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                  <text>16 - The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, April 21, 1976

.

Fitzpatrick
(Continued from page 1)
purchase cigare'ttes . He sal&lt;1
Ill! had a tolal of 85 cenIs In his
pocket.
He said he put in a quarter
and began playing a game of
pool. While he was. playing,
Darst and Clonch were
lalking, but he did not know
what about.
Clonch motioned Darst to
come to the back room and
Fitzpatrick also went back
after playing another game of
pool.
He said he saw coins on a
bed and a brown paper bag.
Fitzpatrick slates that Clonch
wanted l&lt;J know if they knew
of anyone interested. Darst,
said the witness , said he
wanted to borrow money
from Clonch ($10), and Darst
went out and got change and
be was gtven the $10 and they
left.
Fitzpatrick denied selling
coins and denied breaking
inl&lt;J the Century Bar. He
stated Clonch tried l&lt;J sell the
coins and bills to them .
Knight staled there
definitely was a theft.
Pointing to the evidence, he
noted that there had been
returned silver certificates
and lead coins but only half
the bills. He stated that Mr.
Hess was more than willing to
have the money returned and
paid Clonch for its return . He
slated Mrs. Hess knew the
money was in the eslablishmenl, and it defimtely was
not there the next day.
He also stated that Hess
was willing to pay to gel his
money back and Mrs. Hess
knew the money was there
when she left the Bar . Clonch
had called the chief of police
of Middleport and reported
tl)at he had purchased some
of the money.
Crow in his final argument,
slated that the wrong man ws
on trial. "We know properly
was ' taken from Hess, but

there is no evidence by
whom/ ' he sald. Coins were
sl&lt;Jlen, but not by Fitzpatrick.
There was no evidence of a
breaking and entermg, Crow
l&lt;Jid the jury.

..

Almost impossible
by Ms Penelope
to answer MacGillicuty
Dear Big Mac:
As you bave requeSted , I am submitting wyou a list of the
most Interesting personalities in Meigs County whom I think
you would like l&lt;J meet when you arrive .
David Ohlinger, Civic leader and executive head of Capital
Savings &amp; Loan, Middleport
·
Joh,n T. Wolle, President, Racine Home National Bank,
Racine
Rodney Downing, Olairman of the Board of Cittzens
National Bank, Middleport
Zuelelia Smith, Civic and religious leader, Pomeroy
EdiBon Hobstetter, President , Pomeroy National Bank,
Pomeroy
Clara Lochary, Noted historian and ecumenical leader,
Pomeroy
Thereon Joh.nson Vice President, Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Co. and Chairman of the Meigs County Planning
Commission, Racine
Mildred McDaniel, Noted bird watcher (wrote thesis on
eating habits of the crow) Middleport
James Clatworthy, Jr., Renowned humorist, Middleport
Cash Bahr, Outstanding businessman tn Middleport
Elizabeth Arnold Cutler, social leader, Goren Bridge
l':xpert, Pomeroy.
Pete Shields, Outstanding Federal agriculture adviser,
and peanut authority, Ractne
Orion Roush, director, Pomeroy National Bank, and one of
the leading agricultural experts in Meigs County,
Langsville.
Phil Kelly, Executive Head, Kelly Mfg. Co. in Middleport,
Chester.
John F1ck, world renowned painter and mterior decorator,
Chester.
Edward Frecker, Proprietor of the only wo in Meigs
County, Chester .
E. A. "Whiskers" Kibble, World renowned poet and fair
expert, Reedsville.
Charles "Red" Carr, Leading consultant on men 's hair
styling, Tuppers Plains.
Eugene Fink, Expert on gas production, Rutland.
Ben Quisenberry, Expert in metal and leather goods,
Syracuse.
Gayle Price, Leading educator, -PorUand.
Wallace Bradford, Extraordinary Christmas Tree
grower; Santa Claus' helper; President of th! Meigs Fair
Board
Ann Watson, Humanitarian, Minersville.
George Carper, Meigs' leading horllculturalist, Pomeroy,
R.D.
We would appreciate you giving this list your closest
attention.
Signed : Jimmy X, Middleport, Ohio.

General Tel charges
meddling to .produce
much higher rates

Dear Jimmy X:
It appears you have an outstanding list and I appreciate
you taking your time l&lt;J advise me. I note that there are no
politicians included in the group. That is good. There are other
individuals who may be included in this list. We need more

women.

What I would like l&lt;J do Is have a contest to choose Meigs
County's most Interesting personalities. The winner would
receive the coveted Ms. Penelope MacGuillicuty award One
(Continued from page I)
spending to a pomt that award will be for the male personality entitled the "George
threatened allowing Russia to Washington Man of the Year" and the lady would win the
ov e rtake America's "Martha Washington Woman of the Year" award .
Depending on the time of the season, the winner may win a
superpower lead.
trip
to Bankok, India, to hunt Bengal tigers or the wiruter may
His words bore out not only
have
the option l&lt;J wrestle Bobo Brazil, the famous black
his concern at Reagan's
heavyweight
champion. These awafds may or may not be
possible success In attacking
given
,
pending
the Interest shown.
Ford's defense policies In
Please
note
that I will he the final judge as l&lt;J the winner.
campaigning for the Texas
Letters
to
the
editor
of the Daily Sentinel will have a great
May I primary, but also gave
bearing
on
the
outcome.
Sample ballots or petitions for the
public evidence of what White
contestants
w1ll
be
given
consideration.
Please let us hear your
House aides said is Ford's
comments
on
any
of
your
favorites.
Let's
go readers of the
private disgust with what be
Sentinel,
and
let
us
select
the
most
outstanding
female
regards as his rtval's
personality.
irresponsible charges.
Signed : Big Mac
Dear Big Mac :
NOW YOU KNOW
Your·comments on my poetry have made me extremely
Criminal suspects in
unhappy,
One of my friends told me that my poetry reminded
medieval England were
hirri
of
a
Chaucer poem. I think you should be ashamed of
branded with hot irons, and
yourself.
I
am enclosing another poem which I think you will
found innocent if the wound
enjoy.
It
follows
:
healed quickly and guilty if
I love the forest,
an infection set in.
l love the spring,
Everything is beautiful,
When I eat ham and eggs.
Tonight &amp; Thur s.
Aprll21 -22
Are you unhappy,
NOT OPEN
Then don't he,
When you jump rope,
Fr i.-Sat -Sun.
Please have some tea with me.
April 23-24·25
I
cannot
understand
why Mag wrote such horrible
Dirty Crazy Harry
comments
about
my
poem.
I know that she IS a Christian
., PG"
woman
and
I
assume
she
will
apologize.
·
Peter Fonda
Signed Prudence.
Dear Prudence:
Show Starts 7 p m.
Gads, lady. This Is worse than the other poem . What you
should do is become a stamp collecl&lt;Jr.
Signed · !\1g Mac.

U.S. on top

MEIGS THEATRE

TilE INN PLACE
THURSDAY NIGHT

SPECIAL

COPS RETURNING
MANSFIEW, Oh10 UP! More than 90 policemen, off
the job on sick-call since last
Thursday, agreed Tuesday
night lo return to work
. . because of the city's latest
contract propose!.

Potato

'2.95

Vegetable

Hot Rolls
Coffee. Tea or Milk

plus tax

The Tri-County's Most
E«lfing Night Spot

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3629

Pomeroy, Ohio

conununicahons

assure uuniversal service" -

a phone in every home and
office, at the lowest practicable cost to the consumer,
Wopat pointed out.
"Although the reduction in
the subsidies will bring about
higher phone bills for millions
of residential and business
cusl&lt;Jmers, the effect obvtously will be felt most
severely by low income
famili~s and persons on fixed
incomes." Wopat observed.
TELCOS' FUTURE
Two types of "competitors" have arisen as the
result of the FCC policies, he
said. One group consists of
the " interconnect companies" which sell or lease
telephones, switchboards,
and other kinds of equipment
l&lt;J telehpone users for connection to the nattonwide
telehpone network. The other
group is comprised of the socalled "specialized common
carriers" whtch provide
private-line telephone service
over high-traffic routes J&gt;etween selected cities.
The specialized common
carriers can concentrate on
these heavy-traffic routes
which are highly profilable,
while telephone companies
are required to provide a
broad range of services to not
only on the high-traffic routes
but also the far less profitable
low-traffic routes such as
th ose serving smaller
comrnumties and remote
areas, Wopat pmnted out.
" We
at
General
Telephone, the rest of the
telephone industry, and
unions representing many
thousands of telephone people
view ·the FCC policies as
having an inhibiting effect on
the growth of our industry
and its ability to provide the
public with tis traditional
high level of service in the

services,

and various optional services .''

The reduced size of the
subsidies IS expected to result
in rate increases of as much
as 60 per cent to residential
customers and 56 per cent to
business users of basic
telephone service w1thm 10
years, exclusive of inflation,
the executive said .
The anl!cipated rate increases are indtcated in a

recent study conducted by
Systems Applications , Inc., a
telecommuntcations
research organization. The
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Am anda
Folmer , Pomeroy ; Mary
Reed, Reedsville; Mary P.
Bates, Pomeroy ; Juanita
Chapman, Clifton; Billy
McDaniel, Clifton; Lot s
Jeannette Lawrence, Racine;
Darlene .Spangler, Rutland .
DISCHARGED - Orville
Graham, Leoma Pullins ,
Margie Thom as, Rollin
Foley, Mary Smalley,
Rebecca Tripl ett, Cass ie
Baum .
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Apri120)
Jame s
Boyd ,
John
Brammer, Emily Broyles,
Ray Camink, Imogene
Evans, Robby Eynon, Lillie
Ghearing, Stanley Glassburn,
Diane Harrison, Doretha
Campbell, Robert Henderson, Tanowa Hill, Mrs.
Gregory Howell and son,
Delma Jarrell, Mrs. Will1an1
Justis and son, David
Loudermilk , J ennin gs
Marcum, Cur tts Medl ey,
Mrs. Gilbert Mollett and son,
Connie Parsons, Jason
Stutgeon, Stanley Swain ,
Camille Thompson, Madge
Tredway, Mrs. Bill Gene
Ward and daughter , Walker
White .
(Birth, Apri120)
Mr . and Mrs. Larry M. Cox,
son, Gallipolis .

QUEEN TURNS 50
LONDON UPI - Queen
Elizabeth, Britain's monarch
for 24 years, turned 50 today
and celebrated with a prebirthday family dinner party
and a stately royal ball at
Windsor Castle.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in
downtown Pomeroy at 11
a.m. Wednesday was 74
degrees under cloudy skies.
In 19M, u.s. Air
planes began flying French
troops to Indochina to
reinforce the besieged
bastion of Dienbienphu. It
subsequently fell to the
Vietnam Communists.

LINOLEUM RUGS

~98

$,.

9x12

I

Nylon Fabric
Compare at $350.

3 PC. BEDROOM
SUITE

'128

is bombed

Local
in briefs
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. Investigated a schoOl
bus and ~.'an accident
Tuesday at 2:10p.m. on CR 18
in Salisbury Township. Jack
E. Hunsicker, 17, AtheJII,
driving the van, lost contrGl
In loose gravel and turned
sideways in Iron t of a school
bus owned by Meigs Local
School District driven by
linda L. Jell, Pomeroy. The
van struck the rear of the bus.
There were six students on
the bus ages 7 l&lt;J lZ, but there
were no injuries. '1'here was
moderate damage . No
cilallon was Issued.

I

HOOVER ~PRIGHT
CLEANERS

$58

..

A MARRIAGE license was
Issued to Dana Hubert
Bailey, Jr., 25, Rt. 2, Albany
and Jody Luukla Marcie!, 22,
Rt. 2, Albany.
GAYLENE ROBINSON
was granted a divorce from
William Robinson in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court,
THERE WILL be' a
meeting of OAPSE Thursday,
April22, at 8 p.m. at Southern
High School. .

After-Easter Dress Clearance

'

'

.-...
'

. , ... "' &lt;·

~

. . ..

CABIN MOVED REASSEMBLED - Guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Thompson, Spring A~e., overlooking the Meigs Football Stadium in Pomeroy. in the near
future won't have a room. No Sir! They'll have a guest house, an unusual one at that. Mr
and Mrs. Thompoon purchased this 175 year old log cabin from George Hoffma~, Leta rt, W
Va. and after numbering each log had them hrDught to Pomeroy. The cabm has been
rea~sembled to he used as a guest house. The cabin, of two stories, will he _furnished in the
most part with family antiques . There will be a bathroom al)d an open fir eplace. A new
cedar shake roof has been placed on the cabin. The reassembling has been done on a
concrete slab.

VOL XXVIII NO. 4

a1 y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

By SCOTT MACLEOD
FINLEYVIlLE, Pa. (UP! )
- "Hi, I'm Jimmy Carter.
You've got a beautiful
operation here and I know
you're proud of it."
The former Georgia
governor repeated those
words hundreds of times to
coal workers Wednesday
during his first tour of a coal
mine, Consolidation Coal's
Mathies Mine near this
southwestern Pennsylvania
community .
11
Yes sir, I learned a great
bit down there," said Carter,
dressed in miners' garb, 115
he emerged wiU1 sooty boots
alter the I 'f.-hour InspectiOn.
Carter, more familiar with
peanut farming than coal
mining, u:.ed"the -visit as -an
opportunity to express his
support of coal miners and l&lt;J
offer a campaign proposal on
mine safety.
Joseph "Chip" Yablonski

Jr ., son of slain former
United Mine Workers official
"Jock" Yablonski, was on
hand and gav~ Carter a
strong endorsement.
" When the ballots pre
counted , you will find the
working men and women of
this state responding warmly
to
your
candidacy ,"
Yablonski said during a
session with union and
company officials.
Carter predicted union
members wlll defy the state's
labur leaders, who are urging
them to vole for Henry
Jackson in Tuesday's
Pennsylvania presidential
primary.
The rank-&amp;~d-file will not
he "led by their noses "
·Carter said. "I have never
failed to get the support of
those who work."
Carter's five-pomt safety
plan would instill strict safety
precautions, eliminate loop

WASHINGTON - NEW COST OF LIVING figures are
expected to result in a 6.4 per cent Increase in monthly benefit
checks for 37 million Social Security beneficiaries. The latest
Consumer Price Index, announced Wednesday, will cause an
increase by July, a Social Security spokesman said, with the
formal announcement expected by May 15. The 6.4 per cent
hike, based on 1975 earnings, will have the following effects:
- The maximum for a man retiring in 1976 at the age 65
rises from $364l&lt;J $387.50; minimum benefits for the same type
individual goes from $10!.40'to $107.90; average benefits for a
retiree goes from $204l&lt;J $218; an elderly widow receiving $195
would get $208, and the average monthly check for a surviving
mother with two children would rise from $479 to $510.

Save Over

50%

~
~Q

~I:
-~

COLI!MBUS - THE OmO HOUSE HAS voted
unanimously l&lt;J give lire officials another weapon in their war
on arson, which results in about four ftres an hour In Ohio. The
House Wednesday gave unanimous approval and sent to the
Senate legislation requiring insurance companies l&lt;J cooperate
with fire officials investigating the cause of suspicious bl82es.
The bill would require an Insurance compaQy l&lt;J notify lire
officials if arson is suspected, and to provide relevant
information . . Rep. C. J. Mclin (D-Dayton) said Insurance
firms are reluctant to turn information over for prosecution
because they fear a lawsuit if there is no conviction.

Dr~

In This Group

GROUP II

enttne

holes m mme safety supervi- Department's job is to
sion, transfer the mine safety encourage maximum
but
the
agency from the Interior production,
Department to the Labor Department of Labor is
Department, employ an ad- responsible for the benefit of
minisirator of the agency workers ," Carter said.
experienced in mine safety
An aide to Carter disclosed
problems and eliminate the candidate consulted on
delays in fines and the plan with UMW President
corrections.
Arnold Miller. •
Carter said he was "en·
In t erior
"The

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

~off
On Any Dr~

In This Group

AND MANY

CHICAGO (UP! ) - A new
oil embargo that would
hobble America worse than
one that triggered long lines
.. for short gasoline supplies
t )Vo years ago "is an aU too- ,
real possibility," according
to
Federal
Energy
Admimstrator Frank Zarb.
This time, Zarb says, it
won't mean just long gasoline
Denise

Deart

dairy royalty
Demse Dean, daughter qf
Mr . and Mrs. Earl Dean,
Route 3, Pomeroy, was
named 1976 Meigs County
Dairy Princess at a dinner.
held at fellowship hall, St.
Paul Lutheran Church, in
Pomeroy by the Meigs
County Dairy Service Unit
Wednesday night. Miss Dean
was presented gifts, a crown
and banner 'and will
represent the umt at the
Meigs County Fair and in
slate competition.
Runnerup was Pam Kautz,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Kautz, Route 3,
Pomeroy.
.
Both Miss Kautz and Miss
Dean are seniors at Eastern
High School. Other highlights
of the evening were comments from Ann Colwell, 1975
princess, and a talk by
Richard Kellogg, Central
Ohio
Breeding
Assn .
representative.

lines. In some places, it will
mean no gasoline and no
lights.
"But I want to emphasize
that this is not idle doomsday
talk. It is an all loo real
possibility," Zarb told the
American Power Conference
Wednesday. ·
"I am personally convinced
that we stand a disturbingly
great chance of being
subjected
to
another
embargo. The Organization
of Petroleum Exporting
Countries has the oil we need,
and they can be expected to
make the most of the sellers'
market they enjoy."
Zarb said America has
been living on "borrowed
lime for much l&lt;Jo long, and if
the countries, which sell us
crude oil and petroleum
products, decide to stop the
clock again, we'll be In for a
crash refresher course in

Auto wrecked

by sleepy driver
Douglas E. Metz, 27,
Wilkesville, traveling west on
SR 124 at 3:30 a.m. today
apparently went to sleep at
the wheel.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. said Metz' vehicle went
off the road to the left, up an
embankment, back across
&lt;he road and off on the right
coming to a slop in a John
Sheets field. Metz was taken
to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by the sherilf'~
department.
1

200 last convertibles

go like rare antiques

Local news, in briefs

SAN FRANCISCO - BEEF PRICES ARE expected to go
up about 15 per cent over the next few montha, an economist
for the California Farm Bureau predicted Wednesday.
Richard Hartman said the rise woulqresultlrom the fact
that beef prices have been depressed recenUy and "the
economy appears l&lt;J he recovering nicely." He said consumers '
usually spend about 2.5 per cent of their income on beef and
that if this income goes up as expected, there will he an
Increase in demand for beef In the second half of the year.

Main Store, An11ex a net Warehouse Open Thursday 9:30 to s.
Shop Friday 9:30to8and Saturday 9:30 to 5p.m.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

A JUV~: NlLE has
been arrested and has
COitfessed to makinl( the
11hone call that a bomb
was in the school toda y
offici a Is reported late
this morning.
MEIGS LOCAL School
District students got a start
today to complete a full day's
schedule tor the first lime In

ot the day.

four consecutive days.

garnes, practice sesslon5, and

Classes have either been
dismissed comrletely or
before the end o the school
day all week due to a wave of
bomb threats made by
telephone .
Wednesday's threat, made
tnrough Midd leport VIllage
Hall , was directed to lhe
Meigs High School at 11:45
a .m. The b~lldlng wa s

'

OlltER VAWES

President t.Varns Reagan
his Parunnp treaty policy will
precipitate guerilla fighting

WASHING'l'ON IUPI) -- President F'ord says adoption of
Ronald Reagan's policy on negotiating u new Pnnuma Cunni
treaty could trigger gucrilln warfare neAr Ihe walerwny and
require as many as :10,000 U.S.troops to keep It operatin g.
"'!'h ere is no questiot1 about it, " F'o1·d said Wc'&lt;inesday
during an interview with 11 journalists re[H'esenling newspapers in TeXllS , site of the next primary fi ght with ncugun on
May 1. Ford said he reachc•l that con clusion on th e basis of
courag~d" by the quality of
politicians tour the Mathies Reagan's stiff opposition to continued t.u·gulning on a new
the Consol facility- said to he Mine , claiming they do not treaty to govern the canal and the suri·ounchng Canal Zone.
one of the industry's finestget an accurate picture uf
In criticizing Reagan, Ford qu oted the former C!l !ifornin
but the wife of a coal miner coal miners' problems. I ·. •1, governor as saying "there Is absolutely nothing to negotiate said the Mathies Mine does
Charles Fedora, a local we bought It, we built it, we are going to keep it."
not have as many problems union member, said the local
'!'hat kind of attitude , ~'ore! snld , provoked 1004 Canol Zone
as other typical mines.
miners had two questions to riots that killed 2tl Pannmanluns and four Amm·icans "und I
The woman, who said she put to Carter : " Will don't think we want to he put inn position of ~recipi l&lt;1ting the
supported Carter's President Ford veto the bla ck bloodhaUi U1at we had" by halting negotiations.
candidacy, said the UMW is lung bill, and if he was
Beyond that, l•'ord said UICre now nre about 10,000
often
irritated
when president, would he sign it?" American troops in Panama to protect U. S. Interest•. " If lht•
proposals of my opponent were put into effect, no negotiations
and you had guerilla warfare undertaken, you would have to
probobly double 01 triple the number of American militnry
personnel ... just to defend the canal to keep It open," he said.
Democrat Jinuny Carter stops in Macon, Au gusta uml
says he expects to get the Savmmah . Accusin~ the Ford
what life was like during the lions and groups such as the support of working people in ndm lni stration of fi scal
last embargo."
Organization of Petroleum next Tuesday's Pennsylvania irrespmlsibility, Heagan
He outlined a four-step plan Exporting C:Ountrles
primary because union su1d : " If they 'll stop
to malle America embargo- . "As long as we continue to members won't he "led by spending, I'll atop wlking."
proof by 1985 and avert such become
increasingly their Qoses."
·)..
P1•esidenl Jl' or-1 d1·cw , 1
probiems1 1 ·
'dependent on the OPEC
carter spent90 minutes in a cheers ut the Daughters nf '
. The
'plan
includes nations for our petroleum Pennsylvania coal mine th'e American Revolution
maximum conservation of all supplies, we will be Wednes!lay and came out conv enti on in Washington
energy resoW"ces, maximum Increasingly subjecll&lt;J arb!- with the endorsem ent of when he sa id the United
domestic oil and natural gas trary OPEC ci&lt;;~isions on Joseph Yablonski Jr ., son of States Is the most powerful
production wbring It up to a price and supply, Zarb said. the murdered United Mine nution on em'lh' ·•and we're
pre-1974 level , a doubling of
"And that~~~ simply mean Workers reformer.
going to keep it that way."
domestic coal production and that we didn l learn the .. The former Geor gia·
B t the DAR applause
a harnessing of ~uclear history lesson; that we governo1· down graded Henry less~ned gradually to zero
power.
flunked the course, that we J a c k s o n ' s I a b o r when Ford tare into Reagan
Energy Independence, he abdi~ated . our .economic and endorsements, includ ing for attacking his defense
said, is the nation's only polll!cal b~rthnghtl.n favor of U1os~ of the Pennsylvam a policies. f ord branded as
defense against crippling em- foreign, domina lion and AFUIO and the United Steel "complete and
ut~er
bargoes by oil-producing na- control.
Workers . Curter said nonsense" Reagan's claims
Pennsylvania workers will that the IJniLed St.lltcs is
"vote their own mind ."
behind Russia in mlliwry
Jackson told a Louisville, strength .
Ky., news conference it was
George Walla&lt;:e, In Hurrtsin "bad taste" for Carter ·to burg, Pa ., sa id crime was the
discuss his religious views main issue In Pennsylvania
something the Southern primary . The Alabama'
By EDWARDS. LECHTZIN much as Sapienza earns in an Baptist lay leader does when ~ o vc1nor bl nrned federal
DI':TROIT (UP)) - Now entire year. But he's not quizzed py reportei'S.
court judges "for the
that the last U.S.-buill discouraged.
"It's a deeply personui Umgging that's going on in
convertible has rolled off the
"Someday I'll own one," he matter and I deeply resent this country today ."
assembly line,
Peter said, adding "after I hit the it," Jackson said . "When
~'1·a nk (,'h~rch took his late:
Sapienza is wondering if he '11 Michigan lottery.
people go around telling how blooming campaign to the
ever own one of those
"But by then it'll probably religious they are I generally wheut country of western
nostalgic ragtops.
he an imtique and I still won't get suspicious."
.
Nebrask a and predicted that
Sapienza was the man who be able ID afford it."
Morris Udall, campaigning "the West and Midwest Is not
put the tire in the trunk
The white Eldorado In Philadelphia, called for going to fall Into step" with
of Cadlllac
Eldorado convertible is not an antique dismant)ing the big oil primary results th at po( "
6E!A74R6269948 as it rolled yet, just an historical item conglomerates.
Decon- Ca rter ahead in other ar
down the assembly tine lnl&lt;J . that will be put on display at trolling oil prices, Udall said,
"Some people say
history Wednesday. It was Cadillac headquarters.
would he a "robber baron some candidates have
the last of nearly 6.8 million
But for those who wanted ripoff."
nomination in the bag, hL
soft-l&lt;Jpped automobiles built one jut like it, Cadillac built
On the GOP front, Ronald don't know who's holding t.
in this country since World 200 "last" convertibles Reagan politicked for the bag,'' said Church, who ,s
War II.
identical replicas of the last May 4 Georgia ·primary with making his fi rst prirriary bid
"You bet I'd like to own one, white with white tops
in Nebraska's May II contest.
one,'' tbe 34-year-{))d auto and wheel covers, white
worker said, At more than leather seat trim with red
$11,000 it would cost nearly u
(Continued on page 12)

CLEVELAND - THE PRESIDENT OF THE United
Rubber Workers Unio~ said Wednesday II the aul&lt;J industry
needs tires, a strike against the nation's major tire producers
by the URW will be short-lived. "I know if the auto industry
heeds tires, they'll Instruct the tire companies to setUe," said
Pete Bommarito. "And we know what they have stockpiled at
this time. They have less of a stockpiling situation now than
they had In 1973 (the last URW strike)."
A spokesman for Gene"r31 Motors said the strike against
Firestone Tire and Rubber Co., Goodyear Tire a!ld Rubber
Corp., B. F. Goodrich and Uniroyal would "shut down every
aul&lt;J plant In the country" if it lasts for a month. Chrysler and
GM said they could op~rate for about a month, bat Ford said it
had stockpiling problems and could last only several weeks.

Save

Ford.cites
war danger

New oil embargos predicted

~·~

BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
WEST POINT, N. Y.- FIFTY WEST POINT cadetS have
been found guilty of violating the school's rigorous honor code
and two already have resigned m what could be the second
largest cheating scandal ever to rock the U. S. Military
Academy.
West Point spokesman Major Bill Smullen predicted
Wednesday military officer boards would begin reviewing the
cases next week in the third phase of a rigorous judicial
process which could end with mass expulsion. Charges against
the 50 students were formally handed down Wednesday by~ 12member cadet honor corrunittee set up two weeks ago w
question 101 cadets whose names were linked l&lt;J the cheating,
Smullen said.

GROUP I

'
looking for a possibie second
bomb. There wa s no
immedtate expian~tion for
the blast.
Police said that earlier
reports that several persons
(Continued on page 12) ·

•

THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1976

liNews. . .in Brief~i selected tor

Our Regular Stock

SCIENCE STIJDY - "How does a chicken get Into an egg?" MlddlePQrl fourth grader&amp;
got the answer to th~ question in a science study unit. lncub&lt;1 lors and fertilized eggs were
provided by the Meigs County Extension Sci·vtce and the boys and girls studied the
developmentofthe embryodm·lng the three week incubation period . MeiiS.'\11McMillion and
Rodney Clonch are pictured here at the incubntor with the baby chicks.

Carter tours Mathies mine

..

Selected From

blood on the floor," said
Walter Murphy , deputy
oommissioner of probation .
He said the explosion blew
the dOOr off the second-floor
press room .
The blastl&lt;Jre gaping holes
In the walls and shattered
windows m other parts of !be
building .
Dozens
of
ambulances and police cars,
their lights flashings and
sirens screaming, rushed to
the building as people poured
out of doorways .
A spokesman at Massachusetts General Hospital,
where most of the injured
were taken, said at least 10 to
IS persons would be treated
there. The spokesman said
SIX persons were admitted
immediately after the blast.
Police said they were

•

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

Save Now On
A New Spring
Dress

By JANET WU
' BOSTON ! UPI ) - A boonb
exploded on the second floor
o.f th~ Suffolk County
Courtllduse today, injuring at
least 12 persons, three
..
seriously.
Police said one person 's leg
was blown olf In the blast
which occurred about 9:15
a.m. Several persons were
carried from the buildinl! oo
stretchers. Others, stained
with blood, walked to waiting
ambulances.
The force of the explosion
ripped a 2(J.Ioot hole in the
ceiling of the second floor and
punched a one-foot hole in
stone-covered first -floor
ceiling. The lobby was
covered with dust and debris.
"There was smoke and
glass everywhere. I saw

•

e.

THERE WILL BE a special
meeting of Shade River
Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, Chester, at
7:30p.m. Thursday for work
in the EA and FC degrees. All
master masons are invited.
RACINE - The Racine
PTO is sponsoring a
smorgasbord at Southern
Hign School from 11:30 a.m.
ID I p.m. Sunday. Admission
Is $2 for adults and $1 lor
children under 12. M.eat .
dishes will include turkey,
ham and meal loaf.

.·
..'

""

THE MIDDLEPORT
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, ·
will meet at7 p.m. Friday lor
work in the master mason 's
degree. All master masons
are invited.

On Any

Sofa Beds

LIVING ROOM
SUITE $250

son, Paul Smart and W1l1ls
Anthony.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

"We therefore believe that
Congress should enact new
legislation l&lt;J reaffinn the
stated objective of the
Communications Act."
Legislation Introduced
To meet this need, the
"Consumer Communications
Reform Act of 1976" (S.3192)
has been introduced in the
United States Senate by
Senator Vance Hartke (DIndlana ), a member of the
Senate Communications
Subcommittee . Representative Samuel Devioe of Ohio,
ranking Republican member
of the House Interstate and
Foreign Commerce Committee, has introduced
generally similar legislation
( H. R. 12844) in the House of
Representatives . Other
Representatives have introduclgx,duced similar bills.
In summary, the act
would:
- Reaffirm the longstanding national communications policy of
11
Uiliversal servtce n - the
provision of high-&lt;!uality, low-

BAKERS BUDGET

2 PC.

cost telephone service to tne
ma:ximwn number of people.
- IIA!afflnn the authority of
the various state commissions l&lt;J regulate the In·
terconnection
to
the
telephone network
of
customer-provided equipment utilized in local
telephone service.
- Declare that regulatory
policies which
would
authorize specialized common carriers l&lt;J provide intercity private-line services
and other long-distance
services are contrary to the
public interest if such
authorization would result In
unnecessary duplication of
facilities and services.
- Require that the FCC,
prior to authorizing a
specialized common carrier
l&lt;J provide intercity privateline services, must assure
that such authorization will
not result in increased
charges for local telephone
service.
WIDB Early Supprl
The legislation has the
support of the GTE and Bell
System comapnies, the U. S.
Independent Telephone
Assoclation, various Wlions,
the National Telephone
Cooperative Association, and
other industry groups, Wopat
reported. The goals of the bill
are also considered compatible with the recent
legislative position laken by
the National Association of
Regulatory Utility Commissioners, which represents
the slate public utility
conunissioners throughout
the country.
"We anticipate that ml!_ny
of our cusl&lt;Jmers, once they
learn how the FCC's policies
will eventually raise their
monthly phone bills, wlll add
their support to this important legislation," Wopat
concluded.

Mrs. Ferne L. Bradbury,
72, South Third Ave ., Mid·
dleport, died Tuesday af.
ternooo at the Holzer Medical
Center.
Mrs. Bradbury was born
Aug.IO, 1903 in Pomeroy, the
daughter of the late Charles
and Fannie B. Van Meter
McNamee . She was also
preceded in death by a sister,
Mrs. Kathryn (Sis) Wise.
Mrs. Bradbury was an
accompllshed musician. At 14
she was organist at the
Pomeroy First Baptist
Church and later organist at
the Middleport First Baptist
Olnrch several years.'
She was a pianist with
dance bands through the
years, plilyed for dancing
. classes and !aught accordion
students.
She was a member of the
Busy Bee OaiiS of the Mid·
dleport First Baplist Church,
and the American Legion
Auxiliary. She was a former
member of the Amateur
Garden Club In Middleport.
Surviving are her husband,
Cecil P. Bradbury; her son
and daUghter-in-law, Charles
Asa and Jean Ann Bradbury
of Middleport; two grand·
daughters,
Mrs . Carl
(Suzanne) Wolle, Racine, and
Mrs. Pat (Mary Elizabeth)
O'Brien of Ada; a grandson,
Charles Asa Bradbury II of
Circleville; six great grandchildren, Wendy Anne,
Tricia Carleen and Megan
Elizabeth Wolfe, all of
Racine;
Nicole
Lynn
Bradbury and Jeffrey Powell
Bradbury, both of Circleville,
and Joy IIA!nee O'Brien of
Ada, and a brother-In-law, C.
H. (Chink) Wise, Jr., for·
merly of Middleport, now of
Waverly.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Friday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home with the IIA!v. Peter
Granda! Officiating. Burial
wi~ be In the Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2to 4and 7
ID 9 p.m. Thursday and until
time of services on Friday.
Pallbearers wiD be Eddie
Kitchen, Victor Hannahs,
Oay Tuttle, Curtis Jenkin·

years ahead," he asserted.

Pleasant Valley
DISCHARGES - Dale
Fife , Galltpolts; Martin
Oldaker, Rob erts burg ;
Randall Blaine, Gallipolis
Ferry; Laura Hartley, Point
-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:·:-:·:·:-:-:-::-:-:-::-::-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-::-:-:-:- Pleasant ; Gary L. Cottrill,
Mason; Mrs . John A.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Blessing, Parkersburg; Mrs.
Friday through Sunday Marion Reynolds, Mason ;
chance of showers Friday John McDaniel, Clifton, and
and Saturday. Clearing Leonard J Stea rs, Point
Sunday. Highs in the 70s Pleasant.
and low 80s Friday and in
the 60s and 70s Saturday
and Sunday. Lows In the
upper 40s and 50s.
:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::::.·::::.::·:·:·:·:·:·.

Visit Our Salad Bar
Baked Steak

study was sponsored by the
U. S. Independent Telephll!le
Association , whose membership includes the more
than 1,600 Independent (non·
Bell) telephone companies
across the country.
SUBSIDIES HELP
In keeping basic telephone
rates lower than they
otherwise would be , the
subSidies reflect the staled
·objective of the Communications Act of 1934 l&lt;J

MARION - Telep hone
customers throughou t the
United Slates face the threat
of substantially higher phone
bills if \he J'ederal Communications Commission
continues its preSent controversial policies, Robert M.
Wopal, President of General
Telephone Co. of Ohio
declared today.
" The controversial ne w
polices of the FCC permit
non-utilities to pr ovtde
telephone equipm ent for
interconnection with · the
nationwide telephone network and to provide intercity
privale-ltne telephone services ," Wopat pOinted out.
"The effec t of these two types
of so-called 'competitio n'
authorized by the FCC Is to
reduce the
subsidies
traditionally provided to
basic telephone service by
the revenues from lon gdistance calling, business

Feme Bradbury died Tuesday

BICENTENNIAL DANCERS - In red, white and blue
costuming and 1natchin~ shakers this group will salute the
nation's bicentennial '" a part of the finale of the Big Bend
Minstrel Assor intinn' , Spring Fling to be held al7:30 and
9:15p.m. Saturday at the Pomeroy Elementary School.
Twenty-two musical numbers make up the annual
"Fling." The advance ticket sale ends Friday evening and.

is being conducted at Dutton Drugs and the Middleport
Book Store in Middleport and at Swisher-Lohae Drug
Store and the New York Clothing House in Pomeroy.
From the left are Stephanie Rough, Merri Ault, Paige
Smith . K"" Vujaklija, Teresa 'l'aylor, June Wamsley,
Shari Mitch, Lori Wood, Esther Lowery, and Jane Sisson.

RACIN E - The Rac ine
Fire Dept. was ca lled et 2
p.m.

Wed nes day

ex -

Earl Ad ams farm In Letart
Townshi p Three men and
two trucks answered the c&amp;ll.

THERE will be a meeting
of the Pomeroy Youth
Baseba ll Assn. Sunday, April
25, at 8 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Legion Hall. Scheduling of

\yOrkon the playing fields will
be discussed. All managers, •
coaches and Interested
parents are urged to attend.
THE POMEROY E· R
squad was called to the VIsta
Stat ion at Five Polnl$ at 10:)5
a.m. Wednesday fpr

John

Myers, Wilkesboro, N. C.,
who was Ill. He was taken to
vacated
end
classes Vetera ns Memor ial Hospital
throughoot the district were where he was admitted
dismissed abdut mi d· se\leral hours for treatment ,
afternoon.
tnen released.
But all hopes crashed when
CEMETERY maintenance
a threat was received at the
Meigs Junior High School this charges ot S5 a year for a fivemorning. Students went to the grove lot are due at Beech
nearby football field white a Grove Cemetery In Pomeroy.
search was being made of the . Residents are asked to send
building . Sopt Charles their. payments to Pomeroy
Dowler said at 10: ~0 a.m. the VIllage Hall. Checks are to be
Jr H\gh students were bei ng
sent home for the remainder

made payable to the Beech
Grove Cemetery Trustees.
j.

{

to

tinguish a brush lire at the

�'
\

2- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday, April 22, 1976

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April22, 1976

Mine safety~ teacher ten:ore, dirty
tricks bills, approved by. Assembly
.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS t UP! ) - The
Oh10 General Assembly, in a
flurry of activity caltulaled
to send lawmakers home for
a sprmg recess at the end of

next week, dealt Wednesday
wtth a host of maj or btlls
ranging from mine safely lA:l
campaign "dirty tricks" to
teacher tenure .
Most of the action was m
the House, where a stx-hour
floor session resulted in the

Tenure hill is
watered down
By J. R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS tUPl) - A
maj or revtston of Ohto law
conce rnm g public sc hool
teachers passed the Ohio
House Wednesday, but a
se ries
of
stx
fl oor
am endments eliminated or
weakened maJOr secltons of
the btll givmg teachers "due
proce ss" if they are
suspended or fired .
The' final vole, 77-21, came
alter nearly a dozen attempts
to change the so-ca ll ed
"mstant tenure',' btll as tt had
been reported by the House
Education Committee. ·
The bi gges t change in
existmg law as proposed m
the bill, mtroduced more tha n
a year ago m the Senate by
Sen. AnU10ny J . Celebrezze
Jr., D-Cleveland , would set
up periodtc eva luations by a
sc hool board of all public
sc hool teachers .
The Senate wtll have to
concur in the House changes
to the bill. The upper
chm11ber is expec ted to reJect
the amendmenls, sendi 1J the

'

bill to a conference
commtttee for a compromtse
on the maJor points of
dif!erence.
If the school beard, on the
basis of 'th e eva lu ati ons,,
found a teac her was
incompetent or ineffecttve m
the classroom, the board
could dismiss or suspend the
teacher. A suspension could
be up to 14 days
If the teacher had a
" co ntt nu tng," tenur ed
contract, the sc hool board
would have tu swte m writmg
the re ason &gt; be hind the
dismissul or Sllbpt ns1on, and
the teacher could challenge
the dismi ssa l rnher in court
or before an admtrustraltve
panel set up wtthin the school
district
Extension of "due process"
challe nge proce dures for
non tenured teachers wtth
one.to three-year contra cts
was elnninaled by one of the
floor amendmenl•
"If you have a teacher m
the classroom domg wha t he
thmks ts a good JOb, the
teacher is enttlled to know the
rei! sons for his nonrenewal ,''
said Rep Marcus A Roberto,
D·Ravenna, House sponsor of
the btll.
" Bad tea chers wtll be
removed from the classroom
and good teachers wtll ha ve
§ome meas ure of (job )
· protection," said Roberto.
Roberto satd the btll would
allow some measure of JOb
, security lor teachers, who
could apply for tenure if they
meet certain educational and
' lenglhof-service standards
set up by the bill
"The btll was balanced
when it ca me out of
co mmtttee," complained

John Hall, chief lobbyist for
the
Ohto
Educalton
Association, which strongly
campaigned for the bill.
Another education lobby ,
however, representing school
boards, !ought the bill and
was pleased to see adoptton of
the amendments.
"Essentially, we think it's a
good bill," said John Hauck ,
exec uttve direc tor of the
Bu ckeye Association· of
School Admimstrators.
"They cleaned up most of the
objections we had, and I think
we c"n work with it "
Other amendments added
on the floor would reqwre
that any development of
standards agatn st which
public school teachers will be
measured would have to be
adopted outstde of any
co lle c ti ve bargaintng
sesswns between a teacher's
orga mzahon
and
an
mdivtdual school board.
Roberto satd the bill would
prevent a school board !rom
"hiruig somebody 's brother·
tn ·law, or !irmg somebody
because they dtdn'l like the
way they looked or t! the
teacher was mvolved in some
(teacher 1 organizaltonal or
associalional efforts.''

Family night
at Rio proves

I

paign pracltces measures
were sent to t he Senate for
further consideration, while
the Senate-approved teacher
time in 35 years
- Prohtbtting unfatr Lenure bill appears headed
electton campaign practices, for a joint conference
commonly known as "dirty committee
Meanwht le, progre ss
tri cks."
- Selling up per iodic lagged on the two prime
evaluations of all Ohio public tssues eyed by legtslators as
sc hool
teachers
and campaign ammunition providing lor due process if a property tax relief and utility
rate-making reform.
teacher is !ired.
Aconference committee on
The mine safety and cam·
the utility rate-making bill
was to resume negotiations
today amid bickering over
the House and Senate
versions .
And Senate Ways and
Means subcommittees were
to contmue work on a
property tax relief package.
car
The Senate voted to
adjourn
next April 29 until
Helen
Rusche!,
42 ,
after
the
primary election,
Pomeroy, complai ned of
returning
for a working
injuries following a rear end
sesston
o!
perhaps
three days
colhsion at &gt;:20 p.m. Wed·
in
June.
nesday on Rl. 7, lour tenths of
Senate President Pro Tema n\tle south o! Rt. 5&gt;4.
pore
Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron,
The Gallla-Melgs Post
said
that if the utility and
State Highway Patrol said
property
tax bills cannot be
her car was struck in the rear ·
passed
before
the eleclton,
end by an auto operated by
they
will
be
dealt
with in
Tom Hutchins, 23, Rt. 2,
June.
.
Gallipolis. There was minor
The legislation designed lA:l
damage. Mrs. Rusche! was prohibit unfair political cam·
not immediately treated.
patgn -activities such as
Michael Coleman, 19, Rt. I, misrepresentation and
Vinton, was charged with espionage cleared the House
drivmg left of the center on a 77·19 vole despite
followmg an accident at 9:40 opposing arguments it would
p.m. Wednesday on Rt. 30, hinder free speech rights and
seven tenths of a mile west of allow candtdates to make
Mitchell Rd. The patrol said trresponstble statements
Coleman 's car struck the left near election day without
rear of a vehicle driven by accountability.
Aurelia Carson, 29, Colwn·
The measure would forbid
bus. There was moderate candidates to plant spies tn
damage.
an opponent 's campatgn
A third mtshap occurred at organization, bribe a
10:20 p m. Wednesday on Rt. campaign staff worker- or
35 at the Spring Valley knowingly make rUa lse
Shopping Plaza where an statements about candfiiates'
unoccupied car owned by votmg
records
or
Cathe rine Thompson, backgrounds.
McArthur, apparenUy rolled
Anyone violating the provi·
backwards across Rt. 35 into sions of the bill would be
a d1tch. There was moderate subject to a maximum SIX·
damage.
month jail term or a line o! uP
passage of btlls :
- Upgrading Ohio's deep
mme safety laws for the first

Driver claims

injuries from
collision

big success
Famtly recreation night at
Rio Grande College on Friday
evenings from 7 until 9 p m.
has proved successful this
year a college spokesman
announced today.
The spokesman added :
"Family recreation night
at Rio Grande College's Lyne
Center is just the place to be
on· Friday evenings. Family
mght acltvities include
swimmtng , basketball,
volleyball, badminton,
rackelball , weight training,
trampoline , tumbling and
numerous children 's ac·
ltviltes.
" Admtssion ts free . All
students under the age o! 18
must be accompanied by a

OFF AND WALKING
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Entertainer Dick Gregory set
off from Ctly Hall Wednesday
on a walk to New York City to
dramaltze hunger in the
world's rtchest natton.
Mayor Tom Bradley gave
Gregory an empty plate to
symbolize hts trip.
English endurance walker
Steve Drury, meanwhile,
started of! wtth less fanfare
just one block away on a
similar walk designed to
promote the sport of
endurance walking
He said he hopes to beat the
cross-country record of &gt;3
days, 12 hours and 15
minutes.

parent or guardian .''

ANDY m;rs A STAR
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
Andy Grl!!ith became the
·1,6 7l s l e ntertainment
personality Wednesday with
his own star on the Hollywood
Boulevard "Walk o! Fame."
Grilftth, a former North
Carolina high schoolteacher,
began his career smgmg,
playin g his guitar and
dan cin g for loca l ctvtc
groups.

ST LOUIS !UP!) Outfielder Del Unser of the
New York Mets will be out of
actton lor about five days
because of a badly bruised
right elbow suffered Tuesday
night by a pitch thrown by
Lvnn McGlothen of the St.
Louis Cardinals.
X-rays showed no break,
but Unser is expected to have
further- X-rays taken when
the team returns to New York
next week .

rules upgraded
COLUMBUS I UP!) - Tbe
Ohio Senate has received
from the House legislation
upgrading the stale's deep
mine safely regulations for
the first time m 3&gt; years.
The btU, which cleared the
House
unanimously
Wednesday , provides lighter
safety reqwrements, more '
frequent inspections and
mandatory escape devtces
lor miners.
But before the House
passed the bill, it softened
penalties
for
mining
compames which vtolate
sections of the safety law.
Rep. Thomas Fries, [).
Dayton, said the amendment
to reduce the penalties was
agreed upon by all interested
parties, mcluding the United
Mine
Workers,
alter
language was inserted in the
bill to require certification of
all mine superintendents - a
provision vigorously sought
by the UMW
But Rep Sam Speck, R·

Cancer cure doesn't exi,st

'

let it out they could cure
cancer, but they are making
so much money that they
wouldn 'llet it out . Thank you
lor any information you can
give me on this subject.
DEAR READER - First
things first. When a woman
' has a spread of cancer cells
from the breast to other areas
m the body, one of the aceepted forms of treatmen t is
lA:l reduce the hormone supply
which helps support the
growth of the cancer. This is
why the female organs were
removed . Some palienll! with
incurable breast cancer ,that
has already spread can be
controlled lor some length of
lime by removal o! the
female organs.
The same thing can be said
about the removal of the
glands over the top of the
kidney. These glands also
produce female hormones
after the ovaries have been
removed. II they were totally
rem oved
the
doctors
probabl y g~ve her. a
replacement of the other

.

hormones that she needed
that are formed by the
adrenal cortex. The whole
idea was lA:l decrease the
body's formation of female
hormones by these glands
·and the ovaries so that the
cancer
cells
spread
throughout the body would
not continue to grow. These
glands were not removed
because they were thought to
have ca ncer but rather
because of the influence of
female hormones on the
spread of cancer.
You have certainly been
reading a lot of hogwash
judging from the rest of your
letter. Thereisnoknowncure
for cancer urtder lock and,key
in Washington or anywhere
else lor that matter. The
surest way the doctors would
have of making money !rom·
cancer palienll! would be lA:l
have a good cure for it. Such
published garbage Is just
exemplary of the widespread
paranoia that exists tn cer·
tam segments of our s•~·ie t y
People who write th~ Lhings

"

to $1,000.
Rep . Mtchael G, Oxley , R·
Findlay, objected to a section
that bars the Ohio Elections
Com mi ss ton
from
investtgatmg any charge
brought within 30 days of an
election until after the
election, unless four of the
!i ve commission members
agree to look into the
matter .
The House also passed, !JO.
8, and sent to the Senate a bill
providing for simpli!ied
foreclosure proceedings on
taxdelinquent land so it can
be turned over to local
governments for upgrading.
The chief sponsor, Rep.
Kenneth R. Cox , D·
Barberton, said the measure
would assist redevelopment
of abandoned and run-down
properties m inner cities.
Cox said there are 11,100
parcels of tax-delinquent land
in Cleveland alone, and 40 per
cent of them are vacant lots.
He satd current foreclosure
proceedings take years,
delaying redevelopment.
There was scattered
opposition from Rep Joseph
P Tulley , R-Mentor, who
satd the measure would
infringe on mdtVIdual rtghts,
and Rep. C.J. McUn, [).
Dayton, who argued cities
already have the tools for
redeveloping run-down
properties but have not used
them properly.
Tulley said the bill would
not apply merely to blighted
taxdelinquent properties.
"This will subject every
piece of property m the state
of Ohto to qui ck-take
foreclosure proceedtngs,"
said Tulley.
McUn warned that local
governments would use the
procedures only on properltes
in the way of potenttal
highway corridors or urban
renewal
blocks
He
successfully sponsored an
amendment requirtng
preparation of plans lor land
use.

Deep min.e safety

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I lost
a daughter at age 54 years . ll
was 10 years ago when she
died. She had cancer and the
doctors she had surely put
her through thetr butcher
shop . First they took off one
breast, then the other breast,
still later they took out her
female organs and finally
they went in through her back
and made a diagonal mc1sion
on each stde of tlie spine and
took out a ptece of the rib to
gel mstde aria remove the
glands over the kidn ey
Why did they lake these
glands out unless they knew
they were ·affected with
cancer? Anurse told me later
' that they did not take all o!
those glands out or she would
, not have lived. This last
; operation on her back was
done tn September and she
bved till a year after in
: November.
, I have read in a magazine
' that there is a remedy under
· lock and key in Washington
· !or cancer. II the AMA would

Mill~r goes 8-3

prey upon the lack o!
knowledge of the general
public and are guilty of doing
a public disservice. It Is an
evil thing to spread such
malicious gossip about the
treatment o! such a serious
illness as cancer.
Anyone who reads those
kinds of magazines should
discontinue his subscriptions
and not allow himself to be
eKPOSed to such hogwash
from malicious, unethical
people. Judging !rom the
statements you have quoted
such magazines can do
nothing except provide information that may well be
seriously detrimental to your
health.
For information on female
hormones send 50 cenll! lor
The Health Letter. number 512, MenOI!ause . Send a long,
stamped, · self-addressed
envelope for malllng. Ad·
dress your letter to me ln
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1551, Radio Clty Statton,
New York, NY 10019.

New Concord, said the
penalty reduction was a last·
minute proposal of the Ohio
Reclamation Assoctation,
which represents CO'al mtne
operators.
Fries, whose Energy and
Environment Committee had
the bill for 10 months, offered
the amendment reducing
penalties !rom a maximum
stx months in jail and $1,000
line to a maxtmum $100 ftne.
"This is setting aside the
sledgehammer and picking
up a flyswatter," complained
Speck.
The mine safety measure,
sougnt lor years by UMW
representatives !rom
southeastern Ohio, was
her aided as one of the
strongest in the nation
Rep. A.G. Lancione, [).
Bellatre, a sponsor, satd
more than 700 coal miners
have died in Ohio mines since
the safely law was last
upgraded in 1941.
He said the current bill was
spurred by the death last
month of 26 underground
miners in two separate expJo.
slons in Kentucky, addir.g
that
similar methane
only
explosions
were
narrowly averted in Ohio
mines near Cadiz and New
Lexmgton.
"This is the most
dangerous business in Ohio,"
said Lancione,as members of
District 6 of the United Mine
Workers looked on at close
range, "It's a li!e or death
matter with these miners.''
Lancione said the bill would
not only conform Ohio deep
mine standards to federal
criteria, but would set new
standards In underground
ventilation,
r,oo!ing,
escapeways and sanitary
facilities.
The bill would require
underground miners lA:l be
equipped wilh "sell-rescue"
breathing devices and access
to
!ireflghtlng ,
communication and first aid
equipment.
New inspection standards
would be enforced for mining ·
equipment, the number of
Ohio mine inspectors would
be Increased from 26 to 30,
and their pay would be hiked
by $3,000 a year.
In addition, the bill
mtne
requires
that
superlntendent:l be certified
foremen, meaning they would
hav•• a1 leH ~t three years of
Wldt'r Pr• •llllll 1 · xl~'rt"'U~ .

..

to ~op .E astern
. BY GREG BAILEY
Once again plagued by
errors (10 ), the Eastern
Eagles relinquished a 3-1 lead
in the bottom of ·the fifth and
ended up losing to host Miller,
~.

Eastern went ahead in the
top of the second by plating a
run on no hits. Don Eichinger
led off with a walk, stole
second, went to third on a

Meigs girls
triumph. at
Mrs. Greer, her birthday cake, and Rio Grande

Nelsonville

College President Paul Hines

'

Important. 00n'tever qwt,"
11

he satd.
Following the seminar, a
reception was held for the
Greers by the Academic
Department Chairmen m the
main foyer of Allen Hall, a
modern brick building,
donated in 1958 by Esther a

B)' BILL MADDEN
UPI Sport• Writer
•
The Philadelphia Phillies,
M'Bjor Leag ue Standmgs
wmter book favortles to dts·
Bv United Pr ess International
pla ce Pittsburgh as National
National League
Ea st
League
East champions this
W L Pet GB
year.
completed
a two-game
Pitto:;burgh
• 3 66 7
5 J 625
I l
Phi ladel phia
sweep o! Ute Ptrales m Three
New York
6 6500 11 2
Rivers Stadium Wednesday.
4 s 4.44
2
Chi cago
St . Louis
4 6 &lt;100 21 1 and once agam it was Mike
Montreal
3 5 375 21 ? Schnudt
provldtng the
W est
W L , P et. GB damage .
Houston
8 5 6 15
Schmtdt
slammed his
h
11
Cinc, nn at ,
6 4 600
1?
sevenl homer
in lour
Atl anta
6 4 600
· PI11 11
• games
·
Sa n Fran cisco 5 5 500 l 1 2 lo tee the
tes
3.{1 wm
0
1
th
San Diego
S 6 455 2
over the P trates n Y e day
Los AnQeles
2 a 200 41 1
before, he had !ted the major
Wedn esda y's Res ults
Cinci nnat i 5 San D 1ego 4
league record o! SIK homers
Philadelphia 3 Pi ttsburgh 0
in thre e games during
Mil ll Ch1 3, 6 inns, susp
51 Lou is 7 New York 4
Philadelphia's 5-1 victory.
Atlanta 3 San Franc isco 0
The
latest Schmidt homer,
Houston 1 Los A119 0, 16 mn s
however, was still one shy of
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All Tim es EST )
Hall of ramer Kiner's lillie·
Montreal ( Renko 0·0 or K1r by
0 Ol at Ch icago (Stone 0-0) , 2·30 known record of etght m four
games:--'
pm
Los Angeles ( Rau 1 OJ at
" First thing they satd was
Houston (Cosgrove 0-0l. 6 35
you didn 't gel the record,''
p.m
(Onl y gam es schedul e d )
said Sclumdt, who belted a
Frtday's Games
solo
shot '" the eighth inning
Cincinnati a! M ont r eal
A tlanta at Philadelph ia , n1ght
off loser Doc Medtch . "!
Chicago at Los Angeles, n ight
didn 't realize wha l record 1
St Loui s at San D iego , night
was shooting for."
New York at H ous ton . n ight
P1tt sb urgh at San Fr an, night
Schmidt 's homer , hi s
eighth, helped pad the victory
which was really sewed up by
the combined seven-ht l
pitching of left-handers Tom
Major Leagu e Results
Underwood
and
Tug
By United Press Internationa l
McG raw The Phils had
National League

North Gallia
8-1 winners

Esther and John Greer
native of Mtddleport, and her
first husband, Don Allen.
Allen, an alumnus and
trustee of Rio Grande
College, was a national
figure in business with
,his
highly
suc cessful
Chevrolet dealerships. On h1s
death, Esther accepted the
responsibilities o! College
trusteeship and has played an
active role m the · affairs of
the College since that time.
She serves on the college's
Finance and Investmen t
Commt ttee .

over Southern

Followmg the aclivtttes on
campus, members of the
Boards of Trustees o! Rio
Grande College and Rio
Grande Community College
gathered at the President's
Home for a luncheon in honor
of ·Esther's birthday, hosted
by the College President, Dr ,
Paul Hines, and his wile,
Pauline.
A spectal meeting of the
Rio Grande College Boar'd of
Trustees conducted by its
Chatrman, Francts W. Shane,
concluded the schedule o!
activities.

Reds promote

the bOy WOnder

$25,000 payoff whispered,
witness tells Mo·o re.jury
CHARLESTON, W. Va . trial of Moore, ~3 , and his
t UP!) - The government former aide William Loy
began laying the foundation enters its third day !A:lday.
The two men are charged
lor its extortion case against
West Virginia Gov Arch with extortmg $25,000 from
Moore
Tuesday
with the Diversified Mountaineer
testimony from a witness who Corp., a now bankrupt foursaid he heard a business stale loan company . II
executive tell of a $25,000 . convicted, each cou ld be
poltttcal contribution to sentenced to 20 years in
Moore's 1972 re-election cam· prtson and fined $10,000.
A jury of seven women and
patgn.
The U.S . District Court five men heard testimony

Wallace has gone thru
$9 million, now broke
WASHINGTON (UPI) George Wallace has spent $9
million on his presidential
campaign- far more than
any other candidate-&lt;~nd is
nearly broke.
Jet airplanes, a huge
charge card bill, advertismg
and printing by Alabama
!inns, fund raising and a long
list of unitemized "expenses"
have gobbled up the biggest
campaign war chest of the
btcentenmal election, with
only a third of the primaries
completed.
Wallace 's campaign
report, only
partially
completed, was
flied
Wednesday wtth the Federal
Election Commission 10 days
after the deadline. It showed
he had only $243,000 left of the
$9.3 milliorr he has rai~'ld.
with an unstated amount
owed.
The $9.3 million Includes

BASEBALL

Meigs High girls Monday at
Nelsonville
defeated
Nelsonville-York and Miller
High School girls m a threeway meet. Meigs had 55,
Nelsonville· York 52 \l and
Miller 31'f.! points.
Meigs girls finished as
follows:
SHOTPUT 132'3"),
Vaughan third, Burdette
fourth .
San Di ego
010 201 ooo~ 4 a 1
DISCUSS ( 84'), Grueser
C1 ncmnat1
005 000 OOx ~ 5 11 I
first, Burdette, second.
Wehrmeist er .
Foster
(3),
Sp lll ner (4). Metzger (7) lind
HIGH JUMP 14'5"),
Kenda ll, Norman, Gul lett (7 ),
Granda! third.
Eastw ick (6) and Plum mer
WP Norman (3 -0l LP LONG JUMP (14'9"), Ash,
Wehrme1st er ~
first;
Bego,
second;
Phlade lphia 100 001 010- 3 7 0
Wycinski, third.
Pittsburgh
000 000 000- 0 7 0
HURDLES 114.6), SWISher
Underwood , M cG raw (6) and
fourth.
Boone , MediCh , Moose (9) and
Sanguill en WP- Underwood (1 .
880 MEDLEY RELAY,
OJ LP- M edi ch (l 1)
HR Meigs 12.10).
Phi lad elp h la , Schmidt ( 8)
100 YARD DASH, (12.5)
(Suspended , 6 inns ., dark)
Granda! first
Montrea l
132 113- 11150
Ch1cago 1
200 10()- 3 5 1
MILE RUN 17 05 ) None
Fryman,
Ca
rr1
tllers (61 an d
!rom Metgs.
Foot e, Za hn , Dettor e (3 ). P
880 RELAY (2.16 ), Metgs
Reuscllet (5 ). Schul tz (6) and
Sw isher HR s- Montrea l. Jor
first.
&gt;
gensen (3), White (1). Chicago,
440 DASH I1.07) Ash first,
Cardenat (2) Swi sher 12)
Vaughan fourth.
New York
002 020 ooo- 4 12 1
North Gallia continued its St
440 RELAY 159.4) Meigs
Louis
010 104 10)(- 7 12 2
unbeaten habtls Wednesday
third.
Loi1Cil , Lockwood (6). Hall
l and Grote, Forsch , Wal lace
880 RUN (3.17.6 ) No places. night with a rain-shortened IJ. IB
~Sl. Frisella (5).
Ras mu sse n
220 DASH 12ll.3) Miller 1 league vtctory over South· (6). Hrabos ky (Bl and S1m
mons WP - Ra smusse n {2 1)
second, Girolami tie for thtrd ern Htgh o! Meigs County.
LP - L ol1ch (0 3) HR - Sl
Coach
Ron
Janey's L OUIS, Sm 1lll (2 )
with Barnhart o! N·Y.
MILE RELAY (5.03.1) defending SV AC champion
San Francisc 000 000 000- 0 6 1·
Pirates jumped on starting Atlan
Meigs first.
ta
030 000 00)( - 3 52
and losing pitcher, Brady
Barr, Mofflll (7) and Rader A
, M esse r sm tt h ( B) and
Huffman, for four rurts in the Ruthven
Pocoroba WP- Ru t hven (3 0)
!irs l inning and added lour LP - Barr ( I 0
more in the fourth .
(16 mnings&gt;
The victory pushed North Los Angeles
000 000 000 000 000 1)- 0 ' 0
Gallia's unbeaten stri ng to 40. The Pirates hold a two Houston
ODD 000 000 000 000 1- 1 12 0
John, Hough (81 , WaH (14 )
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A game edge over the Kyger
and Ferguson . Ri chard . Forsch
second title promolton in Creek Bobcats.
I 10 1, Barlow { 16) and Johnson
three years has been
Pacing the Pirate attack WP - Barlow (2 OJ LP- WBI I (0
accorded Dick Wagner, who , were Calvin Minnis wtth two I I
ranks behind only Cincinnati hits in three turns including a
Reds President Bob Howsam triple and four RBI's ; Brett
j,
in the ballclub's executive Tackett and Fred Logan with
Amertcan League
hierarchy.
two hils each . Ron Plants and Te)(as a t Cl eve , ppd , wet
The Reds' board of Greg James had one safety Ka n C1ty at Mllw, ppd , ram
directors have re-titled each
000 200 023- 7 1 2
Wagner "executive vtce
James, the wtnning pitcher Chteago
New York
200 023 2h .-10 17 1
president." Wagner, 48, came in the ftve inning contest,
Hamil Ton Kuce k (6 ), BarriOS
herein 1967 as assistant to the yielded two hils, a triple to (7) and Varn ey ; Ma y , Ly le (9 )
Munson WP- May ( 1 OJ
president and in 1973 his title Eric Dunning and a single lA:l and
LP - Ham1l ton
{0 l)
HRswas upped to administrative Young. He fanned 11 while Chicago , Va rn ey ( 1) , New
vice president.
walking two and hittmg two. Y.ork , ChambliSS (1 )
In 1947, at the age o! 19,
Huffman tssued two free Ba1t1mor e 320 000 coo- s 7 o
Wagner had the distinction of passes and struckout eight. Ca ll to rn 1a 000 000 001 - 1 2 1
Palm er , M i ll er (9) and H en
being the youngest general
The Pirates host South· dnck
s, Kir kwood , Hartzell {2),
manager in professional western this evening ,
Drago (8) and Her rm ann WP tmer (3 l) LP - K~rkwood (0
baseball history - heading a South.
001 00-1 2 1 Pa
2l
HR- Balt1 mo re, Singl eton
400 4x~ 8 I II I
minor league club in N Gallia
Thomasville, Ga.
Huffman 1L) Riffle 15) and
300 004 COo- 7 9 0
The Reds ' board of Durtning James IW ) and DetrOit
Oakla nd
001 000 20o-- 3 9 0
directors also have added a Minnis.
Rober ts (2 Ol and Fr eehan ,
Torrez, Todd (6) , Abbott {8),
new director, Robert C. Hunt,
Fingers {9) and Haney LP the Indianapolis, Ind.,
Torrez (l . J ) HRs- Detro1 t ;
contractor who headed the
Hor1on (~J. Staub (1) .
Tigers 7, A's 3:
construction of Riverfront
&lt;onf y gam es schedu led 1
Two oil-season acquistlions
Stadium.
paid off in the Ttgers' win
over the A's as veteran lefty
Dave Roberts went the route,
A thought for the day : spacing nine hits lor hts
President Franklin D Roose- second wm , and Rusty Staub ·
velt said, " The truth is found hit his first AL homer. Willie
when men are free to pursue ·Hor•n~ drove in three runs
with hts third homer.
it."

Greers visit
college campus
at Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE - Esther
and John Greer o! LaGorce
Island 1Roxbury Lane),
Miami Beach, Fla., and Bluff
Drive, Knoxville, Tenn. were
on the Rio Grande College
campus Monday as special
guests of President Paul D.
Hines and the board of
trustees.
In the morning, in the
Jeanette Albiez Davis
Library, Mr . Greer conducted a semmar prtmartly
for Busmess Administration
students but students in other
academic
area
were
welcome. The seminar was
on the theme that "nothing ts
free ; someone has had to
work lor it." Greer stressed
the ordering of lives, family
and church, home and
cOWltry, good health,' self·
su!fictenc)\
and
perseverance, and of these,
perseverance Is the most

wild pttch, and scampered
home on a throwing error ,
But Miller tied it m their half
of that frame .
The Eagles went ahead in
the thtrd when Riffle led off
with a single. Alter steali ng
second and third , he raced
home on Dave Hannum's
groundout. They scored once
more in the fourth when
Eichinger walked again, stole
second, and then sc ored on
Joe Kuhn's triple.
The game was called alter ·
live innings, but that fifth
frame was what the hosts
needed . They plated one run,
but then losing pitcher Phil
LaComb got two outs Then
ltghlnin g struck
(figuratively) . With two outs
and the Eagles leadmg 3·2,
Miller plated six more runs
on lour singles, a walk, and
lour Eagle miscues.
John Evans got Eastern's
other hit, a smgte. Pat Nye
led the winners with two for
three . Eastern pitching
yielded ltv~ hits, struck out
one, and gave up three walks,
while winning pitcher Tolh
KOed five and walked three.
Eas tern hosts Symmes
Valley tonight in an SVAC
encounter.
E
011 111-3 3 10
M
010 07~ 5 2
La Comb ILP ), Hannum
(5) and Riffle . Toth and
Starling.

Phils take Pittsburgh twice

$2.8 million in federal funds .
Wallace, like the other
candidates, has had to curtail
his campa ign sin ce the
matching money was cut off
pending congressional action
reconstituting the FEC along
the lines of a Supreme Court
order.
By compariso n, Henry
Jackson has raised $5.5
million, Jimmy Carter $3.4
million and Morris Udall $2.5
million . Thetr campaigns are
also in financial trouble. On
the
Republican
side,
President Ford has raised
$7.5 mtllion and Ronald
Reagan $7 .I million. Ford IS
the only candidate wtth a
sizeable · campaign balance
remaining .

TEATER RECOMMENDED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
James
A.
Rhodes'
appointment of Robert W.
Teateras dtrectoro!thestate
Department of Natural
Resources was favorably
recommended Wednesday by
SMAU.. BUSINESS DAY
' COLUMBUS (UPI)- Sen. the Senate Energy and
Anthony J . Celelrezze Jr., [). Environment Co!!)mitlee.
Cleveland, Wednesday intro·
Teater took office subject
duced a resolution to set next to full Senate confirmation
Wednesday as "Small Jan. 13, 1975, when Rhodes
Business Day" in Ohio.
began his third term as
The resolution,. which governor.
ptcked up eight cosponsors
The full Senate is expected
upon introduction, would to act on the confirmation·
commemorate small next week. Teater and three
buslnesf contribution to the other Rhodes Cabinet
"econollttc"Well-belng" o! the nominees have yet to be
stale.
confirmed by the Senate.

'

from seven witnesses,
in c luding Charle~ton
attorney Edward H Tiley,
who represented DMC and iS
now a candtdate for the state
Supreme Court.
With Moore watching
intently, Tiley testified he
attended a meeting in the
latter part of 1972 at which
Theodore Prtce, former
president of DMC, was
present.
"Mr. Pri ce, sometime
during the meeting, made the
statement that he had made a
political contribution to Gov.
Moore's campaign ," said
Tiley.
Asked how much, Tiley
replied, "in the amount of
$25,000."
On cross exam inittion,
Tiley testified that he had no
first-hand knowledge that the
donatton actually was
made.
'
Price, expected to be the
government's key witness
against Moore and Loy, has
been sentenced to three years
in prtson following plea bar·
gaining on fraud and bribery
charges con nec ted with
DMC's collapse.
In open in g stateme nts
Tuesda y, Moore 's defense
attorney Stanley Preiser
called the proceedings "a
political trial" and said he
would prove that Price
"bought himself out of 18()
years of prison time" by
agreeing to turn state's
evidence.
"I'll prove that Mr, Price is
a liar," Preiser said.
In a low-key opening slate·
mentfollowing jury selection,
U.S. Attorney John Field m
sa1d he would prove the
$25,000 payment was in
return for Moore's influence
in obtaining a stale !tank
charter for DMC.
He said a go-between would
testify that l.Dy wld Price "!A:&gt;
get down here with , his
money.'' And state' Banking
Co mmissioner
George '
Jordan, according to the
pro!leCUtor, will quote Moore
as saying "that he was In
.. sympathy, that he was in
favor of tbe bank charter
being granted." ·

CUSTOM WHEEL
HEADQUARTERS
'

scored tw tce ea rlier on a nui~

scormg smgle by Greg

l.uzinsk t in the ftrsl and a
sucrtfice fly by Bob Boone trl
the SIXth.
Rlsewherc m the Nattonal
Leag ue Wed n es day,
Cincinnati edged San Otego,
!H , Sl. Llluis downed the New
York Mets. 7-4, Atl anta
blanked San Francisco 3.o
and Houston shut out' Lo~
Angeles, 1.{1, in 16 mrungs.
The game between Montreal
and the Chicaao
Cubs was
b
suspended because of
darkness after ·six innings
with the Expos leadmg, u..a.
It will be completed today
prior to th e regularly
scheduled game.
In the America n League,
the New York Yankees beat
the Chicago While Sox, 1().7,
Balltmore topped Califorma,
5-1, and Detroit put away
0 akland, 7-3. The TexasCleveland and Kansas CityMtlwaukee ga mes were
ramed out.

Braves 3, Gtnnts 0:
R 1 g h t · hand e r Di c k
Ruthven. one of many off.
season acquisttions by' the
Braves, picked up h!s third
strai ght vic tory- ., lth
surprise relief help from
Andy Messersmith. Ruthven,
a former Plullle obtained by
the Braves vta the White Sox
last wmter, also batted m a
run during a three-run second
befor e
yieldin g
to
Messersmith in the eighth .
Alltros I, Dodgers 0:
Jose Cruz stroked a twO-&lt;Jut
smgle to score Larry
Mtlbourne in the bottom of
the 16th inning, enabling
Houston to remam atop the
NL West. Mtlbourne had lined
a smgle and stolen Sej:Ond to
move mto scoring position for
Cruz' hit. Mike Barlow, with
an inning of re Itel, gained his
semnd major league victory .

from the mou~d . Grtf!cy
boosted his lffil total to tS
with his two-nm single nnd
Tony Perez singled home a
third run and Inter scored on
a single by Cesar Ge ronimo
single . The' last run scored
wh en Dav e Conce pciOn
bounced int o a fielder's
choice.
Fred Norman picktod up the
victory. hts thitd against no
losses , but departed after six
· ·
d unno
·
· 11 11c
mmngs.
w1uc
yielded 1111 four Padre run s
Q

REDSWJN ·
Ken Griffey's two -run
Cardinals 7, Mets t :
single highlighted a !1vc-run
Reggie Smith's tw o-run second inning and Rawly
homer triggered a two-&lt;Jul Eastwick pil&lt;:hed scm·eless
!our·rurt, 6th-mnmg outburst relief over the final two in·
by the Cardinals and helped mngs Wednesday to preserve
deal new Mel Mtckey Lohch the Ctnctnnati Reds' 5-4
his third straight Nattonal triumph over the Siln Diego
League Joss without a wm . Padres.
Ted Simmons contrtbuted
The Reds senlll batters to
heavily to the Cardinal attack the plate and rapped out silt
with three hits in lour at-bats hils in the third as they drove
and a patr of runs scored.
rookie Dave Wehrme is ter

5 HP

MODEL

Chambliss comes alive
By JOE FROHLJNGER
UPI Sports Writer
As he descrtbes it, Chris
Chambliss always guessed at
what tt lakes to become a
good hi Iter but il wasn 't unltl
last year that he found oullhe
secret.
The suppose dly anemic
Yankees o.utlasled the
Chicago White Sox. 10-7,
Wednesday , with Chambliss
and Mickey Rtvers each
driving in three runs in a 17·
htt attack, that mcluded four
hits by Wtlhe Randolph and
three each by Chambliss,
Rtvers
and
Thurman
Munson .
"Selectwn of pitches is the
secr et, " sat d Chambh ss,
whose 3-for-5 performance
raised his batting average to
.325 and who has knocked m
11 runs so far this season "I
learned that last season and it
worked well "
Chambliss got New York
off to a 2.{1 lead with a homer
off Dave Hamil ton m the ftrst
mning and the Yankees kept
blasting away unttl Utey had
a 9·2 lead after seven.
Chambliss also singled home
a run in a two-run sixth , whtle
Rtvers drove in a run with a
double m the s1xth and two
with a single in the seventh .
Rudy May kept the While
Sox at bay on two hits unltl
the eighth when Bucky Dent
si ngled and Pete Varney

1u;d live o! their eight hils.
Don Gullett, making hls
first appearance of the
season, pitched a scoreless
seventh but gave way to
Eastwtek in the eighlll aner
walking Merv Rettenmurtd,
yielding a single. to Dave
Winfield and throwing two
straight balls to Doug Rader.
Easlwick snu!!ed OU,t the
threnl, stri king out Ra.der
· ducmg Ml ke lvle to hit
an d m
t'nto a double pla y, one of
.,,
• ·g11t tn the gante.

homered. May lost his stuff iri
the mnth and the Wh1te Sox
scored thre e more runs
before Sparky Lyle rettred
the side "' , ,
. In other AL games, 'Baltimore topped California 5-1
and Detrottlurned back Oak:
land, 7-3. Kansas Ctly at
Mtlwaukee and Texa s at
Cleveland were ramed out.
·Orioles 5, Angels 1:
Cy Young A&gt;yjrd-winner
Jim Paimer beci!Wte the first
AL ptlcher to wm three
games and gave up only two
hits before yteldmg to Dyar
Miller for relief help despt\e a
four-run
lead .
Ken
Singleton's ftrst homer o! the
year capped Balttmore's
three-run hrsl tnning.

You dupHute Mturt's own method ot b\llldlng 1011 fer.

GII'On tiller. Htre'1 why: Gll10n' 1 perfect
slicing and blending action mlxtl up 1011 end ort~nlc
tlllty with 1

metter t~oroughly , . forms 110011, ltrlftd ltedbtd. At
1 rnult, plant roots Ptf'lttratt and rNch out Nlll'f :

FISH DERBY

moisture Is abtorbtd mort rHdlly 1 decomposition of toll

Meigs County Fish &amp;
Game Association
will hold a FISH
derby , Sat. April24 at
the
Rutland
American
Legion
Farm
Lake ,
at
Rutland, Ohio.
For boys and gtrls from

a

a.m. to 4 p.m. The age

mtnerels end org~nlc weste llktl place qlllcklr. YOAif"
91rden gett off to 1 faster star1 lnd flowtra end

vegeteblts grow bigger t~en ,....,. aa.tore. GillOn filters

future txfre heavy construdlon, gUirantllct tines
(replactd ''" II tvtr brohn). ct•t Iron tHr CIM, Njustablt tllllnq wldthl.

Ebersbach Hardware

group ts 15 yrs . and under .
You must turmsh your own

batt and poles. Will be held

"Everything In Hardware"
110W.MAIN
OPEN FRI , TIL 8 -

ram or shm e.

POMEROY
SAT. TIL S

..

•

The
SPRING SELLING
. SPREE .
•

1sonnow

For the Lowest

-

Tire Prices
In the Area
It's

BEND
TIRE CENTER
773 · S88 I

Mason , W. Va .

"Outstanding
serviceil
It's part or
State Farm's
good value ... "
'

93 out ot. 100 of all Ford
Trucks built m the tast

12 yea 1s &lt;He st1ll on me 1oo

M1tes-per-ga1ton figures to r 1976
have tust been released by the

United Slates Envuonrhental Prot ec tiOn Agency The rallngs show Ford
tops all Ol he1 makes w11t1 th e bes t
gas mrleage ratwg ol any V-8 piCkup
Compare the EPA eshmat os lor
Ford piCkups (shown at ngh l) w1th
other makes You II hnd these

l1gur es pub l ished b'( the Uml£ld
States Government •n tt1e t9r6 GB3
Mrleagc Gurde lor New Car Buyru s
0 1COUf!il! these ;u e E PA f!S 11·
mates and you• ac1ua1m•lcag e ma y
va ry dependmg or1 you• p1 ckup s
co nd•t •on optional equ•pment nnd
how and whe •e ~ o u dnvc

Fords EPA Gaa M1le age Re cord
A l'Sull~ 101 f Ol d r -1 00 Y, l lh OJlii Ofl,ll
30:? CID V 8 sl ,m&lt;Hud rnon ual
jr ,UlS IT1 1SSI0 fl

'

Along wrth our larnous low·cos t au to protec lt on comes

a promt se of promp t, persona l servtce So you do n't
have to gtve up a thrng Ia get our low rates You lU St
have to ta k~ advan tage ol them .

Bill Fletcher
1258 POWELL STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.CHECK WITH US BEFORE

vo.u ·auv.

.

NEW F-150 4X4 also 1uns a n any ga!ohne The husk• est h ton
FOR O ever bUilfl Ready tor work and as a go-an.,.where ad .. entu rel FoiJ r speed Shill and power diSC/drum brakos are standard

Phone 992-7155

We Can Save You $$$

Like a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.

GENERAL TIRE SALES

STATE FARM MUTUAL
AUTO MOBILE INSURANCE CO MPANY

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .
'

Homt' Ottit. •

Bloor;ungton llltnots

p 7436.1

FAM ILY-OUTY 9UPERCA8 PICKUP - the 2-door pickup •with
ro om to sea t b ta mlty ol s1~ 1 Full 44 cu I t o t p1 otected c8rgo space
beh•nd the llont sca t

ANY WAY 'WOU LOOK AT IT, YOUR FORD DEALER HAS THE RIGHT PICKUP_FOR YOU.

.,

See ·your Ford Dealer today
.

~

�'
\

2- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday, April 22, 1976

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April22, 1976

Mine safety~ teacher ten:ore, dirty
tricks bills, approved by. Assembly
.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS t UP! ) - The
Oh10 General Assembly, in a
flurry of activity caltulaled
to send lawmakers home for
a sprmg recess at the end of

next week, dealt Wednesday
wtth a host of maj or btlls
ranging from mine safely lA:l
campaign "dirty tricks" to
teacher tenure .
Most of the action was m
the House, where a stx-hour
floor session resulted in the

Tenure hill is
watered down
By J. R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS tUPl) - A
maj or revtston of Ohto law
conce rnm g public sc hool
teachers passed the Ohio
House Wednesday, but a
se ries
of
stx
fl oor
am endments eliminated or
weakened maJOr secltons of
the btll givmg teachers "due
proce ss" if they are
suspended or fired .
The' final vole, 77-21, came
alter nearly a dozen attempts
to change the so-ca ll ed
"mstant tenure',' btll as tt had
been reported by the House
Education Committee. ·
The bi gges t change in
existmg law as proposed m
the bill, mtroduced more tha n
a year ago m the Senate by
Sen. AnU10ny J . Celebrezze
Jr., D-Cleveland , would set
up periodtc eva luations by a
sc hool board of all public
sc hool teachers .
The Senate wtll have to
concur in the House changes
to the bill. The upper
chm11ber is expec ted to reJect
the amendmenls, sendi 1J the

'

bill to a conference
commtttee for a compromtse
on the maJor points of
dif!erence.
If the school beard, on the
basis of 'th e eva lu ati ons,,
found a teac her was
incompetent or ineffecttve m
the classroom, the board
could dismiss or suspend the
teacher. A suspension could
be up to 14 days
If the teacher had a
" co ntt nu tng," tenur ed
contract, the sc hool board
would have tu swte m writmg
the re ason &gt; be hind the
dismissul or Sllbpt ns1on, and
the teacher could challenge
the dismi ssa l rnher in court
or before an admtrustraltve
panel set up wtthin the school
district
Extension of "due process"
challe nge proce dures for
non tenured teachers wtth
one.to three-year contra cts
was elnninaled by one of the
floor amendmenl•
"If you have a teacher m
the classroom domg wha t he
thmks ts a good JOb, the
teacher is enttlled to know the
rei! sons for his nonrenewal ,''
said Rep Marcus A Roberto,
D·Ravenna, House sponsor of
the btll.
" Bad tea chers wtll be
removed from the classroom
and good teachers wtll ha ve
§ome meas ure of (job )
· protection," said Roberto.
Roberto satd the btll would
allow some measure of JOb
, security lor teachers, who
could apply for tenure if they
meet certain educational and
' lenglhof-service standards
set up by the bill
"The btll was balanced
when it ca me out of
co mmtttee," complained

John Hall, chief lobbyist for
the
Ohto
Educalton
Association, which strongly
campaigned for the bill.
Another education lobby ,
however, representing school
boards, !ought the bill and
was pleased to see adoptton of
the amendments.
"Essentially, we think it's a
good bill," said John Hauck ,
exec uttve direc tor of the
Bu ckeye Association· of
School Admimstrators.
"They cleaned up most of the
objections we had, and I think
we c"n work with it "
Other amendments added
on the floor would reqwre
that any development of
standards agatn st which
public school teachers will be
measured would have to be
adopted outstde of any
co lle c ti ve bargaintng
sesswns between a teacher's
orga mzahon
and
an
mdivtdual school board.
Roberto satd the bill would
prevent a school board !rom
"hiruig somebody 's brother·
tn ·law, or !irmg somebody
because they dtdn'l like the
way they looked or t! the
teacher was mvolved in some
(teacher 1 organizaltonal or
associalional efforts.''

Family night
at Rio proves

I

paign pracltces measures
were sent to t he Senate for
further consideration, while
the Senate-approved teacher
time in 35 years
- Prohtbtting unfatr Lenure bill appears headed
electton campaign practices, for a joint conference
commonly known as "dirty committee
Meanwht le, progre ss
tri cks."
- Selling up per iodic lagged on the two prime
evaluations of all Ohio public tssues eyed by legtslators as
sc hool
teachers
and campaign ammunition providing lor due process if a property tax relief and utility
rate-making reform.
teacher is !ired.
Aconference committee on
The mine safety and cam·
the utility rate-making bill
was to resume negotiations
today amid bickering over
the House and Senate
versions .
And Senate Ways and
Means subcommittees were
to contmue work on a
property tax relief package.
car
The Senate voted to
adjourn
next April 29 until
Helen
Rusche!,
42 ,
after
the
primary election,
Pomeroy, complai ned of
returning
for a working
injuries following a rear end
sesston
o!
perhaps
three days
colhsion at &gt;:20 p.m. Wed·
in
June.
nesday on Rl. 7, lour tenths of
Senate President Pro Tema n\tle south o! Rt. 5&gt;4.
pore
Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron,
The Gallla-Melgs Post
said
that if the utility and
State Highway Patrol said
property
tax bills cannot be
her car was struck in the rear ·
passed
before
the eleclton,
end by an auto operated by
they
will
be
dealt
with in
Tom Hutchins, 23, Rt. 2,
June.
.
Gallipolis. There was minor
The legislation designed lA:l
damage. Mrs. Rusche! was prohibit unfair political cam·
not immediately treated.
patgn -activities such as
Michael Coleman, 19, Rt. I, misrepresentation and
Vinton, was charged with espionage cleared the House
drivmg left of the center on a 77·19 vole despite
followmg an accident at 9:40 opposing arguments it would
p.m. Wednesday on Rt. 30, hinder free speech rights and
seven tenths of a mile west of allow candtdates to make
Mitchell Rd. The patrol said trresponstble statements
Coleman 's car struck the left near election day without
rear of a vehicle driven by accountability.
Aurelia Carson, 29, Colwn·
The measure would forbid
bus. There was moderate candidates to plant spies tn
damage.
an opponent 's campatgn
A third mtshap occurred at organization, bribe a
10:20 p m. Wednesday on Rt. campaign staff worker- or
35 at the Spring Valley knowingly make rUa lse
Shopping Plaza where an statements about candfiiates'
unoccupied car owned by votmg
records
or
Cathe rine Thompson, backgrounds.
McArthur, apparenUy rolled
Anyone violating the provi·
backwards across Rt. 35 into sions of the bill would be
a d1tch. There was moderate subject to a maximum SIX·
damage.
month jail term or a line o! uP
passage of btlls :
- Upgrading Ohio's deep
mme safety laws for the first

Driver claims

injuries from
collision

big success
Famtly recreation night at
Rio Grande College on Friday
evenings from 7 until 9 p m.
has proved successful this
year a college spokesman
announced today.
The spokesman added :
"Family recreation night
at Rio Grande College's Lyne
Center is just the place to be
on· Friday evenings. Family
mght acltvities include
swimmtng , basketball,
volleyball, badminton,
rackelball , weight training,
trampoline , tumbling and
numerous children 's ac·
ltviltes.
" Admtssion ts free . All
students under the age o! 18
must be accompanied by a

OFF AND WALKING
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Entertainer Dick Gregory set
off from Ctly Hall Wednesday
on a walk to New York City to
dramaltze hunger in the
world's rtchest natton.
Mayor Tom Bradley gave
Gregory an empty plate to
symbolize hts trip.
English endurance walker
Steve Drury, meanwhile,
started of! wtth less fanfare
just one block away on a
similar walk designed to
promote the sport of
endurance walking
He said he hopes to beat the
cross-country record of &gt;3
days, 12 hours and 15
minutes.

parent or guardian .''

ANDY m;rs A STAR
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
Andy Grl!!ith became the
·1,6 7l s l e ntertainment
personality Wednesday with
his own star on the Hollywood
Boulevard "Walk o! Fame."
Grilftth, a former North
Carolina high schoolteacher,
began his career smgmg,
playin g his guitar and
dan cin g for loca l ctvtc
groups.

ST LOUIS !UP!) Outfielder Del Unser of the
New York Mets will be out of
actton lor about five days
because of a badly bruised
right elbow suffered Tuesday
night by a pitch thrown by
Lvnn McGlothen of the St.
Louis Cardinals.
X-rays showed no break,
but Unser is expected to have
further- X-rays taken when
the team returns to New York
next week .

rules upgraded
COLUMBUS I UP!) - Tbe
Ohio Senate has received
from the House legislation
upgrading the stale's deep
mine safely regulations for
the first time m 3&gt; years.
The btU, which cleared the
House
unanimously
Wednesday , provides lighter
safety reqwrements, more '
frequent inspections and
mandatory escape devtces
lor miners.
But before the House
passed the bill, it softened
penalties
for
mining
compames which vtolate
sections of the safety law.
Rep. Thomas Fries, [).
Dayton, said the amendment
to reduce the penalties was
agreed upon by all interested
parties, mcluding the United
Mine
Workers,
alter
language was inserted in the
bill to require certification of
all mine superintendents - a
provision vigorously sought
by the UMW
But Rep Sam Speck, R·

Cancer cure doesn't exi,st

'

let it out they could cure
cancer, but they are making
so much money that they
wouldn 'llet it out . Thank you
lor any information you can
give me on this subject.
DEAR READER - First
things first. When a woman
' has a spread of cancer cells
from the breast to other areas
m the body, one of the aceepted forms of treatmen t is
lA:l reduce the hormone supply
which helps support the
growth of the cancer. This is
why the female organs were
removed . Some palienll! with
incurable breast cancer ,that
has already spread can be
controlled lor some length of
lime by removal o! the
female organs.
The same thing can be said
about the removal of the
glands over the top of the
kidney. These glands also
produce female hormones
after the ovaries have been
removed. II they were totally
rem oved
the
doctors
probabl y g~ve her. a
replacement of the other

.

hormones that she needed
that are formed by the
adrenal cortex. The whole
idea was lA:l decrease the
body's formation of female
hormones by these glands
·and the ovaries so that the
cancer
cells
spread
throughout the body would
not continue to grow. These
glands were not removed
because they were thought to
have ca ncer but rather
because of the influence of
female hormones on the
spread of cancer.
You have certainly been
reading a lot of hogwash
judging from the rest of your
letter. Thereisnoknowncure
for cancer urtder lock and,key
in Washington or anywhere
else lor that matter. The
surest way the doctors would
have of making money !rom·
cancer palienll! would be lA:l
have a good cure for it. Such
published garbage Is just
exemplary of the widespread
paranoia that exists tn cer·
tam segments of our s•~·ie t y
People who write th~ Lhings

"

to $1,000.
Rep . Mtchael G, Oxley , R·
Findlay, objected to a section
that bars the Ohio Elections
Com mi ss ton
from
investtgatmg any charge
brought within 30 days of an
election until after the
election, unless four of the
!i ve commission members
agree to look into the
matter .
The House also passed, !JO.
8, and sent to the Senate a bill
providing for simpli!ied
foreclosure proceedings on
taxdelinquent land so it can
be turned over to local
governments for upgrading.
The chief sponsor, Rep.
Kenneth R. Cox , D·
Barberton, said the measure
would assist redevelopment
of abandoned and run-down
properties m inner cities.
Cox said there are 11,100
parcels of tax-delinquent land
in Cleveland alone, and 40 per
cent of them are vacant lots.
He satd current foreclosure
proceedings take years,
delaying redevelopment.
There was scattered
opposition from Rep Joseph
P Tulley , R-Mentor, who
satd the measure would
infringe on mdtVIdual rtghts,
and Rep. C.J. McUn, [).
Dayton, who argued cities
already have the tools for
redeveloping run-down
properties but have not used
them properly.
Tulley said the bill would
not apply merely to blighted
taxdelinquent properties.
"This will subject every
piece of property m the state
of Ohto to qui ck-take
foreclosure proceedtngs,"
said Tulley.
McUn warned that local
governments would use the
procedures only on properltes
in the way of potenttal
highway corridors or urban
renewal
blocks
He
successfully sponsored an
amendment requirtng
preparation of plans lor land
use.

Deep min.e safety

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I lost
a daughter at age 54 years . ll
was 10 years ago when she
died. She had cancer and the
doctors she had surely put
her through thetr butcher
shop . First they took off one
breast, then the other breast,
still later they took out her
female organs and finally
they went in through her back
and made a diagonal mc1sion
on each stde of tlie spine and
took out a ptece of the rib to
gel mstde aria remove the
glands over the kidn ey
Why did they lake these
glands out unless they knew
they were ·affected with
cancer? Anurse told me later
' that they did not take all o!
those glands out or she would
, not have lived. This last
; operation on her back was
done tn September and she
bved till a year after in
: November.
, I have read in a magazine
' that there is a remedy under
· lock and key in Washington
· !or cancer. II the AMA would

Mill~r goes 8-3

prey upon the lack o!
knowledge of the general
public and are guilty of doing
a public disservice. It Is an
evil thing to spread such
malicious gossip about the
treatment o! such a serious
illness as cancer.
Anyone who reads those
kinds of magazines should
discontinue his subscriptions
and not allow himself to be
eKPOSed to such hogwash
from malicious, unethical
people. Judging !rom the
statements you have quoted
such magazines can do
nothing except provide information that may well be
seriously detrimental to your
health.
For information on female
hormones send 50 cenll! lor
The Health Letter. number 512, MenOI!ause . Send a long,
stamped, · self-addressed
envelope for malllng. Ad·
dress your letter to me ln
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1551, Radio Clty Statton,
New York, NY 10019.

New Concord, said the
penalty reduction was a last·
minute proposal of the Ohio
Reclamation Assoctation,
which represents CO'al mtne
operators.
Fries, whose Energy and
Environment Committee had
the bill for 10 months, offered
the amendment reducing
penalties !rom a maximum
stx months in jail and $1,000
line to a maxtmum $100 ftne.
"This is setting aside the
sledgehammer and picking
up a flyswatter," complained
Speck.
The mine safety measure,
sougnt lor years by UMW
representatives !rom
southeastern Ohio, was
her aided as one of the
strongest in the nation
Rep. A.G. Lancione, [).
Bellatre, a sponsor, satd
more than 700 coal miners
have died in Ohio mines since
the safely law was last
upgraded in 1941.
He said the current bill was
spurred by the death last
month of 26 underground
miners in two separate expJo.
slons in Kentucky, addir.g
that
similar methane
only
explosions
were
narrowly averted in Ohio
mines near Cadiz and New
Lexmgton.
"This is the most
dangerous business in Ohio,"
said Lancione,as members of
District 6 of the United Mine
Workers looked on at close
range, "It's a li!e or death
matter with these miners.''
Lancione said the bill would
not only conform Ohio deep
mine standards to federal
criteria, but would set new
standards In underground
ventilation,
r,oo!ing,
escapeways and sanitary
facilities.
The bill would require
underground miners lA:l be
equipped wilh "sell-rescue"
breathing devices and access
to
!ireflghtlng ,
communication and first aid
equipment.
New inspection standards
would be enforced for mining ·
equipment, the number of
Ohio mine inspectors would
be Increased from 26 to 30,
and their pay would be hiked
by $3,000 a year.
In addition, the bill
mtne
requires
that
superlntendent:l be certified
foremen, meaning they would
hav•• a1 leH ~t three years of
Wldt'r Pr• •llllll 1 · xl~'rt"'U~ .

..

to ~op .E astern
. BY GREG BAILEY
Once again plagued by
errors (10 ), the Eastern
Eagles relinquished a 3-1 lead
in the bottom of ·the fifth and
ended up losing to host Miller,
~.

Eastern went ahead in the
top of the second by plating a
run on no hits. Don Eichinger
led off with a walk, stole
second, went to third on a

Meigs girls
triumph. at
Mrs. Greer, her birthday cake, and Rio Grande

Nelsonville

College President Paul Hines

'

Important. 00n'tever qwt,"
11

he satd.
Following the seminar, a
reception was held for the
Greers by the Academic
Department Chairmen m the
main foyer of Allen Hall, a
modern brick building,
donated in 1958 by Esther a

B)' BILL MADDEN
UPI Sport• Writer
•
The Philadelphia Phillies,
M'Bjor Leag ue Standmgs
wmter book favortles to dts·
Bv United Pr ess International
pla ce Pittsburgh as National
National League
Ea st
League
East champions this
W L Pet GB
year.
completed
a two-game
Pitto:;burgh
• 3 66 7
5 J 625
I l
Phi ladel phia
sweep o! Ute Ptrales m Three
New York
6 6500 11 2
Rivers Stadium Wednesday.
4 s 4.44
2
Chi cago
St . Louis
4 6 &lt;100 21 1 and once agam it was Mike
Montreal
3 5 375 21 ? Schnudt
provldtng the
W est
W L , P et. GB damage .
Houston
8 5 6 15
Schmtdt
slammed his
h
11
Cinc, nn at ,
6 4 600
1?
sevenl homer
in lour
Atl anta
6 4 600
· PI11 11
• games
·
Sa n Fran cisco 5 5 500 l 1 2 lo tee the
tes
3.{1 wm
0
1
th
San Diego
S 6 455 2
over the P trates n Y e day
Los AnQeles
2 a 200 41 1
before, he had !ted the major
Wedn esda y's Res ults
Cinci nnat i 5 San D 1ego 4
league record o! SIK homers
Philadelphia 3 Pi ttsburgh 0
in thre e games during
Mil ll Ch1 3, 6 inns, susp
51 Lou is 7 New York 4
Philadelphia's 5-1 victory.
Atlanta 3 San Franc isco 0
The
latest Schmidt homer,
Houston 1 Los A119 0, 16 mn s
however, was still one shy of
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All Tim es EST )
Hall of ramer Kiner's lillie·
Montreal ( Renko 0·0 or K1r by
0 Ol at Ch icago (Stone 0-0) , 2·30 known record of etght m four
games:--'
pm
Los Angeles ( Rau 1 OJ at
" First thing they satd was
Houston (Cosgrove 0-0l. 6 35
you didn 't gel the record,''
p.m
(Onl y gam es schedul e d )
said Sclumdt, who belted a
Frtday's Games
solo
shot '" the eighth inning
Cincinnati a! M ont r eal
A tlanta at Philadelph ia , n1ght
off loser Doc Medtch . "!
Chicago at Los Angeles, n ight
didn 't realize wha l record 1
St Loui s at San D iego , night
was shooting for."
New York at H ous ton . n ight
P1tt sb urgh at San Fr an, night
Schmidt 's homer , hi s
eighth, helped pad the victory
which was really sewed up by
the combined seven-ht l
pitching of left-handers Tom
Major Leagu e Results
Underwood
and
Tug
By United Press Internationa l
McG raw The Phils had
National League

North Gallia
8-1 winners

Esther and John Greer
native of Mtddleport, and her
first husband, Don Allen.
Allen, an alumnus and
trustee of Rio Grande
College, was a national
figure in business with
,his
highly
suc cessful
Chevrolet dealerships. On h1s
death, Esther accepted the
responsibilities o! College
trusteeship and has played an
active role m the · affairs of
the College since that time.
She serves on the college's
Finance and Investmen t
Commt ttee .

over Southern

Followmg the aclivtttes on
campus, members of the
Boards of Trustees o! Rio
Grande College and Rio
Grande Community College
gathered at the President's
Home for a luncheon in honor
of ·Esther's birthday, hosted
by the College President, Dr ,
Paul Hines, and his wile,
Pauline.
A spectal meeting of the
Rio Grande College Boar'd of
Trustees conducted by its
Chatrman, Francts W. Shane,
concluded the schedule o!
activities.

Reds promote

the bOy WOnder

$25,000 payoff whispered,
witness tells Mo·o re.jury
CHARLESTON, W. Va . trial of Moore, ~3 , and his
t UP!) - The government former aide William Loy
began laying the foundation enters its third day !A:lday.
The two men are charged
lor its extortion case against
West Virginia Gov Arch with extortmg $25,000 from
Moore
Tuesday
with the Diversified Mountaineer
testimony from a witness who Corp., a now bankrupt foursaid he heard a business stale loan company . II
executive tell of a $25,000 . convicted, each cou ld be
poltttcal contribution to sentenced to 20 years in
Moore's 1972 re-election cam· prtson and fined $10,000.
A jury of seven women and
patgn.
The U.S . District Court five men heard testimony

Wallace has gone thru
$9 million, now broke
WASHINGTON (UPI) George Wallace has spent $9
million on his presidential
campaign- far more than
any other candidate-&lt;~nd is
nearly broke.
Jet airplanes, a huge
charge card bill, advertismg
and printing by Alabama
!inns, fund raising and a long
list of unitemized "expenses"
have gobbled up the biggest
campaign war chest of the
btcentenmal election, with
only a third of the primaries
completed.
Wallace 's campaign
report, only
partially
completed, was
flied
Wednesday wtth the Federal
Election Commission 10 days
after the deadline. It showed
he had only $243,000 left of the
$9.3 milliorr he has rai~'ld.
with an unstated amount
owed.
The $9.3 million Includes

BASEBALL

Meigs High girls Monday at
Nelsonville
defeated
Nelsonville-York and Miller
High School girls m a threeway meet. Meigs had 55,
Nelsonville· York 52 \l and
Miller 31'f.! points.
Meigs girls finished as
follows:
SHOTPUT 132'3"),
Vaughan third, Burdette
fourth .
San Di ego
010 201 ooo~ 4 a 1
DISCUSS ( 84'), Grueser
C1 ncmnat1
005 000 OOx ~ 5 11 I
first, Burdette, second.
Wehrmeist er .
Foster
(3),
Sp lll ner (4). Metzger (7) lind
HIGH JUMP 14'5"),
Kenda ll, Norman, Gul lett (7 ),
Granda! third.
Eastw ick (6) and Plum mer
WP Norman (3 -0l LP LONG JUMP (14'9"), Ash,
Wehrme1st er ~
first;
Bego,
second;
Phlade lphia 100 001 010- 3 7 0
Wycinski, third.
Pittsburgh
000 000 000- 0 7 0
HURDLES 114.6), SWISher
Underwood , M cG raw (6) and
fourth.
Boone , MediCh , Moose (9) and
Sanguill en WP- Underwood (1 .
880 MEDLEY RELAY,
OJ LP- M edi ch (l 1)
HR Meigs 12.10).
Phi lad elp h la , Schmidt ( 8)
100 YARD DASH, (12.5)
(Suspended , 6 inns ., dark)
Granda! first
Montrea l
132 113- 11150
Ch1cago 1
200 10()- 3 5 1
MILE RUN 17 05 ) None
Fryman,
Ca
rr1
tllers (61 an d
!rom Metgs.
Foot e, Za hn , Dettor e (3 ). P
880 RELAY (2.16 ), Metgs
Reuscllet (5 ). Schul tz (6) and
Sw isher HR s- Montrea l. Jor
first.
&gt;
gensen (3), White (1). Chicago,
440 DASH I1.07) Ash first,
Cardenat (2) Swi sher 12)
Vaughan fourth.
New York
002 020 ooo- 4 12 1
North Gallia continued its St
440 RELAY 159.4) Meigs
Louis
010 104 10)(- 7 12 2
unbeaten habtls Wednesday
third.
Loi1Cil , Lockwood (6). Hall
l and Grote, Forsch , Wal lace
880 RUN (3.17.6 ) No places. night with a rain-shortened IJ. IB
~Sl. Frisella (5).
Ras mu sse n
220 DASH 12ll.3) Miller 1 league vtctory over South· (6). Hrabos ky (Bl and S1m
mons WP - Ra smusse n {2 1)
second, Girolami tie for thtrd ern Htgh o! Meigs County.
LP - L ol1ch (0 3) HR - Sl
Coach
Ron
Janey's L OUIS, Sm 1lll (2 )
with Barnhart o! N·Y.
MILE RELAY (5.03.1) defending SV AC champion
San Francisc 000 000 000- 0 6 1·
Pirates jumped on starting Atlan
Meigs first.
ta
030 000 00)( - 3 52
and losing pitcher, Brady
Barr, Mofflll (7) and Rader A
, M esse r sm tt h ( B) and
Huffman, for four rurts in the Ruthven
Pocoroba WP- Ru t hven (3 0)
!irs l inning and added lour LP - Barr ( I 0
more in the fourth .
(16 mnings&gt;
The victory pushed North Los Angeles
000 000 000 000 000 1)- 0 ' 0
Gallia's unbeaten stri ng to 40. The Pirates hold a two Houston
ODD 000 000 000 000 1- 1 12 0
John, Hough (81 , WaH (14 )
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A game edge over the Kyger
and Ferguson . Ri chard . Forsch
second title promolton in Creek Bobcats.
I 10 1, Barlow { 16) and Johnson
three years has been
Pacing the Pirate attack WP - Barlow (2 OJ LP- WBI I (0
accorded Dick Wagner, who , were Calvin Minnis wtth two I I
ranks behind only Cincinnati hits in three turns including a
Reds President Bob Howsam triple and four RBI's ; Brett
j,
in the ballclub's executive Tackett and Fred Logan with
Amertcan League
hierarchy.
two hils each . Ron Plants and Te)(as a t Cl eve , ppd , wet
The Reds' board of Greg James had one safety Ka n C1ty at Mllw, ppd , ram
directors have re-titled each
000 200 023- 7 1 2
Wagner "executive vtce
James, the wtnning pitcher Chteago
New York
200 023 2h .-10 17 1
president." Wagner, 48, came in the ftve inning contest,
Hamil Ton Kuce k (6 ), BarriOS
herein 1967 as assistant to the yielded two hils, a triple to (7) and Varn ey ; Ma y , Ly le (9 )
Munson WP- May ( 1 OJ
president and in 1973 his title Eric Dunning and a single lA:l and
LP - Ham1l ton
{0 l)
HRswas upped to administrative Young. He fanned 11 while Chicago , Va rn ey ( 1) , New
vice president.
walking two and hittmg two. Y.ork , ChambliSS (1 )
In 1947, at the age o! 19,
Huffman tssued two free Ba1t1mor e 320 000 coo- s 7 o
Wagner had the distinction of passes and struckout eight. Ca ll to rn 1a 000 000 001 - 1 2 1
Palm er , M i ll er (9) and H en
being the youngest general
The Pirates host South· dnck
s, Kir kwood , Hartzell {2),
manager in professional western this evening ,
Drago (8) and Her rm ann WP tmer (3 l) LP - K~rkwood (0
baseball history - heading a South.
001 00-1 2 1 Pa
2l
HR- Balt1 mo re, Singl eton
400 4x~ 8 I II I
minor league club in N Gallia
Thomasville, Ga.
Huffman 1L) Riffle 15) and
300 004 COo- 7 9 0
The Reds ' board of Durtning James IW ) and DetrOit
Oakla nd
001 000 20o-- 3 9 0
directors also have added a Minnis.
Rober ts (2 Ol and Fr eehan ,
Torrez, Todd (6) , Abbott {8),
new director, Robert C. Hunt,
Fingers {9) and Haney LP the Indianapolis, Ind.,
Torrez (l . J ) HRs- Detro1 t ;
contractor who headed the
Hor1on (~J. Staub (1) .
Tigers 7, A's 3:
construction of Riverfront
&lt;onf y gam es schedu led 1
Two oil-season acquistlions
Stadium.
paid off in the Ttgers' win
over the A's as veteran lefty
Dave Roberts went the route,
A thought for the day : spacing nine hits lor hts
President Franklin D Roose- second wm , and Rusty Staub ·
velt said, " The truth is found hit his first AL homer. Willie
when men are free to pursue ·Hor•n~ drove in three runs
with hts third homer.
it."

Greers visit
college campus
at Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE - Esther
and John Greer o! LaGorce
Island 1Roxbury Lane),
Miami Beach, Fla., and Bluff
Drive, Knoxville, Tenn. were
on the Rio Grande College
campus Monday as special
guests of President Paul D.
Hines and the board of
trustees.
In the morning, in the
Jeanette Albiez Davis
Library, Mr . Greer conducted a semmar prtmartly
for Busmess Administration
students but students in other
academic
area
were
welcome. The seminar was
on the theme that "nothing ts
free ; someone has had to
work lor it." Greer stressed
the ordering of lives, family
and church, home and
cOWltry, good health,' self·
su!fictenc)\
and
perseverance, and of these,
perseverance Is the most

wild pttch, and scampered
home on a throwing error ,
But Miller tied it m their half
of that frame .
The Eagles went ahead in
the thtrd when Riffle led off
with a single. Alter steali ng
second and third , he raced
home on Dave Hannum's
groundout. They scored once
more in the fourth when
Eichinger walked again, stole
second, and then sc ored on
Joe Kuhn's triple.
The game was called alter ·
live innings, but that fifth
frame was what the hosts
needed . They plated one run,
but then losing pitcher Phil
LaComb got two outs Then
ltghlnin g struck
(figuratively) . With two outs
and the Eagles leadmg 3·2,
Miller plated six more runs
on lour singles, a walk, and
lour Eagle miscues.
John Evans got Eastern's
other hit, a smgte. Pat Nye
led the winners with two for
three . Eastern pitching
yielded ltv~ hits, struck out
one, and gave up three walks,
while winning pitcher Tolh
KOed five and walked three.
Eas tern hosts Symmes
Valley tonight in an SVAC
encounter.
E
011 111-3 3 10
M
010 07~ 5 2
La Comb ILP ), Hannum
(5) and Riffle . Toth and
Starling.

Phils take Pittsburgh twice

$2.8 million in federal funds .
Wallace, like the other
candidates, has had to curtail
his campa ign sin ce the
matching money was cut off
pending congressional action
reconstituting the FEC along
the lines of a Supreme Court
order.
By compariso n, Henry
Jackson has raised $5.5
million, Jimmy Carter $3.4
million and Morris Udall $2.5
million . Thetr campaigns are
also in financial trouble. On
the
Republican
side,
President Ford has raised
$7.5 mtllion and Ronald
Reagan $7 .I million. Ford IS
the only candidate wtth a
sizeable · campaign balance
remaining .

TEATER RECOMMENDED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
James
A.
Rhodes'
appointment of Robert W.
Teateras dtrectoro!thestate
Department of Natural
Resources was favorably
recommended Wednesday by
SMAU.. BUSINESS DAY
' COLUMBUS (UPI)- Sen. the Senate Energy and
Anthony J . Celelrezze Jr., [). Environment Co!!)mitlee.
Cleveland, Wednesday intro·
Teater took office subject
duced a resolution to set next to full Senate confirmation
Wednesday as "Small Jan. 13, 1975, when Rhodes
Business Day" in Ohio.
began his third term as
The resolution,. which governor.
ptcked up eight cosponsors
The full Senate is expected
upon introduction, would to act on the confirmation·
commemorate small next week. Teater and three
buslnesf contribution to the other Rhodes Cabinet
"econollttc"Well-belng" o! the nominees have yet to be
stale.
confirmed by the Senate.

'

from seven witnesses,
in c luding Charle~ton
attorney Edward H Tiley,
who represented DMC and iS
now a candtdate for the state
Supreme Court.
With Moore watching
intently, Tiley testified he
attended a meeting in the
latter part of 1972 at which
Theodore Prtce, former
president of DMC, was
present.
"Mr. Pri ce, sometime
during the meeting, made the
statement that he had made a
political contribution to Gov.
Moore's campaign ," said
Tiley.
Asked how much, Tiley
replied, "in the amount of
$25,000."
On cross exam inittion,
Tiley testified that he had no
first-hand knowledge that the
donatton actually was
made.
'
Price, expected to be the
government's key witness
against Moore and Loy, has
been sentenced to three years
in prtson following plea bar·
gaining on fraud and bribery
charges con nec ted with
DMC's collapse.
In open in g stateme nts
Tuesda y, Moore 's defense
attorney Stanley Preiser
called the proceedings "a
political trial" and said he
would prove that Price
"bought himself out of 18()
years of prison time" by
agreeing to turn state's
evidence.
"I'll prove that Mr, Price is
a liar," Preiser said.
In a low-key opening slate·
mentfollowing jury selection,
U.S. Attorney John Field m
sa1d he would prove the
$25,000 payment was in
return for Moore's influence
in obtaining a stale !tank
charter for DMC.
He said a go-between would
testify that l.Dy wld Price "!A:&gt;
get down here with , his
money.'' And state' Banking
Co mmissioner
George '
Jordan, according to the
pro!leCUtor, will quote Moore
as saying "that he was In
.. sympathy, that he was in
favor of tbe bank charter
being granted." ·

CUSTOM WHEEL
HEADQUARTERS
'

scored tw tce ea rlier on a nui~

scormg smgle by Greg

l.uzinsk t in the ftrsl and a
sucrtfice fly by Bob Boone trl
the SIXth.
Rlsewherc m the Nattonal
Leag ue Wed n es day,
Cincinnati edged San Otego,
!H , Sl. Llluis downed the New
York Mets. 7-4, Atl anta
blanked San Francisco 3.o
and Houston shut out' Lo~
Angeles, 1.{1, in 16 mrungs.
The game between Montreal
and the Chicaao
Cubs was
b
suspended because of
darkness after ·six innings
with the Expos leadmg, u..a.
It will be completed today
prior to th e regularly
scheduled game.
In the America n League,
the New York Yankees beat
the Chicago While Sox, 1().7,
Balltmore topped Califorma,
5-1, and Detroit put away
0 akland, 7-3. The TexasCleveland and Kansas CityMtlwaukee ga mes were
ramed out.

Braves 3, Gtnnts 0:
R 1 g h t · hand e r Di c k
Ruthven. one of many off.
season acquisttions by' the
Braves, picked up h!s third
strai ght vic tory- ., lth
surprise relief help from
Andy Messersmith. Ruthven,
a former Plullle obtained by
the Braves vta the White Sox
last wmter, also batted m a
run during a three-run second
befor e
yieldin g
to
Messersmith in the eighth .
Alltros I, Dodgers 0:
Jose Cruz stroked a twO-&lt;Jut
smgle to score Larry
Mtlbourne in the bottom of
the 16th inning, enabling
Houston to remam atop the
NL West. Mtlbourne had lined
a smgle and stolen Sej:Ond to
move mto scoring position for
Cruz' hit. Mike Barlow, with
an inning of re Itel, gained his
semnd major league victory .

from the mou~d . Grtf!cy
boosted his lffil total to tS
with his two-nm single nnd
Tony Perez singled home a
third run and Inter scored on
a single by Cesar Ge ronimo
single . The' last run scored
wh en Dav e Conce pciOn
bounced int o a fielder's
choice.
Fred Norman picktod up the
victory. hts thitd against no
losses , but departed after six
· ·
d unno
·
· 11 11c
mmngs.
w1uc
yielded 1111 four Padre run s
Q

REDSWJN ·
Ken Griffey's two -run
Cardinals 7, Mets t :
single highlighted a !1vc-run
Reggie Smith's tw o-run second inning and Rawly
homer triggered a two-&lt;Jul Eastwick pil&lt;:hed scm·eless
!our·rurt, 6th-mnmg outburst relief over the final two in·
by the Cardinals and helped mngs Wednesday to preserve
deal new Mel Mtckey Lohch the Ctnctnnati Reds' 5-4
his third straight Nattonal triumph over the Siln Diego
League Joss without a wm . Padres.
Ted Simmons contrtbuted
The Reds senlll batters to
heavily to the Cardinal attack the plate and rapped out silt
with three hits in lour at-bats hils in the third as they drove
and a patr of runs scored.
rookie Dave Wehrme is ter

5 HP

MODEL

Chambliss comes alive
By JOE FROHLJNGER
UPI Sports Writer
As he descrtbes it, Chris
Chambliss always guessed at
what tt lakes to become a
good hi Iter but il wasn 't unltl
last year that he found oullhe
secret.
The suppose dly anemic
Yankees o.utlasled the
Chicago White Sox. 10-7,
Wednesday , with Chambliss
and Mickey Rtvers each
driving in three runs in a 17·
htt attack, that mcluded four
hits by Wtlhe Randolph and
three each by Chambliss,
Rtvers
and
Thurman
Munson .
"Selectwn of pitches is the
secr et, " sat d Chambh ss,
whose 3-for-5 performance
raised his batting average to
.325 and who has knocked m
11 runs so far this season "I
learned that last season and it
worked well "
Chambliss got New York
off to a 2.{1 lead with a homer
off Dave Hamil ton m the ftrst
mning and the Yankees kept
blasting away unttl Utey had
a 9·2 lead after seven.
Chambliss also singled home
a run in a two-run sixth , whtle
Rtvers drove in a run with a
double m the s1xth and two
with a single in the seventh .
Rudy May kept the While
Sox at bay on two hits unltl
the eighth when Bucky Dent
si ngled and Pete Varney

1u;d live o! their eight hils.
Don Gullett, making hls
first appearance of the
season, pitched a scoreless
seventh but gave way to
Eastwtek in the eighlll aner
walking Merv Rettenmurtd,
yielding a single. to Dave
Winfield and throwing two
straight balls to Doug Rader.
Easlwick snu!!ed OU,t the
threnl, stri king out Ra.der
· ducmg Ml ke lvle to hit
an d m
t'nto a double pla y, one of
.,,
• ·g11t tn the gante.

homered. May lost his stuff iri
the mnth and the Wh1te Sox
scored thre e more runs
before Sparky Lyle rettred
the side "' , ,
. In other AL games, 'Baltimore topped California 5-1
and Detrottlurned back Oak:
land, 7-3. Kansas Ctly at
Mtlwaukee and Texa s at
Cleveland were ramed out.
·Orioles 5, Angels 1:
Cy Young A&gt;yjrd-winner
Jim Paimer beci!Wte the first
AL ptlcher to wm three
games and gave up only two
hits before yteldmg to Dyar
Miller for relief help despt\e a
four-run
lead .
Ken
Singleton's ftrst homer o! the
year capped Balttmore's
three-run hrsl tnning.

You dupHute Mturt's own method ot b\llldlng 1011 fer.

GII'On tiller. Htre'1 why: Gll10n' 1 perfect
slicing and blending action mlxtl up 1011 end ort~nlc
tlllty with 1

metter t~oroughly , . forms 110011, ltrlftd ltedbtd. At
1 rnult, plant roots Ptf'lttratt and rNch out Nlll'f :

FISH DERBY

moisture Is abtorbtd mort rHdlly 1 decomposition of toll

Meigs County Fish &amp;
Game Association
will hold a FISH
derby , Sat. April24 at
the
Rutland
American
Legion
Farm
Lake ,
at
Rutland, Ohio.
For boys and gtrls from

a

a.m. to 4 p.m. The age

mtnerels end org~nlc weste llktl place qlllcklr. YOAif"
91rden gett off to 1 faster star1 lnd flowtra end

vegeteblts grow bigger t~en ,....,. aa.tore. GillOn filters

future txfre heavy construdlon, gUirantllct tines
(replactd ''" II tvtr brohn). ct•t Iron tHr CIM, Njustablt tllllnq wldthl.

Ebersbach Hardware

group ts 15 yrs . and under .
You must turmsh your own

batt and poles. Will be held

"Everything In Hardware"
110W.MAIN
OPEN FRI , TIL 8 -

ram or shm e.

POMEROY
SAT. TIL S

..

•

The
SPRING SELLING
. SPREE .
•

1sonnow

For the Lowest

-

Tire Prices
In the Area
It's

BEND
TIRE CENTER
773 · S88 I

Mason , W. Va .

"Outstanding
serviceil
It's part or
State Farm's
good value ... "
'

93 out ot. 100 of all Ford
Trucks built m the tast

12 yea 1s &lt;He st1ll on me 1oo

M1tes-per-ga1ton figures to r 1976
have tust been released by the

United Slates Envuonrhental Prot ec tiOn Agency The rallngs show Ford
tops all Ol he1 makes w11t1 th e bes t
gas mrleage ratwg ol any V-8 piCkup
Compare the EPA eshmat os lor
Ford piCkups (shown at ngh l) w1th
other makes You II hnd these

l1gur es pub l ished b'( the Uml£ld
States Government •n tt1e t9r6 GB3
Mrleagc Gurde lor New Car Buyru s
0 1COUf!il! these ;u e E PA f!S 11·
mates and you• ac1ua1m•lcag e ma y
va ry dependmg or1 you• p1 ckup s
co nd•t •on optional equ•pment nnd
how and whe •e ~ o u dnvc

Fords EPA Gaa M1le age Re cord
A l'Sull~ 101 f Ol d r -1 00 Y, l lh OJlii Ofl,ll
30:? CID V 8 sl ,m&lt;Hud rnon ual
jr ,UlS IT1 1SSI0 fl

'

Along wrth our larnous low·cos t au to protec lt on comes

a promt se of promp t, persona l servtce So you do n't
have to gtve up a thrng Ia get our low rates You lU St
have to ta k~ advan tage ol them .

Bill Fletcher
1258 POWELL STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.CHECK WITH US BEFORE

vo.u ·auv.

.

NEW F-150 4X4 also 1uns a n any ga!ohne The husk• est h ton
FOR O ever bUilfl Ready tor work and as a go-an.,.where ad .. entu rel FoiJ r speed Shill and power diSC/drum brakos are standard

Phone 992-7155

We Can Save You $$$

Like a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.

GENERAL TIRE SALES

STATE FARM MUTUAL
AUTO MOBILE INSURANCE CO MPANY

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .
'

Homt' Ottit. •

Bloor;ungton llltnots

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beh•nd the llont sca t

ANY WAY 'WOU LOOK AT IT, YOUR FORD DEALER HAS THE RIGHT PICKUP_FOR YOU.

.,

See ·your Ford Dealer today
.

~

�5- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April22, t'976

Cowen~, Celtics win first by 9

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April22, 1976

ABA playoffs

.

LOOK WHAT YOUR JEFFERSO'N •2.00
r

BILL WILL BUY•• DURING THE •2.00 JILt

By CHRis TURKEL
Garden before leaving for
Williams lofted a 24-foot to PUSh the Spurs over the
UPI Sporta Writer
. game,s Sunday and next basket right after Jan van Nets and send the ABA
It Is a . basketball axiom . Wednesday in Buffalo.
Breda Kolff had threaded his semifinal playoff series into a
that as U!e center goes, so
In Ule only other NBA way througtl the Kentucky seventjl and deCiding game
goes the t.eam. Dave Cowens game, Washington dumped
defense for a lying lay-up Saturday night in New York.
and Bob McAdoo both proved Cleveland, 109-93,
with four seconds to play.
Julius Erving, who put on a
in Jarry Pare ..
he wasn 't as far advanced as
that adage Wednesday night
Clem Haskins came off the
The
best-of-seven
series
spectacular
41-point
perfor·
·
The
most
common
cliche
other
Reds pitcHers when the
in oppoait.e fashion .
bench to spark a second- now goes back to Denver for mance for the Nets, fouled
heard
during
spring
training
season·
opened . So, the
The Bcs!on Celtics took the quarter rally and wounrl up
game
five
Thursday
night.
Kenoo
as
he
went
up
for
a
is
''the
hitters
are
ahead
of
went to Gary
assignment
opening game of their with 22 points in leading the
The
sixth
game
will
be
played
jump
shot
and
then
Kenon
the
pitchers."
Nolan.
Eastern Division semifinal Bullets over the Cavaliers,
in
Louisville
Sunday sank the shots.
But, cliche or not, as far as
Anderson isn't convinced
series, 107-98, over the knotting their NBA Eastern afternoon.
despera
lion
three-j)Oint
A
Anderson's
concerned,
Gullett
is rendy to slart, but
Buffalo Braves on the
Division semifinal playoff seLarry Kenon hit two free attempt by Erving missed as
sentiments
are
there's
more
truth
than
Anderson's
he
still
olnn.s
to oitch the 25strength of Cowens' over- ries , 2-2.
throws with three seconds left time ran out.
NBA Ptavon Standings
year-old lefty· in Sunday's
shared by more than a few fiction in the words.
powering performance. The
The Bullets, playing their
By United Preu International
pit chers , like as many as 10
" Take our club." said game against the Erpos'
6-foot-9 redhead scored 30 finest basketball of the bestcont . semif inats-qest ol 7
on
the Reds staff alone.
Sparky after the Reds beat Steve Renko .
.:;o;:-=-~?.!=~:::-:~~;:;.~~~;!;!.:!~)~~~~-::_~,;-s.:;:~:::::*~~::~~:::.~~-=~
Goldtn St. te"ilds Detroit l-0
pointsand.added 17 rebounds, of-seven series, rallied from a ;;:~:;::z~!:=~~~~""='
....~»..~:=:=:::::::::::.:-..:..·:·:ox.:&amp;w~-:;..:v.....-.:~ Apr '20 -Gtdn St 127 Detroil 103
11
"It 's hard on a guy 's ulcer · San Diego 5-4 Wednesday
1 can't" wait any longer,"
;:,'§ April n -at Golden State
7 assists1\tlnd five steals.
second-quarter deficit and ·:·;~;:
when
he
's
wal
ching
hi
s
afternoon.
"As
a
team
,
we're
said Sparky. "Don can't pre·
April 24 -at Detroit , aft .
By C9Dlrast, McAdoo, only broke the game open in the
April 26- at Detroit
pit chers get their spring hitting aro~nd .320 after 10 pare himself pitching on the
the fourth man in NBA third· period wheri Cleveland
X·April 28·1!11 Golden Slate
~~~
training
while they're on the games. That's a lot of · sidelines. He 's gol to get into
history
to win four suffered a dry spell of more
X·Aprll 30-et Detroit ..
X·May
2-at
Go
lden
St
ate
firing
line
and those ligures in thumping. And, if you check games."
consecutive scoring titles , than four minutes.
Phoenix leads Seattle l - 1
U1e
won
and lost columns the box scores, you'll notit'l!
Gullett made his season's
tallied a -111ere 16 points- less
Apr 13-Seattle 102 Phoen ix 99
Haskins, a guard In his 9th ·,·:•.{
:-.·:&gt;~
count,"
said
Anderson
as
the
our
guys
aren't
making
all
debut
Wednesday against San
Apr
15Phoenix
116
Seallle
111
........
than half his average. while year in the NBA and with his :·x·:,
~pr 18- Pho enl~t 103 Seattle 91
Reds
prepared
to
head
for
the
thunder."
Diego
when Sparky called
being
outplayed
and third club, hit 10 of 14 shots :~:;~
·~;f:~~ Apr 2Q.Phoenix 130 Sea !lie 11&lt;1
Montreal
and
a
three-game
Specifically,
Anderson
had
upon
him
for relief duty.
April
25.at
Seatt
le
outhustled under both boards. from the floor in scoring his
x. -Aprit 27 -at Phoen ix
series
with
the
Expos
in
mind
the
current
home
run
·
Gullett
yielded on ly a
Cowens scored 10 points first points of the series.
X-April JO-at Seattle
beginning
Friday
afternoon
binges
of
the
New
York
Mets'
harmless
sing le to John
and made three steals in the
Boston leads Buffalo 1-0
The 109 points were the
Apr 21 · Boston 107 Bu ffalo 96
Dave Kingman and the Phila· Grubb in the seventh but was
decisive' U!ird period, then most scored by the Bullets in
April 23-at Boston
delphia
Phils'·
Mike replaced in the eighth .after
fended off a Buffalo charge the series, which moves back
NEW YORK I UP!) - Baseball used to be divided into two April 25 -at Buffalo, aft.
Sclm1idt.
walking Merv Rettenmund • .
April 28·al Buffalo
late in the game to muscle the to the Richfield, Ohio, parts.
30-at Boston
"Tilere•s no doubt about y[eldin~ a single to D11ve
Celtics over the Braves. Colisewn tonight for game · The New York Yankees constituted one part. They were all- X·April
x -Mav 2·af Buffalo
it. " said Anderson. "The Winfield und throwing two
5-at Boston
,
Boston trailed · only once in No. 5,
conquering, fiercely independent and often highhanded. The x -May
tied
2-1
Cleveland
-Wash
~or short spring training hurt the balls to Doug R•d.er. Rawly
Ule game, 31·29, after the first
In ABA action, Denver other part was made up of the remaining 15 teams. They were Apr I]. Wash 100 Cleve land 95
.(I
pitchers." ,
· Eastwick bailed him oul to.
period.
• Apr 15-Cie ve 80 Washington 79
nipped Kentucky, 103-106, and like. two separate entities.
preserve starter Fredie NorIf
it
hadn't
been
for
the
Apr
17-Cieve
88
washington
76
Jo Jo White had 'J:/ points San Antonio edged New York,
During a period stretching from the early '30s to the mid '60s Apr 21-Was h 109 Cleve·rand 98
·
abbrev
iated
spring
training,
man's
third
straig ht
and John Havlicek added 22 106-105.
when they won 23 American League .peiUlants and 17 wbrld Apri .l 22-al Cleveland
victory.
Don
Gull
ett
undoubtedly
at Wash ington
for Ule Celtics, while Randy
Chuck Williams scored the championships, the Yankees, or Bronx Bombers as they often April 2629-at
Cleveland
would have opened U1e season
His fastball isn't anywhere
Smith's · 'l:l points and Jim winning basket at the buzzer were called, were so overbearing, so downright arrogant at x -April
• -If necessary
for the Reds .
close to U1e one he norrnally
McMillan's 24 kept the as the Nugge\s shaded the times, they were shameful.
By MIKE RABUN
But, because Gullett. didn't throws .
Braves in the game.
Colonels and evened their
Happily, that's no longer the case today .
UPI Sports Writer
WHA Playoff Standings
·work out in Florida prior to
"But I'm hoping it will be
The teams play game No. 2 ABA semifinal playoff at two
Under George Steinbrenner, the Yankees have taken on a By United Press International
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - the opening of training camp, soon," said Sparky,
Friday night at Boston games apiece.
Semifinals--Best of 7
much more human quality . At least th~ Yankees come off as
Having put in a proper
Winnipeg -v5. Calgary
moria Is now, not some kind ol mythical gods.
April 23 -at Winnipeg
amount of time forgetting
Unhappily, though, another club seems int ~nt . on following April 25-at Winnipeg
about the Masters, Jack
28 -at Calgary
the Yankees' former pattern, bent perhaps on'achieving their April
April 10-at Calgary
Nicklaus appears ready to·
old image, on the executive side unfortunately as well as the x .M ay 2·at Winnipeg
deal
with the talented field
.;.at Calgary
Playing side, and the club I'm talking about is the world x.May
that has assembled across
x.May s.ar Winnipeg
•
champion Cincinnati Reds.
Quarter- Fi,als.-Best of 7
the river from the ·French
New Eng l~ads 'ndpls 2·1
One thing should be made clear. This imperious image the
Apr l~ · N ew Eng land 4 tndpts l .Quarter tot the $175,000 New
Reds are projecting emanates straight from upstairs and ha s Apr t 7.1ndpts 4 New England 0 Or leans Open,
Regular Price On All Men and Women's Dress
nothing
to do with either the manager or the players. Nobody is Apr 21-New England 3 l ndpls 0 "I went off and did some
Shoes.
1
23-at New England
more down to earth than Sparky Anderson. He has never April
tarpon fishing after th e
A pril 24-at Indianapolis
forgotten his rools, nor have I ever seen him try to impress x.Aprl l 27-st New England
Masters and sometimes that
x .Aprll29 -st Indianapolis
anybody with his imporlance.
is good for you," Nicklaus
Quarter-Finals-Best of 7
The same thing goes for the Reds' players. Pete Rose, Joe
Hous leads San Diego 1-0
said Wednesday. "ll usually
Morgan, Johnny Bench, Dave Cont'l!pcion, Don Gullett, all of Apr 21-Hous 8 San D iego 6
takes me about a week to
Apri I 23-at Houston
them. They don't high-hat or look down on anybody, even John April
25.at San Diego
come down from a rna jor
"The Couril" Montefusco, when he sometimes gets ·up and April 27.at San Otego
tournament.
x .April 28 -at Houston
lalks about how he's going to throw the qall by them.
" It might take a little more
x -Aprll 10-at Sa n Diego
Now the Cincinnati front office, that';; rlifferent.
x.May l ·at Houston
if I win .... "
JC · if necessary
Bob Howsam, president and chief executive officer of the
Nicklaus fired a sevenReds, may be the most efficient of them all, and Dick Wagner,
underpar 65 Wednesday in
his newly promoted executive vice president, is hardly any
practice over the 7.000-yard,
less so. Any time Dick Wagner says something, he's speaking Aussies' tennis
par-72 Lakewood course and
with the fullaulhority of his boss, and wh~n it comes to running
when play starts today he will
. the Reds, Howsam has virtually the last word.
queen quitting
rate the favorite, as usual,
Because You Are Heating With
The Reds have an !lperation that's so efficient, it hums, and
·· over such notables as No. 1
they know it. So maybe it's only natl!ral they feel like flexing
MELBOURNE Australia money winner Hubert Green.
North Second
their muscle a bit.
Middleport
(IJ.PI) - Saying her heart is second leading money winner
One of the places the Reds are doing ·this is in the area of
not in it, Margaret Court, Be nCrensha,w and the wmner
expansion.
queen of Australian tennis of last week s Tournament of
Howsam and Ruly Carpenter, the Phillies' president, were has put away her racquets fo; Champio,ns, Don January.
• ELECTRIC BASEBOARD HEAT
the only two to vote against the National League expanding, the last time
Nicklaus won on this course
• ELECTRIC CABLE HEAT
and that of course is their perfect right, but the Reds always
'In Perth t~ay s)Je ended two years ago .and said his
seem to be dead set ~ga ins! any kind of accommodation for the her 17 years a'l the top of fondness for thts ~ld, tourist
• OR ELECTRIC FURNACE
American League, even when such an accommodation would world tennis with the simple city t~ one of the chief reasons
REGULAR PRICE ON ANY
seem to be in the best interests of baseball. The Reds can't see statement: "I will not play for his return.
that an American . League problem today easily could be a
any more,tournamen t tennis .
"I just .~ike New Orleans,"
.
..
National League problem tomorrow.
If I had 6een ·meant to play . he s~td . The wife and ktds
. Granted, the American League has done some foolish lhings t .
. God would have love
"MIt · 1 kids d ,1 l'k
and has problems now, but that doesn't mean the National . enms agatn
led me to it "
os
on I e 1o go ·
League should go off and leave it. Bowie Kuhn can see that, but
In the p~st few months, to restaurants. b~t mine love
Bob Howsam either can't or won't. He became so upset over
Court 34 has become de pi
11. And so they hke to come
efforts
to change his thinking about expansion, he walked out.
''
eyh
l"
REGULAR PRICE ON
er~, 00 · ·
Chub Feeney hasn't done much as National League religious and believes that
KODAK TRIMLITE
her newfound faith is more
Ntcklaus made two e~gles
' president to try to work out the ticklish Toronto situation. He
important than tennis courts. Wednesday en route to h1s 65,
seems far more interested in eventually becoming part owner She also suffered a ~eachtng the par..'i Sixth hole
of the San Francisco Giants, Lee MacPhail, on the other hand.
miscarriage two months ago m two and ruruung_m a threehas worked exceptionally hard for the American League.
after
a 10-week pregnancy foot putt and chippmg m from
That's what Monday's meeting in Chicago is all about.
"
It
is
no good trying to play BO feet at the par..I lith ..
Another effort will be made to change the Reds' thinking. If
if
my
heart
is not in it," she
Among those n ~t given
that can be done, the feeling is the Phillies will go along as
said.
"There
might
be
a
lot
of
:much
of a chance t~IS year IS
well.
,
•
mone invol db 1 th 1 .
defendmg cha mpton Billy
And if it isn't done, Bowie Kuhn is going to have to make
Y
ve u. a ts no Casper, who won the event m
another decision . This one will deal with whO has the "rights" good_ and no~. ret~~ement IS 1975 with a 17-under 271
271 North Second
Middleport
to Toronto, and if the commissioner eventually has to make my fmal dectslon.
despite a bout with the flu .
that decision, he's going to get someone awfully mad,. and you
Casper struggled to a 71
can take your pick, six of one or a half dozen of the other,
'
'
Wednesday and immediately
whether it'll be the American or National League.
vetoed his own hopes.
"I'm not striking it too
well,"
he said. "I'm not
You're at your best today when
playing
well
at all and I'm not
challenged . You may even surputting well.
prise you rself with the inApril 23, 1976
Did you ~now !hot
genious methods you 'll use to
"Last year I was sick
In
vo
l
ve
yourse
l
f
with
you
con ci d d on
overcome problems .
coming into New Orleans.
Sizes 2 to 5-7 to 14
orga niza tions lhts year where
"Amana Heal Pump"
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
you can meet new people . Ex This
year,
well- l'm
to your high-cOlt iiec.
Bemice Bede Oool
Something you're hoping for
hemely valuable conta cts can
discouraged aliout my_game.
!ric
baseboard, cablw,
may be closer than you thin k. be made who 'll prove very
For Frldoy, April 23, 1178
I guess you could say I'm
or
electric
furnace and
Keep moving forwa rd . Don 't
helpful in o1her area s of your
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 18)
really sick,"
cut your eiKtr~ bill
lose sigh! of your target.
life.
Cond itions having an effect
way_down?
upOn your welt-being are both
LEO !July 23-Aug. 22) Be alerr
promising and unusual today.
lor career and business oppor·
Andl Enjoy air conditioning. in the summerllmel
.
Others may do more lor you
By Health Tex Size 3 to 6
!unities today. They ma y come
An Amona Heat Pump
than )IOu 'll do lor yourself.
unexpectediy . You 'll have lo
think and act quickly .
.
TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20)
There may be a sudden
VIRGO ~Aug. 2~·Sopt. 22)

00

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
APRIL 23 &amp; 24

'

Sparky's pitchers needed
f U II
•
• •
•
sprmg
tra1nmg.
tune

ABA Playoff Slandlng5
By United Press IAiernalional
Semifinal Rounct-Be5t of 7
N. v. tied Siln Antonio, l -l
.
Ap~ 9 N .Y. 116 1Slln Antonio 101
Ap r 1l San Antonio lOS N. Y; 79
·
Apr 14 Slln Antonio Ill N.Y . 103
Apr 18 N .Y . 110 San Antonio 108
Apr 19 N .Y 110 Safi ·Antonio 108
Apr 21-San Anton io 106 N .Y . 105
Aprlt 1S at New York
CINCINNATI (UPI ) Kentucky tied Denv er 2-2
You'll
have a hard time
Apr IS Depver ItO Kentucky 107
Apr 11 ·Kentucky 138 Denver 11 0 convincing Reds' manager
Apr 19 Kentucky 126 Denver 11.4
Apr 21 -Denver 108 Kentucky 106 Sparky Anderson that the
normal spring training period
April 22·at Denver
Apr il 2S ·at· !&lt;entucky. aft .
of
six weeks is too long.
x -April 28·&amp;1 Denver
And , you can
bet
• · it necessary

Today's

~

!ft.l
s::t.

stport ~a· ~a de

&amp;
[1
~:::::

:l\1

~~~~~N~:~N

II"

Nicklaus

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THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

change ih your social plans today, but it shouldn't upset yo u.
Yo u'll enjoy yourse lf in any

Middleport

You'll be lucky in dealings with
associates or partners today if
you th ink in terms of "we."
Teamwork yields big rewards .

event
'

175 North Second

GEMINI (May 21-Juno '20)

I

The Daily Sentinel

BErrY'S SPECIALI
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ON ALL LADIES'

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\

Street

t;xec. Ed.

•

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LIBRA (Sopl.

23-.0ct.

LAWN DECORATIONS

23) Be

ind ustrious today. Direct your
en.ergies toward areas offering
material relu rns. Your chances
lor accumulation are good .

Hen and
. Chicks

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
The Impression you'll make today wjll be an extremely
favorable one, especia ll y with
th ose you'll meet for the fi rs t

·Duck and
Ducklings

time .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) Be optimistic regard ing the
outcome of eVents today. You
have something ex tra going lor
you th at you may not even be
aware of.
CAPRICORN ~Doc. 22-Jon .
19) You mav be more restless
than usual today . You 'll want to
be ...there the action is. Find
so me friends who feel th e
same , and ha ve a ba ll.

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rates :
De livered by Ca rrier where
available 75 ce n ts ~er
week. By Motor Route. : AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 18)
where carrier service not
Yo1.,1r lin8ncial prospects look
a va i lable , One month,
_rather strong today . Ga,ns are
~ 3 . 25. By mail in Oh io an.d
likely careerwise. as well as
w Va ., One Y e-ar, S22 .00 ;
Six months, Sll.SI); Three , through fami,ly ventures ,
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PISCES !Feb. 20 -Morch 20)
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HEATS AND COOLS

In fact, you save enough on your heating bill
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• Compared to a convent ional electric furnace over on
entire heating season. Minneapolis, MN.--26.58•. Savings ;

. Kan!as City, M0.-·44.13'• ; Philadelphia. PA.-·48.72• ,;
Atlanta, GA.·-55.56', ; Tampa . Fl.--6!.09•, ,
San Francisco, CA, ·-61 .39•, . Sovings will vary with

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�5- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April22, t'976

Cowen~, Celtics win first by 9

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April22, 1976

ABA playoffs

.

LOOK WHAT YOUR JEFFERSO'N •2.00
r

BILL WILL BUY•• DURING THE •2.00 JILt

By CHRis TURKEL
Garden before leaving for
Williams lofted a 24-foot to PUSh the Spurs over the
UPI Sporta Writer
. game,s Sunday and next basket right after Jan van Nets and send the ABA
It Is a . basketball axiom . Wednesday in Buffalo.
Breda Kolff had threaded his semifinal playoff series into a
that as U!e center goes, so
In Ule only other NBA way througtl the Kentucky seventjl and deCiding game
goes the t.eam. Dave Cowens game, Washington dumped
defense for a lying lay-up Saturday night in New York.
and Bob McAdoo both proved Cleveland, 109-93,
with four seconds to play.
Julius Erving, who put on a
in Jarry Pare ..
he wasn 't as far advanced as
that adage Wednesday night
Clem Haskins came off the
The
best-of-seven
series
spectacular
41-point
perfor·
·
The
most
common
cliche
other
Reds pitcHers when the
in oppoait.e fashion .
bench to spark a second- now goes back to Denver for mance for the Nets, fouled
heard
during
spring
training
season·
opened . So, the
The Bcs!on Celtics took the quarter rally and wounrl up
game
five
Thursday
night.
Kenoo
as
he
went
up
for
a
is
''the
hitters
are
ahead
of
went to Gary
assignment
opening game of their with 22 points in leading the
The
sixth
game
will
be
played
jump
shot
and
then
Kenon
the
pitchers."
Nolan.
Eastern Division semifinal Bullets over the Cavaliers,
in
Louisville
Sunday sank the shots.
But, cliche or not, as far as
Anderson isn't convinced
series, 107-98, over the knotting their NBA Eastern afternoon.
despera
lion
three-j)Oint
A
Anderson's
concerned,
Gullett
is rendy to slart, but
Buffalo Braves on the
Division semifinal playoff seLarry Kenon hit two free attempt by Erving missed as
sentiments
are
there's
more
truth
than
Anderson's
he
still
olnn.s
to oitch the 25strength of Cowens' over- ries , 2-2.
throws with three seconds left time ran out.
NBA Ptavon Standings
year-old lefty· in Sunday's
shared by more than a few fiction in the words.
powering performance. The
The Bullets, playing their
By United Preu International
pit chers , like as many as 10
" Take our club." said game against the Erpos'
6-foot-9 redhead scored 30 finest basketball of the bestcont . semif inats-qest ol 7
on
the Reds staff alone.
Sparky after the Reds beat Steve Renko .
.:;o;:-=-~?.!=~:::-:~~;:;.~~~;!;!.:!~)~~~~-::_~,;-s.:;:~:::::*~~::~~:::.~~-=~
Goldtn St. te"ilds Detroit l-0
pointsand.added 17 rebounds, of-seven series, rallied from a ;;:~:;::z~!:=~~~~""='
....~»..~:=:=:::::::::::.:-..:..·:·:ox.:&amp;w~-:;..:v.....-.:~ Apr '20 -Gtdn St 127 Detroil 103
11
"It 's hard on a guy 's ulcer · San Diego 5-4 Wednesday
1 can't" wait any longer,"
;:,'§ April n -at Golden State
7 assists1\tlnd five steals.
second-quarter deficit and ·:·;~;:
when
he
's
wal
ching
hi
s
afternoon.
"As
a
team
,
we're
said Sparky. "Don can't pre·
April 24 -at Detroit , aft .
By C9Dlrast, McAdoo, only broke the game open in the
April 26- at Detroit
pit chers get their spring hitting aro~nd .320 after 10 pare himself pitching on the
the fourth man in NBA third· period wheri Cleveland
X·April 28·1!11 Golden Slate
~~~
training
while they're on the games. That's a lot of · sidelines. He 's gol to get into
history
to win four suffered a dry spell of more
X·Aprll 30-et Detroit ..
X·May
2-at
Go
lden
St
ate
firing
line
and those ligures in thumping. And, if you check games."
consecutive scoring titles , than four minutes.
Phoenix leads Seattle l - 1
U1e
won
and lost columns the box scores, you'll notit'l!
Gullett made his season's
tallied a -111ere 16 points- less
Apr 13-Seattle 102 Phoen ix 99
Haskins, a guard In his 9th ·,·:•.{
:-.·:&gt;~
count,"
said
Anderson
as
the
our
guys
aren't
making
all
debut
Wednesday against San
Apr
15Phoenix
116
Seallle
111
........
than half his average. while year in the NBA and with his :·x·:,
~pr 18- Pho enl~t 103 Seattle 91
Reds
prepared
to
head
for
the
thunder."
Diego
when Sparky called
being
outplayed
and third club, hit 10 of 14 shots :~:;~
·~;f:~~ Apr 2Q.Phoenix 130 Sea !lie 11&lt;1
Montreal
and
a
three-game
Specifically,
Anderson
had
upon
him
for relief duty.
April
25.at
Seatt
le
outhustled under both boards. from the floor in scoring his
x. -Aprit 27 -at Phoen ix
series
with
the
Expos
in
mind
the
current
home
run
·
Gullett
yielded on ly a
Cowens scored 10 points first points of the series.
X-April JO-at Seattle
beginning
Friday
afternoon
binges
of
the
New
York
Mets'
harmless
sing le to John
and made three steals in the
Boston leads Buffalo 1-0
The 109 points were the
Apr 21 · Boston 107 Bu ffalo 96
Dave Kingman and the Phila· Grubb in the seventh but was
decisive' U!ird period, then most scored by the Bullets in
April 23-at Boston
delphia
Phils'·
Mike replaced in the eighth .after
fended off a Buffalo charge the series, which moves back
NEW YORK I UP!) - Baseball used to be divided into two April 25 -at Buffalo, aft.
Sclm1idt.
walking Merv Rettenmund • .
April 28·al Buffalo
late in the game to muscle the to the Richfield, Ohio, parts.
30-at Boston
"Tilere•s no doubt about y[eldin~ a single to D11ve
Celtics over the Braves. Colisewn tonight for game · The New York Yankees constituted one part. They were all- X·April
x -Mav 2·af Buffalo
it. " said Anderson. "The Winfield und throwing two
5-at Boston
,
Boston trailed · only once in No. 5,
conquering, fiercely independent and often highhanded. The x -May
tied
2-1
Cleveland
-Wash
~or short spring training hurt the balls to Doug R•d.er. Rawly
Ule game, 31·29, after the first
In ABA action, Denver other part was made up of the remaining 15 teams. They were Apr I]. Wash 100 Cleve land 95
.(I
pitchers." ,
· Eastwick bailed him oul to.
period.
• Apr 15-Cie ve 80 Washington 79
nipped Kentucky, 103-106, and like. two separate entities.
preserve starter Fredie NorIf
it
hadn't
been
for
the
Apr
17-Cieve
88
washington
76
Jo Jo White had 'J:/ points San Antonio edged New York,
During a period stretching from the early '30s to the mid '60s Apr 21-Was h 109 Cleve·rand 98
·
abbrev
iated
spring
training,
man's
third
straig ht
and John Havlicek added 22 106-105.
when they won 23 American League .peiUlants and 17 wbrld Apri .l 22-al Cleveland
victory.
Don
Gull
ett
undoubtedly
at Wash ington
for Ule Celtics, while Randy
Chuck Williams scored the championships, the Yankees, or Bronx Bombers as they often April 2629-at
Cleveland
would have opened U1e season
His fastball isn't anywhere
Smith's · 'l:l points and Jim winning basket at the buzzer were called, were so overbearing, so downright arrogant at x -April
• -If necessary
for the Reds .
close to U1e one he norrnally
McMillan's 24 kept the as the Nugge\s shaded the times, they were shameful.
By MIKE RABUN
But, because Gullett. didn't throws .
Braves in the game.
Colonels and evened their
Happily, that's no longer the case today .
UPI Sports Writer
WHA Playoff Standings
·work out in Florida prior to
"But I'm hoping it will be
The teams play game No. 2 ABA semifinal playoff at two
Under George Steinbrenner, the Yankees have taken on a By United Press International
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - the opening of training camp, soon," said Sparky,
Friday night at Boston games apiece.
Semifinals--Best of 7
much more human quality . At least th~ Yankees come off as
Having put in a proper
Winnipeg -v5. Calgary
moria Is now, not some kind ol mythical gods.
April 23 -at Winnipeg
amount of time forgetting
Unhappily, though, another club seems int ~nt . on following April 25-at Winnipeg
about the Masters, Jack
28 -at Calgary
the Yankees' former pattern, bent perhaps on'achieving their April
April 10-at Calgary
Nicklaus appears ready to·
old image, on the executive side unfortunately as well as the x .M ay 2·at Winnipeg
deal
with the talented field
.;.at Calgary
Playing side, and the club I'm talking about is the world x.May
that has assembled across
x.May s.ar Winnipeg
•
champion Cincinnati Reds.
Quarter- Fi,als.-Best of 7
the river from the ·French
New Eng l~ads 'ndpls 2·1
One thing should be made clear. This imperious image the
Apr l~ · N ew Eng land 4 tndpts l .Quarter tot the $175,000 New
Reds are projecting emanates straight from upstairs and ha s Apr t 7.1ndpts 4 New England 0 Or leans Open,
Regular Price On All Men and Women's Dress
nothing
to do with either the manager or the players. Nobody is Apr 21-New England 3 l ndpls 0 "I went off and did some
Shoes.
1
23-at New England
more down to earth than Sparky Anderson. He has never April
tarpon fishing after th e
A pril 24-at Indianapolis
forgotten his rools, nor have I ever seen him try to impress x.Aprl l 27-st New England
Masters and sometimes that
x .Aprll29 -st Indianapolis
anybody with his imporlance.
is good for you," Nicklaus
Quarter-Finals-Best of 7
The same thing goes for the Reds' players. Pete Rose, Joe
Hous leads San Diego 1-0
said Wednesday. "ll usually
Morgan, Johnny Bench, Dave Cont'l!pcion, Don Gullett, all of Apr 21-Hous 8 San D iego 6
takes me about a week to
Apri I 23-at Houston
them. They don't high-hat or look down on anybody, even John April
25.at San Diego
come down from a rna jor
"The Couril" Montefusco, when he sometimes gets ·up and April 27.at San Otego
tournament.
x .April 28 -at Houston
lalks about how he's going to throw the qall by them.
" It might take a little more
x -Aprll 10-at Sa n Diego
Now the Cincinnati front office, that';; rlifferent.
x.May l ·at Houston
if I win .... "
JC · if necessary
Bob Howsam, president and chief executive officer of the
Nicklaus fired a sevenReds, may be the most efficient of them all, and Dick Wagner,
underpar 65 Wednesday in
his newly promoted executive vice president, is hardly any
practice over the 7.000-yard,
less so. Any time Dick Wagner says something, he's speaking Aussies' tennis
par-72 Lakewood course and
with the fullaulhority of his boss, and wh~n it comes to running
when play starts today he will
. the Reds, Howsam has virtually the last word.
queen quitting
rate the favorite, as usual,
Because You Are Heating With
The Reds have an !lperation that's so efficient, it hums, and
·· over such notables as No. 1
they know it. So maybe it's only natl!ral they feel like flexing
MELBOURNE Australia money winner Hubert Green.
North Second
their muscle a bit.
Middleport
(IJ.PI) - Saying her heart is second leading money winner
One of the places the Reds are doing ·this is in the area of
not in it, Margaret Court, Be nCrensha,w and the wmner
expansion.
queen of Australian tennis of last week s Tournament of
Howsam and Ruly Carpenter, the Phillies' president, were has put away her racquets fo; Champio,ns, Don January.
• ELECTRIC BASEBOARD HEAT
the only two to vote against the National League expanding, the last time
Nicklaus won on this course
• ELECTRIC CABLE HEAT
and that of course is their perfect right, but the Reds always
'In Perth t~ay s)Je ended two years ago .and said his
seem to be dead set ~ga ins! any kind of accommodation for the her 17 years a'l the top of fondness for thts ~ld, tourist
• OR ELECTRIC FURNACE
American League, even when such an accommodation would world tennis with the simple city t~ one of the chief reasons
REGULAR PRICE ON ANY
seem to be in the best interests of baseball. The Reds can't see statement: "I will not play for his return.
that an American . League problem today easily could be a
any more,tournamen t tennis .
"I just .~ike New Orleans,"
.
..
National League problem tomorrow.
If I had 6een ·meant to play . he s~td . The wife and ktds
. Granted, the American League has done some foolish lhings t .
. God would have love
"MIt · 1 kids d ,1 l'k
and has problems now, but that doesn't mean the National . enms agatn
led me to it "
os
on I e 1o go ·
League should go off and leave it. Bowie Kuhn can see that, but
In the p~st few months, to restaurants. b~t mine love
Bob Howsam either can't or won't. He became so upset over
Court 34 has become de pi
11. And so they hke to come
efforts
to change his thinking about expansion, he walked out.
''
eyh
l"
REGULAR PRICE ON
er~, 00 · ·
Chub Feeney hasn't done much as National League religious and believes that
KODAK TRIMLITE
her newfound faith is more
Ntcklaus made two e~gles
' president to try to work out the ticklish Toronto situation. He
important than tennis courts. Wednesday en route to h1s 65,
seems far more interested in eventually becoming part owner She also suffered a ~eachtng the par..'i Sixth hole
of the San Francisco Giants, Lee MacPhail, on the other hand.
miscarriage two months ago m two and ruruung_m a threehas worked exceptionally hard for the American League.
after
a 10-week pregnancy foot putt and chippmg m from
That's what Monday's meeting in Chicago is all about.
"
It
is
no good trying to play BO feet at the par..I lith ..
Another effort will be made to change the Reds' thinking. If
if
my
heart
is not in it," she
Among those n ~t given
that can be done, the feeling is the Phillies will go along as
said.
"There
might
be
a
lot
of
:much
of a chance t~IS year IS
well.
,
•
mone invol db 1 th 1 .
defendmg cha mpton Billy
And if it isn't done, Bowie Kuhn is going to have to make
Y
ve u. a ts no Casper, who won the event m
another decision . This one will deal with whO has the "rights" good_ and no~. ret~~ement IS 1975 with a 17-under 271
271 North Second
Middleport
to Toronto, and if the commissioner eventually has to make my fmal dectslon.
despite a bout with the flu .
that decision, he's going to get someone awfully mad,. and you
Casper struggled to a 71
can take your pick, six of one or a half dozen of the other,
'
'
Wednesday and immediately
whether it'll be the American or National League.
vetoed his own hopes.
"I'm not striking it too
well,"
he said. "I'm not
You're at your best today when
playing
well
at all and I'm not
challenged . You may even surputting well.
prise you rself with the inApril 23, 1976
Did you ~now !hot
genious methods you 'll use to
"Last year I was sick
In
vo
l
ve
yourse
l
f
with
you
con ci d d on
overcome problems .
coming into New Orleans.
Sizes 2 to 5-7 to 14
orga niza tions lhts year where
"Amana Heal Pump"
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
you can meet new people . Ex This
year,
well- l'm
to your high-cOlt iiec.
Bemice Bede Oool
Something you're hoping for
hemely valuable conta cts can
discouraged aliout my_game.
!ric
baseboard, cablw,
may be closer than you thin k. be made who 'll prove very
For Frldoy, April 23, 1178
I guess you could say I'm
or
electric
furnace and
Keep moving forwa rd . Don 't
helpful in o1her area s of your
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 18)
really sick,"
cut your eiKtr~ bill
lose sigh! of your target.
life.
Cond itions having an effect
way_down?
upOn your welt-being are both
LEO !July 23-Aug. 22) Be alerr
promising and unusual today.
lor career and business oppor·
Andl Enjoy air conditioning. in the summerllmel
.
Others may do more lor you
By Health Tex Size 3 to 6
!unities today. They ma y come
An Amona Heat Pump
than )IOu 'll do lor yourself.
unexpectediy . You 'll have lo
think and act quickly .
.
TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20)
There may be a sudden
VIRGO ~Aug. 2~·Sopt. 22)

00

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
APRIL 23 &amp; 24

'

Sparky's pitchers needed
f U II
•
• •
•
sprmg
tra1nmg.
tune

ABA Playoff Slandlng5
By United Press IAiernalional
Semifinal Rounct-Be5t of 7
N. v. tied Siln Antonio, l -l
.
Ap~ 9 N .Y. 116 1Slln Antonio 101
Ap r 1l San Antonio lOS N. Y; 79
·
Apr 14 Slln Antonio Ill N.Y . 103
Apr 18 N .Y . 110 San Antonio 108
Apr 19 N .Y 110 Safi ·Antonio 108
Apr 21-San Anton io 106 N .Y . 105
Aprlt 1S at New York
CINCINNATI (UPI ) Kentucky tied Denv er 2-2
You'll
have a hard time
Apr IS Depver ItO Kentucky 107
Apr 11 ·Kentucky 138 Denver 11 0 convincing Reds' manager
Apr 19 Kentucky 126 Denver 11.4
Apr 21 -Denver 108 Kentucky 106 Sparky Anderson that the
normal spring training period
April 22·at Denver
Apr il 2S ·at· !&lt;entucky. aft .
of
six weeks is too long.
x -April 28·&amp;1 Denver
And , you can
bet
• · it necessary

Today's

~

!ft.l
s::t.

stport ~a· ~a de

&amp;
[1
~:::::

:l\1

~~~~~N~:~N

II"

Nicklaus

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change ih your social plans today, but it shouldn't upset yo u.
Yo u'll enjoy yourse lf in any

Middleport

You'll be lucky in dealings with
associates or partners today if
you th ink in terms of "we."
Teamwork yields big rewards .

event
'

175 North Second

GEMINI (May 21-Juno '20)

I

The Daily Sentinel

BErrY'S SPECIALI
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ON ALL LADIES'

Spring &amp;Summer
DRESS SHOES

\

Street

t;xec. Ed.

•

ROBERT HOEFLICH

WITH THIS COUPON

298
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CROSS

. . ed
Pnm

t,1ARGUERITE'S SHOES

.

,

2157.

Pomeroy ·

.

Second ctass pos.tage
paid at Pomeroy, Ohib .
National
adverflslr,g
rep resenta tiv e War'tf .
Grif fith Company , Inc .,
Bottinelli &amp; Ga ll agher Dlv ,
157 Th ird Ave ., N ew York ,

N.Y. 10017.

!FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY)

102 E. Main

City Edifor
Publish ed daily except
Saturday by The O h10
Va ll ey Publi shi n g Com .
pany ,
111
Co urt
51.,
Pomeroy , Ohio
45769 .
Business Office Phone 992 .
2156. Editorial Phone 992 ·

.

LIBRA (Sopl.

23-.0ct.

LAWN DECORATIONS

23) Be

ind ustrious today. Direct your
en.ergies toward areas offering
material relu rns. Your chances
lor accumulation are good .

Hen and
. Chicks

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
The Impression you'll make today wjll be an extremely
favorable one, especia ll y with
th ose you'll meet for the fi rs t

·Duck and
Ducklings

time .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) Be optimistic regard ing the
outcome of eVents today. You
have something ex tra going lor
you th at you may not even be
aware of.
CAPRICORN ~Doc. 22-Jon .
19) You mav be more restless
than usual today . You 'll want to
be ...there the action is. Find
so me friends who feel th e
same , and ha ve a ba ll.

Subscr i ption
rates :
De livered by Ca rrier where
available 75 ce n ts ~er
week. By Motor Route. : AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 18)
where carrier service not
Yo1.,1r lin8ncial prospects look
a va i lable , One month,
_rather strong today . Ga,ns are
~ 3 . 25. By mail in Oh io an.d
likely careerwise. as well as
w Va ., One Y e-ar, S22 .00 ;
Six months, Sll.SI); Three , through fami,ly ventures ,
•nonths , S7.00 Els&amp;where
PISCES !Feb. 20 -Morch 20)
·.; 26.00 year J ~!x months
13 .50 ; th re e m'onths , $7 .50 .
All you II haVe Ia do to get full
ubscripllon pr ice lncl uc:tes
suppnrtlor
your plans today is
unday Ti rne s.sentlnet .
to shn w a httle in llifl live t ead

on

S•Fintly b.. ~tltul. l!n
01' 01.11 . wtlit• tty

indo«•

Bird Baths
Flamingos
Pheasants
Chipmunks

,.,... pllrtic:.

FLOWER BULBS

HEATS AND COOLS

In fact, you save enough on your heating bill
to pay for air conditioning costs in the summertime!
• Compared to a convent ional electric furnace over on
entire heating season. Minneapolis, MN.--26.58•. Savings ;

. Kan!as City, M0.-·44.13'• ; Philadelphia. PA.-·48.72• ,;
Atlanta, GA.·-55.56', ; Tampa . Fl.--6!.09•, ,
San Francisco, CA, ·-61 .39•, . Sovings will vary with

climate and weather conditions .

to,.,,,.,,

Look
today
for the IIICijf saving Ideas
of

For Spring Planting Nowl
Make Pomeroy Your Shopping Center

COOliNG• HEATING

BEN~FRANKLIN
PHONE
m -J498

200-202 East.Main St.
POMEROY, OHIO

Use Our Convenient lay-Away Pian
Open Friday Nigh1 Tile- Sat, Ti I 5

.FOREMAN &amp; ABBOn
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

�.
7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April22, 1976

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April22 , 1976

Star Garden Club
entertains Athens
Df.XTP.R - Miss Hazel
Henson and Mrs. C. E. Stout
hosted the Star Ga rden Club
at the home of Mrs. C. E.
Stout when they entertained
the Good Luck Garden Club

Radckrn . The door prize was
won by Mrs. Robert Holliday .
Daffodils, Easter nowers
and tulips were brought by
Mrs . No rman Will, Mrs .
Robert Holliday and Mrs. G.
from AU1ens ret:ently .
A. Radekin .
Therr were 20 members · The hostesses, Mrs. Stout
&lt;mel fou r helpers ff.om the and Mi ~s Henlion served a
Good Lu ck Club and 10 lun cheo n
of
fan cy
members and four b'llests sa ndw ic hes, hot chicken
fr om the Star Garden Club. casserole, vegetable s:liad,
C.uests were Mrs. Fern deviled eggs, jello salad,
Stansbury , Mrs. Nellie Vale, cuocakes rninls nuts and
'
,
Mrs. Loretta Stout and coifcc. '
d&lt;IUghter .Jill.
Hcd and white checked
The Good Luck Club read tablecloth with center·pieces
articles and poems on of red tulips and gree n and
springtime and Easler. They white cuonymus decorated
sang " E~ster Parade" and the table.
" He Has the Whole World in
His Hands." Star's therapy
chairman Mrs. Orion Nelson
directed a workshop in
BACK'HOME
making wall p'iaqucs using
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Smith ,
wood chi ps, wa lnu ts and Denean Renee and Ralph of
dried fl owers and pipe Lincoln
Park,
Mich .,
cleaners. Besides tlie plaques returned home Surday after
.e,lch member was given an spending the Easter weekend
!"aster basket ancl cupcake to here wi th their parents, Mr .
take home.
and Mrs. John Beaver, Nye
Dw·ing the Sta r Garden Ave. and Mr. and Mrs. Wetzel
Cl ub 's busine ss meeti ng, Fields, New Haven , W. Va.
Mrs.
Pauline
Atkin s They also visited Mr. and
volunteered to purcha se Mrs. Keith Curtis and Gayia
shrub bery for chu rches of Middleport ; Mr. and Mrs..
represented in the club. The John Deaber, J D. and Doug,
Rutland Friend ly liard en · F_ive Points, and Mr . and
Club invited the Star Club to Mrs. Randy Smith , Marietta .
an open meeting at the
Rutland Church of Christ
April 28. Mrs. Pat Holter will
VISIT GAHANNA
Mr s. Eve lyn Smith of
demonstrate psychedeli c
arran ge m ~nts.
Syracuse and Mrs .· Clyde
Due to illness, Mrs. Gra ce Saunders, of Ga llipolis spent
Turner will be unable to host last weekend with Mrs.
the May meeting. It will now Saunders ' dau ghter. Mrs .
be held at the home of Mr's. AIdo ·rSue) Je ff ers and
Ruby Hailtd ay and Mrs. fam ily, Gahan na. They went
Virgi l Atkins,
especially for the wedding of
The traveling prize donated -Mrs. Jeffers' son. Kenton and
by Mrs. Lawrence Chapman Miss Jinx. Geroux , also of
was brought by Mrs. G. A. Gahanna .

SPRING

SALE
LINOLEUM

7.95 YD.

1

- CONTINUED_:

GREAT SELECTION
STILL

ONLY
YD.

FOR

SPRING ~
· -~~

~~r.~~-~~ ... .. ~-. ~495
MANY ROOM SIZE
CARPET REMNANTS!

SEE OUR FULL LINE OF

WALL COVERING NEEDS
FOR YOUR SPRING
REMODELING NEEDS!
-ONE DAY SERVICE-

Corena Rhodes awarded by
Southern High School band
NH Se tting For AJewell!
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
'f1lis sununer f'n1 going: to drive cross-Country in my van .
My parents have given their consent if I don't go alone. So I
asked Jewell to go with me. But she's 16, and her folks think
this is carrying things a little too far .
Since we're in love and have already had sex, I can 't see
their reaSoning, but they hand us a flat "No 1" And my folks
'
are also in an uproar.
Should we just take orr together anyway when school is
out ~ - UNCERTAIN AT 18
·DEAR 18:
You'II be in troubl e with everyone, not to mention the law,
if you sneak orr with Jewell. ·A summer spent hiding yoW' 16year-&lt;&gt;id girlfriend from the police won't exactly be a piece of
cake ..Think of the cunsequences, and find another van partner.
~ SUE

+++

NOTE FROM HELEN : And be sure he's male ! ... Or you 'll
be in txouble with Jewell too 1

+++

DEAR RAP :
There's this neat guy that all the girls in my crowd like, but
he 's very shy,
He has started paying attention to me, I guess because I'm
easy to talk to. That 's great, except if !let it go on, my girl
friends will ali get mad at me; in fact, most of the ninth grade
girls would be jealous.
Should I risk bein g girifriendless just to get a great
boyfriend' - WORRIED
DEAR WORRIED
How many of your girl friends would turn a great fellow off
~ if he preferred her and she truly liked him - just because
others in their crowd weren't so lucky '
So be glad you 're th e lucky one and let the girls adjust.
They will, they will. - HELEN

+++

DEAR WORRIED:
Here's another angle: If AI-L you girls tW'ned thisboy
down out of "loyalty" tu one another, where would that leave
HTM '

JOSHUA JORDAN

Birthday
1A
party ·he /tU
Several friends and
relatives' were present for the
first birthday celebration of
Joshua Perry Jordan, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan,
(the former Kathy Gilkey J of
Carpenter. His birthday was
on April 16.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. ClintOn Gilkey, Albany,
and Mr . and Mrs. Mendal
Jo~,.. carpentk Mrs. Ava
Gilkey , Harrisonville and
Lincoln Russell, Pomeroy,
are great-g randparents.

Davey Dodson
hosts festivity

FRANCIS
FLORIST

Out in the cold, wondering why he's so unpopular - that's
where.
Davey Dodson hosted an
Give the guy a break and let him know you 're interested. Easter party on Good Friday
at his home in Middleport.
- SUJo:
+++
An E~ster egg hurt was
RAP :
held in the yard with the prize.
I'm 15 and would like to go to parties and dances with my going to Melissa Downing.
boyfriend,' who used to smoke pot and drink, but" doesn 't any The door prize was won by
mon· Dad says the places he wants to ta ke me are Bryan Reeves. Other guests
"dangerous" because we'd gel exposed to dope and booze, and were Timmy an d Mindy
when you're aroWJd them, you do them .
Harri s, Kimberly Deem,
We're mature enough to say , ''No!" Plea se convince Traci Wright and Sco tt
my Dad. - JENN IFER
Ogdin.
JENNIFER :
Refreshments included a
Before I answer your question, I'd have to check out those cake baked in the shape of a
parties and dances. They might be more than you and your b.!. cross , ice cream·, potato chips
can handle. - HELEN
and Kool-Aid. Assisting with
+++
the refreshments were.
AWORD FROM.SliE : You ca n expect a little dope and booze • Davey's mother, Mrs. Patsy
at almost any high schoo)"type party, and learning to say "No " Ogdin and Carol Ault.
at the right time is part of growing up . But if it's more than a
little, then your Dad is right. Look for another crowd.
In 1974, a Pan Am 707
jetliner crashed on the island
of Bali, killing alll07 aboard .

Friendly Circle names
committees for projects
Committees to help with
the moth er - daughter
program and the Big Bend
Regatta food project were
named during a meeting of
the Friendly Circle Tuesday
night at Trinity Church .
The mother - daughter
program will be held on
Friday, May H . Members
were reminded of a rummage
sale on May 4 and 5. Cards
were signed for Mrs. Phil
Globokar. a patient at Holzer
Medical Center , for Mrs.
Lena Huber, Hallifax, Mass.

Family has
Easter visitors
STIVERSVILLE - Easter
guests of Mrs. Allen Brewer
and David were Mrs. Marilvn
Beall , Colum bus, who~e
bir thday was celebra ted
April 17, Mrs. Clyde Close
and Roy, Wa~ford ; Kenneth
Mark
Be a!
Brewer,
Columbus; Harold Brewer:
Long Bottom; Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar llrewer, Portland ;
Mark Goines, Westerville,
and Miss Rita Close .
Miss Close recen tly
retW'ned from a vacation to
England where she spent two
weeks with her sister and
brother-in·law, Sgt. and Mrs.
Robbi n Ressiriger and
daughter, Rebecca. Among
the many historical places
she visited was Weslminster
Abbey. This was her second
trip to England , having made
a trip there about two years
ago.
ME ET POSTPONED
A meeting of the past
matron s of Evangelin e
Chapter, OE.S. scheduled for
Friday night has been
poslponed WJtil April 30 ai the
Middleport Masoni c Temple.

and for Mrs . Ethel
Williamson at the Autumn
Years Nursing Center at
Sabina.
Mrs . W. H. Perrin thanked
the group for potted plants
given her at Easter. Miss
Mar¥ Virgin ia Reibel
presided at the business
meeting with Mrs. Leonard
Jewell reading the minutes.
Mrs. Pearl Mora's program
"When We Worship " was
based on Psalm 150 from the
study book on "The Psalms."
Why we worship, how and
when were discussed with the
answers being fourd in the
Psalms. Atribute to spring in
scripture and poetxy was the
devotional topic'used by Mrs.
Mora.
.
A spring motif was carried
out in the refreshment table
decorations with salad and
sandwi ches being served by
Mrs. Thomas Yourg and Mrs.
James Fugate. The 14
members present were given
favors
of
miniature
arrangements of everlasting
flowers.
:::·:·:·:::·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·

DATE SET
CHESTER- The annual
Ches ter High School
Alumni banquet and dance
has been set for June 5 at
6:30 p.m. at the Chester
Grade School.
Reunion classes of 1916,
1921, 1926, 1931, 1936, 1941,
1946, 1951, 1956 will be
honored. The Chester PTA
will serve the dinner which
will be followed by round
and square dancing
beginning at 9 p.m. with
music by the Khord Kings.
Reservations are to be sent
tu Es ther Ridenour,
Chester. Ohio 45720.

At the recent annual band participated in the district's Morris, and the junior high
banquet at ·Southern High solo and ensemble festivals clarinet section which inSchool Corena Rhodes was and received school colored cluded Carrie Guinther, Meg
named outstanding senior bookmarks: Molly Fisher, Amberger, Carol Gibbs,
band member and was Corena ' Rhodes , Bobbi Della Johnson and Armintha
awarded the John Philip Chapman, Carol Morris , Holter.
Seated at the head table
Sousa Award and Certificate Brenda Lawrence, Lois
by band director Mrs. · Bailey, Penny Smith, Usa were Mrs. Joy Norris, band
Warner, Barb Theiss, Jaye director, Norris , James
Joy Norris.
Corena is the daughter of Ord, Brice Hart, Marie Adams, high school principal,
Mrs. Irene Rhodes of Dorcas. Pickens, Becky Crow, Brian Mrs. Adams , Molly Fisher,
She ls,a first chair player on Johnson, Richard FW'bee and ~ky Harris and Corena
Rhodes, senior band memher main instrument, alto Carl Morris.
bers.
Members of the pep band
saxophone, and has parThe tables were decorated
ticipated in the marching, who received treble clef pins
with
arrangements made by
concert, stage and pep bands were Becky Harris, Corena
the
band
boosters and a
Rhodes,
Molly
Fisher,
Jaye
and at solo and ensemble
festivals starting in jWJior Ord, Heidi Al!hley, Becky smorgasbord ·was providby
the
parhigh where she received Crow, Brenda Lawrence, ed
superior and excellent Suzy Scarberry , Bobbi ents. In keeping with
ratings.
Chapman and Lois Bailey. the -bicentennial the room
Students who participated The above awards were was decorated in red, white
in the band for one ful l year presented by Becky Harris, and blue. Molly Fisher offered puyer before the
were presented letters. They band president.
were Suzy Scarberry, Darla · Mrs. Norris was presented banquet was served.
White, Vicki Boso, Candy with a corsage by a the band
Riffle, Darlene Duncan, Carl and a red, white and blue
Morris, Becky Koehler, floral arrangement by the
Your "Extra Touch "
Wilma Cook, Donna Hub- band boosters.
Florist Since 1957
After the presentation of
bard, Sonja Hili, Mary Beth
Obltz, Paula Wolfe , Becky awards various ensembles
Rhodes , Melissa Yonker, were presented. These inDeanna White, Crista Beegle, cluded the high school
Armintha Holter, Della clarinet txio consisting of
Johnson , Tina Gibbs and Molly Fisher, Carol Morris
and Barb Theiss ; jurior high
Mary Beth Slavin.
Students who had an at- trumpet trio, Cindy Warden,
PH. 992-2644
tendance record of 90 per cent Donna Rice and Mary Beth
at all summer and after Obitz; the junior high
JS2 E . Main, Pomeroy
•Your FTD Florist
school practices and events txornbone trio ," Brian Johnaccumulated merits for each son, Richard FW'bee andfarl
and receil•ed bars, patches
and certificates. Th ese
studen ts were Corena
Rhodes, Becky Harris, Molly
Fisher, Alisa Harris, Heidi
Ashley, Anna Frank, Bobbi
Chapman, Lois Bailey, Jaye
Ord, Barb Theiss, Darla
White, Becky Crow, Suzy
Scarberry, Carol Morris,
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
Lisa Warner, Penny Smith,
Brice Hart, Marie Pickens,
7:30 EACH EVENING
Richard Furbee, Brian
Johnson , Carrie Guinther,
SUNDAY-10 AM &amp;6 PM
Meg Amberger, Amy Fisher,
Cindy Warden , Donna Rice ,
Armintha Holter, Della
Johnson , Carl Morris, Becky
Koehler , Wilma Cook, Becky
Rhodes, Paula Wolfe, Sonja
POMEROY, OHIO 200 W. MAIN
Hill , Mary Beth Obilz ,
Deanna White and Melissa
Yonker.
The following students

GOSPEL MEETING
APRIL 19 THRU 25

WESTSIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST
SPEAKER: HARRY E. RICE

REPORT OF CONDITION
Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK
in the state of Ohio, at th e close of business on March 31, 1976 published in response to call
":'ade by Comptxoiler of the Currency, under title -12, United States Code, Section 161. ,
National Bank Region Number Four ·
Charter number 9815
--.--- State of ReSburces and Liabilities
Thousands
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - • . . • . • . . . . . . 492 .- - U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - . - - • • . . - . . • . . 1653
Obligations of States and political subdivisions - - - • • • • . . • . . 264
Other bonds, notes, and debentW'es - - - - - - - - - - . • . • . • . • . . . .• .•. . 5
Federal reserve stock and corporate stock - - - • • • • . . . . • • • • 8
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
urder agreements to resell - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • 100
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) - - - - - - - - - 4929
Less : Reserve for possible loan losses - - - - - . - - - • 86
Loans, Net - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . • 4843
Bank premises, furniture and fixtW'es, and
other assets representing bank premises - - - - - - - - - - . . . 21
--+--- Other assets - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . . • • • • . . . . . . 3
TOTAL ASSETS - - - · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . 7389 - - Demand deposits of individuals, prthshps., and corps - • • . . • . • • • .. . . 1445
Ill
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
prtnshps., and corps · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . 4760
DepOsits of United States Government - - - - - - - - - - . • • • IB
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - - - - - • . 491
I ll
Certified and officers' checks - - - - - - . - • - • • - - • . . . 54
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . 6768
Total demand deposits - - - - - - - - - • . • • 2008
Total time and savings deposits - - - - - - - . - • 4760
TOTAL LIAjliUTIES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures ) - - - • 6768 - - Common stock
a. No. shares authorized 5000
b. No. shares outstanding 5000
(par value ) - - - - - - - . . 125
:::) i
Surplus - - - - - - - - -· - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . 125
Undivided
profits
- - - - - - - . . 371
.... u
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL • - - - - • - - - •• - . . • - . • • - - . . 621
- +-- TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL - - - - - - - • . . 7389
CC
Average for 15 or 30 calendar days ending with call date :
--Q
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . 478
Z
Fed. funds sold and securities purchased
CC
under agreements to resell - - - - . . . . . . . • • . . - - - -150
111:
Totalloaris - - - . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . • - - - - 5259
Total deposits - - - .1 - . . . . . . • . • . • ----6797 '

.-..
....

.--.

.,.... .cc
- ...
cc

O'cc

0

!

STORE HOURS
.
.
.

tr'' ~'~s~~TiT;~,,~

Teens present sunrise ·servic~

~

The Teens for Christ at the
Rock
Sprirgs
United
MethodistChurchhad charge
of the sur rise service Easter
morning. Charlene Goeglein
was at the piano for the
prelude with Tracey Jeffers
and Linda Eason playing
trumpets. .
.
The t!llll to worship was
extended by Brent Sisson,
Miss Goeglein played "Let
There Be Peace," and Paul
Goeglein led the responsive
reading. Prayer was by Mrs.
Beuna Grueser , and Connie
Radford and Karen Sloan
sang "There is a Sweet Spirit
in This Place."
Re a di ng s
we r e
"Celebration Q( Hope ,"
Tracey Jeffers ;. "A Garden
for a Troubled World," Pam
Evans; "Risen Lord" by
Susan Zirkle, "Thanks" by
Christy Evans; "The End
and the Beginning" by Brent
Sisson. A playlet, " The
Nails" .was narrated by Jim
Jeffers. Mrs. Lottie Leonard
gave the benediction. Mrs .
Thelma Jeffers is leader.
The children' s program
was presented at the morning
worsliip service with Angie
Sloan giving the welcome and
the recitations from the
nursery class including "The
Time" by Tammy Eblin ,
"Thanks for Coming" by Tim
Jeffers·, "Her Gifts" bv Jav
Humphreys; "My Friend'' bv
'
Marsha King·, "So Small" by
Neal Richmond ; "Surshine
Fl
.. b u
D
Y· sa
arst;
, owers
'"H
Easter"
by
Amy
Goeglein
;
e G'tves, " by Tara Humph.

~;

potluck dinner

i

~;

ca·Iendar .I:
·:

··

THURSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Women 's
Circles of the B. H. Sanborn Rhoda 'Hall, Mrs , Carol Fellowship of the Churches of
Missionary Society of the · Granda! and Mrs. An\hony. Christ ThW'sday at Dexter
Middleport First Baptist
The EJecta Circle Church of Christ, 7:30 p.m.
ChW'ch met Tuesday night at members voted to use their Talent arid craft ni~ht.
the ChW'ch for a poUuck treasW'y balance to pW'chase
REVIVAL in progress this
dinner. The meeting marked Items for the layette to be week at United Pentecostal
tlu! conclusion of work for the taken to the Baptist Women's ·-• Church Third Ave. Midyear by the circles and 'their Conference whichwill be held dleport: 7:30 p.m. ~ighUy.
reorganization for the 1976-77 m June. Mrs. Alwllda Werner Public Is invited.
year of activity.
opened the meeting with
TWIN CITY Shrinettes
Plans were made for the prayer
and
e~tended '7:30 p.m. ThW'sday at sociai
annual mother-daughter g~eetlngs to those having rooms of Columbus and
banquet to be held at the birthdays. A letter was read Southern Ohio Electxic Co
chW'ch May 3. Alter the from
Richard
Kane , Middleport.
·
.,
poUuck each of the circles scholarshlp . st~dent for the .$5
MIDDLEPORT CUB Scout
met separately to report on sent him for Easter. Reports Pack 245, 7 p.m. ThW'sday,
work dW'ing the past month were given on the shut-in F .e eney-Be nn etl 128,
and to decide on the Easter projects.
American Legion home;
disposition of the remainder
Mrs · Beulah White had the pmew
· ood derby to be held .
of money in the treasW'y.
love gift dedication . AtMrs . Ka I'le Anth ony te nd'mg were Mrs . p ear 1 Rive rview Garden Club
resl'ded
at the Love Joy Hoffman' • Mrs · Eliza b.eth ThW'sday, 8 p.m. at the horne
P
Circle meeting · Mrs. HeIen Searles, Mrs. Wh1·te • Mr• s. of Mrs. Donald Myers with
•--belle w·rnebrenner, Mr s. Mrs. Gene Young, co-hostess.
BOdl'mer gave devo t'Ions ""'
usrng ·Matt. 6. Thank- Freda Hood , Mr s. 1.owse
·
Mrs. David Chadwell will be
honored with a stork shower.•
You not.es wer·e read Dav1·s and Mrs. Emer.
from Miss Emma MatAt the meet1'ng of ·the
OAPSE meeting ThW'sda)',
thews, Mrs. Eloise Hayes Dorcas Circle, a report was 8 p.m. at Southern High
and William Farley for given on a visit by Mrs. Sarah School.
Easter remembrances. It Fowler, Mrs. Elizabeth
SPECIAL meeting of Shade
was noted that the circle had Slavin, Mrs. Freda Edwards, Ri"er Lodge 453• F&amp;AM,
provided refreshments for Mrs. Nan Davis and Michl Chester, at 7:30 ThUI'sday.
the Monday night Bible study King to the Arcadia NW'sing Work in the' E.A. and F.C.
group. Agift had been sent to Home to see Mrs. Dana Degrees. Ail Master Masons
·
Hamm , a rnem ber of the invited.
one of the men at th e Me1gs
County Infirmary on hi's chW'ch. An Easter' rernemFRIDA¥
·
.
thd.
•f
th
bal
br
tak
to
h
MIDDLEPORT
Masonic
bIf ay. "" or e ance
anoe was
en
er. Lod
of money in the treasW'y, the · Other shut-ins were also
ge 363, F&amp;AM, 7 p.m.
Fri.day. Work in the Master
circle voted to send it to remembe· re d at Easter.
All Master
· th
The baIance rn
Richard Kane, Ohio Baptist
e txeasury Masons ·Degree.
v
·ted.
.
scholarship student at Judson will be sent to Richard Kane . Masons 111 1
College.
, Mrs. Slavin had prayer to
ROLLING HILLS Chapter
th
ti
th
838,
Parents Without PartAt the circle meeting were open e mee ng wi Mrs.
Mrs. Ethel Hughes, Mrs. Frances Smart giving ners , Friday, 7:30 p.m. at
Sara Owen, Mrs. Marjorie devotions from Matt. 28. Grace United Methodist
WalbW'n, Mrs. Bodlmer, Miss Others attending were Iva ChW'ch. Dr . Charlotte Car-·
Turnerand Florence Rhodes . ver, chairman of the
education department at Rio
Grande College, will speak on
"YoW' Dreams , What Do
They Mean ?" Meeting will be
•
in the God Squad room . Use
Cedar St. exit. A TaW'us
statewide
attention
as
being
In place of the regular
monthly. meeting, the South the largest office territorially birthday party for thos~ with
Central Ohio Preservation in Ohio, and first office to May birthdays will be held at
Society wi.th heaaquarters in successfully conduct the Ohio 9:30 p.m. in the chW'ch
the General Moore House, Inventory with volunteer task gymnasium. Refreshments
Piketon, announces that its forces. More than 150 and danCing will be enjoyed .
offices will be open to the volunteers trained in
WEEKEND MEETING at
public during the three days research, architectural Long Bottom Christian
of the Dogwood Festival, history and description and ChW'ch Friday, SatW'day and
photographic techniques, are Sunday,
April 23, 24, 25.
7:30 nightly .
The Preservation Office of CW'renUy working in a 20 Evangelist, Joe O'Coll. Bruce
the Society, directed by Atty. county area of southern Ohio. Srni th is pastor .
The Ohio Inventory is being
David Brook, will have forms
SATURDAY
and instructions available to conducted by the Ohio
JITNEY SUPPER
Society
in Syracuse School Saturday
those interested in listing Historical
cooperation
with
sponsoring
their homes or buildings on
·sponsored by P.T.A. Serving
the national register of historical societies and begins at 4 p.m.
historic places, or on the Ohio colleges across the state.
SOUP SUPPER, Letart,
State Inventory. Mrs. Joseph Ohio now has four regional
W. Va. Grade School
VanMeter, SCOPS coor- preservation offices, in
beginning at 5 p.m.
qlnator and Ohio advisor for Cleveland, Dayton, CinSatW'day with sandwiches,
the National Trust for cinnati and Piketon. New
dessert and beverages and
Historic Preservation, and offices are being located in
an auction at 7:30 p.m.
1\'Irs. Thomas Williams , Toledo, Tiffin and Kent. The
Sponsored by school PTO.
chainnan of the Pike County results of the Ohio Inventory
SMORGASBORD Sunday,
Ohio Inventory and National will be used in long range 11 :30 a.rn.to I p.m. at SouthRegister Task ·Force will be planning by state agencies. It ern High School by Racine ·
present to explain the pur- will also enable comrmmiiies PTO. $2, adults ; $1, children;
poses of the mventory and in south central Ohio to meal will be turkey, ham and
their
historic meatloaf.
~nswer questions concerning assess
resources for purposes of
the inventory forms .
The preservation office of economic development elected were Catherine
SCOPS
has
received through toW'ism.
Wolfe , president; Joyce
White, vice president; Lynn
Crow, secretary, and Dee
Spencer, lreasW'er. They will
be installed in May. Mrs.
Violetta Arnott wa s named
social chairman.
The outside basketball
coW't was again discussed
and it was decided to check
Supplies for use in tornado 14. It was noted that a clock infu the cost of having it
drills were approved for had been purchased for the concreted. Roger Roush's
purchase by the Letart Falls classroom
of
James fifth grade won the room
PTO at a meeting Monday Wickline, and that one had count. '
night at the school.
been ordered for the
The PTO authorized the auditoriwn. New basketball
purchase of a transistor uniforms have also been
radio, two flashlights, two ordered for the fifth grade.
dry cell batteries, and a good
Special thanks was exOrst aid kit. In addition they tended to Betty Morris for the
furnishing soft assistance she gave with the
for field day on May Easttr
New officers

SCOPS to be open

THE BEAUTIFUL LOOK
FOR '76

I, John T. Wolfe, President of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this report of condition is true and
correct to the best of my·knowledge and belief.

Co-ordinated
crushed
velvet bedspreads.
draperies and furniture
throws, orange. green.
red, brown. gold.

We,_ th~ undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resoW'ces and
habrht!es· We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the best of our knowle e and
belief 1s true and correct.

Mon ., Tues .• Wed. &amp; Sat.-8:30til5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

Fre~ia n~

Co-ordinated quilted English Rose
design bedspreads. queen, full, twin
also matching shams and drapes.

MASON· FURNITURE
773-5592

Herman Grate

Mason, W. Va .

.

"""' I It! / /

Main St ,, Pomeroy

~ APRIL~~

TUSSY
SPRAY DEODORANT
7 oz.
REG. 79'
ONLY

'

49~

BAYER

REG. 49'

ALL SUN GLASSES

23~
____

ONLY

.:. .~-------

...... .._

FOSTER GRANT &amp; POLAROID

NYQUIL

Y2PRICE

NIGHT TIME
COLD MEDICINE

REG. 12.07
ONLY

BUFFER IN
100 TABLETS

OGILVIE

REG. 11.95
AYAILAILI FOR RENTAL

Home .Permanents

ONLY

STAR
SUPPLY

DR ISTAN

ONLY

DECONGESTANT

Racine, Ohio

''

TABLETS

•1••

50 TABLETS
REG. 12.99
ONLY
GE HEATED

_l

AYDS REDUCING PLAN
CANDY 24 oz. '$277
REG. 14.50

ONLY

-·------~--..---------

QT LOTION BY
COPPERTONE
2

oz.

REG. 11.69

· KORNER

Chapman's Shoes

6 oz.

Kerm has a gift for you 11 s the b1g 20 Pet. Discount. Select
your new Easter and Graduation
outfit now . It's our way of saying

KI(.'RM'S

a big 20 Pet.'
Disc ount now at Chapman's. Select
your spring and sum mer footwear
now.

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY

ONlY

99~

S. Norris

J. biilon Cross

Grad ~ of 1976 get

.......... . - . . . . . . . . .4!'. . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

SUNDAY
HYMN SING Synday, 2:30
p.m. at Reedsville ·united
Methodist Church. Several
groups and soloist will be
featW'ed. A love offering will
be take/l for a family in the
community .

J. M. Weaver, Jr. - Directors

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

DISCOUNT

36 TABLETS

20% OFF ·
~~ads ..

""~ -.,.

by Jay Evans. The acolytes
were Dawn Goegiein and
Krista! Sisson, and the sermon topic was "To ~ch of the
Saviour'' by the Rev. William
Syde115tricker. Karen Sloan,
Mary Radford and Connie
Radford ~ang "Thirty Pieces
of Silver ."
Ulies on the altar were
donated by Waid Hadford in
memory of Naomi Radford,
Mr. and Mr s. Willi am
Grueser in memory of their
famili es, Mrs. W. A. Morgan
for the Joachim and Morgan
families . Mrs. William
Radford was organist.

ILDREN'S ASPIRI

'76 GRADS

John T. Wolfe
April20,1976

ford ; "For Loving_Care" by
Tim Sloan: "We Thank God "
· by Rhonda Zirkle, " My
Bible" by Michl King; "The
Only One" by Shawn
Goeglein ; "No Greater Gift"
by Scott Pullins; "Im portance" by Kim Eblin , and
" A Word to Say" by Usa
Pullins.
·
Junior class recitations
were "Promise" by Krista!
Sisson ; " If It's Easter in
YoW' Heart " by Dixie Eblin;
"Bells of Easter" by Carla
. DeMoss : " I Believe" by Kim
DeMoss ; "A Blessing" by
Dawn
_ Goegl~ ·:with Us"

'76 GRADS

reys .
Primary
"He
Lives"recitations
by Sally were
Rad-

LOOK!

~

::::·:::::::::::·:::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

MASON FURNITURE

Circles enjoy.

POMEROY,
OHIO

New York Clothing House

GILLETTE DISPOSABLE
TWIN BLADE

RAZOR
REG. 25'

ONlY

15¢

SHAVE CREAM
DISPENSER
1

REG. 19.98

$} 0

ONLY

·----·----..............·---.
VITAMIN E
400 UNITS
BY REXALL

100 CAPS~LES
REG. 14.89
ONLY

�.
7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April22, 1976

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April22 , 1976

Star Garden Club
entertains Athens
Df.XTP.R - Miss Hazel
Henson and Mrs. C. E. Stout
hosted the Star Ga rden Club
at the home of Mrs. C. E.
Stout when they entertained
the Good Luck Garden Club

Radckrn . The door prize was
won by Mrs. Robert Holliday .
Daffodils, Easter nowers
and tulips were brought by
Mrs . No rman Will, Mrs .
Robert Holliday and Mrs. G.
from AU1ens ret:ently .
A. Radekin .
Therr were 20 members · The hostesses, Mrs. Stout
&lt;mel fou r helpers ff.om the and Mi ~s Henlion served a
Good Lu ck Club and 10 lun cheo n
of
fan cy
members and four b'llests sa ndw ic hes, hot chicken
fr om the Star Garden Club. casserole, vegetable s:liad,
C.uests were Mrs. Fern deviled eggs, jello salad,
Stansbury , Mrs. Nellie Vale, cuocakes rninls nuts and
'
,
Mrs. Loretta Stout and coifcc. '
d&lt;IUghter .Jill.
Hcd and white checked
The Good Luck Club read tablecloth with center·pieces
articles and poems on of red tulips and gree n and
springtime and Easler. They white cuonymus decorated
sang " E~ster Parade" and the table.
" He Has the Whole World in
His Hands." Star's therapy
chairman Mrs. Orion Nelson
directed a workshop in
BACK'HOME
making wall p'iaqucs using
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Smith ,
wood chi ps, wa lnu ts and Denean Renee and Ralph of
dried fl owers and pipe Lincoln
Park,
Mich .,
cleaners. Besides tlie plaques returned home Surday after
.e,lch member was given an spending the Easter weekend
!"aster basket ancl cupcake to here wi th their parents, Mr .
take home.
and Mrs. John Beaver, Nye
Dw·ing the Sta r Garden Ave. and Mr. and Mrs. Wetzel
Cl ub 's busine ss meeti ng, Fields, New Haven , W. Va.
Mrs.
Pauline
Atkin s They also visited Mr. and
volunteered to purcha se Mrs. Keith Curtis and Gayia
shrub bery for chu rches of Middleport ; Mr. and Mrs..
represented in the club. The John Deaber, J D. and Doug,
Rutland Friend ly liard en · F_ive Points, and Mr . and
Club invited the Star Club to Mrs. Randy Smith , Marietta .
an open meeting at the
Rutland Church of Christ
April 28. Mrs. Pat Holter will
VISIT GAHANNA
Mr s. Eve lyn Smith of
demonstrate psychedeli c
arran ge m ~nts.
Syracuse and Mrs .· Clyde
Due to illness, Mrs. Gra ce Saunders, of Ga llipolis spent
Turner will be unable to host last weekend with Mrs.
the May meeting. It will now Saunders ' dau ghter. Mrs .
be held at the home of Mr's. AIdo ·rSue) Je ff ers and
Ruby Hailtd ay and Mrs. fam ily, Gahan na. They went
Virgi l Atkins,
especially for the wedding of
The traveling prize donated -Mrs. Jeffers' son. Kenton and
by Mrs. Lawrence Chapman Miss Jinx. Geroux , also of
was brought by Mrs. G. A. Gahanna .

SPRING

SALE
LINOLEUM

7.95 YD.

1

- CONTINUED_:

GREAT SELECTION
STILL

ONLY
YD.

FOR

SPRING ~
· -~~

~~r.~~-~~ ... .. ~-. ~495
MANY ROOM SIZE
CARPET REMNANTS!

SEE OUR FULL LINE OF

WALL COVERING NEEDS
FOR YOUR SPRING
REMODELING NEEDS!
-ONE DAY SERVICE-

Corena Rhodes awarded by
Southern High School band
NH Se tting For AJewell!
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
'f1lis sununer f'n1 going: to drive cross-Country in my van .
My parents have given their consent if I don't go alone. So I
asked Jewell to go with me. But she's 16, and her folks think
this is carrying things a little too far .
Since we're in love and have already had sex, I can 't see
their reaSoning, but they hand us a flat "No 1" And my folks
'
are also in an uproar.
Should we just take orr together anyway when school is
out ~ - UNCERTAIN AT 18
·DEAR 18:
You'II be in troubl e with everyone, not to mention the law,
if you sneak orr with Jewell. ·A summer spent hiding yoW' 16year-&lt;&gt;id girlfriend from the police won't exactly be a piece of
cake ..Think of the cunsequences, and find another van partner.
~ SUE

+++

NOTE FROM HELEN : And be sure he's male ! ... Or you 'll
be in txouble with Jewell too 1

+++

DEAR RAP :
There's this neat guy that all the girls in my crowd like, but
he 's very shy,
He has started paying attention to me, I guess because I'm
easy to talk to. That 's great, except if !let it go on, my girl
friends will ali get mad at me; in fact, most of the ninth grade
girls would be jealous.
Should I risk bein g girifriendless just to get a great
boyfriend' - WORRIED
DEAR WORRIED
How many of your girl friends would turn a great fellow off
~ if he preferred her and she truly liked him - just because
others in their crowd weren't so lucky '
So be glad you 're th e lucky one and let the girls adjust.
They will, they will. - HELEN

+++

DEAR WORRIED:
Here's another angle: If AI-L you girls tW'ned thisboy
down out of "loyalty" tu one another, where would that leave
HTM '

JOSHUA JORDAN

Birthday
1A
party ·he /tU
Several friends and
relatives' were present for the
first birthday celebration of
Joshua Perry Jordan, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan,
(the former Kathy Gilkey J of
Carpenter. His birthday was
on April 16.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. ClintOn Gilkey, Albany,
and Mr . and Mrs. Mendal
Jo~,.. carpentk Mrs. Ava
Gilkey , Harrisonville and
Lincoln Russell, Pomeroy,
are great-g randparents.

Davey Dodson
hosts festivity

FRANCIS
FLORIST

Out in the cold, wondering why he's so unpopular - that's
where.
Davey Dodson hosted an
Give the guy a break and let him know you 're interested. Easter party on Good Friday
at his home in Middleport.
- SUJo:
+++
An E~ster egg hurt was
RAP :
held in the yard with the prize.
I'm 15 and would like to go to parties and dances with my going to Melissa Downing.
boyfriend,' who used to smoke pot and drink, but" doesn 't any The door prize was won by
mon· Dad says the places he wants to ta ke me are Bryan Reeves. Other guests
"dangerous" because we'd gel exposed to dope and booze, and were Timmy an d Mindy
when you're aroWJd them, you do them .
Harri s, Kimberly Deem,
We're mature enough to say , ''No!" Plea se convince Traci Wright and Sco tt
my Dad. - JENN IFER
Ogdin.
JENNIFER :
Refreshments included a
Before I answer your question, I'd have to check out those cake baked in the shape of a
parties and dances. They might be more than you and your b.!. cross , ice cream·, potato chips
can handle. - HELEN
and Kool-Aid. Assisting with
+++
the refreshments were.
AWORD FROM.SliE : You ca n expect a little dope and booze • Davey's mother, Mrs. Patsy
at almost any high schoo)"type party, and learning to say "No " Ogdin and Carol Ault.
at the right time is part of growing up . But if it's more than a
little, then your Dad is right. Look for another crowd.
In 1974, a Pan Am 707
jetliner crashed on the island
of Bali, killing alll07 aboard .

Friendly Circle names
committees for projects
Committees to help with
the moth er - daughter
program and the Big Bend
Regatta food project were
named during a meeting of
the Friendly Circle Tuesday
night at Trinity Church .
The mother - daughter
program will be held on
Friday, May H . Members
were reminded of a rummage
sale on May 4 and 5. Cards
were signed for Mrs. Phil
Globokar. a patient at Holzer
Medical Center , for Mrs.
Lena Huber, Hallifax, Mass.

Family has
Easter visitors
STIVERSVILLE - Easter
guests of Mrs. Allen Brewer
and David were Mrs. Marilvn
Beall , Colum bus, who~e
bir thday was celebra ted
April 17, Mrs. Clyde Close
and Roy, Wa~ford ; Kenneth
Mark
Be a!
Brewer,
Columbus; Harold Brewer:
Long Bottom; Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar llrewer, Portland ;
Mark Goines, Westerville,
and Miss Rita Close .
Miss Close recen tly
retW'ned from a vacation to
England where she spent two
weeks with her sister and
brother-in·law, Sgt. and Mrs.
Robbi n Ressiriger and
daughter, Rebecca. Among
the many historical places
she visited was Weslminster
Abbey. This was her second
trip to England , having made
a trip there about two years
ago.
ME ET POSTPONED
A meeting of the past
matron s of Evangelin e
Chapter, OE.S. scheduled for
Friday night has been
poslponed WJtil April 30 ai the
Middleport Masoni c Temple.

and for Mrs . Ethel
Williamson at the Autumn
Years Nursing Center at
Sabina.
Mrs . W. H. Perrin thanked
the group for potted plants
given her at Easter. Miss
Mar¥ Virgin ia Reibel
presided at the business
meeting with Mrs. Leonard
Jewell reading the minutes.
Mrs. Pearl Mora's program
"When We Worship " was
based on Psalm 150 from the
study book on "The Psalms."
Why we worship, how and
when were discussed with the
answers being fourd in the
Psalms. Atribute to spring in
scripture and poetxy was the
devotional topic'used by Mrs.
Mora.
.
A spring motif was carried
out in the refreshment table
decorations with salad and
sandwi ches being served by
Mrs. Thomas Yourg and Mrs.
James Fugate. The 14
members present were given
favors
of
miniature
arrangements of everlasting
flowers.
:::·:·:·:::·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·

DATE SET
CHESTER- The annual
Ches ter High School
Alumni banquet and dance
has been set for June 5 at
6:30 p.m. at the Chester
Grade School.
Reunion classes of 1916,
1921, 1926, 1931, 1936, 1941,
1946, 1951, 1956 will be
honored. The Chester PTA
will serve the dinner which
will be followed by round
and square dancing
beginning at 9 p.m. with
music by the Khord Kings.
Reservations are to be sent
tu Es ther Ridenour,
Chester. Ohio 45720.

At the recent annual band participated in the district's Morris, and the junior high
banquet at ·Southern High solo and ensemble festivals clarinet section which inSchool Corena Rhodes was and received school colored cluded Carrie Guinther, Meg
named outstanding senior bookmarks: Molly Fisher, Amberger, Carol Gibbs,
band member and was Corena ' Rhodes , Bobbi Della Johnson and Armintha
awarded the John Philip Chapman, Carol Morris , Holter.
Seated at the head table
Sousa Award and Certificate Brenda Lawrence, Lois
by band director Mrs. · Bailey, Penny Smith, Usa were Mrs. Joy Norris, band
Warner, Barb Theiss, Jaye director, Norris , James
Joy Norris.
Corena is the daughter of Ord, Brice Hart, Marie Adams, high school principal,
Mrs. Irene Rhodes of Dorcas. Pickens, Becky Crow, Brian Mrs. Adams , Molly Fisher,
She ls,a first chair player on Johnson, Richard FW'bee and ~ky Harris and Corena
Rhodes, senior band memher main instrument, alto Carl Morris.
bers.
Members of the pep band
saxophone, and has parThe tables were decorated
ticipated in the marching, who received treble clef pins
with
arrangements made by
concert, stage and pep bands were Becky Harris, Corena
the
band
boosters and a
Rhodes,
Molly
Fisher,
Jaye
and at solo and ensemble
festivals starting in jWJior Ord, Heidi Al!hley, Becky smorgasbord ·was providby
the
parhigh where she received Crow, Brenda Lawrence, ed
superior and excellent Suzy Scarberry , Bobbi ents. In keeping with
ratings.
Chapman and Lois Bailey. the -bicentennial the room
Students who participated The above awards were was decorated in red, white
in the band for one ful l year presented by Becky Harris, and blue. Molly Fisher offered puyer before the
were presented letters. They band president.
were Suzy Scarberry, Darla · Mrs. Norris was presented banquet was served.
White, Vicki Boso, Candy with a corsage by a the band
Riffle, Darlene Duncan, Carl and a red, white and blue
Morris, Becky Koehler, floral arrangement by the
Your "Extra Touch "
Wilma Cook, Donna Hub- band boosters.
Florist Since 1957
After the presentation of
bard, Sonja Hili, Mary Beth
Obltz, Paula Wolfe , Becky awards various ensembles
Rhodes , Melissa Yonker, were presented. These inDeanna White, Crista Beegle, cluded the high school
Armintha Holter, Della clarinet txio consisting of
Johnson , Tina Gibbs and Molly Fisher, Carol Morris
and Barb Theiss ; jurior high
Mary Beth Slavin.
Students who had an at- trumpet trio, Cindy Warden,
PH. 992-2644
tendance record of 90 per cent Donna Rice and Mary Beth
at all summer and after Obitz; the junior high
JS2 E . Main, Pomeroy
•Your FTD Florist
school practices and events txornbone trio ," Brian Johnaccumulated merits for each son, Richard FW'bee andfarl
and receil•ed bars, patches
and certificates. Th ese
studen ts were Corena
Rhodes, Becky Harris, Molly
Fisher, Alisa Harris, Heidi
Ashley, Anna Frank, Bobbi
Chapman, Lois Bailey, Jaye
Ord, Barb Theiss, Darla
White, Becky Crow, Suzy
Scarberry, Carol Morris,
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
Lisa Warner, Penny Smith,
Brice Hart, Marie Pickens,
7:30 EACH EVENING
Richard Furbee, Brian
Johnson , Carrie Guinther,
SUNDAY-10 AM &amp;6 PM
Meg Amberger, Amy Fisher,
Cindy Warden , Donna Rice ,
Armintha Holter, Della
Johnson , Carl Morris, Becky
Koehler , Wilma Cook, Becky
Rhodes, Paula Wolfe, Sonja
POMEROY, OHIO 200 W. MAIN
Hill , Mary Beth Obilz ,
Deanna White and Melissa
Yonker.
The following students

GOSPEL MEETING
APRIL 19 THRU 25

WESTSIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST
SPEAKER: HARRY E. RICE

REPORT OF CONDITION
Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK
in the state of Ohio, at th e close of business on March 31, 1976 published in response to call
":'ade by Comptxoiler of the Currency, under title -12, United States Code, Section 161. ,
National Bank Region Number Four ·
Charter number 9815
--.--- State of ReSburces and Liabilities
Thousands
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - • . . • . • . . . . . . 492 .- - U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - . - - • • . . - . . • . . 1653
Obligations of States and political subdivisions - - - • • • • . . • . . 264
Other bonds, notes, and debentW'es - - - - - - - - - - . • . • . • . • . . . .• .•. . 5
Federal reserve stock and corporate stock - - - • • • • . . . . • • • • 8
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
urder agreements to resell - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • 100
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) - - - - - - - - - 4929
Less : Reserve for possible loan losses - - - - - . - - - • 86
Loans, Net - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . • 4843
Bank premises, furniture and fixtW'es, and
other assets representing bank premises - - - - - - - - - - . . . 21
--+--- Other assets - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . . • • • • . . . . . . 3
TOTAL ASSETS - - - · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . 7389 - - Demand deposits of individuals, prthshps., and corps - • • . . • . • • • .. . . 1445
Ill
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
prtnshps., and corps · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . 4760
DepOsits of United States Government - - - - - - - - - - . • • • IB
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - - - - - • . 491
I ll
Certified and officers' checks - - - - - - . - • - • • - - • . . . 54
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . 6768
Total demand deposits - - - - - - - - - • . • • 2008
Total time and savings deposits - - - - - - - . - • 4760
TOTAL LIAjliUTIES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures ) - - - • 6768 - - Common stock
a. No. shares authorized 5000
b. No. shares outstanding 5000
(par value ) - - - - - - - . . 125
:::) i
Surplus - - - - - - - - -· - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . 125
Undivided
profits
- - - - - - - . . 371
.... u
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL • - - - - • - - - •• - . . • - . • • - - . . 621
- +-- TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL - - - - - - - • . . 7389
CC
Average for 15 or 30 calendar days ending with call date :
--Q
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . 478
Z
Fed. funds sold and securities purchased
CC
under agreements to resell - - - - . . . . . . . • • . . - - - -150
111:
Totalloaris - - - . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . • - - - - 5259
Total deposits - - - .1 - . . . . . . • . • . • ----6797 '

.-..
....

.--.

.,.... .cc
- ...
cc

O'cc

0

!

STORE HOURS
.
.
.

tr'' ~'~s~~TiT;~,,~

Teens present sunrise ·servic~

~

The Teens for Christ at the
Rock
Sprirgs
United
MethodistChurchhad charge
of the sur rise service Easter
morning. Charlene Goeglein
was at the piano for the
prelude with Tracey Jeffers
and Linda Eason playing
trumpets. .
.
The t!llll to worship was
extended by Brent Sisson,
Miss Goeglein played "Let
There Be Peace," and Paul
Goeglein led the responsive
reading. Prayer was by Mrs.
Beuna Grueser , and Connie
Radford and Karen Sloan
sang "There is a Sweet Spirit
in This Place."
Re a di ng s
we r e
"Celebration Q( Hope ,"
Tracey Jeffers ;. "A Garden
for a Troubled World," Pam
Evans; "Risen Lord" by
Susan Zirkle, "Thanks" by
Christy Evans; "The End
and the Beginning" by Brent
Sisson. A playlet, " The
Nails" .was narrated by Jim
Jeffers. Mrs. Lottie Leonard
gave the benediction. Mrs .
Thelma Jeffers is leader.
The children' s program
was presented at the morning
worsliip service with Angie
Sloan giving the welcome and
the recitations from the
nursery class including "The
Time" by Tammy Eblin ,
"Thanks for Coming" by Tim
Jeffers·, "Her Gifts" bv Jav
Humphreys; "My Friend'' bv
'
Marsha King·, "So Small" by
Neal Richmond ; "Surshine
Fl
.. b u
D
Y· sa
arst;
, owers
'"H
Easter"
by
Amy
Goeglein
;
e G'tves, " by Tara Humph.

~;

potluck dinner

i

~;

ca·Iendar .I:
·:

··

THURSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Women 's
Circles of the B. H. Sanborn Rhoda 'Hall, Mrs , Carol Fellowship of the Churches of
Missionary Society of the · Granda! and Mrs. An\hony. Christ ThW'sday at Dexter
Middleport First Baptist
The EJecta Circle Church of Christ, 7:30 p.m.
ChW'ch met Tuesday night at members voted to use their Talent arid craft ni~ht.
the ChW'ch for a poUuck treasW'y balance to pW'chase
REVIVAL in progress this
dinner. The meeting marked Items for the layette to be week at United Pentecostal
tlu! conclusion of work for the taken to the Baptist Women's ·-• Church Third Ave. Midyear by the circles and 'their Conference whichwill be held dleport: 7:30 p.m. ~ighUy.
reorganization for the 1976-77 m June. Mrs. Alwllda Werner Public Is invited.
year of activity.
opened the meeting with
TWIN CITY Shrinettes
Plans were made for the prayer
and
e~tended '7:30 p.m. ThW'sday at sociai
annual mother-daughter g~eetlngs to those having rooms of Columbus and
banquet to be held at the birthdays. A letter was read Southern Ohio Electxic Co
chW'ch May 3. Alter the from
Richard
Kane , Middleport.
·
.,
poUuck each of the circles scholarshlp . st~dent for the .$5
MIDDLEPORT CUB Scout
met separately to report on sent him for Easter. Reports Pack 245, 7 p.m. ThW'sday,
work dW'ing the past month were given on the shut-in F .e eney-Be nn etl 128,
and to decide on the Easter projects.
American Legion home;
disposition of the remainder
Mrs · Beulah White had the pmew
· ood derby to be held .
of money in the treasW'y.
love gift dedication . AtMrs . Ka I'le Anth ony te nd'mg were Mrs . p ear 1 Rive rview Garden Club
resl'ded
at the Love Joy Hoffman' • Mrs · Eliza b.eth ThW'sday, 8 p.m. at the horne
P
Circle meeting · Mrs. HeIen Searles, Mrs. Wh1·te • Mr• s. of Mrs. Donald Myers with
•--belle w·rnebrenner, Mr s. Mrs. Gene Young, co-hostess.
BOdl'mer gave devo t'Ions ""'
usrng ·Matt. 6. Thank- Freda Hood , Mr s. 1.owse
·
Mrs. David Chadwell will be
honored with a stork shower.•
You not.es wer·e read Dav1·s and Mrs. Emer.
from Miss Emma MatAt the meet1'ng of ·the
OAPSE meeting ThW'sda)',
thews, Mrs. Eloise Hayes Dorcas Circle, a report was 8 p.m. at Southern High
and William Farley for given on a visit by Mrs. Sarah School.
Easter remembrances. It Fowler, Mrs. Elizabeth
SPECIAL meeting of Shade
was noted that the circle had Slavin, Mrs. Freda Edwards, Ri"er Lodge 453• F&amp;AM,
provided refreshments for Mrs. Nan Davis and Michl Chester, at 7:30 ThUI'sday.
the Monday night Bible study King to the Arcadia NW'sing Work in the' E.A. and F.C.
group. Agift had been sent to Home to see Mrs. Dana Degrees. Ail Master Masons
·
Hamm , a rnem ber of the invited.
one of the men at th e Me1gs
County Infirmary on hi's chW'ch. An Easter' rernemFRIDA¥
·
.
thd.
•f
th
bal
br
tak
to
h
MIDDLEPORT
Masonic
bIf ay. "" or e ance
anoe was
en
er. Lod
of money in the treasW'y, the · Other shut-ins were also
ge 363, F&amp;AM, 7 p.m.
Fri.day. Work in the Master
circle voted to send it to remembe· re d at Easter.
All Master
· th
The baIance rn
Richard Kane, Ohio Baptist
e txeasury Masons ·Degree.
v
·ted.
.
scholarship student at Judson will be sent to Richard Kane . Masons 111 1
College.
, Mrs. Slavin had prayer to
ROLLING HILLS Chapter
th
ti
th
838,
Parents Without PartAt the circle meeting were open e mee ng wi Mrs.
Mrs. Ethel Hughes, Mrs. Frances Smart giving ners , Friday, 7:30 p.m. at
Sara Owen, Mrs. Marjorie devotions from Matt. 28. Grace United Methodist
WalbW'n, Mrs. Bodlmer, Miss Others attending were Iva ChW'ch. Dr . Charlotte Car-·
Turnerand Florence Rhodes . ver, chairman of the
education department at Rio
Grande College, will speak on
"YoW' Dreams , What Do
They Mean ?" Meeting will be
•
in the God Squad room . Use
Cedar St. exit. A TaW'us
statewide
attention
as
being
In place of the regular
monthly. meeting, the South the largest office territorially birthday party for thos~ with
Central Ohio Preservation in Ohio, and first office to May birthdays will be held at
Society wi.th heaaquarters in successfully conduct the Ohio 9:30 p.m. in the chW'ch
the General Moore House, Inventory with volunteer task gymnasium. Refreshments
Piketon, announces that its forces. More than 150 and danCing will be enjoyed .
offices will be open to the volunteers trained in
WEEKEND MEETING at
public during the three days research, architectural Long Bottom Christian
of the Dogwood Festival, history and description and ChW'ch Friday, SatW'day and
photographic techniques, are Sunday,
April 23, 24, 25.
7:30 nightly .
The Preservation Office of CW'renUy working in a 20 Evangelist, Joe O'Coll. Bruce
the Society, directed by Atty. county area of southern Ohio. Srni th is pastor .
The Ohio Inventory is being
David Brook, will have forms
SATURDAY
and instructions available to conducted by the Ohio
JITNEY SUPPER
Society
in Syracuse School Saturday
those interested in listing Historical
cooperation
with
sponsoring
their homes or buildings on
·sponsored by P.T.A. Serving
the national register of historical societies and begins at 4 p.m.
historic places, or on the Ohio colleges across the state.
SOUP SUPPER, Letart,
State Inventory. Mrs. Joseph Ohio now has four regional
W. Va. Grade School
VanMeter, SCOPS coor- preservation offices, in
beginning at 5 p.m.
qlnator and Ohio advisor for Cleveland, Dayton, CinSatW'day with sandwiches,
the National Trust for cinnati and Piketon. New
dessert and beverages and
Historic Preservation, and offices are being located in
an auction at 7:30 p.m.
1\'Irs. Thomas Williams , Toledo, Tiffin and Kent. The
Sponsored by school PTO.
chainnan of the Pike County results of the Ohio Inventory
SMORGASBORD Sunday,
Ohio Inventory and National will be used in long range 11 :30 a.rn.to I p.m. at SouthRegister Task ·Force will be planning by state agencies. It ern High School by Racine ·
present to explain the pur- will also enable comrmmiiies PTO. $2, adults ; $1, children;
poses of the mventory and in south central Ohio to meal will be turkey, ham and
their
historic meatloaf.
~nswer questions concerning assess
resources for purposes of
the inventory forms .
The preservation office of economic development elected were Catherine
SCOPS
has
received through toW'ism.
Wolfe , president; Joyce
White, vice president; Lynn
Crow, secretary, and Dee
Spencer, lreasW'er. They will
be installed in May. Mrs.
Violetta Arnott wa s named
social chairman.
The outside basketball
coW't was again discussed
and it was decided to check
Supplies for use in tornado 14. It was noted that a clock infu the cost of having it
drills were approved for had been purchased for the concreted. Roger Roush's
purchase by the Letart Falls classroom
of
James fifth grade won the room
PTO at a meeting Monday Wickline, and that one had count. '
night at the school.
been ordered for the
The PTO authorized the auditoriwn. New basketball
purchase of a transistor uniforms have also been
radio, two flashlights, two ordered for the fifth grade.
dry cell batteries, and a good
Special thanks was exOrst aid kit. In addition they tended to Betty Morris for the
furnishing soft assistance she gave with the
for field day on May Easttr
New officers

SCOPS to be open

THE BEAUTIFUL LOOK
FOR '76

I, John T. Wolfe, President of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this report of condition is true and
correct to the best of my·knowledge and belief.

Co-ordinated
crushed
velvet bedspreads.
draperies and furniture
throws, orange. green.
red, brown. gold.

We,_ th~ undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resoW'ces and
habrht!es· We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the best of our knowle e and
belief 1s true and correct.

Mon ., Tues .• Wed. &amp; Sat.-8:30til5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

Fre~ia n~

Co-ordinated quilted English Rose
design bedspreads. queen, full, twin
also matching shams and drapes.

MASON· FURNITURE
773-5592

Herman Grate

Mason, W. Va .

.

"""' I It! / /

Main St ,, Pomeroy

~ APRIL~~

TUSSY
SPRAY DEODORANT
7 oz.
REG. 79'
ONLY

'

49~

BAYER

REG. 49'

ALL SUN GLASSES

23~
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...... .._

FOSTER GRANT &amp; POLAROID

NYQUIL

Y2PRICE

NIGHT TIME
COLD MEDICINE

REG. 12.07
ONLY

BUFFER IN
100 TABLETS

OGILVIE

REG. 11.95
AYAILAILI FOR RENTAL

Home .Permanents

ONLY

STAR
SUPPLY

DR ISTAN

ONLY

DECONGESTANT

Racine, Ohio

''

TABLETS

•1••

50 TABLETS
REG. 12.99
ONLY
GE HEATED

_l

AYDS REDUCING PLAN
CANDY 24 oz. '$277
REG. 14.50

ONLY

-·------~--..---------

QT LOTION BY
COPPERTONE
2

oz.

REG. 11.69

· KORNER

Chapman's Shoes

6 oz.

Kerm has a gift for you 11 s the b1g 20 Pet. Discount. Select
your new Easter and Graduation
outfit now . It's our way of saying

KI(.'RM'S

a big 20 Pet.'
Disc ount now at Chapman's. Select
your spring and sum mer footwear
now.

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY

ONlY

99~

S. Norris

J. biilon Cross

Grad ~ of 1976 get

.......... . - . . . . . . . . .4!'. . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

SUNDAY
HYMN SING Synday, 2:30
p.m. at Reedsville ·united
Methodist Church. Several
groups and soloist will be
featW'ed. A love offering will
be take/l for a family in the
community .

J. M. Weaver, Jr. - Directors

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

DISCOUNT

36 TABLETS

20% OFF ·
~~ads ..

""~ -.,.

by Jay Evans. The acolytes
were Dawn Goegiein and
Krista! Sisson, and the sermon topic was "To ~ch of the
Saviour'' by the Rev. William
Syde115tricker. Karen Sloan,
Mary Radford and Connie
Radford ~ang "Thirty Pieces
of Silver ."
Ulies on the altar were
donated by Waid Hadford in
memory of Naomi Radford,
Mr. and Mr s. Willi am
Grueser in memory of their
famili es, Mrs. W. A. Morgan
for the Joachim and Morgan
families . Mrs. William
Radford was organist.

ILDREN'S ASPIRI

'76 GRADS

John T. Wolfe
April20,1976

ford ; "For Loving_Care" by
Tim Sloan: "We Thank God "
· by Rhonda Zirkle, " My
Bible" by Michl King; "The
Only One" by Shawn
Goeglein ; "No Greater Gift"
by Scott Pullins; "Im portance" by Kim Eblin , and
" A Word to Say" by Usa
Pullins.
·
Junior class recitations
were "Promise" by Krista!
Sisson ; " If It's Easter in
YoW' Heart " by Dixie Eblin;
"Bells of Easter" by Carla
. DeMoss : " I Believe" by Kim
DeMoss ; "A Blessing" by
Dawn
_ Goegl~ ·:with Us"

'76 GRADS

reys .
Primary
"He
Lives"recitations
by Sally were
Rad-

LOOK!

~

::::·:::::::::::·:::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

MASON FURNITURE

Circles enjoy.

POMEROY,
OHIO

New York Clothing House

GILLETTE DISPOSABLE
TWIN BLADE

RAZOR
REG. 25'

ONlY

15¢

SHAVE CREAM
DISPENSER
1

REG. 19.98

$} 0

ONLY

·----·----..............·---.
VITAMIN E
400 UNITS
BY REXALL

100 CAPS~LES
REG. 14.89
ONLY

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April22, 1976
M11jor Le.agu e Lud erl
Bv United Pren lnternationll
Leading Batters
( Ba sed on·20 at bah)
National League
g . ab r . h. pet.

Polly's Pointers
{
By l'olt) !'ramt•r

black . Have some

readers solved this problem '
;... RUTH.
: DEAH POLLY - A reader
I\' an led 10 know how to bleach
hour sacks. A Mennonite

·~ bm;:~n who lived near us
Used to put them on H l ine for

t;arbara Fry , treasurer , and

Mrs. .Je nnifer
Warth ,
'secretary. It was noted that
the new swi ng set purchased
:by the PTO had arrived and
'would be installed this week.
The book sale was reported

about two weeks . Each
morning
she
would
thoroughly soak them with a
garden hose and during the
day the sacks would bleach
and dry. This seemed to work
well . - BERNICE.
DEAR POLLY _ It seemed
that every evening when our
newspaper was tossed in the
yard my dogs got it first. I cut
the bottom out of an empty
three gallon size can, painted
ilinsideandoul to match the
fence and attached it with two
screws to the top 'of a fe nce1
post in a "litying down'
position. Jt is open on the side
toward the sidewalk for the
Paper boy and on the yard
side for me . I can see from

•

ul now says

e

Wl

es

••'

, Attendance at Easler
fmorning service, at the Free
'Methodist Churt h was 143.
Rev. Floy d Shook was in
New York la st week to attend
a Pastors Convention .
~ Mr . and Mrs . Joseph
~Jliggenbothan, Columbus,
&gt;,Mr . and Mrs . Jerry Whitaker,
Newark , spent their Easler
, vacation with their parents,
• Rev . and Mrs. Floyd Shook.
-, Mr . and Mrs. Ted Mathew
•spent Easter and th e
weekend with Mr . and Mrs.

MRS. G.H.

as a huge success and it was
noted that all supplies ordered by the PTO have
arrived. John Lisle, principal, noted that tornado
drills are now being conducted at the school. He also
repo r led lh a t s ludenl
teachers are assisting in the
art program and the second
grade. Ed Bartels announced
a sixth grade workshop will
be conducted . ior parents
sometime next week.
Room count was won by
Mrs. Wendell Hoover's first
grade. The program next
month will be by the fifth and
sixth grade band students .

and placing them on houses.
ll was also suggested that
""ch resident would donate $1
toward the house that
perhaps il could be ·financed
in this manner.
Also discussed was a trip to
Heisley Glass Museum in
Newark. If the group takes
the trip they will go by
chartered bus.
Attending were Margaret
Cottrill, .Jane Teaford, Janice
Lawson, Jean Hail , Pauline
Morarity, Eleanor Borham,
Wanda Teaford , Elva Dailey,
Mar ga r et
Eichi nger,
Charolette Nease and Nancy
Neutzling.

Dick 'Karr.
. Mrs . Gera ld (Kath y)
Pullins is a medical patient in
Holzer Medica l Center.
Mrs. Bertha Parker
returned home Sunday from
a week's visit with Miss Cleo
Parker , Mr . and Mrs . Hugh
Ferguson and son James, and
Mr . and Mrs . Gene 'i\..lkire and
attended the wedding of her
granddaughter, Kimberlee
Kay Alkire, and Mr. William
M. Carter of Coltimbus.
Mr. Harry Sl&lt;lhl is a patient
in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mrs. Dora Holley spent a
couple of days with her
daughter, Mrs . Marie Curd,
Ball Run .

Rings by
Mother's Day .
May9

Give the gif1 thot

at

GREAto .

Franklin U

Pomeroy, R.D., received

American League

and Kingman , N Y IS ; Schmid t.

Amer.ican

League : . Carew ,

M. of May I he will be with
State Farm Mutual In surance. Roush and his wife,
the former Janie Heucker,
reside in Pataskala.
Following the gradu~tion , a
dinner in his honor was held
at the MCL Cafeteria. At-

Minn and Norlh , Oak 6; Rivers , Albert Roush and Kenny ,
NY a old Washington, Oak 5;
Remy, Cal ' ·
Mrs. Gerry Kessinger, Kim
Pitching
and Lois, Kevin and Christi
MoSf victories
National League: . Ruthven , Smith, Pomeroy, R.D.; Mr.
Att , Nor man . Cin and Jones. so and Mrs . Larry Flowerli,
J .Q; N iekr o, All , Bartow. Hou.
Matlack , NY and Reuss, Pitt 2 Columbus; Mr: and Mrs .

Koosman. NY 0.90; Ruthven .
Al l and Lonborg , Phil 1.00.

American League : . Carroll ,
Ch i, Kern, Clev and Cleve land,

Bos 0.00 ; Tra ve rs . Mil 0.69 ;
Holf1man , Bait , Fingers and
Todd , Oak and Barr . Tex 1.00.

Strikeouts
National League : Se aver , NY
11; Niekro. At l 18 ; Richard ,
Hou 11 ; Rogers , Mil 16 ; Nie kro ,
Hou and Jones , so 13.
American League : Ryan , Ca l
18; Tan ana , Cal 17 ; Blyl eve n ,
Minn 16 ; Dec ker , M inn and
Perry , Te)( 15.

ECONOMY BETIER
JOLIET, Ill. (UP!)
Treasury Secretary William
Simon says the country's

eco nomic

recovery

''is

defusing the economy as a
political issue" even though
the un~mployment rate is
"absolutely intolerable."
During an interview
Wednesday , Simon sa id ,
'·The vigor and health of the
economic recovery is
defusing the economy as a
political issue. We still have
an unemployment rate that is
absolutely intolerable.''
·•1 wish television cameras
could portray the ·nation 's
economic story as vividly as
it did the war in Vietnam or
the (1960s ) race riots ... "

Reedsville

New

7\ T t
llO

'S

5

28'5

(JtM $,1.11,., llooo)
Mount 2 to 7 1ton.1 per ""O·
Othtr lfyltt O¥oilabto

GOESSlER'S JEWELRY STORE
Court St., ·Pomeroy

.• .
"

WASHINGTON (UP!)
On occ;asiQn the Supreme
Court, as !he nation 's final
arbiter of !he law, decides
without prompting that it is
time to redefine &lt;r clarify a
major constltutiQnal right.
Such .-as the case
Wednesday .when, presented
wilh a relatively narrow tax
issue, Justice Byron R. White
reviewed 90 years of
decisions on the 5th
Amendment and ruled
BftePingiy that the right
•11ainst sel(·lncrlmination
does not also involve rights to
privacy.
Whlte's 22-page opinion in
Flaher v, -United Slates is
likely to become the
centerpiece of consider.able
litigation in years to come.
Whlte, who was joined.by live
other jU!tices, indicated he ·
was · only tying the vario~
strlni!S of past rulings rather
tliari making new law.

\

-

GRADS

10% OFF
TO ALL GRADS

ROGER W. ROUSH

l

•

'

•

ON ALL WEARING
APPAREL

Richard Huecker, Sidney;
Mr . and Mrs. Steven Varner
and family, Versailles; Phil
Huecker, Danville, Va.; Mr .
and Mrs. Mike Goubea u&lt; and
fam ily , Sidney; Ronald
Heucker, John and Judy
Heucker, Sidney; Mrs.
Robert Esworthy and family
and Mr. and Mrs . Rollin
Bailey of Newark.

PLO IN TOKYO

1ethaeK·

tending were Mr. and Mrs.

BUY REALISTIC. CB!

es

Mrs. Walter Brown and
Mrs. Steve Cowdery visited
wi lh Mrs . Tom Spencer, a
patient at Holzer Medical
Center, at Gallipolis.
Mr . and Mrs . Edward
Chevalier and Garrell
Chevalier were recent dinner
guests of Mr . and Mrs. Zenith
Chevalier and Allan of Belpre
Rd.
Recent visitors of Mr . and
Mrs. Reed Crary were S.M .
Sgt. and Mrs . J . M. Crary and
family of Bangkok, Thailand .
Chester Mundry was a
patient at the St. Joseph
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.
Va .
Mr s. Harold Sauer of
Middleport Rd. visited
Friday evening with Mrs .
Jenny Berkhimer and family
and the R..E: Wiliams family .
Mrs . Walter Brown is a
surgical patient at the
Camden-Clark Hospital iri
Parkersburg.
Mr . and Mrs . Robert'
Hayman of Tolono, 01., spent
a weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
J. D. Hayman.

.

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\

MAGNESII.
REG. 11.09

12

oz. .·· as~

CASE

NO . 21 ,613

First,

•final and Distributive Ac .
~~. . ".;J-nt or. Joseph Alton. Swain,
IKecutor of the Estate at

V Ictor $wain, aka VIctor D .
Swain, Deceased .
Unless exc!ptlons are filed
thereto , said 1ccounts will be
for htlr lng before said Court
on tht 21&amp;1 dey Of Mly, 1976, II
whlc:h time said accounts will

AIM
TOOTHPASTE

bl considered and continued

from day to dey unfit flnellv

!&gt;.' '
t

~

1IUDf' CORPORAltON COPM'ANV

I&gt;

Final Ac:c ount of James Stark
Russell, Executor of the
Estate Of CorBbelle Russell.
Deceased.
• CASE NO . 21,616 First and
F Ina I Ac:coun t of Robert S.
Parker. Exeuctor of the
Estate of Ney N. Carpenter,

O.ceesed.

2495

SILVER BRIDGE SHOPPING PLAZA

CASE NO . 21.486

,,

CASE NO . 21,538 First and

.1/2 WAVE

21-9211

CASE NO . 21.243 First and

REG.

Flnef and Distribut ive Ac .
count of Donald Lee Spencer ,
Executor of the estate of
Sidney A . Spencer , deceased .
• CASE NO . 21.509 First and
Final Account of Mollie Allee
Penn , Adm lnlstratrix of the
Estatl! of Truman Al len Penn ,
Jr . aka Allen P'enn , aka Allen
T. Penn , Deceased .

1:~:~12!!94

23~5

Joan
Christy

Final Account of W i lliam

'Frecker, Deceased .

STAINLESS
STEEL
BODY MOUNT
ANTENNA

21 ·909

JUG

George Frecker, Executor of
lhe Estate of Theodosia A.

102"

42" NO-HOLE
FIBERGLASS
TRUNK
MOUNT
ANTENNA

FIBERGLASS
BUMPER
MOUNT
ANTENNA

.
i
f~

CASE NO . 19,365 SIKih

REG. 14.99

.' .

POLORON
CHEST/

Smith, Guardian of Mary K.
Gallagher, a minor.

Wolfe , Guard!an of
Jones a Minor.

!'

7.59

•n~AFSI~a~fC:c~~~~ ot ~x:~~nL~
Current A ccount of

;

2 QT. .
REG. , $577
1

3 5

~ !!'!
• ;

SAYE·5 2

18" GUTTER
CLAMP
STAINLESS
SJEEL
ANTENNA

'1795

~

~...

1

44" NO-HOLE
STAINLESS
STEEL
TRUNK MOUNT
ANTENNA

and sett.lement:

$597

10" TUB

REG. 15.95$4 65

CO\Inty, Ohio, lor approval

, ,.,

..

42"
ROOF MOUNT
STAINLESS
STEEL
ANTENNA

1 QT.

the

•

1

REDWOO
PLANTERS

Attractive way to decorate
y1;11r patio, JOrd , etc.

Accounts and Vouchers of
follow i ng
named
fiduciar ies have been filed in
the Probate Court. Meigs

'

REG.
7.98

29

TORCHES

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT;
PROBATE DIVISION,
MEIGS COUNT¥, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET·
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO

I

REG. 1'1

'PATIO

W 22, 29, 2tc

• Roody fo lise On Any Chonnel Wherever
You Sot Up/

CAR
VACUUM

IRON
FENCE

··109

Clerk

159~

• Add Crystals For Two

PlASTIC WHITE
WROUGHT

REG. 11.39

M. L. Kelly
President of Council
Attest: Gene Grate

23-CHANNEL BASE OR MOBILE
CB TRANSCEIVER

On Channel 9 1

eHALTER TOPS

·-·--'----·-._......--·---------·--·"'

29

Sec . I. That an au:~~.il i arv 1
•
pollee unit be established
; . ,. within the Vill~ge Pollee
•D•P.artment , pursuant to
•
•
Section 37 . 161 of the Ohio
•
ReviSed Code.
Se:c . II. ·Be It further or .
;
,•
dl!llned
that
the
pollee
auxiliary shall be subject to
'
the rules and regu lations ti led
•
with the Mayor of the VIllage .
,'
Sec . Ill. This Ordinance
1
-shall take effect and be in
force from and after Apri l 12.

• Call For EmergRncy Help

.J

PH. 992-3586

n

,

COMPACT 3 ~ CHANNEL
TRANSCEIVER

eTANK TOPS

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

ICE PAKS

Passed the 12th day of April

I)

Kl IIIII' .,0,1

.

1976

eSUN SUITS
•SHORT.

.

1976

the Commissio.n.

FOR

Creditors are required to

Be It ordained by the
Council of the VIllage of

I,

amol• f1 e r Pos 1!Jv O o r nega t•ve ground The re s o nly one p lace
vou can 1Jnc1JI
Rad1o Shack

contacting

HEALTH TEX

BoK U5, Racine , Ohio , has
been duly appointed Executor
of the Estl!lte of Lid a Swain,
1k1 Llddll Swain , deceased ,
late of Su t ~on Townsh ip , Meigs
~ounty, Ohio .
.

ORDINANCE NO . 1041 -76
An Ordinance to ESTABLISH
AUXILIARY POLICE FOR
THE VILLAGE OF MIO·
DLEPORT

1

Jn cludecJ i\dd &lt;HI external speaker and use as mobile PA

Further information may

r:::::~~~l

SET

Notice Is hereby given that
Joseph Alton Swain of Rout e 1,

(4)

I

A ~XJ DIJiiil d1o1et: . o f i!V td CB e r s' O ur TR C-24 fea tures aUioma llc
ntH se limiter plu s a nu 1sC blank e r. delta-tu ne. hghted chan n el
1/ldJ c at o r Qu111-m mo(lu ja tJ o n 1nWcaror All c ry sta l s, m1ke

prac ·

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMI SS ION OF OHIO
by Randall G. Applegate,
Secretary

TENNIS

Judge
Common Pleas Court.
Probate Division
Meigs County , Ohio

the operation of the. fuel

by

WORK
GLOVES

Manning D . Webst·er

adjustment clause and the

be obta ined

GARDEN
GLOVES

Gomales

OF APPOINTMENT

1~6.

publi c hear ing Ca1e No .
76 -163·EL-FAC , to review

tices and poli cie1 of the
Cotumbu1 &amp; Southern
Ohio Electric Company,
on May 17 , t 976, at 9:30
A.M. at the offices of the
CommiiSion, 111 North
High Stree t, Columbus,
Ohio. All interested per ·
sons will be given an OP ·
portu nily to be heard .

prohibition
agai nst
unreasonable searc h and
sei:rure
of
the
5th
Amendm ent, free speech
rights provided by the 1st
Amendment and court rules
protecting
some
c'Ommunications, such as the
Ia wyer-clien t privilege,
White said.
•

Pancho

file their cl aims with sEtid
fiduciary within four months .
Dmted this 16th day of April

mi ssion of Ohio has set for

procu rement

~

prosecutors by a ta&lt;paycr's
lawyer.
In holding that they must ,
White said no Supreme Court
ruling had held that the 5th
Amendment p e rmit s
withholding or evidence on
privacy grounds .
Any right In privacy is
reached only under the

Llddl Swain Deceased.
,/

LEGAL NOTICE

fuel

NOTI~E

' ..

But William J. Brennan Jr. a~ains1 self-mcrim ina tion
accused the majority of ·can be asserted .. .'' although
taking "another step ·in the he did not find it necessarily a
denigration of privacy threat to privacy.
There was no need lor
principles settled nearly 100
Wh ite's extensive opini on.
years ago."
And Thurgood Marshall The appeal raised only the
said it "adopts a wholly new narrow issue of whether an
approach lor deciding when accountan t's work papers
the 5th Amendment privilege must be turned over to

ABide from the privacy another, he is not , by odds" with settled ~\ h
issue, White said a defendant surrendering such records, Amendment principles.
Brennan suggested ,.,
in any criminal case can be incriminating himseH .
compelled
to
provide
Brennan sharply opposed majority was la yu .;; ,
prosec utors potentially most of Whit,• ' s major ~roun d work for ~ fut ur ••
incriminating documents iii conclusions.
• ruling that even pursonal,
his possession so long as they
"EKilressions arc legion in private papers or a defendanl
are not the defendant's own opinions of this court that tile cu n be subpoenaed. He sal
writings.
protection of pwsonal the 5tl• Amendment also bars
The 5th Amendment only privacy is a l"ntral purPQse production of documents
bars compulsion to testify of the pri vil•ti•' against wrilten by someone other '
against oneseH, White said, compe l led
self. U1an the defendant, In tbe
and since the defendant can incrimination, " Brennan defendant 's possession ,
deny the accuracy of said. He called White's which
arc
cl c~ rly
4
doc uments prepared by conclusion "fund amentally at incriminating.

Cue No . 21784
l1t1tt ol Lida SWain, aka

Th e Public Utilities Com·
COURT FAVORS EXNER
SAN DIEGO (UP!) Judith Campbell Exner, who
claimed she had an affair
with the late President
Kennedy, has won another
round in her battle to look at
her FBI files .
Edward Schwa rtz , ch ief
U.S. District Court judge,
Wednesday
denied
a
government request to delay
turning over the files until
officials had filled thousands
of earlier requests .
" I wo,ul&lt;!. hazard to guess
that many of the requests are
trivial,' ' Schwartz said. "I
think Mrs. Exner's request is
of direct concern and I don't
think she should have to wait
in line.,

TOKYO (UPI) - .Farouk
Kaddoumi, ranltijlg official of
the Palestine Liberation
Organization,
conferred
'
•• today with Tomomi Narlta,
leader of Japan 's major
opposition . Socialist Party.
Kaddoumi,
PLO
pcilltibureau chief, who is
regarded
as
the
· organization's foreign
minister, has been in Tokyo
since Tuesday at the
invitation of Prime Minister
Takeo
Miki's
ruling
Liberation Democratic
Party.

BECAUSE 1 ~ YEARS OF MANUFACTURING KNOW-HOW HAVE MADE US A WORLD LEADER

ony Mother would enjoy

. Now only

Now

By JAMt;~j A. KIDNEY

a

g. ab r. h. pet.
Pinlella, NV 7 25 5 13 .120 · ba chelor· · O( ·~clertce in
Lynn , Bos
8 JO 4 12 .400 business
administration
Bell. Cle
7 21 7 10 .400
Patek , KC
7 10 4 8 .400 degree from· Franklin
Horton . Del
8 Jl 7 11 .m University at the 53rd
Harrah , TeK 9 19 2 " .379 co mmen ce m en t E as 1er
Ch alk · CaI
12 40 6 15 ·375
Yount , Mil
7 " 6 9 .371 Sunday
at
Veterans
Fisk, Bos
10 31 9 IJ .311
McR ae, KC " JO 2 '' .367 Memori~ Stadium when ov~
Home Runs
600 degrees were awarded.
Nationil Leagu e: . Sc hm id t,
Roush, graduate of Mid·
Phil
8; King man, NY 7;
Cedeno, Hou ' ' Monday and dleport High School, class of
Morales, Chi. Jorgensen, Mil. 1964, was class president and
Milner , NY and Matthews, SF
co-cap tin of the football team.
3
·American ·· League: . Horton , He went directly from high
Det J; Mora. Ball. Evons, Fisk
and Rice, Bos, Herrmann , cal , school into the Marine Corps
Downing , Ch-i, Ford , M inn. for four ')'ears. Since that
Munson , NY , Ban do, Oak and time he has been employed
Burroughs, Tex 2.
Runs Batted tn
by the GAC Corporation in
Nati ona l League : Gr iffey , Ci n Columbus.

Rasmussen. SI.L anct Mon tefus-

Jewelmcnt.

,.'

6 13 ,406

use, frequently rub a lead co,Amer
SF 2·1
ican League : . Palm er ,
penci l over the zipper teeth. Ba tt 3 1: Tia nt , Bos. Roberts ,
You 'll find the graphite Dei and Fiflmorr ls, Kt 2.0;
.
f
lh
. .
Rvan , Cal , Wood, Ch i'. Slal on.
par t lC1cs rom e penct1 WI 11 Mil and PE&gt;rry, Tex 2-1.
lubricate the zipper .. Work it Earn•~ run. average
.
up al)d down to evenly
(Base d on~ lnntngs pitched)
. .
.
Nattonal League : MeUger ,
distribute the graphite.
\ D o.oo. Forsch, Hou 0.6&lt;;

Mother~s

•
·,'

Henderson , All 9 J2

O; Dierker and Ric hard , Hou,

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

••

6 17 .. &lt;17
4 16 .U4
7 12 ..U4

a period of time. When not in

L
••

McBride ,S t.L 9 38
Grote, ...JY
10 36
Slargel l. Pit
9 ?7

everyone had one . - MRS.
~, D
· ·
DEAR PO LLY - The
zippers on boots , sleeping
b
rl lh
h t' l
ags e:u;, o er sue ar ICes
can become tl problem when
expose d to lh e e1emen ts over

•

Laurel Oiff
: News Notes

Rights of privacy clarified by high court

Phil " ' Cedeno. Hou " '
Matthews. SF 11 .
Amer i can League : Rudi , Oak
the house when the paper is 12 : MeI1on . Ca I and Chamel Iss,
NY
11 ; spenoer, Chi and
pul in and always find it clean Horlon. Del 10 .
and dry. The delivery boy
Stolen a ... ,
Nat ional League: . Morg an ,
said at first it was the fun - Cin a. Cedeno, Hou 6; Grilley ,
nbicsl thing he hadhever ssh
een, ~~ng~~l. M~f~"" · Hoy and

Club to head projects
SYRACUSE - The Wed:nesday Homemakers Club
' here agreed Wednesday at its
regular monthly mee ting to
head two projects for the
village .
The projects are house
nwnbering and purchasing
and selling pink dogwood
lrees.
• Seve ral money-ma king
project&lt; were discussed in
order to raise funds for the
pr ojects. It wa s a lso
'sugge sted that perhap s
:tesidents would pay for the
~,o u se num bers and the
Homemakers would do the
w.ork of assigning numbers

Roger Roush

10 42 12 21 .SOO

Geron imo. Cin 9 35 5 14 .400
Roger Wayne Roush , son of
While , Mil
8 10 J e .•oo Mr . and Mrs . Albert Roush,

Rio Grande Chorale
.
:gives PTO program
A program by the Rio
Grande
Chorale
was
Prese nted preceding a
meeting ofi he Salisbury PTO
•r uesda y nig ht at the
Sali s bury
Elementary
School.
Dw·ing the PTO business
!peeling, Mrs . Delores Will
il)stalled the new officers
including Mrs. Sally Lam·.bert , preside nt : Mrs. Susan
~ullin s, vice president.; Mrs.

9- 11le Daily Sentinel,MiddleP.Qrt-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April 22,.1976

Jhnstnt , Phi l 1 26 6 13 .SOO
Qliver , Pit ,
7 27 5 13 .d l
Milner , NY
10 36 10 17 . A72

Tum a key coikctiop
into a wail hanging

Polly's l'roblem
DEAR PO LLY - I would
Uke to know how I could
display a collection of antique
keys , I thmk they would look
quite beautiful if prO}&gt;erly
displayed. - NAOMI.
~ :PEAR NAOMI - Why not
•l)lpke a wall grouping with
ygur ke y~? They might be.
h~ g sepllrately agamsl the
Wtlli or , if you pr efer ,
trfountcd on a board covered
fjlh black velvet. Also an
trrangement on a large
eolfee tabl e top could be very
effective . - POLLY
·~DEAR POLLY - Since
njoving into a lovely new
mobile home my Pet Peeve is
\l'i th the glue makers and
010se who use glue on labels
tor brand names, etc . The
labels will come off but the
· glue seems to be bonded for
li fe to plaslic, appliance paint
anct even the glass and mel&lt;\!
of windows and storm doors. I
have used rm111y remedies for
~uc h a problem wi,th OC·
casional success but some of
iny sinks and large r appliances are marked forever
fiith little dirty s ti cky
squares that attracl dirt and
~ ccomc

Rose , Cin

Degree won by

t

'

diiPOUd Of .
Anv person Interested mav
flit written exceptiOns to said
accounts or to matters per .

talnlng to the uecullon of the

trust, not leu than five davs
prior to the date set for

• hearing.

«

•

MANNING D. WEBSTER
JUDGE
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
PROBATE DIVISJON
MEIGS COUNTY, D'IHO
W 22, ltc
II

4.6

oz.

REG. 85'

ss~

STEVENS
MOWERS
REG. 12.59

CLOROX

BLEACH

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April22, 1976
M11jor Le.agu e Lud erl
Bv United Pren lnternationll
Leading Batters
( Ba sed on·20 at bah)
National League
g . ab r . h. pet.

Polly's Pointers
{
By l'olt) !'ramt•r

black . Have some

readers solved this problem '
;... RUTH.
: DEAH POLLY - A reader
I\' an led 10 know how to bleach
hour sacks. A Mennonite

·~ bm;:~n who lived near us
Used to put them on H l ine for

t;arbara Fry , treasurer , and

Mrs. .Je nnifer
Warth ,
'secretary. It was noted that
the new swi ng set purchased
:by the PTO had arrived and
'would be installed this week.
The book sale was reported

about two weeks . Each
morning
she
would
thoroughly soak them with a
garden hose and during the
day the sacks would bleach
and dry. This seemed to work
well . - BERNICE.
DEAR POLLY _ It seemed
that every evening when our
newspaper was tossed in the
yard my dogs got it first. I cut
the bottom out of an empty
three gallon size can, painted
ilinsideandoul to match the
fence and attached it with two
screws to the top 'of a fe nce1
post in a "litying down'
position. Jt is open on the side
toward the sidewalk for the
Paper boy and on the yard
side for me . I can see from

•

ul now says

e

Wl

es

••'

, Attendance at Easler
fmorning service, at the Free
'Methodist Churt h was 143.
Rev. Floy d Shook was in
New York la st week to attend
a Pastors Convention .
~ Mr . and Mrs . Joseph
~Jliggenbothan, Columbus,
&gt;,Mr . and Mrs . Jerry Whitaker,
Newark , spent their Easler
, vacation with their parents,
• Rev . and Mrs. Floyd Shook.
-, Mr . and Mrs. Ted Mathew
•spent Easter and th e
weekend with Mr . and Mrs.

MRS. G.H.

as a huge success and it was
noted that all supplies ordered by the PTO have
arrived. John Lisle, principal, noted that tornado
drills are now being conducted at the school. He also
repo r led lh a t s ludenl
teachers are assisting in the
art program and the second
grade. Ed Bartels announced
a sixth grade workshop will
be conducted . ior parents
sometime next week.
Room count was won by
Mrs. Wendell Hoover's first
grade. The program next
month will be by the fifth and
sixth grade band students .

and placing them on houses.
ll was also suggested that
""ch resident would donate $1
toward the house that
perhaps il could be ·financed
in this manner.
Also discussed was a trip to
Heisley Glass Museum in
Newark. If the group takes
the trip they will go by
chartered bus.
Attending were Margaret
Cottrill, .Jane Teaford, Janice
Lawson, Jean Hail , Pauline
Morarity, Eleanor Borham,
Wanda Teaford , Elva Dailey,
Mar ga r et
Eichi nger,
Charolette Nease and Nancy
Neutzling.

Dick 'Karr.
. Mrs . Gera ld (Kath y)
Pullins is a medical patient in
Holzer Medica l Center.
Mrs. Bertha Parker
returned home Sunday from
a week's visit with Miss Cleo
Parker , Mr . and Mrs . Hugh
Ferguson and son James, and
Mr . and Mrs . Gene 'i\..lkire and
attended the wedding of her
granddaughter, Kimberlee
Kay Alkire, and Mr. William
M. Carter of Coltimbus.
Mr. Harry Sl&lt;lhl is a patient
in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mrs. Dora Holley spent a
couple of days with her
daughter, Mrs . Marie Curd,
Ball Run .

Rings by
Mother's Day .
May9

Give the gif1 thot

at

GREAto .

Franklin U

Pomeroy, R.D., received

American League

and Kingman , N Y IS ; Schmid t.

Amer.ican

League : . Carew ,

M. of May I he will be with
State Farm Mutual In surance. Roush and his wife,
the former Janie Heucker,
reside in Pataskala.
Following the gradu~tion , a
dinner in his honor was held
at the MCL Cafeteria. At-

Minn and Norlh , Oak 6; Rivers , Albert Roush and Kenny ,
NY a old Washington, Oak 5;
Remy, Cal ' ·
Mrs. Gerry Kessinger, Kim
Pitching
and Lois, Kevin and Christi
MoSf victories
National League: . Ruthven , Smith, Pomeroy, R.D.; Mr.
Att , Nor man . Cin and Jones. so and Mrs . Larry Flowerli,
J .Q; N iekr o, All , Bartow. Hou.
Matlack , NY and Reuss, Pitt 2 Columbus; Mr: and Mrs .

Koosman. NY 0.90; Ruthven .
Al l and Lonborg , Phil 1.00.

American League : . Carroll ,
Ch i, Kern, Clev and Cleve land,

Bos 0.00 ; Tra ve rs . Mil 0.69 ;
Holf1man , Bait , Fingers and
Todd , Oak and Barr . Tex 1.00.

Strikeouts
National League : Se aver , NY
11; Niekro. At l 18 ; Richard ,
Hou 11 ; Rogers , Mil 16 ; Nie kro ,
Hou and Jones , so 13.
American League : Ryan , Ca l
18; Tan ana , Cal 17 ; Blyl eve n ,
Minn 16 ; Dec ker , M inn and
Perry , Te)( 15.

ECONOMY BETIER
JOLIET, Ill. (UP!)
Treasury Secretary William
Simon says the country's

eco nomic

recovery

''is

defusing the economy as a
political issue" even though
the un~mployment rate is
"absolutely intolerable."
During an interview
Wednesday , Simon sa id ,
'·The vigor and health of the
economic recovery is
defusing the economy as a
political issue. We still have
an unemployment rate that is
absolutely intolerable.''
·•1 wish television cameras
could portray the ·nation 's
economic story as vividly as
it did the war in Vietnam or
the (1960s ) race riots ... "

Reedsville

New

7\ T t
llO

'S

5

28'5

(JtM $,1.11,., llooo)
Mount 2 to 7 1ton.1 per ""O·
Othtr lfyltt O¥oilabto

GOESSlER'S JEWELRY STORE
Court St., ·Pomeroy

.• .
"

WASHINGTON (UP!)
On occ;asiQn the Supreme
Court, as !he nation 's final
arbiter of !he law, decides
without prompting that it is
time to redefine &lt;r clarify a
major constltutiQnal right.
Such .-as the case
Wednesday .when, presented
wilh a relatively narrow tax
issue, Justice Byron R. White
reviewed 90 years of
decisions on the 5th
Amendment and ruled
BftePingiy that the right
•11ainst sel(·lncrlmination
does not also involve rights to
privacy.
Whlte's 22-page opinion in
Flaher v, -United Slates is
likely to become the
centerpiece of consider.able
litigation in years to come.
Whlte, who was joined.by live
other jU!tices, indicated he ·
was · only tying the vario~
strlni!S of past rulings rather
tliari making new law.

\

-

GRADS

10% OFF
TO ALL GRADS

ROGER W. ROUSH

l

•

'

•

ON ALL WEARING
APPAREL

Richard Huecker, Sidney;
Mr . and Mrs. Steven Varner
and family, Versailles; Phil
Huecker, Danville, Va.; Mr .
and Mrs. Mike Goubea u&lt; and
fam ily , Sidney; Ronald
Heucker, John and Judy
Heucker, Sidney; Mrs.
Robert Esworthy and family
and Mr. and Mrs . Rollin
Bailey of Newark.

PLO IN TOKYO

1ethaeK·

tending were Mr. and Mrs.

BUY REALISTIC. CB!

es

Mrs. Walter Brown and
Mrs. Steve Cowdery visited
wi lh Mrs . Tom Spencer, a
patient at Holzer Medical
Center, at Gallipolis.
Mr . and Mrs . Edward
Chevalier and Garrell
Chevalier were recent dinner
guests of Mr . and Mrs. Zenith
Chevalier and Allan of Belpre
Rd.
Recent visitors of Mr . and
Mrs. Reed Crary were S.M .
Sgt. and Mrs . J . M. Crary and
family of Bangkok, Thailand .
Chester Mundry was a
patient at the St. Joseph
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.
Va .
Mr s. Harold Sauer of
Middleport Rd. visited
Friday evening with Mrs .
Jenny Berkhimer and family
and the R..E: Wiliams family .
Mrs . Walter Brown is a
surgical patient at the
Camden-Clark Hospital iri
Parkersburg.
Mr . and Mrs . Robert'
Hayman of Tolono, 01., spent
a weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
J. D. Hayman.

.

' '

!~
1~
I:
~
~

DELUXE REALISTIC ® 23-CHANNEL
MOBILE CB TRANSCEIVER

I
I

BY

I'

GIRLS &amp; BOYS
3 MONTHS TO SIZE 8

J

15&gt;

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· REG. ·11.09

6, 3tc

~allows :

More Ch~trirrelsl

• Only fl/,114V.a6V,''. 12 VDC NegaNve Ground,

•

Mihe Included!

'

;md ym1 c;m

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~

• With. Milce, A C And DC Power Cords!

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r

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s100 000
.

'

l

CAS~

;

IN
PRIZES
TO BE AWARDED IN

T~E 1976 REALISTIC CB SONG SEA
. RCH r••
IYl
Get. Full Det~ils at Participating

·.··.·lcl•l•l••l"l'•li•l••l'l••lmll••l•lcl•l•l•'l'l'·.•ial•·.-.·.·.••l•l•l•l•cl•l•llr-' /~IIIIIRialdllloiSIIhlalclkliS~t~o~rei;siA~n~d~D;e~a=l:e;rs;......

1895

'
TWIN
TRUCKERS
STAINLESS
STEtL
ANTENNA

~~

u

2195

2 t-904

l

21 ·908

l ;-

102"

~

.3495

\..P

•

21 ·9•• '

RADIO SHACK PRICES ON AVERAGE HAVE

j\
,. ,Q?7

t

GAIN TYPE
BASE
ANTENNA
·'
........
~

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INCREASEDULEEialia.-TfiHH.A.;NN,1j";!i~SSilii;Ni(C:IE~J~URl~Y~,J1BI7;4;1r-~niii~~

PRtC£S MAY VARY AT tNDIVIOUAL SfOAES

11

'1 Q99

PHILLIP'S

REDWOOD
PLANTERS

MILK

15" HANGING LOG
REG.'3.59

OF

:-'-13.-75,,~--1-~· -1-·--~
TABLE
TOP
GRILL

First,

REG. 14.77
~

•

69

ALL
FISHER-PRICE
\

MAGNESII.
REG. 11.09

12

oz. .·· as~

CASE

NO . 21 ,613

First,

•final and Distributive Ac .
~~. . ".;J-nt or. Joseph Alton. Swain,
IKecutor of the Estate at

V Ictor $wain, aka VIctor D .
Swain, Deceased .
Unless exc!ptlons are filed
thereto , said 1ccounts will be
for htlr lng before said Court
on tht 21&amp;1 dey Of Mly, 1976, II
whlc:h time said accounts will

AIM
TOOTHPASTE

bl considered and continued

from day to dey unfit flnellv

!&gt;.' '
t

~

1IUDf' CORPORAltON COPM'ANV

I&gt;

Final Ac:c ount of James Stark
Russell, Executor of the
Estate Of CorBbelle Russell.
Deceased.
• CASE NO . 21,616 First and
F Ina I Ac:coun t of Robert S.
Parker. Exeuctor of the
Estate of Ney N. Carpenter,

O.ceesed.

2495

SILVER BRIDGE SHOPPING PLAZA

CASE NO . 21.486

,,

CASE NO . 21,538 First and

.1/2 WAVE

21-9211

CASE NO . 21.243 First and

REG.

Flnef and Distribut ive Ac .
count of Donald Lee Spencer ,
Executor of the estate of
Sidney A . Spencer , deceased .
• CASE NO . 21.509 First and
Final Account of Mollie Allee
Penn , Adm lnlstratrix of the
Estatl! of Truman Al len Penn ,
Jr . aka Allen P'enn , aka Allen
T. Penn , Deceased .

1:~:~12!!94

23~5

Joan
Christy

Final Account of W i lliam

'Frecker, Deceased .

STAINLESS
STEEL
BODY MOUNT
ANTENNA

21 ·909

JUG

George Frecker, Executor of
lhe Estate of Theodosia A.

102"

42" NO-HOLE
FIBERGLASS
TRUNK
MOUNT
ANTENNA

FIBERGLASS
BUMPER
MOUNT
ANTENNA

.
i
f~

CASE NO . 19,365 SIKih

REG. 14.99

.' .

POLORON
CHEST/

Smith, Guardian of Mary K.
Gallagher, a minor.

Wolfe , Guard!an of
Jones a Minor.

!'

7.59

•n~AFSI~a~fC:c~~~~ ot ~x:~~nL~
Current A ccount of

;

2 QT. .
REG. , $577
1

3 5

~ !!'!
• ;

SAYE·5 2

18" GUTTER
CLAMP
STAINLESS
SJEEL
ANTENNA

'1795

~

~...

1

44" NO-HOLE
STAINLESS
STEEL
TRUNK MOUNT
ANTENNA

and sett.lement:

$597

10" TUB

REG. 15.95$4 65

CO\Inty, Ohio, lor approval

, ,.,

..

42"
ROOF MOUNT
STAINLESS
STEEL
ANTENNA

1 QT.

the

•

1

REDWOO
PLANTERS

Attractive way to decorate
y1;11r patio, JOrd , etc.

Accounts and Vouchers of
follow i ng
named
fiduciar ies have been filed in
the Probate Court. Meigs

'

REG.
7.98

29

TORCHES

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT;
PROBATE DIVISION,
MEIGS COUNT¥, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET·
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO

I

REG. 1'1

'PATIO

W 22, 29, 2tc

• Roody fo lise On Any Chonnel Wherever
You Sot Up/

CAR
VACUUM

IRON
FENCE

··109

Clerk

159~

• Add Crystals For Two

PlASTIC WHITE
WROUGHT

REG. 11.39

M. L. Kelly
President of Council
Attest: Gene Grate

23-CHANNEL BASE OR MOBILE
CB TRANSCEIVER

On Channel 9 1

eHALTER TOPS

·-·--'----·-._......--·---------·--·"'

29

Sec . I. That an au:~~.il i arv 1
•
pollee unit be established
; . ,. within the Vill~ge Pollee
•D•P.artment , pursuant to
•
•
Section 37 . 161 of the Ohio
•
ReviSed Code.
Se:c . II. ·Be It further or .
;
,•
dl!llned
that
the
pollee
auxiliary shall be subject to
'
the rules and regu lations ti led
•
with the Mayor of the VIllage .
,'
Sec . Ill. This Ordinance
1
-shall take effect and be in
force from and after Apri l 12.

• Call For EmergRncy Help

.J

PH. 992-3586

n

,

COMPACT 3 ~ CHANNEL
TRANSCEIVER

eTANK TOPS

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

ICE PAKS

Passed the 12th day of April

I)

Kl IIIII' .,0,1

.

1976

eSUN SUITS
•SHORT.

.

1976

the Commissio.n.

FOR

Creditors are required to

Be It ordained by the
Council of the VIllage of

I,

amol• f1 e r Pos 1!Jv O o r nega t•ve ground The re s o nly one p lace
vou can 1Jnc1JI
Rad1o Shack

contacting

HEALTH TEX

BoK U5, Racine , Ohio , has
been duly appointed Executor
of the Estl!lte of Lid a Swain,
1k1 Llddll Swain , deceased ,
late of Su t ~on Townsh ip , Meigs
~ounty, Ohio .
.

ORDINANCE NO . 1041 -76
An Ordinance to ESTABLISH
AUXILIARY POLICE FOR
THE VILLAGE OF MIO·
DLEPORT

1

Jn cludecJ i\dd &lt;HI external speaker and use as mobile PA

Further information may

r:::::~~~l

SET

Notice Is hereby given that
Joseph Alton Swain of Rout e 1,

(4)

I

A ~XJ DIJiiil d1o1et: . o f i!V td CB e r s' O ur TR C-24 fea tures aUioma llc
ntH se limiter plu s a nu 1sC blank e r. delta-tu ne. hghted chan n el
1/ldJ c at o r Qu111-m mo(lu ja tJ o n 1nWcaror All c ry sta l s, m1ke

prac ·

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMI SS ION OF OHIO
by Randall G. Applegate,
Secretary

TENNIS

Judge
Common Pleas Court.
Probate Division
Meigs County , Ohio

the operation of the. fuel

by

WORK
GLOVES

Manning D . Webst·er

adjustment clause and the

be obta ined

GARDEN
GLOVES

Gomales

OF APPOINTMENT

1~6.

publi c hear ing Ca1e No .
76 -163·EL-FAC , to review

tices and poli cie1 of the
Cotumbu1 &amp; Southern
Ohio Electric Company,
on May 17 , t 976, at 9:30
A.M. at the offices of the
CommiiSion, 111 North
High Stree t, Columbus,
Ohio. All interested per ·
sons will be given an OP ·
portu nily to be heard .

prohibition
agai nst
unreasonable searc h and
sei:rure
of
the
5th
Amendm ent, free speech
rights provided by the 1st
Amendment and court rules
protecting
some
c'Ommunications, such as the
Ia wyer-clien t privilege,
White said.
•

Pancho

file their cl aims with sEtid
fiduciary within four months .
Dmted this 16th day of April

mi ssion of Ohio has set for

procu rement

~

prosecutors by a ta&lt;paycr's
lawyer.
In holding that they must ,
White said no Supreme Court
ruling had held that the 5th
Amendment p e rmit s
withholding or evidence on
privacy grounds .
Any right In privacy is
reached only under the

Llddl Swain Deceased.
,/

LEGAL NOTICE

fuel

NOTI~E

' ..

But William J. Brennan Jr. a~ains1 self-mcrim ina tion
accused the majority of ·can be asserted .. .'' although
taking "another step ·in the he did not find it necessarily a
denigration of privacy threat to privacy.
There was no need lor
principles settled nearly 100
Wh ite's extensive opini on.
years ago."
And Thurgood Marshall The appeal raised only the
said it "adopts a wholly new narrow issue of whether an
approach lor deciding when accountan t's work papers
the 5th Amendment privilege must be turned over to

ABide from the privacy another, he is not , by odds" with settled ~\ h
issue, White said a defendant surrendering such records, Amendment principles.
Brennan suggested ,.,
in any criminal case can be incriminating himseH .
compelled
to
provide
Brennan sharply opposed majority was la yu .;; ,
prosec utors potentially most of Whit,• ' s major ~roun d work for ~ fut ur ••
incriminating documents iii conclusions.
• ruling that even pursonal,
his possession so long as they
"EKilressions arc legion in private papers or a defendanl
are not the defendant's own opinions of this court that tile cu n be subpoenaed. He sal
writings.
protection of pwsonal the 5tl• Amendment also bars
The 5th Amendment only privacy is a l"ntral purPQse production of documents
bars compulsion to testify of the pri vil•ti•' against wrilten by someone other '
against oneseH, White said, compe l led
self. U1an the defendant, In tbe
and since the defendant can incrimination, " Brennan defendant 's possession ,
deny the accuracy of said. He called White's which
arc
cl c~ rly
4
doc uments prepared by conclusion "fund amentally at incriminating.

Cue No . 21784
l1t1tt ol Lida SWain, aka

Th e Public Utilities Com·
COURT FAVORS EXNER
SAN DIEGO (UP!) Judith Campbell Exner, who
claimed she had an affair
with the late President
Kennedy, has won another
round in her battle to look at
her FBI files .
Edward Schwa rtz , ch ief
U.S. District Court judge,
Wednesday
denied
a
government request to delay
turning over the files until
officials had filled thousands
of earlier requests .
" I wo,ul&lt;!. hazard to guess
that many of the requests are
trivial,' ' Schwartz said. "I
think Mrs. Exner's request is
of direct concern and I don't
think she should have to wait
in line.,

TOKYO (UPI) - .Farouk
Kaddoumi, ranltijlg official of
the Palestine Liberation
Organization,
conferred
'
•• today with Tomomi Narlta,
leader of Japan 's major
opposition . Socialist Party.
Kaddoumi,
PLO
pcilltibureau chief, who is
regarded
as
the
· organization's foreign
minister, has been in Tokyo
since Tuesday at the
invitation of Prime Minister
Takeo
Miki's
ruling
Liberation Democratic
Party.

BECAUSE 1 ~ YEARS OF MANUFACTURING KNOW-HOW HAVE MADE US A WORLD LEADER

ony Mother would enjoy

. Now only

Now

By JAMt;~j A. KIDNEY

a

g. ab r. h. pet.
Pinlella, NV 7 25 5 13 .120 · ba chelor· · O( ·~clertce in
Lynn , Bos
8 JO 4 12 .400 business
administration
Bell. Cle
7 21 7 10 .400
Patek , KC
7 10 4 8 .400 degree from· Franklin
Horton . Del
8 Jl 7 11 .m University at the 53rd
Harrah , TeK 9 19 2 " .379 co mmen ce m en t E as 1er
Ch alk · CaI
12 40 6 15 ·375
Yount , Mil
7 " 6 9 .371 Sunday
at
Veterans
Fisk, Bos
10 31 9 IJ .311
McR ae, KC " JO 2 '' .367 Memori~ Stadium when ov~
Home Runs
600 degrees were awarded.
Nationil Leagu e: . Sc hm id t,
Roush, graduate of Mid·
Phil
8; King man, NY 7;
Cedeno, Hou ' ' Monday and dleport High School, class of
Morales, Chi. Jorgensen, Mil. 1964, was class president and
Milner , NY and Matthews, SF
co-cap tin of the football team.
3
·American ·· League: . Horton , He went directly from high
Det J; Mora. Ball. Evons, Fisk
and Rice, Bos, Herrmann , cal , school into the Marine Corps
Downing , Ch-i, Ford , M inn. for four ')'ears. Since that
Munson , NY , Ban do, Oak and time he has been employed
Burroughs, Tex 2.
Runs Batted tn
by the GAC Corporation in
Nati ona l League : Gr iffey , Ci n Columbus.

Rasmussen. SI.L anct Mon tefus-

Jewelmcnt.

,.'

6 13 ,406

use, frequently rub a lead co,Amer
SF 2·1
ican League : . Palm er ,
penci l over the zipper teeth. Ba tt 3 1: Tia nt , Bos. Roberts ,
You 'll find the graphite Dei and Fiflmorr ls, Kt 2.0;
.
f
lh
. .
Rvan , Cal , Wood, Ch i'. Slal on.
par t lC1cs rom e penct1 WI 11 Mil and PE&gt;rry, Tex 2-1.
lubricate the zipper .. Work it Earn•~ run. average
.
up al)d down to evenly
(Base d on~ lnntngs pitched)
. .
.
Nattonal League : MeUger ,
distribute the graphite.
\ D o.oo. Forsch, Hou 0.6&lt;;

Mother~s

•
·,'

Henderson , All 9 J2

O; Dierker and Ric hard , Hou,

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

••

6 17 .. &lt;17
4 16 .U4
7 12 ..U4

a period of time. When not in

L
••

McBride ,S t.L 9 38
Grote, ...JY
10 36
Slargel l. Pit
9 ?7

everyone had one . - MRS.
~, D
· ·
DEAR PO LLY - The
zippers on boots , sleeping
b
rl lh
h t' l
ags e:u;, o er sue ar ICes
can become tl problem when
expose d to lh e e1emen ts over

•

Laurel Oiff
: News Notes

Rights of privacy clarified by high court

Phil " ' Cedeno. Hou " '
Matthews. SF 11 .
Amer i can League : Rudi , Oak
the house when the paper is 12 : MeI1on . Ca I and Chamel Iss,
NY
11 ; spenoer, Chi and
pul in and always find it clean Horlon. Del 10 .
and dry. The delivery boy
Stolen a ... ,
Nat ional League: . Morg an ,
said at first it was the fun - Cin a. Cedeno, Hou 6; Grilley ,
nbicsl thing he hadhever ssh
een, ~~ng~~l. M~f~"" · Hoy and

Club to head projects
SYRACUSE - The Wed:nesday Homemakers Club
' here agreed Wednesday at its
regular monthly mee ting to
head two projects for the
village .
The projects are house
nwnbering and purchasing
and selling pink dogwood
lrees.
• Seve ral money-ma king
project&lt; were discussed in
order to raise funds for the
pr ojects. It wa s a lso
'sugge sted that perhap s
:tesidents would pay for the
~,o u se num bers and the
Homemakers would do the
w.ork of assigning numbers

Roger Roush

10 42 12 21 .SOO

Geron imo. Cin 9 35 5 14 .400
Roger Wayne Roush , son of
While , Mil
8 10 J e .•oo Mr . and Mrs . Albert Roush,

Rio Grande Chorale
.
:gives PTO program
A program by the Rio
Grande
Chorale
was
Prese nted preceding a
meeting ofi he Salisbury PTO
•r uesda y nig ht at the
Sali s bury
Elementary
School.
Dw·ing the PTO business
!peeling, Mrs . Delores Will
il)stalled the new officers
including Mrs. Sally Lam·.bert , preside nt : Mrs. Susan
~ullin s, vice president.; Mrs.

9- 11le Daily Sentinel,MiddleP.Qrt-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April 22,.1976

Jhnstnt , Phi l 1 26 6 13 .SOO
Qliver , Pit ,
7 27 5 13 .d l
Milner , NY
10 36 10 17 . A72

Tum a key coikctiop
into a wail hanging

Polly's l'roblem
DEAR PO LLY - I would
Uke to know how I could
display a collection of antique
keys , I thmk they would look
quite beautiful if prO}&gt;erly
displayed. - NAOMI.
~ :PEAR NAOMI - Why not
•l)lpke a wall grouping with
ygur ke y~? They might be.
h~ g sepllrately agamsl the
Wtlli or , if you pr efer ,
trfountcd on a board covered
fjlh black velvet. Also an
trrangement on a large
eolfee tabl e top could be very
effective . - POLLY
·~DEAR POLLY - Since
njoving into a lovely new
mobile home my Pet Peeve is
\l'i th the glue makers and
010se who use glue on labels
tor brand names, etc . The
labels will come off but the
· glue seems to be bonded for
li fe to plaslic, appliance paint
anct even the glass and mel&lt;\!
of windows and storm doors. I
have used rm111y remedies for
~uc h a problem wi,th OC·
casional success but some of
iny sinks and large r appliances are marked forever
fiith little dirty s ti cky
squares that attracl dirt and
~ ccomc

Rose , Cin

Degree won by

t

'

diiPOUd Of .
Anv person Interested mav
flit written exceptiOns to said
accounts or to matters per .

talnlng to the uecullon of the

trust, not leu than five davs
prior to the date set for

• hearing.

«

•

MANNING D. WEBSTER
JUDGE
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
PROBATE DIVISJON
MEIGS COUNTY, D'IHO
W 22, ltc
II

4.6

oz.

REG. 85'

ss~

STEVENS
MOWERS
REG. 12.59

CLOROX

BLEACH

�'" -:;~~~~·--·;:~;:~:.:.:·"JI;or Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
5

PM

Dav

Before

Publ• cat,on
Monday Dl'adlint:'
a m
Ca n c e II a t 'on
Co rr ect1ons will be
c:epted un ltf 9 a rn
Day of Publ•cat•on

9
ac
for

REGULAT IONS

I he r• qht to e-dt I or r et('( t
r~ny
ads deemed ob
lec••onlll 1h e publisher
will not be r espons• b le for

mo re lhan one •nc orrect
•nsert 10n
RAT ES
For Want Ad Serv •ce
S ce nt s per wo rd one

•nsert ,on

M1ntmum CharQ e So l 00
1·1 ce nts per word three

tnse r t•ons

?6 cc •l 'S per wor d srx
rnser11ons
con sec utive
?~ Per Ce n 1 Olscoun 1 on
pard ad s and ad s pard
wrthrn 10 days

CARD OF THANK S
&amp; OB ITUARY

tor
~0
word
mlnrmum
Ea r h add!lronal word J
cen ts
BLIND ADS
Ad dr ltonal 2Sc Charqe
per Adve rtr sement
OFFICE HOUR S
a JO a m to ~ 00 p m
Datly , B JO a m ro ! 'l 00
Noon Sa turday
Phone todl'ly99? 2 1 ~6

5.2 00

NOTICES
ATTN

FRIENDLY

II

ALL HO USEWIV ES

A ll Yard Sal es, Rummag e,
Por ch "nd Basemen t Porch
and B5sem en t Sal es. etc
must be petd m advan c~ :
Ge t your in rn ea r ly by
stopping by our ofltce at
The Da ll y Sentmel. 111
Court St or wr1 tmg Bo x
729 , Pomeroy , Ohro 45769
wrlh you r r em rn an ce

IN MEMORY of my husband
Charle s H Hensley who passed
away Apnl22 , 1972
True was ht s hear!
Hr s acllons so ktnd,
Hrs lrle o pattern to those left

behind

A beautiful soul tn the garden of
res t,
Its tru e what they soy ,
God choose&amp; the be5t
lo~~~~nd Lonesome l eona_~

WE WISH to than k the teachers at
Rocme t·hgh , Racme Emergency
Squad , doctors and nurses ol
Veterans Memorral Hmprtol
and all who sent cords, g1fts
and those who called or stop
ped by the house and took
passionate co nce rn following
our son 1 , Robert Tay lor , acc1
dent. May God bless yo u oil
Mr and Mr5 l eo Taylor and
fom rly

O'AiRv

herd - to sei lat Gallrpolr s
livestock Marke t
Appro~~:
1motel y 12 noon, Sa turday
Apnl24

NO ONE except myself ts
outhomed to accept or s1gn fo r
any merchond tse packages or
matl that ts rn my nome James
M Hamm

•

Pets for Sale

OEM~ HAVE NO CAS H INVEST
MENT NO COLLECTING OR A.KC Reg1stered Collre Stud Ser.
DEUVERINGS CAll CO llECT
vtce , Stardus t Krn g Phone
CAROL DAY , (518) 489-8395 or

REGISTERED tmh Setter mole
dog , red 9 months old Also , 1
pony Contact R1to Roush, 1
"HOME WORKER S ' earn S60
mrle au! St Rt 143 be s1de chur ·
weekly address1ng envelopes
ch
Rush se lf addressed stomp&amp;d
envelope
Sou ther"n 01 ve r· REGISTERED male lmh sette(
Phone 949-2545
srf1ed 1206 Camden Drive ,
R1chmond Vrrgm ra 23229
JWO pon1es for sole Rea sonable
Phone 949-2883
$25 PER HUNDR ED stuftrng
enve l op es.
Se nd
self
SMAll mtxed breed puppres to
addr e ssed
s tomped
g1ve away Mother Poodle enve lope Edroy Mods, Box
Terrre r modure
E&gt;c ce ll enl
188, Albany _M o 6.4&lt;1fl_2_
pn ce Phone992 - ~2 1 4

PART Y PLAN

SUPERV ISORS 3 HORSES , one Appa loosa co lt
Mem .Moc Fom• ly Shopping
one Quarter Horse co lt one
Servteo 1$ eJCpondmg 1n to your
half Morgan· one half Ten·
area and has SupePi ts or op
nessee Walke r more Phone
port unitres ovarla ble
Par ty
(614)698-3290, Rl 2, Albany
plan expenence prele1 red
3
HORSES , one Appaloosa co lt ,
Hrghesl
co mm rsslon
no
one Ouarlln Horse colt one
deli~terrng or col lec ting Coli
half Morgan -one half Ten collect between B.OO AM . and
nessee Walker more Also ,
.4 00 P M to Ann Ba xt er
pony carl and harness Phone
319 556 888 1 or wr1t e Morn
(614)698 3290 Rl 2Aibony
Moe 60 1 JOckson, Dub~que
lA 52001
FREE pupp1es , 8 week s old Phone
99'2 -7805
Rog1onol sal esman , one of the no
h an ' s largest portable and ONE German short horr pointer
modular buildmg rnanufac
ma le One temo le Llewelhn
turers , relarl sole s upenence
se tter both Reg1stered prr ced
tn aut omotr ve and mab1le
reasonable Phone 992·0090
homes helpful Exce llent salary
ond commiSSIOn Stu rdi House
Mfg Co , Porn! Pleasant , W

oq7 5(HEVROLET Ch evelle

WAITRESS over 21 no expen ance
necessary Wrrte Box 729S, co
The Dotly Sen tm el , Pomeroy
Oheo

Nt le's car Sttcker $7,400 00.
S189S

p

st eertng , rad1 o, clea n

302

v.e,

automattc trans
mtertor , blue ftni sh

1

B Phone (304) 882-3205

TRAIN FULL OR
PART TIME
You don 1 helve to qu 1t your
JJr eSellt JOb to tr il lll to clnve il
tr,rctor tr ,uler I n only 7 to 8
waekenrls PART T I M E tr c1111111 9
(S aturct.1y s ~ Sumli:lysl u qud l
Ffmd ri rr ver r.an be ea1n111 g

per yedr cllld u~ (3 weeks rn u
FULL TIME re Silient tra rmng
progr &lt;~m)

RE V CO Tr,rctor Tttuler Tr a111
rn g, Inc wrll tr&lt;tlllyou onmrnJ
e111 , pr ore5stonal equrpmen t,
and placeme11 t ass1stance 1s
av;:ulahle u ~ o n gr rdu at1on
CA LLNO W1

197.4 EJ5 1eep with extras good
cond ttr on. $3900 00
Phono

I 596

5104.

1971MONTECorl o pb ps oc
Phone 992-5301

4 dr. Con be
seen at 399 West Mo1n 51 ,
Pom_erot_ _

VEGETAB lE plants of oil ktnds , 10
drfferent vaneftes of tomatoes ,
1ncl ud1ng non· octd wh1t e
tomato Very large selec tt on of
b eddi ng pla n t s
Also
Geron1ums and oth er potted
pla nts
Hon grnQ... ba ske ts
Cleland form s and Green house
Gero ldrne Cleland ,
Roc1 ne

ENJOY gracious l1v1ng at Vr llage
Manor tn Mtddleport for as low
os $130 per month wtth all
ull httes pa1d These are brand
new h1gh qualrty apartments at
pmes you C(]n afford Your rent
mcludes month to month
lease s
a ll elec
lr\l tng
cor pet rng
range
and
refrrgera tor free trash pr ck up , MODERN wa lnut console AM FM
rod 1o
4 speed changer
ca ble TV ot your e&gt;cpense and
Balan ce $103 40 or terms Call
on srte laundry foc1l1tres . Con·
992-3965
venie nl to shopprng on Th1rd
ond M1lt Streets rn Mtddleport
GARDEN Supply Headquar ters
See the. manager at Rtversrde
Cabbage coulrtlower brocco li ,
Apartments or ca ll 992 3273
head lettu ce and pansy plants
Furnrsh ed apartm ents are also
Al so, omon sets seed potatoes
ovotloble
of all vonetr es an d o fu lllrne of
bulk gard1en seeds Head·
FURNISHED 2 bedrm apartment
quar ters oho for frne produce
adults only rn Mtddleporl
Mrdwoy Mkl . Pomeroy , 992Phone 992 387 4
3 BEDRM house w1th both 1n
Rutla nd Ph one 992 5858
3 AND 4 RM furnished and tm
furn 1shed opts Phone 992
543A

PARKERSBURG d22-4080 COUNTRY-Mobtle H-ome Park , Rl

OLD l urmture 1ce bo.:e s brass
beds , old wall telephones and
parts or "comp lete househo lds
Wnte M D Mtller, Rt 2
Pomeroy Ohro Coll992-77b0
TIMBER , top prrce tor stondmg

ltmber Call (614)446-8570
CASH pard for all makes and
models of mob1 le homes
Phone area code 614 42j -953 1
WANTED used lawn and garden
tractors on9 mowers Olf ermg
top dollar for lrode·tn on new
equ1pm en 1 Boum True Va lue
Chester , Ohr o

YA RD SALE, fnday and Satu rd ay
Apn l 23 and 24 at the home of
Roderrck Gnmm on Broadwa y
and Cherry Stree t, three blocks
up from the l1re stalt on then
nghl ot top of hrl l. Brg red
h':use ~ot ch l or srgns
FIVE fam 1ly Yard Sale Thursday
and Fndoy from 9 ttl 5 New
1tems from a croll shop lots of
n1 ce clothmg of all s1zes, end
many mr sc rtem s F ~rst road to
_ left after po5st~g W ~ . P 0
YA RD SALE Th ursday ond fndoy
9 a m till 4 p m F1rs t house on
St Rt 143, ~o_wery r e~den ce
'fARO SALE , Fr rdoy 9 am trll 5
pm
Btl I Cross res1dence
Rocrne
'fARO SALE Larkrns St , Rutland
Weds through Sa turday , push
mower, toys and bed , co m
plete new mattress Arland
romances drshes of all ktnds
Call 7 ~2

2078

(A ) 11 , li C

YARD SALE . Junror Closs of Kyger
. -- -- - ----,------,
Creek just north of Chesh1re
on St Rt 7, Sa tu rday April 24 ,
9am t~ 4. pm

DAIRY HERD
TO SELL AT

GALLIPOLIS
LIVESTOCK
MARKET
Approx. 12 Noon
Sat., Apri I 24th

•

'

'

GARAGE SALE RAIN OR SH INE ,
Fndoy April .23, 8 30 to 8 30,
Saturday Aprd 24 9 00 fill
4.00
Ce dar che51 , beds
(regular and baby ). Maytog wr·
mger washer (good co nd1tion )
Stnge r
portable
sew rng
mochrne ,
conn1ng
1ors
women s and boy 's clot he5.
dress&amp;r redrnrng c;hcm , some
antrques Rou te 124 1 ou t of
~acme pos t the Belhony Chur ·
ch turn lust rood to rtght ,
follow srgns Bu( k VanMeter ,
JoAnn Cnsp

USED Chomsows !tilers,
mowers Wrlkrnson lawn
Gorden , .498 l ocust 51 ,
dleport . Oh1 o Phone

30'12

and
and
Mrd·

991-

2582

FORD 9N tractor
overhaul
S1 750. Ford Jubtlee tractor
$1 750.Ford 861 tractor wi th
loader, 52 350, Allis Chalmers
W0-45 tractor , w1de lront end
$1 250, Used 2x4 ' plow $175
used 5 h 3 pt rotary mower
$185, New Idea hoy condt
Ironer , $450 3 ndrng lbwn
mowers $35-$11Q,luckett farm
Equ1pm en t Phone (614) 698·

1%9 APACHE told-out sleeps 6,

ssoo_Ph~,?92 -2596 .

COAl , lrmestone and ..~;~m
c: hlonde and c:olclum bnne for
dust con trol and all types of
soil . Excels1or Salt Works East
Main Street Pomeroy. Ohio ,
_ phon! 992:~
_
FORD tractor brush hog and
plow all1n goad condilton See
~ or col i R T. Stewart Rt 1 Mtd·
die por t Pho~ 992! 8! 4_
1972 Husquarno 360 8 speed
Good condrtron
Phone 992

2211
JERSEY Guernsey cow wi th ca lf ,
by srde Pho~~ 9-49 217 9
PEACH and cherry tree s lor sole
rea sonable Coll992 -3638.
VAN for sole near Merg s Mu,e 1
Also , 1973 Hondo IOi) Phone
742 2-465 or 742-2746

HT. ,

Phone 992-

Phone 99'2-7790

- - - - - "for-sole

l BEORM home
cou ntrr , elec .
large 1replace
new !;lcrage

--~

In the
or gas heat ,
and playroom .
and awneng5

Phone (J04)882-51 B6

-- - - - NEWlY remodeled 2
home N ~e e yard

--~

bedroom
Phone 992·

739&lt;
LARGE buildmg on Mom Streel In
Rutland LMng quarters In
rear See or call T 0 Stewart ,

7&lt;2-2&lt;21
3 BEDAM house. 2 yrs old .
carpeted , 2 baths, central otr
cond tttoning , basemen t and
garage 1n Albany . Ohro For op
pom tmen t, phone (614 ) 698

8722

-

PRICED for qurck sa le by owner
Two bedroom frame hou se
new ktlchen and ba th new
carpe t k1 tchen and liv1ng room
elect nc heat , uflhtr. room, dou·
ble garage , Iorge at bulldmg

TP Coli (614 ) M7-3065 or 6673360

Blown
Insula tiort-Services
F tnan cm; Av~rlable
Blown tnto Walh &amp; AIItts

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

LARRY LAVENDER
Syracuse. Oh•o

Ph . 992-3993

3 23 1 mo

D&amp;D

DONEUI'S
PIZZA
295 s 2nd St
Mtddlepart , Ohto

$3.000 00 Phone 843-!6~

We build new and remodel

lhe old

992 6167
OPEN4 PM DAILY
CLOSED MONDAY

3 BEDRM.

house ln

Phone 992-5858

Rutland

HOUSE for sale , 26 acres, newly
fenced pastu re
2 acres 1
llllobl e, house carpeted and
remodeled , l res hly pomted,
basement , smell barn porch
ctly water f orced Otr heat,
rura l. convemenl locot ton near
Chester Pht~ne (614) 985 42A8 '
or 992 5975

we specialtze en hom e
made Przza . Spsgh ettr ,
Baked Lasag na . a. Sa nd
wr ches
Quick Cai'ry Out servtce

All types of

HOUSE on Lmcoln Hgts 2 bedr
ms , Iorge ktt chen , large bose
menl , excel len t buy for
$9 .200 W1th fu rne tu re, $10,700
Phone 992 76-48
3 BEDRM. HOUSE 1n Middleport
For ced 01r furnace central 01r
Phone 992 2058
-'----------__..,..-,

I 72 ACRES Phone 742 23S9
HOUSE for sale by owner on lm
coin Hgts Pr1ced low f or qurck
sale Phone 992-5539
lOVElY 2 story older home rn
Rocme 11 .:24 ltvtng rm , dm1'lg
room new burl 1-m kr lchen wtth
cherry cob1neh , den bedrm
and one·holf both down wtlh
oak hardwoo d floor5 3 bedr
ms . New fu ll both, uhlrty room
upsto~r s full basemen t Iorge
fron,t and rear porches unot.
toched goroge
2 storage
bu1ldtngs, al l se t upon Iorge lot
w1 th oddt t1onol lot ava1lable
Must 5ocrtle ce for $21 000 Call

949-2883

'

~adiato

.

Service

.

'

-

'

•'

From the la rgest Tru ck or
·Bulldo ze r" " Radiator to th e
sma ll es t Heat er Co re

-..-.- f - ~-

....-7 :[~ ...- '~

ll'lp

~ '"",

••

,~

....

1

i .~'

1

PomeroY

SLOAN'S
CARPETING
hFree estimates on ca r petmg and tn sta llat ton
We' ll b n ng sa llfples to your
hom e wrth no obhgation
See how you can really
save
Mtke Young , Manager
Sales and Installation

Rt 3, Pomeroy , Ohoo 4S769
Phone day or noght
61 4-992-2206 I It I 't' O

' Charn

SawsLawn

MowersTillersRtding
T rae t ors.

Lawn Boy mowers,
Ptoneer
cha rn
saws,
Bolen ' s Mowers, Merry
Trllcrs, MTD Mowers.
491 Locust St
Mtdtlleport, Ohto

FORKED RUN LAKE -

FREE GAS -Henlal s all

drnlng r oom , ba sem ent.
garage, 11 acre ln nt ce

localoon 519 .500
WALK TO SHOP - 2 story

hea t S8,500
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
ALL
TYPES
OF
PROPERTY
LIST
WITH US NOW.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
991 -22S9 or 992 -2S68

Virgo I B. Sr , Rea ltor
110

Mechantc , Pameroy, 0 .

Phon e 992-3315
1.4 ACRES - Good garden
12

groun d. nrce 3 br t'lome. l
balhs, large ea l tn kilchen,
hill ba seme nt and extra
se pt tc tank for t railer

131,500 00
49 ACRES -

Lots of no ce

woods for r eld)(tng, 2 br
new
home
w dh
full
ba se m en t a ntj ca rpo rt .

$31,500
SUMMER SPOT - Over 3

IRON FOR ?

6· 30 Till10:00
3 17 -1mo

~lYWJ]lM;~=!:!~c
Unocramblelhese roor Jumbleo,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary warda.

PUBUC
ACCOUNTANT

3· 181 mo

Children, deep well , hogh
On ly S5,BOO
NEARLY NEW - 7 room
ran ch home, large famtl y
room 3 brs , patio and
n1ce lot 1 a r ea l buy at

$24,500
NEW LISTING •-

AUCTION. s,qE ·

llo1P05TOR -

the fire house located in
Tupp ers Platns, Ohto on

April 17th begtnnong at
10:00 a.m.
Watch for Ust
Items Later .

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

of

Yr11erd•r'•

~ERE, ~ IS 'LL

TAKE
CARE OF THESE TWO/

WHAT A\30UT THE OTHER
PTEROSAUR WE SAW

CI'IUISIN ' AROUND UP
Il-lERE , OOP?

level lol $18,000
•
NEA R CHESTER- Extra

and d1tcher. Charles R Hotfield , Ba ck Hoe Service ,
Rutland , Ohto Phone 742-2008.

RIDIN' ON/ COME ON!

382S.
REMODELING Plumbing heoltng
and all types of general repair
Work guaranteed 20 years expertence Phoneo/n -2409.
O&amp;D TREE Tnmmtng, 20 years el!r
pertence . In sure d fr ee
esflmotes Coli 992-2384 or

Coin&amp; Metal
Detectors
For Rent

or

C: AS()T .INti: AT l.li:V

You
look
well,
Amelia!

3167,
W1ll DO elCterlor pointing,
houses and roofs . Phone 992·

NEffi a pla sterer?
Custe r, 992-3550

Coli

Joe

What's on LJOUr

penm~-pinchinq,

moneLj qrubbinq
mind? ._,_,

568ol or 992-337&lt;.
EXTERIOR house pointing, call
949·2154 anyttme.

EXCAVATING doze::r=lo'-o--;de_r_a_n-cd
backhoe wo rk , dump trucks
and lo-boys for htre ; wtll haul
l 1ll d1rt , top soil , limestone and
gravel Call Bob or Roger Jef·
lers , day phone 992-7089,
nlght phone 992-3525 or 992·

Sat Aprol24, 1976 at liP a.m. Locatoon - 1 block above
Texaco Servoce Stat on on Thord and Mary St. at the

Mt=BOC-"Tl116
/SA ROTTEN,

Dorsey L Roush property in New Haven, W. Va .

SELFISH
THING

I w 1ll sell , l Bol rn garden tra ctqr With all attachments,

1 5 gallon stone 1a r, sk ill saw, AM-FM radio, 2 garden
spray er s, shadow boxes, readtng books, electnc
heater , B&amp;D 1/2'' drill. electric motor , pip e ftttings ,
miter bo x and saw , 24" ptpe wrench, ptpe cutter, canoe
paddle s, l rfe ja ckets, pair water sk is, water tank , shoe

lathe, wood pl aner fo r electr ic drt ll, 2 blow torches,

Auctioneer
Henry Lewis ,

PORTABLE we ld tng servtee , ntght
.•• ?! do~ Phone 7.42 2798.

Lunch Will
MOBILE home for ' sale , 1Ax70',
Fl ~etwood . All furn ist-.ed, central orr condiftoning. Phone

99'2-3901
12x65 mobile homes, 2 Iorge
bedrms .• unfurnished . $5 ,500.
lived In about 6 month5 Phone

L . . . : : . . - - - - - - - - --

i

W1NNjiillEi·.-. . . . . . . . . .~~~--­

® "THE NE\\:SfAPER COLUMNI&amp;TS
ARE:601NG8/ffl'Y TRYINB
TO RGURE OUT WHAT~----­
'MOON lAD'i11 WILL

WEAR

w::MI YOU 0\N BEE WHY
IT'S 50 IMPOR'Ji'\NT RJR
YOU 1D ARRIVE AT
11-1E BALL ALL
COlERED UP..,

Owner
Mildred Roush

Be Served

I 367-7793,

FULLY equrpped TV Repa1r Shop
for sole to settle estate, Best

offer lakes It, Phone 8&lt;3-2911 ,

AUCTION . Moson Auct ion Hou1e,
Mason , W Vo Friday, Aprll23 ,
7 p m . Consignments welcome.

Phone (304) 882·2407

FRIDArS GUESlS
ARE OHIO POWER CO.
REPRESENTATIVES WIWAM LEVBY
AND RICHARD WILSON
·AND APPALACHIAN POWER CO.
REPRESENTATIVE "DI_CK ROUSH.
TUNE IN AT 10:15 A.M.
FOR KALEIDOSCOPE
ON W.M.P.O.

)

on Venus" 10.

bW- News 13.
2: 31)-News 3; Movie "The Spiral Road" 4.
3:01)--Movle "Forever Amber" 3.
4:30-Movle "Paranoiac" 4,
5:01&gt;-Movle "Dragonwyck" 3.
Clllnntl Flvt
9:01)--700-Ciub
7:oo--Wresttlng
8:oo--Biack Knight Revue
IO:OG-700-Ciub
ThursCiay, April 22

I RECKON IT'S HIGH
TIME I CLEANED OUT
TH'BARN

WUTHLESS

CARD'PLAVIN'
VARMINTS!~

IT WILL HEIGHTEN
11-iE SUSPENSE: TO
lHE: IV!!! DEGREE"!

Ilvl GOING 1D FEEL
FOOLISH IXJING IT,
13UT(Sf6H) I GUEB5
YOJ 1RE RIOHT1 AS
U:7UAL!

NORTH
• K Q 10 2
• K QJ6
t AQ 10
•Q9

IDI

I: AST

.3

J 976

A83
72

• 954

A K 10 5

... 7 6 4 2

t98 543
SOUTH

theater
40 Pun's
aftermath
41 VIctoria
Cross, e.g.
42 Love
poetry's
Muse

too ls ou tboard motor , 1cec r ea m freezer , 4 hea t lamps ,

-----

5968:::.___ _ _ _ __

39 -

1::1 DO ~~-

push plow , rototil ler, 21awn mowers, lawn and garden

5232.

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Sanetolt on . 992 -3954 or 991-

Yesterday's Auwer

6:oo--Sunrlse 1&gt;eme1ter 10,
6.15-Farm Report 13.
6:2G-Biut Ridge Quartet 13,
6:»-Columbus Today&lt;; News 6; Sunrise Semester 11
·farmtlme 10.
6 : ~unce of Prevention 10
6:6---Mornlng Report 3.
6:50-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13,
6:5S-Chuck Whlfe Reports 10; Good Morning, Tr l
State 1l
7:01)--Today 3,&lt;,151 Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny S. Friends 10.
7:30-Schoollts 10.
8:oo--Lassle 6. Capt , Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame Sf. 33,
8:30-Big Valley 6.
9·oo-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donehue·4,15, Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J , 13,
9:30-A.M. 3; One Life to Llvo 6; Tatftotalos 8; Mike ·
Douglas 13,
IO :OG-Ctlebrlly Sweepstakes 3,&lt;,15; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Right 8,1 0,
10:30-High Rol lers 3,4, 15 ; Dlneh 6,
11 :0G-WhHI of Fortune 3,1Si WHkday &lt;; "Gambit
8, 10; Farmer's Daughter 13,
11 :31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Happy Days13; Love
of Life 8,10; Seaeme St. 20,33.
11 :55-Tak•Kerr 81 Den lmel's World 10.
12 :OG-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15, Let's Make a
Deal 13; Bob Braun 4; Nws 6,8, 10.
12·30-Take My Advice 3,15; All My Children 6,13;
Search lor Tomorrow 8,10,
12:6---Eiec. Co. 33.
12:55-NBC News 3,15
1:oo--News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8;
Vounq S. the Restless 10, Not For Women Only 15.
1:30-Days ot Our Lives 3,4,15; Rh\lme &amp; Reeaon 6,13;
As the World Turns 8,10.
2:01)--$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13.
2:31)-Doctors 3,&lt;: Bruk the Bank 6, 13; Guiding Light
8,10
J,oo-Another World 3,&lt;,15; General Hospltel6,1l: All
In The Family 8,10; Black Journal 20 ,
3:3()--()ne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouat Club 6; Match
Game e,10; Book Beat 20
4:01)--Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin&lt;; Somerltl 151
' Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouat Club 8; Mlater Rogerl _
2Q,33; Movie "The ,Matchmaker" 10; Dinah 13,
4: 30-Bewltched 3; Mod Sq~~ad 6; Beverly Hlllblllltlll
Sesame Sf. 20.33; Family Affair 12; Fllnt1tones 15.
s:oo-Bonanza 3; Partridge Family 8; Star Trek 15,
S:JI)-Adam. 12 4, 13; News 6; Family Affair 8; Eloc.
Co, 20,33.
6:0G-New1 3,4,8,10,13,151 ABC News 61 Zoom 20,33,
6:31)-NBC News 3,&lt;, 15, ABC Newo 13: Andy Grlfldfo 61
CBS News a, 10 ; Hodgepodge Lodge 201
Carrascolendes 33,
7:0G-Truth Ill' Cons. 3; To Tell The Truth 41 · Bowllng
Dollars 6; Space · 1999 8; Aviation Weather 331
Ntws10; Don Adams ScrHn Tesl13; Family Altair
IS; Ohio Journal 20.
7:31)-Portor Wagoner 3; Trea1ure Hunt &lt;; Candid
Camera 6; Evening Edition with Martin Agronaky
20; S2S,OOO Pyramid 10; To Toll the Truth 13o Pnn
Goes the Country 15; Black Per~p~ctlve on The
News 33,
8:01)--Sanlord S. Son 3,4, 15; Donny &amp; Marie 6, 13; Sara
e, Washington WHk In Review 20,33; Presidents: 76
Years on Camera 10,
8:30-The Practice 3,4,15; Wall Strtel WHk 20,33.
9.oo--Rockford Flits 3,4,1S; Movie " Jenny" 6.13o
Movie "How Sweet It lsi " a, 10; Firing Lint 201
Maaterplece Theatre 33
IO:oo--Pollce Story 3,4, 15; News 20; Paul Nuchlm• 33,
10:30-Avlatlon Weather 20.
11 :oo--News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC Newa 33.
11 :31)-Johnny Carson 3,&lt;, 15; Rookl11 6,13; Movie
"Dark of the Sun" 8; Movie "The Nanny" 10;
Janak! 33,
12:AO-Don Klrahner's Rock Concert 6; lron1lde 13,
1:01)--Mfdnlght Special 3,4,15; Movie "First Spacelhlp

Fishbein's falsecard a first

PUBLIC SALE

ba nd saw, 3/e" drtll , electr ic grinder. 18" pipe w rench ,
tap and die se t, valve puller , Ignition wiring , valve
gnndmg se t a nd l ift er , mi cro meter , ptpe smoking
st and' 1/4" elec trtc drill , voltage tester, 1 reinter ' bench
saw, compress1on t es t er, a rr com pre sser , garage
sweeper. concrete mi xe r , other t ools and m ics too
numerous to m entton

DOWN
1 Robert or
Alan
2 Mend
3 Novelist
Seton
4 Archibald
- Le1sh
5 CzechPolish
region
6 Like washday clothes
7 Prong
8 Icelandic

18 Mllkfish
26 Cleanse.
19 - Cruces, 29 Foot lever
N. Mex.
30 Bridge term
n catch
20
Follower
31 Solicitude
Y
i,iii::~:tA":O:~:\
·~·:'.\j
sight
of
1
of an
32 Regretted
measure
18 Ballerina
ism
33 Sicilian
9 Camera part
Markov a
21
Wrong:
city
10 Inch along
21 French
arillss
34
Portico
14
Uninhibited
;
priestly
22
Drone
35
State
(Fr.)
outgomg
IItle
23 Prohibit
36 Nev. city
2&gt; Like certain 17 Canyon
24 Before
36 Transgress
S&lt;lund
fabrics
r--,.,--,.-r:-r.=(3 wds.)
27 Regarding
(2 wds,)
28 Tranquil
29 Commtseration
30 Movie
:::::l~~:li~~~J!J.l: script
. writer
(st. )
34 Pulpit talk
(abbr )
37 Selfb-+-+-t-1-t-"11~
serv u:e
shop

Rutl•nd 742 -2231

Will trim or cut trees and shr u '"~:
bery Phone 9_.9 -2545 or 74 1.

Wr.t- THE LASS ROUNDUP

by THOMAS JOSEPH

(2 wds. l
15 Literary
collection
16 Cash outlay

R&amp;J COINS

What u.e, culled II beautg rnntf!d in Utt Old

~

service

For Sale

(614) 698-7257 Albany
SEWING MACH INE Repatrs , ser·
v1 ce, all make5 , 992 -2284 . The
fobrrc Shop , Po m&amp;roy
Authonted S1nger 5-o les and
Ser~tice We sharpen Scissors

I

ACROSS
1 Prominent
apple
6 Trole
11 Hawa iian
veranda
12 Lubricated
13 Wardrobe

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

n tce 3 br modern home.
dream k tt . bar, dtnrng wt th
g lflSS doors, large lt v lng , 2

ceramtc baths, dbl garage
and lront porch 138,000
NOW IS THE TIME TO
BUY YOUR NEW HOME .
CALL TO SEE.

RIGHT NOW I WANT 10 FilliP

1H ONE 11-lOSI: "!V.O DUDI:6

treasure .

Roger Wamsley
Al -lmo

Jumble" AISLE USURP POPLIN DUPLEX
AniWI:'fl

3-11 1mo

PH. 992-3746

THE ~01515EII:
I!IOXEII: lt:lOK.

(A.wer~ lo~rrow)

ALLEY OOP

burled

""'' dT

iU~NeC:O

l
Now ananre the clreled lellera
.v·.== ICARP
I HE
t" "l I V 'I lo fonn the awpriae an~wer. u
.---,.,:;--:-:-- :=~f-.~~~~~f-.;""j'~":;;"'~'eo~ted b7 the U..e etrloon.
I P111t~S-SUIISWII .. It XX) [I I I I]

Orange Twp Volunteer
Fire Department will hold
a constgnment auction at

F1nd

ri9ht to your proj ect. Fos.l and
easy Free esttmotes Phone
992 328.4 , Goegle1n Ready M1 x
Co , Middleport , Ohto

Near

Racrne. 3 br s, bath , ni ce
kr t
w tth
s to ve.
r e fr rg er a tor , dtn tn g and

t

IYUPTED
I I IJ I

l'lol HOT SA'IIKG
HE'S HOT A FINE
CHAP-- SUT
PEflSCNAUY I
THINK HE'S AN

ac r es, 2 tn Woods for th e
above r. nd looking over th e
Oh to Rtver . 2 br tra rler .

1 51)-News 13.
Channel Five
9 Q0-700-Ciub

nu; STeAM

(OIRS, rings, silver, gold . ,

WILl do roofrng , construcfton ,
plumbmg ond heatrng No job
too large or too small. Phonf'

O'DEll Al rgnment located behrnd
Rut land Grode School. Tuneup
brakes , wheel boloncrng , align .
men t. Phone 7•2·2004 .

TEAFORD

I!IH~T'S

BUY , SELL or TRADE

BRADFORD, Aust1oneer Com
plete Serv1ce Pt-. one 949 2487
or 949-2CX)If Racine , Ohio Crill
Bradford

Sweepers , toaster$ , rron s, all
small appliances . lawn mower,
next to State Highway Goroge
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985-

T06SED IPJ

1·0o-Tomorrow 3,4

COINS

742-23.18
READY MIX CONCRETE delivered EXCAVATING, dozer , backhoe

F1 shmg c ottag e. 3 r oom s, 2
por ches, and a path, close
to lake , needs some r cpatr

M'l GENIUS

DAV!'&gt;--1 JUST

, 9.3()-Jeanne Wolf Wlth ...20
m·oo-Harry 0 6,13; American Parade 8, 10; News 20.
11 GO-News 3,4,6,8,1 0,13,15, ABC News 33,
11 :31)-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Mannix 6,13; Movie "The
Gun" 8; Movie "High Society" 10, Janakl 33,
12 ·41)-Maglclan 6, 13.

OPEN TUES. THRU SAT.

992-3092

MAC'S
LAWN
MOWER
SERVICE

'

7 31)-Hol lywood Squares 3.. •. Ohio State Lotte•y 6;
Evening Edl11on with Marlin AQronskv 20; Wild
_ i( lnQdom 10 . To Tell the Truth 13, Musi c U S.A IS,
8' 01)-Mac Davis 3,4,IS, Welcome Back, Kotler 6,13;
Waltons 8,10; Piccadilly Circus 20; Mark of Jazz 33
6. 31)-Barney Miller 6,13, Lowell Thomas Remembers
33.
9:QO- "Judge Horton &amp; the Scottsboro Boys" 3,4,1S;
Streets of San Francisco 6, 13, Hawaii Flve-0 8,
Mao's China 33; Bacharach lnthe' Park 10

ANYTH ING!

Ph. 949-2404

4 5 76

608 E.
MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .

'IOU 60L.D

Famtly at War 33

R'16Hn IT

WAS ONE OF

Call tn orders and prck up
in twenty minutes.
Located lt329·lrd Street
Rulne, Ohio

NEW

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph 992 2174

Small
Eng.
•
Repair

· ;..,/~ '1

AND TliAT '!&gt;
HOW YOU COOK&amp;P
UP THE FORMULA

MtKEE l

WILKINSON'S
IL-

ONE SIMPlY MI~E'S UP
SOME COLOR~D 600··
PEilflAPS HEATS OR
DISTILLS IT A 81T-

Italian-Style Pizza

4· 13·1 mo.

\ ·-,
o." ~
. , '\

N athan 81 ggs
Radrator Spectalrst

CAP!'AIN EASY
I NEVER REALIZED VOL! WE&lt;REE- A
6CIHITIH , BUCK! DO YOU
• ACTUALLY KtJOW HOW TO LJ$e
ALL TH IS JUtJK ~

SAM'S
PIZZA SHOP

PH. 992-6173

Complete

,

Courteous
Seroice3-31 -1 mo .

Ph 949· 2023 or 84 3-2667

•
'

PH. 992-6010

Now accepting clients
for bookkeeping and
tax service .

L.---------...1
EXPERIENCED
-

24 Hour Service

butldtng and remodeling
from the foundatton up.
Addttions , carpet•ng,
patntrng, srdrng, roofing,
paneling, pap er ha_,glng,
etc .

4 2 1 mo

5 oo--Bonanza 3; Partridge Family 8, Star Trek IS
5.31)-Adam 12 4,13; News 6; Family Affair 8, Elec
Co 20,33
6:QO-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20: lTV
Utilization 33
6:31)-NBC News 3,4, 1S; ABC News 13; Andy Griffi th 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33.
7·00-Tru th or Cons. 3; To Tel tthe Truth&lt;; Bowling fr•
Dollars 6, Lawrence Welk 8; News 10; Let's Make a
Deal1 3; Fam oly Affai r 1S; Anyone tor Tennyson 20 ;

LARRY WHOBREY

CONSTRUCTION

7:oo--Testimony Time
7·3()-0aytlme
8:31)-Rex Humbard
9:3()-Muslc Connection
10 :01)--700-Ciub
FltiDAY,APRfL23, lf76

THURSDAY, APRIL 22,1976

"NEW
MIDDLEPORT
CAB CO.

4 10 nr~o

;::::;;;;:;;;;;;;;;===:;;;;::::::

197( Chevrolet Prckup one half
ton , 6 cy l standard shrft low
speed rear end , fully rnsu loted
cover
Excel lent condrlton ,

fr ame. 4 br , 111 ba ths, nt ce
kt t che n f u ll baseme nt.
you r chotce ot coal or ga s

99'2-7790

__l'_hone (6 14)949-2253. ~-

good cond1tt on
3659

POMEROY LANDMARK

1973 3.50 Kowasak1 Brg Horn ex.
ONE acre on Ktngsbury Rd , J
pon s1on chamber , kno bb y
one half acres Rt 143 Phone
trres 3 brke tro tl er Call m .

&lt;!.':_t~

19=~:::\;r (R~-be-1)-2 dr

TURF TILL
TILLERS
J' , H P , B&amp;S Eng
$163.95

NEW on d Used lod1es' Sandals on 3 BEDROOM total elec home
Sol e 50 Pet off Ends May I, all
garage Iorge lol on RustiC
soles frnal
Barley 's, MidHtlls , Syracuse
Sale prrco
dleport
$22,900 Phone 992 7523 lor
more in formalton
1972 Hondo 750 ewcellen t condl t1on Extras Phone 992 -35 17
NEW 3 bedrm 1 one -half both, 10
m1nute dr1ve from Pomeroy .

711 0

VW

$20,000
CORNER LOT In
Mtdd lcporl , ,, br bii lh ,

MODERN desrgn stereo , 8 track
tope om -lm rodro, combtno·
t1 on
Balance $101 06
or
terms Col l 992 3q65
ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood
frame , two bedrm
home
1 44 ACREAGE , 8ft truck topper
loc ated between Coolville and
rocks boot wtth trailer Phone
Tupper s Plmns One acre lot
(614)M7-JJJJ
two car garage cr ty wat er, gas
FOUR ce metery plots rn Metgs
heat ,
hardwood
floors ,
Mem or rol Gardens W1l l sel l
carpeted
ltvmg room, nrce
v1ew $21 000 Phone (6 14 )
separately Phone (614 ) 985.
4146
667-3519

J D 490 co m plan lor, good con·

1971
Bee11e , $900 Zenr-th col~
or TV 21 rnch , $50 Phone

m good cond lt ton a lways
rent ed 22 1 ' acr es g r ound ,
tn com e $3 60 per month

h1tch Ford cu lt1 vator, 1- 12
9 .. _Ja ck w Carsey , Mgr
row co rn spray e r , 1975
611!
Phone«192 -2191
Oldsmobrle Starfrre. 2 rtdmg L- - - - -- - - - - '
horses Phone 992 7692

LOCUSTposls Phone 742 2359

1965 Oldsmob tle Cutl ass, V-8 3
speed Ca ll 992 3'236

30", J HP, B&amp;S Eng
$89.95

1 FAMilY mtlk cow , fresh soon .

I 4 hole hog Ieeder I sel 3 pi

FREE ESTIMATES

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

Auto-Sal~

SOMEONE to do 1ronrng for me rn STARCRAFT mtn r·motor on Chevy JQ75 Coprtee Closs1c Convert 1ble,
or Dodge chassrs travel !rotlers
lrke new l ow mdes AM-stereo
the Chester Tuppers Plorn s
and fo ld-down campers Check
tope , 23 000 mrles , one owner ,
area Phone {6 14) 992·37 42
Phone 992 5650
our serv tce and quoltty before
WANT someone to sew mendmg
you decrde Hours 12 7, Open
1973 Thunde rbrrd excellent con ·
do
1ron1ng
a nd
l 1ght
Sunday Camp Conley Storcrah
d1tron power seat s wrndows
housework Phone 992 6005
Soles, Rt 62 N , Pt Plea sa nt
steenng and brakes , AM ·FM
SOMEONE to cut gross must be
rad1 o wrth tope player , mag
_ e.)(P_!rt ence d Phone 992 5798
nms plus regul ar rrms and hub
copf Phone 2A7-2.42A or see
NEEDED rmmed ,ately person to
~ rrg r~ H ~l~t~Letart Foll~-~h~o
w rap meat
por l -! rrn e For
more lnform otron coll 992 -337 4 FURNISHED apt , couple onl y oil
utt l1tres paid S130 per mon th
Phone 992 3975 or 992 -2571

1 BEDRM traeler , full( carpeted
located on Rt. 1.43 , c ose to Har
usonvtlle 1 chrld Ph one 742
3122

4 l 1 mo

3-26 1mo

ROGER HYSEUS
GARAGE

1962 CHEVROLET
s le ~s

Sales &amp; Rental
TRAVEL TRAILERS
OPEN
FRI .-SAT.-SUN,
or by contacting
R. Codner, Owner

or "'·2203

1972 FORPMAVE RICK 2 PR.

HAPPY HOUR

Ja n e Walton ,
•
Clerk
V Illage Of Pomer oy

S60'1S

w ith every Chev optton , low mrl es. new ti t le, boss's

--~~

APACHE Ch1el Camper far sole

RAINBOW RIDGE
( Bashan Aru l
LONG BOTTPM

Ractne, Ohto

.

Vo Call Mr Htll (304)675 4079

I

Nee d "new root or o•d
repatred? Hause, roof,
IJarn, shingles, build up,
painftng, electrical work ,
gutters &amp; downspouts,
furnaces, water heaters,
water softn ers, i nstalled &amp;
repaered, Sewage .
Call us •t 949-2882

Dark red, Si mulated wood t rtm, 3 sea t. full y eq u1pped

TAll TIMBERS
NITE CWB

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sea l ed btd s will be re ce n1 ed
1n th e aff rce of the Cle rk on
Second St r ee t , Village ol
Pom er oy
Oh10 , unt rl 12
o'cl ock noon , M onday , May 3
19 7ti , for
th e f oll owrn g
proposal
For 1.000 to ns. mor e or less
of aspha l t concrete '" p tace
To be placed on lh e parkm g
tof , a s des igned by VIl lage
Coun ct l
All matenal s anct equr p
m ent are to meet Oh ro
Oepnr trne nt of
H1ghway
Specl f lcat Ion s
All bids a r e to be by the ton
rn pla ce and the pr ice per ton
sha ll mclud e al l neces sary
c lei!lnln g Specrft ciUton s of th e
Park ing Lot to be su rfa ce d are
on t ile rn Ule offrce of th e
Mayo r 1n t he Vt l l age ol
Pom eroy
Each brd must contarn th e
full name of ever y per son or
com pan y rnterested tn th e
sam e, and be accompanted by
a bond or ce rttf red check 1n th e
sum
of
$100 00 to
the
sat1s t actton of Vr lla ge coun c11
as a gua ranty that rt the b1d 1S
ac c ep t ed , a con tra c t wrtt be
en tered mto and rts per for m
an ce proper ly secured
These checks or bOnd s w•ll
be r eturn ed at once to all
1ex ce pt th e successful btdder
H is check or bond wr tt be he ld
until th e co ntract or brd rs
proper ly exet uted by h1m
The n ght 1S re serv ed to
, re1e ct any and al l brd s

$489S

197S Chev , ESTATE WAGON

Codner's Campei'S

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

Class tc 4 door . co demo w rth low mileage, l ight green
wt th green vi nyl r oof, powe r door locks, wmdows.
br akes factor y a1 r , tm t g lass. con for tll t, cr utse
con trol. AM r ad to &amp; tape, it's loaded and tf 's ntce

33 , len md es nor th of Pomeroy
Lorge lots wrth concret petro s
srdewalks runners and off
~-----------.-STUD Servtce AKC Regts!erec Will DO bu rldmg and remodel
~!re~ r:_~rkmg_ Phan!!~~7 4?!_
Cocker Sponrel
Phone 992mg , roo fing , plumbrng, fu r 2 BEDROOM tro1ler $28 00 week
3032 or 698 -7 88 1 W
3273
noce repair , gas or o1l or
all utd rtt es pmd Phone 992Wash mgton St Albany
general reporr Free esti mates
3324
and rea son able rates Ph o n~
COAl , limestone and all types of
Charles S1nclo1r (b14 ) 985·4121 3 ROOM furn es hed opt , u!tlthes
salt and roc k soh for 1ce ond
po1d 356 N Fourth Mid·
or 992·2221
snow removal Excelsmr 5olt
dleport
Works East Mom St Pomeroy,
WI Ll DO odd tobs roof 1ng pam
Ohro Phone 992 3891
TRA
ilER lot on one acr e tn coun·
tmg , haul1ng . treework, end
try Has septtc tonk. cr ty FREEZER BEEF Corn fed steers
mOYflnQ Phone 992 -74()q
water Flatwoods Rood for
Wrll delive r to local dressrng
Rt 1
Pom eroy , 0 . YARD Work by boy age 15 Con more rnforma t1on coli (61-4 ) plants
Phone 843 2111
furntsh mower 1f necessary
985-3832 or wnte Box 61 3
- - - ---Phone after 3 30 p m 992 7567
Pomer~ . ~to
or all day Saturday and Sunday
TURF TRIM
.4 RMS ond both on ltnco ln Hgts
Phone 992 3WO
PUSH MOWERS

Wed. and Thursday
April21-22
5to6:30p.m.

Business Services

2. ·siGNS Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

(6 1 4 ) 985 - ~ 2~8

WRITE FRIENDlY HOME PAR
TIES
20 RA ILR OAD AVE
Al BANY NY 17105

$12,000
RACINE Ftre" Depar tment wrll
have a hom shoot Sa tu rday ot
6 30 p m at thetr new butldrng
oft 6a shon Road

Television log for ·easy viewing

lOY

PAR fiES HAS OPENI NGS FOR
MANA GERS IN OUR AREA

RECRUI]ING IS EASY BECAUSE

"The Publisher reserves

consecut•ve

PERIENCE?

11 - The Tmilv SentineL Mic!j!lepori-Pomerov, 0 .. Thursdav, APril22, 1976
DlCK TRA.. I
'
'

• A 6 54

•to 12

t KJ 6
... .16 5

today 's hand Is now a well ·
known false card. When l1e
made Iton 1935 it was probably
its first appearance on the'
bridge scene
When South starled alter
lrumps he wa s prepared lo
guard against lour to the jack
In the West hand. When Fishy
dropped the nine under dummy 's kmg , South decided thai
Eas t might hold lour. He
played !he queen and Fishy
had developed a trump trick

Both vulnerable

Norob Ea!l

DAILY -cRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR

Obi
' 4.

South

Pass
Pass

A Vorgima reader wants to
know what you bid with .
•43 2 •HB3

t875 ... 10 63

alter your partner makes a
I• I, 0 N G F E I. L 0 W
takeout double of a one spade
opening,
One lcllcr som ply slands for another In this &amp;ample A Is
The best !hong to do Is bid
used fur the three I.'s, X fur the lwo O's, l'lr Single letters.
apostrophes, the lcnAth :md formation of the words are all
Harry Fishbein 's
at everyone a cheery goodnight
hmls Ea&lt;'h da} th£' rnde l ctl('rs nrc different.
age 76 followed thai of John and tear your hand up. Since
' Crawford by exactly one the rules frown on lha( you bid
{'RVPTOQUOTES
lwo hearts and hope thatllghtweek .
"'ng doesn'L slrike
5 J v Ha'rry was one of the most
FWKBS
C OMVRS
SJV
popular or the bridge ex perts
!Do you have a question
S
J
F
S
Everyone
liked
him
He
wa
s
a
for
the experts? Write "As/&lt;
KQ RYGOCH OR
YGKLORV
liv e- lime winner or !he the Jacobys " care of this
Vanderbilt Cup plus many newspaper The Jacpbys will
R K K C V G KG N F S V G R J V ' N N J F P V other national champlonshops. answer lndrv:Ciua/ questions
He invented the F1shbeon con- '' sta mpeCI, se/1-adCiressed
I V V 'i
0 S,- LFGI
W V N S F 0 G V ventlon to defend agamst sii- envelopes are enclosed, The
SK
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: EDUCATION MAKES A PEOPLE ly preemptive bids and then most interesting questions
EASY TO lEAD, BUT DIFFICULT TO DRIVEj, EASY TO gave 11 ~palter people gave up writ be useCI In th:s column
GOVERN BUt IMPOSSIBI.E TO ENSLAVE. - HENRY those s11ty preempts .
and wit/ receive copies ol
BROUGHAM
.
Foshy's defensive play on JACOBY MODERN.)
(0 19'76 KJna t'u&amp;urtt Sy ncllute. Inc.)

HE'(, MARCIE, I 60T
THE FI~ST

CAP!

HERE, I'M COMIN' OOWN!

1

!ill

"'''

MARCIE!

~.:·

�'" -:;~~~~·--·;:~;:~:.:.:·"JI;or Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
5

PM

Dav

Before

Publ• cat,on
Monday Dl'adlint:'
a m
Ca n c e II a t 'on
Co rr ect1ons will be
c:epted un ltf 9 a rn
Day of Publ•cat•on

9
ac
for

REGULAT IONS

I he r• qht to e-dt I or r et('( t
r~ny
ads deemed ob
lec••onlll 1h e publisher
will not be r espons• b le for

mo re lhan one •nc orrect
•nsert 10n
RAT ES
For Want Ad Serv •ce
S ce nt s per wo rd one

•nsert ,on

M1ntmum CharQ e So l 00
1·1 ce nts per word three

tnse r t•ons

?6 cc •l 'S per wor d srx
rnser11ons
con sec utive
?~ Per Ce n 1 Olscoun 1 on
pard ad s and ad s pard
wrthrn 10 days

CARD OF THANK S
&amp; OB ITUARY

tor
~0
word
mlnrmum
Ea r h add!lronal word J
cen ts
BLIND ADS
Ad dr ltonal 2Sc Charqe
per Adve rtr sement
OFFICE HOUR S
a JO a m to ~ 00 p m
Datly , B JO a m ro ! 'l 00
Noon Sa turday
Phone todl'ly99? 2 1 ~6

5.2 00

NOTICES
ATTN

FRIENDLY

II

ALL HO USEWIV ES

A ll Yard Sal es, Rummag e,
Por ch "nd Basemen t Porch
and B5sem en t Sal es. etc
must be petd m advan c~ :
Ge t your in rn ea r ly by
stopping by our ofltce at
The Da ll y Sentmel. 111
Court St or wr1 tmg Bo x
729 , Pomeroy , Ohro 45769
wrlh you r r em rn an ce

IN MEMORY of my husband
Charle s H Hensley who passed
away Apnl22 , 1972
True was ht s hear!
Hr s acllons so ktnd,
Hrs lrle o pattern to those left

behind

A beautiful soul tn the garden of
res t,
Its tru e what they soy ,
God choose&amp; the be5t
lo~~~~nd Lonesome l eona_~

WE WISH to than k the teachers at
Rocme t·hgh , Racme Emergency
Squad , doctors and nurses ol
Veterans Memorral Hmprtol
and all who sent cords, g1fts
and those who called or stop
ped by the house and took
passionate co nce rn following
our son 1 , Robert Tay lor , acc1
dent. May God bless yo u oil
Mr and Mr5 l eo Taylor and
fom rly

O'AiRv

herd - to sei lat Gallrpolr s
livestock Marke t
Appro~~:
1motel y 12 noon, Sa turday
Apnl24

NO ONE except myself ts
outhomed to accept or s1gn fo r
any merchond tse packages or
matl that ts rn my nome James
M Hamm

•

Pets for Sale

OEM~ HAVE NO CAS H INVEST
MENT NO COLLECTING OR A.KC Reg1stered Collre Stud Ser.
DEUVERINGS CAll CO llECT
vtce , Stardus t Krn g Phone
CAROL DAY , (518) 489-8395 or

REGISTERED tmh Setter mole
dog , red 9 months old Also , 1
pony Contact R1to Roush, 1
"HOME WORKER S ' earn S60
mrle au! St Rt 143 be s1de chur ·
weekly address1ng envelopes
ch
Rush se lf addressed stomp&amp;d
envelope
Sou ther"n 01 ve r· REGISTERED male lmh sette(
Phone 949-2545
srf1ed 1206 Camden Drive ,
R1chmond Vrrgm ra 23229
JWO pon1es for sole Rea sonable
Phone 949-2883
$25 PER HUNDR ED stuftrng
enve l op es.
Se nd
self
SMAll mtxed breed puppres to
addr e ssed
s tomped
g1ve away Mother Poodle enve lope Edroy Mods, Box
Terrre r modure
E&gt;c ce ll enl
188, Albany _M o 6.4&lt;1fl_2_
pn ce Phone992 - ~2 1 4

PART Y PLAN

SUPERV ISORS 3 HORSES , one Appa loosa co lt
Mem .Moc Fom• ly Shopping
one Quarter Horse co lt one
Servteo 1$ eJCpondmg 1n to your
half Morgan· one half Ten·
area and has SupePi ts or op
nessee Walke r more Phone
port unitres ovarla ble
Par ty
(614)698-3290, Rl 2, Albany
plan expenence prele1 red
3
HORSES , one Appaloosa co lt ,
Hrghesl
co mm rsslon
no
one Ouarlln Horse colt one
deli~terrng or col lec ting Coli
half Morgan -one half Ten collect between B.OO AM . and
nessee Walker more Also ,
.4 00 P M to Ann Ba xt er
pony carl and harness Phone
319 556 888 1 or wr1t e Morn
(614)698 3290 Rl 2Aibony
Moe 60 1 JOckson, Dub~que
lA 52001
FREE pupp1es , 8 week s old Phone
99'2 -7805
Rog1onol sal esman , one of the no
h an ' s largest portable and ONE German short horr pointer
modular buildmg rnanufac
ma le One temo le Llewelhn
turers , relarl sole s upenence
se tter both Reg1stered prr ced
tn aut omotr ve and mab1le
reasonable Phone 992·0090
homes helpful Exce llent salary
ond commiSSIOn Stu rdi House
Mfg Co , Porn! Pleasant , W

oq7 5(HEVROLET Ch evelle

WAITRESS over 21 no expen ance
necessary Wrrte Box 729S, co
The Dotly Sen tm el , Pomeroy
Oheo

Nt le's car Sttcker $7,400 00.
S189S

p

st eertng , rad1 o, clea n

302

v.e,

automattc trans
mtertor , blue ftni sh

1

B Phone (304) 882-3205

TRAIN FULL OR
PART TIME
You don 1 helve to qu 1t your
JJr eSellt JOb to tr il lll to clnve il
tr,rctor tr ,uler I n only 7 to 8
waekenrls PART T I M E tr c1111111 9
(S aturct.1y s ~ Sumli:lysl u qud l
Ffmd ri rr ver r.an be ea1n111 g

per yedr cllld u~ (3 weeks rn u
FULL TIME re Silient tra rmng
progr &lt;~m)

RE V CO Tr,rctor Tttuler Tr a111
rn g, Inc wrll tr&lt;tlllyou onmrnJ
e111 , pr ore5stonal equrpmen t,
and placeme11 t ass1stance 1s
av;:ulahle u ~ o n gr rdu at1on
CA LLNO W1

197.4 EJ5 1eep with extras good
cond ttr on. $3900 00
Phono

I 596

5104.

1971MONTECorl o pb ps oc
Phone 992-5301

4 dr. Con be
seen at 399 West Mo1n 51 ,
Pom_erot_ _

VEGETAB lE plants of oil ktnds , 10
drfferent vaneftes of tomatoes ,
1ncl ud1ng non· octd wh1t e
tomato Very large selec tt on of
b eddi ng pla n t s
Also
Geron1ums and oth er potted
pla nts
Hon grnQ... ba ske ts
Cleland form s and Green house
Gero ldrne Cleland ,
Roc1 ne

ENJOY gracious l1v1ng at Vr llage
Manor tn Mtddleport for as low
os $130 per month wtth all
ull httes pa1d These are brand
new h1gh qualrty apartments at
pmes you C(]n afford Your rent
mcludes month to month
lease s
a ll elec
lr\l tng
cor pet rng
range
and
refrrgera tor free trash pr ck up , MODERN wa lnut console AM FM
rod 1o
4 speed changer
ca ble TV ot your e&gt;cpense and
Balan ce $103 40 or terms Call
on srte laundry foc1l1tres . Con·
992-3965
venie nl to shopprng on Th1rd
ond M1lt Streets rn Mtddleport
GARDEN Supply Headquar ters
See the. manager at Rtversrde
Cabbage coulrtlower brocco li ,
Apartments or ca ll 992 3273
head lettu ce and pansy plants
Furnrsh ed apartm ents are also
Al so, omon sets seed potatoes
ovotloble
of all vonetr es an d o fu lllrne of
bulk gard1en seeds Head·
FURNISHED 2 bedrm apartment
quar ters oho for frne produce
adults only rn Mtddleporl
Mrdwoy Mkl . Pomeroy , 992Phone 992 387 4
3 BEDRM house w1th both 1n
Rutla nd Ph one 992 5858
3 AND 4 RM furnished and tm
furn 1shed opts Phone 992
543A

PARKERSBURG d22-4080 COUNTRY-Mobtle H-ome Park , Rl

OLD l urmture 1ce bo.:e s brass
beds , old wall telephones and
parts or "comp lete househo lds
Wnte M D Mtller, Rt 2
Pomeroy Ohro Coll992-77b0
TIMBER , top prrce tor stondmg

ltmber Call (614)446-8570
CASH pard for all makes and
models of mob1 le homes
Phone area code 614 42j -953 1
WANTED used lawn and garden
tractors on9 mowers Olf ermg
top dollar for lrode·tn on new
equ1pm en 1 Boum True Va lue
Chester , Ohr o

YA RD SALE, fnday and Satu rd ay
Apn l 23 and 24 at the home of
Roderrck Gnmm on Broadwa y
and Cherry Stree t, three blocks
up from the l1re stalt on then
nghl ot top of hrl l. Brg red
h':use ~ot ch l or srgns
FIVE fam 1ly Yard Sale Thursday
and Fndoy from 9 ttl 5 New
1tems from a croll shop lots of
n1 ce clothmg of all s1zes, end
many mr sc rtem s F ~rst road to
_ left after po5st~g W ~ . P 0
YA RD SALE Th ursday ond fndoy
9 a m till 4 p m F1rs t house on
St Rt 143, ~o_wery r e~den ce
'fARO SALE , Fr rdoy 9 am trll 5
pm
Btl I Cross res1dence
Rocrne
'fARO SALE Larkrns St , Rutland
Weds through Sa turday , push
mower, toys and bed , co m
plete new mattress Arland
romances drshes of all ktnds
Call 7 ~2

2078

(A ) 11 , li C

YARD SALE . Junror Closs of Kyger
. -- -- - ----,------,
Creek just north of Chesh1re
on St Rt 7, Sa tu rday April 24 ,
9am t~ 4. pm

DAIRY HERD
TO SELL AT

GALLIPOLIS
LIVESTOCK
MARKET
Approx. 12 Noon
Sat., Apri I 24th

•

'

'

GARAGE SALE RAIN OR SH INE ,
Fndoy April .23, 8 30 to 8 30,
Saturday Aprd 24 9 00 fill
4.00
Ce dar che51 , beds
(regular and baby ). Maytog wr·
mger washer (good co nd1tion )
Stnge r
portable
sew rng
mochrne ,
conn1ng
1ors
women s and boy 's clot he5.
dress&amp;r redrnrng c;hcm , some
antrques Rou te 124 1 ou t of
~acme pos t the Belhony Chur ·
ch turn lust rood to rtght ,
follow srgns Bu( k VanMeter ,
JoAnn Cnsp

USED Chomsows !tilers,
mowers Wrlkrnson lawn
Gorden , .498 l ocust 51 ,
dleport . Oh1 o Phone

30'12

and
and
Mrd·

991-

2582

FORD 9N tractor
overhaul
S1 750. Ford Jubtlee tractor
$1 750.Ford 861 tractor wi th
loader, 52 350, Allis Chalmers
W0-45 tractor , w1de lront end
$1 250, Used 2x4 ' plow $175
used 5 h 3 pt rotary mower
$185, New Idea hoy condt
Ironer , $450 3 ndrng lbwn
mowers $35-$11Q,luckett farm
Equ1pm en t Phone (614) 698·

1%9 APACHE told-out sleeps 6,

ssoo_Ph~,?92 -2596 .

COAl , lrmestone and ..~;~m
c: hlonde and c:olclum bnne for
dust con trol and all types of
soil . Excels1or Salt Works East
Main Street Pomeroy. Ohio ,
_ phon! 992:~
_
FORD tractor brush hog and
plow all1n goad condilton See
~ or col i R T. Stewart Rt 1 Mtd·
die por t Pho~ 992! 8! 4_
1972 Husquarno 360 8 speed
Good condrtron
Phone 992

2211
JERSEY Guernsey cow wi th ca lf ,
by srde Pho~~ 9-49 217 9
PEACH and cherry tree s lor sole
rea sonable Coll992 -3638.
VAN for sole near Merg s Mu,e 1
Also , 1973 Hondo IOi) Phone
742 2-465 or 742-2746

HT. ,

Phone 992-

Phone 99'2-7790

- - - - - "for-sole

l BEORM home
cou ntrr , elec .
large 1replace
new !;lcrage

--~

In the
or gas heat ,
and playroom .
and awneng5

Phone (J04)882-51 B6

-- - - - NEWlY remodeled 2
home N ~e e yard

--~

bedroom
Phone 992·

739&lt;
LARGE buildmg on Mom Streel In
Rutland LMng quarters In
rear See or call T 0 Stewart ,

7&lt;2-2&lt;21
3 BEDAM house. 2 yrs old .
carpeted , 2 baths, central otr
cond tttoning , basemen t and
garage 1n Albany . Ohro For op
pom tmen t, phone (614 ) 698

8722

-

PRICED for qurck sa le by owner
Two bedroom frame hou se
new ktlchen and ba th new
carpe t k1 tchen and liv1ng room
elect nc heat , uflhtr. room, dou·
ble garage , Iorge at bulldmg

TP Coli (614 ) M7-3065 or 6673360

Blown
Insula tiort-Services
F tnan cm; Av~rlable
Blown tnto Walh &amp; AIItts

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

LARRY LAVENDER
Syracuse. Oh•o

Ph . 992-3993

3 23 1 mo

D&amp;D

DONEUI'S
PIZZA
295 s 2nd St
Mtddlepart , Ohto

$3.000 00 Phone 843-!6~

We build new and remodel

lhe old

992 6167
OPEN4 PM DAILY
CLOSED MONDAY

3 BEDRM.

house ln

Phone 992-5858

Rutland

HOUSE for sale , 26 acres, newly
fenced pastu re
2 acres 1
llllobl e, house carpeted and
remodeled , l res hly pomted,
basement , smell barn porch
ctly water f orced Otr heat,
rura l. convemenl locot ton near
Chester Pht~ne (614) 985 42A8 '
or 992 5975

we specialtze en hom e
made Przza . Spsgh ettr ,
Baked Lasag na . a. Sa nd
wr ches
Quick Cai'ry Out servtce

All types of

HOUSE on Lmcoln Hgts 2 bedr
ms , Iorge ktt chen , large bose
menl , excel len t buy for
$9 .200 W1th fu rne tu re, $10,700
Phone 992 76-48
3 BEDRM. HOUSE 1n Middleport
For ced 01r furnace central 01r
Phone 992 2058
-'----------__..,..-,

I 72 ACRES Phone 742 23S9
HOUSE for sale by owner on lm
coin Hgts Pr1ced low f or qurck
sale Phone 992-5539
lOVElY 2 story older home rn
Rocme 11 .:24 ltvtng rm , dm1'lg
room new burl 1-m kr lchen wtth
cherry cob1neh , den bedrm
and one·holf both down wtlh
oak hardwoo d floor5 3 bedr
ms . New fu ll both, uhlrty room
upsto~r s full basemen t Iorge
fron,t and rear porches unot.
toched goroge
2 storage
bu1ldtngs, al l se t upon Iorge lot
w1 th oddt t1onol lot ava1lable
Must 5ocrtle ce for $21 000 Call

949-2883

'

~adiato

.

Service

.

'

-

'

•'

From the la rgest Tru ck or
·Bulldo ze r" " Radiator to th e
sma ll es t Heat er Co re

-..-.- f - ~-

....-7 :[~ ...- '~

ll'lp

~ '"",

••

,~

....

1

i .~'

1

PomeroY

SLOAN'S
CARPETING
hFree estimates on ca r petmg and tn sta llat ton
We' ll b n ng sa llfples to your
hom e wrth no obhgation
See how you can really
save
Mtke Young , Manager
Sales and Installation

Rt 3, Pomeroy , Ohoo 4S769
Phone day or noght
61 4-992-2206 I It I 't' O

' Charn

SawsLawn

MowersTillersRtding
T rae t ors.

Lawn Boy mowers,
Ptoneer
cha rn
saws,
Bolen ' s Mowers, Merry
Trllcrs, MTD Mowers.
491 Locust St
Mtdtlleport, Ohto

FORKED RUN LAKE -

FREE GAS -Henlal s all

drnlng r oom , ba sem ent.
garage, 11 acre ln nt ce

localoon 519 .500
WALK TO SHOP - 2 story

hea t S8,500
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
ALL
TYPES
OF
PROPERTY
LIST
WITH US NOW.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
991 -22S9 or 992 -2S68

Virgo I B. Sr , Rea ltor
110

Mechantc , Pameroy, 0 .

Phon e 992-3315
1.4 ACRES - Good garden
12

groun d. nrce 3 br t'lome. l
balhs, large ea l tn kilchen,
hill ba seme nt and extra
se pt tc tank for t railer

131,500 00
49 ACRES -

Lots of no ce

woods for r eld)(tng, 2 br
new
home
w dh
full
ba se m en t a ntj ca rpo rt .

$31,500
SUMMER SPOT - Over 3

IRON FOR ?

6· 30 Till10:00
3 17 -1mo

~lYWJ]lM;~=!:!~c
Unocramblelhese roor Jumbleo,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary warda.

PUBUC
ACCOUNTANT

3· 181 mo

Children, deep well , hogh
On ly S5,BOO
NEARLY NEW - 7 room
ran ch home, large famtl y
room 3 brs , patio and
n1ce lot 1 a r ea l buy at

$24,500
NEW LISTING •-

AUCTION. s,qE ·

llo1P05TOR -

the fire house located in
Tupp ers Platns, Ohto on

April 17th begtnnong at
10:00 a.m.
Watch for Ust
Items Later .

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

of

Yr11erd•r'•

~ERE, ~ IS 'LL

TAKE
CARE OF THESE TWO/

WHAT A\30UT THE OTHER
PTEROSAUR WE SAW

CI'IUISIN ' AROUND UP
Il-lERE , OOP?

level lol $18,000
•
NEA R CHESTER- Extra

and d1tcher. Charles R Hotfield , Ba ck Hoe Service ,
Rutland , Ohto Phone 742-2008.

RIDIN' ON/ COME ON!

382S.
REMODELING Plumbing heoltng
and all types of general repair
Work guaranteed 20 years expertence Phoneo/n -2409.
O&amp;D TREE Tnmmtng, 20 years el!r
pertence . In sure d fr ee
esflmotes Coli 992-2384 or

Coin&amp; Metal
Detectors
For Rent

or

C: AS()T .INti: AT l.li:V

You
look
well,
Amelia!

3167,
W1ll DO elCterlor pointing,
houses and roofs . Phone 992·

NEffi a pla sterer?
Custe r, 992-3550

Coli

Joe

What's on LJOUr

penm~-pinchinq,

moneLj qrubbinq
mind? ._,_,

568ol or 992-337&lt;.
EXTERIOR house pointing, call
949·2154 anyttme.

EXCAVATING doze::r=lo'-o--;de_r_a_n-cd
backhoe wo rk , dump trucks
and lo-boys for htre ; wtll haul
l 1ll d1rt , top soil , limestone and
gravel Call Bob or Roger Jef·
lers , day phone 992-7089,
nlght phone 992-3525 or 992·

Sat Aprol24, 1976 at liP a.m. Locatoon - 1 block above
Texaco Servoce Stat on on Thord and Mary St. at the

Mt=BOC-"Tl116
/SA ROTTEN,

Dorsey L Roush property in New Haven, W. Va .

SELFISH
THING

I w 1ll sell , l Bol rn garden tra ctqr With all attachments,

1 5 gallon stone 1a r, sk ill saw, AM-FM radio, 2 garden
spray er s, shadow boxes, readtng books, electnc
heater , B&amp;D 1/2'' drill. electric motor , pip e ftttings ,
miter bo x and saw , 24" ptpe wrench, ptpe cutter, canoe
paddle s, l rfe ja ckets, pair water sk is, water tank , shoe

lathe, wood pl aner fo r electr ic drt ll, 2 blow torches,

Auctioneer
Henry Lewis ,

PORTABLE we ld tng servtee , ntght
.•• ?! do~ Phone 7.42 2798.

Lunch Will
MOBILE home for ' sale , 1Ax70',
Fl ~etwood . All furn ist-.ed, central orr condiftoning. Phone

99'2-3901
12x65 mobile homes, 2 Iorge
bedrms .• unfurnished . $5 ,500.
lived In about 6 month5 Phone

L . . . : : . . - - - - - - - - --

i

W1NNjiillEi·.-. . . . . . . . . .~~~--­

® "THE NE\\:SfAPER COLUMNI&amp;TS
ARE:601NG8/ffl'Y TRYINB
TO RGURE OUT WHAT~----­
'MOON lAD'i11 WILL

WEAR

w::MI YOU 0\N BEE WHY
IT'S 50 IMPOR'Ji'\NT RJR
YOU 1D ARRIVE AT
11-1E BALL ALL
COlERED UP..,

Owner
Mildred Roush

Be Served

I 367-7793,

FULLY equrpped TV Repa1r Shop
for sole to settle estate, Best

offer lakes It, Phone 8&lt;3-2911 ,

AUCTION . Moson Auct ion Hou1e,
Mason , W Vo Friday, Aprll23 ,
7 p m . Consignments welcome.

Phone (304) 882·2407

FRIDArS GUESlS
ARE OHIO POWER CO.
REPRESENTATIVES WIWAM LEVBY
AND RICHARD WILSON
·AND APPALACHIAN POWER CO.
REPRESENTATIVE "DI_CK ROUSH.
TUNE IN AT 10:15 A.M.
FOR KALEIDOSCOPE
ON W.M.P.O.

)

on Venus" 10.

bW- News 13.
2: 31)-News 3; Movie "The Spiral Road" 4.
3:01)--Movle "Forever Amber" 3.
4:30-Movle "Paranoiac" 4,
5:01&gt;-Movle "Dragonwyck" 3.
Clllnntl Flvt
9:01)--700-Ciub
7:oo--Wresttlng
8:oo--Biack Knight Revue
IO:OG-700-Ciub
ThursCiay, April 22

I RECKON IT'S HIGH
TIME I CLEANED OUT
TH'BARN

WUTHLESS

CARD'PLAVIN'
VARMINTS!~

IT WILL HEIGHTEN
11-iE SUSPENSE: TO
lHE: IV!!! DEGREE"!

Ilvl GOING 1D FEEL
FOOLISH IXJING IT,
13UT(Sf6H) I GUEB5
YOJ 1RE RIOHT1 AS
U:7UAL!

NORTH
• K Q 10 2
• K QJ6
t AQ 10
•Q9

IDI

I: AST

.3

J 976

A83
72

• 954

A K 10 5

... 7 6 4 2

t98 543
SOUTH

theater
40 Pun's
aftermath
41 VIctoria
Cross, e.g.
42 Love
poetry's
Muse

too ls ou tboard motor , 1cec r ea m freezer , 4 hea t lamps ,

-----

5968:::.___ _ _ _ __

39 -

1::1 DO ~~-

push plow , rototil ler, 21awn mowers, lawn and garden

5232.

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Sanetolt on . 992 -3954 or 991-

Yesterday's Auwer

6:oo--Sunrlse 1&gt;eme1ter 10,
6.15-Farm Report 13.
6:2G-Biut Ridge Quartet 13,
6:»-Columbus Today&lt;; News 6; Sunrise Semester 11
·farmtlme 10.
6 : ~unce of Prevention 10
6:6---Mornlng Report 3.
6:50-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13,
6:5S-Chuck Whlfe Reports 10; Good Morning, Tr l
State 1l
7:01)--Today 3,&lt;,151 Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny S. Friends 10.
7:30-Schoollts 10.
8:oo--Lassle 6. Capt , Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame Sf. 33,
8:30-Big Valley 6.
9·oo-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donehue·4,15, Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J , 13,
9:30-A.M. 3; One Life to Llvo 6; Tatftotalos 8; Mike ·
Douglas 13,
IO :OG-Ctlebrlly Sweepstakes 3,&lt;,15; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Right 8,1 0,
10:30-High Rol lers 3,4, 15 ; Dlneh 6,
11 :0G-WhHI of Fortune 3,1Si WHkday &lt;; "Gambit
8, 10; Farmer's Daughter 13,
11 :31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Happy Days13; Love
of Life 8,10; Seaeme St. 20,33.
11 :55-Tak•Kerr 81 Den lmel's World 10.
12 :OG-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15, Let's Make a
Deal 13; Bob Braun 4; Nws 6,8, 10.
12·30-Take My Advice 3,15; All My Children 6,13;
Search lor Tomorrow 8,10,
12:6---Eiec. Co. 33.
12:55-NBC News 3,15
1:oo--News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8;
Vounq S. the Restless 10, Not For Women Only 15.
1:30-Days ot Our Lives 3,4,15; Rh\lme &amp; Reeaon 6,13;
As the World Turns 8,10.
2:01)--$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13.
2:31)-Doctors 3,&lt;: Bruk the Bank 6, 13; Guiding Light
8,10
J,oo-Another World 3,&lt;,15; General Hospltel6,1l: All
In The Family 8,10; Black Journal 20 ,
3:3()--()ne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouat Club 6; Match
Game e,10; Book Beat 20
4:01)--Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin&lt;; Somerltl 151
' Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouat Club 8; Mlater Rogerl _
2Q,33; Movie "The ,Matchmaker" 10; Dinah 13,
4: 30-Bewltched 3; Mod Sq~~ad 6; Beverly Hlllblllltlll
Sesame Sf. 20.33; Family Affair 12; Fllnt1tones 15.
s:oo-Bonanza 3; Partridge Family 8; Star Trek 15,
S:JI)-Adam. 12 4, 13; News 6; Family Affair 8; Eloc.
Co, 20,33.
6:0G-New1 3,4,8,10,13,151 ABC News 61 Zoom 20,33,
6:31)-NBC News 3,&lt;, 15, ABC Newo 13: Andy Grlfldfo 61
CBS News a, 10 ; Hodgepodge Lodge 201
Carrascolendes 33,
7:0G-Truth Ill' Cons. 3; To Tell The Truth 41 · Bowllng
Dollars 6; Space · 1999 8; Aviation Weather 331
Ntws10; Don Adams ScrHn Tesl13; Family Altair
IS; Ohio Journal 20.
7:31)-Portor Wagoner 3; Trea1ure Hunt &lt;; Candid
Camera 6; Evening Edition with Martin Agronaky
20; S2S,OOO Pyramid 10; To Toll the Truth 13o Pnn
Goes the Country 15; Black Per~p~ctlve on The
News 33,
8:01)--Sanlord S. Son 3,4, 15; Donny &amp; Marie 6, 13; Sara
e, Washington WHk In Review 20,33; Presidents: 76
Years on Camera 10,
8:30-The Practice 3,4,15; Wall Strtel WHk 20,33.
9.oo--Rockford Flits 3,4,1S; Movie " Jenny" 6.13o
Movie "How Sweet It lsi " a, 10; Firing Lint 201
Maaterplece Theatre 33
IO:oo--Pollce Story 3,4, 15; News 20; Paul Nuchlm• 33,
10:30-Avlatlon Weather 20.
11 :oo--News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC Newa 33.
11 :31)-Johnny Carson 3,&lt;, 15; Rookl11 6,13; Movie
"Dark of the Sun" 8; Movie "The Nanny" 10;
Janak! 33,
12:AO-Don Klrahner's Rock Concert 6; lron1lde 13,
1:01)--Mfdnlght Special 3,4,15; Movie "First Spacelhlp

Fishbein's falsecard a first

PUBLIC SALE

ba nd saw, 3/e" drtll , electr ic grinder. 18" pipe w rench ,
tap and die se t, valve puller , Ignition wiring , valve
gnndmg se t a nd l ift er , mi cro meter , ptpe smoking
st and' 1/4" elec trtc drill , voltage tester, 1 reinter ' bench
saw, compress1on t es t er, a rr com pre sser , garage
sweeper. concrete mi xe r , other t ools and m ics too
numerous to m entton

DOWN
1 Robert or
Alan
2 Mend
3 Novelist
Seton
4 Archibald
- Le1sh
5 CzechPolish
region
6 Like washday clothes
7 Prong
8 Icelandic

18 Mllkfish
26 Cleanse.
19 - Cruces, 29 Foot lever
N. Mex.
30 Bridge term
n catch
20
Follower
31 Solicitude
Y
i,iii::~:tA":O:~:\
·~·:'.\j
sight
of
1
of an
32 Regretted
measure
18 Ballerina
ism
33 Sicilian
9 Camera part
Markov a
21
Wrong:
city
10 Inch along
21 French
arillss
34
Portico
14
Uninhibited
;
priestly
22
Drone
35
State
(Fr.)
outgomg
IItle
23 Prohibit
36 Nev. city
2&gt; Like certain 17 Canyon
24 Before
36 Transgress
S&lt;lund
fabrics
r--,.,--,.-r:-r.=(3 wds.)
27 Regarding
(2 wds,)
28 Tranquil
29 Commtseration
30 Movie
:::::l~~:li~~~J!J.l: script
. writer
(st. )
34 Pulpit talk
(abbr )
37 Selfb-+-+-t-1-t-"11~
serv u:e
shop

Rutl•nd 742 -2231

Will trim or cut trees and shr u '"~:
bery Phone 9_.9 -2545 or 74 1.

Wr.t- THE LASS ROUNDUP

by THOMAS JOSEPH

(2 wds. l
15 Literary
collection
16 Cash outlay

R&amp;J COINS

What u.e, culled II beautg rnntf!d in Utt Old

~

service

For Sale

(614) 698-7257 Albany
SEWING MACH INE Repatrs , ser·
v1 ce, all make5 , 992 -2284 . The
fobrrc Shop , Po m&amp;roy
Authonted S1nger 5-o les and
Ser~tice We sharpen Scissors

I

ACROSS
1 Prominent
apple
6 Trole
11 Hawa iian
veranda
12 Lubricated
13 Wardrobe

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

n tce 3 br modern home.
dream k tt . bar, dtnrng wt th
g lflSS doors, large lt v lng , 2

ceramtc baths, dbl garage
and lront porch 138,000
NOW IS THE TIME TO
BUY YOUR NEW HOME .
CALL TO SEE.

RIGHT NOW I WANT 10 FilliP

1H ONE 11-lOSI: "!V.O DUDI:6

treasure .

Roger Wamsley
Al -lmo

Jumble" AISLE USURP POPLIN DUPLEX
AniWI:'fl

3-11 1mo

PH. 992-3746

THE ~01515EII:
I!IOXEII: lt:lOK.

(A.wer~ lo~rrow)

ALLEY OOP

burled

""'' dT

iU~NeC:O

l
Now ananre the clreled lellera
.v·.== ICARP
I HE
t" "l I V 'I lo fonn the awpriae an~wer. u
.---,.,:;--:-:-- :=~f-.~~~~~f-.;""j'~":;;"'~'eo~ted b7 the U..e etrloon.
I P111t~S-SUIISWII .. It XX) [I I I I]

Orange Twp Volunteer
Fire Department will hold
a constgnment auction at

F1nd

ri9ht to your proj ect. Fos.l and
easy Free esttmotes Phone
992 328.4 , Goegle1n Ready M1 x
Co , Middleport , Ohto

Near

Racrne. 3 br s, bath , ni ce
kr t
w tth
s to ve.
r e fr rg er a tor , dtn tn g and

t

IYUPTED
I I IJ I

l'lol HOT SA'IIKG
HE'S HOT A FINE
CHAP-- SUT
PEflSCNAUY I
THINK HE'S AN

ac r es, 2 tn Woods for th e
above r. nd looking over th e
Oh to Rtver . 2 br tra rler .

1 51)-News 13.
Channel Five
9 Q0-700-Ciub

nu; STeAM

(OIRS, rings, silver, gold . ,

WILl do roofrng , construcfton ,
plumbmg ond heatrng No job
too large or too small. Phonf'

O'DEll Al rgnment located behrnd
Rut land Grode School. Tuneup
brakes , wheel boloncrng , align .
men t. Phone 7•2·2004 .

TEAFORD

I!IH~T'S

BUY , SELL or TRADE

BRADFORD, Aust1oneer Com
plete Serv1ce Pt-. one 949 2487
or 949-2CX)If Racine , Ohio Crill
Bradford

Sweepers , toaster$ , rron s, all
small appliances . lawn mower,
next to State Highway Goroge
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985-

T06SED IPJ

1·0o-Tomorrow 3,4

COINS

742-23.18
READY MIX CONCRETE delivered EXCAVATING, dozer , backhoe

F1 shmg c ottag e. 3 r oom s, 2
por ches, and a path, close
to lake , needs some r cpatr

M'l GENIUS

DAV!'&gt;--1 JUST

, 9.3()-Jeanne Wolf Wlth ...20
m·oo-Harry 0 6,13; American Parade 8, 10; News 20.
11 GO-News 3,4,6,8,1 0,13,15, ABC News 33,
11 :31)-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Mannix 6,13; Movie "The
Gun" 8; Movie "High Society" 10, Janakl 33,
12 ·41)-Maglclan 6, 13.

OPEN TUES. THRU SAT.

992-3092

MAC'S
LAWN
MOWER
SERVICE

'

7 31)-Hol lywood Squares 3.. •. Ohio State Lotte•y 6;
Evening Edl11on with Marlin AQronskv 20; Wild
_ i( lnQdom 10 . To Tell the Truth 13, Musi c U S.A IS,
8' 01)-Mac Davis 3,4,IS, Welcome Back, Kotler 6,13;
Waltons 8,10; Piccadilly Circus 20; Mark of Jazz 33
6. 31)-Barney Miller 6,13, Lowell Thomas Remembers
33.
9:QO- "Judge Horton &amp; the Scottsboro Boys" 3,4,1S;
Streets of San Francisco 6, 13, Hawaii Flve-0 8,
Mao's China 33; Bacharach lnthe' Park 10

ANYTH ING!

Ph. 949-2404

4 5 76

608 E.
MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .

'IOU 60L.D

Famtly at War 33

R'16Hn IT

WAS ONE OF

Call tn orders and prck up
in twenty minutes.
Located lt329·lrd Street
Rulne, Ohio

NEW

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph 992 2174

Small
Eng.
•
Repair

· ;..,/~ '1

AND TliAT '!&gt;
HOW YOU COOK&amp;P
UP THE FORMULA

MtKEE l

WILKINSON'S
IL-

ONE SIMPlY MI~E'S UP
SOME COLOR~D 600··
PEilflAPS HEATS OR
DISTILLS IT A 81T-

Italian-Style Pizza

4· 13·1 mo.

\ ·-,
o." ~
. , '\

N athan 81 ggs
Radrator Spectalrst

CAP!'AIN EASY
I NEVER REALIZED VOL! WE&lt;REE- A
6CIHITIH , BUCK! DO YOU
• ACTUALLY KtJOW HOW TO LJ$e
ALL TH IS JUtJK ~

SAM'S
PIZZA SHOP

PH. 992-6173

Complete

,

Courteous
Seroice3-31 -1 mo .

Ph 949· 2023 or 84 3-2667

•
'

PH. 992-6010

Now accepting clients
for bookkeeping and
tax service .

L.---------...1
EXPERIENCED
-

24 Hour Service

butldtng and remodeling
from the foundatton up.
Addttions , carpet•ng,
patntrng, srdrng, roofing,
paneling, pap er ha_,glng,
etc .

4 2 1 mo

5 oo--Bonanza 3; Partridge Family 8, Star Trek IS
5.31)-Adam 12 4,13; News 6; Family Affair 8, Elec
Co 20,33
6:QO-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20: lTV
Utilization 33
6:31)-NBC News 3,4, 1S; ABC News 13; Andy Griffi th 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33.
7·00-Tru th or Cons. 3; To Tel tthe Truth&lt;; Bowling fr•
Dollars 6, Lawrence Welk 8; News 10; Let's Make a
Deal1 3; Fam oly Affai r 1S; Anyone tor Tennyson 20 ;

LARRY WHOBREY

CONSTRUCTION

7:oo--Testimony Time
7·3()-0aytlme
8:31)-Rex Humbard
9:3()-Muslc Connection
10 :01)--700-Ciub
FltiDAY,APRfL23, lf76

THURSDAY, APRIL 22,1976

"NEW
MIDDLEPORT
CAB CO.

4 10 nr~o

;::::;;;;:;;;;;;;;;===:;;;;::::::

197( Chevrolet Prckup one half
ton , 6 cy l standard shrft low
speed rear end , fully rnsu loted
cover
Excel lent condrlton ,

fr ame. 4 br , 111 ba ths, nt ce
kt t che n f u ll baseme nt.
you r chotce ot coal or ga s

99'2-7790

__l'_hone (6 14)949-2253. ~-

good cond1tt on
3659

POMEROY LANDMARK

1973 3.50 Kowasak1 Brg Horn ex.
ONE acre on Ktngsbury Rd , J
pon s1on chamber , kno bb y
one half acres Rt 143 Phone
trres 3 brke tro tl er Call m .

&lt;!.':_t~

19=~:::\;r (R~-be-1)-2 dr

TURF TILL
TILLERS
J' , H P , B&amp;S Eng
$163.95

NEW on d Used lod1es' Sandals on 3 BEDROOM total elec home
Sol e 50 Pet off Ends May I, all
garage Iorge lol on RustiC
soles frnal
Barley 's, MidHtlls , Syracuse
Sale prrco
dleport
$22,900 Phone 992 7523 lor
more in formalton
1972 Hondo 750 ewcellen t condl t1on Extras Phone 992 -35 17
NEW 3 bedrm 1 one -half both, 10
m1nute dr1ve from Pomeroy .

711 0

VW

$20,000
CORNER LOT In
Mtdd lcporl , ,, br bii lh ,

MODERN desrgn stereo , 8 track
tope om -lm rodro, combtno·
t1 on
Balance $101 06
or
terms Col l 992 3q65
ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood
frame , two bedrm
home
1 44 ACREAGE , 8ft truck topper
loc ated between Coolville and
rocks boot wtth trailer Phone
Tupper s Plmns One acre lot
(614)M7-JJJJ
two car garage cr ty wat er, gas
FOUR ce metery plots rn Metgs
heat ,
hardwood
floors ,
Mem or rol Gardens W1l l sel l
carpeted
ltvmg room, nrce
v1ew $21 000 Phone (6 14 )
separately Phone (614 ) 985.
4146
667-3519

J D 490 co m plan lor, good con·

1971
Bee11e , $900 Zenr-th col~
or TV 21 rnch , $50 Phone

m good cond lt ton a lways
rent ed 22 1 ' acr es g r ound ,
tn com e $3 60 per month

h1tch Ford cu lt1 vator, 1- 12
9 .. _Ja ck w Carsey , Mgr
row co rn spray e r , 1975
611!
Phone«192 -2191
Oldsmobrle Starfrre. 2 rtdmg L- - - - -- - - - - '
horses Phone 992 7692

LOCUSTposls Phone 742 2359

1965 Oldsmob tle Cutl ass, V-8 3
speed Ca ll 992 3'236

30", J HP, B&amp;S Eng
$89.95

1 FAMilY mtlk cow , fresh soon .

I 4 hole hog Ieeder I sel 3 pi

FREE ESTIMATES

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

Auto-Sal~

SOMEONE to do 1ronrng for me rn STARCRAFT mtn r·motor on Chevy JQ75 Coprtee Closs1c Convert 1ble,
or Dodge chassrs travel !rotlers
lrke new l ow mdes AM-stereo
the Chester Tuppers Plorn s
and fo ld-down campers Check
tope , 23 000 mrles , one owner ,
area Phone {6 14) 992·37 42
Phone 992 5650
our serv tce and quoltty before
WANT someone to sew mendmg
you decrde Hours 12 7, Open
1973 Thunde rbrrd excellent con ·
do
1ron1ng
a nd
l 1ght
Sunday Camp Conley Storcrah
d1tron power seat s wrndows
housework Phone 992 6005
Soles, Rt 62 N , Pt Plea sa nt
steenng and brakes , AM ·FM
SOMEONE to cut gross must be
rad1 o wrth tope player , mag
_ e.)(P_!rt ence d Phone 992 5798
nms plus regul ar rrms and hub
copf Phone 2A7-2.42A or see
NEEDED rmmed ,ately person to
~ rrg r~ H ~l~t~Letart Foll~-~h~o
w rap meat
por l -! rrn e For
more lnform otron coll 992 -337 4 FURNISHED apt , couple onl y oil
utt l1tres paid S130 per mon th
Phone 992 3975 or 992 -2571

1 BEDRM traeler , full( carpeted
located on Rt. 1.43 , c ose to Har
usonvtlle 1 chrld Ph one 742
3122

4 l 1 mo

3-26 1mo

ROGER HYSEUS
GARAGE

1962 CHEVROLET
s le ~s

Sales &amp; Rental
TRAVEL TRAILERS
OPEN
FRI .-SAT.-SUN,
or by contacting
R. Codner, Owner

or "'·2203

1972 FORPMAVE RICK 2 PR.

HAPPY HOUR

Ja n e Walton ,
•
Clerk
V Illage Of Pomer oy

S60'1S

w ith every Chev optton , low mrl es. new ti t le, boss's

--~~

APACHE Ch1el Camper far sole

RAINBOW RIDGE
( Bashan Aru l
LONG BOTTPM

Ractne, Ohto

.

Vo Call Mr Htll (304)675 4079

I

Nee d "new root or o•d
repatred? Hause, roof,
IJarn, shingles, build up,
painftng, electrical work ,
gutters &amp; downspouts,
furnaces, water heaters,
water softn ers, i nstalled &amp;
repaered, Sewage .
Call us •t 949-2882

Dark red, Si mulated wood t rtm, 3 sea t. full y eq u1pped

TAll TIMBERS
NITE CWB

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sea l ed btd s will be re ce n1 ed
1n th e aff rce of the Cle rk on
Second St r ee t , Village ol
Pom er oy
Oh10 , unt rl 12
o'cl ock noon , M onday , May 3
19 7ti , for
th e f oll owrn g
proposal
For 1.000 to ns. mor e or less
of aspha l t concrete '" p tace
To be placed on lh e parkm g
tof , a s des igned by VIl lage
Coun ct l
All matenal s anct equr p
m ent are to meet Oh ro
Oepnr trne nt of
H1ghway
Specl f lcat Ion s
All bids a r e to be by the ton
rn pla ce and the pr ice per ton
sha ll mclud e al l neces sary
c lei!lnln g Specrft ciUton s of th e
Park ing Lot to be su rfa ce d are
on t ile rn Ule offrce of th e
Mayo r 1n t he Vt l l age ol
Pom eroy
Each brd must contarn th e
full name of ever y per son or
com pan y rnterested tn th e
sam e, and be accompanted by
a bond or ce rttf red check 1n th e
sum
of
$100 00 to
the
sat1s t actton of Vr lla ge coun c11
as a gua ranty that rt the b1d 1S
ac c ep t ed , a con tra c t wrtt be
en tered mto and rts per for m
an ce proper ly secured
These checks or bOnd s w•ll
be r eturn ed at once to all
1ex ce pt th e successful btdder
H is check or bond wr tt be he ld
until th e co ntract or brd rs
proper ly exet uted by h1m
The n ght 1S re serv ed to
, re1e ct any and al l brd s

$489S

197S Chev , ESTATE WAGON

Codner's Campei'S

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

Class tc 4 door . co demo w rth low mileage, l ight green
wt th green vi nyl r oof, powe r door locks, wmdows.
br akes factor y a1 r , tm t g lass. con for tll t, cr utse
con trol. AM r ad to &amp; tape, it's loaded and tf 's ntce

33 , len md es nor th of Pomeroy
Lorge lots wrth concret petro s
srdewalks runners and off
~-----------.-STUD Servtce AKC Regts!erec Will DO bu rldmg and remodel
~!re~ r:_~rkmg_ Phan!!~~7 4?!_
Cocker Sponrel
Phone 992mg , roo fing , plumbrng, fu r 2 BEDROOM tro1ler $28 00 week
3032 or 698 -7 88 1 W
3273
noce repair , gas or o1l or
all utd rtt es pmd Phone 992Wash mgton St Albany
general reporr Free esti mates
3324
and rea son able rates Ph o n~
COAl , limestone and all types of
Charles S1nclo1r (b14 ) 985·4121 3 ROOM furn es hed opt , u!tlthes
salt and roc k soh for 1ce ond
po1d 356 N Fourth Mid·
or 992·2221
snow removal Excelsmr 5olt
dleport
Works East Mom St Pomeroy,
WI Ll DO odd tobs roof 1ng pam
Ohro Phone 992 3891
TRA
ilER lot on one acr e tn coun·
tmg , haul1ng . treework, end
try Has septtc tonk. cr ty FREEZER BEEF Corn fed steers
mOYflnQ Phone 992 -74()q
water Flatwoods Rood for
Wrll delive r to local dressrng
Rt 1
Pom eroy , 0 . YARD Work by boy age 15 Con more rnforma t1on coli (61-4 ) plants
Phone 843 2111
furntsh mower 1f necessary
985-3832 or wnte Box 61 3
- - - ---Phone after 3 30 p m 992 7567
Pomer~ . ~to
or all day Saturday and Sunday
TURF TRIM
.4 RMS ond both on ltnco ln Hgts
Phone 992 3WO
PUSH MOWERS

Wed. and Thursday
April21-22
5to6:30p.m.

Business Services

2. ·siGNS Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

(6 1 4 ) 985 - ~ 2~8

WRITE FRIENDlY HOME PAR
TIES
20 RA ILR OAD AVE
Al BANY NY 17105

$12,000
RACINE Ftre" Depar tment wrll
have a hom shoot Sa tu rday ot
6 30 p m at thetr new butldrng
oft 6a shon Road

Television log for ·easy viewing

lOY

PAR fiES HAS OPENI NGS FOR
MANA GERS IN OUR AREA

RECRUI]ING IS EASY BECAUSE

"The Publisher reserves

consecut•ve

PERIENCE?

11 - The Tmilv SentineL Mic!j!lepori-Pomerov, 0 .. Thursdav, APril22, 1976
DlCK TRA.. I
'
'

• A 6 54

•to 12

t KJ 6
... .16 5

today 's hand Is now a well ·
known false card. When l1e
made Iton 1935 it was probably
its first appearance on the'
bridge scene
When South starled alter
lrumps he wa s prepared lo
guard against lour to the jack
In the West hand. When Fishy
dropped the nine under dummy 's kmg , South decided thai
Eas t might hold lour. He
played !he queen and Fishy
had developed a trump trick

Both vulnerable

Norob Ea!l

DAILY -cRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR

Obi
' 4.

South

Pass
Pass

A Vorgima reader wants to
know what you bid with .
•43 2 •HB3

t875 ... 10 63

alter your partner makes a
I• I, 0 N G F E I. L 0 W
takeout double of a one spade
opening,
One lcllcr som ply slands for another In this &amp;ample A Is
The best !hong to do Is bid
used fur the three I.'s, X fur the lwo O's, l'lr Single letters.
apostrophes, the lcnAth :md formation of the words are all
Harry Fishbein 's
at everyone a cheery goodnight
hmls Ea&lt;'h da} th£' rnde l ctl('rs nrc different.
age 76 followed thai of John and tear your hand up. Since
' Crawford by exactly one the rules frown on lha( you bid
{'RVPTOQUOTES
lwo hearts and hope thatllghtweek .
"'ng doesn'L slrike
5 J v Ha'rry was one of the most
FWKBS
C OMVRS
SJV
popular or the bridge ex perts
!Do you have a question
S
J
F
S
Everyone
liked
him
He
wa
s
a
for
the experts? Write "As/&lt;
KQ RYGOCH OR
YGKLORV
liv e- lime winner or !he the Jacobys " care of this
Vanderbilt Cup plus many newspaper The Jacpbys will
R K K C V G KG N F S V G R J V ' N N J F P V other national champlonshops. answer lndrv:Ciua/ questions
He invented the F1shbeon con- '' sta mpeCI, se/1-adCiressed
I V V 'i
0 S,- LFGI
W V N S F 0 G V ventlon to defend agamst sii- envelopes are enclosed, The
SK
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: EDUCATION MAKES A PEOPLE ly preemptive bids and then most interesting questions
EASY TO lEAD, BUT DIFFICULT TO DRIVEj, EASY TO gave 11 ~palter people gave up writ be useCI In th:s column
GOVERN BUt IMPOSSIBI.E TO ENSLAVE. - HENRY those s11ty preempts .
and wit/ receive copies ol
BROUGHAM
.
Foshy's defensive play on JACOBY MODERN.)
(0 19'76 KJna t'u&amp;urtt Sy ncllute. Inc.)

HE'(, MARCIE, I 60T
THE FI~ST

CAP!

HERE, I'M COMIN' OOWN!

1

!ill

"'''

MARCIE!

~.:·

�.·

12- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April 22, 1976

R i 0 Reports to be 'aired

·

RIO GRAND E - T"e C 11
.
h
.
Office of Career De vel~~- . te"r:s~~dsenil~rs e~;lo~~~~~;
men! and Placement at Rio opportunities in Southeastern
Grande College-Community Ohio.
College and WJ EH, local
radio station, will produce a ;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::-:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-'.:-:-:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:
co llege pla ce m\nt news
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
program entitled " Rio
Saturday through
Reports " to be aired every
Monday,
chance of showers
Monday, Wednesday, and
or
thundershowers
Friday, beginning Munday,
April 26, from a:30 p.m. to Saturday and Sunday. Fair
Monday. Highs from tile
5:35p.m.
upper 60s to the lOs . Lows
The purpose of ·" Rio
from the mid 40s to the mid
Reports" is pr imarily to
~ s Saturday, cooling by
ac-quaint area employers in
Monday to the upper 30s
ed ucctti on, busines s, in ..
and mid 40s.
dustry, and government with
qualified graduating Rio
Grande College-Community :;:::;.;:;:;:::;.;:;:;:::;.;:::;.;:::::::::;:;.;:::::::;;:;:;.;:;.;:;::::

HOSPITAL NEWS
Vetera ns Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Helen
Williams, Middleport ; John
Myers, Wilkesboro, N. C.;
. Arthur Roberts , Middleport.
DISCHARG E D
Raymond Baker, Glori a
Reynolds, Teresa Bcn~dwn ,
John My ers, Kenneth Smith,
Julia Barton, Peggy Reit-

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mr s.
James Pauley , daughter ,
Letart; Jessie Jeffers
Scottown; Dewey White, Jr . :
Gallipolis ; Gilbert
Trowbridge, Paltiot ; Mrs .
Roy Ellis, Poin l Pleasant .
William Queen, Southside:
Mrs . · John Malczewski
mire, James Reeves, Samuel1 Clifton : Everett Lutton, Point
Lewis .
Pleasant ; Richard Clonch,
. - - - - - - - - - , . Ga llipoli s Ferry ; Laila
Bowen, Ashton; Roy Phillips,
Crown City; Bonnie Waldie ,
Aaron McDermitt , Terry
Tonight-April22
&amp;mnd ers, Point Pleasant ·
NOT OPEN
Mrs..
William
Cook'
Pomeroy ; Christina Taylor:
Middl eport; Mrs. Lionel
Fr i, Sal. &amp; Sun.
Triplett,
Gallipolis.
Dirty Mary ,
Birth,
April
20, a daughter
Crazy Larry
lo Mr . and Mrs . Charl es
" PG"
Kasee, Gallipolis .
F .:fer Fonda

MEIGS nfEATRE

Running time : 190 min .
Showstarts7p.m ,

.HERE'S WHY·
THEY'RE CALLED
''KID·PROOF"!
CUSHIONED ARCH

STEEL SHANK

DU.RABLE LINING
ELONGATED CUSHIONED
TONGUE

HIGH PADDED
BACK

EXTRA STURDY . LACES

LONG WEARING
TOE CAP

Ii

KID POWER
IDENTIFYING
MARK
PADDED COLLAR
REINFORCED STITCHING
HIGH ABRASIVE
OUTSOLE

"

KID POWER
SURE GRIP
SOLE

"The Kid -Proof Sneaker"

Open Friday Til8 - Sat. TiiS

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
Betty Ohlinger
102 E. Main

Pomeroy, Ohio

Weatli~r

~r:;:;:;:i;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;-~;:;.;-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:·&gt;:·:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::&lt;=::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:&gt;;:;:;~:;::;:;~:;,;;:::;,:!{;

Cloudy and cooler tonight,
D~teline
SQs . Sunny and
.,,
~-· warmer Friday, highs in the
HALIFAX, N. C. April Z%
mid 70s. Probability of rain 40
By Clarence :~~1 per
A committee of the
cent today, 10 per cent
[_;_:_..:
M ill~r
'-~.-·~:- tonight
North
Cart~IIna legislature
and Friday.
'-'
''
urged Congrel$ tllat 21
Fiscal year 1977 marks the ( beginning October Isl of this
prlsonero taken at Moore's
LOCAL TEMPS
beginning of the full im- year) of slightly over $394
Temperature in downtown Creek Bridge he sent to
plemen ta tion of the new billion. This level of spending Pomeroy Thursday at II a . m. Maryland, VIrginia and
congressional budget process would mean a deficit of ap- was 68 degrees under sunny Philadelphia as a security
es tabli shed
in
the proximately $43 billion, down skies.
measure because of 1 the
Congre ssionai• Budget and substantially from the S7S
presence of the British Reel
HILOTEMPS
Impoundment Control Act of billion deficit of last year, but
off the colony's coast.
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
1974. Both the House and still far from the balanced
highest
temperature reported ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::::::::::::::::::::
Senate are in the process of budget I have fought for . In
Wednesday
to the National
finalizing the first budget contrast, the House Budget
VISIT BLACKSTONS
Service,
excl
uding Alaska
resolution , which sets targets Committee has recomMr..
and Mrs . F. E. ·
and
Hawaii,
was
95
degrees
for five major budget mended a spending level of
Shaeffer,
Columbus, and
at
Yuma,
Ariz
.
Today's
low
categories . These targets are· $413 billion with a deficit of
Mr~
Ann
Horne of New
was
22
degrees
at
Alamosa,
intended to guide and in- $SO billion. These Committee
Mexico
,
spent
.Sunday ,
Colo.
figures
reflect,
in
my
opinion,
fluen ce Congress's subMonday
and
Tuesday
here
a~
inability
on
the
part
of
a
·sequen l revenue, spending
with
Mr
.
and
Mrs
.
Harold
of
the
Congress
lo
majority
and debt actions.
Blackston, RD, Pomeroy .
When the Budget Act was make the difficult decisions
LAND TRANSFER
passed in 1974, it did so with necessary to reduce the
Kathleen M. Bissell ,
If
anything,
my support, since I felt that budget.
swelling fed er al spending congressional figures should Hayward Bissell to Jerry R.
bad! y needed to have the show restraint and be Hayman , parcel, Chester.
Miss Dora Hamm
under
lhe
brakes put on it. The targeted
VISITORS COME
haphazard manner in which presidential budget totals.
Mr
.
and Mrs. Robert Mitch died Wednesday
the old proc~ss resolved the Instead, spending measures
of
Wheeling
spent lhe
final budget totals delinitelv . have been increased, adding
Funeral services for Miss
weekend
here
visiting
Mr.
needed to be changed. The to the deficit. Keep in mind
Dora
ijamm, 89, of Minersa~d
Mrs.
Perry
Mitch
,
Budget Ael is designed to that this first budget
ville, who died Wednesday
Middleport.
•
resolution
is
Qnly
a
~~target.
"
change that old process, but
night at the home of Mr. and
to do so all Members of This means that if the same
Mrs
. Ernest Stewart will be
Congress must be far more majority ·tl!at approves it now be jeopardized by such
held
Saturday at 1 p.m. at
willing to raise the tough decided before the binding an inflationary budget
Ewing
Funeral Home with
issues on spending priorities second resolu lion (Sep- resolution. We have to be
the
Rev.
Wllliam Middlethan they have lo date . Only tember 15) that the spending concerned about the impact
sworth
officiating.
Burial will
in this way can the budget be level should be raised even of continued ·huge federal
be
in
Sl.
John
Lutheran
balanced, rather .than facing further , they will pass a deficits on the economy. It
Cemetery
.
should come as no surprise
large deficits as an accepted ''revised'' figure. •
A member of St. John
this
resolution
It is obvious tl!at this that
fact of budgetary life.
Lutheran
Church, she spent
The President's January budget resolution contains represents a major conher
entire
me In Nease
budget submission to the nothing which promises to tribution toward continuing
Settlement.
She
is survived
such
deficits
.
Congress projected a spen- bring federal spending under
by
her
nephew,
Virgil
Hamm,
If
this
fir
st
budget
control.
It
follows
the
old
ding level for fiscal year 1977
misguided idea that the resolution is 'to become ac- Rl. I Minersville, and several
bureaucracy in Washington ceptable and ,get the Budget other nieces and nephews.
In lieu -of flowers friends
can spent tile people's money Act off on sound foolipg, it
more wisely than the people must be modified and are asked to contribute lo the
(Continued from page I)
can spend il themselves. This trimmed considerably. Tbe St. John Memorial Fund.
piping and matching red is reflected in the rejection by budget resolution should be a
Friends may call at the
ca rpeting and instrument the House Budget Committee blueprint for responsible funeral home this evening
panel, and red and blue hood • of the President's proposed federal budgeting, not a from 7 to 9 and Friday from 2
accent stripes.
tax package. The overall blueprint for fiscal disaster . lo 4 and 7 to 9.
But even . all those are result of that rejection is a
spoken for, with some dealers
resolution that will exact
willing to 'pay more than
$11.7 billion more in taxes
$2,000 over the regular price than if the proposed
just to gel their hands on one . presidential budget had been
Sales slipped steadily from followed . In addition, the
a peak of 509,415 convertibles
economic recovery which
in 1965 until just the 14,000
Eldorado convertibles built began in mid-1975 and was
projected
to continue
by C'.a dillac in the 1976-model
strongly throughout 1976 may
year were all that were
available. And from the word
that 1976 would be the end ,
demand has been greater
than ever before.
(Continued from page I)
were trapped on the' second
floor proved unfounded .
Veterinary
There was no fi're but the
force of the e&lt;plosion pulverized stone and plaster ,
Supplies
leaving the air filled with a
thick smoke-like cloud.
i\l least 300 persons were
evacnated from the building
which houses a number of
courts, prob~tipn offices and
stale offices when the
explosion occurred.
Some people in the building
at the lime said they believed
the explosion occurred near
the probation department on
the second floor.
An eyewitness on the
second floor said the ceiling
hatl fallen in, exposing the
beams in lobby next to the
elevators
outside
the
probation department.
There were conflicting re·
ports about exactly where the
bomb went off. One court
officer who works in the
building said he was told the
blast occurred in room 206
which is part of the probation
department. Other sources
said the bomb went off in an
elevator shaft.
Police sealed off the
building located · near \he
Massachusetts state House.
Big new selection of chaise

t Washington

1776

@ lows to low

1 Report

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, April..23. 1976

'

-.

Y-.,.'•

.: ,)

RUSSElL JOHNSON, in the background and his crew, have been working hard all
week cleaning up and tearing down the former Stiffler Store that burned on Jan. 28. Johnson
said the roof on the adjoining building has collapsed to the basement floor. The picture
shows the opening from West Main Street to Second Street.

200 last

..

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Warehouse on Mechanic Street

Courthouse'

SALE

Porch, Lawn and
Patio Furniture

For Your
Sick or
Injured
Pets•.•

DA\IE DILES, left, ABC TV sports figure, guest speaker at the annual basketball
banquet chats with head coach Carl Wolfe following the banquet.
~~~=:::::::~=:~=~~'~''''"''''~,,,,,,,,.,,,.,.,,,.,,,.,.,,,.,.,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~;,:~

1 PIECE FISH .................................... .70
1 PIECE FISH &amp;CHIPS.............. .......... 1.05
2 PIECES FISH &amp; CHIPS...................... . 1.75
6 PIECES FISH &amp; CHIPS ........ .. ............ 4.90
10 PIECE~BUCKET OF FISH .................. 6.95
10 PIECES FISH &amp;CHIPS ..................... 8.50
1 ORDE~ CHIPS .................................. .35

resent th1s advertisement and get 25 percent off the above prices
thru May 22 on drive:in and carryout orders·only .

'
This Fish is White Fish from the CleanWaters of Iceland.

All excellent quality,
colorful and practical for
your outdoor enjoyment.

·,.

I
!
I
I

Warehouse, Main Store·l
and Annex Open 9: 30 to 5
f)·m· Monday, Tuesdav,
Wednesday, Thursday :
Friday 9:30 to 8 p.m.
Saturday 9:30 to 5 p.m.

'!!&amp;

~ ~-

~:~~J!

·.:,··

m

By United Pr'ess International
WASHINGTON - ELECTRICITY BilLS would rise much
. more in the central states than in other parts of tile nation
under proposed clean air laws soon to be debated in the Senate,
a study shows. The study by Dr . I.A!wis Perl of National
Economic Research Associates, performed for the electric
utility industry' showed major regional variations in the .
impact of the Clean Air Act.
Perl found the extra consumer costs of the proposed
RACINE - "The best
legislation over the IS years covered by the measure would
sermons
are lived ,-- not
range from $2,625 per household in Texas to only $39 per
preached,"
ABC.TV sports·
household in the Northeast. ' 'The regional variation 1'1 the cost
caster
Dave
Diles told the
of clean air legislation reflects two factors- variations in the
large
crowd
attending the
delivered cost oflow sulfur coal, and the proportion of. regional
basketball
banquet
Thursday
electric capacity which is projected to be coal !ired," the study
night
at
Southern
High
School
said.
here .
Diles, born and raised in
WASHING TON - AFTER ADEPARTING swipe at Soviet
• actions in Angola, Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger left Middleport, said " I was
today "with an attitude of good will" for a two-week flying trip blessed having parents who
lived their sermons. I call
to seven African countries.
In a news conference Thursday, he said Russian aid to a Detroit my home, but it has
rebel faction in the Angolan civil war was principally never fell like my home. It
responsible for the "deterioration of relations with the Soviet bas never been my home."
The speaker made these
Union." But of his trip to Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Zaire,
bther
points:
Senegal, Ghana and liberia - his first trip as secretary lo
In
some
of the things that
black Africa - he said: "We are certainly going with an
I have been an
matter
most,
attitude of good will" and a desire to demonstrate both U. S.
utter
failure
.
It was an obopposition to white minority regimes and concern for close ties
session
with
me to leave
will! black African nations.
Meigs CoWlty.. I went to
CHARLESTON, .W . VA. - ARCH MOORE'S BID to college because I just wanted
run for an unprecedented tl!icd term as West Virginia's to leave Meigs County. On
governor died swiftly and quietly Thursday behind the marble being a success I have missed
pillars of America's highest court. Leaving him with no where out.
else to get a reversal, tbe U.S. Sup0emeCourt of Appeals ruled
Do not feel you have to
that Moore's posiilon had posed "no substantial federal leave here to make
question ."
something of yourself.
His final strategy failing, Moore is off the May 11 primary Chances are you are not
ballot. Some believe )lis formal departure . could spur going to make your living
Commerce Commissioner Ralph Albertazzie, Moore's - hand- playing sports, so devote
picked successor and former President Nixon's pilot , into a yourself in making Melgs
more aggressive campaign for the GOP guernatorial County a better place in
nomination.
which to live.
,
On the thrlll of victory and
the agony of defeat: the thrill
Wea~her
we handle well, the agony we
don't.
Chance of thundershowers
life is a series of victories
tonight, lows in the low 50s. and defeats. It's high time we
Showers likely Saturday. take a long look at tills thing
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio Highs in low 70s. Chance of called sports. There is
(UPI) -Armco Steel Corp. rain 40 per cent today, 50 per something more to life than
said Thursday its first cent tonight and 60 per cent 'sports, something more
fulfilling.
quarter earnings for 1976 Saturday.
He commended the basket.
were $27,622,000,-or 87 cents
ball squad but told the boys
per share of conunon stock,
not to be too impressed with
on ~les of $746,113,000.
NOW YOU KNOW
themselves.
The earnings were 41 per
The mlcropan tograph --" a
Following Diles, Carla
cent higher than fourth
quarter earnings for 1975, but device used to cut markings Shuler presented cheerleader
awards. Reserve members of
17 pet cent. below the first on calibrated instruments can produce writing, legible the cheerleaders introduced
quarter for that year.
were Kim Taylor, Patty
~Armco Enterprises, the l!llder a miscroscope, on a
of
32,000,000
words
to
scale
Robinson , Carla Teaford ,
company's manufacturing
the
square
inch.
That's
the
Janis
Carnahan, Peggy
and financial businesses.
. . earned $22,091,000 on sales equivalent printing 250 300- Neigler and Debbie Brown .
of ~ 1 126,000 for the first page no'vels on a postag~ Varsity cheerlead·ers instamp.,
(Contlnued on ])llge 2)
quarter.

Armco earnings
up 41 per cent

II

l

i_._.___________.__..;.._,_,

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
'·

es ~ore
' ' content

in home
county

SALE
PRICES
r---·---.._----·--.
1
1

Dil -

INews. . .in Briefs\i

·'

WE HAVE THE
SUPPUES
·YOU NEED.

."FISH AND CHIPS

at y en tine
Volkswagen will build
American Rabbit plant
Fiflt•!'ll l'cnts
\'nl. ~~. No. 5

WOLFSBURG , Wes t
Germany (UP!) - The
Volkswagen com pany
announced today it will
establish · an assembly plant
in the United Slates in an
attempt to regain Volkswagen 's lost status as the
most
popular foreign
automobile in America.
The
Volkswagen
supervisory board at a
special meeting decided lo
open a plant at a cost of $296
million to turn out annnally
200,000 models of the
"Rabbit," the American
equivalent of the German

lounges, gliders, tables,
swings, rockers, straight
·chairs, lawn umbrellas.

P

e

•

,

'

.•
I

"Golf." The plant will employ ·
5,000 American workers.
All 2i members of the
hoard, including the seven
labor representatives, voted
for the American plant after
heari ng assurances there
would be no layoffs in
Germani.
The board did not sa)l'
which of the competing
American cities would get the·
plant. Volkswagen head Toni
Scbmuecker told reporters
the site would be announced
in the next two months.
Arthur Railton, vice
president of Volkswagen of
America said the choice bad ·
'

been narrowed down to three domestic models but labor public rt•lations chief.
uwc must reduce cosH:,''
cities - the Cleveland suburb blocked the plan. fcm·ing that
of Brook Park, Columbus, German workc1·s would lose Sclun ucckcr said. '"l'h nt ts
.
our str11tcgic target 'and that
Ohio, and New Stanton, Pa . jobs.
IG
Metal!
, the powel'ful is why we arc going to Ute
Other An1erican cities that
bad been under consideration melHI workers' union wllkh Unit&lt;•d States.' ' _.
lie SH iel Pnglncs nml li' HIIS·
were Baltimore, Detroit, and repre se nts the 11utomubil e
workers
,
dropp
ed
Its
missions
would b!: shippL'll
Norfolk, Va .
Scbmuecker said the basic opposition when convinced tm rrom Gernmny but 65 per
parts of the Rabbit would be Ameri can pl ant could ~cnt of l'tl&lt;'l; 'automobile
shipped from Germany a.nd · safeg uard jubs here by wuulct be mmle (!·om pnrts
assembled In the · American boosting Americun soles. The llllldt: ill the United ~tnh'B .
union also won a compuny
"The flnmtr inRof tile plant
plant.
"We will save 400 marks promise that no Gei'I'IUill is uu problem,' ' h{• ~u-lill. "But
($1S6) a day on shipping worker would be fi1·cd we have not dctidctl if il will
because of tile America n be totally fi nanced lly volks..
costs," he said.
plant..
wag('ll.
Volkswagen ha s oeen
"I
am
happy
the
vot
"
was
Compuny sources said Oll l'
considering an A~erlcan
plant for years to f1ghl the unanimous with nil seven pi:IIIUOder COilSiderntiOn is tO
competition of Japane se labor members favoring the lu•voAmcrican bunks flnunr·o
automobiles and American plant," said Rudi Maletz, the two-thirds of tl1e project.

Juvenile to
be charged
A Pomeroy juvenile will be
charged with delinquency in
the Meigs County Juvenile
Court as the result of a bomb
threat call made to the Meigs
Junior High School, Middleport, Thursday morning.
Officials said School
Principal Jeff Weaver
received a call about 8 a . m.
advising that a bomb had
been placed in the junior high
building .
School
was
dismissed shortly later for
the day and students were
returned to their homes.
The
juvenile
was
questioned at the school after
a confirmed trace was made
tu- the . .. juvenile'~ home;
Charles Knight, assistant
prosecutor , reported . The
juvenile, officials slate,

signed a statement that he
did make the bomb threat
call from his home before
leaving for school..
Knight commended em ployes of the General
Telephone Co., and the
Middleport and Pomeroy
Pollee Departments for their
work Thursday morning .
However, trouble continued
Thursday· at the Meigs High
School where a bomb threat
call was received after the
Pomeroy juvenile had been
questioned on the call to the
junior high school.. The senior
high school was vacated for
the afternoon and students
returned to tfieir homes when
the regular school bUll runs
were made.

MRS. HOWARD (MARIE) N9RRIS , Rl!clne, was the top wilmer in the State of Ohio In
the bicentennial birthday promotion sale held by l:.andmark . There were 117 prizes mvnnlrd
among the over 37,000 entries in the slate and Mrs . Norris won a 1976 Chevrolet. P1·escllth11~
her with the keys , on the left, is Duane Wilkin, Ohio Llmdmark manager of sa les promotion,
and on the right will! the title of the new vehicle is Jack Carsey, Meigs l;llndmark mmmgcr.

Innocent plea
made by Walter
Billy Waiter, 18, Rt. I,
Northup, charge~ with two
counts of breaking and entering and vandalism in the
April 12 forced entry and fire
at Hannan Trace High
School, entered a not guilty
plea this morning in
Gallipolis Municipal Court..
Walter, through his attorney, Thomas Moulton ,
requested a preliminary
hearing which was set for 9
a.m. May II. Judge RobertS.
Betz continued bond at $5,000
on each charge.
Two juveniles arrested on
the same charges in connection with the same case
appeared before Judge R. ·
William Jenkins.
Rocky Rece, IS, Gallipolis ,
pleaded guilty to charges of
breaking and entering and
vandalism. He was found to
be a delinquent by Judge
Jenkins. A disposition
hearing was set for June 7.
The case of Terry Neal
Waugh, 17, Rt. 1, Northup ,
was continued Thursday in
Gallia County Juvenile Court.
Assistant
Prosecuting
Attorney William N. Eachus,
filed a motion requesting that
Waugh be tried as an adult.
The motion will be heard by
Judge R. William Jenkins.

Meanwhile, Waugh was
returned to the Juvenile
Section of the Gallia County
Jail.. He was represented by
Atty. Hamlin C. King .

LOTTERY WINNERS
This week's winning
lottery
numbers:
Three-digit number 498 ( four-nlne-elgbt).
Four-digit number 1651 (one-slx·flve·one).
Five-digit number..:. 3775
(three-seven-seven-sevenfive).
SIK-dlglt_ number 931211 (nlne-"three-one-twoone-one).
Spirit of '76 winning
numbers':
• Two-digit numbers - 46
1four-six), 23 (two-three),
74 1seven-four) and . 53
(five-three).
Four·digit number 4677 1four·slx·seven·
seven).
Five-digit number 51742 (five-one-seven-fourtwo).
Six-digit number 579905 (five-seven-ninenine-zero-five).
;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

No money, no
'
fireworks show
'

HURT IN FALL
The Pomeroy E·R squad
went to ·Forest Run at 2:14
p.m. Thursday .for Mrs. Alma
Holter who had a possible
fractured leg as the result of
a fall. She was taken to
Holzer Medical Center. At
7:44 p·.m. tile squad went lo
the New Uina Road, near
Rutland for Dale Bachner, an
apparent heart attack victim.
He was taken to O'Bleness
Hospital in Athens.

RACINE - If donations are
not made toward the purchase of fireworks for the
annual 4th of July celebration
there just won't be any
••reworks, Racine Fire Dept.
spokesmen said.
Donations must be received
by May 15 so that an order
may be placed for fireworks
at the 4lh of July Bicentennial
celebration.
Donations may be given to
any fireman or mailed to the
Racine Fire Department,
P.O. Box 184, Racine, Ohio
45771. Checks are to be made
payable to the Racine Fire
Move all · clocks
·
Deparbment and designated
forwa I'd one hOUr
for fireworks fund . The
before Sunday , April
depariment received a $100
- ·l.
donation from JayMar Coal
II
::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:::::::;:;:;: Co. and edend their thanks . ·

Don't Em-get!
.,.

Ti!ESE THREE GffiLS ARE BEING honored at the convention of Ohio's ruturt:
Homemakers of America today and tomorrow In Columbus. Members of the P-astern High
School FHA Chapter, 1-r, they are Debllie Winton and Niese! Duvall, both of whom will
receive the State Degree, and Pam Kautz an award of merit for the program carried out by
her chapter at Eastern_.

Manley hurt in
cruiser wreck
Deputy Sheriff Ray Manley
was Injured In a single car
accident Thursday at S:20
p.m. in I.A!banon Twp , on
144 one mile north of SR 124.
Manley, driving a county
car, lost control in loose
gravel, left the highway
backwards, the vehicle
coming to rest on its side
against a tree.
Manley was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Racine ER squad
where he was treated and
released. The cruiser was
demolished.

sn

UNIT CALLED
The Middleport E·R squad
was called to Rutland St.. for
Mrs. Mary Smalley at 6:45
p.m . Thursday.
Mrs. ·
a . possible
Smalley,
pneumonia pa tient, 'Was
taken to Veterans Memorial
HospitaL Al 8:33 p.m., the
Middleport wlit transferred
Mary Dillard ,£rom VMH to
!he Holzer Medical Center.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;::::::::::

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday throu g h
Tuesday, a chance of
showers Sunday and
Monday, becomin g fair
Tuesday. Highs Sunday In
mid 50s In north and Gns In
south,
warming
by
Tuesday to highs in 70s and
lows In 40 s.
~:;:;:;:;:; : ;:;:;.;:;:::: :::;:;:;:;.;:;i;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;.

CAMPING RATES
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Senate-passed legislation
offerin g reduced campin g
rates in state parks for se~tior
citizens and disabled persons
received unanimous House
approval 111Ursday.
The measure, authored by
Sen. Neal F. Zimmers Jr., DDayton, would permit
residents ~5 or older and
permanently and . . totally
disabled Ohioans to camp in .state parks for half the
, regular fe e except on
weekends and holida ys
designated by the division of
parks and recreation in the
Department of i!atur al
Resourt-es.

Cyclist hurt,
then cited to
Syracuse court
SYRACUSE - A motorcyclist was cited to Syracuse
Mayor Herman London 's
Cour t by Police Chief Milton
Varian following a 'cycl c--&lt;:ar
accident in Syracuse Thursday al 5:15 -p.m.
Chief Varian said Franklin
I.A!wis, 39, Pomeroy , was
stopped in· line of tr affic,
headed west, In front of the
post office when William
Blevins. Jr., 18, Syracuse,
driving a motorcycle In the
Slime direction failed to slop
and struck the I.A!wis vehicle
in the rear .
Blevins was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Syracuse E-R squad
where he was treated and
released. He had injuries to
~oth legs.
Blevins was cited to court
on charges of failure to slop
within 'assured clear dista&lt;lcc
and no oper~tor's · Ikcnse.
There was lig~ t dam age to
the Lewis ca~and heavy 'C
U1 e cycle.

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