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8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middlep&lt;Jrt-Pomeroy. 0 .. Monuay, Mareh 22, 1976

•

, --------------------------i

HOSPITAL NEWS
Robertsburg ; Mrs. Thurman
Oi ler, daughter , Vinton;
William Wallace, Apple
Daniel Norman, Pomeroy ; Grove: Mrs . Malcolm SanElola Sellers, Pomeroy ; ders , Apple Grove; Mrs.
Dorothy Rea, Pomeroy ; Jane Jenny Byus, Hazel Selby,
Goody, Mtddleport; Hattie Ap ple Grove; Mrs . John
Paynter, Racine; Beverl y Stone, Bidwell; Fann ie
Kauff. Pomerov.
Jenkins , Glenwood; Bruce
SATURDAY DISCHARG· Wall ace, Ga llipolis : Mr s .
ES Audrey Ar no ld, Lowell Thomas, son, Poi nt
Ed gar
Ro ustl , Myrtl e Pleasant: Re&lt; Unroe, NorWilson, Jane Kelley, Herbert thup. 0 .; Clarence Emerick,
Whaley, Wil ber Robinson, Poi nt Pleasant; Mrs. John
Salun Yates, Georgia Darst. Clendenin, Point Pleasan t;
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - Dwain Hendr ick. Letar t :
Be rtha Russell, Pomer or ; Charl es
Li t c h fie ld ,
P amela Penni n g t on , Southside; David Pulner,
Ru tla nd; Judith Fa rl ey, Lafayette, La. ; Mrs. Jesse
Middleport ; Agnes Stevens, Bever, Cheshire, 0 .
L&lt;m gsville.
Birth, March 21, a daughter
SUN DAY DISCHARGES - to Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Karen Haggy, Carrie Neutz. Stutler, Leon.
Ung, Sally Holman, Beverly
MRS. HARRIS ILL
Ka ulf, Paul Schuler, Mildred
The
Pomeroy E·R squad
Mitch, Janice Salser, Ruth
Minersville at 9:05 a.
went
to
Ann Smith, Fannte Maynard .
m. Monday for Mrs . Ernest
Harris, who was ill. She wa s
Holzer Medical Center
taken to Veterans Memorial
(Births, March 191
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. William F.
Dailey, daughter. Coalton;
Mr. and Mrs. Lynn L.
Mallory, daughter, Racine.
(Births, March 20)
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bales,
Mrs . George L. Miller , son,

son , Warren ; Mr . and Mrs .

Thomas R. King , son , New
Haven , W. Va .; Mr . and Mrs .
Robert A. McGuire, s on ,

Crown City.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Marsha
Riley, Mason ; Alonzo Roush,
Letart ; Mrs. Kelly Markham,
Vinton; Ralph
Da vis,

WASHINGTON (UP!) - R.
Sargent Shriver, whose campaign for the Democratic
presidential
nomination
failed to catch fire, withdrew
from the race today .
"I formally withdraw my
national candidacy and
release my delegates," he
said at a news conference.
Shriver, 60, who claimed

the mantle of the "Kennedy
legacy" when he announced
his
candidacy,
had
campaigned with
characteristic vigor. but with
disappointing results and

Veterans Memorial Hospital .
Mr. Darst was born April
22, 1894, the son of the fate
Claude and Elizabeth Hood
Darst. He was also preceded

MISSISSIPPI QUEEN NEARLY READY - With her
twin stacks towering 77 feet above the water, the $20
million steamboat Mississippi Queen nears completion in
the Jeffboat Shipyard in Jeffersonville, Indiana. Built to
last ·into the 21st century, the new riverboat assures that
many more generaUons of Americans will enjoy the 169

became the fifth Democrat to
bow out.
He came in fifth in New
Hampshire, the crucial first
primary, with 9 per cent of
the vote; then did no better in
his
home
state
of
Massachusetts where he got 7
per cent of the vote.
Shriver came in second in
the Vermont
"beauty
contest" primary, skipped
Florida and then came in a
disapp&lt;Jinting third in Illinois
with 16 per cent of the votes.
Altogether he won 11
national convention

Mcllwain named Breck winner

MEIGS THEATRE

Area Deaths . ~

BERNICE C. DARST
Bernice C. Darst, 81, Spring
Ave., died Sunday at

Southern Ohio 's Junior
Miss, Jamisue Mcilwain, the
Ohio Junior Miss · Breck
award winn er , has been
selected as one of the lop four

year old tradition of riverboating. The Mississippi Queen
will carry 500.passengers on 7 night cruises up and down
the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. She's scheduled for her
Malden Voyage out of Cincinnati later this spring. Picture
hy John Dreyer, The Delta Queen Steamboat Company.

delegates .
·:·:·..:·:·:·:;:·.;:·:::·:::·:::·:::·:::::;.·:·.·:;.;:;:·:·:::·:·:::::::.:;:;:;:·:;:::::·:;:::::;:::;:,:;:::·:·:::·:::·:::;:;:;:::::::;:::;:::::::::·:;:;:;:;:,
"I shall work for the
Prices higher on Wall Street
nomination and election of a
Democratic Party candidate
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Prices opened higher Monday In
who can challenge the people
active trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
and revitalize their morale
The Dow Jones industrial average, which finished un·
and morality," Shriver said ,
changed
Friday, was ahead 1.57 points to 981.42 shortly
without endorsing any of the .
the
openiug . Advances led declines, 239 to 155,
after
remaining candidates.
among
the
575 issues crossing the tape.
He told reporters he would
Volume
amounted
to!lbout 690,000 shares.
continue to work in the public
Many ana lysts said investors have been ,...,valuating
arena " supporting
their p&lt;Jsitions following the sharp gains the market made
progressive' candidates for
in
the first two months of the year. Some felt there might
the Congress, particularly
be
a delayed reaction to last week's favorable economic
women, Chicanos, etlmics,
news.
blacks and other under·
Many analysts were encouraged the Consumer Price
represented minorities.''
Index
rose only 0.1 per cent in February, the slowest rate
Shriver , who is married to
of
increase
in four and one half years. Corp&lt;Jrate profits
the former Eunice Kennedy ,
rose
2.3
per
cent
in the fourth quarter. and durable goods
was George Mcgovern •s vice
orders surged 2.4 per cent in February.
presidential runnin g mate
four year s ago in the . .·:·.·=·=·=·:::··::·:;:;:;:·::··:;:;:;:;::·::;:;:;:;:;:;:·::··:·:=·=·:::::::::·:::·::··::··:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::::::·:·.·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:::·:::
Mason Bowling Center
unsuc cessfu l campa ign
Mason, W. Va .
against Richard Nixon and
Women's WednedJY
Afternoon League-WIBC
Spiro T. Agnew.

She won her Junior Miss
title at the Southeast Ohio
Junior Miss finals in MidTon ite thru Mar . 25
dleport Nov. 23 sponsored by
JAWS
the Southeast Ohio Junior
CTechnicolor)
Junior Miss Breck winners
Miss Scholarship Program.
for the 1976 America Junior
Miss Mcilwain, a senior at
Miss finals on May 10 in Ironton High School, is the
Ba sed on the nove l "The
Grea t Wh1te Shark " by
Mobile, Ala .
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Peter Benchley .
Miss Mcilwain 's entry won William Mcllwatn . Attending
" PG"
the Ohio Breck contest during the franchise holders meeting
Mr. and Mrs . Don Knapp of
Pearl E. Dtllon, dec . to
the
1976 Ohio Junior Miss from this area was Ralph H.
Show starts at 7: oop .m.
West
Columbia
and
Mr.
and
Gladys V. Dillon, Cert. for
finals in Mount Vernon in Werry, director of the local
Mrs. Harry Knapp of Terre trans., Otive.
'
January.
Junior Miss program.
Haute, Ind., wer e recent
Eargld Dean , E~ta Dean to
visitors of Mr . Lincoln Howard Stevenson, Fannie
Russell .
Stevenson, Parcel, PagevJ!leEarl Russell of Kentucky is Scipio.
vtsiting his motl1er , Mrs .
Robert C. Hartenbach,
Bertha Russell.
Shrft., Atwood
Sloan,
Mrs. Clinton Gilkey of Gertrude W. Lamont eta! to
Albany was a Thursday Michael Van Auken, Pamela
visttor of Mr. Lincoln Russell. Webster, 'Parcels, Bedford.
Marty Redman visited with
Nicholas R. !hie, Dtana L.
her grandmother, Bertha I hie, Ease. , to Col. &amp;
Russell after a month 's Southern Ohio Elec. Co.,
vacation in the west and is on EaS. .. Sutton.
her way to her home in
Delmar Gordon Osburn,
Florida.
Regina
K. Osburn, l.&lt;trry
r------ ---~
- ----co-- · - ----.
Terri Lynn Russell of Leroy Osburn. Mary Jane
'Pomeroy and Mrs. Harold Osburn to Larry Leroy
Gillogly, Vicki and Bruce of Osburn , Mary Jane Osburn,
Pomeroy were Sunday Parcels. Olive.
visitors of Lincoln Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reed
of Hemlock Grove were
HILO TEMPS
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Mrs . Guy Sargent and son.
highest temperature reported
Sunday to the National
The evening stars are Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 89
Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on this date are degrees at Palm Springs,
under the sign of Aries. Calif. Today's low was 7
American actor Karl Malden degrees below zero at Hibbing, Minn .
was burn March 22, 1914.

Meigs
Property

Wolfpen
News Notes Transfers

G lobetr ol* ~ rs

Rooki es
Thr ee G's

Al ley Ca t s

Htt s &amp;M tsses

56
54
46

34

38

50

Mr . Ritchie was head lock·
man for the U. S. Corps of
Engineer! at Bellville Dam
near here. He wa:s a member
of the Racine Amer i can
leg ion Post 602, and a
veteran of World War II , who
received the purple heart.
Born Sept . 6, 1921 , he was

preceded In death by his
father, Fred Ritchie.

He Is survived by his wlf,e.
Phyllis Lawrence Ritchie ;
a daughter , Joyce Rllchle ;

32

42

38

50

37

56

his mother. f&lt;ona Rhodes
Ritchie. all of Portland, and

several aunts. uncles and
cousins .
Funeral services will be

Team H igh Total P ins
Rooki es I 169, Alley Cats 11 5 1,
La tecom ers 11 28.

Te&amp; m
Hig h Gam e Rooki es 418 . La tecomers 408.
Htt s &amp; M isses 40 4

Individ ual H igh Ser ies Nancy Neut zlin g 431. Diana
Pyall 428 , Bunnv Est es 423 .
Ind ivid ual H ig h Game Bunny Esl es 172 , Diana Pyatt

Funeral

~orge

services

S. Towk!Mry, 'U:
Buckeye Lake, formerly . cil
Middleport , who dte(l
Saturday at Licking Count;
Memorial
Hospital · 1(1
Newark, were held at 2 p. m;
today at lhe Rawllngs-Coo!f.

•
~

held Tuesday al 1 p.m : at
Ewing Chapel with the Rev .
Freeland Norris ofllclallng .
Burial will be In Sand Hill
Cemetery . Fr iends may call

at the funeral home any time .

••
•

SORORITY TO MEET ;
Preceptor Chapler of Belir
Sigma Phi Sorority will meeC ·
at the bonne of Mrs. Velnut
Rue, Middleport, at 7:45p. m:
Thursday with Robert~~
O'Brien contributing hostess:
'.
.

..,

COLE TO SPEAK

The Meigs Area Holinea
Asan. will meet at 7:30 p. m;
Tuesday at the Raclqe
Church of the Nazarene. 1'hti
Rev. Don Cole, pastor of tfiol
Middleport Church qf the
Naurene, wUI speak . VDC~~I
music will be provided by the
Kaulfmans.

168 , Nan c y Neulzling , 16-4 .

ELBERFELD&amp; IN POMEROY

From a Great American Bank .

..

Men's Department

1st Floor

Farmers Bank
POMEROY, OHIO

Gmms·
PULLOVER
SWEATER
SHIRT
WITH STRIPES
· Here's a fresh. new look
in a happy combination
of sol ids and dusty lone

stripes.
Note
the
c:ontrast between the

•2.95
plus ta&gt;e

I

stripes at lhe lop and the
drop needle elfecl on the
lower part of the shirt .
Designed for eacy living .
In 100 per cent Imported
acrylic

in

the

Exclting Night Spot

Phone 992-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

WASHINGTON - REP. WAYNE HAYS, IU&gt;hio, said
Monday he will run as a favorite son candidate for President in
six Ohio districts. Hays, 64, filed as a presidential candidate
with the Federal Election Commission.
He later told a National Press Club audience he is standing
as a favorite son in the selected congressional districts at the
request of state and local Democratic leaders who wanted to
make sure they would have places on the Ohio national
convention delegation . He is known to be for Hubert Humphrey.
NEW YORK - NEW YORK CITY HAS told the federal
government it Intends to pull most of its municipal employes
out olthe Social Security system in two years. New York's
withdrawal would mean a loss to the system of more than $400
million annually . The system already has an estimated benefit
deficit of $1.6 billion this year.
Such a move, announced by Mayor Abraham Beame
Monday, would he the largest withdrawal since Social Security
was established in 1935 and would save the city about $200
million In annual contributions . "The notice filed today does
not constitute actual termination of coverage," Beame said .
"That decision will be made following the most rigorous and
thorough analysis of this matter .. . during the next two years."
WASHINGTON - REP. CHARLES VANIK, D.Ohio, says
he will seek election to a 12th consecutive term in Congress this
year without accepting campaign contributions or spending
money in his campaigp .
Vanik said Monday he will seek r.,..,lection in the 22nd
District and "follow the example I established two years ago. I
will endeavor to campaign without a campaign fund, no
campaign committee, no contributions to be acce pted, no
funds to be spent, no signs, no campaign cards, no advertising,
no purchase of time or space in the media."
.
"I will meet voters as I have in the past, on a person-to·
person basis, at meetings, in the home and at public
gatherings, " said Yanik.
WASHINGTON- THE FEDERAL TRADE Commission is
moving against General Motors because of the high price of
automobile crash parts and leaving the door open for action
against other car makers. If Its action succeeds, the cost of
replacement parts to GM auto owners coul(i drop 8 to 10 per

cent.

'·~.OWen M. John1011 Jr., director of the FTC's bureau of
competition, Monday 'lnnounced a complaint charging "GM
allegedly has intentionally maintained a monop&lt;Jiy and
monopoly p&lt;JWer over the distribution of crash parts for its
eutomobiles and tight trucks." Senate hearings Into the crash
part industry earlier this month were told that prices have
eacalated so much in recent years it now costs $22,500 to
replace part by part car priced at $5,000 new.

,,

Snowden in race
for commission

Roger Butcher, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, pleaded guilty to
two counts of burglary and
one of theft In Meigs County
Common Pleas this morning.
Jurors had been summoned
for the case but not excused
by Judge John C. Bacon
following Butcher's plea.
Butcher was charged in the
breaking and en\ering of
Stewart's Gun Shop in
Rutland ' Feb. 24, Ridenour's
Supply in Chester, and Fife's
GWl Shop tn Middleport, on
Feb. 25. Butcher will he
sentenced Ia fer.
Attorneys
were
Bernard Fultz, prose~utor,
and
Charles
Knight, &amp;ISlstant prosecutor;

attorney for the defendant
was
William
Conley,
Gallipolis.
Butcher was sentenced to
not less than one or more than
five years in the Chilticothe
Correctional Institution by
Judge Bacon this morning
following Butcher's plea of
guilty.

Dateline 1776

NEW YORK. March 23-A
number of inhabitants
learned of Gen . Howe's
evacuation of Boston and fled
the city "with the utmost
precipitation" in anticlpalion
of a British arrival. An effigy
of Royal Gov. Tryon was
LOCAL TEMPS
carried
through the streets
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m . and strung up on a gallows
was 55 degrees WJder sunny with the warning ~'Tories
take care . •,
sties.

ever

PGP,&lt;Jiar !ape neck . tn
sizes S M.L.XL.

The Tri-County 's Most

THE MEIGS INN

$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

I

SSHII
COIICC!IOO by

Visit Our Salad Bar
Super Broiled Steak
Baked Potato
Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

LAS VEGAS, NEV . - UNION AND management
negotiators in the 1Uay-old casino strike, longest and most
expensive in the history of the Nevada gambling industry,
have finally agreed on one thing: they are hopelessly
deadlocked. They again broke off talks early today and both
sides appeared to be digging in for a long struggle. There were
signs the strike could spread to more casinos.
"This Is an all-out fight ," declared union attorney Roland
Davis. "We intend to appeal to our international union to go to
George Meany to get the message throughout the United Stales
with their full resources. We hope they will supply us with
financial resources and every other resource available ...
inclto:ling a boycott of corporations involved in hotel ownership
In Nevada."

a

-•

Be sure to see all the other mens knit shirts · sport shirts • leisure
shirts· lank lops· dress slicks ·llllrrlnged for your 11sy selection.
Take advantage of this eerly selection.

ELIERFELDS IN POMEROY .

e

a1 y

en tine

Fi ftPen ('enl s

Vo l. 27. C\/o.

JN;:;!:~E.]ri;f~Legar predicts lower insurance rate
£or b usmess sect1ODS 0 f t WO t ownS

Butcher is guilty

TUESDAY ·NIGHT

SPECIAL

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
'l'llesday, March Z3, 1976

Robert F: · Snowden, · filed for the Republican
Rutland, Monday filed his nomination to run for the Jan.
petition with the Meigs 2, 1977 term. They are Ralph
County Board of Elections, to W. Ours, incumbent. and
seek
the
Republican James Frecker .
nomination to run for county
Three Democrats filed
commissioner, the term petitions for central combeginning Jan. 2, 1977. mittee posts of their party
Snowden Is a member of the Monday. They are Chester
Meigs Local Board of . Wells, Reedsville Precinct;
Education .
Catherine Welsh, Pomeroy
Two other candidates have Fourth, and Ellja Powell,
Harrisonville.

THE INN PLACE
1820 and beyond: Europe's loss is America's gain.
They're calling us the "last best hope of mankind." Ireland is
about to face a five-year potato blight and the terrible
famine. England is draining off what little Irish food there
is. Persecuting the Catholics, too. The Irish are scraping to
find the $12.50 fare to give them a new life in our big, fertile
land. Germany has several seasons of crop failure . Failure,
too , to overthrow their tyrannical Prince. The Germans'
urg.e to come to our shores becomes a craze. The Irish bring
their strength to our large Northeast cities, become a cheap
labor force; and mak e prizefighting a favorite sport. The
Germans bring us prosperous business, Milwaukee,. beer
brewing and our first. kindergarten. Never before have we
had so many new citizens at one time .~

for-·

Parkersburg .

Marth 11 ,1 976
Won Lost

La t ecom er s

••

GEORGE TEWKSBAII'I: : .

In death by hl5 wife. Doris.
Mr. Darst, 1 skilled Funerel Home.
: ..,
machin ist, operated the
Offlclaflng at lhe servlc"
Pomeroy General Machine was Mr. ~orgo Glaze, pas'ful!
Company.
« the Middleport Church' cl,
He Is survived by • Chrsll. Burial was I ~
doughier , Mrs . Marjorie Riverview Cemolery.
• •
Murray , Keene , N. H.; hree
Mr. Tewksbary, • former
sons , N.arv ln, cf Pomeroy: restauranl operator :10.
William, of Miamisburg, and Middleport, was an arml
Charles, Grove City ; nine veleran of World War I;
grandchildren, and 17 .great. member of tho Baptl
Church, Modern Woodmen•&lt;1:
grandchildren.
Funeral serv ices will be America, and lhe G4os Housl.
held Wednesday al t p.m. al Club.
•
~
Ewing Chapel with lhe Rev.
Surviving are his w,ll" '
William Middlesworth of· Adrah Graham Towksbary.; •
flclatlng . Burial will be In son ,
George
Mathellt
Union St. Cemelery, Athens. Tewksbary, Cleveland ; 6Friends may call at the slsler, Mrs. Eva Struble tit
funera lhome after -7 p.m. Middleport ;, a slsler - ln - l~v.i:;
today .
Mrs . .Edward (Nelllel·
Tewksbary, MlddiOpOI'I ; lw!("
FRANK[BENNYJPOTT$
grandchildren, throe great;
SYRACUSE
Frank grandchildren and severe):.
!Benny) Polls. 88, Syracuse. nieces and nephews.
il'
died Saturday aflernoon al
Pallbearers were KenMII\
McElhinny, Bab, Edward an4'
1l s home .
Mr . 1-'ons was bOrn May 26, ~orge Tewksbary Jr., Ralph
1887 the son of the Iole Harry Balley ·and ~lvln Bailey. :
and Ellen Hamer Potts. He
•
was also preceded In death by
GLENNA
M. H'ESS . ~
an Infant son , two sisters, and
Glenna M. Hess, 82, who
one brother . Mr. Potts was a died Tuesday In BucyruS:
retired coal miner .
•
Ohio was burled Friday In~~~~
He Is survived by his wife, Oakwood
Cemetery
Garnet Martin Potts ; a Bucyrus following funer
daughter, Jenn ie Isabelle service• at lhe Wise FuneraJ
Bass , Syracuse ; one grand · Horne there with lhe Re11,
daughter, Bethany Ellen Donald E. Childres ofO
Bass . and several nieces and flclatlng . She wa• lhe mothof
nephews .
rA Mrs. A. E. (VIrglnlal
Funeral services will be
Hartenbach
of
Poln]
Tuesday at 3 p.m. at Ewing Pleasant. Another daughter.,
Chapel with the Rev. Dale Mrs. T. H. {Gwen} !Iaker &lt;#
Bass officiating. Burial will Bucyrus, survives, In ac£
be In Gilmore Cemetery . dillon to four grandchildren
Friends may call at funeral
and six great.grandchlldrerll
home any time .
She wa• born In Pomeroy, 1
doughier
of the lete Jamej
FRED EUG~NE RITCHIE
Margaret Swag11
PORTLAND
Fred and
Jenkins. She was a membet'
Eugene Rilchle, 54, Portland, rA
the First Christian Churc~
died Saturday afternoon at
Camden Clark Hospital ,
•

Shriver out of campaign

daughter, Cheshir e; M r. and

Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs.
Roger L. White, daug hter ,
Gallipolis.
(Births, March21 )
Mr. and Mrs . Phillip A.
Bradbury, son, Cheshire; Mr .
and Mrs. Steven D. Johnson ,

l

I

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Georgia Darst, Gallipolis ;

•

Juveniles held in Middleport
Two juveniles and an adult
wer' taken Into custody
Monday evening in Middleport in connection . with
attempting to sell merchandise allegedly taken
from two Gallla County

llualneaHs.
GaiUpolla Police Chief John
Taylor said the juveniles and
llle adult were atlempting to

•

seil three walches taken from
Tawney's Jewelry Store on
Second Ave., three walches
taken from Hallmark Carda
Full House of Cards in the
Silver Bridge Shopping
Plaza, and merchandise
taken from the 1884 Shop in
Gallipolis. No charges had
been filed on the adult at 11
a.m. today.

'

e

·
Twenty-four persons attending the weekly noon luncheon
meeting of the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce Monday at the
Meigs Inn discussed advantages of the aerial ladder truck
already purchased for Meigs County, abandonment of the C &amp;
0 Railroad in the county, and closing of the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge.
Fred Morrow, president, welcomed large turnout. He
introduced Charles Legar, Pomeroy Fire Chief.
Legar explained how the new fire equipment and the new
water system should help business firms, not individuals, with
lower insurance rates. Legar said it is his personal opinion the
new equipment will lower insurance rates for merchants . He
also indicated that the new 500,000 gallon water tank on Breezy
Heights will he a factor with the aerial ladder truck, in
business rates dropping from the present Class 8 to Class 7,
and possibly Class 6. He said that at no Ume during the great
Stiffler fire in Pomeroy in February were they low on water.
Legar also disclosed that Pomeroy Is buying $1,500 worth
of hose to meet the state's requirements of 2,000feet.
The fire truck is a 1952 model and lias an 85 foot aerial
ladder and will cost $10,000. Legar said he and several other
members of the Middleport and Pomeroy Fire Depariments
went to Springfield, Ill. , to inspect the vehicle. The engine is in
good condition but in case of a future breakdown parts could be
a problem. The truck is expected to arrive anytime.
The truck pump can pump 1,000 gallons Of water a minute,
which should also help on insurance rates. Legar said a
reducer connection is needed that costs $450., a ladder pipe
nozzle will cost $1,000, and of coorse, the truck will have to be

e

painted.
serv1ce.
At last count, a total of $13,170 has been collected toward
Arnott explained that the railroad pays $10,000 a year in
the purchase of the truck. Two members of tbe Middleport taxes tn Meigs County. He stated that ConRail will only come
Fire Dept. and four from Pomeroy will go t0 Springfield to he to Hobson Depot and merchants using rail service will ha ve to
trained in operation of the aerial ladder. This also will cost transport cargo from Hobson to their store location, nor w1ll
money . The goal in the fund drive haS been $14,000.
ConRail come into Meigs County as often as the C&amp;O does.
Legar said Middleport is on automatic call system and the
It was also pointed out tha t the C&amp;O pays $7,500 a year
aerial ladder will be used when Middlep&lt;Jrt has a serious fire a toward the school systems.
fact that will also help Middleport merchants get low'er
Gilkey stated that a large turnout is wha t is needed at the
insurance rates. Legar concluded that the two departments, meeting; persons do not have to be rail users as the abandonPomeroy and Middlep&lt;Jrt, "get along very well."
ment affects everyone. The ra ilroail has an annual payroll of
Legar, asked hy Morrow about the buildings that burned in $'~ million.
the Stiffler fire, as to what was goiug to be done, said if the
Among users of the rail se rvice m Pomeroy are Excelsior
buildings are not repaired or sold, orders will be issued to raze Salt Co., Landmark, Pomeroy Cement Block Co ., Midwest
them.
Steel. Provico and Modern Supply.
Morrow introduced George Arnott and Kenneth Gilkey,
Morrow commended both young men "for the fin e job"
members of a local Railroad Service Committee. They they were doiug in fighting the abandonment of the railroad.
discussed the closillj( of the C&amp;O Railroad in Meigs County. It
It was noted that a meeting on the railroad closing has
was pointed out that there will be a hearing at the Gallia been tentatively set for Thursday at Middleport Village Hall. A
County Courthouse on April 7 at 9:30 a.m.
large attendance is requested. ,
Arnott sp&lt;Jke to chamber about the abandonment of the
It was also announced that the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
railroad which runs from Logan to Middlepurt and Pomeroy, will close on March 30 at 9:30a.m. Phillip Roberts will be the
the only ratlroad that comes into Pomeroy. April 7 is the last engineer and persons will be able towallt the bridge. It was not
chance to file a protest in person or in writing, Arnott known When the ferry service wi11 begin or the cost to ride the
commented. Fifteen jobs will be lost, the persons having to ferry .
quit or be transferred.
Mayor Clarence Andrews rep&lt;Jrted that the upper parking lot
Arnott went on to explain that 20 customers will be street will he repaired before the bridge closes and that the
affected by the rail service. It was brought out that indirectly tl street sweeper will be in operation next week. Ma yor Andrews
will affect many more people than those who use the rail
(Continued on page 10)

Reagan petitions
show up in Ohio
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Peter E. Voss of Canton, a
former Republican candidate
for the U.S. Senate, said
today he has been authorized
to direct a petition circulation
drive to get the name of
Ronald Reagan on the ballot
in the Ohio Republican
presidential primary June 8.
Voss said he and other
Reagan supp&lt;Jrters would try
to get the former California
governor's name on the ballot
In as many congressional
districts as p&lt;Jsslble. II there
were time, · they would
attempt to put together a
statewide slate, he said.
However, Voss and other
Reagan backers said chances
of fielding an effective slate
to challenge President Ford
would be next to imp&lt;Jssible.
"The law of averages is
against us," said Voss.
"It is almost an imp&lt;Jssible
task," said state Sen. Donald
E. Lukens, R·Middletown, an
ardent Reagan supporter who
has been waiting for weeks
for
word
from
the
Californian's campaign office
in Washington to start work

Rear of
rig hit
Two accidents were investigated by tile deparlment
of Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach Monday.
At 2:45 p.m. in Salisbury
Township on SR 7 Robert S.
McCray , 48, McArthur,
traveling north In a tractor
trailer, had stopped to make
a left hand turn onto SR 124
when a car driven by Donald
R. Riley, 24, Nelsonville, also
traveling north struck the
trailer in the rear. There
were no Injuries or arrests.
At 3p.m. on CR 34, one mile
north of SR 124, Ayward C.
Jones, 24, Cleveland, met
another vehicle in a · curve,
lost control in .loose gravel,
and turned over in a creek.
There were no Injuries. No
citation was issued.

in Ohio .
"The
logistics
are
overwhelming,'' said Lukens,
pointing oot that the deadline
for filing slates of delegate
candidates is Thursday at 4
p.m.
Voss said he received a
letter hy special delivery late
Monday night authorizing
hlm to serve as the Reagan
representative in Ohio.
"!?lease accept this letter
as formal authorization to act
as bur committee's agent for
the purp&lt;Jse.of organiziug and
filing a Reagan-pledged
delegation to the Republican
National Convention for tbe
state of Ohio," Voss quoted
the letter from Loren Smith,
general counsel for Reagan's
campaign committee.
Voss said he had already
begun contacting Reagan
backers throughout the state
to start circulating petitions

Corn, Sorghwn
prices stand
above subsidy
Meigs Coon ty farmers will
not receive deficiency
payments for 1975 corn and
sorghum,
the
Meigs
Agriculture and' Stabilization
Service announced today.
As provided by the
Agriculture and Consumer
Protection Act of 1973,
deficiency payments will be
made to producers when the
national weighted average
price received by farmers for
the first five months of the
marketing year (OctoberFebruary) Is less than the
established target price for
these crops.
The national weighted
average price received by
producers for the first five
months of the 1975 marketing
year was $2.44 per bushel for
corn and $2.31 per bushel
($4.13 per hundredweight) of
. sorghum. Since this is in
excess of the target prices of
$1.38 for corn and $1.31 for
sorghum, there will be no
deficiency payments.

Nearly $8 million spent
in Wallace's drive for votes
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~
Gov. George Wallace of
Alabama has spent nearly $8
million
on his
1976
presidential campaign -lar
more than 1 any other
candidate, Republican or
Democratic.
The Federal Election Com·
mission handed out a final $1
million to 12 presidential
candidates Monday . The
commission's pursestring
p&lt;Jwer over federal campaign
funds expired at midnight
and there will he no more
government money until
Congress reconstitutes the

commission to answer
Supreme Court objections.
A partial Wallace financial
statement that arrived at the
FEC Monday, 12 days after
the filing deadline, showed
Wallace has raised $8.6
million in the camPl'ign and
has spent all bul $716,000 of it.
Ronald Reagan has spent
about $5.5 million, President
Ford and Sen. Henry
.Jackson, D·Wash., about $4
million.
The figures
include
matching funds authorized by
the FEC.

and get them filed .
"U we are able to get this
accomplished, Mr. Reagan's
name will be ori the ballot,"
said Voss. " U we aren't able
to , it won't."
Voss,
who
ran
unsuccessfully against
Cleveland Mayor Ralph J .
Perk lor the U.S. Senate
nomination in the Repubtican
primary in 1974, said his first
goal is to get Reagan's name ·
on the ballot in "as many
congressiqnal districts as hu·
manly possible."
A statewide slate of 28 at·
large delegates is secondary,
he said.
(Continued on page 10)

f ·I

-

•

•

I

' -•·

THE STIFFLER DEPARTMENT SToRE in.Pomeroy, ravaged hy fire on Jan. 28, has
opened for business in these temporary Quarters at 236 E. Main St., Pomeroy.

Levy would continue EMS
The Meigs County commissioners Monday formally
requested the Southeastern
Ohio Emergency Medical
Service to release $10,018 in
"operations reserve 11 to
operate the ambulance
service until a levy can be
voted.
Meeting with the commissioners was Margaret
Eskew In regard to the .
ambulance service . SEOEMS
is still In operation in

Rutland. Money in the balance of the year.
~~ operations reserve" is from
In other business the
runs made by SEOEMS.
commissioners reapp&lt;Jinted
Mrs. Eskew pointed out Billy Williamson, Rutland, to
that a levy will be placed on the SE9EMS board for a
the ballot to be voted on in the three year term .
Primary Election in June. It
Attending were Henry
will be a two-tenths of mill for Wells, Warden Ours, Bernard
the continued operation of GilkeY. commis sioners ,
SEOEMS.
W1•s leY Buehl, engineer ,
Mrs. Eskew stated that if M.•ctha Chambers, clerk.
the levy fails , the money in
Later in the day the
the reserve fund may be commissioners in a meeting
enough to operate on for the with Maxme, Plummer,

executive director of. the
Meigs • Gallia . Jackson
Mental Health Service
agreed to submit an ap:
plication to the Ohio
Department of Mental Health
for capital improvement
dollars for a combined
Community Health Service
Multi-Purpose facility in the
amount of $820,000. The
county will be the applicant
agency.

Middleport council opposes
abandonment of railway line

Aresolution of opposition to Auxilia~y..
.
abando~ment of Chesapeake
Permtsston was mformally
and Ohto Rallroad lines from given for visitors at the
Logan to Pomeroy was Middleport Church of Christ
passed by Mtddleport council who will be conducting
·~ regular sesston Monday revival services at th~ church
mght.
the ftrst week of Aprtl to use
The resolution followed an alley behind the church to
Mayor Fred Hoffmans' an- park vehicles. The persons
nouncement that a public reside in the vehicle and will
hearmg wtll be held in thl! be able to get utilities to the
cou~troom at Gallipolis on vehicle through parking at
Aprtl 7 to hear protests the rear of the church .
agamst the abando~ment of
Council President Marvin
the hnes. The . Middleport Kelly reported that only three
village protest wtll oppose the employes had expressed a
abando.nment from the destre to take part m a group
standpomt of the effect of insurance (Blue Cross) plan
growth of the town, the loss which had been offered them
of empl.oyment and the-loss of with the village to pay up to
service by rail for local $10 - or 25 percent - of the
merchants. Mayor Hoffman total cost. Since eight persons
urged ctttzens, particularly ~e.re ~equired for the par·
busl~essmen , to attend the tictpahon of the employes,
he~rmg and express thetr the three Interested cannot
obJecltons to the proposed secure the h.ospltalization
abandonment.
plan, Kelly sa1d.
Council heard a request for
Middlep&lt;Jrt Police Chie~ J.
a [).2 permtt for the Golden J . Cremeans asked council to
Nugget, a 3.2 beer sale approve a $25 monthly inpermit, formerly Ossie's crease for two regular pollee
Recreation Center . The officers. He said the officers
Cll\lliCil took no action since it needed the money for ad·
has until April 12 to approve ditional insurance, but stated
or disapprove. Council must that they could use it for food,
approve the request before it if they desired . Council said
tsapprovedon lhestatelevel. all fu nds had been apCounctl approved a second propriated and that the ap·
reading of the by-laws of the propriations did not provide
Mtddleport Pollee Dept. for raises. Chtef Cremeans

said he. did not want an increase m salary for himself.
He said , however, that
officers work long hours
under hazardous conditions
and that there has never been
any overltme turned in. He
satd the Officers sometimes
drive their own vehicles using
their own gas in worktng
extra hours without pay.
Since council did not act on
his request, the chief then
asked council take action to
provide $25 for additional
ins.urance for one.of his police
offtcers. The ch1ef said the
one
officer
has
no
ht~3pitalization insurance at
all. He offered to have $10 of
his own salary taken to help
provide the insurance for the
one office~ . Council's attitude
was that tt could not provide
the insurance for one and not
for the ?lhers who had expressed tnterest earlier.
Councilman Geor ge
Meinhart reported on a car
lot on Locust st. along with
Mayor Hoffman and it was
stated that fewer damaged
cars are now on the lot.
Councilman James Brewer
asked that some plan be
worked out on setting up a
schedule
for
playing
basketball and tennis at the
community park . Mayor
Hoffman said he would
1

discuss the scheduling with
Paul Gerard, chairman of the
village recreation com.
mission.
Councilman Brewer also
indicated that he is against
fluoridation of the water in
town and presented an article
indicating that such a process
coold be cancer inductive.
However, Mayor Hoffman
had another article on the
subject in exact contrast to
the arti cle presented by
Brewer. Brewer said the
public should express its
feeling to village officials at
once about whether or not
they wish the fluoridation
carried out.
Prayer preceding the
meeting was by Rev . Dwigh t
Zavitz . A:ttending were
Mayor Hoffman, ClerkTreasurer Gene Grate,
Councilmen Kelly , Meinhart,
Brewer Carl Horky and
William' Walters, and Chief
Cremeans.

Weather
Clear and not so cool
tonight, lows 40 to 45. Cloudy,
wmdy and warmer Wednesday , highs in the lower
70s. Probability of rain near
zero per cent today and
tonigh t, 20 per cent Wednesday.
t
'&gt;

�3 The Pomerol Sentinel M ddleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday Harch 23 1976

2 The Pon eroy Sentu et M ddleport Po eroy o l'u" dav Ma

23 976

Coal mmers still' die by ones, twos

Anger, frustration too much
LANSING M ch UP!
It was a ger
and frus ration the fa mers sa d hat dro e
them tAJ p e the carcasses of ca e on hl'

s eps of the sta e Cap to
Theca Ue "ere po soned or staugh ered
because of a chenucat feed mtxup 1 he
farmers Monday we e p olesl ng the sta e s
handlmg of the prob en
pa ticula )
delays n payment of eta ms for the an mats
Some 30 000 calUe hogs and ch ckens
have d ed or been s ughtcred because of
the m shap m which PBB a o&lt;Jc ftre
etardan was m xed wtth feed and
distr bu ed w hundreds of M ch gan far ns
m JWJe 1973
State government has not spen one th n
dime on research mw wha th s pmson w t
do sad Lewts Trombley a farmer fro n
Hersh e)
They ve got us broke and ou cattle all
dead sa d Trombley Now t s spr ng
p an ling time and we haven t go any ac on
yet
One of Trombley s dead cows was cha ned

ange from oof falls
the
oct of U e 969 Coal M ne
!lea th and Safety Ac w 1 mosl common c ause of
to haul ng
beg n four days of pub c nJUrles
ace dents I ke the one that
hea mgs Wednesda;
It w It seek ways o ktlled cart Wll ams and the
unp ove gave rune nt m ne exploSions that usually result
safety efforts and w t ghten n heavy deaths and n)ur es
Alt!wugh the 1969 Jaw was
penalt es for operators who
ntended w reduce the toll
VIolate the Ia\\
Sen Harr son A Will ams the results have been spotty
DN J
the comm ttee Some mme operators say the
s
vague
and
cha rman sa d the Scot a aw
Coal Co had been ctled for un enforceable Federal
I 250 a teged VIola ons s nee off c ats openly concede that
penall es for v olat ons are
too m ld w have much effect
on curb ng deaths and
nJurleS
Accord mg to
MESA
stat st cs 155 coal mmers
1970 when the m ne safety died m acctdents last year
up from 132 each m !974 and
law went mw effect
He satd government 1973 and JUSt one less than
mspecwrs shut down the the 156 k lled m 1972
Th s year after Jusl two
mme 57 ltrnes m the past ftve
year s c t ng
mm nen t and one.!Jalf months the mil
stands near 5()
danger on 21 occas ons
W !hams has proposed
Inspectors from the Mmlng
hree maJOr changes in the
Enforcement and Safety Ad
m n s rat on
apparently safety law
Move MESA from the
un covered v olat on s
Inter
or Departinent to the
reg ularly Will ams sa d
Labor
Departinent
bu no meanmgful changes
Put workers m non-eoat
have been brough about
Instead
MESA mmmg mdustr es under !he
enforcement amounted to same standards that apply to
g vmg m ne operators no coal mmmg
Revtse enforcemen t
more than a m td slap on the
rules ndudmg a speedier
wrst hesa d
There have got w be p ocess form ne operators to
reasons why th s trag c and appeal f nes b) leVIed MESA
Robert E Barrett a
mtole able carnage of mmers
s con t nwng desp le the Ia ws former coa l m ner who
des gned o stop 1! W ll ams re ently took charge at
And
we
are MESA hastened w he Scotia
sa d
de term ned w f nd wha they m ne after he f rst exploston
killed 15 men March 9 He
are
Coa m ners espec ally was m on the dec s on o send
hose who work deep n the team of mmers and
underground m Appalach a federal mspecwrs that lost II
face danger every une they men n the second explosiOn
en er he mmes Hazards two days Ia er

to a t ruler The f ozen carra!;S of a 1 mb
"asp aced al the foot of a pod w 1 Pi kup
trucks and tra lers bear ng oil er carcasses
1 tered s de s reels around he cap ol
Sta e I "' U off c a s says nail amounts of
PBB rn meat and da ry products s not
harmful to human be ngs Bu farn ers
bel eve any amount of PBB s unsafe for
both human bemgs and an mats
The) say traces of PBB n the r silos and
food s or age areas st It po son the r herds
The fa mers demanded a ban on
sh pments of m lk and n ea f on
contam nated herds w thm three days
trnmed ate settlement of a c atms and
lean ng and tes ng of a ll gran elevators
and feed supply po nts
Gov Will am M It ken agreed he ate of
clatrn process ng was too slow He ordered a
weekly account ng of se tlements and
appo nted a conumttee o oversee clatrn
handlmg
Our nex s ep ts Wash ngton if th s man
M ken ) doesn do someth ng today
sa d Trombley

the slaughter
goes on

Patty's lawyers lose again
By DONALD B THACKREY
SAN FRANCISCO UP!
A torneys for conv cted bank

robber Patr c a Hea sl have
been hwa rted n thetr
a! empts to preven her
trnmed ale transfer to Los
Angeles wface state charges
U S D str ct Cour Judge
0 ver carter reJected thetr
appea Monday to keep he
hetress here unt 1sen enc ng
The defense lawyers told the
court she would be m grea
da nger m Los Ange es They
did no! elabo a e
Carter sa d she wou ld be
transferred by U S marshals
b; he end of he week af er a
p obat on off ce comp e es
presentence nlerVIews wtlh
M ss Hearst
The judge also reschedu ed
he sentenc ng w Apr 1 2
When she was con v c ed
Sa urday on charges of bank
robbery and usmg a ftrearm
n !he cormruss on of a felony
Sa urday he se sen enc ng
for April 19
M ss Hearst 22 daugh er
of San Franc sco Exam ne
Pres dent Rando ph Hears

w I be charged w th II
counts mclud ng k dnap
assa ult and robbe y n Los
Angeles
The
c harges
resu led from a shoot ng at
Mel s Sport ng Goods Store
Defense lawye Albe
Johnson

who

sa d

her

conv c Jon
wou d
be
appealed sru d a JOmt tr al
w th Symb onese L beral on
A m; membe s W ll an
Harr sand h s w fe Emtly n
Los Angeles would be ou of
the quest on
He srud the defenses were
different and the law s
clea r tha t defendan s w th
means sten defenses canna

be t ed w h another
defendant
1 os Ange les
D str c
Attorney John van de Camp
sad Mss Hea sl w uld he
b ought befo e Supe or
Court Judge Ma k Brandler
early next " ee k for
a ra gnmenl
and
ba
set mg
We
ecommended
ortgmall)
when the grand
JUry e urned Is md ctinent
a ba I of $500 000 bu hat

m ght be academtc no\\

he

prosecutor sa d

Tl e shoot ng took p ace a
month after the robbery at a
H berrua Bank branch here
The robbery occurred two
mon hs

after

she

was

kidnaped from her Be keley
Cal f apartinent by he SLA
n February 974
More of the JUry wh h
conv cted M ss Hearst spoke
out expla rung the reasons
they re]ec ed her clatrn she
part c pa ed n he c unes
because she feared he SLA
would k 1 her
Jury members Ellen
West n 54 mo her of four
and Clovet a Ro;all 32 both
sa d they d d not believe M ss
Hearst s story she was raped
by SLA member W II e Wolfe
TI ey no ed M ss Hea st
when captu ed m September
was carry ng a MeXJcan ftgu
rme g ven o her by Wolfe
before he was sla n n Los
Angeles w th f ve othe SLA
members I bel eve that she
ruly d d ove W 1 e Wolfe
Mrs Roya l sa d

Evening, night courses
still open at RGC-CC
RIO GRANDE - R o
Grande College R o Grande
Commun ly Co lege s con
nu ng

o accept students

who\\ sh to enroll n even ng

Candidates loved(and left)North Carolina voters~:;e~~~~~i~:?~~~~~a:~~
By ELIZABETII WHARTON
A federal cour udge set a
United Press Internat onal
hear ng oday on whether to
Whatever the results m he block p mtmg of ha s a e s
VIew of the compet ng ca n Democrat c bat ots pendmg a
qidates
oday s North dec son on whether Morr s
Ca rol na pr mary no\\ s Udal s pe ons had he
hl6 ory None of the four proper number of names
major contenders rema ned
And n a separate d spute
rl the state to hear the the Morgan Coun y Elect on
esults
Boardorderedthreedeegae
The Democrats off cat y can d dates
pledged to
ost a cand date - Sargent Wallace off lnd ana s ballot
Shr ver
who already had after a Mart nsVIlle a torney
all but taken hime f ou of the challenged their pet t1on
runnmg after the lit no s
Pres dent Fo d was sa d o
pr mary and gamed a be conf den of h s s xth
favor te son contender n stra ght wm o e Republ can
Rep Wayne Hays of Oh o
cha Ienger Rona d Reaga n n
And lnd ana was sl 1 North Carol na oday and
havmg difficult es de ding planned w s ay home and
who qualif ed for ts ballo
wa ch he retu ns w th h s

w fe n the Wh le HoWle
Reagan who campa gned
hard through Mondav n ght
spen today seekmg votes for
Wtsconsm s p una y Apr 1 6
and planned to fly home to
Ca llforma ton ght
On the Democrattc s de
!avo te J mmy Ca rter
headedforafWJd-f"a se nS
Lou s and George Wa lace
who cl maxed h s Nor h
caro na effort w th one of h s
pa ented rall es Monday was
w get the results m he
gove rn or s ma ns on
n
Alabama ton ght
Ea rl ) Monday Shr ver
whose campa gn never
ca ugh fire became the f fth
Democra w w thdraw from

DR. LAMB

Plan diet for spastic colon
II)&lt; Lawrence E Lamb MD

DEAR DR LAMB I have
had d ar hea off and on for
e gh years The tests show a
spasltc colon I am bones
because no h ng stays n me
I an a h ghly nervous person
but I ha e d a rhea even f
my nerves are re axed Thev

have t ea ed me w th d f
ferent th ngs but
doesn t
work I have sharp pa ns and
burn ng a nd flut er ng
Htroughout my ntes nes
tian you please adv se me l
am only 35 but feel ke 99
most of the me
DEAR READER
S op
coffee n all forms nclud ng
the decaffe nated type Do
not use tea colas or o her
c.affe ne
co n a n ng
~~Verages Temporar ly you
1!)1 ght avo d al forms of soda
lleverages No because they
&amp;&gt;nta n soda but because
@me of them that you m ght
suspect conta n caffe ne
!Pat may sttmul a te the
10ervous sys tem
S op
imok ng c garett_es f you se
liiy at a t
=. Do start eatmg bu k
toota mng foods part cularly
ihose conta n ng bran These
ire the whole wheat
lltoducts You ca n use All
JStan b and buds or any
~er sources of who e whea t
ffber tha t you ca n ge
lllredded wheat products are
ll.oo whole wheat Keep n
l!llnd that you have gas and
pptoms for he ftrst two to
Ioree weeks when you n
liease the cereal f ber m
Ylfur d et You ay need to do
thiS gradua ly to keep fro m
causmg too many symp oms
Stop all m k •nd m tk

ao•

products a nd ao not use foods
tha use any app ec abe
amounts of m lk n the r
preparat on such as m lk
gravtes c earn p es ce
cream and m k-conta n ng
sherbets
After fo tow ng hiS reg me
for a wh le f you s tuat1on
stra ghlens out you can try
rru k products and see f you
are able to tolerate them If
you are you cou d add hem
back to your normal d et so
you w 11 be ge tmg enough
calcnan These s mpte po nts
1 sled above w II go a long
way toward he lp ng many
people who have !he spas\ c

only ab ormal ty w th a
perle tly no rna hear and
normal abdom nat organs
Such mdtv duals may 1ve a
perlectly normal I fe span
Some! mes when the
var a on occu s here w be
accompany ng b rth defects
If here are whether or not
they wtll affec he health of
the nd v dual depends on
what defects are present and
how se ous hese defe ts are
If t s an ord nary garden

var ely type of hea t defect
hat an be comp te ely
co rr ec ed w h a s mple
ope a on hen !he outlook s
usually good

co on prob em

D arrhea often IS part of the
problem of an rr table colon
Those who wan more n
format on on spas! c colon

can send 50 cents fo The
Irr table or Spas t c Colon and
Const paiJon Send a long
stamped
se f addressed
envelope for mat! ng Ad
dress your etler to me n
ca re of h s newspaper P 0
Box 1551 Rad o C ty Stat on
Ne\1 York NY 10019
DEAR DR LAMB
Can
yo u pl ease g ve me In
fo rna on on dextrocard a
w th s us nverses Is t true
that the hear on the nght
s de s weaker and that he
ch ld usually des at btrth
DEAR
READER
Nega ve A I that d agnos s
n cans s tha t the nternal
organs of the body a e
arranged n a m r or mage
of he norma l arrangement
That s he h ngs tha a e
upposed to be on the r ght
s de are o he ef s de and
v ce v

a

{ s

an be tl

The

Da1~

Linden Me

•

Sentinel

he race
o beg n on Tuesday may do
He re a ed
he 11 so by com ng to A len Hall on
de ega es he p eked up n he campus before the class
M ss ss pp
a n d RegJSira on fo o her olasses
Ma ssachu se ts _ w thou! w ll con nue each evenmg
ecommending a cand da e hroughout the week
bu w 1 allow delegate
The follow ng classes to
ca nd dates pledged to hun to beg n Tuesda) are open fo
s ay on he ba to n Texas reg strat on
Rep Wayne Hay s 64
In s ama t c Cam er a
cha rman of the powe ful Te hn ques Tuesday 8 30House Adm n s tr at on 10 JOP m
comm ttec announced he
Judo Tuesda y 8 30-10 30
w ll run for pres den as a P n
favor te son n Oh 0
Introduct on to Soc otogy
The Democrats newts\ TTh 6 30-8 30 p m
co ntender
Sen
Frank
Marr age and the Fam1ly
Church of Idaho said m Salt TTh 8 40-10 40 P m
Lake c ty he expec s to be
Soc otogy of Ed uca l on
among the surv vo s of the TTh 4 10-8 0 p m
brutal prtrnary campa gn
tntroduc on o Socia
Meanwh le a Gallup poll of Wo k TTh 6 30.lJ 30 p m
lntrod uct on to Taxes TTh
1 425 Democrats showed non
cand date Hubert Humphrey 8 40-10 40 p m
Real Estate Reappraisal
s favore&lt; for the pa y s
nom na on by 30 per cent a TTh 8 40-10 10 p m
ga n of 3 po nts from the last
F eshman or ental on
such survey wh le carter s Program T 5 20-8 20 p m
favored by 28 per cent a gam
General Psychology TTh
of2ponts
630-830pm
Humphrey s not runrung
Accounting Quantitat ve
but he frequently has sad he Methods I TTh 8 40-10 40
wou d be del ghted to accept p m
a draft - and run and w n

Gospel group
slated to stng
The Everlas ng Love a
gospel group w II s ng at the
Laurel C If Free MethodiSt
Church Sunday a 7 30 p m

Account ng Quan tat ve
Methods III TTh 6 30-8 30
pm
Advanced Photog raphy T
6 30-10 30 p m
Fundamentals of B otogy
T530-830pm
Delation a nd Trans
cr pt on TTh 6 30-8 30 p m
Advanced Typewr mg
TTh 4 10-8 10 p m
Read ~ g Methods fo
Secondary School TTh 6 309pm

Phys cal Ed Methods for
Secondary School T 6 3010 30 p m
Advanced Compos tJOn T
oJ0-830pm
F ne Arts MTTH 5 20-7
pm
Informal Geometry TTh
630-830pm
Descr pt ve As ronomy
TTh 8 30-10 30 p m
Archeology and PrehJSI&lt;lry
TTh 8 4P.10 40 p m
Theory of Argument TTh
6 30-830pm
Theater
Producallon
Serrunar MTW 6 'Z p m
Theater
Act n~ MT
WThF 79 30pm
For more nformat on
contact Ule Off ce of Ad
m .. o~ and Records Rio
Grande College R o Grande
Commun ty Coll ege R o
Grande Oh o 45674 o
U! ephooe 245-5353

Barrett told UPI in an
nterv ew he feels the 1969
mme safety law needs to be
changed
The assessment of
penal! es IS borrendous he
sad
The deterrent effect ts
defeated 1f violations result m
small fines he satd but rome
operators
knowmg \be
complexities of the law force MESA to go w court If
f nes are relat vely large
Some cases) are backed
up four years he sa1d
In the past f ve years
MESA has collected fmes
wtal ng $21 3 m U10n and
failed to collect an additional
$15 rmlllon
The Scot a rome
a
subs dtary of Blue D amond
Coal Co of Knoxville Tenn
has po d $78 877 n ctvil
penult es on 650 not ces of
Vlolat on s nee 1971
Scot a has yet to pay one
$10 000 !me for a haulage
ace dent hat nJured three
persons last AprJl and 20
other fines totalmg $1 679 for
less ser ous nctdents In
addttion the mme has 92
not ces of v olat on awa t ng
m !tal assessment of a fme
A MESA lllSpecto can
close a mme urunediately tf a
vtolat on poses trnmment
danger w miners If the
danger s less severe he can
ssue an order to correct the
cond t on without a shutdown
The mspe ctor sends a
not ce of the v olation to
MESA for assessment of a
f ne If the operawr objects
the matter may be dealt w th

m conference wtth MESA or
appealed through varwus
channels
Roy
Wade
ch ef
nvest gator for W lllams
Senate commtllee s81d ooe of
MESA s mam enforcement
problems has been a
tendency to compromtse
Don t pay Don t pay he
said Thai a just the name of
t11e game Eventually MESA
will settle for 30 cents on the
dollar
A mJSjudgment of the haz
ards at a particular mme
such as the threat of a gas
exploston can be disastrous
Barrett satd the Scotia
mme was not considered very
gassy even though t emttled
300 000 cubic feet of methane
per day Some rrunes m
Vtrg n a by compar1son
em t between 17 and 18
million cubtc feet per day
In the less gassy mrnes he
srud offtctals build up a
certain complacency
A Scot a he sa d there
were mistakes made on the
part of the operawrs
The
ven lat on was margrnal but
m compliance They probably
should have had a hell of a lot
more air In the mine
Notmg that Scot a off CJa s
say thetr mme was tested by
a man before the exploSIOn
and that no methane ws
found Barrett sa d I m not
going w accuse the guy but
he exammes t and 6 or 7
hour s lat er there s an
explos on
Some observers are leery

about what the government s
Coni nued on page 10)

the Poet's comer
THE COMFORT OF SPRING
Wmter has wld ItS story and ts
days have stepped as de
The weeks are march ng qmckly n
WI form to abide
A lime for pleasure s here which
adds enJoyment to some extent
A breath of fresh atr or the beauty
of flowers discovered by the r scent
As I dnve along the roads my eyes

see fresh colors on the groWJd
I can I sten m the evenmg to birds
frogs and other artslng soWJds
As a lovmg song often comforts the
heart w th a story
So does the season of spring as It
del vers all ts many joys
It s so easy for us all to blmd the
season from our dally cares
Should we open our eyes we mtgh
f nd that fe and beau yare meant wshare
How one loves w look at the earth
and see nature wtth all Is form
The xpring IS a spec al season wtth
movement from hfe that s now bemg born
Ufe JS so short when only at \lines
11 seems to have no end
To over look prec ous tune and w sh
11 by makes 1 fe somewhat thin
Yes our lives grow closer toward the
ftrst day of sprmg
As tlme surely passes the days each
year another life t w ll brmg
As sprmg comes forth to meet our
needs Easter 1s closely by
thus remember Jesus Chrtsl rose with
our sms so our souls could live and never die
Deem Middleport Ohto

Rog~r K

Local chapter concludes observance
of national Demolay Week Mar. 14-21

The Me gs Chapter of the
Order
of DeMolay has con
t was announced at the
Young Adult Class meeting at eluded ts observance of
the Me gs CoWJly Jnftrmary Nat onal DeMolay We ek
March 14 21
Fr day mght
Also ann oun ced we re
Estabhshed over 50 years
evangel st c se v es to beg n the DeMolay movement was
March 29 and co ntmue founded m 1919 by the late
through Apr I 4 w th the Rev
Frank S Land and a group of
Donald Glass evangel sl A n ne h gh school boys in
skat ng party vas planned for Kansas C ty Mo
F 11 ng a need then as now
Apr 1 15 7 30
o 10 p m
F ankl n Mart n d reeled a fo act ve young men of
study of Revelat on Darla pr nc ple ts rap d growth
little
short
Hawley and Brenda Haggy was
of
served refreshments
phenomenal becomtng n
Attendmg bes des those U!rnat onal m scope w1 htn
named were the Rev and four years Today over three
M s Floyd Shook V ck m I on act ve and sen or
Hanson Joan Clark Rick DeMolays have entered Is
Ash D ane Lew s Lawrence purtals n some 2 :;oo chapters
and Barbara Ebhn Ida m 12 counlrles and territor es
Marttn Becky Eblin Randy throughout the free world
Thousands of these young
and Darla Haw ey Ern e and
Brenda Ha ggy
Vtrgtl men who ftrst acqmred their
Ph I ps M ke and Sharon leadership ablllties n their
W ght Jac k and Jane DeMolay chapters have gone
Jacobs Benny Wr ght Bob on to errunent careers tn
and L nda Foster Kathy business the professions
Scarberry Sharon and Dick 1 terary ar s government
Fo mer and Mrs M ldred servtce the m 1 tary en
tertamment and athletics
Jacobs
prov1d ng some of the most
SONGHcST SLATED
d1sUngwshed names In their
A songfest " II be he d al 2 respect ve
f elds
In
p n Sunday at the Seventh numerable testlmon es have
Day Adven\Jst Church n bee made by these national
Pomeroy All smgers and the and "uri 1 eade s a g
pubhc are welcome
I ey sl ~ P• a ct ce ll e

DeMolay pnnc ples nstilled where lasting friendshtps are
n them as young men
formed
Each DeMolay chapter s
2 Partie pat on m a w de
sponsored by a recogmzed var ely of chapter d strict
group !]! Masons DeMolay Is jur sd1ct1onal
and
n
not ~ JUn or Masonic lernahonal activ ties rangmg
orgaJ)tza t on
nor
1s from soc al events and sports
relat onsh1p o a Mason a through clv c serv ce of m
prereqwSJU! of membersh p fimte vartety
It IS however recogn zed as
3 Responstb llty developed
freemasonry as an out
through participation in
stand ng characU!r building planning and execulmg many
organization for young men programs such as fund
Mason c
sponsorsh p raising events and ob
prov1des DeMolay chapters servatlons of Obligatory
wtlh dependable dedtcaled Days and Internal onal
adult leadersh p and the USe DeMolay Week
of Mason c bwld ngs to house
4 Ability to work and get
DeM9lpy act v1t1es
along wtth others through
The mmed ate supervls on skills stressed and developed
of every DeMolay chapter s by DeMolay leadership
by an advtsory c ounctl tralnin~
compr sed of nterested
5 Advantage of becoming
Malll'[ls from \he sponsoring a better son a better citizen
body One of these cOWiclt and a better fr1end through
members s deslgnatea adherence to DeMolay
ChapU!r Dad and s the teachings and ideals
main counselor and adVIsor
6 CompeUtloo with peers tn
o th~ chapter members To such areas as ritual sports
h1m any member can take speech and - Y contests
h s problems with the
1
Opportunity
for
assurance he w II be met with achievement through an
fr endshlp
and
un extensive program of honors
def!itandtng
and awards
Ne~&lt; honzons offered by
8 Ellg1blllty to attend
r M'ol n tude
conclaves and leadership
r. ~
I a ely to
camps to visit other chapters
worldwtde brotherhood throughout the free world and
I

to apply for DeMolay
scholarships
9 Travel opportun hes
period cally prov de d for
DeMolays to JOurney In
groups to such places as
Europe the Hawauan Islands
and tbe Orient
10 Commendahon from
leaders of the commun ly for
seeking membership in a
youth organ zation offering
worthwhile companlollllhtp
and activities and deyelop
ment of admirable character
lralts which remain with the
DeMolay member for l)fe
I Strong Ues of !rater
nallsm and mutual Interest
with hWJdreds of thousands of
other DeMolays ln cities and
towna toea ted all over the
world
12 Initiation cerem011ies
conducted with dignity and
solemnity free from em
barrassment or ridicule
13 Nominal fees for
nltiatlon or life membership
plan DeMotay •• a non-profit
organization
To join the order of
DeMolay yoWJg men shrould
be between the ages of 14 and
21 beHeve In God be of good
character and reputation
and petition a DeMolay
chapter

ley after 2nd straight AAA title

By GENE CADDES
UP! Sporll Writer
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) Jene
Davis who guided Colwnbus
Linden McKinley to !be state
Class AAA basketball title m
lWJ fttst year as a head coach
would like wprove 11 wasn t
a Duke
DavlB whose team was 10-8
in regular season play last
season before wadmg
By MILTON RICHMAN
through eight tournament
UP! Sports Editor
opponents gets that chance
Sf' PETERSBURG Fla (UP!)- Tom Seaver had put m a begmmng Frulay ( 11 a m )
long day
when the Panthers go against
He was the last one to fmish as he generally IS every day m M ddletown In the Hrst game
the sprmg because he hab tually works longer than any of the ol the AAA semt.f nals
other Mets and now as he sat there on the grass leaning back
The second AAA game
on one hand the SWJ was catching the left stde of h s face while scheduled for 2 30 p m
he talked wnewsmen only a few feet from the Huggma-stengel sends unbeaten and No 2
Held clubhouse entrance
ranked Barberton against
Bud Harrelson the Mets regular shortstop trying to come Toledo Scott also unbeaten
back after knee surgery was the last player to leave the and ranked No 3 w1th the
clubhouse When he returned f ve mmutes tater for something wmners of the two games
he forgot m h1s locker and saw Seaver still reclmmg on the meeting for the state blg
grass talking he couldn t help needling him a little
school IItle Saturday at 3 p.m
Hey Tom he called out whadd ya domg' Tell ng em
We re not golrig w sneak
EVERYTHING
up on anybody this year
Tom Seaver told a lot but he didn t tell everything
sa1d DaVIs who has only one
He revealed how he felt about the Mets mitlatlng trade talks starter (aU.Qhto guard Todd
mvolvmg him durmg the 17 days the camps were closed He Pem ) back from last years
talked of how that came about and he spoke of the strong role squad We d like to prove it
he took on the stde of the Players Assoclat on m the stalemate wasn t a fluke that you don t
wtth the owners He also talked about hts unage InSISting he get here 011 luck
had to do what he honestly felt was right but he never talked at
Lmden whtch handed
all ahout what happened when the camps I nally opened last Middletown one of 1ts two
Thursday
regular season losses 65-63 at
Everyone was trYing w act as f nothing unusual had Middletown takes a 21 3
occurred on the first day
record mto the semi finals
The Mets players all greeted one another cheerlu ly and Fr day morning havmg won
asked about each others lam lies
the tough Columbus City
Tom Seaver was about to put on h s uruform that f rst day League btle
when one of the Mets pulled hun as de and told hun he d llke to
With the 5-9 Penn one of
have a word wtth hun pr vately
last year s tournament stars
The two went nto a SJde room here and when they both were as the leader Dav1s has a
out of earshot of all the others th1s parUcular ind v dual solld squad of etght players
thanked Seaver deeply for becommg so Involved for do ng all
he had w preserve this man s eventual penston
Tom Seaver tried to brush off the whole thmg saymg 1! was
nothmg but then he suddenly not ced someth ng
The man talkrng to hun had tears n hts eyes
Other players w th the Mets also made 1\ a pomt to convey
their gratitude to Seaver for what he had done n the r behalf
Seaver told them all he had only done what he felt he had to
bemg the Mets player rep The job sn t an easy one
By GENE CADDES
Somebody s gotta do t srud Joe Torre the Nat onal UP! Sports Writer
League player rep Tom d d a fine JOb
COLU!I1BUS UP!) - The
Ed Kranepool the Mets player rep before Seaver took over Blue Jays Of Delphos St
the job m 1911 fees he JS drawmg an unfair rap all around
John s under coach Bob
He s trymg to get the best possible reserve clause for all the Arnzen for years have been
rest of the guys not Tom Seaver said Kranepool He s one of the wp basketball
trying to get the 6-and I That doesn t affect him He could ve schools m the state but 1975eaSily gone along wtth the owners or gina! proposal and he d 76 was thetr f rst unbeaten
be s1ttmg pretty He could be p aymg out h s ophon But he season ever
wasn t thmkmg of himself he was thinlung of the rest of the
When you play the Roose
guys
veils Dunbars Dayton) and
When Seaver !malty p eked hunsell up from the grass and the Toledo and Columbus
walked mt.o the Mets clubhouse Monday be talked some more schools one of them l8 gomg
about why he had been so active m the players behalf
to get you We ve always put
I had to be true to myself he satd sunpty without being a good schedule ahead of the
dramatic It had to do with something I believed In and I record explained Arnzen
stood up for t I had to look at myself and I had to look at the
This past seaaon however
players these players that I live with every day from now untd the Blue Jays paced by
Ocwber I could ve ]ust stayed out of the enttre sltuat on and Arnzen s son Jim and &amp;.a Tim
protected myself but if I had done that I wouldn t have Pohlman both All-Ohto
respected myself and I wouldn t have felt I had the respect of selections
rolled over
my fellow players
everybody
Seaver bel eves the Mets began trade talks for hlDI only
And Delphos prowess was
because his feelmgs wward the club were mJSrepresented by reflected n balloting for
newspaper accoWJts
United Press Inlernational
There s no doubt m my mmd !be Mets talked trade w th Class AA Ohio coach of the
some clubs about me he sa d That s the r prerogat ve year honors when Amun
That doesn t bother me m tbe slightest I mean f they want to topped all nominees with 23 of
trade me then they can go ahead and trade me I mean 1t 67 votes cast
s ncerely 11 wouldn t hurt my feel ngs If they traded me I can
Arnzen who has turned out
p tch some place else I ve told that to Joe McDonald Mets perenrual powerhouses m h s
general manager But I also told him don t trade me JUS\ 26 years at St John s led the
because you !hmk I m WJhappy I never satd I m unhappy Blue Jays to the an IS.O
That s only what some writer s&amp;d
record before they were upset
Tom Seaver hasp tched nme years for the Mets
m the district tournament by
In alii kelihood that s he same team he s going w p tch for St Marys a team they beat
th s year
by 25 points only two weeks

Sport Parade

which he turns to regularly
Pem a junior s the
leading scorer at 17 pomts per
game whtle 6 2 Sterhng
W1Uiams another juruor IS
next at IS and and 6-1 seJUor
Be My Hill at 10
Dav1s p1cks h s other
starters from among a group
of four tncluding &amp;-foot senior
Alan Lawson 6 2 sen or
ReggJe Richardson S-3 jumor
John Davis and ~ JUIUor
John Collins
ThiS year s Linden squad JS
similar to last years wtth the
ability either to run or play a
disctplined
game
tf
necessary
Phystcally we were
sa1d
stronger last year
Davts but we shoot better
thts year There s nobody on
our team who can shoot
In
Middletown
the
Panthers go up agamst a
Paul Walker coached team
which Js making its f rst
appearance 1n the State
Tournament smce 1959
Paced by AAA player of the
year Butch Carter a 6-5
forward Wlth a 25 pomts per
game average the Middies
were 1&amp;-2 on the regular
season Wlth the other loss to
Sprmgfteld South
Walker who has has a long
line of outstandmg players at
!11iddletown calls carter se
cond only to (Jerry) Lucas
The veteran coach making
his eighth trip to the b1g show
and seeking his sixth
championship credits great
Improvement for his team s

Delphos' Blue Jays in
first perfect season

Swanton's Lambert is quick
on the court, in classroom
By GENE CADDES
UP! Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP!)
UJU\ed Press International
Class AA Ohio Player of the
Year Jeff Lambert of
Swanton s as adept m the
classroom as he

1s

on a

basketball court
Special mention was ac
corded
Br an
Beys
Wheelersbure and Dean Ftlz
~tnck Ironton
Honorable menUon went to
Tony Folden Gallipolis Joe
Rose Wheelersburg and
Gary Snowden Galllpolls
62
175 pound
The
Lambert second In hls class
of 167 with a 3 95 grade-pomt
average out of a po5111ble 4 0
averaged 28 pomts per game
this past season In leading a
medtocre Swanton team to a
10-8 record
He was double-teamed at
most every tlnle he got the
ball but he handled all the
pressures of the season very
well said Swanton coach
Jeff Eckel His intelligence
carries over on the floor
Lambert heads up a AA
AllOhio basketball squad that
also includes &amp;.a Marquis
Miller of Columbus St
Charles &amp;-7 Scott Spencer of
Rossford 6-5 Ron WUczak of
Lorain Catholie and 6-0 Jim
Arnzen of Delph011 St Johns
Despite a variety of box
811dooe or dlamood-and-&lt;Jne
defenses to stop him
Lambert captured the
Northern Border League
scoring title for the third

consecutive year
Lambert scored 53 pomts
against Anthony WayJIC his
hlgh for the season
prompting coach D ck
Albaugh w proclann be s
glad to see h1m graduate
Lambert also had 41 points m
hts other game agamst
Anthony Wayne
Albaugh added however
that Lambert Is his type of
player and person He s a
wellbehaved k d on the
floor he sa1d
Another coach who had to
try to defend against
Lambert Jim McBride of
Delta called him just what
you re looking for m a
player
Lambert in the last 40
games was held under 20
points only three times He
holds the Swanton career
scoring marl! of 1 361
Miller the ooly junior on
the three AA teams paced St
Charles to a 111-2 regular
season mark
Besides averaging 19 7
points per game for the well
balanced Cardinals MUier
also was an outstanding
rebounder and an effective
sho.t.blocker
Spencer a solid 215
pounder averaged 24 3 polnta
per game iii leadtnc Roulord
to a 17 I season whUe Wilczak
averaged It points per game
in Lorain Catholic s 18-0
season
Arnzen son of AA Coach of

the Year Bob Arnzen was the
leader of the Blue Jays thlB

before
Arnzen a Un vers ty of
Dayton graduate refuSed to
tab this year s squad his best
but did say he never had a
team to dominate opponents
like tlWJ one
Despt\e the d sappomting
wurney loss to St Marys
Arnzen called the 1975-76
season really fun
We had no troubles at
all Arnzen satd It was
JUSt a real fun year for us
Even the tournament loss
lett no real bad taste m
Arnzen s mouth
It wasn t that we played
badly
Arnzen
said
referrmg to the St Marys
loss We played good but
they JUS! played better They
hit 68 per cent from the field
and It was not that our
defense broke down they just
put ll lll.
Jun Lawhead of unbeaten
Loram catholic was second in
the balloting with eight votes
Walt Harrop of River Vtew
last year s wp coach was
third with SIX
others with more than one
vote lricluded Bill Kemon of
Urbana Wally Teeters of
Colwnbus St Charles Bob
Haas of Willard Larry
Siefert of Brookfield Gary
McElfresh of Coshocton
Bobby Dawson of WellSVIlle
J1m Bailey of Circleville and
Bob Shahan of Cincinnati
Greenhills
NHL

s and ngs

ly Un ed P en lnte na on1l

C.Jmpbel Conference
past season with h1s play
Patr ck D "' s on
making and defense while
W L T Pis GF GA
averaging 15 5 points per K Ph aa ph •a
" a 320 90
NY sende s39 8 5 932 2 0
contest
A an a
J 32
73 2-42 22
Arnzen a teammate 6 8 NYR:angers 2539 9 5924 304
Smvthe 0 v son
Tim Pohlman heads up the
W L T Pis GF GA
second team which also Ch ago
29 2
75 224 233
mcludes Circlevtlle s 6 3 Vancou e 29 31 " 72 2-45 25,.
ous
2635 3 6522 270
George Moore &amp;-2 Blll Dodd sMnneso
a
9 -49 s -43 5 27
of Flrelands 11-2 Mike Moyer Kansas C v 12 49
35 68 306
WI es Confer•nce
of River View and S.ll Todd
Nor s D v son
Stevens of Sandy Valley
W L T Pis GF GA
ea
54 0 0 9309 59
Dodd was by far the top PxMon
sbu gh
33 29
27
scorer among the secmd five Los Ange es 34 J 8 n6 32352 245
24 •.0 9 5 962 J
wtth a 28 4 per-t~ame mark Dero
Wash ng on
9 sc 9 27 99 353
Pohlman led the well
Ad1ms D v son
W L T PIS GF GA
balanced St John s club m
Bos on
C6 4 2 OC 286 209
scorln~ with a 16 2 scoring
e ta o
4 20 2 94 306 22
average
while
Moore To on o
32 28 4 78 2 7 254
averaged 17 I Mayer 17 and Ca torn 1!1 26 40 b 62 239 26C
x c nched divls on 111e
Stevena 19 1
Mond1y 1 Rnu t
Named w the third team Ca fo na S LOUS
Tuesday s G1mes
were Mike Horne
a NY s anders
a Vancouve
teammate of Wllczak at Ph aae ph a a M nneso a
C y at Wash ng on
IAJ'aln catholic Mike Wright KansasWednesd1y·
s G1mes
of WeUsvllle Mike Huebner NY Range s 1 Buffa o
of Paulding Rod Cok of NY s ande sa Los Ange es
A an a at Ch cago
WUiard and Brian Agler of Toron
o a Mon ea
Marlon Etgln
Wash ng on a Oe o
Bos on a P sbu 'ilh
The 11-10 Huebner averaged M
nneso a a Kansas C y
'l1 points per game while
Aglilr a nifty ball.!Jandler
aver-ged 21 Horne 18 I
Wright 17 and Cok 14
PHILADELPHIA UP!)
The PhUadelphia Atoms have
announced \he slgnmg of
three North American Soccer
League veterans Manny
Matoa George 0 Neill 811d
Juau Paletta
0 N•lll played on the
Atorna 1973 championship
team liut saw little action last
seaaon because of a broken
leg

success along w th a rugged
But Coa h Jack Greynolds
defense which beld CincmnatJ uses seven players I beratly
Elder w 13 po nts n the ftrsl n h s pressure defense wh ch
ha lf of Saturdays 77 56 he
ca l s
organ zed
regional !mats wm at Dayton confusion
Walker s other starters are
The confuston however s
6-2 Ron Morr son and 11-2 usually prov ded by the
sopbomore George Carter a oppos lion w !ness the 38
brother of Butch both
urn ove rs
by
Canton
averagmg m double f gures
McK nley n ts reg ona t
and 6-4 Er c McClure and 5-11 f nals loss to the Mag s and
Ron Gregory
41 by Akron t;;ast n another
Walker called Unden a wurnament con test
Mark Bodnar s the leading
good ball club they re quick
and they shoot well I thmk t scorer w h a 21 per game
mark Sco 1 s averag ng 17
will be a hell of a game
The second AAA game Marty Bodnar 16 and Gr sby
matches the b ggest learn m who played only f ve regular
the tournament Scott ( 23-0)
season games 10
aga nst
the
smallest
Asked where he uses the
Bodnars Greynotds rep! ed
Barberton ( 24-0
Barberton with no starter
anywhere we need them
over &amp;-1 features the Bodnar When you re as smal as we
are you can t play regular
tw ns Mark and Marty
Carter Scott and Fred basketball
Gr sby a ll averag ng n
Stx of Barber on s op
seven players are JUruors the
double f gures

only seruor be ng 6-1 Harold
Gr sby bro her of Fred and
the
team s
lead ng
rebounder

Scott coached by Ben WJI
1ams s paced by IHl second
earn at Oh oan Donald
Collins
Colhns a sen or s not only
the teague scorer w th h s 9
po nts per game mark but IS
a so se ond n rebounding
stea ls and ass sts
Will ams ca lls h m the
bes player n the state
The other starters on the
Scott team wh ch averages
better than 6-4 per man a e 64 Greg Pope 6-2 Verd s
Chears 6-4 Booker Harr s
and 6-5 Tom W lliams
Pope averages 16 pomls pe
game and Chea s 10
Coach Wll ams feels h s
team 1s well balanced and
adjusts fa rly we I to game
s uat ons

l9HORSES DIE
PAWTU CKET
R I
I UPI
An estimated 19
Thoroughbred horses were
killed Monday night when
I re swept two large stables
at Narragansett Park race
track
That looks like the float
ount 19 Narragansett
spoke man John McCarthy
sa d
ear ly
today
Workers managed to
lea d so me frightened
hurses frum the stables to

other hors e barns In the
confus io n three horses
knocked down pollee of
I ccr Jake Sarlva 38 The
ofUcer

was

taken

to

Pa,tucket Memorial
Hospital where he was
treated and released The
cause of th e fire was

un-

dete rmined

Cardinals gamble all on Cruz
By
United
Press
lnternallonal
The spot! ght rn the early
days of the St Lou s
Cardmats spr ng tra n ng
camp has been turned full
glare on rookte thtrd
baseman Hector Cruz
The cardinals gambling
by tradtng veteran thJ[d
baseman Ken Re tz durmg
the wmter m order to acqwre
p tcher Pete Falcone are
1 kely to stand or fall as
pemant contenders on the
quatity of the r new inf eld
of Ke th Hernandez at flrst
base Mtke Tyson at second
Don Kessmger at short and
Cruz at thtrd
M!fed at bemg traded
Rettz sa1d durmg the wmter
that he thought the cardinals
were
s ttmg on an
earthquake
Manager Red Schoendienst
had coach Preston Gomez
hittmg w eked groWJders at
the Card nals nf elders
durmg Monday s workout
and Gomez was eager w
explain why

S pi spls met
COLUMBUS
UP
Pa ngs o th s weekend s
g r s state h gh s hoo
baske ba

ou nemnts

C assAAA
t AI Norwalk I
Fr day
Bow ng Green
60
s
ToedoWoodwa d ( 42 6 30
p m Bay V age
3
s
Med na
4
8 30 p m
F na s Sa urday
30 p m
At Canton I
F day
C eveland Kennedy
3 s
S ulhe s
4 2 6 30 p m
Men o
s G eensbu g
G een
5
8 30 p m
F na s Satu day
30 p m
AI Weslerv lei
Wednesday
Gahanna L ncoln
5
s
51 OW
5
6 30 p m
Columbus Wa terson
5o
vs Ch co he
04
8 30
p m F na s Sa u day
p m
tAt Dayton
Wednesday
Day on Wayne
33
s
Ketter ng Fa mon East 3
3
6 30 p m
C nc nnat
Sycamo e
60
vs
C nc nna Oak H I s
5
8 30 p m F nals Salu day
pm
Class AA
At Canton
Thursday
Wa en Champ on 5
s
Day es own Ch ppewa
3
630pm AkonOu Ladyof
he E ms 4
vs Campbel
Memo a
06
830 pm
F na s Satu day 4 30 p m
t AI Bowling G een
Thursday
Obe n 4
vs A hbo d
60
6 30 p m
Uppe
Sandusky
3 21 s 0 egon
Ca d na S lch
4 8 30
p m F na s Sa u da y 4 30

pm

CAI Westerv le)

Thursday
R ver V ew ( 14 2 s R e
Va ey 5 I 6 30 p m T
Va ey ( 6 0 vs Co umbus
Ha ey
6
8 30 p m
F na s Sa lu day 4 30 p m
AI Dayton
Thursday
C nc nnat Tay or 3 3 s
Be lb ook ( 2 6 30 p m
Waverly ( 5
s U bana
o1
8 30 p m
F na s
Saturday 4 30 p m
Class A
t AI Wooster I

Southern local

5

there

In other camps
Bob Moose Larry Demery
and Geor~e Med ch were

s

C eveland Luthe an Wes
4 6 30 p m No thweste n

named by Manager Danny
Murtaugh to p tch the P tts
P rates
f rst
burgh
exh b t on game agamst the
Ch cago Wh e Sox Murtaugh
a so sa d he wan ted to
ex per men
w th f rst
baseman-out! elder.ea tcher
Ed Kirkpatr ck at th rd base
JUS! to see what he can do
Outf elde Bobb; Murcer of
the San Franc sco G ants
ba kmg a a 20 per cen pay
cu sa d I don 1 want to

By Greg Bailey
In the champ onshtp game
of the Southern Htgh Athlet c
Boos ters
Independ en t
basketball ournamen held
at tne H gh School Sa urday
n ght
he youth and
qu ckness of the Beach
Ath e\tc Club p am y was the

dec d ng factor
n
outlast ng an o der learn from
85 79 The
MacArthu
MacArthur team had seven
men on he r rosU!r over 30
vea s old
It seemed as though the age
was go ng o be a factor from
the very start as the Athlet c
Club took a 20-11 f rs quarter
lea d but he MacArthur
gentlemen we en t over the
h yet They boWJced back to
score 31 po nts m he second
I
t penod o take a 42 36 half
time ead
At the th rd buzzer he
MacArthur
learn was st It
NBA Stand ngs
hangmg on to a s m 6!-59
By Un ed P es s 11 e na ona
Easte n Conte ence
margm rna n y beh nd the
A ant c D son
w L Pc GB e ght po nts n that quarter by
Boson
6 6
Ke h Ntce But the fourth
Ph ade ph a
32 556 8
quarter took ts to I at the
B fa o
549 8
N ew Yo k
38
65 4
BAC boys tossed n 26
Cen
on
GB markers to w n gong away
L Pc
The ournament s MVP
620
Wash g 0
2
28 600
C e e and
rectp ent Ivan Taylor led
Ho son
6 500 8
the champs w th 27 pomts
New 0 eans
39 458
A
wh le teammate Blll Braddle
illssed m 25 MacArthur s
GB Dave W lcoxen paced them
M waukee
w th 20 po nts wh e Jeff
Kansas C y
3
Crewey and N ce each had 17
De o
4
Ch ago
9
Crewey
rece ved the award
Pac
GB for scor ng the tournament s
most pomts as he tossed n 93
5
po
nts n four games
3
6
36
6
Th e St oh s team took
20
home the h rd place trophy
as Boggs Sa es forfe ted the
consolatwn game Fo lowmg
IS a box sco e and a st of the
all tourney team
The All ournament learn
Larry K uger MacArthur
Van Debuck Beach A C
Ron Ferguson
Golden
Nugget
M ke Griggs
S oh s Dave Wilcoxen
Mac Arthur Iva n Ta ylo
Beach A C Glen Lacky
Boggs Sa es
Se v ce and
vs Bu keye Cen a 9
B It Brabble Beach A C

: Pro
:
:StrouHngs I

8 30 p m
F na s
da y
30 pm
(At Bow ng G een
F day
TnoaOSvsM eCy
4
6 30 p m
Con oy
C est ew 6 0
L be y
Ben on
2
8 30 p m
F na s Sa u day
30 p m
tAt Weste vI el
F day
Ga away
33
S Joseph 5
nd an Va ey No
Lan ast e F she
p m F na s Sa l
pm
AI Dayton
F day
M dd etown Fenw ck 6 0
s Russ a 8
6 30 p m
F ankfo
Adena
6 0 vs
A can um
22
8 30 p m
F na s Sa u day
30 p m

p ay out my opt on unless I
J ohn Grub b
have to
tr pled hom e two runs m the
San D ego Padres mtra
squad game The Atlanta
Braves are st ll wondermg
about the whereahouts of
Roger Moret Cuban born
p tcher acqu red durmg the
wmter from the Boston Red
Sox Dock Ell s was named
w be the f rst starter for the
New Yo k Yankees n
ex h b t on games
and
clubowner
Geo rge
Stem bremer sa d I expect

~

him to wm a m nunum of 15 ~.~

Younger team
is 85-79 winner

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

Girl pairings

eg ona

The reason s because he
comb nat on of arttf eta turf
and d rt a St Lou s the only
such mf etd m the Nat ona
League makes the bat scoot
and z p faster than m any
o her park he sad I! s he
wughest mf1eld n the eague
and you cant baby mfi elders
11ho have w react qu ckly

games
Manager Alex
Grarnmas of the Mlwaukee
Brewers nd1cated that he
hopes h s regular out! eld will
cons st of Bobby Darwm In
r ght Stxto Lezcano m center
and Charhe Moore m
eft Out! elder
Jerry
Mart n f ghtmg for a spot on
the Philadelphia roster hit a
sacr f ce fly Wlth one out m
he n nth mn ng Monday
n ght to It the Ph II es w a I
0 v ctory over the Detroit
Tigers Jtrn Kaat made h s
debu m a National League
un form and comb ned wtth ,.
Ron
Schue er
Tom....'l
Hilgendorf and Dan Boytano ~
w restrict the T1gers worst
team m the maJor leagues
last season to ftve smgles

YOUr

NeigHBOr
Bill Fletcher

~

1251 Fow.ll St
Middleport 0.

PH. 992-7155

--

See hilll lor all )lOUr

1

...

•

flflll~

St. 1 F1 m su ence Com~Mnlel
Home OH en 1 OOf'l'l "'fon
noll

Sa

ISDOM IS...
protection for your home•

-NOWOPEN-

teaturmg
Ice Cream m
Quarts Pmts, and
Cones

the wise old owl say~

f

Adolph's Dairy Valley
Hrs 10 OOA M Ttl II 00 PM Sun Thur
10 00 A M Ttl12 00 P M Frt &amp; Sat
992 2SS6
W MAIN
POMEROY 0

You home s the most va uable

em you w

eve own Don t take a chance of os ng t
w thout p oper ns u a nee to cover the loss We
w
p ov de VOl! w th adequate coverage at
easonab y ow rates Don t be penny w se and
do a fool sh
Ca us today

When you see us don I lhmk of msurance
but when you thmk of msurance see us

Dowmng-Childs Agency
MIDDLEPORT

PHONE 992-2342

�3 The Pomerol Sentinel M ddleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday Harch 23 1976

2 The Pon eroy Sentu et M ddleport Po eroy o l'u" dav Ma

23 976

Coal mmers still' die by ones, twos

Anger, frustration too much
LANSING M ch UP!
It was a ger
and frus ration the fa mers sa d hat dro e
them tAJ p e the carcasses of ca e on hl'

s eps of the sta e Cap to
Theca Ue "ere po soned or staugh ered
because of a chenucat feed mtxup 1 he
farmers Monday we e p olesl ng the sta e s
handlmg of the prob en
pa ticula )
delays n payment of eta ms for the an mats
Some 30 000 calUe hogs and ch ckens
have d ed or been s ughtcred because of
the m shap m which PBB a o&lt;Jc ftre
etardan was m xed wtth feed and
distr bu ed w hundreds of M ch gan far ns
m JWJe 1973
State government has not spen one th n
dime on research mw wha th s pmson w t
do sad Lewts Trombley a farmer fro n
Hersh e)
They ve got us broke and ou cattle all
dead sa d Trombley Now t s spr ng
p an ling time and we haven t go any ac on
yet
One of Trombley s dead cows was cha ned

ange from oof falls
the
oct of U e 969 Coal M ne
!lea th and Safety Ac w 1 mosl common c ause of
to haul ng
beg n four days of pub c nJUrles
ace dents I ke the one that
hea mgs Wednesda;
It w It seek ways o ktlled cart Wll ams and the
unp ove gave rune nt m ne exploSions that usually result
safety efforts and w t ghten n heavy deaths and n)ur es
Alt!wugh the 1969 Jaw was
penalt es for operators who
ntended w reduce the toll
VIolate the Ia\\
Sen Harr son A Will ams the results have been spotty
DN J
the comm ttee Some mme operators say the
s
vague
and
cha rman sa d the Scot a aw
Coal Co had been ctled for un enforceable Federal
I 250 a teged VIola ons s nee off c ats openly concede that
penall es for v olat ons are
too m ld w have much effect
on curb ng deaths and
nJurleS
Accord mg to
MESA
stat st cs 155 coal mmers
1970 when the m ne safety died m acctdents last year
up from 132 each m !974 and
law went mw effect
He satd government 1973 and JUSt one less than
mspecwrs shut down the the 156 k lled m 1972
Th s year after Jusl two
mme 57 ltrnes m the past ftve
year s c t ng
mm nen t and one.!Jalf months the mil
stands near 5()
danger on 21 occas ons
W !hams has proposed
Inspectors from the Mmlng
hree maJOr changes in the
Enforcement and Safety Ad
m n s rat on
apparently safety law
Move MESA from the
un covered v olat on s
Inter
or Departinent to the
reg ularly Will ams sa d
Labor
Departinent
bu no meanmgful changes
Put workers m non-eoat
have been brough about
Instead
MESA mmmg mdustr es under !he
enforcement amounted to same standards that apply to
g vmg m ne operators no coal mmmg
Revtse enforcemen t
more than a m td slap on the
rules ndudmg a speedier
wrst hesa d
There have got w be p ocess form ne operators to
reasons why th s trag c and appeal f nes b) leVIed MESA
Robert E Barrett a
mtole able carnage of mmers
s con t nwng desp le the Ia ws former coa l m ner who
des gned o stop 1! W ll ams re ently took charge at
And
we
are MESA hastened w he Scotia
sa d
de term ned w f nd wha they m ne after he f rst exploston
killed 15 men March 9 He
are
Coa m ners espec ally was m on the dec s on o send
hose who work deep n the team of mmers and
underground m Appalach a federal mspecwrs that lost II
face danger every une they men n the second explosiOn
en er he mmes Hazards two days Ia er

to a t ruler The f ozen carra!;S of a 1 mb
"asp aced al the foot of a pod w 1 Pi kup
trucks and tra lers bear ng oil er carcasses
1 tered s de s reels around he cap ol
Sta e I "' U off c a s says nail amounts of
PBB rn meat and da ry products s not
harmful to human be ngs Bu farn ers
bel eve any amount of PBB s unsafe for
both human bemgs and an mats
The) say traces of PBB n the r silos and
food s or age areas st It po son the r herds
The fa mers demanded a ban on
sh pments of m lk and n ea f on
contam nated herds w thm three days
trnmed ate settlement of a c atms and
lean ng and tes ng of a ll gran elevators
and feed supply po nts
Gov Will am M It ken agreed he ate of
clatrn process ng was too slow He ordered a
weekly account ng of se tlements and
appo nted a conumttee o oversee clatrn
handlmg
Our nex s ep ts Wash ngton if th s man
M ken ) doesn do someth ng today
sa d Trombley

the slaughter
goes on

Patty's lawyers lose again
By DONALD B THACKREY
SAN FRANCISCO UP!
A torneys for conv cted bank

robber Patr c a Hea sl have
been hwa rted n thetr
a! empts to preven her
trnmed ale transfer to Los
Angeles wface state charges
U S D str ct Cour Judge
0 ver carter reJected thetr
appea Monday to keep he
hetress here unt 1sen enc ng
The defense lawyers told the
court she would be m grea
da nger m Los Ange es They
did no! elabo a e
Carter sa d she wou ld be
transferred by U S marshals
b; he end of he week af er a
p obat on off ce comp e es
presentence nlerVIews wtlh
M ss Hearst
The judge also reschedu ed
he sentenc ng w Apr 1 2
When she was con v c ed
Sa urday on charges of bank
robbery and usmg a ftrearm
n !he cormruss on of a felony
Sa urday he se sen enc ng
for April 19
M ss Hearst 22 daugh er
of San Franc sco Exam ne
Pres dent Rando ph Hears

w I be charged w th II
counts mclud ng k dnap
assa ult and robbe y n Los
Angeles
The
c harges
resu led from a shoot ng at
Mel s Sport ng Goods Store
Defense lawye Albe
Johnson

who

sa d

her

conv c Jon
wou d
be
appealed sru d a JOmt tr al
w th Symb onese L beral on
A m; membe s W ll an
Harr sand h s w fe Emtly n
Los Angeles would be ou of
the quest on
He srud the defenses were
different and the law s
clea r tha t defendan s w th
means sten defenses canna

be t ed w h another
defendant
1 os Ange les
D str c
Attorney John van de Camp
sad Mss Hea sl w uld he
b ought befo e Supe or
Court Judge Ma k Brandler
early next " ee k for
a ra gnmenl
and
ba
set mg
We
ecommended
ortgmall)
when the grand
JUry e urned Is md ctinent
a ba I of $500 000 bu hat

m ght be academtc no\\

he

prosecutor sa d

Tl e shoot ng took p ace a
month after the robbery at a
H berrua Bank branch here
The robbery occurred two
mon hs

after

she

was

kidnaped from her Be keley
Cal f apartinent by he SLA
n February 974
More of the JUry wh h
conv cted M ss Hearst spoke
out expla rung the reasons
they re]ec ed her clatrn she
part c pa ed n he c unes
because she feared he SLA
would k 1 her
Jury members Ellen
West n 54 mo her of four
and Clovet a Ro;all 32 both
sa d they d d not believe M ss
Hearst s story she was raped
by SLA member W II e Wolfe
TI ey no ed M ss Hea st
when captu ed m September
was carry ng a MeXJcan ftgu
rme g ven o her by Wolfe
before he was sla n n Los
Angeles w th f ve othe SLA
members I bel eve that she
ruly d d ove W 1 e Wolfe
Mrs Roya l sa d

Evening, night courses
still open at RGC-CC
RIO GRANDE - R o
Grande College R o Grande
Commun ly Co lege s con
nu ng

o accept students

who\\ sh to enroll n even ng

Candidates loved(and left)North Carolina voters~:;e~~~~~i~:?~~~~~a:~~
By ELIZABETII WHARTON
A federal cour udge set a
United Press Internat onal
hear ng oday on whether to
Whatever the results m he block p mtmg of ha s a e s
VIew of the compet ng ca n Democrat c bat ots pendmg a
qidates
oday s North dec son on whether Morr s
Ca rol na pr mary no\\ s Udal s pe ons had he
hl6 ory None of the four proper number of names
major contenders rema ned
And n a separate d spute
rl the state to hear the the Morgan Coun y Elect on
esults
Boardorderedthreedeegae
The Democrats off cat y can d dates
pledged to
ost a cand date - Sargent Wallace off lnd ana s ballot
Shr ver
who already had after a Mart nsVIlle a torney
all but taken hime f ou of the challenged their pet t1on
runnmg after the lit no s
Pres dent Fo d was sa d o
pr mary and gamed a be conf den of h s s xth
favor te son contender n stra ght wm o e Republ can
Rep Wayne Hays of Oh o
cha Ienger Rona d Reaga n n
And lnd ana was sl 1 North Carol na oday and
havmg difficult es de ding planned w s ay home and
who qualif ed for ts ballo
wa ch he retu ns w th h s

w fe n the Wh le HoWle
Reagan who campa gned
hard through Mondav n ght
spen today seekmg votes for
Wtsconsm s p una y Apr 1 6
and planned to fly home to
Ca llforma ton ght
On the Democrattc s de
!avo te J mmy Ca rter
headedforafWJd-f"a se nS
Lou s and George Wa lace
who cl maxed h s Nor h
caro na effort w th one of h s
pa ented rall es Monday was
w get the results m he
gove rn or s ma ns on
n
Alabama ton ght
Ea rl ) Monday Shr ver
whose campa gn never
ca ugh fire became the f fth
Democra w w thdraw from

DR. LAMB

Plan diet for spastic colon
II)&lt; Lawrence E Lamb MD

DEAR DR LAMB I have
had d ar hea off and on for
e gh years The tests show a
spasltc colon I am bones
because no h ng stays n me
I an a h ghly nervous person
but I ha e d a rhea even f
my nerves are re axed Thev

have t ea ed me w th d f
ferent th ngs but
doesn t
work I have sharp pa ns and
burn ng a nd flut er ng
Htroughout my ntes nes
tian you please adv se me l
am only 35 but feel ke 99
most of the me
DEAR READER
S op
coffee n all forms nclud ng
the decaffe nated type Do
not use tea colas or o her
c.affe ne
co n a n ng
~~Verages Temporar ly you
1!)1 ght avo d al forms of soda
lleverages No because they
&amp;&gt;nta n soda but because
@me of them that you m ght
suspect conta n caffe ne
!Pat may sttmul a te the
10ervous sys tem
S op
imok ng c garett_es f you se
liiy at a t
=. Do start eatmg bu k
toota mng foods part cularly
ihose conta n ng bran These
ire the whole wheat
lltoducts You ca n use All
JStan b and buds or any
~er sources of who e whea t
ffber tha t you ca n ge
lllredded wheat products are
ll.oo whole wheat Keep n
l!llnd that you have gas and
pptoms for he ftrst two to
Ioree weeks when you n
liease the cereal f ber m
Ylfur d et You ay need to do
thiS gradua ly to keep fro m
causmg too many symp oms
Stop all m k •nd m tk

ao•

products a nd ao not use foods
tha use any app ec abe
amounts of m lk n the r
preparat on such as m lk
gravtes c earn p es ce
cream and m k-conta n ng
sherbets
After fo tow ng hiS reg me
for a wh le f you s tuat1on
stra ghlens out you can try
rru k products and see f you
are able to tolerate them If
you are you cou d add hem
back to your normal d et so
you w 11 be ge tmg enough
calcnan These s mpte po nts
1 sled above w II go a long
way toward he lp ng many
people who have !he spas\ c

only ab ormal ty w th a
perle tly no rna hear and
normal abdom nat organs
Such mdtv duals may 1ve a
perlectly normal I fe span
Some! mes when the
var a on occu s here w be
accompany ng b rth defects
If here are whether or not
they wtll affec he health of
the nd v dual depends on
what defects are present and
how se ous hese defe ts are
If t s an ord nary garden

var ely type of hea t defect
hat an be comp te ely
co rr ec ed w h a s mple
ope a on hen !he outlook s
usually good

co on prob em

D arrhea often IS part of the
problem of an rr table colon
Those who wan more n
format on on spas! c colon

can send 50 cents fo The
Irr table or Spas t c Colon and
Const paiJon Send a long
stamped
se f addressed
envelope for mat! ng Ad
dress your etler to me n
ca re of h s newspaper P 0
Box 1551 Rad o C ty Stat on
Ne\1 York NY 10019
DEAR DR LAMB
Can
yo u pl ease g ve me In
fo rna on on dextrocard a
w th s us nverses Is t true
that the hear on the nght
s de s weaker and that he
ch ld usually des at btrth
DEAR
READER
Nega ve A I that d agnos s
n cans s tha t the nternal
organs of the body a e
arranged n a m r or mage
of he norma l arrangement
That s he h ngs tha a e
upposed to be on the r ght
s de are o he ef s de and
v ce v

a

{ s

an be tl

The

Da1~

Linden Me

•

Sentinel

he race
o beg n on Tuesday may do
He re a ed
he 11 so by com ng to A len Hall on
de ega es he p eked up n he campus before the class
M ss ss pp
a n d RegJSira on fo o her olasses
Ma ssachu se ts _ w thou! w ll con nue each evenmg
ecommending a cand da e hroughout the week
bu w 1 allow delegate
The follow ng classes to
ca nd dates pledged to hun to beg n Tuesda) are open fo
s ay on he ba to n Texas reg strat on
Rep Wayne Hay s 64
In s ama t c Cam er a
cha rman of the powe ful Te hn ques Tuesday 8 30House Adm n s tr at on 10 JOP m
comm ttec announced he
Judo Tuesda y 8 30-10 30
w ll run for pres den as a P n
favor te son n Oh 0
Introduct on to Soc otogy
The Democrats newts\ TTh 6 30-8 30 p m
co ntender
Sen
Frank
Marr age and the Fam1ly
Church of Idaho said m Salt TTh 8 40-10 40 P m
Lake c ty he expec s to be
Soc otogy of Ed uca l on
among the surv vo s of the TTh 4 10-8 0 p m
brutal prtrnary campa gn
tntroduc on o Socia
Meanwh le a Gallup poll of Wo k TTh 6 30.lJ 30 p m
lntrod uct on to Taxes TTh
1 425 Democrats showed non
cand date Hubert Humphrey 8 40-10 40 p m
Real Estate Reappraisal
s favore&lt; for the pa y s
nom na on by 30 per cent a TTh 8 40-10 10 p m
ga n of 3 po nts from the last
F eshman or ental on
such survey wh le carter s Program T 5 20-8 20 p m
favored by 28 per cent a gam
General Psychology TTh
of2ponts
630-830pm
Humphrey s not runrung
Accounting Quantitat ve
but he frequently has sad he Methods I TTh 8 40-10 40
wou d be del ghted to accept p m
a draft - and run and w n

Gospel group
slated to stng
The Everlas ng Love a
gospel group w II s ng at the
Laurel C If Free MethodiSt
Church Sunday a 7 30 p m

Account ng Quan tat ve
Methods III TTh 6 30-8 30
pm
Advanced Photog raphy T
6 30-10 30 p m
Fundamentals of B otogy
T530-830pm
Delation a nd Trans
cr pt on TTh 6 30-8 30 p m
Advanced Typewr mg
TTh 4 10-8 10 p m
Read ~ g Methods fo
Secondary School TTh 6 309pm

Phys cal Ed Methods for
Secondary School T 6 3010 30 p m
Advanced Compos tJOn T
oJ0-830pm
F ne Arts MTTH 5 20-7
pm
Informal Geometry TTh
630-830pm
Descr pt ve As ronomy
TTh 8 30-10 30 p m
Archeology and PrehJSI&lt;lry
TTh 8 4P.10 40 p m
Theory of Argument TTh
6 30-830pm
Theater
Producallon
Serrunar MTW 6 'Z p m
Theater
Act n~ MT
WThF 79 30pm
For more nformat on
contact Ule Off ce of Ad
m .. o~ and Records Rio
Grande College R o Grande
Commun ty Coll ege R o
Grande Oh o 45674 o
U! ephooe 245-5353

Barrett told UPI in an
nterv ew he feels the 1969
mme safety law needs to be
changed
The assessment of
penal! es IS borrendous he
sad
The deterrent effect ts
defeated 1f violations result m
small fines he satd but rome
operators
knowmg \be
complexities of the law force MESA to go w court If
f nes are relat vely large
Some cases) are backed
up four years he sa1d
In the past f ve years
MESA has collected fmes
wtal ng $21 3 m U10n and
failed to collect an additional
$15 rmlllon
The Scot a rome
a
subs dtary of Blue D amond
Coal Co of Knoxville Tenn
has po d $78 877 n ctvil
penult es on 650 not ces of
Vlolat on s nee 1971
Scot a has yet to pay one
$10 000 !me for a haulage
ace dent hat nJured three
persons last AprJl and 20
other fines totalmg $1 679 for
less ser ous nctdents In
addttion the mme has 92
not ces of v olat on awa t ng
m !tal assessment of a fme
A MESA lllSpecto can
close a mme urunediately tf a
vtolat on poses trnmment
danger w miners If the
danger s less severe he can
ssue an order to correct the
cond t on without a shutdown
The mspe ctor sends a
not ce of the v olation to
MESA for assessment of a
f ne If the operawr objects
the matter may be dealt w th

m conference wtth MESA or
appealed through varwus
channels
Roy
Wade
ch ef
nvest gator for W lllams
Senate commtllee s81d ooe of
MESA s mam enforcement
problems has been a
tendency to compromtse
Don t pay Don t pay he
said Thai a just the name of
t11e game Eventually MESA
will settle for 30 cents on the
dollar
A mJSjudgment of the haz
ards at a particular mme
such as the threat of a gas
exploston can be disastrous
Barrett satd the Scotia
mme was not considered very
gassy even though t emttled
300 000 cubic feet of methane
per day Some rrunes m
Vtrg n a by compar1son
em t between 17 and 18
million cubtc feet per day
In the less gassy mrnes he
srud offtctals build up a
certain complacency
A Scot a he sa d there
were mistakes made on the
part of the operawrs
The
ven lat on was margrnal but
m compliance They probably
should have had a hell of a lot
more air In the mine
Notmg that Scot a off CJa s
say thetr mme was tested by
a man before the exploSIOn
and that no methane ws
found Barrett sa d I m not
going w accuse the guy but
he exammes t and 6 or 7
hour s lat er there s an
explos on
Some observers are leery

about what the government s
Coni nued on page 10)

the Poet's comer
THE COMFORT OF SPRING
Wmter has wld ItS story and ts
days have stepped as de
The weeks are march ng qmckly n
WI form to abide
A lime for pleasure s here which
adds enJoyment to some extent
A breath of fresh atr or the beauty
of flowers discovered by the r scent
As I dnve along the roads my eyes

see fresh colors on the groWJd
I can I sten m the evenmg to birds
frogs and other artslng soWJds
As a lovmg song often comforts the
heart w th a story
So does the season of spring as It
del vers all ts many joys
It s so easy for us all to blmd the
season from our dally cares
Should we open our eyes we mtgh
f nd that fe and beau yare meant wshare
How one loves w look at the earth
and see nature wtth all Is form
The xpring IS a spec al season wtth
movement from hfe that s now bemg born
Ufe JS so short when only at \lines
11 seems to have no end
To over look prec ous tune and w sh
11 by makes 1 fe somewhat thin
Yes our lives grow closer toward the
ftrst day of sprmg
As tlme surely passes the days each
year another life t w ll brmg
As sprmg comes forth to meet our
needs Easter 1s closely by
thus remember Jesus Chrtsl rose with
our sms so our souls could live and never die
Deem Middleport Ohto

Rog~r K

Local chapter concludes observance
of national Demolay Week Mar. 14-21

The Me gs Chapter of the
Order
of DeMolay has con
t was announced at the
Young Adult Class meeting at eluded ts observance of
the Me gs CoWJly Jnftrmary Nat onal DeMolay We ek
March 14 21
Fr day mght
Also ann oun ced we re
Estabhshed over 50 years
evangel st c se v es to beg n the DeMolay movement was
March 29 and co ntmue founded m 1919 by the late
through Apr I 4 w th the Rev
Frank S Land and a group of
Donald Glass evangel sl A n ne h gh school boys in
skat ng party vas planned for Kansas C ty Mo
F 11 ng a need then as now
Apr 1 15 7 30
o 10 p m
F ankl n Mart n d reeled a fo act ve young men of
study of Revelat on Darla pr nc ple ts rap d growth
little
short
Hawley and Brenda Haggy was
of
served refreshments
phenomenal becomtng n
Attendmg bes des those U!rnat onal m scope w1 htn
named were the Rev and four years Today over three
M s Floyd Shook V ck m I on act ve and sen or
Hanson Joan Clark Rick DeMolays have entered Is
Ash D ane Lew s Lawrence purtals n some 2 :;oo chapters
and Barbara Ebhn Ida m 12 counlrles and territor es
Marttn Becky Eblin Randy throughout the free world
Thousands of these young
and Darla Haw ey Ern e and
Brenda Ha ggy
Vtrgtl men who ftrst acqmred their
Ph I ps M ke and Sharon leadership ablllties n their
W ght Jac k and Jane DeMolay chapters have gone
Jacobs Benny Wr ght Bob on to errunent careers tn
and L nda Foster Kathy business the professions
Scarberry Sharon and Dick 1 terary ar s government
Fo mer and Mrs M ldred servtce the m 1 tary en
tertamment and athletics
Jacobs
prov1d ng some of the most
SONGHcST SLATED
d1sUngwshed names In their
A songfest " II be he d al 2 respect ve
f elds
In
p n Sunday at the Seventh numerable testlmon es have
Day Adven\Jst Church n bee made by these national
Pomeroy All smgers and the and "uri 1 eade s a g
pubhc are welcome
I ey sl ~ P• a ct ce ll e

DeMolay pnnc ples nstilled where lasting friendshtps are
n them as young men
formed
Each DeMolay chapter s
2 Partie pat on m a w de
sponsored by a recogmzed var ely of chapter d strict
group !]! Masons DeMolay Is jur sd1ct1onal
and
n
not ~ JUn or Masonic lernahonal activ ties rangmg
orgaJ)tza t on
nor
1s from soc al events and sports
relat onsh1p o a Mason a through clv c serv ce of m
prereqwSJU! of membersh p fimte vartety
It IS however recogn zed as
3 Responstb llty developed
freemasonry as an out
through participation in
stand ng characU!r building planning and execulmg many
organization for young men programs such as fund
Mason c
sponsorsh p raising events and ob
prov1des DeMolay chapters servatlons of Obligatory
wtlh dependable dedtcaled Days and Internal onal
adult leadersh p and the USe DeMolay Week
of Mason c bwld ngs to house
4 Ability to work and get
DeM9lpy act v1t1es
along wtth others through
The mmed ate supervls on skills stressed and developed
of every DeMolay chapter s by DeMolay leadership
by an advtsory c ounctl tralnin~
compr sed of nterested
5 Advantage of becoming
Malll'[ls from \he sponsoring a better son a better citizen
body One of these cOWiclt and a better fr1end through
members s deslgnatea adherence to DeMolay
ChapU!r Dad and s the teachings and ideals
main counselor and adVIsor
6 CompeUtloo with peers tn
o th~ chapter members To such areas as ritual sports
h1m any member can take speech and - Y contests
h s problems with the
1
Opportunity
for
assurance he w II be met with achievement through an
fr endshlp
and
un extensive program of honors
def!itandtng
and awards
Ne~&lt; honzons offered by
8 Ellg1blllty to attend
r M'ol n tude
conclaves and leadership
r. ~
I a ely to
camps to visit other chapters
worldwtde brotherhood throughout the free world and
I

to apply for DeMolay
scholarships
9 Travel opportun hes
period cally prov de d for
DeMolays to JOurney In
groups to such places as
Europe the Hawauan Islands
and tbe Orient
10 Commendahon from
leaders of the commun ly for
seeking membership in a
youth organ zation offering
worthwhile companlollllhtp
and activities and deyelop
ment of admirable character
lralts which remain with the
DeMolay member for l)fe
I Strong Ues of !rater
nallsm and mutual Interest
with hWJdreds of thousands of
other DeMolays ln cities and
towna toea ted all over the
world
12 Initiation cerem011ies
conducted with dignity and
solemnity free from em
barrassment or ridicule
13 Nominal fees for
nltiatlon or life membership
plan DeMotay •• a non-profit
organization
To join the order of
DeMolay yoWJg men shrould
be between the ages of 14 and
21 beHeve In God be of good
character and reputation
and petition a DeMolay
chapter

ley after 2nd straight AAA title

By GENE CADDES
UP! Sporll Writer
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) Jene
Davis who guided Colwnbus
Linden McKinley to !be state
Class AAA basketball title m
lWJ fttst year as a head coach
would like wprove 11 wasn t
a Duke
DavlB whose team was 10-8
in regular season play last
season before wadmg
By MILTON RICHMAN
through eight tournament
UP! Sports Editor
opponents gets that chance
Sf' PETERSBURG Fla (UP!)- Tom Seaver had put m a begmmng Frulay ( 11 a m )
long day
when the Panthers go against
He was the last one to fmish as he generally IS every day m M ddletown In the Hrst game
the sprmg because he hab tually works longer than any of the ol the AAA semt.f nals
other Mets and now as he sat there on the grass leaning back
The second AAA game
on one hand the SWJ was catching the left stde of h s face while scheduled for 2 30 p m
he talked wnewsmen only a few feet from the Huggma-stengel sends unbeaten and No 2
Held clubhouse entrance
ranked Barberton against
Bud Harrelson the Mets regular shortstop trying to come Toledo Scott also unbeaten
back after knee surgery was the last player to leave the and ranked No 3 w1th the
clubhouse When he returned f ve mmutes tater for something wmners of the two games
he forgot m h1s locker and saw Seaver still reclmmg on the meeting for the state blg
grass talking he couldn t help needling him a little
school IItle Saturday at 3 p.m
Hey Tom he called out whadd ya domg' Tell ng em
We re not golrig w sneak
EVERYTHING
up on anybody this year
Tom Seaver told a lot but he didn t tell everything
sa1d DaVIs who has only one
He revealed how he felt about the Mets mitlatlng trade talks starter (aU.Qhto guard Todd
mvolvmg him durmg the 17 days the camps were closed He Pem ) back from last years
talked of how that came about and he spoke of the strong role squad We d like to prove it
he took on the stde of the Players Assoclat on m the stalemate wasn t a fluke that you don t
wtth the owners He also talked about hts unage InSISting he get here 011 luck
had to do what he honestly felt was right but he never talked at
Lmden whtch handed
all ahout what happened when the camps I nally opened last Middletown one of 1ts two
Thursday
regular season losses 65-63 at
Everyone was trYing w act as f nothing unusual had Middletown takes a 21 3
occurred on the first day
record mto the semi finals
The Mets players all greeted one another cheerlu ly and Fr day morning havmg won
asked about each others lam lies
the tough Columbus City
Tom Seaver was about to put on h s uruform that f rst day League btle
when one of the Mets pulled hun as de and told hun he d llke to
With the 5-9 Penn one of
have a word wtth hun pr vately
last year s tournament stars
The two went nto a SJde room here and when they both were as the leader Dav1s has a
out of earshot of all the others th1s parUcular ind v dual solld squad of etght players
thanked Seaver deeply for becommg so Involved for do ng all
he had w preserve this man s eventual penston
Tom Seaver tried to brush off the whole thmg saymg 1! was
nothmg but then he suddenly not ced someth ng
The man talkrng to hun had tears n hts eyes
Other players w th the Mets also made 1\ a pomt to convey
their gratitude to Seaver for what he had done n the r behalf
Seaver told them all he had only done what he felt he had to
bemg the Mets player rep The job sn t an easy one
By GENE CADDES
Somebody s gotta do t srud Joe Torre the Nat onal UP! Sports Writer
League player rep Tom d d a fine JOb
COLU!I1BUS UP!) - The
Ed Kranepool the Mets player rep before Seaver took over Blue Jays Of Delphos St
the job m 1911 fees he JS drawmg an unfair rap all around
John s under coach Bob
He s trymg to get the best possible reserve clause for all the Arnzen for years have been
rest of the guys not Tom Seaver said Kranepool He s one of the wp basketball
trying to get the 6-and I That doesn t affect him He could ve schools m the state but 1975eaSily gone along wtth the owners or gina! proposal and he d 76 was thetr f rst unbeaten
be s1ttmg pretty He could be p aymg out h s ophon But he season ever
wasn t thmkmg of himself he was thinlung of the rest of the
When you play the Roose
guys
veils Dunbars Dayton) and
When Seaver !malty p eked hunsell up from the grass and the Toledo and Columbus
walked mt.o the Mets clubhouse Monday be talked some more schools one of them l8 gomg
about why he had been so active m the players behalf
to get you We ve always put
I had to be true to myself he satd sunpty without being a good schedule ahead of the
dramatic It had to do with something I believed In and I record explained Arnzen
stood up for t I had to look at myself and I had to look at the
This past seaaon however
players these players that I live with every day from now untd the Blue Jays paced by
Ocwber I could ve ]ust stayed out of the enttre sltuat on and Arnzen s son Jim and &amp;.a Tim
protected myself but if I had done that I wouldn t have Pohlman both All-Ohto
respected myself and I wouldn t have felt I had the respect of selections
rolled over
my fellow players
everybody
Seaver bel eves the Mets began trade talks for hlDI only
And Delphos prowess was
because his feelmgs wward the club were mJSrepresented by reflected n balloting for
newspaper accoWJts
United Press Inlernational
There s no doubt m my mmd !be Mets talked trade w th Class AA Ohio coach of the
some clubs about me he sa d That s the r prerogat ve year honors when Amun
That doesn t bother me m tbe slightest I mean f they want to topped all nominees with 23 of
trade me then they can go ahead and trade me I mean 1t 67 votes cast
s ncerely 11 wouldn t hurt my feel ngs If they traded me I can
Arnzen who has turned out
p tch some place else I ve told that to Joe McDonald Mets perenrual powerhouses m h s
general manager But I also told him don t trade me JUS\ 26 years at St John s led the
because you !hmk I m WJhappy I never satd I m unhappy Blue Jays to the an IS.O
That s only what some writer s&amp;d
record before they were upset
Tom Seaver hasp tched nme years for the Mets
m the district tournament by
In alii kelihood that s he same team he s going w p tch for St Marys a team they beat
th s year
by 25 points only two weeks

Sport Parade

which he turns to regularly
Pem a junior s the
leading scorer at 17 pomts per
game whtle 6 2 Sterhng
W1Uiams another juruor IS
next at IS and and 6-1 seJUor
Be My Hill at 10
Dav1s p1cks h s other
starters from among a group
of four tncluding &amp;-foot senior
Alan Lawson 6 2 sen or
ReggJe Richardson S-3 jumor
John Davis and ~ JUIUor
John Collins
ThiS year s Linden squad JS
similar to last years wtth the
ability either to run or play a
disctplined
game
tf
necessary
Phystcally we were
sa1d
stronger last year
Davts but we shoot better
thts year There s nobody on
our team who can shoot
In
Middletown
the
Panthers go up agamst a
Paul Walker coached team
which Js making its f rst
appearance 1n the State
Tournament smce 1959
Paced by AAA player of the
year Butch Carter a 6-5
forward Wlth a 25 pomts per
game average the Middies
were 1&amp;-2 on the regular
season Wlth the other loss to
Sprmgfteld South
Walker who has has a long
line of outstandmg players at
!11iddletown calls carter se
cond only to (Jerry) Lucas
The veteran coach making
his eighth trip to the b1g show
and seeking his sixth
championship credits great
Improvement for his team s

Delphos' Blue Jays in
first perfect season

Swanton's Lambert is quick
on the court, in classroom
By GENE CADDES
UP! Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP!)
UJU\ed Press International
Class AA Ohio Player of the
Year Jeff Lambert of
Swanton s as adept m the
classroom as he

1s

on a

basketball court
Special mention was ac
corded
Br an
Beys
Wheelersbure and Dean Ftlz
~tnck Ironton
Honorable menUon went to
Tony Folden Gallipolis Joe
Rose Wheelersburg and
Gary Snowden Galllpolls
62
175 pound
The
Lambert second In hls class
of 167 with a 3 95 grade-pomt
average out of a po5111ble 4 0
averaged 28 pomts per game
this past season In leading a
medtocre Swanton team to a
10-8 record
He was double-teamed at
most every tlnle he got the
ball but he handled all the
pressures of the season very
well said Swanton coach
Jeff Eckel His intelligence
carries over on the floor
Lambert heads up a AA
AllOhio basketball squad that
also includes &amp;.a Marquis
Miller of Columbus St
Charles &amp;-7 Scott Spencer of
Rossford 6-5 Ron WUczak of
Lorain Catholie and 6-0 Jim
Arnzen of Delph011 St Johns
Despite a variety of box
811dooe or dlamood-and-&lt;Jne
defenses to stop him
Lambert captured the
Northern Border League
scoring title for the third

consecutive year
Lambert scored 53 pomts
against Anthony WayJIC his
hlgh for the season
prompting coach D ck
Albaugh w proclann be s
glad to see h1m graduate
Lambert also had 41 points m
hts other game agamst
Anthony Wayne
Albaugh added however
that Lambert Is his type of
player and person He s a
wellbehaved k d on the
floor he sa1d
Another coach who had to
try to defend against
Lambert Jim McBride of
Delta called him just what
you re looking for m a
player
Lambert in the last 40
games was held under 20
points only three times He
holds the Swanton career
scoring marl! of 1 361
Miller the ooly junior on
the three AA teams paced St
Charles to a 111-2 regular
season mark
Besides averaging 19 7
points per game for the well
balanced Cardinals MUier
also was an outstanding
rebounder and an effective
sho.t.blocker
Spencer a solid 215
pounder averaged 24 3 polnta
per game iii leadtnc Roulord
to a 17 I season whUe Wilczak
averaged It points per game
in Lorain Catholic s 18-0
season
Arnzen son of AA Coach of

the Year Bob Arnzen was the
leader of the Blue Jays thlB

before
Arnzen a Un vers ty of
Dayton graduate refuSed to
tab this year s squad his best
but did say he never had a
team to dominate opponents
like tlWJ one
Despt\e the d sappomting
wurney loss to St Marys
Arnzen called the 1975-76
season really fun
We had no troubles at
all Arnzen satd It was
JUSt a real fun year for us
Even the tournament loss
lett no real bad taste m
Arnzen s mouth
It wasn t that we played
badly
Arnzen
said
referrmg to the St Marys
loss We played good but
they JUS! played better They
hit 68 per cent from the field
and It was not that our
defense broke down they just
put ll lll.
Jun Lawhead of unbeaten
Loram catholic was second in
the balloting with eight votes
Walt Harrop of River Vtew
last year s wp coach was
third with SIX
others with more than one
vote lricluded Bill Kemon of
Urbana Wally Teeters of
Colwnbus St Charles Bob
Haas of Willard Larry
Siefert of Brookfield Gary
McElfresh of Coshocton
Bobby Dawson of WellSVIlle
J1m Bailey of Circleville and
Bob Shahan of Cincinnati
Greenhills
NHL

s and ngs

ly Un ed P en lnte na on1l

C.Jmpbel Conference
past season with h1s play
Patr ck D "' s on
making and defense while
W L T Pis GF GA
averaging 15 5 points per K Ph aa ph •a
" a 320 90
NY sende s39 8 5 932 2 0
contest
A an a
J 32
73 2-42 22
Arnzen a teammate 6 8 NYR:angers 2539 9 5924 304
Smvthe 0 v son
Tim Pohlman heads up the
W L T Pis GF GA
second team which also Ch ago
29 2
75 224 233
mcludes Circlevtlle s 6 3 Vancou e 29 31 " 72 2-45 25,.
ous
2635 3 6522 270
George Moore &amp;-2 Blll Dodd sMnneso
a
9 -49 s -43 5 27
of Flrelands 11-2 Mike Moyer Kansas C v 12 49
35 68 306
WI es Confer•nce
of River View and S.ll Todd
Nor s D v son
Stevens of Sandy Valley
W L T Pis GF GA
ea
54 0 0 9309 59
Dodd was by far the top PxMon
sbu gh
33 29
27
scorer among the secmd five Los Ange es 34 J 8 n6 32352 245
24 •.0 9 5 962 J
wtth a 28 4 per-t~ame mark Dero
Wash ng on
9 sc 9 27 99 353
Pohlman led the well
Ad1ms D v son
W L T PIS GF GA
balanced St John s club m
Bos on
C6 4 2 OC 286 209
scorln~ with a 16 2 scoring
e ta o
4 20 2 94 306 22
average
while
Moore To on o
32 28 4 78 2 7 254
averaged 17 I Mayer 17 and Ca torn 1!1 26 40 b 62 239 26C
x c nched divls on 111e
Stevena 19 1
Mond1y 1 Rnu t
Named w the third team Ca fo na S LOUS
Tuesday s G1mes
were Mike Horne
a NY s anders
a Vancouve
teammate of Wllczak at Ph aae ph a a M nneso a
C y at Wash ng on
IAJ'aln catholic Mike Wright KansasWednesd1y·
s G1mes
of WeUsvllle Mike Huebner NY Range s 1 Buffa o
of Paulding Rod Cok of NY s ande sa Los Ange es
A an a at Ch cago
WUiard and Brian Agler of Toron
o a Mon ea
Marlon Etgln
Wash ng on a Oe o
Bos on a P sbu 'ilh
The 11-10 Huebner averaged M
nneso a a Kansas C y
'l1 points per game while
Aglilr a nifty ball.!Jandler
aver-ged 21 Horne 18 I
Wright 17 and Cok 14
PHILADELPHIA UP!)
The PhUadelphia Atoms have
announced \he slgnmg of
three North American Soccer
League veterans Manny
Matoa George 0 Neill 811d
Juau Paletta
0 N•lll played on the
Atorna 1973 championship
team liut saw little action last
seaaon because of a broken
leg

success along w th a rugged
But Coa h Jack Greynolds
defense which beld CincmnatJ uses seven players I beratly
Elder w 13 po nts n the ftrsl n h s pressure defense wh ch
ha lf of Saturdays 77 56 he
ca l s
organ zed
regional !mats wm at Dayton confusion
Walker s other starters are
The confuston however s
6-2 Ron Morr son and 11-2 usually prov ded by the
sopbomore George Carter a oppos lion w !ness the 38
brother of Butch both
urn ove rs
by
Canton
averagmg m double f gures
McK nley n ts reg ona t
and 6-4 Er c McClure and 5-11 f nals loss to the Mag s and
Ron Gregory
41 by Akron t;;ast n another
Walker called Unden a wurnament con test
Mark Bodnar s the leading
good ball club they re quick
and they shoot well I thmk t scorer w h a 21 per game
mark Sco 1 s averag ng 17
will be a hell of a game
The second AAA game Marty Bodnar 16 and Gr sby
matches the b ggest learn m who played only f ve regular
the tournament Scott ( 23-0)
season games 10
aga nst
the
smallest
Asked where he uses the
Bodnars Greynotds rep! ed
Barberton ( 24-0
Barberton with no starter
anywhere we need them
over &amp;-1 features the Bodnar When you re as smal as we
are you can t play regular
tw ns Mark and Marty
Carter Scott and Fred basketball
Gr sby a ll averag ng n
Stx of Barber on s op
seven players are JUruors the
double f gures

only seruor be ng 6-1 Harold
Gr sby bro her of Fred and
the
team s
lead ng
rebounder

Scott coached by Ben WJI
1ams s paced by IHl second
earn at Oh oan Donald
Collins
Colhns a sen or s not only
the teague scorer w th h s 9
po nts per game mark but IS
a so se ond n rebounding
stea ls and ass sts
Will ams ca lls h m the
bes player n the state
The other starters on the
Scott team wh ch averages
better than 6-4 per man a e 64 Greg Pope 6-2 Verd s
Chears 6-4 Booker Harr s
and 6-5 Tom W lliams
Pope averages 16 pomls pe
game and Chea s 10
Coach Wll ams feels h s
team 1s well balanced and
adjusts fa rly we I to game
s uat ons

l9HORSES DIE
PAWTU CKET
R I
I UPI
An estimated 19
Thoroughbred horses were
killed Monday night when
I re swept two large stables
at Narragansett Park race
track
That looks like the float
ount 19 Narragansett
spoke man John McCarthy
sa d
ear ly
today
Workers managed to
lea d so me frightened
hurses frum the stables to

other hors e barns In the
confus io n three horses
knocked down pollee of
I ccr Jake Sarlva 38 The
ofUcer

was

taken

to

Pa,tucket Memorial
Hospital where he was
treated and released The
cause of th e fire was

un-

dete rmined

Cardinals gamble all on Cruz
By
United
Press
lnternallonal
The spot! ght rn the early
days of the St Lou s
Cardmats spr ng tra n ng
camp has been turned full
glare on rookte thtrd
baseman Hector Cruz
The cardinals gambling
by tradtng veteran thJ[d
baseman Ken Re tz durmg
the wmter m order to acqwre
p tcher Pete Falcone are
1 kely to stand or fall as
pemant contenders on the
quatity of the r new inf eld
of Ke th Hernandez at flrst
base Mtke Tyson at second
Don Kessmger at short and
Cruz at thtrd
M!fed at bemg traded
Rettz sa1d durmg the wmter
that he thought the cardinals
were
s ttmg on an
earthquake
Manager Red Schoendienst
had coach Preston Gomez
hittmg w eked groWJders at
the Card nals nf elders
durmg Monday s workout
and Gomez was eager w
explain why

S pi spls met
COLUMBUS
UP
Pa ngs o th s weekend s
g r s state h gh s hoo
baske ba

ou nemnts

C assAAA
t AI Norwalk I
Fr day
Bow ng Green
60
s
ToedoWoodwa d ( 42 6 30
p m Bay V age
3
s
Med na
4
8 30 p m
F na s Sa urday
30 p m
At Canton I
F day
C eveland Kennedy
3 s
S ulhe s
4 2 6 30 p m
Men o
s G eensbu g
G een
5
8 30 p m
F na s Satu day
30 p m
AI Weslerv lei
Wednesday
Gahanna L ncoln
5
s
51 OW
5
6 30 p m
Columbus Wa terson
5o
vs Ch co he
04
8 30
p m F na s Sa u day
p m
tAt Dayton
Wednesday
Day on Wayne
33
s
Ketter ng Fa mon East 3
3
6 30 p m
C nc nnat
Sycamo e
60
vs
C nc nna Oak H I s
5
8 30 p m F nals Salu day
pm
Class AA
At Canton
Thursday
Wa en Champ on 5
s
Day es own Ch ppewa
3
630pm AkonOu Ladyof
he E ms 4
vs Campbel
Memo a
06
830 pm
F na s Satu day 4 30 p m
t AI Bowling G een
Thursday
Obe n 4
vs A hbo d
60
6 30 p m
Uppe
Sandusky
3 21 s 0 egon
Ca d na S lch
4 8 30
p m F na s Sa u da y 4 30

pm

CAI Westerv le)

Thursday
R ver V ew ( 14 2 s R e
Va ey 5 I 6 30 p m T
Va ey ( 6 0 vs Co umbus
Ha ey
6
8 30 p m
F na s Sa lu day 4 30 p m
AI Dayton
Thursday
C nc nnat Tay or 3 3 s
Be lb ook ( 2 6 30 p m
Waverly ( 5
s U bana
o1
8 30 p m
F na s
Saturday 4 30 p m
Class A
t AI Wooster I

Southern local

5

there

In other camps
Bob Moose Larry Demery
and Geor~e Med ch were

s

C eveland Luthe an Wes
4 6 30 p m No thweste n

named by Manager Danny
Murtaugh to p tch the P tts
P rates
f rst
burgh
exh b t on game agamst the
Ch cago Wh e Sox Murtaugh
a so sa d he wan ted to
ex per men
w th f rst
baseman-out! elder.ea tcher
Ed Kirkpatr ck at th rd base
JUS! to see what he can do
Outf elde Bobb; Murcer of
the San Franc sco G ants
ba kmg a a 20 per cen pay
cu sa d I don 1 want to

By Greg Bailey
In the champ onshtp game
of the Southern Htgh Athlet c
Boos ters
Independ en t
basketball ournamen held
at tne H gh School Sa urday
n ght
he youth and
qu ckness of the Beach
Ath e\tc Club p am y was the

dec d ng factor
n
outlast ng an o der learn from
85 79 The
MacArthu
MacArthur team had seven
men on he r rosU!r over 30
vea s old
It seemed as though the age
was go ng o be a factor from
the very start as the Athlet c
Club took a 20-11 f rs quarter
lea d but he MacArthur
gentlemen we en t over the
h yet They boWJced back to
score 31 po nts m he second
I
t penod o take a 42 36 half
time ead
At the th rd buzzer he
MacArthur
learn was st It
NBA Stand ngs
hangmg on to a s m 6!-59
By Un ed P es s 11 e na ona
Easte n Conte ence
margm rna n y beh nd the
A ant c D son
w L Pc GB e ght po nts n that quarter by
Boson
6 6
Ke h Ntce But the fourth
Ph ade ph a
32 556 8
quarter took ts to I at the
B fa o
549 8
N ew Yo k
38
65 4
BAC boys tossed n 26
Cen
on
GB markers to w n gong away
L Pc
The ournament s MVP
620
Wash g 0
2
28 600
C e e and
rectp ent Ivan Taylor led
Ho son
6 500 8
the champs w th 27 pomts
New 0 eans
39 458
A
wh le teammate Blll Braddle
illssed m 25 MacArthur s
GB Dave W lcoxen paced them
M waukee
w th 20 po nts wh e Jeff
Kansas C y
3
Crewey and N ce each had 17
De o
4
Ch ago
9
Crewey
rece ved the award
Pac
GB for scor ng the tournament s
most pomts as he tossed n 93
5
po
nts n four games
3
6
36
6
Th e St oh s team took
20
home the h rd place trophy
as Boggs Sa es forfe ted the
consolatwn game Fo lowmg
IS a box sco e and a st of the
all tourney team
The All ournament learn
Larry K uger MacArthur
Van Debuck Beach A C
Ron Ferguson
Golden
Nugget
M ke Griggs
S oh s Dave Wilcoxen
Mac Arthur Iva n Ta ylo
Beach A C Glen Lacky
Boggs Sa es
Se v ce and
vs Bu keye Cen a 9
B It Brabble Beach A C

: Pro
:
:StrouHngs I

8 30 p m
F na s
da y
30 pm
(At Bow ng G een
F day
TnoaOSvsM eCy
4
6 30 p m
Con oy
C est ew 6 0
L be y
Ben on
2
8 30 p m
F na s Sa u day
30 p m
tAt Weste vI el
F day
Ga away
33
S Joseph 5
nd an Va ey No
Lan ast e F she
p m F na s Sa l
pm
AI Dayton
F day
M dd etown Fenw ck 6 0
s Russ a 8
6 30 p m
F ankfo
Adena
6 0 vs
A can um
22
8 30 p m
F na s Sa u day
30 p m

p ay out my opt on unless I
J ohn Grub b
have to
tr pled hom e two runs m the
San D ego Padres mtra
squad game The Atlanta
Braves are st ll wondermg
about the whereahouts of
Roger Moret Cuban born
p tcher acqu red durmg the
wmter from the Boston Red
Sox Dock Ell s was named
w be the f rst starter for the
New Yo k Yankees n
ex h b t on games
and
clubowner
Geo rge
Stem bremer sa d I expect

~

him to wm a m nunum of 15 ~.~

Younger team
is 85-79 winner

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

Girl pairings

eg ona

The reason s because he
comb nat on of arttf eta turf
and d rt a St Lou s the only
such mf etd m the Nat ona
League makes the bat scoot
and z p faster than m any
o her park he sad I! s he
wughest mf1eld n the eague
and you cant baby mfi elders
11ho have w react qu ckly

games
Manager Alex
Grarnmas of the Mlwaukee
Brewers nd1cated that he
hopes h s regular out! eld will
cons st of Bobby Darwm In
r ght Stxto Lezcano m center
and Charhe Moore m
eft Out! elder
Jerry
Mart n f ghtmg for a spot on
the Philadelphia roster hit a
sacr f ce fly Wlth one out m
he n nth mn ng Monday
n ght to It the Ph II es w a I
0 v ctory over the Detroit
Tigers Jtrn Kaat made h s
debu m a National League
un form and comb ned wtth ,.
Ron
Schue er
Tom....'l
Hilgendorf and Dan Boytano ~
w restrict the T1gers worst
team m the maJor leagues
last season to ftve smgles

YOUr

NeigHBOr
Bill Fletcher

~

1251 Fow.ll St
Middleport 0.

PH. 992-7155

--

See hilll lor all )lOUr

1

...

•

flflll~

St. 1 F1 m su ence Com~Mnlel
Home OH en 1 OOf'l'l "'fon
noll

Sa

ISDOM IS...
protection for your home•

-NOWOPEN-

teaturmg
Ice Cream m
Quarts Pmts, and
Cones

the wise old owl say~

f

Adolph's Dairy Valley
Hrs 10 OOA M Ttl II 00 PM Sun Thur
10 00 A M Ttl12 00 P M Frt &amp; Sat
992 2SS6
W MAIN
POMEROY 0

You home s the most va uable

em you w

eve own Don t take a chance of os ng t
w thout p oper ns u a nee to cover the loss We
w
p ov de VOl! w th adequate coverage at
easonab y ow rates Don t be penny w se and
do a fool sh
Ca us today

When you see us don I lhmk of msurance
but when you thmk of msurance see us

Dowmng-Childs Agency
MIDDLEPORT

PHONE 992-2342

�LUCKY

Individual Marauder basketball records
established during the 1975-76 season
.r.:of't r.&amp;.rres playa~: 1 se a. ~:) l!-22 bv ·; . -. 1 1 alli 011 ftl,:~;,
.!,11;•
t'\ ,- 1 •'•'~-,, •!), 1 ru1.~t
.. •-u.ea -..
cn. a,
!r' t
·~
.
Jn. :- even-rort , 5 . Pc.ndolrh in 19 76
,J

:.CIS

~a. t (.. ~ !i !h.&amp;:fed 1

•

season·S7 by

"

.

:~: •. ave npo:-t in

MEIGS COUNTY'S
NEWEST
BUSINESS

1976

rlOJ't quaJO t,:rs ;'l leyed 1 ,: wno- a by .T . '? yo , J"' . ~' un :·:atre , J , r,:orris
vs Gall boll.s in 1971
•
1 •
'·: 0 ~ ~ p o1n~4 ' sco!'o~ 1 r,amc - 33 by :.1. :; avt;n; ort vs ·. ahnn a in 19 76
~ o .. ~ p o1n .~ sco r~a l s e ason- 350 by ~ . L c:v e n:• o•t in J9 76
·.O~ t ~ ~ l nt f ecONld 1 f.}.t:-.e b:r Ol' t&gt;OnA nt - 46 by r";o c;o r y of \.'i r.ton 1 n 196'3
--!l'~d ~oal a tt empts 1 ca:,Je-29 by ... . Do d ~ on vs Gall1nol1s 1:1 19 74
~: ~ ~i '~~ ' on ~ attm•.; ts 1 game by o... nc- netit - i:.."} l·y :a teflO n of Ironton in 1970
;...
e .a. _oa ... 1.· t •;n-r,ts 1 see. ~on - )07 by J . Tyo in 19 70
1
·:o··" ~1 J l d ,o s l$. flllae 1 Gi.llle-lr:: by ~r! , ' : o.ve n ~· o ro t in 19 76
~ ~11 o lldd ~onlls !1\!i:l f! 1 ' c a:.m by oy ··onent• l E. b y (; rec.o:- y of llintorl 1 n 1968
~0~ • e
, oa ! r.l:lil l'l 1 s e.lison-147 by N: , JllJVenport t n l976
~e:t f i !! ld ro d ~h oo t 1 ncr a.va!' 'l£,"' l g8.me-l00 f. by J. Myo r11 {7·7} 1n 1969
.e .. t fhld r,oal !;hoo ting avarr~r·e 1 r,ru:1a hy o 1:- ) O.n en~-BS ~· by l ap:;- or .'1thona
g.,·•· f1 0 ld
1 •
:n 1968
: ,
r:oa S•;OOtino ave:-ar:e 1 eeneon- 54. '!)y .~ .VIilU. l"kHm in 1973
~~o~ ~ 1r ·B t:~.row e,'Jt 6:,\, '; s l ~G.lnfl ·21 't':'J r.; . !ll.J r:ert:.y ·1 s LO.~ .Iln ln 1~( 0
l&gt;1o . l tl" '3 0 throw att mhpt e 1 rame by op r.u. er t - 18 hy C.!'e ,Jory of Vin ton in l9~ S
:•o Jt. t r e thro w ;tt (·m;; te 1 a e a.son- 1;,8 by J . J•:ye~·s in 1969
;.o et ! :-" c.e t hrow 3 rra~e 1 •! a.rae -1 6 h:r J . T:;o ve Ironton in i971
•:Oit f~• O e t h rOWS I::!.Oe 1 garr.e by O?f. OTlOr'.t. - 1 ~. by [';.•o ;-ory of '•lin t o n i :n 1C'J66
f1oet t're e t~row ~ rr.s.cle 1 oenson - 94 'oy c . ~'l!"-; crty in -1970
·
'ije ~ t fru.. t 1row shnotine; aver :\ CC 1 rau · lOO (6· 9) by .r. r:: or:do i n 1968

._.o ;t

,

PURCHASE OF '5.00 OR MORE
(CI~AREnES EXCLUDED) WHOSE

•·~e ::~t r r ce _ t"'-,row ~naot
.
1!",~_:

TOTAL PURCHASE ENDS IN
SEVEN (7) WILL BE AWARDED

CHOICE
TOP QUALITY

FREE 20 oz. LOAF OF
GATEWAY BREADI

BLADE CUT

SHOULDER ROAST

BONELESS CHUCK ROAST
BONELESS ENGLISH ROAST
BONELESS BEEF STEW CUBES

LB.

c
LB.

LB.

77~

TRY OUR OWN SLICED LUNCHEON MEAT
.;_SLICED FRESH DAILY-

OLD 'fASHION LOAF.............~~: .. ~1.27
PEPPER LOAF...................... ~.~: ..~1.77

BOHAIMLE.. D
..........L.B.....$..197

PILLSBURY
BISCUITS
8 OZ. CANS

3!37~

MAKE A BmER BURGER

BETSY ROSS

NOODLES
SWEET ROLLS MEDIUM, WIDE,
SAVE 12'

PKG.

57

¢

TEEN QUEEN
FROZEN

LUCKY LEAF APPLE, LEMON
OR CHERRY
NO. 2 CAN
PIE FILLING ••••••••••••·••••••••••••••••••• ,. •••••••
GOLDEN ISLE

NO. 303 CAN 3/97~

GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS...................

12 OZ. PKG.
AMERICAN CHEESE SINGLES.................

GOLDEN ISLE

57¢
.
¢
·

8 7·

FRENCH
FRIES
2 LB. PKG

LIPTON'S· CHILl, MILDLY

GERMAN VILLAGE

SEASONED, HICKORY, OR
ONION

2

X WIDE, OR

KI.USiO

LADY

77~

scon

FACIAL
TISSUES

57~

80XES

200 CT,

BOX

47~

in 1976

! Mason County
~·:

"ENJOY EVERY OUNCE YOU BUY"

ROUND BONE .

f,IJ.r.Je

o;;:;:;:-:;:;:·:·:.:-:·:.&gt;.-..:
......•.•.v.v..............
..W:!:-s·~;..;.o;o
.._............. · · ·{·¢
"'i$:o;o,•.v;&gt;....,.o"X···;o-..
• • '• • • • • • • • • ,o,o;r.•,•,•o•T.o
•.-_.,.-,.r,•,•,;.;;.~
;o, ,.,,
..•. . , ,
...,,.·

v

'·

ave·•1w e 1

.

LEAN JUICY, FINE FOR GRIUINGI

~~

·:·:

.•~

News Notes ~\

By Alma Marshall

~

X:

$:
::~

CIJFTON - Mrs. Alburtice (Roberta) Young, presented
the Mason Extension Homemakers lesson, "Your Clothing
Dollar" when the hommemakers met on March 16 at the home
of·Mrs. Nancy VanMeter in Clifton, with Mrs. CecU Smith as
co.flostess. The lesson leader spoke on shopping guidelines and
in regards to armchair shopping at home by reading
advertisements. She passed around ads and asked each person
present to express her thoughts.
A skit was acted out with Mrs. Evelyn Stewart, sales clerk,
and Mrs. Matilda Noble, customer. Several garments were
exhibited and Mrs. Noble pointed uut what to look for when
purchasing garments. The homemakers were reminded to
read labels on garments and keep laundering instructions.
Following the pledge uf allegiance to our flag ,
homemakers creed and pledge, Mrs. Laura Johnson ,
presented the devotionals pertaining to lent. She closed with a
prayer and Thought for the Day.
A thank-you card was read by the president from Mrs.
Nancy VanMeter ~for the flowers sent by the club as an
expreSsion of sympathy in regard to the death of her brother,
Harley Powell, of Nitro.
Mrs. Laurene lewis, president, again aruwunced that the
National Homemakers Conference will be held August 1S.20 at
Morgantown. The cost is $97.10 for the conference with
registration commencing on Sunday.
'
The Mason Homemakers Mother and Daughter Banquet
will be held May 7th, at 6:30 at CUfton United Methodist
Church. Mrs. Fred Spencer and Mrs. Norman Reynolds will be
mcharg'e of the program.
.
Mrs. George Carson will be hustess at the April meeting.
A game was played and Mrs. Evelyn Stewart was named
the winner. Mrs. lloyd WiUiarns won the door prize.
.
Mrs. Van Meter and Mrs. Smith served refreshments to
Mrs. Evelyn Stewart, Mrs. Laura Juhnson, Mrs. Helen
Williams, Mrs. lloyd Williams, Mrs. Fred Spencer, Mrs.
Laurene Lewis, Mrs. Alburtice Young, Mrs. John Marshall,
Mrs. Matilda Noble, Mrs. George Carson, Mrs. Lawrence
Ruush, Mrs. Norman Reynolds, Mrs. Landon Smith. Mrs. Wm.
Zerkle and a guest, Mrs. Thelma Henry.
CUflon Pe..,onal Menllon
Mrs. Ethel Rayburn of Letart, visited her sister, Mrs.
Uoyd Williams and family over the weekend.
Guests of Mrs. Thelma Henry over the weekend were Mr.
' and Mrs. Don Qujsenberry, Kim and Unda of S. Charlestun,
0 .; Mrs. Martha Ward, Aaron and Chris of Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Terry Henry, Terry and Jeff of Mason, Mrs. Hazel
Hoschar, West Columbia.
Mrs. Helen Barker, Clifton, was guest of honor at a birth·
. day dinner on Sunday evening at Crow's Steak l!ouse, In
observance of the occasion and coming to share the day with
Mrs. Barber were grandson, Marvin Barker, Jr., his wife,
Linda, and daughter, Melanie of Marmet, W. Va .; Marvin's
mother, Mrs. Bernice Barker Harris, Mr. Harris and Mrs.
Barker's other grandson, Bob Barker of Charleston, W. Va.
The honoree received many cards and gifts.
MASON,,W. Va.- Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel, Mason,
Mr. and Mrs. James lloyd and sons of Nashport, Ohio; Mr.
and Mrs. Calvin McDaniel, Christine and son, C. R., Pl.
Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Stan saunders and family of
Columbus, were here to attend the funeral of Mrs. Ethel
•' Saunders, formerly of Middleport who died in Cohunbus. Mrs.
Saunders was the muther of Mr. Stan Saunders. The funeral
was held at the Free, Will Baptist Church.
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. Harley Hendricks, Pt. Pleasant,
are announcing the birth of a son, Vernon Albert, on March
18th at Holzer Medical Center Hospital. The infant weighed 8
JlOWids and 6 oWices. The m!llher is the former Mary Foster of
Mason.
Mr. and Mrs. Hendricks are. the parents of three other
chU"'en, Harley Jr., Ann and a foster son, Tommy Martin .
Grandparents are Mrs. Vernon Foster, Mason ; Mr . and Mrs.
Carl Hendricks, and grea t11randmothers are Mrs. Edward
Durst, Mrs. Eva Dessauer, all of Pomeroy.
MASON - William Muller, Mason 'county librarian, spoke
to Mason Mothers Club Tuesday at Mason 's new library. He
W!IS Introduced by Mrs. Ray Proffitt, the librarian.
Mr. Muller discussed the new Mason County \.lbrary being
. buUt in Pt. Pleasant on the Memorial Park lot located acroas
from the Courthouse. The services offered by this library will
be for the people of Mason County. Mrs. Proffitt told of the
services offer-ed by the local library which is located at the
corner of Brown and Third Streets In Mason.
After the meeting at the library the group went to the
VirgU A. lewis home nest door for the business meeting . Mrs.
Glacldle Stewart, president of the-Mothers Club, presided.
Among , the club's proje~ discussed were havinil a
Olristmas Bazaar and donating funds to help the toWn of
Muon erect signs on Its streets and alleys.
A St. Patrick's Day theme was used by the hostesses Mrs.
Sally Ross, Mrs. Joan Bentley and Mrs. Donns Fowler.
Attending were Mrs. LUcille Swackhamer, Mrs. Mary
Berry, Mrs. Erlene Bumgardner, Mrs. Carol Proffitt, Mrs. ·
BoMie McFarland, Mrs. Betty Liah, Mrs. Lavera Yeager,
Mrs. Lola Test, Mrs. Jody Noble, Mrs. Mayme Noble and the
hostesses.
NEW HAVEN- Johnny Merrlt, 4-year~ld son of Mr. and
Mrs. Michael A. Merril, received second degree burns to hoth
thighs and a forearm when he lipped over a lea ke!Ue on the
stove. He was taken to Holzer Medical Center Hospital by the
New Haven ambulance. lie will be home in a few days.

1

WED., MARCH 24th
AT 12 NOON~ COME IN

!.n 1971

AND LOOK AROUND FOR WHAT YOU NEED

-

r.~ost conse cut ive field sho t s t:.!i.dc-7 by J , Mye rt;; v 2 ifel.aonv ille-York in 1969
~;est reb o ~·.nd s l ga ma .. 31 by 't' . \' au p-hEI.n ir: 1972
Lofi t rab o .m::-! 1 Mt&gt;s on-2C4 \:v D . ~: alter!l in l'.l70

.J

~

CHUCK
STEAK

U.: tt . V~;~.n Ye t.ro

COR. PEARL &amp; LOCUST-MIDDLEPORT

by o p,~ onent- 1 CO;,; (9 ·9 ) by
/
Jetfe r a ef .. Fllhton in 1968
~oat f r r e. t h:-o w shooti ng avoo:-at·e 1 ua.;on .. O l~.: by .r . ~ O f,IJ!I in 1973
~.oBt co n!l eout l ve tree th T'O\'IS n:ndo-2h by J . '!'yo in 1970
·
f~ 1 chrnt p oint C. V(Il"S (,e p er f' "Ame .fOC' l eonson-16.9 hy D.Dod aon i n 1974
~ .ost personal foul3 1 se!lson - ~9 by S .:land ol nh in 1976
Le nat p e!"3C n~ l f ouls 1 se ason -S by B. \~· erry l n 1969
!."o3 t acme s f o r'l&lt;.~ d out l s e9.sor: - 10 by S . P.I!.!Idol ph in 1976
Least f\tll'l81l fo·Jted nut 1 a e e.so n !'or most ga.men·O by J.' Crter:l'e on s :..: M. l!ave1: rJort

A

TOP FLAVOR

•

OWNED &amp; OPERA TED BY

:·tf.

ANY CUSTOMER WITH A

USDA

IOlhaeN

EVERSONIC

23-Channel Mobile Citizens Band 5 watt Transceiver
Jwrior High
honors listed

'

RACINE ·~ Jennings
Beegle, principal, has an·
nounced the Southern Junior
High School fourth six week
honor roll. Making a grade of
"B" or above to be listed with
those in capital letters
receiving all A's were :
Seventh Grade - Bonnie
Boso, Paul Cardone, Steve
Circle, Terrie Crouch, Eddie
Duffy, Jody Grueser, Eric
Harris, Teresa Holstein,
Becky Koehler, Bob lee,
Mary Beth Obitz , Becky
Rhodes·~ Berta Robinson i
Mary Beth Slavin, Danny
Talbott, Melissa Yohker,
Paula Wolfe.
PEGGY BUSH, JANET
MIDDLESWART, CARL
MORRIS, MARK SIMPSON,
BRYAN WOLFE, JACK
WOLFE .
Eighth Grade - Brenda
Ash , Tom Bass, Sharon
Crouch, Ray Deem, Kim
Dugan, Amy Fisher, David
Foreman, Richard Furbee,
Pam Harden, Rosemary
Hubbard, Carmen Manuel,
James Meadows, Becky
McGraw. Kent Varnev_Cindv
Warden, Matt Weaver.
CRICKET CARPENTER,
JACK DUFFY, MELISSA
IHLE, BRIAN JOHNSON.

REG.

'139.95
"BONUS'~ WHEN YOU BUY A CB RADIO

OF '119.95 OR MORE YOU CAN GET A

CITIZEN BAND
ANTENNA
ATTENTION
CB BUYERS!

AL~0~A~~:RE

'

RADIO SHACK'S DUoFONE 3
T~LEPHONE AMPLIFIER
SYSTEM

GIVE "EM
OUR AM
FLAVORADIO '·

Reg . 6.95

We Have A Real

5~~6

Good Selection of
Realistic CB Radios
In Stock. But

Supp~

SPECIAL
PURC ... ASE

Is Short 'So Buy Now

8 TRACK

CUSTOM-PRO
STEREO HEADSET

The Five Point Star Slit·
chers organized March ·Is at
the home of Pat Holter with
12 members present.
Officers elected for the new
4-H year are president, Becky
Eichinger; vice president,
Jackie Rapp; second vice
president, Lori Louks ;
secretary, Tina Spencer ;
treasurer, Lee Ann Gaul ;
vice
president,
Beth
Fredrick ; recreation leaders,
Cheryl Folmer and Melinda
Mankin; safety chairman,
Tamra
Clark;
health
chairman, Debbie Porter and
news reporters, Sheila
Kbenig and Pam Riebel. The
next meeting will be April 2.
- Sheila Koenig and Pam
Riebel.
The Five Point Star SUI·
chers Junior leaders 4-H
Club organized March 15 at
the home of Pat Holter.
Officers elected for the new ·
4-H year ate president, Mary
Mora; vice president, Kaim
Krautter; second vice
president, Nancy Samos;
secretary, Tam Starcher;
.treasurer, Paula Hysell;
news reporter, Denise White;
health chairman, Patty
Parker and Fonda Rapp;
safety chairman, April
Parker and Carolyn Bowen;
tour chairmen, Becky Ed·
wards and Beth Wilson, and
recl'eation leaders, Tammy
Spencer, Raeleen Oliver,
Brenda Bailey, Kathy
Parker, Melanie Bailey and

The Five . Point Bucks and
reporter.
Does elected officers March
15 at the Nick leonard home.
They are president, Rocky
Pitzer; vice president, Nicky
J.eonard; secretary, Charles
Ritchie; treasurer, Terry
Sayre ; recreation leader,
Chuck
Martin ;
news
reporter, JohMie Riebel and
safety chairman, Tommy
Pullins.
The next meeting will be
April 20 at the home of Nick
leonard. _: Johnnie Riebel.

MOUNT.

SAVE 21%

FOR OPENING

Meigs 4-H ·
Club News

The next meeting will be
TammySamos.
April 5 at the home of Pat
Holter. - Denise· While,

TRUNK OR ROOF TOP

REALISTIC "
VERY THRIFTY
AM-FM CLOCK RADIO!

'I

CASSETTE
OR S-TRACK
PADDED
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WITH PHONO/TUNER INPUTS

IT'S NEW
IT'S SOME SWELL GAME

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BASKETBALL
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AND TRY IT
OUT

- · • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • •·• • • • • •·• • • • • • • • • • • •.• • • • • • • • • • • • • - . • • • ..

i

:

I
I

I

1
1.
1

200 EXTRA

1
I"

1
,I

I
I

TOP V.'ALUE

·

·

:
1

1
1

s~~MPS

on any purchase of '20 or more
(excluding items prohibited by law)
AT THE RADIO SHA'CK
I
:
I

EXPIRES 3-27·76

1

.

GROCERY
HARDWARE ·
RADIO SHACK

MON.- FRI.

9- 8
SAT.

9- 6
SUNDAY
CLOSED

1

1.

STORE
HOURS:

······---------------------------~----~-------------­
·'
'

'

�LUCKY

Individual Marauder basketball records
established during the 1975-76 season
.r.:of't r.&amp;.rres playa~: 1 se a. ~:) l!-22 bv ·; . -. 1 1 alli 011 ftl,:~;,
.!,11;•
t'\ ,- 1 •'•'~-,, •!), 1 ru1.~t
.. •-u.ea -..
cn. a,
!r' t
·~
.
Jn. :- even-rort , 5 . Pc.ndolrh in 19 76
,J

:.CIS

~a. t (.. ~ !i !h.&amp;:fed 1

•

season·S7 by

"

.

:~: •. ave npo:-t in

MEIGS COUNTY'S
NEWEST
BUSINESS

1976

rlOJ't quaJO t,:rs ;'l leyed 1 ,: wno- a by .T . '? yo , J"' . ~' un :·:atre , J , r,:orris
vs Gall boll.s in 1971
•
1 •
'·: 0 ~ ~ p o1n~4 ' sco!'o~ 1 r,amc - 33 by :.1. :; avt;n; ort vs ·. ahnn a in 19 76
~ o .. ~ p o1n .~ sco r~a l s e ason- 350 by ~ . L c:v e n:• o•t in J9 76
·.O~ t ~ ~ l nt f ecONld 1 f.}.t:-.e b:r Ol' t&gt;OnA nt - 46 by r";o c;o r y of \.'i r.ton 1 n 196'3
--!l'~d ~oal a tt empts 1 ca:,Je-29 by ... . Do d ~ on vs Gall1nol1s 1:1 19 74
~: ~ ~i '~~ ' on ~ attm•.; ts 1 game by o... nc- netit - i:.."} l·y :a teflO n of Ironton in 1970
;...
e .a. _oa ... 1.· t •;n-r,ts 1 see. ~on - )07 by J . Tyo in 19 70
1
·:o··" ~1 J l d ,o s l$. flllae 1 Gi.llle-lr:: by ~r! , ' : o.ve n ~· o ro t in 19 76
~ ~11 o lldd ~onlls !1\!i:l f! 1 ' c a:.m by oy ··onent• l E. b y (; rec.o:- y of llintorl 1 n 1968
~0~ • e
, oa ! r.l:lil l'l 1 s e.lison-147 by N: , JllJVenport t n l976
~e:t f i !! ld ro d ~h oo t 1 ncr a.va!' 'l£,"' l g8.me-l00 f. by J. Myo r11 {7·7} 1n 1969
.e .. t fhld r,oal !;hoo ting avarr~r·e 1 r,ru:1a hy o 1:- ) O.n en~-BS ~· by l ap:;- or .'1thona
g.,·•· f1 0 ld
1 •
:n 1968
: ,
r:oa S•;OOtino ave:-ar:e 1 eeneon- 54. '!)y .~ .VIilU. l"kHm in 1973
~~o~ ~ 1r ·B t:~.row e,'Jt 6:,\, '; s l ~G.lnfl ·21 't':'J r.; . !ll.J r:ert:.y ·1 s LO.~ .Iln ln 1~( 0
l&gt;1o . l tl" '3 0 throw att mhpt e 1 rame by op r.u. er t - 18 hy C.!'e ,Jory of Vin ton in l9~ S
:•o Jt. t r e thro w ;tt (·m;; te 1 a e a.son- 1;,8 by J . J•:ye~·s in 1969
;.o et ! :-" c.e t hrow 3 rra~e 1 •! a.rae -1 6 h:r J . T:;o ve Ironton in i971
•:Oit f~• O e t h rOWS I::!.Oe 1 garr.e by O?f. OTlOr'.t. - 1 ~. by [';.•o ;-ory of '•lin t o n i :n 1C'J66
f1oet t're e t~row ~ rr.s.cle 1 oenson - 94 'oy c . ~'l!"-; crty in -1970
·
'ije ~ t fru.. t 1row shnotine; aver :\ CC 1 rau · lOO (6· 9) by .r. r:: or:do i n 1968

._.o ;t

,

PURCHASE OF '5.00 OR MORE
(CI~AREnES EXCLUDED) WHOSE

•·~e ::~t r r ce _ t"'-,row ~naot
.
1!",~_:

TOTAL PURCHASE ENDS IN
SEVEN (7) WILL BE AWARDED

CHOICE
TOP QUALITY

FREE 20 oz. LOAF OF
GATEWAY BREADI

BLADE CUT

SHOULDER ROAST

BONELESS CHUCK ROAST
BONELESS ENGLISH ROAST
BONELESS BEEF STEW CUBES

LB.

c
LB.

LB.

77~

TRY OUR OWN SLICED LUNCHEON MEAT
.;_SLICED FRESH DAILY-

OLD 'fASHION LOAF.............~~: .. ~1.27
PEPPER LOAF...................... ~.~: ..~1.77

BOHAIMLE.. D
..........L.B.....$..197

PILLSBURY
BISCUITS
8 OZ. CANS

3!37~

MAKE A BmER BURGER

BETSY ROSS

NOODLES
SWEET ROLLS MEDIUM, WIDE,
SAVE 12'

PKG.

57

¢

TEEN QUEEN
FROZEN

LUCKY LEAF APPLE, LEMON
OR CHERRY
NO. 2 CAN
PIE FILLING ••••••••••••·••••••••••••••••••• ,. •••••••
GOLDEN ISLE

NO. 303 CAN 3/97~

GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS...................

12 OZ. PKG.
AMERICAN CHEESE SINGLES.................

GOLDEN ISLE

57¢
.
¢
·

8 7·

FRENCH
FRIES
2 LB. PKG

LIPTON'S· CHILl, MILDLY

GERMAN VILLAGE

SEASONED, HICKORY, OR
ONION

2

X WIDE, OR

KI.USiO

LADY

77~

scon

FACIAL
TISSUES

57~

80XES

200 CT,

BOX

47~

in 1976

! Mason County
~·:

"ENJOY EVERY OUNCE YOU BUY"

ROUND BONE .

f,IJ.r.Je

o;;:;:;:-:;:;:·:·:.:-:·:.&gt;.-..:
......•.•.v.v..............
..W:!:-s·~;..;.o;o
.._............. · · ·{·¢
"'i$:o;o,•.v;&gt;....,.o"X···;o-..
• • '• • • • • • • • • ,o,o;r.•,•,•o•T.o
•.-_.,.-,.r,•,•,;.;;.~
;o, ,.,,
..•. . , ,
...,,.·

v

'·

ave·•1w e 1

.

LEAN JUICY, FINE FOR GRIUINGI

~~

·:·:

.•~

News Notes ~\

By Alma Marshall

~

X:

$:
::~

CIJFTON - Mrs. Alburtice (Roberta) Young, presented
the Mason Extension Homemakers lesson, "Your Clothing
Dollar" when the hommemakers met on March 16 at the home
of·Mrs. Nancy VanMeter in Clifton, with Mrs. CecU Smith as
co.flostess. The lesson leader spoke on shopping guidelines and
in regards to armchair shopping at home by reading
advertisements. She passed around ads and asked each person
present to express her thoughts.
A skit was acted out with Mrs. Evelyn Stewart, sales clerk,
and Mrs. Matilda Noble, customer. Several garments were
exhibited and Mrs. Noble pointed uut what to look for when
purchasing garments. The homemakers were reminded to
read labels on garments and keep laundering instructions.
Following the pledge uf allegiance to our flag ,
homemakers creed and pledge, Mrs. Laura Johnson ,
presented the devotionals pertaining to lent. She closed with a
prayer and Thought for the Day.
A thank-you card was read by the president from Mrs.
Nancy VanMeter ~for the flowers sent by the club as an
expreSsion of sympathy in regard to the death of her brother,
Harley Powell, of Nitro.
Mrs. Laurene lewis, president, again aruwunced that the
National Homemakers Conference will be held August 1S.20 at
Morgantown. The cost is $97.10 for the conference with
registration commencing on Sunday.
'
The Mason Homemakers Mother and Daughter Banquet
will be held May 7th, at 6:30 at CUfton United Methodist
Church. Mrs. Fred Spencer and Mrs. Norman Reynolds will be
mcharg'e of the program.
.
Mrs. George Carson will be hustess at the April meeting.
A game was played and Mrs. Evelyn Stewart was named
the winner. Mrs. lloyd WiUiarns won the door prize.
.
Mrs. Van Meter and Mrs. Smith served refreshments to
Mrs. Evelyn Stewart, Mrs. Laura Juhnson, Mrs. Helen
Williams, Mrs. lloyd Williams, Mrs. Fred Spencer, Mrs.
Laurene Lewis, Mrs. Alburtice Young, Mrs. John Marshall,
Mrs. Matilda Noble, Mrs. George Carson, Mrs. Lawrence
Ruush, Mrs. Norman Reynolds, Mrs. Landon Smith. Mrs. Wm.
Zerkle and a guest, Mrs. Thelma Henry.
CUflon Pe..,onal Menllon
Mrs. Ethel Rayburn of Letart, visited her sister, Mrs.
Uoyd Williams and family over the weekend.
Guests of Mrs. Thelma Henry over the weekend were Mr.
' and Mrs. Don Qujsenberry, Kim and Unda of S. Charlestun,
0 .; Mrs. Martha Ward, Aaron and Chris of Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Terry Henry, Terry and Jeff of Mason, Mrs. Hazel
Hoschar, West Columbia.
Mrs. Helen Barker, Clifton, was guest of honor at a birth·
. day dinner on Sunday evening at Crow's Steak l!ouse, In
observance of the occasion and coming to share the day with
Mrs. Barber were grandson, Marvin Barker, Jr., his wife,
Linda, and daughter, Melanie of Marmet, W. Va .; Marvin's
mother, Mrs. Bernice Barker Harris, Mr. Harris and Mrs.
Barker's other grandson, Bob Barker of Charleston, W. Va.
The honoree received many cards and gifts.
MASON,,W. Va.- Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel, Mason,
Mr. and Mrs. James lloyd and sons of Nashport, Ohio; Mr.
and Mrs. Calvin McDaniel, Christine and son, C. R., Pl.
Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Stan saunders and family of
Columbus, were here to attend the funeral of Mrs. Ethel
•' Saunders, formerly of Middleport who died in Cohunbus. Mrs.
Saunders was the muther of Mr. Stan Saunders. The funeral
was held at the Free, Will Baptist Church.
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. Harley Hendricks, Pt. Pleasant,
are announcing the birth of a son, Vernon Albert, on March
18th at Holzer Medical Center Hospital. The infant weighed 8
JlOWids and 6 oWices. The m!llher is the former Mary Foster of
Mason.
Mr. and Mrs. Hendricks are. the parents of three other
chU"'en, Harley Jr., Ann and a foster son, Tommy Martin .
Grandparents are Mrs. Vernon Foster, Mason ; Mr . and Mrs.
Carl Hendricks, and grea t11randmothers are Mrs. Edward
Durst, Mrs. Eva Dessauer, all of Pomeroy.
MASON - William Muller, Mason 'county librarian, spoke
to Mason Mothers Club Tuesday at Mason 's new library. He
W!IS Introduced by Mrs. Ray Proffitt, the librarian.
Mr. Muller discussed the new Mason County \.lbrary being
. buUt in Pt. Pleasant on the Memorial Park lot located acroas
from the Courthouse. The services offered by this library will
be for the people of Mason County. Mrs. Proffitt told of the
services offer-ed by the local library which is located at the
corner of Brown and Third Streets In Mason.
After the meeting at the library the group went to the
VirgU A. lewis home nest door for the business meeting . Mrs.
Glacldle Stewart, president of the-Mothers Club, presided.
Among , the club's proje~ discussed were havinil a
Olristmas Bazaar and donating funds to help the toWn of
Muon erect signs on Its streets and alleys.
A St. Patrick's Day theme was used by the hostesses Mrs.
Sally Ross, Mrs. Joan Bentley and Mrs. Donns Fowler.
Attending were Mrs. LUcille Swackhamer, Mrs. Mary
Berry, Mrs. Erlene Bumgardner, Mrs. Carol Proffitt, Mrs. ·
BoMie McFarland, Mrs. Betty Liah, Mrs. Lavera Yeager,
Mrs. Lola Test, Mrs. Jody Noble, Mrs. Mayme Noble and the
hostesses.
NEW HAVEN- Johnny Merrlt, 4-year~ld son of Mr. and
Mrs. Michael A. Merril, received second degree burns to hoth
thighs and a forearm when he lipped over a lea ke!Ue on the
stove. He was taken to Holzer Medical Center Hospital by the
New Haven ambulance. lie will be home in a few days.

1

WED., MARCH 24th
AT 12 NOON~ COME IN

!.n 1971

AND LOOK AROUND FOR WHAT YOU NEED

-

r.~ost conse cut ive field sho t s t:.!i.dc-7 by J , Mye rt;; v 2 ifel.aonv ille-York in 1969
~;est reb o ~·.nd s l ga ma .. 31 by 't' . \' au p-hEI.n ir: 1972
Lofi t rab o .m::-! 1 Mt&gt;s on-2C4 \:v D . ~: alter!l in l'.l70

.J

~

CHUCK
STEAK

U.: tt . V~;~.n Ye t.ro

COR. PEARL &amp; LOCUST-MIDDLEPORT

by o p,~ onent- 1 CO;,; (9 ·9 ) by
/
Jetfe r a ef .. Fllhton in 1968
~oat f r r e. t h:-o w shooti ng avoo:-at·e 1 ua.;on .. O l~.: by .r . ~ O f,IJ!I in 1973
~.oBt co n!l eout l ve tree th T'O\'IS n:ndo-2h by J . '!'yo in 1970
·
f~ 1 chrnt p oint C. V(Il"S (,e p er f' "Ame .fOC' l eonson-16.9 hy D.Dod aon i n 1974
~ .ost personal foul3 1 se!lson - ~9 by S .:land ol nh in 1976
Le nat p e!"3C n~ l f ouls 1 se ason -S by B. \~· erry l n 1969
!."o3 t acme s f o r'l&lt;.~ d out l s e9.sor: - 10 by S . P.I!.!Idol ph in 1976
Least f\tll'l81l fo·Jted nut 1 a e e.so n !'or most ga.men·O by J.' Crter:l'e on s :..: M. l!ave1: rJort

A

TOP FLAVOR

•

OWNED &amp; OPERA TED BY

:·tf.

ANY CUSTOMER WITH A

USDA

IOlhaeN

EVERSONIC

23-Channel Mobile Citizens Band 5 watt Transceiver
Jwrior High
honors listed

'

RACINE ·~ Jennings
Beegle, principal, has an·
nounced the Southern Junior
High School fourth six week
honor roll. Making a grade of
"B" or above to be listed with
those in capital letters
receiving all A's were :
Seventh Grade - Bonnie
Boso, Paul Cardone, Steve
Circle, Terrie Crouch, Eddie
Duffy, Jody Grueser, Eric
Harris, Teresa Holstein,
Becky Koehler, Bob lee,
Mary Beth Obitz , Becky
Rhodes·~ Berta Robinson i
Mary Beth Slavin, Danny
Talbott, Melissa Yohker,
Paula Wolfe.
PEGGY BUSH, JANET
MIDDLESWART, CARL
MORRIS, MARK SIMPSON,
BRYAN WOLFE, JACK
WOLFE .
Eighth Grade - Brenda
Ash , Tom Bass, Sharon
Crouch, Ray Deem, Kim
Dugan, Amy Fisher, David
Foreman, Richard Furbee,
Pam Harden, Rosemary
Hubbard, Carmen Manuel,
James Meadows, Becky
McGraw. Kent Varnev_Cindv
Warden, Matt Weaver.
CRICKET CARPENTER,
JACK DUFFY, MELISSA
IHLE, BRIAN JOHNSON.

REG.

'139.95
"BONUS'~ WHEN YOU BUY A CB RADIO

OF '119.95 OR MORE YOU CAN GET A

CITIZEN BAND
ANTENNA
ATTENTION
CB BUYERS!

AL~0~A~~:RE

'

RADIO SHACK'S DUoFONE 3
T~LEPHONE AMPLIFIER
SYSTEM

GIVE "EM
OUR AM
FLAVORADIO '·

Reg . 6.95

We Have A Real

5~~6

Good Selection of
Realistic CB Radios
In Stock. But

Supp~

SPECIAL
PURC ... ASE

Is Short 'So Buy Now

8 TRACK

CUSTOM-PRO
STEREO HEADSET

The Five Point Star Slit·
chers organized March ·Is at
the home of Pat Holter with
12 members present.
Officers elected for the new
4-H year are president, Becky
Eichinger; vice president,
Jackie Rapp; second vice
president, Lori Louks ;
secretary, Tina Spencer ;
treasurer, Lee Ann Gaul ;
vice
president,
Beth
Fredrick ; recreation leaders,
Cheryl Folmer and Melinda
Mankin; safety chairman,
Tamra
Clark;
health
chairman, Debbie Porter and
news reporters, Sheila
Kbenig and Pam Riebel. The
next meeting will be April 2.
- Sheila Koenig and Pam
Riebel.
The Five Point Star SUI·
chers Junior leaders 4-H
Club organized March 15 at
the home of Pat Holter.
Officers elected for the new ·
4-H year ate president, Mary
Mora; vice president, Kaim
Krautter; second vice
president, Nancy Samos;
secretary, Tam Starcher;
.treasurer, Paula Hysell;
news reporter, Denise White;
health chairman, Patty
Parker and Fonda Rapp;
safety chairman, April
Parker and Carolyn Bowen;
tour chairmen, Becky Ed·
wards and Beth Wilson, and
recl'eation leaders, Tammy
Spencer, Raeleen Oliver,
Brenda Bailey, Kathy
Parker, Melanie Bailey and

The Five . Point Bucks and
reporter.
Does elected officers March
15 at the Nick leonard home.
They are president, Rocky
Pitzer; vice president, Nicky
J.eonard; secretary, Charles
Ritchie; treasurer, Terry
Sayre ; recreation leader,
Chuck
Martin ;
news
reporter, JohMie Riebel and
safety chairman, Tommy
Pullins.
The next meeting will be
April 20 at the home of Nick
leonard. _: Johnnie Riebel.

MOUNT.

SAVE 21%

FOR OPENING

Meigs 4-H ·
Club News

The next meeting will be
TammySamos.
April 5 at the home of Pat
Holter. - Denise· While,

TRUNK OR ROOF TOP

REALISTIC "
VERY THRIFTY
AM-FM CLOCK RADIO!

'I

CASSETTE
OR S-TRACK
PADDED
CARRY CASE

DELUXE 3-PC. S-TRACK PLAYER
WITH PHONO/TUNER INPUTS

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�7- The Pomeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, March 23.

6 - The Pomeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 23, 1976

District mission meets Sunday
"Spiritual Awareness" was
lhe the!Jle of the Hocking
Dislrict Mission Convention
Sunday at the Naomi Baptist
Church, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Dorothy Lewis
Thomas, president of the
Providence
Women ' s
Association, presided in the
absence of Mrs . Helen
Harper, president, and Mrs.
Freda
Roberts,
vice
president of the Hocking
District Missionary Convention. There was ,group
singing of "Keep Me Every
Day" and HThe Crown .11
Devotions were given by Mrs.
Iris Payne, Naomi Church,
and Mrs . Henrietta Robinson ,
Mt . Moriah, Middleport ,
Scripture from Acts 2 and
prayer were by the Rev.
Samuel Jackson, pastor of
the host church. There was
also a testimony service.
Responding to roll call

missionary societies and one reference to St. Luke 12, " for
guild . The offering was $46.56 the Holy Ghost shall teach
with tije offertory prayer by you in th e same hour what ye
Rev . Mr . Jackson . A love gift ough t to say." She spoke on
from the convention will be dependence upon the Lord for
sent to the president and vice guidance for what to do and
president.
say. The third commentary,
It was announced that the "The Holy Apiri t- to Abide
project of a penny a day will with You" was given by
be carried out again this Oscar Qualls who read St.
year .. Mrs. Bernice Borden, John 15, "If ye abide in me
for Mrs . Roberta Preston who and my words abide in you,
was unable to attend , ye shall ask what ye will and
reported on the children 's it shall be done unto you."
band . Mrs. Zuelelia Smith
Committees
for
the
gave a report on the guild meeting were courtesy, Mrs.
work and imnounced that Payne and Mrs. Robinson;
Guild May Day will be ob- ijme and place, Mrs. Lula
served May 6 at the Mount Hamilton and Mrs. Smith,
Moriah Baptist Church . and finance committee, Mrs.
Slides of her trip to Sweden Margaret Bowles and Carlos
will be shown during the Thomas . The closing hymn
afternoon.
was "God Be With You" with
"The Holy Spirit" was the the benediction by the Rev.
theme of the three-part Mr . Jackson . The next
program. The Rev . Mr . meeting will be June 6 at the
Jackson spoke on "The Holy Mt. Zion Baptist Church in
Spirit - Gift of God, " Athens. Mr. and Mrs. Carlos
stressing Baptist doctrine Thomas and Mrs. Bernice
that the Holy Spirit was given Borden of Bidwell were
on the day of Pentecost to last convention guests. Mrs. Mary
forever ,
Frances Baumgardner is
Mrs . Florence Ric.hards secretary , and Kimberly
talked on ·'The Holy Spirit Payne was pianist for the
To Teach You" making meeting.
•

Social
Calendar

"Am I My Sister's Keeper?"
Dear Helen and Sue :
My younger sister ( 16) is on tbe "free" kick. She says you
should experience "everything," and I think she's trying to set
a record. If a guy doesn't ask her to fool around, she asks !liM.
And quite a lew have come through nobly, she reports.
Her idea is that everybody's doing it, so why sit home and
"be good ?" I asked her if she actually enjoys all this heavy
stuff and, at first, she said, "Sure! " Then she said, "It's really

Special
meet held

Debate swirls over new desegregation idea of moving teachers and pupils

Breakfast
plans made

Plans for serving the
Easter breakfast following
TUESDAY
the sunrise service at the
RACINE AMERICAN Middleport First Baptist
Legion Auxiliary, 1 p.m. Church were made at Thurs·
Tuesday at the hall.
day night's meeting of the
CONCERT, Southern High Busy Bee Class at the home of
School and Junior High. Miss Kathryn Werner.
bands, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
The class also made a $25
none of your business," and finally she admitted, " It's
the high school under the contribution to the aerial
e&lt;pected if you're popular."
direction of Mrs. Joy Norris. lad~er fire lruck fund . The
I can't talk sense into her. I've warned about VD and bad
No admission, public invited. April meeting was changed to
effects of the Pill, and a rotten reputation, but she figures those
METHODIST MEN of April 22 due to a conflict on
things happen to other people.
Meigs County Tuesday at the regular meeting night.
There's only one route left: tell our parents. That would
Dorcas Church, 7:30 p.m . with Maundy Thursday
destroy her trust in me, but they're really quite sensible.
Levon Shaum, Sugar Grove, commWlion service .
Maybe they could help? ~ SHOULD I?
guest speaker. Special music
Cards were sent to Mrs.
by Vernon Weber.
Edith
Sauer, surgical palient
Dear Should:
at
University
Hospiial, and
AMERICAN
LEGION
By all means, you should tell your parents. But first let
Mrs. Opal Priddy and Mrs.
Auxiliary,
Drew
Webster
your sister know you're doing this as a last resort, because
BRONSON LAUDERMILT Post 39, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at Lettie Roush. The birthdays
you're terribly worried about her.
lhe hall. Rev. Ron James to Of Mrs. Sadie Turner, Mrs.
I have a feeling she already knows she is on the wrong
be
the speaker. Bill Young to Nelle Werner and Mrs. Freda
track and would welcome a strong push·in the other direction
talk
about the Pomeroy mini- Edwards were noted.
- even though it hurts. - HELEN
were members of three
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin gave
park
. Civic leaders and
+++
devotions
using the theme,
public
invited
.
Dear Should I:
"
Love
for
God, " with
JUNIOR
AMERICAN
How about giving your sister a choice: either you 'll tell
scripture
and
prayer. The
Legion
Auxiliary,
Feeneyyour parents, or she'll consent to joining a discussion group
program
by
Mrs.
Rosemary
Bennett
Post
128,
6:30p.m.
at
that may straighten out her thinking.
MASON - A birthday
She needs people her own age to show her the free life party wsa held lor Bronson the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lyons included humorous
readings and a Bible quiz.
sometimes carries a very high price - and the greatest lossis Lee Laudermilt at the home Albert Roush .
AMERICAN Association of Serving a salad, crackers and
in self -esteem. - SUE
of his parents, Mr . and Mrs.
Vincent Laudermilt in Mason University Women , Mid- coffeee were Mrs . Nelle
A special meeting was held
+++
re&lt;:enUy at the First Southern :t:~:;::::::::::::::::=:=:::: ::;::==:===:=====:==:::=:::::=:= ::===:=====:=:===~=:=:======::===:~::=:=:=~=::~:·=·=·=·=·=·=· =·=·:·=·=·= ·=·=·=·=·:·: ·=·=·:·=r Dear Helen and Sue :
on Tuesday. He was three dleport-Pomeroy Area Werner , Miss Kathryn
Branch, 7:30 Tuesday, Meigs Werner and Mrs. Ruth
Baptist Church of Pomeroy in
I am a 22-year-old male and have a problem with girls my years old.
High Ubrary. Teresa Casci to Johnson.
Attending
were
the
honoree
observance of the Week of
own age. I really enjoy the company of older women- in their
Others attending were Mrs.
late 20s or early 30s.
Prayer for Home Missions.
and his grandparents, Mr. talk on her educational exIva
Turner, Mrs. Gwinnie
periences
.
in
Australia
.
My
age
group
thinks
I
am
too
serious,
and
I
think
most
and
Mrs.
Bernard
Scarberry,
The program was entitled, ::
punJ
liFreedom For Leisure," .by shower was held rccenUy at were served.
females under 21 are just a litUe silly. I'm uncomfortable with Arlene, Dennis and Harold Hostesses: Jeannie Bowen, White, Mrs. Eva Hartley,
Smith,
Sabra Mrs. lsahelle Winebrenner,
Rhojean McClure which the Christian . Brethren
Scarberry, Mr. and Mrs . Helen
The floral bouquet was . them.
Some of my friends imply I am weird. Do you? - EDDIE Harold Cunningham, Letart ; Morrison, Sibley Slack , Mrs. EJecta Souders, Mrs.
explained how the Bill of Church in Mason, for Miss given by the churc h to the
Rights protects all fn ·freedom Becky Gilmore, New Haven, honoree who also received
Mr . and Mrs. Clifford Kathryn Knight, Maxine Lillian Demoskey, Mrs .
Wilma Parmalee, Mrs .
of speech, religion, and bride-ele-elect of James
Dear Eddie:
Murray, Pomeroy ; Mr. and Philson.
many other gifts.
PAST
MATRONS, Florence Rhodes, Mrs. Eloise
No!
Mrs.
Randy
Albright
and
son
assembly, and thus we have (Bub) Lewis, Jr ., Pt.
Attending were Miss
H 30ish women like you as well as you like them: no J. C. of West Columbia; his Pomeroy Chapter, O.E.S. Wilson and Mrs. Beulah
freedom in Christ because of Pleasant. Miss Gilmore is the Gilmore, Barbara Bordman,
problem ... Unless they 'remarried. - HELEN AND SUE
grandmother, Mrs. Alberta 7:30 Tuesday night, home of White.
the Cross.
1
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nora Lewis, Mrs. Genevieve
The group, led by Donna Robert Gilmore, New Haven, Lewis. Mrs. Becky Stein and
+++
Laudermilt, Pomeroy; Mrs. Mrs. Edna Schoenleb.
Brenda Haley and son Mark,
Spencer sang, "My Coun lry and James Lewis is the son of Wendy, Mrs. Addie Norris, Dear Rap:
MEIGS AREA Holiness
TUESDAY
This guy was the most popular fella in high school and, of Middleport and his grea t- Assn. meeting, 7:30 Tuesday
Tis of Thee," and "At Mr. and Mrs. James Lewis, Velma
RACINE
AMERICAN
Zuspan, Linda
. gra ndfa ther, Mr . Cut riel eveni ng at Racine Church of Legion Auxiliary, 1 p.m .
Calvary." Rachael Lefebre Pt. Pleasant. Hostesses were Zuspan , Cathy Zuspan, Ruth course, he ignored me - then.
After we graduated, I got a good job, a car, and a nice Fitchpatrick,
and
hi s the Nazarene with Rev. Don Tuesday at the hall. Members
and Sylvia Zwilling led in
Mrs. Earl Stewart, Mrs. Riley , Ruth Thompson,
prayer, thanking God for our George Zuspan, Jr., and Mrs. Naomi Bumgardner, Carol apartment. I ran into him last year, and he said he wsa "be· parents.
Cole, Middleport, speaking, urged to attend to· vote on
tween jobs." We started going together, me paying the way. ·
religious freedom and for the Ronnie Thompson .
and music by the Kauffmans. candidates to Girls State.
Stanley, Billie Gilmore , providing the car, and letting him hang o~t at my place.
dreedom we have as
THURSDAY
SYRACUSE • MINER·
A floral arrangement Connie Thompson, Delores
I finally decided the high school Superstud was not ;::::::::::,:,:,::::::::&gt;:,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::,:::::· SVILLE Boosters Tuesday,
"children of the King."
MIDDLEPORT
CHILD
ce ntered the dining table and Stewart, Renee Stewart, measuring up, though I still had the remains of my crush on
Carolyn Dailey spoke on
;:::
::::
7:30
p.m
.
at
Syracuse
Conservation
League,
Thursa color scheme Or blue and Barbara Suspan and Stacey him. We broke up for a month, with him begging me back
how Souithern Baptists
day,
7:30p.m.
at
the
home
of
Municipal
Building.
Anyone
constantly. I gave in, and he actually picked up the check, the ::::
minister at vacation resorts. white was used in the Zuspa~.
::: havinv ~ ~ny league uniforms Mrs. Helen Blackston. Mrs.
fir~ time we went out again .
Mrs. McClure told about the
::::
·
·:· froru .ast year are ask.ed ·to Carolyn Grueser wiD . give
Since then, we've been going Dutch, but still use my car.
"Grand Canyon - Flooded
contad Lowell McNickle at devotions.
He never seems to keep a job very long, but he is very ::::
with Swnmer Missionaries,''
::: 949-2442.
SYRACUSE PACK 242,
persuasive •bout the reasons why, and he's fun to be with.
, and Donna Spencer spoke on
A bowling and pizza party
XI GAMMA Mu Sorority Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the
ShoUld i nang on a while longer" - NANCY
"Campers Unoffi cial
was held· Saturday night by Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at school. Boys eight years of
The youth of the Middleport Saxton " I Have a Home ."
Missionaries.''
the youth group of the Columbus and Southern Ohio age or finishing the second
United Pentecostal Church Giving a testimony was the
Four groups were formed for their Friday night service Rev. William Knittel. Mrs. Dear nancy:
Bradbury Church of Christ. Electric
Co. · Cultural grade interested in joining
Why not ? The fellow is a good companion, fun to be with, The young people bowled at program
for the prayer time, after went to the Apostolic Gospel Robert Shaffer sang "More of
~"~ Never
Un- cub scouts invited to attend.
and this time around, you aren't paying HIS way. But don't get the Mason Lanes and then derestimate the Power of a
which the group sang a Church in Gallipolis where a You , ·Lord."
.
PRECEPTOR CHAPTER.
marriage..minded; or even seriously involved . We 'd guess he's went to the home of Kathy Woman"
special theme hymn and revival is being held by the
by Charlotte Beta Sigma Phi Sorority 7:45
The group traveled on the about as dependable as a fiv~ollar watch. - HANDS
repeated Galatians 5:1 Rev. Richard Masters.
and Mike Miller at Bradbury Hanning and Phyllis Bennett. ·p.m. Thursday at home of
church bus and 'before
together. After the meeting
lor the pizza party .
Hostesses are Carol Mc- Velma Rue with Roberta
The Rev. Mr. Masters is the returning home dined at a
cookies, coffee, and tea were blind evangelist who ~ecenUy drive-in in Gallipolis. In the·
Devotions were given by Cullough and Rita Lewis .
O'Brien, contributing
serve·d for refreshments . held a revival at the Mid- group were Tommy and Lori
Linda Gerard and Desi
WEDNESDAY
hostess.
There were 21 present.
Jeffers with scripture being
REUNION MEETING
. dleport United Pentecostal Kelly, Mark, Tim, Joy and
MIDDLEPORT CUB Scout
taken from Romans 12 :3-5. Wednesday at 1:30 p.m., 1966 Pack 245, monthly meeting,
Church, During the service Cherri Sauters, Tammy,
.
Others attending were Vickie class at Southern High at the Thursday, 7 p.m. at MidTammy Knittel sang "I Love Trent and Tony Knitte'l,
.This Week·;
. Special
Hoffman, Rodney Bailey, school.
Hlm Too Much," Tom Kelly, Michelle and Pam Zirkle,
dleport American Legion
Rita Bailey, Sherrie BarAMERICAN LEGION and Home .
Sr ., "The . Stranger of Tony and Richard Chapell,
nhart, John Blake, Bryan Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Galilee," and Mrs . Dale Misty, Shonda and Taunda
FREE PAP and breast
Wilcox,
Beverly Wilcox, Greg Post 128, dinner at 6:30; examination clinic, ThursVan Meter, Paul Pearman
,
Browning, Christie Stanley, meetings at 1:30 p.m. at the day, at Veterans Memorial
and · Paul Jones.
. By Polly Cramer
Kevin
King, June Hutton, hall .
Hospital. For appoinlrnent
Also attending from , the - - - -- - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - : USED CARS
Ruth
Carsey,
Dave Cole,
Middleport Church were the
992-753!, daytime ;
call,
RUTLAND BASEBALL
Denise Marshall, Tina Miller,
Rev. and Mrs. William
evenings,
992-5832,
to over-charge or under- Tammy Stanley. Randy League Wednesday 6:30p.m .
POLLY'S PROBLEM
Knittel, the Rev. and Mrs .
SENIOR
AND junior band
Mrs. Lucy White was Dale Saxton, Mr. and Mrs.
DEAR POLLY - How does charge the customer, but if Haynes, Sherry King, Mat- at American Legion Hall on of Wahama High School
hostess for a recent meeting William Van Meter, Mr. and one revive a typewriter we could see the numbers we thew Finlaw, Heather Beech Grove Road . All
of the Sew-Rite-Sewing Club Mrs. Leroy Sauters, Mr. and ribbon? I recall having seen would at least have a chance Finlaw, BiD and Naomi King, parents and interested spring concert, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday in high school gym ;
at the Lhcoln Heights club- Mrs. Tom Kelly, Mrs .. Ann such a hint in the column, but Of correcting an error. and Kim and Darlene Cole., persons urged to attend . public Invited.
Red with black Landau
house.
roof, black Vinyl bucket
minister of the Bradbury Election of officers.
Bailey, Mrs. Michael Zirkle, I do not remember how it was BILL.
seats, console, full ppwer, ·
Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore gave Mrs. Robert Shaffer, Mrs, done. I am a free iance typist
DEAR POLLY - I live in congregation and his wife.
OHIO VALLEY Comair , SS wheels, stereo .
the secretary's report. Ethel Priddy, Mrs. Frank and would like to know his for an old house and two of my
See Our
A friendship circle closed mandry 24, Knights T~mplar,
Games were played with Wells; Mrs. Manda Easlman, emergency use as well as' to door iatches started coming the gathering.
will meet at 7:30 Wednesday
prizes going to Pandora Mrs. Ovena Neal, Mrs. Mabel save several old ribbons I loose beca use the screws
at the Pomeroy Masonic
WIDE SELECTION
Collins and Betty Wehrung. Pearman, Mrs. Velma Keller have on hand. - MARGE.
would not stay in. I stuck half
Temple. All Sir Knights
Mrs. Martha Hoffman will and Mrs . Dora Holly.
DEAR MARGE - Sewing a wood matchstick in each
urged to attend.
Of
host the next meeting with a
machine oil applied to an old hole, put the screws back in
POMEROY • Middleport
silent auction to be held at
and
turned
them
hard
with
a
;~:~:~::=:::::~:::::=~:~:::::::::::=::::::~:::::::::::~:::::·
;
~:
Uons
Club,
noon
Wednesday,
ribbon will revive the dried
that time . Refreshments
out
ink. Wrap in foil or plastic good screwdriver. I have no
You'll Like Our Quality
Meigs Inn .
were
served.
Others
atmore loose latches. - EVA.
Way cf Doing Business.
wrap
and
leave
fastened
long
Anniversary Honored
tending were Mrs . Lenora
DEAR POLLY- Washing
GMAC FINANCING
enough for the oll to be abTHURSDAY
McKnight, Mrs. Nettie
992-5342
Pomeroy
picture
windows in the winter
•
sorbed by all the rlbhon. TWIN
CITY Shrinettes
Open Evenings 'til6 ~ 00
Boyer, Mrs. Barbara Mullen
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. POLLY.
is a cold job. Here in MinThursday
7:30 p.m. at
Til5 ~ . m. Sat.
and Mrs. Mildred Wells.
Cecil Smith observed their
nesota it is so cold the window
Dr . and Mrs. E . A. Tracy Columbus and Southern Ohio
Middleport, Ohio
wedding anniversary with a
DEAR POLLY - The past cleaner freezes on the win- spent the weekend here with Eleclric social room.
turkey dinner Saturday at few months my small child dow before one can wipe it his mother, Mrs . Nellie
their home. Alte~ding were has not wanted to take baths off. Our solution for this is to Tracy. ..
·
r--~-~------------------, Mr.
and Mrs. George Carson, but I have finally discovered use windshield washer fluid
Mr. and Mr~ . Melvin
'i1t11pk· Lwl' l'\lTIOIJl ' '""'
Mr. and Mrs. Landon Smith, a way to overcome this. I cut · as it does not freeze . Hope Bonecutter were weekend
O\\ H~ ;, itllllll', ' ·; 11 &lt;&gt;r hii SI IIl'S.\ SitoiJid k11&lt; ~~
Mrs. Frances Stewart, Mrs. a picture of a magazine and this wiU help others with the guests of their son-in-law and
Maxine Arnold, and the taped it to the wall by the tub sameproblem. - MRS.W.J. daughter, Mr . and Mrs .
Smith's daughter and son-in· where he can see it. While
DEAR POLLY - I have William Curnutt, Paige,
law, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis giving the child a bath, I tell · found that an easy and Parrish and Jill, Irvine, Ky .
Harris, and son, David Smith. him a story that I make up helpful way to \real raw
Mrs . Hugh Bearhs has
I
about . the picture. I change unfinished wood is to use returned to her home after
this quite often so as to keep mineral oil. This is good for spending the past two weeks
CARNIVAL PLANNED
him interested. Now he en- homemade chopping blocks at Holzer Medical Center.
HARRISONVILLE - The joys his baths and I enjoy since It is a waterproof sealer
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
1&lt;1llll •i&lt;n1 .1."...•1&lt;1 " Ill ,J J" '"il,l \ Ill
Harrisonville
PTO
will
stage
and
protector
and
is
safe
and
Jayne were weekend
giving
them
to
him.
1111 11\\II I.IIOL 1
,[,,1' 1" 1 II. [ '.,1
"'f't, &gt;11 ••·• 1 'I ,, r~ "" • •;rn ,,r, 111
a
spring
carnival
from
6:30
to
around
children
and
food
.
guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Mike
JULIE.
1h • r•· .Hr 1111 11&lt; t h.illl ill&lt;&lt; ,j, ,,,,,nt• l
l!.lpi'l\:: ,,.[, ,[,1 '" ' ,( l'"l. ( &lt;] IJII. Ibl,
6:30 p.m. Friday at the
, •l llll'·lill&lt;\ "IIIII).: llhlll ,lllco I'I !JI,il'
'&lt; ltlqmlll 1'1' ' '''1'11DEAR POLLY - I cleaned Wipe it on,letstand overnight Hammer and Klm, and Mr.
to • 1 •I&lt; &lt;I ho·Ill&lt;'·, ,,r, .Ill• I J, ,1'''" "' '·
1:, ' ,,u" I" 1' ,1 " II l't np I&lt;·~ ,., ! j, •&lt;". 11
school. The public is invited. a greasy spot off my rug with and wipe .off any excess. · and Mrs. Dallas Jones,
i• •t•JIIl" Ill Ill •• 011 llld&lt; f' \'ll ok tH ,1 ).:1' 111
.ntd it ' "1' 1 )''·" lt t.tl lttr ' "I' I•• •. h" I,
rug cleaner and wanted it dry · Repeat twice. · - DEBBIE. Columbus.
\',t&lt;ll.lll&lt;l n •n '••l'&lt; ·
).1 PI\ I hi\ I "1'" 1\&gt;tl&lt;tlll\ 11 I« lt i1
in
a hurry. So, I used .my hair
'l h.n\ "h' n\, 1:""1 •.1 .. ,11 ,,,,1
"oil ,j]l ll lli"f 'l 11 110'11&lt; 111\11! ... 1&lt; I .l~Cpl
"''"'.~It" il•l''llll''' 111 1lortT h ·.v
~
dryer on the wet spot. As I
.\ 11 ''"le i" n,f, n1 .1,.:&lt;111 ,11 '', 11111 Ill . .,
Say
write this the cap to my dryer
1\ l •1 \.. lo•l .Ill &lt;ll'oll\,&lt;lh I 1''"'1' 1l\ ! f,
I.
r J, ,. , •• , uf,' ti t&lt; I~·~ 111• 111 ,111&lt; ('
. .:A
"Happy Anniversary' is over such a wet spot. " " r\..• 1•·• )""· " 'ht dlllll .&lt;ll• ft, •. on
' " " '·'.~' .11 tlor 1"'"''1 1ruc ut~.t
Reason
12.
There.are
major
ct'iaoges
in
ADA.
J•!.m tl1&lt; "~" r.•.:• tl1 .11 I''' 11,,. '''II
With An
1, ,,. 11
!11. 11 \1]olt ll&lt; II 1'1.•,( II \\lilt th&lt; Ill"''
~
DEAR
POLLY
·
My
Pet
the tax laws that could affect your
Arrangement
[
""' ·'j, f, ,, j tin "&lt;11 •I Ill' II!''"' '1, , lit '' ·' ' 11l1f,h 1!.11 ,u 1&lt;l 111.1:111 '"
Peeve
is
one
I
have
heard
Our people are specially trained
return.
"'I'''" ' "''''"' tlL&lt;'I h
J
•••111['. 1111. I Ill ,I, .• I, \\ lth
Of
others
express.
It
is
about
the
.\ l.u"l"''!'l' m.•lr lh, ''"'h "'"
.~ t 11, h .udJ,' .&lt;II " t•u .,J '"'"I
to help you take advantage of these
new cash registers at the
,,,).., '· l ·'"l!lilllt.t: 11&lt;.11 on•tll.tth• I' I
,111., ,1, 1 ,11.,1 , lh o"".L!f1 •t~&lt;u l,~.:.
·new
laws. We'll do our best to make
,, h.,!.j, \''lllf'.llll &lt;'
'''"' ·'" .• 1111, ,. '-'"H ·r It, ,1 ,11h ''·
supermarkets. The small
th , \ .It t' 11&lt;•1. '&lt;• •I ••nil d..,, lh&lt; '!ll.tl
I " 111,,)., "II• '"" h:"' .111 m,l,
sure you pay the right amount of tax.
numbers on that rectangular
Give the gift that
FLOW~RS
••
Ill ,f l l&lt;'&lt; t'. t),:l ' \ ,In 11&gt; &lt;111 1'''~~' I I"
I'' n.llll l lll,llt. lll•l ·~\Ill ••II 1" ''~'
black
box
are
hard
to
read
No more, no less.
any Mother would enjoy
~~·lhl.lnu tit ~·,,,, , ••l trlt 1.1! 1&lt; •1 • ••• .
•
From $7~
~ 1. 11:,j!'.;"~,,~"r 1 1'l'l/,: '
.
and sometimes It is turned so
1\ t tn n nll\ t tll .1t f&lt;l'lc&lt; ' ' '" ' ' tilt·
1
, ,.,h [,,,,,. lu1 "'k , 11 110.: '''"' I''' ' I
"'I! 1&lt;•11 1 'Ill• I"
I
you cannot see them at all, so
Now
only
•.~' .. \ """1'.- "!1 ·, ~· 1'111 .111 1•11 h•t " 1 1'.1-: o, It l;v 1,111 '1
we do not know what we are
,,,, .uu i .L"n"l'·r\IIH JIIt'''"''·"
],ll' ' '''l.li' 'r""·h
I
lo.t l
being charged. When a
.... $1M por •loool
package has no price the girl
Mount 2 to 7 sto- por ri119.
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
'"'" ' '" '' '"
'
"
'
can charge just what she
Olhof stylos oVailablo
FlDIH.:r~ ~ thinks the price Is. Since you
cannot see the numbers you
Reuter.Brogan Insurance Service
Ohio
have no idea if you are being
{, N. Second St.
O!INr , .. W.ifiiiera. f.J Sat. ·
214 E. Main
ffl·lllO
Pomeroy
charged an Incorrect price. I
Middleport. Ohio
Court
Sl,
PomeniJ
NO ,.,P'OtNTMINT NICISSA.Y
1 ... _
- · . . . . . . . _..1 . . . , . . _ . . _ _ _ ~
do not say the girls ar~ trying

By RICK VAN SANT
DAYTON, Ohio 1UP)) - A
~ique school desegregation
tdea - moving teachers to
new schools along with bused
students- ''is workable and
acceptable," c laim s an
.~ education innovatof who is
-=

trying to convince a federal
.. judge to try the plan.
"I know how unusual it is
fo~ .teachers to cha nge
butldmgs, but thts will make
desegregation something
.. more than just arbitrary

reassignment, " Dr . Joh n

Finger testified Monday .
"This is a plan that show&amp;
promise of working ...

Finger, a professor of
education at Rhode Island
University, came up with the
'' teacher

movement ''

concept when he was called in
to work out a desegregation
plan for Dayton schools.
"Dayton would he the first
community I know of to .)lave
teachers change buildings,"
Finger said in two hours of

'·

'·'·

How to (;et

the Best Insurance Buv
k&gt;r\bur Money.
&lt;

I ' \(1

l
l

II

•!J

1

I

SPRING

i
i·

20%0FF

".'.;~;~~~,.~·~.Store"

I

, •.

Jewelmont.
28"

l (.~~?/::~:~1

!

GOESSI ER'S JEWELRY STORE

611 E. MAIN sr.

.,."'.,..Y•

(

morale

problems

a nd

burdensome administrative
tasks, wants students to
change buildings only once a
year and teachers not to
move at all .
School board attorney
David Greer asked Fingers if
his plan wouldn 't lower
teacher morale.

" I don 't see a morale
prolilem," said the softspoken Finger.
" Isn 't this an enormoll.!J

administrative problem?"
asked Greer.
"It seems to he the ultimate
in simplicty ,'' replied Finger 1

peering over the top of his
halfframe glasses .
Greer wbndered if there
wouldn't

serious

be

transportation problems in
having thousands of students
(Continued on page 10)

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TOILET TISSUE

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3 12bxs.oz. s 100

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9 ounce
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carton
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Mother's Rings by

2,300 teachers and about
14,000 biudents, most of them
in elementary schools.
The Dayton Board of
Ed~cation, fear-ing teacher

PICNIC HAMS

Superiors All Meat

$5195

llenry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for incon1e tax help.

desegregat ion planner was

shot and killed as he worked
on his plan in a nearby
building.
A local man who vowed his
they do to their &lt;~local " children would not be bused is
being held in connection with
school.
the
shooting death of Dr.
Hearings on the idea, which

Charles Glati uf Ohio Sl&lt;lte
University.
Persons were sea r ched
before heing allowed to enter
the ninth floor courtroom ,
which was filled to capacity.
The Judge warned spectators
they would be kicked out if
they tried to become
"participants" in tbe hearing
and Monday afternoon's
thre~ hour sess ion was
peaceful.
Finger's plan would involve
more than half of Dayton's

h,

Typewriter ribbon
revived with oil

I
I

another, intermingle students
to achieve integrated classes

this

FRESH, LEAN SIDE BACON..........!L*1.29
PURE PORK SAUSAGE ....~.~~~..~~~.~ ... ~?:.~1.09
·POLISH SAUSAGE ...... :......... ~~-~~~.i?.~~ ........~.~~ .. 89e

75 OLDS
Cut. Salon Cpe.

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schoo l with

"local'' school the other half·
year.
It involves a "teacher busing" co ncept, although
teachers wouldn 't actually be
on buses - they would drive
to their "away" school just as

continue

We Accept Federal Food Stamp.~
PHONE 992-3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts. We reserve the right to limit quantities. M1DDLEPORT, 0.

.

heritage house

one

year and remain at thdr

to

SUperiors Fresh &amp; lean

Polly's Pointers

Pomeroy /
Personal Notes ;:

pair"

afternoon,
are
being
eonducted und r ex tremely
tight "ecurity at the new
~'edera l
Building here
beca use just six months ago a
11revious Dayton school

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to, 10 ·

( ptzza party ( ·

J
i

1

were

•iudents swa p schoo ls at the
semester break . All students
would be bused lor a half-

..

r Group enjoys : :

Karr &amp;Van landt

'

;md then hav~ teachers and

BY SUPERIORS

MA~~ck;pre~~~~~:~on(~a:~a~

Lucy White
hosts meeting

testimony before U.S.
District Court Judge Carl B.
Rubin .
·
Finger's proposal, opposed
by local teachers a nd the
schoo l board, ca lls for
students and teac hers to
spend half the academic year
in their local school and the
other half in a different
school.
.
The pian is to initially

Always •••USDA Choice Meats

Celebrates
birthd4y

Youth attend revival

197~

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NEW CABBAGE

-1"

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lb. 10~

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.:
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BROUGHTON'S

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BAYER

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ASPIRIN

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Reg. 49c

Size

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Vanilla, Fudge Twirl, Neopoitan
I .

�7- The Pomeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, March 23.

6 - The Pomeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 23, 1976

District mission meets Sunday
"Spiritual Awareness" was
lhe the!Jle of the Hocking
Dislrict Mission Convention
Sunday at the Naomi Baptist
Church, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Dorothy Lewis
Thomas, president of the
Providence
Women ' s
Association, presided in the
absence of Mrs . Helen
Harper, president, and Mrs.
Freda
Roberts,
vice
president of the Hocking
District Missionary Convention. There was ,group
singing of "Keep Me Every
Day" and HThe Crown .11
Devotions were given by Mrs.
Iris Payne, Naomi Church,
and Mrs . Henrietta Robinson ,
Mt . Moriah, Middleport ,
Scripture from Acts 2 and
prayer were by the Rev.
Samuel Jackson, pastor of
the host church. There was
also a testimony service.
Responding to roll call

missionary societies and one reference to St. Luke 12, " for
guild . The offering was $46.56 the Holy Ghost shall teach
with tije offertory prayer by you in th e same hour what ye
Rev . Mr . Jackson . A love gift ough t to say." She spoke on
from the convention will be dependence upon the Lord for
sent to the president and vice guidance for what to do and
president.
say. The third commentary,
It was announced that the "The Holy Apiri t- to Abide
project of a penny a day will with You" was given by
be carried out again this Oscar Qualls who read St.
year .. Mrs. Bernice Borden, John 15, "If ye abide in me
for Mrs . Roberta Preston who and my words abide in you,
was unable to attend , ye shall ask what ye will and
reported on the children 's it shall be done unto you."
band . Mrs. Zuelelia Smith
Committees
for
the
gave a report on the guild meeting were courtesy, Mrs.
work and imnounced that Payne and Mrs. Robinson;
Guild May Day will be ob- ijme and place, Mrs. Lula
served May 6 at the Mount Hamilton and Mrs. Smith,
Moriah Baptist Church . and finance committee, Mrs.
Slides of her trip to Sweden Margaret Bowles and Carlos
will be shown during the Thomas . The closing hymn
afternoon.
was "God Be With You" with
"The Holy Spirit" was the the benediction by the Rev.
theme of the three-part Mr . Jackson . The next
program. The Rev . Mr . meeting will be June 6 at the
Jackson spoke on "The Holy Mt. Zion Baptist Church in
Spirit - Gift of God, " Athens. Mr. and Mrs. Carlos
stressing Baptist doctrine Thomas and Mrs. Bernice
that the Holy Spirit was given Borden of Bidwell were
on the day of Pentecost to last convention guests. Mrs. Mary
forever ,
Frances Baumgardner is
Mrs . Florence Ric.hards secretary , and Kimberly
talked on ·'The Holy Spirit Payne was pianist for the
To Teach You" making meeting.
•

Social
Calendar

"Am I My Sister's Keeper?"
Dear Helen and Sue :
My younger sister ( 16) is on tbe "free" kick. She says you
should experience "everything," and I think she's trying to set
a record. If a guy doesn't ask her to fool around, she asks !liM.
And quite a lew have come through nobly, she reports.
Her idea is that everybody's doing it, so why sit home and
"be good ?" I asked her if she actually enjoys all this heavy
stuff and, at first, she said, "Sure! " Then she said, "It's really

Special
meet held

Debate swirls over new desegregation idea of moving teachers and pupils

Breakfast
plans made

Plans for serving the
Easter breakfast following
TUESDAY
the sunrise service at the
RACINE AMERICAN Middleport First Baptist
Legion Auxiliary, 1 p.m. Church were made at Thurs·
Tuesday at the hall.
day night's meeting of the
CONCERT, Southern High Busy Bee Class at the home of
School and Junior High. Miss Kathryn Werner.
bands, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
The class also made a $25
none of your business," and finally she admitted, " It's
the high school under the contribution to the aerial
e&lt;pected if you're popular."
direction of Mrs. Joy Norris. lad~er fire lruck fund . The
I can't talk sense into her. I've warned about VD and bad
No admission, public invited. April meeting was changed to
effects of the Pill, and a rotten reputation, but she figures those
METHODIST MEN of April 22 due to a conflict on
things happen to other people.
Meigs County Tuesday at the regular meeting night.
There's only one route left: tell our parents. That would
Dorcas Church, 7:30 p.m . with Maundy Thursday
destroy her trust in me, but they're really quite sensible.
Levon Shaum, Sugar Grove, commWlion service .
Maybe they could help? ~ SHOULD I?
guest speaker. Special music
Cards were sent to Mrs.
by Vernon Weber.
Edith
Sauer, surgical palient
Dear Should:
at
University
Hospiial, and
AMERICAN
LEGION
By all means, you should tell your parents. But first let
Mrs. Opal Priddy and Mrs.
Auxiliary,
Drew
Webster
your sister know you're doing this as a last resort, because
BRONSON LAUDERMILT Post 39, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at Lettie Roush. The birthdays
you're terribly worried about her.
lhe hall. Rev. Ron James to Of Mrs. Sadie Turner, Mrs.
I have a feeling she already knows she is on the wrong
be
the speaker. Bill Young to Nelle Werner and Mrs. Freda
track and would welcome a strong push·in the other direction
talk
about the Pomeroy mini- Edwards were noted.
- even though it hurts. - HELEN
were members of three
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin gave
park
. Civic leaders and
+++
devotions
using the theme,
public
invited
.
Dear Should I:
"
Love
for
God, " with
JUNIOR
AMERICAN
How about giving your sister a choice: either you 'll tell
scripture
and
prayer. The
Legion
Auxiliary,
Feeneyyour parents, or she'll consent to joining a discussion group
program
by
Mrs.
Rosemary
Bennett
Post
128,
6:30p.m.
at
that may straighten out her thinking.
MASON - A birthday
She needs people her own age to show her the free life party wsa held lor Bronson the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lyons included humorous
readings and a Bible quiz.
sometimes carries a very high price - and the greatest lossis Lee Laudermilt at the home Albert Roush .
AMERICAN Association of Serving a salad, crackers and
in self -esteem. - SUE
of his parents, Mr . and Mrs.
Vincent Laudermilt in Mason University Women , Mid- coffeee were Mrs . Nelle
A special meeting was held
+++
re&lt;:enUy at the First Southern :t:~:;::::::::::::::::=:=:::: ::;::==:===:=====:==:::=:::::=:= ::===:=====:=:===~=:=:======::===:~::=:=:=~=::~:·=·=·=·=·=·=· =·=·:·=·=·= ·=·=·=·=·:·: ·=·=·:·=r Dear Helen and Sue :
on Tuesday. He was three dleport-Pomeroy Area Werner , Miss Kathryn
Branch, 7:30 Tuesday, Meigs Werner and Mrs. Ruth
Baptist Church of Pomeroy in
I am a 22-year-old male and have a problem with girls my years old.
High Ubrary. Teresa Casci to Johnson.
Attending
were
the
honoree
observance of the Week of
own age. I really enjoy the company of older women- in their
Others attending were Mrs.
late 20s or early 30s.
Prayer for Home Missions.
and his grandparents, Mr. talk on her educational exIva
Turner, Mrs. Gwinnie
periences
.
in
Australia
.
My
age
group
thinks
I
am
too
serious,
and
I
think
most
and
Mrs.
Bernard
Scarberry,
The program was entitled, ::
punJ
liFreedom For Leisure," .by shower was held rccenUy at were served.
females under 21 are just a litUe silly. I'm uncomfortable with Arlene, Dennis and Harold Hostesses: Jeannie Bowen, White, Mrs. Eva Hartley,
Smith,
Sabra Mrs. lsahelle Winebrenner,
Rhojean McClure which the Christian . Brethren
Scarberry, Mr. and Mrs . Helen
The floral bouquet was . them.
Some of my friends imply I am weird. Do you? - EDDIE Harold Cunningham, Letart ; Morrison, Sibley Slack , Mrs. EJecta Souders, Mrs.
explained how the Bill of Church in Mason, for Miss given by the churc h to the
Rights protects all fn ·freedom Becky Gilmore, New Haven, honoree who also received
Mr . and Mrs. Clifford Kathryn Knight, Maxine Lillian Demoskey, Mrs .
Wilma Parmalee, Mrs .
of speech, religion, and bride-ele-elect of James
Dear Eddie:
Murray, Pomeroy ; Mr. and Philson.
many other gifts.
PAST
MATRONS, Florence Rhodes, Mrs. Eloise
No!
Mrs.
Randy
Albright
and
son
assembly, and thus we have (Bub) Lewis, Jr ., Pt.
Attending were Miss
H 30ish women like you as well as you like them: no J. C. of West Columbia; his Pomeroy Chapter, O.E.S. Wilson and Mrs. Beulah
freedom in Christ because of Pleasant. Miss Gilmore is the Gilmore, Barbara Bordman,
problem ... Unless they 'remarried. - HELEN AND SUE
grandmother, Mrs. Alberta 7:30 Tuesday night, home of White.
the Cross.
1
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nora Lewis, Mrs. Genevieve
The group, led by Donna Robert Gilmore, New Haven, Lewis. Mrs. Becky Stein and
+++
Laudermilt, Pomeroy; Mrs. Mrs. Edna Schoenleb.
Brenda Haley and son Mark,
Spencer sang, "My Coun lry and James Lewis is the son of Wendy, Mrs. Addie Norris, Dear Rap:
MEIGS AREA Holiness
TUESDAY
This guy was the most popular fella in high school and, of Middleport and his grea t- Assn. meeting, 7:30 Tuesday
Tis of Thee," and "At Mr. and Mrs. James Lewis, Velma
RACINE
AMERICAN
Zuspan, Linda
. gra ndfa ther, Mr . Cut riel eveni ng at Racine Church of Legion Auxiliary, 1 p.m .
Calvary." Rachael Lefebre Pt. Pleasant. Hostesses were Zuspan , Cathy Zuspan, Ruth course, he ignored me - then.
After we graduated, I got a good job, a car, and a nice Fitchpatrick,
and
hi s the Nazarene with Rev. Don Tuesday at the hall. Members
and Sylvia Zwilling led in
Mrs. Earl Stewart, Mrs. Riley , Ruth Thompson,
prayer, thanking God for our George Zuspan, Jr., and Mrs. Naomi Bumgardner, Carol apartment. I ran into him last year, and he said he wsa "be· parents.
Cole, Middleport, speaking, urged to attend to· vote on
tween jobs." We started going together, me paying the way. ·
religious freedom and for the Ronnie Thompson .
and music by the Kauffmans. candidates to Girls State.
Stanley, Billie Gilmore , providing the car, and letting him hang o~t at my place.
dreedom we have as
THURSDAY
SYRACUSE • MINER·
A floral arrangement Connie Thompson, Delores
I finally decided the high school Superstud was not ;::::::::::,:,:,::::::::&gt;:,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::,:::::· SVILLE Boosters Tuesday,
"children of the King."
MIDDLEPORT
CHILD
ce ntered the dining table and Stewart, Renee Stewart, measuring up, though I still had the remains of my crush on
Carolyn Dailey spoke on
;:::
::::
7:30
p.m
.
at
Syracuse
Conservation
League,
Thursa color scheme Or blue and Barbara Suspan and Stacey him. We broke up for a month, with him begging me back
how Souithern Baptists
day,
7:30p.m.
at
the
home
of
Municipal
Building.
Anyone
constantly. I gave in, and he actually picked up the check, the ::::
minister at vacation resorts. white was used in the Zuspa~.
::: havinv ~ ~ny league uniforms Mrs. Helen Blackston. Mrs.
fir~ time we went out again .
Mrs. McClure told about the
::::
·
·:· froru .ast year are ask.ed ·to Carolyn Grueser wiD . give
Since then, we've been going Dutch, but still use my car.
"Grand Canyon - Flooded
contad Lowell McNickle at devotions.
He never seems to keep a job very long, but he is very ::::
with Swnmer Missionaries,''
::: 949-2442.
SYRACUSE PACK 242,
persuasive •bout the reasons why, and he's fun to be with.
, and Donna Spencer spoke on
A bowling and pizza party
XI GAMMA Mu Sorority Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the
ShoUld i nang on a while longer" - NANCY
"Campers Unoffi cial
was held· Saturday night by Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at school. Boys eight years of
The youth of the Middleport Saxton " I Have a Home ."
Missionaries.''
the youth group of the Columbus and Southern Ohio age or finishing the second
United Pentecostal Church Giving a testimony was the
Four groups were formed for their Friday night service Rev. William Knittel. Mrs. Dear nancy:
Bradbury Church of Christ. Electric
Co. · Cultural grade interested in joining
Why not ? The fellow is a good companion, fun to be with, The young people bowled at program
for the prayer time, after went to the Apostolic Gospel Robert Shaffer sang "More of
~"~ Never
Un- cub scouts invited to attend.
and this time around, you aren't paying HIS way. But don't get the Mason Lanes and then derestimate the Power of a
which the group sang a Church in Gallipolis where a You , ·Lord."
.
PRECEPTOR CHAPTER.
marriage..minded; or even seriously involved . We 'd guess he's went to the home of Kathy Woman"
special theme hymn and revival is being held by the
by Charlotte Beta Sigma Phi Sorority 7:45
The group traveled on the about as dependable as a fiv~ollar watch. - HANDS
repeated Galatians 5:1 Rev. Richard Masters.
and Mike Miller at Bradbury Hanning and Phyllis Bennett. ·p.m. Thursday at home of
church bus and 'before
together. After the meeting
lor the pizza party .
Hostesses are Carol Mc- Velma Rue with Roberta
The Rev. Mr. Masters is the returning home dined at a
cookies, coffee, and tea were blind evangelist who ~ecenUy drive-in in Gallipolis. In the·
Devotions were given by Cullough and Rita Lewis .
O'Brien, contributing
serve·d for refreshments . held a revival at the Mid- group were Tommy and Lori
Linda Gerard and Desi
WEDNESDAY
hostess.
There were 21 present.
Jeffers with scripture being
REUNION MEETING
. dleport United Pentecostal Kelly, Mark, Tim, Joy and
MIDDLEPORT CUB Scout
taken from Romans 12 :3-5. Wednesday at 1:30 p.m., 1966 Pack 245, monthly meeting,
Church, During the service Cherri Sauters, Tammy,
.
Others attending were Vickie class at Southern High at the Thursday, 7 p.m. at MidTammy Knittel sang "I Love Trent and Tony Knitte'l,
.This Week·;
. Special
Hoffman, Rodney Bailey, school.
Hlm Too Much," Tom Kelly, Michelle and Pam Zirkle,
dleport American Legion
Rita Bailey, Sherrie BarAMERICAN LEGION and Home .
Sr ., "The . Stranger of Tony and Richard Chapell,
nhart, John Blake, Bryan Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Galilee," and Mrs . Dale Misty, Shonda and Taunda
FREE PAP and breast
Wilcox,
Beverly Wilcox, Greg Post 128, dinner at 6:30; examination clinic, ThursVan Meter, Paul Pearman
,
Browning, Christie Stanley, meetings at 1:30 p.m. at the day, at Veterans Memorial
and · Paul Jones.
. By Polly Cramer
Kevin
King, June Hutton, hall .
Hospital. For appoinlrnent
Also attending from , the - - - -- - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - : USED CARS
Ruth
Carsey,
Dave Cole,
Middleport Church were the
992-753!, daytime ;
call,
RUTLAND BASEBALL
Denise Marshall, Tina Miller,
Rev. and Mrs. William
evenings,
992-5832,
to over-charge or under- Tammy Stanley. Randy League Wednesday 6:30p.m .
POLLY'S PROBLEM
Knittel, the Rev. and Mrs .
SENIOR
AND junior band
Mrs. Lucy White was Dale Saxton, Mr. and Mrs.
DEAR POLLY - How does charge the customer, but if Haynes, Sherry King, Mat- at American Legion Hall on of Wahama High School
hostess for a recent meeting William Van Meter, Mr. and one revive a typewriter we could see the numbers we thew Finlaw, Heather Beech Grove Road . All
of the Sew-Rite-Sewing Club Mrs. Leroy Sauters, Mr. and ribbon? I recall having seen would at least have a chance Finlaw, BiD and Naomi King, parents and interested spring concert, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday in high school gym ;
at the Lhcoln Heights club- Mrs. Tom Kelly, Mrs .. Ann such a hint in the column, but Of correcting an error. and Kim and Darlene Cole., persons urged to attend . public Invited.
Red with black Landau
house.
roof, black Vinyl bucket
minister of the Bradbury Election of officers.
Bailey, Mrs. Michael Zirkle, I do not remember how it was BILL.
seats, console, full ppwer, ·
Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore gave Mrs. Robert Shaffer, Mrs, done. I am a free iance typist
DEAR POLLY - I live in congregation and his wife.
OHIO VALLEY Comair , SS wheels, stereo .
the secretary's report. Ethel Priddy, Mrs. Frank and would like to know his for an old house and two of my
See Our
A friendship circle closed mandry 24, Knights T~mplar,
Games were played with Wells; Mrs. Manda Easlman, emergency use as well as' to door iatches started coming the gathering.
will meet at 7:30 Wednesday
prizes going to Pandora Mrs. Ovena Neal, Mrs. Mabel save several old ribbons I loose beca use the screws
at the Pomeroy Masonic
WIDE SELECTION
Collins and Betty Wehrung. Pearman, Mrs. Velma Keller have on hand. - MARGE.
would not stay in. I stuck half
Temple. All Sir Knights
Mrs. Martha Hoffman will and Mrs . Dora Holly.
DEAR MARGE - Sewing a wood matchstick in each
urged to attend.
Of
host the next meeting with a
machine oil applied to an old hole, put the screws back in
POMEROY • Middleport
silent auction to be held at
and
turned
them
hard
with
a
;~:~:~::=:::::~:::::=~:~:::::::::::=::::::~:::::::::::~:::::·
;
~:
Uons
Club,
noon
Wednesday,
ribbon will revive the dried
that time . Refreshments
out
ink. Wrap in foil or plastic good screwdriver. I have no
You'll Like Our Quality
Meigs Inn .
were
served.
Others
atmore loose latches. - EVA.
Way cf Doing Business.
wrap
and
leave
fastened
long
Anniversary Honored
tending were Mrs . Lenora
DEAR POLLY- Washing
GMAC FINANCING
enough for the oll to be abTHURSDAY
McKnight, Mrs. Nettie
992-5342
Pomeroy
picture
windows in the winter
•
sorbed by all the rlbhon. TWIN
CITY Shrinettes
Open Evenings 'til6 ~ 00
Boyer, Mrs. Barbara Mullen
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. POLLY.
is a cold job. Here in MinThursday
7:30 p.m. at
Til5 ~ . m. Sat.
and Mrs. Mildred Wells.
Cecil Smith observed their
nesota it is so cold the window
Dr . and Mrs. E . A. Tracy Columbus and Southern Ohio
Middleport, Ohio
wedding anniversary with a
DEAR POLLY - The past cleaner freezes on the win- spent the weekend here with Eleclric social room.
turkey dinner Saturday at few months my small child dow before one can wipe it his mother, Mrs . Nellie
their home. Alte~ding were has not wanted to take baths off. Our solution for this is to Tracy. ..
·
r--~-~------------------, Mr.
and Mrs. George Carson, but I have finally discovered use windshield washer fluid
Mr. and Mr~ . Melvin
'i1t11pk· Lwl' l'\lTIOIJl ' '""'
Mr. and Mrs. Landon Smith, a way to overcome this. I cut · as it does not freeze . Hope Bonecutter were weekend
O\\ H~ ;, itllllll', ' ·; 11 &lt;&gt;r hii SI IIl'S.\ SitoiJid k11&lt; ~~
Mrs. Frances Stewart, Mrs. a picture of a magazine and this wiU help others with the guests of their son-in-law and
Maxine Arnold, and the taped it to the wall by the tub sameproblem. - MRS.W.J. daughter, Mr . and Mrs .
Smith's daughter and son-in· where he can see it. While
DEAR POLLY - I have William Curnutt, Paige,
law, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis giving the child a bath, I tell · found that an easy and Parrish and Jill, Irvine, Ky .
Harris, and son, David Smith. him a story that I make up helpful way to \real raw
Mrs . Hugh Bearhs has
I
about . the picture. I change unfinished wood is to use returned to her home after
this quite often so as to keep mineral oil. This is good for spending the past two weeks
CARNIVAL PLANNED
him interested. Now he en- homemade chopping blocks at Holzer Medical Center.
HARRISONVILLE - The joys his baths and I enjoy since It is a waterproof sealer
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
1&lt;1llll •i&lt;n1 .1."...•1&lt;1 " Ill ,J J" '"il,l \ Ill
Harrisonville
PTO
will
stage
and
protector
and
is
safe
and
Jayne were weekend
giving
them
to
him.
1111 11\\II I.IIOL 1
,[,,1' 1" 1 II. [ '.,1
"'f't, &gt;11 ••·• 1 'I ,, r~ "" • •;rn ,,r, 111
a
spring
carnival
from
6:30
to
around
children
and
food
.
guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Mike
JULIE.
1h • r•· .Hr 1111 11&lt; t h.illl ill&lt;&lt; ,j, ,,,,,nt• l
l!.lpi'l\:: ,,.[, ,[,1 '" ' ,( l'"l. ( &lt;] IJII. Ibl,
6:30 p.m. Friday at the
, •l llll'·lill&lt;\ "IIIII).: llhlll ,lllco I'I !JI,il'
'&lt; ltlqmlll 1'1' ' '''1'11DEAR POLLY - I cleaned Wipe it on,letstand overnight Hammer and Klm, and Mr.
to • 1 •I&lt; &lt;I ho·Ill&lt;'·, ,,r, .Ill• I J, ,1'''" "' '·
1:, ' ,,u" I" 1' ,1 " II l't np I&lt;·~ ,., ! j, •&lt;". 11
school. The public is invited. a greasy spot off my rug with and wipe .off any excess. · and Mrs. Dallas Jones,
i• •t•JIIl" Ill Ill •• 011 llld&lt; f' \'ll ok tH ,1 ).:1' 111
.ntd it ' "1' 1 )''·" lt t.tl lttr ' "I' I•• •. h" I,
rug cleaner and wanted it dry · Repeat twice. · - DEBBIE. Columbus.
\',t&lt;ll.lll&lt;l n •n '••l'&lt; ·
).1 PI\ I hi\ I "1'" 1\&gt;tl&lt;tlll\ 11 I« lt i1
in
a hurry. So, I used .my hair
'l h.n\ "h' n\, 1:""1 •.1 .. ,11 ,,,,1
"oil ,j]l ll lli"f 'l 11 110'11&lt; 111\11! ... 1&lt; I .l~Cpl
"''"'.~It" il•l''llll''' 111 1lortT h ·.v
~
dryer on the wet spot. As I
.\ 11 ''"le i" n,f, n1 .1,.:&lt;111 ,11 '', 11111 Ill . .,
Say
write this the cap to my dryer
1\ l •1 \.. lo•l .Ill &lt;ll'oll\,&lt;lh I 1''"'1' 1l\ ! f,
I.
r J, ,. , •• , uf,' ti t&lt; I~·~ 111• 111 ,111&lt; ('
. .:A
"Happy Anniversary' is over such a wet spot. " " r\..• 1•·• )""· " 'ht dlllll .&lt;ll• ft, •. on
' " " '·'.~' .11 tlor 1"'"''1 1ruc ut~.t
Reason
12.
There.are
major
ct'iaoges
in
ADA.
J•!.m tl1&lt; "~" r.•.:• tl1 .11 I''' 11,,. '''II
With An
1, ,,. 11
!11. 11 \1]olt ll&lt; II 1'1.•,( II \\lilt th&lt; Ill"''
~
DEAR
POLLY
·
My
Pet
the tax laws that could affect your
Arrangement
[
""' ·'j, f, ,, j tin "&lt;11 •I Ill' II!''"' '1, , lit '' ·' ' 11l1f,h 1!.11 ,u 1&lt;l 111.1:111 '"
Peeve
is
one
I
have
heard
Our people are specially trained
return.
"'I'''" ' "''''"' tlL&lt;'I h
J
•••111['. 1111. I Ill ,I, .• I, \\ lth
Of
others
express.
It
is
about
the
.\ l.u"l"''!'l' m.•lr lh, ''"'h "'"
.~ t 11, h .udJ,' .&lt;II " t•u .,J '"'"I
to help you take advantage of these
new cash registers at the
,,,).., '· l ·'"l!lilllt.t: 11&lt;.11 on•tll.tth• I' I
,111., ,1, 1 ,11.,1 , lh o"".L!f1 •t~&lt;u l,~.:.
·new
laws. We'll do our best to make
,, h.,!.j, \''lllf'.llll &lt;'
'''"' ·'" .• 1111, ,. '-'"H ·r It, ,1 ,11h ''·
supermarkets. The small
th , \ .It t' 11&lt;•1. '&lt;• •I ••nil d..,, lh&lt; '!ll.tl
I " 111,,)., "II• '"" h:"' .111 m,l,
sure you pay the right amount of tax.
numbers on that rectangular
Give the gift that
FLOW~RS
••
Ill ,f l l&lt;'&lt; t'. t),:l ' \ ,In 11&gt; &lt;111 1'''~~' I I"
I'' n.llll l lll,llt. lll•l ·~\Ill ••II 1" ''~'
black
box
are
hard
to
read
No more, no less.
any Mother would enjoy
~~·lhl.lnu tit ~·,,,, , ••l trlt 1.1! 1&lt; •1 • ••• .
•
From $7~
~ 1. 11:,j!'.;"~,,~"r 1 1'l'l/,: '
.
and sometimes It is turned so
1\ t tn n nll\ t tll .1t f&lt;l'lc&lt; ' ' '" ' ' tilt·
1
, ,.,h [,,,,,. lu1 "'k , 11 110.: '''"' I''' ' I
"'I! 1&lt;•11 1 'Ill• I"
I
you cannot see them at all, so
Now
only
•.~' .. \ """1'.- "!1 ·, ~· 1'111 .111 1•11 h•t " 1 1'.1-: o, It l;v 1,111 '1
we do not know what we are
,,,, .uu i .L"n"l'·r\IIH JIIt'''"''·"
],ll' ' '''l.li' 'r""·h
I
lo.t l
being charged. When a
.... $1M por •loool
package has no price the girl
Mount 2 to 7 sto- por ri119.
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
'"'" ' '" '' '"
'
"
'
can charge just what she
Olhof stylos oVailablo
FlDIH.:r~ ~ thinks the price Is. Since you
cannot see the numbers you
Reuter.Brogan Insurance Service
Ohio
have no idea if you are being
{, N. Second St.
O!INr , .. W.ifiiiera. f.J Sat. ·
214 E. Main
ffl·lllO
Pomeroy
charged an Incorrect price. I
Middleport. Ohio
Court
Sl,
PomeniJ
NO ,.,P'OtNTMINT NICISSA.Y
1 ... _
- · . . . . . . . _..1 . . . , . . _ . . _ _ _ ~
do not say the girls ar~ trying

By RICK VAN SANT
DAYTON, Ohio 1UP)) - A
~ique school desegregation
tdea - moving teachers to
new schools along with bused
students- ''is workable and
acceptable," c laim s an
.~ education innovatof who is
-=

trying to convince a federal
.. judge to try the plan.
"I know how unusual it is
fo~ .teachers to cha nge
butldmgs, but thts will make
desegregation something
.. more than just arbitrary

reassignment, " Dr . Joh n

Finger testified Monday .
"This is a plan that show&amp;
promise of working ...

Finger, a professor of
education at Rhode Island
University, came up with the
'' teacher

movement ''

concept when he was called in
to work out a desegregation
plan for Dayton schools.
"Dayton would he the first
community I know of to .)lave
teachers change buildings,"
Finger said in two hours of

'·

'·'·

How to (;et

the Best Insurance Buv
k&gt;r\bur Money.
&lt;

I ' \(1

l
l

II

•!J

1

I

SPRING

i
i·

20%0FF

".'.;~;~~~,.~·~.Store"

I

, •.

Jewelmont.
28"

l (.~~?/::~:~1

!

GOESSI ER'S JEWELRY STORE

611 E. MAIN sr.

.,."'.,..Y•

(

morale

problems

a nd

burdensome administrative
tasks, wants students to
change buildings only once a
year and teachers not to
move at all .
School board attorney
David Greer asked Fingers if
his plan wouldn 't lower
teacher morale.

" I don 't see a morale
prolilem," said the softspoken Finger.
" Isn 't this an enormoll.!J

administrative problem?"
asked Greer.
"It seems to he the ultimate
in simplicty ,'' replied Finger 1

peering over the top of his
halfframe glasses .
Greer wbndered if there
wouldn't

serious

be

transportation problems in
having thousands of students
(Continued on page 10)

USDA
CHOICE

u.s.
Govt.

Inspected

lb.

BONELESS

PORK ROAST
lb. '1.09

WIENERS

SUPERIORS FRESH &amp; LEAN

lb.

·PORK STEAK

"

89e

lb.

$ 09

USDA CHOICE PORK

SUPERIORS All MEAT
BOLOGNA

89e

lb.

. .

.

NEW FROM SCOTT PAPER CO.
COTTONEUE

ORE IDA SOUTHERN STYLE

TOILET TISSUE

HASH BROWNS
3 12bxs.oz. s 100

TONE
TOILET SOAP

-------------------------NON-DAIRY WHIPPED TOPPING
•

,..
.

•
,.••
1•

.

COOL WHIP
9 ounce
59e __ ___
carton
_____________________
.......

,

3

*1

bath

SPECIAUY PRICED MR. COFFEE
ECONOMY PACK
50 count

...;.

COFFEE FILTERS

!0

!'

pkg.

,.~

'

,:l;•

EASTER SHOES

Mother's Rings by

2,300 teachers and about
14,000 biudents, most of them
in elementary schools.
The Dayton Board of
Ed~cation, fear-ing teacher

PICNIC HAMS

Superiors All Meat

$5195

llenry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for incon1e tax help.

desegregat ion planner was

shot and killed as he worked
on his plan in a nearby
building.
A local man who vowed his
they do to their &lt;~local " children would not be bused is
being held in connection with
school.
the
shooting death of Dr.
Hearings on the idea, which

Charles Glati uf Ohio Sl&lt;lte
University.
Persons were sea r ched
before heing allowed to enter
the ninth floor courtroom ,
which was filled to capacity.
The Judge warned spectators
they would be kicked out if
they tried to become
"participants" in tbe hearing
and Monday afternoon's
thre~ hour sess ion was
peaceful.
Finger's plan would involve
more than half of Dayton's

h,

Typewriter ribbon
revived with oil

I
I

another, intermingle students
to achieve integrated classes

this

FRESH, LEAN SIDE BACON..........!L*1.29
PURE PORK SAUSAGE ....~.~~~..~~~.~ ... ~?:.~1.09
·POLISH SAUSAGE ...... :......... ~~-~~~.i?.~~ ........~.~~ .. 89e

75 OLDS
Cut. Salon Cpe.

.

schoo l with

"local'' school the other half·
year.
It involves a "teacher busing" co ncept, although
teachers wouldn 't actually be
on buses - they would drive
to their "away" school just as

continue

We Accept Federal Food Stamp.~
PHONE 992-3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts. We reserve the right to limit quantities. M1DDLEPORT, 0.

.

heritage house

one

year and remain at thdr

to

SUperiors Fresh &amp; lean

Polly's Pointers

Pomeroy /
Personal Notes ;:

pair"

afternoon,
are
being
eonducted und r ex tremely
tight "ecurity at the new
~'edera l
Building here
beca use just six months ago a
11revious Dayton school

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to, 10 ·

( ptzza party ( ·

J
i

1

were

•iudents swa p schoo ls at the
semester break . All students
would be bused lor a half-

..

r Group enjoys : :

Karr &amp;Van landt

'

;md then hav~ teachers and

BY SUPERIORS

MA~~ck;pre~~~~~:~on(~a:~a~

Lucy White
hosts meeting

testimony before U.S.
District Court Judge Carl B.
Rubin .
·
Finger's proposal, opposed
by local teachers a nd the
schoo l board, ca lls for
students and teac hers to
spend half the academic year
in their local school and the
other half in a different
school.
.
The pian is to initially

Always •••USDA Choice Meats

Celebrates
birthd4y

Youth attend revival

197~

."'

I.

.,.••,.

.,.

••·~

*"'

:!

:

i.

NEW CABBAGE

-1"

Ia ------------------

lb. 10~

i... ·----------·----------

.:
::
.:

BROUGHTON'S

HOMO MILK '12 Gal. 79~

BAYER

12-HOUR RELIEF

CHILDREN'S
ASPIRIN

CONTAC

Reg. 49c

Size

33~

Reg . $1.95

Size

·

$119

CARROTS
l·lb.19~·
bag

.=

i......

I
t

MARl&lt; V BONUS BUYS

~

*
i
*

~

16 OUNCE

!

RETURNABLE BOTILES

8 PAK

i Salad Dressing

SCOT LAD
ICE Ml

*

1fz

i

i

*

-·

SCOT LAD
q~art
Jar

6

~

gal.,

crt.

Vanilla, Fudge Twirl, Neopoitan
I .

�8 - The

Pomeroy Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Tuesday. March 23. 1976

Astra- ·\ii:.:~:~·::::l:~1::::::. For
Graph

Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds ~
B
.
s
.
!-':
.~~~~!·~~. o~;.dl~.:~o': @) 2 SIGNS Pomeroy .
USlReSS erVlCeS
§

know rng the wMercabouJ s of

,h ;, dog . ot•••• ca ll 9913587
or 7:.1'1 '137S, Re ward offered
3 1961

Bernice Bede O sol
Far Wedne•d•y. March 24,
1976
ARIES (March 21 · April

19)

Half measures won't cut 11 to-

Wanted

DEADLINES

MU SICIAN
fiddll'.' or
,.,ando!i n , lor young S lue
C ra~ s
Band
T rmi n g rm
porlant Calr 747 7796
3 11 61c

day •I you ' re faced with
challenging s11uat1ons

TAURUS (April 20-Mor 20)
Tqday you may look at Issues
only fro m the side you WISh to

v•ew them . This could distor t
the true picture

GEMINI (Mor

~1 -Juna

20)

Don't be ta.ken in to day by a
s harp ho r se - trad er wh o Is
s h re wd e no ugh to mak e
valueless concessions in order
to win the real pot

CANCER (Juno 21-.lulr 22) In
situations (;B IIing for teamwork
today, harmonize your aims
w 1th assoc•a te s . Be sure
everyone pulls together

LEO (Julr 23 - Aug . 22)
Rewards due you lor your eflorts may be a !rille slow 1n
coming. They'll be there eventually. Don'l give up.

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22)
Soc•aJ situations cou ld be a tn .
fie tricky today. Be on your
guard, or you m1ght u ninten ~
tionally rub someone wrong

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0el. 23) Selldoubts tod ay could keep you
from putt1ng forth your best el ~
forts . It wou ld be a mistake to
Quit before yo u try

SCORPIO Oel. 24-Nov. 22)
Today you may be tempted to
doctor a tale a bit in order to
please · yo ur a udience The
safer course is to tell it like Ills.
SAGGITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Before assu ming new
obligatwns now. be sure all
your old ones are well under
control. No use c reating future
headaches.

PUB LIC NOTICE
T O THF U NKNO W N HE I R S,
THEIR
EXECUTORS . A D
MIN I S TRATOR S
A ND
ASS IGN S
Or
WAY NE
CHEVI\LIER ,
DEC E ASED .
RE SIDENCE
U NKNOWN

Pers on s who se coo perat1 on
you thought you had may surprise you tod ay when they're
reluctant to go along with your
plans

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20)
Your easygo1ng natiJre may
lead others to think they ca n
expect more from you today
than IS reasonable. Put your
foot down

®~
Merch 24. 1976

The coming year should be an
extremely busy one fo r you ,
w ith-heavy irons in the fire. Try
not to saddle yourself w ith n on
productrve projects tha t could
detract from yo ur efforts

•

The Almanac
By
United
Press
United Press International
Today is Tuesday, March
23, the 83rd day of 1976 with
283 to follow.
The moon is between its
last quarter and new phase .
The morning stars are
Mercury and Venus . .
The evening stars are
Mars, Jupiter a nd Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aries.
German rocket scientist
Wernher Von Braun and
American actress Joan
Crawford were born on
March 23 .. :he in 1912 and. she
in 1908. '
On this day in history:
In 1775, Patrick Henry,
advoca ling arming Virginia
in preparation for war with
England, declared : "I know
not what course others may
take, but for me, give me
liberty or give me death."
In
1942,
Japanese
Americans were moved from
their homes along the Pacific
Coast to inland relocation
sites as
a
wartime
precaution.
In 1965, Virgil 1Gus )
Grissom and John Young
were launched from Cape
Kennedy to become the first
two-man American space
team to go into orbit.
In 1975, Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger returned to
Washington after failing in a
personal mission to Egypt
and Israel to bring about a
peace agreement.
A thought for the ·day :
American movie magnate
Samuel Goldwyn said: " A
verbal contract · isn't worth
the paper It's written on ."

1614) 985-4164 .

3·23 Jtc

We

WI$H to express our
sin c ere thanks to relatives
and friends for the ex pression of sympathy and

kindness shown during th e

puslng of mv wife , Lule
Fltchpatrlck and mo ther of
Mrs . tternard Scarberry
and Mrs . Lucille Murray
May God bless eactl of you
Curnel Fltchpatrlck , Mrs .
Scarberry
and
Mrs
Murray ,
3-23 · 1tC

_ __

-

--~------

19 69
IN TERN ATIONAL
pi c kup ,
com pl ete
n ew
ex ha ust system Carb ure tor
OIJerhauled . Phone 99 2 7 149 .
3 '1 1 61C

---

19 70
PONTIA C
Catalina
h ardtop coupe , p b , p s ,
a c., V -B motor . $750 . Ph one
949 .2589
3. 2 1 3tc
19 74 DA t s-UNB2i OFaSibaC ~o: ,
4 speed , has r adia I tires ,
AM FM ster eo 8 track . l rke
new Call Cha rl ie Matth ews,
991 2257
3 19 5t c

10 7 ] "
TIMB ER. lOP
P ri ce f o r
sl and1ng timb er Cal l ( 614 )
1
· 46 8~70
3 7 tt c

PROPOSALS

l'.f /0 CUTL/I. ~S
Phon(' 9Y'l 3 110

~ up r e rn c

1 17

".. OUTHERN
yel l ow p rn e
pos ts N ow bUYing sever a l
51les . contacl
13urke
P.1r so n~
Bo wlby Corp , P
0 Bo x ] Y. ~ p e n ce r , w Va
'J&lt;&gt;J7b Ph on e &lt;30.1r 971 l?r,u
nr e ve n 1n qs (301~ 'J!,.I /b9 .t

Ph . (614)

2· 12 I

•.tc

Watch for List
Items La fer .

.

For Sale

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

For Rent

______ --

--

TEAFORD

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

_________

_____ _

Employment Wanted

________ _____ _

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

----------

- - -------

-·-------------

------ --

-

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

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

CUB Farm all WfHi mower and
p low . Camper tha i wit ! fit a
6ft. bed truck Phone (614)
98 5 392.t .
321 -6tp

Ho uSE

1n Cheste r , Ohi O.
New ly r edecora t ed, fully
c arpet ed, mostlY furn ish ed
Shown 12 t o 4, M arch 27 th
R easonllb l e r ent . Call 1

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
KI_DS IN YOUR HAIR- LOOK HERE. 2 slory home in
th e c ountry . 3 large bedrms., large spaci ou s li Ving
room, dming room, kitchen with built-I ns, bath, a nd
ut i lity room . 2 ca r co ncre t e block garage, garden space
and str awberry patch , a lm ost I acre of land . Where?
About 5 minutes from Pom eroy on Co. Rd . 30 . Pric ed

on l y $11 .000 .

·

90 ACRES VACANT LAND - you wou ld know spring is
here w hen ybu see this wide green valley wrth a brook
running thro ugh It ; just pertec;t for a large lake ;
wooded hill side just c rying f or a cab i;, . .' .' Here•s
scenery a nd seclusion .. , at less than $300 per acre.

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

FURNis HED ,
2
bedrm .
apartment. adu lt s on l y, in
Midd leport . Phon e 992 -3874.
3-12-tf c
~---- ---------

T h is is the rig ht prrce ... for this modern two bedroom
home. In the cou n tr y near Bashan .. City wa ter a nd
natural gas. Even a garden .
Ca II for aPPOintment

9 ACRES OF WOODED AREA - Ju sI off Union Ave A
$4,000 00.

POME·ROY - H igh v rew ·. , low pri ce , ch eck !hi!; 3
bedroom home w ith large dini ng room ; living room
with firepla ce; kitchen and bath, nat . gas , furniture
goes too ... one low price $7500.00 .

Want that FOR SALE ad to read SOLD.
Call Jimmy Deem
949-2388

l! " ~ f-U R f\~t !

-~--

--

In
Pom ero y :! bcc.Jrrn . n ew l y
redecorat ed , fuiiV carpeted .
Cell In th e earlY a .m , 992. · 1 R 601', t ,u.._.s ~ wrth bath , good
loc arton , lull basement, 391
2288
South Second , Middleport .

Rill Estate for Sale

f

2-22 -llc

- -------~----- ·, 1, , 111~ M tra iler , reet nice .
Ph one 992 ·3324 .

3 21 tfc

-----------J B ED R M h ouse wi t h ba t h i[1
-·-

Rut l and

·'

r~

Phone 992 5858
3 9. tf c

...
I

r exPERiENcm
Rad iata '
Servic«- ·. ~

&gt;Ci j'l "

..

'

Ph. 949-l404

P h . '1 97 1114

WI L L TR IM of cut trees and
Shrub bery
Phone 9•19 n.J5
or 74? 3167
1 ?7 ?6t c
C

!

~

ACROSS

Q 8. u

l~Ll:

lr !nl nlin(/

1 colloq. I

; I

E:XCI\VA r lN G , OOll'r , lo.) tn:·.and backh oe w or k . scp tr c
rank s
1n"il&lt;1lled .
dump
tru c k s f1tl d to b(JV ~ for h 1re .
will ha ul t il l (lr r t. lop soH[
lrme s t of'le and qrd vc ! C"l
Bob or RoQer Je tt er :. , day
p h on e 99? 70B9, 111Qh l phon+,;
99? J'i25 or 99 2 5737
2 I I Ifc

N EW b1 -leve l home, 3 bed r m ,
bu i ll i n k i l c h en , c arp e t ,
in
ba se m e n t ,
g a ra g e
basem ent , locat e d behrnd
g r ade sc h oo l , Lon g St .,
Ru tla nd , Ohio
See Milo
Hu t c h ison , or phone 742

2306

3 23 if C

6 ROOM ho u se In Middleport ,
n ext lo s chool. n ew sh mg le
root , ss .soo Phone 99 2 7275 .
3 23 3t p

Phone 992 -2215 .

NEW

furnace,

3-21 -12tp

HOME for sate by prrva l t.&lt;
o wner ,
31
a c res ,
4
bedrooms , barn on bla ck top
road , gtts and w"ter Phon e
9-19 2023 .
3 1 26tp

Budgel gas bill $35.00 .
EXCELLENT
CONDITION. 518,500 .
WE
NEED
NEWER
HOMES. .
.
992-2259 qr 992-2566

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

LjOU

to be

happLj,
Clovia!

Austen

women's

novel

org.

•

••

·-...,...,
••\ I

." ''
'

'

is

,\ X \" D L K .\ \ X R '
I. Q X G F E I. I. 0 W

One lettrr simpl y sta n d s fo r anothf'r , In th is..~ampli' ·\ i s
u sr d f or thf' three I.'s. X f or th e two 0 s. etc s mgle !{' tt~rs ,
apostrophes . th e length and (o rmat~ o n of thr wo r cls ate at\
hints. Eath da~· th r rode h' tl&lt;' rs ~II"(' (hfTf'ren t.

W E BI\LL
y 51)(.

••

Wt:t::Kt&gt; O F F . .•

'

l'RVPTOIIUOTES

-'".
,,
BQKGK . N

"'"

I.PY

,

.-

,,"

.
l'

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'•

WE GOT ONE OF
THEM BODACIOUS
RECLINIC\J' CHAIRS,
LUKE\/

GLORV BE!!

MAW'S USIN' IT
RIGHT NOW

LET ME
TRY ITOUT
SNUFFV

l

TYXI

RJXX

BQPB"N

II

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TYK

BQK

BQJYW

BQ P B

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K F M 1. p B J T Y . - A J X X

,. K G N
G I W
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T
Yesterday 's Cryploquole: SOMETIMES 1 THINK 1 Dl
HAISE OUR CHII.DRF."', I l.OWF.Rf:D THEM . - RICHARD
AHMOUR
fC&gt;

1976 Kin&amp;l&gt;' ealures

SyndiCI~l' .

Ll TTLE FELLOW HE.I:E
HIS
/1\ETATA~:lAL

n'::lD!TH;~R~se,eON

'
,,
•'

Mason , W. Va.
)•

3,4,15; Movie ''Promise Him

knave saves the day

West

North East

South

1.
Pass
Pass

Pass
3 N.T

INT.

Pass
Pass

bring the contract home.
He wouldn't have been able
to do th1s if" West had decided
to play singles (he mighl well
do since his partner had
shown a very bad hand) and
played out ace-king and 10 of
spades, but West made the
standard fourth -best lead and
South brought home the con·
tract by means of a second
hand high play. He went up
with dummy·s jack of spades.
It held and now South was able
to finesse in clubs with safety
since hts queen of spades was
a second stopper in the suit.

~~@V.~~

A Misstssippi reader asks
who deals the next hand in a
rubber bridge game after a
Opening lead - 8 •
hand is passed out.
'-----------~
The answer 1s that the deal
passes to the player on the left
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
as if the hand had been
When your left-hand oppo- just
bid
and
played.
nent opens the bidding with
one of a suit and his partner
(Do you have a question
passes it is up to you to reopen lor the experts? Write "Ask
on the theory that your the Jacobys " care of this
partner will hold the balance newspaper. The Jacobys will
of power. In the situation you answer individual questions
don•t need 16 points to bid if stamped. self-addresse"d
one notrump and South·s 14- envelopes are enclosed. The
point notrump was full y most interesting questions
justified
So w~s North "s rai se to will be used in this column
and wfff receive copies or
three and it was up to South to JACOBY
MODERN.)
Pass

Inc. I

1~:UK!:

,..,

Carson

Anylhlng .. .'' 6,13; Movie "The Biggest Bun~le of
Them All" 8: Movie ' "Honeymoon Hotel 10;
Janakl 33.
1:QO-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

Neither vulnerable

TIAILY CRYI'1'0Ql10TE - ll~re' ho" tn wnrk it :
$HE WAG
PRESSED FOR

ll : .~~Johnny

..-+--t-t-+----1--tl

Kind of
history
2 Felled
:1 Not interesting
4 Neighbor
of Ala.

·,•

.A;

NORTH
• J2
• K to 3
t K 85
ofoQJ toBG
WEST !D)
EAST
•AKt086
.93
¥QH
¥J852
tQ92
tJ763
of,K5
o!o942
SOUTH
• Q7 54
¥ A9 6
t A JO 4
• A73

DOWN

"

Herman Grate

river
Put to
sea
37 Hold
back
39 Patriotic
36

~-+--t--t--r-'-!Spade

cormnon

. '

MASON FURNITURE

valued
33 Otherwise
34 Denude
35 Greek

Arthur

~ ~~~~~~~~~~ ~
"

FRIIMY UNTIL 8 PM

32 Greatly

WIN AT BRIDGE

42 Un -

. '·'

Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.-I:JOtil S:OO
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

Grand Opry
23 Marsh
24 Be quiet '
26 Ca 11 to get
attention
29 Wahine 's
dance
30 Russian
ruler
31 Jane

1 One

~....

STORE HOURS

2~

43 Domain

~

MASON lliURNITURE

Yesterday's Answer

41 Litlle

~·

. ..

773-5592

want

~·

and 5 P.M.

.

just

I

8 A.M., The Noon Report,

carpeting, tile / paneling,
siding, storm doors &amp;
wlndows. Porches , full
bas~ment, 2 car garage.

'

we1ght
s Abstract
being
purchase
9 Hone
i1 Word with
12 wds. l
up, down,
14 Make - meet
15 Vent
etc.
16 Danube
13 Plant
covering
tnbutary
17 Approxi·
12 wds. l
mately
16 Yoko ·n
Behmd
r.:------;-;--;-~ 1 Attic
18
Regret
can wait! 25 Like 12
19 Palm
Across
13 wds. l
leaf
20 German
'f.;;;~:!7 Crew
Type of
city
ruler
21 Ship's VOY·
Kind of
age account
fever
Old hymn
12 wds. l
34 Low·
[
pitched
38 Had
suspicions
(3 wda. )
40 Absalom·s
cousin

•

W I L L cto odL1 ro!) s, r ooh ny ,
pilrn l ing h aulrnq , rr ccw or'k
&lt;mel nl owin~ Ca ll 9Y 7 '! 409 .
3 2 '26 1(

AT

......~~~~~~~

We

''

EXPANDED WEEK DAY NEWSCASTS

~

Let's q
Before weqo
back so I I wonder it...
can pack~ &amp;-r-----.

9 Ill \ fc ..-

2 .J tt c

Asian

j

nest
II Hide
12 Dairy

J•r
',

10

z

5 Footlike
part
6 Dele·s ·
opposite

6 Ragout
10 Eagle"s

Real Estate For Sale

--~-

~ ~~'61:111
. ~,VI
by THOMAS JOSEPH
1 Title holder

•'

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

~~"

Puml'rO)
__ _J

yea r s ('~pcr•l,'n c(
ln~u t NI
lr f'Q ('Siima Jo•&lt;, rdll Q9 ') 2) H! ~
REMOD E; LIN G ,
Ptumbinu ,
o r (61-ll &amp;Yfl 7?17 ;\lt) •1ny
r..-,·
heat in g and al l types 0'1
10 ,., 1f c ..;.,. ·
gene r al
rcp &lt;l! r
Work
t
•" I
guaranteed
70 ye ars ex
~ EWtN C M /\C HtNF.:- RC'pilrrs,
pcrren ce
Ph one 997 ;&gt;.109
S!? r iJicfl (i(t IHilkrs 99? i784
5 1 lie
The f &lt;1t:lr1( l,.h(.lp , Pon, cr'oy
l\u lhOr l7c-d 'lrpqvr C.. aif''l ,l nd
O' DELL Ali n en;&lt;'nl tocafcct
~·ervi C l'
Wr"'htHpe n
R ut l and
Grad e
be h 1n d
Sciss or "&gt;
Sc ho o l
Tune u p , brakes .
l 79 li e.
w h eel bal ancing , alinemcr]l
Ph on e 7·1'1 }00-1
·
RE /\DY MIX CO N •_ .... L I I_
J 1 16 1tc
d e l rve r t'd rr qt11 10 your
proje c t t rl SI rl nd cas v I ree
WI LL
do
ro o f rng .
(On
€''i.l11nat cs Ph or1ro -';1 97 37 fiJ ,
struction , plumb1n g and
GbcQtein Rci'l tt y Mn~ 'Co,
h ea li n g . No job too la r gC' or
Mrddlf&gt;port Ohr o
too small . Phon e 747 23·18
6 30 li e
3 19 261C
E L WO O D flOWEr&lt; ) R rPI\IR · t
'l wecp cro; I OD~I('r•, nons . ~ :
all sm.111 &lt;:~ pp l l fl llC('',) L.:t wn , 1
mowt~ r n .. xt lo S1.1 tr H rfl h
,.
way GJrttgc on t ~owrc l
Ph nn f' 11{1'; 38?~
MODERN hom e 111 Chester , B
1 l o tt c
ro oms : '} ba ths . 1 por c h es.
sunporch . 1 ' ba semen I, crly
and w e ll water , natura l g as, S EPT I C 1 1\NK ~, c lca n ('(i
Mod er n SqnrtalrOn •Jq'} Jl;lSJ ,1
garage . Pri ce ct ro se ll
or 99 ~ Jl.t9
Pho n e (6 14) 965 4\0 ?

---------

... v.,_,,,.,..

AJIRort~loP.-I'IId

EX CAVAT l N G
11/\(1&lt;' HOI:_ ~
A ND DOZER L A.R&amp;L .A N D
SM ALL
S FP Tu: T/\NKS
, IN ~ l A LLl O
BILL
PUL LI N S, PHO NL 99 ? 74/ij,
DA Y OR Nl(;ll'f
2 n 'i 71p

BRf-\D FO RD , Auction ee r
Co mpl ele Sf' rv 1ce . Phone
949 2·1B7 or 9,19 2000, R &lt;;~cine .
Oh ro , Cr ill Brad tord
10 9 rf c

porches- small basement) .

-

..

SMI_TH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

OPEN TUES . THRU SAT
6 · JOTIIIIO 00
3 17 I mo .

MUST SELL - 22 lf' acres
- 1 home &amp; 2 apartnien~s
has fr-ee gas , and own
water systems . I Mobile
Home . All rented at all
times . $420.00 per month
plus gas well. Asking

frame

'

N at h an R1qqs ,
Rold il! fOI Sp(' Ctil lr \ l'

Racin e, Ohi o

WMPO AM-F·M

$12.000.
FORKED RUN LAKE Fishing cabin. 3 rooms , 2
porches and a path . (needs
some repair) . $2 ,800
POMEROY 7 room

'

1

-...

•

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

.....
.-.

~RUMEN!

LIT11..E ORPHAN ANNIE

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

( 304) 773 -5626

-

1I

r ,., . ;n orders and pick up

3-2 1-Jt p

Good condition . 12 glassed

form four ordinary worda.

TOM IF

118lrno

ON

111, baths, insulated, storm
doors &amp; wlndows, N . G .
heat, garage &amp; carpqrt .

M&gt;ton*/J .-1 ~

Unscramble the!te four Jum~les.
one letter to eKh square, to

biRi. ! IS
'/OUR
MOOt-N
AT Uf »&amp; "

PH. 992-6173

"' twenty m mutes
Located at 329-lrd Street

--------..----RUG S of all sizes . Call Ma son.

...

J1llJIWID!1J]®u..J

HEAR NEWS FIRST

$25 ,000.
MAKE
AN
OFFER .
MIDDLEPORT - 5 BR .

Farmtlme 10.

-.

No w accepting clients
fo r bookkee pi ng and
tax service .

3709 ,

3-21 6tc
' ENJOY grac io us livin g at - VIllage Man or in Mid dlepor t for as low us $130 30 INCH Kenmore el ec . ran CAt: .
per
m o nth
With
all '
Phon e 992 6162 .
utilities
paid .
These ,
3.19 3tc
ar e brand new high quality -~-----------.._
apa rt ment s al prr ces you 1973 HONDA road bike , ex .
can aftorQ Yo ur rent ln .
cellent
c ondition , 3, 900
etudes rnonth to month
m tles , tot of ex t ras . Phon e
l eases, all elec . living ,
742-22 11 ; aft er 5 p m call
carpeting,
range
and
742 2201 .
refrigerator , fre e trash
3· 19 -6t c
pickup , cable TV at your
ex pense ,
and
on -site laundry fac i lit i es . Con - '23 CH A NNEL C B . Radios ,
$109 95 up , antenne , $14 95
venien t to shopping on Third
up . 4 fill 9 , Tuesdav thru
end Mil l Stree ts i n M id Friday, 12 till 6 Sarurdlly . 60
dleport Se e the manager ar
Central Ave ., Athens , Ohio .
R1versi de A partm e nts or
3-21 -1Q1p
cal l 992 · 3273
FtJ rn/sh ed
apartments
ar e
al so
GOOD h(ty , ne ve r w e t . Phone
av a ila b le .
949 15'1~
_ _ _ _ _.l _ _ _2·2·78tc
_ _
3 10 121 c

I

10.

6:4()-Qun ce of Prevention 10.
6;45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:55-Chuck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
Slate 13.
7:QO-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, Amorita 6,13; CBS
News 9; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
e:oo-Lassle 6: Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame Sl 33.
e:Jo-Big Valley 6.
9:QO-Not for Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4.15; Luty
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning wit~ D.J. 13.
9:3o-A.M. 3; One Llfelo Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
10: oo-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Rlaht 8.10.
11 : oo-W~eel of Fortune 3.15; Weekday 4; Gambll
8,10; Farmer' s Daughter 13 .
11 :3Q-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Happy Oays13; Love
of Life 8,10: Sesame Sl. 20,33 .
11 · 55-Take Kerr 8; Dan I mel's World 10.
12 : QO-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15; Let's Make a
Deal 13; Bob Braun' s 50-50 Club 4; News 6,8,10.
12 : 31i-Take My Advice 3,15; All My Children 6,13;
Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
·
12:45-Eiec . co. 33 .
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
1: 00-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8:
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women ·Only 15.
1:»-Days of Our Lives 3,4, lS; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, 13;
As lhe World Turns 8, 10.2:QO-S20,000 Pyramid 6,13 •
2:3Q-Doctors 3,4, 15; Neighbors 6, 13, Guiding Light
8, 10.
.
3:QO-Another World 3,4,15;
General Hospllal 6.13;
Kup 's Show 20.
J:JO--&lt;lne Life lo Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6;
Malch Game 8,10: Educating the Handicapped
Children 33.
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3: Merv Griffin 4: Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
20,33; Dinah 13.
F
II
4: 3Q-Bewllched 3; Mod Squad 6: Pari ridge am y 8 :
Ssame St. 20,33; Fllntstones 15.
5 ·QO-Bonanza 3: Family Affair 9; Slar Trek 15.
s:JO-Adam-12 4,13; News 6: Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Elelec. Co. 20.33.
20 33
6·oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6;
oom • ·
6:3o-NBC News 3,4,15: ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
· CBS News 8,10; Crop Game 20: Crascolendes 33.
1·oo-Trulh or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
· Dollars 6; Pop Goes t~e Country 9; News 10; Wild
Kingdom 13; Area Mayors Report 15: Book Beat
20 .. Know Your School 33.
7· 3o-:Lasl of the Wild 3: .Name that Tune 4; Wild Wild
· world of Animals 6; Welcome Back. Kolter 7;
Match Game PM a: EvenlnQ Edition with Martin
Agronsky 9,20; Movie "American Guerilla In lhe
Phllllplnes" 9: The Judge 10: To Tell the Truth 13.
8. QO-Little House on the Prairie 3,4, 15; Bionic Woma1t
. 6,13: Mystery of the Andrea Doria 9,10; The Way
Was 20; Decades of Decision 33 .
a··3Q-Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
9:QO-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,4,15; Baretta 6,13 ; Cannon
. 8, 10; Dante In America 33; Decades of Decision 20.
9:JQ-Dumpllngs 3.4.15.
10·oo-McNaughlon's DauQhter 3,4, 15; Starsky
. Hutch 6,13: Blue Knight 8,10: Renoir 33: News .
10:3Q-Aimanac 20; Deamer 33.
11·oo-News 3,4,6,8,10.13.15; ABC News 33.

-~

of

FAR MALL Sup er C tractor
w ith tw in plow s and mower.
q uic k hitch . Phone (6 14) 667 -

3-19-7tc

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

DON'T FLIP OUT

little dozer wo rk and have a few home sites -

(3 14) 866 -1731 .

6 : QO--Sunrlse Semester

6:15-Farm Reporl 13.
6::ID-The Story 13.
6:3o-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;

9:QO-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15; Lola Falana 6,13; Mash
8.10; Adams Chronicles 20.33

PUBUC .
ACCOUNTANT

Italian-Style Pizza

---·- - - - --

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

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1976

Theatre 33.

Consumer Surviva l 20,33.

LARRY WHOBREY

SAM'S
PillA SHOP

------ - --

n
-------

A THING CA N

l :QO-News 13 .
1· Jtl- Tomorr ow 3,4

8.QO-Movln' On 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; Dr . Seuss
8, 10; Behind the lines 33; Internat ional An l mation
F eslival 20.
8: 3o-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Good Ti mes B, IO.

Ph . 949 -1013 or 843 -1667

Real Estate for Sale

-

Pets

•
'
1-:-:
'100

F ro m a she lf to a hou se. al l
t ypes or , bull~ ing a n d
r emode l ing
!rom
the
· fo undatiOn up . Addition~.
c arp e ting , pai n trng , srd rng,
roofmg , paneling , paper
ha nging etc .

3 17- l mo.

Grace Episcopal Parish
FISCAL YEAR 1977
f-tou se, East Main Street,
COMPREHENSIVE
MANPOWER PROGRAMS
Pomeroy , Ohio (Beside Old
1970 MOB I LE ho me, 12 )( 44 , 2
Not ice 1s h ereby grven th at
Pom eroy Jr High School)
3 I ~ I ll p
bearm , gas, Ph one (304)
the
R egio nal
M a,np ower
773 5460 or 992 5001
TUPP E R S PL A IN S, N ew 3
Serv ic es Counc1 1. A rea 8, rs
Speakers
:
Robert
'..:A~
H
p
ar
d~
ll
rnake5
iina
ca r.pe ted.
b edrm , hou ses
r equeslrng p r o po sal s for F Y
3 23 6tp
mod
e
ls
o
f
rnob1t
e
h
om
es
Hutchinson and Joe
ran ge, ga r age , large tot s.
'77 Manpower Program s.
Ph one
·ea
co de 614 423
F H A f inan c in g a~Jailab l e,
Reed. ·
Prog ram s are fund ed thr oug h
9'i3 I
14 x 65 MOBILE h om e tor sa te ,
$2 1, 900 . P h on e ! 614l 667
Ti fl e I mon ey authorized by
For
mo
r
e
i
nformat
1on
,
c
all
A 13 I l c
630 4.
REFRESHMENTS
th e
Comp r ehensive
Em ~.
99 '1 7256 .
3 14 161p
p loymcn t and Tra1nmg A c t of
DOOR PRIZES
3 21 7tp
1973 (CETA) . As a com ponent
-INFORMATION
of CE T A , th e general purpose
UNFUR NI S H E D I J )( 70 4 1\C R E !:&gt; . 7 qood we lls, ~
DOOR PR-IZES
of T i tle I prog ram s rs to
mobtl e h ome . tola l ete c . 3
COON H 6UN OdO g , 11 month s
bcclr m tr ai lt' r W rll sell wilh
provide job tra inin g and
POMEROY LANDMARK
ton cen tr al ai r con dr t 1oner .
ol d P ho ne 992 -7149.
rr-a iiL• r or w r!hour Call 7.1')
em ploym ent opportunities for
excell
en
t
co
ndr!
Jon
P
h
one
Jack
W. Carsey, Mgr.
3
6tc
'n l / i'lf lflr ,fp nl Prrl('';/500
econom1c at l y drsadvantag ed.
1.11
t6H4
or
247
2664
l o r bo lh
Phone 992 -2181
and
un
u n e mploye d
TW O coon hou nd Pu ps _ Phone
3 10 I fc.
3 I? J?rp
dere mp to yed persons and t o
99 2 78 10
assure that th ese se r v ices l ead
WANT Vacat1on? Need c hores
3 21 61 c
to maximum employment
1973 14 lC 70 TR A I LER , 3
do ne?
For
more
Ill - - - - opportun r t1es
G roup s
Oe d roo m s,
1 1-;
baths
formation , c a l l 16 14 ) 985
AKC REG f em ale Chih uahua ,
designat ed b y R MS C 8 to b e
428 1.
Ass um e paym en t s , $ 11 2.90
gold
en
f
awn
,
$75
.
4
y
ea
r
s
PhOn e 992 3388
g1v en primary c onsid eration
3·21 -61p
old Phon e 99 2 '1265 .
are t h e ec onom ic ally drsad
3 19 4t p
3
IY
'
p
IJantage d .
and
th e
un - WIL L g1vep iano te ssons in my
VIrgil B .• Sr., Broker
der e m play e d
and
u nem
h ome . Ca lt 742 -2131
110 Mechanic Pomeroy , 0 .
A K C Registe r e d Cu tt 1 ,&gt; 11J d
pla yed . Within t h ese area s,
Phone 992 -3325
Servic e, St ardus
spec rfic g roup s to be giiJen
' ng
Ph
one
(614)
98
5·42
,
prrority
are .
h ea d S o f
WILL car e f or e lder ly woman
T E NNA 8 tra ck
FM s t e r eo
househo ld , ve teran s; youth
J 16 tfc
REAL OAK FLOORS - In
in my home Phon e 992 73 14
radio co m bi n ation for ca r
i:md y o ung adults , th e han
Speak er s rn c l u d e d
$50 .
3 17 6tc
3 B . ~ .S .. n ice car p eting in
dicapped, and , o ld er work ers
Phone 949 . 2322 .
--------~-l 1ving &amp; family Rm s. On ly 4
Any indivrd ual or org anr zahon
:JAKE SURE you ge t e11ery •
3 17 6tc
yr s. old . $24 .500 .
m ay su bmit a propo sal,
po ssi blededuct 1on th is ye ar
4 ROOM S an d balh Plus utility
h owever, the regulations
MODERN
- u Brs., lge.
Ha 11e your Fe dera l a n d
room , sc reened in porc h , coA L ro~L Er C!ll~ cOa t
d isa llow the fund rng ot a
kit. w ith ba r , dining wi 1h
St a te Incom e T ax return by
forced
air
h
ea
t
Phone
992
Co
mprany
•
1
mile
north
o
f
pr og r am which wou l d p r od uce
an ac counta n t . Phone 992 ·
5630
s l rdi n g g la ss
dr s,
')
Ch esh ir e , o n Rl . 7 Pi ck you r
profit fo r the c ontra c t o r
617 3
_._
own , $20 p er ro n Open 6 d ays
cer a mic t ile bath s, ful l
3-23 -61 c
Geog raphi c area served rs
1 21 52t c
p er wee k . o r ca ll (61 -1) 367
- ....,..,...
basemen t and dbl garage
RM SC
Ar ea
8 . • P e rr y ;
AUTO P a ris _,.. 200 CIJb rc in ch 6
73 30 for fu rther m f o r m a tion
Hoc king ; At h en s; Morg an ;
$38
.000
N I G HT HAWK S Wr ll be bac k
cylrn d er Ford eng in e and 3
1 8 78 I c
Nob l e,· Monroe . Washi n gton ,
at Tal l Timb ers , no more
RIVER FRONT LOT speed
1r
ansm
iss
1
on
,
$100
.
and , M ei gs cou n t i es. Ap jun k b and s . Rodney Grov er
390 c ubi c i n c h M e r c ury 5 PIECE
Wat er , electric, and smal l
Hickory
F amily
Pli cations may be obtarned .
3-23 -3tc
En gi ne
and
automatic
building. $4, 000 . ·
r oom set , Cu stom made
from Paul D Bookman. Trtle I
lran smrssron , S150 Ca ll 992 ca nopy , approx . 15x l 5, 2 1 :~
LARGE - 9 rms .• 3 Br s.,
Fie l d R ep rese nt atrve , 11 7
7120
Nort h Pleasant Street , New
HP Jet propelled outboard
Jln bath s, hot wa t er heat
'
3- 2'3 4l p
Le)(lngton ,
Ohro
43764
motor , F oley R ee l mQwer ,
Living
acros s fr o n t of
g rinder , large , M cC ulloch
Compl e t e d
apptica t ron s
EXPERIENCED
au1o -~~----------15 C U FT . upright fre ezer,
hou se. Lo t s of c lose t s
cha
in
saw
Ma
c
1.
10
Phon
e
should be re t urn ed to Ch ester
mechanic looking for work
excellent condition . Ph one
La r-ge lot and beautiful
(6];)) 678 -2166
Wh 1te , P lann i n g Coordmator.
in my own g arage . Qualify
247 -22 05 or 247 -273 1.
Office of Manpower D eve lop .
view $16,500 .
3-18 -61p
work and reasonable rates .
3.23 ·6fc
ment. 30 E a st B r oa d St. .' 27th
Call 992 -7120 .
FIVE POINTS - Modern 3 •
F loor , Co lumbus, Ohio 43215,
,__
3 23 41p 1975 36 0 HONDA , e)(cel lent IN D AS H , 23 ~h annel C B . 8
Br s., al l paneled. lge. balh ,
no l at er than Aprrt 9, 1975
track , A M F M radio . Call
condi t ion, SB75 . Pf'lon e 9&gt;19
garage and lge lot $25,500
PrOposal s must b e su bmit led
1674
992 39 65
PAINTING in si de , out and
RACINE Nice 3 Brs,
rn tr i pli ca t e in t h e form
ro ots Phone Mason , (304 )
3 18 tf c
3·23 -3tc
prov i ded by r e Qu es t
large krt , dining, full
773 ·5626
- ---~basement , 1 1 , ~ ba t h s, Obi
3 21-6t c
3 A ND 4 ~M turnish ed and . H A Y , never been we t Phon e
13) 23, 24, 25. 3tc
garage
pl us . A lmost 11 1 ~
(61 4) 378 -6205 after 6 p . m
unfurn iShed apt s Phone 992 .
5434
acres $31 , 500
3 11 12t p
11 9 1fc 49 ACRES - 3 yrs . old, 2
-- - -bedroom
home, bat h, bir ch
COUNTRY MaP i l e Hom P. COAL , l 1mesto ne and all type s
k it c h en . c arport and full
of sa il a nd rock sa lt lor ic e
Par-k , Rt 33, ren mites n orth
and snow r emo11al
Ex
basemerit . $31.500.
of Pomer o y . LafQe lot s wrth
ce tstor Sa lt Wo rk s , East
WA NT
oon c r e l e pat 1os. Sidewal k s,
IF
YOU
Ma in St. Pome ro y , Ohio
runner s and · Off s treet
PROFE
SS
IONAL
Ph one 992 -3891.
parking . Ph one 992 .747 9
AOVI C'E, HIRE ONE, IT
12.7 rt c
12 31 tt c
WILL PAY YQU

Mobile Homes For Sale

.,'
'
••

CONSTRUCTION

Orange Twp . Volunte e r
Fire Department wtll hold
a consignment auction a t
the ftre house lo cated rn
Tuppers Plain s, Oh1o on
April llttJ b egrn ning at
10 : 00 a.m .

FO R SA LE near Lan gsv rtt e. 5
roo m house . roo t cell ar w ith
room OIJe r , 2 bay detac h ed
garage, 119 a cr es, no ba th ,
hot arid c otd wat er in kit
c h en , l P ga s heal , h eate r s
wit h house
Cart 74?.2 8 19
after 5 p .m .
3 17 71p

ARE YO U OUT OF
'lOUR 1,\INI&gt;! WHAT
SORT OF 5COUNOREL
WOULD PLAY SUC H
A TRICK'?!

HAPPE-N ;

0&amp;0

AUCTION SALE

eshmates on car petmg and in stallat io n .
We ' ll bnng samples to your
home wilh no obligation .
See how you can really
sa v e.
Mike Young , Manager
Sales and Installation
Rt. 3, Pomeroy , Ohio 4S769
Phone day or night
614 -991 -'2206
J )4 I f!IO

E"VHOPE:

ON &gt;

2191 rno

.. Free

IT II&lt;J THIS

VEr NOW IT "5
BLANK: CO NFOUND
11; I DON'T UII:DER5 TAND HOW SUCH

~===-~ .

mo .

SLOAN'S
.
CAIIPETING

~EALED

I

Ohro
Ph . 9\11 3993
4 10 1 mo

AVAILABLE
Tupper s Pl ains Chester
water D istri ct now selling
bu lk. water lo tanks on
trucks at our n ew ott1ce!
Loca te d on St. Rt. 7
1 Mile No r t h of
Easter n· H 1g h Schoo l
Se r ve Yourse lf Drspenser
Taking quart ers only , one
at a 11 me . f or 250 ga ll ons o f
wa t er .
Openal ll h e Trme
t or your c on ve n ience!
3 1 1nw .

985-4102

THE FORMULA
WAS W~t TTE~

OF COURSE l"M
5UR~:

Syrucu~e .

BULK WATER

BISSEll BUILDERS

1975 OLDSMOB I LE Sl ar f ire,
m us t se l l Ph o ne 992 7692 .
3-73 -6tp

_;..

PERSON to do te l e phone
su r vey work from their
home 1n the POf1"lerov area .
M us t h ave a pr rvate phone
Fou r hou r s per Clay . Call 446 4367 f or Info rmation
l 2) . If

Tuesday, March 30I
7:45 p.m.

-------------\

~----------

196 3 FALc;O N wa g on , pool
tabl e,
Mayl ag
wr inge r
w as her , b a c k b umper fo r
1971 O ld sm ob i l e , rotary
tire . front end tor 1 ton Ford
!ruck . Phon e 742-2174 .
3 23 3fp

7760

-----·- ·~-

C.rd of Thanks

M EA T CUT T E R for th is
area . Stat e exPerience a nd
Qua lr fical 1ons rn your le tt er
to Box 500 c -'0 Sunday T 1n1 es
Senti n e l , Ga l lipolis, Ohio
456 3 1
3-21 3t c
---~-~------- WOULD li k e to h ave lady to
l 1ve in , tr ee board . l ight
h ou se w ork . Phone 992 5798.
3-13-3tc

,OU"RE SURE!
T~Af"5 W~AT

LARRY LAVENDER

Rutland 742 ·23 31
Rog er Wam sley
l · l - tmo .

advantag e of our
prices .
Quality
built
homes. Nice lots available
in nice locations.

CAPTAIN EASY

REPLACEM ENT
WINDOW S
ALUMINUM
SIO ING- SOFF IT T
G U TTE·R 5- A WNIN GS

R&amp;J COINS

Take

19 72 PLYMOUTH Ous ter . 2
dr au t omat iC, a 1r Pho ne
992 ·5737
3 n 6tc

WINDOW S &amp; DOOR S

o•

SAVE MONEY?
Help Wanted

Fmanclng A'Jartable
Bl own in t o W alls &amp; Attics
STORM

Fo r Sale

WANT TO

Dlll l urnr tur e,
ice boxPs .
brass
b ed s,
Diet
wall
telephon es an d par rs. or
comp tele .h oLI Seh ot ds Wr ri e
M
D
Mil le r ,
Rl . 2.
Pom eroy, Ohio . Ca ll 992

PUBliC NOTICE
REQUEST FOR

S695

I

Insulation- Services

Find
buqed
tr eas u re .
Coins. r i ngs, sil ver. gold .
Corn &amp; Metal
D etectors
For R e nt

32J i mo .

MAJOR CHEMICAL
MEETING

16000.00 -

BLAC K and white f emale
coondog in Long Bottom
area . Has only T eve . P h one

1969 BELAIR 4 DR .
New ti r es, 8 cy t., auto , radio, green f irn sh .

Wanted To ·Buy

CAlL QUI CK.

Lost

f i r es, w h il e finish .

..--

.....

Blown

BUY , SELL or TRADE

5:QO-Bonannza 3; Fam ily Affair 8; Slar Trek 15
5:3Q-Adam -12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec .
Co 20.33, Adam -12.
6·QO-News 3,4,8. 10.13.15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; lTV
U1ili zation 33.
6·3Q-NBC News3.4, 15; ABC News 13: Andy Grilfilh 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33 .
7: 0&lt;&gt;- Tr-uth or Cons. J ; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollar s 6; Country Place 8; News 10; Name T hat
Tune 13, Family~ Aflalr 15 ; Anllque s 20; Wild Wild
World of Animals 33.
7:3Q-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal Wllh II 6;
525,000 Pyramid 8; Evening edlllon wilh Martin
Agrohsky 20; To Tell the Trulh 13; Price Is Righi
10; High School TV Honor Soclely 15; Family

t:::

FREE ESTIMATES

COINS

Automobile and
Truck Repair
State Rt . 124
Toward Rutland
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone : 992 -5682

1973 CHEVY VAN
S2495
6 cy l . auto. , r ight door g )ass a nd rear door gla ss, good

3o (.Jl 6,

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19)
There's a possrb ilrty today that
you may not properly caprtalrze
on your op portunitres because
you take them for granted

tires , low mileage, green fin 1sh .

MANNI N G D WEBS T ER.
J UDGE AND
EX OFF I C I O CL ERK .
CO MMON PLEA S COURT ,
ME I GS COUN T Y , O HI O ,
PROBATE DIVI SI ON

'"

ROGER HYSEUS
GARAGE

Day at a Time 8.10.
IO·QO-Ci l y of Angels 3.4.15; Family 6, 13; Switch 8,10;
N ews 20; Woman Al i ve 33.
10 :30-W oman Alive 20 ; Woman 33.
II :QO- News 3,4.6.8, 10, 13.1 5, ABC News 33.
11 : JG- N or th Carolina Primary 3,4,6,8,10 , 13, 15 ; J anak/
33 .
11...CG-Movie " Far from the Maddi ng Crowd'' 8: Movie
" Sons &amp; Lovers" 10.
11.45-Mystery of lhe Week 6, 13.
12 :00-Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15.

9 . 3o---one

TUESDAY. MARCH 23, 1976

·~

'1973 BUICK LESABRE
$2895
Cus t cpe ., auto ., P.S , P . B., speci al w heels , w -s-w

Notice

:n

Television log for easy viewing

J.!
-r.i

Motor Co
•

Of
QUALITY

Cantellarron
Corr ecti on s W tll be ac
re p led "" 1;t 9 • m
tor
Day of Publica I ron
REGULAT ION S
Th e Publ iSh er r ese rves
rhe rrg h J ro ed rr or rctect
any ads deemed ob
iCC IIOnitl
Th e pu~lisher
wilt nor be responsibl e tor
more lhan one rnc orrect
1nser1•on
RATES
F ar Wan t Ad Servi ce
., cent s pe r word on e
mser1 10n
Minimum ChargeS I 00
L t c ents per word three
consecutive
1nsert1o n s
16 ccn rs p er word six
r onsecut 1vc
1nscrtions .
?.S P e r Cent Dis cou n t on
paid aa s and ad~ paid
W1lhrn 10 day s
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
'i7 oo
lor
50
word
m inimum
Each adddional wo rd J
r ents
BLIND ADS
1\ ddilrona t ?5c Cha rg e
per 1\dverrisemen r.
OFFICE HOUR S
8 30 il m to S 00 p m .
Dar ty . 8 JO a n1 to 17 00
N oon Saturd ay
~honP todav 992 '2 156

Yard Sale

111 14 I 3J '1 . 9 , t 6,

Auto Sales

,....

You ar l' h er e by not !Ired tha i .
a Compta rnt hils been til-ed rn
rtH: Cornman Pl eas Cou r t of
fll\ t;igs Counry , Ohro. P r obate
Divrsion .
Courr
House ,
Pomeroy , Ohro , 157 69 , Case
No
21 , 7 18 ,
by
Ec;tward
Cheva l ier , Adminrstr ator of
th e
E slate
ot
Wayne
Chev al i e r .
Deceased,
Pla i ntiff ,
vs
Edward
Chev alier . e t al , and th e
unknown
h er rs .
their'
executo r s , .1Qm 1nrs tralors and
assrgns o f Wayne Chevalier ,
Decea sed , De f endants , whose
residcn c('S are unknown Th e
obr ec l of the Comp la int and
the dernand for retre t are ro
det e rn,me who are the next o f
krn , h eirs al law , !heir
exec urors . admmrst r a tor s and
assrgns of Way n e Chevalier .
Deceas~?d , en t il l ed by th e i&lt;'~ws
of I f) iS state 10 I he nex t estale
of rnheritancc an d to deter
rn ine I he shar e ro Wh 1c h th e
n exl of k rn or he1 r s at law ,
!herr
cxeculo r s,
ad
TH U R SDAY, F rr day and
mini slrators and assrgns . are
Saturday , Rot o li ller , 2 wrnd
C'ntrtled ac c ording to the
m 1ll s, ta p e p la ye r , baby and
statu t e 111 suc h c ases ma d e
boy thrng s, c lo th es, wal k er ,
and p r oiJided . and tor suc h
bac k pack , bed fra mes,
Other r elref as th e cou r t m ay
m ise i tem s 1 mrte fro m
de t errnine .
Chester Br1dge , Rt
248 .
You ar e h ereby notrf1 ed that
P ho ne 985 3335 .
you are r equ rr e d to answer the
3 23 tllp
Complai n t wilhin rwe n ty eight
clays a fter th e la st pubtrcalron ,
th e last pub l 1catron of which
will be on the 6t h day of Apr1 1,
19 76.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.len 19)

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

f

INFORMATION

C

Howeve1 you can succeed by
gom9 all -out.

Auto Sales

WAN r ADS

9 _ The Pomeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Tuesday, March 2.1. 1976
DICK TRACY

LISTEN CAREFVLL'( FOR
THIS IS THE WAI{ IT
ALL ~APPENED...

iNCiOENTALL'/, MA'AM,AAE
ON TRUTH

WE GRAI'ED

AND ACCURAC&lt;t'?

�8 - The

Pomeroy Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Tuesday. March 23. 1976

Astra- ·\ii:.:~:~·::::l:~1::::::. For
Graph

Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds ~
B
.
s
.
!-':
.~~~~!·~~. o~;.dl~.:~o': @) 2 SIGNS Pomeroy .
USlReSS erVlCeS
§

know rng the wMercabouJ s of

,h ;, dog . ot•••• ca ll 9913587
or 7:.1'1 '137S, Re ward offered
3 1961

Bernice Bede O sol
Far Wedne•d•y. March 24,
1976
ARIES (March 21 · April

19)

Half measures won't cut 11 to-

Wanted

DEADLINES

MU SICIAN
fiddll'.' or
,.,ando!i n , lor young S lue
C ra~ s
Band
T rmi n g rm
porlant Calr 747 7796
3 11 61c

day •I you ' re faced with
challenging s11uat1ons

TAURUS (April 20-Mor 20)
Tqday you may look at Issues
only fro m the side you WISh to

v•ew them . This could distor t
the true picture

GEMINI (Mor

~1 -Juna

20)

Don't be ta.ken in to day by a
s harp ho r se - trad er wh o Is
s h re wd e no ugh to mak e
valueless concessions in order
to win the real pot

CANCER (Juno 21-.lulr 22) In
situations (;B IIing for teamwork
today, harmonize your aims
w 1th assoc•a te s . Be sure
everyone pulls together

LEO (Julr 23 - Aug . 22)
Rewards due you lor your eflorts may be a !rille slow 1n
coming. They'll be there eventually. Don'l give up.

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22)
Soc•aJ situations cou ld be a tn .
fie tricky today. Be on your
guard, or you m1ght u ninten ~
tionally rub someone wrong

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0el. 23) Selldoubts tod ay could keep you
from putt1ng forth your best el ~
forts . It wou ld be a mistake to
Quit before yo u try

SCORPIO Oel. 24-Nov. 22)
Today you may be tempted to
doctor a tale a bit in order to
please · yo ur a udience The
safer course is to tell it like Ills.
SAGGITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Before assu ming new
obligatwns now. be sure all
your old ones are well under
control. No use c reating future
headaches.

PUB LIC NOTICE
T O THF U NKNO W N HE I R S,
THEIR
EXECUTORS . A D
MIN I S TRATOR S
A ND
ASS IGN S
Or
WAY NE
CHEVI\LIER ,
DEC E ASED .
RE SIDENCE
U NKNOWN

Pers on s who se coo perat1 on
you thought you had may surprise you tod ay when they're
reluctant to go along with your
plans

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20)
Your easygo1ng natiJre may
lead others to think they ca n
expect more from you today
than IS reasonable. Put your
foot down

®~
Merch 24. 1976

The coming year should be an
extremely busy one fo r you ,
w ith-heavy irons in the fire. Try
not to saddle yourself w ith n on
productrve projects tha t could
detract from yo ur efforts

•

The Almanac
By
United
Press
United Press International
Today is Tuesday, March
23, the 83rd day of 1976 with
283 to follow.
The moon is between its
last quarter and new phase .
The morning stars are
Mercury and Venus . .
The evening stars are
Mars, Jupiter a nd Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aries.
German rocket scientist
Wernher Von Braun and
American actress Joan
Crawford were born on
March 23 .. :he in 1912 and. she
in 1908. '
On this day in history:
In 1775, Patrick Henry,
advoca ling arming Virginia
in preparation for war with
England, declared : "I know
not what course others may
take, but for me, give me
liberty or give me death."
In
1942,
Japanese
Americans were moved from
their homes along the Pacific
Coast to inland relocation
sites as
a
wartime
precaution.
In 1965, Virgil 1Gus )
Grissom and John Young
were launched from Cape
Kennedy to become the first
two-man American space
team to go into orbit.
In 1975, Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger returned to
Washington after failing in a
personal mission to Egypt
and Israel to bring about a
peace agreement.
A thought for the ·day :
American movie magnate
Samuel Goldwyn said: " A
verbal contract · isn't worth
the paper It's written on ."

1614) 985-4164 .

3·23 Jtc

We

WI$H to express our
sin c ere thanks to relatives
and friends for the ex pression of sympathy and

kindness shown during th e

puslng of mv wife , Lule
Fltchpatrlck and mo ther of
Mrs . tternard Scarberry
and Mrs . Lucille Murray
May God bless eactl of you
Curnel Fltchpatrlck , Mrs .
Scarberry
and
Mrs
Murray ,
3-23 · 1tC

_ __

-

--~------

19 69
IN TERN ATIONAL
pi c kup ,
com pl ete
n ew
ex ha ust system Carb ure tor
OIJerhauled . Phone 99 2 7 149 .
3 '1 1 61C

---

19 70
PONTIA C
Catalina
h ardtop coupe , p b , p s ,
a c., V -B motor . $750 . Ph one
949 .2589
3. 2 1 3tc
19 74 DA t s-UNB2i OFaSibaC ~o: ,
4 speed , has r adia I tires ,
AM FM ster eo 8 track . l rke
new Call Cha rl ie Matth ews,
991 2257
3 19 5t c

10 7 ] "
TIMB ER. lOP
P ri ce f o r
sl and1ng timb er Cal l ( 614 )
1
· 46 8~70
3 7 tt c

PROPOSALS

l'.f /0 CUTL/I. ~S
Phon(' 9Y'l 3 110

~ up r e rn c

1 17

".. OUTHERN
yel l ow p rn e
pos ts N ow bUYing sever a l
51les . contacl
13urke
P.1r so n~
Bo wlby Corp , P
0 Bo x ] Y. ~ p e n ce r , w Va
'J&lt;&gt;J7b Ph on e &lt;30.1r 971 l?r,u
nr e ve n 1n qs (301~ 'J!,.I /b9 .t

Ph . (614)

2· 12 I

•.tc

Watch for List
Items La fer .

.

For Sale

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

For Rent

______ --

--

TEAFORD

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

_________

_____ _

Employment Wanted

________ _____ _

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

----------

- - -------

-·-------------

------ --

-

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

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

CUB Farm all WfHi mower and
p low . Camper tha i wit ! fit a
6ft. bed truck Phone (614)
98 5 392.t .
321 -6tp

Ho uSE

1n Cheste r , Ohi O.
New ly r edecora t ed, fully
c arpet ed, mostlY furn ish ed
Shown 12 t o 4, M arch 27 th
R easonllb l e r ent . Call 1

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
KI_DS IN YOUR HAIR- LOOK HERE. 2 slory home in
th e c ountry . 3 large bedrms., large spaci ou s li Ving
room, dming room, kitchen with built-I ns, bath, a nd
ut i lity room . 2 ca r co ncre t e block garage, garden space
and str awberry patch , a lm ost I acre of land . Where?
About 5 minutes from Pom eroy on Co. Rd . 30 . Pric ed

on l y $11 .000 .

·

90 ACRES VACANT LAND - you wou ld know spring is
here w hen ybu see this wide green valley wrth a brook
running thro ugh It ; just pertec;t for a large lake ;
wooded hill side just c rying f or a cab i;, . .' .' Here•s
scenery a nd seclusion .. , at less than $300 per acre.

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

FURNis HED ,
2
bedrm .
apartment. adu lt s on l y, in
Midd leport . Phon e 992 -3874.
3-12-tf c
~---- ---------

T h is is the rig ht prrce ... for this modern two bedroom
home. In the cou n tr y near Bashan .. City wa ter a nd
natural gas. Even a garden .
Ca II for aPPOintment

9 ACRES OF WOODED AREA - Ju sI off Union Ave A
$4,000 00.

POME·ROY - H igh v rew ·. , low pri ce , ch eck !hi!; 3
bedroom home w ith large dini ng room ; living room
with firepla ce; kitchen and bath, nat . gas , furniture
goes too ... one low price $7500.00 .

Want that FOR SALE ad to read SOLD.
Call Jimmy Deem
949-2388

l! " ~ f-U R f\~t !

-~--

--

In
Pom ero y :! bcc.Jrrn . n ew l y
redecorat ed , fuiiV carpeted .
Cell In th e earlY a .m , 992. · 1 R 601', t ,u.._.s ~ wrth bath , good
loc arton , lull basement, 391
2288
South Second , Middleport .

Rill Estate for Sale

f

2-22 -llc

- -------~----- ·, 1, , 111~ M tra iler , reet nice .
Ph one 992 ·3324 .

3 21 tfc

-----------J B ED R M h ouse wi t h ba t h i[1
-·-

Rut l and

·'

r~

Phone 992 5858
3 9. tf c

...
I

r exPERiENcm
Rad iata '
Servic«- ·. ~

&gt;Ci j'l "

..

'

Ph. 949-l404

P h . '1 97 1114

WI L L TR IM of cut trees and
Shrub bery
Phone 9•19 n.J5
or 74? 3167
1 ?7 ?6t c
C

!

~

ACROSS

Q 8. u

l~Ll:

lr !nl nlin(/

1 colloq. I

; I

E:XCI\VA r lN G , OOll'r , lo.) tn:·.and backh oe w or k . scp tr c
rank s
1n"il&lt;1lled .
dump
tru c k s f1tl d to b(JV ~ for h 1re .
will ha ul t il l (lr r t. lop soH[
lrme s t of'le and qrd vc ! C"l
Bob or RoQer Je tt er :. , day
p h on e 99? 70B9, 111Qh l phon+,;
99? J'i25 or 99 2 5737
2 I I Ifc

N EW b1 -leve l home, 3 bed r m ,
bu i ll i n k i l c h en , c arp e t ,
in
ba se m e n t ,
g a ra g e
basem ent , locat e d behrnd
g r ade sc h oo l , Lon g St .,
Ru tla nd , Ohio
See Milo
Hu t c h ison , or phone 742

2306

3 23 if C

6 ROOM ho u se In Middleport ,
n ext lo s chool. n ew sh mg le
root , ss .soo Phone 99 2 7275 .
3 23 3t p

Phone 992 -2215 .

NEW

furnace,

3-21 -12tp

HOME for sate by prrva l t.&lt;
o wner ,
31
a c res ,
4
bedrooms , barn on bla ck top
road , gtts and w"ter Phon e
9-19 2023 .
3 1 26tp

Budgel gas bill $35.00 .
EXCELLENT
CONDITION. 518,500 .
WE
NEED
NEWER
HOMES. .
.
992-2259 qr 992-2566

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

LjOU

to be

happLj,
Clovia!

Austen

women's

novel

org.

•

••

·-...,...,
••\ I

." ''
'

'

is

,\ X \" D L K .\ \ X R '
I. Q X G F E I. I. 0 W

One lettrr simpl y sta n d s fo r anothf'r , In th is..~ampli' ·\ i s
u sr d f or thf' three I.'s. X f or th e two 0 s. etc s mgle !{' tt~rs ,
apostrophes . th e length and (o rmat~ o n of thr wo r cls ate at\
hints. Eath da~· th r rode h' tl&lt;' rs ~II"(' (hfTf'ren t.

W E BI\LL
y 51)(.

••

Wt:t::Kt&gt; O F F . .•

'

l'RVPTOIIUOTES

-'".
,,
BQKGK . N

"'"

I.PY

,

.-

,,"

.
l'

'
'•

WE GOT ONE OF
THEM BODACIOUS
RECLINIC\J' CHAIRS,
LUKE\/

GLORV BE!!

MAW'S USIN' IT
RIGHT NOW

LET ME
TRY ITOUT
SNUFFV

l

TYXI

RJXX

BQPB"N

II

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TYK

BQK

BQJYW

BQ P B

C TUJK N.

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K F M 1. p B J T Y . - A J X X

,. K G N
G I W
DN '
T
Yesterday 's Cryploquole: SOMETIMES 1 THINK 1 Dl
HAISE OUR CHII.DRF."', I l.OWF.Rf:D THEM . - RICHARD
AHMOUR
fC&gt;

1976 Kin&amp;l&gt;' ealures

SyndiCI~l' .

Ll TTLE FELLOW HE.I:E
HIS
/1\ETATA~:lAL

n'::lD!TH;~R~se,eON

'
,,
•'

Mason , W. Va.
)•

3,4,15; Movie ''Promise Him

knave saves the day

West

North East

South

1.
Pass
Pass

Pass
3 N.T

INT.

Pass
Pass

bring the contract home.
He wouldn't have been able
to do th1s if" West had decided
to play singles (he mighl well
do since his partner had
shown a very bad hand) and
played out ace-king and 10 of
spades, but West made the
standard fourth -best lead and
South brought home the con·
tract by means of a second
hand high play. He went up
with dummy·s jack of spades.
It held and now South was able
to finesse in clubs with safety
since hts queen of spades was
a second stopper in the suit.

~~@V.~~

A Misstssippi reader asks
who deals the next hand in a
rubber bridge game after a
Opening lead - 8 •
hand is passed out.
'-----------~
The answer 1s that the deal
passes to the player on the left
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
as if the hand had been
When your left-hand oppo- just
bid
and
played.
nent opens the bidding with
one of a suit and his partner
(Do you have a question
passes it is up to you to reopen lor the experts? Write "Ask
on the theory that your the Jacobys " care of this
partner will hold the balance newspaper. The Jacobys will
of power. In the situation you answer individual questions
don•t need 16 points to bid if stamped. self-addresse"d
one notrump and South·s 14- envelopes are enclosed. The
point notrump was full y most interesting questions
justified
So w~s North "s rai se to will be used in this column
and wfff receive copies or
three and it was up to South to JACOBY
MODERN.)
Pass

Inc. I

1~:UK!:

,..,

Carson

Anylhlng .. .'' 6,13; Movie "The Biggest Bun~le of
Them All" 8: Movie ' "Honeymoon Hotel 10;
Janakl 33.
1:QO-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

Neither vulnerable

TIAILY CRYI'1'0Ql10TE - ll~re' ho" tn wnrk it :
$HE WAG
PRESSED FOR

ll : .~~Johnny

..-+--t-t-+----1--tl

Kind of
history
2 Felled
:1 Not interesting
4 Neighbor
of Ala.

·,•

.A;

NORTH
• J2
• K to 3
t K 85
ofoQJ toBG
WEST !D)
EAST
•AKt086
.93
¥QH
¥J852
tQ92
tJ763
of,K5
o!o942
SOUTH
• Q7 54
¥ A9 6
t A JO 4
• A73

DOWN

"

Herman Grate

river
Put to
sea
37 Hold
back
39 Patriotic
36

~-+--t--t--r-'-!Spade

cormnon

. '

MASON FURNITURE

valued
33 Otherwise
34 Denude
35 Greek

Arthur

~ ~~~~~~~~~~ ~
"

FRIIMY UNTIL 8 PM

32 Greatly

WIN AT BRIDGE

42 Un -

. '·'

Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.-I:JOtil S:OO
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

Grand Opry
23 Marsh
24 Be quiet '
26 Ca 11 to get
attention
29 Wahine 's
dance
30 Russian
ruler
31 Jane

1 One

~....

STORE HOURS

2~

43 Domain

~

MASON lliURNITURE

Yesterday's Answer

41 Litlle

~·

. ..

773-5592

want

~·

and 5 P.M.

.

just

I

8 A.M., The Noon Report,

carpeting, tile / paneling,
siding, storm doors &amp;
wlndows. Porches , full
bas~ment, 2 car garage.

'

we1ght
s Abstract
being
purchase
9 Hone
i1 Word with
12 wds. l
up, down,
14 Make - meet
15 Vent
etc.
16 Danube
13 Plant
covering
tnbutary
17 Approxi·
12 wds. l
mately
16 Yoko ·n
Behmd
r.:------;-;--;-~ 1 Attic
18
Regret
can wait! 25 Like 12
19 Palm
Across
13 wds. l
leaf
20 German
'f.;;;~:!7 Crew
Type of
city
ruler
21 Ship's VOY·
Kind of
age account
fever
Old hymn
12 wds. l
34 Low·
[
pitched
38 Had
suspicions
(3 wda. )
40 Absalom·s
cousin

•

W I L L cto odL1 ro!) s, r ooh ny ,
pilrn l ing h aulrnq , rr ccw or'k
&lt;mel nl owin~ Ca ll 9Y 7 '! 409 .
3 2 '26 1(

AT

......~~~~~~~

We

''

EXPANDED WEEK DAY NEWSCASTS

~

Let's q
Before weqo
back so I I wonder it...
can pack~ &amp;-r-----.

9 Ill \ fc ..-

2 .J tt c

Asian

j

nest
II Hide
12 Dairy

J•r
',

10

z

5 Footlike
part
6 Dele·s ·
opposite

6 Ragout
10 Eagle"s

Real Estate For Sale

--~-

~ ~~'61:111
. ~,VI
by THOMAS JOSEPH
1 Title holder

•'

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

~~"

Puml'rO)
__ _J

yea r s ('~pcr•l,'n c(
ln~u t NI
lr f'Q ('Siima Jo•&lt;, rdll Q9 ') 2) H! ~
REMOD E; LIN G ,
Ptumbinu ,
o r (61-ll &amp;Yfl 7?17 ;\lt) •1ny
r..-,·
heat in g and al l types 0'1
10 ,., 1f c ..;.,. ·
gene r al
rcp &lt;l! r
Work
t
•" I
guaranteed
70 ye ars ex
~ EWtN C M /\C HtNF.:- RC'pilrrs,
pcrren ce
Ph one 997 ;&gt;.109
S!? r iJicfl (i(t IHilkrs 99? i784
5 1 lie
The f &lt;1t:lr1( l,.h(.lp , Pon, cr'oy
l\u lhOr l7c-d 'lrpqvr C.. aif''l ,l nd
O' DELL Ali n en;&lt;'nl tocafcct
~·ervi C l'
Wr"'htHpe n
R ut l and
Grad e
be h 1n d
Sciss or "&gt;
Sc ho o l
Tune u p , brakes .
l 79 li e.
w h eel bal ancing , alinemcr]l
Ph on e 7·1'1 }00-1
·
RE /\DY MIX CO N •_ .... L I I_
J 1 16 1tc
d e l rve r t'd rr qt11 10 your
proje c t t rl SI rl nd cas v I ree
WI LL
do
ro o f rng .
(On
€''i.l11nat cs Ph or1ro -';1 97 37 fiJ ,
struction , plumb1n g and
GbcQtein Rci'l tt y Mn~ 'Co,
h ea li n g . No job too la r gC' or
Mrddlf&gt;port Ohr o
too small . Phon e 747 23·18
6 30 li e
3 19 261C
E L WO O D flOWEr&lt; ) R rPI\IR · t
'l wecp cro; I OD~I('r•, nons . ~ :
all sm.111 &lt;:~ pp l l fl llC('',) L.:t wn , 1
mowt~ r n .. xt lo S1.1 tr H rfl h
,.
way GJrttgc on t ~owrc l
Ph nn f' 11{1'; 38?~
MODERN hom e 111 Chester , B
1 l o tt c
ro oms : '} ba ths . 1 por c h es.
sunporch . 1 ' ba semen I, crly
and w e ll water , natura l g as, S EPT I C 1 1\NK ~, c lca n ('(i
Mod er n SqnrtalrOn •Jq'} Jl;lSJ ,1
garage . Pri ce ct ro se ll
or 99 ~ Jl.t9
Pho n e (6 14) 965 4\0 ?

---------

... v.,_,,,.,..

AJIRort~loP.-I'IId

EX CAVAT l N G
11/\(1&lt;' HOI:_ ~
A ND DOZER L A.R&amp;L .A N D
SM ALL
S FP Tu: T/\NKS
, IN ~ l A LLl O
BILL
PUL LI N S, PHO NL 99 ? 74/ij,
DA Y OR Nl(;ll'f
2 n 'i 71p

BRf-\D FO RD , Auction ee r
Co mpl ele Sf' rv 1ce . Phone
949 2·1B7 or 9,19 2000, R &lt;;~cine .
Oh ro , Cr ill Brad tord
10 9 rf c

porches- small basement) .

-

..

SMI_TH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

OPEN TUES . THRU SAT
6 · JOTIIIIO 00
3 17 I mo .

MUST SELL - 22 lf' acres
- 1 home &amp; 2 apartnien~s
has fr-ee gas , and own
water systems . I Mobile
Home . All rented at all
times . $420.00 per month
plus gas well. Asking

frame

'

N at h an R1qqs ,
Rold il! fOI Sp(' Ctil lr \ l'

Racin e, Ohi o

WMPO AM-F·M

$12.000.
FORKED RUN LAKE Fishing cabin. 3 rooms , 2
porches and a path . (needs
some repair) . $2 ,800
POMEROY 7 room

'

1

-...

•

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

.....
.-.

~RUMEN!

LIT11..E ORPHAN ANNIE

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

( 304) 773 -5626

-

1I

r ,., . ;n orders and pick up

3-2 1-Jt p

Good condition . 12 glassed

form four ordinary worda.

TOM IF

118lrno

ON

111, baths, insulated, storm
doors &amp; wlndows, N . G .
heat, garage &amp; carpqrt .

M&gt;ton*/J .-1 ~

Unscramble the!te four Jum~les.
one letter to eKh square, to

biRi. ! IS
'/OUR
MOOt-N
AT Uf »&amp; "

PH. 992-6173

"' twenty m mutes
Located at 329-lrd Street

--------..----RUG S of all sizes . Call Ma son.

...

J1llJIWID!1J]®u..J

HEAR NEWS FIRST

$25 ,000.
MAKE
AN
OFFER .
MIDDLEPORT - 5 BR .

Farmtlme 10.

-.

No w accepting clients
fo r bookkee pi ng and
tax service .

3709 ,

3-21 6tc
' ENJOY grac io us livin g at - VIllage Man or in Mid dlepor t for as low us $130 30 INCH Kenmore el ec . ran CAt: .
per
m o nth
With
all '
Phon e 992 6162 .
utilities
paid .
These ,
3.19 3tc
ar e brand new high quality -~-----------.._
apa rt ment s al prr ces you 1973 HONDA road bike , ex .
can aftorQ Yo ur rent ln .
cellent
c ondition , 3, 900
etudes rnonth to month
m tles , tot of ex t ras . Phon e
l eases, all elec . living ,
742-22 11 ; aft er 5 p m call
carpeting,
range
and
742 2201 .
refrigerator , fre e trash
3· 19 -6t c
pickup , cable TV at your
ex pense ,
and
on -site laundry fac i lit i es . Con - '23 CH A NNEL C B . Radios ,
$109 95 up , antenne , $14 95
venien t to shopping on Third
up . 4 fill 9 , Tuesdav thru
end Mil l Stree ts i n M id Friday, 12 till 6 Sarurdlly . 60
dleport Se e the manager ar
Central Ave ., Athens , Ohio .
R1versi de A partm e nts or
3-21 -1Q1p
cal l 992 · 3273
FtJ rn/sh ed
apartments
ar e
al so
GOOD h(ty , ne ve r w e t . Phone
av a ila b le .
949 15'1~
_ _ _ _ _.l _ _ _2·2·78tc
_ _
3 10 121 c

I

10.

6:4()-Qun ce of Prevention 10.
6;45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:55-Chuck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
Slate 13.
7:QO-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, Amorita 6,13; CBS
News 9; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
e:oo-Lassle 6: Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame Sl 33.
e:Jo-Big Valley 6.
9:QO-Not for Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4.15; Luty
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning wit~ D.J. 13.
9:3o-A.M. 3; One Llfelo Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
10: oo-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Rlaht 8.10.
11 : oo-W~eel of Fortune 3.15; Weekday 4; Gambll
8,10; Farmer' s Daughter 13 .
11 :3Q-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Happy Oays13; Love
of Life 8,10: Sesame Sl. 20,33 .
11 · 55-Take Kerr 8; Dan I mel's World 10.
12 : QO-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15; Let's Make a
Deal 13; Bob Braun' s 50-50 Club 4; News 6,8,10.
12 : 31i-Take My Advice 3,15; All My Children 6,13;
Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
·
12:45-Eiec . co. 33 .
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
1: 00-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8:
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women ·Only 15.
1:»-Days of Our Lives 3,4, lS; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, 13;
As lhe World Turns 8, 10.2:QO-S20,000 Pyramid 6,13 •
2:3Q-Doctors 3,4, 15; Neighbors 6, 13, Guiding Light
8, 10.
.
3:QO-Another World 3,4,15;
General Hospllal 6.13;
Kup 's Show 20.
J:JO--&lt;lne Life lo Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6;
Malch Game 8,10: Educating the Handicapped
Children 33.
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3: Merv Griffin 4: Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
20,33; Dinah 13.
F
II
4: 3Q-Bewllched 3; Mod Squad 6: Pari ridge am y 8 :
Ssame St. 20,33; Fllntstones 15.
5 ·QO-Bonanza 3: Family Affair 9; Slar Trek 15.
s:JO-Adam-12 4,13; News 6: Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Elelec. Co. 20.33.
20 33
6·oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6;
oom • ·
6:3o-NBC News 3,4,15: ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
· CBS News 8,10; Crop Game 20: Crascolendes 33.
1·oo-Trulh or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
· Dollars 6; Pop Goes t~e Country 9; News 10; Wild
Kingdom 13; Area Mayors Report 15: Book Beat
20 .. Know Your School 33.
7· 3o-:Lasl of the Wild 3: .Name that Tune 4; Wild Wild
· world of Animals 6; Welcome Back. Kolter 7;
Match Game PM a: EvenlnQ Edition with Martin
Agronsky 9,20; Movie "American Guerilla In lhe
Phllllplnes" 9: The Judge 10: To Tell the Truth 13.
8. QO-Little House on the Prairie 3,4, 15; Bionic Woma1t
. 6,13: Mystery of the Andrea Doria 9,10; The Way
Was 20; Decades of Decision 33 .
a··3Q-Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
9:QO-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,4,15; Baretta 6,13 ; Cannon
. 8, 10; Dante In America 33; Decades of Decision 20.
9:JQ-Dumpllngs 3.4.15.
10·oo-McNaughlon's DauQhter 3,4, 15; Starsky
. Hutch 6,13: Blue Knight 8,10: Renoir 33: News .
10:3Q-Aimanac 20; Deamer 33.
11·oo-News 3,4,6,8,10.13.15; ABC News 33.

-~

of

FAR MALL Sup er C tractor
w ith tw in plow s and mower.
q uic k hitch . Phone (6 14) 667 -

3-19-7tc

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

DON'T FLIP OUT

little dozer wo rk and have a few home sites -

(3 14) 866 -1731 .

6 : QO--Sunrlse Semester

6:15-Farm Reporl 13.
6::ID-The Story 13.
6:3o-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;

9:QO-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15; Lola Falana 6,13; Mash
8.10; Adams Chronicles 20.33

PUBUC .
ACCOUNTANT

Italian-Style Pizza

---·- - - - --

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

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1976

Theatre 33.

Consumer Surviva l 20,33.

LARRY WHOBREY

SAM'S
PillA SHOP

------ - --

n
-------

A THING CA N

l :QO-News 13 .
1· Jtl- Tomorr ow 3,4

8.QO-Movln' On 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; Dr . Seuss
8, 10; Behind the lines 33; Internat ional An l mation
F eslival 20.
8: 3o-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Good Ti mes B, IO.

Ph . 949 -1013 or 843 -1667

Real Estate for Sale

-

Pets

•
'
1-:-:
'100

F ro m a she lf to a hou se. al l
t ypes or , bull~ ing a n d
r emode l ing
!rom
the
· fo undatiOn up . Addition~.
c arp e ting , pai n trng , srd rng,
roofmg , paneling , paper
ha nging etc .

3 17- l mo.

Grace Episcopal Parish
FISCAL YEAR 1977
f-tou se, East Main Street,
COMPREHENSIVE
MANPOWER PROGRAMS
Pomeroy , Ohio (Beside Old
1970 MOB I LE ho me, 12 )( 44 , 2
Not ice 1s h ereby grven th at
Pom eroy Jr High School)
3 I ~ I ll p
bearm , gas, Ph one (304)
the
R egio nal
M a,np ower
773 5460 or 992 5001
TUPP E R S PL A IN S, N ew 3
Serv ic es Counc1 1. A rea 8, rs
Speakers
:
Robert
'..:A~
H
p
ar
d~
ll
rnake5
iina
ca r.pe ted.
b edrm , hou ses
r equeslrng p r o po sal s for F Y
3 23 6tp
mod
e
ls
o
f
rnob1t
e
h
om
es
Hutchinson and Joe
ran ge, ga r age , large tot s.
'77 Manpower Program s.
Ph one
·ea
co de 614 423
F H A f inan c in g a~Jailab l e,
Reed. ·
Prog ram s are fund ed thr oug h
9'i3 I
14 x 65 MOBILE h om e tor sa te ,
$2 1, 900 . P h on e ! 614l 667
Ti fl e I mon ey authorized by
For
mo
r
e
i
nformat
1on
,
c
all
A 13 I l c
630 4.
REFRESHMENTS
th e
Comp r ehensive
Em ~.
99 '1 7256 .
3 14 161p
p loymcn t and Tra1nmg A c t of
DOOR PRIZES
3 21 7tp
1973 (CETA) . As a com ponent
-INFORMATION
of CE T A , th e general purpose
UNFUR NI S H E D I J )( 70 4 1\C R E !:&gt; . 7 qood we lls, ~
DOOR PR-IZES
of T i tle I prog ram s rs to
mobtl e h ome . tola l ete c . 3
COON H 6UN OdO g , 11 month s
bcclr m tr ai lt' r W rll sell wilh
provide job tra inin g and
POMEROY LANDMARK
ton cen tr al ai r con dr t 1oner .
ol d P ho ne 992 -7149.
rr-a iiL• r or w r!hour Call 7.1')
em ploym ent opportunities for
excell
en
t
co
ndr!
Jon
P
h
one
Jack
W. Carsey, Mgr.
3
6tc
'n l / i'lf lflr ,fp nl Prrl('';/500
econom1c at l y drsadvantag ed.
1.11
t6H4
or
247
2664
l o r bo lh
Phone 992 -2181
and
un
u n e mploye d
TW O coon hou nd Pu ps _ Phone
3 10 I fc.
3 I? J?rp
dere mp to yed persons and t o
99 2 78 10
assure that th ese se r v ices l ead
WANT Vacat1on? Need c hores
3 21 61 c
to maximum employment
1973 14 lC 70 TR A I LER , 3
do ne?
For
more
Ill - - - - opportun r t1es
G roup s
Oe d roo m s,
1 1-;
baths
formation , c a l l 16 14 ) 985
AKC REG f em ale Chih uahua ,
designat ed b y R MS C 8 to b e
428 1.
Ass um e paym en t s , $ 11 2.90
gold
en
f
awn
,
$75
.
4
y
ea
r
s
PhOn e 992 3388
g1v en primary c onsid eration
3·21 -61p
old Phon e 99 2 '1265 .
are t h e ec onom ic ally drsad
3 19 4t p
3
IY
'
p
IJantage d .
and
th e
un - WIL L g1vep iano te ssons in my
VIrgil B .• Sr., Broker
der e m play e d
and
u nem
h ome . Ca lt 742 -2131
110 Mechanic Pomeroy , 0 .
A K C Registe r e d Cu tt 1 ,&gt; 11J d
pla yed . Within t h ese area s,
Phone 992 -3325
Servic e, St ardus
spec rfic g roup s to be giiJen
' ng
Ph
one
(614)
98
5·42
,
prrority
are .
h ea d S o f
WILL car e f or e lder ly woman
T E NNA 8 tra ck
FM s t e r eo
househo ld , ve teran s; youth
J 16 tfc
REAL OAK FLOORS - In
in my home Phon e 992 73 14
radio co m bi n ation for ca r
i:md y o ung adults , th e han
Speak er s rn c l u d e d
$50 .
3 17 6tc
3 B . ~ .S .. n ice car p eting in
dicapped, and , o ld er work ers
Phone 949 . 2322 .
--------~-l 1ving &amp; family Rm s. On ly 4
Any indivrd ual or org anr zahon
:JAKE SURE you ge t e11ery •
3 17 6tc
yr s. old . $24 .500 .
m ay su bmit a propo sal,
po ssi blededuct 1on th is ye ar
4 ROOM S an d balh Plus utility
h owever, the regulations
MODERN
- u Brs., lge.
Ha 11e your Fe dera l a n d
room , sc reened in porc h , coA L ro~L Er C!ll~ cOa t
d isa llow the fund rng ot a
kit. w ith ba r , dining wi 1h
St a te Incom e T ax return by
forced
air
h
ea
t
Phone
992
Co
mprany
•
1
mile
north
o
f
pr og r am which wou l d p r od uce
an ac counta n t . Phone 992 ·
5630
s l rdi n g g la ss
dr s,
')
Ch esh ir e , o n Rl . 7 Pi ck you r
profit fo r the c ontra c t o r
617 3
_._
own , $20 p er ro n Open 6 d ays
cer a mic t ile bath s, ful l
3-23 -61 c
Geog raphi c area served rs
1 21 52t c
p er wee k . o r ca ll (61 -1) 367
- ....,..,...
basemen t and dbl garage
RM SC
Ar ea
8 . • P e rr y ;
AUTO P a ris _,.. 200 CIJb rc in ch 6
73 30 for fu rther m f o r m a tion
Hoc king ; At h en s; Morg an ;
$38
.000
N I G HT HAWK S Wr ll be bac k
cylrn d er Ford eng in e and 3
1 8 78 I c
Nob l e,· Monroe . Washi n gton ,
at Tal l Timb ers , no more
RIVER FRONT LOT speed
1r
ansm
iss
1
on
,
$100
.
and , M ei gs cou n t i es. Ap jun k b and s . Rodney Grov er
390 c ubi c i n c h M e r c ury 5 PIECE
Wat er , electric, and smal l
Hickory
F amily
Pli cations may be obtarned .
3-23 -3tc
En gi ne
and
automatic
building. $4, 000 . ·
r oom set , Cu stom made
from Paul D Bookman. Trtle I
lran smrssron , S150 Ca ll 992 ca nopy , approx . 15x l 5, 2 1 :~
LARGE - 9 rms .• 3 Br s.,
Fie l d R ep rese nt atrve , 11 7
7120
Nort h Pleasant Street , New
HP Jet propelled outboard
Jln bath s, hot wa t er heat
'
3- 2'3 4l p
Le)(lngton ,
Ohro
43764
motor , F oley R ee l mQwer ,
Living
acros s fr o n t of
g rinder , large , M cC ulloch
Compl e t e d
apptica t ron s
EXPERIENCED
au1o -~~----------15 C U FT . upright fre ezer,
hou se. Lo t s of c lose t s
cha
in
saw
Ma
c
1.
10
Phon
e
should be re t urn ed to Ch ester
mechanic looking for work
excellent condition . Ph one
La r-ge lot and beautiful
(6];)) 678 -2166
Wh 1te , P lann i n g Coordmator.
in my own g arage . Qualify
247 -22 05 or 247 -273 1.
Office of Manpower D eve lop .
view $16,500 .
3-18 -61p
work and reasonable rates .
3.23 ·6fc
ment. 30 E a st B r oa d St. .' 27th
Call 992 -7120 .
FIVE POINTS - Modern 3 •
F loor , Co lumbus, Ohio 43215,
,__
3 23 41p 1975 36 0 HONDA , e)(cel lent IN D AS H , 23 ~h annel C B . 8
Br s., al l paneled. lge. balh ,
no l at er than Aprrt 9, 1975
track , A M F M radio . Call
condi t ion, SB75 . Pf'lon e 9&gt;19
garage and lge lot $25,500
PrOposal s must b e su bmit led
1674
992 39 65
PAINTING in si de , out and
RACINE Nice 3 Brs,
rn tr i pli ca t e in t h e form
ro ots Phone Mason , (304 )
3 18 tf c
3·23 -3tc
prov i ded by r e Qu es t
large krt , dining, full
773 ·5626
- ---~basement , 1 1 , ~ ba t h s, Obi
3 21-6t c
3 A ND 4 ~M turnish ed and . H A Y , never been we t Phon e
13) 23, 24, 25. 3tc
garage
pl us . A lmost 11 1 ~
(61 4) 378 -6205 after 6 p . m
unfurn iShed apt s Phone 992 .
5434
acres $31 , 500
3 11 12t p
11 9 1fc 49 ACRES - 3 yrs . old, 2
-- - -bedroom
home, bat h, bir ch
COUNTRY MaP i l e Hom P. COAL , l 1mesto ne and all type s
k it c h en . c arport and full
of sa il a nd rock sa lt lor ic e
Par-k , Rt 33, ren mites n orth
and snow r emo11al
Ex
basemerit . $31.500.
of Pomer o y . LafQe lot s wrth
ce tstor Sa lt Wo rk s , East
WA NT
oon c r e l e pat 1os. Sidewal k s,
IF
YOU
Ma in St. Pome ro y , Ohio
runner s and · Off s treet
PROFE
SS
IONAL
Ph one 992 -3891.
parking . Ph one 992 .747 9
AOVI C'E, HIRE ONE, IT
12.7 rt c
12 31 tt c
WILL PAY YQU

Mobile Homes For Sale

.,'
'
••

CONSTRUCTION

Orange Twp . Volunte e r
Fire Department wtll hold
a consignment auction a t
the ftre house lo cated rn
Tuppers Plain s, Oh1o on
April llttJ b egrn ning at
10 : 00 a.m .

FO R SA LE near Lan gsv rtt e. 5
roo m house . roo t cell ar w ith
room OIJe r , 2 bay detac h ed
garage, 119 a cr es, no ba th ,
hot arid c otd wat er in kit
c h en , l P ga s heal , h eate r s
wit h house
Cart 74?.2 8 19
after 5 p .m .
3 17 71p

ARE YO U OUT OF
'lOUR 1,\INI&gt;! WHAT
SORT OF 5COUNOREL
WOULD PLAY SUC H
A TRICK'?!

HAPPE-N ;

0&amp;0

AUCTION SALE

eshmates on car petmg and in stallat io n .
We ' ll bnng samples to your
home wilh no obligation .
See how you can really
sa v e.
Mike Young , Manager
Sales and Installation
Rt. 3, Pomeroy , Ohio 4S769
Phone day or night
614 -991 -'2206
J )4 I f!IO

E"VHOPE:

ON &gt;

2191 rno

.. Free

IT II&lt;J THIS

VEr NOW IT "5
BLANK: CO NFOUND
11; I DON'T UII:DER5 TAND HOW SUCH

~===-~ .

mo .

SLOAN'S
.
CAIIPETING

~EALED

I

Ohro
Ph . 9\11 3993
4 10 1 mo

AVAILABLE
Tupper s Pl ains Chester
water D istri ct now selling
bu lk. water lo tanks on
trucks at our n ew ott1ce!
Loca te d on St. Rt. 7
1 Mile No r t h of
Easter n· H 1g h Schoo l
Se r ve Yourse lf Drspenser
Taking quart ers only , one
at a 11 me . f or 250 ga ll ons o f
wa t er .
Openal ll h e Trme
t or your c on ve n ience!
3 1 1nw .

985-4102

THE FORMULA
WAS W~t TTE~

OF COURSE l"M
5UR~:

Syrucu~e .

BULK WATER

BISSEll BUILDERS

1975 OLDSMOB I LE Sl ar f ire,
m us t se l l Ph o ne 992 7692 .
3-73 -6tp

_;..

PERSON to do te l e phone
su r vey work from their
home 1n the POf1"lerov area .
M us t h ave a pr rvate phone
Fou r hou r s per Clay . Call 446 4367 f or Info rmation
l 2) . If

Tuesday, March 30I
7:45 p.m.

-------------\

~----------

196 3 FALc;O N wa g on , pool
tabl e,
Mayl ag
wr inge r
w as her , b a c k b umper fo r
1971 O ld sm ob i l e , rotary
tire . front end tor 1 ton Ford
!ruck . Phon e 742-2174 .
3 23 3fp

7760

-----·- ·~-

C.rd of Thanks

M EA T CUT T E R for th is
area . Stat e exPerience a nd
Qua lr fical 1ons rn your le tt er
to Box 500 c -'0 Sunday T 1n1 es
Senti n e l , Ga l lipolis, Ohio
456 3 1
3-21 3t c
---~-~------- WOULD li k e to h ave lady to
l 1ve in , tr ee board . l ight
h ou se w ork . Phone 992 5798.
3-13-3tc

,OU"RE SURE!
T~Af"5 W~AT

LARRY LAVENDER

Rutland 742 ·23 31
Rog er Wam sley
l · l - tmo .

advantag e of our
prices .
Quality
built
homes. Nice lots available
in nice locations.

CAPTAIN EASY

REPLACEM ENT
WINDOW S
ALUMINUM
SIO ING- SOFF IT T
G U TTE·R 5- A WNIN GS

R&amp;J COINS

Take

19 72 PLYMOUTH Ous ter . 2
dr au t omat iC, a 1r Pho ne
992 ·5737
3 n 6tc

WINDOW S &amp; DOOR S

o•

SAVE MONEY?
Help Wanted

Fmanclng A'Jartable
Bl own in t o W alls &amp; Attics
STORM

Fo r Sale

WANT TO

Dlll l urnr tur e,
ice boxPs .
brass
b ed s,
Diet
wall
telephon es an d par rs. or
comp tele .h oLI Seh ot ds Wr ri e
M
D
Mil le r ,
Rl . 2.
Pom eroy, Ohio . Ca ll 992

PUBliC NOTICE
REQUEST FOR

S695

I

Insulation- Services

Find
buqed
tr eas u re .
Coins. r i ngs, sil ver. gold .
Corn &amp; Metal
D etectors
For R e nt

32J i mo .

MAJOR CHEMICAL
MEETING

16000.00 -

BLAC K and white f emale
coondog in Long Bottom
area . Has only T eve . P h one

1969 BELAIR 4 DR .
New ti r es, 8 cy t., auto , radio, green f irn sh .

Wanted To ·Buy

CAlL QUI CK.

Lost

f i r es, w h il e finish .

..--

.....

Blown

BUY , SELL or TRADE

5:QO-Bonannza 3; Fam ily Affair 8; Slar Trek 15
5:3Q-Adam -12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec .
Co 20.33, Adam -12.
6·QO-News 3,4,8. 10.13.15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; lTV
U1ili zation 33.
6·3Q-NBC News3.4, 15; ABC News 13: Andy Grilfilh 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33 .
7: 0&lt;&gt;- Tr-uth or Cons. J ; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollar s 6; Country Place 8; News 10; Name T hat
Tune 13, Family~ Aflalr 15 ; Anllque s 20; Wild Wild
World of Animals 33.
7:3Q-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal Wllh II 6;
525,000 Pyramid 8; Evening edlllon wilh Martin
Agrohsky 20; To Tell the Trulh 13; Price Is Righi
10; High School TV Honor Soclely 15; Family

t:::

FREE ESTIMATES

COINS

Automobile and
Truck Repair
State Rt . 124
Toward Rutland
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone : 992 -5682

1973 CHEVY VAN
S2495
6 cy l . auto. , r ight door g )ass a nd rear door gla ss, good

3o (.Jl 6,

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19)
There's a possrb ilrty today that
you may not properly caprtalrze
on your op portunitres because
you take them for granted

tires , low mileage, green fin 1sh .

MANNI N G D WEBS T ER.
J UDGE AND
EX OFF I C I O CL ERK .
CO MMON PLEA S COURT ,
ME I GS COUN T Y , O HI O ,
PROBATE DIVI SI ON

'"

ROGER HYSEUS
GARAGE

Day at a Time 8.10.
IO·QO-Ci l y of Angels 3.4.15; Family 6, 13; Switch 8,10;
N ews 20; Woman Al i ve 33.
10 :30-W oman Alive 20 ; Woman 33.
II :QO- News 3,4.6.8, 10, 13.1 5, ABC News 33.
11 : JG- N or th Carolina Primary 3,4,6,8,10 , 13, 15 ; J anak/
33 .
11...CG-Movie " Far from the Maddi ng Crowd'' 8: Movie
" Sons &amp; Lovers" 10.
11.45-Mystery of lhe Week 6, 13.
12 :00-Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15.

9 . 3o---one

TUESDAY. MARCH 23, 1976

·~

'1973 BUICK LESABRE
$2895
Cus t cpe ., auto ., P.S , P . B., speci al w heels , w -s-w

Notice

:n

Television log for easy viewing

J.!
-r.i

Motor Co
•

Of
QUALITY

Cantellarron
Corr ecti on s W tll be ac
re p led "" 1;t 9 • m
tor
Day of Publica I ron
REGULAT ION S
Th e Publ iSh er r ese rves
rhe rrg h J ro ed rr or rctect
any ads deemed ob
iCC IIOnitl
Th e pu~lisher
wilt nor be responsibl e tor
more lhan one rnc orrect
1nser1•on
RATES
F ar Wan t Ad Servi ce
., cent s pe r word on e
mser1 10n
Minimum ChargeS I 00
L t c ents per word three
consecutive
1nsert1o n s
16 ccn rs p er word six
r onsecut 1vc
1nscrtions .
?.S P e r Cent Dis cou n t on
paid aa s and ad~ paid
W1lhrn 10 day s
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
'i7 oo
lor
50
word
m inimum
Each adddional wo rd J
r ents
BLIND ADS
1\ ddilrona t ?5c Cha rg e
per 1\dverrisemen r.
OFFICE HOUR S
8 30 il m to S 00 p m .
Dar ty . 8 JO a n1 to 17 00
N oon Saturd ay
~honP todav 992 '2 156

Yard Sale

111 14 I 3J '1 . 9 , t 6,

Auto Sales

,....

You ar l' h er e by not !Ired tha i .
a Compta rnt hils been til-ed rn
rtH: Cornman Pl eas Cou r t of
fll\ t;igs Counry , Ohro. P r obate
Divrsion .
Courr
House ,
Pomeroy , Ohro , 157 69 , Case
No
21 , 7 18 ,
by
Ec;tward
Cheva l ier , Adminrstr ator of
th e
E slate
ot
Wayne
Chev al i e r .
Deceased,
Pla i ntiff ,
vs
Edward
Chev alier . e t al , and th e
unknown
h er rs .
their'
executo r s , .1Qm 1nrs tralors and
assrgns o f Wayne Chevalier ,
Decea sed , De f endants , whose
residcn c('S are unknown Th e
obr ec l of the Comp la int and
the dernand for retre t are ro
det e rn,me who are the next o f
krn , h eirs al law , !heir
exec urors . admmrst r a tor s and
assrgns of Way n e Chevalier .
Deceas~?d , en t il l ed by th e i&lt;'~ws
of I f) iS state 10 I he nex t estale
of rnheritancc an d to deter
rn ine I he shar e ro Wh 1c h th e
n exl of k rn or he1 r s at law ,
!herr
cxeculo r s,
ad
TH U R SDAY, F rr day and
mini slrators and assrgns . are
Saturday , Rot o li ller , 2 wrnd
C'ntrtled ac c ording to the
m 1ll s, ta p e p la ye r , baby and
statu t e 111 suc h c ases ma d e
boy thrng s, c lo th es, wal k er ,
and p r oiJided . and tor suc h
bac k pack , bed fra mes,
Other r elref as th e cou r t m ay
m ise i tem s 1 mrte fro m
de t errnine .
Chester Br1dge , Rt
248 .
You ar e h ereby notrf1 ed that
P ho ne 985 3335 .
you are r equ rr e d to answer the
3 23 tllp
Complai n t wilhin rwe n ty eight
clays a fter th e la st pubtrcalron ,
th e last pub l 1catron of which
will be on the 6t h day of Apr1 1,
19 76.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.len 19)

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

f

INFORMATION

C

Howeve1 you can succeed by
gom9 all -out.

Auto Sales

WAN r ADS

9 _ The Pomeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Tuesday, March 2.1. 1976
DICK TRACY

LISTEN CAREFVLL'( FOR
THIS IS THE WAI{ IT
ALL ~APPENED...

iNCiOENTALL'/, MA'AM,AAE
ON TRUTH

WE GRAI'ED

AND ACCURAC&lt;t'?

�•••
tO _ The Pumerny Sent met , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tut•:&lt;dm _March 2:1. 1976

Baptist rally held

•

Hike-Bike will
roll on May 15

Mrs. Mary Eno&lt;·h s
died on Munday

Bridge closing

Raymond Hartley of Racine dies

:

,

May of 1972, he was ~
member
of the Racine Gun
Ch urch, the "Sons of ~har un"
Mrs. Mary Gladys Enochs,
Club and lhe Public Em~' 1r sl
Southern Baptist u! the Sharon ll.tpllst Chun h
79, of 16t W Locust St.,
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
ployeea Retirement Syaten~Church of PomerO) attended of Ironton and the adult chotr
Wilmington, Ohio, a former Andrews satd lhts morning
Mr HarUey is survived by
the yo uth rall y an d of the Etnmi:lnuel Baptist
Metgs County restdent, dted Glen Smtih , Dtvlsion 10
a siSter, Mrs. Carrie Nea~
C\'ange hsm conference of thr Church of Jac kson
Racine ; one nephelr, DavMI
Plans for the second annual and Mr. and Mrs Hank Monday eve nmg the re engineer in Marietta ha s
Setoto Va lley Assot· ta tton at
Tht• goal of 330 bapttsms for
following a Long Illness
confirmed
the
bridge
wtll
Nease
, Baltimore, Ohio; one
Htke
Btke
whtch
last
year
the Park v1e w Elemen t~H)
Clela
nd,
Chester-Tuppers
1976 \\ ,as se l, and at tile close
Mrs E nochs was born on close on March JO
niece, Mary Alice Nea1111;
&amp;·hoot at Jackson Sa turda) of the mee llng, pastors of lhe raiSed $1,556 - were made Pla1ns area , 985-4112.
The mayor satd DOC McCoy
SeatUe, Wash.; one great
eventng
Rev , Leo nard assOC iatiOn stood at the fron t Monday mght by the Metgs
Anyone wishmg to help m March 10, 1897, in Meigs
nephew, Davis Russe!IStigler of Co lumbus wa s wlul e membe r s or the ir County Assoc ia ti on for another a rea 1s asked to County, Ute daughter of the wtll begm ferry serv•ce the
Nease , Baltimore, and
guest sp ake r for the l hurc hes came forward as a Retarded Ct ttze ns m a con l&lt;lc t Hank Cleland The late Ross and Martha Bowles same day the brtdge clo.es.
Halliday.
She
IS
survived
by
a
several
cOUSins.
Pedestrtan traffic will be
FINES LEVIED
evemng Rev Sttgler, who ges ture of their comnutment meeting at the Metgs Mental c ommumty chairpersons
daughter
.
Mrs.
Alice
McHealth
Center
Funeral
servlei!a Will ~
allowed on the bridge whtle It
Frned m the court of
has served as Dtrcetor of to wm others for Jesus Uus
wtll, among other thmgs, hne
Neall1
Wllmmgton
;
a
son,
held
Wednesday
at 3 p.m. at
Hank
Clela
nd
of
the
IS
closed
Fred
Middleport
Mayor
Evangelism 111 Ohio fo r the l'ommg year
up parbctpan Is and sponsors
Rodney
L
Enochs
m
New
Ewing
Chapel
with
the Rev.
Hoffman were Thomas
pas t 17 years Will retu e m
There were approx imately Chester area wtll serve as for lhe even t.
York;
four
grandchildren,
Howard
Shiveley
ofllciatmg,
cha1rman
for
the
annual
Roush,
Middleport,
$25
and
May
Nora Eason wtll be in
235 111 at tendance Allendmg
coots, disturbing lhe peace, Burial will be In Greenwood
Spec 1al
mus1r
wa s fr om the Pomeroy Churc h even t whtch tentatively has charge of the check pomt and two great-grandchildren, and
two
sis
ters,
Mrs.
Marvel
been
se
t
lor
10
a
m
May
15
and $50 and costs, assault and Cemetery. Friends may call
prese n ted
bv
Rt£'hard \\ ere Donna Spe ncer, Da1sy
stands comrmltee, Richard
Athens
,
and
Mrs
Mutchler,
battery;
Jenny Pennington, at the funeral home any time:.
s
tartm
g
from
the
sc
hoo
l
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
Crow, head of publicity , Rea
l;&gt;atlerson Hers hel McClure,
Myrtle
Smclatr,
Mtami,
Fla
property
on
East
Middleport,
Mam
St.
$25 and costs and
ADMITTED
Myrtle
Rous h , treasurer ,
and
HhoJean McC lu re, Sylvia
Mrs
.
E
nochs,
a
former
l.as
t
year
110
persons
took
30
days
probabon
on conDurst,
Syracuse
;
Clarence
Cla ren c e
Mig ht, ro ute
Zwtlhng Cmdy Patterson,
schoo
l
teacher,
was
a
part
111
the
Htke
Btke
VIction
of
contributing
to the
Mtght,
Middleport
,
Donald
chatrman
Jeanme McClure, Rena
member
of
the
Rebecca
delinquency
of
mmors;
"
ere
made
to
award
Covert
,
Pomeroy
;
Buddy
Plans
Tontle th ru Mar 25
The Btg Bend Ci tizens Band
Lefebre , Cheryl Le fe br e,
Lodge , Daugbters of the Thompson, Rac tne; John Charles W. Whttlmgton,
ConUnued from page
Cm liss Spencer, Ga ry trophtes, cups and cer- Radto Club wtll serve as the
American
Revolutton
,
the
JAWS
Mtddleport,
$25
and
costs,
Motley,
Middleport;
h
ft
cates
for
n
ders
and
Freda
change schools at mid-year.
safe l y
c ommttlee
Bas ham , Gera ld Spencer,
( Tec hn •color}
sponsors Chairpersons are to Represenbng the club at the Chnwn County Republican Marlin, Shade; Ttm othy disturbmg the peace, and $100
"No," answered Fmger:,
and Cathy Adkms
Club,
the lawrence, Mine rsville ; and coo Is and five days in adding, "Maybe you don't
p1ck up regis tration forms, meeting last night were Guy Women 's
posters and other rela~tl Hysell, Pi'estdent, Charles Wtlmmgton Busmess and Sherne Jewell, Rutland ; jail, assault upon a police understand how this works. ~
Bn sed on the nove l The
Professwnal Women's Club Beatrice Ratrden, Hartford ; offtcer; Charles D. Hysell,
ASK TO WED
Grent Wh 1te Sh(l r k" by
matenals at the olftce of Mrs Blake and Gary Hysell
"Maybe I don't," repliec!
Peter Bcnchley
A marn age hce nse was
and belonged to the Ftrst John Krawsczyn, Sr , Mtd- Jr , 22, Columbus, $25 and Greer.
Mary Skmner in the Mental
" PG"
Issue d to Ha rry Edgar Health Center beginmog
Chnst Church of Disciples of dleport ; Margaret Thomp- c osts , disorderly manner;
Greer also said the schoo)
ChriSt
Ste\&lt; art, 21, Mtddleport , and Wednesday
The
next
Steve
Hysell,
28,
Columbus,
son,
Letart,
W.
Va
;
Melvina
board
wanted to "phase in''
Show start s at 7 00 p m
Penn y Sue J ohn son, 17, assocJahon meetmg was set
Funeral servtces will be Barnhart, Middleport, Pearl $150 and costs and three days the mtegration plan over
Mtddleport.
held at 2 p .m. Thursday at the Me dors , Rutland ; Betty m jail, drtving while m- three years, which irrttateij
for 7·30 p m on Aprtll2 at the
SUITS FILED
meni&lt;I Lhealth center.
~
Dan Thompson Ford , Inc , Marsh Funeral Home, 187 E. McKmghl, Middleport ; Edtth tozicated , and John D. the judge.
Named to serve as com- Middleport, has fiLed an Locust Sl , Wtlmmgton . Hood, Mmersvtlle; Howard Zurcher, 25, Pomeroy, $5 and
" I do not propose at thil
muntty chairpersons for the action for damages to an Friends may call at the Nolan, Syracuse ; Howard C&lt;l!lls, improper backing.
ttme to mandate any
Htke Btke were Jean Woods , abandoned vehicle agamst H funeral home from 7 to 9 p m Nut ter, Reedsvt!le, Saith
phasmg," said Rubtn, whO
Pomeroy, 992-5024 , Mary L. Wtlbams, Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Wednesday Bunal wtll be at Fnend, Racme.
referred to a U.S. Slxllt
Sktnner , Mtddleport, 992- in Metgs County Common Sedalia, Ohio
DISCHARGED - Terry
Circuit
Court of Appeals
CLOTRJNG OFFERED
George, Everett Roush,
2500; Mr and Mrs Rtchard Pleas Court. Barbara James,
order
requiring
"complete"
Free Clothing Day will be
'• ·...
Grueser , Rutland , 742-li931; Pomeroy, filed for support
Marvtn Darst, Rtchard held at the Salvabon Anny, desegregation of Dayton
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Mr and Mrs . Robert Eason, under
Sauer, Pearl Darst
lhe
Reciprocal
Butternut Ave, Pomeroy, on schools by Sept 1
Thursda) through
Flatwoods area , 992-7277 , Agreement Act against
Board of Education offtclal
Thursday from 10 a m until
Saturday a chance of
Rick Crow, Letart-syracuse Lonnel Coats, and Credtthrtft
William
Goff testified that
12 noon All area residents m
Holzer Medical Center
showers Thursday and
requirmg
elementary
area , 247-3737 ; Clarence of Amenca , Inc., Galbpohs,
need of clothing are mvlled.
t Discharges, March 22)
again a bout Saturday.
Mtght, Danvtlle area , 742-3089 ftled an action agamst
teachers
to
change
James Btggs, Charles
Highs will be In the 60s
classrooms
at
mtdyear
Marcta Capehart, MidConrad, Gene Cook, Mrs.
Thursday and In the mid
"would be devastating to the
dleport, uskmg $1 ,029 69
Wilham Oatley and daughter,
50s to the mid 60s Friday
learrung
process" because
Harold Dalley, Sr , Donald
and Saturday. Lows mostly
teachers
in
the lower grades
Dalton, Jr , Mrs Melvm
CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY
will be In the 40s.
their
classrooms to
decorate
DaviS and son, Kalhenne
MASON - The btrthday of
Conlmued
from
page
2
become
"learning
centers."
(Contmued from page 1)
Elhs, Wtlham Fetty, Jr.,
Mrs
Landon
(
Ca
thenne
)
mvesttgation
at
Scotia
will
But
NAACP
attorney
Louts
Each
of
the
23
John Jeffers, Rena Johnson,
Smith,
Mason,
was
observed
produce
Lucas
complained
to
Golf,
congresswnal distrtcts has
Barbara Jones, Goldte Long,
They
pomt
to
the
1970
"lsn
'I
the
real
problem
!hal
three delegates , and three Friday evemng al her home
Jenmler Meyer , Theresa
WDGETOMEET
Ice
cream
and
cake
were
explosion
at
the
Finley
Coal
teachers
have
protested
alternates. Reagan, 1f he
The annual mspectwn of Miller, Jack Payton, Deme
entered 111 all the diStrtcts, served. Sendmg gifts were Shade River Lodge 45) Phtpps, Sharlene Ptckens, Co , m Hyden, Ky , 35 rrnles moving and are putting
Nelson F &amp;AM, Chester, wtll be hel&lt;\ Minme Rtffle, Lmda Roberts, northwest of Scotia, in whtch pressure on the board of
could wm . up lo 69 Mr. and Mrs
Reynolds,
Jay
and
Jill,
Mr Fnday,March26at 7·30p m Myrl Roberts , Luretha 38 miners dted .
educa!Loo?"
delegates
and
Mrs
Kenneth
Reynolds
, All master masons are m- Smtth, Maxine Smtth, Paul
A prohibited explosive
"No," said Goff, who mainPrestdent Ford already has
You can bank m t he comfort of your own car
devtce
was
found
at
the
scene
tained
that his objection was
attracted almost all the top Ketlh and Kelly; Mr and vtled.
Wagner , Sarah Wheeler,
at our drtve m windo w A t eller IS stationed
of
the
Hyden
blast
and
MESA
stnctly
"my opinion."
Republican leaders m Ohto to Mrs Norman Reynolds, Mr
Vtrgmw Wtlllams, Thomas
th e re during al l r e gular bankmg hours plus
Finger's
plan would "pair"
brought
23
crlrmnal
charges
serve as his delegates at- and Mrs Carroll Shmn,
Yenan, Jr
t'REE
CLOTHING
Lowell
and
Alisa
,
Mrs
Velma
agamst
the
firm
and
tls
44 of Dayton's 53 elementary
Frtday evenmg s from 5 00 til 7·00 It ' s just
large. He also has ltled a full
(Births, March 22)
CHESHIRE - The Galha prestdent,
Charles
Finley,
schools,
involvmg about
another s pec tal banking convenience from
slate of dtstrtct delegates and Luckeydoo, Mrs. Vada Kmg
Mr and Mrs. Dexter R
and Mrs Emogene Batley Metg s Commumty Aclton Dowell, daughter, Galhpohs
The Justice Department 12,000 elementary school
" THE FRIENDLY BANK "
alternates
Agency will hold lis free
children
Voss called 11 "an 11.35
Ferry, W Va , Mr and Mrs dropped 19 of tlie. charges,
clothmg
hours
from
9
a
m
lo
including
all
dtrectly
Only four of Dayton'a 10
effort" referring to the lith
Paul Jenktns , son, Oak Hill,
2
p
m
Thursday
for
persons
connected
with
the
disaster,
high
schools - all black Roth
hour "The key question is
Mr and Mrs Ketth A Jones ,
TWO
RUNS
MADE
of
the
area
111 need of
and
allowed
"no
contest"
and
Dunbar
and
why , anybody
would
son, Dexter
The
Pomeroy
E-R
umt
was
clothmg.
The
clothmg
bank
1
s
WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
pleas
on
four
minor
predominantly
white
undertake 1! at such a late
called lo Laurel Sl, at 5:51 located in the old htgh school
vtolattons.
. AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
Belmont and Wilbur Wright
how," he srud.
p.m.
Monday
for
Paul
at
Cheshtre
Finley
and
the
firm
paid
a
would be 11 paired,"
FRI. EVENINGSS To 7 P.M.
PLEASANT VALLEY
Lukens satd the tune was
past when an effective effort Wickhne who had suffered a
C!SCHARGES - Mrs Earl total $122,000 m fines - equal involving about 2,000 of tbe
possible
broken
ankle.
He
Withrow, Jack Wheeler to ali!Ue more than $3,200 for ctty's !4,161 high school stucould be made.
''THE FRIT',NDLY BANK"
was
taken
to
Pleasant
Valley
'
den!ll .
Damel
Boles, Mrs. Woody' each mmer who died
"Ilts not easy to go out and
E-R UNIT CALLED
Hospttal
At
6
14
a
m
get 150 names on a petition II
The Middleport E-R untt Burdette, Mrs Floyd Siders,
would take a mmunum of Tuesday, lhe squad went to answered a call to Cheshire Mrs. Edward Hughart, Mrs.
between 400 and 500 va ltd the home of Charles Burt, a at 5·30a .m Tuesday for Erna Jonathan Double, son, and
stgnatures per pehtion/' he medical pallent, "ho was Cornelius who was Ill She Carma B~necutter , all of
_ ,..
CIHt;;tHNA Tl
satd "Ten days ago was my taken to Holzer Medtcal was taken to Holzer Medtcal PmnlPleasant, Mrs Thomas
cutoll Cfor a lull Reagan slate Center
Jones, Cheshtre, Mehssa
Center
MIDDLEPORT
m
Ohto
)
II
would
now
be
Hughes, Ashton; Mrs .
I&gt;HIO
physically tmposstble lo put
Fredenck Lamb, Gallipolis ,
up a good slate.
Mrs Harvey Rollins, U!on:
"I believe !hal a honest
Mrs Aile Cox, Galhpohs;
®
el!orl for Reagan should
Jesse Christian, Rtpley; Mrs.
mvolve a total approach. We
Johnny McCloud, Mason;
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
begged lor perrrnsston and
Mrs.
En
~ ne
Moore,
had many excellent names Henderson.
(Conlmued from page 1)
DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000
many of whom are now on
also reported that the slde\'lalk conlamers will be emptied by
slates pledged to Ford "
H&amp;P Samtabon.
STREAKS ON LINE
Mayor Andrews also commented that only one ferry wtll
RALEIGH,
N. C. tUPi)
be used during the closmg of the bridge and they wtll face the
President
Ford and
same problems as before when there is high water.
Jimmy
Carter
Georgia's
Followmg the regular meeting the Regatta commtltee met
put
their
presidential
in spec tal sess1on.
primary winning I streaks
Attendmg were Morrow, Lynne Crow, secretary, Legar,
on
the line In North
AT
Mayor Andrews, John Koebel, Ralph Graves, Paul Gerard,
Carolina
today against
Scott Lucas, Bob Jacobs, Ferman Moore, Jack Carsey, N. W
upset
challenges
from
Compton, Mr. and Mrs. John Fultz, Btll Grueser, Ada Nease,
Ronald
Reagan
and
George
Benny Ewing, Fred Crow, George Memhart, Arnoll, Gtlkey,
C.
Wallace.
Ted
Reed, Jun Molt, Beulah Jones and Katte Crow.
'
INDEPENDENT
The North Carolina
'
primary - sixth In the
bicentennial election year
and second In the South was considered crucial to
keeping alive the badly
damaged Reagan and
Wallace campalgm.
Tlurtcen members of the

is confirmed

RACINE - Raymond C.
Harlley, 69, Racine, died
Monday
afternoon
8t
Veterans Memorial Hoopttal
Mr. HarUey was lhe son of
the late John Carlos and
Bessie Salser HarUey.
A retired employe of the
Ractne Water Dept,, havtng
worked there from 1949 until

Hospital News

MEIGS THEATRE

Debate

1:

when you drive· in
bank with us

Coal

Reagan

TALK ABOUT CONVENIENCE!

lltbens ~ational

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Hanes

Legar

·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

T·Shirt &amp;Brief

SPRING FLING SALE

lawn Mower

Sayre Hardware

MUFFLERS

/

THE INN PLACE

WEDNESDAY NIGHT

SPECIAL

...........

............5:•

'

5

GASOLIN

Vtsit Our Salad Bar
Shrtmp
French F~tes
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

'2.95
plus tax

The Trt-County ' s Most
Exciting Ntght Spot

WITH COUPON

OHO

'&gt;O'J

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I@~
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I

882-2525

W.VA.

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I

•

ONE GALLON

BRIEFS

Confession is
admitted into
1
Bayles trial

••
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•
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WITH
COUPON

5 1 GO

J

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

W

'·

PARKERSBURG, W. Va_
(UP!)- Wood County CircUit
Judge Donald Black has
admttted into testimony a
murder confession by John
Calvm Bayles, Belpre, Ohio ,
Bayles, accused in the
slaying of Jima AM [)olson,
18, ~ad clatmed the
confesSion was beaten out of
him by state pohce. The
judge termed•the defendant 's
accusation "incredible"
Monday and ordered that the
testimooy be adnutted into
evidence.
Iii the confesswn Bayles
said he had a "sPlit
personality" when
he
grabbed the Parkersburg
Conununlty College coed and
strangled her to death.
"She may have been dead
before I choked her but I
don't know," the coofesslon
said. "I dtdn'l want to hurt
anyooe. I don't know why I
did II "

When act1on - I - comfort
counts th1nk HANES• Now a new
breed of f•n est conon kntt underwear
The HANES T shirt Rema rkable
shnnk reststant perform ance
retnforced neckband to red uce
sagg1ng or stretch1ng Ftne quality
conon kn1t keeps 1Ls shape and Itt
yet g1ves automat•c comfort-stretch'
The HAN ES Bnef The long diStance performer wtth a h1nt of
athletiC SUPPOrt where you want •t'
Heat reststant elastic 1n waist-band'
and •n leg ope111ngs Perma·whtte
ft nest ab:mrbent kntt
From the
HANES famtly of f1n e underwear
Complete selecllon ofsiZes from the sm1fltst to extra,

extr1 l1rge.
Also Hontt bo•er end 1ripper boxtr shorts- V neck T,
shtrts . sleovoleu T shirts - and Hanos T shirts lnd
briefs for boys.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Hlnet 11 11

rtw•, l•

'

1d lrHemtrk al Htn" COfiXHtllon Wmtlon Stltm N

Railroad meeting
called Thursday
The Metgs County Ratl
Serv tce Committee headed
by George Arnott and Ken
Gilkey has called a public
meeting al 7 30 p.m. Thursday m the former council
chambers al Middleport
Village Hall.
The mee ting will be held to
dtscuss testimony for the
upcommg hean ng conpr oposed
cermng
the
abandonment
of
th e
Chesapeake a nd
Ohio
Ratlway's Logan to Pomeroy
vta McArthur , and
Gallipolis - lin e. The
abandonment would result m
the loss of over 20 railroad
jobs wtth a quarter mtllion
dollar payroll and $142,000 m
taxes to the area served by
the line, the commtttee satd.
The abandonment would

a lso end rat l service to many

users, over 20 in Meigs
County alone The payroll
loss es could hur t many
businesses , the lost tax
revenue having to be made up
from other sources which
could mean htgher taxes for
eve ryone Everyon e wtll
defmitely feel the effects of
htgher shtpping costs, the
comm1ttee co-chairmen sa ad
Anyone may present
testimony at the Interstate
Comm erce Co mmissi on
hearing whtch wtll be held at
9·30a.m. Wednesday, Apnl 7,
at the Gallia County Courthouse m Gallipolis
Farmers and busmesses
affected by htgher shtppmg
costs, busmesses affected by
JOb loss , individuals interested m the future of

Metgs County s hou ld all
present testi mony, the
commtttee stated
The comm ittee 's co n ~
cludmg statement:
" If you are even slightly
interested in testifying or
sendmg a wntten statement,
we 11rge you to attend the
Thursday mght mee tm g
Altendmg the meetmg will
not commit you, but will gtve
you a chance to gam more
mlormallon fr om whtch to
make yo ur own dects ton
concernmg the hearmg If
you cannot attend the
meetmg but have questions,

or desire more tnformatJOn,
please contact the Metgs
County Ratl Service Comrrnttee, 480 Broadway St ,
Mtddleor t, or phone 9925794."

Ford's loss
isn't fatal

lN;::;·;.:·:·:·~·: :· :~~·i~:::.jj;i;/;\\
=·~

0

By United Presslaternalional
DETROIT - STAGGERED BY A reductton tn Delrml's
bond credit ralmg, ctty officials today sought to find out how
much short-term money local bankers will loan the city to ease
its loommg linanctal criSis. If loans are not forthcoming, city
workers will lace payless paydays, ctty offictals warned.
A syndication of banks is scheduled to announce the
amount of temporary notes it was willing to buy from the ctty.
OffiCials want to borrow $40mtlllon, but there were indications
the banks would offer only $27 mtllion Tlie city would have lo
pay back the $27 mtllion plus mterest m August . The remaunng
$13mtlbon, ofloaned, would be due next January.
COWMBUS - SEN HENRY M JACKSON, DWashtngton, announced through hts Ohto campatgn
headquarters Tuesday he will enter the state's June 8
Democratic presidential primary election with a full slate of 38
at~arge delegates and representation in 22 of Ohio's 23
congressional districts.
Jackson srud he wtU have no delegate candtdates in the
18th District, where Rep Wayne L. Hays, D-Ohio, is running as
a favorite son. Jackson said he will begin his Ohio campaign
Aprll9 with stops m the Cleveland area and an appearance at a
Democratic fund-ratslng diMer m Columbus. Ohio Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson heads up Jackson's statewide delegate
ticket
COLUMBUS - '11iE STATE SENATE has approved
House-passed legtslation reducmg Ohio's "bedsheet ballot" to
pillowcase size for the June 8 presidential prunary. Indications
were that the House Would quickly agree t~118te changes
and speed the emergency legtslation, lour years In the making,
to the desk ofGov. James A. Rhodes for signature.
The bill, passed unanunously by the Senate Tuesday,
needs to become law before Secretary of State Ted W. Brown
begins printing the June ballots next month If the
complications of the 1972 Democratic presidential primary are
to be avotded. The legislation ellnunates lengthy lists of
presidential delegate candtdates from the statewide ballot,
and instead allows Ohio voters to cast a single vote for their
favortle presidential aspirant.
Meanwhile, the Holllle has Ignored objections by !lie Ohio
Manufacturers AsSOCiatton and approved Senate-passed
legislation forbidding discrimination against the handicapped
in many aspects of llfe, lncludilll! employment. The "bill of
righlll" for the handicap~. adopted Tuesday, prohibits
dtscrtmination against the mentally and physically
handicapped tn the areas of employment, housmg, public
accommodations, obtainmg credit and lhsurance, voting,
public transportation and operating motor vehicles.
WASHINGTON - THE FORD ADMINISTRATION and
Ute coal Industry have won &amp;major victory in their opposition
to a revival of twice-vetoed federal strip mining legislation.
"Dead, dead, dead'" exclaimed Rep. Sam Steiger, R-Arlz., the
chief coogressional opponent of strip mining legislation when
the House Rules Committee voted Tuesday against sending a
surface mining bill to the noor _
The committee agreed by votce vote to table further
consideration of the bill. Rep Jolm Melcher, D-Mont., said he
would try to ftnd IJ4)me way to keep the' btU alive: "I would
doubt that It's dead,"' Melcher told reporters. "It will be
passed eventually." ·

'

'1

VOL. XXVII NO. 241

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Hysell is fourth
to file petition
Charles R. Hysell, Route I,
Mtddleporl, Tuesday became
the fourth Republican to ltle
hts peh t10n to se ek lhe
nommahon to run for the Jan.
2, 1977 term of Metgs County
Commissioner '
A nahve of Meigs County,
Hysell served five years 111
the armed force s durmg
World War ll. He ts a
member of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion,
Middleport.
Hysell, who attended
Pomeroy High School,
worked for 18 years at lhe R.
H. Rawhngs and Son Motor
Co. m Mtddleporl and has
retired for dtsabtlltv after 21

and prune shrubbery which had been planted there earlier by garden club
members. Keepmg thhe low level area of the park attractive for visitors
during the summer months will be a proJect of the semor c1t1zens
Workmg there Tuesday were Ketmit and Gene McElroy, Lmioul
Johnson , Clarence McNeal, and Glen Lambert.

•

e

By HELEN THOMAS
will not .''
UP! White House Reporter
The President said he was
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - opluntstic he can reverse the
Prestdent Ford satd today he North Carolma result m the
was surpnsed to lose April 6 Wtsconsin primary.
Tuesday's North Carolina "We expect to win ," he said
presidential pnmary to
But Ford did not make a
Ronald Reagan but predtcted predictiOn about the Texas
the setback wtll not black hun pnmary May I , whtch
from getting the GOP Reagan supporters believe
nommahon
the form er
Ca lifornia
" There have been some governor can wm .
Wednesday morntn gs that
Gary Gnfftth, a ssiS tant
have been happter," Ford director of the Dallas, Tex.,
told a group of some 95 Texas Republican organization,
Republican Party workers 111 said , "The President was
the Whtte House Rose behind Reagan m Texas but
Garden.
he's caught up . This (the
The President, who tasted North Carolina result) will
his first primary defeat m the spur the troops on "
,
North Carolina volmg after
Desptte the North Carolma
successave VIctorieS ln ftve Loss, Ford looked beyond the
other states, satd, "We knew nommallon
race
wtth
11 would be a close race .. we Rea gan " The important
expected to win We dtd not thmg for all of us IS the
"I mtghl add that m Republican Party and !he
politics, ll's never good to philosophy 1t represents ...
come ln second .''
The Republican Party is a
The defeat was Ford's ltrst mmortly party .. we must
smce he entered polihcallife attract voles (m November )
as a congresfi man from from the independents .. and
Grand Rapids, /&gt;ltch., In 1948. woo some of the Democrats."
Ford asked aloud 1f the
Ford satd Republicans
Carolina loss would have a "must be careful we don't
harmful impact on his alienate fellow Republicans
chances of deleatmg Reagan
. we must keep the party
for the GOP nomlnatwn . together
. ,personaltttes
Answering his own questwn . must be secondary to
lie satd, " It is my judgment phtlosphy."
that in the flliBI conclUSIOn, 11

::;

VOLUNTEERS AT WORK - Community beautiftcalton, bemg a
proJect of the RetiredSemor Volunteer Program, the Middleport Garden
Club, Tuesday asked volunteers to clean the sidewalk and lhe area
around the cannon at the Le~on Memortal Park on Mtll St. in Mtddleporl

years of employment al the
Middleport Post Offtce
Other Hepubh cans who
have !tied lor nommalton to
run for the same term are
James Frecker of Pom eroy:
Ralph W Ours , the incumbent, and Robel t F
Snowden of Rutland .
Filing central commtttee
post pelttwns wtth the county
board of electwns on Tuesday
were Donald F Johnson, R ,
Lebanon Precmct, V1rgm1a
A Ftsher, D , Mmersvtlle
Precmcl, and Lola J Proffttl,
D , Letart Precmct Deadline
for flhng pettllons lor the
June 8 election IS 4 p m.
Thursday

en tine
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1976

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j Reagan revived I
By STEVE GERSTEL
RALEIGH , N C (UP! )
Ronald Reagan won his first
prunary, upsettmg Prestdent

Ford in North Carolina
Tuesday and pumping new
hie mto hts dun presidential
hopes.
And Jimmy Carter added
one more primary to his
streak
that
sohdly
established
~1m as the
CAMBRIDGE,
Mass.,
Democratic front-runner and
March 24
Gen.
perhaps
ended forever
Washington
requested
George
Wallace
's endurmg
Josiah Quincy to hire 12
wtsh
for
the
Whtte
House.
trustworthy men to keep
Both
winners
scored
clear"atch on the British fleet
cut
majonties
Carter
which had stationed Itself
crushmg Wallace 54 to 35 per
In Natasket Road. They
cent, Reagan whippmg Ford
"ere to be available for
52 to 46.
,
both counter-espionage and
Carter's margin made him
mtelllgence
gathering
the first Democrat to win a
duties
state with more than 50 per
:..,:·:..::::::::::.,:.,: :,:,:..,:,:,:,:,::,:,:,:•,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,::·:· ,:,:·. cent of the vote.
The
North
Carolina
prunary - sixth of the year
and second 111 the South revttabzed Reagan's almost
monbund campaign; shook
support the btl!
Ford; gave Carter added
Amendments added by the momentum; and may have
commttlee would allow been Wallace's swan song.
utilitie s
to
include
construction work in progress
m the1r total rate base, and
would allow uttllttes an
accounting method to
withhold part of their mcome
A single car accident was
taxes for reinvestment.
McCormack satd the mvestigated by the Meigs
unamended, Senate verston County Sheriff's Dept
of the btl! was "balanced" Tuesday at 11 ·30 p.m. on CR
and he would urge the lull 30 in Sutton Township.
Charles J . Eakms, 57, Rt 2,
Senate not to concur if the
amendments were retained Racme, was travelmg east
when hiS left front tire blew
m a fmal House draft .
out. The vehicle sktdded off to
the nght through a fence mto
a pasture, turned upon 1ts left
side and slid approximately
10 more feet, came back onto
its wheels, moved another 20
Betty I Moore and Donald yards, spun around and
L. Moore. Rt. 2, Pomeroy, stopped.
The drtver was not mjured.
have llled a sm t for
No clt.atton was issued. The
damages m the amount
of $4,290 agamst Shel- fence was on the Charles Yost
ly and Sands Corp., property.
Zanesville, 111 Meigs County '
Common Pleas court.
The sui l 1s lor alleged
damages to real estate Players will be
located m Salisbury townassigned Sunday
ship
Oscar Wallace, Charleston,
A meetmg of the Pomeroy
filed a smt m the amount of Baseball Assn for youths will
$1,300 against James Conner, be held Sunday at 1 p.m at
address unknown, as the the Pomeroy Legton Hall.
amount due on a registered
Player asstgnment to
~lack Angus Bull
The teams will be made Whether
marnage of Carla J. Wtles Pomeroy li!Ue league teams
and John H. Wtles was will play m another league
dtssolved and Janet E. Nease this summer Will be
was grimted a divorce from dtscussed.
Claude K Nease on charges
All youths age 6 to 15
of gross neglect of duty 111 wishmg to stgn up for the
other court actions.
summer baseball season are
asked
to contact Don Hunnell
UNIT TO MEET
at
992-2604
or Allee Wamsley
RACINE - The Racme
at
992-3938
before Sunday so
emergency squad wtll meet
they
may
be
asstgned to a
at 8 p m Monday at the
team.
firehouse .

Dateline 1776

Senate utility hill stands
COLUMBUS (UP! )- Sen
J Titnothy McCormack, DEuclid, Tuesday said there
was lillie room
lor
compromise between h1s
Senate-passed ulihly rate
reform btll and the amended
version drafted by a House
comrmttee
Final amendments were lo
be beard m a spec"l House
Utthttes Commtllee meetmg
today.
In Tue ~day's hearmg ,
McCormack apologtzed for
charges he made March 2
that many of the "anti-

consumer ' '

amendments

added by the committee were
"concocted Ill Columbus
cocktatl lounges and secret
meetings in hotel rooms ."
"On a couple of occasions
my comments may have gone
beyond respect lor the
General Assembly," satd
McCormack. "I apologize for
any comments that may have
been made about House

members."

Meeting called
at Meigs Museum
A meeting of all persons
interested In the preservation
of old buildings in Metgs
County and dlscussmg
selection for listing 111 the
Nahonal Regtsler will be held
Friday at 1.30 p m. at the
Meigs County Museum,
Butternut Ave , Pomeroy
The meeting 1s sponsored
by the Metgs County Ptoneer
and HISIOrtcal Society and
the South Central Ohto
Preservation Society. A
sports exhibtl at the museum
will be open lor mspect10n
followmg the meeting.

McCormack
appeared
before the committee at the
request of tls chairman, Rep
William E Htmg, D-New
Philadelphia
He
was
peppered wtth detatled
questiOns abou t the btll ,
whtch passed the Senate Feb
11 by a 26 lo 5 margm
The quesuomng, at tunes,
became
btlter,
wtth
conservattve Republicans
pomtmg thetr remarks at
McCormack's admtltedly
hasty remarks.
McCormack's btll seeks kJ
sunphly 0~10 utthty law, and
reqwres that utility's base
their rate requests on the
ortgmal cost of all generatmg
plants and equipment, not the
·• reconstruc tion costs"
currently estunated m the
requests
McCormack satd the btll
wtll not reduce cWTent utthty
rates, but would tend to slow
down the increases granted
by the Pubhc Utilities
ConuniSston. Two of the three
PUCO commtsstoners
FLASHING LIGIITS
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The
House Tuesday passed 85 to 2
and sent lo the Se118te a btl!
permtltmg tow trucks and
wreckers to use Hashmg or
rotating red lights when
towmg disabled vehicles or
cleanmg up accidents on
highways_
Current law lumts such
vehtcles to nash!ng amber
lights.
VISITORS LIMITED
Due to the mfluenza outbreak, VISitors lo Veterans
Memorial Hospttal are
hmited only lo lamtly
members of the patten Is until
further nohce .

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Blowout cause
of auto mishap '

Zanesville
firrn sued

Carter Jubilantly hailed the
results as clear proof the
voters - not "the political big
shots" - would dectde the
Democratic nominee. II was
a clear reference to
predictions that a deadlocked
convention would turn to
Hubert Humphrey, Edward
Kennedy or others, who have
shunned the primaries.
The final results of the GOP
prunary:
REAGAN: 181,448 -52 per
cent
FORD: 88,924 - 46
No Pl'el 3,345 - 2
In the Democratic ~ace II

was :
· CARTER: 321,059 - 54 per
cent
WALLACE: 209,807 - 35
JACKSON ~ 25,698 - 4
UDALL: 14,122 - 2
HARRIS: 6,136 - 1
No Pre! 22,$85 - 4
Reagan won 28 of the North
l':arolina 's 54 convention
delegates, gtving hun 81 to
date. Ford won 24, gtvmg hun
205. Needed to wm the GOP
nomination 1,130.
On the Democratic side,
Carter won 36 of lhe 61
delegate~ for a total of 167.
Wallace won 25, for a total to
85. Sen. Henry Jackson and
Rep. Morns Udall, who dld

not campaign in Noth
Carolina, have 55 and 23,
respectively. It takes 1,505 for
nommatlon.
In
a
puzzling
announcement before the
North Carolina returns rolled
111, Reagan said he had
cleared hts campaign
schedule next week to work
on a nationally televised
broadcast The Reagan camp
did not elaborate, but it was
possible the appearance
would be a plea for funds for
his debt-riddled campaign.
In St Louts for a fundraiser, Carter acknowledged
his role as the front-111nner
and predicted he would win
the nommatlon on the first
ballot.
"I'm far ahead of any other
candtdate arid my strength is
increasmg rather than dissipating," Carter said.
A crestfallen Wallace told a
news conference in Mont..
gomery, Ala., that he would
push on to Wtsconsm for the
April 6 primary , but for the
first tune did not predict he
would stay m the race all the
way to the national
convention m New York Ctty
''I don't have any excuses,"
Wallace said "I just lost the
vace."

Bribery scandal
brings demands
TOKYO (UPI) - Opposttlon parltes demanded
the resignation of Pri111e
Mimster Taeko Mikt tod~y,
accusing htm of attemptmg to
bar dtsclosure of the names of
Japanese officials involved in
the
Lockheed
bribery
scandal
M1k1's Conservative
government announced
earher that arrangements
had been made in Washington
under whtch the United
Slates would supply secrets
about $12 mtlhon tn payoffs
allegedly made in Japan by
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. But
all data would be kept confldenllal until mvestigations
are completed.
About 60,000 persons JOllied
In a demonstrallon organized
by opposition parhes to
denounce the arrangements
and demand thorough mvesllgation mto lhe case,
lncludtng release of the
names of government offtctals involved .
Opposttton groups, led by
the
Soctallsl
party ,
denounced the arrangements
as " an attempt to cover up 11
the scandal and "a challenge

to Japanese public opmton."
The Soctalists and three
other maJor opposition
parlles - Kometto, Co~­
munist and DemocrattcSociahst - demanded that
the names of Japanese olltctals be made public and the
government 4 'renegotiate''
with the United States along
thts hne.
The Soctahsts and Kometto
demanded that Mtkl step
down

"to

assume respon-

sibility" lor the Lockheed
affair
Tomomt Nania, chairman
of the Soctalist party, in a
speech also demanded the
resignallon of Mtkl's cabmet
which he charged was trying
to " hush up" the scandal.
The oppostllon parlles said
they
would
continue
boycotting debates 111 the Diet
unles the government agrees
to renegobate 1ts agreement
with the Umted States.
Proceedmgs in lhe Diet
have been virtually stalled
for lhe past three weeks ,
delaying action on major
pendmg bills, mcludmg the
1976 llscal budget.

Golden Buckeye Card program underway
The Ohio Comnusston on
Aging today announei!d that
the Golden Buckeye Card
Program ts underway in the
etght Soutbeastern counties
of Ohio. In order lb further
the development of thts
unique discount program lor
persons 65 and over, tbe
Cormmssion has hired two
fteld representatives and an

area coordtnator.
county region
The field representatives
The Golden Buckeye Card
are , for Washmgton , Noble, ts a state-wtde effort to
Morgan ,
and
Monroe regtster persons 65 and older
Counties, Mrs. Mary Jane for dlscoun~ at participatmg
Hoult and for Perry, Hocking, stores There wtll be no cost
Athens, and Metgs Counties, lor registration , and the only
Mr James Harder. The reqwremenl for regtstrahon
Commtsston has also hired wtll be proof of age. Tliere are
Tom Mtlllgan to coordinate four items that Will be
the program for the etght- considered as valid proof of
~

age, these are· a vaiid Ohio
driver's license, birth
certtlicate, baptismal record,
or medicare care.
The Commission Ls working
to register 600,000 persons 65
and over m Ohio by June 30.
RegiOnally, The Com-

missions representahves,

15,000 persons, 85 and older
by June 30. At the same ltme,
the representallves wtll be
contacting local busmesses
•sking them to parbctpate m
the program by giVIng
discounts to those persons
that hold the Golden Buckeye
Card.

with lhe help of • &gt;Lunteers,
Will be ~tt r mpt m

~

1 t'J!l&lt;; te r

Seniors 65 and over should

watch tlletr local papers for
information concerntng
registration sites and times.
Also, if there are persons tn
the busmess community that
wish to participate or obtain
further tnformation, they
may
call
the
area
Coordmator, Mr. Tom
Milhgan,m Martelta at (614)
374-9436.

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