black .PErspactlvo on tile Naws _.
· A: OO-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin ~~ Bewltchacl 6;
Somerset 15; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rog1r1
20,33; Movie "Forty Guns" 10; Dinah 13.
:
~ : 311-Bewllched 3; ~ Sq
6r Partridge Family 1;.
Sesame S. 20,33; Fllnlst
15.
5:GO-Bonanza 3; Family Affair · Star Trek 15.
s:»-Adllm-12 A,13; News 6; Be
ly .Hillbllll" 8;
Elec. Co'. 20,33,
6:GO-News 3,~,8,1G.13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 :»-NBC News3,A,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
.terroscolendas 33.
J,
7:GO-Trulh or Cons. 3; fa Tellthe Truth AI Lewrwnc:e ·
Welk 8; Bowling for Dollors 6; Aviation Wuthtr
33; News 10; Don Adams Screen Test 13; "Ftt11.1lv ·
Affair 15; Ohio Journal 20.
.
7:311-Porter 'W agoner 3; TrNsure Hunt ~~ Candid
Camera 6; Evening Edltlon with Martin Agronsky ·
20: $25,000 Pyramid 10; To Tel.l .the Truth 13; Plf:.
Goes the Country 15; Bleck Perspective on
News 33.
8: oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,A,15; Donny &amp; Marie 6,13; Sara
8,100; Washington Week In Rovlew .20,33.
8: 311-The Practice 3,4,15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:GO-Rockford Fllos 3,A,15:; Movie "The Nept\111a
Disaster" 6,13; GE Theater 8,10; Firing Line 20;
Maslerplece Theatre 33.
10:GO-Pollco Story 3,4,15; News 20; Educetlqnll
lmpllcatlons 33.
10:311-Avletlon Weather 20.
11 :GO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :31)-JohMy Carson 3,A,I5; Rookl . . 6,13; Movie "The
Glass Bottom Boel" 8; Movie "The Abominable
Snowmen" 10; Janakl 33.
12: 40-Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 6; Ironside 13.
1: GO-Frlends 3,A,15; Movie "Blood Rose" 10.
1:-News 13.
2:30-Nows 3; Movie "Kiu of Evil"~ 3:GO-Movle 'Eye of tha Cat" 3.
4:15-Movle "Prlvale Buckaroo" 3.
A: JI)-Movle "The Chalk Garden" A.
6:00-Movle "Tho Old-Fashioned Way" 3 .

41 Bartlett -

1974
Plymouth Satellite
pass. waQ. air.

TOM RUE SALE PRICE

FRIDAY, MARCH 12.1976

nest

Air , Sherwood Gr~~·. ll~e. new.
TOM RUE SALE PRICE

.Air, 2 dr., ·H.T.

9 :oo-Movle "Farewell to Manzaner" 3,4,15; Straato.
of San Francisco 6,13; Hewell Five.() I; Holl,_
Television Theatre 33; Movlt "CountdCJwn" 10.
9 :311-Toll Shlpo are coming 20.
IO:oo-Horry ·o 6,13; Barnaby Jones 8; News 20.
10:31)-Roalldades 33.
.11 ;GO-News 6.8. 10,13; ABC Nowo 33.
11: io-Nows 3,4,15.
11:311-Mannl• 6,13; Movie "Hot Millions" I ; Movie
"Crosscurrent" 10; Janekl 33 .
11:40-Johnny Carson 3. ~.15.
12:40-Maglclan 6,13.
1: ID-Tomorrow J.A.
1 :5?-News 13.

'Ill Uke some
seals

4195
1975 auysler Custom 4 dr.
$4195
TOM RUE SALE PRICE

32 Japanese

21 "'Now Is

talk

FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS I
1975 G11n fUIJ Custom 4 dr. ·.

1975
Dodge Dart SE
Air .

Veslerday's Answer .

(abbr.)
30 -&lt;lo-well
31 Carnelian
gem
32 Musical
syllable
,__--~ 35 Mecca for
elopers
(2 wds.)
C: 31 Eagle's

TOM RUE
MOTORS

While with white vinyl roof, loaded
and sharp, new car warranty.
TOM RUE SALE PRICE

answer indiv;dual questions
il stamped, sell-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
most int!3resting questions
will be used in th1s column
and will receive copoes ol
JACOBY MODERN.)

61ew•~w ·
"niitt MV 1"1&lt;\I!NDS, WI&gt;JS ONE
OF~ BIG,Ol! FLYIN'
LI:ZA.RI:&gt;e 'IOU 'Il!:. LOOI&lt;.IN' !'OR·1

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

••
•••

so urn

• 75 3
ofo63

• Q97
tJ2
o!oAQI087S2

. ~EXCAV A TING . dozer, loao.:-o
and backhoe work ; septic
tan~s
Installed ; dump
truck~ and to-boys tor hirE! ;
will haul fill d irt. top soil,
lime stone and gravel. Call
Bob or Roger Jeffer s. day
Phone 992 -7089 , n ight phone
99 7-352 5 or 99 2-5232 .

• 973
•K 10652

.AJ 3
.t K 9 8 6

I lOlO '(X) f».Wi \1.0U!,DN'T

.

spade , led the jack or
diamonds covere&lt;l by king and
ace, rufled another spade and
ran off all his trumps to leave
himself with one diamond and
three hearts.
West had to throw his ace of
hearts to hold three diamonds
and the spade queen . Now
Arthur discarded dummy's
las! spade to leave it with
three diamonds and a heart.
East was down to hearts and

11

.14

TEAF.ORO ·

56000.00 - DON' T FLIP OUT
(This is the right price .. .for this modern two bedroom
hotT!e . In the coun try near Bashan. City water and
natural gas . Even a garden .
Ca II for appointment

.

~

NORm

Real Estate For Sale

'0 ACRES VACANT LAND - you would know spring Is
tmre when you see this wide green valley with a brook
runnmg through • i t ; just perfect for a large lak e;
wooded hillside ju st crying for a cabiO . .'.' Here's
scenery and seclusion ... at less than $300 per acre .
CALL QUICK.
.

.

33.

WIN AT BRIDGE
.
'
Great play pulls six clubs

E-NERGY!

SAW!

2·1'11'-1 mo .

HOUSE and tot , good c BRADF.ORD . Auctioneer
Complete Service . Phont.
back
yard , Ideal
for
949 · 2487 or 949 --2000 . Racine .
cl'11 1dren Mr . and Mrs .
Pomeroy
Ph. "2 -2174
Oh io . Crill Bradford .
George W . Kauff , call 99 2
7227 or come and see it at 724
10 ·9-Hc ,
Condor Sf , Pomeroy , Ohio
RE·MOOELING ,
Plumbing_,
J -l\ -3t c WILL do odd job S. roofing,
healing
and
all
types df
paint ing , haul ing , treework
genera!
repair .
Work
and mow ing . Call 992-7&lt;109.
guaranteed . 20 years el( .
HOME t or sate , sp&amp;C IOUS
J -2·26tc
per ience
Phone 992 -2409 .
li ving room . dining room , 7
6 ·1-lfc
bedroom s, large k1tche.n . RE:D DOG , l imestone , gravel
family, room and new bath .
and till dirt de livere d .
dozer ,
Phone 992 -7394 .
Phone Bill Pullin s , 99'2 ·2478 . EXCAVATING .
backhoe
and
dllcher .
3· 10 -41 C
1 11i1 ·26tc
Charfes R HaTfi eld Back
-·----- - ---"- --'---Hoe Ser&gt;Jic e . Rutland , Ohio .
APPROX 10 ac res with very
LUCKETT Farm Equipment,
Phone' 7&lt;12 2008
ni ce building lot on Co . Rd
West
Washington
St.
11 30 -78t c
Jl . Chester water district.
Albany . Phon e (0 14.l 698 3032
b ea ut i fu l 1ocat 1on . Phon e
or 698 .7881.
0 &amp; D TREE Tr immi ng , 20
949-2770
2 18 26tc
years experiwn ce . Insured ,
~- -----~-~----· tree estimates . Call 992 ·2384 .
.
or (614} 698 -7'251 Alba ny .
, IO. I5·tfC
BUILDING , Main 51. in ----- - -- - - --+---R~J t l and , see or call T , O ,
SEW ING MA CH IN E Repairs ,'
Ste wart , Rutland , OhiO ,
se rvic e . all make s . 992 ·2284 .
Virgil B .. Sr., Broker
pnone 742 2d2 1.
The Fabr ic Shop , Pomeroy .
IIOMechanlc Po,.eroy. 0.
Authorized Singer Sales and
.
PIIOM 992-JDS
Se rvi ce .
We
sharpen
Scissor s .
ESTATE - 8 rms. , ll/2
3·19·tf c
baths, 4 B. R .S., 2 livings ,
gas fireplace, hot water
O'DELL Alinement loca t&amp;d
beh1nd
Rutland
Grade
heat. and garage 'on
Sc hool . Tuneup , brakes.
Mu lberry Ave. 520 ,000 .
wheel balancing , alinement .
RUTLAND - Near school,
Phone 742 -2004 .
6 rms , bath , new Nat gas
11 -16 -ttc
..... •
furnace. 3 Brs ., and n ice
EXCAVATI NG . BA(K HOE S
lot. $12 ,500 .
AND DOZER . LARGE AND
NEW LISTING - Brand
SMALl , SEPliC TANKS
new 3 BRS., 2 cerami c
FARM - 30 clean acres. 3
IN S TALLED .
BILL
baths , large kit ., dining ,
PlJLLINS . PHONE 992 ·1478 , .
BR home (no bath) barn &amp;
DAY OR NIGHT .
utility , and carpo r t. 1 ac re .
lots of buildings . Close to
2 22 -52tp
$30 ,000.
mines . Sl7,500 .
.
RUTLAND - 2 BR. bath.
READY MIX CON':. ~" c:Tt::"
UNION AVE. - 8 rm s .. 5
din ing R ., wash R .. 9arage,
delivered righ l to your
Brs., 2 baths, gas . F .A. .
project F'ast and easy . Free
close to schooL $8 ,500.
t urna ce , garage, patio and
e51ima!es . Phone ~92 378"';
BRICK-Live in the nice 4
117 acre . 518,500 .
Goeglein Ready Mi~ · .JCO.,'
BR oapartment. rent the 2
DREAM HOME - J Brs.,
Middleport , Ohio .
'
furni shed apts. for Income.
'
6·30 tfcI'
1112 baths, a co mpletely
______
Excellent
neighborhood .
mod ., kit., hot water heat.
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
sn.ooo.
covered patio , 2 car
- Sweepers. , toasters , Irons ,
POMEROY
2
SR.
garage, and J lots. Very
all small appl iances . Lawn
BATH, N. gas heat. garden
ni ce at $46,900 .
mower , n eiC.I to Sta te H lliJh ·
plot.
porches
,
Just
$4,500
.
way Garage on Rou te 7.'
NEW LISTING- Business
Phone t8 5 3825.
'
WALKTOSHOP - Large2
building with 2 bedroom
d-16 -tfc'
story frdme, 4 BR , l'h
apa rtment
over ,
in
- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - l
baths . new kitctlen, full
Rutland . Askong 513,500.
SE PTI C TAN KS c lea ned •
basement
,
coa~
or
gas
heat.
10 Percent down FHA on
Modern Sanitation . 992 -3954
$8 ,500.
or 992 ·7349.
the above homes VA
991-225' or 992-2568
9-18·ffc
nothing down .
HAVE BUYER FOR 100
ACRES OF LAND
•

SCENIC COUNTRY HOME- Well cared lor home In
the country containln9 2 bedrooms, living room,
kitchen, s mall dining room, bath , nice sun porch. Also
cellar and celler house, 2 garages and barn , .. Thats
not all .
37 acres goes with H . .. all over looking the
beautiful Ohio River . BeHer call quick ,,, Only
Sl5,000.

T

-·

I

: cAPrAIN EA.'IV

I

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

949-2388

From 1 shell to altouse, Ill
types of building 1ne1
remodellnt
trom
tttt
· · foundation up. Additions,
cupttlne, palnt1n1. stdlng,
rooling, paneJinf', p1per
hangint etc. , ..

-- ----

7 RO OM house-with bath , good
loca tio n Full basement , 391
Sou th Second , Middleport
Phon e 992 276 5
3 7 12tp

3

5 :GO-Bonanza 3; Family Alfalr 8; Ster Trek 15.
5 :3G-Adllm· l2 A; News 6; Beverly Hlllblllltl 8;
Eloctrlc Company 20,33; Adllm-12 13.
6 :GO-Ntws 3,4.1,10,13.15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; lTV
UTilization 33 .
6 :3D-NBC Nows3,A,15; ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS NtwsS,10; Hodgepodge Lodge20; Lilias, Yoga.
and You 33.
7:oo-Truth or Consequencu 3; To Tell The Trulh A;.
Bowling for Dollars 6; Space: 1999 8; News 10;
Let's Make A O.al13; FomllyAifelr 15; Anyone for
Tonnyson? 20; Family at War 33 .

CONSTRUCilON

4-IO -l mo

1

_____

Find buried treasure .
Coins, rings, silver. gold .
Coin &amp; Metal
Detectors
For Rent
or
For S1le

7: 31)-Hollywoocl Squor" 3,A; Ohio State ~ 6;
Evening Edition wlth Morfin Agronlky 20; Wild .
Kingdom 10; To Tell lhe Truth 13; Mutlc City
U.S.A, 15.
8 :GO-Special Treat.3.4,15; Welcome Beck, KoHw 6,13:
Waltono8.10; Play of lha Month 20; The Way l t 33 .
1 :311-Borney Mlllor6,13; Lowell Thomas Rtmembatl

THURSDAY, MARCH 11, lt76

DID

COINS

Ph . 992 -3993

-------------1972 CHEVY Cheyenne 1 l0n ,
Real Estate For Sale
mirrors , v . o, carpe t. fa ctory
g aug es, ps , d isc Brakes.
au tomatic , topp er , e;occellent
condition , $'2.695 Call 9927170 or 992 -5876 .
3-7-0ip

'.

BUY , SELL or TRADE

Ph . (614) 'l85·4102
2- 12-1 mo.

----------:-~

Rut land Pho ne 992 -5858 .

--~-

BISSELL BUILDERS

I nsu Ia ti o~t-Services

--------------3 BEDRM house wil!'l bath in

Help Wanted

Take odvontoge ol our
prices .
Quality
built
homes. Nice lah available
in nice locations.

FREE, ESTiMATES
'"Blown·

Found

AstroGrapM

$28'5

2 BEDRM . t ra iler. I m tle from
Harr ison\lille on New Lim a
Road . PhOn e 742 · 2997 .
J . \0 4t c

For Sale

AnENTIOI

SAVE MONEY?

13295
1973 MONTE CARLO
Auto ., PS , PB, 8 cyl, radio, w -s t lres, black -white vinyl
roof.

3 ROOM furnished house w ith
bath . Adults on ly. Phone
992 -5535 .
3 10-tt c

Television log for easy viewing

~~~~====~==~~~
WANT TO

S24'5

-----...----------

GET

Business Services

w.s t ires, low

1'73 CHEVY VAN

-------------For

Auto Sales

-

GQH

~~~~~~~rcS;HMUrxi:.. ~W;E~'V~E~~:;~~~A~N~'~~~E~A~Rss~A~Nt'~~BEA~R~S~~~Jl
HAD. MATCHIN' t--c.,
BEDSPREADS
AN' CURTAINS
FER '4EARS ·-

X P ,D A
EIB

FG

E
UKA

GE 0 U

PD

WFDU

GEJHAD . - TEHYK

UTQA

JAEQUPXEHBF

AWATDFI
Yeolerday's Cryptoqaote: BUT IT MA ITERS MORE WHAT'S
IN A WOMAN'S FACE THAN WHAT'S ON IT.- CLAUDET'I'E .
CoLBERT
(f) 19'71 Kln1 Ftaturn SrftdicaLe, IM. )

AN' '/EARS AN'···

I{Ou

TfWlEO

ME A PI.Al{Eil

'WITH A~
Lf6!!

IROCENEj ·

rx tJ

IPJJWfl~

I K

I ,..,., __ ..,

�~;,;,:.;~~;;~;"'·~·;~;~~'·]:~~Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds.
l

Mason
Auct ion
Hou se ,
1 Muon . W . Va . Bress bed .
Iaroe secretary , mantle

clock with pillars and brass.,
cotf&amp;e

grlnd~r .

oak side
bOud , black. wa lnut china
c tose1. oak t at.lle and .ot
chairs, oak. dresser , watot.~t
dresser , round Ollk ta ble,

P M ,

S

Day

Pub lic~tlion .

Before

Deadl i ne

Mondav

' a rn

9

C a 11 c e 1 1a r i o n

Corrections wit! be ac
cepted un t ll 9 a. m . fo r
Oay of Pub licat ion,
REGULATIONS
Th e Publ iShe r reserves

library tab le . stone ia rs . lots
of alanwere , many othe r
Items . Fred A. Mark.s ,
owner, No t responsible for

the r ig tp to edit or r eject
any ads de eme d ob
iection a l. The publisher

acc i den ts . Ho ward Beas ley ,

w 111 not be responsible for

auc tioneer .

mo re th a n one •nco rre ct
inserti on

3 11 -71c

RATES
For Wan I Ad Service

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

79th ANNUAL Hereford Sal e ·
18 bulls and 15 Femal es ,
Soutl'leastern Oti io Hereford
Associat ion ,
a. tt c lean
pedigrees , ooth horned and
polled . Saturday , March 20,
1'!1'76
Sale 1: 00 P . M .
Rockspr ings Falrgro~Jnds,
Rt. 33, three mites north of
Pomeroy ,
Oh io
For
catalogs write to . lloyd
Blackwood , Sates Mgr .. Ri.
3, Pomeroy , Oh io , 45769 .
J . n .3tc
KODCOT
Cosmet ics has
unlim ited op porllm ity for
sale!'g irls interested • 1n
beauty . Ther e ' s " Beauty
D irector " possib il it ies wi th
organ izat ion ot yo ur own .
Contact : Ann Sauv a,ge,
Syracus e, on io 992 -3272
(Independent Distr ibutor }.
3-5·6tp
MAKE SURE you get every
possible deduc tion thi s year .
Ha ve your Federal and
State Income Ta lC return by
an a cc ountan t. Phon e 997 .
6173
1· 21 -52tc

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

R UTLANO Gun Club meeting
and 22 R ifle Match at New
Lima Road , Friday , 8 p .m .
Everyone we lcome
3-lil · 6tc

For Sale or Trade
REGISTERED
polled
Hereford bull from Royal
Oa~ Farms ,•2 yr old . wou ld
l ike to trade fo r anoth e r
bull . Phon e 9&lt;19-2770
3 10 61 c

5 ce nts

per

word

one

in se r lf on
M inimu m Charge $1 00
14 cents per word three
c oMec~Jt i ve
insert ions
20 ce n rs p er word si,;
c on sec ut ive
insert ions .
75 Per Ce n t Discount on
pa rd ads and ad s paid
wilh1n 10 days ,
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 .&lt;l0
for
50
word
mmrmum ,
Each add it ional word 3
ce n ts
BLIND ADS
Ad d1t1onal 25c Ch arge
per Ad\le rtisem en t.
OFFICE HOURS
8 . 30 a . m 10 5:00 p m
Da ily, 8. 30 am . to 12 00
Noon Saturday .
PhOne today991 '2 150

. .. ~.... .... • •

•

Misc. Sales

Auto Sales

BASEME NT Sale , f='r~ day and
Sa turday . 10: 00 til l 6:0Q . SW
portable TV Wit h stand,
single bed com ple te, 8 pa ir
new men 's pajamas . 13 pair
in good condition Numerous
miSC . lle ms . 572 • S. Third
Ave ., Middleport.
3-ll -21p

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF
Motor Co.
QUALITY

Mobile Homes For Sale

1'73 BUICK LeSABRE
Cust. Cpe. auto, PS, PB, Special wheels,
m11ea9e . green fin ish .

UNFUR NI S HED 14 X 10
mob ile home , total elec ., 3
ton central a ir condition e r ,
exc e~lent c·ond ition
Phone
247 -7684 or 241 -2604
3-10-ttc

Ren~

.Bernice Bode Osol
For Friday, March 12, 1976
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19)
You have a way of making light
ol seriou.s problems today_that
15 disarming . ·Go to 1! - th ose
under Stra rn wr ll be appreciative
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Someone in your fam rfy could
have a problem toda y Your
help and that of others should
e rase it at {he so urc:e If you stay
clOse to til e home front.
GEMINi (May 21-June 20)
You 're a very c reative pe rson
Somethmg you·re Interested 1n
t oday cou l d prov1de a
breakthrough a nd mcite the
adm rration of others.
CANCER (June 21-Julr 22) In·
volved in any k1nd of commercoal deal;ngs loday? Don'l be
bashful about seek1ng your
price . C hances are you ·u get a
· better deal
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22)
Whether or not you 're aware of
1\ , you have a magnetism today
that permits you to gain tne ad·
\lantage 1n your dealings. es·
pecially wrth the opposite sex .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)
Obligations owed to you could
be repa td today. If somethi ng
you expected is not for th com rng , reconsider the valldrty of
your claim
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) This
day you shou ld make 11 a pomt
to miK with people , especiall y
close trrend s. Your most
valuable expe tien ces come
from associating wrth kindr~d
&amp;plrits .
.
SCO RPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Challenging s ttua tions are your
cup of tea today. You'll e n)oy
whal you're doing and . you' ll
be graWied by yo u r accomp lrshments .
'SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) An unexpected developmen! you lea rn of ind1reclly
could jolt your optim is m. V1ew
things philosophically. Your
'progress won't be tmpeded .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· Jen.
19JTodayyou'reagoodhorsetrader. If you have a hunch.
. follow -11 Don't sett'le for
' second - best just because
someone feel s It's the last
Word . ·~
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob, 18)
Diplomacy and tact are second
·nature to . you today You're
able to mad late so ski llfully that
those involved don 't rea lize
What IS happenmg .

....

----

SMALL furnished apartment
for 1 or 7 per sons , ll9
Butternut. Pom eroy, Ohio .
3-ll -6tp

1968 MUSTANG V8 , 302
engine , automat ic, mar.oon
wi t h black vinyl top . Good
condition , easy on gas . Call
(614 ) 985-3596 .
3· 11·31p

3 9 tt c

Card of Thanks

4 ROOM S furn1shed apa r t .
men! , all utilities paid
1909 CHEVELLE Ma l ibu .
WE WISH to thank Veterans
Ph on e 992-3356
Memor ial Hospital , tn e
Phone 992 -7830.
3-9 J lc
3-11 -61C
doctors and n~Jrses , the
Rawtings . coats Funeral
ap1.
in 11i171 INTERNATIONAL 2 ton
Home , Re\1. O'dell Manley , . U NFURN IS HED
Pomeroy 2 bedrm . newly
dump truck . Phone lilliJ2 .J640 .
the pallbearers, and all our
redecorated , ful ly carpeled .
3 11 -0tp
many friend s and neighbors
Call
in
the
early
a
.m
.
99
2
for their k in dness d~Jr i ng the
2288
.
illness and deatn of our
1975 CUTLAS S Salon . tul ly
2-22 -ff c
belo ved son , Roy M. Sears,
equ ipped . must sell. Phone
and to t ho se .wl'to sent food
99 7-5013 or 992 -9981.
and flower s. Your kindness 3 AND 4 RM . furnisl1ed and
3 10-3tc
was deeply appreciated .
unf~Jrnished apl s . Phon e 992 .
May God bless all of you .
5434.
)973 CHEVY Vega GT , 4
Mr and Mrs . James Sear s
11 9 1fc
spe ed , $1.200 . Phone lillil2
and fam il y.
7912 .
3-11 -ltp CO UNTR Y Mobil e HomP.
3·8-6tp
Park , Rt . 33 . ten miles n orth
WE'D LIK E to express our
of Pomeroy . Large lo'IS with" 197 5 DAT SUN Mode l B-710 ,
si ncere thanks to all ou r
c3ncrete patios , sidewalks .
$3 ,000 Pnone 992-3453 or 992 ·
fr iends and re lat ives, to
rur'iners and oft street
33 8 1.
everyone !hal sent, food and
parking Phone 992 -7.!79 .
3-7-0t c
flowers , home nealth nur
12 31 -tfc
ses, employees of Jay Mar ~---------~--Coal Co . to t he Middleport
ENJOY grac1ous l ivi ng at Emerg e n c y
Squad,
Village Manor - in Mid ·
Rawl ing s Coats Funeral
dleporl for as low as $130
Home, the pallbearers. the
per
mont.h
wilh
al l MANURE
loader ,
$175 .
Rev . Jack Perry for his
utilit ies
pa1d .
The se
consoling words and to
Phone (6 14 ) 318 -0311 after 6
are bra nd new hl9 h qua.lity
eveyon e that nelped in any
apa rtm ents at prices you
way , in the loss of our .d e.ar
l ·5·61C
ca n afford , Your rent in · --~-----------· nusband. and father, Jrm
"' e lude s month to month HAY for sale . Phone 992 ·7306.
Lam bert'
leases . all el ec l i\l ing ,
Wife and Family
· 3-5-121p
carpeting,
range
and
3-11 -ltp
ret r 1gera to r. fre e tra s h
LOSE we ig h t with Ne w Shape
pickup , cable TV at your
Tabl e ts and Hydre)( Water
e xpense ,
and
on -site •
Pills at Dullon Drug in
laundry fa ci l ities . Con Midd l eport and Ne lson
venienl to sho ppm g on Third
Drug s .
2 YEAR ma le hound , wh il e
a nd Mill Str eets in Mid ·
3 9-31p
with liver speckling . Found
dleport . See the manage'r at
in Minersville, Ohio area
Ri\lerside Apartments or HAY for sale , JO e per bale .
caug ht in stee l jaw trap . Ha s
c all 992 3273
F urn iShed
Ca ll after 4 p m . 992 7015.
wide black collar With bra ss
apartmenl5
ar e
also
3·9 31p
studding and spikes . ow.ner
available .
may claim by P.ay ing for ad
2 2 78tc MIX ED hay , call 997 -2877
and veterinary fee . Cal l ------....--~----aft e r 7 p m
MASON
CO .
Hu mane
3 9-31c
Soc 1ety , (304 ) 675 -1059 or
675 -4515
197 5 20 F T CH AMPION motor
3 4·61p STRAW , 7Sc bal e, two row
hom e, power stee ring ,
cu tt 1va tors fits Massey
power brake s, till steering
Harri s &lt;14, $50 Phone (0,4 )
wh eel, roof air . 2,400 mil es.
.,85 3581.
' '
sleeps 8 Phone 992 3153
3-11 ·41p
LOST in v lnclnty of Tanner 's
3 9-61 C
Run, black and white ARE YOUR planning cabinet s
spo tted coon hound pup .
VER 77 L PTO . HYD 2
in your home'? We hav e a OLI
Phone 247 ·2280
row cu lti \lato r , r eady to go .
limited
supply
of
new
Phone (614) 9B 5·41J l or 9.:19 3-11 ·6fP
wood'en cabinet doors and
2473 after 6 p m
drawer fronts availab le at a
3 9-3tc
LO ST in Rutland a re a , Ger ,
reasonab le price . Some WHh
. man Sheph erd black, gray
g la ss inserts Some so lid , all 20 F T . SELF CONTAI NED
and tan. nam e ''S il ver ."
top Quality , Can be seen at
camping trailer wilh ext r as
Reward off ered Contact c
Kingsbury Mob1 le Hom e
Excellent condition . Phone
T . Jewett , Rt . I, Middleport ,
Sales , 1100 E . Main St. ,
(3041 773 58 76.
or c a ll 742 -2135.
Pom eroy , Ohio or call 992 3 9 -8tc
7034 .
J . J1 Si c
MIXE D hay , phone 997 3709.
BLACK and while Oa lmill10n
) .9. 31c
dog, spotted, answers to tne OL D FA SHIONED ba t htub .
name of . "Dice ." Reward .
Phone 992.7030 .
19 74 FO RO F250 Rang e r ,
Phone 992 3792 .
J . J 1 3tc
19 ,000 mi les ; 1973 10ft . cab
3 9-6tp
over c amper. lik e n e w
---~----·-----­
HA·
Y
.
never
been
wet.
Phone
Magic Ch ef E lec rang e,
.
(6 14) 378 ·6205 afler 6 p. m .
Co leman oil furnace w1th
3-11 1'21p
tank for mob i le hom e
Phon e (014 ) 698 -7255
SY
LVANIA
Co
lored
TV
Set.
OLD furJlll ur e , ic e boxes .
3 9 Jlp
brass
beds, old
wal l
$85 . Phone 992 -7'262 .
telep hon es and pa rt s, or
23 -tJ .J tc
MODERN Walnut Consol e,
c ompl e te .households Wr1t e
Am Fm Radio , d s pe e d
M . D . Miller . Rt.
2, . FOR SALE . 1h · ton 1965 In ·
changer . Balanc e $102 10 o r
Pom e roy. Ohio Ca II 992
ternational Tru c k . 36.000
t'erms . Call 992 3965
7760 .
miles . sooo. Phone (6141 985
3 10 I tc
4212 .
10-7.74
3· 11 -4tp
':ASH paid for all makes and
HE AVY duty home buiit
models of mobile home s .
tand e m a~ele tr a11er Bed 10
Phone ar ea code 614 423
It long Phone 949-24-tlil .
WE
INSTALL!
9531 .
3 10 3tc
-·--- -------~~~ fc
1'.':; 1,.
hay ·-,~- -s-~le .
Ca ll 992 ·3658.
TIMBER . lop pric e to r
CO-OP
3-5· 121c
s tandi ng timber . Call {61.:1)
__ Automatic Wate•
446 -8570.
FISHING SIN KERS made by
Conditioner
3 7.tfc
mold , 1;, oz . through 2. 1,h oz .
Model UCXXX,
5 TO 20 ACRES w1th or
Very reasonable Phone 992 ·
BUY
110.000
5829
withou t house . Phone 997 .
NOW
Weekly Grain
J .3 . t 2t p
5::15 2 or 9n -2496 .
AND
Capacity
3-9 61C
SAVE
ctiA L FOR. ~A-LE . [A e Coa t
SMA LL~;;;;;,-;~~i;.; ~as
Company , 1 mil e north of
cnc s h lre . on Rt 7. Pick your
cooking range w ith oven .
own , S20 per ton Open 6 days
Pnone 99'2 .5766 or 997 · 2529 .
per w ee k, or ca ll (614 ) 367 .
3-9·6tc
--------------7330 for further informal ion .

PISCES (feb. 20·Mirth 20)
Be on your toes regarding your

For Sale

lost

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

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

Wanted To Buy

~~

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

bd R~ :~~~Val

·POMERO.Y LANDMARk
• • - Jock
Carsey, Mgr .
-'ill Phone 992-2111

w.

--------....-----....-

G~ILL

----and kitchen

-~---

®::: ~ .~~'"'" . . . . .
.~;;:-~~·
VI

border
3640.

coiHe .

Phone 992 ·

3-11 .6tp
•
March 12, 1t76
- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - .
Minia t ure
female
· AKC
Qeing eon9truct l ve an d
Schnauzer .
housebroken .
productive
in
your
Phone 742 .'2050 .
relationships can be eKtremety
31c
- ----· _...._ ____ -3·10·
.---advantageous to you this comIng year. Your good works Will CH IHUAH UAS for sale . ~
femal es , Phone 91i12 2265 ,
go unappreciated or unJ.1.6tp
rewar~ed.

not

' .,7-

r

--~~

l

1 8 78tc

Sa lesperson or Agenl Wanted
TEXA S OIL COMPANY needs
d ependable person M -F who
can work w 1tnout super 1 FORD trac tor , model 2000.
v1sion in MeiQs County area
like new One sorrel gelding
Contact customers . Age
riding horse , gen tle. 6 years
unimportant , bu t maturity
ol~ , Arno ld Grate , Rulll!nd ,
is We tra in . Writ e J . G.
Onio Phone 742 ·22&lt;11 or 742Dick, Pres .. Soutl1western
2240 evenings
Pe tY o leum . Ft Wo rt h , Tx ..
3 5-6tc
E .O . E .
, 1 o . o~t c
3
QUARTER horse w ith saddle
-----------;---Gehtle
Beautiful animal
SOMEONE to serv1ce an ·
$300. Phone 161 41 318 -6311
established msurance sales
after 6 p .m
·
route in the Middleport .
3-5·61C
Cheshire area . very good ------- - ---~-wages. all fringe benefitS,
· an outstand ing opportunity WHITE Leghorns , 75c eacil ,
good layers . Phone 949 ·2043 .
for someone with. a little
3·5-6tc
ambition and a se lf -worker
All inquiries confident ial
Write P . 0 . Bo x 672 ,
Pomeroy , Ohio 45169
:J . 7. 7t c

COOK
c ook
Apply in person
work or career . Good th ings
Crow's
Steak
Hou se ,
·can happen unexpe c ted ly
Pomeroy , OhiQ
You'll want to be able to lake _ - - - - - - - - - - - 3-5
- -6tc

~~· r.

c;oo-o- cWaiiiY

1

.........

_

UNFINI S H-tlJ . furni t ure ·
night stand, full size bed
w1th mattress and bOIC
springs
nine
draw er
dre sser Sell 2 wingback
chair s with ottoman . Sell
separat e or together . Phone
992· 3317 .
3-4·71p
COAL , l imestone and all types
of salt and rock sail for ice
and snow r e mo\lal . Ex .
celsior Salt WorkS. East
Main St ., Pom eroy , Ohio .
Phon e 992-3891
12 7·1fC
1971 YAMAHA 650 Springer.
front
and
tube. fully
chopped. Cal l after 5 p . ni
992 ·59 14
3-7·6t c

FRIDAY'S GUESJ
ON

KALEIDOSCOPE
IS

DR. ROBERJ. HARTJE
Author of ,., Bicentennial U.S.A."
Tune In at 10:15 A.'!'•

ON

WMPO

F ina nclnt Available
Blown inlo Walls &amp; Atl ics
STORM
WINOOWS &amp; DOORS

1968 CHEVY An w ith 1970
molor , 6 c y l . c arpeted ,
pane led , stereo tape de c k
FM rad io , mag wheels, in
good condit ion . $1 ,300
Ph one lil92 J710 .

REPLACEMENT

WINDOWS
.

ALUMINUM

StDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNlNGS

LARRY
LAVENDER
Svracuse. Ohio

1973 DODGE Polara Custom,
fu lly equipped , good shape,
S2.000 Phone 99 2-7797.
3-9· 3tp

For Sale

1974 TSI.B5 S UZUK I A · l
cond illon , 1,100 mites . Call
742 2143 after 5 p .m .
3·8 9t o;
ANTIQUE nome com fort
cookstove . Also qu ick meal
bottled gas and wood or coal
co mb ination stove Good
condition
Phone 9&lt;19 2770 .
3-10 6tc
SEAR S' Craftsman 10 inch
radial arm saw. comp le te
wi th s tand , ligh! and, ad
jUs tabte , dado blade . Phone
9.:!9-2449 .•
3. 1Q.3tc
1974 SUZUKI T .S 185 eKira
h ead , lUg , carburetor and
exhau st pip e, 167 miles good
buy . Phone 9&lt;19 2449 .
3 lO .Jt c
GOOD t1ay, n ever wet . Ph one
949 257 3.
3 10 12tc
8 TRACK s te r eo com ponent
se t, good co nditio n Phone
84 2 7050.
3 10-3tc
LADY 'S Bcnr us watcn , ~6 ;
MODEL
43 0
Polaroid
c am e ra , S70; w ire less ln ·
ler corp S20 , Man ' s pocket
wat c h, needs repa1r, $15 ; F
M co nverted for car , $15 .
Phon e 997 7551.
3-10 -3tc

Real Estate For Sale

R&amp;J. COINS

4 AC RES , 2 b edrm mobi le
home . room added, land
scaped, appliance s, car
pe1ing , ', n e w barn , out
bu ildin gs .
tru1t
trees ,
AleK ander Twp ., 7 miles
s outn of A1 hens . $12.000
Phone (614 I 592 424 5.
3 7 7t c
..,....,....,
_...

____ _

MODERN home in Ches ter , 8
rooms . 2 bath s, 1 porches .
sun porch , 1 'J basement , c ity
and w elt wa te r , natural gas,
garag e
Pr iced to sell
Phone (6 14) lil8 5·4102
2 4.1fc
QEDRM . home ,
lust
finish ed , r emode l1n_g , Salem
St , Rutland . Phone 742· 2306
af te r 4 p .m . or see Milo B.
Hut chison .
9-23 -tfc

Rull1nd 742:-2331
Roger Wam1ley
3-1-1 mo .

J

BR HO~E . tus f finished
remodel ing , Sa lem St ..
Rutland . Pl'1one 742 ·2306
aft e r 4 p m . or see Milo B
Hut c hinson .
10 ·9-lfc

HOME for sale by private
owner,
31 ~
a c res .
&lt;1
bedroom s. barn on blacktop
ro ad . gas and water . Phone
949 -2023 .
3 1. 26fp
-~-----------

' GOoo

NOW HOLD 0.,, SUH!
YOU 1!-XPE-C.T US '!"0
• &amp;ELIE-VE THAT GU .. K.
C:OUL D ti~I.,G A
MUMMY I!&gt;AC:K.

'-.h. U9·2023 or 142· 2467

TO LIFE&lt;'!'

WAS!-&lt;
AND!

I&lt;NOW
WHAT WE-

MAVI'&gt;E lT WASN 'T •A"VE: I'&gt;Uf
THAT MUMMY WAf, CI!IZTAINLY
TWITCHI.,&lt;S WITH 610· ELEC'T"~IC

BULK WATER
AVAILABLE
Tuppers Plains -Chester
Water District now sett ing
bulk water to tanks on
trucks a t our new office!
Located on St . Rt . 1
1 Mile Nor th of
Eastern H l~h School
Serve Yourself Dispenser
Taking q uarters only , one
at a ti m e. for 250 gallons ol
water .
Open all the Time
tor your convenience!
3-1-lmo .

4 A 10 8 2

CARPETING.

t A Q 10 4
ofoJ94
WEST !DI
EAST

Free estimates on car
peting and inolallollon ,
We ' ll bring sarftples to you
home with no obligation
,See how you can realh
save .
Mike Young , Manager
Sales and Jnstallltion
Rt. 3, Pomeroy , Ohio 457"
Phone day or night
614.J191·1106
I 14 · 1 rtio .

4KQJ64

U()KN~R

o!oK

SIVOW 1 L.fi~IIE'
CVT THJ; BlD

-::::~ PU~ISH '00 IF '/QJ

2 - 11 · 11~

-WILL
-· -----------TRIM or cut trees and

shrubbery . Phone 949 7545
or 747 3167 .
1 27 -'26tc

-----------~---;:--

4!

.,

\)J()Il.()'&gt; ~

COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST- Whal? ... S
bedrooms , lovely kitchen with all buill ins, dining room
with sliding glass doors opening to a hugh deck , famll.y
room. lower level patio, central air. total electric.
intercom system; some finishing work required on
first floor . Where? .. . Riggscrest Manor near Tuppers
Plains. One of the finest homes In the area at a
reasonable price. Call for appointment.
BICENTENNIAL SPECIAL 560 N. Second St.,
M iddleport . Sit on the large front porch and watch the
world go by ; step Inside the large foyer arid teel lhe
spaciousness of this thick walled ·brick hom01 open
stairway ; large living room w1n1 a fireplace; "huge
formal dining room ; big kllchen. Upslalrs Is 4
bedrooms with a sun "porch. Plenty of room for real ·
living ala price you can atford, ... Just $29,500. You w,lll
have a home with presllge.
'
POMEROY- High view ... low price, check this 3
bedroom home with large dining room; living room
with fireplace ; kitchen and bath, nat. gas, furniture
goes too ... one • low price $7500.00.

diamonds.
~'inally, Arthur cashed dum·
my"s high diamonds and led
that heart. East took his king,
, but Arthur's queen was his
12th trick.

North-South vulnerable

West

From "the largest TrUCtc; o·r ,
Bulldozer"'"Radiator ro , thE
smallest Heater Core .

Nortl1 East

Sout ..

1•

Pass

Pass

2t
Pass

3ofo
5•

3ofo
Pass

2ofo
4ofo

Pass

~~~~

Pass

A California reader wants to
know the youngest and oldest
players to win the McKenney
trophy.
Oswald Jacoby's fourth and
lasl win occurred in 1962 at
the age of 61. Barry Crane's
first win occurred in 1962 at
the age or 24 or \hereabouts.
Paul Soloway and Peter Rank
each won it at age Tl.

Opening lead- K •

••

Nalhan Bigg1
Rldialor Speciatisl
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

.SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

OM,

Yesterday's hand is
repeated today . Playing in
five clubs, Arthur Robinson ol
o&lt;o-111At's
Philadelphia was able to mark
JUST ~l SAM- West with the king of clubs
I'M ""' OA!Itl
HAPI'Y 1 FE~ because his opening lead of
LIK£ BAWUM- the spade king marked East
(Do you have a quesfion
""..-;:;~ with either the ace or king of lor lhe experts? Write "Ask
' \4)/1.&lt;1'/.;;
hearts . So Arthur dropped the · ' lhe Jacobys"' care ol this
singleton king and was sure to newspaper. The Jacobys will

. . ---"&lt;

LOOK! MV 111111101

AHD MY TIIAIH THAT

RUiiS ·· AHD IT'S
tiOT A WMI9TU!:- N-ID
-.y P\TCHE._, l!tOOIIS
MD·-

make his game contract.
However , the game was
duplicate and Arthur proceed-

ed to make six. The play is
Worthy of note .
At trick three he led a club
lo dummy. then he rulfed a

--~~---,......__

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

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
DOWN
1 Cherished ;
1 Naive
close
person
,
6 Orson of
Z Glad eye
comedy
3 Fly
10 Greek
4 Whale
marketplace 5 Succeed
11 Scan dina( 2 wds. J
vian
6 '"Why Was
1Z German
I-'"
mountain
7 Before
region
8 Dolt
(2 wds. )
9 Aerialist's
14 Suffix lor
safeguard
mountain
11 One of the
15 Merit
Poles
16 Scot's
13 Encounter
ancestor
16 Languish
17 Conswne
17 Smirk
by lire
18 Secondhand
20 Capital of ·19 Dress
Yukon
size
Territory
20 Artlllce
23 Symbol of
Great
Britain
24 Bearing
25 Illinois city
(2 Wds.)
29 Pulpit

a

No,Chip'
Your sister
is ver4
pick4!

tOOill

she
likes,
Slim"

.

monastery

the-''
22 Gen.

33 Clarinet

Bradley
part
23 Dieter's
34 Singer
loss (abbr.)
Williams
26 Foolish
35 Credibility 21 Evening,
3&amp; Caddoan
in Rome
Indian
28 Account
37 Epoch
book
38 Gordon
31 Move about
Mac-

$4295
r~;~~~::::::=;:~~~~~==
::

.~~~~=:.~.:=,.:~"6jlif,Mi,~;~~~;~~::;;_-~------ ----·r""""o""•~

5

llliT WHAT MAKES
yOI.J "THINK MY
DEf;IONS tm&gt;&lt;ND
A CHANa: OF

~lNG
CONCIIDEREDO'

'3595
-USID CAR$1972 Mercury 9 pass. Sta. 52595
1972 OlevJ Impala Custom 52195

BECAUSE

WE

f2 Available

DAILY

CRYPTO(~UOTE- Jlere'•
II

y

how

lo work

it:

A X
D I. 8 A A :ol R
I.ONGFELI.QW

One leller simply stands for anolhcr. In I his sample A is
used for the three L"s. X for I he two O's, etr. Single letters,
apoatrophes. 1he lenglh and formation of the words nre all
hinls. Each day the code letlers are different.
CRYPTOQUDTES

HA~

"THE IN:;! DE

TRI'CK I

9

. TOM RUE - SALE PRICE

Air and wlr.ed for ~.B.
"
TOM RUE SALE PRICE

~.

I

1495

5

•a9s

MANY MORE USED CARS, STOP &amp; LOOK.

PH. 992·2594

Want that FOR , SALE ad t~ read SOLD.
Call Jimmy Deem

See!

Totl,.flue, kay Douglas, ,

G. (Pat) Williamson or Eddlt

'

Fife

"
I

J.

l'

1

.y .j

UK A

YFAUTZ

II

1971 DDclae Coronet Waaan
Air,
TOM RUE SA.LE PRICE .
6 cyl., 2 dr .

U F

I

.

1970 Ford Maverick

6: GO-Sunrise Semesler 10.
6: 15-Farm Report 13.
6 : 20-Biua Ridge Quartet 13.
·
6 :»-Columbus Today A: News 6; Sunrise Semeslw 1.1
Farmtlme 10.
6:..o-oUnce of Prevention 10,
I.:As-Morning R-rt 3.
6:5S....Chuck White R-rts 10; Good Morning, Trl
Stele 13.
7 :GO-Toclay 3,A,15; Good Morning, Amerlca6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Frlonds 10.
7, JO.-Schoolles 10.
8 :GO-Lassle 6; Copt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
8:30-Big Valley 6; Seslma St. 9.
9:GO-Nol For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue A,15; Lucy
Show8; Mlke Douglas10; Morning with D.J. 13. ·
9:»-A .M. 3; One Llle to Live 6i Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
10 : ~elebrlty Sweepstakes 3,A,15; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Right 8,10.
10:31)-High Rollers 3.~.15; Dinah 6.
11: GO-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday ~~ Gambit ·
8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13.
11: :111;-:-Hollvwood SQuares 3,4,15; Happy Days13; L~
of: tllo 8,10; Sesame St. 20.33.
11:55-Take. Ktrr 8; Den lmel's World 10.
.12:GO-Matlfllflcent Marble Machine 3.15; Let's Ma""
.A DNI13;Bob Braun's 50-50 Club .15; Hews 6,1,10.
12:311-Tako My Advice 3,15i All My Chlldr'tn 6,131
Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
12: A5-Eiec. Co. 33.
12: 55-NBC News 3,15,
I :GO-News 3; ~yon's Hope 6.13; Phil Donllhua 8:
Young &amp; tho Restlass 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1 :30-0ays of Our Llves3,~,15; Rhyme &amp; Reasan ,,13;
As the World Turns 8,10.
2: GO-S20.ooo Pyramid 6,13.
2:31)-Doctors 3,4,15; Neighbors 6,13; Guiding Light
8,10.
3: GO-Another World J,A,15; General Hospital 6,13; All
In the Family 6.,10; Block Journal 20.
3:30-0nellfetoLive13; MlckoyMouseCiub6; ~f"h ·
Game 1,10; Black .PErspactlvo on tile Naws _.
· A: OO-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin ~~ Bewltchacl 6;
Somerset 15; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rog1r1
20,33; Movie "Forty Guns" 10; Dinah 13.
:
~ : 311-Bewllched 3; ~ Sq
6r Partridge Family 1;.
Sesame S. 20,33; Fllnlst
15.
5:GO-Bonanza 3; Family Affair · Star Trek 15.
s:»-Adllm-12 A,13; News 6; Be
ly .Hillbllll" 8;
Elec. Co'. 20,33,
6:GO-News 3,~,8,1G.13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 :»-NBC News3,A,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
.terroscolendas 33.
J,
7:GO-Trulh or Cons. 3; fa Tellthe Truth AI Lewrwnc:e ·
Welk 8; Bowling for Dollors 6; Aviation Wuthtr
33; News 10; Don Adams Screen Test 13; "Ftt11.1lv ·
Affair 15; Ohio Journal 20.
.
7:311-Porter 'W agoner 3; TrNsure Hunt ~~ Candid
Camera 6; Evening Edltlon with Martin Agronsky ·
20: $25,000 Pyramid 10; To Tel.l .the Truth 13; Plf:.
Goes the Country 15; Bleck Perspective on
News 33.
8: oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,A,15; Donny &amp; Marie 6,13; Sara
8,100; Washington Week In Rovlew .20,33.
8: 311-The Practice 3,4,15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:GO-Rockford Fllos 3,A,15:; Movie "The Nept\111a
Disaster" 6,13; GE Theater 8,10; Firing Line 20;
Maslerplece Theatre 33.
10:GO-Pollco Story 3,4,15; News 20; Educetlqnll
lmpllcatlons 33.
10:311-Avletlon Weather 20.
11 :GO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :31)-JohMy Carson 3,A,I5; Rookl . . 6,13; Movie "The
Glass Bottom Boel" 8; Movie "The Abominable
Snowmen" 10; Janakl 33.
12: 40-Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 6; Ironside 13.
1: GO-Frlends 3,A,15; Movie "Blood Rose" 10.
1:-News 13.
2:30-Nows 3; Movie "Kiu of Evil"~ 3:GO-Movle 'Eye of tha Cat" 3.
4:15-Movle "Prlvale Buckaroo" 3.
A: JI)-Movle "The Chalk Garden" A.
6:00-Movle "Tho Old-Fashioned Way" 3 .

41 Bartlett -

1974
Plymouth Satellite
pass. waQ. air.

TOM RUE SALE PRICE

FRIDAY, MARCH 12.1976

nest

Air , Sherwood Gr~~·. ll~e. new.
TOM RUE SALE PRICE

.Air, 2 dr., ·H.T.

9 :oo-Movle "Farewell to Manzaner" 3,4,15; Straato.
of San Francisco 6,13; Hewell Five.() I; Holl,_
Television Theatre 33; Movlt "CountdCJwn" 10.
9 :311-Toll Shlpo are coming 20.
IO:oo-Horry ·o 6,13; Barnaby Jones 8; News 20.
10:31)-Roalldades 33.
.11 ;GO-News 6.8. 10,13; ABC Nowo 33.
11: io-Nows 3,4,15.
11:311-Mannl• 6,13; Movie "Hot Millions" I ; Movie
"Crosscurrent" 10; Janekl 33 .
11:40-Johnny Carson 3. ~.15.
12:40-Maglclan 6,13.
1: ID-Tomorrow J.A.
1 :5?-News 13.

'Ill Uke some
seals

4195
1975 auysler Custom 4 dr.
$4195
TOM RUE SALE PRICE

32 Japanese

21 "'Now Is

talk

FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS I
1975 G11n fUIJ Custom 4 dr. ·.

1975
Dodge Dart SE
Air .

Veslerday's Answer .

(abbr.)
30 -&lt;lo-well
31 Carnelian
gem
32 Musical
syllable
,__--~ 35 Mecca for
elopers
(2 wds.)
C: 31 Eagle's

TOM RUE
MOTORS

While with white vinyl roof, loaded
and sharp, new car warranty.
TOM RUE SALE PRICE

answer indiv;dual questions
il stamped, sell-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
most int!3resting questions
will be used in th1s column
and will receive copoes ol
JACOBY MODERN.)

61ew•~w ·
"niitt MV 1"1&lt;\I!NDS, WI&gt;JS ONE
OF~ BIG,Ol! FLYIN'
LI:ZA.RI:&gt;e 'IOU 'Il!:. LOOI&lt;.IN' !'OR·1

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

••
•••

so urn

• 75 3
ofo63

• Q97
tJ2
o!oAQI087S2

. ~EXCAV A TING . dozer, loao.:-o
and backhoe work ; septic
tan~s
Installed ; dump
truck~ and to-boys tor hirE! ;
will haul fill d irt. top soil,
lime stone and gravel. Call
Bob or Roger Jeffer s. day
Phone 992 -7089 , n ight phone
99 7-352 5 or 99 2-5232 .

• 973
•K 10652

.AJ 3
.t K 9 8 6

I lOlO '(X) f».Wi \1.0U!,DN'T

.

spade , led the jack or
diamonds covere&lt;l by king and
ace, rufled another spade and
ran off all his trumps to leave
himself with one diamond and
three hearts.
West had to throw his ace of
hearts to hold three diamonds
and the spade queen . Now
Arthur discarded dummy's
las! spade to leave it with
three diamonds and a heart.
East was down to hearts and

11

.14

TEAF.ORO ·

56000.00 - DON' T FLIP OUT
(This is the right price .. .for this modern two bedroom
hotT!e . In the coun try near Bashan. City water and
natural gas . Even a garden .
Ca II for appointment

.

~

NORm

Real Estate For Sale

'0 ACRES VACANT LAND - you would know spring Is
tmre when you see this wide green valley with a brook
runnmg through • i t ; just perfect for a large lak e;
wooded hillside ju st crying for a cabiO . .'.' Here's
scenery and seclusion ... at less than $300 per acre .
CALL QUICK.
.

.

33.

WIN AT BRIDGE
.
'
Great play pulls six clubs

E-NERGY!

SAW!

2·1'11'-1 mo .

HOUSE and tot , good c BRADF.ORD . Auctioneer
Complete Service . Phont.
back
yard , Ideal
for
949 · 2487 or 949 --2000 . Racine .
cl'11 1dren Mr . and Mrs .
Pomeroy
Ph. "2 -2174
Oh io . Crill Bradford .
George W . Kauff , call 99 2
7227 or come and see it at 724
10 ·9-Hc ,
Condor Sf , Pomeroy , Ohio
RE·MOOELING ,
Plumbing_,
J -l\ -3t c WILL do odd job S. roofing,
healing
and
all
types df
paint ing , haul ing , treework
genera!
repair .
Work
and mow ing . Call 992-7&lt;109.
guaranteed . 20 years el( .
HOME t or sate , sp&amp;C IOUS
J -2·26tc
per ience
Phone 992 -2409 .
li ving room . dining room , 7
6 ·1-lfc
bedroom s, large k1tche.n . RE:D DOG , l imestone , gravel
family, room and new bath .
and till dirt de livere d .
dozer ,
Phone 992 -7394 .
Phone Bill Pullin s , 99'2 ·2478 . EXCAVATING .
backhoe
and
dllcher .
3· 10 -41 C
1 11i1 ·26tc
Charfes R HaTfi eld Back
-·----- - ---"- --'---Hoe Ser&gt;Jic e . Rutland , Ohio .
APPROX 10 ac res with very
LUCKETT Farm Equipment,
Phone' 7&lt;12 2008
ni ce building lot on Co . Rd
West
Washington
St.
11 30 -78t c
Jl . Chester water district.
Albany . Phon e (0 14.l 698 3032
b ea ut i fu l 1ocat 1on . Phon e
or 698 .7881.
0 &amp; D TREE Tr immi ng , 20
949-2770
2 18 26tc
years experiwn ce . Insured ,
~- -----~-~----· tree estimates . Call 992 ·2384 .
.
or (614} 698 -7'251 Alba ny .
, IO. I5·tfC
BUILDING , Main 51. in ----- - -- - - --+---R~J t l and , see or call T , O ,
SEW ING MA CH IN E Repairs ,'
Ste wart , Rutland , OhiO ,
se rvic e . all make s . 992 ·2284 .
Virgil B .. Sr., Broker
pnone 742 2d2 1.
The Fabr ic Shop , Pomeroy .
IIOMechanlc Po,.eroy. 0.
Authorized Singer Sales and
.
PIIOM 992-JDS
Se rvi ce .
We
sharpen
Scissor s .
ESTATE - 8 rms. , ll/2
3·19·tf c
baths, 4 B. R .S., 2 livings ,
gas fireplace, hot water
O'DELL Alinement loca t&amp;d
beh1nd
Rutland
Grade
heat. and garage 'on
Sc hool . Tuneup , brakes.
Mu lberry Ave. 520 ,000 .
wheel balancing , alinement .
RUTLAND - Near school,
Phone 742 -2004 .
6 rms , bath , new Nat gas
11 -16 -ttc
..... •
furnace. 3 Brs ., and n ice
EXCAVATI NG . BA(K HOE S
lot. $12 ,500 .
AND DOZER . LARGE AND
NEW LISTING - Brand
SMALl , SEPliC TANKS
new 3 BRS., 2 cerami c
FARM - 30 clean acres. 3
IN S TALLED .
BILL
baths , large kit ., dining ,
PlJLLINS . PHONE 992 ·1478 , .
BR home (no bath) barn &amp;
DAY OR NIGHT .
utility , and carpo r t. 1 ac re .
lots of buildings . Close to
2 22 -52tp
$30 ,000.
mines . Sl7,500 .
.
RUTLAND - 2 BR. bath.
READY MIX CON':. ~" c:Tt::"
UNION AVE. - 8 rm s .. 5
din ing R ., wash R .. 9arage,
delivered righ l to your
Brs., 2 baths, gas . F .A. .
project F'ast and easy . Free
close to schooL $8 ,500.
t urna ce , garage, patio and
e51ima!es . Phone ~92 378"';
BRICK-Live in the nice 4
117 acre . 518,500 .
Goeglein Ready Mi~ · .JCO.,'
BR oapartment. rent the 2
DREAM HOME - J Brs.,
Middleport , Ohio .
'
furni shed apts. for Income.
'
6·30 tfcI'
1112 baths, a co mpletely
______
Excellent
neighborhood .
mod ., kit., hot water heat.
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
sn.ooo.
covered patio , 2 car
- Sweepers. , toasters , Irons ,
POMEROY
2
SR.
garage, and J lots. Very
all small appl iances . Lawn
BATH, N. gas heat. garden
ni ce at $46,900 .
mower , n eiC.I to Sta te H lliJh ·
plot.
porches
,
Just
$4,500
.
way Garage on Rou te 7.'
NEW LISTING- Business
Phone t8 5 3825.
'
WALKTOSHOP - Large2
building with 2 bedroom
d-16 -tfc'
story frdme, 4 BR , l'h
apa rtment
over ,
in
- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - l
baths . new kitctlen, full
Rutland . Askong 513,500.
SE PTI C TAN KS c lea ned •
basement
,
coa~
or
gas
heat.
10 Percent down FHA on
Modern Sanitation . 992 -3954
$8 ,500.
or 992 ·7349.
the above homes VA
991-225' or 992-2568
9-18·ffc
nothing down .
HAVE BUYER FOR 100
ACRES OF LAND
•

SCENIC COUNTRY HOME- Well cared lor home In
the country containln9 2 bedrooms, living room,
kitchen, s mall dining room, bath , nice sun porch. Also
cellar and celler house, 2 garages and barn , .. Thats
not all .
37 acres goes with H . .. all over looking the
beautiful Ohio River . BeHer call quick ,,, Only
Sl5,000.

T

-·

I

: cAPrAIN EA.'IV

I

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

949-2388

From 1 shell to altouse, Ill
types of building 1ne1
remodellnt
trom
tttt
· · foundation up. Additions,
cupttlne, palnt1n1. stdlng,
rooling, paneJinf', p1per
hangint etc. , ..

-- ----

7 RO OM house-with bath , good
loca tio n Full basement , 391
Sou th Second , Middleport
Phon e 992 276 5
3 7 12tp

3

5 :GO-Bonanza 3; Family Alfalr 8; Ster Trek 15.
5 :3G-Adllm· l2 A; News 6; Beverly Hlllblllltl 8;
Eloctrlc Company 20,33; Adllm-12 13.
6 :GO-Ntws 3,4.1,10,13.15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; lTV
UTilization 33 .
6 :3D-NBC Nows3,A,15; ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS NtwsS,10; Hodgepodge Lodge20; Lilias, Yoga.
and You 33.
7:oo-Truth or Consequencu 3; To Tell The Trulh A;.
Bowling for Dollars 6; Space: 1999 8; News 10;
Let's Make A O.al13; FomllyAifelr 15; Anyone for
Tonnyson? 20; Family at War 33 .

CONSTRUCilON

4-IO -l mo

1

_____

Find buried treasure .
Coins, rings, silver. gold .
Coin &amp; Metal
Detectors
For Rent
or
For S1le

7: 31)-Hollywoocl Squor" 3,A; Ohio State ~ 6;
Evening Edition wlth Morfin Agronlky 20; Wild .
Kingdom 10; To Tell lhe Truth 13; Mutlc City
U.S.A, 15.
8 :GO-Special Treat.3.4,15; Welcome Beck, KoHw 6,13:
Waltono8.10; Play of lha Month 20; The Way l t 33 .
1 :311-Borney Mlllor6,13; Lowell Thomas Rtmembatl

THURSDAY, MARCH 11, lt76

DID

COINS

Ph . 992 -3993

-------------1972 CHEVY Cheyenne 1 l0n ,
Real Estate For Sale
mirrors , v . o, carpe t. fa ctory
g aug es, ps , d isc Brakes.
au tomatic , topp er , e;occellent
condition , $'2.695 Call 9927170 or 992 -5876 .
3-7-0ip

'.

BUY , SELL or TRADE

Ph . (614) 'l85·4102
2- 12-1 mo.

----------:-~

Rut land Pho ne 992 -5858 .

--~-

BISSELL BUILDERS

I nsu Ia ti o~t-Services

--------------3 BEDRM house wil!'l bath in

Help Wanted

Take odvontoge ol our
prices .
Quality
built
homes. Nice lah available
in nice locations.

FREE, ESTiMATES
'"Blown·

Found

AstroGrapM

$28'5

2 BEDRM . t ra iler. I m tle from
Harr ison\lille on New Lim a
Road . PhOn e 742 · 2997 .
J . \0 4t c

For Sale

AnENTIOI

SAVE MONEY?

13295
1973 MONTE CARLO
Auto ., PS , PB, 8 cyl, radio, w -s t lres, black -white vinyl
roof.

3 ROOM furnished house w ith
bath . Adults on ly. Phone
992 -5535 .
3 10-tt c

Television log for easy viewing

~~~~====~==~~~
WANT TO

S24'5

-----...----------

GET

Business Services

w.s t ires, low

1'73 CHEVY VAN

-------------For

Auto Sales

-

GQH

~~~~~~~rcS;HMUrxi:.. ~W;E~'V~E~~:;~~~A~N~'~~~E~A~Rss~A~Nt'~~BEA~R~S~~~Jl
HAD. MATCHIN' t--c.,
BEDSPREADS
AN' CURTAINS
FER '4EARS ·-

X P ,D A
EIB

FG

E
UKA

GE 0 U

PD

WFDU

GEJHAD . - TEHYK

UTQA

JAEQUPXEHBF

AWATDFI
Yeolerday's Cryptoqaote: BUT IT MA ITERS MORE WHAT'S
IN A WOMAN'S FACE THAN WHAT'S ON IT.- CLAUDET'I'E .
CoLBERT
(f) 19'71 Kln1 Ftaturn SrftdicaLe, IM. )

AN' '/EARS AN'···

I{Ou

TfWlEO

ME A PI.Al{Eil

'WITH A~
Lf6!!

IROCENEj ·

rx tJ

IPJJWfl~

I K

I ,..,., __ ..,

�.••
•••.•

••
12 - The Pomeroy Sent mel , Moddlepori-Pomeroy 0 •Thursday, March II 1976

Sisk note
(Conlmued from pag• 1)
Cont1nuong ,
lh e
statement released loday
S81d
"D urmg
the
m-

•

Comm1ss1on
president
Whalen summed up Wed
nesday
evening s

Pomt Pleasant
He began h1s career m law
enforcement w1th the c1ty of

as

a

proceedmgs when he sal(l,

Pom t

"We've had qwte a week, the
actoon tomght has fmahzed a
lot of thmgs
It was commissioner
Rardm who made the mot10n
to accept Gaskins as the new
shenff and Adkins, as one of
hts final dulles as a comIJUSSJOner seconded ot
Be£ore Gaskins was sworn
m, the Comm1 ss1on passed
another mohon that they
accept a $75 000 bond by
Gaskms
One of the for st dulles for
the new sheroff was to watch
as clerk Getty followm g the
comm1ss1on meeting swore m
all the shenff 's deput1es
' Pete was a close personal
fnend of mme and we w1ll
contmue every program Pete
started to the f1msh," said
Gaskins He also saod, "We
are gomg to fight the drug
sce ne m th1s county w1th

patrolman '" 1964 rn 1966 he
accepted a pos1hon as a
patrolman rorthe Miramar.
Flor1da Pollee Department
In 1969, he was elevated to the
pos1t1on of sergeant After
passmg h1s exammahon for
heutenantm 1971, he resigned
hos posotlon there and
returned to Pomt Pleasant
where he served as a
sergean t m the Mason County
Shenff's Department under
Shenff Wedge

Plea sant

Mam Store, Home Furnishings Annex
and Mechanic Street Warehouse Open
Friday 9:30a.m. to 8 p.m . and
Saturday from 9:30a .m. to 5 p.m.

WOMEN'S
SPRING
DRESSES

Two years ago, Gaskms

accepted the posi!Jon as Clue!
of Police for Pomt Pleasant
Upon h1s acceptance of the
shenff' s
posthon,
he
separaled h1s dut1es completely from the c1ty
department
Hos w1fe, Jean , 1s employed
at Holzer Medtc:.J f',pn tPr
They have three sons , Russ,
who IS a freshm an at Mar -

shall Umvers1ty , Dave, who
IS a semor at Pomt Pleasant
High School and John who IS
on the nmth grade at Pomt
Pleasant Junwr H1gh

everythmg we've got "
Gaskms, who has been bed

law enforcement for the
past 12 years, resides w1th hos
farmly at 1403 Cedar St ,
to

Area Deaths

demanded to spend the ntght
woth his wife Harriet who
had been tncarcerated and

charged the day before woth

the homicide of the1r Infant
cfilld, Davl Calllne Stsk age
two months
' Alter galn1ng entry to the
cell occup1ed by his wife

Harriet Slsk and whtle of

fleers were attempting to
gain control of the sltuatton
Br uce Sisk detonated a heavy
charQe of dynamite, wh1ch
had been concealed en the
SUitcase at approximately
11

20 PM

The explosion

resulted '" the death of f1ve
(5) perso~s and mturles of

twelve ( 12) The gun used by

Bruce S1sk to fo1ce his way
Into the Jail had been
reported stolen during the

week of Feburary 21

1916

during a Burglary 1n Ma son
County
' Accordmg to statements
from
persons
closely

asspclated wtth Bruce Sisk.

he adm 1 tfed t o ~av1ng
Illegally obtained posses1on
of the dynam lte from a
construction company where
he had prev i ously been

employed dunng the fall of
1975

' Based on the size of the

crater m the lad cell cement
floor and other damage to
the Court House tf was
determ ined that a minimum

of fifteen

(15) pounds of

dynamite was used Based on
the physical evidence found
at the scene. it was ascer
talned that the cllarge was

apparently detonated by an
ele&lt;lnc blastlna cap Ign ited

by the use of a 1ih volt D ce ll

flashlight battery

' Physical evidence further
reveals the shotgun used by

Bruce Sisk to force his way

mto the cell was not fired
' Based on statements of
persons at the scene there
was apparently msufficlent

time to evacuate the jatl after

the
officers
became
suspicious that Bruce Slsk
was poss1bly carrying ex
ploslves m the suitcase
" There was a suicide note

found at the Slsk tratler

The
lnvestigat1on
produced ev idence that In
dlcated Harriet S1sk may
11ave agreed to a suicidal

pa&lt;l that both she and her
t)usband parhclpated In the

had been urgmg hun to stay
on Followmg Adkins' announced restgnahon
nu
motton Was m ade to accept
the resignation
In subm1ttmg hiS letter to
effect that the mfant was
mtssmg or kidnapped In an
attempt to conceal th e tn
fant' s hom1c1de
' During the investigation
md1 cat1ons were found that
Bru ce Slsk had feelings of
antmoslfy and host1llt y
toward law enforcement
off1cers Sisk s labeling of the
offi cers as pigs ' and other
mOf"e obscene htles 1s m
dlcat1ve of this attitude
' Harriet Sisk s voluntary
st~tement was g1ven to the
West V1rg1n ta State Pollee
and the Mason County Shenff
on the Sunday eve nmg
preceding her arrest Th1s
statem ent conftrmed the

autopsy finding s that death of

the Infan t child was due to
mu l tipl e contus ons and
asphy)(lafton by strang
ulatlon
The lnvesf1gatmn further
reveals that by the voluntary
statement gtven by Harnef
Stsk on Sunday, Februar y 29,
1976

to the tnvestlgatlng

ofltcers tndlcated she was
responsible fer the death of
the 1nfant child Fu rther
tnvestlgatton more par
ticularly the post mortem

conducted on the Infant child,

confirmed the fa ct that death
was not attri buted to ac
ctdent, and further report
supported the voluntary
statement of Harr.et Slsk
' The 1nvestlgatwn is not
concluded and wtll continue
as long as there would appear
to be reasonable ground to
conhnue the lnveshgatlon
Numerous people and
organlzaftons listed below
deserve recognition and
appreclatton for the exce llent

Pleasant Valley Hosp otal
Mason Ctty Police Depart
ment New Haven City Pollee

Deportment, Henderson Coty

Poll ee Department

Ohto

State Patrol, GallipoliS,
Gall la County Sheriff's
Department, Gallipolis City
Polt ce
Depa rt ment
Gall1pOI1s, Oh io Pom eroy

City Pollee Department

County Shentf's Office to the

VJrgonla Nat ional Guard

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE
Thurs Mar 11

NOT OPEN
Frt Sun
Mar 12 14
Hearts of the West
(Technicolor)
Starr i ng Jeff Brtdges
Alan Arkm and Andy

Grlttlth
Show starts at 7 00 p m

He rsc hel
Manuel
were
conducted Fr tday at the
Ew1ng
Funeral
Home
Among those from out of
town attending were Mrs
Paul me Monette Mr and
Mrs Ste ve Morlan and
daughters
Oebb1e and
Kathy
Mr s
Charles
Caulk.ns, Mr and M r s
Robert Graham Columbus
Mr and Mrs Dennts Manuel
Troy and Oentse, Manetta
Fred Spencer Mason W
Va
and Mr and Mr s
Russell
Cumm1n s
Chr~sto_p her
Rusty and
Ton 1a Racine

MEMORIAL HELPED
RACINE - Latest contributors to the Walter
Cleland Memonal Fund as
reported
by
Jeanette
Lawrence are Carl Lee, Ross
Cleland, Sammy Yates ,
Isabelle S1mpson, Garret t
Corcle, Apple Grove Umted
Method1st Women , Dorsey
Parsons Cora Beegle and
Sh1rley Beegle m memory of
Joseph Beegle, Walter Burke,
George Theiss , Racme
Amencan Legwn Aunhary
and Helen Pickens
CIGAR REMINDER
mterested m
growmg cogar leaf tombacco
on a one year basts are bemg
remmded to !ole an applicatiOn for a temporary
allotmen t at the Me1gs ASCS
Off1ce, Farmers Bank
BUJldmg , Pomeroy The
deadline for f1hng applicatiOns IS March 15, 1976
Thos progr am 1s ad IJUmstered w1th out regard to
race, color, rehg1on 1 sex or
natiOnal ongm
Farmers

manner of handl ing the

rescue
operattons
and
hospitalization of the In lured
Potnt
Pleasant
Poltce
Department, Entire staff of

burial of the chtld and both

conspired In the giving of a
false report to the Mason

'

members of the comm1ss1on

Pomeroy
Ohto
Kenova
Pollee Department West

Po i nt
Pleasant
Squad ,
Mason

Emergency Squad

Rescue
Ctly

Mason

Ctfy F~re Department New
Haven Emergency Squad
New Haven F1re Depa r t
ment, Potnt Pleasant Fire
Department, Mason County

Civil Defense, Gallla County
Emergency Squad Gall la
County Civil
Defense

Members of

Red

Cress

Mason County Citizens Band
Radio Club. Jackson County
Cttlzens Band Radio Club
W!lco)(en Funeral Home
Stevens Funeral Home, Crow
Hussell Funeral Home,

Jackson countv Civil Defense

P----------------,
Need a dress shoe that's snap-crackling

smart? Footworks has 1t on an easy going
mid-heel. . Properly proportioned for your
easy gotng tastes.

SHINY
BLACK

CAMEL
AND WHITE

"Rt£ SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~--··.-------~----~

SEETON, NOTGOINS
Mrs Fran Seeton, teacher
corps mtern, was word
pronouncer at the spelling
bee at Pomeroy Elementary
School, not Dwight Goms as
was reported Mr Goms woll
be pronouncer at the county
spellmg bee at Salisbury
Elementary School
Wednesday , March 24

MRS SOPHIS THOMAS

CHESHIRE - Mrs Soph1a
Thomas
81
of Rt
2
Chesh1re who d1ed Wed
nesday has four surv 1v mg
sons not three and was born
1n 1895 not 1885 as reported
here yesterda y Sons are
John W1 lltam (Bill) Thomas
Frederick
0
Thomas
Ch ar les A Thomas and
Richard 0 Thomas all of
Ches h~r e

MRS NORA M JOHNSON
RUTLAND - Mr s Nora M

our

RACINE - Reg.stratoon
day for pee wee, little and
pony league players of the
Racme Baseball Assn woll be
beld at the ball diamond
Saturday from 9 to 11 a m
Plans for the registration
were made Monday mght by
the assoc1allon at the
elementary school when Don
Beegle wa s elected v1ce
president Oth er offocers
elected earlier are Libby
Ftsher , president , Jean
Cleland, busmess manager,
and

Karen

Johnson

treasurer
Baseball Coach B1ll Porter
discussed a plan for upda tmg
the present haseball diamond
"I the JUruor hogh school and
addmg a doamond to help
meet schedules for pee wee
httle and pony league games
Without confi1ctrng woth one
another Porter suggested
that two new dugouts be
constructed at the present
diamond along With extens1 ve
repa1rs to the bleachers
Donahons of labor, money or
material
for
planned
unprovements will be more
~ccret.ary

ACCEPTS JOB
Mrs Sylvia Carman of
Rock Sprmgs has accepted
employment at the Syracuse
Nursmg Home, Syracuse

and a number of prtvate
ct t1zens
'In the event that anyone
who assisted m the above was
not mentioned here, It was
done unIntentionally '

Amendment

Ulan welcome, off1cers sa.td,

and anyone w1shmg to donate
should contact Porter to
advise hun ofthelr mtenllons
(Contmued from page 1)
Children must be SIX yearS!
changmg to an origmal cost old by Aug 18 th1s year and
forumula would mean a not over 15 by the same date
reduction m monthly uhlity m order to be ehglble to play
bills
Officers would hke each boy
"However , we do know that planmng to play ball this
11 w1ll stop or considerably season to brmg at least one
slow down the constantly standard size concrete block
mcreaslng rates that we have for the dugout construction
Witnessed m recent monUis," and a reg1strat1on fee of $3
he sa1d
with him to the d1amond thiS
He said he saw htUe hope m Saturday
the Senate-passed utility
Another meetrng of the
reform legoslat1on now before assoc1allon Will be held at 1 p
the Oh1o House He sa1d the m Tuesday at the Racme
legislatiOn as currently Elemetnary School All
wrrtten would "defeat the per!\(&gt;ns mterested in the
whole purpose of utility rate program are mvlted
makmg reform
" Also , It would allow
LOCAL TEMPS
utllltles to use a fair value
The
tem perature
on
formula m proposmg rate downtown Pomeroy at 11 a
changes, which Is just as bad m Thursday was 51 degrees
as the current formula "
under sunny sk1es
'

~~''""='W=.;"';::«·&gt;:&lt;·:.,.:,.,..:,:

Regular Stotk

•Juniors
•Misses
•Half Sizes

h ne
• fS

•

ffi

A meeting of the Yeung
Adult Class of the Bradford
Church of Chr1st w1l l be at
7 JO

pm

Friday at the

church
The
Rutland
Lad1es
Fi remen Aux1l 1ary will mee t
Tuesday March 16 at 7 30
p m at the ftre house All
mem bers are urged to attend
The au)(Jitary will sponsor a
Jitney supper Thursday
March 18 at t he Rutland
Grade School gym Servt ng
Wi ll begin at -4 p m

John son , 89 2580 Holt on
Road Grove Ctty forme r ly
of Rutland d1ed Wednesday
The Racme PTO woll hold a
at Mt Carmel Medical
regul ar meetmg at 7 30 p m
Center m Columbus
She I S surv1ved by a Monday at the Racine
Elementa'J Sc hool The f irst
daughter
Mrs
Earl
(Madel me) Deer tng Grove second an th.rd grade s wil l
present the program and
C1ty th ese sons Alber t Ray
Grove Ctty Ja cob Wtllard of mothers of l ht rd graders wil l
Rutland, and Paul l
of ser:ve re fr eshments
Colu mbus 21 grandchildren
Gr.an t St
l eona Kohl
40 great grandchildren SIX
M tddl eport has lea rn ed of the
great great grand children
and several n1eces and death of Glen Ray Wertz on
Feb 25 as fh p re su lt of a
nephews
Mrs Johnson was preceded mass1v e heart attack A
res1dent of Mentor formerl y
tn death by her husband
of Cleveland Mr Wertz was
Wi nfield and sons Roy
the son tn law of the late Sue
Orv1ll e Joe and De l Johnson
El11s of M ddlepo rt
He
Fnends may cal l at the
Sc hoedlnger Norn s Chapel .frequently visited In Mid
3574 North Bor adway Grove dleport
C1ty lh ts evenmg f rom 7 to 9
RA CI NE - Two run s were
and Fnday fr om 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 Serv1ces wil l be held at made Wednesday bv the
Rac:me E R un 1t at 3 p m to
t he chapel af 10 a m
Route 1 Ractne for Wll l tam
Saturday w tfh t he Rev
James Phil lips offi ciating M orr i s who was Ill He was
taken to Ve teran s Mem onal
Gravestde services and m
Hospttal where he was ad
ferment wt II be held at 1 p m
Saturday at Mtles Cemetery m1tted at 4 40 p m the
squad went t o Route 1
10 Rutland
Portland for Morrts Teaford
who was havtng chest pains
He was taken to Ho lzer
Med1 cal Center

Registration
day set for
Racine area

PRESENTED $100 SCHOLARSIDP- Cheryl Lehew,
nght, daughter of Mr and Mrs Wilham Lehew, Pomeroy,
was presented the annual $100 scholarship by Isabelle
Couch, left, chall'person of Scholarship and Educatwn, on
behall of the American LegiOn Aunhary Umt 39,
Pomeroy It 1s requll'ed that the recipient is the daughter
of a veteran, and the money be used for educational
purposes Cheryl was a member of the Jumor Aux1hary
for several years and IS now a member of the Senior
Au1illary She plans to attend a Licensed Practical
Nursing school Cheryl 1s a semor at Me1gs H1gh School

Selected from

: Local news
I1

PARTRIOOE, Ky (UP!)
- Eleven men, incl~ding
three federal mspectors,
were trapped Thursday mght
by an exploSion at the Scoha
Coal Co m eastern Kenucky
where a methane gas
explosiOn earlier th1s week
killed 15 mmers
The Letcher County, Ky ,
sheriff's office said shortly
after the exploSion that all 11
were beheved to be ahve
However, the oxygen they
had WJth them was good for
only about an hour
Two men who were m the
mine at the tune of the
explosoon managed to escape
unharmed and were under
observahon at a Cumberland
hospital Tbey told offiCials

Special Friday and Saturday Sale

---- -----------------------1

appro)(lmately 10 50 PM ,
Bruce Sisk armed with a
stolen ~wed off shotgun and
carrying a su it case, forced
his way 1nto the Mason
County Jail at gunpoint and

ore miners trappe

Mason County has new sheriff ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

POINT PLEASANT - AI lhe Mason County Com8 30 p m Wednesday Mason miSSIOn Adkins wrote 'It 1s
County got a new shenff woth regret that I fmd ot
when County Clerk L W necessary to tender my
vestigabon ;- mdtcshons were Getty swore tn the £ormer restgnatlon as a Mason
found that Bruce Sisk had Pomt Pleasant Chief of Pollee CoWlty Commi ssioner, but
feelings of ammos1ty and J1m Gaskins to replace the due to oll health 1t cannot be
hoshhly toward law en - late Elvm R !Pete ) Wedge, avmded
forcement ofhcers S1sk ' s wh o doed a little over a week
' Durmg my 11 years
labeling of the offocers as ago man explosoon at the Joll ..serv•ce as a CoWlty Com•'pigs " and other more ob- wh1ch killed four other mJssiOner 1t has been my
scene hUes IS mdacahve of
pleasure to meet and work
persons
tlns attitude "
Several monutes after with some e:xtraordmarlly
Three law enforcement Gasktn s was sworn m, fine people, and because of
officers, Mason Co unty Oarence Adkins, the 68-year- these expenences and the
Sheroff Elvm E Wedg e
old comm tssioner tendered conlldence of my conslltuents
Deputy K W Love and Jaoler h1s res1gnalJ on to that my deciSIOn has been a difErnest R Hesson, are dead governmg body
ficult one "
as a result of the March 2
Getty, who was also vos1bly
Wh1le 1t had been
mcident that followed the rumored for the past couple shaken, was led to say, 'I
arrest of Mrs S1sk on a of months that Adkins would would rather hear a motiOn
charge of murdering her two- resig n due to fal ling health no not
to
accept
th e
month old daughter The one tncludmg commtssJOners res1gnatwn "
S1sks also d1ed m the ex- Mochael Whalen, W1ham
Of the three com
plosiOn
Rardm or Getty, expected mass1oners, Adkms , a
Law enforcement of- him to do so Wednesday Democrat, IS the l onge st
fiCials sa1d the mvesllgatJOn evenmg
servmg He was elected to
has not be concluded
Adkins who was startmg that pos11Jon m 1964
Followmg 1s the complete h1s 12th year on the Mason
Thos mormng Getty, who
news releas e that was Cou n ty
Comm i ss ion was elected as county clerk m
mutually g1ven by primary turned m his resignation not 1960, sa1d • Clarence and I
mvestigahve agenctes and only as a commissioner, but have been fnends for a long
Prosecutor Kmgery at thos also as the commtsston 's lime , thr ough !hock and
mornmg s news conference
representatove on the Ma son fum '
Tl'lls Is a !oint 1n
Coun ty Board of Heal th and
vest1gat1on conduced by the the
Comm umty Achon
following different agenc1es
to wit West Virginia State Counc1l
Pollee
Mason
County
A v1s1bly shaken Adkins
Sheriff's Department, West satd, ''I want to announ ce
i
Virginia Fore Marshal l Off ice
and Bureau of Alcohol , that I m gomg to res1gn "
ApparenUy , up unt1l the I
Tobacco and Firearms of the
U S Treasury Department moment he announced hts
HERSCHEL MANUEL
On March 02 1976, at res1g na1Jon
Funeral
serv 1ces
for
the other

•

•

SPECIAL TWO DAY SALE!

MEN'S SPRING AND
SUMMER WEIGHT

JACKETS
Nylons , po ly es te r and c otton
bl ends and vonyls, a good
selectron of styles and colors for
golf. sports and general wear
Mens $6 95 Jackets
Sale 55.40
Mens$10.95 Jackets ..... SaleS8.60
Mens $11.95 Jackets. ..... Sale 59.40
Mens $16.95 Jackets.... Sale 513.30
Mens $22.95 Jackets ... , Sale S17 .90

A meehng of candystnper s
Veterans
Memor ial
Hosp olal wtl be held at 7 p m
Mond ay at t he hos pita l
cafeteria

Tina Beaver
top speller
CHESTER - Tina Beaver,
a sixth grader, has been
named champoon speller at
the 1 Chester Elementary
SchoOl and will represent her
school at tbe County Bee at
Salisbury Elementary School
March 24
Tina 1s the daughter of Mr
and Mr s Gary Grofhth,
Route I, Long Bottom
Alternate as f1rst runnerup m
the Chester Bee 1s Gary
Gmther, son of Mr and Mrs
John Gmther of Route 1, Long
Bottom
Other finalists m the
Chester champ1onsh1p round
were David Gaul, Rhonda
R1ebel, Ke1th Brogan and
Jackie Rapp , all fifth
graders M1ss Carolyn Sm1th
pronounced the words and
JUdges were teachers Mrs
Eleanor Knight and Mrs
Betty Roush and PrmCJpal
Duane Wolfe
Veterans Memorial Hoopltal
ADMI'ITED - Orner Hess,
Pomeroy , Richard McHaffie,
Portland, Ruth McKinney,
Long Bottom , Fred McVey,
Coshocton, Jenmfer Wh1te,
Albany , David Decker,
Reedsville , Jess1e Bush,
Long Bottom ; William
Morns, Ra cine , Harold
Evans, Middleport; James
Van Cooney, Middleport,
John C H1te, Middleport;
Clarence
Koehler,
Reedsville
DISCHARGED - Amanda
Autherson , Richard Gibbs, Jo
Ann Ward, Juamta Chapman,
Mary King, Sallie B1as, Nellle
Lemley, Katherine
Bu c hanan , William
Chad.e1ck

Frtday and Saturday Sale!

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS
Sizes 29 to 42 waist, lengths from 29 to 34,
solid colors In light and odark shades,
plaid paHerns and checks.
100 per cent textumed polyester , buy
what you need now and save A fine new
selection of spnng and summer
styles
MensS10.95Siacks .............. SaleS8.65'
Mens$11.95 Sla~ks .............. S.le$9.45
Mens 512.95 Slacks . ...... ....... Sale $10.25
Mens$13.95 Slacks ............. Sale$11.15
Mens$14 .95 Slacks .............. Sale$11.85
Mens $15.95 Slacks .............. Sale $12.65
Mens 516.95 Slacks .............. S.le 513.45

FRIDAY ·SATURDAY SALE

MEN'S LEISURE SUITS
long sleeve and short sleeve styles Colorful prints in light and dark
tones An e)\cellenl new selection to wear with your leisure suits or
wear separately

Mens 56.95 Leisure Shirts .............................. Sale $5.63
Mens $8.95 Leisure Shirts.............................. Sale $7.23
Mens $9.95 Leisure Shirts .............................. Sale $8.13
Mens $10.95 Leisure Shirts ...................... ... .... Sale$8.93
Mens $11.95 Leisure Shirts ............................ Sale$9.73
Mens $12.95 Leisure Shirts ................. .......... Sale $10.53
Mens $13.95 Leisure Shirts ............................ Sale $11.33
Mens $15.00 Leisure Shirts ............................ S.Ie $12.23
Mens $16.00 Leisure Shirts ............................ Sale $12.93
Mens S17.00 Leisure Shirts ..... ............. , ........ Sale $13.13

ELBERFELDS IN POM

•

rescue teams

•

at

· ~nus ts always one of the
hazards," Potter Sllld "It s
something we hve w1th '
The explosoon Tuesday occurred S'fz m1les underground
and 11 took some 14 hours for
rescue crews to dig !hell' way
through to reach the mmers

Nme of the nuners were

believed killed mstantly
Tuesday by the methane g•s
explosion that MESA off1c1als
theorized was caused by
unproper vent1hatoon
The other six were
suffocated by a combmahon
of methane gas and smoke,
off1coals sa1d
H N
Korkpatrock,
Kentucky 's comrrusstoner of
mmes , had sa1d late
Wednesday that mspechon

crews had been prevented
from reachmg the exact s1te
of Tuesday's exploSion
because of weakened tunnel
supports However. MESA
officials saod the probe was
contmmng as crews rebwlt
the walls and dug toward the
sue of the blast
Both Potter and Nelhus,
saod the names of the
lllSpectors mvolved were not
known
Nelhus saod the mspectors
are normally equ1pped woth
rur breathmg dev1ces that
would supply several hours of
oxygen
'However we don 1t know
what type of equopment they
had when th1s latest crew
went down to the mme,'

of the Whys answered
Ahce Sue M1ssen , a cellmate
of Mrs Sosk, told off1cers Mrs Sosk
knew her husband had dynamote on
the case Mrs S1sk reportedly
assured Mrs MJSsen she would not
be hur t
AuthoritieS were unable to
answer repeated questions at the
conference why, 1f Mrs Missen
knew of the dynannte, she did not
warn her Jatlers, or whether or not,
defm1tely, she d1d worn them
West Vorgoma State Pollee Sgt
M P Koerner sa1d lhat although the
mvesllgahon and a sw c1de note
wntten by Bruce S1sk the evenmg of
March 2 and left m h1s mobole home
revea led S1sk had feehn gs of
ammds1ty towar d law enfor cement
ofhcer s, there IS no concrete

evidence he mtended to kill those
officers presen t when he entered hts
"ole s cell
State pollee also dosclosed
Harne t S1sk had confessed to the
murder Of her two month old
daughter. Davo Calhne and that her

WASHINGTON - WHITE HOUSE SOURCES have
1denhf1ed the State Deparunent's top Moddle East expert as
the man who leaked some embarrassmg mformahon about
Henry Kissinger 's Middle East negotlaUons to a magazme
writer He was identified late Thursday as Alfred L Atherton,
Jr , Assistant Secretary of State for Near East and South Asia
hy sources who said be had not mtended to g1ve the writer,
Edward Sheehan, class1f1ed materoal
Alberton represented the department m greetmg Israeli
Foreogn Minister Y1gal Allon who am ved m Washmgton's
National Airport Thursday 1'he leaks that disturbed the
department were detaol ed acco unts of K1ss mger's
conversations durmg his shuttle negotwtions They appear m
an article In the current Issue of Fore1gn Polley magazme
Kissinger himsell talked to Sheehan and authonzed other
offlcjals to talk to him for the 20,000 word arbcle on M1ddle
East diplomacy smce the October 1973, war
COLUMBUS - A HOUSE COMMITTEE has been told
there IS no eVIdence to suggest that the additiOn of fluoride to
public water supplies causes cancer Rather, Dr Ralph Cook
of the state department of health, Thursday sa1d fluoride
represents "one of the most unportant advances m modern
preventive dentistry "
The House Urban A!fa1rs Comrmttee has before It two bolls
which seek to reduce or elimmate the amount of Duorode m
public water systems Last month, supporters of the b1ll
broll8ht to the attention ol the comnutlee a study prepared by
the National Federal Bureau of Health, an antifluorlde
organization based In Washington , D C , which indicated a
definite statlstlcallmk between cancer 311d fluoride
l)f George G Blazes of the Oh1o Dental Assoclahon sa1d
that the case m favor of fluoride wa s 'well documented" and
said the study was a nuslnterpretation of med1cal data

Nelhus sa1d
Robert
Barr e tt,
admmstrator of MESA, wbo
had Down hack from the Site
Wednesday, was enroute to
the scene along with other
MESA and KentuckY mme
offoCJals
Crews of federal mme
Inspectors Thursday were
able to make some surveys of
the mme and indicated tbe
ventllatton syste m was
apparentl y not working
which led to the bwldup of
methane gas Tuesday
Barrett sa1d the mght
before Tuesday's exploSion,
MESA mspectors checked the
mme and coted the fiiiii for
not havmg the required
(Contmued on page 10)

•

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, MARCH 12, m6

. ;: .:.

ByUnltedPreoslnternatlonal
.
WNDON - PRIME MINISTER HAROLD W1lson has
scored a sohd VICtory over rebellious left-wmg members of his
party, but the left says 1t may revolt agam to protest the
govenunent 's antt-mflatlon pol1c1es
The Wilson government bounced back Thursday from a
humiliating defeat 1n Uoe House of ConUIIons by wmmng a
confidence vote on ots proposal to slash $10 billion m pubhc
spendmg Wilson demanded the vote after 36 of hos Labor
party's lelt-wmters abstruned Wednesday m a vote on the
proposal, causmg It to faol
Thursday's confidence vote - 297 to 280 - wa s a n
unexpectedly large margm for the government

THE MIDDLEPORT Ftre

state and federal offiCials to
pinpoint the cause of
Tuesday's disaster
The mme has been c1ted by
MESA for excess concentrahons of methane gas
R1chard Nellius, chief of
office of the office of informauon for MESA, sa1d the two
rnspectors who had escaped
were about three moles
underground and
had
reached a telephone w mform
personnel on the surface that
the other men were trapped
Potter said the mme had
been closed smce Tuesday's
exploSion and acknowledged
the chances for secondary
explosions were part of the
risk taken by search and

POMEROY-MJDDlEPORT, OHIO

38Dems
picked

husband ass1sted m the ch1ld s
bur1al The couple also attempted to
conceal the murder by govmg a false
report to the Mason County Sheriffs
office, pollee said
State pohce demed, however, the
use of drugs pnor to the Feb 27
murder played a s1gm!Jcant part
Dr Sopher sa1d he beheved the
hom1c1de was a momentary loss of

self control brought on durmg child
abuse " Dr Sopher said th1s os the
case m many ch1ld abuse deaths
Offoc1als saod, The onveshgallon
IS not concluded and will contmue as
long as there would appear to be
reasonable groWld to con tmue 1t ''
Twenty-none West Vorgoma State
Pollee offocers, f1ve special agents of
the U S Treasury Department ATF
bureau and three state !Ire marshall
mveshgators have been mvolved. m
the mvestlgahon m addthon to mne
prmcipal onveshgators More than
2,000 hours have been spent so far on
the mveshgat1on - By Sarah
Carsey

News •. '.in Briej~·-l Electric company
hearings are set

Sozes 36 to 50

Departmentw1t1 hold a public
f tsh fry beglnn~ng at 11 am
Saturday at the f ire station
of

NO 233

r,; Some
..

•·---~~·~·-·--·~ /17
j, ---·_.·--·~-

VOl XXVII

:- -:

POINT
PLEASANT
Questions and answers posed Thurs
:~~ day to West V1rgoma's choef medocal
~
examiner about the dynamote blast
~:::::·
.• in the county jaol that k1lled love
persons put more hght on the
mystery of ' Why '"
Severe depressoon apparently
l ed Bruce Stsk to enter mto a SUICide
pact w1th hts w1fe , Harne t, resultmg
m the explos1on at the )all March 2
accordmg to Dr Ervmg Sopher
An inveshgatwn conducted by
the West V1rgoma State Police,
Mason County Shenff s Dept , West
Vorgm1a F1re Marshall's Office and
the Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco and
Forearms of the U S Treasury
Dept produced evodence Hamel
Sisk knew her husband was comm g
to the jaol tha t evemng and the
contents of hts sui tcase The ex
plosoon caused the death of the SJS k
couple and three law enforcement
ofhcers Severa l others were
sen ously lfiJured

!hOFF

e

:~r::~w.:::::~=:s·n::&amp;.-.:::·

&gt;:
::.:?.,..'·

SAVE UP TO

the 11 men were ahve when
they managed to escape
Herschel Potter, ch1ef of
the safety dms1on of the
Mmmg Enforcement and
Safety Admlnstrat1on, said
the 11 trapped men had
re sporators but said the
eqwpment was usually only
good for one bour
Potter sa1d the men were
believed to be two IJUles
underground Huge cranes
were deployed w droll a hole
.at the top of the mme to clear
a passage way for a rescue
team
Potter sa1d the cause of the
latest explosion was not unmedlately known
The mspectors were part of
a round the clock elfort by

COLUMBUS (UP[) - !'he
Public Utilities Comrrnssoon
of Ohoo (PUCO) Thursday
scheduled pubhc hearmgs to
determme of (our electric
compames
ha ve
been
properly chargong their
customers for fuel costs th1s
wmter
If the PUCO fmds the
uhhhes have overcharged
the1r customers for coal and
other fuel used to produce
electrlCJty, 1t can order the
compames to make refunds
If the compames have
und e rch a rg e d ,
the
corrumssoon can direct them
to Increase customer btlls to

Hearing on
new agency
• p Offi eroy
m

The Southeastern Oh1o
Health Planmng Assocoatwn,
Cambrodge, through
author1zatwn of 1ts board of
trustees 1s submlthng an
appllcahon to crea te a new
organozatlon to be designated
as the Health Systems
Agency for the (Oh1o Area
VI ) 18 county health service
area
•
In compliarce w1th the
provision of P L 93-041 the
Southeastern Ohoo Health
Planning Assoc1atoon woll
hold
public
hearings
begmnmg at 7 30 p m on
WASHINGTON - A COMMriTEE PROMOTING Sen March 31 at the Meigs Inn,
John H Glenn, ~h1o, for the 1976 Democrallc pres1denhal East Mam St , Pomeroy, and
nomination was formed today by former Ohio Gov Michael V at 7 p m on Aprol 6 at the
DISille who supported the former astronaut for U1e Senate m Sheraton Inn, off 1·70, St
Clairsville
1974
Any person may appear
DISille had been asked not to form the committee,
according to Glenn, who sa1d 11 might mterfere wlth hiS and be heard at eother pubhc
position as a keynote speaker at the DemocratiC Nat10nal meetmg, m person or subrmt
ConvenUon in July "I'm not gettmg mvolved and they re on m wnting comments on the
their own," Glem Said of the committee
quahf1cat1ons of the proposed
Southeastern Ohio Health
CHICAGO - INffiSFlRSTCAMPAIGN speech on fore1gn Systems Agency apphcat1on
policy, President Ford declared today that hls plan of peace to be deSigned as the Health
through strength ill not "election year rhetoric " and sa1d there Systems Agency to serve
may be no new SALT agreement with Russia
OhiO HSA Area VI
"Peac, through strength has been my const1111t gosl as
For add1t10nal mformation
yoll' president," Ford said In remarks prepared for delivery at contact the Southeastern
a lunche111 of the Ollcago Co~mcll on Fore1gn Relations at the Ohoo Health
Plannin g
Palmer House hotel "Let me tell you what I mean by peace Assocoa!Jon, P 0 Box748, 127
through llrelgth, not with election year rhetoric but by the South Tenth Street, Camrecord"
bridge, phone 614-4•2-7361

recover the money
The hearmgs are requll'ed
hy a three-month-old law that
gave the PUCO broader
powers to monitor the fuel
adjustment clauses of
electriC ut1ht1es The clause
allows the companies to pass
on to customers the higher or
lower costs of fuel purchased
to generate electriCity
Public outcry over $524
m1lhon worth of fuel ad[ust·
ment charges last Winter
prompted the Geheral
Assembly to approve the new
leg1slahon
The fll'st public hearing wlll
be here April 26 for the Ohio
Edison Co of Akron Other
hearmgs w1ll be May 3 for
Oh1o Power Co of Canton,
May 12 for the Dayton Power
&amp; Loght Co and May 17 for
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
ElectriC Co
Hearmgs for the Cleveland
Electric Dlummatmg Co and
Cincmnat1 Gas &amp; Elecinc will
follow The dates have not
been set
The purpose of the hearmgs
os to look for errors by the
uhh(les m theor monthly
reports to the PUCO The
commtsswn
w1ll
also
determine If the compames
are gwlty of unprudent or
unreasonable fuel purchases
If a company IS guilty, the
PUCO can take that Into
cons1derat1on when order a
readjustment on consumer
bills
Before the new law took
effect, the PUCO never conducted a bearllJI on fuel
adjustment clau.es

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Chance o£ sbowers each
da; of the forecast period
Highs mostly \\111 be In the
40s to the low 50s Lows" Ill
be in the 20s Sun~ay
morning and In the 30s
Monday and Tuesday

UNIT CALLED
The Middleport E·R un1t
was called to 312 Pearl St , at
7 05 a m Friday for Susan
Ve1tli, a medocal pat1ent, who
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center

DETAILS--West Vll'gima law enforcement agencies released details of
their investigation concernmg the March 2 explosion at Mason County Ja1l durmg a news
conference Thursday mormng Don Kingery, left, Mason County prosecutmg attorney, and
West Virginia State Pollee SQt M P. Koerner sa1d Bruce S1sk left a su1c1de note m hJS
mob1le home mdicatmg his Wife, Hamel, may have agreed to a SUICidal pact

Ladder truck canvass
• Middleport Sunday
m
A house to-house canvass
woll be made m Middleport
Sunday to ra1se funds for the
purchase of an aer1al ladder
truck for use m Meogs
County
Headmg the drive are Mrs
Grace Pratt and Mrs Ruth
Powers on behalf of the
Moddleport Fore Dept
• The aenalladder !1re truck

Purchase of an aeroaf
has been purchased from
ladder
!1re truck was unSprmgheld, Ill at a pnce of
dertaken
after the recent
$10,000 and some $4,000 to
Stiffler
Department
Store hre
$6,000 IS needed to repamt
m
Pomeroy
Last
Sunday
a
and properly eqwp 1t Achouse
to
house
canvass
m
cordmg to plans made by f"e
departments, the veh1cle w1ll Pomeroy brought m well over
be housed m Pomeroy but $1,500, a $200 contr1bullon
woll be avallable at all tunes from a lodge, and $2,000 from
for all of Meigs County or to a busmes:; m Cheshll'e
Hours of Sunday's drove on
other nearby towns and c1lles
Middleport
are I to 4
as needed

Preachers warn SEOEMS
•
•
service
IS badly needed
RACINE - A plea to the
pubhc to help retam the
Sou th eas tern
Ohoo
E mer gency Med1cal Service
m Pomeroy WcL'i made by the
Mcogs Co unty Moms tenal

unmediately, and urged all
laypersons lo do hk ew1se, so
that thos very valuable
serv1ce can be kept here "
He sa1d thatSEOEMS IS not
m any way competJt1on woth
the volunteer emergency
squads of the county and that,

Grande

P r eac he rs

Con ference "oll be held April
20 21 I\ 1 esource person from
Columbus wolllead a con floct
management study and Rev
Al MacKenZie of Gallipolis
"oll be devotwnallea der The
Assoc tall on when tl met
re~os trahon '.\III be $16 per
March 8 at the Racme Umted
m1mster
attendmg
"
bothservtces
are
greatly
Method1st Church w1th Rev
The schedule for Veterans
Howard Shoveley, host needed "
Hosp1ta l
pastor , leadmg devoh ons and
The
mmtsters
al so Memo nal
Chaplamcy
and
Openmg
Rev Wilham M1ddles""rth discussed the possoblllt) of
pr es tdent,
pre sidin g
the Associa tion en1 ermg a Pra; er for Council Mectmgs
Rev Shiveley spoke on float mall of the July 4th BI· on Middleport and Pomero)
nnportance of keepmg the Centeruuai Parades m the were lolled through Apnl and
SEOEMS umt m Pomeroy count} Each tmmster l::i tv the mornmg medotauon radio
He stated that as 11 stands contact youth and others m program schedule was foll ed
now, this serv1ce will be h1s loca l church and fmd out through Ma"
Rev Shiveley announced a
dJScontmued March 12 and how many persons would be
(Contmued on page 10)
after that t11ere woll be no mterested on helpm g wllh
transfer serv1ce avaolable to such a pro Ject anti report
tr ans£e r pat ients fr om back at the next meetmg
Rev
Moddle s warth
Veterans Memonal Hospita l
to other area hospitals or to reported on the Council on
Alcohol Problems, a referral
nursmg homes, etc
He suggested
Eac h servoce bemg formed and
mmtster call each county mcorporated 1n the county
oomm1ss10ner and urge them Eac h county agency wtll have
to take some k1nd of action one repr esentative on the

Independents

will signup

next Tuesday

counctl who w11l be a v otmg

Four indicted
by grand jury
The January term Me1gs
County grand JUry has
returned four true bills of
mdoctmen t
IndiCted were Rex Darst
for theft , Roger Butcher for
breaking and entermg and
receovmg s tolen proper ty
and Wayne Hubbard and
Homer M1ller for receiVIng
stolen property
Jurors were Sarah Gibbs
foreman Sh1rle; Hawk ,
Dena
Welch,
Charles
Newhouse Paul R Lash,
Ka thleen Tolhs , Walter
Wears, Guy Morns and
Brenda Weber

The Ohoo Valley Independent Baseball League
w1ll hold ots for st mee tmg of
1976 on Tuesday March 16 at
7 p m , at the Steamboa t Inn
mtmster1al assoctahon
R e~
Robert Bwngarner m Racme
All coaches and players
repor ted that the annua] RIO
mterested m part1c1patmg
th1s summer should attend
Vch~cles collide
llus mee tmg as th os Will be
Two vehicles had medoum the for st s1gn-up for teams m
damages m a colhs1on on the league
The league woll ab1de by
West Main St on Pomeroy at
Nahonal League Rules Each
2 15 p m Thursday
Pollee said one car dr1ven pia) er must be at least 18
Iby Worthy Moll er, Pomt years old Office rs for th1s
Pleasant, had stopped 1n hos yea r are Don Hupp ,
lane of traffic near the Ebers Presodenl, Gary Durst Voce
bach Hardware Store when President, and Greg Roush,
his car was struck m the rear Secretary-Treasurer
All licensed umpores who
by one dnven by Dw1ght Carl
Albany There were no on would hke to be considered
jur1es Carl 1s to be cha rged for work 10 th1s summers
games ar e tn\ 1ted to attend
w1th DWh pollee saod
ttustee of the councol Rev
M1ddleswarth appomted Rev
Shiveley to serve as the
tr ustee repre se ntmg the

INDEPENDENCE, Ohio
(UP!) - Ohio Democratic
leaders, who had no
challenges to delegates
recommended hy state party
headquarters, Thursday
mght at a caucus here picked
38 uncommitted delegates
and 19 alternates to the 1976
DemocratiC National
Convention
The 38 delegates mclude 19
women and 10 blacks
State Treasurer Gertude
W Donahey rece1ved the
delegation's pledge for
pres1dent and State Sen.
Oliver Ocasek, Northfield, as
VICe preSident, at the seSSion,
one of nme held throughout
the state for aUarge slates
Delegates m the 23
congressional districtS will be
selected tomght
Caucuses were held here on
behalf of former Georgia
Governor Jimmy Carter, former Sen Fred R Harris, 00kla , Sen Frank amrch, 0ldaho , Sen Henry M
Jackson , D-Wash , R
Sargent Shriver, nommee for
v1ce pres1dent m 1972 ,
Alabama Gov George C
Wallace,. Pennsylvania Gov
Milton J Shapp, and R&lt;:~&gt;
Morris K Udall, D-ArlZ.
These delegates Will be
selected at the June 8
prunary Delegates Will be
awarded on the bas1s of
proportional representation
To quahfy, a candidate must
get 15 per cent of the vote

Candidate
Shapp quits
HARRISBURG, Pa (UP! )
- Pennsylvama Gov M1lton
J Shapp, c1tmg hos dJSappomtmg showmg In the
Massachusetts and Flonda
pnmary elections, today
w1 thdrew
fr om
the
Democrahc pres1denhal
nommatwn race
H1s withdrawal left six
maJOr Democra ts m th e
nommahon batUe
Shapp said he would not
even run m Pennsylvama's
April 27 pnmary election,
and urged supporters to
evaluate the other candidates
and vote for the delegates
they feel will best represent
them
'Whole at th1s t1me I Will
not sup port another can·
d1date, hke so many other
Atnerocans, I w1ll be looking
for the man who has a sohd
program to match his
promises ," Shapp told a news
conference

SENTENCE BEGINS
John Westbtook, Rt 1
Rutland, was taken Thursday
to the Chilhcothe Correctional Inslltutwn by Meigs
County Deputy Ray Manley
to begm servmg h1s tenn of
not less than 'lslx months or
more than f1ve years on
conviction of breaking and
1
entermg
BAKE SALE TOO
Woves of Pomeroy fll'emen
w11l hold a bake sale m
connectoon With the spagtetti
dmner th e hremen are
sponsormg Saturday from 3
to 7 p m at the Pomeroy Fire
Stahon Carryout orders will
be avai lable 1! con tainers are
provoded

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