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teamsters on st
e
•
e at y en tine
E0 r·d po
· ,..l c l .es.
h l·t .b..·y R. .eagan
"\

.60% of nation's goods
to and from -factories

grounded ·at"midnight

.VOL. XXVII

ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, Ill. tUPI) - Teamster trucks
stopped rolling early today in the first nationwide Teamsters
strike in history.
~
Negotiators worked to the wire but failed to reach an
agreement to avert a strike by som~ 400,000 Teamsters who
h;lul60percentofthenation'smanufacturedgoods.
'
.
Negotiations aimed at settling the walkout stalled early
today. Labor Secretary W.J. Usery remained in town for
another meeting today between the two sides.
Teamsters President Frank Fitzsimmons said the meeting
would be held "to see if there is any change in the industry's

po~~o~~lkout

threatened to halt auto assembly lines and
trigger shortages of foodstuffs and gasolines.
Labor Department sources said President Ford would
declare a state of emergency and invoke an Blklay cooling off
period ll!lder the Taft-Hartley Act. However, other sources
said the President would wait three or four days before seeking
a Tlift-Hartley injunction.
.
A handful of Teamsters covered by the national agreement
remained on their jobs under a series of interim agreements
reached at the local level. But the vast majority were off the
road.
Bill Mcintyre, President of Trucking Employers Inc., which
represents the industry, said ta!ks broke down because "the
offer of one side has not matched the demands of the other."
He said TEl had made a counteroffer to Teamster
negotiators but would not elaborate.
" It haspot been accepted by the union at this time. I am not
optimistic at the moment," he said.
Carriers were given an ultimatum Wednesday night as the
deadline neared: negotiate a local interim agreement or be
shut down when the National Master Freight Agreement expired at midnight local tiine. .
.
·
Some 20,000 truckers stopped their rigs ih Pittsburgh and
pickets were set up at a Sears Roebuck Co. store in Philadephia.
Only sixteen of the 500 companies employing Teamsters in
Michigan reached interim agreements. ·

NO. 247.

.

THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1976

PRICE FIFTH~ CENTS '

e

.

·

·

e ·

·
By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHI)'lGTON (UPI)
Ronald Reagan has taken his
victory-,short, money-starved
bid for the Republican presidential nomina lion to the
American people with a
nationwide television speech
denouncing_ President Ford's
policies at home and abroad.
The 65-year-old former
California governor planned
to stay on the offensive with
saturation television and
some personal campaigning
in the South, Southwest and
West' in a desperate attempt
to blunt Ford's drive for a
first-ballot nomination in
Kansas City in August.
Reagan cut out all personal
campaigning for more than a
. week to concentrate on the 30minute taped speech shown
nationally
NBCgambled
Wednesday
mghtoverand
$100,000 for the prime time
which he hoped would bring
in cash to replenish the

United Press International
Ohio Teamsters joined a
nationwide truckers strike. at
midnil(ht Wednesday and
threw t.p picket lines at most
major terminals in the
Buckeye State. The strike
could severely cripple Ohio
industry apd would shut down
every auto producing plant in
the state within 10 days.
"There are very few trucks
running," said Kevin McDonald, Columbus, executive
assistant to the Ohio Motor
Carriers Labor Relations
Assocation. "There are
pickets just about all over the

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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

Picket s pat·ro'1
most terminals .
e

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depleted campaign coffer.
Reagan said Ford's
·
'
has
im'1'1tary-fore1gn
po11cy
placed the country in
"danger, and the danger
grows with each passing
day ." He said the President's
claims of a solid economic
recovery are reminiscent of
the boasts thaf preceded the
recession after the 1972 eleclions.
Reagan said neither Ford
nor Defense Secretary
, Donald Rurnsfeld is willing to
proclaim U.S. military
superiority and added "the
·evidence mounts that we are
No. 2 in a world where it is
dangerous, if not fatal, to be
second best."
On the economic · front,
Reagan said the country
must "stop fighting the
symptoms and start fighting
.the disease."
"There's only one cause for
inflation - government
spending
more
than

government takes in,"
. Reagan said. "The cure is a
balanced budget." ·
Ford's cain p a i g n
committee dismissed the
address as Reagan's "basic
stump speech" filled with
"negative rhetoric."
Reagan's address was a
composite of the increasingly
tough attacks the presidential
challenger has mounted
against. Ford in recent
primaries. But the speech
raised no_ major new issues
nor did it give any indication
· of Reagan's future campaign
plans.
::::::::::::: ::~::::::::::: :::: ::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::: : ;:·

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday through
Monday, a chance of
showers Saturday and
Sunday and fair Monday.
Highs will be In the 50s to
the lower 60s and lows will
be in the 30s.

..
BRADBURY WINNERS - The muSic written by Steplianle Houchins and the literature
of John Cremeans, seated, as well as the visual art entry of Barbara Haley, absent, were
selected school winners in the three divisions of the Bradbury P'I'A contest judged this week .
They now enter county competition. Other blue ribbon winrwrs at the school were left to
right, Angela Farley, Tamil Hart, Craig Darst, Tanya Stobart, Melissa Spencer, Kent Doss
and Pam Crooks. See Page 7.
·

;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;::

Funds probe set

pitched from an overpass.
Some truck drivers in the
Youngstown area . parked
their 'rigs at trucli stops and
went home by car.
COLUMBUS (UPii - Gov.
• Police in Cleveland said
James
A. Rhodes today
truck driver Paul Allan, 37,
ordered
a staie Highway
Marilla, N.Y.,. was shot at
Patrol
in,vestigation
into
twice today along Interstate
nearly
$1
million
in
missing
90 in Cleveland after he
funds in the Bureau of Motor
refused to Pl!ll his rig off the Vehicles.
·
highway.
Allan told police three men
in a tan car pulled alongside
his truck and told him to stop.
When he refusj!d one of the
occupants of the car opened
fire and the bullet went
state .~·
through a vent window on the ·
Independent truckers said right side of the truck. The
they would continue to car then pulled in front of the
work.
truck in an effort to slow it
RUTLAND _: The annual
One truck driver was shot down or stop the vehicle. The Fourth of July parade will be
at in Cleveland today and car then pulled along the left - held again this year it was
thefe
were scattered side of the truck and another decided at a Bicentennial
incidents of violence in the shot was fired through the left Committee meeting Tuesday
Akron area where debris was side of the cab.
night at the American Legion
Allan was not injured.
Hall here.
Firemen will sponsor their
annual ox roast and other
activities will'include square
dancing, cake show, flower
show, tractor pull and a Q.vmn
sing.
By United Press Iuternatioqal
Plans were made to erect a
WASHINGTON- IF THE POSTAL SERVICE is going to.
permanent
memorial to the
break even financially, it probably will mean first class
war
dead
of &amp;utland
stamps ·costing 19 cents next year and 34 cents by 1984. The
Township
by
Memorial
Day.
General Accounting Office Wednesday made that estimate in a
door
to
door
canvass
for
A
report to Congress on the financial plight of the postal system.
contributions
will
be
made.
William J. Anderson, a deputy director in the GAO, told
the House P~st Office and Civil Service Committee the the next meeting will be held
estimate was based on the "self sufficiency concept" for the f!pril 13.
Pos~l Service .....meaning no subsidy, and reliance on postage
rates alone !j cover its losses. Under the "self sufficiency"
approach, a first class stamp, which now cQilts 13 cents, would
rise to 19 cents in 1977, 21 cents in 1978, 24 cents in 1979, 25 cents
in 1980, 27,cents in 1981, 30 cents in 1982, 32 cents in 1983 and 34
cents in 1984.

Ox roast is

feature of

Rutland '4th'

"There have been repeated
discoveries of missing funds
and other possible illegal acts
in connection with Ohio's
motor vehicle registration
system," Rhodes said in· a
letter to Highway Patrol
Supt. Col. Frank Blackstone.
"Shortages turned up by
the current Bureau of Motor
Vehicles officials and
reported in the news media
exceed $1 million," Rhodes
said. ''This is taxpayers'
·money, most of it intended for
return to local government
for vital street and highway
purposes.
"It is unconscionable that
these lqsses, which reached
their peak· in 1974 under the
previous administration were
ever permitted to occur,"
Rhodes said.
"Through state efforts, and
through efforts by the news
media, much of the problem
has been exposed," said the
governor. "However, state
funds are still missing.
"Accordingly, I request
that you conduct a complete
and
comprehensive
investigation to determine
who took the missing funds,
and where the money is
now," he said. "A thorough
probe by an agency of the

....

..

sta lure oft he' Highway Patrol
is needed to · clear the air in
this obvious mishandling of
public funds."
Most of the shortages in the
acrounts of deputy registrars
throughout the state were
turned up in an investigation
by the Elyria Chronl'cleTelegram.
Rhodes, in a separate letter
to the Chronicle-Telegram,
lauded the newspaper1's
efforts.
"My primary consideration
in ordering the probe was the
series of articles on the
Bureau of Motor Vehicles ·
written. by Paul Schroeder
and Earl Neikirk and
published in the ChronicleTelegram, and the continuing
interest
of
State
Representative Scribner
Fauver of Elyria," Rhodes
said . "The articles and
Representative Fauver's
interest represent
investigative reporting and
political action at their best."

CULTURAL ART WINNERS - The crocheted flag replica made by Deanna and Laura
Van Meter (not pictured), poetry by Nicky Riggs, seated, and art work by Jennifer Swartz,
seated right of Riggs, were·selected "best of show" in the·cultural arts competition at the
Pomeroy Elementary Scnool. The blue ribbon winners were, left to right, front, Kim
Morrow, Chris Smith,.lllcky Riggs, Jennifer Swartz, and standing, Mary Klein , Suzan
Thoma, Tanya Aleshire, Barbara Grueser, Heinz Coats and Debbl Werry . See Page 6.

Two levies offered co~ty vot.ers

Meigs County voters will money needed for the mental discussions by village of. for recreation .
approve or reject two tax health program in Meigs, fi cials, the levy, if passed,
In the Southern Local
measures at the June 8 Jackson and Gallla Counties. would provide one-half of the School District a $420,000
primary election and four
Middleport Village has · funds for sl{eet lighting in the bond issue - or 3.32 mills for
other tax Issues will be of- three tax issues going before town and one-half of the total 20 years - has been put up
fered voters in two sub- the voters. Each would be in for street maintenance.
for a vote the second time.
divisions, the Meigs County effect for five years. A three
In Middleport the second Th e issue would provide
Board of Elections said mill levy will be listed on the Issue js one mill for t~e money for constructing,
today.
ballot for current expenses. department and the lrd furnishing and equipping an
All voters of the county wlll However , according to issue is one-half of o mill addition to the Southern High
cast ballots on a two mill levy
BUENOS AlliES, ARGENTINA - ARGENTINA has
School in Racine and for the
for 10 years to provide funds .;:::;:; :: :; :::::::::;:::;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;: :: ::::::::: :::;:;:~;:;: ::::: ::::: :
decided to fire all nonessential government employes in its
·
purchase of bleachers for the
for the continued operation of
first drastic step to reduce a $2.38 billion budget deficit and put
high school gymnasium.
the nation back on its economic feet.
LICENSES DUE
The Pomeroy-Middleport to determine the winner. The the Southeastern Ohio
A law issued late Wednesday, by the ruling three-man Lions Club is accepting ap- system is based on the ex- Emergency Medi.cal Service
Wholesale and. Retail
GAME SCHEDULED
LONDON April I military junt 'd not specify how many employes would be plication for participants for pected time to drive sttaight which provides emergency
cigarette licenses must be
A baseball gme between
During debate.ln the House paid on or before the fourth
involved in epa I cuts, but they were expected to remain its novel road rally which has to each post. Drivers will be medical care and hospital
of Commons on the British Monday in May of each year. the Portland Bandits of !lie
in effect until at least e end of the year. More than 1.5 million been set for I p.m. on Sunday, penalized one point for each transfer service.
All
of
the
county
also
will
economy,
David Hartley, Therefore, individuals selling Independent League and a
Argentine5-j)ne-sixth 0 e-miliO ' work force of nine million May 2.
minute late and three points
vote
on
.2
of
one
mill
for
10
friendly
to
America, urged cigarettes or operati ng Middleport team will be
- receive their paychecks from the ~errunent, either as
Cost of entering the rally for each minute too early.
years
with
the
proreeds
to
be
civil servants or workers in stateo()wned'enterprises. ··
the
members
to consider cigarette vending machines played at 2 p. m. Sunday on
which is upen to all drivers is
The club is stressing that
Meigs
County's
share
of
the
the
"ruinous
consequences
· $5. The winner of the unusual tra!fic viola tors will be
must purchase a cigarette the Portland Elementary
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. - THE U.N. Security Council .event will receive a $100 disqualified immediately.
which must · Inevitably license on or before May 24th, School diamond. The public Is
.•
attend the civil war with of 1976. These cigarette welcome.·
has condemned :South Africa's intervention in Angola as savings bond and there will
race is apparently not set T~
aggression and.called on it to pay war reparations to the new be three trophies . Con- The
our
colonies."
He
urged
the
· licenses inay be purchased
up on the basis of speed but
.u. "'
,..
LOCAL TEMPS
Angolan goverriment.7The 15-member council adopted the testants will 'receive a riddle ta ther on the expected
offer of reasonable terms after today ai the office of
"The
tempera lure
in
resolution late Wednesday with the required nine-vote at each of some eight posts
as a move to . end the· Meigs County Auditor
downtown
Pomeroy
at
11
a.
driving
time
between
posts.
rebellion.
majority. '
•
they· will visit during the
Howard" Frank in the court.- m. Thursday was 54 degrees
Residents interested are to
'(;;
Britain, France, Italy, Japan and the United States rally. The riddle when complete the application .
,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;· house.
under cloudy skies.
abstained. China did not participate. All council members unraveled tells the next form below and send their $5
Sheriff Robert Haragreed in condemning South Africa's military role in Angola. l!ication to which they are to entry fee with the form to Bill · tenbach's Dept. investigated
But the Western powers and China felt !,he resolution s.hould drive. Each contestant wilC
have condemned all foreign intervention in the former ~arry his time sheet with him Nease, in care of the a single car accident today at
Pomeroy National Banli, 1:20 a.m. in Racine vlllage.
Portuguese territory.
throughout the race and iive Pomeroy. Checks are to be No personal injuries were · Howard E. Frank, Meigs lawyers and others engaged treasurer and are used to
Chinese Ambassador Huang Hua insisted the Soviet Union it to the Lion member h~t at
County Auditor, reminded in business on December 31, support schools, libraries,
made payable to the reported. .
and Cuba be equally branded as aggressors.
, .~ each post.
taxpayers
today that per- 1975 must also file personal . pollee and fire departments
·
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Michael P. Salser, 19, Rt. 3,
.
I
sonal
property
tax returns · property tax returns and list an~ other local services.
A point system will be used Club.
Racine, driving on SR 124 had
MONTGOMERY, ALA. - AN ALABAMA legislator, who
must
be
filed
no
laaer than
Information and tax forms
. is part Indian, complained that state historical markers 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , a tire blow out causing him to April 30. Individuals owning· all inventories , supplies,
lose
control.
The
car
skidded
equipment
and
fixtures
used
may
be obtained from !lie
always called Indian victories "massacre:&gt;" and white
LIO~S l'lifi Rt&gt;Ail HALLY APPLICATION
investments on January I,' in
across
the
street
and
struck
a
business.
Persons auditor's office during the
victories "battles."
1976 such as stocks, bonds, engaging in business after hours at 9a.m. and 4p.m. The
pole
broadside.
The
.telephone
Rep. H. L. "Sonny" Callahan of Mobile, who said he was
;'lli\;\U:_~---------,-----j
axle broke and the vehicle notes, debentures, land January I, 1976 must file a telephone nllmber is 992-2698.
one-eighth Muskogee Indian, Wednesday complained
Those filing returns are
1\UDHESS---------'------l · skidded approximately 40 contracllj and other similar new taxpayer return within
,.. Wedl)esday to Warner Floyd, the director of the stil.e
property are liable for per- ninety days of commencing asked to complete as much of
yards,
coming
to
a
~top on the
historical commission, that, "when the Indians won, you
sonal property taxes.
PilON E.
left side fo the road.
business;
the tax form as possible
always call it a massacre. When the wh,ites won, you always
Merchants, manufa cThere
was
heavy
damage.
Personal
property
taxes
before
returning the form to
· (Continutid on page 10)
turers., contractors, doclllrs, are paid to . the county the auditor's office. .
No citation was issued.
iI

Places offered

in road rally

Qateline 1776

...... blow..n.ut

causns· wreck .

c

AU;ditor. is ,'reminding taxpayers

~

'

1

�•

'

•

"

'

Mrs. Ulllan Moore

Rev. Harold Deetli ""

Wayne Tlimer

Pearl Reyaoldi

Lula Hamptoa

John Rice

Rev. Robert Bumgarner

•

Senior Citizens Center in
three ·years of growth,
expansion of activities ·
t

Hazel McKelvey

C. E. Blakeslee

Mrs. PauUne Roush

- SmithI
Miss Lucille

Mrs. Vilma Plkkojo

Edson Roush

U1e cowtly on a da\ly basis.
The buses average 2, 700
miles per month, with ap·
proximately 3,600 riders
making use of this service the
""Sl .vear. Many oilier per.sons are transported to outof-county medical facilities
for heail.h services.
Information, Referral
lnformahon and Refe rral Is
·
h h If
a service w IC o ers
assistance m areas such as
· 1secunty
· , 1ood sta mps ,
Socia
Medicare and Medicaid,
·
hom~s , hea 1th
nursmg
problems, financia l problems
an d oth er needs. Ass1·s ta nee
in these matters often in volves a c' onsiderab.le amount
.
. .
of mvest1gal10n and follow up A full-time comdinator is
.
.
h1red for th1s program.
Persons working with Informa tion and Referral have
to be kn ow ledgeable of
serv1ces ava1·1a ble· th roug h
other agencies which can
henef1t older persons; consequenUy, they work closely
with these agencies. Over
1,200requests for Information
d
· ta
h
b
an -or ass1s ·nee ave cen
received th1s pas t year.
Office space is provided for
th e
soc1a· 1 secun'ty
representative one day each
ek
we .
Out Reach
In conjunction with Information and Referral an
Out Reach Worker was hired
to contact older persons and
advise them of services
wh1ch are availabl e , 36
contacts were made the past
month. Often, older p-ersons
la ck means of com.
mun1oat10n and consequently '
are unaware of these services. Example : An older
person was not aware of his

Rev. Howard Shiveley ,

Rev. William Mlddleswarth

Mrt1. W. P. Locbary

e!igib1hty for Supplemental
secunty Income payments;
consequently, his income has
been increased from $112.00
to $156.0() a month.
Newsletter
A TIJOnthly Newsletter is
published by the staff and
mailed to approximately
2,000 persons. The newsletter
contains items of interest to

discussiOns
on health
problems of older persons.
Many of the above are
possible because of the
cooperation of other agencies
'and organizations. By
agencies working together a
cancer screening program
for Meigs County women was
made possible; funded by the
Ohio Dept. of Health.
Shopping Assistance and
Eseort Service
This service is provided to
older persons who, because of
physical disabilities and
confinement to their homes,
require ass1stance in shopping and other personal
business.

older

person s,

such

as

changes in Homestead
Exemption regulations and
information regarding senior
Citizen programs in Meigs
Coun ty.
Health Services
, For older persons, medical
expenses are 3 times those of
younger persons, statistics
show that Medicare pays only
45 pet. of an older person 's
medical costs. Many older
persons cannot afford to buy
some of the items required by
the infirmities of age, such as
glasses, hearing aids and
dentures .
Some health services which
have been provided are
monthly blood pressure
clinic, annual flue shots,
mulli-phastc health screening
pr ogra m, home nursing
courses, first aid classes,
physical fitness classes,
arrangements for wheel
chairs and hospital beds,
medical appomtments made ,
and
programs
and

Loretta Beegle

HOSPITAL NEWS
Cales , lronton , Jeffery Wood,
Plcasnt Valley Hospital
Scott
Depot; Mrs. James Lee,
DISCHARGES - Mrs.
Henderson
; Virg(l Watson,
Kenn eth Roush, Mary
Gallipolis;
Mrs. Luther
Goodwm, New Haven ; Mrs.
Price,
Apple
Grove; Mrs.
Phiimore Hudnall , Minme
Rufus
Greathouse,
GlenBurdette, Mrs. Harold Kenly,
wood
;
Mrs.
Charles
Herdtificially stimulated growth Valene Biggs, Bucky
man,
Letart;
Pamela
Van·
qf the lining of the uterus Gillispie, Harry Davis,
fossin,
Mt.
Alto,
and
.
Leslie
could lead to cancer.
Darnell Jefferies, Point
One possible solution is to Pleasant ;
Mrs . Okey Markhall, Kenova.
interrupt the hormones once , Scharllger, Middleport; John
a month and induce artificial James, Henderson; Alma
bleeding by giving the other Miller, Middleport; Leo Veterans Memorial Hospital
f e m a I e h o r m o n e , Clonch, Gallipolis ; Matilda
DISCHARGED - Daniel
progesterone . Answers to
Norman, John Davis, Saith
these and many other
t' riend, Douglas Barnett,
questions surrounding this recent heart attack or are in Robert Burson, Aaron Card,
problem have not yet been heart failure do poorly . Sherrie Jewell, Bessie
answered.
.
Surgery within three to six Sellers.
The terms m the diagnosis months after a heart attack
that you mclude in yqur letter does increase the risk . The
means that the cells were not lac\ that your relative had the
cancerous, but they ' were · heart attack three years ago
LODGE TO MEET
atypic's!, meaning they should mean that she is out of
Pomeroy
Chapter No. 80,
weren't quite normal either. this ~roup, and if her conRAM
will
hold a special
If she wishes to continue dition IS as her cardiologist
convocatiOn
Monday,
April 5,
taking female horm.ones and apparently thinks, she should
at
7:30
p.
m.
at
the
Msonic
her &amp;ardiologist feels that she be able to undergo the
can (undergo this surgery it surgery without difficulty Temple to confer the Mark
Master and Past Master
might be advisable for her to from her heart.
elect to have a hysterectomy,
For information on the Degrees.
otherwise it might he a good effect of female hormones
idea if she we.re put on a send 50 cents for The Health
sequential type program Letter , number
5-12,
NEXT WEDNESDAY
which induced artificial Menopause . Send a long,
The Galiia Academy High
shedding of the excess cell stamped , self-ad dres~ed
growth once a month
. envelope for mailing. Ad· School baseball game with
There is literally no way to dr~ss yoitr letter to me in the Meigs Marauders, rained
predict which patients will do care of this newspaper, P. 0 . out Wednesday, has IJeen
well during surgery except to Box 1551, Radio City ~a lion, rescheduled next Wednesday
in Syracuse at 4 p m.
say that those who ha ve had a New York , NY 10019.
j

Smpicious cells need.study
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR . LAMB - •
Please help me· with a
medical pr oblem we are
having with a close relative .

medicines given to · women
after the m~nopause do
stimulate the growth of the
hmng of the uterus (womb ).
This is because such
Sheismhermid~Osandshe
preparations contain
has been on a hormone estrogen. During the normal
medication for three to four menstrual cycle the natural
years , She began havmg female estrogen hormones
abnormal bleeding from , tilL stimulate the uterus to have
uterus.
an overgrow th of cells or
She consutled bet' famil y hyperplasia . Then when
doctor who sen t her to a menstruation comes they are
gynecologist. he advised her shedcIt is not surprising then
to have aD and C (dilatation that the overgrowth of cells
and curettage) which she did . was observed when a tissue·
The pathologist report C!!ITie specimen was taken from the
back
"focal ollt atypi c'ai ·. lining of the uterus. The
adenomatous hyperplasia." gynecologist is not upset
The gynecologist did not because he realizes this, and
say that this abnormal tissue he !snows that increased cell
in the uterus was a cancer, growth Occurs in response to
but·hedidsayitcoiild become such medicines.
malignan t. He left it up to her
Recent repor ts indi cate ,
to decide whether or n'ot she that women who are taking
should have o1 'hysterectomy. female hormones after the
He hesitated because she had menopause pre four to 15
a heart attack three years times more Jikely to develop
ago and has occasional spellS cancer of the uterus . In the
of angina, What is your past many gynecologists
opinion? Her cardiologist have felt the one major
thinks she can take the major . danger from taking female
surgery and anesthesia.
hormones
after
the
DEAR READER - The menopause
was
the
femal(
hormo~e s
in · possibility • .that ; he ar·

"'

inning to ~core four runs off
Reds starter Pat Zachary.
Five of the Los Angeles hits
produced' extra bases as
catcher . Steve Yeager
poundeg, a pair -of triples
.although he was called out at
home when he tried to stretch
one ofthem into an inslde4hepark home run . He drove in
three· runs.
· Doidge~ outfielder Bill
Buckner continued hi:! powerhitting by getting a double in
the first inning; giving him 14
hits In eight games, with nine

· st. PETERSBURG, Fla. (UP!) - Andy Meiisersmlth wins
again!
·
.·
H~ hasn 't thrown a b&amp;:J yet this year, but this one makes it
four in a row for hiin. Imagine what he's going to be like when
the weather warms up. ..,
Messersmith's first victory was the big one. It was so big, il
turned the entire baseball structure around. That was four
months ago when arbitrator Peter Seitz made him and Dave
McNally free agents by knocking out the reserve clause.
His second and third wins came when two different courts
backed up Seitz' ruling and now here comes No.4 pretty much
the same way Catfish Hunter won his free agency from the
Oakland A's and picked up three million bucks from the New
York Yankees. On a technicality.
Here's the way it happened :
With eight clubs looking to sign Messersmith, his agent 811d
next-door neighbor in Newport, Calif., Herb Osmond; met with
Yankees' President Gabe Paul in Tampa this past Sunday.
They talked about any number of things and then got down 'to
COLUMBUS l UPI) - At 6- beautiful hook shot," said
the only one that mattered: Money.
foot-4 , Cindy Noble stands out Drummond, "but I can't get
Paul 'told Osmond the yankees would pay Messersmith $1 in a crowd .
her to shoot it in a game and if
million to pitch for them four years- this one, 1977, 1978 and
She
also
stands
out
on
the
she
has one fault, It's that she
1979.
basketball court, where the is too nice, too easy going.
psmond okayed the money but said Messersmith wanted it 17-year-old junior has led
"She takes a lot of punishon a deferred basis to help him tax wise and otherwise, and Frankfort Adena to an 111-&lt;1 ment under the boards and
Paul said that was firie Wlth him.
record this year and into the · never c ~ m pI a ins,''
The details were set down on a plain piece of paper, Osmond Class Asemifinals of the first Drummond said, adding, "I
writing them out himself. When he-finished, both he and Paul girls State High School don't cthink you can gel her
signed the paper. Paul said he'd have the whole thing put into Basketball Tournament mad."
legal language and would bring the finished version to Osmond which begins Friday morning
Crestview, which has woo
in the form of a contract.
at Ohio State's St. John 30 In a row, also has an
He did that Tuesilay.
.. .
Arena.
outstanding performer in ii-11
Osmond, said he'd get back to him. Messersmith's agent
In fact, )he Warriors and senior Journey Beard, who
conveyed the terms to his client, who checked with Marvin Noble get the privilege of averaged 22.5 points and 25
Miller antl Pick Moss of tile Players' Association. Osmond then ipaugurating the state girls rebounds during the season.
informed Paul it was no deal.
competition when they come She connected on 67 per cent
Why not, Pauf wanted to know"
.
up against another unbeaten of her Jree throws and 57.7
Thesal,ryfigureswere the same, weren't they? One million team, Convoy Crestview, also from the field.
dollars for four years with the total to be deferred over 20 1~. at 9:30a.m. in one of six
Crestview Coach Rita
years.
semifinal games scheduled Schnipke calls Beard "a well
Yes, Osmond said, but there had been a misunderstanding.
for Friday.
rounded player," noting that
Such as how and when the deferred payments J\'Ould be made
The other A game sends besides her team-leading seato Messersmith. That could affect the interest, where there
Rocky River Lutheran West ring, she also Is tops in
would he 1a swing .of as much as ~.1)()() either gomg to
( 13-4} agamst Lancaster assists.
Messersrruth or staying with the Yankees.
FisherCatholic!17-l)at 11:30
"We spend quite a bit of
Paul was flabbergasted .
a.m.
time workin~ on defense ,"
He issued a statement Wednesday saying the Yankees had
The Class AA semis pit
entered into. a written agreement with Messersmith, through
Columbus Bishop Hartley
his authorized agent, Osmond, and that Messersmith now was
( 13-6) , against Oregon
trying to renege on it. Paul said he felt his agreement with
Cardinal Stritch (13-4} at 2:30
Osmond was binding and that Messersmith, a 19-game winner
p.m. and Bellbrook (19-2)
with the· Los Angeles Dodgers last year, now was ~legal
against Warren Champion
property of the 'Yankees.
( 17·11 at 4:30p.m., while the
Paul went further .
two AAA contests find
He called Bowie Kuhn, telling him his troubles, and the
Cincinnati Sycamore (17-ll)
commissioner is holding a hearing in his New York office and Columbus Watterson (17today with Paul, Osmond, Miller, Moss and. George 0) colliding at 7:30p.m. and By KEN ROSENIIERG
Steinbrenrler, the Yankees' principal owner, all expectejl to be Toledo Woodward and UPI Sports Writer
present.
·
Struthers, both 10.2, meeting
The Cleveland Cavaliers
Kuhn called attention to Rule 3D of the major league rules at 9:30.
clinched a berth in the NBA
which says any written agreement of acceptance between a
Noble, who is averaging 23 playoffs for the first time in
player and a club "shall be construed as a contract and held to points and 22 rebounds per their history Wednesday
he bindihg."
game, finished second In the night, tl)en set their sights oo
"It was hot an agreement," insists Marvin Miller. "It was
high jwnp last spring in tbe .. a more lofty and prestigious
merely a piece of paper outlining a few provisions."
first girls state high school ·.- position,
the
,league
Paul insists otherwise.
track meet and also starred championship.
"I think I've been in this business long enough to know what on the schools state volleyball
Throughout those troubled
a firm agreement is," he says. "This was a firm agreement championship squad.
times, one thing remained
· and we expect Andy Messersmith to pitch for the Yankees."
"She's a natural athlete," constant-Coach Bill Fitch's
Miller claims the contract sent to Osmond for Messersmith's said her coach, Louise Drum- humor.
signa lure did not con(orm to the terms on the original piece of mond, whose team will take a
In fact, last year when the
paper signed by 0smond and Paul. There was a· change, he 42-game winning streak into Cavs missed a playoff berth
says, in how the deferred payments would be made. ·
its game against Crestview. by a one-point loss in their
I asked Qabe Paul whether Herb Osmond has the power of
"Picture a 7-foot high final game, Fitch put it In the
attorney for Messersmith. The Yankee president said, "he school boy who can do ·proper perspective.
represented himself that he did."
· everything and you know
"Close only counts in
And there you have it- another win for Andy Me~ersmitb. what I'm talkin~ about," said horseshoes, hand grenades
· Messersmith, it develops, never signed over any power of Drummond, who slarts one and at the dr1ve~n-movles,"
attorney to Osmond.
. senior, three juniors and a he said .
·
You don't have to be any legal gem us to figure out what that sophomore.
Well, the Cavs acen't close
piece of paper is worth that Paul and Osmond signed.
"She (Noble ) has a .anymore. In fact, they have. a

of "them for extra bases. Ted Tom Hume and catcher Don
Sizemore and Steve Garvey Werner Jii the minor league
also collected a double each. complex' for reassignment.
The Dodgers completed
All three played with In·
three double plays, g1ving dianapolis last year and are
them a tot,! of 18 in eight expected to be J\'ith the Reds'
spring games.
.
. American Association farm
· The Reds, outhit 9:&amp;; · club aga in' this season.
finished the game scoring
Payne and Hwne are rated
with a run in the eighth two of the top pitching
inning. Cincinnati players prospects in the club's farm
Cllmmitted the two contest system. Both pitched in Wederrors.
nesday's game with the Dod·
Meanwhile in Tampa gers.
Wednesday, the Reds sent
"Payne has .been terrific
pitchers Larry Payne and this spring but I would rather

First girls .sta,t e basketball
tournain-e nt to. start Friday

,-·

Th
n h rt12 cillzen serviCes. The Council
h ~c year~ ago~ / 1 ' is dependent upon local funds '
1.e elgs 2un Y en ~r for a large share of its
Clllzens Center opened Its operating expenses. Local
doors. In the past th~ee years, funds are raised thr.Q)lgh
programs
and serv1ces
been
expanded
to meethave
the mem bers h'Ips, dona lion s an d
money-making projects.
.
need: of older persons 10 the
The Council was first
c~~~dance at the Center organized in February 1972
·
d f
105 th from a volunteer group who
ha. s tncreathse
t r1o9m49 . the were co ncerned with th e
f1rst mon
o
10
e
.
.
1
1 ' th Th ' many problems - fmanc1al,
mos b r~cden mont . · 1 dis physical and emotional num er oes hno h me bu e which people encounter as
manyhpderbsonsthw o ave eofen they grow older. A survey of
reac e y e servicest ·_ 1,200 older persons was
ftere d bhay the Center tbteu daedc conducted to determine the
ua11y ve never a nh · needs 10
. Me1gs County. The
1 50
An average o . ptothne Council decided to implement
calls are received dOlly a e
h. h o id
Center Semor c1t1zens of a program w IC w u
· c'"' 1 h· 1 d th provide many of the needed
Meigs oun Y ave oun
e
·
Cente~ a place to enjoy the semces ·
.
· h' 11 · d d. - Progr-ams wh1ch are
comptal~lontsh lp otari Ients s.an
funded through the Council
to uf~lze eJr en l:n a include the Senior Citizen
ghealln mthanner has whe 1 ~s Comprehensive Pl'ogram . the
pmg
. and Referra
' 1
d d -o ers w en e p IS lnformahon
neT\e ·
.
th Outreach Program and the
.
e
sp~nso~mg
~gene~'
Retired Senior Volunteer
Me~gs ~;oun Y ouncl ~·~e Program
•
Ag~ng, t' a . ~on -pr~ 1d In addition to the above, a
orb ganthlza 1Con , Is_ eslgna ef nutrition
pr ogra m
is
y e omm1ss1oners o
.
· c t
th If · 1 tlfOVIded funded through the
Melgs.
oun
Y a~ e 0 lela Galha·Meigs Commumty
1
p annmgt ' an f seArgvlncge Action Agency and the Site
organ1za 1on M or Co 1 , and facllllles
..
'
Pr ograms Ill elgs un 1l · b ll1 c te are furmshed
Accordmg to the 1970 census Y. e en r ·
there are 2 731 persons over
Services provided under
65 in Meigs' County, 13.8 pet. these programs are :
of the total population . This is
Tr~nsportallon
the fifth highest percentage . In Meigs County pracin the state. The estimate of hc~lly all commumty
persons over 60 is 16_5 pet. "!r,. fac1hhes - health, legal,
the total population .
, county government . and
The Council is associated shoppmg - .are located m the
with the Buckeye Hills . Po~erO)(·Mtddle port area
Hocking Valley Regional Th1s poses a problem for
Development District and the older persons, many of whom
Ohio Commission on Aging do not dnve .
through which it receives a
Two mml-buse~ are used to
portion of its · funds for offer transporll!t!On serv1ces
operating expenses of SCIJ.IOr to semor c1t1zens throughout

Hooton topples ·Cincinnati, .6-l

.

VERO BEACH, Fla. l UP!)
- Burt Hooton pitched seven
innings · to spark. the Los
Angeles Dodgers to a &amp;-1 win
over the Cincinnati Reds
Wednesday . in their fin·a!
Florida exhibition game fo.r a
&amp;-2 record, the best of any
National League team. .
Hooton w'ent seven frames
- second Dodger "urier to go
that far this spring -gave up
five hits and two walks while
striking out two. 'Qle Dodgers
collected four hits and used a
Pete Rose error in the first

I

.

Clarence Struble

Mn. Goldie Cleadealll

CounseiUog
Counselling services are
closely associated with . Inforamtlon and Referral and ·
can be provided through
coordination with other
agencies such as Community
Mental Health. Ministers are
available. Sometimes all that
is needed is the sympathetic
ear of one of the staff, As one
senior citizen said, "It helps
just knowing someone

cares.

11

Nutrition Program
Although the program was
funded to serve 35 l)lDches
daily, volunteer help and
donations have enabled an
average of 75 persons dally to
take advantage of the hot
Home Maintenance
lunch program . This
Many older persons find •program
provides
a
dignity and self-respect in nutritious meal to many
maintaining their own homes people who otherwise,
as long as possible. To do so, . because of low income or
assistance in home main- poor health, might have
tenance is often, necessary. inadequate diets' Meals may
The home maintenance be delivered to persons who
service was established to are physically unable to come
provide for minor repairs in to the Center.
those cases where the
Educational Programs
homeowner is linancially
The educational programs
unable to do •SO. A part time range 'from learning new
staff person is responsible for skills to participa ling In ·
checking the person's group discussions on subjecta
eligibility, finding someone to which are of interest to older
do the repairs at a nominal · persons or from which. they
cost, ordering the mate~·
Is may benefit.
and checking the work a!
·
Examples are art classes,
is completed.
chair caning, woodworking,
Mrs. A. R. KaJPI
legal affairs, community
services and safety in the
horne.
Social Acllvltles
This part of the program
has different meanings for
different persons - for some,
personal enjoyment and
enrich¥.'en ~ for others,
facing loneliness or a crisis,
emotional support. For the
depressed it acts as '
therapeutic communitf
where
communication
with others helps in social
rehabilitation.
Examples are individual
activities, quilting, crafts,
playing horseshoes, cards,
just yisiting and small group
activities such as bowling,
Charles Karr, Sr.
hiking, singing. Large group
Mrs. Gertrude MitebeD
activities include square
dances, hayrides, und short
trips.
Financial Assistance
tremendous amoUnt of talent,
GAME IS FRIDAY
The
Senior
Citizens
Center
skill
and experience _to the
' The
Eastern-Southern
is
used
as
a
market
place
for
conununity
and In return he
..Aiwnni basketball game will
handmade
items
and
for
receives
a
great
satisfaction
be played Friday at 7 p.m. at
garden
produce.
These
sales
for
having
shared.
Eastern . Admission is $1 for
At the end of March there
adults and 50 cents for supplement income in ,many
cases
where
people
are
were
239 senior citizens
students. The event is
physically
able
to
pur~ue
enrolled
in the Retired Senior
sponsored by the Eastern
these productive pasttimes. Voluntee.I' Program. These
Alumni Assn.
, ,Many senior citizens have ~ volunteers have contributed
ASKS DIVORCE
benefited from a used 35,693 hours of volunteer
Dottie Capehart, . Rt. 4, clothing exchange shop service to their comlnunlty in
Pomeroy has filed suit for where clothing is available the past year.
'
divorce ' from Michael ac~~ding to the person's
They have vol~teered at
Capehart, Spring Lake, N. c,, abthty to_ pay . .
. thefollowmg agencies: Meigs
County Home , Arcadia
00 charges of,gross neglector ,•· Fmanc1al _ assiStance has
duty and exfreme cruelty.
been QJ&gt;ta~ned for older Nursmg Home , Syracuse
persons m emergepty Nursmg Home, iijmwood
situations.
Nursing Home., Pomeroy
Volunteer
Program
'fi.ibrary,
Middleport Ubrary,
TAG DAY SET
The
retiree
offers
a
(Continued
on page JO)
RUTLANO - Tag Day
scheduled Saturday here for
the baseball program has
been cancelled.

.

Mother's Rings by

CANVASS PLANNED
RUTLAND - Members of
the Rutland Garden Club and
Drew
Webster
Post
American Legion, will
convass Rutland for contributions to the Cancer Fund
next week beginning Monday.

JeweJmont.
G~e the gift that

any Mother would enjoy
5
9

Now only
SIGN UPSET
The signup for Harrisonville Pony League players
will be held at 10 a·. m.
Saturday at the headquarters. The cost for each boy is
$5 which Includes hat and
insurance .•

28 ~

(pill $,UI,., ·-~

Mount 2 to 7stonn por rl119.

Otlltr 1tyf11 ovoilablo

GOESSI.ER'S JEWELRY STORE
Court St., Pomeroy ,.
'

.

said Schnipke, "and- a lot of
time at the foul line. "
It evidently pays off,
because 5-li playmaket Cindy
Owens has made 73.1 per cent
of her free throws .
Champion, the best record
team among the AA
semifinalists, lost its 'opening
game of the season to
Lakeview and has won 17 in a
row since then, including a
pair of wins over 'Lakeview.
Jenny Romack, a 5·7
senior, leads t~ Golden
Flashes in scoring with a 20
per game average, with 5-9
junior center Cindy Packman
at 15.
Beth Bickford, a 5-4 senior
guard, is the key to the
Champion offense, however.
"We really depend on her to
set the plays," said Coach
Renee Ackerman of Bickford,
validictorlan of her class.
Sycamore, paced by ii-7
Sandy Dittoe, an excellent
ball handler, has won 40 In a

row over the past three years.
The Aviators, with a front
line of 5-9, ii-9 and 5-ll,
outrebounded
Kettering
Fairmont East 63.,'!7 in the
regional finals, with Cindy
Mc Ca ll and' Kathy Koch
getting 16 each.
Watterson , Sycamore's
semifinal opponent, is
smaller with 5-8 junior
forward Lisa Bernard the
Eagles' biggest player.
Watterson's top scorer Is
Mary Ellen Seidel, a 5-6
junior with a 13.5 average.
After that, the Eagle scoring
is well balanced, ranging
from six to nine points ·per
contest.
~~we're not big, " said
Watterson Coach Ginny
Sawyer. "Our biggest aaaets
are speed and defense."
The championship games
in all three classes will be
Saturday, Class A at noon,
AA at 3 p.m. and AAA at 7:30
p.m.

Cavs clinch first
NBA playoff·bert~
shot at dethroning the
Washington Bullets as
Central Division clilunplons.
They moved Into first place
Wednesday night when Jim
Cleamons scored 12 of his 18
points in the fourth quarter
and they beat New Orleans,

scored six Points In the final
five minutes to lead Golden
State to a 95-88 victory.
Smith put the Warriors
ahead to stay 81-79,with 4:45
left and then twice improved
the lead In five as the Bullet's
threatened in the closing
11~101.
minutes.
If Austin Carr, who scored .. Rick Barry led all scorers
I? points against New with 22 points while Jamaal
Orleans, can return to top Wilkes and Charlie Johnson
form by playoff time, the each added 18 for Golden
season might be even more State. Smith had 14 points.
In other NBA · games,
gratifying.
· Meanwhile, the Bullets had Philadelphia edged Buffalo,
their hands full with the 107-103, Boston routed
Golden State Warriors who Phoenix, 122-102, Detroit
swept · them four st;alght shaded Chicago, 102-96, and
games in the finals of the - Seattle beat Los Angeles, 120playoffs last year and have 109.
alr~a(ly, clinched the Pacific
In the ABA, San Antonio
crown this season.
downed Denver, 117-110, InPhil Smith who made only diana topped New York, 1161-{)f~ shots bJ the first half 106 and Kentucky bea t
· Virginia, lll-103.

Montreal going after all records
the Los Angeles Kings iopped
the St. Louis Blues, 2-1, in
""oring leader Guy Lafleur oth er NHL games.
"" there's little doubt about
Th e w·mmpeg
· J ets defea ted
says
&lt; • the
th
T
to
e oron Toros, ""•
l·t, the Montreal Canadlens
I
d
C1
Cru
de
beat
the
are going' to win the Stanley
eve an
sa rs
'I
gla
N
E
d
What
. year and a number
ew 'n n
ers, ,. •
Cup thiS
· Roadru nners
of league records will fall In and the Phoerux
the drive.
toppecl the Cincinati StingerS',
It has been 15 years since a 7-2, m WHA games.
member of the Canadle~ Hawks f, Scouts 3:
.)lernie Geoffrion won the Art
stan Mikita scored two
'scoring.
B~t
goals
and assisted. Cliff Koroll
Ross Trophy for
th 1 d
Chi
011
it appears that Lafleur s
ano er, ea mg
cago
about to end all that.
~ its victory over Kansas
. Lafleur scored two goals City. Gary Croteau scored
and assisted on goal8 by lwo goals for the SCouts, w~
Jacque's Lemaire, Peter have a l-32-8 record in !herr
' Mahovllch and Serge Savard last 41 games.
as Montreal skated to a 7.,'! Leafs 4, Wings 4:
win over the Pittsburgh
Stan Weir scored his !9th
Penguins Wednesday night. goal at 3' 09. of the third
Pierre Bouchard and Bob pe~lod, enablmg Toronto _to
Gainey accounted for the gam a tie with Detroit .
other Montreal goals.
· · Referee Lloyd Gilmore
· The two goals gave Lafleur handed out a . to~! .of 129
M for the season, one better minutes 1n penalties. m
than his pen10nal Cld'Oer high addition to ejecting eight
of 53 set last year. The five -·players from the game. The
points gave him l20 points, assessments r~ulted from a
Seven more than. seco-• place 39-minute brawl during the
'"'
Bobby Clarke of Phlla,delphla
second pe rlod ·
•
United PresslntenuiUonal

50 boys playing baseball
)•

fo~ - Meigs High -Marauders
Twenty-one jumors and
,seniors have suited up for the
Meigs Marauders first two
base)lall. games of 1976 whicli
have divided up to one victory
• and one loss.
The Marauders' new head
coach, Dale Harrison succeeding Donald Wolfe,
who hal&gt; retired fr.Qm the prep
school diamond wars - said
approximately SO boys have
come out for the spring sport.
The sophomores and freshmen hopefully will play a 13game reserve team schedule.
· The opening 4-3 loss to the
powerpacked Point Pleasant
squad couldn't' have been
discouraging, especially
since the Marauders eame
back TUesday behind the
·str,on•g
pitching
of
righthander Jeff McKinney to
ali but shut out (3-1) another
strong team, Ironton, in the
SEOAL opener for both clubs.
The varisty toster by year
and poslton:
SENIORS
Kenny
Mankin, catch; Pat Soulsby,
catch-outfielder; !Oteve
Bachner, second base, outfielder; Mickey Davenport,
short stop; Charlie Marshall,
third base; Mike Magnotta,
center field; Jim Howard,
pitcher, right field; Jeff
Miller, pitcher-outfielder;
Jeff McKinney, pitcher,
outfielder; Jeff Glass, and

Wayne Searls, outfielders; Meigs.
Fri., Apr. 23, M~igs at
Kenny Wyatt, catcher, first
Ironton .
base.
-":WNIORS
Brian . Mon., Apr. 26, Trimble at
Hamilton, catcher-first base; M~igs.
Tues., Apr. 27, Meigs at
Carl Carmichael, first base;
Dale Browning, pitcher, Gallipolis.
Fri., Apr. 30, Athens at
outfielder; Greg Smith,
second base and backup Meigs.
Tues., May 4, Logan at
shortstop 'or third base, and
pitcher; Crenson Pratt, left Meigs
Thurs ., May 6, Point
field ; Dick Owen, first base,
and Stan Starcher, Ray Plea5!1nl at Meigs.
Fri., May 7, Jackson at
Willford and Rick George,
.Meigs.
outfielders.
Lettennen are Davenport, · Sat., May 8, North Gallia at
Bachner , Marshall, Meigs. Game time I :30 p.m.
Tues., May 11, Meigs at
Magnotta, McKinney,
Waverly.
Hamilton, Carmichael and
Fri., May 14, Wellston at
Browning.
Meigs.
The Meigs schedule
, RESERVES
(Varsity}: ~
Thurs.,
Apr. 8, Meigs at
Wed., March 31, Gallipolis
scoring
, Flyers
Eastern.
•
race . in the
at Meigs.
Sat., , Apr. 10, Meigs at
The win gave the
Fri., April 2, Meigs at
Wahama, . Game time I :00 p. Canadiens an NHL record 123
Vinton
points, and left · thellfl.ope
Tues ., Apr. 6, Meigs at m.
Athens.
Mon , Apr. 19, Meigs at short of the league record of
57 wins in a season.
Fri. Apr. 9, Meigs at Logan: Southern.
"We're going after all the
Sat., Apr. 10, Meigs at
Wed., Apr . 28, South.
records this year and we're
Wahama (2), game time 1 p. western at Meigs.
m.
Wed., May 5; Southern at going to top It all off by
winning the Stanley CUp,"
Mon., Apr. 12, Meigs at Meigs.
Kyger Creek.
Sat., May 6, North Gallia at Lafleur said emphatically .
The Chicago Blac~ Hawks
Tues., Apr. 13, Meigs at Meigs.
Jackson,'
Thurs., May 13, Eastern at defeated the Kansas City
Scouts, 6·3, the Toronto
Thurs., Apr. 1~. Waverly al Meigs.
Meigs.
I Plus 2 games with Maple Leafs and Detroit Red
' Tues., Apr. 20, Meigs at Gallipolis, · 2 with Point. Win~s played a 4-4 tie, the
Wellston . ·
Pleasant, I with Vinton, I New York Rangers beat the
Thurs., Apr. 22, Wahama at with Wahama - dates to be New York Islanders, 3-1, and
set).

~HL

the second period stood up as
the winning goal for the
Rangers. Ed Westfall scored
the Islanders' goal on a power
play-t"ing
the record of 92 by
'
a team for an NHL season.
The loss damaged the
Islanders' chances of
finishing ahead of Buffalo in
the complicated NHL playoff.
pairing system.
Kings Z, Blues 1:
Goals by Marcel · Dionne
and Don Kozak lifted Los
AngelestoltswlnatSt. Louis,
Dionne's 38th' goal of the
season set a club scoring
record. Red Berenson scored
his 20th goal of the season for
the Blues.
WHA:
Bobby Hull scored three .
goals for the Jets and now Is
one short of the 50-mark for
the season ... Garry Jarrett
and Jerry Pinder each scored
two goals as the Crusaders
revived their playoff hopes
with their win over . the
Whalers ... Seven players
scored for the Roadrunners in
a "businessman's special"

rRan~~ge~n~~~~~l~a
nde~l'tl~l.===ga:m:e:th:aitista~rted:;a~t~n~oon~a;nd
Pat
at 1!02 of drew

5

BILL FLETCHER
1258 PGwell St.
Middleport, 0 .
PH. 992-7155

N BA St•ndlngs .
l!ly United Press International

Eistern Conference
NHL Stendinvs
ly Unlttd Prtn lnternetlonal

ClmpDell Conterenct
•

P1lrick Olvllion
WLTPtsGFGA
x Ph lla
49 12 16 114 JJ2 201
NY Is landers 41 20 16 9878.4 18'2
Atlonlo
33 33 11 77 251 232
NY Rongers 28 41 9 65 258 323
Smvthe Oi~ls i on
WLTPtsOFOA
Chicego
J 1 30 17 79 2~ 256
Vancouver
J I Jl 15 77 261 110
5! . LOUIS
79 361J 71 244 280
Mtnnesota
20 52 6 46 191 297
Kansas City 12 54 12 36 187 341
Wiles conterer~ce
Narr\!1 Olvltlon
W L T Ptl GF GA
x Montre11l
56 11 11 113 J27 168
Los Plngeles J7 32 9 83 256 259

Aflantlc Ol\llslon
W. L .. Pet. 01
)( BOSfOn
51 'U .680 Philade t p~ l a

New York

Central

C l e~e tan d

W l T Ph GO OA

47 U 16 110 305 226
Buffalo
44 20 13 101 325 231
Toron to
J4 29 15 83 290 267
Californt~
26 41 11 63 45 27 1
•·clinched division title
Wednesdl'f 'S Results
NY Rangers J NY ISlanders 1
Montreal 7 Pitt sb urgh J
x Boston

Toronto 4 Detroit 4
Los Angeles 2 Sl Louis 1
Chicago 6 Kansas City J
Thursday's Games
Allante at NV Islanders
Wllshlngton at Philadelph ia
Boston 1!11 Buff&amp;lo
Frlclav's Games
Mlnnesotflllt Atlanta
vancouver at Cell lornlll

Slelf

l .. m l iiC II'IWII!Ct ComiNinY
OI11Ct !lloomiiiQkll\ lfliFIO'~

~me

p

"

'

Dl~lslon

W5shington
Houston
New Orleans

4S
46
38
35
28

30
31
38
41
41

.600 ,597 .SOO 7lfJ
111~1 tov,
.373 17

A!lanta
Wtnter n Cont•nnce
MldwtSt Division

W. L.. Pet. -otl
M i lwaukee

34 4'2 ,447 -

De troll
Kansas City

32 43 .427
29 47 .382

Chicago

w..

Por!land

1v,
5

22 5• .289 12.

Pacific Olvhlon
L .. Pet .
x Golden State 56 21 .7'17

39 36

.520

oe
16

39 37 .513 16'11
38 40 487 18•h
34 42 .4117 11112

•· cli nched division title
Wednu.dly 's Resultl
Bos10n 122 Phoe,n lx 102
Philadelphia 107 Buffalo 103
Cleveland 110 New Or leans 101
G old~n SU1 te 95 washington 88

&lt;(!roll 102 Chlca~o 96

Scfttlle 120 Los Angeles 109

Thur1d1y'1 Olmt

Bos ton at .Cleveland
FrldiY''I Glmt.l
New Orle&amp;ns at Detroit
Houston .111 Bosion
Atlllnla AI BOffalo
Washington at Phi ladelphia
New York at Chicago
Kansas Clly at Milwaukee
Seat li e at Los Angele!l
Por tland at Phoenix

.••
CALL MARSIIALL
Everyone 18 or over who
· wishes to play baseball in the
Meigs Independent League Is
asked to call Charlie Marsl~all at 992·7448.
WANT TO PLAY'/
All boys 16 to 18 years old
interested in playing senior
Babe Ruth baseball are askect
to call Lewis Harper at 74221l21, Charlie Marshall at 9927448 or Jerry Davenport.

ABA Stondlnv•
By United Pren lntern•tlon•l
W, L .. Pet. 08

x.Denver
New York
Srm A.nfon lo

58 21
51 29
47 3l

116
638 6'12
588 1D112

kentuckv
4.4 l6 .550
Indiana
39 41 .4118
St LOU I!
J.t 46 ..42.5
Virginia
13 65 · .167
It· Clinched dlvl1lon title

131h
18'12
2l'h

43 1h

,Wedntldly's Ruulh

lndlaWe 116 New York 106

Kentucky 111 Virginia 103
San Antonio 117 Denver 110
Tttursd•y's G•mes
(No games 5cheduled l
Friday's G•mn
Kenlucky llf New York
Virginia at St Louis
san Antonio at tncllana

•

Meigs hounds

do well in ·trials
By Greg Balky
:rhe Meigs Beagle Club has
heen doing quite well In
recent field trials around the
state. In trials held by the
Huntington Beagle Uub In
Gallipolis on Feb. 29, Radar
Line Kayto~ owned by
Franklin Wilson of Racine,
took fifth place.
In Logan on March 14 In a
contest sponsored by the
Colwnbus Beagle Club, the

Independents
meet Tuesday
There will be a meeting of
the Ohio Valley Independent
Baseball League April 6th at
. the Steam Boat Inn In Racine
at 6 p.m. All new teams are
reminded that the deadline
for sign-up Is April 13.
All rated umprles are also
urged to attend If they are
interested in officiating any
of these games. Inquiries
should be directed to Greg
Roush of Syracuse or Don
Hupp of Racine .

Meigs County dogs did even
better as they took the first
three places. Key Line
Timmy, owned by Mike
Whitlatch of Pomeroy,
walked away with the lop
spot; Henry Wells' Well Run
Fascination took second and
Harlan Whltlatch's 'Key Une
Amos got third.
At the Southern Ohio
!!eagle Uub at Chillicothe on
March 21, the same three
dogs once again fared well.
Key Une Amos was second,
Well Run Fascination took
third, and Key Une Timmy
came away with fifth place.
At Marletll! on March 21
also, but In Marietta, fladar
Line Leroy of Franklin
Wilson notched fourth place.
On March 28 In field trials
sponsored by the local club,
local dogs still fared well
when Key Une Amos and •
Well Run Fascination look •
third and fourth places,
respectively.
::.
All of these hounds are now •
qualified for the Derby ••
Winners' Stake whlch .ls to be
held at the Salt Creek Beagle
Club on April 25th.

..

Henry Block has-·

17 reasons why you
shoulu come to us
for income tax help.

•
·~

;:;

-J

•

,.
rr
I f l ..

,.,

.. ,
·~

Reason 12. There are major changes in
the tax laws that could affect your
return. Our people are.specially trained
to help you take advantage of these
new laws. We'll do our besl to make
sure u pay the right amount of tax.
No more, no less. ·

'
...,

...
....
"'
,_

.

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618. t MAIN ST.

"·
'"·

Pomeroy, Ohio
PH. 99l-3795
OPEN: 9-6 Weekday1, 9-5 Sal.
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

'' ,

"

•
.

~

34 o12 .453 171h

w.. L.. Pet. oe

L

Plltsburgh 34 32 12 80 329 293 Seottle
Det roII
26 42 10 62 218 288 ' Phoenix
Woshlng ton 10 57 10 30 21&lt; 375 Los Angele!io
Ad.lms Division

9Vt

42 34 .SSJ

&lt;2 35 .5&lt;5 10

Bull~lo

H&amp;R BLOCK®

"State Farm has LIFE insurance,
· . too!·Calhqe for details~
Like I good neighbor,
Slate Fann is there.

r----::-------.,
: Pro II
~Stall tlings :

have him pitching regularly
at Indianapolis and have him
ready if 1 should need him
later in the season than h11ve
him sitting on thf: beneh with I
us," ~eds manager Sparky
Anderson said.

�•

'

•

"

'

Mrs. Ulllan Moore

Rev. Harold Deetli ""

Wayne Tlimer

Pearl Reyaoldi

Lula Hamptoa

John Rice

Rev. Robert Bumgarner

•

Senior Citizens Center in
three ·years of growth,
expansion of activities ·
t

Hazel McKelvey

C. E. Blakeslee

Mrs. PauUne Roush

- SmithI
Miss Lucille

Mrs. Vilma Plkkojo

Edson Roush

U1e cowtly on a da\ly basis.
The buses average 2, 700
miles per month, with ap·
proximately 3,600 riders
making use of this service the
""Sl .vear. Many oilier per.sons are transported to outof-county medical facilities
for heail.h services.
Information, Referral
lnformahon and Refe rral Is
·
h h If
a service w IC o ers
assistance m areas such as
· 1secunty
· , 1ood sta mps ,
Socia
Medicare and Medicaid,
·
hom~s , hea 1th
nursmg
problems, financia l problems
an d oth er needs. Ass1·s ta nee
in these matters often in volves a c' onsiderab.le amount
.
. .
of mvest1gal10n and follow up A full-time comdinator is
.
.
h1red for th1s program.
Persons working with Informa tion and Referral have
to be kn ow ledgeable of
serv1ces ava1·1a ble· th roug h
other agencies which can
henef1t older persons; consequenUy, they work closely
with these agencies. Over
1,200requests for Information
d
· ta
h
b
an -or ass1s ·nee ave cen
received th1s pas t year.
Office space is provided for
th e
soc1a· 1 secun'ty
representative one day each
ek
we .
Out Reach
In conjunction with Information and Referral an
Out Reach Worker was hired
to contact older persons and
advise them of services
wh1ch are availabl e , 36
contacts were made the past
month. Often, older p-ersons
la ck means of com.
mun1oat10n and consequently '
are unaware of these services. Example : An older
person was not aware of his

Rev. Howard Shiveley ,

Rev. William Mlddleswarth

Mrt1. W. P. Locbary

e!igib1hty for Supplemental
secunty Income payments;
consequently, his income has
been increased from $112.00
to $156.0() a month.
Newsletter
A TIJOnthly Newsletter is
published by the staff and
mailed to approximately
2,000 persons. The newsletter
contains items of interest to

discussiOns
on health
problems of older persons.
Many of the above are
possible because of the
cooperation of other agencies
'and organizations. By
agencies working together a
cancer screening program
for Meigs County women was
made possible; funded by the
Ohio Dept. of Health.
Shopping Assistance and
Eseort Service
This service is provided to
older persons who, because of
physical disabilities and
confinement to their homes,
require ass1stance in shopping and other personal
business.

older

person s,

such

as

changes in Homestead
Exemption regulations and
information regarding senior
Citizen programs in Meigs
Coun ty.
Health Services
, For older persons, medical
expenses are 3 times those of
younger persons, statistics
show that Medicare pays only
45 pet. of an older person 's
medical costs. Many older
persons cannot afford to buy
some of the items required by
the infirmities of age, such as
glasses, hearing aids and
dentures .
Some health services which
have been provided are
monthly blood pressure
clinic, annual flue shots,
mulli-phastc health screening
pr ogra m, home nursing
courses, first aid classes,
physical fitness classes,
arrangements for wheel
chairs and hospital beds,
medical appomtments made ,
and
programs
and

Loretta Beegle

HOSPITAL NEWS
Cales , lronton , Jeffery Wood,
Plcasnt Valley Hospital
Scott
Depot; Mrs. James Lee,
DISCHARGES - Mrs.
Henderson
; Virg(l Watson,
Kenn eth Roush, Mary
Gallipolis;
Mrs. Luther
Goodwm, New Haven ; Mrs.
Price,
Apple
Grove; Mrs.
Phiimore Hudnall , Minme
Rufus
Greathouse,
GlenBurdette, Mrs. Harold Kenly,
wood
;
Mrs.
Charles
Herdtificially stimulated growth Valene Biggs, Bucky
man,
Letart;
Pamela
Van·
qf the lining of the uterus Gillispie, Harry Davis,
fossin,
Mt.
Alto,
and
.
Leslie
could lead to cancer.
Darnell Jefferies, Point
One possible solution is to Pleasant ;
Mrs . Okey Markhall, Kenova.
interrupt the hormones once , Scharllger, Middleport; John
a month and induce artificial James, Henderson; Alma
bleeding by giving the other Miller, Middleport; Leo Veterans Memorial Hospital
f e m a I e h o r m o n e , Clonch, Gallipolis ; Matilda
DISCHARGED - Daniel
progesterone . Answers to
Norman, John Davis, Saith
these and many other
t' riend, Douglas Barnett,
questions surrounding this recent heart attack or are in Robert Burson, Aaron Card,
problem have not yet been heart failure do poorly . Sherrie Jewell, Bessie
answered.
.
Surgery within three to six Sellers.
The terms m the diagnosis months after a heart attack
that you mclude in yqur letter does increase the risk . The
means that the cells were not lac\ that your relative had the
cancerous, but they ' were · heart attack three years ago
LODGE TO MEET
atypic's!, meaning they should mean that she is out of
Pomeroy
Chapter No. 80,
weren't quite normal either. this ~roup, and if her conRAM
will
hold a special
If she wishes to continue dition IS as her cardiologist
convocatiOn
Monday,
April 5,
taking female horm.ones and apparently thinks, she should
at
7:30
p.
m.
at
the
Msonic
her &amp;ardiologist feels that she be able to undergo the
can (undergo this surgery it surgery without difficulty Temple to confer the Mark
Master and Past Master
might be advisable for her to from her heart.
elect to have a hysterectomy,
For information on the Degrees.
otherwise it might he a good effect of female hormones
idea if she we.re put on a send 50 cents for The Health
sequential type program Letter , number
5-12,
NEXT WEDNESDAY
which induced artificial Menopause . Send a long,
The Galiia Academy High
shedding of the excess cell stamped , self-ad dres~ed
growth once a month
. envelope for mailing. Ad· School baseball game with
There is literally no way to dr~ss yoitr letter to me in the Meigs Marauders, rained
predict which patients will do care of this newspaper, P. 0 . out Wednesday, has IJeen
well during surgery except to Box 1551, Radio City ~a lion, rescheduled next Wednesday
in Syracuse at 4 p m.
say that those who ha ve had a New York , NY 10019.
j

Smpicious cells need.study
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR . LAMB - •
Please help me· with a
medical pr oblem we are
having with a close relative .

medicines given to · women
after the m~nopause do
stimulate the growth of the
hmng of the uterus (womb ).
This is because such
Sheismhermid~Osandshe
preparations contain
has been on a hormone estrogen. During the normal
medication for three to four menstrual cycle the natural
years , She began havmg female estrogen hormones
abnormal bleeding from , tilL stimulate the uterus to have
uterus.
an overgrow th of cells or
She consutled bet' famil y hyperplasia . Then when
doctor who sen t her to a menstruation comes they are
gynecologist. he advised her shedcIt is not surprising then
to have aD and C (dilatation that the overgrowth of cells
and curettage) which she did . was observed when a tissue·
The pathologist report C!!ITie specimen was taken from the
back
"focal ollt atypi c'ai ·. lining of the uterus. The
adenomatous hyperplasia." gynecologist is not upset
The gynecologist did not because he realizes this, and
say that this abnormal tissue he !snows that increased cell
in the uterus was a cancer, growth Occurs in response to
but·hedidsayitcoiild become such medicines.
malignan t. He left it up to her
Recent repor ts indi cate ,
to decide whether or n'ot she that women who are taking
should have o1 'hysterectomy. female hormones after the
He hesitated because she had menopause pre four to 15
a heart attack three years times more Jikely to develop
ago and has occasional spellS cancer of the uterus . In the
of angina, What is your past many gynecologists
opinion? Her cardiologist have felt the one major
thinks she can take the major . danger from taking female
surgery and anesthesia.
hormones
after
the
DEAR READER - The menopause
was
the
femal(
hormo~e s
in · possibility • .that ; he ar·

"'

inning to ~core four runs off
Reds starter Pat Zachary.
Five of the Los Angeles hits
produced' extra bases as
catcher . Steve Yeager
poundeg, a pair -of triples
.although he was called out at
home when he tried to stretch
one ofthem into an inslde4hepark home run . He drove in
three· runs.
· Doidge~ outfielder Bill
Buckner continued hi:! powerhitting by getting a double in
the first inning; giving him 14
hits In eight games, with nine

· st. PETERSBURG, Fla. (UP!) - Andy Meiisersmlth wins
again!
·
.·
H~ hasn 't thrown a b&amp;:J yet this year, but this one makes it
four in a row for hiin. Imagine what he's going to be like when
the weather warms up. ..,
Messersmith's first victory was the big one. It was so big, il
turned the entire baseball structure around. That was four
months ago when arbitrator Peter Seitz made him and Dave
McNally free agents by knocking out the reserve clause.
His second and third wins came when two different courts
backed up Seitz' ruling and now here comes No.4 pretty much
the same way Catfish Hunter won his free agency from the
Oakland A's and picked up three million bucks from the New
York Yankees. On a technicality.
Here's the way it happened :
With eight clubs looking to sign Messersmith, his agent 811d
next-door neighbor in Newport, Calif., Herb Osmond; met with
Yankees' President Gabe Paul in Tampa this past Sunday.
They talked about any number of things and then got down 'to
COLUMBUS l UPI) - At 6- beautiful hook shot," said
the only one that mattered: Money.
foot-4 , Cindy Noble stands out Drummond, "but I can't get
Paul 'told Osmond the yankees would pay Messersmith $1 in a crowd .
her to shoot it in a game and if
million to pitch for them four years- this one, 1977, 1978 and
She
also
stands
out
on
the
she
has one fault, It's that she
1979.
basketball court, where the is too nice, too easy going.
psmond okayed the money but said Messersmith wanted it 17-year-old junior has led
"She takes a lot of punishon a deferred basis to help him tax wise and otherwise, and Frankfort Adena to an 111-&lt;1 ment under the boards and
Paul said that was firie Wlth him.
record this year and into the · never c ~ m pI a ins,''
The details were set down on a plain piece of paper, Osmond Class Asemifinals of the first Drummond said, adding, "I
writing them out himself. When he-finished, both he and Paul girls State High School don't cthink you can gel her
signed the paper. Paul said he'd have the whole thing put into Basketball Tournament mad."
legal language and would bring the finished version to Osmond which begins Friday morning
Crestview, which has woo
in the form of a contract.
at Ohio State's St. John 30 In a row, also has an
He did that Tuesilay.
.. .
Arena.
outstanding performer in ii-11
Osmond, said he'd get back to him. Messersmith's agent
In fact, )he Warriors and senior Journey Beard, who
conveyed the terms to his client, who checked with Marvin Noble get the privilege of averaged 22.5 points and 25
Miller antl Pick Moss of tile Players' Association. Osmond then ipaugurating the state girls rebounds during the season.
informed Paul it was no deal.
competition when they come She connected on 67 per cent
Why not, Pauf wanted to know"
.
up against another unbeaten of her Jree throws and 57.7
Thesal,ryfigureswere the same, weren't they? One million team, Convoy Crestview, also from the field.
dollars for four years with the total to be deferred over 20 1~. at 9:30a.m. in one of six
Crestview Coach Rita
years.
semifinal games scheduled Schnipke calls Beard "a well
Yes, Osmond said, but there had been a misunderstanding.
for Friday.
rounded player," noting that
Such as how and when the deferred payments J\'Ould be made
The other A game sends besides her team-leading seato Messersmith. That could affect the interest, where there
Rocky River Lutheran West ring, she also Is tops in
would he 1a swing .of as much as ~.1)()() either gomg to
( 13-4} agamst Lancaster assists.
Messersrruth or staying with the Yankees.
FisherCatholic!17-l)at 11:30
"We spend quite a bit of
Paul was flabbergasted .
a.m.
time workin~ on defense ,"
He issued a statement Wednesday saying the Yankees had
The Class AA semis pit
entered into. a written agreement with Messersmith, through
Columbus Bishop Hartley
his authorized agent, Osmond, and that Messersmith now was
( 13-6) , against Oregon
trying to renege on it. Paul said he felt his agreement with
Cardinal Stritch (13-4} at 2:30
Osmond was binding and that Messersmith, a 19-game winner
p.m. and Bellbrook (19-2)
with the· Los Angeles Dodgers last year, now was ~legal
against Warren Champion
property of the 'Yankees.
( 17·11 at 4:30p.m., while the
Paul went further .
two AAA contests find
He called Bowie Kuhn, telling him his troubles, and the
Cincinnati Sycamore (17-ll)
commissioner is holding a hearing in his New York office and Columbus Watterson (17today with Paul, Osmond, Miller, Moss and. George 0) colliding at 7:30p.m. and By KEN ROSENIIERG
Steinbrenrler, the Yankees' principal owner, all expectejl to be Toledo Woodward and UPI Sports Writer
present.
·
Struthers, both 10.2, meeting
The Cleveland Cavaliers
Kuhn called attention to Rule 3D of the major league rules at 9:30.
clinched a berth in the NBA
which says any written agreement of acceptance between a
Noble, who is averaging 23 playoffs for the first time in
player and a club "shall be construed as a contract and held to points and 22 rebounds per their history Wednesday
he bindihg."
game, finished second In the night, tl)en set their sights oo
"It was hot an agreement," insists Marvin Miller. "It was
high jwnp last spring in tbe .. a more lofty and prestigious
merely a piece of paper outlining a few provisions."
first girls state high school ·.- position,
the
,league
Paul insists otherwise.
track meet and also starred championship.
"I think I've been in this business long enough to know what on the schools state volleyball
Throughout those troubled
a firm agreement is," he says. "This was a firm agreement championship squad.
times, one thing remained
· and we expect Andy Messersmith to pitch for the Yankees."
"She's a natural athlete," constant-Coach Bill Fitch's
Miller claims the contract sent to Osmond for Messersmith's said her coach, Louise Drum- humor.
signa lure did not con(orm to the terms on the original piece of mond, whose team will take a
In fact, last year when the
paper signed by 0smond and Paul. There was a· change, he 42-game winning streak into Cavs missed a playoff berth
says, in how the deferred payments would be made. ·
its game against Crestview. by a one-point loss in their
I asked Qabe Paul whether Herb Osmond has the power of
"Picture a 7-foot high final game, Fitch put it In the
attorney for Messersmith. The Yankee president said, "he school boy who can do ·proper perspective.
represented himself that he did."
· everything and you know
"Close only counts in
And there you have it- another win for Andy Me~ersmitb. what I'm talkin~ about," said horseshoes, hand grenades
· Messersmith, it develops, never signed over any power of Drummond, who slarts one and at the dr1ve~n-movles,"
attorney to Osmond.
. senior, three juniors and a he said .
·
You don't have to be any legal gem us to figure out what that sophomore.
Well, the Cavs acen't close
piece of paper is worth that Paul and Osmond signed.
"She (Noble ) has a .anymore. In fact, they have. a

of "them for extra bases. Ted Tom Hume and catcher Don
Sizemore and Steve Garvey Werner Jii the minor league
also collected a double each. complex' for reassignment.
The Dodgers completed
All three played with In·
three double plays, g1ving dianapolis last year and are
them a tot,! of 18 in eight expected to be J\'ith the Reds'
spring games.
.
. American Association farm
· The Reds, outhit 9:&amp;; · club aga in' this season.
finished the game scoring
Payne and Hwne are rated
with a run in the eighth two of the top pitching
inning. Cincinnati players prospects in the club's farm
Cllmmitted the two contest system. Both pitched in Wederrors.
nesday's game with the Dod·
Meanwhile in Tampa gers.
Wednesday, the Reds sent
"Payne has .been terrific
pitchers Larry Payne and this spring but I would rather

First girls .sta,t e basketball
tournain-e nt to. start Friday

,-·

Th
n h rt12 cillzen serviCes. The Council
h ~c year~ ago~ / 1 ' is dependent upon local funds '
1.e elgs 2un Y en ~r for a large share of its
Clllzens Center opened Its operating expenses. Local
doors. In the past th~ee years, funds are raised thr.Q)lgh
programs
and serv1ces
been
expanded
to meethave
the mem bers h'Ips, dona lion s an d
money-making projects.
.
need: of older persons 10 the
The Council was first
c~~~dance at the Center organized in February 1972
·
d f
105 th from a volunteer group who
ha. s tncreathse
t r1o9m49 . the were co ncerned with th e
f1rst mon
o
10
e
.
.
1
1 ' th Th ' many problems - fmanc1al,
mos b r~cden mont . · 1 dis physical and emotional num er oes hno h me bu e which people encounter as
manyhpderbsonsthw o ave eofen they grow older. A survey of
reac e y e servicest ·_ 1,200 older persons was
ftere d bhay the Center tbteu daedc conducted to determine the
ua11y ve never a nh · needs 10
. Me1gs County. The
1 50
An average o . ptothne Council decided to implement
calls are received dOlly a e
h. h o id
Center Semor c1t1zens of a program w IC w u
· c'"' 1 h· 1 d th provide many of the needed
Meigs oun Y ave oun
e
·
Cente~ a place to enjoy the semces ·
.
· h' 11 · d d. - Progr-ams wh1ch are
comptal~lontsh lp otari Ients s.an
funded through the Council
to uf~lze eJr en l:n a include the Senior Citizen
ghealln mthanner has whe 1 ~s Comprehensive Pl'ogram . the
pmg
. and Referra
' 1
d d -o ers w en e p IS lnformahon
neT\e ·
.
th Outreach Program and the
.
e
sp~nso~mg
~gene~'
Retired Senior Volunteer
Me~gs ~;oun Y ouncl ~·~e Program
•
Ag~ng, t' a . ~on -pr~ 1d In addition to the above, a
orb ganthlza 1Con , Is_ eslgna ef nutrition
pr ogra m
is
y e omm1ss1oners o
.
· c t
th If · 1 tlfOVIded funded through the
Melgs.
oun
Y a~ e 0 lela Galha·Meigs Commumty
1
p annmgt ' an f seArgvlncge Action Agency and the Site
organ1za 1on M or Co 1 , and facllllles
..
'
Pr ograms Ill elgs un 1l · b ll1 c te are furmshed
Accordmg to the 1970 census Y. e en r ·
there are 2 731 persons over
Services provided under
65 in Meigs' County, 13.8 pet. these programs are :
of the total population . This is
Tr~nsportallon
the fifth highest percentage . In Meigs County pracin the state. The estimate of hc~lly all commumty
persons over 60 is 16_5 pet. "!r,. fac1hhes - health, legal,
the total population .
, county government . and
The Council is associated shoppmg - .are located m the
with the Buckeye Hills . Po~erO)(·Mtddle port area
Hocking Valley Regional Th1s poses a problem for
Development District and the older persons, many of whom
Ohio Commission on Aging do not dnve .
through which it receives a
Two mml-buse~ are used to
portion of its · funds for offer transporll!t!On serv1ces
operating expenses of SCIJ.IOr to semor c1t1zens throughout

Hooton topples ·Cincinnati, .6-l

.

VERO BEACH, Fla. l UP!)
- Burt Hooton pitched seven
innings · to spark. the Los
Angeles Dodgers to a &amp;-1 win
over the Cincinnati Reds
Wednesday . in their fin·a!
Florida exhibition game fo.r a
&amp;-2 record, the best of any
National League team. .
Hooton w'ent seven frames
- second Dodger "urier to go
that far this spring -gave up
five hits and two walks while
striking out two. 'Qle Dodgers
collected four hits and used a
Pete Rose error in the first

I

.

Clarence Struble

Mn. Goldie Cleadealll

CounseiUog
Counselling services are
closely associated with . Inforamtlon and Referral and ·
can be provided through
coordination with other
agencies such as Community
Mental Health. Ministers are
available. Sometimes all that
is needed is the sympathetic
ear of one of the staff, As one
senior citizen said, "It helps
just knowing someone

cares.

11

Nutrition Program
Although the program was
funded to serve 35 l)lDches
daily, volunteer help and
donations have enabled an
average of 75 persons dally to
take advantage of the hot
Home Maintenance
lunch program . This
Many older persons find •program
provides
a
dignity and self-respect in nutritious meal to many
maintaining their own homes people who otherwise,
as long as possible. To do so, . because of low income or
assistance in home main- poor health, might have
tenance is often, necessary. inadequate diets' Meals may
The home maintenance be delivered to persons who
service was established to are physically unable to come
provide for minor repairs in to the Center.
those cases where the
Educational Programs
homeowner is linancially
The educational programs
unable to do •SO. A part time range 'from learning new
staff person is responsible for skills to participa ling In ·
checking the person's group discussions on subjecta
eligibility, finding someone to which are of interest to older
do the repairs at a nominal · persons or from which. they
cost, ordering the mate~·
Is may benefit.
and checking the work a!
·
Examples are art classes,
is completed.
chair caning, woodworking,
Mrs. A. R. KaJPI
legal affairs, community
services and safety in the
horne.
Social Acllvltles
This part of the program
has different meanings for
different persons - for some,
personal enjoyment and
enrich¥.'en ~ for others,
facing loneliness or a crisis,
emotional support. For the
depressed it acts as '
therapeutic communitf
where
communication
with others helps in social
rehabilitation.
Examples are individual
activities, quilting, crafts,
playing horseshoes, cards,
just yisiting and small group
activities such as bowling,
Charles Karr, Sr.
hiking, singing. Large group
Mrs. Gertrude MitebeD
activities include square
dances, hayrides, und short
trips.
Financial Assistance
tremendous amoUnt of talent,
GAME IS FRIDAY
The
Senior
Citizens
Center
skill
and experience _to the
' The
Eastern-Southern
is
used
as
a
market
place
for
conununity
and In return he
..Aiwnni basketball game will
handmade
items
and
for
receives
a
great
satisfaction
be played Friday at 7 p.m. at
garden
produce.
These
sales
for
having
shared.
Eastern . Admission is $1 for
At the end of March there
adults and 50 cents for supplement income in ,many
cases
where
people
are
were
239 senior citizens
students. The event is
physically
able
to
pur~ue
enrolled
in the Retired Senior
sponsored by the Eastern
these productive pasttimes. Voluntee.I' Program. These
Alumni Assn.
, ,Many senior citizens have ~ volunteers have contributed
ASKS DIVORCE
benefited from a used 35,693 hours of volunteer
Dottie Capehart, . Rt. 4, clothing exchange shop service to their comlnunlty in
Pomeroy has filed suit for where clothing is available the past year.
'
divorce ' from Michael ac~~ding to the person's
They have vol~teered at
Capehart, Spring Lake, N. c,, abthty to_ pay . .
. thefollowmg agencies: Meigs
County Home , Arcadia
00 charges of,gross neglector ,•· Fmanc1al _ assiStance has
duty and exfreme cruelty.
been QJ&gt;ta~ned for older Nursmg Home , Syracuse
persons m emergepty Nursmg Home, iijmwood
situations.
Nursing Home., Pomeroy
Volunteer
Program
'fi.ibrary,
Middleport Ubrary,
TAG DAY SET
The
retiree
offers
a
(Continued
on page JO)
RUTLANO - Tag Day
scheduled Saturday here for
the baseball program has
been cancelled.

.

Mother's Rings by

CANVASS PLANNED
RUTLAND - Members of
the Rutland Garden Club and
Drew
Webster
Post
American Legion, will
convass Rutland for contributions to the Cancer Fund
next week beginning Monday.

JeweJmont.
G~e the gift that

any Mother would enjoy
5
9

Now only
SIGN UPSET
The signup for Harrisonville Pony League players
will be held at 10 a·. m.
Saturday at the headquarters. The cost for each boy is
$5 which Includes hat and
insurance .•

28 ~

(pill $,UI,., ·-~

Mount 2 to 7stonn por rl119.

Otlltr 1tyf11 ovoilablo

GOESSI.ER'S JEWELRY STORE
Court St., Pomeroy ,.
'

.

said Schnipke, "and- a lot of
time at the foul line. "
It evidently pays off,
because 5-li playmaket Cindy
Owens has made 73.1 per cent
of her free throws .
Champion, the best record
team among the AA
semifinalists, lost its 'opening
game of the season to
Lakeview and has won 17 in a
row since then, including a
pair of wins over 'Lakeview.
Jenny Romack, a 5·7
senior, leads t~ Golden
Flashes in scoring with a 20
per game average, with 5-9
junior center Cindy Packman
at 15.
Beth Bickford, a 5-4 senior
guard, is the key to the
Champion offense, however.
"We really depend on her to
set the plays," said Coach
Renee Ackerman of Bickford,
validictorlan of her class.
Sycamore, paced by ii-7
Sandy Dittoe, an excellent
ball handler, has won 40 In a

row over the past three years.
The Aviators, with a front
line of 5-9, ii-9 and 5-ll,
outrebounded
Kettering
Fairmont East 63.,'!7 in the
regional finals, with Cindy
Mc Ca ll and' Kathy Koch
getting 16 each.
Watterson , Sycamore's
semifinal opponent, is
smaller with 5-8 junior
forward Lisa Bernard the
Eagles' biggest player.
Watterson's top scorer Is
Mary Ellen Seidel, a 5-6
junior with a 13.5 average.
After that, the Eagle scoring
is well balanced, ranging
from six to nine points ·per
contest.
~~we're not big, " said
Watterson Coach Ginny
Sawyer. "Our biggest aaaets
are speed and defense."
The championship games
in all three classes will be
Saturday, Class A at noon,
AA at 3 p.m. and AAA at 7:30
p.m.

Cavs clinch first
NBA playoff·bert~
shot at dethroning the
Washington Bullets as
Central Division clilunplons.
They moved Into first place
Wednesday night when Jim
Cleamons scored 12 of his 18
points in the fourth quarter
and they beat New Orleans,

scored six Points In the final
five minutes to lead Golden
State to a 95-88 victory.
Smith put the Warriors
ahead to stay 81-79,with 4:45
left and then twice improved
the lead In five as the Bullet's
threatened in the closing
11~101.
minutes.
If Austin Carr, who scored .. Rick Barry led all scorers
I? points against New with 22 points while Jamaal
Orleans, can return to top Wilkes and Charlie Johnson
form by playoff time, the each added 18 for Golden
season might be even more State. Smith had 14 points.
In other NBA · games,
gratifying.
· Meanwhile, the Bullets had Philadelphia edged Buffalo,
their hands full with the 107-103, Boston routed
Golden State Warriors who Phoenix, 122-102, Detroit
swept · them four st;alght shaded Chicago, 102-96, and
games in the finals of the - Seattle beat Los Angeles, 120playoffs last year and have 109.
alr~a(ly, clinched the Pacific
In the ABA, San Antonio
crown this season.
downed Denver, 117-110, InPhil Smith who made only diana topped New York, 1161-{)f~ shots bJ the first half 106 and Kentucky bea t
· Virginia, lll-103.

Montreal going after all records
the Los Angeles Kings iopped
the St. Louis Blues, 2-1, in
""oring leader Guy Lafleur oth er NHL games.
"" there's little doubt about
Th e w·mmpeg
· J ets defea ted
says
&lt; • the
th
T
to
e oron Toros, ""•
l·t, the Montreal Canadlens
I
d
C1
Cru
de
beat
the
are going' to win the Stanley
eve an
sa rs
'I
gla
N
E
d
What
. year and a number
ew 'n n
ers, ,. •
Cup thiS
· Roadru nners
of league records will fall In and the Phoerux
the drive.
toppecl the Cincinati StingerS',
It has been 15 years since a 7-2, m WHA games.
member of the Canadle~ Hawks f, Scouts 3:
.)lernie Geoffrion won the Art
stan Mikita scored two
'scoring.
B~t
goals
and assisted. Cliff Koroll
Ross Trophy for
th 1 d
Chi
011
it appears that Lafleur s
ano er, ea mg
cago
about to end all that.
~ its victory over Kansas
. Lafleur scored two goals City. Gary Croteau scored
and assisted on goal8 by lwo goals for the SCouts, w~
Jacque's Lemaire, Peter have a l-32-8 record in !herr
' Mahovllch and Serge Savard last 41 games.
as Montreal skated to a 7.,'! Leafs 4, Wings 4:
win over the Pittsburgh
Stan Weir scored his !9th
Penguins Wednesday night. goal at 3' 09. of the third
Pierre Bouchard and Bob pe~lod, enablmg Toronto _to
Gainey accounted for the gam a tie with Detroit .
other Montreal goals.
· · Referee Lloyd Gilmore
· The two goals gave Lafleur handed out a . to~! .of 129
M for the season, one better minutes 1n penalties. m
than his pen10nal Cld'Oer high addition to ejecting eight
of 53 set last year. The five -·players from the game. The
points gave him l20 points, assessments r~ulted from a
Seven more than. seco-• place 39-minute brawl during the
'"'
Bobby Clarke of Phlla,delphla
second pe rlod ·
•
United PresslntenuiUonal

50 boys playing baseball
)•

fo~ - Meigs High -Marauders
Twenty-one jumors and
,seniors have suited up for the
Meigs Marauders first two
base)lall. games of 1976 whicli
have divided up to one victory
• and one loss.
The Marauders' new head
coach, Dale Harrison succeeding Donald Wolfe,
who hal&gt; retired fr.Qm the prep
school diamond wars - said
approximately SO boys have
come out for the spring sport.
The sophomores and freshmen hopefully will play a 13game reserve team schedule.
· The opening 4-3 loss to the
powerpacked Point Pleasant
squad couldn't' have been
discouraging, especially
since the Marauders eame
back TUesday behind the
·str,on•g
pitching
of
righthander Jeff McKinney to
ali but shut out (3-1) another
strong team, Ironton, in the
SEOAL opener for both clubs.
The varisty toster by year
and poslton:
SENIORS
Kenny
Mankin, catch; Pat Soulsby,
catch-outfielder; !Oteve
Bachner, second base, outfielder; Mickey Davenport,
short stop; Charlie Marshall,
third base; Mike Magnotta,
center field; Jim Howard,
pitcher, right field; Jeff
Miller, pitcher-outfielder;
Jeff McKinney, pitcher,
outfielder; Jeff Glass, and

Wayne Searls, outfielders; Meigs.
Fri., Apr. 23, M~igs at
Kenny Wyatt, catcher, first
Ironton .
base.
-":WNIORS
Brian . Mon., Apr. 26, Trimble at
Hamilton, catcher-first base; M~igs.
Tues., Apr. 27, Meigs at
Carl Carmichael, first base;
Dale Browning, pitcher, Gallipolis.
Fri., Apr. 30, Athens at
outfielder; Greg Smith,
second base and backup Meigs.
Tues., May 4, Logan at
shortstop 'or third base, and
pitcher; Crenson Pratt, left Meigs
Thurs ., May 6, Point
field ; Dick Owen, first base,
and Stan Starcher, Ray Plea5!1nl at Meigs.
Fri., May 7, Jackson at
Willford and Rick George,
.Meigs.
outfielders.
Lettennen are Davenport, · Sat., May 8, North Gallia at
Bachner , Marshall, Meigs. Game time I :30 p.m.
Tues., May 11, Meigs at
Magnotta, McKinney,
Waverly.
Hamilton, Carmichael and
Fri., May 14, Wellston at
Browning.
Meigs.
The Meigs schedule
, RESERVES
(Varsity}: ~
Thurs.,
Apr. 8, Meigs at
Wed., March 31, Gallipolis
scoring
, Flyers
Eastern.
•
race . in the
at Meigs.
Sat., , Apr. 10, Meigs at
The win gave the
Fri., April 2, Meigs at
Wahama, . Game time I :00 p. Canadiens an NHL record 123
Vinton
points, and left · thellfl.ope
Tues ., Apr. 6, Meigs at m.
Athens.
Mon , Apr. 19, Meigs at short of the league record of
57 wins in a season.
Fri. Apr. 9, Meigs at Logan: Southern.
"We're going after all the
Sat., Apr. 10, Meigs at
Wed., Apr . 28, South.
records this year and we're
Wahama (2), game time 1 p. western at Meigs.
m.
Wed., May 5; Southern at going to top It all off by
winning the Stanley CUp,"
Mon., Apr. 12, Meigs at Meigs.
Kyger Creek.
Sat., May 6, North Gallia at Lafleur said emphatically .
The Chicago Blac~ Hawks
Tues., Apr. 13, Meigs at Meigs.
Jackson,'
Thurs., May 13, Eastern at defeated the Kansas City
Scouts, 6·3, the Toronto
Thurs., Apr. 1~. Waverly al Meigs.
Meigs.
I Plus 2 games with Maple Leafs and Detroit Red
' Tues., Apr. 20, Meigs at Gallipolis, · 2 with Point. Win~s played a 4-4 tie, the
Wellston . ·
Pleasant, I with Vinton, I New York Rangers beat the
Thurs., Apr. 22, Wahama at with Wahama - dates to be New York Islanders, 3-1, and
set).

~HL

the second period stood up as
the winning goal for the
Rangers. Ed Westfall scored
the Islanders' goal on a power
play-t"ing
the record of 92 by
'
a team for an NHL season.
The loss damaged the
Islanders' chances of
finishing ahead of Buffalo in
the complicated NHL playoff.
pairing system.
Kings Z, Blues 1:
Goals by Marcel · Dionne
and Don Kozak lifted Los
AngelestoltswlnatSt. Louis,
Dionne's 38th' goal of the
season set a club scoring
record. Red Berenson scored
his 20th goal of the season for
the Blues.
WHA:
Bobby Hull scored three .
goals for the Jets and now Is
one short of the 50-mark for
the season ... Garry Jarrett
and Jerry Pinder each scored
two goals as the Crusaders
revived their playoff hopes
with their win over . the
Whalers ... Seven players
scored for the Roadrunners in
a "businessman's special"

rRan~~ge~n~~~~~l~a
nde~l'tl~l.===ga:m:e:th:aitista~rted:;a~t~n~oon~a;nd
Pat
at 1!02 of drew

5

BILL FLETCHER
1258 PGwell St.
Middleport, 0 .
PH. 992-7155

N BA St•ndlngs .
l!ly United Press International

Eistern Conference
NHL Stendinvs
ly Unlttd Prtn lnternetlonal

ClmpDell Conterenct
•

P1lrick Olvllion
WLTPtsGFGA
x Ph lla
49 12 16 114 JJ2 201
NY Is landers 41 20 16 9878.4 18'2
Atlonlo
33 33 11 77 251 232
NY Rongers 28 41 9 65 258 323
Smvthe Oi~ls i on
WLTPtsOFOA
Chicego
J 1 30 17 79 2~ 256
Vancouver
J I Jl 15 77 261 110
5! . LOUIS
79 361J 71 244 280
Mtnnesota
20 52 6 46 191 297
Kansas City 12 54 12 36 187 341
Wiles conterer~ce
Narr\!1 Olvltlon
W L T Ptl GF GA
x Montre11l
56 11 11 113 J27 168
Los Plngeles J7 32 9 83 256 259

Aflantlc Ol\llslon
W. L .. Pet. 01
)( BOSfOn
51 'U .680 Philade t p~ l a

New York

Central

C l e~e tan d

W l T Ph GO OA

47 U 16 110 305 226
Buffalo
44 20 13 101 325 231
Toron to
J4 29 15 83 290 267
Californt~
26 41 11 63 45 27 1
•·clinched division title
Wednesdl'f 'S Results
NY Rangers J NY ISlanders 1
Montreal 7 Pitt sb urgh J
x Boston

Toronto 4 Detroit 4
Los Angeles 2 Sl Louis 1
Chicago 6 Kansas City J
Thursday's Games
Allante at NV Islanders
Wllshlngton at Philadelph ia
Boston 1!11 Buff&amp;lo
Frlclav's Games
Mlnnesotflllt Atlanta
vancouver at Cell lornlll

Slelf

l .. m l iiC II'IWII!Ct ComiNinY
OI11Ct !lloomiiiQkll\ lfliFIO'~

~me

p

"

'

Dl~lslon

W5shington
Houston
New Orleans

4S
46
38
35
28

30
31
38
41
41

.600 ,597 .SOO 7lfJ
111~1 tov,
.373 17

A!lanta
Wtnter n Cont•nnce
MldwtSt Division

W. L.. Pet. -otl
M i lwaukee

34 4'2 ,447 -

De troll
Kansas City

32 43 .427
29 47 .382

Chicago

w..

Por!land

1v,
5

22 5• .289 12.

Pacific Olvhlon
L .. Pet .
x Golden State 56 21 .7'17

39 36

.520

oe
16

39 37 .513 16'11
38 40 487 18•h
34 42 .4117 11112

•· cli nched division title
Wednu.dly 's Resultl
Bos10n 122 Phoe,n lx 102
Philadelphia 107 Buffalo 103
Cleveland 110 New Or leans 101
G old~n SU1 te 95 washington 88

&lt;(!roll 102 Chlca~o 96

Scfttlle 120 Los Angeles 109

Thur1d1y'1 Olmt

Bos ton at .Cleveland
FrldiY''I Glmt.l
New Orle&amp;ns at Detroit
Houston .111 Bosion
Atlllnla AI BOffalo
Washington at Phi ladelphia
New York at Chicago
Kansas Clly at Milwaukee
Seat li e at Los Angele!l
Por tland at Phoenix

.••
CALL MARSIIALL
Everyone 18 or over who
· wishes to play baseball in the
Meigs Independent League Is
asked to call Charlie Marsl~all at 992·7448.
WANT TO PLAY'/
All boys 16 to 18 years old
interested in playing senior
Babe Ruth baseball are askect
to call Lewis Harper at 74221l21, Charlie Marshall at 9927448 or Jerry Davenport.

ABA Stondlnv•
By United Pren lntern•tlon•l
W, L .. Pet. 08

x.Denver
New York
Srm A.nfon lo

58 21
51 29
47 3l

116
638 6'12
588 1D112

kentuckv
4.4 l6 .550
Indiana
39 41 .4118
St LOU I!
J.t 46 ..42.5
Virginia
13 65 · .167
It· Clinched dlvl1lon title

131h
18'12
2l'h

43 1h

,Wedntldly's Ruulh

lndlaWe 116 New York 106

Kentucky 111 Virginia 103
San Antonio 117 Denver 110
Tttursd•y's G•mes
(No games 5cheduled l
Friday's G•mn
Kenlucky llf New York
Virginia at St Louis
san Antonio at tncllana

•

Meigs hounds

do well in ·trials
By Greg Balky
:rhe Meigs Beagle Club has
heen doing quite well In
recent field trials around the
state. In trials held by the
Huntington Beagle Uub In
Gallipolis on Feb. 29, Radar
Line Kayto~ owned by
Franklin Wilson of Racine,
took fifth place.
In Logan on March 14 In a
contest sponsored by the
Colwnbus Beagle Club, the

Independents
meet Tuesday
There will be a meeting of
the Ohio Valley Independent
Baseball League April 6th at
. the Steam Boat Inn In Racine
at 6 p.m. All new teams are
reminded that the deadline
for sign-up Is April 13.
All rated umprles are also
urged to attend If they are
interested in officiating any
of these games. Inquiries
should be directed to Greg
Roush of Syracuse or Don
Hupp of Racine .

Meigs County dogs did even
better as they took the first
three places. Key Line
Timmy, owned by Mike
Whitlatch of Pomeroy,
walked away with the lop
spot; Henry Wells' Well Run
Fascination took second and
Harlan Whltlatch's 'Key Une
Amos got third.
At the Southern Ohio
!!eagle Uub at Chillicothe on
March 21, the same three
dogs once again fared well.
Key Une Amos was second,
Well Run Fascination took
third, and Key Une Timmy
came away with fifth place.
At Marletll! on March 21
also, but In Marietta, fladar
Line Leroy of Franklin
Wilson notched fourth place.
On March 28 In field trials
sponsored by the local club,
local dogs still fared well
when Key Une Amos and •
Well Run Fascination look •
third and fourth places,
respectively.
::.
All of these hounds are now •
qualified for the Derby ••
Winners' Stake whlch .ls to be
held at the Salt Creek Beagle
Club on April 25th.

..

Henry Block has-·

17 reasons why you
shoulu come to us
for income tax help.

•
·~

;:;

-J

•

,.
rr
I f l ..

,.,

.. ,
·~

Reason 12. There are major changes in
the tax laws that could affect your
return. Our people are.specially trained
to help you take advantage of these
new laws. We'll do our besl to make
sure u pay the right amount of tax.
No more, no less. ·

'
...,

...
....
"'
,_

.

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618. t MAIN ST.

"·
'"·

Pomeroy, Ohio
PH. 99l-3795
OPEN: 9-6 Weekday1, 9-5 Sal.
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

'' ,

"

•
.

~

34 o12 .453 171h

w.. L.. Pet. oe

L

Plltsburgh 34 32 12 80 329 293 Seottle
Det roII
26 42 10 62 218 288 ' Phoenix
Woshlng ton 10 57 10 30 21&lt; 375 Los Angele!io
Ad.lms Division

9Vt

42 34 .SSJ

&lt;2 35 .5&lt;5 10

Bull~lo

H&amp;R BLOCK®

"State Farm has LIFE insurance,
· . too!·Calhqe for details~
Like I good neighbor,
Slate Fann is there.

r----::-------.,
: Pro II
~Stall tlings :

have him pitching regularly
at Indianapolis and have him
ready if 1 should need him
later in the season than h11ve
him sitting on thf: beneh with I
us," ~eds manager Sparky
Anderson said.

�.'

I
·'

5-The Daily Sentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Thursday, April!, 1976

M~ssacred

-

By J .R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS I UP! ) - Thf
Senate sponsor never smiled
du~ing the tw&lt;Hl our Ohio
House debate on the bill he
said would ,simplify...Ohio's
utility law. In the end, the
House had sided with its
·utiliti es committee · and
passed' the controversial 'bill
6.9 to 28.
Sen·.
J,
Timothy
McCormack, D-Euclid,
pledged after the vote he
would "fight aga inst every
one of those changes .,that
were put in" before the House
pa ssed and return ed a
subsitute version of his bill to
the Senate :·
The bill drastically revises
Ohio utility law. puttin g an 18
month deadl ine for the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio
to decide a utility rate case,
establishing a new method to
compute a utility's profit and
giving consumers a voice in
PUCO deli]Jerations through
an appointed '' People's
Counsel."
No one would state that the
bill will lower utility rates.
McCormack sa id he hoped
future utility rate increases
would be lower than those
author ized under existing
\;Jw.

utility hill is approved ".

.
F'orty-three Democrats and .
26 Republicans joined to p~ss
the bill. OppoSition came .
from 15 Democrats and 13
Republicans, led by Rep.
Dennis J . Wojtanowski, DWilloughby Hills, wh6 said
(!le bill would add $100 a year
to homeowner 's ulilitv rates
for every Ohio family.
Rep . Vernon F'. Cook, 0Cuya\10ga Falls, sponsor of
the bill his subcommittee
heav ily amended over
McCo rma ck's strong and
repeated objections, said the
bill wa s " balan ced" and
wou:d '·'moderat e ·future
utility rate increases."
" Thi s bill has had a
checkered history, is highly
controversial ~nd has been
the subject• of intensive
lobbying," said Cook. "It is
not a bcnanza to either the
utilities or to (he consumers.
"The bill was not ,perfect
wh en it' ca me !rom the
Senate. We improved it."
The Senate must still agree
to the p1ajor changes made in
the House. McCormack said
he had t6 "hard" Senate
votes to retain the original
version, forcing the bill to a
six.member committee of
conference to try and
hammer out a compromise.

Of the ten amendments
One ad hoc organization,
considered on the floor &lt;luring . Citizens for Utility Rate
tl1e dinner-hour debate , the Equality, said after the vote
most important to a possible It would step ~P its efforts to
Senate co mpromise was coiiect317,000 signatures and
remowai of PUCO authority · put a proposed utility reform
to consider the cost of a amendment on the November
utility's constructior work in general election ballot.
Former · PUCO' chairman
progress when considering a
rate request.
, Henry Eckhart said 10,000
That authority had been . il'litiative . petitions are in
rejected in the Senate but circulation statewide.
added in the House Utilities
Other major provisions of
Committee , An amendnient the House-passed bill :.
- Rate requests by utilities
to .delete. that section was
beaten 40 to 56, the closest of filed with PUCO would go into
.any of the moves to take out effect, subject to refund,
the
.c ommittee's
amendments. '
Another amendment to
The Dai~ Sentinel
remove
the
16-month
DEVOTED TO .THE
deadline for PUCO decisions
I NTER EST OF.
was defeated. One of the five
M·EtGS · MASON AI'EA
CHESTE;R L. TANNEH IL L
amendmehts adopted would
exec. Ed .
fund the estimated . $1.3
, ROB'E~T HOEFLICH
Ci ty Editor
million cost of the consumer
, Published daily except
oriented People's . Coun se l
Sarurday by The Ohro
V,alley • Pub li SI'ling Com from the PUCO budget rather
pany ,
Ill
Cou rt
St.,
than from an appropriation of
Pomeroy , Ohio
45769 .
Business Office Phone 99-2
the General Assembly.
?156. Editorial Phone 992
The Counsel, to be named
7157 '
Sec ond c lass postage
by a· nine-member board
pa id 'at Pom eroy , Ohio
appoi nted by the Ohio
advertis.ing ·
Nationa l
~ep r esen tative
Ward Attorney General, wo uld
l!Jri ff it h Cqmpa ny , Inc . ,
have powers to fight utility
Bot!ine lli 8. Gallagher Div ., .
757 Third Ave ., New York ,
requests before PUCO or take
N.Y. 10017 .
an
ordet
from
the
Subscripllon
rates :
Delivered by carrier where
Commission to court.
available 75 ce nts per

Daughter· can die at last ·

;

By MIKE AVF.NENTI
TRE:NTON, N.J . I UP)) The father of Karen Ann
Quinlan, with the sanction of
New Jersey's high~st court,
tod&lt;1y soug ht a doctor's
permission for removal of
- life-support apparatus to let
his daughter die .
The New .Jersey Supreme
Court ruled 7-1l Wednesday
that the respirator that has·
kept the 22-year-oid Miss
Quinlan alive. but in a coma,
for nearly a year, can he
turned off,. if doctors and a
hos pital ·e thics committee
agree there is ' 'no reasonable
possibility"- of' her recovery .
In overturning a lower,
court decision in the case, the
~i gh
court era sed the
possibility of criminal
chargelrsaifist hospitals or
doctor. and said the
standa for medical agreement it set would also
preclude prosecution .for c1vil
· damages:
· "The ensuing de'ath would
not be homicide but rather
expi rat ion from existing
natural'· causes," said the
decision written by Chief
Justice Richard J . Hughes.
The court said.the hospital
doctor s, who origina lly
declined the parenIs' request
to remove the respirator,
may feel differcn'tly because
"we assume that she is now
even more fragile and nearer
to death," but noted that if
they stili disa grre, her father
may be able to fmd other
doctors acceptable to the
hospital ethics committee
"who may take a different
view .' '
Karen's parents, both
Roman Catholics, told a news

co nferen ce they would
Superior Court Judge Robert
consult doctors -today to
Muir had said removing the
determine who would form a
respirator
wou ld
be
medical pa nel acceptable to
homicide.
the ethics Committee or St.
•
Cla re's Hospital, where their
60-pound da ughter has lain in
a fetal'position since April 15.
Quinlan, who replaces a
court-appo inted lawyer as his
daughte r 's legal guardian'
under the landmark decision,
told a news conference in a
church near their home in
Roxbury, N.J ., that he
By KF.N ROSENBERG
wanted the respirator , UPI Sports Writer
disconnected in the presence
NEW YORK (UP!) - On
of the family and tfieir priest. the surface , under a provision
"We don't consider this a • in baseball 's bylaws, you'd
victorv," said his wife, her think Commissioner Bowie
eyes tearing . "We are going Kuhh has no option but to step
to lose our daughter , But this in and declare th~t free agent ·
is the way we want our pitcher Andy Messersmith
daughter's life to end."
must play for the New York
Sta te Attorney Genera l Yankees.
William Hyland, calling the
However, there's more to ·
decisio n
'' high I y ba5eba ll 's late st lega l
compass ionate," said it enta nglement than meets the
" probably represents the eye, so don't be surprised if
consensus of society" and the commissioner rules in
said an appeal to the U.S. Messersmith 's favor at a 2
Supreme Court was unlikely . p.m~ EST meeting here
New Jersey Gov. Brendan T. today.
Byrne called it "a sound
On · Wednesday,
the
ruling,"
Yankees claimed that
"This allows us to do what Messersmith, who has been
we've been doing for 'years, shopping around for the best
but it brings it out into ' the offer since March 9, the day
open," said Dr. Julius Korein · he was officially declared a
of New ·York Uni versity. free agent, 'reneged on a four·
Medica l School, one of the year, $1 million contract with
nation's leading neurologists. them and appealed to Kuhn
He called it "one of the most for a ruling concerning the
enlittened statements the destiny &lt;if the 3().year-oid
judi ary has made in my nghl·hander.
life! e." •
~ ssersmith's agent, Herb
Korein had e§£ified AJtT---.Osmon , nd Yankees Presihehaif of the inlans the dent Gabe ul beth signed a
Superior Cour tria
their written agree ent Tuesday
·suit last JaiL In is ruling , providing for Messersmith to
pitch for the Yankees in 1976,
1977, 1978 and 1979 for $1
milliorr and it is tha t
agreement which is the
center of the storm.
Kuhn gave some indication
of what his ruling might be
when he called attention IQ a
provision in baseball's rules,
3(D), which states that an
agreement
between a player
NEW EUREKA
and
a
club
before a contract
EDGE KLEENEit
is
signed
can
bind that player
Cleans that last
tough inch along
to the club. Under this rule, it
the baseboard!
would "appear that Kuhn
could only rule in favor of the
Yankees ..
The issue, however,
suddenly has become one of
whether or not Osmond
actually has the power of
' Cflrict tMI
attorney for Messersmith.
According to Marvin Miller ,
the eKecutive director of the
,Players Association, it is
clear he does not.
" I've bec,n advised h
doesn't
have any power of
IJ'O
.......rrer
attorney," Miller sa id .
'.'There was no contract
signed by Messersmith; No
contract signed by Osmpnd or
anybcdy else. It was just a ·
piece of paper outlining some
of the provisions."
. E:ven Paul could not ciear.ly
1. Clmt lOiil'll• c.,m
refute Miller's contentions,
saying only that Osmond
"REPRESENTS" the oower

Kuhn may rule
in Andy's favor

EUREKA
clea11s
4•' ~ wart
.._

t?'i,,

~J- ,&amp;''

'

Model
1424 A.

1424A (WITH UGHD

$6,95

PICKENS
HARPWARE ~CO.
MASON, W.VA.
Mon .- Thurs. &amp; Sat. 8-5:30, Fri. B-8

'

'.

of attorney for Messersmith.
Paul admits never having
spoken to Messersmith and
tha\ all his dealings were
through Osmond ,
"The Yankees have
entered into a written
agreement with Andy
Messersmith thro ugh hi s
authorized agent, Herb Qs·
mond," Paul explained in
New York. "We have been
advised through the Players
Association
that
Mr .
is
now
Messersmith
attempting to void the term of
the agreement despite the
fact that both the Yankees
and Mr. Osmond bargained in
good faith....
"We intend to perform our
obligations under the agreement a nd expec t Mr.
Messersmith
to · do
likewise .... "
,
Dick Moss, attorney for the
Players Association , wired
Yankee owner George
Steinbrenner to inform him
that Osmond was not
authorized to sign an
agreement for Messersmith
and also the contract' sent to
Messersmith on Tuesda y had
several discrepancies from
an agreement made in
Tampa Saturday night. '
In New York,, Miller also
in sisted
no
binding
agreement had been reached
because the contract did not
conform with the previons
agreement.
The Yankees asked Kuhn to
intervene.

. c.

2 bedrm .
apartment , adults only , In
Middleport . Phone 992 -387ol.
3-12 -lfc

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

-

SUBJ!;CT : Purchase of New
Riding Lawn ~ower
. For : The -Board of Education
of the Southern Local Sr:nooJ
~ District, Box l76, R.a cine, Ohio

·back again

I

1

l

•

¢

••
I'
•

2 BEDRM .'trailer, ./ eat nice .
Phon_e 992 -3324.
'3 21 lfc

3 28-6tc TAURUS (April 20·Mar· 20) ·
Today', you may receive conlidentlal [ntormatton that could

and rear
Said Soard of Educlltion
reserves the right to Wllive
Informalities , to accept or
re l ect any and llll bids .
The successful budd er will
be required to f urn i sh a
Slltis fa ctory
performa-nCe
bond far one .hundred percent
of th e contract pr ice .
No b ids may be wit l'ldra wn
for at least thirty (309J da ys
after tt1e scl'leduled c iO$Ing
time for receipt of b ids .

18, 75

.TUXEDO

'

Rental

'

For All Spring

.

'

take

-AQUARIUS

· .•s an addlttonol spurce of In·
come . Develop your potential
talen ts tor fun or profit. .

(Jon .20-Ftb. lVI

LIQUID
16 oz.
Nel son 's ~·

Reg.

.

&amp;

MINT

'

su1 ·

. ,.'1$11!

.;.o;;;,i. - I•"'' Expi-res
.t-·~:t,rc~.:.I''"".!!!!"!!
....' . ,.. 4.4.76

.It . .: :.:·.: ·,:. ,
'

Nelson's
Reg. ~2.97

46,751.69

Special

Total

Occasions

Tax Fund

To
Dinner Jackets

'•

New York Clothing House

...................
KERM'S KORNER

I

Balance Dec . 31, 1975
Genera l Fund
30,050 .3 8
Motor Vehicle Li cense

Tax Fund

v

PRESTO

- 3,464 ,15

i
~

Bal., Jan . I, 1975

Tra iler \Grossi

PRESTO BURGER

Cigarette L icense Fees
an~I"Fi nes (Gross)
91.85
In teres t
1,877 .52

2,069.67
11,816.70
Balan ce
44 ,025.86

Expenditures
Total Expenditures
- Adm inlstrative
7,806 .34
- Town Halls, Memor ia l
Buildings and Grounds
.r
632..46
-Fire Protection
1, 27 0.34
-C e"meterjV3,030.82

SAM PWS 700 WATT
PROFESSIONAL
DRYER/STYLER

1 ,

1.

IN t

• It toasts, top brown's and bakes.
• Co nvenient counter top cooking.

$2877
DURKEE

PEWJER·STYLE TEA KETTLE
3 Qt.
P~wrer- Style

Aluminum

2 drying speeds lor easy

.

~--.,
.

'tltJ rl~t'
OHC

/9

NELSON'S

styling &amp; · drying .
Comforf.grip handle.

POTATO
STICKS

REG. $4 .77

·EASTER

WHITMAN EGGS

SPICED

,_

JELLY BEANS

EASTER

7,094 ,90
16,340.12

Dec. 31,1975
16,340.12
GasoUne Tax Fund
Bal. , Jon . 1,1975 . 1,905.19
Receipts
Gasoline Tax
13,600.00
Tota l Receipts
1 13,600.00

Total Beginning Balnnr:e .
·, Plus Receipts
15 ,5 05.19
E xprndltures
Total Expenditures
- M iscel lane ous
7,567 .48
- Maintenan ce
8,3 65.64
'- Grand To tal Exp.
- Gasoline Tax Fund

Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund

Bal ., J~n . 1, 1975

DELUXE
TOAST
·R·OYEN''"
T938

Balan ce

Expenditures
To tal Expenditures
- M isce l laneous
2,602.36
- Maintenance
17.201.91
Grand To tal Exp. Motor Vehic le License
Tax Fund
19;804 .27
Bal. , Dec . 31, 1975 · - \1,464.15
Total Exp , Plus Bal. ,

Multi·cblor Bamboo
Basket $4.65

OI'P\I~NC! S

I

NEVCO

9,245.27
6,9 18.50
176.40

II At t HI '

.

NELSON'S
REG. $34 .77

- Lighting
I,139.52
- san I tory Dump
96,00
Grand To tal Ex p. General Fund
13, 975,48
Bat .. Dec . 31, 1975
30,050.38
Total Exp, Plus Bat
Dec . 31, 1975
~.025.86

'•

TOAST-R.QVEN

. DELUXE

NELSON ' S
REG. $17.49

4,195.00

3!323.16 '

In tangible
Total Rece ipts
Total Beginning
Plus Receipts

ENGRAVED
DECORATIVE GOLD

32,209. 16

Tariolble Perso nal Property
Tax CGrossJ
64 .85
Estl!lte Ta x (Gross) _ ~ 194.65
Local Gover rnment
and State Income Tax

'

, ..

Broils hambu r gers in 1 to J
minutes . Toasts mulfin s.
heats sa nd wic hes. Cover locks
lor nb-spat1er cooking .

Receipts
General Property T~ x Real Estate and

•

YOUR
CHOICE

HAMBURGER COOKER

427 ' 93

Federa l Revenue
' .
Sharing Fund
- I , 269.97
Total
24,8 88 .JJ
Cuh Balance,
Receipts and
Expenditures
By Fund
General Fund

J

5"x7" or. 8"x10"
, ot
·. 99~
TEXTURED'GOLD

YOUR
CHOICE

Rpa"d and Bridge Fund

POMEROY

..

.,•.

16,340.12

Gaso!ine Ta K Fund
f5,505.19
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
7,846.12
Total
83.717.29
Expenditures
General Fund
13,975.48
Motor Vehic le Li cense
Ta x F und
19,804 .27
Gasoline Tax Fund
lS ,933.12
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
9,11 6.09
Total
58,828 .96

Full Dtess

PICTURE FRAMES

BROOM

36,965.60

·Total Receipts&amp; Balances
G'neral Fund
-44, 025.86
Motor Veh icle Li cense

1S,933.12
Bat .. Dec. 31, 1975 · - 427.93
Total Exp. Plus Ba l.,
Dec. 31, 1975
15,505.19

1

FROM

COCONUT
F~UIT &amp;

59~

NUT

MARSHMAllOW
EGG CRATES

RUBY'S EASTER.
. _ EGG DYE
'

Includes vials
of colors, egg dipper,
and complete
instructions.
NELSON 'S
REG. 69c

FROM

&amp;

NELSON'S
REG. 79c

HERsHEY
CANDY BARS

.

...

.

/~1"\l~'"f .. U U•I ~ l .. ;-f' ~- ll a.St;a_..
... .....:.;:,.,,.. ~~' ac;ua•
•nns. ' · . · f ~
' ·• •, f
;
'
'

~-

.
·' ~· _:___:__

~rackel
.
'

~ jrY~ .a.uu.. •ooaJ~

7'ia -

~ .JJiflf(

• -

•"

•

Hershey Almond,
Kit Kat &amp; Rally

3.392. 12

•
Receipts ...
Granls-F ederl!l
4,454 .00
Total Receip ts
•
4,454 .00
Total Beginning Bal.
Plus Receipts
7,8.46. 12
Expenditures
MilOt. &amp; Op•trl'tiO!I_'

lea' mel waitaki lamb)

· shouiO

4 0uality

· ha~e the knack today, if you

Motor v '!t lcle· License
Tax Fund
7,094 .90
Gasoline Tax Fund
13,600.00
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
4, 454.00

-

cen'ter.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)

Total Re Ceipts
Genera l Fund
11.816.70

Russe ll Stover Candies are the
fine st in qua lity , freshness and
~
goodness. Choose · from many
assortments of delicious can ·
dies especially decorated for
·\
Easter.

and home entertainment

(Jutr ,. 23· Aug , . 22) You

SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
Balance J~n . 1, 197S
General Fund
S 32,209.16
Motor Vel'licle License
Ta x Fund
9,245.22
Gasoline Tax Fund
1,905.19
Federal R.evenue
Sharing Fund
3,392.12

Total

-'1

We carry tape s, record s, c:
B radios , Cdr tape players

LEO

save. you s'ft.me pennies.

This year you are likely to
become In terested .In areatlve
projects, elltler as a hobby or:. ,

Ada Bissell
Tel. No . 614 985·3544

Tota l Receipts
Tota l Beginning
Plus Receipts

Foster Dr .Ma so n, W. Va ."

to gel beller terms. II could

19~ You ~ave a matmcr abou t
you today tha1 trronds will tlno
very appealing It blend s
Slnc.erfty , compa ss1p·n an({ ·
' wBrmth

(41 I, 8, 41c

Motor Veh icle
Li cense Ta x
Other

NATURALIZER~~

your co mmercial dealings to day, try your bargaining power

Township Clerk

etc.

•
,.__.._. .,_. ,_.__ ·--....--·---""---.-1
~(gastelr Shoe center' I

'your imtlgmatlon to good use.
Think creatively . Dare to ·be
dilferent

cou ld""dd weight to your
curse
April 2, 1178

BY Order· of the Bo,srd of
Education
Jane Wa gner
Clerk -Treasurer of
Soutl'1ern Loca l School District
Rac ine. Ohio 45771

Bal .. Jan . 1, 197l
RecelpJs

Oia.l 949 - 2515

CAPRICORN joec. 22 -Jon .

REG.

Motor Vehicle Lie nse
T~x Fuqd'

~teamboat lnlf

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) In

•

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWN SHIPS
For Fiscal Year Ending
Dec emberll, 1975
Olive Township
Meigs County
Long Bottom, Ohio
1
March.24, 1976
I cer tify -t he follow ing report
to be co rrect

eiCE CREAM CONES
·eMILKSHAKES

12 EGGS
PER CRATE

lsc ·
BARS

Supplies
Toto! E•p.
Bal. / Dec. 31 , 1975
Total E•p. P'lus Bot ..
Dec. 31,1975
7,846.12

. ________.. L----.-----·-_.,_.._.._._.._.._.._
102

_.J

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
You r a lms ca,n · be ac c;omptished loday 1f you put

21) You 'll take a· special pride
in tAsks you perform today
The quality of your work, WJ!t
refl ect 11.

·

PISCES (Feb. 20·Morch 201
Somethtng unusual may occur
today that could result In a
Srnf\11 advantage careerwise, II

3. gear frive tl' ansm iss ion

Middleport , Ohio

Soft Ice Cream

PI:A.ZZA

---

that have a practical application will be worth heeding. Put
them to the test.

will

SAGtnARIUS (Nov . 23·Dtc.

Your talents could be put to
good use · tOday in making
th ose de cO'raUve changes
around home you've been
th inking about. ·

~ 4. higl'l flotati'*'t lres . front

THE

.. .. .

Friday, April 2

Th.e,hours ·are fr~m 10 a.m.
till 8 p.m. Monday thru
Saturday.

-

Bemice Bede Otot
for Frtdor, AprU. 2, )i76

values

(Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)

11 . approximate!~· ~-1" m.:w"r

~{

Opening

I~

------

trailer , fu l ly
ca rp eted located on Rt. 143 ,
close to Harrisonvil le, I
ch iltL. Phone n2 -J 122 .

· vuioo

20) II

vou assoc1ale wtth persons today whose tdeals are on a par
with yours .. something mutually
adv~ntageou. s could result · '

ARIES (M"ch 21·Aprll
19)Hunches or insights lo~ay'
BED~M

call 1avorabte auentlon to you.

Your f1rst thought\ will be lor
the necr;s ottoved ones today,
rather lh•n for yourself Yet '-"·
you 'll benefit the same QS theY

time OJWned by the clerk of
said bMtd as ·pro_
v ided by law
tor a new riding l llwn mowe r
accord ino to the following
speclficlltions of said Board or
E:duclltion :
· .
1. 12 horsepoJNer motor

,.-f:,..,_.

3rd St .• . Racine, Ohio

-

GEMINI (Mil 21 -Juno

precedence oVer price It You 're
comparing "similiu Items loday
Take t1me to study thetr real

things with a flourish that will

on April B, -1976 an d at that

·13 1

FRANCIS
FLORIST

.SUNDAE~

redecora ted , tully ca rp eted .
Call in the early a .m . 992
2288·'"
2 22 uc

cnoose to use 11, of doing

e1ther make or save you
mor:'I8Y Check your sourc~s for
reliable tips.

Seeled groposals -will be
·received
y the Board of
Education of tl'le Southern
Loca l School D istrict of
Rac ine, Ohio at the clerk's
oft ice until 12 :00 o'clock noon

i

AL,SO IN '
A
SLIP ON

,. . .__, .
UNFURNISHED fPt. '\In
Pomeroy . ~ bcdrm . newly

4·5771

up

THE GIOVANNI

By FRED DOWN
Rangers ... Keith Hernandez
UPI Sports Writer
hit a three-run homer and the
Amencan League hitters St. Louis Cardinals rocked
received just about the worst Jim Hunter for six runs in six ·
news they could get innings in a 6-2 triumph over
Wednesday short of learning the New York ·Yankees,
that it would be two strikes
John Vukovich's three-run
and out this year .
double in the seventh inning
That man Nolan Ryan is capped a four-run rally that
.hack at it again.
gave the Philadelphia
The Ca lifornia Angels' Philiies a 4·1 victory over the
n\ajor league strikeout king New York Mels, who have
and author of four n&lt;Hlilters lost all eight of their
pitched five oe~r-perfect exhibition games ... Larry
innings 'in a 3-1 victory over Milbcurne, batting .450 this
the San Diego Padres spring, knocked in the
Wednesday. He faced only 16 winning run with his third
batters during the fiv e single of the game as the
innin gs, struck out 10, Houston Astros beat the
allowed a homer by Willie !Montrea l Expos, 3-2, in 10
McCo.vey and walked none , innings... Dwight Evans hit a ·
"I had as good stuff as I had three-run homer and Carl
all last year," said Ryan Yastrzemski ' a three-run
after the game. "I couldn't double leading the Boston'
throw any better than !threw Red Sox to a 13-4 triumph
in this game."
over the Detroit Tigers ... the
Ryan· .suff ered a groin Kansas City Royals put
in jury last season, then pitcher Steve Busby on the 21·
developed elbow trouble. He day disabled list because they
finished the season with a 14- . consider him "behind in his
12 record and underwent overall conditioning.''
surgery during the winter.
Whether he returns to his
Your " Extra Touch "
1972-73-74 form is likely to
Florist Since 1957
make or break the Angels'
season. With Ryan and Frank
Tanana leading their staff,
the Angels could be a Western
Division pennant contender.
Without Ryan in top form, the
Angels could finish fifth or
sixth.
PH. 992-2644
On other fronts :
John Candelaria , who had
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
an \l-6 record after being
Your FTD Florist
brought up in . mid-1975,
pitched the first six innings,as
the Pittsburgh Pirates
defeated the Chicago- White
Sox, 3.{), Candelaria allowed
two hits, struck out three and
walked one ... Burt Hooton
pitched seven strong innings
for the l11s Angeles Dodgers
in a 6-1 triumph over the
, Cincinnati Reds.
lb . Assorted Chocolates
Steve Braun doubled in the
winning run in the lllh inning
$2 .95
to give the Minnesota Twins a
4-3 win over the Texas
Rangers. Jim Sundberg,
Juan Beniquez and Wayne
Pinkerton homered for the

PUtLIC NOTICE.

TO : Bidders

·AstraGraph

For Rent

. ~ork , R1.33 , ten miles nort h ·
of Pomeroy . Large ICil ~ Wrth :
concrete pa tl o.s, sidewalks ,
rur'l"ner s and off street
parking . Phone 992 -7479 .
:2 .3 1 lfc 2

l -9-tt c

DAN'S

Nolan Ryan

unfurnished apts Phone 992
504 .
11 -9 Ltc

Rutland . Phone 992-5858 .

.

won't let you come
sh-ort.
Platform soles and tall heels set you up tn
Antiqued leather moves easy . Step
into a pair.

~l ANO" 4 RM . furn ished and

3BEoRM~~~s;;lth-b-;th in COuNTRY -M;bi,;H~p

Palmer, who won here with a
••• score last year. "I
record """
enjoy facing it."
''I always play this course
· well," Blalock added. "The
glamor ge~ you pumped up.
·Actually·, I'm oft to a pretty
good start although I have
beeq a slow starter in the past
and usually don't sta rt
playing really well until April
and May. "
SAFETY BOOTS
JoAnne earner was made a
LADIES BOOTS
6-1 choice while Judy Rankin Ml N E R BOOTS
and Carol Mann were IH and FARM ~OOTS
10·1, respectively. Another DRESS BOOTS
strong contender will he Amy
Alcott, last year's LPGA
Rookie of the Year.
"I've ne\ier felt any pressIn Middleport
ure,". sa' :l Alcott. "My goal
last yea· was just to play.,.,J__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,.

~n.

For Rent

FU~NISH!O ,

NOW AVAILABLE!

CII. . -Oifeo,oto,

l9t' ~·· -- -4·--·- - 4. Clnot- lUIS
.

DELUXE MODEL

week . By Motor Roule
whe r e car r ie r servi ce not
availab l e . One monlh ,
S3 .25 By .ma l t in Ohio and
w . va , One Yea r , S22 .00 ,
SiK months ._ SI J. 5~ ; Th ree
monthS , $7 .00 . Elsewhere
$26.00 year : ~ i x mon rns
$1J .SO ; three montns , S7 .50.
Su bscription price includes
Sunday Time.s Sentinel .

Palmer .heath fie(d ·
•
zn zrcle ..,ournament

alter
nine
months
n o t w i t h s t a n d in g
a
commission decisioo.
PALM SPRINGS, Calif.
(Up))
·
·Headed by
: - PUCO commissioners
would not'he allowed to run defending champion sandra
for elective office while Palmer, a field of SJ.tees off
serving on the commis:;ion. . today iri the big apple of the
-'-Utilities would he allowed Ladi.es Professional. _Golf
to "normalize'' some of their · Assocjation tour, the $200,000
income taxes, not passing on Wimers Circle tournament.
the saving to consumerS'but
Palmer is listed as a 4-1
using the funds for further f"vorite in the 72-hole event
investment.
over the difficult Mission
_ The •puco would have Hills Country Club course.
authority to study proposed
.The field for th~ richest
utility company constructi.on · event on the women s pro golf
with an eye to whether. the !' loursponsored , by
plans are "prudent."
Colgate-w~s cut by one m
- Utility company rate re- Wednesdays pro-am , when
quests would be based on .sandra Post ~&amp;came tll and
· financial data gatl!ered three had to withdraw.
months prior 10 a filing before
Jane Blalock, w~o .won •the
the
commission
and Tnpie Crown at Mtsston Htlls
projected nine months after last December, won, the
the filing.
maugural Wmners Ctrcle
_ The PUCO could not event four years ago .and has
consider the cost of providing ~ been made a 5-1 chmce. She
utility servi ce to various was runnerup here m 1972.
clasSes of customers when
"It's the cha~en~e that
decidin~ a case.
sparks me still,
sa.td

For Rent

well. I never look at the
leader board to see where I
am. I play the course and
don't worry •about what the
others are doing. If I'm doing
well, everything will ta~e
care of itself.''
At ;.foot-l'h and 117
pounds, Palmer gives away
miles of yards to the longer
hitte~s of .the tour. But she
was the No. 1 money winner
on the tour "in 1975.
p-iiiiliii.iii.iii~--·
WESTERN
liOOTS
LOGG"E R BOOTS
HARNESS
BOOTS

E~~RGU~~IJ!:~ s~p~!eroy

(•I I, lie

'

-.-..

�.'

I
·'

5-The Daily Sentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Thursday, April!, 1976

M~ssacred

-

By J .R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS I UP! ) - Thf
Senate sponsor never smiled
du~ing the tw&lt;Hl our Ohio
House debate on the bill he
said would ,simplify...Ohio's
utility law. In the end, the
House had sided with its
·utiliti es committee · and
passed' the controversial 'bill
6.9 to 28.
Sen·.
J,
Timothy
McCormack, D-Euclid,
pledged after the vote he
would "fight aga inst every
one of those changes .,that
were put in" before the House
pa ssed and return ed a
subsitute version of his bill to
the Senate :·
The bill drastically revises
Ohio utility law. puttin g an 18
month deadl ine for the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio
to decide a utility rate case,
establishing a new method to
compute a utility's profit and
giving consumers a voice in
PUCO deli]Jerations through
an appointed '' People's
Counsel."
No one would state that the
bill will lower utility rates.
McCormack sa id he hoped
future utility rate increases
would be lower than those
author ized under existing
\;Jw.

utility hill is approved ".

.
F'orty-three Democrats and .
26 Republicans joined to p~ss
the bill. OppoSition came .
from 15 Democrats and 13
Republicans, led by Rep.
Dennis J . Wojtanowski, DWilloughby Hills, wh6 said
(!le bill would add $100 a year
to homeowner 's ulilitv rates
for every Ohio family.
Rep . Vernon F'. Cook, 0Cuya\10ga Falls, sponsor of
the bill his subcommittee
heav ily amended over
McCo rma ck's strong and
repeated objections, said the
bill wa s " balan ced" and
wou:d '·'moderat e ·future
utility rate increases."
" Thi s bill has had a
checkered history, is highly
controversial ~nd has been
the subject• of intensive
lobbying," said Cook. "It is
not a bcnanza to either the
utilities or to (he consumers.
"The bill was not ,perfect
wh en it' ca me !rom the
Senate. We improved it."
The Senate must still agree
to the p1ajor changes made in
the House. McCormack said
he had t6 "hard" Senate
votes to retain the original
version, forcing the bill to a
six.member committee of
conference to try and
hammer out a compromise.

Of the ten amendments
One ad hoc organization,
considered on the floor &lt;luring . Citizens for Utility Rate
tl1e dinner-hour debate , the Equality, said after the vote
most important to a possible It would step ~P its efforts to
Senate co mpromise was coiiect317,000 signatures and
remowai of PUCO authority · put a proposed utility reform
to consider the cost of a amendment on the November
utility's constructior work in general election ballot.
Former · PUCO' chairman
progress when considering a
rate request.
, Henry Eckhart said 10,000
That authority had been . il'litiative . petitions are in
rejected in the Senate but circulation statewide.
added in the House Utilities
Other major provisions of
Committee , An amendnient the House-passed bill :.
- Rate requests by utilities
to .delete. that section was
beaten 40 to 56, the closest of filed with PUCO would go into
.any of the moves to take out effect, subject to refund,
the
.c ommittee's
amendments. '
Another amendment to
The Dai~ Sentinel
remove
the
16-month
DEVOTED TO .THE
deadline for PUCO decisions
I NTER EST OF.
was defeated. One of the five
M·EtGS · MASON AI'EA
CHESTE;R L. TANNEH IL L
amendmehts adopted would
exec. Ed .
fund the estimated . $1.3
, ROB'E~T HOEFLICH
Ci ty Editor
million cost of the consumer
, Published daily except
oriented People's . Coun se l
Sarurday by The Ohro
V,alley • Pub li SI'ling Com from the PUCO budget rather
pany ,
Ill
Cou rt
St.,
than from an appropriation of
Pomeroy , Ohio
45769 .
Business Office Phone 99-2
the General Assembly.
?156. Editorial Phone 992
The Counsel, to be named
7157 '
Sec ond c lass postage
by a· nine-member board
pa id 'at Pom eroy , Ohio
appoi nted by the Ohio
advertis.ing ·
Nationa l
~ep r esen tative
Ward Attorney General, wo uld
l!Jri ff it h Cqmpa ny , Inc . ,
have powers to fight utility
Bot!ine lli 8. Gallagher Div ., .
757 Third Ave ., New York ,
requests before PUCO or take
N.Y. 10017 .
an
ordet
from
the
Subscripllon
rates :
Delivered by carrier where
Commission to court.
available 75 ce nts per

Daughter· can die at last ·

;

By MIKE AVF.NENTI
TRE:NTON, N.J . I UP)) The father of Karen Ann
Quinlan, with the sanction of
New Jersey's high~st court,
tod&lt;1y soug ht a doctor's
permission for removal of
- life-support apparatus to let
his daughter die .
The New .Jersey Supreme
Court ruled 7-1l Wednesday
that the respirator that has·
kept the 22-year-oid Miss
Quinlan alive. but in a coma,
for nearly a year, can he
turned off,. if doctors and a
hos pital ·e thics committee
agree there is ' 'no reasonable
possibility"- of' her recovery .
In overturning a lower,
court decision in the case, the
~i gh
court era sed the
possibility of criminal
chargelrsaifist hospitals or
doctor. and said the
standa for medical agreement it set would also
preclude prosecution .for c1vil
· damages:
· "The ensuing de'ath would
not be homicide but rather
expi rat ion from existing
natural'· causes," said the
decision written by Chief
Justice Richard J . Hughes.
The court said.the hospital
doctor s, who origina lly
declined the parenIs' request
to remove the respirator,
may feel differcn'tly because
"we assume that she is now
even more fragile and nearer
to death," but noted that if
they stili disa grre, her father
may be able to fmd other
doctors acceptable to the
hospital ethics committee
"who may take a different
view .' '
Karen's parents, both
Roman Catholics, told a news

co nferen ce they would
Superior Court Judge Robert
consult doctors -today to
Muir had said removing the
determine who would form a
respirator
wou ld
be
medical pa nel acceptable to
homicide.
the ethics Committee or St.
•
Cla re's Hospital, where their
60-pound da ughter has lain in
a fetal'position since April 15.
Quinlan, who replaces a
court-appo inted lawyer as his
daughte r 's legal guardian'
under the landmark decision,
told a news conference in a
church near their home in
Roxbury, N.J ., that he
By KF.N ROSENBERG
wanted the respirator , UPI Sports Writer
disconnected in the presence
NEW YORK (UP!) - On
of the family and tfieir priest. the surface , under a provision
"We don't consider this a • in baseball 's bylaws, you'd
victorv," said his wife, her think Commissioner Bowie
eyes tearing . "We are going Kuhh has no option but to step
to lose our daughter , But this in and declare th~t free agent ·
is the way we want our pitcher Andy Messersmith
daughter's life to end."
must play for the New York
Sta te Attorney Genera l Yankees.
William Hyland, calling the
However, there's more to ·
decisio n
'' high I y ba5eba ll 's late st lega l
compass ionate," said it enta nglement than meets the
" probably represents the eye, so don't be surprised if
consensus of society" and the commissioner rules in
said an appeal to the U.S. Messersmith 's favor at a 2
Supreme Court was unlikely . p.m~ EST meeting here
New Jersey Gov. Brendan T. today.
Byrne called it "a sound
On · Wednesday,
the
ruling,"
Yankees claimed that
"This allows us to do what Messersmith, who has been
we've been doing for 'years, shopping around for the best
but it brings it out into ' the offer since March 9, the day
open," said Dr. Julius Korein · he was officially declared a
of New ·York Uni versity. free agent, 'reneged on a four·
Medica l School, one of the year, $1 million contract with
nation's leading neurologists. them and appealed to Kuhn
He called it "one of the most for a ruling concerning the
enlittened statements the destiny &lt;if the 3().year-oid
judi ary has made in my nghl·hander.
life! e." •
~ ssersmith's agent, Herb
Korein had e§£ified AJtT---.Osmon , nd Yankees Presihehaif of the inlans the dent Gabe ul beth signed a
Superior Cour tria
their written agree ent Tuesday
·suit last JaiL In is ruling , providing for Messersmith to
pitch for the Yankees in 1976,
1977, 1978 and 1979 for $1
milliorr and it is tha t
agreement which is the
center of the storm.
Kuhn gave some indication
of what his ruling might be
when he called attention IQ a
provision in baseball's rules,
3(D), which states that an
agreement
between a player
NEW EUREKA
and
a
club
before a contract
EDGE KLEENEit
is
signed
can
bind that player
Cleans that last
tough inch along
to the club. Under this rule, it
the baseboard!
would "appear that Kuhn
could only rule in favor of the
Yankees ..
The issue, however,
suddenly has become one of
whether or not Osmond
actually has the power of
' Cflrict tMI
attorney for Messersmith.
According to Marvin Miller ,
the eKecutive director of the
,Players Association, it is
clear he does not.
" I've bec,n advised h
doesn't
have any power of
IJ'O
.......rrer
attorney," Miller sa id .
'.'There was no contract
signed by Messersmith; No
contract signed by Osmpnd or
anybcdy else. It was just a ·
piece of paper outlining some
of the provisions."
. E:ven Paul could not ciear.ly
1. Clmt lOiil'll• c.,m
refute Miller's contentions,
saying only that Osmond
"REPRESENTS" the oower

Kuhn may rule
in Andy's favor

EUREKA
clea11s
4•' ~ wart
.._

t?'i,,

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Model
1424 A.

1424A (WITH UGHD

$6,95

PICKENS
HARPWARE ~CO.
MASON, W.VA.
Mon .- Thurs. &amp; Sat. 8-5:30, Fri. B-8

'

'.

of attorney for Messersmith.
Paul admits never having
spoken to Messersmith and
tha\ all his dealings were
through Osmond ,
"The Yankees have
entered into a written
agreement with Andy
Messersmith thro ugh hi s
authorized agent, Herb Qs·
mond," Paul explained in
New York. "We have been
advised through the Players
Association
that
Mr .
is
now
Messersmith
attempting to void the term of
the agreement despite the
fact that both the Yankees
and Mr. Osmond bargained in
good faith....
"We intend to perform our
obligations under the agreement a nd expec t Mr.
Messersmith
to · do
likewise .... "
,
Dick Moss, attorney for the
Players Association , wired
Yankee owner George
Steinbrenner to inform him
that Osmond was not
authorized to sign an
agreement for Messersmith
and also the contract' sent to
Messersmith on Tuesda y had
several discrepancies from
an agreement made in
Tampa Saturday night. '
In New York,, Miller also
in sisted
no
binding
agreement had been reached
because the contract did not
conform with the previons
agreement.
The Yankees asked Kuhn to
intervene.

. c.

2 bedrm .
apartment , adults only , In
Middleport . Phone 992 -387ol.
3-12 -lfc

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

-

SUBJ!;CT : Purchase of New
Riding Lawn ~ower
. For : The -Board of Education
of the Southern Local Sr:nooJ
~ District, Box l76, R.a cine, Ohio

·back again

I

1

l

•

¢

••
I'
•

2 BEDRM .'trailer, ./ eat nice .
Phon_e 992 -3324.
'3 21 lfc

3 28-6tc TAURUS (April 20·Mar· 20) ·
Today', you may receive conlidentlal [ntormatton that could

and rear
Said Soard of Educlltion
reserves the right to Wllive
Informalities , to accept or
re l ect any and llll bids .
The successful budd er will
be required to f urn i sh a
Slltis fa ctory
performa-nCe
bond far one .hundred percent
of th e contract pr ice .
No b ids may be wit l'ldra wn
for at least thirty (309J da ys
after tt1e scl'leduled c iO$Ing
time for receipt of b ids .

18, 75

.TUXEDO

'

Rental

'

For All Spring

.

'

take

-AQUARIUS

· .•s an addlttonol spurce of In·
come . Develop your potential
talen ts tor fun or profit. .

(Jon .20-Ftb. lVI

LIQUID
16 oz.
Nel son 's ~·

Reg.

.

&amp;

MINT

'

su1 ·

. ,.'1$11!

.;.o;;;,i. - I•"'' Expi-res
.t-·~:t,rc~.:.I''"".!!!!"!!
....' . ,.. 4.4.76

.It . .: :.:·.: ·,:. ,
'

Nelson's
Reg. ~2.97

46,751.69

Special

Total

Occasions

Tax Fund

To
Dinner Jackets

'•

New York Clothing House

...................
KERM'S KORNER

I

Balance Dec . 31, 1975
Genera l Fund
30,050 .3 8
Motor Vehicle Li cense

Tax Fund

v

PRESTO

- 3,464 ,15

i
~

Bal., Jan . I, 1975

Tra iler \Grossi

PRESTO BURGER

Cigarette L icense Fees
an~I"Fi nes (Gross)
91.85
In teres t
1,877 .52

2,069.67
11,816.70
Balan ce
44 ,025.86

Expenditures
Total Expenditures
- Adm inlstrative
7,806 .34
- Town Halls, Memor ia l
Buildings and Grounds
.r
632..46
-Fire Protection
1, 27 0.34
-C e"meterjV3,030.82

SAM PWS 700 WATT
PROFESSIONAL
DRYER/STYLER

1 ,

1.

IN t

• It toasts, top brown's and bakes.
• Co nvenient counter top cooking.

$2877
DURKEE

PEWJER·STYLE TEA KETTLE
3 Qt.
P~wrer- Style

Aluminum

2 drying speeds lor easy

.

~--.,
.

'tltJ rl~t'
OHC

/9

NELSON'S

styling &amp; · drying .
Comforf.grip handle.

POTATO
STICKS

REG. $4 .77

·EASTER

WHITMAN EGGS

SPICED

,_

JELLY BEANS

EASTER

7,094 ,90
16,340.12

Dec. 31,1975
16,340.12
GasoUne Tax Fund
Bal. , Jon . 1,1975 . 1,905.19
Receipts
Gasoline Tax
13,600.00
Tota l Receipts
1 13,600.00

Total Beginning Balnnr:e .
·, Plus Receipts
15 ,5 05.19
E xprndltures
Total Expenditures
- M iscel lane ous
7,567 .48
- Maintenan ce
8,3 65.64
'- Grand To tal Exp.
- Gasoline Tax Fund

Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund

Bal ., J~n . 1, 1975

DELUXE
TOAST
·R·OYEN''"
T938

Balan ce

Expenditures
To tal Expenditures
- M isce l laneous
2,602.36
- Maintenance
17.201.91
Grand To tal Exp. Motor Vehic le License
Tax Fund
19;804 .27
Bal. , Dec . 31, 1975 · - \1,464.15
Total Exp , Plus Bal. ,

Multi·cblor Bamboo
Basket $4.65

OI'P\I~NC! S

I

NEVCO

9,245.27
6,9 18.50
176.40

II At t HI '

.

NELSON'S
REG. $34 .77

- Lighting
I,139.52
- san I tory Dump
96,00
Grand To tal Ex p. General Fund
13, 975,48
Bat .. Dec . 31, 1975
30,050.38
Total Exp, Plus Bat
Dec . 31, 1975
~.025.86

'•

TOAST-R.QVEN

. DELUXE

NELSON ' S
REG. $17.49

4,195.00

3!323.16 '

In tangible
Total Rece ipts
Total Beginning
Plus Receipts

ENGRAVED
DECORATIVE GOLD

32,209. 16

Tariolble Perso nal Property
Tax CGrossJ
64 .85
Estl!lte Ta x (Gross) _ ~ 194.65
Local Gover rnment
and State Income Tax

'

, ..

Broils hambu r gers in 1 to J
minutes . Toasts mulfin s.
heats sa nd wic hes. Cover locks
lor nb-spat1er cooking .

Receipts
General Property T~ x Real Estate and

•

YOUR
CHOICE

HAMBURGER COOKER

427 ' 93

Federa l Revenue
' .
Sharing Fund
- I , 269.97
Total
24,8 88 .JJ
Cuh Balance,
Receipts and
Expenditures
By Fund
General Fund

J

5"x7" or. 8"x10"
, ot
·. 99~
TEXTURED'GOLD

YOUR
CHOICE

Rpa"d and Bridge Fund

POMEROY

..

.,•.

16,340.12

Gaso!ine Ta K Fund
f5,505.19
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
7,846.12
Total
83.717.29
Expenditures
General Fund
13,975.48
Motor Vehic le Li cense
Ta x F und
19,804 .27
Gasoline Tax Fund
lS ,933.12
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
9,11 6.09
Total
58,828 .96

Full Dtess

PICTURE FRAMES

BROOM

36,965.60

·Total Receipts&amp; Balances
G'neral Fund
-44, 025.86
Motor Veh icle Li cense

1S,933.12
Bat .. Dec. 31, 1975 · - 427.93
Total Exp. Plus Ba l.,
Dec. 31, 1975
15,505.19

1

FROM

COCONUT
F~UIT &amp;

59~

NUT

MARSHMAllOW
EGG CRATES

RUBY'S EASTER.
. _ EGG DYE
'

Includes vials
of colors, egg dipper,
and complete
instructions.
NELSON 'S
REG. 69c

FROM

&amp;

NELSON'S
REG. 79c

HERsHEY
CANDY BARS

.

...

.

/~1"\l~'"f .. U U•I ~ l .. ;-f' ~- ll a.St;a_..
... .....:.;:,.,,.. ~~' ac;ua•
•nns. ' · . · f ~
' ·• •, f
;
'
'

~-

.
·' ~· _:___:__

~rackel
.
'

~ jrY~ .a.uu.. •ooaJ~

7'ia -

~ .JJiflf(

• -

•"

•

Hershey Almond,
Kit Kat &amp; Rally

3.392. 12

•
Receipts ...
Granls-F ederl!l
4,454 .00
Total Receip ts
•
4,454 .00
Total Beginning Bal.
Plus Receipts
7,8.46. 12
Expenditures
MilOt. &amp; Op•trl'tiO!I_'

lea' mel waitaki lamb)

· shouiO

4 0uality

· ha~e the knack today, if you

Motor v '!t lcle· License
Tax Fund
7,094 .90
Gasoline Tax Fund
13,600.00
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
4, 454.00

-

cen'ter.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)

Total Re Ceipts
Genera l Fund
11.816.70

Russe ll Stover Candies are the
fine st in qua lity , freshness and
~
goodness. Choose · from many
assortments of delicious can ·
dies especially decorated for
·\
Easter.

and home entertainment

(Jutr ,. 23· Aug , . 22) You

SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
Balance J~n . 1, 197S
General Fund
S 32,209.16
Motor Vel'licle License
Ta x Fund
9,245.22
Gasoline Tax Fund
1,905.19
Federal R.evenue
Sharing Fund
3,392.12

Total

-'1

We carry tape s, record s, c:
B radios , Cdr tape players

LEO

save. you s'ft.me pennies.

This year you are likely to
become In terested .In areatlve
projects, elltler as a hobby or:. ,

Ada Bissell
Tel. No . 614 985·3544

Tota l Receipts
Tota l Beginning
Plus Receipts

Foster Dr .Ma so n, W. Va ."

to gel beller terms. II could

19~ You ~ave a matmcr abou t
you today tha1 trronds will tlno
very appealing It blend s
Slnc.erfty , compa ss1p·n an({ ·
' wBrmth

(41 I, 8, 41c

Motor Veh icle
Li cense Ta x
Other

NATURALIZER~~

your co mmercial dealings to day, try your bargaining power

Township Clerk

etc.

•
,.__.._. .,_. ,_.__ ·--....--·---""---.-1
~(gastelr Shoe center' I

'your imtlgmatlon to good use.
Think creatively . Dare to ·be
dilferent

cou ld""dd weight to your
curse
April 2, 1178

BY Order· of the Bo,srd of
Education
Jane Wa gner
Clerk -Treasurer of
Soutl'1ern Loca l School District
Rac ine. Ohio 45771

Bal .. Jan . 1, 197l
RecelpJs

Oia.l 949 - 2515

CAPRICORN joec. 22 -Jon .

REG.

Motor Vehicle Lie nse
T~x Fuqd'

~teamboat lnlf

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) In

•

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWN SHIPS
For Fiscal Year Ending
Dec emberll, 1975
Olive Township
Meigs County
Long Bottom, Ohio
1
March.24, 1976
I cer tify -t he follow ing report
to be co rrect

eiCE CREAM CONES
·eMILKSHAKES

12 EGGS
PER CRATE

lsc ·
BARS

Supplies
Toto! E•p.
Bal. / Dec. 31 , 1975
Total E•p. P'lus Bot ..
Dec. 31,1975
7,846.12

. ________.. L----.-----·-_.,_.._.._._.._.._.._
102

_.J

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
You r a lms ca,n · be ac c;omptished loday 1f you put

21) You 'll take a· special pride
in tAsks you perform today
The quality of your work, WJ!t
refl ect 11.

·

PISCES (Feb. 20·Morch 201
Somethtng unusual may occur
today that could result In a
Srnf\11 advantage careerwise, II

3. gear frive tl' ansm iss ion

Middleport , Ohio

Soft Ice Cream

PI:A.ZZA

---

that have a practical application will be worth heeding. Put
them to the test.

will

SAGtnARIUS (Nov . 23·Dtc.

Your talents could be put to
good use · tOday in making
th ose de cO'raUve changes
around home you've been
th inking about. ·

~ 4. higl'l flotati'*'t lres . front

THE

.. .. .

Friday, April 2

Th.e,hours ·are fr~m 10 a.m.
till 8 p.m. Monday thru
Saturday.

-

Bemice Bede Otot
for Frtdor, AprU. 2, )i76

values

(Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)

11 . approximate!~· ~-1" m.:w"r

~{

Opening

I~

------

trailer , fu l ly
ca rp eted located on Rt. 143 ,
close to Harrisonvil le, I
ch iltL. Phone n2 -J 122 .

· vuioo

20) II

vou assoc1ale wtth persons today whose tdeals are on a par
with yours .. something mutually
adv~ntageou. s could result · '

ARIES (M"ch 21·Aprll
19)Hunches or insights lo~ay'
BED~M

call 1avorabte auentlon to you.

Your f1rst thought\ will be lor
the necr;s ottoved ones today,
rather lh•n for yourself Yet '-"·
you 'll benefit the same QS theY

time OJWned by the clerk of
said bMtd as ·pro_
v ided by law
tor a new riding l llwn mowe r
accord ino to the following
speclficlltions of said Board or
E:duclltion :
· .
1. 12 horsepoJNer motor

,.-f:,..,_.

3rd St .• . Racine, Ohio

-

GEMINI (Mil 21 -Juno

precedence oVer price It You 're
comparing "similiu Items loday
Take t1me to study thetr real

things with a flourish that will

on April B, -1976 an d at that

·13 1

FRANCIS
FLORIST

.SUNDAE~

redecora ted , tully ca rp eted .
Call in the early a .m . 992
2288·'"
2 22 uc

cnoose to use 11, of doing

e1ther make or save you
mor:'I8Y Check your sourc~s for
reliable tips.

Seeled groposals -will be
·received
y the Board of
Education of tl'le Southern
Loca l School D istrict of
Rac ine, Ohio at the clerk's
oft ice until 12 :00 o'clock noon

i

AL,SO IN '
A
SLIP ON

,. . .__, .
UNFURNISHED fPt. '\In
Pomeroy . ~ bcdrm . newly

4·5771

up

THE GIOVANNI

By FRED DOWN
Rangers ... Keith Hernandez
UPI Sports Writer
hit a three-run homer and the
Amencan League hitters St. Louis Cardinals rocked
received just about the worst Jim Hunter for six runs in six ·
news they could get innings in a 6-2 triumph over
Wednesday short of learning the New York ·Yankees,
that it would be two strikes
John Vukovich's three-run
and out this year .
double in the seventh inning
That man Nolan Ryan is capped a four-run rally that
.hack at it again.
gave the Philadelphia
The Ca lifornia Angels' Philiies a 4·1 victory over the
n\ajor league strikeout king New York Mels, who have
and author of four n&lt;Hlilters lost all eight of their
pitched five oe~r-perfect exhibition games ... Larry
innings 'in a 3-1 victory over Milbcurne, batting .450 this
the San Diego Padres spring, knocked in the
Wednesday. He faced only 16 winning run with his third
batters during the fiv e single of the game as the
innin gs, struck out 10, Houston Astros beat the
allowed a homer by Willie !Montrea l Expos, 3-2, in 10
McCo.vey and walked none , innings... Dwight Evans hit a ·
"I had as good stuff as I had three-run homer and Carl
all last year," said Ryan Yastrzemski ' a three-run
after the game. "I couldn't double leading the Boston'
throw any better than !threw Red Sox to a 13-4 triumph
in this game."
over the Detroit Tigers ... the
Ryan· .suff ered a groin Kansas City Royals put
in jury last season, then pitcher Steve Busby on the 21·
developed elbow trouble. He day disabled list because they
finished the season with a 14- . consider him "behind in his
12 record and underwent overall conditioning.''
surgery during the winter.
Whether he returns to his
Your " Extra Touch "
1972-73-74 form is likely to
Florist Since 1957
make or break the Angels'
season. With Ryan and Frank
Tanana leading their staff,
the Angels could be a Western
Division pennant contender.
Without Ryan in top form, the
Angels could finish fifth or
sixth.
PH. 992-2644
On other fronts :
John Candelaria , who had
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
an \l-6 record after being
Your FTD Florist
brought up in . mid-1975,
pitched the first six innings,as
the Pittsburgh Pirates
defeated the Chicago- White
Sox, 3.{), Candelaria allowed
two hits, struck out three and
walked one ... Burt Hooton
pitched seven strong innings
for the l11s Angeles Dodgers
in a 6-1 triumph over the
, Cincinnati Reds.
lb . Assorted Chocolates
Steve Braun doubled in the
winning run in the lllh inning
$2 .95
to give the Minnesota Twins a
4-3 win over the Texas
Rangers. Jim Sundberg,
Juan Beniquez and Wayne
Pinkerton homered for the

PUtLIC NOTICE.

TO : Bidders

·AstraGraph

For Rent

. ~ork , R1.33 , ten miles nort h ·
of Pomeroy . Large ICil ~ Wrth :
concrete pa tl o.s, sidewalks ,
rur'l"ner s and off street
parking . Phone 992 -7479 .
:2 .3 1 lfc 2

l -9-tt c

DAN'S

Nolan Ryan

unfurnished apts Phone 992
504 .
11 -9 Ltc

Rutland . Phone 992-5858 .

.

won't let you come
sh-ort.
Platform soles and tall heels set you up tn
Antiqued leather moves easy . Step
into a pair.

~l ANO" 4 RM . furn ished and

3BEoRM~~~s;;lth-b-;th in COuNTRY -M;bi,;H~p

Palmer, who won here with a
••• score last year. "I
record """
enjoy facing it."
''I always play this course
· well," Blalock added. "The
glamor ge~ you pumped up.
·Actually·, I'm oft to a pretty
good start although I have
beeq a slow starter in the past
and usually don't sta rt
playing really well until April
and May. "
SAFETY BOOTS
JoAnne earner was made a
LADIES BOOTS
6-1 choice while Judy Rankin Ml N E R BOOTS
and Carol Mann were IH and FARM ~OOTS
10·1, respectively. Another DRESS BOOTS
strong contender will he Amy
Alcott, last year's LPGA
Rookie of the Year.
"I've ne\ier felt any pressIn Middleport
ure,". sa' :l Alcott. "My goal
last yea· was just to play.,.,J__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,.

~n.

For Rent

FU~NISH!O ,

NOW AVAILABLE!

CII. . -Oifeo,oto,

l9t' ~·· -- -4·--·- - 4. Clnot- lUIS
.

DELUXE MODEL

week . By Motor Roule
whe r e car r ie r servi ce not
availab l e . One monlh ,
S3 .25 By .ma l t in Ohio and
w . va , One Yea r , S22 .00 ,
SiK months ._ SI J. 5~ ; Th ree
monthS , $7 .00 . Elsewhere
$26.00 year : ~ i x mon rns
$1J .SO ; three montns , S7 .50.
Su bscription price includes
Sunday Time.s Sentinel .

Palmer .heath fie(d ·
•
zn zrcle ..,ournament

alter
nine
months
n o t w i t h s t a n d in g
a
commission decisioo.
PALM SPRINGS, Calif.
(Up))
·
·Headed by
: - PUCO commissioners
would not'he allowed to run defending champion sandra
for elective office while Palmer, a field of SJ.tees off
serving on the commis:;ion. . today iri the big apple of the
-'-Utilities would he allowed Ladi.es Professional. _Golf
to "normalize'' some of their · Assocjation tour, the $200,000
income taxes, not passing on Wimers Circle tournament.
the saving to consumerS'but
Palmer is listed as a 4-1
using the funds for further f"vorite in the 72-hole event
investment.
over the difficult Mission
_ The •puco would have Hills Country Club course.
authority to study proposed
.The field for th~ richest
utility company constructi.on · event on the women s pro golf
with an eye to whether. the !' loursponsored , by
plans are "prudent."
Colgate-w~s cut by one m
- Utility company rate re- Wednesdays pro-am , when
quests would be based on .sandra Post ~&amp;came tll and
· financial data gatl!ered three had to withdraw.
months prior 10 a filing before
Jane Blalock, w~o .won •the
the
commission
and Tnpie Crown at Mtsston Htlls
projected nine months after last December, won, the
the filing.
maugural Wmners Ctrcle
_ The PUCO could not event four years ago .and has
consider the cost of providing ~ been made a 5-1 chmce. She
utility servi ce to various was runnerup here m 1972.
clasSes of customers when
"It's the cha~en~e that
decidin~ a case.
sparks me still,
sa.td

For Rent

well. I never look at the
leader board to see where I
am. I play the course and
don't worry •about what the
others are doing. If I'm doing
well, everything will ta~e
care of itself.''
At ;.foot-l'h and 117
pounds, Palmer gives away
miles of yards to the longer
hitte~s of .the tour. But she
was the No. 1 money winner
on the tour "in 1975.
p-iiiiliii.iii.iii~--·
WESTERN
liOOTS
LOGG"E R BOOTS
HARNESS
BOOTS

E~~RGU~~IJ!:~ s~p~!eroy

(•I I, lie

'

-.-..

�7- The Daily_§e ntine_l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday April! 1976

S.Pt. dker r~f Iron: ton

r

jar Ch le tneeting

Wolf iD the :Manger!
Dear Rap :
. When l started going witll Toby,! didn't know that he'd got
his former girl frienct pregnant. We dated until he joined the
Winners in the Pomeroy
VISUAL ARTS
Elementary School PTA
Fourth : Nicky Riggs, blue; Marines, aftd we both agreed it was lov~.
He writes and calls. But here 's my problem : he finally
cultural arts contest were Amy Sisson, red, and Keith ·
decined
to marry the girl he got pregnant, mostly·because her
announce&lt;! Wednesday and Kingel and Randy Lee, white.
parents
were
bugging him and he wanted his baby. But he still
the ribbons presented by Mrs.
Fifth : Deanna and Laura
it
's
me
he
loves, and when I told him I am going out with
says
Pat T
a and Mrs. Judy Van Meter. blue; Mark ·
another
fellow
,
he was furious .
Werry, co-chairpersons.
Googlein and Giqa Johnson ,
Heexpectsme
to wait!or him, see him whenever I can, but
Receiving best of show · red, and Priscilla Herdman
he
hasn't
said
anything
about a divorce. I still love him (I
ri~ons for , their entries and Chuck Bailey, whites.
think
),
but
I'm
afraid
he's more interested in sex than·
which will now be entered in
LITERATURE
marriage
to
me
..
the county competition April
Fourth : Nicky Riggs, two
Should I stay true to him a while longer• - P. Z.
8 were primary division (first blues; Christi Smith, blue;
through third grades) Jell· Patricia Neutzling, Jon
Dear P.:
mfer Swartz, visual arts, and Perrin
a nd
Barbara
Should a chicken get chummy with a hawk•
intermediate division (fourth Chapalier, red ribbons, and
stay with your present boyfriend, and don't lei the Marines
throlll!h sixth), Deanna and Kelly Wh itlatch, Shelpla ·
land again! - HELEN AND SUE
Laura Van Meter, visual arts , Goradia and Kyle Woods,
+++
. and Nicky Riggs, literattire. whites.
Rap :
Judging was done by John
Fifth : Barbara Grueser,
I'm a truck driver and, want to own my own rig. It 's the
Lisle, pr incipal of the Kim Morrow and Sandy
only job I've ever wanted even if it isn't the games-and-dames
~tisbury SChool, literature, Reed blues · Gina Johnson
life Sonny and Will make it out to be.
and William Mayer, visual Susa~ Lightfoot and Tere..;
My girl says the divorce rate for truckers is high . She
Harden , reds, and Gina thinks we one-night-stand across the country and can't spend
arts .
The ribbon winners were as Johnson, Roxanne McDanlel enough time with our wives and l&lt;ids . She hasn 't exactly said I
follows:
· an\1 Angie Van Cooney, should choose between my rig and her, but I get the message.
PR)~RYI)(VISION
whites.
Maybe you couldhelp ~erchange her mind. If not you, how·
VISUAL ARTS
Sixth : Tanya Aleshire , about some letters from truckers who have stayed married'' First Grade: · Jennifer Heinz Coats, an(! Mary Klein, JUMPY JOE
.
Swartz, blue; A. S. Casto, Jr. , blues ; Melinda Grimm, Mike
red, and Amy Satterfield, Miller , Ta.mmy Pettit, reds, Joe :
white.
and Victor Painter, Brenda
Why not make it a real married learn and take your wife
Third : Susan Thoma , blue. Fry and Rochelle McDaniel ,along as your driving buddy ' It's not a ·bad life for an
'LITERATURE
whites.
' adventurous woman - with a strong back, sturdy kidneys and
Third : Debbie Werry , blue.
There were approximately wanderlust - wlro doesn't like housework. - HELEN
INTERMEmATE I)!VISION 140 entries in the contest.
+++
NOTE FROM SUE : A rig owner I know'l;ays a trucker's
chance for a good marriage is about par with the bear's chance
to bust him for hammerin' down in the rock in' chair. (For the
few of you who don't read C.B.ese yet, that means (in Citizen's
Band radio talk) "the police's chance to nail hinn for speeding
when he's in the middle of a truck convoy - whose drivers
keep track of "Smokey" via Citizen's Band radio .)
- But ... any marriage will work if both partners try hard
enough. Let's he.ar what other big-wheelers have to say about
,{
this. Okay• ·
.,,
\
+++
By Polly Cramer
- - - - - - - - - -- 9ear Helen and Sue:
she has been trying to use , In the controversy over whether or not young people are
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I am vanilla extract for her scent graded too highly for too little high school or college work,
hoping someone out there can and this will not mix with Daniel F. said, "What really counts is what you KNOW, and
.
give me the exact ingredients · wax . I use a concentrated . not the grades."
I'd like to suggest that what really counts .goes a mite
for whipping up my own diet scent that is made just for
margarine. I know the candles and can be purchased further than that. "It's what you DO with what you know" that
calories can be cut in hall or ,at most hobby shops. Melt the· gives most satisfaction in life. - REGULAR "OLDER"
more by this method. - wax to 175-180 degrees, add READER
.the scent and stir until,
BEVERLY.
I)EAR BEVERLY' - I thoroughly mixed and there Rap:
My ll)Other is 47 and she's joined a belly dancing class at
spoke with the laboratory of a should be no problem. the
"Y."
Don't you think she showd act her age? - SHOCKED
MONA.
margarine company con·
cernlng your question, and
Readers, the above came
'
they knew of no ingredients to from a candle shop in Shocked:
Sure! - which means a shot at belly dancing if she ·wants
add. But they suggested that California.
.
it.
Alta
girl, Mom! - SUE
.
low calorie margarine might
DEAR POLLY - If you
.
+++
be allowed to soften enough have a portable sewing
so It wUI whip well In your - machine, but no cabinet, a Dear Shocked :
Why don't- you join her ? Might loosen up your rigid
electric mixer. 'rhis will add metal t.yp~Siter table serves
thinking as well as your stomach muscles. - HELEN
· air and lntrease the volume, the PW:P~ very well . It is
so the margarine will go just tl&gt;ifflght size and height.
further and nalurally have - R0Z.
less calories In a serving.
I)EAR ROZ - I certainly
Perbaps some reader has agree with you as I have used
found a bener answer from mine on such a table for
personal experience. - many years. The machine Is
Mrs. Bea Dugan and Mrs. May, Judy Musser, Attard&gt;
POLLY.
too heavy for me to lift butthe ·
Betty
Hutchi son were Dewhurst, Roberta Musser.
table can be rolled to where It
hbste'sses
for a layette shower Margaret Parsons , Ethyl
DEAR POLLY - My Pet is to be used and the leaves
honoring
Mrs . Andrea Chapman, Ann Webster ,
dropped
to
the
sides
when
not
Peeve is with those comDewhurst
Enright
recently at Virginia Michael, Juanita
In
use.
-:POLLY.
panies who put short zippers
the
Hutchison
home.
Wamsley and Ada Keesee .
in baby sleepers. Those who
Games
were
played
with
designed them surely never
prizes goi ng to the winners .
tried to put one on a baby . .
Cake,
punch and coffee were
SERVICES
SET
You have to practically bend
INVITm TO MEET
served.
Guests were Anita
RUTLAND
Eas
ter
baby's arms and Jegs off to
Mrs . Harold
Sauer.,
get them into the sleeper and Sunrise services have been Jacobs, Mary Jacobs, Shelby president of the Middleport.
this is most uncomfortable set lor 6 a.m . at the Rutland Davis, Saundra Tillis, Carrie Pomeroy Area Branch of the
Church of Christ and this Moore , Pauleen Tillis, Kathy American Asssociatiim of
for baby. - TRACY.
serv
ice will be followed by a Tyree, Debbie Tillis, Mar- University Women, received
DEAR POLLY- Mrs. E.
feU
ow
ship bre'Mast in the · jorie Skidmore, Joy Skid- a telepho ne invita ti on
s. wrote of her un successful
church
basement. The public more, June Dewhurst, Ruth - Wednesday night from the
attempt to make vanilla
Tillis, Mary Nev ille, Pauline program chairperson of the
is
invited.
candles. I strongly suspect
Bentley, Anna Frank, Rose Gallipolis Branch, AAUW,
Patterson, Audrey Patterson, inviting members to attend a
Becky Co ttrill , Cheryl meeting Monday night at 6
Lemley, Julie Hutchison and p.m. at the Grace United
Robin and Penny Dewhurs~ . Methodist Ch urch. The
Sending gifts were Bea program will be a panel
discussion entitled "Women
in Traditionally Male Roles" .
CLASS ONTV
SYRACUSE - The kinON I)EAN'S LIST
dergarten class of the Asbury
RUTLAND
- Julie HutUnited Methodist Church of
chison,
Rutland,
a junior at
here will appear on•-the Mr.
Ohio
State
University,
made
Cartoon Show on WSAZ TV
the
dean
's
list
lor
the
winter
Cii/1.61-GM- '
Friday, April Z, at 4 p.m.
quarter .

Polly's Pointers
Whip your own
diet margmitne

~

•.

.

Mrs. Enright feted

.•

t····················~

,.

:

i

.•

......,

Start your

garden this
and

:

way...

J

·•

•
1
:••
:

watch J!.arowl

I
Ii
Ir
:
:

TILLERS

Compact models

- lor small gardens

MODEL

,,
v..,

noture's own m - o1 bvlldtng IIGII , ...
Gil- IIIIer. Hero's whyo Glt-'s perloct

dupllcolo

IIIII)' will\ I
slicing """ bl-1\g ocllon miJCII up 1011 end orgonlc

molter -.ughly , .. formo 11-. oorolod -bod. Ao

. • .r"ult, pl111l roots penotroto ond rMcll auf Qolly;
mOiolure lol!boorNd mOrt rtldlly ' cltcompoolllon o1 oe11
mlr.r.roto lnd ort~nlc wosll lok" plow ·qlll-. Ytlllt

!llrdon glh .off to I fllltr lflrf IIIII f ' - 1 ' 1nd .
....lolllto grow -tnor lhlll ...,. ...,,..., Qlloon tll!lirt
IMiure oxtro ht••Y canotrucllon. guorol!tltll 1 ·(....,.ocod treo II OYtr -rol&lt;on), CUI Iron geor CMO od.

IVItllllo IJIIIng wtcltho.

"

.

'

"E

very
110 W. MAIN

thl

1

ng n Hardware"
POMEROY

·

(
I I

1

· ~~11 hwstlay evening of
j
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Terry Lee Metheney, son of Mr. 1111&lt;1 \ics 1... n:oiJ
Metheney , Ewington. Miss Johnson is r1 :.;pnwr , \11'1 ...
High School. Her fiance is a 1973 gl'&lt; o&lt;iual&lt;• •·I I!•
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Art auction items d11 e

auction and sangr ia party

will be Tomm y Joe Stewarl
from the Ohio Val ley

Lh ('~( (l('k

For Your
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POMEROY. 0~' ·1.

Use Our Convenient l,!ly-Awav Plan
Open Friday Night Ttl,B-Sat. Til5

·Bitf city mayofs quiz candidates

By LEWIS LORI)
Cultw-al ;ut contest win- categories which will now competition were:
United
Press International
ners ,were recognized and compete in the county
Miss Parsons' class: J phn
Four
Democratic
presented ribbon awards In competition on April 0 were : Cremeans , ' 'My ure as a
presidential
hopefuls were
an assembly program · by Stephanie Houchins, Flag '', 'first : Kathy Blake,
set
to
face
each
other today
THURSI)AY
Wednesday afternoon at Ule m~sic ; Barbara Haley, " Frank 1in
De 1an o
before
a
group
of big city
GALLIA COUNTY Salon Bradbury School for fifth and visual arts, ,and John Roosevelt", second; and
sixth graders.
Cremeans, literature.
. "Our Bicentennial" by T_erry mayors and state their views
612, Eight and For ty, ThursD H 1
. on what should be done about
. day. 6:30 dinher at the home
on ann ng, principal,
Classroom winners in Wayland, third.
the nation's urban problems.
.
·
made
the
presentations
in
Ule
·visual
arts
we!'\!
as
follows
:
Mr.
Hanning's
class:
Pam·
of . MiSs Erma Smith ; Spring · ·
•- t sponsored · by the · Teresa Casci's class: Tami Crooks, "The Most Famous
·The National Conference of
con"'s
Ave., Pomerov.
Democratic
Mayors gathered
EVANGELINE CHAP- Bradbury PTA under _ the Hart, first; Stephanie Ride", first ; Ricky EberTER, Order of the Eastern Chairmanship of Mrs. Sibley . Houchins,, second, and Paula s b a c h , ' ''G e o r -g e
Star, 7, 30 p.m. Thursday at Slack . The bicentennial Horton, third.
Washington", second, and
the Middleport Masonic theme was carried out in
Jeanne Parsons' class: Eda Sinith, "Thomas Jefenlries wl.i~h were displayed Barbara Haley, first ; David ferson", third.
·
Te~fb~LEPORT CHAM· for viewing by the parents · Meadows and David Hoff. MiSS' Ornstein's class :
who had been invited to at- man, . tied for second, and Tanya Stobart, "George
BER of Commerce,_ 12 ' 15 tend the assembly.
John Cremeans third .
Washington" and Angela
p.m. Thursday for a luncheon
" ti ·
h
'
. meeting
at
Martin . .;.n res 1_n eac roo~ were
Don Hannin g's class; Farley, "The Liberty Bell",
Restaw-ant.
Judged w1th bl~e nbbons MeUssa Spencer, first; Opal tie for first; Cindy Crooks,
bemg 1given for f1rst, rect for Pugh, second· Pam Crooks "Bicentennial Wishes" and
LETART Baseball Assn., 7 second, and white ·lor third. third, and Allen Arnott' Kris Snowden, "Our Natural
p.m. Thursday, at Letart Participant ribbons were red, honorable mention.
' Resources", tie for second,
~ails Elementary School; all 0 "ihite ~d blue with the PTA
Susan Ornstein's class : and Lori Maynard, "Betsy
mterested persons urged to seal affixed.
Angela Farley and Craig Ross", and Susanna Wise,
attend.
·
Judges were Mrs. Gladys Darst tie for first· Kris ·•war," tie for third.
F.RmAY
Foley for music, Mrs: Snowden, second, and' Karen
Miss easel's class :
By JOHN ENGSTROM
TURKEY DmNER Friday Margaret Ella Lewis for Goggins, third.
Stephanie Houchins , "The
SEATTLE, Wash. (UP! )at Orange Township Fire visual arts, and Mrs. Nan
Karen Maziarz ' class : Kent Ride", first: Kim Roush, It was a risky comment, but
Station from 5 to 7 p.m. Moore and Miss Mildred Doss first· Carl StiU second "Betsy Ross" , second, and Milie Lude, new athl etic
sponsored by Tuppers Plains. Hawley for literature.
and Adam' Edgar , third.
' Barbara
Custer,
''A director at the University of
Community Club .
Top entries in the three
Winners in . the literature Celebration", third.
.Washington, admitted to
SATURI)A y
Winner in the music were reporters at his first news
REGULAR MEETING,
~
.
.·
·,
Stephanie Hou~hins, first; conference that he had a
Bedford Township Trustees, 1
honor.~" '
Kris Snowden, second, and thing for women .
ll:30p.m. Saturday at home of l.JU.J
J
Tina Stewart, third.
"I know something about
women _: but .not llke you
Helen Swartz, clerk.
might be Ulinking," he said,
SQUARE DANCE,
flashing a broad smile.
Satw-day. o to 11 p.m. at _
"I have three daughters,
Pomeroy Elementary School _
'J
and my wife is sitting right in
with music by " String.
:he back of this room. And
du sters." Dance open to
MASON - A layette .ding, Mrs. Rosalie Roush and
when we recruit dogs (for the
public, admission $1 adults shower was held recently for Kelly Lee, Mrs. Vanna
:.l:
family) we recruit female
with children under 12 ac- Mrs. James · (Joyce ) Pauley Samples, Mrs. Betty Pauley,
~
=~ dogs."
com panyin g parents ad- at the Faith Baptist Church. Mrs. Bobbi Pauley, MisS
MASON, W. · Va . ...:. Rev.
Then Lude, who reeks with
mitted free .
Attending were Mrs. Anna lllena Van Meter, Miss· An·
MIDDLEPORT FIRE Neal, Point Pleasant; Mrs. .drea Dudding, Miss Debbie Frank Nott, Charleston Road, the enthusiasm of a man who
Department fish fry, sand~ Irene Hanson , Mrs. Carolyn Barnham and Miss Cheryle Pt. Pleasant, will be . the could sell suntan oil to rain
wiches or dinner, Sa turday Dailey, Mrs. Brenda Haggy, Van Meter, Mason, and Mrs. speaker at the Faith Baptist forest residents, turned
beginning at II a.m. at fire Middleport; Mrs. Shirley ·Shawnee King, New · Haven. Church Sunday, April 4,-. at serious. He promised that
7:30 p. m.
· women athletes at tlie UW
department building.
Coleman, Rutland ; Sherri
Games were played with
Rev.
Cliff
Coleman
of
can expect continued growth
JOmT MEETING, local Clark, Joann Clark and Mrs . prizes going to Nancy AnJackson,
Ohio,
brought
the
and
emphasis in 'their
humane socie ties or 10 Rhojean McClure, Pomeroy;
derson ,- Rosalie Roush and evening mess~gSunday, programs Wlder the Ltide
Southern Ohio counties Mrs. Florence Clark, Mrs.
Joann Clark. The door prize March 26. Sund
School administration.
meeting at Meigs · Inn LucUle King and Mrs .
was won by Virginia Wears. attendance on M h 28 was
"Athletics has been very
. Saturday, 9:30a.m. to 4 p.m. Lorraine Barnett, Letart;
Sending gifts were Mrs. 65.
good
for me, so I would have
Training session to be held Mrs.
Vicki
·Hanson, · Hazel Stephens, FayetWednesday
,
A
pril28
at
7:30
a
tough
time convincing
and John W. Inman , Jr., Fort Harrisonville;· Mrs. Mary
tesville, N. C.; Deloris Cliff Colema_n will perform. myself that it wouldn 't be'
Wayne, Ind., director of Samples and Miss Beth
Great Lakes Regional Office Samples, Marysville, Mich .; Johnson, June Wilkenson, magic for the Youth . good for another person,
Letart; Kay King, Mid- Fellowship group and all male or female."
to he present.
Mrs. Virginia Wears, West dleport; Vicki Jeffers, West children , teena gers and
He · said Washington
SOUP AND BAKE SALE Columbia.
Columbia; Rose Ellen Lee adults are invited to atte nd. officials assured him , during
Sa tu rday at Syracuse
Mrs. Ella Ford, Mrs. Janet and Kelly and Betty Norton,
Sunday School is eac h pre-hiring talks, that .they
Presbyterian Ch ur ch Pierce, Mrs. Pearl Roush, Pomeroy; Vivian Fry, Jean
Sunday
at 10 a. m. Blble want "ah outstanding
beginning alll :30a.m. Bring Mrs. Lorraine McCauley, Grueser and Joann Harmofi,
Study is Wednesday at 7:30 p. intercollegiafe program containers for carryout .
Mrs. Betty Van Meter , Mrs . Mason , Mary Dudding,
lor men and women." But he
SIGN UP DAY Saturday Carla King, Mrs. Nancy Mason, and Jane Snouffer, m.
Special
speakers
are
admitted
that growth in
for Middleport Li ttle League Anderson,- Mrs. Ruth Dud- Pomeroy.
featllfed
each
Sunday
at
7:30
women's
programs
will mean
at Legion Hall from 10 a.m. to
p.
m.
The
church
is
presently
"some
retrenchment,
re2 p.m. For T-hall age 5 to 7,
meeting
in
tlie
Steel
Workers
evaluation
and
assignment
of
pee wee , age 6 to 9, little
Union
Hall
on
Railroad
Sl.
priorities."
league, age 10 to 12, pony
between Horton and Pomeroy
"I think it can be done ...
league age 13 to 15. All youths
Streets.
Everyone
welcome
but
I know it's going to · be
Ill the above ages are invited.
to
attend
all
services.
tough,"
he said, explaining
Registration fee is $4.
that
during
talks in the
SIGN UP DAY for Rutland
Midwest
over
the next lew
Joys baseball a nd girls
An org~nizationai meeting fined to the · Holzer -Medical
weeks
he
will
explore
"new
;oftbdll Saturday at old
BORmGS SKimG
of the Useful Friend Center, intensive care unit.
resource
dollars"
for
lutland High School 10 a.m.
Michael and Robin Boring women's athletic.
Organization was held She will be hospitalized for
mtil noon. Fee is $5.
Tuesday at the South Bethel' several weeks. Donations are left Wednesday to spend their
Continu,ed support for
T/IG DAY for Rutland United Methodist Church.
spring vacation at Bir- women's programs, and most
being taken and the club is&gt;aseball
Saturday
in
Officers elected were Pal planning a bake sale with all chwood, a skiing resort in the of the sports at Washington,
·Rutland. Players and parents Zielinski, president; Evelyn
Poconos in ·Pennsylvania.
who can assist are to meet at Well, v.ice president; Norma proceeds to go to the Spencer Mrs. Boring is a teacher at will still depend on bigtime
the old Rutland High School Hawthorne , secreta ry; family. Others desiring to Pomeroy Elementary and basketball and football proat 9 a.m.
· Frances Sheets, assistant donate to the family may Mr. Boring teaches at grams.
" With
football
and
SQUARE DANCE Satw-- secretary ; Lila Van Meter, contact Mrs. Ula Van Meter, Racine.
basketball
as
major
revenueday at Tuppers Plains School tre~surer; Wanda Findling, Box 26, Chester 45720.
producing sports, which the
Next meeti_ng wiD be held
from 9 p.m. to I a.m. Spon- assistant treasurer; Unda
institution
is interested In
sored by Bar-30. Refresh- Bentz, news reporter and April 13 at 7 p. m. at the
continuing
to · develop into
.
NAME
GAMES
ments by Tuppers . Plains Martha Bailey, assistant church. Anyone interested in
national
prominence,
I
WASHINGTON
(UP!
)
joining is invited to attend a
Community Club.
news reporter.
believe
we
can
do
it,"
be
meeting . At the first meeting Democratic National
SUNI)AY
Plans were made to _assist
Committee Chairman Robert explained.
MARY Shrine 37, Order of· the Tom Spencer family. It were thOse elected officers Strauss ·predi.cted Ford will
White Shrine of Jerusalem, was noted that Mr. Spencer and Eileen Bahr , Jean win in 1976. Not President
rehearsal 2 p.m. Sunday at has just returned to work and Sheets, Ada Van Meter and Ford. Strauss was talking
Pomeroy Masonic Temple for that Is wife. Cathv. is con- Linda Wells.
about Sen. Wendell Ford (Dinstallation of officers.
Ky.).
SONGFEST Sunday; 2'p.m. REAL OR FICIION
The senator was selected
HOLLYWOOD (UP!) at Seventh-Day Adventist
Democratic c~mpaign chairWHA Standings
Chur ch. All sing ers and Actor Jason Ronard said a
man Wednesday . Said
role he played on the
By un;ted Press International
public invited.
East
Stauss: "He is one Ford who
w L T Pts. GF GA will prove a winner."
BLACK Lung meeting television series "The Blue
Sunday at J•ck's Club, in- Knight" inspired the $3 ~~~e~1and
~
;ll Reps. Yvonne Burke (Dtersection of SR 7and 143, a{ 1 million bank robbery in New Englnd 32 39 7 11 248 284 Calif.) and James Wright (DClncl nnaii J&lt; 43 1 69 277 332
p.m. President of Southeast Montreal Tuesday.
Texas) will cochair the
p ~
West
"It was exactly the same
w L T Pts GF G~ committee. Their job is to coOhio Black Lung Association
thing I did in the show," he y-Houston 49 27 0 98 316 253 ordinate campaign efforts to
will be present.
said. The robbers threatened Phoen ix
39 33 6 64295 211
San o;09o 35 36 6 76 296 279 get Democrats elected at ali
SLIDES 01" C8)ll~ Bouna
Brink's
truck
driver
with
a·
x
Minn
JO 25 4 64 211 212 levels.
tiful 's history narrated by Joe
50mm
antiaircraft
gun
and
c..,vntd'r
Pts GF GA
Stobart and Jim Cleland
using audio visual equip, forced
open theagreed
door. Quebec
v-Winn_lpeg 51
Jl7 303
242 · I"
·-~------------~---,
Policehim
in to
Montreal
46 25
27 24 104
96 344
ment. Everyone welcome.
MAKE 'EM .
with Ronard. "It appears the ~ ~~~~~~~on ~~ J~ ~
~~
idea of some smart writers in Toronlo
24 46 5 53 323 375
• the United States set the x-Otlawa
14 26 I 29 134 172
CUTE FOR
• •
x .team disbanded
11
pattern, satd Lt . Larry
v·clinched division title
IN HOSPITAL
Levis. 11The crime shown on
Wedn~sday •s Games
EASTER
Patty Ann Lee of Elyria, 13
·
1 •·
Pl1oen lx 7 C1nc lnnatr 2, aft
Amencan
te
evtston
was
Cleveland
5
New
England
1.
year old daughter of Mrs.
to this one." Winnipeg 5 Toronto 3 '
Dorothy Lee, the former almost identical
tl
thing .. In the Houston
Thursday's
Games
E
xcep or one
at lnd lanaP,olis
NEW SHI MENT
Dorothy Howell of Pomeroy,
show,
the
robbers
found
no
Edmon/on
a1
Quebec
Of
and granddaughter of'r.1rs.
Edward Templeton and money in the truck and !ndiana:~ii:•:;sT~r~~f~s
Edward Howell, Pomeroy, is Ronard's character was Cl eveland a~ Cincinnati
confined to .the Allen killed. In real life, the robbers WlnnipeHI Colgar v
Memorial Hospital for took the money and escaped.
treatment of rheumatl~;
lever. Cards may be sent to
Si1es 2t to6x
Miss Lee ·at' the Alien
Memorial Hosp_ital, Room
106, Bed 2,_Oberlin, Ohio.
BOYS WIND BREA~E,R

If
*

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in New York for a question- that "there's l;()methuig in
and--answer session with the office that elevates a man
Henry Jackson, Morris Udall, and his thinking."
Jimmy Carter and Frank
Carte r, campaigning in
Church - followed by a Wisconsin,
said
the
speech
from
Hubert Democrats could suffer from
Hwnphrey, who says he Isn't efforts to deadlock the
a candidate. but wouldn't na(ional convention .
mind being.the nom.inee . .
"Trying . to con.lrive M
A state c-onvention of South brokered convention would
Carolina Democrats agreed be making a serious mistake
Wednesday night to send nine for the party and the
delegates to the national country," Carter said. " It
convention committed to might be the one factor that
Carter, eight committed to keeps us from winning this
George
Wallace,
one . fall. "
corrunitted to Cl)urch - his
Udall-, campaigning in uupfirst _: and 13 uncommitted. state New York, drew big
On the GOP front, Ronald crowds in Rochester but was ·
Reagan told a nationwide snubbed by Democratic
teleVision audience that be- legislators tn Albany. "Out,
cause of President For4's out. out of the room! " they
foreign policy "our nation is shouted when Udall and his
In danger, and the danger entourage showed up lor a
grows greater with each scheduled· address to a
passing day."
Democratic caucus .
Without mentioning his
Gov. Hugh Carey then
challenger by name, Ford granted Udall a visit but
suggested to · nearly - 1,000 refused to leave his olfice .to
Republicans at a $1,000 a pose with the candidate lor
plate dinner in Washington photographers.
that Reagan was hurting
Wallace said he would cut
party unity .
his Wisconsin cali&gt;palgn short
"I am always campaigning and' spend the weekend In
for the Wlity of this party," Montgomery. "I'm the
Ford said. "That has been my governor of Alabama and I
philosphy and my practice have thin gs to do," he
and I will not abandon 1Nn explained .
1976."
Ford's
campaign .
commi tlee, dismissing
Reagan's talk as a "basic
stump speech," said : "There
is nothing new in it."
There was one thing new,
but Reagan didn't say it. The
moment he quit talking, an
announcer told viewers how
to send money. Reagan.hopes ,
to gather enough funds lor a
strong bid in primaries in the
Soulb and the West in early
May . .
Reagan will seek support in
Tuesday 's Wisconsin
primary with a sta\ewide
television address this
weekend - similar to a
statewide TV appeal that
preceded last week's North
Carolina triumph.
·
Ford plans to campaign in
Wisconsin
during
the
Weekend, and Reagan's state
manager sa id there is·.a slight
chance Reagan will be in the
state Monday.
Mayor Richard Daley, yet
to endorse a candidate, said
in Chicago that Carter "has a
potential to be a candidate
and a good candidate." Da]~y
said Democrats should quit
lookin g for a "super
candida te" and reco~nize

named ·
to post

shower

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Middleport; Ohio

Ebersbach Hdwe.
Pomeroy

Open Fridays

Main 51.

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GIRLS' JACKETS

.AND ENSEMBLES

PASSENGER
RETREADS

VISITS HERE
Mark Milliron of. Columbus
spen t a week with his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Andrews, Long Bottom.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs:
Larry Milliron joined him
· here for the weekend and the
family returned home Sunday. Other recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Andrews
and daughter, Barbara were
Mr. and mrs. Pearl McCrery
and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Corrigan, Columbus. ~

- STOREWIDE ~PEC IALS AVAILABLE- .

PHONE
992-~4c~ ,

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CANDY

Selection

,

Officers elected during
organizational meeting

t~ ..

,,,

1 all
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M rs. ] ames Pa.uk11

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11Jette

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April is the month for the
annual art auction sponsore0
by the French Art Colony of
'Ga llipolis at Rive,:!Jy ,
Pa intin gs have been g,a th cred
and are now on di&gt;4Jlay at
Riverby , according to the
chairman or the art auctio11 ,
Mrs. Joy Prendergast.
She urges anyone who has
antiques that they wish to
include in the ~i sp!'aJ' and
auction to co ntac t Mrs.
Geisla Alonzo by ca lling 44b4221 before Saturday·. April
10. All contr ibutors who have
items on display . that are
auctioned off will rece1ve :lO
per cent of the sa le pri ce.
Mrs. P1·e ndergast al so
eqcourAges those who may
have craft i terns that they
wish to display and ha ve
available for ~uc ti o n to
· contact Mrs . Anne Jenki ns at
· 446-4926 by April 10.
Aucti o,neer for th e art

at ChUfC h .
S'l•bar t 1s f'i~s ~

t~fl1 r\1.\r\

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ENGAGED - Mr ..aml M" . Simon .JiJIII"''"·

u·eam. socials,

1 ,,1 ft1r the July

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' ips h1 camp, pic·
rifles. weine r

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Choice of Salad ,.Potnto, French B;c&lt;1d
with any of the ~bove entrees.

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AT YOUR POMEROY
BE,N FRANKLIN STORE

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Bounliful

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111 '1\,r(\'e Had a pizza

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OPEN FRI . TIL 8 - SAT. TIL 5

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

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�7- The Daily_§e ntine_l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday April! 1976

S.Pt. dker r~f Iron: ton

r

jar Ch le tneeting

Wolf iD the :Manger!
Dear Rap :
. When l started going witll Toby,! didn't know that he'd got
his former girl frienct pregnant. We dated until he joined the
Winners in the Pomeroy
VISUAL ARTS
Elementary School PTA
Fourth : Nicky Riggs, blue; Marines, aftd we both agreed it was lov~.
He writes and calls. But here 's my problem : he finally
cultural arts contest were Amy Sisson, red, and Keith ·
decined
to marry the girl he got pregnant, mostly·because her
announce&lt;! Wednesday and Kingel and Randy Lee, white.
parents
were
bugging him and he wanted his baby. But he still
the ribbons presented by Mrs.
Fifth : Deanna and Laura
it
's
me
he
loves, and when I told him I am going out with
says
Pat T
a and Mrs. Judy Van Meter. blue; Mark ·
another
fellow
,
he was furious .
Werry, co-chairpersons.
Googlein and Giqa Johnson ,
Heexpectsme
to wait!or him, see him whenever I can, but
Receiving best of show · red, and Priscilla Herdman
he
hasn't
said
anything
about a divorce. I still love him (I
ri~ons for , their entries and Chuck Bailey, whites.
think
),
but
I'm
afraid
he's more interested in sex than·
which will now be entered in
LITERATURE
marriage
to
me
..
the county competition April
Fourth : Nicky Riggs, two
Should I stay true to him a while longer• - P. Z.
8 were primary division (first blues; Christi Smith, blue;
through third grades) Jell· Patricia Neutzling, Jon
Dear P.:
mfer Swartz, visual arts, and Perrin
a nd
Barbara
Should a chicken get chummy with a hawk•
intermediate division (fourth Chapalier, red ribbons, and
stay with your present boyfriend, and don't lei the Marines
throlll!h sixth), Deanna and Kelly Wh itlatch, Shelpla ·
land again! - HELEN AND SUE
Laura Van Meter, visual arts , Goradia and Kyle Woods,
+++
. and Nicky Riggs, literattire. whites.
Rap :
Judging was done by John
Fifth : Barbara Grueser,
I'm a truck driver and, want to own my own rig. It 's the
Lisle, pr incipal of the Kim Morrow and Sandy
only job I've ever wanted even if it isn't the games-and-dames
~tisbury SChool, literature, Reed blues · Gina Johnson
life Sonny and Will make it out to be.
and William Mayer, visual Susa~ Lightfoot and Tere..;
My girl says the divorce rate for truckers is high . She
Harden , reds, and Gina thinks we one-night-stand across the country and can't spend
arts .
The ribbon winners were as Johnson, Roxanne McDanlel enough time with our wives and l&lt;ids . She hasn 't exactly said I
follows:
· an\1 Angie Van Cooney, should choose between my rig and her, but I get the message.
PR)~RYI)(VISION
whites.
Maybe you couldhelp ~erchange her mind. If not you, how·
VISUAL ARTS
Sixth : Tanya Aleshire , about some letters from truckers who have stayed married'' First Grade: · Jennifer Heinz Coats, an(! Mary Klein, JUMPY JOE
.
Swartz, blue; A. S. Casto, Jr. , blues ; Melinda Grimm, Mike
red, and Amy Satterfield, Miller , Ta.mmy Pettit, reds, Joe :
white.
and Victor Painter, Brenda
Why not make it a real married learn and take your wife
Third : Susan Thoma , blue. Fry and Rochelle McDaniel ,along as your driving buddy ' It's not a ·bad life for an
'LITERATURE
whites.
' adventurous woman - with a strong back, sturdy kidneys and
Third : Debbie Werry , blue.
There were approximately wanderlust - wlro doesn't like housework. - HELEN
INTERMEmATE I)!VISION 140 entries in the contest.
+++
NOTE FROM SUE : A rig owner I know'l;ays a trucker's
chance for a good marriage is about par with the bear's chance
to bust him for hammerin' down in the rock in' chair. (For the
few of you who don't read C.B.ese yet, that means (in Citizen's
Band radio talk) "the police's chance to nail hinn for speeding
when he's in the middle of a truck convoy - whose drivers
keep track of "Smokey" via Citizen's Band radio .)
- But ... any marriage will work if both partners try hard
enough. Let's he.ar what other big-wheelers have to say about
,{
this. Okay• ·
.,,
\
+++
By Polly Cramer
- - - - - - - - - -- 9ear Helen and Sue:
she has been trying to use , In the controversy over whether or not young people are
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I am vanilla extract for her scent graded too highly for too little high school or college work,
hoping someone out there can and this will not mix with Daniel F. said, "What really counts is what you KNOW, and
.
give me the exact ingredients · wax . I use a concentrated . not the grades."
I'd like to suggest that what really counts .goes a mite
for whipping up my own diet scent that is made just for
margarine. I know the candles and can be purchased further than that. "It's what you DO with what you know" that
calories can be cut in hall or ,at most hobby shops. Melt the· gives most satisfaction in life. - REGULAR "OLDER"
more by this method. - wax to 175-180 degrees, add READER
.the scent and stir until,
BEVERLY.
I)EAR BEVERLY' - I thoroughly mixed and there Rap:
My ll)Other is 47 and she's joined a belly dancing class at
spoke with the laboratory of a should be no problem. the
"Y."
Don't you think she showd act her age? - SHOCKED
MONA.
margarine company con·
cernlng your question, and
Readers, the above came
'
they knew of no ingredients to from a candle shop in Shocked:
Sure! - which means a shot at belly dancing if she ·wants
add. But they suggested that California.
.
it.
Alta
girl, Mom! - SUE
.
low calorie margarine might
DEAR POLLY - If you
.
+++
be allowed to soften enough have a portable sewing
so It wUI whip well In your - machine, but no cabinet, a Dear Shocked :
Why don't- you join her ? Might loosen up your rigid
electric mixer. 'rhis will add metal t.yp~Siter table serves
thinking as well as your stomach muscles. - HELEN
· air and lntrease the volume, the PW:P~ very well . It is
so the margarine will go just tl&gt;ifflght size and height.
further and nalurally have - R0Z.
less calories In a serving.
I)EAR ROZ - I certainly
Perbaps some reader has agree with you as I have used
found a bener answer from mine on such a table for
personal experience. - many years. The machine Is
Mrs. Bea Dugan and Mrs. May, Judy Musser, Attard&gt;
POLLY.
too heavy for me to lift butthe ·
Betty
Hutchi son were Dewhurst, Roberta Musser.
table can be rolled to where It
hbste'sses
for a layette shower Margaret Parsons , Ethyl
DEAR POLLY - My Pet is to be used and the leaves
honoring
Mrs . Andrea Chapman, Ann Webster ,
dropped
to
the
sides
when
not
Peeve is with those comDewhurst
Enright
recently at Virginia Michael, Juanita
In
use.
-:POLLY.
panies who put short zippers
the
Hutchison
home.
Wamsley and Ada Keesee .
in baby sleepers. Those who
Games
were
played
with
designed them surely never
prizes goi ng to the winners .
tried to put one on a baby . .
Cake,
punch and coffee were
SERVICES
SET
You have to practically bend
INVITm TO MEET
served.
Guests were Anita
RUTLAND
Eas
ter
baby's arms and Jegs off to
Mrs . Harold
Sauer.,
get them into the sleeper and Sunrise services have been Jacobs, Mary Jacobs, Shelby president of the Middleport.
this is most uncomfortable set lor 6 a.m . at the Rutland Davis, Saundra Tillis, Carrie Pomeroy Area Branch of the
Church of Christ and this Moore , Pauleen Tillis, Kathy American Asssociatiim of
for baby. - TRACY.
serv
ice will be followed by a Tyree, Debbie Tillis, Mar- University Women, received
DEAR POLLY- Mrs. E.
feU
ow
ship bre'Mast in the · jorie Skidmore, Joy Skid- a telepho ne invita ti on
s. wrote of her un successful
church
basement. The public more, June Dewhurst, Ruth - Wednesday night from the
attempt to make vanilla
Tillis, Mary Nev ille, Pauline program chairperson of the
is
invited.
candles. I strongly suspect
Bentley, Anna Frank, Rose Gallipolis Branch, AAUW,
Patterson, Audrey Patterson, inviting members to attend a
Becky Co ttrill , Cheryl meeting Monday night at 6
Lemley, Julie Hutchison and p.m. at the Grace United
Robin and Penny Dewhurs~ . Methodist Ch urch. The
Sending gifts were Bea program will be a panel
discussion entitled "Women
in Traditionally Male Roles" .
CLASS ONTV
SYRACUSE - The kinON I)EAN'S LIST
dergarten class of the Asbury
RUTLAND
- Julie HutUnited Methodist Church of
chison,
Rutland,
a junior at
here will appear on•-the Mr.
Ohio
State
University,
made
Cartoon Show on WSAZ TV
the
dean
's
list
lor
the
winter
Cii/1.61-GM- '
Friday, April Z, at 4 p.m.
quarter .

Polly's Pointers
Whip your own
diet margmitne

~

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Mrs. Enright feted

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Start your

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and

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Compact models

- lor small gardens

MODEL

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noture's own m - o1 bvlldtng IIGII , ...
Gil- IIIIer. Hero's whyo Glt-'s perloct

dupllcolo

IIIII)' will\ I
slicing """ bl-1\g ocllon miJCII up 1011 end orgonlc

molter -.ughly , .. formo 11-. oorolod -bod. Ao

. • .r"ult, pl111l roots penotroto ond rMcll auf Qolly;
mOiolure lol!boorNd mOrt rtldlly ' cltcompoolllon o1 oe11
mlr.r.roto lnd ort~nlc wosll lok" plow ·qlll-. Ytlllt

!llrdon glh .off to I fllltr lflrf IIIII f ' - 1 ' 1nd .
....lolllto grow -tnor lhlll ...,. ...,,..., Qlloon tll!lirt
IMiure oxtro ht••Y canotrucllon. guorol!tltll 1 ·(....,.ocod treo II OYtr -rol&lt;on), CUI Iron geor CMO od.

IVItllllo IJIIIng wtcltho.

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110 W. MAIN

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POMEROY

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•t .l':lb)'Sit ter provided in
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Pomer·oy, are a nno un c in ~ Uw t' n~ ; J gi.'f!l' nt lll'l
approaching marriage of Uleir daughter, Mdn r';\. 1.\IL' I
Terry Lee Metheney, son of Mr. 1111&lt;1 \ics 1... n:oiJ
Metheney , Ewington. Miss Johnson is r1 :.;pnwr , \11'1 ...
High School. Her fiance is a 1973 gl'&lt; o&lt;iual&lt;• •·I I!•
employed by Edwin Davis and S1111 at lmm·illl'

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Art auction items d11 e

auction and sangr ia party

will be Tomm y Joe Stewarl
from the Ohio Val ley

Lh ('~( (l('k

For Your
Sick or
Injured
.

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G &lt;~ lllp {11t~ . ,\:');.;t:; l'·!, !w

be St;.tn Ev;tn:;; .. ·t(

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Til L• art tiUI..'lt•lf

.111 d s:111· , !d
party \\ill he ;d tt o'ckr·l~ r
S~tuni&lt;ly l'\' t._' nw.~; .. \pnl • tl

lli\'Crl&gt;).
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tu rai St' fl'lltllt ' ' h~t

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Fur adtlitionnl
and ti rk d -.
~ 'ulmn h l&lt;t

(,rt ·:~"

SUPPliES
YOU NEED.

l..U'N"".t

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r·-.•rtiflt ilL

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ma s lu: rl})IH~tl(lt'" ~m!l Hd! ....
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WE HAV~ THE

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is $2 pt.:r ndull :md ~I pt'!'·
stud ent. Tht• nw11U · ,.u-.i~ .
(lf (' 1\lekcn, ~1' \• • ·n· hl•:tn ,
A $50

Pets.. .

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supp li {·~.
Allll! b ~ wn

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DIN\I ·.lt l'L'\ d 11
II' EST ('llll "LI \ 1
Va. - 'f'lw \h ..,t ('nL~;nh .. t
Elemt•nta r ~ Sdt•l •' l·u·u!l'
is hold ing a dwl ··,, 1 I'll' 1
Frithty Irum 1;:m lu 1 11 11~ .

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Centennial Tennis by

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Complete ·

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Red, White
and Blue

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Tit e
Sat . TiiS

Dr .;.o;-, Shir t s
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Chapman's SHOE
POMERO Y, OHI O

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Til 8:00
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U.S. CHOICE PETITE FilET M! ·I'!Ot

95

NOVELTIES
EGGS.

WHITE Fl SH FII.L.ET FRQ1.1 f ,:,rm

2.!1~

TOYS
EVERYTHING FOR' EAS

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· Social ·Contest winners recogntzed
Calendar

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')nd rolf~''· ~~-~~l~l k -~
- __,....,._ --· - . . . -

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Make Pomeroy Your 5hoppmg Center

. .~~K 11 DI
200-202 East Main St.
POMEROY. 0~' ·1.

Use Our Convenient l,!ly-Awav Plan
Open Friday Night Ttl,B-Sat. Til5

·Bitf city mayofs quiz candidates

By LEWIS LORI)
Cultw-al ;ut contest win- categories which will now competition were:
United
Press International
ners ,were recognized and compete in the county
Miss Parsons' class: J phn
Four
Democratic
presented ribbon awards In competition on April 0 were : Cremeans , ' 'My ure as a
presidential
hopefuls were
an assembly program · by Stephanie Houchins, Flag '', 'first : Kathy Blake,
set
to
face
each
other today
THURSI)AY
Wednesday afternoon at Ule m~sic ; Barbara Haley, " Frank 1in
De 1an o
before
a
group
of big city
GALLIA COUNTY Salon Bradbury School for fifth and visual arts, ,and John Roosevelt", second; and
sixth graders.
Cremeans, literature.
. "Our Bicentennial" by T_erry mayors and state their views
612, Eight and For ty, ThursD H 1
. on what should be done about
. day. 6:30 dinher at the home
on ann ng, principal,
Classroom winners in Wayland, third.
the nation's urban problems.
.
·
made
the
presentations
in
Ule
·visual
arts
we!'\!
as
follows
:
Mr.
Hanning's
class:
Pam·
of . MiSs Erma Smith ; Spring · ·
•- t sponsored · by the · Teresa Casci's class: Tami Crooks, "The Most Famous
·The National Conference of
con"'s
Ave., Pomerov.
Democratic
Mayors gathered
EVANGELINE CHAP- Bradbury PTA under _ the Hart, first; Stephanie Ride", first ; Ricky EberTER, Order of the Eastern Chairmanship of Mrs. Sibley . Houchins,, second, and Paula s b a c h , ' ''G e o r -g e
Star, 7, 30 p.m. Thursday at Slack . The bicentennial Horton, third.
Washington", second, and
the Middleport Masonic theme was carried out in
Jeanne Parsons' class: Eda Sinith, "Thomas Jefenlries wl.i~h were displayed Barbara Haley, first ; David ferson", third.
·
Te~fb~LEPORT CHAM· for viewing by the parents · Meadows and David Hoff. MiSS' Ornstein's class :
who had been invited to at- man, . tied for second, and Tanya Stobart, "George
BER of Commerce,_ 12 ' 15 tend the assembly.
John Cremeans third .
Washington" and Angela
p.m. Thursday for a luncheon
" ti ·
h
'
. meeting
at
Martin . .;.n res 1_n eac roo~ were
Don Hannin g's class; Farley, "The Liberty Bell",
Restaw-ant.
Judged w1th bl~e nbbons MeUssa Spencer, first; Opal tie for first; Cindy Crooks,
bemg 1given for f1rst, rect for Pugh, second· Pam Crooks "Bicentennial Wishes" and
LETART Baseball Assn., 7 second, and white ·lor third. third, and Allen Arnott' Kris Snowden, "Our Natural
p.m. Thursday, at Letart Participant ribbons were red, honorable mention.
' Resources", tie for second,
~ails Elementary School; all 0 "ihite ~d blue with the PTA
Susan Ornstein's class : and Lori Maynard, "Betsy
mterested persons urged to seal affixed.
Angela Farley and Craig Ross", and Susanna Wise,
attend.
·
Judges were Mrs. Gladys Darst tie for first· Kris ·•war," tie for third.
F.RmAY
Foley for music, Mrs: Snowden, second, and' Karen
Miss easel's class :
By JOHN ENGSTROM
TURKEY DmNER Friday Margaret Ella Lewis for Goggins, third.
Stephanie Houchins , "The
SEATTLE, Wash. (UP! )at Orange Township Fire visual arts, and Mrs. Nan
Karen Maziarz ' class : Kent Ride", first: Kim Roush, It was a risky comment, but
Station from 5 to 7 p.m. Moore and Miss Mildred Doss first· Carl StiU second "Betsy Ross" , second, and Milie Lude, new athl etic
sponsored by Tuppers Plains. Hawley for literature.
and Adam' Edgar , third.
' Barbara
Custer,
''A director at the University of
Community Club .
Top entries in the three
Winners in . the literature Celebration", third.
.Washington, admitted to
SATURI)A y
Winner in the music were reporters at his first news
REGULAR MEETING,
~
.
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·,
Stephanie Hou~hins, first; conference that he had a
Bedford Township Trustees, 1
honor.~" '
Kris Snowden, second, and thing for women .
ll:30p.m. Saturday at home of l.JU.J
J
Tina Stewart, third.
"I know something about
women _: but .not llke you
Helen Swartz, clerk.
might be Ulinking," he said,
SQUARE DANCE,
flashing a broad smile.
Satw-day. o to 11 p.m. at _
"I have three daughters,
Pomeroy Elementary School _
'J
and my wife is sitting right in
with music by " String.
:he back of this room. And
du sters." Dance open to
MASON - A layette .ding, Mrs. Rosalie Roush and
when we recruit dogs (for the
public, admission $1 adults shower was held recently for Kelly Lee, Mrs. Vanna
:.l:
family) we recruit female
with children under 12 ac- Mrs. James · (Joyce ) Pauley Samples, Mrs. Betty Pauley,
~
=~ dogs."
com panyin g parents ad- at the Faith Baptist Church. Mrs. Bobbi Pauley, MisS
MASON, W. · Va . ...:. Rev.
Then Lude, who reeks with
mitted free .
Attending were Mrs. Anna lllena Van Meter, Miss· An·
MIDDLEPORT FIRE Neal, Point Pleasant; Mrs. .drea Dudding, Miss Debbie Frank Nott, Charleston Road, the enthusiasm of a man who
Department fish fry, sand~ Irene Hanson , Mrs. Carolyn Barnham and Miss Cheryle Pt. Pleasant, will be . the could sell suntan oil to rain
wiches or dinner, Sa turday Dailey, Mrs. Brenda Haggy, Van Meter, Mason, and Mrs. speaker at the Faith Baptist forest residents, turned
beginning at II a.m. at fire Middleport; Mrs. Shirley ·Shawnee King, New · Haven. Church Sunday, April 4,-. at serious. He promised that
7:30 p. m.
· women athletes at tlie UW
department building.
Coleman, Rutland ; Sherri
Games were played with
Rev.
Cliff
Coleman
of
can expect continued growth
JOmT MEETING, local Clark, Joann Clark and Mrs . prizes going to Nancy AnJackson,
Ohio,
brought
the
and
emphasis in 'their
humane socie ties or 10 Rhojean McClure, Pomeroy;
derson ,- Rosalie Roush and evening mess~gSunday, programs Wlder the Ltide
Southern Ohio counties Mrs. Florence Clark, Mrs.
Joann Clark. The door prize March 26. Sund
School administration.
meeting at Meigs · Inn LucUle King and Mrs .
was won by Virginia Wears. attendance on M h 28 was
"Athletics has been very
. Saturday, 9:30a.m. to 4 p.m. Lorraine Barnett, Letart;
Sending gifts were Mrs. 65.
good
for me, so I would have
Training session to be held Mrs.
Vicki
·Hanson, · Hazel Stephens, FayetWednesday
,
A
pril28
at
7:30
a
tough
time convincing
and John W. Inman , Jr., Fort Harrisonville;· Mrs. Mary
tesville, N. C.; Deloris Cliff Colema_n will perform. myself that it wouldn 't be'
Wayne, Ind., director of Samples and Miss Beth
Great Lakes Regional Office Samples, Marysville, Mich .; Johnson, June Wilkenson, magic for the Youth . good for another person,
Letart; Kay King, Mid- Fellowship group and all male or female."
to he present.
Mrs. Virginia Wears, West dleport; Vicki Jeffers, West children , teena gers and
He · said Washington
SOUP AND BAKE SALE Columbia.
Columbia; Rose Ellen Lee adults are invited to atte nd. officials assured him , during
Sa tu rday at Syracuse
Mrs. Ella Ford, Mrs. Janet and Kelly and Betty Norton,
Sunday School is eac h pre-hiring talks, that .they
Presbyterian Ch ur ch Pierce, Mrs. Pearl Roush, Pomeroy; Vivian Fry, Jean
Sunday
at 10 a. m. Blble want "ah outstanding
beginning alll :30a.m. Bring Mrs. Lorraine McCauley, Grueser and Joann Harmofi,
Study is Wednesday at 7:30 p. intercollegiafe program containers for carryout .
Mrs. Betty Van Meter , Mrs . Mason , Mary Dudding,
lor men and women." But he
SIGN UP DAY Saturday Carla King, Mrs. Nancy Mason, and Jane Snouffer, m.
Special
speakers
are
admitted
that growth in
for Middleport Li ttle League Anderson,- Mrs. Ruth Dud- Pomeroy.
featllfed
each
Sunday
at
7:30
women's
programs
will mean
at Legion Hall from 10 a.m. to
p.
m.
The
church
is
presently
"some
retrenchment,
re2 p.m. For T-hall age 5 to 7,
meeting
in
tlie
Steel
Workers
evaluation
and
assignment
of
pee wee , age 6 to 9, little
Union
Hall
on
Railroad
Sl.
priorities."
league, age 10 to 12, pony
between Horton and Pomeroy
"I think it can be done ...
league age 13 to 15. All youths
Streets.
Everyone
welcome
but
I know it's going to · be
Ill the above ages are invited.
to
attend
all
services.
tough,"
he said, explaining
Registration fee is $4.
that
during
talks in the
SIGN UP DAY for Rutland
Midwest
over
the next lew
Joys baseball a nd girls
An org~nizationai meeting fined to the · Holzer -Medical
weeks
he
will
explore
"new
;oftbdll Saturday at old
BORmGS SKimG
of the Useful Friend Center, intensive care unit.
resource
dollars"
for
lutland High School 10 a.m.
Michael and Robin Boring women's athletic.
Organization was held She will be hospitalized for
mtil noon. Fee is $5.
Tuesday at the South Bethel' several weeks. Donations are left Wednesday to spend their
Continu,ed support for
T/IG DAY for Rutland United Methodist Church.
spring vacation at Bir- women's programs, and most
being taken and the club is&gt;aseball
Saturday
in
Officers elected were Pal planning a bake sale with all chwood, a skiing resort in the of the sports at Washington,
·Rutland. Players and parents Zielinski, president; Evelyn
Poconos in ·Pennsylvania.
who can assist are to meet at Well, v.ice president; Norma proceeds to go to the Spencer Mrs. Boring is a teacher at will still depend on bigtime
the old Rutland High School Hawthorne , secreta ry; family. Others desiring to Pomeroy Elementary and basketball and football proat 9 a.m.
· Frances Sheets, assistant donate to the family may Mr. Boring teaches at grams.
" With
football
and
SQUARE DANCE Satw-- secretary ; Lila Van Meter, contact Mrs. Ula Van Meter, Racine.
basketball
as
major
revenueday at Tuppers Plains School tre~surer; Wanda Findling, Box 26, Chester 45720.
producing sports, which the
Next meeti_ng wiD be held
from 9 p.m. to I a.m. Spon- assistant treasurer; Unda
institution
is interested In
sored by Bar-30. Refresh- Bentz, news reporter and April 13 at 7 p. m. at the
continuing
to · develop into
.
NAME
GAMES
ments by Tuppers . Plains Martha Bailey, assistant church. Anyone interested in
national
prominence,
I
WASHINGTON
(UP!
)
joining is invited to attend a
Community Club.
news reporter.
believe
we
can
do
it,"
be
meeting . At the first meeting Democratic National
SUNI)AY
Plans were made to _assist
Committee Chairman Robert explained.
MARY Shrine 37, Order of· the Tom Spencer family. It were thOse elected officers Strauss ·predi.cted Ford will
White Shrine of Jerusalem, was noted that Mr. Spencer and Eileen Bahr , Jean win in 1976. Not President
rehearsal 2 p.m. Sunday at has just returned to work and Sheets, Ada Van Meter and Ford. Strauss was talking
Pomeroy Masonic Temple for that Is wife. Cathv. is con- Linda Wells.
about Sen. Wendell Ford (Dinstallation of officers.
Ky.).
SONGFEST Sunday; 2'p.m. REAL OR FICIION
The senator was selected
HOLLYWOOD (UP!) at Seventh-Day Adventist
Democratic c~mpaign chairWHA Standings
Chur ch. All sing ers and Actor Jason Ronard said a
man Wednesday . Said
role he played on the
By un;ted Press International
public invited.
East
Stauss: "He is one Ford who
w L T Pts. GF GA will prove a winner."
BLACK Lung meeting television series "The Blue
Sunday at J•ck's Club, in- Knight" inspired the $3 ~~~e~1and
~
;ll Reps. Yvonne Burke (Dtersection of SR 7and 143, a{ 1 million bank robbery in New Englnd 32 39 7 11 248 284 Calif.) and James Wright (DClncl nnaii J&lt; 43 1 69 277 332
p.m. President of Southeast Montreal Tuesday.
Texas) will cochair the
p ~
West
"It was exactly the same
w L T Pts GF G~ committee. Their job is to coOhio Black Lung Association
thing I did in the show," he y-Houston 49 27 0 98 316 253 ordinate campaign efforts to
will be present.
said. The robbers threatened Phoen ix
39 33 6 64295 211
San o;09o 35 36 6 76 296 279 get Democrats elected at ali
SLIDES 01" C8)ll~ Bouna
Brink's
truck
driver
with
a·
x
Minn
JO 25 4 64 211 212 levels.
tiful 's history narrated by Joe
50mm
antiaircraft
gun
and
c..,vntd'r
Pts GF GA
Stobart and Jim Cleland
using audio visual equip, forced
open theagreed
door. Quebec
v-Winn_lpeg 51
Jl7 303
242 · I"
·-~------------~---,
Policehim
in to
Montreal
46 25
27 24 104
96 344
ment. Everyone welcome.
MAKE 'EM .
with Ronard. "It appears the ~ ~~~~~~~on ~~ J~ ~
~~
idea of some smart writers in Toronlo
24 46 5 53 323 375
• the United States set the x-Otlawa
14 26 I 29 134 172
CUTE FOR
• •
x .team disbanded
11
pattern, satd Lt . Larry
v·clinched division title
IN HOSPITAL
Levis. 11The crime shown on
Wedn~sday •s Games
EASTER
Patty Ann Lee of Elyria, 13
·
1 •·
Pl1oen lx 7 C1nc lnnatr 2, aft
Amencan
te
evtston
was
Cleveland
5
New
England
1.
year old daughter of Mrs.
to this one." Winnipeg 5 Toronto 3 '
Dorothy Lee, the former almost identical
tl
thing .. In the Houston
Thursday's
Games
E
xcep or one
at lnd lanaP,olis
NEW SHI MENT
Dorothy Howell of Pomeroy,
show,
the
robbers
found
no
Edmon/on
a1
Quebec
Of
and granddaughter of'r.1rs.
Edward Templeton and money in the truck and !ndiana:~ii:•:;sT~r~~f~s
Edward Howell, Pomeroy, is Ronard's character was Cl eveland a~ Cincinnati
confined to .the Allen killed. In real life, the robbers WlnnipeHI Colgar v
Memorial Hospital for took the money and escaped.
treatment of rheumatl~;
lever. Cards may be sent to
Si1es 2t to6x
Miss Lee ·at' the Alien
Memorial Hosp_ital, Room
106, Bed 2,_Oberlin, Ohio.
BOYS WIND BREA~E,R

If
*

.

L~de

in New York for a question- that "there's l;()methuig in
and--answer session with the office that elevates a man
Henry Jackson, Morris Udall, and his thinking."
Jimmy Carter and Frank
Carte r, campaigning in
Church - followed by a Wisconsin,
said
the
speech
from
Hubert Democrats could suffer from
Hwnphrey, who says he Isn't efforts to deadlock the
a candidate. but wouldn't na(ional convention .
mind being.the nom.inee . .
"Trying . to con.lrive M
A state c-onvention of South brokered convention would
Carolina Democrats agreed be making a serious mistake
Wednesday night to send nine for the party and the
delegates to the national country," Carter said. " It
convention committed to might be the one factor that
Carter, eight committed to keeps us from winning this
George
Wallace,
one . fall. "
corrunitted to Cl)urch - his
Udall-, campaigning in uupfirst _: and 13 uncommitted. state New York, drew big
On the GOP front, Ronald crowds in Rochester but was ·
Reagan told a nationwide snubbed by Democratic
teleVision audience that be- legislators tn Albany. "Out,
cause of President For4's out. out of the room! " they
foreign policy "our nation is shouted when Udall and his
In danger, and the danger entourage showed up lor a
grows greater with each scheduled· address to a
passing day."
Democratic caucus .
Without mentioning his
Gov. Hugh Carey then
challenger by name, Ford granted Udall a visit but
suggested to · nearly - 1,000 refused to leave his olfice .to
Republicans at a $1,000 a pose with the candidate lor
plate dinner in Washington photographers.
that Reagan was hurting
Wallace said he would cut
party unity .
his Wisconsin cali&gt;palgn short
"I am always campaigning and' spend the weekend In
for the Wlity of this party," Montgomery. "I'm the
Ford said. "That has been my governor of Alabama and I
philosphy and my practice have thin gs to do," he
and I will not abandon 1Nn explained .
1976."
Ford's
campaign .
commi tlee, dismissing
Reagan's talk as a "basic
stump speech," said : "There
is nothing new in it."
There was one thing new,
but Reagan didn't say it. The
moment he quit talking, an
announcer told viewers how
to send money. Reagan.hopes ,
to gather enough funds lor a
strong bid in primaries in the
Soulb and the West in early
May . .
Reagan will seek support in
Tuesday 's Wisconsin
primary with a sta\ewide
television address this
weekend - similar to a
statewide TV appeal that
preceded last week's North
Carolina triumph.
·
Ford plans to campaign in
Wisconsin
during
the
Weekend, and Reagan's state
manager sa id there is·.a slight
chance Reagan will be in the
state Monday.
Mayor Richard Daley, yet
to endorse a candidate, said
in Chicago that Carter "has a
potential to be a candidate
and a good candidate." Da]~y
said Democrats should quit
lookin g for a "super
candida te" and reco~nize

named ·
to post

shower

N;t;,,:·\·

l:li' ·'·R;~:,, ,. .

.

to speak .' \

STAR"
SUPPLY
. Racine, Ohio

FOR YOU· ••
FROM

BAHR CLOTHIERS

· Earli-Gard
SELF- CONTAIN~D

EARLY WARNING

FIRE
DETECTOR
'32.95

BAHR CLOTHIERS

110 V. AC , 60 HZ cord
connected . Just plug in.
Installs with 2 screws. ·

Middleport; Ohio

Ebersbach Hdwe.
Pomeroy

Open Fridays

Main 51.

r~

a:oo

con

JJJ: iJ m

_

-'

m

GIRLS' JACKETS

.AND ENSEMBLES

PASSENGER
RETREADS

VISITS HERE
Mark Milliron of. Columbus
spen t a week with his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Andrews, Long Bottom.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs:
Larry Milliron joined him
· here for the weekend and the
family returned home Sunday. Other recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Andrews
and daughter, Barbara were
Mr. and mrs. Pearl McCrery
and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Corrigan, Columbus. ~

- STOREWIDE ~PEC IALS AVAILABLE- .

PHONE
992-~4c~ ,

• .

ll

CANDY

Selection

,

Officers elected during
organizational meeting

t~ ..

,,,

1 all
\' ,f
"' ht1d t 1,

~~

.

M rs. ] ames Pa.uk11

,,,;f lji

I'TJ

~

. ._ .

11Jette

i J. !I

! I ; t '11

tP Jut

•''

April is the month for the
annual art auction sponsore0
by the French Art Colony of
'Ga llipolis at Rive,:!Jy ,
Pa intin gs have been g,a th cred
and are now on di&gt;4Jlay at
Riverby , according to the
chairman or the art auctio11 ,
Mrs. Joy Prendergast.
She urges anyone who has
antiques that they wish to
include in the ~i sp!'aJ' and
auction to co ntac t Mrs.
Geisla Alonzo by ca lling 44b4221 before Saturday·. April
10. All contr ibutors who have
items on display . that are
auctioned off will rece1ve :lO
per cent of the sa le pri ce.
Mrs. P1·e ndergast al so
eqcourAges those who may
have craft i terns that they
wish to display and ha ve
available for ~uc ti o n to
· contact Mrs . Anne Jenki ns at
· 446-4926 by April 10.
Aucti o,neer for th e art

at ChUfC h .
S'l•bar t 1s f'i~s ~

t~fl1 r\1.\r\

Jl "

't

pbnmng :m Eas ter
"•'r\'i('f' \\ilh . brea k·

,,

._, I

•r

ENGAGED - Mr ..aml M" . Simon .JiJIII"''"·

u·eam. socials,

1 ,,1 ft1r the July

, ~

L----·'------~

'"

' ips h1 camp, pic·
rifles. weine r

• , _\ 1

Choice of Salad ,.Potnto, French B;c&lt;1d
with any of the ~bove entrees.

.

,t'hl

'

. I

'

.

d

'1;1\

•

I

by
a
l!Hkt: sa le. · roller

1,,

nJc

AT YOUR POMEROY
BE,N FRANKLIN STORE

Ii

hav e gone

·Jl,ll? 'T!I(:Y p~ar1 ~ many ·
,.1, • f.~r 'iw summer.
t !. ;,
' iiJiiP
Bounliful

.

'

, ,. r, ·h'dli.'~ion service for
,. 'w 1;1r, tt.e d1ristmas
1

1

r

~·il..,l'f\-' -r\U are always
111 '1\,r(\'e Had a pizza

., ·

·. '

••

............: ..~............ ..-----------------=.:1
OPEN FRI . TIL 8 - SAT. TIL 5

,,

+:

• GREETING CARDS ~Big

jEbersbach HardWare

..

"

,,~ ' h\! churrh on the

'

I

SHOP NOW FOR EASTER

Heavy· dutv models
- For large gardens+

5 HP

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l

~;,:::::::·:::::x:::::=:~~:;:;::::::.~::~~;;*f:~~·

Wh~~~

Black Walls

JACKETS

s1195

MOUNTED&amp;~ALANCEDFREE

GENERAL TIRE 'SALES
Middleport

'

992-7161

VERSA TIL' ITY.

Sizes 2 to 4

Plus Recapable
Casmgs .

Ohio

.

.

. THE
FASHION ACCEN . . .~.vISON

·~~~~

.,·JDI' SNoPPI
MIDDLEPORT, OHJO
. PH. 992-358b

•.

Pun-ctuate your wardrobe with the one loot.:Vcar style that can take you any ·
where your bu~y days dem'and. Island sole construction lends

bendable comfort to 'thc look .

.

'

heritage ·house
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

•

�•

4

8-l':~~~;·~~:~~"~·""uw·~~~:er::~~-,·:'~:s~l:~:~"''·L'~.jor L'vast. Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds ....
5 P M
Day
Before
P u bhc tuton
M o nd a y D ea dl rne Q

H umane Soctely Th~lfl Stl o p
wl1h good sum of money and
tm portant paper~
If the
la dy will 1 ·· tur n l' to th e
H um an,. Soc 1cty
Thrt t l

a me

Ohoo. no QUC,I ion'

DEADLINES

d 11 c

e II a I 1 on

Cqrr ecttom

be

W1lt

cep t ed untll

R ECUL ATIONS
The Pub t ts her rese r ve!&gt;
the ftgt]t to Pd l t or retec t
rtny ans d (! Pn ,.., d nb
iec ttOTJ&lt;JI .

The

pu b l tsh cr

W tl l O;,.d t)C l"( !;p Ot•';tble iOt
crl' ~

mor l: th ;u 1

tnser t, or

nco rr ect

RAH I
f- or Want h d Scrvt l e
5 Ct"rt ts per wo,.Q onr
insen.on
M tn •m um L .. o r t~ C!' ~ t 00
Iii CC' n t&lt;, per wor(! t t'&gt; r ce

con SC' r uttv r

•ns erl tono;,

16 u •nts pf r wo rd

St ~

u• ~,,
• ,&lt;,fi r Iron~
P er ( , rot LJ r·,co unt on
pard rld:; il'l(l Jd&lt;; ra l r;t_
Wrlhm '0 d•lY i&gt;
CAJ&lt;DOF THAN ~o..r;
X. O B I TUARY
\1 00
lor
S'O word
c on -;~ ,

2~

rr1 rn rtn •Jn1

E.r.c h &lt;rddrlr011a l wo r e! l
ce nr •,
6 LI ND AD S

AdtJ rlr(l rul l ?'ic

CtldUJr

per l\ c1 vr&gt;nrsemrrrr
I I'JU tn,

OF FICE

am

S 'U
0.1!1 y

to ~

1:1 J(1 a "
o;,, •urd~y

'

vo

p ''
I Jf

•·

Noon
fl h {') n e ' vd il,. 9VJ ~~ ~

N O U I D l rk e 1u e:.o:;J(ess my
• hr~111q.
fo r
tho se
who
p r a y( d se nt tlow&amp;rs , and
ca r tt~ durm g my re c en l ~ fa y
rn ltu• hosprt al
Sue l rn '
boch.m
4 1 1tc

In Memory
LO I! I tJG

lliCmor y Ol
Bo yl" !i
who

Drn !. rr o il
passr r• ;:t w rw M uc h J I , 1975
It lt' d 1

,..

a

~H.I

w!1r •1 &gt;JU t
'&gt; dil l

d -'Y for ,) I I of US,
~eov t' Piy

Fathe r

com• n r ' 1on t ' my t h tl d o:~nd
e111t
n'CI all ' he IDVS Of
lfeil 'l 1" 1 ·
rl's \.~ f ·· lon el y here wrlhour
ytJU , ,1 u wr&gt; rn rss you r t ender
10 11 1 rq c.1re '
) r m u 1 1 th rn qs here to rcm , nd
u'i o f ~o u th at many l rrnes
II.P 111., 1 h \1111.: lo QrVl! way IO
Te a r~

Wh "n

we

MA N ' S qreen brllfOid loc;t
ll1 ovnd 1-'orllarHI con ta rn rn g
v ~ lt....1bl e papers
If found ,
phon(' 949 2411
Jeffr(!y
1 rt f•Hd , r eward
J 30 6t~
LADY' S wh rlll yold watch rn
!h(' area of · K r og er's 11'1
POrlleroy
Rt:ward
Pl'lone
991 5938 or 992 37]6
3 30 t'llp

Help Wanted
!I~ PEP

HUN@RF.D sluft 1n g

Se nd
se lf
, rr ... elop ~s
a ! ldr €1~· f' d , s t amp ed
en
vt&gt;I .O p(• E dr~y Marls . Bo:-;
lHB A!h any M u 6 140'1
3 30 10lp

VOtUNT t;;:E R !. nQec.led !Or
Care l rnt; ,
~
c rrsts
In
t ervel"l1 tn n,
rnlorm alr on
and r ~•;:&lt;r r.rl SN\I ic e!. 60 hr
(, w eek !raln rng p r oqrem
beq1n s /lp rr l 10 For i!p
plr cal run rt nd more tn
f0!;.[!1atrnn 991 1501
4 1 Si c

DO )'OU
P L.\ 1-J

PARTY
EXPERIEN CE?

H AV F

rlli[NDLY l OY PAR T IES
HAS OPEN INGo
FO R
M A NfiGER S
IN
OU Q

Card of Thanks

IN

as ked

f or

Day of Pu blica tton

we yo to churc h rt seems

·ARE A
RE C '&lt;U IT I NG I S
EA S Y BE CA U S E OE M S
HAVL
NO
C/\ SH
IN
VESTM E N 1
N O

CO LL E C T IN G
OR
DELI VER INC
C ALl
" COLLECT TO CAR OL DAY
(5\tU "4 S9 8395 or W RIT E
r R I r ~l 0 L Y
H 0 M E
PAR TI E'•
70 RA I LR OAD
AVE , I\LI3A NY
N
Y
1?!0 5
4 I SO tp

SOMEONE to lrv•' rn and c ar e
for l'ld ert v lady or s t ay at
lllqhts P IIOOC' /'!'/ 20 95 Of
997 36116
J J t 6tc
SOME O N ~

to lt v r •n wrt11
rlderly lady t o ~ 1 rore rn
for mu'10n c all 991 J,l57 ~

3 JO )IC

' HOME

[

J 78 (&gt;t c

:J&lt;.

9 a m

I

Ntn

WO R KERS '

1.60
weel(ly
&lt;l Cldrcss tn g
f'nvel o p es
Ru s h
se ll
a ddr esse d s larTlLJCd en
v~ tope
So u t11cr n Drvcr
~r f1 cd, 1206 Ci'4md('n Dr i ve .
R •c h r'no nct Vtr C/rnru 2322'9
.3 28 16 1p

.

loy

Auto ·Sales

mp ment Wanted

-

WILL
DO
bu rt drng
an d
r ernodclrrr g , r .1JO I 1ng .
plum broq , l u rnu r;. (' r cp11 1r,
oas or o rI or g~ne rot t repa ;r
F ree
es lr m a)e s
and
r ea'Sonable rate s Phone
Charl es Srn c 1~ tr , r 6 q l 985
&gt;'~171 or ~J9l :rn 1
1 ?8 121c

For Sale

1975

CHEVROLET Cl\ PR ICE

Cia ss i c co upe less th a n 7.000 m1les , deluxe be l ts, l tnted
gr.. ..• .. =li r r:an d r~1 oned. delu xe bumper s &amp; guard s,
rem ate LH ; R H m1rrors, 400·4 bbl. V-8, AM rad1o &amp;
I ape , (1ux l l•ghf lrt9 co mfortllt. dark red wrth black
VIO yl roof. hk e new - Ct rea ' sharpi e

L EG HORN H ENS , 60c each
w S M 1ch a el Ph one (0 14 )

16695

4 I Jtp
BOOT S BOOT S. Boots Boors
Men 's wo r k boots , s1ee1 toe
r-u bber , \14 9 5. leathe r
1i'l t9 5 Reg
1oe leather ,
$17 95 Western Boo ts S29 95
and le&lt;;s, M en ' s US l: d work
pcln l ., , Sl 09 , shirt's 'l"c .
BAILEY 'S , Mtd dle port
~ I 31!
CHE SS SET S, met al locato ,
alm os t new slrdc pro tecln ,
lla1r dryer , antique lamp
fJ!. htng reel. 52 g.; l t. lec
wa ter he ater , \1 5, Need s
bollom e lem ent
Cherry
l rnrsh d reso;e r
SSO Other
1lem s n11 11ey 's , Mrddleport
4 1 3tp

ONE FORM AL. s ue 9, l1ke
new M rs
Jean Gr ve st:&gt; r ,
992 ll65

1975 KAWASAK I 400 $600
Harley McDona l d , Gra.,.
Manor Apt , Apt 4, M rd
dl epor 1. Ohro
Ph,on .e 991
990J aft er 5 p m
4 1 Jt c

10

H P

SU PER

.
197 SC HEVROLET SUBURBAN

Real Estate for Sale
7 ROOM house wtlh balh , go od
loca tron lull base m ent , 39 1
South Second
Mr ddlcport
Ptlone 9Y7 2265 "
..- J21121p
16 1\CR E S. l bed r oom ho use ,
Rut l ,lnd arc:a
Ph on e 74 2
1796
JJI

Convert :tJie

Gra \l ely wrth Elec rro Sl ar t

soo. ev

GROCERY sro re

all

and 30 m ch mowe r ,
st ep down ge ar lor
garden u ~v
Call 992 7164
&lt;1f qc- ~ 5 p m
4 1 Jlp

ana
cqutprn ef"'t.
ltV Jn g
qua ri Ns p &lt;:~rlly f urnrsh ed .
nr.:wly remodel e d P h one
1·12 27 96
•

1972 HONDA J SO wrlh C)(! t as ,
yood Sha pe. \SOO Pt1 on e ' '' 2
3167 or 7,12 31 52
1 1 6tc

HOM E l or "&gt; ale , l 1vrng room ,

plus

3 3 1 Jlc
dm1n g room, 2 bedrooms ,
ktt C ht~ n. ta m 11y roo m and
bath Prt c ed to sell Phon e
f/ '1 '} 7394
3 31 41(

Wanted To Buy

Notice

For Sale or Trade

Misc. Sales

E.
MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .

-.·

WELDING
DEMONs·fRA 1 ION
A l l c~ ndm n rlc S1ore

April 7
201h

7:45 pm

Ceni L• t· y

VJef de r

Repr P.sontaflve.

Re fr eshme-nts and door
onzes
E""~e ryr&gt; n e
IS
We lcomr.

41

J JO p
GARAGE: SALE , Aprrl 2, J, 4
Jrm M a y's G ara ge. turn at
Ctlester onto Co Rd 25 , ~ ~
rn:l e 7 Fam i l y Sale
J JO 41 p

For Rent

J RM t urn 1!.t" Cd apt
pard , J5ti Nortll
Middlep or t

- --·-- --- -.J
Yard Sale
FAM I LY yru d sa lt&gt;
48 2
South J rd Ave , M lO Cl l eport ,
Oh to , ac r oss trom
F ord
Gara ge Saturday , A pr il 3, 9
ti l SOld OU f

It 1 11J1
-

- -

-

- - - -

't

Cab ba q e ,
caul rflo wer , bro cco l r, h ead
lettuc e and oan :; v plants
A l so .. an ton
se l~ .
se('d
potatoes of all var re1 1cs ana
a lull ltne of built garden
seeds
Hea :tquarler s also
for line proct u re M tdway
Mkt , Pomeroy , 992 2582
J 28 301 c

----.

3303l p GOODHAY , ncverwel Phon e
949 2523 '
,I ROOM S a nd bath plus utility
J ?5 12 t c
r oo rn screened 1n por ch
f orcecl ~~ r heal Pho n e 997
COAL , lrrnesto n ~ dnd alll(pe s
563 0
of sa lt and rock sa t I tor rc(!
3 30 61 c
and snow renio va l
Ex
-- ·
ce tsro r Salt Works , Ea!ot
EN JO Y g ra c tou s l rv rnQ at Marn 51 , 1-'om cr oy llh ro
VIllage Manor ·- tn M1d
Phone 992 .3 891
dl cp ort for as low as SlJ O
p er
mo nt h
w . 111
ol 1
, 11 7 l i e

--

·-

.... 7

2 FAMILY lne:Joor Yard Salo ,
Th urs da y and F1 rday , baby
c lothe s 1 househola 1tems
and m rs ...
Ca ll li~ "J 390 5
Watch for s•g n~ m 3 v r ac l. s ~
4 1 2t p

--

- - ---

u tl.!l1!.tl_

-

u P p I

Headquarter s

---- -~ ---- -

•

5

---- ----7 - ------

PCJM i' ROY LA NDMARK
't'. Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
&amp;;,!~
Phone 992 -2101

4

UT1Ilt 1es

F ounh ,

MIDDLEPORT

G A R 0 E N

8. a 1d,.

_These

a1 e bran d ne w h1g 1· q u &lt;'lt rty
apartm ents a t pri CC[&gt; yo •;
can af for d Y\IUf" r en l in
elu des montl'l to• rn o n th
tease s , all elec
l 1v rng,
c arpe t rng , • r:ange
and
· refrigerato r , tru:&gt; trash
prck up cabl e TV .:,t you r
exp e n'&gt; c .
~110
·o n s rte
lau~ C' r y
t a cr l r l 1e s
Con
11enr cnt to shvpp,no wn ihr rd
and M tl l ~lr e c t s n M rd
dlepo rl See th e m an rll:Jf'r at
R•· " r ~ tde ApMtrn en t!) or
~ Clll 997 .327 3
~urn r s h ccf
apdrtments
Me
a ls o
F~-..a r lab le

~

/ 78t c

--- - -

_Q......,_

--~

---

Recenfly renovated, 2 BR,
bath , uhl1ty
R , full
ba sem ent. NG forced arr

heat Carport Sl3.000.
RUTLAND - 2 BR , bath ,
rJ i n 1ng

R , por ches, garage.

ver1rble hnrdlop, p b , p s
atr , all elec, new paint
Phone 992 6154
•I I 6tc

307 , 1 ~ ton ,
p1ckup wit"' ca mQt. r she ll
Phone 992 7232
4 1 41 c
CH EVY

--- ~

--

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

I..F'·h

9Y!_ 21-74

FREE

Pome§

_

'

I

N EW b r l"ve l hom e, 3 bedrm .
burl! rn k rtc h en
car pet
bas-eme n I ,
g rnage , , rn
bc1sem enl
lo c at ed b'elirn d
g r ad e sc h oo'l. L o ng ST ,
Ruflanel , OhiO
See MilO
Hu i ChiSOn , or ph one '42

2l06

New

P LA IN S,

f inanci ng

$2 1,9011' Pn cne
6l04

M I)( CON o:. i\' e - ,~ c.­
delrv.ere d rrghl Jo y our
prolec;t f-ast Cl r'1d easy F r ee
estrmales
Phone ~92 3284,
Gne qle tn Rea,dy !Jp)to 'Co' ,
M1 u dlepor t U r11b
6 JO lie

avarlablf! ,,
~

14 2otp

VIrgil B. Sr . Broker
110 Mecha nic Pom eroy, 0 .
Phone 992·332S
AI most

&lt;1 acr~s

w 1th

2 sepf1c

!a nks and tra1l er . A real

buy al $8,500
CONVENIENT - N1ce 3
B R. older hom e m pnm e
locatton . Hot wpter heat,

' fu ll ba semen! &amp;) mod

krl

Just S19.500
O;tT OF FLOOD - Mod . 2
B R 's, new dr eam k tt .,
bath, nat gas heat, patro
and large l evel lot Barga1n

North·South vulnerable

t.

.

Ph. (61-f) 985-4102
I

2 12-lmo.

Need new r oof or old
r epair er!"' • l ou se, root.
b arn, stt i t1 gr HS, build up,
pat nf rng, !f11J c1rtca l work',
gu1ters &amp;
downspo ut s,
I u rna..:es, wa t l:!r heaters,
water soft (le r s, rn~ tall ed &amp;
r epai r ed, S e~,o·,aye
C011t us at 9119-~ 882
or 949-2203

AND
WILL

7RUER
FRIEHDS

rentals, 2 rcn 1ed on 1st
floor wi th good 1nc ome

big

k rt ,
na t . gd s, F A furnace , vast
corner lot , dbl garage r~nd
large shade tr ees Cm !y

I

Modern Sanrr ar ron
or 99 2 73.19

992 3954

JjEXTTO STORE - Large
12 r oom s ~, t th all u•·h tres
near new restaurant Good
loca t ion lor ren l mg MSklng

--J. .l...- -- -~ ~- - -

SEW I~G

MACHIN E Repa1rs,
se r vice , all mak.es 99? 22A4
' The Fa brrc Shop, P ~rne roy
Au thorized Srnger Sn les and
Se r- vice
We
sharpen
Sqssors
J 29-1f c

--~ ----- ~--

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

ExcAVATING ,

l llture invest ment

..
'".""""

B ILL
PULLIN S, PHONE 992 2478.

DAY OR N IGHT

_____ _____ _

2 22

rJJ.

"'

WHERE

IS OOP '!'! I
GO!TA FIND HIM!

2i~
.'
·'

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AUCTION

You fed
himthis
morninq'

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SAT APRILJ

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AUC TIONEE RS

521 p

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Real Estate Fo1 Sale

'
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8 A.'f' •• The Noon Report,

6 RM hou se 1n Middlepor t ,

.

'a;

.

FRANKLY, ALI6TAIR1
I THINK SHE'S
Fll PPED OUT !

SHE WANTS 10 STAY ON
H:JR THE '1MOON LADY '
13ALL1 AND SHES DP
516N ING A GOWN FOR

ME, BUT .SHE WON'T

LETMEoEEIT
UNTil. IT'S

FIN/SilEO/

•''

..
.,..,.

and 5 P.M. "'

WHY NOT J UST GO
ALONG WITH HER?
YOU [7() TRUST
HER .JUD0MENT1
DON'T YOU?

1

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I.ONGFEI, LOW

DBDSZW

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done b y N IASE cert mechanics .

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GW

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XHW G WPQS "' WB

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MASON FURNITURE

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Mon. , Tues., Wed.&amp; Sat.-8:JOtil5:00
THURSDAY tll12. NOON
.', .

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~

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'TATER DON'T

..
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FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

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SPILL FOOD ON
TH' FLOOR. NO
MOIRE, ELVLNEY
'

I RECKON IT'S TH' NEW
HE'S
BIB I MADE TH MESSY
.'
GROWIN'UP, LEETLE VARMINT
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SF-

LGBZ . - ABLSEM ABPOSUW
Yesterday ' s Cryptoquote: BORROW, TROUBLE FOR
YOURSELF IF THAT IS YOUR NATURE, BUT DON'T r.END
IT TO YOUR NEIGHBORS.- RUDYARD KIPUNG
(I&gt; 1171 Khll P•&amp;wra Srndlak, ~nc . )

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A COLl.I~ION DUE TO
'THE DE.ED OF A
Ml~CHIEVOLI5 C- H ILD.

Now arranre the cln:led letten

j .j· I. eurreoted
to form the eurpriH ONwer, u
.
b)' the obo•e culo!&gt;n•
A::N ~ "K

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(AAI•en

1o1110rrow)

l•mbl•" PORGY UNCAP INFORM MANIAC

Yeeterday't

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JU5T CALLED.

AND SAID ~E
CAN TA&lt;:e

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one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary word!.

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Unscramble t~e•• roor Jumbleo,

.CRYPTOQUOTES

HXZ

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ilr:'!!:!!!!

\111\INl fi)'il ~ -1-'.J .....
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One tell er simply slands for another ln thiS sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes the l ength and form ation of the words are :.11
hints Each d~y the code lett ers arc different

X

33.

4:!&amp;-Movie "C laudi a a nd David" 3.
5· 3()-Movle "Gun law" 4
6.DO-Movle "The Countv Cholrman" 3.

'rt•

COUt;&gt;ON .

Carrascol end as

0()-Truth or Con sequ ences J ; To Tell The Truth 4;
. Law rence welk 8; Bowling tor Dollars 6, Aviation
Wea l her 33, News 10; Don Adams Screen Test 13;
Family ACfalr 15, Ohio Journal 20,
7.3()-Porler Wagoner 3; Treasure Hunt 4; Can did
Ca mera 6: C:venlng Ed ition with Ma rtin Agronsk y
?0; $25,000 Pyramid 1p; To Tell The Truth 13. Popl
Goes The Co untry IS; Black Perspecti ve on th e
News 33.
s·oo-Sanford and Son 3,4,15; Donny and Mar ie 6,13;
Sara 8, Washington Week In Rev iew 20,33; World
of fhe Bea ver 10;
8 3()-The Practice 3,4, 15, Wall Street Week 20,33
9:DO-Rockford Files 3,4,15; Movie ",~ Flstlul of
Collars" 6:13: Movie "Heifer Skelter 8.1 0; Firing
Line 20 ; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
10;0()-Pollce Story 3,4, 15, News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33.
10 3()-Avlallon Weather 20
11 0()-News 3.4,6.B, 10, 13.15; AB C News 33.
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Rookl,~s 6, 13; Movi e
"Farewell, Frie nd" 8, Movie Terror In the
Jungle" 10, Janak l 33
l2 ·4()-0on Kirshner's Rock Concert 6; Ironside 13.
1·00-Midnlghl Special 3,4,15. Mov ie " Macabre" 10
1·4()-News 13
•
2 3()-News 3; Movie " Kino Kong Escapes" 4.
7

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :
AXYDL 8 AAXR

GZ

Daughter 13.

4 oo-Movie ''The Sergeant Wa s A lady" 4.

is

"':(

EXPANDED WEEK DAY NEWSCASTS

H OO c: for '&gt; ale by prt-..atE
o wn er ,
31 •
a c r es.
bedro oms. barn on bl acktop
road , g ;, c; .:. n d wiJifl r PhonE
9d9 20 23

Hosiery

shade
9 Island
(Fr .)
10 Magazine
feature
(abbr.)
16 Recowoted
18 Weather·
cock

"

3 OO:..Movie "C ate M et ropo l e" 3.

' ,1

.,

8

19 See 3
30 ·untouchDown
abies, in
20 " Butterflies
India
- Free"
31 Approximate
21 Oui,
32 Athirst
trans33 Fail the
lated
mark
23 Summon
35 Electrical ·
24 "Roscoe"
WJit
25 Cereal
36 Taro root
plant
37 " 0 Sole - "
( obs.)
38 Air (comb.
26 Yield .
form) ·

40 Gaelic
41 Unfasten
42 Whale oil
cask
DOWN
·I Trousers
measurement

,.
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,.

ON

tl)ppers

Yeslerday's Answer

river

~ :I

HEAR NEWS FIRST

Phone 949 2862 ,
,I
3 3 1 4tc

(2 wds.)

Guido's
note
35 Negligent
38 Twtltery
39 South
Carolina

•
I·-:
- ,.
'

Son Dave

film star

~4

.'

COL R E. Knotts

3 SUent ·
4 Egyptian
solar
deity
5 Silent and
'talkie film
star
(2 wds.)
6 Lassoes
7 King

.

'

8.10.
3·0()-Another
World 3,4,15, Gene ral Hosp,Ita I 6•13'•
· All In The Family B, 10; Black Journa l 20.
J· 3()-()ne life to Live 13; Ml ckev Mouse Club 6; Match
· Ga me 8,10 ; Black Perspective on Ihe News 20.
4 00'-Miste r Cartoon J , Merv Grlllln 4; Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6: Mickey Mouse Cl ub 8; Mister Rogers
20,33; Movie " Botany Bay" 10; Dinah! 13 .
4 30-Bewltched 3; Mod Squa d 6; Part1dge Family 8;
Sesame Slreet 20.33; Fllntstones 15
5·oo- Bonama 3; Family Aff a1r 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3()-Adam -12 4,13 ; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Electric Company 20,33.
6:0()-N ews 3,4,8,10, 13, 15; ABS: News 6: Zoom 20,33.
6·3()- NBC News 3, 4, 15; ABCJiews 13; Andy Gr iffith 6:
CBS New&gt; 8,1 0; Hodge podge Lodge 20;

"tresses

"'I

fa r m

lh e Jacobys" c are of this
newspaper Th e .Jacobys w11/
answer md1vidual qu estions
11 stamped, sell-addresse d
envelopes are enclosed The
mos t mterestlng qu est10ns
w1/l be used m this column
and w•ll rece1ve cop1es of
JA CO BY MOD ERN )
·'

29 Tsia or
oolong
30 Tempo
33 S1mba's

'

the Estate of thll!
Van Buzzard con sisting of household good s,
~ e l lin g

a quest1on

(Do you have

lor the e•perts? Write "As k

"

Lyra

IIi

la ,· e

marh i n er y
.!l nd
m rs cel lan ec us Fr orn Stale
Route 1 on the Po meroy .
Middleport By pass., ta Ke
Route 143 about 15 m1l es to
the rai l r oad c r-os s. rr.g In
Ca rp enter fh~rr 'urn le f~
on County Read 10, go ll '2
m 1tes
Wat r "l for St11e
Sig n s The Md mi n• slral er
1c1 e Buzzard 'l rll 11lso off er
the 119 acre '-'::~ rm lor sate
pr iv ately on day of sate.

He's just a pupp~ ~

Has to be fed
twice
a da4!

,. ...,'

St ar ting At 10 AM
R arn or Shme

a, 10 ~ Farmer's

'

11.3()-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; H;lppy Days 13; Love
of Life 8, 10, Sesame Street )0,33.
II 55- Take Kerr 8; Dan !me l's Wor ld 10.
12.00'-Magn lfl cent Marbl e Machine 3, 15; l et' s Make
A Deal 13; Bob Braun 4, News 6,8, 10.
12 :3()-Take My Advi ce 3,15; All My -Chi ldren 6, 13;
Search- for Tomarrow 8, 10.
12s: 4&amp;-Eiectrlc.Company 33
1
12:5.&gt;-NB C News 3,15.
1:0()-News 3 Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young, a nd The Restless lu . Nol For Women only
15.
d R
l .J()-Da ys of Our Lives 3,4, 15. Rhyme an
easqn
· 6,13, As The Wor ld Turns B. lO.
2 00'-$20.000 Pyramid 6.13.
2 3()-Doclors 3,4,15; Neighbor s 6, 13; Guiding Light

2 In motion

I Light bulb
name
5 On the house
11 Tennis star
12 Setting
13 Detail
14 First game
of the
season ,
15 FUMY
Caesar
16 - bien
17 Plains
Indians
vehicle
19 Disburse
22 Geological
epoch
23 Skin
opening
24 Large under·
takings
• (2wds.)
27 River of
England
28 Star in

"\')l 1 HECK

·il....,,....:

.

L- -WR:lTESEL:· ro-;,fing,

~(J\CHiNU 1

ACROSS

. '
•"i. I ,

Service

FR IDAY: APRIL 2, tm
6:oo-S unrlse Semester IQ
6 !&amp;-Farm Report 13 .
6·2()-B iue Ridge Quartet 13.
6: 3()-Columbus Today 4; News 6: Sunrise Semestor 8,
Farmtlme 10
6 4~un ce oC Prevention 10
6·4&amp;-Mornlng Repor t 3.
6:55-Chuck White Rworts W,...{;QQ.Ii Morning, Trl
. State 13
·
7:0()-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning , America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny and Friends 10.
7:3()-School les 10
8 oo-Lassle 6, Cap tain Kangaroo 8. 10; Sesame Street
33.
• 8.3()-Big Valley 6.
9·0()-Not For Women Only 3,, Phil Donahue 4, 15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning With D. J. 13.
9:3(}-A.M. 3; One li fe lo live 6; Tattletales 8: Mike
Douglas 13.
10·0()-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15, Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Rlghf B, 10.
10 :3()-H igh Roll ers 3,4. 15; Dlnahl 6.
11 :00- Wheel oC FOrtu ne 3,15; Weekday 4; Gambit

~MJ·~by THOMAS JOSEPH

~ ~-

PUBliC

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

W I LL CIO Odd fObS , r oo f rng ,
parntrng, ha~t~lrn g , trcewor~
and .,m ow i n g Ca ll 99 2 7409
J l 2olc

Good .through April 8, 1976

FREE S ·,

9A CKHut::s

IN S TAL L ED

rou r ,l g .
con
plumbrng and
10b too l arge or
Phone 742 2348
J 19 26tc
_,_...,

next to sc hoo l N ew shi ngle
roof. $5500 Pho ne 99 2 7~75
4 1 Jtc

-

AND DOZER LARGE AND
SMA LL. SEPTIC TANKS

WILL
c;O
struc t ro n ,
h eatmg No
too srnal!

new rep a~r
or 949 21!'1!)

-

Pass

...:,..,.;,.--;=-:::-,

·-

11 3()-Johnny Carson 3.4,15; Mannix 6, 13; Movie "Tho
· Lawyer" 8. Movie " Bitter Sweet" 10; Janakl 33
12 4()-Maglclan 6,13.
1: oo-Tom or row 3,4
1. 50-News 13.

A Florida reader wants to
know what the rule is when.
alter a hand is dealt, h1d, and
a few cards have been played.
it is discovered that one hand
has too many and one too few
cards .
The answer is tha t the hand
is a misdeal and is thrown in

• " In the '20s the best auction
bndge in the world was played
at New York's Kni ckerbocker
Wh1st Club Culbertson and
~tJ.R2~· Sims were two of the best, bul
many oth ers c~tnbut ed
tremendous help 1n gettmg
contract bndge on its feet
One was Ted Lightner Ted,
who Is now 82 or 83. play s
rubber bridge at The Regency
Wh1st Club severa l da ys a
week.
The best known of his many

.:.....
S'

Courteous
c.___s_~_,rvic~ 1 • •d

..&lt;.. - ---~-----

IUS! $7500 00
V.A. nothing do wn, ot hers 3
PcJ. See us now for your

:t§:

PH. 992-6010

D &amp; D lREE Tr rmmtn g, 20
yea r s exper;en ce Ins ured,
fr ee estrmates Call 9?2 238&lt;1
or ~6 14 1 698 7757 A lbany
10 15 tt c

B RADFORD . Auctron eer
Comptet" Serv rc e
Ph one
949 7487 or 9 49 2000 Ractne .
Ohto Cr 111 Brildford
10.9 lfc t

24 Hour

REMQDELING ,
!--' ,.,rn01n9 ,
h eating and all ty pes cit
gener al
r eparr
Work
guaranteed
20 year s ex
p errence Phone 992 2409
6 1 lfc

farm l and , farrly 990d
!ences, large 4 B R home, 2
farm pond s, rrr rn t&gt;rols, on
!57 ,"lrres

~··

J l 1 261c

E XC 1-\ VATIN G , dolr.r, lo;,u..,-, sep trc
an ' t b ackhr:H wor~
r ank s
m stat ted . du mp
t ruck s and lo hoys for hir e,
wdl ha ul l rll d1 r t, lop so rl ,
11mestone and grave l Ca ll
Bob or Roger Je ff ers, day
nho .... .: 11'1 :: 7nrrl l.rr, r • rhon e
9rn 3515 or o; n :&gt;&gt;1'l
2 11 l ie

H

"
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N EE o a plas t er er ? Call Joe
Custer , 992 3550

9 18 lfc

- --

'CAB

I·

SE PTi c- lA-NKS ~~~~d

1..

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,,,

'
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MIDDLEPORT

Tupp e r s Pla rn s Che!&gt;ler
Wi!kr D1slt tel n ow se ll my
bu l k water to tan ks on
l ruck s at our new of1 1c e 1
Located on St ~ t 7
1 Mrie North of
Eastern H1g l1 School
Serve You rse lf Drspenser
T ~Kt ng quarlers only one
at a lime , for 250 gallo n~ of
water
Open all the Trtne
fo r your co nven rence 1
1 l 1mo

Pass
Db I

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

I'
I'

~AVE

318-lm o

NEW

BULK WATER
AVAILABLE

Souih

2.

'
',.

Pass

~E

Ra t l'1t&gt;, O hio

.

I•

Opemng lead - 10 •

-·-·
"-..

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

'

North Ealt

Pass

.:!.., 10 J'Mo

BISSELl BUILDERS

E LWOO D BOW E P (j ~ EPAI R
- s wet?pers . toaste r !&gt;, tr ons .
a ll small app 11 an ces Lawn
mower . ne xt to Stat e Hrgh
way Gvr ag e on Rout e 7
Phone WI S 3825

at 112.900
BUSINESS BUILDING - 3

to read SOLD?

•a

Wt&gt;s t

Ph il'1 -1993

homes Nice lot s a v;;.ilable
i~ nice locat1ons.

I

R EA 0 Y

3

(6 14 1 667

TEAFORD

Work

tAKQJ4 3

I IJ.OIJDER WHAT SH~
~N-JT 6'1 TfiAH

Pass 5 A
Pass Pass

'

,LARRY
lAVENDER
Syrac use, Ohro

Take advantage of our
pnc es. Quality built

I I 16 IIC

bedrm
., . r •.(' . c.r ;-. ~ ted
range , garag e, I&lt;H YO lots

Want that FOR SALE .

• 4l

'
'·

ctn odd

O ' DE LL A. lrnem enl loc a l ed
bch rnd
Rutland
G rade
Sc hool
Tu11eur brak es.
whee l balaflcrn g , Jlrne m ent
Phon e 7d1 200 d

3 23 tfc

'

SOUTH CDI
• K Q 10 8

I

GUTTERS AW NING S

SAVE MONEY?

• t 982
"'AKJ 97S2

'I·

I.

RfPL A C E MENT
WINDOW S
ALUMI NUM
S IOIN G- SOFFITT

Rutland 742 -23] 1
Roger Wam sle v
J -1· 1 mo

• 10 9 8 7 6 2

LOSER

'

'Blown

EAST
. 742

tiD J

'·
'•''•
''

ESTIMATES 1

WEST
A5 3

"'10 6 4

'·'·

j

•

t 65
• QJ

'

Sl O RM
WINDOW S &amp; DOORS

R&amp;J COINS

lobs , roof rng ,
parntrng , haul rng , treew ork ,
and m'owm g Ca ll '192 7409
3 28 lie

W IL L

3 '16701 (

• C.. II For Appointment

..

Insuliltion-Services

F or Sa l e

A A J 9~

.AKQJ5

.

F111ancm g Avadub l e
Blown tn to W a li s &amp; AHtcs

WANT TO

Check Ot. fo ur Car!
With purchase of oi l and filte r charge.

a~

R ild tator Sllec 1it lrst

or

3 17 l n; ..,

7648

w.aoo

"
'

contribulions to the game IS
the Lightner slam double
Th ts double means th at when
your opponents bid a slam on
th eir own steam you a re ask·
mg yo ur partner to make an
unusual lead. rather tha n the
one yo u wou ld norm~ ll y
make.
Here IS a simple example of
th1 s bid which every expert
use s today W1thoul th e
Lightner double West would
open a club Eas l would take
lhe first tnck an~ South lhc
rest After the double, ,West
leads a heart a nd poor South 1s
one tr•ck short of Ius cont ract.

NORTH

J=

Btggs

~I at h a n

Fo r Rc nl

Ph. 949-2404

-

on LinCO l n Hgts 2
bed r ms, large k1tchen ,
targ ~ bd SI'ment , ex. ce l lent
bq for $9 ,200 W rl l'l fur
nttur e, Sl0 .700 .Phnn e 992

1

.~

j

San Francisco 6,13, Movie " Heller S ke lt~r" 8,10;
Hollywood. Television Theatre 33.
,
10:0()-Harry-0 6,13.
10:3()-News 20. Reall dodes 33.
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8,10.13. 15; ABC News 33 .

I

Lightner double sets slam

....

t

sm a l 1es1 H€!.eter Cor e ..

HOU SE

large porches, and a sun porch, g ara ge '"a!u~ al ga s
furna ce i~ ver y ~t ... Jm h..(l :.. i 2~· t · (" '- " "
1~ ,,• , 1n

J

-·

Det~&gt;ct.,r ~

OPEN TUES TH'IU SAT .
6:10 Tr lll O· OO

____

to wn

1

--=-

-= rom the lurges t Truck o'r
Oulldozei*"R.adla or to the

bur red
trea!&gt; u re .
F1nd
Corns, nngs, si lver. gold .
Coin &amp; M etal

Italian-Style Pizza

HOU SE • r oom~ c&gt;,.,d t&gt; n th , 1
car b lock garage o n 1 , acr e
ground , $lfi , ~OO Ph one 992

nea r

]4

WIN AT BRIDGE

..

~Movie " Slaughterhouse-Five " 3,4, 15; Streetsof

9
SUT TH IS I~ WHAT 5 HE .
1-00K S •t~e NOW·!

I&lt;AL &amp; fU5~ ~

"

•

BUY , SELL or TRADE

Ca ll 1n ord ers attd pt ck up
'" twenty mtnutcs .
Lo c;, t ed at l29·lrd Street
Racrne , Ohto

Real Estate for Sale.

floor, 3 nicely paneled bedrooms on the 2nd tloor . al•o 2

Plees~ note that ~ !I !'. ~se men!, garug!! .
porr.b, rumrna!J~ . r; nd yard sa les now must
be p1 ; ;~ for 1n ) dv an ce. Ad ver ti se ahead of
l imP. I y p la cin~, y1. ut ad 1r. e ~rly by stopping
by O•Jr office on 111' Coull St., Pomeroy or
phonin g 992-2 1~6 for the cost. of your ad and
mail ynpr re mlf liln : e in.

I

COINS

PIZZA stiOP

3 28 6tp

kit chen with bui lt tns , 2 bath r ooms, 21Jedrooms on first

AnN ! !f ! ALL HOUSEWIVES

'

.. -

~·

-

SAM'S

2257

LOOK -

••

R

f 16 1 mo

3 23 1 mo

j
mo

CAPl'~ EASY
CONFOUND IT! D~ ' T
KE:EP US DANGLING,
FARQUAIO:! W~AT '~
HAPPENED TO MISS

.,

'

PH. 992-6 173

Automobile and
Truck Repair
State Rt. 124
-;·oNard kulland
Pomeroy, Oh io 45769
Phone:· 992 -5682

saoo

only $11 ,000
5 BEDROOMS - Th1&gt; n1ce I'" stor y hon1e has a large
; ' l lv! ng room with shiny oak floor l ng, dining rooiJ11 nice

Would )'OU bel ie ve

.

~~ow accepting chenls
for bookkeeping and
tax service..

GARAGE

1969 C H EVY , Ch rom e r rm s,
1achomeler , new lt r es ,
Also , J964 For d G a la xre 500
$200 Phone ?47 21 69 or 247

$35. 000
REAL NICE -- 3 neal large
B R 's, bat h. large uti lily ,
front porch. and large lot
lor garden 0•1 Jy $19,500.
LARGE FA~M
Gv0d

the cou n try , 3 la rg e bedrms , lar ge Sf'JclC IOus llv 1ng
room , drnmg room.~kitchen wi th bullt.ins, bath. a nd
utility room 2 c ar cone rete block garage, garden sp ace
and stra wberry p~tc h , al most l acre of land Where?
About 5 minutes fr om Pomeroy on Co Rd . 30 Prrced

06
614-~'ll-22
•

&gt;.-:!..

ACCOUNTANT

Sup r cm e

for ced at r heu t &amp; a~r co nd
N eeds 3 or &lt;~ pa rtrt1 ons, a
sh ower or tub
Do 11

'CENTRAL REALTY CO.

8

..--------ROGER HYSELLS

3 1? r f c

rlt.\

.'

'

11110 CUTt 'J \5~
Phone 9'1 'i 111 0

TUP PER ~

•

·-')

Phone day or night

LARRY WHOBREY
PUBUC

3 17 ·1 mo

197 1 DU STER 6 c yl , 3 spee d ,
fa tr c ond rtto n Phone 992
7126 or con ta c4 218 Co ndor
St , Pam er o y
.3 2&gt;1 61p

..•.

I

Bowling tor Dollars 6; Space : 1999 6; News 10;
Let's Make A Oeall3; Family Altair 15; Anyone foo
Tennyson? 2() ; Family At War 33.
.
7. 3()-Hollywood Squares 3.•: Ohio Stale Lollery 6,
l::venlog Edition \'fl1h Marti~ Agr~nsky 20; Wj)c .
Kingdom 10: 'To Tell The Truth 13; ·Music 'Cit)
u·s A 15
8 ()()-Mac Davis 3,o, 15; Wel come Back, Koller 6, 13;
Waltons 8, )e; Moon For the Misbegotten 20: The
Way II 'Was 33. ·
8 3()-Barney Miller 6, 13; Lowell Thomas Remembtlrs

191~

5·oo-Bonanza 3; Family Altair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3()-Adam-12 4, 13, News 6 ; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
• E lectrlc Compa ny :ZO,JJ.
6:QO-News 3,4,8,10, 13, IS; ABC News 6; Zoom 20. lTV
Utilization 33
6 3()-NBC News 3,o, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias, Yoga
and You 33.
J cllO-Truth or Consequences 3, To Tell ne Truth 4,_,

.••''

Rt , 3, Pom pr::,.,, Ohro 45769

2 19 1 mo

THURSDA'(, APRIL 1,

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

Sa les and IMtallaf!¥1

Watch for List of
Item s later.

1969 ( 60C H EVRO L E f Durnp
tr uck 1&lt;1 f! bed, and cheater
axle Good co ndtl ron Phone
(614) 66 7 6JO•I
3 76 121p

ENORMOUS - 4
&lt;8 R 1::,, 2 baths, mod

yourself $7,000
PROPERTIES
ARE
" f:LL:NG FA ST ·- WE
NEED LI STI NGS
992-2219 or 992-2568

•

Ph . '49-2023 or 8.0·1661

10 . 00 a .m.

1963 FOR 0 E:cono l. ne van , J
speed , Phone 74 2 2190
3 26 6tc

Lot 50xl00 Close to sc hool
$8 ,500
CHA RM
PLU S
DURABIL ITY - Stone &amp;
bmk Staled lloor s, NG

I liJS IN YOUr! HAl~ - LOOK HER E. 2 •tor1 home in

Chester Oh io .

-----

1966 OLDSMOBILE 98 con

___ ,_

paper

.

Orange Twp . Vo lunteer
Ftre Dep.lrtmenf w111 t'lold
_,.a cons i gnment auct1on at
th e fi re house localed 1n
Tuppers Pl&lt;tln s, Clh10 on
Apn l 17th begmniny at

1966 FAL CON-Staf,on Wagon
6 cy l s to a•r good co n
,j Iron P hone 992 7826
,
4 l 3tp

75rl7

paneling,

hanging etc.

AUCTION 5ALE

4 I Jl p

,--

Ad d r~t~ns,

4 1 1 mo .

41C

S IOC k.S

up .

-

!973 DUL&gt;UE DART spo rt 340,
metallrc gree n , 40,000 m i les
Call 9 J9 2376

197C.

roofwg,

614-84l -2 621

POMEROY, OHIO

3 16 1fc

,.

"

•&lt;"'(

kFr
·pet ing and tnstallatton
We ' II br ing 'S arftples to your
ho me w1f h r.o oh11ga11on .
Se e how you can really
'" veMtke Young , Manager

ca r peting, pa rnttng , mtmg,

or by contacting
R Cod ner . Owner

I

-~----

....d

foundahon

:~!~~~~~.~~

I

CON ST~UCiiON

.,...
•••
•
I
I

I Sl~AN·~ I

D&amp;D

From a shelf to a tJovse. il •
types of burl.ding a.,rt:l
remodeltng
f r om
tl1e

FRI . - SAT .- ~UN.

POM~~~~,~~!,O,R., CO.@)
f-?o qr~terc d Collrf' Stud
~ll v /cc , St CHdlJS!
Kr n y
P hone (61&lt;t l 985 4 7~8

-

TRAVEL TRAILERS
OPEN

..

AKf

.

SALE &amp;RENTAL

Rc·d nrrd wh i t e frn1sh , doub le arr , lo~;~d.,ed w1th ever y
( he v oplron, low mileage, never l1tled, Co Demo
SIIC ker Over sa.ooo 00

Pets

f.AM PERS

RAINBOW RIDGE
CBash an Mea)
LONG BclTTOM

'

15295

REGISTERED 1 2 and J •
Arabtaf"'
m ., u·~
~nd
geld 1ng s, Da! m a t ton Pu p s
See Esk ey H ill, F lat woo d s
Road , Pomeroy Ohrq or
PhOne 992 38 85
" 1 l ie

98 5 l956

CODNER'~

.

•

Television log for easy t'zewrng

•
,,,

'

.

'lt r'1 rllm O':il h f&gt; :J r- your
yQ rtP •.ttlg rnll Of&lt;l~ o f you r
IDvvr rt ( sowts
' Wh c 11 we
MODERN Walnut conso le
rtil q('! to H · ~v ~&gt;n "
AM F M radro , 4 s p eed
fl CO n 'i Q!BIJO r IO M ~ VOU 1\re
ch anger Balance $10J 10 or I }'} ACRES Phon e 742 2359
n0v. " 'rrgu' o P' n-. ~ g r ea t
terms Call 'i'ft 1965
3 30 30tp
HPth enly c .u.r
,f I tt c
OLD f urn rt ure, 1C1.! bO&gt;&lt;P"Wh ... n w ' QO h C .r l (' II !'.C C I'I'l &amp; you
br a ss
t:l~l s .
old
wa ll
AI30U T 3' • a cres of un
~hould
be t'ler e rn you r
re tP phones i'lnd parts
or
(0/.L I Uf.&lt; ;, /\L E ( 110 Co.11
(Jev e lop ed land. consrs t mg
ta vorJir r 'l a•r , b u t C' \I C·n th f•
compleiC"rhouseh ol dS Wr rf r
Compa ny , I m df' nur ill ol
of about 14 lots . each 50 fl rn
h rr t1• s r~:m to say " 9one
M
n • Mi ll er
Rl
/,
Cllcs t~~r e on Rt 7 Pre].. your
wid t h and over: 150 fl rn
gon e '
Pom er oy. Oh•o l.11 1 99 ?
own , ~1 0 per lor • Op en 6 dc~y&lt;;
d eplh Ha s crl y warer , and
'I ll• tha n k God !Or our ye ars
ll bO
pt•r Ne e~o, , or ci'! ll t n ll ) 361
sanrtary sewerage Can b e
IOIJethcr
for
pr• •cro u!i
1310 lor lur l hr&gt;r tn for rT1a lr on
h&gt;~anccd Phone 992 5786 b e
m{'nr or C~.,jt.ld tu rhe gl ac!
l 8 /!jl(
lwe rn I a no 5 p m
1 ('LJn ron 6i!Y ll Wat1rng t.~
J~ 28 61C
Si! d ,· ·n r'i li e&lt;t by his w1te and WCU L' D l rke 10 b u\1 QOOd u~·· o
rnanure s prea d('f
f ' honr FORO )f"' lra c tor , over' hi"ul ,
l ('lrr. rl ',
1\ q ~ r n w e Wt&lt;; h to
$1.150 . Ford Jubi l ee l ra o or . SACRIFICE
Q9? 1106
By owner .
th~ itl&lt;
all nu r W.)n ~1 r!ul
,1 ,750 . Ford 861 lrt!lclor wrth
l JQ "• IC
N ow Haven \Nes r Vrrgr n ta ,
nerr Jhr;or ~ . our ftlt.nd ~ and
loader
~ 7 3 50
All1s
.mr'J dPrn all n l~&gt; r trt -:= three
the d tffert•rn ·· hu r ctw~ to r
TIM BEI&lt;''
rop
pr I'"
TCir
Ch~ t mer ~
w o 45 •ra c tor
s t or y
brt c k
apa r tmt:n t
lh€.' tr rnany rJe e t\ S of krnd
~l,lndr ntl ' "lll.ler ( All ' 61 1
w rde lr o nr en d 'lil , 2!10. Used
bu rh.J11r y Four 3 bedr oom
nt&gt;s ~ ro u !&gt; &lt;~t tn a t t lnr e
116 B570
1 x 14 ' plow , ~ 17 5 use d 5 II
ilncl lwo 7 bedroom apart
J l l1p
J pt ifi)lary muwcr , $18 5 ,
, ' 1/ (
ments Dec ordtPd plaste r ed
Hew Idea hay condrl10ner ,
wall s Compl f' le Yo ungs
(A~H pdrd lor all ml!I&lt;('S and
\ .tSO . l r1d rn1 l awn m owers.
towr.l kr!cliens wtlh dtsposa l
models o f mobl l t' hOn1 es
\JS Sil O Lud:-c tl Farm
unrt s Storm wrndows and
AU CliO N Mas on ~\u ctr on
Ph on e nreil cod e 61 •1 &lt;t? J
EQu rpmPnt Ph one ( 61 d) 698
dOo r s Bur ldrng c ornp ' el ely
Hou ~c.
Ma son
w Va
?) ll
1031
or
698 788 1,
W
rns u l a le d , Ir on! Jnd r ear
Fr ld i'ly , /qJr d 7. . a t 1 p m
.1 IJ t f c
Was hrn g1on Sr , Albany
c nlrance s Bca ul rfu ll y land
Con'&gt;ignmen t s w 0 lc ome
J
28
?61C
sc aped , or rval e parkrng lot
Phon 11 9~? 1 ol07
Fo ur c~p ar -t nH'fliS
com
~ 1 21c
pte tel y lurntshed
Sr1~ o f
AM rM radro FM srereo , a
proper ty 160 f l x. 110 feet
SH OOllr\IG MAT C H , P u11and 35 HP E\lrnrude m o to r . 14 11
track tape pl oye r w rth
Frv P year co nst ru c TIOn jOb '
Gun C lrJ!;,, New Luna Ro a d
spc ak.ers . t urn tabl e and
boa!, d ump lra rl rr tor sa l e
e x pect ed to ber n ful l swrng
R rflt • Jn d o:o; l ols Su ndDy .
head ph on es rh one 949 2167
or trad e Phone 992 61 54
l hrs
Sum m e r
R e al
Apn l 1, I p m E-.. C'r yon e
aft er 5 o m
4 1 6t c
sac r!lr c,• , $59 ,900 00 Return
welcOmt'
) 30 SIC
o r c:;etrtlo't\ r enl 16 per ce nt
1 WC1 work pon reo;; Ph on q 9.19
4 I lt c
Own er in poo r hea lth L1ves
i57 8
AROW N hand tooleo sndd l e
outof s tilt e P ho n ~ (30·1) 882
T HER E WILL he a Sh oc t rng
3 30 lie
and br i dle , $150
al so
2
7.1 33
M&lt;t l c. h al t h e: Nt:w R i'lct ne
sa ddle s tand s A ll are lrk e
3 28 71C
F 1r c
Dept
b ur ldr n g,
new P/lOne 7&lt;12 2930
Sa!ur O-" Y A prr l• 1, 1Q16 a.
) 10 ]lr
l JOp m Fr orn RrlCt.r~; , I 1 r
~u.r~ ,\{ ,E:.
Sa te ,
St a r trn g
Co G!u U! l !hr&gt; Fl.n~han P~'
Phone 74?
T h oll -; day /\ prof 1 th r ou'] h LOC US T posts
to th e Bo.~ sh&amp;n Pr r e S l~t i OJ1.
ll59
Su nduy , Aprt l 4 Boys and
IUrt • r rg •1t a1 l t'!e l rre h o u ~
J 30 17tp
grr ls cl olll rn g I W1 n b e et
and follow !hat ro a d tor
co rnp lt.' t c ,
c re am
aho•JI ll1 m de Bulldtng on
se paral ors , r ec or d p l ayer , FA RMALL M tractor- , S900 ,
!ell
r acto r y chok e guns
Grav rly beds and wagons , 13
dr sh es and lots of mrs c
only 1
fl
self propelled c9m bm e.
rt e ms
R e e ds \lrllt&gt;
Oh ro
608
.3 30 &lt;lTC
1971 GMt p ic kup . 1 1 ton G
Tu rn at Rt\lerview Sc hool
A Radek.. rn Phon e ( 61J J 698
Srg n , lhrrd hoU5l' on left
NO
: r r•&lt;:. IJ&lt;l SSr ng
w i t hout
88Sl
3 31 4tp
p er,Jl1 1';.SIOn on my prope rty
3 lOl ip
Ja the ~ Mohler , Rt
7 by RUMM A GE
SALE
1n
pa ss, :v~~ ~l dleport
BA 8 Y CIQ'&gt; . phon e 949 2857
lHsC'mcnl o f EnlerP.r, se
POMEROY - 2 stor y
l lO l ip
l 30 t7rc
Church on R I l l Lool&lt;. for
frrrm e Almost new s1d1 ng ,
s1g n s Th u t sday, F r rd ay ,
('yARAC.E
SA LE
145
roof &amp; ca r port 3 BR , bath .
- BLOCK lor F art l'1 all " H "
Saturday , A prr! l 2, 3 9 El
Mul ll Nf ll ~\ve
Porne roy
1r acto1 wrth power pil ck
rn lt ll 6 p m
po rches, NG hea t . sm a ll
Thu ~ s:!Jd / aru F rtday
Ap rrl
Kenneth H ag er- , Cool-..dlc
.1 I 2tp
yard sa.ooo
1 ._ Prone 991 15'!6
3 lO li p
5 YEARS OLD - l BR,
3 JO Jt p
FAMILY Ba sem eril Sal e,
bath. dining R , hardwood
•~ a c tor
!'JS t
baby c hrldren and adult GRA.VELY
VVILL
o\ •;
srn al '
qa r den
ove r tlCI JI('d r1 ua l VJI1Ct&gt; IS JQflol)r S Ful! ba se m ent
c lott11ng , va r
ho
usPho
ld
olow rnn
N r lh
G ra vely
rn mower , A 1 co ntl! 'ron
•tcr1s wa s her and dryer ,
Por lh r.s, for ced a1r heat ,
tract or Pho r,;o ?'1 2 7 192 or
Phone 992 58Jfl
s m all
applian c e s
166 7
99?)!1'1
abou t J 4 acre SJ9 ,500
3
JO
:
J
tc
Lrn\:o ln Hgts

J 26 IRtp

Business servz ces
L_
Motor Co.
•

•

••

:-;;.,

2 SIGNS. Pomeroy
QUALITY

DICk~ ·

~

Auto Sales

OF

_g:- Tho! DaUy Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., ThUrsday,'April!, 1976

!·

\

�•

4

8-l':~~~;·~~:~~"~·""uw·~~~:er::~~-,·:'~:s~l:~:~"''·L'~.jor L'vast. Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds ....
5 P M
Day
Before
P u bhc tuton
M o nd a y D ea dl rne Q

H umane Soctely Th~lfl Stl o p
wl1h good sum of money and
tm portant paper~
If the
la dy will 1 ·· tur n l' to th e
H um an,. Soc 1cty
Thrt t l

a me

Ohoo. no QUC,I ion'

DEADLINES

d 11 c

e II a I 1 on

Cqrr ecttom

be

W1lt

cep t ed untll

R ECUL ATIONS
The Pub t ts her rese r ve!&gt;
the ftgt]t to Pd l t or retec t
rtny ans d (! Pn ,.., d nb
iec ttOTJ&lt;JI .

The

pu b l tsh cr

W tl l O;,.d t)C l"( !;p Ot•';tble iOt
crl' ~

mor l: th ;u 1

tnser t, or

nco rr ect

RAH I
f- or Want h d Scrvt l e
5 Ct"rt ts per wo,.Q onr
insen.on
M tn •m um L .. o r t~ C!' ~ t 00
Iii CC' n t&lt;, per wor(! t t'&gt; r ce

con SC' r uttv r

•ns erl tono;,

16 u •nts pf r wo rd

St ~

u• ~,,
• ,&lt;,fi r Iron~
P er ( , rot LJ r·,co unt on
pard rld:; il'l(l Jd&lt;; ra l r;t_
Wrlhm '0 d•lY i&gt;
CAJ&lt;DOF THAN ~o..r;
X. O B I TUARY
\1 00
lor
S'O word
c on -;~ ,

2~

rr1 rn rtn •Jn1

E.r.c h &lt;rddrlr011a l wo r e! l
ce nr •,
6 LI ND AD S

AdtJ rlr(l rul l ?'ic

CtldUJr

per l\ c1 vr&gt;nrsemrrrr
I I'JU tn,

OF FICE

am

S 'U
0.1!1 y

to ~

1:1 J(1 a "
o;,, •urd~y

'

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p ''
I Jf

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Noon
fl h {') n e ' vd il,. 9VJ ~~ ~

N O U I D l rk e 1u e:.o:;J(ess my
• hr~111q.
fo r
tho se
who
p r a y( d se nt tlow&amp;rs , and
ca r tt~ durm g my re c en l ~ fa y
rn ltu• hosprt al
Sue l rn '
boch.m
4 1 1tc

In Memory
LO I! I tJG

lliCmor y Ol
Bo yl" !i
who

Drn !. rr o il
passr r• ;:t w rw M uc h J I , 1975
It lt' d 1

,..

a

~H.I

w!1r •1 &gt;JU t
'&gt; dil l

d -'Y for ,) I I of US,
~eov t' Piy

Fathe r

com• n r ' 1on t ' my t h tl d o:~nd
e111t
n'CI all ' he IDVS Of
lfeil 'l 1" 1 ·
rl's \.~ f ·· lon el y here wrlhour
ytJU , ,1 u wr&gt; rn rss you r t ender
10 11 1 rq c.1re '
) r m u 1 1 th rn qs here to rcm , nd
u'i o f ~o u th at many l rrnes
II.P 111., 1 h \1111.: lo QrVl! way IO
Te a r~

Wh "n

we

MA N ' S qreen brllfOid loc;t
ll1 ovnd 1-'orllarHI con ta rn rn g
v ~ lt....1bl e papers
If found ,
phon(' 949 2411
Jeffr(!y
1 rt f•Hd , r eward
J 30 6t~
LADY' S wh rlll yold watch rn
!h(' area of · K r og er's 11'1
POrlleroy
Rt:ward
Pl'lone
991 5938 or 992 37]6
3 30 t'llp

Help Wanted
!I~ PEP

HUN@RF.D sluft 1n g

Se nd
se lf
, rr ... elop ~s
a ! ldr €1~· f' d , s t amp ed
en
vt&gt;I .O p(• E dr~y Marls . Bo:-;
lHB A!h any M u 6 140'1
3 30 10lp

VOtUNT t;;:E R !. nQec.led !Or
Care l rnt; ,
~
c rrsts
In
t ervel"l1 tn n,
rnlorm alr on
and r ~•;:&lt;r r.rl SN\I ic e!. 60 hr
(, w eek !raln rng p r oqrem
beq1n s /lp rr l 10 For i!p
plr cal run rt nd more tn
f0!;.[!1atrnn 991 1501
4 1 Si c

DO )'OU
P L.\ 1-J

PARTY
EXPERIEN CE?

H AV F

rlli[NDLY l OY PAR T IES
HAS OPEN INGo
FO R
M A NfiGER S
IN
OU Q

Card of Thanks

IN

as ked

f or

Day of Pu blica tton

we yo to churc h rt seems

·ARE A
RE C '&lt;U IT I NG I S
EA S Y BE CA U S E OE M S
HAVL
NO
C/\ SH
IN
VESTM E N 1
N O

CO LL E C T IN G
OR
DELI VER INC
C ALl
" COLLECT TO CAR OL DAY
(5\tU "4 S9 8395 or W RIT E
r R I r ~l 0 L Y
H 0 M E
PAR TI E'•
70 RA I LR OAD
AVE , I\LI3A NY
N
Y
1?!0 5
4 I SO tp

SOMEONE to lrv•' rn and c ar e
for l'ld ert v lady or s t ay at
lllqhts P IIOOC' /'!'/ 20 95 Of
997 36116
J J t 6tc
SOME O N ~

to lt v r •n wrt11
rlderly lady t o ~ 1 rore rn
for mu'10n c all 991 J,l57 ~

3 JO )IC

' HOME

[

J 78 (&gt;t c

:J&lt;.

9 a m

I

Ntn

WO R KERS '

1.60
weel(ly
&lt;l Cldrcss tn g
f'nvel o p es
Ru s h
se ll
a ddr esse d s larTlLJCd en
v~ tope
So u t11cr n Drvcr
~r f1 cd, 1206 Ci'4md('n Dr i ve .
R •c h r'no nct Vtr C/rnru 2322'9
.3 28 16 1p

.

loy

Auto ·Sales

mp ment Wanted

-

WILL
DO
bu rt drng
an d
r ernodclrrr g , r .1JO I 1ng .
plum broq , l u rnu r;. (' r cp11 1r,
oas or o rI or g~ne rot t repa ;r
F ree
es lr m a)e s
and
r ea'Sonable rate s Phone
Charl es Srn c 1~ tr , r 6 q l 985
&gt;'~171 or ~J9l :rn 1
1 ?8 121c

For Sale

1975

CHEVROLET Cl\ PR ICE

Cia ss i c co upe less th a n 7.000 m1les , deluxe be l ts, l tnted
gr.. ..• .. =li r r:an d r~1 oned. delu xe bumper s &amp; guard s,
rem ate LH ; R H m1rrors, 400·4 bbl. V-8, AM rad1o &amp;
I ape , (1ux l l•ghf lrt9 co mfortllt. dark red wrth black
VIO yl roof. hk e new - Ct rea ' sharpi e

L EG HORN H ENS , 60c each
w S M 1ch a el Ph one (0 14 )

16695

4 I Jtp
BOOT S BOOT S. Boots Boors
Men 's wo r k boots , s1ee1 toe
r-u bber , \14 9 5. leathe r
1i'l t9 5 Reg
1oe leather ,
$17 95 Western Boo ts S29 95
and le&lt;;s, M en ' s US l: d work
pcln l ., , Sl 09 , shirt's 'l"c .
BAILEY 'S , Mtd dle port
~ I 31!
CHE SS SET S, met al locato ,
alm os t new slrdc pro tecln ,
lla1r dryer , antique lamp
fJ!. htng reel. 52 g.; l t. lec
wa ter he ater , \1 5, Need s
bollom e lem ent
Cherry
l rnrsh d reso;e r
SSO Other
1lem s n11 11ey 's , Mrddleport
4 1 3tp

ONE FORM AL. s ue 9, l1ke
new M rs
Jean Gr ve st:&gt; r ,
992 ll65

1975 KAWASAK I 400 $600
Harley McDona l d , Gra.,.
Manor Apt , Apt 4, M rd
dl epor 1. Ohro
Ph,on .e 991
990J aft er 5 p m
4 1 Jt c

10

H P

SU PER

.
197 SC HEVROLET SUBURBAN

Real Estate for Sale
7 ROOM house wtlh balh , go od
loca tron lull base m ent , 39 1
South Second
Mr ddlcport
Ptlone 9Y7 2265 "
..- J21121p
16 1\CR E S. l bed r oom ho use ,
Rut l ,lnd arc:a
Ph on e 74 2
1796
JJI

Convert :tJie

Gra \l ely wrth Elec rro Sl ar t

soo. ev

GROCERY sro re

all

and 30 m ch mowe r ,
st ep down ge ar lor
garden u ~v
Call 992 7164
&lt;1f qc- ~ 5 p m
4 1 Jlp

ana
cqutprn ef"'t.
ltV Jn g
qua ri Ns p &lt;:~rlly f urnrsh ed .
nr.:wly remodel e d P h one
1·12 27 96
•

1972 HONDA J SO wrlh C)(! t as ,
yood Sha pe. \SOO Pt1 on e ' '' 2
3167 or 7,12 31 52
1 1 6tc

HOM E l or "&gt; ale , l 1vrng room ,

plus

3 3 1 Jlc
dm1n g room, 2 bedrooms ,
ktt C ht~ n. ta m 11y roo m and
bath Prt c ed to sell Phon e
f/ '1 '} 7394
3 31 41(

Wanted To Buy

Notice

For Sale or Trade

Misc. Sales

E.
MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .

-.·

WELDING
DEMONs·fRA 1 ION
A l l c~ ndm n rlc S1ore

April 7
201h

7:45 pm

Ceni L• t· y

VJef de r

Repr P.sontaflve.

Re fr eshme-nts and door
onzes
E""~e ryr&gt; n e
IS
We lcomr.

41

J JO p
GARAGE: SALE , Aprrl 2, J, 4
Jrm M a y's G ara ge. turn at
Ctlester onto Co Rd 25 , ~ ~
rn:l e 7 Fam i l y Sale
J JO 41 p

For Rent

J RM t urn 1!.t" Cd apt
pard , J5ti Nortll
Middlep or t

- --·-- --- -.J
Yard Sale
FAM I LY yru d sa lt&gt;
48 2
South J rd Ave , M lO Cl l eport ,
Oh to , ac r oss trom
F ord
Gara ge Saturday , A pr il 3, 9
ti l SOld OU f

It 1 11J1
-

- -

-

- - - -

't

Cab ba q e ,
caul rflo wer , bro cco l r, h ead
lettuc e and oan :; v plants
A l so .. an ton
se l~ .
se('d
potatoes of all var re1 1cs ana
a lull ltne of built garden
seeds
Hea :tquarler s also
for line proct u re M tdway
Mkt , Pomeroy , 992 2582
J 28 301 c

----.

3303l p GOODHAY , ncverwel Phon e
949 2523 '
,I ROOM S a nd bath plus utility
J ?5 12 t c
r oo rn screened 1n por ch
f orcecl ~~ r heal Pho n e 997
COAL , lrrnesto n ~ dnd alll(pe s
563 0
of sa lt and rock sa t I tor rc(!
3 30 61 c
and snow renio va l
Ex
-- ·
ce tsro r Salt Works , Ea!ot
EN JO Y g ra c tou s l rv rnQ at Marn 51 , 1-'om cr oy llh ro
VIllage Manor ·- tn M1d
Phone 992 .3 891
dl cp ort for as low as SlJ O
p er
mo nt h
w . 111
ol 1
, 11 7 l i e

--

·-

.... 7

2 FAMILY lne:Joor Yard Salo ,
Th urs da y and F1 rday , baby
c lothe s 1 househola 1tems
and m rs ...
Ca ll li~ "J 390 5
Watch for s•g n~ m 3 v r ac l. s ~
4 1 2t p

--

- - ---

u tl.!l1!.tl_

-

u P p I

Headquarter s

---- -~ ---- -

•

5

---- ----7 - ------

PCJM i' ROY LA NDMARK
't'. Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
&amp;;,!~
Phone 992 -2101

4

UT1Ilt 1es

F ounh ,

MIDDLEPORT

G A R 0 E N

8. a 1d,.

_These

a1 e bran d ne w h1g 1· q u &lt;'lt rty
apartm ents a t pri CC[&gt; yo •;
can af for d Y\IUf" r en l in
elu des montl'l to• rn o n th
tease s , all elec
l 1v rng,
c arpe t rng , • r:ange
and
· refrigerato r , tru:&gt; trash
prck up cabl e TV .:,t you r
exp e n'&gt; c .
~110
·o n s rte
lau~ C' r y
t a cr l r l 1e s
Con
11enr cnt to shvpp,no wn ihr rd
and M tl l ~lr e c t s n M rd
dlepo rl See th e m an rll:Jf'r at
R•· " r ~ tde ApMtrn en t!) or
~ Clll 997 .327 3
~urn r s h ccf
apdrtments
Me
a ls o
F~-..a r lab le

~

/ 78t c

--- - -

_Q......,_

--~

---

Recenfly renovated, 2 BR,
bath , uhl1ty
R , full
ba sem ent. NG forced arr

heat Carport Sl3.000.
RUTLAND - 2 BR , bath ,
rJ i n 1ng

R , por ches, garage.

ver1rble hnrdlop, p b , p s
atr , all elec, new paint
Phone 992 6154
•I I 6tc

307 , 1 ~ ton ,
p1ckup wit"' ca mQt. r she ll
Phone 992 7232
4 1 41 c
CH EVY

--- ~

--

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

I..F'·h

9Y!_ 21-74

FREE

Pome§

_

'

I

N EW b r l"ve l hom e, 3 bedrm .
burl! rn k rtc h en
car pet
bas-eme n I ,
g rnage , , rn
bc1sem enl
lo c at ed b'elirn d
g r ad e sc h oo'l. L o ng ST ,
Ruflanel , OhiO
See MilO
Hu i ChiSOn , or ph one '42

2l06

New

P LA IN S,

f inanci ng

$2 1,9011' Pn cne
6l04

M I)( CON o:. i\' e - ,~ c.­
delrv.ere d rrghl Jo y our
prolec;t f-ast Cl r'1d easy F r ee
estrmales
Phone ~92 3284,
Gne qle tn Rea,dy !Jp)to 'Co' ,
M1 u dlepor t U r11b
6 JO lie

avarlablf! ,,
~

14 2otp

VIrgil B. Sr . Broker
110 Mecha nic Pom eroy, 0 .
Phone 992·332S
AI most

&lt;1 acr~s

w 1th

2 sepf1c

!a nks and tra1l er . A real

buy al $8,500
CONVENIENT - N1ce 3
B R. older hom e m pnm e
locatton . Hot wpter heat,

' fu ll ba semen! &amp;) mod

krl

Just S19.500
O;tT OF FLOOD - Mod . 2
B R 's, new dr eam k tt .,
bath, nat gas heat, patro
and large l evel lot Barga1n

North·South vulnerable

t.

.

Ph. (61-f) 985-4102
I

2 12-lmo.

Need new r oof or old
r epair er!"' • l ou se, root.
b arn, stt i t1 gr HS, build up,
pat nf rng, !f11J c1rtca l work',
gu1ters &amp;
downspo ut s,
I u rna..:es, wa t l:!r heaters,
water soft (le r s, rn~ tall ed &amp;
r epai r ed, S e~,o·,aye
C011t us at 9119-~ 882
or 949-2203

AND
WILL

7RUER
FRIEHDS

rentals, 2 rcn 1ed on 1st
floor wi th good 1nc ome

big

k rt ,
na t . gd s, F A furnace , vast
corner lot , dbl garage r~nd
large shade tr ees Cm !y

I

Modern Sanrr ar ron
or 99 2 73.19

992 3954

JjEXTTO STORE - Large
12 r oom s ~, t th all u•·h tres
near new restaurant Good
loca t ion lor ren l mg MSklng

--J. .l...- -- -~ ~- - -

SEW I~G

MACHIN E Repa1rs,
se r vice , all mak.es 99? 22A4
' The Fa brrc Shop, P ~rne roy
Au thorized Srnger Sn les and
Se r- vice
We
sharpen
Sqssors
J 29-1f c

--~ ----- ~--

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

ExcAVATING ,

l llture invest ment

..
'".""""

B ILL
PULLIN S, PHONE 992 2478.

DAY OR N IGHT

_____ _____ _

2 22

rJJ.

"'

WHERE

IS OOP '!'! I
GO!TA FIND HIM!

2i~
.'
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...
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AUCTION

You fed
himthis
morninq'

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SAT APRILJ

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AUC TIONEE RS

521 p

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Real Estate Fo1 Sale

'
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8 A.'f' •• The Noon Report,

6 RM hou se 1n Middlepor t ,

.

'a;

.

FRANKLY, ALI6TAIR1
I THINK SHE'S
Fll PPED OUT !

SHE WANTS 10 STAY ON
H:JR THE '1MOON LADY '
13ALL1 AND SHES DP
516N ING A GOWN FOR

ME, BUT .SHE WON'T

LETMEoEEIT
UNTil. IT'S

FIN/SilEO/

•''

..
.,..,.

and 5 P.M. "'

WHY NOT J UST GO
ALONG WITH HER?
YOU [7() TRUST
HER .JUD0MENT1
DON'T YOU?

1

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I.ONGFEI, LOW

DBDSZW

I

done b y N IASE cert mechanics .

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Mon. , Tues., Wed.&amp; Sat.-8:JOtil5:00
THURSDAY tll12. NOON
.', .

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'TATER DON'T

..
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FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

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SPILL FOOD ON
TH' FLOOR. NO
MOIRE, ELVLNEY
'

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HE'S
BIB I MADE TH MESSY
.'
GROWIN'UP, LEETLE VARMINT
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LGBZ . - ABLSEM ABPOSUW
Yesterday ' s Cryptoquote: BORROW, TROUBLE FOR
YOURSELF IF THAT IS YOUR NATURE, BUT DON'T r.END
IT TO YOUR NEIGHBORS.- RUDYARD KIPUNG
(I&gt; 1171 Khll P•&amp;wra Srndlak, ~nc . )

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A COLl.I~ION DUE TO
'THE DE.ED OF A
Ml~CHIEVOLI5 C- H ILD.

Now arranre the cln:led letten

j .j· I. eurreoted
to form the eurpriH ONwer, u
.
b)' the obo•e culo!&gt;n•
A::N ~ "K

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(AAI•en

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l•mbl•" PORGY UNCAP INFORM MANIAC

Yeeterday't

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one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary word!.

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Unscramble t~e•• roor Jumbleo,

.CRYPTOQUOTES

HXZ

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ilr:'!!:!!!!

\111\INl fi)'il ~ -1-'.J .....
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One tell er simply slands for another ln thiS sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes the l ength and form ation of the words are :.11
hints Each d~y the code lett ers arc different

X

33.

4:!&amp;-Movie "C laudi a a nd David" 3.
5· 3()-Movle "Gun law" 4
6.DO-Movle "The Countv Cholrman" 3.

'rt•

COUt;&gt;ON .

Carrascol end as

0()-Truth or Con sequ ences J ; To Tell The Truth 4;
. Law rence welk 8; Bowling tor Dollars 6, Aviation
Wea l her 33, News 10; Don Adams Screen Test 13;
Family ACfalr 15, Ohio Journal 20,
7.3()-Porler Wagoner 3; Treasure Hunt 4; Can did
Ca mera 6: C:venlng Ed ition with Ma rtin Agronsk y
?0; $25,000 Pyramid 1p; To Tell The Truth 13. Popl
Goes The Co untry IS; Black Perspecti ve on th e
News 33.
s·oo-Sanford and Son 3,4,15; Donny and Mar ie 6,13;
Sara 8, Washington Week In Rev iew 20,33; World
of fhe Bea ver 10;
8 3()-The Practice 3,4, 15, Wall Street Week 20,33
9:DO-Rockford Files 3,4,15; Movie ",~ Flstlul of
Collars" 6:13: Movie "Heifer Skelter 8.1 0; Firing
Line 20 ; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
10;0()-Pollce Story 3,4, 15, News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33.
10 3()-Avlallon Weather 20
11 0()-News 3.4,6.B, 10, 13.15; AB C News 33.
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Rookl,~s 6, 13; Movi e
"Farewell, Frie nd" 8, Movie Terror In the
Jungle" 10, Janak l 33
l2 ·4()-0on Kirshner's Rock Concert 6; Ironside 13.
1·00-Midnlghl Special 3,4,15. Mov ie " Macabre" 10
1·4()-News 13
•
2 3()-News 3; Movie " Kino Kong Escapes" 4.
7

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :
AXYDL 8 AAXR

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Daughter 13.

4 oo-Movie ''The Sergeant Wa s A lady" 4.

is

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EXPANDED WEEK DAY NEWSCASTS

H OO c: for '&gt; ale by prt-..atE
o wn er ,
31 •
a c r es.
bedro oms. barn on bl acktop
road , g ;, c; .:. n d wiJifl r PhonE
9d9 20 23

Hosiery

shade
9 Island
(Fr .)
10 Magazine
feature
(abbr.)
16 Recowoted
18 Weather·
cock

"

3 OO:..Movie "C ate M et ropo l e" 3.

' ,1

.,

8

19 See 3
30 ·untouchDown
abies, in
20 " Butterflies
India
- Free"
31 Approximate
21 Oui,
32 Athirst
trans33 Fail the
lated
mark
23 Summon
35 Electrical ·
24 "Roscoe"
WJit
25 Cereal
36 Taro root
plant
37 " 0 Sole - "
( obs.)
38 Air (comb.
26 Yield .
form) ·

40 Gaelic
41 Unfasten
42 Whale oil
cask
DOWN
·I Trousers
measurement

,.
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ON

tl)ppers

Yeslerday's Answer

river

~ :I

HEAR NEWS FIRST

Phone 949 2862 ,
,I
3 3 1 4tc

(2 wds.)

Guido's
note
35 Negligent
38 Twtltery
39 South
Carolina

•
I·-:
- ,.
'

Son Dave

film star

~4

.'

COL R E. Knotts

3 SUent ·
4 Egyptian
solar
deity
5 Silent and
'talkie film
star
(2 wds.)
6 Lassoes
7 King

.

'

8.10.
3·0()-Another
World 3,4,15, Gene ral Hosp,Ita I 6•13'•
· All In The Family B, 10; Black Journa l 20.
J· 3()-()ne life to Live 13; Ml ckev Mouse Club 6; Match
· Ga me 8,10 ; Black Perspective on Ihe News 20.
4 00'-Miste r Cartoon J , Merv Grlllln 4; Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6: Mickey Mouse Cl ub 8; Mister Rogers
20,33; Movie " Botany Bay" 10; Dinah! 13 .
4 30-Bewltched 3; Mod Squa d 6; Part1dge Family 8;
Sesame Slreet 20.33; Fllntstones 15
5·oo- Bonama 3; Family Aff a1r 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3()-Adam -12 4,13 ; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Electric Company 20,33.
6:0()-N ews 3,4,8,10, 13, 15; ABS: News 6: Zoom 20,33.
6·3()- NBC News 3, 4, 15; ABCJiews 13; Andy Gr iffith 6:
CBS New&gt; 8,1 0; Hodge podge Lodge 20;

"tresses

"'I

fa r m

lh e Jacobys" c are of this
newspaper Th e .Jacobys w11/
answer md1vidual qu estions
11 stamped, sell-addresse d
envelopes are enclosed The
mos t mterestlng qu est10ns
w1/l be used m this column
and w•ll rece1ve cop1es of
JA CO BY MOD ERN )
·'

29 Tsia or
oolong
30 Tempo
33 S1mba's

'

the Estate of thll!
Van Buzzard con sisting of household good s,
~ e l lin g

a quest1on

(Do you have

lor the e•perts? Write "As k

"

Lyra

IIi

la ,· e

marh i n er y
.!l nd
m rs cel lan ec us Fr orn Stale
Route 1 on the Po meroy .
Middleport By pass., ta Ke
Route 143 about 15 m1l es to
the rai l r oad c r-os s. rr.g In
Ca rp enter fh~rr 'urn le f~
on County Read 10, go ll '2
m 1tes
Wat r "l for St11e
Sig n s The Md mi n• slral er
1c1 e Buzzard 'l rll 11lso off er
the 119 acre '-'::~ rm lor sate
pr iv ately on day of sate.

He's just a pupp~ ~

Has to be fed
twice
a da4!

,. ...,'

St ar ting At 10 AM
R arn or Shme

a, 10 ~ Farmer's

'

11.3()-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; H;lppy Days 13; Love
of Life 8, 10, Sesame Street )0,33.
II 55- Take Kerr 8; Dan !me l's Wor ld 10.
12.00'-Magn lfl cent Marbl e Machine 3, 15; l et' s Make
A Deal 13; Bob Braun 4, News 6,8, 10.
12 :3()-Take My Advi ce 3,15; All My -Chi ldren 6, 13;
Search- for Tomarrow 8, 10.
12s: 4&amp;-Eiectrlc.Company 33
1
12:5.&gt;-NB C News 3,15.
1:0()-News 3 Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young, a nd The Restless lu . Nol For Women only
15.
d R
l .J()-Da ys of Our Lives 3,4, 15. Rhyme an
easqn
· 6,13, As The Wor ld Turns B. lO.
2 00'-$20.000 Pyramid 6.13.
2 3()-Doclors 3,4,15; Neighbor s 6, 13; Guiding Light

2 In motion

I Light bulb
name
5 On the house
11 Tennis star
12 Setting
13 Detail
14 First game
of the
season ,
15 FUMY
Caesar
16 - bien
17 Plains
Indians
vehicle
19 Disburse
22 Geological
epoch
23 Skin
opening
24 Large under·
takings
• (2wds.)
27 River of
England
28 Star in

"\')l 1 HECK

·il....,,....:

.

L- -WR:lTESEL:· ro-;,fing,

~(J\CHiNU 1

ACROSS

. '
•"i. I ,

Service

FR IDAY: APRIL 2, tm
6:oo-S unrlse Semester IQ
6 !&amp;-Farm Report 13 .
6·2()-B iue Ridge Quartet 13.
6: 3()-Columbus Today 4; News 6: Sunrise Semestor 8,
Farmtlme 10
6 4~un ce oC Prevention 10
6·4&amp;-Mornlng Repor t 3.
6:55-Chuck White Rworts W,...{;QQ.Ii Morning, Trl
. State 13
·
7:0()-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning , America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny and Friends 10.
7:3()-School les 10
8 oo-Lassle 6, Cap tain Kangaroo 8. 10; Sesame Street
33.
• 8.3()-Big Valley 6.
9·0()-Not For Women Only 3,, Phil Donahue 4, 15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning With D. J. 13.
9:3(}-A.M. 3; One li fe lo live 6; Tattletales 8: Mike
Douglas 13.
10·0()-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15, Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Rlghf B, 10.
10 :3()-H igh Roll ers 3,4. 15; Dlnahl 6.
11 :00- Wheel oC FOrtu ne 3,15; Weekday 4; Gambit

~MJ·~by THOMAS JOSEPH

~ ~-

PUBliC

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

W I LL CIO Odd fObS , r oo f rng ,
parntrng, ha~t~lrn g , trcewor~
and .,m ow i n g Ca ll 99 2 7409
J l 2olc

Good .through April 8, 1976

FREE S ·,

9A CKHut::s

IN S TAL L ED

rou r ,l g .
con
plumbrng and
10b too l arge or
Phone 742 2348
J 19 26tc
_,_...,

next to sc hoo l N ew shi ngle
roof. $5500 Pho ne 99 2 7~75
4 1 Jtc

-

AND DOZER LARGE AND
SMA LL. SEPTIC TANKS

WILL
c;O
struc t ro n ,
h eatmg No
too srnal!

new rep a~r
or 949 21!'1!)

-

Pass

...:,..,.;,.--;=-:::-,

·-

11 3()-Johnny Carson 3.4,15; Mannix 6, 13; Movie "Tho
· Lawyer" 8. Movie " Bitter Sweet" 10; Janakl 33
12 4()-Maglclan 6,13.
1: oo-Tom or row 3,4
1. 50-News 13.

A Florida reader wants to
know what the rule is when.
alter a hand is dealt, h1d, and
a few cards have been played.
it is discovered that one hand
has too many and one too few
cards .
The answer is tha t the hand
is a misdeal and is thrown in

• " In the '20s the best auction
bndge in the world was played
at New York's Kni ckerbocker
Wh1st Club Culbertson and
~tJ.R2~· Sims were two of the best, bul
many oth ers c~tnbut ed
tremendous help 1n gettmg
contract bndge on its feet
One was Ted Lightner Ted,
who Is now 82 or 83. play s
rubber bridge at The Regency
Wh1st Club severa l da ys a
week.
The best known of his many

.:.....
S'

Courteous
c.___s_~_,rvic~ 1 • •d

..&lt;.. - ---~-----

IUS! $7500 00
V.A. nothing do wn, ot hers 3
PcJ. See us now for your

:t§:

PH. 992-6010

D &amp; D lREE Tr rmmtn g, 20
yea r s exper;en ce Ins ured,
fr ee estrmates Call 9?2 238&lt;1
or ~6 14 1 698 7757 A lbany
10 15 tt c

B RADFORD . Auctron eer
Comptet" Serv rc e
Ph one
949 7487 or 9 49 2000 Ractne .
Ohto Cr 111 Brildford
10.9 lfc t

24 Hour

REMQDELING ,
!--' ,.,rn01n9 ,
h eating and all ty pes cit
gener al
r eparr
Work
guaranteed
20 year s ex
p errence Phone 992 2409
6 1 lfc

farm l and , farrly 990d
!ences, large 4 B R home, 2
farm pond s, rrr rn t&gt;rols, on
!57 ,"lrres

~··

J l 1 261c

E XC 1-\ VATIN G , dolr.r, lo;,u..,-, sep trc
an ' t b ackhr:H wor~
r ank s
m stat ted . du mp
t ruck s and lo hoys for hir e,
wdl ha ul l rll d1 r t, lop so rl ,
11mestone and grave l Ca ll
Bob or Roger Je ff ers, day
nho .... .: 11'1 :: 7nrrl l.rr, r • rhon e
9rn 3515 or o; n :&gt;&gt;1'l
2 11 l ie

H

"
""·

N EE o a plas t er er ? Call Joe
Custer , 992 3550

9 18 lfc

- --

'CAB

I·

SE PTi c- lA-NKS ~~~~d

1..

...
,,,

'
'

MIDDLEPORT

Tupp e r s Pla rn s Che!&gt;ler
Wi!kr D1slt tel n ow se ll my
bu l k water to tan ks on
l ruck s at our new of1 1c e 1
Located on St ~ t 7
1 Mrie North of
Eastern H1g l1 School
Serve You rse lf Drspenser
T ~Kt ng quarlers only one
at a lime , for 250 gallo n~ of
water
Open all the Trtne
fo r your co nven rence 1
1 l 1mo

Pass
Db I

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

I'
I'

~AVE

318-lm o

NEW

BULK WATER
AVAILABLE

Souih

2.

'
',.

Pass

~E

Ra t l'1t&gt;, O hio

.

I•

Opemng lead - 10 •

-·-·
"-..

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

'

North Ealt

Pass

.:!.., 10 J'Mo

BISSELl BUILDERS

E LWOO D BOW E P (j ~ EPAI R
- s wet?pers . toaste r !&gt;, tr ons .
a ll small app 11 an ces Lawn
mower . ne xt to Stat e Hrgh
way Gvr ag e on Rout e 7
Phone WI S 3825

at 112.900
BUSINESS BUILDING - 3

to read SOLD?

•a

Wt&gt;s t

Ph il'1 -1993

homes Nice lot s a v;;.ilable
i~ nice locat1ons.

I

R EA 0 Y

3

(6 14 1 667

TEAFORD

Work

tAKQJ4 3

I IJ.OIJDER WHAT SH~
~N-JT 6'1 TfiAH

Pass 5 A
Pass Pass

'

,LARRY
lAVENDER
Syrac use, Ohro

Take advantage of our
pnc es. Quality built

I I 16 IIC

bedrm
., . r •.(' . c.r ;-. ~ ted
range , garag e, I&lt;H YO lots

Want that FOR SALE .

• 4l

'
'·

ctn odd

O ' DE LL A. lrnem enl loc a l ed
bch rnd
Rutland
G rade
Sc hool
Tu11eur brak es.
whee l balaflcrn g , Jlrne m ent
Phon e 7d1 200 d

3 23 tfc

'

SOUTH CDI
• K Q 10 8

I

GUTTERS AW NING S

SAVE MONEY?

• t 982
"'AKJ 97S2

'I·

I.

RfPL A C E MENT
WINDOW S
ALUMI NUM
S IOIN G- SOFFITT

Rutland 742 -23] 1
Roger Wam sle v
J -1· 1 mo

• 10 9 8 7 6 2

LOSER

'

'Blown

EAST
. 742

tiD J

'·
'•''•
''

ESTIMATES 1

WEST
A5 3

"'10 6 4

'·'·

j

•

t 65
• QJ

'

Sl O RM
WINDOW S &amp; DOORS

R&amp;J COINS

lobs , roof rng ,
parntrng , haul rng , treew ork ,
and m'owm g Ca ll '192 7409
3 28 lie

W IL L

3 '16701 (

• C.. II For Appointment

..

Insuliltion-Services

F or Sa l e

A A J 9~

.AKQJ5

.

F111ancm g Avadub l e
Blown tn to W a li s &amp; AHtcs

WANT TO

Check Ot. fo ur Car!
With purchase of oi l and filte r charge.

a~

R ild tator Sllec 1it lrst

or

3 17 l n; ..,

7648

w.aoo

"
'

contribulions to the game IS
the Lightner slam double
Th ts double means th at when
your opponents bid a slam on
th eir own steam you a re ask·
mg yo ur partner to make an
unusual lead. rather tha n the
one yo u wou ld norm~ ll y
make.
Here IS a simple example of
th1 s bid which every expert
use s today W1thoul th e
Lightner double West would
open a club Eas l would take
lhe first tnck an~ South lhc
rest After the double, ,West
leads a heart a nd poor South 1s
one tr•ck short of Ius cont ract.

NORTH

J=

Btggs

~I at h a n

Fo r Rc nl

Ph. 949-2404

-

on LinCO l n Hgts 2
bed r ms, large k1tchen ,
targ ~ bd SI'ment , ex. ce l lent
bq for $9 ,200 W rl l'l fur
nttur e, Sl0 .700 .Phnn e 992

1

.~

j

San Francisco 6,13, Movie " Heller S ke lt~r" 8,10;
Hollywood. Television Theatre 33.
,
10:0()-Harry-0 6,13.
10:3()-News 20. Reall dodes 33.
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8,10.13. 15; ABC News 33 .

I

Lightner double sets slam

....

t

sm a l 1es1 H€!.eter Cor e ..

HOU SE

large porches, and a sun porch, g ara ge '"a!u~ al ga s
furna ce i~ ver y ~t ... Jm h..(l :.. i 2~· t · (" '- " "
1~ ,,• , 1n

J

-·

Det~&gt;ct.,r ~

OPEN TUES TH'IU SAT .
6:10 Tr lll O· OO

____

to wn

1

--=-

-= rom the lurges t Truck o'r
Oulldozei*"R.adla or to the

bur red
trea!&gt; u re .
F1nd
Corns, nngs, si lver. gold .
Coin &amp; M etal

Italian-Style Pizza

HOU SE • r oom~ c&gt;,.,d t&gt; n th , 1
car b lock garage o n 1 , acr e
ground , $lfi , ~OO Ph one 992

nea r

]4

WIN AT BRIDGE

..

~Movie " Slaughterhouse-Five " 3,4, 15; Streetsof

9
SUT TH IS I~ WHAT 5 HE .
1-00K S •t~e NOW·!

I&lt;AL &amp; fU5~ ~

"

•

BUY , SELL or TRADE

Ca ll 1n ord ers attd pt ck up
'" twenty mtnutcs .
Lo c;, t ed at l29·lrd Street
Racrne , Ohto

Real Estate for Sale.

floor, 3 nicely paneled bedrooms on the 2nd tloor . al•o 2

Plees~ note that ~ !I !'. ~se men!, garug!! .
porr.b, rumrna!J~ . r; nd yard sa les now must
be p1 ; ;~ for 1n ) dv an ce. Ad ver ti se ahead of
l imP. I y p la cin~, y1. ut ad 1r. e ~rly by stopping
by O•Jr office on 111' Coull St., Pomeroy or
phonin g 992-2 1~6 for the cost. of your ad and
mail ynpr re mlf liln : e in.

I

COINS

PIZZA stiOP

3 28 6tp

kit chen with bui lt tns , 2 bath r ooms, 21Jedrooms on first

AnN ! !f ! ALL HOUSEWIVES

'

.. -

~·

-

SAM'S

2257

LOOK -

••

R

f 16 1 mo

3 23 1 mo

j
mo

CAPl'~ EASY
CONFOUND IT! D~ ' T
KE:EP US DANGLING,
FARQUAIO:! W~AT '~
HAPPENED TO MISS

.,

'

PH. 992-6 173

Automobile and
Truck Repair
State Rt. 124
-;·oNard kulland
Pomeroy, Oh io 45769
Phone:· 992 -5682

saoo

only $11 ,000
5 BEDROOMS - Th1&gt; n1ce I'" stor y hon1e has a large
; ' l lv! ng room with shiny oak floor l ng, dining rooiJ11 nice

Would )'OU bel ie ve

.

~~ow accepting chenls
for bookkeeping and
tax service..

GARAGE

1969 C H EVY , Ch rom e r rm s,
1achomeler , new lt r es ,
Also , J964 For d G a la xre 500
$200 Phone ?47 21 69 or 247

$35. 000
REAL NICE -- 3 neal large
B R 's, bat h. large uti lily ,
front porch. and large lot
lor garden 0•1 Jy $19,500.
LARGE FA~M
Gv0d

the cou n try , 3 la rg e bedrms , lar ge Sf'JclC IOus llv 1ng
room , drnmg room.~kitchen wi th bullt.ins, bath. a nd
utility room 2 c ar cone rete block garage, garden sp ace
and stra wberry p~tc h , al most l acre of land Where?
About 5 minutes fr om Pomeroy on Co Rd . 30 Prrced

06
614-~'ll-22
•

&gt;.-:!..

ACCOUNTANT

Sup r cm e

for ced at r heu t &amp; a~r co nd
N eeds 3 or &lt;~ pa rtrt1 ons, a
sh ower or tub
Do 11

'CENTRAL REALTY CO.

8

..--------ROGER HYSELLS

3 1? r f c

rlt.\

.'

'

11110 CUTt 'J \5~
Phone 9'1 'i 111 0

TUP PER ~

•

·-')

Phone day or night

LARRY WHOBREY
PUBUC

3 17 ·1 mo

197 1 DU STER 6 c yl , 3 spee d ,
fa tr c ond rtto n Phone 992
7126 or con ta c4 218 Co ndor
St , Pam er o y
.3 2&gt;1 61p

..•.

I

Bowling tor Dollars 6; Space : 1999 6; News 10;
Let's Make A Oeall3; Family Altair 15; Anyone foo
Tennyson? 2() ; Family At War 33.
.
7. 3()-Hollywood Squares 3.•: Ohio Stale Lollery 6,
l::venlog Edition \'fl1h Marti~ Agr~nsky 20; Wj)c .
Kingdom 10: 'To Tell The Truth 13; ·Music 'Cit)
u·s A 15
8 ()()-Mac Davis 3,o, 15; Wel come Back, Koller 6, 13;
Waltons 8, )e; Moon For the Misbegotten 20: The
Way II 'Was 33. ·
8 3()-Barney Miller 6, 13; Lowell Thomas Remembtlrs

191~

5·oo-Bonanza 3; Family Altair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3()-Adam-12 4, 13, News 6 ; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
• E lectrlc Compa ny :ZO,JJ.
6:QO-News 3,4,8,10, 13, IS; ABC News 6; Zoom 20. lTV
Utilization 33
6 3()-NBC News 3,o, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias, Yoga
and You 33.
J cllO-Truth or Consequences 3, To Tell ne Truth 4,_,

.••''

Rt , 3, Pom pr::,.,, Ohro 45769

2 19 1 mo

THURSDA'(, APRIL 1,

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

Sa les and IMtallaf!¥1

Watch for List of
Item s later.

1969 ( 60C H EVRO L E f Durnp
tr uck 1&lt;1 f! bed, and cheater
axle Good co ndtl ron Phone
(614) 66 7 6JO•I
3 76 121p

ENORMOUS - 4
&lt;8 R 1::,, 2 baths, mod

yourself $7,000
PROPERTIES
ARE
" f:LL:NG FA ST ·- WE
NEED LI STI NGS
992-2219 or 992-2568

•

Ph . '49-2023 or 8.0·1661

10 . 00 a .m.

1963 FOR 0 E:cono l. ne van , J
speed , Phone 74 2 2190
3 26 6tc

Lot 50xl00 Close to sc hool
$8 ,500
CHA RM
PLU S
DURABIL ITY - Stone &amp;
bmk Staled lloor s, NG

I liJS IN YOUr! HAl~ - LOOK HER E. 2 •tor1 home in

Chester Oh io .

-----

1966 OLDSMOBILE 98 con

___ ,_

paper

.

Orange Twp . Vo lunteer
Ftre Dep.lrtmenf w111 t'lold
_,.a cons i gnment auct1on at
th e fi re house localed 1n
Tuppers Pl&lt;tln s, Clh10 on
Apn l 17th begmniny at

1966 FAL CON-Staf,on Wagon
6 cy l s to a•r good co n
,j Iron P hone 992 7826
,
4 l 3tp

75rl7

paneling,

hanging etc.

AUCTION 5ALE

4 I Jl p

,--

Ad d r~t~ns,

4 1 1 mo .

41C

S IOC k.S

up .

-

!973 DUL&gt;UE DART spo rt 340,
metallrc gree n , 40,000 m i les
Call 9 J9 2376

197C.

roofwg,

614-84l -2 621

POMEROY, OHIO

3 16 1fc

,.

"

•&lt;"'(

kFr
·pet ing and tnstallatton
We ' II br ing 'S arftples to your
ho me w1f h r.o oh11ga11on .
Se e how you can really
'" veMtke Young , Manager

ca r peting, pa rnttng , mtmg,

or by contacting
R Cod ner . Owner

I

-~----

....d

foundahon

:~!~~~~~.~~

I

CON ST~UCiiON

.,...
•••
•
I
I

I Sl~AN·~ I

D&amp;D

From a shelf to a tJovse. il •
types of burl.ding a.,rt:l
remodeltng
f r om
tl1e

FRI . - SAT .- ~UN.

POM~~~~,~~!,O,R., CO.@)
f-?o qr~terc d Collrf' Stud
~ll v /cc , St CHdlJS!
Kr n y
P hone (61&lt;t l 985 4 7~8

-

TRAVEL TRAILERS
OPEN

..

AKf

.

SALE &amp;RENTAL

Rc·d nrrd wh i t e frn1sh , doub le arr , lo~;~d.,ed w1th ever y
( he v oplron, low mileage, never l1tled, Co Demo
SIIC ker Over sa.ooo 00

Pets

f.AM PERS

RAINBOW RIDGE
CBash an Mea)
LONG BclTTOM

'

15295

REGISTERED 1 2 and J •
Arabtaf"'
m ., u·~
~nd
geld 1ng s, Da! m a t ton Pu p s
See Esk ey H ill, F lat woo d s
Road , Pomeroy Ohrq or
PhOne 992 38 85
" 1 l ie

98 5 l956

CODNER'~

.

•

Television log for easy t'zewrng

•
,,,

'

.

'lt r'1 rllm O':il h f&gt; :J r- your
yQ rtP •.ttlg rnll Of&lt;l~ o f you r
IDvvr rt ( sowts
' Wh c 11 we
MODERN Walnut conso le
rtil q('! to H · ~v ~&gt;n "
AM F M radro , 4 s p eed
fl CO n 'i Q!BIJO r IO M ~ VOU 1\re
ch anger Balance $10J 10 or I }'} ACRES Phon e 742 2359
n0v. " 'rrgu' o P' n-. ~ g r ea t
terms Call 'i'ft 1965
3 30 30tp
HPth enly c .u.r
,f I tt c
OLD f urn rt ure, 1C1.! bO&gt;&lt;P"Wh ... n w ' QO h C .r l (' II !'.C C I'I'l &amp; you
br a ss
t:l~l s .
old
wa ll
AI30U T 3' • a cres of un
~hould
be t'ler e rn you r
re tP phones i'lnd parts
or
(0/.L I Uf.&lt; ;, /\L E ( 110 Co.11
(Jev e lop ed land. consrs t mg
ta vorJir r 'l a•r , b u t C' \I C·n th f•
compleiC"rhouseh ol dS Wr rf r
Compa ny , I m df' nur ill ol
of about 14 lots . each 50 fl rn
h rr t1• s r~:m to say " 9one
M
n • Mi ll er
Rl
/,
Cllcs t~~r e on Rt 7 Pre].. your
wid t h and over: 150 fl rn
gon e '
Pom er oy. Oh•o l.11 1 99 ?
own , ~1 0 per lor • Op en 6 dc~y&lt;;
d eplh Ha s crl y warer , and
'I ll• tha n k God !Or our ye ars
ll bO
pt•r Ne e~o, , or ci'! ll t n ll ) 361
sanrtary sewerage Can b e
IOIJethcr
for
pr• •cro u!i
1310 lor lur l hr&gt;r tn for rT1a lr on
h&gt;~anccd Phone 992 5786 b e
m{'nr or C~.,jt.ld tu rhe gl ac!
l 8 /!jl(
lwe rn I a no 5 p m
1 ('LJn ron 6i!Y ll Wat1rng t.~
J~ 28 61C
Si! d ,· ·n r'i li e&lt;t by his w1te and WCU L' D l rke 10 b u\1 QOOd u~·· o
rnanure s prea d('f
f ' honr FORO )f"' lra c tor , over' hi"ul ,
l ('lrr. rl ',
1\ q ~ r n w e Wt&lt;; h to
$1.150 . Ford Jubi l ee l ra o or . SACRIFICE
Q9? 1106
By owner .
th~ itl&lt;
all nu r W.)n ~1 r!ul
,1 ,750 . Ford 861 lrt!lclor wrth
l JQ "• IC
N ow Haven \Nes r Vrrgr n ta ,
nerr Jhr;or ~ . our ftlt.nd ~ and
loader
~ 7 3 50
All1s
.mr'J dPrn all n l~&gt; r trt -:= three
the d tffert•rn ·· hu r ctw~ to r
TIM BEI&lt;''
rop
pr I'"
TCir
Ch~ t mer ~
w o 45 •ra c tor
s t or y
brt c k
apa r tmt:n t
lh€.' tr rnany rJe e t\ S of krnd
~l,lndr ntl ' "lll.ler ( All ' 61 1
w rde lr o nr en d 'lil , 2!10. Used
bu rh.J11r y Four 3 bedr oom
nt&gt;s ~ ro u !&gt; &lt;~t tn a t t lnr e
116 B570
1 x 14 ' plow , ~ 17 5 use d 5 II
ilncl lwo 7 bedroom apart
J l l1p
J pt ifi)lary muwcr , $18 5 ,
, ' 1/ (
ments Dec ordtPd plaste r ed
Hew Idea hay condrl10ner ,
wall s Compl f' le Yo ungs
(A~H pdrd lor all ml!I&lt;('S and
\ .tSO . l r1d rn1 l awn m owers.
towr.l kr!cliens wtlh dtsposa l
models o f mobl l t' hOn1 es
\JS Sil O Lud:-c tl Farm
unrt s Storm wrndows and
AU CliO N Mas on ~\u ctr on
Ph on e nreil cod e 61 •1 &lt;t? J
EQu rpmPnt Ph one ( 61 d) 698
dOo r s Bur ldrng c ornp ' el ely
Hou ~c.
Ma son
w Va
?) ll
1031
or
698 788 1,
W
rns u l a le d , Ir on! Jnd r ear
Fr ld i'ly , /qJr d 7. . a t 1 p m
.1 IJ t f c
Was hrn g1on Sr , Albany
c nlrance s Bca ul rfu ll y land
Con'&gt;ignmen t s w 0 lc ome
J
28
?61C
sc aped , or rval e parkrng lot
Phon 11 9~? 1 ol07
Fo ur c~p ar -t nH'fliS
com
~ 1 21c
pte tel y lurntshed
Sr1~ o f
AM rM radro FM srereo , a
proper ty 160 f l x. 110 feet
SH OOllr\IG MAT C H , P u11and 35 HP E\lrnrude m o to r . 14 11
track tape pl oye r w rth
Frv P year co nst ru c TIOn jOb '
Gun C lrJ!;,, New Luna Ro a d
spc ak.ers . t urn tabl e and
boa!, d ump lra rl rr tor sa l e
e x pect ed to ber n ful l swrng
R rflt • Jn d o:o; l ols Su ndDy .
head ph on es rh one 949 2167
or trad e Phone 992 61 54
l hrs
Sum m e r
R e al
Apn l 1, I p m E-.. C'r yon e
aft er 5 o m
4 1 6t c
sac r!lr c,• , $59 ,900 00 Return
welcOmt'
) 30 SIC
o r c:;etrtlo't\ r enl 16 per ce nt
1 WC1 work pon reo;; Ph on q 9.19
4 I lt c
Own er in poo r hea lth L1ves
i57 8
AROW N hand tooleo sndd l e
outof s tilt e P ho n ~ (30·1) 882
T HER E WILL he a Sh oc t rng
3 30 lie
and br i dle , $150
al so
2
7.1 33
M&lt;t l c. h al t h e: Nt:w R i'lct ne
sa ddle s tand s A ll are lrk e
3 28 71C
F 1r c
Dept
b ur ldr n g,
new P/lOne 7&lt;12 2930
Sa!ur O-" Y A prr l• 1, 1Q16 a.
) 10 ]lr
l JOp m Fr orn RrlCt.r~; , I 1 r
~u.r~ ,\{ ,E:.
Sa te ,
St a r trn g
Co G!u U! l !hr&gt; Fl.n~han P~'
Phone 74?
T h oll -; day /\ prof 1 th r ou'] h LOC US T posts
to th e Bo.~ sh&amp;n Pr r e S l~t i OJ1.
ll59
Su nduy , Aprt l 4 Boys and
IUrt • r rg •1t a1 l t'!e l rre h o u ~
J 30 17tp
grr ls cl olll rn g I W1 n b e et
and follow !hat ro a d tor
co rnp lt.' t c ,
c re am
aho•JI ll1 m de Bulldtng on
se paral ors , r ec or d p l ayer , FA RMALL M tractor- , S900 ,
!ell
r acto r y chok e guns
Grav rly beds and wagons , 13
dr sh es and lots of mrs c
only 1
fl
self propelled c9m bm e.
rt e ms
R e e ds \lrllt&gt;
Oh ro
608
.3 30 &lt;lTC
1971 GMt p ic kup . 1 1 ton G
Tu rn at Rt\lerview Sc hool
A Radek.. rn Phon e ( 61J J 698
Srg n , lhrrd hoU5l' on left
NO
: r r•&lt;:. IJ&lt;l SSr ng
w i t hout
88Sl
3 31 4tp
p er,Jl1 1';.SIOn on my prope rty
3 lOl ip
Ja the ~ Mohler , Rt
7 by RUMM A GE
SALE
1n
pa ss, :v~~ ~l dleport
BA 8 Y CIQ'&gt; . phon e 949 2857
lHsC'mcnl o f EnlerP.r, se
POMEROY - 2 stor y
l lO l ip
l 30 t7rc
Church on R I l l Lool&lt;. for
frrrm e Almost new s1d1 ng ,
s1g n s Th u t sday, F r rd ay ,
('yARAC.E
SA LE
145
roof &amp; ca r port 3 BR , bath .
- BLOCK lor F art l'1 all " H "
Saturday , A prr! l 2, 3 9 El
Mul ll Nf ll ~\ve
Porne roy
1r acto1 wrth power pil ck
rn lt ll 6 p m
po rches, NG hea t . sm a ll
Thu ~ s:!Jd / aru F rtday
Ap rrl
Kenneth H ag er- , Cool-..dlc
.1 I 2tp
yard sa.ooo
1 ._ Prone 991 15'!6
3 lO li p
5 YEARS OLD - l BR,
3 JO Jt p
FAMILY Ba sem eril Sal e,
bath. dining R , hardwood
•~ a c tor
!'JS t
baby c hrldren and adult GRA.VELY
VVILL
o\ •;
srn al '
qa r den
ove r tlCI JI('d r1 ua l VJI1Ct&gt; IS JQflol)r S Ful! ba se m ent
c lott11ng , va r
ho
usPho
ld
olow rnn
N r lh
G ra vely
rn mower , A 1 co ntl! 'ron
•tcr1s wa s her and dryer ,
Por lh r.s, for ced a1r heat ,
tract or Pho r,;o ?'1 2 7 192 or
Phone 992 58Jfl
s m all
applian c e s
166 7
99?)!1'1
abou t J 4 acre SJ9 ,500
3
JO
:
J
tc
Lrn\:o ln Hgts

J 26 IRtp

Business servz ces
L_
Motor Co.
•

•

••

:-;;.,

2 SIGNS. Pomeroy
QUALITY

DICk~ ·

~

Auto Sales

OF

_g:- Tho! DaUy Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., ThUrsday,'April!, 1976

!·

\

�,.

• l

.A
J.V -

••·-.~- -· ·;

... ~· · ·•··

, .... - • r- '" ' ' '

"' '"'- 1 VJ ,V . ,IIIW::, Uil .)l,/\ j)f 11J , I~/IJ

'

·Rill overhauling ·retirement
way to Senate
systems

on

COI.UMI3llS I UPI I

!I

bill
overhau lin ~ the state '~ fin•

ro mpreh e n siv t&gt;

. major ret.irement syslC'ms
. anJ improVing' benefi ts has
cleared U1e Ohio Hpuse and is
on its way 10 the Scn(l(e.
The n1easurc wtts passed
by U1 e House Wednesday, 67

MEIGS THEATRE
TO NITE
fJwrs . . ....Apnll

NOT OPEN
COMING

"E ARTH QUA KE"

( Tcc h•Hc0 1or )
ChM IIon' Heston

S!ttrnng

nnd Av.1 l.oilfdner
~how -. tart s at 7; 00 p.m .

tu 28,. but only after minority
llcpuhlka ns, complainin~
the plan would cost the '
taxpaye rs .an extr a H08
111WiDn to fi na nc~ duril1g the
fir st ye ar, succeeded in
t•luninating several mujor ·
Jlrovismns ilnd cutting the

estunated &lt;·ost almost in half.
The hill . sponsored by Rep .
ftn1wld H. James, D·
Proctorville, is the product of
lfi UII ths or work by the Ohio
Hc tirement S tud y
C'Omin!Sslon. It deals with ttie
rel1remcnts sys tems £or
pu blic employes, s tate
teachers, school employes,
the Ohio Highway Patrol and
policemen ctnd riremen.

. Til e i;f·oposai changes the

l ow~ .

•
II alw provides adtlitiun&lt;&amp;l
Me d ,,. "re pr e mium
P:t~· nwnt~; increitses benefi ts
to the surv iv ing spouses or
poli cemen, fir emen and
highway pat r o 1m e n :
iiiJe ralizes serviee cre dit
pr ov id es
provis ions;
minimun&gt; di sa bilit y
re tirement benefits; and
reduces the waiting period
for co"t{J f·living increases
ror public employes, teachers
anJ soj10ol employes.
House Min'urity Lead er
Charl es I' Kurress, H.
Bowl ing Green, pointed our
sta te employes have 11lready
1·ece1ved an II per cent pay

1nves! 1ncnt powers of the

trustees of the pension funds
ami subjects them to Ohio's
elhi cs. and open meeti ri~s

innrast·. ''That mea ns t.~n 11 • Two persons were fi sted in
per· eent increase in their satisfactory condition at the
penSions ~ nd an II pet cent Holzer Medical Cenlier where
increi1se in lhe -co~' to lhe · thc·y were ·adinitted .Wed:
tiJxp;;ycrs," he said.
nesday afternoon followin~ a
Hcpublica,ns,
w1th traffic accident on Rt. 325
Democratic he lp, knocked near the Ohio Valley Bank's
out provisions which would branch in Hio Grande .
hav••liberalized purcha se or
Sixo(hersweretreatedand
. additiona l servi ce time ror rel ease d in the Holzer
ele&lt;:ted offi cials and allowed · Medi cal Ce nter . Three
puiJiic employes with 30 or ambulan ces, two rr om
more year s of service to SEOEMS and one rrom the
retire at any age .
Ca lli a Co unty Voluntee r
They also amended the bill Squad, were needed .to
to requir e
addit io nal transport the injured to the
contributions to the pension hosptial.
systems by employes and
Li sted in satisfactory ·
employers to help fund the condition were Janet Yoho,
ex tra benefi ts.
20, Patriot' Star Rt. and
Shebaun
Raffett,
20 , ·
McArthur: Miss Yoho had a

News •. in Briefs

1Continued rrom page 1J
call it a battle."
" You 've rai;;ed a good point ," replied Floyd, who said he
was part Cherokee Indian. "In the future, we 're going to be
lairer to the indians."

NBC stays on the air

"UTAH"

SAN PIF.GO 1UPi i- Some
1.700 technieiaus &lt;md news
liT Iters, rcjec ling a federal
appea l ror delay , went on
strike Loday against the NBC
tel e vi sion ne twork . NB C
co ntinu ed operaliri g with

3 Pc. Group From Ravenswood

The Meigs Inn
PH. 992-3629

s11per vtsurs an d n1anagcmcnt

..

personnel
The strike by the Na lional
Assoc iation of

'POMEROY, OHIO

Broad c&lt;J~ tin g

Emp loyees began a! 11 01 a
EST foll owin g se ven

11 1.

weeks of negotiati ons.

and 300 others rangin g from
mainten an ce wor kers to
direc lurs at network studiOS
.in New York , Washin gton,
Ch1 cago, Clevel and , San
Fra nci sco an d Burbank
Calif.
·
'
• Dick Goldstein , th e ncl·
wQrk 's vice president for
labor relal ions, said crews or
sup erv isors and management
personnel wer e sl&lt;tnding by to
take over when the strike
beg an.
"Ther·e \.lias no lll lcl'fuption

Th., 1mion represen ts 1.200
e11 gin eers
and
oth er of .service," he sai d.
technicians, 200 rwws writrrs

BAKER·s PRESENTS:.--A 2 .DAY SALE II
TO SURPRISE AND DELIGHT
OUR CUSTOMERS

FRI. &amp; ''SAT., APRIL 2 &amp; 3
9 A.M. ~ 9 P.M.

Every Item In Our Store Is Reduced In Price
For This Two Day Event! ! !

.

••ADMIRAL, QUALITY APPLIANCES

BOOKCASE __ :.._ ~ ______ !1499
K.o.

32 " H. 32" W, 9" D.

99
16X48
DOOR
MIRROR
__
$4
Comple te w1th mounting clips.
·

'21.

WOOD ROCKERS
SLAT SEAT------- -----

PLATFORM ROCKERS--~58
RECLINING .CHAIRS ____ !68
5X8 PORCH RUGS_____ ~rs

•a

SLAT SEAT WOOD
KITCHEN CHAIRS--------18" ' 5.99 24~' '6.99

Ref rig e rat ors . Freezer s. Ra nge s . Air
Con ditioner s. Deh um idi fiers. _ Color T.V.,
B&amp; W T. V's, Stereo Sets, Radios .

" SPEEDQUEEN"
Since 1'908

WASHERS AND
DRYER.S
FLEXSTEEL
FINE FURNITURE
Begins on
The Inside.

25

SWEEPERS
from

sss

up

For a full size uprig
model.

FRIGIDAIRE

'1575
BACK CHAIRS--------

UNFI ~ ISHED LADDER

9X12 LINOLEUM RUG __

srs

•saoo
s·saoo

TWEED RUGS'-------12 ' Wide Foam Backed

CARPET-~~~q~r~! 3

12' Wide Cushioned Back Vinyl

QEDDING ,

To Choose From

at ·Special

METAL CABINETS
CABINET SINKS
WARDROBES
DESKS.
CEDAR CHESTS

99

Sale Prices

BABY 'BEDS
LAMPS
TABLES
•
DINETTES !
MIRRORS
PICTURES

~

$l!B

. Up

Area Death. S

.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Dlsc;over Buster.Brown
clothes this Spring

NIGHT STANDS--------$25·
3 PC. BEDROOM SUITEs 128

MIDOL£
Otfl{l
OPEN FRI.

....

UNTIL 8:00

WINNERS REWARDED - Plaques were presented· to ·wbmers in the annual
"pinewood derby" of Cub Scout Pack 249 Thursday night at the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
The Mllners were Clyde Gaus, pictured front, the best looking car, and left t.o right , derby
winners Michael Hatfield, first ; Bill Howell, second, and Matt Riffle, third. 'fhe winners will
compete in the MGM District run&lt;Jffto be held at the Huntington Memorial Field House. All
of the 22 cub scouts participating were awarded ribbons, said George Wright, cubmast~r .
. John Gaus is his assistant. There are three dens in the pack, two in Pomeroy and r o~e in
Harrisonville,

VOL XXVII NO. 248

Weather

•

e

at y

PO'MEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

en tine
FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1976

Lights on ball field
expected . in. two ·weeks

are Pickens, Ralph Laven·
In other action council
der, and Barry· McCoy.
voted to charge persons using
Hollie Stewart, fire chief, the building lor car wash or
discussed houses he &gt;thinks bake sale a ree of $5 for
are fire hazards. Steward has building expenses and if the
authority to serve papers to room is used by an
owners or such structures. organization the fee will be
Stewar t agree d tu· serve •$20 ··ahd be re~ponsible ror
necessary papers to owners damages .
or property that should be · Attending were Mayor
razed , and council agreed to London, Robert Winge tt,
back him up.
Zwilling, Pickens, McCoy,
Mayor Herman London Hemsley and Kathryn Crow,
said location of the proposed co uncil members; Mary
ilisp~sal plant for the
Chan cey, clerk; George
Syr acuse·Racine Sewage Holman, treasurer; Mrs .
System has been changed Hayman , Mrs . Thuener,
from Syracuse to back of Stewart and Chief Varian.
Racine . It probably will be
two years before actual work
on the sewage system gets
underway, council agreed.
Police Chief, Milton Varian
reported speed limit signs are
needed 'and he a$ked council
to purchase a radar unit. A
Edward W.
Rowles,
representative of a radar unit
Fairfield . County, assistant
firm will meet with council at
slieward of the Ohio Stalie
the next meetin~ .
Grange, will speak on the
·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;:::::::::::;:::::::.:·:·:•·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:::::::·:::::::::::·:::::::::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: occasion of the annual Meigs
~ :~:: Coun ty . Grange banquet at
:.!.
the
School at
~
.;.j
p.m. Fnday, Apnl 9.
::::
·
.,. · Rowles , who operates a
By United Press International
500·a cre dairy farm in
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO.SENATE THURSDAY .failed F~irrield County; is a
by 10 votes to authorize a June 1977 referendum. on repeal of graduate of Ohio State
the state's antiquated, $7~0,000 limit on capital construction University where he received
debt. The 50 to 41 defeat - a three-fifths majority or the 99.
member House was needed .- resulted when six Democrats his bachelor of science
joined 35 of the 36 Republicans on the floor in voting against the
proposed constitutional amendment.
The resolution , if approved by the electorate, would have
allowed the General Assembly to approve up to $300 million in
capital construction bonded inbebtedness this year without a
vote of the citizens of the state. Opponents said similar
authorization was what led to New York City's financial crisis,
which has plunged that city near bankruptcy and pulled New
York State into the worst fiscal crisis of its fiistory. "There are
other ways to do this," argued Rep. Frederick N. Young, ~­
Meeting at the Martin
Dayton.
Restaurant Thursday at
noon,
the · Middleport
LOS ANGELES - A GROUP CALLED.Teamsters for a
Chamber of Commerce will
Decent Contract voted Thursday to remain ·on strike, shoudl a
protest the proposed abannational agreement be reached, if their proposals are not met donment .of the Cfesapeake
by the union .
and Ohio Railway's Logan to
The group's .proposals include a no-ceiling cQSt of Jiving
Pomeroy line via McArthur
increase, guaranteed 40 hour work week, job protection in case and Gallipolis.
or mergers, new grievance procedures and full union
According to plans made by
protection and benefits from the first day on the job. The group
the chamber meeting Thurs·
also accused union president Frank Fitzsimmons of trying to
day at the Marin Restaurant,
·~sell rank-afid.file members down the drain."
a
letter of protest wlil be
1 At &amp;Greater Los Angeles Press Club news conference,
prepared for presentation at
Doug Allan, a group spokesman, predicted that 75 per cent of an Intersta te Commerce
rank-and.file lllerhbers would "throw any back-to-work order Commission hearing on the
from the union into the trash can . If we don't g~t action on
abandonment to be held
· these demands, we're not going back to work," ~id Allan.
beginning at 9:30 a.m.
"TDC is committed t.o organizing a· rejection of any contract
Wednesday• at the Galli a
which does not contain its program 's demands. The union 's County courthouse in
final compromise offer does not measure up," Allan said.
Gallipolis.
,
The chamber · also comTWIN FAlL'&gt;, IDAHO - ANDY ANDERSoN, courtesy of pleted plans ror a community
his friends, probably has the nation's only set of Bicentennial sidewalk sale from 5 to 8p.m.
ieeth - red, white arid. blue dentures. Even with preparation , F'riday, April 9, and on
it's a shock to catch the first glimpse of the gleaming red . following Saturday . Special
canines inset with diamonds framing four white and· blue prices on merchandise will
incisors annnouncing 1976 in red and white.
·
feature the event.
Early in January, Anderson went to a friend and dentl&amp;t,
During · the meeting,
Dr , Donald E. SoniU!l, to have impressions made for a set of presided over by John
regular upper dentures. Sonlus and silme other pals took. it Werner, president, the
from there. When Anderson arrived at the dentist's for .fitting cleanup campaign was
with what he expected would be a regular set of dentures, in diseussed . It was noted lhe
)l'ent the colorful teeth .
·
week of April 5·9 which lias
Now he weah them an hour or so each day. "I scare the been set in Middl i· p"r' ill'
(Continued on page 12)
Mayor Fred Hoffman Iva~
SYRACUSE - ErectiOn of
lights at the Syracuse ball
field will begin at once it waa
decided by Syracuse council
Monday night.
Erection or the lights will
be under supervision of
Jimmy Joe Hemsley and
Barry McCoy. It is expected
the lights will be in operation
in two weeks.
Councilman Eber j?ickens
is to eonrer with th ~.lrillage
solicitor about an open· .
cistern on a vacant lot m
town. Meeting with council
were Sadie Thuener and
Emma Hayman about having
a street light on an existing
pole near their homes .
Council agreed to move a
present light to the pole.
Troy Zwilling said th e
Firemen 's Dependency
Board has named him
chairman and Fred Morrow,
an
outsid e
member,
secrel&lt;try. Oth er members

.11
,'·!.

Losses were ·expected to

run to $30,000 in a fire that

EDWARD ROWLES

State Grange officer to
speak here April 9

S'~l

• •

Salt~bury

7~

Green , Rad/ Navy. Sizes: 7 to f 4. $6.10 •
Yoke Back Jeans with Spade Hip Pock·
els. PolyeSier/ Nylon / Cotlon. Navy.
Sizes : 6to 14. $8.75

Random Ribbed Premium Cotlon Shirt.
Assorted Colllrs. Sizes: 71o 14. $5.00
Zip·Front Plaid Pants. Polyester/Cot·
ton. Harbor Blue Multicolor, TropiCal

Green Multlcolor. Sizes : 71o 14. $8.75

Main Store, Home · Furnishings Annex and Mechanic
Street Warehouse Open Friday 9:30 to. 8 p.m . and
Saturday 9:30 to 5 p.m • .
'

•
'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY ·
.

•

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Fire losses
~t $30,000

.degree in Agriculture. A
grange member over 25
years, he holds all or its seven
degrees and ' has served as
maslier and many other of.
flees or· the subordinate and
Pomona Grange.
Rowles is a member of the
Masonic Lodge
and has
served as worshipful master .
He is a member of the
Pleasantville
United
Methodist Church.
(Contlmied on page 12)

Abandonment
draws.protest

Tri·Color Ore11 Shirl with Raglan
Sleeve. Premium Cotton NavY/ Tropical

truck strlkf4

J

: ;: 7\Tews • . lU
• ·Brze
·•

•

•

\

BEIRUT, Lebanon IUPI) processed foods over.
- Lebanon's leftist · Pllrfles shadowed a drop In prices lor
decided today to freeze farm product$, the Labor
military operations for one Department reported today.
week provided that a new
The 1 per cent decline In
president would be elected farm product prices was less
within this period , the rebel . than in recent months, the
TWO IN HOSPITAL
held Beirut Radio said . The dePllrfment said. ' lndllslrl~t
RACINE - The Racine E· repor t cal)'le as U. S. special com mOllities rose 0.4 per cent
H squad was called Wed· envoy L. Dean Brown began last month and processed
· nesda at ·2'30 p m to an , urgent peace effort In ·. food costs were up 0.2 per.
Y
. ·
·
·. r • Be~rut amid growing' Syrian cent ..
M~giC Gilmore, Racme, pressure on Moslem leftists
-admitted to
Vet.erans to accept · a cease.flre in
PHILADELPHIA !UP!) ~
Memorial Hospital , as a &lt;..ebanon's bloody tl ·month The Penn Central Tran.
medical patient and today at CIVIl war .
~portatl on Co., parent firm of
.
'
.
file Penn Central Railroad,
3:50 a. m. to the Maxme WASH II'IG TON (UP I l suffered a net loss of more
Sellers, R. D. , Racine, to Wholesale prices rose 0.2 per tlian $43 million for the first
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
cent in March as rising costs two months of this year .
of Industrial qoods and
In a report released
·1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -; 1 Wednesday, the firm's
J trustees said the loss Of
I!
I $43, 102.~61 was compared
wl
to
1 Jh1 da'-tiel
f dloss,1 restated
t Of
J. A. COMER
Anderson Greenlees. He was nc u e e era gran s,
lordan A. Comer, 53, died refired from the Southeastern 552 •269 · 266 fpr the same
at the home of a friend on Rt. Oh io Development and period of W75 ·
2.Ga lllpollsaround 5:15a. m. Research
Center
at
WASHINGTON '&lt;UP!) _
today .
Carpenter . He had been Declining prices for cattle
He was the son of the late leader of the Carpenter Boys
•
Rober I P. and Rozella 4.. H Club from 1953 to 1962 and hogs, eggs and milk led a 1.5
Westfall Comer .
be longed to Columbia Grange pef"~nl drop In average
He wos born 1n West 2433, Meigs County Pomona prices for all raw farm
Virginia on Sept. 14, t922. He Grange , Ohio State Grange, . produ~ls in lhe month ending
had been ill lhe past Jhree and held the seventh degree March 15, " the Agriculture
years.
In the National Grange .
Department says.
Mr . Comer is the father of
Sur viving . are his wife,
The mid .March level was
four children by a previous Ava; two daughlers, Mrs. 12 per cent above a year ago.
marriage. One sister, Mrs . Rose~ooper , Athens, and But of more immediate In·
Magaie Gil more, Racine , Mrs . Carolyn Fraley, Route teres! fo farmers and con.
survfves. Two brothers 4.
Pomeroy ;
four sumers who have watched
preceded him In death .
g~andchild ren. one of whom, retail food prices soffen early
Funeral services wil l be R1lla Rhoades, was reared by fhlsyearwasthefactlhatthe
held 1 p. m. Saturday al the Mr. and Mrs. Green lees ; two March average was about 1
Will is Funeral
Home , brothers, Chester, of Barlow. ~r cent below mid·
Gallipolis, with Rev . Alfred and Dean, of Fleming. Mr.
comber.
Hol ley officiating . Burial will Greenlees was preceded '"
follow in the fam ily cemetery death by one grandchild and
(Old Carey Cemetery) near thro:e sisters. Florence, Ethel
Wilkesville
and Vesta Greenlees .
Friends 'may call at the
Funeral services will be
fun era 1 hom e on Friday held at 2 p. m. Saturday aft he
DANCE PLANNED
between 2·' and 7.9 p. m.
Bigony . Jordan Funeral
A
square
dance will be held
Home in Albany with the Rev .
Saturday,
April 3, at
CARLL GRE'ENLEES
Earl Nichols and the Rev.
Wilkesville
Legion Grove
Ca r l L. Greenlees , 70, Howard Mayne officiatino.
Route 4, Pom eroy , died Burial wi ll be In · Barlow
from 8 p. m. un UJ midnight.
Wednesday al Univer Si ty Cemete ry .
Hasp ·1
1· c 1 b
Fr iends may call at the The event Is sponsored by
• q m 0 um us .
funeral home from 2 to 4and 7
Wilkesville Women 's·Softball
He was the son of the late to 9 Friday.
Team.
Charles and Henr 1etta

·
Taught by
Florence Richards
Enroll Now
Select
your
"FORMAL" from ·our
many love_Jy fabrics :

·effects

bn"e·JJ

. STARTING IN APRIL

FLOOR COVERING
~s~·-~~~2 99
.
4 DRAWER CHESTS----!37

.._,

0

ffi

DAYTIMl:
'
SEWING
CLASSES

From

~

Horne &amp; abroad

By JOHN T. KAD\'
Interstate 75 inside the city the national master frci21\t
United Press b1ternational
limits.
Bl(reement negotiations are
Three trucks were hit by
Rock throwing incidents completed ,"
said
a
gUnfire in Toledo early today also were re~orted in . S~XJ.kesman for Council 41 ..
in the second day of ' a · Tallmadge and Mogadcir~ 1ri "At that tirtle the provisions
nationwide Teamsters strike. northeast Ohio.
of the final settlement will
~f
One driver was injured by
At least 500 Teamsters in succeed those of the
flying glass wtien a bullet the Cleveland area went hack m e m o r a n d u m s o f
from a high powered rifle to work today after interim agreememnt.
•
&lt;Xl!.UMBUS (U P!) - Gov . Jumes A. Rhodes , ut the
smashed a window in his agreements .were signed with
reque&gt;t of the White House, is monito ring U1e effect of
truck .
Teamsters' strike on Ohio's economy as part or u·
23 trucking firms. .
Teamsters Joint CoWJcil 41
u dgments as ked
Toledo police said Bryan
effort to help President Ford decide
Minteer , 27, Springfield, in Cleveland said the interim Elberfelds in Ponreroy
wh11ther to invoke. the Tafl.Hartlcy Act.
Ohio, was struck by glass contracts - known as Company has filed a suit ror
Thus rar , the monitoring has shown there nrc
when the bullet went through memorandum of agreements judgment of $2,07~. 31 against
. · adequate supplies of food for the present, "b\lt there ..
a window. He was treated in - provide for acceptance by Frederick B. Goeglein,
ha'" b&lt;Jen layoffs in several major Industries und if the
the emergency room of a the employer on an interim Pomeroy, in Meigs County ·:·:·:•.·····"-- lasts until the middle of next week , ''there will be
Toledo hospital and released. basis of the union 's last Common Pleas Court.
. a real problem," according to the" Ohio Manufncturers .
"Hew'as shot at with a 30-30 bargaining proposal to the
The T&amp;B Corp., Cutler,
Association .
on Interstate 75 in North tru cking employers Ohio , is suing ror $680.49 from
Rhodes .and his economic bnd community
Toledo," said Dennis Rankin, nego tiatin g in Arlington Harold and Bernadette
development director, James A. Du ~ rk , met Thursdny
a Toledo 'police· technician. Heights, Ill.
will! representatives of Ohio's manufacturers, retu il
Wolfe , Rt. I, Portland on a
" He wasn 't hit but it ,slid
"These memorandums can retail installment contract.
merchant~. farmers and governmenl agencies to
shatter the window on the take effect immediately when Frederick J . Smith , Mid·
i ln&gt;ple,me&lt;Jt the President 's request.
,
driver's side."
signed by the companies anct dleport, asked divorce from
President asked the governors or all the states
Police said a truck driven will remain operative until Doris V. Smith, Concord, Ky ., .
to find out what impact the Teamsters' strike is
by Ron Kopp of Carleton,
having, " said one representative in on the meet~ng .•
on charges of gross neglect of
Mich., on Interstate 75 was
"He woUld prefer to have U1ls thing settled and doesn't
~uty and extreme cruelty.
hit by a snipers' bullet,
want to pull th~ string on the Taft ·llllrtl~y Act unless
EXTENDED
OUTLOOK
.
damaging the radiator .
absolutely n&lt;K-essary."
'
'
Sunday
throu'gh
Robert Lewis of Lavonia,
If
the
taft-Hartley
Act
were
invoked,
striking
Tue,day, a chane~ or
Mich., told police three men
Clearing tonight, lows in
truckers would be ordered ba c~ to work during an ID·showers
Sunday and lair
in a passing car shot out his
the lower 30s. Warner
day
cooling off period.
Monday and Tuesday. Saturday, highs in the lower
radiator on Interstate 75.
Highs 11'111 be In the mid 50s 60s .
Police . said all three
Probability.
of
to the lower 60s and lows
shootings occurred within 15
precipitation 70 per ce nt
will be In the 30s.
minutes and within a mile
today, 10 per cent tonight, 20
and a half of each other on
per cen t Saturday.

Gov. Rhodes is monitoring

27;

Quality Name Brand

BEDROOM SUITES

WAU PLAQUES

operated by Miss Waldron. accident at 8:40 a. m. Wed·
Their car pulled into the path nesday on Rt. 35, two miles ·
. or a .vehicle drjyen .by Earl west o(Rt. 7.
.
Lowder,
Rt . 2, Patriot.
The palrof said Angelo
Miss ,Waldron was cited to Ayala, 54, Brooklyn, N. Y.,
Hio Grand~ Mayor's Court lost control of his car which
for failure to yield the right of ran off the ~ight side of the
way..
highway striking a post.
The G'allia -Meigs Post There
wa's
moderate
State 'flighway' Patrol in· damage . No charges were
yestigated a minor traffic filed . .
·
··

·The Coun cil and staff would
like to express therir appreciation to the many in·
dividuais ,
churc hes ,
organizations and agencies,
whose assistance and
cooperation have made it
possible to provide services
to senilJ citizens in Meigs
County.

EVERY ITEM IS SALE PRICED

9xl2
FOAM BACK .
SHAG RUG$ ______ ..: __

rup tured spleen and large
scalp laceration. Miss Rafrett
~uf(ered ~. fractured hip.
They . are students at Rio
Grande College.
Other students treated and
released were Janice Annetlie
Waldr on, 19, Hamden ;
Debbie Arnott, 18, Rt. 2,
Racine ; Marsha Hawkins,-18,
Zenia; Jeana Mullineaux, 18,
Portsmouth; E li zabet h
Rowe, ·18, . Ironton, and
l:ficinda Schultz, 19, Port.
smouth .
Acc ording to village
marshal Bob· Shaw , the
students were in a car on
East North College Ave.

3 True .s gunne

311.

Ref rigerators
Ranges
Freezers
Washers
Dryers

30" '7.49
25 Different

9xl2 FOAM BACK

"HOOVER"

Continued rrom page 2)
Meigs.Jackson·Vinton Book·
mobile, Pomeroy Elemen.
tary School, Middleport
Elementary &amp;hooi, Personal
Advocacy Board , 'Meigs
County Humane Society,
Meigs Teachers Corp, Meigs
High
Schoo l,
Cancer
Screening Clinic, Red Cross
and Bloodmobile , Meigs
County Museum, DAR.
Also, Meigs County Board
of Ed ucation, Harrisonville
Senior ,Citizen Club, Rutland
Senior Ci tizen Club, , Long
Bottom Senior Citizen Club,
T. B. Association; Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Meigs
Community School, Pomeroy
Chamber of Co mmerce ,
Salisbu ry
Elementary
School , Chester P.T.A..
Community Action Agency ,
Meigs
County
Court,

Southern High School, Head
Start, Golden Buckeye Card
Ohio Commiss ion . on
Agin g,
COA D
Senior
Nutriti on . Program, Senior
Citizens Cenlier.
Volunteers have assisted at
Ji~e sf!iior Citizens Center in
man)' way s suc h as :
Heceptionist , making crafts,
·
· WI'th bazaars , he1pmg
hc Ipmg
with fund raising activities,
fri endly
visit1 ng
and
telephone reassurance to
shut.ins, transportation and .
shopp ing ass istance for
senior citizens , mailing of the
Newsietlier and many aspects
of the different educational
and soc ial programs con.
dueled at the Center.
There is no charge ror any
or the a bove se rvi ces ,
everyone contribu tes ac ·
cording to his or her ability to
pay. Since June I, 1975 sen ior
citi7.ells ha ve contribu ted
$9,862.65 toward support of
the program s through
" memberships, donations and
money making projects. In'
addiJilllllil senior cit izens
~ to the hot lunch
progra m.
In
March,
donations for this program
totalleij $836.62.
Though many older persons
have been reached in Meigs
County, the Council realizes
there·are still persons in need
of services who are not
rcce~ them. If you need
assistance in any way please
c I 992·711!16, 992·7864 , or 992-

Lane , Bassett ." Simmons, Spring Air,
Syrcico, Provincetown Solid. Maple , Roper.

WOOD STOOLS

TWEED

Senior

IVASHINGTON _.. OHIO'S SENATORS s plit in voting on
nu .ra ult auto insurance legJsiation which the Senate by a 494~
vo te Tuesday recommitt ed and almost certainly killed. Sen.
Hobert Tart was one of 25 Republicans voting for and Sen. John
Glenn was one or 45 Democrats castin&amp;no votes.
'l'he OhiO senators also voted oppositely on a sweeping
rev ision or the 1939 Hatch Act relaxing the ban on politica l
activ ity by federal employes. The uppe r chamber pa ssed it 54·
:m and se11t it 1o the White House. Glerm was one or 54
Dernocrats voting fOI' and Taft one of 28 Republinms opposing.

Thur s ., 8 : 30· 1 : 00
Fr.' " IO: OO·Z : OO

.

Eight injured·in Rio wreck,
·three ambulances summoned

destroyed the vacant brick
and frame, !IeVen [001!j, ·one
-noor-Woine oimed b'fi&gt;M1iel
PhUiipa on Grover Road in
Cheshire Township at 2:25
a .m. today.
Middleport firemen Sllid
when they got to the' scene
about 2:42a .m., the structure
was engulfed in names. The
origin or the fire was believed
to have been from electrical
wiring, firemen said. Phillips
had moved to Route I r;:rown
City, and had put the
property up for sale. A few
pieces or furn iture had not
been moved rrom the home.
The
Gallipolis
fire
department sent a tanker to
help in fiJiUling the blaze.
There was some Insurance.
At 8:56 a .m. Friday,
Middleport firemen were
recalled to the scene when the
fire rekindled and threatened
a garage. The garage was
saved and firemen returned

•
More protests
believed· needed
More Meigs residents are
needed to testify at the April
7 hearing in Gallipolis on the
th
prop~e.d abandonment of e
Chesapeake
and
Ohio
Railway's Logan to Pomeroy
line, the Meigs County Rail
Servi'Ce Committee said

~~· hearing 'getsunderway

discussed.
at 9, 30 a.m. · Anyone wishing
Mayor Hoffman has urged to testify or who would like
all residents and business more infonnation Is asked to
establishments to make a call the committee at 992•
special effort to clean up ~ 794 .
yards, sidewalks, and .
generally around homes and
business establishments.
TWO ASSIST\o
The village will provide
The Pomeroy E·R WJit
rree pickup service for the • went to Brick st. at 11 :37 a.m.
accumulations of tra.sh, with Thursday f~r Dord)\ Call,
theflrstward to be prcked UP "· taken to Veterans Memorial
on Monday; second ward, Hospital and admitted, and at
Tuesday; ·third ward, 6:38a.m. Friday, to TUppers
WedneSday, and fourth ward , Plains for Judy Groth , who
Thursday. Anyone missed was taken to Holzer Medical
during that week, may call Center.
the mayor's office (992-3145)
or· the maintenance office :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::
1992·5711 ) and work'Crs will
SIGN-UP DAY
return Io make the collection.
Sig~t-Up day for MidResidents are asked to dleporl Little League Is
place materiah to be Saturday at the Legion hall
'disposed of at the curb in f·romlO a.m. to% p.m. For
front or their homes so that T·ball. age 5-7 ; Pee Wee.
the wo~kers can readily see age 8 to 9; little league. age
what has to be taken uway . 10 to 12: Pony Leagor. age
AIfending Ilie meeting were 13 ·to IS. All youths are
President We mer, Alwilda invited. Rcgistrallolflee Is
Werner , Emerson Heighton, · $4.

• ~~n~

~~:~~~~~nEd~~:iR~~~~:

George Ing els ,' Manning
Kloes, Carl Horky and Dick
Owen.

:::::

to their station at 10:09 a.m.
M 9:30a.m. Thursday, the
Middleport E·R unit went to
Tuppers Plains lor Lida
' Slflitri;IIO';"'~Mitrittetiil
·
Ita arrival. At 3:27 p.m. the
squad look Jean Morgan or
~77Third Ave ., Middleport, to
St. Mary's HoSflltal In
Huntington and at 3:28, other
squad members weht to
assist Alma Miller at her
home, 668 s. Third. At.6:04
p.m., the squad returned to
the Miller home and Mrs.
·
1
MJ!Ier was taken to Peasant
Vall Hospital
At'Y7, 52 a.m.' Friday, the
squad went to Harrisonville
for Mrs. Hlel French who was
ha ing difficulty breathing
v
·
and running a high tern·
perature· She was taken. to
Veterans Memorial .Hospital
where she was admitted.

ARLINCTON HEIGHTS ,
Dl. (UP!) - The crack of
gunfire replaced the rumble
of trucks on some of the
nation's roadways today and
negotiators worked to end a
natiowide Teamsters stri ke
that threatened to hobble the
''nation's economy.
The
Department
of
Transportation estimated a
strike of any duration would
idle a million wor)!ers and
cost $300 million a week .
Violence flared in several
areas Thursday - lh e
opening day of the union's
flrst ·nationwide strike. Nonstriking drivers were the
tar sets of gunfire and fists .
A~lnJCk . trlver w~s shot
today as he drove on
Interstate 751n Toledo, Ohio.
He was wounded In the right
arm.
Negotlatons aimed at
ending the walkout recessed
,early this morning and were
to resume at 1l a.r,n. EST
today.
Labor Secretary W. · J.
Usery
worked
with ·
ti to
t the Arl' gt
nego a rs a
m on
Park Hilton Hotel outside
Chtcago . A spoke81llan for
Usery said he would remain
111 to~. to help with the
negotiatrons.
The 400 ,000 Teamsters on
strike handle 60 per cent of
the na~ion's manufactued
gooda. The walkout co111d

soon shut &lt;town auto
assembly lin es and halt
shipment or steel, ,beer'
bread, rood and gasoline.
Use ry co nfe rred with
President Ford by tele)lhone
Thtll'sday . •·ord has yet to
· decide whether to seek an 8(). ·
day cooling orr period under
the :rart.Harlley Act. The
President told Usery to stay .
at the negotiating table.
Allen ._Grant, president or
the 2.5·mlllion member
American Farm Bureau
Federation, sent a telegram
to Ford asking that he invoke
Taft-Hartley .
Two inllependent tr~ckers
reported they were fired ~pon
in Ohio ~nd truck drivers in
'Michigan and Indiana also
said U1ey were shot at but no
one was injured. Rocks and
debris were showered upoQ
trucks still moving from
overpasses in Michigan a~
Ohio.
Interim agrecm c n
negotiated by Teamsters
locals , plus Independent
truckers and locals which
~ave separat e contracts kept
many trucks on the
highways, notably In New
York and Gblcago.
But a spokesman for Con·
solidated Forwarding in
Kansas City, Mo ., expressed
the news from many parts or
the country : "We are down ,

down, down ."

·M arching Marauders
invired to Riverfront
CINCINNATI - Nearly
1,000 high school bandsmen
including roughly 150 from
Meigs High, will show off
their talent at Hiverfront
Stadium as the Reds present

by Roger Bacon High School
band director and band
festival coordinator Wes
Neal, had a tough job
selecting this year's par·

ticipants. Approximately 200
bands expressed interest In
participating.
The six participants all
(Continued on page 12)

their second Marching Band
Festiyal Sunday, May 16.
Six of the top bands in
Reds Country will compete
between games of the
doubleheader with the New
\'ork Mets. Participating in
thla year's festival besides
Meigs are Anderson High of
Anderson, Indiana; Glasgow
High of Glasgow, Kentucky;
Greensburg High or Greensburg , Indiana; Ross High or
Hamilton , Ohio, and Trotwood·Madison High of
Trotwood, Ohio. Lawrence·
burg, Indiana High School
was last year's winner.
Each school will have five
l!linutes
to pe!'for.m . Judgmg
1
will be baaed on showmanship and entertainment,
mui11c and· marching . The
bands will be competing ror
first, sec011d and third place
trophies.
Judging this year's festival
will be college band directors
Paul Droste or Ohio State,.
Harry Clarke of the
University or Kentucky and
Fred Ebbs or the University
of Indiana. •
Each band will receive a
Cincinnati Reds banner to

Mrs. Hampton
wins $150

t

:::::~i;~L'f~~;~:·::::::::,:,:,: ~:::;,:"::de eve:~s ban"!s:

The ternperature
in
downtown Pomeroy at II
a .m. Friday ' was 48 degrees
under d oudy skics:t!'

Negotiators
stay .onjob

man will receive a sourvenir
medal.
The selection committee
for this year's band , headed

for composition
Mrs . Lula B. Hampton,
Pomeroy, was one of three
top winners in Ohio of the
Lucille Loy Kuck Award ror
Excellence ln. Literary Expression announced jointly
Thursday by the Ohio
Commission on Aging, the
Ohioana Library , and .the
Area Agency on Aghfg · of
Buc.keye Hills · Hoc king
Valley Regional Develop.
ment District.
The Southeastern Ohio are~
is home for two of the 10
winners . Besides Mrs . ·
Hamplori of Kerr Street, who
received the second place
award worth l150, Mrs .
Florence McLain · Clark,
Lancaster Street, Marietta,
received one of seven Certificates of Mention.
The Awards are being '
give in recognition of ex:
&lt;:ellence In the areas or prose
and poetry. Entries were
made to the Lucille Ipy Kuck
Ohloana Awara on the theme
"I Remember, I Remem·
ber" . All ~bmlssions were
written by Ohio Senior
Citizens. .

LULA

HA~PTON

~1
I

Award recip1en!s will be
guests ol hon.or at the Spring
Meeting and Tea of the
Ohioana Library Association
to be held April 23 in
Columbus.·The prizes will be
presented at that time.
All award recipients will
also be presented at the Ohio
Governor's Conference on
Aging , May 25 and 26 at the
Lausche Building, State
Fairgrounds, Columbus,
Ohio. At the Governor 's
Conference , the award·
winning writings will' be
available in ~ublished for\" .

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