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                  <text>10 - The Pomeroy Sentinel , M1dilleport-Porr &gt;t•roy, 0 , Tuesady, May 4, 197G
shHn ng usc report had to be
compleWd She S41lcd the
(Continued from page 1)
vill age will IWCIVC for the
(Continued from page I)
Ute meeting antl ag reed tu ucx l stx months, .Jul y 1
Davi
s In sura nce, Tcafurll
donate $500 tow;ud the Li llie tl1J'ough Dee. 1976 p total uf
Hc~lty, Sears-Pomeroy, Ben
League from 1l' revenue $ll ,BH:l.
Counu l voted to spend the Frankhn Store , Dr. Harold
shanng money
Mee llllg "l UI council were money'" fu ll"" ' $500 lo the Brown , Gloec kn er 's, ~ c w
Larry We hrur~ g arrd Dick little league. $11,:183, for Yurk Clothing, Margurilc's
Freeman who proposed thP fi nancial adilllnJstratton, or Shoes, Green Lantern , n• iry
water he softened. It was ca pital llllprovcmenl, hopmg Valley, Sti ffler 's, Fabrtc
pointed out that the cost of ((J remudel the Pomer oy Shop, Cour t Street Gnll ,
Thurston Sto ne, Warner's
placmg a softener at the Semor High Building
water plant would be lou
Mayor Andrews read the Barber Shop, Meigs Auto
great for the VIllage to un- clucf of pol•ce's report for Parts, Dale C. Warner
dertake.
Apri I The department in- A~ency , Royal Crown Bottling Co , Shuler's Markel,
Dr. flarold Brown , coun- ves ltgaled 15 accid e n ts, Twin Ci ties Machmc Shop,
mad&lt;' :16 a rr cs l~. Issued 1.12!1
ci lm an, p&lt;unl t: rl out lhat
tickets. collected $3, 61 :! 50 Midway Markel, Crow, Crow
water softeners would no fr om pr~rk t n g meters a nd tmd Porter , Pomeroy F'lower
doubt be up to Ind iVIduals and drove I he cnuser 4,862 miles Shop, Moore's Store , Stmon's
that 1l would be up to tile
R1d s we re opened for Mm kel and Ptc-A-Pa u, Blue
boa rd of public .1ff:uq to
and Grey, Sw1she1 and!.ohse,
place a water softener at the p;mng of the parking Jot. Tile L. and z.. K &amp; C Jewelers.
well site However he bid of Myers and Sons, the
Also Regatta Inn , RobJJJsuggested that coun c\1 ap- lowes1, 111 lhe tJIIIUU JII of son's Laundry, Ebersbach's
$:!,.182,
wa'
'accepted
OtheJS
proach the hoard of public
Hardware, Howard K1lchen,
affairs on the matter to whtch submtlttng b1ds were Shelly Neva Moore , Chapman's
company
,
$:!,665;
Shelly
and
Counctl agreed.
Shoes, Metgs Inn, G. &amp; J.
Also m ee tin~ wtth council Sands, $8,750, and F H Auto Parts, Hartley-Bennett
Bre"
wet
C'o
,
$:
1
,850
were Trell Schoenl eb and
Mrs WaUou told council an Shucs, Dew D1up Inn, V1ulet
Jack Se!dcmtble, ('C n wtery
Woodyeard , RBinbow In n,
trustees Schoe nleb satd 1t urdm:mcc will have to be Bora k's Carry-Out, The C1ty
1s necessary lo lay out mure drawr1 up to ;Hivertise the Loan, Athens Sav mg s &amp;
lut~
at B(!cc h Grove present e~ ty ha ll fur sale. Loan, Pomeroy 'Bow ling
Ccmelc1} He also slated that Bartels ann()un ccd ttJal the Lanes , Mason Bowhng
the trustees would hke lu new lander truck l1ad Lan es , Ew ing' s, Reut erknow how much land they arr·ived.
Attendin g we re Ma yor Brogan, The Da1ly Scnlmel,
own on top of the hill.
Pomeroy Ceme nt Block,
Schoo nleb also asked what Andrews, l1,1lph Werry, Luu Wil son '~ Car Wash, Gene
Osborne,
Dav1s,
Bmtels,
Dr.
the price of,, lollS. He s~1 ted
Coleman's Ashland, Modern
U1at no one see1i1s to be able Ha ro ld Brown, counc1l Chemical , Sugar Run Flour
nwmbers,
Phyll
iS
Hennessy,
to HIVe htm that answer He IS
M1ll, Ben Tom , Mrs. Cl1arles
tr e a ~ u1 e r . J ed Webs te r ,
tu sec Olhu Murray
clucf . Henry Werry ..Cap lam, Strauss , J.andme:Jrk, Tom's
It was poin ted out lhol the
Carryoul, Gr;,vely Tractor
cos t of kcepmg up lots at the and Jane Walton, clerk
&amp;lies, Sugar Run Ashland,
cemete ry IS $5 for a f1 ve
Gtbb 's Groc er y, Pomeroy
grave Jut or $1 ~~ gra ve Also
Mutur Cumpany, Nalwnw1de

Council

dl Sl'IISSCd Wd S

the

Five teams

I CtJd H

of

roads in the cemetery .
Mayor Clarence Anchews
reported thai he personally
wil l sec

lhd t

l eav~s

dre

Help

l n~ura nce.

(Continued from page 1)
help gel the road repatr cd,

burned He w11l ta ke a fu e
truck to the cc mete1y ~&lt;hen
leaves are burned Schoenleb

'' we \.\Il l elect eonum ssioncrs
tJ1al will," WH S 0\ICI' hem d

said twu rnen are needed to

IS rn o1e thHn the trustees can

keep the cemetery tn good
condt tton .
Mayor Andr ews a sked
council tf Bill Wendell , wtth
Ius red caboose, could use
the parkmg lot for organ
displays on May 1:!, 14, 15 for
a cost of $50. Coun cil agreed

ha ndle ftn an c1all y Co mplmnt s are lodged fr um
people 111 regard to damages
received to cm·s when they
tra vel the ro;1d The road IS

Smt th held that Ihe road

useU heavily by uuners and
dunng hi!::ll water as a rlood

road
Sm1 lh argued that the ou ly

Also Logan Monume nt ,
Mtdwes l Steel, Meigs Tire
Cen ter , D &amp; D Mea ts,
Welker's Ashland , Karr &amp;
Van Za ndt , Ktngsbury
Homes, Pome1oy Home and
Aut o, H &amp; R Block, Excelstor
0 11 , SmiliJ-Ne lson Motors
F:xcelsJOr Salt'Worlis , Crow's'
Steak House, Ftve Pomls
Gn ll.
and 24 fee t w1de
The l'Ornnussi oner s m other

busmess stgnerl a fmal apJ ~tn e
Wcdton"
clerk,
reported thai the revenue soluti on seems to be to t1ave plicatiOn wtth the Houstng
Urban Development for a
tl1e &lt;.: ounty take the road ove1.
block grant m the amount of
The ~.:omrn i s s J o nc rs agreed $'1t0,325 A breakdown of
to ha\ e the count) hi ghway
expendt lurcs IS as fo llo~&lt; s ,
clean out di tches along the
Access road $1Gii,OOO, hduse
Tomghllhru Thursday
road and Ia te 1 111 lhe year ntunbering $47,000, housmg
NOT OPEN
perhops gravel tl They' chd rehabilita tion, $80,000 and the
not agree to 111i:lk c 1l u (Ounty balance , adtmmslratwn
road .
Fn ., Sat Sun .. May 7 a 9
Atte ndmg were Henry
Duehl estuualed the cost of Wells, Warden Ours, and
THE ADVENTURE
OF SHERLOCK HOLMES'
an access r oad near the
Be rna rd Gtlkey , ComSMARTER BROTHER
for mct Cht ldren's · Home. mi ssione rs . Buehl and
Gene Wilder . Made l1ne
w.hcre the proposed semor Martha Chambers, clerk.
Ka hn
ct li zens and mcni&lt;Ji health
t PG J
center would he located , at
Show Starts af 7 p m
$160,000. The road would be
appruxunn lely one nnle long

MEIGS THEATRE

BOB EASTMAN

Eastman is
new Kroger
rone boss

Parade set on June 5
A parade levtng Middleport al9:30 a.m on Saturday, June
5, wtll be among the highlights of a bicentennial observance
bemg held in Meigs CoWJty to mark a visit by the National
Wagon Tram
.
Several stale wagons wiV be at the Middleport CoJ111TJunity
P'drk and they ~ill be joitled by local horsemen, floats, bands
and other entrtes to form a parade which will move from
Middleport to Pomeroy.
The committee asks that the parade entries even riders of
horses carry out the btcentenmal theme in some manner.
Deadlitle for enteritlg is June I.
All persons, groups and businesses wishing to enter the
parade are asked to fill out the registration form in today's
Dally Sentinel.

.

Woman sent to prison ·
Willie Lou Robinson
Saturday pleaded guilty in
Meigs Coun ty Common Pleas
Cour l to a charge of forgery ,
She waived her rights to a
grand jury hearmg and was
sentenced to the Women 's
Heformatory at Marysville
fur not less than one nor more
than five years by Judge John
C. Bacon.
EdtlhClark, Rt. 1, Rutland ,
has filed suit for divorce from
Ri chard Clark, same ad-

IIOSPITAL NEWS
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHA RGES - Mr s .
Wtlliam Phelp s, Point
Pleasa nt; Mrs Thoma s
Kuhn, son, Point Pleasant ;
Mrs. Robert Norvell , son,
Letart ; Mrs Donald Russell ,
Mason; Linda Ferrell , Hartford ; John Os hel, Point
Pleas ant; ' Ausltn Moor e,
Point Pleasant; Bay Beaver,
Crown City, 0.; Jay Slone,
Leon; Orvm Dunlap, Point
Pleasant ; Floyd McMillin,
Hartfo rd ; ' Orville Cash ,
!.eon ; Mrs Donald Knapp,
son, Leon, and Mrs. Jay
Colburn, daughWr, Gallipolis
Ferry .
Vcterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Murl
Doug las , Harrisonville;
Waldo Neal, Harnsonvtlle;
Leah Louise Rhodes, Mid dl eport; Jose ph Blevtns ,
Middl eport ; David Lee
Bocock, Mason .
DISCHARGED - Mary
Van Meter, Paul Wilson.

SO DELIGHT YOUR
"QUEEN OF HEARTS"
THIS MOTHER'S DAY
v • "/

WITH HER OWN PERSONAL

CHECKING ACCOUNT
FROM

"THE FRJT£NDL'i BANK "

I

Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorpOration
'

DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40.000

There will be a gWJ shoot
Sunday, May 9, at 1 p m. at
the Lucky Seven Club, off SR
7bypass. All proceeds will go
to the B1g Bend Warriors
football team .

LOS ANGELES (UP!) The petition for probate in the
estate of Howard R. Hughes,
filed Monday, lists the value
of the deceased's properly as
" unknown ." It might be
easier to keep track of all
Hughes ' dollars than of the
growing list of clabnants to
them
A Canadian said he accompanied Melvm Durnmar when
Dummar picked up the billionaire 111 the desert m 1966
perhaps winning the desert
good samaritan a share of
Hughes' estate worth more
than $120 million.
Court action was expected
mtwo states today, itlcluding
the appearance m Las Vegas,
Nev., of a Kentucky lawyer to
file claims for 11 persons
claimin g · to be distant
rela t1ves of the dead
billionatre.
A thr ee-way battle for
control of the California
assets was scheduled in Los
Angeles between Hughes '
cousm Rtehard Gano, the
county public acbninistrator
and Noah Dietrich, named
executor In the hand wrtllen
document that appeared

Personal!

wtth the Kroge r Co
In h1s new pos iti on,
Eaaslman will be supervtsmg .By combining your Auto
the comple te operaltons of 13 and Homeowners in Kroger Stores m southern surance Into ONE policy
West Virgin ia . Eatma n
Youmoybeobteto
started wt th the Kroger Co 111
1957 and served 12 years as a
store manager in fi ve stores
itJ Ohio and West Virginia .
Before his promotion to on your yearlv Insurance
zone manager, he was a premiums.
merchandis in g representative for stores in ParkersWe will review your
burg and the Ohto , Valley
insurance
program
area.
with you free of
The son of Mrs. Bernice
charge any day of the
Saxton, Pomeroy, and Homer
week.
Easbnan, St. Paul, Mmn .,
.Call or stop
Easbnan is a 1967 graduate of
and see us.
Pomeroy Htgh School where
he played varsity baseball,
basketball and foo tball. He is
married to the former Sheila
Strauss, ' a 1959 graduate of
Insurance SefYices
Pomeroy Hi gh School, and
daughter of Wtlham Strauss,
'' The
Route I, Pomeroy. Mr . and
Insurance
Mrs. Eastman and their two
Store"
sons, Brent, 13, " nd Kevin , 9,
Phone 992-5130
w1 1l restde Ill Hurncane, W
Va , unltl the close of school
Pomeroy
214 E. Mam
when they wtll move to
Beckley, W. Va.,.

mysteriously on a desk in
Mormon church head quarters.
The District Attorney's
office began an investigalton
into " possible criminal
activity" involving Hughes'
estate-estimated to be worth
about $2 billionbut refused to
give any indlcaltons what the
investigation concerns.

The Clark County Clerk's
office m Las Vegas- whtch
has the three-page "will"
locked in a bank- Monday
night received a telegram
signed by James Guiltner of
Edmonton, Alberta.
"Melvin Dturunar and myself, James Guiltner, picked
up Howard Hughes from the
side of the road outside Las
Wgas and delivered hbn to
back door of Sands Hotel,"
the telegram said. "Melvin
Dummar should verify same .
It was I who gave Howard
Hughes the 25 cents
'

Ford stopped in
three primaries

..

A marria(e license has
been issued here to Monty
Ray Barringer, 19, Hockingport, and Marshal Sue Kimes,
18, Rt. 1, Reedsville.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK

Your Mother's Day

RACINE - Mothers of
junior class members of
Southern High School will
meet at the sc hool at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday to make
final plan~ for serving the
aumni banquet.

Gift Shopping Headquarters

Flying wall remains

Morton Titus, son of Mr.
and Mrs. James R. Titus,
Pomeroy , has entered
Hocking Technical Institute
where he will study environmental health sciences.

A mutual wall-picture at left-between the SIIHier
Department Store building and a structure owned by Mrs.
Amy Kingsland, Jackson, on West Main St. in Pomeroy
collapsed about 2:00p.m. Tuesday.
Work has been underway at the Stitner wilding for
several weeks clearing the structure of debris and rubbish
caused by a major fire IIi the structure ear~er this year.
The collapse of the wall left one corner of the top of the
Stiffler building wholly unsupported (see above) which
officials said created a "very , very dangerous" situation.
Traffic was bein~ routed around the area with the lower
parking lot and Court St. being used as detours. Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews said a request had been made
for a slate inspector to come in to check aU Of the buildings
damaged by the fire.
Representatives from Stiffler's conferred with the
mayor late Tuesday afternoon. Plans were being made to
tear off the top of the Stiffler building.

The Middleport E-R squad
was called to the LaSalle
Hotel al6:10 p.m. Monday for
Joseph Weed who was suf-

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thur sday through
Saturday, a chance of
showers each day of the
forecast period. Highs will
be In the 70s and lows will
be In the upper tOs to the

•

50s.

Clear and not so cool
tonight, lows in upper 40s.
Partly cloudy and warmer
Wednesday, chance of afternoon showers . Highs will
be in the mtd to upper 70s.
Probability of rain near zero
today and tomght, 30 per cent
Wednesday.

VOL XXVIII NO. 13

MAY MOVE IN
The Democrat mee ting to
be held Wednesday, May 5, at
6·30 p.m. at the fatr grounds
will be held in the Grange
Hall if the weather continues
cold, E. A. Wingett said
today.

LISTEN TO THE WINDFLOWER SONG
A cloudb urst of flame -colored blossoms
cascade over a,soft pearl background to
form magn1f1cent lounge and sleep
compan1ons In sa tm so ft Satn que Antron'
Il l Nylon Tncot for Incomparable we anng
co mfort Gown at S18 00 and Robe w1th
concealed long front z1pper at S24.00 m
XS -S-M-L Match1ng Scuffs at S4 50 ~ ~

s -M-L-xL Lingerie Depl Second floor
Free Customer Parking on Second Street
and at the Mechanic Street Warehouse.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

OUR GIFT TO YOU
IS A GOLDEN
ANNIVERSARY
BLANKET FROM
SPRING AIR •••

By JIM ANDERSON
NAIROBI, Kenya (UP!) Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger urged ric hand poor'
nations today to take a
common approach to
economic development
.
BY UNlrfiiD!.Rf.SS INTERNATIONAL
problems and avoid "the twin
MARIETI'A, GA. T A 22-YEAR-OLD ATLANTA man was dangers of rigidity and
charged with mW'der today in the kidnaping of two young girls, slogans.'!
, one of whom was found dead. Cobb County police said Virgil
"Just as we are doomed to
Delano Presell Jr. was abo charged with rape, aggravated coexistence
by the nature of
· sodomy and two counts of kidnaping. PreseU was picked up nuelear weapons, so we also
Tuesday night at hls apartment and bas been held in the Cobb face the imperative of a
jail.
common approach
to
Lt. Lee Moss said Lori Ann Smith, 6, who was kllled , and a development and common
:~ 1()-year-old companion were walking home from the Richard
growth," Kissinger said.
·; Rll9sell Elementary school Tuesday when they were kidnaped. . Ktssinger addressed a
,' Pollee were withholding the name of the IG-year-old.
luncheon
meeting
of
WASHINGTON_ PRESIDENT FORD was ready today to delegates from industrialized
sign a blll authorizing more than $17.5 billion in federal nations attending the U.N.
highway assistance over the next two years and making some Conference on Trade and
changes in the government trust fund financing the program. &lt;-- Development tha l opened
In advance of a mid-afternoon signing ceremony at the White he~e today. .
.
House, one Ford aide called the 1976 Federal Highway Act an
The Umted Nations
Interim measure and "a first step" toward long-range goals Conference on Trade. and
envisioned in broader legislation that Ford recommended last pe.v e:ment ~us: ~J-~'d I~
July.
wm ngedrs ho r g1 1 yli~
1
The federal aid authorized by the bill will go to state and s1og~ns an . t e compe tve
local goverrunents in the 1977 and 1978 fiscal years, beginning senliiiientabty of programs
Oct 1. For thl! first time it authorizes funds expressly for that have n~ , real hope of
interstate highway rehabilitation and restoration projects. aeh~evement, the secretary
' Priority In new construction was assigned to completion of satd; .
major inter-{!fty routes that would close remaining gaps in the
Klssmger wlll address the
nationwide system.

U&gt;UISVILIE, KY. - A FEDERAL ;JUDGE Tuesday
rejected a plan to end mandatory racial bll9ing of students in
the metropolitan Louisvllle school system and declared ·
unconstitutional a stale1'8ssed "freedom of choice" school
attendance law_
U. S. District Judge James F. Gordon, who last year
ordered busing of more than 22,000 students to desegregate the
Louisville - Jefferson County school system, also ordered a
• amplete revision of his desegregation plan for elementary
schools. He said lhe 'city-county school board had misled him
by falling to present an adequate plan to bring all schools in the
system wlthlrt the court guidelines for racial balance. He said
• his "guard wiD be up" In future lleallngs with the school board.
ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, ILL. - PROGRESS has been
made toward a settlement in the United Parcel Service strike
which bas idled some 14,000 company employes and halted
UPS package delivery in 13 states.
Negotiators for UPS and the Teamsters Union met
Tuesday at the ArUngton Park Hilton Hotel for the first lime
since talks broke off last Friday. They recessed at midnight
and were scheduled to meet again today. When their contract
expired at midnight Friday, the Teamsters union members
atruc)t UPS in Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan,
Mlrtneapta, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Soultt
Mota, Wisconsin and Wyommg. •

Save 10 to 25%

~

~

JJ,Jst buy any Bac·k Supporter
mattress set nowduring our 50th Anniversary Celebration!
Now tak e ho me a gorgeous golden blanket at no ex tra charge- and
own the ul11mate m fme mattresses- the famous Spring A1r Ba ck

SuppMer ll's the only mattress th at gtves you the exclusiVe Heallh
Cen ter! for extra support, and many other un ique features as welL So
act now to get your specia l g1fl blanket Offer exp~res June 30, 1976

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OPEN ~RI. EVE. TIL 8~0

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

"
'
_
.,
'
•
~

The
BACK SUPPORTER ®
mattress is
made only by

conference Thursday. HIS
speech Is belrtg awaited by
many delegates as the most
important statement of the
first political stage of the
conference.
"We are not here to score
debating points,"
the
Secretary said. "We have
tried to put together a
JX'Ogfam which will avoid an
endless debate! '
American Ideas will be put
forward, he said, "IIi a spirit
of concilla,tion and goodwlll,
so we can a !lack the
problems that stretch
forward as far as we can
see."
Trying to head off a
confrontation between rich
and poor countries, Kissinger
has assured the world's
developing nations the United
States will "go to the limit" of
its own laws to give them a
better economic deal.
Kissinger, wrapping up a
two-week African tour,
planned today to meet U.N.
Secretary General Kurt
Waldhelm, Philippine
President Ferdinand Marcos,
Luxembourg Prime Minister

Gaston Thorn, who Is current
chairman of the European
Common Market Council of
Ministers, and Japanese
delegates.
As llost of a dinner Tuesday
night, Kissinger did not spell
out specific U.S. propo118ls to
delegates oot said: "We have
gone to the limits of our
domestic possibilities IIi the
proposals the United Stales
will make."
Asked to clarify this,
KiSsinger said he was
"thinking of both economic
and
congressional
restrictions" placed on hlm IIi
mapping out the U.S. stand.
Washmgton 's position Is
expected to differ sharply in
some areas with Third World
views especially In their
effort to tie the price of major
commodities with world
inflation and establish a
stockpile of essential
resources, such as copper
and tin, to try to avoid wild
jll'lce fluctuations.
In his opening talks with
delegates, Kissinger has been
stressing a policy of cooperation
rather
than

COLUMBUS (UPI) Betty Ford said Tuesday if
she wanted to be "selfish
about it" she would not want
her husband to be President
But she quickly added "he
has the strong abillty and
talent needed to lead
America into this third
century" as a country.
Mrs. Ford received a
standing ovation from some
three hundred Republicans at
aplilpicnic~tyle
te fund-raising$250--a-paperluncheon in

~~~;.n:r~~:i~e~~:ri~

Dateline 1776
CAPE FEAR RIVER, N.
C., May 5 - Bolstered by
reinforcemeats from
England, Gen. Clinton
Issued a proclamation
denouncing the "wicked
rcbclllon" in the colony and
urging the Inhabitants to
return to their "duty to our
common sovereign." He
also offered a pardon lo all
except Gen. Robert Howe,
commander of a body of
North Carolina troops, and
Corndlus Haraetl, an
activist In tile provincial
committee of safety.

As many as six juveniles
and adults may be charged
following an Incident Monday
afternoon on the lower
parking lot in Pomeroy.
Pomeroy pollee and the
assistant prosecuting attorney, Charles Knight, are
piecing together details of \he
event and are studying what
charges can be flied .
Some of the adults will be
charged with contributing to
the delinquency or minors
and possession and use of
controlled substances
(drugs). A juvenile of West
Virginia wlll be charged In
the Meigs Juvenile Court with
driving Wider the lnDuence of
alcohol or drugs rnd
possession and use of a
controlled substance, Knight
said.
Pollee were called to the
parking lot after the juvenile
driver had struck two parked
cars on the parking lot. A
quantlly of pills were found
on lhe ground outside the

:·:·:::::::~::::::·::::;:;::·::::::;:;::·:::::::·;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::·:::::::::

confrontation.
" You can have either
rhetoric or cooperation,
confrontation or solutions,"
Kissinger told one group.
"But confrontation will hurt
all. Developlrtg nations, too,
are dependent on the
flourishing of. the entire economic system for their own
economic growth.''
He urged all nations
attending UNCTAD to launch
a "second generation of
economic cooperation" In
which "we must adapt our
Institutions to fundamentally
different economic conditions
than existed when the present
International Institutions
were establlllhed.''

Calendar
approved

right to the end.
son and the President did lot of truckers and one asked
"We hope to do better In agree some changes were her where she got her
Indiana than we did In needed in the marijuana "jargon." She told him ·she
bad a dictionary on her lap.
Texas," she said. "We need a laws.
Gov. James A. Rhodes,
second win for momentum.
However , she did not
Our chances are very good in explain what changes they introducing the First Lady,
said, "through determination
discussed.
Indiana.''
Mrs. Ford said she thought
Mrs. Ford was asked If she her honesty and candor have
ber son was misquoted when will be doing any more captivated the hearta of milit was reported he said his campaigning on her citizen lions in the U.S. She Is
father would work for the band radio. She answered, "I ~cated IUld devoted as
deeriminalizljlion
of hope so, I just love that CB.'' wife and mother and speaks
marijuana. But she added her She said she has talked with a out with great candor."
.;:.::::::·::::::::·:: ::·:·::·:·:::::::::.::::.::::::::::::::::;:::::::::·::::.::::·::::.::::·:::::::::::::::·:::::·:·:·:·:::::·:·:·:::::·:·:·.::::·:::::::::·:::·:::·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·: :·:-: ::::::·::::::::·:::·;

i:i:

Carter credits success to Georgians

Vi~g~ ~;~ied to be seUlsh ::::\~\~ after
ATLANTA (UPI) - More ..than a year
he first announced hla run for the

" And just when I was getting the most
discouraged there was an airplane that
unloaded about 100 Georgians and they
slipped and sUd lhrolll!h the Ice and snow
and knocked at every Democratic home
and when the returns came In we were
first in New Hampahire thanks to Georgia
people,"
he said.
The former
governor told his supporters,

borderstareofWestV~~

and the rann belt state of
Nebraska.
Carter won landslides In
Indiana and hls home state of
Georgia. He led in .the
District of Colwnbla but was
tralllng in Gov. George
Wallace's home state of
Alabama.
Tuesday's voting gave
Carter 10 victories 1n 15
rrimarles and made hlll'i a
near runaway leader In the
Democratic delegate count .
With 9i per ct111l of the
Jodlana vole co111ted, tbe
GOP race showed:
REAGAN: 311,0t-51perceat
FORD: 30Z,St3-48 On the
Democratic aide It was:
CARTER: U%,541H8pereeal
WALLACE : U;tU· ll
JACKSON : 71,001·U
MCCORMACK: 31,811H
In Indiana, Georgia and
Alabama, FQrd won or was
leading for only 9 delegates
for a total of 318. Reagan was
ahead for 124 fQr a total of 359.
In
the
Democratic
primaries, Carter won or was
leading for 109 for a total of
566. Wallace was ahead for 29
for 1(4. Morris Udall led for 5,
for a total of 180. Fred Harris
led in I for a total of 16. There
were 211 uncornmltted, for a
total of 232.

Six may face
drug charges

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1976

Bet~y Ford sure Jerry good in job

!\\:

\':::~\!

vehicle and on tbe persons of
those Inside the car. Knight
said he believes at least six
persons were In the ear at the
time.
One of the six Is In serious
condition at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, having been moved
there
from
Veterans
Memorial Hospital following
the Incident Knight said
detalls will be given as soon
as o!flclals are able to
determine the charges And
the names of the Individuals
to be charged.

First game

Thursday
on campus
Meigs High School will play
its first spring sport contest
Thursday on Its .new qncampus baseball diamond on
"the high groWJd back of the
school.

The call, "Play Ball," to
the Marauders and Point
Pleasant, wlll mark the
reallzatlon of a dream since
\ the new, consolidated Meigs
The Meigs County Board of-.) High Sehool opened Ita doors
Education Tuesday night the first time In 1968 . .
recommended the school
Eventually, the carnpWJ
calendar year for adopUon by will have a full complement
local school boards for 1976- of. alhlelic faclllties with a
1977.
modern, drained turf for the
Robert Bowen, county football program, a standard
superintendent said the quarter mile cinder track
board fell the c~lendar was with a sill table Infield.
satisfactory for all schools In
The football field , for the
the district.
time being, Is needed badly
In other business the board by head coach Charles
adopted textbooks for grades Chancey for practke
9 through 12 which Include
Moving dirt and leveling
Math , Health,. Driver's the higher ground back of the
Education Psychology and high school to prepare It for
Speech. '
athletic use has been under
Tbe board also approved direction of Mr. Chancey,
the employment of a second
Game time Is 4:30 p.m.
osychologlat providing 11 is Thursday.
approved by the state
The Marauders Willi this
department of education. year used the diamond in the
Attending were Bowen Middleport MWJiclpal Park.
Robert Burdette, Harold This spring, however, Meigs'
Lohse, Harold Roush and home games have been
George Perry, members.
played on the Syracua~
Municipal Park diamond,
until Its own diamond was
completed.

about 11 •!would not want him ;:;~ presidency, Democratic frontrunner
~(:
(Ford) to be President. But ..
..
he has strong ability of ~ple ;:;: Jimmy Carter returned home and told his
;:::
for President.''
;::~ f~Uow Georgians they were th~ reason for
~;~;
She said she tries to :;:; ~.success.
::::
"believe In strength of people . ~:~i
:rt&gt;roughout this entire year and all
:~:
JERSUALEM - ISRAEL MARKED THE 2BTH- and to show my feellngs I ;:;: durlrtg last year I had a tremendous
...·'[.
anniversary of the birth of the Jewish state ioday at a time of believe the President has ihe ;~;~ advantage over all my opponents and that
growing Arab unrest IIi occupied territories, increasing dedicated talent needed to ~:~: was my Ge~gia people who had confi- "I don't intend to lose and with your help I
....
dependence on foreign aid and fears of a U. S.-impoaed peace lead America llito this third ;:;: dence in me, he said at a victory party won't lose.
settlement. Prime Mlnlster Yltzhak Rabin called on the nation century_, ·
;:;! TUesday night.
.
"I want to conduct myself as a candidate '.· ..~1.~..
Mrs Fo d dressed In tw ~:: carter won 84 per cent •&gt;f the vote mhis for jll'esldent in such a way that will .
of 3.3 mill1oo "to produce more, oonsume less, and be less
· r ' .
a 0 ;:;. home state's rrimary and also won In always make you rroud of me," he said. ····
•
dependent on external ald" to solve larael's problems.
piece suit of qwlted grey!Bh- :~:~ Indiana, which prompted his cheering
Carter Wll!l joined by his family at the :;:;
Greg Smith, varsity
The prime minlJter urged a reduction in Israel's dependpodlwn during hls victory speech and he :;· ~_:,l:. :
~~~b·~~h~~~~~~:t h~~~
ence on foreign largesse IIi case of a "generil confrontation" brown and yellow print :;:: supporters at Atlanta's Hyatt Regency
told the crowd when he first announced hla .
wlttl the UnltedStatesover a peace se!Uement ''I say that it is cotton, sipped champagne ;::: hotel to thrust their index fingers llito the
candidacy ln December, 1974, a major ····
~~e.0 : 1pia~ed "an'~~~
preferable to visualize the gravest overall political difficulties, and shook hands with some :~ : air in a symbolic "No. 1" gesture.
the lost and foynd column,
and marshal ourselves foqt\lem," he said in an interview over 100 persons ~t a $1,&lt;m-a- . :;:; Carter, backed by a large green and Atlanta new~~paper headlined an editorial :;:;
couple fund-raising receptlm :::: white "Jinuny Carter for President"
"that said 'Jinuny Carter's running for :;:;
and Greg Roosh, Syracuse,
larael'a semi-official teleVision station.
at
placard, said trlpa made by Georgians to what?'"
,': ', _:;_': ·_
tound It and )l611od him.
0
IBI!e
·
:;:: New Hampshire, Florida, Wisconsin,
"I'm running," Carter said. "I'm .·
Gr"ll Smith appreciates the
COLUMBUS- THE OffiO ETHICS Cc)mmisslon plans to
She was asked her reaction :;:: Pennsylvania and other primary states
rulming for president."
quick resylts the Sentinel
meet May 11 to dlscll9s possible commiBslon action on alleged about Ronald Reagan's :::: pushed him to the top.
Carter said earller that he talked to Sen.
want ad broyght him and
financial Irregularities by public officials disclosed In the news victory over Ford IIi the : .: . "As you know. the first srimary was ~ew Hubert H"-""•ey by phone Tuesday and :;:; thanks Greg Rou•h tor
media, Including the status of a blind trust established by Gov. Texas primary Saturday
In th
.......u
••
finding his valuable •Jove.
,,
·
:;:: Hampah~e and I was In trwble
e New
the Minnesota Democrat told him he would :;:;
For Quick Rtsutt~
James A. Rhodes.
Naturally'
we
were
very
::?.
H•rnnshire
primary
because
some
of
my
not
do
anythln•
to
hurt
party
unity
at
the
:;::
Turn
to,.... •·ntln'el
Jerome R. Bahlman, executive secretary of the dlsappolrtted," she said. "I :::: --...
o
::::.
,,. ..
'tthl
k
'd
IIi
T
·:·:
opponents
had
been
working
up
there
national
convention
IIi
July_
.
Want
Ads.
You'll Be Glad
coounillion, said Tuesday the six-member panel wiD discuss didn n we w 1n exas :·:·
hl
th lhsd
!;
!
i
y
"appropriate action to be taken IIi respone to anonymous trips but I tholll!hl we'd do better { muc anger an
•
!:j
ou Did
1l4:__.u
(Continued on page 6)
- th'f we did. We 're golrtg :-··:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::·:·::·.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::':::·:::.:::::·:·:'·:·:·:· ·:·:·::·.:·:·:.::·::::.:::::.:::.:-::::::~:::::::::::::·::.::;::::.;.:.;:::::;: ::::;.;:;.;.;:;~:;.;:::;.;.;:;.::::;;.;::::::~·: ,__ __:_P::ho:::n:_•.:_m:;:,:-2.:;:

shtheorDhtlyibefVollrl~~heHluotnelcheon

'

widening appeal - for his
United Prell IDtei'IIIIUoaal
conservative candidacy.
Ronald Reagan stopped
Combined with hls elean
President Ford's bandwagon sweep in Texas Saturday, the
Tuesday with solid rrimary triple wlrt Tuesday gave Rea ..
victories~ Indiana, Georgia gan more committed
and Alabal)lll , and forged de)ejjates than Ford--359 to
ahead for the first time in tbe 318. It takes 1,130 votes for
race for GOP convention nomination.
delegates. But Ford told
House Republican l-eader
fu!publlcan le!lders today he Jolm Rhodes emerged fr001 a
will win the nomination and morning meeting between
the November election.
Ford and GOP leaders In the
Jimmy carter continued White House Cabinet Room
his unimpeded drive toward today to report that Ford did
the Democratic presidential not
seem
outwardly
nomination with wins in disappointed by tbe setbacks.
Georgia and Indiana, and led
Asked If Ford displayed
in the District of Columbia. d 1sa ppo 1n t men I or
Reagan, speaking In discouragement over his
Lincoln, Neb., ' said he , Tuesday primary losses ,
believed his triplelleader win Rhodes said "No, not al
had given
him lhe aU ...hls attitude was very
momenttun to deny Ford a positive.
first ballot victory.
"He made the statement
Reagan won big In Georgia that he was going to be In tbe
and Alabama and by more contest to the very end, that
than 15,000 votes in Indianahe was going to be nominated
his first victory In a northern and that he was going to win
state and a'prl2e he sorely in November," sad Rhodes.
needed to proclaim a
The President had large
blocs of uncommitted
delegates In New York and
Pennsylvania that
apparently are his for the
asking In Kansas City . But
Ford was unlikely to stem
Reagan's momentum In next
Tuesday's primaries- the

enttne

Kissinger warns conference
rich, poor shQuld cooperate

LOCAL TEMPS
.Th e temperature 10
downtown Pomeroy al 11
a.m . Tuesday was 56 degrees
under sunny skies.

however, it was Melvin Dummar's car I was just riding
with him at the time ."
Dietrich's lawyers filed a
copy of the document in
Superior Court Monday, and
a hearing was set for JWJe I.
A similar hearing is
scheduled for May 21 in Las
Vegas, where the main
decision I'T'"Y be made
because the
&gt;da court has
the original 01 ,_ ~ document , ·
itJ which Hughes purportedly
describes himself as a
resident of Las Vegas.
Dietrich's lawyers said
they expect the documenf to
be declared valid when
handwriting experts confirm '·
mcourt that it was written by
Hughes. But they expect the
Surruna Corp., the holding
company that administers
most of Hughes estate, to
fight the Dietrich takeover,
perhaps by arguing that
Hughes was not of soWJd
mind.

at y

e

Weather

wealth listed
as unknown in probate

Reuter-Brogan

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Apri13)
An thony Altieri , Thomas
Beaver, Bonnte Beckner ,
Hall Finley, Alex Fraser,
John Fry, Ruth Goody ,
Michael Green, Hall Hale,
James Hammond , Georgia
McCoy, John Mooney, Mary
Nida , Angte Ours, Jerry Rtee,
Wendy Sea ver, L1sa Sowards,
Cathy Stanley, Mrs. Lewis
Stapleton and son, Everett
Stevens , Mrs. Dallas Taylor
and daughter.
1 Births, Apri13)
Mr . an d Mrs. Thomas
Knapp, son, Letart, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Freddie
Skaggs , twin daughters ,
Gallipoli s, Mr . and Mrs .
Robert Htcke l, son, New
,Haven, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
George Baplsl, son, Jackson;
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hill, son,
Raeme; Mr. and Mrs Johnnyo
Endi co tt , daughter, Point
Pleasant, W. Va.

Local news, in briefs

Hughe~'

Robert H. I Bob) Eastman
formerly 'Of Pomeroy, ha~
been named a zone manager

dress, Sammte Ray Lewis,
Rl. 4, Pomeroy , filed against
Milztanne Lewis, Racine, and
Lois A. Taylor was granted a
dtvorce from Ronald D.
Taylor, as was Janel J .
Batley from Robert Batley.
Ethal A Shank, Pomeroy,
and Howard Scott Shank ,
Pomeroy, have filed for
dissolution of marnage.
Dismtssed wa s the divorce
action of George Neigler
against Beulah Neigler .

miners, and wives of
deceased miners are invited
to attend a meeling of the
"\.
.
Southeastern
Ohio Chapter of
fenng muscle spasms. He
the
Black
Lung
Assn. at I :30
was taken to VMH.
p.m. Sunday In the recreation
Coal miners and their room of Jack's Club at the
wi ves and former coal juncUon of Routes 1t2 and 7.
t=:;:: .....
. .. .... .........•... -:..:-:.;-:-:-. ,• • .: ... .:-:-·:·:·:-:-.-:..-:-. :-:·:·:···::

'

.

'll
' I

f

'::··:!:·
· ::::
'

lost and Found
Ad Gels
Quick Results

THREE FINED
Three defendants were
fined and aa many othera
forfeited bonds In the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clare~ce
Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined were ,Dale Davia,
Route 1, Pomeroy, $25 and
COlts, speeding; Ronnie G.
Johnson, Racine, SlOO and
COlts, leaving the scene of an
accident, and William
Reeves, Pomeroy, ~ and
c01ts, Intoxication. Forfeiting
bonds were Louie B.
Frederick, Long Bottom,
'150, reckless operation;
Mlchae\ J. Kelton, Athens,
S30, speeding, and Sally A.
Gloeckner , Racine, $33,
Jtpeedlng.

�•

2- The Daily Semmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, May 5, 1976

Car maker offered $5 million bait
'

By LEE LEONARD
I,JPI Statehouse Reporler
COWMBI,JS ( I,JPI ) - An
appropriatiOn of $5 million, to
serve as an mcentive for the
Volkswagen Corp to locate
an autom obtle assembly
plan t m Ohio, has been
agreed to by Democrahc
leg tsla ttve leaders and
Republican Gov . Jame.s A.
Rhodes.
In an announcement made
through Executive Asststant
Thomas J Moyer, the
governor sa id the agreement
w~s reached during a 4:&gt;minute meeting in hts office
Tuesday mght with House
Speaker Verna l G Riffe Jr ,
D-New Boston, and Senate
Prestdent Pro Tempore
Ol1ver Ocasek, DAkron.
Rhodes planned to tnform
Volkswage n by telephone
toda y of the agr eement,
Moyer satd
Th e Democraltc leaders
prom tsed to ma ke the
appropr iation wh en the
Ge n e r a l
As semb ly
f l.'Convenes m June,

s~ 1 d

Moyer
The money would come
from unspec ified general
reven ues, expected to
accumulate by the end of thts
ftscal year, and be used to
purchase an Ohto stte for the
auto manufacturing plant,
Moye1 srud

If Volkswagen decides to
locate a facthty m Brook
Park pear Cleveland, the
money would go toward the
purchase of the abandoned
Brook Park tank plant, satd
the Rhodes aide, adding that
if Columbus were chosen as
the site, "and the same kind
of mcentive ts needed, then
we would make the same
appropriation ."
Although House Mmority
Leader Charles F. Kurfess,
RBowling Green, and Senate
Minority Leader Michael J .
Maloney, R-Cmcinnati, were
not at the meeting, they also
agreed to the appropriation ,
Moyer satd.
"Everyone agreed it was a
necessary appropriation,"
th e governor 's asststant satd.
, "We expect. to save . $10
mtlhon through our hirmg
fr eeze, and we anticipate a
small unencumbered balance
at the end of this fiscal year.
"This ts really an
investment - money we wtll
be geltmg back in two or
th r ee yea rs from taxes
generated by the automobile
plant," satd Moyer
Earlier Tuesday, Rhodes
listened to a sale.s pttch from
a group seeking to attract the
plant to the Columbus area .
He apparently cautiOned the
group agamst gettmg mto a
public ftght with 1ts mtrastate

isn't rare
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DE AR DR . LAMB Recen tly I have been faced
wt lh an eqwi11Jn tim problem
upon an smg m the morrnng
and some t1mes dw mg the
day I am 69 years old. Often I
feel as though I could fa ll
Coul d you tell rne what rn}
pJ oblem ts''
DEAR READER - Man}
people
have
)J alance
problems. It ts not a stmple
problem. There are three
baste Inputs of mformatwn to
yo ur bratn about your body
postlton . They are the mputs
from the eye , the balance
mechamsm of the ear and the
sensory pe1ceph on from ali
of the mus cular skeletal
sys l.en) of the bud
This combmed tnput of
mformat wn rs sorted out and
acted upon by centers tn the
br·a1n The bra1n ( enter sends

out Impulses that arc used to
make the proper movements
l&lt;l matn ~ tn biilance If vour
le~s a1·e out of postlion there

•s nn au tomallc renex
response t~a t occurs and
even w1 thout llunktng, you'll
readjust your foot posttton to
m:unta tn balance These
ba lance ce nters m the brmn
must also funclton properly
lot your equilibrium to be
nOt mal
'l'hc list of th1ngs wh1ch can
happen to lhe eye that wtll
affect balance IS fatrly long
Add to th is the list of defects
of the balance mechamsm of
tile car The httle ear canals
U1at con trol balance can be
affec ted by an mfec!t on
ilabtnlhnlts) The mfl amed
can als cau se a ttacks of
d1zzmess and problems with
balan ce Th ts can follow a
virus mfcctton Vartous drugs
can affec t the balante
mechamsm. The toxtc or
chemtcal act1on on the little
canals will also cause trouble
wtth eq wh~ri wn .
Anyll ung that affects the
Circulatwn to the balance
ce nters m the bram can ca use
loss of equillbnum Changes
111 the arlenes to tile bram
can cause madequate cir·
culatwn and loss of balance
Th1s ts why many older
people
have
balance
problems. Any decrease tn

ctrculalton to the bratn can
produce temporary problems
m balance Tins can occur at
the begmmng or a famt tn a
young, healthy mdiVIdu al If
the blood pools m the legs and
not enough gels lo the bram,
as occurs w1th an unpendmg
fatn t, associa ted problems
are to be expected to the point
even of complete mab1 hty to
stan d
I recogni ze lhts ts not your
problem, but to gtve you a
better ptcture remember that
mdtvtduals who have had too
much alcohol to dn nk often
have troubl e wtth thctr
balance. They lose tl1e normal fmc tumng mechamsms
of the nerve, muscle, and
skeletal system tha t arc
necessa ry to rnamtam proper
balance
Wha t can you do then' The
on ly answer to th1s kind of
prohlem IS to obtain a fatrly
co mpl e t e m edica l
exam111alton Certamly the
exammation should tnclude
an evalua tiOn of the
posstbtllly of poor ctrculat1on
to vttal areas of the bratn or·
tile balance mechamsm of the
ear, but tt wtll also prov1de
Impor ta nt tnform allon on
many other causes that can
produce the same symptom .
For informa tion on symptoms of strokes as opposed to
simple fainting send ~0 cents
!01 Th e Hea lth Le tter ,
number
2 -~ .
Strokes ,
Cerebral Va scular Accident
- Cere bra l Th rombos is.
Send a long, stamped , selfaddr essed enve lope fo r
matling Address your letter
to me m care of this newspaper, P. 0 Box 1551, Radto
Ctty Statton. New York , NY
10019.

nval m Cuyahoga County .
The Columbus group met
priva tely In the governor's
office with Rhodes and hiS
development director, James
A Duerk, in an effort to enlist
some aid
Mayor
Tom
Moody
dec lined to deta il the
discuss ions but ~aid th e
governor urged the Columbus
group to refratn from wagmg
a public battle wtth Brook
Park.
"He satd that what we need
is no t a fuss betw een
Columbus and Brook Park
but a fundmg mechanism to
get tt to Dhio," Moody told

newsmen. 11 He doesn't want
us to do thmgs that would be
counter-producttve "
The mayor satd a proposed
$5
mtlllon lcgtslattve
appropnation to help attract
the1acihty to Brook Park was
discussed "In a peripheral
way" but there was "no
substantial discusSion" ahout
making the same offer for a
Columbus site .
"The governor is for the
good of all Ohtoans," sa id
Moody , who requested the
meetmg wtth Rhodes "He's
pushmgfor everythmg he can
get on all fronts ."
Rhodes has been playmg up
the Brook Park locatiOn, but

satd last week he would
supply Volkswa gen w1th
ml orma tion
about
a
For Thurlday, May I , 1878
Columbus ~H ie tf that
ARIES (March 21-Apttl 18)
tnformat10n was requested by
You' re reasonably luck y today
the company.
but you shouldn't pu sh your
Volkswagen has dedded to
tu ck It's not one of those t1mes
when you 'll get something for
expa nd to the Umted States
nothing
and ann ounced last week 1t
had narrowed the loca lion to
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You 'll have to look out for yqur
Brook Park , Columbus and
New Sta nton, Pa . A !mal ' own Interests today N9...,one
etse rs likely to do 1t for you Be
dectslon is expected later thiS
com pletely sell -rel1a nt
month. ,.
GEMINI (May 21 -~unt 20)
The governor declined to
S o m e o ne may t e l l yo u
talk to newsmen alter hls
something confide ntial today
meetmg with the Columbus
about a mu tu al friend The rn group Tuesday.
lormat•on co uld be d1stprted,
Check the facts
Also in on the meeting were
Robert Lazarus, chairman of
CANCER (Juno 21 -~uty 22) To
avo1 d a problem wtlh a frrend
the Columbus group; Kline
o ve r money today, clanly the
Roberts and Rosemary
Martm of the Columbus Area · s hare of e)(penses each Is to
pa y Don t grab the en tHe tab
Chamber of Commerce;
LEO (July 23-Auw. 22) Usually
Raymond Ross of the Uruted
you re good at mnu!lg busme ss
Auto Workers ; and Frank J
w1 th pleasure but today that
Smtth and Wtlliam Welsh, all
form ula won t JBII Don t try tor
members of the Columbus
a b1g deal ov er dmner and
d nnk s
group
Moody' was asked ahout a
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You
statement Monday by
have a tetndency today to talk a
l1ttle too much about matters
Pe nnsylvanta Gov. Milton J
th at shou ld be co nllde nllal
Shapp that Columbus was out
Conl
rdmg m the wrong person
of the run nmg for the VW
m 1g ht spo1t something for you
plant.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 Be
" Gov Shapp, "if you'll
careful m doi ng bus1 ness With a
examtne hts record, has
fr1 end today or both of you
made a number of mcorrect
may teet you ve been taken adpredictions," satd Moody
van tage of Be fa1r but al so be
prac t1cal

SC ORPIO (Oct 24-Nov.22) Today appra 1se your opposition
THURSDW
real1 st• cally Don't ge t Involved
SECOND HALF of "Tom
111 so meth rng where the odds
Browo's Sc hool Days, " part
are stacked agam st you
d a free mov1e series gomg
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
on a t the Meigs Museum will
21) To get the most o ut of p eobe shown at 7 30 p m
ple who ar e working lor or w1th
yo11 tod ay let them functton
Thursday, courtesy of
WEDNESDAY
w1 th a mm1mum amount or
Pomeroy Mtddl eport
REVIVAL at 7'30 each lJbrartes
d1rect1on
evemng at the Hazel Com8&gt;APRICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan.
FRIDAY
mum ty Church wtth l)Je Rev
19) Don 't gamble today o n
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
someone whom you know fr om
Ge orge Hoschar, evangelist;
special smgmg each night Grange to v1stt Gallia County expe rr ence has a very poor
Pastor Edsel Hart tnvites Pomona Grange a t the record of success Back1ng th 1s
person co uld prove costly
Sprtngfleld Grange Hall.
pubhc
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
MIDDLEPORT Fir eREVUE 76, a variety show,
To doy 1t may be eas •er fo r you
me n's Auxtl1ar y, 7 30 wtll be presented by Southern
to make pr om1 ses tha n to keep
Wednesday at the ftrehouse . Htgh School Chotr under the - them Thtn k tw1 ce before c omm•ttmg
A housewares par ty wtll be dtrec tion of Mrs Lee Lee
held Hostesses wtll be the Frtday, at 8 p m. at the htgh PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20)
offtcers MembCI s may lake school.
Try1 ng sho rtcvt s With your wo rk
cou ld backfire today Don t ex guests
SATURDAY
per iment with new tw 1sts 1t an
POMEROY LODGE 164, F.
TAG DAY tn f. 1c1ne old one IS wo rking fme
and A M , Wcdneay, i 30 Sa turday from 9 to 11 a .m.
p.m Masomc Temple All
master masons mviled
· Evet yone to meet at ballfteld
and brmg own money conMOTHERS OF Junior class t&lt;:uners
members mee t at 7 30 p m
Moy 8, 1976
Wednesday at Southern Htgh
School to make !mal plans for
Th1s yea r you ma y be able to
make tha t change or Improveservmg ·atumm banquet
m ent In yo ur res1dence you 've
THURSDAY
bee n t h1n km g about Also ,
MIDD LEPOR f CHAMmore of you r ac t1v1t1es w1 ll be
BER of Commerce mcetmg,
cen tered around your tam•ly
12 15 p.m Th ursday at
and re tat1ves
Mar lin Restaurant
'
MEIGS COUNTY Counctl
of Parents and Teachers, 7: 30
Thursday , at the Pomeroy
.J ame s Cooner, Eth el
Elementary School.
GRANGE FIFTH degree Conne!' to James A Bernard,
team practice at the Rock Elno ra Ber na rd, parcels ,
Spnngs grange hall , 7 30 Orange
Madden, \'.! A., Sallsbary.
Granvel Wamsley , Juamta
p m. Thursday.
Lee Layne, Anna Layne to
EVANGELINE CHAPTER Wamsley to HS D Oil and George Stem, Ann Stem
172, Thursday, 7:30 p.m Gas Co . n ght of wav Parcels, Letart.
'
''
Middleport Masomc Temple Rutland
Ar chie McKmn ey, Eva
Glenn Va nce. Cora Il McKinney to Roger Black,
25 year ptns to be presented
Vance
to H S D Otl and Gas Ka r olyn Black, .06A.,
Officers to " ear gowns.
Co
,
nght
of way, Rutland Rutland
CATHOLIC Women's Club
Thursday , 8 p.m at Sacred
Dav1d Parry, Cathy Parry
Loutse M. Keebaugh ,
Heart Chu rch Rec tory to Dewey F Sm ith Jr , Marvtn L. Keebaugh, MarHostesses wtll be Ceceha Sharon K Sm1th, Racme.
JOrte J . Keebaugh, J Oaue
Mttch, Phyll is Hac kett,
Be1nard L. Caru th ers Abohn, Theodore W. Abohn to
Barbara Mullena nd Sandy Wan da S Ca r uthers t~ Jason J Davts, Tonya E.
Kov lachtk .
Ayward Curbs Jones, Vivian Davis. 2.39 A , Orange.
BISHOP Ralph Grover of E Jones, Parcels, Sutton
Ona E.' Osborne, dec. to
Baltimore Apostolic Church
Cectl 0 Toban , Gertrude L. Bernard D. Osborne, Cert of
speaker at Rutland Apostoh~ Toban to Lula Sue Toban Trans , Chester .
Church, Depot St., Rutland , 2.787 acres, Bedford
Robert H. Eastman, Sloetla
Thursday, 7:30 p m Soul
Clarence A Lawson
E. Eastman to James B
Seekers quartet fr om Lan - Glenna Lawson to Kenneth Phillips, Martha Phtlhps,
caster will be fea tured . W. Madden, Mary Lou Lots, Pomeroy.
Public is mvtted.

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By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sperl&amp; Editor

lll

~EW YORK (UPI )- For nearly 20 years, Brooks Robinson
hils played a pretty good third base for Baltll'llore so good his
rtxt stop will be Cooperstown. The only trouble 'wtth that ts
SllJ!Ie people can't watt . They keep trying to rush him there a
~le too early.
•Brooks Robinson has an excellent understandmg of people.
lie concede.s most of tltem who say he should quit mean well
l\11ddon't want to see him dull his reputation, but that's not the
m int.
~ey are NOT him. Their emotions are not his emotions. The
a.y Brooks Robinson rettres from baseba ll will be only
aliother day for most everyone else but it'll be one of the
t41happiest days in the life of Brooks Robinson because of what
lflseball has grown to mea n to him.
:,:When he was merely a school kid in fifth grade he wrote a
&lt;*~~positiOn one day saymg all he ever wanted to do was play
b1seballm the big leagues. That was nearly 30 years ago but
rtJthmg has changed for Brooks Robinson.
:"'I still love to play baseball," he says. "It's easy for
S!'"ebody else to stt on the outside and tell you to qUit but
nobody ever wants to quit. I'm gonna play forever "
:.Brooks Robmson laughs when he says thai.
• "My wile, Connie, thinks I am, " he says, still laughing. You
qon tell he gets a big kick out of her saying tha t.
• "I know I can'tdothat, but I'm gonna play as long as I can. I
tlrmk we gotta good chance to win and I want to contnbute. I'll
~ you this- if I )lit as bad as I did last year I would hang 'em

up."

'

~ Robmson will ~ 39 in two weeks. Last year was his worst
season smce commg up to the Ortoles originally tn l955 He hit
.:101. There tsn't that much difference m hts average right now
~the has been swinging Ute bat much better, and he's out:
tatting 25-year.()ld Doug DeCinces being groomed to take over
1&amp; him at third base.
~Defensively, Robinson still can do the job and if you
r{!lllember, tt wasn't that long ago everybody satd he could hit
.200 and still be the best third baseman mbaseball. •
::The fact Robinson has a lifetime .2119 batting average isn't
lilely tg. keep hll'll out of Baseball's Hall of Fame. Rabbit
"%aranvtlle got tn witlt 258 and wasn't anywhere near the
~fensive marvel. For years, whenever they talked about third
b8semen, the one tltey always put at the top was Pte Traynor,
aDother Hall of Farner. He had always been considered
~~ball's premter third baseman, yet before he died a few
~ars ago, even he satd he never saw anybody better wtth the
ClOve than Robinson .
:.Think of it, Brooks Robinsoll' has been in 18 All .Star games
alfd has won Ute Gold Glove award for 16 consecutive years
~r since 1960. He was the American League's Most Valuable
...ayer in 1964 and has played in four World Series.
:SOme players merely say they love baseball. Robinson not
~ly says tt, he means it
::Jle hasn 't taken a day off this season. Even on those days
When the Oriole.s haven't been scheduled, Robinson has
sLowed up at the park both on Ute road and at home to take
J:tttmg practice. The Oriole.s had a day ·off Monday and
I\I!Uiager Earl Weaver asked AI Bumbry, Dave Duncan , Elrod
~ndricks, Tommy Harper, Reggie Jackson and DeCinces to
come out for some extra hitting. .
• 'All right if I come out, too ?" Robinson asked Weaver.

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Even homer·lnttlng Mike
Schmidt admits that the
Philadelphia Phillles' key
sluggers are Greg L112lnski
.and Dick Allen
Sclunidt has hit 12 homers
tn 18 games this season, but
he's a raw hitter compared
with l.uzinski and Allen-and
he's one of the first to concede
the point.
"I'd like to be a hitter like
Luzmski ," Sc hmidt sa td
Tu esday
night
after

11

Asked if Griffin had a good
chance to be a starter,
Johnson
shot
ba ck,
"Absolutely."
"We didn 't draft Archte m
the ftrst round JUSt because
he was a t wo~mle Heisman
WliUler," Said JohnSOn . 11 We
Pesearched hun thoroughly.
We think he's got a great
future in pro football.
" Size should be no
detrintenl. We think more
and more the little man is
making a big impact in pro
football "

capped a tour;un rally that
helped deal Larry Dterker hts
third loss agamst three wins.
Bobby Tolan had sent the
Phils off to a 1-0 lead witlt his
second homer of the season m
the second innmg.
Jim Lonborg pitched a
seven-hitter, walked non and
game."
"Thts ts about as good a struck out three for his third
start as I've had ," said straight triu mph as the
Luzinski, who is batting 310 Phtllles retamed possession
wtth two homers and 15 runs of first place m the National
batted m. Allen currently IS League's Eastern Dtvtsion
Philaclelphta 's btg etghth
on the disabled hst.
l.uztnskt's three;un double
Luztnski's three;un, eighthtnnmg double cemented the
Phtllies' iHl victory over the
Houston Astros. "He's got
great power but he also is the
type of hitter who can deliver
a single or a double when
that's what IS needed to win a

GAHS captures
SEO track title
Ga llip oli s sh a ttered
Ironton 's hopes of winning 8
r1Ith straight Southeastern
Ohio League track chamFll
. h' t R
ptons tpa utter ed , The
Plains, Tuesday by caplurtng
the 1976 champtonship .
It was Galha Academy 's
second league track tttle m
the event's 20 year htstory ,
and ftrst smce the 1970

campaign.

The Fightmg Tigers were
gomg after Athens' record of

seven straight conference

Long o, Mo il er, A - 10 3
n o. v ARD DASH - s
Saund er s, G . Wil liamson , M .
Long 1. Grov er, A. Henry,
We ll . Halt er. L - 23 2
44 0 - YARDOA SH B
sa und ers, G, McCat oe, Well ,
Unger, I. Hornba ck• Wav ,
T5 1Pf'ng . A Jones, Wav a80 -YARD RELAY
Jonnson . Well. Noslra nl A
H e lb er . L
Gr anda l. M
Sa un ders, I. Maple, Wav 2 o• 6

°

MI L E RUN - N osfran t, A
John son , We ll. Sk aggs G

Mc cown. 1 E Ruoz , G.
Adk
on s, A - ' 39 ' RUN
TWO MILE
Gr ee nrn , A ,

RUNNING EVENTS
' IOO · YARD DASH - B

'

The year's second-team defeasive uott II made up of
lorwatds Jim Brtwer of Cleveland and Jamaal Wilkes of
Golden State, center Kareem Abdui-Jabber of Los Angela,
and guards J im (leamons of Cleveland aod Phil Smith of
Golden State.

Mets 5, Reds 3:
Tom Seaver received credit
for his fourth straight victory
with 2 2-3 innings of strong
relief by Skip LockWood
Lockwood took over witlt the
bases filled and one out in the
seven th a nd struck out
Johnny Bench and Mike Lum
Dave Kingman hit hls lOth
homer for the Mets and now
has driven in 23 runs in 23
games.
Pirates 8, Giant s 5:
Willie Stargell hit a two-run
lie-breaking homer In the
sixth Inning and the Pirates
added two' more runs in the
mmng Jerry Reuss went 6 1-3
inmngs to get the wm with
Bob Moose finishing up. Mike
Cald well yielded air slx
Pittsburgh runs In 5 1-3
inmngs and lost his fourth
stra ight decision.
Cards 8, Braves 7:
Ted Simmons' double drove
in Bake McBride with the

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18
16

Nos tran t, Athe ns
W 10 1am son . M elgs

Saund ers , G , Wi ll iamson , M ,
M cCarter , Wei , Gro ve r , A,

an early 7-4 deficit to hand the
Braves their eighth stral~ht
loss. Simmons and McBride
hlt homers for St Louis while
Jimmy Wynn connected for
Atlanta . Reliever Harry Rasmussen was the winner .
Dodgers 9, Cubs 6:
Henry Cruz drove in three
runs with a two-run homer
aud a triple as the Dodgers
ran their winning streak to tO
games. Burt Hooton went ~ 23 Innings to win his set'Ond
game for Los Angeles, with
Mike Marsha ll going Ute last
3 1-3 and earning his fourth
~ave. Hick Reuschel was the
loser.

Dave Vaughn's two-ru n
homer in the £irst mning and
a four-hi t pttching perfprmancc by Junim Btll Bob
Acktson gave visthng Ironton
to an 6-3 Southeastern Ohio
League baseball victory over
Galhpolls on Memona l Field
Tuesday evenmg
The VIctory left Iron ton
with a 16-7 season record The
Ftghtmg Ttgers upped their
conference mark to 8-3. They
tratl league-leadmg Jackson
by one full game.
GAHS dropped to 6-11
overall and 3-8 tnstde the
SEOAL. Today, GAHS wtll
host Por tsmouth m a nonleague outing at 4 30 p m on

Memorial Field
Ga llia's Brent Johnson led
off the bottom of the f1rst wtth
a home run After that blast
Acktson held the Blue Devil~
lntless and scoreless until the
last inmng when Gary Swain,
Ter ry Wall an d Mickey
Graham slapped out three
consecuttvc smgles tor the
!mal two Blue Dev tl runs.
Ackson gave up three runs
on four htts. He fanned four
and walked three. Ironton
made two errors
Sophomore Terry Wall was
charged WIth the loss Wall
gave up etght runs on nine
hits in stx inmngs. Juntor
Chuck Lane hurled the final

INTEREST

On Certificates
Of DepcM
s1,000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term

run g for GAHS, se tting the
Tigers down in order GAHS
made two errors. Wall fanned
Utree and walked five.
Rtck Howard paced the
Ttgers w1th three singles in
four trt ps. Dave Vaughn had
two htts m three trips. Jay
Brtcky had a fifth mn lng
home run for Ironton. Jeff
Houston had a fourth Inning
triple.
l.inescore
Ironton
201 212 0-8-9-2
GAHS
100 000 2- 3-4-2
Batteries: GAHS - Wall
(LP ), Lane, 7th - Graham
Ironton - Acktson (WP) &amp;
Knebel.

N lnot y day Interes t pen 11ty
II
withdr awn
b efor e

m atur ity date.

Meigs Co. Branch

f!iJ
The Attt en s Count y

s av ing' &amp; Lo an co
196 Sec ond St .

Pom eroy, Ohio

Logan edges Marauders 2-1
walk.
In the bottom of.Ute second
with one out, Meigs' Soulsby
stroked a single to right.
Myers then threw wildly on a
piCk.()ff attempt, allowing the
runner to advance to scormg position, and Soulsby
promptly stole third. Willi
two away he sc ampered
home on a wild pitch, making
Meigs ' only run unearned.
In the sixth, Browning got
out of a two-out, bases,!oaded
jam when centerflelder Jim
Howard made a nice running
catch to pot the Chieftains
away. But then came the
disastrous seventh.
Gasser hit a hard smash
through the infield, and witlt
one out, stole second. He
scored • on pinch -hitt er
Watkins' single to left An out
later, Watkins scampered
home with the winnmg run
on Howdyshell 's single into
left field Myers put Meigs
down in order in t~eir last
turn at bat.
There were no exira base
knooks
in the contest, but
lnte rnatr onal L eagu e
Soulsby led the hitters with
Standing s
Unrted P ress lnternat•on al
two singles. Hamilton had
W L Pel GB Metgs' other hit. Six U&gt;gan
Rhode I sl and 12 5 706
hitters each had a single.
Rochesler
7 3 .7 00 t•;,
To led o
9 6 600
Thursday Point Pleasant
R lc hmond
10 7 588
a
comes
to Metgs. Meigs hosts
syracuse
1 a 467
Memphis
6 9 400 ~
Ironton in Sectional play
Charl es ton
4 9 308
T id ewater
2 10
167 1•12 Monday
Tues day' s Res ults
Ulgan
000 1100 0-2 6 2
Roches ter 6 T1 d ewa t er 2
Meigs
010
1100 0-1 3 1
Tol edo 10 Rrc hm ond 9
Myers
and - Tucker .
Svr iJcuse 6 M em ph iS o
Rho de Island 2 Charl eston 1 BrowninM and Soulsby.

It was a pitchers' duel all
the way Tuesday night at
Syracuse when the visiting
Logan Chiefta ins handed the
Meigs Marauders their
seventh league defeat agamst
four victories. It became a
fru stratmg evening for the
hosts when the game was lost
in Ute top of the seventh.
Pitching was the name of
the game as neither team
mounted any serious threat
until the last two innings,
other than the run scored by
Metgs m the second.
Logan 's Myer s pitched
superbly With pinpoint
control. striking out seven
and gtvmg up only one free
pass. Metgs' Dale Browning
agam turned in a fine
performance in a losing
cause. He gave up only two
base on balls and KO'd etght.
Browning almost always has
good control, and at one tll'lle
thts year pitched two straight
games wtthout givin~ up a

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Prices Valid May 5-9

Reg . 89c

winning run In the 12th intilng

as the Cardinals rallied from

Towl er , wav ,

THURSDAY NIGHT

performan ce.

started when Lonborg walked
wtth one out Dave Ca sh
tr tpled, Larry Bows was safe
on a ftelder's choice, Schmidt
walked and L112inskt followed
wtth his double.
The New York Mets
defea ted Cmcinnati, 5-3,
P tttsburgh shaded Sa n
Fran ctsco , 6-5, St. Louts
edged Atlanta, 8-7, and Los
Angeles beat the Chicago
Cubs, 9-ji, m other NL games
Sa n Diego at Montreal was
postponed by cold weather.

19'1t.

Tigers alive after 8-3 win

THE INN PLACE

SPECIAL

enough.

John son satd he will send
Griffin through "intensive
workouts" even before
tra mtng camp opens in July.
"By Ute time camp starts,"
figured Johnson, "Arch will
be Indo ctrinated into the
Bengals system "
Glli(fm, one of the most
celeblated players m the
htstory of collegiate football,
holds three NCAA career
offensive records, Including
the rushing mark of 5,177
yards.
Grtffin, 21, who graduated
from Ohto State two montlts
ago, plans to get married
Jlex! month and figures to use
fth e ltrst part of hls new
salary "to take care of my
family."

Lozinski's hat leading Phils

titles before the streak was Green. G.-Hones, G, conley,
Wel t. Smolh , M - 10 3S 7
120 HIGH HURDLES dissolved by Coach Bob
Lawson 's Blue Devils.
McG uore , G. Wol coxen, 1.
Senior Brent Saunders Crawford
, J -, Stone,
Il l A, Koc h
A, Belz, G
establlsh~ d a new SEOAL
IIO · LOW HURDLES 1
d wlth a 40 pent
1
M c Gu 1r e, G. Cr awfor d J
srorngrecor
McK innlss. Well . Belz, G.
perFormance. •Teammate Ston e. A , Wil coxe n, 1- 21 1
Kejth McGuire, a junior,
UO·YARD RELAY - Won
b y L ogan
Second pl ace
pIaced second In individual lrono on. Thord
pl ace ,
scoring with 23 points.
Galllpo los Fo urlh pl ace ,
The Blue Devils captured Meog
s, Foflh plac e, Alhens,
Si x th pla ce , W a ve rl y this year's eight-team session ' I 37 7
with 1021.2 points. Defending w ~:;,~.-E ~:cvo~ w~,"ac~Y
champion Ironton was second Log an
Th or d
pl ace
wtth 100. Athens fmtshed Wav erly , Four lh pl ace ,
third With 83 ; Wellston ~~~~~~ s pi~~~~~ PJ~~e,;s~e lg~
fourth , 75¥.. ; Logan fifth , 30; 3 37 1
FIELD EII ENTS
MetgS SIXth, 28; Waverly
SHOT PUT - Fro lz , 1.
seventh, 26 and Jackson last Grey , Well . Hoero nom us. 1.
wtth 20 pomts.
Murphree , A. wood , G,
Stew ar t, M - 47'
:"Yeah, sure," was the answer.
Ironton trailed the Blu~
DISCUS Fro 1z. 1.
•Weaver says Robinson is_swinging the bat better now than he
Devtls
100¥..
to
92
going
into"
Hi
eron
o
mu
s,
t,
Berbero
ck, A,
ctrd at anyttme last year.
the
fmal
event,
the
pole
vault.
'.:
~~~~n
5r'
A 't lr, e,o1~!es .l N~.,;
~" It doesn't look like he's going to htt with any power, but
Had Ironton won a ftrst in' mee t record Old mor k 1l2'
efen if we have to go to DeCinces for some added power, I still
1
that
eventand'GAHS failed to ' 't' ~J'U~U,;o;. .!!l ~ saun
~ink Brooks can add something," points out the Orioles'
IIUIIIager . "Say DeCinces does hit and gets hurt. We don't have have place, the Tigers would ' ders. G. Sa lisbury . G. o Nell
have edged GAHS lor the- A, Folzpalrlck, ' · Gro ver, A,
Osbo rn e, We ll - 21'-B, 7 "
dybody who can do the job Brooks can do. I think in his heart
HIGH JUMP - F&gt;ll
It feels be can help the ball club, and in my heart I'm not so championship.
As
tt
turned
out,
Wellston's'
palrl
ck I Wol ll am s, 1.
spre he can't. I haven'tconvinced myself he's done yet. "
· Dorsey J , Em er son, L , t1 ed
•Earl Weaver is a sharp appratser of baseball ability He isn 't Pete Rupert captured the, for l~ o rd , McG uor e, G and
with a 12' effort McKonnoss , Well , loed for toflh
giiing around advising Brooks Robtnson to qwt, so why should pole vault
5" New mee l record
3.? d Ga111a. •s Bruce Scar berry :• -Old 6'r ecord
by Chase. A t hen s,
o!)lers ?
ptcked
up
a
fifth
place
for
•
1961,
6'
, ,, .. ,
:;ntey 'II be the first to miss htm when he's gone .
GAHS by gomg "u• thus
POLE 1/AULT - Ru perl
•
•
' We lL Hug hes , I. Ke l ler , A
''
assurmg GAHS of its second H orn sba c k , Wav ' Sc ar berr y '
league championship
G. Ooxon, Well - 12"
'
•.
FINAL STANDINGS
Two more new league TEAM
POINTS
records were established • Gall opolos
102'h
lronoon
100
Tuesday, both by Ironton Alh ens
83
players.
Wellslon
75 "•
Ken Fritz bettered his M
Logan
JO
e 1g s
28
1975 mark m the discus event wa verly
26
with a toss of 156'-11". Dean Jackso n
20
Fitzpatrick erased Steve
TOP s coRERS
Chase 's 1961 high jump mark PLAYER
POINTS
with an outstandmg 6'-5" ~ cS.:~~~;;';.~ ~ H S
~~

25$

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•······

TABLETS

Reg 41c
WIT~ COUPON
5 grain
LIMIT 2
Prices Valid May S-9

I

WITH COUPON 1
1
~
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I,
Pr ices Valid May 5-9
1'

Reg. $1.33

The

BAKER .fURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OPEN FRI. EVE. TIL 8:00

ANTI-PERSPIRANT ROI!.()N

:::::~

the starting hneup," Grtflm
said at a news conference
along with Brown and head
coach Bill Johnson. "II I'm
not a ~tarter , it won't be
because I didn 't try hard

100 Pameeo

----------------~r--- - COUPON- - - oz .
I
DIAL

Sport ,Parade

"It was a short negotiating
session, but a hard one, " said
Brown, son of Bengals
general manager Pa ul
Brown.
"The money was less than
in Canada, but quite frankly,
I was surprised the Bengals
offered so much," said Mike
Trope of U&gt;s Angeles, one of
Griffin's agents .
6dded Grtff in's older
brotlter, James, hts other·
agent, " It was a ver y
eqwtable arrangement."
Brown said it was not a nocut contract, but Griffin
ftgures to have no problem
makmg the team. In fact ,
he's hoping to become a
starter his rookte year
" I'll be gtvmg 111)..120 per
cent as a pro to trv In rr• rk

.
CELTICSGETmREEFORFIVE
NEW YORK (UPI) - 1be Bolloa Celdcsacllleved 10 per
eent of the bonon wbeo center Dave Cowe111 and forwardl
John HavUeek tind Paul sn.. were named by league coache1
Tuesday to the National Ba!lketball Auoetatloo 's All·
Defensive team lor 197~'18.
Nona Van Uer of the Odcago Bulls aod Seattle'e SUck
Watts wert picked for the guard positions on the lint team.
The selection of the Celtic trio marked the lint lime a ieam
landed three met1 on the squad slaee New Vorl&lt;'• Wall
Frazier, WIIUs Reed aad Dave DeBuuchere wert picked lD

-----

1.5

Just buy any Back Supporter
mattress set nowduring our 50th Anniversary Celebration!

!@

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WITH COUPON
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own the ulttm ate 1n fine mallresses-the famous Spnng Air Back
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RO BERT HOE FLICH

pllld a t Pomero y . Oh JQ
Na rr on ttl
adv ertrs i . g
re p r e se n t a t iv e Wa r"tf
G'r l f f rf h Com p any In c
Bot tln el/ 1&amp; Get ll a g her D1 v '
151 Th ird Av e , N ew fork '

1

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PCMDER
bottles
WITH COUPON
soap~d!!h.es and toothbrush holders. '
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~

2157

1

Assorted colors and styles
Waterproof Inside and out
Reg. Your ·
WITH COUPON
39 C Choice
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Prices Va tid May 5-9

DESENEX

Ctt y E d1 t or
P~b hs hed da ll y .e xce pt
Saturd ay by Th e Oh •o
Val le y P ubl ish ing c om
pa n y ,
111 Co ur t 51
Po me r o y , Oh lo H7 69 '
Bus ine ss Off ice Phone 992
2156 Ed 1tonal Phone 992

NAIL

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Duray'

Sentinel

Exec Ed .

MarII

I

' OJ .

The

4 oz.

I

Ute former Ohio State star. "I offer ranged from $210,000 for
never dreamed of playing in three years to $840,000 lor six
years - quite a chunk of
Canada."
Salary was not disclosed, money for a~ untested rookie
Jt!Ore.
but Griffin acknowledged, who was passed over by some
. Spurning a bigger salary "The contract I signed is · NFL teams because of his
from a Canadian pro lower than the Canadian relatively small size - S;footfltltball team, Amenca's only offer."
8, 189 pounds.
tJ!o-time Heisman Trophy
Griffin said the actual
Griffin was a Bengals' first
Winner stgned a multt-year round draft choice last Canadian offer was higher
clintract for less money with month, &amp;ut the Mon treal than some of the reports, but
~e Cincinn ati
Bengals Alouettes of the Canadian the Columbus, Ohio native
~esday night.
Football League trted to lure pointed out, " I wanted to play
• "My boyhood dream was ,the running back away wttlt m Ute NFL and m Cincinnati
~ways to play in the National big money.
because tt's close to home."
R'ootball League ," explained
Reports of the Canadian
Griffm declared he was
••
"satisfied " wtlh the contract
..~x=::~:::~~'&gt;!::l:"~~::·~:.;*'-:=::::•:•:•::.'&lt;&lt;-:'o'Uo(o'.'•X•'•'•:;m"'
~ .. .
.. . .. .•. . .. .
·=~:::::;.-..~ii=~~:;mw:::-=':::~:::-}:::::--:::=~:::::::::;::~:r:::;~:::::::::::;::~1 and Bengals' assistant
gen eral manager Mike
Brown , who tossed figures
·:::.-:-:
~:: around for five hours
.·~~... Tuesday with Griffm and his
::::=:::
........
two agents, termed it "fair "
'•'•'•i

ceer

QUANTITIES LIMITED
PRICES VALID MAY 5-9

Johnson's

signs with Bengals, ignores Canadians

'y RICK VANSANT
:·c iNCINNATI (UPI ) 1\tchie Griffin has signed lor
Ips, but figures to enjoy it

Day Savings

BODY

DEIIOT ED TO THE
LNTER ES T OF
MEIGS·MASQN AREA
( HES TER L TANN EH ILL

~riffin

Mother's

Property
Transfers

OUR GIFT TO YOU
IS A GOLDEN
ANNIVERSARY
BLANKET FROM
SPRING AIR •••

3- The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., w_-dnesday, May 5, 1976

..

We offer all mechanics work - tires - tuneups - brake jobs - oil change - major
overhauls - minor transmission repair?

RIVAL

Hour s 8 to S Monday through Saturday
except Thursdav 8 to noon.

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Reg•

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TH;E MEIGS INNPhone 992-3629
' Pomeroy, C!tlio

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•

•

•

\'

•

�•

2- The Daily Semmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, May 5, 1976

Car maker offered $5 million bait
'

By LEE LEONARD
I,JPI Statehouse Reporler
COWMBI,JS ( I,JPI ) - An
appropriatiOn of $5 million, to
serve as an mcentive for the
Volkswagen Corp to locate
an autom obtle assembly
plan t m Ohio, has been
agreed to by Democrahc
leg tsla ttve leaders and
Republican Gov . Jame.s A.
Rhodes.
In an announcement made
through Executive Asststant
Thomas J Moyer, the
governor sa id the agreement
w~s reached during a 4:&gt;minute meeting in hts office
Tuesday mght with House
Speaker Verna l G Riffe Jr ,
D-New Boston, and Senate
Prestdent Pro Tempore
Ol1ver Ocasek, DAkron.
Rhodes planned to tnform
Volkswage n by telephone
toda y of the agr eement,
Moyer satd
Th e Democraltc leaders
prom tsed to ma ke the
appropr iation wh en the
Ge n e r a l
As semb ly
f l.'Convenes m June,

s~ 1 d

Moyer
The money would come
from unspec ified general
reven ues, expected to
accumulate by the end of thts
ftscal year, and be used to
purchase an Ohto stte for the
auto manufacturing plant,
Moye1 srud

If Volkswagen decides to
locate a facthty m Brook
Park pear Cleveland, the
money would go toward the
purchase of the abandoned
Brook Park tank plant, satd
the Rhodes aide, adding that
if Columbus were chosen as
the site, "and the same kind
of mcentive ts needed, then
we would make the same
appropriation ."
Although House Mmority
Leader Charles F. Kurfess,
RBowling Green, and Senate
Minority Leader Michael J .
Maloney, R-Cmcinnati, were
not at the meeting, they also
agreed to the appropriation ,
Moyer satd.
"Everyone agreed it was a
necessary appropriation,"
th e governor 's asststant satd.
, "We expect. to save . $10
mtlhon through our hirmg
fr eeze, and we anticipate a
small unencumbered balance
at the end of this fiscal year.
"This ts really an
investment - money we wtll
be geltmg back in two or
th r ee yea rs from taxes
generated by the automobile
plant," satd Moyer
Earlier Tuesday, Rhodes
listened to a sale.s pttch from
a group seeking to attract the
plant to the Columbus area .
He apparently cautiOned the
group agamst gettmg mto a
public ftght with 1ts mtrastate

isn't rare
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DE AR DR . LAMB Recen tly I have been faced
wt lh an eqwi11Jn tim problem
upon an smg m the morrnng
and some t1mes dw mg the
day I am 69 years old. Often I
feel as though I could fa ll
Coul d you tell rne what rn}
pJ oblem ts''
DEAR READER - Man}
people
have
)J alance
problems. It ts not a stmple
problem. There are three
baste Inputs of mformatwn to
yo ur bratn about your body
postlton . They are the mputs
from the eye , the balance
mechamsm of the ear and the
sensory pe1ceph on from ali
of the mus cular skeletal
sys l.en) of the bud
This combmed tnput of
mformat wn rs sorted out and
acted upon by centers tn the
br·a1n The bra1n ( enter sends

out Impulses that arc used to
make the proper movements
l&lt;l matn ~ tn biilance If vour
le~s a1·e out of postlion there

•s nn au tomallc renex
response t~a t occurs and
even w1 thout llunktng, you'll
readjust your foot posttton to
m:unta tn balance These
ba lance ce nters m the brmn
must also funclton properly
lot your equilibrium to be
nOt mal
'l'hc list of th1ngs wh1ch can
happen to lhe eye that wtll
affect balance IS fatrly long
Add to th is the list of defects
of the balance mechamsm of
tile car The httle ear canals
U1at con trol balance can be
affec ted by an mfec!t on
ilabtnlhnlts) The mfl amed
can als cau se a ttacks of
d1zzmess and problems with
balan ce Th ts can follow a
virus mfcctton Vartous drugs
can affec t the balante
mechamsm. The toxtc or
chemtcal act1on on the little
canals will also cause trouble
wtth eq wh~ri wn .
Anyll ung that affects the
Circulatwn to the balance
ce nters m the bram can ca use
loss of equillbnum Changes
111 the arlenes to tile bram
can cause madequate cir·
culatwn and loss of balance
Th1s ts why many older
people
have
balance
problems. Any decrease tn

ctrculalton to the bratn can
produce temporary problems
m balance Tins can occur at
the begmmng or a famt tn a
young, healthy mdiVIdu al If
the blood pools m the legs and
not enough gels lo the bram,
as occurs w1th an unpendmg
fatn t, associa ted problems
are to be expected to the point
even of complete mab1 hty to
stan d
I recogni ze lhts ts not your
problem, but to gtve you a
better ptcture remember that
mdtvtduals who have had too
much alcohol to dn nk often
have troubl e wtth thctr
balance. They lose tl1e normal fmc tumng mechamsms
of the nerve, muscle, and
skeletal system tha t arc
necessa ry to rnamtam proper
balance
Wha t can you do then' The
on ly answer to th1s kind of
prohlem IS to obtain a fatrly
co mpl e t e m edica l
exam111alton Certamly the
exammation should tnclude
an evalua tiOn of the
posstbtllly of poor ctrculat1on
to vttal areas of the bratn or·
tile balance mechamsm of the
ear, but tt wtll also prov1de
Impor ta nt tnform allon on
many other causes that can
produce the same symptom .
For informa tion on symptoms of strokes as opposed to
simple fainting send ~0 cents
!01 Th e Hea lth Le tter ,
number
2 -~ .
Strokes ,
Cerebral Va scular Accident
- Cere bra l Th rombos is.
Send a long, stamped , selfaddr essed enve lope fo r
matling Address your letter
to me m care of this newspaper, P. 0 Box 1551, Radto
Ctty Statton. New York , NY
10019.

nval m Cuyahoga County .
The Columbus group met
priva tely In the governor's
office with Rhodes and hiS
development director, James
A Duerk, in an effort to enlist
some aid
Mayor
Tom
Moody
dec lined to deta il the
discuss ions but ~aid th e
governor urged the Columbus
group to refratn from wagmg
a public battle wtth Brook
Park.
"He satd that what we need
is no t a fuss betw een
Columbus and Brook Park
but a fundmg mechanism to
get tt to Dhio," Moody told

newsmen. 11 He doesn't want
us to do thmgs that would be
counter-producttve "
The mayor satd a proposed
$5
mtlllon lcgtslattve
appropnation to help attract
the1acihty to Brook Park was
discussed "In a peripheral
way" but there was "no
substantial discusSion" ahout
making the same offer for a
Columbus site .
"The governor is for the
good of all Ohtoans," sa id
Moody , who requested the
meetmg wtth Rhodes "He's
pushmgfor everythmg he can
get on all fronts ."
Rhodes has been playmg up
the Brook Park locatiOn, but

satd last week he would
supply Volkswa gen w1th
ml orma tion
about
a
For Thurlday, May I , 1878
Columbus ~H ie tf that
ARIES (March 21-Apttl 18)
tnformat10n was requested by
You' re reasonably luck y today
the company.
but you shouldn't pu sh your
Volkswagen has dedded to
tu ck It's not one of those t1mes
when you 'll get something for
expa nd to the Umted States
nothing
and ann ounced last week 1t
had narrowed the loca lion to
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You 'll have to look out for yqur
Brook Park , Columbus and
New Sta nton, Pa . A !mal ' own Interests today N9...,one
etse rs likely to do 1t for you Be
dectslon is expected later thiS
com pletely sell -rel1a nt
month. ,.
GEMINI (May 21 -~unt 20)
The governor declined to
S o m e o ne may t e l l yo u
talk to newsmen alter hls
something confide ntial today
meetmg with the Columbus
about a mu tu al friend The rn group Tuesday.
lormat•on co uld be d1stprted,
Check the facts
Also in on the meeting were
Robert Lazarus, chairman of
CANCER (Juno 21 -~uty 22) To
avo1 d a problem wtlh a frrend
the Columbus group; Kline
o ve r money today, clanly the
Roberts and Rosemary
Martm of the Columbus Area · s hare of e)(penses each Is to
pa y Don t grab the en tHe tab
Chamber of Commerce;
LEO (July 23-Auw. 22) Usually
Raymond Ross of the Uruted
you re good at mnu!lg busme ss
Auto Workers ; and Frank J
w1 th pleasure but today that
Smtth and Wtlliam Welsh, all
form ula won t JBII Don t try tor
members of the Columbus
a b1g deal ov er dmner and
d nnk s
group
Moody' was asked ahout a
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You
statement Monday by
have a tetndency today to talk a
l1ttle too much about matters
Pe nnsylvanta Gov. Milton J
th at shou ld be co nllde nllal
Shapp that Columbus was out
Conl
rdmg m the wrong person
of the run nmg for the VW
m 1g ht spo1t something for you
plant.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 Be
" Gov Shapp, "if you'll
careful m doi ng bus1 ness With a
examtne hts record, has
fr1 end today or both of you
made a number of mcorrect
may teet you ve been taken adpredictions," satd Moody
van tage of Be fa1r but al so be
prac t1cal

SC ORPIO (Oct 24-Nov.22) Today appra 1se your opposition
THURSDW
real1 st• cally Don't ge t Involved
SECOND HALF of "Tom
111 so meth rng where the odds
Browo's Sc hool Days, " part
are stacked agam st you
d a free mov1e series gomg
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
on a t the Meigs Museum will
21) To get the most o ut of p eobe shown at 7 30 p m
ple who ar e working lor or w1th
yo11 tod ay let them functton
Thursday, courtesy of
WEDNESDAY
w1 th a mm1mum amount or
Pomeroy Mtddl eport
REVIVAL at 7'30 each lJbrartes
d1rect1on
evemng at the Hazel Com8&gt;APRICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan.
FRIDAY
mum ty Church wtth l)Je Rev
19) Don 't gamble today o n
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
someone whom you know fr om
Ge orge Hoschar, evangelist;
special smgmg each night Grange to v1stt Gallia County expe rr ence has a very poor
Pastor Edsel Hart tnvites Pomona Grange a t the record of success Back1ng th 1s
person co uld prove costly
Sprtngfleld Grange Hall.
pubhc
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
MIDDLEPORT Fir eREVUE 76, a variety show,
To doy 1t may be eas •er fo r you
me n's Auxtl1ar y, 7 30 wtll be presented by Southern
to make pr om1 ses tha n to keep
Wednesday at the ftrehouse . Htgh School Chotr under the - them Thtn k tw1 ce before c omm•ttmg
A housewares par ty wtll be dtrec tion of Mrs Lee Lee
held Hostesses wtll be the Frtday, at 8 p m. at the htgh PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20)
offtcers MembCI s may lake school.
Try1 ng sho rtcvt s With your wo rk
cou ld backfire today Don t ex guests
SATURDAY
per iment with new tw 1sts 1t an
POMEROY LODGE 164, F.
TAG DAY tn f. 1c1ne old one IS wo rking fme
and A M , Wcdneay, i 30 Sa turday from 9 to 11 a .m.
p.m Masomc Temple All
master masons mviled
· Evet yone to meet at ballfteld
and brmg own money conMOTHERS OF Junior class t&lt;:uners
members mee t at 7 30 p m
Moy 8, 1976
Wednesday at Southern Htgh
School to make !mal plans for
Th1s yea r you ma y be able to
make tha t change or Improveservmg ·atumm banquet
m ent In yo ur res1dence you 've
THURSDAY
bee n t h1n km g about Also ,
MIDD LEPOR f CHAMmore of you r ac t1v1t1es w1 ll be
BER of Commerce mcetmg,
cen tered around your tam•ly
12 15 p.m Th ursday at
and re tat1ves
Mar lin Restaurant
'
MEIGS COUNTY Counctl
of Parents and Teachers, 7: 30
Thursday , at the Pomeroy
.J ame s Cooner, Eth el
Elementary School.
GRANGE FIFTH degree Conne!' to James A Bernard,
team practice at the Rock Elno ra Ber na rd, parcels ,
Spnngs grange hall , 7 30 Orange
Madden, \'.! A., Sallsbary.
Granvel Wamsley , Juamta
p m. Thursday.
Lee Layne, Anna Layne to
EVANGELINE CHAPTER Wamsley to HS D Oil and George Stem, Ann Stem
172, Thursday, 7:30 p.m Gas Co . n ght of wav Parcels, Letart.
'
''
Middleport Masomc Temple Rutland
Ar chie McKmn ey, Eva
Glenn Va nce. Cora Il McKinney to Roger Black,
25 year ptns to be presented
Vance
to H S D Otl and Gas Ka r olyn Black, .06A.,
Officers to " ear gowns.
Co
,
nght
of way, Rutland Rutland
CATHOLIC Women's Club
Thursday , 8 p.m at Sacred
Dav1d Parry, Cathy Parry
Loutse M. Keebaugh ,
Heart Chu rch Rec tory to Dewey F Sm ith Jr , Marvtn L. Keebaugh, MarHostesses wtll be Ceceha Sharon K Sm1th, Racme.
JOrte J . Keebaugh, J Oaue
Mttch, Phyll is Hac kett,
Be1nard L. Caru th ers Abohn, Theodore W. Abohn to
Barbara Mullena nd Sandy Wan da S Ca r uthers t~ Jason J Davts, Tonya E.
Kov lachtk .
Ayward Curbs Jones, Vivian Davis. 2.39 A , Orange.
BISHOP Ralph Grover of E Jones, Parcels, Sutton
Ona E.' Osborne, dec. to
Baltimore Apostolic Church
Cectl 0 Toban , Gertrude L. Bernard D. Osborne, Cert of
speaker at Rutland Apostoh~ Toban to Lula Sue Toban Trans , Chester .
Church, Depot St., Rutland , 2.787 acres, Bedford
Robert H. Eastman, Sloetla
Thursday, 7:30 p m Soul
Clarence A Lawson
E. Eastman to James B
Seekers quartet fr om Lan - Glenna Lawson to Kenneth Phillips, Martha Phtlhps,
caster will be fea tured . W. Madden, Mary Lou Lots, Pomeroy.
Public is mvtted.

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By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sperl&amp; Editor

lll

~EW YORK (UPI )- For nearly 20 years, Brooks Robinson
hils played a pretty good third base for Baltll'llore so good his
rtxt stop will be Cooperstown. The only trouble 'wtth that ts
SllJ!Ie people can't watt . They keep trying to rush him there a
~le too early.
•Brooks Robinson has an excellent understandmg of people.
lie concede.s most of tltem who say he should quit mean well
l\11ddon't want to see him dull his reputation, but that's not the
m int.
~ey are NOT him. Their emotions are not his emotions. The
a.y Brooks Robinson rettres from baseba ll will be only
aliother day for most everyone else but it'll be one of the
t41happiest days in the life of Brooks Robinson because of what
lflseball has grown to mea n to him.
:,:When he was merely a school kid in fifth grade he wrote a
&lt;*~~positiOn one day saymg all he ever wanted to do was play
b1seballm the big leagues. That was nearly 30 years ago but
rtJthmg has changed for Brooks Robinson.
:"'I still love to play baseball," he says. "It's easy for
S!'"ebody else to stt on the outside and tell you to qUit but
nobody ever wants to quit. I'm gonna play forever "
:.Brooks Robmson laughs when he says thai.
• "My wile, Connie, thinks I am, " he says, still laughing. You
qon tell he gets a big kick out of her saying tha t.
• "I know I can'tdothat, but I'm gonna play as long as I can. I
tlrmk we gotta good chance to win and I want to contnbute. I'll
~ you this- if I )lit as bad as I did last year I would hang 'em

up."

'

~ Robmson will ~ 39 in two weeks. Last year was his worst
season smce commg up to the Ortoles originally tn l955 He hit
.:101. There tsn't that much difference m hts average right now
~the has been swinging Ute bat much better, and he's out:
tatting 25-year.()ld Doug DeCinces being groomed to take over
1&amp; him at third base.
~Defensively, Robinson still can do the job and if you
r{!lllember, tt wasn't that long ago everybody satd he could hit
.200 and still be the best third baseman mbaseball. •
::The fact Robinson has a lifetime .2119 batting average isn't
lilely tg. keep hll'll out of Baseball's Hall of Fame. Rabbit
"%aranvtlle got tn witlt 258 and wasn't anywhere near the
~fensive marvel. For years, whenever they talked about third
b8semen, the one tltey always put at the top was Pte Traynor,
aDother Hall of Farner. He had always been considered
~~ball's premter third baseman, yet before he died a few
~ars ago, even he satd he never saw anybody better wtth the
ClOve than Robinson .
:.Think of it, Brooks Robinsoll' has been in 18 All .Star games
alfd has won Ute Gold Glove award for 16 consecutive years
~r since 1960. He was the American League's Most Valuable
...ayer in 1964 and has played in four World Series.
:SOme players merely say they love baseball. Robinson not
~ly says tt, he means it
::Jle hasn 't taken a day off this season. Even on those days
When the Oriole.s haven't been scheduled, Robinson has
sLowed up at the park both on Ute road and at home to take
J:tttmg practice. The Oriole.s had a day ·off Monday and
I\I!Uiager Earl Weaver asked AI Bumbry, Dave Duncan , Elrod
~ndricks, Tommy Harper, Reggie Jackson and DeCinces to
come out for some extra hitting. .
• 'All right if I come out, too ?" Robinson asked Weaver.

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Even homer·lnttlng Mike
Schmidt admits that the
Philadelphia Phillles' key
sluggers are Greg L112lnski
.and Dick Allen
Sclunidt has hit 12 homers
tn 18 games this season, but
he's a raw hitter compared
with l.uzinski and Allen-and
he's one of the first to concede
the point.
"I'd like to be a hitter like
Luzmski ," Sc hmidt sa td
Tu esday
night
after

11

Asked if Griffin had a good
chance to be a starter,
Johnson
shot
ba ck,
"Absolutely."
"We didn 't draft Archte m
the ftrst round JUSt because
he was a t wo~mle Heisman
WliUler," Said JohnSOn . 11 We
Pesearched hun thoroughly.
We think he's got a great
future in pro football.
" Size should be no
detrintenl. We think more
and more the little man is
making a big impact in pro
football "

capped a tour;un rally that
helped deal Larry Dterker hts
third loss agamst three wins.
Bobby Tolan had sent the
Phils off to a 1-0 lead witlt his
second homer of the season m
the second innmg.
Jim Lonborg pitched a
seven-hitter, walked non and
game."
"Thts ts about as good a struck out three for his third
start as I've had ," said straight triu mph as the
Luzinski, who is batting 310 Phtllles retamed possession
wtth two homers and 15 runs of first place m the National
batted m. Allen currently IS League's Eastern Dtvtsion
Philaclelphta 's btg etghth
on the disabled hst.
l.uztnskt's three;un double
Luztnski's three;un, eighthtnnmg double cemented the
Phtllies' iHl victory over the
Houston Astros. "He's got
great power but he also is the
type of hitter who can deliver
a single or a double when
that's what IS needed to win a

GAHS captures
SEO track title
Ga llip oli s sh a ttered
Ironton 's hopes of winning 8
r1Ith straight Southeastern
Ohio League track chamFll
. h' t R
ptons tpa utter ed , The
Plains, Tuesday by caplurtng
the 1976 champtonship .
It was Galha Academy 's
second league track tttle m
the event's 20 year htstory ,
and ftrst smce the 1970

campaign.

The Fightmg Tigers were
gomg after Athens' record of

seven straight conference

Long o, Mo il er, A - 10 3
n o. v ARD DASH - s
Saund er s, G . Wil liamson , M .
Long 1. Grov er, A. Henry,
We ll . Halt er. L - 23 2
44 0 - YARDOA SH B
sa und ers, G, McCat oe, Well ,
Unger, I. Hornba ck• Wav ,
T5 1Pf'ng . A Jones, Wav a80 -YARD RELAY
Jonnson . Well. Noslra nl A
H e lb er . L
Gr anda l. M
Sa un ders, I. Maple, Wav 2 o• 6

°

MI L E RUN - N osfran t, A
John son , We ll. Sk aggs G

Mc cown. 1 E Ruoz , G.
Adk
on s, A - ' 39 ' RUN
TWO MILE
Gr ee nrn , A ,

RUNNING EVENTS
' IOO · YARD DASH - B

'

The year's second-team defeasive uott II made up of
lorwatds Jim Brtwer of Cleveland and Jamaal Wilkes of
Golden State, center Kareem Abdui-Jabber of Los Angela,
and guards J im (leamons of Cleveland aod Phil Smith of
Golden State.

Mets 5, Reds 3:
Tom Seaver received credit
for his fourth straight victory
with 2 2-3 innings of strong
relief by Skip LockWood
Lockwood took over witlt the
bases filled and one out in the
seven th a nd struck out
Johnny Bench and Mike Lum
Dave Kingman hit hls lOth
homer for the Mets and now
has driven in 23 runs in 23
games.
Pirates 8, Giant s 5:
Willie Stargell hit a two-run
lie-breaking homer In the
sixth Inning and the Pirates
added two' more runs in the
mmng Jerry Reuss went 6 1-3
inmngs to get the wm with
Bob Moose finishing up. Mike
Cald well yielded air slx
Pittsburgh runs In 5 1-3
inmngs and lost his fourth
stra ight decision.
Cards 8, Braves 7:
Ted Simmons' double drove
in Bake McBride with the

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20
18
18
16

Nos tran t, Athe ns
W 10 1am son . M elgs

Saund ers , G , Wi ll iamson , M ,
M cCarter , Wei , Gro ve r , A,

an early 7-4 deficit to hand the
Braves their eighth stral~ht
loss. Simmons and McBride
hlt homers for St Louis while
Jimmy Wynn connected for
Atlanta . Reliever Harry Rasmussen was the winner .
Dodgers 9, Cubs 6:
Henry Cruz drove in three
runs with a two-run homer
aud a triple as the Dodgers
ran their winning streak to tO
games. Burt Hooton went ~ 23 Innings to win his set'Ond
game for Los Angeles, with
Mike Marsha ll going Ute last
3 1-3 and earning his fourth
~ave. Hick Reuschel was the
loser.

Dave Vaughn's two-ru n
homer in the £irst mning and
a four-hi t pttching perfprmancc by Junim Btll Bob
Acktson gave visthng Ironton
to an 6-3 Southeastern Ohio
League baseball victory over
Galhpolls on Memona l Field
Tuesday evenmg
The VIctory left Iron ton
with a 16-7 season record The
Ftghtmg Ttgers upped their
conference mark to 8-3. They
tratl league-leadmg Jackson
by one full game.
GAHS dropped to 6-11
overall and 3-8 tnstde the
SEOAL. Today, GAHS wtll
host Por tsmouth m a nonleague outing at 4 30 p m on

Memorial Field
Ga llia's Brent Johnson led
off the bottom of the f1rst wtth
a home run After that blast
Acktson held the Blue Devil~
lntless and scoreless until the
last inmng when Gary Swain,
Ter ry Wall an d Mickey
Graham slapped out three
consecuttvc smgles tor the
!mal two Blue Dev tl runs.
Ackson gave up three runs
on four htts. He fanned four
and walked three. Ironton
made two errors
Sophomore Terry Wall was
charged WIth the loss Wall
gave up etght runs on nine
hits in stx inmngs. Juntor
Chuck Lane hurled the final

INTEREST

On Certificates
Of DepcM
s1,000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term

run g for GAHS, se tting the
Tigers down in order GAHS
made two errors. Wall fanned
Utree and walked five.
Rtck Howard paced the
Ttgers w1th three singles in
four trt ps. Dave Vaughn had
two htts m three trips. Jay
Brtcky had a fifth mn lng
home run for Ironton. Jeff
Houston had a fourth Inning
triple.
l.inescore
Ironton
201 212 0-8-9-2
GAHS
100 000 2- 3-4-2
Batteries: GAHS - Wall
(LP ), Lane, 7th - Graham
Ironton - Acktson (WP) &amp;
Knebel.

N lnot y day Interes t pen 11ty
II
withdr awn
b efor e

m atur ity date.

Meigs Co. Branch

f!iJ
The Attt en s Count y

s av ing' &amp; Lo an co
196 Sec ond St .

Pom eroy, Ohio

Logan edges Marauders 2-1
walk.
In the bottom of.Ute second
with one out, Meigs' Soulsby
stroked a single to right.
Myers then threw wildly on a
piCk.()ff attempt, allowing the
runner to advance to scormg position, and Soulsby
promptly stole third. Willi
two away he sc ampered
home on a wild pitch, making
Meigs ' only run unearned.
In the sixth, Browning got
out of a two-out, bases,!oaded
jam when centerflelder Jim
Howard made a nice running
catch to pot the Chieftains
away. But then came the
disastrous seventh.
Gasser hit a hard smash
through the infield, and witlt
one out, stole second. He
scored • on pinch -hitt er
Watkins' single to left An out
later, Watkins scampered
home with the winnmg run
on Howdyshell 's single into
left field Myers put Meigs
down in order in t~eir last
turn at bat.
There were no exira base
knooks
in the contest, but
lnte rnatr onal L eagu e
Soulsby led the hitters with
Standing s
Unrted P ress lnternat•on al
two singles. Hamilton had
W L Pel GB Metgs' other hit. Six U&gt;gan
Rhode I sl and 12 5 706
hitters each had a single.
Rochesler
7 3 .7 00 t•;,
To led o
9 6 600
Thursday Point Pleasant
R lc hmond
10 7 588
a
comes
to Metgs. Meigs hosts
syracuse
1 a 467
Memphis
6 9 400 ~
Ironton in Sectional play
Charl es ton
4 9 308
T id ewater
2 10
167 1•12 Monday
Tues day' s Res ults
Ulgan
000 1100 0-2 6 2
Roches ter 6 T1 d ewa t er 2
Meigs
010
1100 0-1 3 1
Tol edo 10 Rrc hm ond 9
Myers
and - Tucker .
Svr iJcuse 6 M em ph iS o
Rho de Island 2 Charl eston 1 BrowninM and Soulsby.

It was a pitchers' duel all
the way Tuesday night at
Syracuse when the visiting
Logan Chiefta ins handed the
Meigs Marauders their
seventh league defeat agamst
four victories. It became a
fru stratmg evening for the
hosts when the game was lost
in Ute top of the seventh.
Pitching was the name of
the game as neither team
mounted any serious threat
until the last two innings,
other than the run scored by
Metgs m the second.
Logan 's Myer s pitched
superbly With pinpoint
control. striking out seven
and gtvmg up only one free
pass. Metgs' Dale Browning
agam turned in a fine
performance in a losing
cause. He gave up only two
base on balls and KO'd etght.
Browning almost always has
good control, and at one tll'lle
thts year pitched two straight
games wtthout givin~ up a

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winning run In the 12th intilng

as the Cardinals rallied from

Towl er , wav ,

THURSDAY NIGHT

performan ce.

started when Lonborg walked
wtth one out Dave Ca sh
tr tpled, Larry Bows was safe
on a ftelder's choice, Schmidt
walked and L112inskt followed
wtth his double.
The New York Mets
defea ted Cmcinnati, 5-3,
P tttsburgh shaded Sa n
Fran ctsco , 6-5, St. Louts
edged Atlanta, 8-7, and Los
Angeles beat the Chicago
Cubs, 9-ji, m other NL games
Sa n Diego at Montreal was
postponed by cold weather.

19'1t.

Tigers alive after 8-3 win

THE INN PLACE

SPECIAL

enough.

John son satd he will send
Griffin through "intensive
workouts" even before
tra mtng camp opens in July.
"By Ute time camp starts,"
figured Johnson, "Arch will
be Indo ctrinated into the
Bengals system "
Glli(fm, one of the most
celeblated players m the
htstory of collegiate football,
holds three NCAA career
offensive records, Including
the rushing mark of 5,177
yards.
Grtffin, 21, who graduated
from Ohto State two montlts
ago, plans to get married
Jlex! month and figures to use
fth e ltrst part of hls new
salary "to take care of my
family."

Lozinski's hat leading Phils

titles before the streak was Green. G.-Hones, G, conley,
Wel t. Smolh , M - 10 3S 7
120 HIGH HURDLES dissolved by Coach Bob
Lawson 's Blue Devils.
McG uore , G. Wol coxen, 1.
Senior Brent Saunders Crawford
, J -, Stone,
Il l A, Koc h
A, Belz, G
establlsh~ d a new SEOAL
IIO · LOW HURDLES 1
d wlth a 40 pent
1
M c Gu 1r e, G. Cr awfor d J
srorngrecor
McK innlss. Well . Belz, G.
perFormance. •Teammate Ston e. A , Wil coxe n, 1- 21 1
Kejth McGuire, a junior,
UO·YARD RELAY - Won
b y L ogan
Second pl ace
pIaced second In individual lrono on. Thord
pl ace ,
scoring with 23 points.
Galllpo los Fo urlh pl ace ,
The Blue Devils captured Meog
s, Foflh plac e, Alhens,
Si x th pla ce , W a ve rl y this year's eight-team session ' I 37 7
with 1021.2 points. Defending w ~:;,~.-E ~:cvo~ w~,"ac~Y
champion Ironton was second Log an
Th or d
pl ace
wtth 100. Athens fmtshed Wav erly , Four lh pl ace ,
third With 83 ; Wellston ~~~~~~ s pi~~~~~ PJ~~e,;s~e lg~
fourth , 75¥.. ; Logan fifth , 30; 3 37 1
FIELD EII ENTS
MetgS SIXth, 28; Waverly
SHOT PUT - Fro lz , 1.
seventh, 26 and Jackson last Grey , Well . Hoero nom us. 1.
wtth 20 pomts.
Murphree , A. wood , G,
Stew ar t, M - 47'
:"Yeah, sure," was the answer.
Ironton trailed the Blu~
DISCUS Fro 1z. 1.
•Weaver says Robinson is_swinging the bat better now than he
Devtls
100¥..
to
92
going
into"
Hi
eron
o
mu
s,
t,
Berbero
ck, A,
ctrd at anyttme last year.
the
fmal
event,
the
pole
vault.
'.:
~~~~n
5r'
A 't lr, e,o1~!es .l N~.,;
~" It doesn't look like he's going to htt with any power, but
Had Ironton won a ftrst in' mee t record Old mor k 1l2'
efen if we have to go to DeCinces for some added power, I still
1
that
eventand'GAHS failed to ' 't' ~J'U~U,;o;. .!!l ~ saun
~ink Brooks can add something," points out the Orioles'
IIUIIIager . "Say DeCinces does hit and gets hurt. We don't have have place, the Tigers would ' ders. G. Sa lisbury . G. o Nell
have edged GAHS lor the- A, Folzpalrlck, ' · Gro ver, A,
Osbo rn e, We ll - 21'-B, 7 "
dybody who can do the job Brooks can do. I think in his heart
HIGH JUMP - F&gt;ll
It feels be can help the ball club, and in my heart I'm not so championship.
As
tt
turned
out,
Wellston's'
palrl
ck I Wol ll am s, 1.
spre he can't. I haven'tconvinced myself he's done yet. "
· Dorsey J , Em er son, L , t1 ed
•Earl Weaver is a sharp appratser of baseball ability He isn 't Pete Rupert captured the, for l~ o rd , McG uor e, G and
with a 12' effort McKonnoss , Well , loed for toflh
giiing around advising Brooks Robtnson to qwt, so why should pole vault
5" New mee l record
3.? d Ga111a. •s Bruce Scar berry :• -Old 6'r ecord
by Chase. A t hen s,
o!)lers ?
ptcked
up
a
fifth
place
for
•
1961,
6'
, ,, .. ,
:;ntey 'II be the first to miss htm when he's gone .
GAHS by gomg "u• thus
POLE 1/AULT - Ru perl
•
•
' We lL Hug hes , I. Ke l ler , A
''
assurmg GAHS of its second H orn sba c k , Wav ' Sc ar berr y '
league championship
G. Ooxon, Well - 12"
'
•.
FINAL STANDINGS
Two more new league TEAM
POINTS
records were established • Gall opolos
102'h
lronoon
100
Tuesday, both by Ironton Alh ens
83
players.
Wellslon
75 "•
Ken Fritz bettered his M
Logan
JO
e 1g s
28
1975 mark m the discus event wa verly
26
with a toss of 156'-11". Dean Jackso n
20
Fitzpatrick erased Steve
TOP s coRERS
Chase 's 1961 high jump mark PLAYER
POINTS
with an outstandmg 6'-5" ~ cS.:~~~;;';.~ ~ H S
~~

25$

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•······

TABLETS

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WIT~ COUPON
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The

BAKER .fURNITURE
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OPEN FRI. EVE. TIL 8:00

ANTI-PERSPIRANT ROI!.()N

:::::~

the starting hneup," Grtflm
said at a news conference
along with Brown and head
coach Bill Johnson. "II I'm
not a ~tarter , it won't be
because I didn 't try hard

100 Pameeo

----------------~r--- - COUPON- - - oz .
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DIAL

Sport ,Parade

"It was a short negotiating
session, but a hard one, " said
Brown, son of Bengals
general manager Pa ul
Brown.
"The money was less than
in Canada, but quite frankly,
I was surprised the Bengals
offered so much," said Mike
Trope of U&gt;s Angeles, one of
Griffin's agents .
6dded Grtff in's older
brotlter, James, hts other·
agent, " It was a ver y
eqwtable arrangement."
Brown said it was not a nocut contract, but Griffin
ftgures to have no problem
makmg the team. In fact ,
he's hoping to become a
starter his rookte year
" I'll be gtvmg 111)..120 per
cent as a pro to trv In rr• rk

.
CELTICSGETmREEFORFIVE
NEW YORK (UPI) - 1be Bolloa Celdcsacllleved 10 per
eent of the bonon wbeo center Dave Cowe111 and forwardl
John HavUeek tind Paul sn.. were named by league coache1
Tuesday to the National Ba!lketball Auoetatloo 's All·
Defensive team lor 197~'18.
Nona Van Uer of the Odcago Bulls aod Seattle'e SUck
Watts wert picked for the guard positions on the lint team.
The selection of the Celtic trio marked the lint lime a ieam
landed three met1 on the squad slaee New Vorl&lt;'• Wall
Frazier, WIIUs Reed aad Dave DeBuuchere wert picked lD

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Na rr on ttl
adv ertrs i . g
re p r e se n t a t iv e Wa r"tf
G'r l f f rf h Com p any In c
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Waterproof Inside and out
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DESENEX

Ctt y E d1 t or
P~b hs hed da ll y .e xce pt
Saturd ay by Th e Oh •o
Val le y P ubl ish ing c om
pa n y ,
111 Co ur t 51
Po me r o y , Oh lo H7 69 '
Bus ine ss Off ice Phone 992
2156 Ed 1tonal Phone 992

NAIL

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Duray'

Sentinel

Exec Ed .

MarII

I

' OJ .

The

4 oz.

I

Ute former Ohio State star. "I offer ranged from $210,000 for
never dreamed of playing in three years to $840,000 lor six
years - quite a chunk of
Canada."
Salary was not disclosed, money for a~ untested rookie
Jt!Ore.
but Griffin acknowledged, who was passed over by some
. Spurning a bigger salary "The contract I signed is · NFL teams because of his
from a Canadian pro lower than the Canadian relatively small size - S;footfltltball team, Amenca's only offer."
8, 189 pounds.
tJ!o-time Heisman Trophy
Griffin said the actual
Griffin was a Bengals' first
Winner stgned a multt-year round draft choice last Canadian offer was higher
clintract for less money with month, &amp;ut the Mon treal than some of the reports, but
~e Cincinn ati
Bengals Alouettes of the Canadian the Columbus, Ohio native
~esday night.
Football League trted to lure pointed out, " I wanted to play
• "My boyhood dream was ,the running back away wttlt m Ute NFL and m Cincinnati
~ways to play in the National big money.
because tt's close to home."
R'ootball League ," explained
Reports of the Canadian
Griffm declared he was
••
"satisfied " wtlh the contract
..~x=::~:::~~'&gt;!::l:"~~::·~:.;*'-:=::::•:•:•::.'&lt;&lt;-:'o'Uo(o'.'•X•'•'•:;m"'
~ .. .
.. . .. .•. . .. .
·=~:::::;.-..~ii=~~:;mw:::-=':::~:::-}:::::--:::=~:::::::::;::~:r:::;~:::::::::::;::~1 and Bengals' assistant
gen eral manager Mike
Brown , who tossed figures
·:::.-:-:
~:: around for five hours
.·~~... Tuesday with Griffm and his
::::=:::
........
two agents, termed it "fair "
'•'•'•i

ceer

QUANTITIES LIMITED
PRICES VALID MAY 5-9

Johnson's

signs with Bengals, ignores Canadians

'y RICK VANSANT
:·c iNCINNATI (UPI ) 1\tchie Griffin has signed lor
Ips, but figures to enjoy it

Day Savings

BODY

DEIIOT ED TO THE
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3- The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., w_-dnesday, May 5, 1976

..

We offer all mechanics work - tires - tuneups - brake jobs - oil change - major
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�t

4 -- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, May 5, 1976

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

Lockwood fanned r;;:;'SCOREBOARD""'i~~tl
:·
Re.d s' b1'g batS
Maior L ea gu e standings

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Cincinnati Reds weren't the
least bit happy, believe it or
Mt, wh en manager Joe
Frazier of the New York Mets
decided Tuesday night to
bring in a relief pitcher for
Tom Seaver.
"He wasn 't doing us any
fa vo rs, " Manager Sparky
Anderson of · the Reds
grumbled after the game.
''Lockwood throws harder
than Seaver. He can bring it
in."

Frazier summo ned Skip
Lockwood from the bullpen
after tli e Reds filled the bases .
with one out in the seventh
inning on a single by Pete
Rose and wa lks to Joe
Morgan and Dan Driessen.
I ~ckwood pitched his way out
of the jam by striking out
Johnny Bench and Mike Lum
and went the rest of the way
to preserve Seaver's fourth
straight win and give the
Mets their 5-3 triumph .
" The
feeling
was
euphoric ," said Lockwood,

still on Cloud Nine after the
game. "I had never faced
Bench before and I felt
tremendo us striking him

out. "

·

Asked how he felt being
called in to pitch to the heart
of the Cinci nn ati ball ing
order in a tough situation,

Bv UnHe d Press lnternot;onol
l:ut
W. L. . Pet. GB
x PhHa
12 6 667
New York
15 8 652
Pillsb vrg h
10 9 .526 Z1 J1
Ch;eogo
11 12 .478 3' ,

Lockwood added, "I said to
.
1m to be
myseIf , this IS not e
tricky ... they all know I'm
gonna throw nothing but ~o;t~~~51
~ : ~ ,;~: ~: ~
fastballs ... I went out there/"
w es l
and threw strikes."
.___;
w.. L Pet. GB
,. bl
If f
Los Angeles
13 9 591
I
arne myse
or a
Ci nci nnat i
11 9 55U
medioc're performance," said
Houston
12 17 .500
Seaver HI don't know what
San D iego .
10 11 .476 2'1 ~
·
San Franosco B 13 381
4 1
went Wrong except maybe I Allan Ia
B 13 .38 1 4',
tried to aim the ball from the
•· Gam es beh;nd ba sed on 1st·
pla ce t eam
third inning on and I couldn't
Tue sday 's Res ults
do it."
San D ie9o ~~ Mil , ppq ., co ld
Los An gel es 9 Ch ic ago 6
Se 8VCf ,S WI'ldness prov ed. Pillsburgh
t, San Francisco 5
COStly in the third inning Sl . Lo u; s B Alia 7, 12 ;nns
when Rose's infield hit Phila d elphia s Hou ston o
New York 5 Cincinnati J
produced a r un after two
To day 's Pro bable Pi fchers
walks. The Reds scored their
! All Ti mes Eon
'f
Los Angel es ( Sulton 1 3) at
f
second r u n in the 1 th on a Chicago ! Burr is 1 11 , 2 10 p.m .
t w o-o ut single by Morgan and
San J:rancisco ( Ha li cki 1 3) at
a third run off Lockwood in
Pittsbu r gh CK ison 1 7l, 1 H
D Il l.
the ninth on Lwn's single.
san Olcuo !SpHiner o 41 al
The Mets gave Seaver a 2-0 Montreal ! Rog ers 1 21 . B 05
lead without making a hit in P $~ . Louis ( Fa lc on£' o 21 at
the second inning and built a All an !a ! Rulhven 3 21. 7 3l
4-1 lead on Oave Kingman 's p . ~i~ cinna!i ! Nolan 2 1l at Ne w
two-run homer in the third . It Yor k (MJI Iack 3 0 1, B 05 p m.
waS the lOt h homer for ' the' Hou ston ! N ickro 1 4J at
Philad el ph ia !Carlton 1 1) , 7 :, 35
slugger the Mets ca ll "Kong" p .m .
T~ur s day' s Ga mes
because of hts prodigious
nci hnat I at New York
drives. Kingman was willing Ci
Los An g£'!1;!s at Chi cago
to throw this one back, San Diego at Mtl , nigh t
F ran at P i tt sburg h, night
however, beca use it just SSLanLouis
(II Atlanta . nigh t
cleared the 396-foot sign in
(Only games sc hed uled )
left center.
Am eri ca n L ea gue
Kingman has now knocked ·
Ea st
W .. L. . Pe t . GB
in 2J runs in the Mets' 2J
II 5 .688
New York
games. Fred Norma n Milwaukee
9 5 .643 I
suffered his first loss after De tro i t
8 7 .53J 21 I
9 9 .500 3
Cl evel and
three wins for the Reds .

7 11 .389 5
6 10 .375 5
Wes t
W. l . Pet . GB
Texas
12 6 .667
Kan sas Ci ty
a 7 .533 21 1
Oa kl and
11 10 52 4 21 .,
Minneso ta
7 9 &lt;~3 8 4
6 8 429 4
Chic ago
Ca l i forni~
7 14 333 6 1 1
Tues day ' s Ga m es
Kansa s City 7 Boston 5
Chicago 3 Balli mor e I
Te)(as 7 Milwaukee 4
Minn 5 De troi t 4, 10 inns
New York 2 Cali forn ia 1
Oa k.l an d 8 Cleve l and 4
Today 's Pr oba bl e Pit chers
(A ll Ti m es E DT J
Kan sas Ci ty (S pl'illorff 1 3l at
Boston (Jen kin s I J J, 7: 30pm .
Ch icago (Gossag e 1 1J at
Ball imor e I Patm er J3t , 7 : 30
pm .
Minnesota ( Bl yleven 1 1J at
Detroi t (R ober ts J 01, a pm .
Texas ( Umbarger 2. 1) at
MHwau kcE' (Tr aver s 2 0), 6 : 30
pm
New York (Hunter 2 3) at
Cali tornia ! Ryan 3 11, IO. JO pm .
Cte've lan d (Do bson 1·3) tt l
Baltimo r e
Boston

·Polly's Pointers
\

By Polly Cramer

Dining room
best for chandelier

Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY - I wo uld
like to know if it is proper to
hang a chandelier in the
Uving room, since we have no
tlining room. The one I. have
in rnind ls all crystal with no
trim. - MRS. E. L.W.
DEAR MRS. E. L.W. Chandeliers often look quite
lovely In Itvlng rooms If the
ceilings are high enough, but
in man y cases It may look as
if it were hung there just
because one had it. If you
have a dining Hr ca in the end

of your living room or eve n a
perm anent card table
grouping, a chandelier eo uld
be hung over the table for a
reason. The placement of one
in a living room could be
either very successful or a
dismal failure, so proceed
with caution. I Inferred from
your letter you arc going to
buy one. If so, tread carefully
and be very sure.~ POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pel
Peeve is that such a large
number
of
packaged
children's foods have artifi cial coloring. This worries
me. 1 wonder why · they can
not leave them with their
na tura l color in g. ( Poll y' s
note - I presume you are
referring to things like dry
cereals and powders to make
drinks.( - MARY W.
DEAR POLLY - Annie
wro le aboul he r wa ffl es
sti cking to her old nonelectric waffle iron. I have
one. After three unsuccessful
attempts to preve nt the
wa ffles slicking, I finally
foll owed
my
wi fe's
suggesti on . I bough t a can of
thai spray that is used on
pans to prevent sticking.
Since then we have had
perfec t waffl es. This waffle
ir on has now bec ome a

regul ar part of the equi pment
we carry in our camper and
we enjoy waffles in the
desert,-al the seashore, in the
molUl U! ins or wherever.

I

bought my iron for thirty-fi ve
ce nls at a lhrifl shop years
ago, but now see lh.J!m sold at
swap meets fur 'fifteen or
twe nty do llars as co nversation pieces. But, believe
me, they are a functional
practica l item fgr every
camper. - LE LAND.
DEAR POLLY - I used to
be bothered with th.a t
problem of buttons popping
off at the wrong lime. Now I
use fi shing string to sew them
on and ha ve no more worri es.
This is really strong unlike
the cheaper threads that
some manufacturers now use·
to sew bu ttons on. MARION.
DEAR POLLY - I thought
other young mothers might
be interested in an idea that
saves me a li tile time on
hectic mornings. Once a week
I measure out the necessary
amoun t of baby cereal and
put it into seven baby food
jars and store !hem away . In
the morning when baby is
hun gry and in a hurry to ea t,
. all I have to do is to lake out a
jar, pour it into a pan with the
correc t amounl of water . This
is very handy when going on a
trip, too. - J EAN F.

Oakland (Bl ue .1 ~), 11 pm .
Thursday' s Gam es
M innesot a at Detroit , n ig ht
New York at Cal if , night ,
(Only games scheduled )

Maior L~ague Leaders
By United Press Internati onal
Leadi ng Ba tters
(based on JS at bats)
National Leag ue
G. A B- R. - H. Pet.
M iln er , NY
13 43 I I 21 .488
Rose , Cip
20 sa 22 38 .412
Slargell . Pit
16 59 II 12 .373
Grot e. NY
18 62 7 23 .371
Monday . Chi 73 102 26 37 .363
18 80 17 29 .363
Gr if fey . Cin
Reill. SF
21 84 6 30 .357
Cr aw lrd , SLL 16 45 6 16 .356
Rader , SD
16 57 a 20 .35 1
Jh nstne . Phil 17 60 13 21 .350
American L eag ue

G. AB. R.. H. Pet .

American L eii!gUe : R.y6n ,
4S ; Tanana , Cal 40 ; Wood ,
18 ; 'lllyleven , Minn 24 ; Blue
Torr el , Oak and Perr y, Tex

On this day in history:

In 1925, biology te~cher
John Sco pes of Dayton ,
Tenn ., was arrested for
teaching Darwin 's theory of
evolution in violation of state
laws.

LB.

Chicago
Ball imore
Wood
(3
Holllman (2

o:w 000 OI Q---- J. B 0
000 00 I 000- 1 4 7
3) and
Essian ;
I I an d Duncan .

( 10 i nnings)

M;nn
0 10 110 000 2- 5 10 I
Detro i t
000 000 01 2 1 4 12 0
Goltz , Burgmeier (S) , Camp
bell (B), Albury (9), Luebber
( lO l and Wynega r ; Coleman ,
L ax ton (7 ), Hi ll er ( 10) and
Fr eehan , w o c k e n fu ss (8) ,
Kl mm (9.) WP - Aibury ( L l) .
LP-- La xton (0. 1). HR S- Min
neso ta , Fo rd (3 ), Wynegar (3 ).

Lynn , Bos
14 53 a 23 .434
Carty , Cle
I S 64 12 24 .375
Pat ek, KC
1d 40 5 I S .375
Chamb lss , NY 16 67 9 25 . 373
Horton ,' De!
15 57 13 21 . 368
Bell , Cte
18 69 14 25 .362
Rud i. Oak
19
13 2S .347
Sta ub , Det
15 54 6 18 .333
Ort a , Chi
14 5d 9 18 .33 3
000 214 OOo- 7 B 0
Randolph . NY 16 51 10 17 .333 T e~tas
Bond s, Cal
17 42 7 14 .333 Mi lwaukee
100 100 11 o- 4 12 2
Home Runs
'Bri les . Fouc au l t
(8)
and
Na t ion al L eag ue: . Sc hm idt. Sundberg : Co lborn . Murphy (6)
Phil 12 1 Ki n gman . N Y 10 ; and Port er . WP - Br iles (J 1l
Cedeno. Hou 6; Monday , Chi. LP - Colborn (2 ·2l. HRs- Texas ,
Ben ch, Cin and Mallhews, SF 5. Harrah (2 ). Milwaukee, Mon ey
Am erica n L ea'gu e: . Hortor'\ . (J J, Aaron ( 1), M oor e (21.
Oct 6; Bu r rough s an d ' Gri eve• •
000 002 000- 2 ~ 0
Tex 5; Hendrick, Clcv and New York
Rud i, Oak 4
Ca l i fo rn ia
100 000 000 ~ 1 50
Ru ns Batt ed In
El,li s. L yl e (9) and Mun son ;
Na t ional L eag ue: Kingman, Tana na I 1· 3) and Herrma nn,
NY and Sc hmid t. Phil 23 ; E tc hebarren . WP ,E II is. H Rs-,-.
Monday, Chi and Ced eno, Hou ~ ew York , White ( 2), Cham ·
20 : Ben c h. Cin 19.
bl is s D l.
tli m cri ca n Leag ue: 'Rudi , Oak
26 ; HOrt on , D el 20 ; Chambl iss , Cl eveland
00 1 001 007- 4 6 3
NY 17 ; Mellon , Ca l 15; Ca r ty , Oakland
002 031 02x - 8 13 2
Peter son . Kei'n (5) , Bibby 17)
Cl cv and 6urr oughs , Te" 14
and As hby ; Torr ez. L indbl ad
Stole n Bases
Na ti omi l L eag ue: . Cedeno, (9), Fing er s (9) and Han ey . WP
Tor rez (4 JJ. L P- Peterson
Hou 10; Griff ey 9; Morgan , Cin
8. Cabe ll , Hou and Buc kn er , L A (0 2) . H R- Ci eve land , Carty

n

IJ I.

6.
American
l eague: . North ,
Oak
11':
R iver s,
NY
9;
Randolph , NY B: Rcmy , Cal,
Pat ek, KC. Carew , M inn and
Washington , Oak. 7.
Pitchi ng
Mo st Vicf ori es
5. ~a~i:~.a~ AL~~~u~~a~~~~~..,.S~
0: Ri chard , Hou 4 1; 10 pi t ~ h e r s
ti ed wi th three. vict or i es .
Ameri ca n Le agu e: · . To rr ez ,
Oak 4 ) ; Robert s. Del , Fitzmor
r is. KC and Ellis. N Y 3 0:
Tian t. Bas. Ryan . Ca l. Slaton ,
Mil , Campbe l l,
Minn
and
Briles , Te)l 3 1; Per ry , Tex 32 ;
Pal mer , Ball and Wood . Chi 3
3
Ea rn ed Ru n Average
(b ased on 18 inn in gs pi tched)
Nat ional L eag ue : L av elle, SF
0.39 , Fo rsch , Hou 1.00 ; Zachry ,
Ci n, . l.79 ; ~hoden , LA 1.7 1;
L onborg , Ph 1l L BO .
America n L eague: Tra ve r s,
Mil OA J ; Ro berts. Det 1.00 ;
Holllman . Ba i t 1.05; Ryan , Ca l
1.41 : Kern . Clev 1.64
Stri keouts
Nati onal L eagu e: Seave r , NY
•11: Nlekro . A ll cmd Mpnt efu sco ,
SF ,33, L ol ich , N Y 25; Ri chard ,
Hou 24.

N H L- Pi ayo ff Standings
B y Un i t ed Press I nternat ional
Se m ifin als- Bes t of 7
Mtllea ds NY l slndrs l ·l
Apr 27 M il 3 NY l s(ndrs 2
Apr 29 M il 4 NY l slndr s 3
May 1 M! l 3 NY tstnd rs 2
May •t N Y l slndr s 5 M 11 1
May 6 at Mon tr eal
x M a y 9 a t N Y Isl ander s
x May 11 at Mon trea l
Ph il a l ead s Bo ston l-1
Apr 11 Bos ton " Ph i Ia 2
Apr 29 Phila 2 Boston 1, ot
May 1 Ph i la 5 Bo ston 2
May 4·Phila 4 Boston 2
May 6 at Ph i ladelph ia
x May 9 at Boston
K May 11 at Phi l ade l ph ia
x- i f necessary

0/llbumh.M

Heilrl pendan t.
ye l GP $10.00

SE OA L BASE BALL
T EAM
W L R OR

Jackson
9 2 102 45
Ir ont on
8 3 94 60
At hens
6 5 67 70 .
Lo gan
6 5 69 76
Wave rl y
5 6 51 63
Meigs
4 7 64 60
Ga l li po l is
3 8 il6 85
We ll ston
3 8 50 76
TOTAL S
44 44 544 S44
Tu es day 's res ul ts : .
Ironton 8 Gallipol is 3
Athens 12 Wa ve rl y 0
Jackson 11 Wel l ston 2
Logan 2 Me igs 1
Frida y's gam es :
waverly at Ironton
G all ipol is at L ogan
Jackson a t Me igs
A thens at Wells ton

Joint

You hear us talk,, lot about the natural gas shortage. But we're
doing much more than just talk ing about it.
Case in point: Cove Point, Maryland. Columbia Gas is building
a deep-water termi nal there to bring in liquefied natural gas- LNG
-from overseas. It's a 300 million doiiM project.
And that's just par t of the cost of getting vit1lly needed gas from
abroad. The liquefy ing pl,mt in Algeria will cost over half a billio11
dollars! Special tankers to carry the liquid gas cost 100 million dollars
r11d1. And there will be nine of them.
But we need ,,II the gas we can get - to wam1 our homes, cook
our meals, and fuel our industry. LNG won't be c ~eap, but it's less
expensive than alternate sources of energy.
By the end of 1977, natura l gas from overseas will be added to
Colu mbia's supply at a r,ite of 300 mi ll ion cubic feet a day. That's
what our customers need.
Not just talk.

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

69~

773-5554

SWEET CORN
ears

Hannum in the second. Kent
Hal ley, the winning pitcher,
fanned 14 and walked seven.
The win gave HT a 3-7 league
mark while Eastern Is 3-4.
Hannan Trace plays at Coal
Grove Friday in the Class A
Sectional Tournament.
Unescore :
Eastern 040 101 00-7 4 3
ffr '
322 000 01--8 10 3
Evans, Hannwn ( I) (L)
SE
100 60UI- 8 II I and Riffle.
KC
000 0002-2 9 2 Halley ( W) and Shaffer.
Barker (W) and Prater.
Taylor (L) Baird (4) and
Metzner.

KC ousted from 'A' play
The
Panthers
of
Southeastern of Ross County
erupted for si~ runs In the
fourth inning Tuesday night
enroute to an 8-2 Class .A
Sectional 'Tournament victory over Kyger Creek.
The win snapped an 11game winning streak for
Coach Jim Sprague's SVAC
Bobcats.
The visitors broke up a
pitc hers' duel between rightbanders Jwiior Barker of
Southeastern and Todd
Taylor of KO.
Southeastern took a 1-0 lead
in the first tin a walk, stolen

base, long fly ball and a
sacrifice fly . That stood un til
the big r~lly .
The Bobcats gol their only
run ~ in lhe final innings on
hi Is by Tim Lucas, Von
Taylor and Bill Metzner. V.
Taylor led KC with thre.e hils
in four trips. Todd Taylor and
Tim Lucas had two hits each.
Packing t~e Panthers were
Barker, Coy Prater, Doug
Estep and Craig Gray with
two hils each. The loss left KC
with a ll.J record.
·
By KEN ROSENBERG
Southeastern will play
UPI Sports Writer
Southwestern Friday night.
It seems the .Boston Red
Unescore:
Sox, defending American
League champions, have
been having their share of
bad luck and Tuesday night
was
no exception - they lost
Pupp~!~~®
their fifth straight game and
are mired in last place in the
East Division with a 6-10
record,
Kansas City became the
latest team to benefit from
Boston misfortunes when a
bloop hit kicked up some
chalk and a routine fly ball
took off in a jelstream.
The bloop hit was Buck
Hush Puppies T-slrap sand a I is
like a whisper to your fool . It's
Martinez' tW(K)Ut double off
ligMweighl, cushioned and has a
Red Sox' hurler Blll Lee that
soft crepe sole .
landed on the right field foul
line and drove home the first
two runs of a five-run second
inning. Two batters later,
Amos Otis lofted a fly ball to
left field that the wind carried
into the screen for a three·run
homer. ·
Lee, who lost for the third
straight time and rarely is at
a loss to explain anything,
was dumbfounded.
"I just can't put my finger
on what 's wrong," he' said.
"Martinez hit a checked
swing popup and knocks in
two runs and Otis' homer was
Tahiti
a fly ball. But even a blind
- Coral
squirrel finds an acorn
Smo.oth
sometime.''
In tbc fifth inning, however,
Otis hit a seCilnd homer,
without the aid of the wind, to
help AI Fi12morrls gain his
!bird victory.
Elsewhere in the AL, Texas
defeated Milwaukee, 7-4, New
York trirruned California, 2-1,
Oakland dumped Cleveland,
8-4,
Chicago
topped
Baltimore,
3-1,
and
Mimesota edged 'Detroit, 5-4,
Middle of Uppl)r Block
in 10 innings.

.

Red Sox drop 5th
straight contest

Hush

Toby Harrah's fir st two
homers of the season enabled
Western Division leading

MOTHER'S MY
I

GARDS

Valley Bell

COTTAGE
CHEESE

24 oz. crtn.

SOFT
MARGARINE

Betty Crocker
Devil Food·White-Yellow

box

2 lb. box
SHEDD'S .

Van Camp

CAKE MIX

'

49'

Buckeye

3::: 89~

~ f!!)'"~.J

POTATO CHIPS
8 oz.

KRAFT

32oz.~ 89~

The Fresh Idea

Comp~ny

• •,

STORE HOURS
8 AM•10 PM

p~. 59~

Annuals

• Hanging Baskets
For Moms
Out-of' Town
- Order EarlyKenneth McCullogh, R. -Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph .
Mon. thru sat. 8:00a .m. lo9 ' 00 p.m .
Sunday 10:30 to 12:30 and 5to 9 p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
Friendly Service
112 E·. MAIN
Open Nights til 9 POMEROY, 0 .

Call: 992-5560

N. Second 51,
Middleport, 0 .

'59

•'·

.

MOH.-SA1

10 A.M.-10 p.M. SUNDAY

298 SECOND st
POMEROY, OHIO

Prices Effective
Thru May 8, 1976

North
thinclads in
72lf2 -45lf2
•

WID
Coach Bruce Gabrie l's
Nor th Gallia track team
defea ted
Coach
Tom
Weaver's Kyger Creek
squad, 72\&gt;2 to 45\&gt;2 Tuesday
night at Cheshire.
North Gallia captured eight
first place evenls while the
Bobcats took six .
Here are the results :
Field Events
Shotput - Runyon , NG 37.2
ft .
Discus - Runyon , NG
129.11 ft.
Long Jump ~ Geiger, KC
18.10 ft.

Superiors
.

.

.

lb.

FRANKIES.u •••••••

HIGH JUMP - Eggleton,
NG, Casey, NG, 5 ft .
Running Events
100 Yd. Dash - Spencer,
NG :10.8.
220 Yd. Run - Spencer, NG
:23.8.,
. 440 Yd. Run - Spencer, NG
:57.1.
880 Yard Run - Lookado,
NG 2: 26.
Mile Run - LQokado, NG
5: 04.
Two Mile Run - Nibert, KC

11 :58.
120 Yd. High Hurdles ~
Geiger, KC :15.7.
120 Yd. Low Hurdles
Geiger, KC :23.
880 Yd. Relay - Won by
KC, Runners, Hill, Halley,
Russell and Geiger.
Mile Relay - Won by KC,
Runners, Richards, Mulford,
Tyler and Hill.

e 'Porch Boxes Filled
W~h

Open
9 til7
Mon.·Sat•.
~un. 10 to 5:1
Prices Effective .
lbursday thru Sunday

l'

Last Friday at Federal
Hocking, the track girls of
Southern High finished
second in a dual meet, 74-39.
Once again , sophomore
Cheryl Roseberry picked up
wins in the mile and 440· (an
arduous coml)ination) and a
second in the long jwnp. In
two years of competition,
Cheryl has not been beaten in
the mile.
Thursday Southern travels
to Middleport to tangle with
Meigs.
·
How Southern girls scored:
Shot put ~ 29'4" Carnahan,
first and War~, third.
'220 dash - Neigler 34.5,
second .
110 Dash - Shasteen 13.5,
third.
80 yard hurdles, Crouch
second .
High jump
· K.
Winebrenner 3'7", third .
· 880 run - Dill, third and
Shasteen, fourth .
Long jump - Russell
14'3\&gt;2" first and Roseberry,
second .
Discuss - Ward 71' 10 11.!"
first.
440 dash.- Roseberry first.
Mile run - Roseberry 6.42
fi rst.

• Terrariums

Returnable Rnttl"'"

1 lb. tub

STOCK SALE
CINCINNATI (UP! ) Warner National Corp. has
agreed to sell more than I
million shares of Cllmmon
stock of
Kinder-Care
·Learn ing Centers , Inc.
for $4 .5 million cash
to a group of investors
headed by Kinder-Care
President Perry Mendel ,
Warner National officials an.
nounced Tuesday.
The transaction represents
72 per cent of all Kinder-Care
stock. The "book value" of
!be stock in the deal was
nearly $2 million as of May
31, 1975, Warner National
officials r;aid.
Warner National is a finan·
cial services Cllmpany headquarter ed here and Its
principal sub;idiary is Home
State ~vings Association.
Kinder-Care owns and
operates 138 child day-&lt;!are
and education centers across
the CllUn try.

girls outrun
Southem's

Salad
'

TOMATOES •••••••'~·••

BARRY WARNS
WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen. Barry Goldwater has
accused fellow Republican
Ronald Reagan of taking an
irresponsible position that
could needlessly lead the
United States to war over the
Panama Canal.
Goldwater , in what he
termed "fatherly advice,"
urged the GOP presldl!l)tial
hopeful in a news Cllnference
Tuesday to "rethink" his
position on the canal.
"The United SUites is in no
position to threaten war,
which Mr. Reagan Is in effect
doing," Goldwater·said.

~-DU_PDN_j

[

CHARM IN

lracle Whl
32 Ol

69~/C

Limit 1 Coupon Per Customer
Good at Powell's Super Valu
' Coupon Expires Mav 8, 1976 ·

[

CAKE MIX

OZ.

TOILET tiSSUE

2/$100 .
W/C

Limit 1 Coupon Per Customer
Good at Powell's Super Valu
Coupon Expires May 8, 1976

59~ W/C

4ROI.L

PACK

.Lunn I Coupon Per Customer
ll :'lli~tld at Powell's Super Valu

Coupon Expires May 8, 1976

l

CDU":DN_

DUNCAN HINES

18%

j

COUPON

KRAFT

FLOWERS

Hi m.
cans

PEPSI
COLA

Texas to win its fifth straight
victory and raise Nelson
Briles' r ecord to 3-1.
Milwaukee's Hank Aaron hit
his first homer of the season
and 746th of his career in
addition banging out two
singles.
Yan)lees 2, Angels 1:
Roy White and Chri s
Chambliss drilled sidh inning homers to carry .New
York past California and into
first place in the AL East.
Dock Ellis, with ninth inning
relief from Sparky Lyle ,
picked up his third victory
without a loss. Frank Tanana
fell to 1-3.
A's 8, Indians 4:
Joe Rudi drove in three
runs with two ·doubles and a
single to · hike his major
leagueleading total to 26 and
give Mike Torrez his third
straight victory as Oakland
downed Cleveland.
White Sox 3, Orioles 1:
Wilbur Wood scattered four
hits and struck out seven to
gain his third victory as
Chicago took advantage nf
shoddy Baltimore fielding.
Throwing errors by loser Ken
Holtzman; 2-1, and catcher
Dave Duncan followed a walk
and an infield single to give
the White Sox two second
inning runs.
Twins 5, Tigers 4:
Rookie Butch Wynegar and
Dan Ford slammed back-tohack homers with one out in
the loth inning to power
Minnesota over Detroit after
the Tigers had tied the game
with two runs in the nil)th.

Fed .Hocking

OHIOANS VOTE
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Ohio delegation balloting in
the vote by which the House
Tuesday, on a 301·101 roll
call, overrode President
Ford's veto of a child day
care center bill :
Ohio, 8 Democra ts, 15
· Republicans .
....- - - - - - - - - . ,
Democr ats for : Ashley,
Carney, Hays, Mottl,
MAY 9th IS
Seiberling, Stokes, Vanlk.
Democrats not voting:
MOtHER'S DAY
James Stanton.
Republicans for : Guyer,
Remember your Mom
Mosher, Regula , J. William
with
Stanton, Whalen.
Republicans against : Ashbrook, Brown, Clancy ,
Devine, Gradison, Harsha ,
Latta, Miller , Wylie.
• Blooming Plants
Republicans not voting:
Kindness.

-------------C~LUMBIAGAS-~

VELVEETA
CHEESE

'119

hits in three trips.
Pacing Eastern was Bruce
Riffle with a grandslam home
'1110 in the second inning. He
was two for three .
.
Evans started for Eastern
and was relieved by Dave

MATERIALS CO.

KRAFT

WIENERS

inning with a double and
remained there until Shaf.
fer's clutch hit. Shaffer was
!be leading hitter for Coach
Tom Belville's Wildcats with
four hits in five at bats. Whitt
finished the night with 1'\vo

Pomeroy; 0.
Open All Day Thursc!ay.
Friday Night Til8.
Saturday 9 Til 5.

Its to the .point.

3" Solid.

A two-out single in lhe 8th
Inning by catcher David
Shaffer scored the winning
run Tuesday night giving the
Hannan Trace Wildcats, an 117 victory over Eastern .
Rick Whitt opened the

edge Eastern 8 to 7

~SiOES

Cove Point.

2.50

Wildca~s

~j~

A8A Pl ayo ff Standings
Un i t ed Pr ess Internati onal
( Fln a l!r- Besl of Seven)
New Y ork - Denver ti ed 1-1
May 1 N . Y . 120 Denver 118
May 4 Denver 127 N Y . 121
May 6·at New Yor k
May 8 at New Yor k
May 11 ·al Denve r
X·May IJ ·al New York
X·May 16·at Denve r
X· if nec essa ry

Solid &amp; Perforated

s - The Daily Sentinel, Middlliport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. May 5, 1976

for

B~

4" PLASTIC
10'

An son go ld elec lrop lale and ster ling s ilver
persona lized to your order with s imu lated
b irt hstones . Cus tom·set in mi nules and
'
beau! \full y gift box eel.

A piece of the energy puzzle.

You Get A LOWER PRICEI

sPECIAL
· SALE

Stor lmy ft11n1ly
N est brooch .
t ree pc nd&lt;~nt. $10.00 sterling silv er $16 .50

SEO standings

We Bot~ght A Truckloadl

French City

LARGE
CANTALOUPE

23.

Rio's Jim Bennett captured toss while the school took
Malone College captured
the An nual MOC track meet second place in the javelin second in the 440 yard relay ,
4
Tuesday afternoon. Malone
collected
120 points ;
Cedarville finished second
with 77; Rio Grande College
had 44 ; MI . Vernon, 14 and
J EWELR '(
Ohio Dominican, II.
Rio's Bernard Tilley
THREE OF THE BRIGHT NEW ADDITIONS
captured the mile run and the
TO AMERICA'S LIVELIEST
A
880 yard run . The Rio Grande
FAMILY
.
BY
GTTII4Cil'
Mile Relay team set a new
college record with a time of
3.28.6. Runners were Mike
Beverly, Terry Smith, Jay
Marli n and Bernie Tilley.
Brian Neal, although
taking third place . for the
Redmen, still set a school
record in the 120 yard high
hurdles with a time of 15.3
•
seconds. Tiliey was the only
parlicipant to capture all the
evenls he entered .

$l0

PICNIC HAMS

.5

ant~

American League
Ket n sas City 050 010 1()(}-- 7 II 2
Boston
000 22 1 000 ~ 5 10 1
F i 1 z mor r is, L ittell (6) ,
McClur e ( 6 ), Bi rd (7) and
Martin ez ;
L ee,
Pole
(6) ,
Wil loughby 18 l and Fi sk. WPFitzmor ri s (3 OJ. L P- Lee (0 -3) .
HR s K ansa s Ci ty , Otis (2).
Boston . Petrocelli (21 .

French City

20 count

Ca l
Chi

Malone is winner· of MOC meet

•

_j

C OUPON

TIDE
84 Ol

$189
W/C

Limit 1 Coupon Per t::us;ton~er~
Good at Powell's Super Valu ,
Coupon Expires May 8, 19'76

off"" ,

\''\

I.

•

-

�t

4 -- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, May 5, 1976

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

Lockwood fanned r;;:;'SCOREBOARD""'i~~tl
:·
Re.d s' b1'g batS
Maior L ea gu e standings

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Cincinnati Reds weren't the
least bit happy, believe it or
Mt, wh en manager Joe
Frazier of the New York Mets
decided Tuesday night to
bring in a relief pitcher for
Tom Seaver.
"He wasn 't doing us any
fa vo rs, " Manager Sparky
Anderson of · the Reds
grumbled after the game.
''Lockwood throws harder
than Seaver. He can bring it
in."

Frazier summo ned Skip
Lockwood from the bullpen
after tli e Reds filled the bases .
with one out in the seventh
inning on a single by Pete
Rose and wa lks to Joe
Morgan and Dan Driessen.
I ~ckwood pitched his way out
of the jam by striking out
Johnny Bench and Mike Lum
and went the rest of the way
to preserve Seaver's fourth
straight win and give the
Mets their 5-3 triumph .
" The
feeling
was
euphoric ," said Lockwood,

still on Cloud Nine after the
game. "I had never faced
Bench before and I felt
tremendo us striking him

out. "

·

Asked how he felt being
called in to pitch to the heart
of the Cinci nn ati ball ing
order in a tough situation,

Bv UnHe d Press lnternot;onol
l:ut
W. L. . Pet. GB
x PhHa
12 6 667
New York
15 8 652
Pillsb vrg h
10 9 .526 Z1 J1
Ch;eogo
11 12 .478 3' ,

Lockwood added, "I said to
.
1m to be
myseIf , this IS not e
tricky ... they all know I'm
gonna throw nothing but ~o;t~~~51
~ : ~ ,;~: ~: ~
fastballs ... I went out there/"
w es l
and threw strikes."
.___;
w.. L Pet. GB
,. bl
If f
Los Angeles
13 9 591
I
arne myse
or a
Ci nci nnat i
11 9 55U
medioc're performance," said
Houston
12 17 .500
Seaver HI don't know what
San D iego .
10 11 .476 2'1 ~
·
San Franosco B 13 381
4 1
went Wrong except maybe I Allan Ia
B 13 .38 1 4',
tried to aim the ball from the
•· Gam es beh;nd ba sed on 1st·
pla ce t eam
third inning on and I couldn't
Tue sday 's Res ults
do it."
San D ie9o ~~ Mil , ppq ., co ld
Los An gel es 9 Ch ic ago 6
Se 8VCf ,S WI'ldness prov ed. Pillsburgh
t, San Francisco 5
COStly in the third inning Sl . Lo u; s B Alia 7, 12 ;nns
when Rose's infield hit Phila d elphia s Hou ston o
New York 5 Cincinnati J
produced a r un after two
To day 's Pro bable Pi fchers
walks. The Reds scored their
! All Ti mes Eon
'f
Los Angel es ( Sulton 1 3) at
f
second r u n in the 1 th on a Chicago ! Burr is 1 11 , 2 10 p.m .
t w o-o ut single by Morgan and
San J:rancisco ( Ha li cki 1 3) at
a third run off Lockwood in
Pittsbu r gh CK ison 1 7l, 1 H
D Il l.
the ninth on Lwn's single.
san Olcuo !SpHiner o 41 al
The Mets gave Seaver a 2-0 Montreal ! Rog ers 1 21 . B 05
lead without making a hit in P $~ . Louis ( Fa lc on£' o 21 at
the second inning and built a All an !a ! Rulhven 3 21. 7 3l
4-1 lead on Oave Kingman 's p . ~i~ cinna!i ! Nolan 2 1l at Ne w
two-run homer in the third . It Yor k (MJI Iack 3 0 1, B 05 p m.
waS the lOt h homer for ' the' Hou ston ! N ickro 1 4J at
Philad el ph ia !Carlton 1 1) , 7 :, 35
slugger the Mets ca ll "Kong" p .m .
T~ur s day' s Ga mes
because of hts prodigious
nci hnat I at New York
drives. Kingman was willing Ci
Los An g£'!1;!s at Chi cago
to throw this one back, San Diego at Mtl , nigh t
F ran at P i tt sburg h, night
however, beca use it just SSLanLouis
(II Atlanta . nigh t
cleared the 396-foot sign in
(Only games sc hed uled )
left center.
Am eri ca n L ea gue
Kingman has now knocked ·
Ea st
W .. L. . Pe t . GB
in 2J runs in the Mets' 2J
II 5 .688
New York
games. Fred Norma n Milwaukee
9 5 .643 I
suffered his first loss after De tro i t
8 7 .53J 21 I
9 9 .500 3
Cl evel and
three wins for the Reds .

7 11 .389 5
6 10 .375 5
Wes t
W. l . Pet . GB
Texas
12 6 .667
Kan sas Ci ty
a 7 .533 21 1
Oa kl and
11 10 52 4 21 .,
Minneso ta
7 9 &lt;~3 8 4
6 8 429 4
Chic ago
Ca l i forni~
7 14 333 6 1 1
Tues day ' s Ga m es
Kansa s City 7 Boston 5
Chicago 3 Balli mor e I
Te)(as 7 Milwaukee 4
Minn 5 De troi t 4, 10 inns
New York 2 Cali forn ia 1
Oa k.l an d 8 Cleve l and 4
Today 's Pr oba bl e Pit chers
(A ll Ti m es E DT J
Kan sas Ci ty (S pl'illorff 1 3l at
Boston (Jen kin s I J J, 7: 30pm .
Ch icago (Gossag e 1 1J at
Ball imor e I Patm er J3t , 7 : 30
pm .
Minnesota ( Bl yleven 1 1J at
Detroi t (R ober ts J 01, a pm .
Texas ( Umbarger 2. 1) at
MHwau kcE' (Tr aver s 2 0), 6 : 30
pm
New York (Hunter 2 3) at
Cali tornia ! Ryan 3 11, IO. JO pm .
Cte've lan d (Do bson 1·3) tt l
Baltimo r e
Boston

·Polly's Pointers
\

By Polly Cramer

Dining room
best for chandelier

Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY - I wo uld
like to know if it is proper to
hang a chandelier in the
Uving room, since we have no
tlining room. The one I. have
in rnind ls all crystal with no
trim. - MRS. E. L.W.
DEAR MRS. E. L.W. Chandeliers often look quite
lovely In Itvlng rooms If the
ceilings are high enough, but
in man y cases It may look as
if it were hung there just
because one had it. If you
have a dining Hr ca in the end

of your living room or eve n a
perm anent card table
grouping, a chandelier eo uld
be hung over the table for a
reason. The placement of one
in a living room could be
either very successful or a
dismal failure, so proceed
with caution. I Inferred from
your letter you arc going to
buy one. If so, tread carefully
and be very sure.~ POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pel
Peeve is that such a large
number
of
packaged
children's foods have artifi cial coloring. This worries
me. 1 wonder why · they can
not leave them with their
na tura l color in g. ( Poll y' s
note - I presume you are
referring to things like dry
cereals and powders to make
drinks.( - MARY W.
DEAR POLLY - Annie
wro le aboul he r wa ffl es
sti cking to her old nonelectric waffle iron. I have
one. After three unsuccessful
attempts to preve nt the
wa ffles slicking, I finally
foll owed
my
wi fe's
suggesti on . I bough t a can of
thai spray that is used on
pans to prevent sticking.
Since then we have had
perfec t waffl es. This waffle
ir on has now bec ome a

regul ar part of the equi pment
we carry in our camper and
we enjoy waffles in the
desert,-al the seashore, in the
molUl U! ins or wherever.

I

bought my iron for thirty-fi ve
ce nls at a lhrifl shop years
ago, but now see lh.J!m sold at
swap meets fur 'fifteen or
twe nty do llars as co nversation pieces. But, believe
me, they are a functional
practica l item fgr every
camper. - LE LAND.
DEAR POLLY - I used to
be bothered with th.a t
problem of buttons popping
off at the wrong lime. Now I
use fi shing string to sew them
on and ha ve no more worri es.
This is really strong unlike
the cheaper threads that
some manufacturers now use·
to sew bu ttons on. MARION.
DEAR POLLY - I thought
other young mothers might
be interested in an idea that
saves me a li tile time on
hectic mornings. Once a week
I measure out the necessary
amoun t of baby cereal and
put it into seven baby food
jars and store !hem away . In
the morning when baby is
hun gry and in a hurry to ea t,
. all I have to do is to lake out a
jar, pour it into a pan with the
correc t amounl of water . This
is very handy when going on a
trip, too. - J EAN F.

Oakland (Bl ue .1 ~), 11 pm .
Thursday' s Gam es
M innesot a at Detroit , n ig ht
New York at Cal if , night ,
(Only games scheduled )

Maior L~ague Leaders
By United Press Internati onal
Leadi ng Ba tters
(based on JS at bats)
National Leag ue
G. A B- R. - H. Pet.
M iln er , NY
13 43 I I 21 .488
Rose , Cip
20 sa 22 38 .412
Slargell . Pit
16 59 II 12 .373
Grot e. NY
18 62 7 23 .371
Monday . Chi 73 102 26 37 .363
18 80 17 29 .363
Gr if fey . Cin
Reill. SF
21 84 6 30 .357
Cr aw lrd , SLL 16 45 6 16 .356
Rader , SD
16 57 a 20 .35 1
Jh nstne . Phil 17 60 13 21 .350
American L eag ue

G. AB. R.. H. Pet .

American L eii!gUe : R.y6n ,
4S ; Tanana , Cal 40 ; Wood ,
18 ; 'lllyleven , Minn 24 ; Blue
Torr el , Oak and Perr y, Tex

On this day in history:

In 1925, biology te~cher
John Sco pes of Dayton ,
Tenn ., was arrested for
teaching Darwin 's theory of
evolution in violation of state
laws.

LB.

Chicago
Ball imore
Wood
(3
Holllman (2

o:w 000 OI Q---- J. B 0
000 00 I 000- 1 4 7
3) and
Essian ;
I I an d Duncan .

( 10 i nnings)

M;nn
0 10 110 000 2- 5 10 I
Detro i t
000 000 01 2 1 4 12 0
Goltz , Burgmeier (S) , Camp
bell (B), Albury (9), Luebber
( lO l and Wynega r ; Coleman ,
L ax ton (7 ), Hi ll er ( 10) and
Fr eehan , w o c k e n fu ss (8) ,
Kl mm (9.) WP - Aibury ( L l) .
LP-- La xton (0. 1). HR S- Min
neso ta , Fo rd (3 ), Wynegar (3 ).

Lynn , Bos
14 53 a 23 .434
Carty , Cle
I S 64 12 24 .375
Pat ek, KC
1d 40 5 I S .375
Chamb lss , NY 16 67 9 25 . 373
Horton ,' De!
15 57 13 21 . 368
Bell , Cte
18 69 14 25 .362
Rud i. Oak
19
13 2S .347
Sta ub , Det
15 54 6 18 .333
Ort a , Chi
14 5d 9 18 .33 3
000 214 OOo- 7 B 0
Randolph . NY 16 51 10 17 .333 T e~tas
Bond s, Cal
17 42 7 14 .333 Mi lwaukee
100 100 11 o- 4 12 2
Home Runs
'Bri les . Fouc au l t
(8)
and
Na t ion al L eag ue: . Sc hm idt. Sundberg : Co lborn . Murphy (6)
Phil 12 1 Ki n gman . N Y 10 ; and Port er . WP - Br iles (J 1l
Cedeno. Hou 6; Monday , Chi. LP - Colborn (2 ·2l. HRs- Texas ,
Ben ch, Cin and Mallhews, SF 5. Harrah (2 ). Milwaukee, Mon ey
Am erica n L ea'gu e: . Hortor'\ . (J J, Aaron ( 1), M oor e (21.
Oct 6; Bu r rough s an d ' Gri eve• •
000 002 000- 2 ~ 0
Tex 5; Hendrick, Clcv and New York
Rud i, Oak 4
Ca l i fo rn ia
100 000 000 ~ 1 50
Ru ns Batt ed In
El,li s. L yl e (9) and Mun son ;
Na t ional L eag ue: Kingman, Tana na I 1· 3) and Herrma nn,
NY and Sc hmid t. Phil 23 ; E tc hebarren . WP ,E II is. H Rs-,-.
Monday, Chi and Ced eno, Hou ~ ew York , White ( 2), Cham ·
20 : Ben c h. Cin 19.
bl is s D l.
tli m cri ca n Leag ue: 'Rudi , Oak
26 ; HOrt on , D el 20 ; Chambl iss , Cl eveland
00 1 001 007- 4 6 3
NY 17 ; Mellon , Ca l 15; Ca r ty , Oakland
002 031 02x - 8 13 2
Peter son . Kei'n (5) , Bibby 17)
Cl cv and 6urr oughs , Te" 14
and As hby ; Torr ez. L indbl ad
Stole n Bases
Na ti omi l L eag ue: . Cedeno, (9), Fing er s (9) and Han ey . WP
Tor rez (4 JJ. L P- Peterson
Hou 10; Griff ey 9; Morgan , Cin
8. Cabe ll , Hou and Buc kn er , L A (0 2) . H R- Ci eve land , Carty

n

IJ I.

6.
American
l eague: . North ,
Oak
11':
R iver s,
NY
9;
Randolph , NY B: Rcmy , Cal,
Pat ek, KC. Carew , M inn and
Washington , Oak. 7.
Pitchi ng
Mo st Vicf ori es
5. ~a~i:~.a~ AL~~~u~~a~~~~~..,.S~
0: Ri chard , Hou 4 1; 10 pi t ~ h e r s
ti ed wi th three. vict or i es .
Ameri ca n Le agu e: · . To rr ez ,
Oak 4 ) ; Robert s. Del , Fitzmor
r is. KC and Ellis. N Y 3 0:
Tian t. Bas. Ryan . Ca l. Slaton ,
Mil , Campbe l l,
Minn
and
Briles , Te)l 3 1; Per ry , Tex 32 ;
Pal mer , Ball and Wood . Chi 3
3
Ea rn ed Ru n Average
(b ased on 18 inn in gs pi tched)
Nat ional L eag ue : L av elle, SF
0.39 , Fo rsch , Hou 1.00 ; Zachry ,
Ci n, . l.79 ; ~hoden , LA 1.7 1;
L onborg , Ph 1l L BO .
America n L eague: Tra ve r s,
Mil OA J ; Ro berts. Det 1.00 ;
Holllman . Ba i t 1.05; Ryan , Ca l
1.41 : Kern . Clev 1.64
Stri keouts
Nati onal L eagu e: Seave r , NY
•11: Nlekro . A ll cmd Mpnt efu sco ,
SF ,33, L ol ich , N Y 25; Ri chard ,
Hou 24.

N H L- Pi ayo ff Standings
B y Un i t ed Press I nternat ional
Se m ifin als- Bes t of 7
Mtllea ds NY l slndrs l ·l
Apr 27 M il 3 NY l s(ndrs 2
Apr 29 M il 4 NY l slndr s 3
May 1 M! l 3 NY tstnd rs 2
May •t N Y l slndr s 5 M 11 1
May 6 at Mon tr eal
x M a y 9 a t N Y Isl ander s
x May 11 at Mon trea l
Ph il a l ead s Bo ston l-1
Apr 11 Bos ton " Ph i Ia 2
Apr 29 Phila 2 Boston 1, ot
May 1 Ph i la 5 Bo ston 2
May 4·Phila 4 Boston 2
May 6 at Ph i ladelph ia
x May 9 at Boston
K May 11 at Phi l ade l ph ia
x- i f necessary

0/llbumh.M

Heilrl pendan t.
ye l GP $10.00

SE OA L BASE BALL
T EAM
W L R OR

Jackson
9 2 102 45
Ir ont on
8 3 94 60
At hens
6 5 67 70 .
Lo gan
6 5 69 76
Wave rl y
5 6 51 63
Meigs
4 7 64 60
Ga l li po l is
3 8 il6 85
We ll ston
3 8 50 76
TOTAL S
44 44 544 S44
Tu es day 's res ul ts : .
Ironton 8 Gallipol is 3
Athens 12 Wa ve rl y 0
Jackson 11 Wel l ston 2
Logan 2 Me igs 1
Frida y's gam es :
waverly at Ironton
G all ipol is at L ogan
Jackson a t Me igs
A thens at Wells ton

Joint

You hear us talk,, lot about the natural gas shortage. But we're
doing much more than just talk ing about it.
Case in point: Cove Point, Maryland. Columbia Gas is building
a deep-water termi nal there to bring in liquefied natural gas- LNG
-from overseas. It's a 300 million doiiM project.
And that's just par t of the cost of getting vit1lly needed gas from
abroad. The liquefy ing pl,mt in Algeria will cost over half a billio11
dollars! Special tankers to carry the liquid gas cost 100 million dollars
r11d1. And there will be nine of them.
But we need ,,II the gas we can get - to wam1 our homes, cook
our meals, and fuel our industry. LNG won't be c ~eap, but it's less
expensive than alternate sources of energy.
By the end of 1977, natura l gas from overseas will be added to
Colu mbia's supply at a r,ite of 300 mi ll ion cubic feet a day. That's
what our customers need.
Not just talk.

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

69~

773-5554

SWEET CORN
ears

Hannum in the second. Kent
Hal ley, the winning pitcher,
fanned 14 and walked seven.
The win gave HT a 3-7 league
mark while Eastern Is 3-4.
Hannan Trace plays at Coal
Grove Friday in the Class A
Sectional Tournament.
Unescore :
Eastern 040 101 00-7 4 3
ffr '
322 000 01--8 10 3
Evans, Hannwn ( I) (L)
SE
100 60UI- 8 II I and Riffle.
KC
000 0002-2 9 2 Halley ( W) and Shaffer.
Barker (W) and Prater.
Taylor (L) Baird (4) and
Metzner.

KC ousted from 'A' play
The
Panthers
of
Southeastern of Ross County
erupted for si~ runs In the
fourth inning Tuesday night
enroute to an 8-2 Class .A
Sectional 'Tournament victory over Kyger Creek.
The win snapped an 11game winning streak for
Coach Jim Sprague's SVAC
Bobcats.
The visitors broke up a
pitc hers' duel between rightbanders Jwiior Barker of
Southeastern and Todd
Taylor of KO.
Southeastern took a 1-0 lead
in the first tin a walk, stolen

base, long fly ball and a
sacrifice fly . That stood un til
the big r~lly .
The Bobcats gol their only
run ~ in lhe final innings on
hi Is by Tim Lucas, Von
Taylor and Bill Metzner. V.
Taylor led KC with thre.e hils
in four trips. Todd Taylor and
Tim Lucas had two hits each.
Packing t~e Panthers were
Barker, Coy Prater, Doug
Estep and Craig Gray with
two hils each. The loss left KC
with a ll.J record.
·
By KEN ROSENBERG
Southeastern will play
UPI Sports Writer
Southwestern Friday night.
It seems the .Boston Red
Unescore:
Sox, defending American
League champions, have
been having their share of
bad luck and Tuesday night
was
no exception - they lost
Pupp~!~~®
their fifth straight game and
are mired in last place in the
East Division with a 6-10
record,
Kansas City became the
latest team to benefit from
Boston misfortunes when a
bloop hit kicked up some
chalk and a routine fly ball
took off in a jelstream.
The bloop hit was Buck
Hush Puppies T-slrap sand a I is
like a whisper to your fool . It's
Martinez' tW(K)Ut double off
ligMweighl, cushioned and has a
Red Sox' hurler Blll Lee that
soft crepe sole .
landed on the right field foul
line and drove home the first
two runs of a five-run second
inning. Two batters later,
Amos Otis lofted a fly ball to
left field that the wind carried
into the screen for a three·run
homer. ·
Lee, who lost for the third
straight time and rarely is at
a loss to explain anything,
was dumbfounded.
"I just can't put my finger
on what 's wrong," he' said.
"Martinez hit a checked
swing popup and knocks in
two runs and Otis' homer was
Tahiti
a fly ball. But even a blind
- Coral
squirrel finds an acorn
Smo.oth
sometime.''
In tbc fifth inning, however,
Otis hit a seCilnd homer,
without the aid of the wind, to
help AI Fi12morrls gain his
!bird victory.
Elsewhere in the AL, Texas
defeated Milwaukee, 7-4, New
York trirruned California, 2-1,
Oakland dumped Cleveland,
8-4,
Chicago
topped
Baltimore,
3-1,
and
Mimesota edged 'Detroit, 5-4,
Middle of Uppl)r Block
in 10 innings.

.

Red Sox drop 5th
straight contest

Hush

Toby Harrah's fir st two
homers of the season enabled
Western Division leading

MOTHER'S MY
I

GARDS

Valley Bell

COTTAGE
CHEESE

24 oz. crtn.

SOFT
MARGARINE

Betty Crocker
Devil Food·White-Yellow

box

2 lb. box
SHEDD'S .

Van Camp

CAKE MIX

'

49'

Buckeye

3::: 89~

~ f!!)'"~.J

POTATO CHIPS
8 oz.

KRAFT

32oz.~ 89~

The Fresh Idea

Comp~ny

• •,

STORE HOURS
8 AM•10 PM

p~. 59~

Annuals

• Hanging Baskets
For Moms
Out-of' Town
- Order EarlyKenneth McCullogh, R. -Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph .
Mon. thru sat. 8:00a .m. lo9 ' 00 p.m .
Sunday 10:30 to 12:30 and 5to 9 p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
Friendly Service
112 E·. MAIN
Open Nights til 9 POMEROY, 0 .

Call: 992-5560

N. Second 51,
Middleport, 0 .

'59

•'·

.

MOH.-SA1

10 A.M.-10 p.M. SUNDAY

298 SECOND st
POMEROY, OHIO

Prices Effective
Thru May 8, 1976

North
thinclads in
72lf2 -45lf2
•

WID
Coach Bruce Gabrie l's
Nor th Gallia track team
defea ted
Coach
Tom
Weaver's Kyger Creek
squad, 72\&gt;2 to 45\&gt;2 Tuesday
night at Cheshire.
North Gallia captured eight
first place evenls while the
Bobcats took six .
Here are the results :
Field Events
Shotput - Runyon , NG 37.2
ft .
Discus - Runyon , NG
129.11 ft.
Long Jump ~ Geiger, KC
18.10 ft.

Superiors
.

.

.

lb.

FRANKIES.u •••••••

HIGH JUMP - Eggleton,
NG, Casey, NG, 5 ft .
Running Events
100 Yd. Dash - Spencer,
NG :10.8.
220 Yd. Run - Spencer, NG
:23.8.,
. 440 Yd. Run - Spencer, NG
:57.1.
880 Yard Run - Lookado,
NG 2: 26.
Mile Run - LQokado, NG
5: 04.
Two Mile Run - Nibert, KC

11 :58.
120 Yd. High Hurdles ~
Geiger, KC :15.7.
120 Yd. Low Hurdles
Geiger, KC :23.
880 Yd. Relay - Won by
KC, Runners, Hill, Halley,
Russell and Geiger.
Mile Relay - Won by KC,
Runners, Richards, Mulford,
Tyler and Hill.

e 'Porch Boxes Filled
W~h

Open
9 til7
Mon.·Sat•.
~un. 10 to 5:1
Prices Effective .
lbursday thru Sunday

l'

Last Friday at Federal
Hocking, the track girls of
Southern High finished
second in a dual meet, 74-39.
Once again , sophomore
Cheryl Roseberry picked up
wins in the mile and 440· (an
arduous coml)ination) and a
second in the long jwnp. In
two years of competition,
Cheryl has not been beaten in
the mile.
Thursday Southern travels
to Middleport to tangle with
Meigs.
·
How Southern girls scored:
Shot put ~ 29'4" Carnahan,
first and War~, third.
'220 dash - Neigler 34.5,
second .
110 Dash - Shasteen 13.5,
third.
80 yard hurdles, Crouch
second .
High jump
· K.
Winebrenner 3'7", third .
· 880 run - Dill, third and
Shasteen, fourth .
Long jump - Russell
14'3\&gt;2" first and Roseberry,
second .
Discuss - Ward 71' 10 11.!"
first.
440 dash.- Roseberry first.
Mile run - Roseberry 6.42
fi rst.

• Terrariums

Returnable Rnttl"'"

1 lb. tub

STOCK SALE
CINCINNATI (UP! ) Warner National Corp. has
agreed to sell more than I
million shares of Cllmmon
stock of
Kinder-Care
·Learn ing Centers , Inc.
for $4 .5 million cash
to a group of investors
headed by Kinder-Care
President Perry Mendel ,
Warner National officials an.
nounced Tuesday.
The transaction represents
72 per cent of all Kinder-Care
stock. The "book value" of
!be stock in the deal was
nearly $2 million as of May
31, 1975, Warner National
officials r;aid.
Warner National is a finan·
cial services Cllmpany headquarter ed here and Its
principal sub;idiary is Home
State ~vings Association.
Kinder-Care owns and
operates 138 child day-&lt;!are
and education centers across
the CllUn try.

girls outrun
Southem's

Salad
'

TOMATOES •••••••'~·••

BARRY WARNS
WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen. Barry Goldwater has
accused fellow Republican
Ronald Reagan of taking an
irresponsible position that
could needlessly lead the
United States to war over the
Panama Canal.
Goldwater , in what he
termed "fatherly advice,"
urged the GOP presldl!l)tial
hopeful in a news Cllnference
Tuesday to "rethink" his
position on the canal.
"The United SUites is in no
position to threaten war,
which Mr. Reagan Is in effect
doing," Goldwater·said.

~-DU_PDN_j

[

CHARM IN

lracle Whl
32 Ol

69~/C

Limit 1 Coupon Per Customer
Good at Powell's Super Valu
' Coupon Expires Mav 8, 1976 ·

[

CAKE MIX

OZ.

TOILET tiSSUE

2/$100 .
W/C

Limit 1 Coupon Per Customer
Good at Powell's Super Valu
Coupon Expires May 8, 1976

59~ W/C

4ROI.L

PACK

.Lunn I Coupon Per Customer
ll :'lli~tld at Powell's Super Valu

Coupon Expires May 8, 1976

l

CDU":DN_

DUNCAN HINES

18%

j

COUPON

KRAFT

FLOWERS

Hi m.
cans

PEPSI
COLA

Texas to win its fifth straight
victory and raise Nelson
Briles' r ecord to 3-1.
Milwaukee's Hank Aaron hit
his first homer of the season
and 746th of his career in
addition banging out two
singles.
Yan)lees 2, Angels 1:
Roy White and Chri s
Chambliss drilled sidh inning homers to carry .New
York past California and into
first place in the AL East.
Dock Ellis, with ninth inning
relief from Sparky Lyle ,
picked up his third victory
without a loss. Frank Tanana
fell to 1-3.
A's 8, Indians 4:
Joe Rudi drove in three
runs with two ·doubles and a
single to · hike his major
leagueleading total to 26 and
give Mike Torrez his third
straight victory as Oakland
downed Cleveland.
White Sox 3, Orioles 1:
Wilbur Wood scattered four
hits and struck out seven to
gain his third victory as
Chicago took advantage nf
shoddy Baltimore fielding.
Throwing errors by loser Ken
Holtzman; 2-1, and catcher
Dave Duncan followed a walk
and an infield single to give
the White Sox two second
inning runs.
Twins 5, Tigers 4:
Rookie Butch Wynegar and
Dan Ford slammed back-tohack homers with one out in
the loth inning to power
Minnesota over Detroit after
the Tigers had tied the game
with two runs in the nil)th.

Fed .Hocking

OHIOANS VOTE
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Ohio delegation balloting in
the vote by which the House
Tuesday, on a 301·101 roll
call, overrode President
Ford's veto of a child day
care center bill :
Ohio, 8 Democra ts, 15
· Republicans .
....- - - - - - - - - . ,
Democr ats for : Ashley,
Carney, Hays, Mottl,
MAY 9th IS
Seiberling, Stokes, Vanlk.
Democrats not voting:
MOtHER'S DAY
James Stanton.
Republicans for : Guyer,
Remember your Mom
Mosher, Regula , J. William
with
Stanton, Whalen.
Republicans against : Ashbrook, Brown, Clancy ,
Devine, Gradison, Harsha ,
Latta, Miller , Wylie.
• Blooming Plants
Republicans not voting:
Kindness.

-------------C~LUMBIAGAS-~

VELVEETA
CHEESE

'119

hits in three trips.
Pacing Eastern was Bruce
Riffle with a grandslam home
'1110 in the second inning. He
was two for three .
.
Evans started for Eastern
and was relieved by Dave

MATERIALS CO.

KRAFT

WIENERS

inning with a double and
remained there until Shaf.
fer's clutch hit. Shaffer was
!be leading hitter for Coach
Tom Belville's Wildcats with
four hits in five at bats. Whitt
finished the night with 1'\vo

Pomeroy; 0.
Open All Day Thursc!ay.
Friday Night Til8.
Saturday 9 Til 5.

Its to the .point.

3" Solid.

A two-out single in lhe 8th
Inning by catcher David
Shaffer scored the winning
run Tuesday night giving the
Hannan Trace Wildcats, an 117 victory over Eastern .
Rick Whitt opened the

edge Eastern 8 to 7

~SiOES

Cove Point.

2.50

Wildca~s

~j~

A8A Pl ayo ff Standings
Un i t ed Pr ess Internati onal
( Fln a l!r- Besl of Seven)
New Y ork - Denver ti ed 1-1
May 1 N . Y . 120 Denver 118
May 4 Denver 127 N Y . 121
May 6·at New Yor k
May 8 at New Yor k
May 11 ·al Denve r
X·May IJ ·al New York
X·May 16·at Denve r
X· if nec essa ry

Solid &amp; Perforated

s - The Daily Sentinel, Middlliport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. May 5, 1976

for

B~

4" PLASTIC
10'

An son go ld elec lrop lale and ster ling s ilver
persona lized to your order with s imu lated
b irt hstones . Cus tom·set in mi nules and
'
beau! \full y gift box eel.

A piece of the energy puzzle.

You Get A LOWER PRICEI

sPECIAL
· SALE

Stor lmy ft11n1ly
N est brooch .
t ree pc nd&lt;~nt. $10.00 sterling silv er $16 .50

SEO standings

We Bot~ght A Truckloadl

French City

LARGE
CANTALOUPE

23.

Rio's Jim Bennett captured toss while the school took
Malone College captured
the An nual MOC track meet second place in the javelin second in the 440 yard relay ,
4
Tuesday afternoon. Malone
collected
120 points ;
Cedarville finished second
with 77; Rio Grande College
had 44 ; MI . Vernon, 14 and
J EWELR '(
Ohio Dominican, II.
Rio's Bernard Tilley
THREE OF THE BRIGHT NEW ADDITIONS
captured the mile run and the
TO AMERICA'S LIVELIEST
A
880 yard run . The Rio Grande
FAMILY
.
BY
GTTII4Cil'
Mile Relay team set a new
college record with a time of
3.28.6. Runners were Mike
Beverly, Terry Smith, Jay
Marli n and Bernie Tilley.
Brian Neal, although
taking third place . for the
Redmen, still set a school
record in the 120 yard high
hurdles with a time of 15.3
•
seconds. Tiliey was the only
parlicipant to capture all the
evenls he entered .

$l0

PICNIC HAMS

.5

ant~

American League
Ket n sas City 050 010 1()(}-- 7 II 2
Boston
000 22 1 000 ~ 5 10 1
F i 1 z mor r is, L ittell (6) ,
McClur e ( 6 ), Bi rd (7) and
Martin ez ;
L ee,
Pole
(6) ,
Wil loughby 18 l and Fi sk. WPFitzmor ri s (3 OJ. L P- Lee (0 -3) .
HR s K ansa s Ci ty , Otis (2).
Boston . Petrocelli (21 .

French City

20 count

Ca l
Chi

Malone is winner· of MOC meet

•

_j

C OUPON

TIDE
84 Ol

$189
W/C

Limit 1 Coupon Per t::us;ton~er~
Good at Powell's Super Valu ,
Coupon Expires May 8, 19'76

off"" ,

\''\

I.

•

-

�Local news, Parade set on Jwte 5
in briefs

~eigs . chapter

Aparade ieving Middleport at 9:30a .m. on Saturday, June
5, will be among the highlights o£ a bicentennial observance
being held in Meigs County to mark a visit by the National
Wagon Train.
Several state wagons will be at the Middleport Community .
Park and they will be joined by local horsemen , floats, bands
and other entries to form a parade which will move from
Middleport to Pomeroy.
The committee asks that the parade entries even riders of
horses carry out the bicentennial theme in some manner.
Deadline for entering is June L
All persons, groups and businesses wishing to enter the
parade are asked to fill out the registration form in today's
Daily SentineL

The Racine E:R squad wa s
c alle~

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday, May 5, 1976

Tuesday at 1 a.m . for

Mayme Mallory , 70, Racine,
who was having difficulty
breathing . She was taken to
HMC.

•

TRUSTEES OF lhe Meigs
Pioneer
and
Hlslor lcal Society will meel
al 3:30p.m. Thursday at the
County

of FFA dines
The Yelp Future Farmers Hayes, arid Matthew Maro£- America Chapter was

Museum on Butternut Ave. In

Pomeroy .

THESE SEVENTH AND EIGHTH GRADE vocal students. were presented special
awards Tuesday night when the spring band and vocal concert was held at the Metgs Jumor
High SchooL Director of the well received concert was Randy Hunt., center, vocal and
instrumental instructor . From the left are Deena Neece, directors award, Camtlle
Swindell, choral award, both seventh graders ; Hunt, L&lt;lri Kloes, choral award , and Janel
Horky, director's award, both eighth graders. The choral wmners -:vere selected by the
students and the director's award wtnners by Hunt. The etghth grade gtrls chorus durmg the
concert presented Mrs. Mickey Wolfe Hoback, facu lty member who has served as
accompanist; a bouquet of roses.
·

Pomeroy and Bashan Fire

Departments .

PHONE

Sizes 110 and 126. From Koda~
GAF, and Fuji color prinl film.

THE REV. MEREDITH
Armour , evangel ist with the

Faith Missions in Bedford.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY

Guysv ill e Community Church
at 7:30 p.m. Friday. The

(Please complete and mail to John
Hice, P. 0. Rox 32, Pomeroy, Ohio 457(i9J
(Entry dea~line- june I)

Ind .• for nine years a
mJsslonary in Afr ica , will
conduct a service at the

publi c is invited.

Limit 1 roll.

THE POMEROY E-R unit
· answered a ca ll to Cherr y
Ridge at 2: 26 a.m. Wed-

News ..· in Briefs

nesday for She rr y Marshall
who was taken to HMC.

1' /;1 ..
.'

i~ ·

•
SEVENTH AND EIGHTH GRADE instrumental student.s receiving specia l awards at
the spring ·concert at the Meigs Junior High School Tuesday night ru:e pictured with the!r
director, 'Randy Hunt. The winners of the awards from the left are : VICkt Sheets, dtrector s
award; Kim Warner, band· award, both eighth graders; Unda Eason, director 's award ;
April King, band award, both seventh graders. The band awards, trophies, went to students
selected by other student.s; the director awards (plaques), winners were selected by Hunt.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
Veterans Memorial Hospital
(Discharges. May 4)
ADMITTED - Ada Slack,
Carol Ann Barnett, Irene Sandyville; Harold Evans,
Baxter , Jessie Br own ,
Middleport; Lcnna Brinker,
Karen
Conn er ,
Earl Racine ; Jacob Scott, MidD~a n ,
Lee
Depri est, dl eport;
Annie Moon,
Arthur Ead s , Mrs . Mar- Pomeroy.
vin Friend and daughter.
DISCHARGED - Susan
James Goble; Z€na Grant, Thompson , Frances Wells,
Vernon · G r um blin g, Merle Manley .
Geraldine Hale, Mrs. Bobby
Henby and daughter , Mrs.
Edward Hughes and son,
Mrs . Jay J enkin s and
daughter, Hiram Kuh n,
SEVERAL FINED
Esther Utterer , Mary Lynd ,
Fined by Middleport Mayor
Walter Mooney, Martha
Moore , Nancy Niehoff , Velsia Fred Hoffman Tuesday night
Roush, Lillian Saunders, were Jack L. Sm ith , 22,
Loretta
Sayre,
Doris Middleport, $150 and costs
Stapleton, Betty Tom blin , and three days in jail, driving
Archie Vinson, Ellen Wood, while intodcated , and $50 and
Teresa Wood, Donna Woods. costs for resisting arrest;
Alberta J. Boyd, 40, Athens,
$5 and costs , opening a door
WEATHER
Cloudy tonight, lows in the in to traffic causing an acupper 50s . Showe rs and cident, and Charles Lawson,
thund ers howers lik ely 19, cheshire, $15 and cosls,
Thursday, highs 70 to 75. speeding. Florence P. Stone,
Probability of rain 10 per cent 28, Pomeroy, forfeited her $25
today, 20 per cent tonight, 70 bond posted on a charge of
squealling tires .
per cent Thursday.

Players ready
in Racine for
ball practice
RACINE - The Racine
Base ball Association has
assigned players to coaches,
uniforms
have
bee n
di stributed, and practices
s~rted. Portable toilet.s will
be rented for the ball season
so children will not have to
cross streels. Members also
voted to give the Athletic
Boosters a donation of $tOO
for wire fencing.
Meanwhile, all Racine
baseball tea ms, in cluding
girls, will hold tag day
Saturday from 9 to II a.m .
Everyone is to meet at the
ballfield and bring a money
container. Tag day was
postponed from last Saturday .

BY GARY CLARK
Rick Buzzard's one out
single in the top half of the
ninth inning brought home two
runs to give Coach Gordon
Spencer's Wahama White
Falcons a 5-3 extra inning
victory over Huntington St.
Joe Tuesday evening.
The local nine used a 13 hit
attack to plate five runs in
gaining the victory, their 20th
ofthe season against just eight
defeats.
St. Joe had the Bend Area
team down to their last out but
consecutive doubles by Mike
Goldsberry and Duke Smith
enabled the White Falcons to
tie the score ·and send the
game into extra Innings.
Tim Davis started on the hill

for Wahama and was
sb~rry. D~ke Smith then
touched for two runs in the · dehvere~ hts second stratght
opening frame. The locals cMch htt to .m~ve Tucker to
broke the ice with a lone tally thtrd . The JuniOr shortstop

in
the third
on a single
Kena
Riggs,
a stolen
base, byand
one baser by David Reed.
St. Joe retaliated with
another score in the bottom
half of the third to give them a
3-1
lead which is how it stood
LOCAL TEMPS
as
Wahama
came in for their
Temperature in down town
last
swin&amp;
~~·,the
seventh.
Pomeroy Wednesday at 11
Reed
started
things
off by
a.m . was 67 degrees under
sun ny skies .
reaching base on an error by
the third baseman. Tim
Thompson flew out and Terry
~VZr----------------------------~~00 Tucker went down swinging to

7GG

0\J~ auditiOnS.

Projects ...

COooo !~t=t~i~=~m~:~:~:~¥i~:~::::it::::::::!:t:::t:t:
STRIKE ENDS
LUCASVILLE,
Ohio
(UP!) -A strike by guards
at the Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility

MA. OEINU !&gt; A

A Gift
of Beauty

"appears to have ended"

with a normal complement
of correction officers
reporllng for work on the
first
shUt
today.
J oscph Ashley, In·
formation officer with the
Ohio Depariment of
Cor r ec tion s and
Rehabilitation, said about
70 guards showed up today .

Give her a fashion poi nt of beau ty
and comfort . We ha ve a big
selection of fashion-oriented
styles and exciting colors to
choose frorn ... or let her pick
her favorite with a co nvenient
gift ce1t ifica te. It's a great
gift of love.

Marguerite's Shoes
Betty Ohiinger
102 E. Main
Pomeroy

OQ

~O&lt;J

bring St. Joe to within one out
of a victory . But the White
Falcons were not beaten yet
Mike Goldsberry doubled to
score Reed and pull the
visitors within one, at 3-2. The
next batter, Duke Smith, also
drilled a two bagger to score
Goldsberry and tie the game
forcing extra innings.
Jerry " Blue" Tucker
relieve&amp; Davis in the seventh
and sent the Huntington hitters down on just one hit and
eventually emerged as the
winning pitcher after his
teammates pushed across two
runs in the ninth.
The winning rally started
when Terry Tucker opened the
frame with an infield hit.
He was moved to second on
a sa~ri[ice bunt by Gold-

then
swiped
second
scored
behind
Tuck~r
afterand
Buzzards
game wmmng blow.
. .
Wahama wa.s to vtstt
Parkersburg thts aftern~on
and Ripley tomorrow . With
both games slated to begm at 5
p.m.
Coach ~ic~ard Cline's
Jun!or varstty squad will also
be m Ripley. tomorrow Wtth. a
game followmg the varstty lilt
against the Ripley J. V·
WAHAMA :
-5- 30 01 00 0 20 2 1 2
HUNTINGTON :
2 o 1 ooo oo*7·1

Jury at work
CHARLESTON, W. Va.
(UPI) - A seve11-woman,
five-man federa l court jury
began deliberations again
today In another allempllo
reach a verdict in the
extortion trial of Wes t
Virginia Gov. Arch Moore
and a form er guberna1orlal
· aide.

BAER HffiED
SACRAMENTO, Cali£ .
(UPI)
- Ja cob Henry
WORDING FIXED
Buddy"
Baer, former
One of th e ordinances
heavyweight
boxer, who
turned down by Pomeroy
twice
£ought
Joe
Louis, has
Council Monday night should,
been
hired
as
an
assistant
ha ve read, "an ordinance to
arms
of the
sergeant
at
amend a portion of another to
California
Senate.
controlloi tering on the river
ilaer, 61, brother of the late .
front parking lots for a 24
heavyweight
champion Max
hour period with an obBaer,
had
55
fights before
se rvation point near the
retiring
[rom
the
ring in 1942.
barbecue pit," not "from an
He also appeared in 18
observation point"
movies and 150 television
shows.
BAKE SALE
RACINE - Racine Cub and
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Boy Scout Troops will hold a
A chance of showers
bake sale Satw-day beginning
Friday
and Sunday and fair
at 8 a.m. in front of the post
Saturday.
Highs Friday
office. i\nyone wishing to
will
be
In
the
50s to the low
donate Is asked to have the
60s
and
lows
will
be In ·the
0
baked goods at the sale
0
40s.
Then
warmer
wltb
00~ location by 7: 45a.m. In case highs In the 70s and lows
In
of rain, the sale will be held at
the 50s by Sunday. '
the Boy Scout building.
'

1

~ ***[ Dl~lf~R&amp; J*0 0

sa·29

COLOR PRINTS
20 EXP. ROLL

Borderlns - Silk Finish
Sizes 110, 128, &amp; 135. From
Kodak, GAF, &amp; Fuji color print film.

per roll

Limit 1 ro ll. Expires 5/ 15/76

***0 0 *

COUPON MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER ~

NELSON'S DRUG STORE
208 .E. MAIN

POMEROY

Mothers Day Gifts

' Open Eves. Til9:00. Closed Sundays
so our employees may attend church
of their choice.

Check Our

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

Lower Prices.,,

WHOLE

II.• ,

05

HAMS................................

SHANK HALF. ................~~·.• ~ 109
BUn HALF..••...•............. ~~:. '1 19

HA~tsucEs. . . . . . .!~.~.1
PRINGLE$

49

9

g~

TRIPLE PACK

POTATO CHIPS............
·
RED OR GRAPE
46 oz.ggc
.Hawaiian Punch cans

2

Men's Mesh

Shoes

EXPRESS IT
WITH
FLOWERS

'5.99
heritage house

GC!LDEN ISLE

Z¥z lb.

$159

PEANUT BUTTER ... ~r......
GOLDEN ISLE SINGLES
lZ oz.
AMERICAN CHEESE.!~..

8

Potted Mums, Roses, Combination Pots, Hardy Azaleas, Porch
Boxes &amp; many Varieties of Hanging Baskets in 4 Convenient Sizes,
Including Several Types of Vines &amp; Foilage Plants.

g~

REMEMBER MOM WITH FLOWERS MAY 9th

t-~~~~~~~-.--~=:":~:"::"":":~~-r-=~::':~:':::"'"-1

FOR THE MAN

FOR THE lADY

AND HIS GARDEN

OF THE HOUSE

l--------·+---------"i---------1
OF THE YARD

• Pink Dogwood
• Large Budded
Rhododendron
• Hardy Azaleas
• Junipers
• Arbovitaes
• Hemlock
• Boxwood
• Fruit Trees
e CriiJlSOn Maple
• Hoi~ Trees
• Spruce Trees
• Exbeny Azaleas
• Creeping Phlox
• Rose Bushes

• 14 Varieties of •
Tomato Plants ·
Featuring Better Boy
and SupeiSonic, Hybrids
~t Sweet Peppers
• Hot Peooers
• Cabbage Plants
• Broccoli
. • Cauliflower
• Brussels
Sprouls
.
• Cucumber Plants
• Cantaloupes and
Watermelon Plants
• Bulk Garden Seeds
e Seed Potatoes
• Onion Sets
e Sweet Potato Plants
Plants
~

'

• Petunias
• Marigolds
• Begonias

• Coleus
• lmpatien.~

-

• Ageratum

• Celosia

e Zinnia

'

, •,

Bob and Corena Barnitz and family and employees would
like to wish you a Happy Day and express their feelings
that vegetables can nourish your body, but flowers can
nourish the soul!

"TWO CONVENIENT LOCA liONS"

MIDWAY MARKET

West Main sireet

PH. 992-2581

Pomeroy, Ohio

Rt. 33

Mason, W. Va .

PH. 773-572 I

GOLDEN ISLE

CAT FOOD

BISCUITS

·
5 cans~OJ, $1

2 t~~ 25e

.

Be sure to include her address

0

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POMEROY, OHIO

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• • I

With
Coupon

Expires 5-8-76
Twin Cities Gateway

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ll1 COURT ST.

•

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175 count

MAIL WITH $1.00
TO lHE .DAILY SENTINEL
.

BROTH

FACIAL TISSUES

20
20 WORDS JUST

CHICKEN
13% oz.

PUFF ASSORTED

14

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Twin Cities Gateway
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box

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CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE

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Bob's Market

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9-I.IVts
ALL VARIETIES

We'll send Mom a special card too!
It's a thoughtful and unique way to
. tell her how wonderful she is . .

eSalvia
eMIISRose
eAiyssum
• Dianthus
• Joseph's Coat
• Geraniums

Area's Best.&amp; Largest Selection
At Reasonable Prices!
.

'

WITH YOUR OWN MESSAGE
TO MOTHER ON THESE PAGES,
MOTHER'S DAY, MAY 9TH

MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS!Potting Soil, Terrarium Soil, African Violet Soil, Hyponex &amp; Rapid
Grow Plant Foods, Garden Fertilizer &amp; Spray, Dusting Supplies,
Evergreen Plant Foods .

.-

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COUPON MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER 05 ·

(Continued from page 1)
EASTERN BAND Boosters or news stories revealing possible omissions or
wil l meeiTuesday. May II , al misinformation contained in financial disclosure sta teme nts ~
7: 30p .m. in the band room . filed with the commission.''
All members are urged to
Lee Walker, public information officer for the ~
a I lend .
commission, confirmed Ute discussion was prompted in part ~
EVERYONE IN THE by newspaper articles questioning the propriety of Rhodes'
Harr ~sonvl ll e area wishi ng to
placing his interests in a Columbus real estate development .
play on a women's slow -pitch agency in trust after becoming goveroor again in 1975, and not
softbal l tea m is asked to detailing titem on his disclosure statement
conlacl Bob Williams al 9927017.
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO CAMPAIGN for Sen. Henry
Jackson, D-Wash., a candidate for the Democratic
presidential nomination, will continue, according to state
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson.
·
NOW YOU KNOW
An acre of forest land
''We have been in contact with Jackson supporters around
absorbs about 450,000 gallons the siate," Ferguson said Tuesday, "a nd they report that they
of water in a light rai nfalL want to continue pushing Jackson's candidacy ."

'

s2 29

~~~~~~~F~~s

ADDRESS

the

~$

~ ~ O ,--[DR-=Np::;-;:STO=N'~~E--,1 O O

NAME

a.m . and closed at 8 p.m. tor
the summer months . The
trustees also have renewed

lire contracts with

·.

I would like to register as an entry in the
Wagon Train Parade on Saturday, June 5.

WILLIAM HARRIS, clerk
of lhe Sullon Township board
of lruslees, announced · to.day
lhe gale af lhe Gilmore
Cemetery will be opened al 8

cum, and Everett HolcOtl!b,
hm&lt;re&lt;l by 1be presence of instructor, presented awards
tbe State F .F .A. VIce to the soil joding team of Rick
President, Scott Miller, aa Macomber, Denver Cotterill,
speaker at ita fourth an- Patty Dyer, and Chester Fox.
niW banquet In tbe Meigs
Holcomb presented awards
High School cafeteria laat to
the
parliamentary
Thursday at 6 p.m.
procedure team of Rick
Invocation by Sheila Ash- Macomber, Denver Cotterill,
bll'n was followed by a Patty Dyer, Citester Fox,
delicious ham dinner which Matthew Marcum , Don Hood,
was served buffet style.
Tony Hutton, Rick Rowe, and
Each member introduced William Hart.
their parents, then Matthew
A potted azalea was pr. _Jifarcum introduced these senled to Mrs. Drake for her
special guests, Charles assistance and a pen and
Dowler, superintendent ; pencil-desk set was presented
Principal and Mrs. 'James to Mr. Diehl, principaL
Diehl, Mrs. W. A. Drake,
A !IJ!"Cial award to the
school !!I!Cretary, and Mr. " outs1anding senior" was
Drake; Roy Holter, advisory presented to Rick Macomber.
COOIIlllttee, and Mrs. Holler ;
.Pins were presented to the
Charles Bush, Landmark . newly elected officers for
Representative, and Mrs . 1976-17 of president, Matthew
Bush; VIrgil King, school Marcum ; vice president ,
board, and Mrs. King, and Denver Cotterill; secretary,
Carl Davidson, alumni.
Sheila Ashbw-n; treasurer,
Requirements lor Gary Holliday ; reporter,
Greenhand were read by the Patty Dyer; sentinel, Don
secretary, Patty Dyer.
Hood, and student advisor ,
Presentation of the Green- William Hart.
hand awards was by the
instructor, Aaron Sayre, to
Patty Dyer, Gary · Holliday,
William . Hart,
Steve
SALES REPORT
McGrath, Terry Lunsford,
Ohio Valley Uveslock Co.
Kenneth Klein, .Sheila AshGalllpoUs, Oblo
burn, Jeff L!lwis, and Ron
Mayl, 18'16
Lewis.
STOCKER CATTLE
Sayre presented the Star ·· STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 40
Greenhand award to Patty down, 300 to 400 lbs. 42 down,
Dyer, who then repealed the 400 to 500 lbs. 43 down, SilO to
F.F A Creed.
600lbs. 44 down , 600 to 700 lbs.
Requirements [or the 43 down, 700 1bs. and over 45.
Chapter Fanner were read
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
by the secretary.
300 lbs. 32.50 down, 300 w400
Sayre presented Chapter lbs. 33 down, 400 to 500 lbs. 33
Fanner awards to Dennis down, 500 to 800 lbs. 35 down ,
Donahue, Don Hood, Tom 600 to 700 lbs. 36.50 down, 700
Kennedy, Paul Rupe, Terry lbs. and over 39.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS
(By the Head) - Stock Cows
165 to 225, Stock Cows and
Calves 185 to 320, Stock Bulls
155 to 375, Baby Calves 45
down; (By the Pound)
Canners &amp; Cutter Cows 30.50
Natural or Black
down, Holstein Cows 25.50 to
33, Commercial Bulls (1,000
lbs. and over J ·a2 to 38.
PIGS - 24 to 40.
·VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
lbs. to 250 48 to 53, Medium
200 lbs. to 300 38 to 45.50, CUlls
Middleport, 0.
30 down, Sows 400 lbs. up 38.50
to 42.

',

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�Local news, Parade set on Jwte 5
in briefs

~eigs . chapter

Aparade ieving Middleport at 9:30a .m. on Saturday, June
5, will be among the highlights o£ a bicentennial observance
being held in Meigs County to mark a visit by the National
Wagon Train.
Several state wagons will be at the Middleport Community .
Park and they will be joined by local horsemen , floats, bands
and other entries to form a parade which will move from
Middleport to Pomeroy.
The committee asks that the parade entries even riders of
horses carry out the bicentennial theme in some manner.
Deadline for entering is June L
All persons, groups and businesses wishing to enter the
parade are asked to fill out the registration form in today's
Daily SentineL

The Racine E:R squad wa s
c alle~

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday, May 5, 1976

Tuesday at 1 a.m . for

Mayme Mallory , 70, Racine,
who was having difficulty
breathing . She was taken to
HMC.

•

TRUSTEES OF lhe Meigs
Pioneer
and
Hlslor lcal Society will meel
al 3:30p.m. Thursday at the
County

of FFA dines
The Yelp Future Farmers Hayes, arid Matthew Maro£- America Chapter was

Museum on Butternut Ave. In

Pomeroy .

THESE SEVENTH AND EIGHTH GRADE vocal students. were presented special
awards Tuesday night when the spring band and vocal concert was held at the Metgs Jumor
High SchooL Director of the well received concert was Randy Hunt., center, vocal and
instrumental instructor . From the left are Deena Neece, directors award, Camtlle
Swindell, choral award, both seventh graders ; Hunt, L&lt;lri Kloes, choral award , and Janel
Horky, director's award, both eighth graders. The choral wmners -:vere selected by the
students and the director's award wtnners by Hunt. The etghth grade gtrls chorus durmg the
concert presented Mrs. Mickey Wolfe Hoback, facu lty member who has served as
accompanist; a bouquet of roses.
·

Pomeroy and Bashan Fire

Departments .

PHONE

Sizes 110 and 126. From Koda~
GAF, and Fuji color prinl film.

THE REV. MEREDITH
Armour , evangel ist with the

Faith Missions in Bedford.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY

Guysv ill e Community Church
at 7:30 p.m. Friday. The

(Please complete and mail to John
Hice, P. 0. Rox 32, Pomeroy, Ohio 457(i9J
(Entry dea~line- june I)

Ind .• for nine years a
mJsslonary in Afr ica , will
conduct a service at the

publi c is invited.

Limit 1 roll.

THE POMEROY E-R unit
· answered a ca ll to Cherr y
Ridge at 2: 26 a.m. Wed-

News ..· in Briefs

nesday for She rr y Marshall
who was taken to HMC.

1' /;1 ..
.'

i~ ·

•
SEVENTH AND EIGHTH GRADE instrumental student.s receiving specia l awards at
the spring ·concert at the Meigs Junior High School Tuesday night ru:e pictured with the!r
director, 'Randy Hunt. The winners of the awards from the left are : VICkt Sheets, dtrector s
award; Kim Warner, band· award, both eighth graders; Unda Eason, director 's award ;
April King, band award, both seventh graders. The band awards, trophies, went to students
selected by other student.s; the director awards (plaques), winners were selected by Hunt.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
Veterans Memorial Hospital
(Discharges. May 4)
ADMITTED - Ada Slack,
Carol Ann Barnett, Irene Sandyville; Harold Evans,
Baxter , Jessie Br own ,
Middleport; Lcnna Brinker,
Karen
Conn er ,
Earl Racine ; Jacob Scott, MidD~a n ,
Lee
Depri est, dl eport;
Annie Moon,
Arthur Ead s , Mrs . Mar- Pomeroy.
vin Friend and daughter.
DISCHARGED - Susan
James Goble; Z€na Grant, Thompson , Frances Wells,
Vernon · G r um blin g, Merle Manley .
Geraldine Hale, Mrs. Bobby
Henby and daughter , Mrs.
Edward Hughes and son,
Mrs . Jay J enkin s and
daughter, Hiram Kuh n,
SEVERAL FINED
Esther Utterer , Mary Lynd ,
Fined by Middleport Mayor
Walter Mooney, Martha
Moore , Nancy Niehoff , Velsia Fred Hoffman Tuesday night
Roush, Lillian Saunders, were Jack L. Sm ith , 22,
Loretta
Sayre,
Doris Middleport, $150 and costs
Stapleton, Betty Tom blin , and three days in jail, driving
Archie Vinson, Ellen Wood, while intodcated , and $50 and
Teresa Wood, Donna Woods. costs for resisting arrest;
Alberta J. Boyd, 40, Athens,
$5 and costs , opening a door
WEATHER
Cloudy tonight, lows in the in to traffic causing an acupper 50s . Showe rs and cident, and Charles Lawson,
thund ers howers lik ely 19, cheshire, $15 and cosls,
Thursday, highs 70 to 75. speeding. Florence P. Stone,
Probability of rain 10 per cent 28, Pomeroy, forfeited her $25
today, 20 per cent tonight, 70 bond posted on a charge of
squealling tires .
per cent Thursday.

Players ready
in Racine for
ball practice
RACINE - The Racine
Base ball Association has
assigned players to coaches,
uniforms
have
bee n
di stributed, and practices
s~rted. Portable toilet.s will
be rented for the ball season
so children will not have to
cross streels. Members also
voted to give the Athletic
Boosters a donation of $tOO
for wire fencing.
Meanwhile, all Racine
baseball tea ms, in cluding
girls, will hold tag day
Saturday from 9 to II a.m .
Everyone is to meet at the
ballfield and bring a money
container. Tag day was
postponed from last Saturday .

BY GARY CLARK
Rick Buzzard's one out
single in the top half of the
ninth inning brought home two
runs to give Coach Gordon
Spencer's Wahama White
Falcons a 5-3 extra inning
victory over Huntington St.
Joe Tuesday evening.
The local nine used a 13 hit
attack to plate five runs in
gaining the victory, their 20th
ofthe season against just eight
defeats.
St. Joe had the Bend Area
team down to their last out but
consecutive doubles by Mike
Goldsberry and Duke Smith
enabled the White Falcons to
tie the score ·and send the
game into extra Innings.
Tim Davis started on the hill

for Wahama and was
sb~rry. D~ke Smith then
touched for two runs in the · dehvere~ hts second stratght
opening frame. The locals cMch htt to .m~ve Tucker to
broke the ice with a lone tally thtrd . The JuniOr shortstop

in
the third
on a single
Kena
Riggs,
a stolen
base, byand
one baser by David Reed.
St. Joe retaliated with
another score in the bottom
half of the third to give them a
3-1
lead which is how it stood
LOCAL TEMPS
as
Wahama
came in for their
Temperature in down town
last
swin&amp;
~~·,the
seventh.
Pomeroy Wednesday at 11
Reed
started
things
off by
a.m . was 67 degrees under
sun ny skies .
reaching base on an error by
the third baseman. Tim
Thompson flew out and Terry
~VZr----------------------------~~00 Tucker went down swinging to

7GG

0\J~ auditiOnS.

Projects ...

COooo !~t=t~i~=~m~:~:~:~¥i~:~::::it::::::::!:t:::t:t:
STRIKE ENDS
LUCASVILLE,
Ohio
(UP!) -A strike by guards
at the Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility

MA. OEINU !&gt; A

A Gift
of Beauty

"appears to have ended"

with a normal complement
of correction officers
reporllng for work on the
first
shUt
today.
J oscph Ashley, In·
formation officer with the
Ohio Depariment of
Cor r ec tion s and
Rehabilitation, said about
70 guards showed up today .

Give her a fashion poi nt of beau ty
and comfort . We ha ve a big
selection of fashion-oriented
styles and exciting colors to
choose frorn ... or let her pick
her favorite with a co nvenient
gift ce1t ifica te. It's a great
gift of love.

Marguerite's Shoes
Betty Ohiinger
102 E. Main
Pomeroy

OQ

~O&lt;J

bring St. Joe to within one out
of a victory . But the White
Falcons were not beaten yet
Mike Goldsberry doubled to
score Reed and pull the
visitors within one, at 3-2. The
next batter, Duke Smith, also
drilled a two bagger to score
Goldsberry and tie the game
forcing extra innings.
Jerry " Blue" Tucker
relieve&amp; Davis in the seventh
and sent the Huntington hitters down on just one hit and
eventually emerged as the
winning pitcher after his
teammates pushed across two
runs in the ninth.
The winning rally started
when Terry Tucker opened the
frame with an infield hit.
He was moved to second on
a sa~ri[ice bunt by Gold-

then
swiped
second
scored
behind
Tuck~r
afterand
Buzzards
game wmmng blow.
. .
Wahama wa.s to vtstt
Parkersburg thts aftern~on
and Ripley tomorrow . With
both games slated to begm at 5
p.m.
Coach ~ic~ard Cline's
Jun!or varstty squad will also
be m Ripley. tomorrow Wtth. a
game followmg the varstty lilt
against the Ripley J. V·
WAHAMA :
-5- 30 01 00 0 20 2 1 2
HUNTINGTON :
2 o 1 ooo oo*7·1

Jury at work
CHARLESTON, W. Va.
(UPI) - A seve11-woman,
five-man federa l court jury
began deliberations again
today In another allempllo
reach a verdict in the
extortion trial of Wes t
Virginia Gov. Arch Moore
and a form er guberna1orlal
· aide.

BAER HffiED
SACRAMENTO, Cali£ .
(UPI)
- Ja cob Henry
WORDING FIXED
Buddy"
Baer, former
One of th e ordinances
heavyweight
boxer, who
turned down by Pomeroy
twice
£ought
Joe
Louis, has
Council Monday night should,
been
hired
as
an
assistant
ha ve read, "an ordinance to
arms
of the
sergeant
at
amend a portion of another to
California
Senate.
controlloi tering on the river
ilaer, 61, brother of the late .
front parking lots for a 24
heavyweight
champion Max
hour period with an obBaer,
had
55
fights before
se rvation point near the
retiring
[rom
the
ring in 1942.
barbecue pit," not "from an
He also appeared in 18
observation point"
movies and 150 television
shows.
BAKE SALE
RACINE - Racine Cub and
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Boy Scout Troops will hold a
A chance of showers
bake sale Satw-day beginning
Friday
and Sunday and fair
at 8 a.m. in front of the post
Saturday.
Highs Friday
office. i\nyone wishing to
will
be
In
the
50s to the low
donate Is asked to have the
60s
and
lows
will
be In ·the
0
baked goods at the sale
0
40s.
Then
warmer
wltb
00~ location by 7: 45a.m. In case highs In the 70s and lows
In
of rain, the sale will be held at
the 50s by Sunday. '
the Boy Scout building.
'

1

~ ***[ Dl~lf~R&amp; J*0 0

sa·29

COLOR PRINTS
20 EXP. ROLL

Borderlns - Silk Finish
Sizes 110, 128, &amp; 135. From
Kodak, GAF, &amp; Fuji color print film.

per roll

Limit 1 ro ll. Expires 5/ 15/76

***0 0 *

COUPON MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER ~

NELSON'S DRUG STORE
208 .E. MAIN

POMEROY

Mothers Day Gifts

' Open Eves. Til9:00. Closed Sundays
so our employees may attend church
of their choice.

Check Our

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

Lower Prices.,,

WHOLE

II.• ,

05

HAMS................................

SHANK HALF. ................~~·.• ~ 109
BUn HALF..••...•............. ~~:. '1 19

HA~tsucEs. . . . . . .!~.~.1
PRINGLE$

49

9

g~

TRIPLE PACK

POTATO CHIPS............
·
RED OR GRAPE
46 oz.ggc
.Hawaiian Punch cans

2

Men's Mesh

Shoes

EXPRESS IT
WITH
FLOWERS

'5.99
heritage house

GC!LDEN ISLE

Z¥z lb.

$159

PEANUT BUTTER ... ~r......
GOLDEN ISLE SINGLES
lZ oz.
AMERICAN CHEESE.!~..

8

Potted Mums, Roses, Combination Pots, Hardy Azaleas, Porch
Boxes &amp; many Varieties of Hanging Baskets in 4 Convenient Sizes,
Including Several Types of Vines &amp; Foilage Plants.

g~

REMEMBER MOM WITH FLOWERS MAY 9th

t-~~~~~~~-.--~=:":~:"::"":":~~-r-=~::':~:':::"'"-1

FOR THE MAN

FOR THE lADY

AND HIS GARDEN

OF THE HOUSE

l--------·+---------"i---------1
OF THE YARD

• Pink Dogwood
• Large Budded
Rhododendron
• Hardy Azaleas
• Junipers
• Arbovitaes
• Hemlock
• Boxwood
• Fruit Trees
e CriiJlSOn Maple
• Hoi~ Trees
• Spruce Trees
• Exbeny Azaleas
• Creeping Phlox
• Rose Bushes

• 14 Varieties of •
Tomato Plants ·
Featuring Better Boy
and SupeiSonic, Hybrids
~t Sweet Peppers
• Hot Peooers
• Cabbage Plants
• Broccoli
. • Cauliflower
• Brussels
Sprouls
.
• Cucumber Plants
• Cantaloupes and
Watermelon Plants
• Bulk Garden Seeds
e Seed Potatoes
• Onion Sets
e Sweet Potato Plants
Plants
~

'

• Petunias
• Marigolds
• Begonias

• Coleus
• lmpatien.~

-

• Ageratum

• Celosia

e Zinnia

'

, •,

Bob and Corena Barnitz and family and employees would
like to wish you a Happy Day and express their feelings
that vegetables can nourish your body, but flowers can
nourish the soul!

"TWO CONVENIENT LOCA liONS"

MIDWAY MARKET

West Main sireet

PH. 992-2581

Pomeroy, Ohio

Rt. 33

Mason, W. Va .

PH. 773-572 I

GOLDEN ISLE

CAT FOOD

BISCUITS

·
5 cans~OJ, $1

2 t~~ 25e

.

Be sure to include her address

0

0

'

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1

2

3

4

5
7

6
8

9
11
13

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0

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POMEROY, OHIO

4

can

jc:~~w;-~.--; "7 7'" ;,

·sgc

COUPO N

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: :!
• • I

With
Coupon

Expires 5-8-76
Twin Cities Gateway

.

ll1 COURT ST.

•

••••

175 count

MAIL WITH $1.00
TO lHE .DAILY SENTINEL
.

BROTH

FACIAL TISSUES

20
20 WORDS JUST

CHICKEN
13% oz.

PUFF ASSORTED

14

"- .

COLlfGE INN

·

Expires 5-8-76
Twin Cities Gateway
0

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age

box

4~ sgc ~~~on

1~
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17oz.

SAusAGEJi ·

PIZZA

C OUPO N

COUPO N

10
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PEPPERONI OR

.ROYAL ~ ASSORTED FiAvbRs.
JELLO

NO. 105
.

CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE

.Ai ~~~

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'

Bob's Market

.

9-I.IVts
ALL VARIETIES

We'll send Mom a special card too!
It's a thoughtful and unique way to
. tell her how wonderful she is . .

eSalvia
eMIISRose
eAiyssum
• Dianthus
• Joseph's Coat
• Geraniums

Area's Best.&amp; Largest Selection
At Reasonable Prices!
.

'

WITH YOUR OWN MESSAGE
TO MOTHER ON THESE PAGES,
MOTHER'S DAY, MAY 9TH

MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS!Potting Soil, Terrarium Soil, African Violet Soil, Hyponex &amp; Rapid
Grow Plant Foods, Garden Fertilizer &amp; Spray, Dusting Supplies,
Evergreen Plant Foods .

.-

VO(SI' - &lt; - - - - - - , - - - - - --~
.P00'\5

!:2

000~000000000

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per roll

Expires 5/15/76

000 0 0 000

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COUPON MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER 05 ·

(Continued from page 1)
EASTERN BAND Boosters or news stories revealing possible omissions or
wil l meeiTuesday. May II , al misinformation contained in financial disclosure sta teme nts ~
7: 30p .m. in the band room . filed with the commission.''
All members are urged to
Lee Walker, public information officer for the ~
a I lend .
commission, confirmed Ute discussion was prompted in part ~
EVERYONE IN THE by newspaper articles questioning the propriety of Rhodes'
Harr ~sonvl ll e area wishi ng to
placing his interests in a Columbus real estate development .
play on a women's slow -pitch agency in trust after becoming goveroor again in 1975, and not
softbal l tea m is asked to detailing titem on his disclosure statement
conlacl Bob Williams al 9927017.
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO CAMPAIGN for Sen. Henry
Jackson, D-Wash., a candidate for the Democratic
presidential nomination, will continue, according to state
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson.
·
NOW YOU KNOW
An acre of forest land
''We have been in contact with Jackson supporters around
absorbs about 450,000 gallons the siate," Ferguson said Tuesday, "a nd they report that they
of water in a light rai nfalL want to continue pushing Jackson's candidacy ."

'

s2 29

~~~~~~~F~~s

ADDRESS

the

~$

~ ~ O ,--[DR-=Np::;-;:STO=N'~~E--,1 O O

NAME

a.m . and closed at 8 p.m. tor
the summer months . The
trustees also have renewed

lire contracts with

·.

I would like to register as an entry in the
Wagon Train Parade on Saturday, June 5.

WILLIAM HARRIS, clerk
of lhe Sullon Township board
of lruslees, announced · to.day
lhe gale af lhe Gilmore
Cemetery will be opened al 8

cum, and Everett HolcOtl!b,
hm&lt;re&lt;l by 1be presence of instructor, presented awards
tbe State F .F .A. VIce to the soil joding team of Rick
President, Scott Miller, aa Macomber, Denver Cotterill,
speaker at ita fourth an- Patty Dyer, and Chester Fox.
niW banquet In tbe Meigs
Holcomb presented awards
High School cafeteria laat to
the
parliamentary
Thursday at 6 p.m.
procedure team of Rick
Invocation by Sheila Ash- Macomber, Denver Cotterill,
bll'n was followed by a Patty Dyer, Citester Fox,
delicious ham dinner which Matthew Marcum , Don Hood,
was served buffet style.
Tony Hutton, Rick Rowe, and
Each member introduced William Hart.
their parents, then Matthew
A potted azalea was pr. _Jifarcum introduced these senled to Mrs. Drake for her
special guests, Charles assistance and a pen and
Dowler, superintendent ; pencil-desk set was presented
Principal and Mrs. 'James to Mr. Diehl, principaL
Diehl, Mrs. W. A. Drake,
A !IJ!"Cial award to the
school !!I!Cretary, and Mr. " outs1anding senior" was
Drake; Roy Holter, advisory presented to Rick Macomber.
COOIIlllttee, and Mrs. Holler ;
.Pins were presented to the
Charles Bush, Landmark . newly elected officers for
Representative, and Mrs . 1976-17 of president, Matthew
Bush; VIrgil King, school Marcum ; vice president ,
board, and Mrs. King, and Denver Cotterill; secretary,
Carl Davidson, alumni.
Sheila Ashbw-n; treasurer,
Requirements lor Gary Holliday ; reporter,
Greenhand were read by the Patty Dyer; sentinel, Don
secretary, Patty Dyer.
Hood, and student advisor ,
Presentation of the Green- William Hart.
hand awards was by the
instructor, Aaron Sayre, to
Patty Dyer, Gary · Holliday,
William . Hart,
Steve
SALES REPORT
McGrath, Terry Lunsford,
Ohio Valley Uveslock Co.
Kenneth Klein, .Sheila AshGalllpoUs, Oblo
burn, Jeff L!lwis, and Ron
Mayl, 18'16
Lewis.
STOCKER CATTLE
Sayre presented the Star ·· STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 40
Greenhand award to Patty down, 300 to 400 lbs. 42 down,
Dyer, who then repealed the 400 to 500 lbs. 43 down, SilO to
F.F A Creed.
600lbs. 44 down , 600 to 700 lbs.
Requirements [or the 43 down, 700 1bs. and over 45.
Chapter Fanner were read
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
by the secretary.
300 lbs. 32.50 down, 300 w400
Sayre presented Chapter lbs. 33 down, 400 to 500 lbs. 33
Fanner awards to Dennis down, 500 to 800 lbs. 35 down ,
Donahue, Don Hood, Tom 600 to 700 lbs. 36.50 down, 700
Kennedy, Paul Rupe, Terry lbs. and over 39.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS
(By the Head) - Stock Cows
165 to 225, Stock Cows and
Calves 185 to 320, Stock Bulls
155 to 375, Baby Calves 45
down; (By the Pound)
Canners &amp; Cutter Cows 30.50
Natural or Black
down, Holstein Cows 25.50 to
33, Commercial Bulls (1,000
lbs. and over J ·a2 to 38.
PIGS - 24 to 40.
·VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
lbs. to 250 48 to 53, Medium
200 lbs. to 300 38 to 45.50, CUlls
Middleport, 0.
30 down, Sows 400 lbs. up 38.50
to 42.

',

J

[

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FOLGER REGULAR, ELEC. PERK, DRIP.

GALA

PAPER TOWELS
2 Rolls

COUPON

ggc

COFFEE

ith
,upon

1 lb. can
NO. 105

$149

EKpires 5·8-76.
Twin Cities Gateway

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Twin Cities Gateway

COUPON

CO UPON

TENDERLEAF

HONEYCOMB

TEA BAGS

Gravy Train

CEREAL

DOG FOOD

.48 Count
NO. 225

49c

Expires 5-8-76
Twin Cities Gateway

With
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9 oz. Box
NO. 105

CO UPON

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With
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Twin Cities Gateway

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NO. 505

$477

Expires 5-8-76
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�1: · The Daily Sentin•l. Middleport -Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May ~.1976

·r"'w;;hi;;gb;~
,:,:

1·,·_:,;_: :

.

Report.

,,

·&lt;=

By

Clarence
Miller

~:~·~"~:

..•.

bigger spending programs
are neeced .
Mr. Chairman , it is time to
put th e Federal budget on a
diet and balance the budget.
In the years [rom fiscal 1971
through fi sca l 1976, to tal
Federal spending will have
risen an cs(imated $162
billion - more than double
the $77 billion rise in the :&gt;year period 1966-71. In the pst
2 years alone, the budget is
running with red ink to the
extent o{ a combined deficit
of $120 billion , The taxpayers
of America - our consituents
- are doing all they can to
fight inflation and balance
their own family budgets.
They
~hould expect nothing
t'u ngr e~s ional Record in .
less
from
the U. S. Congress
' upport of the concept of a
when the national budget is
balanced budget follow :
debated .
Congressional
'l1te trend toward bigger
Record - House
und bigger Government and
(11 3548)
1111-. Miller of Ohio. Mr. higher and higher deficits can
'\:lwi1·man , as th e House be reversed . The House has
dobates this first concurrent before it today several
resolution on the budget it is proposals that will bring the
plain to see that we are once budget into balance or move
ugain con fr onting a spec- a long way toward that goal. I
tacular rise in Government support these effor ts. Failure
' !lending. Under the Budget to approve these substitute
Co mmittee' s r ec om- measures will on ly mean that
n.cndations, we are talking once again the majority of the
House has shown an inability
:~bo ut a spending level in
excess o[ $413 bill ion and a to make the diffi cult
defic it of over $50 billion. decisions necessary to reduce
With this budge t, the public the budget. The ·effect of
debt of the United Slates will balancing the budget , acreach almost $712 billion . If compunied by the tax cuts
some or the Members here in I which could be made, would
the House have their way, be a stimu lat ion or the
these fig ures will rise even economy, pr ov idin g
higher as each of these meaningful jobs on a perceilin gs is raised . I can not manent ba sis by lea ving
" "' IXJrl the resolution at the more money in the hands of
the American taxpayers to
eommittee £igW' es .
spend
as they see fit in the
We have always been told
pri
vale
sector .
in the past that a balanced
Mr
.
Chairman,
I hope that
budget - something I have
l11ng , fought fOI' - was im- those Members here today
IJI'actical ; tha t the economy · will heed the warning given
•·ould nol sur vive such a step. by those of us advocating a ·
As a result the Congress has _balan ced budget and will
wut·k with us in exercising
s~·c n a steady parade of
defi cit-spending budgets, re str aint on ballooning
fueled by a vmiely o[ I•'ederal spending .
pro~ rmns for which we are
o11ly now begining to pay the
p1 icc. Halher than culling
hack on spending, this budget
RAOUL ROCKED
l'l'solulion lays the foundation
WELLINGTON
,
New
for a whole new series of
Zealand
I
UPf)
A
strong
spending programs. The
country cannot even afford to ear thquake rocked Raoul
pay for the progr11ms of the island of the Kerdamec group
late sixti es and early in the so uthwes t Pacific
seventies - and some are today, the island's weather
suggesting th at new and station reported.
. The Houe of Representul ives passed this week a
l:llllget resolution setting a
$115.4 billion spending target
r..r fiscal year 1977. Amend"•''llts added on the Hou se
floor brought the total deficit
fo r this budget to $52.4 billion .
'111e spending target for the
yc11r starting October 1 is
$1U.Ii billion over what the
)•resident recomml!nded and
th" deficir target is $7.8
bill ion hi gher than the
pn•sidential goal. I did not
~ uppor t .the huge deficit
wl.ich was recommended by
the Hou se Budget Com millee.
My remarks in the

Attorney quits
By VERNON SCOIT

UP! Hollywood Reporter
BEVERLY llii.LS, Calif.
1UP! I - Louise Lasser's
attorney quit Tuesday,
saying her agents demanded
an impossible guarantee that
the star of the "Mary
Hartman, Mary Hartman"
television series would not
have to go to court on a
cocaine charge.
The lawyer, Robert Steinberg, said Miss Lasser's
agents would not allow him
even to speak to her.
The arrest spotlighted the
long-standing popularity of
cocaine in show business
circles And opinions of drug
researchers !hat its use is
spreading to th e upper
middle class.
Miss Lasser, 37, booked
Saturday on suspicion of
possession of cocaine, was
free on $1,631 bail.
The district attorney's
office was awaiting th e
results of tests on a vial of

He estlmated 500,000 110 1

mmled claaa. "

LaS!~:.~~~g~
.
~!.!~
5:~~
~~~Jlt~
.
u"'

white powder found on Miss

At • 10 000

d

Prevention ol Drug Abule In ames to you, at pa,rtielllld

::~~;r
.~efpo~:~~~e~~drinheg =rl~~~ to! =:~ coc~e. ia ~:u:r;wru:; New York.
In the
uJ•· "' --ted b the Wood.y Allen, was booked ,_;...-~......~~......~~~~!"!""'~-~~~!"!""'

res "' were expec
Y
Wlder the name of Louise
end of the week:
Miss Lasser was taken Into Allen.
custody following a fracas at
A hearinl! was scheduled In
the Rai!lbOW boutique, Municipal Court May 12.
reportedly 'because the store
Cocaine has been popular
could not honor a credit card for years In show:btJslness
she tried to use to buy a $lOll circles, particularly the
doll house.
recording Industry . A
A check revealed she was stimulant, it can be used by
wanted for non payment of prodUcers, performers · and
$65 in traffic tickets, and the others who would b\l unable to
vial of white powder was function in their hyperactive
discovered when she was life styles under the effects of

MOTHER'S DAY BARBECUE
MAY 9, STARTS 11 A.M.

elenll!.'~

GAULS SHAKE HAVEN
CHESTER, OHIO

ST. RT. 7

_..

All during the month of 1.\iy '76. Jake and Mid will be
oHering specials on diHerent sandwiches, buket• and
dinnen. The "Spirito! '76" special Will run Ill month.
Door prizes for those 16 yeirs or under ond 16 vears or
over . Reglstrolion will bevin on ~Y 11t and end May
ll5t with drawings at 9:oop:m. You need not be prestftt

. At Tuppers Plains Fire House
Half chicken or spare ribs with baked
beans, cole slaw, potatoe chips. Drink and
dessert extra. Meats only may be
purchased for carry-out.

eucuUve__

. LADIES'

PONCHOS

to w1n .

Poly/ Cott on Knit Poncho w;th M
Indian print, rope belt. Beige

Many, many, thank5 to all who have m01de ours years
in business very special to both of us.

only.

Joke &amp; Mid Gout

Sponsored by Orange Twp. Vol. Fire

PANT SUITS

" lteody ·tG ·go" week ·•nderl ore j111t what the nome
su gguh. Eo•y core polyeUe~ knit1 ond folcutto' ihot
ore reody to 90 when yo~ ore , 1 ond 3 p •erf rJ ylt~

$644

De t.

Junior, miuu o11d f1oU $11e1.

$.1788

HECK'S REG.

$7.88
ClDTIMMII,.

·'

- GIFTS THAT MOM WANTS HAN[S MAY QUEEN
STRETCH NYLON

HECK'S REG.

$21.99
LADIES'

PANTY HOSE

ClOTH/"' DEPT.

SHORTS

Se lect a ~ill of cot~lwne jewelry for Mom.
Pins, earrings, necklaces, beads. Great

Relol !hi! summer 1n a pair of cool c omlorto~ l l!!
shorts. Eosy ·corl!! poly·collon ~:!lend in so lid~ .
chech and pr1n11 . 5irl!!s' 8 to 16.

selection.

$1qg

LADIES

Polyester

PANT

=~i'i:@~:;j:i:=:mw..:ii:i:~:::::::;::::;::liliMi~~~=ii

REG.
' $4.88

. STRAW HAIIDIAIS
Choc:.e hom 5 Jtyln of mocrom.
cOmpll.nt
your ....~ Eolli, outfit .·

u :9!1

CLOTHING !JIPI.

•,:

- GIFTS THAT MOM WANTS MI SS ES PLAIN &amp; FANCY
SPRING AND SUMMER

PANT SUITS

FASHION TOPS

LADIES'
JEANS

Mother will Love.

T-SHIRTS

Compliment your

'. ,.$,, ,66

le~ns

or slocks with one
lee shi rls wllh

of these 100 percent· c otton
~~~e

•

and jul e t r im . u .neckline. So lid.

coors. Sizes s.

M, L.

HECK'S REG.

FASHION
.PANTS

ClOTII,_

,.,

IJ9T.

DUSTERS

For~

,yoriu f:cJu&lt;mite

You'll plea!e Mother wilb a gift of theae Une
easy care, never iron blended fabric dusters.
Come .. . save foryoor~eU aUWfler'a !

KODAK
POCKET CAMERA

G.E.
HI-DOME

KIT

FRY PAl

MOTHEH

YOUR OWN MESSAGE
fELLING HER OF YOUR
LOVE ON THESE PAGES
MOTHER'S DAY, MAY 9TH
We'll Send 1f1om A
Card, Too:

s____

4- - - - 6 _ _ _ __

3 _ _ _ __
7_ _ __
9_ _ __

-~

MISSES LACE TRIMMED

FULL SLIPS

She wW adore one ol theM laney lace·
trimmed full slips. Any mother wiU epprecl!l!e the quality and comfort 'of theie fine
sllpo.

9

$2 t~

Be sure to include her address .

2---------

$ 00 plg'g

- GIFTS THAT MOM WANTS -

~pecial

1

~··

19- - - - 20 - - - - -

.

ClOTHIN' DEPT.

$

LADIES'

DRESSES AND
SKIRT SETS

- GIFTS

FAMOUS LOVABLE BRAND

BRAS-G IROLES

Bru and JlnUta availlb&amp;e In COOd Mledlon of
styl• and lllelaDd alwaya pr1ctd to l)l,eue

your Wdlet at Stlffltr'a. Now ll thl tfme to

shop Stlff'ier'a.

BRAS
PRICED
FROM

LADIES'
PANT COATS

Just right for that "'&gt;reezy, chilly!' spring
weather. ladies' pont coats in either 25" or
28'' lengths. Chod.e from oxfords, nylon or
chintz in sizes 8 Ia 18 and 16 \', ta 24 '~ .

TO

$23."

ClDTa.
1111.

FOOTWEAR

MR.

$....

HECK'S
REG.

JIWiliiY

'22.88
IIWB./11

.,,

I

DIIP•O-LATOR .
Mr. Coffee with uclv$ive "Ultra 'PHd" ':&gt;tew ·
ing oct ion l:&gt;rews 1 to 10 cup s. Pour cc ld water
in and you'll hove kot &lt;oflee out In teconds .

HECK'S, _
REG.

$34.96

VW7CO.....J

~·"'

GILLmE

"

-

....

MOTOROLA

STRACK AUTO
STEREO PLAYER
HICK'S
799
RIG •

$44.99
CON~

SUPERMAX2

WITH ATTACHMENTS

650 watts lor last drying . 2
grooming attachments. Gives hair

IIWillr

.'!l'r.

~ f.-~
.C~J '@
-·"il.lf,i),~j ~;a
• ~
~~
---~_!
~
., I
-

HECKS

fo11t J.,.IJ "'"''''"''"' ttl ... ll'lt. lt.,.l llfllo I, ....
t4011o tol.foc-u ofiH . CollotM..,.,_ilooo l~ l
.,.,., '&gt;olttf · 1M w. •ltl tl clth iclwt ctfltt . Wet•"'
1"11 pkllt ~tlld1 1off" at !No ~"~''"'...,-• "'"'"""
o••••lo&lt; hDon , Sail,., ,ton &lt;lllllllrltt ltdi1tlw01M•

2000

lhe nalurallook fa st.

'

.,,

$3

.' $28'' $1999

s•s••

slr.

ELECTRIC ZIP
. CAMERA

$22.96
IIIJIT.

I

POLAROID

.$1776. $1776

Cl.OTHIIIG DUT.
.

$11.96

IIWillY
Alii

CLOCK

CAIOPIIIR

S to~· A·Motic 1top5 whtn lid h optn . Clean· A·
M~hc perm!ta u•y removal to cleon cutting
un.t, Cord slorog•, ?ottle opener.

HECK'S
REG.

3799

\WALL OR MANTLE

$17-.99

RIG.

-G l
THAT MOM WANTSMOTHER WILL APPRECIATE
FASHIONABLE SUMM ER

$

HICK'S
REG.
$59,96
JEWEUrwr.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S

REGULAR
PRICE

e

HECK'S REG.

$ 59

$25.56

-or • lilllilltl11iN111Irtg pholllft Twin 't*'J.t'l lor ,,.,.
11treo ~ • Wolftul W-d De&lt;k ...lilt twv furV" W~11111
S.-otw ku•l! Tl.new outllmllt11• rnoni&lt;Oip""'""' Mile·
101 b"'"ctft. 3 Sltcl. 'Gel C111'11r11lt F., tr'ol-llonolld Trtltlt .

GIRDLES PRICED FROM $4 .50

f-

OFF

8TRACK HOME PLAYER

VANWYCK

AUTOMATIC

ss••

HECK'S
REG.

fr&gt;jQy Yo.,r fo- ~t Mwit 'lor-d 1r Y!Wr fo W.h Arfi "'
G~l ... llcl.""' ~ttoini"ll e A ~lui odditloo r11 ',~

Fashioned for good laokl and priced for the
working girl. long and short sleeve ladies'
dresses and skirt sets in denim, calcutta, and
solid· .Jnd printed polye,ter. Junjor, misses
and half ~ze s.

Olld ...... COlli
cOlon
and otyleo. Shop oorl,y for boll oOioclloo
and ave one-tlalf.
;"

.• ,

"

REG • ''f'"'i &lt;.........- ~~'
$27.96 lu. / .
-~- -----

AIR

vw

I LOW
STYLIR
DRY II

55

' WhlrMt Y'OII Q0, 1Wf hoir wi~ fllolt; i ll~ ·
"'""'~ ''- VAGAIQNO, 'l'v~ ttrlOOO ...atto

ol dr)'ino powtr for WIMr , - · bMIItiflll
'"""'' lro ltn 11.... ,...,.. with jt..11 o !lie:• ol tht

1wll(h you (IMO !an-I lhl VACioi.IOND to
trithw IIO or UO...,,,tctit t on•""' Ill 1ty1inf

. . . iftyt~w"- , ~&gt;~11" ,.... ""'• .,.,.,...,..,

$15''

c-1 whh MIIO'IIM 1ryliroe nonlt.

HECK'S
REG.
.

$19.96

....

·'~"'-....., ml·lrlt~.,

....~-~~~~.,
_,..._,,,............ ,wirt ......,..,
HICK'S
. RIG.

S9.96

Mother will apprfclllt a pair of theae
fuhlonable !IIDI,mer style~. Choollt from
the mll!t popular styles. HIPPY Mothrr'a
Day!

20 WORDS JUST •1.00

$1 Q99

MAIL WITH '1.00 TO
'

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Mtibtr'a O.y l

~.~~U9blt
In._..

10 _ _ _ __
12 _ _ __

HECKSREG.
$9.99

denim jeant. l..aiat Jtytea. AU lhe tllfll lbtl
rmm wanU ctme from SUffler'a. lbppy

- GIFTS THAT MOM WANT
SPECIAL CLEARANCE GROUP
MISSES NEW SPRING

8 _ _ _ __

11--- - - 13 -..,..--...,.-- 14 - - - - 15 _ _ __
16 - - - 17 _.:.___ _ 18 _ _..:._ __

GIANI'IIX ·

OuiltaJidlng

from thil flne ~elecUon cl long and walb
gowra. Made from nylon and blended fabrics

tlD,..

$2177

DENIM
JEANS
1tlec1ioo ci tbote poplllar bloo

NIGHT GOWNS
Choooe a gift ci preUy !OWIII for Motl&gt;en

,.,
"'"""'

III'T.

1

FTS
MOM
EVER POPULAR
FASHION RIGH T

HICK'S RIG.
$5.99

IIG.
$3.99

$9.11

~nd

- GIFTS THAT MOM WANT S MI SSES PERMAN ENT PRE SS
PLAIN ANO FAN CY

'*. ""'-'

HICK'S

$5.88

(;ool and airy ,leevele,s sum me~ dreue~ in polye~ler ond
u lt re~o prints. Si l l!~ 10 to 20 ond 14 11 to 24 11. Ea~y
core .

• &lt;.d ..... ~......... -wilt. ......
~
WM pelyottltr '""· - ....... 101 Wllid u.lo.r1 with 11 ,......
d.olr, ChMtt foo"' U....! ~
111 tiM• • ·M·l ,

$7''

ClOTNIIIG DEPT.

SUMMER DRESSES

ClOTHING DEPT.

,..

LADIES'
POLYESTil TOPSl.,..

LAN$ ~

HICK'S lEG.

LADIES'

- GIFTS THAT MOM WANTS :::
FOR MOM ON HER DAY
LONG AND WALTllENGTH

Clothing

mtlord1 in

$3.88

_____

Heck's Reg. '23.99
Clothing Depl

~ ennh

HECK'S
REG.

'3.99

. $11.88

HOUSE DRESSES

·-,·sg,~

Heck'$ Reg,

$}999

HECK'S
REG.

ClOTNI*'

Big selecLion for Motbe r'a Dly IJUUnc.
Newest patterns and styles In fine easy care
dresse3 lor home wear. Azl Ideal lift Idea .

Co~on

duck upptr, lodle1'
wh•te or blue, St1e5 5 to 10,

LADIES'

ladiei jeans in denim, c:onva5 , and c:olcutto .
Choose from tie front or belted in si ze~ 8 · 18 .

Beautiful selection of mluea polyester
doublekn!t two piece pant suits, con~~~istin&amp; of top
and matching or contraatlni slacka. A R1ft

TENNIS OXFORDS

$328

..$288

Hoclr't ROfl.

- GIFT S THAT MOM WA
BEAUTIFUL SELECTI ON MI SSES
POLYESTER Dl!UBLEKNIT

LADIES'

I.AMIS'

. dl'aw hancl,oliJ' to

...

.' .

SHIRTS

·SUITS

HECK'S

GIVE MOTHER THESE
FANCY COTTON PRINT

. ..

LADIIS

=~ : . ::;·::.; .

Pomeroy, Ohio

.,

I

�1: · The Daily Sentin•l. Middleport -Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May ~.1976

·r"'w;;hi;;gb;~
,:,:

1·,·_:,;_: :

.

Report.

,,

·&lt;=

By

Clarence
Miller

~:~·~"~:

..•.

bigger spending programs
are neeced .
Mr. Chairman , it is time to
put th e Federal budget on a
diet and balance the budget.
In the years [rom fiscal 1971
through fi sca l 1976, to tal
Federal spending will have
risen an cs(imated $162
billion - more than double
the $77 billion rise in the :&gt;year period 1966-71. In the pst
2 years alone, the budget is
running with red ink to the
extent o{ a combined deficit
of $120 billion , The taxpayers
of America - our consituents
- are doing all they can to
fight inflation and balance
their own family budgets.
They
~hould expect nothing
t'u ngr e~s ional Record in .
less
from
the U. S. Congress
' upport of the concept of a
when the national budget is
balanced budget follow :
debated .
Congressional
'l1te trend toward bigger
Record - House
und bigger Government and
(11 3548)
1111-. Miller of Ohio. Mr. higher and higher deficits can
'\:lwi1·man , as th e House be reversed . The House has
dobates this first concurrent before it today several
resolution on the budget it is proposals that will bring the
plain to see that we are once budget into balance or move
ugain con fr onting a spec- a long way toward that goal. I
tacular rise in Government support these effor ts. Failure
' !lending. Under the Budget to approve these substitute
Co mmittee' s r ec om- measures will on ly mean that
n.cndations, we are talking once again the majority of the
House has shown an inability
:~bo ut a spending level in
excess o[ $413 bill ion and a to make the diffi cult
defic it of over $50 billion. decisions necessary to reduce
With this budge t, the public the budget. The ·effect of
debt of the United Slates will balancing the budget , acreach almost $712 billion . If compunied by the tax cuts
some or the Members here in I which could be made, would
the House have their way, be a stimu lat ion or the
these fig ures will rise even economy, pr ov idin g
higher as each of these meaningful jobs on a perceilin gs is raised . I can not manent ba sis by lea ving
" "' IXJrl the resolution at the more money in the hands of
the American taxpayers to
eommittee £igW' es .
spend
as they see fit in the
We have always been told
pri
vale
sector .
in the past that a balanced
Mr
.
Chairman,
I hope that
budget - something I have
l11ng , fought fOI' - was im- those Members here today
IJI'actical ; tha t the economy · will heed the warning given
•·ould nol sur vive such a step. by those of us advocating a ·
As a result the Congress has _balan ced budget and will
wut·k with us in exercising
s~·c n a steady parade of
defi cit-spending budgets, re str aint on ballooning
fueled by a vmiely o[ I•'ederal spending .
pro~ rmns for which we are
o11ly now begining to pay the
p1 icc. Halher than culling
hack on spending, this budget
RAOUL ROCKED
l'l'solulion lays the foundation
WELLINGTON
,
New
for a whole new series of
Zealand
I
UPf)
A
strong
spending programs. The
country cannot even afford to ear thquake rocked Raoul
pay for the progr11ms of the island of the Kerdamec group
late sixti es and early in the so uthwes t Pacific
seventies - and some are today, the island's weather
suggesting th at new and station reported.
. The Houe of Representul ives passed this week a
l:llllget resolution setting a
$115.4 billion spending target
r..r fiscal year 1977. Amend"•''llts added on the Hou se
floor brought the total deficit
fo r this budget to $52.4 billion .
'111e spending target for the
yc11r starting October 1 is
$1U.Ii billion over what the
)•resident recomml!nded and
th" deficir target is $7.8
bill ion hi gher than the
pn•sidential goal. I did not
~ uppor t .the huge deficit
wl.ich was recommended by
the Hou se Budget Com millee.
My remarks in the

Attorney quits
By VERNON SCOIT

UP! Hollywood Reporter
BEVERLY llii.LS, Calif.
1UP! I - Louise Lasser's
attorney quit Tuesday,
saying her agents demanded
an impossible guarantee that
the star of the "Mary
Hartman, Mary Hartman"
television series would not
have to go to court on a
cocaine charge.
The lawyer, Robert Steinberg, said Miss Lasser's
agents would not allow him
even to speak to her.
The arrest spotlighted the
long-standing popularity of
cocaine in show business
circles And opinions of drug
researchers !hat its use is
spreading to th e upper
middle class.
Miss Lasser, 37, booked
Saturday on suspicion of
possession of cocaine, was
free on $1,631 bail.
The district attorney's
office was awaiting th e
results of tests on a vial of

He estlmated 500,000 110 1

mmled claaa. "

LaS!~:.~~~g~
.
~!.!~
5:~~
~~~Jlt~
.
u"'

white powder found on Miss

At • 10 000

d

Prevention ol Drug Abule In ames to you, at pa,rtielllld

::~~;r
.~efpo~:~~~e~~drinheg =rl~~~ to! =:~ coc~e. ia ~:u:r;wru:; New York.
In the
uJ•· "' --ted b the Wood.y Allen, was booked ,_;...-~......~~......~~~~!"!""'~-~~~!"!""'

res "' were expec
Y
Wlder the name of Louise
end of the week:
Miss Lasser was taken Into Allen.
custody following a fracas at
A hearinl! was scheduled In
the Rai!lbOW boutique, Municipal Court May 12.
reportedly 'because the store
Cocaine has been popular
could not honor a credit card for years In show:btJslness
she tried to use to buy a $lOll circles, particularly the
doll house.
recording Industry . A
A check revealed she was stimulant, it can be used by
wanted for non payment of prodUcers, performers · and
$65 in traffic tickets, and the others who would b\l unable to
vial of white powder was function in their hyperactive
discovered when she was life styles under the effects of

MOTHER'S DAY BARBECUE
MAY 9, STARTS 11 A.M.

elenll!.'~

GAULS SHAKE HAVEN
CHESTER, OHIO

ST. RT. 7

_..

All during the month of 1.\iy '76. Jake and Mid will be
oHering specials on diHerent sandwiches, buket• and
dinnen. The "Spirito! '76" special Will run Ill month.
Door prizes for those 16 yeirs or under ond 16 vears or
over . Reglstrolion will bevin on ~Y 11t and end May
ll5t with drawings at 9:oop:m. You need not be prestftt

. At Tuppers Plains Fire House
Half chicken or spare ribs with baked
beans, cole slaw, potatoe chips. Drink and
dessert extra. Meats only may be
purchased for carry-out.

eucuUve__

. LADIES'

PONCHOS

to w1n .

Poly/ Cott on Knit Poncho w;th M
Indian print, rope belt. Beige

Many, many, thank5 to all who have m01de ours years
in business very special to both of us.

only.

Joke &amp; Mid Gout

Sponsored by Orange Twp. Vol. Fire

PANT SUITS

" lteody ·tG ·go" week ·•nderl ore j111t what the nome
su gguh. Eo•y core polyeUe~ knit1 ond folcutto' ihot
ore reody to 90 when yo~ ore , 1 ond 3 p •erf rJ ylt~

$644

De t.

Junior, miuu o11d f1oU $11e1.

$.1788

HECK'S REG.

$7.88
ClDTIMMII,.

·'

- GIFTS THAT MOM WANTS HAN[S MAY QUEEN
STRETCH NYLON

HECK'S REG.

$21.99
LADIES'

PANTY HOSE

ClOTH/"' DEPT.

SHORTS

Se lect a ~ill of cot~lwne jewelry for Mom.
Pins, earrings, necklaces, beads. Great

Relol !hi! summer 1n a pair of cool c omlorto~ l l!!
shorts. Eosy ·corl!! poly·collon ~:!lend in so lid~ .
chech and pr1n11 . 5irl!!s' 8 to 16.

selection.

$1qg

LADIES

Polyester

PANT

=~i'i:@~:;j:i:=:mw..:ii:i:~:::::::;::::;::liliMi~~~=ii

REG.
' $4.88

. STRAW HAIIDIAIS
Choc:.e hom 5 Jtyln of mocrom.
cOmpll.nt
your ....~ Eolli, outfit .·

u :9!1

CLOTHING !JIPI.

•,:

- GIFTS THAT MOM WANTS MI SS ES PLAIN &amp; FANCY
SPRING AND SUMMER

PANT SUITS

FASHION TOPS

LADIES'
JEANS

Mother will Love.

T-SHIRTS

Compliment your

'. ,.$,, ,66

le~ns

or slocks with one
lee shi rls wllh

of these 100 percent· c otton
~~~e

•

and jul e t r im . u .neckline. So lid.

coors. Sizes s.

M, L.

HECK'S REG.

FASHION
.PANTS

ClOTII,_

,.,

IJ9T.

DUSTERS

For~

,yoriu f:cJu&lt;mite

You'll plea!e Mother wilb a gift of theae Une
easy care, never iron blended fabric dusters.
Come .. . save foryoor~eU aUWfler'a !

KODAK
POCKET CAMERA

G.E.
HI-DOME

KIT

FRY PAl

MOTHEH

YOUR OWN MESSAGE
fELLING HER OF YOUR
LOVE ON THESE PAGES
MOTHER'S DAY, MAY 9TH
We'll Send 1f1om A
Card, Too:

s____

4- - - - 6 _ _ _ __

3 _ _ _ __
7_ _ __
9_ _ __

-~

MISSES LACE TRIMMED

FULL SLIPS

She wW adore one ol theM laney lace·
trimmed full slips. Any mother wiU epprecl!l!e the quality and comfort 'of theie fine
sllpo.

9

$2 t~

Be sure to include her address .

2---------

$ 00 plg'g

- GIFTS THAT MOM WANTS -

~pecial

1

~··

19- - - - 20 - - - - -

.

ClOTHIN' DEPT.

$

LADIES'

DRESSES AND
SKIRT SETS

- GIFTS

FAMOUS LOVABLE BRAND

BRAS-G IROLES

Bru and JlnUta availlb&amp;e In COOd Mledlon of
styl• and lllelaDd alwaya pr1ctd to l)l,eue

your Wdlet at Stlffltr'a. Now ll thl tfme to

shop Stlff'ier'a.

BRAS
PRICED
FROM

LADIES'
PANT COATS

Just right for that "'&gt;reezy, chilly!' spring
weather. ladies' pont coats in either 25" or
28'' lengths. Chod.e from oxfords, nylon or
chintz in sizes 8 Ia 18 and 16 \', ta 24 '~ .

TO

$23."

ClDTa.
1111.

FOOTWEAR

MR.

$....

HECK'S
REG.

JIWiliiY

'22.88
IIWB./11

.,,

I

DIIP•O-LATOR .
Mr. Coffee with uclv$ive "Ultra 'PHd" ':&gt;tew ·
ing oct ion l:&gt;rews 1 to 10 cup s. Pour cc ld water
in and you'll hove kot &lt;oflee out In teconds .

HECK'S, _
REG.

$34.96

VW7CO.....J

~·"'

GILLmE

"

-

....

MOTOROLA

STRACK AUTO
STEREO PLAYER
HICK'S
799
RIG •

$44.99
CON~

SUPERMAX2

WITH ATTACHMENTS

650 watts lor last drying . 2
grooming attachments. Gives hair

IIWillr

.'!l'r.

~ f.-~
.C~J '@
-·"il.lf,i),~j ~;a
• ~
~~
---~_!
~
., I
-

HECKS

fo11t J.,.IJ "'"''''"''"' ttl ... ll'lt. lt.,.l llfllo I, ....
t4011o tol.foc-u ofiH . CollotM..,.,_ilooo l~ l
.,.,., '&gt;olttf · 1M w. •ltl tl clth iclwt ctfltt . Wet•"'
1"11 pkllt ~tlld1 1off" at !No ~"~''"'...,-• "'"'"""
o••••lo&lt; hDon , Sail,., ,ton &lt;lllllllrltt ltdi1tlw01M•

2000

lhe nalurallook fa st.

'

.,,

$3

.' $28'' $1999

s•s••

slr.

ELECTRIC ZIP
. CAMERA

$22.96
IIIJIT.

I

POLAROID

.$1776. $1776

Cl.OTHIIIG DUT.
.

$11.96

IIWillY
Alii

CLOCK

CAIOPIIIR

S to~· A·Motic 1top5 whtn lid h optn . Clean· A·
M~hc perm!ta u•y removal to cleon cutting
un.t, Cord slorog•, ?ottle opener.

HECK'S
REG.

3799

\WALL OR MANTLE

$17-.99

RIG.

-G l
THAT MOM WANTSMOTHER WILL APPRECIATE
FASHIONABLE SUMM ER

$

HICK'S
REG.
$59,96
JEWEUrwr.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S

REGULAR
PRICE

e

HECK'S REG.

$ 59

$25.56

-or • lilllilltl11iN111Irtg pholllft Twin 't*'J.t'l lor ,,.,.
11treo ~ • Wolftul W-d De&lt;k ...lilt twv furV" W~11111
S.-otw ku•l! Tl.new outllmllt11• rnoni&lt;Oip""'""' Mile·
101 b"'"ctft. 3 Sltcl. 'Gel C111'11r11lt F., tr'ol-llonolld Trtltlt .

GIRDLES PRICED FROM $4 .50

f-

OFF

8TRACK HOME PLAYER

VANWYCK

AUTOMATIC

ss••

HECK'S
REG.

fr&gt;jQy Yo.,r fo- ~t Mwit 'lor-d 1r Y!Wr fo W.h Arfi "'
G~l ... llcl.""' ~ttoini"ll e A ~lui odditloo r11 ',~

Fashioned for good laokl and priced for the
working girl. long and short sleeve ladies'
dresses and skirt sets in denim, calcutta, and
solid· .Jnd printed polye,ter. Junjor, misses
and half ~ze s.

Olld ...... COlli
cOlon
and otyleo. Shop oorl,y for boll oOioclloo
and ave one-tlalf.
;"

.• ,

"

REG • ''f'"'i &lt;.........- ~~'
$27.96 lu. / .
-~- -----

AIR

vw

I LOW
STYLIR
DRY II

55

' WhlrMt Y'OII Q0, 1Wf hoir wi~ fllolt; i ll~ ·
"'""'~ ''- VAGAIQNO, 'l'v~ ttrlOOO ...atto

ol dr)'ino powtr for WIMr , - · bMIItiflll
'"""'' lro ltn 11.... ,...,.. with jt..11 o !lie:• ol tht

1wll(h you (IMO !an-I lhl VACioi.IOND to
trithw IIO or UO...,,,tctit t on•""' Ill 1ty1inf

. . . iftyt~w"- , ~&gt;~11" ,.... ""'• .,.,.,...,..,

$15''

c-1 whh MIIO'IIM 1ryliroe nonlt.

HECK'S
REG.
.

$19.96

....

·'~"'-....., ml·lrlt~.,

....~-~~~~.,
_,..._,,,............ ,wirt ......,..,
HICK'S
. RIG.

S9.96

Mother will apprfclllt a pair of theae
fuhlonable !IIDI,mer style~. Choollt from
the mll!t popular styles. HIPPY Mothrr'a
Day!

20 WORDS JUST •1.00

$1 Q99

MAIL WITH '1.00 TO
'

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Mtibtr'a O.y l

~.~~U9blt
In._..

10 _ _ _ __
12 _ _ __

HECKSREG.
$9.99

denim jeant. l..aiat Jtytea. AU lhe tllfll lbtl
rmm wanU ctme from SUffler'a. lbppy

- GIFTS THAT MOM WANT
SPECIAL CLEARANCE GROUP
MISSES NEW SPRING

8 _ _ _ __

11--- - - 13 -..,..--...,.-- 14 - - - - 15 _ _ __
16 - - - 17 _.:.___ _ 18 _ _..:._ __

GIANI'IIX ·

OuiltaJidlng

from thil flne ~elecUon cl long and walb
gowra. Made from nylon and blended fabrics

tlD,..

$2177

DENIM
JEANS
1tlec1ioo ci tbote poplllar bloo

NIGHT GOWNS
Choooe a gift ci preUy !OWIII for Motl&gt;en

,.,
"'"""'

III'T.

1

FTS
MOM
EVER POPULAR
FASHION RIGH T

HICK'S RIG.
$5.99

IIG.
$3.99

$9.11

~nd

- GIFTS THAT MOM WANT S MI SSES PERMAN ENT PRE SS
PLAIN ANO FAN CY

'*. ""'-'

HICK'S

$5.88

(;ool and airy ,leevele,s sum me~ dreue~ in polye~ler ond
u lt re~o prints. Si l l!~ 10 to 20 ond 14 11 to 24 11. Ea~y
core .

• &lt;.d ..... ~......... -wilt. ......
~
WM pelyottltr '""· - ....... 101 Wllid u.lo.r1 with 11 ,......
d.olr, ChMtt foo"' U....! ~
111 tiM• • ·M·l ,

$7''

ClOTNIIIG DEPT.

SUMMER DRESSES

ClOTHING DEPT.

,..

LADIES'
POLYESTil TOPSl.,..

LAN$ ~

HICK'S lEG.

LADIES'

- GIFTS THAT MOM WANTS :::
FOR MOM ON HER DAY
LONG AND WALTllENGTH

Clothing

mtlord1 in

$3.88

_____

Heck's Reg. '23.99
Clothing Depl

~ ennh

HECK'S
REG.

'3.99

. $11.88

HOUSE DRESSES

·-,·sg,~

Heck'$ Reg,

$}999

HECK'S
REG.

ClOTNI*'

Big selecLion for Motbe r'a Dly IJUUnc.
Newest patterns and styles In fine easy care
dresse3 lor home wear. Azl Ideal lift Idea .

Co~on

duck upptr, lodle1'
wh•te or blue, St1e5 5 to 10,

LADIES'

ladiei jeans in denim, c:onva5 , and c:olcutto .
Choose from tie front or belted in si ze~ 8 · 18 .

Beautiful selection of mluea polyester
doublekn!t two piece pant suits, con~~~istin&amp; of top
and matching or contraatlni slacka. A R1ft

TENNIS OXFORDS

$328

..$288

Hoclr't ROfl.

- GIFT S THAT MOM WA
BEAUTIFUL SELECTI ON MI SSES
POLYESTER Dl!UBLEKNIT

LADIES'

I.AMIS'

. dl'aw hancl,oliJ' to

...

.' .

SHIRTS

·SUITS

HECK'S

GIVE MOTHER THESE
FANCY COTTON PRINT

. ..

LADIIS

=~ : . ::;·::.; .

Pomeroy, Ohio

.,

I

�·

C.RYSTAL
GLASS SETS

FREE
PARKING

KODAK

SUPER 8 CAMERA KIT

Anchor Hoc.king 2 pc . crystal
fi ~ h 'iC I, chicken set or ·turtle set.

Simples!, eosiost-to·u!e Kodak XL Movie Camero . .Budget ·
priCed, accepts type G 160 speed film wnicn eliminates filter
settings. Fast F/1.2, 9 mm Kodak Ektor lens, electric eye !ets
exposure in any light. Easy cartridge loading , binocular
~nope- cdnvenient to hold.
onij

..SOUNDESIGN

Oecorotive gla sswa re for

CASSmE RECORDEk

I

P!o)' and record tope cOuellet leve-r ~ktfl Play
Fou fo~ wtud, Stop ond. Rewtnd P~o~.t!I:Juttofl Re:
co•d . "" ''~ Wi fel y •n terlock Joch fo r input !rea
Oll• •ltory Wll!rtt ond earphone, !ncludet corryi'(
&lt;oW~ , eorphone. re mote mic, «"'yinv •tfl.lp , 'lot
ter•e t ~) qn~ co m: tle ond AC odo~t 111 r ."

HECK'S ·
REG .

'

3

$32.t~

$8799

IIWIUY

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

100I.

GLASSWARE

Chooifl hom f airfield oold or ovo·
codo jar &amp; cover, Weafo rd (Ondy
di,h ond co ...er , milk glou co11dy
jar &amp; co~ er , ond precul jar tlnd

Choose /rom 7 V ' pre&lt;ul o~htroy , 54 Ol . Fau lield
gold tar 4 cove• . 58 oz . Wexlord fOt &amp; cover, 52 oz.
Rc 1nHower ta r ~ co vl!!r. I qt . l:ta lll!!t ~owl. drvided

SJ19.

HECK'S .

$~t

EACH

HECK'S REG.
TO $1 .79 EACH

c ;

SJ33

CHOICE

corn jOI &amp; ro~er fr om Anchor HockillQ.

. HECK'S
REG.

$1 ~.~

HECK'S
REG.
$1.67

$1.88

AUTOMOTII/E
DEPT.

HOUSEWAREDEPT.
HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$21.99

~n•r.

ZEBCO

POLY -LITE COOLER

SPINCAST REEL

......., .b-~1!.,

..•..

.

- ~·
"V
,• " .'
fl •

f

~

' •

~
H~~~s

22

1

;

f

• •

I

l

1' I

SWINGER
FRONT RUBBER
CAR
MATS
ASSOIITID COl OilS
H~CK'S
$44 4
REG.

Ll

(

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

2 PC. WEXFORD

PENNZC!L

fc;•l"'&gt;.)
20 PC. STONEWARE

HECK'S REG.
$10.99

$199

COVERED CAKE
AND UTILITY PAN

HECk'S
REG.
$2.97

HECK'S . •122
REG. 11.99

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.
$19.99

'

'I

\

I

·

HOI/SEWAII
'DEPT.

\

$5!!

HECK'S RIG .
$7.99 GAL.

HECK'S REG.
$7.88 GAi.;

HAIIWAIE WT.

HAIIW~RE DEPT.

ALL PAINT
HICK'S $ ]99.
RIG.

CAMP OVEN

•~ ... .,..,.GAL.

GAL.

SJ28
HECK'S
REG.
$1.89
COSMinC
191.

.

' REG .
HECK'S
. $5.99

,,1.

NOUSEWARE

G.E.
3SPEED

PORTABLE
MIXER
] speed mr11er featurei fin·
gertip co n tro l. Id eal fo r
whipping, stirring end mix·
ing . BeQ,tJr e(ect o rfor•asy
'&gt;eater detachment. fosy·
· 'Grrp hondle lor comforta·
'lie uu , Beater d ips fo r
eote of storage. Bolanced
heel rest .

. sass

HECK'S REG.

SJ76

ss~

FRAIILL

FISH STRINGER
80Z.

3.750!. -AL

WELLA SHAMPOO

tf9c

99(
$1.67
COSMETIC

,.,

· COSMITit

IJIIT.

'&gt;lodes. Ha s the
Sun'&gt;eom " tip t hat

trims ." Slim ~of ·
anced and li wht·
weight . Push~ul ·
ton ~lode release ,
safety lock, remov·
o'&gt;le cord.

$1577
HECK'S
REG.
$19.96

.WillY
IUT. .

FINAL
NET
IIG. &amp; UNSCINTID

CONDITIONER
IEC.DlU.Y

\ i

99(

.

.

HECK'S
REG.

$1.69
COs.TIC

,.,

48(

WITH
SCABBARD
HECK'S
REG.
$4.77

,::;:
.........

-

:::S:.:

HECK'S
REG.
$1.78

TACKLE BOX

saaa

ltECK'S R.EG".
$14.66

w•n "''·

- ~-~

~

6]001

' DYNAMARK
3 1/JHP

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S
REG.
$1.78

Twin rtdproco tin~
Kollaped edge~ .
sta i nleu steel

HICK'S
REG.
69'

TECRIN LOTION

liGULA I

SLICING
KNfE

MACHETE

REEL
LUBE

COMBO

$2.88

SUNBEAM
M24

GOODNEALTH

HECK'S
REG.

.

$1444

~·

IIUL AS ATV SIIA(l TliU

$1244

..... ~

·· "

NOUSEWARE
DEPT.

REDWOOD
TABLE
HECK'S
REG.
$19.99

LIMIT 6 QTS.

20 prece S t onewo~e servite lo r f o11r rnc.ludu -4 d inner plates , 4
cups , 4 ~ovce r s , 4 1olad plo te 1 ond 4 WIIP ~owls .

SSHELF fiTCH

COOKWARE SET

OIL

PENNZOil
.,.

SET

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

9" LOOK-N:SEE

SALT &amp; PEPPER SET

WALL PAINT

$61!

SJ488

GARCIA

$722

HOIISEWARE
DIP1.-

7 PC. COPPER BOTTOM

sn

'10W30-MOTOR OIL

HECK'S
REG.
$9.99

ENAMEL

AI/TOMOnrEDEPT.

- TRIPLE FOOD CARRIER

$688

HECK'S PREMiUM
LATEX

LATEX PLAT

FUN TIME

DOUBLE FOOD CARRIER

HECK'S LATEX
SEMI·GLOSS

HAIDWAB /JIPT.

$5.99 Set
·. ···

,,,

BABWARI

SfUIMIIJ

$6.66

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

"'

ISO COUll

HECK'S .·
REG. ~

·- $488

~ ·~ .)1.

ssaa

COLEMAN

I

$5799 .

4 PC. CANISTER SET

'

HICK'S
REG.
$7.99

SPORTS /JilT.

SPORn DEPT• .

$1.99
COSMETIC
COSMETIC
L~~~~ DE,T.

MIXMASTER

COVERED PIE CARRIER

HECK'S
REG.
$1.28

'

$888

nor·Ml"-"'"9 of both ._..,.,oN,. ..,,...,.,,

HECK'S
REG.
$17.99

. HECK'S
REG.

. .}~.'

- "")--

HAIDWARE
DEPT.

COLEMAN

pot,trhJit..,. otuy•

'.

ROOF COATING

!f~~\

HECK'S REG.
$11.99

HECK'S REG.
$33.88 .

SHITS DEPT.

T~. hi ~ d.o1~r

f welve '1peed ml;t·linder dial indico lei proper W!lling for oM
mi xer opera tion,. Powerf ul 175 won gove rnor co ntrolled mo·
to r. Con 'Je used as po r to~ le mi,l!!r away lrom stand . Extra
Iorge " ~owl · lit " l:l eoters m i ~ l horo11ghly , evenly . A11tomo tic
l:lowl speed co, trol. Bowl shr lt lever od1ustS mi•ing ~wls to
couect mumg position. Removo"&gt;le cord. Comes wi th dough
hooio.

9" LOOK-N-SEE

HECK'S
REG.
$16.88

99

HECK'S,5 GALLON

5FOOT
. WOOD

STEPLADDER
BINOCULARS
Top quality, precision, and superbly engi-

Wotlllr-;rai,..d .. !trior ,..,,,, uro!(h-.1 , ~h:p"in;, w:ulti"9. _n,. li,jlh wotl' t lode. um't •ull.
lirtt~ol'll toorTI iftWio!iCl'l I'Ddi 1hll' cold. ~~ l11igM~i Q~t . lntrdt rt.rt 'l a o,.·pi.ct ~... t"-ut'•
to1y to IMp' elton, oo.d o plo1tic , leok'flroot d.on.
·

SUNBEAM
DELUXE

HECK'S REG.
$9.99

JASON EMPIRE
7X35 WIDE ANGLE

neered, featuring coated optics, center focus .
Case and strap·included.
2 on~

SJ39

$622

IIABWAIE

(aiMDI 'I ,ili~· I.Jit' IODiil ll oHif qualit,o, ilytt and fleltOfi'IIQI't(f ... 01 0 buOGtt ·rniniMd prir:t.

FOOD GRINDER

CARNIVAL

Autographed by Catfish Hunter. Made of
cow-hide leather.

$15

.,,

,,,

WILSON

WnM API'liCAJOI JOP

co.er from Anchor Hoelting

reh\11 di1h, dmded dr~h . 1 1 gol . 10r ond co,. er , 2 pc.
novo condleho lde• ~e t , 10" crystal egg pla te , I O oz.
tomato 1o r &amp; cover, 16 Ol corrol 1c r &amp; cover or 32 o z.

CHOICE

SUPER HARD SHELL
CAR WAX KIT

HICK'S
RIG.
$3.19

IIAIIDWAIE

SHirl /JUT.

PRESTONE
CARBURETOR
CLEANER

.$268
HECK'S
REG.
99'

HECK'S
REG.
$1 ...88
EACH

FIELDER'S GLOVE

.TUinE

ASSORTED

HECK'S ,
REG. 11.99

Stan Smith or Chris Evert tennis roc·
' quets. Styled with leather grips, and top
quality nylon string .

IIWElRY DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$3.27 EACH

ENAMEL

TENNIS RACKET

HECK'S REG.
$94.96

760.1 . , ,

QUART RED DEVIL

WILSON
SMITH OR EVERt

Dura
Pack
TRUE
SHOT
VERMICULITE
SLINGSHOT .POTTING
SOIL
Heck's
Reg.
1
1.88

$8(
HECK'S RfP •
18' '

GARDEI TILLER
Powerful 3 Y, HP Briggs &amp; Stratton
engine. Features a 26" ~!ling sworth

SJ6688

·oi,JPONT

41NCH

RED DEVIL

1 1h"

WALL BRUSH

ANTIQUE KIT

ANGLE
SASH
BRUSH
$218

, HECK'S R.G.

$218.66
HECK'S REG.
$2.86

1/AIIWAIIIIJEIT.

,,,

HA,.WAIIE

$299
HICK'S
REG.
$B.99

HECK'S
REG.
$3.99

,,

IIAIIWAII

-

�·

C.RYSTAL
GLASS SETS

FREE
PARKING

KODAK

SUPER 8 CAMERA KIT

Anchor Hoc.king 2 pc . crystal
fi ~ h 'iC I, chicken set or ·turtle set.

Simples!, eosiost-to·u!e Kodak XL Movie Camero . .Budget ·
priCed, accepts type G 160 speed film wnicn eliminates filter
settings. Fast F/1.2, 9 mm Kodak Ektor lens, electric eye !ets
exposure in any light. Easy cartridge loading , binocular
~nope- cdnvenient to hold.
onij

..SOUNDESIGN

Oecorotive gla sswa re for

CASSmE RECORDEk

I

P!o)' and record tope cOuellet leve-r ~ktfl Play
Fou fo~ wtud, Stop ond. Rewtnd P~o~.t!I:Juttofl Re:
co•d . "" ''~ Wi fel y •n terlock Joch fo r input !rea
Oll• •ltory Wll!rtt ond earphone, !ncludet corryi'(
&lt;oW~ , eorphone. re mote mic, «"'yinv •tfl.lp , 'lot
ter•e t ~) qn~ co m: tle ond AC odo~t 111 r ."

HECK'S ·
REG .

'

3

$32.t~

$8799

IIWIUY

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

100I.

GLASSWARE

Chooifl hom f airfield oold or ovo·
codo jar &amp; cover, Weafo rd (Ondy
di,h ond co ...er , milk glou co11dy
jar &amp; co~ er , ond precul jar tlnd

Choose /rom 7 V ' pre&lt;ul o~htroy , 54 Ol . Fau lield
gold tar 4 cove• . 58 oz . Wexlord fOt &amp; cover, 52 oz.
Rc 1nHower ta r ~ co vl!!r. I qt . l:ta lll!!t ~owl. drvided

SJ19.

HECK'S .

$~t

EACH

HECK'S REG.
TO $1 .79 EACH

c ;

SJ33

CHOICE

corn jOI &amp; ro~er fr om Anchor HockillQ.

. HECK'S
REG.

$1 ~.~

HECK'S
REG.
$1.67

$1.88

AUTOMOTII/E
DEPT.

HOUSEWAREDEPT.
HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$21.99

~n•r.

ZEBCO

POLY -LITE COOLER

SPINCAST REEL

......., .b-~1!.,

..•..

.

- ~·
"V
,• " .'
fl •

f

~

' •

~
H~~~s

22

1

;

f

• •

I

l

1' I

SWINGER
FRONT RUBBER
CAR
MATS
ASSOIITID COl OilS
H~CK'S
$44 4
REG.

Ll

(

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

2 PC. WEXFORD

PENNZC!L

fc;•l"'&gt;.)
20 PC. STONEWARE

HECK'S REG.
$10.99

$199

COVERED CAKE
AND UTILITY PAN

HECk'S
REG.
$2.97

HECK'S . •122
REG. 11.99

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.
$19.99

'

'I

\

I

·

HOI/SEWAII
'DEPT.

\

$5!!

HECK'S RIG .
$7.99 GAL.

HECK'S REG.
$7.88 GAi.;

HAIIWAIE WT.

HAIIW~RE DEPT.

ALL PAINT
HICK'S $ ]99.
RIG.

CAMP OVEN

•~ ... .,..,.GAL.

GAL.

SJ28
HECK'S
REG.
$1.89
COSMinC
191.

.

' REG .
HECK'S
. $5.99

,,1.

NOUSEWARE

G.E.
3SPEED

PORTABLE
MIXER
] speed mr11er featurei fin·
gertip co n tro l. Id eal fo r
whipping, stirring end mix·
ing . BeQ,tJr e(ect o rfor•asy
'&gt;eater detachment. fosy·
· 'Grrp hondle lor comforta·
'lie uu , Beater d ips fo r
eote of storage. Bolanced
heel rest .

. sass

HECK'S REG.

SJ76

ss~

FRAIILL

FISH STRINGER
80Z.

3.750!. -AL

WELLA SHAMPOO

tf9c

99(
$1.67
COSMETIC

,.,

· COSMITit

IJIIT.

'&gt;lodes. Ha s the
Sun'&gt;eom " tip t hat

trims ." Slim ~of ·
anced and li wht·
weight . Push~ul ·
ton ~lode release ,
safety lock, remov·
o'&gt;le cord.

$1577
HECK'S
REG.
$19.96

.WillY
IUT. .

FINAL
NET
IIG. &amp; UNSCINTID

CONDITIONER
IEC.DlU.Y

\ i

99(

.

.

HECK'S
REG.

$1.69
COs.TIC

,.,

48(

WITH
SCABBARD
HECK'S
REG.
$4.77

,::;:
.........

-

:::S:.:

HECK'S
REG.
$1.78

TACKLE BOX

saaa

ltECK'S R.EG".
$14.66

w•n "''·

- ~-~

~

6]001

' DYNAMARK
3 1/JHP

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S
REG.
$1.78

Twin rtdproco tin~
Kollaped edge~ .
sta i nleu steel

HICK'S
REG.
69'

TECRIN LOTION

liGULA I

SLICING
KNfE

MACHETE

REEL
LUBE

COMBO

$2.88

SUNBEAM
M24

GOODNEALTH

HECK'S
REG.

.

$1444

~·

IIUL AS ATV SIIA(l TliU

$1244

..... ~

·· "

NOUSEWARE
DEPT.

REDWOOD
TABLE
HECK'S
REG.
$19.99

LIMIT 6 QTS.

20 prece S t onewo~e servite lo r f o11r rnc.ludu -4 d inner plates , 4
cups , 4 ~ovce r s , 4 1olad plo te 1 ond 4 WIIP ~owls .

SSHELF fiTCH

COOKWARE SET

OIL

PENNZOil
.,.

SET

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

9" LOOK-N:SEE

SALT &amp; PEPPER SET

WALL PAINT

$61!

SJ488

GARCIA

$722

HOIISEWARE
DIP1.-

7 PC. COPPER BOTTOM

sn

'10W30-MOTOR OIL

HECK'S
REG.
$9.99

ENAMEL

AI/TOMOnrEDEPT.

- TRIPLE FOOD CARRIER

$688

HECK'S PREMiUM
LATEX

LATEX PLAT

FUN TIME

DOUBLE FOOD CARRIER

HECK'S LATEX
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-

�Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, May a, 1976

Hospital auxiliary
approves purch4ses

NEWOFFICERS - These new officers of Ohio Eta
Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority were installed at a
meeting Tuesday night at the Columbus and Southern •
Ohio Electric Co. in Middleport. From the left are Janet

jpyce Lie Berkley

''

BETROTHED - Mrs. PaulL. Berkley, of Letart, W.
Va . announl'ed the engagement of her daughter, Joyce
Lee to John (Dan) Kupets, son of Mr. a nd Mrs. John A.
Kupets, Republic, Pennsylvania. Miss Berkley, . a 1971
gra duate of Point Pleasant High School is a 1975 graduate
of Fairmont Stale College. She is employed by the
Southwestern Community Action Group as a Head Start
teacher in the Point Pleasant area . Mr. Kupets is a 1972
graduate of Brownsville High School and will graduate
from Fairmont Slate College in December. Wedding plans
are incomplete.

Helen Help

Us •.•

.:.'
'

By Helen Bottel

The Readers Always Write
Dear Helen :
In a recent column, you wrote, "Marriage Encounter is
also highly recommended not only for problem couples, but for
all those who want the most from their married lives." .
Although we know of several "problem couples'' It has
helped, Marriage Encounter is actually recommended for
GOOD marriage only, and thi~ is stressed during the weeke~d .
The teams making the presentations receive no special
training in counseling or psychology, and are not equipped to
handle really troubled unions . I mention this only because so
many. couples are insulted when friends suggest they try the
M. E. weekend. U only they would reali~e they are being
invited because people see something spec ial in their
relationship! They know the Encounter will int ensify and
perfect an already .strong love.
·
You also mention that Marriage Encounter is "sponsored
by the Catholic Church." Although it was started in Spain by a
Catholic priest ilfld brought to the U. S. in 196~ by .still
another priest, the movement IS supported through mdiV!dual
contributions, and not sponsored · by any one orgamzed
religion. As you said, the Catholic version is open to everyone;
however, there are also Episcopalian and Jewtsh ExpressiOns,
both devel oped from the Catholic version and following the
same basic format. - JANE AND FRANK H.
Dear Helen :
I can sympathize with "Elbi" because I suffered the same
hopeless depressions for years. I too loved my husband and
children, "had everything going for me ," but couldn't shake
my unreasonable melancholy.
Psychiatry would help for a short lime, but then I'd be
right back in those black moods.
Then I met a woman who had gone through the same lhirlg .
Mler traveling from doctor to doctor she finally found one who
gave her a glucose tolerance test and found she had
hypoglycemia, low blood sugar .
. .
I insisted my M.D. give me this test (six blood tests m hve
hours, and not very pleasant, but worth it ). Sure enough,lhat
was my trouble . For the first lime in ages, I'm happy most of
the time - as long as I slay on the diet. No pills or shots - just
a special diet.
I'm not saying this Is Elbi 's trouble, but at least she should
check out the possibility of low blood sugar. I suggest she start
by reading a book on the subject which she can get at the
library . - HAPPY NOW
Dear Helen:
A cure for Elbi's depressions? Get a part-lime job or do
volunteer work that makes her feel worthwhile and takes her
"out" of herself. I know. I did! - NOT .nJST A HOUSEWIFE
Dear Helen:
What you eat is closely associated with your mental
·attitudes. Deficiencies cause depressions , and healthful diets
(often plus supplements) can help cure them. I suggest that
Elbi and others read, ''Winning the Age Game" by ~Ioria
Heidi. It gives a happy guide to becoming the "ageless
woman." - DISCOVERER
Dear Dis :
I did, and !like Heidi's many hints. Will review "Winning
the Age Game" in an upcoming column. - H.

..
'

•'

..·
''

'

'.

•'

SPENDS WEEKEND
Mr . and Mrs . Evere tt
Bachrer spent the pa ~l
weekend in Columbus visiting
th eir
son-in-law
and
daughter, Mr . and Mrs .
Donald Brown and children ,
and Mrs. Bachner's sister,
Miss Mary Schaaf. They were
gues ts of Mr . and Mrs.
William Theobald, former
Middleport residents, for an
organ recital . by Keith
Chapm an at the Ohio
Thea ter.
VISIT ENJOYED
Mr . and Mrs. Wilbur
Koenig, Middleport, spent a
week with Mr. and Mrs. ~el
Harmon, Alanhan , Md. Thii,past Sunday they visited in
Marietta with Mr . and Mrs.
Fred J;leatty .

VISITS DAUGHTER
Mrs. Betty Hutchison was
in Columbus Saturday for the
Alpha Phi Sorority Mother's
IWJcheon at the Hilton Inn.
She was the guest of her
daughter , Julia, a student at
Ohio Slate University.

POUCEMAN INDICI'ED
CINCINNATI I UP!) - A
Hamilton County grand jury
Tuesday indicted Cincinnati
Police Sgt. Handy L.
Mathews on If charge of
aggravated vehicular
homicide in connection with
the death of a I:&gt;-year old boy.
. Mathews, 48, a :!&amp;-year
·police veteran, allegedly ran
into bicych, t. Gregory Weddle
last Feb. 16.

' Purchase of a monitor for
patient use following surgery
and a camera for ad ·
minis tration personnel at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
was approved at a recent
meeting of the women's
auxiliary at the hospital.
Dr. Lewis Telle mel with
the group to discuss the need
for and use of a monitor . Mrs.
Janice Daniels presided at
the meeting during which
time a committee was chosen
w select the recipient for a
nursing scholarship of $500 to
be awarded over a three year
period.
A report was given on the

Downie, president; Susan . Lanning, treasurer; Sharon
Bailey, corresponding secreta!'Y, a~d Ly"?e Crow,
recording secretary. Kathy Cummgs, vice president, was
not present for the picture.

National Bank and Fruth
Pharmacy. In Meigs County,
the Meigs Inn located in
Pomeroy and the Fabric
C.,nter in Middleport have
tickets.
The Wellston Sentry in
Well ston and Mrs. John
Preston in Jackson ca n
provide tickets for Jackson
County residents who would
like to attend the ball. Tickets
may also be purchased In
Athens at My Si ster's Closet.
If bought in advance, the
price is $17.76 per couple, or
at the door the night of the
ball, the cost will be $20 per
couple.
The United Sound of
Hunting ton, W. Va . will
provide the music from 9
p.m. until 1 a.m. Theme for
the ball is "Reflections of
Freedom'', and the activities
building will be decorated in
keeping with this bi centennial theme.

e Dyna Mike Gain Control

The 27th annual May Day
celcprati on of the Ohio
Baptist Guild of the Hattie
J ackson Girls and th e
Georgia E. Miller Girls of the

On May 12 all friends and

HOFFMAN SUES
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Acwr Dustin Hoffman filed
suit in Superior Court
Tuesday, charging he is being
cheated out of his 5 per cent
share in profits from tbe
movie "Papillon,"
Hoffman said his contract
called for him to receive 25
per rent of the first $500,000 in
profits and then 5 per cent of
all ]irofits over $14 million. He
charged the distributors with
deducting improper expenses
in figuring the income from
•the film.

$17 995

COBRA-19
TROPHY DISPLAYED - Lynne Crow holds a.trophy
which she received as "pledge of the year" of Ohio Eta
l'hi Chapter of Bela Sigma Phi Sorority. Mrs. Crow,
secretary of the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce,
recently became a member of the sorority when pledges
were taken into membership.

well ~&gt;ishers of Miss Marta
Guilkey,
formerly
of
Middleport, are invited to
attend an open house in her
honor . The gathering will be
held from 7·9 p.m. in the
dining room of · the Meigs
County
Infirmary
on
Mulberry Heights.
For the past two and one·
half years Miss Guilkey has
served Meigs County as
County Extension Agent in
Home Economks. On May 22
she will become Mrs. Douglas
England and will be moving
to Prince Albert, in the / { . n't it time
Province of Saskatchewan,
you remembered
Canada.
Everyone
is
someone you love
welcome to a llend.
with a beautiful gift
FOXX'S -BOXER
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - ,
Comedian Redd Foxx
brought suit Tuesday against
Athletic
the
sta te
Commission for allegedly
violating his civil rights by
ordering Foxx to slop
managing boxer Fred
Houpe.
An arbitrator appointed by
the commission issued the
order last year against Foxx
and co-manager Haywood
Jones, the suit said. It did not
say why. Foxx demanded
$50,000 in damages.

only

• Illuminated Meter
• Switchable Noise L1miter .

ATTENDED POUVOm
Miss Erma Smith and Mrs.
David Cumings of Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Dorothy Hecker and
Mrs. Mabel Brown of
Gallipolis were in Cincinnati
over the weekend to attend
Providence Assoc i~tion will the spring pouvoir of Eight
be held Saturday at the and Forty, Departemental D'
Moun t Moriah Baptist Ohio. All four are members of
Church, Fourth and Main St.; the Gallia County Salon,
Middleport. Mrs . Zueleiia Eight and Forty.
Smith is supervisor.
President · will be Mrs .
Dorothy Thomas, president
SPONSORING SALE
of the Missionaries Society of
REEDSVILLE
- The
the Association, and the Rev.
Riverview
PTA
will
sponsor
a
Henry L. Key , pastor of
yard
and
bake
combination
Mount Moriah and moderator
of Providence Association . saleFriday,10a.m. to 8p.m.,
The Rev . Mr. Key will be the and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 3
speaker at the morning p,m. at the school in Reeds·
ville. Proceeds will go to the
session .
The morning progr,am will school fund .
begin at 10 a.m. 'with the
afternoon service to follow a
luncheon. On the afternoon
prograrri will be a talk and COUPLE ENTERTAINED
The Rev . and Mrs. W. P.
pictures of Mrs. Smith's lrlp
Bikacsan
of New Brighton,
to· the Baptist World Alliance
held in Stockholm, Sweden in Pa., former reside.nts, were
July , 1975. Films will be Friday and Saturday guests
shown by the slate supervisor of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb .
of guilds, Mrs. Aggie Ran- on Friday evening they were
dolph , a member of the Shiloh entertained at dinner by Miss
Baptist Church, Columbus. Vera Beegle.

• Built-in Noise limiting

only

e All 23 Channels
• Mini Size/Maxi Talk
Power

VISITS HERE
Miss Carol Foster of
Uvonla , Mich, spent the past
week here with her grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Webb, and Mrs. Ed Foster.

MEAT SPECIALS
97~

Gibson or Oscar Myer

BOLOGNA
'

•••••••••••••• •• ••••••••••••·••··•••••••••• Slic.ed $1.07

WIENERS.....'.&lt;?.i~~~!l.).........'.

0 •••••••• I •••• 0 •• '

SALAD ......
FROZEN BANQUET
FULLY COOKED

CHICKEN

2

lb.

I •••••••••• 0 •••••••••••

HEAD

MARGARINE

51b. bag 79~
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Grape Jelly
oz.

18

CARROTS
16

Jar
WYLERS

oz. 19~

Pkg.

LfMONADE MIX
12

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69~
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Cans
16

Order Now! Ph. 992-2039
Mrs. Mi II a rd Van Meter
Delivery Service Maintained loWest Virginia

Mrs. Stephen D. McKnight

Marjorie Walburn .
At the business meeting
which followed the dinner
Miss Rhoda Hail installed the
1976.77 officers. They were
Mrs. Kloos, president; Mrs.
Fowler, vice president and
progr-am cha irman ; Mrs .
Katie Anthony, secretary;
Mrs . AI wilda Werner ,
treasurer; Mrs. Hughes, vice
presi~enl of missions; Mrs.
Sarah Owen, White Cross
chairman; Mrs. Smart,
communications; Mrs .
Elizabeth Slavin, Christian
social relations ; Mrs. Beulah
While, love gift; Mrsc ..
Walburn , vice president of
leadership training; Mrs.
Leora Sigman, vice president
of Christian service; Miss
Hall, spiritual growth
chairman; Mrs. Freda Hood,
chairman of literature ; Mrs.
Lillie Hubbard, scholarship
chairman, and Mrs. Isabelle
Winebrenner, key woman.
Named as the new circle
chairmen were Mrs. Werner,
EJecta; Mrs. Fowler, Dor·
cas ; Miss Hall, Love JOy.
New names were drawn for
the circles.
'
Devotions were given by
Miss Hall who used "Creative
Help for Daily Living." May
Fellowship Day was announced for May 7 at the
Rutland United Methodist
Church. The ne.t meeting
Will be a picnic at the Smart
home and in the event of rain
It will be held at the Werner
recreation room.
The love ·gift dedication
was conducted by Mrs. White
using the thelJ!e "God's
Extras and Ours." Yearly
reports were given by each of
the circle chairmen and Mrs.
Kloes thanked the group for
cooperation during the past
year. A guest at the banquet
was Mrs. Gladys llife of
Cheshire, president of the Rio
Grande Association Women 's
Work. The Rev. Peter
Granda! dismissed the
meeting with prayer.

colored flowers and roses.
Cherubs and floral nosegays
separated the tiers . The
bottom layer lleld the
traditional miniature bride
and groom. Mrs . Gracie
WilsoQ of Albany made the
cake for the couple.
Assisting at the reception
were Mrs. Bolin, Mrs. James
Carpenter, Coolville, Mrs.
Bruce May, . Mrs. Joan
Stewart, and Mrs. Judy Hart,
all of Rutland. Mrs. Bolin,
Mrs. Stewart and the bride 's
mother arranged the flowers
for · the wedding. Mrs.
Snowden also made her
daughter's bridal bouquet
and the attendants• baskets. GUARD FOR FRANK
For a wedding trip to
CHICAGO (UP!) - Too
Gatlinburg, Tenn. the bride
many swooning women aild
changed into a pantsuit of
dusty rose with brown ac· even a few anonymous
threats caused the Chicago
cessories. They returned to
Police Department to assign
their home· in Laurel, Md. · Frank
Sinatra 24-hour pollee
following the wedding trip. guard.
The bride, a Meigs High
At least that's the reason
School graduated, attended Police Superintendent James
llio Grande iollege . The . Rochford gives for stationing
groom is a Rio drande a relief cop at the door of
College graduate associated Sinatra's Ambassador East
with G. C. Murphy Co.
. Hotel suite every eight hours,
Pre-nuptial courtesies were seven days a week.
extended the couple by Mr.
01' Blue Eyes is in Chicago
and Mrs . McKnight who for a nightclub appearance.
hosled a rehearsal dinner at
"Women go outside his
the Meigs Inn. Other parties hotel. room and begin going
were given by Mrs. Bolin, 'tee,hee' and 'ohhhhh,
Mrs. May, Mrs. Birchfield, Frankie," Rochford said. He
Mrs. Carpenter, Rose Mary also said there had been some
Snowden
and
Marty anonymous threats, though
Krawsczyn.
he did not elaborate;

Nuptial vows repeated
in November ceremony

In a double ring ceremony hand baskets of dried flowers
at the Rutland Church of with streamers.
Christ on Nov. ll Miss Judith
Mark Jago of Malta served
Lynn Snowden, daughier of as the groom's best man.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Groomsmen were Harry
Snowden of Rutland and White of Barboursville, Ky.;
Stephen Douglas McKnight, Allie Slllith, Wheelersburg;
son of Mr . and Mts. Harold E. Randy
Greenburg,
McKnight, Allison Park, Pa. Hackensack, N. J. David
exchanged wedding vows.
Houck, Pittsburgh, Pa.
The Rev. C. J . Lemley of
For her daughter's wed·
Vinton officiated at the I :30 ding, Mrs. Snowden wore a
p.m. ceremony which carried gown of old rose with a grell!l,
out the fall shades of gold, brown and rose colored
green, orange, brown and jacket. Mrs. McKnight chose
dusty rose. Two large a floor le.ngth wine skirt and
arrangements of assorted jacket of taffeta. Both
dried flowers and roses mothers had rose corsages.
adorned the altar. The floral Guests were registered by
pieces were flanked with Miss Lori Snowden, sister of
· candelabra holding tapers the bride, and Miss Kim
entwined with ribbon and Birchfield, Rutland .
dried flowers. The fall color
The reception honoring the
scheme ·was also carried out couple wsa held in the church
in the large bows which social room which was
marked the family pews. decorated in the fall colors
Candles with floral rings with dried flowers and rib·
were used in the windows, bon . The brid's table was
and the doors to the church centered with ·a large
were decorated with a large arrangement of dried and
wreath:
live flowers and featured a
Music was presented by four tiered wedding cake
Mrs . Janet Bolin ac· !rimmed with clusters of fall
companied by Mrs. Brenda
Bolin Cremeans, pianist.
Escorted to the altar by her
father , the bride was attired
in a designer g.own of ivory
satin and chiffon detailed
with hand . clipped chantilly
lace. The. high collar was
made of Brussels lace and the
bodice was accented with
alencon lace and tiny satin
QUALITY IN A ZIG-ZAG MACtiNE BUILT
covered buttons which lined
WITH 17 SEW-EASY FEATURES
the front. The ·shepherdess
sleeves of lace were dosed aI
the . cv!f by .matching
overed
buttons
and
trimmed with an overhang of
Brussels lace. The flared
skirt had back fullness which
formed a sweep train. The
entire hemline of the gown
Reg.
was bordered with a scroll of
Reg. $129.95
alencon lace .
The bride's headpiece of
sa tin and lace held her
Versatile, dependable, with bu ilt·in
sweeping floor length veil of
blind-hem st itch, exclusively designed
candlelight illusion which
fron1 drop-in bobbin, extra wide zi g·
was completely encircled
• zag capabi lity, snap-on pre sse r feet,
with chantilly lace. She
many other con veniences .
carried a hand bouquet of
Carrying case or
dried flowers and roses atop a
cabinet extra .
Bible and a long stemmed
yellow rose which she
ptesented to the groom at the
FOR
altar .
MOTHER'S DAY!
Attending her as maid of
honor was her sister, Miss
Rose
Mary
Snowden,
Rutland. Bridesmaids in·
eluded Miss Barbara Ful~.
Middleport;
Miss Sue
; , . ;McKnight of Allison Park,
A great Mothe.r'a Day gift Idea. Gift
, ·; Pa.; Mrs. Pamela Wilson
certllk:•tes of 1111y denomination are avallLenigar, Albany, and Miss
lble.
Patty O'Hara, Seager!, N. J .
Miss Karen DeAnn Lambert,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
WIDE SELECTION
James
P.
Lambert,
Pomeroy, and Miss Donna
Kay Lambert, daughter of
Mr and Mrs . Clarence
· La~bert, Rock Springs,
TRADE IN YOUR OLD MACHINE . AND SAVE EVEN MORE!
served as flower girls ·for
· their cousin, ·
Each of 'the attendants was
dressed In a different fall
colored empire waisted gown
~ crepe satin. Their head·
~.....~i'!
115 w; Second
. Pomeroy
Ph. 992·2284
pieces were made of illusion APPROVEDSINOEAOEALER
• A Trademark of THE SrNGER COMPANY
and satin and they carried

SAVE $30 ·

LOWESY PRICE EVER!

FLOUR
33~ Head

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP·

. 99~

BLUE BONNET

l.EITUCE

We give "Gold Medal
Service" and have daily
deliveries to hospitals,
nursing homes and
residences. Call today . ..

'1.89

ROBIN HOOD PLAIN

of flowers?

Approximately 50 women
attended the annual motherdaughter banquet of the B. H.
Sanborn Missionary Society
of the Middleport First
Baptist Church Monday
night .
.
A highlight of the program
was the recognition of
mothers by Mrs. Tony
Fowler. Floral arrangements
were presented .to Mrs.
Elizabeth Gardner, the oldest
mother; Mrs. Judy Cowan,
the youngest: Mrs . June
Kloes and Mrs . Carol
Granda!, the mothers with
the most children , and Mrs.
Eva Hartley, the mother who
has been a member of the
church the longest.
A bicentennial theme was
carried out in the table
decor a lions with cen·
terpieces of chrysanthemtuns
and flags . Red, white and
blue pencils were given as
favors. Mrs. Fowler planned
the table arrangements. In
charge of the dinner were
Mrs. Freda Hood, Mrs. Mary
Hughes and Mrs. Frances
Smart. Mrs , Granda! gave
the welcome and presented
the program using a reading
"The Home." Several
selections were presented by
Susie and Roxanne Granda!
and Lori Kloos accompanied
by Barbara Anthony. The
scripture was read by Mrs.

Ohio
Hospital
recent
Association convention. in
Cincinnati attended bv MrR.
Jessie White , Mrs. Gilda
Baxter ,
Mrs.
Frieda
Mossman and Mrs. Nettle
Hayes . Refreshments
carrying out the Easter
theme were served to those
named and Mrs. Louise
McElhinny, Mrs. Elizabeth
Harold, Mrs. Charlotte
Wright, Mrs. Mildred Withej!,
Mrs. Ruth Gosney, Mrs .
Emogene Simms, Mrs. Alma
Newton, Mrs. Jestie Molden,
Mrs . Nellie Borgan, Mrs.
Belly Ch ristopherson and
Mrs . Carrie Kennedy .

COBRA-21

Annual celebration
scheduled Saturday

Society enjoys annual
mother-daughter banquet

bra

Tickets available
for bicentennial ball
Mrs. Anita Tope, ticket
chairm an for th e Gallia ·
County Bicentennial Ball, to
be held on Saturday evening,
May 29, in the activities
· building at the Gallia County
Junior Fa irgrounds, has
annoWJced locations where
tickets may be.purchased in
advance throughout a five
county area.
In Galli a Co unty , th e
Gallipolis down town retail
merchanIs as well as those in
the two shopping plazas have
tickets available. In down·
!.own Gallipolis, tickets may
be bought at Paul Davies
Jewelers, Thomas Clothiers,
PJ 's , Ha skin s Tanner ,
Bernadines, The Bastille,
Peddler's Pantry and Tope
Furniture; at the Silver
Bridge Shopping Plaza ; Cox
Department Store; in Sph ng
Valley Plaza, Country Fare.
Residents of Mason County
will find tickets in Pt. ·
Pleasant at th e Citizens

13- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePQrt·Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,'May 5,1976

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�Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, May a, 1976

Hospital auxiliary
approves purch4ses

NEWOFFICERS - These new officers of Ohio Eta
Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority were installed at a
meeting Tuesday night at the Columbus and Southern •
Ohio Electric Co. in Middleport. From the left are Janet

jpyce Lie Berkley

''

BETROTHED - Mrs. PaulL. Berkley, of Letart, W.
Va . announl'ed the engagement of her daughter, Joyce
Lee to John (Dan) Kupets, son of Mr. a nd Mrs. John A.
Kupets, Republic, Pennsylvania. Miss Berkley, . a 1971
gra duate of Point Pleasant High School is a 1975 graduate
of Fairmont Stale College. She is employed by the
Southwestern Community Action Group as a Head Start
teacher in the Point Pleasant area . Mr. Kupets is a 1972
graduate of Brownsville High School and will graduate
from Fairmont Slate College in December. Wedding plans
are incomplete.

Helen Help

Us •.•

.:.'
'

By Helen Bottel

The Readers Always Write
Dear Helen :
In a recent column, you wrote, "Marriage Encounter is
also highly recommended not only for problem couples, but for
all those who want the most from their married lives." .
Although we know of several "problem couples'' It has
helped, Marriage Encounter is actually recommended for
GOOD marriage only, and thi~ is stressed during the weeke~d .
The teams making the presentations receive no special
training in counseling or psychology, and are not equipped to
handle really troubled unions . I mention this only because so
many. couples are insulted when friends suggest they try the
M. E. weekend. U only they would reali~e they are being
invited because people see something spec ial in their
relationship! They know the Encounter will int ensify and
perfect an already .strong love.
·
You also mention that Marriage Encounter is "sponsored
by the Catholic Church." Although it was started in Spain by a
Catholic priest ilfld brought to the U. S. in 196~ by .still
another priest, the movement IS supported through mdiV!dual
contributions, and not sponsored · by any one orgamzed
religion. As you said, the Catholic version is open to everyone;
however, there are also Episcopalian and Jewtsh ExpressiOns,
both devel oped from the Catholic version and following the
same basic format. - JANE AND FRANK H.
Dear Helen :
I can sympathize with "Elbi" because I suffered the same
hopeless depressions for years. I too loved my husband and
children, "had everything going for me ," but couldn't shake
my unreasonable melancholy.
Psychiatry would help for a short lime, but then I'd be
right back in those black moods.
Then I met a woman who had gone through the same lhirlg .
Mler traveling from doctor to doctor she finally found one who
gave her a glucose tolerance test and found she had
hypoglycemia, low blood sugar .
. .
I insisted my M.D. give me this test (six blood tests m hve
hours, and not very pleasant, but worth it ). Sure enough,lhat
was my trouble . For the first lime in ages, I'm happy most of
the time - as long as I slay on the diet. No pills or shots - just
a special diet.
I'm not saying this Is Elbi 's trouble, but at least she should
check out the possibility of low blood sugar. I suggest she start
by reading a book on the subject which she can get at the
library . - HAPPY NOW
Dear Helen:
A cure for Elbi's depressions? Get a part-lime job or do
volunteer work that makes her feel worthwhile and takes her
"out" of herself. I know. I did! - NOT .nJST A HOUSEWIFE
Dear Helen:
What you eat is closely associated with your mental
·attitudes. Deficiencies cause depressions , and healthful diets
(often plus supplements) can help cure them. I suggest that
Elbi and others read, ''Winning the Age Game" by ~Ioria
Heidi. It gives a happy guide to becoming the "ageless
woman." - DISCOVERER
Dear Dis :
I did, and !like Heidi's many hints. Will review "Winning
the Age Game" in an upcoming column. - H.

..
'

•'

..·
''

'

'.

•'

SPENDS WEEKEND
Mr . and Mrs . Evere tt
Bachrer spent the pa ~l
weekend in Columbus visiting
th eir
son-in-law
and
daughter, Mr . and Mrs .
Donald Brown and children ,
and Mrs. Bachner's sister,
Miss Mary Schaaf. They were
gues ts of Mr . and Mrs.
William Theobald, former
Middleport residents, for an
organ recital . by Keith
Chapm an at the Ohio
Thea ter.
VISIT ENJOYED
Mr . and Mrs. Wilbur
Koenig, Middleport, spent a
week with Mr. and Mrs. ~el
Harmon, Alanhan , Md. Thii,past Sunday they visited in
Marietta with Mr . and Mrs.
Fred J;leatty .

VISITS DAUGHTER
Mrs. Betty Hutchison was
in Columbus Saturday for the
Alpha Phi Sorority Mother's
IWJcheon at the Hilton Inn.
She was the guest of her
daughter , Julia, a student at
Ohio Slate University.

POUCEMAN INDICI'ED
CINCINNATI I UP!) - A
Hamilton County grand jury
Tuesday indicted Cincinnati
Police Sgt. Handy L.
Mathews on If charge of
aggravated vehicular
homicide in connection with
the death of a I:&gt;-year old boy.
. Mathews, 48, a :!&amp;-year
·police veteran, allegedly ran
into bicych, t. Gregory Weddle
last Feb. 16.

' Purchase of a monitor for
patient use following surgery
and a camera for ad ·
minis tration personnel at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
was approved at a recent
meeting of the women's
auxiliary at the hospital.
Dr. Lewis Telle mel with
the group to discuss the need
for and use of a monitor . Mrs.
Janice Daniels presided at
the meeting during which
time a committee was chosen
w select the recipient for a
nursing scholarship of $500 to
be awarded over a three year
period.
A report was given on the

Downie, president; Susan . Lanning, treasurer; Sharon
Bailey, corresponding secreta!'Y, a~d Ly"?e Crow,
recording secretary. Kathy Cummgs, vice president, was
not present for the picture.

National Bank and Fruth
Pharmacy. In Meigs County,
the Meigs Inn located in
Pomeroy and the Fabric
C.,nter in Middleport have
tickets.
The Wellston Sentry in
Well ston and Mrs. John
Preston in Jackson ca n
provide tickets for Jackson
County residents who would
like to attend the ball. Tickets
may also be purchased In
Athens at My Si ster's Closet.
If bought in advance, the
price is $17.76 per couple, or
at the door the night of the
ball, the cost will be $20 per
couple.
The United Sound of
Hunting ton, W. Va . will
provide the music from 9
p.m. until 1 a.m. Theme for
the ball is "Reflections of
Freedom'', and the activities
building will be decorated in
keeping with this bi centennial theme.

e Dyna Mike Gain Control

The 27th annual May Day
celcprati on of the Ohio
Baptist Guild of the Hattie
J ackson Girls and th e
Georgia E. Miller Girls of the

On May 12 all friends and

HOFFMAN SUES
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Acwr Dustin Hoffman filed
suit in Superior Court
Tuesday, charging he is being
cheated out of his 5 per cent
share in profits from tbe
movie "Papillon,"
Hoffman said his contract
called for him to receive 25
per rent of the first $500,000 in
profits and then 5 per cent of
all ]irofits over $14 million. He
charged the distributors with
deducting improper expenses
in figuring the income from
•the film.

$17 995

COBRA-19
TROPHY DISPLAYED - Lynne Crow holds a.trophy
which she received as "pledge of the year" of Ohio Eta
l'hi Chapter of Bela Sigma Phi Sorority. Mrs. Crow,
secretary of the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce,
recently became a member of the sorority when pledges
were taken into membership.

well ~&gt;ishers of Miss Marta
Guilkey,
formerly
of
Middleport, are invited to
attend an open house in her
honor . The gathering will be
held from 7·9 p.m. in the
dining room of · the Meigs
County
Infirmary
on
Mulberry Heights.
For the past two and one·
half years Miss Guilkey has
served Meigs County as
County Extension Agent in
Home Economks. On May 22
she will become Mrs. Douglas
England and will be moving
to Prince Albert, in the / { . n't it time
Province of Saskatchewan,
you remembered
Canada.
Everyone
is
someone you love
welcome to a llend.
with a beautiful gift
FOXX'S -BOXER
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - ,
Comedian Redd Foxx
brought suit Tuesday against
Athletic
the
sta te
Commission for allegedly
violating his civil rights by
ordering Foxx to slop
managing boxer Fred
Houpe.
An arbitrator appointed by
the commission issued the
order last year against Foxx
and co-manager Haywood
Jones, the suit said. It did not
say why. Foxx demanded
$50,000 in damages.

only

• Illuminated Meter
• Switchable Noise L1miter .

ATTENDED POUVOm
Miss Erma Smith and Mrs.
David Cumings of Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Dorothy Hecker and
Mrs. Mabel Brown of
Gallipolis were in Cincinnati
over the weekend to attend
Providence Assoc i~tion will the spring pouvoir of Eight
be held Saturday at the and Forty, Departemental D'
Moun t Moriah Baptist Ohio. All four are members of
Church, Fourth and Main St.; the Gallia County Salon,
Middleport. Mrs . Zueleiia Eight and Forty.
Smith is supervisor.
President · will be Mrs .
Dorothy Thomas, president
SPONSORING SALE
of the Missionaries Society of
REEDSVILLE
- The
the Association, and the Rev.
Riverview
PTA
will
sponsor
a
Henry L. Key , pastor of
yard
and
bake
combination
Mount Moriah and moderator
of Providence Association . saleFriday,10a.m. to 8p.m.,
The Rev . Mr. Key will be the and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 3
speaker at the morning p,m. at the school in Reeds·
ville. Proceeds will go to the
session .
The morning progr,am will school fund .
begin at 10 a.m. 'with the
afternoon service to follow a
luncheon. On the afternoon
prograrri will be a talk and COUPLE ENTERTAINED
The Rev . and Mrs. W. P.
pictures of Mrs. Smith's lrlp
Bikacsan
of New Brighton,
to· the Baptist World Alliance
held in Stockholm, Sweden in Pa., former reside.nts, were
July , 1975. Films will be Friday and Saturday guests
shown by the slate supervisor of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb .
of guilds, Mrs. Aggie Ran- on Friday evening they were
dolph , a member of the Shiloh entertained at dinner by Miss
Baptist Church, Columbus. Vera Beegle.

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only

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VISITS HERE
Miss Carol Foster of
Uvonla , Mich, spent the past
week here with her grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Webb, and Mrs. Ed Foster.

MEAT SPECIALS
97~

Gibson or Oscar Myer

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Mrs. Mi II a rd Van Meter
Delivery Service Maintained loWest Virginia

Mrs. Stephen D. McKnight

Marjorie Walburn .
At the business meeting
which followed the dinner
Miss Rhoda Hail installed the
1976.77 officers. They were
Mrs. Kloos, president; Mrs.
Fowler, vice president and
progr-am cha irman ; Mrs .
Katie Anthony, secretary;
Mrs . AI wilda Werner ,
treasurer; Mrs. Hughes, vice
presi~enl of missions; Mrs.
Sarah Owen, White Cross
chairman; Mrs. Smart,
communications; Mrs .
Elizabeth Slavin, Christian
social relations ; Mrs. Beulah
While, love gift; Mrsc ..
Walburn , vice president of
leadership training; Mrs.
Leora Sigman, vice president
of Christian service; Miss
Hall, spiritual growth
chairman; Mrs. Freda Hood,
chairman of literature ; Mrs.
Lillie Hubbard, scholarship
chairman, and Mrs. Isabelle
Winebrenner, key woman.
Named as the new circle
chairmen were Mrs. Werner,
EJecta; Mrs. Fowler, Dor·
cas ; Miss Hall, Love JOy.
New names were drawn for
the circles.
'
Devotions were given by
Miss Hall who used "Creative
Help for Daily Living." May
Fellowship Day was announced for May 7 at the
Rutland United Methodist
Church. The ne.t meeting
Will be a picnic at the Smart
home and in the event of rain
It will be held at the Werner
recreation room.
The love ·gift dedication
was conducted by Mrs. White
using the thelJ!e "God's
Extras and Ours." Yearly
reports were given by each of
the circle chairmen and Mrs.
Kloes thanked the group for
cooperation during the past
year. A guest at the banquet
was Mrs. Gladys llife of
Cheshire, president of the Rio
Grande Association Women 's
Work. The Rev. Peter
Granda! dismissed the
meeting with prayer.

colored flowers and roses.
Cherubs and floral nosegays
separated the tiers . The
bottom layer lleld the
traditional miniature bride
and groom. Mrs . Gracie
WilsoQ of Albany made the
cake for the couple.
Assisting at the reception
were Mrs. Bolin, Mrs. James
Carpenter, Coolville, Mrs.
Bruce May, . Mrs. Joan
Stewart, and Mrs. Judy Hart,
all of Rutland. Mrs. Bolin,
Mrs. Stewart and the bride 's
mother arranged the flowers
for · the wedding. Mrs.
Snowden also made her
daughter's bridal bouquet
and the attendants• baskets. GUARD FOR FRANK
For a wedding trip to
CHICAGO (UP!) - Too
Gatlinburg, Tenn. the bride
many swooning women aild
changed into a pantsuit of
dusty rose with brown ac· even a few anonymous
threats caused the Chicago
cessories. They returned to
Police Department to assign
their home· in Laurel, Md. · Frank
Sinatra 24-hour pollee
following the wedding trip. guard.
The bride, a Meigs High
At least that's the reason
School graduated, attended Police Superintendent James
llio Grande iollege . The . Rochford gives for stationing
groom is a Rio drande a relief cop at the door of
College graduate associated Sinatra's Ambassador East
with G. C. Murphy Co.
. Hotel suite every eight hours,
Pre-nuptial courtesies were seven days a week.
extended the couple by Mr.
01' Blue Eyes is in Chicago
and Mrs . McKnight who for a nightclub appearance.
hosled a rehearsal dinner at
"Women go outside his
the Meigs Inn. Other parties hotel. room and begin going
were given by Mrs. Bolin, 'tee,hee' and 'ohhhhh,
Mrs. May, Mrs. Birchfield, Frankie," Rochford said. He
Mrs. Carpenter, Rose Mary also said there had been some
Snowden
and
Marty anonymous threats, though
Krawsczyn.
he did not elaborate;

Nuptial vows repeated
in November ceremony

In a double ring ceremony hand baskets of dried flowers
at the Rutland Church of with streamers.
Christ on Nov. ll Miss Judith
Mark Jago of Malta served
Lynn Snowden, daughier of as the groom's best man.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Groomsmen were Harry
Snowden of Rutland and White of Barboursville, Ky.;
Stephen Douglas McKnight, Allie Slllith, Wheelersburg;
son of Mr . and Mts. Harold E. Randy
Greenburg,
McKnight, Allison Park, Pa. Hackensack, N. J. David
exchanged wedding vows.
Houck, Pittsburgh, Pa.
The Rev. C. J . Lemley of
For her daughter's wed·
Vinton officiated at the I :30 ding, Mrs. Snowden wore a
p.m. ceremony which carried gown of old rose with a grell!l,
out the fall shades of gold, brown and rose colored
green, orange, brown and jacket. Mrs. McKnight chose
dusty rose. Two large a floor le.ngth wine skirt and
arrangements of assorted jacket of taffeta. Both
dried flowers and roses mothers had rose corsages.
adorned the altar. The floral Guests were registered by
pieces were flanked with Miss Lori Snowden, sister of
· candelabra holding tapers the bride, and Miss Kim
entwined with ribbon and Birchfield, Rutland .
dried flowers. The fall color
The reception honoring the
scheme ·was also carried out couple wsa held in the church
in the large bows which social room which was
marked the family pews. decorated in the fall colors
Candles with floral rings with dried flowers and rib·
were used in the windows, bon . The brid's table was
and the doors to the church centered with ·a large
were decorated with a large arrangement of dried and
wreath:
live flowers and featured a
Music was presented by four tiered wedding cake
Mrs . Janet Bolin ac· !rimmed with clusters of fall
companied by Mrs. Brenda
Bolin Cremeans, pianist.
Escorted to the altar by her
father , the bride was attired
in a designer g.own of ivory
satin and chiffon detailed
with hand . clipped chantilly
lace. The. high collar was
made of Brussels lace and the
bodice was accented with
alencon lace and tiny satin
QUALITY IN A ZIG-ZAG MACtiNE BUILT
covered buttons which lined
WITH 17 SEW-EASY FEATURES
the front. The ·shepherdess
sleeves of lace were dosed aI
the . cv!f by .matching
overed
buttons
and
trimmed with an overhang of
Brussels lace. The flared
skirt had back fullness which
formed a sweep train. The
entire hemline of the gown
Reg.
was bordered with a scroll of
Reg. $129.95
alencon lace .
The bride's headpiece of
sa tin and lace held her
Versatile, dependable, with bu ilt·in
sweeping floor length veil of
blind-hem st itch, exclusively designed
candlelight illusion which
fron1 drop-in bobbin, extra wide zi g·
was completely encircled
• zag capabi lity, snap-on pre sse r feet,
with chantilly lace. She
many other con veniences .
carried a hand bouquet of
Carrying case or
dried flowers and roses atop a
cabinet extra .
Bible and a long stemmed
yellow rose which she
ptesented to the groom at the
FOR
altar .
MOTHER'S DAY!
Attending her as maid of
honor was her sister, Miss
Rose
Mary
Snowden,
Rutland. Bridesmaids in·
eluded Miss Barbara Ful~.
Middleport;
Miss Sue
; , . ;McKnight of Allison Park,
A great Mothe.r'a Day gift Idea. Gift
, ·; Pa.; Mrs. Pamela Wilson
certllk:•tes of 1111y denomination are avallLenigar, Albany, and Miss
lble.
Patty O'Hara, Seager!, N. J .
Miss Karen DeAnn Lambert,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
WIDE SELECTION
James
P.
Lambert,
Pomeroy, and Miss Donna
Kay Lambert, daughter of
Mr and Mrs . Clarence
· La~bert, Rock Springs,
TRADE IN YOUR OLD MACHINE . AND SAVE EVEN MORE!
served as flower girls ·for
· their cousin, ·
Each of 'the attendants was
dressed In a different fall
colored empire waisted gown
~ crepe satin. Their head·
~.....~i'!
115 w; Second
. Pomeroy
Ph. 992·2284
pieces were made of illusion APPROVEDSINOEAOEALER
• A Trademark of THE SrNGER COMPANY
and satin and they carried

SAVE $30 ·

LOWESY PRICE EVER!

FLOUR
33~ Head

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP·

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BLUE BONNET

l.EITUCE

We give "Gold Medal
Service" and have daily
deliveries to hospitals,
nursing homes and
residences. Call today . ..

'1.89

ROBIN HOOD PLAIN

of flowers?

Approximately 50 women
attended the annual motherdaughter banquet of the B. H.
Sanborn Missionary Society
of the Middleport First
Baptist Church Monday
night .
.
A highlight of the program
was the recognition of
mothers by Mrs. Tony
Fowler. Floral arrangements
were presented .to Mrs.
Elizabeth Gardner, the oldest
mother; Mrs. Judy Cowan,
the youngest: Mrs . June
Kloes and Mrs . Carol
Granda!, the mothers with
the most children , and Mrs.
Eva Hartley, the mother who
has been a member of the
church the longest.
A bicentennial theme was
carried out in the table
decor a lions with cen·
terpieces of chrysanthemtuns
and flags . Red, white and
blue pencils were given as
favors. Mrs. Fowler planned
the table arrangements. In
charge of the dinner were
Mrs. Freda Hood, Mrs. Mary
Hughes and Mrs. Frances
Smart. Mrs , Granda! gave
the welcome and presented
the program using a reading
"The Home." Several
selections were presented by
Susie and Roxanne Granda!
and Lori Kloos accompanied
by Barbara Anthony. The
scripture was read by Mrs.

Ohio
Hospital
recent
Association convention. in
Cincinnati attended bv MrR.
Jessie White , Mrs. Gilda
Baxter ,
Mrs.
Frieda
Mossman and Mrs. Nettle
Hayes . Refreshments
carrying out the Easter
theme were served to those
named and Mrs. Louise
McElhinny, Mrs. Elizabeth
Harold, Mrs. Charlotte
Wright, Mrs. Mildred Withej!,
Mrs. Ruth Gosney, Mrs .
Emogene Simms, Mrs. Alma
Newton, Mrs. Jestie Molden,
Mrs . Nellie Borgan, Mrs.
Belly Ch ristopherson and
Mrs . Carrie Kennedy .

COBRA-21

Annual celebration
scheduled Saturday

Society enjoys annual
mother-daughter banquet

bra

Tickets available
for bicentennial ball
Mrs. Anita Tope, ticket
chairm an for th e Gallia ·
County Bicentennial Ball, to
be held on Saturday evening,
May 29, in the activities
· building at the Gallia County
Junior Fa irgrounds, has
annoWJced locations where
tickets may be.purchased in
advance throughout a five
county area.
In Galli a Co unty , th e
Gallipolis down town retail
merchanIs as well as those in
the two shopping plazas have
tickets available. In down·
!.own Gallipolis, tickets may
be bought at Paul Davies
Jewelers, Thomas Clothiers,
PJ 's , Ha skin s Tanner ,
Bernadines, The Bastille,
Peddler's Pantry and Tope
Furniture; at the Silver
Bridge Shopping Plaza ; Cox
Department Store; in Sph ng
Valley Plaza, Country Fare.
Residents of Mason County
will find tickets in Pt. ·
Pleasant at th e Citizens

13- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePQrt·Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,'May 5,1976

Hi-C Orange Drink.......... ."............. 2
·
2 R!!ll
Delsey TISSues ...........'~.':~!~~.;.............,; /. Pkg.
.
32 oz.
PaImol.IVe uQUI'd .I............................. Bottie
6112 oz.
·Star-Kist Ught Tuna .. ,; ................ 2 ·can
17 oz.
Green Giant Sweet Peas ........... 2 Cans

IIIli

Beef Patties

~::89c

.•. . •. ..•

Regular or Chub

·I OOOfo Pure.

Ground Beef

Grade

f:.;;i;. s·;·~kpec•ed

A Frying lb.

Blc

Chicken Breasts . . . .
U.S. Go•t, Graded Choice People's Choice

Sirloin
Steak . . . . . . . . . . . .

Froten
5- to 7 ·lb. Avg.

Baking;
Hens

Yasty

Delicious

·· StokeiJ
Fruit Coclctall

· Stokely
Applesauce

l-Ib.

$

Ca111

Whitener

Dry

Magic
Bleach

Field Trial
Dog Food

• • • • •

Fre~h

16-ot. leturnable ltl•.

Kroger
White Bread

Sprite, Tab or
Coca-Cola .•.
Krog1r

Genuine

11-Nu· 2'o

Idaho Russet
Potatoes

Lowfat Milk

15$ 79

hi.

·lb.

19

lag

GIFT .CERTIFICATES

All KrogeJI.IIorea

Now·vpen

24 !!!!J. '
lnuwy, H I - . " -

WISS SCISSORS

~ '~!,. ~!~~~~.,!~!».!

h'ltct tt A1111n"• St•t• llltll full

·

95

SPRING FABRICS

With Coupon

·..&lt;: ·':; •·:.&gt;,\ Limit 2 With Ceupen
$10 er Mort Ptircaan
Yt" Afttr and
hi. , Mrr I , IIJI

'-!'

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

bt~y ot
Krot" it gvorotllt•d lor
yo1r'r totol •otitfoction
r•gardlet~ of mort~o~loct~,rr tr .
·If you ort not totitli•d ,
Kroll" will replott your

htryming yo"

item with the

\O rllt

brand

"m'"'"'bllo brand or
prict .

Kroger Welcome•
Your Federal ·
Food Stamps

�14 - The Da1ly Sent mel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, M"-' :, \" . '

DEADL.INES
5 P M
Dav
Befor e
Publ tcatton
Monday O ead ltn c 9

am

Ca n cel lalton
CorrectiO n s will be

ac

c~ pt e d

f or

unt il 9 am
Q.ay Of PubltCal tOn

REGULATIONS
The Publ iShe r r ese r ves
the r tg ht to e dll o r r e ,ec t
any ads deemed ob
lfCitonal 1h e publt5hcr
will not be res pons tble lor

more tha n on e mco rr ec t
tn se r iJO n

RATES
For w a nt Ad Servtce
S

cenrs per

w ord

on e

tnse r tlon
Mtn tmum Cha r QC~l 00
14 c ents pe r wo r d thr eccons ec u t tvc
m se r tt on'&gt;
26 cent!:. pe r wo r d StX

con sec ut tve

tns er ttons

25 P er Ce n t Dt sco unl on
patd ad s and ad f, pa td
w il htn 10 day s

CARD OF THANK S
&amp; OB ITU ARY
\7 00
tor
SO
wm d
mmtmurn

Each addtllonal wo r d 3

ce nt s

BLIND ADS
Addilton al 75c Cha r qc
p e r Adv c r hserne nt
OFFICE HOUR S
8 30 a m 10 5 00 p m
Da ily B 30 a 111 IO I? 00
Noo n Sat ur da y
Ph one to day 991 1 1 ~ 6

NOTICES

.

ATTN I I
AL.L IIOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sa tes . Rummage ,
Porch and Base ment Por c h
and Ba seme nt Sa les , e tc
mu s t b e paid In advanc ~:
Ge t your •n In early by
stopptng by ou r offt ce at
The Dally Sentt n et
111
Court S t o r wrt1 1ng Box
729 , Pom e roy O hto 45769
wtth your rem 11tan ce

WE WISH to thOnk the Roone
Emorgency Squad Person ne l of
Veterans Memonol Hosp1tol
Dr
Blazewtck
Re v
Do n
Wa lk er and all those who se nt
fl owers food e tc All who
helped tn a ny way dunng the
hosp1tahzo lt on and deat h of
our husband and fath er All e n
Tayl or W1fe and Ch1ldren

Help Jlante_tt"' &gt; DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX ·
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
PARTIE S HAS OPENINGS FOR
MANAGERS IN OUR AREA
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST
MENT . NO COLLECTING OR
DELIVERINGS CALL COLLECT
CA ROL DAY (SIB) 4B9-B395 or
WRITE FR\ENDL Y HOME PAR
TIE S 20 RA ILROAD AVE
ALBANY NY 12205
.$25 PER HUNDRED 't"llong
en v e l o p es
Send
self
addr es sed
s tamped
f!nvelope Ed roy Math 801&lt;
188 Albany Mo 64402

BRANCtj MANAGER TRAINEE
Unu s ual oppo rtuntty to become
ossoc tat ed wrth a leodt ng lost
g row1 ng consumer
ftnonce
comp any dot ng busmess 10 19
s tates We rrotn you tn all
pha ses o! work tnvolvmg co n
sume r cred11 You wtll contact
our cus to mers bo th tn and out
51de the oll1 ce and learn to
work with mer cha nts In a
fn endly way you will help peo
p ie
wi th thetr personal
fm oncos Sa lary wrll meet th e
needs of you and your family
now In a few shaft years you
con earn we ll abo'le average
Our company promo tes from
wrth1n
Prevrous expenence
no t necessory Mus t be a hrgh
school graduate ln1t1at1 ve and
ombrtt on pay off Exce pl1onol
employee beneftt s
PHONE
Mr
Ohlmger at 992 2111
Capt tol Fmonc1 al ServiCes 300
W Second St Pomeroy, O h10

45769 AN EQUAL OPPORTUN I
TYEMPLOYER

GR ILL Cook and wa tt ress wanted

Apply m per son Crows Steak
House Pomeroy
WAirRESS wanted Fr~day and
Sa turdor nrghts Apply m per
so n Tal Ttmbers Nil e (tub

Web~t e r

Judge
Co urt o f Co mmon Pl ea s ,
Probate Dt VISton
12 19, J tc

.Pil.OT KilLED

...... ~-·- =-"'"'""-

PUBliC AUCTION Sot May 8,
1976, 11 00 om
Haywa rd
B1ssell Form &amp;a shen Keno Rd ,
RACINE F1re Deportmen t will
County Rd 26 , long Bottom ,
hove o hom shoot Sa turday at
Ohto Dewa lt radtol arm sow
6 30 p m a t thetr new but ldmg
co mplete 6 m a lec planer ,
o ft Bo s ho n Rood
hand too ls of all krnds power
MOl HERS day IS Sunday May 9
hand too ls too l boxes e lec
Te ll Mom how great s he ts w1th
gnnder wtth ben~ h vtces , c
o speoo l me ssage tn the Ttmes
cl am ps a ll srze s furmtu r~
Sen tt nel on Mot he rs Day In
cl am ps model I Gravely tractor
el ude ht:tr nome and address
w1th mower
rtdrng lawn
and we wtll send o Co rd te llmg
mower small o utboard motor
her to look fo r the message 20
ga s brass kettle copper wash
words just$ I 00
botler copper tea ke ttl e o ld
1ron , dum p wagon wtth horses
SWEEPER and Sowtng Moch1ne
old 12 gouge shotgun , d oubl e
Repo 1r Port s and Suppl tes
barrel , o ld 12 gouge pump gun ,
Dovts Va cu um Cleaner , one
around 19 19 Super Ruger 22
half mtl e up Geor ges Creek
magnum revolver wtth 22 long
Rd oft State Rou te 7 Phone
rt tl e cylinder Gutman he n end
(614 ) 446 0294
100~ t e t pocket kn1fe and o ther
MEIGS Co unty Ft sh and G a me
Knrves lo t of sr lver co1ns and
A s~ n
wtl l have a s peoal
other co1ns sump pump old
mee trng Fndoy May 7 at 7 30
dtshes and load s a t o ther
p m at Snowball H1ll Club
d1shes e lec m1 xers rron s
rooms to moke pla ns lor tho
pots larg e marble whatnot s
Jun e Ft sh Fr y
c lec tons and lots of b o~&lt;es and
o ther 1tE11m too numerous to
me ntt on Iorge lot of garden
too ls sleepmg bags 17 tn
cha in sow Aucttoneer Roge r
Hayman
Owner
Hayward
O lD furnllure ICe boxes bra ss
Btssell Na t respans tble for OC ·
beds o ld wall telepho nes and
oden ts
ports or co mplete house ho ld s
Wrtte M D Mtller . Rt 2
Pomeroy , O hto Call 992 7760

Wanted to Buy

CASH pat d lor al l makes and
m odels of mo btle homes
Phonf! area code 614 423 q531
$$Cosh$$$ fo r tunk e d au la Frye s
Tru ck Auto Port s
Rutland
Phone 742 208 1

Forknt

FURN ISHED apt coupl e on ly all
uttlilles pard $130 per month
Phone 992 39'75 or 992 2571

2 BED~M troller . fully carpet ed
lo cated o n Rt 143 close to Hor ·
II SOn vtll e 1 child Phone 742

3122
FURN ISHE D 2 bedrm apartment
adult s on ly in Mtdd leport
Phone 992 -387&lt;1

USE D co r 111 good runntng condr
!ton No t more Than 10 years

3 BEDRM house w1th both
Rutland Phone qn 5858

m

-

3 AN D 4 RM lurnts hed and un
furntshed op ts Pho ne 992
5434

Yard Sale
YARD So le May 3 4 and 5 Gas
range , re frtg ero to r wrmger
type wash1ng mach ine double
cgbmct stn k mangle bed s
rugs ont1 q ues 3 p c parlor
Su ite k1tc hen chot rs , tables ,
sew 1ng
mo ch1ne
ptclure
fram es co ll e cto rs 1tems Many
o ther tt em s 1 m tl e west o!
Ro o m~ o n Rt 124 O t1 ~ McC I111
loc k res 1de n ce

COUNTRY Mobtle Home Pork Rt
33 le n mtles nort h o f Pom eroy
Lorge lo ts wtth co ncret potr os ,
stdewolks , runners and o ft
street po rk rng Phone 992 7479
3 ROOM furntshed apt utrlit1es
pard 356 N Fourth Mtd
dleport

FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED

IF YOU ha ve o se rv tce To o tff!r
want to buy or se ll, some!hmg
are loolo.tn g !or work
or
wha tever
you II get res ul ts
laste r w 1th a Sen tmel Want Ad
Co\1992 -2156
4 Fam1ly Yard Sole, l 1' 1 mile from
Chesh1 re on Sr Rr 554 May 5
th roug h 8 9 00 !t il da rk
Drapes Bedspread s d1s hes
ba by and ad ul t d o th tng o f al l '2
k tnd s too numerous To men
!ton
2
YARD SA LE 2 Fomtly Ya rd Sole at
l aurel Cl tff cl ose to laurel Cltff
Chu rch
used d me tte set
ftreploce sc reen porch sw tng
many mes clothe s Thursday
and Fndoy May 6 &amp; 7 9 00 111 1

modern opt s 2 and 3 bedrms
all e lect nc bnck burld1ng
decorated pla stered walls
compl e te Youngstown krtchens
and dtsposol umls s torm doors
and w•ndows complete ly rn
sulated front and rear e n
trance s , baautrfu lly land
seeped pnvate pork1ng low
rent The Ha ven Terrace Aport·
ments , New Haven W Va Ph

304 882 2433
bedrm furn tshed op! Ca ll 992

3129 or 992·5434

YARD SALE Fnday May 7 9 11113
Corne r Rt 7 and Co unty Road
2b Ft 'le Pomts Mt Hermon
Woman S MI SS IOn a ry ASSOCIO
I ton
YARD SALE , Thursda y and Fr1doy
App ro ~~: 4 mtles ea s t on Co Rd
32 Turn at Me mortol Gardens
Ce metery _Look for stgns
FOUR Fomtly Garage Sale May 6
7 and 8 at 810 W Mat n St ,
Po meroy
Ne11t !a Shule r s
Market from 9 o m !til 5 p m
To ys fo rmal s cl o th1ng and etc
YARD SALE, Ftrst ho use post
Metgs Htgh School on Co Rd
25 across fr om g un club
Clo thm g , ve ry che ep 9 om td

VEGETABLE plants of al l km ds 10
dtlferen l vortet1es of tomatoes,
•nclud1ng non a c1d wh1te
tomato Very large se lect1on of
beddtng
plants
Also
Ge ron1 ums and other potted
p la nts
Hongmg basket s
Clel and Farms and Gr een
house
Geroldme Cleland ,
Roc me
MODERN wa lnut console AM · FM
radto
4 speed change r
Balance $103 40 or leon$ Co li

992-3965
COAL ltme s tone and all !ypes of
sa lt and rock sal t for 1ce and
snow removal El(cels•or Salt
Works , East Main St Pome roy
Oh1o Phone 992 3891
FREEZER BEEF Corn fed s teers
W1ll de lr ver to local dressrng
plant ~ Phone 843· 2111

To 5 14 76 l og Cobrn Twp Rd
261 be tw een Keno an d l on g
COAL limestone .and calcium
Bo!l om !a ll ow s1gns off 248 at
chlo r1 de and colc tum brine lor
Keno or l ong Bo llom Waches
dust control and all types of
Jewelr y
purses
cl o thes
sal t Enels1or Sa lt W or~ s . East
d1shes , C-8 radt o
f1sh rng
Mom St re et , Pomeroy , Ohto ,
ta ckl e , Four 700x 16 B ply trr es
~ho~e_'l_9~ 3~91
fou r 750~&lt;16 t1 res one th ree .
fou rth 1968 Jeep truck 36 tn 1953 Ford Jubt lee tractor (ex·
ce llent ). $1 650 Ford 9N tro c
cop bunks slave otr horn s CB
tor overhauled S1,000 , New 5
rod1o fully equ1pped for tra1ler
tow •ng
It 3 pt ro tary mower (st ump
umper) , $385 Four used r1 d1ng
YARD SALE Thu rsday , Fnday and
awn mower$ , 7 and Bh p $200
Sa turday May 6 7 and 8 155
to $230 Luckett Form Equrp·
PMrl St , ~tddleporl , Oh1o
ment , Wast Washtngton Sf ,
Albany Phone (614) 698-3032
YARD SALE 2 mtles up Story s Run
or698 7881
Rood Th\Jrsdoy and Saturday .
May 6 thr ough 8
POL LED Hereford bull , 2 yrs old
YARD SALE , Thursday , Fnday and
$300 7 wee~s o ld nanny goat ,
Sa!urday at Pearl Wtll1 s letart
$25 Phone Shade. (614) 696·
Fall s Oh1o
1234

l

-

modern

THE Rt ver'ltew PTA w1ll s ponso r a STEREO-RADIO
des1gn
co mbtnott on yard and bake
om -tm rodt o 8 tra ck tope com
btno t1on Ba lance $101 20 or
sol e on Fnday May 7th from I 0
terms Coll992-3965
a m ttl I 8 p m and Satu rday
May 8 from 10 o m t1ll 3 p m
BEAN POSTS Coli 247 3077
The sa le wt ll be held a t the
---~
school m Reedsv tll e , and pro 1975 Suzukt GT 750 motorCycle
c~ eds ~ II go to schoo l fund s
go?d condllt an C~ll ~~?.:!!'!
FOUR Fomrly Garage Sale , O NE set of maple bunk beds w ith
Thursday and Fn day May 6 and
box sp nng s and mattress Anfl
7 9 a m ttl! 5 p m Rt 7 above
que bed rm sutt , Burl inla1d , 4
Cheshrre Clothtng and every
block le athe r bar s too ls
ttem rmagmoble
Gravely
wtth attachmcmts
Phone (614 ) ~85 · 35 11
YA~D SALE , iHiursday Fnd ay and
Saturday 6.47 North Second 11973 350 Kowasakt 81g Ho rn u
Ave , Mtddlep o rt
Yellow
pons 1o n chamber , knobby
!Ires 3 brke tro1ler Cal l 992
house below Gateway lots of
ttems , 911115
7110

BIG CHIMNEY , W Va
IUPI)
Federal
mveshgator s today were
lrymg to detenmne what
caused the crash of a small
plane which resulted m the
, death of an OhiO man.
E F Snyder, about 50, of
Akron was killed early
Monday when the t"in-Engme
aircraft he was piloting
clipped a tree and plummeted
lD the ground, falling apart on
Impact.
Snyder, on course from
" Atlanta at the time, dted of
massive heqd and internal
injuries, according
to
Regtstered Co llie Stud Ser Kanawha County Coroner Al AKC
vtce , Stardust Kmg Phone
Shepard.
(614 ) 985-4248
Officials at Kanawha BASSETT
P"PP&gt;es Phone (614)
Airport told investigating
_ !~~~3_7~_:'~!_f_6_p._m
__
state troopers they lost radio ONE male 2 female poodle pups
contact with Snyder at 12:13
Also 1967 10K40 house •troder ,
a.m. Monday. The missing
1n good condi tron Phone 992·
7185
plane was found by a Slate
Pollee helicopter
1970 Cheve lle SS 396 4 s peed ex ·
ce llent co,d tt lo,. Lo ts of elC
There was no explosion or
tros Coli alter 5 p m 992
ftre m the crash, police
5717
added .

nu~~

OF Nff QUARRY.

Business Services

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
Of ·
QUALITY Motor Co.
1972 FORD MAVERICK 1 DR

S189S

302 V-8 automat1c tra ns , P
inferrer . blue f1n1sh

steen ng, radro, clean

1972 AMC HORNET

1973 FORD TORINO

S199S

- -

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS
30",3 HP, B&amp;S Eng.

$89.95
TURF TILL
TILLERS
3'1• H. P., B&amp;S Eng.

$163.95
POMEROY LANDMARK
9.- Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Aiil
Phone 992 2181

WILKINSON'S

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, Gutters,
Painting and Repair

~~~
·, •

992 -3092

-

w heel block wtth block 111nyl
lop
black in teuor, 39,000
m tles Prrced below book a!
$2795 Phone 742 -3008

71 750 Norto n (amanda Con see
at Rutland Pennzod or cal l 742

2542

1975 Honda motorcycle 360 rood
b tke ltke new El(ce llent con
dtlton Phone 992 3566
truck co;per
5983 afte r 5 p m

JERSEY cow
After 7 p m

-

_____ -

NEW Improved
Zrpp res ' the
great 1ron pdl now w1th Vttom.n
C Ne~so~ ~r~g LOCUST ' posts round- ~~ ~splrt
Phone 949 2774

-- --- -

---

~

MANS lef t handed gulf set bog
and pu5h cart $35 l adles rtght
handed gull se t bog and push
ca rt $30 Ht-power telescope ,
elec addmg mochrne $20
Man 's brown su1t s 1ze 40 $10
Phone 949·2660

---

--- - 1-----

--

CHEVY' 3 bell housmgs 10 one.
half , $5 00 e ach VW clutch
$15, ' 4 SS wheels $60 327
block co mplete , $50 Set of 396
hoods , $20 Set o f 396 heoders
$30 396 lock complete, $125 2
Pont1ac a 1&lt;le s, $15 Phone 992·

3 bedrm hou se tn the country
For reasonable ren t Phone
992 -5175

tn

992 -7336

Rutla nd Phone

3 BEORM HOUSE

2 bedrm home s pac1 ous rooms
nrce Y~!_d Ph.?~!!~!~9_4

m---------~-------

ll'ICOit~Oil ATII:D

16G ACRES - Large older
home , 6 ponds , several
outbutldmg s, owner wrll
dlvtde , wil l take land
co nt ract
wtfh
ddwn

paymen t
No 159 - 3 br . full base ,

v,

a
ground , c lose
stores , $23,000 00

No 161 large

to

close

ce ramt c bath , a 1r cond ,
carpor t , garden About liz

ac re Storage Bldg $16,900
INVEST - DON'T SPEND
- Here IS a d BR , 2 bath
home w1t h a n1ce Rec . R

N G hot water hea t. ul&gt;lo ty
R , large e nclosed porch
garage and not very o ld

$30 .000
AN AMAZING VALUE -

to

10

good

oondot&gt;on $\2 000
OVERLOOKS THE RIVER

schools. 18,600 00

-

We have other acreage call

b as e ment w1t h 2 car
garag e Large fron t porch
lo lounge on th iS summer
Many
other
feature s

tf mterested

804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2 298
After Hours Ca II

992 -7133
CONTACT
Lots Pauley
Branch Manager

Exce ll en t cond1 tron 7 R

frame , 3 large BR , fu ll

ASK \ NG $18,500.
CallUs Up
G&gt;ve Us A Try

Moddlerort

3825
REMODE LIN G, Plumbmg heatrng
and all types o f general reparr
Work guaranteed 20 years elC
D&amp;D TREE lnmmtng , 20 years ex
pertence
Insured free
esttmates Call 992 -2364 or

_(b!_4)_~~.!2~!-_l~~r__ ___ _
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser
viCe, all maKes 992·228.4 The
Fabrtc Shop ,
P'omeroy
Authomed Smger Sales and
Servtce We sh~_!:~e~~~~~~-EXCAVATI NG , dozer loader and
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo boys fo r h1re , wrll haul
ftll drrt lop sot l lrmestone o nd
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jef
fers
day phone 992· 7089
nrght phone 992-3525 or 99'2·

667-35\9
3 BEDROOM total elec hom e ,
garage Iorge lot on Ru s h c
Htll s , Syracuse Sole pnce

5232

Phone 992-7523 for

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

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Sanrtotron 992·3954 or 992·

3 bedrm home , ( all 9'12· 7033
HOUSE, 3 bedroom home, 59

742 2348
EXCAVATING

TEAFORD

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
Attentton Coal Mtners - 56 acre modern J b r house
wrth fire pla ce, plenty of pasture , farm ground , cherr y,

Vtrgll B Sr ., Realtor

be ry

a pple and other fru&gt;l trees Mostly fenced, woth pond
close Ia Oanvi\ le Price 131,900
12,8GG- 5 bedrooms, 2 balh s. eKI lg l&gt;v rm porches
gar Nat, ga s furnace cbns hdwd firs, Loc Seoul Rd
tn Chester
Here's What You 've Been Ask1ng For - A modern 3
bedroom farmhou se, 1n the coun try , 3 acre, nat . gas
furnace. c lty water , sm barn and ch rc k hse , loca ted

near Basha.n 26 ,500 . ONner Moght Trade
Newly Wed Spectaf - New a ll elec hom e, never lt ved
In , 3 bedroom s. l1 v mg room. krtchmg &amp; drnmg room &amp;
bath , mostly ca rpete d , porch &amp; but lf on garage , •, 2 acre

of land Country sellong , I mole off Rt 7, 1\n&gt;sh&gt;ng work
requ~red , wt ll be done for buyer tn 30 days Prr ced tor
qu ock sale 122.500
90 Acres Vaca nt Land -

You would know s pnng ts here
w h e n you see tht s w tde green vall ey w1th a brook
runnmg through 1t , 1u s t per fe c t for a large lak e ,
woo ded htlls rde JUSt crying for a cabtn
He res
sce n ery an~ s eclusion
at less than $300 per acre

CALL QUICK.

On ly

JIMMY DEEM

~'H4
ACROSS
1 Came
.Chapman5 South
American
. plains
11 Rainy day
complamt
12 Become
apparent

D6 exte rior pomhng
houses and roofs . Phone 992

5684 oc 992-3374
GREG S CB SALES, localed at Er
w 1n s Gulf Servtce , Mtd·
dleport , Ohto Phone 992·

2438
EXCAVATING , BACKHOES AND
DOZER , LARGE AND SMALL.
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED . BILL
PULLINS, PHONE 9'12-2478, DAY
OR NIGHT

. .,".-!~-~~-::

4 brs , bath , n 1ce kit , large

ya rd on M&gt;ctdleporl On ly
58500
•
11 RMS. - Old house wtlh
all uhlllie s and 2 lots near
new

restaurant

W&gt;ll take otler
WANTED - Large family
for th&gt;S 5 BRs , 2'12 baths, 10
rm hom e, 2 car garage,

and lot IOOx145 See this
and we'l l try to work a
dea l
BUSINESS - All stack and
Good location ,

thousand, or wi ll lease

MINERALS - 135 acres in
Lebanon Townsh ip . 2 miles
east of Bashan
GET IN TOUCH WITH US
ON THESE SOON , OVER
40 PICTURES TO LOOK
AT. DROP IN TO SEE.
•

•

•
•• e•
••

e

••

••

CARPENTER wtll do srd1ng , roof
1ng, remodeling , room oddi ·
Free
l1ons
Also garages
Est1mates . Call 992 2659.

What's

Mobrle home and lot 1n Cheshrr a

doinq
on

You

nailed
t hat

Pert

•

•

:•
:

Phone 992· 2605.

15 Be able
to hold

'\,17 CaU- day

Brinq
some
tools~

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

-

I

Yd.

&lt;e..--J

CALL !41-2111
TALk TO
WENDELL GRATE
CAR PET CONSULTANT

I'LL e.E11-1E LAUGH IN6&amp;TOCK.OF80CIE1Y AND
THE PRESS IF THAT'S
THE BEST WE O'N
COME. UP Wlnl !

®lHAT FEMALE
VER510NOFAN

A5m:&gt;NAUT I&amp;
WHATAIYDESfGNERCAME

uP wrrn!

••
•
•

el

.
••
•

RUTLAND

THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1976
6 oo-Su nrlse Semester 10
6 15-Farm Report 13.
6· 20-Pallerns fpr Living 13
6 ' 3D-Columbus Today 4, News 6, Sunr ise Se mester 81
Urban Le•gUfl 10
6 411-&lt;&gt;unce of Prevention 10
6' 45-Mornlng Report 3.
6 50-Good MornlnQ. West Vlrglnle 13
6 55-Chuck While Reports 10, Good Morning, Trl
Slate 13.
7 .oo-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning, Ameri ca 6, 13. CBS
News 8, Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10
7;3Q-Schoolles 10
(\:oo-Lassle 6, Capt Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St 33 .
8 :~Q-Big Valley 6
9 oo-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue&lt;, lSI Lvcy
Show B: Mike Douglas 10, Morning with D J 13.
9;3Q-A.M. 3: One Life lo Live 6, Tattletales 8, Mike
Douglas 13
JO .oo-Celebrlty Sweeps takes 3,15; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Right 8,10
10 3Q-High Rollers 3, 4, 15, Dln•h 6
11 oo-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15: Weekday ' ' Gambit
e,10; Farmer's Daughter 13 : E lee. Co 20.
11 ·3Q-Ha llywood Squares 3,4,15, Happy Days 13; Love
of Life 8, 10, Sesome Sl 20
11 55-Take Kerr 8. Dan lmel's Wor ld 10.
12·0o-Fun Factory 3, Lei's Make a O..al 13; Bob
Braun 4: News 6,8,10, Pollll cal Talk IS
12 3Q-Take My Advice 3,15 . All My Children 6,13,

bellhop

31 SubBtantlal
33 Cognizant
3t Beneath
37 Proofreading
word

39 Mamma -!

12·45- Eiec Co. 33.
12 55-NBC News 3, 15
1 oo-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13: Ph il Donohue 8;
Young &amp; the Reslless 10; Not Foor Women Only 15.
1 3Q-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15: Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13i
As the World Turns 8,10
2 Q0-520,000 Pyr~mld 6,13
2 3Q-Doclors 3,&lt;, 15, Break the Bank 6,13 : Guiding
Light 8,10
3 OQ-Anolher World 3.4,15. General Hospllal 6, 13; All
In The Family 8,10: Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3 3ll-One Llle to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6, Match
Game 8,10, Col lege For Canines 20. lTV Ullllzallon
33
•.oo- 8aseball 3,4: Somerset IS; Bewitched 6. Mickey
Mouse Club B. Mister Rogers 20,33; Mov ie "Young
Tom Edison" 10, Dinah 13
4 3Q-Mod Squad 6; Bever ly Hll lblll les 8; Sesame St.
20,33; Fllntslones 15
5 oo-Parlrldge Family 8, Mission lmpposslble 15
s 3Q-News 6, Family Altair 8. Elec. Co 2(),33. Adem
12 13
l oo-News 4,8,10,13,15: ABC News 6: Zoom 20 ; lTV
Utilization 33
6 JQ-News 3,4, ABC News 13; NBC News 15; And)
Griffith 6, CBS News 8, 10, Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Li li as Yoga &amp; You 33
l ·oo-Truth or Cons j, To Tell the Truth 4, Bowling
tor Doll•rs 6, Lawrence Welk 8; News 10, Lei's
Make a Deal 13: Family Altair 15, Anyone for
Tennyson? 20. Famllv AI War 33.
_
1 3Q-Hollywood Squares 3,; , Ohio Stele Lottery 6:
Evening Edll lon wllh Marlin Agronsky 20; Wild
Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Music City
U.S A IS
8 oo-Movle " Law and ~rder" 3,4, IS •• Welcome Back,
Potter 6, 13, Wattons 8,10, Opera Theater 20 ; Mark
ol Jazz 33
8· 3Q-Barney Miller 6, Lowell Thomas Remembers 33;
Pollllcl Talk 13.
·
9 oo-Streets of San Francisco 6,13: Hawaii Flve-0 8:
Olympiad 33 : Movie "Sialag 17" 10
10 OQ-Harry 0 6,13, Barnaby Jones 8: Bi ll Moyers'
Journal 33; News 20
11.0o-News 3,4,8, 10,6, 13, 15; ABC News :p.
Car ~on 3,4, 15;
Manni• 6; Movie
'Generation " 8, Movie "San Francisco" 10;
Political Talk 13; Janak! 33.
12 oo-Mannl• 13
12 4Q-Maglclan 6
J·oo-Tomor row J, 4
l.lQ-Maglclun 13.
2 2Q-New&lt; 13

11 3Q-Johnny

WIN AT BRIDGE

A safety play in duplicate?
NOI\TII \1)1

1:::-+-1-+-

,_ K 5
II A?

t A?
o!oA .J76542

WEST

EAST
olo7! 2

•IIJ 1084
119 542
t .1 9 52

·-

111/10
t QB u:1
o!ol/108 .1

SOUT\1
• A 9 ti
IIK JRO
t K \0 4
o1o

K9

Hol h v ulne rabl e

38 Quiver
CO Zounds!
tl Alleviating

North E 11st

Pt~ss

Ill
5NT
6 N T I'.&lt;Ss Pass
Itt.

P.I SS

~•

PM;s

Pass
Pass
Openmg lea d- Q •

~

=
=

'JUGHAID'S BEEN
UP IN THAT DADBURN
1REEHOUSE
TH' WHOLE
BLES5ET DAV,
MAW

I{OUNG-UNS

AXYDLBAAXII
LONGFELLOW

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Wh en the Li fe Master
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Ia category was established m
used far the three L's. X for the two O's, etc Single letters. 1936 Dav1d Bruce was made
apostrophes. the length and !ormation of the words are all numb e r one a nd Oswald
hints. Each day 1he code letters are dllTerent
Jacoby number two
Dav1d rettred from senous
CRVPTOQUOTE
tournament play around f940 ,
u D A but before dmng so he hadesFHEAB
UK
GJK
... B N Q K
tablished himself as one of the
G
H
·
games
mosL knowledgeable
KAHEBJ
J0 I
OZDNAI
MJH
players
Playmg wtth Oswa ld Jacoby
HC
D CHHS
UDXK
J N U I K S C · - 1n the 1934 Men 's pairs which
they won, Dave found htmse lf
ZH0 KZG
SHE N I
I G K QK A I H A
1n stx notrump after simple
Yesterday's Cryploquole: LAWS TOO GENTLE ARE 1934 b1ddmg
SELDOM OBEYED; TOO SEVERE, SELDOM EXECUTED.- After studymg the dummy
I c arefully Dave dec1ded on
BENJAMIN FRANKUN
(C) 19'76 Kin&amp; Fea\uru Syndlc•~e. Inc,)
that very rare thing tn match
pomts - a safety play to
Is

LIKE TO BE

ALL BV
THEMSELVES

ONCE

IN A

WHILE}

PAW

60 00. 1m! THE 6AME
HA5 ElEEN CAU.ED ~

'

DON'T I{()U THINK

I KNOW THAT?

guard agatnst a 4·0 suit break .
Therefore . after winning the
first spade lead tn dummy,
Dave led a luw dub and In·
serted his nme spot after East
played low The result prov·
ed Dave rtght He made stx
notrump for a top score.
Furthermore, a later check of
the other 1esults showed that
!here was JUSt one other patr
m SIX notrump If clubs had
broken the lrtck Dave would
have ~1ven away would have
cost lum JUSt half a match
potnl

South

West

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work- It:

With paddtng lnstalted
U ts square vard

ARNOLDGRATE '

notch
( hyph. wd.)
Z2 Coffee
holder
23 Cl8tem
!t Aquatic
mammal
Z5 Inle!!ted

(Scot.)
31 Disparaged
(2 wds.)

)-..

ding , $7.95 sq. yd.

···•••••···

one

16 Top-

28 Suffix lor
Incur
:10 can for a

30 Mr.
Ziegleld
3% Greek
letter
35 Aid~ tree

501 NYLON

Close Sat. At s p.m.

5 Danger
6 Set
right
7 Encountered
8 Hallelujah!
(4 wds.)
9 Churn

10 HST was

Edward

Green, gold , red , blue, rusl
Do it yourself, witk ped

Thursday 8til12,noon

(2 wds.)
e Pup-

Ve•tenllly'• Auwer

i~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ rlv~

12 or 15 FT.

8:00til 5:00

character
Z Equity
member
3 Saints be
praised!

28 Suffix for

l\J

•• •

Caesar"

ztUttle

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

••

~t: King

1 "Julius

Bard's

Beautiful colors. Do tl
yourself and save. Regular
56.95 sq. yd.

Mo n., Tues., Wed.

boat

IZ Learning
t3 Swordshaped
MGerman
river
DOWN

Gotham

Candy Sbipe
Sq.

19

Movi e " A Cry In the Wilderness'' 8, Movie " Kona
Coas t" 10, Janakl 33
1· M-Tomorrow 3. News l:l

weapon

SAVE ON
CARPETING

Sale Sf&amp;

(2 wds.)
18 Biblical

Perched
21 GatlingTurn down
2t Poet,
Marianne 28 Cavalry·
man's

742-3018

·················~·········
II-

n::\r'1'11''&lt;;

W'ld
I

U Keep

!It

1969 12x60 mobtle home, custom
Schu lt . Good cond1lion Coli

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742-2211

1

•

I' ll

roof?

12)(65 3 bedrm al l elec . $6500

: -. FRI_DAY TIL 8 : .,
•

Kenton

CE&gt;'J.u.:"s-..._

the

Phone 367-7614

~.

. .••

13 Getz or

""""='="-'~--------··_:"~"-"""'':.:·~·..!.'!'"!::"~·:or,

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

••
•a

-~

-

up in Rutland

Ask&gt;ng lU St $13,500
OLDER HOME - 8 roorns,

Needs a couple wllh a few

949-2388

~~55!~~~

$29,500
BUSINESS BUILDING Down (rea l nice) and a s

equip m e nt

Call For Appointment

All new STARCRAFT Mmr-mo tor
home s
tra vel ttarlers and
fold -dawns new and used.
Best prrces rn tr1 -stote, we w1 ll
sell serv rce and quahty Hours
12 -7 Open Sunday, Camp Con
ley Storcroft Sales, Rt. 62 , N
Pt Pleasant ~

renova ted home wtth woodburntng fireplace. gas F.A.
furnace
N1 ce carpeting

s tore &amp;

go homback rldl•g-THE HORSE

Will

Phone 9.:19-25.45 or 742·

~iiiEI~~~~i~

$16,500
12 ACRES - In town,
garden land, large garage
wl lh storage , 3 BR .,

room apt

r.,,,.,d,,•, IJumbl•" BRIBE FORCE GRATIS CIPHER
An••t:r. ffl~t might t:Gn•ltkrit bt•eorll JOIA t•

by THOMAS JOSEPH

backhoe

3167.

'$25,000 00
2 HOUSES - I has 9 rms.,
bath , lhe ather has 3 rms
and balh All ulllot&gt;es , a nd
acre

I tn
(A.wen to..orro,r)

Pomeroy

Ph 992-2174

Will trrm or cut t rees and shrub·

Phone 992-3325

a lm ost o n e

do&lt;er

and d1tcher Charles R Hat.
held , Back Hoe Servrce,
Rutland Ohto Phone 742·2008

110 Mechamc Pomeroy, 0.

drnrng, F A oil furnace
Large 2 car ga rage an d 1
level
acre
A sk rng

RAZDAH

TIIIIIIIIY

Will do roofmg construction ,
plumbtng and heatrng No JOb
too large or too small Phone

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

BR RANCH - Nice
closets, 1•; , baths, large ki t.

[)

••r•ealell br the obove cartoon.

596B

acres I mde from Rutland on
New ltmo Rood phone 742

4

I

,.

-~~~~~-~h.s'~!..~I~~o_! ___ _

We Have People

Eager To Buy
H E CLELAND BROKER
992-2159 or 992 -2568

•••

Now uranp the circled letten
to lorm the turprloe Ullwer, u

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Sweepe rs toa sters , rrons , all
smal l opolta nces lawn mower
next to State Hrghwoy Garage
on Route 7 Phone (6U] 985

ROOMY 7 yr. old one story wood
frame
two bedrm
home
located between Coo lvtlle a nd
Tuppers Plotn s One acre lot,
two col garage Ctty water gas
heat ,
hardwood
fl oors
carpeted
Irving room mce
v1ew $21 000 Phone (614)

----

J.'k

Noble Summit Rd.,
Middleport
PHO~Em S724
5-3-1 mo

Phone Anna Blackwood

BRADFORD Austtoneer Com
p late Servrce Phone 949 2487
or 949· 2CXX&gt; Rocm e Ohro Crrtt
Brodford

949 2883

2988

-1 WIHSS

D. BUMGARDNER

l

Search tor Tomorrow 8, 10

vaurself man .

All paot suppltes available,
too.

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Spec1a1rst

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

baths, ulll&gt;ty R , garage &amp;
All

Rut land

LOVELY '2 story olde r home m
Racrne I I K24 ltvtng rm dtnrng
room nf!w butl! -ln k1tchen wrth
cherry cabtnets, den , bedrm
and one -holt bath down w1th
oak hardwood fl oors 3 bedr
ms New full both utrltty room
upsto trs lull basement , large
fro nt and rea r porches unat·
toched garage
2 storage
burldtng s, all set upon large lot
wtth addr!tonol lo t avorlable
Must socrtf1ce fo r $21 ,OOCl Ca ll

more mformot1on

Unscramble the•• f101r Jumbleo,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinar)' worda.

~At:ATICJt.l

Above and below ground
pool ktts for lhe do-it-

Anniversa!J Services
Bran Thomas
992-1726 4_30_1 mo .

Phone 992 2058

$22,900

%l&lt;l'R THAN A
11-M WHO !&lt;; SIC-K

SWIMMING
POOLS

Ann's Bridal and

985-3805

Forced atr furna ce , centro otr

2 s t ory fr 3 me , 5 BR, l'/1
carport

3 br , I story .

yar d ,

CHARM &amp; COMFORT About S Yr s old 3 BR N&gt;ce
krtchen &amp; drntng Utlltty R.

tn

~&amp;~~;~::::~-:!=

/n&lt;F,I&lt;'\::'&lt;=. 1-X)THitJb

Ol.llll!' FIRST ~'i
OF HIS

From the largest Truck o'r
Bul ldozer Radtator to the
sma ll est Heater Core

4- ll · 1 mo .

tn

Phone 742-240'1
Rutland, Oh .
4·26 1 mo.

Bo• 28A

Free Consultation

Ph 949-2023 or 843-2667

BEDRM house
Phone 9&lt;12 5858

Shepard Contractors

Complete Br1dal
And Anniversary
Service

the old . All types of
burldrng: and remodeling
from the loundat1on up .
Addrtrons,
carpetrng ,
patntrng , Sldtng, roofing ,
paneling, paper hangtng ,
etc .

3

3 bedrm house

r-/'"l'o11T NOW !AI READY TO MAI&lt;E A
CONFESSION OF MV CRIM ES!

24 Hour Phone Serv1ce

41Gimo .

We butld new and remodel

2328

ME, I 50~EL"' REGRE-T
HEARTLE55 SWIIIIDLE5
I'VE PULLED IN THE PA5Tl

by
Ltcensed Installer

Svratuse, Oh10
Ph 99'1 3 99J

OONSTRUCTION

NEW home for sale 3 be drms
sew mg room 2 cerarrttc baths
pe rsonaltzed kllchen butlt lor
the homemaker
Plenty of
garden space on thts one acre
lo t Approx 2 o ne four th mrles
from Rt 7 on S R 124 Toward
Rutland o n sou!h s1de of rood
Watch for s1gn Al TROMM
BUILDER Rutland Pholle 742

•

f&gt;E~&gt;t=Y6
A~~ THE'

Installed

LARRY LAVENDER

D&amp;D

or(614)985 me

SMALL house tn Syracuse 2lorge
lots Phone qq2 3857 ofter 5

Strout"
Rea It,

ALUMINUM
SIDING· SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

d 25 1 mo

7803

p

F1nancrng Avartable
Slown mto Wall s &amp; Atf1cs
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

j

~PLENDID~ ... ~O THE TRUTH
S!!IWM HAS FINALLY ENABL5D
YOU TO SEE: WHAT A DEPRAVED
5NAI&lt;.E·IN· THE · 6RA5.S YOU
ARe;, ISH~!~IIII...II111i

Septic Systems

Blown
Insulation Services

We Deliver
WANTED TO RENT small house or
troller preferab ly rn the co untry
and near Pomeroy Etther fu r
nrshed or no t Phone 949-2480

CAPtAIN EASY

Mtke Young, Manager
Safes and Installation
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
Phone day or night
614-991-2106 I 14 1 me

FREE ESTIMATES

17 Cole Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Telephone (614 ) 992 -3768

Phone 992 560 I

See how you can really

3 28 1 mo

TWIN CITY
MACHINE SHOP

Phone 992 3462

--

or 949-2203

ARE AVAILABLE
AT

-

225 AMP ltnco ln electrtc welder
$100 19 1nch Zentth portable
b&amp;w TV $50 , Stereo 8 track
tape
player ,
$25 ,
1962
Che vro let one ha ll ton 4 wheel
dn ve ptekup truck $4SO , good
cond tt ton Phone
992· 7435
-- _._,

Call u• at 949 2182

Medical Oxygen
and Supplies

73 340 Dus ter low m tleage 75
Dodge ptckup
6 cylinder

Ph~ne - 99'2

8 It

Need new roof or old
reparred? House, roof,
barn, sh•ngles, burld up ,
patntrng , electrical work ,
gutters &amp; downspouts ,
furnaces # water heaters ,
water softners, tnstalled &amp;
repatred, Sewage .

4-5 76

'

·home with no obligation.

Racrne, Ohio

PH. 992-3746

.

-

on cai·

estimates

peting and inslallallon.
We'll bnng sample~ to your

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

Certified technician.
Br1ggs &amp; Stratton
Engines.
Pickup &amp; Delivery

1969Comoro loaded wrth ex tras
Unbel iev ably good cond thon
Prtce $1850 Phone 742 -2143
B k p ratottller cham dnve 4
after 5 p m or co ntact Dallas
speed Phone992· 5194
We ber
NEW e lec floor fan new Eureka
1973 Mont e Carlo excellent con
swee per Electnc hot plate 2
dt!ton
outomoltc power
burner Call any ftme after 6
stearmg power brakes a1r ,
p m B43 26-45
tape
sw tve l buckets
itlt

r,.\

NEW . L.awn Boy mowers .
Ptoneer
chain
saws.
Bolen's Mowers , Merrv
Ttllers, MTO Mowers .
491 Locust St
Mrddleport. Ohio

MAC'S
LAWN
MOWER
SERVICE
SSOO Phone 992 7671 or 992

TillersRldrng
Tractors .

~-. ...4
~ il

S.oo-Bonmanra 3. Partridge Family B. Mission
Imposs ible IS
5·3o-Adam-12 4: News 6 : Family Affair 8: Elec. Co
20.33 , Adam-12 13
6 oo-News 3.4.8.10,13.15; ABC News 6, Zoorn 20.33.
6 3Q-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Villa
Alegre 33
7 ·oo-Truth or Cons. 3: To Te ll the Truth o; Bowling lor
Dollars 6: Pop oes the Country 8: News 10; Wild
Kingdom 13; League of Women Voters 15, Boo!&lt;
Beat 20; Know Your School 33.
7 3Q-Polltlcal Talk 3, Name That Tune 4; Match
Game PM 6: 525,000 Pyram ,ld 8, Evening Edition
wllh Mart in Agronsky 20. The Judge 10, To Telllhe
Truth 13, Wild Kingdom 15, Book Beal 33.
8·QO-LIIIIe House on I he Prair ie 3,&lt;, 15: , Bionic
Woman 6, 13, Tony Ora lando &amp; Dawn 8, 10, Tribal
Eye 33, Mark ol Jazz 20
8 3Q-Lowell Thomas Remembers 20 .
9·QO-Sanford &amp; San 3,4,1 5; Barelta 6,13: Cannon 8, 10;
Theater In America 33, Decades of Decision 20
9 3Q-Pollllcal Talk 3; Chico &amp; the Man 4,15.
IO :OQ-Hawk 3,4, 15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13 : Blue Knight
B. IO, News 20
10 3Q-Aimanac 20
p ·oo11 oo-News 3,4,16,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33

SLOAN'S
CARPETING
Free

11 3Q-Jhnny Csrson 3&lt;, 4.15; Movie "Outrage" 6,1 3;

WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1976

save .

5·5·1 mo

7034

Lown
Mowers-

. o!fP•

~-

•t r

Free Estimates

1975 &gt;&lt;S 650 B Yamaha , lrke new,
low mt leage For more In
formatton cont a ct Metgs Auto
Parts Phone 992 -7711

'

,1r" r t (t ;;r~ •
..

Eng .

Repair

i . . ,. . ~ ~~:.'~

, ~:

Rutland
742-1318
All Work Guaranteed

1968 Tempest converttble , very
good con dtt10n
New top
automattc , power steertng

__

~u

:e_~_., .f' f,

Al. TROMM CONST.

A door , Vs au tomatte . radio good rad tal t1res. blue
1fm1sh . clean mt erior

Smill

Co.mplete
_

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

51995

Spb rt about Wagon 6 cy l Automat ic trans , rad1o,
good ttres, wh1te fln1 sh, g oo d eco nomy

MAKE s prrng cleontng profttab le
turn unwan ted ttems mto cask
Ad ve rt 1se 1n the Wont Ads

Television log for eAsy viewing

IN THE MEANTIME,

.,_

bedrm tra 1le r, a c one mde
from Harrtsonvtlle on New lrmo
Road Call before noon and
al ter 6 p m 742 2997

f~j~le~~~~~~i~~~~~~o

400

_

15-The Dallv Sentlnol. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, May 5, 1976
DICK
··

I MUST NOT LOSE

v.a

USED CAR tn good runn1ng condt
l1 o n no t mo re than 10 .)'ears
o ld Co ll 742 258 1

old Co\1742 258 1

=- ,, ·."·-""'
a-~-=

nuw~ ..::~~~~;~~-

•

Notkes

ODDS and End• Sale •larh 5·7 76

NOTICE OF APPO INTMENT
Case No 21797
Estate of Olga Jan e 'T he rs s
• Deceased
Not tce IS he reby g1ven tha t
W
Crow
Jr
of
F red
,._Pomeroy Meigs Co u nty , Oh iO ,
na s b e e n duly appo1nted
Ancil lar y Admmrst r ator of the
Estate Of Olga J an e Thet ss .
.,.deceased lill eo t Ra-.enswood ,
,..Jackso n
Coun t y
Wes t
Vtrgin1 a
Credttor s are re qurr eo to
ftl e t h eir c la tms w1th sa 1d
f•du c tary wrthtn fo ur mo nth s
Dat e d Th ts Jrd day of May
t97&amp;

(5 1 5

found

?

Legal Notice

r Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

TEll Mother how much you love ,
her w1th an ad on these pages
on Mo th ers day 20 words tu s t
S1 oo Tt;~ l l her nome and ad I - ' ~d
dress and we w1l l send het a UQ' ¥ 11
cord to ll1 ng hor to look fo1 a LOST Ma n s wallet wrt h valuable
message tn thvl trne s Senltnel
papers between Pome roy and
Roc
me If found caii9.49 ·21 .U.
IN lOVING memory of my
mother Frances Schne1de r who LOST Sunday between Pomeroy
passed away May 5 th 1933
and Mrdd leporl lodtes Stiver
Years come and yea rs go
wnst watch , Shan Mtlch , Phone
Bu! memor tes wtll stay fo1
~2 3&lt;178
lhe o ne you love Mo!her
~---·Daughter s Edtth , Helen

fiMBER top prtce lor standtng
limbe r Call (614 ) 446 8570

cart of ThankS

Mannmg D

V
.L' 0

tnMemOty -

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

A Wi scon sm reader wants to
know what she should bid In
response to a three-spade
openmg b1d by her partner
when she holds
t A K lOX
• • AKxx
•1\K xxx

There 1s no way to answer
thiS questiOn because we don 't
know what sort of opemng
three bids her partner uses II
they are of the trash type we
would JUSt b1d four spades II
they are likely to be good we
would recommend some sort
of Blackwood route.'
(Do you have a questlo~
lor the experts? Wflle "Asi
/he Jacobys" care of fhll
newspaper The Jacobys w/1
answer mdtvldual questions
11 stamped. se/1-addressea
envelopes are enclosed. The
mosr mterestmg questions
will be used In lhiS column
and will receive copies ol

JACOBY MODERN I

�14 - The Da1ly Sent mel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, M"-' :, \" . '

DEADL.INES
5 P M
Dav
Befor e
Publ tcatton
Monday O ead ltn c 9

am

Ca n cel lalton
CorrectiO n s will be

ac

c~ pt e d

f or

unt il 9 am
Q.ay Of PubltCal tOn

REGULATIONS
The Publ iShe r r ese r ves
the r tg ht to e dll o r r e ,ec t
any ads deemed ob
lfCitonal 1h e publt5hcr
will not be res pons tble lor

more tha n on e mco rr ec t
tn se r iJO n

RATES
For w a nt Ad Servtce
S

cenrs per

w ord

on e

tnse r tlon
Mtn tmum Cha r QC~l 00
14 c ents pe r wo r d thr eccons ec u t tvc
m se r tt on'&gt;
26 cent!:. pe r wo r d StX

con sec ut tve

tns er ttons

25 P er Ce n t Dt sco unl on
patd ad s and ad f, pa td
w il htn 10 day s

CARD OF THANK S
&amp; OB ITU ARY
\7 00
tor
SO
wm d
mmtmurn

Each addtllonal wo r d 3

ce nt s

BLIND ADS
Addilton al 75c Cha r qc
p e r Adv c r hserne nt
OFFICE HOUR S
8 30 a m 10 5 00 p m
Da ily B 30 a 111 IO I? 00
Noo n Sat ur da y
Ph one to day 991 1 1 ~ 6

NOTICES

.

ATTN I I
AL.L IIOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sa tes . Rummage ,
Porch and Base ment Por c h
and Ba seme nt Sa les , e tc
mu s t b e paid In advanc ~:
Ge t your •n In early by
stopptng by ou r offt ce at
The Dally Sentt n et
111
Court S t o r wrt1 1ng Box
729 , Pom e roy O hto 45769
wtth your rem 11tan ce

WE WISH to thOnk the Roone
Emorgency Squad Person ne l of
Veterans Memonol Hosp1tol
Dr
Blazewtck
Re v
Do n
Wa lk er and all those who se nt
fl owers food e tc All who
helped tn a ny way dunng the
hosp1tahzo lt on and deat h of
our husband and fath er All e n
Tayl or W1fe and Ch1ldren

Help Jlante_tt"' &gt; DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX ·
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
PARTIE S HAS OPENINGS FOR
MANAGERS IN OUR AREA
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST
MENT . NO COLLECTING OR
DELIVERINGS CALL COLLECT
CA ROL DAY (SIB) 4B9-B395 or
WRITE FR\ENDL Y HOME PAR
TIE S 20 RA ILROAD AVE
ALBANY NY 12205
.$25 PER HUNDRED 't"llong
en v e l o p es
Send
self
addr es sed
s tamped
f!nvelope Ed roy Math 801&lt;
188 Albany Mo 64402

BRANCtj MANAGER TRAINEE
Unu s ual oppo rtuntty to become
ossoc tat ed wrth a leodt ng lost
g row1 ng consumer
ftnonce
comp any dot ng busmess 10 19
s tates We rrotn you tn all
pha ses o! work tnvolvmg co n
sume r cred11 You wtll contact
our cus to mers bo th tn and out
51de the oll1 ce and learn to
work with mer cha nts In a
fn endly way you will help peo
p ie
wi th thetr personal
fm oncos Sa lary wrll meet th e
needs of you and your family
now In a few shaft years you
con earn we ll abo'le average
Our company promo tes from
wrth1n
Prevrous expenence
no t necessory Mus t be a hrgh
school graduate ln1t1at1 ve and
ombrtt on pay off Exce pl1onol
employee beneftt s
PHONE
Mr
Ohlmger at 992 2111
Capt tol Fmonc1 al ServiCes 300
W Second St Pomeroy, O h10

45769 AN EQUAL OPPORTUN I
TYEMPLOYER

GR ILL Cook and wa tt ress wanted

Apply m per son Crows Steak
House Pomeroy
WAirRESS wanted Fr~day and
Sa turdor nrghts Apply m per
so n Tal Ttmbers Nil e (tub

Web~t e r

Judge
Co urt o f Co mmon Pl ea s ,
Probate Dt VISton
12 19, J tc

.Pil.OT KilLED

...... ~-·- =-"'"'""-

PUBliC AUCTION Sot May 8,
1976, 11 00 om
Haywa rd
B1ssell Form &amp;a shen Keno Rd ,
RACINE F1re Deportmen t will
County Rd 26 , long Bottom ,
hove o hom shoot Sa turday at
Ohto Dewa lt radtol arm sow
6 30 p m a t thetr new but ldmg
co mplete 6 m a lec planer ,
o ft Bo s ho n Rood
hand too ls of all krnds power
MOl HERS day IS Sunday May 9
hand too ls too l boxes e lec
Te ll Mom how great s he ts w1th
gnnder wtth ben~ h vtces , c
o speoo l me ssage tn the Ttmes
cl am ps a ll srze s furmtu r~
Sen tt nel on Mot he rs Day In
cl am ps model I Gravely tractor
el ude ht:tr nome and address
w1th mower
rtdrng lawn
and we wtll send o Co rd te llmg
mower small o utboard motor
her to look fo r the message 20
ga s brass kettle copper wash
words just$ I 00
botler copper tea ke ttl e o ld
1ron , dum p wagon wtth horses
SWEEPER and Sowtng Moch1ne
old 12 gouge shotgun , d oubl e
Repo 1r Port s and Suppl tes
barrel , o ld 12 gouge pump gun ,
Dovts Va cu um Cleaner , one
around 19 19 Super Ruger 22
half mtl e up Geor ges Creek
magnum revolver wtth 22 long
Rd oft State Rou te 7 Phone
rt tl e cylinder Gutman he n end
(614 ) 446 0294
100~ t e t pocket kn1fe and o ther
MEIGS Co unty Ft sh and G a me
Knrves lo t of sr lver co1ns and
A s~ n
wtl l have a s peoal
other co1ns sump pump old
mee trng Fndoy May 7 at 7 30
dtshes and load s a t o ther
p m at Snowball H1ll Club
d1shes e lec m1 xers rron s
rooms to moke pla ns lor tho
pots larg e marble whatnot s
Jun e Ft sh Fr y
c lec tons and lots of b o~&lt;es and
o ther 1tE11m too numerous to
me ntt on Iorge lot of garden
too ls sleepmg bags 17 tn
cha in sow Aucttoneer Roge r
Hayman
Owner
Hayward
O lD furnllure ICe boxes bra ss
Btssell Na t respans tble for OC ·
beds o ld wall telepho nes and
oden ts
ports or co mplete house ho ld s
Wrtte M D Mtller . Rt 2
Pomeroy , O hto Call 992 7760

Wanted to Buy

CASH pat d lor al l makes and
m odels of mo btle homes
Phonf! area code 614 423 q531
$$Cosh$$$ fo r tunk e d au la Frye s
Tru ck Auto Port s
Rutland
Phone 742 208 1

Forknt

FURN ISHED apt coupl e on ly all
uttlilles pard $130 per month
Phone 992 39'75 or 992 2571

2 BED~M troller . fully carpet ed
lo cated o n Rt 143 close to Hor ·
II SOn vtll e 1 child Phone 742

3122
FURN ISHE D 2 bedrm apartment
adult s on ly in Mtdd leport
Phone 992 -387&lt;1

USE D co r 111 good runntng condr
!ton No t more Than 10 years

3 BEDRM house w1th both
Rutland Phone qn 5858

m

-

3 AN D 4 RM lurnts hed and un
furntshed op ts Pho ne 992
5434

Yard Sale
YARD So le May 3 4 and 5 Gas
range , re frtg ero to r wrmger
type wash1ng mach ine double
cgbmct stn k mangle bed s
rugs ont1 q ues 3 p c parlor
Su ite k1tc hen chot rs , tables ,
sew 1ng
mo ch1ne
ptclure
fram es co ll e cto rs 1tems Many
o ther tt em s 1 m tl e west o!
Ro o m~ o n Rt 124 O t1 ~ McC I111
loc k res 1de n ce

COUNTRY Mobtle Home Pork Rt
33 le n mtles nort h o f Pom eroy
Lorge lo ts wtth co ncret potr os ,
stdewolks , runners and o ft
street po rk rng Phone 992 7479
3 ROOM furntshed apt utrlit1es
pard 356 N Fourth Mtd
dleport

FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED

IF YOU ha ve o se rv tce To o tff!r
want to buy or se ll, some!hmg
are loolo.tn g !or work
or
wha tever
you II get res ul ts
laste r w 1th a Sen tmel Want Ad
Co\1992 -2156
4 Fam1ly Yard Sole, l 1' 1 mile from
Chesh1 re on Sr Rr 554 May 5
th roug h 8 9 00 !t il da rk
Drapes Bedspread s d1s hes
ba by and ad ul t d o th tng o f al l '2
k tnd s too numerous To men
!ton
2
YARD SA LE 2 Fomtly Ya rd Sole at
l aurel Cl tff cl ose to laurel Cltff
Chu rch
used d me tte set
ftreploce sc reen porch sw tng
many mes clothe s Thursday
and Fndoy May 6 &amp; 7 9 00 111 1

modern opt s 2 and 3 bedrms
all e lect nc bnck burld1ng
decorated pla stered walls
compl e te Youngstown krtchens
and dtsposol umls s torm doors
and w•ndows complete ly rn
sulated front and rear e n
trance s , baautrfu lly land
seeped pnvate pork1ng low
rent The Ha ven Terrace Aport·
ments , New Haven W Va Ph

304 882 2433
bedrm furn tshed op! Ca ll 992

3129 or 992·5434

YARD SALE Fnday May 7 9 11113
Corne r Rt 7 and Co unty Road
2b Ft 'le Pomts Mt Hermon
Woman S MI SS IOn a ry ASSOCIO
I ton
YARD SALE , Thursda y and Fr1doy
App ro ~~: 4 mtles ea s t on Co Rd
32 Turn at Me mortol Gardens
Ce metery _Look for stgns
FOUR Fomtly Garage Sale May 6
7 and 8 at 810 W Mat n St ,
Po meroy
Ne11t !a Shule r s
Market from 9 o m !til 5 p m
To ys fo rmal s cl o th1ng and etc
YARD SALE, Ftrst ho use post
Metgs Htgh School on Co Rd
25 across fr om g un club
Clo thm g , ve ry che ep 9 om td

VEGETABLE plants of al l km ds 10
dtlferen l vortet1es of tomatoes,
•nclud1ng non a c1d wh1te
tomato Very large se lect1on of
beddtng
plants
Also
Ge ron1 ums and other potted
p la nts
Hongmg basket s
Clel and Farms and Gr een
house
Geroldme Cleland ,
Roc me
MODERN wa lnut console AM · FM
radto
4 speed change r
Balance $103 40 or leon$ Co li

992-3965
COAL ltme s tone and all !ypes of
sa lt and rock sal t for 1ce and
snow removal El(cels•or Salt
Works , East Main St Pome roy
Oh1o Phone 992 3891
FREEZER BEEF Corn fed s teers
W1ll de lr ver to local dressrng
plant ~ Phone 843· 2111

To 5 14 76 l og Cobrn Twp Rd
261 be tw een Keno an d l on g
COAL limestone .and calcium
Bo!l om !a ll ow s1gns off 248 at
chlo r1 de and colc tum brine lor
Keno or l ong Bo llom Waches
dust control and all types of
Jewelr y
purses
cl o thes
sal t Enels1or Sa lt W or~ s . East
d1shes , C-8 radt o
f1sh rng
Mom St re et , Pomeroy , Ohto ,
ta ckl e , Four 700x 16 B ply trr es
~ho~e_'l_9~ 3~91
fou r 750~&lt;16 t1 res one th ree .
fou rth 1968 Jeep truck 36 tn 1953 Ford Jubt lee tractor (ex·
ce llent ). $1 650 Ford 9N tro c
cop bunks slave otr horn s CB
tor overhauled S1,000 , New 5
rod1o fully equ1pped for tra1ler
tow •ng
It 3 pt ro tary mower (st ump
umper) , $385 Four used r1 d1ng
YARD SALE Thu rsday , Fnday and
awn mower$ , 7 and Bh p $200
Sa turday May 6 7 and 8 155
to $230 Luckett Form Equrp·
PMrl St , ~tddleporl , Oh1o
ment , Wast Washtngton Sf ,
Albany Phone (614) 698-3032
YARD SALE 2 mtles up Story s Run
or698 7881
Rood Th\Jrsdoy and Saturday .
May 6 thr ough 8
POL LED Hereford bull , 2 yrs old
YARD SALE , Thursday , Fnday and
$300 7 wee~s o ld nanny goat ,
Sa!urday at Pearl Wtll1 s letart
$25 Phone Shade. (614) 696·
Fall s Oh1o
1234

l

-

modern

THE Rt ver'ltew PTA w1ll s ponso r a STEREO-RADIO
des1gn
co mbtnott on yard and bake
om -tm rodt o 8 tra ck tope com
btno t1on Ba lance $101 20 or
sol e on Fnday May 7th from I 0
terms Coll992-3965
a m ttl I 8 p m and Satu rday
May 8 from 10 o m t1ll 3 p m
BEAN POSTS Coli 247 3077
The sa le wt ll be held a t the
---~
school m Reedsv tll e , and pro 1975 Suzukt GT 750 motorCycle
c~ eds ~ II go to schoo l fund s
go?d condllt an C~ll ~~?.:!!'!
FOUR Fomrly Garage Sale , O NE set of maple bunk beds w ith
Thursday and Fn day May 6 and
box sp nng s and mattress Anfl
7 9 a m ttl! 5 p m Rt 7 above
que bed rm sutt , Burl inla1d , 4
Cheshrre Clothtng and every
block le athe r bar s too ls
ttem rmagmoble
Gravely
wtth attachmcmts
Phone (614 ) ~85 · 35 11
YA~D SALE , iHiursday Fnd ay and
Saturday 6.47 North Second 11973 350 Kowasakt 81g Ho rn u
Ave , Mtddlep o rt
Yellow
pons 1o n chamber , knobby
!Ires 3 brke tro1ler Cal l 992
house below Gateway lots of
ttems , 911115
7110

BIG CHIMNEY , W Va
IUPI)
Federal
mveshgator s today were
lrymg to detenmne what
caused the crash of a small
plane which resulted m the
, death of an OhiO man.
E F Snyder, about 50, of
Akron was killed early
Monday when the t"in-Engme
aircraft he was piloting
clipped a tree and plummeted
lD the ground, falling apart on
Impact.
Snyder, on course from
" Atlanta at the time, dted of
massive heqd and internal
injuries, according
to
Regtstered Co llie Stud Ser Kanawha County Coroner Al AKC
vtce , Stardust Kmg Phone
Shepard.
(614 ) 985-4248
Officials at Kanawha BASSETT
P"PP&gt;es Phone (614)
Airport told investigating
_ !~~~3_7~_:'~!_f_6_p._m
__
state troopers they lost radio ONE male 2 female poodle pups
contact with Snyder at 12:13
Also 1967 10K40 house •troder ,
a.m. Monday. The missing
1n good condi tron Phone 992·
7185
plane was found by a Slate
Pollee helicopter
1970 Cheve lle SS 396 4 s peed ex ·
ce llent co,d tt lo,. Lo ts of elC
There was no explosion or
tros Coli alter 5 p m 992
ftre m the crash, police
5717
added .

nu~~

OF Nff QUARRY.

Business Services

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
Of ·
QUALITY Motor Co.
1972 FORD MAVERICK 1 DR

S189S

302 V-8 automat1c tra ns , P
inferrer . blue f1n1sh

steen ng, radro, clean

1972 AMC HORNET

1973 FORD TORINO

S199S

- -

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS
30",3 HP, B&amp;S Eng.

$89.95
TURF TILL
TILLERS
3'1• H. P., B&amp;S Eng.

$163.95
POMEROY LANDMARK
9.- Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Aiil
Phone 992 2181

WILKINSON'S

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, Gutters,
Painting and Repair

~~~
·, •

992 -3092

-

w heel block wtth block 111nyl
lop
black in teuor, 39,000
m tles Prrced below book a!
$2795 Phone 742 -3008

71 750 Norto n (amanda Con see
at Rutland Pennzod or cal l 742

2542

1975 Honda motorcycle 360 rood
b tke ltke new El(ce llent con
dtlton Phone 992 3566
truck co;per
5983 afte r 5 p m

JERSEY cow
After 7 p m

-

_____ -

NEW Improved
Zrpp res ' the
great 1ron pdl now w1th Vttom.n
C Ne~so~ ~r~g LOCUST ' posts round- ~~ ~splrt
Phone 949 2774

-- --- -

---

~

MANS lef t handed gulf set bog
and pu5h cart $35 l adles rtght
handed gull se t bog and push
ca rt $30 Ht-power telescope ,
elec addmg mochrne $20
Man 's brown su1t s 1ze 40 $10
Phone 949·2660

---

--- - 1-----

--

CHEVY' 3 bell housmgs 10 one.
half , $5 00 e ach VW clutch
$15, ' 4 SS wheels $60 327
block co mplete , $50 Set of 396
hoods , $20 Set o f 396 heoders
$30 396 lock complete, $125 2
Pont1ac a 1&lt;le s, $15 Phone 992·

3 bedrm hou se tn the country
For reasonable ren t Phone
992 -5175

tn

992 -7336

Rutla nd Phone

3 BEORM HOUSE

2 bedrm home s pac1 ous rooms
nrce Y~!_d Ph.?~!!~!~9_4

m---------~-------

ll'ICOit~Oil ATII:D

16G ACRES - Large older
home , 6 ponds , several
outbutldmg s, owner wrll
dlvtde , wil l take land
co nt ract
wtfh
ddwn

paymen t
No 159 - 3 br . full base ,

v,

a
ground , c lose
stores , $23,000 00

No 161 large

to

close

ce ramt c bath , a 1r cond ,
carpor t , garden About liz

ac re Storage Bldg $16,900
INVEST - DON'T SPEND
- Here IS a d BR , 2 bath
home w1t h a n1ce Rec . R

N G hot water hea t. ul&gt;lo ty
R , large e nclosed porch
garage and not very o ld

$30 .000
AN AMAZING VALUE -

to

10

good

oondot&gt;on $\2 000
OVERLOOKS THE RIVER

schools. 18,600 00

-

We have other acreage call

b as e ment w1t h 2 car
garag e Large fron t porch
lo lounge on th iS summer
Many
other
feature s

tf mterested

804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2 298
After Hours Ca II

992 -7133
CONTACT
Lots Pauley
Branch Manager

Exce ll en t cond1 tron 7 R

frame , 3 large BR , fu ll

ASK \ NG $18,500.
CallUs Up
G&gt;ve Us A Try

Moddlerort

3825
REMODE LIN G, Plumbmg heatrng
and all types o f general reparr
Work guaranteed 20 years elC
D&amp;D TREE lnmmtng , 20 years ex
pertence
Insured free
esttmates Call 992 -2364 or

_(b!_4)_~~.!2~!-_l~~r__ ___ _
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser
viCe, all maKes 992·228.4 The
Fabrtc Shop ,
P'omeroy
Authomed Smger Sales and
Servtce We sh~_!:~e~~~~~~-EXCAVATI NG , dozer loader and
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo boys fo r h1re , wrll haul
ftll drrt lop sot l lrmestone o nd
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jef
fers
day phone 992· 7089
nrght phone 992-3525 or 99'2·

667-35\9
3 BEDROOM total elec hom e ,
garage Iorge lot on Ru s h c
Htll s , Syracuse Sole pnce

5232

Phone 992-7523 for

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

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Sanrtotron 992·3954 or 992·

3 bedrm home , ( all 9'12· 7033
HOUSE, 3 bedroom home, 59

742 2348
EXCAVATING

TEAFORD

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
Attentton Coal Mtners - 56 acre modern J b r house
wrth fire pla ce, plenty of pasture , farm ground , cherr y,

Vtrgll B Sr ., Realtor

be ry

a pple and other fru&gt;l trees Mostly fenced, woth pond
close Ia Oanvi\ le Price 131,900
12,8GG- 5 bedrooms, 2 balh s. eKI lg l&gt;v rm porches
gar Nat, ga s furnace cbns hdwd firs, Loc Seoul Rd
tn Chester
Here's What You 've Been Ask1ng For - A modern 3
bedroom farmhou se, 1n the coun try , 3 acre, nat . gas
furnace. c lty water , sm barn and ch rc k hse , loca ted

near Basha.n 26 ,500 . ONner Moght Trade
Newly Wed Spectaf - New a ll elec hom e, never lt ved
In , 3 bedroom s. l1 v mg room. krtchmg &amp; drnmg room &amp;
bath , mostly ca rpete d , porch &amp; but lf on garage , •, 2 acre

of land Country sellong , I mole off Rt 7, 1\n&gt;sh&gt;ng work
requ~red , wt ll be done for buyer tn 30 days Prr ced tor
qu ock sale 122.500
90 Acres Vaca nt Land -

You would know s pnng ts here
w h e n you see tht s w tde green vall ey w1th a brook
runnmg through 1t , 1u s t per fe c t for a large lak e ,
woo ded htlls rde JUSt crying for a cabtn
He res
sce n ery an~ s eclusion
at less than $300 per acre

CALL QUICK.

On ly

JIMMY DEEM

~'H4
ACROSS
1 Came
.Chapman5 South
American
. plains
11 Rainy day
complamt
12 Become
apparent

D6 exte rior pomhng
houses and roofs . Phone 992

5684 oc 992-3374
GREG S CB SALES, localed at Er
w 1n s Gulf Servtce , Mtd·
dleport , Ohto Phone 992·

2438
EXCAVATING , BACKHOES AND
DOZER , LARGE AND SMALL.
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED . BILL
PULLINS, PHONE 9'12-2478, DAY
OR NIGHT

. .,".-!~-~~-::

4 brs , bath , n 1ce kit , large

ya rd on M&gt;ctdleporl On ly
58500
•
11 RMS. - Old house wtlh
all uhlllie s and 2 lots near
new

restaurant

W&gt;ll take otler
WANTED - Large family
for th&gt;S 5 BRs , 2'12 baths, 10
rm hom e, 2 car garage,

and lot IOOx145 See this
and we'l l try to work a
dea l
BUSINESS - All stack and
Good location ,

thousand, or wi ll lease

MINERALS - 135 acres in
Lebanon Townsh ip . 2 miles
east of Bashan
GET IN TOUCH WITH US
ON THESE SOON , OVER
40 PICTURES TO LOOK
AT. DROP IN TO SEE.
•

•

•
•• e•
••

e

••

••

CARPENTER wtll do srd1ng , roof
1ng, remodeling , room oddi ·
Free
l1ons
Also garages
Est1mates . Call 992 2659.

What's

Mobrle home and lot 1n Cheshrr a

doinq
on

You

nailed
t hat

Pert

•

•

:•
:

Phone 992· 2605.

15 Be able
to hold

'\,17 CaU- day

Brinq
some
tools~

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

-

I

Yd.

&lt;e..--J

CALL !41-2111
TALk TO
WENDELL GRATE
CAR PET CONSULTANT

I'LL e.E11-1E LAUGH IN6&amp;TOCK.OF80CIE1Y AND
THE PRESS IF THAT'S
THE BEST WE O'N
COME. UP Wlnl !

®lHAT FEMALE
VER510NOFAN

A5m:&gt;NAUT I&amp;
WHATAIYDESfGNERCAME

uP wrrn!

••
•
•

el

.
••
•

RUTLAND

THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1976
6 oo-Su nrlse Semester 10
6 15-Farm Report 13.
6· 20-Pallerns fpr Living 13
6 ' 3D-Columbus Today 4, News 6, Sunr ise Se mester 81
Urban Le•gUfl 10
6 411-&lt;&gt;unce of Prevention 10
6' 45-Mornlng Report 3.
6 50-Good MornlnQ. West Vlrglnle 13
6 55-Chuck While Reports 10, Good Morning, Trl
Slate 13.
7 .oo-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning, Ameri ca 6, 13. CBS
News 8, Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10
7;3Q-Schoolles 10
(\:oo-Lassle 6, Capt Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St 33 .
8 :~Q-Big Valley 6
9 oo-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue&lt;, lSI Lvcy
Show B: Mike Douglas 10, Morning with D J 13.
9;3Q-A.M. 3: One Life lo Live 6, Tattletales 8, Mike
Douglas 13
JO .oo-Celebrlty Sweeps takes 3,15; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Right 8,10
10 3Q-High Rollers 3, 4, 15, Dln•h 6
11 oo-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15: Weekday ' ' Gambit
e,10; Farmer's Daughter 13 : E lee. Co 20.
11 ·3Q-Ha llywood Squares 3,4,15, Happy Days 13; Love
of Life 8, 10, Sesome Sl 20
11 55-Take Kerr 8. Dan lmel's Wor ld 10.
12·0o-Fun Factory 3, Lei's Make a O..al 13; Bob
Braun 4: News 6,8,10, Pollll cal Talk IS
12 3Q-Take My Advice 3,15 . All My Children 6,13,

bellhop

31 SubBtantlal
33 Cognizant
3t Beneath
37 Proofreading
word

39 Mamma -!

12·45- Eiec Co. 33.
12 55-NBC News 3, 15
1 oo-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13: Ph il Donohue 8;
Young &amp; the Reslless 10; Not Foor Women Only 15.
1 3Q-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15: Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13i
As the World Turns 8,10
2 Q0-520,000 Pyr~mld 6,13
2 3Q-Doclors 3,&lt;, 15, Break the Bank 6,13 : Guiding
Light 8,10
3 OQ-Anolher World 3.4,15. General Hospllal 6, 13; All
In The Family 8,10: Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3 3ll-One Llle to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6, Match
Game 8,10, Col lege For Canines 20. lTV Ullllzallon
33
•.oo- 8aseball 3,4: Somerset IS; Bewitched 6. Mickey
Mouse Club B. Mister Rogers 20,33; Mov ie "Young
Tom Edison" 10, Dinah 13
4 3Q-Mod Squad 6; Bever ly Hll lblll les 8; Sesame St.
20,33; Fllntslones 15
5 oo-Parlrldge Family 8, Mission lmpposslble 15
s 3Q-News 6, Family Altair 8. Elec. Co 2(),33. Adem
12 13
l oo-News 4,8,10,13,15: ABC News 6: Zoom 20 ; lTV
Utilization 33
6 JQ-News 3,4, ABC News 13; NBC News 15; And)
Griffith 6, CBS News 8, 10, Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Li li as Yoga &amp; You 33
l ·oo-Truth or Cons j, To Tell the Truth 4, Bowling
tor Doll•rs 6, Lawrence Welk 8; News 10, Lei's
Make a Deal 13: Family Altair 15, Anyone for
Tennyson? 20. Famllv AI War 33.
_
1 3Q-Hollywood Squares 3,; , Ohio Stele Lottery 6:
Evening Edll lon wllh Marlin Agronsky 20; Wild
Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Music City
U.S A IS
8 oo-Movle " Law and ~rder" 3,4, IS •• Welcome Back,
Potter 6, 13, Wattons 8,10, Opera Theater 20 ; Mark
ol Jazz 33
8· 3Q-Barney Miller 6, Lowell Thomas Remembers 33;
Pollllcl Talk 13.
·
9 oo-Streets of San Francisco 6,13: Hawaii Flve-0 8:
Olympiad 33 : Movie "Sialag 17" 10
10 OQ-Harry 0 6,13, Barnaby Jones 8: Bi ll Moyers'
Journal 33; News 20
11.0o-News 3,4,8, 10,6, 13, 15; ABC News :p.
Car ~on 3,4, 15;
Manni• 6; Movie
'Generation " 8, Movie "San Francisco" 10;
Political Talk 13; Janak! 33.
12 oo-Mannl• 13
12 4Q-Maglclan 6
J·oo-Tomor row J, 4
l.lQ-Maglclun 13.
2 2Q-New&lt; 13

11 3Q-Johnny

WIN AT BRIDGE

A safety play in duplicate?
NOI\TII \1)1

1:::-+-1-+-

,_ K 5
II A?

t A?
o!oA .J76542

WEST

EAST
olo7! 2

•IIJ 1084
119 542
t .1 9 52

·-

111/10
t QB u:1
o!ol/108 .1

SOUT\1
• A 9 ti
IIK JRO
t K \0 4
o1o

K9

Hol h v ulne rabl e

38 Quiver
CO Zounds!
tl Alleviating

North E 11st

Pt~ss

Ill
5NT
6 N T I'.&lt;Ss Pass
Itt.

P.I SS

~•

PM;s

Pass
Pass
Openmg lea d- Q •

~

=
=

'JUGHAID'S BEEN
UP IN THAT DADBURN
1REEHOUSE
TH' WHOLE
BLES5ET DAV,
MAW

I{OUNG-UNS

AXYDLBAAXII
LONGFELLOW

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Wh en the Li fe Master
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Ia category was established m
used far the three L's. X for the two O's, etc Single letters. 1936 Dav1d Bruce was made
apostrophes. the length and !ormation of the words are all numb e r one a nd Oswald
hints. Each day 1he code letters are dllTerent
Jacoby number two
Dav1d rettred from senous
CRVPTOQUOTE
tournament play around f940 ,
u D A but before dmng so he hadesFHEAB
UK
GJK
... B N Q K
tablished himself as one of the
G
H
·
games
mosL knowledgeable
KAHEBJ
J0 I
OZDNAI
MJH
players
Playmg wtth Oswa ld Jacoby
HC
D CHHS
UDXK
J N U I K S C · - 1n the 1934 Men 's pairs which
they won, Dave found htmse lf
ZH0 KZG
SHE N I
I G K QK A I H A
1n stx notrump after simple
Yesterday's Cryploquole: LAWS TOO GENTLE ARE 1934 b1ddmg
SELDOM OBEYED; TOO SEVERE, SELDOM EXECUTED.- After studymg the dummy
I c arefully Dave dec1ded on
BENJAMIN FRANKUN
(C) 19'76 Kin&amp; Fea\uru Syndlc•~e. Inc,)
that very rare thing tn match
pomts - a safety play to
Is

LIKE TO BE

ALL BV
THEMSELVES

ONCE

IN A

WHILE}

PAW

60 00. 1m! THE 6AME
HA5 ElEEN CAU.ED ~

'

DON'T I{()U THINK

I KNOW THAT?

guard agatnst a 4·0 suit break .
Therefore . after winning the
first spade lead tn dummy,
Dave led a luw dub and In·
serted his nme spot after East
played low The result prov·
ed Dave rtght He made stx
notrump for a top score.
Furthermore, a later check of
the other 1esults showed that
!here was JUSt one other patr
m SIX notrump If clubs had
broken the lrtck Dave would
have ~1ven away would have
cost lum JUSt half a match
potnl

South

West

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work- It:

With paddtng lnstalted
U ts square vard

ARNOLDGRATE '

notch
( hyph. wd.)
Z2 Coffee
holder
23 Cl8tem
!t Aquatic
mammal
Z5 Inle!!ted

(Scot.)
31 Disparaged
(2 wds.)

)-..

ding , $7.95 sq. yd.

···•••••···

one

16 Top-

28 Suffix lor
Incur
:10 can for a

30 Mr.
Ziegleld
3% Greek
letter
35 Aid~ tree

501 NYLON

Close Sat. At s p.m.

5 Danger
6 Set
right
7 Encountered
8 Hallelujah!
(4 wds.)
9 Churn

10 HST was

Edward

Green, gold , red , blue, rusl
Do it yourself, witk ped

Thursday 8til12,noon

(2 wds.)
e Pup-

Ve•tenllly'• Auwer

i~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ rlv~

12 or 15 FT.

8:00til 5:00

character
Z Equity
member
3 Saints be
praised!

28 Suffix for

l\J

•• •

Caesar"

ztUttle

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

••

~t: King

1 "Julius

Bard's

Beautiful colors. Do tl
yourself and save. Regular
56.95 sq. yd.

Mo n., Tues., Wed.

boat

IZ Learning
t3 Swordshaped
MGerman
river
DOWN

Gotham

Candy Sbipe
Sq.

19

Movi e " A Cry In the Wilderness'' 8, Movie " Kona
Coas t" 10, Janakl 33
1· M-Tomorrow 3. News l:l

weapon

SAVE ON
CARPETING

Sale Sf&amp;

(2 wds.)
18 Biblical

Perched
21 GatlingTurn down
2t Poet,
Marianne 28 Cavalry·
man's

742-3018

·················~·········
II-

n::\r'1'11''&lt;;

W'ld
I

U Keep

!It

1969 12x60 mobtle home, custom
Schu lt . Good cond1lion Coli

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742-2211

1

•

I' ll

roof?

12)(65 3 bedrm al l elec . $6500

: -. FRI_DAY TIL 8 : .,
•

Kenton

CE&gt;'J.u.:"s-..._

the

Phone 367-7614

~.

. .••

13 Getz or

""""='="-'~--------··_:"~"-"""'':.:·~·..!.'!'"!::"~·:or,

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

••
•a

-~

-

up in Rutland

Ask&gt;ng lU St $13,500
OLDER HOME - 8 roorns,

Needs a couple wllh a few

949-2388

~~55!~~~

$29,500
BUSINESS BUILDING Down (rea l nice) and a s

equip m e nt

Call For Appointment

All new STARCRAFT Mmr-mo tor
home s
tra vel ttarlers and
fold -dawns new and used.
Best prrces rn tr1 -stote, we w1 ll
sell serv rce and quahty Hours
12 -7 Open Sunday, Camp Con
ley Storcroft Sales, Rt. 62 , N
Pt Pleasant ~

renova ted home wtth woodburntng fireplace. gas F.A.
furnace
N1 ce carpeting

s tore &amp;

go homback rldl•g-THE HORSE

Will

Phone 9.:19-25.45 or 742·

~iiiEI~~~~i~

$16,500
12 ACRES - In town,
garden land, large garage
wl lh storage , 3 BR .,

room apt

r.,,,.,d,,•, IJumbl•" BRIBE FORCE GRATIS CIPHER
An••t:r. ffl~t might t:Gn•ltkrit bt•eorll JOIA t•

by THOMAS JOSEPH

backhoe

3167.

'$25,000 00
2 HOUSES - I has 9 rms.,
bath , lhe ather has 3 rms
and balh All ulllot&gt;es , a nd
acre

I tn
(A.wen to..orro,r)

Pomeroy

Ph 992-2174

Will trrm or cut t rees and shrub·

Phone 992-3325

a lm ost o n e

do&lt;er

and d1tcher Charles R Hat.
held , Back Hoe Servrce,
Rutland Ohto Phone 742·2008

110 Mechamc Pomeroy, 0.

drnrng, F A oil furnace
Large 2 car ga rage an d 1
level
acre
A sk rng

RAZDAH

TIIIIIIIIY

Will do roofmg construction ,
plumbtng and heatrng No JOb
too large or too small Phone

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

BR RANCH - Nice
closets, 1•; , baths, large ki t.

[)

••r•ealell br the obove cartoon.

596B

acres I mde from Rutland on
New ltmo Rood phone 742

4

I

,.

-~~~~~-~h.s'~!..~I~~o_! ___ _

We Have People

Eager To Buy
H E CLELAND BROKER
992-2159 or 992 -2568

•••

Now uranp the circled letten
to lorm the turprloe Ullwer, u

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Sweepe rs toa sters , rrons , all
smal l opolta nces lawn mower
next to State Hrghwoy Garage
on Route 7 Phone (6U] 985

ROOMY 7 yr. old one story wood
frame
two bedrm
home
located between Coo lvtlle a nd
Tuppers Plotn s One acre lot,
two col garage Ctty water gas
heat ,
hardwood
fl oors
carpeted
Irving room mce
v1ew $21 000 Phone (614)

----

J.'k

Noble Summit Rd.,
Middleport
PHO~Em S724
5-3-1 mo

Phone Anna Blackwood

BRADFORD Austtoneer Com
p late Servrce Phone 949 2487
or 949· 2CXX&gt; Rocm e Ohro Crrtt
Brodford

949 2883

2988

-1 WIHSS

D. BUMGARDNER

l

Search tor Tomorrow 8, 10

vaurself man .

All paot suppltes available,
too.

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Spec1a1rst

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

baths, ulll&gt;ty R , garage &amp;
All

Rut land

LOVELY '2 story olde r home m
Racrne I I K24 ltvtng rm dtnrng
room nf!w butl! -ln k1tchen wrth
cherry cabtnets, den , bedrm
and one -holt bath down w1th
oak hardwood fl oors 3 bedr
ms New full both utrltty room
upsto trs lull basement , large
fro nt and rea r porches unat·
toched garage
2 storage
burldtng s, all set upon large lot
wtth addr!tonol lo t avorlable
Must socrtf1ce fo r $21 ,OOCl Ca ll

more mformot1on

Unscramble the•• f101r Jumbleo,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinar)' worda.

~At:ATICJt.l

Above and below ground
pool ktts for lhe do-it-

Anniversa!J Services
Bran Thomas
992-1726 4_30_1 mo .

Phone 992 2058

$22,900

%l&lt;l'R THAN A
11-M WHO !&lt;; SIC-K

SWIMMING
POOLS

Ann's Bridal and

985-3805

Forced atr furna ce , centro otr

2 s t ory fr 3 me , 5 BR, l'/1
carport

3 br , I story .

yar d ,

CHARM &amp; COMFORT About S Yr s old 3 BR N&gt;ce
krtchen &amp; drntng Utlltty R.

tn

~&amp;~~;~::::~-:!=

/n&lt;F,I&lt;'\::'&lt;=. 1-X)THitJb

Ol.llll!' FIRST ~'i
OF HIS

From the largest Truck o'r
Bul ldozer Radtator to the
sma ll est Heater Core

4- ll · 1 mo .

tn

Phone 742-240'1
Rutland, Oh .
4·26 1 mo.

Bo• 28A

Free Consultation

Ph 949-2023 or 843-2667

BEDRM house
Phone 9&lt;12 5858

Shepard Contractors

Complete Br1dal
And Anniversary
Service

the old . All types of
burldrng: and remodeling
from the loundat1on up .
Addrtrons,
carpetrng ,
patntrng , Sldtng, roofing ,
paneling, paper hangtng ,
etc .

3

3 bedrm house

r-/'"l'o11T NOW !AI READY TO MAI&lt;E A
CONFESSION OF MV CRIM ES!

24 Hour Phone Serv1ce

41Gimo .

We butld new and remodel

2328

ME, I 50~EL"' REGRE-T
HEARTLE55 SWIIIIDLE5
I'VE PULLED IN THE PA5Tl

by
Ltcensed Installer

Svratuse, Oh10
Ph 99'1 3 99J

OONSTRUCTION

NEW home for sale 3 be drms
sew mg room 2 cerarrttc baths
pe rsonaltzed kllchen butlt lor
the homemaker
Plenty of
garden space on thts one acre
lo t Approx 2 o ne four th mrles
from Rt 7 on S R 124 Toward
Rutland o n sou!h s1de of rood
Watch for s1gn Al TROMM
BUILDER Rutland Pholle 742

•

f&gt;E~&gt;t=Y6
A~~ THE'

Installed

LARRY LAVENDER

D&amp;D

or(614)985 me

SMALL house tn Syracuse 2lorge
lots Phone qq2 3857 ofter 5

Strout"
Rea It,

ALUMINUM
SIDING· SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

d 25 1 mo

7803

p

F1nancrng Avartable
Slown mto Wall s &amp; Atf1cs
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

j

~PLENDID~ ... ~O THE TRUTH
S!!IWM HAS FINALLY ENABL5D
YOU TO SEE: WHAT A DEPRAVED
5NAI&lt;.E·IN· THE · 6RA5.S YOU
ARe;, ISH~!~IIII...II111i

Septic Systems

Blown
Insulation Services

We Deliver
WANTED TO RENT small house or
troller preferab ly rn the co untry
and near Pomeroy Etther fu r
nrshed or no t Phone 949-2480

CAPtAIN EASY

Mtke Young, Manager
Safes and Installation
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
Phone day or night
614-991-2106 I 14 1 me

FREE ESTIMATES

17 Cole Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Telephone (614 ) 992 -3768

Phone 992 560 I

See how you can really

3 28 1 mo

TWIN CITY
MACHINE SHOP

Phone 992 3462

--

or 949-2203

ARE AVAILABLE
AT

-

225 AMP ltnco ln electrtc welder
$100 19 1nch Zentth portable
b&amp;w TV $50 , Stereo 8 track
tape
player ,
$25 ,
1962
Che vro let one ha ll ton 4 wheel
dn ve ptekup truck $4SO , good
cond tt ton Phone
992· 7435
-- _._,

Call u• at 949 2182

Medical Oxygen
and Supplies

73 340 Dus ter low m tleage 75
Dodge ptckup
6 cylinder

Ph~ne - 99'2

8 It

Need new roof or old
reparred? House, roof,
barn, sh•ngles, burld up ,
patntrng , electrical work ,
gutters &amp; downspouts ,
furnaces # water heaters ,
water softners, tnstalled &amp;
repatred, Sewage .

4-5 76

'

·home with no obligation.

Racrne, Ohio

PH. 992-3746

.

-

on cai·

estimates

peting and inslallallon.
We'll bnng sample~ to your

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

Certified technician.
Br1ggs &amp; Stratton
Engines.
Pickup &amp; Delivery

1969Comoro loaded wrth ex tras
Unbel iev ably good cond thon
Prtce $1850 Phone 742 -2143
B k p ratottller cham dnve 4
after 5 p m or co ntact Dallas
speed Phone992· 5194
We ber
NEW e lec floor fan new Eureka
1973 Mont e Carlo excellent con
swee per Electnc hot plate 2
dt!ton
outomoltc power
burner Call any ftme after 6
stearmg power brakes a1r ,
p m B43 26-45
tape
sw tve l buckets
itlt

r,.\

NEW . L.awn Boy mowers .
Ptoneer
chain
saws.
Bolen's Mowers , Merrv
Ttllers, MTO Mowers .
491 Locust St
Mrddleport. Ohio

MAC'S
LAWN
MOWER
SERVICE
SSOO Phone 992 7671 or 992

TillersRldrng
Tractors .

~-. ...4
~ il

S.oo-Bonmanra 3. Partridge Family B. Mission
Imposs ible IS
5·3o-Adam-12 4: News 6 : Family Affair 8: Elec. Co
20.33 , Adam-12 13
6 oo-News 3.4.8.10,13.15; ABC News 6, Zoorn 20.33.
6 3Q-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Villa
Alegre 33
7 ·oo-Truth or Cons. 3: To Te ll the Truth o; Bowling lor
Dollars 6: Pop oes the Country 8: News 10; Wild
Kingdom 13; League of Women Voters 15, Boo!&lt;
Beat 20; Know Your School 33.
7 3Q-Polltlcal Talk 3, Name That Tune 4; Match
Game PM 6: 525,000 Pyram ,ld 8, Evening Edition
wllh Mart in Agronsky 20. The Judge 10, To Telllhe
Truth 13, Wild Kingdom 15, Book Beal 33.
8·QO-LIIIIe House on I he Prair ie 3,&lt;, 15: , Bionic
Woman 6, 13, Tony Ora lando &amp; Dawn 8, 10, Tribal
Eye 33, Mark ol Jazz 20
8 3Q-Lowell Thomas Remembers 20 .
9·QO-Sanford &amp; San 3,4,1 5; Barelta 6,13: Cannon 8, 10;
Theater In America 33, Decades of Decision 20
9 3Q-Pollllcal Talk 3; Chico &amp; the Man 4,15.
IO :OQ-Hawk 3,4, 15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13 : Blue Knight
B. IO, News 20
10 3Q-Aimanac 20
p ·oo11 oo-News 3,4,16,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33

SLOAN'S
CARPETING
Free

11 3Q-Jhnny Csrson 3&lt;, 4.15; Movie "Outrage" 6,1 3;

WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1976

save .

5·5·1 mo

7034

Lown
Mowers-

. o!fP•

~-

•t r

Free Estimates

1975 &gt;&lt;S 650 B Yamaha , lrke new,
low mt leage For more In
formatton cont a ct Metgs Auto
Parts Phone 992 -7711

'

,1r" r t (t ;;r~ •
..

Eng .

Repair

i . . ,. . ~ ~~:.'~

, ~:

Rutland
742-1318
All Work Guaranteed

1968 Tempest converttble , very
good con dtt10n
New top
automattc , power steertng

__

~u

:e_~_., .f' f,

Al. TROMM CONST.

A door , Vs au tomatte . radio good rad tal t1res. blue
1fm1sh . clean mt erior

Smill

Co.mplete
_

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

51995

Spb rt about Wagon 6 cy l Automat ic trans , rad1o,
good ttres, wh1te fln1 sh, g oo d eco nomy

MAKE s prrng cleontng profttab le
turn unwan ted ttems mto cask
Ad ve rt 1se 1n the Wont Ads

Television log for eAsy viewing

IN THE MEANTIME,

.,_

bedrm tra 1le r, a c one mde
from Harrtsonvtlle on New lrmo
Road Call before noon and
al ter 6 p m 742 2997

f~j~le~~~~~~i~~~~~~o

400

_

15-The Dallv Sentlnol. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, May 5, 1976
DICK
··

I MUST NOT LOSE

v.a

USED CAR tn good runn1ng condt
l1 o n no t mo re than 10 .)'ears
o ld Co ll 742 258 1

old Co\1742 258 1

=- ,, ·."·-""'
a-~-=

nuw~ ..::~~~~;~~-

•

Notkes

ODDS and End• Sale •larh 5·7 76

NOTICE OF APPO INTMENT
Case No 21797
Estate of Olga Jan e 'T he rs s
• Deceased
Not tce IS he reby g1ven tha t
W
Crow
Jr
of
F red
,._Pomeroy Meigs Co u nty , Oh iO ,
na s b e e n duly appo1nted
Ancil lar y Admmrst r ator of the
Estate Of Olga J an e Thet ss .
.,.deceased lill eo t Ra-.enswood ,
,..Jackso n
Coun t y
Wes t
Vtrgin1 a
Credttor s are re qurr eo to
ftl e t h eir c la tms w1th sa 1d
f•du c tary wrthtn fo ur mo nth s
Dat e d Th ts Jrd day of May
t97&amp;

(5 1 5

found

?

Legal Notice

r Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

TEll Mother how much you love ,
her w1th an ad on these pages
on Mo th ers day 20 words tu s t
S1 oo Tt;~ l l her nome and ad I - ' ~d
dress and we w1l l send het a UQ' ¥ 11
cord to ll1 ng hor to look fo1 a LOST Ma n s wallet wrt h valuable
message tn thvl trne s Senltnel
papers between Pome roy and
Roc
me If found caii9.49 ·21 .U.
IN lOVING memory of my
mother Frances Schne1de r who LOST Sunday between Pomeroy
passed away May 5 th 1933
and Mrdd leporl lodtes Stiver
Years come and yea rs go
wnst watch , Shan Mtlch , Phone
Bu! memor tes wtll stay fo1
~2 3&lt;178
lhe o ne you love Mo!her
~---·Daughter s Edtth , Helen

fiMBER top prtce lor standtng
limbe r Call (614 ) 446 8570

cart of ThankS

Mannmg D

V
.L' 0

tnMemOty -

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

A Wi scon sm reader wants to
know what she should bid In
response to a three-spade
openmg b1d by her partner
when she holds
t A K lOX
• • AKxx
•1\K xxx

There 1s no way to answer
thiS questiOn because we don 't
know what sort of opemng
three bids her partner uses II
they are of the trash type we
would JUSt b1d four spades II
they are likely to be good we
would recommend some sort
of Blackwood route.'
(Do you have a questlo~
lor the experts? Wflle "Asi
/he Jacobys" care of fhll
newspaper The Jacobys w/1
answer mdtvldual questions
11 stamped. se/1-addressea
envelopes are enclosed. The
mosr mterestmg questions
will be used In lhiS column
and will receive copies ol

JACOBY MODERN I

�lu

The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 5, 1976

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

rogram to benefit gifted
'.~hildren is in second year
ATHENS - Whi le the focus class two days per week.
throug hout the region have
&lt;'I Exceplional Child~e n ' s
begun
or are in the process of
Oth er sc hool distric ts
W&lt;'ek 1May 2-6) ha s naturally
planning programs which are
li{'CII the ed ucalionulneeds of
incorporated into the regular
l,,nJicapped children , there
classroom.
. one group of exceptional
The SEO-HESA project,
~·o ungstc rs
who
are
this sc hool year, has provide'&lt;!
nmeti mes ign ored
a variety of services to
•alented and gifted children.
The Meigs Soil and Water pe rsonnel workin g wi th'
And this week marks the
talented and gifted children.
·. :ceonct yea r of acti vity by the Co nse rvation District ha s These services ha ve included
•;uuthcastern Ohio Regional adopted "stillshine rules" in th e availability of Inl·:tluca tion Service Agency compliance wi th the "Sun- structional materials geared
I S ~: O-HF:S A I aimed at shine Bill".
According to the board any to TAG c hil~re n and con'"'isting Southeastern Ohio
sul tant se rvices to individual
:d wol districts prov ide pe rson may be informed of programs.
·
·1 ppropria te
ed ul'a tiona l . the time and place of regular . Consult.lln ts have included
! 'fOJ~fHrrt m ing
for their mee tings, or the lime, place Dave Bates, formerly a TAG
t&lt;Jicn tcd and gifted - or and purpose of any special coordinator for the ll\inois
meeting by calfing on the
" TAl;" - children.
Depar tment of Education ; Jo
The SEO-RES A project phone the district offi ce in Patterson, coordi nator of
Pomeroy.
~~ rves the 27 sc hool &lt;)istri cts
TAG pr ograms for -the
Any person may also obtain.
"' Athens, Gallia, Hocki ng,
Memphis [Tenn .) Schools;
Jackson, Meigs, Monr oe, advance noti ce of all and Gkn Poshard , a regional
Morgan, Perry, Vi nton, and meeti ngs at whi ch any coo rd in ator
for
TAG
Wash in gton Counti es with spec ifi c typ e of publi c prog rams in Southern
programs ran gi ng rrom business is to be discussed by Illinois.
identifying the type of public
1 na na ge m ent
effi ci ency
:ystcms to special education business for which he desires
;crvk es . Nuw in its securu.l to be notified ·and by sup)Car of opcmti on, SEO-RESA plyi ng th e district with
is fund ed by the Appalachian stamp ed se lf -addr es sed
envelopes.
\lcgional Commission.
The di stric t will notify
Duri ng the 1974-75 school
media
who have requested in
year, SEO-HESA held a follr
\\Tiling
, notice of ~ pecial or
lay training program for
emergenc
y mee tin gs. All
loc;:!l school distri ct personnel
minutes
of
the district will be
vho we re ap poi nted as
promptly
recorded
and shall
·'1.•.:•11 District TAG CoOI·be
open
to
public
inspecti
on
Iinators" by their respective
during
working
hours
at
the
i ll pcri ntenden Lc; .
Tnlini ng sess ions dealt district office, 221 W. Second
.vit h clmracteri stics of TAG St., Pomeroy .

S&amp;Wm goes

sunshine rule

children currenUy enro~ Iii
their special ed\lcattim
programs, and;
&gt;
- Contacted agenele1
wllhl.n their communiUe1
(such as heallll departmenll
and day · tare centen) to
identify other · children
particularly pre-~~eOOO!en,
placement. Tl]e system was who may have potential ·
developed by the SEO- learning problems.
In addition, the Initial
SERRC project in conreturns
from a ·region-wide
junction with local school
home
mall.out
from the SEOdistrict personnel and apSERRC
office
have
been ~e~~t
proved by school district
to
the
respective
distrlota:
·
sperintendenis December 4,
"Now
that
the
initial
cilia
1975.
1
The SEO.SERRC project has been collected" Wetnhas served the schools In· furtner explained, "district
Athens, Gallia, Hocking, personnel will determine If
Jackson, Meigs, Monroe, the initial identification.effOrt
Morgan, Perry, . Vinton and is valid and, If so, whlc1J of
Washingtoo Counties in ef- those children' suspecfecl of
forts to ·provide appropriate belng,handlcapped need tO be
:.
educational services to assessed.''
handicapped children since · Activities concerning ·4be
"Identification of suspeCted
1968.
At this point, school handicapped" component
districts have compleled the began in February, 1978.and
following steps leading to are to be concluded by Sept.
I, 1976.
identification :
The assessment and
- Surveyed their teaclng
placemeni
compOnenla will
staffs to determine which
follow,
based
upon . the
children may have suspected
avljilability
of
necessary
It: ning problems or special
financial and other l'eltour•
ne ~ :li
- Analvzed data on ces.

Identification phase near

PRACTICE SET
HARRISONVILLE Harrlsonvllle Chapter,
Order of Eastern Star, wllf
hold a practice session at 7
p.m. Monday at the hall.
All officers are urged te
attend.
Agrand Inspection olthe
chapter will be held at7 :30
p.m. on May 13 with
Worthy Patron Dr. Howard
I. Shull as Inspecting olllcer. There wllf be a
dinner served at 5:45 p.m.
All officers, members and
guests should have their
reservalfons In before May
8.
.

complete in child proje.ct
ATHENS - · As the nation
ob serv es Ex c eptional
Children's Week May 2-ll,
Southeastern Ohio's 27 school
districts are nearing completion of the first component
d the region's Handicapped
Child Identification System.
Robert L. Weinfurtner ,
director of the Southea s ~rn

WATERFIELD HELD
SANTA BARBARA, Calif.
!UP! ) - Robert John Waterfield , 20, son ol actress Jane
Russell and pro football star
Bob Waterfield, was held in
lieu of $5,000 bail today on
attempted murder charges in
barroom shooting.
Waterfield, a farm worker,
and two juveniles were
arrested after sheriff's
deputies , acting on . a
warrant, searched his
Cuyama home and said they

found a gun believed used in
the shooting of Oscar
Hernandez, 26, of Maricopa .
Hernandez, shot in the.back
of the head while dancing in a
bar Sunday, was in critical.
condition at Kern County
Medical
Center
in
Bakersfield.
Miss Russell was divorced
in 1968 from Waterfield's
f11ther, former quarterback
and coach of the Los Angeles
Rams, aiter 25 years of
marriage.

a

Ohio Special Education
Hegional Resource Center
(SEO.SERRC) said the first
component of ·the sys~m is
"identification of suspecled
handicapped children." ·.
The identification system
also indudes components
dealing with assessment and

'J;he Almanac
United PrenlDternalioaal
Today is Wednesday, May
5, the 12lith day of 1976 with
240 to follow. .
The moon is approaching
its first quarter.
The mor!Ung stars are
Venus and Jupiter.
· The evening stars are Mer·
cury, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Taurus.
American
author
OJristopher Morley was born
'May 5, 1890.
·

Laurel Cliff
Attendance at the morning
se rvi ces at the Fr ee
Methodist Church May 2 was

Jlans fur implementation of
rArr pro~ ra m s in resfledive

Mrs. Kath y Pullens has
been returned home from
Holzer Medical Ce n~r .
Mr. Harry Stahl has been
retum cd home h•om Pleasant
Valley Hospi t.lll.
MI'S. Florence Stahl,
H1mtington visited recently

lis tf'ic l,.
The mos t ambitious TAG
:JI'ogram initiated as

lJ

result

the training program was
:hat of the Mo•·ga n Local

'~

)l'huol Distric t in Morgan
.~uu nt y .

·

In that district a full -time
I'M; resour ce teac her
Jrovidcs services to :;;mall

(roups of talented and gifted
:hildren in a central location.
)l mlc nls in the progr a m

·ange from fourth to eighth
•raders. Each student is in
·!,r regular classroom three
lays per week and in tl!e TAG

Ml' ~.

Norman

Schaefer .
Mr . Mark Stahl, Stockport,
Mr . and Mrs. r'aul Stahl,
Columbus, Mr. F'rilz Stahl,
New Marshfield , and Mr . and
Mr s. Paul Neutzling, Athens,
visited Saturday with Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Schaefer and
Mr. and Mrs. Vern Story .

Fri., Sa l ., Sun , May 7-8·9
The Adv enture of Sherlock

Holmes' Smit rter Brother
Technicolor

Gene Wilder , Made I ine
Kah n

Show Starts 7 p.m.

In 1961. Alan Shepard
rocketed 115 miles from Cape
Canaveral, F1a., to become
America 's fir st subo{)rbital
space explorer.
In 1972, an Alitalia airliner
crash in llnly killed 115
persons.
In 1975, President Ford
asked Congress for $507
mil lion to aid South
Vietnamese refugees.

Big Selection Of .

GOWNS-ROBES
DUSTERS PAJAMAS
SLIPS PANTIES

SPRING

LINGERIF DEPT.

JEWELRY-HANDBAGS
HOSIERY-SUPPERS

COSMETICS-SCARFS
GlDVES-BIWOlDS

and Half Sizes

DRESS DEPT.

.DECORATIVE GLASSWARE

COORDINATES-PANTS
BLOUSES..:SKIRTS-SWEATERS
BLAZERS-VESTS-SHIRTS
KNIT TOPS-SHORTS-HALTERS

Complete Selection Of

LAWN FURNITURE
WASHERS-DRYERS
REFRIGERATORS

SPORTSWEAR DEPT.

COOKWARE-CURERY
KITCHEN GADGETS

RANGES

MORE FOR YOUR MONEY!
When it comes to saving . we want you to
come out on top! That:s why we offer top
interest on all our savmgs plans . You n?t
only have the money you 've,saved ... you II
have a little extra besides.
,J;! .

For

Mews County
People

RACINE
IIJME NATIONAL
BANK
RACINE

OHIO

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

1/!News. . •in Briefsl

.SHEDS PILLOWCASES-TOWELS
PHOTO EQUIPMENT
AND FILM-FANNY FARMER
CANDY-HALLMARK CARDS
AND GIA WRAP
NOTIONS

WASH

aH.OR
TEI.fVISIONS

AINS

AREA RUGS-TABLE COVERS
TOSS CUSHIONS BATH MAT SETS

MECHANIC ST.

KITCHEN .TOWELS
HOME FURNISHINGS ANNEX

Main Store' Annex and Warehouse Open Thursday
9:30 to 5, Friday 9:30 to 8 and Saturday,
9:30 to 5 PM
.
.
'

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

WASHINGTON :.... THE FBI PROVOKED and encouraged
bloody gang warfare between the Black Panthers and rival
groups In hopes of neutralizing the organi2ations or killing off
the leadership, a Senate intelligence staff report said tOday.
At least four gang-style killings in California in 1969 were
linked to FBI provocation, and the bureau targeted the
premises of a Chicago Black Panther apartment for a local
poli~ raid jn which two died in a gun batl)e the sanie year, the
report said. The supplemental report, prepared by the stall of
the Senate Intelligence Commitlee, was titled "The FBI's
Covert Action Program to Destroy the Black Panther Party.''
It catalogued FBI tactics ranging from anon)'inous hate letters
and scurrilous propaganda to fingering black leaders for
killing by one side or the other.
NEW YORK - A FEDERAL APPEALS judge has urged a
gathering of top news executives to "make no concessions or
compromises" in their fight against judicial infringements on
the freedom of the press. "The First Amendment freedoms of
press and speech are the most important of all the freedoms In
the Bill of Rights," Harold R. Medina, senior judge of the
Second Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals 'sald Wednesday.
He spoke to the general session of the American Newspaper
Pupllmlers Association's 90th convention.
,
Medina urged the press to contest every step of the way
judicial gag orders restricting reportage of court cases.
CLEVELAND - A FIVE-ALARM FIRE, whipped by
winds gusting up to 30 miles an hour created a "holocaust"
which destroyed 26 frame homes here early today, leaving an
estimated 60 persons homeless.
Fire Department officials said the blaze broke out about 11
p.m. at a two.family home and quickly spread across the east
side neighborhood forcing the evacuation of 35 families. More
than 100 firemen fought the blaze which a dispatcher described
as "a holocaust, you can't believewhatyousee."
The fire was officially declared under control early today
but crews were to remain on the scene as a precaution most of
the day,
·
·
WASHINGTON - A NATIONAL cOmmission today
recommended the goverrunent double lis research efforts to
develop improved methods to treat and prevent arthritis, the
disabling disease that affects millions of Americans. lD a
report to Congress, the 17-member commission also called for
creatlon,ol a network of federally funded arthritis cen~rs and
community programs to make the latest developments in care
available to more people.
The commission, established by the NaUonal Arthritis Act
last year, said there are less than 1,000 physicians with
specialized training to treat more than 22 mllllon Americans
afflicted by the painfully criwling joint disease. Asummary of
the report sald there are serious deficiencies in the knowledge
of what. causes the many forms of arthritis and as a result,
scientiSts have been unable to develop effective ways to treat
and prevent arthritis.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

GUEST OF HONOR at the buffet dinner at the Meigs CountY Fairgrounds, sponsorllCf by
the Meigs County Democrat'party, was Lt. Governor Richard Celeste. Above are, 1-r, Ron
James, State .Represent.lltive; Lt. Gov. Celeste, and E. A. Wingett, chairman of the Meigs
County [)emocrat executive committee. Gertrude' Donahey, state treasurer, also attended
the dinner meeting.

Carter~Glenn unbeatable

,.

COLUMBUS {UPI) - The
state Welfare Department
announced today that 33
persons were convicted of
fraud In obtaining food
stampa in Ohio through the
first three months of the year.
The department, in a report
to llle U,S. Department of
Agriculture, said 13 of the ·
convlcUons were in Lucas
County, seven In Marion
County, four In Cuyahoga
County, two in Oark CoWJty,
two In Portage County and
one each in Erie, Hamilton,
Highland, Knox and Lake
counties.
The 33 cases Involved
fraudulent o~talnlng of fooda
stamps in amounts ranging
from $80' to $3,209. Penalties
In two cases involved
sentences to the Marysvlne
Reformatory . Other cases
resulted In workhouse
sentences and fines ranging
. up to .1.000.
NOW YOU KNOW

says L~. Governor Celeste
· A Jimmy Carter and John
Glenn ticket this fall would be
an Wlbeatable n~tional team
according to Ohio Lt.
Governor Rlchard Celste.
The Democrat wa. in
southeastern Ohio Wed·
nesday drumming up interest
in and support for Issue I
which will be on the ballot
this JWJe in the Primary
election. Issue I would have
the governor and lieutenant
governor of Ohio be of the
same party as are President
and Vice President of the
national ticket.
In response to questions

prior to a meeting in his
honor in the Rock Springs
Grange Hall sponsored by
Meigs County Democrats, Lt.
Gov. Celeste made these
other points (and issued a
prepared statement on Issue
I - see below):
1976 will be an extrodinary
year In the political arena.
The incumbent president,
Jerry Ford, will be rejected,
as whoever nms on the
Democratic
ticket
in
November will be the winner.
The Lt. Governor has two
respqnsibilities, to preside
·over the Ohio Senate and to

A 10-gallon hat actually
holds % of a gallon.
I

take over for the Governor .
Celeste also thinks it Is the
responsibility of a Lt.
Governor to spend time with
ordinary people and be
familiar with their problems.
The fact that the Governor
Is a Republican and he
(Celsete) a Democrat,
doesn 't create . any real
problems, as he personally Is
friendly with Gov. Rhodes .
However, a Republican
Governor doesn't take a
Democratic Lt. Governor Into
his confidence. Over 150
.persons attended the buffet
dinner.

Yes on Issue I has reason
.

Wholes·ale prices jump
WASHINGTON (UPI) - steel, aluminum, copper, lead
Wholesale Irices leaped 0.8 and some wood products, a slight 0.2 in March niter
per cent in April, propelled by Industrial pr)ces rose a slight declines In January and
the biggest Increase In fann 0.3 per cent during March. Febuilry. A similar lull In
and food prices In a year, tbe Metal prices began to heat up consumer prices and a
trend
in
Lilbor Department reported slightly In April, but wood downward
Wlemployment
also
were
IJJ(.
today.
prlaes dropped.
peeled to be reversed durln1l
The increase, reflecting a
The Wholesale Price Index April.
nearly double-digit annual in April stood at 181.3, up 5.3
The 4.2 per cent jwnp In
rate of 9.6 per cent, brought per cent from a year agq.
farm
prices was the biggest
an !lbrupt end to a virtual '1'\lat mea11s that wholesale .
since
last
May, despite lower
five-month lull in the goods costing $100.1n 1967 now
prices
for
grains,
live poultry
wholesale market. It was the cost $181.30. The Index for
biggest monthly jump sinee farm products was 8.8 per and fluid milk. The biggest
!ann price· Increase was for
last October,
cent higher than a· year ago, livestock,
which was
The April wholesale and for industrial goods It
expected
to
continue
Increases soon will be passed was up 8.1 per cent.
climbing
In
the
months
along to consumers and,
Wholesale prices Increased ahead.
combined with an upcoming
round of metal price hikes,
threaten to weaken Presidenl
Ford's campaign promise
that his economic policies can
defuse inllatlon .
Ways of raising money to discussed by Drew Webster
Led by livestock, eggs and bl!ild a new post home on Its Post 39, American Legion,
green coffee, farm prices property near the Rock met Tuesday night.
rose a healty 4.2 per cent Springs Fairgrounds were The post voted to sponsor·
after declining sharply the
one rider In the May I~ hike·
previous three months. .::::;:::;:;:;:::::::;:::;:;:,:::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::.:::::::&lt;':':· bike and help ral~ fWlda for
Processed food and feed
retarded citizens. Plall!l were·
EXTENDED OUTWOK
prices rose 1.9 per cent-the
begWl
for the observance of
Saturday through
biggest rise since November, ·
Memorial
Day by the post
Monday, Utile, tl aay,
1974.
and
the
Pomeroy Fire
precfpltalton through the
Combined farm and proDcpariment. Bands and civic
period.
Highs
Saturday
will
cessed food prices rose 2.8
be In the Ha and lows In tbe organizations will be Invited
per cent. Not since April,
1
38s to the low 40a, warming to join In the observance with
1975, have these prices taken
by Moaday to highs in the a time and schedule of ac·
such a large leap.
tlvfttes to be announced later.
70s
and lows In the fts.
Despite already announced
future price Increases for :::::::::;:::~;:::: :; :;:;:::;:,:,:::::::::,:;:::;:;:,::::::'::: : :: ::::: :: :':::

New post home is considered

on its side, says Celeste
By Lt. Gov.
Richard F. Celeste
. Issue One, on the ballot this
June 8th, ' wol!id amend out
Constitution to require that
future Governors and
Ueutenant Governors would
be elected as a team. I want
to urge Ohioans to vote YES
on Issue One.
Our . present method of
choosing
the
State's
leadership was designed 125
years ago when the annual

ALMOST CAUGHT ON FIRE - A truck owned by the
Pomeroy Street Department almost caught on fire
Wednesday morning. There was hot mix In the back of Ute
truck and It caused a tarpaulin to snioke a great deal. The
fire department was summoned to wet down the tarp.

budget for the State was just state cimals were .important
a bit over $2 million . sources or revenue. .
(compared to $5 billion this
And when dentists pulled
year); when the biggest teetli with an instrwnent
expenditure was almost one called a "Turkey Oaw.''
million dollars for "foreign
Dentistry, like much In our
debt"; .when other ex- daily lives, has changed, and
penditures included items has improved ita tools In the
like "appropriations for last 125 years.
wood" and "wolfe scalps";
State government in Ohio
when tolls from the Nalional has grown enormously
Road, and the Western complex in that same time.
Reserve Road and Mawnee Yet we choose our g_~ernor
Road, and especially our
(Continued on page 8).

Backing autos
bwnp in Racine
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. investigated a minor.
accident In Racine Tuesday ,
at 6:30 p.m . Randal C.
Friend, 19, Rt. 1, Long Bottom, backed from a parking
place Into a car driven by
Joan L. Tuttle, Racine, who
was pulling Into a parking
place.
·
There was no damage to
Friend's and slight damage
to Tuttle's vehicle . No
citation was Issued.

OOLUMBUS - THE OHIO SUPREME COURT ruled
Wednesday that when it reverses an order by the Public
Utilities Coiiiiiiil!sion of Ohio tbe reversal does not reinstate
the rates in effect before the PUCO decision. The high court
made the ruling in suits involving the aeveland Electric
filumlnating Co. and General Telephone Co.
The court said reversal of the PUCO rate hJke order Is a ·
mandate to PUCO ''to lssure a new order, and to rate schedule
being challenged remains In effect until the commission iasues
a new rate schedule. In its original General Telephone ruling
the justices said the utility during the time PUCO was .
computing a new rate In compliance with the court's order
should have reduced its rates In effect prior to the date or' the
challenged rates. ·
·

. . Datelmegeneral
l'i76·~onvention

WILLIAMSBURG, Va .,
May 6 - The VIrginia House
of
Burgesses,
oldest
representative body in
~erica, was replaced by a

of
delegates who elec~d EdmWld Pendleton as their
president over the opposition
Of Patrick Henry.
~ .

\

Fraud in
welfare
stopped

i~r*~~::::::::::::::::::::~::::=::::;;::::~:::;:;;;;;:::~=:===:~=i=!::::=:=~=:=~=:::::=:=:=:=:=:::~=~=:=:=:::=:=:=:::=:::=:=====:::::::~

By United PresslDternatlonal
BOSTON - MORE THAN A MILLION PEOPLE given
radiation treatment for respiratory infections during
childhood now face the risk of thyroid cancer, according to a
report in the Ne\v England Journal of Medicine. "Tbere is rio
estimate of how many.people are inyo)ved, but the number in
the United St.lltes mayeKceed a million,'' according to thEi
report, based on findings at Chicago's Michael Reese Hospital
9f Dr. Murray Favus and his associates .
"Many are WJaware of prior radiation exposure," it said.
The doctors studied 1,056 people who had received radiation
trestment lor such thin~ as infected tonsils and diseases of
the upper respiratory tract during the 1940s and 1950s. The
doctors found '!1\&gt;er cent of those examined had some form of
thyroid disease and 9 per cent had cancer.

en tine

.THU~SDAY.. MAY 6, 1976

TUMBLES DOWN - Tbe top of the Stiffler Buildiljg
was brought down by a winch supplied by the Pomeroy
Motor Company Wednesday afternoon. Traffic was being
routed around th~ area with lower parking lot and Court
St. being used as detours. The wall remained on the
Stiffler Bl!ildlng after a mutual wall fell between the
Stiffler Depariment Store building .and a structure owned
by Mrs. Amy Kin.Jlsland, Jackson, Tuesday at 2:50p.m.

...

In Misses, Junior

A Home l1ank

VOL XXVIII

May 9th
is
Mother's
Day ••

DRESSES

more than ever

County to of!sel that. "
Hughes said Reaganhasnoat-largedelegates lron1 Cuylu~gu
County nor Is he on the ·ballot here In any of Ute four
Congressional districts.
CLEVELAND (UP!) - After defeats In Indiana, A!llbama
The local GOP organization w~ the first in the sllllll to
and Georgia, Ohio has become a crucial primary for Gerald endorse Ford several months ago.
Ford and Cuyahoga County Is a crucial county to winning that
Hughesadded that he now expects Ford to step up c8tnPI~gu
Irimary says Robert Hughes, Republican chalnnan of that efforts In Ohio.
..,
county.
"I imagine he will come to Ohioseveral times and mny be In
" It has now boiled down to !he simple fact that Ford must 1 Oeveland two or three times now," ll!lld Hughes.
·defeal (fonner CaUfomia Gov. Ronald) Reagan In Ohio to wiD · Reagan Is on the ballot in only I~ of the 23 Congressional
the nomination," Hughes said Wednesday after Reagan had districts In llle state, assuring Ford ol at least 24 of Ohio 's 91
scored wins in three suces$1ve primaries.
RepubUcan delegates even before the primary - but Uughes
Hughes said he believed the President would succeed but malntllins the popular vote will be the key .
. .
cautioned that ''Reagan is going to get some strong suwort
"U Reagan would win the popular vote, It would huvt~ a
downstate and the President will have to win-big In CuyahO(Ia tremendous effect on the convention," said Hughes.

at y

•

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonighl !hru Thur sdil y,
M&lt;1 Y '1-6
NOT OPEN

discussion of the Issues with personal attacka," Reagan said.
The lith conunandment refers to a general GOP maxim that
one Republican shall not speak Ill ol another Republican. ·

•

••
••

110.

with Mr . and

SHREVEPORT, La . (UPI) ...,. Ronald Reagan, leading
President Ford for the first time in GOP convention delegates, ·
says his campaign has dealt with llle issues, while party
divisiveness "has come from the other side.''
Fresh from three primary victories TuC$1ay and hoping to
pick up a nwnber of Louisiana's 42 delegates, the former
California governor swings through three of the state's cities
today, with a breakfast meeting and speech In Shreveport, an
airport news conference and a luncheon· speech In New
Orleans, and a evening slop in Baton Rouge,
In Nebraska Wednesday, Reagan responded to attacks from
·the FOrd c;~mpaign that his candidacy makes a political
bloodletting likely at the Kansas City convention ,
"Any personal attacks or divisiveness have come lrom tbe
other side," Reagan said. "I have taken up the issues:
"There is nollling in the lith CQmtnandmenl that says you
can't disagree with lbe issues ..The other slUe has replied to my

. '

h ildr t•n, Id e ntif ica tio n
•ro ccd ures , l' urri c ulum

lt:velopment and program
lrveloprnent - evaluation .nudifica tio n. Th e loca l
·ourdi na to rs we re then
recl uired to develop written

Politics: warming up period

NEW BASEBALL Dlj\MOND - A new baseball diamond haS. Peen
built at Meigs High sChool behind the high school. The diamond will be
used by the school and also by pony league tea"\t ' Wori&lt; on the field was

under the direction of head coach Charles OJancey. Next to the diamond
is a football practice field and on top of llle hill is a UtUe league diamond
Ulat has been comple~.
''
·

WEATHER
Lows tonight in the mid 40s.
Ooudy Friday, highs 55 to 60.
Probability of rain 90 per cent
IOOay, 80Jler cent tonl~ht, 20
per cent ll'rlday .
·

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