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                  <text>.·
36 - The Sunday TiJn,.. . Sentinel, Sunday, April II, 1976

Arsonists wreck, burn
school at Mercerville

African
scholar
•
c()mmg

•
•

•

•

'

:j
I

/
· t$1 \

( oo ;
''" ..
,Jii,;. ...
'' '

RIO GRANDE - Marc
Dagbovi, noted African
scholar will be on the campus
of Rio Grande College·
Community College for four
days, April 12-15.
A graduate of St.
Augustine's College in Ghana
and Ca mbridge Univ~rsity,
he is a native of Togo in West
Africa. Dagbovl has served
with the Post and Telecommunications Office, the r·
Tax and Excise Offiee and
the Education Ministry of
Togo. He has also had exJ
tensive experience in private
businesses in Africa.
In more recent years he has
worked in education development with the Peace Corps
and is currently' assOciated
FiNISH EQUIPMENT - Three unidentified Meigs High School Senior welding students
with the Phelps-Stokes FWld,
are
putting finishing touches on playground equipment they constructed for the area ·
a private .education founl&gt;Chool~.
The work fits In closely with required pipe welding techniques each student must
dation, as an international
complete in his senior year. Richard Roseberry is illstructor.
·
curriculum specialist.
He comes to Rio. Grande
College-Community College
to aid in the dev.elopment of
international curriculum
within the college. Under a
federal grant Rio Grande
POMEROY - The Meigs glass makbig. Old fashioned
College-Community College County
will also be a diversion of the
Pioneer
and
and twen ty-e ight other Histnrical Society has set music and square dancing day.
colleges around the nation JW1e 20 for· its annual 'obare seeking to develop servance of Heritage Sunday
courses that will examine at the Meigs Museum in
interna tional cultures and Pomeroy,
probiems and will ' involve
A history wall area on
both student and the com- Meigs CoWlty is expected to
munity.
I
be completed for the obWhile at Rio Grande , servance and a major feature
GALLIPOLIS - Funeral Telephone Co., in Doyton.
Dagbovi will meet with of the day will be on the
services
were held April 7 In
He is survived by his wife ,
students, conduct-classes and history and artifacts of the West Alexandria,
Ohio for
former Wanda Hardwick ;
hold a round table discussion townships of Meigs County. Luther Eugene Stewart, ll. athedaughter
, Vicki ; three
on African education and 'J1he latter exltibit will be on who died there April 5.
,
sisters,
Betty
Born O.:t. 27, 1924 at Rt. 2. Miam isburg, OhiO; Dougan
politics with educators from display through July 4.
Esther
Bidwell,
he
was
the
son
of
the
Bush, and Sal ly Yeag ley,
Ri o
Grande
CollegeDuring ·the June 20 ob- tate Charles L. Stewart and both
of Gallipolis; five
Community College, Mar - servance there will be Ella Reed Stewart. He was brothers,
Char les R.,
emoloved
In
Gall
fa
Countv
bv
shall University, Ohio demonstrations of crafts of
Dayton
;
Dan,
Centerville ;
Univ ersity, and the· Ohio the past including quilting, The Buckeye Rural Electric Frank, Xenia ; Robert, of
COOperative
until
about
20 Columbus, and William .
State University. He will also woodworking, pottery years ago when he moved to
visi t the local community and m~ng, art; story telling, West Alexandria. Since Dayton.
A brother, Russell D., was
leaving Gallla County he was killed
public schools.
in Korea in 1950.
weaving , caning and
slained employed
.
with the Ohio Bell
,.

t

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l

e

Heritage Sunday date set

,.

HARBOUR NAMED N. E. DIVISION MANAGER Edwin E. "Gene" Harbour, right, Ashland, Ky. has been
promoted to division manager of Valvoline Oil Company 's
Northeastern Division, according to Russell H. Long,
executive vice president. In his new position Harbour will
be responsible for Valvoline sales in eight states served by
the company 's packaging facilities at Edison, N. J. He
will report to Ernest K. Johnson, manager of branded
sales for Valvoline. Assuming Harbour's responsibilities
as sales promotion supervisor will be John 0 . Kinkade,
left , a sales representative for Valvoline's Los Angeles
Division since joining the company in April 1972. Bott.

Harbour and Kinkade will begin their new duties effective
May 3. Kinkade also will replace Harbour in coord inating
racing activities, sa les promotion and publicity efforts for
both Valvolinc and Mac's, Inc., automotive chemicals at
race tracks and drag strips throughout North America.
Mac's is a division of Valvoline supplying automotive
chemicals to special markets. Harbour began his career
with Valvoline in 1969 as sales representative at
Indianapolis, and later in West Paln1 Beach, Fla. , from ·
1971-74. A native of Gallipolis, Harbour graduated from
Rio Grande College in 1967.

65 names drawn for duty on juries
POMEROY - Sixty - five
names were drawn Satilrday
morning for possible jury
duty for the May i;,rm at the
offi ce of Larry Spencer, Clerk
of Cour t. .
Names drawn for the grand
jury were Hazel fj;lrmon, Ht.
:!, Albany: Kenneth Wilt,
Mi nersv ill e; EdJO in F.
Neutzling, Syracuse ; Susan
Lanning, Rt. 3, Pomeroy :
Sam.Hi cks,_ Jr ., Rt. I, Vinton:
Laura L. Harrison, Rt. 4,
_ Pomeroy; Helen WoOdy, Rt.

2, Coolville; Dale Barr ,

Reedsville ; Joe Bailey, Rt. 1,
Middleport ; Marie Watson ,Pomeroy ; Edna M. Swick,
Rt. I, Middleport; Harry
Clark, Rt. 2, Pomeroy; Cecil
Sta cey , Dexter ; Bonnie
Lawrence, Portland, and
Helen Jeffers, Rt. 2, Albany .
Names drawn for the petit
jury were Glenna Felty,
Langsvill e; James L.
Fry ,
Rt .
3,
Pomeroy; Albert Hill, Jr .,
Racine ; Roger K. Deem, Rt.

CARROL K. SNOWDEN
24 State Street

Gallipolis
Phone 446-4290
Home 446-4Sl8

"State Farm's the worldS~t
car insurer. Ask me why•••"
UAff

Like a good neighbor,
Slate Fann is there.
' p 7569

~AIIIM

s... film iltltl.llll

A

AlJDIIIDit lntuiii'Ca

~~

ttomt ortlct: llloomingu, ll l• noit

INSUIANCI

I, Middleport; Roger Dillon,

Long Bottom; Elizabeth
Wilford, Racine; Eber I.
Pickens, Racin e; Ethel
Clifford , Rt. 2, Pomeroy ;
Lawrence· Balse r, Reedsville; Le onard Hoffm an,
Shade; Phyllis Henn essy,
Pomeroy; Marshall R.
Roush , Ra cin e; Naomi
Compton, ' Middl epo r t;
Lougean Chancey, Racine;
Bernice Winn, Rl. 1, Middleport; Jeffrey C. Harris,
Portland; · Betty R. Mattox,
Albany ; Don. A. Co tt;,rill,
Rutland ; Ina Masser, Reedsville; Allen E. Dill, Chest;,r;
.Linda Jett, Pomeroy; Carl J.
Horky, Middleport ; Vivian
Humphr ey, Reedsville;
Esther Dill, Rl. 3, Pomeroy;
Leo Vaugh an, Pomeroy ;
Nancy Coll ins, Pomeroy ;
Phyllis Harris, Rt. 1, Racine;
Herber t 0 . Hoover , Middleport; Lavern Jordan, Rl.
3, Albany ; Leland E. Nelson ,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy ; Randy
Pyles, Ra cin e; Glenna
Riebel , Ches!;,r; Margaret C.
Dutton, Middleport; Virginia
Cove:i, Pomeroy; Florence
Barrett, Rutland; Mary E.
Pauley, Rt. 2, Albany ; Bessie

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
APRIL 11 THRU APRIL i7
'

DINNER BOX
· 3 PIECES CHICKEN
·MASHED POTATOES
&amp; GRAVY
•SLAW
eROLL . No Sub!.
No COupons No Lil)lit

Galli~is,

0.

Parsons, Racine ; Nancy R.
Ervin, Racine ; William J.
Smith, Rutland ; James W.
Wright, Coolvilie ; Jennifer L.
Sheets, Rt . 1, Rutland;
Wanda Eblin , Rt. 4,
Pomeroy ; Evelyn Gaul , Rt. I ,
Chester; George L. Harris ,
Middl eport ; Rex Sum merfield , Ches ter; Sheila
Anderson, Rl. I, Dexter ; Bill
Winebr enner, Syracuse;
Grace M. Stout, Chest;,r;
Kermit Walton, Pomeroy,
and Norma Gale Wilcox,
. Middleport.
.
Attending were Lauren
Hoffman, and F'ree land
Norris, jury commissioners;
deputy Sheriff Robert Beegle,
Nellie Brown, Judge John C.
Bacon, and Le ttie Spencer.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
SELECT YOUR
EASTER' COAT
NOW•••
. JEROLD

ON SHOPPING TOUR
VIENNA, Austria 1UP! )
President Anwar Sadat of
Egypt Salurday reviewed the
Middle East connict with
Austrian Cpancellor Bruno
Krelsky . Vienna is the last
stop on Sadat's five-nation
European tour , largely a
shopping trip for weapons
and economic aid.

MISTr HARBOR
PIER4
PRINTZESS .

BIG SELECTION
OF MISSES,
JUNIORS AND
HALF SIZE
-COATS
2nd R.OOR

NO. 254

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Open Weekdays 9:30 to 5.- fridays 9:30 to 8 and Saturdays 9:30 to 5

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

enttne

MONDAY, APRIL

.

/t!N"ews. • •in Brief~~

~

~

By Uolted Press International
MARIETTA, OHIO - ACKNOWLEDGING some
"overkill" In the current defense budget, Sen. William
Promlire, O.Wis.; says the United States needs to spend more
than Russia for protaction. "Military power is what the Soviet
Union understands," the Wisconsin Democrat told a Marietta
College a.udience Saturday evening.
Ahu·ger defense budget would be popular with liberals and
conservatives and would help provide much-needed jobs for
.the unemployed, said Proxmire. Turning to politics, Proxmire
said former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter must become the
presidential or vice presidential candidate if Democrats are
going to capture the southern vote in the November election.
W.\SIDNG'!'QN - _WOMEN .HAVE_ BEEN virtually
excluded from top decision-filaklng jobs on the staffs of the
1976 presidential candidates, according to a survey by the
Capitol Hill Women's Political Caucus. The survey, which the
caucus promised to detail today,found that 69 of more than 400
p11id'campaign jobs existing In March were positions of power.
Yet, it said, llo more than 10 women - both paid and
vol111ieer ,wield any slghificant influence in these ·campaigns. The study al!Kl found that women hold a greater
share of the middle-level .and supp6rt positions In the
preiilllenlial campaigns.
·
"The doors to the inner collll&lt;:ils of political decision-making
are closed to women on almost every staff in the 1976
presidential camapign," the study concluded.
FLOODS HAVE FORCED THOUSANDS of persons from
their homes in Minot, N. D., and cold, blustery winds sent
shivers from the Midwest to the Northeast and sank a Chicago
police car in Lake Michigan.
Workers today raced to repair and raise 35 miles of dikes
along the Souris River, which meanders through Minot. About
12,000 to 15,000 of the city's 32,1100 residents were ordered from
Uielr homes on the flood plain along the meandering river .

.

.

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KARACHI , Pakistan (uPI)
- A Philippines Air Lines
jetliner carrying a trio of
Moslem hijackers and five
hostages from Thailand
landed
at
Karachi
International Airport today.
Pakistani authorities,
reversing
an original
decision, granted I a~ ding
rights on "humanitarian and
compassionate grounds,''
officials said. The airline
touched down at dawn
following a five-hour flight
from Bangkok,
·
But the authorities said the
plane must resume its long
journey
to
Libya
immediately after refqeling .
Officials said airport ·
authorities had received an
S.O.S. message from the
pilot. They refused to
elaborate.
The gunmen, stranded. for
three days in the Thai capital,
switched to a long..-ange DC8
jetliner for the trip here en
route to the Middle East.
Crouching among bostages
and airline officials to avoid ·
being picked off by sharpshooters, the three hijackers
moved today from a small ·
jetliner they commandeered
last Wednesday to a bigger
Philippine Air Lines DC8.
On lloard the long..-ange jet
were nine fresh crewmen.

five of the original 12
hostages from the smaller
BAC!ll and the three
hijackers, each armed with a
pistol.
Among those still held by
the gWlmen were PAL Vice
President Rafael lgoa and
PAL captain Arnulfo Santos,
pilot of the BAClll.
In return for the DC8, the
hijackers left behind on the
BAClll grenades and a suit·
case full of explosives,
security officials said .
UP!
correspondent
Sumalee Phithayakorn said
the hijackers demanded to be
flown to Benghazi, . Libya,
where they \lope to find
asylum . They carried a
$300,1100 ransom paid for the
safety of the original 70
passengers on the BAC Ill
released Thursday
in ·
Manila.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, chance of showers
Wednesday and fair
Thursday and Friday.
Highs Wednesday will be In
the upper 60's to the lower
70's, cooling by Friday to
highs In the lower 60s. Lows
will be mostly In the 40s.
::;::~::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;

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

PAL President Benjamin
Toda, who negotiated details
of the plane switch, said the
hijackers threatened at one
point this morning to blow up
themselves, their hostages
and the BAClll because the
talks were going too slowly.
"These people have no
political connections and at
no time did they express any"
political v_iews, Toda said.
"They have given no motive
for the hijacking other than

saying they want to go to
Ubya."
Philippines ambassador to
Thailand Manuel Yan said,
"They are criminals. They
are murderers." He said all
have criminal records In the
Philippines.
Toda said there was no
flight plan beyond Karachi
and there was no Indication If
Libya would allow the
hijackers to land or give them
amnesty.

Commission is
infonned of need
A delegation of teachers
and parents asked the Meigs
County Commission this
morning to employ a health
nW'se.

A spokesman pointed out
that children starting to
school must be administered
required lnnoculatlons. On
that basis, a nurse is badly
needed, the delegation said.
The group wanted . the
commissioners to be aware of
the need for a nurse, even if
only on a temporary basis.
The commissioners agreed
and offered to help.

Gas forces ~vacuation

PITTSBURGH - REPRESENTATIVES OF about 2,1100
steelhaulers in the tri-&amp;ate area of Pennsylvania, Ohio and
West Virginia plan to make a "detennined effort" to reject the
proposed national Teamsters contract as it affects
steelhaulers.
The group, which met here Saturday, also decided not to
strike "at this time." William J. Hill, national chairman of the
Fraternal Association of Steel Haulers (FASH ), said under the
JX'Oposed contract owner-operators of steelhaullng rigs t:ould
lose an average of $60 a week and drivers of company-owned
steelhaullng rigs could lose an average of $20 a week.

Also meeting with the
Commission was Wesley
Buehl, County Engineer, who
used a map to· explain
preliminary plans for a road
to the county~wned site on
top of the hlll behind Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The road
would provide access to the
proposed community health
service
multi-purpose
facUlty.
Ameeting wlll be held this
afternoon at the former
children's home to Inspect the
site.
.
C. E. Blakeslee presented
the commission detailed
report on Meiss County
nursing home needs for
study, prepared by James M.
Jennings Associates,
CoiiDDbu!l, provided by the
Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission.
Attendlns were Henry ·
Wells, Warden Ours, and
Bernard Gilkey, Commlasloners; Buehl, Martha
Chambers, clerk; Robert
Morris, Principal at Pomeroy
Elementary School, the
spokesman; Mrs. Wilma
Parker, Mrs. Folmer, Mrs.
Maxine
Thomas
and
Goegleln.

DWIGHT, lll. (UPI) southwestward into farm Into the area. "
Toxic bromine gas from regions. Shifting winds later
Among those evacuated,
exploding capsules inside a pushed it in a northwesterly Hume said, were 200-300 resiparked truck today forced the direction.
dents of the Fox Olildren's
evacuation of 3,600 residents
Deputy James Hume In the Center, a state fadllty for
Including patients from a county seat In Pontiac said retarded youths, and the
large nursing home and the only reported injury was Continental Nursing Home.
•
retarded chil~ fl'om a the truck driver who was
The truck, belonging to
MANOR HAVEN. N. Y .. - THE UNEMPLOYED son of state institution.
taken
to
a
hospital
suffering
Consolidated
Frelghtways of
Bobby Riggs, the flam~yant lenni~ ~ustler has been fow:ul
Special chemical control from toxic fumes. He was not Menlo Park, Calif., was
dead in a Long Island rooming house, authorities reported.
teams were reported en route Immediately identified.
north bound
on
busy
Nassau County police said James Riggs, 22, was found to the gas spewing truck
H\ime said according to his · Interstate 55 en rouie from St.
dead In his bed at a Long Island address by his roommate about 65 miles southwest of information the entire town of Louis to Chicago, when
Saturday evening. Pollee said a "narcotic implement" was Olicago's Loop.
J
3,600 had been evacuated. He bromine began leaking from
LOCAL TEMPS
found nearby the boey. But they would not say if Riggs' death
The Livingston County She- said there were reports of exploding capsules about 2
The temperature In
was caused by drug use. Homicide detectives said there was no riff's department said the gas "possible looting" and · a.m., state police said. The
Indication Rigg.s was slain.
cloud at first passed over "we're trying to get a squad truck pulled up two miles downtown Pomeroy at 11
a.m. Monday was « degrees
Dwight
and
moved (of law enforcement officers) north of Dwight
under sunny skies.
NEW YORK - NBC TECHNICIANS AND newswriters
who claim they are being locked out by the network have :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:::::,:-:-:,:,:,:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::t
decided to test presidential candidates who want labor
support. The 1,700 employes, members of Local 11 of the
National Association of Broadcast Employes and Technicians, J!J·
Sunday sent a telegram to major candidates 91 both Jll!rtles,
DETROIT (UP!) - A lot of Americans who always live sparse and frugal Uvea," he says. "The argument that
asking them not to appear before NBC's cameras.
· ::::
"Anything you door say - live, on film or tape - Is in fact ;:;; ·wanted to own a big luxury car are finally reallzln8 their the consumer Ia not king and he Ia just a manipulated
dreams. In fact, one of every 20 car buyers this year has puppet Is a lot of bunk and is not
In
a -croSsing to our picket lines and a defeat for us In our ·
shelled out $10,000 and more for a fancy-car.
consumer behavior."
attempts to end the lockout and negotiate a contract,'' the
Just when American and foreign auto companies are · The big cars haven't completely shed their "gastelegram said. "Whot you do in this matter will tell the country ;:;:
far more eloquenUy than anything you say about your attitude :·:_·.:' _:'·.:' spendins millions to push their spartan sUbcotnpacll!, guzzling dinosaur" image, but they're gaining a bit of
Americans ar.e opting for such exotic items as crushed respectability among a fuel-conscious public.
toward unions and union working men. "
The 1974 Lincoln Continental was rated by the
· The telegram went to the GOP's President Ford and :::: velvet fabrics, power this and thats and even electrically
Environmental Protection Agency at less than eight miles
Rmald Reagan, as well as Democrats Jimmy Carter, Henry ::./.: adjusted seat backs to fit a particular shape and size.
....
Even in the auto Industry's best year - 1973 - luxury per gallon In dty driving but jamped to 12 m.p.g. for 1976.
Jackson, Morris Udall and George Wallace.
....
:;:; car sales have never grabbed as large a share of the Cadillac's sporty Eldorado was boosted from eight m.p.g.
WASHINGTON - TilE GOVERNMENT REPORTS total :-:· market, usually hanging In around 41&gt; per cent. Through in 1974 to 11 m.p.g. this year.
DetrDII's answer to future fuel economy regulations Is
apendlng on welfare programs was at an annual rate of ,$26.5 :;:; the first six months of the 1978 model year, however, the
billion In 1975 while welfare spending on needy families ::): exwp;!lSIII
' 've caBors took k Fa 5.d2 peMr tcentcplece
, .
tl
vi
saluxuysryis aa 1a '-:,: ·-·_:
lncrealled by $1.3 billion to $9.2 billion.
15
say:;tJ!i
a
in the city. "'•
·
The Department of Health, Education and Welfare Sunday
also rep&lt;rted a trend toward smaller welfare families during
who,wtgong"'
an1t se
thtattlflft
their
ill counter with ta
nconolnw
ey aren
e or
anysthty.le
mgo1fess,
says. forFor19d7w
..
19'1$ and an Increase In welfare aid to families with
7 - a segmen m
· : :~
But Prof, Ross Wilhelm of the-University of Michigan's represented
urlemployed fathers.
· 'j[[ Graduate School of Business Administration says the
Detroit automakers say these smaller luxury cars will ....
·.·. surge in luxury car buying is part ofa consumer rebellion. allow buyers to enjoy all the cQnveniences while : :~-.: !:
"TI1e American people obviously are not buying the conserving fuel since size and welgltt are the prime gas
Clear, cool tonight, lows to Probability of precipitation }
(
argument
that we have to turn into a nation of monks who wasters.
::::
mid 30s. Fair and warmer near zero tOday, tonight and
~
~
'l'llesday, hlgha in the 60s . Tuesday.
~·
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·~
:;:;:::::::~:::::;:;:::::::; :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:·:·::::::::;;:::::::::::;:;:::::::::;:;:::: : ::::::::::::::::;:::: :;:;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:::;:::: : : :::;:;:::;:;:;::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Fancy $10,000 and up cars selling better than ever

.:.~.:-_:

!::'·. :::!.

Main Store, Annex and Mechanic Street Warehotise

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Karachi acc~pted hijackers

Area Deaths . ·!

.

New Hope

By Ada KeelsJames Dewey Keels of
Cincinnati visited his father,
Dewey Keels Friday and
Saturday and his sister, Mrs.
Gladys Grant who is a patient
in Holzer Medical Cen!;,r,
Glen Elkins, local, accompanied his mother, Mrs.
Viola Elkins from Jackson to
Charleston, W. Va .,' to bring
back his grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ivan Elkins, Sr.,
who will spend some time
with his son, Ivan Elkins, Jr.
and fam ily at Jackson.
John Howard visited
Robert Cooper, who is a
patient at Holzer Medical
Ceni;,r, Sunday.
Mrs. Brenda Keels of
Gallipolis visited her fatherin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Keels and family Sunday.
Edward Ross of Chicago,
m. called his mother, Mrs.
Daisy Ross and sister, Mrs.
Edna Cooper Sunday saying
they had snow out there
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Patton of
Jackson visited Lloyd Hutcheson Monday.
Dewey . Keels and son,
Russell, local, visited their
daught;,r and sister, Mrs.
Gladys Gran t who is a patient
in the Holzer Hospital Sunday
afternoon.
Lloyd Hutcheson attended
revival services at Mt.
Carmel Church at Bidwell
Monday night.
The farmers are busy
sowing oats, plowing for corn
and burning tobacco beds.

VOL XXVII

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

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I

By Dale Rotbceb
coun ty Sheriff's de~ utl es
It was theorized the in· barn" shop students were
M E R CERVI L LE
with their-lnvesUgatlon.
truders may have been on the bulldlns to sell as a pro jecl.
The ·fire, which destroyed first floor of the three-story The barn ltoolf was valued at
, Damages could exceed a
hundred tbOusand dollars In a · the · shop area · - ap - elementary building while . ~.
fire and breaking and en- proxim11tely 40' x 40' - was Deputy Hamilton was In the
As bad as the damage was
tering this morning at. discovered alter 4 a. m. by school 's gymnasium.
·
Itself, forcing pO!Jlpooement
Hannan Trace High School Deputy Sheriff Silas J .
Accordlns to an un- of claS8es tOday Blld possibly
near here.
Hamilton. Hamilton earlier confirmed report, a gallon of most of this week, It ~ould
Frank Eisnaugle, State (2: 02a. m.) had discovered a sasoline was found In the have been worse, 'j:'wo
Fire. Mashal from Jackso~, breaking and entering at building. Apparently the acetylen e burning tanks
members of his staff and the Hannan Trace Elementary Intruders were planning . to Inside the shop did not e.x·
Southeastern Ohio Regional School across the highway set fire to that building, too. piOde. Outside, two bottled
Crime Lab at Nelsonville (Rt. 218) from the high
Signs1ndlca ted the gasoline gas tanks, were Intact. If
were called in to assist Gallta school.
was Jake:n from u gasoline those tanks had exploded, the
lank outside the elementary entire building probably
:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.:;:;:;:;:;:;. building.
would have boen destroyed.
At 4:16 a. m. Crown City
DAMAGES ARE EXPECTED to exceed one hundred
There was extensive
volunteer firemen were damage to the outside roofing
thousand dollars In a set fire this morning at Hannan
called to the high school prea of the shop where bricks
Trace High School near Mercerville. The fire was set in
building.
·the school's agricultural-.shop area after the building was
and glass cracked due to the
hit by thieves .
According to the report, intensive heal. There was
entry there wa s made by heavy damage to two nearby
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :~:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;!;_
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:; pulling a window from Its
chissrooms and smoke and
frame In the school 's typing water . damage to the
room. Once Inside, th e hallways and Interior of the
thieves ransacked the office school.
of Principal Paul Dillon,
pried
open
vending
County School Supert n.
machines, and left humon tendent C. .Comer Bradbury
waste In· the school cafeteria said the district's Insurance
before . entering
the ~older, The Wiseman
Vocational Agricultural Shop Agency's adjuster would be
area .
in later tOday to assess the
12, 1976
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS According to agricultural damage .
Instructors Tom Pope and · Crown .City and Gallipolis
David Carter, hand tools, volunteer fire flshters were
shop equipment, power saws both at the scene early lod!ly.
and other Items were
The
Hannan
Trac e
removed from the shop area structure was built In 1960,
before the fire was set.
and has a student enrollment
It is believed gasoline was · of 206 pupils, grades 9
thrown on a "little yellow through 12 .

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0

In~ u~feco~~Ye~~r~ :e 1~~ m.p. g~~~;·

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~awllehrlchMercedForde~noLit

!::·::':·,::.:::::::

SHERIFF JAILED - It waa a switch for Meigs
County Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach,'Sat\D'day, who was
jailed by Mrs. Jack Crisp In the "Ball and Jail Day"
llenefltting the Meigs Chapter of the American Cancer
Society. Sharon Bailey, director, said the event was "very
successful" with over $800 collected, $200 over the Qoal.
Mrs. Bailey extends her thanks to Gateway Market, R.
C. Bottling Co., Tera Cumberledge, Ruth Ann Deininger,
Francis stewart, Kermit Walton, Mary Mora, Jack Kerr,
Jay Hill, Jeno Kahn, Mellasa Kerr, Dave Strang, Jennie
Turner, Jim Hamm and all the "voi\Ulteers" who came to
jaU for use, to those who honored thl!ir arrests , and a
special thanks to the '"Caped Crusader".
(Picture by Jim Hamm)

LONDON, April 12 . Adm. Lord Howe resigned
momentarily as a peace
commluloner to the
colonies when he learned
be would have to accept a
crowa-appolnled "aide" In
lbe negotiations. He
resumed the mission when
the proviso wa1 withdrawn
but was pessimistic lhat
the bud terms of king
George Ill would restore
peace.

BEST BAND
NAPOillON, Ohio (UPI)
- City officials and other
dignitaries today welcomed
borne with a victory convoy
the Napoleon High School
band, judged the best tit the
American Bicentennial
Olerry Blossow Festival In
Waahington , D.C ..
Representing Ohio under
the direction of Roger King,
the 17!Hnember group look
festival honots over some 100
other bands Saturday,
Mayor Robert G. Heft proclaimed this Napoleon Band
Appreciation Week.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomer~y E·R squad
went to Minersville at 8:50 p.
m. Saturday for Billie
Herald, a medical patient,
who was taken to VMH and at
10:23 p. m. to E. Main for
John Hunnell, Jr. , who
received a fa cial injury In a
fall, also taken to VMH.

PONY LOCATED
SYRACUSE - Police Chief
Milton Varian Is looking for
the owner of a black pony that
strayed from the Maplewood
area S111day morning. The
pony is at the Dale J\Ullor
Teaford residence. The
owrier may call Varian at 9925183.

Dateline 1776

PTATOMEET .
Safety Patrol members will
be honored by the Pomeroy
PTA meeting at •7:30 thll
evening at the Pomeroy
Elementary School.

EGGS NEEDED
RACINE - The Southern
FHA will sponsor an Easter
Egg H111 t at the high school
Saturday, April 17, from 1:30
to 2:30p . m. Those wishing to
PTA TO MEET
donate colored eggs are
SYRACUSE - A meellng
asked to call 949-2649 or bring of the Syracuse PTA will be
them to the high school on held at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday at
Friday. - ·
· the school.

,.

�2- The Pomeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Mon~y, Apn\1 2. 1976

3- The Pomeroy Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday , Apnl1 2, 197U

Awesome Reds smash Astros, ,9-3

Budget debate begins
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Sen. Birch Bayh, ~lnd ,
wants to cut $500 mtllion 111
defense spending from next
year's budget and add $100
million for juvenile justice .
Sen Edward Kennedy, 0..
Mass., wants to add $2.5
billion for jobs, health, meals
for the elderly, community
development and rural water
and sewer projects.
Sen James Buckley, RN Y , wants to shce $6.8
billton from funds for natural
resources, com'm unt ty
development, education ,
health and welfare.
Those were among the
proposals being made today
as the Senate debated a $412.6
billion 1977 federal budget
recommended by the Senate
Budget Comrruttee. It 1s $17
btlhon more than Prestdent
Ford requested
This year for the first time
Olngress Is voting on how
national priorities should be
divided
among
broad
categories 10 the overall
budget. Though 1ts deciSlons
wm be targets only, they will
carry much weight when
specific appropriation btlls
come to the floor.
Prestdent Ford asked Congress to increase defense
spending next year but w
slow down the growth of

many
soctal
welfare
programs
Senate Budget
The
Olmmlttee approved nearly
all his defense request It
recommended social welfare
spendmg htgher than Ford
proposed but sttll below the
level of current programs
plus 10flation
Bayh
sa1d
the
administration has used
" m !sl eadtng figures"
attempt10g to show the Sovtet
Uruon IS pulhng ahead of the
Uruled States Ill mthtary
power
The House last week bought
the
administration's
10\erpretation, approvmg a
$33.3 btllion weapons bill
mclud10g nme new ships the
Navy didn't request Bayh
proposed cutting $500 million
Ill 1977 defense spendmg and
$2.6 btll1on tn budget
authority, some of whtch

BRIDGE CLOSED
MARIETTA, Ohio (UP!)The 76-year-old Oh10 Rtver
Brtdge connecting downtown
Maneta to Wtlhamstown,
W.Va , wtll be closed for
about two months for repatrs
to de teriorated cut stone
piers
All traffic crossmg the twolane bridge, used pnmanly
for local trafftc, 1s being been
rerouted over the 1-77 fourlane bridge a mile upstream
by the West Vtrgmia
Htghway Department.

patd a1 Pom eroy , Ohitl
Naltonal
adverl tslng

The

Dai~

would nol be spent until '
future years
He said an Olhce of
Maqagement and Budget
memo
shows
the
admtmstratton padded tis
defen~e request with $3
btlhon ·&gt;cut insurance."
Desptte a memo us10g that
phrase, the admuustrallon
derues any paddlllg
Bayh requested $100
million to help communiltes
develop better systems of
justice lor youngsters.
Buckley's amendment
would roll back the federal
de[lcit from $~0 2 billion
proposed by the budget
committee to $43.4 billion,
about the f1gure 10itially
proposed by Ford.
Ke nn edy's proposed
amendment would 10crease
the number of federally
financed public service jobs
in
state
and
loca l
governments from the
IX'esent 300,000 to 600,000.

Sentinel

CHESTER l

TANNEHILl

l; xec Ed
•
ROBE AT HOEFLICH
C1ty EdtiOr
Publi Shed dally except
Saturday by Th e 01'\ l o
valle y Pubt l shmg Com ·
pany ,
Ill
Courl
St ,
Pom e r o y , Ohto
45769
Bus tn ess Offt cc Phone 992
7 156 Ed•torta l P hon e 992
21 57
Second c las s postage

representalt¥ e

II

Ward

G rdfllh Company I n c,
Botllnelh &amp; Gal lagher D•v ,
157 Thtrd A ve , New York

N Y

10017

Sub sc rtptlon

r ates

Del•vered by ea rn er where

available 75 cents per
week
By Motor Route
where ce rr te r sen~rce not
avat labl e . One month
$] 25 By mat l m Oh•o and
W Va , One Yea r , S27 00
Stx months . Sl l 50 Three

months 57 oo Elsewhere
526 00 yea r Arx m on ths
513 50 three mo nths , 57 50

Sub:sc npll on p n c e rn c lu des

Su nday Trmes Sentrne l

Most candidates are
already on credit. Only
President F'ord and Henry
Jackson had healthy bank
balances when the cash flow
stopped three weeks ago
The FEC ts still Ill buswess.
Only tis power to enforce
regulatwns and dispense
matching federal money was
suspended by the Supreme
Court rulmg. On Saturday 11
published the only three
financial statements to be
recetved by week's end
One was from Ford, who
satd he has taken m a total of
$5 8 mtlllon , mcludmg
matching funds , and spent $5
million. The other two were
from Democratic Senator
Robert Byrd, runmng as West
V1rgin1a favorite son, and
lndtana Sen. Birch Bayh, who
has Withdrawn as an active
candidate.
Byrd had taken m $207,261
and spent $91 ,417 Bayh had
taken m $440,471 and spent
$378,458
Henr y Jackson,
10\erviewed on ABC-TV 's

"Issues and Answers" from
Philadelphia, sa1d he IS
enough of a realist to rcahze
many Pennsylvarua voters
prefer llubert Humphrey
"lnall candor,n hesatd, "a
number of these people have
as their preference Hubert
Humphrey but they're going

DR. LAMB

SYRACUSE FIFTH GRADE CHEERLEADERS - L-r, Shari Cogar, Lisa WilliS, Penny
Sue Wolfe and Jo Ann Wolfe , adVIsor

Police accept contract
'

.•
•

•

•

•
•"
•

practica lly every means ul
recorilin g sounds and
reproducmg tt, has been used
to record heart sounds normal ones, irregular ones
and all the different
abnormal sounds made wtth
valvulllr d1sease and vartous
cardiac condtllons
These are mostly used to •
tea ch doctors , m some
instances they're used for
patient records The classtc
clinical record IS the
phonocardiogram which IS
usually a photogra phic
means of recording the
vibrations generated by the
heart sound You can see the
individual vibrations created
by abnormal sounds as well
as the vibrahons created by
the normal sound There are
even text books devoted to
thts subject showtn g the
pictures of the vibrations
generated by the heart
sounds.
The "lub-&lt;iub" sotmds you
describe are the normal first
and second heart 59unds of
every heartbeat. the first
sound ilub) is created by~
closure of valves between the

SIXTH GRADE CHEERLEADERS--First row, 1-r, Chasity Jacks; second row, Tlll8
Pierce, Ann Withams, Tracy McGraw, Amber Warner, thtrd row, Chrts Jacks, advisor;
Julie Flagg, Jacki~ Zerkle, Diana Nease.

hard to make." '

Marauders stopped 10-0

urgmg
COLUMBUS tUPii Ctl) poll ee, who had
He satd that 1f Carter does Pollee offtcers voted b) a 3-1
worked
wtthout a contract
Junior Southpaw Mtke
poorly m Pennsylvanta , tt marg10 Sunday to accept a 3\lsmce
Dec.
28, earlier thts Goldsberry was 10 complete
wtll have "a n enormous month labor contract calling
impact" on the Georgian's for an overall 18 per cent pay - year staged a slowdown at control Saturday afternoon
writing t1ckets, but last week when he pitched the
mcrease andJrtnge beneftts
drive for the nommallon.
went on a work speedup. It Wahama White Falcons to a
The
agreement
was
Carter took Sunday off, as
resulted Ill the ISSUillg of as HHI one hit shutout win over
reached
m
meetmgs
dtrected
usual. Quesllons a bout
many
as 60 per cent more the Meigs Mauraders. The
by
Federal
Medtator
Joseph
"ethmc purtty" followed hun
hckets
than the previous White Falcons banged out
Santa-Emma
Saturday
mght,
from Pennsylvania to Ohto to
Mtssourt by week's end , and on the eve of a lhreatened week for both parkmg and ten hits scoring ten runs
movlllg vtolations
he asked reporters why they walkout.
Flfe-ftghters, who hall been enroute to their sixth victory
The contract proVIdes a 6
contmued to ask about the
of the spring season against
words, smce he had per ce nt pay mcrease negottating jointly wtth the four defeats. The wm gave
starlmg last Sunday, another pollee, broke apart Friday
apologtzed for them
the local mne a 3-3 split for
In Califorma , Democrats 4and 3 per cent rruses m 1977, and wtll negotiate separately,
the week wtth v1ctortes over
beg1nmng
Tuesda
y.
F:trebegan choosmg a 280- and a 5 per cent hoosl the
Huntington
St. Joe, Wirt OJ.
ft
ghter
representatives
have
member co nv en tion lhtrd year
and
Meigs
while dropping
been
Clrculatmg
petltwns
Saturday
negotiahons
bedelegation Gov. Edmund
among
thetr
membership
to
dec!stons
to
Federal
l"een
representallves
of
the
Brown ran far ahead among
g1ve
a
s
pectal
achon
Hocking,
Poca
and
Ripley.
A
ctty
and
Fraternal
Order
of
the 20,000 to 30,000 party
members lurrung up at cau- Pollee went more than 11 commttlee authonty to do full· slate ts also scheduled
cuses Ill all 43 congresstonal hours, clunaxing a sertes of whateve r 11 thinks necessary for thts week weather permeetmgs that began earlier to break the deadlock with mltt10g.
districts
Jackson cirumed a 56 per m the week at Santa-Emma 's the ctly
Goldsberry went the
cent maJortty of delegate
candida tes m the second
stage of the selection process
m his hom e state of
Mrs Mary 'Lowse Shuler
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Wash 10gton
Mrs Clara Adams entered return ed home from Flonda
Holzer Medtcal Center wtlh after spendmg two weeks
w1th their mother , Mrs .
pneurnuma.
Gretta Simpson Mr and
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs
Belle
TheiSS
IS
a
NEW CHIEF
Mrs
Gerald
Stmpson
have
Mr
and Mrs Norman
patten
I
m
Veterans
Memortal
COLUMBUS I UP I) - Ohio
Styer of Waterford, 0. were
Agrtculture Dtrector John M Hospital wtlh a broken arm gone to be at her bedside.
Mr and Mrs DaVId Saturday evemng guests of
Stackhouse has named John from a fall .
Hensler
are parents of a Mr and Mrs. Herbert Sayre.
Mrs Garnet Ervme has
· E Taylor, Ollumbus, chief of
daughter
born Sunday, Aprtl
Herbert Sayre and Lorenzo
the divisiOn of foods, dames returned home from Camden
4
at
Holzer
Medtcal Center. DaV.s of Pomeroy spent ten
and drugs for th e Oh1o Clark Hospttal , Parkersburg.
Mr Earl Hart has returned days 10 Fionda attendlllg
Mrs Lilhan Hayman and
Department of Agrtcul lure
home from Flonda after baseball games
spendlllg the w10ter
Mr and Mrs Charles
Mrs Don Gnfftlh, two Burrts of Bolivar Darn spent
daughters and Mrs Rtchard Monday night with Mrs.
of Newark, Ohio and Mrs. Kathryn Hunt and attended
Shendan Russell, Jr. of funeral services for Francis
Mason , W. Va were guests of (Tiny) Webb at the Ewing
Mr. and Mrs Kenneth Funeral Home Tuesday.
Turley
Mrs. Flossie Badgely Is a
Mrs. Steve Cleland and medtcal pabenl at Veterans
sons spent a week w1th Mr. Memorial Hospttal
upper and lower chambers of other techm,.ues have of Cleland m Cleveland where
Mrs Freda Buchann of
the heart. The second sound course been brought Into use he IS employed
Tuppers
Plams has purI dub) ts caused by the closure 10 medicme as well There
Mrs Carohne Miller ac- chased the Wallace Haynes
of the valves at the outlet of are very few advances In companted Mr. and Mrs.
residence and moved there
the heart where blood ts technology thai cannot be Ernest Bush to Parkersburg
wtth her family. Mr. and Mrs.
ejected in to lite right used 10 someway or another Satlll'day.
Haynes and sons moved to
(pulmonary) and left (aorta) 10 medicme And m most
Mrs. Helen Simpson and Flortda
Instances there ts someone
arteries leaving the heart.
Mrs Dorothy Badgley spent
Mr. and Mrs Don Manuel
These heart sounds have busy applymg them
from
Thursday
111
Monday
spent
Monday in Huntington
Your dad's heart sounas
even been analyzed in terms
w1th
Mr
and
Mrs
Brtan
They
visited WSAZ TV
of frequency and how much of may be perfectly normal wtth Stmpson and famtly at
Slatwn
and went shopping.
each part of the sound 1s a relatively slow heart rate A Baltimore
Flossie
Bush and Edith
pr:oduced by different stroke which affect.s the brain
Marjori
e
Gnmm,
Manuel
stayed
with Donnita
1 Mrs
frequenctes m th e sound does not necessartly affect Mrs Linda Grimm and Mrs .
and
Robm
Manuel
while their
the fun ctiOn of the heart. For
spectrum.
Mildred Hart spent a day parents were In Huntington.
We also have means of more mformation about shoppmg In Parkersburg.
Mrs. Joyce Manuel,
listening to a pattent's heart strokes send 50 rents for The
Mr.
Kenneth
Swart
of
chtldren
Donnita and Robin
and simultaneously Health Letter, number 2~ , Akron spent a rouple days
vtsited
Earl
Hart at Racine.
broadcasting 11 to nwnerous Strokes Cerebral Vascular w1th h1s mother, Mrs James
Mr
.
Hart
had
just returned
Cerebral Swart.
different locations. This IS Accident
home
after
spendmg
the
sometimes
used
m Thrombosts. Send a long,
Mr and Mr s Kenneth winter In St. Cloud, Fla. They
stamped,
self-addressed
demonstrating heart sounds
Turley and sons spent Sunday
to medical students m a large envelope for matting. w1th hts parents, Mr. and also vtslted Dennie and Gary
Hart
audttortum or even in smaller Address your letter to me m
Mrs.
Clarence
Turley
at
care of thts newspaper, P) 0
groups
IRONTON MAN DIES
Galhpohs
I someltmes thipk the Box 1551, Radtn City Station,
IRONTON - A 23-year old
public does not realize how New York, NY 10019
Ironton man, Rickey Ivan
much has gone mto producing
Johnson of
369 Orchard
the level of medicine which
In W4~. Pr estdcnl F1 Hllklm Hollow was kllled In a
they receive today . The
D Roosevelt died at Warm motorcycle accident at about
On lh ls du\ m lustm J
advances in technology such
In 1861 , the Ctvll War began Sprlllgs, Ga. About three 5 45 p m. Saturday in a strip
as those 10 the sound wh en Confederate troops hours later , Vtce President mmwg area off Ohio 650 the
recordmg area that are opened ftre on Ft. Sumter, Harry Truman was sworn m Lawrence County sheriff's
applied to h1-f1 work and sc
as chtef executtve
department said today .
to vote for me ."

Racine Social Events

Doctors record heart sounds
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
listened to many heartbeats
since 1929 I hear the "lobdub". Every heart has a
diStinct "lutHlub" Is 11 not
possible w record and play
back the "lutHlub" of good
hearts , diseased hearts,
irregular hearts, ell: so that
the doctors can compare the
good ones with the bad ones?
My dad Is 90 years old and
suffered one stroke and hiS
heart sounds through ,the
stethoscope as a slow, strong
sound. I never heard a heart
sound quite like 11. If a dottor
had a recordlllg of several
heart cases, could he not be
better able to detect a new
heart case that he had never
seen before'
DEAR READER - Thank
your for your mteresting
thought. Like many good
ideas, someone else has
already had it.
We have been usmg
recordings of heart sounds
for years.
They were first put on old
phonograph records. Later
magnetic
tape ,
and

FIFTH GRADERS HONORED - Honored Friday night following the dinner at the
Syracuse Elementary School was the fifth grade squad. First row, 1-r, Jerry Wolfe , Rtck
Chancey, Todd Cundiff; second row, Robert Cunnmgham, Tun Patterson, David Cundiff;
thlfd row, Eddie Ash and Jolm Manuel, coaches.

DEVOTED TO THE
INTER EST OF.
MEIGS· MASON AitEA

·candidates marking time
By ELIZABETH WHARTON
United Press International
If
conferees
reach
agreement, and 1f both House
and Senate pass the bill, and
If Prest dent Ford signs it and
then appoints the six new
Federal
Election
Olmmtssioners, and tf the
Senate confinns them - then
!X'esidential candidates agam
can draw federal funds by
Easter.
It doesn't seem likely
Olngress starts a !().day
recess at midweek, and with
only three working days left,
it appears to be a long-shot
chance all the steps can be
completed w put the FEC
back Into the business of
doling out matching funds.
Unless by some kind of
legislative mtracle the
process can be completed
before Thursday, the cash
window will reopen too late to
help candidates m the next
day's Pennsylvania primary
or the May 1 Tetas balloting.
Senate-House negotiators
scheduled another effort
today to work out a bill
acceptable to House, Senate,
White House and Supreme
Court. But the wedding plans
of the chtef House conferee,
Ohio Democrat Wayne Hays,
wtll cause problems tf
another session is needed
Tuesday .

TROPHIES PRESENTED - The Sll!th grade
basketball team at Syracuse Elementary School rece~ved
trophtes Frtday rught followmg a dmner at the school.
Front row, 1-r, Eugene Jeffers, Joe Bob Hemsley,
Dew~yne Dtll; back row, Eddte Ash , coach, C. I.
Chapman, Robert Brown, Brian Ash, Joho Manuel, coach.

AUGUSTA, Ga (UP() - When you wm the Masters,
especially the spectacular way Ray .Floyd did, you can say
you've finally reached the btg leagues, jollled the "club " so to
speak,
Only Ill his case, he dtd that years ago, and 11 nearly ftmshed
him for good
The old Ray Floyd had SQme rough edges He wasn't what
you'd call nice He tells you that himself, then moves on to
another subject. Like how much he has changed now, and how
happy he is bemg married and the father of two little boys,
which he is.
Uke he says, he wasn't a bad guy, but he was self-centered, a
smart-aleck who never had much time for anybody except
himself
"I guess I was a spoiled brat," he says.
Bemg a bachelor helped . There were no strmgs What he was
concentratmg on more than playmg golf, which was only his
occupatton, was livmg the "good life," which became his
avocation.
He lived it up wherever he went, the more wine and women,
the better. Maybe tl's an exaggeration to say that every night
was New Year's Eve for him, but you get the general1dea.
He was the new playboy of the professional golf tour, 10 the
big leagues, and even if he enJoyed the attention and pubhctty
that went w1th it, one man didn't, and that man was his father
L.B. Floyd, a former Army master sergeant.
"I never apprectated all that stuff about his bemg a
playboy," satd the 55-year-old father of the new Masters'
champ Sunday at Augusta National. "I thmk they overdone
it
This was ail before Ray Floyd mel his present wife, the
fonnerMaria Frietta, three years ago. That, he says, changed
everythlllg for him.
Before it d1d, though , he wasn 't exactly mak10g them forget
Jack Ntcklaus and Arnold Palmer by hiS achievements on the
golf course. Floyd scored his first professional vtclory m 1963,
in the St Petersburg Open, then slipped 10!o the background
again unltl he won the PGA title at Dayton, Ohio, stx years
later
Finally when L.B. Floyd felt thmgs had gone far enough, he
sat down with hts boy and had one of those father-and-son talks
with him .
"I started out by tellmg him that with ail the ability he had,
and wtth all the shots he had, he wasn 't applymg htmself," sa1d
the elder Floyd, who now operates the Cypress Lakes golf
course m Fayvettevtlle, N C.
"He satd, 'Daddy, there's more thmgs m life than playing
golf,' and when he said that to me, I told him 'you beller make
it while you're young because when you're my age, baby, it's

Fairview
News Notes

dtstance strikmg out stx and of earlier reports. The senior
walking four for his fourth leftf!elder has hit safely in
consecutive pitching victory every game that he has
The game was called w1th partictpated in so far this
Wahama battin~C in the season
The Whtte Falcons visit
bottom half of the fifth
because o( the -ten Tun rule. Parkersburg South today
Meigs threatened only and entertain Eastern
,once 10 the game and that tomorrow. They vistt Buffalo
was m the top half of the on Wednesday and Winfield
on Thursday Buffalo VIsits
second. Soulsby led off the
innmg wtth a base on balls. ' Mason on Friday and Duval
Saturday.
After Bachner struck out,
Howard delivered a ground
00000011
rule double to left center Metgs
putting runners on second Wahama 1 3 I 0 5 10 10 I
and third wtth JUSt one out , Wmning Pitcher: GoldGoldsberry then choked oil sberry 4-ll
the rally by sinking out the Losing Pttcher· Smtth
next two batters to rettre the 2BH-Goldsberry, Howard
HR · Tucker (2)
side.
Wahama scored one run
RESERVE GAME
in the first when Davtd Rees
The Whtte Falcon Reserve
singled, stole second and
rode home on a single by Tim Squad fatled 10 their bid for a
season open10g win when
Thompson.
they took 11 on the chin by a itIn the second frame the
3
score. The Maurader
White Faleons scored three
Reserves
scored three runs
tlDles on just one hit. RICk
m the opening Frame and
Buzzard and Dale Lewts
added two more 10 the fourth
opened the inning wtth
to chalk up the victory
walks. Both nmners moved
Tom Thompson started on
up a base wtlh a double steal
the
mound for Wahama and
and then scored on a smgle
pitched
five 10nlllgs, giving
by Goldsberry. The White
up
flve
runs on four hits.
Falcon pitcher later scored
Three of the four Meigs hits
when Davtd Reed grounded went for extra bases acout.
counting for all five enemy
Terry
Tucker
was nms.
responsible for the Falcons
Wahama pounded out six
fifth run when he blasted a htts in all but were unable to
round-tripper he cleared the come up with the victory.
bleachers m nght field
Phil Hobbs and Tom
The filth inning sewed \he Thompson each had two
game up for Wahama when singles while Buddy Rose
they scoPed f1ve times on delivered a two run double.
four htts, Tun Thompson Kreig Sayre also had a single
opened with a single and . and made a fine defensive
scored on three successiVe play at hts second base
wild pitches. Tun Davis and pos11!on.
Duke Smith walked and
The two schools
also
moved to third and second played a third game conrespectively on wild pttches
sisting of both vars1ty and
A' smgle by Buzzard scored reserve players with Meigs
both runners with the winnin~ out by a 9 to 5 score.
sophomore second sacker The Mauraders scored four
scoring when the throw by runs In the second to take a
the catcher went into left quick 4-0 lead, but the White
field as he was attempbng to Falcons came back with two
swtpe third base. Mike in the th1rd and three more in
Lambert then delivered a the fourth to take a 5-4
pinch hit smgle and promp- advantage. In the final In·
Uy stole second. Goldsberry nlng the White Falcons
then doubled' Lambert home committed five errors which
to end the game.
led to five Maurader runs
The leading hitters for the giving the Ohio School a 9 to 5
White
Falcons · were
victory
Tucker, Thompson and
Meigs outhlt the While
Goldsberry with two hits Falcons sill to three In the
I
ea,ch . Tim Sayre, David game with sit
singles.
Reed, Rick Buzzard and Wabama had singles by Kurt
M1ke Lambert all chipped ln Sayre and Jackie Smith with
with smgles In the winning Buddy Rose driving In two
cause to round out the runs with a homer to center
Falcon hitters.
In the third.
A check back Into the Reserve
books show David Reed Game:
123Hrhe
currenUy riding a
nine Meigs
30020543
game hitting streak instead Wahama
00030361
~

The elder Floyd came here Saturday He pulled !or hts son,
but remallled qu~etly Ill the background . He stayed in the same
place wtth Ray and hts wife and the couple's two boys,
Raymond, Jr., two years old, and Robert, only two-and-a-half
months.
.
Ray Floyd told hts father he was gomg to wm by rune shots
He was ahnost as good as hts word, never playing defensively,
stumblmg only once and shoot10g a splendid two underpar 70 to
win by eight shots
When they put the tradtllona l green Masters coal on Ray
Floyd after he had won , hts father stood off to one side and
watched the whole thing closely. The color came to his face
and he bllllked his eyes a couple of times.
1 " . . This," he srud to a companton alongstde him, "IS what a
father always dreams of. "

SPORTS CALENDAR
MONDAY, APRIL 12 - Baseball North Ga!!ia at Eastern. Hannan Trace at
Southern, Meigs Reserves at Kyger Creek;
Track - Meigs at Gallipolis.
TUESDAY, APRIL l:l - Baseball Eastern at Wahama, Southern at Federal
Hocking, Meigs at Jackson; Track- Meigs
at Eastern, Meigs Girls at Eastern. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14- Baseball
- E'astern at Trimble.
THURSDAY, APRIL 15- BaseballSouthern at Eastern, Waverly at Meigs ;
Track - Waterford at Eastern.
FRIDAY, APRIL 16 - Baseball Easre'rn at Ravenswood, Southern Reserves
vs . Alumni.

Sonics earn home
court advantage
Unlled Press International
The Seattle Sonics will be
just where they want to be
when the National Basketball
Assoc1at1on playoffs open th1s
week - at home.
The Sonics overcame a
determined Portland effort in
their regular season finale
Sunday 132-13! to fmish in
second place l'n ihe Pactfic
Dt vision and earn the home
court advantage mthe If bestof -seven quarterfinal
showdown w1th the Phoenll!
Suns.
The Sanies will thus shoot
for thetr 17th consecutive
home court win Tuesday in
their opening confrontation
wtth the Suns. The Sonics,
who own a 31-10 home record
compared with a 12-29 road
mark, were last defeated
here by the Suns on Feb. 8
Slick Watts, along with
backcourt n\ate Fred Brown,
ignited a fourth quarter rally
which saw the Sonics erase
an 11-point Blazer lead in the
final seven minutes. Brown,
who equaled Bill Walton's
game-high 33 pomts, scored
12 In the fourth penod and
Watts added 15.
Walton staked the Blazers
_to a 34-26 f1rst quarter lead
with IS points, five rebounds
and four assists. But with
Walton sidelined with three
fouls in the second quarter,

By FRED DOWN
UP! ~ports Writer
United Press International
Awesome
That 's the word Pete Rose
uses to describe !he
Cincmna \1 Reds and it would
be difficult to thmk of a better

one.
'How else would you
describe a team that has won
thr ee straight games , is

.
averagmg 11 nlll s per game
and has two players m Its
bneup battmg .636 and 563,
respecllvely '
The Reds made 11 three
wtns m a row Sunday when
they whipped the Houston
Astros, 9-3, wtlh Pete Rose
gomg 4-for-6 and Joe Morgan
2-for-4 The Reds scored a
total of 33 runs m the thr &lt;oe

games : Rose has a 563 ieaa to
hattmg Hveragc, and Morga n
IS hlttmg 636
The Reds scored two runs
m the ft r"t mnin g on a single
by Rose, a walk to Ken
Gnffey, a double by Morgan
and Tor• y Perez ' infteld out
They routed Joe Ntekro wtlh
a fow·-run burst m the fourUt
mnmg when Utey bmlt thetr

IHl

The Sun Franctscu Giants
defeated the Los Angeles
Dodgers, 6-4 : the Atlanta
Braves beat the San Dtego
Padres, 4·2, the Pittsburgh
Pira tes
topped
the
Piuladelphta Phtlhes, 8-3; the
Chicago Cubs downed the St.
Louis Cardmals , 8-5, and the
Montreal Rxpo s nipped the

Floyd equals Masters record
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPII Ray Floyd knew he had the
Masters won, but he wanted
to wrap 11all up 10 a neat, tidy
package
"I knew the tournament
was mine Saturday night,"
S8ld F'loyd after hts runaway
etght-stroke vtct.Jry Sunday
"! didn 't believe anyone else
could catch me. But, I didn't
want to do it sloppily."
He didn't
F'loyd had a steady 2underpar 70 m the final
round , good enough for a
fo~r-day wtal of 17-under-par
271 that tied the Masters
record Jack Ntcklaus set 10
1965.
··r honestly wasn't thmking
about the record at f1rst ," he
smd. "But I d!d start th10king
about 11 when I went 17 under
111th my btrdte at the 15th
hole
" ! kn ew I had the
tournament won, provtding I

dtdn 't break a leg or
something, so I figured why
not go lor the record."
Floyd parred the last three
holes and thus m1ssed seltmg
a new 72-hole mark
He set 36-(131) arld 54-hole
( 201 ) records and hts 14 under
par showmg for the par ftves
a\ Augusta Na llonal was a
stroke better than Jtmmy
Demaret's next-best showmg
back m 1950.
"My play on the par fives
was the secret of my success
this week, " satd Floyd "!
figured the way the course
was playmg that if I htt the
ball well I'd have a chance to
btrdie all of them "
He dtd better than that the
ftrst three days, gett10g 11
b1rd1es and an eagle 10 12
chances, but b1rd1ed only one
of the four par-fives Sunday
Floyd, who ratsed h1s earnmgs for the year w nearly

Red Sox snap
losing spell
By NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI ~ports Writer
Call tl mtutlton or call 11
luck, manager Darrell
Johnson 's decision Sunday to
overlook the law of averages
resulted in the Boston Red
Sox nettmg the1r first v1ctory
of the season
Denny Doyle's three-run
double chmaxed a ftve-run
thtrd 1nn10g and Fred Lynn
belted hts firs\ home run of
the year as the Red Sox
defeated , the Ba ltimore
Ortoles, 6-2, behind the
pttchmg of veteran Lu1s Tiaht
and
rehever
Regg~e
Cleveland
The VIctory enabled the
Red Sox, the defendmg
Amencan
League
champions, to salvage the
final game of the three-game

senes .
Johnson usually platoons
Doyle, a left-handed batter,
with Doug Griff10 at second
base With southpaw Mike
Cuellar the Onoles' startmg
pitcher Sunday, the Red Sox
ratsed several eyebrows
when they started Doyle
ahead of the right-handed
hittmg Griffin . But the
suprise strategy worked out
well for Johnson, last
season's AL "Manager of the

Year."
"Cuellar throws that
screwball to the right-handed
balt"''s so I assume that's
why I was in the l10eup
today,'' srud Doyle . "Not
being 10 the starting lineup
every day is out of my
hands."
Lynn, named the AL's
"Rookie of the Year" and
"Most Valuable Player" last
season, continued hts hot·
hitting with a home run and a
double Lynn now has SIX hits
in hts last nine at-bat.s.
In other games Minnesota
edged Texas 4-3 and Oakland
outslugged Cal1forma . 11).7.
Detroit at Cleveland, New
York at Milwaukee, and a
doubleheader between
·Kansas City City and ChiCago

me ~onics struck for 40 points
and a 66-61 halftune lead.
Walton added 12 pomts m
the third ·quarter as the
Blazers went back 10 front 9492 and overall hit l~f-17
shots, grabbed 14 rebounds
and added stx assists before
fouling out in the final
minute.
Elsewhere in the NBA,
Boston edged Washmgton
103-99, Buffalo mpped Kansas
Bulls Ill, Bucks 77
City 99-98, Chicago trounced
Tom Boerw10kle, Mickey
Milwaukee 111-77, Houston Johnson and Cliff Pondexter
t.Jpped Atlanta 122-lll, New combined for 75 Chicago
York drubbed Cleveland 103- points to end a three-game
78 and New Orleans beat losing streak. Midwest
Detroit 112-105.
Divtsion champ~on Milwauke
Celtlcs 103, Bullets 99
meets Detroit m its first
Jolm Havhcek scored a playoff game Tuesday
sea son-high 38 pomts in BosRockets 122, Hawks 111
ton 's last regular season
Joe Meriweather scored 25
and
Rudy
contest to break a four-game pom\s
losmg streak. Elvin Hayes Tomjanovtch added 24 for
led Washington with 24.
Houston in a battle of two
Braves 99, Kings 98
non-plavoff teams. Dean
·Bob McAdoo garnered his Mem10ger had 24 for Atlanta.
thtrd stratght scoring crown,
Knieks 103, Cavs 78
scoring 34 points to complete
Butch Beard led a llaianred
the season with a 31.1 New York attack with Iii
average. McAdoo also p01nts Dtck Snyder led
grabbed 12 rebounds while Cleveland, whtch meets
Ken Charles added 20 points Washmgton Tuesday 10 its
and John Shumate 17 points . lust playoff contest, wtth 13
and 15 rebounds. Nate po10ts.
Archibald topped Kansas
Jazz 112, Pistons 105
City with 27 points and Scott
Pete Maravich scored 31
Wedman had 22. The Braves' point.s and added rune ass1sts
playoff opener is 10 to carry New Orleans past
Philadelphia Thursday .
Detr01t

were all postponed due to bad
weather
Twins 4, Rangers 3
Dan Ford's solo home run
m the mnth mmng broke a 3-3
lie and gave the Twins theu
first vtctory of the season
The Rangers had battled
back from a 3~ def1ctt before
Ford's blast off Jeff Terpko ,
the fourth Ranger pitcher ,
snapped a two-game losmg
streak Five-t une Amen clln
League batttng champton
Rod Carew also doubled
twice and scored twtce for the
Twms
A's 10, Angels 7
Sal Bando npped a two-run
homer to h1ghhght a four-run
first mn10g Oakland outburst
and B1ll North s10gled 10 two
runs m the e~ghth frame as
the A's ou!)asted Cahforma
for a sweep of the three-game
senes

After surrenderlllg etghl
runs in the first three ino10gs,
the Angels battled back,
scormg three times 10 the
f1fth, twtce more on Orland&lt;r
Ramirez's two-run mngle 10
the sixth and two more on Bill
Melton's homer m the
seventh But Oakland came
hack with two runs 10 the
etghlh mning to decide the
contest.

$55,000 by ptckmg up $40,000
m the Masters, had three
b1rd1 es and a boge y m
Sunda y's round.
The bogey came at the parthree fourth hole where he
nussed the green lie got that
shot back on the ft fth hole by
plac ing a three-Iron shol
three feet from the pm ; ran
home a :!().footer at No 12 ;
then sank a 15-footer at No
15.
•
Young Ben Crensha11 ,
wtnner of two back-to-ha ck
tournaments earher this
year, had a 67 Sunday, the
best score m the fmal round,
for a 9-under.par 279 !hal

earned tum $25,000 secondplace money .
Defendmg champion Jack
Ntcklaus, favored to wm hts
Sixth Masters champ!Onshtp,
had hts second stratgh ~ 73
Sunday and wound up tied for
thtrd , at 282, _wtth Larry
Ztegler
Former U S. Open champ
Hale lrwm, former Masters
champ Charles Olody and
l om Kite all had ~ and
former Masters champ Billy
Casper had a 287 as only e1ght
golfers from the original
Masters held of 72'were able
lo beat pa r for the full four
rounds

Spring sports on
'go' at Eastern
EAST MEIGS - The
Spring Sports program at
Eastern High School Is fn full
swmg wtlh the guts and boys
track teams pract!ctng smce
the mtddle of March and
approachmg the openmg of
lhe~r seasons Tuesday Apnl
13th
The boys track team,
coached by Spike Berkhtmer,
ts preparmg for tts first meet
that day at home agamst
Me1g s Ht gh School and
Thursday , Apnl 15th at home
agamsl Waterford
In
add1hon to these meets the
boys wtll have mne other
meets plus the conference
and th e sect tonal tra ck
meets
There are 15 boys out for
tra ck mcludmg three semors,
s1x juntors, th ree sophomores
and three freshmen Of these
15 boys, e1ght are lettermen
Th e gtrls track team ,
.. coached by Susie Thompson,
IS prepar10g for 1ts ftrsl track
season ever They are
scheduled to run agamsl the
Metgs High School gtrls at
home on Tuesday, April 13.
Along w1th lh1s meet th ey
have mne other re gular
season meets plus the conference meet and the sectional meet Currently there
are 17 girls prepanng for the
season Making up the team
are two semors, eleven
juntors, three sophomores,
and one mnth grader
G1rl athletes parllctpatmg
are Semors - Sherry Epple
and Lola Walker

Juntors .. Rachel Hunter ,
Tammy Fitch, Janet Ambrose, Teresa Edwards ,
Teresa Ca rr , Cmdy R1tch1e ,
Jewell Blake, Ltsa Masters ,
Je nm!er Gamer, Pam
Spurlock, Paula Hawk
Sophomores - Ktm Batey,
Tammy Fortney, Debbte
Heins
Freshman
Laune
Matthews
Boys team has Semors - B
Bennett , dtslan ce,
G
Longenelte, dtsta nce; J
Landon, sprmts and relays
Jun10rs - L. Lungenelte,
hurdles, M Grossnickle, field
and disUince, K. Barton,
hurdles and sprmts; J. Day,
spr10ts and relays, B. Drake,
sprmts and relays; M Smith,
distance and relays
Sophomores - P Reed,
spnnls and relays ; K
Enevoldsen, distance; D.
Browmng , field .
Freshmen - G Reed,
field;
D.
Lon ge nelle,
distance; R Masters , field
G Longenette, Landon, L
Longenette , Grossmckle,
Day, Drake, Smtih and Reed
are lettermen

New York Mets, 7-6.
Giants 5, Dodgers t
'
Pinch~utter Dave Rader's
ptnch-htl double climaxed a
four-run etghth inning rally
which hfted lhe Giants to
lhetr vtct ory over the
n• W,...,,rou•••• """
Dodgers
·· ~" ~
Braves 4, Padres 2
Pit&lt;·her Dick Ruthven
drove Ill three runs with two
singles and received credit f:lf1TCH~lf1
~tP.
1
·
for the Braves' win With relief 1
help from Roger Moret and
yOU
Pablo Torrealba
Pirates 8, Phll\les S
Riehle Zisk and Rennie
·.A.
Stennett knock~ in two runs
~
each as the Pirates kayoed
•
Steve Carlton In the fifth and
went on to beat the Phillles . State Farm Matchmaker
Carlton rcllred the first 10
ServiCe IS free And so
s1mple You tell us a little
batters, but the Ptrates took a
about yourself, your famtly ,
2-0 lead when Mann y
your goals We feed thiS In
Sangmllen singled , AI Oliver
format1on to our comput er
walked and Zisk doubled
an~ In a matter of seconds
Cubs 8, (;~rdlnals 5
It
prints out a State Form
Btll Madlock smgled m the
l tfe msu rance pl'ogram that
tie-breaking run and Andy
matct1es your needs One
Thornton and Steve Swisher
you t im 11ve with
followed with sacrlftce files
as the Cubs rallied for three
See or call
runs m the mnth to beat the
Cardinals.
BILL FLETCHER
Expos 7, Mets 6
1258 Powell Sl
Nate Colbert, who always
Mtddleporl, 0
seems at his best against the
Mets, drove in two runs witll
.PH. 992-7155
a homer and a s10gle as the
Expos
dealt
form er
STATE FARM LIFE
Amertean League great INSURANCE COMPANY
Mickey l.ohch a loss m his
li o nr ~ Qn1c1 8loomr n11011 lll l n~ l s
p 7220
National League debut.

--

~Rl~~~~~~~·

,..

. ...

The State Farm

Can find
a matCh '"" '""
for l'lfe

I N\ li iA "1 ( 1

BICENTENNIAL

SPECIAL

' · ; -'Good thru Sun., April 18 '· ·'

..........sl.l9

SONNYBURGER
SONNYBURGER
SANIJNIQi
ONLY
Now Featuring

Soft Dairy Dessert -Twist

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Middleport,
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A piece of the energy puzzle.

PROFESSIONAL
SALES POSITION ·
EXCELLENT PAY PLAN
USE OF CAR
•
COMPLETE TRAINING
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MASON COUNTY
MOTOR COMPANY
YOUR lllEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE DEALER
1011 YIAND ST.
POINT PLEASANT
675-3370
WILLIAM R. KNIGHT,

MANAGER
We Are An Equal Opoortunity Employer

Some cold facts
about the cost
ofgetting new gas.
Colum btJ Gas would ltke nothing better liMn to .mn ounce thai
you r gas r.1tes wtll soon go down But the s.td fa ct is, gas ra\es must
go up Nol down
O ne te.1son ts the need for new sources of n.ttur.1 l gas to keep
you supplt ed And the cost con tmucs to cl un b bec.IUse tt 's , lot
tougher to develop th ose new sources
iniust the past fou r years, Colum bia h.1s commttted over , In II toll
,/,.//" " to the search for new gas suppltes fh e money's bt g bec.lUse
the iOb IS btg
•
And you have every nght to know where , JI th.•t money's gomg
Herr .ne I he ma1or tlems
• Arcttc ex pl orallon .md develop ment
• an LNG term mal for gas from overseas
• rxplonng farth er and deeper offshore
• mtllion-doiiM-a-mtlc underwater p1pehnes
· new deep-well dnllmg 111 Appal.lchta
• J synthet tc gas plant
' • O.Ml gclSlfJ C,lho n f('S£'.HCh

Tha i's where th e m&lt;mry's J\0111~ We don'llt kc tt any more than
you do, but the hard truth IS - the g.Is from these new sources
costs more II may be littl e comforl, but tn spJ\e of rismg costs, gas
wtll contmuc to be your most eco nomtc,, J .md cff1ue nt energy
sou ttc And th,tt , too, 15 ,1 fJct

-------lf!IIMf!l!!f!llllill••rJ,wMBIAGAS
'

(

I

•.

'I

�2- The Pomeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Mon~y, Apn\1 2. 1976

3- The Pomeroy Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday , Apnl1 2, 197U

Awesome Reds smash Astros, ,9-3

Budget debate begins
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Sen. Birch Bayh, ~lnd ,
wants to cut $500 mtllion 111
defense spending from next
year's budget and add $100
million for juvenile justice .
Sen Edward Kennedy, 0..
Mass., wants to add $2.5
billion for jobs, health, meals
for the elderly, community
development and rural water
and sewer projects.
Sen James Buckley, RN Y , wants to shce $6.8
billton from funds for natural
resources, com'm unt ty
development, education ,
health and welfare.
Those were among the
proposals being made today
as the Senate debated a $412.6
billion 1977 federal budget
recommended by the Senate
Budget Comrruttee. It 1s $17
btlhon more than Prestdent
Ford requested
This year for the first time
Olngress Is voting on how
national priorities should be
divided
among
broad
categories 10 the overall
budget. Though 1ts deciSlons
wm be targets only, they will
carry much weight when
specific appropriation btlls
come to the floor.
Prestdent Ford asked Congress to increase defense
spending next year but w
slow down the growth of

many
soctal
welfare
programs
Senate Budget
The
Olmmlttee approved nearly
all his defense request It
recommended social welfare
spendmg htgher than Ford
proposed but sttll below the
level of current programs
plus 10flation
Bayh
sa1d
the
administration has used
" m !sl eadtng figures"
attempt10g to show the Sovtet
Uruon IS pulhng ahead of the
Uruled States Ill mthtary
power
The House last week bought
the
administration's
10\erpretation, approvmg a
$33.3 btllion weapons bill
mclud10g nme new ships the
Navy didn't request Bayh
proposed cutting $500 million
Ill 1977 defense spendmg and
$2.6 btll1on tn budget
authority, some of whtch

BRIDGE CLOSED
MARIETTA, Ohio (UP!)The 76-year-old Oh10 Rtver
Brtdge connecting downtown
Maneta to Wtlhamstown,
W.Va , wtll be closed for
about two months for repatrs
to de teriorated cut stone
piers
All traffic crossmg the twolane bridge, used pnmanly
for local trafftc, 1s being been
rerouted over the 1-77 fourlane bridge a mile upstream
by the West Vtrgmia
Htghway Department.

patd a1 Pom eroy , Ohitl
Naltonal
adverl tslng

The

Dai~

would nol be spent until '
future years
He said an Olhce of
Maqagement and Budget
memo
shows
the
admtmstratton padded tis
defen~e request with $3
btlhon ·&gt;cut insurance."
Desptte a memo us10g that
phrase, the admuustrallon
derues any paddlllg
Bayh requested $100
million to help communiltes
develop better systems of
justice lor youngsters.
Buckley's amendment
would roll back the federal
de[lcit from $~0 2 billion
proposed by the budget
committee to $43.4 billion,
about the f1gure 10itially
proposed by Ford.
Ke nn edy's proposed
amendment would 10crease
the number of federally
financed public service jobs
in
state
and
loca l
governments from the
IX'esent 300,000 to 600,000.

Sentinel

CHESTER l

TANNEHILl

l; xec Ed
•
ROBE AT HOEFLICH
C1ty EdtiOr
Publi Shed dally except
Saturday by Th e 01'\ l o
valle y Pubt l shmg Com ·
pany ,
Ill
Courl
St ,
Pom e r o y , Ohto
45769
Bus tn ess Offt cc Phone 992
7 156 Ed•torta l P hon e 992
21 57
Second c las s postage

representalt¥ e

II

Ward

G rdfllh Company I n c,
Botllnelh &amp; Gal lagher D•v ,
157 Thtrd A ve , New York

N Y

10017

Sub sc rtptlon

r ates

Del•vered by ea rn er where

available 75 cents per
week
By Motor Route
where ce rr te r sen~rce not
avat labl e . One month
$] 25 By mat l m Oh•o and
W Va , One Yea r , S27 00
Stx months . Sl l 50 Three

months 57 oo Elsewhere
526 00 yea r Arx m on ths
513 50 three mo nths , 57 50

Sub:sc npll on p n c e rn c lu des

Su nday Trmes Sentrne l

Most candidates are
already on credit. Only
President F'ord and Henry
Jackson had healthy bank
balances when the cash flow
stopped three weeks ago
The FEC ts still Ill buswess.
Only tis power to enforce
regulatwns and dispense
matching federal money was
suspended by the Supreme
Court rulmg. On Saturday 11
published the only three
financial statements to be
recetved by week's end
One was from Ford, who
satd he has taken m a total of
$5 8 mtlllon , mcludmg
matching funds , and spent $5
million. The other two were
from Democratic Senator
Robert Byrd, runmng as West
V1rgin1a favorite son, and
lndtana Sen. Birch Bayh, who
has Withdrawn as an active
candidate.
Byrd had taken m $207,261
and spent $91 ,417 Bayh had
taken m $440,471 and spent
$378,458
Henr y Jackson,
10\erviewed on ABC-TV 's

"Issues and Answers" from
Philadelphia, sa1d he IS
enough of a realist to rcahze
many Pennsylvarua voters
prefer llubert Humphrey
"lnall candor,n hesatd, "a
number of these people have
as their preference Hubert
Humphrey but they're going

DR. LAMB

SYRACUSE FIFTH GRADE CHEERLEADERS - L-r, Shari Cogar, Lisa WilliS, Penny
Sue Wolfe and Jo Ann Wolfe , adVIsor

Police accept contract
'

.•
•

•

•

•
•"
•

practica lly every means ul
recorilin g sounds and
reproducmg tt, has been used
to record heart sounds normal ones, irregular ones
and all the different
abnormal sounds made wtth
valvulllr d1sease and vartous
cardiac condtllons
These are mostly used to •
tea ch doctors , m some
instances they're used for
patient records The classtc
clinical record IS the
phonocardiogram which IS
usually a photogra phic
means of recording the
vibrations generated by the
heart sound You can see the
individual vibrations created
by abnormal sounds as well
as the vibrahons created by
the normal sound There are
even text books devoted to
thts subject showtn g the
pictures of the vibrations
generated by the heart
sounds.
The "lub-&lt;iub" sotmds you
describe are the normal first
and second heart 59unds of
every heartbeat. the first
sound ilub) is created by~
closure of valves between the

SIXTH GRADE CHEERLEADERS--First row, 1-r, Chasity Jacks; second row, Tlll8
Pierce, Ann Withams, Tracy McGraw, Amber Warner, thtrd row, Chrts Jacks, advisor;
Julie Flagg, Jacki~ Zerkle, Diana Nease.

hard to make." '

Marauders stopped 10-0

urgmg
COLUMBUS tUPii Ctl) poll ee, who had
He satd that 1f Carter does Pollee offtcers voted b) a 3-1
worked
wtthout a contract
Junior Southpaw Mtke
poorly m Pennsylvanta , tt marg10 Sunday to accept a 3\lsmce
Dec.
28, earlier thts Goldsberry was 10 complete
wtll have "a n enormous month labor contract calling
impact" on the Georgian's for an overall 18 per cent pay - year staged a slowdown at control Saturday afternoon
writing t1ckets, but last week when he pitched the
mcrease andJrtnge beneftts
drive for the nommallon.
went on a work speedup. It Wahama White Falcons to a
The
agreement
was
Carter took Sunday off, as
resulted Ill the ISSUillg of as HHI one hit shutout win over
reached
m
meetmgs
dtrected
usual. Quesllons a bout
many
as 60 per cent more the Meigs Mauraders. The
by
Federal
Medtator
Joseph
"ethmc purtty" followed hun
hckets
than the previous White Falcons banged out
Santa-Emma
Saturday
mght,
from Pennsylvania to Ohto to
Mtssourt by week's end , and on the eve of a lhreatened week for both parkmg and ten hits scoring ten runs
movlllg vtolations
he asked reporters why they walkout.
Flfe-ftghters, who hall been enroute to their sixth victory
The contract proVIdes a 6
contmued to ask about the
of the spring season against
words, smce he had per ce nt pay mcrease negottating jointly wtth the four defeats. The wm gave
starlmg last Sunday, another pollee, broke apart Friday
apologtzed for them
the local mne a 3-3 split for
In Califorma , Democrats 4and 3 per cent rruses m 1977, and wtll negotiate separately,
the week wtth v1ctortes over
beg1nmng
Tuesda
y.
F:trebegan choosmg a 280- and a 5 per cent hoosl the
Huntington
St. Joe, Wirt OJ.
ft
ghter
representatives
have
member co nv en tion lhtrd year
and
Meigs
while dropping
been
Clrculatmg
petltwns
Saturday
negotiahons
bedelegation Gov. Edmund
among
thetr
membership
to
dec!stons
to
Federal
l"een
representallves
of
the
Brown ran far ahead among
g1ve
a
s
pectal
achon
Hocking,
Poca
and
Ripley.
A
ctty
and
Fraternal
Order
of
the 20,000 to 30,000 party
members lurrung up at cau- Pollee went more than 11 commttlee authonty to do full· slate ts also scheduled
cuses Ill all 43 congresstonal hours, clunaxing a sertes of whateve r 11 thinks necessary for thts week weather permeetmgs that began earlier to break the deadlock with mltt10g.
districts
Jackson cirumed a 56 per m the week at Santa-Emma 's the ctly
Goldsberry went the
cent maJortty of delegate
candida tes m the second
stage of the selection process
m his hom e state of
Mrs Mary 'Lowse Shuler
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Wash 10gton
Mrs Clara Adams entered return ed home from Flonda
Holzer Medtcal Center wtlh after spendmg two weeks
w1th their mother , Mrs .
pneurnuma.
Gretta Simpson Mr and
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs
Belle
TheiSS
IS
a
NEW CHIEF
Mrs
Gerald
Stmpson
have
Mr
and Mrs Norman
patten
I
m
Veterans
Memortal
COLUMBUS I UP I) - Ohio
Styer of Waterford, 0. were
Agrtculture Dtrector John M Hospital wtlh a broken arm gone to be at her bedside.
Mr and Mrs DaVId Saturday evemng guests of
Stackhouse has named John from a fall .
Hensler
are parents of a Mr and Mrs. Herbert Sayre.
Mrs Garnet Ervme has
· E Taylor, Ollumbus, chief of
daughter
born Sunday, Aprtl
Herbert Sayre and Lorenzo
the divisiOn of foods, dames returned home from Camden
4
at
Holzer
Medtcal Center. DaV.s of Pomeroy spent ten
and drugs for th e Oh1o Clark Hospttal , Parkersburg.
Mr Earl Hart has returned days 10 Fionda attendlllg
Mrs Lilhan Hayman and
Department of Agrtcul lure
home from Flonda after baseball games
spendlllg the w10ter
Mr and Mrs Charles
Mrs Don Gnfftlh, two Burrts of Bolivar Darn spent
daughters and Mrs Rtchard Monday night with Mrs.
of Newark, Ohio and Mrs. Kathryn Hunt and attended
Shendan Russell, Jr. of funeral services for Francis
Mason , W. Va were guests of (Tiny) Webb at the Ewing
Mr. and Mrs Kenneth Funeral Home Tuesday.
Turley
Mrs. Flossie Badgely Is a
Mrs. Steve Cleland and medtcal pabenl at Veterans
sons spent a week w1th Mr. Memorial Hospttal
upper and lower chambers of other techm,.ues have of Cleland m Cleveland where
Mrs Freda Buchann of
the heart. The second sound course been brought Into use he IS employed
Tuppers
Plams has purI dub) ts caused by the closure 10 medicme as well There
Mrs Carohne Miller ac- chased the Wallace Haynes
of the valves at the outlet of are very few advances In companted Mr. and Mrs.
residence and moved there
the heart where blood ts technology thai cannot be Ernest Bush to Parkersburg
wtth her family. Mr. and Mrs.
ejected in to lite right used 10 someway or another Satlll'day.
Haynes and sons moved to
(pulmonary) and left (aorta) 10 medicme And m most
Mrs. Helen Simpson and Flortda
Instances there ts someone
arteries leaving the heart.
Mrs Dorothy Badgley spent
Mr. and Mrs Don Manuel
These heart sounds have busy applymg them
from
Thursday
111
Monday
spent
Monday in Huntington
Your dad's heart sounas
even been analyzed in terms
w1th
Mr
and
Mrs
Brtan
They
visited WSAZ TV
of frequency and how much of may be perfectly normal wtth Stmpson and famtly at
Slatwn
and went shopping.
each part of the sound 1s a relatively slow heart rate A Baltimore
Flossie
Bush and Edith
pr:oduced by different stroke which affect.s the brain
Marjori
e
Gnmm,
Manuel
stayed
with Donnita
1 Mrs
frequenctes m th e sound does not necessartly affect Mrs Linda Grimm and Mrs .
and
Robm
Manuel
while their
the fun ctiOn of the heart. For
spectrum.
Mildred Hart spent a day parents were In Huntington.
We also have means of more mformation about shoppmg In Parkersburg.
Mrs. Joyce Manuel,
listening to a pattent's heart strokes send 50 rents for The
Mr.
Kenneth
Swart
of
chtldren
Donnita and Robin
and simultaneously Health Letter, number 2~ , Akron spent a rouple days
vtsited
Earl
Hart at Racine.
broadcasting 11 to nwnerous Strokes Cerebral Vascular w1th h1s mother, Mrs James
Mr
.
Hart
had
just returned
Cerebral Swart.
different locations. This IS Accident
home
after
spendmg
the
sometimes
used
m Thrombosts. Send a long,
Mr and Mr s Kenneth winter In St. Cloud, Fla. They
stamped,
self-addressed
demonstrating heart sounds
Turley and sons spent Sunday
to medical students m a large envelope for matting. w1th hts parents, Mr. and also vtslted Dennie and Gary
Hart
audttortum or even in smaller Address your letter to me m
Mrs.
Clarence
Turley
at
care of thts newspaper, P) 0
groups
IRONTON MAN DIES
Galhpohs
I someltmes thipk the Box 1551, Radtn City Station,
IRONTON - A 23-year old
public does not realize how New York, NY 10019
Ironton man, Rickey Ivan
much has gone mto producing
Johnson of
369 Orchard
the level of medicine which
In W4~. Pr estdcnl F1 Hllklm Hollow was kllled In a
they receive today . The
D Roosevelt died at Warm motorcycle accident at about
On lh ls du\ m lustm J
advances in technology such
In 1861 , the Ctvll War began Sprlllgs, Ga. About three 5 45 p m. Saturday in a strip
as those 10 the sound wh en Confederate troops hours later , Vtce President mmwg area off Ohio 650 the
recordmg area that are opened ftre on Ft. Sumter, Harry Truman was sworn m Lawrence County sheriff's
applied to h1-f1 work and sc
as chtef executtve
department said today .
to vote for me ."

Racine Social Events

Doctors record heart sounds
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
listened to many heartbeats
since 1929 I hear the "lobdub". Every heart has a
diStinct "lutHlub" Is 11 not
possible w record and play
back the "lutHlub" of good
hearts , diseased hearts,
irregular hearts, ell: so that
the doctors can compare the
good ones with the bad ones?
My dad Is 90 years old and
suffered one stroke and hiS
heart sounds through ,the
stethoscope as a slow, strong
sound. I never heard a heart
sound quite like 11. If a dottor
had a recordlllg of several
heart cases, could he not be
better able to detect a new
heart case that he had never
seen before'
DEAR READER - Thank
your for your mteresting
thought. Like many good
ideas, someone else has
already had it.
We have been usmg
recordings of heart sounds
for years.
They were first put on old
phonograph records. Later
magnetic
tape ,
and

FIFTH GRADERS HONORED - Honored Friday night following the dinner at the
Syracuse Elementary School was the fifth grade squad. First row, 1-r, Jerry Wolfe , Rtck
Chancey, Todd Cundiff; second row, Robert Cunnmgham, Tun Patterson, David Cundiff;
thlfd row, Eddie Ash and Jolm Manuel, coaches.

DEVOTED TO THE
INTER EST OF.
MEIGS· MASON AitEA

·candidates marking time
By ELIZABETH WHARTON
United Press International
If
conferees
reach
agreement, and 1f both House
and Senate pass the bill, and
If Prest dent Ford signs it and
then appoints the six new
Federal
Election
Olmmtssioners, and tf the
Senate confinns them - then
!X'esidential candidates agam
can draw federal funds by
Easter.
It doesn't seem likely
Olngress starts a !().day
recess at midweek, and with
only three working days left,
it appears to be a long-shot
chance all the steps can be
completed w put the FEC
back Into the business of
doling out matching funds.
Unless by some kind of
legislative mtracle the
process can be completed
before Thursday, the cash
window will reopen too late to
help candidates m the next
day's Pennsylvania primary
or the May 1 Tetas balloting.
Senate-House negotiators
scheduled another effort
today to work out a bill
acceptable to House, Senate,
White House and Supreme
Court. But the wedding plans
of the chtef House conferee,
Ohio Democrat Wayne Hays,
wtll cause problems tf
another session is needed
Tuesday .

TROPHIES PRESENTED - The Sll!th grade
basketball team at Syracuse Elementary School rece~ved
trophtes Frtday rught followmg a dmner at the school.
Front row, 1-r, Eugene Jeffers, Joe Bob Hemsley,
Dew~yne Dtll; back row, Eddte Ash , coach, C. I.
Chapman, Robert Brown, Brian Ash, Joho Manuel, coach.

AUGUSTA, Ga (UP() - When you wm the Masters,
especially the spectacular way Ray .Floyd did, you can say
you've finally reached the btg leagues, jollled the "club " so to
speak,
Only Ill his case, he dtd that years ago, and 11 nearly ftmshed
him for good
The old Ray Floyd had SQme rough edges He wasn't what
you'd call nice He tells you that himself, then moves on to
another subject. Like how much he has changed now, and how
happy he is bemg married and the father of two little boys,
which he is.
Uke he says, he wasn't a bad guy, but he was self-centered, a
smart-aleck who never had much time for anybody except
himself
"I guess I was a spoiled brat," he says.
Bemg a bachelor helped . There were no strmgs What he was
concentratmg on more than playmg golf, which was only his
occupatton, was livmg the "good life," which became his
avocation.
He lived it up wherever he went, the more wine and women,
the better. Maybe tl's an exaggeration to say that every night
was New Year's Eve for him, but you get the general1dea.
He was the new playboy of the professional golf tour, 10 the
big leagues, and even if he enJoyed the attention and pubhctty
that went w1th it, one man didn't, and that man was his father
L.B. Floyd, a former Army master sergeant.
"I never apprectated all that stuff about his bemg a
playboy," satd the 55-year-old father of the new Masters'
champ Sunday at Augusta National. "I thmk they overdone
it
This was ail before Ray Floyd mel his present wife, the
fonnerMaria Frietta, three years ago. That, he says, changed
everythlllg for him.
Before it d1d, though , he wasn 't exactly mak10g them forget
Jack Ntcklaus and Arnold Palmer by hiS achievements on the
golf course. Floyd scored his first professional vtclory m 1963,
in the St Petersburg Open, then slipped 10!o the background
again unltl he won the PGA title at Dayton, Ohio, stx years
later
Finally when L.B. Floyd felt thmgs had gone far enough, he
sat down with hts boy and had one of those father-and-son talks
with him .
"I started out by tellmg him that with ail the ability he had,
and wtth all the shots he had, he wasn 't applymg htmself," sa1d
the elder Floyd, who now operates the Cypress Lakes golf
course m Fayvettevtlle, N C.
"He satd, 'Daddy, there's more thmgs m life than playing
golf,' and when he said that to me, I told him 'you beller make
it while you're young because when you're my age, baby, it's

Fairview
News Notes

dtstance strikmg out stx and of earlier reports. The senior
walking four for his fourth leftf!elder has hit safely in
consecutive pitching victory every game that he has
The game was called w1th partictpated in so far this
Wahama battin~C in the season
The Whtte Falcons visit
bottom half of the fifth
because o( the -ten Tun rule. Parkersburg South today
Meigs threatened only and entertain Eastern
,once 10 the game and that tomorrow. They vistt Buffalo
was m the top half of the on Wednesday and Winfield
on Thursday Buffalo VIsits
second. Soulsby led off the
innmg wtth a base on balls. ' Mason on Friday and Duval
Saturday.
After Bachner struck out,
Howard delivered a ground
00000011
rule double to left center Metgs
putting runners on second Wahama 1 3 I 0 5 10 10 I
and third wtth JUSt one out , Wmning Pitcher: GoldGoldsberry then choked oil sberry 4-ll
the rally by sinking out the Losing Pttcher· Smtth
next two batters to rettre the 2BH-Goldsberry, Howard
HR · Tucker (2)
side.
Wahama scored one run
RESERVE GAME
in the first when Davtd Rees
The Whtte Falcon Reserve
singled, stole second and
rode home on a single by Tim Squad fatled 10 their bid for a
season open10g win when
Thompson.
they took 11 on the chin by a itIn the second frame the
3
score. The Maurader
White Faleons scored three
Reserves
scored three runs
tlDles on just one hit. RICk
m the opening Frame and
Buzzard and Dale Lewts
added two more 10 the fourth
opened the inning wtth
to chalk up the victory
walks. Both nmners moved
Tom Thompson started on
up a base wtlh a double steal
the
mound for Wahama and
and then scored on a smgle
pitched
five 10nlllgs, giving
by Goldsberry. The White
up
flve
runs on four hits.
Falcon pitcher later scored
Three of the four Meigs hits
when Davtd Reed grounded went for extra bases acout.
counting for all five enemy
Terry
Tucker
was nms.
responsible for the Falcons
Wahama pounded out six
fifth run when he blasted a htts in all but were unable to
round-tripper he cleared the come up with the victory.
bleachers m nght field
Phil Hobbs and Tom
The filth inning sewed \he Thompson each had two
game up for Wahama when singles while Buddy Rose
they scoPed f1ve times on delivered a two run double.
four htts, Tun Thompson Kreig Sayre also had a single
opened with a single and . and made a fine defensive
scored on three successiVe play at hts second base
wild pitches. Tun Davis and pos11!on.
Duke Smith walked and
The two schools
also
moved to third and second played a third game conrespectively on wild pttches
sisting of both vars1ty and
A' smgle by Buzzard scored reserve players with Meigs
both runners with the winnin~ out by a 9 to 5 score.
sophomore second sacker The Mauraders scored four
scoring when the throw by runs In the second to take a
the catcher went into left quick 4-0 lead, but the White
field as he was attempbng to Falcons came back with two
swtpe third base. Mike in the th1rd and three more in
Lambert then delivered a the fourth to take a 5-4
pinch hit smgle and promp- advantage. In the final In·
Uy stole second. Goldsberry nlng the White Falcons
then doubled' Lambert home committed five errors which
to end the game.
led to five Maurader runs
The leading hitters for the giving the Ohio School a 9 to 5
White
Falcons · were
victory
Tucker, Thompson and
Meigs outhlt the While
Goldsberry with two hits Falcons sill to three In the
I
ea,ch . Tim Sayre, David game with sit
singles.
Reed, Rick Buzzard and Wabama had singles by Kurt
M1ke Lambert all chipped ln Sayre and Jackie Smith with
with smgles In the winning Buddy Rose driving In two
cause to round out the runs with a homer to center
Falcon hitters.
In the third.
A check back Into the Reserve
books show David Reed Game:
123Hrhe
currenUy riding a
nine Meigs
30020543
game hitting streak instead Wahama
00030361
~

The elder Floyd came here Saturday He pulled !or hts son,
but remallled qu~etly Ill the background . He stayed in the same
place wtth Ray and hts wife and the couple's two boys,
Raymond, Jr., two years old, and Robert, only two-and-a-half
months.
.
Ray Floyd told hts father he was gomg to wm by rune shots
He was ahnost as good as hts word, never playing defensively,
stumblmg only once and shoot10g a splendid two underpar 70 to
win by eight shots
When they put the tradtllona l green Masters coal on Ray
Floyd after he had won , hts father stood off to one side and
watched the whole thing closely. The color came to his face
and he bllllked his eyes a couple of times.
1 " . . This," he srud to a companton alongstde him, "IS what a
father always dreams of. "

SPORTS CALENDAR
MONDAY, APRIL 12 - Baseball North Ga!!ia at Eastern. Hannan Trace at
Southern, Meigs Reserves at Kyger Creek;
Track - Meigs at Gallipolis.
TUESDAY, APRIL l:l - Baseball Eastern at Wahama, Southern at Federal
Hocking, Meigs at Jackson; Track- Meigs
at Eastern, Meigs Girls at Eastern. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14- Baseball
- E'astern at Trimble.
THURSDAY, APRIL 15- BaseballSouthern at Eastern, Waverly at Meigs ;
Track - Waterford at Eastern.
FRIDAY, APRIL 16 - Baseball Easre'rn at Ravenswood, Southern Reserves
vs . Alumni.

Sonics earn home
court advantage
Unlled Press International
The Seattle Sonics will be
just where they want to be
when the National Basketball
Assoc1at1on playoffs open th1s
week - at home.
The Sonics overcame a
determined Portland effort in
their regular season finale
Sunday 132-13! to fmish in
second place l'n ihe Pactfic
Dt vision and earn the home
court advantage mthe If bestof -seven quarterfinal
showdown w1th the Phoenll!
Suns.
The Sanies will thus shoot
for thetr 17th consecutive
home court win Tuesday in
their opening confrontation
wtth the Suns. The Sonics,
who own a 31-10 home record
compared with a 12-29 road
mark, were last defeated
here by the Suns on Feb. 8
Slick Watts, along with
backcourt n\ate Fred Brown,
ignited a fourth quarter rally
which saw the Sonics erase
an 11-point Blazer lead in the
final seven minutes. Brown,
who equaled Bill Walton's
game-high 33 pomts, scored
12 In the fourth penod and
Watts added 15.
Walton staked the Blazers
_to a 34-26 f1rst quarter lead
with IS points, five rebounds
and four assists. But with
Walton sidelined with three
fouls in the second quarter,

By FRED DOWN
UP! ~ports Writer
United Press International
Awesome
That 's the word Pete Rose
uses to describe !he
Cincmna \1 Reds and it would
be difficult to thmk of a better

one.
'How else would you
describe a team that has won
thr ee straight games , is

.
averagmg 11 nlll s per game
and has two players m Its
bneup battmg .636 and 563,
respecllvely '
The Reds made 11 three
wtns m a row Sunday when
they whipped the Houston
Astros, 9-3, wtlh Pete Rose
gomg 4-for-6 and Joe Morgan
2-for-4 The Reds scored a
total of 33 runs m the thr &lt;oe

games : Rose has a 563 ieaa to
hattmg Hveragc, and Morga n
IS hlttmg 636
The Reds scored two runs
m the ft r"t mnin g on a single
by Rose, a walk to Ken
Gnffey, a double by Morgan
and Tor• y Perez ' infteld out
They routed Joe Ntekro wtlh
a fow·-run burst m the fourUt
mnmg when Utey bmlt thetr

IHl

The Sun Franctscu Giants
defeated the Los Angeles
Dodgers, 6-4 : the Atlanta
Braves beat the San Dtego
Padres, 4·2, the Pittsburgh
Pira tes
topped
the
Piuladelphta Phtlhes, 8-3; the
Chicago Cubs downed the St.
Louis Cardmals , 8-5, and the
Montreal Rxpo s nipped the

Floyd equals Masters record
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPII Ray Floyd knew he had the
Masters won, but he wanted
to wrap 11all up 10 a neat, tidy
package
"I knew the tournament
was mine Saturday night,"
S8ld F'loyd after hts runaway
etght-stroke vtct.Jry Sunday
"! didn 't believe anyone else
could catch me. But, I didn't
want to do it sloppily."
He didn't
F'loyd had a steady 2underpar 70 m the final
round , good enough for a
fo~r-day wtal of 17-under-par
271 that tied the Masters
record Jack Ntcklaus set 10
1965.
··r honestly wasn't thmking
about the record at f1rst ," he
smd. "But I d!d start th10king
about 11 when I went 17 under
111th my btrdte at the 15th
hole
" ! kn ew I had the
tournament won, provtding I

dtdn 't break a leg or
something, so I figured why
not go lor the record."
Floyd parred the last three
holes and thus m1ssed seltmg
a new 72-hole mark
He set 36-(131) arld 54-hole
( 201 ) records and hts 14 under
par showmg for the par ftves
a\ Augusta Na llonal was a
stroke better than Jtmmy
Demaret's next-best showmg
back m 1950.
"My play on the par fives
was the secret of my success
this week, " satd Floyd "!
figured the way the course
was playmg that if I htt the
ball well I'd have a chance to
btrdie all of them "
He dtd better than that the
ftrst three days, gett10g 11
b1rd1es and an eagle 10 12
chances, but b1rd1ed only one
of the four par-fives Sunday
Floyd, who ratsed h1s earnmgs for the year w nearly

Red Sox snap
losing spell
By NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI ~ports Writer
Call tl mtutlton or call 11
luck, manager Darrell
Johnson 's decision Sunday to
overlook the law of averages
resulted in the Boston Red
Sox nettmg the1r first v1ctory
of the season
Denny Doyle's three-run
double chmaxed a ftve-run
thtrd 1nn10g and Fred Lynn
belted hts firs\ home run of
the year as the Red Sox
defeated , the Ba ltimore
Ortoles, 6-2, behind the
pttchmg of veteran Lu1s Tiaht
and
rehever
Regg~e
Cleveland
The VIctory enabled the
Red Sox, the defendmg
Amencan
League
champions, to salvage the
final game of the three-game

senes .
Johnson usually platoons
Doyle, a left-handed batter,
with Doug Griff10 at second
base With southpaw Mike
Cuellar the Onoles' startmg
pitcher Sunday, the Red Sox
ratsed several eyebrows
when they started Doyle
ahead of the right-handed
hittmg Griffin . But the
suprise strategy worked out
well for Johnson, last
season's AL "Manager of the

Year."
"Cuellar throws that
screwball to the right-handed
balt"''s so I assume that's
why I was in the l10eup
today,'' srud Doyle . "Not
being 10 the starting lineup
every day is out of my
hands."
Lynn, named the AL's
"Rookie of the Year" and
"Most Valuable Player" last
season, continued hts hot·
hitting with a home run and a
double Lynn now has SIX hits
in hts last nine at-bat.s.
In other games Minnesota
edged Texas 4-3 and Oakland
outslugged Cal1forma . 11).7.
Detroit at Cleveland, New
York at Milwaukee, and a
doubleheader between
·Kansas City City and ChiCago

me ~onics struck for 40 points
and a 66-61 halftune lead.
Walton added 12 pomts m
the third ·quarter as the
Blazers went back 10 front 9492 and overall hit l~f-17
shots, grabbed 14 rebounds
and added stx assists before
fouling out in the final
minute.
Elsewhere in the NBA,
Boston edged Washmgton
103-99, Buffalo mpped Kansas
Bulls Ill, Bucks 77
City 99-98, Chicago trounced
Tom Boerw10kle, Mickey
Milwaukee 111-77, Houston Johnson and Cliff Pondexter
t.Jpped Atlanta 122-lll, New combined for 75 Chicago
York drubbed Cleveland 103- points to end a three-game
78 and New Orleans beat losing streak. Midwest
Detroit 112-105.
Divtsion champ~on Milwauke
Celtlcs 103, Bullets 99
meets Detroit m its first
Jolm Havhcek scored a playoff game Tuesday
sea son-high 38 pomts in BosRockets 122, Hawks 111
ton 's last regular season
Joe Meriweather scored 25
and
Rudy
contest to break a four-game pom\s
losmg streak. Elvin Hayes Tomjanovtch added 24 for
led Washington with 24.
Houston in a battle of two
Braves 99, Kings 98
non-plavoff teams. Dean
·Bob McAdoo garnered his Mem10ger had 24 for Atlanta.
thtrd stratght scoring crown,
Knieks 103, Cavs 78
scoring 34 points to complete
Butch Beard led a llaianred
the season with a 31.1 New York attack with Iii
average. McAdoo also p01nts Dtck Snyder led
grabbed 12 rebounds while Cleveland, whtch meets
Ken Charles added 20 points Washmgton Tuesday 10 its
and John Shumate 17 points . lust playoff contest, wtth 13
and 15 rebounds. Nate po10ts.
Archibald topped Kansas
Jazz 112, Pistons 105
City with 27 points and Scott
Pete Maravich scored 31
Wedman had 22. The Braves' point.s and added rune ass1sts
playoff opener is 10 to carry New Orleans past
Philadelphia Thursday .
Detr01t

were all postponed due to bad
weather
Twins 4, Rangers 3
Dan Ford's solo home run
m the mnth mmng broke a 3-3
lie and gave the Twins theu
first vtctory of the season
The Rangers had battled
back from a 3~ def1ctt before
Ford's blast off Jeff Terpko ,
the fourth Ranger pitcher ,
snapped a two-game losmg
streak Five-t une Amen clln
League batttng champton
Rod Carew also doubled
twice and scored twtce for the
Twms
A's 10, Angels 7
Sal Bando npped a two-run
homer to h1ghhght a four-run
first mn10g Oakland outburst
and B1ll North s10gled 10 two
runs m the e~ghth frame as
the A's ou!)asted Cahforma
for a sweep of the three-game
senes

After surrenderlllg etghl
runs in the first three ino10gs,
the Angels battled back,
scormg three times 10 the
f1fth, twtce more on Orland&lt;r
Ramirez's two-run mngle 10
the sixth and two more on Bill
Melton's homer m the
seventh But Oakland came
hack with two runs 10 the
etghlh mning to decide the
contest.

$55,000 by ptckmg up $40,000
m the Masters, had three
b1rd1 es and a boge y m
Sunda y's round.
The bogey came at the parthree fourth hole where he
nussed the green lie got that
shot back on the ft fth hole by
plac ing a three-Iron shol
three feet from the pm ; ran
home a :!().footer at No 12 ;
then sank a 15-footer at No
15.
•
Young Ben Crensha11 ,
wtnner of two back-to-ha ck
tournaments earher this
year, had a 67 Sunday, the
best score m the fmal round,
for a 9-under.par 279 !hal

earned tum $25,000 secondplace money .
Defendmg champion Jack
Ntcklaus, favored to wm hts
Sixth Masters champ!Onshtp,
had hts second stratgh ~ 73
Sunday and wound up tied for
thtrd , at 282, _wtth Larry
Ztegler
Former U S. Open champ
Hale lrwm, former Masters
champ Charles Olody and
l om Kite all had ~ and
former Masters champ Billy
Casper had a 287 as only e1ght
golfers from the original
Masters held of 72'were able
lo beat pa r for the full four
rounds

Spring sports on
'go' at Eastern
EAST MEIGS - The
Spring Sports program at
Eastern High School Is fn full
swmg wtlh the guts and boys
track teams pract!ctng smce
the mtddle of March and
approachmg the openmg of
lhe~r seasons Tuesday Apnl
13th
The boys track team,
coached by Spike Berkhtmer,
ts preparmg for tts first meet
that day at home agamst
Me1g s Ht gh School and
Thursday , Apnl 15th at home
agamsl Waterford
In
add1hon to these meets the
boys wtll have mne other
meets plus the conference
and th e sect tonal tra ck
meets
There are 15 boys out for
tra ck mcludmg three semors,
s1x juntors, th ree sophomores
and three freshmen Of these
15 boys, e1ght are lettermen
Th e gtrls track team ,
.. coached by Susie Thompson,
IS prepar10g for 1ts ftrsl track
season ever They are
scheduled to run agamsl the
Metgs High School gtrls at
home on Tuesday, April 13.
Along w1th lh1s meet th ey
have mne other re gular
season meets plus the conference meet and the sectional meet Currently there
are 17 girls prepanng for the
season Making up the team
are two semors, eleven
juntors, three sophomores,
and one mnth grader
G1rl athletes parllctpatmg
are Semors - Sherry Epple
and Lola Walker

Juntors .. Rachel Hunter ,
Tammy Fitch, Janet Ambrose, Teresa Edwards ,
Teresa Ca rr , Cmdy R1tch1e ,
Jewell Blake, Ltsa Masters ,
Je nm!er Gamer, Pam
Spurlock, Paula Hawk
Sophomores - Ktm Batey,
Tammy Fortney, Debbte
Heins
Freshman
Laune
Matthews
Boys team has Semors - B
Bennett , dtslan ce,
G
Longenelte, dtsta nce; J
Landon, sprmts and relays
Jun10rs - L. Lungenelte,
hurdles, M Grossnickle, field
and disUince, K. Barton,
hurdles and sprmts; J. Day,
spr10ts and relays, B. Drake,
sprmts and relays; M Smith,
distance and relays
Sophomores - P Reed,
spnnls and relays ; K
Enevoldsen, distance; D.
Browmng , field .
Freshmen - G Reed,
field;
D.
Lon ge nelle,
distance; R Masters , field
G Longenette, Landon, L
Longenette , Grossmckle,
Day, Drake, Smtih and Reed
are lettermen

New York Mets, 7-6.
Giants 5, Dodgers t
'
Pinch~utter Dave Rader's
ptnch-htl double climaxed a
four-run etghth inning rally
which hfted lhe Giants to
lhetr vtct ory over the
n• W,...,,rou•••• """
Dodgers
·· ~" ~
Braves 4, Padres 2
Pit&lt;·her Dick Ruthven
drove Ill three runs with two
singles and received credit f:lf1TCH~lf1
~tP.
1
·
for the Braves' win With relief 1
help from Roger Moret and
yOU
Pablo Torrealba
Pirates 8, Phll\les S
Riehle Zisk and Rennie
·.A.
Stennett knock~ in two runs
~
each as the Pirates kayoed
•
Steve Carlton In the fifth and
went on to beat the Phillles . State Farm Matchmaker
Carlton rcllred the first 10
ServiCe IS free And so
s1mple You tell us a little
batters, but the Ptrates took a
about yourself, your famtly ,
2-0 lead when Mann y
your goals We feed thiS In
Sangmllen singled , AI Oliver
format1on to our comput er
walked and Zisk doubled
an~ In a matter of seconds
Cubs 8, (;~rdlnals 5
It
prints out a State Form
Btll Madlock smgled m the
l tfe msu rance pl'ogram that
tie-breaking run and Andy
matct1es your needs One
Thornton and Steve Swisher
you t im 11ve with
followed with sacrlftce files
as the Cubs rallied for three
See or call
runs m the mnth to beat the
Cardinals.
BILL FLETCHER
Expos 7, Mets 6
1258 Powell Sl
Nate Colbert, who always
Mtddleporl, 0
seems at his best against the
Mets, drove in two runs witll
.PH. 992-7155
a homer and a s10gle as the
Expos
dealt
form er
STATE FARM LIFE
Amertean League great INSURANCE COMPANY
Mickey l.ohch a loss m his
li o nr ~ Qn1c1 8loomr n11011 lll l n~ l s
p 7220
National League debut.

--

~Rl~~~~~~~·

,..

. ...

The State Farm

Can find
a matCh '"" '""
for l'lfe

I N\ li iA "1 ( 1

BICENTENNIAL

SPECIAL

' · ; -'Good thru Sun., April 18 '· ·'

..........sl.l9

SONNYBURGER
SONNYBURGER
SANIJNIQi
ONLY
Now Featuring

Soft Dairy Dessert -Twist

••••••••••••"'•

~··

.;,.··· McClure's
(

DAIRY ISLE

··~

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

•.,
•,.....,.

Middleport,
Ohio

Cone.~­

Phone

'.,.,. 992·5248
•
~ 15!1e.
d11ry
y

,...

......
~------""'"'

~

A piece of the energy puzzle.

PROFESSIONAL
SALES POSITION ·
EXCELLENT PAY PLAN
USE OF CAR
•
COMPLETE TRAINING
INSURANCE PROGRAM
PAID VACATION
FACTORY INCENTIVES
MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITY
SECURITY

QUALIFICA liONS
HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATION (Preferred)
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
DESIRE TO EXCEL

MASON COUNTY
MOTOR COMPANY
YOUR lllEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE DEALER
1011 YIAND ST.
POINT PLEASANT
675-3370
WILLIAM R. KNIGHT,

MANAGER
We Are An Equal Opoortunity Employer

Some cold facts
about the cost
ofgetting new gas.
Colum btJ Gas would ltke nothing better liMn to .mn ounce thai
you r gas r.1tes wtll soon go down But the s.td fa ct is, gas ra\es must
go up Nol down
O ne te.1son ts the need for new sources of n.ttur.1 l gas to keep
you supplt ed And the cost con tmucs to cl un b bec.IUse tt 's , lot
tougher to develop th ose new sources
iniust the past fou r years, Colum bia h.1s commttted over , In II toll
,/,.//" " to the search for new gas suppltes fh e money's bt g bec.lUse
the iOb IS btg
•
And you have every nght to know where , JI th.•t money's gomg
Herr .ne I he ma1or tlems
• Arcttc ex pl orallon .md develop ment
• an LNG term mal for gas from overseas
• rxplonng farth er and deeper offshore
• mtllion-doiiM-a-mtlc underwater p1pehnes
· new deep-well dnllmg 111 Appal.lchta
• J synthet tc gas plant
' • O.Ml gclSlfJ C,lho n f('S£'.HCh

Tha i's where th e m&lt;mry's J\0111~ We don'llt kc tt any more than
you do, but the hard truth IS - the g.Is from these new sources
costs more II may be littl e comforl, but tn spJ\e of rismg costs, gas
wtll contmuc to be your most eco nomtc,, J .md cff1ue nt energy
sou ttc And th,tt , too, 15 ,1 fJct

-------lf!IIMf!l!!f!llllill••rJ,wMBIAGAS
'

(

I

•.

'I

�,'

•

.

$- The Pomeroy S.ntine!, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Aprill2, 1976

4- Tile Pomeroy S.ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Mond;;y . April l2, 1976

-

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

Messersmith says his act

Pro lI
~ StaJl il 1ngs :

lI
By Un it ed

Pren

WHA Pla yoffs
( F irs t Round!
Se r ie-s A ,
. ( Best ot Se ven)'
Wtnnipeg tead s Edmonto rt. l ·O
Aprtl 9 Wtnni peg 7 Edmonton 3
Ap r il 11 Wlnn tpeg 5 Edmonton 4
&lt;oil
Ap r il 14 at Edmon ton
Apr il 16 at Edmonton
• · ....
)( Aprt l 18 at W tnnipeg
)( Apn l21 at eamonton
)( Apr il 2J at W tnn tpeg

Inter nationa l

Am er i can Leagu e

East
W L Pet .
Oetro i l
Ba l l imore

1

01000

2

I

667

1

I

~00

11

I

I 100
2 333

11

M ilwayl&lt;ce
New Yor k

Boston

Cl eveland

Oa kland
' Chicago
Tex as

GB

I
0
Wes l
W
3
1
'l

I

l

1
1

000

Pe t
0 1.000
0 1.000
1 667

'2 .333

2

Ka nsa s City
0 1 ooo
Cal 1forn 1a
0 J 000
Saturday' s Resu lt s

'1
3

Minn esota

1

Se n es 8

GB
1
1

( Best of Seven)
Calgary lead s Qu ebec. 2·0
Apr il 10 Calga r y J Quebec I
Apr il 11 Calgary B Quebec .1
Apr tl 14 at Calgary
Ap r d 16 at Calgary
x Apr it 18 at Quebec
x Apr il 11 at C ~ l gary
x Ap r 11 23 or 2&gt;1 at Quebec

'

Batt imor e 3 Bos ton 1
Oaklan d 6 Cal iforn ia 1
New Y ork 9 M ilwa ukee 7
Detr oi t 3 Clevel an d 1

Tex a s 4 Mmnesota 1. n• g hl
S und ay · ~

Resuns

Oakland 10 Ca litor ni" 7

Minn esota 4 Tex as l
Boston 6 Baltim or e 2 •
Kan sas C1 ty at Chte ago .

2

gam es . ppd , co ld
Detroit al Cleveland , ppd , co ld
New Yor k at M ilwa uke e, ppd ,
col d

Monday's Games
(All T1mes EST)

( 197 s results •n parentneses&gt;
Oakland (M i tche ll 3 0) a t Tex as
( Bril es66J , 8. 30p m
New Yo rk ( Hunfer 23 14 ) at
Ba l tmw r e (G r imsley
10 13) ,
II JO p I'Yl
Cl e\l elan d (Dobson 11 - 111 1 at
Boston (Lee 17 9), 2 00 p m
(on l y ga m es sche du led )

National Lc;1guc
Eas t

W L Pe t

Pttt sbu r gh
New York
Ch ic ag o
St Louts
Montr eal
Phtl ade lphta

2

'1
7
I
1
0
We st
W

0 1 000

1 667
1 61! 7

2 333
7 333

1 000
'
L Pet.
0 1 000
0 I 000
1 667
1 3JJ
2 000

GB
1
1

Ohl. Valley
.AssociatiOll
• busm·ess
ill

'

Jl :~
1'•
2

GB
Cmc mnat i
3
San F r anctsco 7
Atlan t &lt;l
2
Sa n O teg o
I
Los A ng eles
o
2':~
Hous ton
o 3 000 J
Sa tu r day's Rcsu lh
New York I Mon l r eal 0
Pttl sburyh 5 Phil ad el pht a 4 , 11
•nns
Ch ica go 4 St LOU IS 3
Ctn c tnn at l 13 Houston 7
Allan I a 3 San Diego 0, ntght
Los Angeles at San F ron cts
co. ppd • r am
Su nd ay ' s Results
Mon treal 7 New Yo rk b
Ch tcag o 6 SL Lou i s 5
A t lanta 4 San D iego 1
Ptllsbu rgh 8 Ph iladelph ia 3
Cinci nnati 9 Hou ston J
San Fran cisc o 6 Lbs Ang el es 4
Mon day' s Ga m es
( All T1m cs ESTI
( 1H5
wo n lo st
r ecords
tn
par en th eseil '
San F rancisco ( Halt ckt 9 13 1 at
Houston (Rt chard 12 \OJ, 8 30
Pm
•
San Di ego {S trom 8 8) at Los
Angeles IHoolon 18 9). 10 , 30

pm

(onl y games sc hedul ed)
Sunday ' s Basl!ball Res ult s
By Umfed Prl!ss lntl!rnatto nal
A merican League
Boston
lOS 000 000- 6 8 0
Ball tmore
00 0 200 006-2 8 0
Tiant , Cle v eland ( 8) and
F tsk. ; Cu ella r. Flanag an (J )
and H en dr tc ks WP Ttan t ( I OJ
L P Cuellar (0 1) . HR Bo st on,
L ynn 11)
M inn esota
100 OQtl 001 - 4 8 a
TeKaS
000 000 126-3 7 I
Goltz , Campbell
IB J and
Wyn e9 ar ; Stngcr , Hargan (6),
Hoe rn er 181. Terpko (8) and
Sun db erg WP .Campbe ll ( I 1)
L P .T erpko (0· 1). H R Mtnnesota ,
Fo r d ( I J.
Oakland
404 ooo 02G-10 13 1
Callrnia
000 032 20G- 7 9 0
Bahn sen . Abbott (61. Todc:J (7)
and Tenac e . K trK.wood , Ro ss
(J ), Brew er (8), Drag o (8 ) and
Herrmann WP Bahnse n ( I .QJ
LP ·Ki rk.w ood (0 I ) HR S Oak
l and , Ba nda ( 1l . Cal iforn ta,
Mellon ( 1!
'
Kan sas Ct!y at Chtca go , 2
ga mes , ppd , co ld
Detro i t at Clev eland , ppd .. cold
New York ar M tlwa uk ee , ppd ,
cold
Nat1ana1 Lea gu e
Pi ttsbur gh
000 230 116-8 13 0
Phil adelphia 000 021 00 ~3 10 1
Ki son , Moose (6) and San .
gutll l en ; Ca rlt on . Underwood
(5J, Reed ( &amp;), Sc hueler !7L
Garb er (9 l and Boon e. WP ·
K ison ( 101 LPCarl ton l Ol l
HR ·Philad elphta, Schm idt ( 11
Houston
ooo OOJ ooo- 3 52
Cinc innati
200 400 1 2~e - 9 13 0
N tekro , Andular (4) , J Sosa
( 6). Bar low (6L Hard y 18 ) and
Jutze (5) ; Darcy ,
Johnson
Zachar y (b), M c l;:naney (9J and
Bench WP Dar cy (I OJ LP
N1ekro (0 I I
Ch icago
003 000 023- 8 1S 0
St. Lou is
ooo 210 200-s 12 J
Zahn , Garman (6.), Knowles
(8)
and
Swishcf ,
Denny ,
Wallace (5 ), Hrabosky (1) ,
Curtis (9). Pro \y (9) 11nd
Simmon s WP .Knowl es ( 1.0)
L P -CurttS (0 ll
Montrea l
OJ 1 110 0\ G-7 11 1
New Yo r k
003 100 011-6 10 3
Warthen , Grange~ (3), Car r i thers (4). Sc herman
(5).
Murray (9) and Can er Lottch ,
Webb (JJ, Apod aca ( 61 and
Grote . WP ·Sch er m an (I OJ. LP Lol ich
{0 I)
HR S Mont r eal.
Colber t ( \ ), New York , Ktng .
man f 1)

LA .
SF .

101 100 000--4 ~ 1
100 010 04K- 6 10 0
Rau .
Marsh all
(7)
and
Ye ag er ; Barr , Heaverlo (6 ),
Mofft tl (8 ), La velle (9) and
H tll . WP -M off itt ( 1 OJ LP Mershall (O·l l. HRS L os An .
ge les, Buckner (1 ). Yeager (1)
Atlanta
010 200 000- 4 1 o
sa11 Diego
ooo 011 ooo-2 6 o
Ruth ven , Moret (6 ), Torreal ba (7) and Po coroba ; Grei f .
Fost er ~ 4) , Tom l in (8 1 and
Da vis . WP Ruthven ( 1-0l LP
Greif (0 1).

-----

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y .
(UP! ) - Erroll Prisby, an
assistant coach at the
University of Massachusetts,
has been named specia l
teams coach of the National
Football League Buffalo
Bills .
The Bill s announced
Pri s by's appointment
Saturday. He had been
defensive backfield coach al
Massachusetts.

o'

o

Scnc s c.
.
( Be st of F tvc )
New England beat Clevel and, 30
April 9 New England 5 Cl eve
lan d 3
Apr il 10 NeW England 6 Cle\le
l an d I
Apnl 11 New England J Cl eve
lan d 2
Series 0
(B es t of F tve)
Phoenix ti ed w tfh San Otego, I ·
I
Apn l 9 Phoen tx 3 San Otego 1
(O IJ

Apn l 10 Sa n Otego &gt;1 Ph oC nt x 2
Apnl 13 at Ph oe n iX
Apnl 15 at San Otego
x A pnl 10 or 17 at Phoen tx
x tf necessa r y

•

Fmal N BA standing s
Ea stern Conferen ce
·
Atlanttc OIV! Ston
w 1 pet. gb
)( Boston
4 28 659
Pht tadelphi&lt;J
11 6 36
56 1 8
Buffa lo
40 J6 56 1 8
New York
JS .14 .1 63 16
Central Otvmon
w 1 pet . IJb
x Clevel and
49 33 598
Was htng ton
48 Jd 585
1
Hous ton
40 .12 488 9
New Orlea ns 38 44 463 II
At l anta
79 53 354 70
Weo;ll'rn Co nfere nce
Mtdwest 0 1vislo n
w 1 pet gb
x Mdwai.JI&lt;ec 39 44 463
Oetrod
36 d6 43?
Kan o;asC tly
~ \ 51 378
Cht cago
24 58 793 111
PacifiC DIVISion
w 1 pet . gb
x Gold en Sl at e 59 23
~
Sea ttle
43 39 52 4 16
Phoentx
47 dO 512 17
Los Angeles
40 42 488 19
Portlan d
37 115 451 '11
x c linched dt vtsto n !tile
Sa turday 's R ~ su l ts
Cl ev eland 99 NY 9&lt;1
Atlan ta 123 Ph il r~ 109
Hou ston 110 D etr o1t 99
Phoent x 121 Sc al! le 95
sun day 's ReSU lt s
Buffalo 99 K an C1ty 98
Boston 103 W ash 99
Ch tcago 111 Mt l wau kee 77
Hou ston 121 At l anta 111
N Or l ean s 111 Oem o1t 105
NY 103 Cle\l el and 78
Seall le ,JJ2 Po r tland 131

s

•

refl cl.'ted on whc.t it was all

no

Etght team s w11l cOmpete
in the Oh to Valley Baseball
Association , w1th openings
still permi tted , according to
Gary Wolfe wh o liste d
himself on the Letart team's
roster as "player, public
rela tiOns !leag ue) offi ce r ,
and emergency medical aid
technician .' '

Meeting a week or so a~o ,
representatives of eight
learns orgamzed and made

the deadline for more teams
to JOin up the Apnl1 3meeting
(lhi s Tuesday ) at7 :30 p m. in
the Syracuse El ementa ry
School.
All coaches mu st ha ve
teams stgned and entry fee
patd at that ltme. The season
will start shortlv after the
April 13th meeting. The Ohio
Valley Baseball Associati on
will apply for membership 10
th e Nati onal Bas eba ll
Assoctatwn .
Th e OVBA has grown very
rapidly over the past couple
or years and most of the
teams th1s year have sponSOl' S

The Letert ball team IS one
team fortun ate enough to
have a spon s01 th1s yecn·

- Miller's Mobile Homes of
Belpre has been very good to
hts home town boys. Ern est
Sh ul er of Miller 's Mo bil
Homes, who lives 10 Letart ,
has ta ken the team as h1s
show of support for helpmg
tilts organization grow

The Letart teatn has improved very much over last
year 's learn and here ill'e

Aprd 12 at Kent uc ky

some of the reasons
The outfield this year will
consist of Marty Morarity
innght, Gary Roush. center,
;;nd Monk Jenkms, 10 left.
The infiel d wtll be Steve
Jenkins at short , Melvin
Lawrence on f1r st, Ralph
Rose ;;t tlnrd and Gil Tucker

(Semifinal

on second .

.0. BA Playoff s
(Qua hf y tn g
Roun tt- Best

of

Three)
x-K enlu cky tie d wi th lnd tana , 1
I
Aprtl 8 Kentuc k y 120 lnd tana
109
.
Aprt l 10 lnd ta na 109 Kent uck y

91

R ou nd Best of
Sev en)
New York
t ted Wi th
Sa n
Anton to, 1 1
Ap r il 9 New Yor k 116 Sa n
Anton io 101
Ap r il II San An tont O 105 New
Yo r k 79
Aprtl 14 at Sa n An TOniO
April 17 or IB·at San Anton to
Apnl 19 at New York
y Apnl 21 at Sa n Ant on to
y Apr il 15 at New York
x Wtnn er mee ts Denve r tn
semt f tnal round
v tf necessary
NHL P l ay oHs
( Quarterfina l r- Bes t of 71
Se ri es E
Montrea l leads Ch icago, 1-0
Apnl 11 Mon tr eal 4 Chtc ag o 0
April 1~ at Montr eal
Apr il I S al Ch ic ago
Aprd 18 at Chic ago
x-Apr tl 20 at Montreal
x Apnl n el Ch ic ago
x Apr il 1J at Montr eal
Ser •es F
.
Philadelph ta vs To ronto
Apnl 12 ar Ph il !!tdelph ia
April IJ- al Ph il adelphia
Ap n l 15 at Tor on to
April 17 at Tor on lo
K·Apr tl 20 a1 Ph llad el phta
x Apn l2 2·at T oronto
K April 24 or 25 al Ph ilad elphta
.
senes G
. Bo ston lea ds Lo s Ang el es, 1·0
Apnl ll · Boston 4 Los An geles 0
Apn l 13 at Bos ton
April 15 al Lo s Angel es
Apnl 17 at Los Angeles
x Ap n l 20 at Bos I on
)( Ap rt l 22 at Los Ang el es
x Ap ri l 24 or 2S.al Boston.
Series H.
Buffalo leads NY I slanders, 1·0
Apr i l 11 Buffalo 5 NY Isl anders

3

Ap r d 1J.at Buffalo
Apr i l 15 at NY I slander s
Apr il 17 at NY Islanders
x Aprt l 20 at Buffalo
x Aprtl 12 at NY Islanders
x Apnl 24 or 25 at Bu ff alo
x if necessary

IHL Pla~off ita nd lng s
Uni te d Pr ess In ter nationa l
Se m dina! Round· Best of
Seven
Da y ton lea cH Fort wayn e, 1-0
Apr i l 1 0 ~ Dayt o n 5 Fo rt
Wayn~ 2
Apr il 14- at Fo rt Wayne
Ap r il 16- at Daylon
Apn l l·7- at Fort Wayn e
x Apnl 21 - at Dayton
x Apr il 24- at Fort Wayne
x ·Apr.il 25- al Dayton
Port Hur on l ea ds Saginaw , 2
0
Ap r il 10- P ort Hu r on J
Saginaw 2
Apr tl 11 - Porl Huron J
Sagmaw 1
Apnl 14- at Port Hur on
April 17- at Pori Huron
X·APril 18 - at Port Huron
x Ap r il 20- lH Sa gin aw
K·Apr i l n - at Saginaw
x -tf necessar y

about.
The 30-ye.;i r-o ld righthandel·, a 19-game winner for
the Los Angeles Dodgers last
season who had never been
kn own as an ag1tator,
startled baseball when he
announced through Ius agent
he would tes t ba se ba)l's
reserve chmse by seeking"
free agent status
Last Dec 23, he won it.
Charges began flying th;;t
baseball was ruined - that
owners were now at the
mercy of players would begin
pl ayt ng out the tr options
enm asse to be come fr ee
agents and negotiate wtlh the
club of thetr choice
"I honestly fe el that owners
have nothing to fear in this
regard ," said the curly·
haired Messersmtt h, who

Catching are two very good
men who will switch on this
chore, Frank Shane and
Roger Man uel.
Pitchm g are the ve teran
Larry Ogdin , a nghthander ,
with Brady Huffman, Rust)
Tucker and Fred Miller all
very good prospects
Other men not listed above
but showing good promise are
Steve Hupp , oulftelder; Glen
Tucker ', pla yer -co ach :
Orv ill e Jarrell , pi tc hin g
c"oach; Gary Wolfe, player ,
publi c
relations
and
emer g e nc y medi c a l
techntctan who said Don
Hupp is the manager and one

or the most dedicated men in
baseball.

Only Jim "Gatfish" Hunter
of the Yankees 1s paid more
than Messersmith . Hunter
signed with New York prior
to the 1975 season for an
estima ted $3 millton.

POll. Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I use a
couple of ideas that save a .
little bit on the electric bill.
To dry small i terns I have
laundered such as socks,
cleaning rags, etc. 1 lay my
oven ra ck across backs of
two kitchen chairs and hang
the things on the cross wires
in the rack I only use my
dryer for larger things.
To reheat food or to keep it
warm, I set the pan it is in on
top of the pan in which
another vegetable is cooking.
When my husband is slow
gettmg down to breakfast I
keep his plate of food warm
this way . - LOETIA.
~

DE:i\R POLLY - I always

•• Thumb
••
• • Notes
' • weekly
of
•

,

W!INATIONWIDI.

~L~~~c.!

330 Main St _

614-454-9703
Zanesville. Ohio 43701

.,

V.A. Loans - "0" down - 30 yr. term F.H. A. -Low Down Paym't. - 30 yr. Term-

I

I I I

-------FAST APPROVALS -----Refinancing also available to qualified
Veterans &amp; FHA applicants.

ALTERNATE

WHEN YOUR SHIFT CHANGES.

NOW YOU CAN GET AN
EDUCATION, TOO.
* IF YOU'RE AVETERAN, DiECK

THE CHART BELOW FOR YOUR
MONTHLY EDUCATIONAL AllOWANCE

1270 .00

1321.00

1366

oc

1388 .00

1410 .00

4 Child

1432 .00

Call 446-4367 for information . Offices open B-

Gallipolis -Business College
36 Loc ust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
State Regt stration No. 75-02 -0472 B

t~ n d r- lf•c•r nt ly

Pn vatf' r qwnmcn t .ts al so a capt l al
P~ l)+ ndtluH· Evr n I &lt;J k1ng dl'prec talton
c~ llowa n c l' S m l o dClount t hat m onty
mtght do
good 1·lsr wh€re tn your
bliSIOPSS
Th ew ' s msuranc1 · to worr y abou t , 100
OpNct lo r tr atr11ng Pr oprort y tau'S The
r·llpcnse ot conn r ctmg your cqu tpmcnt
to phon e company 11nc·s As l o'r I he hard
wa r e •I se lf . no matt or whose lin e of
t•QlJlpme nl you choose. It won' t be any
more modern or complete th an ou r s

mOn·

Meica

1
1

By Helen Bottel

All Tbose Beaten Wives ,,
Helen:
How pitifully true that a woman has no safe place to go
wt\en she is attacked by her brutal husband. A!l several of your
correspondents have said, ijle autborities won't get involved in
family squabbles unless they're life-threatening; and if the
beaten wife DOES have her man arrested, he'll be out on bail
in a couple of hours with mayhem, possibly murder, in mind .
If a woman locks her husband out he may return with a
gun ; and if SHE runs away, a jealous man will track her down
- or sue her for desertion and leave her without house or
support.
Maybe this is why so many women stay and take it better to placate than rile him. What can be done•
TE~RIBLY CONCERNED SIDEUNER
~r

Beta Sigma Phi Sorority at
the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co.
Nominated for the honor
were Debbl Buck and Janet
Downie. Announcement of
the winner will be made at
the- April 29 )'ounder's Day
observance at the Meigs Inn.
During the meeting plans
were discussed for \he Ritual
of Jewels Tea to be held at 2
p, m. on April 25 at the home
of Yvonne Butcher. A bake
and recipe sale were announced for the next meeting
by Kathy Cummings, ways
and means chairperson and it
was noted that the pledges
will have a bake sale on
Saturday at the New York
Clothing House. It was also
decided that the expenses for
two girls lo attend the Beta
Sigma Phi Soror1 ty con-

An Easter breakfast and a
mother-daughter reception
were annolUlced by Miss
Erma Smith, president, at a
meeting of the Happy Harvesters Class a t Trinity
Church Friday night.
The Easter breakfast will
be
held
immediate ly
following the sunrise service.
The mother -daughter
reception was announced for
May 14 with members of the
Happy Harvesters to serve as
hostesses . Also discussed
during the meeting was a
project to be carried out
during the Big Bend Regatta
in June, and a rummage sale
to be held in the church
basement on May 4 and 5.
Reported ill were Mrs .
Carrie Neutzling, Mrs. Belly
Reibel and Mrs. Gladys
Cuckler. Get-well cards were
signed for the ill members.
An expression of sympathy
was extended to Mrs. Edith
Lanning.
Mrs. John Burnell was
welcomed as a new member ,
Miss Smith opened the
meeting with prayer followed
by devotions by Mrs. John
Terrell. Mrs. Terrell 's
devotjons included a hymn ,
"God Be With You" ; a
reading , "God's Corner" and
a poem, 11 Easter SWirise" by
Donita Dyer. The' group also
sang "In the Garden" and
had prayer , Mrs. Freda
Duffy was pianist. Welcomed'
back after a Florida vacation
were Mrs . Ada Holter and
Mrs . Stella Kloes.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Holter,
Mrs. Rose Ginther, Mrs. Eva
Dessauer and Mrs. Burnell.
Refreshments of ca ke,

Call yo u r loc at 'G&lt; neral Telepho ne
bu siness o f her~ and talk to one of ou r
Comm umcalrons Con sult anh who 'Mil
extol our IM!ues tn morc dela1f and E:•ve
you a comp let e compu ter cost analysts
-us vs anybody
That sh01t ld convtnce you that g•vrng
us you r b usm oss 15 goo d for your
b u s m e~s

tm

GEnERAL TELEPHOnE

•

..
I'

.AT'I'ENDS MEETING
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
president of the Meigs County
Association of Retired
Teachers was in Jackson
Wednesday for a meeting of
the Retired Teachers
Association of District 7,
Plans were made for the fall
district meeting to be held at
PM!$mouth, Dc!nna Stanley
J!l:'6,sided at the meeting
whl~h was preceded by a
1\¥,\,fheon at the Sadler Inn.

.'"

'II I I

vention will be paid. ,
A thank-you note from Pat
Brogan for Oowers received
whil~ hospitalized was read.
Mrs. Buck was appointed to
represent the chapter at a
luncheon on Tuesday of the
promotion committee for the
mental health levy to be
voted on m June .
Letters were read from
Sen. Robert Taft and S.n .
John Glenn regarding
establishment of a Bela
Sigma Phi Week. A certificate of recognition was
received from the March of
Dimes, Mrs , Downie gave
heritage heartbeat and the
cultural report entitled
"What's In It for Me" was
given by Mrs. Pal Shrivers.
Mrs . Sharon Bailey
presented a film on breast
can'cer. A do-your-own-thing
auction was held during the
social hour with Mrs. Buck,
Darla Hawley and Susan
Oliver serving refreshments.

strawherries and coffee were
served by Mrs. Kloes and ,
Miss Smith from a table
carryin g oul a n Eas ter
theme. The class noted that
Mrs. Martha Struble had
donated new curtains for the
dining room.
WJW:~~-~:-.-:::..-..;,-::::;::::;;;;~;:;.;.:·:~:~:~:~:~

Social I
Calendar

see Our
Wide Selection
of

America, the Future Far- the fair.
mers of America , boys' 4-H
The next meeUn~ w!ll be
club, girls' 4-H clubs an~
scouts.
.
Also discussed during the
meeting was that an outstanding person from each
representative group will be
selected and recognized with
a trophy during tbe Meigs
From
County Fair.
[twas decided llliat the king
and queen will be presented
at the opening ceremonies or

BAKER'S
BUDGET SHOP

Annual meet to be May 5
The Black Diamond Girl
Scout Council's annual
meeting will be held Wednesday , May 5 at the Bec kley
Armory , Beckley, W. Va.
Check-in will begin at 9
a.m. with the meeting to start
at 10 a.m. The meeting will
have a bicentennial theme,
" A Backward Glance, A
Forward Look''. There will
be exhibits showing events
and people important to the
HEATH UNITED Methodi st Churc h Women,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the
chtU·ch. Mrs. Paulme Horton,
devotions ; Mrs. Betty Fultz,
program . Hostesses Will he
Mrs. Mae Lambert, Mrs.
L"ttie Young, Mrs. Mary
Wise, Mrs. Mae Ketchka.
.
TUESDAY
RACINE MASONIC Lodge
461 Tuesday, 7: 30 p.m. All
master masons invited.
EASTERN
BAND
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
m band room to discuss ways
of fmancing band camp . All
parents of band members
invited.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, at the Meigs Museum ,
7:30 Tuesday with Mrs. Earl
' Th oma as hostess . A
bicentennial theme will be
carried out for the meeting
with roll call response to be
about early Metgs ColUlty.
There will also be a display of
historical books by Mrs. Alice
Thompson.
LEWIS MANLEY,
American L•gion Auxiliary 7
p.m. Tuesday at the home of
Mrs. Allen Hampton.
·

May 19 al 7:30 p.m. at the
Meigs High School.

ANOTHER
GOOD BUY

9x 12 LINOLEUM

Coun cil 's Girl Scouting
program over the years.
The business meeting will
inc lude
di scussion
of
amendments to the by-laws,
location of the 1977 annual
meeting and COIUicil commlUlicallons.
Delegates from the Big
Bend Area of Meigs County
are Mrs . Earl Thoma and
Mrs. Ehzabeth Lane. Mrs.
Caro lyn Reeves is the
alternate.

*

**

Room Size

RUGS

ONLY

.,••

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

**

Bicentennial Feature

The 2 Dollar
Bill is .BACK

I

MONDAY
SYRACUSE
LADIES
Auxiliary selling Easter eggs
beginning Monday, each day
from 10 a.m. to 4 p m. at
Syracuse Municipal Building,
Seven flavors, 25 cents each.
RUTLAND LITTLE league
and pee wee baseball mee ling
Monday, 6 p.m. at American
Legion •Hall, Beech Grove
Road.
RIVERVIEW
ELE·
MENTARY School PTA,
7:30 p.m. Monday at the
school with Juvenile 'Officer
Carl Hysell to present a
program on problems of
drugs with juveniles. Officers
for 1976-77 will be installed
and special recogmtion wlll
be given all teachers and'
employes. Mothers of second
graders will serve refreshments. Public urged to attend. OFFICERS AND coaches
of Racine Baseball Assn.
meeting, 7:30p.m. Monday at
the home of Bob F'lsher for
formation of teams . All
persons interested in
coaching, please attend .

~~

junior fair plans discussed at meet

Plans for the Meigs Connty
Junior Fair in August w.erediscussed at a meeting held
~~ Meig ~ High School Wed nesday night,
It was d~ided during the
meeting that the Junior Fatr
Board will consist of two
representallves from each
school district , Southern ,
Eastern ,,and Meigs for each
of the groups including the
F.uture Homemakers of

Dear Sr.:
You didn't say, but my l.G.A.P. ("I'm Guessing Again
Perception" ) tells me Sis was the.oldest child in the family and
accustomed to being obeyed ,., And even at this late date ,
you're the little brother who Jets her play queen.
Since you evidently aren't tough or mean enough to say
what you think, how about a bit of sneakiness? "Money-tight"
people wiD cool the telephone calls if you keep asking for loans
or contributions to your favorite charity. And the next time you
travelllO;lliis miles on a chauffeuring job, "forget" your credit
cards or cash, and let HER fill your tank.
I think it won't be long till debt takes you part . , , except.
for occasional duty visits. - H.
In 1954, Dr. Robert Oppenheimer, referred to as "the
father of the atom bomb,"
was suspended by the U.S.
Atomic Energy Commission
as a possible security risk.

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

J!/

Activities planned

We're-Celebrating Its Return At PNB

2 HR.

In
Circulation

DRY
CLEANING

April 13th
Jefferson's

Birthday

(ON REQUESD

•
1 DAY
SERVICE ON

SHIRT
FINISHING
IN BY 10 · OUT BY 5

Robinson's
DRY CLEANING
&amp; LAUNDRY

A Bicentennial Event Aprill3-17

POMEROY

REGULAR $4.00 SAFETY DEPOSIT BOX

'2

$2 OFF ON

YEAR

LARGER BOXES

1HE INN PLACE
I

TUESDAY NIGHT '

,•"

•

~~

SPECIAL

EASTER SHOES

I

...

...

••••••••••••••••
'•
•

YOU ARE

I

"•.

•

..················..........
INVITED

.--

1.1

:
I

I

, I•

Sign up for free
stuffed Easter Bunny
to be given away.

••••••

Our hostesses in Bicente~nial dress will serve
Refreshments to all visitors on April 13th at our
Pomeroy, Rutland and Tuppers Plains offices - You're
invited and serving hours are 9 to 3.

heritage house
Middleport, Ohio

NO MEETING
A meeting of the Middleport Amateur Gardeners
scheduled for this week has
been p08tpoited WlUI next
week, the time and place to
be announced .

Buy your own telephone equipment and
suddenly you're running two businesses.
Wh1 n you bu y your own prtval £: tf' le
phon1·1 qutpmenl you b1 ·coml' tn(' 1fc·ct .
your ov.•n pnva te tf' h phom · company
Wtl h 1 1 ~ pori~t bth l tr ·~ probiPmS and r•x
11• rt 5 1 · ~ of Cll l ·lc;ph on r company
Tll&lt;l l' 5 why wr• thr · l r·lephone Com
pn ny l llt n~ yo u' rr• bl'111' 1 off W!lh us
Mit trl h nfl llcr nncl repfl t r for f•xarnpi P.
'nn h1 · o . ht ~ nroblcm wtlh a custom&lt;:r·.
ownf•d !. yS h •m • And an ev!•n btg g£1r
I· Kpt·n51• Bul wrlh our equtpmt tll SNvrcc
15 alw.t ys pM I of the df'i'll And ou r nw n
are alwilys nr ~ rby to do tht: 10b Qu tckfy

feature

Dear Concerned:
S.veral large cities now have emergency centei'S' for
battered women and tllelr children. One such Is Haven House
in Los Angeles County which opened in mid-1974, and now
counsels some 500 wives (or live-togethers) a year. New York
City's AWAIC (Abused Women's Aid in Crisis) provides
U:lephone assistance, putting women in touc)l with agencies
that can help them.
' Unfortunately, most areas do not offer quick rescue for
tlifeatened wives, and many "take it" rather than risk worse
punishment if they report their bruises.
The biggest mistake, it seelllB to me, is INACfiON. Too
often a mate allows beatings to continue, always hoping "this
will. be the last time," My advice: "Don't give the slugger a
second chance. One episode should prove you have the wrong
man, and at this early point, separation Is much easier. - H.
P. S.l'll probably get ftak from hopsefuls who write, "My
niari knocked me cold - once - but he'd never do it again,
and, besides, I asked for it." So okay, ladies, but remember, I
warned you.
Dear Helen :
+++
My sister Is a wealthy wtdow, She lives along but has
clilldren and grandchildren nearby, all of whom own cars, Yet
whenever Sis wants to go somewhere she calls me to pick ber
UP. and take her horne - and !live about 30 miles from her.
· She bas alienated herself from her family and friends,
mainly because she expects everyone to do for her' but she Is
very seiflsh and money-tight, doing nothing for others.
She callS ine every day and wants to know all about our
personal lives, even down to sex. This upsets my wife as much
as it does me. We are retired and could enjoy our leisure, but
she keeps bugging us until we are so angry and tense that
living has become a depressing chore. Sure, we could hang up,
but she'd just call back. We tell her to lay off, but she ignores
what she doesn't want to hear.
She is not senile, bu.t rather crafty and cunning and
wlleedling in her methods to get around us. I love her as a
sister (a duty) but how can we get her off our bac.ks ? UNHAPPY SR.

FOR SHIFT WORKERS. TRAIN 3

3 Child

A

County Garden Club membera.

Us •.•

HAS INITIATED A NEW PROGRAM

2 Chi ld

1

of

•

Helen Help

McLENDON
MORTGAGE
COMPANY

THE GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE

Marri ed 1 Child

1

-

oo

Shift Workers!

Si ngle

.

•• , Nominations for the "girl of
award were made
•• atthetheyear"
Tuesday night meeting
• of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter

AMARYUJS
"BRIGHT AND CHEERFUL"
By Mn. R. L. Larklrui
of tbe Riverview Garden Club
The lovely blost10ms·of a bright amaryllis blooming on a
wlndowsill 'oo a winter day give a warm welcome to everyone.
Bloom stalks, one to three from each bolb, are about a foot and
' ' half tall. There are several wide-open lily-like blooms on each
stalk.
Though these bulbs were cherished by our grandmothers,
they were overlooked for many years unUI this present
enormous popularity developed. Hybridigers have produced
outstanding hybrids in several shades of red, pink and salmon
blends, and even a pure white with a green shading in center.
Some varieties are striped and others bordered.
Bulbs already potted are a big seller and make welcome
gifts. Bulbs require minimum care and need little or no water
1U1til first green shoots appear.
When bud stalk emerges, more water is needed in addition to
a feeding as the Rowers develop. Blossoms can be expected to
last from three to four weeks.
If a bare bulb Is planted, certain directions must be
followed. Pot must large enough to allow an inch of space all
around bulb and side of pot. Fill pot with equal parts of fertile
garden soil, sand and peat moss. Work only lower one-third of
bulb into soil, leaving upper two-thirds above soil level. This
may seem like careless planting, but fonow the rules .
Water freshly potted bulbs at once, then only sparingly
Wllil growth starts. Within three or four weeks after blooms
wither, cut stalks back completely, start generous watering
anq regular feeding with any good house plant food. This is to
,, develop a good crop of leaves, necessary to produce blooms
following winter,
Pot can be moved from window for short periods, while
flowers are in full bloom, to brighten a corner.
Cycle of leaf growth lasts until summer when foilage
begins to wither and bulbs go into their rest period until late
autumn . During this, the pot and bulb can be set in soil where
house plants are swrunering. Water and feed as long as there
i~ leaf growth.
E7q&gt;erienced gardeners may be successful growing
amaryiiis from seeds, but usually they must wait three years
lor blooms. Buloo may be started from offsets from mature
bulbs. First quality bulbs usually bloom lavishly the first
winter, and as long as they continue to produce flowers there is
no need of repotting, which experts tell us is never needed
before third year. Even then it can be postponed if some old
soil is spooned out of pot and fresh supply added.

ATTENTION

DAYS OR 3 NIGHTS -

'Girl o-r
'1 the year '
·: nominations made

7 •
I
I

rebuild
your
liome

tlie

WEDNES DAY
WHITE ROSE LODGE,
1:30 Wednesday at the
minority I took my action to
American Legion Hall ,
help those players who would
I
Middleport.
be regulars, but are held back
MAGNOLIA CLUB, 7:30
by the superstars such as
ANNAPOLIS, Md. 1UPI I Wednesday at the home of
Johnny Bench and thus thetr Yale , after three days of
Mrs Elle n Couch Mrs
cmeers are hampered. "
perfect satling weathet·, took
Messersmith, who m;;y get first place Sunday in the 12th Bu rton Sm ith to have
Ills hrst start With the Braves Annual .John F. Kennedy devotions, Mrs. Ell a Smith to
have the program.
next Sunday "hen they meet Memonal Regatta at the US .
MIDDLEPORT
LITERU1e Dodge rs m Los Angeles, Naval Academy .
ARY
Club
,
Wednesday
, 7:30
said when the clnps finally
Sk1ppered by Peter 'Isler,
p.m.
w1
th
Mrs.
Harold
Sauer
fell , 1t wa s th e peop le Yale edged Webb Institute of
in volved - and not U1e money Technology to gain lhe trophy to revtew "Twenty Years at
- tha t led him to sign w1th in the best of fi ve of six race Hall House", and Mrs. De" ey
Atlanta .
Langan Horton "The Melling Pot"
contest
Bil l
by lsr~el Zangwill. Roll caii
And in parti cular , it was a skippered Webb.
will
be an ethnic custom.
co mm en t by San Dte go
Meeting
will be held at the
Padres' owner Ray Kroc, the
home
of
Mrs
. Carl Horky.
Mc Dona ld' s ha mburger
BOSTON
1UPI I - Suffolk
THURSDAY
cham ba ron , that conv mced
Downs has announced that it
ELIZABETH CH'APEL
111m.
wants to host a proposed Ladies Aid will meet with
"I wotudn' t tak e the guy
$100.000 race between three
Helen Taylor I p.m. Thursnow at any price," Krot smd
aft er Messersmith rejected American horses and three day Women are asked to
the Padres' $1.1 million offer E:nghsh steeds during the bnng wash cloth
July 4 weeket\d .
- which did not contain a no·
Rtchard Donovan, Suffolk
,cut provision - ear ly last
Downs' executive vice presi·
week. "He can work in a car
wash .. . it was the most dent , said "we understand
mna zing display of arrogance that Quee n E: liza beth is
SIGN UP NOTICE
planning a trip to Boston the
l' v~ ever seen."
Ftnal sign-up for teams in
first
week
in
July
and
a
race
" It would have been
the Ohio Valley Independent
diff icult for me to play in San of this type would certainly Baseball League will be held
tie
in
perfectly."
Di ego after the thmgs Kroc
Suffolk offi cials have asked Tuesday, Apirl 13 at 7:30 p.
sa1d about me ," Messersmith
the
director of England 's m. at Syracuse Elementary
said "Some tlungs were satd
International
Racmg Bureau School. Currently there are
about me in the press that
eight teams entered in the
we1 e not complimentary and to consider the track as the league. All licensed umpires
site for the race which is
it upset me .
mterested m·urnptring in lhts
"Ted 1Turner, 36-year-old expected to be carried or
league
are urged to attend .
Bt·ave s' ow ner ) is an television in the U.S and
honorable and decent man abroad.
and he was the fi rst person to
contact me " hen I got my
free agency
"My agent and I have had
nothi ng but friend ly and
courteous chats during this
)l&lt;riod . When Ted called to
reopen talks, it took me just
10 minutes to make up my
mind I was going to sign with
Allanta ."
"He' ll never be traded,"
Turner smd ''He'll be a
Brav e as long as I am .. It's

B Mon .-Thurs., Fri. 8-4,

.

enough for me .''

WINDSOR , Ont IUPI)
Young Quinn, apparen!ly
boxed m with less than a
quarter of a mde to go ,
suddenly found an opening
surrendered· h1s fr ee agency and charged to his second
Saturday by signing a virtual straight $50,000 Provincial
"lifetime" contract with the Cup win Sunday at Windsor
Braves tha t made him Raceway.
The New 2'.ealand-bred, 7base ball' s second highest
year-old
gelding, handled by
pa id pitcher.
"Th ere wtll be some driver Joe Marsh Jr., was
pla)ers m the ·superstar ' clocked at I .56.6 and finished
category who may do so, but a length ahead of Leader's
U1ey are very much m the Dream and Fly Fly Solly.

'

Prisby, a Univcrstty of
Cincinnati graduate, played
one season of pro footba ll
w!lh the Denver Bron cos in
1967 . He replaces Ed
Cava naugh, who left th e
coaching post to become the
Bills' director or pro scouting.

Messersmith rejoins four of

hi s
form er
Dodger
teanU11ates - Jinuny Wynn ,
Tom Pacoriek, Jerry Royster
and Lee Lacy .
" We have four players thai
are good frterjijs or Andy's
and they are all tickled to
death ," '1\trner said wn,ey
sa.id there's not a better
player , and tha t's good

\

Dryer no_t needed
for smaller items

practice for the Atla nta for life or until death or old
Braws Sunda y and then age us do p&lt;:~rt "

.

·:(=·::;.~::

•••••••·' ••'' '· ••'·' '':
, ·.·-·••Green
•

Polly's Pointers

will help average players
SAN DIEGO 1UP! I Andy
Messersm1th , baseba ll 's
newest million -&lt;Iollar pitcher,
threw 15 mmutes of batting

with very little help . A
' vaporizer helped' but needed
to be rlUl constantly. With the
energy crisis on and trying to
save on our electric bill, I now
add moisture to her room by
wringing half an old sheet out
of cold water and hanging it
on the cross bar of a coat
hanger . This is kept wet day
and night. She has no more
pain, watery eyes or dripping
save the pieces of foil that nose. !"do hope someone else
come over the top of TV . will get 'as much help from
dinners. They are just tile this as she has. - DAISY.
DEAR POU.Y - With
right size to u.Se wrapping
potatnes to be baked, and are prices wha Cthey are today I
strong enough to be so used decided much of the aerosol
several times. Certainly spray 1 use on my potted
plants was lost in the air. Now
saves on buying foil. I
put them in a big plastic
ANNA .
bag,
spray into the bag and
DEAR POLLY - Most of
us do not iron as much as we quickly twist a tie around it ·
used to, but an iron is still a thus trapping all the spray In
necessity. To save the money the bag so the plants get tile
spent for buying distilled full benefit of it. - MRS. F .
water for my electric steam R.
You will r~eive a dollar If
iron, we put out buckets and
pans to collect ram water to Polly uses your f~vorlte
use for this. The water is hom emaking Idea, Pel
strained through a clean cloth Peeve, Polly's Problem or
and put in plastic containers. solution to a problem. Write
The bottles are labeled and Polly In care of this
newspaper.
are kept just for this use. CAROLYN.
DE AR POLLY - My
grandson came up with quite
Couldyoli
an origmal idea for his
em trtbutiori to
Cub Scout
bazaar. He grew plants from
orange seeds, grapefruit
seeds and avocado seeds and
sold them. They made qUite a
showing and the customers
seemed intrigued with his
at today's pricts'?
ingenuity.
Houae v11ue1 hllltclo\&amp;ltd
I never throw away
In tht l11t 20 , ..,. Unleu
anything that can be used in
yOUt cov•l9• hll '"liN,
the fu ture. I always save
your ftrt 1nsurtnet nwy
only PlY far hill 1 ~
zippers out of worn clothing,
so 1 usually have one on hand
Momtowntr'l IMUflftOI
when a replacement is
hom Nl!tonw4!M II . . . .
to prOttcl your home at .
needed. Old purses are also
loctty'l . . . till •••••
saved . The soft leather
VIIUtl. Al k I Nlllonwklf
makes good patches for the
agtnl tor dr.ltlla.
elbows on men 's sweaters,
P. J. PAULEY
children's snow suits and
804 W. MAIN
other clothing. Good for knee
Pomeroy, 0 .
patches, too. - MRS. M. K.
PH. 992·2318
DEAR POLLY - My
Pointer is for sinus sufferes.
My· daughter has suffered
from it for many years and
,.,,,Ofl. lcle ""'"'· ,,,. lllllll fi!IH c.
we tried steam medicalton
" - Oltoc:t ~ . CJII;t
'
.,
.

pomeroy
rutl~nd
tuppers platns

Visit Our Sa lad Ba r

Corn Dogs

Hf memade Vegetable
COffee, Tea or Milk

Soup

'2.95

pomeroy·
nationa
bank ,

plus tax
Play it safe and mre

It may be time to
bave your preoent
policy updated,

'•''s .raile Soon

DALE C. WARNER
?n ·2 1H

1"2

w. Mam

Pomeroy

Thll Tri. (uunty 's Mo st

E•citing Night Spot

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

~
~
~

the bank of
the century
established 1872
~~Aut en

•

J:t.

~

J:t.

~J:t.J:t.~J:t.J:t.~~~·~~~~~~~~~~

�,'

•

.

$- The Pomeroy S.ntine!, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Aprill2, 1976

4- Tile Pomeroy S.ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Mond;;y . April l2, 1976

-

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

Messersmith says his act

Pro lI
~ StaJl il 1ngs :

lI
By Un it ed

Pren

WHA Pla yoffs
( F irs t Round!
Se r ie-s A ,
. ( Best ot Se ven)'
Wtnnipeg tead s Edmonto rt. l ·O
Aprtl 9 Wtnni peg 7 Edmonton 3
Ap r il 11 Wlnn tpeg 5 Edmonton 4
&lt;oil
Ap r il 14 at Edmon ton
Apr il 16 at Edmonton
• · ....
)( Aprt l 18 at W tnnipeg
)( Apn l21 at eamonton
)( Apr il 2J at W tnn tpeg

Inter nationa l

Am er i can Leagu e

East
W L Pet .
Oetro i l
Ba l l imore

1

01000

2

I

667

1

I

~00

11

I

I 100
2 333

11

M ilwayl&lt;ce
New Yor k

Boston

Cl eveland

Oa kland
' Chicago
Tex as

GB

I
0
Wes l
W
3
1
'l

I

l

1
1

000

Pe t
0 1.000
0 1.000
1 667

'2 .333

2

Ka nsa s City
0 1 ooo
Cal 1forn 1a
0 J 000
Saturday' s Resu lt s

'1
3

Minn esota

1

Se n es 8

GB
1
1

( Best of Seven)
Calgary lead s Qu ebec. 2·0
Apr il 10 Calga r y J Quebec I
Apr il 11 Calgary B Quebec .1
Apr tl 14 at Calgary
Ap r d 16 at Calgary
x Apr it 18 at Quebec
x Apr il 11 at C ~ l gary
x Ap r 11 23 or 2&gt;1 at Quebec

'

Batt imor e 3 Bos ton 1
Oaklan d 6 Cal iforn ia 1
New Y ork 9 M ilwa ukee 7
Detr oi t 3 Clevel an d 1

Tex a s 4 Mmnesota 1. n• g hl
S und ay · ~

Resuns

Oakland 10 Ca litor ni" 7

Minn esota 4 Tex as l
Boston 6 Baltim or e 2 •
Kan sas C1 ty at Chte ago .

2

gam es . ppd , co ld
Detroit al Cleveland , ppd , co ld
New Yor k at M ilwa uke e, ppd ,
col d

Monday's Games
(All T1mes EST)

( 197 s results •n parentneses&gt;
Oakland (M i tche ll 3 0) a t Tex as
( Bril es66J , 8. 30p m
New Yo rk ( Hunfer 23 14 ) at
Ba l tmw r e (G r imsley
10 13) ,
II JO p I'Yl
Cl e\l elan d (Dobson 11 - 111 1 at
Boston (Lee 17 9), 2 00 p m
(on l y ga m es sche du led )

National Lc;1guc
Eas t

W L Pe t

Pttt sbu r gh
New York
Ch ic ag o
St Louts
Montr eal
Phtl ade lphta

2

'1
7
I
1
0
We st
W

0 1 000

1 667
1 61! 7

2 333
7 333

1 000
'
L Pet.
0 1 000
0 I 000
1 667
1 3JJ
2 000

GB
1
1

Ohl. Valley
.AssociatiOll
• busm·ess
ill

'

Jl :~
1'•
2

GB
Cmc mnat i
3
San F r anctsco 7
Atlan t &lt;l
2
Sa n O teg o
I
Los A ng eles
o
2':~
Hous ton
o 3 000 J
Sa tu r day's Rcsu lh
New York I Mon l r eal 0
Pttl sburyh 5 Phil ad el pht a 4 , 11
•nns
Ch ica go 4 St LOU IS 3
Ctn c tnn at l 13 Houston 7
Allan I a 3 San Diego 0, ntght
Los Angeles at San F ron cts
co. ppd • r am
Su nd ay ' s Results
Mon treal 7 New Yo rk b
Ch tcag o 6 SL Lou i s 5
A t lanta 4 San D iego 1
Ptllsbu rgh 8 Ph iladelph ia 3
Cinci nnati 9 Hou ston J
San Fran cisc o 6 Lbs Ang el es 4
Mon day' s Ga m es
( All T1m cs ESTI
( 1H5
wo n lo st
r ecords
tn
par en th eseil '
San F rancisco ( Halt ckt 9 13 1 at
Houston (Rt chard 12 \OJ, 8 30
Pm
•
San Di ego {S trom 8 8) at Los
Angeles IHoolon 18 9). 10 , 30

pm

(onl y games sc hedul ed)
Sunday ' s Basl!ball Res ult s
By Umfed Prl!ss lntl!rnatto nal
A merican League
Boston
lOS 000 000- 6 8 0
Ball tmore
00 0 200 006-2 8 0
Tiant , Cle v eland ( 8) and
F tsk. ; Cu ella r. Flanag an (J )
and H en dr tc ks WP Ttan t ( I OJ
L P Cuellar (0 1) . HR Bo st on,
L ynn 11)
M inn esota
100 OQtl 001 - 4 8 a
TeKaS
000 000 126-3 7 I
Goltz , Campbell
IB J and
Wyn e9 ar ; Stngcr , Hargan (6),
Hoe rn er 181. Terpko (8) and
Sun db erg WP .Campbe ll ( I 1)
L P .T erpko (0· 1). H R Mtnnesota ,
Fo r d ( I J.
Oakland
404 ooo 02G-10 13 1
Callrnia
000 032 20G- 7 9 0
Bahn sen . Abbott (61. Todc:J (7)
and Tenac e . K trK.wood , Ro ss
(J ), Brew er (8), Drag o (8 ) and
Herrmann WP Bahnse n ( I .QJ
LP ·Ki rk.w ood (0 I ) HR S Oak
l and , Ba nda ( 1l . Cal iforn ta,
Mellon ( 1!
'
Kan sas Ct!y at Chtca go , 2
ga mes , ppd , co ld
Detro i t at Clev eland , ppd .. cold
New York ar M tlwa uk ee , ppd ,
cold
Nat1ana1 Lea gu e
Pi ttsbur gh
000 230 116-8 13 0
Phil adelphia 000 021 00 ~3 10 1
Ki son , Moose (6) and San .
gutll l en ; Ca rlt on . Underwood
(5J, Reed ( &amp;), Sc hueler !7L
Garb er (9 l and Boon e. WP ·
K ison ( 101 LPCarl ton l Ol l
HR ·Philad elphta, Schm idt ( 11
Houston
ooo OOJ ooo- 3 52
Cinc innati
200 400 1 2~e - 9 13 0
N tekro , Andular (4) , J Sosa
( 6). Bar low (6L Hard y 18 ) and
Jutze (5) ; Darcy ,
Johnson
Zachar y (b), M c l;:naney (9J and
Bench WP Dar cy (I OJ LP
N1ekro (0 I I
Ch icago
003 000 023- 8 1S 0
St. Lou is
ooo 210 200-s 12 J
Zahn , Garman (6.), Knowles
(8)
and
Swishcf ,
Denny ,
Wallace (5 ), Hrabosky (1) ,
Curtis (9). Pro \y (9) 11nd
Simmon s WP .Knowl es ( 1.0)
L P -CurttS (0 ll
Montrea l
OJ 1 110 0\ G-7 11 1
New Yo r k
003 100 011-6 10 3
Warthen , Grange~ (3), Car r i thers (4). Sc herman
(5).
Murray (9) and Can er Lottch ,
Webb (JJ, Apod aca ( 61 and
Grote . WP ·Sch er m an (I OJ. LP Lol ich
{0 I)
HR S Mont r eal.
Colber t ( \ ), New York , Ktng .
man f 1)

LA .
SF .

101 100 000--4 ~ 1
100 010 04K- 6 10 0
Rau .
Marsh all
(7)
and
Ye ag er ; Barr , Heaverlo (6 ),
Mofft tl (8 ), La velle (9) and
H tll . WP -M off itt ( 1 OJ LP Mershall (O·l l. HRS L os An .
ge les, Buckner (1 ). Yeager (1)
Atlanta
010 200 000- 4 1 o
sa11 Diego
ooo 011 ooo-2 6 o
Ruth ven , Moret (6 ), Torreal ba (7) and Po coroba ; Grei f .
Fost er ~ 4) , Tom l in (8 1 and
Da vis . WP Ruthven ( 1-0l LP
Greif (0 1).

-----

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y .
(UP! ) - Erroll Prisby, an
assistant coach at the
University of Massachusetts,
has been named specia l
teams coach of the National
Football League Buffalo
Bills .
The Bill s announced
Pri s by's appointment
Saturday. He had been
defensive backfield coach al
Massachusetts.

o'

o

Scnc s c.
.
( Be st of F tvc )
New England beat Clevel and, 30
April 9 New England 5 Cl eve
lan d 3
Apr il 10 NeW England 6 Cle\le
l an d I
Apnl 11 New England J Cl eve
lan d 2
Series 0
(B es t of F tve)
Phoenix ti ed w tfh San Otego, I ·
I
Apn l 9 Phoen tx 3 San Otego 1
(O IJ

Apn l 10 Sa n Otego &gt;1 Ph oC nt x 2
Apnl 13 at Ph oe n iX
Apnl 15 at San Otego
x A pnl 10 or 17 at Phoen tx
x tf necessa r y

•

Fmal N BA standing s
Ea stern Conferen ce
·
Atlanttc OIV! Ston
w 1 pet. gb
)( Boston
4 28 659
Pht tadelphi&lt;J
11 6 36
56 1 8
Buffa lo
40 J6 56 1 8
New York
JS .14 .1 63 16
Central Otvmon
w 1 pet . IJb
x Clevel and
49 33 598
Was htng ton
48 Jd 585
1
Hous ton
40 .12 488 9
New Orlea ns 38 44 463 II
At l anta
79 53 354 70
Weo;ll'rn Co nfere nce
Mtdwest 0 1vislo n
w 1 pet gb
x Mdwai.JI&lt;ec 39 44 463
Oetrod
36 d6 43?
Kan o;asC tly
~ \ 51 378
Cht cago
24 58 793 111
PacifiC DIVISion
w 1 pet . gb
x Gold en Sl at e 59 23
~
Sea ttle
43 39 52 4 16
Phoentx
47 dO 512 17
Los Angeles
40 42 488 19
Portlan d
37 115 451 '11
x c linched dt vtsto n !tile
Sa turday 's R ~ su l ts
Cl ev eland 99 NY 9&lt;1
Atlan ta 123 Ph il r~ 109
Hou ston 110 D etr o1t 99
Phoent x 121 Sc al! le 95
sun day 's ReSU lt s
Buffalo 99 K an C1ty 98
Boston 103 W ash 99
Ch tcago 111 Mt l wau kee 77
Hou ston 121 At l anta 111
N Or l ean s 111 Oem o1t 105
NY 103 Cle\l el and 78
Seall le ,JJ2 Po r tland 131

s

•

refl cl.'ted on whc.t it was all

no

Etght team s w11l cOmpete
in the Oh to Valley Baseball
Association , w1th openings
still permi tted , according to
Gary Wolfe wh o liste d
himself on the Letart team's
roster as "player, public
rela tiOns !leag ue) offi ce r ,
and emergency medical aid
technician .' '

Meeting a week or so a~o ,
representatives of eight
learns orgamzed and made

the deadline for more teams
to JOin up the Apnl1 3meeting
(lhi s Tuesday ) at7 :30 p m. in
the Syracuse El ementa ry
School.
All coaches mu st ha ve
teams stgned and entry fee
patd at that ltme. The season
will start shortlv after the
April 13th meeting. The Ohio
Valley Baseball Associati on
will apply for membership 10
th e Nati onal Bas eba ll
Assoctatwn .
Th e OVBA has grown very
rapidly over the past couple
or years and most of the
teams th1s year have sponSOl' S

The Letert ball team IS one
team fortun ate enough to
have a spon s01 th1s yecn·

- Miller's Mobile Homes of
Belpre has been very good to
hts home town boys. Ern est
Sh ul er of Miller 's Mo bil
Homes, who lives 10 Letart ,
has ta ken the team as h1s
show of support for helpmg
tilts organization grow

The Letart teatn has improved very much over last
year 's learn and here ill'e

Aprd 12 at Kent uc ky

some of the reasons
The outfield this year will
consist of Marty Morarity
innght, Gary Roush. center,
;;nd Monk Jenkms, 10 left.
The infiel d wtll be Steve
Jenkins at short , Melvin
Lawrence on f1r st, Ralph
Rose ;;t tlnrd and Gil Tucker

(Semifinal

on second .

.0. BA Playoff s
(Qua hf y tn g
Roun tt- Best

of

Three)
x-K enlu cky tie d wi th lnd tana , 1
I
Aprtl 8 Kentuc k y 120 lnd tana
109
.
Aprt l 10 lnd ta na 109 Kent uck y

91

R ou nd Best of
Sev en)
New York
t ted Wi th
Sa n
Anton to, 1 1
Ap r il 9 New Yor k 116 Sa n
Anton io 101
Ap r il II San An tont O 105 New
Yo r k 79
Aprtl 14 at Sa n An TOniO
April 17 or IB·at San Anton to
Apnl 19 at New York
y Apnl 21 at Sa n Ant on to
y Apr il 15 at New York
x Wtnn er mee ts Denve r tn
semt f tnal round
v tf necessary
NHL P l ay oHs
( Quarterfina l r- Bes t of 71
Se ri es E
Montrea l leads Ch icago, 1-0
Apnl 11 Mon tr eal 4 Chtc ag o 0
April 1~ at Montr eal
Apr il I S al Ch ic ago
Aprd 18 at Chic ago
x-Apr tl 20 at Montreal
x Apnl n el Ch ic ago
x Apr il 1J at Montr eal
Ser •es F
.
Philadelph ta vs To ronto
Apnl 12 ar Ph il !!tdelph ia
April IJ- al Ph il adelphia
Ap n l 15 at Tor on to
April 17 at Tor on lo
K·Apr tl 20 a1 Ph llad el phta
x Apn l2 2·at T oronto
K April 24 or 25 al Ph ilad elphta
.
senes G
. Bo ston lea ds Lo s Ang el es, 1·0
Apnl ll · Boston 4 Los An geles 0
Apn l 13 at Bos ton
April 15 al Lo s Angel es
Apnl 17 at Los Angeles
x Ap n l 20 at Bos I on
)( Ap rt l 22 at Los Ang el es
x Ap ri l 24 or 2S.al Boston.
Series H.
Buffalo leads NY I slanders, 1·0
Apr i l 11 Buffalo 5 NY Isl anders

3

Ap r d 1J.at Buffalo
Apr i l 15 at NY I slander s
Apr il 17 at NY Islanders
x Aprt l 20 at Buffalo
x Aprtl 12 at NY Islanders
x Apnl 24 or 25 at Bu ff alo
x if necessary

IHL Pla~off ita nd lng s
Uni te d Pr ess In ter nationa l
Se m dina! Round· Best of
Seven
Da y ton lea cH Fort wayn e, 1-0
Apr i l 1 0 ~ Dayt o n 5 Fo rt
Wayn~ 2
Apr il 14- at Fo rt Wayne
Ap r il 16- at Daylon
Apn l l·7- at Fort Wayn e
x Apnl 21 - at Dayton
x Apr il 24- at Fort Wayne
x ·Apr.il 25- al Dayton
Port Hur on l ea ds Saginaw , 2
0
Ap r il 10- P ort Hu r on J
Saginaw 2
Apr tl 11 - Porl Huron J
Sagmaw 1
Apnl 14- at Port Hur on
April 17- at Pori Huron
X·APril 18 - at Port Huron
x Ap r il 20- lH Sa gin aw
K·Apr i l n - at Saginaw
x -tf necessar y

about.
The 30-ye.;i r-o ld righthandel·, a 19-game winner for
the Los Angeles Dodgers last
season who had never been
kn own as an ag1tator,
startled baseball when he
announced through Ius agent
he would tes t ba se ba)l's
reserve chmse by seeking"
free agent status
Last Dec 23, he won it.
Charges began flying th;;t
baseball was ruined - that
owners were now at the
mercy of players would begin
pl ayt ng out the tr options
enm asse to be come fr ee
agents and negotiate wtlh the
club of thetr choice
"I honestly fe el that owners
have nothing to fear in this
regard ," said the curly·
haired Messersmtt h, who

Catching are two very good
men who will switch on this
chore, Frank Shane and
Roger Man uel.
Pitchm g are the ve teran
Larry Ogdin , a nghthander ,
with Brady Huffman, Rust)
Tucker and Fred Miller all
very good prospects
Other men not listed above
but showing good promise are
Steve Hupp , oulftelder; Glen
Tucker ', pla yer -co ach :
Orv ill e Jarrell , pi tc hin g
c"oach; Gary Wolfe, player ,
publi c
relations
and
emer g e nc y medi c a l
techntctan who said Don
Hupp is the manager and one

or the most dedicated men in
baseball.

Only Jim "Gatfish" Hunter
of the Yankees 1s paid more
than Messersmith . Hunter
signed with New York prior
to the 1975 season for an
estima ted $3 millton.

POll. Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I use a
couple of ideas that save a .
little bit on the electric bill.
To dry small i terns I have
laundered such as socks,
cleaning rags, etc. 1 lay my
oven ra ck across backs of
two kitchen chairs and hang
the things on the cross wires
in the rack I only use my
dryer for larger things.
To reheat food or to keep it
warm, I set the pan it is in on
top of the pan in which
another vegetable is cooking.
When my husband is slow
gettmg down to breakfast I
keep his plate of food warm
this way . - LOETIA.
~

DE:i\R POLLY - I always

•• Thumb
••
• • Notes
' • weekly
of
•

,

W!INATIONWIDI.

~L~~~c.!

330 Main St _

614-454-9703
Zanesville. Ohio 43701

.,

V.A. Loans - "0" down - 30 yr. term F.H. A. -Low Down Paym't. - 30 yr. Term-

I

I I I

-------FAST APPROVALS -----Refinancing also available to qualified
Veterans &amp; FHA applicants.

ALTERNATE

WHEN YOUR SHIFT CHANGES.

NOW YOU CAN GET AN
EDUCATION, TOO.
* IF YOU'RE AVETERAN, DiECK

THE CHART BELOW FOR YOUR
MONTHLY EDUCATIONAL AllOWANCE

1270 .00

1321.00

1366

oc

1388 .00

1410 .00

4 Child

1432 .00

Call 446-4367 for information . Offices open B-

Gallipolis -Business College
36 Loc ust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
State Regt stration No. 75-02 -0472 B

t~ n d r- lf•c•r nt ly

Pn vatf' r qwnmcn t .ts al so a capt l al
P~ l)+ ndtluH· Evr n I &lt;J k1ng dl'prec talton
c~ llowa n c l' S m l o dClount t hat m onty
mtght do
good 1·lsr wh€re tn your
bliSIOPSS
Th ew ' s msuranc1 · to worr y abou t , 100
OpNct lo r tr atr11ng Pr oprort y tau'S The
r·llpcnse ot conn r ctmg your cqu tpmcnt
to phon e company 11nc·s As l o'r I he hard
wa r e •I se lf . no matt or whose lin e of
t•QlJlpme nl you choose. It won' t be any
more modern or complete th an ou r s

mOn·

Meica

1
1

By Helen Bottel

All Tbose Beaten Wives ,,
Helen:
How pitifully true that a woman has no safe place to go
wt\en she is attacked by her brutal husband. A!l several of your
correspondents have said, ijle autborities won't get involved in
family squabbles unless they're life-threatening; and if the
beaten wife DOES have her man arrested, he'll be out on bail
in a couple of hours with mayhem, possibly murder, in mind .
If a woman locks her husband out he may return with a
gun ; and if SHE runs away, a jealous man will track her down
- or sue her for desertion and leave her without house or
support.
Maybe this is why so many women stay and take it better to placate than rile him. What can be done•
TE~RIBLY CONCERNED SIDEUNER
~r

Beta Sigma Phi Sorority at
the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co.
Nominated for the honor
were Debbl Buck and Janet
Downie. Announcement of
the winner will be made at
the- April 29 )'ounder's Day
observance at the Meigs Inn.
During the meeting plans
were discussed for \he Ritual
of Jewels Tea to be held at 2
p, m. on April 25 at the home
of Yvonne Butcher. A bake
and recipe sale were announced for the next meeting
by Kathy Cummings, ways
and means chairperson and it
was noted that the pledges
will have a bake sale on
Saturday at the New York
Clothing House. It was also
decided that the expenses for
two girls lo attend the Beta
Sigma Phi Soror1 ty con-

An Easter breakfast and a
mother-daughter reception
were annolUlced by Miss
Erma Smith, president, at a
meeting of the Happy Harvesters Class a t Trinity
Church Friday night.
The Easter breakfast will
be
held
immediate ly
following the sunrise service.
The mother -daughter
reception was announced for
May 14 with members of the
Happy Harvesters to serve as
hostesses . Also discussed
during the meeting was a
project to be carried out
during the Big Bend Regatta
in June, and a rummage sale
to be held in the church
basement on May 4 and 5.
Reported ill were Mrs .
Carrie Neutzling, Mrs. Belly
Reibel and Mrs. Gladys
Cuckler. Get-well cards were
signed for the ill members.
An expression of sympathy
was extended to Mrs. Edith
Lanning.
Mrs. John Burnell was
welcomed as a new member ,
Miss Smith opened the
meeting with prayer followed
by devotions by Mrs. John
Terrell. Mrs. Terrell 's
devotjons included a hymn ,
"God Be With You" ; a
reading , "God's Corner" and
a poem, 11 Easter SWirise" by
Donita Dyer. The' group also
sang "In the Garden" and
had prayer , Mrs. Freda
Duffy was pianist. Welcomed'
back after a Florida vacation
were Mrs . Ada Holter and
Mrs . Stella Kloes.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Holter,
Mrs. Rose Ginther, Mrs. Eva
Dessauer and Mrs. Burnell.
Refreshments of ca ke,

Call yo u r loc at 'G&lt; neral Telepho ne
bu siness o f her~ and talk to one of ou r
Comm umcalrons Con sult anh who 'Mil
extol our IM!ues tn morc dela1f and E:•ve
you a comp let e compu ter cost analysts
-us vs anybody
That sh01t ld convtnce you that g•vrng
us you r b usm oss 15 goo d for your
b u s m e~s

tm

GEnERAL TELEPHOnE

•

..
I'

.AT'I'ENDS MEETING
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
president of the Meigs County
Association of Retired
Teachers was in Jackson
Wednesday for a meeting of
the Retired Teachers
Association of District 7,
Plans were made for the fall
district meeting to be held at
PM!$mouth, Dc!nna Stanley
J!l:'6,sided at the meeting
whl~h was preceded by a
1\¥,\,fheon at the Sadler Inn.

.'"

'II I I

vention will be paid. ,
A thank-you note from Pat
Brogan for Oowers received
whil~ hospitalized was read.
Mrs. Buck was appointed to
represent the chapter at a
luncheon on Tuesday of the
promotion committee for the
mental health levy to be
voted on m June .
Letters were read from
Sen. Robert Taft and S.n .
John Glenn regarding
establishment of a Bela
Sigma Phi Week. A certificate of recognition was
received from the March of
Dimes, Mrs , Downie gave
heritage heartbeat and the
cultural report entitled
"What's In It for Me" was
given by Mrs. Pal Shrivers.
Mrs . Sharon Bailey
presented a film on breast
can'cer. A do-your-own-thing
auction was held during the
social hour with Mrs. Buck,
Darla Hawley and Susan
Oliver serving refreshments.

strawherries and coffee were
served by Mrs. Kloes and ,
Miss Smith from a table
carryin g oul a n Eas ter
theme. The class noted that
Mrs. Martha Struble had
donated new curtains for the
dining room.
WJW:~~-~:-.-:::..-..;,-::::;::::;;;;~;:;.;.:·:~:~:~:~:~

Social I
Calendar

see Our
Wide Selection
of

America, the Future Far- the fair.
mers of America , boys' 4-H
The next meeUn~ w!ll be
club, girls' 4-H clubs an~
scouts.
.
Also discussed during the
meeting was that an outstanding person from each
representative group will be
selected and recognized with
a trophy during tbe Meigs
From
County Fair.
[twas decided llliat the king
and queen will be presented
at the opening ceremonies or

BAKER'S
BUDGET SHOP

Annual meet to be May 5
The Black Diamond Girl
Scout Council's annual
meeting will be held Wednesday , May 5 at the Bec kley
Armory , Beckley, W. Va.
Check-in will begin at 9
a.m. with the meeting to start
at 10 a.m. The meeting will
have a bicentennial theme,
" A Backward Glance, A
Forward Look''. There will
be exhibits showing events
and people important to the
HEATH UNITED Methodi st Churc h Women,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the
chtU·ch. Mrs. Paulme Horton,
devotions ; Mrs. Betty Fultz,
program . Hostesses Will he
Mrs. Mae Lambert, Mrs.
L"ttie Young, Mrs. Mary
Wise, Mrs. Mae Ketchka.
.
TUESDAY
RACINE MASONIC Lodge
461 Tuesday, 7: 30 p.m. All
master masons invited.
EASTERN
BAND
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
m band room to discuss ways
of fmancing band camp . All
parents of band members
invited.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, at the Meigs Museum ,
7:30 Tuesday with Mrs. Earl
' Th oma as hostess . A
bicentennial theme will be
carried out for the meeting
with roll call response to be
about early Metgs ColUlty.
There will also be a display of
historical books by Mrs. Alice
Thompson.
LEWIS MANLEY,
American L•gion Auxiliary 7
p.m. Tuesday at the home of
Mrs. Allen Hampton.
·

May 19 al 7:30 p.m. at the
Meigs High School.

ANOTHER
GOOD BUY

9x 12 LINOLEUM

Coun cil 's Girl Scouting
program over the years.
The business meeting will
inc lude
di scussion
of
amendments to the by-laws,
location of the 1977 annual
meeting and COIUicil commlUlicallons.
Delegates from the Big
Bend Area of Meigs County
are Mrs . Earl Thoma and
Mrs. Ehzabeth Lane. Mrs.
Caro lyn Reeves is the
alternate.

*

**

Room Size

RUGS

ONLY

.,••

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

**

Bicentennial Feature

The 2 Dollar
Bill is .BACK

I

MONDAY
SYRACUSE
LADIES
Auxiliary selling Easter eggs
beginning Monday, each day
from 10 a.m. to 4 p m. at
Syracuse Municipal Building,
Seven flavors, 25 cents each.
RUTLAND LITTLE league
and pee wee baseball mee ling
Monday, 6 p.m. at American
Legion •Hall, Beech Grove
Road.
RIVERVIEW
ELE·
MENTARY School PTA,
7:30 p.m. Monday at the
school with Juvenile 'Officer
Carl Hysell to present a
program on problems of
drugs with juveniles. Officers
for 1976-77 will be installed
and special recogmtion wlll
be given all teachers and'
employes. Mothers of second
graders will serve refreshments. Public urged to attend. OFFICERS AND coaches
of Racine Baseball Assn.
meeting, 7:30p.m. Monday at
the home of Bob F'lsher for
formation of teams . All
persons interested in
coaching, please attend .

~~

junior fair plans discussed at meet

Plans for the Meigs Connty
Junior Fair in August w.erediscussed at a meeting held
~~ Meig ~ High School Wed nesday night,
It was d~ided during the
meeting that the Junior Fatr
Board will consist of two
representallves from each
school district , Southern ,
Eastern ,,and Meigs for each
of the groups including the
F.uture Homemakers of

Dear Sr.:
You didn't say, but my l.G.A.P. ("I'm Guessing Again
Perception" ) tells me Sis was the.oldest child in the family and
accustomed to being obeyed ,., And even at this late date ,
you're the little brother who Jets her play queen.
Since you evidently aren't tough or mean enough to say
what you think, how about a bit of sneakiness? "Money-tight"
people wiD cool the telephone calls if you keep asking for loans
or contributions to your favorite charity. And the next time you
travelllO;lliis miles on a chauffeuring job, "forget" your credit
cards or cash, and let HER fill your tank.
I think it won't be long till debt takes you part . , , except.
for occasional duty visits. - H.
In 1954, Dr. Robert Oppenheimer, referred to as "the
father of the atom bomb,"
was suspended by the U.S.
Atomic Energy Commission
as a possible security risk.

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

J!/

Activities planned

We're-Celebrating Its Return At PNB

2 HR.

In
Circulation

DRY
CLEANING

April 13th
Jefferson's

Birthday

(ON REQUESD

•
1 DAY
SERVICE ON

SHIRT
FINISHING
IN BY 10 · OUT BY 5

Robinson's
DRY CLEANING
&amp; LAUNDRY

A Bicentennial Event Aprill3-17

POMEROY

REGULAR $4.00 SAFETY DEPOSIT BOX

'2

$2 OFF ON

YEAR

LARGER BOXES

1HE INN PLACE
I

TUESDAY NIGHT '

,•"

•

~~

SPECIAL

EASTER SHOES

I

...

...

••••••••••••••••
'•
•

YOU ARE

I

"•.

•

..················..........
INVITED

.--

1.1

:
I

I

, I•

Sign up for free
stuffed Easter Bunny
to be given away.

••••••

Our hostesses in Bicente~nial dress will serve
Refreshments to all visitors on April 13th at our
Pomeroy, Rutland and Tuppers Plains offices - You're
invited and serving hours are 9 to 3.

heritage house
Middleport, Ohio

NO MEETING
A meeting of the Middleport Amateur Gardeners
scheduled for this week has
been p08tpoited WlUI next
week, the time and place to
be announced .

Buy your own telephone equipment and
suddenly you're running two businesses.
Wh1 n you bu y your own prtval £: tf' le
phon1·1 qutpmenl you b1 ·coml' tn(' 1fc·ct .
your ov.•n pnva te tf' h phom · company
Wtl h 1 1 ~ pori~t bth l tr ·~ probiPmS and r•x
11• rt 5 1 · ~ of Cll l ·lc;ph on r company
Tll&lt;l l' 5 why wr• thr · l r·lephone Com
pn ny l llt n~ yo u' rr• bl'111' 1 off W!lh us
Mit trl h nfl llcr nncl repfl t r for f•xarnpi P.
'nn h1 · o . ht ~ nroblcm wtlh a custom&lt;:r·.
ownf•d !. yS h •m • And an ev!•n btg g£1r
I· Kpt·n51• Bul wrlh our equtpmt tll SNvrcc
15 alw.t ys pM I of the df'i'll And ou r nw n
are alwilys nr ~ rby to do tht: 10b Qu tckfy

feature

Dear Concerned:
S.veral large cities now have emergency centei'S' for
battered women and tllelr children. One such Is Haven House
in Los Angeles County which opened in mid-1974, and now
counsels some 500 wives (or live-togethers) a year. New York
City's AWAIC (Abused Women's Aid in Crisis) provides
U:lephone assistance, putting women in touc)l with agencies
that can help them.
' Unfortunately, most areas do not offer quick rescue for
tlifeatened wives, and many "take it" rather than risk worse
punishment if they report their bruises.
The biggest mistake, it seelllB to me, is INACfiON. Too
often a mate allows beatings to continue, always hoping "this
will. be the last time," My advice: "Don't give the slugger a
second chance. One episode should prove you have the wrong
man, and at this early point, separation Is much easier. - H.
P. S.l'll probably get ftak from hopsefuls who write, "My
niari knocked me cold - once - but he'd never do it again,
and, besides, I asked for it." So okay, ladies, but remember, I
warned you.
Dear Helen :
+++
My sister Is a wealthy wtdow, She lives along but has
clilldren and grandchildren nearby, all of whom own cars, Yet
whenever Sis wants to go somewhere she calls me to pick ber
UP. and take her horne - and !live about 30 miles from her.
· She bas alienated herself from her family and friends,
mainly because she expects everyone to do for her' but she Is
very seiflsh and money-tight, doing nothing for others.
She callS ine every day and wants to know all about our
personal lives, even down to sex. This upsets my wife as much
as it does me. We are retired and could enjoy our leisure, but
she keeps bugging us until we are so angry and tense that
living has become a depressing chore. Sure, we could hang up,
but she'd just call back. We tell her to lay off, but she ignores
what she doesn't want to hear.
She is not senile, bu.t rather crafty and cunning and
wlleedling in her methods to get around us. I love her as a
sister (a duty) but how can we get her off our bac.ks ? UNHAPPY SR.

FOR SHIFT WORKERS. TRAIN 3

3 Child

A

County Garden Club membera.

Us •.•

HAS INITIATED A NEW PROGRAM

2 Chi ld

1

of

•

Helen Help

McLENDON
MORTGAGE
COMPANY

THE GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE

Marri ed 1 Child

1

-

oo

Shift Workers!

Si ngle

.

•• , Nominations for the "girl of
award were made
•• atthetheyear"
Tuesday night meeting
• of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter

AMARYUJS
"BRIGHT AND CHEERFUL"
By Mn. R. L. Larklrui
of tbe Riverview Garden Club
The lovely blost10ms·of a bright amaryllis blooming on a
wlndowsill 'oo a winter day give a warm welcome to everyone.
Bloom stalks, one to three from each bolb, are about a foot and
' ' half tall. There are several wide-open lily-like blooms on each
stalk.
Though these bulbs were cherished by our grandmothers,
they were overlooked for many years unUI this present
enormous popularity developed. Hybridigers have produced
outstanding hybrids in several shades of red, pink and salmon
blends, and even a pure white with a green shading in center.
Some varieties are striped and others bordered.
Bulbs already potted are a big seller and make welcome
gifts. Bulbs require minimum care and need little or no water
1U1til first green shoots appear.
When bud stalk emerges, more water is needed in addition to
a feeding as the Rowers develop. Blossoms can be expected to
last from three to four weeks.
If a bare bulb Is planted, certain directions must be
followed. Pot must large enough to allow an inch of space all
around bulb and side of pot. Fill pot with equal parts of fertile
garden soil, sand and peat moss. Work only lower one-third of
bulb into soil, leaving upper two-thirds above soil level. This
may seem like careless planting, but fonow the rules .
Water freshly potted bulbs at once, then only sparingly
Wllil growth starts. Within three or four weeks after blooms
wither, cut stalks back completely, start generous watering
anq regular feeding with any good house plant food. This is to
,, develop a good crop of leaves, necessary to produce blooms
following winter,
Pot can be moved from window for short periods, while
flowers are in full bloom, to brighten a corner.
Cycle of leaf growth lasts until summer when foilage
begins to wither and bulbs go into their rest period until late
autumn . During this, the pot and bulb can be set in soil where
house plants are swrunering. Water and feed as long as there
i~ leaf growth.
E7q&gt;erienced gardeners may be successful growing
amaryiiis from seeds, but usually they must wait three years
lor blooms. Buloo may be started from offsets from mature
bulbs. First quality bulbs usually bloom lavishly the first
winter, and as long as they continue to produce flowers there is
no need of repotting, which experts tell us is never needed
before third year. Even then it can be postponed if some old
soil is spooned out of pot and fresh supply added.

ATTENTION

DAYS OR 3 NIGHTS -

'Girl o-r
'1 the year '
·: nominations made

7 •
I
I

rebuild
your
liome

tlie

WEDNES DAY
WHITE ROSE LODGE,
1:30 Wednesday at the
minority I took my action to
American Legion Hall ,
help those players who would
I
Middleport.
be regulars, but are held back
MAGNOLIA CLUB, 7:30
by the superstars such as
ANNAPOLIS, Md. 1UPI I Wednesday at the home of
Johnny Bench and thus thetr Yale , after three days of
Mrs Elle n Couch Mrs
cmeers are hampered. "
perfect satling weathet·, took
Messersmith, who m;;y get first place Sunday in the 12th Bu rton Sm ith to have
Ills hrst start With the Braves Annual .John F. Kennedy devotions, Mrs. Ell a Smith to
have the program.
next Sunday "hen they meet Memonal Regatta at the US .
MIDDLEPORT
LITERU1e Dodge rs m Los Angeles, Naval Academy .
ARY
Club
,
Wednesday
, 7:30
said when the clnps finally
Sk1ppered by Peter 'Isler,
p.m.
w1
th
Mrs.
Harold
Sauer
fell , 1t wa s th e peop le Yale edged Webb Institute of
in volved - and not U1e money Technology to gain lhe trophy to revtew "Twenty Years at
- tha t led him to sign w1th in the best of fi ve of six race Hall House", and Mrs. De" ey
Atlanta .
Langan Horton "The Melling Pot"
contest
Bil l
by lsr~el Zangwill. Roll caii
And in parti cular , it was a skippered Webb.
will
be an ethnic custom.
co mm en t by San Dte go
Meeting
will be held at the
Padres' owner Ray Kroc, the
home
of
Mrs
. Carl Horky.
Mc Dona ld' s ha mburger
BOSTON
1UPI I - Suffolk
THURSDAY
cham ba ron , that conv mced
Downs has announced that it
ELIZABETH CH'APEL
111m.
wants to host a proposed Ladies Aid will meet with
"I wotudn' t tak e the guy
$100.000 race between three
Helen Taylor I p.m. Thursnow at any price," Krot smd
aft er Messersmith rejected American horses and three day Women are asked to
the Padres' $1.1 million offer E:nghsh steeds during the bnng wash cloth
July 4 weeket\d .
- which did not contain a no·
Rtchard Donovan, Suffolk
,cut provision - ear ly last
Downs' executive vice presi·
week. "He can work in a car
wash .. . it was the most dent , said "we understand
mna zing display of arrogance that Quee n E: liza beth is
SIGN UP NOTICE
planning a trip to Boston the
l' v~ ever seen."
Ftnal sign-up for teams in
first
week
in
July
and
a
race
" It would have been
the Ohio Valley Independent
diff icult for me to play in San of this type would certainly Baseball League will be held
tie
in
perfectly."
Di ego after the thmgs Kroc
Suffolk offi cials have asked Tuesday, Apirl 13 at 7:30 p.
sa1d about me ," Messersmith
the
director of England 's m. at Syracuse Elementary
said "Some tlungs were satd
International
Racmg Bureau School. Currently there are
about me in the press that
eight teams entered in the
we1 e not complimentary and to consider the track as the league. All licensed umpires
site for the race which is
it upset me .
mterested m·urnptring in lhts
"Ted 1Turner, 36-year-old expected to be carried or
league
are urged to attend .
Bt·ave s' ow ner ) is an television in the U.S and
honorable and decent man abroad.
and he was the fi rst person to
contact me " hen I got my
free agency
"My agent and I have had
nothi ng but friend ly and
courteous chats during this
)l&lt;riod . When Ted called to
reopen talks, it took me just
10 minutes to make up my
mind I was going to sign with
Allanta ."
"He' ll never be traded,"
Turner smd ''He'll be a
Brav e as long as I am .. It's

B Mon .-Thurs., Fri. 8-4,

.

enough for me .''

WINDSOR , Ont IUPI)
Young Quinn, apparen!ly
boxed m with less than a
quarter of a mde to go ,
suddenly found an opening
surrendered· h1s fr ee agency and charged to his second
Saturday by signing a virtual straight $50,000 Provincial
"lifetime" contract with the Cup win Sunday at Windsor
Braves tha t made him Raceway.
The New 2'.ealand-bred, 7base ball' s second highest
year-old
gelding, handled by
pa id pitcher.
"Th ere wtll be some driver Joe Marsh Jr., was
pla)ers m the ·superstar ' clocked at I .56.6 and finished
category who may do so, but a length ahead of Leader's
U1ey are very much m the Dream and Fly Fly Solly.

'

Prisby, a Univcrstty of
Cincinnati graduate, played
one season of pro footba ll
w!lh the Denver Bron cos in
1967 . He replaces Ed
Cava naugh, who left th e
coaching post to become the
Bills' director or pro scouting.

Messersmith rejoins four of

hi s
form er
Dodger
teanU11ates - Jinuny Wynn ,
Tom Pacoriek, Jerry Royster
and Lee Lacy .
" We have four players thai
are good frterjijs or Andy's
and they are all tickled to
death ," '1\trner said wn,ey
sa.id there's not a better
player , and tha t's good

\

Dryer no_t needed
for smaller items

practice for the Atla nta for life or until death or old
Braws Sunda y and then age us do p&lt;:~rt "

.

·:(=·::;.~::

•••••••·' ••'' '· ••'·' '':
, ·.·-·••Green
•

Polly's Pointers

will help average players
SAN DIEGO 1UP! I Andy
Messersm1th , baseba ll 's
newest million -&lt;Iollar pitcher,
threw 15 mmutes of batting

with very little help . A
' vaporizer helped' but needed
to be rlUl constantly. With the
energy crisis on and trying to
save on our electric bill, I now
add moisture to her room by
wringing half an old sheet out
of cold water and hanging it
on the cross bar of a coat
hanger . This is kept wet day
and night. She has no more
pain, watery eyes or dripping
save the pieces of foil that nose. !"do hope someone else
come over the top of TV . will get 'as much help from
dinners. They are just tile this as she has. - DAISY.
DEAR POU.Y - With
right size to u.Se wrapping
potatnes to be baked, and are prices wha Cthey are today I
strong enough to be so used decided much of the aerosol
several times. Certainly spray 1 use on my potted
plants was lost in the air. Now
saves on buying foil. I
put them in a big plastic
ANNA .
bag,
spray into the bag and
DEAR POLLY - Most of
us do not iron as much as we quickly twist a tie around it ·
used to, but an iron is still a thus trapping all the spray In
necessity. To save the money the bag so the plants get tile
spent for buying distilled full benefit of it. - MRS. F .
water for my electric steam R.
You will r~eive a dollar If
iron, we put out buckets and
pans to collect ram water to Polly uses your f~vorlte
use for this. The water is hom emaking Idea, Pel
strained through a clean cloth Peeve, Polly's Problem or
and put in plastic containers. solution to a problem. Write
The bottles are labeled and Polly In care of this
newspaper.
are kept just for this use. CAROLYN.
DE AR POLLY - My
grandson came up with quite
Couldyoli
an origmal idea for his
em trtbutiori to
Cub Scout
bazaar. He grew plants from
orange seeds, grapefruit
seeds and avocado seeds and
sold them. They made qUite a
showing and the customers
seemed intrigued with his
at today's pricts'?
ingenuity.
Houae v11ue1 hllltclo\&amp;ltd
I never throw away
In tht l11t 20 , ..,. Unleu
anything that can be used in
yOUt cov•l9• hll '"liN,
the fu ture. I always save
your ftrt 1nsurtnet nwy
only PlY far hill 1 ~
zippers out of worn clothing,
so 1 usually have one on hand
Momtowntr'l IMUflftOI
when a replacement is
hom Nl!tonw4!M II . . . .
to prOttcl your home at .
needed. Old purses are also
loctty'l . . . till •••••
saved . The soft leather
VIIUtl. Al k I Nlllonwklf
makes good patches for the
agtnl tor dr.ltlla.
elbows on men 's sweaters,
P. J. PAULEY
children's snow suits and
804 W. MAIN
other clothing. Good for knee
Pomeroy, 0 .
patches, too. - MRS. M. K.
PH. 992·2318
DEAR POLLY - My
Pointer is for sinus sufferes.
My· daughter has suffered
from it for many years and
,.,,,Ofl. lcle ""'"'· ,,,. lllllll fi!IH c.
we tried steam medicalton
" - Oltoc:t ~ . CJII;t
'
.,
.

pomeroy
rutl~nd
tuppers platns

Visit Our Sa lad Ba r

Corn Dogs

Hf memade Vegetable
COffee, Tea or Milk

Soup

'2.95

pomeroy·
nationa
bank ,

plus tax
Play it safe and mre

It may be time to
bave your preoent
policy updated,

'•''s .raile Soon

DALE C. WARNER
?n ·2 1H

1"2

w. Mam

Pomeroy

Thll Tri. (uunty 's Mo st

E•citing Night Spot

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

~
~
~

the bank of
the century
established 1872
~~Aut en

•

J:t.

~

J:t.

~J:t.J:t.~J:t.J:t.~~~·~~~~~~~~~~

�I
} - _The Pomeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 . Mmtol&lt;~v . April }2. 1976
DICK Tlt\CY .

6- The Pomero y Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy 0 . Monday. ApriU~, I 97h
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No 2176-7
E~tat e of HOMER CARMAN

De"cused .

N otice IS hereby g iven that

El u a beth CMman o f 169

w

Ma i n St reet , Pomeroy, Ohio,

h as

been

dul y

appo 1nte d

Execulr•x of the Estate of

Ho mer carman , deceased.
la te of 269 W Ma in StreeL
Pom e ro y, Metg s County , Ohto.
Oh io
Cred itors are requ•r ed to
f lit&gt; thetr cl a tm s w tth .satd
f tduct ary w ith i n four monlhS
Dated 11'1 1s 3 1st da y of Ma r c h
1976

Mann tng D WcbsiC'r
Ju dge
(J ) S, 17, 19,

TIH•

Jtc

lEGAl NOTI CE
Meig s Local Sch oo l

O tsfrtct Boa rd of Edu cat•on •s
acc ep tm g se a ted btd s for two

used schoo l bus es

Dodge

nam el y. 65

66 passe,ger

361

eng tn e 38 815&lt;11672 and 62 In
ternattonal 66 pa ssenger 345
S B268 712F
B td s wd l be
r ec ei ved unlll 11 00 o'clock

noon on May &lt;I, 1976. The
Board
ol
Edu cal10n
rereserves the r~ g ht to reie c t
any and al l bidS The b1dS wdl
be opened on Ma y 11 . 1976 at
7 30 P M
Sea led b1ds should be ad
dressed to. John Tr 1ple1t,
Cler k. Me1gs Local Sc hool
D1s1r ,c1. Middlepo rt Oh io
4S7 60
John Tr tplell. Cle r io:.
Me1gs Local Sc hoo l
Dtstnct
( &lt;I ) 12, 19, 26

AstraGraph

WAN1 ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
•, P M
Dav
f3ctor •·
PuiJIIca t,o n
Monday Oril dl ln t 'I
ilm

Cance!1a110n
Corrections will !Jc ac
ce pled untd Y am for
()ay of Pvbl1cat10n
REGUlATIONS
The Pubk,hN r esc r . . rs
lh£' r1qht 1o ed d or re, ect
dny dd!l. deemed ub
IPCIIOn rt l Th e pub11!.1'1t.•r
Jtdt 1101 br&gt; respons1b le for
n•ore than ::&gt;c .ncorr ect
1nse r 1,on
RATE S
~or Want Ad ScrviC C'
'I c ehts pe r word one
1nse r ttor,
Mt n 1n•um Ch !lrqe\1 00
l •t Ll'nl s pe r word lh ref'
con &lt;;.r&gt;cu ! tV('
msert1 on ~
26 ce n1s pe r word Silt
co nsecu•1v e
•n!.ertJons
I'&gt; Per Cr nt DIS COUn I Orl
l'l&lt;1 1d &lt;'\ CIS end ads p tlld
w• h .n 10 days
CAR D OF THANKS
&amp; OB ITUAR Y
'i./ 00
lor
~0
word
m1n1nlum
Ettrh addi110ilill word 3
ADS
Acldii !Orl OI )'&gt;C Charc1e
p(t r AdvC r! ISf'll1C n t
OFF ICE HOURS
B JO a r11 10 ~ 00 p rll
Da ll y a 10 a n1 to 11 oo
Noon S~;tlu rdoy
Ph onf' tod ay 99'1 1156
BLIND

NOTICES
ATTN : I I
All ltOUSEWIV ES
All Yo rd Sat es, Rum mage
Por cn and Baseme nt Po rch
and Bas ement Sal es, e te
mu s t be pa1d In advan ce
Get your 1n • m ear ly by
s topp1n g by our olt 1Ce at
Th e Dally Sentm ef. 11 1
Cou r t 51 or wrd 1ng Box
719, Po meroy, Ohro 45769
wit h your remlltan ce

Bermce Bede Osol
For Tuesday , Apnl 13, 1976
ARIES (March 21-Aprrl 19)
Th1s 15 not the 11me to brmq \JP
&lt;1n olcl unsetlled ctomest11.:
ISSue ttwt 1s il source of lffttil
t1on Sp::llk &lt;i could Uy
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Try
not to be snor t tempered tOday
'IIIII' per sons wh o don t do
111111gs you r wfly To l e r c~ncG will
milkC: everyone s 10b eas1er
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) II q
s~1arp1e Oilers you somethm!J
lor noth1ng IO(Iay look lor 111e
s tr 1ngs Tt1ey rc sure to be
there Do n I buy rrnP1 ii S1vely
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) In
your llaste to get iJ ll1fl.t1Pr ~e tll ­
ed today you tn1gh t move too
last lor yom ow1l good and
cause lurt he1 cornpl,cat1ons
LEO (July 23 - Aug 22)
Pressu re tacl\cs w11l produce
undeSirable re sLrlts tor yOu today d you employ tloem on
others Use you r ~ cha 1m Instea d

VIRGO (Aug. ~3 - Sepl. 22) II
you tend so metll1ng thilt you re
. fond ot to th e wrong per son to
d ay you may get 11 back l!l r1
sorry state

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 2l) Don I
get you r s1gna ls crosse d today
by bemg ove rl y as!;&gt;e rt 1ve 111 a
s rluat1on th a t calfs l o r
diplomacy and tac t
SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov 22)
Plan your mov es ca refull y to
d ay or you may w1 nd up pamhng yourse lf 1nto a corne r Ra sh
ac t1 ons w11f ca use u nnecessary h eadac ~ws
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec
21) Norm all y you frt ve ry co mfortably mto grou p ac ttvtt1es
but toda y may be ofl day wh ere
be1ng 1n a crowd cou ld bug
you
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan
19) Your posrt1 0n With certa m
assoc1 ates 1sn I qu1t e as stro ng
as you ma y th1n k. Don t do
any th 1ng to d ay tha t m1ght
at1en at e them
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb 19)
Tr y not to make unreasona ble
reques ts o f helpers or
emp loyes today fhcy II be sur pr1 s1ngly tmsll le 1f you lean on
th em
PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20)
Someone you 're very close to

does not want you prob1ng too
deep ly 1nto h1s a11atrs today
Keep a disc reet diS tance

-~
April 13, 1976

Par tn erShipS will assume a
grea ter tm port ance to you th1s
year Select assoc1ates .,.., rth
The cho1ces could t.:Je 1n 1n help1ng to ad your goa ls

BOWLING
j;

POMEROY LANES

c. Wednesdav Early Bi rds
...,
March 24 , 1976
,
Pts.
Royal Crown
160
F.armers Bank
129
BenT om
117
King Builders
106
Evelyn 's Grocery
95
t.tatey ·s ceram1cs .
89
,,, High lnd Game - Mary
~oss 210, Belly Whillalch ,
)00
· High Serie s
Be lty
Whitlat ch 53.:1 , Ma ry Voss ,

CONSIGNMENT Auctio n Sole,
So turd ~ . Apnl 17 10 am
Sponsored by Orange Twps ·
Vo lun tee r F1ru Dept ot t he ~r
Fife Stallon , Tu ppers Plains .
Oh1o Constgnmenls we lcome
Phone (614) 667·3303 or 3890

RACINE F1 re Dept will hove a
Shoo tin g Match Saturday , Ap r~ l
11, ol 6 30 p m Thts ma tc h wtll
be at the new match buddmg
Out of Ro ctne toke Soshon rd
to Bashon F1re House , turn left
for about 1' miles
WILL do smoll gorden plowrng
w1th Gro . . ely trac tor Phone
992 7-492or9923716
LOOKING for one mole toy lox
temer owned by md1 v1dual for
breed1ng purp ose5. Phone 742·
2559
GRAND OPENING - Blue lorton
Tavern 1 p m Saturday , Apr1l
17 New ly remodeled , some
management
Eve ry one
welco me
TO GIVE away cmder blks Fo r
fdl or who! hove you See Som
Bell er . New l1ma Rd Rutland or
coll 742-2908

TALL TIMBERS
NITE CLUB
Pomeroy, 0

OF

Will DO bu1lding and remodel
1ng, roo fing , plumbtng , fur
·~ noce repai r S:jOS or oil or
general repo~r Free estimates
and reosonQ.ble rates. Phone
Chor les S1ncroir (614 ) 985·4121
or 992-2221 .

Wante.dJo_Buy

--

OlD fu l"nrture . 1ce boxes , brass
beds, old wall telephon.,s and
po rts . or complete households
Wnte M 0 M1ller Rt 2.
Pome roy. Ohlo.'Call992 7760
TIMBER top pnce for stondtng
l1mbe r Call (614 ) -446 8570
CAS H pa1d for oil makes and
mode ls of mob1le · homes
Phone area c..ode b1 4-423 ·9531

Wed. a nd Thursday
April14-15
5to6 : 30p . m .

I.
,.I

• SANTA BARBARA , Calif
:(UP! ) - The Kern County
;!earn rallied to beat llle Los
:Angeles Rugby Club 19-14
•Sunday in the championship
:game of llle lith annual Santa
:Barbara Rugby Tournament.
: Steve Lindsay, a Kern
:County forward , was named
•Most Valuable Player of the
tournament. He scored five

197S CHEV ESTATE WAGON
16095
Dark r ed, Simulated wood tnm , 3 seat, lvlly equ tpped
wr lh eve ry Chev option , low miles, new ti tl e, boss's
wt le's car Sl icker $7, 400 00
1972 DODGE POLAR A CUSTOM
11995
4 door , V8, au tomatic, P stee r tng and brak es , fac tory
a rr cr u1se contr ol. sharp, 1 owner local car , dar k
gree n

3122

ENJOY gracious li vi ng a t Village
Mono'r m M1 dd leport fo r as lo'f.'
os $130 per month w1th oil
ulll1tres pard. These ore brand
new h1gh qual1ty apartment s ot
pr1ces you can alford Your rent
tncl ude s month to month
leases . al l e lec
l1v1 ng ,
carpetrng
ra nge
and
re fngerator free trash pickup ,
cable TV ot you r exp611Se 6nd
on s1te laundry fo cl lit 1es Con ·
ven1ent Ia shoppmg on Tht rd
ond M1l l Streets 1n M1ddlepor1
See the manager ot R1 vers1de
Apartments or coli 992-3273
Furnrs hed apartments are also
ava1lable
FURNISHED . 2 bedrm apartmen t,
adults on ly m M1ddlepo rt .
Phone 992-3874
3 BEDRM house wtth both 1n
Rutla nd Phone 992 5858
J AND 4 RM fu rn1shed and un
furn1s hed opts Phone 9925.4'34

qn 1186

BARN 2 stlos, near 60 acres of
posture w1th pond m the
Portland area Coli coll ect (6 1-4 )
085 3647ofter6p .m

NI CE 23 mch Zen1t h co lor TV ,
wood cabme t, s tee l w1r e dog
cage, 8 md l1 mcter mov1e
cam e ra
proj ec tor
and
sc ree n , bla ck Span1sh couch
and ch a 1r couc h need s
uphol s ter y Phon e 992 3273

CAMPER to Ill o Dat sun 6 ft bed
Cu b Farmall tractor Phone
9B5 397•
IN DASH 23 Channel CB. AMFM
MPX rad1o, 8 tra ck stereo Cal l
992-3965
1972 TAGAlONG Travel tr01le r
se ll conta1ned
Phone q49
2739

BICENTENNIAL star qu1 lf kll . Dou
ble , 84 1'xl04'' S25 Phone
992 3296
DUNCAN F1fe drop leof du11ng
~!fil""--~~
tab le , Sec retory Chino
DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EXcobmets . carpet for 4 rooms .
PERIENCE ? FRIENDLY TOY
draper~es . cu rtoms , end tables .
PARTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
one marble top table , tables
MANAGERS IN "OLJR AREA
and lloor lamps , maple cho1r
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
Phon&amp; 9'n·l403
---OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVESTWORKBIRO
Gorden trac to r.
MENT . NO COLLECT ING OR
Snggs
&amp;
Stratton
motor. Grove·
DELIVERINGS CALL COLLECT
ly tractor w1th mower Call
CAROL DAY , (SIB) 4B9 839S or
(614) 98S-3811 ony day afler '
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR ·
TIES , 20 RAILROAD AVE .,
_p~ --~ALBANY, N Y 12205.
197S CHATEAU 2a II camper-.10
lb bottles Fle)(-Steel Sofa bed,
"HOME WORKERS, ' earn $60
couble
door refngf"rotor , fan
weekly oddren1ng envelopes .
hood , fo rced orr furnace a1r
Rus h self-addressed , stomped
cond1trone", AM-FM tope rad1o,
en\lelopo." Southern Di\ler
crank
up antenna . 12 vo lt cons1f1ed. 1206 Camden Onve,
verter pock, twm beds on s1de .
R1chm ond. VtrQiniO 23~~ _
bunk above or cabinets , rear
$2S PER HUNDRED slullong
both w1th exhou$1 fan in top 21
en ve lopes
Serd self It owntng . pr1ced to se ll
addre ssed .
st omped
Phone 7•2·29S•
envelope. Edroy Mmls Box 1973 HONDA 350 cycle , 1966
_,_188, Albany Mo. 6-4402
.~
m1 les crash ba rs , rear comer
AN NEEDED. Must be abl11 to
new battery . good fires Phone
work weekends Call Arcod1a
742 2954
Nursing Home Coolvdle 667
1973 MOTO Gozzi Fully dressed .
3196
low m1leoge $1500. Also , 1975
WANTE~D~.---w-oc :,-lr-e-ss-.--~S~e-c
nd Bultoco Frontera 250 CC 200
references and resume to The
miles . never been raced, lots of
Ooilv Sentmel, Bo)f 7290.
e)(lras , $850 f1rm . Phone
Pomeroy , Ohio
Galhpolis 256·1295

-.

LARRY WHOBREY 1 EX PER
.~_adlato
PUBUC
· Service
ACOOUNTANT
From the largest Truck or
Radiator to the
· Bulldoze,-~

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS

tries to lead Ius team to f1 ve
straight wms in the 33-Lea m
maJor division.
The team from Newport
Beach, Calif., won llle second
divison by beating Cal Poly
San Luis Obispo 30-0 and San
Die go Sta te claim ed the
women 's title by downing
Be lmont Shores of Long
Beach , Calif .

20" , 3 HP, B&amp;S Eng

$69.95
TURF TILL
TILLERS
3'1&gt; H. P., B&amp;S Eng .
$163.95
POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey , Mgr .
Phone992-2181

'1'.

.t:•

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

f'H. 992-6173
mo

3 18 1

MAC'S
LAWN
MOWER
SERVICE

WIN AT BRIDGE
Ruff and discard wrap it up

COINS
BUY, SELLorTRADE
Ftnd

buried

treasure .

CoinS, rings, silver, gold .

Cotn &amp; Metal
Detectars
For Rent
or
For Sale

NOR Til

61\J~ '~M H~.1.Ve~.

t A 93
• A Q 54

~'!?aiD!

R&amp;J COINS
Rutland 742-Ull
Roger Wamsley

WEST Ill I
EAST
•10
•73
¥ J 914
¥ K 106 5 3 2
t K Q 10 8 7 5 4 t6
.7
1093
SOU'IH
•KJ86 5 4

.J

• I

\

4 I 1 mo .

Codner's Campers

Racine Plumbing

RAINBOW RIDGE
I Bash an Area)
LONG BOTTOM

&amp;Heating
Racme, Oh1o
Ne ed new root or old
repa1red? House, roof,
barn, shrngles, build up,
pamttng, electncal work,
gutters &amp; downspouts,
furnaces, wat~r heal~rs,
wal~r saftners , Installed &amp;
repa.red, Sewage.
ca 11 us at 9~9 - 2882
or 949 22 03
J261m6.

••
!• :• FRIDAY TIL 8
Close Sat. At s p.m .

Blown
lnsulatiolf Services
Fmanc1ng Ava•lable
Blown tnto Walls &amp; Attr cs
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; COORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SID ING -SOFFITT
GUTTERS -AWN INGS

lARRY lAVENDER

Syracuse. Oh10
Ph 992 -3993
4 10 lma .

RUTLAND FURNITURE

••

•

:

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Joe

REMODELING , Plumbmg heahng
and all types of general repo tr
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
pertence Phone 992 - ~409
D&amp;O TREE Tnmm1ng, 20 years experien ce
Insured free
est1mates . Coli 992 2384 or
(614) 698·7257 Albony.
SEWING MACHINE Repo.rs , ser
'Vice, oil makes , 992·2264 . The
Fabric Shop
Pome roy
Authonzed Singer Soles and
Service We sharpen S~sors

'

West

LT'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE- "THE MAN WHO KNEW"

·

SIIALL WE

B·BUT HE'S
50 HURT A~D
WEAK -- H~ JUST
SAID MY NAME -AND Ffll FLAT
01'1 HIS FACE-

Courteous
Seroice3-31 1 mo

FREE ESTIMATES

.. ..
.
.
·• .
: ···•••••··· :
.::•

• K 86 2

Ne~ ther vulnerable

PH. 992-60 10

4-1 1 mo

e e

••
••

24 Hour Service

OPEN
FRI.-SAT. -SUN.
or by contacting
R. Codner, Owner

••
••
•

•••

CAB CO.

TRAVEL TRAILERS

¥Q
. tJ 2

(

MIDDLEPORT

Sales &amp; Rental

NEEO a plasterer? Call
Custer, 992-3550.

'

NEW

S A~ I
HAD A

Italian-Style Pizza
YEAH, AN' F'WE'LL GETCHA TEN
HU"--CH WAS RIGHT.
11-IEV GOT SOM&amp; OF 11-IOSE
OOP.' LOOK WHAT'S LITI1.E SLACK-SE/Io~DED GUYS
COMIN'.'
RIDlN' ON THElR BACKS!
LOOKS LIKE YOUR

dummy's weak s uit when you
are to the nght of dummy
The answer to this ·qucst10n
IS that there are many occasiOns when th1 s type of lead
IS correct but that in general
lhe Idea l t1me to lead dummy s weakness is when you
are to the left of dummy and
leadmg through the declarer's
s lrengtlo

(F or a copy ol JACOBY
MODERN. send $1 to
a t Bridge ," c t o
newspaper. P 0 Box
Red1o City Station. New
N Y 10019)

"Wtn
thts
489,

York,

by THOMAS JOSEPH

GASOUNE ALLEY

Yesterday's Answer
9 Restram ~d
by leash
12 Garnered
16 Graf 19 - Stanley
Gardner
21 Munificent
22 Beige
23 Inn, in
Spain
24 Breezy

26 Screened
28 Beer
mug
32 Holy 33 Command
to a tot
( 2wds.)
35 Railroad
stop (abbr.
36 Chinese
pagoda

23 American
clergyman
24 Yearned
painfully
25 Formerly
26 Fathered
biblically
27 Dry, as

ON A .PLANE APPROACHING D:J6F.l\TCH -

IFONLY Si-.JE'D PUTlHAT
PAPER DaNN !r-

YOU'RE 1'01"
WHATS WOCNG-,

MCKING OUT

WENDY? YOU'RE

ON ME, ARE

NOT YOURSELF

YOU?

lONIGHT!

ME WHEN YOU 5EE

WHAT I'LL BE
W_EARING!

I'LL
RENT A &amp;EWING- MACHINE ...
BUY Tl-IE FABRIC

~111~~;~=~-=.-1=
Unscramble these four Jumbleo,
letter lo each square, to
form four ordinary word1.

1--+--i-4 one

.

R:JR

1=11"1~''------ 11-IE 'MOON LAD)'"

COSTUME ... AND

how to
A.XVDI.BA.A.XR
LONGFELLOW

DAILY CRYPTdQUOTE - Here-s
Is

work

It :

RL

0 RI 0

RID

I ---N UFV

KLLVD

BARNEY

THAT WUZ A LONG,
DRAWN-OUT SE~1MC)N
TH' PARSON
GIVE 'lESTIDDY,
WUZN'T IT,
ELVINEV?
F.

IT SHORE
WUZ!!

MY EARS
RUNNETH OVER

HGUS

DHGGLZ

IS V

NR I
SU

SYSOM

.I I

One lellcr simply stands lor another In lhis sample A ia
u•ed lor l hc Lhree L's, X lor lhe two o·,, l'lC Single tellers,
apostrophes, the length ond rormnl1un or I he words are all
hmts Each day lh&lt;! code letters arc &lt;hR'ercm

SLZ . - ORUAID

45769.

10: 3~Biack Perspective on the News 20; Women 33.
II:OG-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 · 3~Johnny Carson 3.~, 15 ; Mystery of the Week
6, 13, Movie "The Comedians" 8; Movie "lnterrupled Melody" 10; Janak! 33.
I : oo-Tomorrow 3,4: News 13
CHANNEL FIVE
9 a. m. - 700 Club (c)
7 p m. - Changed Lives (c)
7 : 3~The Gunslingers
o:oo-The Outdoors man (c)
8:30-Daytlme (c)
9 : 3~Wyatt Earp
IO:OD--700 Club (c)

CRVPTOQUOTES

Send resume and salary
history · to Box 729-K, The
Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio

8; One Day At A Time 10. ·
·
IO:oo-City of Angels 3,4,15 ; Family 6,T3; Switch 8;
Oral Roberts Spring Is Hope 10; News 20; Woman
Allvel 33.

wine

NO .. BUT I 'M AFRAID

YOU'LL CHANGE YOUR
MIND AI30UT TAKIN/3-

STENOGRAPHER, JR.

Attractive starting salary,
excellent benefits.

9 : 3~Norman Rockwell's World : An American Dream

h;-+-+-il-

28 Woody
plant
·
29 Nigerian
tribesman
30 Scottish
river
31 Have
34 Drenched
36 Corrida
beast
37 Marne's
title
38 Similar
39 Tolerate

ALL lOGETH ER I

Large electric utility in the
area has an interesting
position available for a
stenographer with ·good skills
and approximately 1to 2 years
office experience.

9 : 3~Maude 8; World Press 20.
10 :00-Jigsaw John 3,,, Oral Roberts' Spring IsH~
IS; Gunsmoke 8: ~dlcal Cent~r 10; News 20: Bl·
Ways 3J
10: 3~Lock Stock &amp; Barrel 20; Catch-33 33.
11 :GO-News 3,,,6,8, 10, 13, IS; ABC News 33.
11.31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3, ~, IS; HJoneymoon Suite 6,13;
, Movie " Blow-Up" 8; Movie " Lilith" 10; Janakl 33.
l :oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
Monday-Channel Flv•
9:0G-700 Club (c)
l : oo-Washlnglo~ Debates lc l
B:oo-Prollle ol a Star (c )
9 -oo-Peter Love• Mary
9 : 3~Wyatt Earp
10 OG-700 Club I c l
TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 1916
6 :oo-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6 o1s-Farm Reporl 13.
6 2~Rev C::leophus Robinson 13 ·
6 : 3~Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
6 :•o-{)unce of Prevenllon 10
6 :45-Mornlng Report 3
6:Ss-Chuck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Tri.
Stale 13
7:oo-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning . America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs BunnY and Friends 10.
1 :3~Schoolles 1o,
9 GO-Lassie 6; Caplaln Kangoroo B. IO,• Sesame StrHI
33.
B · 3~Big Valley 6.
9·QO-Not For Women Only 3: Phil Donahue ., 15;
Lucy Show 8; Mike Douglas 10 , MornlnQ with D.J .
13.
9 3~A . M 3; One Life lo Live 6; Taltletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13
10 .00---Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3 . ~ . 15 ; Edge of Nlghf 6;
Price Is Right 8, 10.
10 3~High Rollers 3,~, 1S; Dinah I 6.
11 :GO-Wheel ot Fortune 3, 15; Weekday ~ ~ Gambit
B,10; Farmer's Daughter 13; Electri c Company 20.
11 ·30-Hollywood Squares3,4,15; Happy Days 13 ; Love
ol Life 8,10, Sesame Street 20.
11 · ss-Take Kerr 8; Don I mel's World 10.
12 GO-Magnificent Marble Machine 3,15; Let's Make
A Deal 13; Bob Braun A; News 6,8, 10.
12 3~Take My Advice 3,1S: All My Children 6,13 ;
Search tor Tomorrow 8, 10.
12 o45- Eiectrlc Company 33.
12:Ss-NBC News 3, IS.
1· GO-News 3; Ryan' s Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue B;
Young and The Restless 10; Not For Women Only
IS.
1 · 3~Days 01 Our Lives 3,4,1S; Rhyme and Reason
6, 13 ; As The World Turns 8,10
2:0G-$20,000 Pyramid 6.13 .
2:30-Doctors 3,4,1S; Break The Bank 6,T3; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3:0G-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospllal6,13 : All
In The Family 8, 10, Lilias, Yoga and You 20;
Educating the Handicapped Children 3~.
3:3o-{)ne Life to Llve13; Mickey Mouse Club 6: Match
Game 8, 10; You Can Do It 20; lTV Utilization 33
4 ·GO-Special :Creat 3,4, 15; Bewitched 6; Festival of
Lively Arts for Young People 8; Mister Rogers
20,33; Movie " The Shot" 10, Dlnohf 13 .
4 : 3~Mod Squad 6; Sesame Street 20,33.
S:OG-Bononza 3; Lambchop and the Professor ••
Family Affair 8, Star Trek 1S.
5:30-Adam-12 4,13 ; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Electric Company 20,33.
6:0G-News3,4,8,10,13,1S: ABC News6; Zoom 20; lTV
Utilization 33 .
6 : 3~NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News T3 : Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilies, Yoga
and You 33 .
7:oo-Truth or Consequences 3; Vaudeville 4; Bowling
For Dollars 6; Country Place B; News 10; Name
That Tune 13: Famllv Affair 15 ; Understanding
Alrlca 20; Wild, Wi ld World of Animals 33 .
7 : 3~Hol l ywood Squares 3; Let's Deal With It 6;
S2S,OOO Pyramid 8; Evening Edition with Marlin
Agronsky 20; Price Is Right 10; To Tell The Truth
13; High School T. V. Honor Society 15; Family
Theatre 33
8:0G-Movln' On 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Here Comes
Peter Cottontail 8,10; Behind the Lines 33; International Animation Festival 20. ·
8 : 3~Laverne and Shirley 6, 13; Consumer Survival
Kit 20,33 .
9 : 0~Pollce Woman 3,~,15; Rookies 6,13; M-A·S-H
'
8,10; Adams Chronicles 20,33.

d' -

START G ETTING

An Equal Employment Employer. M-

P&lt;l SS

ACROSS
10 Regarding
1 Snail's (2 wds.)
5 Legislate
DOWN
10 Algerian city ' I Partner of
11 In a circwn( excited)
stance
13 Temperate
2 G1oconda's
"Suicidio"
II Mal :....
(headache:
3 Reprimand
Fr. J (2 wds.)
(3 wds.)
15 Buddy
I Call it quits
16 Get 'em,
5 Formed a
Fido!
whirlpool
17 Oriental tea
6 Caroline
18 Great
Kennedy,
Plains
to Ethel
abode
7 Legal
20 Catch
adviser
1Scot.)
I abbr.)
21 Toreros can
8 Have an
be by 36
, audit
Across
( 3 wds. )
%2 RaiSOn

-EXCAVATING . BACKHOES AND
DOZER, lARGE AND SMALL,
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED . BILL
PUlliNS. PHONE 992-247B, DAY
OR NIGHT.
BRADFORD. Austioneer. Complete Serv1ce. Phone 9-49·2-487
or 949-2000. Racine , Ohio, Critt
Bradford
R~ADY MIX CONCRETE delivered
right to you r project. Fast and
easy. Free estimates. Phone
992-328&lt; Googloin Roody Mix
Co , Middleport, Ohro.
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toasters , 1rons, al l
small opphances. lawn mower,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 9853825.
1SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Mod"ern
SonltOIIon. 992·3954 or 99273-49
Wtll do roofing , ~construction,
plumbing and heating. No job
too Iorge or too small Phone
742-23.48

3 BEORM . total elec. home,
garage . Iorge lot on Rusttc
H1 lls, Srrccuse . sale price
$22 900 Phone 992-7S23 lor
more 1nformot1on.
20 ACRE form , well sulted lor
beef co nle, has Iorge born,
pond and fruit trees . Included is
7 rm house, 24t x 60 Elcono
doub le w1de tra1ler Trader rs
just l 1h years old, tota l elec . 3
bedrm , 2 full baths, kitchen,
den and large l1ving room . AU
lor $29.500. Caii6992-7S90
3 BEDRM . house In Rutland.
Phone 992 -5858
HOUSE for sale, 26 acres, newly
lenced posture,
2 acres
!!liable, house carpeted and
remodeled, freshly painted,
basement, small born , porch,
ctty 'water, forced air heat.
rural, convenient location near
Chostor. Phone (6") 9BS-42•B
or 992-S975 .
0 DELL Alignment located behind
Rut land Grade School. Tuneup,
HOUSE on l1ncoln Hgts. 2 bedrbrakes, wheel baloncmg, alrgnm$. , Iorge k1tchen. Iorge basement. Phone 7.42-2004.
ment , excellent buy for
$9 200 W1th fu rniture , $10,700. EXCAVATING , dozer , loader and
Phone 992-760B
backhoe work; dump trucks
and lo·boys for hire , wil l haul
3 BEDROOM all eleclnc home,
fill d1rt, top so1l , limestone and
fom ily room carpeted with
gravel Call Bob or Roger Jefwood burnmg fireplace. In
fers, day phone 992·7089,
Rustle Hills , Syracuse. $25,000.
n1ghl phone 992-3525 or 992Phone 992-78}6
S232.

A Flonda reader wants Lo
know if it eve r correc t to lead

~vw¥

OONELLI'S
PIZZA
295 S 2nd St
Middleport, Ohio
992-6167
OPEN 4 P. M. DAILY
CLOSED MONDAY
we specia liZe 10 hom.e
made P1zza , Spaghetti,
Baked Lasllgna , &amp; Sand ·
WICheS .
Quick carry out Ser'Vice .
4 2 1 mo

4Pass
· -

Oswald " The ruff and disca rd play IS usua lly employed
by declarer to gel nd of a sure
loser "
Jim ··sometimes 11 is a last
reso rt but when all else IS gomg to fa ll yo u m1ght as well
Lry tha t last chance ··
Oswald : ·south wms the
dtamond lead w1th dummy 's
ace plays thre e rounds of
trumps . lOne exira smce he

Call tn arders and pick up

OPEN TUES THRU SAT.
6oJOTIIIIO · OO
3-17 -1 m~ .

Pa~ s

HUNCH? ' -- - - - - - - By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

PillA SHOP -

Ph. 949-2404

~~~~

Pass

J •
Pass

can afford 1t. ) Then he goes
afte r clubs West shows oul on
the second lead He considers
a squeeze. but sees lhal a
squeeze won't work Tha t
leaves the last resort play of
getting a ruff and discard ."
Jim . " It isn' t a s far fetched
as it mtglot be because 1t will
work 1f West held seven
diamonds for h1s preempt He
leads a heart to the ace , ruffs
a heart cashes his last high
club throws East 10 with a
club and is rewarded by gettmg the forced hea rt lead to
give h1m h1 s contract "

Snuth

Openong lead - K t

SAM'S

tn twentv mlnu1es .
Located at 329-lrd Street
Ractne, Oh1C1

12

• A Q92
¥A 8

0 - ----n

• e•

:

of

J 17 1 mo .

4·S-76

~-

-----

Watch for List
Items Later.

PH. 992-3746

TEAFORD

-· ---

Twp. Volunteer
Fire Deparlment will hold
a constgnment auct1on at
the ftre house loca1ed in
Tuppers Plains, Ohio on
April 17th beginntng at
10 . 00 a.m.

Certified technician.
Briggs
&amp; S!rallon
Engines .
Pickup &amp; Delivery

ROGER HYSELLS
GARAGE

•••

AUCTION SALE

orange

PomeroY

Ph. 992 -217&lt;1

We 1 11 bring santples to your
h'Ome wtth no obligation .
See how You can reall·
save
M1ke Young, Manager
Sa les and tnstallafton
Rl . 3, Pomeroy , Ohlo4S769
Phone day or noghl
614-992-1106
j 14 1 mo

e

1971 - 12x46 2 bedroom mobt le
home Pnced to sell Call 992.
2791

smallest He~ t er Cor e
Natt'!an Biggs
Radrator Spec1alist

Now accepting clients
for bookkeeping and
Ia x service .

1973 350 KAWASAKI B1ghorn , ex
pon s1o n [homber , knobby
11res, 3 b1ke !roller Call 992
7110 .
TUPPERS PLAINS New 3 bedrm .
houses , carpeted
range ,
1974 KAWASAKI 250, knobby
goroge. Iorge lots : FHA financ
l1 res. chamber low m1leoge
mg ovo1loble, $21.900 Phone
w1th o ther extras Also brown
(614 ) ~4 -_ - - alum 1num underptnn1ng for 1-4
x 70 housetro1ler Call 9C12- NEW b1 · l e~el home 3 bedrm .
7066
built-1n k1tchen, carpet. basement , garage 1n basement ,
COLLIE pups for sole Rocme
located
beh1nd grade school
phone 8~3:_372_
3 _
_
long St. , Rutland. Oh1o See
VEGE TABLE plants of a ll kmds 10
M1lo Hutchtson . or phone 742 ·
different \IOr1e11es of tomatoes ,
2306
1ncludmg non ac1d wh1 te
HOUSE
for sale by owner on lmtomato Very Iorge selec.t1on of
coln Hgts Poced low for qurck
Automobile and
bedd1ng plant s
Also
sole Phone 992·5539
Geraniums and other potted
Truck Repair
pla nts
Hangmg baskets FULLy ~ped TV R;potr sh~
Cleland Forms and Green
Stale Rt. 124
lor so le to sett le es tate . Bes t
house
Gercldt ne Cleland
of!er lokes 11 Phone 843-2911
Toward Rutland
Roone
LOVELY 2 story older home m
--Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
MARLIN le . . er matte 22 nfle
Ro cme 11)(24 l1vrng room . dm miCrogroove rtlhng , equ1pped
mg room , new bu1lt·1n ktt chen
Phone: 992-5682
w1th sling , K ~ wea\le scope
w1th cherry ccbmets, den ,
3 23 1 me
and delu~~:e carrymg case
bedrm and one-half both down
Phone9n 5210
wtlh oak hardwood lloors 3
bedrms new full bath ulil1ty
MODERN walnut console AM-FM
room
upsto1rs, full bosem8nt ,
rad1o . 4 speed changer. ,
large fron t end reor porches ,
Balance $103 40 or terms Call
unattached garage, 2 storage
992-396S .
bUJid1ngs All set upon Iorge lot HOUSE , 7 rooms , bath , full s1ze
basement and garage. un LO(_L!S!_p~s ts Phone 742 2359
w1th additional lot a\loilable
fimshed ApprO)Cimotely 2 and
Must
socnf1ce
for
$21
000
Coli
GARDEN Supply Headquarters
one -half acres ground. Phone
949 -2BBJ .
Cabbage cau liflowe r, broccol1 ,
992-3SI I or 992-2768
head lettuce ond pansy plonls
3 BEORM . HOUSE m M1ddlerort .
Also . onron sets . seed potatoes
Forced air furnace centra a1r
of all \lanet1es and o full lme of
Phone 992-2058
bulk garden seeds Headquarters also lor f1rle produce
1.72
ACRES . Phone 742-23S9
V1rgtl B Sr , Realtor
M1dwoy Mkt . Pomeroy , 992
110 Mechantc Pomeroy , 0.
25B2 .
Phone 992 -3325
A COMMUNITY SERVICE ' DEAR
RUTLAND - 6 rms .• ~
FRIEND EVERY COMMUNITY
brs , ba th , c1 t y wa fer , new
- NEEDS A RELIABLE LOCAL
REPRESENTAT IVE
FOR
nat gas F A furnace
MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS,
porches, and large lot
WHO IS CONVENIENTLY AT
112 ,soo
608 E.
ONE 'S SERVICE TO PLACE
Ll NCOLN HTS. - Nea t 2
MAIN
SUBSCRIPTIONS, TO GIVE THE
brs . bath , ba se men t.
MOST ADVANTAGEOUS PRICES
POMEROY, 0.
storm dr s , and windows,
AND TO GIVE COMPLETE INalum1num
Stdtng
,
nat.
ga
s
FORMATION ON OFFERS IN
lfl ACRE - Home 5 yrs .
FA furna ce Onl y SIO,OOO
EFFECT I HAVE BEEN AP
old 3 BR . balh, ntce
POINTED TO REPRESENT THE
NEAR RUTLAND - New 6
kitchen and d1mng Utility
INTERNATIONAL CIRCU LA TION
rms., 2 ce ramt c baths, 3
R , carport, storage bldg .•
DISTR IBUTORS OF HEARST
brs , n1ce kd , base board
al l e lectn c 116,900 .
MAGAZINES , NEW YORK
heat . carport, Ohio Power,
ROUTE 6Bl - 13S acres,
WHICH IS ONE OF THE WORLD"S
and
level lot 530,000.
mtnerals , water availab le,
LARGEST SUBSCR IPTION AGEN
CHESHIRE - Modern 7
good hunting , some t tmber ,
CIES AND THE CIRCULATION
room . ran ch home , 11,
DIVISION OF SUCH FAMOUS
near other recreat1on .
baths, large mod ki tchen ,
MAGAZINES AS GOOD
$16,600
HOUSEKEEPING . POPULAR
wtlh eve r ything . Full
LOVELY HOME - 7 r .
MECHANICS ,
HOUSE
ba se ment w ith family
frame , 3 large SR ., 1'1:2
BEAUTIF UL TOWN AND COUNroom Covered pal1o, dbl
ba th s full basement w-2
TRY , SPORTS AFIELD MOTOR
ga ra ge. and 3 level lots
car
garage.
porches
BOATING AND SAILING
$46,500
overloo k mg the rtver ,
SC IENCE DIGEST. ETC ,. I CAN
RACINE - L1ving 18x30. 3
excel lent condition , JUST
HANDLE YOUR ORDER FOR
n1ce bedrOOf"r1S wtth closets,
$18 ,soo'
PRACTICAllY ANY MAGAZINE
btg bath, 2 porches , dry
PUBliSHED AND SAVE YOU
MIDDLEPORT - 5 BR ,
MONEY IN DOI NG SO. FOR
ba se ment. garage wtth
Jl/2 baths , dm1ng r .. 2
SPEEDY . DEPENDABLE SERshop, and J4 acre of land
g lassed
porches ,
a ll
VICES, PLEASE COMM UNICATE
Only $21 ,500
storms .. NG heal, garage
WITH ME, SYLVIA C CARMAN
MIDDLEPORT - N1 ce 12
and wo rk s hop, c arport,
ROUTE '
BO X 109A ,
room
s, 2 f u l~th s, ex tra
S12,DOO
POMEROY , OHIO 'S769 ,
large mod
en wood
IMMED IATE
.
PHONE 992-7060
bu rning fireplac , family
POSSESSION
Ranch
1974 SUZUKI 1BS, excellent condl room w'il h poollabl e, 2 lois
lype , 4 BR , 2 balhs, ulility
lron 3.000 mdes . 2 helmets rn ·
Jusl !25,000.
r ., part basement has rec .
eluded , $500 Phone 9q2 7586
POMEROY 2 brs , 1';,
room , lovely rear glassed
1973 STARCRAFT camper Phone
baths. central a1r and heat,
por c h, hot wate r heat ,
992-S761.
2 porches , db I gara ge, and
garage , c lose to school
FORD 9N tracto r, O\lttrhaul,
4 acres of land All for
$30 ,000
$1,750: Ford Jubilee tractor,
$31,000
WANTED-HOMES • TO
$1 .7SQ,Ford 861 tractor with
THE ABOVE ARE NI CE
SELL
loader, $2 350 All1s Chalmers
DESIREABLE
AND
HENRY E. CLELAND
WD-45 tractor, wtde front end ,
SA
LEA
BLE
HOMES
BUY
BROKER
$1.250 U&gt;ed 2x4" plow. SI7S.
ONE NOW
992-22S9 or 992 -2568
used S ft . 3 pr rotary mower ,
$185 ; New Idea hoy conditioner $450 3 nd lng lown
mowen , $35 $1JO,Luckett Form
Equ ip ment Phone (6 14) 698, 3032 or 69B-78BI , w
~o~in~.!_?~ St , ~ I bony ___
COAL , limestone and all types of
solt ond rock salt for tee and
snow removal Excels1or Salt :
••
Mon ., Tues., Wed .
• •
:
Wo rks , East Mom St , Pomeroy,
1
8 : 00iil5:00
Ohio . Phone992·3B91
FREEZER BEEF. Corn fed steers .
Thursday 8 ti112 noon
• •
Wil l deliver to local dress1ng 1
plants Phone 8-4J-2111 .
_,
1974 KAWASAKI MX 250 Molar cross . excellent cond1tt on .
N~ver been ra ced Ron Smtih ,
Hemlock Grove , Oh10 Phone .
~
.
992 7693 .
•
_
1975 750 Honda, full w1nd tOm · 1
.
_ mer , fo_e~ g . Co l! 992-7059.
PORTABlE ont1que organ , dealers
welcome Phone 992 5539
17 1/ , GLASTRON boot, 125 h p
Merc uty motor , and Shorelme 1 742-2211
ARNOLD GRATE
RUTLAND 1
boat trade1 Phone (614) 667 ,
3JOS .

••

MONDAY . APRIL 12, 1976
3, Family Atra1r o, otar Trek 15.
S : 3~Adam - 12 ~ . 13 ; New$ 6; Beverly Hlllblllle$ 8;
Elee. Co. 20,33.
.
6:QO-News 3,~,8 , .10 , 13, 1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20
Special ducatlon 33 .
6 o 3~NBC News 3,4, 1S;; ABC News 13;, Andy Griffith
6; CBS News 8, 10, Hodgepodge Lod9e 20.
7·oo-Trulh or Cons . 3; To Tell the Truth~ ' Bowl ing for
Dollar$ 6; New$ 10; Candid Camera 13.; Family
Affair 1S; Teaching Children to R~ad 20;
Re!'ourceful We•! VlrQinla 3:1.
7:3o-{)ral Roberts' Spring I$ Hope 3; Don Adams
Screen Te$1 ~ ~ Match Game Pm 6; Price Is Right 8:
Evening Edlt_ion with Martin Agronsky 20; High
Road to Adventure 10; To Tell the Truth 13 ; Friends
ot Man 1S; Marco Sporlllle 33
8 OO--On the Rocks 13; Rich Little 4; Baseball Report
6; Peanut$ 8, 10; U S.A. People and Politics 20,33
B o 3~That Good Ole Na$hvllle Music 3; Baseball 6;
Rlkki -Tikki-Tavl 8,10; Outstory 20,33; Movie " Fall
Safe" 13.
9 oo-Joe Forrester 3,4,15; All In The Family 8;
Symphoni c Soul 33; Bravo, julie 10; Quietest Voice
20 .
5:QO-Bonanza

_,

r. peting
F~~~~~.~~~'!rand installation .

-

Television 'log for easy viewing

Business Services

JSI.OAN'S

---

509

.Team High Game an d
ser1es - K1ng Bur lders , 1566 ,
879

197S CHEVROLET CHEV ELLE
14895
Cla ssic 4 door , co demo with low mileage. ligh t g reen
wi th green vmyl roo!. power door locks , windows,
brak es, fa ctory ai r , tml g lass, comfortllt , cr u1se
control , AM radto &amp; tape, it' s loaded and it 's ni ce

1975 DATSUN au cond1t1on1ng 1958 GMC P1dwp 6 cyl rum
power brakes . $2,900 Phone ~~d , $150 P~hone 992·602 4.
992-34S3
1970 FORD three-fourth Ton
Camper Special , soft seCJt,
) 971 PLYMOUTH Ouster. 6
carpet , auto ., power brakes,
cyl1nder 3 speed. Well worth
power steering. 390 engrns
$750 Phone 992·7126 or see at
double gas tonk, shdtng glass
218 Condor St , Po ~e roy
rear w1ndow Topper wtth
3 RM furnished apartment, 1973 THUNDERBIRD, elftellenl
sl1d1ng gloss . 2 bunks . good
ut dtt1 es ~(Jid 356 North Fourth,
co nd 1hon , power soo ts , w1n
ltres equ 1pped with hitch, body
M1ddJepor t.
dows steermg and brakes
~!_Of good Phone 742-2954 _
AM-FM rod1 o w1th tope player
mog nms plus regu lar nms end 1973 VEGA s tation wagon , 4
speed low mileage eJCcellent
hubcops Phone 274-2424 or !lee
cond1t1 on Will sell reasonable
V1rgil Hll l mlelart Falls , Oh1o_
FUR NISHED opt couple only oil
Phone 992-2386.
uttl1t1es po1d $130 per month
19b8 MERCURY for sale Good
Phone 992-397S or 992-2S71
run1ng cond11ton
Phone
2 SEORM tro1ler, fully carpeted, SNO CO NE mochme for sale,
614 9BS-356S
located on Rt 143, close to Hor$200 Phone 992 7757 or 9C12
nsonv tlle 1 ch1 ld Phone 742·
366!1

m

STRAYED OR stolen m the VICinl!y
at Boll Run Road , Twp. Rd. 20 A
off 143 7 mont h old f1 lly pony
abou t 36 m. tol l, gray w1th
blaze face . black mane ond toil
wearmg blue nylon hoher
Ch 1lds ' ~ -4 H pro1ect for th1s
year
If seen or know
whereabouts CONTACT DORIS
WOODYARD 992-5SI9 EVEN
INGS OR HENRY WEll . 992
3652 ANYTIME
lOST or stolen l11tle black dog
w1th 4 wh1te feet , los t m Hornsonv tl le Nome "AI' on col
lor Phone 742-2256
LOST In Hamson v1 lle area . St Rt
143 on Co Rd 17 , one
homemade walnut and shmy
stee l percuss1on munl e
loodrng p1s!ol w11h beltcl1 p on
left s1de Worth ltttle , sen- ltmental. good reword Make
a kid happy and ptck up heavy
reward Phone 742·2218

QUALITY

Motor Co.

AKC Reg1 stered Coll1e Stud Ser
v1ce Stardus t Kmg Phone
(6 14 )985 4748 '

COUNTRY Mob1le Home Po rk Rt
JJ ten m1 les north of Pomeroy
Lo rge lots with concret pot1os
sidewa lk s, runners and off
street p_or~ln~ Phone 992 -747_9
UNFURNISHED opt m Po meroy , 2
bedrm , new ly rtdeco rote O, lui ·
ly carpeted Coli 1n the early a

HAPPY HOUR

2 SIGNS Pomeroy

SituatiOns Wanted

For-Rent -

Notices.

Rl.7

For
Fast
Results
Use
The
Sentinel
Classifieds
Audiens·

tKONYED I

I X•LJ
~

1_ 1_ 1.

__
D-~-L~LL-L--L-

• tMUJERP

I

Ir

I

IT"TAKE5'TO

iH!tt&gt;W IN 'THE iOWEI...

No" .,.....,. tho dreled Itt. . .

~
~
to form the eurprioe ......... .
_ j
_ _ f, .1 . our~ated b7thuloo•• conoa
V T S- ~::::~=~::':;~~~::;

zT 0 c

KHF'FLZ

Yesterday's Ceyp14M!uole : HE WHO WAITS TO 00 A GREAT
DEAL OF GOOD AT ONCE WILL NEVER 00 ANYTHING. SAMUEL JOHNSON

EVE~ONE ON r\\'1 TEAM
SODDENL~ THINI(S WE NEED
6A5EBALL CAPS ...WHERE DID
'(OU 6UI{S GET 'lOURS ?

I

NO .. - -...

I IT I X)At I I Il!.J

J..thl'" ENACT MHAKI

Sar•rd•y'•

I

(U.wen ••••n ...
BRONCO ltiEitiiER

An•w.-rr Wltat lftl.ltU up 111UIIwh111 ,OQ 1t.rt ,.,.,.,.,.,
~··•ro•k-BAC~ BREAK

WE JU5T WENT OIJT AND
BOU6HT THEM ~SELVES ...

�I
} - _The Pomeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 . Mmtol&lt;~v . April }2. 1976
DICK Tlt\CY .

6- The Pomero y Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy 0 . Monday. ApriU~, I 97h
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No 2176-7
E~tat e of HOMER CARMAN

De"cused .

N otice IS hereby g iven that

El u a beth CMman o f 169

w

Ma i n St reet , Pomeroy, Ohio,

h as

been

dul y

appo 1nte d

Execulr•x of the Estate of

Ho mer carman , deceased.
la te of 269 W Ma in StreeL
Pom e ro y, Metg s County , Ohto.
Oh io
Cred itors are requ•r ed to
f lit&gt; thetr cl a tm s w tth .satd
f tduct ary w ith i n four monlhS
Dated 11'1 1s 3 1st da y of Ma r c h
1976

Mann tng D WcbsiC'r
Ju dge
(J ) S, 17, 19,

TIH•

Jtc

lEGAl NOTI CE
Meig s Local Sch oo l

O tsfrtct Boa rd of Edu cat•on •s
acc ep tm g se a ted btd s for two

used schoo l bus es

Dodge

nam el y. 65

66 passe,ger

361

eng tn e 38 815&lt;11672 and 62 In
ternattonal 66 pa ssenger 345
S B268 712F
B td s wd l be
r ec ei ved unlll 11 00 o'clock

noon on May &lt;I, 1976. The
Board
ol
Edu cal10n
rereserves the r~ g ht to reie c t
any and al l bidS The b1dS wdl
be opened on Ma y 11 . 1976 at
7 30 P M
Sea led b1ds should be ad
dressed to. John Tr 1ple1t,
Cler k. Me1gs Local Sc hool
D1s1r ,c1. Middlepo rt Oh io
4S7 60
John Tr tplell. Cle r io:.
Me1gs Local Sc hoo l
Dtstnct
( &lt;I ) 12, 19, 26

AstraGraph

WAN1 ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
•, P M
Dav
f3ctor •·
PuiJIIca t,o n
Monday Oril dl ln t 'I
ilm

Cance!1a110n
Corrections will !Jc ac
ce pled untd Y am for
()ay of Pvbl1cat10n
REGUlATIONS
The Pubk,hN r esc r . . rs
lh£' r1qht 1o ed d or re, ect
dny dd!l. deemed ub
IPCIIOn rt l Th e pub11!.1'1t.•r
Jtdt 1101 br&gt; respons1b le for
n•ore than ::&gt;c .ncorr ect
1nse r 1,on
RATE S
~or Want Ad ScrviC C'
'I c ehts pe r word one
1nse r ttor,
Mt n 1n•um Ch !lrqe\1 00
l •t Ll'nl s pe r word lh ref'
con &lt;;.r&gt;cu ! tV('
msert1 on ~
26 ce n1s pe r word Silt
co nsecu•1v e
•n!.ertJons
I'&gt; Per Cr nt DIS COUn I Orl
l'l&lt;1 1d &lt;'\ CIS end ads p tlld
w• h .n 10 days
CAR D OF THANKS
&amp; OB ITUAR Y
'i./ 00
lor
~0
word
m1n1nlum
Ettrh addi110ilill word 3
ADS
Acldii !Orl OI )'&gt;C Charc1e
p(t r AdvC r! ISf'll1C n t
OFF ICE HOURS
B JO a r11 10 ~ 00 p rll
Da ll y a 10 a n1 to 11 oo
Noon S~;tlu rdoy
Ph onf' tod ay 99'1 1156
BLIND

NOTICES
ATTN : I I
All ltOUSEWIV ES
All Yo rd Sat es, Rum mage
Por cn and Baseme nt Po rch
and Bas ement Sal es, e te
mu s t be pa1d In advan ce
Get your 1n • m ear ly by
s topp1n g by our olt 1Ce at
Th e Dally Sentm ef. 11 1
Cou r t 51 or wrd 1ng Box
719, Po meroy, Ohro 45769
wit h your remlltan ce

Bermce Bede Osol
For Tuesday , Apnl 13, 1976
ARIES (March 21-Aprrl 19)
Th1s 15 not the 11me to brmq \JP
&lt;1n olcl unsetlled ctomest11.:
ISSue ttwt 1s il source of lffttil
t1on Sp::llk &lt;i could Uy
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Try
not to be snor t tempered tOday
'IIIII' per sons wh o don t do
111111gs you r wfly To l e r c~ncG will
milkC: everyone s 10b eas1er
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) II q
s~1arp1e Oilers you somethm!J
lor noth1ng IO(Iay look lor 111e
s tr 1ngs Tt1ey rc sure to be
there Do n I buy rrnP1 ii S1vely
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) In
your llaste to get iJ ll1fl.t1Pr ~e tll ­
ed today you tn1gh t move too
last lor yom ow1l good and
cause lurt he1 cornpl,cat1ons
LEO (July 23 - Aug 22)
Pressu re tacl\cs w11l produce
undeSirable re sLrlts tor yOu today d you employ tloem on
others Use you r ~ cha 1m Instea d

VIRGO (Aug. ~3 - Sepl. 22) II
you tend so metll1ng thilt you re
. fond ot to th e wrong per son to
d ay you may get 11 back l!l r1
sorry state

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 2l) Don I
get you r s1gna ls crosse d today
by bemg ove rl y as!;&gt;e rt 1ve 111 a
s rluat1on th a t calfs l o r
diplomacy and tac t
SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov 22)
Plan your mov es ca refull y to
d ay or you may w1 nd up pamhng yourse lf 1nto a corne r Ra sh
ac t1 ons w11f ca use u nnecessary h eadac ~ws
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec
21) Norm all y you frt ve ry co mfortably mto grou p ac ttvtt1es
but toda y may be ofl day wh ere
be1ng 1n a crowd cou ld bug
you
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan
19) Your posrt1 0n With certa m
assoc1 ates 1sn I qu1t e as stro ng
as you ma y th1n k. Don t do
any th 1ng to d ay tha t m1ght
at1en at e them
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb 19)
Tr y not to make unreasona ble
reques ts o f helpers or
emp loyes today fhcy II be sur pr1 s1ngly tmsll le 1f you lean on
th em
PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20)
Someone you 're very close to

does not want you prob1ng too
deep ly 1nto h1s a11atrs today
Keep a disc reet diS tance

-~
April 13, 1976

Par tn erShipS will assume a
grea ter tm port ance to you th1s
year Select assoc1ates .,.., rth
The cho1ces could t.:Je 1n 1n help1ng to ad your goa ls

BOWLING
j;

POMEROY LANES

c. Wednesdav Early Bi rds
...,
March 24 , 1976
,
Pts.
Royal Crown
160
F.armers Bank
129
BenT om
117
King Builders
106
Evelyn 's Grocery
95
t.tatey ·s ceram1cs .
89
,,, High lnd Game - Mary
~oss 210, Belly Whillalch ,
)00
· High Serie s
Be lty
Whitlat ch 53.:1 , Ma ry Voss ,

CONSIGNMENT Auctio n Sole,
So turd ~ . Apnl 17 10 am
Sponsored by Orange Twps ·
Vo lun tee r F1ru Dept ot t he ~r
Fife Stallon , Tu ppers Plains .
Oh1o Constgnmenls we lcome
Phone (614) 667·3303 or 3890

RACINE F1 re Dept will hove a
Shoo tin g Match Saturday , Ap r~ l
11, ol 6 30 p m Thts ma tc h wtll
be at the new match buddmg
Out of Ro ctne toke Soshon rd
to Bashon F1re House , turn left
for about 1' miles
WILL do smoll gorden plowrng
w1th Gro . . ely trac tor Phone
992 7-492or9923716
LOOKING for one mole toy lox
temer owned by md1 v1dual for
breed1ng purp ose5. Phone 742·
2559
GRAND OPENING - Blue lorton
Tavern 1 p m Saturday , Apr1l
17 New ly remodeled , some
management
Eve ry one
welco me
TO GIVE away cmder blks Fo r
fdl or who! hove you See Som
Bell er . New l1ma Rd Rutland or
coll 742-2908

TALL TIMBERS
NITE CLUB
Pomeroy, 0

OF

Will DO bu1lding and remodel
1ng, roo fing , plumbtng , fur
·~ noce repai r S:jOS or oil or
general repo~r Free estimates
and reosonQ.ble rates. Phone
Chor les S1ncroir (614 ) 985·4121
or 992-2221 .

Wante.dJo_Buy

--

OlD fu l"nrture . 1ce boxes , brass
beds, old wall telephon.,s and
po rts . or complete households
Wnte M 0 M1ller Rt 2.
Pome roy. Ohlo.'Call992 7760
TIMBER top pnce for stondtng
l1mbe r Call (614 ) -446 8570
CAS H pa1d for oil makes and
mode ls of mob1le · homes
Phone area c..ode b1 4-423 ·9531

Wed. a nd Thursday
April14-15
5to6 : 30p . m .

I.
,.I

• SANTA BARBARA , Calif
:(UP! ) - The Kern County
;!earn rallied to beat llle Los
:Angeles Rugby Club 19-14
•Sunday in the championship
:game of llle lith annual Santa
:Barbara Rugby Tournament.
: Steve Lindsay, a Kern
:County forward , was named
•Most Valuable Player of the
tournament. He scored five

197S CHEV ESTATE WAGON
16095
Dark r ed, Simulated wood tnm , 3 seat, lvlly equ tpped
wr lh eve ry Chev option , low miles, new ti tl e, boss's
wt le's car Sl icker $7, 400 00
1972 DODGE POLAR A CUSTOM
11995
4 door , V8, au tomatic, P stee r tng and brak es , fac tory
a rr cr u1se contr ol. sharp, 1 owner local car , dar k
gree n

3122

ENJOY gracious li vi ng a t Village
Mono'r m M1 dd leport fo r as lo'f.'
os $130 per month w1th oil
ulll1tres pard. These ore brand
new h1gh qual1ty apartment s ot
pr1ces you can alford Your rent
tncl ude s month to month
leases . al l e lec
l1v1 ng ,
carpetrng
ra nge
and
re fngerator free trash pickup ,
cable TV ot you r exp611Se 6nd
on s1te laundry fo cl lit 1es Con ·
ven1ent Ia shoppmg on Tht rd
ond M1l l Streets 1n M1ddlepor1
See the manager ot R1 vers1de
Apartments or coli 992-3273
Furnrs hed apartments are also
ava1lable
FURNISHED . 2 bedrm apartmen t,
adults on ly m M1ddlepo rt .
Phone 992-3874
3 BEDRM house wtth both 1n
Rutla nd Phone 992 5858
J AND 4 RM fu rn1shed and un
furn1s hed opts Phone 9925.4'34

qn 1186

BARN 2 stlos, near 60 acres of
posture w1th pond m the
Portland area Coli coll ect (6 1-4 )
085 3647ofter6p .m

NI CE 23 mch Zen1t h co lor TV ,
wood cabme t, s tee l w1r e dog
cage, 8 md l1 mcter mov1e
cam e ra
proj ec tor
and
sc ree n , bla ck Span1sh couch
and ch a 1r couc h need s
uphol s ter y Phon e 992 3273

CAMPER to Ill o Dat sun 6 ft bed
Cu b Farmall tractor Phone
9B5 397•
IN DASH 23 Channel CB. AMFM
MPX rad1o, 8 tra ck stereo Cal l
992-3965
1972 TAGAlONG Travel tr01le r
se ll conta1ned
Phone q49
2739

BICENTENNIAL star qu1 lf kll . Dou
ble , 84 1'xl04'' S25 Phone
992 3296
DUNCAN F1fe drop leof du11ng
~!fil""--~~
tab le , Sec retory Chino
DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EXcobmets . carpet for 4 rooms .
PERIENCE ? FRIENDLY TOY
draper~es . cu rtoms , end tables .
PARTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
one marble top table , tables
MANAGERS IN "OLJR AREA
and lloor lamps , maple cho1r
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
Phon&amp; 9'n·l403
---OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVESTWORKBIRO
Gorden trac to r.
MENT . NO COLLECT ING OR
Snggs
&amp;
Stratton
motor. Grove·
DELIVERINGS CALL COLLECT
ly tractor w1th mower Call
CAROL DAY , (SIB) 4B9 839S or
(614) 98S-3811 ony day afler '
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR ·
TIES , 20 RAILROAD AVE .,
_p~ --~ALBANY, N Y 12205.
197S CHATEAU 2a II camper-.10
lb bottles Fle)(-Steel Sofa bed,
"HOME WORKERS, ' earn $60
couble
door refngf"rotor , fan
weekly oddren1ng envelopes .
hood , fo rced orr furnace a1r
Rus h self-addressed , stomped
cond1trone", AM-FM tope rad1o,
en\lelopo." Southern Di\ler
crank
up antenna . 12 vo lt cons1f1ed. 1206 Camden Onve,
verter pock, twm beds on s1de .
R1chm ond. VtrQiniO 23~~ _
bunk above or cabinets , rear
$2S PER HUNDRED slullong
both w1th exhou$1 fan in top 21
en ve lopes
Serd self It owntng . pr1ced to se ll
addre ssed .
st omped
Phone 7•2·29S•
envelope. Edroy Mmls Box 1973 HONDA 350 cycle , 1966
_,_188, Albany Mo. 6-4402
.~
m1 les crash ba rs , rear comer
AN NEEDED. Must be abl11 to
new battery . good fires Phone
work weekends Call Arcod1a
742 2954
Nursing Home Coolvdle 667
1973 MOTO Gozzi Fully dressed .
3196
low m1leoge $1500. Also , 1975
WANTE~D~.---w-oc :,-lr-e-ss-.--~S~e-c
nd Bultoco Frontera 250 CC 200
references and resume to The
miles . never been raced, lots of
Ooilv Sentmel, Bo)f 7290.
e)(lras , $850 f1rm . Phone
Pomeroy , Ohio
Galhpolis 256·1295

-.

LARRY WHOBREY 1 EX PER
.~_adlato
PUBUC
· Service
ACOOUNTANT
From the largest Truck or
Radiator to the
· Bulldoze,-~

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS

tries to lead Ius team to f1 ve
straight wms in the 33-Lea m
maJor division.
The team from Newport
Beach, Calif., won llle second
divison by beating Cal Poly
San Luis Obispo 30-0 and San
Die go Sta te claim ed the
women 's title by downing
Be lmont Shores of Long
Beach , Calif .

20" , 3 HP, B&amp;S Eng

$69.95
TURF TILL
TILLERS
3'1&gt; H. P., B&amp;S Eng .
$163.95
POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey , Mgr .
Phone992-2181

'1'.

.t:•

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

f'H. 992-6173
mo

3 18 1

MAC'S
LAWN
MOWER
SERVICE

WIN AT BRIDGE
Ruff and discard wrap it up

COINS
BUY, SELLorTRADE
Ftnd

buried

treasure .

CoinS, rings, silver, gold .

Cotn &amp; Metal
Detectars
For Rent
or
For Sale

NOR Til

61\J~ '~M H~.1.Ve~.

t A 93
• A Q 54

~'!?aiD!

R&amp;J COINS
Rutland 742-Ull
Roger Wamsley

WEST Ill I
EAST
•10
•73
¥ J 914
¥ K 106 5 3 2
t K Q 10 8 7 5 4 t6
.7
1093
SOU'IH
•KJ86 5 4

.J

• I

\

4 I 1 mo .

Codner's Campers

Racine Plumbing

RAINBOW RIDGE
I Bash an Area)
LONG BOTTOM

&amp;Heating
Racme, Oh1o
Ne ed new root or old
repa1red? House, roof,
barn, shrngles, build up,
pamttng, electncal work,
gutters &amp; downspouts,
furnaces, wat~r heal~rs,
wal~r saftners , Installed &amp;
repa.red, Sewage.
ca 11 us at 9~9 - 2882
or 949 22 03
J261m6.

••
!• :• FRIDAY TIL 8
Close Sat. At s p.m .

Blown
lnsulatiolf Services
Fmanc1ng Ava•lable
Blown tnto Walls &amp; Attr cs
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; COORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SID ING -SOFFITT
GUTTERS -AWN INGS

lARRY lAVENDER

Syracuse. Oh10
Ph 992 -3993
4 10 lma .

RUTLAND FURNITURE

••

•

:

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Joe

REMODELING , Plumbmg heahng
and all types of general repo tr
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
pertence Phone 992 - ~409
D&amp;O TREE Tnmm1ng, 20 years experien ce
Insured free
est1mates . Coli 992 2384 or
(614) 698·7257 Albony.
SEWING MACHINE Repo.rs , ser
'Vice, oil makes , 992·2264 . The
Fabric Shop
Pome roy
Authonzed Singer Soles and
Service We sharpen S~sors

'

West

LT'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE- "THE MAN WHO KNEW"

·

SIIALL WE

B·BUT HE'S
50 HURT A~D
WEAK -- H~ JUST
SAID MY NAME -AND Ffll FLAT
01'1 HIS FACE-

Courteous
Seroice3-31 1 mo

FREE ESTIMATES

.. ..
.
.
·• .
: ···•••••··· :
.::•

• K 86 2

Ne~ ther vulnerable

PH. 992-60 10

4-1 1 mo

e e

••
••

24 Hour Service

OPEN
FRI.-SAT. -SUN.
or by contacting
R. Codner, Owner

••
••
•

•••

CAB CO.

TRAVEL TRAILERS

¥Q
. tJ 2

(

MIDDLEPORT

Sales &amp; Rental

NEEO a plasterer? Call
Custer, 992-3550.

'

NEW

S A~ I
HAD A

Italian-Style Pizza
YEAH, AN' F'WE'LL GETCHA TEN
HU"--CH WAS RIGHT.
11-IEV GOT SOM&amp; OF 11-IOSE
OOP.' LOOK WHAT'S LITI1.E SLACK-SE/Io~DED GUYS
COMIN'.'
RIDlN' ON THElR BACKS!
LOOKS LIKE YOUR

dummy's weak s uit when you
are to the nght of dummy
The answer to this ·qucst10n
IS that there are many occasiOns when th1 s type of lead
IS correct but that in general
lhe Idea l t1me to lead dummy s weakness is when you
are to the left of dummy and
leadmg through the declarer's
s lrengtlo

(F or a copy ol JACOBY
MODERN. send $1 to
a t Bridge ," c t o
newspaper. P 0 Box
Red1o City Station. New
N Y 10019)

"Wtn
thts
489,

York,

by THOMAS JOSEPH

GASOUNE ALLEY

Yesterday's Answer
9 Restram ~d
by leash
12 Garnered
16 Graf 19 - Stanley
Gardner
21 Munificent
22 Beige
23 Inn, in
Spain
24 Breezy

26 Screened
28 Beer
mug
32 Holy 33 Command
to a tot
( 2wds.)
35 Railroad
stop (abbr.
36 Chinese
pagoda

23 American
clergyman
24 Yearned
painfully
25 Formerly
26 Fathered
biblically
27 Dry, as

ON A .PLANE APPROACHING D:J6F.l\TCH -

IFONLY Si-.JE'D PUTlHAT
PAPER DaNN !r-

YOU'RE 1'01"
WHATS WOCNG-,

MCKING OUT

WENDY? YOU'RE

ON ME, ARE

NOT YOURSELF

YOU?

lONIGHT!

ME WHEN YOU 5EE

WHAT I'LL BE
W_EARING!

I'LL
RENT A &amp;EWING- MACHINE ...
BUY Tl-IE FABRIC

~111~~;~=~-=.-1=
Unscramble these four Jumbleo,
letter lo each square, to
form four ordinary word1.

1--+--i-4 one

.

R:JR

1=11"1~''------ 11-IE 'MOON LAD)'"

COSTUME ... AND

how to
A.XVDI.BA.A.XR
LONGFELLOW

DAILY CRYPTdQUOTE - Here-s
Is

work

It :

RL

0 RI 0

RID

I ---N UFV

KLLVD

BARNEY

THAT WUZ A LONG,
DRAWN-OUT SE~1MC)N
TH' PARSON
GIVE 'lESTIDDY,
WUZN'T IT,
ELVINEV?
F.

IT SHORE
WUZ!!

MY EARS
RUNNETH OVER

HGUS

DHGGLZ

IS V

NR I
SU

SYSOM

.I I

One lellcr simply stands lor another In lhis sample A ia
u•ed lor l hc Lhree L's, X lor lhe two o·,, l'lC Single tellers,
apostrophes, the length ond rormnl1un or I he words are all
hmts Each day lh&lt;! code letters arc &lt;hR'ercm

SLZ . - ORUAID

45769.

10: 3~Biack Perspective on the News 20; Women 33.
II:OG-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 · 3~Johnny Carson 3.~, 15 ; Mystery of the Week
6, 13, Movie "The Comedians" 8; Movie "lnterrupled Melody" 10; Janak! 33.
I : oo-Tomorrow 3,4: News 13
CHANNEL FIVE
9 a. m. - 700 Club (c)
7 p m. - Changed Lives (c)
7 : 3~The Gunslingers
o:oo-The Outdoors man (c)
8:30-Daytlme (c)
9 : 3~Wyatt Earp
IO:OD--700 Club (c)

CRVPTOQUOTES

Send resume and salary
history · to Box 729-K, The
Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio

8; One Day At A Time 10. ·
·
IO:oo-City of Angels 3,4,15 ; Family 6,T3; Switch 8;
Oral Roberts Spring Is Hope 10; News 20; Woman
Allvel 33.

wine

NO .. BUT I 'M AFRAID

YOU'LL CHANGE YOUR
MIND AI30UT TAKIN/3-

STENOGRAPHER, JR.

Attractive starting salary,
excellent benefits.

9 : 3~Norman Rockwell's World : An American Dream

h;-+-+-il-

28 Woody
plant
·
29 Nigerian
tribesman
30 Scottish
river
31 Have
34 Drenched
36 Corrida
beast
37 Marne's
title
38 Similar
39 Tolerate

ALL lOGETH ER I

Large electric utility in the
area has an interesting
position available for a
stenographer with ·good skills
and approximately 1to 2 years
office experience.

9 : 3~Maude 8; World Press 20.
10 :00-Jigsaw John 3,,, Oral Roberts' Spring IsH~
IS; Gunsmoke 8: ~dlcal Cent~r 10; News 20: Bl·
Ways 3J
10: 3~Lock Stock &amp; Barrel 20; Catch-33 33.
11 :GO-News 3,,,6,8, 10, 13, IS; ABC News 33.
11.31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3, ~, IS; HJoneymoon Suite 6,13;
, Movie " Blow-Up" 8; Movie " Lilith" 10; Janakl 33.
l :oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
Monday-Channel Flv•
9:0G-700 Club (c)
l : oo-Washlnglo~ Debates lc l
B:oo-Prollle ol a Star (c )
9 -oo-Peter Love• Mary
9 : 3~Wyatt Earp
10 OG-700 Club I c l
TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 1916
6 :oo-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6 o1s-Farm Reporl 13.
6 2~Rev C::leophus Robinson 13 ·
6 : 3~Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
6 :•o-{)unce of Prevenllon 10
6 :45-Mornlng Report 3
6:Ss-Chuck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Tri.
Stale 13
7:oo-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning . America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs BunnY and Friends 10.
1 :3~Schoolles 1o,
9 GO-Lassie 6; Caplaln Kangoroo B. IO,• Sesame StrHI
33.
B · 3~Big Valley 6.
9·QO-Not For Women Only 3: Phil Donahue ., 15;
Lucy Show 8; Mike Douglas 10 , MornlnQ with D.J .
13.
9 3~A . M 3; One Life lo Live 6; Taltletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13
10 .00---Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3 . ~ . 15 ; Edge of Nlghf 6;
Price Is Right 8, 10.
10 3~High Rollers 3,~, 1S; Dinah I 6.
11 :GO-Wheel ot Fortune 3, 15; Weekday ~ ~ Gambit
B,10; Farmer's Daughter 13; Electri c Company 20.
11 ·30-Hollywood Squares3,4,15; Happy Days 13 ; Love
ol Life 8,10, Sesame Street 20.
11 · ss-Take Kerr 8; Don I mel's World 10.
12 GO-Magnificent Marble Machine 3,15; Let's Make
A Deal 13; Bob Braun A; News 6,8, 10.
12 3~Take My Advice 3,1S: All My Children 6,13 ;
Search tor Tomorrow 8, 10.
12 o45- Eiectrlc Company 33.
12:Ss-NBC News 3, IS.
1· GO-News 3; Ryan' s Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue B;
Young and The Restless 10; Not For Women Only
IS.
1 · 3~Days 01 Our Lives 3,4,1S; Rhyme and Reason
6, 13 ; As The World Turns 8,10
2:0G-$20,000 Pyramid 6.13 .
2:30-Doctors 3,4,1S; Break The Bank 6,T3; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3:0G-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospllal6,13 : All
In The Family 8, 10, Lilias, Yoga and You 20;
Educating the Handicapped Children 3~.
3:3o-{)ne Life to Llve13; Mickey Mouse Club 6: Match
Game 8, 10; You Can Do It 20; lTV Utilization 33
4 ·GO-Special :Creat 3,4, 15; Bewitched 6; Festival of
Lively Arts for Young People 8; Mister Rogers
20,33; Movie " The Shot" 10, Dlnohf 13 .
4 : 3~Mod Squad 6; Sesame Street 20,33.
S:OG-Bononza 3; Lambchop and the Professor ••
Family Affair 8, Star Trek 1S.
5:30-Adam-12 4,13 ; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Electric Company 20,33.
6:0G-News3,4,8,10,13,1S: ABC News6; Zoom 20; lTV
Utilization 33 .
6 : 3~NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News T3 : Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilies, Yoga
and You 33 .
7:oo-Truth or Consequences 3; Vaudeville 4; Bowling
For Dollars 6; Country Place B; News 10; Name
That Tune 13: Famllv Affair 15 ; Understanding
Alrlca 20; Wild, Wi ld World of Animals 33 .
7 : 3~Hol l ywood Squares 3; Let's Deal With It 6;
S2S,OOO Pyramid 8; Evening Edition with Marlin
Agronsky 20; Price Is Right 10; To Tell The Truth
13; High School T. V. Honor Society 15; Family
Theatre 33
8:0G-Movln' On 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Here Comes
Peter Cottontail 8,10; Behind the Lines 33; International Animation Festival 20. ·
8 : 3~Laverne and Shirley 6, 13; Consumer Survival
Kit 20,33 .
9 : 0~Pollce Woman 3,~,15; Rookies 6,13; M-A·S-H
'
8,10; Adams Chronicles 20,33.

d' -

START G ETTING

An Equal Employment Employer. M-

P&lt;l SS

ACROSS
10 Regarding
1 Snail's (2 wds.)
5 Legislate
DOWN
10 Algerian city ' I Partner of
11 In a circwn( excited)
stance
13 Temperate
2 G1oconda's
"Suicidio"
II Mal :....
(headache:
3 Reprimand
Fr. J (2 wds.)
(3 wds.)
15 Buddy
I Call it quits
16 Get 'em,
5 Formed a
Fido!
whirlpool
17 Oriental tea
6 Caroline
18 Great
Kennedy,
Plains
to Ethel
abode
7 Legal
20 Catch
adviser
1Scot.)
I abbr.)
21 Toreros can
8 Have an
be by 36
, audit
Across
( 3 wds. )
%2 RaiSOn

-EXCAVATING . BACKHOES AND
DOZER, lARGE AND SMALL,
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED . BILL
PUlliNS. PHONE 992-247B, DAY
OR NIGHT.
BRADFORD. Austioneer. Complete Serv1ce. Phone 9-49·2-487
or 949-2000. Racine , Ohio, Critt
Bradford
R~ADY MIX CONCRETE delivered
right to you r project. Fast and
easy. Free estimates. Phone
992-328&lt; Googloin Roody Mix
Co , Middleport, Ohro.
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toasters , 1rons, al l
small opphances. lawn mower,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 9853825.
1SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Mod"ern
SonltOIIon. 992·3954 or 99273-49
Wtll do roofing , ~construction,
plumbing and heating. No job
too Iorge or too small Phone
742-23.48

3 BEORM . total elec. home,
garage . Iorge lot on Rusttc
H1 lls, Srrccuse . sale price
$22 900 Phone 992-7S23 lor
more 1nformot1on.
20 ACRE form , well sulted lor
beef co nle, has Iorge born,
pond and fruit trees . Included is
7 rm house, 24t x 60 Elcono
doub le w1de tra1ler Trader rs
just l 1h years old, tota l elec . 3
bedrm , 2 full baths, kitchen,
den and large l1ving room . AU
lor $29.500. Caii6992-7S90
3 BEDRM . house In Rutland.
Phone 992 -5858
HOUSE for sale, 26 acres, newly
lenced posture,
2 acres
!!liable, house carpeted and
remodeled, freshly painted,
basement, small born , porch,
ctty 'water, forced air heat.
rural, convenient location near
Chostor. Phone (6") 9BS-42•B
or 992-S975 .
0 DELL Alignment located behind
Rut land Grade School. Tuneup,
HOUSE on l1ncoln Hgts. 2 bedrbrakes, wheel baloncmg, alrgnm$. , Iorge k1tchen. Iorge basement. Phone 7.42-2004.
ment , excellent buy for
$9 200 W1th fu rniture , $10,700. EXCAVATING , dozer , loader and
Phone 992-760B
backhoe work; dump trucks
and lo·boys for hire , wil l haul
3 BEDROOM all eleclnc home,
fill d1rt, top so1l , limestone and
fom ily room carpeted with
gravel Call Bob or Roger Jefwood burnmg fireplace. In
fers, day phone 992·7089,
Rustle Hills , Syracuse. $25,000.
n1ghl phone 992-3525 or 992Phone 992-78}6
S232.

A Flonda reader wants Lo
know if it eve r correc t to lead

~vw¥

OONELLI'S
PIZZA
295 S 2nd St
Middleport, Ohio
992-6167
OPEN 4 P. M. DAILY
CLOSED MONDAY
we specia liZe 10 hom.e
made P1zza , Spaghetti,
Baked Lasllgna , &amp; Sand ·
WICheS .
Quick carry out Ser'Vice .
4 2 1 mo

4Pass
· -

Oswald " The ruff and disca rd play IS usua lly employed
by declarer to gel nd of a sure
loser "
Jim ··sometimes 11 is a last
reso rt but when all else IS gomg to fa ll yo u m1ght as well
Lry tha t last chance ··
Oswald : ·south wms the
dtamond lead w1th dummy 's
ace plays thre e rounds of
trumps . lOne exira smce he

Call tn arders and pick up

OPEN TUES THRU SAT.
6oJOTIIIIO · OO
3-17 -1 m~ .

Pa~ s

HUNCH? ' -- - - - - - - By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

PillA SHOP -

Ph. 949-2404

~~~~

Pass

J •
Pass

can afford 1t. ) Then he goes
afte r clubs West shows oul on
the second lead He considers
a squeeze. but sees lhal a
squeeze won't work Tha t
leaves the last resort play of
getting a ruff and discard ."
Jim . " It isn' t a s far fetched
as it mtglot be because 1t will
work 1f West held seven
diamonds for h1s preempt He
leads a heart to the ace , ruffs
a heart cashes his last high
club throws East 10 with a
club and is rewarded by gettmg the forced hea rt lead to
give h1m h1 s contract "

Snuth

Openong lead - K t

SAM'S

tn twentv mlnu1es .
Located at 329-lrd Street
Ractne, Oh1C1

12

• A Q92
¥A 8

0 - ----n

• e•

:

of

J 17 1 mo .

4·S-76

~-

-----

Watch for List
Items Later.

PH. 992-3746

TEAFORD

-· ---

Twp. Volunteer
Fire Deparlment will hold
a constgnment auct1on at
the ftre house loca1ed in
Tuppers Plains, Ohio on
April 17th beginntng at
10 . 00 a.m.

Certified technician.
Briggs
&amp; S!rallon
Engines .
Pickup &amp; Delivery

ROGER HYSELLS
GARAGE

•••

AUCTION SALE

orange

PomeroY

Ph. 992 -217&lt;1

We 1 11 bring santples to your
h'Ome wtth no obligation .
See how You can reall·
save
M1ke Young, Manager
Sa les and tnstallafton
Rl . 3, Pomeroy , Ohlo4S769
Phone day or noghl
614-992-1106
j 14 1 mo

e

1971 - 12x46 2 bedroom mobt le
home Pnced to sell Call 992.
2791

smallest He~ t er Cor e
Natt'!an Biggs
Radrator Spec1alist

Now accepting clients
for bookkeeping and
Ia x service .

1973 350 KAWASAKI B1ghorn , ex
pon s1o n [homber , knobby
11res, 3 b1ke !roller Call 992
7110 .
TUPPERS PLAINS New 3 bedrm .
houses , carpeted
range ,
1974 KAWASAKI 250, knobby
goroge. Iorge lots : FHA financ
l1 res. chamber low m1leoge
mg ovo1loble, $21.900 Phone
w1th o ther extras Also brown
(614 ) ~4 -_ - - alum 1num underptnn1ng for 1-4
x 70 housetro1ler Call 9C12- NEW b1 · l e~el home 3 bedrm .
7066
built-1n k1tchen, carpet. basement , garage 1n basement ,
COLLIE pups for sole Rocme
located
beh1nd grade school
phone 8~3:_372_
3 _
_
long St. , Rutland. Oh1o See
VEGE TABLE plants of a ll kmds 10
M1lo Hutchtson . or phone 742 ·
different \IOr1e11es of tomatoes ,
2306
1ncludmg non ac1d wh1 te
HOUSE
for sale by owner on lmtomato Very Iorge selec.t1on of
coln Hgts Poced low for qurck
Automobile and
bedd1ng plant s
Also
sole Phone 992·5539
Geraniums and other potted
Truck Repair
pla nts
Hangmg baskets FULLy ~ped TV R;potr sh~
Cleland Forms and Green
Stale Rt. 124
lor so le to sett le es tate . Bes t
house
Gercldt ne Cleland
of!er lokes 11 Phone 843-2911
Toward Rutland
Roone
LOVELY 2 story older home m
--Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
MARLIN le . . er matte 22 nfle
Ro cme 11)(24 l1vrng room . dm miCrogroove rtlhng , equ1pped
mg room , new bu1lt·1n ktt chen
Phone: 992-5682
w1th sling , K ~ wea\le scope
w1th cherry ccbmets, den ,
3 23 1 me
and delu~~:e carrymg case
bedrm and one-half both down
Phone9n 5210
wtlh oak hardwood lloors 3
bedrms new full bath ulil1ty
MODERN walnut console AM-FM
room
upsto1rs, full bosem8nt ,
rad1o . 4 speed changer. ,
large fron t end reor porches ,
Balance $103 40 or terms Call
unattached garage, 2 storage
992-396S .
bUJid1ngs All set upon Iorge lot HOUSE , 7 rooms , bath , full s1ze
basement and garage. un LO(_L!S!_p~s ts Phone 742 2359
w1th additional lot a\loilable
fimshed ApprO)Cimotely 2 and
Must
socnf1ce
for
$21
000
Coli
GARDEN Supply Headquarters
one -half acres ground. Phone
949 -2BBJ .
Cabbage cau liflowe r, broccol1 ,
992-3SI I or 992-2768
head lettuce ond pansy plonls
3 BEORM . HOUSE m M1ddlerort .
Also . onron sets . seed potatoes
Forced air furnace centra a1r
of all \lanet1es and o full lme of
Phone 992-2058
bulk garden seeds Headquarters also lor f1rle produce
1.72
ACRES . Phone 742-23S9
V1rgtl B Sr , Realtor
M1dwoy Mkt . Pomeroy , 992
110 Mechantc Pomeroy , 0.
25B2 .
Phone 992 -3325
A COMMUNITY SERVICE ' DEAR
RUTLAND - 6 rms .• ~
FRIEND EVERY COMMUNITY
brs , ba th , c1 t y wa fer , new
- NEEDS A RELIABLE LOCAL
REPRESENTAT IVE
FOR
nat gas F A furnace
MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS,
porches, and large lot
WHO IS CONVENIENTLY AT
112 ,soo
608 E.
ONE 'S SERVICE TO PLACE
Ll NCOLN HTS. - Nea t 2
MAIN
SUBSCRIPTIONS, TO GIVE THE
brs . bath , ba se men t.
MOST ADVANTAGEOUS PRICES
POMEROY, 0.
storm dr s , and windows,
AND TO GIVE COMPLETE INalum1num
Stdtng
,
nat.
ga
s
FORMATION ON OFFERS IN
lfl ACRE - Home 5 yrs .
FA furna ce Onl y SIO,OOO
EFFECT I HAVE BEEN AP
old 3 BR . balh, ntce
POINTED TO REPRESENT THE
NEAR RUTLAND - New 6
kitchen and d1mng Utility
INTERNATIONAL CIRCU LA TION
rms., 2 ce ramt c baths, 3
R , carport, storage bldg .•
DISTR IBUTORS OF HEARST
brs , n1ce kd , base board
al l e lectn c 116,900 .
MAGAZINES , NEW YORK
heat . carport, Ohio Power,
ROUTE 6Bl - 13S acres,
WHICH IS ONE OF THE WORLD"S
and
level lot 530,000.
mtnerals , water availab le,
LARGEST SUBSCR IPTION AGEN
CHESHIRE - Modern 7
good hunting , some t tmber ,
CIES AND THE CIRCULATION
room . ran ch home , 11,
DIVISION OF SUCH FAMOUS
near other recreat1on .
baths, large mod ki tchen ,
MAGAZINES AS GOOD
$16,600
HOUSEKEEPING . POPULAR
wtlh eve r ything . Full
LOVELY HOME - 7 r .
MECHANICS ,
HOUSE
ba se ment w ith family
frame , 3 large SR ., 1'1:2
BEAUTIF UL TOWN AND COUNroom Covered pal1o, dbl
ba th s full basement w-2
TRY , SPORTS AFIELD MOTOR
ga ra ge. and 3 level lots
car
garage.
porches
BOATING AND SAILING
$46,500
overloo k mg the rtver ,
SC IENCE DIGEST. ETC ,. I CAN
RACINE - L1ving 18x30. 3
excel lent condition , JUST
HANDLE YOUR ORDER FOR
n1ce bedrOOf"r1S wtth closets,
$18 ,soo'
PRACTICAllY ANY MAGAZINE
btg bath, 2 porches , dry
PUBliSHED AND SAVE YOU
MIDDLEPORT - 5 BR ,
MONEY IN DOI NG SO. FOR
ba se ment. garage wtth
Jl/2 baths , dm1ng r .. 2
SPEEDY . DEPENDABLE SERshop, and J4 acre of land
g lassed
porches ,
a ll
VICES, PLEASE COMM UNICATE
Only $21 ,500
storms .. NG heal, garage
WITH ME, SYLVIA C CARMAN
MIDDLEPORT - N1 ce 12
and wo rk s hop, c arport,
ROUTE '
BO X 109A ,
room
s, 2 f u l~th s, ex tra
S12,DOO
POMEROY , OHIO 'S769 ,
large mod
en wood
IMMED IATE
.
PHONE 992-7060
bu rning fireplac , family
POSSESSION
Ranch
1974 SUZUKI 1BS, excellent condl room w'il h poollabl e, 2 lois
lype , 4 BR , 2 balhs, ulility
lron 3.000 mdes . 2 helmets rn ·
Jusl !25,000.
r ., part basement has rec .
eluded , $500 Phone 9q2 7586
POMEROY 2 brs , 1';,
room , lovely rear glassed
1973 STARCRAFT camper Phone
baths. central a1r and heat,
por c h, hot wate r heat ,
992-S761.
2 porches , db I gara ge, and
garage , c lose to school
FORD 9N tracto r, O\lttrhaul,
4 acres of land All for
$30 ,000
$1,750: Ford Jubilee tractor,
$31,000
WANTED-HOMES • TO
$1 .7SQ,Ford 861 tractor with
THE ABOVE ARE NI CE
SELL
loader, $2 350 All1s Chalmers
DESIREABLE
AND
HENRY E. CLELAND
WD-45 tractor, wtde front end ,
SA
LEA
BLE
HOMES
BUY
BROKER
$1.250 U&gt;ed 2x4" plow. SI7S.
ONE NOW
992-22S9 or 992 -2568
used S ft . 3 pr rotary mower ,
$185 ; New Idea hoy conditioner $450 3 nd lng lown
mowen , $35 $1JO,Luckett Form
Equ ip ment Phone (6 14) 698, 3032 or 69B-78BI , w
~o~in~.!_?~ St , ~ I bony ___
COAL , limestone and all types of
solt ond rock salt for tee and
snow removal Excels1or Salt :
••
Mon ., Tues., Wed .
• •
:
Wo rks , East Mom St , Pomeroy,
1
8 : 00iil5:00
Ohio . Phone992·3B91
FREEZER BEEF. Corn fed steers .
Thursday 8 ti112 noon
• •
Wil l deliver to local dress1ng 1
plants Phone 8-4J-2111 .
_,
1974 KAWASAKI MX 250 Molar cross . excellent cond1tt on .
N~ver been ra ced Ron Smtih ,
Hemlock Grove , Oh10 Phone .
~
.
992 7693 .
•
_
1975 750 Honda, full w1nd tOm · 1
.
_ mer , fo_e~ g . Co l! 992-7059.
PORTABlE ont1que organ , dealers
welcome Phone 992 5539
17 1/ , GLASTRON boot, 125 h p
Merc uty motor , and Shorelme 1 742-2211
ARNOLD GRATE
RUTLAND 1
boat trade1 Phone (614) 667 ,
3JOS .

••

MONDAY . APRIL 12, 1976
3, Family Atra1r o, otar Trek 15.
S : 3~Adam - 12 ~ . 13 ; New$ 6; Beverly Hlllblllle$ 8;
Elee. Co. 20,33.
.
6:QO-News 3,~,8 , .10 , 13, 1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20
Special ducatlon 33 .
6 o 3~NBC News 3,4, 1S;; ABC News 13;, Andy Griffith
6; CBS News 8, 10, Hodgepodge Lod9e 20.
7·oo-Trulh or Cons . 3; To Tell the Truth~ ' Bowl ing for
Dollar$ 6; New$ 10; Candid Camera 13.; Family
Affair 1S; Teaching Children to R~ad 20;
Re!'ourceful We•! VlrQinla 3:1.
7:3o-{)ral Roberts' Spring I$ Hope 3; Don Adams
Screen Te$1 ~ ~ Match Game Pm 6; Price Is Right 8:
Evening Edlt_ion with Martin Agronsky 20; High
Road to Adventure 10; To Tell the Truth 13 ; Friends
ot Man 1S; Marco Sporlllle 33
8 OO--On the Rocks 13; Rich Little 4; Baseball Report
6; Peanut$ 8, 10; U S.A. People and Politics 20,33
B o 3~That Good Ole Na$hvllle Music 3; Baseball 6;
Rlkki -Tikki-Tavl 8,10; Outstory 20,33; Movie " Fall
Safe" 13.
9 oo-Joe Forrester 3,4,15; All In The Family 8;
Symphoni c Soul 33; Bravo, julie 10; Quietest Voice
20 .
5:QO-Bonanza

_,

r. peting
F~~~~~.~~~'!rand installation .

-

Television 'log for easy viewing

Business Services

JSI.OAN'S

---

509

.Team High Game an d
ser1es - K1ng Bur lders , 1566 ,
879

197S CHEVROLET CHEV ELLE
14895
Cla ssic 4 door , co demo with low mileage. ligh t g reen
wi th green vmyl roo!. power door locks , windows,
brak es, fa ctory ai r , tml g lass, comfortllt , cr u1se
control , AM radto &amp; tape, it' s loaded and it 's ni ce

1975 DATSUN au cond1t1on1ng 1958 GMC P1dwp 6 cyl rum
power brakes . $2,900 Phone ~~d , $150 P~hone 992·602 4.
992-34S3
1970 FORD three-fourth Ton
Camper Special , soft seCJt,
) 971 PLYMOUTH Ouster. 6
carpet , auto ., power brakes,
cyl1nder 3 speed. Well worth
power steering. 390 engrns
$750 Phone 992·7126 or see at
double gas tonk, shdtng glass
218 Condor St , Po ~e roy
rear w1ndow Topper wtth
3 RM furnished apartment, 1973 THUNDERBIRD, elftellenl
sl1d1ng gloss . 2 bunks . good
ut dtt1 es ~(Jid 356 North Fourth,
co nd 1hon , power soo ts , w1n
ltres equ 1pped with hitch, body
M1ddJepor t.
dows steermg and brakes
~!_Of good Phone 742-2954 _
AM-FM rod1 o w1th tope player
mog nms plus regu lar nms end 1973 VEGA s tation wagon , 4
speed low mileage eJCcellent
hubcops Phone 274-2424 or !lee
cond1t1 on Will sell reasonable
V1rgil Hll l mlelart Falls , Oh1o_
FUR NISHED opt couple only oil
Phone 992-2386.
uttl1t1es po1d $130 per month
19b8 MERCURY for sale Good
Phone 992-397S or 992-2S71
run1ng cond11ton
Phone
2 SEORM tro1ler, fully carpeted, SNO CO NE mochme for sale,
614 9BS-356S
located on Rt 143, close to Hor$200 Phone 992 7757 or 9C12
nsonv tlle 1 ch1 ld Phone 742·
366!1

m

STRAYED OR stolen m the VICinl!y
at Boll Run Road , Twp. Rd. 20 A
off 143 7 mont h old f1 lly pony
abou t 36 m. tol l, gray w1th
blaze face . black mane ond toil
wearmg blue nylon hoher
Ch 1lds ' ~ -4 H pro1ect for th1s
year
If seen or know
whereabouts CONTACT DORIS
WOODYARD 992-5SI9 EVEN
INGS OR HENRY WEll . 992
3652 ANYTIME
lOST or stolen l11tle black dog
w1th 4 wh1te feet , los t m Hornsonv tl le Nome "AI' on col
lor Phone 742-2256
LOST In Hamson v1 lle area . St Rt
143 on Co Rd 17 , one
homemade walnut and shmy
stee l percuss1on munl e
loodrng p1s!ol w11h beltcl1 p on
left s1de Worth ltttle , sen- ltmental. good reword Make
a kid happy and ptck up heavy
reward Phone 742·2218

QUALITY

Motor Co.

AKC Reg1 stered Coll1e Stud Ser
v1ce Stardus t Kmg Phone
(6 14 )985 4748 '

COUNTRY Mob1le Home Po rk Rt
JJ ten m1 les north of Pomeroy
Lo rge lots with concret pot1os
sidewa lk s, runners and off
street p_or~ln~ Phone 992 -747_9
UNFURNISHED opt m Po meroy , 2
bedrm , new ly rtdeco rote O, lui ·
ly carpeted Coli 1n the early a

HAPPY HOUR

2 SIGNS Pomeroy

SituatiOns Wanted

For-Rent -

Notices.

Rl.7

For
Fast
Results
Use
The
Sentinel
Classifieds
Audiens·

tKONYED I

I X•LJ
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1_ 1_ 1.

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Ir

I

IT"TAKE5'TO

iH!tt&gt;W IN 'THE iOWEI...

No" .,.....,. tho dreled Itt. . .

~
~
to form the eurprioe ......... .
_ j
_ _ f, .1 . our~ated b7thuloo•• conoa
V T S- ~::::~=~::':;~~~::;

zT 0 c

KHF'FLZ

Yesterday's Ceyp14M!uole : HE WHO WAITS TO 00 A GREAT
DEAL OF GOOD AT ONCE WILL NEVER 00 ANYTHING. SAMUEL JOHNSON

EVE~ONE ON r\\'1 TEAM
SODDENL~ THINI(S WE NEED
6A5EBALL CAPS ...WHERE DID
'(OU 6UI{S GET 'lOURS ?

I

NO .. - -...

I IT I X)At I I Il!.J

J..thl'" ENACT MHAKI

Sar•rd•y'•

I

(U.wen ••••n ...
BRONCO ltiEitiiER

An•w.-rr Wltat lftl.ltU up 111UIIwh111 ,OQ 1t.rt ,.,.,.,.,.,
~··•ro•k-BAC~ BREAK

WE JU5T WENT OIJT AND
BOU6HT THEM ~SELVES ...

�8- The Pomeroy Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, April 12, !976
f ----- ~- - --------- - - ---7-- - ,

Hospital News

IN PROGRESS
SYMPOSIUM SEJ'
A revival is In progress at
COLUMBUS (UPI) - 1'116
the
Pomeroy
Wesleyan
Buckeye
Stale Sheriffs' ·A I!
Veterans Memorial Hosoltal
... about your
I
.
I
SATURDA Y DI S Holiness ChJJrch SR 143 sociatlon, In cooperaiiCII will!
I CHARGES
Clar a ·
Harrisonville Road nightly at the Hocking Technlcll
WILLARO"PUG" CAUDILL brothe r , Lester Edwards of Lavender, J uan ita Aleshire,
7: :ro. The Rev , David Light ill College, wiD hold a Jail
Herman Caudill ol Mid. . New Lexlllglon, and a niece, lsher Baker, Leonard Hill,
tile evangelist. There will be Management Sympoalum
diepor t has learned of the nep hew , and a great niece. Daniel Pooler , Joseph Reiser,
speeial
singing each evening. ' May 4, 5 and 6 In Canton.
death of his brother , Willard He was born at Mur r ~y Ci ty,
Quar terly wage reports and quarter.
covered wages, and th e The Rev. O'Dell Manley is
The session Is designed w.
" Pug" Caudill . 53, of the son of the late Thom as Geprge Conde, Brian Diehl , social security contributions
"Wage reports and social employer pays a matching
Colum bus Sat urda y morn ing Joh n and Emma Edwards. , James Warner.
pastor.
The
public
Is
Invited.
provide
lnlonnatlon to COUD\!·
for household workers are se curi ty contributions for amoWJ t.
a t· the Ve tera ns Ad - · Funera l ser vices will be
commissioners,
commoa·
SUNDAY
DISCHARGES
due by April 30, accordi ng to Jan uary, Febr uary, an d
mi nistration Hosp ital In held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
Social security conpleas
judges,
prosecutora.
Dye:
Dorothy
Rea
,
Robert
COUNCIL
TO
VOTE
Cinci nnat i.
Hel n leln -Br ow n
Funera l
Ed Peterson, Social Security March of 1976 are due by tributions build retirement ,
A nati ve of Por tsmouth, he · Hom e, 20~ W. Main St. , Evelyn
Stewart, Mary Branch Manager in Athens, April 30," Peterson said.
KE'l'I'ERING, Ohio (UP! ) sheriffs and key jalJ.
disability, survivors, and
served In France with the Logan. Friends may ca ll at Hussell.
City Council was to vote management personnel Cll);
Ohio.
The wage report may be Medicare pr otection for
U.S. Army during World War the Rawli ng s-Coats Funeral
Tuesday
night on a tentative what the federal courta have
People who pay a filed on l! form available at work,ers 1111d their families.
2. He Is sur vived by his Horn e In Middlepor t tram 2 to
Pleasant Valley llospltal
co
ntra
e
t. agreement ruled which mUBt be provided,
mother, Mrs . Myrtl e Patlan 4 and 7 to 9, Tuesda y, and at
who
employ
DI SCHARG ES:
Harr y household worker $50 or more any Internal Reven ue Service Peo ple
Lamber f. and sfeRfathe r , th e Heln leln -Brown Funeral
approved
Saturday by city In the way of jail facilltlea'
" Empl oye r' s household workers can get a .
French Lambert , both of Rl. 6 Hom e Wed nesda y fr om 2 to~ Davi s, Om a Cra ig, Mrs . in cash wages ih any 3-month Office
and programs.
~
police.
.
Portsmouth; a daug hler , and 7to 9. Burial wil l be In the Gifford Egnor , Marjori e cal endllf quarter must send a Quar terly Tax Return for free copy of tile leaflet,
The agreement was worked
Mrs. Pamela Joyce Rowe, Gr eenl aw n Cem eter y a t Fruth, Henry Vester , Sarah report of the wages, along Household Employees (for "Social Security and your
out
between negotiators for
Rl. 4, Portsmou th , and two Nelsonville.
hou·sehold employee," at the the city and police. ·
Bonecutter, Mrs. Elvin Legg, with the social sec urity Social Secur ity.)"
brothers, Herma n of MidRonald Thomas, all Point contribution , to tile Internal · The social seeurity eon- Athens Social Security Office
in
''an
dl eport, a nd VIrg ie L.
The 56 officers ha~· work¢ participated
Caudill. Lincoln Park, Mich.
Pleasant ; Ori e Rossiter, Revenue .Service within one tributlon for a household at 221¥&lt; Columbus Ro~d . without a contracl since the affirmative work action", ll·
Funeral services will be
HI·LOTEMPS
Crown Ci ty, 0 .; Mrs. Gratha month after tile end of the empl oyee is 5.85 percent of Athens, Ohio. Phone 592-1440. end of February. Officers had speedup of writing tickets.
held at 1 p.m. Wednesday at
Ward , Vinton, 0 .;• Patricia
NEW
YORK
(
UPI
I
The
the Penningt on Funer a l
highest
temperature
reported
Maso n; J ohn
Childers,
Home In Neywo Bos ton. The
LAFF - A - DAY
Rev. Donald Noe l wil l of. Wednesday to the National McDaniel, Clifton; Mrs. ,
ll ciate. Burial wil t be in Weather Service, excluding Laura Wh ittington , Ar·
Memorial Burial Park at Alaska and Hawaii , was 91· buckle; Mrs. Willian1 San·
Wheelersburg . Fr iends may
call alter 7 p.m. Monda y at degrees at Phoenix, Ariz . ders, Glenwood ; Emm ett
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
the fun eral home.
Today's low was II degrees at Coll in s, Gallipoli s Ferry ;
Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Ables ·
Massena, N. Y. and Newport , Percival C~rr , New Haven ;
sp~nt
the
weekend at Canal
Mrs. ·Robert Franklin, son,
Ver.
GERALD(UJm ) EDWARD
W
inchester
with Mr . and
Parkersburg;
Mrs.
Charles
CHE SHIR E - Gerald W.
Your ,aster:
Mrs. Butch Abies, Ronnie apd
ILum l Edwards, 77, Route 1.
Meadows, Mason ; Darnell
Cheshire !Roush Lane! died ·
Vicki Ables.
SUIH' ILED
Gandee, Leon ; Mrs. Virgil
Sunday at the Hol ze r Medi cal
Shopping Headquarters
Lorna Bell spent the
The
Farmers
Bank
and
Harper,
Gallipoli
s,
Mrs.
Cenf~rr wher e he had been a
weekend witll her parents
patient since Apr il B. Mr . Savings Co., Porp eroy, filed Joyce Bonecutter , Hen·
Mr. and Mrs. Ilon Bell.
Edwards ha d been ill about suit in the amoun1 of 11 ,840.38 derson, Mrs. John Bigelow,
lwo months .
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Paragainst Robert and Marie
Mr . Edwardsretired in 1958 Divietro, Pomeroy , in Meigs Middleport , Warner Wallace, " No, he isn't helpmg .Junior sons and daughter of Akron,
Gallipolis ; Mrs. Konel
from his employm ent with
County Common Pleas Court. Triplett, Gallipolis; Mrs . with his homework. Junior's spent the weekend with Mr .
the American Electri C Power
Co. Forme r/ y he had been The marriage of Ilonald H.
Ge rald Rollins , Pomeroy ; helping him with his income and Mrs. Carroll White, Mr .
employ ed at Mine 5 in Call and Nancy Lee Call was Angel Anderson, New Haven. ta• ' ..
and Mrs. Ilon Hupp .
Murray City, and he and his dis.'!Oived and Thomas F.
Bill Wheeler and fian cee
wil e had operated a
Phyllis
Kos tin of Columbus
Anderson
was
granted
a
MILWAUKEE
(UP!
)
r estaur ant
In
Ea s t
Holzer Medical Center
Jim Fitzgerald, the largest spent the weekend with Mr .
Fultonham several_ r ears. He ·diwrce from Judith M.
IBirths, Aprll9)
was also In the retai business' Anderson .
stockholder in the Milwaukee and Mrs. Alex Wheeler.
In Columbus a number of
Mr. and Mrs . Mark E. Bucks and the man who is
Arthur Wilson of Cleveland ·
years .
Dillard,
daughter,
Pom
eroy
;
spent
Sunda y with Mrs .
to
be
trying
to
dump
supposed
Surv iv ing ar e his wile,
Mr . and Mrs. James W. coach Larry Costello, says he Erma Wilson.
Ma ri e Ki dd Edward s; a FIRE DEATH
BUCYRUS, Ohio IUPII Gregory, daughter, Welfston; th inks Costello was treated in
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Smitll ,
Charles E . Pncc, 28 , Mr. and Mrs, Rothbe Gerald a "shabby" way by the daughter !lonna of Mollvale,
Bu cyrus , di ed Saturday Kirkendall, daughter, Oak Bucks' management.
Pa. spent the weekend with
followin g a fire in his HilL
Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Smith
II
is
reported
Fitzgerald
Tonight thru Thursday
apartment. Bucyrus firemen
I
Births,
April
10
I
Sr.
ha
s
offered
the
job
of
Aprill2-15
said Price wa s found on the
Mr. and Mrs. Richard K. coaching next year's team to
Mrs . Pearl Whitman of
NOT OPEN
floor in front of hi s apartment
Ilouglas , son, Coolville; Mr . Hubie Brown, who formerly Athens spent Tuesday with
Fri., Sat., Sun.
after he apparently tried to and Mrs . Gary L. Lunsford , was Costello 's assistant.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Cross .
Aprill6-17-18
reach a window .
daughter, Oak HilL
Fitzgerald would not comJoey Hill of Rogers, 0.
Walt Disney's
Cause of deatll is believed
IBirths, April II I
ment on what he thinks of spent a recent weekend with
TREASURE ISLAND
to be s mok e inhalation,
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Bur· Costello. But he did say he Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hill,
" G"
Firemen
said flame s were ehett, son, Oak Hill; Mr. and thinks Costello has been Mr . and Mrs. Dallas Hill.
PLUS
coming out of the four·unit Mrs. Robert L. Plants,. treated shabbily by th e
DR. SYN
Mrs. Erw in Gloeckn er ,
"G"
buidling when they arrived. daughter , Point Pleasant.
Bucks' management.
Mrs . David Gloeekner,
Running Time 165 Min,
Dama ge was estimated at
"Larry should have been daughter Carrie- were
Show starts 7 p.m.
$10,000.
told last year whetller he was shopping a t the Grand
going to get a new L'O ntract or Central Mall Monday night
not, " Fitzgerald said. and al so visited Russe ll
DAVTOMEET
"Keeping him on a limb has Lockhart and daughters.
Meigs County Chapter 53, been a shabby way to deal
Mr . and Mrs. Richard
Disabled American Veteran s, wilh him."
Norris of Carroll, 0 . visited
-OPTOMETRtU
will meet at 7:30 p. m.
Mrs. Ada Norns, Mr . and
OFFICE HOURS : 9:30 to 12, 21o 5 (CLOSE
Shop the second floo·r
MASSnJ.ON, Ohio iUPII Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner .
Tuesday at the DAV Home on
AT NOON ON THURS.l- EAST COURT
Children's
Department
Butternut Ave . in Pomeroy. - The Dallas CowbOys have
Virgil Hill of the tow boat
ST., POME OY .
signed Mike Mauger, a 6-1, Rachel spent several days
for a large and complete
215-pound Kent State running with his wife Kathryn an d
selection of Girls' Dresses
back passed over in the · children.
'
National Football League
for Easter and Spring.
Chuck Be rn · and Pam
player draft, as a free agent. Dillion senior studen ts at
Mauger called tile three· Ohi o State Univ ersit y
year contract signed at his Colwnbus visited Mr. and
home Saturday "very Mrs . Edward Cross.
pleasing
to . . everyon e
Mr , and . Mrs. Clarene
concerned.
Yeager , granddaughters
Main Store, Annex and Warehouse open Tuesday, Wednesday and
Stephanie and Annelte of
More than 600
Thursday, 9 :30 to 5 p. m.
Letart, W. Va ., Mrs . Rhoda
Yeag er , Mr . and Mrs.
---~ - - - ~ ~ ..
Charles Yeager , Mason, W.
attend
ceremony
1'
Va . visiled Mrs. Blanche
More than 600 persons were Yeager Sunday.
on hand for Sunday' s
dedication of the new $4.2
million Buckeye Hills Career
Center near Rio Grande.
Between 800 and I ,000
persons toured the new
facility
followin g the
dedication program.
Main speaker was Dr .
Martin
EsseX,
state
superintendent of public
instrudion.
The dedication ceremony
was held in Ute Commons
Buil"ding.

:

Area Deaths

:

Carter supported

Social Security

Apple Grove
News Notes

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

MEIGS THEATRE

Infants

Toddlers

4 to 14

N. W. COMPTONi 0.0.

From a Great American Bank

.----

''

--- - ----

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

FOR YOU

This Week At Ingels

hy 111' 1 m i~11n n Qf Till 111 '1 ' 1~ 1 !\'\\ .\HI I ll\' I

BOARD TO MEET
The Southern Loeal Board
of Education will meet April
13, at 7 p. m. at the high
school.

Sofa, Love ·Seat, Chair

1834 : We reap what we've sow11 .

We' re pretty self-reli ant peopl e. Our farming feeds us , gives
us a n in come, and , ha rd a nd tryin g as it is, becomes tbe way
· of li l'u fo r t housa nds of our fam ilies. Lately, farmin g has
beco me a liLLie easier. And we're abl e to accompli sh a li ttl e
more. Th anks to a new metal plow . And a bri ght fell ow
named Cy rus McCormi ck , who's just made us our first
mechani ca l rea per a nd keeps improv ing on it . Now, we can
really take advan tage of our fettil e soil. We can make a
grand success of our farm s on t he prairi e. We can move our
farm s into the West. We can realize our gra nd dream s of
exporting grain . Looks like th is McCormick isn't going to
stop with just a bri ghl id ea. We predict he' ll teach us a lot
about ma nufacturing, just as he has about fa rming. We may
even make fa rmin g a bi g bu siness someday . It\

Farrners Bank

~;.;
· '\\

l'
f~et lhat you ~ave

"If you
no faults, go no further.

Thai was a good one to
start wilhl"
SIPp u1) Ia th ~ l ne xt tall , job
with . a
WERNER

ALUMINUM
from

LADDER

the Home of

" FRIEND LY

the

ONES ",

From Utility to Extenion

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

Incredible Value
For All 3 Pieces

Bank Rate
Financing

you'll never lind taut! with
a WERNER ALUMINUM
LADDER .
,

POMEROYCEM
BLOCK
The Department Store of
A• 1 illii~Since~ 91~_
. - ·-

Gla~orous is the only word for this group of sofa, love seat and
chatr for only $399.00. The beauty of the fine upholstery fabric is
enhanced by meticulous outline. Contemporary style in nylon
platd. Reverstble seat cushions. Frames are solid hardwood.

992-2635

We Deliver

Middleport

No decision ·was made
abOut an access road or
which way to go on the
project pending a feasibility
study as a guide to whether or
not It would be better to
remodel
the
former
Children's Home or tear il
down and build a new
structure or remodel tbe
structure.
There will be no cash outlay ·
by the county In the construction of the mlltl-purpose
faclllty , However, the
commissioners will provide
land and site development,

valued at $110,000.
The applications ask
VOL. XXVII NO. 255
$401,446 in mental healtll
fundslor tile planned $831,446
two story structure. ·
Attending the site viewing
Monday afternoon were
Bernard Fullz, prosecutor ,
Buehl, Henry Wells, Bernard
Gilkey, and Warden Ours, '
commissioners, C,
E. . "All carriers must provide
Blakeslee, Doug Lison, reasonable and adequate ·
Eleanor Thomas, Thereon service," said Merv Rothar,
Johnson, Jack Cummins, assistant director , Public
Maxine Plummer, Eleanor Ulilities Commission of Ohio,
Thomas, Mary Skinner, Jim during Monday night's public
Page and Robert Bowen .
meeting in the common pleas
courtroom of the Gallia
County Court House.
One hundred and twenty
·:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::~:;:;:;::::::::::::::::~:::~:::::~:::::~:~:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::
persons, a majority of them
truck drivers, along with
mine operators, attorneys,
brokers, coal purehasers
~
* coal
and other business and inBy United Press International
dustrial executives, parHELSINKI, FINLAND .~ AN EXPLOSION destroyed an ticipated In the two-hour
ammunition factocy In western Finland, todaY killin~ at least session .
40 persons, most of them women, and Injuring more than 30
Fifty.four persons
others In the nation's worst Industrial accident.
represented Gallla County,
The defense ministry said 40 persons were known dead in Other areas represented
l.he blast that ripped through a building housing more than u were Chillicothe, Athens,
l•Jn of explosives. The Senijaki Central Hospital said it Jackson, New Straitsville,
''dmltted 31 perBOns - 25 in serious condition .
Carbondale, McArthur, New
Marshfield, The Plains,
CONCORD, N.H. - NEW HAMPSIDRE legislators receive
Ute lowest salaries of any legislators In the country, according
I~ a summary by the Citizens Conference im State
: .eglslatures.
New Hainpshlre lawmakers reeelve $100 annually, In
contrast with New York ·which pays its legislators $23,500 ·
:mnually, highest In the nation. N~ Mexico legislators receive
no salary, but are paid )40 per diem. The national average was
~.943, according· to the summary. .
·

THE DALLES, ORE. -A MODERATE EARTHQUAKE
shook nortlrcentral Oregon Monday but caused no major
damage.
The Oregon state University seismology station measured
the Iremblor at 5.1 on the RIChter scale and said its epicenter
was 10 miles soutll-east of The Dalles.

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You don't need expertem::e

to get results with a
Sentinel want ad phone 992·
2156 "iODAY

:·:;:~:·:~:-:·:·:-:::&gt;::;::-:·:·::;.;~:;:::;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::::: ;=-:_:.; -:-:-:·:·:-:-;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;

ainDa ve.~ .
WASHINGTON UPI - Betty Ford Fa von ''Fint

First Mama ready for

Mama" as her code name on Citizen• Band radio,
The Flnt Lady recently received a temporary CB
permit 'while oa the campaign trail In Wisconsin, and
"she's taklai It vecy seriously,,. prells aid Shelllt
Weldeafeld 1ald Monday.
SUggestions lor her CB name thai have come In Include:

uMi•s America," "Wonder "oman~ " "D. C. Oa netr,"

"Steady Betty.,". .,Not 1 Uncoln',•' "Queen g,et~/' and
" Ready Belly." A sixth grader snggeoted the obvious,
" Fil'll Lady.,
.
But Mrs. Ford reportedly fa von " Firat Ma ma" - a
name whleh comedian Flip Wlllon dubbed her during om~
of their eneounten.
·
•
·:; :;:;: ;: ;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;::~:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:::;:;:; :;:;:;:;: ;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;.;:; :;:;: ; :;: ;::::: ::;:;: ;::: :: ;: ;:::

News. "I think that Jlnuny
has already answered evecy
question that Hosea asked.
Hosea knows as well as I do

that Jimm y Carter, as
governor ol Georgia , had an
outstanding record on open
(Continued on page t 2)

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at y """"enttne

POMEROY·MJDDlEPORT, OHIO

· PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 1976

'

Lancaster, Slow, Ironton, PUC explained the rules and
Logan,
South
Point, statutes, a loilg question and
Pomeroy~Middlepilrt,
Oak answer period followed .as
Hill, Youngstown, Canfield officials sought to · clarify
misunderstanding of the
and Huntington, W. Va.
Purpose of Monday's rules
and regulations
meeting was to hear com- governing the transportation
plaints concerning Ute illegal industry .
transportation of dwnp truck
PUC officials announced
commodities - particularly lhey will be stepping up Its
coal-from a six.county area enforcement efforts In
in southeastern Ohio.
southern Ohio as a result of
Officials of the PUC alleged economic and safety
Tfansporta tiim Department regulations violations.
Weight llmltations, 'dust
outlined laws governing the
regulation of the Iran· controls, prices charged by
sportation of coal and other some haulers, hours of
dump truck commodities to working, the problem of
haulers, mine operations, myriad and somethimes ·
coal brokers and purchasers conflicting PUC regulations,
operating in Gallia, Meigs, haphazard enforcement, or
Lawrence, Vinton, Jackson none at all, and safety
equipment required are parts
and Hocking Counties.
After representatives of the of the problem.
enforcement section of the
The rules to be enforced are
listed In a little green bOOklet
titled "Safety Rules and
'
'
Regulations for Owners,
Operators and
Truck
Drivers," issued by the State ·
of Ohio, James A. Rhodes,
governor.
,
Rothar said anybody
having any complaints should
contact the commission In
Columbus at once and the
si
pare~ts staled, that Wider Dr, tuatlon will be looked into
Nielun's tenure, the institute immediately by officials.
has .become one of the best Others seated at the
Institutes In the State of Ohio. speakers platlorm Included
The Parents Volunteer John Hofstetter, chief of
Association is going on re- enforcement; Ron Albers,
cord as not supporting assistant chief; Lawrence
the recommendations of Letzelter, supervisor .and
the Investing Committee of George E. Woodyard, local
Gallipolis State Institute PUCO Investigator,
because the report does not Officials distributed copies
have sufficient documented of the safety r-ules and
data for such action, neither regulations following the
can · they discount Dr . meeting.
Nielun's broad background of
five years of' dedicated
service at Gallipolis State
Institute and his 20 years of
training and experience In
the field of mental retar.
dation .
Decorated Easter eggs will
be sold In front of the New
York Clothing House on
PLANT SHUT DOWN
Saturday, April 17, from 10
BLUFFTON, Ohio UPI. - a.m. until 5 p.m.
The Molded Plastics plant,
A bake sale will be held at
hit by a $400,000 !Ire during the same Ume. The eggs S.il
the weekend, will be shul for $1 a box and orders may
down for one month, com- be placed In advance by
pany officials said. There calling Sheila Reeves at 992were no Injuries in Ute blaze, 3843 or Sharon Russell at 992cause of which remains under 3097. The sales are spons~~ed
investigation. ·
by Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,

PVA supports
Dr. ·Niehm

The Parents Volunteer
Association of the Gallipolis
State Institute went on record
Sunday as opposing the
recommendation of the eight
COLUMBUS - A CONTROVERSIAL BILL to pcevent member Professional Inutility companies from charging homeowners for part of the vestigating Committee that
cost of emergency natural gas allocations made to reduce was appointed by Timothy B.
Industrial curtailments has been scheduled for a full Senate Moritz , M. D., Director of
Ohio Department of Mental
dehate Wednesday.
The bill, written by Rep. Michael Stlnziano, O.COlumbus, Health and Mental Retarpassed the House March 3 and is aimed at prohibiting the dation to place Dr. Bernard
current $1 a month surcharge now appearing on Columbia Gas F. Niehm on one year
of Ohio, Inc. residential customer's bill. Tbe Senate Rules probation.
The parents felt the report
Committee Monday evening cleared the bill for Wednesday's
had
some good recomealendar. Only Sen. Michael J. Maloney, R.Cincinnati, ~oted
mendations,
however, they
against sending the bill to the floor.
felt several of the recom· COLUMBUS - THE HOUSE JUDICIARY Corrunlttee has mend&amp; !Ions should be
dealt what could be a serious blow to charity bingo legislation challenged.
The Parents Volunteer
by adding an amendment to allow gambling on slot machines
Assoclation
is recommending
and other "games of chance" for charitable purposes. Rep .
to
Dr.
Moritz
that Dr. Ber·
Robert A. Nader, D-Warren, sponsor of the amendement
nard
F,
Nlehm,
Superinapproved 10 to 5 Monday night, said it would merely retain
tendent
of
Gallipolis
State
current law. under which "Las Vegas" style gaming is
Institute
not
be
placed
on
permitted only for chairtable purposes.
probation,
but
give
the
full
But Rep. Harry J. Lelunan, D-Shaker Heights, chairman
of the Judiciary Committee, said Nader's amendment would support and cooperation of
create "Las Vegasnightforreal everynlghtof the week," with the department, to keep the
slo,t machines , poker and crap games. Lt: " .tan said because of Galllpolis State Institute on
the amendment, he may not call the bill up for a cimunittee the up-grade by continuing
improve resident care,
vote next week as he had originally planned.
programs and facilities . The

Is what· Carol. Russell.
Wolfe Pen said after
advertising her husband's·
new Bear cat Scanner In the
Sentinel w•nt ads . Sold on
third call. II was the first
ad she ever placed In the
Sentinel.\

e

discuss ing neighborh ood
housing.
Henry Jackson and Morris
Udall , the other two major
Democrati c candldstes,
campaigned In Pennsyllvl!lia
today while Carter set a news
conference and rally In downtown Atlanta,
Carter
has
already
apologized for "tbe ethnie
purity phrase several times,
but Williams Monday
att,acked what he called a
bl!slc contradiction between
the term and open housing.
"That's like being for Jesus
Christ and the Devil at tbe
same til¥," sald ' Willla1115.
"I'm not going to
withdraw," Young countered
today on the CBS Morning

Carrier complaints aired at hearing

iNews. . .in Briefs\\

"WANT QUICK
RESULTS?'' .
•'

high ground back of the former Children's Home and
Veterans Memorial Hospital. They were particularly
interested in the best place for an access road.

Decision on .road
is pending .study·

MARBLEHEAD, Mass.,
April 13 - Twenty-two
penons who were aboard
the brtg Sally when taken
· by Capl John Manley and
bls American crewmen
: enroute from Boston to
· Nova Seotla .were brought
· to Marblehead to awalt
further disposition. The
·group Included British
aoldlel'l, their women and
children and loyalists and
their families.

'399

INGELS FURNITURE

VIEW ARE;A - Warden Ours, Wesle~ Buehl and
Bernard Gilkey, lo!', Monday checked the proposed site of
a community health serviee multi-purpose fa~ility on the

By El 17 411E1ll WHARTON
Bla c k
G eorgia
Congressman An'drew YoWJg
today refused to withdraw hill
support of Jinuny Carter for
presidept, saying the former
Georgia governor had "an
outstandillg rerord on open
hoWJing ."
" I'm nol going to
withdraw," said Young, one
of Carter's most outspoken
backers , in a televised
Interview,
down
Young turned
Monday's call by the Rev.
Hosea Wlllla1115 for Young
and other black leaders to
abandon Carter ' s
Democratic campaign
following tbe use of "ethnic
purity " by Carter in

Colored eggs

going on sale

WINNERS CASH IN- Jack Welcl),ocenter, sales representative of the Ohio-L.o!tery
Commission, Marietta, presented clteclut Monday afternoon to John Greene, left, manager
of Twin aty Gateway and Mrs. Bessie Darst. Mrs. Darst reeelved · $1,000 - a payment
which she will receive each month for a maximum or $400,000, and Greene .received $4,000,
one percent of Mrs. Darst's total win. Businesses which sell winning ticketa receive one
-percent of tbe total won by the purchaser. Mrs. Darst, an employe of Gateway, purchased
her $400',000 winning ticket at the store

Pool plans ·announced
·The Middleport swimming
pool should open May :ro and
close Sept 6 this season, Paul
Gerard, chairman of the
Mlddltiport Recrea lion
Commission said Monday
night when Middleport
VIllage Council met In
regular ses§lon.
The commission will meet
at 1 Wednesday evening at
town hall to name employes
at the pool. Gerard pointed
out that the minimum wage
now ior seasonal labOr Is $1.00
compared to the $1.35. He
said there will be swimming
lesaons this year at the pool.
Gerard said the commission Is hoping to secure
federal revenue sharing
money for a public address
system at the pool and will
also look Into the possibility
of a summer film series for
one or two nlghte a week at
the park since the town has no
theater . The commission
plans also to take a first step
towards UghUng the baseball

diamonds and will promote
cornmWJity participation In
the Bicentennial Wagon Trull
parade through the town on
JWJe 5,
In conclusion Gerard said
the commission hopes to
develop a year round
recreation program to reach
all age groups, Including
senior citizens.
The Middleport pool will be
open seven days a week from
1 to 6 p.m. and additional
evening hours will be announced later. Season llckels
wlll be $25 for a family with
each child to be an additional
$2. Individual adult season
tickets wl seU for $20,, and

.------

ehlldren's season Uckete for
$15, Tlie pool will be available
for private parties at a cpgt of
$40. 1'hl11 will be for two hours
and the cost of lifeguards,
lights and oUter operation
expenses wlll be covered In
the fee .
In .other actions council
approved the third and final
reading of an ordinan ce
creating by·laws of tile new
pollee department auxiliary,
The mayor's report for
March of $1,289 .90 In flneK
and fees and $122 In merchant
pollee colleetions for a total of
$1,411.90 was approved .
(Continued on page 12)

Robert Birchfield,
stationed with the U. S. Army
at Fort Riley, Kan., Wlderwent corrective surgery
Friday on one of his wrists.
Birchfield was Injured in
February In Columbus, Mo.
In , an auto accident and at
that time suffered severe
lacerations of the face and a
broken arm. When the cast on
his arm was removed Thursday the wrJst was stiff.
Friday's surgery was to
correct that. He Is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Birch.
field.

WeaJher
Sunny and clear, High
today In the low 70s. Low
tOnight in the 30s. Wed..nesday, cloudy and possible
pn!cipltatl...
. TO MEET
'The Big Bend Citizens Band
Radio Club will meet at 7:30
this evening a"t the Ruck
Springs Grange Hall.
~

YOUNG ENTERTAINERS - Wearing gUtlerilll! star
hats and carrying small American flags these second
graders of Harrisonville Elementary School, taught by
Mrs. Rose Ann Jenkins , will entertain the Harrisonville
PI'O at 7:30 this evening with a bicentennial program of
music. Mrs. Jenkins will accompany the group. Pictured,
are, front row, I to r, Marisa Butcber, Richelle ~te,

•

Melissa Howard, Lis8 Rlgp, Beverly Napper, Darla
Hatfield, Teresa McMurray, Bridget Largent, Mary
King ; back row, I tor, Arlin Blevins, Larry France, Terry
Payne, Roland Will, Timmy Stepp, 'Jerry Uribe, BUBier
Haning, David. Reeves, Danny Dalton, Bennie Thomas,
Buddy Gaus, Vincent King. Absent was Kenda Donohue .

.

LEARNING
- These. pupill ol the
Harrlsonvllle Elementary School browse through
educational material now on display at a learning fesllval
being held at the school this week. Articles on display may
be !Kirchased, Proceeds from the acllvity headed by
faculty member, Karen Walker, will be used for
.curriculwn supplies.
:M

IIJ

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