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                  <text>-School district awards contracts

'

RACIN E - Tcadung ,md
non-teachmg conlr ,lCL&lt;.; wcr e
awarded '1 uesday ntght when
the Southern Loc.1l Board of
Educatton met
Prmc1pals g1ven one year
ca nt! ac ts wer e Jam es
~dam s , lugh sclwol
Jenrungs Beegle, JUilmr lugh
school and Rober I Beegle ,
Hac tne El e mentary
Teachers 'gtven one year
contr ac ts 11ere Howard
Caldw ell !II , Pa tn cta
Struble, Patnctu Flclj::her,
C'hcrJI Hook, Kathryn
St mp so n, Mt r h a c l
W1neb1 enner and Suzan ne

Wolfe MIS Joyce Thoren
was J(Jven a one year contract
oi S the dtstn cl's nurse
Gtvcn two yc,u tcach111g
contracts were VJc k1 Carr ,
Mtchael Elberfeld, Debora
Ha 1n s. Jan Not n s and
Debora Wtlson Tlnee )car
tea chmg con tracts went to
Wtlliam Dowme , Jt , James
l.awr e n &lt;.:e,
Barbc~ra
Lawrence, Joyce Htlchte and
Carl Shuler
The boa t d .1 cceptcd
1estgnatt ons from ftv c
teachers lncludtng Vmas Lee,
lames Stmpson, Den ms
Rusch, Mtchael Bonng and
Brenda Trotter Restgnattons
from supplemental teachmg
cont ra cts accep ted were
those of John Duddmg ,
var stly foo tball ass tstanl
coach, Batbat a Baer,
Yearbook and Echo advisor
Ca rl Sh ul er. chee rl eade r
&lt;~dvt&gt; or, Lan y Wolfe, head
teacher at Portland, and
Conmc Andrc" s, maJorette
advtsot '1 he tc.1chcrs wtll
contmue worktng tn the
dtstt ~e t on thc tr 1egul ar
teachmg contracts

one yca1 t: on tract t:t ~ a
Wlillalll Jewell,
dtiVCI
(' U~~.than and tw o yea r
educat 1un
Jn~tr u ( tor :;,
Wilham Jewell , heod fuulball c·•m'ifac ts wen t to Huby
coach . Michael Wmebrenne1 , Congo, cook. Blance Btgg,.,
f1 eshman football coach, full hmc cus todian, an d
Carl Wolfe, head basketball Phyll is Har rt s, part-tune
coach. How ar~ Caldwell HI , custodtan
Contmumg contra cts were
ass !Stan l basketball coach,
Wilham Baer and Jarnes awarded to bu s drtvers
Charles Lawrence, Larry
I awrence , JUIItor htgh
basketball, Htlton Wolfe, Jt , Smtth and Charles Wolfe, to
head baseboll coach, Con me full ltme custodi an, Be tram
Andrews, gtrls' athle hc Brueser, and matutenance
coach. Carl Wolfe, alhlellc man IJnl ey Hat t
Supplemen tal contracts
dtrcctor, Mrs Lee I.ec ,
went
to ~us dnvers, Larry
vanety show, Sandra Boothe,
Smtth
spectal educatiOn and
'rttle 9 coot dtnator, Joyce
kindergarten,
Delbert Stmth ,
Thoren , Idenlth calton or
handicapped students, and Vocational EducatiOn and
Ralph Wtgal, Tttle 1 coor- kmdergarten 111 addtbon to
their regular routes, and to
dtnator
Dcbert Ours was gtven a Anna Grace Otler, lun ch
room supervisor
A spectal meetmg was set
for 7 p m on Aprtl 29 to meet
REVIVAL Pl,ANNED
SYRACUSE - A rev1val wtth the band boosters to
w11J be held at the Church of diScuss the upcommg bond
th e Nazat cnc, Syracuse, Issue to be voted on m the
h om Apnl 20 to 25 at 7 30 dtslrtct at the June 8 elect1on
n1ghtly !'he Rev Ray Estabhshment of a track
Lassen, author and radw program for the htgh school
hr oa dcastet , wtll be th e was discussed and a comevangchst There wtll be mittee to study the matter
Will be appomted The next
special s111 gtng nt ghtly
Pastor Is the Rev Dale T regular meehng wtll be May
Bass The pubhc IS mv1ted to
attend
NOTICE TO

lH "' 7 30 p m
Attcndlllg the nreellfiJ:.: wcr c

Sup t Bobby Ord , buartl
members Jack Bosttck,
Robel t Sayre, Den me Evans,
Dallas Htll and Roge r
Ad ams, pn nctpa ls James
Wt c~me, Larry Wolfe, Btll
Baer and Bob Beegle. Clerk
Jane Wagner and Athleltc
Dtreclor Carl Wolfe
PUBLIC NOTICE
To lh e Def endan ts F RA N K
COOK f;'cstden ce Un know n
WILLIE tOOK
R ~ sldencc
Unknown
FLORE N CE
W I L S ON
RCStden ce
Unknown
THE UNKNOWN HEIR S

DEV IS EE S
LEGATEE S
ADM INI STRATOR S
EXE CUTOR S AND AS SIGN S
OF
EAC H
OF
THE
FOLLOW IN G

WHOM

A LL

OF

ARE

DE CEA SED
CH A R E S COOK
W IL LI AM
H COO K
FRA N K COOK
DAN L
COOK
LEE OR
E THEL SAUVAGE
COOK

H E NR Y
COOK
CLARA
COOK
OANIE L E REE S

SUSA N
REES

T H E UNKNOW N HE I R S 1
DE V IS EE S
LEGATEES
ADM INI STRATOR S
f;:XE CUTOR S AND ASSIG NS
OF
EAC H
OF
TH E
FOL LOWING I F THEY BE
DE CEA SE D FRA NK COO K
WILLIE COOK F LORE NCE
WIL SON
Joseph w Co o k as Ad
m m• str ator ot the Estate ot
Clar a
Re es
D ecease d
P latn t ff
has brought thr s
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OltiO
ac t• on nam tng eac h o f you as
OEPARTMENT OF
o n e ott he de fenda nt s by fdtng
h ts com platnt on Febr uary
IIIGIIWAYS
MQRE KILUNG
~6fh
1976 m the Co mm on
Columbus, Ohto ,
Apnl2,1976
P l eas Co urt of Me iQs Coun t y
COLUMBUS I UP! ) - Ohto
OhtO Probat e Dt\lt StOn Cour t
Contract Sates Legal Copy
had a 4 9 per cent mcrease 111
No 76 169
H ouse Pome roy OhtO &lt;:~57 69
Ca se N o 2 1 625
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
lJ a ff~e fatahltes for the ftrst
PMS 0005(401
Th e ob rec t ot the comptamt
three months of 1976, acSea ted proposals wil t be IS to se ll Th e IO I IOW tn g
cot dmg to Oh10 Hlghwa) re ce tved at th e off tce of the d escrt bed r eal es tat e •n ord er
to pa y the debts of t he
Dt rec tor of th e Ohto Depart
Safety Dtrector Dcnald Cook ment
de cedent
of
Transportalton
' Pt ehnunary ftgures for the Co lumbu s, Ohto until 10 00
Par ce l No 1
e foll ow tng desc r i bed rea l
f1rst three months of 1976 AM Ohto Standard Ttme es Th
tat e st tuat ed n the vtflagt.• o f
Thu r sda y May 6 19 76 tor
show a lola! of 342 deaths tmproveme nt s tn
Pomeroy county of Metgs and
Dt stn ct 10 ( Plan N o •10 I 1 s t ate of Ohto
B e •n g tot
wluch IS an mcrease of 16
n um ber ed 177 as de ltn ea t ed on
Athe n s
Gattla
M e tgs
over
the
326
recorded
durmg
G1ven one year sup·
Mo rg an
and
wa shi ngton the plat of sard v tllage and
plemental cont ra cts were the same' periOd 111 1975," Co un rtes , Otl to on \la rt ous ctty be rng at th e tun c tt () n of Matn
str eets U S Rout e ,1nd Stat e and Loc ust St r ee ts m satd
Wtlham Baer .md James- Cook satd Tuesday
Route
Interse c tion s m the VIllage Th e coal and a ll oth er
Wt ckltn e, head teac hers,
Ctty
of
A then s . Athens mt ncra l s a r e h er eby r eserv ed
Coun1y
th e V ill ages of an d ar e not sold Th e rr gh t rs
Cmla Shulet , Disadvan taged
Ches h tr c Gal lta Co unty tile also reserved to n11ne and
Pupil Prog ram coordumlor ,
Vill ag e of Pomeroy Me igs remo\le the same togethe r
County th e Vi llag es of Malta Wt ll1 th e rtghl and prtvtlege to
UP TO RHODES
James
Law1 en ce and
M c Connetsv li e Morgan tran sport through se ams a nd
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The and
County
th e
V•llage of entrt es und er sa td pr emtses.
Ohw Se na te has passed and Matamoras th e Ctly of coa t and all ot her m tncrals
Be lpr e , W as htngt on County
t ra m ad rac ent or co ni nguous
sent to Gov James A Rhodes by
appl y tn g th ermopl asttc ter r tlory
a House-approved bill arrow s, word s and ltnes
Ref er ence Deed Vo l 138
TO NI G HT &amp; THURS
Pr o tec t a nd Work l ength Page 34 1 D eed Records Me tgs
allowmg
the
sale
of
alcohohc
APRIL I~ 15
Va ry
Co unty 0 1110
beverages on electiOn day
The Ohm D epart men t of
NOT OPEN
h e r eby
Par ce l No 2
l'he vote Tuesda) was 17 to Tra nsportatt on
no t rtt es all btdders tha t 11 wil l
F RI , SA T SUN
Th e follow .n g dosc rtb cd r ea l
15
aff trma tt \le ty m su r e t hat tn esta t e Sttuated m the \ltllage of
APRIL 16 17 18
any cont r ac t en t er ed mto Pomeroy coun ty of Me tgs and
Wa ll DI Sney 5
pursua n t
to
l h ts
ad
stat e of Ohto BetnQ Lot No 35
TREAS UR E ISLAND
vertfsemen t , mrnortly rn C W Dabn ey 's A ddttton to
G
bustness ent erp r ses wrll be Pomeroy Ohm The pl at of
afford ed ful l opportunt t y to Pomeroy
Oht o show s th e
Plu s
su bmd btd s tn res ponse to thiS a bov e lot to be a bou t &lt;10 feet
LOCAL TEMPS
DR SY N
•lal ton and Wtll n ot be front on Sa lt Str ee t and to be
Temperature m downtown dtn\l
IGI
tscrtmtnated aga1nst on the 1oo teet deep
Runn rng ltm e 165 tntn
Pomeroy Wednesday was 64 g rou nds of ra ce , color or
Refe r enc e Deed Vo l 156
or gtn tn co nstd er at.o n Page 171
D ee d Reco rd s
.._ .s.ho•w• S
• I•a•r '.' •7•P•M•, _ _.. degrees under sunny skies &amp;natural
for an award
Me1g s County Ohto
' Minimum wage rat es for
Th e pray er furth er provtde s
Jht s proi ect
ha ve
be en that l he rtgh t s tnl ensts and
predetermmed as re qutred by !t ens of all parlt es m ay be
law and are set fo r th tn th e btd tul l y det e rm tn ed ad rust e d
proposa l '
and pr o t ec ted
t hat yo u r
Th e dat e set tor co mp l etton pe t ttl one r be auth oriZ ed an d
ot thts wo rk shall be se t forth ord er ed to se ll satd r eal es tat e
10 th e btddtn g proposal
ot sad deced ent accor d mg to
Ea c h b i dd e r
shal t be th e st at ut es tn such cases
r equtred to ftl e wtth hts bi d a mad e and pro v ded , and for
ce rttft ~d c heck or cas hrer s suc h ot her r elt ef as to whteh
che ck for an amount equal to he may be enttlled
live per cent ol hts b1d but m
Yo u are r equir ed to answer
no e\lent mor e than fifty !he complatnt Wtth tn 28 Pays
thou sa nd dollar s or a bo na tor afte r th e last publt ca tto n of
ten percent of hts b1d , pay abl e lht s nott ce
whrch w111 be
to the Drrector
publi she d on ce each w ee k for
Btdd'er s mus t appl y , on th e St)( SUCCCSS t\IC week s, and th e
prop er form s
form s for la s t pub l tcalt on wtll be made
qual lft ca tto n at l east ten day s on Apri l 28t h, 1976
prtor to th e date set for
In case of your fatlur e to
openmg btd S rn ac cordanr e an swe r or oth er wtse r es pond
Wt th Chapt er
S52S Ohto as pe rmtll ed by the Oh 10
Rev1 se d Co d e
Rule s of Ctvtl Pro ce dur e
Plan s and spec tft cat1ons are wtthtn
t he ttme s tat ed
on f tte rn the Departm ent of tUdgmen l by d efau lt will be
Tran sportatt on and the otftce r end ered agatn st you for the
of
the
Dt s l rtct
D e puty re i re f demanded
tn
t he
Dtr ec tor
comp l arn t
The D r ec to r r ese r \leS the
right to r etec t ~ nv and all btds
Mannm g D Webs ter
RICHARD D JA CKS ON
J ud ge and Ex Ofltc o
D IRE CTO R
Clerk ot th e M etgs
County c ommon Pl eas
R I:! \I 8 17 73
Court Probate D t\ltSton ,
Pomeroy , Oh to
(4) 14 21 2tc
(JJ 17 2J , l t (4) 7 !4 21 28 7tc

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INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

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-

RACINE

OHIO

died on Tuesday

COOI.VII.I.E - Russell C.
Cody, 70, J:;oolvtlle, died
unexpectedly Tuesday
evenmg at St • Joseph
Hospital , Parkersbur g,
followmg a trief lllness.
CINCINNATI IU PI) _
Mr . Cody was born at
Hospttals costs will rise and ' Stockport, Ohio, the son or the
servll'Cs w1Ube de&lt;~reased &lt;Ill late Clyde A and Ella Harper
a result of a stale cutback 111 Cody He was a well driller,
the Medtcatd program, OhiO 011 and gas producer and
hospital offt ctals warn ed former employe of the OhiO
Tuesday
Fuel Gas Co
Reduchons effecttve May 1 He IS survived by his Wife,
m the Medicaid program Mary Belle (Bentz) Cody ;
have ' fJruJnctal soctal and three daughters, Mrs. Joe
medtcal tmpli~alions for {Phyllis) Owens,_ and Mrs.
everyone even though they Ivan (Rheta) Creeger, both of
wtll htt Medicaid rec1p1ents Coolvtlle, and Mrs . Mary
the hardest "satd Richard L Jane Smtih, GuySVIlle , a
Strns,
~ewly
elected brother, Perl Cody, Canton;
chatrman of the Ob1o two Sisters, Mrs Gertrude
Hospttal Association
Bechtel, Richmond, Ind., and
" It was the pohtictans who Mrs . Mildred Letbrand,
ratsed the expectations of the Waterford, OhiO, and three
people and then cut back the grandchildren
whereWithal by whtch
Funeral servtces Will be
hospitals could operate the held Frtday at 2 p m. at the
programs," SBid Stms
White Funeral Home m
"It was the pohllctans who Coolville WIth the Rev
promiSed the people these Wesley Thatcher officiating
programs, not the hospitals Burtal wtll be m Coolville
We are the purveyors of the Cemetery. Frtends may call
servtces," added Suns, who 1s at the funeral home after
admtmstrator or Doctors noon Thursday
Hospital 111 Columbus
Hospttals wtll have to
reduce outpatient servtces,
Suns satd, but added
mpattenl and emergency Veterans Memorial Hoopilal
DISCHARGES - Juha
servtces would not be
Spencer,
Violet McDonald,
affected substanttally
Dons
Grueser,
Edith Rose,
Stms satd hospitals are
Charles
Hilton.
more than wtihng to continue
provtdtng the servtces but
PLEASANT VALLEY
they do not and camot get
Mrs Everett Newell, son,
resources to do so_
Cutbacks m the Medtcatd Pomt Pleasant; Mrs. John
program
were
hrst Barker, Glenwood; Charles
announced m March by Ohio Powell, Racme , Mrs Carl
Department of Pubhc Hood, Mason; Evelyn Rossm,
Welfare Director Raymond Southstde, Mrs. Sam Lewts,
McKenna He satd the Racme, Mrs Raymond
reductiOns were necessary Taylor, AddiSon; Effie
be c ause Medtcatd Knapp, Leon; Carl Lanham,
expenditures were exceeding Pomt Pleasant; Mrs "Holly
funds appropriated by state Jordan, Millwood; Mrs.
Donald Persell, Mason, and
legislature
Donald R
Newktrk, Mrs John Wiseman, II, Potnt
prestdent of the OHA's Pleasant.
executive staff, srud federal
programs such as Medtcatd
Holzer Medical Center
and Medicare were set up to
1Discharges, Aprill3)
pay the medtcal btlls of the
Clara Adams, Ralph Amos,
poor
Ralph Barbour , Perry
'The state's mababthty to Barker, Verme Blake, April
pay these persons' btlls Blankenship, Mary Bowman,
doubles the burden on Paul Burton, Carolyn Canhospttals and the paymg terbury, Vera Chandler,
pubhc," Newktrk satd
Lows Day, Mrs Mark Dillard
and daugl)ter, Shirley Durst,
Oscar Dyer, William Fetty,
The Almanac
Jr , Mary Ford, Archer
Graham, Patricia Halfteld,
Uttiled Press lnternallonal
J'oday IS Wednesday, Apnl Mrs Gary Lunsford and
14, the 105th day of 1976 wtth daughter, Wylodme McCoy,
Ernest McKinney, Kenna
261 to follow
Noffsmger, Janet Northup,
The moon Is full
Flam
Ratltff, Patricia
The mornmg star ts Venus
Stmpson,
Heath Smtth,
The evemng stars are MerKatnna
Specht,
Ruby Taylor,
cury, Mars, Juptter and
Peggy Tennant, Cectl TopSaturn
'Those born on this date are pmg
I Births, Aprill3)
under the stgn of Aries
Mr and Mrs. Clarence M.
BntiSh Antarctic explorer
Str James Clark was born Hall, daughter, Leon, W Va .;
April 14, 1800. Thts IS the 51st Mr and Mrs Robert R.
btrthday of actor Rod Steiger_ Randolph, daughter, Pomt
Pleasant, W, Va.; Mr. and
On this day m htstory
In 1861, the flag of the Mrs Gregory V. Smtth,
Confederacy was ratsed over daughter, BtdweU.
n Sumter, S C , as Umon
troops there surrendered.
In 1865, John Wtlkes Booth NEW OFFICERS
crept mto the box of
COLUMBUS I UP!) - The
President Abraham Ll!lColn recently-created State .
at ~·ord
theater
m Devlopment Advisory
Washmgton and shot hllll
Council elected two officers
Lmcoln dted the next Tuesday
mormng
__ Frank Wobst, president
In 1910, PreSident Wtlham and chief executive officer of
Howard Taft set a precedent the Huntington Nahonal
by throwmg out the first Bank, Cohunbus, will serve
baseball to open the maJOr as Chairman and Davtd B.
league season.
Meeker , president of the
In 1975, screen and stage Hobart Corp , Troy, will be
star Fredertc March dted of VICe chairman. James A
cancer at the age or 77
Duerk, director of the State
Department of Economic and
A thought for the day
Commumty Development, IS
Brtllsh novehst Dmah Cratk secretary of the adyisory
satd, "Oh, my son 's my son
'ttl he gets him a wtfe, but my
daughter's my daughter all
her hfe "

Hospital News

Old senior high
.
IContmued from page I)
At_the clo~ of the sessiOn, the board moved into execullve
sessiOn to dtscuss negottatlons now underway wtth teachers
and non-teachmg persomel.
The meeting was recessed unt1l Aprtl 26 at which time the
employment or staff members and the Pomeroy Seruor Htgh
Building going to Pomeroy Vtllage wtll be taken up
Attendmg were Supt. Charles Dowler, Asst Supt. Dan
Morrill, board members 'M!ndeU Hoover, Dr. Ketth Riggs,
Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, V1rgil King and Bob'Snowden clerktreasurer Triplett, representatives from the Teache; Corps
and the vlllage of Pomeroy, and Prmcipals Bob Morris and
James Dtehl

Local news in briefs
Fmed by Mtddleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night
were Tommy Joe Farley, 27,
Cheshire, $50 and co~ ts ,
menacmg threats to a pohce
officer; $50 and costs, interferring wtth a pohce officer, and $25 and costs for
diSOrderly manner ; Alfred
M. Conard, 36, Mason, $150
and costs and three days in
JBII, drivmg while Intoxicated , Michael E
Cremeans, Middleport, $5
and costs, parking in a yellow
zone; Matthew E Long, 21,
Reedsville, $30 bond forfeited
for spinning tires .
The Middleport ER squad 1
was called to the New Lima
Road at 8 45 p m. Tuesday
for J~seph Barkus who was
dead on the squad's
arnval
Ftve persons forfeited
bonds on speeding charges
and three were fmed on the
same cbarge m the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday mght .
Forfeiting bonds were Max
H11l, Racine, $25 ; Fred
Pnddy, Mtddleport, $30; Ida
Holter, Mmersvi11e, $25;
Theodore Hayes, Pomeroy,
$25; Marc Datley, Toledo,
$25, $30, rwmmg a red light

Weather

by Roy Jenkms, Pomeroy.
Ftned on convtchon of
speedtng were Robert
Chaney, Pomeroy, $39 and
costs, Eileen Swan, Syracuse,
$25 and costs, and Michael
Hill , Ract~e, $30 and costs
The Democrat party Will
meet Thursday at 7 30 p m.
at the Episcopal Parish
House. All candtdates,
VISitors and delegates to the
nattonal convention are
urged to attend
Harrtsonvtlle Order of
Eastern Stars will host the
Roberta Ctrcle Thursday ,
Aptll 151 at 6 30 p m Persons
are asked to brmg a covered
dtsh and table servtce Past
matrons and hne offtcers are
InVIted
Three persons have filed
for divorce m Metgs County
Common Pleas Court, each
chargmg gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty
They are Barbara Brooks,
Rt I, Rutland from John Max
Brooks, Amanda, OhiO ,
Esterla Roach, Pomeroy.,
from Ira G Roach, Columbus, and Linda S Hubbard,
Syracuse, from Donald L
Hubbard , Syracuse

Movie proved
expensive to
West Virg.in.ian

Partly cloudy tonight and
Thursday, chance of showers
Thursday_ Lows 50 to 55, htghs Thursday 75 to 80
It was a costly evemng m
Probabihty of prectpttahon Galhpolts for a Rt I, Letart,
near zero today, 10 per cent W Va man and a Rt 3,
tomght, JOper cent Thursday. Galhpohs restdent Tuesday
Accordmg to the ctty pollee
report thts mormng, Dan
Roush motored to the Old
HOMESTEAD
French City to attend a movie
EXEMPTIONS
now playing at the Colony
COLUMBUS I UP!) - Sen Theatre .
Jerome Stano, D-Parma, told
Roush parked hts 1973 GMC
a House committee Tuesday pickup truck behmd the
his bill to exclude Soctal Gallipohs Post Offtce around
Security increases from 8pm
tncome to determine which
When the out-of-town
Ohto semor Citizens are vtsttor returned to hts vehicle
eligible for homestead around 10 p m he found
exemptions IS a "temporary someone had broken mto hts
measure''
vehicle and stolen a Regency
Stano satd the btll , 35-watt 4-channel radto
estunated to cost the state valued at $475, and a CB untt
$900,000 by fiscal 1979, would valued at $175.
eliminate disqualifiCation of
Shortly later Tuesday
senior cthzens for homestead mght, Btil Watson, Rt.· 3,
exemptions because of an Galhpohs, reported to ctty
mcrease m thetr mcome due police that someone stole hts
to rises in &amp;lCial Security 1971 Ford ptckup truck whtch
payments.
was parked at Fourth Ave ,
Stano told the committee and Pine St.
25,000 semor Citizens have
Watson told poltce he
had
their
homestead parked the vehtcle near
e~emptions reduced or
Woody's tavern around 10 40
elimmated He satd the btU p.m. When he returned at
would be a stoJ&gt;1lap measure 10:55 p m 11 was gone
that would have to be
Later, the vehtcle was
permanently corrected m the
found ablaze on the Addtsonnext sessiOn of
the Bulavllle Rd , around 11 p m.
legislature
Ftre damage to the stolen
·
vehtcle
totaled
approX)mately $1,000 Two 22
cahbre Colt pistols, _some .
barbed w1re and a 5--gallon,
counctl.
water JUg were in the vehtcle
Governor James A Rhodes
The two inctdents _in appointed the 25-member creased the number of
counctl to asstst him and the reported thefts and B &amp; Es m
development department Galha County to 59 smce
With economtc plannmg for March I, and. to 22 dw-mg the
Otuo.
ftrst 14 days of Aprtl
•

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

when you save for a home with us

A SPACE ONLY

yet

Hospital
costs will
go up

R usscH C Cody

WASHINGTON 1UP!) Two top offiCials of the Lake
Plactd Or g antztng
Commtttee for the 1980
Wtnter Olymptcs met
Tuesday wtth Rep Robert C
McEwen, R-N Y , to dtscuss
the status of a btll to
authortze $50 mtlhon for
construcllon of fa cthttes
Thomas Long, McEwen's
legislative assistant, satd the
congressman emphasized
that supporters of the
proposal, whtch has already
had House heartngs, were
awatllng lhe official Ford
admtntstratwn positiOn un
the measure

JUST ARRIVEDI

RAJ "II MettlE' 1/Pit - Ron
Blombt•t g, &lt;Ill whom the New
York Yankees were counUng
on lo suppl) the power they
trdded awav m Bobby Bonds,
'"" undtr~u
sur~ery
Wednesdm tltal ntav stclehm•
him unlllnlld -Au~u~t

'

The unoccupied 1:1-room home and double garage owned b&gt;
Mr. and Mfs. Leslie Carr was destoryed by f1re that started
about 6. 55 a m today on Lmcoln Hill Road m Pomeroy.
Pomeroy firemen were called to the scene at 6·55 a.m arter
Mary Hawk, passmg the home known as the old Ebersbach
mansiOn, noticed smoke She went to the sheriff's office whtch
notified Pomeroy ftremen _
The f1re tn the three-story frame structure was out of control
when the department arttved. As early as 7 15 a m., portions

of the structure were cavtng m
The large, picturesque home contamed 12 large rooms,
several baths, a basement and a large atuc. It was built
perhaps around 1900 by the Ebersbach family and m tile 1950s
became the residence. of the late Rtchard Rawlings who
remodeled tt throughout
The home was unoccupied at the time of the ftre. Mr Carr,
employed m construclion, had hts home closed last sprmg so
that he could follow h1s work However, Mr and Mrs. Carr bad
returned and had asked the utility serviCes he turned on They
were res1dmg temporarlly m a mobtle home m Middleport
nu u• ult: rurmsnmgs were destroyed in this mormng's blaze
ThiS mcluded many anlique pteces whtch had belonged to the
Rawhngs famtly sold Wtlh the house. Other rurnishmgs, such
as new appliances, also were destroyed
The monetary loss had not been set this mormng and
firemen were slill at the scene at 11 a m The Pomeroy Dept
was JOined by Middleport ftremen JUSt after 7a m
School buses were unable to travel Lincoln Hlll to ptck up
students above the area of the ftre The busses stood by ,
however, and at IO·Oli a.m children were pte ked up to be taken
to their respeclive schools .
There was some tnsurance on the property but madequate to
telephone room door about cover replacement, tt was reported.
2 45 a.m. and shouted that
food that had been ordered
AT RIGHT. The manston on Lmcoln Htll road built by
had arrtved. Switchboard
the
Ebersbach farruly, early Pomeroy mdustrtahsts,
operator Erruly Eberly satd
remodeled
m the 50s by the late Rtchard Rawlings, was
she looked through a
destroyed
earl)'
today by fire
peephole atid saw a man 111 a
uniform wtth a badge
carrymg what looked hke a
takeout order of ptzza.
When she opened the door,
another man wtth a gun
pushed mside, pulled her
arms behmd her and ordered
her to be qutet.
The FBI sa1d the gunmen
overpowered securtty guards
Edward Burnett and Karl
Markert. The three employes VOL XXVII NO 257
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT,
had their eyes and mouths
taped, were handcuffed and
ordered to lie on the floor of
the bu1idmg's cocktail
lounge.
"The three vtctlms were
told they would be ktUed 1f
they made any notse," an
FBI agent satd. There were
no inJuries
Gaffney satd the bandits
rifled 180 of 300 safety depostt
boxes.
Ll Robert Shea ofthe Palm
Beach Pollee Department
srud most of the loot was
jewelry, but $15,000 m cash
and another $3Q,OOO m checks
was taken from a front-desk
safe.
Shea srud pollee had "some
people m mmd" as possible
suspects but very few leads m
the case.

Millions in
jewel heist
PALM BEACH, Fla. (UP! )
-Cash and jewels stolen in a
"very professwnal job" at
the luxunous Palm Beach
Towers condomiruwn could
add up to more than $4
million, a prelimmary
mventory of the losses shows
, Palm Beach Police Chief J
M Gaffney told a news
conference Wednesday mght
the loot taken by three
masked gunmen "can't be
less" than $3 miU10n and
"tnight be a great deal more"
than $4 rrullion.
The robbers gamed entry to
the building by pretending to
be deli vermg ptzza One
apartment dweller smd the
largest mdividual loss was
more than $150,000
" It was deftmtely a very
professional job, deftmtely
very well planned," Gaffney
SBld

Some 250 to 300 wealthy
persons live at the stx-slory
complex, once a resort hotel
Michael
Brett,
the
condomtmum's ge neral
manager, satd the men
appeared to be familiar With
the buildmg
"They knew exactly what
they were domg and where to
go," he satd. "U you don't
know the layout of this
butlding you wouldn't have
any tdea where the
smtchboard was "
The FBI sa1d the men
knocked on a downstairs

e

•

at y
OHIO

en tine

THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1976

now
The thtrd firm satd 11 would
look for new partners,
posstbly to butld a smaller
verston.
But e9vironmentaltsts, who
charged the plant would have
spewed -·tons of pollutants
over ftve natiOnal parks and a
national recreation area, proclatmed the proJec t "was
dead "
InteriOr Secretary Thomas
Kleppe, who had planned to
dectde in the next few weeks
whether the plant could be
built on federal Ianda agreed
that ''there's no need'· now to
make a ruhng.
"The rug ts pulled out from
under the entire project as I
read tt, " srud Kleppe, who
canceled a trtp to southern

:·:~=:=::: :: ::·:·:=:·:::::·:·::: :-:·:·:·:: :·:

!I'INews. • •in Briefs\\\
-·

By United PressiDternallooal
WASHINGTON - A HOUSE SUBCOMMITIEE has
approved a bill extending federal revenue sharing to state and
local goverrunents for 3 more years wtth new provisiOns to
protect c1vil rights. Committee offtctals Wednesday said the
civil rights requirements would be the strongest many federal
law Others disagreed.
The bill would requ1re thi! Treasury secretary to suspend
revenue sharmg funds if he fmds they are bemg used by
localities in a dtscrl!Rinatory way. Now, this IS up to hts
discretion. It also broadens the deflmtion of diScrumnatton
that is bamed Present law apphes to ractal dtscrl!Rmatton
The bill also would ban discrimination involvmg reltg10n, age
and handicapped persons

Shop The Second Floor Foundations

Department For A Complete Selection

Middleport's Compre~ensive Plan adopted in
1964 has ~en under revision
since last October by the
Middleport Planning Commission
composed
of
('
Chatrman
William
Childs,
LOS ANGELES - WILUAM AND EMILY HARRIS, the
Secretary , Edison Baker,
criminal charges against them steadily mounting, have
Mayor Fred Hoffman,
accused former comrade Patrtcta Hearst of lying to enmeSh
Councilman Carl Horkey, and
them m crunes to lighten her own punishment. The HarrtsesManning Kloes .
faced w1th 19 fresh charges Wednesday of ktdnaptng Mtss
In a progress report made
Hearst and connected with a posstble murder count In another
public
today the commission
development- were descnbed as bitter but "not surprised" at
said it has examined
reports Miss Hearst was cooperating with FBI agents and
economtc and population
prosecutors, agreeing to be a witness against them
POMEROY FIREMAN-HONORED - Herman Werry was honored Tuesday mght on
tnformation, the e~isting uses
"Theu- expertence now has been that she IS wtlling to say
his 60 years of service wtth the Pomeroy F1re Department. Members presented him w1th a
of
land, and transportation
anything, no matter how reckless, no matter how untrue, to 1 combination plaque and ash tray and a cake. The presentatton was a surpriSe Herman and
problems
and potentials
advance her own cause," said Mrs. Harrts's attorney, Leonard
his famtly have served a total of 150 years wtth the department . Herman, 60, Henry Werry
Between
now
and June 30, the
Welnglass. In San Francisco, station KQED-TV quoted
36, Charles Werry 35, Tom Werry 12, and Phillip Werry, former ftreman , 7. Herman has
Planning
CommiSSion
w11l be
unidentified sources as saying the Harrises took part m a
served under nine fire chtefs, Ed Schaarf, Herb Gtles, Dana Roush, Henry Werry, Roy
addressing
the
two
tmportan
t
Sacramento bank robbery m which one woman was ktlled
Reuter, Emerson Wells, Ralph Sisson, George Htcks and Charles Legar. Shown 1-r, are
areas
of
capital
subject
Harris was outside the bank and it was Emily HarriS who shot
Albert Woodard, president of the Pomeroy Fire Department, Herman and Charles Legar ,
!Jilprovement programming
fire chief.
the woman, the station quoted the source as saymg.
and planning administration
The Capital Improvements
CAMDEN, N.J.- AWOMAN who had half her nose bttten
Program wtll Include the
off by a horse at a Camden County slabl~ has been awarded
tdenttricatton and prioritizing
$450,000 m damages by a jury that found the stable negliAent
He's show us
of public projects the comMfs Clorine Foglio, 38, of Somerdale, N.J , was btlten by the
mumty should undertake
horse, "Big Boy," at Slim's Ranch in Gloucester Townslup m
during the next ten-year
March, 1971,
how it all goes
periOd. Part of this program
The Jury, whiclt deliberated for about 2'k hours
WASHINGTON (UPI) _
will be discussiOn of possible
Wednesday, also awarded Mrs. Foglio's husband $90,000 m
Today being Income tax
funding sources for desired
damages During the two-week trial Mrs. Foglio said the horse
projects. The Plannmg Adpushed his head through a plank m the side of the stall where
Plans for Easter Lily Day Sellars, Mrs. Donna Larkins day, Sen. Frank E. Moss,
he was being housed and bit off her nose. She testified that she thts Saturday have been and Evelyn Foreman
().Uiah, wants Americans to mintstration work to be achas undergone 18 operations and skin grafts to restore her completed callmg for youths
Syracuse area, Mrs Susan
know where their money nose.
and adults takin~ to the Wmebrenner , leader, and 22
goes.
streets of the Meigs vtllages Gtrl Scouts
He said Wedneoday he
I
BRAUNSCHWEIG, WEST GERMANY - EUGENE and perhaps knockmg on
will Introduce a bill
evy tOr
Racme area , Mrs li:arl
LODERER, head of the automobile workers' unio11, doors of homes askmg Cleland, leader and ftve Qoy
requiring the Internal
'
Wednesday demanded gu11rantees that West German don~llons for , the Crippled Scou,ls
Re•enue Service to include
Volkswagen workers wtll not be fired if the company Children's Program of Metgs
in its Instruction packets to
Rutlan9
area,
Mrs
constructs a branch factory in the United States.
County
The Pomeroy·Middleport
Margaret Edwards and taxpayers a breakdown or
. Loderer, chairman of the IG MetaII union, whtch
The Middleport-Pomeroy members
of
Younger federal spending during the Uons Club voted to support
represents automobile workers, also stts on the company 's Rotary Club is sponsoring the Women's Garden Club.
previous year.
the 2 of one mill mental
supervlsory board. The board will meet April 23 to decide activity - For each donation
health levy to be voted upon
Tuppers Plams area, Mrs
whether Is:! :;o ahead with 1ts plans to open a branch m the the donor wtll be given an John Rice and Sunday School
at the JUlie 8 election at a
Umted States
arhftcial hly witnessing to Youth Class.
luncheon meeting held
One location under consideration IS the abandoned World the' fact that he or she has
Wednesday at the Meigs Inn.
Pomeroy and Middleport
War II tank plant in the Cleveland, Ohio, suburb of Brook contributed.
Cloudy and continued
areas, Mrs Gene Riggs and
The Rev Wtlllam Middles!!ark.
The committee _ planning "The Riggs Royal-eltes warm tonight and Friday, warth, president of the club,
chance of showers and and ~clive in the promotion of
for th~ day includes Robert Baton Corps "
PI'M'SBURGH - FORD MOTOR CO. PRESIDENT Lee A T Bumgarner, chatrman ,
Lows the levy, outlined the .mental
Persons soliciting Will have thundershowers
lacocca says the "bang" in car sales is just begmrung, and Doris Bailey, Dennis Keney, identtfymg name tags
tonight will be In the mid 50s health program and facilities
that's welcome news to the steel Industry.
and highs Friday will be the in the county. The prestdent
Gene Riggs , and Sharon lhle.
• 'Actually, it would take a pretty perverse character not to
lower 80s The probability of also appointed nominating
The following groups andbe buiUsh in the face of the good reports business has been or lndtvtduals will be parNOW YOU KNOW
ram ts 20 per ~en! today, 40 and auditing committees and
getting lately,' ~ he told the Chamber of Commerce here lictpatmg The elephant has the per cent tonight and 30 per plans were discussed for the
Wednesday. Iancocca believes America's annual car and
cent Fr1day. Wmds will be road rally to be held May 2 A
Portland area, Mrs Ann longest gestallon period
truck sales should soar past 17 million uruts by 1985. In the next Boso, president, P T 0 , Mrs 645 days or more than 21 southerly at 10 to 20 mph guest of Bruce T &lt;rr\ was
(Contlnu~ on page 2)
today and tonight
Mary Oatley, Mrs Hazel months
Dave Jeffers

Easter lily day
is ·on Saturday

mental health

Weather

Of lestfarm Bras and Girdles

\

OPEN THURSDAY, 9:30 TO 5 PM

Elberfelds In Pomero

cent of Uw project, would not
be 111Jie to go on alone.
"llowev cr, we will be
cxan um n~ lhP fenslbtllty of
U1e project - peril !Ips 011 a
smaller scale- with other
partlctpant.s,'' he sa td
ow ostllllll to lhu plant
ccntct ed 111 ound the ulr pollution tl would create ht an111·ea
dotted 11 ttl! nutlonul parks,
mcludmg Gt u11 d Canyon ,
Zton, Bry ce, Capitol Reef and
Canyonl~ nd s , 1\8 well us
nattonu I monuments and the
Glen Ca nyon Nati ona l
Ret:reation Area.

Radio club

Middleport plan
talent show
under revision

tax 1

BESTFORM BRAS AND GIRDLES

Utah for a Site inspecholl
Th e Stetra Club and
Env~ronmentBI Defe11se Fund
led the ft ght against the plant,
wtth actm Hobert Rectr01 dwho maintains a swmner
home in utah-often !IeUn g
as thetr spokesman
South e rn Ca lif orni a
Edtson, the ch~f partner With
40 per cent of Ute project, and
San Dtego Gas &amp; Electric Co ,
with 23 per cent, said they
were withdrawing their
apphcaltonsto build the plant
because of rtsmg costs and
"uncertainties" caused by
the
rthng
of
one
environmental lawswt and
the threat of others .
President Keith Turley of
Amona Public Service sa td
his firm , whtch owned 18 per

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

•
sponsonng
,,

Lions support

ANOTHER BIG SHIPMENT OF

MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND WAREHOUSE

Fire destroys mansion
on Lincoln Hill road

compllshed Includes the
prlntmg of the current •onlng
ordinance
The work was authorized
by town councll last fall and
has been made posstble wtth
a grant or $750 In Federal 701
plannin g funds from the
Department of Housing and
Urban Development through
the Ohio Depar tment of
Economic and Commumty
Development This grant was
supplemented by $400 in local
In -kind services provided by
the Meigs County Regional
Planmng Commission
The Planning Commission
meets the third Monday of
every month with their
consliltant, Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional
Development District In the
Town Hall at 7 30 p.m The
public Is Invited

Spring Fling
tickets go on
advance sale

'l'he Btg Bend Cttlzens'
Band RadiO Club Is sponsor!ng a Country and Gospel
Yartely Benefit Show Frldpy,
Ap11l JO at 7-30 p m at the
Meigs J t High Sc hool
audltonum All proceeds will
go to the Meigs Co. Aerial
l.,ddet 'J) uck Fund .
Arnong the local talent
appearing will be 'rom and
the Cowt try Sounds, Rutland;
Gospe l Tones, Chesler ;
Armond I'urley at the orgun,
and more
Prtces of the tlckelq are
adults $1.50 and chtldren
under 12, 75 cents Tickets
Will be on sale at the door or
at these business plat'CS,
Crow's Steak House, Fabric
Shop, G &amp; J Auto Parts,
Me igs Inn , Moores Auto
Store, Nelsons Dt ug Store,
Pom eroy Bowli ng Lanes,
Swtsher &amp; Lohse Drug Store,
Ingels Furniture Store,
Valley Lwnber Co , Western
Auto Store, Du tton's Drug
Store, Evelyn's Grocery and
Rutland De partment Store

Advance tickets for the
annual Sprmg Fling of the
Btg Bend Minstrel Assn to be
staged at the Stiver Slipper or
Preceptor Chapter, Be ta
Sigma Ph1 Sorority In the
Pomeroy Elementary School• Approl(imately 500 plastic
have gone on sale.
eggs each containing a slip
Advance ttckets whtch entitling the fmder to a prize,
provtde for free refreshments wlll be up for hunting Sunday
and admisston to the musical when th e Middleportare selling for $1.25, 25 cents Pomeroy Rotary Club holds
less per ltcket than at the ll, annual Easter egg hunt at
door on show mght
2 p m at the Middleport
Tickets may be secured at Communtty Park.
the New York Clothmg House
There w1ll be an area set
or Swtsher-Lohse Drll!ls m aside for toddlers through the
Pomeroy or at the Middleport · age of five and another area
Book Store or Dutton Drug s, w111 be set as1de for chtldren
Middleport
stx through 11 . Parents of
There wlll be two shows, chtldren m eiUter age group
one at 7.30 and one at 9 15 will not be pernutted in either
Members of the sorority Will are&amp;
Mer.chants
are
stage their annual candy provtdmg the prtzes for the
sale Some 200 prizes wtll he annual event Fmder of the
awarded during the candy golden egg wtll recetve $10
sale mcludmg two handmade and the finder of the sliver
egg will receive $5
afghans.

holding slipS

to be hidden

�3-Tht Dally Sentinel, P001eroy-Middl~, 0 , Thursday, Aprill5, 1976

z_Th~ nailv Sentinel Pomeroy Moddleport, 0 , Thursday , April 15, 1976

Rhodes going for realignment in '78
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS {UPI) - Guv
James A Rhodes saod Ulday
he has abandoned plans Ul
reapportiOn legoslatl\e
dlstrocts for thos year's
elections llut stoll hopes to
realign the distrocts by 1978
"I do not believe they can
get 11 ready for thts elecllon,"

saJd Rhodes, referrong to a
reapportionment plan whtch
he must first get court
perrrussoon to put forward
There s a problem of
con!usmg the voters ' satd
the governor 'The new plan
would be for 1978 '
RhOdes is chaorman of the
fiVe-member ApportiOnment
Board, controlled 3 to 2 by

elec tiOn next November,
candodates would have to be
renommated, perhaps by
running at large
I am not m favor of
makmg a confused ballot by
makmg them run at large '
swd the governor
RhOdes satd it would have
taken an extra 60 days to get
his court challenge ready on
lime
to
get
a
reapporllonment dectmon for
thos year s electoon He satd
he was busy wotti other things'
and had no regrets about
wattmg
32, a mustc teacher and
The governor satd eVIdence
chonster
at
Durham
Cathedral, was at home when woll be presented to the state
Board next
the m!ants were dehvered Controlling
All were b(orn wtthm four Tuesday m support of
pa) ment of fees for hos
mmutes
Thetr wetght ranged from defense m lawsutts mvolVIng
two pounds three ounces to the Kent State Umversoty
one pound, four ounces
Dr Derek Tacch1, who led
the team of 11 that attended
Mrs Proce, satd everythmg
went like clockwork We were
expectmg five but we got an
LITILE EGG HARBOR,
extra one •
N J , AprU 15- Capt John
Barry ol the American
vessel Lexington brought
his prisoners from the
recently captured British
sloop Edward for delivery
10 the congressional
Marine Committee In
btlhon level
Philadelphia Barry was
House Senate conferees credited with making the
Will put ftmshin g touches on first U S capture of a
thetr first week back on a British ship of war under
comp romo se Federal battle conditions orr the
Election Commtssoon btll
VIrginia capes on April 7
whoch Ford opposes and
addotoonal JOb creat 1ng
measures
are
near
compl etion woth spendmg
le\ els also opposed by the
White House
Not all of the congressmen
woll grassroot 1t durmg the
re cess
A 15 member
delegation headed by House
Democratoc leader Thomas
PLACE CHANGED
0 Netll wtll travel to West
Due to Holy Week services
and East Berhn Rome, the Democrati c Club meet ng
Krakow Warsa" and Dublm lhls...llf/enlng w•ll be held at
l'llelgs Inn mstead of the
Another mn e member the
EpiScopal Pan sh House
group wtll be m Pekmg and
there os a thre e member
Easter Sunnse Serv1ce will
group studymg agrtculture be held at 6 JO a m at the
led Faolh Church Rl 7
problems on Pan s and Un•
Bypass The Rev Robert E
Brussels
Sm1fh Sr
•s pastor The
Republicans who ch 1s
seekmg court permtsswn to
test a 1972 plan written by
Democrats
The board would have to
rece ove court permtss oon,
adopt a new plan and get It
approved by the court-5 before
ot coulobe tmplementcd
If the courts struck down
the current plan before the

Doctors fighting for four
NEWCASTLE UPON
TYNE, England (UPI) Doctors today fought to save
the lives of four Slll"VIvors of
sextuplets born to a musoc
teacher's wife
The mfants- three boys
and three gtrls-were
dehvered Wednesday by
Caesarean secllon more than
two months premature But
withm hours two of the gorls
had dted wtth respiratory
complications
The lour survovors also

were affected by resporatory
difficulties, satd a spokesman
lor Prml'fss Mary Matermty
hospital
The mother, Chrtstme
Prtce, 30, of Ramton near
Durham, was satd to be
tmprovon g arter early
concern for her health
Mrs Proce, who Ulok a
fertiloty drug lor stx months
before she became pregnant,
had been on the hospotal 14
weeks
Her husband Alan Pnce

Dateline 1776

Congressmen testing mood
By GENE BERNHARDT
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Members of Congress toda)
fanned out through home
districts to assess the electoon
year mood durmg the longest
recess so far thos year - 11
days over Easter
House Democratoc Whip
John McFall sent hts troops
off wtth a suggested speech
makmg slogan
Congress
has emerged as the leader,
and the admtrustrallon as the
reluctant partner '
But, It's one of the worst
Congresses I've ever served
m " was House Republican
Leader John Rhodes assessment
McFall srud Democrats, m
the nearly l' l years they
have run the 94th Congress,
led the way m bolstermg the
economy through JOb·
creatmg programs, a tax cut
and a legtslallve plan that
slowed the energy crtsts
while holdmg down the pnce
of gasolme
Congress has forced an
unwtllong admtmstratwn to
act to get the natton out of the
economoc doldrums and onto
the road to recovery, he
srud
Senate Democraltc leaders
Sllld that body has worked
longer and harder and passed
more bolls thos year than m
the past two years desptte the
fact ' there have been four
times as many vetoes thos
sessiOn, WIth the promtse for

more"

' The Democratoc
leadersh op has not come up
With a coherent program
satd Rhodes
Presodent Ford has cam
patgned
aga mst
the
Democrats as btg spenders
and sa) s the record-settmg
pace of 48 vetoes he has cast
smce takmg offoce Aug 9,
1974, was the result of an
uncompromising ' Con
gress
Some of the toughest White
House-Congress battles awatt
the return of lawmakers
Apnl 26 Chief among them IS
a fmal budget ft gure for the
1977 fiscal year that starts
Oct I
The Senate has voted a
$412 6 bollton spendmg level
$17 btlhon over Fords
proposal The House Will vote
April 29 on a proposed $413

Trimble trims Eagles
5.() in non-league go
Behind the tw0-h1t potchmg
the
Tromble Tomcats clawed the
vosohng Eastern Eagles
Wednesday mght by the score
of ii-0 Eastern pitchers gave
up only three base hots, but
the Eagle defense commtlled
four cootly errors with men
on base to let the hosts do
their seormg
of left-hander Hunter

Gout can be
controlled

'

in briefs

public Is welcome

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB Approximately one year ago I
had an attack of acute gout
My physlctan prescCJbed
Colbenerrud and the attacks
subslded I thought that was
the end of 1t Then a month
ago I read that I needed
lifettme medtcal
management and that the
severity of gout was much
more cntical for those who
had an attack when they were
under 30 years of age
I tmmedtately saw a
physlcian and he placed me
on Zyloprim although he was
not able to gtve me any m
dlcatlon of the course of the
disease when a person had
the flrst attack under 30 years
of age I was 28 when mme
occurred I am wondering If
you can glve me some mdlcatlon of what to expect m
this area as I am quite apprehensive
DEAR READER - Gout,
as you must know from your
reading, 1s caused by an over
production of urtc acid by the
cells m our own body The
uric acld Is literally a by
product of cellregeneration
Without cell regeneration our
llfespan would be extremely
short
The excess producllDn of
uric acld appears to be on a
genetic or mhertted basts
It is perfectly true that
anyone who has gout should
accept lifetime medtcal
SUperviSIOn Thls lsn 'I all
bad As long as the person's
urlc acld level m the blood IS
controlled
thmgs are
progressing well
Very often it 1s necessary
for patients with significant
elevations of uric acid to take
medicines perststently
Zyloprim wh1ch you are now
taking is also called
allc;oPurlnol It suppresses the

Local news

Enough runs scored on the
hrst mmng to won when the
lead-off batter walked stole
second, went to thord on a
sacroflce, and come home
when the catcher returned
the bali wtldly back to the
potcher
They scored once more tn
the second and plated three
bog msurance runs on the ftlth
after two were out The forst
batter of that mnmg walked
but then came two stratght
outs That was followed by a
walk and then Trimble s
Echslenkamper hot a
boommg trtple to score both
men An Eagle error followed
and allowed htm to scamper
home
Eagle starter and loser
freshman Dan Spencer
turned m an admorable
performance as he learned up
wo th John Evans to stroke out
foUl' and walk fl\ e Eastern
hollers were Ttm Kuhn and
Steve Little both havmg
smgles
Besides Echstenkamper s
trtple, the hosts Lewts and
Leanch each had a smgle
Hunter gave up only the two
hits and walked two and
struck out SIX
Tomght at Eastern, the
Southern Tornadoes and
Eagles battle wtth Don
Etchmger domg the potching
for the hosts, whtle ace rtghthander Brady Huffman goes
to the mound for Southern
E
000 000 ()....O 2 4
T
110 030 x- 5 3 1
Spencer {LP), Evans (5)
and Rtffle Hunter and
Bruton

body cell s capacity to form
excess urtc acid Other
medtcmes help eliminate
excess urtc acod through the
kidneys The combination of
medocmes now available
make 1t posstble to literally
control gout and prevent
most of 1ts complicahons But
of course one must continue
medical supervoslon to gam
these benefits
The advances in the abtllty
to treat gout with medtcines
has also dtminished the
omportance of the diet in the
treatment of gout
There are no meaningful
stahstics on what to expect
just because you had your
first attack before age 30
Quite frankly, the advances
m medlclne in the treatment
of gout are suff!ctenUy recent
that long term studies on
mdlVIduals who have been
properly treated JUSl aren't
available
Those who want a more
complete picture of the
The Da1~ Sentinel
course of gout, what to expect
DEVOTED TO THE
m the way of complications
INTEREST OF.
MEIGS MASON AllEA
and how to prevent them can CHESTER
l TANNEHill
send 50 cents for The Health I
fxec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Letter number 2-3, Gout,
Crty Edrtor
Unc Acid Send a long,
Publoshed dally e~cepl
Saturday by Th e Ohio
stamped, self-addressed
Valley Publrshrng Com
envelope to me In care of thts pany
111
court
St
""omeroy
Ohro 45769
newspaper, P 0 Box 1351,
Business Offrce Phon e 992
Radio Ctty Stahon , New
215 6 Edltorral Phone 992
11 57
York, NY 10019
Second class postege
I wtll say, however , that paid at Pomero y Ol'litl
Nattonal
advert sing
because 1t 1s possible to representative
Wan:t
control the urtc acid level Grrfftth Comp an y Inc
Bo t tmeltr &amp; Gllflagher Olv
With available medicines that 157
Th~rd Ave New York
N
Y 10011
a conscientious patten! under
Subsc r rptlon
rates
good medocal supervision Del,vered
by ca rr ier where
av
arlable
75
cen
t
s per
should expect to have a
week
By Motor Route
relatively normal lifespan where carrrer serv ice not
wtth a mmunum amount of ava tlab le One month
SJ 25 By mall In Ohio ond
complications, tf any The W
Va One Year S21 00
Six monlhs S11 5B1 Three
key part of thts, however 1s months
S7 00 Elsewhere
that the patient must ~26 oo year '1 1x months
13 50 three months S7 50
cooperate wtth the doctor on S,ubscnptron
prrce Includes
hts continuous management
Sunda y T mes Sentinel

Sunrise service w1ll be held
at 6 a m at tile Pomeroy
Wesleyan Holiness Church
Rt 143 Hamsonvllle Road
CommuniOn w1ll be served
The Rev 0 Del l Manley IS
pastor The publoc IS Invited

CHESTER - There will ~e
a square dance at the Chesler
Elementary School May 1 at
6 p m sponsored by the
Chesler Volunteer Fire Dept
The publ 1c IS cordoally In
vi led
CHESTER - The public os
Invited to voew a film on
bottle gas at the Chester fire
station on April 26 at 6 p m
Refreshments Will be served
Easter
Sunrise serv1ces
held at 6 a m at the
F~rsl Baptist Church In
Middleport.

wil t be

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Baseball League Will meet at
6 p m Monday althe home of
Jerry Eads Maon St
A youth servoce by lantern
light will be held at 7 30 p m
Froday al the Rutland
MISsion on Depot St Girls are
to wear print dresses and
boys /eans or overalls If
poss1b e All young people are
lnvlled

shootmgs of 1970
He satd there will be a
letter from former state
Attorney General Paul W
Brown approvmg the
appOintment of Brooke
Alloway as hts counsel
Alloway IS asking for $70,000
for hts work on the case
On other matters, Rhodes

new food sources
By Ray Cromley

Kentucky

operators

out of jail

Market Report

FFA Chapter to receive grant

..

LOCAL TEMP
Temperature m downtown
Pomeroy 1hursday at 11 a m
was 76 degrees under partly
sunny •kies

Veterans Memorial Hoapltal
DISCHARGED - Dale
Connolly, William Easterday,
Penny Landers, Cloist
Badgley, Hassle Badgley,
Cuba Little

By BW. MADDEN
UPI Sporta Writer

WASHINGTON - There Is emphatically no doubt thai
energy production on the Umted States and the world must be
of maJor concern to this country OtherwiSe, the financial
IIIS!abtlity of many developmg nations and economic
S81d
dislocallons m the Umted Stales wtll brmg repeated crises
Holzer Medical Center
- He has done everything
But there's another approach to these problems - larj!ely
(Discharges, Aprill4)
Ill: can to ftre GregorJ~ J
ognored - wh1ch could have as much unpact on stability as
Florence Bauerle, Carol mcreased and nuclear eneri!Y output ThiS Is the development
Stebbms as a member of the
Blame, Robert Bragg, of vast underexplooted agrocultural areas of the worldOhto Industrial ColllllUSSion
that Ills up to the Ohto Senate Jennifer Brenner, Magdalene espectally m the troptcs - and the planting of overlooked or
Carmtchael, Gerald Chesser, underutilized crops With mtensifted research, these offer tbe
and the federal court
Shtrley
Coburn Floyd En t, promise of becommg 'new ' miracle food&amp;
- He wlll not lake a posttlon
on whether he favors the sale Elizabeth Frazier, Shll'ley
For the lack of food, 11 IS now clear, has become more of a
of alcoholic beverages on Fridenmaker, Ray Hall, drag on many of the world s poorer countries than petroleum
elecllon day until a btll Russell Holland, Wtlliam costs Food pnces have skyrocketed lncreasmg millions go
passed by the General Holley, Unda Hudson, Mary hungry The costs bankrupt na tiona! budgets
Assembly reaches his desk Kemper, Lmes Kmgrey,
Increased development of agroculture would not only
Deborah Lambert, Elmore benefit foreign lands Htstortcally, Amertcan markets are the
Leach , Charlotte Little, more prosperous the greater the agrocultural and industrial
Laura McGraw, Patncia progress of the foretgn nations concerned
Mtller, Cynthta Norton,
American farmers would not be hurt" For there IS little
Jaspar Olover, Claudette chance, however much thiS country pours onto helpmg their
Pinkerman, Jason Powell, countrtes, that the world will run mto repeated surpluses,
Edna Reynolds, Tina Rice, population forecasts beong what they are
Ray Saunders, Sallie Shtvely,
Moreover, the new research and development can help
Cathy Spencer, Mabel Insure that at some time m the future, one diSease or another
VanMeter, Rtcky Woerner, wtll not wtpe out maJOr U S output - at least for long As
Roma Wood
scientists workmg With the National Academy of Sciences
(Births, Aprl114)
poml out "retiance on a small number of plants carries great
Mr and Mrs Blame riSk, for monocultures are extremely vulnerable to
FRANKFORT, Ky (UPI) Carter, son, New Haven, W catastrophoc failure brought about by dtsease of variations in
Two
southeastern Va , Mr and Mrs George M clunate"
Kentucky coal operators Collins, son, ReedSVIlle, Mr
The werld and the Umted States have gradually centered
were rel eased from jatl and Mrs Bobby A Ftzer, producllon on 20 maJOr crops not suitable for all climates This
Wednesday alter pa:y~ng a daughter, Jackson, Mr and means that unportant world areas, parllcularly m the tropics
total of $5 000 10 CIVIl Mrs David W McCarty, son, are not offermg the ytelds necessary to meet the growmg
penalties for vtolatoons of Jackson
populabons
Kentucky s reclamahon
Though man has used some 3,000 plant species for food,
laws
today one out of 10 1s etther extmct or m unnnnent danger of
The Jatlmgs of Henry
extmction Some 20,000 spectes now need protection Scientists
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Parker, Manchester and
say that only by careful preservation wlU the genetic
Saturddy through
Btlly Hurley, Bernstadt, were
diverstty and healthy stock needed for developmg new food
the !~test in the Department Monday, a chance of
crops be assured Potenllal breedmg stocks will otherwise
for Natural Resources and showers or thundershowers
become extmct '
Environmental Protection's each day and continued
Paradoxtcally, the potential of many troptcal crops has
get tough strop mine mild Highs wiD be In lhe
never been sClenhfocally explored A strllung case, a National
enforcement policy
70s to the lower 80s
Academy of Sciences group reports, ts qumus - one of the
Both operators spent Saturday and In the 60s
most productive sources of plant protem It grows htgh m the
Tuesday mght m Jao! Monday Lows wllJ be In
Andes, where few other crops can surVIve The Spanish
followmg thell' arrests by the 50s to the lower 60s
mtroduced wheat and barley and focused agricultural
state pohce troopers on bench early Saturday and again
research only on those crops, whtch eventually diSplaced
warrants tssued m Franklin early Suaday builD the 40s
qumua Despite 1ts mtrmstc nutritive and economoc value and
Corcuot Court here
Co the lower 50s early
the fact that protem defiCiency IS a serious problem m its
It was believed the ftrst Monday
native regton, the agronomy of qumua has advanced little ln
time 10 recent Kentucky
the past four centurtes '
history that mme operators
There's a wild Australian grass which yJelds nutritious
had been Jailed
m
gram With JUS! one deep watermg - unportant for regwns with
reclamatoon cases
sporadtc rainfall
The departmenl hied sepaA neglected Central Amencan gram has extremely high
rate suits m 1975 chargmg
levels of protem and the essenttal ammo actd, lysme
both Parker and Hurlex woth
A gram-producmg grasslike plant that grows m seawater
strip mmmg without state
could open new potentials for sea fanmng
penruts Parker s operatiOn
APeruVIan parsntp, the root of which IS sometunes grown
SALES REPORT
was m Clay County and
onstead
of potato at half the cost, offers promise for troptcal
Ohio Valley Uvestock Co
Hurley s m Laurel County
highlands worldwtde
Ga!Upolls, Ohio
Court orders ISSued earlier
Some types of the htgh-y•eldmg taro grow upland, others 1n
ApiillO, 1976
thts week mdtcated that both
waterlogged
otherwtse unproduchve swampy s.01ls, offermg
men had contmued to operate STOCKER CATTLE worldwtde lropocal potential
Without penruts m VIolatton STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs 45
Then there s a large melonhke vegetable which yields
down, 300 to 400 lbs 45 down
of orders
three
crops a vear and IS easy to grow The frwt can be kept as
Franklin Ctrcuot Judge 400 to 500 lbs 45 down 500 to long as a year Without refngeratwn
Squtre Wtlllams Jr found 600 lbs 44 :iO down, 600 to 700
Parker had mmed wtthout a lbs 41 50 down, 700 lbs and
perm1t at three locations over 42 75 down
HEIIi'ER CALVES - 250 to
from July to December, 1975
COLUMBUS-James E
300
lbs 35 down, 300 to 400 lbs
( Buildmg Our
He was penalized $1 000 for
Dougan
Dll'ector of the Oh10 BOAC
each operation plus a $1 000 35 down, 400 to 500 lbs 37 50 Agrteulture Edqcahon Amencan Commumtle~)
contempt of court penalty for down, 500. to 600 lbs 33 50 Servtce and Advtsor of the program The BOOC and
BOAC programs are both illfailmg to appear at a January down, 600 to 700 lbs 34 down
OhiO FF A Assoctahon, today depth commumty Imhearmg
700 lbs and over 35
released the names of 39 Ohto
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS He was released after
FF
A Chapters who were provement programs carried
(By the head) Stock Cows 165 selected
paymg the $4,000
to receiVe fmanctal out by FFA chapters and
Hurley, who does busmess to 225, Stock Cows and Calves grants for communtly im- members
Monies are made avallable
as the B&amp;H Coal Co , earlier 220 to 365, Stock Bulls 175 to provement programs The
had been ordered by W1Ulams 350 Baby Calves 20 to 47, (By Buckeye Hills Career Center for the BOOC program
to pay a $3,000 penalty for the Pound) Canners &amp; Cut- Chapter 1s one of those through the cooperation of
operatmg wtthout a perm1t ters Cows 33 down, Holstein selected and Will recetve a the Farmers Home Adfor three days, but faded to Cows 48 down, Commercial grant of $500 00
mints!rahon and the Ohio
pay
Bulls 27 down (1,000 lbs and
Department
of Agnculture,
Accordmg to Dr Earl for rural development
He was ordered to pay an over)
Kantner, Executive
added $2,0t10 penalty for two
PIGS - 20 to 45
The local BOOC progran\
Secretary
of the Oh10 FFA
no-permit violations but 11
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220 Assoctatton the fmanctal woll be under the direcUon of
later was discovered that one lbs to 250 57 to 66, Medium
Mr Ben Rowland, Forestry
of the violation was covered n 200 lbs to 300 48 to 54, Culls 27 grant program os a part of the fnst and Ken Schilling FFA
the previOus order Judge to 34, Sows 35 lbs up 40 to 45 Ohto FFA's BOOC (Building advisor and will consist of
Our Ohio Commumhes)
Henry Meigs then ordered
program,
a substdoary of the making Improvements of the
hlril released on payment of
Nahonal FFA Assoctahon 's Margaret Ann Swtmming
$1,000
Pool Park m Oak Hill

FIREMEN CALLED
The Middleport E-R squad
was called at 3 18 a m
Thursday to the mobile home
of Patrtcta Lynch on North
Second Ave Suffering chest
pams, Mrs Lynch was taken
to VMH At 7 07 a m the fire
CLASSES RESUMED
depariment went to Pomeroy
Gloria
Buck Wallace Will
to asstst Pomeroy bremen at
resume
leaching
her batonthe scene of a fire on Lincoln
dance
classes
Tuesday
Hill Road that leveled the
evening
at
the
Orchid
Room
former Rawlings home
m Pomeroy Mrs Wallace
discontinued her teaching
several weeks ago when her
HILOTEMPS
husband, State Patrolman
NEW YORK (UPI )- The Bruce Wallace, was seriOusly
htghest temperature reported injured in the explosion at the
Wednesday to the Nattonal Mason County Jatl m Pomt
Weather Servtce, excluding Pleasant
Alaska and Ha wan was 91
degrees at Wmk Tex
Today's low was 17 degrees at
Houlton, Mame
BII LS SIGNED
COLUMBUS UPI - Gov
James A Rhodes Wednesday
Signed emergency legoslatwn
conformmg Ohio law to a
constitutional amendment
adopted last November by
requmng prectncl by
preemct rotatton of candidates' names on the ballot
Rhodes
also
signed
legiSlation reqwnng school
dostrtcls to purchase llabtllty
msurance for school vehicles
to protec t lhetr bus dnvers

Lonhoi-g- is hack

HOSPITAL RAY CROMLEY
NEWS
World must develop

DIVORCE ASKED
Rosalee E Eubanks,
Pomeroy, filed suit for
dtvorce against Floyd C
Eubanks, Harrosonburg, La ,
m Metgs County Common
Pleas Court
TO MEET MONDAY
The
Hannan
Trace
Boosters Club Mil hold its
regular monthly meelmg
Aprol 19, begmnlng at 7 30
p m m the elementary school
bwldmg In Mercerville

News •• in Briefs

(Continued from page I)
five years, he ad4ed, automakers' demand for steel could
Increase 10 per cent
He satd his forecast of Increased demand for cars and
trucks IS based on ' solid, bwlt-m documentation,' such as
family formations, vehicle-scrappage rates, rlsmg incomes
and a declme m' real" car and truck prtces
COLUMBUS - ANEW TOURIST A'ITRACTION for Ohio
and a source of state revenue - jat alai frontons - would be
authorized under terms of a btl! whtch unanunoosly cleared
the Senate Ways and Means Commttee Wednesday
The btU would allow a IOiklay Jal alat season In the state,
with 5 per cent of the gross revenues of any operations set up
taxed by the state Sen Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown, sponsor
of the blU, says the game could attract as many tourists to Ohio
as It currently does In Flonda and Nevada
The btU was opposed m the conuruttee by representatives
of the state's standardbred horse racmg mdustry, who said Jal
alat bettmg parlors would reduce wagertng at trotting and
pacmg tracks

,

,---------------------------11

1
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be
1 less than 300 words long (or be subject 1o reduction by
I the edllor) and must be signed with the sfpee'• lidI dress Names may be withheld upan publlcatfoa
However, on request, names will be dllcloaed Letten
should
be In good taste, addressing lasues, not per·
1
1 sonalltles,
I
i]

l

I
I
I

.Q~~..r--6_

•••~·~=

I

Time for beginnings

1
I
I
I

I1
I

!
I
I

I

Dear Sir
Easter is a time for beginnings, when the resurrection of
nature we call spring colnctdes with the celebration of the
resurrection of Christ
"Easter is celebrated at about the right time of year, uSU8Uy '
the ftrst Sunday after the Jewish Passover, which of course Ia
the way it happened on the first Easter"
That's more than you can say for Christmas By all.ll
Indications, Jesus was born In the early spring, not in mid- '
WID!er How else could the shepherda In Palestine be out with
their Docks•
But Easter IS not purely a religiOus holiday It has a '
cultural connection with the Roman Empire of the early ~
ChriStian era The hOliday was named for the goddess Astre,' "
and 1t was something of a 'rite of spring' 1o promote human ~
and agricultural fertility for the coming season Some of ~
current unages aSSOCiated with Easter, Uke bunnies and eggs,
are reminders of this emphasis on fertlllty
••
The word "Easter" Is used only once ln the entire King ' '
James Bible - Acts 12 4, an obscure time reference to the
jatling of Peter, and even there the Revised Venion refers to
the date as "Passover' instead of Easter
1
StU!, it's very important to focus on the central event of ,.
Easter - the resurrection of Christ Alter resting over the " '
Sabbath, He was called back to llfe by His Father In Heaven, 1
and thts IS the best news the world has ever hew:d -{lerard ~
Seton, pastor, Pomeroy Seventh-day Adventist Church

•

That "missing link"
pitcher the Philadelphia
PhUlies sought so earnestly
thi.s put winter may have
been ri&amp;ht under their noses
!•
n may b! all the Phllliea
•• needed was a return to form
' • by Jim l.onborg
• • Lonborg, who spent the
latter half of the 1975 8e880n
nursing a shoulder Injury,
was the forgotten man this
spring, whUe Jun Kaat, Ron
lteed, Steve Carlton, .._rry
, Christenson and Tom
Underwood were penciled In
as probable starters at the
Pbillles' training camp That
rotation may have to be
altered now
Lonborg, who hadn't won a
game since last July 23, drew
the startmg assignment
Wednesday and his performance had Phillies' Manager

Danny Ozark wondering suddellly what he's going to do
With all those pitchers The
31-year-old right-hander
yielded only sb: hits, walked
three and struck out su m
hurHng the Phlllies to an 8-2
victory over Montreal for
the1r first win of the season
"I guess 11's the beginning
of a ne'if career," satd
l.onborg, who privately has
admitted his days with the
Pbillles might be numbered
"It's been a long, long time
between wms "
l.onborg benefitted from a
pa1r of RBI each from Dtck
Allen, Garry Maddox and
Bob Boone, but the Expos
also aided his cause by
comrruttlng four errors
Elsewhere in the National
League, the Chicago Cubs
edged the New York Mets, 65, Houston topped San
Francisco, S-3, and San Diego

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
, , NEW YORK ( UPJ) - Willle Mays' problem With the Mets
" cenler~und hiS specific dulles wtth them Smce Mrs Joan
Payson, the late owner of the club, was a long-tune fan and
' admirer of hiS, she certainly didn 'I set down any hard and fast
conditions when he was obtamed from the Giants four years
, , ago and signed to a U).year contract She wasn 'I looking for
_. any pound of flesh or anything like that
• All she was trylng to do IS bring a 41-year-old Willie Mays
back to New York for one last hurrah, and if there was
anything more than that, she only wanted to make sure he'd
have some connectiOn with baseball and some assoCllltion wtth
' the Mets, if he wtshed, when he was through playmg That's
why he was given a ]{)-year contract calling for $160,000 for two
" years and $50,000 a year for etght years thereafter
The conditions spelling out what Mays would have to do for
:. his $50,000 a year were vague They became more vague as
~ time went along and soon there was a breach between hun and
ntheclub,andnowthe lawyers are In on It even though the Mets
, sincerely want Willie back
, Five years ago, three years ago, maybe even a year ago, the
race issue qwte likely would've been mtroduced somewhere
mto the proceedings Thts time, though, it has not been and
that has to be a positive step forward
Some might say that with Frank Robinson now managmg
Cleveland and With men like Monte Irvtn and Emmett Ashford
representing the baseball commissioner's office, BlU Lucas
servmg as minor league admimstrator for Atlanta, Don
Newcombe doing corrununtty relations' work with the Dodgers
and Brooks Lawrence handling the same thong for the Reds,
baseball has become fully mtegrated, but that tsn't entll'ely
true
"There has been considerable unprovement," says St Louts
Cardinals' nght fielder Regg1e Sm1th, 'but the game isn t
completely Integrated yet I'm talking mostly about the front
offtce and management level I think baseball has been a tittle
remiss In overlookmg, say a Bob G1bson, as front offtce
!IUJterlal When Lou Brock IS finished playmg, I feel he's
another who could contribute something substantial to
management But I wlll say baseball has improved to the pomt
where l think management has recognized 11 cannot hope to
wm a pennant without blacks on the club I'm speakmg about
lhe field level now: When baseball recogmzes that blacks can
help m the front office, I think the turnaround will be
' complete "
Smith feels the Dodgers, Cardinals and Pirates have been
the best of all the clube at proVIdmg opportumties for black
, players He says the club he broke m With, the Red Sox, were a
little slow m "discovering" blacks and Latln-Amertcans
althtlugh he adds they seem to be domg much better now
• Up to now, Regg1e Snuth has a 287llfelime batting average
Only 10 regular National Leaguers show a h~gher one He has
hit 191 homers, which averages out a bit better than 21 a year
and driven iii 712 runs, or an average of 80 a year, which ISn't
too shabby etther
"Possibly I could've done better, I dunno," he says of what
he has done so far, "but now I'm In the prune of my career I'm
enjoying baseball more now than I ever did I'm enjoymg 11
Uke when [was a kid I'm thankful I got an opportunity to play
\Miseball It afforded me an economic mobility and soctal
ablllty l wouldn't have normally gotten doing something else
It has made it eas1er for me to feed my family "

Tbe Almlnae
Ullfled Pre.. International
Today Is Thursday, April
15, the 108th day of 1978 with
260 lo follow
ThemDOIIISbetween 1ts full
pllase and last quarter
The mornmg star IS Venus
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars, Jup1ter and
Saturn
Those born on this date are
IDlder the sign of Aries
Italian painter Leonardo
Da Vmci was born April IS,
1452
On this day In history
In 1881, President Abraham
Uncoln sent Congress amessage recognizing a state of
war with the Southern states
and calling for 75,000
vohmteer soldiers
In 1865, President Uricoln
died from an assassm 's bullet
lll)d Andrew Johnson was
sworn in as chief executive
In 1912, the luury liner
"Titanic"
sank
off
Newfomdland Of the 2,223
passengers aboard, 1,517
were lost
ln 1975, the war ' in
Cambodia neared an end as
Communist Insurgents closed
In on Phnom Penh, the
capital, from all Sides
A thought for the day
American poet Robert Froat
said, "I never dared to be
radical when youllg, for fear
it
would make me
conservative when old "

Rose at 35 hottest Red
BASEBALL

put away Los Angeles, 3-1
Over in the American Lea.
gue, 11 was Minnesota over
the Chicago White Sox, 6-2,
Cleveland atop Boston, 6-5,
California shading Kansas
City, 7-G, and TeJas bestmg

Maior Le~gue Standings
By United Press lnternattonal
Nat1onal Lugue
El\t
Pittsburgh
Chicago
New York
Phtlactelphla
Montreal

Oakland, 4-2
Cube 6, Mell 5

Bill Madlock tripled home
the tying 1'1111 and scored the
game-Wlflller on
Jerry
Morales' single during a
thre«un Houston rally on the
seventh mnmg that gave the
Astros a come-from-behind
wm over New York Tom
Seaver started for the Mets,
but was forced out of the
game m the sixth With a calf
muscle mjury
Aslros 5, Glanll 3
Enos Cabell keyed a fourrun second-innmg Houston
rally by triplmg borne one run
and then scormg wliat proved
to be the WUlller when a relay
by tbe Gtants' Derrel Thomas
went wUd Larry Dierker
benefttted from the four-run
Astro outburst by ptcking up
his first WID With SIX Innings
of work
Padres 3, Dodgers I
Dave Winfield and Hctor
Torres belted back-to-hack
solo homers m the second
mnmg and Padres' ace
southpaw Randy Jones made
them stend up for hts second
stratght WID For Wmfteld 1t
was hts second homer m as
many mghts agamst the
Dodgers, who have lost four
straoght

St LOUIS

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134001
I 1 333 2
1

3

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1

3

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W l Pet GB
Cine nnat t
.i 0 1 000
San OteQO
3 2 600 l'h
Houston
3 3 SOO 2
Allonlo
2 2 soo 1
San Francisco 2 3 400 21h
Los Angeles
o " 000 4
Wtdntsdav s Re-sults
Philadelphia 8 Montreal 2
Chicago 6 New York 5
Houston 5 San Francisco 3
Son Diego 3 Los Angeles I
{Only games scheduled)
TOday s Probable Pitchers
I All Times EST I
( 1t7S records In panmthesesJ
Sl Louis IMcGiolhen 1513)
at Ptttsburgh (Rooker 13 11 or
Candelana 8 6) 12 35 p m
New York (Matlack 16 121 at
Chicago (Bonham 13 15) 2 30
p,m

Cinctnnett (BIIItngham 15 10 J
ol Allan Ia INiekro 15 !5) 7 35
pm
Philadelphia (Underwood 14
13 pr Kaat 20 1.4) at Montreal

(Fryman 9 12) 2 15 p m
{Only games scheduled)
Fr1dav s Games
New York at Pittsburgh nlghl
Los Angeles. at Atlanta nl,ght
San Diego at Houston
San Fran at Cincinnati night
Amenciln Lugue
EilSf

New York
M1lwaukee
Detroi t
Boston
Balt•more
Cleveland

W l Pel
3 J 750

GB

2 1 6 6 7 '12
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2 3 400Ph
2 3 400 Ph
1 2 333 Ph
West
W l Pet GB
Texas
5 1 833 Chicago
i!
1 667 11;,
Oakland
3 3 500 2
Minnesota
2 3 400 2h
Kansas City
1 2 333 21!1
Caltfornla
1 4 200 Jih
Wednesday s Results
Minnesota 6 Chicago 2
Cleveland 6 Basion s
Texas 4 Oakltmd 2
Cal tfornta 7 Kansas C1ty 6
(Only games scheduled)
Today s Probable Pitchers
(All Times ESTl
( 1975 records m parentheses)
Cal,torn a (Ryan 14 12) at
Kansas C ly ISphttorfl 19 10 )
8 30 p m
Mmnesota &lt;aonz 1-1 141 at
New York (May 14 121 '1 00

Bullets
go for 2
straight

om

Chtcago &lt;Johnson 0 OJ at
Boston (Wtse 19 12) 3 00 p m
(Only games scheduled)
Fridays Games
Detro tat California nigh t
Milwaukee at Texas ntoht
Cleveland at Kan C ty n1ght
(Only games scheduled)

:

1258 Powe tt 51
Moddleport, 0
PH 992 7155

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1:

"State Farm's the lWrldS~t
car insurer. Ask me why•••"
Sat 11m t.IY\111
-~lomOIJ
HOII'It
N~UUN(~

Eagles fallll-2
MASON, W Va - Junior
Tim Sayre, Mike Lambert
and Tim Thompson banged
out three hits each m leading
the Wahama Falcons to an 112 vtctory over the viSiting
Eastern Eagles Tuesday
here
The wm was the thtrd
stratght for Coach Gordon.
Spencer s charges and gave
them a fine 8-4 won lost
record
The lr10 of juniors paced a
season h1gh of 14-htts attack
for the Whole Falcons erasing
the prev10us high of 12
against Huntington St Jo and
Belpre The II runs scored by
the Bend area team is also a
season htgh, overtaking the
old mark of ten runs scored
agamst Meigs and Wtrt
County
Wahama got two runs m the
second a'ld added another m
the thtrd to take a quick 3-(J
lead before Eastern got on
the board The Eagles closed
the gap WIth a run m the
fourth but the White Falcons
countered with another m
the1r half of the mmng to keep

e

~~Y ~~~

OMtf

8100'10 "i

Como•
or

p 7569

:

their three run lead at 4-1
The visttors came wtthln
two runs once again by addong another on the ftfth but
Wahama bats came to hfe In
the bottom half of the fifth by
scoring seven runs to put the
game away
David Reed and Tim Sayre
kept their hitting streaks
gomg wtth Reed now hitting
safely m II straight and
Sayre In six games Urn
Thompson also has a strmg
going wtth at least one safety
1n each of his last five
outings
Getting hits for the Whtte
Falcons were Tim Sayre wtth
three singles and five stolen
bases mcluding a theft home,
Mtke Lambert with two
singles and a triple , Tim
Thompson woth two singles
and his fourth home run of the
year, Duke Smith with a
double and a swgle and Rick
Buzzard, Dale Lewis and
Davtd Reed all chipped in
with one base hit apiece
The winning pitcher was
Jerry Tucker (2-1)

Atlanta against the Braves
The major league record
for most VIctories to start a
season Is 10, shared by the
Brooklyn Dodger~ (1955) , the
Pittsburgh Piutes ( 1962) and
the Cleveland lndtans ( t966)
Rose, who has had at least
two hits m all four games so
far, 1s 11 for 19 for a 578
average
Even If Rose would go
hitless m his next seven at
bats, he still would be o(f to.
the best start of his 14 year
maJor league career
Counting lust year, Rose
has htt safely in 18 straight
games The club record is 27,
held by Ed Roush ( 1920 1924)
and Vada Pinson (1965)
Meanwhile, wtth manager
Sparky 'Ca ptain Hook"
Anderson sll ll jerking
starting pitchers every ganw,
the Reds are threatening to

break their own dubloua
major league record of .S
straight games In which the
starter did not finish
Counting last season, the
Reda have now posted :H
straight mcomplete games
But hlttmg Is the Reds'
forte, and they ve been
unsloppa ble so far because of
their booming bats
A potcher just can't let up
l!iainl}t this club,'' says Rose
"It's the damndest thing
you 'II ever see In yow life "
Acknowledged Atlanta
manager OliVe Bristol after
Tuesday nights 6-1 Rt'de'
romp, 'They re a mighty
tough outftt for n pitcher to
wade through '
fn four gan1es the Red!
have pounded out 54 hits nnd
stwed 39 runs - lin average
of about 14 hits antl10 runs a
game

Stiversville News Notes
Mr and Mrs Randall
Talbott, New Lexmglon,
VISited relaltves m lhts area
on a recent Thursday
Mrs
Arthur Evans,
Galhpohs, called on Mr and
Mrs Mike Evans, Ahcta
Cmdy and Ryan, on Sunday
Mrs Fannie Ours! visited
Mr and Mrs Tim Wilkmson
Shawn and Kevm, Columbus
a recent weekend
Mr and Mrs Davtd
Bryant, Charleston, W Va
Mrs Myrtle Lewis and
Brenda Bancroft, W Va
Larry Fowler and Bobby
Lewis, Plymouth, W Va ,
Mrs Carol Cornell and
Sherry, East Liverpool Mrs
Freda Mtddleswarl Mrs
Vtcki Proffitt and daughters
Mrs Vtolet Ritchie, Mrs
Barbara Talbott and famtly,
local, were weekend callers
at the home of Mr and Mrs
Bill Bryant and family
Mr and Mrs Harold
VanMeter, Columbus and Mr
and Mrs Mac VanMeter and
Mossy, Pomeroy, VIsited Mrs
Ada Van Meter, a recent
weekend
Barbara Richard os the new
manager of Steppes Beauty
Salon on the Athens Plaza
R R Durst and S W Durst
made a busmess tr1p to
Ripley and Parkersburg a
recent Wednesday
Mr and Mrs David
Rigglns and Sherr! of Ullle
Hocking, and Mr and Mrs
Thomas Birch, Waterford,
spent a recent Sunday wtth
Clint Birch and daughter,
\Aloia
Mrs Lows DeLuz has been

receiving treatments at
Camden-Clark hospital in
Parkersburg mstead of St
Joseph, as prevlsouly writ
ten
Mrs Merle ( Paul
Dean) Evans, M r and
Mrs Richard Abels, Mrs
N a n c y Carnell, Mr and
Mrs Rudy Durst, Gene
Carpenter, Mr and Mrs
R R Ours t and Tom, S
W Durst, Mrs Clarence
Lawrence, Mrs Elva Dailey,
Mrs Ada Van Meter, Mr and
Mrs Randall Talbott, Duke
Dailey Lawrence Ritchte ,
Jr , Mr and Mrs Btll Bryant,
Debra and David, Mrs
Myrtle Lewos, Mrs Nell
Middleswart, Mrs Roy
Donohew, Lewts Ogg, Joe
Miller, Wa! ter Crooks, Mrs
Mary Greer, Mrs Mildred

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Mrs R R Durst and Tom on
Sunday afternoon

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8-SATURDAY TIL "5

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Free Travel Show :

"Presenting Hawaii"

April 21, 7:30 PM
HOLIDAY INN
GALLIPOLIS

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I

GENERAL TIRE •
ll
an:ot~~h~~tchie, Belpre,
SALES
...,.~..:.... ,.~~.,
voslted his sister, Mr and -._-...;,MiiioiiD;D;;;,;,L,;;E.;.P,;;O;,;R;,;T;,o,.;O-._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Circle, Dav1d Talbott, and
Louis DeLuz were recent
vtsitors of Mrs Iva Carpenter

For the Lowest

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BILL FLETutER

celebrated h•s 35th birthday
Wednesday is off to his best
batting start with 11 hits m
the ftrst four games
The Reds, who had a
season-opening four game
win streak halted In 1970 by
San Francisco, try for a team
record five m a row tonight m

West

LANDOVER, Md (UPJ) The Washmgton Bullets
attempt tomght to prove their
excellent fmt half m
Cleveland was no fluke when
they face the upstart
Cavaliers m game two of
\
their best-of-seven Nallonal
Ma1or league Results
By
Un1ted
Press International
Basketball Association
Nat1ona1 League
quarterfmal sertes
Phlladelphl 000 105 01o- 8 9 1
000 001 001 - 2 6 4
The Bullets, who lost eoght Montreal
Lon borg ( 1 OJ and Boone
of thetr last 12 r~gular season Rogers
Granger (5) Stanhouse
games to fmosh a game (8J and Carter LP- Rogers (0
behind the Cavaliers m the 2)
NBA Central DIVISIOn, ran up New York 200 011 OOD-5 10 o
000 011 30x- ! 9 I
a 56-35 halftune lead m Ch•cago
Seaver Apodaca (6J Webb
Tuesday mght's opemng (7) Sanders C1J and Grote
Burns Dettore (6) Schultz 171
playoff game at Rtchfoeld
Garman
(8)
and Swisher
OhiO
HUtldley 17) WP- Schul!z 11 Ol
But a fourth quarter sag LP - Webb 10 1l HRs- Chocago
( ll New York King
cost them much of the bulge Monday
man (2)
and they came away With
only a hve-pomt victory, 100. San Franc1sc 000 002 01 o- 3 9 2
Houston
040 010 OOx - 5 9 2
95
Caldwell Heaverlo (6) Min
Foul trouble was the key to ton (7l and Rader D erker
(7) Hardy (8 ) and Jutze
the Bullets woes, accordmg to Sosa
WP- D1erker (1 l) LP - Cald
playmakmg guard Dave weii i O I)
Bong, who had 24 pomts plus a
San D1eg0
020 000 OlD- 3 12 0
key steal that shut off a Los
Angeles 000 001 DOO- 1 1 3
Jones and Kendall Sulton
Cleveland threat in the final
Marshall (8) and Yeager WPseconds
Jones 12 0) LP - Sullon (0 2)
' They got a lot of baskets m HRs- San Diego Wtnf•eld ( 2)
the fourth quarter because Torres ( 1J
we had so many people m foul
(Only games scheduled)
American league
trouble As a result, we had to
Ch1cogo
000 000 02D- 2 65
be more deliberate There Mlnnesola
010 140 OOx - 6 8 0
was no way we could afford to
Wood (1 1J and Varney
Campbell (8) and
Decker
get mto a raaehorse game Wynegar
WP - Decker ( 1 1J
with them m the second
Cleveland
000 006 OOD- 6 10 0
hall,' he smd
Boston
001 300 IOD-511 0
"We got careless at the
Bibby Hood W Kern 17)
end,'' said assistant coach LaRoche (9 1 and Ashby
House (6) and Fisk
Bernte Bickerstaff 'We Jenkins
WP-Hood 11 01 LP- Jenklns
FEWER JOBLESS
wanted to use up the clock, (0 2)
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
number of jobless OhiOans but we got sloppy run'mg our Oakland
000 010 001 - 2 6 I
patterns and dtdn 'I get good Texas
ooo 020 llx- • 8 1
filing unemployment benefit shots'
Blue F tngers (8) and Tena
claims last week dropPed,
ce Perry and Ellis WP - Perry
The
Bullets
ran
up
leads
of
11 1)
Albert Giles, admlmstrator of il-1l and 33-!3 over the tight 12 0) LP- Biue
.,-the Ohio Bureau of Employ- Cavahers and Cleveland CIIIforma 020 010 O~Q- 7 II I
Kansas City 302 ooo OJo- 6 J3 0
ment
Servtces,
sa1d
never cut lnto the margm ' Tanana Hartzwell (3) Monge
Wednesday
{6) Drago (8) Brewer (8J and
Those fiHng mitlal claims untlllate in the game
Herrmann leonard McClure
'We were ready to play 17) Pattin (8) WP - Monge 11
for unemployment benefits
tomght, ' said forward Elvin 0) LP- Pallln 10 I) HRsdropped 8 8per cent from the Hayes, who scored 28 polnts Cal lfornla Herrmann 2 (2)
Kansas City McRae (l)
p-eVIoll8 week, during the
week ended April 10, 11 was and grabbed 18 rebounds "In
(Only games scheduled)
the ftrst half we played great
announced Wednesday
defense and worked
Glles S8ld 15,236 persons team
well together on offense "
filed mltial claims compared
Bullet VIctory Wiped
with 16,697 fUed the prmous outThe
the
home
court advantage
weeks
the
Cavaliers
He said continued clauns finishmg ftrst earned by
for those unemployed one or
'
Game three of the ser1es
more weeks were estunated
at 212,150, a one-tenth of one wtll be played Saturday
per cent decrease from the afternoon at Rtchfteld, With
fourth game at Landover
previous week's total of the
next
Wednesday night
212,:133

Uke I good nelgllbor,
SCate Fann IS there

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Tbe
old Reds are still bot and
thetr oldest player IS hOtter
than ever
Clncmnah, baseball's
oldest professional team has
Jumped off to a ~ start thiS
season, matchmg a club high,
and Pete Rose, who

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�3-Tht Dally Sentinel, P001eroy-Middl~, 0 , Thursday, Aprill5, 1976

z_Th~ nailv Sentinel Pomeroy Moddleport, 0 , Thursday , April 15, 1976

Rhodes going for realignment in '78
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS {UPI) - Guv
James A Rhodes saod Ulday
he has abandoned plans Ul
reapportiOn legoslatl\e
dlstrocts for thos year's
elections llut stoll hopes to
realign the distrocts by 1978
"I do not believe they can
get 11 ready for thts elecllon,"

saJd Rhodes, referrong to a
reapportionment plan whtch
he must first get court
perrrussoon to put forward
There s a problem of
con!usmg the voters ' satd
the governor 'The new plan
would be for 1978 '
RhOdes is chaorman of the
fiVe-member ApportiOnment
Board, controlled 3 to 2 by

elec tiOn next November,
candodates would have to be
renommated, perhaps by
running at large
I am not m favor of
makmg a confused ballot by
makmg them run at large '
swd the governor
RhOdes satd it would have
taken an extra 60 days to get
his court challenge ready on
lime
to
get
a
reapporllonment dectmon for
thos year s electoon He satd
he was busy wotti other things'
and had no regrets about
wattmg
32, a mustc teacher and
The governor satd eVIdence
chonster
at
Durham
Cathedral, was at home when woll be presented to the state
Board next
the m!ants were dehvered Controlling
All were b(orn wtthm four Tuesday m support of
pa) ment of fees for hos
mmutes
Thetr wetght ranged from defense m lawsutts mvolVIng
two pounds three ounces to the Kent State Umversoty
one pound, four ounces
Dr Derek Tacch1, who led
the team of 11 that attended
Mrs Proce, satd everythmg
went like clockwork We were
expectmg five but we got an
LITILE EGG HARBOR,
extra one •
N J , AprU 15- Capt John
Barry ol the American
vessel Lexington brought
his prisoners from the
recently captured British
sloop Edward for delivery
10 the congressional
Marine Committee In
btlhon level
Philadelphia Barry was
House Senate conferees credited with making the
Will put ftmshin g touches on first U S capture of a
thetr first week back on a British ship of war under
comp romo se Federal battle conditions orr the
Election Commtssoon btll
VIrginia capes on April 7
whoch Ford opposes and
addotoonal JOb creat 1ng
measures
are
near
compl etion woth spendmg
le\ els also opposed by the
White House
Not all of the congressmen
woll grassroot 1t durmg the
re cess
A 15 member
delegation headed by House
Democratoc leader Thomas
PLACE CHANGED
0 Netll wtll travel to West
Due to Holy Week services
and East Berhn Rome, the Democrati c Club meet ng
Krakow Warsa" and Dublm lhls...llf/enlng w•ll be held at
l'llelgs Inn mstead of the
Another mn e member the
EpiScopal Pan sh House
group wtll be m Pekmg and
there os a thre e member
Easter Sunnse Serv1ce will
group studymg agrtculture be held at 6 JO a m at the
led Faolh Church Rl 7
problems on Pan s and Un•
Bypass The Rev Robert E
Brussels
Sm1fh Sr
•s pastor The
Republicans who ch 1s
seekmg court permtsswn to
test a 1972 plan written by
Democrats
The board would have to
rece ove court permtss oon,
adopt a new plan and get It
approved by the court-5 before
ot coulobe tmplementcd
If the courts struck down
the current plan before the

Doctors fighting for four
NEWCASTLE UPON
TYNE, England (UPI) Doctors today fought to save
the lives of four Slll"VIvors of
sextuplets born to a musoc
teacher's wife
The mfants- three boys
and three gtrls-were
dehvered Wednesday by
Caesarean secllon more than
two months premature But
withm hours two of the gorls
had dted wtth respiratory
complications
The lour survovors also

were affected by resporatory
difficulties, satd a spokesman
lor Prml'fss Mary Matermty
hospital
The mother, Chrtstme
Prtce, 30, of Ramton near
Durham, was satd to be
tmprovon g arter early
concern for her health
Mrs Proce, who Ulok a
fertiloty drug lor stx months
before she became pregnant,
had been on the hospotal 14
weeks
Her husband Alan Pnce

Dateline 1776

Congressmen testing mood
By GENE BERNHARDT
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Members of Congress toda)
fanned out through home
districts to assess the electoon
year mood durmg the longest
recess so far thos year - 11
days over Easter
House Democratoc Whip
John McFall sent hts troops
off wtth a suggested speech
makmg slogan
Congress
has emerged as the leader,
and the admtrustrallon as the
reluctant partner '
But, It's one of the worst
Congresses I've ever served
m " was House Republican
Leader John Rhodes assessment
McFall srud Democrats, m
the nearly l' l years they
have run the 94th Congress,
led the way m bolstermg the
economy through JOb·
creatmg programs, a tax cut
and a legtslallve plan that
slowed the energy crtsts
while holdmg down the pnce
of gasolme
Congress has forced an
unwtllong admtmstratwn to
act to get the natton out of the
economoc doldrums and onto
the road to recovery, he
srud
Senate Democraltc leaders
Sllld that body has worked
longer and harder and passed
more bolls thos year than m
the past two years desptte the
fact ' there have been four
times as many vetoes thos
sessiOn, WIth the promtse for

more"

' The Democratoc
leadersh op has not come up
With a coherent program
satd Rhodes
Presodent Ford has cam
patgned
aga mst
the
Democrats as btg spenders
and sa) s the record-settmg
pace of 48 vetoes he has cast
smce takmg offoce Aug 9,
1974, was the result of an
uncompromising ' Con
gress
Some of the toughest White
House-Congress battles awatt
the return of lawmakers
Apnl 26 Chief among them IS
a fmal budget ft gure for the
1977 fiscal year that starts
Oct I
The Senate has voted a
$412 6 bollton spendmg level
$17 btlhon over Fords
proposal The House Will vote
April 29 on a proposed $413

Trimble trims Eagles
5.() in non-league go
Behind the tw0-h1t potchmg
the
Tromble Tomcats clawed the
vosohng Eastern Eagles
Wednesday mght by the score
of ii-0 Eastern pitchers gave
up only three base hots, but
the Eagle defense commtlled
four cootly errors with men
on base to let the hosts do
their seormg
of left-hander Hunter

Gout can be
controlled

'

in briefs

public Is welcome

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB Approximately one year ago I
had an attack of acute gout
My physlctan prescCJbed
Colbenerrud and the attacks
subslded I thought that was
the end of 1t Then a month
ago I read that I needed
lifettme medtcal
management and that the
severity of gout was much
more cntical for those who
had an attack when they were
under 30 years of age
I tmmedtately saw a
physlcian and he placed me
on Zyloprim although he was
not able to gtve me any m
dlcatlon of the course of the
disease when a person had
the flrst attack under 30 years
of age I was 28 when mme
occurred I am wondering If
you can glve me some mdlcatlon of what to expect m
this area as I am quite apprehensive
DEAR READER - Gout,
as you must know from your
reading, 1s caused by an over
production of urtc acid by the
cells m our own body The
uric acld Is literally a by
product of cellregeneration
Without cell regeneration our
llfespan would be extremely
short
The excess producllDn of
uric acld appears to be on a
genetic or mhertted basts
It is perfectly true that
anyone who has gout should
accept lifetime medtcal
SUperviSIOn Thls lsn 'I all
bad As long as the person's
urlc acld level m the blood IS
controlled
thmgs are
progressing well
Very often it 1s necessary
for patients with significant
elevations of uric acid to take
medicines perststently
Zyloprim wh1ch you are now
taking is also called
allc;oPurlnol It suppresses the

Local news

Enough runs scored on the
hrst mmng to won when the
lead-off batter walked stole
second, went to thord on a
sacroflce, and come home
when the catcher returned
the bali wtldly back to the
potcher
They scored once more tn
the second and plated three
bog msurance runs on the ftlth
after two were out The forst
batter of that mnmg walked
but then came two stratght
outs That was followed by a
walk and then Trimble s
Echslenkamper hot a
boommg trtple to score both
men An Eagle error followed
and allowed htm to scamper
home
Eagle starter and loser
freshman Dan Spencer
turned m an admorable
performance as he learned up
wo th John Evans to stroke out
foUl' and walk fl\ e Eastern
hollers were Ttm Kuhn and
Steve Little both havmg
smgles
Besides Echstenkamper s
trtple, the hosts Lewts and
Leanch each had a smgle
Hunter gave up only the two
hits and walked two and
struck out SIX
Tomght at Eastern, the
Southern Tornadoes and
Eagles battle wtth Don
Etchmger domg the potching
for the hosts, whtle ace rtghthander Brady Huffman goes
to the mound for Southern
E
000 000 ()....O 2 4
T
110 030 x- 5 3 1
Spencer {LP), Evans (5)
and Rtffle Hunter and
Bruton

body cell s capacity to form
excess urtc acid Other
medtcmes help eliminate
excess urtc acod through the
kidneys The combination of
medocmes now available
make 1t posstble to literally
control gout and prevent
most of 1ts complicahons But
of course one must continue
medical supervoslon to gam
these benefits
The advances in the abtllty
to treat gout with medtcines
has also dtminished the
omportance of the diet in the
treatment of gout
There are no meaningful
stahstics on what to expect
just because you had your
first attack before age 30
Quite frankly, the advances
m medlclne in the treatment
of gout are suff!ctenUy recent
that long term studies on
mdlVIduals who have been
properly treated JUSl aren't
available
Those who want a more
complete picture of the
The Da1~ Sentinel
course of gout, what to expect
DEVOTED TO THE
m the way of complications
INTEREST OF.
MEIGS MASON AllEA
and how to prevent them can CHESTER
l TANNEHill
send 50 cents for The Health I
fxec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Letter number 2-3, Gout,
Crty Edrtor
Unc Acid Send a long,
Publoshed dally e~cepl
Saturday by Th e Ohio
stamped, self-addressed
Valley Publrshrng Com
envelope to me In care of thts pany
111
court
St
""omeroy
Ohro 45769
newspaper, P 0 Box 1351,
Business Offrce Phon e 992
Radio Ctty Stahon , New
215 6 Edltorral Phone 992
11 57
York, NY 10019
Second class postege
I wtll say, however , that paid at Pomero y Ol'litl
Nattonal
advert sing
because 1t 1s possible to representative
Wan:t
control the urtc acid level Grrfftth Comp an y Inc
Bo t tmeltr &amp; Gllflagher Olv
With available medicines that 157
Th~rd Ave New York
N
Y 10011
a conscientious patten! under
Subsc r rptlon
rates
good medocal supervision Del,vered
by ca rr ier where
av
arlable
75
cen
t
s per
should expect to have a
week
By Motor Route
relatively normal lifespan where carrrer serv ice not
wtth a mmunum amount of ava tlab le One month
SJ 25 By mall In Ohio ond
complications, tf any The W
Va One Year S21 00
Six monlhs S11 5B1 Three
key part of thts, however 1s months
S7 00 Elsewhere
that the patient must ~26 oo year '1 1x months
13 50 three months S7 50
cooperate wtth the doctor on S,ubscnptron
prrce Includes
hts continuous management
Sunda y T mes Sentinel

Sunrise service w1ll be held
at 6 a m at tile Pomeroy
Wesleyan Holiness Church
Rt 143 Hamsonvllle Road
CommuniOn w1ll be served
The Rev 0 Del l Manley IS
pastor The publoc IS Invited

CHESTER - There will ~e
a square dance at the Chesler
Elementary School May 1 at
6 p m sponsored by the
Chesler Volunteer Fire Dept
The publ 1c IS cordoally In
vi led
CHESTER - The public os
Invited to voew a film on
bottle gas at the Chester fire
station on April 26 at 6 p m
Refreshments Will be served
Easter
Sunrise serv1ces
held at 6 a m at the
F~rsl Baptist Church In
Middleport.

wil t be

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Baseball League Will meet at
6 p m Monday althe home of
Jerry Eads Maon St
A youth servoce by lantern
light will be held at 7 30 p m
Froday al the Rutland
MISsion on Depot St Girls are
to wear print dresses and
boys /eans or overalls If
poss1b e All young people are
lnvlled

shootmgs of 1970
He satd there will be a
letter from former state
Attorney General Paul W
Brown approvmg the
appOintment of Brooke
Alloway as hts counsel
Alloway IS asking for $70,000
for hts work on the case
On other matters, Rhodes

new food sources
By Ray Cromley

Kentucky

operators

out of jail

Market Report

FFA Chapter to receive grant

..

LOCAL TEMP
Temperature m downtown
Pomeroy 1hursday at 11 a m
was 76 degrees under partly
sunny •kies

Veterans Memorial Hoapltal
DISCHARGED - Dale
Connolly, William Easterday,
Penny Landers, Cloist
Badgley, Hassle Badgley,
Cuba Little

By BW. MADDEN
UPI Sporta Writer

WASHINGTON - There Is emphatically no doubt thai
energy production on the Umted States and the world must be
of maJor concern to this country OtherwiSe, the financial
IIIS!abtlity of many developmg nations and economic
S81d
dislocallons m the Umted Stales wtll brmg repeated crises
Holzer Medical Center
- He has done everything
But there's another approach to these problems - larj!ely
(Discharges, Aprill4)
Ill: can to ftre GregorJ~ J
ognored - wh1ch could have as much unpact on stability as
Florence Bauerle, Carol mcreased and nuclear eneri!Y output ThiS Is the development
Stebbms as a member of the
Blame, Robert Bragg, of vast underexplooted agrocultural areas of the worldOhto Industrial ColllllUSSion
that Ills up to the Ohto Senate Jennifer Brenner, Magdalene espectally m the troptcs - and the planting of overlooked or
Carmtchael, Gerald Chesser, underutilized crops With mtensifted research, these offer tbe
and the federal court
Shtrley
Coburn Floyd En t, promise of becommg 'new ' miracle food&amp;
- He wlll not lake a posttlon
on whether he favors the sale Elizabeth Frazier, Shll'ley
For the lack of food, 11 IS now clear, has become more of a
of alcoholic beverages on Fridenmaker, Ray Hall, drag on many of the world s poorer countries than petroleum
elecllon day until a btll Russell Holland, Wtlliam costs Food pnces have skyrocketed lncreasmg millions go
passed by the General Holley, Unda Hudson, Mary hungry The costs bankrupt na tiona! budgets
Assembly reaches his desk Kemper, Lmes Kmgrey,
Increased development of agroculture would not only
Deborah Lambert, Elmore benefit foreign lands Htstortcally, Amertcan markets are the
Leach , Charlotte Little, more prosperous the greater the agrocultural and industrial
Laura McGraw, Patncia progress of the foretgn nations concerned
Mtller, Cynthta Norton,
American farmers would not be hurt" For there IS little
Jaspar Olover, Claudette chance, however much thiS country pours onto helpmg their
Pinkerman, Jason Powell, countrtes, that the world will run mto repeated surpluses,
Edna Reynolds, Tina Rice, population forecasts beong what they are
Ray Saunders, Sallie Shtvely,
Moreover, the new research and development can help
Cathy Spencer, Mabel Insure that at some time m the future, one diSease or another
VanMeter, Rtcky Woerner, wtll not wtpe out maJOr U S output - at least for long As
Roma Wood
scientists workmg With the National Academy of Sciences
(Births, Aprl114)
poml out "retiance on a small number of plants carries great
Mr and Mrs Blame riSk, for monocultures are extremely vulnerable to
FRANKFORT, Ky (UPI) Carter, son, New Haven, W catastrophoc failure brought about by dtsease of variations in
Two
southeastern Va , Mr and Mrs George M clunate"
Kentucky coal operators Collins, son, ReedSVIlle, Mr
The werld and the Umted States have gradually centered
were rel eased from jatl and Mrs Bobby A Ftzer, producllon on 20 maJOr crops not suitable for all climates This
Wednesday alter pa:y~ng a daughter, Jackson, Mr and means that unportant world areas, parllcularly m the tropics
total of $5 000 10 CIVIl Mrs David W McCarty, son, are not offermg the ytelds necessary to meet the growmg
penalties for vtolatoons of Jackson
populabons
Kentucky s reclamahon
Though man has used some 3,000 plant species for food,
laws
today one out of 10 1s etther extmct or m unnnnent danger of
The Jatlmgs of Henry
extmction Some 20,000 spectes now need protection Scientists
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Parker, Manchester and
say that only by careful preservation wlU the genetic
Saturddy through
Btlly Hurley, Bernstadt, were
diverstty and healthy stock needed for developmg new food
the !~test in the Department Monday, a chance of
crops be assured Potenllal breedmg stocks will otherwise
for Natural Resources and showers or thundershowers
become extmct '
Environmental Protection's each day and continued
Paradoxtcally, the potential of many troptcal crops has
get tough strop mine mild Highs wiD be In lhe
never been sClenhfocally explored A strllung case, a National
enforcement policy
70s to the lower 80s
Academy of Sciences group reports, ts qumus - one of the
Both operators spent Saturday and In the 60s
most productive sources of plant protem It grows htgh m the
Tuesday mght m Jao! Monday Lows wllJ be In
Andes, where few other crops can surVIve The Spanish
followmg thell' arrests by the 50s to the lower 60s
mtroduced wheat and barley and focused agricultural
state pohce troopers on bench early Saturday and again
research only on those crops, whtch eventually diSplaced
warrants tssued m Franklin early Suaday builD the 40s
qumua Despite 1ts mtrmstc nutritive and economoc value and
Corcuot Court here
Co the lower 50s early
the fact that protem defiCiency IS a serious problem m its
It was believed the ftrst Monday
native regton, the agronomy of qumua has advanced little ln
time 10 recent Kentucky
the past four centurtes '
history that mme operators
There's a wild Australian grass which yJelds nutritious
had been Jailed
m
gram With JUS! one deep watermg - unportant for regwns with
reclamatoon cases
sporadtc rainfall
The departmenl hied sepaA neglected Central Amencan gram has extremely high
rate suits m 1975 chargmg
levels of protem and the essenttal ammo actd, lysme
both Parker and Hurlex woth
A gram-producmg grasslike plant that grows m seawater
strip mmmg without state
could open new potentials for sea fanmng
penruts Parker s operatiOn
APeruVIan parsntp, the root of which IS sometunes grown
SALES REPORT
was m Clay County and
onstead
of potato at half the cost, offers promise for troptcal
Ohio Valley Uvestock Co
Hurley s m Laurel County
highlands worldwtde
Ga!Upolls, Ohio
Court orders ISSued earlier
Some types of the htgh-y•eldmg taro grow upland, others 1n
ApiillO, 1976
thts week mdtcated that both
waterlogged
otherwtse unproduchve swampy s.01ls, offermg
men had contmued to operate STOCKER CATTLE worldwtde lropocal potential
Without penruts m VIolatton STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs 45
Then there s a large melonhke vegetable which yields
down, 300 to 400 lbs 45 down
of orders
three
crops a vear and IS easy to grow The frwt can be kept as
Franklin Ctrcuot Judge 400 to 500 lbs 45 down 500 to long as a year Without refngeratwn
Squtre Wtlllams Jr found 600 lbs 44 :iO down, 600 to 700
Parker had mmed wtthout a lbs 41 50 down, 700 lbs and
perm1t at three locations over 42 75 down
HEIIi'ER CALVES - 250 to
from July to December, 1975
COLUMBUS-James E
300
lbs 35 down, 300 to 400 lbs
( Buildmg Our
He was penalized $1 000 for
Dougan
Dll'ector of the Oh10 BOAC
each operation plus a $1 000 35 down, 400 to 500 lbs 37 50 Agrteulture Edqcahon Amencan Commumtle~)
contempt of court penalty for down, 500. to 600 lbs 33 50 Servtce and Advtsor of the program The BOOC and
BOAC programs are both illfailmg to appear at a January down, 600 to 700 lbs 34 down
OhiO FF A Assoctahon, today depth commumty Imhearmg
700 lbs and over 35
released the names of 39 Ohto
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS He was released after
FF
A Chapters who were provement programs carried
(By the head) Stock Cows 165 selected
paymg the $4,000
to receiVe fmanctal out by FFA chapters and
Hurley, who does busmess to 225, Stock Cows and Calves grants for communtly im- members
Monies are made avallable
as the B&amp;H Coal Co , earlier 220 to 365, Stock Bulls 175 to provement programs The
had been ordered by W1Ulams 350 Baby Calves 20 to 47, (By Buckeye Hills Career Center for the BOOC program
to pay a $3,000 penalty for the Pound) Canners &amp; Cut- Chapter 1s one of those through the cooperation of
operatmg wtthout a perm1t ters Cows 33 down, Holstein selected and Will recetve a the Farmers Home Adfor three days, but faded to Cows 48 down, Commercial grant of $500 00
mints!rahon and the Ohio
pay
Bulls 27 down (1,000 lbs and
Department
of Agnculture,
Accordmg to Dr Earl for rural development
He was ordered to pay an over)
Kantner, Executive
added $2,0t10 penalty for two
PIGS - 20 to 45
The local BOOC progran\
Secretary
of the Oh10 FFA
no-permit violations but 11
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220 Assoctatton the fmanctal woll be under the direcUon of
later was discovered that one lbs to 250 57 to 66, Medium
Mr Ben Rowland, Forestry
of the violation was covered n 200 lbs to 300 48 to 54, Culls 27 grant program os a part of the fnst and Ken Schilling FFA
the previOus order Judge to 34, Sows 35 lbs up 40 to 45 Ohto FFA's BOOC (Building advisor and will consist of
Our Ohio Commumhes)
Henry Meigs then ordered
program,
a substdoary of the making Improvements of the
hlril released on payment of
Nahonal FFA Assoctahon 's Margaret Ann Swtmming
$1,000
Pool Park m Oak Hill

FIREMEN CALLED
The Middleport E-R squad
was called at 3 18 a m
Thursday to the mobile home
of Patrtcta Lynch on North
Second Ave Suffering chest
pams, Mrs Lynch was taken
to VMH At 7 07 a m the fire
CLASSES RESUMED
depariment went to Pomeroy
Gloria
Buck Wallace Will
to asstst Pomeroy bremen at
resume
leaching
her batonthe scene of a fire on Lincoln
dance
classes
Tuesday
Hill Road that leveled the
evening
at
the
Orchid
Room
former Rawlings home
m Pomeroy Mrs Wallace
discontinued her teaching
several weeks ago when her
HILOTEMPS
husband, State Patrolman
NEW YORK (UPI )- The Bruce Wallace, was seriOusly
htghest temperature reported injured in the explosion at the
Wednesday to the Nattonal Mason County Jatl m Pomt
Weather Servtce, excluding Pleasant
Alaska and Ha wan was 91
degrees at Wmk Tex
Today's low was 17 degrees at
Houlton, Mame
BII LS SIGNED
COLUMBUS UPI - Gov
James A Rhodes Wednesday
Signed emergency legoslatwn
conformmg Ohio law to a
constitutional amendment
adopted last November by
requmng prectncl by
preemct rotatton of candidates' names on the ballot
Rhodes
also
signed
legiSlation reqwnng school
dostrtcls to purchase llabtllty
msurance for school vehicles
to protec t lhetr bus dnvers

Lonhoi-g- is hack

HOSPITAL RAY CROMLEY
NEWS
World must develop

DIVORCE ASKED
Rosalee E Eubanks,
Pomeroy, filed suit for
dtvorce against Floyd C
Eubanks, Harrosonburg, La ,
m Metgs County Common
Pleas Court
TO MEET MONDAY
The
Hannan
Trace
Boosters Club Mil hold its
regular monthly meelmg
Aprol 19, begmnlng at 7 30
p m m the elementary school
bwldmg In Mercerville

News •• in Briefs

(Continued from page I)
five years, he ad4ed, automakers' demand for steel could
Increase 10 per cent
He satd his forecast of Increased demand for cars and
trucks IS based on ' solid, bwlt-m documentation,' such as
family formations, vehicle-scrappage rates, rlsmg incomes
and a declme m' real" car and truck prtces
COLUMBUS - ANEW TOURIST A'ITRACTION for Ohio
and a source of state revenue - jat alai frontons - would be
authorized under terms of a btl! whtch unanunoosly cleared
the Senate Ways and Means Commttee Wednesday
The btU would allow a IOiklay Jal alat season In the state,
with 5 per cent of the gross revenues of any operations set up
taxed by the state Sen Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown, sponsor
of the blU, says the game could attract as many tourists to Ohio
as It currently does In Flonda and Nevada
The btU was opposed m the conuruttee by representatives
of the state's standardbred horse racmg mdustry, who said Jal
alat bettmg parlors would reduce wagertng at trotting and
pacmg tracks

,

,---------------------------11

1
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be
1 less than 300 words long (or be subject 1o reduction by
I the edllor) and must be signed with the sfpee'• lidI dress Names may be withheld upan publlcatfoa
However, on request, names will be dllcloaed Letten
should
be In good taste, addressing lasues, not per·
1
1 sonalltles,
I
i]

l

I
I
I

.Q~~..r--6_

•••~·~=

I

Time for beginnings

1
I
I
I

I1
I

!
I
I

I

Dear Sir
Easter is a time for beginnings, when the resurrection of
nature we call spring colnctdes with the celebration of the
resurrection of Christ
"Easter is celebrated at about the right time of year, uSU8Uy '
the ftrst Sunday after the Jewish Passover, which of course Ia
the way it happened on the first Easter"
That's more than you can say for Christmas By all.ll
Indications, Jesus was born In the early spring, not in mid- '
WID!er How else could the shepherda In Palestine be out with
their Docks•
But Easter IS not purely a religiOus holiday It has a '
cultural connection with the Roman Empire of the early ~
ChriStian era The hOliday was named for the goddess Astre,' "
and 1t was something of a 'rite of spring' 1o promote human ~
and agricultural fertility for the coming season Some of ~
current unages aSSOCiated with Easter, Uke bunnies and eggs,
are reminders of this emphasis on fertlllty
••
The word "Easter" Is used only once ln the entire King ' '
James Bible - Acts 12 4, an obscure time reference to the
jatling of Peter, and even there the Revised Venion refers to
the date as "Passover' instead of Easter
1
StU!, it's very important to focus on the central event of ,.
Easter - the resurrection of Christ Alter resting over the " '
Sabbath, He was called back to llfe by His Father In Heaven, 1
and thts IS the best news the world has ever hew:d -{lerard ~
Seton, pastor, Pomeroy Seventh-day Adventist Church

•

That "missing link"
pitcher the Philadelphia
PhUlies sought so earnestly
thi.s put winter may have
been ri&amp;ht under their noses
!•
n may b! all the Phllliea
•• needed was a return to form
' • by Jim l.onborg
• • Lonborg, who spent the
latter half of the 1975 8e880n
nursing a shoulder Injury,
was the forgotten man this
spring, whUe Jun Kaat, Ron
lteed, Steve Carlton, .._rry
, Christenson and Tom
Underwood were penciled In
as probable starters at the
Pbillles' training camp That
rotation may have to be
altered now
Lonborg, who hadn't won a
game since last July 23, drew
the startmg assignment
Wednesday and his performance had Phillies' Manager

Danny Ozark wondering suddellly what he's going to do
With all those pitchers The
31-year-old right-hander
yielded only sb: hits, walked
three and struck out su m
hurHng the Phlllies to an 8-2
victory over Montreal for
the1r first win of the season
"I guess 11's the beginning
of a ne'if career," satd
l.onborg, who privately has
admitted his days with the
Pbillles might be numbered
"It's been a long, long time
between wms "
l.onborg benefitted from a
pa1r of RBI each from Dtck
Allen, Garry Maddox and
Bob Boone, but the Expos
also aided his cause by
comrruttlng four errors
Elsewhere in the National
League, the Chicago Cubs
edged the New York Mets, 65, Houston topped San
Francisco, S-3, and San Diego

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
, , NEW YORK ( UPJ) - Willle Mays' problem With the Mets
" cenler~und hiS specific dulles wtth them Smce Mrs Joan
Payson, the late owner of the club, was a long-tune fan and
' admirer of hiS, she certainly didn 'I set down any hard and fast
conditions when he was obtamed from the Giants four years
, , ago and signed to a U).year contract She wasn 'I looking for
_. any pound of flesh or anything like that
• All she was trylng to do IS bring a 41-year-old Willie Mays
back to New York for one last hurrah, and if there was
anything more than that, she only wanted to make sure he'd
have some connectiOn with baseball and some assoCllltion wtth
' the Mets, if he wtshed, when he was through playmg That's
why he was given a ]{)-year contract calling for $160,000 for two
" years and $50,000 a year for etght years thereafter
The conditions spelling out what Mays would have to do for
:. his $50,000 a year were vague They became more vague as
~ time went along and soon there was a breach between hun and
ntheclub,andnowthe lawyers are In on It even though the Mets
, sincerely want Willie back
, Five years ago, three years ago, maybe even a year ago, the
race issue qwte likely would've been mtroduced somewhere
mto the proceedings Thts time, though, it has not been and
that has to be a positive step forward
Some might say that with Frank Robinson now managmg
Cleveland and With men like Monte Irvtn and Emmett Ashford
representing the baseball commissioner's office, BlU Lucas
servmg as minor league admimstrator for Atlanta, Don
Newcombe doing corrununtty relations' work with the Dodgers
and Brooks Lawrence handling the same thong for the Reds,
baseball has become fully mtegrated, but that tsn't entll'ely
true
"There has been considerable unprovement," says St Louts
Cardinals' nght fielder Regg1e Sm1th, 'but the game isn t
completely Integrated yet I'm talking mostly about the front
offtce and management level I think baseball has been a tittle
remiss In overlookmg, say a Bob G1bson, as front offtce
!IUJterlal When Lou Brock IS finished playmg, I feel he's
another who could contribute something substantial to
management But I wlll say baseball has improved to the pomt
where l think management has recognized 11 cannot hope to
wm a pennant without blacks on the club I'm speakmg about
lhe field level now: When baseball recogmzes that blacks can
help m the front office, I think the turnaround will be
' complete "
Smith feels the Dodgers, Cardinals and Pirates have been
the best of all the clube at proVIdmg opportumties for black
, players He says the club he broke m With, the Red Sox, were a
little slow m "discovering" blacks and Latln-Amertcans
althtlugh he adds they seem to be domg much better now
• Up to now, Regg1e Snuth has a 287llfelime batting average
Only 10 regular National Leaguers show a h~gher one He has
hit 191 homers, which averages out a bit better than 21 a year
and driven iii 712 runs, or an average of 80 a year, which ISn't
too shabby etther
"Possibly I could've done better, I dunno," he says of what
he has done so far, "but now I'm In the prune of my career I'm
enjoying baseball more now than I ever did I'm enjoymg 11
Uke when [was a kid I'm thankful I got an opportunity to play
\Miseball It afforded me an economic mobility and soctal
ablllty l wouldn't have normally gotten doing something else
It has made it eas1er for me to feed my family "

Tbe Almlnae
Ullfled Pre.. International
Today Is Thursday, April
15, the 108th day of 1978 with
260 lo follow
ThemDOIIISbetween 1ts full
pllase and last quarter
The mornmg star IS Venus
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars, Jup1ter and
Saturn
Those born on this date are
IDlder the sign of Aries
Italian painter Leonardo
Da Vmci was born April IS,
1452
On this day In history
In 1881, President Abraham
Uncoln sent Congress amessage recognizing a state of
war with the Southern states
and calling for 75,000
vohmteer soldiers
In 1865, President Uricoln
died from an assassm 's bullet
lll)d Andrew Johnson was
sworn in as chief executive
In 1912, the luury liner
"Titanic"
sank
off
Newfomdland Of the 2,223
passengers aboard, 1,517
were lost
ln 1975, the war ' in
Cambodia neared an end as
Communist Insurgents closed
In on Phnom Penh, the
capital, from all Sides
A thought for the day
American poet Robert Froat
said, "I never dared to be
radical when youllg, for fear
it
would make me
conservative when old "

Rose at 35 hottest Red
BASEBALL

put away Los Angeles, 3-1
Over in the American Lea.
gue, 11 was Minnesota over
the Chicago White Sox, 6-2,
Cleveland atop Boston, 6-5,
California shading Kansas
City, 7-G, and TeJas bestmg

Maior Le~gue Standings
By United Press lnternattonal
Nat1onal Lugue
El\t
Pittsburgh
Chicago
New York
Phtlactelphla
Montreal

Oakland, 4-2
Cube 6, Mell 5

Bill Madlock tripled home
the tying 1'1111 and scored the
game-Wlflller on
Jerry
Morales' single during a
thre«un Houston rally on the
seventh mnmg that gave the
Astros a come-from-behind
wm over New York Tom
Seaver started for the Mets,
but was forced out of the
game m the sixth With a calf
muscle mjury
Aslros 5, Glanll 3
Enos Cabell keyed a fourrun second-innmg Houston
rally by triplmg borne one run
and then scormg wliat proved
to be the WUlller when a relay
by tbe Gtants' Derrel Thomas
went wUd Larry Dierker
benefttted from the four-run
Astro outburst by ptcking up
his first WID With SIX Innings
of work
Padres 3, Dodgers I
Dave Winfield and Hctor
Torres belted back-to-hack
solo homers m the second
mnmg and Padres' ace
southpaw Randy Jones made
them stend up for hts second
stratght WID For Wmfteld 1t
was hts second homer m as
many mghts agamst the
Dodgers, who have lost four
straoght

St LOUIS

W L Pet 08
l 01000
&lt; I 800
134001
I 1 333 2
1

3

250

1

3

250

2'12
2'h

W l Pet GB
Cine nnat t
.i 0 1 000
San OteQO
3 2 600 l'h
Houston
3 3 SOO 2
Allonlo
2 2 soo 1
San Francisco 2 3 400 21h
Los Angeles
o " 000 4
Wtdntsdav s Re-sults
Philadelphia 8 Montreal 2
Chicago 6 New York 5
Houston 5 San Francisco 3
Son Diego 3 Los Angeles I
{Only games scheduled)
TOday s Probable Pitchers
I All Times EST I
( 1t7S records In panmthesesJ
Sl Louis IMcGiolhen 1513)
at Ptttsburgh (Rooker 13 11 or
Candelana 8 6) 12 35 p m
New York (Matlack 16 121 at
Chicago (Bonham 13 15) 2 30
p,m

Cinctnnett (BIIItngham 15 10 J
ol Allan Ia INiekro 15 !5) 7 35
pm
Philadelphia (Underwood 14
13 pr Kaat 20 1.4) at Montreal

(Fryman 9 12) 2 15 p m
{Only games scheduled)
Fr1dav s Games
New York at Pittsburgh nlghl
Los Angeles. at Atlanta nl,ght
San Diego at Houston
San Fran at Cincinnati night
Amenciln Lugue
EilSf

New York
M1lwaukee
Detroi t
Boston
Balt•more
Cleveland

W l Pel
3 J 750

GB

2 1 6 6 7 '12
I 1 500 J
2 3 400Ph
2 3 400 Ph
1 2 333 Ph
West
W l Pet GB
Texas
5 1 833 Chicago
i!
1 667 11;,
Oakland
3 3 500 2
Minnesota
2 3 400 2h
Kansas City
1 2 333 21!1
Caltfornla
1 4 200 Jih
Wednesday s Results
Minnesota 6 Chicago 2
Cleveland 6 Basion s
Texas 4 Oakltmd 2
Cal tfornta 7 Kansas C1ty 6
(Only games scheduled)
Today s Probable Pitchers
(All Times ESTl
( 1975 records m parentheses)
Cal,torn a (Ryan 14 12) at
Kansas C ly ISphttorfl 19 10 )
8 30 p m
Mmnesota &lt;aonz 1-1 141 at
New York (May 14 121 '1 00

Bullets
go for 2
straight

om

Chtcago &lt;Johnson 0 OJ at
Boston (Wtse 19 12) 3 00 p m
(Only games scheduled)
Fridays Games
Detro tat California nigh t
Milwaukee at Texas ntoht
Cleveland at Kan C ty n1ght
(Only games scheduled)

:

1258 Powe tt 51
Moddleport, 0
PH 992 7155

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•:

1:

"State Farm's the lWrldS~t
car insurer. Ask me why•••"
Sat 11m t.IY\111
-~lomOIJ
HOII'It
N~UUN(~

Eagles fallll-2
MASON, W Va - Junior
Tim Sayre, Mike Lambert
and Tim Thompson banged
out three hits each m leading
the Wahama Falcons to an 112 vtctory over the viSiting
Eastern Eagles Tuesday
here
The wm was the thtrd
stratght for Coach Gordon.
Spencer s charges and gave
them a fine 8-4 won lost
record
The lr10 of juniors paced a
season h1gh of 14-htts attack
for the Whole Falcons erasing
the prev10us high of 12
against Huntington St Jo and
Belpre The II runs scored by
the Bend area team is also a
season htgh, overtaking the
old mark of ten runs scored
agamst Meigs and Wtrt
County
Wahama got two runs m the
second a'ld added another m
the thtrd to take a quick 3-(J
lead before Eastern got on
the board The Eagles closed
the gap WIth a run m the
fourth but the White Falcons
countered with another m
the1r half of the mmng to keep

e

~~Y ~~~

OMtf

8100'10 "i

Como•
or

p 7569

:

their three run lead at 4-1
The visttors came wtthln
two runs once again by addong another on the ftfth but
Wahama bats came to hfe In
the bottom half of the fifth by
scoring seven runs to put the
game away
David Reed and Tim Sayre
kept their hitting streaks
gomg wtth Reed now hitting
safely m II straight and
Sayre In six games Urn
Thompson also has a strmg
going wtth at least one safety
1n each of his last five
outings
Getting hits for the Whtte
Falcons were Tim Sayre wtth
three singles and five stolen
bases mcluding a theft home,
Mtke Lambert with two
singles and a triple , Tim
Thompson woth two singles
and his fourth home run of the
year, Duke Smith with a
double and a swgle and Rick
Buzzard, Dale Lewis and
Davtd Reed all chipped in
with one base hit apiece
The winning pitcher was
Jerry Tucker (2-1)

Atlanta against the Braves
The major league record
for most VIctories to start a
season Is 10, shared by the
Brooklyn Dodger~ (1955) , the
Pittsburgh Piutes ( 1962) and
the Cleveland lndtans ( t966)
Rose, who has had at least
two hits m all four games so
far, 1s 11 for 19 for a 578
average
Even If Rose would go
hitless m his next seven at
bats, he still would be o(f to.
the best start of his 14 year
maJor league career
Counting lust year, Rose
has htt safely in 18 straight
games The club record is 27,
held by Ed Roush ( 1920 1924)
and Vada Pinson (1965)
Meanwhile, wtth manager
Sparky 'Ca ptain Hook"
Anderson sll ll jerking
starting pitchers every ganw,
the Reds are threatening to

break their own dubloua
major league record of .S
straight games In which the
starter did not finish
Counting last season, the
Reda have now posted :H
straight mcomplete games
But hlttmg Is the Reds'
forte, and they ve been
unsloppa ble so far because of
their booming bats
A potcher just can't let up
l!iainl}t this club,'' says Rose
"It's the damndest thing
you 'II ever see In yow life "
Acknowledged Atlanta
manager OliVe Bristol after
Tuesday nights 6-1 Rt'de'
romp, 'They re a mighty
tough outftt for n pitcher to
wade through '
fn four gan1es the Red!
have pounded out 54 hits nnd
stwed 39 runs - lin average
of about 14 hits antl10 runs a
game

Stiversville News Notes
Mr and Mrs Randall
Talbott, New Lexmglon,
VISited relaltves m lhts area
on a recent Thursday
Mrs
Arthur Evans,
Galhpohs, called on Mr and
Mrs Mike Evans, Ahcta
Cmdy and Ryan, on Sunday
Mrs Fannie Ours! visited
Mr and Mrs Tim Wilkmson
Shawn and Kevm, Columbus
a recent weekend
Mr and Mrs Davtd
Bryant, Charleston, W Va
Mrs Myrtle Lewis and
Brenda Bancroft, W Va
Larry Fowler and Bobby
Lewis, Plymouth, W Va ,
Mrs Carol Cornell and
Sherry, East Liverpool Mrs
Freda Mtddleswarl Mrs
Vtcki Proffitt and daughters
Mrs Vtolet Ritchie, Mrs
Barbara Talbott and famtly,
local, were weekend callers
at the home of Mr and Mrs
Bill Bryant and family
Mr and Mrs Harold
VanMeter, Columbus and Mr
and Mrs Mac VanMeter and
Mossy, Pomeroy, VIsited Mrs
Ada Van Meter, a recent
weekend
Barbara Richard os the new
manager of Steppes Beauty
Salon on the Athens Plaza
R R Durst and S W Durst
made a busmess tr1p to
Ripley and Parkersburg a
recent Wednesday
Mr and Mrs David
Rigglns and Sherr! of Ullle
Hocking, and Mr and Mrs
Thomas Birch, Waterford,
spent a recent Sunday wtth
Clint Birch and daughter,
\Aloia
Mrs Lows DeLuz has been

receiving treatments at
Camden-Clark hospital in
Parkersburg mstead of St
Joseph, as prevlsouly writ
ten
Mrs Merle ( Paul
Dean) Evans, M r and
Mrs Richard Abels, Mrs
N a n c y Carnell, Mr and
Mrs Rudy Durst, Gene
Carpenter, Mr and Mrs
R R Ours t and Tom, S
W Durst, Mrs Clarence
Lawrence, Mrs Elva Dailey,
Mrs Ada Van Meter, Mr and
Mrs Randall Talbott, Duke
Dailey Lawrence Ritchte ,
Jr , Mr and Mrs Btll Bryant,
Debra and David, Mrs
Myrtle Lewos, Mrs Nell
Middleswart, Mrs Roy
Donohew, Lewts Ogg, Joe
Miller, Wa! ter Crooks, Mrs
Mary Greer, Mrs Mildred

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Mrs R R Durst and Tom on
Sunday afternoon

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8-SATURDAY TIL "5

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It's

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Free Travel Show :

"Presenting Hawaii"

April 21, 7:30 PM
HOLIDAY INN
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I

GENERAL TIRE •
ll
an:ot~~h~~tchie, Belpre,
SALES
...,.~..:.... ,.~~.,
voslted his sister, Mr and -._-...;,MiiioiiD;D;;;,;,L,;;E.;.P,;;O;,;R;,;T;,o,.;O-._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Circle, Dav1d Talbott, and
Louis DeLuz were recent
vtsitors of Mrs Iva Carpenter

For the Lowest

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BILL FLETutER

celebrated h•s 35th birthday
Wednesday is off to his best
batting start with 11 hits m
the ftrst four games
The Reds, who had a
season-opening four game
win streak halted In 1970 by
San Francisco, try for a team
record five m a row tonight m

West

LANDOVER, Md (UPJ) The Washmgton Bullets
attempt tomght to prove their
excellent fmt half m
Cleveland was no fluke when
they face the upstart
Cavaliers m game two of
\
their best-of-seven Nallonal
Ma1or league Results
By
Un1ted
Press International
Basketball Association
Nat1ona1 League
quarterfmal sertes
Phlladelphl 000 105 01o- 8 9 1
000 001 001 - 2 6 4
The Bullets, who lost eoght Montreal
Lon borg ( 1 OJ and Boone
of thetr last 12 r~gular season Rogers
Granger (5) Stanhouse
games to fmosh a game (8J and Carter LP- Rogers (0
behind the Cavaliers m the 2)
NBA Central DIVISIOn, ran up New York 200 011 OOD-5 10 o
000 011 30x- ! 9 I
a 56-35 halftune lead m Ch•cago
Seaver Apodaca (6J Webb
Tuesday mght's opemng (7) Sanders C1J and Grote
Burns Dettore (6) Schultz 171
playoff game at Rtchfoeld
Garman
(8)
and Swisher
OhiO
HUtldley 17) WP- Schul!z 11 Ol
But a fourth quarter sag LP - Webb 10 1l HRs- Chocago
( ll New York King
cost them much of the bulge Monday
man (2)
and they came away With
only a hve-pomt victory, 100. San Franc1sc 000 002 01 o- 3 9 2
Houston
040 010 OOx - 5 9 2
95
Caldwell Heaverlo (6) Min
Foul trouble was the key to ton (7l and Rader D erker
(7) Hardy (8 ) and Jutze
the Bullets woes, accordmg to Sosa
WP- D1erker (1 l) LP - Cald
playmakmg guard Dave weii i O I)
Bong, who had 24 pomts plus a
San D1eg0
020 000 OlD- 3 12 0
key steal that shut off a Los
Angeles 000 001 DOO- 1 1 3
Jones and Kendall Sulton
Cleveland threat in the final
Marshall (8) and Yeager WPseconds
Jones 12 0) LP - Sullon (0 2)
' They got a lot of baskets m HRs- San Diego Wtnf•eld ( 2)
the fourth quarter because Torres ( 1J
we had so many people m foul
(Only games scheduled)
American league
trouble As a result, we had to
Ch1cogo
000 000 02D- 2 65
be more deliberate There Mlnnesola
010 140 OOx - 6 8 0
was no way we could afford to
Wood (1 1J and Varney
Campbell (8) and
Decker
get mto a raaehorse game Wynegar
WP - Decker ( 1 1J
with them m the second
Cleveland
000 006 OOD- 6 10 0
hall,' he smd
Boston
001 300 IOD-511 0
"We got careless at the
Bibby Hood W Kern 17)
end,'' said assistant coach LaRoche (9 1 and Ashby
House (6) and Fisk
Bernte Bickerstaff 'We Jenkins
WP-Hood 11 01 LP- Jenklns
FEWER JOBLESS
wanted to use up the clock, (0 2)
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
number of jobless OhiOans but we got sloppy run'mg our Oakland
000 010 001 - 2 6 I
patterns and dtdn 'I get good Texas
ooo 020 llx- • 8 1
filing unemployment benefit shots'
Blue F tngers (8) and Tena
claims last week dropPed,
ce Perry and Ellis WP - Perry
The
Bullets
ran
up
leads
of
11 1)
Albert Giles, admlmstrator of il-1l and 33-!3 over the tight 12 0) LP- Biue
.,-the Ohio Bureau of Employ- Cavahers and Cleveland CIIIforma 020 010 O~Q- 7 II I
Kansas City 302 ooo OJo- 6 J3 0
ment
Servtces,
sa1d
never cut lnto the margm ' Tanana Hartzwell (3) Monge
Wednesday
{6) Drago (8) Brewer (8J and
Those fiHng mitlal claims untlllate in the game
Herrmann leonard McClure
'We were ready to play 17) Pattin (8) WP - Monge 11
for unemployment benefits
tomght, ' said forward Elvin 0) LP- Pallln 10 I) HRsdropped 8 8per cent from the Hayes, who scored 28 polnts Cal lfornla Herrmann 2 (2)
Kansas City McRae (l)
p-eVIoll8 week, during the
week ended April 10, 11 was and grabbed 18 rebounds "In
(Only games scheduled)
the ftrst half we played great
announced Wednesday
defense and worked
Glles S8ld 15,236 persons team
well together on offense "
filed mltial claims compared
Bullet VIctory Wiped
with 16,697 fUed the prmous outThe
the
home
court advantage
weeks
the
Cavaliers
He said continued clauns finishmg ftrst earned by
for those unemployed one or
'
Game three of the ser1es
more weeks were estunated
at 212,150, a one-tenth of one wtll be played Saturday
per cent decrease from the afternoon at Rtchfteld, With
fourth game at Landover
previous week's total of the
next
Wednesday night
212,:133

Uke I good nelgllbor,
SCate Fann IS there

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Tbe
old Reds are still bot and
thetr oldest player IS hOtter
than ever
Clncmnah, baseball's
oldest professional team has
Jumped off to a ~ start thiS
season, matchmg a club high,
and Pete Rose, who

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GALLON

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Ebersbach
Hardware
' EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"
110 w. - ·

992-281 1

�/

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Falcons edge Buffalo 3-2

4---The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport , 0 ., Thursday, April 15, 1976

•

SEV

Red Scare real

•
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TEAM
Jackson
At h ens
wa ve (l y
M eigs

m '76 voting
•t

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..'

'.,

"
'•

,,,

"l
&lt;

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CINCINNATI I UP!) - The
infamoll8 " Red Scare" that
haunted the 1957 baseball All·
Star game was recalled toclay
when the entire Cincinnati
Reds starting lineup was
included on the 1976 National
U!ague All-Star ballot.
And, the Red-&lt;lominated
ballot means lhat what
almost happened 19 years ago
could now come about.
·In 1957, ll8ing the war cry
"Vote early and often," Reds
fans stuffed the All-Star
ballot box in hopes .that all
National League starters
would be Reds.
It worked - until then·
Baseball Commissioner Ford
Frick stepped in and kicked
three dubioll8 Cincy All-Stars
off the team.
But, with all eight (pitchers
excluded) Reds starters on
this year's official ballot, the
entire 1976 National U!ague
starting team that takes the
field in Philadelphia Jul~ 13
could .legit;imately turn out to
be wearing Cincinnati
uniforms.
"Sure,
we'll
be
encouraging our fans to vote
for the All'..Star team " a
Reds official said ~Iter
learning the welcome news.
"We might flash messages
like 'Vote a Red ticket' on the
scoreboard, but we ' won't
come out 100 per' cent and say
stuff the ballot box," he
laughed. " Let's just say,
we'll encourage 'our' fans to
vote.
"We'll be saying, 'Vote for
your favorite player,' but in
essence, we'll be advocating,
'Vote the Reds," he admitted.
In 1957, Cincy rooters
mailed in more votes than
fans from all the other
National League cities

combined.
Official ballots weren't
needed then . - a scrap of
paper with the Reds lineup
scrawled on it did just fine . In
faCt, a loclil radio station
promoted ·a massive "Reds
Write-In" campaign and even
took care of mailing in the
ballots.
And of course, Reds fans
who had voted "early and
often" were upset when Frick
booted out such "stars" as
George Crowe, Wally Post
and Gus Bell and replaced
them with the outvoted Stan
Musial, Hank Aaron and
. Willie Mays.
In the wake of the 1957
"Red Scare," fans lo;t their
voting rights and for lhe next
decade , mana,gers, coaches
and players se lected th e
lineups.
Although fans won back the
vote a few years ago, it is now
harder to stuff the ballot box
because the official voting
form must be used and
Baseball Commiss ion er
Bowie Kuhn reserves the
right to step in if he suspects
hanky -panky. •
An All..Star voting rule
states , "Th&amp; decision of the
baseball commissioner will
be final on all matters
conce rning the eJection .11
But, jll8t as the Reds made
believers out of all other
teams by winning the World
Series last year, maybe Reds
rooters can make a believer
out of the commissioner this
year.

Standin~s
ABA -Playoff Slar'ldings

By United Press International
(Semifinal Round-Best ol1

Ap~~~-N~~'.0 r~: ~ea~d~~.o~·~;·,'o1
Apr ll ·S"n An tonio 105 N.Y. 79
Apr 14.San An ton io 111 N .Y . 103~ pr 18-at San Antonio , att .
Apr lfrat New York
x -Apr 21-at Sa n Antonio
x.Apr 25 -at New York

. l&lt;entuch vs . Denv er

x -Apri l 23 or 24-al Quebec
Series c.
. (Best of Ftvel
New Eng beat Cl!:!ve, 3-0 \
Al&gt;ril 9-New Eng S Cleve 3
April 10-New Eng 6 Cleve 1
April 11 -New Eng J Cleve 2
Series o., . .
.. ( Best of Five)
Phoenix leads S. D., 2-1
Apr 9 -Phoenhc. 3 S.D. 2. ot
Apr 10-S.O. 4 Phoenix 1
Apr 13-Phoeni x 6 S.O. 4
Apr 1S-at San Diego
x -Apr 16 or 17-at Phoeni x
II· if necessary

CLEVELAND {UPI )
Cleveland Indians catcher
Ray Fosse, who injured his
left hand in a game against
Boston 1\tesday, was placed
on the 15-&lt;lay disabled list
Wednesdsy.
The Tribe called up first
baseman Doug Howard from
Its J'riple·A fa rm club al
Toledo.

3
2
2
2
1
20

We ll s ton

Logan
G ~tt l pol is

TOTALS

2
.3
J
l
-4

R OR
50 16
28 41
29 18

39
H
2fl

26
35

3.4
3 1 37
14 42

Brian Nea l for Rio Grande
College racked up three first
place finishes in the high
jump, triple jump and t2tl
high hurdles and Mike
Beverly captured first in the
100 and 220 yard dashes as
Rio Grande College knocked
off host Wilmington 1\tesday

20 249 249

Tuesday's results :
Wayerly 11 Ironton 1
Gallipolis S LogBn I
Mei gs " Jac kson l
A the ns II Wellston 5
Wednesday's result :
Jack son 15 Ath ens I
tmak eup &gt;
Thursday's gam es:
A th ens at Logan
J a ckson at Ironton
Wa11erty at Meigs
Wel lston at Gall ipol is

a f~rnoon .

Yankees in
renovated
home today
Nl':W YORK (UPI )- More
than 54,000 Yankee Stadium
landlords have paid $1.50 to
$5.50 to watch their pinstriped
tenants and the Minnesota
Twins play the first baseball
game today at the renovated
ballpark .
The stadium at 161st Street
and River Avenue in the
Bronx was called "The House
that Ruth built" on opening
day April 18, 1923, in
deference to the pot-bellied
right fielder for whom Cols.
Jacob
Ruppert
and
Tillin ghast L' Hommidieu
Hll8ton paid $100,000.
Daily News writer Ed
Hurley has dubbed the new
version "The house that you
built," in deference to city
taxpayers who have shelled
out $41 million or $75 million
or $100 million, depending on
whose estimate is used.
· In addition to several structural changes, three acres of
rea l, zipper1ess ouiJield grass
have been added, plus a
Disneyland style scoreboard,
escalators and a pinstriped
Toyota to transpori pitcher
Sparky Lyle from bullpen to
mound.
Bob Shawkey, the ~year­
old former righthander who
pitched the Yankees to a 4-1
victory ov.er the Boston Red
Sox at the first stadium
opener, was scheduled to toss
out the first ball at the new
ballpark and the usual
assortment of dignitaries was
on hand for the ceremonies as
they were 53 years ago.
However, as the New York
Time,s reported ·then, the

PORTLAND - Four~en
women make up the Portland
Women's Independent Soft.
ball ~am coached by Terry
Brewer and Donna Larkins.
Making up the ~am, called
the "Bandits" are Mindy Hill,
Brenda Lawren ce, Donna
Rose , Pa tty Young , Kay
Proffitt, Shelly Ward, Vicki
Proffitt, Donna Larkins,
Cheryl Larkins , Nancy
Cornell, Ruby Bryant, Joyce
Proffitt, Freda Middleswart
and Kenora Wolfe . The first
scrimmage will be held
Friday at 5:30p .m. here . .

SYRACUSE, N.Y. iUPI) The
Heisman Trophy
awarded to Ernie Davis in
. 1961 and stolen from
Syracuse University late last
WHA Ptayoff Standings
month
was
returned
By United Press International
Wednesday.
Series A.
An unidentified person
I Best ol Seven&gt;
Winnipeg leadl Edmntn, l -0
walked
into · the Syracuse
Apr 9-Winnlpeg 7 Edmntn 3
Apr 1 ! -Winnipeg 5 Edmn tn 4, ot Post:Standard newsroom and
Apr U -Winn ipeg 3 Edmnln 2
handed over the trophy . The
Apr i l 16-et Edmonton
return wa s made under
x -Aprll 111-at Winnipeg
x -A pril 21 -at Edmonton
condition that no information
x -Aprll 23 -at Winnipeg
concerning the person would
Series B.
be turned over to police.
( Best of Seyen)
Calgary leads Que., 3·0
The trophy.wa~ undamaged
Apr i l tO-Calgary 3 Que t
and
was restored to the
Apr!l 1\ .Catgary 11 Que 4
April 14-Calgary 3 Que 2
university, where it was put
April 16-at Celgary
back in it,s display case in
x -Apri l 18-at Quebec
x .Apri l 21-at Calgary
Manley Field House.

W L
4 1
3 2
3 1

Iron ton

Women fonn
softball team

April 15-at Denver
Apr i l 17-at Denver
Apr i l19 -et Kentucky
April 21 -al Kentu cky
x-Aprll 22 -at Den ver
x -April 25 -at Ky ., afl
X·Aprll 28 -el Denver
•-if necessary

Redmen trip
Wilmington

SEOAL BASEBALL

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standing.~

George Herman "Babe"

Ruth who built the first house
"did the real dedicating"
when he launched a lunar
probe off a low curve from
Howard Ehmke which settled
to earth about 10 rows deep in
"the right field stands.
"The big crqwd let loose a
roar that floated across the
Harlem and far beyond,'' the
TinlCS sa id.

FOSSE INJURED
CLEVELAND (UP! )
The Cleveland Indians have
called up first baseman Doug
Howard [rom its Triple-A
farm club at Toledo al~r
putting catcher Ray Fosse on
the 15-day disabled list
Wednesday. Fosse injured his
left hand in a game against
Boston 1\tesday. Fossee, 27,
6-2, 210, had three stitches
taken in his left hand after a
collision at home pia~ with
Jim Rice of the Red Sox.

-.,·

The Rio Grande distance
runners were outstanding as
usual lor the season. Fresh·
man John Anderson won the
mile, while freshman Jay
Martin and Sophomore John
Climer followed to give Rio
Grande a clean sweep for the
event. Bernie Tilley, the
highly touted Redman mile
star took the day off to rest
for the Ohio State Relays on
·

·Ranger pitchers h~d to

Saturday.
Mar tin and Anderson then
c.ombined to take first and
Second in the 880 yard run
with Climer following to give
Rio Grande a second clean
sweep. In the difficult three
mile event, Climer again
came through and took first
place and Bill Canfield and
Mark Fox of Rio Grande
swept the second and third
places.
The Redman 440 relay
team of Jl:like Beverly, Terry
Smith, Mike Riley and Brian
· Neal captured first with a
time of 46.4 sec., Tilley;
Martin, and Smith combined
with Beverly also won the
mile relay with a 3 min . 37.1
sec. time.
Jim Bennett, a former Rio
baseball pitcher turned
javelin thrower captured first
in \bat event. He had the only
points for Rio Grande in the

B0 bcat s COp
7_4 triumph weigh~events
feas~d

Kyger Creek
on six
Highlander fielding miscues
Wednesday night to defeat
the host Southwes~rn nine , 74 in an SVAC con~st. Five of
the Bobcats' seven runs were
unearned .
Coach Jim Sprague's
Bobcats opening the game ,
with two unearned runs in the
firs t frame scoring af~r two
were gone on a bad throw
over the first baseman's
head. KC righthander S~ve
Baird was perfect in the four
innings he worked. Baird did
not allow a hit or base runner.
He fanned seven .
Southwes~rn struck for its
four runs and three hits in the
fifth off junior hurler Todd
Taylor. Getting hils were Kip
U!wis, Rick Crouse and Keith
Grate. Taylor's wildness was
also a contributing factor .
U!ading the Bobcat hit
parade was southpaw
swinger Jeff Blazer who had
2-4 including a two-run
homer in the seventh inning .
Vaughn Taylor, Bill Metzner
and Baird had the other
safeties.
Lewis, the losing pitcher,
walked one bat~r and did not
strike oul anyone. Gene
Lay t on , · freshman
righthander, struckout one
and hit a bat~r .
- Southwes~rn is 24 on the
year and 1·3 in the SV AC.
Kyger Creek 3-2 in all games
recorded its first SVAC
victory after two losses.
The Highlanders are idle
until their April
22
doubleheader at North
Galiia.
Kyger Creek traveled to
Symmes Valley today.
Line score :
200' 210 2-7 5 0
K. Creek
S'western 000 040 ll-4 3 6
Baird (W) T. Taylor' (5)
and Baylor.
Lewis (L), Lewis {6) and
Crouse.

By-FRED DOWN .
UPI Sports Writer
Frank Lu.cchesi, the new
manager of the Texas
Rangers, is a man with an.
eye for figures - and he's got
a beauty to admire.
It's the 1.44 earned run
average the Ranger' pitching
staff has compiled so far this
season.
Gaylord Perry pitched a
six-hitter Wednesday night
as the Rangers beat Oakland
A's, 4-2, and swept their
three-game series with the
defending Western Division
champions. The Rangers
have won five of their six
games this season and the
pitching staff has allowed a
total of nine earned runs in 56
innings.
"Considering that the
shortened spring training
period
worked
such
hardships on pitchers it is
remarkable that we have five
complete games in six starts
and that our pitchers have
done so well," said Lucchesi.
"You have. to think this
makes
us
stronger

contenders than the experts
thought we were ~fore the
start of the season."
· Toby Harrah knocked in
the go-ahead run with single
in the fifth inning and Perry,
~. pitched powerfully until
the ninth when he allowed.lhe
A's their second run .. Perry,
who struck out six and
walked one, retired 12batters
in order after Phil Garner
singled-in the A's first run in
the top of the fifth.
Vida Blue went seven
innings lor the A's, yielding
three Texas runs, and
sufferirig his ftrst loss of the
season.
The Minnesota Twin~
defeated the Chicago White
Sox, 6·2, the Cleveland
Indians shaded the Boston
Red Sox, 6·&gt;, and the
California Angels beat the
· Kansas City Royals, 7~, in
other AL games.
In the National U!ague, it
was Houston &gt;San Francisco
3, Philadelphia 8 Montreal 2,
Chicago 6 New York &gt; and
San Diego 3 Los Angeles I.
Twins 6, White Sox 2

Joe Decker, who won onlJ
one game in 1975, allowed flv.
hits in 7 1..J innings In wlnnlnt
his first game of the ne1
season lor the Twlna. Ro
Carew and Larry Hlale eacl
knocked in two runs as th
Twins dealt Wilbur Wood th
loss. Bucky Dent had two hit
lor the White Sox.
Indians &amp;, Red Sox i
The Indians rallied from
w deficit with six runs In th
sixth inning to beat the R4!
Sox. Alan Ashby single
borne the go-ahead 111118 afU
Jenkins balked in the tyln
run. Jenkins, acquired fro1
Texas during the wlnte1
suffered his second stralgl
loss for , the AL c~pion1
Jim Rice had three hits an
Fred LY!Ul and Carlton Fls
two each lor the Red Sox.
Angels 7, Royal&amp; a
Ed Herrmann drove in fou
rwis with a three-run home
and a solo shot for the Angel
while Hal McRae hit a two
run homer lor the Royals, Sic
Monge picked up the win for :
2-3 innings of relief whiit
Marty· Pattin was the loser

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PREPARE FOR EASTER EGG SALE - TIM! pledge class of the Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority W~esqay were busy preparing lor the coloring of Easter eggs that they have
· taken orders for and others they will sell in front of the New York Clothing Store Saturday
from 10 a.m. untu 5 p.m. A bake sale will be held in conjunction with the Easter egg sale.
Eggs sell for $1 a box. Shown are, front row, 1-r, Sheila Reeves , Lynne Crow; back row,
Oleryl Crow, Sherry Abbott and Sharon Russell. The proceeds from the sale will be given to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·

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Two Bahr grievances

Mike Pruitt ·wants 3-year contract
By PETE SPUOICH
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Running backs, like actors,
are a dime a dozen, according
to Mike Pruitt of Purdue, the
No. 1 draft pick of the
Cleveland Browns.
He should know. The 6-foot
215-pound Chicago native i~
both .
Pruitt's been in three plays,
taken ballet two years, runs
track and wrestles. Hjs goal
is io start at fullback for lhe
Browns. But unlike his fellow
actors, he won't come cheap.
" II the BrO\I'llS want to get
any use out of my potential,
my contract had better be for

more than a year," said
Pruitt, who along with his
agent, Arthur Morris, met
Wednesday with owner Art
Modell and his assistant, Pete
Hadhazy, in prelim.lnary
negotiations. "I want at least
a three-year contract.
"I think I'll be at my peak
in three years. I'm not saying
I can't do the job, but it's
going to be a learning process
for me playing professional
football. It's just like going to
college all over again."
It's also going to be
refresher course for Modell,
who had trouble with Morris
in reaching agreement on a

By
United
Press
International
TRENTON, N.J. (UPI) Spokesmen for major league
football and baseball testified
at a public hearing
Wednesday against a ,
proposed referendum asking
New Jersey voters whether
they want casino gambling in
Atlantic City. ·
"This is a badly drawn'
resolution," said Jack
Danahy, director of security
for the National Football
League . "It leaves open the
possibility of sports gambling
in casinos. It eould open
sports pools and permit
betting on professional
sportS, to which we strongly
object."

signing of their second-round
choice.
Tony Gallreath, a 6-loot·l,
23().pound running back from
the .University of Missouri,
signed a five-year contract
for an undisclosed amount,
according to coach Hank
Stram.
The Saints 1itesday an·
nounced the signing of Chuck
Muncie, their No. I draft
pick.

ORCHARD LAKE, Mich.
{UPI) - Stan Coveleski,
former pitcher with the
Cleveland Indians; Ted
Marchibroda, a former coach
of the NFL's Baltimore Colts,
and Johnny Crimmins, who
won the 1941 All-Star Bowling
Tournament in 1941, have
been elected to the Polish·
American Sports Hall of
Fame to boost the total
- number of honorees to 10.
The trio joins baseball's
Stan Musial, Ted Kluszewski ,
Al Simmons, track star Stella
Walsh, softball's Ed Tyson,
boxing's Tony Zale, and foot·
ball's Alex Wojciechowicz.

ADDRESSES WANTED
The Point Pleasant High
School Class of 1971 is in the
process of planning their live ·
year reunion, and needs
addresses of all graduates.
Please contact the following
phone numbers so they can
get addresses and discuss
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) ideas of the reunion: before
The New Orleans Saints, the
·ve, 675-2907 and after five,
first team in the National
o/5-1123 or 675-2757.
Football U!ague to sign their
first -round draft choice,
Wednesday announced the

· contract for former Browns'
running back Ron Johnson,
who has since been traded to
the New York Giants.
"Arthur and 1 had our
share oi differences then, but
I'm sure we'll be able to work
something out that'll be good
for both sides," Modell said. ·
The 23-year-{)ld Pruitt,
Purdue 's Most Valuable
. Player who gained 899 yards
this past season-an average
of 4.1 yards per carry-says
Morris will do all the
bickering .
"Arthur and I discussed
what I would like in the
contract, but he's going to
handle all the negotiations,"
said Pruitt, who also caught
eight passes for 62 yards.
"The only thing I can give the
ballclub in return is my
talent, my 110 per cent
dedication and my leadership
ability.
"I plan to do the best I can.
It's been my life-long ·
ambition to play professional.
football and I'm glad to be
playing with the Browns. It'll
be great; a fantastic
experience."
The same could hold true
for the Browns' opponents
next season when head coach
Forrest Gregg uses Pruitt

ATLANTA IUP I) - Six
free agents, including a
skiing star wbo also placekicks, have been signed by ·
· the Atlanta Falcons.
AFalcons' spokesman said
the kicker was Bernt
Rognstad, runnerup in the
1974 NCAA Nordic skiing
championships.
'
Others signed were Isiah
Roddie, a defensive back
from Clark College in
Atlanta; offensive tackles
Larry Favorite of Grambling
and David Van Halanger ·of
West Virginia; free safety
and punt returner Marke
Burke from West Virginia
and Maurice White, a running
back from Miles College.

and scatback Greg Pruib
from Oklahoma as a tanden
in the backfield.
"I think of myseU better a1
a ballcarrier," says Mike
Pruitt, ·who can operate
efficiently from eit])er of the
backfield positions. "I can
read defenses well and can
play offense as well as
anybody.
"On certain coverages 1
like to bowl people over. But
other times, like against big
linemen like Pittsburgh's Joe
Greene, you know you can't
knock him off his feet ,
yourself. You rely on the
linemen to do it for you. The11
you just have the defensive
backs left to pass so you ·
become an elusive butterfly."

DAN'S .
In Middleport ·
Headquarters For

BOOTS:
Justin
Texas
Sheboygan
Knapp
"We Service What
We Sell"

Easter Spring Aing
••••

BA~AAR
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY,
APRIL 16 &amp; 17
ntRIFT SHOP BUILDING
(Across From Pomeroy Post
Office)
Baked goods; sandwiches, c~ffee,
pop, Planters, . flowers, Easter
nohons, door pnzes.

. are denied by board ·
,
.,

Gallla County's Local
Board of Education Wed·
nesday In a recessed 3esslon
denied two grievances filed
by William Bahr, President
of the Gallla County Local
Teachers' Assn. against
Kyger Creek Principal
Robert L. Lanning and
County Sohool Superlnlendent C. Comer Bradbury.
The declal~n came after the
board met 10 executive
&amp;eS!IIon with Ute teachers'
Grievance Committee
composed of Kyger Creek
teachers Lloyd Danner,
Aileen Rutz .and Bahr, and
James Foster, Vinton
Elementary School. Also
attending the session were
Principal Lanning, Supt.
Bradbury and Gary Minton,
KC guidance counselor.
The vote to disallow was 3·1
with board member James
Blevins saying no. Board
member James C. Mitchell
was absent. .
Both grievances had been
formally answered by

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Just In Time

.I '

For Spring!
•••
••

I

-Dv · Humane Society of Meigs
~------~co~u~n~tv-----------------------1
Sponsored

TRUCK LOAD SALE
PLASTIC SEWER AND
DRAIN .PIPE

Tucker brought Thompson
home with a line single to
right for the White Falcons
second run of the Inning.
Mike Goldsberry reached
base after beating out a bunt
and stole second to put
runners on second and third.
An unsuccessful. squeeze
bunt erased Tucker but
Duke Smith came through
with a clutch single to score
Goldsberry with what
proved to be the winning run.
The Putnam County nine .
add!!d their final tally in the
filth but Smith came on to
shut tlie door giving the
White Falcons a 3·2 win .
Terry Tucker stroked two
of the Falcons eight hits with
Sayre, Thompson, Gold·
sberry, Duke Smith, Buzzard
and Ken Riggs all collecting
singles.
Wahama with a H record
is on. the road again today
seeking their filth con·
secutive victory. Poca is the
site with · the Winfield
Generals providing the
opposition. Two games are
on tap lor tomorrow af·
ternoon . At 2:30 Coach
Richard Clines' res.erve

Redmen cop
double bill

Coach C. L. (Johnny )
Ecker's Rio Grande College
Redmen upped their season
record to 16-7 following a
double victory over West
Virginia Tech at Montgomery
1itesday afternoon.
Rio won the firsl game 9.0
behind the lour-hit pitching of
· Skipper Johnson . The Rea.
-men blanked the Bears 5-0 in
the nightcap. Wes Hairston
hurled the first four rungs.
Dave Huesman pitched two
and Mike Spadafora one
inning for Rio in the nightcap.
Candidates in
Mike Prater. was the big
gun for Rio, banging out five
hits dur.ing the afternoon .
New Haven will
Saturday, the Eckermen
will take on Cedarville at
Cedarville. It will be a Mid·
file by May 4th
Ohio Conference twinbill. The
first game starts ai l p. m.
NEW HAVEN , W.Va. - As Rio is 4·2 in league play.
the June I town election date
is fast approaching here the
town council Tuesday
evening set May 4 for a public
meeting to establish party
~ckels.
.
Therefore anyone wishing
to run for mayor, recorder or
council should file their name
on a ticket at the city building
on or before May 4.
In other· action , the council
approved. a $500 matching
expenditure with Ute New
Haven Volunteer Fire
for
the
Department
replacement of the fire
station door. The door will
cost approximately $1,000
and agreed to purchase
additional water pipes for the
town to be laid between two
water pumps.
A\tending were Mayor
Charles Smith, recorder
Shelby Duncan and council
members Bernard Ueving,
Charles Roush and Thomas
Grinstead.

squad will entertain. the
Gallipolis Reserves with the
White Falcon varsity
meeting Buffalo (P) at 4:30
to cap off a double header of
action. Duval visits Mason
on Saturday for a twin bill to
comolete the week.
1234567 RHE
Wahama 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 3 8 4
,Buf
falo ( P) 0 l 0 0 I 0 0 2 4 2
Winning Pitcher : Rick
Buzzard (1.0)

·'~1~

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Choice of Salad, Potato, French Bread and coHee, tea or milk
with any of the above entrees.

Selet.:t .

dressing. up
for Easter!

Friday &amp; Saturday

'I

Lanning and Bradbury but
· were taken to the board ~s the
next s~p under terms of th~
negotiated contract between.{;
the board and teachers•{!
association.
]
Mrs. Vita Carman, Ad.:! :
dison, was employed as·
kin'dergar~n teacher in the
Kyger Creek area for ·thii
remainder of the school year.
She replaces the late Violet
Russell.
.In other matters, the board
transferred $4,000 from the
Contingency F!llld to account
BOBBY ELKINS
A-21 to pay for the teacher's
A ' spring revival will
aide employed at Cheshire. begin April 19 and continue
Kyger Elementary School. through April 25 at 7:30
Denny Cleaning Service of each evening at the
Wellson was hired for · · Burlingham Southern
cleaning duties at Hannan
Baptist Chapel. The Rev.
Trace High School which was Bobby Elkins, pastor of the
struck by vandals Monday. Burllligham and Mid·
A 15-man crew began
dleport Chapeis, sponsored
"clean-up" operations there
by the French City Baptist
. this morning. It is hoped work · Church, GalUpolls, will be
will be completed ln time lor
the evangelist. Ail Easter
classes to resume 1itesday,
sunrise service Is also
April 20.
planned for 6 a: m. at the
An insurance check State Par~ ~n Route 33,
'
going north, at 6 a. m. with
,. · covenng
money stolen from a
the.
Rev. Mr. Elkins, In
breaking and entering last
charge.
"He Uves", will be
February at Hannan Trace
was transferred to Principal
Rev. Mr. Ellllns topic.
Paul Dillon. James Blaschek,
compliance officer lor the
Federal Wage and Hour INSTANT WINNERS
Division , ·Department of
CLEV-ELAND (UPI) - An
Labor, explained procedures '.'instant game" proposal will
and board compliances under be considered by the Ohio
the new minimum wage Lottery Commission at its
procedures. Atty. Bill regular meeting Friday.
Eachus, the board's legal
A commission spokesman
advisor, was present to said under the proposal, a
discuss the compliances.
. purchaser of a lottery ticket
In final action, the board would know right away if he
agreed to meet Friday, April had a winning ti~ket.
23, at 7:30 p. m. to employ
The commission will
teaching and non&lt;ertilicated discuss other'proposals at the
employees.
10 a.m. meeting at
commission
headquarters.
SfOCKSALE
CLEVELAND (UPI) - A
registration statement filed
Wednesday
with
the
Securities and Exchange
Commission proposed the
sale of 2.j million shares of
common stock of the
C I e v e Ian d .EJ.e c t ric
lliurninating Co.
Proceeds of the sale, sche~
duled Ill be offered May 12,
HALLMARK
will go towarfls retiring some
short-term debt the company
incurred to temporarily
finance Its construction'
program.

Mark Smith, Freshman
pitcher, came on in relief
Wednesday aftem.oon with
the
bases
loaded an~
pr9mptly shut the door to
preserve a narrow 3·2
Wahama Whiite Falcon win
over the Buffalo Bisons of
Putnam County.
Smith took over for
Wahama starter · Rick
. Buzzard in the fifth inning
after Buzzard had run into. a
control problem issuing
three consecutive ba~s on
balls to fill the sacks. The
first batter Smith faced hit a
fly ball to the outfield to
bring home a run. The fresh·
man righthander struck out
the next opponent to ex·
tingulsh the rally and save
the victory lor the bend area
school.
Buzzard came away with
the victory, 1 his first of the
year, after a pitching four
and one-third innings of
reputable baseball giving up
only three hits. Smith
finished the contest in
picking up the save allowing
only one hit in his two and
two-thirds stint on the
mound.
Buffalo took a 1.0 lead in
the second on tc hits. White
singled to open the frame
and went to second when the
following batter grounded
out. The Bison runner ad·
vanced to third on a fly ball
and later scored on a single
by Mark Burgess.
The local nine took the lead
in the top half of the third
when they plated three runs
on three hits. Tim "The
Rabbit" Sayre led off the
inning with a single. The
"Rabbit" stole second and
scored when Tim Thompsons' fly ball was dropped for
a two-base error. Terry

dressing up
for Easter!

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Falcons edge Buffalo 3-2

4---The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport , 0 ., Thursday, April 15, 1976

•

SEV

Red Scare real

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TEAM
Jackson
At h ens
wa ve (l y
M eigs

m '76 voting
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CINCINNATI I UP!) - The
infamoll8 " Red Scare" that
haunted the 1957 baseball All·
Star game was recalled toclay
when the entire Cincinnati
Reds starting lineup was
included on the 1976 National
U!ague All-Star ballot.
And, the Red-&lt;lominated
ballot means lhat what
almost happened 19 years ago
could now come about.
·In 1957, ll8ing the war cry
"Vote early and often," Reds
fans stuffed the All-Star
ballot box in hopes .that all
National League starters
would be Reds.
It worked - until then·
Baseball Commissioner Ford
Frick stepped in and kicked
three dubioll8 Cincy All-Stars
off the team.
But, with all eight (pitchers
excluded) Reds starters on
this year's official ballot, the
entire 1976 National U!ague
starting team that takes the
field in Philadelphia Jul~ 13
could .legit;imately turn out to
be wearing Cincinnati
uniforms.
"Sure,
we'll
be
encouraging our fans to vote
for the All'..Star team " a
Reds official said ~Iter
learning the welcome news.
"We might flash messages
like 'Vote a Red ticket' on the
scoreboard, but we ' won't
come out 100 per' cent and say
stuff the ballot box," he
laughed. " Let's just say,
we'll encourage 'our' fans to
vote.
"We'll be saying, 'Vote for
your favorite player,' but in
essence, we'll be advocating,
'Vote the Reds," he admitted.
In 1957, Cincy rooters
mailed in more votes than
fans from all the other
National League cities

combined.
Official ballots weren't
needed then . - a scrap of
paper with the Reds lineup
scrawled on it did just fine . In
faCt, a loclil radio station
promoted ·a massive "Reds
Write-In" campaign and even
took care of mailing in the
ballots.
And of course, Reds fans
who had voted "early and
often" were upset when Frick
booted out such "stars" as
George Crowe, Wally Post
and Gus Bell and replaced
them with the outvoted Stan
Musial, Hank Aaron and
. Willie Mays.
In the wake of the 1957
"Red Scare," fans lo;t their
voting rights and for lhe next
decade , mana,gers, coaches
and players se lected th e
lineups.
Although fans won back the
vote a few years ago, it is now
harder to stuff the ballot box
because the official voting
form must be used and
Baseball Commiss ion er
Bowie Kuhn reserves the
right to step in if he suspects
hanky -panky. •
An All..Star voting rule
states , "Th&amp; decision of the
baseball commissioner will
be final on all matters
conce rning the eJection .11
But, jll8t as the Reds made
believers out of all other
teams by winning the World
Series last year, maybe Reds
rooters can make a believer
out of the commissioner this
year.

Standin~s
ABA -Playoff Slar'ldings

By United Press International
(Semifinal Round-Best ol1

Ap~~~-N~~'.0 r~: ~ea~d~~.o~·~;·,'o1
Apr ll ·S"n An tonio 105 N.Y. 79
Apr 14.San An ton io 111 N .Y . 103~ pr 18-at San Antonio , att .
Apr lfrat New York
x -Apr 21-at Sa n Antonio
x.Apr 25 -at New York

. l&lt;entuch vs . Denv er

x -Apri l 23 or 24-al Quebec
Series c.
. (Best of Ftvel
New Eng beat Cl!:!ve, 3-0 \
Al&gt;ril 9-New Eng S Cleve 3
April 10-New Eng 6 Cleve 1
April 11 -New Eng J Cleve 2
Series o., . .
.. ( Best of Five)
Phoenix leads S. D., 2-1
Apr 9 -Phoenhc. 3 S.D. 2. ot
Apr 10-S.O. 4 Phoenix 1
Apr 13-Phoeni x 6 S.O. 4
Apr 1S-at San Diego
x -Apr 16 or 17-at Phoeni x
II· if necessary

CLEVELAND {UPI )
Cleveland Indians catcher
Ray Fosse, who injured his
left hand in a game against
Boston 1\tesday, was placed
on the 15-&lt;lay disabled list
Wednesdsy.
The Tribe called up first
baseman Doug Howard from
Its J'riple·A fa rm club al
Toledo.

3
2
2
2
1
20

We ll s ton

Logan
G ~tt l pol is

TOTALS

2
.3
J
l
-4

R OR
50 16
28 41
29 18

39
H
2fl

26
35

3.4
3 1 37
14 42

Brian Nea l for Rio Grande
College racked up three first
place finishes in the high
jump, triple jump and t2tl
high hurdles and Mike
Beverly captured first in the
100 and 220 yard dashes as
Rio Grande College knocked
off host Wilmington 1\tesday

20 249 249

Tuesday's results :
Wayerly 11 Ironton 1
Gallipolis S LogBn I
Mei gs " Jac kson l
A the ns II Wellston 5
Wednesday's result :
Jack son 15 Ath ens I
tmak eup &gt;
Thursday's gam es:
A th ens at Logan
J a ckson at Ironton
Wa11erty at Meigs
Wel lston at Gall ipol is

a f~rnoon .

Yankees in
renovated
home today
Nl':W YORK (UPI )- More
than 54,000 Yankee Stadium
landlords have paid $1.50 to
$5.50 to watch their pinstriped
tenants and the Minnesota
Twins play the first baseball
game today at the renovated
ballpark .
The stadium at 161st Street
and River Avenue in the
Bronx was called "The House
that Ruth built" on opening
day April 18, 1923, in
deference to the pot-bellied
right fielder for whom Cols.
Jacob
Ruppert
and
Tillin ghast L' Hommidieu
Hll8ton paid $100,000.
Daily News writer Ed
Hurley has dubbed the new
version "The house that you
built," in deference to city
taxpayers who have shelled
out $41 million or $75 million
or $100 million, depending on
whose estimate is used.
· In addition to several structural changes, three acres of
rea l, zipper1ess ouiJield grass
have been added, plus a
Disneyland style scoreboard,
escalators and a pinstriped
Toyota to transpori pitcher
Sparky Lyle from bullpen to
mound.
Bob Shawkey, the ~year­
old former righthander who
pitched the Yankees to a 4-1
victory ov.er the Boston Red
Sox at the first stadium
opener, was scheduled to toss
out the first ball at the new
ballpark and the usual
assortment of dignitaries was
on hand for the ceremonies as
they were 53 years ago.
However, as the New York
Time,s reported ·then, the

PORTLAND - Four~en
women make up the Portland
Women's Independent Soft.
ball ~am coached by Terry
Brewer and Donna Larkins.
Making up the ~am, called
the "Bandits" are Mindy Hill,
Brenda Lawren ce, Donna
Rose , Pa tty Young , Kay
Proffitt, Shelly Ward, Vicki
Proffitt, Donna Larkins,
Cheryl Larkins , Nancy
Cornell, Ruby Bryant, Joyce
Proffitt, Freda Middleswart
and Kenora Wolfe . The first
scrimmage will be held
Friday at 5:30p .m. here . .

SYRACUSE, N.Y. iUPI) The
Heisman Trophy
awarded to Ernie Davis in
. 1961 and stolen from
Syracuse University late last
WHA Ptayoff Standings
month
was
returned
By United Press International
Wednesday.
Series A.
An unidentified person
I Best ol Seven&gt;
Winnipeg leadl Edmntn, l -0
walked
into · the Syracuse
Apr 9-Winnlpeg 7 Edmntn 3
Apr 1 ! -Winnipeg 5 Edmn tn 4, ot Post:Standard newsroom and
Apr U -Winn ipeg 3 Edmnln 2
handed over the trophy . The
Apr i l 16-et Edmonton
return wa s made under
x -Aprll 111-at Winnipeg
x -A pril 21 -at Edmonton
condition that no information
x -Aprll 23 -at Winnipeg
concerning the person would
Series B.
be turned over to police.
( Best of Seyen)
Calgary leads Que., 3·0
The trophy.wa~ undamaged
Apr i l tO-Calgary 3 Que t
and
was restored to the
Apr!l 1\ .Catgary 11 Que 4
April 14-Calgary 3 Que 2
university, where it was put
April 16-at Celgary
back in it,s display case in
x -Apri l 18-at Quebec
x .Apri l 21-at Calgary
Manley Field House.

W L
4 1
3 2
3 1

Iron ton

Women fonn
softball team

April 15-at Denver
Apr i l 17-at Denver
Apr i l19 -et Kentucky
April 21 -al Kentu cky
x-Aprll 22 -at Den ver
x -April 25 -at Ky ., afl
X·Aprll 28 -el Denver
•-if necessary

Redmen trip
Wilmington

SEOAL BASEBALL

•

••
•••
'

standing.~

George Herman "Babe"

Ruth who built the first house
"did the real dedicating"
when he launched a lunar
probe off a low curve from
Howard Ehmke which settled
to earth about 10 rows deep in
"the right field stands.
"The big crqwd let loose a
roar that floated across the
Harlem and far beyond,'' the
TinlCS sa id.

FOSSE INJURED
CLEVELAND (UP! )
The Cleveland Indians have
called up first baseman Doug
Howard [rom its Triple-A
farm club at Toledo al~r
putting catcher Ray Fosse on
the 15-day disabled list
Wednesday. Fosse injured his
left hand in a game against
Boston 1\tesday. Fossee, 27,
6-2, 210, had three stitches
taken in his left hand after a
collision at home pia~ with
Jim Rice of the Red Sox.

-.,·

The Rio Grande distance
runners were outstanding as
usual lor the season. Fresh·
man John Anderson won the
mile, while freshman Jay
Martin and Sophomore John
Climer followed to give Rio
Grande a clean sweep for the
event. Bernie Tilley, the
highly touted Redman mile
star took the day off to rest
for the Ohio State Relays on
·

·Ranger pitchers h~d to

Saturday.
Mar tin and Anderson then
c.ombined to take first and
Second in the 880 yard run
with Climer following to give
Rio Grande a second clean
sweep. In the difficult three
mile event, Climer again
came through and took first
place and Bill Canfield and
Mark Fox of Rio Grande
swept the second and third
places.
The Redman 440 relay
team of Jl:like Beverly, Terry
Smith, Mike Riley and Brian
· Neal captured first with a
time of 46.4 sec., Tilley;
Martin, and Smith combined
with Beverly also won the
mile relay with a 3 min . 37.1
sec. time.
Jim Bennett, a former Rio
baseball pitcher turned
javelin thrower captured first
in \bat event. He had the only
points for Rio Grande in the

B0 bcat s COp
7_4 triumph weigh~events
feas~d

Kyger Creek
on six
Highlander fielding miscues
Wednesday night to defeat
the host Southwes~rn nine , 74 in an SVAC con~st. Five of
the Bobcats' seven runs were
unearned .
Coach Jim Sprague's
Bobcats opening the game ,
with two unearned runs in the
firs t frame scoring af~r two
were gone on a bad throw
over the first baseman's
head. KC righthander S~ve
Baird was perfect in the four
innings he worked. Baird did
not allow a hit or base runner.
He fanned seven .
Southwes~rn struck for its
four runs and three hits in the
fifth off junior hurler Todd
Taylor. Getting hils were Kip
U!wis, Rick Crouse and Keith
Grate. Taylor's wildness was
also a contributing factor .
U!ading the Bobcat hit
parade was southpaw
swinger Jeff Blazer who had
2-4 including a two-run
homer in the seventh inning .
Vaughn Taylor, Bill Metzner
and Baird had the other
safeties.
Lewis, the losing pitcher,
walked one bat~r and did not
strike oul anyone. Gene
Lay t on , · freshman
righthander, struckout one
and hit a bat~r .
- Southwes~rn is 24 on the
year and 1·3 in the SV AC.
Kyger Creek 3-2 in all games
recorded its first SVAC
victory after two losses.
The Highlanders are idle
until their April
22
doubleheader at North
Galiia.
Kyger Creek traveled to
Symmes Valley today.
Line score :
200' 210 2-7 5 0
K. Creek
S'western 000 040 ll-4 3 6
Baird (W) T. Taylor' (5)
and Baylor.
Lewis (L), Lewis {6) and
Crouse.

By-FRED DOWN .
UPI Sports Writer
Frank Lu.cchesi, the new
manager of the Texas
Rangers, is a man with an.
eye for figures - and he's got
a beauty to admire.
It's the 1.44 earned run
average the Ranger' pitching
staff has compiled so far this
season.
Gaylord Perry pitched a
six-hitter Wednesday night
as the Rangers beat Oakland
A's, 4-2, and swept their
three-game series with the
defending Western Division
champions. The Rangers
have won five of their six
games this season and the
pitching staff has allowed a
total of nine earned runs in 56
innings.
"Considering that the
shortened spring training
period
worked
such
hardships on pitchers it is
remarkable that we have five
complete games in six starts
and that our pitchers have
done so well," said Lucchesi.
"You have. to think this
makes
us
stronger

contenders than the experts
thought we were ~fore the
start of the season."
· Toby Harrah knocked in
the go-ahead run with single
in the fifth inning and Perry,
~. pitched powerfully until
the ninth when he allowed.lhe
A's their second run .. Perry,
who struck out six and
walked one, retired 12batters
in order after Phil Garner
singled-in the A's first run in
the top of the fifth.
Vida Blue went seven
innings lor the A's, yielding
three Texas runs, and
sufferirig his ftrst loss of the
season.
The Minnesota Twin~
defeated the Chicago White
Sox, 6·2, the Cleveland
Indians shaded the Boston
Red Sox, 6·&gt;, and the
California Angels beat the
· Kansas City Royals, 7~, in
other AL games.
In the National U!ague, it
was Houston &gt;San Francisco
3, Philadelphia 8 Montreal 2,
Chicago 6 New York &gt; and
San Diego 3 Los Angeles I.
Twins 6, White Sox 2

Joe Decker, who won onlJ
one game in 1975, allowed flv.
hits in 7 1..J innings In wlnnlnt
his first game of the ne1
season lor the Twlna. Ro
Carew and Larry Hlale eacl
knocked in two runs as th
Twins dealt Wilbur Wood th
loss. Bucky Dent had two hit
lor the White Sox.
Indians &amp;, Red Sox i
The Indians rallied from
w deficit with six runs In th
sixth inning to beat the R4!
Sox. Alan Ashby single
borne the go-ahead 111118 afU
Jenkins balked in the tyln
run. Jenkins, acquired fro1
Texas during the wlnte1
suffered his second stralgl
loss for , the AL c~pion1
Jim Rice had three hits an
Fred LY!Ul and Carlton Fls
two each lor the Red Sox.
Angels 7, Royal&amp; a
Ed Herrmann drove in fou
rwis with a three-run home
and a solo shot for the Angel
while Hal McRae hit a two
run homer lor the Royals, Sic
Monge picked up the win for :
2-3 innings of relief whiit
Marty· Pattin was the loser

•
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••

.. .
....
"'
I"! I

'"
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"

•••••
PREPARE FOR EASTER EGG SALE - TIM! pledge class of the Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority W~esqay were busy preparing lor the coloring of Easter eggs that they have
· taken orders for and others they will sell in front of the New York Clothing Store Saturday
from 10 a.m. untu 5 p.m. A bake sale will be held in conjunction with the Easter egg sale.
Eggs sell for $1 a box. Shown are, front row, 1-r, Sheila Reeves , Lynne Crow; back row,
Oleryl Crow, Sherry Abbott and Sharon Russell. The proceeds from the sale will be given to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·

'"

'"

...
...

Two Bahr grievances

Mike Pruitt ·wants 3-year contract
By PETE SPUOICH
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Running backs, like actors,
are a dime a dozen, according
to Mike Pruitt of Purdue, the
No. 1 draft pick of the
Cleveland Browns.
He should know. The 6-foot
215-pound Chicago native i~
both .
Pruitt's been in three plays,
taken ballet two years, runs
track and wrestles. Hjs goal
is io start at fullback for lhe
Browns. But unlike his fellow
actors, he won't come cheap.
" II the BrO\I'llS want to get
any use out of my potential,
my contract had better be for

more than a year," said
Pruitt, who along with his
agent, Arthur Morris, met
Wednesday with owner Art
Modell and his assistant, Pete
Hadhazy, in prelim.lnary
negotiations. "I want at least
a three-year contract.
"I think I'll be at my peak
in three years. I'm not saying
I can't do the job, but it's
going to be a learning process
for me playing professional
football. It's just like going to
college all over again."
It's also going to be
refresher course for Modell,
who had trouble with Morris
in reaching agreement on a

By
United
Press
International
TRENTON, N.J. (UPI) Spokesmen for major league
football and baseball testified
at a public hearing
Wednesday against a ,
proposed referendum asking
New Jersey voters whether
they want casino gambling in
Atlantic City. ·
"This is a badly drawn'
resolution," said Jack
Danahy, director of security
for the National Football
League . "It leaves open the
possibility of sports gambling
in casinos. It eould open
sports pools and permit
betting on professional
sportS, to which we strongly
object."

signing of their second-round
choice.
Tony Gallreath, a 6-loot·l,
23().pound running back from
the .University of Missouri,
signed a five-year contract
for an undisclosed amount,
according to coach Hank
Stram.
The Saints 1itesday an·
nounced the signing of Chuck
Muncie, their No. I draft
pick.

ORCHARD LAKE, Mich.
{UPI) - Stan Coveleski,
former pitcher with the
Cleveland Indians; Ted
Marchibroda, a former coach
of the NFL's Baltimore Colts,
and Johnny Crimmins, who
won the 1941 All-Star Bowling
Tournament in 1941, have
been elected to the Polish·
American Sports Hall of
Fame to boost the total
- number of honorees to 10.
The trio joins baseball's
Stan Musial, Ted Kluszewski ,
Al Simmons, track star Stella
Walsh, softball's Ed Tyson,
boxing's Tony Zale, and foot·
ball's Alex Wojciechowicz.

ADDRESSES WANTED
The Point Pleasant High
School Class of 1971 is in the
process of planning their live ·
year reunion, and needs
addresses of all graduates.
Please contact the following
phone numbers so they can
get addresses and discuss
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) ideas of the reunion: before
The New Orleans Saints, the
·ve, 675-2907 and after five,
first team in the National
o/5-1123 or 675-2757.
Football U!ague to sign their
first -round draft choice,
Wednesday announced the

· contract for former Browns'
running back Ron Johnson,
who has since been traded to
the New York Giants.
"Arthur and 1 had our
share oi differences then, but
I'm sure we'll be able to work
something out that'll be good
for both sides," Modell said. ·
The 23-year-{)ld Pruitt,
Purdue 's Most Valuable
. Player who gained 899 yards
this past season-an average
of 4.1 yards per carry-says
Morris will do all the
bickering .
"Arthur and I discussed
what I would like in the
contract, but he's going to
handle all the negotiations,"
said Pruitt, who also caught
eight passes for 62 yards.
"The only thing I can give the
ballclub in return is my
talent, my 110 per cent
dedication and my leadership
ability.
"I plan to do the best I can.
It's been my life-long ·
ambition to play professional.
football and I'm glad to be
playing with the Browns. It'll
be great; a fantastic
experience."
The same could hold true
for the Browns' opponents
next season when head coach
Forrest Gregg uses Pruitt

ATLANTA IUP I) - Six
free agents, including a
skiing star wbo also placekicks, have been signed by ·
· the Atlanta Falcons.
AFalcons' spokesman said
the kicker was Bernt
Rognstad, runnerup in the
1974 NCAA Nordic skiing
championships.
'
Others signed were Isiah
Roddie, a defensive back
from Clark College in
Atlanta; offensive tackles
Larry Favorite of Grambling
and David Van Halanger ·of
West Virginia; free safety
and punt returner Marke
Burke from West Virginia
and Maurice White, a running
back from Miles College.

and scatback Greg Pruib
from Oklahoma as a tanden
in the backfield.
"I think of myseU better a1
a ballcarrier," says Mike
Pruitt, ·who can operate
efficiently from eit])er of the
backfield positions. "I can
read defenses well and can
play offense as well as
anybody.
"On certain coverages 1
like to bowl people over. But
other times, like against big
linemen like Pittsburgh's Joe
Greene, you know you can't
knock him off his feet ,
yourself. You rely on the
linemen to do it for you. The11
you just have the defensive
backs left to pass so you ·
become an elusive butterfly."

DAN'S .
In Middleport ·
Headquarters For

BOOTS:
Justin
Texas
Sheboygan
Knapp
"We Service What
We Sell"

Easter Spring Aing
••••

BA~AAR
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY,
APRIL 16 &amp; 17
ntRIFT SHOP BUILDING
(Across From Pomeroy Post
Office)
Baked goods; sandwiches, c~ffee,
pop, Planters, . flowers, Easter
nohons, door pnzes.

. are denied by board ·
,
.,

Gallla County's Local
Board of Education Wed·
nesday In a recessed 3esslon
denied two grievances filed
by William Bahr, President
of the Gallla County Local
Teachers' Assn. against
Kyger Creek Principal
Robert L. Lanning and
County Sohool Superlnlendent C. Comer Bradbury.
The declal~n came after the
board met 10 executive
&amp;eS!IIon with Ute teachers'
Grievance Committee
composed of Kyger Creek
teachers Lloyd Danner,
Aileen Rutz .and Bahr, and
James Foster, Vinton
Elementary School. Also
attending the session were
Principal Lanning, Supt.
Bradbury and Gary Minton,
KC guidance counselor.
The vote to disallow was 3·1
with board member James
Blevins saying no. Board
member James C. Mitchell
was absent. .
Both grievances had been
formally answered by

"·,

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•

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

I'·

••
••

•

•'
•

Just In Time

.I '

For Spring!
•••
••

I

-Dv · Humane Society of Meigs
~------~co~u~n~tv-----------------------1
Sponsored

TRUCK LOAD SALE
PLASTIC SEWER AND
DRAIN .PIPE

Tucker brought Thompson
home with a line single to
right for the White Falcons
second run of the Inning.
Mike Goldsberry reached
base after beating out a bunt
and stole second to put
runners on second and third.
An unsuccessful. squeeze
bunt erased Tucker but
Duke Smith came through
with a clutch single to score
Goldsberry with what
proved to be the winning run.
The Putnam County nine .
add!!d their final tally in the
filth but Smith came on to
shut tlie door giving the
White Falcons a 3·2 win .
Terry Tucker stroked two
of the Falcons eight hits with
Sayre, Thompson, Gold·
sberry, Duke Smith, Buzzard
and Ken Riggs all collecting
singles.
Wahama with a H record
is on. the road again today
seeking their filth con·
secutive victory. Poca is the
site with · the Winfield
Generals providing the
opposition. Two games are
on tap lor tomorrow af·
ternoon . At 2:30 Coach
Richard Clines' res.erve

Redmen cop
double bill

Coach C. L. (Johnny )
Ecker's Rio Grande College
Redmen upped their season
record to 16-7 following a
double victory over West
Virginia Tech at Montgomery
1itesday afternoon.
Rio won the firsl game 9.0
behind the lour-hit pitching of
· Skipper Johnson . The Rea.
-men blanked the Bears 5-0 in
the nightcap. Wes Hairston
hurled the first four rungs.
Dave Huesman pitched two
and Mike Spadafora one
inning for Rio in the nightcap.
Candidates in
Mike Prater. was the big
gun for Rio, banging out five
hits dur.ing the afternoon .
New Haven will
Saturday, the Eckermen
will take on Cedarville at
Cedarville. It will be a Mid·
file by May 4th
Ohio Conference twinbill. The
first game starts ai l p. m.
NEW HAVEN , W.Va. - As Rio is 4·2 in league play.
the June I town election date
is fast approaching here the
town council Tuesday
evening set May 4 for a public
meeting to establish party
~ckels.
.
Therefore anyone wishing
to run for mayor, recorder or
council should file their name
on a ticket at the city building
on or before May 4.
In other· action , the council
approved. a $500 matching
expenditure with Ute New
Haven Volunteer Fire
for
the
Department
replacement of the fire
station door. The door will
cost approximately $1,000
and agreed to purchase
additional water pipes for the
town to be laid between two
water pumps.
A\tending were Mayor
Charles Smith, recorder
Shelby Duncan and council
members Bernard Ueving,
Charles Roush and Thomas
Grinstead.

squad will entertain. the
Gallipolis Reserves with the
White Falcon varsity
meeting Buffalo (P) at 4:30
to cap off a double header of
action. Duval visits Mason
on Saturday for a twin bill to
comolete the week.
1234567 RHE
Wahama 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 3 8 4
,Buf
falo ( P) 0 l 0 0 I 0 0 2 4 2
Winning Pitcher : Rick
Buzzard (1.0)

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SAVE SBO ~~~~','" s2199o
on Ouecrt ~tl C ~e l ~ NOW

-For

AYAILAILIIOI RINTAL

STAR
SUPPLY

SAVE$60

BY RUSSELL STOVER

'250

Choice of Salad, Potato, French Bread and coHee, tea or milk
with any of the above entrees.

Selet.:t .

dressing. up
for Easter!

Friday &amp; Saturday

'I

Lanning and Bradbury but
· were taken to the board ~s the
next s~p under terms of th~
negotiated contract between.{;
the board and teachers•{!
association.
]
Mrs. Vita Carman, Ad.:! :
dison, was employed as·
kin'dergar~n teacher in the
Kyger Creek area for ·thii
remainder of the school year.
She replaces the late Violet
Russell.
.In other matters, the board
transferred $4,000 from the
Contingency F!llld to account
BOBBY ELKINS
A-21 to pay for the teacher's
A ' spring revival will
aide employed at Cheshire. begin April 19 and continue
Kyger Elementary School. through April 25 at 7:30
Denny Cleaning Service of each evening at the
Wellson was hired for · · Burlingham Southern
cleaning duties at Hannan
Baptist Chapel. The Rev.
Trace High School which was Bobby Elkins, pastor of the
struck by vandals Monday. Burllligham and Mid·
A 15-man crew began
dleport Chapeis, sponsored
"clean-up" operations there
by the French City Baptist
. this morning. It is hoped work · Church, GalUpolls, will be
will be completed ln time lor
the evangelist. Ail Easter
classes to resume 1itesday,
sunrise service Is also
April 20.
planned for 6 a: m. at the
An insurance check State Par~ ~n Route 33,
'
going north, at 6 a. m. with
,. · covenng
money stolen from a
the.
Rev. Mr. Elkins, In
breaking and entering last
charge.
"He Uves", will be
February at Hannan Trace
was transferred to Principal
Rev. Mr. Ellllns topic.
Paul Dillon. James Blaschek,
compliance officer lor the
Federal Wage and Hour INSTANT WINNERS
Division , ·Department of
CLEV-ELAND (UPI) - An
Labor, explained procedures '.'instant game" proposal will
and board compliances under be considered by the Ohio
the new minimum wage Lottery Commission at its
procedures. Atty. Bill regular meeting Friday.
Eachus, the board's legal
A commission spokesman
advisor, was present to said under the proposal, a
discuss the compliances.
. purchaser of a lottery ticket
In final action, the board would know right away if he
agreed to meet Friday, April had a winning ti~ket.
23, at 7:30 p. m. to employ
The commission will
teaching and non&lt;ertilicated discuss other'proposals at the
employees.
10 a.m. meeting at
commission
headquarters.
SfOCKSALE
CLEVELAND (UPI) - A
registration statement filed
Wednesday
with
the
Securities and Exchange
Commission proposed the
sale of 2.j million shares of
common stock of the
C I e v e Ian d .EJ.e c t ric
lliurninating Co.
Proceeds of the sale, sche~
duled Ill be offered May 12,
HALLMARK
will go towarfls retiring some
short-term debt the company
incurred to temporarily
finance Its construction'
program.

Mark Smith, Freshman
pitcher, came on in relief
Wednesday aftem.oon with
the
bases
loaded an~
pr9mptly shut the door to
preserve a narrow 3·2
Wahama Whiite Falcon win
over the Buffalo Bisons of
Putnam County.
Smith took over for
Wahama starter · Rick
. Buzzard in the fifth inning
after Buzzard had run into. a
control problem issuing
three consecutive ba~s on
balls to fill the sacks. The
first batter Smith faced hit a
fly ball to the outfield to
bring home a run. The fresh·
man righthander struck out
the next opponent to ex·
tingulsh the rally and save
the victory lor the bend area
school.
Buzzard came away with
the victory, 1 his first of the
year, after a pitching four
and one-third innings of
reputable baseball giving up
only three hits. Smith
finished the contest in
picking up the save allowing
only one hit in his two and
two-thirds stint on the
mound.
Buffalo took a 1.0 lead in
the second on tc hits. White
singled to open the frame
and went to second when the
following batter grounded
out. The Bison runner ad·
vanced to third on a fly ball
and later scored on a single
by Mark Burgess.
The local nine took the lead
in the top half of the third
when they plated three runs
on three hits. Tim "The
Rabbit" Sayre led off the
inning with a single. The
"Rabbit" stole second and
scored when Tim Thompsons' fly ball was dropped for
a two-base error. Terry

dressing up
for Easter!

~~;

�'"
&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Thursday, April IS, 1976

7- The Daily Sentinel, P&amp;neroy-Mtddleport,O., Thursday, Aprll15, 19'16

Senate .says who uses gas shall pay for it

A THA·l-EYE VIEW OF THE UNITED STATES, is the subject of a sign errected in .
Bangkik by students protesting the presence of U.S. forces. The Thai government has
ordered American installations shut down and all but a handful of Amencan advisers must
be withdrawn from the Southeast Asian country by July 20.

Registration
bill approved
By J.R. KIMMINS
the . estima ted $t0,000
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Abill registration cost. in those
requiring statewide voter counties ·not now requiring
registration , under registration.
consideration during three
Sen. Tony P. Hall, !).
previous legislative sessions, Dayton , the bi ll 's floor
bas been passed by both manager, said that would
hollses of the Ohio General soon be offset with the
Assembly.
reduced expense of having to
The
state
Senate purge the rolls each year .
Wednesday passed 25 to 7and
Onlv two other states,
ALVINWAGGONEI\
returned to the House a bill North.Dakota and Wisconsin,
requiring registration to vote do not require statewide
in aU 88 counties. The House , voter registration .
which originated the bill, will
County boards of elections
have
to
concu r
in could stay open more than 10
amendments added by the hours a week i! they chose,
Senate Elections Comittee. under terms
of · an
Currently , 22 Ohio counties amendment ad opted in the
do not require registration · senate ~ommittee . They
prior to voting, and four other would have been reqUired to
:counties have partial do so under the House bill.
registration . The measure,
Hal l. sa id the postcard
i drafted by
Rep . Ike re gistra tion system was
RUTLAND - Alvin Clair
Thompson, D-Cleveland, taken out of the bill in the
Waggoner
of Rutland has
would become effective Nov . Senate, even though there
retired
from
Colwnbia Gas
8, 1977, il ratified by the was "considerable support,"
Transmission
Corporation
House and signed by Gov. beca use members o! the
after
30
years
of
service. He
James A. Rhodes.
committee decided "the bill
was
a
well
tender
working
out
Besides statewide registra- was not a proper vehicle· !or
of
Athens.
lion, the bill would extend a it."
Waggoner, a native o(
registration's validity from
"So me peopl e must
.
Washington
County, attended
two years to four years and register 30 days prior to an
Vincent
High
School ·and
would also require Saturday election. Others can just walk
Harrisonville
'High
School.
and nighttime office hours for in on election day' and vote,"
He
joined
the
gas
company
at
boards of elections in the 30 added Hall, who said a
Athens
in
1946
as
a
well
days prior to the closing of statewide voter registration
the rolls.
system would also provide a tender. He has worked there
Another element of the bill, ready reference to check the caring for wells and meters
allowing a voter to register validity of nominating and since then.
Waggoner is a member and
through the mail, was initiative petitions.
eliminated by the Senate
Sen. Stanley Aronoff. R- elder of the Presbyterian
committee.
Cincinnati, saill many met- Church and a member of the
Modern
Woodmen
o!
1\Vo months ago, the House ropolitan boards of elections
America.
passed the bill 52 to 40, only oppose the bill because of the
two more than
the extension o! a registration's
Mrs . Waggoner is the
constitution I majo(ity validity. He said that would former Ardis Ruth Dean of
needed to pass a measure in clutter up registration rolls in • Pomeroy. Mr . and Mrs.
the lower chamber.
urban areas with people who Waggoner are the parents of
Similar bills ·failed in the have moved.
two · daughters,
Mrs.
1~61,
1969 and
1973
Enactment of the bill has Jacqualine Gillogly of Albany
legislatures.
long been a goal of SecreUiry and Mrs. Joyceline Haley of
Sen. William H. Mossey, R- o! State Ted Brown and the Rutland .
Batavia, opposed the bill and Ohio League o! Women
FREE TUITION
said it was an "infringement Voters as a weapon against
COLUMBUS
UP! ·- Gov.
on home rule" powers in the fraudulent elections.
James
A.
Rhodes
signed
counties and did not provide
legislation Wednesday , effective July 11, permitting
the children of lire lighters
and police officers killed in
line of duty to attend state
universities without paying
tuition .

Waggoner ends
30 years of

employment

·Ford·shows care
•
on runnmg mate

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford is in no rush
to Indicate his choice of a vice
presidential running mate.
"I have to get nominated
myself first," he teasingly
responds when asked the
question, which is often.
If he has his way, Ford
probably will not make a·firm
decision until after he has
nailed the top spot on the
Republican ticket himself
and after he has surveyed the
political scene. Like any
politician,
Ford
will
pragmatically weigh one
factor - who can do the most
lor him in the vote-gftling
field.
He also undoubtedly ·wm be
taking into consideration
whether he needs a heavy
hitter who is popular in the
South, or whether he has been
pushed to the right too much
himself in the contest willl
conservative challenger
Ronald Reagan and needs
some political bolstering on
the moderate or liberal side.
The vice presidency has
often been a plwn for the
lncwnbent to dangle . The
classic. case is Franklin D.
· Roosevelt who promised the
vice presidential nomination
to many, particularly in 1911,
and got a lot of people mad at

him . In the end, the
Democratic pros talked him
into choosing a relatively
nationally unknown - Sen,
Harry S . Truman of
Missouri.
President Lyndon B.
Johnson also played games
with the vice presidency in
1964, leading many to believe
llley were the front runners,
while Johnson-Humphrey
signs were being painted in
the basement of convention
hall in Atlantic City: N.J, at
LBJ's behest.
When he finally told Hubert
H. Humphrey that he was the
one, he reminded him ,
"You're only going to be a - messenger boy around
· here."
Ford · has ticked off a
number of names o'f men who
would be attractive running
· mates . They
include
Commerce Secretary Elliot
Richardson, Sens.. Howard
Baker, Tenn., Edward . M.
Brooke, Mass., Charles E.
Percy, lll., William Brock,
Tenn., Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld and former
Texas Gov. John B. Connally
among olllers.
Ford also has mentioned
one
woman,
Housing
Secretary Carlo Hills, lor the
No. 2 spot, but rio one would
make My bets on that.
And Vice President Nelson

A. Rockefeller has ruled
himself out of the running
with Ford's acquiesence.
Some of Ford's Texas
pundits are speculating that
COnnally has tried to strike a
deal with Ford lor the vice
presidency. Connally is
playing it cool and says he is
remaining "neutral" ir;t the

By J.R. KIMMINS
O'Shaughnessy said he bad
COLUMBUS I UP!) - Two been informed that Gov .
monllls after the Public UtUl- James A. Rhodes would sign
ties Commission ol Ohi9 al-· the amended bill If and when
lowed homeowners to pay for it reaches hiB desk.
a portion of emergency
Senate opponents of the
industrial natural gas bill, introduced in the House
purchases, the Ohio Senate earlier this year by Rep .
ha s pa ssed a measure Michael Stinziano, D·
outlawing the practice.
Columbus, said it would put
"The simple effect of this an unnecessary financial
bill is that il you use the gas burden on industries, driving
- you pay lor it," said Sen. up the cost of consumer goods
Robert E. O'Shaughnessy, D- beyond the $1 surcharge.
Columbus, floor manager lor
Further, argued Sen.
U1e Housepassed bill:
Thomas A. Van Meter, R·
1'he PUCOorder, which has , Ashland, II could hurt Ohio's
since been appealed to tbe chances o! 0btalntng a $250
Ohio Supreme Court, said · million coal gasification plant
that Columbia Gas o! Ohio, lor the Warren area,
Inc. could divide the $33.1
O'Shaughnessy . discounted
million cost of last winter's those arguments, and noted
emergency gas purchases that homeowners cannot pass
among residential, on the increasing cost of
commercial and industrial energy as can industries, and
customers.
that since the bill dealt only
The effect of thlit decision with · emergency
gas
was a $1 surcharge added to purchases, it would have no
Columbia Gas' I million Ohio ellect on the price of
customers beginning Feb. 14 synthetic gas from any pilot
and scheduled w reappear demonstration.plant.
monthly through March 1977 .
The bill would re(jllire that ·Van Meter countered wit))
Columbia Gas' ~industrial familiar utility industry
and commercial customers arguments that residential
pay for the emergency · customers benefitted from
purchases - if they exceeded the purchases - since their
their 1970-76 gas allotments. gas supplies were not
Wednesday's 25-7 vote curwiled - and therefore
returns the measure to the should be required tO pay
House lor concurrence in the their fair share.
amendments added in the
A second section of Stin·
Senate Ways and Means ziano's bill would require the
Committee and adopted on PUCO to write an emergency
the Senate floor .
purchase gas adjustment

Banquet planned

clause to cover similar elected and appointed state prohibitions to appointed
and local government state and local officials.
pw:chases, if needed.
A requirement. that that tlllicials who must file Current law covers only
regula tlon first be approved· .financial disclosure elected officials.
The Senate and HoUse adby tbe General ~bly was statements.
journed
Wednesday and will
Headley
said
members
of
amended out of the bill on the
floor - one of the changes boards of education already not return to the capitol until
· which will require House have a· "thankless j,ob," and Tuesday because of the lo11g
boards are losing valuable Easter vacation.
concurrence.
The Senate also approved members who refuse to
legiSlation 29 to 3 revising the submit to public disclosure of
Your " Extra Touch"
two-year old 'state ethics their fmances. He pointed out
Florist Since 1957
they would still be subject to '
law.
conflict-of-interest
provisions
Sen. David L. Headley, {).
Barberton, said the changes of the btU.
The House had preViously
reflect experience with the
removed
a provision in
law
some tighten
current
law
requiring that
provisions while others are
and
other
designed to make it more · teachers
workable.
· nonsupervlsory educators file
The House, which passed disclosure statements.
PH. 992-2644
Another major point in the
the bill last February, will
m E. Main, Pomeroy .
have to concur in the Senate bill Is the application of
Your FTD Florist
conflict-of-interest and
changes to the bill.
"influence
peddling
"
Major sections o! the
Senate version remove
members of local boarda of
education from the list of

Put homemade soap
in automatic washer

Mrs. Deem
entertains
homemakers

FRANCIS
FLORIST

p·
.:,;, ·
Omeroy
Personal Notes .

How they voted

COLUMBUS (UP!) -Here
-Is
a
breakdown
of
Wednesday's 25 to 7 Ohio
·Senate vote to paSs a bill
prohibiting residential natural gas utility customers
from bearing a portion of the
cost of emergency natural
. gas purchases: ·
. ... . FOR (25)
DEMOCRATS (21)
Applegate, Bowen, Butts,
Calabrese, Carney,
Celebrezze, Freeman, Hall,
. Headley, Jackson ,
spent Tuesday night with Mr. McCormack, Meshel, OcaOtester
and Mrs. Ross Cleland. On . sek, O'Shaughnessy, Pease,
Friday, Clair Newell, Secrest, Slagle, Stano,
Otescolumbus, and )'tlrs. Ve~a ValiqUette, Woodland,
· Newell, Tuppers Plams, Zimmers.
REPUBLICANS (4~
Mr. and Mrs . Harry Son- called on the Clelands. ,
Shannon
Hollon
is
staying
.
Gillmor, Johnson, Mossey,
derman, Cincinnati, were
with
her
grandmother,
Mrs.
White.
recent visitors of Mr. and
Opal Hollon, while her
AGAINST (7~
Mrs. John Wickham. .
parents
are
in
South
Dakota.
REPUBUCANS
(7~
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ken
Aronoff,
Dennis,
Gaeth,
Fisher, Wooster, were recent
Freeman,
Delaware
were
Gray,
Lukens,
Maloney,
Van
guests o! Mr . and Mrs. Roy
Tuesday
dinner
guests
of
Mr.
Meter.
Christy.
ABSENY II)
Vernon Cleland, Columbus, and Mrs. Fred Rice .
Mr. and Mrs . Roscoe REPUBLICANS (1)
Collins.
Hollon have returned home
after a week's visit with Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas McNally,
Sandusky. They also visited
The Sunday morning, April with Mrs. Paul Kimes, Mr.
II service at the Free and Mrs. George Ritter and
Methodist Church was at- Mrs. Charlotte Hartlaub, all
o! Sandusky.
·
tended by 102 persons.
Ross
Cleland
recently
Ten members o! the WMS
o! the local church met with called on Clarence Woll at the
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs Tuesday home o! Mr . and Mrs. Paul
evening. Mrs. Otto Lohn Karr.
D. D. Cleland, Colwnbus
assisted Mrs. Jacobs.
called
on Denzil Oeland,
Refreshments were served.
Wednesday.
Mrs. Lucie Smith, Germany, is visiting Mr. and · Tamra and Penny Oark
were recent visitors of ,their
Mrs. Thomas Parker.
Mickey
Howell
has grandparents at Harrisonreturned home !rom vacation ville.
Mrs . Opal Eichinger and
in Florida.
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Laura Jean were- weekend
!Dick) Karr spent the past guests of Mr . and Mrs.
week with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Charles Eichinger, ColumBauer o! Marfon . Their bus.
-Clarice Allen
granddaughter, Mrs. Polly
DeConnick, underwent
:··: .
:· ::::
surgery at a hospital in
Marion .
Amos Leonard, Sam
Radford and Mrs. Emma Fox
attended the hymn sing at the
Seventh Day Adventist
Church recently.
Vern Story, Columbus, •THE B. DAVID
spent llle weekend with his
wile and son, John .
Mrs.
Kathy . Pullins
remains a patient in Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs . Mike
Douglas, Sam Radford, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Walker, Mr.
and Mrs. Harmon Fox were
dinner guests Saturday
evening of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Howell.

We Can

Outf~

·The Whole
Fami~

Leisure Suits and Shirts
For Men and Boys.

Church choirs
to present
Faster cantata

Coats and Dresses For

News N

Ladies and. Girls.

Open Fri. &amp; Sit Ti 8:00

.

Laurel Oiff

News Notes

DO YOU OWN
AN
ELECTRIC

FURNACE?

FAMILY
CROWN"P

BOWLING

The story of Mother's llfi .
beautifully told In a tr'uly ,
quality P'- of tewetry
thll will bo ~ wlfh prldt
. and chert...._ always.
Beautiful , .. r lhaPt
sl&lt;lnes In tilt color of lht
lam lly's
blrlhslonu .
Ptrsonalltt lnd OIYe this ::
pin spectalstontttcanQt.

crucial Texas primary where
he could swing heavy weight
POMEROY LANES
Morning Glories League
with Texas conservatives.
April 6, 1976
It appears certain that
Ph
Ford will not se lect an Excelsior Oil Co .
16~
Gibbs Grocery
163
unknown, but rather a WMPO
IIJ
national figure who would Newell Sunoco·
11 3
G&amp;J Auto Parts
112
enhanc-e his ticket.
Market
5-4
The day may come when Spencer's
High Ind . Game - Donna
vice presidential hopeful s McFar l and 234, Thelma
o rne , 185.
have to run on their merits in Osb.
High Ind . Series - Donna
primary bids themselves. But McFar l and 557 , Marlene
486.
,
old politics still being what it Wilson,
High Team Game - Gibbs
is, vice presidents still are the Grocery
POMEROY
834.
High Team series - Ex choice o! the presidential
candidate, and what it gets celsior Oil co. H61.
down to in many ways is that
one person selects the future
President.
·Easter and Spring
Since 1945, three vice presidents have acceded to the
presidency becaU.se of death ,
For Men, Women &amp; Children
assass.ination
and
resignation.
Store Hours For Easter Week
But few presidential candi-'
Mon . thru Wed.-91. m.-5 p.m .
dates seem lo take into
Thurs. Thru Salurday-9 a .m . ·, I p.m .
consideration that their
"Ali children ere reminded 10 reglaltr for lhe Easter
running mates may wind up
, Bunny and Easter Ba~kets."
,
·
in the White House and
therefore should be highly
qualified to assume that
MtDOLEPORT, OHIO
awesome position.
LO

CIIIJ '

'11.00

GoeSsler's

JewekfStonl

SHOES

SHoEBOX

CkJss gives
&amp;terparty

..

LET

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

EASTER
GIFT!

Polly's Pointers

A mother -dau'~·hter with Mrs. Bertha Parker
blinquel to be held in May giving the
devotions .
was planned during a Scrlptil'e was taken frQm The ·
meeting of the Missionary Psalms and there was a
Society Pf the Laurel Cliff reading, "The Old Man and 1 •
Free Methodist Church at the the Stylish Church." Mrs.
home of Mrs. Tina Jacobs Wright read "How to Pray for
Tuesday night.
. Misaions" and Mrs. Joan
Mrs. Jean 'Wright presided Clark gave the prayer
Polly's Problem
DEAR
POLLY - Can
reques~ and had prayer. To
anyone
ten
me how to make
conclude the meeting Mrs.
or
powdered
Wright read "Garden of flaked
My
· Gethsemene' and "My homemade soap?
homemade bar soap is
Redeemer Uveth."
Mrs. Amber Lohn and Mrs. perfect (looks like cream
Mildred Jacobs served . colored fudge) but It Is work
refreslunents to those named to cut It Into small pieces for
and . Ann Mash, Mrs. Iva quick dissolving . Any
Powell, Mrs. Bertha Parker, suggestions would be greatly
and a guest, Mrs. Evel)rn ap~lati!d .
I have used illy homemade
COOLVILLE
The Spencer.
SQap
In my wringer tYJie
meeting of the Eastern
Homemaker's held recently ·.·.·,:,:~:~:~%&lt;..'0lS&amp;l'Qii!',·J
· .... . washer for years. But I now
have anew automatic washer
in the home of Mrs. Lois ~~
S:
so I hestltate to use the
Deem, Coolville, was called
§:
homemade
laWtdry soap in
to order by the ·president,
~
the
automatic.
I would Uke to
Judith Starcher.
.
·
hear
of
the
experiences
of
After a short business
Jlm Corcoran of So~th ' others who may have done
session the group was given Windaor, Coon., will be here this. Because of the high
helpful household hints by over, the wee ken~ for a prices of laundry soap and
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ubman of week s visit with his grand- detergents 1 MUST continue
Pomeroy.
paren~, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph to use my Inexpensive
Refresh!nents were served Cook. On April 24 they will homemade bar soap. It helps
w members Sue Dye, Joan ~turn w. Con~ticul with the budget tremendously and
Smith, Judith Starcher, and him and wlU be there for an Is very easy quick and in·
Lois Deem. Marty Williams extended visit with their terestlng t'o make.
come as Sue Dye's guest. daughter and her family.
LOUISE
Absent were: Pam Hager,
Jamie and Chris Lochary of
DEAR. WUISE - I spoke
Sharon and Barl)ara Hensley. Glen Haven, N. J. will spend wttll a compaay lbal bas
Judith Starcher ·and Joan the next week here visiting repalftd ,...ben of an types
Smith received birthday their grandparents, Mr. and . for many yean and was
gifts. The doo.r prize was won Mrs. Patrick Lochary.
.
adviled lbat they see no
by Marty Williams.
Sherry King, Malone reason why you cannot use
College, Canton, Is spending lbe homemade soap Ill your
Eastern weekend here with automatic washer. Cut It up
her family, Mr. and Mrs. ffne or grate It so It wiD
William King and Kevin.
di&amp;IIOlve more quickly. Ex·
perlment to find lbe correct
amount of sucb soap to use
but do not have more tb~n one
lo one and a balf Inches of
suds above lbe water level. POLLY.
"Faith,
Tears
and
DEAR POLLY - II you
Resurrection," an Easter
print
my Pet Peeve I will
An Easter party was held
cantata will be presented
use
the
Polly Dollar to have
Sunday at 7 p.m. at the Tuesday night by the
my
•
best
slacks cleaned. The
BradbW'y Church o! ChriSt by Homebuilders Class of the
seat
of
the
chair I sat on in a
llle adult and youth choirs. Middleport Church of Christ
Paula Haynes is directot of for patients at the Athens.
the cantata. Members of the Mental Healtli Center.
choirs are Mr. and Mrs.
Games were played, grl\up
FELLOWSHIP MEETS
Wllllam Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. singing was led by George
The Ught and Ufe Men's
Mike Miller, Rodney and Rita Glaze, and refreshmen~ with Fellowship of the Laurel Cliff
Bailey, Tammy and Christi Easter favors were sel'lled to ,. Free Methodlat Church met
Stanley, Desi Jeffers, Kevin the patients. Going over for Thursdll)' night at the home
King, Randy Haynes, Sherrie the party we~e the pastor,. of Pearl Jacobs. E~nest
Barnhart, John Blake, Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence Powell had prayer and gave
Beverly and Bryan Wilcox, Stewart, Ed. Evans, Mrs. Flo the thought, "To,'Do Nothing
Maryln
Wil~ox,
Greg Grueser, Mrs. Coleen Van is Sin." Devotions were by
Browning, · Vickie Hoffman, Meter, Mrs. Susan Chambers James Gllmore, Pearl
Unda Gerard.
·
visiting here from East Point, Jacobs, read "Adorned In His
Ga. and Mrs. Nora Rice.
Fear", and !lob Barton
, , , ,.
, c]osed ,rtth 1!1'~· .Refrelll!men~ were serl&gt;ed to lllose
. named and Herb Gilkey,. Ed
ATI'END SERVICES
Van lnwagen, Steve Evlin,
SHOWINGS PLANNED
Mr. and Mrs. John Fultz
Mike Wright, and Otto Lohn.
Three
showings
of
"The
and soil Marc, of Middleport,
and their daughter, Miss Gospel Road", a story of
Anita Marie Fultz, Columbus, Jesus sung and told by MANUEL INTERVIEWED
were In Xenia Tuesday lor Johnny Cash, have been
An interview with Donald
the fWteral services of Mrs. scheduled lor this weekend. Manuel, Racine, author of the
Lyston Fultz. The funeral At 2 p. m., on Saturday the book, "Love, Hate and War,
was held at the Faith Com- fllm wlU be shown at the.
Ufe of an Ex-POW", will be
munity United Methodist Bethany United Methodist on the Pam Huff show,
Church with burial In the Oluroh In Racine; at 7:30 p. Channel 3, at ·9:30 a. m.
Mllledgeville Plymouth n'i. on Saturday at the Friday.
Cemetery. Pallbearers were Portland United Methodist
·male members of the·choir of Church and at 7:30 p. m. on
llle church where Mrs. Fultz SWtday at the Letart Falls
SERVICE SUNDAY
served as organist. Relatives United Methodist Church.
A sunrise service will be
from Columbus and Cinheld at the Hemlock Grove
cinnati attended the funeral.
Christlan Church at 6 a. m.
SPECIAL PRODUCTION
Easter. Regular services will
a public aervlce, radio be held at 9:30 a . m,
station WMPO wiU present a
special production of "Jesus
SERVICES PLANNED
Clnist, Superstar" on both
MASON, W. Va. -Sunrise FM and Am beginning at I: 15 JOINING FOR SERVICES
Columbia Chapel will join
services lor the upper Mason p. m. Friday. The production
Dexter
Ch~h of Christ for
Parish will begin at 6 a.m. runs almost two hours.
sunrise
services at 6:30a.m. ·
Sunday morning at the Union
The
Rev.
Charles Russell,
Campground. This service
Sr.,
will
speak at the
will include the 14 UM
SERVICES .U L
Columbia
Chapel
at 9:30a.m.
churches in the upper Mason
SW!rise services will be and the Dexter Church at
parish. On Saturday there held at the Bradford Church
wUI be a work day at the of Christ at 6 a.m. A Ugh! 10:30 a.m. Breakfast will be
campground starting at 9 breakfast wlll be served served at 8 a.m.
a.m.
following the services.

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

,.

. . M.ay the love of the risen Christ flood
your heart with joy this Easter Sunday.
Let His understanding end guidance
bring harmony and peace to all.
We Will Close
At Noon Good Friday

.REUTER-~ROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
"The Insurance Store"

214 E. MAIN

PH. 992-5130

restaurant last night had not
been cleaned before we were
seated and when we returned
home I discovered a green
spot on my good slacks. Such
a staiqls even wo~se Ulan the
spotleft when a seat has been
wiped off and left wet. I!
seems restaurants could be
more careful about such
cleaning. - MRS. W.E.M.
DEAR POLLY - Several
people have asked me how I
keep my fiber glass shower so
clean and white, so I thonght
some of the readers might
like to know, too. 1 use white
vinegar, a plastic scouring
pad and a lot of scrubbing
where the soap dries and
coats the walls and ftoor. Of
course, there ~re some
women with husbands who
wipe the walls and sllding
dOOilS alter every shower but
not mlrie. - MRS. F.L.W.
DEAR POLLY - With
spring upon us many are
thinking about bedding
plants. I started mine this
week in the bottom halves of
different colored styrofoam
egg cartons. I pufabout three
seeds In each cup after they
were filled with dirt. When all
danger of frost has passed
they can be easily removed
from the carton cups and be
transplanted out of doors .
Now they )ook very pretty on
the window sill until that time
comes. - W.J.M . .
DEAR POLLY - I read In
the column about all the
trouble with bugs. I was told
to buy a dog's ftea collar, cut
!I into pieces and keep them
in my cupboard. It really
works. Hope this does the
same for others who may try
i). - MRS. D.C.P.

Young adults pick committees
Committees to design and
erect directional signs to the
Bradford Olurch ol Christ
were named at a meeting of
the Young Adult Class at the
church parsonage Friday
night.
.
Bill Riggs presided at the
meeting with a discussion
being held on painting the
church bus. It was decided
that this will be done alter
vacation Bible school.
Assistance with the cost of
F,aster bookmarks was given
by llle class. As a graduation
gill to Jack ·Perry, pastor, the
class agreed to give money
to.ward the purchase of some
boo.ks qe wants, Mr. perry
will graduate from the
Kentucky Christian College
and will be ordained on May 9
at the. Bradford Church.
The cost of bulletins was
discussed and some plans to
char1ge these were made .

Bridal showers lor Tammy Jamie and Vlnda Biggs,
Schoonover on April 22, and Penny Kirby , Roger and
Linda Hy sell and Diane Brian Weaver , Catherine
Painter later were planned. • Russell , Gerrl, Cherrl and
Miss Schoonover is the bride- Suzi Lightfoot, John, Sylvia
elect of Ten ·y Pickens. A and David Blake, Madeline
planning session for vacation Painter, Bonnie and Gerry
Bible school was set for Ughtfapt, Etta Mae Ellis and
Friday . The next meeting will Mrs. Will.
be on May 10 at the church
with Catherine Russell to
have devotions .
At the meeting Carol Biggs
gave devotions, Bonnie
Lightfoot the secretary's
report, and Bonnie Pickens,
the treasurer 's report.
Foreign dishes prepared by
members were served dllfing
a social hour. Betty Wlll, a
guest, played the harp and
sang for entertainment.
Others attending were Nancy
and Carol Morris, Bonnie and
Vicki Pickens, Jack and Kitty
Perry , Bill Bonar, Blll, Carol,

$3.25 lb. '

Bicentennial program
highlights PTO meet
HARRISONVILLE - A
bicentennial program by the
second grade students of Mrs.
Rose Ann Jenkins highlighted
the Tuesday night meeting o!
the Harrisonville PTO.
The program featured
patriotic singing and original
readings on "Why I Like
Alilerica ." A lighted birthday
cake baked by Mrs. Jenkins'
mother, Mrs. Donald Usle,
was presented io the class.
During the. business
meeting new officers ·were
elected. They are Harold
Norris, president; Mrs .
Helena Riggs, vice ~resident;
Mrs.
Karen
Thomas ,
secretary; Charles Barrett,
treasurer ; Jan Hatfield,

PTA TO MEET
CHESTER _: The Chester
MASON , W. V,a. - Sunday
PTA will meet at 7:30 p. m.
school
attendance on April II
Monday at the school. Inwas
70
at llle Faith llaptist
stallation of officers wlll be
Church
at Mason. .
held.
Ivan Cardwell of Athens
brought
the ·evening
message. Wednesday
evening Aprill4, at 7:30p.m.
RUMMAGE SALE SET
The Meigs High School Rev. Freeland Norris,
Cosmetology Department Racine, brought the message.
On Sunday, April. 18, the
will hold a rummage sale
youth
will present an Easter
Fridav and Saturttay, 9 a. m.
to 5 p, m. at the Masonic program Immediately
following Sunday School at II
Temple, Middleport.
a.m. Sunday School is each
Sunday at !Oa.m. Bible study
SUPPER PLANNED
is Wednesdat at 7:30p.m.
A soup supper will be held
ltev · Cliff Coleman of
at the Letart Falls Jackson will perform a magic
Elementary School beginning program Wednesday, ·April
at 5p. m. Saturday, April24. 28, at 7:30p.m. Everyone is
Anauctionwillbeheldat 7:30 invited to this program.
in the evening. Homemade
The Faith Baptist Church Is
vegetable soup hot dogs presently meeting in the Steel
sloppy joes, cak;, pie and soft ' Wo~kers Union l!all on
drinks will be available.
Railroad Street between
Horton and Pomeroy Sts.

For Easter Paraders

conn1e·

HONOICARY DEPlfi'Y
CQLUMBUS (UP!) -' Six·
year-old George Justice had
the privilege Wednesday of
saying he was a "law
enforcement officer''.

spring btouamsln an embroidered,
~oven b~tket , It's the pt~ WI)'
to send your Euter
•

Always
Appreciated

grtetlnga. Ttlia Easter.

refreshments chairperson;
Donna Weber , news reporter,
and Gloria Riggs, sunshine
correspondent.
Plans were made to show
the film, "That Darn Cat" at
the school on May 7 lor the
general public . The at tendance banner was won by
Mrs. Jenkin 's second grade.
Refreshments were served.

send our basket of
lo~te , They'll love you
for it.

.

Swisher &amp;Lohse

PHARMACY
992-556Q
Middleport,

Open Nights Til9
' 112 E.LMain St.
Pomeroy, o.

o.

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•

KERM'S 19TH

DANCERS INVITED
The French Oty Swingers
Square Dance Club of
G8lllpolls Invites area square
dancers to Ita Saturday night
dance to be held· at Clay
Elementary School from 8 to
II p.m. Caller will be Oiad
·Johnson of ~uth Point.
CLASS OFFERED
RIO GRANDI): - Adult'
Education at Buckeye Hills
Career Center here wlll offer .
a . Housekeeping class to
be held ' on Wednesday
evenings from 6:30 to 9:30 p.
m. Costing $$30 the class Is
geared to people currently
employed or seeking employment In the 'lleld of lnsUtutlonal 'bouaekeeplng at
hospitals and hotels. Class
starts on April28 and .will end
June 30. Registration wtu be
held April20 and 21from 6:30
to 8:30p.m.

~

li's 1 Iovine gift of fresh. fr~r•nt

us.

SRJ~

'POMEROY
OPEN FRI. Tll8 P.M.

Kerm 's Korner

•

�'"
&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Thursday, April IS, 1976

7- The Daily Sentinel, P&amp;neroy-Mtddleport,O., Thursday, Aprll15, 19'16

Senate .says who uses gas shall pay for it

A THA·l-EYE VIEW OF THE UNITED STATES, is the subject of a sign errected in .
Bangkik by students protesting the presence of U.S. forces. The Thai government has
ordered American installations shut down and all but a handful of Amencan advisers must
be withdrawn from the Southeast Asian country by July 20.

Registration
bill approved
By J.R. KIMMINS
the . estima ted $t0,000
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Abill registration cost. in those
requiring statewide voter counties ·not now requiring
registration , under registration.
consideration during three
Sen. Tony P. Hall, !).
previous legislative sessions, Dayton , the bi ll 's floor
bas been passed by both manager, said that would
hollses of the Ohio General soon be offset with the
Assembly.
reduced expense of having to
The
state
Senate purge the rolls each year .
Wednesday passed 25 to 7and
Onlv two other states,
ALVINWAGGONEI\
returned to the House a bill North.Dakota and Wisconsin,
requiring registration to vote do not require statewide
in aU 88 counties. The House , voter registration .
which originated the bill, will
County boards of elections
have
to
concu r
in could stay open more than 10
amendments added by the hours a week i! they chose,
Senate Elections Comittee. under terms
of · an
Currently , 22 Ohio counties amendment ad opted in the
do not require registration · senate ~ommittee . They
prior to voting, and four other would have been reqUired to
:counties have partial do so under the House bill.
registration . The measure,
Hal l. sa id the postcard
i drafted by
Rep . Ike re gistra tion system was
RUTLAND - Alvin Clair
Thompson, D-Cleveland, taken out of the bill in the
Waggoner
of Rutland has
would become effective Nov . Senate, even though there
retired
from
Colwnbia Gas
8, 1977, il ratified by the was "considerable support,"
Transmission
Corporation
House and signed by Gov. beca use members o! the
after
30
years
of
service. He
James A. Rhodes.
committee decided "the bill
was
a
well
tender
working
out
Besides statewide registra- was not a proper vehicle· !or
of
Athens.
lion, the bill would extend a it."
Waggoner, a native o(
registration's validity from
"So me peopl e must
.
Washington
County, attended
two years to four years and register 30 days prior to an
Vincent
High
School ·and
would also require Saturday election. Others can just walk
Harrisonville
'High
School.
and nighttime office hours for in on election day' and vote,"
He
joined
the
gas
company
at
boards of elections in the 30 added Hall, who said a
Athens
in
1946
as
a
well
days prior to the closing of statewide voter registration
the rolls.
system would also provide a tender. He has worked there
Another element of the bill, ready reference to check the caring for wells and meters
allowing a voter to register validity of nominating and since then.
Waggoner is a member and
through the mail, was initiative petitions.
eliminated by the Senate
Sen. Stanley Aronoff. R- elder of the Presbyterian
committee.
Cincinnati, saill many met- Church and a member of the
Modern
Woodmen
o!
1\Vo months ago, the House ropolitan boards of elections
America.
passed the bill 52 to 40, only oppose the bill because of the
two more than
the extension o! a registration's
Mrs . Waggoner is the
constitution I majo(ity validity. He said that would former Ardis Ruth Dean of
needed to pass a measure in clutter up registration rolls in • Pomeroy. Mr . and Mrs.
the lower chamber.
urban areas with people who Waggoner are the parents of
Similar bills ·failed in the have moved.
two · daughters,
Mrs.
1~61,
1969 and
1973
Enactment of the bill has Jacqualine Gillogly of Albany
legislatures.
long been a goal of SecreUiry and Mrs. Joyceline Haley of
Sen. William H. Mossey, R- o! State Ted Brown and the Rutland .
Batavia, opposed the bill and Ohio League o! Women
FREE TUITION
said it was an "infringement Voters as a weapon against
COLUMBUS
UP! ·- Gov.
on home rule" powers in the fraudulent elections.
James
A.
Rhodes
signed
counties and did not provide
legislation Wednesday , effective July 11, permitting
the children of lire lighters
and police officers killed in
line of duty to attend state
universities without paying
tuition .

Waggoner ends
30 years of

employment

·Ford·shows care
•
on runnmg mate

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford is in no rush
to Indicate his choice of a vice
presidential running mate.
"I have to get nominated
myself first," he teasingly
responds when asked the
question, which is often.
If he has his way, Ford
probably will not make a·firm
decision until after he has
nailed the top spot on the
Republican ticket himself
and after he has surveyed the
political scene. Like any
politician,
Ford
will
pragmatically weigh one
factor - who can do the most
lor him in the vote-gftling
field.
He also undoubtedly ·wm be
taking into consideration
whether he needs a heavy
hitter who is popular in the
South, or whether he has been
pushed to the right too much
himself in the contest willl
conservative challenger
Ronald Reagan and needs
some political bolstering on
the moderate or liberal side.
The vice presidency has
often been a plwn for the
lncwnbent to dangle . The
classic. case is Franklin D.
· Roosevelt who promised the
vice presidential nomination
to many, particularly in 1911,
and got a lot of people mad at

him . In the end, the
Democratic pros talked him
into choosing a relatively
nationally unknown - Sen,
Harry S . Truman of
Missouri.
President Lyndon B.
Johnson also played games
with the vice presidency in
1964, leading many to believe
llley were the front runners,
while Johnson-Humphrey
signs were being painted in
the basement of convention
hall in Atlantic City: N.J, at
LBJ's behest.
When he finally told Hubert
H. Humphrey that he was the
one, he reminded him ,
"You're only going to be a - messenger boy around
· here."
Ford · has ticked off a
number of names o'f men who
would be attractive running
· mates . They
include
Commerce Secretary Elliot
Richardson, Sens.. Howard
Baker, Tenn., Edward . M.
Brooke, Mass., Charles E.
Percy, lll., William Brock,
Tenn., Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld and former
Texas Gov. John B. Connally
among olllers.
Ford also has mentioned
one
woman,
Housing
Secretary Carlo Hills, lor the
No. 2 spot, but rio one would
make My bets on that.
And Vice President Nelson

A. Rockefeller has ruled
himself out of the running
with Ford's acquiesence.
Some of Ford's Texas
pundits are speculating that
COnnally has tried to strike a
deal with Ford lor the vice
presidency. Connally is
playing it cool and says he is
remaining "neutral" ir;t the

By J.R. KIMMINS
O'Shaughnessy said he bad
COLUMBUS I UP!) - Two been informed that Gov .
monllls after the Public UtUl- James A. Rhodes would sign
ties Commission ol Ohi9 al-· the amended bill If and when
lowed homeowners to pay for it reaches hiB desk.
a portion of emergency
Senate opponents of the
industrial natural gas bill, introduced in the House
purchases, the Ohio Senate earlier this year by Rep .
ha s pa ssed a measure Michael Stinziano, D·
outlawing the practice.
Columbus, said it would put
"The simple effect of this an unnecessary financial
bill is that il you use the gas burden on industries, driving
- you pay lor it," said Sen. up the cost of consumer goods
Robert E. O'Shaughnessy, D- beyond the $1 surcharge.
Columbus, floor manager lor
Further, argued Sen.
U1e Housepassed bill:
Thomas A. Van Meter, R·
1'he PUCOorder, which has , Ashland, II could hurt Ohio's
since been appealed to tbe chances o! 0btalntng a $250
Ohio Supreme Court, said · million coal gasification plant
that Columbia Gas o! Ohio, lor the Warren area,
Inc. could divide the $33.1
O'Shaughnessy . discounted
million cost of last winter's those arguments, and noted
emergency gas purchases that homeowners cannot pass
among residential, on the increasing cost of
commercial and industrial energy as can industries, and
customers.
that since the bill dealt only
The effect of thlit decision with · emergency
gas
was a $1 surcharge added to purchases, it would have no
Columbia Gas' I million Ohio ellect on the price of
customers beginning Feb. 14 synthetic gas from any pilot
and scheduled w reappear demonstration.plant.
monthly through March 1977 .
The bill would re(jllire that ·Van Meter countered wit))
Columbia Gas' ~industrial familiar utility industry
and commercial customers arguments that residential
pay for the emergency · customers benefitted from
purchases - if they exceeded the purchases - since their
their 1970-76 gas allotments. gas supplies were not
Wednesday's 25-7 vote curwiled - and therefore
returns the measure to the should be required tO pay
House lor concurrence in the their fair share.
amendments added in the
A second section of Stin·
Senate Ways and Means ziano's bill would require the
Committee and adopted on PUCO to write an emergency
the Senate floor .
purchase gas adjustment

Banquet planned

clause to cover similar elected and appointed state prohibitions to appointed
and local government state and local officials.
pw:chases, if needed.
A requirement. that that tlllicials who must file Current law covers only
regula tlon first be approved· .financial disclosure elected officials.
The Senate and HoUse adby tbe General ~bly was statements.
journed
Wednesday and will
Headley
said
members
of
amended out of the bill on the
floor - one of the changes boards of education already not return to the capitol until
· which will require House have a· "thankless j,ob," and Tuesday because of the lo11g
boards are losing valuable Easter vacation.
concurrence.
The Senate also approved members who refuse to
legiSlation 29 to 3 revising the submit to public disclosure of
Your " Extra Touch"
two-year old 'state ethics their fmances. He pointed out
Florist Since 1957
they would still be subject to '
law.
conflict-of-interest
provisions
Sen. David L. Headley, {).
Barberton, said the changes of the btU.
The House had preViously
reflect experience with the
removed
a provision in
law
some tighten
current
law
requiring that
provisions while others are
and
other
designed to make it more · teachers
workable.
· nonsupervlsory educators file
The House, which passed disclosure statements.
PH. 992-2644
Another major point in the
the bill last February, will
m E. Main, Pomeroy .
have to concur in the Senate bill Is the application of
Your FTD Florist
conflict-of-interest and
changes to the bill.
"influence
peddling
"
Major sections o! the
Senate version remove
members of local boarda of
education from the list of

Put homemade soap
in automatic washer

Mrs. Deem
entertains
homemakers

FRANCIS
FLORIST

p·
.:,;, ·
Omeroy
Personal Notes .

How they voted

COLUMBUS (UP!) -Here
-Is
a
breakdown
of
Wednesday's 25 to 7 Ohio
·Senate vote to paSs a bill
prohibiting residential natural gas utility customers
from bearing a portion of the
cost of emergency natural
. gas purchases: ·
. ... . FOR (25)
DEMOCRATS (21)
Applegate, Bowen, Butts,
Calabrese, Carney,
Celebrezze, Freeman, Hall,
. Headley, Jackson ,
spent Tuesday night with Mr. McCormack, Meshel, OcaOtester
and Mrs. Ross Cleland. On . sek, O'Shaughnessy, Pease,
Friday, Clair Newell, Secrest, Slagle, Stano,
Otescolumbus, and )'tlrs. Ve~a ValiqUette, Woodland,
· Newell, Tuppers Plams, Zimmers.
REPUBLICANS (4~
Mr. and Mrs . Harry Son- called on the Clelands. ,
Shannon
Hollon
is
staying
.
Gillmor, Johnson, Mossey,
derman, Cincinnati, were
with
her
grandmother,
Mrs.
White.
recent visitors of Mr. and
Opal Hollon, while her
AGAINST (7~
Mrs. John Wickham. .
parents
are
in
South
Dakota.
REPUBUCANS
(7~
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ken
Aronoff,
Dennis,
Gaeth,
Fisher, Wooster, were recent
Freeman,
Delaware
were
Gray,
Lukens,
Maloney,
Van
guests o! Mr . and Mrs. Roy
Tuesday
dinner
guests
of
Mr.
Meter.
Christy.
ABSENY II)
Vernon Cleland, Columbus, and Mrs. Fred Rice .
Mr. and Mrs . Roscoe REPUBLICANS (1)
Collins.
Hollon have returned home
after a week's visit with Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas McNally,
Sandusky. They also visited
The Sunday morning, April with Mrs. Paul Kimes, Mr.
II service at the Free and Mrs. George Ritter and
Methodist Church was at- Mrs. Charlotte Hartlaub, all
o! Sandusky.
·
tended by 102 persons.
Ross
Cleland
recently
Ten members o! the WMS
o! the local church met with called on Clarence Woll at the
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs Tuesday home o! Mr . and Mrs. Paul
evening. Mrs. Otto Lohn Karr.
D. D. Cleland, Colwnbus
assisted Mrs. Jacobs.
called
on Denzil Oeland,
Refreshments were served.
Wednesday.
Mrs. Lucie Smith, Germany, is visiting Mr. and · Tamra and Penny Oark
were recent visitors of ,their
Mrs. Thomas Parker.
Mickey
Howell
has grandparents at Harrisonreturned home !rom vacation ville.
Mrs . Opal Eichinger and
in Florida.
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Laura Jean were- weekend
!Dick) Karr spent the past guests of Mr . and Mrs.
week with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Charles Eichinger, ColumBauer o! Marfon . Their bus.
-Clarice Allen
granddaughter, Mrs. Polly
DeConnick, underwent
:··: .
:· ::::
surgery at a hospital in
Marion .
Amos Leonard, Sam
Radford and Mrs. Emma Fox
attended the hymn sing at the
Seventh Day Adventist
Church recently.
Vern Story, Columbus, •THE B. DAVID
spent llle weekend with his
wile and son, John .
Mrs.
Kathy . Pullins
remains a patient in Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs . Mike
Douglas, Sam Radford, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Walker, Mr.
and Mrs. Harmon Fox were
dinner guests Saturday
evening of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Howell.

We Can

Outf~

·The Whole
Fami~

Leisure Suits and Shirts
For Men and Boys.

Church choirs
to present
Faster cantata

Coats and Dresses For

News N

Ladies and. Girls.

Open Fri. &amp; Sit Ti 8:00

.

Laurel Oiff

News Notes

DO YOU OWN
AN
ELECTRIC

FURNACE?

FAMILY
CROWN"P

BOWLING

The story of Mother's llfi .
beautifully told In a tr'uly ,
quality P'- of tewetry
thll will bo ~ wlfh prldt
. and chert...._ always.
Beautiful , .. r lhaPt
sl&lt;lnes In tilt color of lht
lam lly's
blrlhslonu .
Ptrsonalltt lnd OIYe this ::
pin spectalstontttcanQt.

crucial Texas primary where
he could swing heavy weight
POMEROY LANES
Morning Glories League
with Texas conservatives.
April 6, 1976
It appears certain that
Ph
Ford will not se lect an Excelsior Oil Co .
16~
Gibbs Grocery
163
unknown, but rather a WMPO
IIJ
national figure who would Newell Sunoco·
11 3
G&amp;J Auto Parts
112
enhanc-e his ticket.
Market
5-4
The day may come when Spencer's
High Ind . Game - Donna
vice presidential hopeful s McFar l and 234, Thelma
o rne , 185.
have to run on their merits in Osb.
High Ind . Series - Donna
primary bids themselves. But McFar l and 557 , Marlene
486.
,
old politics still being what it Wilson,
High Team Game - Gibbs
is, vice presidents still are the Grocery
POMEROY
834.
High Team series - Ex choice o! the presidential
candidate, and what it gets celsior Oil co. H61.
down to in many ways is that
one person selects the future
President.
·Easter and Spring
Since 1945, three vice presidents have acceded to the
presidency becaU.se of death ,
For Men, Women &amp; Children
assass.ination
and
resignation.
Store Hours For Easter Week
But few presidential candi-'
Mon . thru Wed.-91. m.-5 p.m .
dates seem lo take into
Thurs. Thru Salurday-9 a .m . ·, I p.m .
consideration that their
"Ali children ere reminded 10 reglaltr for lhe Easter
running mates may wind up
, Bunny and Easter Ba~kets."
,
·
in the White House and
therefore should be highly
qualified to assume that
MtDOLEPORT, OHIO
awesome position.
LO

CIIIJ '

'11.00

GoeSsler's

JewekfStonl

SHOES

SHoEBOX

CkJss gives
&amp;terparty

..

LET

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

EASTER
GIFT!

Polly's Pointers

A mother -dau'~·hter with Mrs. Bertha Parker
blinquel to be held in May giving the
devotions .
was planned during a Scrlptil'e was taken frQm The ·
meeting of the Missionary Psalms and there was a
Society Pf the Laurel Cliff reading, "The Old Man and 1 •
Free Methodist Church at the the Stylish Church." Mrs.
home of Mrs. Tina Jacobs Wright read "How to Pray for
Tuesday night.
. Misaions" and Mrs. Joan
Mrs. Jean 'Wright presided Clark gave the prayer
Polly's Problem
DEAR
POLLY - Can
reques~ and had prayer. To
anyone
ten
me how to make
conclude the meeting Mrs.
or
powdered
Wright read "Garden of flaked
My
· Gethsemene' and "My homemade soap?
homemade bar soap is
Redeemer Uveth."
Mrs. Amber Lohn and Mrs. perfect (looks like cream
Mildred Jacobs served . colored fudge) but It Is work
refreslunents to those named to cut It Into small pieces for
and . Ann Mash, Mrs. Iva quick dissolving . Any
Powell, Mrs. Bertha Parker, suggestions would be greatly
and a guest, Mrs. Evel)rn ap~lati!d .
I have used illy homemade
COOLVILLE
The Spencer.
SQap
In my wringer tYJie
meeting of the Eastern
Homemaker's held recently ·.·.·,:,:~:~:~%&lt;..'0lS&amp;l'Qii!',·J
· .... . washer for years. But I now
have anew automatic washer
in the home of Mrs. Lois ~~
S:
so I hestltate to use the
Deem, Coolville, was called
§:
homemade
laWtdry soap in
to order by the ·president,
~
the
automatic.
I would Uke to
Judith Starcher.
.
·
hear
of
the
experiences
of
After a short business
Jlm Corcoran of So~th ' others who may have done
session the group was given Windaor, Coon., will be here this. Because of the high
helpful household hints by over, the wee ken~ for a prices of laundry soap and
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ubman of week s visit with his grand- detergents 1 MUST continue
Pomeroy.
paren~, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph to use my Inexpensive
Refresh!nents were served Cook. On April 24 they will homemade bar soap. It helps
w members Sue Dye, Joan ~turn w. Con~ticul with the budget tremendously and
Smith, Judith Starcher, and him and wlU be there for an Is very easy quick and in·
Lois Deem. Marty Williams extended visit with their terestlng t'o make.
come as Sue Dye's guest. daughter and her family.
LOUISE
Absent were: Pam Hager,
Jamie and Chris Lochary of
DEAR. WUISE - I spoke
Sharon and Barl)ara Hensley. Glen Haven, N. J. will spend wttll a compaay lbal bas
Judith Starcher ·and Joan the next week here visiting repalftd ,...ben of an types
Smith received birthday their grandparents, Mr. and . for many yean and was
gifts. The doo.r prize was won Mrs. Patrick Lochary.
.
adviled lbat they see no
by Marty Williams.
Sherry King, Malone reason why you cannot use
College, Canton, Is spending lbe homemade soap Ill your
Eastern weekend here with automatic washer. Cut It up
her family, Mr. and Mrs. ffne or grate It so It wiD
William King and Kevin.
di&amp;IIOlve more quickly. Ex·
perlment to find lbe correct
amount of sucb soap to use
but do not have more tb~n one
lo one and a balf Inches of
suds above lbe water level. POLLY.
"Faith,
Tears
and
DEAR POLLY - II you
Resurrection," an Easter
print
my Pet Peeve I will
An Easter party was held
cantata will be presented
use
the
Polly Dollar to have
Sunday at 7 p.m. at the Tuesday night by the
my
•
best
slacks cleaned. The
BradbW'y Church o! ChriSt by Homebuilders Class of the
seat
of
the
chair I sat on in a
llle adult and youth choirs. Middleport Church of Christ
Paula Haynes is directot of for patients at the Athens.
the cantata. Members of the Mental Healtli Center.
choirs are Mr. and Mrs.
Games were played, grl\up
FELLOWSHIP MEETS
Wllllam Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. singing was led by George
The Ught and Ufe Men's
Mike Miller, Rodney and Rita Glaze, and refreshmen~ with Fellowship of the Laurel Cliff
Bailey, Tammy and Christi Easter favors were sel'lled to ,. Free Methodlat Church met
Stanley, Desi Jeffers, Kevin the patients. Going over for Thursdll)' night at the home
King, Randy Haynes, Sherrie the party we~e the pastor,. of Pearl Jacobs. E~nest
Barnhart, John Blake, Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence Powell had prayer and gave
Beverly and Bryan Wilcox, Stewart, Ed. Evans, Mrs. Flo the thought, "To,'Do Nothing
Maryln
Wil~ox,
Greg Grueser, Mrs. Coleen Van is Sin." Devotions were by
Browning, · Vickie Hoffman, Meter, Mrs. Susan Chambers James Gllmore, Pearl
Unda Gerard.
·
visiting here from East Point, Jacobs, read "Adorned In His
Ga. and Mrs. Nora Rice.
Fear", and !lob Barton
, , , ,.
, c]osed ,rtth 1!1'~· .Refrelll!men~ were serl&gt;ed to lllose
. named and Herb Gilkey,. Ed
ATI'END SERVICES
Van lnwagen, Steve Evlin,
SHOWINGS PLANNED
Mr. and Mrs. John Fultz
Mike Wright, and Otto Lohn.
Three
showings
of
"The
and soil Marc, of Middleport,
and their daughter, Miss Gospel Road", a story of
Anita Marie Fultz, Columbus, Jesus sung and told by MANUEL INTERVIEWED
were In Xenia Tuesday lor Johnny Cash, have been
An interview with Donald
the fWteral services of Mrs. scheduled lor this weekend. Manuel, Racine, author of the
Lyston Fultz. The funeral At 2 p. m., on Saturday the book, "Love, Hate and War,
was held at the Faith Com- fllm wlU be shown at the.
Ufe of an Ex-POW", will be
munity United Methodist Bethany United Methodist on the Pam Huff show,
Church with burial In the Oluroh In Racine; at 7:30 p. Channel 3, at ·9:30 a. m.
Mllledgeville Plymouth n'i. on Saturday at the Friday.
Cemetery. Pallbearers were Portland United Methodist
·male members of the·choir of Church and at 7:30 p. m. on
llle church where Mrs. Fultz SWtday at the Letart Falls
SERVICE SUNDAY
served as organist. Relatives United Methodist Church.
A sunrise service will be
from Columbus and Cinheld at the Hemlock Grove
cinnati attended the funeral.
Christlan Church at 6 a. m.
SPECIAL PRODUCTION
Easter. Regular services will
a public aervlce, radio be held at 9:30 a . m,
station WMPO wiU present a
special production of "Jesus
SERVICES PLANNED
Clnist, Superstar" on both
MASON, W. Va. -Sunrise FM and Am beginning at I: 15 JOINING FOR SERVICES
Columbia Chapel will join
services lor the upper Mason p. m. Friday. The production
Dexter
Ch~h of Christ for
Parish will begin at 6 a.m. runs almost two hours.
sunrise
services at 6:30a.m. ·
Sunday morning at the Union
The
Rev.
Charles Russell,
Campground. This service
Sr.,
will
speak at the
will include the 14 UM
SERVICES .U L
Columbia
Chapel
at 9:30a.m.
churches in the upper Mason
SW!rise services will be and the Dexter Church at
parish. On Saturday there held at the Bradford Church
wUI be a work day at the of Christ at 6 a.m. A Ugh! 10:30 a.m. Breakfast will be
campground starting at 9 breakfast wlll be served served at 8 a.m.
a.m.
following the services.

SHOW YOU HOW

TO CUT YOUR
ELECTRIC BILL

is

·-

I
Did you know that you can add an
"Amana Heat Pump" to your hi'gh-cost
electric furnace a11d cut your electric
bill way down?

Blessings to All
·This Easter . .------

And! Enjoy air conditioning in the
summertime!

An Amana Heat Pump

'

HEATS AND COOLS
In fact, you save enough on your heating bill to
conditioning costs in the summertime!

..

Compared to a conventional electric furnace . over an entire heaitng season.
Minneapolis, MN.-26 .51 . Savings; Kansu Cily, M0.-44. 13 • Philadelphia, PA .48.72. Atlanta, GA-55 .56 . Tampa, FL~1.09 . San Francisco, CA-61.39. Savings will
vary with cllmote and weather conditions.

Look to Amana today

for the energy saving ideas
of tomorrow

_A.,,,,~
COOLING • HEATING

FOREMAN &amp;. ABBOn
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

,.

. . M.ay the love of the risen Christ flood
your heart with joy this Easter Sunday.
Let His understanding end guidance
bring harmony and peace to all.
We Will Close
At Noon Good Friday

.REUTER-~ROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
"The Insurance Store"

214 E. MAIN

PH. 992-5130

restaurant last night had not
been cleaned before we were
seated and when we returned
home I discovered a green
spot on my good slacks. Such
a staiqls even wo~se Ulan the
spotleft when a seat has been
wiped off and left wet. I!
seems restaurants could be
more careful about such
cleaning. - MRS. W.E.M.
DEAR POLLY - Several
people have asked me how I
keep my fiber glass shower so
clean and white, so I thonght
some of the readers might
like to know, too. 1 use white
vinegar, a plastic scouring
pad and a lot of scrubbing
where the soap dries and
coats the walls and ftoor. Of
course, there ~re some
women with husbands who
wipe the walls and sllding
dOOilS alter every shower but
not mlrie. - MRS. F.L.W.
DEAR POLLY - With
spring upon us many are
thinking about bedding
plants. I started mine this
week in the bottom halves of
different colored styrofoam
egg cartons. I pufabout three
seeds In each cup after they
were filled with dirt. When all
danger of frost has passed
they can be easily removed
from the carton cups and be
transplanted out of doors .
Now they )ook very pretty on
the window sill until that time
comes. - W.J.M . .
DEAR POLLY - I read In
the column about all the
trouble with bugs. I was told
to buy a dog's ftea collar, cut
!I into pieces and keep them
in my cupboard. It really
works. Hope this does the
same for others who may try
i). - MRS. D.C.P.

Young adults pick committees
Committees to design and
erect directional signs to the
Bradford Olurch ol Christ
were named at a meeting of
the Young Adult Class at the
church parsonage Friday
night.
.
Bill Riggs presided at the
meeting with a discussion
being held on painting the
church bus. It was decided
that this will be done alter
vacation Bible school.
Assistance with the cost of
F,aster bookmarks was given
by llle class. As a graduation
gill to Jack ·Perry, pastor, the
class agreed to give money
to.ward the purchase of some
boo.ks qe wants, Mr. perry
will graduate from the
Kentucky Christian College
and will be ordained on May 9
at the. Bradford Church.
The cost of bulletins was
discussed and some plans to
char1ge these were made .

Bridal showers lor Tammy Jamie and Vlnda Biggs,
Schoonover on April 22, and Penny Kirby , Roger and
Linda Hy sell and Diane Brian Weaver , Catherine
Painter later were planned. • Russell , Gerrl, Cherrl and
Miss Schoonover is the bride- Suzi Lightfoot, John, Sylvia
elect of Ten ·y Pickens. A and David Blake, Madeline
planning session for vacation Painter, Bonnie and Gerry
Bible school was set for Ughtfapt, Etta Mae Ellis and
Friday . The next meeting will Mrs. Will.
be on May 10 at the church
with Catherine Russell to
have devotions .
At the meeting Carol Biggs
gave devotions, Bonnie
Lightfoot the secretary's
report, and Bonnie Pickens,
the treasurer 's report.
Foreign dishes prepared by
members were served dllfing
a social hour. Betty Wlll, a
guest, played the harp and
sang for entertainment.
Others attending were Nancy
and Carol Morris, Bonnie and
Vicki Pickens, Jack and Kitty
Perry , Bill Bonar, Blll, Carol,

$3.25 lb. '

Bicentennial program
highlights PTO meet
HARRISONVILLE - A
bicentennial program by the
second grade students of Mrs.
Rose Ann Jenkins highlighted
the Tuesday night meeting o!
the Harrisonville PTO.
The program featured
patriotic singing and original
readings on "Why I Like
Alilerica ." A lighted birthday
cake baked by Mrs. Jenkins'
mother, Mrs. Donald Usle,
was presented io the class.
During the. business
meeting new officers ·were
elected. They are Harold
Norris, president; Mrs .
Helena Riggs, vice ~resident;
Mrs.
Karen
Thomas ,
secretary; Charles Barrett,
treasurer ; Jan Hatfield,

PTA TO MEET
CHESTER _: The Chester
MASON , W. V,a. - Sunday
PTA will meet at 7:30 p. m.
school
attendance on April II
Monday at the school. Inwas
70
at llle Faith llaptist
stallation of officers wlll be
Church
at Mason. .
held.
Ivan Cardwell of Athens
brought
the ·evening
message. Wednesday
evening Aprill4, at 7:30p.m.
RUMMAGE SALE SET
The Meigs High School Rev. Freeland Norris,
Cosmetology Department Racine, brought the message.
On Sunday, April. 18, the
will hold a rummage sale
youth
will present an Easter
Fridav and Saturttay, 9 a. m.
to 5 p, m. at the Masonic program Immediately
following Sunday School at II
Temple, Middleport.
a.m. Sunday School is each
Sunday at !Oa.m. Bible study
SUPPER PLANNED
is Wednesdat at 7:30p.m.
A soup supper will be held
ltev · Cliff Coleman of
at the Letart Falls Jackson will perform a magic
Elementary School beginning program Wednesday, ·April
at 5p. m. Saturday, April24. 28, at 7:30p.m. Everyone is
Anauctionwillbeheldat 7:30 invited to this program.
in the evening. Homemade
The Faith Baptist Church Is
vegetable soup hot dogs presently meeting in the Steel
sloppy joes, cak;, pie and soft ' Wo~kers Union l!all on
drinks will be available.
Railroad Street between
Horton and Pomeroy Sts.

For Easter Paraders

conn1e·

HONOICARY DEPlfi'Y
CQLUMBUS (UP!) -' Six·
year-old George Justice had
the privilege Wednesday of
saying he was a "law
enforcement officer''.

spring btouamsln an embroidered,
~oven b~tket , It's the pt~ WI)'
to send your Euter
•

Always
Appreciated

grtetlnga. Ttlia Easter.

refreshments chairperson;
Donna Weber , news reporter,
and Gloria Riggs, sunshine
correspondent.
Plans were made to show
the film, "That Darn Cat" at
the school on May 7 lor the
general public . The at tendance banner was won by
Mrs. Jenkin 's second grade.
Refreshments were served.

send our basket of
lo~te , They'll love you
for it.

.

Swisher &amp;Lohse

PHARMACY
992-556Q
Middleport,

Open Nights Til9
' 112 E.LMain St.
Pomeroy, o.

o.

!COUNT THE CANDLES!

Off ·

Your Store Wide
Choice at 1
Off

'%

FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY. APRIL 16 &amp;17

Spring &amp; Easter dressing ...

Latigo Tan
Navy Blue
Black Patent

for men of all ages
And there's a smartly
styled suit to please
every one, here. Find
the newest looks for
men, teen men.

And All ·

The

The most
exciting
dress and
casual
Shoes
offered this
year.

Accessories
Come in and enjoy
coffee &amp; donuts with

Discover
Connie
shoes ... with an easv
going . mld-hee I in a
fashionable sandal
look to help you go in
style.

Chapman's

•

KERM'S 19TH

DANCERS INVITED
The French Oty Swingers
Square Dance Club of
G8lllpolls Invites area square
dancers to Ita Saturday night
dance to be held· at Clay
Elementary School from 8 to
II p.m. Caller will be Oiad
·Johnson of ~uth Point.
CLASS OFFERED
RIO GRANDI): - Adult'
Education at Buckeye Hills
Career Center here wlll offer .
a . Housekeeping class to
be held ' on Wednesday
evenings from 6:30 to 9:30 p.
m. Costing $$30 the class Is
geared to people currently
employed or seeking employment In the 'lleld of lnsUtutlonal 'bouaekeeplng at
hospitals and hotels. Class
starts on April28 and .will end
June 30. Registration wtu be
held April20 and 21from 6:30
to 8:30p.m.

~

li's 1 Iovine gift of fresh. fr~r•nt

us.

SRJ~

'POMEROY
OPEN FRI. Tll8 P.M.

Kerm 's Korner

•

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thursday, April IS, 1976

r-§;)~~i;r,&gt;;w

I

•
•
Harrisonville 0£5 TV m
review
Calendar to hold inspection

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT CHI LD
Conservation League, 7:3U
Thur~ay at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
Co. White elephant sale. Ann
Colburn to take the traveling
prize, Peggy Houdashelt to
have devotions.
HARRISONVILLE . Order
of Eastern Slars will host the
Roberta Circle Thursday at
· 6:30p. m. Bring covered dish
and table service. All past
matrons and line 'officers
lnviled.
REVIVAL SERVICES AT
MI. Hermon U.B. Church 7:30
p.m. April 14 through April
20. Rev . JOhn H. Lanier,
evangelist. Pastor Rev .
James Leach. Public Invited.
HOLY WEEK Services at
Bethlehem Baptist Church,
Great Bend, now In progress
through April 17 at 7:30
nighUy. Sunrise services at
6:30 a.m. Special singing.
Earl Shuler pastor . Public
invited.
SYRACUSE FIRST Church
~ God will observe the ordinance of the church on
Thursday at 7:30p.m. which
Includes feet washing and
communion. Public Invited.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, Thursday, 1:15
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Teresa Abbott. Mrs. Phyllis
Skinner wlil have the
program, Mrs . Louise
Radford, the contest.
CARRY -IN DINNER at 6
p.m., hymn sing at 7 p.m
Thursday at Enterprise
United Methodist Church,
featw-ing the singing group ,
.Everlasting Love.
FRIDAY
BIBLE DRAMA, "The Ule
of Christ", at Bradbury
• Church~ Christ, Friday and
• Satw-day at 7:30p.m. Public
.. lnvited.
: COMMUNITY GOOD
: FRIDAY Services Friday at
~ 7:30p.m. at ·the Middleport
~ Chw-ch of Christ. The Rev .
• Peter Granda! of the First
: Baptist Church speaker.
~
SATURDAY
~
DECORATED EASTER
• EGGS will be sdld for $1 a box
: in front of New York Clothing
:. House Saturday from 10 a.m.
: until 5 p.m. A bake sale will
• also be held. Sponsored by
: Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
: EASTER EGG HUNT at
: Southern High School
: Satw-day from I :30 to 2:30
• p.m. Those wishing to donate
, colored eggs call 949-2549 or
: leave at school Friday.
:.Sponsored by F.H.A.
•
SUNDAY
: SUNRISE SERVICES at
: Sutton Church at 7:30 a.m.
: Breakfast at 8:15 · a.m.
• Sunday &amp;hool at 9:15 a.m .
: with egg hunt to follow.
: Charge wide services at
: Carmel Church at 10:45 a.m.
: Pastor is the Rev . Steve
• Wilson.
' COUNTY-WIDE PRAYER
: service to be held at 2 p.m. on
; Sunday at the Fairplay
: Chapel with Glen Bissell,
: leader . Rev ." Thereon
• Durham is pastor of the
: church located off Stale
: Routes 320 and 124 on Meigs
: County Road I.
·
• BRADFORD Church of
: Christ sunrise service, 6 a. m.
; Easter morning. Everyone
: Welcome.
• APPLE GROVE Church,
: Sunrise service Easter
: morning, 6 a. m.
: BRADBURY Church of
: Christ, Easter cantata by the
• adult and youth choir, 7 p. m.
~ Sunday. Sunrise service at
, 6:30 a. m. Eas~r morl)ing,
: outside weather permitting.
•••
~
MONDAY
• BLOODMOBILE Monday
: at Pomeroy Elementary
: &amp;hool from I to 6 p. m.
• RACINE PTO Monday at
; elementary school. There will
: be a cui turar arts program
: and installation of new of-ficers. Refreshments will be
"• served.by second grade.

'
••

•••

•••
•

•

HARRISONVIJ:LE
lor the dining area .
Grand
Inspection
of
A letter was read from the
Harrlsooville Chapter, Order district president thanking
of the Eastern Star, was the chapter for assistance
announcedlor May 13, at the with a gift for her receotlon.
chpater meeting
held and also for the work with
Tuesday night at the Masonic Howard Shull, worthy grand
Temple.
1 patron, and his wife, Mary:
Members were reminded to Also read w~s a letter from
take cookies, sandwiches and Mrs. Evelyn Jones, a past
a jello salad for the social grand . matron ,
comhour which wtll follow In- pllmenbng the members and
spectlon. The dinner wiU be Masons on the new temple.
served at S: n p.m. at a cost. New proposed by-laws were
of J3 wttl\ reservations tp be read. The birthday of
made with Mrs. Avanell Douglas Bishop was noted,
George by May 6.
·and reported ill were Mrs.
It was also announced that Joan Kaldor who enters
Roberta Circle will meet a~ University Hospital today,
the temple tonight at 6:31) p. Ml:s. Sam Wyatt and Mrs.
m. and all members ate to • Mary Diehl.
'take food and their own table
It was reported that the
service. Read at the meeting bazaar and bake sale netted
were invitations · to In- $180.90 The altar was draped
spectlons to be held at lor Marguerite Hale, past
chapters in Guysville, grand matron .
Glouster,
Westwood,
In the absence of Mrs.
Reiners ville Matamoras Kaldor., worthy matron, Mrs . .
Bartlett, Alb~ny, Vinton, Mt: Betty B~shop presided .
Olive and Wilkesville
Douglas Btshop was w!H'thy
A report was given. on the · p~tron pro tern; Gracie
spaghetti dinner serv.ed. tor W1lson, associate matron ,pro
the Masons Saturday night. It tern; Don Wilson, assoctale
was given in appreciation for patron, pro tern, and Lots
the new hall · which was Thompson, Esther pro tern .
recently buill. The new . Refreshments were served
labaranUi rug was In use and by Mrs ..Norma Lee, Mr. and
il was noted that 14 new Mrs. B1shop, Mrs. Frances
tables had been purchased Alkire , and Mrs. Frances
Young.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::;:::~:::~:i:i::::::}.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:~;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::i:·:·::::::;:;

·.·.

J,

\_.i..•.
_

·

·.;.

miJlutes uta time if he knows
what's good for him, which
our fun-i ovin~ hero doesn't
alwavs seem to realize.
"Gemini Man" is followed
by NBC Monday Night ·at the
Movies.
Tuesday : "Baa Baa Black
Sheep," scheduled for S-9
p.m. Eastern time, is a
comedt·adventure series
based on the World War II
exp loits or flying ace
"Pappy" Boyington who, In
this version,leads a squadron
of
roliickin·g,
antiestablishment pilots. It Is
followed by "Police Woma n"
and "Police Story."
Wednesday: "Uttie House
oh The Prairie" remains in
~~Movin" On/' "City of An ~ the fam il y hour , to . be
gels," "The Dumplings," followed from 9-10 p.m. by
"Petrocelli,'' Mac Davis and "Quest, " th e on ly new
"Ellery Queen." With that Western on the air. The quest
lineup goes a lot of action - of U1e title is the search by
adventure and some lop Kurt Russell and Tim
performers, including I.Joyd Matheson for their sister who
Bridges, Jack Warden, wa~ captured by the Indians.
Wayne Rogers and Jimmy Name stars are to C&lt;Jme on as
Coco.
gues ts playin g famous .
There are 21 programs heroes, or villains, of the Old
listed on NBC'snew schedule,
and only seven of thcin are
holdovers In their old time
slots.
NBC's third place rating
lor the season genera lly was
blamed
on
Marvin
Antonowsky, dubbed the
"mad prograrruner" by Lee
Grant after he cancelled her
show, "Fay." Antonowksy
has stepped · down, although
not out ol the network, and
the schedule was worked out
by a committee, with a big

J./

Should Have- Not Get More?
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Here's a two-generation question for you : My wife and I
are at odds about our will. We have three children. Two show
every sign of success - they won't need our money, as they 're
already In the high income bracket.
But our youngest is a dreamer. He has no business sense,
and lor him a job is something forced on you between "more
important things." I hate to say it, but he's on the lazy side.
My wife says we should leave the bulk of our savings
(about $50.000) to him as he'll need it, whereas the others don't.
I say that's discriminating against success. What do you say•
- lOOKING FORWARD.
DEAR L.F.:
We're with YOU. Share and share alike Is the only fair way
to divide an Inheritance among the children. - HELEN.
DEAR L. :
Could be your wile's attitude toward her "baby" is one of
the reasons he Is anti-work. Whatever, why reward him for
laziness? - SUE.
DEAR RAP :
I'm 2ti, a native Californian, brought up in the days or
flower children,lree love and lots of dope. I left the scene three
years ago to lind a new life.
I'm now married to a wonderful man, but it's hsrd to come
down to only one partner when you've been accustomed to a lot
of different relationships. I had my first affair recently and
regret it. AJn determined it won't happen again, but how can I
make myself. satisfied with only one?- EX IDPPIE
DEAR EX:
By considering the consequences If y'ou revert to the free
and sleasy life . Which are, I. You'll be again caught in a
nowhere scene; and 2 You'UJose your husband. Are a few new
sexual experiences worth that ?-HELEN AND SUE
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I am 13. When I was eight, I was molested by a man who
was then 54 . He !snow 59 and Is still after me. I'm afraid of him
and can't protect myself. I'm afraid someday I might get
pregnant .
I ca n't tell Mom because she is in love with him. They
aren't married, but he is living with us. I tried running away,
but I didn't get far enough and they brought me back.
What can I do?- F .M.
DEAR F.:
You MUST tell your mother! There's a chance she won't
believe you, -but getting your fears in the open will at least
make her realize you should be in a foster home or with
reiatives.-SUE
•
A WORD FROM HELEN : Something's awfully wrong here ,
and I don't mean entirely the seduction. Ho.wcould a mother be
so blind thst she is not aware of a five-year assault on her
young daughter ? II she doesn 't want to see, then you should tell
someone outside the home - a minister, a school counselor who will contact the proper authorities.
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject for discussion , twogeneration style • Direct your questions to either Sue or Helen
Bolte! - or both, If you want a combination m9ther~ughter
answer - in care of this newspaper. )

Parents
committee
heard
.

Hy JOAN HANAUER
UPI Televislnn Writer
NE W YOHK I UP! I - i"BC
hopes to wtn back its share of·
the television audience next
wi th a one-two
fall
combination of heavy
"event" programming and
light touch adventures that
forego
pun ches
for
punchlines.
The n~twork has cancelled
ni.ne shows and the "McCoy"
segment of its Sunday
Mystery Movie. Only one
show introduced during the
197S.76 season survives . ~
"The Practice/ ' .starring
Danny Thomas.
Gone are Rich Lillie, "Joe
Forrester.'' 11 Jigsaw John, n

~~~::a~!~:.~:.~ •. ~~~§~;£~

a slide rule . The failure of his ·
schedule is one of the biggest
boosts for ·seat-&lt;Jf-the-pants
programming in a long time.
The most exciting thing
coming up on NBC this fall is
"The Big Event," blocked in
from 9:3().11 p.m., Eastern
time, on Sunday nights, but
expandable if ptogramming
demands merit more time.
"Big Events" include the
television premiere of "Gone
With the Wind," a Ross
Hunter produ ce d
dramatization of Arthur
Halley's "The Moneychsngers," and NBC's four-hour
50th anniversary special.
"Best Sellers" Is another
new concept In regular
scheduling, slated lor
Thursday , 10-11 p.m.,
Eastern time. Here NBC Is
taking a page from ABC's
book , what with the
popularity first of "QB Vll"
and then of "Rich Man, Poor
Man."
"Captain and the Kings'' by
Taylor
Caldwell
and
"Evening In Byzantium" by
Irwin Shaw are among the
four to ~ix novels slated lor
serialization at various
lengths with major guests
stars yet to be announced.
The new NBC schedule
comes out like this:
Sunday
sticks
with
" Disne y", followed by
"Mystery Movie" from S-9 :3U
p.m., Eastern time, winding
up with "The Big Event."
There's one newcomer to
"Mystery " - Jack Klugman
as '(Quincy ,'' a flip and
irreverant medical e&lt;amlner
in the Los Angeles coroner's
office.
Monday : "Gemini Man,"
NBC 's second tr y at
invisibility, from S-9 p.m.,
Eastern time. Last Fall "The
Invisible Man" vanished
quickly from the schedule .
Now we will have Ben
Murphy as a government
agent who can make himself
invisible - but only for 15

GET RID Of FATI
KILlER

MASON, W. Va. - Five
disciplinary proplems at
Wah arna High &amp;hool and
Junior High were presented
to the Mason County Board or
Education Tuesday night by a
group calling i!self the Bend
Area Parents Committee.
The committee 's presence
at the meeting was the apparen t direct result of an
occu rrence at Wahama
Junior High last week in
which -eight girls overdosed
on drugs . .
John C. Wolle, spokesman,
rea d the five disciplinary

West .
From 11!-ll p.rn., Eastern
time , will be "Gibbsville,"
based on short stories by
:John O'Hara. Set in a small
Pennsylvania town in the
1940s, it stars Gig Young and
John Savage (the star of
"Eric" last fall ) as reporters.

together to solve the
problem."
Board member Bill Brady
more or less told the people
present that these problems
were not the fault of the
administration or . SJ:hool
board, but of the parents.
In speaking on absenteeism, Brady said: "lf
parents can't make students
attend how can we?"
He then criticized the
Parents Committee for
allowing the Point Pleaiant
Register to cov~ a meelinll
last Friday at the Hartford
Community ~nter 1!1 which
200 people attended. He said:
"Too many times we've ~OIIe
to the Register to air our
wash."
Wahama Principal Larry
Sawyers said, "I've nevel4
refused to talk to anyone. I'D ·
sit down and talk to anyone on
any or these problems."
Nothing concrete was
resolved
during
the
discussion.
Other business was routine.

problems as they say them :
- Abuse of teachers by
students.
- Alcohol on campua.
-Continued absenteeism.
- Unauthorized people on
school property.
- Restroom problems.
"The problems are nol
unique to Wahama . It is juat
that we are concerned about
our particular school," said
Wolfe .
Superintendent Charles
:.Vithers asked Wolle for
additional examples
disclpllnar~ problems and
Wolf~ noted that students
smoke at school in nonsmoking areas. Withers said
that the eight students who
reportedly were overdosed
carried
prescription
medicine bottles.
" Mr. Sawyers can't shske
down a child, the board or
education can't shake down
every child, " Withers said.
Withers
and
Board
President Harry Siders
agreed ''we want to work

or

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SAVESSO.

BURTON ILL
Paul Eugene Bw-ton Is
confined to Ward 2-A,
Veterans Administration
Hospital, Huntington, W. Va.
Burton was taken to Holzer
Medical Center in critical
condition by the Syracuse
Emergency Squad Saturday
and was confined to the intensive care ward . Somewhat
improved he was transferred
to the Veterans Ad·
·ministration Hospital .

HERE FOR VISIT
• Mrs . Chesler Rice of
YOUTH TO GATHER
: College Park, Ga., and Mrs.
A youth rally of the United
:George Chambers and Pentecostal Churches wiD be
:children, Clint and Emily, held at Portsmouth, Friday
:East Point, Ga., arrived last . at e· p. m. with the Rev .
.Friday for II.,.Visit with Mr.
:and Mrs. DeiJk,er Rice and Robert He~ of Indiana as
;Billy, Mrs. Homer · Rice, guest speaker. Services at the
Mtdnleport United Pen:Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
tecostal Church will not be
8_eorge DeWeese, Athens. held Friday due to tile youth
,, ney will be joined here
tomorrow by Chesler Rice rally and no bua services will
be provided. The rally is a
and the family will remain sectional "Sheaves for
ltere over Euler.
Christ"kick-&lt;Jfl rally .

... and some people need
help . Here 's a Simple way to
lose weight. MDNAOEX
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You eat less ... you weigh

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:,

BY OONAU&gt; B. THACXREV
SAN FRANCISOO (UP!) Patricia Hearst has admitted
taking part in the bQmbings
of two sheriff's cars a month
before she was arrested and
may be involved in other
crimes Utat hs~~e nP' "ot

Proxmire's
... award given

pa~

come to light, authorities
have disclosed.
Marin County District
Attorney Bruce Bales ~id
Miss Hearst , hospitalized
wit11 a collapsed lung ,
admitted she was one of four
persons who blew up the
patrol cars in the parking lot
of the Marin Civic Center, .

in two bombings of cars
across the Golden Gate gore, who knew Miss Hearst
Bridge from San Francisco. while she was underground,
He said Miss Hearst said is being sought for
she was al the ·scene, "but que tlonlng in the case.
didn't actually throw the
U- ~ · Attorney James
bombs."
Browning 'Jr., asked if be
Bales said Miss Hearst was thought there were still other
ready to testify against the incidents Miss Hearst was
other three , who were n"ot . involved in thsthsve not beeh
named , although James Kil- disclosed, said, "! suspect

there 'are."
The latest disclosures by
Miss Hearst grew out of a
four-hour session she had
with government prosecutors
Monday after her sentencing
for bank robbery. .
.
Her admissions, {Tiade tn
the presence of her attomeys,
were in hopes she could win a

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· light sentence on the bank
robbery ~o nviction and
Immunity from further
prosecution.
Miss Hearst, stili in pain,
was isolated in a third-Door
private room in Sequoia ·
Hospital in Redwood City,
where she was reported
improving. She complained
of difficulty in breathing
Tuesday night and was taken
to the hospital for minor
surgery.
Miss Hearst was allowed

visits from her attorneys and
her family. Her parents and a
sister visited her lor I ll! hours
Wednesday.
A hospital spokesman said
the ailment wus relatively
common lor young women of
slight build but could have
caused death had it remained
untreated. He said Miss Hearst would
remain hospitalized for lour
or five days, then would need
another u·days of recupera-

lion.
Miss Hears! 's scheduled
court appearance in Los
Angeles on Iter indlclmellt lor
the Mel's Sporting Gooda
Incident - and her first
con fron ta tion with
Symblonese UberaUon Ar1liY
members Emily and WiWam
Harris since her admissions
- was delayed lor a week.
Superior Court Judge Mark
Brandler said he would
further delay !I II necessary.

"

~

...

:: space agency
WASHtNGTON (UP!) : The llpace agency has won
April's ."Golden Fleece of the
Month" award for proposing
'· to spend $2.8 mlllloo to house
190 pounds of moon rocks.
•I
Sen. WUilam Proxmire, OWls., makes the monthly
fleece awa..at to what he
considers the biggest, most
ridiculous or ironic example
of wasteful government
spending. All mon\hly fleece
winners are in the running to
be "Golden Fleece of the
Year."
Proxmire said Wednesday
National Aerolljlutics and
Space Administration asked
· for the $2.8 mUllan to build an
" addition to the exisUng Lunar
Receiving Laboratory at the
~ Johnson Space Center In
Houston, Tex.
The irony, he said, is thst in
~· 1971, after spending $8.7
million to construct the lunar
~ laboratory, NASA Curator
· Dr. Michael D\lke said the
• new building would be " ... the
:. permanent facility for .
storage, handling and doing
' detailedstudiesoftherocks."
Now, Prollllire said, NASA
"is back at Congress'
: doorstep asking for the extra
: mllllons to add to a facility
. ; that only five years ago was
considered to be the final
; resting place for the moon
, rocks. ''
~
He called · the existing
" structure '' perfectly
~ adequate .. . to house a
' • wheelbarrowful of moon

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Lim It one coupon Per C•
1·76 .

. ,:wage law will
.: he aired in
"

Helen Evaits, director of
::., the Department of Induatrial
:;'Relations, has designated
• .several department
representatives to inform
pubUc authoritie' in Ohio
about the State's prevailing
wage law.
The "Prevailing Wag~
- . Emphasis Program"· as it Is
~•' called, Is designed Initially to
acquaint
the
public
authorities with their. con-·lractural and emiJloyee
::obligations in the CQJI·
, . ' structton of public im- provements.
Two separate public
meeUng will be held at City
Health Office, 280 W. Union
Street, Athens, Wednesday,
_ April 28, at 10:30 a.m. and 2
;-p.ni. Representatives of
: pubUc authorities; including
• cities, counties, villages,
r-townshlpe and school boarda
·.:will be invited from Atlll!'~&lt;
. IJaUla, Hocking, Jack•,
.: "Meigs,. MDrl!an, Perry and
VInton counties.

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THRU MAY 1, 1976

NELSON'S DRUG STORE

.

CouPOn

ANACIN

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· 563 Limll1 per ·

FIU.ED STRAW

: Cards, fonns
.• offered 725
'
! senior·folks '
•
; Golden Buckeye Cards and
: appllcatioo forms have been
: completed lor an estimated
• 725 Meigs County senior
: citizens. Registration will
: continue at the Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy
:::,~dally from 10 until 2.
Applications are also
:!available dally at Hensley's
;.~ Store in Long Bottom,
•• Harrisonville Elementary
&amp;hool at tile Senior Citizen
Room on Tuesdays, Rutland
Senior Citizens and . Reedsville Fire Department on
Wednesdays. Ali Ohioans age
65 and over are eligible for
•the cards.
.. , As announced by Gov.
• · James A. Rhodes, discounts
will be provided at state park
facilities tor card holders.
~~ Several statewide groups
such as the Ohio Theatre
Association and
Wendy's Old Fashioned
' Hamburgers have announced
their participation. Local
Buckeye · Card coordinators
are working with businesses
fu Meigs County to join the
sta~de program.

DATRIL

Nelson's
REG.
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CHORALE TO PERFORM
The Rio Grande Chorale
less! Start your Monadex
will perform Tuesday at 7 p. reducing
plan today ...
m. at the Salisbury PTO. One you 've a new
way of life
of you! If you don '!
member of the group Is Phil ahead
lose that ugly fat ~ we ' ll
Ohlinger who attended chee r fully refund your
money - no t~uesfion s asked .
Salisbury Elementary Also
try AQUATABS ... a
School. The program Is "open water pill that Works gently
to help you lose water bloat.
. to the pubirc. A business Swisher
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meeting of the PTO will 112 E. Main, Pomerov &amp;
Dutton Drl,fg S1ore, M id·
follow the Ch!H'ale presen- dleport.
Mail Orders Filled.
tation.

9-The Dally Sentinel, P!H'neroy-Middleport, 0 ., Thursday, April IS, 1976

CELLO GRASS

NELSON'S
REG.

39c

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thursday, April IS, 1976

r-§;)~~i;r,&gt;;w

I

•
•
Harrisonville 0£5 TV m
review
Calendar to hold inspection

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT CHI LD
Conservation League, 7:3U
Thur~ay at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
Co. White elephant sale. Ann
Colburn to take the traveling
prize, Peggy Houdashelt to
have devotions.
HARRISONVILLE . Order
of Eastern Slars will host the
Roberta Circle Thursday at
· 6:30p. m. Bring covered dish
and table service. All past
matrons and line 'officers
lnviled.
REVIVAL SERVICES AT
MI. Hermon U.B. Church 7:30
p.m. April 14 through April
20. Rev . JOhn H. Lanier,
evangelist. Pastor Rev .
James Leach. Public Invited.
HOLY WEEK Services at
Bethlehem Baptist Church,
Great Bend, now In progress
through April 17 at 7:30
nighUy. Sunrise services at
6:30 a.m. Special singing.
Earl Shuler pastor . Public
invited.
SYRACUSE FIRST Church
~ God will observe the ordinance of the church on
Thursday at 7:30p.m. which
Includes feet washing and
communion. Public Invited.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, Thursday, 1:15
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Teresa Abbott. Mrs. Phyllis
Skinner wlil have the
program, Mrs . Louise
Radford, the contest.
CARRY -IN DINNER at 6
p.m., hymn sing at 7 p.m
Thursday at Enterprise
United Methodist Church,
featw-ing the singing group ,
.Everlasting Love.
FRIDAY
BIBLE DRAMA, "The Ule
of Christ", at Bradbury
• Church~ Christ, Friday and
• Satw-day at 7:30p.m. Public
.. lnvited.
: COMMUNITY GOOD
: FRIDAY Services Friday at
~ 7:30p.m. at ·the Middleport
~ Chw-ch of Christ. The Rev .
• Peter Granda! of the First
: Baptist Church speaker.
~
SATURDAY
~
DECORATED EASTER
• EGGS will be sdld for $1 a box
: in front of New York Clothing
:. House Saturday from 10 a.m.
: until 5 p.m. A bake sale will
• also be held. Sponsored by
: Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
: EASTER EGG HUNT at
: Southern High School
: Satw-day from I :30 to 2:30
• p.m. Those wishing to donate
, colored eggs call 949-2549 or
: leave at school Friday.
:.Sponsored by F.H.A.
•
SUNDAY
: SUNRISE SERVICES at
: Sutton Church at 7:30 a.m.
: Breakfast at 8:15 · a.m.
• Sunday &amp;hool at 9:15 a.m .
: with egg hunt to follow.
: Charge wide services at
: Carmel Church at 10:45 a.m.
: Pastor is the Rev . Steve
• Wilson.
' COUNTY-WIDE PRAYER
: service to be held at 2 p.m. on
; Sunday at the Fairplay
: Chapel with Glen Bissell,
: leader . Rev ." Thereon
• Durham is pastor of the
: church located off Stale
: Routes 320 and 124 on Meigs
: County Road I.
·
• BRADFORD Church of
: Christ sunrise service, 6 a. m.
; Easter morning. Everyone
: Welcome.
• APPLE GROVE Church,
: Sunrise service Easter
: morning, 6 a. m.
: BRADBURY Church of
: Christ, Easter cantata by the
• adult and youth choir, 7 p. m.
~ Sunday. Sunrise service at
, 6:30 a. m. Eas~r morl)ing,
: outside weather permitting.
•••
~
MONDAY
• BLOODMOBILE Monday
: at Pomeroy Elementary
: &amp;hool from I to 6 p. m.
• RACINE PTO Monday at
; elementary school. There will
: be a cui turar arts program
: and installation of new of-ficers. Refreshments will be
"• served.by second grade.

'
••

•••

•••
•

•

HARRISONVIJ:LE
lor the dining area .
Grand
Inspection
of
A letter was read from the
Harrlsooville Chapter, Order district president thanking
of the Eastern Star, was the chapter for assistance
announcedlor May 13, at the with a gift for her receotlon.
chpater meeting
held and also for the work with
Tuesday night at the Masonic Howard Shull, worthy grand
Temple.
1 patron, and his wife, Mary:
Members were reminded to Also read w~s a letter from
take cookies, sandwiches and Mrs. Evelyn Jones, a past
a jello salad for the social grand . matron ,
comhour which wtll follow In- pllmenbng the members and
spectlon. The dinner wiU be Masons on the new temple.
served at S: n p.m. at a cost. New proposed by-laws were
of J3 wttl\ reservations tp be read. The birthday of
made with Mrs. Avanell Douglas Bishop was noted,
George by May 6.
·and reported ill were Mrs.
It was also announced that Joan Kaldor who enters
Roberta Circle will meet a~ University Hospital today,
the temple tonight at 6:31) p. Ml:s. Sam Wyatt and Mrs.
m. and all members ate to • Mary Diehl.
'take food and their own table
It was reported that the
service. Read at the meeting bazaar and bake sale netted
were invitations · to In- $180.90 The altar was draped
spectlons to be held at lor Marguerite Hale, past
chapters in Guysville, grand matron .
Glouster,
Westwood,
In the absence of Mrs.
Reiners ville Matamoras Kaldor., worthy matron, Mrs . .
Bartlett, Alb~ny, Vinton, Mt: Betty B~shop presided .
Olive and Wilkesville
Douglas Btshop was w!H'thy
A report was given. on the · p~tron pro tern; Gracie
spaghetti dinner serv.ed. tor W1lson, associate matron ,pro
the Masons Saturday night. It tern; Don Wilson, assoctale
was given in appreciation for patron, pro tern, and Lots
the new hall · which was Thompson, Esther pro tern .
recently buill. The new . Refreshments were served
labaranUi rug was In use and by Mrs ..Norma Lee, Mr. and
il was noted that 14 new Mrs. B1shop, Mrs. Frances
tables had been purchased Alkire , and Mrs. Frances
Young.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::;:::~:::~:i:i::::::}.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:~;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::i:·:·::::::;:;

·.·.

J,

\_.i..•.
_

·

·.;.

miJlutes uta time if he knows
what's good for him, which
our fun-i ovin~ hero doesn't
alwavs seem to realize.
"Gemini Man" is followed
by NBC Monday Night ·at the
Movies.
Tuesday : "Baa Baa Black
Sheep," scheduled for S-9
p.m. Eastern time, is a
comedt·adventure series
based on the World War II
exp loits or flying ace
"Pappy" Boyington who, In
this version,leads a squadron
of
roliickin·g,
antiestablishment pilots. It Is
followed by "Police Woma n"
and "Police Story."
Wednesday: "Uttie House
oh The Prairie" remains in
~~Movin" On/' "City of An ~ the fam il y hour , to . be
gels," "The Dumplings," followed from 9-10 p.m. by
"Petrocelli,'' Mac Davis and "Quest, " th e on ly new
"Ellery Queen." With that Western on the air. The quest
lineup goes a lot of action - of U1e title is the search by
adventure and some lop Kurt Russell and Tim
performers, including I.Joyd Matheson for their sister who
Bridges, Jack Warden, wa~ captured by the Indians.
Wayne Rogers and Jimmy Name stars are to C&lt;Jme on as
Coco.
gues ts playin g famous .
There are 21 programs heroes, or villains, of the Old
listed on NBC'snew schedule,
and only seven of thcin are
holdovers In their old time
slots.
NBC's third place rating
lor the season genera lly was
blamed
on
Marvin
Antonowsky, dubbed the
"mad prograrruner" by Lee
Grant after he cancelled her
show, "Fay." Antonowksy
has stepped · down, although
not out ol the network, and
the schedule was worked out
by a committee, with a big

J./

Should Have- Not Get More?
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Here's a two-generation question for you : My wife and I
are at odds about our will. We have three children. Two show
every sign of success - they won't need our money, as they 're
already In the high income bracket.
But our youngest is a dreamer. He has no business sense,
and lor him a job is something forced on you between "more
important things." I hate to say it, but he's on the lazy side.
My wife says we should leave the bulk of our savings
(about $50.000) to him as he'll need it, whereas the others don't.
I say that's discriminating against success. What do you say•
- lOOKING FORWARD.
DEAR L.F.:
We're with YOU. Share and share alike Is the only fair way
to divide an Inheritance among the children. - HELEN.
DEAR L. :
Could be your wile's attitude toward her "baby" is one of
the reasons he Is anti-work. Whatever, why reward him for
laziness? - SUE.
DEAR RAP :
I'm 2ti, a native Californian, brought up in the days or
flower children,lree love and lots of dope. I left the scene three
years ago to lind a new life.
I'm now married to a wonderful man, but it's hsrd to come
down to only one partner when you've been accustomed to a lot
of different relationships. I had my first affair recently and
regret it. AJn determined it won't happen again, but how can I
make myself. satisfied with only one?- EX IDPPIE
DEAR EX:
By considering the consequences If y'ou revert to the free
and sleasy life . Which are, I. You'll be again caught in a
nowhere scene; and 2 You'UJose your husband. Are a few new
sexual experiences worth that ?-HELEN AND SUE
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I am 13. When I was eight, I was molested by a man who
was then 54 . He !snow 59 and Is still after me. I'm afraid of him
and can't protect myself. I'm afraid someday I might get
pregnant .
I ca n't tell Mom because she is in love with him. They
aren't married, but he is living with us. I tried running away,
but I didn't get far enough and they brought me back.
What can I do?- F .M.
DEAR F.:
You MUST tell your mother! There's a chance she won't
believe you, -but getting your fears in the open will at least
make her realize you should be in a foster home or with
reiatives.-SUE
•
A WORD FROM HELEN : Something's awfully wrong here ,
and I don't mean entirely the seduction. Ho.wcould a mother be
so blind thst she is not aware of a five-year assault on her
young daughter ? II she doesn 't want to see, then you should tell
someone outside the home - a minister, a school counselor who will contact the proper authorities.
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject for discussion , twogeneration style • Direct your questions to either Sue or Helen
Bolte! - or both, If you want a combination m9ther~ughter
answer - in care of this newspaper. )

Parents
committee
heard
.

Hy JOAN HANAUER
UPI Televislnn Writer
NE W YOHK I UP! I - i"BC
hopes to wtn back its share of·
the television audience next
wi th a one-two
fall
combination of heavy
"event" programming and
light touch adventures that
forego
pun ches
for
punchlines.
The n~twork has cancelled
ni.ne shows and the "McCoy"
segment of its Sunday
Mystery Movie. Only one
show introduced during the
197S.76 season survives . ~
"The Practice/ ' .starring
Danny Thomas.
Gone are Rich Lillie, "Joe
Forrester.'' 11 Jigsaw John, n

~~~::a~!~:.~:.~ •. ~~~§~;£~

a slide rule . The failure of his ·
schedule is one of the biggest
boosts for ·seat-&lt;Jf-the-pants
programming in a long time.
The most exciting thing
coming up on NBC this fall is
"The Big Event," blocked in
from 9:3().11 p.m., Eastern
time, on Sunday nights, but
expandable if ptogramming
demands merit more time.
"Big Events" include the
television premiere of "Gone
With the Wind," a Ross
Hunter produ ce d
dramatization of Arthur
Halley's "The Moneychsngers," and NBC's four-hour
50th anniversary special.
"Best Sellers" Is another
new concept In regular
scheduling, slated lor
Thursday , 10-11 p.m.,
Eastern time. Here NBC Is
taking a page from ABC's
book , what with the
popularity first of "QB Vll"
and then of "Rich Man, Poor
Man."
"Captain and the Kings'' by
Taylor
Caldwell
and
"Evening In Byzantium" by
Irwin Shaw are among the
four to ~ix novels slated lor
serialization at various
lengths with major guests
stars yet to be announced.
The new NBC schedule
comes out like this:
Sunday
sticks
with
" Disne y", followed by
"Mystery Movie" from S-9 :3U
p.m., Eastern time, winding
up with "The Big Event."
There's one newcomer to
"Mystery " - Jack Klugman
as '(Quincy ,'' a flip and
irreverant medical e&lt;amlner
in the Los Angeles coroner's
office.
Monday : "Gemini Man,"
NBC 's second tr y at
invisibility, from S-9 p.m.,
Eastern time. Last Fall "The
Invisible Man" vanished
quickly from the schedule .
Now we will have Ben
Murphy as a government
agent who can make himself
invisible - but only for 15

GET RID Of FATI
KILlER

MASON, W. Va. - Five
disciplinary proplems at
Wah arna High &amp;hool and
Junior High were presented
to the Mason County Board or
Education Tuesday night by a
group calling i!self the Bend
Area Parents Committee.
The committee 's presence
at the meeting was the apparen t direct result of an
occu rrence at Wahama
Junior High last week in
which -eight girls overdosed
on drugs . .
John C. Wolle, spokesman,
rea d the five disciplinary

West .
From 11!-ll p.rn., Eastern
time , will be "Gibbsville,"
based on short stories by
:John O'Hara. Set in a small
Pennsylvania town in the
1940s, it stars Gig Young and
John Savage (the star of
"Eric" last fall ) as reporters.

together to solve the
problem."
Board member Bill Brady
more or less told the people
present that these problems
were not the fault of the
administration or . SJ:hool
board, but of the parents.
In speaking on absenteeism, Brady said: "lf
parents can't make students
attend how can we?"
He then criticized the
Parents Committee for
allowing the Point Pleaiant
Register to cov~ a meelinll
last Friday at the Hartford
Community ~nter 1!1 which
200 people attended. He said:
"Too many times we've ~OIIe
to the Register to air our
wash."
Wahama Principal Larry
Sawyers said, "I've nevel4
refused to talk to anyone. I'D ·
sit down and talk to anyone on
any or these problems."
Nothing concrete was
resolved
during
the
discussion.
Other business was routine.

problems as they say them :
- Abuse of teachers by
students.
- Alcohol on campua.
-Continued absenteeism.
- Unauthorized people on
school property.
- Restroom problems.
"The problems are nol
unique to Wahama . It is juat
that we are concerned about
our particular school," said
Wolfe .
Superintendent Charles
:.Vithers asked Wolle for
additional examples
disclpllnar~ problems and
Wolf~ noted that students
smoke at school in nonsmoking areas. Withers said
that the eight students who
reportedly were overdosed
carried
prescription
medicine bottles.
" Mr. Sawyers can't shske
down a child, the board or
education can't shake down
every child, " Withers said.
Withers
and
Board
President Harry Siders
agreed ''we want to work

or

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SAVESSO.

BURTON ILL
Paul Eugene Bw-ton Is
confined to Ward 2-A,
Veterans Administration
Hospital, Huntington, W. Va.
Burton was taken to Holzer
Medical Center in critical
condition by the Syracuse
Emergency Squad Saturday
and was confined to the intensive care ward . Somewhat
improved he was transferred
to the Veterans Ad·
·ministration Hospital .

HERE FOR VISIT
• Mrs . Chesler Rice of
YOUTH TO GATHER
: College Park, Ga., and Mrs.
A youth rally of the United
:George Chambers and Pentecostal Churches wiD be
:children, Clint and Emily, held at Portsmouth, Friday
:East Point, Ga., arrived last . at e· p. m. with the Rev .
.Friday for II.,.Visit with Mr.
:and Mrs. DeiJk,er Rice and Robert He~ of Indiana as
;Billy, Mrs. Homer · Rice, guest speaker. Services at the
Mtdnleport United Pen:Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
tecostal Church will not be
8_eorge DeWeese, Athens. held Friday due to tile youth
,, ney will be joined here
tomorrow by Chesler Rice rally and no bua services will
be provided. The rally is a
and the family will remain sectional "Sheaves for
ltere over Euler.
Christ"kick-&lt;Jfl rally .

... and some people need
help . Here 's a Simple way to
lose weight. MDNAOEX
helps curb your appetite.
You eat less ... you weigh

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Herman Grate · Mason. W.Va .

773-5592

:,

BY OONAU&gt; B. THACXREV
SAN FRANCISOO (UP!) Patricia Hearst has admitted
taking part in the bQmbings
of two sheriff's cars a month
before she was arrested and
may be involved in other
crimes Utat hs~~e nP' "ot

Proxmire's
... award given

pa~

come to light, authorities
have disclosed.
Marin County District
Attorney Bruce Bales ~id
Miss Hearst , hospitalized
wit11 a collapsed lung ,
admitted she was one of four
persons who blew up the
patrol cars in the parking lot
of the Marin Civic Center, .

in two bombings of cars
across the Golden Gate gore, who knew Miss Hearst
Bridge from San Francisco. while she was underground,
He said Miss Hearst said is being sought for
she was al the ·scene, "but que tlonlng in the case.
didn't actually throw the
U- ~ · Attorney James
bombs."
Browning 'Jr., asked if be
Bales said Miss Hearst was thought there were still other
ready to testify against the incidents Miss Hearst was
other three , who were n"ot . involved in thsthsve not beeh
named , although James Kil- disclosed, said, "! suspect

there 'are."
The latest disclosures by
Miss Hearst grew out of a
four-hour session she had
with government prosecutors
Monday after her sentencing
for bank robbery. .
.
Her admissions, {Tiade tn
the presence of her attomeys,
were in hopes she could win a

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· light sentence on the bank
robbery ~o nviction and
Immunity from further
prosecution.
Miss Hearst, stili in pain,
was isolated in a third-Door
private room in Sequoia ·
Hospital in Redwood City,
where she was reported
improving. She complained
of difficulty in breathing
Tuesday night and was taken
to the hospital for minor
surgery.
Miss Hearst was allowed

visits from her attorneys and
her family. Her parents and a
sister visited her lor I ll! hours
Wednesday.
A hospital spokesman said
the ailment wus relatively
common lor young women of
slight build but could have
caused death had it remained
untreated. He said Miss Hearst would
remain hospitalized for lour
or five days, then would need
another u·days of recupera-

lion.
Miss Hears! 's scheduled
court appearance in Los
Angeles on Iter indlclmellt lor
the Mel's Sporting Gooda
Incident - and her first
con fron ta tion with
Symblonese UberaUon Ar1liY
members Emily and WiWam
Harris since her admissions
- was delayed lor a week.
Superior Court Judge Mark
Brandler said he would
further delay !I II necessary.

"

~

...

:: space agency
WASHtNGTON (UP!) : The llpace agency has won
April's ."Golden Fleece of the
Month" award for proposing
'· to spend $2.8 mlllloo to house
190 pounds of moon rocks.
•I
Sen. WUilam Proxmire, OWls., makes the monthly
fleece awa..at to what he
considers the biggest, most
ridiculous or ironic example
of wasteful government
spending. All mon\hly fleece
winners are in the running to
be "Golden Fleece of the
Year."
Proxmire said Wednesday
National Aerolljlutics and
Space Administration asked
· for the $2.8 mUllan to build an
" addition to the exisUng Lunar
Receiving Laboratory at the
~ Johnson Space Center In
Houston, Tex.
The irony, he said, is thst in
~· 1971, after spending $8.7
million to construct the lunar
~ laboratory, NASA Curator
· Dr. Michael D\lke said the
• new building would be " ... the
:. permanent facility for .
storage, handling and doing
' detailedstudiesoftherocks."
Now, Prollllire said, NASA
"is back at Congress'
: doorstep asking for the extra
: mllllons to add to a facility
. ; that only five years ago was
considered to be the final
; resting place for the moon
, rocks. ''
~
He called · the existing
" structure '' perfectly
~ adequate .. . to house a
' • wheelbarrowful of moon

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Lim It one coupon Per C•
1·76 .

. ,:wage law will
.: he aired in
"

Helen Evaits, director of
::., the Department of Induatrial
:;'Relations, has designated
• .several department
representatives to inform
pubUc authoritie' in Ohio
about the State's prevailing
wage law.
The "Prevailing Wag~
- . Emphasis Program"· as it Is
~•' called, Is designed Initially to
acquaint
the
public
authorities with their. con-·lractural and emiJloyee
::obligations in the CQJI·
, . ' structton of public im- provements.
Two separate public
meeUng will be held at City
Health Office, 280 W. Union
Street, Athens, Wednesday,
_ April 28, at 10:30 a.m. and 2
;-p.ni. Representatives of
: pubUc authorities; including
• cities, counties, villages,
r-townshlpe and school boarda
·.:will be invited from Atlll!'~&lt;
. IJaUla, Hocking, Jack•,
.: "Meigs,. MDrl!an, Perry and
VInton counties.

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THRU MAY 1, 1976

NELSON'S DRUG STORE

.

CouPOn

ANACIN

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· 563 Limll1 per ·

FIU.ED STRAW

: Cards, fonns
.• offered 725
'
! senior·folks '
•
; Golden Buckeye Cards and
: appllcatioo forms have been
: completed lor an estimated
• 725 Meigs County senior
: citizens. Registration will
: continue at the Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy
:::,~dally from 10 until 2.
Applications are also
:!available dally at Hensley's
;.~ Store in Long Bottom,
•• Harrisonville Elementary
&amp;hool at tile Senior Citizen
Room on Tuesdays, Rutland
Senior Citizens and . Reedsville Fire Department on
Wednesdays. Ali Ohioans age
65 and over are eligible for
•the cards.
.. , As announced by Gov.
• · James A. Rhodes, discounts
will be provided at state park
facilities tor card holders.
~~ Several statewide groups
such as the Ohio Theatre
Association and
Wendy's Old Fashioned
' Hamburgers have announced
their participation. Local
Buckeye · Card coordinators
are working with businesses
fu Meigs County to join the
sta~de program.

DATRIL

Nelson's
REG.
$1.19

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CHORALE TO PERFORM
The Rio Grande Chorale
less! Start your Monadex
will perform Tuesday at 7 p. reducing
plan today ...
m. at the Salisbury PTO. One you 've a new
way of life
of you! If you don '!
member of the group Is Phil ahead
lose that ugly fat ~ we ' ll
Ohlinger who attended chee r fully refund your
money - no t~uesfion s asked .
Salisbury Elementary Also
try AQUATABS ... a
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. to the pubirc. A business Swisher
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Dutton Drl,fg S1ore, M id·
follow the Ch!H'ale presen- dleport.
Mail Orders Filled.
tation.

9-The Dally Sentinel, P!H'neroy-Middleport, 0 ., Thursday, April IS, 1976

CELLO GRASS

NELSON'S
REG.

39c

�_l~~:D;E~Ai;D,tLAI:NT~EI~se~,Pomeroy-Mtddleport,O Thursday,A:il}~o
li r past Results
..

S P M
Oov
Be f ore
Public
ati on
Mond&amp;y O ead l tne 9
am
•
C e n c e 11a 1 Ion
Correcllon s wrl l be ac
cepted un ttl 9 a m for
Da y of Publ tcat•o n
REGULATIONS
The P ubl•she r res er ves

£

GRAND OPENING - Blue lodon

Tavern , 1 p m. Saturday , Apnl
1
d 1d
e~m
17 New y remo e e , some ~I'R,Q
mana gemen t ,
Ever yon e

we lcomB.
RAciNE Fire D;pt . w il l ha't'tt a
d
Shooting Match . Sotur oy, ·
Aprill7ot6 ·30p.m lh is mo tch
wtll be held at the new match

~

Offerefl~
-~-

the r ig h t to ed t1 or r etec t

bu il ding Out of Racine , toke 8u$iiiME~~

8o 1han Rd to 8oshon Fire
House Turn ngh t for about 1 &amp;

m ore I han one mcorr ec t
tnserltOn ...
A ATE S
For Want Ad serv tce
~ cent s pe r word one
.n ser It on
Mtn imum Charg e $1 00
14 ce nt s p er word thre e
consecuttv c
mserttons
26 ce nt s p er vvord,. sue
con secu ttv e
m sert1ons
1S Per Ce nt O tscount on
pa td ads and ads pa •d '
Wt! hm 10 days

CARD OF THANKS
&amp;.OBITUARY

~~

RACINE Ftre Deportmen t will
hove a 11om shoot Satvrdoy at
6.30 p.m ot the 1r new butlding
off Bashan Rood

-

...;;:-=...:::;:::_

FULLY equipped TV Repa ir Shop
for sale to se llle estate Best
offer takes tt , Phone8.43291 1 ~

00

WANTED TO rent-or lease house
wtth 2 ocre1 or more Husband
wt lhng to do repair and pain ling Reply P 0 . Box I long '

BLIND ADS

Additi ona l 15c Charge
per Ad vertisement
OFFICE HOUR S
B 30 a m to 5 00 p m
Dally 8 JO a rn to 12 00
Noo n Sarurday
Ph one tod ay 997 21~6

NOTICES
ATTN : II
ALL IIOUSEWIVES
Al l Yard Sales , Rummage ,
Por ch and Basement Porch
lind Ba sement Sat es, etc
must be pa id tn ad va n ce
Get your tn In earl y b y
stopptng by our offi ce at
The Dally SentineL 111
Court St or wrtttng Box
719, Pomeroy , Ohto 45769
w ith you r rem II lan ce

1968.

God needed a prectous jewel l
To grace hts hea\lenly throne
Although we hated to lose you ,
God wantedJou lor his own
Sadly mine by Chuck Floos te
lne , Ma)C , Don , Joe and Tom

WISH to e)Ctend my Sincere
thanks for the many deeds of
kindneu ahown me wl'ltle a pa ·
t~ent at Holter Med1col Center
I sincerely thank the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad , the doctors
and nu rses at Holzer Medical
Center , the mm tsfers . and oil
my friends and relottves who
remembered me wtth cards
Your ki nd thought wt ll never be
forgotten Arthur Hoyt
WE ARE deeply grateful and wi1h
to edend our heortfeh thanks
and appreciation to our many
frtends and ~etghbors lor thet r
expreu ions of sympathy m the
lou of our husband and father
Charles J Sauer A special
thanks to the docto rs and staff
at Veterans Membrlol Hospital
and also to the Honor Guard ol
Fe eney -Bennett Po st 128
Amert can legion . Mn Edtlh
Sauer and Daughters

I WOUlD ltke to thank my friends
and neighbors for all the many
cards and flowers and also the
prayers wh ich were offered m
my behalf durtng my stay in the
Untventty Hospital

DO YOU HAVE PARlY PlAN EX-

lt vtng ,
leases , all ale c
ca rpe ltng ,
range
and
ref n gerolor, free trash pt ckup ,
cable TV of your B)Cpense and
on-5118 laundry fact lities Con ventent to shopptng on Third
and Mill Streets m Middleport
See the manager at Rtverside
Apartments or call 992-3273 .
Furn ished apar tments are also

$2S

PER

HUNDRED

stull&gt;ng

enve l opes
Send
self .
addressed ,
s tamp e d
envelope . Edroy Matis , Box
18B. Albany , Mo. 64402
work weekends Coli Arcadia
Nursing Home, Coolvtlle , 667

3196.

adu lts only, tn
Phone 992-387.4 ,

' tl I '

.

'

"''!

.'

·····
.....
'IV I

"''
,,,,,

.,
,, ...
.""-

.

~

o~. n•

( 4)

Mtddleport

3 BEDRM house wrth bath tn

DEPENDABLE bobystller needed
to care tor ftve and 8 yea r old

Phone 992·3S11.

Rutland Phone 992-58S8
3 AND ~ RM. furnt shed and un·
lurn tshed opts. Phone 992-

5434

SALESPERSON or Agent Wonhtd.

·--~

lEXAS PETROLEUM CORP Sub

sidlory needs dependable per· COUNTRY Mobile Home Park. Rt
33 ten miles north of Pomeroy
son to work on their own . Con Lo rge lots will'! concret pot1os,
tact protected accounts m
sidewalk s. runners and off
Meigs County area We tram
street parking Phone 992-7-479
Write W G Crawford , Pres.
PANCO , Bo)C 52, Fort Worth 5 or 6 room modern house .
Te)l ,
reasonable rent Rev A: 0
Brown, 669·4171.
2 BEDROOM troller $28 00 week ,
all utilities potd Phone 992-

Will DO butldlng ond remodel .
tng roofing, plumbrng , fu r
nace repotr , ga1 or otl or
general repair Free esltmates
and reasonable rates Phone
Charles Stnclair , (61.4) 985 · ~121

or992·2221
WILL BABYSIT weekdays , Bashon
area Mn . Glen Bi ssell Phone

949·2801

•

_333~ ----~·-­
~

RM APT and bath , partially furnrslied, over Fabric Shop No
pets, not more thon one child,

$SO 00 per m_o_
nt--h~4

potd. 356 N. Fourth , Mtd dleport :.__ _~----

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS

OLD furniture , ice boxes , brass
beds old wa ll te lephones and
ports , or co mplete households
Wr ite M D Mtller. Rt 2
Pomeroy , Oh1o Call992-77b0

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

$69.95

TIMBER , top prtce far standmg

l&gt;mber , Coli (614 ) 446·8570

TURF TILL
TILLERS
3'12 H. P., B&amp;S Eng .

$163.95
i!f'. _Ja ck W. Carsey, Mgr

Ohio

tll!ii!ll

Va ll ey ,
Watch lor

YARD SALE, Thursday through
Saturday ot Larkins St ,
Rut land Rtding lawn mower,
complete bed end moltren ,
boy 's bike, all kinds of dishes

Call 742·2078
PORCH SAlE, corner Long ond
College In Rutland Beh1nd old
grade 1ehool lhursdoy and
Frtday . 9a .m tti i Sp.m ,

PAllO SALE Rl 7, 2 m•les S. lup·
pers Plotns , I &amp; one-half m1le
N. of E.H S. Weds . thru Sotur-

, dov .

·--

AKC RegiStered Co llie Stud Ser·
vtee , Stardust Ktn~ , Phone

GIVE a ltvtng Easter Poodle .
teacup , ft nies, toy . AKC
reg istered;
I block male
Pomeran ton , 6 weeks . Phone

696-1297 . •

SPRING SALE on Storcroft Mint·
motor homes , tro..,el tratlers
and fold-downs Used trailers
tn stock . Warran ty and Service
what we sell Accesso rtes. and
Parts Der,t. Cpmp Con ley Star
craft So es. Rt 62. N of Pt
Pleasant
~~-~---

1973 SCHU LTZ 3 bedroom all elec·
Irk mobtle home Phone 992.

2605
1973 SCHULTZ 3 bedrm. oil alec
mobile home Phone992-2605
-

===

Martha Chambers ,
Clerk SPRING SALE on Storcroft Min t·
Metgs c ounty Board
motor homes, travel trailers
Of Co mmtSS lonettS
and fold-downs . U1ed trailers
,, in stock Warranty and Service
'
a 15, 2tc
what we •ell. Accenortes and
Parts Dept. Camp Conley Star ·
croft Sales , Rt 62 N of ,Pt .

.

I

"i"

,,...
'.
"I '

I'

Pts

Royal Oak Park
62
Ra ci ne Home Na t B k.
56
Mitch ell's Paintmg Co
52
Dew Drops
•
50
Oa1ry Va ll ey
46
New York Clothing
46
Htgh lnd Game - Connte
Chapman 20J, Shir~ey M it
Che ll Pat Carson 190
High Series - Pat Carson ,
539, Shirley Mltt helt 528
Team H ig h Gl!m e - Royal

Oak Par k, SOB .

Team
H lgh Se ries
Mitchell ' s Pl!lnting Co 14 S7

I ':-, •

1975 Choteau Camper , 28 ft ,
sleeps 8, equipped w1th Oir,
Fle)C·I teel sofa bed , fwo door
refrrgerotor {gas or electrte), '
double sink , 1:2V converter
pock , forced air fu rnace. hot
watar heater , 2 twin beds al$0
cabinet bunks - sleeps .4 , 21 ft .
owning, cronk up antenna . .4
burner rap and oven, fon hood
Ltl.e new, priced to sell. Phone

142-2'154.
1966 Passenger lntern-J iional
Schoq,l bus converted into a
camper. Bottle gas stove and
refrigerator . Phone Y92-2S90 or

992·7890.

MODERN walnut console , AM·FM
radio , .e speed changer ·
Balance $103 .eQ or terms Ca ll

992·3965
GARDEN Supply Heodquorlers
Cabbage, cauliflower , broccoli ,
head lettuce and pansy plants
Also. on ton 3ets. seed potatoes
of all variet1es and a full hne ot
bulk garden 3eeds
Heod
quarters also for fine produce.
Mtdway Mk I , Pomeroy , 992·

2582.
FORD 9N trac tor , overhaul.
$1 ,750, Ford Jubtlee tractor ,
$1 ,750.Ford 861 tractor wtth
loader. $2 350. Allts Chalmers
W0 -•5 tractor , wide front end,

dows. steering and brakes,
AM-FM rad io With tape player,
mag rims plus regular 11ms and
hubcaps Phone 27,..2,.2,. or see
Vtrgil Hillin letart Foils, Ohio.
1973 VEGA sta tton wagon , 4
speed, law mileage, excellent
conditton . Wtll sell reasonable.

Phone 992·2366.

1968
MERCURY
for solo
Good
runlng
cond•llon
. Phone
614-9BS·3S65.
1951 CHEVROLET Pickup, Ro.bu•ll
V -8, 283 motor, new brakes,
new ti res $400 Phone 992·

7876.
1968 CUTLASS Supreme

COAL, limestone and all types. of
s.a lt and rock salt lor ice and
snow removal. Excelsior Soh
Work s. East Mom St . Pomeroy ,
Ohto Phone 992·3891

used 5 ft 3 pt rotary mower,
$185; New Idea hay condt·
tloner, $450; 3 riding lown
mowers , $35-S110.Luckett Form

Equipment. Phone (61&lt;) 698·
3032 or b98 7881 , ·w.
Washington St ., Albany

engine, air conditioned
99'.2 -7869 after .4 p.m.

Call

1972 NOVA, 6 cyl. automatic,
power steering , ~8 .000 miles

$14SO. Phone 992-32S9.
1964 Corvai r Monzo New C B

Phone 992.:)403

1973 MOTO Cow fl.dly dressed
low mdeoge $1500 Also, 1975
Bultoco Frontera 2SO CC, 200
mtles, never been raced , lots of
extras , $850 firm
Phone
Golltpolts 256 -1295
3

3 BEDRM

house

tn

CONSIGNMENT Auct1on Sale,
Saturday, Aprtl 17, 10 a .m.
Sponsored by Orange Twps.:
Volunteer Fire Dept at their
Ftre Station , Tuppers Plotns,
Ohta. Consignments welcome .

31:112
1971 750 HONDA good conditron .

667-6185 aller6 p.m

197.4 750 cc Suzukt motorcycle .

Coli 992·S502 .
ONE Compre ssor wtth condenser ,
I h.p . 3 phose A lso, one 2
wheel utillty tratler Phone

9'12·57.:.
86~-:--:---c-:-1971 Skiff craft 21 ft cabin cruiser
Inboard 140 Mercrouser. Als.o
troller. Many e)( tras Phone

992·2590or 992.7890.

- - --

MIMEOGRAPH mochtne, ~oyal
Portable typewrt ter. Homel tte
chain sow Phone992 -2409

1976 GAS
12XSO PENTHOUSE
MOBILE HOME
$4,995

Kanauga
Mobile Homes
Kanauga, Ohio
Ph. 446-9662

Mike Yaung, Manager

of

Sales and Installation

or 992·S975

Televuion log for easy viewin8"
THURSDAY,APRIL 15, 1976
5:1X1-B"oiianzo J ; t-amuy ATTatr o; Mor Trek IS.
5.3G-Adam .J2 ~ ; News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co . 20,33; Adam-12 13,
6·1)(1-News 3,4,B,10,13,15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20; IT\/
Utilization 33.
6: 3G-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith b;
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20 , Lltlos Yovo

614-99'1-22~

.

TEAFORD
110 Mechanic

Pomeroy, 0 .

Phone 992 3325
RUTLAND -

3 BEDROOM all electric home
famtly room carpeted wtth
wood burn1ng fireplace . In
Rustic Htlls Syracus.e $25,00)
Phone 992 7836

F.A. furnace Only $10,000
NEAR RUTLAND - New 6

rooms and both plus finished
basement wtth 1 or 3-acre•
near Racme Phone (61.4) 9.e9.

2748.

COINS

'I&gt; ACRE -

3 BR

Home 5 yrs
bath , n1ce

kttch en a nd dining . Uttlify

R , ca rport , storage bldg ,
al l electnc $16,900
ROUTE b81 - 135 ac res.
mrnerals, wa ter avatlable,
good hunting , some limber ,
near other re cr ea tion

Slb.600
LOVELY HOME -

fr ame, 3 large

8 R.,

7 r
Jl/2

baths, full basement w.2
d tr
garag e,
por c he s
over l ookmg the rt ve r ,
excellent condttton , JU ST

$18,500.
MIDDLE PORT -

5 BR ,
r ,

2

Find burled treasure .
Coins, rings. sliver, gold.
Coin &amp; Metal
Detec1ors
For Ren1
For 5ale

R&amp;J COINS
Rutland 742·:Zlll
Roger Wamsley
4· 1· 1 mo

NEW

THE

"FLOOGH, '
FA T50- · AtJO

ITS VOU R~ -· M~RSLY MV MEMORY'S
FOil. PICTATIN6 AN· 5LIPPING, M&lt;Kf!".
SOT THERE .\116HT
OTHER COPYOF

WHA T'S ALL.

FORMULA OVE'R.

THS PfiO&gt;J!&gt; !

THIS A&amp;OUT

brs , bath , basement.
storm dr s., and wi ndo ws,
alum tnum sidmg, na1. gas

PH. 992-6010
..

Courteous
Service3 31. 1 mo

Sa~_ &amp;_R.ental
TRAVEL TRAILERS

R.

,'(f.. 1(00\.\),

Codner, Owner
.4 1 1

..

BO'RN I llSRR

OPEN
FRI.-SAT.·SUN.
or by contading

t&gt;-T ~RI?TMP6
't'l:NB 'f.MA
Rli~TII~ ...

mo .

Ph . 992 -3993
.4 10 11¥\o

we

I:

building and remodeling
from the foundation up.
Additions, carpeting,
painting, stding, roofing ,
paneling, paper hanging,
etc ....

Yeeterd•y'•

_.. ,..J ____,

·"'.:,-.f-8

:~·om the largest TrucJ&lt; o'r
3ulldozer""'Radia tor to th ! ·
smallest Heater Core

Nathan Biggs
IUdtator Specialtst

Ph. 992 -2174

basem e nt

i

· :·-

· Chain

·•

' o~J !ft ""

Sovn-

Lawn
Mowers-

i!y f(l&gt;•:.;.\ \. Tllters·'iiii:.· 1" , • •••A ' R tding
~~·r~ '-',&amp;;#'
Tr•ctors .

•

'··'

NEW: Lawn Boy mowers,

SMITH NELSON
MOlORS, INC.

J 18 1 mo

r-

~

·•

Pioneer
chain
uws,
Bolen's Mowers, Merry.
Tillers, MTO Mowers .
498 Locust Sf.
Middleport, Ohio

PomeroY

wit h

Full

992-1092

family

room Covered patio, dbl.garage. and 3 level lots.
$~ , 500 .

RACINE - Lt ving 16x30, 3
nice bedrooms wi th c losets,

big bath , 2 porches. dry
ba se ment , garage wtth
shop, and l f4 acr-e of land

Only $2 1,500.
MIDDLEPORT - N1ce 12
rooms , 2 full baths, eKtra
large mod . ktf chen, woo d
burning f trepla ce. fam i ly

room wilh pool table, 2 lots
Just $25,000 .
POMEROY - 1 brs , 1'1'
bath s, centra l air and heat,

2 porches, dbl garage, and
4 acres of land . All for
$31 ,000
THE ABOVE ARE NICE
DESIREABLE
AND
SALEABLE HOMES. BUY
ONE NOW

MODERN all electric home, 5
rooms and bath, plus ftnished
basement wtth 3 &amp; two-thirds
acres near Racine. Phone (61,.)

949·2748.
6 RM house tn Middleport. ntKt
to s.chool. New shingle roof ,

$5500. Phone 992·7275.
ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood
frame, two bedrm. home
located between .Coolville and
Tuppers Plains . One acre lot,
two cor garage, city woter, gas
heat ,
hor'dwood
floors ,
carpeted
living room , ntce

view. $21,000. Phone (614)
667-3519.

EXCAVATING, BACKHOES AND READY MIX CONCRETE delivered
DOZER , LARGE AND SMAll ,
r&gt;ght to your project. Fast ond
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllED. Bill
eosy . Free esllmcles. Phone
PUlliNS. PHONE 992-2478, DAY
992-32114, Googloln R0&lt;1dy Mix
OR NIGHT.
• •. Co., Middleport, Oh1a.
-B...=.:
RAD
:.:F:::,
O::.RD'::',"'-A:-u-s"llo-n-e-er-. -::
Co_m
_· ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
plate ServiCe. Phone 9.49-2.487
or 9.49-2000. Racine, Ohio, Critt
Bradford.

garage, larg• lot on Rustic
Htlls , Syracuse. Sale price

$22,900 . Phone 992-7523 for
more information.

ABOUT l one.hall acres of
undevelored land in the
Village o Pome(oy, Ohio. Out

:Strout"

Realty·

of high wotor, good neighbors,
has city water and sanitary
sewage. Reo1onable . Phone

f ,HC;,.PDII.An\D

992-5786
HOME for scle, livmg room ,,dln·
lng room , 2 bedroom~J , kitchen , family room , bath.

Phone992·7394.

NO. 142 - 95 o .. &lt;a stock eo
lake, 2 or 3 BR home, on
paved road, $40,000.00.

Newly Wed Spectal- New all elec. home, never lived
bath , mostly carpeted, porch &amp; built·on garage, '12 acre
of land Country setting , 1 mtle off Rt. 7,11nishing work
qu1ck sate sn,soo.
Little 3 Cow Farmer - Here IS a modern house in the
natural gas furnace, smal l barn, chicken house, city

water &amp; natural gas. Almost 3 acres ol welllayed land
Pnced 526.500.

backhoe work . 'dump trucl.s
and lo-boys for hlrt ; will houl
fill dirt, top sotl, limestone and

tow n close to

gravel. Coli 8ob or Roger Jel·
fen , day phone 992-7089,
night phone 992·3525 or m.
5232.
SEPTIC lANKS cleoned. Modern
Sanitation

7349.

992-3954 or 992-

WILL do roofing , construct ion,
plumbing and heating. No job •
too large or too small. Phone

742-2348.
EXCAVATING, dorer, backhoe
and ditcher, Charles A. Hatr
field , Back Hot Servtee,

CONTACT :
Lois Pauley
Branch Monager

5 BEDROOMS - This ni ce 1'1&gt; slory home has a large

Rutlond, Ohio. Phone 742-2008.

kitchen with built ins, 2 bathrooms, 2 bedrooms 9n first

floor , l ni ce l y paneled bedrooms on the 2nd floor·, also 2

HEAR NEWS FIRST

Chester . Ohio. Would you believe $12,800.

ON

Sll,(lOO wi ll buy modern hom e near fairgrounds, 2
bedrooms , li vmg room , kttchen, bath , garage, 2 car
concre te block garage and garden space, nice for small
famil y .

WMPO AM·FM
EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWSCASTS AT

Call For APpointmenl

8 A.M., The Noon Report,

949-2388

and. 5 P.M.

JIMMY DEEM
•

J~

NO. 118 - 3 BR , full base.,
large glassed in front

W. Main
992-2298
Pomeroy
Alter Hours Call
992-7133

everything new tncludes wiring, plumbing, roof,

vice, all makes, 992 -2284. The
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We sharpen Scissors,

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader ond

~04

country . completely remodeled, 3 bedroom house,

osllmotn Coil 992-2J8.1 or
(bl4) b'IB-7257 Albonv.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser-

Rutland Grode School. Tuneup,
brakes, wheel balancing, alignment. Phone7-42-20CW.

NO. 157 - 3 BR, bath &amp; 'I&gt;,
full base ., mod. kitchen,
ca rpeting, additional u·t .
bldgs ., $20,500.00.

r equired. wt ll be done for buy,er in 30 days. Priced for

D&amp;D TREE Trimming , 20 years tx·
perience . Insured fr••

O'DEll Allgnmenllocoled behind

stores, $19,000 .00.

IUIPIItd b7 tht oboYI -~·

I I x1

I

., ,.
"
An1wert '"17tll tolumll lla1 badrbonfl - 91!NAL

ACROSS
DOWN
1 London
I Expire
2 Perfect
elevator
5 Philippine
3 ''You are
JSland
old "
10 Jewtsh
12 wds. I
month
4 Three, m
11 Gloomy
Trieste
12 Rose of
5 Fountain
treat
the Reds
Yesterday's Answer
13 Famous
6 Land mess26 Eucharist
18 Fine
folk
W'e
plate
sheer
songstress
7 One's
29 Gigll or
t4 Czech
native
fabric
Schipa, for
19 Verdun 's
measW'e
land
example
river
15 Feather
12 wds. I
scarf
8 Oregon ctty 22 Hat similar 30 Developmeatal
to a fez
16 Greedy
9 Chemical
... catching a
phase
23 Cuban
person
substance
little sun!
17 Football
11 Like the
32 Sun disk
province
Learn
Earth's
24 Proof35 - standstill
19 Bare
satellite
(2 wds. )
reading
direction
20 Blushmg
15 Conquer
36 Newt
21 Hibernia
22 Namely
12 wds.)
J...&lt;~"'T'I~ 24 Ticket •
25 Seed
covering
n-+--t-1
26 Tampico
money
Z discarded u club from his
27 Exasperate ;, J
NORTH
t5
hand and a diamond from
28 Al~skan
'K J 10 54
dummy . West had to lead .
natives
'K 2
· another heart. Z chucked
t A7 6
31 - esplit
dummy 's last low diamond,
.A
85
32 Consumed
ruffed in his own hand and
WEST IDI
EAST
33 Snare
claimed the balance of the
•32
• 34 Eastern rite
tricks and his contratl West
• Q J 10 9 8 7 6 5 4¥ had been forced to give Z a
1..--t- +--tChristian
t3
tKQJ8 5 1 double discard first and a rulf
36 Spirit lamp
'-;-t--t--1!.4
.KQI0976l
and a discard next.
37 Island in
SOUTH
With any normal line of play
New York
•AQ9876
Lhe
defense would co llect
Bay
.
" A3
three
tricks and set the con38 Amphibian
• 10 9 2
Lracl
.JJ
39 Tarzan, for
Bolh Vulnerable
example
(hyph. wd.)
CO Phoenician
No rth Eut South
Several readers have asked
city
us to describe the negative
Dbl
5•
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It:
double. It was invented by
Pass Pass
Alvin Roth about 20 years aso
AXYDLBAAXR
IOJ&gt;&lt;•ning lead - Q ¥
and is a double of an overcall
Is 1. 0NGFJ!LLOW
for takeout.
One leiter Simply slands for another.. In thi• .•ample A Ia By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Here Is an example. South
userl for th e three I.'s , X for the Lwo 0 s, etc Stngle letters.
opens one diamond. West bids
Old man Z who used to
aposlrop hes, the length· and formation of lhe words are all
one spade. North holds
appear in the auction brtdge "'32¥ K 1076 tJ 32 o!oK 1085
htnts. Earh day the rocle lellers are different
columns played dummy 's king
He doubles lo ask partner to
. CRYPTOQUOTES
of hearts. East dtscarded lo 10 bid
of clubs and Z remarked, " I
DEZ
LEZZ
XAEUZSJX
L D A U Y L believe R F. Foster thought
(Do you have a question
of this hand back around 1922. for fhe experrs? Write "Ask
X D W Z L I V Z R LX
XS
L Y Z I It is a ruff and discard hand to lho Jacobys " care of this
K DE
end all such ."
LS
newspaper The Jacobys will
CDLM J L X. Then Z overtoo.k du~my's answer mdividuar questions
KSJ ' L WDRR SAL SW
. king of hearts wtth ht s ace, 11 stampea, self-addressed
cashed two trumps and both envelopes are enclosed The
U
FOR minor suit aces His next play most lntereslmg questions
DJ S J
• was a low heart. West had to w111 be used In th is column
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE ONE INFAL BLE
MULA FOR GETIJNG THE WRONG SLANT IS TO LOOK win the trick and play another and w1/l receiVe copies of
DOWN YOUR NOSE. - DAMON RUNYON
heart.
JACOBY MODERN I
.. .
&lt;C 1976 Kinl lo~etturu Syndicate, Jne. )

;;..-+-+-

and all types of general repair .
Work guaranteed 20 years experience . Phone 992-2~09.

move into, with or without
f urniture Very good buy!

porch , in

tn, l bedrooms, li vtng room , kitchen &amp; dining room &amp;

Ll

Double sluff aida ruff one

REMODELING, Plumbing hooting

Coli

~

12 :IXI-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15; Let's Mok• o
Doal 13; Bob Braun ' ·
•
12: 3(1-Take My Advice 3,IS; All My Children 6,13;
Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
12:4s- Electric Ccmpony 33
12:5s-.NBC News 3.
1:IXI-News 3; Ryan's Hq&gt;e 6, 13; Phil Donahuo 8;
Young &amp; the Restleu 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1: 3G-Oays 01 Ovr Llvtl 3,.4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, 13;
As lhe World Turns 8,10.
•
'
2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:3G-Doctors 3,,,15; Break the Bank 6,13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
3: IXI-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; All
In The Family 8, 10; Bleck Journa1 :W.
3:31)-()ne Life fo Llve13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; M•lch
Game 8,10; Book Btat20.
4:IXI-Mister Cartoon 3; /llerv Grllfln 4; Somernt15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Moutoe Club B; Mister Rovers
20,33; Movie " Rancho Notorious" 10; Dlnoh 13.
' :]()-Bewitched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesome Sl , 20,33; Fllnlstones 15.
5:IXI-Bonanza 3; Family Alfalr B; Star Trtk 15.
5:30-Adam ·12 ,,15; News 6; Beverly HlilbiUie&amp; 0;
. Elec . Co, 20.33.
6:IXI-News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33 .
6:311-NBC News 3,,,15; ABC News13; Andy Grllfilh 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Carrascolondas 33.
7:1)(1-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth '' Lowrence
Wtlk a; Bowling tor Oollors 6; Aviation Woother
33; News 10; Don Adams Sc'"n Tst 13; Fomll·,
Alfolr 15; Ohio Journal 20.
7:30-Porter Wogoner 3; Treosure Hunt 4; Cndld
Comer a 6; Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky
20; $25,000 Pyromld 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Pq&gt;
Goes 1he Country 15; Bleck Perspective on The
News 33.
B:IXI-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Donny &amp; Morlo 6, 13 ; Movie
"A Boy Named Charlie Brown" B, 10; Was htnglon
Weak In REview 20,33 ...
8:3G-The Prattico 3,4,15; Woll Street Week 20,33 .
9:IXI-Rockford Flies 3,4,151 Movie "Love Story" 6,13 1
Firing Line 20; Masterpiece Theare 33,
9:3G-Movlt "Beneath the Planet of the Apes" 8,10.
lO:IXI-Pollce Story 3,~. 15; News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33.
10 :3G-Avlatlon weather 230.
11 :IXI-News 3.4,6,8, 10, 13,15; ABC News 33.
11:311-Johnny Corson 3,4,15, Rookies 6,13; Movlt
"Three Ring Circus" 8; Movie "Queen of Outer
Space" 10; Janakl 33.
12 :411-Don ' Kirshner's Rock Concert 6 ; 1roqslda 13 .
1 :00- Midnlght Speclol 3,4,15; Movlo "Witches
Mountain" 10 .
1:411-News 13; 2:3G-Movle " Kitten with o WhiR" 4;
News 3.
3:IXI-Movle "Apartment for Peggy" 3.
4:IXI-Movle "Ovt of Sight" 4,
~:1s-Movle "Lifeboat" 3.
5:3G-Movle "HI, Gaucho" 4.
6:IXI-Movle "Lynch Mob" 3

-+-+-+--+-tWIN AT BRIDGE

Sweepers, too1ters , irons, all
small appliances. lawn mower,
neKt to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985-

NEED o plasterer?
Custar , 992-3550.

NO. 147 - 2 BR, full base .•
some carpellng,, ready to

co.·

·~ ·

h (J II

3825.

3 BEDROOM total elec. home,

No• unnp the clrtled letten

by THOMAS JOSEPH

WILKINSON'S

,' '.,/~11

,1

-.

V 'i to ronn the ourpiH OMwor, •

·~

Ph . 9H-202J or Ul-2647

. :~~-.:

~

tJ

Jumble" DAILY FIN NV: JUSTLY PERMIT

comptere
small
Eng.
. • .-... ·- kepair

PUBUC

I

Wf,iA\ A GIR:I..
50MEIIMEe WEA~
AT THE 8EACH.

(.._wen t.. .rnw}

the ald . All types of

992-6167
OPEN4 P. M DAILY
CLOSED MONDAY

LARRY WHOBREY

PH. 992-6173

'·

. ...,

=-H=-ER~tx~x~x~I~x~x,:.qn

4-13-1 mo.

Now accepting clients
for bookkeeping and
tax service.

Q

form four ordinary words.

_

We build new and remodel

specta lt ze tn home
made Pizza , Speghet1 t ,
Baked Lasagne , &amp; Send ·
Wtehes
Qutck carrv Out Ser'&lt;~•ce.
-4 -2 1 mo

ACCOUNTANT

• •~

Unmamble the&amp;efaur Jumbles,
one letter to each aquare, to

GLUBIN

CONSTRUCTION

Middleport, Ohio

Call in Of'ders and pick up
in tw en ty minutes
Located at l:Zt-lrd Street
~a cine. Ohia

~&amp;~~;::!..:::t::::c

1
] [
t
IT I

D&amp;D

29S s 2nd St.

Italian-Style Pizza

1·oo-Tomorrow 3,.4 .

1 5G-News 13 .•

tSINIST

Modern 7

eve rylhmg

6:1X1-Sunr lse· Semester 10.
6:1s-Farm Reportl3.
6:20-Biue Ridge Quartet 13
6:306:3(1-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrl&amp;e 5erne&amp;ter B;
Farmtime 10.
6:40--Qunce Of Prevention 10 .
6:4s-Mornlng Report 3.
6:5s-Chuck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
State 13 .
7·lXI-Today 3,,, 15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
•
7:3G-S&lt;;hoolles 10
8.IXI-Laule 6; Coptoln Kongoroo a,10; se&amp;ome St . 33.
8·3G-Big Valley 6.
9·IXI-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donohue 4,15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Oouglos 10; Morning with D.J , 13.
9 30-A.M. 3; one Life to Live 6; Tottletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13
10:IXI-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Edge of Nlght6;
Price Is Right 8, 10.
10:3G-Htgh Rollers 3,,,151 Dlnahl 611 :1)(1-; Wheel of
Fortune 3,15; weekday 4; Gambit 8,10; Farmer' &amp;
Daughter 13.
11 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Hoppy Ooys 13; Love
of Life B, 10; Sesome St . 20,33 .
11 ·5s-Toke Kerr 81 Don tmel's World 10.

20.33.
.
'
10·oo-ABC News Closeup b,l3; Bobby VInton 41 Oral
Roberts' Spr(ng is Hope 8: New. Countr.v. 10.
10 :3(1-Probe 4.
1l :IXI-News 3.~.6,8 , 10,13 , 15..20; ABC News 33. ,
11 :3G-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; MonniK 6, 13; Movie The
~ hoes of the Fisherman " 8; Movie " Bridge to the
Sun" 10; Janak! 33
12 4G-Maglclan 6,13.

I K XJ

lARRY
LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio

DONELLI'S
PIZZA

room , ranch home, 1•12
baths, large mad. kitchen,

w1th

7;IXI-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell he Trulh 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Spoce . 1999 8; News 10; Let's Make o
Deal 13; Family Allolr 15; Anyone for Tennyson?
20; Family at War 33.
7·3G-Hollywood Squores 3: Baseball 4: Ohio Stoto
Lottery 6 ; Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky
20; Wild Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Music
Clly U.S.A. 15.
- 8:il0-'-Mac Davis 15; Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13;
Wpllons 8, 10; Koscluszko : An Amertcon Portrait
20; The Way II Was 33
8:3G-Barney Miller 6,13; Lowell Thomas Remembers

Financtng Ava1lable

3·23 1 mo .

I

SAM'S
PIZZA SHOP

rm s , 2 ce ramic baths , 3
brs , ntee kit., baseboard
heat, carport , Oh to Power,
and leve l lot SJO,OOO.

CHESHIRE -

WAY TO
J06 IT!

BE A

/'-

FRIDAY, APRIL 16,1916

Streets of San Franclsco6, 13 ; Great Performances

Blown mto Walls &amp; Attics
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTE RS·AWNINGS

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

•

garage, close to school.
S30,000
WANTED-HOMES
TO
SELL
HENRY E. .CLELAND
BROKER
992·22S9 or 992·2568

f,/AME' ~

Y E!7, V&amp;5! OF cOURSE

WE 'Ll A cCEPT CHAR6 E5!
... HELLOL •W DEAR 1!7H•
15 THAT VOU~

.

Blown
Insulation-Services

GARAGE

e

storms .. NG heat, gar age
a nd w or ks hop , ca rp o rt.

r .• part basement ha s rec
room , l oVely rear glassed
porch , hot w at er heat ,

O&gt;J LINE

50 GRAND'f

4·5·76

FREE ESTIMATES

ROGER HYSELLS

MIDDLEPORT
CAB co

larg e porches, and a sull porch , garage. Natural gas

POSSE~SION
Ranc h'
lype, 4 BR , 1 balhs , ut1ll1y

~p

PHONII\JO CO Ll.. ECT !

r----------""1

furna ce ts ve r y economical . located on Scout Road in

$12,000
IMMEDIATE

Mil Mek ES ! PICK

?CVI'N ! ITS THAT DR. FLOOGEL·-

RAINBOW RIDGE
I Bashan Area I
LONG BOTTOM

Racine, Ohio
Need new root or old
repaired? House, root.
barn, shingles, build up,
painti"g, electrical work ,
gutters &amp; downspouts,
furnaces, water hea1ers,
water softners, tnstalled &amp;
repaired, Sewage .
Call us at 949-2882
or 949·2203
3-28 -1 mo

or

all

porches ,

CAPl'AIN !" &gt;\SY

PH. 992-3746

l 1vmg room with shiny oak f loor ing, dining room, nice

1''1 bat hs, dtning

·'

fAKiner's Cam~

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

BUY, SELLar TRADE

CENTRAL REALTY
old

-l

Certified technician.
Briggs &amp; Stratton
Engines.
Pickup &amp; Delivery

.

CHANNEL FIVE
9:IXI-700·Ciub
7:00-Coble Journol
8:00-Quldoorsmon
8:3G-Re• Humbord
9. 3G-Wyott Eorp
IO:IXI-700-Ciub

33.
9:IXI-Movle
"The Greatest Slory Ever Tol d" 15;

6 rms., 3

brs , ba th, city wa ter, n ew
n a t ga s F. A. furn ace,
porches. and large lot

$12,500.
LINCOLN HTS. - Neat 2

MODERN all electric home , 5

1 " · ' ..; • • "

~y~~ .

Vorgtl B. Sr ., Realtor

HOUSE on ltncoln Hgu 2 bedr·
ms , large k1tcl1en, large basement , excellent buy for
$9 200 Wtth furmture , $10 ,700.
Phone 992 76.4 8

Farced oir turnoce, central otr
Phone 992 2058.
-'-~:-:--:c---=:-::-:c=1.72 ACRES . Phone 7~2-2359
HOUSE for sale by owner on linco in Hgt5 , Priced low for qutck
sole Phone 992-5539.

,

Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohto 45769 '
Phone day or nigh!

6 JO Ttll10:00
3-17 1mo

Phone 992 58S8
HOUSE for sale. 26 acres newly
2 acres
fenced posture,
ti llable, house carpeted and
remodeled , freshly pointed,
basement, small barn, porch,
city water , forced atr heat,
rurol , conventen l locatton near
Chester. Phone (014) 985·.42-48

glassed

SPECIAL

save.

OPEN TUES. THRU SAT.

Rutland.

1973 KAWASAKI 100 on and off
roodbike Runs real good $225
or best otter 1.44. Pearl St ,
Mtddleport .
USED Cfloinsows, tillers. and
mowers Wilkms on lawn and
Garden .498 locus t St ., Middleport.' Ohto Phone" 992-

home with no obligation .
See how you can really

Ph. 949-2404

HEREFORD
bulls
June
Wamsley , M iddleport , Route 1,
Phone 742 -233 1

~ (614)

.

-

rodto. Phone992·7826.

Phone lb14) 667·3303 or 667·
3890.

FREEZER BEE~ . Corn fed s.teers lOVELy 2 story older home m
Racme 1h24 1iving rm , dlntng
Wtll del tver to local dress ing
plonh Phone 643&lt;2 111 .
room , new butlt-in k1tchen wtth
PORTABLE anttque organ , dealers
cherry cab• nets , den, bedrm
welcome Phone992-5539.
and one -ha lf bath down wtth
oak hardwood floors , 3 bedrIN DASH 23 Channel CB, AMFM·
ms. New full both , utility room
MPX radto , 8 track stereo. Coli
992 -3965.
upstairs, full basement , Iorge
front and rear porches, unotDUNCAN Fite dropleaf dmtng
tocl'led garage, 2 storage
tab l e , Secretary Ch tn o
butldings, all set upon Iorge lot
cabineh. carpet for 4 rooms,
with addtttonol lot available
draperies , curtatns , end tables
Must sacrif1ce 1or $2 1, 000 Coli
one marble top table , tables
949-2683
and floor lamps maple chatr

We'll bring santples to your ,

24 Hour Service
350

$1 ,2SO; Used 2•4' plow, $17S;

3 8EDRM HOUSE •n M&gt;ddleporl

(614) 985·4248
COL LIE pups for salt , Roclne
phone 843·2753

Phone 992 2181

Pleasan t:·~--:--·--::-

·'

S79l

-

POMEROY LANDMARK

Tuesday Triplicate
Aprit6 , 1976

Watch for List
Items Later . .

3 ROOM fvrntsl'led apt , uttltlles

WILL DO odd tobs , roofmg , pam ·
ling. haulmg, treework and
mowing Phone 992 7409 .

Syracuse,
signs .

differen t vorteties of tomatoes ,
including non -acid wh rte
tomato. Very large selection of
beddtng plants
Also
Geraniums and other polled
plonh . Hanging baskets
Cle land Farms and Green house. Geraldtne Cleland ,
Racine.

ROOMS and both on ltncoln

--

peling and inslallation .

3·11-1 mo.

Hgts Fully carpeted , ltving
room Phone 992·3090

PUBLIC NOTICE

I I' I

51095

Phone 992·3975 or 992-2571
PERIENCE? FRIENDL Y TOY
2
BEDRM
. trailer , fully carpeted ,
PARliES HAS OPENINGS FOR
located on Rt . 1&lt;t3, close to Har·
MANAGERS IN OUR AREA.
risonvtlle . I cht!d Phone 7~2RECRUITING IS EASY 8ECAUSE
3122
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVESl · -~-MENl , NO COLLECTING OR ENJOY grac1ous livtng at Vtl lage
DELIVERINGS CALL COLLECT
Manor in Middleport tor as low
CAROL DAY , 1518) 489·839S or
os $130 per month wtth all
1't/5 DAlSUN, air condtttontng,
WRilE FRIENDlY HOME PAR
utiht tes pa td. These are brand
power brakes, $2,900. Phone
liES 20 RAILROAD AVE
new high qual tty opo rtmenls at
992·3453. - - - - - ALBANY, N.Y. 1220S.
pn ces you can oftord. Your rent
1973 THUNDERBIRD, eKcellent
tncludes
month
to
month
VEGETABLE
plonls
of
all
kinds
,
1D
' HOME WORKERS.' eorn 160
condition , power seats, wtn weekly oddreuing envelopes
Rush self -addressed . stomped
envelope . Southern Otver·
St!ied. 1206 Camden Dri ve,
Rtchmond, Virginia 23229.

'

IWWY PIECES,
FIN15HED· 0H · I
STAND TO SEE
• EXCUSE ME··

MAC'S
LAWN
MOWER
SERVICE

~Free estl~ates on car.:

Aprtl 17th .J&gt;eginnlng a1
·10:00 a .m .

FURNISHED opt ., 'couple on ly, all
uttlthes paid $130 per month.

~~~
~===­

CASH potd for all makes and
models of mobtle homes
Phone oreo code 614 -42 3-9531

Nott ce to Bit um inous Ven
dors
Se ale d btds wt ll be re ceived
by the Board o f Co m
m tsStO ner s of Meigs County ,
Oh to , at the off ice of the
Co unty Commtsstoners , tn the
Court House , tn the Vt llage of
Pomeroy , Oh to 457 69 , untll
9 30 a m on tile 29th da y of
April , 1976 tor th e lu r n lshmg
of bltUmtnous materta ls for
the Me tg s Cou n ty Highway
Department
Esltmat ed quanttly of liqutd
asphalt
r equire d ,
ap
pro)Cimately 400 ,"o OO ga llons
Btd Spe cific ation Su bm 1fted
As Follo ws
Btd price p er ga llon , fob
vendors plan t. an d the Pri ce
per gallon deliver ed to ven
dors portable tank to any
lo c alt on
tn
the
co unty
desig n ated by the co unty
eng tn ee r
for the various
grades
of
bdum Incu s
materta l!i whteh may b e
required by the M e tgs County
Hig hway Department , which
shall conform to th e perttn enl
stat e of Oh1o , Department of
Th e H ig hway Cons tru c tion
and Mat er ial Specif 1cat ron
With
r es pe ct
to
th e
afore sa i d esti mated quan
tthe s, the ve ndo rs shall un
derstand that no guarantee 1s
given as to the l!ctual QU~n
t ttles of b tlum Incus ma t ertals
to be furnrshed , but each
successful vendor shall be
requ ir ed to f urnt sh all or any
pi!rl of the Meigs County
actua l r eq utrem en ts· as or
dered during t he 1976 se ason
Prtces on thts btd shall be In
effect tor the rematn der of th e
year 1976
On the envelope contatntng
each btd , th e nam e and ad
dress of the v endor mu sf be
shown and pla inly m ar ke d
" B1tum !no us Btds "
Propo sa ls are lobe r eturn ed
on bid forms supp lied bv th e
vendor , and wdl be opened on
the dale and pla ce spectfied
above
The M eigs Coun ty Com
ml~sioners reserve the rtgh t to
accept or reje c t any or !!II bids
or any part there of

a consignment auction at
the hre house located in
Tuppers Plains, Ohio on

1970 NOVA 4 DR ,

ovoilo:::b::,le:.:..,-:--:-- - - R.N. NEEDED Must be able to FURNISHEO, 2 bedrm apartment
IN MEMORY of Mrs. Effie Manuel
who left us 8 yrs ago, April14 ,

S6095

6 cy l . aulomttlt c, P st e~ rmg , radio , good fires .

SL04N'· ·
CARPETING

AUCTION SALE

Dar k red, si mula ted wood tr im , 3 seat , fully equipped
wtth every Chev . op tion . low mtles, new tttle, boss 's
w ife's· car Sti cker $7 ,400.00

1974CHEV BELAIR4DR ,
Aulo, P S , P B.. air, police ca r

Bottom . Ohio 45743.

~ -.:-::;o-:

-

Business Servi·ces
Orange Twp , Volunteer
Ftre Department will hold

1975 Chev . ESTATE WAGON

LOST or stolen, little black dog
wtth .4 while ftet . lost in Hor·
monvtlle Name "AI " on col ·
lor. Phone 7.42 22S6

~

I

----~--

f or
50
word
mmimum
Each ad ditro nll l word 3
ce n ts

'" ~
.,,.,

2 SIGNS, Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

t~:HQOUA.

--

11- The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport,O.., Thursday, AJ1f.ill6, 1916

mcK tRXCY

_

CARPENTER wtll do sidmg, roof·
ing~ rem odeling, room Dddt ·
tton s
Also garages . free
E!lt1motes . Call W2 26S9.

-

Classified~

_ :_

an y ads deemed Ob
ject•onal Th e publiSher
wt l l n ot b e responstble for

one-half mtle .

Use The Sentin.e l

AH THINKS
THIS MEETrN'
1&amp;6aJNA
MEAN A LOT

1b/V1E- ,._..,

1

"

·z

z

�_l~~:D;E~Ai;D,tLAI:NT~EI~se~,Pomeroy-Mtddleport,O Thursday,A:il}~o
li r past Results
..

S P M
Oov
Be f ore
Public
ati on
Mond&amp;y O ead l tne 9
am
•
C e n c e 11a 1 Ion
Correcllon s wrl l be ac
cepted un ttl 9 a m for
Da y of Publ tcat•o n
REGULATIONS
The P ubl•she r res er ves

£

GRAND OPENING - Blue lodon

Tavern , 1 p m. Saturday , Apnl
1
d 1d
e~m
17 New y remo e e , some ~I'R,Q
mana gemen t ,
Ever yon e

we lcomB.
RAciNE Fire D;pt . w il l ha't'tt a
d
Shooting Match . Sotur oy, ·
Aprill7ot6 ·30p.m lh is mo tch
wtll be held at the new match

~

Offerefl~
-~-

the r ig h t to ed t1 or r etec t

bu il ding Out of Racine , toke 8u$iiiME~~

8o 1han Rd to 8oshon Fire
House Turn ngh t for about 1 &amp;

m ore I han one mcorr ec t
tnserltOn ...
A ATE S
For Want Ad serv tce
~ cent s pe r word one
.n ser It on
Mtn imum Charg e $1 00
14 ce nt s p er word thre e
consecuttv c
mserttons
26 ce nt s p er vvord,. sue
con secu ttv e
m sert1ons
1S Per Ce nt O tscount on
pa td ads and ads pa •d '
Wt! hm 10 days

CARD OF THANKS
&amp;.OBITUARY

~~

RACINE Ftre Deportmen t will
hove a 11om shoot Satvrdoy at
6.30 p.m ot the 1r new butlding
off Bashan Rood

-

...;;:-=...:::;:::_

FULLY equipped TV Repa ir Shop
for sale to se llle estate Best
offer takes tt , Phone8.43291 1 ~

00

WANTED TO rent-or lease house
wtth 2 ocre1 or more Husband
wt lhng to do repair and pain ling Reply P 0 . Box I long '

BLIND ADS

Additi ona l 15c Charge
per Ad vertisement
OFFICE HOUR S
B 30 a m to 5 00 p m
Dally 8 JO a rn to 12 00
Noo n Sarurday
Ph one tod ay 997 21~6

NOTICES
ATTN : II
ALL IIOUSEWIVES
Al l Yard Sales , Rummage ,
Por ch and Basement Porch
lind Ba sement Sat es, etc
must be pa id tn ad va n ce
Get your tn In earl y b y
stopptng by our offi ce at
The Dally SentineL 111
Court St or wrtttng Box
719, Pomeroy , Ohto 45769
w ith you r rem II lan ce

1968.

God needed a prectous jewel l
To grace hts hea\lenly throne
Although we hated to lose you ,
God wantedJou lor his own
Sadly mine by Chuck Floos te
lne , Ma)C , Don , Joe and Tom

WISH to e)Ctend my Sincere
thanks for the many deeds of
kindneu ahown me wl'ltle a pa ·
t~ent at Holter Med1col Center
I sincerely thank the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad , the doctors
and nu rses at Holzer Medical
Center , the mm tsfers . and oil
my friends and relottves who
remembered me wtth cards
Your ki nd thought wt ll never be
forgotten Arthur Hoyt
WE ARE deeply grateful and wi1h
to edend our heortfeh thanks
and appreciation to our many
frtends and ~etghbors lor thet r
expreu ions of sympathy m the
lou of our husband and father
Charles J Sauer A special
thanks to the docto rs and staff
at Veterans Membrlol Hospital
and also to the Honor Guard ol
Fe eney -Bennett Po st 128
Amert can legion . Mn Edtlh
Sauer and Daughters

I WOUlD ltke to thank my friends
and neighbors for all the many
cards and flowers and also the
prayers wh ich were offered m
my behalf durtng my stay in the
Untventty Hospital

DO YOU HAVE PARlY PlAN EX-

lt vtng ,
leases , all ale c
ca rpe ltng ,
range
and
ref n gerolor, free trash pt ckup ,
cable TV of your B)Cpense and
on-5118 laundry fact lities Con ventent to shopptng on Third
and Mill Streets m Middleport
See the manager at Rtverside
Apartments or call 992-3273 .
Furn ished apar tments are also

$2S

PER

HUNDRED

stull&gt;ng

enve l opes
Send
self .
addressed ,
s tamp e d
envelope . Edroy Matis , Box
18B. Albany , Mo. 64402
work weekends Coli Arcadia
Nursing Home, Coolvtlle , 667

3196.

adu lts only, tn
Phone 992-387.4 ,

' tl I '

.

'

"''!

.'

·····
.....
'IV I

"''
,,,,,

.,
,, ...
.""-

.

~

o~. n•

( 4)

Mtddleport

3 BEDRM house wrth bath tn

DEPENDABLE bobystller needed
to care tor ftve and 8 yea r old

Phone 992·3S11.

Rutland Phone 992-58S8
3 AND ~ RM. furnt shed and un·
lurn tshed opts. Phone 992-

5434

SALESPERSON or Agent Wonhtd.

·--~

lEXAS PETROLEUM CORP Sub

sidlory needs dependable per· COUNTRY Mobile Home Park. Rt
33 ten miles north of Pomeroy
son to work on their own . Con Lo rge lots will'! concret pot1os,
tact protected accounts m
sidewalk s. runners and off
Meigs County area We tram
street parking Phone 992-7-479
Write W G Crawford , Pres.
PANCO , Bo)C 52, Fort Worth 5 or 6 room modern house .
Te)l ,
reasonable rent Rev A: 0
Brown, 669·4171.
2 BEDROOM troller $28 00 week ,
all utilities potd Phone 992-

Will DO butldlng ond remodel .
tng roofing, plumbrng , fu r
nace repotr , ga1 or otl or
general repair Free esltmates
and reasonable rates Phone
Charles Stnclair , (61.4) 985 · ~121

or992·2221
WILL BABYSIT weekdays , Bashon
area Mn . Glen Bi ssell Phone

949·2801

•

_333~ ----~·-­
~

RM APT and bath , partially furnrslied, over Fabric Shop No
pets, not more thon one child,

$SO 00 per m_o_
nt--h~4

potd. 356 N. Fourth , Mtd dleport :.__ _~----

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS

OLD furniture , ice boxes , brass
beds old wa ll te lephones and
ports , or co mplete households
Wr ite M D Mtller. Rt 2
Pomeroy , Oh1o Call992-77b0

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

$69.95

TIMBER , top prtce far standmg

l&gt;mber , Coli (614 ) 446·8570

TURF TILL
TILLERS
3'12 H. P., B&amp;S Eng .

$163.95
i!f'. _Ja ck W. Carsey, Mgr

Ohio

tll!ii!ll

Va ll ey ,
Watch lor

YARD SALE, Thursday through
Saturday ot Larkins St ,
Rut land Rtding lawn mower,
complete bed end moltren ,
boy 's bike, all kinds of dishes

Call 742·2078
PORCH SAlE, corner Long ond
College In Rutland Beh1nd old
grade 1ehool lhursdoy and
Frtday . 9a .m tti i Sp.m ,

PAllO SALE Rl 7, 2 m•les S. lup·
pers Plotns , I &amp; one-half m1le
N. of E.H S. Weds . thru Sotur-

, dov .

·--

AKC RegiStered Co llie Stud Ser·
vtee , Stardust Ktn~ , Phone

GIVE a ltvtng Easter Poodle .
teacup , ft nies, toy . AKC
reg istered;
I block male
Pomeran ton , 6 weeks . Phone

696-1297 . •

SPRING SALE on Storcroft Mint·
motor homes , tro..,el tratlers
and fold-downs Used trailers
tn stock . Warran ty and Service
what we sell Accesso rtes. and
Parts Der,t. Cpmp Con ley Star
craft So es. Rt 62. N of Pt
Pleasant
~~-~---

1973 SCHU LTZ 3 bedroom all elec·
Irk mobtle home Phone 992.

2605
1973 SCHULTZ 3 bedrm. oil alec
mobile home Phone992-2605
-

===

Martha Chambers ,
Clerk SPRING SALE on Storcroft Min t·
Metgs c ounty Board
motor homes, travel trailers
Of Co mmtSS lonettS
and fold-downs . U1ed trailers
,, in stock Warranty and Service
'
a 15, 2tc
what we •ell. Accenortes and
Parts Dept. Camp Conley Star ·
croft Sales , Rt 62 N of ,Pt .

.

I

"i"

,,...
'.
"I '

I'

Pts

Royal Oak Park
62
Ra ci ne Home Na t B k.
56
Mitch ell's Paintmg Co
52
Dew Drops
•
50
Oa1ry Va ll ey
46
New York Clothing
46
Htgh lnd Game - Connte
Chapman 20J, Shir~ey M it
Che ll Pat Carson 190
High Series - Pat Carson ,
539, Shirley Mltt helt 528
Team H ig h Gl!m e - Royal

Oak Par k, SOB .

Team
H lgh Se ries
Mitchell ' s Pl!lnting Co 14 S7

I ':-, •

1975 Choteau Camper , 28 ft ,
sleeps 8, equipped w1th Oir,
Fle)C·I teel sofa bed , fwo door
refrrgerotor {gas or electrte), '
double sink , 1:2V converter
pock , forced air fu rnace. hot
watar heater , 2 twin beds al$0
cabinet bunks - sleeps .4 , 21 ft .
owning, cronk up antenna . .4
burner rap and oven, fon hood
Ltl.e new, priced to sell. Phone

142-2'154.
1966 Passenger lntern-J iional
Schoq,l bus converted into a
camper. Bottle gas stove and
refrigerator . Phone Y92-2S90 or

992·7890.

MODERN walnut console , AM·FM
radio , .e speed changer ·
Balance $103 .eQ or terms Ca ll

992·3965
GARDEN Supply Heodquorlers
Cabbage, cauliflower , broccoli ,
head lettuce and pansy plants
Also. on ton 3ets. seed potatoes
of all variet1es and a full hne ot
bulk garden 3eeds
Heod
quarters also for fine produce.
Mtdway Mk I , Pomeroy , 992·

2582.
FORD 9N trac tor , overhaul.
$1 ,750, Ford Jubtlee tractor ,
$1 ,750.Ford 861 tractor wtth
loader. $2 350. Allts Chalmers
W0 -•5 tractor , wide front end,

dows. steering and brakes,
AM-FM rad io With tape player,
mag rims plus regular 11ms and
hubcaps Phone 27,..2,.2,. or see
Vtrgil Hillin letart Foils, Ohio.
1973 VEGA sta tton wagon , 4
speed, law mileage, excellent
conditton . Wtll sell reasonable.

Phone 992·2366.

1968
MERCURY
for solo
Good
runlng
cond•llon
. Phone
614-9BS·3S65.
1951 CHEVROLET Pickup, Ro.bu•ll
V -8, 283 motor, new brakes,
new ti res $400 Phone 992·

7876.
1968 CUTLASS Supreme

COAL, limestone and all types. of
s.a lt and rock salt lor ice and
snow removal. Excelsior Soh
Work s. East Mom St . Pomeroy ,
Ohto Phone 992·3891

used 5 ft 3 pt rotary mower,
$185; New Idea hay condt·
tloner, $450; 3 riding lown
mowers , $35-S110.Luckett Form

Equipment. Phone (61&lt;) 698·
3032 or b98 7881 , ·w.
Washington St ., Albany

engine, air conditioned
99'.2 -7869 after .4 p.m.

Call

1972 NOVA, 6 cyl. automatic,
power steering , ~8 .000 miles

$14SO. Phone 992-32S9.
1964 Corvai r Monzo New C B

Phone 992.:)403

1973 MOTO Cow fl.dly dressed
low mdeoge $1500 Also, 1975
Bultoco Frontera 2SO CC, 200
mtles, never been raced , lots of
extras , $850 firm
Phone
Golltpolts 256 -1295
3

3 BEDRM

house

tn

CONSIGNMENT Auct1on Sale,
Saturday, Aprtl 17, 10 a .m.
Sponsored by Orange Twps.:
Volunteer Fire Dept at their
Ftre Station , Tuppers Plotns,
Ohta. Consignments welcome .

31:112
1971 750 HONDA good conditron .

667-6185 aller6 p.m

197.4 750 cc Suzukt motorcycle .

Coli 992·S502 .
ONE Compre ssor wtth condenser ,
I h.p . 3 phose A lso, one 2
wheel utillty tratler Phone

9'12·57.:.
86~-:--:---c-:-1971 Skiff craft 21 ft cabin cruiser
Inboard 140 Mercrouser. Als.o
troller. Many e)( tras Phone

992·2590or 992.7890.

- - --

MIMEOGRAPH mochtne, ~oyal
Portable typewrt ter. Homel tte
chain sow Phone992 -2409

1976 GAS
12XSO PENTHOUSE
MOBILE HOME
$4,995

Kanauga
Mobile Homes
Kanauga, Ohio
Ph. 446-9662

Mike Yaung, Manager

of

Sales and Installation

or 992·S975

Televuion log for easy viewin8"
THURSDAY,APRIL 15, 1976
5:1X1-B"oiianzo J ; t-amuy ATTatr o; Mor Trek IS.
5.3G-Adam .J2 ~ ; News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co . 20,33; Adam-12 13,
6·1)(1-News 3,4,B,10,13,15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20; IT\/
Utilization 33.
6: 3G-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith b;
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20 , Lltlos Yovo

614-99'1-22~

.

TEAFORD
110 Mechanic

Pomeroy, 0 .

Phone 992 3325
RUTLAND -

3 BEDROOM all electric home
famtly room carpeted wtth
wood burn1ng fireplace . In
Rustic Htlls Syracus.e $25,00)
Phone 992 7836

F.A. furnace Only $10,000
NEAR RUTLAND - New 6

rooms and both plus finished
basement wtth 1 or 3-acre•
near Racme Phone (61.4) 9.e9.

2748.

COINS

'I&gt; ACRE -

3 BR

Home 5 yrs
bath , n1ce

kttch en a nd dining . Uttlify

R , ca rport , storage bldg ,
al l electnc $16,900
ROUTE b81 - 135 ac res.
mrnerals, wa ter avatlable,
good hunting , some limber ,
near other re cr ea tion

Slb.600
LOVELY HOME -

fr ame, 3 large

8 R.,

7 r
Jl/2

baths, full basement w.2
d tr
garag e,
por c he s
over l ookmg the rt ve r ,
excellent condttton , JU ST

$18,500.
MIDDLE PORT -

5 BR ,
r ,

2

Find burled treasure .
Coins, rings. sliver, gold.
Coin &amp; Metal
Detec1ors
For Ren1
For 5ale

R&amp;J COINS
Rutland 742·:Zlll
Roger Wamsley
4· 1· 1 mo

NEW

THE

"FLOOGH, '
FA T50- · AtJO

ITS VOU R~ -· M~RSLY MV MEMORY'S
FOil. PICTATIN6 AN· 5LIPPING, M&lt;Kf!".
SOT THERE .\116HT
OTHER COPYOF

WHA T'S ALL.

FORMULA OVE'R.

THS PfiO&gt;J!&gt; !

THIS A&amp;OUT

brs , bath , basement.
storm dr s., and wi ndo ws,
alum tnum sidmg, na1. gas

PH. 992-6010
..

Courteous
Service3 31. 1 mo

Sa~_ &amp;_R.ental
TRAVEL TRAILERS

R.

,'(f.. 1(00\.\),

Codner, Owner
.4 1 1

..

BO'RN I llSRR

OPEN
FRI.-SAT.·SUN.
or by contading

t&gt;-T ~RI?TMP6
't'l:NB 'f.MA
Rli~TII~ ...

mo .

Ph . 992 -3993
.4 10 11¥\o

we

I:

building and remodeling
from the foundation up.
Additions, carpeting,
painting, stding, roofing ,
paneling, paper hanging,
etc ....

Yeeterd•y'•

_.. ,..J ____,

·"'.:,-.f-8

:~·om the largest TrucJ&lt; o'r
3ulldozer""'Radia tor to th ! ·
smallest Heater Core

Nathan Biggs
IUdtator Specialtst

Ph. 992 -2174

basem e nt

i

· :·-

· Chain

·•

' o~J !ft ""

Sovn-

Lawn
Mowers-

i!y f(l&gt;•:.;.\ \. Tllters·'iiii:.· 1" , • •••A ' R tding
~~·r~ '-',&amp;;#'
Tr•ctors .

•

'··'

NEW: Lawn Boy mowers,

SMITH NELSON
MOlORS, INC.

J 18 1 mo

r-

~

·•

Pioneer
chain
uws,
Bolen's Mowers, Merry.
Tillers, MTO Mowers .
498 Locust Sf.
Middleport, Ohio

PomeroY

wit h

Full

992-1092

family

room Covered patio, dbl.garage. and 3 level lots.
$~ , 500 .

RACINE - Lt ving 16x30, 3
nice bedrooms wi th c losets,

big bath , 2 porches. dry
ba se ment , garage wtth
shop, and l f4 acr-e of land

Only $2 1,500.
MIDDLEPORT - N1ce 12
rooms , 2 full baths, eKtra
large mod . ktf chen, woo d
burning f trepla ce. fam i ly

room wilh pool table, 2 lots
Just $25,000 .
POMEROY - 1 brs , 1'1'
bath s, centra l air and heat,

2 porches, dbl garage, and
4 acres of land . All for
$31 ,000
THE ABOVE ARE NICE
DESIREABLE
AND
SALEABLE HOMES. BUY
ONE NOW

MODERN all electric home, 5
rooms and bath, plus ftnished
basement wtth 3 &amp; two-thirds
acres near Racine. Phone (61,.)

949·2748.
6 RM house tn Middleport. ntKt
to s.chool. New shingle roof ,

$5500. Phone 992·7275.
ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood
frame, two bedrm. home
located between .Coolville and
Tuppers Plains . One acre lot,
two cor garage, city woter, gas
heat ,
hor'dwood
floors ,
carpeted
living room , ntce

view. $21,000. Phone (614)
667-3519.

EXCAVATING, BACKHOES AND READY MIX CONCRETE delivered
DOZER , LARGE AND SMAll ,
r&gt;ght to your project. Fast ond
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllED. Bill
eosy . Free esllmcles. Phone
PUlliNS. PHONE 992-2478, DAY
992-32114, Googloln R0&lt;1dy Mix
OR NIGHT.
• •. Co., Middleport, Oh1a.
-B...=.:
RAD
:.:F:::,
O::.RD'::',"'-A:-u-s"llo-n-e-er-. -::
Co_m
_· ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
plate ServiCe. Phone 9.49-2.487
or 9.49-2000. Racine, Ohio, Critt
Bradford.

garage, larg• lot on Rustic
Htlls , Syracuse. Sale price

$22,900 . Phone 992-7523 for
more information.

ABOUT l one.hall acres of
undevelored land in the
Village o Pome(oy, Ohio. Out

:Strout"

Realty·

of high wotor, good neighbors,
has city water and sanitary
sewage. Reo1onable . Phone

f ,HC;,.PDII.An\D

992-5786
HOME for scle, livmg room ,,dln·
lng room , 2 bedroom~J , kitchen , family room , bath.

Phone992·7394.

NO. 142 - 95 o .. &lt;a stock eo
lake, 2 or 3 BR home, on
paved road, $40,000.00.

Newly Wed Spectal- New all elec. home, never lived
bath , mostly carpeted, porch &amp; built·on garage, '12 acre
of land Country setting , 1 mtle off Rt. 7,11nishing work
qu1ck sate sn,soo.
Little 3 Cow Farmer - Here IS a modern house in the
natural gas furnace, smal l barn, chicken house, city

water &amp; natural gas. Almost 3 acres ol welllayed land
Pnced 526.500.

backhoe work . 'dump trucl.s
and lo-boys for hlrt ; will houl
fill dirt, top sotl, limestone and

tow n close to

gravel. Coli 8ob or Roger Jel·
fen , day phone 992-7089,
night phone 992·3525 or m.
5232.
SEPTIC lANKS cleoned. Modern
Sanitation

7349.

992-3954 or 992-

WILL do roofing , construct ion,
plumbing and heating. No job •
too large or too small. Phone

742-2348.
EXCAVATING, dorer, backhoe
and ditcher, Charles A. Hatr
field , Back Hot Servtee,

CONTACT :
Lois Pauley
Branch Monager

5 BEDROOMS - This ni ce 1'1&gt; slory home has a large

Rutlond, Ohio. Phone 742-2008.

kitchen with built ins, 2 bathrooms, 2 bedrooms 9n first

floor , l ni ce l y paneled bedrooms on the 2nd floor·, also 2

HEAR NEWS FIRST

Chester . Ohio. Would you believe $12,800.

ON

Sll,(lOO wi ll buy modern hom e near fairgrounds, 2
bedrooms , li vmg room , kttchen, bath , garage, 2 car
concre te block garage and garden space, nice for small
famil y .

WMPO AM·FM
EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWSCASTS AT

Call For APpointmenl

8 A.M., The Noon Report,

949-2388

and. 5 P.M.

JIMMY DEEM
•

J~

NO. 118 - 3 BR , full base.,
large glassed in front

W. Main
992-2298
Pomeroy
Alter Hours Call
992-7133

everything new tncludes wiring, plumbing, roof,

vice, all makes, 992 -2284. The
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We sharpen Scissors,

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader ond

~04

country . completely remodeled, 3 bedroom house,

osllmotn Coil 992-2J8.1 or
(bl4) b'IB-7257 Albonv.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser-

Rutland Grode School. Tuneup,
brakes, wheel balancing, alignment. Phone7-42-20CW.

NO. 157 - 3 BR, bath &amp; 'I&gt;,
full base ., mod. kitchen,
ca rpeting, additional u·t .
bldgs ., $20,500.00.

r equired. wt ll be done for buy,er in 30 days. Priced for

D&amp;D TREE Trimming , 20 years tx·
perience . Insured fr••

O'DEll Allgnmenllocoled behind

stores, $19,000 .00.

IUIPIItd b7 tht oboYI -~·

I I x1

I

., ,.
"
An1wert '"17tll tolumll lla1 badrbonfl - 91!NAL

ACROSS
DOWN
1 London
I Expire
2 Perfect
elevator
5 Philippine
3 ''You are
JSland
old "
10 Jewtsh
12 wds. I
month
4 Three, m
11 Gloomy
Trieste
12 Rose of
5 Fountain
treat
the Reds
Yesterday's Answer
13 Famous
6 Land mess26 Eucharist
18 Fine
folk
W'e
plate
sheer
songstress
7 One's
29 Gigll or
t4 Czech
native
fabric
Schipa, for
19 Verdun 's
measW'e
land
example
river
15 Feather
12 wds. I
scarf
8 Oregon ctty 22 Hat similar 30 Developmeatal
to a fez
16 Greedy
9 Chemical
... catching a
phase
23 Cuban
person
substance
little sun!
17 Football
11 Like the
32 Sun disk
province
Learn
Earth's
24 Proof35 - standstill
19 Bare
satellite
(2 wds. )
reading
direction
20 Blushmg
15 Conquer
36 Newt
21 Hibernia
22 Namely
12 wds.)
J...&lt;~"'T'I~ 24 Ticket •
25 Seed
covering
n-+--t-1
26 Tampico
money
Z discarded u club from his
27 Exasperate ;, J
NORTH
t5
hand and a diamond from
28 Al~skan
'K J 10 54
dummy . West had to lead .
natives
'K 2
· another heart. Z chucked
t A7 6
31 - esplit
dummy 's last low diamond,
.A
85
32 Consumed
ruffed in his own hand and
WEST IDI
EAST
33 Snare
claimed the balance of the
•32
• 34 Eastern rite
tricks and his contratl West
• Q J 10 9 8 7 6 5 4¥ had been forced to give Z a
1..--t- +--tChristian
t3
tKQJ8 5 1 double discard first and a rulf
36 Spirit lamp
'-;-t--t--1!.4
.KQI0976l
and a discard next.
37 Island in
SOUTH
With any normal line of play
New York
•AQ9876
Lhe
defense would co llect
Bay
.
" A3
three
tricks and set the con38 Amphibian
• 10 9 2
Lracl
.JJ
39 Tarzan, for
Bolh Vulnerable
example
(hyph. wd.)
CO Phoenician
No rth Eut South
Several readers have asked
city
us to describe the negative
Dbl
5•
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It:
double. It was invented by
Pass Pass
Alvin Roth about 20 years aso
AXYDLBAAXR
IOJ&gt;&lt;•ning lead - Q ¥
and is a double of an overcall
Is 1. 0NGFJ!LLOW
for takeout.
One leiter Simply slands for another.. In thi• .•ample A Ia By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Here Is an example. South
userl for th e three I.'s , X for the Lwo 0 s, etc Stngle letters.
opens one diamond. West bids
Old man Z who used to
aposlrop hes, the length· and formation of lhe words are all
one spade. North holds
appear in the auction brtdge "'32¥ K 1076 tJ 32 o!oK 1085
htnts. Earh day the rocle lellers are different
columns played dummy 's king
He doubles lo ask partner to
. CRYPTOQUOTES
of hearts. East dtscarded lo 10 bid
of clubs and Z remarked, " I
DEZ
LEZZ
XAEUZSJX
L D A U Y L believe R F. Foster thought
(Do you have a question
of this hand back around 1922. for fhe experrs? Write "Ask
X D W Z L I V Z R LX
XS
L Y Z I It is a ruff and discard hand to lho Jacobys " care of this
K DE
end all such ."
LS
newspaper The Jacobys will
CDLM J L X. Then Z overtoo.k du~my's answer mdividuar questions
KSJ ' L WDRR SAL SW
. king of hearts wtth ht s ace, 11 stampea, self-addressed
cashed two trumps and both envelopes are enclosed The
U
FOR minor suit aces His next play most lntereslmg questions
DJ S J
• was a low heart. West had to w111 be used In th is column
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE ONE INFAL BLE
MULA FOR GETIJNG THE WRONG SLANT IS TO LOOK win the trick and play another and w1/l receiVe copies of
DOWN YOUR NOSE. - DAMON RUNYON
heart.
JACOBY MODERN I
.. .
&lt;C 1976 Kinl lo~etturu Syndicate, Jne. )

;;..-+-+-

and all types of general repair .
Work guaranteed 20 years experience . Phone 992-2~09.

move into, with or without
f urniture Very good buy!

porch , in

tn, l bedrooms, li vtng room , kitchen &amp; dining room &amp;

Ll

Double sluff aida ruff one

REMODELING, Plumbing hooting

Coli

~

12 :IXI-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15; Let's Mok• o
Doal 13; Bob Braun ' ·
•
12: 3(1-Take My Advice 3,IS; All My Children 6,13;
Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
12:4s- Electric Ccmpony 33
12:5s-.NBC News 3.
1:IXI-News 3; Ryan's Hq&gt;e 6, 13; Phil Donahuo 8;
Young &amp; the Restleu 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1: 3G-Oays 01 Ovr Llvtl 3,.4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, 13;
As lhe World Turns 8,10.
•
'
2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:3G-Doctors 3,,,15; Break the Bank 6,13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
3: IXI-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; All
In The Family 8, 10; Bleck Journa1 :W.
3:31)-()ne Life fo Llve13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; M•lch
Game 8,10; Book Btat20.
4:IXI-Mister Cartoon 3; /llerv Grllfln 4; Somernt15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Moutoe Club B; Mister Rovers
20,33; Movie " Rancho Notorious" 10; Dlnoh 13.
' :]()-Bewitched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesome Sl , 20,33; Fllnlstones 15.
5:IXI-Bonanza 3; Family Alfalr B; Star Trtk 15.
5:30-Adam ·12 ,,15; News 6; Beverly HlilbiUie&amp; 0;
. Elec . Co, 20.33.
6:IXI-News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33 .
6:311-NBC News 3,,,15; ABC News13; Andy Grllfilh 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Carrascolondas 33.
7:1)(1-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth '' Lowrence
Wtlk a; Bowling tor Oollors 6; Aviation Woother
33; News 10; Don Adams Sc'"n Tst 13; Fomll·,
Alfolr 15; Ohio Journal 20.
7:30-Porter Wogoner 3; Treosure Hunt 4; Cndld
Comer a 6; Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky
20; $25,000 Pyromld 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Pq&gt;
Goes 1he Country 15; Bleck Perspective on The
News 33.
B:IXI-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Donny &amp; Morlo 6, 13 ; Movie
"A Boy Named Charlie Brown" B, 10; Was htnglon
Weak In REview 20,33 ...
8:3G-The Prattico 3,4,15; Woll Street Week 20,33 .
9:IXI-Rockford Flies 3,4,151 Movie "Love Story" 6,13 1
Firing Line 20; Masterpiece Theare 33,
9:3G-Movlt "Beneath the Planet of the Apes" 8,10.
lO:IXI-Pollce Story 3,~. 15; News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33.
10 :3G-Avlatlon weather 230.
11 :IXI-News 3.4,6,8, 10, 13,15; ABC News 33.
11:311-Johnny Corson 3,4,15, Rookies 6,13; Movlt
"Three Ring Circus" 8; Movie "Queen of Outer
Space" 10; Janakl 33.
12 :411-Don ' Kirshner's Rock Concert 6 ; 1roqslda 13 .
1 :00- Midnlght Speclol 3,4,15; Movlo "Witches
Mountain" 10 .
1:411-News 13; 2:3G-Movle " Kitten with o WhiR" 4;
News 3.
3:IXI-Movle "Apartment for Peggy" 3.
4:IXI-Movle "Ovt of Sight" 4,
~:1s-Movle "Lifeboat" 3.
5:3G-Movle "HI, Gaucho" 4.
6:IXI-Movle "Lynch Mob" 3

-+-+-+--+-tWIN AT BRIDGE

Sweepers, too1ters , irons, all
small appliances. lawn mower,
neKt to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985-

NEED o plasterer?
Custar , 992-3550.

NO. 147 - 2 BR, full base .•
some carpellng,, ready to

co.·

·~ ·

h (J II

3825.

3 BEDROOM total elec. home,

No• unnp the clrtled letten

by THOMAS JOSEPH

WILKINSON'S

,' '.,/~11

,1

-.

V 'i to ronn the ourpiH OMwor, •

·~

Ph . 9H-202J or Ul-2647

. :~~-.:

~

tJ

Jumble" DAILY FIN NV: JUSTLY PERMIT

comptere
small
Eng.
. • .-... ·- kepair

PUBUC

I

Wf,iA\ A GIR:I..
50MEIIMEe WEA~
AT THE 8EACH.

(.._wen t.. .rnw}

the ald . All types of

992-6167
OPEN4 P. M DAILY
CLOSED MONDAY

LARRY WHOBREY

PH. 992-6173

'·

. ...,

=-H=-ER~tx~x~x~I~x~x,:.qn

4-13-1 mo.

Now accepting clients
for bookkeeping and
tax service.

Q

form four ordinary words.

_

We build new and remodel

specta lt ze tn home
made Pizza , Speghet1 t ,
Baked Lasagne , &amp; Send ·
Wtehes
Qutck carrv Out Ser'&lt;~•ce.
-4 -2 1 mo

ACCOUNTANT

• •~

Unmamble the&amp;efaur Jumbles,
one letter to each aquare, to

GLUBIN

CONSTRUCTION

Middleport, Ohio

Call in Of'ders and pick up
in tw en ty minutes
Located at l:Zt-lrd Street
~a cine. Ohia

~&amp;~~;::!..:::t::::c

1
] [
t
IT I

D&amp;D

29S s 2nd St.

Italian-Style Pizza

1·oo-Tomorrow 3,.4 .

1 5G-News 13 .•

tSINIST

Modern 7

eve rylhmg

6:1X1-Sunr lse· Semester 10.
6:1s-Farm Reportl3.
6:20-Biue Ridge Quartet 13
6:306:3(1-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrl&amp;e 5erne&amp;ter B;
Farmtime 10.
6:40--Qunce Of Prevention 10 .
6:4s-Mornlng Report 3.
6:5s-Chuck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
State 13 .
7·lXI-Today 3,,, 15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
•
7:3G-S&lt;;hoolles 10
8.IXI-Laule 6; Coptoln Kongoroo a,10; se&amp;ome St . 33.
8·3G-Big Valley 6.
9·IXI-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donohue 4,15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Oouglos 10; Morning with D.J , 13.
9 30-A.M. 3; one Life to Live 6; Tottletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13
10:IXI-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Edge of Nlght6;
Price Is Right 8, 10.
10:3G-Htgh Rollers 3,,,151 Dlnahl 611 :1)(1-; Wheel of
Fortune 3,15; weekday 4; Gambit 8,10; Farmer' &amp;
Daughter 13.
11 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Hoppy Ooys 13; Love
of Life B, 10; Sesome St . 20,33 .
11 ·5s-Toke Kerr 81 Don tmel's World 10.

20.33.
.
'
10·oo-ABC News Closeup b,l3; Bobby VInton 41 Oral
Roberts' Spr(ng is Hope 8: New. Countr.v. 10.
10 :3(1-Probe 4.
1l :IXI-News 3.~.6,8 , 10,13 , 15..20; ABC News 33. ,
11 :3G-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; MonniK 6, 13; Movie The
~ hoes of the Fisherman " 8; Movie " Bridge to the
Sun" 10; Janak! 33
12 4G-Maglclan 6,13.

I K XJ

lARRY
LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio

DONELLI'S
PIZZA

room , ranch home, 1•12
baths, large mad. kitchen,

w1th

7;IXI-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell he Trulh 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Spoce . 1999 8; News 10; Let's Make o
Deal 13; Family Allolr 15; Anyone for Tennyson?
20; Family at War 33.
7·3G-Hollywood Squores 3: Baseball 4: Ohio Stoto
Lottery 6 ; Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky
20; Wild Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Music
Clly U.S.A. 15.
- 8:il0-'-Mac Davis 15; Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13;
Wpllons 8, 10; Koscluszko : An Amertcon Portrait
20; The Way II Was 33
8:3G-Barney Miller 6,13; Lowell Thomas Remembers

Financtng Ava1lable

3·23 1 mo .

I

SAM'S
PIZZA SHOP

rm s , 2 ce ramic baths , 3
brs , ntee kit., baseboard
heat, carport , Oh to Power,
and leve l lot SJO,OOO.

CHESHIRE -

WAY TO
J06 IT!

BE A

/'-

FRIDAY, APRIL 16,1916

Streets of San Franclsco6, 13 ; Great Performances

Blown mto Walls &amp; Attics
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTE RS·AWNINGS

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

•

garage, close to school.
S30,000
WANTED-HOMES
TO
SELL
HENRY E. .CLELAND
BROKER
992·22S9 or 992·2568

f,/AME' ~

Y E!7, V&amp;5! OF cOURSE

WE 'Ll A cCEPT CHAR6 E5!
... HELLOL •W DEAR 1!7H•
15 THAT VOU~

.

Blown
Insulation-Services

GARAGE

e

storms .. NG heat, gar age
a nd w or ks hop , ca rp o rt.

r .• part basement ha s rec
room , l oVely rear glassed
porch , hot w at er heat ,

O&gt;J LINE

50 GRAND'f

4·5·76

FREE ESTIMATES

ROGER HYSELLS

MIDDLEPORT
CAB co

larg e porches, and a sull porch , garage. Natural gas

POSSE~SION
Ranc h'
lype, 4 BR , 1 balhs , ut1ll1y

~p

PHONII\JO CO Ll.. ECT !

r----------""1

furna ce ts ve r y economical . located on Scout Road in

$12,000
IMMEDIATE

Mil Mek ES ! PICK

?CVI'N ! ITS THAT DR. FLOOGEL·-

RAINBOW RIDGE
I Bashan Area I
LONG BOTTOM

Racine, Ohio
Need new root or old
repaired? House, root.
barn, shingles, build up,
painti"g, electrical work ,
gutters &amp; downspouts,
furnaces, water hea1ers,
water softners, tnstalled &amp;
repaired, Sewage .
Call us at 949-2882
or 949·2203
3-28 -1 mo

or

all

porches ,

CAPl'AIN !" &gt;\SY

PH. 992-3746

l 1vmg room with shiny oak f loor ing, dining room, nice

1''1 bat hs, dtning

·'

fAKiner's Cam~

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

BUY, SELLar TRADE

CENTRAL REALTY
old

-l

Certified technician.
Briggs &amp; Stratton
Engines.
Pickup &amp; Delivery

.

CHANNEL FIVE
9:IXI-700·Ciub
7:00-Coble Journol
8:00-Quldoorsmon
8:3G-Re• Humbord
9. 3G-Wyott Eorp
IO:IXI-700-Ciub

33.
9:IXI-Movle
"The Greatest Slory Ever Tol d" 15;

6 rms., 3

brs , ba th, city wa ter, n ew
n a t ga s F. A. furn ace,
porches. and large lot

$12,500.
LINCOLN HTS. - Neat 2

MODERN all electric home , 5

1 " · ' ..; • • "

~y~~ .

Vorgtl B. Sr ., Realtor

HOUSE on ltncoln Hgu 2 bedr·
ms , large k1tcl1en, large basement , excellent buy for
$9 200 Wtth furmture , $10 ,700.
Phone 992 76.4 8

Farced oir turnoce, central otr
Phone 992 2058.
-'-~:-:--:c---=:-::-:c=1.72 ACRES . Phone 7~2-2359
HOUSE for sale by owner on linco in Hgt5 , Priced low for qutck
sole Phone 992-5539.

,

Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohto 45769 '
Phone day or nigh!

6 JO Ttll10:00
3-17 1mo

Phone 992 58S8
HOUSE for sale. 26 acres newly
2 acres
fenced posture,
ti llable, house carpeted and
remodeled , freshly pointed,
basement, small barn, porch,
city water , forced atr heat,
rurol , conventen l locatton near
Chester. Phone (014) 985·.42-48

glassed

SPECIAL

save.

OPEN TUES. THRU SAT.

Rutland.

1973 KAWASAKI 100 on and off
roodbike Runs real good $225
or best otter 1.44. Pearl St ,
Mtddleport .
USED Cfloinsows, tillers. and
mowers Wilkms on lawn and
Garden .498 locus t St ., Middleport.' Ohto Phone" 992-

home with no obligation .
See how you can really

Ph. 949-2404

HEREFORD
bulls
June
Wamsley , M iddleport , Route 1,
Phone 742 -233 1

~ (614)

.

-

rodto. Phone992·7826.

Phone lb14) 667·3303 or 667·
3890.

FREEZER BEE~ . Corn fed s.teers lOVELy 2 story older home m
Racme 1h24 1iving rm , dlntng
Wtll del tver to local dress ing
plonh Phone 643&lt;2 111 .
room , new butlt-in k1tchen wtth
PORTABLE anttque organ , dealers
cherry cab• nets , den, bedrm
welcome Phone992-5539.
and one -ha lf bath down wtth
oak hardwood floors , 3 bedrIN DASH 23 Channel CB, AMFM·
ms. New full both , utility room
MPX radto , 8 track stereo. Coli
992 -3965.
upstairs, full basement , Iorge
front and rear porches, unotDUNCAN Fite dropleaf dmtng
tocl'led garage, 2 storage
tab l e , Secretary Ch tn o
butldings, all set upon Iorge lot
cabineh. carpet for 4 rooms,
with addtttonol lot available
draperies , curtatns , end tables
Must sacrif1ce 1or $2 1, 000 Coli
one marble top table , tables
949-2683
and floor lamps maple chatr

We'll bring santples to your ,

24 Hour Service
350

$1 ,2SO; Used 2•4' plow, $17S;

3 8EDRM HOUSE •n M&gt;ddleporl

(614) 985·4248
COL LIE pups for salt , Roclne
phone 843·2753

Phone 992 2181

Pleasan t:·~--:--·--::-

·'

S79l

-

POMEROY LANDMARK

Tuesday Triplicate
Aprit6 , 1976

Watch for List
Items Later . .

3 ROOM fvrntsl'led apt , uttltlles

WILL DO odd tobs , roofmg , pam ·
ling. haulmg, treework and
mowing Phone 992 7409 .

Syracuse,
signs .

differen t vorteties of tomatoes ,
including non -acid wh rte
tomato. Very large selection of
beddtng plants
Also
Geraniums and other polled
plonh . Hanging baskets
Cle land Farms and Green house. Geraldtne Cleland ,
Racine.

ROOMS and both on ltncoln

--

peling and inslallation .

3·11-1 mo.

Hgts Fully carpeted , ltving
room Phone 992·3090

PUBLIC NOTICE

I I' I

51095

Phone 992·3975 or 992-2571
PERIENCE? FRIENDL Y TOY
2
BEDRM
. trailer , fully carpeted ,
PARliES HAS OPENINGS FOR
located on Rt . 1&lt;t3, close to Har·
MANAGERS IN OUR AREA.
risonvtlle . I cht!d Phone 7~2RECRUITING IS EASY 8ECAUSE
3122
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVESl · -~-MENl , NO COLLECTING OR ENJOY grac1ous livtng at Vtl lage
DELIVERINGS CALL COLLECT
Manor in Middleport tor as low
CAROL DAY , 1518) 489·839S or
os $130 per month wtth all
1't/5 DAlSUN, air condtttontng,
WRilE FRIENDlY HOME PAR
utiht tes pa td. These are brand
power brakes, $2,900. Phone
liES 20 RAILROAD AVE
new high qual tty opo rtmenls at
992·3453. - - - - - ALBANY, N.Y. 1220S.
pn ces you can oftord. Your rent
1973 THUNDERBIRD, eKcellent
tncludes
month
to
month
VEGETABLE
plonls
of
all
kinds
,
1D
' HOME WORKERS.' eorn 160
condition , power seats, wtn weekly oddreuing envelopes
Rush self -addressed . stomped
envelope . Southern Otver·
St!ied. 1206 Camden Dri ve,
Rtchmond, Virginia 23229.

'

IWWY PIECES,
FIN15HED· 0H · I
STAND TO SEE
• EXCUSE ME··

MAC'S
LAWN
MOWER
SERVICE

~Free estl~ates on car.:

Aprtl 17th .J&gt;eginnlng a1
·10:00 a .m .

FURNISHED opt ., 'couple on ly, all
uttlthes paid $130 per month.

~~~
~===­

CASH potd for all makes and
models of mobtle homes
Phone oreo code 614 -42 3-9531

Nott ce to Bit um inous Ven
dors
Se ale d btds wt ll be re ceived
by the Board o f Co m
m tsStO ner s of Meigs County ,
Oh to , at the off ice of the
Co unty Commtsstoners , tn the
Court House , tn the Vt llage of
Pomeroy , Oh to 457 69 , untll
9 30 a m on tile 29th da y of
April , 1976 tor th e lu r n lshmg
of bltUmtnous materta ls for
the Me tg s Cou n ty Highway
Department
Esltmat ed quanttly of liqutd
asphalt
r equire d ,
ap
pro)Cimately 400 ,"o OO ga llons
Btd Spe cific ation Su bm 1fted
As Follo ws
Btd price p er ga llon , fob
vendors plan t. an d the Pri ce
per gallon deliver ed to ven
dors portable tank to any
lo c alt on
tn
the
co unty
desig n ated by the co unty
eng tn ee r
for the various
grades
of
bdum Incu s
materta l!i whteh may b e
required by the M e tgs County
Hig hway Department , which
shall conform to th e perttn enl
stat e of Oh1o , Department of
Th e H ig hway Cons tru c tion
and Mat er ial Specif 1cat ron
With
r es pe ct
to
th e
afore sa i d esti mated quan
tthe s, the ve ndo rs shall un
derstand that no guarantee 1s
given as to the l!ctual QU~n
t ttles of b tlum Incus ma t ertals
to be furnrshed , but each
successful vendor shall be
requ ir ed to f urnt sh all or any
pi!rl of the Meigs County
actua l r eq utrem en ts· as or
dered during t he 1976 se ason
Prtces on thts btd shall be In
effect tor the rematn der of th e
year 1976
On the envelope contatntng
each btd , th e nam e and ad
dress of the v endor mu sf be
shown and pla inly m ar ke d
" B1tum !no us Btds "
Propo sa ls are lobe r eturn ed
on bid forms supp lied bv th e
vendor , and wdl be opened on
the dale and pla ce spectfied
above
The M eigs Coun ty Com
ml~sioners reserve the rtgh t to
accept or reje c t any or !!II bids
or any part there of

a consignment auction at
the hre house located in
Tuppers Plains, Ohio on

1970 NOVA 4 DR ,

ovoilo:::b::,le:.:..,-:--:-- - - R.N. NEEDED Must be able to FURNISHEO, 2 bedrm apartment
IN MEMORY of Mrs. Effie Manuel
who left us 8 yrs ago, April14 ,

S6095

6 cy l . aulomttlt c, P st e~ rmg , radio , good fires .

SL04N'· ·
CARPETING

AUCTION SALE

Dar k red, si mula ted wood tr im , 3 seat , fully equipped
wtth every Chev . op tion . low mtles, new tttle, boss 's
w ife's· car Sti cker $7 ,400.00

1974CHEV BELAIR4DR ,
Aulo, P S , P B.. air, police ca r

Bottom . Ohio 45743.

~ -.:-::;o-:

-

Business Servi·ces
Orange Twp , Volunteer
Ftre Department will hold

1975 Chev . ESTATE WAGON

LOST or stolen, little black dog
wtth .4 while ftet . lost in Hor·
monvtlle Name "AI " on col ·
lor. Phone 7.42 22S6

~

I

----~--

f or
50
word
mmimum
Each ad ditro nll l word 3
ce n ts

'" ~
.,,.,

2 SIGNS, Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

t~:HQOUA.

--

11- The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport,O.., Thursday, AJ1f.ill6, 1916

mcK tRXCY

_

CARPENTER wtll do sidmg, roof·
ing~ rem odeling, room Dddt ·
tton s
Also garages . free
E!lt1motes . Call W2 26S9.

-

Classified~

_ :_

an y ads deemed Ob
ject•onal Th e publiSher
wt l l n ot b e responstble for

one-half mtle .

Use The Sentin.e l

AH THINKS
THIS MEETrN'
1&amp;6aJNA
MEAN A LOT

1b/V1E- ,._..,

1

"

·z

z

�12-The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Thursday, April15, 1976.

i~sue

Canal

Wind up car near
ready to drj.ve

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT

April1l

NOT OPEN

nomination.
Carter, Henry Jackson,
Morris Udall and Fr11nk
Church answered questions
from an A!nerican Society of
· Newspaper Editors panel by
telephone Wednesda y to
avoid crossing an NBC picket
line around the hotel.
But noncandidate ·Hubert
Humphrey stole the show. He
entered by a nonpicketed
entra.nce and wowed the
groop with a luncheon speech
full of one-liners. He said he
doesn't plan to enter any
primaries but refused to say
flatly he will not change his
mind.

"The word 'never' in
polltlcs is a very finite word,"
he said. "Let's just say I don't
••peel to enter any

COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR
SALE
Our entire stock fo new spring sportswear
coordinates is included. Pants · Shirts
Shorts · Blazers · Sweaters · Jackets
Shirts.

Sale Prices·

primaries."

Walt Disney's

TREASURE ISLAND
·G·
Pl us

DR . SYN

IGI
Running t ime 165 min.
Show Starts 7 P.M.

Men's

COLUMBUS (UP!)

- · and Reagan with 40 first
ruled Invalid on the grounds
Brown today ordered they were not members of the
Republican 1\onald Reagan politica l party of the
andAlaba!llll Gov. George C. candidate played a major
Wallace, a Democrat, part in enabling the two to
retns:ated to the June 8 Ohio qualify.
· primary election ballot.
In deciding this issue raised
,. Brown ~~ the order Wednesday· at a hearing,
·after acting on second Brown told Reagan backers:
appeals filed on behaH of the
"Because of the lack of
two presidential candidates, clarity of the Ohio Revised
originl!lly ordered off the Code as to procedures for
ballot because of insufficient qualification of signatures of
signatures.
members of a political party
Brown said Wallace now and because the petition was
has 1,000 valld signatures _ . so close to being sufficient,
the minimum required by we resolved any ambiguity in
law, and Reagan 1,022. Just a · the statute in favor of
week ago today, the qualification, and therefore,
secretary, alter acting on the added 40 signatures which
candidates' first protest,.said had
previously
been
Wallace was 19 signatures disqualified be cause the
shy of qualHying and Reagan signers had voted in
54.
Democratic primaries.''
Brown's decisioo to credit
Brown also said Reagan
Wallace with 15 signatures had gained 40 other names

LEISURE
.SUITS

Women's Spring Coats

lliiS WEEKEND
ON ANEW SPRING COAT.

PLAYTEX SPRIN·GSALE
-

Pupils active during
Right to Read Week

SAVE UP TO '3.00
On Double Diamonds(rl Girdles
Foundations Department, Second Floor
Mens Double .Knit

DRESS SLACKS

By Mrs. R. M. Jonas
During the week, all
TUPPERS PLAINS
students were given 76
An excellent selection · solid colors and
Right ·to Read Week at the minutes of time lor uninelementary school here has lerrupled silent sustained
patterns. Waist sizes 29 to 42 . Lenths 29 to
been declared a huge success reading . Students enjoyed
36 . Includes entire stotk.
by everyone Involved.
this so much that several
Co-chairpersons lor the teachers will continue the
week's activities were Mrs. activity throughout the school
Carlotta Reed and this year. The entire school
-·-·-~--·--·-~--·-·-·-~
writer, director of "Right to population read-&lt;boods of its
Read." The theme chosen for choice at the same time each
this special week was, "A day.
Belter Ufe through Better
Over 85per cent of pupils in
Neck sizes 14112 to 17 , also s!zes small,
Reading."
grades 2-6 read at least one
Winner or the prize for the book during the week and
medium. large and extra large . Long and
best song abOut reading was signed their names to the
snort sleeve styles . Includes our entire
Deedrah Sanders, grade 3. Declaration of Right to Read
stock .
Winner of the prize for the in the school library. Mrs ..
best poem about reading was Sandy Gumpl, speech
Tammy Calaway, grade 3. therapist, designed the
The winners will each receive declaration .
A pupil book-exchange lor
a new book of their choice.
Kick-off lor the week's many was the most e•ciling
activities was an assembly part of the week. Younsstets
program lor students, " brought in books they had
faculty, and parents. Mrs. read and exchanged them
This special sale is on all of our mens knit
Lavina Brannon's · third· with classmates. Donations
shirts . Crew necks · tank tops · golf and
grade class opened the of books were also received
tennis shirts · terry cloths · rugbys . Sizes
program with a song about from high school slud~nts .
smail.
medium. large and extra large.
reading written by the Enough books were received
teacher . A sklt entitled . so that each child in grades .
"Read, Read, Read Your K-G received at least one book
Book" was then presented. to keep for his own. In ~ll, 550
Scott Skinner, grade six, books were distributed
was narrator and the cast through the ••change.
included Humpty-Dumpty,
Parent voliln leers assisting
Shannon Stewart, kin- with this project were Mrs.
dergarten ; Sam I Am, Nina Sanders, Mrs. Kathy
Melissa Calaway, grade one; Davis, and Mrs. Richard
Sizes 28 to 42 waist . Twills. corded cloths.
Tin Man, Sean Clemson, Griffin. Faculty members
brushed denims. 100 per cent c-ottons.
grade two; Red Riding Hood, helped with collection and
Hundreds of pairs in this selection . Some
Laura Skinner, grade 3; · distribution , and al~o
nave jackets to match.
Johnny Appleseed, Lori arranged special bulletin
Robinson , grade 4; Tom boards and room activities.
Mens .9.95 Fashion 'Jeans
- .7 .88
Sawyers, Mark Rice, grade
So much enthusiasm was
.
. 8.38
Mens
10.95
Fashion
Je
ans
·
·
·
live ; and Mr. and Mrs ..Read- shown for these projects that
. 9.38
Mens 11.95 Fashion Jeans · · · ·
a-Book, Kevin Brooks. and Right To Read Week ap·
•
9.88
Mens
12.95
Fashion
Jeans
·
·
·
·
·
•
Sarah Goebel, grade six.
parently will become an
Mens 13.95 Fashion Jeans
• 10.88
Other sl•th-grade students annual event.
Mens 14.95 Fashion Jeans - - · - · . .11.38
assisting with costume design
and stage management were
Mens 15.95 Fashion Jeans · · · · • . 12.38
NOTICE
Bernnie Bennett, Mike Not icePUBLIC
to Aggregate Vendors :
These sale prices also on new entire stock ol
Bissell, Rob Smith, Cassie
Sealed bids will be received
The Board ot County
Sheets, Mike Baker, Greg by
mens Pre Washed denim jeans.
Commissioners of Meigs
Cole, Patty Edwards, Deedee County , Ohio at tht offi ce of
Durst, Marjorie Myers, and the
The County Commis si oners in 1-·-·-·-·---·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-~-~-~-~--~-i
Court House . in the Village
Qndy Crites.
of Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, unt il
Puipls in Tom Gumpl's ~ : Jo A .M . on the 19th day of
April 19 76 for tht furn ishing of
fourth-grade class had made all
kinds end sizes of
bookworm bookmarks for aggregates that may be
Juvenile sizes 3 to 7. Reg ular boys sizes. 8 to 12. Tank
by the Meigs County
each stUdent and these were required
top s , crew necks · school name shirts . number s shirts. ·
Highway Oepartn,ent .
Our entire stock .
distributed by the cast. Mrs.
Estimated quantity of all
aggregates required. o!!IP ·
Ma•ine Whitehead, music pro
x'im at ely ~0 , 000 ton s.
teacher, led singing of songs
Bid Specltlcotlons To Be
Boys 2.95 Knit Shirts
Sale 2.49
As Follows :
K
Sh t
about reading whlch the Submitted
Sale 3.19
Bid price per lon , f .o.b.
Boys 3.95 nit
ir S
students had been practicing looded
al vendors pion I for the
Boys 4.95 Knit Shirts
Sale 3.99
all week.
various ki nd and size of
Sale 4.79
aggrego les I hoi may be
Boys 5.95 Knit Shirts

Sale Prices

t-·--·-"--·-..
MEN'S WESTERN SHIRTS

Sale Prices

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS

Sale Prices

MEN'S FASHION JEANS

.,.

·-···-··

'jiOOWIII'I,..,. ~
' . •• c.-. .....

requ ired which w i ll conform
to
the fJ.ernnento fSta Highways
te of Oh io ,
Department
Construc tion and Materials
Spocificalions
, exce
pl ing pea
or
shot gravel
whl c ~ is an
ungraded material.
With
respe c t
to
the
aforesaid estimated quant ities
the vendors shall understand
that no guarantee is given as
to the actual quan ti ties of
aggregates to pe furn ished ,
but each vendor shall be
r equired to furnish anv part of
the Blclut~l r eq uirements as
order ed dur i ng the 1976
season .
Prices on this bid sh all be In
effect
for the remaind er of the
year 1976.
On the en~Jetopt con tein ing
each bid , th e name and ad dress
lhe plainly
vendor musl
b•
shown ofand
'marked
" Aggregate Bids ."

10 be relurned
onProposals
bid form sare
supplied
by the
vendor , and wil l be opened on
the date and pt!!l ce speci f ied
above .
The Meigs Counly Com .
missioners
resereny
ve !he
to·
acce pt or reject
or ri
allght
bids
or any pori

th•r•~' ·

Marlha Chambers ,
Clerk
Me igs County Board
of Commissioner s
(4 ) 8 , 1.5, 1 1C

MEN'S

'

.
Buy them to wear
with leisure suits or
separat.ly .
Sizes
small ; 11 (14-14112 ),
Medium ( 15·15'12 ).
large (16·16 112 ) and
extra large (17-17112 ).
A
I r ' me n do u s
selection!",
.
r· ~

Salt·. Prices
· Fu~niture Department - 3rd Floor

SALE! KROEHLER IN NAUGAHYDE

Final Two Days
Cortley
Made 20-~asure

Draperies

Ideal ftlf Family· Room, Den, Living Room
or Office.
.

Sofa • lM Seats • OlaiJS • Ottomans

Save m Now
(Please bring

459.00 Love Seats, light brown · ·
297.Qd ,$ofa, green · · · · • • •
242.00 Love-Seat, green • · • · •
395.00 Sofa,'brown • • - · ·
319.00 Love Seat, brown • • •
229.00 Olair, brown • • • • ·
539.00 ~fa, Patchwork
. •
469.00 ~ve Seat, Patchwork • •• • •
249.00 Olair, Patchwork' : · - - . . ·
500.00 Sola, brown. • • • • • •
440,00 Love Seat, brown .• · · · · •
360.00 Chair, brown • • • • • • •
143.00 Oltoman, brown • . • .• • •
219.00
Chair, light brown. · ·
209.00
Ch~ir, light brown • • •

349.00
199.00
169.00
299.00
239.00
179.00
429.00
369.00.
199.00
349.00
300.00
210.00
109.00
149.00
139.00

SALII

POWER LAWN. MOWERS
No. 17 $119.95 3 H. P. 18 inch cut mower ·
Brigg,·:and Stratton engine · 4 cycle.

SALE '99.95

window m~suremen1s

Reg. $145.00

WINTUK
YARN
4· Ply,
4oz. Skein

REG. '3.95
JACKSON AND PERKINS

Superooted
Rose Bushes

SALE '104.95
No. 3-Reg •. $189.95 llf2 H.P. 22 inch cut
mower · self propelled • Briggs and
Stratton, 4 cycle engine. ·

Sale $1 9
Reg. $69.95
Model 1416A

EUREKA
UPRIGHT
SWEEPER

SALE '159.95

1---~~---~--·-··-·-·-·-·-·---·-·-·~-..t·--·-=-~-=~·==~=:-:::-:-::::-::---"1

Sizes. 6 to 20. Made like the mens leisure
Short and long sleeve styles.

Boys 7.95 Leisure Shirts
Boys 8.95 Leisure Shirts

Sale 6.47
Sale7.17

SALE! ROJO TIUERS

Reg. 5264.95, 31f2 H. P. Briggs . and Stratton
engine, power reverse · be~- drive.

SALE '239.95
Reg. $359.95 5 1'1· P. jriggs . and Stratton
· motor ·~ •chain drive.
;..~~J,;,

Boys Sizes 18 to 30. Mens sizes 30 to 50.
Riversibles : wide white belts and fashion
1
L
co ors. eather work belts. E~ceptional
ValueS.
.

Sale '59.95Complete

26 inch· standard boys style- Boys 3 and 10
speed bikes • Limited quantity.

··•.

STEREO
TAPES
Our entire stock
included Popular ·
Rock
Country
Western - Vocals
Instrumentals .

SALE PRICEs·

,.

fo.-..;..~,;;;.".-·~-~-·-·-·w·-·-·-------~·r-~~-""!'"--"·--~-·--·---~--·---·-·-·--..-:-"'1
•
,
,.

Maill Store, Alln.e1 and Warehouse .illll •.rr

9:30 ID 8 p.m. ShOp Siturday 9:30 to 5 p.m.

y

ELBERFELD$ 'tN"
r

VOL XXVII NO. 258

••

at y

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

on the list of substitute
teachers .
Hiring of personnel and
negotiations whicn are underway with the teachers
were reviewed and the
meeting was recessed until
April 26.·
Attending the meeting also
were Supt. Riebel, High
school Principal Chester
Gooding, board members
Oris Smith, David Smith,
Dorset Larkins, Doug Bissell
and Dorothy Calaway, and
representatives of · the
Athletic Boosters who
discussed matters of general
nature pertaining to the
athletic-program.

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in
downtown Pomeroy at 11
a.m. Friday was 84 degrees
under sunny skles .

night in a tree just a bout IS
feet outside the fence,"
reported il park worker, "and
today they 're still rownlng
around free.
"Some of them are running
hack and forth over other
fences, mlxing with zebras
and giraff~s, but we've got
plenty of fresh fruit on the
ground to keep them in the
area and we 're keeping a
close eye on them."
Wou ld-be captors were
fearful that rushing the
baboons would cause them to
scatter. so they played a
waiting game with the frisky
animals that were Imported
from West Africa just two
weeks ago.

entine

FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1976

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS •

Politicians
slow down
By ELIZABE'lll WHARTON
United Preas International
Three things combined to
slow the pace of political
pother today: Good Friday,
Passover and a shortage of
campaign money .
The two religious holldays
undoubtedly would have
created a hiatus In any event
over the Easter-Passover
weekend. But the fact is that
lor most candidates right now
the financial Income is a
trickle and the outgo is a
flood. It tends to make them
welcome an e•cuse to slow
down lor a few days.
Jimmy Carter ·was set to
outline his health policies at a
speech (at 11 a.m. EST) and

later a news conference (at
I :30p.m. EST) in Washington
today, and most of the others
stayed
busy
through
Thursday.
President Ford did no
active campaigning, but he
announced trlps to Georgia
and Indiana coming up lute
next week, and his press aide,
Ron Nessen, liad another go
at defusing the Panama
Canal as an issue.
He acknowledged the
..
negotiations could lead to
eventual Panamanian control
DESTROYED BY FIRE _ This lkoom home on Lincoln Hill Road has been admired
but not for an9ther 30 to $0
by Pomeroy residents and visitors for many years. Built by the Ebersbach family , it
years. He said failure to write
became the home of the late Richard Rawlings in the 50s. Current owners of the home ,
a new treaty could lead to
destroyed by fire Thursdaymorning,-are Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Carr.
further antiAmerican riots in
Panama and possible
·
confrontation with other
Latin American nations:
Republlcan challenger
Ronald Reagan wound up
section of Huntington's east have been torn down and be three days In · Texas still
petitions, protested and spanning the Ohio River.
pounding away at the canal
rebuilt.
gritted their teeth over the
Finally, it was decided to side.
and
other foreign policy
Now, a new crisis has
Van Vorhis lndlcated it Issues, and sald he Is "hoping
location o( a new bridge put the facill ty between
eastern Lawrence County, arisen. Is the bridge doomed· could lake several weeks for and praying 1'll be whialllng
Ohio,. and the Guyandotte before the first car drives the department to complete • 'The Eyes of Texas'" alter
over it'
lts test . .
that sUite's primary May I.
Two large piers were being
The engmeer said crews
Both Carter and Udall went
Bomb threatened, put up on the West VIrginia were to have poured 900 cubic after the labor vote that
slde, but ' the Maxon yards in the footer, but their supposedly favors Jackson ,
Construction Co. of Dayton, supply of concre!e was ln Pennsylvania Thursday,
$400 stolen from Ohio, has decided to apply the exhaus!ed the loUowmg day. while JackSon himself spent
brakes to its $1.9 million That same day, some more hours on the telephone ln
project.
Meigs
High
was Poured, and, at that fund-raising effo rts from
cubation period lor the
Someone irf the state High· point, the stat.e ordered Philadelphia.
For the second time In ways Department thinks the Maxon Constructioo to stop.
clllckens, the children
The crucial Keystone
learned of the stages of the three days a bomb threat was bridge might have a flaw . According to Vl\fl Vorhis, Stale's primary is April 27.
received at the Melgs Junior already.
embryo growth.
the state feared that a "cold
Meanwhile a Gallup poll
High
School Thursday and · Dan Van Vorhls, chief engi- joim" would develop, leaving showed Carter and Hubert
One egg which cracked on
neer lor the Ohlo firm, says
the fifth day was opened so found groundless.
Humphrey virtually tied.
The
call
was
received
at
the
controversy lles In the a weak polnt.
that the children could · see
The
second
time
the
among
Democrats and
what had actually taken about 11:45 a.m. during the concrete footer poured Feb. concrete was poured, It
too much I with the
(Continued on page 10)
. place inside the fer tilized egg lun~h hour . The. junior hlgh . 9, which now has come in for settled
.
and nearby central buildings some tests
by
the hghter
in that period of lime.
part rl.slng to the top .
Wednesday as excited· were evacuated for the department's materials However, Van Vorhl.s said he
fourth graders watched, si• reminder of the day with control, soil and testing divi- didn't believe the looter was
baby chicks pecked their way sludenl.s returning to their slon.
plagued by either. overThere is a· possibility the vibration or a "cold joint."
through the shells. Other eggs homes by school bus at the
looters might need replacing ,
were expected to hatch today. usual hour.
Nonetheless, the siate has
Overnight, a breaking and Van Vorhis said.
As for the duck eggs, , the
decided to investigate this
Workmen have been idled initial phase of what would be
Two persons were taken to
incubation period is 28 days, entering took place at the
so it will be another week school. An office door and because, he pointed out, it , the third such bridge crossing ~C as the result of an acbefore six more blessed sale door were pried open and would useless lor them to the Obio River In Hu~tington, cident on East Main St. at
some. $400 In cash stolen from continue· work on the piers a span estimated to cost $41 11:03 a.m. Thursday.
events occur.
the sale. The school other- while it is possible they would million.
Police said an eastbound
wise was undisturbed.
car driven by Jess Wlll.
'
Pomeroy, attempted a left
Work party will begin at 10 am
turn into Landmark and
struck a westbound cr
Protector; Larry Hudson ,
Members of the Pomeroy fields . All . managers dri~en by Hilda Weaver 'Iii, .
Pomeroy Police DepartBoys League are working on coaches, players (Little Philo. There was moderate
MEETING SET
ment; and Russell Eshelman,
new
baseball llelds at the League and Poly Leag~e), damages and Will was cited
The
Meigs
County
Regional
Pomeroy night watclunan.
Meigs Hlgh School located on and all interested parents are lor falling to yield right of
Planning
Commission
will
The group made plans to
the hlll above the high urged to try to make this way. Mrs. Weaver and her
sponsor the Hoxie Brothers meet in regular session at · school's varsity baseball work session.
3:05
p.m.
Monday
at
the
small son were taken to HMC
Circus in Gallipolis in June
diamond.
Any questions concerning by the Syracuse E·R squad
A.S.C.S.
conference
room
,
and for the observance of
A work party has been set the above work party can be
National Police Week, lv!ay g. second floor, Farmers Bank for Saturday, April .17, directed to Don Hunnel or ~hlch, by coincidence, was
Building , Pomeroy . .
near the scene of the ac15.
beginning at 10 a.m. at the Roger Stewart.
cident.
•

• ·g ton ,s new
H un1m
· oh·10 R··
IVer hn·dge doomed?.

By United Press International
DETROIT - FOR THE FIRST TIME in two years,
indefinite layoffs in the U.S. auto industry will fall below the .
50,000 mark nelrt week as General Motors resumes second shift
operations at two California assembly plants.
' But the nation's . "Big Three" automakers warned
Thursday a Strike by the United Rubber Workers next week
could cripple car production . They said there are enough tires
ln stock or in transit for a week of production before the effects
of a rubber strike would be felt.

.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(UP! I - For nearly a
decade, they argued, drew up

Incubation seen
by 4th ·g raders
"How does a chicken get
into an egg?"
A Middleport fourth grader
asked his teacher, Mrs. Lucy
White, that question and it
resulted in the development
of a science study unit on
reprOduction.
The incubation process
~ould have been explained by
Mrs. White with words and
graphs, but she chose instead
. to let the hoys and girls see It
happen.
The Meigs County E;x·
tension Office provided the
school with two incubators , a
dozen chicken eggs and six
duck eggs.
During the 21 day In-

COLuMBUS ~ THE OHIO EXPOSITIONS Commission
most of the 1976 Ohio Slate Fair grandstand $312,250
entertainment lineup Thursday.
,
The 1976 Fair grandstand lineup will lead off with the
Osmonds on Thursday, Aug. 26; K. C. and the Sunshine Band
and Singer Natlle Cole, Friday, Aug. 27; Telly Savalas and
Tanya Tucker, Saturday. Au~. 28 : Pat Boone, Sunday, Aug. 29;
Glenn Campbell and Lynn Anderson, Wednesday, Sept. I.
Six new members were
Singer Kate Smith and Canadian singer Rene Sinard will
appear Thursday, Sept. 2; Bob Hope, Saturday and Sunday, accepted when the Gallia·
Sept. fand 5, and Neil Sedaka will close out the Fair Labor Meigs Lodge 93, Fraternal
Order of Pollee, met at
Day, Mooday, Sept. 6.
Middleport Vlllag e Hall .
They
are George E. Miller,
WASHINGTON - A SENIOR AGRICULTURE
J
.,
Richard
Clark, Capt .
Department official says expectations that farmers will plant
Sidney
Little,
Middleport
about 6 per cent more corn this year than last could mean the .
Police
Department
; Greg
(Continued on ,page 10)
Taylor,
Meig~
Game
~proved

Jr.

Two injured in

traffic mishap

Officers join police lodge

8- track

,i ~·.·

.BICYCLE SALE

New Selection

M·en's and Boys' Belts

and Reg. 519.95
· Deluxe
Attachments

SALE '304.95

1~~~-~~·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·--·-·-·-·-·-·---~'"f

PROPERTY DESTROYED - Vandals, apparenUy using a shingle stain, wrote
uncomplimentary names and swastikas on the automobile of Jim Cleland, Racine about
midnight Wednesday . Cleland, who heads th·e Ohio Valley Fellowship, said the act of
1
vandalism was carried out because of his work in the fellowship's drug abuse program: The
de)Jl!rtment of Sheriff Robert Hartenhach is conducting an investigation. The vehicle will
have to be repainted.
·

e

·EAST MEiGS- A policy wlll be notified lor possible
on dealing wllh students legal action on the second
Involved in drugs and-or offense.
·
alcohol abuse that calls lor
The board accepted the
ell]lulsioolrom school lor as resignations of Larry Baker,
long a5 law permits upon a high school custodian; Judy
second Offense was adopted Sams, dl.strict nurse, and
Thursday night by the Delores Frank, study hall
Eastern Local School Distric t monitor. Employed were Tim
Board of Education.
Spencer , · high
school
About 75 parenls of the custodian, and Doris Swain,
district met two to three study hall monitor,
hours with the board to exLarry Heines and Duane
press
concern , and Wolfe, faculty members,
willingness to work with ~were given permission .to
school and support its actions ~d·a- [(asketball clinic in
on drug and alcohol abuse . Cincinnati next weekend. The
The board adopted a policy seventh grade was given
sla~ng lhatanystudenlfound permission to visit the ExPOssessing alcohol or drugs, posilioo Center in ' Columbus
•UIIng, selling or giving to next week and Supt. John
others on school properly, Riebel will attend personnel
including buses . will be employment practices
placed on probation on t~ serninarinColumbusonApril
rtrst offense. The student w1ll 28.
•
not be pennl lied to take part
A policy for regula ling the
ln any extra curricular ac. spending of student activity
tlvlty whatsoever.
accounts was adopted and the ·
Also, the parents will be board voted to renew
~sked to give permission for membership in the South·
the student to be counseled by eastern Education Television
the school psychologist.
Service lor 1976-77 for
On a second offense the educational television. The
student will be expelled for board authorized the Chester
the maximum period set by and Riverview schools to be
law which would be the used lor Bible schools the
remainder of the semester. first two weeks of June and
Law enforcement agencies Charles McManus was placed

Sale $119

No. 2-Reg. $124.95 3 H. P. ·20 inch cut
mowe.f. Briggs and Stratton 4 cycle engine.

s~irts .

By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UPI)
·Fifty baboons made monkeys
out of frustrated would-be
human captors lor U!!l second
day today.
The young IS-pound
animals, whlch scramble&lt;!
over a supposedly "baboonproof" 12-foot hlgh len~e at
nearby
Kings
Island
amusement park Thursday ,
roamed free on park grow1 ds
. just outside the leoce today.
"All the baboons spent last

Drug .abuse will
bring expulsion

·LEISURE
· SHI,RTS

BOYS LEISURE SHIRTS

Baboons just
too smart

"which had previously been
ruled invalid" by local boards
.of elections on such grounds
as illegibility, not registered
etc. Wallace picked up 4 key
signatures in this manner
also, t he secretary said.
The ruling means Reagan
and President Ford will
battle to see who wins Ohio 's
28-member at~arge delegate .
slate to the Republican
National Convention.
Ford has delegate slates in
(Continued on page 10)

Secr~tary of State Ted W.

Sale Prices

ANOTHER_ _~
GOOD BUY
FROM BAKERrS

HOOVER •
CLEANER

Reagan, Wallace
restored on Ohio
election ballot

The candidates tumed back · ....--~-·-·-·-·--·-·-·--·-·-·~--·-·--'"! Sizes sm~ll •. medium, ·
to their vote quest alter their.
large and extra large.
morning convergence in WaAll famous makes.
shington, and reporters. quesPatterns and solid
tioned Nessen about Panama.
SAVE
20%
:·colors.
This sale on
The Panama question has
all
of'·•
our mens
. necessary kin etic energy . been one of Reagan 's
leisure
suits.
The wheel decided on is made standard - but largely
of ·· high -strength Fiber ignored - issues for a month
Misses - Juniors - Half sizes. Well known
composites bullt up in or more. This wee k
quality
brands.
concentric rings to minimize Ambassador Ellsworth
Bunker, named by Ford to
radial stress.
work
oqt Final deU!ils of a new
Wethe ·said the projected
Final Two Days
•
basic fuel cost of operation is treaty with the Panama
less than half that of· a goverrunent, told a House
battery-()perated
electric subcommittee the object of
automobile ana tar below the negotiations ls "to give up
Special savings on Cross· Your· Heart(r).
that of a gasoline or diesel the Canal Zone after a period
Soft Sider (r) , and Support can be Beautiful
vehicle.
· of time, that is correct."
(r ) Bras .
"

BOYS KNIT SHIRTS

FRI. , SAT., SUN .
APRIL 16·11·18

$

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

heats up

' dent Ford's pledge never to
By ELIZABE'lll WHARTON
sUI'render the canal and his
Uillted Press International
Republican challenger chief negotiator's statement
Rona ld
Reagan, to a House subcommittee that
campaigning in Texas, said it is "perfectly clear" the
of · Panama
tjle Panama Canal is as much Republic
eventually
will
gain control
a part ollhe United Slates as
over
it.
the Louisiana l"'lrchase or
White
House
press
lhe stale of Alaska . He
secretary
Ron
Ne8sen
said
suggested President Ford is ·
delaying the· current treaty there is 110 inconsistency.
Democratic candidate
negotiations until after the
Jimmy Carter told CBS he
election.
The canal question, which has , a ll.st of two dozen
Reagan had sounded earlier possible vice presidential
without much response, now names and his stall i'
looms as a major political studying their backgrooods.
But he would not rule ou.t
issue.
the
possibility the choice
Al a news conference in
would
be a negotiating point
Austin, Reagan found some
to
assure
his own presidential
inconsistency between Presi-

NEW YORK (UP! ) - An
urban commuter automobile
that runs on kinetic energy
much as a child's top spins, is
to be e~aluated under ·a
contract jus\ granted by the
federal Energy Research &amp;
Development
Administration.
llle contract went to Lear
Motors Corp. of Reno, Nev., a
creation of inventor Bill Lear,
who spent so much of his own
money and time trying to
design an effective modern
steam car. Lear Motors
expects eventually to build a
prototype kinetic car but the
present contract is just for
engineering evaluation.
The car would be powered
by kinetic energy stored in a
flywheel turned by an electric
motor plugged into an outlet
while the car is at rest. The
principle is basically the
same as that of a child
winding up a top with a
string.
.J.D. Wethe, president of
U.S. Flywheels, Inc., San
J uan Capistrano, Calif.,
which designed and tested the
kinetic fly\vheel, expects the
car to have a range of 50 to
100 miles at speeds ol40 to 60
miles an hour - all on the
stored kinetic energy in the
flywheel.
The present kinetic
fly wheel was invented by
Richard and Stephen Post but
the principle has been used·
for centuries in such devices
as the potter's wheel and
spinning wheel.
.
The principle also has been
used with fair success to
power experimental vehicles
in
Europe and
its
performance has at times
astonished engineers. The
proposed car would require
no fuel or no·electricity while
actually in motion and would
give off no emissions of any
kind. Weihe said its actual
operating cost would be only
one penny a mile.
The kinetic flywheel would
be connected to the car's
drive system by a variable
speed transmission much like
the transmissions used in
gasoline and diesel powered
vehicles.
The big problem, Weihe
said, was to design a flywheel
mronger and more durable .
than steel that could stand
turning for hours at high
'Speed and store up the

·'

~

Capsized ocean oil rig takes 12 men to deaths
By RONALD LITTLEPAGE

FORT ARANSAS, Tex. (UP!) - Aglant oil rig under tow in
the stormy GuH of Mexico broke lose and sank Thursday night .
The Coast Guard said today 12 men trapped in an overturned
survival capsule were feared dead, two others were
unaccounted for and :2 survived.
The USS Lexingtoo, on maneuvers off the Texas coast ,
dispatched helicopters io assl.st in the rescue and pull the
dlBilbl~ capsule, shaped like a large sa~cer, from the rolling

sea.

~ 'Where

.

do you want us to ship the bodies," the Lexington
Nked on the OJast Guard radio channel. Divers said they
1\l!Ukl see bodies floating inside the orange capsule but could
not verify the number of dead.
· Seas were 13feet and winds were clocked at 50 knots when

ihe Ocean Express, a $12 million platform commissioned in
January , broke away from towships.
· "It was rough," said survivor Ellis R. Whitt of Shrevepor,
i..a., a motorman who was among 16 crewmen boarding an
identical survival capsule. "At 8 o'clock they woke us up and
we did what wero~ld to get things sqUared away .
"The rig began to arch more and more and we could see that
eventually something drastic 'was going to happen."
Whitt sald he entered the first survival capsule and cast off
into the turbulent Gulf.
" It was rolling and rocking but everyone remained calm,"
he said . "Five minutes later they got the second capsule off,
then the rig toppled over and went to the boll om.
" It went into the water upside duwn. I don't think Iherr"'"
any way to get air because ventilation is al the top.··

.Whitt said he never saw the second capsule again.
Coast Guard spokesman Dave Cipra said a helicopter •from
the Lexington plucked the last man from the water to safety
and a lug latched onto the first Sl)rvlval capsule early today
about 30 miles off the Texas coast.
Cipra said the captlan of the rig radioed the Coast Guard at 8
p.m. Thursday that he was having difficulty with tile 166-footlong, 100-loot wide rig. A half hour later he radioed that all
hands were abandoning the rig.
Cipra said the first helicopter arrived at 9 p.m. and
apparently all ol those a board but the captain had scrambled
into one of the capsules and the rig was sinking rapidly. The
helicopter moved in over the rig, Cipra said, and lowered a
basket to the captain. He got Into it and was hoisted to safety.
Ref ore he reached the helicopter the rig had &lt;tisappeared.

"We got word from a tugboat out there ," the C~st Guard
said, "that 19 people entered the capsule (which capsized ).''
He said seven swam away from it when it first encountered
trouble and were rescued. ,
"That leaves 12 in the capsqle. The two others are
unaccounted for , but we aren 't sure whether there are two
more or not. In a situation Uke this we can't count on ariy
ligures.being correct. " ·
It was possible that some of those dozen men had left the
capsule and were in the open water . lie said a lullscale search
was underway lor any signs of life on the surface.
Cipra said the Coast Guard had given up on !rYI~ to turn the
capsule back over and ·would attach lines to it and haul it
aboard the Lexilll!ton.

'

•

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