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•
10 - The Daily Sentinel, Midcllt•Jl(lr t.Pollwr&lt;•y, o., Tuesday, Jan . 27. 1976

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Mcinori&lt;ll Hospital
ADMITT ED - Meli ssa
Cla y, Rutlan d ; Charluttt•
PatU!rsorl , Rutland ; Karen
Guinthe r , Svr acuse; F.d~\ ~rd
For ema n. ·Portland : :Xellir
Price. Middleport ; B;~rbara
Doug las. Coolville ; Mar tin
Mollahan . Tuppers Plains;
Ronda Dempsey, Syracuse:
Clyde Bay les, Middleport;
Dorothy Bailey, P omeroy;
Franklin Lemley, Portla nd .
DISCHARGED - Shann on
Count s, Myrtl e Wolford ,

Burton

Pearso n,

Ha tti ('

Swarll. Lunt ('ou nl'), Leota
Hubbitrd.
l-lulzt•r l\lt•dieotl ('t-nt r r
1OiS&lt;·ha r grs. Jan. 26)
Al ri cia Ba il es. J ess ie
Bax ter. Mrs. John G. Bla ck
an d son, Ar chie Bond, Hom er
Buvd. Bvron Bunce, Frances
Ru~·th&lt;H il . Mrs. Tom Calho un
and son. Patricia Chafin ,
Verna Circle. Miachel Da vis,
Ma ry Deer , Thoma s Farley,
Bess ie Ferg uson, Gina
Gi lpin. Ma ri on Gr iffith,
Newlon Grill o, Derek Harris,
Mrs. Louis Hunt and son,

Mrs. Jerry Hulchi nson and
daugh ter , Genevie ve Jones ,
Cvnthia Kuhn. Lillian Leach,
l.;1lhc r Leslie, J on a tha n
McCa be. Iva McGin nis ,
J udi th Mil hoa n, Alice Mi ssen,
Hilda Oile r , J . Sherma n
Port e r . Kri s tina Raines ,
Dona ld Slone rr , Lettie
Spe ncer.
Mr s.
Ronald
Twyma11 and daughter , Janet
Ward . C"rl Wolfe .
Birth, Jan. 261
Mr . and Mrs. rtoger T.
Manu el, da ughter , Racine .'

MEIGS THEATRE
TONlTE HlRU
THURS:
JAN .1 7-29

NOT OPEN

. FRI. THRU. TUES .
Walt Disney's
APPLE DUMPLING
GANG

Show Starts 7:00p .m .

IS ...
YOUR
VALUABLES
LOCKED
IN A SAFE
DEPOSIT BOX

•

·. •.•.•.•: •.····:·:·:·:·:···:·:·:-:·;.;.;-;o;·;·;·;:::::::o::::o·•·;::~

· ···;.·~·~:~;:~~~·~~·~~~o~

Thursday
through
Saturda y, a chance of rain
or snow Thursday and
Friday and fair Saturday.
Highs mostly will be in the
30s Thursday and rising to
the 40s by Saturday. Lows
will be 15 to 25 early Thursday and in the 30s Friday
and Saturday.

Weather
Partly cloud y tonight and
Wednesday , lows lonighl15 to
20. Highs Wednesday in the
mid 30s. Probability of
precipitati on 20 per cent
today , tonight a nd Wed -

Walk-Up Teller Window and
Auto Teller Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.

"THE FRIENDLY BANK"

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
DEPOSitS INSURED TO '40,000

jim Arness in new show
temporary setting wearing a
"Griff. n The·. show never got
suit and necktie and playing~ off the ground when viewers
drawing room scene.
co uldn 't imagine Papa
"I'd be taking a ch~nce Cartwright with zippers.
doing a comedy role, for .
"People won't be shocked
instance, not that I care to . I by Macahan because he's not
don't want to tamper with.the a totally different gny from
public image that I gained in Matt," said Arness .
~Gunsmoke. '"
" He is more colorful than
Arness was reminaed that Dillon . Matt was serious and
Lorne Greene suffered a down to business. He was a
credibility gap when he left lawman and there was an
"Bonanza" after more than a official air about him.
dozen years to star in
" This new character has a
basic belief in right and
wrong like Dillon had. But
he's more volatile . He doesn 't
have to stop and think about
the law before he acts.
"Macallan will have to
make his presence felt with
The West Was Won."
the viewers just like Matt did .
" Macahan is a hell of a
He's larger than life, a
guy," said Arness. "He and
dominant character who
Matt Dillon have a lot of
keeps things moving .
Pom e roy Bowling Lanes
traits in common. But they
" He carries a pistol but its
Th.ursday Strikers
have a good many differences
an
earlier model. The story
Dec. 25. 1975
too.
w. l . takes place 15 years before
Team No . 3
' 81 39
" My problem was sWitMall came to Dodge City."
T£&gt;am No . 1
64 56
ching .to the new character
Team No . 4
61 59
Arness is aware that
P ick A Pa i ~
60 60
after playing Matt lor so long . TSi·mon's
''Gunsrno·
k e's'' longevity was
ea m No . 6
"B 72
Team NO . 2
46 74 due in large part to its supBut this has been an ideal
High series ~ T eam N o . 4
tra nsition because both men
·JXlrting actors - Milburn
96 3 ; Team N o . 1 906 ; T eam
li~ed on the frontier.
No . 3 881.
Stone, Ken Curtis and
High lnd Game ~ Ann
"Suppose · I tried a series
Grover 115 : · Pat ti William s Amanda Blake.
playing a Los Angeles cop. I'd
158 ; Barb Whittington 156 .
In later years Arness often
H igh I nd . J Gam e - Patt i
be concerned at taking that
made
token appearances in
Wi ll iams 430 ; A n n Gr o vCr
big a jump.
421; Phyl lis Cline 404 .
episodes, allowing
the
"People are accustomed to
pr.
e
sence
of
Matt
Dillon
to
be
Thursday Strikers
me
in
a
frontier
lorDec
.
29.1975
seeing
felt rather than seen.
W. L.
mat. I don't know if they
"Chemistry among · the
Team No . 3
83 45
Team 5 Stm on 's
would accept me in a conactors ,is the most important
-Pi ck. A Pair
66 62
thing you can put on the
T eam No . 1
66 62
Team No 4
63 65
screen," he said. "S ome
Team No .'6
54 74
RACINE ~ Two registere~ Tea
people call it ensemble acm No . 2
· 52 76
Guernsey cows in the herd of
. High Series ..,.... No . .6 939 ;
ting .
Edson Roush 's Locust Grove No . 1 875 ; No . 2 854 .
High Ind . Seri es Patti
Farms have recently com- · Williams 475 ; Anna Wa rd
ASK TO WED
ple led lop official DHIR 38 1 ; ·oarlene T illis 377 .
H i gh Ind . Game Patti
A
marriage
license has
actual production records, Williams
179 ; Darlene T illis
been issued -to Jerry Ray
according to The American 163 ; Pat ti Williams 150 .
Hubbard, 22, Rl. I, Racine ,
Guernsey Cattle Club. All
Thursday Strikers
and Kathryn Jean Conde, 23,
cows were milked two limes a
Jan!Jary 8, 1976
W. L.
day . The testing, supervised
Rt. I, Reedsville .
T eam No . 3
89 45
by Ohio Stale University, T ea m N o . 1
74 62
68 68
Colwnbus was on Locust Simo n ' s Pick A Pair
STUDENT ILL
Tea m N o . 4 ·
65 71
Grove Fay, a six year old , Team N o. 6
60 76
The Pomeroy E-R squad
produced 14,570 pounds of Team No . 2
52 84
answered a call to Meigs
End of firs! ha lf .
milk and 709 pounds .of fat, in
High Team Ser i es - Team
High &amp;;hool at 2:20 p.ITI.
305 days·, and Locust Grove .No . 1 971 ; Team No . 6 960:
Monday for Tom Gibbs, . a
Tea
m
No
.
3
953
.
Flossie Bell, a Sr. one year
High 1nd . Series Patti
student who was ill. He was
old, who produced 12,170 Williams 464; Lena Howard
taken to Holzer Medical
pounds of milk and 575 443 ; JoAnn ward 421 .
Center.
H ig h Ind .. Garne - .Patti
pounds of fat , in 305 days.
Williams 197; Lena Howard
By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
Big Jim Arness, indelibly
stamped as Marshal Matt
Dillon for 20 years in
" Uunsmoke," return.ed to
television Monday night to
play another westerner in
what he hopes will become a
long.run ning series.
Arness, his hair returned to
its natural blond and liberally
sprinkled with· gray, has
grown a mustache to play Zeb
Maca han,
a
grizzled
mountain man leading a
fa mily trek westward.
Monday 's ABC-TV pilot
film ran 21 , hours but will be
pared down to 60 minutes an
episode next fall titled "How

THE SECOND ONE-

Maynard H. Ellis, 60,
Cheshire , was charged with
failure to yield the right of
way following an accident at
9:50 a .m . Monday at the
Junction of Rl. 7 and Crooks
Rd. north of Cheshire.
The Gallia-Meigs Post

State Highway Patrol said
Ellis' car pulled into the path
of an auto operated by Betty
L. McKinley , 32, Middleport.
There
was
moderate
damage.
Roger L. Montgomery , 27,

Ivan W. Well died on Monday
Ivan W. Well, 78, Route 1,
Minersville , died Monday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The son of the late Frank and
Emma Wickham Well, he
was also preceded in death by
his wife, Helen Mae Frank

SWCD program

will he planned
The Meigs Soil and Water
Co nservation District
( SWCD) will ~old i Is a nnual
program plan ning meeting
Wednesday , Jan . 28, in the
conference room , second
floor, of the Farmers Bank
building at 8 p.m.
County
officials
and
Agriculture Service Center
representatives will assist
the supervisors . Everyone
interested in the district
program is welcome. The
SWCD board meets regularly
on. the fourth Wednesday of
each · month and is always
open to the public.

Discount
tConl in u&lt;~l

from page l )
ta'Ognition of their special
place in society.
' 'Our senior citizens should
be honored , and not pushed
aside to cope by themselves
with problems of inflation
and
dwindli ng
buying
power/ ' said Rhodes .
"This program will not only
provide discounts for senior
citizens," Rhodes said, "i t
also will relieve public and
private agencies how issuing
their own cards of the need to
do so, freeing more mPney for
direct be nefit s to the
e lderly ."
·

Well in 1974, and a brother,
Clyde.
S.urviving are a daughter,
Margaret Mae Yost, Minersville, a brother, Floyd, MeConnellsville, and ~everal
nieces and nephews .
Mr . Well was a member of
Flatwoods
United
he
Methodist Church and had
belonged to the Meigs County
Farm Bureau for 40 years .
Funeral services will be
held at I p.m. Thursday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with
the Rev. Freeland Norris
officiating. Burial will be in
Gilmore Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytime.

Crown City, was charged
wi lh DWJ following an accidentat7:4Sp.m. Monday on
Rt. 7 at Crown City. Officers
said Montgomery's car
slammed into the side of a
tractor-trailer rig operated
by Joseph T. Johnson, 34,
Gallipolis. Bernard Wells, a
passenger in the Montgomery
car, had visable injuries but
was not treated. There was
severe damage to the truck.
Montgomery's car was
demolished .
A rear-end collision occurred at 6:50 a.m. today
near the entrance to Bob
Evans' Sausage Shop on Rl.
35, one tenth of a mile east of
Rio Grande.
Officers said an auto driven
by Curtis C. Porter, 70,
Gallipolis, was struck in the
rear by a vehicle operated by
James R. Porter, 45 ,
Gallipolis. A passenger in lhe
Porter car, Gertrude Clark,
62, Gallipolis, had minor
injuries. No charges were ,
filed .

NOW IN PROGRESS

20% oH

CROW'S :

Visif lhe Colonel and get a tree dinner . You buy one
an d gel the second one free . Each Dinner 80111.
contai n s three pieces of finger lickin' good Ken fucky Fried Chicken, potatoes and gravy , slaw, and

• •

JANUARY WHITE SALE

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a r(ll!
NO SUBSTITUTIONS

L__ _::_ 0~~~~~ Wed_:,·~:".:.

28

SATURDAY

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~nd_Th~:,:,:a~~~~n~----_1

NAME BRAND
FURNITURE
AND APPUANCES

It's A Great Day For

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KENTUCKY FRIED ·CHICKEN

I

POMEROY, Oi-tiO

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·-----------------------------------------J
.

iW:A(lfi'NctFOfl~rnE

BLAZE -- Firemen climb a
to get at the lire in Stiffler's Department Store
9:30 a.m. today near th.e· store's West Seeond St .
!_lltraltce . At this point firemen hoped to control the blaze .
By noon they still had not brought it under control and

...

1fN;=
: ;:::&lt;·:;.: ·:=·i;:::·Jj;i';{;.'\.~r:;~~~..~~~~e~siness
·•

~

By United P!'ess International
WASHINGTON - ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER Yitzhak
Rabin has received a pledge lroin President Ford for conll~ued American commitment to Israel's secw:lty. Midway
through his lour.day visit to Washington, Rabin addresses
members of the Senate and House today.
- ·In a toast at a black-lie siate dinner honoring Rabin
'I'Uesday night at the Whlie House, Ford said the United States
:!l"ill ~ontinue to support measures" to maintain the
momentum of peace negotiations In the Middle East. Ford said
the United Stales showed Its commitment by vetoing the U. N.
resolution calling lor an independentPaleslinian state. " We
Will oppose measures we consider unworkable and make peace
l]arder to achieve," he said.
DETROIT - A ''YEILOW FLU" BOYCOTT that kept one

'l'uesday. School attendance Tuesday averaged 83 per cent,
with only half the number of absentees recorded Monday when
Uie two.siep plan went into effect.
~ More than 15,000 elementary students were bused Monday.
'[hey were joined by thousands of middle-and highof!Chool
students as the full court"'rdered contingenl of 21,853 students
Mde buses to new schools Tuesday. Only one minor Incident
l!Ould be attributed directly to opposition to the desegregation
~n, and school officials cautiously began to speak of school
1J1 egration as successful In De\foit.
, " WASHINGTON ~ TilE SENATE HAS CONFIRMED
George Bush as director of the CIA despite charges his past
IJ!yolvement in partisan politics will further erode public
confidence in U. S. intelllgence efforts.
'
Bush, whose nomination was approved 64-27 Tuesday, will
[eplace William Colby, who was fired by President Ford in his
November cabinet shakeup. Bush will be the ninth director of
the CIA since its creation In 1947 but the first with a political
background .
Sen. Jesse Helm•, Jj.-N .C., was the 0 nly Republican to
DppOse the nomination, although Sen. Lowell Weicker, R.Conn., voted prese11t.

®ROYAL FAMILY

Sheets and Pillowcases, ·Bad.reads,
Bath Towels, Hand Towels
and Wash Cloths

NOW

Main Store, Annex and Mechanic Street Warehouse open MQnday
lhru Thursday and Saturday9:30to5, Friday9:30to8.

ELBERFELDS -IN POMEROY

'FURNITURE
Middleport, Oltio

'•

*

•

fell apart and Detroit's full desegregation plan wentlnto effect

CANNON.

BAKER

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE
'

50%

SAVE ON
QUALITY

.-.I I.

I

Stores vacated as firemen fight to
contain blaze sta~ing in Stiffler's
A fire that began early today in the Slifner ':. Department
Store ncar the corner of Court and Main Sls. in Pomeroy's
business section raged out of control and threatened the entire
lwer business block at II o'clock.
Most of the business finns ironting on West Second and
West Main Sls, in that block were vacating their premises.
Firemen at 11 a.m.told The Daily Sentinel they did not know
whether or not the blaze could be controlled. The lire,
spreading into buildings adjoining Stiffler's was prevented so far this morning - Iron"! jwnping across Court St. and
getting into the middle business block .
At noon the fire continued out of control and had spread
into a ll the buildings lacing Court St. Threse three-flour
buildings contained law offi.ccs, &lt;JpartmenL'l , an insurance
agency. grill, and other firms.
. on the, scene battling the blaze which alii was spreading to
adjoining buildings were the fire departmenl• of Pomeroy,
Middleport, Ma son, Ga llipol is, Syracuse a nd Racine .
The fire was discovered by two men on Second St. at 7:02
a.m. The Pomeroy fire department was called and at7:10 the
Middleport department was summoned to aid. Other departments were summOne&lt;l when it was apparent tha l the
Pomeroy and Middleport departments were going to be unable
to put out the fire.
5 Stiffler's store has three entrances located on West Second
St ., Cow·t St. a nd West Main St. The lire at fir•t wa• annarently

contained to the second floor which opens onto Second St.
Windows on Second St. were broken out by the Pomeroy fire
departments and it appeared that the blaze would be brought
under control at about 7:30.
· The Middleport department stood by on West Main St., the
first floor level , where there appeared to be no blaze. Smoke ,
however, poured from the front entrance.
The lire then became out of control and all merchandise of
the department stor e was destroyed by the fire and losses are
expecledloruninlolhousandsandthousandsofd ollars.
At 11 the blaze had spread on Second St. to . the Rizer
building with names still shooting out each of the three sides of
the Stiffler building. The Rizer building is the former Gilmore
Hardware Store building . Most a[ the businesses in the Stiffler
block had been vacated including the Fabric Shop and the
Swatzel Auto Parts store on Second St., the Simon 's Pick-A· Pair on Main St. and a barber shop on Court St. operated by
Oitie Scholl.
At times , the intense smoke was overwhelming and the
streets a ppeared as if it were night. Cause of the blaze was
unknown .
State Rep. Ron James telep honed at midmorning he had
engaged a helicopter to fly to the scene for an on-the-spot inspection. he said he may propose to Gov. Rhodes Pomeroy be
declared a disaster aref).

topic today

In three students home on the first day of coort"'rdered busing

This Week 'or Savings On •••

MUCH AS

Vol. 27 . No. 2111

bridge is

•

Shop Our Home 'urnlshlngs Annex

Fifteen Cents

Closing of .

~-

THROUGH

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CLOTHING OFFERED
Free ~lothlng day will be
held at the Salvation Army,
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,
Thursday from 10 a.m. until
noon for all area residents in
need of clothing.

1

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•

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

TAKENTOVM
RACINE - The Racine ER squad was called Monday
at9 p.m. for Gene Lenley, RD
Portland, a medical patient
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

NOW

~'!e----.----~-~--.-.------

i-

CINCINNATI - UNION TERMINAL, TiiE HUGE , " art
deco" ·styled railroad station that was left vacant a few years
ago when the rail passenger business diminished , is now officially destined to become a School lor tbe Creative and
Performing Arts. The Cincinnati Board of Education voted :&gt;-2
Monday to allow Ute first phase of a $3.7 million renovation
program to begin. The t.e rminal could be in use as a school ·by
.
. .
&amp;:plember )977.
member
Edward
Geers
called
the
terminal
a
Board
"facility of great historic significance and an extremely appropriate place for this school."

Final Week To Save.

en tine

Whole Pomeroy business block
threatened by fire out of control

•

UNIVERSITY PARK, PA. - A PENNSYLVANIA State
University scientist says surface mined land could be made
useful again in a financially rewarding way if it is reclaimed in
the proper manner. "Tbe familiar hog-back contour of parts of ·
Appalachia can be l~veled to permit industrial, agricultural or
community use," says Dr . Lee W. Saperstein. He says such
treatment could i(lcrease the value ol the land 10 or 20 times .
Saperstein is associate professor of mining engineering
and co-&lt;lirector of a 14-member task force at Penn Stale that is
compiling the first "Manual of Practice lor Eastern Surface
Mining." The pamphlet, compiled through an Environmental
Protection Agency grant, will be distributed among strip mine
operators to facilitate conformance with environmental
regullltions.
·
·

FINAL JANUARY
CLEARANCE SALE

-.CROW'S
-...
l£&lt;2!!!s»!'tl_)

at

(Continued from page I)
Sunday night and slept in sleeping bags.

uN

ALL ITEMS
Store Hours:
9-5 Mon. thru Sat.
9-8 Fri.

e

~ Pome•·oy. Middleport. Ohio
Wednesday, Jan. 28. 1976

-

•

News •. in Briefs

WITH
COUPON

1

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JANUARY
CLEARANCE

Middleport , Ohio

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cited after mishan
'I'

190 : .JoAnn ward and Dr ema
Roach 166.

heritage house ·

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MONTREAL, .Jan. 27 Gen . Woo st e r
urged
Congress to send him West
Indian goods such as rums
and liquors whleh he would
sell only lor continental
currency
which
was
depreciating rapidly . He
also noted the New York
regiment had . dissolved
when its enlistment term
expired at the first of the
month .

General sales tax receipts
THEFT REPORTED
for December, 1975 totaled
The Meigs County Sheriff's
$66,464.61 while receipts lor Dept. was advised thi s
December, 1974, totaled morning of a theft at the
nesday .
$58,562.27, an increase of Alvin B. Mays residence at
17,902.34. Motor vehicle sales Reedsville that occurred
LODGE TO MEET
tax for the month, 1974, Monday between noon and
The ·annual inspection of
totaled $29,519.71 compared 5:30 p.m. Taken from an
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;fl,M,
to receipls of $28,018.87 for unlocked garage was a
will be held at 7:30 p.m .
1&gt;ecember, 1975, a decrease quantity of tools. The incident
Saturday. All master masons
of $1 ,500.84.
·is under investigation.
are invited .

,---------------------------------------!
TWO FOR PRICE OF ONE · !
i
BUY. ONE $1.95 KENTUCKY
i
FRIED CHICKEN DINNER-

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&amp;lies tax receipts lor Meigs
County in December, 1975
were up 13.49 percent over
December, 1974, but sales tax
receipls in the county on
motor vehicle sales for
December, 1975 were down
5.08 percent under sales for
December, 1974 according to
the . report of Mrs. Gertrude
Donahey , state treasurer .

·~~=&lt;=== =='~~'~'~,~~:~=~=;;~==~===== = = = = · Driver

BOWLING

And you'll be surprised over our very
nominal safe deposit box rental fees! It's
really a comfortable feeling knowing
that your valuables are safely protected
from fire, theft and all kinds of disaster,
in our bank vault. Talk with us today
about a safe deposit box for your valuables.

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Sales tax take
up in December

.

~WASHINGTON - REPUBLICANS LOOK to the Senate to
~t!jecllhe House lead In overriding President Ford's veto of a'
~5 billion health, welfare and labor money bill and avoid what
one called a "long year" of confrontation.
·
.... The Senate set a midafternoon vote on the veto, which the
House Tuesday overrode on a 310-113 vole, 28 more lha.n the
t,wo-thirds majority needed to onrturn a veto. The margin
Indicated the Senate also would meet the two-thirds necessary
to override, which would put the measure automatically into
law . The bill would fund the Depts. of Labor and Health,
l':ducalion and Welfare for the iS-month period that started
)list July I.
-· CINCINNATI - TiiE AUTHOR OF "Tender Loving
'G reed," an investigation of nursing home abuses, figures it is
.)l&lt;ls'sible that up to one-filth of nursing home income is made
fraudulently. However, Mrs. Mary Mendelson admits U is
impossible to determine the exact amount of fraud in the industry because of a lac~ of government monitoring.
.·
·:· "II is estimated that as high as 20 per cent of the money in
11\irsing homes is fraudulently taken," she said. "That's not a
deflnilive figure .because nobody knows. We do not have the
auditors ... to adult nursing home books." Mrs. Mendelson,
addressed an Ohio Nurses Association district meeting '
b!re, told the nurses they should Iry to counter the strong
,lt:gislalive lobbies of nursi~ borne officials.

block either were vacating or

Roush , first vice president;
Henry . Wells , second vice
president; Edison Baker 1
secretary; George Collins ,
treasurer,
Making up the executive
board will be the officers and
E. F. Robinson, Car l Qualls ,
Eleanor· Thomas and H. F..
Shields.
The group named C. E.
Officers lor 1976 were Blakeslee as executive
elected Tuesday eve ning direclor1 for the year . They
when the Meig s Co unty endorsed a pre-applicati on
Regional Planning Com. for a block grant which would
mission met at the Farmers provide some $400,000 in
federal funds to carry ·out
Bank Building.
Elected were Thereon four projects in · Mei g s
Johnson, president ; Orien Coun ty .

Johnson
heading
planners

B~own

against utility

plan to spread costs
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Attorney General William J .
Brown slid Tuesday he · opposes a plan by natural gas
companies
to
charge
residential consumers for .
natural gas used by in dustries.
The
Public
Utilities
Commission of Ohio was
scheduled to hold hearings
today on the plan by the gas
companies
to
assess
residential consumers for
part of the cost of emergency
gas purchased for use only by
industrial and commercial
customers. ·
"I have directed attorneys
in my special litigation

sec li on to represent the
reslden tia 1consumers of Ohio
at tho se hearings ,"· said
Brown. i'We will contin"ue to
argue that residential conswners should not be forced
to pay for gas they do not
need and do not use.
" I want to make it cJear
that rate increases whicl1
have been approved in recent'
months by the Federal Power.
Commission will be showi ng
up on residen tial gas bills,"
Brown said. "However,
unless the plan we· advocate
is adopted, an addilonal 33
per cent increase can be
expected, a nd that is what we
seek to prevent.' j

State Dcpartn}cnt of Tnmsportation off ic ials a nd
representatives of the Conn
Constr uction Co . a re meeting
in Marietta today to discuss
the approac hing closing of
the'. Pumeroy-Ma.son Bridge,
Rep . Ron James said ·in
Pomeroy last night.
Rep. James said lie had
talked with Linn Hickman of
the ODT in Colum.bus who
said th e meeting was to
discuss the proposals of the
Con n Cnnstruction firm in
regard lu the closing of the
bridge. Co nn COnslr uctior,
has the contract on the
replacement of the bridge
floor, and under the contract,
the bridge is scheduled to be
closed from March 15 unlii
Nov . 15.
However, severa1 groups
l1ave been working towards '
keeping the bridge open until
after Easter and in getting an
earlier reope ning date.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
a chance of snow each day
of the forecast period with
highs mostly in the 30s.
Lows will be In the teens
Friday morning and in the
20s Saturday and Sunday.

Weather
Snow likely tonight and
Thursday, lows in the mid
20s. Highs Thursday to mid
:ms. Probability of preciptalion 30 per cen t today, 60
'per cent tonight and Thursday.
NOW YOU. KNOW
The
Tran s-S ib e rian
Railroad's Moscow to Peking
run is the longest rail Journey
that ca n be made without
changing trains.

"'ho
,,,

I I " • J'I I j:I.; • ·~ J OJTI ~1:1l~f' )ijl

. .h •

MANNEQUIN GOTTEN OUT - Someone bro,Ught out one of the Siiffler Store mannequins to the street where it laid useless . Better that it is wood and carJhoard, not a hum;m

body.

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.,...~

TOTAL SHAMBLES - West Second St., looking toward Court and the Davis Insurance
building was a shambles at 9:30a.m. as firemen from Mason, Gallia and Meigs Counties
tried to bring under control a fire that began in the third floor of Stiffler's Depariment Store
. this morning. At noon the entire business block was under serious threat and fire units from
six adjoining counties had been ordered into Pomeroy .

Damage high to tavern
Exte nsive d amage wa s short in a vent over the grill
incurred to the Blue Tartan area. An upstairs apartmen t ·
Tavern on South Third St., also was heavily damaged.
Middleport al2:36 a.m. today
Middleport firemen were
by fire which Fire Chief Bob on the scene with four pieces
Fishe r said apparently of equipment from 2::16 a.m.
started from a n electrical un til after 4 a.m. They

returned to the scene about 5
when it appeared the fire
might break oui again . The
business is owned by Mr . and
Mrs. Millard Spa ulding .
There is some insurance .
Monetary losses have not
been set.

Political reforms revealed
MADRID, Spain I UP!) · Prime Minister Carlos Arias
Navarro today announced a
broad prQgram of political
reforms to move Spain closer
to Western-type democracy.
Opposition
groups immediately denounced it cis too
little and too vague.
¥las told parliament the
go vernme nt of King Juan
Carlos will move 11Without
haste and with put a pause" to
crea te
a
two-house
parliamentary system, to
broaden political freedoms
and to legalize political
groups, e.cepl for the extreme left a nd separatists .
But Arias announced no
sc hedul e and gave few
details . As a result, opposit ion s pok e&gt;
: o n im\

~

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.:, . '.

1

mediatelv
bla sted
the
program too vague and too
little.
· One spokesman for the
moderate Social Democrats
said unless democratization
is speeded up, Spain will find
itself "On a collision course
by next fall."
As Arias spoke, leftistinspired strikes and street
protests co ntinued . They

as

Datelin~

1776

SUSSEX COUNTY, Va.,
Jan. 28- Local authDrlties
pledged to help the
homeless inhohltants of
bombarded Norfolk by
providing shelters and land
to cultivate lor as many as
possible .

have idled about200,000 while
and blue-collar workers and
keep affecting differe nt parts
of the country in n rotating
pa ttern that indicated they
were ce ntrally directed.
Speaking two months after
the death of Generalissimo
Francisco Franco , Arias
ruled out abrupt change,
saying Spain would "travel
the road to a de mocratic
alternative
With
quiet
determination
.''
.
.
'
Ari.as s poke before the
Cortes in a nationa lly
televised 80-minute speech
interrupted by applause 18
times . The lawm&lt;Jkcrs gave
him a standing ovation at the
end - even
thoug h
the
parliament itself forms one of
the first reform targets.

�•

2

I ht' Diith &amp;nlUlP I Mtddh pot l·l'o!Ht'luy , 0

Wu lm•sd,t\

1.11 1 ~II

Road work
at all time low
JACKSON - Members of
the htghwa) users comnut tee
of the Southeastern Ohto .
Regtonal Counctl (SEORC)
" ere told Monday lhal OhiO
' ha s reache d a new low ' m
htgh,. a y con s lructt on ac·
ltvtlv not JUst wtthm the
regton but throughout the
state
G Kenner Bush committee
c hatrrnan
and
publisher of The Ath ens
Messenger satd the slate has
plan s to let only one htghwa)
construction contract m the
regton durmg the ftrst stx
months of lh1s ) ear, and
there ts only one htgh\\ay
constructwn prOJect of any
consequence scheduled to be
let tn all of Ohto tn these In st
six: months '
Bush tdenltfted the smgle
area prowct anttctpated as
constructiOn of an access
road to Hockmg Techmcal
College tn Nelsonvtlle He
sa td the only large htghway
proJect expected to be flUlded
tn the ftrst half of the year
mvolves work on Route 30 m
Stark County
The SEORC comm1ttee met
Monday to access the current
status of some $251 mtlhon
worth of planned regtonal
htgh" ay proJects, none of
whtch IS scheduled for early
fundm g Appalachtan High·
wa; proJects from Athens to
Cmcmna tt, Bush satd, are all
Ln varwus envtronmenta]
tmpact stages of study
!lush urged the Ohto
Department of Trans-

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Six die in crash

:1

GREENVILLE, Oh10 cUP!)- Six people " erc ktlled
ut.•ar here today when a car crashL"II IIllo a house. Darke

C.&gt;Unty sheriff's dcputtes satd
"The only detatls I have are chat a south-bound
vehu•le on State Route 49 left the road'-'BY 1 traveled
,.;. somethmg hke 340 feet and went through a houSe, com.. pletely through the house, ' satd Deputy Sheriff Toby
~:- Spencer ''How many people were m the house and how

po rt a tto n
through
tis
Dtstn cts 9 and 10 offices, to
push ahead as qwckly as
posstble to co mplete the :;;
::~ many people were 111 the car, I don't know as yet "
.
e n vir onmental
1mpact :;:,
Spencer satd the car was evtdently traveling at a htgh ..
statements, so that when and :~ rate CJf speed
tflundmg becomes available ,
these proJects wtll be ready to ~.
go.
Slymted as they are by a at Kavenswood , which would keep ahve area projects,
lack of state flUids , Ap· connect Southeastern Ohto desptte the la ck of fund1ng ,
palachtan Htghway proJects wtth Interstate 77 a t and emphastze the cnt1 cal
need to compl ete th ese
rank much htgher on the Stlverton, W Va
The commtttee plan s to call pro jects to avotd furth e r
stales hst of prtorthes Bush
observed, than some others m a meeltog, the date as yet economic dechne .md loss. of
the regwn that are also undetermtned of county JObs tn the 1eg10n '
!he commtltee , ong10ally
comadered vttal to 1ts pohhcal party heads and
orgamzed
tn 1914 as a
legtslaltve leaders to hear
economtc weJI-bemg
regiOnal
lnghway
users
further
lnghway
con
struchon
Among those, Bush satd,
conference,
merged
wath
the
status
report
s
from
are 'long-awaited" ImSoutheastern
Ohto
Hegwnal
representatives
of
the
slate
provements to the · key
ColUlctllast October and now
transportalton department
regiOnal artenes ' of Routes
operates
under the a uspices
Bush
satd
the
commtllee
33 and 35 and Improvements
of
SEORC
mtends
to
'
work
wtlh
and
to access roads leadmg to the
through the legtslature to
proposed Ohto Rtver brtdge

Ironton tratled 12- IJ after
one penod and w,Is onlj
ahead by two, 26 24, dur10g
the halfltm e tn ler mt ss ton
ruesday mght but 10 the
second half thP unbeaten
F1ghltng T 1ge r s turned on the
steam to "allop defendmg
champiOn Waverly , 61 39
The vtctory all but assured

Ironton of tts ftrst South- and tt).O IOStde the cOn·
eastern Oh w League tttle as fcrcnce Waverly dropped to
Coac h Buddy Bell 's lads 9-5 overall an d 1-3 mstde the
move d thr ee full ga mes league
a head of seco nd pl ac e
Ironton outscored Waverly
Waverly and Galhpohs wtth 16-610 the lhu d pertod a nd 19·
onl y fo ur games remammg 9 m the fmal stanza to wm
on tht s ye ar 's league gomg a"ay
schedule
Dean Fttzpalrtck was the
Ironton 1s now 13-0 overall b1g gun for Ironton wtlh 28

-------------------------Letters of oplruon are \\Cicomed They should be
less than 300 words long 1or be subJect to reduction by
the editor) and must be signed with the signee's ad·
dress Names may be withheld upon publication
Ho&gt;le\er, on request, names wJII be disclosed. Letters
should be m good taste , addressing Issues, not per·
sonahties

An impression not snowwhite
Dear Str
The followmg 1s m response to an article wrttten recentJy
stgned, 'Showwhtte '
It has alwavs been my contention tha t sno wwhtte meant
clea n free of dtrl filth, etc However, thts wasn't the tm·
presston I got when I read thts a rticle
Ftrst,l would ltk e to remmd "Mr Snowwhtte ' tha t Racme
Ftre Dept ts an orgamzauon of VOLUNTEERS Meamng they
dona 1e thetr ume efforts, knowledge and a lot of ttmes thetr
mone) to protect the pub he from ftre and savtng a lot of hves,
11 htch they don't have to do Instead of bemg cut down for what
the) do, they should be thanked , a t least once tn awhtle
True, we have members m our department from outside
the 10llage hmtts, but lhts ts to help us fight ftres and have the
help whenever \\e are called
The btg reason we have been forced mto this ts because not
enough people care to help any more
By the way, ' Mr Snowwhtte," I haven' t seen you offer
your serv1ces to help us many way at all
Regardless of your fe ehngs, I'm proud to belong to the
Racme Ftre Dept and I'm also not ashamed, or afratd, to stgn
my name - Davtd Cleland, Chief, Racme Vol F1re Dept

Why can't somebody do something?
Dear Str
I am wntmg thts Jetter to say I thmk we need to have
another election m Rutland Townshtp to elect some trustees as
I thmk the rest have gone on vacation by the shape our roads
are m nght now m Happy Hollow as tbey have not been worked
on smce before the electton In November
We have had to pay higher property taxes this year, yet we
can't have a decent road to rtde over When the water ts up m
Rutland, everyone has to come over our road, but no one seems
to ca re what shape tt gets m
1 would hke to know why, because the trustees get patd to
take care of the roads and they don'tdo 11 Why can't somebody
do somethtng 7 - Mr~ Chrts Haley, Rt I, Middleport, Ohio

DR. LAM;B

JUdge's request gtvtng a ftrst
look at the famous defendant
to the prospectiVe Jury panel
of 120 cmzens, from wh1ch 12
wtll be chosen to try her
The tnal of the newspaper
heiress accused of turmng
terrortst bank robber began
Tuesday wtth US D1strtcl
Judg e Oliver J Ca rter s
admomllon to the JUrj panel
that tt would be one of the
most wtdely publicized tn the
natton's htstor) But 11 soon
became obviOus tha t the
histone nature of the case did
not IOttmtdale the judge
Qutckly quesuomng Jurors
- a role normally taken by
the JUdge 10 federal COUrts Carter by the end of the first
day had dtsmtssed 46
potential JUrors But a sur.
pnsmgly large nwnber , 74,
remamed 10 sptte of hts apparentlemency 10 permttlmg
JUrors to be excused
Mtss Hearst dressed m a
navy blue pantswt whtch
appeared a btl too large fo r
her sltghl frame, sal qwelly
bu t listened tntently m the
center of the packed courtroom She sm tled and occasionally chatted dur10g
breaks wtth her parents and
two younger Sisters, Anne
and Vtckt, who sat 10 the first
row about 10 feet away
She sat at a table along wtth
five of her attorneys, tn·
clud10g flambo)a nt F Lee
Batley, who heads her
defense team
The packed courtroom fell
to a hushed stlence as Carter
read the entire two-count
tndtrtment agamst the 21
year-old granddaughter of
legendary newspaper owner
Wtlham Randolph Hearst to
the JUry 'so that you wtll
Wlderstand the case more
fully "
'Patrlcta Campbell Hearst
and others," he read ' dtd by
force and vtolence rob the
Htberma Bank branch of
$10,690 on Aprtl 15, 1914 In
commmtttmg l~ts offense,
the defendant and others not
named d1d assault other
persons and dtd put m
Jeopardy the ltves of the
persons wtth deadly weapons,
to w1t, firearms "
The others were the four
Symbtonese Liberation Army
members. one man and three

were wounded All four of her
compamons m the holdup
died m a shootout wtth poltce
m Los Ange les a month later
Mtss Hearst could be" sen·
tenced to as much as 25 years
m pnson on the bank robbery
charge, and an addtllonal one
to 10 l ears for the second
charge of usmg a firearm to
conumt a felony
She 11111 contend that whtle
she dtd take part m the
holdup , tt was only because
she had been tortured and
terronzed by her captors and
feared she would be killed tf

'

SHARP MARAUDER - Mtck Davenport ( 22), the Metgs Marauders' htgh scormg,
smooth forward puts up a JUmper Tuesday mght agatnst Wellston , won by Metgs, 12-61 at
Larry MorriSOn gym at Rock Sprmgs Nearby ts Metgs 6-8 center , Mttch Meadows 132) For
'Wellston, Steve Arnold (20 ) and Terry McKinnts (42), are unable tc slop Davenport - Jtm
Hamm picture

-.
.,

School has

'

E:ASTE:RN RACE - Phtl Lacomb (24), Brtan Conde (10) and Steve Nelson 130) are 10
the crowd chasmg the ball Tuesday mght tn a game at Eastern lost Io Waterford, G8•37
Eastern will be gomg after Its second vtctot y of the season Fnd,ly mght at Kyger Creek
.Jnn Ha mm picture

BOARD TO MEET
RACINE - The SouthernLoca l School BoaFd wtll mel.C.
Thursday al 7 p m at the htgh
school

intramural
basketball

•

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Wahama loser to Buffalo-

•-~• IJ'UPPERS PLAINS
Boys and gtrls tn grades four,
f1ve, and six are learmng to
play basketball by havmg a
cttance to play
•Stx teams have been for·
med a nd everyone ts
welcome as a team member
Qn Frtday afternoons at 2 30
tile learns meet
; Spectators fr om the ftrst
grade through the stxth , and
D,tany parents, gather for the
fllll or "atchtng and cheermg
thetr fnends
The teams mclude gtrls and
til\ys from three dtfferenl
grade le ve ls coached by
Robert Sanders 5th grade
teacher , and Mrs Bea
lOOuglas. stxth grade teacher
and pnnctpal Tom Gumpf
fourth grade teacher, and
Mtss
Pam
Douthitt,
~lementary
phy s tcal
education
teacher
a re
r.elerees
, Players are
, Team I - Charles Massar,
Jackie Brannon, Gean Jones,
Kell1 Headley, Sarah Goebel,
l'lOn Spurlock Mtke Morlan ,
Rusty
Shields,
Steve
Ejlevoldsen, Mary Clark
• Team 2 - Mtke Bissell,
t:ass1e Sheets, Kevtn Brooks,
taurle Lance, Robbte Smtih,
Cathy Chtchester, John
Davts, M1chael Connolly,
Greg Colhns, Ttm Probert,
Brtan Connolly, Ctndy
Rams
: Team 3
Rodney
Spurlock , Sherrt Putman ,
Tommy Scyoc, Glenda
Conner, Brtan Well, Brenda
Calaway, Eddie Grtfftn.
Gerald Watson,
Brtan
jlowers, Todd Clemson ,
,t:rma Connolly
Team 4 - Mike Baker,
'Patty Jones, Scott Sktnner,
Demse Gaddis, Mark Gaddts,
,Dee Dee Durst, Paul Hensley ,
Tom Everett, Mike Collins,
Vtclor Gtlhlan
' Team 5 - Scotty Sprague,
'Shern Myers, Greg Cole,
,Wendy Elkins. Jtmm)
pawnan, Phylhs Clark, Jeff
Sllrivers, Frank Day, Jeff
Wyers, Troy Guthrte
' Team 6 - Edward Rtffe,
'Pat It Edwards, C J Morlan,
\Jenny Causey, Ketlh Harrts,
Jamte Chapman Mark Rice,
J\oger Balser, Larry Ufe,
Chflord Gnlflth

•u

BY GARY CLARK
Coach .Jun SCherr and hts hard court men from Wah~
High School dtd not know whtch was worse the blowmg snOW'
she- refused
and freezmg temperatures outside or the blazmg mlerno
C&lt;o~rter a sked the Jurors
mstde Buffalo gymnastum as the Btsons of Putnam Counl!'•
whether they would suffer
handed the Wlnte Falcons a stunnm g 102-72 defeat
any ha rds htps tf they
The Btsons, etghth ran ked tn Class AA Circles were thil-'
remamed sequestered for the
thtrd
consecultve opponent to face the Wahama c~gers wltli'
duratiOn uf the tnal whtch he
state
ranking
credenttals Although the results were the same
satd he expected to last about
In
all
three
encounters
the local team gave 1t all they hmt
four weeks He told them they
before
succwnbmg
to
the
superior hetght advantage held lJY.:
shou ld not be prejudiced
thetr opponents
'
agamst a Y.ltness because he
.. . 1
mtght have long hatr, a
Even though the Whtte
lead
beard or a combmatton of
Falcons were gotng down to
The second
half sa w
both ,,
their n10th loss of the year all
Buffalo cool off somewhat
He also asked whether they
was not 10 vam Stx foot
from ·thetr torrtd ftrst haii
had &lt;my connectiOn wtlh lav.
)lUll Or forward Ttm Davts
sconng pace but evenatthlkl
enforceme nt agencies,
came off the bench tn the they sttll managed to ou~
whether they had formed any
second quarter to score 22
score the Wahama charg 5
preJtKhce for or agamsl the
po10ts
for
the
evemng
and
by a 43-43 marg 10 to clalffi
defendant or v,;hether they
make
htm
only
the
second
the
30 point victory
"
were acquamteo wtth M1ss
Whtte
Falcon
to
break
the
20
Wahama
wtll
now
return
til
Hearst, her famtly, or at·
po10t scor10g barrter so lar the fnend!ey con fines or
torneys m the case
thts season Davts connected
home court for two game!!
on ten fi eld goals and added thts weekend On Fnday the
two fortwo chartty tosses for
Whtte Falcons enterta 10 the
hts mght's effort
Southwestern Ht ghlanders'
Wahama had one other A team they defeated 53-li2
plus
fa ctor tn Tuesday earher this season Then o'll
The Da1ly Sentinel.
mght's game and that was Saturday evemng cross' m~~
DEVOTED fO THE
the pla y of center Bob foe Metgs 10 vades for the
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
Nicewander The 6·2 juntor only meetmg between tb~
CHESTER l TANNEHILl
got hts first varsity stanng two schools th1s year Frtd~~
E l(CC Ed
DEFENSE, DEFE:NSE - That s "hat the crowd
ROBERT HOEFLICH
asstgnmnent an I made an mght ' s prehmtnary c las ~
C1ly Edt lor
when the other guy has the ball, and Steve Nelson
chants
tmpresstve showm g by w11l begtn at 6 p m with tht
Publtsh e d daily excep t
130) of E:astern Tuesday mgltt tned to put some on a
Saturday by T he Ohro
scorm
g mne pmnts, leadmg
mam event to foUow
.1
Va t ey P u blrshtng Com
Waterford player Joe Kuhn ts No 34 - J tm Hamm
pany
I l l
Court
51
hts tea m tn reboundmg and
WAHAMA (7ZI
,
pte lure
Pomeroy
Ohro
-15 769
blocktng
numerous
Btson
Player
FG
FT
PF
~
Bus iness Off1ce Phon e 992
21 56 Edrtor1al Phone 991
f1eld goal attempts
Dav1s
10 2·2 3 22
/157
Buffalo Jumped out to a Smith
5 1·3 4 U
Se cond c ras s po st a g e
pa1 d at Po m ero y Ohto
qutck
lead
m
the
open10g
Nicewander
4 1·2 4 9
Nat tonal
advertiSing
re pr esentatrve Ward
cantc and went on to score a Holbrook
2 4-5 4 , s
Grlffdh Company In c
total of 28 pomts before the q Lambert
4 1).0 2 s
Bottrne l lt &amp; Ga l lagher Dtv
757 T hrrd A ve New Yo r k
quarter
exptred
Duke
Smith
Seyre
2
2-5 3 ~
lly
Greg
Balle)
thrtller as the Baby Eagles
NY 100 17
Subscrtpt ton rates
EAST MEIGS - Host led all Ute " "Y unttl the carried the scormg load for T Tucker
2 1).0 2 ~
Del tvered by earne r wnere
Eastern gave the Waterford closing mmutes when lhey Wahama m the first etght J Tucker
1 Il-l 5 1
ava table 75 cen t s '"p e r
week
By Motor Rout e
Wtldcats all they cou ld gave up a It ve potnl lead and minutes by contnbutmg R Tucker
1 1).0 2 2
where carr er serv 1c e not
handle for three quarters lost 33·31
etght of his game total 11
availabl e
One month
SJ 25 By mall in Oh(O and
"
Tuesuay mghl before bowmg
Doug Bro" mng led the markers m the penod
W Va
One Year $17 00
68-31
m
a
non-league
basketRuffalo contmued to
Stx months 511 50 Three
attack wtth mne potnls, whtle
Total
31 10· 18 29 7~
months $7 00 E lsewhere
ball game
score
everytune down the
teamm
ate
Dave
Brown
S76 00 year
S11&lt; months
BUFFALO (102)
Eastern , a steadtly 1m added etgh l Townsend led court and mto the second
$13 50 three mbo th s sr 50
Player
FG FT PF
Sub scnpt ton pr1ce ncludes
women, who accompamed
provtng
team, trav el Fnday Waterford wtth 10
stanza by adding 31 more C Nofsinger 14 6·7 1 :U
Sunday T mes Se n t nl'!t
her m the 10-rrnnute holdup
to Kyger Creek for an tm·
Box Score
tallies to their huge total
Whittington
8 5·9 5 ~
durmg which two bystanders
portant SVAC battle Kyger
EASTERN - Conde 4.().8, Tim Davis was subelltuted Greenlaw
9 2-5 3 20
has \\On onlJ two games th1s Rtffle 1-ll-2, G Nelson 1·2-4 P 10to the game for the Whtte
6 1·3 3 l;l
season, and Eastern's only LaComb I ll-2, Kuhn 1.0 2, S Falcons and he promptly htt Stone
Bowles
1 2·2 0 ..4
vrctory c ame over the Nelson 3-0-6, E1chmger 3·2·8,
for 10 potnts before tn· Lttlle
I 2·3 I 4
Bobcats
Ha\\k 1·1·3 Barton ll-2 2 termlsslon But the Btsons
Burch
I 1·2 1 •G
Tuesady mght the much Totals 15-1-37
were already too far out 10 Mayes
0
2-2 0 " 2
taller Wtldcals found the
WATERFORD - Rauch 6·
0 1·2 I ·1
gomg rough The Eagles 3-15, Cunntngham 2-1·5, front w1th a gtganttc 59·34 Martin
A Nofsmger 0 0·1 I :D
tratled a ll the way , but Sampson 2·2-6, Dtarnond 7-2·
\\ Ouldn'l let the vlsttors gel 16, Kearns 1.().2, Balshord
out of reach as the ftrst 1·4-6 Dowler 1.().2, Tucker 4·
w 22-36 16 102
Totals
quarter
score
stood
20-13
The
pills have been used to treat nwd IO SltiC tile eye w}JJie also
5-13, Lang 1-ll-2 R Rauch Il-l·
Wahama
15 19 18 20 72
glaucoma by many doctors
actmg on the kidn ey to Eagles put on an tmpresstve 1 Tot..ls 25-18-68
Glaucoma IS ca used by a ehmtnate any mcreased body secon d quarter as thetr
28 31 22 21 "102
Buffalo
bwldup of flutd ms1de the flwd ll ts not harmful tf defense hmtted the Wildcats
ON DEAN S LIST
eyeball There IS a Itt tie gland taken
under
medtcal to 10 potnts, leaving the ball·
Reserve Score. Wahama
Beth J Fultz of 129
tnstde the eye that !titers superviston so 1ts effects ca n ttme score at 30-21
69-65
Fatrlane Dr1ve, Middleport,
The pace uf the game has been named to the dean's
James Busktrk scored 22
water mto the eye There ts be con trolled
also a httle canal where
All medtcme 1s potentially conhnued unttl the closmg Its! of Captlal Umverstty for pm~ts Tuesday mght to lead
water 1s dramed out of the harmful to someone We gtve mtnules of the thtrd quarter the ftrsl semester She IS the Parkersburg td a 61-51 VIC·
tory over slwnpmg Pmnt
eye
medtcmes beca use they when the Wtldcats bega n to daughter of Mr an d Mrs
In norma l people the correct a medtcal problem, wtden the gap They blew tl Bern a rd Fultz About 20 Pleasant
The Btg Blacks fell to 1·5
amount of flutd formed no t beca use they are open tn the fo urth when they percent of Capttal's nearly
equals the amount dramed otherwise good for you A scored 21 potnts to Eastern 's 2,100 undergraduates were wtth the loss, thetr th1rd
SIX
out of the eye Thts keeps the case tn pomlts taking asptnn
LAFF • A • DA'Y
named to the honor hshng To stratght Parkersburg evened
Diamond and Rauch had 16
tis
record
at
5·5
amount of Outd tn the eye at a You do~ ' t lake asptrtn
be ehgtble, a student must be
I
Parkersburg won the game
level to malntam a normal because tl's good for you, ~ut and 15 pomts for the visitors enrolled full-ltme at th e
T
The
team
Jut
18
foul
sho
ts
lor
\ ~ ·'!'..
mternal pressure
bkause the cha nces tha t it
untverstty and have earned at in the ftrst half, Jwnpmg out
1
to an 18-12lead after the ftrst
Glaucoma treal ment ts "111 rehe\ e a headache urc ' 64 percen t No other stnhshC~i least a 3 4 grade average
quarter and padding tl to 40·
dtrected towa td res lot tng the far greater than the chances were avatlable.
The EAgles were led by SI::NATE VOTE
25 at the half Point Pleasant
normal dramage mechamsm that 11 wtll cause you any
outscored
Parker~burg 32-21
or decreasmg the flwd for - harm All of the water pills Conde and Etchtnger wtth
WASHINGTON (UP!) etght potnls each Steve Both of Oluo 's senators, m the ftnal two quarters
me~lwn. etlhcr medict:~ll) or
are m the same category
sut gtcHIIy dependmg on what They are not good fur you, but Nelson had stx and pulled tn Democrat John Glenn and
PARKERSBURG {61) 10 Buskirk 22 Maddox
causes the tmbalance tn fluid tf needed they wtll tmpruve ntn e of hts tearr. 's 31
Republican Robert Taft Jr , Culllp
2 Kelle r 18 Britta n 2 Moore
rebolUlds
They
hit
7
foul
control ms1de !he eye
the overall srt uatlon, and any
)otned wtth the rr.ajonty 2
D
POl NT PLEASANT I S71
One par ticu lar type of lUldes1table responses such shots, and connected on 15-58 Tuesday as the Senate, 011 a
~
_/,
Hess 25 N1ber1 9 Wilson 7
11''/lr{ •
water ptll affects an enzyme as loss of too much potasslwn fteld goals for a cool 25 64-27 vote, cunftrmed the McCormick 6 Brown 1ng 4 ...,
Important 10 flwd formahon
ca n be
corrected or percent They had 13 turn· nomtnatton of George Bush Tat rerson 6
We cha rge 1200 to trace:your
By Quarters
overs
It decreases the lormabon of prevrnled
famtly
tree, and another $~00 to
as dtrector of the Central Parkersburg 18 22 6 15 ... 61
l'hp I ~S PI \'C /-;•llll l' \\ U~ fl
forget
what
Y.e found oul
E'l
Pleas
12
13
14
lB
57
lntelhgence A~et c )

Eagles go down again

.

T

Gout causes joint swelling

...

Big Blacks

changes d~I.A\ llc1t: u1 lilt!
\ By Lav.rence E Lamb, MD
I DF:AR DR LAMB - If a body
One stmply does not have
blood test shows no stgn of
gout
wtth a completely
, gout 11hy would there sltll be
norm
al
urtc actd level,
a swelhng tn the ftrst jomts of
provtded
the tes t ts done
the ftngers and much tenacctll'ately
derness ) Perhaps I am tn·
For more mformalton on
correct but I thought that was
gout
send 50 cents for The
a stgn when you had thts kind
Health
Letter ~umber 2-3,
7
of gouty arthrtlts
Gout
,
Unc
Actd Enclose a
DEAR READER - Gout
long,
stamped,
self.
can ca use swelhng of almost
addre
ssed
envelope
for
any JOtnl, but cerlamly 11 ts
matling
Address
your
letter
not the only cause for
swelhng As far as the fingers to me m care of thts
are concerned, the JOtnl at the newspaper, P 0 Box 1551,
knuckle and the mtddle JOtnt Radto Ctly SlattOn, New
may swell from rheumatOid York, NY 10019
DEARDR LAMB-lmon
arthntis, eventually resulttng
the
borderltne of ha&gt;1ng
m spmdle shaped ftngers The
glaucoma
I was told of a
end jOmt may swell and
doctor
who
prescrtbes
ptlls to
develop small bumps, known
reduce
flmd
through
the
as Heberden 's node as a
ktdneys
I
have
tead
arltcles
vartant of os teoarthr11ts
t degenera!tve arthnlts) Thts UJHt water ptlls should not be
form of arthnttc change ts taken as they deb1htate one's
particularly apt to occur m health Your commen ts pro
women and may not be and C(ITI on t/us treatmenl
related to severe arthnltc would be apprccwted
DEAR R.::ADER - Water

drop fifth
cage battle

:~,-:,;,~;;,,

..

"

'"
Ohio H1gh School
Scores
Uneted Pren International
TutldiV
Bextev 62 Ham i lton Twp 59
Cambridge 60 Meadowbrook

h t

&lt;S

;~\ :~

&lt;B

Morg•n 81 Dresden Tr1
Valley 61
New Albanv 79 Col Academy
66
New Concord John Glenn 45
Crooksville 40
,. Newlllrk Ceth 11 Heath 53
,; River V iew 71 Philo .. a
' Sheridan 65NeW Lulngton 5S
' Skyvue 67 WoodSfield 63
n waterford 68 Meigs Eastern
' )7

Fairfield Union 119 Miller 81
Jackaon 62 Gaiii.,OIIs 60 (2 ot l
=.North Gal Ill ., eastern
1

; •

Pro
Istan d•

OUTSIDE SHOOTER - Steve Randolph has marked
himself this season as an aggresstve performer on offense
and defense, and one of the Me1gs Marauders' good out
stde shooters Above he puts the ball m the atr agamst
Wellston Tuesday mghl - Jtm Hamm ptclure

Wildcats whip Bobcats
Kent Halley, 5-11 semor
guard, had a season htgh 31
potnts Tuesday mght tn
leadmg the Hannan Trace
Wildcats to a 65-40 SV AC
vtclory over Kyger Creek
The defendmg SV AC champs
were hard-pressed by the
saggmg Bobcats for two
quarters , but Jumped mto a
three-potnt lead , 211-25 wtth
JUS! seconds left m the ftrst
half
Kyger Creek. trailing 10-6
at the end of the f1rst quarter
knotted the score lwtee
durmg a tornd second penod
Hannan Trace went ahead for
good on an 18 foot Jumper by
Halley Halley made tt a
three-pomt play on the foul
shot conversiOn
Durtng the ftrst half, !Ialley
connected for 16 of h1s 31
pomts Davtd Shaffer, 6-1
senior, who ftmsh ed wtth 16
pomts, had stx tn the ftrst
half
The Bobcats' ftrst ha lf
surge was paced by semors
Bill Metzner and Tim Lucas

1

, _CPikel 60
· ,_...ron t on 61 Waverly 39
Meigs 72 Wellston 61
llu Ent Canton 58 Northwes1 55
• :; Akro'l East 11 Fairies!. 68

ROSE THE BEST
NEW YORK , (UP!) The 1976 Rose Bowl on NBC
television atlracled a total
audience ol 71,750,000
v1ewen, according to
research estimates based
on Nielsen Television Data,
making II the most widely
viewed college football
game ever telecast.
It also "as the second
most widely viewed sports
telecast ever, topped only
by the seventh game of tbe
lf75 World Series, which
had a lolal audience of
75,931,100 The lf75 Rose
Bo'lll, 'llhlch attracted
U,zto,OIO viewers, was the
previous re•ord holder for
coUege football.
~

: r r u or rrr ; ; •

77
:::

and JUOtor forward Ralph
Baylor Metzner and Lucas
ca nn ed etght each wh1le
Baylor chtpped tn wtth five
Hannan Trace came out
nppmg m the thtrd quarter as
the Wtldcats outscored the
host team, 111-1 Halley agatn
was the btg bomber wtlh 10
pomls Shaffer came on
strong to help the Wtldcat
attack m the fourth per10d
He canned etght pomts,
Halley , ftve , Kevm Petrte and
Max Wells, two each
Baylor led the Bobcat
second half offense "'th etght
pomts
Baylor and Lucas were the
only Bobcats m double
ltgures wtth 1.1 and 12 po10ts
respecltvely
Hannan Trace !1-4 overall
and 8-2 m the SVAC, htt 26 of
55 shots for 47 pet and 13 of 23
free throws Kyger Creek
sank only 15 of 56 attempts
for a cool 28 pet and 10 of 14
at the chanty strtpe
The Bobcats of Coach Ke1lh
Carter w1ll host Easte rn
Frtday and travel to Symmes
Valley Saturday Coach Dan
Cornell's Wtldcats play
Green Frtday
Hannan Trace 's reserves
won their l Oth league game
and 10 m 12 sta•ts, 58-25 over
the Bobktlten reserves
Frank Mooney and Davtd
Swam topped the Wtldkittens
w1th 16 and 13 each Ed
Mollohan and Yancey Halley
paced KC w1th stx aptece
Box score
Hann:~n
Trace {651
Petr1e 3 1 7 H a lle y 12 7 31
SMatter 8 0 16 Gibson 1 1 3
Wh1ll 0 1 1 Woodyard 2 0 4
We ll s 0
and Swam 0 1 1
Totals 26 13 65
Kyg er Creek ~40) - Sands
1 0 2 Mellner 1 7 9 Lucas 6
0 12 Salem 1 0 2 Kern 1 0 2
and Baylor 5 3 13 Totals 1s
10 40
1 By Querten
HT
10 18 17 19 6 ~

2'

KC

' :-

::.~w.:::

a

I7

8

7

40

Re.sHves Hannan Trac e 5R
Cr e ek 25

Kyg~r

But then the home team»s mne mmutcs of that nal f
Whe11 the y, h1 stl e ble" to
defense sllffened once agatn
as they dented the Rocke ts of begm the last half , llungs
Coac h Gary Jcnktn s any held looked the same Peoples
goals for the last 3 45 of the opened the sconng for
second
quarter
Th e Wellston and Meadows
Marauders meanwhile added t:OWJteled for Meigs at the
10 to go tn to l he locker room 7 10 mar k Bu t Wellston
connected on three slratghl
leadmg at ha lf ltme , 36-21
In that first half, Meigs fteld goa ls ,md some foul
canned 18-27 shots and hauled shots \\htlc Mctgs only added
tn a whopptng 19 rebounds a held goal by Ct emeans to
Fans really sa w some fme put the score at 4(1.28 But
basketball and showed lhetr then Me1gs got on a hot streak
approval by standmg and and netted S IX pmn ts in a rov.
applaudmg when the starters and ended th e Ourd canto
were glVen a brea ther m the leadmg 52 J5
The !our lh quarter saw the
!mal mmute and a half of that
Marauders
pull away for
second quarter Metgs' ltgh l
good
as
they
at one ltme
defense hmtled Wellston to
opened
up
a
66
40 lead wtth
only two field goals m the last

Reserves bow to Wellston by 7
percen t of their shots 116·35)
By Greg Halley
and
ne tted 15·28 at the chan ty
After keepmg pace through
s
tnpe
two quarters the Metgs
The Metgs dub had a
Reserve team hit a cold
balanced
sconng a ttack led
streak that spe lled thetr
by
Bnan
Hatml ton s mght
undomg, as they bowed to
markers
,
"htle
Halley and
Wellston, 41-40 1he loca l
Young
chtpped
m
s1x aptece
boys of Coach Bob Ohver
I
he
learn
shot
a
ve
ry cold 23
scored only one pomt durmg
percent
from
th
e
fteld
and
the th1rd quarter , and one
managed
JUSl
J0-28
fr
om
the
mmute of the last c anto
foul
!me
1
he1r
loss
put
the1r
The half-lime score stood
26·22. but the thtrd quarter seClson record &lt;:il 3 8
Offtctals for the contest
readmg showed Wellston m
\\
ere
ClUldtff and Bragg
front 31 23 The Baby
MEIGS
- Wmebrenner 1·2·
Marapders made a vahant
4
W1tte
ll-3·3
Stanley Q.O.O,
effort m the last quarter ,
Halley
.1
-0-6,
Young 3-0-6,
outscormg thetr opponents 11·
Qualls
2-0
4
Fo
llrod 2-04,
10 but the rail) fell short
Coats
1
3·5
Hamtllon
3-2-8
Coach Mark Mullen s'
Totals
15-10.40
Rockets are now 2 10 on the
WELLSTON - Wtlhs 0 2-2,
)ear They were led 111
Bdker
2-3 1 Marltn 3 :1 9,
sco nn g by Hud son and
Hudson
5·3
13, Royster 5·3·13,
Royster, each wtlh 13 pmnts
Swmgle
1·1·3
To tals 16 15-47
As a team they cannert 4'

Tornado frosh split 2 games

, ne Southern Freshmen
cagers of Coac h Howte
Ca ldwell spht a patr of games
lht s \\ eek Saturday at
Racme, as usual, they went
~-- ----------,
on a scor10g bmge m th e last
quarter to ovet take the
Federal Hockmg Lancets and
I
t wm 33-30 after trathng most
the game
1
Ill2!"i 1 of The
Ltltle Tornados ac
tually won tt a t the foul !tne,
Nat1onat Basketball As soc 1at1on although they sank only 3,13
Stand1ngs
F d
1 H k
dd l
Bv Un1ted Press lntl'!rnat 1onal
e era
oc mg
1 n
Eastern conference
connect on a free throw m 10
Atlanhc D1v1s1on
attempts Both teams made
W l Pel
GB
Boston
31 rJ 705 _
15 f1 el d goals
Philad elph ia
29 17 ii30 3
Three Tornados chipped m
Buffalo
29 19 604 J
erghl potnts to lead their
N ew Yor k
24 24 5 11
9
Central Otv ts•on
te am They were Dave
wash •hg ton
~ ~0 P~J4 GB Robmson, T1m Bnnager, and
Clevelan d
26 20 565
1~
Todd Cummtns and J im
Alla nla
12 lJ 469 4
O'Brien had stx Rowley led
Hou ston
21 22 488 4
19 23 45 2 5 ~ , Federa] Hockmg wrth etght
N ew Orleans
Wl'! St ern Conference
Monday evemng the South.
M1dwes t D1v1s1on
ern team hosted the Belpre
W l Pet
GB
M il waukee
19 27 4q
Golden Eagles, but th1s time
DetrOit
17
26
39
5
I l
lh ey Ios t l t a l the fouI Ime ,
Ka n sas c 11 y
16 30 348 3
Chi cago
tJ 31
295 5
C3nmng only 7 of 28 free

:

Buk~tblll

Circleville so Logan Elm 33
Col Watterson 68 Col North 61
Fairfield Un10n 119 Miller 81
Groveport 67 Canal W1n
chtster 32
Guernuy Zane Tra ce 61
'-8elllsvllle 38
' Maysville 78 w Muskingum

]

:v· a:-

•

By Greg Bailry
In front of a spa1 s e , snow
dan1pened crowd. the Metgs
Marauder s even ed th etr
basketball season record at 6·
6 as they handily whtpped the
vlstttng Golden Rockets 12-61
The hosts scored the opemng
bu cke t and were neve r
headed
Terry Qualls opened the
scortng soon after the
Marauders got the opemng
lip-off At the 5 50 mark
Steve Arnold knotted the
score at 2·2 on a short JWTI·
per, but then the Marauders
reeled off stx stratght pomls
before the viSitors cou ld
connect agam Qualls scored
stx of those first etght pomts
The ftrsl quarter contmued
on that same pace, but the
Marauders added two more
pomts to thetr lead as the
quarter ended, 18·10
In that tmltal pertod, b1g
Mttch Meadows blocked ftve
Wellston's shots, msptrmg hts
team He also hauled m seven
rebounds m that ftrst canto
Metgs moved the ball qwckly
and took lhe good percentage
shot At one time m that
penod the) htt ftve stratgh l
fteld goals Metgs ulthzed a
ttght man-lo-man defense to
slym te the Rockets as the
visitors found 1l hard to get a
good shot
Metgs started the second
pertod nght where they left
off by addmg four pmnts on
goals b) Steve Randolph and
Jerry Cremeans In the first
and second penods, Me1gs at
one lime ht t a hot streak 10
whtch they canned 11 of 12
field go•ls a ttempts and tt
looked hke the Rockets had
had tt
But
trontcally,
the
Marauders htt a cool spell m
whtch they fatled to even get
a shot tn one and a half
mmutes wh tle Wellston was
putlmg seven pomts on the
board narrowmg the margtn
to seven al 26 19

pomts Mtke Brown and Ed
Howard added 10 aptece
Joe Davena was the only
Waverly player tn doutHr
ftgures wtth 12.
..
Irontcn htt 26 of 52 for !;
percent, mne of 14 at the foill.
hne whtle Waverly was IBt;C
47 for 38 percent and three ou~
of stx at the foul hne The I.
Tigers controlled both boardl·
37-9 Ed Howard had 16 allll
Fttzpatrtck had 12 !Of'
Ironton Waverly had 22
tlU'novers, Ironton 21
Ironton
hosts
Metgs
Friday Waverly 1s at Athens
Ironton 's reserves moved
tnlo a lte with Waverly for
ftrs t place tn the prehrrunary
game wtlh a 46·26 trtumph
over the v1s1tors
Varstty box score
WAVERLY {3'1) S
Thom as 1 0 2 Ho ls1 nger 3 0
6 M Thomas 2 0 4 Davena
52 1 2
T hompso n
4 0 8
Whal e y 2 1 5 Work m an 1 0
2 Shoe maker 0 0 0 TOTALS
18 3 19
IRONTON t61 )
E
Howard 4 2 10 Cr oc kr et 0 '1
1 Royal 0 0 0 Fl t zpalr ck
12 4 28 C Brown l 0 6 R
Howard 1 1 3 M Brown 50
10 T h oma s 1 0 2 TOTALS
26 9 61
Scor e by quarters
It'..
Waver l y
12 12 6 9- .J..Y
Iro n ton
11 15 16 19-----&amp;1
Reserves Ir o nt o n 4~
Wave rl y 26

Hearst jurors probed
DONALD B THACKREY
SAN FRANCISCO ( UPI JAs Patncta Hearst watched
mtently, a federal JUdge
questioned potential JUrors on
the opemng day of her trtal
and satd he hoped to complete
JUry seleclton today, clearmg
the "ay for ope mng
arguments to begm Thursday
In a dramatic moment,
Mtss Hearst , lookmg thm and
pale and dwarfed by the huge
courtroom, stood at the

Marauders maul Rockets

Ironton wallops Waverly 61-39

:

I

Pac1ftc DIVISIOn
W L Pet
GB
Golden Stat e
JJ 12 733
Los Ang eles
21 24 489 11
Sealt le
22 25 468 12
Phoentx
18 25 419 14
Portland
19 27 413 14 ' ,
Tue sdays Results
Bu ff alo 129 New Orlean s 105
A tlan ta 114 New York 11 3
Cle11eland 85 De troll aJ
Houst on 127 Ph1ladelph 1a 116
Ch1 cago 110 Golden State 103
Ka nsas C11y 107 Milwaukee 89
Portland 118 Wash ngton 105
Wednesday's Games
A llan Ia a t Bo s ton
Cte11eland at Houston
Ch tcago at Detro• I
Buffalo at N ew Orleans
Phoen 1x at Los Angeles
Seatt le al Portl and

Am enca n Basketball Assocla
hon Stand.ngs
By Un1ted Press International
W L Pet
GB
Denver
32 11 744
N ew York
29 15 659 31 2
Ken tu cky
26 20 565 71 ~
San An tonto
24 19 558 8
lnd 1ana
25 21 543 B 2
Sl LOUIS
20 27 426 14
V 1rgm1a
7 37 159 25 11
Tuesday 's Result
Denver 144 ABA All Stars IJB
Wednesday 's Games
(No games scheduled)

Nattonal Hockev Leagu e Stand
.ng s
By Umted Press International
Campbell Conf erence
Patnck Dtv~~~on
W L T Pts
Phllae!elphta
JO 10 8
68
N Y Islan der s
26 12 a
60
Atlanta
24 20
7
55
NY Rangers
17 25 5
39
Smythe D1v1S10n
W l T Pts
Ch icago
20 12 16
56
Van couver
17 20 10
44
St LOU IS
18 24
S
Jl
M1nnesota
15 29 3
33
Kansas City
11 32 4
26
W•J es conference
Norns DIVISIOn

W L T Pis

Monlreal
35 6 8
78
Los Angeles
27 22
2
56
Pittsburgh
18 24
6
42
Detro!!
15 28 6
36
Wash1ngton
4 41
5
13
Adams DI VISIOn
W L T Pf5
Bc;~ston
28 10 9
65
Buffalo
27 14 6
60
Toronto
20 18 10
.so
Cal iforn ia
19 24
4
42
Tuesday's Results
N Y Islanders 4 Mmnesota 3
Attanra 8 Phtladelph1a 4
Detrott 3 St LOUIS 2
Monlreal 2 Vancouver 2
Los Ange le~ 2 Wash 1ng1on 0
Wednesday's Games
Buffalo at NY Rangers
NY Islanders at Toronto
Altanta at Ch1cago
WaShing ton at Cal 1forn,a
KM "&gt;as C1 t v al Mtnneso1a

lhro\\ s whtle the vlsttors
connected on 6 of 12 Fmal
score was 4441 Belpre
After Jeadmg f01 the ft rst
half 21-10 , the lhtrd quarter
proved dtsastrous for the
home team when they were
out scored, 16·9, a nd could n't
ca tch up
'f1m Brmager agatn led the
Southern team as he collected
II pomts \\htle teal]lmate
Dave Ftndle) had 10 The
learn 1s now 4 2 on the ) ear
Belpre was led by Atkinson
and Blake wtlh 12 pmnts
each
Soul hern s next game ts
Thursday when they host
Wahama

MEIGS MARAUDERS
FG A FT A R8 PF TO TP
Qua il s
8 17
7J
4
18
3
3
I
37
25
8
2
5
Cr em ean s
12
0 1
4
6 9
IS
7
M eado ws
59
14
I
0
11
5
Dew en port
34
1
4
s IS
Ran do 1ph
68
I
00
22
0
2
0
Brownmg
0 1
00
0
0
2
2
Stew.,rt
00
2
0
0
00
2
Dod son
12
1
2
Sc 1t es
01
0
2
0 I
02
3
0
M ar fl n
0
0
I
0
00
00
0
0
~ Coats
I
I
4
I I
0
22
Gran da !
30 so 12 24 32
19
22 72
TOTALS
WELLSTON
FG A FT A R8 PF TO TP
PLAYER
I
17
3
7 IS 34
3
Go! I
2
I 2
7
0
Broo}o:. s
00
0
9
28
56
3
1
0
Barnett
1
0 1
0
00
1
3
Sw ong er
4
0
s
27
1
M c K 1nn1 s
I2
I
I
0
I2
03
1
G t1 111and
24
1
3
10
4 15
3
Peopl es
1
4
0
~ oys t er
I 3
11
1
1
12
4
44
1
4s
A rnold
I
2
1
12
3
00
Derro w
0
2
0
02
00
0
Wat ts
9
61
21 61 19 26 22
23
TOTALS
Quarter Scores
72
18 18 16 20
M e 1gs
61
10 II 14 26
W ell st o n
PLAYER

4 .15 rematnmg Both coaches
then benched lhe1r starters
and the Rocke ts narrowed the
score to 11 potn ts, but then the
bench uf the Marauders
played some good basketball
of thetr own, and wouldn 't lot
the vtsttors get any closer
The vwtors were led m
scormg by Quulls 18 markers
whtle teammates Randolph ,
Meadows and Davenport had
15. 12 and 11, respecltvely
Meadows hauled tn a btg 15 of
h1s team s .~2 rebounds, most
of them tn the ftrst half The
team shot a SIZzh ng 60 percent (30-50) from the floor
and connected on 12-24 from
the chan ty stnpe The) had
22 tu;-novers
Wellston was led by Gtll
who had 11 potnts, whtle
Arnold and Peoples had 12
and 10 No Rocket got more
than four rebolUlds , an d the
team total was on ly 22 They
shot only 34 percent from the
floor , but can ned a hot 19 26
from the free throw !me
Offtctals for the game were
Schwartzel and Thompson
Metgs next game ts Fnday
when they travel to Ironton to
tangle Wtlh the Jeag ue leadtng Ttgers It'll be the
first ttme the Marauders
have played tn the new field ,
house there

GOOD/YEAII
SALE_..SALE-SALE-SALE

REGUlAR OR
MUD &amp; SNOW RETREADS
,'/·

Hock ey AssoC1af1on
Standmg s
By Untted Pre ss Interna tional
East
w L T Pts
47
22 5
New Eng land
43
21 25 I
Cm cmnat
39
16 25 3
Cleveland
38
18 26 2
tnd lanapot 1s
West
Tuesday s Coll ege ' Ba sk etball
w L T Pis
Resu11s
60
30 16 0
Houslon
By Un1ted Press lntern attonal
48
22 4
San Ot eg o
East
46
19 4
Phoen1 x
Ar my 57 Co lgat e 44
47
22 18 3
Boston u 75 Nl'!w Hampshtr e 73 M nnesota
Canad1an
Buffalo 111 Brockport ST 109
W L T Pts
(OI)
W nn 1p eg
33 17 0
66
Cornell 82 N1agara 60
Quebe c
30 16 '1
62
Dartmout h 58 Hofstra 56
Ca lgar y
25 19 2
52
Massachuse t ts sa lona 72
Edmonton
18 30 J
39
Pr 1nce ton 69 Penn 52
Toronto
15 28 4
34
Rutgers 10 2 P1ttsbur gh 71
:K Ollawa
14 26 I
29
St Fran (Pa l 79 St Fran
:K Team d 1sband ed
I NY) 1S
Tu esday s R esults
51 Peter s 83 Easl Caro ltna 67
V1llanova 94 St Bonaventur e 82 Quebec 9 Cm c nn a t1 1
Edmonton A Toronto 4 (Oi l
Ph0en1x 4 San Otego 3 (ot l
South
•
Wednesday s G:~mcs
Duke 94 Dav1dson 79
Cleveland a l C1ncmna 11
Georgetown (0 C) 71 Penn St
Ind ianapolis at New England
63
Calgary at Phoen •x:
Memph1S 51 81 La san e 77
W nn peg at M1nnesota
M1SS St 87 Mo Western 71
Hous ton at Edmon Ton
Nort otk s t 'I J va Un1on 74

'

world

"

""

I

~

'

$10~
"'f '
"'\:~

'

I-'-"

,.•

Size
listed

5.60x15

6.95x14

6.00x15

7.00x14

Mounted &amp; Balanced
No Trade Ins
Wh1le Present Stock lasts.

Meigs Tire Center Inc.
Pomeroy

992 2101
John F. Fultz, Owner

Ohto

M1dwest
lnd Purd Ft W 84 lnd Tech 79
Mo Rolla 73 Cu lver Stockton 62
(OI )

Oberl1n 62 Wooster 59
West
An zona 114 Portland 51 94
Ca t Bapt1st 141 Los Angeles
Bapt 67
Nev Las Vegas 139 No An zona
101
Oregon Tectl 72 Ch tco St 6 1

Oh1o College
B as ketball Scores
Un1ted Pre ss lnterna11onal
TUl'!Sddy
Keny on 73 Baldwtn Wi'l l tace
61
Oberlin 62 wooster 59
Wittenberg 82 Musk 1ngum 47
Ashland 99 Ohm Dom1n1can
46
H1ram 66 Jo hn Carroll 61
Mat one 71 Ce darv li te 66
Taylor (lnd J 91 Wllmtngton
69

SEO
FROSH
Team
W L
P
Ga ll 1pol1s
1 1 325
Logan
6 2 392
Waverly
5 2 145
At h ens
5 2 279
M e 1gs
2 5 211
Ja c k son
1 6 23 3
Wellslon
0 8 222
TOTALS
26 26 1901
Jan 19 result
Athens 41 Gall1po i 1S
(makeup)
Jan 22 resulh
Ja ckson A lhen s ppnd
GallipoliS Metgs ppn d
Waver ly Logan ppnd
Wl'! II Ston open
Monday's results
Gallipolis 5 1 Jackson 39
Alhen s 42 Logan 40
Metgs 42 Wellston 31
wavl'!rty Open
Thursday's games
Alhens at Waverly
Gal l i?OIIs at Logan
Wellston at Jackson
Me igs Open

OP

2 &lt;~7
270
206
246
267
323
348
1907
35

No. 2 Grade
2x4x8

PRE-CUT

STUDS
HOGG &amp;. ZUSPAN
MA T~RIALS CO.
773-55.54

MASON, W. \&lt;,._

�•

2

I ht' Diith &amp;nlUlP I Mtddh pot l·l'o!Ht'luy , 0

Wu lm•sd,t\

1.11 1 ~II

Road work
at all time low
JACKSON - Members of
the htghwa) users comnut tee
of the Southeastern Ohto .
Regtonal Counctl (SEORC)
" ere told Monday lhal OhiO
' ha s reache d a new low ' m
htgh,. a y con s lructt on ac·
ltvtlv not JUst wtthm the
regton but throughout the
state
G Kenner Bush committee
c hatrrnan
and
publisher of The Ath ens
Messenger satd the slate has
plan s to let only one htghwa)
construction contract m the
regton durmg the ftrst stx
months of lh1s ) ear, and
there ts only one htgh\\ay
constructwn prOJect of any
consequence scheduled to be
let tn all of Ohto tn these In st
six: months '
Bush tdenltfted the smgle
area prowct anttctpated as
constructiOn of an access
road to Hockmg Techmcal
College tn Nelsonvtlle He
sa td the only large htghway
proJect expected to be flUlded
tn the ftrst half of the year
mvolves work on Route 30 m
Stark County
The SEORC comm1ttee met
Monday to access the current
status of some $251 mtlhon
worth of planned regtonal
htgh" ay proJects, none of
whtch IS scheduled for early
fundm g Appalachtan High·
wa; proJects from Athens to
Cmcmna tt, Bush satd, are all
Ln varwus envtronmenta]
tmpact stages of study
!lush urged the Ohto
Department of Trans-

1!17h

'

'

.

.. . .

Six die in crash

:1

GREENVILLE, Oh10 cUP!)- Six people " erc ktlled
ut.•ar here today when a car crashL"II IIllo a house. Darke

C.&gt;Unty sheriff's dcputtes satd
"The only detatls I have are chat a south-bound
vehu•le on State Route 49 left the road'-'BY 1 traveled
,.;. somethmg hke 340 feet and went through a houSe, com.. pletely through the house, ' satd Deputy Sheriff Toby
~:- Spencer ''How many people were m the house and how

po rt a tto n
through
tis
Dtstn cts 9 and 10 offices, to
push ahead as qwckly as
posstble to co mplete the :;;
::~ many people were 111 the car, I don't know as yet "
.
e n vir onmental
1mpact :;:,
Spencer satd the car was evtdently traveling at a htgh ..
statements, so that when and :~ rate CJf speed
tflundmg becomes available ,
these proJects wtll be ready to ~.
go.
Slymted as they are by a at Kavenswood , which would keep ahve area projects,
lack of state flUids , Ap· connect Southeastern Ohto desptte the la ck of fund1ng ,
palachtan Htghway proJects wtth Interstate 77 a t and emphastze the cnt1 cal
need to compl ete th ese
rank much htgher on the Stlverton, W Va
The commtttee plan s to call pro jects to avotd furth e r
stales hst of prtorthes Bush
observed, than some others m a meeltog, the date as yet economic dechne .md loss. of
the regwn that are also undetermtned of county JObs tn the 1eg10n '
!he commtltee , ong10ally
comadered vttal to 1ts pohhcal party heads and
orgamzed
tn 1914 as a
legtslaltve leaders to hear
economtc weJI-bemg
regiOnal
lnghway
users
further
lnghway
con
struchon
Among those, Bush satd,
conference,
merged
wath
the
status
report
s
from
are 'long-awaited" ImSoutheastern
Ohto
Hegwnal
representatives
of
the
slate
provements to the · key
ColUlctllast October and now
transportalton department
regiOnal artenes ' of Routes
operates
under the a uspices
Bush
satd
the
commtllee
33 and 35 and Improvements
of
SEORC
mtends
to
'
work
wtlh
and
to access roads leadmg to the
through the legtslature to
proposed Ohto Rtver brtdge

Ironton tratled 12- IJ after
one penod and w,Is onlj
ahead by two, 26 24, dur10g
the halfltm e tn ler mt ss ton
ruesday mght but 10 the
second half thP unbeaten
F1ghltng T 1ge r s turned on the
steam to "allop defendmg
champiOn Waverly , 61 39
The vtctory all but assured

Ironton of tts ftrst South- and tt).O IOStde the cOn·
eastern Oh w League tttle as fcrcnce Waverly dropped to
Coac h Buddy Bell 's lads 9-5 overall an d 1-3 mstde the
move d thr ee full ga mes league
a head of seco nd pl ac e
Ironton outscored Waverly
Waverly and Galhpohs wtth 16-610 the lhu d pertod a nd 19·
onl y fo ur games remammg 9 m the fmal stanza to wm
on tht s ye ar 's league gomg a"ay
schedule
Dean Fttzpalrtck was the
Ironton 1s now 13-0 overall b1g gun for Ironton wtlh 28

-------------------------Letters of oplruon are \\Cicomed They should be
less than 300 words long 1or be subJect to reduction by
the editor) and must be signed with the signee's ad·
dress Names may be withheld upon publication
Ho&gt;le\er, on request, names wJII be disclosed. Letters
should be m good taste , addressing Issues, not per·
sonahties

An impression not snowwhite
Dear Str
The followmg 1s m response to an article wrttten recentJy
stgned, 'Showwhtte '
It has alwavs been my contention tha t sno wwhtte meant
clea n free of dtrl filth, etc However, thts wasn't the tm·
presston I got when I read thts a rticle
Ftrst,l would ltk e to remmd "Mr Snowwhtte ' tha t Racme
Ftre Dept ts an orgamzauon of VOLUNTEERS Meamng they
dona 1e thetr ume efforts, knowledge and a lot of ttmes thetr
mone) to protect the pub he from ftre and savtng a lot of hves,
11 htch they don't have to do Instead of bemg cut down for what
the) do, they should be thanked , a t least once tn awhtle
True, we have members m our department from outside
the 10llage hmtts, but lhts ts to help us fight ftres and have the
help whenever \\e are called
The btg reason we have been forced mto this ts because not
enough people care to help any more
By the way, ' Mr Snowwhtte," I haven' t seen you offer
your serv1ces to help us many way at all
Regardless of your fe ehngs, I'm proud to belong to the
Racme Ftre Dept and I'm also not ashamed, or afratd, to stgn
my name - Davtd Cleland, Chief, Racme Vol F1re Dept

Why can't somebody do something?
Dear Str
I am wntmg thts Jetter to say I thmk we need to have
another election m Rutland Townshtp to elect some trustees as
I thmk the rest have gone on vacation by the shape our roads
are m nght now m Happy Hollow as tbey have not been worked
on smce before the electton In November
We have had to pay higher property taxes this year, yet we
can't have a decent road to rtde over When the water ts up m
Rutland, everyone has to come over our road, but no one seems
to ca re what shape tt gets m
1 would hke to know why, because the trustees get patd to
take care of the roads and they don'tdo 11 Why can't somebody
do somethtng 7 - Mr~ Chrts Haley, Rt I, Middleport, Ohio

DR. LAM;B

JUdge's request gtvtng a ftrst
look at the famous defendant
to the prospectiVe Jury panel
of 120 cmzens, from wh1ch 12
wtll be chosen to try her
The tnal of the newspaper
heiress accused of turmng
terrortst bank robber began
Tuesday wtth US D1strtcl
Judg e Oliver J Ca rter s
admomllon to the JUrj panel
that tt would be one of the
most wtdely publicized tn the
natton's htstor) But 11 soon
became obviOus tha t the
histone nature of the case did
not IOttmtdale the judge
Qutckly quesuomng Jurors
- a role normally taken by
the JUdge 10 federal COUrts Carter by the end of the first
day had dtsmtssed 46
potential JUrors But a sur.
pnsmgly large nwnber , 74,
remamed 10 sptte of hts apparentlemency 10 permttlmg
JUrors to be excused
Mtss Hearst dressed m a
navy blue pantswt whtch
appeared a btl too large fo r
her sltghl frame, sal qwelly
bu t listened tntently m the
center of the packed courtroom She sm tled and occasionally chatted dur10g
breaks wtth her parents and
two younger Sisters, Anne
and Vtckt, who sat 10 the first
row about 10 feet away
She sat at a table along wtth
five of her attorneys, tn·
clud10g flambo)a nt F Lee
Batley, who heads her
defense team
The packed courtroom fell
to a hushed stlence as Carter
read the entire two-count
tndtrtment agamst the 21
year-old granddaughter of
legendary newspaper owner
Wtlham Randolph Hearst to
the JUry 'so that you wtll
Wlderstand the case more
fully "
'Patrlcta Campbell Hearst
and others," he read ' dtd by
force and vtolence rob the
Htberma Bank branch of
$10,690 on Aprtl 15, 1914 In
commmtttmg l~ts offense,
the defendant and others not
named d1d assault other
persons and dtd put m
Jeopardy the ltves of the
persons wtth deadly weapons,
to w1t, firearms "
The others were the four
Symbtonese Liberation Army
members. one man and three

were wounded All four of her
compamons m the holdup
died m a shootout wtth poltce
m Los Ange les a month later
Mtss Hearst could be" sen·
tenced to as much as 25 years
m pnson on the bank robbery
charge, and an addtllonal one
to 10 l ears for the second
charge of usmg a firearm to
conumt a felony
She 11111 contend that whtle
she dtd take part m the
holdup , tt was only because
she had been tortured and
terronzed by her captors and
feared she would be killed tf

'

SHARP MARAUDER - Mtck Davenport ( 22), the Metgs Marauders' htgh scormg,
smooth forward puts up a JUmper Tuesday mght agatnst Wellston , won by Metgs, 12-61 at
Larry MorriSOn gym at Rock Sprmgs Nearby ts Metgs 6-8 center , Mttch Meadows 132) For
'Wellston, Steve Arnold (20 ) and Terry McKinnts (42), are unable tc slop Davenport - Jtm
Hamm picture

-.
.,

School has

'

E:ASTE:RN RACE - Phtl Lacomb (24), Brtan Conde (10) and Steve Nelson 130) are 10
the crowd chasmg the ball Tuesday mght tn a game at Eastern lost Io Waterford, G8•37
Eastern will be gomg after Its second vtctot y of the season Fnd,ly mght at Kyger Creek
.Jnn Ha mm picture

BOARD TO MEET
RACINE - The SouthernLoca l School BoaFd wtll mel.C.
Thursday al 7 p m at the htgh
school

intramural
basketball

•

••
••

Wahama loser to Buffalo-

•-~• IJ'UPPERS PLAINS
Boys and gtrls tn grades four,
f1ve, and six are learmng to
play basketball by havmg a
cttance to play
•Stx teams have been for·
med a nd everyone ts
welcome as a team member
Qn Frtday afternoons at 2 30
tile learns meet
; Spectators fr om the ftrst
grade through the stxth , and
D,tany parents, gather for the
fllll or "atchtng and cheermg
thetr fnends
The teams mclude gtrls and
til\ys from three dtfferenl
grade le ve ls coached by
Robert Sanders 5th grade
teacher , and Mrs Bea
lOOuglas. stxth grade teacher
and pnnctpal Tom Gumpf
fourth grade teacher, and
Mtss
Pam
Douthitt,
~lementary
phy s tcal
education
teacher
a re
r.elerees
, Players are
, Team I - Charles Massar,
Jackie Brannon, Gean Jones,
Kell1 Headley, Sarah Goebel,
l'lOn Spurlock Mtke Morlan ,
Rusty
Shields,
Steve
Ejlevoldsen, Mary Clark
• Team 2 - Mtke Bissell,
t:ass1e Sheets, Kevtn Brooks,
taurle Lance, Robbte Smtih,
Cathy Chtchester, John
Davts, M1chael Connolly,
Greg Colhns, Ttm Probert,
Brtan Connolly, Ctndy
Rams
: Team 3
Rodney
Spurlock , Sherrt Putman ,
Tommy Scyoc, Glenda
Conner, Brtan Well, Brenda
Calaway, Eddie Grtfftn.
Gerald Watson,
Brtan
jlowers, Todd Clemson ,
,t:rma Connolly
Team 4 - Mike Baker,
'Patty Jones, Scott Sktnner,
Demse Gaddis, Mark Gaddts,
,Dee Dee Durst, Paul Hensley ,
Tom Everett, Mike Collins,
Vtclor Gtlhlan
' Team 5 - Scotty Sprague,
'Shern Myers, Greg Cole,
,Wendy Elkins. Jtmm)
pawnan, Phylhs Clark, Jeff
Sllrivers, Frank Day, Jeff
Wyers, Troy Guthrte
' Team 6 - Edward Rtffe,
'Pat It Edwards, C J Morlan,
\Jenny Causey, Ketlh Harrts,
Jamte Chapman Mark Rice,
J\oger Balser, Larry Ufe,
Chflord Gnlflth

•u

BY GARY CLARK
Coach .Jun SCherr and hts hard court men from Wah~
High School dtd not know whtch was worse the blowmg snOW'
she- refused
and freezmg temperatures outside or the blazmg mlerno
C&lt;o~rter a sked the Jurors
mstde Buffalo gymnastum as the Btsons of Putnam Counl!'•
whether they would suffer
handed the Wlnte Falcons a stunnm g 102-72 defeat
any ha rds htps tf they
The Btsons, etghth ran ked tn Class AA Circles were thil-'
remamed sequestered for the
thtrd
consecultve opponent to face the Wahama c~gers wltli'
duratiOn uf the tnal whtch he
state
ranking
credenttals Although the results were the same
satd he expected to last about
In
all
three
encounters
the local team gave 1t all they hmt
four weeks He told them they
before
succwnbmg
to
the
superior hetght advantage held lJY.:
shou ld not be prejudiced
thetr opponents
'
agamst a Y.ltness because he
.. . 1
mtght have long hatr, a
Even though the Whtte
lead
beard or a combmatton of
Falcons were gotng down to
The second
half sa w
both ,,
their n10th loss of the year all
Buffalo cool off somewhat
He also asked whether they
was not 10 vam Stx foot
from ·thetr torrtd ftrst haii
had &lt;my connectiOn wtlh lav.
)lUll Or forward Ttm Davts
sconng pace but evenatthlkl
enforceme nt agencies,
came off the bench tn the they sttll managed to ou~
whether they had formed any
second quarter to score 22
score the Wahama charg 5
preJtKhce for or agamsl the
po10ts
for
the
evemng
and
by a 43-43 marg 10 to clalffi
defendant or v,;hether they
make
htm
only
the
second
the
30 point victory
"
were acquamteo wtth M1ss
Whtte
Falcon
to
break
the
20
Wahama
wtll
now
return
til
Hearst, her famtly, or at·
po10t scor10g barrter so lar the fnend!ey con fines or
torneys m the case
thts season Davts connected
home court for two game!!
on ten fi eld goals and added thts weekend On Fnday the
two fortwo chartty tosses for
Whtte Falcons enterta 10 the
hts mght's effort
Southwestern Ht ghlanders'
Wahama had one other A team they defeated 53-li2
plus
fa ctor tn Tuesday earher this season Then o'll
The Da1ly Sentinel.
mght's game and that was Saturday evemng cross' m~~
DEVOTED fO THE
the pla y of center Bob foe Metgs 10 vades for the
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
Nicewander The 6·2 juntor only meetmg between tb~
CHESTER l TANNEHILl
got hts first varsity stanng two schools th1s year Frtd~~
E l(CC Ed
DEFENSE, DEFE:NSE - That s "hat the crowd
ROBERT HOEFLICH
asstgnmnent an I made an mght ' s prehmtnary c las ~
C1ly Edt lor
when the other guy has the ball, and Steve Nelson
chants
tmpresstve showm g by w11l begtn at 6 p m with tht
Publtsh e d daily excep t
130) of E:astern Tuesday mgltt tned to put some on a
Saturday by T he Ohro
scorm
g mne pmnts, leadmg
mam event to foUow
.1
Va t ey P u blrshtng Com
Waterford player Joe Kuhn ts No 34 - J tm Hamm
pany
I l l
Court
51
hts tea m tn reboundmg and
WAHAMA (7ZI
,
pte lure
Pomeroy
Ohro
-15 769
blocktng
numerous
Btson
Player
FG
FT
PF
~
Bus iness Off1ce Phon e 992
21 56 Edrtor1al Phone 991
f1eld goal attempts
Dav1s
10 2·2 3 22
/157
Buffalo Jumped out to a Smith
5 1·3 4 U
Se cond c ras s po st a g e
pa1 d at Po m ero y Ohto
qutck
lead
m
the
open10g
Nicewander
4 1·2 4 9
Nat tonal
advertiSing
re pr esentatrve Ward
cantc and went on to score a Holbrook
2 4-5 4 , s
Grlffdh Company In c
total of 28 pomts before the q Lambert
4 1).0 2 s
Bottrne l lt &amp; Ga l lagher Dtv
757 T hrrd A ve New Yo r k
quarter
exptred
Duke
Smith
Seyre
2
2-5 3 ~
lly
Greg
Balle)
thrtller as the Baby Eagles
NY 100 17
Subscrtpt ton rates
EAST MEIGS - Host led all Ute " "Y unttl the carried the scormg load for T Tucker
2 1).0 2 ~
Del tvered by earne r wnere
Eastern gave the Waterford closing mmutes when lhey Wahama m the first etght J Tucker
1 Il-l 5 1
ava table 75 cen t s '"p e r
week
By Motor Rout e
Wtldcats all they cou ld gave up a It ve potnl lead and minutes by contnbutmg R Tucker
1 1).0 2 2
where carr er serv 1c e not
handle for three quarters lost 33·31
etght of his game total 11
availabl e
One month
SJ 25 By mall in Oh(O and
"
Tuesuay mghl before bowmg
Doug Bro" mng led the markers m the penod
W Va
One Year $17 00
68-31
m
a
non-league
basketRuffalo contmued to
Stx months 511 50 Three
attack wtth mne potnls, whtle
Total
31 10· 18 29 7~
months $7 00 E lsewhere
ball game
score
everytune down the
teamm
ate
Dave
Brown
S76 00 year
S11&lt; months
BUFFALO (102)
Eastern , a steadtly 1m added etgh l Townsend led court and mto the second
$13 50 three mbo th s sr 50
Player
FG FT PF
Sub scnpt ton pr1ce ncludes
women, who accompamed
provtng
team, trav el Fnday Waterford wtth 10
stanza by adding 31 more C Nofsinger 14 6·7 1 :U
Sunday T mes Se n t nl'!t
her m the 10-rrnnute holdup
to Kyger Creek for an tm·
Box Score
tallies to their huge total
Whittington
8 5·9 5 ~
durmg which two bystanders
portant SVAC battle Kyger
EASTERN - Conde 4.().8, Tim Davis was subelltuted Greenlaw
9 2-5 3 20
has \\On onlJ two games th1s Rtffle 1-ll-2, G Nelson 1·2-4 P 10to the game for the Whtte
6 1·3 3 l;l
season, and Eastern's only LaComb I ll-2, Kuhn 1.0 2, S Falcons and he promptly htt Stone
Bowles
1 2·2 0 ..4
vrctory c ame over the Nelson 3-0-6, E1chmger 3·2·8,
for 10 potnts before tn· Lttlle
I 2·3 I 4
Bobcats
Ha\\k 1·1·3 Barton ll-2 2 termlsslon But the Btsons
Burch
I 1·2 1 •G
Tuesady mght the much Totals 15-1-37
were already too far out 10 Mayes
0
2-2 0 " 2
taller Wtldcals found the
WATERFORD - Rauch 6·
0 1·2 I ·1
gomg rough The Eagles 3-15, Cunntngham 2-1·5, front w1th a gtganttc 59·34 Martin
A Nofsmger 0 0·1 I :D
tratled a ll the way , but Sampson 2·2-6, Dtarnond 7-2·
\\ Ouldn'l let the vlsttors gel 16, Kearns 1.().2, Balshord
out of reach as the ftrst 1·4-6 Dowler 1.().2, Tucker 4·
w 22-36 16 102
Totals
quarter
score
stood
20-13
The
pills have been used to treat nwd IO SltiC tile eye w}JJie also
5-13, Lang 1-ll-2 R Rauch Il-l·
Wahama
15 19 18 20 72
glaucoma by many doctors
actmg on the kidn ey to Eagles put on an tmpresstve 1 Tot..ls 25-18-68
Glaucoma IS ca used by a ehmtnate any mcreased body secon d quarter as thetr
28 31 22 21 "102
Buffalo
bwldup of flutd ms1de the flwd ll ts not harmful tf defense hmtted the Wildcats
ON DEAN S LIST
eyeball There IS a Itt tie gland taken
under
medtcal to 10 potnts, leaving the ball·
Reserve Score. Wahama
Beth J Fultz of 129
tnstde the eye that !titers superviston so 1ts effects ca n ttme score at 30-21
69-65
Fatrlane Dr1ve, Middleport,
The pace uf the game has been named to the dean's
James Busktrk scored 22
water mto the eye There ts be con trolled
also a httle canal where
All medtcme 1s potentially conhnued unttl the closmg Its! of Captlal Umverstty for pm~ts Tuesday mght to lead
water 1s dramed out of the harmful to someone We gtve mtnules of the thtrd quarter the ftrsl semester She IS the Parkersburg td a 61-51 VIC·
tory over slwnpmg Pmnt
eye
medtcmes beca use they when the Wtldcats bega n to daughter of Mr an d Mrs
In norma l people the correct a medtcal problem, wtden the gap They blew tl Bern a rd Fultz About 20 Pleasant
The Btg Blacks fell to 1·5
amount of flutd formed no t beca use they are open tn the fo urth when they percent of Capttal's nearly
equals the amount dramed otherwise good for you A scored 21 potnts to Eastern 's 2,100 undergraduates were wtth the loss, thetr th1rd
SIX
out of the eye Thts keeps the case tn pomlts taking asptnn
LAFF • A • DA'Y
named to the honor hshng To stratght Parkersburg evened
Diamond and Rauch had 16
tis
record
at
5·5
amount of Outd tn the eye at a You do~ ' t lake asptrtn
be ehgtble, a student must be
I
Parkersburg won the game
level to malntam a normal because tl's good for you, ~ut and 15 pomts for the visitors enrolled full-ltme at th e
T
The
team
Jut
18
foul
sho
ts
lor
\ ~ ·'!'..
mternal pressure
bkause the cha nces tha t it
untverstty and have earned at in the ftrst half, Jwnpmg out
1
to an 18-12lead after the ftrst
Glaucoma treal ment ts "111 rehe\ e a headache urc ' 64 percen t No other stnhshC~i least a 3 4 grade average
quarter and padding tl to 40·
dtrected towa td res lot tng the far greater than the chances were avatlable.
The EAgles were led by SI::NATE VOTE
25 at the half Point Pleasant
normal dramage mechamsm that 11 wtll cause you any
outscored
Parker~burg 32-21
or decreasmg the flwd for - harm All of the water pills Conde and Etchtnger wtth
WASHINGTON (UP!) etght potnls each Steve Both of Oluo 's senators, m the ftnal two quarters
me~lwn. etlhcr medict:~ll) or
are m the same category
sut gtcHIIy dependmg on what They are not good fur you, but Nelson had stx and pulled tn Democrat John Glenn and
PARKERSBURG {61) 10 Buskirk 22 Maddox
causes the tmbalance tn fluid tf needed they wtll tmpruve ntn e of hts tearr. 's 31
Republican Robert Taft Jr , Culllp
2 Kelle r 18 Britta n 2 Moore
rebolUlds
They
hit
7
foul
control ms1de !he eye
the overall srt uatlon, and any
)otned wtth the rr.ajonty 2
D
POl NT PLEASANT I S71
One par ticu lar type of lUldes1table responses such shots, and connected on 15-58 Tuesday as the Senate, 011 a
~
_/,
Hess 25 N1ber1 9 Wilson 7
11''/lr{ •
water ptll affects an enzyme as loss of too much potasslwn fteld goals for a cool 25 64-27 vote, cunftrmed the McCormick 6 Brown 1ng 4 ...,
Important 10 flwd formahon
ca n be
corrected or percent They had 13 turn· nomtnatton of George Bush Tat rerson 6
We cha rge 1200 to trace:your
By Quarters
overs
It decreases the lormabon of prevrnled
famtly
tree, and another $~00 to
as dtrector of the Central Parkersburg 18 22 6 15 ... 61
l'hp I ~S PI \'C /-;•llll l' \\ U~ fl
forget
what
Y.e found oul
E'l
Pleas
12
13
14
lB
57
lntelhgence A~et c )

Eagles go down again

.

T

Gout causes joint swelling

...

Big Blacks

changes d~I.A\ llc1t: u1 lilt!
\ By Lav.rence E Lamb, MD
I DF:AR DR LAMB - If a body
One stmply does not have
blood test shows no stgn of
gout
wtth a completely
, gout 11hy would there sltll be
norm
al
urtc actd level,
a swelhng tn the ftrst jomts of
provtded
the tes t ts done
the ftngers and much tenacctll'ately
derness ) Perhaps I am tn·
For more mformalton on
correct but I thought that was
gout
send 50 cents for The
a stgn when you had thts kind
Health
Letter ~umber 2-3,
7
of gouty arthrtlts
Gout
,
Unc
Actd Enclose a
DEAR READER - Gout
long,
stamped,
self.
can ca use swelhng of almost
addre
ssed
envelope
for
any JOtnl, but cerlamly 11 ts
matling
Address
your
letter
not the only cause for
swelhng As far as the fingers to me m care of thts
are concerned, the JOtnl at the newspaper, P 0 Box 1551,
knuckle and the mtddle JOtnt Radto Ctly SlattOn, New
may swell from rheumatOid York, NY 10019
DEARDR LAMB-lmon
arthntis, eventually resulttng
the
borderltne of ha&gt;1ng
m spmdle shaped ftngers The
glaucoma
I was told of a
end jOmt may swell and
doctor
who
prescrtbes
ptlls to
develop small bumps, known
reduce
flmd
through
the
as Heberden 's node as a
ktdneys
I
have
tead
arltcles
vartant of os teoarthr11ts
t degenera!tve arthnlts) Thts UJHt water ptlls should not be
form of arthnttc change ts taken as they deb1htate one's
particularly apt to occur m health Your commen ts pro
women and may not be and C(ITI on t/us treatmenl
related to severe arthnltc would be apprccwted
DEAR R.::ADER - Water

drop fifth
cage battle

:~,-:,;,~;;,,

..

"

'"
Ohio H1gh School
Scores
Uneted Pren International
TutldiV
Bextev 62 Ham i lton Twp 59
Cambridge 60 Meadowbrook

h t

&lt;S

;~\ :~

&lt;B

Morg•n 81 Dresden Tr1
Valley 61
New Albanv 79 Col Academy
66
New Concord John Glenn 45
Crooksville 40
,. Newlllrk Ceth 11 Heath 53
,; River V iew 71 Philo .. a
' Sheridan 65NeW Lulngton 5S
' Skyvue 67 WoodSfield 63
n waterford 68 Meigs Eastern
' )7

Fairfield Union 119 Miller 81
Jackaon 62 Gaiii.,OIIs 60 (2 ot l
=.North Gal Ill ., eastern
1

; •

Pro
Istan d•

OUTSIDE SHOOTER - Steve Randolph has marked
himself this season as an aggresstve performer on offense
and defense, and one of the Me1gs Marauders' good out
stde shooters Above he puts the ball m the atr agamst
Wellston Tuesday mghl - Jtm Hamm ptclure

Wildcats whip Bobcats
Kent Halley, 5-11 semor
guard, had a season htgh 31
potnts Tuesday mght tn
leadmg the Hannan Trace
Wildcats to a 65-40 SV AC
vtclory over Kyger Creek
The defendmg SV AC champs
were hard-pressed by the
saggmg Bobcats for two
quarters , but Jumped mto a
three-potnt lead , 211-25 wtth
JUS! seconds left m the ftrst
half
Kyger Creek. trailing 10-6
at the end of the f1rst quarter
knotted the score lwtee
durmg a tornd second penod
Hannan Trace went ahead for
good on an 18 foot Jumper by
Halley Halley made tt a
three-pomt play on the foul
shot conversiOn
Durtng the ftrst half, !Ialley
connected for 16 of h1s 31
pomts Davtd Shaffer, 6-1
senior, who ftmsh ed wtth 16
pomts, had stx tn the ftrst
half
The Bobcats' ftrst ha lf
surge was paced by semors
Bill Metzner and Tim Lucas

1

, _CPikel 60
· ,_...ron t on 61 Waverly 39
Meigs 72 Wellston 61
llu Ent Canton 58 Northwes1 55
• :; Akro'l East 11 Fairies!. 68

ROSE THE BEST
NEW YORK , (UP!) The 1976 Rose Bowl on NBC
television atlracled a total
audience ol 71,750,000
v1ewen, according to
research estimates based
on Nielsen Television Data,
making II the most widely
viewed college football
game ever telecast.
It also "as the second
most widely viewed sports
telecast ever, topped only
by the seventh game of tbe
lf75 World Series, which
had a lolal audience of
75,931,100 The lf75 Rose
Bo'lll, 'llhlch attracted
U,zto,OIO viewers, was the
previous re•ord holder for
coUege football.
~

: r r u or rrr ; ; •

77
:::

and JUOtor forward Ralph
Baylor Metzner and Lucas
ca nn ed etght each wh1le
Baylor chtpped tn wtth five
Hannan Trace came out
nppmg m the thtrd quarter as
the Wtldcats outscored the
host team, 111-1 Halley agatn
was the btg bomber wtlh 10
pomls Shaffer came on
strong to help the Wtldcat
attack m the fourth per10d
He canned etght pomts,
Halley , ftve , Kevm Petrte and
Max Wells, two each
Baylor led the Bobcat
second half offense "'th etght
pomts
Baylor and Lucas were the
only Bobcats m double
ltgures wtth 1.1 and 12 po10ts
respecltvely
Hannan Trace !1-4 overall
and 8-2 m the SVAC, htt 26 of
55 shots for 47 pet and 13 of 23
free throws Kyger Creek
sank only 15 of 56 attempts
for a cool 28 pet and 10 of 14
at the chanty strtpe
The Bobcats of Coach Ke1lh
Carter w1ll host Easte rn
Frtday and travel to Symmes
Valley Saturday Coach Dan
Cornell's Wtldcats play
Green Frtday
Hannan Trace 's reserves
won their l Oth league game
and 10 m 12 sta•ts, 58-25 over
the Bobktlten reserves
Frank Mooney and Davtd
Swam topped the Wtldkittens
w1th 16 and 13 each Ed
Mollohan and Yancey Halley
paced KC w1th stx aptece
Box score
Hann:~n
Trace {651
Petr1e 3 1 7 H a lle y 12 7 31
SMatter 8 0 16 Gibson 1 1 3
Wh1ll 0 1 1 Woodyard 2 0 4
We ll s 0
and Swam 0 1 1
Totals 26 13 65
Kyg er Creek ~40) - Sands
1 0 2 Mellner 1 7 9 Lucas 6
0 12 Salem 1 0 2 Kern 1 0 2
and Baylor 5 3 13 Totals 1s
10 40
1 By Querten
HT
10 18 17 19 6 ~

2'

KC

' :-

::.~w.:::

a

I7

8

7

40

Re.sHves Hannan Trac e 5R
Cr e ek 25

Kyg~r

But then the home team»s mne mmutcs of that nal f
Whe11 the y, h1 stl e ble" to
defense sllffened once agatn
as they dented the Rocke ts of begm the last half , llungs
Coac h Gary Jcnktn s any held looked the same Peoples
goals for the last 3 45 of the opened the sconng for
second
quarter
Th e Wellston and Meadows
Marauders meanwhile added t:OWJteled for Meigs at the
10 to go tn to l he locker room 7 10 mar k Bu t Wellston
connected on three slratghl
leadmg at ha lf ltme , 36-21
In that first half, Meigs fteld goa ls ,md some foul
canned 18-27 shots and hauled shots \\htlc Mctgs only added
tn a whopptng 19 rebounds a held goal by Ct emeans to
Fans really sa w some fme put the score at 4(1.28 But
basketball and showed lhetr then Me1gs got on a hot streak
approval by standmg and and netted S IX pmn ts in a rov.
applaudmg when the starters and ended th e Ourd canto
were glVen a brea ther m the leadmg 52 J5
The !our lh quarter saw the
!mal mmute and a half of that
Marauders
pull away for
second quarter Metgs' ltgh l
good
as
they
at one ltme
defense hmtled Wellston to
opened
up
a
66
40 lead wtth
only two field goals m the last

Reserves bow to Wellston by 7
percen t of their shots 116·35)
By Greg Halley
and
ne tted 15·28 at the chan ty
After keepmg pace through
s
tnpe
two quarters the Metgs
The Metgs dub had a
Reserve team hit a cold
balanced
sconng a ttack led
streak that spe lled thetr
by
Bnan
Hatml ton s mght
undomg, as they bowed to
markers
,
"htle
Halley and
Wellston, 41-40 1he loca l
Young
chtpped
m
s1x aptece
boys of Coach Bob Ohver
I
he
learn
shot
a
ve
ry cold 23
scored only one pomt durmg
percent
from
th
e
fteld
and
the th1rd quarter , and one
managed
JUSl
J0-28
fr
om
the
mmute of the last c anto
foul
!me
1
he1r
loss
put
the1r
The half-lime score stood
26·22. but the thtrd quarter seClson record &lt;:il 3 8
Offtctals for the contest
readmg showed Wellston m
\\
ere
ClUldtff and Bragg
front 31 23 The Baby
MEIGS
- Wmebrenner 1·2·
Marapders made a vahant
4
W1tte
ll-3·3
Stanley Q.O.O,
effort m the last quarter ,
Halley
.1
-0-6,
Young 3-0-6,
outscormg thetr opponents 11·
Qualls
2-0
4
Fo
llrod 2-04,
10 but the rail) fell short
Coats
1
3·5
Hamtllon
3-2-8
Coach Mark Mullen s'
Totals
15-10.40
Rockets are now 2 10 on the
WELLSTON - Wtlhs 0 2-2,
)ear They were led 111
Bdker
2-3 1 Marltn 3 :1 9,
sco nn g by Hud son and
Hudson
5·3
13, Royster 5·3·13,
Royster, each wtlh 13 pmnts
Swmgle
1·1·3
To tals 16 15-47
As a team they cannert 4'

Tornado frosh split 2 games

, ne Southern Freshmen
cagers of Coac h Howte
Ca ldwell spht a patr of games
lht s \\ eek Saturday at
Racme, as usual, they went
~-- ----------,
on a scor10g bmge m th e last
quarter to ovet take the
Federal Hockmg Lancets and
I
t wm 33-30 after trathng most
the game
1
Ill2!"i 1 of The
Ltltle Tornados ac
tually won tt a t the foul !tne,
Nat1onat Basketball As soc 1at1on although they sank only 3,13
Stand1ngs
F d
1 H k
dd l
Bv Un1ted Press lntl'!rnat 1onal
e era
oc mg
1 n
Eastern conference
connect on a free throw m 10
Atlanhc D1v1s1on
attempts Both teams made
W l Pel
GB
Boston
31 rJ 705 _
15 f1 el d goals
Philad elph ia
29 17 ii30 3
Three Tornados chipped m
Buffalo
29 19 604 J
erghl potnts to lead their
N ew Yor k
24 24 5 11
9
Central Otv ts•on
te am They were Dave
wash •hg ton
~ ~0 P~J4 GB Robmson, T1m Bnnager, and
Clevelan d
26 20 565
1~
Todd Cummtns and J im
Alla nla
12 lJ 469 4
O'Brien had stx Rowley led
Hou ston
21 22 488 4
19 23 45 2 5 ~ , Federa] Hockmg wrth etght
N ew Orleans
Wl'! St ern Conference
Monday evemng the South.
M1dwes t D1v1s1on
ern team hosted the Belpre
W l Pet
GB
M il waukee
19 27 4q
Golden Eagles, but th1s time
DetrOit
17
26
39
5
I l
lh ey Ios t l t a l the fouI Ime ,
Ka n sas c 11 y
16 30 348 3
Chi cago
tJ 31
295 5
C3nmng only 7 of 28 free

:

Buk~tblll

Circleville so Logan Elm 33
Col Watterson 68 Col North 61
Fairfield Un10n 119 Miller 81
Groveport 67 Canal W1n
chtster 32
Guernuy Zane Tra ce 61
'-8elllsvllle 38
' Maysville 78 w Muskingum

]

:v· a:-

•

By Greg Bailry
In front of a spa1 s e , snow
dan1pened crowd. the Metgs
Marauder s even ed th etr
basketball season record at 6·
6 as they handily whtpped the
vlstttng Golden Rockets 12-61
The hosts scored the opemng
bu cke t and were neve r
headed
Terry Qualls opened the
scortng soon after the
Marauders got the opemng
lip-off At the 5 50 mark
Steve Arnold knotted the
score at 2·2 on a short JWTI·
per, but then the Marauders
reeled off stx stratght pomls
before the viSitors cou ld
connect agam Qualls scored
stx of those first etght pomts
The ftrsl quarter contmued
on that same pace, but the
Marauders added two more
pomts to thetr lead as the
quarter ended, 18·10
In that tmltal pertod, b1g
Mttch Meadows blocked ftve
Wellston's shots, msptrmg hts
team He also hauled m seven
rebounds m that ftrst canto
Metgs moved the ball qwckly
and took lhe good percentage
shot At one time m that
penod the) htt ftve stratgh l
fteld goals Metgs ulthzed a
ttght man-lo-man defense to
slym te the Rockets as the
visitors found 1l hard to get a
good shot
Metgs started the second
pertod nght where they left
off by addmg four pmnts on
goals b) Steve Randolph and
Jerry Cremeans In the first
and second penods, Me1gs at
one lime ht t a hot streak 10
whtch they canned 11 of 12
field go•ls a ttempts and tt
looked hke the Rockets had
had tt
But
trontcally,
the
Marauders htt a cool spell m
whtch they fatled to even get
a shot tn one and a half
mmutes wh tle Wellston was
putlmg seven pomts on the
board narrowmg the margtn
to seven al 26 19

pomts Mtke Brown and Ed
Howard added 10 aptece
Joe Davena was the only
Waverly player tn doutHr
ftgures wtth 12.
..
Irontcn htt 26 of 52 for !;
percent, mne of 14 at the foill.
hne whtle Waverly was IBt;C
47 for 38 percent and three ou~
of stx at the foul hne The I.
Tigers controlled both boardl·
37-9 Ed Howard had 16 allll
Fttzpatrtck had 12 !Of'
Ironton Waverly had 22
tlU'novers, Ironton 21
Ironton
hosts
Metgs
Friday Waverly 1s at Athens
Ironton 's reserves moved
tnlo a lte with Waverly for
ftrs t place tn the prehrrunary
game wtlh a 46·26 trtumph
over the v1s1tors
Varstty box score
WAVERLY {3'1) S
Thom as 1 0 2 Ho ls1 nger 3 0
6 M Thomas 2 0 4 Davena
52 1 2
T hompso n
4 0 8
Whal e y 2 1 5 Work m an 1 0
2 Shoe maker 0 0 0 TOTALS
18 3 19
IRONTON t61 )
E
Howard 4 2 10 Cr oc kr et 0 '1
1 Royal 0 0 0 Fl t zpalr ck
12 4 28 C Brown l 0 6 R
Howard 1 1 3 M Brown 50
10 T h oma s 1 0 2 TOTALS
26 9 61
Scor e by quarters
It'..
Waver l y
12 12 6 9- .J..Y
Iro n ton
11 15 16 19-----&amp;1
Reserves Ir o nt o n 4~
Wave rl y 26

Hearst jurors probed
DONALD B THACKREY
SAN FRANCISCO ( UPI JAs Patncta Hearst watched
mtently, a federal JUdge
questioned potential JUrors on
the opemng day of her trtal
and satd he hoped to complete
JUry seleclton today, clearmg
the "ay for ope mng
arguments to begm Thursday
In a dramatic moment,
Mtss Hearst , lookmg thm and
pale and dwarfed by the huge
courtroom, stood at the

Marauders maul Rockets

Ironton wallops Waverly 61-39

:

I

Pac1ftc DIVISIOn
W L Pet
GB
Golden Stat e
JJ 12 733
Los Ang eles
21 24 489 11
Sealt le
22 25 468 12
Phoentx
18 25 419 14
Portland
19 27 413 14 ' ,
Tue sdays Results
Bu ff alo 129 New Orlean s 105
A tlan ta 114 New York 11 3
Cle11eland 85 De troll aJ
Houst on 127 Ph1ladelph 1a 116
Ch1 cago 110 Golden State 103
Ka nsas C11y 107 Milwaukee 89
Portland 118 Wash ngton 105
Wednesday's Games
A llan Ia a t Bo s ton
Cte11eland at Houston
Ch tcago at Detro• I
Buffalo at N ew Orleans
Phoen 1x at Los Angeles
Seatt le al Portl and

Am enca n Basketball Assocla
hon Stand.ngs
By Un1ted Press International
W L Pet
GB
Denver
32 11 744
N ew York
29 15 659 31 2
Ken tu cky
26 20 565 71 ~
San An tonto
24 19 558 8
lnd 1ana
25 21 543 B 2
Sl LOUIS
20 27 426 14
V 1rgm1a
7 37 159 25 11
Tuesday 's Result
Denver 144 ABA All Stars IJB
Wednesday 's Games
(No games scheduled)

Nattonal Hockev Leagu e Stand
.ng s
By Umted Press International
Campbell Conf erence
Patnck Dtv~~~on
W L T Pts
Phllae!elphta
JO 10 8
68
N Y Islan der s
26 12 a
60
Atlanta
24 20
7
55
NY Rangers
17 25 5
39
Smythe D1v1S10n
W l T Pts
Ch icago
20 12 16
56
Van couver
17 20 10
44
St LOU IS
18 24
S
Jl
M1nnesota
15 29 3
33
Kansas City
11 32 4
26
W•J es conference
Norns DIVISIOn

W L T Pis

Monlreal
35 6 8
78
Los Angeles
27 22
2
56
Pittsburgh
18 24
6
42
Detro!!
15 28 6
36
Wash1ngton
4 41
5
13
Adams DI VISIOn
W L T Pf5
Bc;~ston
28 10 9
65
Buffalo
27 14 6
60
Toronto
20 18 10
.so
Cal iforn ia
19 24
4
42
Tuesday's Results
N Y Islanders 4 Mmnesota 3
Attanra 8 Phtladelph1a 4
Detrott 3 St LOUIS 2
Monlreal 2 Vancouver 2
Los Ange le~ 2 Wash 1ng1on 0
Wednesday's Games
Buffalo at NY Rangers
NY Islanders at Toronto
Altanta at Ch1cago
WaShing ton at Cal 1forn,a
KM "&gt;as C1 t v al Mtnneso1a

lhro\\ s whtle the vlsttors
connected on 6 of 12 Fmal
score was 4441 Belpre
After Jeadmg f01 the ft rst
half 21-10 , the lhtrd quarter
proved dtsastrous for the
home team when they were
out scored, 16·9, a nd could n't
ca tch up
'f1m Brmager agatn led the
Southern team as he collected
II pomts \\htle teal]lmate
Dave Ftndle) had 10 The
learn 1s now 4 2 on the ) ear
Belpre was led by Atkinson
and Blake wtlh 12 pmnts
each
Soul hern s next game ts
Thursday when they host
Wahama

MEIGS MARAUDERS
FG A FT A R8 PF TO TP
Qua il s
8 17
7J
4
18
3
3
I
37
25
8
2
5
Cr em ean s
12
0 1
4
6 9
IS
7
M eado ws
59
14
I
0
11
5
Dew en port
34
1
4
s IS
Ran do 1ph
68
I
00
22
0
2
0
Brownmg
0 1
00
0
0
2
2
Stew.,rt
00
2
0
0
00
2
Dod son
12
1
2
Sc 1t es
01
0
2
0 I
02
3
0
M ar fl n
0
0
I
0
00
00
0
0
~ Coats
I
I
4
I I
0
22
Gran da !
30 so 12 24 32
19
22 72
TOTALS
WELLSTON
FG A FT A R8 PF TO TP
PLAYER
I
17
3
7 IS 34
3
Go! I
2
I 2
7
0
Broo}o:. s
00
0
9
28
56
3
1
0
Barnett
1
0 1
0
00
1
3
Sw ong er
4
0
s
27
1
M c K 1nn1 s
I2
I
I
0
I2
03
1
G t1 111and
24
1
3
10
4 15
3
Peopl es
1
4
0
~ oys t er
I 3
11
1
1
12
4
44
1
4s
A rnold
I
2
1
12
3
00
Derro w
0
2
0
02
00
0
Wat ts
9
61
21 61 19 26 22
23
TOTALS
Quarter Scores
72
18 18 16 20
M e 1gs
61
10 II 14 26
W ell st o n
PLAYER

4 .15 rematnmg Both coaches
then benched lhe1r starters
and the Rocke ts narrowed the
score to 11 potn ts, but then the
bench uf the Marauders
played some good basketball
of thetr own, and wouldn 't lot
the vtsttors get any closer
The vwtors were led m
scormg by Quulls 18 markers
whtle teammates Randolph ,
Meadows and Davenport had
15. 12 and 11, respecltvely
Meadows hauled tn a btg 15 of
h1s team s .~2 rebounds, most
of them tn the ftrst half The
team shot a SIZzh ng 60 percent (30-50) from the floor
and connected on 12-24 from
the chan ty stnpe The) had
22 tu;-novers
Wellston was led by Gtll
who had 11 potnts, whtle
Arnold and Peoples had 12
and 10 No Rocket got more
than four rebolUlds , an d the
team total was on ly 22 They
shot only 34 percent from the
floor , but can ned a hot 19 26
from the free throw !me
Offtctals for the game were
Schwartzel and Thompson
Metgs next game ts Fnday
when they travel to Ironton to
tangle Wtlh the Jeag ue leadtng Ttgers It'll be the
first ttme the Marauders
have played tn the new field ,
house there

GOOD/YEAII
SALE_..SALE-SALE-SALE

REGUlAR OR
MUD &amp; SNOW RETREADS
,'/·

Hock ey AssoC1af1on
Standmg s
By Untted Pre ss Interna tional
East
w L T Pts
47
22 5
New Eng land
43
21 25 I
Cm cmnat
39
16 25 3
Cleveland
38
18 26 2
tnd lanapot 1s
West
Tuesday s Coll ege ' Ba sk etball
w L T Pis
Resu11s
60
30 16 0
Houslon
By Un1ted Press lntern attonal
48
22 4
San Ot eg o
East
46
19 4
Phoen1 x
Ar my 57 Co lgat e 44
47
22 18 3
Boston u 75 Nl'!w Hampshtr e 73 M nnesota
Canad1an
Buffalo 111 Brockport ST 109
W L T Pts
(OI)
W nn 1p eg
33 17 0
66
Cornell 82 N1agara 60
Quebe c
30 16 '1
62
Dartmout h 58 Hofstra 56
Ca lgar y
25 19 2
52
Massachuse t ts sa lona 72
Edmonton
18 30 J
39
Pr 1nce ton 69 Penn 52
Toronto
15 28 4
34
Rutgers 10 2 P1ttsbur gh 71
:K Ollawa
14 26 I
29
St Fran (Pa l 79 St Fran
:K Team d 1sband ed
I NY) 1S
Tu esday s R esults
51 Peter s 83 Easl Caro ltna 67
V1llanova 94 St Bonaventur e 82 Quebec 9 Cm c nn a t1 1
Edmonton A Toronto 4 (Oi l
Ph0en1x 4 San Otego 3 (ot l
South
•
Wednesday s G:~mcs
Duke 94 Dav1dson 79
Cleveland a l C1ncmna 11
Georgetown (0 C) 71 Penn St
Ind ianapolis at New England
63
Calgary at Phoen •x:
Memph1S 51 81 La san e 77
W nn peg at M1nnesota
M1SS St 87 Mo Western 71
Hous ton at Edmon Ton
Nort otk s t 'I J va Un1on 74

'

world

"

""

I

~

'

$10~
"'f '
"'\:~

'

I-'-"

,.•

Size
listed

5.60x15

6.95x14

6.00x15

7.00x14

Mounted &amp; Balanced
No Trade Ins
Wh1le Present Stock lasts.

Meigs Tire Center Inc.
Pomeroy

992 2101
John F. Fultz, Owner

Ohto

M1dwest
lnd Purd Ft W 84 lnd Tech 79
Mo Rolla 73 Cu lver Stockton 62
(OI )

Oberl1n 62 Wooster 59
West
An zona 114 Portland 51 94
Ca t Bapt1st 141 Los Angeles
Bapt 67
Nev Las Vegas 139 No An zona
101
Oregon Tectl 72 Ch tco St 6 1

Oh1o College
B as ketball Scores
Un1ted Pre ss lnterna11onal
TUl'!Sddy
Keny on 73 Baldwtn Wi'l l tace
61
Oberlin 62 wooster 59
Wittenberg 82 Musk 1ngum 47
Ashland 99 Ohm Dom1n1can
46
H1ram 66 Jo hn Carroll 61
Mat one 71 Ce darv li te 66
Taylor (lnd J 91 Wllmtngton
69

SEO
FROSH
Team
W L
P
Ga ll 1pol1s
1 1 325
Logan
6 2 392
Waverly
5 2 145
At h ens
5 2 279
M e 1gs
2 5 211
Ja c k son
1 6 23 3
Wellslon
0 8 222
TOTALS
26 26 1901
Jan 19 result
Athens 41 Gall1po i 1S
(makeup)
Jan 22 resulh
Ja ckson A lhen s ppnd
GallipoliS Metgs ppn d
Waver ly Logan ppnd
Wl'! II Ston open
Monday's results
Gallipolis 5 1 Jackson 39
Alhen s 42 Logan 40
Metgs 42 Wellston 31
wavl'!rty Open
Thursday's games
Alhens at Waverly
Gal l i?OIIs at Logan
Wellston at Jackson
Me igs Open

OP

2 &lt;~7
270
206
246
267
323
348
1907
35

No. 2 Grade
2x4x8

PRE-CUT

STUDS
HOGG &amp;. ZUSPAN
MA T~RIALS CO.
773-55.54

MASON, W. \&lt;,._

�•
~

Tht• I)ally St·nt int•l, Mid(Ut&gt;port -l't~J lll'l'i.'Y. ( J•• \\ t•thwstla ~ , .1; u1 . :!fl. W71i

Cape staudinps

Vaughan sets new
game high record
Pam

Vaughan

was out-

standing Monday night as she
broke her own game Sl'oring
record on the ba sket ba ll
t·our t as s he tallied J5 points

agamst Federal Hocking .
Pam, a jWlior guard, had a
record las t year of 28 points in
une game . Meig s easi ly
defeated Ft•tft~J:al Hocking,74

to 52.
Meigs domina ted the first
quarte t· as Pam , Bet h
Vr.iughan and Cath y Meadows

l'anned ltl; 9 and l potnls
r£&gt; spet•th·e!y. Th e secon d
quart er was somc wh~t
slower wi lh Pam , Meadows ,
Demaris Ash , Mary Boggs

and Glenda Brown all con-

the locke r r oom at

TOTALS

he~ lf-li ruc

14· 28

6-12
4 14
4-4
2·3

29
0· 1
32-71

7-12
13

0- t

o.o
1·3
0-4
t ·2
10-25

,

16
B
6
8
3

1
49

PF

TO TP
?
0 35
5
B 13
5
1
B
3
I
B
4
0
5
3
0
4
1
4
1
23
14 14

Toclav. ·IS

Sport Parade

765
727
7'll

6 6 649 651
Sout h Point
6 8 836 909
Logan
4 8 689 776
Athens
4 9 607 678
Jackson
4 10 7d 6 ns
Wellslon
3 9 627 "118
Non -SEOAL r es ult s:
Oak Hill 87 Soulh Poinl 77
Parker sb urq 01 P l . Pleasant
57

with a 1:ummanding 17 point
lead .
The third quarter was a
surpri se for Federal Hocking
when Meigs · switched to ~
full-cow- t zone press . Both
teams had plenty .of fo ul
lr uuble .
Mei gs'
lop
rebounder, Beth Vaughan,
and tcam captain Demaris
As h foul ed out of the game .
Mary Ja ne Deeley, coach,
deaned the bench during the
end of the third quarter.
Mei~s will .face Kyger Creek
Satw-day at home at 6 p. m .
RB

OP
597
622
698

Meigs

tributing: to the S('Oring effort
with 4, 2, 4, 2, and 2,
respeetive ly. Meigs went In

MEIGS GIRLS
FG-A FT-A
Pam Vaughan
Be th Vaug han
Demar i s Ash
Ca th y Meadows
Gtendil Brown
Mary Boggs
Tracy Burdette

ALL GAMES
Tu m
W l
P
lronlon
13 0 731
Whee1ersbur9 12 o 828
Portsmouth
9 J 770
Waverly
9 5 772
Gallipolis
B 6 778
P t. P leasant
7 5 754

SEOAL VARS IT Y

T eam
1ron1on
Gallipolis
waverly
A th ens
Meigs
Loga n
Jack,son
Wellslon
TOTALS

W
10
7
7

L
0
3
3

.t
4

J~a

OP
431
511
516
436

6

577

591

3 6
2 8
2 8

518
503
510

507

5

P
550
51'2
526

563

599
l9 39 4 154 41S4

Tu es day 's results :
Jac kson 62 Ga ll i polis 60 1:2 ot )
Ironton 61 Wave rlv 39

-

::-

-

ANOTHER VAUGHAN - Beth Vaughan, cousin of
high scoring Pam Vaughan , was second hig h scorer with
10 points Monday against Federal Hocking in the
Marauder girls' 74-52 victory. Here she shows ~ood form
in the jump shot.

20

SEOAL R ESE.RVES
Team
W l
P OP
Iron lim
B 2 490 335
wa11 er1y
8 2 425 368

Alhens
Logan
Jackson
Gall ipolls
Wellston
Me igs
TOTALS

7

2

426

323

5

4

354

A

6
7
8
8

376
379
378
381
357

3
2
2

39 39 3212

..

M&amp;R Shopping.Center

POT PIES

•

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

440

460
Sll
421

WE RESERVE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

]11~

Tuesday's results:

FOR

Jackson 38 Gallipolis l5
Ironton .d6 Waverly 26
Wel l~ton 47 Meigs -40
A th ens at Logan reset Feb . 20
Frlday's games :
waverly at Athens
Logan at Gallipol is
Me igs at Iron to n
Jackson at Wellston
Chil l i cot he at Porlsmouth
Soulh Point at Coa l Gro11e
Whee ler sb urg at Northwest
Pl . Pleasa n t at Dunbar
Saturday's games :
M eigs at Wahama
Whee ler sburg at Greenup

r---------------------~··I:·
I.

Jackson upsets
GAHS, 62-60

BANQUET

M eigs 12 Wellsion 61
Alhens at Logan. re set Feb .

'

Delinquent
11
Personal
Property''
Taxpayers

CARNATION

MIX MATCH

COFFEE-MATE

TABLE

11

OR

oz.

JAR

FOR

SUPERIORS LEAN Sl-ICED

BOILED

MIRACLE WHIP

F'rer throws by Jack so n 's Marty Coopf;! r and
NEW RECORD - Pam Vaughan dribbled up court
Monda y night in the Meigs Girls' game against Federal
Tom Os borne with lfi and fiv£' second s remaining
Hock ing, preparing no doubt, to put the ball in the basket.
in a second overtime pPriod gave Coach AI
•
The
Marauder
junior
set
a
new
school
single
ga
me
scoring
Burger's lronmen a 62-60 upset Southeaste rn Ohio
fly MILTON RICHMAN
record of 35 point !"!. - Katie Crow picture.
•
League
victory over vi s iting Ga llipoli s TuC' s day
t;PJ Spurts Editor
•
In compliance with provts1ons of
night.
Sec. 5719.04 R.C., there will be
NEW YORK t UP!)- The judge now was about to perform
Down IJy nine points late in the th ird period .
the toughest, must tormenting part of his job, passing senpublished during the next few
the lronmen came storm ing back in the fin a l
tence .
spc onds of r egulation play to knot the count at 54.weeks,
in this newspaper, a list of
He hammered his gavel down hard. So hard, the sudden
2-4 in the conterence. .
a ll . It was o{i-all at the e nd of the firs t overtimr .
OhiuCullcge
delinquent persona I property taxnoise it made shattered the judicial quietness of the court.
• Wooster fought all the way
De
spit
e
lhe'
def.ea
f
Morrow
's
chHrity
toss
5)
Haskdh&lt;J,IIRound·
up
:
1
11
2
" I sentence you," the judge said, ''to not less than one year
payers in Meigs County, Ohio.
in its home contest, but were
Gallipolis remained tied for
ma de it 59-56 and Marl y _United Press lntcrnatiunal
and not more than five years in prison ..."
ThE' perennially-s trong defeated at the last minute by
That was 12 years ago when Bobby Bonds was only 17, but he second place with Waverly in Cooper's free throw with 32
the
conference
standings
as
seconds
left
gave
J
ac
kson
;
Witt
enbe rg Tige r s fl exed Oberli n in another northern
All persons, partnerships, com 1
hasn't forgotten it. His first reaction was that the judge had to
·
f
11
their
musc les in an Ohio div ision g;;tme.
.
h
I
I
f
d
t
1e
&lt;
e
en
mg
c
am
piOns
e
60-56
advantage.
panies and corporations currently
be talking to someone else, that this sentence was being meted
Merlin Friend paced the
61.:m at Ironton last nigh t.
Foldt'n' s tap-in with lG Co nfer en ce ga me ag&lt;:~ in s t
out to some wrong-&lt;loer because Bobby Bonds knew in his
listed on the delinquent classified
, G'd llipolis dropped to 8-6 on seconds left &lt;' Ill it to 60,58, but Muskingurn Monday night. winners with 21 and Jimmy
heart he hadn 't commi lled any crime .
.Jones
added
16
more
for
the
or general personal property tax
and
the year and 7-3 inside the Gallia fouled on tlu• play.
The Ti gers shot a sizzling 69
" I was scared," confesses Bobby Bonds, who ultimately was
Yeomen.
league. Jackson , which upset Cooper sank the first of a unc- pt:&gt;r cent to durnp the Muskies
duplicates may avoid publication of
placed on three yea rs' probation and never went to jail. " It all
Preston Burroughs threw
51-40
last
Friday,
is
and-one
to
make
it
61·58.
fie
82-4
7
in
'"'
OAC
.
5ou
thern
Athens
sta rted as a fight. Fi'"t thing you know a knife was brought
such delinquency and subsequent
· 'd e missed the second. Fnldt•n Di\'i sion
conte s t
at in 1U poillLS for the Fighting
now4-10overa II.an d.2·8 ms1
out. Someb\ldy was killed in the figl .t, and I was scared.
property tax liens by paying said
Scots , who tra iled 35-38 at tile
the loop.
grabbed th e rcbunnd and hit a Springfield.
Petrified. At the time, it was wrong to mention anything about
h;d
f.
Hick
Wh
ile'
piir
cd
the
C
h
B
h
oac urger. w use squa d goal with seven ~cc.:u ml s ll'ft, .
taxes in full prior to Feb. 6, 1976.
another person. You just didn 't do that. You didn 't tell on
with 20 mnrk eh5 and
Oberlin is no w 7-7 overall
had lost three O\'ertime· cuttin.1' it hack to lllll' •. 61-60. Tigers
·
someone e lse."
ll
ba ltlcs earlier this year. Osborne!s
free throw with Iean uuqte 15lc:k l··r.n· etdllucl and 2-4 in co nf~r ence play.
Bobby Bonds has done a grea t deal of growing up since that
Collection of ·the delinquent I ists
Wooster 's is 10-8 overa ll and
crrdited a " lucky boum·t~' ' of five se•·onds ll'ft icPd Uw 14 ·
day he stood in front of the judge in Riverside , the city where
:~-;J
i
n
H11.
!
loop.
·
J
f.
1
d
1
La
rry
Hall
l'&lt;-lltlt'
through
h
b
11
publicized
will be enforced as
t e a m t Je ma Sl'l'IHI so
Ji.H'ksnn \'ktory.
he was born, where his father worked as a chef in a small truck
for
the
Musk
il~s
with
11
In
uthcr
g;.mn::s,
Ashl
and
the reg ulation game for
Gallipoli s led 14-12, 20-24
prescribed under Sec. 5719.08 R.C.
stop and his mother as a registered nurse in a local hospita l,
O \' erw h elm~d
Ohio .
saving the lronmen from a nd ~ :l-38 a t the qu &lt;~r· poi nt s.
where he played in the Little League and where he eventually
Wittenber g is now 12-2 for Domini c~l n 99-48 1 Malone beat
.
1oss. tc1'marks. Bi g' uest GA HS lead
anot hcr ht•artbrc&lt;.t k mg
was signed by the San Francisco Giants .
.
b
the
sc;Js mi :-md ~- l in con- Ct'cbrville 71-66, Hiram got
Gallipolis held a 54-50 WiiS 4:1.;14 . with J:24l eft in"--hc
• This season will be his 12th in organized ball, and Bobby
'
fcrencc pla~~. Mu!:iking;nn is. b:o Juli n Carroll li()...6] , and
Bonds will be going with his 'third major league club. Bobby
advanta ge foll owi ng two thi,rd period.
lO-S ovcr~J ll and ;).;{ in the
Taylor
1Jnrt. )
edged
cl1arity tosses by Tony
G•\HS hi t 26 of li4 field goal
Bonds was traded to the Ca lifornia Angels last m(Jnth after
loop .
Wilmington
91-4J9in
overtime,
Foldeh with 44 seconds left in attemt&gt;ls.· for :J7.5 t&gt;crcenl .
only one season with the New York Yankees for whom Bobby
El sewlu~n· in Ohio Conthe [ow·th period.
GAHS wa s eight of 13 at the
·
Bonds played hurt and still did a good job.
•
fer
cnceacl JOn 'l'~ue:-;d&lt;Jy ni ght ,
Jackson's Steve Morrow foul li ne for ·61.5 t&gt;crcent.. The
When the Giants traded him to the Yankees for Bobby
Ke nyon ed ge d Baldwi.nMur eer in October.of 1974 the consensus waq the Giants·got the
drove up the middle for a Devi ls had 20 perso na ls, 44 Wallace ?3-6?, and Wooste r
. ds, and 18 costly tw·nlayup with 34 seconds left to reboW1
short end o[ it.
1
cut Gallia 's lead to 54-52.
overs. Brent Saunders picked got by Obcr in fi2-59.
Bonds admits ·disappointment over being traded by the
Kenyon ':-; Tim Applc.ton and
Yankees but says he sees a chance now to have a good year
GAHS brought the ball up of! 20 rebound s for Ut e Don Ma rtin turned in 22
cow·t, and was working ·it Gallians, a c areer hig'h for
with the Angels and help some of their younger players.
points eac h to power the
a round wh en a Jack so n the 6·2 senior for·wurd".
Bobby Bonds doesn 't dwejl upon his past in or out of
Lords past Baldwin-Wallace
baseball. That doesn 't mean he ever forge ts it. Last Sunday,
defender slapped it out of a
Gary Snowden 's 20 poin ts in northern di vision action at
for example, a neighbor of his in Sa n Carlos, Calif., was · Blue Devil 's hand. The ball paced GAHS. Folden added
Ge:tmbicr .
worried about his 13-year-old daughter. He told Bonds she was
bouncedhighintotheair. Jeff 16 and Saunders 10.
Kenyon le&lt;l :l!l-211 a t insmoking and was (:I Ssociating with the wrong kind of company.
Conroy came out uf nowhere,
. Jackson hit 24 or 59 field termission, but had 10 hold off
Bonds had a little talk ,with the girl.
scooped it up , and raced all ~oar attempts for 40 .6 per- the Yell ow Ja c kets. who
the wa)' down court with the cent. The Ironmen were 14 of
·
·1
" You're judged by the company you keep," he said. to her. " I
cmnl' with1n a point mrc way
know and everybody else knows you're not a bad girl, but if the
tying goal at the 14 second 23 at the foul line fo r 60.8 dut'ing tlte sPcun rl hii lf.
girls yo u run with are doing things they shouldn 't be doing, and
mark .
percent. Jack son !t a d 12
Appleton also pulled down
12 oz.
yo u're wtth them, everybody'll say you 're doing those same
In the first overtime period , personals, 27 rebounds ami t2 reb'Junds to lead the Lords
things even though you 're not."
Tom Osborn e's tip put on ly seven turn overs . .Steve · in thal d~partment.
lt1'l
IO '!, oz
Bobby Bonds kn ows that !rom sad experience. Not
Jackson ahead for the first Morrow picked off seven
Bal&lt;.l~in -Wa l lft ce se nio 1•
1
1
It' me sJ·nce the lronmerl held a re boun ds for tl 1e wmners.
·
somebody else's, b~t his own.
in Gla ss
16 oz .
Dave Lung and Dan H;:~ gc n
2-0 lead · in the first period.
Morro\\· was also top scon•r go t 17 pomts each, whi le B-W
One minute and forty seconds fo r Jackson with 17 points. senior Jim English was the
0
remained .
Jeff Controy added 14 and game's leaUing rebou nde r
Tony Folden's lnng jumper Gcorgt' Srhmid 12 and Tom \vith 15.
at the I :26 mark tied it up at Osborne 11.
Kenyon is now .9-8 overa ll
2
56-all .
Friday , J ac kso n is at and JJaldwin-Wa llacc is 4-11,
Nor th Ga lli a's Pirates, behind 20.12 early in the
In the second overtime, Wellston. Gallipolis will host overall. Both tea ms a rc now
leade r s
the Southern second quarter. Tlie Pirates George Schmid's jumper put IJJgan.
24 oz .
Valley 1\thletic Con ference , came on strong in the second JHS on top 58-56 St eve
29
out scored visi ting Eastern of half, connecting on 17 of 33
GAHS BLUE DEVILS 160)
••
FG-A FT. A PF RB TO TP
Pike Coun ty, ~0-13 during a floor attempts, 51 pet. from PLAYER- Pos .
7
·
14
2~
7
3
16
Tony
Folden
,
f
8
hot-torrid fourth quaJ,Ier the field.
5·13 0 ~ 0
2
10
Brent Sau nders, f
20
3
Tuesday night ror a 67~6Q nonWith 3:21 remaining, North Gary Swai n. f
I
1-2
1·2
4
I
J
leag ue victory .. The win . Gallia went ahead 58-55 and Keith McGuire. c
2.5
r6 s 9 2 7
2.7
o.o
4
d
0
5
avenged an earlier five-point began. playing a four-corner Brent. Johnson , g
6
9·23
2·3
1
20
3
loss at Eastern and snapped a offense. It forced the Eagles Gary Snowden , g
0-0
0-0
1
0
0
0
Terry WaiL g
si x-game winning streak for out of their zone. The Pirates, TOTALS
2H4
8 ~ 13
20
44 18
60
90~PINT
·· Coac h Don Cantrell 's Eagles . h011&gt;ever, Jostlhe ball on turn- ·
JACKSON1RONMEN I62)
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
Coach Jim Foster's Pirates overs while Eastern cut l he PLAYER ~ Pos .
CARRY OUT ONLY
11
3-9
5·7
2
6
0
a r e 12-J overall and 9-0 · count to 58-57 before Logan Tom Osborne, I
4
6· 17
2·3
2
Je ff Conroy , g
5
.again st league foes.
and James got key baskets to Marty Cooper , g
3-8
2-5
2
3
8
0
Trailing, :!0-26 at the half, give North Gallia more . George Sc hm id , f
6-10 0 ~ 0
2
5
0
12 .
6-12
H
4
I7
Steve Morrow , c
7
I
the Pirates s tormed back to breathing room.
o.o
0-0
0
1
0
0
Randy Jone s, g
take a 47-42 lead near the
Hilling double ligures for
0
0-0
0·0
0
0
0
Kyle Bu c hanan , f
closing of the third quarter . the Eagles were Rob Phillips Tom Dorsey , f
1
1
0-3
0-0
0
0
only to see the Pike Countians with 16 ; Smith with 14 and TOTALS
24· 59 14·23 12
21 . 7
62
Pomeroy , Ohio
ScOre by quart_g r"s :
kn ot the game at 47-47 .
Southworth with 11.
60
14 15 14 11 2 4
GAHS Blue Devils
· Greg James, an AII-Qhio
North Gallia sank 29 of 78 Jackson lronmen
121 2
1~16 2 6
62
ca ndid&lt;:~t e, gave another
floor allempts for 37 pel. and
Officials - Lo we ll Shope &amp; Dic k Hyland, Port~mout.h
outstanding performance, nine of 11 foul shots. The Chapter .
ripping the nets for 33 points , Pirates ha d 57 teams
grabbing 27 rebounds and r ebo unds . James got 27:
bl uekin g fh· e sho ts. He Logan 14 and Minnis, seven.
DR. RONALD F. RIVIER E
l'Ombincd with tea mmat e
Eastern
won
the GAS DRILLING
Ott A. J. STAEHLt
DR. FREEMAN MAlTZ
Fred Logan , 6-2 junior for- pre lim inary game, 57·32.
..---MEATS--~
CLEVELAND t UP! ) DR. CHRIS A. IlDDLE
ward, to lead the Pirates ' Arnold King led the winners Mayor Ralph Perk and of·
CAH COLLECT AREA CODE (6141
Superior Assorted
fourth period scoring. Both with 21. Doug Sisson had 10 ficials of the Monarch Energy
PHONE:
252-3181
252-8445
had 10 points. during that for the Little Bucs.
Corp.,
Hilliard,
Ohio ,
One or Two Day Full Denture
l-Ib.
winning effort.
North Ga lli a will host. Tuesday discussed a proposal
l .{,gHJl, held. to no points in Southern Friday night .
Service, Partials, Extractions,
to allow oil and g"s drilling on .
ihc fi rst half, eame on s trong
f
Box Score
X· Rays, Cleaning
land at the tq(y workhouse in
Home Made
Eastern
Pike C~OJ
to get 18 points before the
s uburban Warrensville
J enkins") 1 4; Phi l l ips i ~ 16,
game ended.
_
Sourhworfh
5 l 11 ;
Me
Tow"nsllip. •
lb.
Defensively, &lt;;oach Foster Culcheon :2 0_-4 ; Brown 1 0 :2 ;
'J'h1 · rw, ~r~cr l y is owned b'y
S
milh
·
7
•0
·
14
;
McGraw
2
0
4
;
credited James and Cisco
: · t (·i; 111 d am..l includes about
Coul ey 1-1·4 and De till ion 0 1
Minnis with great efforts. 1 Totals 26· 8· 60 .
, 1 v ,., rt•.c; u£ unused land, city
North
Galtia (67)
They held their opponents,
officials said ,
Runyon 1 0·2 : c . M innis 3 o 6;
Agar
Tim McCulcheml and Jay Logan
9 E.
8 2- 18 ; James 1J 7 3J ;
The drilling venture would
Jenkins to just fow- points S. Minnis 3 0 6 and Theiss 1 0 not cost the city anything, Ihe
COLUMBUS, ();tO 43205
lb.
•
.
TotAls 29· 9·67 .
each on a rugged man-to- 2. By
'
}'
ou
'll
Smi
lc
Tomor
ro
u•
If
Yo1.1
f
ak
•' Cure Oj }'ou r I, .,., fi 1 wi&lt;1~ ·
mayor
said.
In
fact,
if
gas
is
Quarters :
man defense.
·
Eas t P ike
17 13 17 13 - 60 found, it would provide a free
MOf'DAY THROUGH FRI_DAY
North Ga l lia 10 16 ?1 "lO 6?
North Gallia thanks· to its
su
ppply
of
gas
for
the
8:30 A.M. TO b:30 P.M.
Reserves :
Ea s lern
57
co ld shooting f 5·~5 1 fell Norlh Gal li a 37 .
workhouse.

SALAD
DRESSING

NOTICE

DEL MONTE

SAVE
.8()' LB.

LB.

Wittenberg hot

HOWARD E. FRANK
- MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR

KRAFT

QT.

Sala d Or ess•ng

CRISCO
3 LB. CAN

.~

L---~~~~~--------~-i

. Arm
. our Treet ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 99'.
V•ett• Beef Bar-~ue .•••.•••••· ·················~···79 ~
Del Mone
I Beets ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 39'
t Whoe
Folger's Instant Coffee •••••• ~ ••••••••••••• ~ .~!;'2.59
Hunt's T~atoes •••••••••••••.•••••••.•••• ;!~!~.!l~'
Coffee Mate ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .2!t'1.39
Crisco 01'1 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 79•
Dei . . Monte Pears •••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ~.!-.69~

Pirates avenged. loss
of

Fresh Ham Hock

'

WAGNER

HUCK
LEAN
&amp;

e

TENDER

ONLY

·32 OZ.,

BOT.

LB.
JACK FROST OR

JOY
Ll UID
22

JUICE
46 oz.
CAN

Miracle

Whip

GRAPEFRUIT or
ORANGE

DOMINO
SUGAR

oz.

trow's

Steak House

DENTI

RY

w

a:

LUNCH MEAT

::::&gt;

....
z

w

c

~~

HAM SALAD

SLICED BACON
,,

$119

'l:lv. , 5LBS

BTL

BAG

JUICY
U.S. NO.1

U.S. NO.1

YELLOW

w•NESAP

ONIONS

RED DELICIOUS

YELLOW

FAMILY

ONIONS

PACK

sgc

99~

FLORIDA

$139

ORANGES
s lb. baa

69e
."

~
.

5 LB.

Navy Bean Soup

"

/

OR

6 LB. BAG

LB.

BOILING
BEEF

LB. LEAN

LB.

APPLES

I

�•
~

Tht• I)ally St·nt int•l, Mid(Ut&gt;port -l't~J lll'l'i.'Y. ( J•• \\ t•thwstla ~ , .1; u1 . :!fl. W71i

Cape staudinps

Vaughan sets new
game high record
Pam

Vaughan

was out-

standing Monday night as she
broke her own game Sl'oring
record on the ba sket ba ll
t·our t as s he tallied J5 points

agamst Federal Hocking .
Pam, a jWlior guard, had a
record las t year of 28 points in
une game . Meig s easi ly
defeated Ft•tft~J:al Hocking,74

to 52.
Meigs domina ted the first
quarte t· as Pam , Bet h
Vr.iughan and Cath y Meadows

l'anned ltl; 9 and l potnls
r£&gt; spet•th·e!y. Th e secon d
quart er was somc wh~t
slower wi lh Pam , Meadows ,
Demaris Ash , Mary Boggs

and Glenda Brown all con-

the locke r r oom at

TOTALS

he~ lf-li ruc

14· 28

6-12
4 14
4-4
2·3

29
0· 1
32-71

7-12
13

0- t

o.o
1·3
0-4
t ·2
10-25

,

16
B
6
8
3

1
49

PF

TO TP
?
0 35
5
B 13
5
1
B
3
I
B
4
0
5
3
0
4
1
4
1
23
14 14

Toclav. ·IS

Sport Parade

765
727
7'll

6 6 649 651
Sout h Point
6 8 836 909
Logan
4 8 689 776
Athens
4 9 607 678
Jackson
4 10 7d 6 ns
Wellslon
3 9 627 "118
Non -SEOAL r es ult s:
Oak Hill 87 Soulh Poinl 77
Parker sb urq 01 P l . Pleasant
57

with a 1:ummanding 17 point
lead .
The third quarter was a
surpri se for Federal Hocking
when Meigs · switched to ~
full-cow- t zone press . Both
teams had plenty .of fo ul
lr uuble .
Mei gs'
lop
rebounder, Beth Vaughan,
and tcam captain Demaris
As h foul ed out of the game .
Mary Ja ne Deeley, coach,
deaned the bench during the
end of the third quarter.
Mei~s will .face Kyger Creek
Satw-day at home at 6 p. m .
RB

OP
597
622
698

Meigs

tributing: to the S('Oring effort
with 4, 2, 4, 2, and 2,
respeetive ly. Meigs went In

MEIGS GIRLS
FG-A FT-A
Pam Vaughan
Be th Vaug han
Demar i s Ash
Ca th y Meadows
Gtendil Brown
Mary Boggs
Tracy Burdette

ALL GAMES
Tu m
W l
P
lronlon
13 0 731
Whee1ersbur9 12 o 828
Portsmouth
9 J 770
Waverly
9 5 772
Gallipolis
B 6 778
P t. P leasant
7 5 754

SEOAL VARS IT Y

T eam
1ron1on
Gallipolis
waverly
A th ens
Meigs
Loga n
Jack,son
Wellslon
TOTALS

W
10
7
7

L
0
3
3

.t
4

J~a

OP
431
511
516
436

6

577

591

3 6
2 8
2 8

518
503
510

507

5

P
550
51'2
526

563

599
l9 39 4 154 41S4

Tu es day 's results :
Jac kson 62 Ga ll i polis 60 1:2 ot )
Ironton 61 Wave rlv 39

-

::-

-

ANOTHER VAUGHAN - Beth Vaughan, cousin of
high scoring Pam Vaughan , was second hig h scorer with
10 points Monday against Federal Hocking in the
Marauder girls' 74-52 victory. Here she shows ~ood form
in the jump shot.

20

SEOAL R ESE.RVES
Team
W l
P OP
Iron lim
B 2 490 335
wa11 er1y
8 2 425 368

Alhens
Logan
Jackson
Gall ipolls
Wellston
Me igs
TOTALS

7

2

426

323

5

4

354

A

6
7
8
8

376
379
378
381
357

3
2
2

39 39 3212

..

M&amp;R Shopping.Center

POT PIES

•

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

440

460
Sll
421

WE RESERVE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

]11~

Tuesday's results:

FOR

Jackson 38 Gallipolis l5
Ironton .d6 Waverly 26
Wel l~ton 47 Meigs -40
A th ens at Logan reset Feb . 20
Frlday's games :
waverly at Athens
Logan at Gallipol is
Me igs at Iron to n
Jackson at Wellston
Chil l i cot he at Porlsmouth
Soulh Point at Coa l Gro11e
Whee ler sb urg at Northwest
Pl . Pleasa n t at Dunbar
Saturday's games :
M eigs at Wahama
Whee ler sburg at Greenup

r---------------------~··I:·
I.

Jackson upsets
GAHS, 62-60

BANQUET

M eigs 12 Wellsion 61
Alhens at Logan. re set Feb .

'

Delinquent
11
Personal
Property''
Taxpayers

CARNATION

MIX MATCH

COFFEE-MATE

TABLE

11

OR

oz.

JAR

FOR

SUPERIORS LEAN Sl-ICED

BOILED

MIRACLE WHIP

F'rer throws by Jack so n 's Marty Coopf;! r and
NEW RECORD - Pam Vaughan dribbled up court
Monda y night in the Meigs Girls' game against Federal
Tom Os borne with lfi and fiv£' second s remaining
Hock ing, preparing no doubt, to put the ball in the basket.
in a second overtime pPriod gave Coach AI
•
The
Marauder
junior
set
a
new
school
single
ga
me
scoring
Burger's lronmen a 62-60 upset Southeaste rn Ohio
fly MILTON RICHMAN
record of 35 point !"!. - Katie Crow picture.
•
League
victory over vi s iting Ga llipoli s TuC' s day
t;PJ Spurts Editor
•
In compliance with provts1ons of
night.
Sec. 5719.04 R.C., there will be
NEW YORK t UP!)- The judge now was about to perform
Down IJy nine points late in the th ird period .
the toughest, must tormenting part of his job, passing senpublished during the next few
the lronmen came storm ing back in the fin a l
tence .
spc onds of r egulation play to knot the count at 54.weeks,
in this newspaper, a list of
He hammered his gavel down hard. So hard, the sudden
2-4 in the conterence. .
a ll . It was o{i-all at the e nd of the firs t overtimr .
OhiuCullcge
delinquent persona I property taxnoise it made shattered the judicial quietness of the court.
• Wooster fought all the way
De
spit
e
lhe'
def.ea
f
Morrow
's
chHrity
toss
5)
Haskdh&lt;J,IIRound·
up
:
1
11
2
" I sentence you," the judge said, ''to not less than one year
payers in Meigs County, Ohio.
in its home contest, but were
Gallipolis remained tied for
ma de it 59-56 and Marl y _United Press lntcrnatiunal
and not more than five years in prison ..."
ThE' perennially-s trong defeated at the last minute by
That was 12 years ago when Bobby Bonds was only 17, but he second place with Waverly in Cooper's free throw with 32
the
conference
standings
as
seconds
left
gave
J
ac
kson
;
Witt
enbe rg Tige r s fl exed Oberli n in another northern
All persons, partnerships, com 1
hasn't forgotten it. His first reaction was that the judge had to
·
f
11
their
musc les in an Ohio div ision g;;tme.
.
h
I
I
f
d
t
1e
&lt;
e
en
mg
c
am
piOns
e
60-56
advantage.
panies and corporations currently
be talking to someone else, that this sentence was being meted
Merlin Friend paced the
61.:m at Ironton last nigh t.
Foldt'n' s tap-in with lG Co nfer en ce ga me ag&lt;:~ in s t
out to some wrong-&lt;loer because Bobby Bonds knew in his
listed on the delinquent classified
, G'd llipolis dropped to 8-6 on seconds left &lt;' Ill it to 60,58, but Muskingurn Monday night. winners with 21 and Jimmy
heart he hadn 't commi lled any crime .
.Jones
added
16
more
for
the
or general personal property tax
and
the year and 7-3 inside the Gallia fouled on tlu• play.
The Ti gers shot a sizzling 69
" I was scared," confesses Bobby Bonds, who ultimately was
Yeomen.
league. Jackson , which upset Cooper sank the first of a unc- pt:&gt;r cent to durnp the Muskies
duplicates may avoid publication of
placed on three yea rs' probation and never went to jail. " It all
Preston Burroughs threw
51-40
last
Friday,
is
and-one
to
make
it
61·58.
fie
82-4
7
in
'"'
OAC
.
5ou
thern
Athens
sta rted as a fight. Fi'"t thing you know a knife was brought
such delinquency and subsequent
· 'd e missed the second. Fnldt•n Di\'i sion
conte s t
at in 1U poillLS for the Fighting
now4-10overa II.an d.2·8 ms1
out. Someb\ldy was killed in the figl .t, and I was scared.
property tax liens by paying said
Scots , who tra iled 35-38 at tile
the loop.
grabbed th e rcbunnd and hit a Springfield.
Petrified. At the time, it was wrong to mention anything about
h;d
f.
Hick
Wh
ile'
piir
cd
the
C
h
B
h
oac urger. w use squa d goal with seven ~cc.:u ml s ll'ft, .
taxes in full prior to Feb. 6, 1976.
another person. You just didn 't do that. You didn 't tell on
with 20 mnrk eh5 and
Oberlin is no w 7-7 overall
had lost three O\'ertime· cuttin.1' it hack to lllll' •. 61-60. Tigers
·
someone e lse."
ll
ba ltlcs earlier this year. Osborne!s
free throw with Iean uuqte 15lc:k l··r.n· etdllucl and 2-4 in co nf~r ence play.
Bobby Bonds has done a grea t deal of growing up since that
Collection of ·the delinquent I ists
Wooster 's is 10-8 overa ll and
crrdited a " lucky boum·t~' ' of five se•·onds ll'ft icPd Uw 14 ·
day he stood in front of the judge in Riverside , the city where
:~-;J
i
n
H11.
!
loop.
·
J
f.
1
d
1
La
rry
Hall
l'&lt;-lltlt'
through
h
b
11
publicized
will be enforced as
t e a m t Je ma Sl'l'IHI so
Ji.H'ksnn \'ktory.
he was born, where his father worked as a chef in a small truck
for
the
Musk
il~s
with
11
In
uthcr
g;.mn::s,
Ashl
and
the reg ulation game for
Gallipoli s led 14-12, 20-24
prescribed under Sec. 5719.08 R.C.
stop and his mother as a registered nurse in a local hospita l,
O \' erw h elm~d
Ohio .
saving the lronmen from a nd ~ :l-38 a t the qu &lt;~r· poi nt s.
where he played in the Little League and where he eventually
Wittenber g is now 12-2 for Domini c~l n 99-48 1 Malone beat
.
1oss. tc1'marks. Bi g' uest GA HS lead
anot hcr ht•artbrc&lt;.t k mg
was signed by the San Francisco Giants .
.
b
the
sc;Js mi :-md ~- l in con- Ct'cbrville 71-66, Hiram got
Gallipolis held a 54-50 WiiS 4:1.;14 . with J:24l eft in"--hc
• This season will be his 12th in organized ball, and Bobby
'
fcrencc pla~~. Mu!:iking;nn is. b:o Juli n Carroll li()...6] , and
Bonds will be going with his 'third major league club. Bobby
advanta ge foll owi ng two thi,rd period.
lO-S ovcr~J ll and ;).;{ in the
Taylor
1Jnrt. )
edged
cl1arity tosses by Tony
G•\HS hi t 26 of li4 field goal
Bonds was traded to the Ca lifornia Angels last m(Jnth after
loop .
Wilmington
91-4J9in
overtime,
Foldeh with 44 seconds left in attemt&gt;ls.· for :J7.5 t&gt;crcenl .
only one season with the New York Yankees for whom Bobby
El sewlu~n· in Ohio Conthe [ow·th period.
GAHS wa s eight of 13 at the
·
Bonds played hurt and still did a good job.
•
fer
cnceacl JOn 'l'~ue:-;d&lt;Jy ni ght ,
Jackson's Steve Morrow foul li ne for ·61.5 t&gt;crcent.. The
When the Giants traded him to the Yankees for Bobby
Ke nyon ed ge d Baldwi.nMur eer in October.of 1974 the consensus waq the Giants·got the
drove up the middle for a Devi ls had 20 perso na ls, 44 Wallace ?3-6?, and Wooste r
. ds, and 18 costly tw·nlayup with 34 seconds left to reboW1
short end o[ it.
1
cut Gallia 's lead to 54-52.
overs. Brent Saunders picked got by Obcr in fi2-59.
Bonds admits ·disappointment over being traded by the
Kenyon ':-; Tim Applc.ton and
Yankees but says he sees a chance now to have a good year
GAHS brought the ball up of! 20 rebound s for Ut e Don Ma rtin turned in 22
cow·t, and was working ·it Gallians, a c areer hig'h for
with the Angels and help some of their younger players.
points eac h to power the
a round wh en a Jack so n the 6·2 senior for·wurd".
Bobby Bonds doesn 't dwejl upon his past in or out of
Lords past Baldwin-Wallace
baseball. That doesn 't mean he ever forge ts it. Last Sunday,
defender slapped it out of a
Gary Snowden 's 20 poin ts in northern di vision action at
for example, a neighbor of his in Sa n Carlos, Calif., was · Blue Devil 's hand. The ball paced GAHS. Folden added
Ge:tmbicr .
worried about his 13-year-old daughter. He told Bonds she was
bouncedhighintotheair. Jeff 16 and Saunders 10.
Kenyon le&lt;l :l!l-211 a t insmoking and was (:I Ssociating with the wrong kind of company.
Conroy came out uf nowhere,
. Jackson hit 24 or 59 field termission, but had 10 hold off
Bonds had a little talk ,with the girl.
scooped it up , and raced all ~oar attempts for 40 .6 per- the Yell ow Ja c kets. who
the wa)' down court with the cent. The Ironmen were 14 of
·
·1
" You're judged by the company you keep," he said. to her. " I
cmnl' with1n a point mrc way
know and everybody else knows you're not a bad girl, but if the
tying goal at the 14 second 23 at the foul line fo r 60.8 dut'ing tlte sPcun rl hii lf.
girls yo u run with are doing things they shouldn 't be doing, and
mark .
percent. Jack son !t a d 12
Appleton also pulled down
12 oz.
yo u're wtth them, everybody'll say you 're doing those same
In the first overtime period , personals, 27 rebounds ami t2 reb'Junds to lead the Lords
things even though you 're not."
Tom Osborn e's tip put on ly seven turn overs . .Steve · in thal d~partment.
lt1'l
IO '!, oz
Bobby Bonds kn ows that !rom sad experience. Not
Jackson ahead for the first Morrow picked off seven
Bal&lt;.l~in -Wa l lft ce se nio 1•
1
1
It' me sJ·nce the lronmerl held a re boun ds for tl 1e wmners.
·
somebody else's, b~t his own.
in Gla ss
16 oz .
Dave Lung and Dan H;:~ gc n
2-0 lead · in the first period.
Morro\\· was also top scon•r go t 17 pomts each, whi le B-W
One minute and forty seconds fo r Jackson with 17 points. senior Jim English was the
0
remained .
Jeff Controy added 14 and game's leaUing rebou nde r
Tony Folden's lnng jumper Gcorgt' Srhmid 12 and Tom \vith 15.
at the I :26 mark tied it up at Osborne 11.
Kenyon is now .9-8 overa ll
2
56-all .
Friday , J ac kso n is at and JJaldwin-Wa llacc is 4-11,
Nor th Ga lli a's Pirates, behind 20.12 early in the
In the second overtime, Wellston. Gallipolis will host overall. Both tea ms a rc now
leade r s
the Southern second quarter. Tlie Pirates George Schmid's jumper put IJJgan.
24 oz .
Valley 1\thletic Con ference , came on strong in the second JHS on top 58-56 St eve
29
out scored visi ting Eastern of half, connecting on 17 of 33
GAHS BLUE DEVILS 160)
••
FG-A FT. A PF RB TO TP
Pike Coun ty, ~0-13 during a floor attempts, 51 pet. from PLAYER- Pos .
7
·
14
2~
7
3
16
Tony
Folden
,
f
8
hot-torrid fourth quaJ,Ier the field.
5·13 0 ~ 0
2
10
Brent Sau nders, f
20
3
Tuesday night ror a 67~6Q nonWith 3:21 remaining, North Gary Swai n. f
I
1-2
1·2
4
I
J
leag ue victory .. The win . Gallia went ahead 58-55 and Keith McGuire. c
2.5
r6 s 9 2 7
2.7
o.o
4
d
0
5
avenged an earlier five-point began. playing a four-corner Brent. Johnson , g
6
9·23
2·3
1
20
3
loss at Eastern and snapped a offense. It forced the Eagles Gary Snowden , g
0-0
0-0
1
0
0
0
Terry WaiL g
si x-game winning streak for out of their zone. The Pirates, TOTALS
2H4
8 ~ 13
20
44 18
60
90~PINT
·· Coac h Don Cantrell 's Eagles . h011&gt;ever, Jostlhe ball on turn- ·
JACKSON1RONMEN I62)
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
Coach Jim Foster's Pirates overs while Eastern cut l he PLAYER ~ Pos .
CARRY OUT ONLY
11
3-9
5·7
2
6
0
a r e 12-J overall and 9-0 · count to 58-57 before Logan Tom Osborne, I
4
6· 17
2·3
2
Je ff Conroy , g
5
.again st league foes.
and James got key baskets to Marty Cooper , g
3-8
2-5
2
3
8
0
Trailing, :!0-26 at the half, give North Gallia more . George Sc hm id , f
6-10 0 ~ 0
2
5
0
12 .
6-12
H
4
I7
Steve Morrow , c
7
I
the Pirates s tormed back to breathing room.
o.o
0-0
0
1
0
0
Randy Jone s, g
take a 47-42 lead near the
Hilling double ligures for
0
0-0
0·0
0
0
0
Kyle Bu c hanan , f
closing of the third quarter . the Eagles were Rob Phillips Tom Dorsey , f
1
1
0-3
0-0
0
0
only to see the Pike Countians with 16 ; Smith with 14 and TOTALS
24· 59 14·23 12
21 . 7
62
Pomeroy , Ohio
ScOre by quart_g r"s :
kn ot the game at 47-47 .
Southworth with 11.
60
14 15 14 11 2 4
GAHS Blue Devils
· Greg James, an AII-Qhio
North Gallia sank 29 of 78 Jackson lronmen
121 2
1~16 2 6
62
ca ndid&lt;:~t e, gave another
floor allempts for 37 pel. and
Officials - Lo we ll Shope &amp; Dic k Hyland, Port~mout.h
outstanding performance, nine of 11 foul shots. The Chapter .
ripping the nets for 33 points , Pirates ha d 57 teams
grabbing 27 rebounds and r ebo unds . James got 27:
bl uekin g fh· e sho ts. He Logan 14 and Minnis, seven.
DR. RONALD F. RIVIER E
l'Ombincd with tea mmat e
Eastern
won
the GAS DRILLING
Ott A. J. STAEHLt
DR. FREEMAN MAlTZ
Fred Logan , 6-2 junior for- pre lim inary game, 57·32.
..---MEATS--~
CLEVELAND t UP! ) DR. CHRIS A. IlDDLE
ward, to lead the Pirates ' Arnold King led the winners Mayor Ralph Perk and of·
CAH COLLECT AREA CODE (6141
Superior Assorted
fourth period scoring. Both with 21. Doug Sisson had 10 ficials of the Monarch Energy
PHONE:
252-3181
252-8445
had 10 points. during that for the Little Bucs.
Corp.,
Hilliard,
Ohio ,
One or Two Day Full Denture
l-Ib.
winning effort.
North Ga lli a will host. Tuesday discussed a proposal
l .{,gHJl, held. to no points in Southern Friday night .
Service, Partials, Extractions,
to allow oil and g"s drilling on .
ihc fi rst half, eame on s trong
f
Box Score
X· Rays, Cleaning
land at the tq(y workhouse in
Home Made
Eastern
Pike C~OJ
to get 18 points before the
s uburban Warrensville
J enkins") 1 4; Phi l l ips i ~ 16,
game ended.
_
Sourhworfh
5 l 11 ;
Me
Tow"nsllip. •
lb.
Defensively, &lt;;oach Foster Culcheon :2 0_-4 ; Brown 1 0 :2 ;
'J'h1 · rw, ~r~cr l y is owned b'y
S
milh
·
7
•0
·
14
;
McGraw
2
0
4
;
credited James and Cisco
: · t (·i; 111 d am..l includes about
Coul ey 1-1·4 and De till ion 0 1
Minnis with great efforts. 1 Totals 26· 8· 60 .
, 1 v ,., rt•.c; u£ unused land, city
North
Galtia (67)
They held their opponents,
officials said ,
Runyon 1 0·2 : c . M innis 3 o 6;
Agar
Tim McCulcheml and Jay Logan
9 E.
8 2- 18 ; James 1J 7 3J ;
The drilling venture would
Jenkins to just fow- points S. Minnis 3 0 6 and Theiss 1 0 not cost the city anything, Ihe
COLUMBUS, ();tO 43205
lb.
•
.
TotAls 29· 9·67 .
each on a rugged man-to- 2. By
'
}'
ou
'll
Smi
lc
Tomor
ro
u•
If
Yo1.1
f
ak
•' Cure Oj }'ou r I, .,., fi 1 wi&lt;1~ ·
mayor
said.
In
fact,
if
gas
is
Quarters :
man defense.
·
Eas t P ike
17 13 17 13 - 60 found, it would provide a free
MOf'DAY THROUGH FRI_DAY
North Ga l lia 10 16 ?1 "lO 6?
North Gallia thanks· to its
su
ppply
of
gas
for
the
8:30 A.M. TO b:30 P.M.
Reserves :
Ea s lern
57
co ld shooting f 5·~5 1 fell Norlh Gal li a 37 .
workhouse.

SALAD
DRESSING

NOTICE

DEL MONTE

SAVE
.8()' LB.

LB.

Wittenberg hot

HOWARD E. FRANK
- MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR

KRAFT

QT.

Sala d Or ess•ng

CRISCO
3 LB. CAN

.~

L---~~~~~--------~-i

. Arm
. our Treet ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 99'.
V•ett• Beef Bar-~ue .•••.•••••· ·················~···79 ~
Del Mone
I Beets ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 39'
t Whoe
Folger's Instant Coffee •••••• ~ ••••••••••••• ~ .~!;'2.59
Hunt's T~atoes •••••••••••••.•••••••.•••• ;!~!~.!l~'
Coffee Mate ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .2!t'1.39
Crisco 01'1 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 79•
Dei . . Monte Pears •••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ~.!-.69~

Pirates avenged. loss
of

Fresh Ham Hock

'

WAGNER

HUCK
LEAN
&amp;

e

TENDER

ONLY

·32 OZ.,

BOT.

LB.
JACK FROST OR

JOY
Ll UID
22

JUICE
46 oz.
CAN

Miracle

Whip

GRAPEFRUIT or
ORANGE

DOMINO
SUGAR

oz.

trow's

Steak House

DENTI

RY

w

a:

LUNCH MEAT

::::&gt;

....
z

w

c

~~

HAM SALAD

SLICED BACON
,,

$119

'l:lv. , 5LBS

BTL

BAG

JUICY
U.S. NO.1

U.S. NO.1

YELLOW

w•NESAP

ONIONS

RED DELICIOUS

YELLOW

FAMILY

ONIONS

PACK

sgc

99~

FLORIDA

$139

ORANGES
s lb. baa

69e
."

~
.

5 LB.

Navy Bean Soup

"

/

OR

6 LB. BAG

LB.

BOILING
BEEF

LB. LEAN

LB.

APPLES

I

�,

v~i:;;;~e~;id~llt' l''"•r'~==0:·:W:e:d:n:es~·ci«~·

=~~::;:;:::::::::---~~----~~~~---------------------------~--

•: ·:
·'•:· •:
'·:2R:. :t!1;71:;

wanted for
program

Obscene l:aller 's New Twist
Dear Helen :
Last spring you warned readers all about the "VD
Telephony ," the stinker who calls up wives, says he 's
representing the County Health Department, and mforms
them their husbands have a venereal disease.
Now there's a new kind of obscene call : A woman, or
perhaps a man with a high voice, introduces her (him) seH as a
telephone company employee " tracking down an obscene
phone caller in this area." She as~s the housew!Ve on the other
end of the line if she " will please cooperate" by holding this

Dear Readers :
Since "specialists" seem to be the latest phony-call
ginunick, here's a warning: Don't act on an unusual phoned
request or annoWlcement until you've checked the supposed
source. - H.

·

+++

Dear Helen:
I'm becoming impotent, and I think it's because of a to&lt;&gt;radical circumcision when I was a baby . I can't get any doctor
to admit this. They all hang together to protect their own.
I recently read about a. baby boy who was "converted" into
a girl because the surgeon goofed during circumcision. If these
parents can sue on hehaH of their child, why can't I sue the
doctor who messed up my love life? - Would there be a statute
· of limitations here? - THROUGH AT 3!i

New personnel announced
at senior citizens center
New personnel at the Mejgs
Senior Citizens Center, as
announced today by the
Meigs County Council on
Aging, Inc. , are Douglas G.
retired
senior
Lizon,
volunteer program (RSVP )
director; Mrs. Susan Oliver,
social services coordinator,
and Mrs . Donna Williamson ,
outreach employe .
Lizon, who fills the position
vacated by the resignation of
Mrs. Pearl Welker, is a
graduate of Rio Grande
College; magna cum laude ,
~974, where he majored in
jfldividualized
social
9ciences, with spedal emphasis in psych.ology, social
work and biology for attainment of a holistic understanding
of
human
behavior . He has also completed 10 hours of graduate
studies in gerontology at
Miami University.
Lizon has worked with
Scripp's Foundation on
Aging, Oxford, 'where he was
a
graduate
research

assistant,

assisting

the

faculty in gathering research
data in gerontology. He was
also associa.t ed with the
Jefferson County Comprehensive Mental Health
Center, Steubenville, as a
primary therapist, and a lso
worked as a social worker
there with experience in
individual, group and family
counseling.
Married with a year-old
daughter , Deidre Denise, Mr .
and Mrs. Uzon , plan to move
to Meigs County soon. Lizon
is the son of John W. Lizon,
Gavin .plant . manager, and
Mrs. Uzon, and he and his
family are temporarily
residing with his parenls in
Addison.
He will spend three days
this week at Salt Fork Lodge
in Cambridge attending the
RSVP stale convention .
As social services coordinator, Mrs. Oliver's area of
responsibility will be in the
area of' further development
of health, education and

soCial services for senior
citizens.
Expansion
of
programs s uch as mull.iphasic screening, blood

pressure clinics, first aid
course offerings, self-care

programs, as well as the Meigs County CoWlcil 011
education c'ourses and social Aging .
Individual contact will be
programs will be planned by
the
basis of her role in telling
Oliver
.
Mrs.
A native of Morgan CoWlty, senior citizens about the
Mrs. Oliver and her family, transportation, nutritlon ,
Raymond L. Oliver, a Gavin horne maintenance social
emp loye and children Ryan , aspects of the program, and
eight, and Raeleen , 12, moved the assistance available in
form s
and
here about three years ago. comp leting
They reside at Route 3, referrals to other agencies.
Married
to
Fred
Pomeroy .
Mrs. Oliver graduated Williamson , employe at
from high school in 1962 and Kyger Creek power plant, the
couple has three c!Iildren,
Business
the Meredith
College, Zanesville in 1963_. Bob , a senior ~t Meigs High
She was. employed at the · School, Debbie, a junior, and
McConnelsville Library prior Rick, an eighth grader. They
to comin~ here and was also reside in Rutland .
For t!&gt;e past eight years
involved in organizing a head
start program in Morgan Mrs . Williamson has worked
as an Avon representative .
County .
Currently she is active with She is a graduate "' MidBeta Sigma Phi Sorority, dleport High School, and is
in
school
president of the Sorority 's active
City Council which is com- organizations, the Auxiliary
prised of members from · the of the Rutland Fire Departthree local chapters. She is ment, and the United
secretary of the · Board of Methodist Women of the
Rutland Church.
Trustees of the Meigs ·County
While all three of the new
Historical Society, and is
staff members are currently
active with the Chester PTA.
full-time emp loy es, Mrs .
. Jn · Mrs . Williamson's role
Thomas reports that the
as outreach worker, she will
expectation is that Mrs.
travel over Meigs County
Williamson and Mrs. Oliver
seeking out senior citizens
will be only part-lime ern·
who need enlightenment on
ployes beginning in JWle due
the sentices ahd programs of
to the lack of funds .

Dear Through :
The statute of limitations isn't your problem: it's proving
there WAS a medical limitation in the first place. A 3:i-year-old

Mrs. Michael obseroes
90th birthday recentlj

"

..

WEINERS

$

8- 16 oz.
.Returnables

20 cnt.
pllg.

BEEF
Any Amount

•· 69c

can

SLAB
BACON

e·
ea.

•• ~

French City

JO-BO
DOG FOOD
16 oz.

order the 1976 Prayer
Calendar.
The name of Mary L.
Miller, a deaconess in South
Carolina was selected by the
president and a card signed
for her birthday. Kate
Hanacher accepted the
Prayer Calendar for the next
month. A letter was read
from Paul Hawks thanking
the Society for help on the
Bang-le-desh project i l he
adult 'S.S. class also contributed to this project. )
Mrs . Finch gave two instances of personal missions.
June Stearns led the Call to .
Prayer and Self Denial.
The program was "And All
These Things Shall Be Ad-·
ded ~' with readings, songs
and an offering .
The hostesses served
refreshments to those named
and Thelma Henderson, Osie
Follrod, Kathy Follrod, Clair
Follrod and Clarence Henderson .
The next meeting will be
held al the home of June
Stearns on Tuesday, Feb. 17,
at 8 p.m. with Emma Lou
Finch leading the program on
"Child Advocacy."

PEPSI-COLA
and
7-UP

FRENCH CITY

GROUND

lb.

'

Installation
highlights
meeting

Polly's Pointers
Try iron on slipper saver

Alfred UMW gathers

- The UMW of
the Alfred United Methodist
Church met recently at the
home of Clara Follrod and
Nina Robinson with nine
members attending .
The meeting, in charge of
president Nellie Parker,
opened with prayer by Helen
Woode. The hymn s un g was·
"Glory To His Name ."
Roll call was given and,
and 19 sick and shut-in ·calls
was baked by Mrs. Wilma etta
reported.
Leifheit.
.CommLmications were read
Mrs. Michael received gifts
from Miss Dawsey in South
from her family, including a
floral arrangement given by .Carolina and Miss Newnan in
Mr. and Mrs . Samuel . Boliv ia from the prayer
Calendar-i t was decided to
Michael. She also received
many cards and good wishes
from friends . .
Mrs . Michael was born
MONITORS LISTED
at Pass Creek, Wyo . She
Riverby
monitors fur this
grew
up
and
taught
weekend
have been anschool near Spokane, Washnounced
.
Saturday ' s
ington.
She
married
are
Mrs.
Edward
monitors
Gurn'ey L. Michael December
Berkich,
Mrs.
Robert
Adams,
27, 1908. They lived in
to
3p.m
.;
Mrs
.
Roy
Briggs,
1
Washington State, West
Mrs.
Mike
Bucci,
3
to
5 p.m.
Virginia , and Ohio; Mrs.
Sunday's
monitors
are
Mrs.
·Michael has lived in her
Harold
M.
Brown,
Mrs.
present home on Old ChesterJames Orr, 1 to 3 p.m.; Mrs .
Pomeroy Road almost 56
E.
V. Clark, Mrs. Forest
years . Mr . Michael died
Davis,
3 to 5 p.m.
August 'XI , 1975.

CHESTER - The ninetieth
birthday on January 20 of
Mrs. Florence Michael was
honored by members of her
family with two dinners. On
Sunday, January 18, a surprise steak dinner was held at
her home near here . ·The
birthday cake was decorated
by Mrs. Samuel Michael and
Samuel Michael asked the
blessing . Others present were
Tim Vooris, Mrs . Gary
Michael, Louise Michael and
Mr . and Mrs. Wilber Parker .
On Tuesday, January 20,
Mrs . Michael' enjoyed a
dinner at her grandson's, Mr.
and Mrs . Gary Michael ,
Others present were Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Leifheit, and
Matthew and Kimberly
Michael. The birthday cake

MEMBERS of Ule Fairmount Dance Theatre of Cleveland presented a lecturedemonstration of modern dance to students at the Cheshire.Kyger Elementary School
Tuesday morning. The dancers, here under the sponsorship of the French Art Colony, will
be in concert this evening at the Gallia Academy High School auditorium hegiMing at 8.
General admission tickets are $2 for adults, and $1 for students and senior citizens. Pa tron
tickets are $5 each. Tickets may be purchased at the Callia County High Schools, Rio
Grande College and ln in downtown Gallipolis at PJ's, the Uniform Center , Peddler's
Pantry and Bernadine's.

Installation of officers
man can become impotent for other reasons than "the
highlighted a recent meeting
unkindest cut of all,'; you know. - H.
of the Pythian Sisters 591 held
+++
at the .Wilkesville Temple.
Dear Helen:
Installing officer was
When I got home from visiting my sister, I found a watch
Thelma Campbell, with
and several of my expensive rings missing from my jewelry
Gladys Major, grand senior ,
box by the bed.
and Loisene Hoy, grand
My husband says someone must have broken in, but why
manager . Installed were
just these few items stolen when there were so many other .
Anna Ogdin, past chief;
things avl!ilable? I've said nothing bUt I suspect he had a
Martha Ward, most excellent
woman here, who just wore the things home with her. This
chief; Neva Metz, most exbecause he says .i t was such a "small loss" we shouldn't report
cellent senior; Jennie Maddy,
it to our insurance company or the police. He probably doesn't
excellent junior; Mary
want to be questioned .
Helem, manager; Robbie
Should I report tne theft anyway? And how do I stop
Good, manager; Wykle
silspecting my husband? I don't want to ruin our relationship
Whitley, treasurer ; Lida
which has been more than great since my return. - R. 0 .
Jones, protector; Wanda
Johnston, guard, and BarDear R.:
Ask yourself this : is it better to know and forgive or be bara Lester, musician .
Mrs . Ward closed th e
nagged by suspicion ?
meeting
which was followed
Your husband will probably tell you the truth , if you .let
by
a
luncheon
prepared by
him know you won't hold it against him . (And the insurance
the refreshment committee,
money might help salve your wounds.) - H.
Pearl Bowen, Loisene Hoy,
Mary Ellen Rider and Karen
Starkey . Next meeting will be
Feb . 20. Eighteen members
attended.
AL~' RED

e

IMPERIAL
MARGARINE
lib.

..

Store hours:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 Second St.

all. n

Sure enough, about half an hour later, Mr. Dirtymouth
comes on the horn and his victim, thinking she can help trap
'
.
him, gets an earful.
.
This is to alert people that telephone compames do NOT
request such cooperation - by phone .
The best way to deal with an obscene caller is to blow the
whistle on him - literally, with an extra-piercing pollee
whistle - then hang up before his ears stop ringing. WAJ{NER

: social services -coordinator.

Jan. 31, 1976

TUPPERS PLAINS More volunteers are now
· being recruited for the Right
to Read program at Tuppers
Plains Elementary School.
The local program is part of
the national Right to Read
effort whose goal is to " improve reading instruction · for

lowlife in conversation for 15 minUtes "until we can trace the
ca n ..

:
NEW EMPLOYES AT THE Senior Citizens Center are left to right, Mrs. Donna
: Williamson, outreach worker; Douglas G. Lizon , RSVP director, and Mrs . Susan Oliver,

Prices·
Effective Thru
'

MRS. HORAK ILL
Mrs . Elizabeth Horak,

Pomeroy , is a

By Polly Cramer
INFLATION FIGHTER
DEAR POLLY - During
these days of inOated prices
we are ail trying to gel the
last bit of wear out of
anything we have so wheri the
soles of my family's knit
slippers start to wear out I
apply denim iron..,n knee
patches that I have cut to fi t
the shape of the soles. Iron on
with a hot Iron and then sew
aroWld the edges of the
patches with th e sewing
machine to make sure the
patches slay on liglllly . This
adds a lot of wear to a pair of
slippers . - M.K.
DEAR POLLY - Many
products a r e packed in boxe~s
that are completely covered
with foil or a waxed type
paper . The :'easy pouring"
spout is under the paper
covering that must be torn
away before the spout can be

pulled open . As a result much
of the product falls beleween
the box and the outer warpping so is never used . Avoid
this waste by plaicng a piece
of masking tape right
BELOW the puring spout. In
other words, tape the outer
paper to the box and there is

surgical

patient at St. Joseph
Hospital, Parkers burg . Her
room number is 522.

DIVOKCE ASKED
Judith
M.
Anderson,
Middleport, has filed suit for
divorce in Meigs Co unty
Common Pleas Court against
Thomas F. Anderson , Middleport, c harging gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty . Connie Sue Moodispaugh was granted a divorce
from William Moodispaugh
on charges of extreme
cruelty
and
habitual
drunkenness.

SQUARE DANCE SET
A square dance will be held
Saturday night at the
pomeroy Elem.e ntary School
auditorium from 8 to 11 p.m.
Charge for the dance spon·
sored by the Senior Citizens
will be $1 for adults . Children
under 12 will admitted free.

BIRTHDAY HONORED

Tara Dawn Bacon was
hon ored Friday night with a
slumber party in observance
of her 12th birthday anniversary at the home of her
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Jack
Bacon, Middleport. Pizza,
cake and ice cream were
served to Tammi Ferguson,
Lynn Kloes, Melissa Spencer,
Helen Slack, Robin Kitchen
and Sheila Powell.

OPEN HOUSE SET
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Masonic Lodge
411, F&amp;AM, will entertain the
publlc with an open house at
the new temple from 2:30 to
4:30p .m. Sunday.

no slot for the product to fall
through. This way one gels to
use 100 per cent of the product
bought. - SALLY J .
DEAR POLLY - Even
sewing threa d is expensive
these days so I save thread by
carefully removing basting
threads after stitching to
reuse for more basting .
( Polly's note ' - As it is
removed it could be wound
around ane mply spool to
prevent tangles and knots.)
- KATE .
DEAR POLLY - If you
have a· parakeet save the
"wasted;' seed from the cage
and stir into a coffee can full
of old grease . Let it harden ,

remove fr.Jm the can1 put in a
net vegetable bag and hang in
a tree to provide food for wild
birds dtiring the winter . IDA.
DEAR POLLY - I think
one of the biggest sayings
women can make in the food
budget is to mak~ their own
bread rather than buy it at
the store . I paid slightly less
than a dollar for five pounds
of white flour and with it
baked four loaves of bread,
six bllns and eight doughnuts .
TWO loaves of siore bread
would cost me a little more
than than the flour cost. llive
alone and this provided me
with' enough bread for a
month . Also there is
something lasting about
homemade
bread
and
sometimes bought bread
seems to go like a puff of
Wllld .

· After Christmas the linen
calendars that se)l for about a
dollar and half can often be
bought for ten cents each and
be put to practical use like
dish towels, tray cloths , ek . I
use one over my lap as I drink
tea or coffee while watching
TV on a winter's night. L.C.E.
DEAR POLLY - To get
that last bi I of cleaner or
hand lotion out of pump
dispenser bottle I slip on a
section of a plastic drinking
straw so all the contents can
be used and none wasted .
To loosen a ribbon 'knot
sprinkle with talcum powder.
- AMELIA .

·1·
3
7
2% MILK.......•................~!: .

BROUGHTON'S

.

.

°

FRESH .BROCCOLI............~~~c.h•••5 9
FLORIDA.ORANGES ......·.~,!~-.~~! .. 59°
Golden Isle

BREAD

16 oz. loaves

Baked by Betsy Ross .••••••••••••

VolWlteer tutors at Tuppers
Plains School are helping
individuals and small groups
of primary children with
reading
comprehension,
listening skills, reading
games and readiness activit ies . Kindergarten and
primary teachers schedule
plan
prescriptive
a nd
programs with the tutors.
Volunteer tutors include
parents, upper elementary
students and other adults.
Senior citizens and all other
interested persons who would
like to help children with
reading are invited to call the
school at 667·3310 .
Mrs . R. M. Jones, special
reading teacher 1 and Mrs .
Robert · Sanders are cochairpersons of the program .
Those present at a recent
meeting
to
formulate
programs with volunteers
were Mrs . Sanders ~ Mrs .
Betty Osborne, Mrs . John
Rice, Mrs . Wayne Uptpn ,
Mrs . Carolyn Tripp, Mrs.
Carlotta Reed, Mrs . Kathy
Davis, Miss DeeDee Durst,
Miss Margery Myers, Scott
Skinner ,
Mrs .
Lavina
Brannon , Mrs . Barbara
Tripp, Mrs. Chris!)• Caldwell , ·
Mrs . Wilma Parker , Mrs .
Bea Douglas and Mrs . Jonas.

French City
LIVER PUDDING.......~99 e
Superiors Polish
· 'l · .·
SAUSAGE.. ............. ~ .
t

'

,([

GRADE A

Baby Beef

.. Prices Effective ·

ThuiSdly
lhn Sunday
.
. .
"

$

'

· .

LB. 49e
.
WHOLE FRYERS.......... . .
!liP»

39

II'

WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennett
Post 123, 6:30 p.m . dinner
Wednesday with Legionnaires. Meeting at 1:30 p.m .
of both Auxiliary and Legion.
WU..DWOOD Garden Club,
7:30p.m . Wednesady, home
of Mrs . Mason Fisher with
Mrs. Pau) Fisher as cohostess .
OHIO VALLEY Cornmandery 24, regular state
co nvocation, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Uons Club ladies
night, Thursday 6:30p.m. at
the Meigs Inn . Lions and their
ladies invited .
GALLIA-MEJGS
Community Action Agency free
clthing day for low income
persons, 9 a. m. to 2 p. m .
Wednesday
at .. former
Cheshire High School.

ROUND STEAK •••••• !~·.
$
59
Baby Beef
T-BONE STEAK •••••• !b~.
$
Babj Beef
.'

lr

"

'I

1

. fb.

RIB STEAK ••••

' /'

SUNUAY
M-M MEN's Slo·Pltch
softball league Sunday, I :30
p.m. at Royal Crown BotUing
co. garage on North Second
Ave., Middleport. Officers,
managers or representatives
urged to attend .
MEIGS GIRLS' Slo-Pitch
Softball League I both junior
and senior division) Sunday,
3:30 p.m. at Royal Crown
Bottling Co . garage on North
Second Ave., Middleport. All
officers, and representatives
from all 14 of last -y~ar's
teams are urged to attend, or
' anyone who is interest..d.

All Purpose
POTATOES ............ !~.~.99 e
Joan of Arc 29 oz.

·

·

2 '1
17 ounce
•1
.ARGO PEAS~ •••••••••••

. KIDNEY BEANS......
••
,,
'

.,

•

.
,·. ,-) . ;~~~}:~$

.
I

Campbell's Vegetable
P. ••••••••• ~ ••••~

sou

l,QUPON

•

N~AN Hl~ES

'

19 oz.
Box

.

2 $1
For

•"

5

c:a~'l

.

....

1

'

v

With '

Coupon

.,

,,

'

.' . -·

•

.

.
·'

.

FOR

CANS

•

.

"'

COUPON

CAKE fttiX

•

...

'

THURSDAY
OHIO VALLEY Commandery 24, special meeting
to confer orders of the
temple . 7: 30 Thursday,
Pomeroy Masonic Temp le .
. FREE CLOTHING day at
Salvation
Army
Headquarters, 115 Butternut
Ave ., 10 a .m. until noon
. Thursday; all area residents
in ne~d of clothing invited .
SATURDAY
ANNUAL INSPECTION ,
Pomeroy I..odge 164, F&amp;AM,
Saturday, 7:30 p.m.; all
Master Masons invited .
HARLEM ALL Stars
against the Eastern High
School Alumni basketball
team, 8 p.m. Saturday at
Eastern High School; public
invited .

OFFICERS NAMED
New officers were eiected
at a recent meeting of \he
Meigs County Council on
Aging . They are Mrs . Lilllam
Moore, president ; the Rev .
Howard •Shiveley, vice
' president; Mrs . Pauline
~ Roush, secretary, and Mrs .
Gertrude Mitchell , treasurer .

Sun. 10 to 5

.

79e

•·

Mon.-sat.

POMEROY, OHIO

NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERV'ZO

'

.

'
•' '

..,

..

(:

•

r

,

I

I,

M)OtGARINE
••••
~
••••••
'
'

~
t:

_ .... ._ __

1 ~ • '' • • • '
I~,

t:

•

•

I

e

l

Genuine Johann Haviland

l: (4) ¥er/Ashtrays
.

,. ·

$4 .99 Value ..,...,_,....._.,...._

ij

�,

v~i:;;;~e~;id~llt' l''"•r'~==0:·:W:e:d:n:es~·ci«~·

=~~::;:;:::::::::---~~----~~~~---------------------------~--

•: ·:
·'•:· •:
'·:2R:. :t!1;71:;

wanted for
program

Obscene l:aller 's New Twist
Dear Helen :
Last spring you warned readers all about the "VD
Telephony ," the stinker who calls up wives, says he 's
representing the County Health Department, and mforms
them their husbands have a venereal disease.
Now there's a new kind of obscene call : A woman, or
perhaps a man with a high voice, introduces her (him) seH as a
telephone company employee " tracking down an obscene
phone caller in this area." She as~s the housew!Ve on the other
end of the line if she " will please cooperate" by holding this

Dear Readers :
Since "specialists" seem to be the latest phony-call
ginunick, here's a warning: Don't act on an unusual phoned
request or annoWlcement until you've checked the supposed
source. - H.

·

+++

Dear Helen:
I'm becoming impotent, and I think it's because of a to&lt;&gt;radical circumcision when I was a baby . I can't get any doctor
to admit this. They all hang together to protect their own.
I recently read about a. baby boy who was "converted" into
a girl because the surgeon goofed during circumcision. If these
parents can sue on hehaH of their child, why can't I sue the
doctor who messed up my love life? - Would there be a statute
· of limitations here? - THROUGH AT 3!i

New personnel announced
at senior citizens center
New personnel at the Mejgs
Senior Citizens Center, as
announced today by the
Meigs County Council on
Aging, Inc. , are Douglas G.
retired
senior
Lizon,
volunteer program (RSVP )
director; Mrs. Susan Oliver,
social services coordinator,
and Mrs . Donna Williamson ,
outreach employe .
Lizon, who fills the position
vacated by the resignation of
Mrs. Pearl Welker, is a
graduate of Rio Grande
College; magna cum laude ,
~974, where he majored in
jfldividualized
social
9ciences, with spedal emphasis in psych.ology, social
work and biology for attainment of a holistic understanding
of
human
behavior . He has also completed 10 hours of graduate
studies in gerontology at
Miami University.
Lizon has worked with
Scripp's Foundation on
Aging, Oxford, 'where he was
a
graduate
research

assistant,

assisting

the

faculty in gathering research
data in gerontology. He was
also associa.t ed with the
Jefferson County Comprehensive Mental Health
Center, Steubenville, as a
primary therapist, and a lso
worked as a social worker
there with experience in
individual, group and family
counseling.
Married with a year-old
daughter , Deidre Denise, Mr .
and Mrs. Uzon , plan to move
to Meigs County soon. Lizon
is the son of John W. Lizon,
Gavin .plant . manager, and
Mrs. Uzon, and he and his
family are temporarily
residing with his parenls in
Addison.
He will spend three days
this week at Salt Fork Lodge
in Cambridge attending the
RSVP stale convention .
As social services coordinator, Mrs. Oliver's area of
responsibility will be in the
area of' further development
of health, education and

soCial services for senior
citizens.
Expansion
of
programs s uch as mull.iphasic screening, blood

pressure clinics, first aid
course offerings, self-care

programs, as well as the Meigs County CoWlcil 011
education c'ourses and social Aging .
Individual contact will be
programs will be planned by
the
basis of her role in telling
Oliver
.
Mrs.
A native of Morgan CoWlty, senior citizens about the
Mrs. Oliver and her family, transportation, nutritlon ,
Raymond L. Oliver, a Gavin horne maintenance social
emp loye and children Ryan , aspects of the program, and
eight, and Raeleen , 12, moved the assistance available in
form s
and
here about three years ago. comp leting
They reside at Route 3, referrals to other agencies.
Married
to
Fred
Pomeroy .
Mrs. Oliver graduated Williamson , employe at
from high school in 1962 and Kyger Creek power plant, the
couple has three c!Iildren,
Business
the Meredith
College, Zanesville in 1963_. Bob , a senior ~t Meigs High
She was. employed at the · School, Debbie, a junior, and
McConnelsville Library prior Rick, an eighth grader. They
to comin~ here and was also reside in Rutland .
For t!&gt;e past eight years
involved in organizing a head
start program in Morgan Mrs . Williamson has worked
as an Avon representative .
County .
Currently she is active with She is a graduate "' MidBeta Sigma Phi Sorority, dleport High School, and is
in
school
president of the Sorority 's active
City Council which is com- organizations, the Auxiliary
prised of members from · the of the Rutland Fire Departthree local chapters. She is ment, and the United
secretary of the · Board of Methodist Women of the
Rutland Church.
Trustees of the Meigs ·County
While all three of the new
Historical Society, and is
staff members are currently
active with the Chester PTA.
full-time emp loy es, Mrs .
. Jn · Mrs . Williamson's role
Thomas reports that the
as outreach worker, she will
expectation is that Mrs.
travel over Meigs County
Williamson and Mrs. Oliver
seeking out senior citizens
will be only part-lime ern·
who need enlightenment on
ployes beginning in JWle due
the sentices ahd programs of
to the lack of funds .

Dear Through :
The statute of limitations isn't your problem: it's proving
there WAS a medical limitation in the first place. A 3:i-year-old

Mrs. Michael obseroes
90th birthday recentlj

"

..

WEINERS

$

8- 16 oz.
.Returnables

20 cnt.
pllg.

BEEF
Any Amount

•· 69c

can

SLAB
BACON

e·
ea.

•• ~

French City

JO-BO
DOG FOOD
16 oz.

order the 1976 Prayer
Calendar.
The name of Mary L.
Miller, a deaconess in South
Carolina was selected by the
president and a card signed
for her birthday. Kate
Hanacher accepted the
Prayer Calendar for the next
month. A letter was read
from Paul Hawks thanking
the Society for help on the
Bang-le-desh project i l he
adult 'S.S. class also contributed to this project. )
Mrs . Finch gave two instances of personal missions.
June Stearns led the Call to .
Prayer and Self Denial.
The program was "And All
These Things Shall Be Ad-·
ded ~' with readings, songs
and an offering .
The hostesses served
refreshments to those named
and Thelma Henderson, Osie
Follrod, Kathy Follrod, Clair
Follrod and Clarence Henderson .
The next meeting will be
held al the home of June
Stearns on Tuesday, Feb. 17,
at 8 p.m. with Emma Lou
Finch leading the program on
"Child Advocacy."

PEPSI-COLA
and
7-UP

FRENCH CITY

GROUND

lb.

'

Installation
highlights
meeting

Polly's Pointers
Try iron on slipper saver

Alfred UMW gathers

- The UMW of
the Alfred United Methodist
Church met recently at the
home of Clara Follrod and
Nina Robinson with nine
members attending .
The meeting, in charge of
president Nellie Parker,
opened with prayer by Helen
Woode. The hymn s un g was·
"Glory To His Name ."
Roll call was given and,
and 19 sick and shut-in ·calls
was baked by Mrs. Wilma etta
reported.
Leifheit.
.CommLmications were read
Mrs. Michael received gifts
from Miss Dawsey in South
from her family, including a
floral arrangement given by .Carolina and Miss Newnan in
Mr. and Mrs . Samuel . Boliv ia from the prayer
Calendar-i t was decided to
Michael. She also received
many cards and good wishes
from friends . .
Mrs . Michael was born
MONITORS LISTED
at Pass Creek, Wyo . She
Riverby
monitors fur this
grew
up
and
taught
weekend
have been anschool near Spokane, Washnounced
.
Saturday ' s
ington.
She
married
are
Mrs.
Edward
monitors
Gurn'ey L. Michael December
Berkich,
Mrs.
Robert
Adams,
27, 1908. They lived in
to
3p.m
.;
Mrs
.
Roy
Briggs,
1
Washington State, West
Mrs.
Mike
Bucci,
3
to
5 p.m.
Virginia , and Ohio; Mrs.
Sunday's
monitors
are
Mrs.
·Michael has lived in her
Harold
M.
Brown,
Mrs.
present home on Old ChesterJames Orr, 1 to 3 p.m.; Mrs .
Pomeroy Road almost 56
E.
V. Clark, Mrs. Forest
years . Mr . Michael died
Davis,
3 to 5 p.m.
August 'XI , 1975.

CHESTER - The ninetieth
birthday on January 20 of
Mrs. Florence Michael was
honored by members of her
family with two dinners. On
Sunday, January 18, a surprise steak dinner was held at
her home near here . ·The
birthday cake was decorated
by Mrs. Samuel Michael and
Samuel Michael asked the
blessing . Others present were
Tim Vooris, Mrs . Gary
Michael, Louise Michael and
Mr . and Mrs. Wilber Parker .
On Tuesday, January 20,
Mrs . Michael' enjoyed a
dinner at her grandson's, Mr.
and Mrs . Gary Michael ,
Others present were Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Leifheit, and
Matthew and Kimberly
Michael. The birthday cake

MEMBERS of Ule Fairmount Dance Theatre of Cleveland presented a lecturedemonstration of modern dance to students at the Cheshire.Kyger Elementary School
Tuesday morning. The dancers, here under the sponsorship of the French Art Colony, will
be in concert this evening at the Gallia Academy High School auditorium hegiMing at 8.
General admission tickets are $2 for adults, and $1 for students and senior citizens. Pa tron
tickets are $5 each. Tickets may be purchased at the Callia County High Schools, Rio
Grande College and ln in downtown Gallipolis at PJ's, the Uniform Center , Peddler's
Pantry and Bernadine's.

Installation of officers
man can become impotent for other reasons than "the
highlighted a recent meeting
unkindest cut of all,'; you know. - H.
of the Pythian Sisters 591 held
+++
at the .Wilkesville Temple.
Dear Helen:
Installing officer was
When I got home from visiting my sister, I found a watch
Thelma Campbell, with
and several of my expensive rings missing from my jewelry
Gladys Major, grand senior ,
box by the bed.
and Loisene Hoy, grand
My husband says someone must have broken in, but why
manager . Installed were
just these few items stolen when there were so many other .
Anna Ogdin, past chief;
things avl!ilable? I've said nothing bUt I suspect he had a
Martha Ward, most excellent
woman here, who just wore the things home with her. This
chief; Neva Metz, most exbecause he says .i t was such a "small loss" we shouldn't report
cellent senior; Jennie Maddy,
it to our insurance company or the police. He probably doesn't
excellent junior; Mary
want to be questioned .
Helem, manager; Robbie
Should I report tne theft anyway? And how do I stop
Good, manager; Wykle
silspecting my husband? I don't want to ruin our relationship
Whitley, treasurer ; Lida
which has been more than great since my return. - R. 0 .
Jones, protector; Wanda
Johnston, guard, and BarDear R.:
Ask yourself this : is it better to know and forgive or be bara Lester, musician .
Mrs . Ward closed th e
nagged by suspicion ?
meeting
which was followed
Your husband will probably tell you the truth , if you .let
by
a
luncheon
prepared by
him know you won't hold it against him . (And the insurance
the refreshment committee,
money might help salve your wounds.) - H.
Pearl Bowen, Loisene Hoy,
Mary Ellen Rider and Karen
Starkey . Next meeting will be
Feb . 20. Eighteen members
attended.
AL~' RED

e

IMPERIAL
MARGARINE
lib.

..

Store hours:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 Second St.

all. n

Sure enough, about half an hour later, Mr. Dirtymouth
comes on the horn and his victim, thinking she can help trap
'
.
him, gets an earful.
.
This is to alert people that telephone compames do NOT
request such cooperation - by phone .
The best way to deal with an obscene caller is to blow the
whistle on him - literally, with an extra-piercing pollee
whistle - then hang up before his ears stop ringing. WAJ{NER

: social services -coordinator.

Jan. 31, 1976

TUPPERS PLAINS More volunteers are now
· being recruited for the Right
to Read program at Tuppers
Plains Elementary School.
The local program is part of
the national Right to Read
effort whose goal is to " improve reading instruction · for

lowlife in conversation for 15 minUtes "until we can trace the
ca n ..

:
NEW EMPLOYES AT THE Senior Citizens Center are left to right, Mrs. Donna
: Williamson, outreach worker; Douglas G. Lizon , RSVP director, and Mrs . Susan Oliver,

Prices·
Effective Thru
'

MRS. HORAK ILL
Mrs . Elizabeth Horak,

Pomeroy , is a

By Polly Cramer
INFLATION FIGHTER
DEAR POLLY - During
these days of inOated prices
we are ail trying to gel the
last bit of wear out of
anything we have so wheri the
soles of my family's knit
slippers start to wear out I
apply denim iron..,n knee
patches that I have cut to fi t
the shape of the soles. Iron on
with a hot Iron and then sew
aroWld the edges of the
patches with th e sewing
machine to make sure the
patches slay on liglllly . This
adds a lot of wear to a pair of
slippers . - M.K.
DEAR POLLY - Many
products a r e packed in boxe~s
that are completely covered
with foil or a waxed type
paper . The :'easy pouring"
spout is under the paper
covering that must be torn
away before the spout can be

pulled open . As a result much
of the product falls beleween
the box and the outer warpping so is never used . Avoid
this waste by plaicng a piece
of masking tape right
BELOW the puring spout. In
other words, tape the outer
paper to the box and there is

surgical

patient at St. Joseph
Hospital, Parkers burg . Her
room number is 522.

DIVOKCE ASKED
Judith
M.
Anderson,
Middleport, has filed suit for
divorce in Meigs Co unty
Common Pleas Court against
Thomas F. Anderson , Middleport, c harging gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty . Connie Sue Moodispaugh was granted a divorce
from William Moodispaugh
on charges of extreme
cruelty
and
habitual
drunkenness.

SQUARE DANCE SET
A square dance will be held
Saturday night at the
pomeroy Elem.e ntary School
auditorium from 8 to 11 p.m.
Charge for the dance spon·
sored by the Senior Citizens
will be $1 for adults . Children
under 12 will admitted free.

BIRTHDAY HONORED

Tara Dawn Bacon was
hon ored Friday night with a
slumber party in observance
of her 12th birthday anniversary at the home of her
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Jack
Bacon, Middleport. Pizza,
cake and ice cream were
served to Tammi Ferguson,
Lynn Kloes, Melissa Spencer,
Helen Slack, Robin Kitchen
and Sheila Powell.

OPEN HOUSE SET
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Masonic Lodge
411, F&amp;AM, will entertain the
publlc with an open house at
the new temple from 2:30 to
4:30p .m. Sunday.

no slot for the product to fall
through. This way one gels to
use 100 per cent of the product
bought. - SALLY J .
DEAR POLLY - Even
sewing threa d is expensive
these days so I save thread by
carefully removing basting
threads after stitching to
reuse for more basting .
( Polly's note ' - As it is
removed it could be wound
around ane mply spool to
prevent tangles and knots.)
- KATE .
DEAR POLLY - If you
have a· parakeet save the
"wasted;' seed from the cage
and stir into a coffee can full
of old grease . Let it harden ,

remove fr.Jm the can1 put in a
net vegetable bag and hang in
a tree to provide food for wild
birds dtiring the winter . IDA.
DEAR POLLY - I think
one of the biggest sayings
women can make in the food
budget is to mak~ their own
bread rather than buy it at
the store . I paid slightly less
than a dollar for five pounds
of white flour and with it
baked four loaves of bread,
six bllns and eight doughnuts .
TWO loaves of siore bread
would cost me a little more
than than the flour cost. llive
alone and this provided me
with' enough bread for a
month . Also there is
something lasting about
homemade
bread
and
sometimes bought bread
seems to go like a puff of
Wllld .

· After Christmas the linen
calendars that se)l for about a
dollar and half can often be
bought for ten cents each and
be put to practical use like
dish towels, tray cloths , ek . I
use one over my lap as I drink
tea or coffee while watching
TV on a winter's night. L.C.E.
DEAR POLLY - To get
that last bi I of cleaner or
hand lotion out of pump
dispenser bottle I slip on a
section of a plastic drinking
straw so all the contents can
be used and none wasted .
To loosen a ribbon 'knot
sprinkle with talcum powder.
- AMELIA .

·1·
3
7
2% MILK.......•................~!: .

BROUGHTON'S

.

.

°

FRESH .BROCCOLI............~~~c.h•••5 9
FLORIDA.ORANGES ......·.~,!~-.~~! .. 59°
Golden Isle

BREAD

16 oz. loaves

Baked by Betsy Ross .••••••••••••

VolWlteer tutors at Tuppers
Plains School are helping
individuals and small groups
of primary children with
reading
comprehension,
listening skills, reading
games and readiness activit ies . Kindergarten and
primary teachers schedule
plan
prescriptive
a nd
programs with the tutors.
Volunteer tutors include
parents, upper elementary
students and other adults.
Senior citizens and all other
interested persons who would
like to help children with
reading are invited to call the
school at 667·3310 .
Mrs . R. M. Jones, special
reading teacher 1 and Mrs .
Robert · Sanders are cochairpersons of the program .
Those present at a recent
meeting
to
formulate
programs with volunteers
were Mrs . Sanders ~ Mrs .
Betty Osborne, Mrs . John
Rice, Mrs . Wayne Uptpn ,
Mrs . Carolyn Tripp, Mrs.
Carlotta Reed, Mrs . Kathy
Davis, Miss DeeDee Durst,
Miss Margery Myers, Scott
Skinner ,
Mrs .
Lavina
Brannon , Mrs . Barbara
Tripp, Mrs. Chris!)• Caldwell , ·
Mrs . Wilma Parker , Mrs .
Bea Douglas and Mrs . Jonas.

French City
LIVER PUDDING.......~99 e
Superiors Polish
· 'l · .·
SAUSAGE.. ............. ~ .
t

'

,([

GRADE A

Baby Beef

.. Prices Effective ·

ThuiSdly
lhn Sunday
.
. .
"

$

'

· .

LB. 49e
.
WHOLE FRYERS.......... . .
!liP»

39

II'

WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennett
Post 123, 6:30 p.m . dinner
Wednesday with Legionnaires. Meeting at 1:30 p.m .
of both Auxiliary and Legion.
WU..DWOOD Garden Club,
7:30p.m . Wednesady, home
of Mrs . Mason Fisher with
Mrs. Pau) Fisher as cohostess .
OHIO VALLEY Cornmandery 24, regular state
co nvocation, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Uons Club ladies
night, Thursday 6:30p.m. at
the Meigs Inn . Lions and their
ladies invited .
GALLIA-MEJGS
Community Action Agency free
clthing day for low income
persons, 9 a. m. to 2 p. m .
Wednesday
at .. former
Cheshire High School.

ROUND STEAK •••••• !~·.
$
59
Baby Beef
T-BONE STEAK •••••• !b~.
$
Babj Beef
.'

lr

"

'I

1

. fb.

RIB STEAK ••••

' /'

SUNUAY
M-M MEN's Slo·Pltch
softball league Sunday, I :30
p.m. at Royal Crown BotUing
co. garage on North Second
Ave., Middleport. Officers,
managers or representatives
urged to attend .
MEIGS GIRLS' Slo-Pitch
Softball League I both junior
and senior division) Sunday,
3:30 p.m. at Royal Crown
Bottling Co . garage on North
Second Ave., Middleport. All
officers, and representatives
from all 14 of last -y~ar's
teams are urged to attend, or
' anyone who is interest..d.

All Purpose
POTATOES ............ !~.~.99 e
Joan of Arc 29 oz.

·

·

2 '1
17 ounce
•1
.ARGO PEAS~ •••••••••••

. KIDNEY BEANS......
••
,,
'

.,

•

.
,·. ,-) . ;~~~}:~$

.
I

Campbell's Vegetable
P. ••••••••• ~ ••••~

sou

l,QUPON

•

N~AN Hl~ES

'

19 oz.
Box

.

2 $1
For

•"

5

c:a~'l

.

....

1

'

v

With '

Coupon

.,

,,

'

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•

.

.
·'

.

FOR

CANS

•

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COUPON

CAKE fttiX

•

...

'

THURSDAY
OHIO VALLEY Commandery 24, special meeting
to confer orders of the
temple . 7: 30 Thursday,
Pomeroy Masonic Temp le .
. FREE CLOTHING day at
Salvation
Army
Headquarters, 115 Butternut
Ave ., 10 a .m. until noon
. Thursday; all area residents
in ne~d of clothing invited .
SATURDAY
ANNUAL INSPECTION ,
Pomeroy I..odge 164, F&amp;AM,
Saturday, 7:30 p.m.; all
Master Masons invited .
HARLEM ALL Stars
against the Eastern High
School Alumni basketball
team, 8 p.m. Saturday at
Eastern High School; public
invited .

OFFICERS NAMED
New officers were eiected
at a recent meeting of \he
Meigs County Council on
Aging . They are Mrs . Lilllam
Moore, president ; the Rev .
Howard •Shiveley, vice
' president; Mrs . Pauline
~ Roush, secretary, and Mrs .
Gertrude Mitchell , treasurer .

Sun. 10 to 5

.

79e

•·

Mon.-sat.

POMEROY, OHIO

NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERV'ZO

'

.

'
•' '

..,

..

(:

•

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,

I

I,

M)OtGARINE
••••
~
••••••
'
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1 ~ • '' • • • '
I~,

t:

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Genuine Johann Haviland

l: (4) ¥er/Ashtrays
.

,. ·

$4 .99 Value ..,...,_,....._.,...._

ij

�Pot laws in wide variance as reforms pushed
lly GltEGilRY GOROON

UniiNt

P'r~ss

nomination have de c larea

Internationa l

thl2'ir support for marijuana

Bnb Kor n, the city attorney
for Telluride. Colo .. almost
went lC ja il because he
smokes marijuana .
He is lucky he Jives in one of
six s ta les wit h newly
decriminalized pot la ws . Last
June 19, Korn, 34, invited a
deputy sheriff and anot her
man to his home for a chat.
The deputy 's fri end noticed
a small bag of marijuana on
lhe table , a sked for a joint ,
and J&lt;orn obliged. The ·friend
wus-an undercover agent and
Korn was in .trouble.
He s ince has become an
advocate
of
outspoken
marijuana law reform .
" I think a whole generation
t ha ~ found marijuana is being
prosecuted for using a harmless drug. and certainly more
harmless than alcohol ," he
said .
Stille- reforms have been
passed in California , Oregon,
Alaska. Ohio, Colorado and
Maine. E lection-year politics
not withstand ing, lobbyists
for decrimina lization hope as
many as eight more state.;
will follow with laws this .

year.
Eighf of the 10 a nn ounced
c~md i date s

i)cm ocratic

for

the

pr es ide ntial

Ia"' reform - in apparent
re&lt;:ognition of what surveys
indicate to be a bloc or between 14 and 20 million
marij1,1ana smokers.
Jack Ford , the President's
22-year -old son, pu blicly
admits that he has smoked
marijuana .
When Korn got in trouble, it
was only 12 days before
Colorado's new la.w was scheduled to take effect making il
a
minor of£ense for
possession of small amounts
of marijuana . But -he was
arrested a nd c harged with
possession and distribution .
Korn , married and a
father, faced a penalty of up
to 14 years in prison ,
revocation of his attorney's
license and a criminal recofd
as a convicted felon.
After legal haggles that
drew s ta tewide attention,
a uthor ities
agreed
to
prosecute him under lhe new
law . He got off last month by
paying a $100 ticket for a
seco nd~Jass petty offense .
The President's Domestic
Council on Drug Abuse, citing
studies which show no hannful effects from marijuana
u s a ge ,
re co mmended
de criminalization although

With tlw push fur rcfn1·ms,
he said , judges and polk't'
rdorms. S£1'vera l c ongres."i- departments aeross th e .
me n will a~o:aln try to win nation have ~radually cased
· passa ~c of a federal reform their a pproa c hes toward
marijuanet law enforcement .
law this session.
On the s late level , New But stiff laws in some states
York Gov . Hugh ca rey said allow for heavy permlties
he wo uld introduec-a bill that against convicted users.
" I think it is fair to say
would decriminalize the law .
there
is much less of that
Proposa ls are being made in
selective
type of enforcement
more than a score of other
than
I
here
used to be ," Stroup
s tates to protect casual
said.
smokers s uc h as Korn.
"Today, the police have
"Of the 10 target states we
generally
arrived at the same
picked, I would say eight of
conclusion
that we ha ve them have a chance this
year," said Keith Stroup, 32, although by different reasons
a lawyer who works fulltime - thai it is not in their inin Washing ton as head of the terests to make arrests for
National Organi1.ation for fhe marijuana.
" I don't think police are out
Reform of Marijuana Laws.
The " target" stales include looking for marijuana users.
Hawaii, Washington stale, If they were, you 'd have 4
Arizona , Jllinois, Michigan , million arrests instead of
Minnesota ,
Wi sc ons in , 400,000 &lt;last year 's tota l ).
PeMsylvania, New Jersey The penalties judges are
and New York. Stroup said he imposing toda y are usually
believes there is a chance for no grea ter than what is being
passage in all except Atizona proposed by these laws.
·" The difference is, under
and Illinois , where NORML is
engage d
mainly
in most state la ws you are still
educational lobbying efforts. arrested, still fingerprinted ,
The fiv e-ye ar - old still booked. still have to hire
organiza tion is funded by the an attorney, still are taken to
Playboy Foundation, High · ja il ... most importantly, left
Times magazine and some with an arrest and possibly a
20, 000 memberships sold at conviction record for the rest
of your life.
$10 a nd $15 apiece .
''You still may end uo with
rord

and

the

Justi ce

Department o ppos e suc·h

the $mnc hnes •. but you don't
t'lld up with the intermediate
tonsequences -· obligating
the s tate to Spt!nd between
$1 .100 and $1 .400 every time
they , arrest a marijuana
smoker .' '
Of the s tates with new laws,
none makes marijuana ·use
legal. Alaska is the most
liberal - imposing virlua !ly
no penalty against adull' who
m;e small amounts in their
homes .
California, Mai ne , Ohio.and
Oregon a ll have re du ced
penalties to maximum fines
of $100 for possessio n of an
ounce or less of marijuana. In
Oregon, where the law has
been in effect for two years,
surveys indicate marijuana
usage is s ligh tly down .

heads the Pennsylvania
Governor's Cm).ncil on Drug
and Alt-ohol Abuse, said a
survey showed " tremendous
inequity in the prosecution of
marijuana offenses," with
light
penalties
in
Philadelphia and stiff penalties in conservative, rura l
areas.
Opposition against
relaxation is strongest in lhe
South . Former Louis iana
state senator James Fontenot
attributed his recent defeat to
his s upport for decriminalization, saying some voters
"don 't kn ow the difference
between marijuana a nd
heroin . 11
However . NOR ML has
found no organized roe to its
push for s tale reforms.
Stroup said only election-year
In a ddition, city ordinances politics could s ta ll passage of
have ea sed pe na lti es in laws this year.
·
college towns s uch as Ann
" Obviously, if we're going
Arbor. Mich., and Austin , to make progress on these
Tex.
bills this session," he said,
There still is resista nee .
" we 're going to have to make
Los Angeles police began it early in the session. Once
equipping officers with scales · we get close to the
so they can arrest those Democratic and Republican
carrying more than the one- nationa.l conventions and
ounce limit on stiffer closer
to
November,
charges . Judges, sheriffs and politicians are going to get
legislators in many rural cautious."
areas are tough on marijuana
users.
Dr . Richard Horman. who

Now y~u can have a setting by Keepsake
... even 1f your diamond isn't a Keepsake.
'

Choose from 25 pages of new moontings in 1he colortul
Keepsake catalog, ··The Perfect Selling." Each was designed
by the same ctaltsmen who fashion Keepsake and Slarlire
diamond nngs You'll al so find scllings for cocktai l rings, earnngs and pendants. and men's rings. Come in s001. The next
best thing to a Kcepsake ... is a selling by Keepsake

Tu~ • . ..,.,.

Jl• l

f'

utilities and businesses
paying the tangible personal
property tax on inventories
and equipment would have to
pay on the higher value of
their property .
A move to roll the ta ngible
persona l proper ly lax back lo
35 per cent from the current
levels of 40 to 50 per cent was
tabled . The Ohio Senate is
Thurs~ay.
While the proposal would now considering a Housenot a ffect taxes a lready paid pa ssed bill which would
by homeowners in prior years · accomplish the rollback over
or billealo them this year, an eight-year ·period .
.Johnson also pointed out
Johnson said it would lighten
the burden in future years. that any new construction. or
The Orrville lawmaker also improvements on real estate
said the measure would would be subject to tbe higher
Thoma s W, Bowen, Mary furnish "aPout the same 11 taxes brought about by reapE. Bowen to Charles D. a mount of money to school praisals. Lilnd values would
Jeffers, Brenda K. Jeffers , districts and local govern- be updated every three years
ments as they now receive . instead of every year .
.29A. , Salisb w·y.
Any real estate tax inRepresenta t ives · of
John W. Arbaugh, Ethel
creases
approved by the
business,
industry
and
the
Arbaugh to Eva M. Walker,
voters
would
not be canOhio
Municipal
League
exLot 5, Tuppe r s Plains .
celed
under
the
terms of
pressed
dismay
over
the
form
Me rli n · Teets. Ida Teets to
Johnson's
bill.
of
lhe
tax
break.
School
Lester D. Haning, Brenda D.
lobbyists voiced uncertainty
"There's no one in Ohio
Haning, 1 acre, Scipio.
that
knows all the imover
the
effects
of
the
WiJma
J,
Carnicom,
.
plicati
funds
.
legislation
on
their
0ns of this bill,"' said
Richai"Q E. Carnicorn to .
one
of
the opponents, Rep.
Key
feature
of
the
bill
is
a
Roger W. Stearns, Charles J.
E.
Netzley, R-Latira,
Robert
.aimed
at
·hulllfying
provision
Stea rns, Warre n J. Stearns ,
complaining
it would be
the
effect
on
real
estate
Jtme ·stearns , 141.37 Acres,
difficult
lo
administer
and
iaxpayers·
of
unvoted
inRutland.
would
"drive
business
from
creases
brought
about
by
D.
Ke nnedy ,
Charles
the sta te.' 1
Margare t Kennedy to Adams inflation.
Johnson said ' .thai when
Johnson
agreed
that
Drilli ng Co., Me ier Site
.
revisions
would
probably
property
values
are
reapAgree., Rutland .
· Gene Yos t, Marv K. Yost to praised upward in the various have lobe made in the state
Gene Yost , Mary K. Yost, counties, a new state Division schoo l subsidy formula ,
of Tax Equalization would which is based on real estate
Parcels, Sulton.
. Da le E. Sh ultz, Helen R. recalculate tax bills to yield taxes in the various school
Sh ultz, Roy E. Dav is, Nancy the dollar amount paid the districts.
John H. Hall, representing
F' . Davis to Patr.ck Cavote, previous year.
"The
hoineowner
is
going
Ohio
Education
the
Lots, Middleport .
gellhe
break
on
this,''
said
to
.
Association,
and
Paul
Taylor,
Ha rvey D. Boney to HerJohnson,
adding
that
inrepresenting
the
Buckeye
bert E. Boney, Berneda C.
dustries and bus inesses
Association of School AdBoney, Lot, Pomeroy.
owning
real
estate
also
would
ministrators,
both said they
Fra nklin Real 'Estate Cci . lo
receive
the
break.
were
uncertain
of the total
Kenne th L. Bass, Ina Jea n
However,
he
noted,
public
effect
of
the
bill
on school
Bass, Lot, Middleport.
The bill, being groomed as
ttte General Assembly's response to irate homeowner-s
faced with skyrocketing tax
billS, cleared the committee
Tuesday on a 14-3 vote .
The chief sponsor, Rep .
John E . Johnson, D.Qrrville,
sa id he anticipates flo or
a cti on on the measure

Property
Transfers

revenues.
" It has some pluses and
some minuses,' ' said Hall,
adding that the proposal
would increase the state 's
share of financing elemen·
tary and secondary schools.
" It will probably hurt local
government more than its
hurts us," sa id Taylor.
John
P.
Co leman,
executive di rector of the Ohio
Municipal League , said the
measure would rob local
gove rnm ents of needed
.revenue by taking their share
of unvoted taxes.
·
Sefore recommending the .
bill for passage. the committee tabled an· amendment
which would have allowed
homeowners' an extra 30 days
to pay any unvoted tax increases r es ulting from
reappraisals . Gov . James A.
Rhodes is seeking a similar
ruling from the state Board of
Tax Appeals.
Johnson's bill sets up a new
state Tax Court to hear appeals, replacing the BTA. The
board ' s administra t ive
functions would be taken over
by the new Division of Tax
Equalization .
The committee voted 9 to 8
in favor of an amendment by
Rep . John A. Galbraith, R-

Maumee, plating the new
division in the Department of
Taxation . Johnson originally
proposed thai the administratiVe (unctions of the
BTA be taken over by a ne w
state Department of Tax
Equa lization .
Meanwhile , a scheduled
hearing on a controversia l
utility ra te base formula bill
was canceled by the House
Utilities Committee, which
ran into a snag over language
in the Propo15a I.
In other legislative aCtivities Tuesday:
- The Senate unanimously
passed a nd sent to the House
a bill allowing tax a ppeals to
be filed by certified mail.

BARGAIN DAYS
SALE
FRI. AND SAT.
JAN. 30·31

.

$2''

8-16 oz. bottles

21 lo 25 lbs.

REG.

BREADED
HADDOCK TAILS
WE WT ONLY U.S.DA CHOICE MEATS

2 Ll.

ROUND STEAK •••••••••••••••• !~·......'1.4'
SIRLOIN ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ ••• ~.•1.69
TAILESS T-BONES•••••••••••• !~·...•.!1.98
BONELESS RIB EY[;~; •••• ..I~~.. .-.~2.99
..

•

"~!"

~

HOBBYPLA

frllll Our faii8Us
PUTCHER'S llOCK

I

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~

Red·C·····

TOOL BOX ·

BOSCH SPARK PLUGS ·

BO
;

OIIDB

Pleee'' ·••·

...,~l&lt;!ed ......

.

GIBSON

4A .. ._~t..~~

.

.

'

HECK'S
REG.

SET
AUTO DEPT.

.

79'

AUTO DEPT.

MIRROR .

GROUND CHUCK •••••••••••••• tb••• ~ ••••• 99~
BEEF STEW •••••••• ~ ••-••••••• ~}~: •••••! 1.29

P r ov i de ~ 1)etl er , so ler reor lro ffic view·

e

•r.

IACH
PINT
SNAP

CARBURETOR
CLEANER
.2FOR
$100

HECK'S·
REG.
$9.99

NAIIDWAIIEDEPT.

AUTO DEPT.
TWIN TEXTURA RUBBER

NEST OF SAWS

FRONT CAR MAT SET

10FT.

LAMP BULBS

•

PKG.Of2

«&lt;G.

See Pomeroy and Middleport Stores
·Special Merchandise SaVings In Your .
Newspaper On Thursday •••

GIBSON COOKED SAlAML _______ .:_ ___LB. __

I

LIMIT 6
HECK'S

HECK'S
REG. '2.76

REG.
74' QT.

59~T.

D&amp;D MEATS
RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE
·;92 · 3502

Pomerov , Ohio

Open 8-5 Man. lhru

TERRY

SEAT
COVERS

GAS-TREATMENT

$4''

HECK' S
REG.

69'

HECK'S REG.

44(

FITS SOLID QR SPLIT
SEAT S. ASSORTED
COLOR S.

~7.61

••

-'

HECK'S
REG.
$5.99

,.,..
99'
PKG.

AUTO
DEPT.

~.

.·

I•

.....

,

I .

S]99

IJIIIT.

.THE DAILY SENTINEL

ACCEPTED

Sat. Closed

58' QT.

' AUTO DEPT.

'

USDA FOOD
STAMPS
GLADLY

HECK'S
REG.

AUTO DEPT.

2 ,.,.•.,

HECK'S

HECK'S
REG.
$1.99 PKG.

10W40 .MOTOR OIL

COPPER TUBING

••wA•

s 1OP?a.

HAVOLINE

8 OZ. STP

Get Your ,ull Sharel

SET OF 8

TRANSMISSION
FLUID

AUTO DEPT.

HAHWAif

NAIIDWARE DEPT.

STOPA. TAIL

SPARK PLUGS

PPO

HECK'S REG. '7.60

AtiTODII'T.

RECONDITIONED

AUTO DEPT.

•s••

HECK'S

REG.
. 99'1!ACH

e

e lli?r.o l io n·p ro ol

$2.29 Each

NAIIIIWAIIE

e

ing !
Fully od jur. l a':l le b tra Iorge 6''
x II " head sile
co mpl etely ru ~ lpr oo f

Heck's Reg.

Jan. 30 and 31

$104

48(

PICK UP TRUCK

2 Days of January

7': _~ ' PlANTATION
89 ., BOLOGNA _____LB:._

OIL CHANGE
GASKET KIT

SET OF 4

HAHWAIII . .f.

friday and Saturday

WEINERS _____ LB._

HECK'S REG. $5.99 SET
VOLKSWAGEN

HECK'S REG. $9 .99

...

For The Last

96.
81 C

VOLKSWAGEN

$4.77

Their Ears in Savings

Specials

$1.18

AUTO DEPT.

SET

PARK

SNIPS

~4 ;;~IVAlR

:

1

Bargain Days Sale

Superior's

·

99

FOR
FOREI GN
&amp; COMPA NY
CARS

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG.

D &amp; D MEATS

IPICIALI

1

HECK'S
REG. '5.36
HAIIDWAIIE DEPT.

$4.49
IIAIIWA/11
IJWT.

MAT SET$
-~ r-:-

AUTO
DEPT.

12 FT.

HECK'S

Area Merchants Are Up To

Hollywood Spare Ribs---------- 11.49 lb.
Pork Loin Roast (3 lb. average) _____ 11.49 lb.
Pork Shoulder Roast- -~------- 1 1.09 lb.
Pork Shoulder Steak-- ---------'1.09 lb.
Center Cut Pork Chops., ________ 11.69 lb.
Loin Cut Pork Chops .--~------- 1 1.79 lb.
Homemade Bulk Sausage ________ 11.49 lb.

6FT
HECK'S
REG. 14.66

NO BONE or FAT

heritage house
Middieporl, Ohio

LAI\GE.~IZE ,

&amp; 7-Up

\ mlna tes old ·fashio11ed rod
i and o1r sealed fl oa t boll .

GROUND DAO.Y

Open Til 8 Fri.

.

R~c.

LOBSTER TAILS

AT TAPES RUBBER FRONT

hyd raulic preswre pnnc1 ·
; pie\, corrosl o n·prool. ho~
·; ln'otanl pos1t1ve \hu to ll , elo·

..

LARGE ll oz.

LITTLE
SWINGER

t ,,. \ ~tainle\~ steeL Vie5 new

A

SHRIMP

ASSORTED
FUSE KIT

FLUIDMASTER

CJ .~~~~,. *

Homeowners would gain in newest house hill
By LEE LEONARD
. UP! Staiehousc Reporter
CQLUMBUS I UP I) - The
House Ways and Means Comriiittee, sides te pping complaints that il would erode
'local goverrunent reve nues
and in crease the tax burden
on indus tri es, has ap proved
legislation designe d to halt
future unvoted rea l estate tax
hikes,
·mainly
for
homeowners.

~

VOLKSWAGEN ·

., ,

'

�Pot laws in wide variance as reforms pushed
lly GltEGilRY GOROON

UniiNt

P'r~ss

nomination have de c larea

Internationa l

thl2'ir support for marijuana

Bnb Kor n, the city attorney
for Telluride. Colo .. almost
went lC ja il because he
smokes marijuana .
He is lucky he Jives in one of
six s ta les wit h newly
decriminalized pot la ws . Last
June 19, Korn, 34, invited a
deputy sheriff and anot her
man to his home for a chat.
The deputy 's fri end noticed
a small bag of marijuana on
lhe table , a sked for a joint ,
and J&lt;orn obliged. The ·friend
wus-an undercover agent and
Korn was in .trouble.
He s ince has become an
advocate
of
outspoken
marijuana law reform .
" I think a whole generation
t ha ~ found marijuana is being
prosecuted for using a harmless drug. and certainly more
harmless than alcohol ," he
said .
Stille- reforms have been
passed in California , Oregon,
Alaska. Ohio, Colorado and
Maine. E lection-year politics
not withstand ing, lobbyists
for decrimina lization hope as
many as eight more state.;
will follow with laws this .

year.
Eighf of the 10 a nn ounced
c~md i date s

i)cm ocratic

for

the

pr es ide ntial

Ia"' reform - in apparent
re&lt;:ognition of what surveys
indicate to be a bloc or between 14 and 20 million
marij1,1ana smokers.
Jack Ford , the President's
22-year -old son, pu blicly
admits that he has smoked
marijuana .
When Korn got in trouble, it
was only 12 days before
Colorado's new la.w was scheduled to take effect making il
a
minor of£ense for
possession of small amounts
of marijuana . But -he was
arrested a nd c harged with
possession and distribution .
Korn , married and a
father, faced a penalty of up
to 14 years in prison ,
revocation of his attorney's
license and a criminal recofd
as a convicted felon.
After legal haggles that
drew s ta tewide attention,
a uthor ities
agreed
to
prosecute him under lhe new
law . He got off last month by
paying a $100 ticket for a
seco nd~Jass petty offense .
The President's Domestic
Council on Drug Abuse, citing
studies which show no hannful effects from marijuana
u s a ge ,
re co mmended
de criminalization although

With tlw push fur rcfn1·ms,
he said , judges and polk't'
rdorms. S£1'vera l c ongres."i- departments aeross th e .
me n will a~o:aln try to win nation have ~radually cased
· passa ~c of a federal reform their a pproa c hes toward
marijuanet law enforcement .
law this session.
On the s late level , New But stiff laws in some states
York Gov . Hugh ca rey said allow for heavy permlties
he wo uld introduec-a bill that against convicted users.
" I think it is fair to say
would decriminalize the law .
there
is much less of that
Proposa ls are being made in
selective
type of enforcement
more than a score of other
than
I
here
used to be ," Stroup
s tates to protect casual
said.
smokers s uc h as Korn.
"Today, the police have
"Of the 10 target states we
generally
arrived at the same
picked, I would say eight of
conclusion
that we ha ve them have a chance this
year," said Keith Stroup, 32, although by different reasons
a lawyer who works fulltime - thai it is not in their inin Washing ton as head of the terests to make arrests for
National Organi1.ation for fhe marijuana.
" I don't think police are out
Reform of Marijuana Laws.
The " target" stales include looking for marijuana users.
Hawaii, Washington stale, If they were, you 'd have 4
Arizona , Jllinois, Michigan , million arrests instead of
Minnesota ,
Wi sc ons in , 400,000 &lt;last year 's tota l ).
PeMsylvania, New Jersey The penalties judges are
and New York. Stroup said he imposing toda y are usually
believes there is a chance for no grea ter than what is being
passage in all except Atizona proposed by these laws.
·" The difference is, under
and Illinois , where NORML is
engage d
mainly
in most state la ws you are still
educational lobbying efforts. arrested, still fingerprinted ,
The fiv e-ye ar - old still booked. still have to hire
organiza tion is funded by the an attorney, still are taken to
Playboy Foundation, High · ja il ... most importantly, left
Times magazine and some with an arrest and possibly a
20, 000 memberships sold at conviction record for the rest
of your life.
$10 a nd $15 apiece .
''You still may end uo with
rord

and

the

Justi ce

Department o ppos e suc·h

the $mnc hnes •. but you don't
t'lld up with the intermediate
tonsequences -· obligating
the s tate to Spt!nd between
$1 .100 and $1 .400 every time
they , arrest a marijuana
smoker .' '
Of the s tates with new laws,
none makes marijuana ·use
legal. Alaska is the most
liberal - imposing virlua !ly
no penalty against adull' who
m;e small amounts in their
homes .
California, Mai ne , Ohio.and
Oregon a ll have re du ced
penalties to maximum fines
of $100 for possessio n of an
ounce or less of marijuana. In
Oregon, where the law has
been in effect for two years,
surveys indicate marijuana
usage is s ligh tly down .

heads the Pennsylvania
Governor's Cm).ncil on Drug
and Alt-ohol Abuse, said a
survey showed " tremendous
inequity in the prosecution of
marijuana offenses," with
light
penalties
in
Philadelphia and stiff penalties in conservative, rura l
areas.
Opposition against
relaxation is strongest in lhe
South . Former Louis iana
state senator James Fontenot
attributed his recent defeat to
his s upport for decriminalization, saying some voters
"don 't kn ow the difference
between marijuana a nd
heroin . 11
However . NOR ML has
found no organized roe to its
push for s tale reforms.
Stroup said only election-year
In a ddition, city ordinances politics could s ta ll passage of
have ea sed pe na lti es in laws this year.
·
college towns s uch as Ann
" Obviously, if we're going
Arbor. Mich., and Austin , to make progress on these
Tex.
bills this session," he said,
There still is resista nee .
" we 're going to have to make
Los Angeles police began it early in the session. Once
equipping officers with scales · we get close to the
so they can arrest those Democratic and Republican
carrying more than the one- nationa.l conventions and
ounce limit on stiffer closer
to
November,
charges . Judges, sheriffs and politicians are going to get
legislators in many rural cautious."
areas are tough on marijuana
users.
Dr . Richard Horman. who

Now y~u can have a setting by Keepsake
... even 1f your diamond isn't a Keepsake.
'

Choose from 25 pages of new moontings in 1he colortul
Keepsake catalog, ··The Perfect Selling." Each was designed
by the same ctaltsmen who fashion Keepsake and Slarlire
diamond nngs You'll al so find scllings for cocktai l rings, earnngs and pendants. and men's rings. Come in s001. The next
best thing to a Kcepsake ... is a selling by Keepsake

Tu~ • . ..,.,.

Jl• l

f'

utilities and businesses
paying the tangible personal
property tax on inventories
and equipment would have to
pay on the higher value of
their property .
A move to roll the ta ngible
persona l proper ly lax back lo
35 per cent from the current
levels of 40 to 50 per cent was
tabled . The Ohio Senate is
Thurs~ay.
While the proposal would now considering a Housenot a ffect taxes a lready paid pa ssed bill which would
by homeowners in prior years · accomplish the rollback over
or billealo them this year, an eight-year ·period .
.Johnson also pointed out
Johnson said it would lighten
the burden in future years. that any new construction. or
The Orrville lawmaker also improvements on real estate
said the measure would would be subject to tbe higher
Thoma s W, Bowen, Mary furnish "aPout the same 11 taxes brought about by reapE. Bowen to Charles D. a mount of money to school praisals. Lilnd values would
Jeffers, Brenda K. Jeffers , districts and local govern- be updated every three years
ments as they now receive . instead of every year .
.29A. , Salisb w·y.
Any real estate tax inRepresenta t ives · of
John W. Arbaugh, Ethel
creases
approved by the
business,
industry
and
the
Arbaugh to Eva M. Walker,
voters
would
not be canOhio
Municipal
League
exLot 5, Tuppe r s Plains .
celed
under
the
terms of
pressed
dismay
over
the
form
Me rli n · Teets. Ida Teets to
Johnson's
bill.
of
lhe
tax
break.
School
Lester D. Haning, Brenda D.
lobbyists voiced uncertainty
"There's no one in Ohio
Haning, 1 acre, Scipio.
that
knows all the imover
the
effects
of
the
WiJma
J,
Carnicom,
.
plicati
funds
.
legislation
on
their
0ns of this bill,"' said
Richai"Q E. Carnicorn to .
one
of
the opponents, Rep.
Key
feature
of
the
bill
is
a
Roger W. Stearns, Charles J.
E.
Netzley, R-Latira,
Robert
.aimed
at
·hulllfying
provision
Stea rns, Warre n J. Stearns ,
complaining
it would be
the
effect
on
real
estate
Jtme ·stearns , 141.37 Acres,
difficult
lo
administer
and
iaxpayers·
of
unvoted
inRutland.
would
"drive
business
from
creases
brought
about
by
D.
Ke nnedy ,
Charles
the sta te.' 1
Margare t Kennedy to Adams inflation.
Johnson said ' .thai when
Johnson
agreed
that
Drilli ng Co., Me ier Site
.
revisions
would
probably
property
values
are
reapAgree., Rutland .
· Gene Yos t, Marv K. Yost to praised upward in the various have lobe made in the state
Gene Yost , Mary K. Yost, counties, a new state Division schoo l subsidy formula ,
of Tax Equalization would which is based on real estate
Parcels, Sulton.
. Da le E. Sh ultz, Helen R. recalculate tax bills to yield taxes in the various school
Sh ultz, Roy E. Dav is, Nancy the dollar amount paid the districts.
John H. Hall, representing
F' . Davis to Patr.ck Cavote, previous year.
"The
hoineowner
is
going
Ohio
Education
the
Lots, Middleport .
gellhe
break
on
this,''
said
to
.
Association,
and
Paul
Taylor,
Ha rvey D. Boney to HerJohnson,
adding
that
inrepresenting
the
Buckeye
bert E. Boney, Berneda C.
dustries and bus inesses
Association of School AdBoney, Lot, Pomeroy.
owning
real
estate
also
would
ministrators,
both said they
Fra nklin Real 'Estate Cci . lo
receive
the
break.
were
uncertain
of the total
Kenne th L. Bass, Ina Jea n
However,
he
noted,
public
effect
of
the
bill
on school
Bass, Lot, Middleport.
The bill, being groomed as
ttte General Assembly's response to irate homeowner-s
faced with skyrocketing tax
billS, cleared the committee
Tuesday on a 14-3 vote .
The chief sponsor, Rep .
John E . Johnson, D.Qrrville,
sa id he anticipates flo or
a cti on on the measure

Property
Transfers

revenues.
" It has some pluses and
some minuses,' ' said Hall,
adding that the proposal
would increase the state 's
share of financing elemen·
tary and secondary schools.
" It will probably hurt local
government more than its
hurts us," sa id Taylor.
John
P.
Co leman,
executive di rector of the Ohio
Municipal League , said the
measure would rob local
gove rnm ents of needed
.revenue by taking their share
of unvoted taxes.
·
Sefore recommending the .
bill for passage. the committee tabled an· amendment
which would have allowed
homeowners' an extra 30 days
to pay any unvoted tax increases r es ulting from
reappraisals . Gov . James A.
Rhodes is seeking a similar
ruling from the state Board of
Tax Appeals.
Johnson's bill sets up a new
state Tax Court to hear appeals, replacing the BTA. The
board ' s administra t ive
functions would be taken over
by the new Division of Tax
Equalization .
The committee voted 9 to 8
in favor of an amendment by
Rep . John A. Galbraith, R-

Maumee, plating the new
division in the Department of
Taxation . Johnson originally
proposed thai the administratiVe (unctions of the
BTA be taken over by a ne w
state Department of Tax
Equa lization .
Meanwhile , a scheduled
hearing on a controversia l
utility ra te base formula bill
was canceled by the House
Utilities Committee, which
ran into a snag over language
in the Propo15a I.
In other legislative aCtivities Tuesday:
- The Senate unanimously
passed a nd sent to the House
a bill allowing tax a ppeals to
be filed by certified mail.

BARGAIN DAYS
SALE
FRI. AND SAT.
JAN. 30·31

.

$2''

8-16 oz. bottles

21 lo 25 lbs.

REG.

BREADED
HADDOCK TAILS
WE WT ONLY U.S.DA CHOICE MEATS

2 Ll.

ROUND STEAK •••••••••••••••• !~·......'1.4'
SIRLOIN ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ ••• ~.•1.69
TAILESS T-BONES•••••••••••• !~·...•.!1.98
BONELESS RIB EY[;~; •••• ..I~~.. .-.~2.99
..

•

"~!"

~

HOBBYPLA

frllll Our faii8Us
PUTCHER'S llOCK

I

I

~

Red·C·····

TOOL BOX ·

BOSCH SPARK PLUGS ·

BO
;

OIIDB

Pleee'' ·••·

...,~l&lt;!ed ......

.

GIBSON

4A .. ._~t..~~

.

.

'

HECK'S
REG.

SET
AUTO DEPT.

.

79'

AUTO DEPT.

MIRROR .

GROUND CHUCK •••••••••••••• tb••• ~ ••••• 99~
BEEF STEW •••••••• ~ ••-••••••• ~}~: •••••! 1.29

P r ov i de ~ 1)etl er , so ler reor lro ffic view·

e

•r.

IACH
PINT
SNAP

CARBURETOR
CLEANER
.2FOR
$100

HECK'S·
REG.
$9.99

NAIIDWAIIEDEPT.

AUTO DEPT.
TWIN TEXTURA RUBBER

NEST OF SAWS

FRONT CAR MAT SET

10FT.

LAMP BULBS

•

PKG.Of2

«&lt;G.

See Pomeroy and Middleport Stores
·Special Merchandise SaVings In Your .
Newspaper On Thursday •••

GIBSON COOKED SAlAML _______ .:_ ___LB. __

I

LIMIT 6
HECK'S

HECK'S
REG. '2.76

REG.
74' QT.

59~T.

D&amp;D MEATS
RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE
·;92 · 3502

Pomerov , Ohio

Open 8-5 Man. lhru

TERRY

SEAT
COVERS

GAS-TREATMENT

$4''

HECK' S
REG.

69'

HECK'S REG.

44(

FITS SOLID QR SPLIT
SEAT S. ASSORTED
COLOR S.

~7.61

••

-'

HECK'S
REG.
$5.99

,.,..
99'
PKG.

AUTO
DEPT.

~.

.·

I•

.....

,

I .

S]99

IJIIIT.

.THE DAILY SENTINEL

ACCEPTED

Sat. Closed

58' QT.

' AUTO DEPT.

'

USDA FOOD
STAMPS
GLADLY

HECK'S
REG.

AUTO DEPT.

2 ,.,.•.,

HECK'S

HECK'S
REG.
$1.99 PKG.

10W40 .MOTOR OIL

COPPER TUBING

••wA•

s 1OP?a.

HAVOLINE

8 OZ. STP

Get Your ,ull Sharel

SET OF 8

TRANSMISSION
FLUID

AUTO DEPT.

HAHWAif

NAIIDWARE DEPT.

STOPA. TAIL

SPARK PLUGS

PPO

HECK'S REG. '7.60

AtiTODII'T.

RECONDITIONED

AUTO DEPT.

•s••

HECK'S

REG.
. 99'1!ACH

e

e lli?r.o l io n·p ro ol

$2.29 Each

NAIIIIWAIIE

e

ing !
Fully od jur. l a':l le b tra Iorge 6''
x II " head sile
co mpl etely ru ~ lpr oo f

Heck's Reg.

Jan. 30 and 31

$104

48(

PICK UP TRUCK

2 Days of January

7': _~ ' PlANTATION
89 ., BOLOGNA _____LB:._

OIL CHANGE
GASKET KIT

SET OF 4

HAHWAIII . .f.

friday and Saturday

WEINERS _____ LB._

HECK'S REG. $5.99 SET
VOLKSWAGEN

HECK'S REG. $9 .99

...

For The Last

96.
81 C

VOLKSWAGEN

$4.77

Their Ears in Savings

Specials

$1.18

AUTO DEPT.

SET

PARK

SNIPS

~4 ;;~IVAlR

:

1

Bargain Days Sale

Superior's

·

99

FOR
FOREI GN
&amp; COMPA NY
CARS

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG.

D &amp; D MEATS

IPICIALI

1

HECK'S
REG. '5.36
HAIIDWAIIE DEPT.

$4.49
IIAIIWA/11
IJWT.

MAT SET$
-~ r-:-

AUTO
DEPT.

12 FT.

HECK'S

Area Merchants Are Up To

Hollywood Spare Ribs---------- 11.49 lb.
Pork Loin Roast (3 lb. average) _____ 11.49 lb.
Pork Shoulder Roast- -~------- 1 1.09 lb.
Pork Shoulder Steak-- ---------'1.09 lb.
Center Cut Pork Chops., ________ 11.69 lb.
Loin Cut Pork Chops .--~------- 1 1.79 lb.
Homemade Bulk Sausage ________ 11.49 lb.

6FT
HECK'S
REG. 14.66

NO BONE or FAT

heritage house
Middieporl, Ohio

LAI\GE.~IZE ,

&amp; 7-Up

\ mlna tes old ·fashio11ed rod
i and o1r sealed fl oa t boll .

GROUND DAO.Y

Open Til 8 Fri.

.

R~c.

LOBSTER TAILS

AT TAPES RUBBER FRONT

hyd raulic preswre pnnc1 ·
; pie\, corrosl o n·prool. ho~
·; ln'otanl pos1t1ve \hu to ll , elo·

..

LARGE ll oz.

LITTLE
SWINGER

t ,,. \ ~tainle\~ steeL Vie5 new

A

SHRIMP

ASSORTED
FUSE KIT

FLUIDMASTER

CJ .~~~~,. *

Homeowners would gain in newest house hill
By LEE LEONARD
. UP! Staiehousc Reporter
CQLUMBUS I UP I) - The
House Ways and Means Comriiittee, sides te pping complaints that il would erode
'local goverrunent reve nues
and in crease the tax burden
on indus tri es, has ap proved
legislation designe d to halt
future unvoted rea l estate tax
hikes,
·mainly
for
homeowners.

~

VOLKSWAGEN ·

., ,

'

�OF FREE
PARKING

.

UNION CARBIDE .

CAPTAIN "C" OR "D" SIZE
FLASHLIGHT

WIICIIU11R

.22 CAL. ·RIFLE

Sports

WIIHICOfl

·--~·

:,:..,:;.~.!;~'"-""'

· 240Z.

LONG RIFLE AMMO

HEAD &amp;SHOULDERS
SHAMPOO

SCOPE
MOUlHWASII

Heck's Reg. ~
'69~.9~5:::::=:::::::::!::~$3~.9~9~E~AC~H~~~= ...__ _ _ _ _ _._

•De111
pt_.-

_ _ _. _- _ _ _ _ _
Sp_ts_.

COLEMAN
Three to 5,000 BTU Ca talytic Heater ... o greot

wa y to turn o chill y o rdeal in to a wo rm ex perience .

. 3-SSM

VANWYC

s3.66

AUTOMATIC

....,,.T. $4487
MICK'SIIG.
$49.96

CAN OPENER

HECK'S REG .

•

MIST HAIR smER
Water:mist. conditioning milt or r"egular sets.

•

11.. llo• • &lt;ampoo n "''~ •otot ou.,.~, •.Oob le &lt;oo&gt;•ng o"'doo•• n,. Wil tmd wo nd
lo. ltl. o pr o.. nl d rulll oo '"'" r&lt;.n ytl &gt;IIKJ.J , . •i•o og f-.0 1 ~I OoO ~ » 11tcl but ne•l

1,(1~ •ft&gt;lonll)

won I &lt;v i i o• b"'n ""' I•I).......,&lt; •Qi"Tt , ''"Y '~ '~''l' • ee1y lo 1G&lt; elc"

.....

$18"
IIG.
$22.96

•1 5 87

Heck's Reg.

$19.96

JlfiiUr .

HECK'S
REG.
$24.99 .

. SPOITS
DEPT.

. .T.

CASSETTE
RECORDER

$2799
'

World' 1 mo1! popu lar la ntern .. hol d ~ two pm ls ollucl . . .
'enough for lOto 12 hou ts . . . two ColemM Silk l1te m a ntl e~
pr.oduce lwl(t' the loghl , lo1t up to four 11me1 o ~ long o\
ordlnory man tles.

LADIES'
SHAVER
o.,..
lu ou&gt;y

14

99

G.E.

ROBYN

Heck's Reg.

HEATING ePAD
e
Push bu non lighted con trol

Wet proof inner cover

blue, ·

23 CHANNEL C:B

3 Heat le . . el'

e·

$2.03

e Wcshoble outer cover in

'1''

With Antenna &amp; Speaker
Heck's Reg.

'189.96

'169

'

iL·:-..
,. :·

--~~.

·- ..

"-;.

Jewelry Dept. .

' :!
.
- .. -.....
'

JON-E HAND WARMER
FLUID

• 5 ~p eed fingert ip cor1 trol- . lold , \ tir .

e

mix, beat , whi p
Conw:n.~~n t bea re r
storoc;~e cli pt • Handy beater ejec.toc
Dr lnlt ml.er oHoc hmenl
130
wous o l mixing power

5

e

13

99

M22

HECK'S
REG.
99 1

s422

HECK'S
REG.

$6.34

·. '

HECK'S .
REG.
$2.18Each .

BOUNCE

$199
EACH

40SHEETS ....... ..

T0$1.79

.;

52x70

$139
IACH

· FABRIC
· SOFTENER

.. · _I
HECK'S
REG.

VINYL TABLE
CLOTHS

$J39

. 2os•ns .. ... .... 77~

HOUSIWAIE DEPT.

oz.

Assor ted

/.

styles·
and (Oiors.

LIQUID DRAIO
.

HOUSIWAIIIDEPT.

89

1.5

oz.

SECRET

HECK'S REG.

lflo
99' EACH
"
~ IICIII'T.
EACNn_______.-....__

BOY'S
WHITE RIB
.BRIEFS AJI) T

90Z.
AUTOMATIC SOLID

•r.

ROLLOI
DEODORANT

e

VANISH

SHOWER CURTAil
A•'CCESSORY SET
C~l or· bright ~trip~ o• priph

e

69(

H:~::s

e

Soft, pliub ll!
gracefully
lQO ~g vinyl fo r loh of
":'ear • w.p, (leon wilh damp clatlo • l ofgtl
~• ze .. protects Ho on ond wol l ~
plo, lo c, drope~

89 1

RENUZIT

AIR FRESHENER

HECK'S
REG.
HECK'S
REG.
$1. 19 ·•

·

Chpose from o!.sorted fragrance$ . '

$4.99
SET

COSMITIC
1111'1.

IIOIJSIWAIE
DEPT.

160Z.

IEIUZIT

LIQUID VANISH

SUPER ODOR
KILLER

HECK'S
REG.

44~
"

61'

HOUSIWA/11 DEPT.

70Z.

FLAIIR IACIID PLASnC

TOILET BOWL CLEANER

'44#)
"/ .

TABLE ClOTHS
52"x52"

$222

.

3FOR

POCKET KNIVES

.

DEPT.

IIOIJSEWAII

HICK'S REG •

. ASSORTED

::~ACH

HOUSEWARE
1111'1.

HECK'S
REG ,.

$188

$1.

...~

EACH

WASTEBASKETS

toSMmC1111'1.

CHOICE

HECK'S

~

$1244

12 QT. METAL

WITH THERMOS AND
FREI SNACK JAR

styled ~riels . Si••• 6 to 16.

12 oz.

5 SPEED
MIXER

.i •• .

.;,"-:.t. ~.i4. ,lj.;;

WQRKMAN'S KIT

Three pair per package of
coHon jockey or boxer

JIWEUY /JEPT.

e

"' '

NOUSIWAIE
· DEPT.

148

lFOR

GENERAL 'ELECTRIC

· COSTUME
JEWELRY
NECKLACIS, IIACILITS AND EARRINGS

.-

101

Sports Dept.

HECK'S REG.
$7;69

.. r.

-~··

P55

'

..

.

S~~MniiiPT.

97

. ... '.'. rr.,;~ 1

HECK'S
REG.
$2.59

..•

"

'6

. .-' ':';\ · · ;..

,

8ail'

•

. ~ f \ill~ ~

· 70Z.IHUUI

.177 CAL
•.PELLETS
250COUNT
,

H::::s

.,

~

.

//IIJIIUW/1., /191.

CROSMAN

'$1.04
. lOX .

HECK'S
REG.
$16.97
EACH

$1.18

$16.88

CROSMAN .POWERLETS

No odhesi~Je needed .

$1.31

SPORTS DEPT.

bept

effects, mor1:&gt;1e designs. Goes righ t over any solid sul:&gt;fl oor.

$,119

HECK'S
REG.
TO $2.59
. EACH

HECK'S REG.
$20.99

HECK'SREG.

Jeweky

EACN

..

vmyl surface.meonslong wear wi th easy core . And it wipes
clean sq eastly. C~oose from floral prints, tile _ond carpet

IIOIJSIWAIIDEPT.

WHITE ONLY

100'5

RAPALA LURES

II&gt;

"

· CHOICE

'•w"'

Heck's Reg. 137.96

7' , .

~~.~~

•

T~ere ' s never ~en a L,e"er vinyl 110lue . The tough , clear

HECK'S REG.
$1.99EACH

37 1/t"x6'

EXCEDRIN
HICK'S
RIG.

h• ad loo loljl\ ,

""' hood lo• und r •O•·"'&gt; Poc up f&gt;too ' ' '""''
bullon. l Ot eo\' .chong ong , Qu&gt;&lt; 0 ·clt on1n'il
Sko.,eCI 10 1•1 '"'" '""" "ond1. con•oulf d l or t ~ •
"lin' .~a""\1 a o9~ · r~ll .. e ..
~,;.,.,,., .
qo..• rt , lo~IJ OI &lt; ,.,o l~t 0, O tt S.,.och ~f ii1Chti
bi! CO&lt;It g• l! CO\f

5

EACH

SPOITSDEPT•

RUGS

CHOICE

WillOW SHADES

COSMmC 1111'1.

jA
tp

LANTERN ·

SUNBEAM

f,. , ,.. t;! Oit&gt;k"''~'il

$2.19

9' x 12' ARMSTRONG ·

COITOUR MATTRESS
COVERS

IIOIISIWAIE DEPT.

. COLEMAN DELUXE

Jewelry Dept.

SoondeSign

77

HECK'S
REG.
$ 1.09
EACH

.$

to ins.

PLASTIC

73(

H:~;:s

OBortm~nt of
plastic shower cur·

TWIIORFULL

DEODORANT

ROOSTER TAIL LURES---..-

DRYER

..;.;

!

$2 288 .'

BLOW-STYLER

Twenty KindnMs r~llen to help prevent ton·
gling and pive lasting

--

,

SHOWER

1

, if,

SURE
14 oz; lEG. AID UISCEIRD

I

2-BURNER STOVE ·

CON·AIR

RIG.

$1.66
COSMETIC
llf,T.

f'lt

~

toSMmc DEPT.

COLEMAN DELUXE

JEWELIY DEPT.

CLAIRQL

Sports Dept.

SPDITS DEPT.

99

$

HECKSREG •
. $11.96

HECK 'S

ULTRA BAN
ROLL ON
DEODORANT
1. 5 oz.
HECK'SREG.
99 1

$36.99

Stop-A ·Motic slops w he n l1d i1 open (leon· A. ·Motoc pt&gt;tm•h
eo ~y tt&gt;m&lt;Wo11o dean cu t1u1g un•l Co• d 1iorogc , ope ner

s 118

f

$1 .39 EACH

'244

Heck's Reg.

8-TRACI

HECK'S
RIG .
$2 . 19
tOSI/Intc
D9T.

2 PLACE
GUN RACK

HEATER

7tl2

s 1'8

$10.80

HECK'SREG.

o;k, LOUIIMou~

II Ql. lOTIH

Heck's Reg.

Dept.
,_.....,.

Super X

701.TUIIOI

'

$2.49

ClOTHIIIG
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
HICK'S
RIG.
57'

11081WAII.I'T.

59'

.,,_

IIIHISIWA/11

I ~~@~
~:
..
~

._::;_"f.'~~'

52"x72"

$2''

60"ROUND

$]99
HECK'S REG,

,,

'

It

.

'

�OF FREE
PARKING

.

UNION CARBIDE .

CAPTAIN "C" OR "D" SIZE
FLASHLIGHT

WIICIIU11R

.22 CAL. ·RIFLE

Sports

WIIHICOfl

·--~·

:,:..,:;.~.!;~'"-""'

· 240Z.

LONG RIFLE AMMO

HEAD &amp;SHOULDERS
SHAMPOO

SCOPE
MOUlHWASII

Heck's Reg. ~
'69~.9~5:::::=:::::::::!::~$3~.9~9~E~AC~H~~~= ...__ _ _ _ _ _._

•De111
pt_.-

_ _ _. _- _ _ _ _ _
Sp_ts_.

COLEMAN
Three to 5,000 BTU Ca talytic Heater ... o greot

wa y to turn o chill y o rdeal in to a wo rm ex perience .

. 3-SSM

VANWYC

s3.66

AUTOMATIC

....,,.T. $4487
MICK'SIIG.
$49.96

CAN OPENER

HECK'S REG .

•

MIST HAIR smER
Water:mist. conditioning milt or r"egular sets.

•

11.. llo• • &lt;ampoo n "''~ •otot ou.,.~, •.Oob le &lt;oo&gt;•ng o"'doo•• n,. Wil tmd wo nd
lo. ltl. o pr o.. nl d rulll oo '"'" r&lt;.n ytl &gt;IIKJ.J , . •i•o og f-.0 1 ~I OoO ~ » 11tcl but ne•l

1,(1~ •ft&gt;lonll)

won I &lt;v i i o• b"'n ""' I•I).......,&lt; •Qi"Tt , ''"Y '~ '~''l' • ee1y lo 1G&lt; elc"

.....

$18"
IIG.
$22.96

•1 5 87

Heck's Reg.

$19.96

JlfiiUr .

HECK'S
REG.
$24.99 .

. SPOITS
DEPT.

. .T.

CASSETTE
RECORDER

$2799
'

World' 1 mo1! popu lar la ntern .. hol d ~ two pm ls ollucl . . .
'enough for lOto 12 hou ts . . . two ColemM Silk l1te m a ntl e~
pr.oduce lwl(t' the loghl , lo1t up to four 11me1 o ~ long o\
ordlnory man tles.

LADIES'
SHAVER
o.,..
lu ou&gt;y

14

99

G.E.

ROBYN

Heck's Reg.

HEATING ePAD
e
Push bu non lighted con trol

Wet proof inner cover

blue, ·

23 CHANNEL C:B

3 Heat le . . el'

e·

$2.03

e Wcshoble outer cover in

'1''

With Antenna &amp; Speaker
Heck's Reg.

'189.96

'169

'

iL·:-..
,. :·

--~~.

·- ..

"-;.

Jewelry Dept. .

' :!
.
- .. -.....
'

JON-E HAND WARMER
FLUID

• 5 ~p eed fingert ip cor1 trol- . lold , \ tir .

e

mix, beat , whi p
Conw:n.~~n t bea re r
storoc;~e cli pt • Handy beater ejec.toc
Dr lnlt ml.er oHoc hmenl
130
wous o l mixing power

5

e

13

99

M22

HECK'S
REG.
99 1

s422

HECK'S
REG.

$6.34

·. '

HECK'S .
REG.
$2.18Each .

BOUNCE

$199
EACH

40SHEETS ....... ..

T0$1.79

.;

52x70

$139
IACH

· FABRIC
· SOFTENER

.. · _I
HECK'S
REG.

VINYL TABLE
CLOTHS

$J39

. 2os•ns .. ... .... 77~

HOUSIWAIE DEPT.

oz.

Assor ted

/.

styles·
and (Oiors.

LIQUID DRAIO
.

HOUSIWAIIIDEPT.

89

1.5

oz.

SECRET

HECK'S REG.

lflo
99' EACH
"
~ IICIII'T.
EACNn_______.-....__

BOY'S
WHITE RIB
.BRIEFS AJI) T

90Z.
AUTOMATIC SOLID

•r.

ROLLOI
DEODORANT

e

VANISH

SHOWER CURTAil
A•'CCESSORY SET
C~l or· bright ~trip~ o• priph

e

69(

H:~::s

e

Soft, pliub ll!
gracefully
lQO ~g vinyl fo r loh of
":'ear • w.p, (leon wilh damp clatlo • l ofgtl
~• ze .. protects Ho on ond wol l ~
plo, lo c, drope~

89 1

RENUZIT

AIR FRESHENER

HECK'S
REG.
HECK'S
REG.
$1. 19 ·•

·

Chpose from o!.sorted fragrance$ . '

$4.99
SET

COSMITIC
1111'1.

IIOIJSIWAIE
DEPT.

160Z.

IEIUZIT

LIQUID VANISH

SUPER ODOR
KILLER

HECK'S
REG.

44~
"

61'

HOUSIWA/11 DEPT.

70Z.

FLAIIR IACIID PLASnC

TOILET BOWL CLEANER

'44#)
"/ .

TABLE ClOTHS
52"x52"

$222

.

3FOR

POCKET KNIVES

.

DEPT.

IIOIJSEWAII

HICK'S REG •

. ASSORTED

::~ACH

HOUSEWARE
1111'1.

HECK'S
REG ,.

$188

$1.

...~

EACH

WASTEBASKETS

toSMmC1111'1.

CHOICE

HECK'S

~

$1244

12 QT. METAL

WITH THERMOS AND
FREI SNACK JAR

styled ~riels . Si••• 6 to 16.

12 oz.

5 SPEED
MIXER

.i •• .

.;,"-:.t. ~.i4. ,lj.;;

WQRKMAN'S KIT

Three pair per package of
coHon jockey or boxer

JIWEUY /JEPT.

e

"' '

NOUSIWAIE
· DEPT.

148

lFOR

GENERAL 'ELECTRIC

· COSTUME
JEWELRY
NECKLACIS, IIACILITS AND EARRINGS

.-

101

Sports Dept.

HECK'S REG.
$7;69

.. r.

-~··

P55

'

..

.

S~~MniiiPT.

97

. ... '.'. rr.,;~ 1

HECK'S
REG.
$2.59

..•

"

'6

. .-' ':';\ · · ;..

,

8ail'

•

. ~ f \ill~ ~

· 70Z.IHUUI

.177 CAL
•.PELLETS
250COUNT
,

H::::s

.,

~

.

//IIJIIUW/1., /191.

CROSMAN

'$1.04
. lOX .

HECK'S
REG.
$16.97
EACH

$1.18

$16.88

CROSMAN .POWERLETS

No odhesi~Je needed .

$1.31

SPORTS DEPT.

bept

effects, mor1:&gt;1e designs. Goes righ t over any solid sul:&gt;fl oor.

$,119

HECK'S
REG.
TO $2.59
. EACH

HECK'S REG.
$20.99

HECK'SREG.

Jeweky

EACN

..

vmyl surface.meonslong wear wi th easy core . And it wipes
clean sq eastly. C~oose from floral prints, tile _ond carpet

IIOIJSIWAIIDEPT.

WHITE ONLY

100'5

RAPALA LURES

II&gt;

"

· CHOICE

'•w"'

Heck's Reg. 137.96

7' , .

~~.~~

•

T~ere ' s never ~en a L,e"er vinyl 110lue . The tough , clear

HECK'S REG.
$1.99EACH

37 1/t"x6'

EXCEDRIN
HICK'S
RIG.

h• ad loo loljl\ ,

""' hood lo• und r •O•·"'&gt; Poc up f&gt;too ' ' '""''
bullon. l Ot eo\' .chong ong , Qu&gt;&lt; 0 ·clt on1n'il
Sko.,eCI 10 1•1 '"'" '""" "ond1. con•oulf d l or t ~ •
"lin' .~a""\1 a o9~ · r~ll .. e ..
~,;.,.,,., .
qo..• rt , lo~IJ OI &lt; ,.,o l~t 0, O tt S.,.och ~f ii1Chti
bi! CO&lt;It g• l! CO\f

5

EACH

SPOITSDEPT•

RUGS

CHOICE

WillOW SHADES

COSMmC 1111'1.

jA
tp

LANTERN ·

SUNBEAM

f,. , ,.. t;! Oit&gt;k"''~'il

$2.19

9' x 12' ARMSTRONG ·

COITOUR MATTRESS
COVERS

IIOIISIWAIE DEPT.

. COLEMAN DELUXE

Jewelry Dept.

SoondeSign

77

HECK'S
REG.
$ 1.09
EACH

.$

to ins.

PLASTIC

73(

H:~;:s

OBortm~nt of
plastic shower cur·

TWIIORFULL

DEODORANT

ROOSTER TAIL LURES---..-

DRYER

..;.;

!

$2 288 .'

BLOW-STYLER

Twenty KindnMs r~llen to help prevent ton·
gling and pive lasting

--

,

SHOWER

1

, if,

SURE
14 oz; lEG. AID UISCEIRD

I

2-BURNER STOVE ·

CON·AIR

RIG.

$1.66
COSMETIC
llf,T.

f'lt

~

toSMmc DEPT.

COLEMAN DELUXE

JEWELIY DEPT.

CLAIRQL

Sports Dept.

SPDITS DEPT.

99

$

HECKSREG •
. $11.96

HECK 'S

ULTRA BAN
ROLL ON
DEODORANT
1. 5 oz.
HECK'SREG.
99 1

$36.99

Stop-A ·Motic slops w he n l1d i1 open (leon· A. ·Motoc pt&gt;tm•h
eo ~y tt&gt;m&lt;Wo11o dean cu t1u1g un•l Co• d 1iorogc , ope ner

s 118

f

$1 .39 EACH

'244

Heck's Reg.

8-TRACI

HECK'S
RIG .
$2 . 19
tOSI/Intc
D9T.

2 PLACE
GUN RACK

HEATER

7tl2

s 1'8

$10.80

HECK'SREG.

o;k, LOUIIMou~

II Ql. lOTIH

Heck's Reg.

Dept.
,_.....,.

Super X

701.TUIIOI

'

$2.49

ClOTHIIIG
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
HICK'S
RIG.
57'

11081WAII.I'T.

59'

.,,_

IIIHISIWA/11

I ~~@~
~:
..
~

._::;_"f.'~~'

52"x72"

$2''

60"ROUND

$]99
HECK'S REG,

,,

'

It

.

'

�Th'-' i &gt;olii.Y &amp;ut int•l, Middll'i'l' t l'l - l 1 ,~11n'I'U\ . 0 ., Wt~ l,lt ·s d; n , .I au , 211. I!•7ti
DlCK .TRACY
.
•.

13

12 - The ()mly St·muu.·l. Mi&lt;idl'-'l&gt;'-'1'1 -Pouwn l ~'. 0 .. Wt 1 chw~da ) .. 1:111 :m ..l!t'ifi

Reagan-Ford debate proposed
Ry IRA R. ALLEN
United Press lnterna liona l
TI1e presidential adviser
who said Monday President
Ford is not changing his
middle-of-the road st ripes
because of Ronald Reagan

Aid to Angola
By JOHN F. BARTON
WASHINGTON 1UP!)
Congress has convincingly
reljuffed Presid ent Ford 's
plea for covert aid to pro-U .S.
forces in the Angola civil war,
but Secretary of State Hen ry
Kissinger says it's a problem·
"that won 't go away ."
Ignoring Ford's warning
tha t the tw o an ti-Soviet
factions need U.S. a id to
survive, the House on a 323-99
vote Tuesda y gave fina l
congressional approval for a
han on covert military a id to
the newly indendent nation.
An a ngry Ford , who before
the vote said in a letter to
House Speaker Carl Albert
that anti-Soviet forces in
Angola " will be destroyed"
without "effective Western
assistance," sa id later in a
statement :
"The Congress has stated
to the world that it will ignore
a clear act of Sov iet-Cuba n
expansion by brute milit2ry
force into areas thousands of
miles from· either country ."
Kissinger, who testified
nearly two hours in closed
session ·before the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee
Tuesday, told reporters upon
emerging :
"The problem in Angola is

draw from the r:tce.
He quoted the President as
saying, " If anyone thinks I'm
going to pull out. they a,e out
of their minds ."
Ford go t more advice
Tuesday
fr om
George
Wallace, whose motives are
not as charitable as Hartmann 's.
AI a rally in East Boston,
Wallace said : " I want to ask
the President to ask his at$11 2.3 billion defense ap- torney genera l to ask for a
propriation bill the Senate moratorium . on busing
pa sse d la st month aft er throughout
the United
addin g lan guage to ba n States." Wallace aide Billy
cove rt assistance to the Joe Camp said the Alabama
former Portuguese colony . gov ernor would put the
The House acted on the request in writlng to Attorney
defe nse bill earlier, so General Edward Levy .
Monday's approval of the
Wallace,
who
ha s
Angola amendment sent the previously played down his
bill to Ford.
chances in the March 2
During the hour-long Massachusetts primary, said
de ba te, appropriations Tuesday a good show ing
commillee Chairman · Rep. would send his Democratic
George H. Mahon, D-Tex ., rivals "scurrying 1ike a cat
told cO lle ague~ large Soviet on a ·hot tin roof."
aid to the Angolan comEls ew h e re, liberal
munists and transport of Democrats turned their fire
Cuban troops to Angola ''is a n from 1+--.ord and Reagan to
outrage
of
the
lirst fe llow Democ ra t J immy
magnitude ," Our vote today Carter in Neli• Engla nd and
must not be taken as a back- Henry Jackson did the same
ward step by the greatest in Florida.
Carter's strung showing in
nation in the world,'' he said.
But Rep. Joseph P, Ad- Iowa last wee k has set him up
dabbo , D-N.Y., said, "There as a target for other cani&amp;, in my judgment, no reaSon didates striving to gain the
for the United Stales to get uliber a l' ' vote. In New
involved in the Angolan war. Hampshire, Morris Udall and
The Congress has been Birch Bayh have been
burned before and I have no publicly questioning some of
desire to be burned again." the former Georgia goverHouse Democratic leader no'r's positions on abortion
Thomas P. O'Neill said the and labor issues. And in
Russians "are in the same Florida , Ja ckson ran down
position in Angola that we Carter's suggestion Monday
were in Vietnam. "
that the Ma rch 9 primary
would be a Carter-Wallace
affair.
Ja ckson, in Miami Beach,
accused ·Carter of "ta lking
out of a1l corners of his mouth
... He's heard that Jackson is
are ready to assist callers
wi th their concerns, provide earning in like a thundering
herd and he doesn't like it, "
up to date information about
1
available services Ur just jackson said. "He 11 hear
talk ,, The service is entirely mOre aQout it because .we 're ·
free and confidential. Metgs goi ng to beat him here. ' '
Reagan, campaigning in
Coun ly reSidents can feel free
North
Carolina , called for
to ca ll Meigs Care line any
"fundamen
ta l reform" in the
hour of the day at 992-7502.
Social Security system. He
said persons over 65 should be
allowed to work and still
collect benefits a nd Social
SERVICES HELD
Securit y discrimin a tion
Funeral services fo r agai nst working women
Margaret Zwilling, 52, wife of should stop. He said "there is
William Zwilling , who died nothing in this 12lk of reform
Jan. 19 at · Ravenna , Ohio that should frighten anyone ,
were conducted Thursday at 'because ''no one would. be
Immaculate
Co nception deprived of or delayed" in
Catholic Church by the Rev . gettin g Social Security
Father Donald G. Harak. checks.'' .
Attending from here were
br ol her -in'-law s J ose ph
Zwilling, Middleport , and
George Horak and Gilbert
Zwilling, both of Pomeroy.

1000
Extra
Top Value Stamps
--=
-- Caslo Calculator

rongress in Mi chigan despite
advice he shouldn 't. and he
might advise Ford to do the
same now. Hart mann also
told reporters he could not
conceive of a situation that
would cause Ford to with-

said Tursd;:\v t'tP mi~ht
suggest that Ford debate his
GOP challenger.
White House counst'llor
Robert T. Hartmann sa id
Ford always debated opponents when he ran for

Careline in training for winter
Carcline, a 24-h our cnsts cerns callers might face.
interventiort. inf&lt;Jrmation and
In addi lion to trainin g
re ferral telephone line ser- lectures , volunteers practice
vin g Meigs Cuun ly, s ta rted handling call' situations in
its winter training this past role~ play practices. Trainees
Saturday.
then work en internship at the
Meigs Ca r e line (Ph o ne: Care li~ e Center with an
992-7502) is a place where ex perienced Careline
people may call at any hour vo lunteer . Careline run s
of the day wi th problems, thes€ free training programs
concerns, or just to talk . And four times a year . The next
citizens can use Careline as a program will begin in April.
place to find out a bout socia l
Meigs Care line is funded by
se rvices available in Meigs the Me igs-Gallia -Jackson
Coun ly . All calls are com - Men tal Health and MenU.!
pletely confidential. Callers Retardation SerVices 64 8
arc not asked for their names Boa rd . Careline volun teers
or adQresses. The service i ~
free .
BLOOD NEEDED
Trained volunteers staff
Delores Aeiker, Pomeroy,
Carelinephones. The training
course conSists of 50 hours of wh o will undergo heart
intens ive work in crisis in- surgery Friday at University
terve nti on aild telep hone Hospital, is in ne.ed of 16 pints
listening skills as well as of Type 0 positive blood.
lectures· dealing with the Blood may be donated at the
kinds of problems and con. next bloodmobile.

I mages of Aging 20.
9 :30----Dumpl ings 3,.4, 15.

IO:OQ-Petrocelti 3, 4.15; Slarsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; Blue

S.O YOU 6ET O VER

Dollar Day
Round-Up

Witt! Coupon
BORN LOSER

I ~D I P11T 1\1t. a£XK 1HE:I&lt;f ~

Stokely
Fruit

't:O \I.Ot.l'T KEEP
101&lt; TilE TIME,

500 Sheets Per lolt-Sintl• Ply-latllno•

--

1-llt.
Cans

MF3

BV~R-1 10

Charmin Tissue

...-

f£STE'R!t-llo

4·Roll
Pkg,

:

With Coupon
limit 1 Ceupon With $10 or More1'1rchm

G.....iillliiiP~'i"~;ili'•no&lt;at

Void Ahtr Sat., Jan . 31, 1976

ANNIE-HIND-SIGHT

r....
EVEM I ~ Wf

WE Nfi/ER ¥KJRRifD
HOW OUR
SHOWS AlWA'I'5
S UMED TO fC\DI~
RfMf~8ER

D&lt;D HEA RLY
STARVE TO
DfATH
NOW AN D
lHfN - ·

Deliciou•

Y•Ca~

Armour Star

THE MOST OU l · Or THf · WA'f lANK
TOWNS?

Sliced Bacon

Pork 'N Beans

$

St:t'!

your md t~

.nclt : llt

TH ESE .... ~

PJrt s Plus Auto Pa rt s Stor ~ o r Serv ic t:: Dea lt::r fo r hi s pr'ice.

p~~t; AUTO PARTS STORES ARE FEATURING

THIS DELCO DEEP FREEZE SPECIAL OFFER

G&amp;J Auto Parts

I

144 W. Second Street
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769

G&amp;J Auto Parts
Rt. 33
Mason, W. 1/a.

y Vl&gt;LH l)i•IC:(J l3il l l•~ ry IIIS!till,·d 11IL1S dl 11 l rlllli ,, ~111. 11
!nsl c:~l l ati Oil vl 1.1rq. ·, ,11 .my
t ll1· 'k ~ • Part&amp; RfllABLE SE RV ICE DEALERS

I

or

Pomeroy Motor Co.
Pomeroy , Ohio
Bailey's Ashland Station
Tuppers Plains. Ohio

,., Plus
Smith · Nel~on Motors
Pomeroy, Ohio
French's Sunoco Station
MidcUeport . Ohto

·

Burton Sunoco
Mason. W. Vo .

Offer good thru Saturday:

'I'OU POOR KID - I
REMEMBER. THE

SO REAl Al10

ERNEST AS ll'S

~!(,

BEEN PLENTY

W~IE:N

PfLRI't

YOU Q UIT TilE
SHOW ·· YOU WERE

OF TIMES

"So-0 ·0 UJC K'f~
EVERYBODY 5AID·-THAT DIRTY SO·

5 'N CE-

m t , IT

Wl\'5 M'r'

OWN
._AUIT,
1 00,

MlR11A -

I

Pkg.

••
Pass

chrupber
8 Constant
9 Derelict
13 Pledge

u

(2

wds.)

15 Babylonian
deity
16 Summer,

$

Can't! 1 promise
bear la plai.J 'im

Goin'
t'

some poker'

an·

r....... u.u.a. ~~-

2 I Chicken
2·1'1. . .1.
np ••••
......
. . . .s
...h

Zeb.

Fa•llf

JoeJ?

I

•

U.S. Goo!. Graded Cholet tt.Gplt's Chol,..
~,_., to 11·1b. A"'l. loneltu

I

Don' be a -~ 11 ~.::n
Rufus! He teach in' article
me,
ts Earth-

Ha! You
think
LjOU QOin'

,

t'teach
that
bear
t' plaw
cards 7

me

...

This

instant

$

(Do you have a quesUon
for th~ experts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys" care ol !his
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer indi vidual questions
if stamped, self.addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The

most

inter~sting

·,questions

will be used in this column
and wiJf receive copies of
JACOBY MODERN.)

l'WO HAMMERHEADS, ZlGGY AN 'TARL !

. Stokely
Applesa"ce

loll

A Pennsylvania reader
j umped to three diamonds
after he had opened one heart
and partner responded one
spade. They had a part score
of 40 and partner passed. Our
reader wants to know if !lis
jump shift was forcing .
The answer is that il would
be with the Jacpbys but obviously his partner did not
think it was. Partners do go
wrong on occasion.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

NOW l8''S GO AN ' SURPR ISE 0110SE

Talty

Holly

t•

~ ~~~

~·~-

With .Coupon

mark

1-lb.

t.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Some tim es a weak dis ·
tribulional overcall really
pays off
We have given North and
South exactly the same cards
as they held yesterday but
have changed East and West a
trifle .· Specifically. we have
given East the king o! spades
and West the king of clubs.
East and West can sti ll
ma"e four hearts because
the re ~re singletons in each of
the black s uits. but when
South gets doubled at four
spildes he has a rea l baiL
Eas t takes his ace of hearts,
looks over dummy and lays

Limit I Coupon With $10 or More Purcho11

quake
20 Ending lor

exam
22 Principal
23 Highway to
the 49th

DOWN
1 Wea,gel
2 Hoisting
d'vice
3 Late-bloom·
ing plant
(2 wds.)
4 Alkali
5 Elocutionist

6 Hold back
7 I love
(Lat.)
10 Winter's
forerunner
(2

wds.)

Yesterday's Allt!Wer

11 Pleasing to
the eye
12 Peaceful

27 Turn up
· the radio
29 Greek

16 Joie de
vivre
19 Head ( sl.)
Z2 Kind
of kit
23 "- Fideles"
24 "Sleepy -"

island
30 Neighbor
of Quebec
31 Invest

25 Whetstone

311'jcottillh
river

37 RaiDbow
shape

~!-

GET HIM

AWAY r-

Firm Ripe

Urban League 10.
6 :4o---Qunce of Prevent ion 10 .
6:45-Morn ing Report 3.
6:55-Ch uck Wh ite Reports 10; Good Morning, Tr l
Slate \3 .
7:0D-----Today 3,4,15 ; Good Morning , America 6 6, 13;
CBS News 8; Bungs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.

7:3[}.-Schoolies 10.
8:1){)-Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St . 33.
8:31)-- Big Valley 6.
·
,
9:QO-.-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue4,15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9:3[}.-A.M. 3; One Llle to li ve 6; To Be Announced 8;
New Zoo Revue 13.
·
10 :.0[}.-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Edgeot Night 6;
Price Is Right 8,10; Mike Doug las 13.
10:3[}.-High Rollers 3,15; Formby's Antiques Fur.
nlture Workshop 4; D i nah 6.
ll :OD-Wheel of For tune 3, 15; Hollywood Squares ..;

Gambit 8,10; E lee. Co. 20.
11 : 31)--Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Happy Days 13;
Midday 4; Loe oiLite 8, 10; Sesame St. 20.
11:55-Take Kerr 8; Dan lmel's World 10.
12:0[}.-Magnlltcent Marble Mach ine 3.15; Let's Make a
Deal 13; Bob Braun's 50·50 Club News 6,8,10.
12:3[}.-Take My Advice 3,15; Ati ·My Children 6,13;
Search for Tomorrow 8, 10 .
12:45-Eiec. Co. 33.
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
1:Oo-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donah'-'e 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15.1 :3[}.-DAys ,of Our lives 3,4.15; Rhyme &amp;
Reason 6,13; As the World Turns 8,1 0.
2:0Q-S20.000 Pyramid 6,t3 .
2:3l}.-Doc1ors 3.4, 15; Neighbors 6, 13; Guiding Light
8, tO .
3:0[}.-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospllal 6,1 3; All
In The Fam ily 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:3()-Qn'e Life to live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6;
Match Game 8,10; Lowell Thomas Remembt!rs 20.
4 : 0~M i ster Cartoon 3;

Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister ROgers
20,33; M~vte " Pepe" 10; Dinah 13.
4:3[}.-Bewitched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. '20,33; Get Smart 15.
5 : 00--Bon~nza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3l}.-Adam·12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec .
Co. 20,33; Adam . t2 13.
6:0[}.-News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15; Zoom 20; lTV Utilization 33.
6:3[}.-NBC News3 ,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Your Future is Now 33; tn .School
Programs 20 .
7:DO- Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Space : 1999; News 10; Let's Make a Peal
t3 ; Family Aff~ir 15; Anyone tor Tennyson? 20;
7:JQ-Holly.wood Squares 3,4; Ohio State Lottery 6;
Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky 20;, Wild
Kingdom 10; To Tell tHe Truth 13; Music City
U.S.A. 15.
.
8:0[}.-Cop &amp; the Kid 3,4, 15; Wel~ome Back, Kotter 6,13;
Waltons 8. 10; ; Lowell Thomas Remembers 33.
9: 0().-.Movle ·"S isters" 3, lS; Streets of San Francisco
6,13; Movie "The Other Man" 4; Hawaii Ftve·O 8; ;
Movie "Little Murders" 9; Movie " The Moon Is
Blue " 10; In Search of a Maestro 20; HollywOod
Television Theatre 33. '
10 :0[}.-Lola Falana 6,!3; Barnaby Jones 8; News 20;
Journey Thgrough Eden 33.
10 :3o-M0nster Concert 33 .
tl :0[}.-News 3.4.6.8 .1 0, 13,15; ABC News 33.
tl :3[}.-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Mannix 6. 13; Movie
"Sa ddle the Wind" 8; Movie " Come Back, Little
Sheba" 10; Janak i 33.
12 :3[}.-Longstreet 6, 13.

lO :OG-Target :Corruptors

Astro-

:sz Political

lb.JR SHr:=:IKC:O."rr,
CYRIL THt;
SWI NE.:~ YOU ARE
HIS MASTt::R rf

Grapt;t

party
(abbr.)
33 Street
(Fr.)
34 "Mr. Tam-

•Bernice Bade Oaol
For Thursday, Jan. 29, 1976

bowine -"

ARIES (March 21·April 19)

35 Bally-

":A+-i-+-i Occasionall y. you can

hooed
37 In the
midst of

get away

Open
24 H
a Day
s•••.,)

I DON'T WANT TO
SEE NO HATS ON IN
TH' SCHOOLHOUSE .
FELLE.RS ---

(Except Saturday Mhlll..t 'til 9 1.11.

•• ALL BUT ONE,
Tf-IAT IS

l

MCJTUJAUM

fC 1916 Kin1 Fealure• Sndlcatt, Inc . )

TJ.lE ANSWER I5'1R~E · ! PVT
oowN ·r~tiE .' owcK' W~AT 5

TRVE 15 Tf?VE! f'VT DOWN

' TRVE.' CHUCK, OR I'LL NEVER
SPEAK TO '10~ AGAIN !
'

•..• ......
YeMr F•-•r•l

•

•

CQU id lind a germ of unexpected subsl anCe.

' RPHY LEO (July 23-Aug, 22) You
h a~;e n tC!n dency 10 be a slow
OAPH PVA
OKAMC
HJMCYAM
JTU st:irler today. You can over co me yo ur l eth ar gy _ Push
yourseU a bit 1n the morning.
PVA
OAPH
E.iQO
PCEYA
CEY
·VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) This
1s no1 the day 1o bet on a lo ng
OKAMC
QPGYM . - MJTCJXJTJ
shot Be saiiSfLed wit h sure
Yesterday's Ci'yptoquote: FIRST LOVE IS A KIND OF VAC- th1ng s that o ffe r a smalle r
CINATION WlUCH SAVES A MAN FROM CATCHING THE reward . but a cerl&lt;tln re turn.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23 -0ct. 23)
COMPLAINT A SECOND TIME. - HONORE DE ·BALZAC
Promises to the fam.11y today

BARNEY

means to d ay . Plea s ura ble

(April 20-May 20)
:....JL..l-~:r}~~~c~l~: ym1
qet toda)' cou ld

.4

PVA

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) It's going to take d fsci pline.
bllt l ry to live within your

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jon.
19) Unless you keep things in
per spect ive today , you can

-;r+-t--t-i ;;"~':;, ,';;o uhowhold
th ree aces . you'd
e them
he ~;c r y mLsleading. Rely on

EJQO

Don'! enlarge on the .scope of
wha( you do for another today.
Th ey cou ld be resentful if you
magnil y your contr ibution .

whim s cou ld demolis h your

a l1ttl e bluff . Today. if

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: re.l sorHnQ an d logic lo keep
vou out of 1ro11 ble
AXYDLBAAXR
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) In
II J, 0 N ." G FELL 0 W
S1tuallons where you share an
One letter simply stands for another, In this sample A il 1n t eres1. don '! lo.ok l o.r a
used for the three L's, X for the two O' s, etc. Single letters, qrea(er return than you · r~ enapostrophes, the length n.nd formation of the words are all ti tle d to . II won't happen today .
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
h ints. Each day the code lett ers are dift'etent
E~; e r yone is en t11led to his opiCRYPTOQUOTES
nion He ar others ou t. You

I \\ONDER WHAT CDULD
HAVE HAPPENED 1D
oTAN ' HE NEVER
GOES OFF WITHOUT TELLING-

mood will be disappoinwhen yo u fail to deliver.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov: 22)

s1ve
tin g

you

wilh

Town council's
Middleport Ma yor Fred
Hoffman has named village
council committees lor 1976 .
They are (chairman first):
Finance - Marvin Kelly ,
William Walters, Carl Horky;
Fire - Allen Klng, George
Meinhart. Horky; Ordinance
- Meinhart, Horky, Kelly;
Equipment - James Brewer,
Walters and Meinhart;
Safety - Walters, Kelly,
Brewer; Utili ties ::... Walters,
Kelly. Meinhart; Cemetery
- Horky, King , Kelly;
Streets and Sidewalks Kelly, Brewer , King; Sewer
and Water - Brewer, Horky,
Walters; Recreation - King,
Jlorky, Walters; Building Horky . Brewer, King, and
Insurance - Ke lly , Walters,
Moinharl.

THURSDAY , JANUARY 29, t976
6:ro-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6: 15- Farm Report 13.
6:2(}--P atterns for Living 13 .
6:Jo-Columbus Today 4; News 6 ; Bible Answers 8;

CHANNELS
7:0().-.Special Edition (c)
7:30--Bilt Cosby lei
8 oo-High &amp; Wild (c )
8 : 3~Rex Humbard (c)
9:30--Wyatt Ea rp

· quently
26 Doggone.
it!
27 Perdition

HIGH

CHANNELS
7:0Q-Good News lor Today lei
7:3[}.- Bil I Cosby {c)
8:1){)-Wyatt Earp

1: oo--T a morrow 3,4, ·
I :3[}.-News 13.

b+-t-t-

~~~-~----~~--~~~~~----------------"----------~~~~~~26Mter~
?? -HE MUST E€ 10 FEEl HE Wt6 BORN IN
29 =~ow

c-

l :oo- Tomorrow 3.4 ; News 13 .

Cities at War 33. ·

25 Conse~

I

Sirloin

38 Swordshaped
39 Nevada
city
40 Craving
11 Gang

21 Approach

ME'

committees set

(Salt: p rice does no t mc lud e ac id .)

3&amp;

5 Seraglio

lu•

1\Jow 011 S;tl., a t your PARTS P lU S OU TLETS .

:1 .

ACROSS

a:.it il;id

Dt:lc o Ot-pt'ndahllity l or l ns tnn 1 S t a rtin ~l Po w t-! r . Eve n a t Deep·Freete Temp··
t; rature s. 01·lco's To p Ouali1 y Bcttl!-:ry Numbers Y-49, y ,55, Y·59 and Y·89

South

1 Capone's

•uniJ Towels

• Parts
Plus

r;r~==~~""

li-tEr-1

QND- 50

Void .4fter S.at ., Jon . 31 , 1976
S~,~bj•c:t to Appli&lt;:oble State &amp; local lo.111el

J:::i;

ONLY FROM

L\~E

l·lb.

l·llt.
Cans

Nort h East

- - - - - - -- - - l

:

-

West

4¥
Oble . P&lt;.~ ss Pass
Op&lt;' nin~ lea·d - j ¥

with

/. n .\· lhrtll .\ ' fJ/1 ri'ould t'.\ '/Jt'c:i to fHl\'
fur /Jt'onrolimlfll quolil .v balt r'l'il'.'i

,- - - - - - - - - - - - . down the ace of diamonds_
NORTH
2ll Diamonds are continued .
• l0832
South ruffs, enters dummy
¥7
by ruffing a heart. Takes a
• QJ 5
trump finesse, picks up the
• AQ J 96
last
trump . ta kes a c lub
Wt:ST
EAST tDI
finesse and winds up making
• 7
• K6
four spades plu s an overtrick .
¥K l043
¥ AQ J98
Just thi nk ! If South had sa t
t K tO 9 6
t A8132
back and passed he would
.K l0 52
.4
have lost 620 points instead of
SOUTH .
gain
ing 790 .
• AQ J 95 4
Of
course, West didn 't have
• 6 52
to
double
. East and Wes t
t4
might
continue
to five hea rts
"' 8 7 3
- down one , but in any event
Buth v~lnerable
the overca ll took their game
and rubber away from them .

Unolt I (Hptn With $10 or Mort l'tii'CMH

town

0

Distribution aids overcall ·

Cans

Ta1ty

Cans

GLENN COLLINS
RACINE - · Glenn It
Collins, Jr.. son of Mrs.
Emil G. Eynon, Route 1,
Racine, and the late Glenn
R. · Collins. Sr., has been
elected to "Who's Who
Among
Students
In
American Vocation and
Technical Students " in
recognition of outstanding
merit and accomplishment
as a student at Ashland
State Vocational and
Technical School lor 197576. Collins, a 1974 graduate
of Southern High S&lt;hool, is
training to be a machinist.

OLD EGYPTIAN
MUMMIE'&gt; I
DOJJ' T LIKE!

10 t!z•IZo

Veld Aft•r Sat., Jon. 31, 1976
Subltd to Appll«1bl• Stott &amp; Local Taxt•

.

WIN AT BRIDGE

ABOUT MOVI&gt;J'

~m

To111ato Soup

••Htitlts. NONE SOLD TO DUU:IS.

SUM PT HJ~

TO NI GHT A ND SET
UP THE SC.AM ~

CllltpMirl

ll :OQ- News 3,4,6; News 8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
Movie " They've Ki dnapped Anne Benedict" 6, 13; Movie " A Li ttle
Game" 8: Mov i e "The Lieutenant Wore Skirts" 10;
Janaki JJ.

11 :3Q-Johnn y Ca rson 3.... 15;

S:JD-Muslc Connection (c)
9:00--Mov le " Metropolis"
10 : 3D-----Out doorsm an

THERE-'S

TO THE' WAREHOUSE
C""llllt 1tJS-rkt Mr11tr Ct. llt•l IIIII 'riCII

10 :30-Aimanac 20; Ourstory 33.

8:00--Little House on lhe Pra irie 3,4, 15; Bionic Woman
6.13; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10; The Way It Was
20; Images ol Aging 33.
8·30--Lowell Thomas Remember s 20 .
9:oo-Chico &amp; the Man 3,4, 15; Baretta 6, JJ; Col lege
Basketball 9; Theater ln America 33; Cannon 10;

w ... ,_.... "Aay

ltll J... :U II all Galll1t1IS Ill rt•tftJ
liN
''I" Sttrl!l, Wt rutrvt th ri111t It ll•lt

Kn ight tO; News 20.

WEDNESDAY , JANUARY 28, t976

With Thla Coupon

~efused

whether the United Swtes
ca n acquiesce in the massive
involvement of
Soviet
military equipment and the
intervention of over 10 1000
Cuban military forces 'in an
area where the United Swtes
has sought no specia l position
for itself. This is a problem
that will not go away ."
The letter to Albert con.
tained
some
of
the
President's bhmtest foreign
policy rema rks of his .tenure.
1
' 1 believe that resistance to
Soviet expansion by military
means mu st be a fundamenta l element of U.S.
foreign p&lt;ilicy ," he said.
But Albert described the
adminis tration 's desire to
send covert aid as "abou t the
most useless enterprise I
have ever seen undertaken ."
House Republican leader
Rep. John J . Rhodes of
Arizona said "a lingering
fear of getting involved in
another Vietnam" was the
main reason for the lopsided
vote .
Rhodes said that "denying
him I Ford) the right to use
. any kind of aid there is in
effect to tell the Russians to
just come ahead and take
them.' '
The House action came on a

Televisihn log for easy .v iewing

h'ade whtle yo u're man expan-

MA'AM ?OH,NO.MA'A~I,~HE'S
NQT 6tVtN6 ME THE AN5i11EI?S...

budget.

was1e a lo t ol time and acco mplish very litt( e _ Weigh
E!ac h project for 1ts worth .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 19)
You're not lao sharp today .
R ~nd anyth ing 1mportant over
two or th ree .times. panlcu larly
ha~;e to sign it.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
Your tnierest in an organization·

i f you

t;o uld qe t oul of hand today .

&lt;":111

l in&lt;~ncial

co ntnbu1 1ons .

o ff er servi ces inslead .

~~~
Jan, 29, 1t71

M;lk e the

mosl of your opporcoming year . Th ey

lurll tleS this

should Qe ample. bul

you won"t

1111t a return un less you Invest
your hme .:ind lalen l wisely .
'\J.;\1 •! ' \! '1 ·: 11 i', '\II· l! I

•n1s1 · \ ..;.-: :-,.

FORCIN~ MA«BE, 6UT
NOT GIVING '

,

�Th'-' i &gt;olii.Y &amp;ut int•l, Middll'i'l' t l'l - l 1 ,~11n'I'U\ . 0 ., Wt~ l,lt ·s d; n , .I au , 211. I!•7ti
DlCK .TRACY
.
•.

13

12 - The ()mly St·muu.·l. Mi&lt;idl'-'l&gt;'-'1'1 -Pouwn l ~'. 0 .. Wt 1 chw~da ) .. 1:111 :m ..l!t'ifi

Reagan-Ford debate proposed
Ry IRA R. ALLEN
United Press lnterna liona l
TI1e presidential adviser
who said Monday President
Ford is not changing his
middle-of-the road st ripes
because of Ronald Reagan

Aid to Angola
By JOHN F. BARTON
WASHINGTON 1UP!)
Congress has convincingly
reljuffed Presid ent Ford 's
plea for covert aid to pro-U .S.
forces in the Angola civil war,
but Secretary of State Hen ry
Kissinger says it's a problem·
"that won 't go away ."
Ignoring Ford's warning
tha t the tw o an ti-Soviet
factions need U.S. a id to
survive, the House on a 323-99
vote Tuesda y gave fina l
congressional approval for a
han on covert military a id to
the newly indendent nation.
An a ngry Ford , who before
the vote said in a letter to
House Speaker Carl Albert
that anti-Soviet forces in
Angola " will be destroyed"
without "effective Western
assistance," sa id later in a
statement :
"The Congress has stated
to the world that it will ignore
a clear act of Sov iet-Cuba n
expansion by brute milit2ry
force into areas thousands of
miles from· either country ."
Kissinger, who testified
nearly two hours in closed
session ·before the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee
Tuesday, told reporters upon
emerging :
"The problem in Angola is

draw from the r:tce.
He quoted the President as
saying, " If anyone thinks I'm
going to pull out. they a,e out
of their minds ."
Ford go t more advice
Tuesday
fr om
George
Wallace, whose motives are
not as charitable as Hartmann 's.
AI a rally in East Boston,
Wallace said : " I want to ask
the President to ask his at$11 2.3 billion defense ap- torney genera l to ask for a
propriation bill the Senate moratorium . on busing
pa sse d la st month aft er throughout
the United
addin g lan guage to ba n States." Wallace aide Billy
cove rt assistance to the Joe Camp said the Alabama
former Portuguese colony . gov ernor would put the
The House acted on the request in writlng to Attorney
defe nse bill earlier, so General Edward Levy .
Monday's approval of the
Wallace,
who
ha s
Angola amendment sent the previously played down his
bill to Ford.
chances in the March 2
During the hour-long Massachusetts primary, said
de ba te, appropriations Tuesday a good show ing
commillee Chairman · Rep. would send his Democratic
George H. Mahon, D-Tex ., rivals "scurrying 1ike a cat
told cO lle ague~ large Soviet on a ·hot tin roof."
aid to the Angolan comEls ew h e re, liberal
munists and transport of Democrats turned their fire
Cuban troops to Angola ''is a n from 1+--.ord and Reagan to
outrage
of
the
lirst fe llow Democ ra t J immy
magnitude ," Our vote today Carter in Neli• Engla nd and
must not be taken as a back- Henry Jackson did the same
ward step by the greatest in Florida.
Carter's strung showing in
nation in the world,'' he said.
But Rep. Joseph P, Ad- Iowa last wee k has set him up
dabbo , D-N.Y., said, "There as a target for other cani&amp;, in my judgment, no reaSon didates striving to gain the
for the United Stales to get uliber a l' ' vote. In New
involved in the Angolan war. Hampshire, Morris Udall and
The Congress has been Birch Bayh have been
burned before and I have no publicly questioning some of
desire to be burned again." the former Georgia goverHouse Democratic leader no'r's positions on abortion
Thomas P. O'Neill said the and labor issues. And in
Russians "are in the same Florida , Ja ckson ran down
position in Angola that we Carter's suggestion Monday
were in Vietnam. "
that the Ma rch 9 primary
would be a Carter-Wallace
affair.
Ja ckson, in Miami Beach,
accused ·Carter of "ta lking
out of a1l corners of his mouth
... He's heard that Jackson is
are ready to assist callers
wi th their concerns, provide earning in like a thundering
herd and he doesn't like it, "
up to date information about
1
available services Ur just jackson said. "He 11 hear
talk ,, The service is entirely mOre aQout it because .we 're ·
free and confidential. Metgs goi ng to beat him here. ' '
Reagan, campaigning in
Coun ly reSidents can feel free
North
Carolina , called for
to ca ll Meigs Care line any
"fundamen
ta l reform" in the
hour of the day at 992-7502.
Social Security system. He
said persons over 65 should be
allowed to work and still
collect benefits a nd Social
SERVICES HELD
Securit y discrimin a tion
Funeral services fo r agai nst working women
Margaret Zwilling, 52, wife of should stop. He said "there is
William Zwilling , who died nothing in this 12lk of reform
Jan. 19 at · Ravenna , Ohio that should frighten anyone ,
were conducted Thursday at 'because ''no one would. be
Immaculate
Co nception deprived of or delayed" in
Catholic Church by the Rev . gettin g Social Security
Father Donald G. Harak. checks.'' .
Attending from here were
br ol her -in'-law s J ose ph
Zwilling, Middleport , and
George Horak and Gilbert
Zwilling, both of Pomeroy.

1000
Extra
Top Value Stamps
--=
-- Caslo Calculator

rongress in Mi chigan despite
advice he shouldn 't. and he
might advise Ford to do the
same now. Hart mann also
told reporters he could not
conceive of a situation that
would cause Ford to with-

said Tursd;:\v t'tP mi~ht
suggest that Ford debate his
GOP challenger.
White House counst'llor
Robert T. Hartmann sa id
Ford always debated opponents when he ran for

Careline in training for winter
Carcline, a 24-h our cnsts cerns callers might face.
interventiort. inf&lt;Jrmation and
In addi lion to trainin g
re ferral telephone line ser- lectures , volunteers practice
vin g Meigs Cuun ly, s ta rted handling call' situations in
its winter training this past role~ play practices. Trainees
Saturday.
then work en internship at the
Meigs Ca r e line (Ph o ne: Care li~ e Center with an
992-7502) is a place where ex perienced Careline
people may call at any hour vo lunteer . Careline run s
of the day wi th problems, thes€ free training programs
concerns, or just to talk . And four times a year . The next
citizens can use Careline as a program will begin in April.
place to find out a bout socia l
Meigs Care line is funded by
se rvices available in Meigs the Me igs-Gallia -Jackson
Coun ly . All calls are com - Men tal Health and MenU.!
pletely confidential. Callers Retardation SerVices 64 8
arc not asked for their names Boa rd . Careline volun teers
or adQresses. The service i ~
free .
BLOOD NEEDED
Trained volunteers staff
Delores Aeiker, Pomeroy,
Carelinephones. The training
course conSists of 50 hours of wh o will undergo heart
intens ive work in crisis in- surgery Friday at University
terve nti on aild telep hone Hospital, is in ne.ed of 16 pints
listening skills as well as of Type 0 positive blood.
lectures· dealing with the Blood may be donated at the
kinds of problems and con. next bloodmobile.

I mages of Aging 20.
9 :30----Dumpl ings 3,.4, 15.

IO:OQ-Petrocelti 3, 4.15; Slarsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; Blue

S.O YOU 6ET O VER

Dollar Day
Round-Up

Witt! Coupon
BORN LOSER

I ~D I P11T 1\1t. a£XK 1HE:I&lt;f ~

Stokely
Fruit

't:O \I.Ot.l'T KEEP
101&lt; TilE TIME,

500 Sheets Per lolt-Sintl• Ply-latllno•

--

1-llt.
Cans

MF3

BV~R-1 10

Charmin Tissue

...-

f£STE'R!t-llo

4·Roll
Pkg,

:

With Coupon
limit 1 Ceupon With $10 or More1'1rchm

G.....iillliiiP~'i"~;ili'•no&lt;at

Void Ahtr Sat., Jan . 31, 1976

ANNIE-HIND-SIGHT

r....
EVEM I ~ Wf

WE Nfi/ER ¥KJRRifD
HOW OUR
SHOWS AlWA'I'5
S UMED TO fC\DI~
RfMf~8ER

D&lt;D HEA RLY
STARVE TO
DfATH
NOW AN D
lHfN - ·

Deliciou•

Y•Ca~

Armour Star

THE MOST OU l · Or THf · WA'f lANK
TOWNS?

Sliced Bacon

Pork 'N Beans

$

St:t'!

your md t~

.nclt : llt

TH ESE .... ~

PJrt s Plus Auto Pa rt s Stor ~ o r Serv ic t:: Dea lt::r fo r hi s pr'ice.

p~~t; AUTO PARTS STORES ARE FEATURING

THIS DELCO DEEP FREEZE SPECIAL OFFER

G&amp;J Auto Parts

I

144 W. Second Street
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769

G&amp;J Auto Parts
Rt. 33
Mason, W. 1/a.

y Vl&gt;LH l)i•IC:(J l3il l l•~ ry IIIS!till,·d 11IL1S dl 11 l rlllli ,, ~111. 11
!nsl c:~l l ati Oil vl 1.1rq. ·, ,11 .my
t ll1· 'k ~ • Part&amp; RfllABLE SE RV ICE DEALERS

I

or

Pomeroy Motor Co.
Pomeroy , Ohio
Bailey's Ashland Station
Tuppers Plains. Ohio

,., Plus
Smith · Nel~on Motors
Pomeroy, Ohio
French's Sunoco Station
MidcUeport . Ohto

·

Burton Sunoco
Mason. W. Vo .

Offer good thru Saturday:

'I'OU POOR KID - I
REMEMBER. THE

SO REAl Al10

ERNEST AS ll'S

~!(,

BEEN PLENTY

W~IE:N

PfLRI't

YOU Q UIT TilE
SHOW ·· YOU WERE

OF TIMES

"So-0 ·0 UJC K'f~
EVERYBODY 5AID·-THAT DIRTY SO·

5 'N CE-

m t , IT

Wl\'5 M'r'

OWN
._AUIT,
1 00,

MlR11A -

I

Pkg.

••
Pass

chrupber
8 Constant
9 Derelict
13 Pledge

u

(2

wds.)

15 Babylonian
deity
16 Summer,

$

Can't! 1 promise
bear la plai.J 'im

Goin'
t'

some poker'

an·

r....... u.u.a. ~~-

2 I Chicken
2·1'1. . .1.
np ••••
......
. . . .s
...h

Zeb.

Fa•llf

JoeJ?

I

•

U.S. Goo!. Graded Cholet tt.Gplt's Chol,..
~,_., to 11·1b. A"'l. loneltu

I

Don' be a -~ 11 ~.::n
Rufus! He teach in' article
me,
ts Earth-

Ha! You
think
LjOU QOin'

,

t'teach
that
bear
t' plaw
cards 7

me

...

This

instant

$

(Do you have a quesUon
for th~ experts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys" care ol !his
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer indi vidual questions
if stamped, self.addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The

most

inter~sting

·,questions

will be used in this column
and wiJf receive copies of
JACOBY MODERN.)

l'WO HAMMERHEADS, ZlGGY AN 'TARL !

. Stokely
Applesa"ce

loll

A Pennsylvania reader
j umped to three diamonds
after he had opened one heart
and partner responded one
spade. They had a part score
of 40 and partner passed. Our
reader wants to know if !lis
jump shift was forcing .
The answer is that il would
be with the Jacpbys but obviously his partner did not
think it was. Partners do go
wrong on occasion.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

NOW l8''S GO AN ' SURPR ISE 0110SE

Talty

Holly

t•

~ ~~~

~·~-

With .Coupon

mark

1-lb.

t.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Some tim es a weak dis ·
tribulional overcall really
pays off
We have given North and
South exactly the same cards
as they held yesterday but
have changed East and West a
trifle .· Specifically. we have
given East the king o! spades
and West the king of clubs.
East and West can sti ll
ma"e four hearts because
the re ~re singletons in each of
the black s uits. but when
South gets doubled at four
spildes he has a rea l baiL
Eas t takes his ace of hearts,
looks over dummy and lays

Limit I Coupon With $10 or More Purcho11

quake
20 Ending lor

exam
22 Principal
23 Highway to
the 49th

DOWN
1 Wea,gel
2 Hoisting
d'vice
3 Late-bloom·
ing plant
(2 wds.)
4 Alkali
5 Elocutionist

6 Hold back
7 I love
(Lat.)
10 Winter's
forerunner
(2

wds.)

Yesterday's Allt!Wer

11 Pleasing to
the eye
12 Peaceful

27 Turn up
· the radio
29 Greek

16 Joie de
vivre
19 Head ( sl.)
Z2 Kind
of kit
23 "- Fideles"
24 "Sleepy -"

island
30 Neighbor
of Quebec
31 Invest

25 Whetstone

311'jcottillh
river

37 RaiDbow
shape

~!-

GET HIM

AWAY r-

Firm Ripe

Urban League 10.
6 :4o---Qunce of Prevent ion 10 .
6:45-Morn ing Report 3.
6:55-Ch uck Wh ite Reports 10; Good Morning, Tr l
Slate \3 .
7:0D-----Today 3,4,15 ; Good Morning , America 6 6, 13;
CBS News 8; Bungs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.

7:3[}.-Schoolies 10.
8:1){)-Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St . 33.
8:31)-- Big Valley 6.
·
,
9:QO-.-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue4,15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9:3[}.-A.M. 3; One Llle to li ve 6; To Be Announced 8;
New Zoo Revue 13.
·
10 :.0[}.-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Edgeot Night 6;
Price Is Right 8,10; Mike Doug las 13.
10:3[}.-High Rollers 3,15; Formby's Antiques Fur.
nlture Workshop 4; D i nah 6.
ll :OD-Wheel of For tune 3, 15; Hollywood Squares ..;

Gambit 8,10; E lee. Co. 20.
11 : 31)--Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Happy Days 13;
Midday 4; Loe oiLite 8, 10; Sesame St. 20.
11:55-Take Kerr 8; Dan lmel's World 10.
12:0[}.-Magnlltcent Marble Mach ine 3.15; Let's Make a
Deal 13; Bob Braun's 50·50 Club News 6,8,10.
12:3[}.-Take My Advice 3,15; Ati ·My Children 6,13;
Search for Tomorrow 8, 10 .
12:45-Eiec. Co. 33.
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
1:Oo-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donah'-'e 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15.1 :3[}.-DAys ,of Our lives 3,4.15; Rhyme &amp;
Reason 6,13; As the World Turns 8,1 0.
2:0Q-S20.000 Pyramid 6,t3 .
2:3l}.-Doc1ors 3.4, 15; Neighbors 6, 13; Guiding Light
8, tO .
3:0[}.-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospllal 6,1 3; All
In The Fam ily 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:3()-Qn'e Life to live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6;
Match Game 8,10; Lowell Thomas Remembt!rs 20.
4 : 0~M i ster Cartoon 3;

Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister ROgers
20,33; M~vte " Pepe" 10; Dinah 13.
4:3[}.-Bewitched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. '20,33; Get Smart 15.
5 : 00--Bon~nza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3l}.-Adam·12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec .
Co. 20,33; Adam . t2 13.
6:0[}.-News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15; Zoom 20; lTV Utilization 33.
6:3[}.-NBC News3 ,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Your Future is Now 33; tn .School
Programs 20 .
7:DO- Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Space : 1999; News 10; Let's Make a Peal
t3 ; Family Aff~ir 15; Anyone tor Tennyson? 20;
7:JQ-Holly.wood Squares 3,4; Ohio State Lottery 6;
Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky 20;, Wild
Kingdom 10; To Tell tHe Truth 13; Music City
U.S.A. 15.
.
8:0[}.-Cop &amp; the Kid 3,4, 15; Wel~ome Back, Kotter 6,13;
Waltons 8. 10; ; Lowell Thomas Remembers 33.
9: 0().-.Movle ·"S isters" 3, lS; Streets of San Francisco
6,13; Movie "The Other Man" 4; Hawaii Ftve·O 8; ;
Movie "Little Murders" 9; Movie " The Moon Is
Blue " 10; In Search of a Maestro 20; HollywOod
Television Theatre 33. '
10 :0[}.-Lola Falana 6,!3; Barnaby Jones 8; News 20;
Journey Thgrough Eden 33.
10 :3o-M0nster Concert 33 .
tl :0[}.-News 3.4.6.8 .1 0, 13,15; ABC News 33.
tl :3[}.-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Mannix 6. 13; Movie
"Sa ddle the Wind" 8; Movie " Come Back, Little
Sheba" 10; Janak i 33.
12 :3[}.-Longstreet 6, 13.

lO :OG-Target :Corruptors

Astro-

:sz Political

lb.JR SHr:=:IKC:O."rr,
CYRIL THt;
SWI NE.:~ YOU ARE
HIS MASTt::R rf

Grapt;t

party
(abbr.)
33 Street
(Fr.)
34 "Mr. Tam-

•Bernice Bade Oaol
For Thursday, Jan. 29, 1976

bowine -"

ARIES (March 21·April 19)

35 Bally-

":A+-i-+-i Occasionall y. you can

hooed
37 In the
midst of

get away

Open
24 H
a Day
s•••.,)

I DON'T WANT TO
SEE NO HATS ON IN
TH' SCHOOLHOUSE .
FELLE.RS ---

(Except Saturday Mhlll..t 'til 9 1.11.

•• ALL BUT ONE,
Tf-IAT IS

l

MCJTUJAUM

fC 1916 Kin1 Fealure• Sndlcatt, Inc . )

TJ.lE ANSWER I5'1R~E · ! PVT
oowN ·r~tiE .' owcK' W~AT 5

TRVE 15 Tf?VE! f'VT DOWN

' TRVE.' CHUCK, OR I'LL NEVER
SPEAK TO '10~ AGAIN !
'

•..• ......
YeMr F•-•r•l

•

•

CQU id lind a germ of unexpected subsl anCe.

' RPHY LEO (July 23-Aug, 22) You
h a~;e n tC!n dency 10 be a slow
OAPH PVA
OKAMC
HJMCYAM
JTU st:irler today. You can over co me yo ur l eth ar gy _ Push
yourseU a bit 1n the morning.
PVA
OAPH
E.iQO
PCEYA
CEY
·VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) This
1s no1 the day 1o bet on a lo ng
OKAMC
QPGYM . - MJTCJXJTJ
shot Be saiiSfLed wit h sure
Yesterday's Ci'yptoquote: FIRST LOVE IS A KIND OF VAC- th1ng s that o ffe r a smalle r
CINATION WlUCH SAVES A MAN FROM CATCHING THE reward . but a cerl&lt;tln re turn.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23 -0ct. 23)
COMPLAINT A SECOND TIME. - HONORE DE ·BALZAC
Promises to the fam.11y today

BARNEY

means to d ay . Plea s ura ble

(April 20-May 20)
:....JL..l-~:r}~~~c~l~: ym1
qet toda)' cou ld

.4

PVA

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) It's going to take d fsci pline.
bllt l ry to live within your

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jon.
19) Unless you keep things in
per spect ive today , you can

-;r+-t--t-i ;;"~':;, ,';;o uhowhold
th ree aces . you'd
e them
he ~;c r y mLsleading. Rely on

EJQO

Don'! enlarge on the .scope of
wha( you do for another today.
Th ey cou ld be resentful if you
magnil y your contr ibution .

whim s cou ld demolis h your

a l1ttl e bluff . Today. if

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: re.l sorHnQ an d logic lo keep
vou out of 1ro11 ble
AXYDLBAAXR
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) In
II J, 0 N ." G FELL 0 W
S1tuallons where you share an
One letter simply stands for another, In this sample A il 1n t eres1. don '! lo.ok l o.r a
used for the three L's, X for the two O' s, etc. Single letters, qrea(er return than you · r~ enapostrophes, the length n.nd formation of the words are all ti tle d to . II won't happen today .
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
h ints. Each day the code lett ers are dift'etent
E~; e r yone is en t11led to his opiCRYPTOQUOTES
nion He ar others ou t. You

I \\ONDER WHAT CDULD
HAVE HAPPENED 1D
oTAN ' HE NEVER
GOES OFF WITHOUT TELLING-

mood will be disappoinwhen yo u fail to deliver.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov: 22)

s1ve
tin g

you

wilh

Town council's
Middleport Ma yor Fred
Hoffman has named village
council committees lor 1976 .
They are (chairman first):
Finance - Marvin Kelly ,
William Walters, Carl Horky;
Fire - Allen Klng, George
Meinhart. Horky; Ordinance
- Meinhart, Horky, Kelly;
Equipment - James Brewer,
Walters and Meinhart;
Safety - Walters, Kelly,
Brewer; Utili ties ::... Walters,
Kelly. Meinhart; Cemetery
- Horky, King , Kelly;
Streets and Sidewalks Kelly, Brewer , King; Sewer
and Water - Brewer, Horky,
Walters; Recreation - King,
Jlorky, Walters; Building Horky . Brewer, King, and
Insurance - Ke lly , Walters,
Moinharl.

THURSDAY , JANUARY 29, t976
6:ro-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6: 15- Farm Report 13.
6:2(}--P atterns for Living 13 .
6:Jo-Columbus Today 4; News 6 ; Bible Answers 8;

CHANNELS
7:0().-.Special Edition (c)
7:30--Bilt Cosby lei
8 oo-High &amp; Wild (c )
8 : 3~Rex Humbard (c)
9:30--Wyatt Ea rp

· quently
26 Doggone.
it!
27 Perdition

HIGH

CHANNELS
7:0Q-Good News lor Today lei
7:3[}.- Bil I Cosby {c)
8:1){)-Wyatt Earp

1: oo--T a morrow 3,4, ·
I :3[}.-News 13.

b+-t-t-

~~~-~----~~--~~~~~----------------"----------~~~~~~26Mter~
?? -HE MUST E€ 10 FEEl HE Wt6 BORN IN
29 =~ow

c-

l :oo- Tomorrow 3.4 ; News 13 .

Cities at War 33. ·

25 Conse~

I

Sirloin

38 Swordshaped
39 Nevada
city
40 Craving
11 Gang

21 Approach

ME'

committees set

(Salt: p rice does no t mc lud e ac id .)

3&amp;

5 Seraglio

lu•

1\Jow 011 S;tl., a t your PARTS P lU S OU TLETS .

:1 .

ACROSS

a:.it il;id

Dt:lc o Ot-pt'ndahllity l or l ns tnn 1 S t a rtin ~l Po w t-! r . Eve n a t Deep·Freete Temp··
t; rature s. 01·lco's To p Ouali1 y Bcttl!-:ry Numbers Y-49, y ,55, Y·59 and Y·89

South

1 Capone's

•uniJ Towels

• Parts
Plus

r;r~==~~""

li-tEr-1

QND- 50

Void .4fter S.at ., Jon . 31 , 1976
S~,~bj•c:t to Appli&lt;:oble State &amp; local lo.111el

J:::i;

ONLY FROM

L\~E

l·lb.

l·llt.
Cans

Nort h East

- - - - - - -- - - l

:

-

West

4¥
Oble . P&lt;.~ ss Pass
Op&lt;' nin~ lea·d - j ¥

with

/. n .\· lhrtll .\ ' fJ/1 ri'ould t'.\ '/Jt'c:i to fHl\'
fur /Jt'onrolimlfll quolil .v balt r'l'il'.'i

,- - - - - - - - - - - - . down the ace of diamonds_
NORTH
2ll Diamonds are continued .
• l0832
South ruffs, enters dummy
¥7
by ruffing a heart. Takes a
• QJ 5
trump finesse, picks up the
• AQ J 96
last
trump . ta kes a c lub
Wt:ST
EAST tDI
finesse and winds up making
• 7
• K6
four spades plu s an overtrick .
¥K l043
¥ AQ J98
Just thi nk ! If South had sa t
t K tO 9 6
t A8132
back and passed he would
.K l0 52
.4
have lost 620 points instead of
SOUTH .
gain
ing 790 .
• AQ J 95 4
Of
course, West didn 't have
• 6 52
to
double
. East and Wes t
t4
might
continue
to five hea rts
"' 8 7 3
- down one , but in any event
Buth v~lnerable
the overca ll took their game
and rubber away from them .

Unolt I (Hptn With $10 or Mort l'tii'CMH

town

0

Distribution aids overcall ·

Cans

Ta1ty

Cans

GLENN COLLINS
RACINE - · Glenn It
Collins, Jr.. son of Mrs.
Emil G. Eynon, Route 1,
Racine, and the late Glenn
R. · Collins. Sr., has been
elected to "Who's Who
Among
Students
In
American Vocation and
Technical Students " in
recognition of outstanding
merit and accomplishment
as a student at Ashland
State Vocational and
Technical School lor 197576. Collins, a 1974 graduate
of Southern High S&lt;hool, is
training to be a machinist.

OLD EGYPTIAN
MUMMIE'&gt; I
DOJJ' T LIKE!

10 t!z•IZo

Veld Aft•r Sat., Jon. 31, 1976
Subltd to Appll«1bl• Stott &amp; Local Taxt•

.

WIN AT BRIDGE

ABOUT MOVI&gt;J'

~m

To111ato Soup

••Htitlts. NONE SOLD TO DUU:IS.

SUM PT HJ~

TO NI GHT A ND SET
UP THE SC.AM ~

CllltpMirl

ll :OQ- News 3,4,6; News 8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
Movie " They've Ki dnapped Anne Benedict" 6, 13; Movie " A Li ttle
Game" 8: Mov i e "The Lieutenant Wore Skirts" 10;
Janaki JJ.

11 :3Q-Johnn y Ca rson 3.... 15;

S:JD-Muslc Connection (c)
9:00--Mov le " Metropolis"
10 : 3D-----Out doorsm an

THERE-'S

TO THE' WAREHOUSE
C""llllt 1tJS-rkt Mr11tr Ct. llt•l IIIII 'riCII

10 :30-Aimanac 20; Ourstory 33.

8:00--Little House on lhe Pra irie 3,4, 15; Bionic Woman
6.13; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10; The Way It Was
20; Images ol Aging 33.
8·30--Lowell Thomas Remember s 20 .
9:oo-Chico &amp; the Man 3,4, 15; Baretta 6, JJ; Col lege
Basketball 9; Theater ln America 33; Cannon 10;

w ... ,_.... "Aay

ltll J... :U II all Galll1t1IS Ill rt•tftJ
liN
''I" Sttrl!l, Wt rutrvt th ri111t It ll•lt

Kn ight tO; News 20.

WEDNESDAY , JANUARY 28, t976

With Thla Coupon

~efused

whether the United Swtes
ca n acquiesce in the massive
involvement of
Soviet
military equipment and the
intervention of over 10 1000
Cuban military forces 'in an
area where the United Swtes
has sought no specia l position
for itself. This is a problem
that will not go away ."
The letter to Albert con.
tained
some
of
the
President's bhmtest foreign
policy rema rks of his .tenure.
1
' 1 believe that resistance to
Soviet expansion by military
means mu st be a fundamenta l element of U.S.
foreign p&lt;ilicy ," he said.
But Albert described the
adminis tration 's desire to
send covert aid as "abou t the
most useless enterprise I
have ever seen undertaken ."
House Republican leader
Rep. John J . Rhodes of
Arizona said "a lingering
fear of getting involved in
another Vietnam" was the
main reason for the lopsided
vote .
Rhodes said that "denying
him I Ford) the right to use
. any kind of aid there is in
effect to tell the Russians to
just come ahead and take
them.' '
The House action came on a

Televisihn log for easy .v iewing

h'ade whtle yo u're man expan-

MA'AM ?OH,NO.MA'A~I,~HE'S
NQT 6tVtN6 ME THE AN5i11EI?S...

budget.

was1e a lo t ol time and acco mplish very litt( e _ Weigh
E!ac h project for 1ts worth .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 19)
You're not lao sharp today .
R ~nd anyth ing 1mportant over
two or th ree .times. panlcu larly
ha~;e to sign it.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
Your tnierest in an organization·

i f you

t;o uld qe t oul of hand today .

&lt;":111

l in&lt;~ncial

co ntnbu1 1ons .

o ff er servi ces inslead .

~~~
Jan, 29, 1t71

M;lk e the

mosl of your opporcoming year . Th ey

lurll tleS this

should Qe ample. bul

you won"t

1111t a return un less you Invest
your hme .:ind lalen l wisely .
'\J.;\1 •! ' \! '1 ·: 11 i', '\II· l! I

•n1s1 · \ ..;.-: :-,.

FORCIN~ MA«BE, 6UT
NOT GIVING '

,

�14 - The

\\'t'tlrll'sda~ . ,J;u• :~R. 1!f7ti

Ottily St•ntint•l, Middlt•J,..Il"t-P, )JlJt•ruy, 0 .,

..

JlllJ1~111E-t4.J MwiiJ....J~

.&lt;%
_ -,/~-_\.\)~_',./')-~
".' . . ,,

t1J

I I

Cancel la!ion

I
-

~

h
I I I

:y.f··'
-J'i· '• ·
1 \

l

l

;.;.I,

~

ce nt s p er word
ronsecuti"e Ins er tions .

Now arTanrr tht cirtlflllrtltn
form lht 1urpriie an1wtr,"'

~ ~ to

CA..ewll'n tumurro.t•)

I

Jumbtr.: FLORA.

BLOAT

OSSIFY

LICHEN

• An'""'': U"lwt tlu· pd mlt'/1/11 fynmrt ndfc•dt•d -'" OIJ,.S "'

Notice

Notice

INCOME
TAX
pr ep a r ed ,.
F edera l and sta l e taxe s .
Will be don e b y appt . on ly
Please phon e 99 2 2'272 . or se c
Mrs . Wanda Eb l in . La11rel
Cl iff Rd ., Pomeroy
12 3 1 JO I C:

INCOME Tax Se rv ice b y
ap pointment on l y . P hon e
99 2 3386 . F ive Po int , OhiO .
1 27 5. tp

M AK E_ SURE you g e t every
poss tble dedu ct ion th is year .
Ha-ve your Fe de ral and
Sta t e In come Ta)( return by
an accounlan t. Phon e 992
6173 .
1 21 57t c '

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

A Low Cost
Want Ad

Will Cut
Cost of

1 WILL be g iving p iano lesson s
in mv ho me s t arting re b . 1
1 or
in for mat ion call 992
J/78
I I It! 501

c

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
CHe N o . 21117
Estate
Of W ILLIAM
F
WINEBRENNER Decea se d :
is
given
t hat
N ot i Ce
Margaret Ett en Winebrenner
of Syr,a cu se , M e igs Coun ty .
Oh io , ha s bee n dul y appointed
Execu t r ix
th e Estate of
Wi l l ia m
F
Winebrenne r .
deceased . .la t e of Sy ra cuse,
M eig s County , Ohio .
Cr editor s ar e r equ ire d to
f ile th e ir claims with said
fiduc i ary within four months
Dated thi s 2Jrd day oi
Ja nu ary l'il76

ot

Manning D . Webs te r
Judge
Court of Common Pl eas .
P robate D ivision
( l l 2812 1 o.i , 11 , 3t.c

Living ••••••
WRITE YOUR
OWN AD!

ATHENS LIVESTOCK
SALES, INC.

SWEEPER
an d
Se wmg
Machin(!-s R e pa1r , Pa ris,
a nd
Su pp l ies .
Dav i s
Vac uum Cl ean er , 1 .· mil e up
George ' s Creek Rd . off Sta te
Rout e 7. Phon e (6 14) 446
0294 .

I 28 1tc
FA BR IC.: SA LE Biggest and
Best sa te since opening of
our bus iness A l l mater ia l in
shop on sale one. week on l y .
Monday , January 26 l hru
Sat ., Jan 31 . F irst quality
knits st art at $1. 98 per yard .
Open 9 a .rn . to 7 p .m .
Monday thru Fri day and 9
a .m . to 5 p m . Sa turday
Caro l ina Fabrics on Route 7,
one half mi l e north of
Ches t er , Ohio . H enry and
Mary Hunter , owne r s.
I 25 61p

ITS EASY TO

ORDER BY
MAIU
-SPECIAL!-

12 WORDS
4 DAYS .
ONLY
CASH WITH
ORDER

AVAILABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
NO REFUNDS.
Each
initial
and
group
of
figures
counts as one word.
Be sure fo count
name and address, if
used , and your phone
number .
Including
prices for items offered in your want ad
will
increase
response .

1.---~-

2. _ _ _ __
3. _ __:__ __
4, _ _ __ __

5· ----~~

6. _ _ _ __

7. _~---

a. _____ _

9. - -- - 10. ----~
11. -~---

12.---~­

NAME
ADDRESS- - -

Bulls

{over

1, 000

'US
TO lltE

QAJLY SENTINEL
111 COURT ST.

POMEROY, OHIO
45769

25 -

18.85, Feeder Bulls (&lt;00-BOO
lbs.) 22 . 50-31.
SlriUgh t er Cow s- Utility 1327, Canner -Cutter 16.85-23 .
Vea l s (choice -pr ime) 49.85 ·
65.50, Sla ug hter Lambs 47 .50,
Feeder Lambs 45 -46 .50, Hogs
50 .40-50.50, Sows 41 ·42, Boars
35 -40, Pigs {by the h ead) 35 40.

ANAHEIM
!UP! )
America 's first official
national rugby team will play
an international malch
against Australia a t Glover
Field here Saturday.
"Some people thought it
would lake three years for us
to get our fit"st international
game and then probably
aga inst a second-level rugby
nation ' like Canada," said
Dennis Storer of UCLA, the
national team coach. "But
it's happened. '.'
The U.S. National Rugby
Union was organized last
June in Chicago.
LOS ANGELES IUPI) Chris Evert, winner over
Virginia Wade at Landover,
Md., Sunday, has moved into
the lead in the Virginia Slims
points race .
·
Evert passed first-week
leader Martina Navratilova,
who sa t out the second event
of the 10-toutnament series
leading to the $150,000 finale
at the Sports Arena here
April 12-17. Evert has 200
points . iri two tournaments
followed by Sue Barker of
England, who has llO .
Navratilova also has 110.
PALM SPR IN GS, Calif.
IUPI) - Sixty.&lt;Jne women
pros will compete in the fifth
annua l Colga te-Dinah Shore

Winners

Circle

Cham ·

pionship golf tournament at
the Mission Hills Country
Club April 1-4.
The $200,000 event-,- the
richest
t our nament
in
women's golf ....carries a first
prize . of $32,000 'plus a new
car . The finals will be on
nationa l television.
World - H c c k e y Associa ti on
Stand i ng5
By United Pre ss I nt ernation al
East
w l
T Pts .
New Eng land
2 1 12
5
47
Cincinnati
2 1 24
I
43
Cleveland
18 25 3
39
lhd ianapolis
18 Ui 2
38

west

MAIL WITH

lbs.)

W. l

Houston
San Di ego
Mrnnesota
Phoen ix

30

. T
16

Pis
0

60

1975 CHEV . ESTATE WAGON

197o'PL Y.-C UDA

12691

Mobile Homes For Sale
197 5 W IND SOR Mobi le Hom e,
l.l )( 10 with
pul l oul , J
bedroom , l ' "' bath , w w
carpe t , bui ll In s tereo , new
wash er and dryer , co m
pte re ly f urnished , tola l elec
to r qui ck sa l e , $8 ,500 . F ir si
traile r on right going towa rd
Pag etown , J etti e Ar i x .
1 27 Jtc
197 4 SKY LINE Mobi le Home
2 bedrooms , blue an'd while :
Phon e 949 2860 .
I 23 61 c

for Rent

La Salle
HOTEL
M iddleport. 0 . Ph . 992 -2nl

1941 CHEVROLET p ic kup ,
good condition . Call 99 2
) 640 .
1 77 5tc
1971 L T 0 . 4 dr , p .b ., p .s, a ..c .,
radial tire s. S1.995 A lso 1
1966 Mu st ang '1 dr ,, lot s of
goodies, S5 95. Call Fi r eston e
Store. 99 ~ · 2138 .
I 23 6t c

I&lt;ETIRE D or semi retired
lady to live i n r ree roo m
and board and small wages
for l ight dulies See at 308
Page St .. Midd le port , Ohio
l I I I I t:
BABY SI TTER needed in my
home , preferab l y liv e -in .
Phon e 247 -282 1 after 6 p rh .
I 25 -4f p

Wanted
lASH paid fo r al l makes and
models of mobile homes
P hon e area code 614 ·423 :
953 1.
4-13-lfc

Wanted To Buy
WANTED old . upright p ianos
in any c ond.ition . Will _pay
$10 eac h . F irst fl oor .o nly ,
Wr ite givi ng directions 10
Witten Piano Co . • B.o)( 188 ,
Sardis, Ohio 4.3946.
·
1-21,1Otp

- ----

·•n

196:, fORO L T O : NfiW 12 ga .
Wi n c hest er 37 A Si ngle shol
Phone 742 7359 .
I 13 261p

H OUSEfRA ILEf.&lt;
ncar
Ra cine . 3 BR ., bath , no pe l s,
1 s mall chil d · o .k . 550
d eposit , ~ 1 00 plu s uti li ties .
Phon e 949 1093
I 28 Jlc

HOSPITAL bed . l ike n ew , all
posit ions.. P~one 992 2876 or
992 5565 .
I 2S 61C

H OU SE in Mason , 5 r ooms and
bath , n ice lo catio n . PhOne
99 1 '5126 .
1·28 J tc
14

PER SO N to help drive to
Flo r ida for fr ee trip , ear l y in
Februa ry . Phone 99:1 792'1
I 27 ) IC
REL I AB LE babysitter n ee d ed
in M iddl epo rt area . Phone
99 2 2220 aller '6 p .m .
1 28 - .lt c

l l RCO H eti I R C w elding
mac h ine . n ~ w e t ec
,, (1
accessor ic·s inctud (' O Phon e
3.11 0
I 0 7H I t c

GOOD h ay f&lt;:ir sal e, Sr" bale .
Phone 74 2 1 108 , L e ad in~
Cr ee k ROad
1 ~5 .:!Jp

f' T MOTOR horil e, like
n ew . sleeps six, generator,
a . c ., $2 50, we ek pIus 20c m li e
Phon e 949 2770 for res. er
va lion .
I 28 31 c

WALNUT c on sole , modern ,
am tm
rad i o , 4 speed
changer Balance $101.3 1 or
terms Call 99 2 3965 .
1 27 lfc
STAR CRAFT T ra i l e rs and
Fo ld down s, some 197 5 Fol d
down s l eft . 1974 25 f t . delu)(e
Slarcrafl
A .C. .
Au ro
awn . , $.:1 ,489. Best pr ice
Tri Slat e ar ea . Se rv ice what .
w~
se l l .
Fina n c ing
ar ran ged . Camp Cant e Y
Slarc rafl Sal es, Rt : 62 N . of
Pt . Pleasan t.
1 ?7 41c

REDU CE sa fe anct fas t Wi th
GoBese Tabl ets a. E Vap
" wa ter pills ," N elson Drug .
1 28 ltp
NEW Im p ro ved "Zi ppi es,"
the g r eat iron pill n ow wi lh
Vitamin C. N e lson Drug .
1 28 11 p
F REE RENT A T V I LL AGE
MANOR .
IN
MID ,
OLE PORT! We are so sure
that· yo u w il t l ove ou r
apartments that
g ive you
two weeks RENT F REE .
Ju s t pay your sec urity
depos i t and stay Si )( month s
and the fi rst 2 week s is free .
You will enjoy mon th ly
l eases ., a l l e lec.tric li v ing ,
carpe l tng ,
r a ng e
and
re frigerator , fr ee trash
pickup , cab l e TV {op l iona l )
an,d
l~undry
facilit i es .
Cor:-vent enl to sh oppi ng on
Th', ~r d
and M i ll in Mid
dleport . V I L LAGE M A NOR
is you r s for one bedioom
apartments s t arling a t $104
monthly p l us elec . We pay
for eve r y tning e l se . See th e
Manager
at
Riverside
A partments or ca ll 99 7&gt;3273
Th is o ~fer wiil end soon , sO
mov~ tn now and seve$$$$ .
'· 10·-23 -lf c

.1971 (OMET G .T V 8 s td .. 7
dr . good condition , S950.
Phone {6 14) 985 35911 . .
I 21 Si p

we

CO/\ L r OR St. LE C/\0 Coal
.Company . I rni te north ol
Ch eshire, on t:e t. 7 Pi c k your
own , S?O p er ton . Op en 6 days
per week, or ta ll (61 .1) 307
73JO for fur th er in fo r m at ion .
1 8 781 c

GASh eai ing s tove with blo.w er
-,- . .,., ___
tor sa l e. $15. co,:rpertone ,
old _upright pitlnos TRAILER space tor ren t
rang e hood Phone (614 ) 985 tn · any cond1tion . Will pay
privat e lol in the co untry :
4222 .
S10_ eac~ . _F) r s 1 floor on l y .
Phone (614 ) 985 42 10.
1-25 -4tp
Wrlle g1vmg direclions to
1 25 tllp
- ,..-..-"-- -------~- Witten Piano Co ., Box 188,
TWO hardrock:·, maple t w in
Sardis , Ohio 43946.
ONE bedrm . apartment , all
bed s a_nd mattresses AlSo,
1-25 - IOip
elec Pomeroy Home and .
mat ch1ng double dresser
Auto , 600 E
Ma in Sl . ,
$175 . K i tchen tabl e with 6
20 or 25 H · P · oul board motor
.f'omeroy .
ma l c hinq
c ha i r s.
n~w
Call 992 178 1_after 4 p .m . ·
t: ondit ion , $85 . 10 speed
1-25 -6tc
----- -- ------,-·
AMF Sc or c her Bicycle ,
1-27 -41c ext:ellent condition , S60 .
~ 0~
RENT OR S/\ LE , J
DEt. L E R S iri scra p , iro n ,
Phone 99 2-5606.
bedr _m . mobile nome , un
meta l s. jun k auto s Rider's
1-25 61 c '
furn•st1 ed, utilities paid on
Savage Phone 992 S-168
Rt 33 in Bur l ingham . Pt1one -•---'--------992 775 1
·' 2 29!p
12 J 1 t r c
G IN ', E N G. &lt;.,72 p er l b Phone
t-t
O
l+~.E
in
Ru!.lan
d
(fi
ll 9 92
161 '1) 37116219
Sfl .\8 .
· 1 16 · fc
I •I I f c
~---- -~-'- ·--

CARPETING

ACOOUNTANT

FOR SALE

Free esti mates on car·
peling and installation .

3

1 BR Bri ck ·home , 6 yr s , 2':
ba +h s. garage on :z 8 ac r es
on pa ved r oad ne-a r I ork cd
Run StatE I crest
Phon e
(614 ) 667 37 87 \]8 ,000
I 15 171p
10 RM . HOU SE , 2 bath s, full
ba seme nt , gla sse d in por ch ,
carpe t and _ ga rag e in
Mic;ldl epor t . $11.000. Phone
99 2 33 19
1 -17 6! (.
BEDRM . hou se in M id
d t epor t, corn e r lot . N ew
ba th , s1or y and ha lf. u!i l lty
room , n ew carpeti ng and
neW rooL garage and w or k
room , f ruit ce ll ar Close 10
sc hool
and
shopping .
$1 7.500. Ph one 991 7624 .
1 27 ntc

TEAFORD
Virgil 8 ., Sr .. Broker
llO,Mechani c Pom eroy , 0 .
?
Phone 99'2-lllS
20 ACRES - 2 houses . one
new 3 BR s. '2 bath s, stove,
ret r i gera 1or. barn . and
l a rm pond . $3 1,000.

RUTLAND

~

B room

house, bath .·nal . ga s h eat, 2
ca r garage and gard en .

s 17,000 .
12

ACRES

3

BR

ren Ov at ed hom e, good
garden land . ga s l urnc1 Ce.b.:Jrn , in l awn . S29,500 .

NEW LISTING

~

J acres

on 124w i l h drilled w el l. and
2 mobile hom·es . Sl 6,500.

OLDER HOME - J 8R s.,
hot water heat , mod . kit. ,
full ba se m e n1, view of
rive r . $29 ,500 .
MASSIVE ....,. 10 roo m s, 2
lul l bath s, m od . k it.. woodburning ·fir epl ac es, gas
furna ce, fi sh pond, and dbl.
garage S35,000 .
ba th . mod . k il .. g as lurnace , fu ll basem en! and
garden . S17,500 .

COUNTRY ·HOME

~

EXC AVtdiNG ,
dozer ,
b ackhoe
and
d itchc r
Char les R Ha tfie ld Bac k
Ho e Ser vice . Ru l t and . Ohio
Ph one , ,17 2008
11 30 1B r c
D &amp; 0 lREE Trtl"flming , 20
year s ex perien ce Insu r ed ,
fr ee es timates .. Ca ll 992 2384
or {6 14) 698 7751 Alba ny ,
10 15 If (
SEW IN G MACHINE Repai r s .
serv ice. all mak es . 992 228-t
Th e Fa br ic Shop , PonHJroy
A ul h orizcd Si ng er Sates and
S.e.r vi t: e .
We
sha rpen
Scissors
3 79 t f c

Rill £state f or Sale
ACRE ::. Wiln
r tn tsnl"'d
bas e ment Ca tt ( 61-1) 985
420 3 af ter 5 p m
1 ?8 6tp

~

house, bath. 4 BR s., woodburn.ing fir eplac es, porch ,
bar n , and some t imber . .

BEAT INFLAT ION, BUY
NOW. SE LL LATER .

71 a .. J BR.

SNOW TIRE SALE!

•5 Discount

OLD l urnll ure , ice boxes ,
brass beds , stone jar s. or
comp le te household s. Write
M . D . M i ll er,
Rt.
2,
Pomeroy, Ohio . Call 992
, 776 0.
10 -7-7.ot

Pets
Mi •LE borde r ( (J it •e . year old ,
!rad c f or Bca~do:.&gt; plip or sell
r ea sonab le Phone 992 5149.
I 28 41p

"J +-E tlR M

OFF A PAIR
OF CO-OP
SNOW TIRES

•rail er ~Ph o ne 9~1

]J7 I

1 16 r.c
4 RM HOU SE wit h garage .
For more i nformat ion , ca ll
992 25 02 .
l -25 -6t c

AppHes to tires in

------·'-----~--- ---

POMEROY LANDMARK
9.~ Jack W. Caney, ft\vr .
....
Pho•e 992 -2111

3 ROOM ep l. Adults only . Call
992 -3129 or 992 -543.:1 .
1-26-3tc

------- ------for Sale

-- - -·-

1t~ck.

COf• L linH:f. ronr cu. J .111 ty pes
of sa lt and rock salt for Ice
and sn ow removal . Ex .
C!?ISi or Se ll Works , Eau
Mam Sl ., - Pomeroy. Ohio
Phoni! 99 2-3891 .
·
12 7 lit:

-

------ ~-- -----·

WILL be paying more and
more rent . WHY not buy
n ow . Here is a nice 3 BR
hOme, balh . The si d ing ,
root and. carport are nearly

new. JU ST A LOW $8,000.
5 YEARS O~D &amp; o'er looks
the vattey . J SR . balh.
dining R ., ha rdwood floor s.
full basement, about llr
acr e. $19,500.

A MONEY MAKER - Ll'e
in 'lh e lat"ge 4 BR apa rtm ent and rent the 2 smaller
furnished apartments . (all
are always rented~ Th is is
a brick wi th low upkee p
and ha s spa ce for a large
garden . S22 .000.

FOR
THE
LAAGER
FAMILY - &lt; BR , 1'''
baths , lovely new cabinets
in the kitchen , coal or N .
gas heat , full basement
with shower. Walk to shop.

Reg .

1 1\ NK S Cl eaned
Mod ern San i ta tion . 992 3954
or 99 7 73•t9
9 I!! II C

SAVE 30%

CONTACT :
Lois P1uley
Branch Manager

39 ·95

1995

POCKET
CALCULATOR
DESK STAND

"MINI"
LABEL MAKER

1.00

•

INCREDIBLE
SPECI L PURC

Reg.

39~

riA

fi

,_ ,I

t•
FULL FEA.TURE AM-FM
STEREO RECEIVER ~y REALISTIC '

16%

PALM-SIZE 4-DIGIT
RESET COUNTER

LAMP
DIMMER
SOCKET
Reg.

5.95

4.99

68 · )020

\.)

" ts your prese n stereo sys tem
Adap
to .exciting 4-chann ell

Reg .

2.39

(~

,_j

31 -4001

•

BR A D FO RD , A uct ,
Conl ple l e Ser.,.ic e. ~neer .
9~9 ? &lt;~ a7 or 9&lt;~9 2000 R h_one
Oh io , Cr ill Bradford . tcme .

'·

-.~

16%

SAVE

Hurry for thi s trul y
outsta ndin g hi-li barga1 n1
Our STA-7 1 f eatures main
and/ or remote speaker
sw itc h; separate bass .
treb le. bala nce , vo lum e,
controls; tape
inputs/ outpu ts with
monitor . Phono input.
headpho ne jack , ster eo indi ca tor.
Walnut gra ined vinyl veneer case.
There·s only o ne plaCe you ca n
find it
. Radio Shack

.

$

'

•,

31-1976

. . ·a nd you can
'

CHARGE IT.;
At Radio Shack

REALISTIC l.AB-34
AUTOMATIC CHANGER

we have h undr eds at
carpet va l ues . You r job can
be comp leted in 1 to 2
w eeks
~o
long ' wailif'lg

Reg .

79.95

11

~~~irOsd erp :ril~~~:l ~~-r ~:~e;~
ms.Ja ll alion . You ' ll
what you g et

AM-FM
··f{ADIO
.tASSETTE RECO

Reg :

Reg.

6.95

89.95

•

95
14-822

A TTEN'iiON CB BUYERS!

l ike

FREE.

CALL 742 -2211
TALK TO WEND~Ll

.
GRATE
:
CARPET CONSULTANT

BATTERY CLUB CARD
AVAILABLE AT
YOUR RADIO SHACK
STORE! GET 1 FREE
BATTERY PER
MONTH FON ONE
FULL YEAR!

RUTLAND

FURNR'URE
742·2211

r

ss

688 -PAGJ
ELECTRONICS
DICTIONARY

RUBBER BACK

.,

992-7133

Reg .

SAV

I

Reg .

•

REALISTIC SQ II
. 4 -CHANNEL ADAPTER

ASSORTED STEREO. Reg . 2 88
S-TRACK TAPES BY
·
TOP ARTISTS!
Hurry for bes t se lect ion '

Square
Yard

Have buyer for lot on
river. Do you have
one? Call us.

804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2298
Alter Hours Ca II

. ~·

5

99.95

~ EP T IC

$499

------ n

---

ELW OOD BOWER S' Rt'PAIR
'
Sw eepers ,. toasicrs . irons , ·
all sm all applian ces . L aWn
mower . n c ~&lt;. t to Si·ate Hig h
way Garag e on RouTe 7
Phone 98 5 387 5.
J 16 lfc

Carpeting
501 NYLON

NO. 1-16 - 3 BR . a ll el ec. 1
home . fully carpeted, full
basement , 2 acres. $25,600.

AS TIME GOES 'ON YOU

,.

3-PIECE REALISTIC DELLiXE
STEREO S-TRACK
PLAYER SYSTEM

LET US DO IT!!

ranch, mod. kitch en, built.
in elec. range , d ishwash er ,
refr igerator . FoUr tra i le r
lot s w -wa ter &amp; sewage
hookup, c lose to new mine
area, $40,000.00 .

-·-'----~·----

STATE

MORE SPECTACUlAR RADIO SHACK SAVINGS DURING OUR GRAND OPENING

IMCOUOR ... TEO

NO. 153 -

ADDRESS
CITY

----------------~11.~

·Strout«
Realty

Good older

.

E~20

SAVE S30

3

BRs ., gas f urnace , bath,
a l uminum siding , on one
acre. $25 ,000.

157 ACRES

'

READY N1IX CON~~~;c
deliver ed rig ht to your
proje c l F as t an d easy . f' re e
estimates Ph on e 99 2 3184 ,
Goeg l ein R eady M i)( Co ,
Mid dl eporl , Ohio
6 30 lfc

C

and bath hom.e. new dri l l ed
w el l a nd furna ce , n ew
bathroom . 7 l irepla ces . good
lo ca tion ~n Lelart
Fa.l l s
Ohio . S7. 500 Phone 747 3853 ,
1 23 1?tc

I
I
I
1
I
I
1

NAME

I

PomeroY

O'DELL "'t1neme n t to cated
behind
R u1land
Grade
Sc hool . Tun eup . bra kes .
wt.cet balanc;in g , al ineriwnt
PhO!"'€ 74? 7004 ~
11 16 lfc

5 room s

FEB. 2, 1976

68 · 1022

I
I
I
I
I
I

THRU THIS ~---~--------------~---~-----~
COMING MONDAY

THESE SALE PRICES GOOD

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

3, lt AC ~E S bu i lding -s.i te in
Ba shan . water and ga s,
SS .OO.O Phon e Ch esler ( 6 \;1 )
98 5 4245
•
N E W HOME or rem oal'ling by
,1 25 41p
t'lour or contra ct . Pt1on e 992 ·
35 11 or 99 ? 7523 after s p .m .
L OT , Fai rv iew Hgr s
with
'
115 11'J
se p t ic tank and wa te r ta p
!~·2~?n:Shon e 1614 ) 985 41 53. C t.! t, NE Servi ce .
bui di ng
cr e c lion . -10 fl
d ·rr i ck
1 75 41R
P hone 997 5468
7 RM HO WSE on JO acres in
2 261 p
c: ounlrv . Bac k of Letart
Ohio . Ph on e 247 2286.
'
E&gt;: CAVA TIN G , BAC · H QES
I 2!i
A ND DOZ E R . LARC: ANO
SMALL
SEPTIC .ANK S
IN S T A LLED
BILL
2 BED ROOM m ollit e home
PU LLI N S, PHONE li-122478
w it h 3l, ac r e's of g round
D AY O R NIGHT
'
Phon e 247 ?1 61 L e tart , Oh io .
111J ]8 tp
1 ?3 12tc
AC ~Ei . big g ard ert ,

Otter Exorres

WO U LD YOU BEL IE VE ?
Buil d an all steel bu it dinQ at
Pol e Barn pr ice s? Go t"den
Gia n t 1\ 11 Stee l Build ing!&gt; ,
R t 4, Bo){ 148, Wav-erly ,
Oh iO Pt. on e 947 27.96 '
7 24 1fc

5 RM HO U SE. with bath Ne w
f uel oil hearer Ap pro:x
1
bJ.,f ild i ng s
n ear
a cr e
Pome r oy , B all Run Roa d
Conla c t R ic h ard Wi t t, Rl. •1
Pomeroy , Oh io;
·
'
l 78 .ttc

Ha ndy for ho m e or
ca rr First Powerbeam -5
Flashlight FREE .
Extras at $1.39 .
Persons under 16
must be accompaoied
by an adu lt.

OUT NEW STORE MANAGER

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Sp et:ia l ist

Value

FLASHLIGHT

"

COME IN AND MEET

Fr om the largest True 1o; or
Buttdo!er Radiator tc:. ~ ,.
.
sma ll es t H eater Core .

Ph . 991 -2114

Reg. 1.39

POWI;RBEAM-5

MIKE FEATHEROFF

REMODELIN G.
Pl umbin g ,
heati n g and all type s Ot
gen-er a t " r epa i r
work.
guaranteed . 20 year s e,.,
p er i en c e . Phon e 99 :1 2&lt;109 .
5 1 ti C

I

STORE ONLY

Mike Young , Manag er
Sa les and Installa tion
Rt . 3, Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
Phone day or night
614 -99~-2206
1 14- l mo .

E XCAVAT ING . do l er . loa'u~:: ,
and ba ckhoe work . sep t ic
ta nk s
insta lled ;
dum p
tru c k s and to boys to r h i re ;
will ha ul fill d irt , lpp soil
limestone and grav el . Cal l
Bob or Roger Je ff er s. day
phone 997 7089 , n ight phone
997 3525 or 992 5232
2 11 1 fc

11

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

save .

UNC Set 13 pes . I 18.50.

1

'\

•

We'll bring sa mple,. to your
home with no olm9ation .
See how you can really

R&amp;J COINS

BR HOME , iust finish ed
remodeling . Sa l em S t ,
Rutland . Pt1one 7d1 230 6
alter 4 p .m or SEe Mi l o B .
Hutchinson .
10 9 tic

W~ NT ED

-·- -

Bicentennial Coins
197SS Proof Set (6 ·pes .)
S2S.OO; 1975 Mint Set $9.00 ;
1976 Silver Proof Set (3
pes . ) s 15.00 ; 1976 Silver

Roger Wam sley
1 '23 I mo

MIDDLE PORT - 3 BRs ..
A N T I QUE Vi c torian Lo\ie
sea t
e)(cel l en t condit ion ,
Sl50 .
Portable
H oover
washer and dryer , harves t
gold , good cond i tion , Sl50 .
Por table
dishwas_h.er .
avo ca do , good condttron ,
S50 . Phone 99 2-5236 or 9.92.
59 10.
1 21 Btp

4 10 1 mo

PUBUC

HOU SE on lincoln Hgt~ 2
bedrm , lar ge k i lchen . lu l l
ba se ment . excell en t biJV for
!.8.900. with n ew f urn it ur e .
o.nlv \10 ,3 00. PhQn·e 992 7648
I 6 26 1c

3

for Sale

Ph. n2-3993

SLOAN'S

R., Estate for Sale

•
•

S-,4-acuse, Ohio

COINS

1-22 1 mo

••

LARRY LAVENDER

Call Rutland. 74 2-2JJ1

1969 MERCURY wagon , $395
Runs good
Ca!l 99 2 3619
befo r e 2 p .m .
I 25 4tp _

1974 C HEVROLET 1 ton , V 8
c abin chassis ; .1 speed , p.s .,
p .b , S3.600 Phon e (6 14) 985
35 94 .
I 27 5tp

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

Currency and Supplies
Buy , Sale or Trade

PH. 992-6173

-

Blown into Walls &amp; AHics '

(

Now accepting clients
for bookkeeping and
tax service.

1969
DODGE
Campe r ,
Spe ci a l. '·• 1on tru ck v 8, 4
sp .. 5600 . Phofi! e 992 526 4
1 28 Jtc

1968 1 TON Fo rd , F lat bed. V
8, auto .• t ransm issiOn . $750 .
Phone ( 614) 985 3594 .
1 27 5tp

COU NTRY
Mobile Hom e
Par k. Rt . J3 , ten mi tes north
of Pomeroy . Large to t s w i th
concrete patios. sidewalks,
runn ers and off stree -t
p arkj ng Phone 997 7479
12 31 tf c

' Help Wanted

p.m-:

C HEV Y '• ton .1 w heel
dr ive · p ic kup
n at ,1 r'Ce o t
tnc'ory w.n r il nly Ch rc}o.
•his befor e you buy ,, n ew
nn e Pll on c &lt;l i ter '1 p m or on
w~clo.,ends . 991 J 196
I 9 i fc

11 9 t fc

SEW IN G ot at t 1&lt;.mas. ar.e sses
f or all ot:caslo ns , s tac k s.
St1i rt s, new born laye lles,
curtains , drapes . Phone 99'1
30~5 and ask for Doroth y .
1 27 61(

1969 CHEVELLE 396 , 4 sp ., 4
elev en
gears .
positive
traction , ex.,tra parts , S695
Phon e 747 3076 ~It er 6
1 28 6tc

! 97~

3 A ND 4 - R;M . furnished and
unfurnish ed apts . Phon e 99 2
5434 .
'.

Employment Wanted

1· 12- 1 mo .

LARRY WHOBREY

Special Rate 1
by Week
or Month

REWARD tor any in l ormation
lead ing lq the r eturn of 7
Western saddles taken fr om
th e residence of Robert
Wi l son . Plea se phone 992
3621. eveni ngs .
1-26 -6tc

Call 992-7537
Pomeroy , Ohio

•
•••
•
•
•
••
•
•••

Blown
In sula tion Services

Pomerov Office
105 Bunernut
992· llH
Formerly W ee d Whol esa le.
Featuring ;
OetuJC Zerox Copy Ser vi ce,
0 1 f ice
Sf.l ppt i es ;
MimeogrOJph
Supplies ,
lar gest selection of we d
d ing .supp l ies in South
ea ste rn Ohio .
Th e Print Shop Complet e
( Stil! in busin ess in Middl epor tl
128 2rno .

Kuhl Cake Decor

Oar.k maroon finish , blk . b ucket vinyl seats, radio, V-8
engtne , automatic . power steering. good tires. a
sportsman 's dream .

Rooms, SS.OO up

Lost

16295

•
•

FREE ESTIMATES

Quality Print Shop

Ltcense d
baker
and
decorator.
Kitchen State Inspected

Slicker 17300.00 . SALE PRICE 16295.

12 21 4
48
22 18 3
WI LL GIVE 1\W/\Y 6puppiei, FREE ZER bt'CI
Phone 992
21 19 4
A6
-~
mates .
I
female .
56 16.
Canadian
Th oro uqhbred H einz 57 . Catt
I 21 ,6fp
w. l
T
Pts.
949 2673 betw een 6 a m , ant.l
Winnipeg
33 . 17 0
-·--66·
11 noon ,
Quebec
29 16 2
60
I 27 lip B EU 'cir·~.:~.s cr . ma 11rc !.s e o .
Ca lg;uy
25 19 2
52
':! al t::.m mapt e, f inish , ~ood
Edmonton
18 JO 1
38 A KC Irish Se ller , 7 mon ths
condition . Wanl $200. Phone
Toron to
15 28 3
992 5833 .
33
old Phone 992 7030.
x Ottawa
14 26 I
29
I 23 -4t p
1 27 Si c
, x Team d isbanded
Monday's Rnulh
8
r~ E E to good home . Male ;..;; ·I q I ~ N d \.·'ot \jl r ~'!!n•n
I No games scheduled J
dog . • . kus.sian Wolfhound ,
tra c k '•1Pl'
am lm rr1di o
11
Tucsda v's Games
8o)(er
Good
with
combination . "aluncc S9H.60
Cin cinna ti at Quebec
or term s. C~ll 991 396 S
child ren . Phone 992 2649 .
Edmonton at Toronto
I 27 3tc
1 ~ r rc
PhOen ix at san Diego

"

12695

Dark red . s imu la ted wood tr im , 3 seat , fu ll y equ ipped
with every Chev . option, .. low miles , ne w titl e boss' s
wife car .
'

P A R A SOL
Boutiqu e
an
nounces ·
P er manent
Sp eci a l s ! Un ip erm , r eg . t?O,
now $17 .50 ; R eg . $17 .50. now
SI S, R eg . $ 15, now $13.50.
Specia l s from Jan 20 1h thru
3 1st Lo cated next Jo Skate
A Way Rol l er Rink . Op en
Tues l hru Sal urday . Ph one
(61-0
985 4141 . Owner :
Sand ra ( Tru sse ll J K ern5 .
I I!! 12t c

Saturday, Jan . 24, 19-76
Feeder Steer s {400-800 lbs .)
25-31.75; Feeder He ifer s 1400

Cakes, Baked
and Decorated
To Your Order

f in ish. good tires , radi o , real economy . Book Value
Pri ce 52875 .00 - Clei'rance .

~5 Per Cent Discoun t on pa id
ads and ads pa id w i lhin 10
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
i:l 00 l or 50 word min imum
Ea c h a dd i t io n a l word 3
cents
BLIND ADS
1\ dd i t.io nat 25c Charge per
ll dvert 1S!! ment
OFFICE HOURS
8· JO a . m . to 5: 00 p . - m .
Daily . 8 · Joa m . to 12: 00 Noon
Saturday .

PERM A N E NT Waves Sa te fo r
n ext :;&gt; w eeks . Fashion
Beauty , ttl' ;• E . Se cond Sr.
I 28 41p

Business Services

Loc~l 1 owner, a u tomati c, blk . vinyl int. tr im , silver

?6 cen ts pe r word Si K co n
sccu t ,vc inscr!io n's

700 lbs . I. 22:50·18.25; Slaughter

PHONE _ _ __

1974 OAT5UN 710CPE .

th re e

Notice

-----------.

Pomeroy
QUALlll Motor Co.

M in imum Charge $ 1 oo

l.t

X

em- - --

-@ 2 SIGNS
OF

Fo.r Wa!lf Ad Serv ice
5 ren ts pe r word one inse rtion

~==·==-=~-::::::~·:::;-~r-.,_~~LJ~~·:•!"!"•:•~ted by the abo"e cartoon.
Lr_...,_
•~1111.:._
"".:._
""-.JI ''(X I XJ-0-[ L J"
r ...,.. r~h y' •

'
Correct
ions

RATES

u

Auto Sales

-· ··

W1ll be accepted unt i l 9 a m .

~:- -- '{iJ'~~~"?r;, · ,

) I I
JNSO UC

\- - .1.
011 - "-,

.

Auto Sales

fo r Day o t P ublic a tion .
REGULATIONS
The P ub lish er reser ..,.es the
r rrJIII •n l"dl! or r eiN. I nnv ads 1
deemed ob tectionat . Th e
publi s h t' r
will
no t
llt&gt; 1
responsible lo r more than on e
incorrect insert ion

~ ..__
_
~ - ~• •)

A

g::~ t ~~'em

~~,~~~.~£~noo,,:l:.~,. aee~m

..,
..::::-

R

OEAOLINES

Q

] [j

R

1N~

. . 1

OONES

I [

R

15

Rutland

I.
•

SHOP THE
SHACK ' FOR ANY
ANTENNA NEED
PLUS HARDWARE
AND ACCESSORIES
AT OUR FAMOUS
LOW PRICES!

Aadi'o Shack ~n!r o du ced •.I S lamo11S to w-cos t Real• slrc CB l•nc m
1960 and has been a worl d leader tn C1 t1zens Band tor 16 years
While some o f Rea listic s 16 radios lma'f. be in,shorl ~ upptv allimes
it'l l be worlh vour whtle to WAI T FOR 'RtAll S'r'IC (It you ha11e to)
an d avoid th e 11assle and' probl erils q l de~l ing .yt.ith Slorc lt and
Brand X We also make 01 11' ow n A.r t: h.!r l ind of 'CB an!ennas,
. c rystals . coax cables and accessom:s . Th ese are m la1rly
good supply toda y Aeallsllc CB IS sold and serv •c ed ONL '( bv
Aadro Shack 1n our ove t 4000 shops tn ttHl USA ;tnd Canact&lt;1 Buy
!ro m a really qualified spec•at•sl - yo11 r tr~encl \v ne 1ght&gt;o rllood
Aad10 Shack

BARGAIN-PRICED REALISTIC
AM-FM '2 14-CHANNEL RECEIVER

.,~;";,

129~~

Exceptionally low pnce on ou r
QTA-720 puts the rea l ism of 4-chan nel
w ithin your reacht Tape inputs/o utputs.
tuning meter . headphone jacks.
Genuin e walnut veneer case .

''

1

WITH THIS COUPON

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

SAVE :I

50°L

ON YOUR SElgND
REALISTIC FAIL-SAFE
LIFETIME TUBE!
, Guaranteed to Last
As Long As Your Set Or
We Replace Them FRE

I

1 BUY ONE TUBE
1

AI Our Regular Low Price

I GET A SECON
Of Your Choice at
I
I 1/2 PRICE!
I
I
I Offer Good on Any Tube in Stock at I
I Parli cipaling Radio Shack Stores &amp; Dealers

------------J

'
'

'

GALLIPOtiS

REFRESHINGLY
ROOMY ~ • rli ce BPs .. 1
batha , nice la rge kitchen.

Mo1t •t•ms •t•o •va11able
at Radio St1ac::k Oeal•rs
Look for -thi•

In yovr

"'11'

n~uihborhQO~

part basement with rec . R .
1 . .1 ~ l::.l ' Hrw ..
llome.
lus t
finished , rt:modl!ting , Safem
!&gt; t ., Rutland . Phone :'42 2306
after- 4 P.m . or see Milo e
Hutchison .
·
9 2J lie

tary~

e n c losed patio , garage ,

NOT VERY OLD . SJO,IIOO .
fH~ SIG N OF
KNOW
HC'W IS HERE - LET US
SELL YOUR PROPERTY .
nl 2259or .,. 2561

-,

RADIO SHACI&lt; PRICES ON AVl:RAGE HAVE INCREASED LESS TH~N 1% SINCE JULY, 1974!

$8.500.

Hot wa ter heal ,

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

fl A TANDY CORPORATION COMPANY

SILVER 'BRIDGE PLAZA
•

'
PRICES MAY VAR Y AT IN DIVIDUAL STORES

�14 - The

\\'t'tlrll'sda~ . ,J;u• :~R. 1!f7ti

Ottily St•ntint•l, Middlt•J,..Il"t-P, )JlJt•ruy, 0 .,

..

JlllJ1~111E-t4.J MwiiJ....J~

.&lt;%
_ -,/~-_\.\)~_',./')-~
".' . . ,,

t1J

I I

Cancel la!ion

I
-

~

h
I I I

:y.f··'
-J'i· '• ·
1 \

l

l

;.;.I,

~

ce nt s p er word
ronsecuti"e Ins er tions .

Now arTanrr tht cirtlflllrtltn
form lht 1urpriie an1wtr,"'

~ ~ to

CA..ewll'n tumurro.t•)

I

Jumbtr.: FLORA.

BLOAT

OSSIFY

LICHEN

• An'""'': U"lwt tlu· pd mlt'/1/11 fynmrt ndfc•dt•d -'" OIJ,.S "'

Notice

Notice

INCOME
TAX
pr ep a r ed ,.
F edera l and sta l e taxe s .
Will be don e b y appt . on ly
Please phon e 99 2 2'272 . or se c
Mrs . Wanda Eb l in . La11rel
Cl iff Rd ., Pomeroy
12 3 1 JO I C:

INCOME Tax Se rv ice b y
ap pointment on l y . P hon e
99 2 3386 . F ive Po int , OhiO .
1 27 5. tp

M AK E_ SURE you g e t every
poss tble dedu ct ion th is year .
Ha-ve your Fe de ral and
Sta t e In come Ta)( return by
an accounlan t. Phon e 992
6173 .
1 21 57t c '

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

A Low Cost
Want Ad

Will Cut
Cost of

1 WILL be g iving p iano lesson s
in mv ho me s t arting re b . 1
1 or
in for mat ion call 992
J/78
I I It! 501

c

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
CHe N o . 21117
Estate
Of W ILLIAM
F
WINEBRENNER Decea se d :
is
given
t hat
N ot i Ce
Margaret Ett en Winebrenner
of Syr,a cu se , M e igs Coun ty .
Oh io , ha s bee n dul y appointed
Execu t r ix
th e Estate of
Wi l l ia m
F
Winebrenne r .
deceased . .la t e of Sy ra cuse,
M eig s County , Ohio .
Cr editor s ar e r equ ire d to
f ile th e ir claims with said
fiduc i ary within four months
Dated thi s 2Jrd day oi
Ja nu ary l'il76

ot

Manning D . Webs te r
Judge
Court of Common Pl eas .
P robate D ivision
( l l 2812 1 o.i , 11 , 3t.c

Living ••••••
WRITE YOUR
OWN AD!

ATHENS LIVESTOCK
SALES, INC.

SWEEPER
an d
Se wmg
Machin(!-s R e pa1r , Pa ris,
a nd
Su pp l ies .
Dav i s
Vac uum Cl ean er , 1 .· mil e up
George ' s Creek Rd . off Sta te
Rout e 7. Phon e (6 14) 446
0294 .

I 28 1tc
FA BR IC.: SA LE Biggest and
Best sa te since opening of
our bus iness A l l mater ia l in
shop on sale one. week on l y .
Monday , January 26 l hru
Sat ., Jan 31 . F irst quality
knits st art at $1. 98 per yard .
Open 9 a .rn . to 7 p .m .
Monday thru Fri day and 9
a .m . to 5 p m . Sa turday
Caro l ina Fabrics on Route 7,
one half mi l e north of
Ches t er , Ohio . H enry and
Mary Hunter , owne r s.
I 25 61p

ITS EASY TO

ORDER BY
MAIU
-SPECIAL!-

12 WORDS
4 DAYS .
ONLY
CASH WITH
ORDER

AVAILABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
NO REFUNDS.
Each
initial
and
group
of
figures
counts as one word.
Be sure fo count
name and address, if
used , and your phone
number .
Including
prices for items offered in your want ad
will
increase
response .

1.---~-

2. _ _ _ __
3. _ __:__ __
4, _ _ __ __

5· ----~~

6. _ _ _ __

7. _~---

a. _____ _

9. - -- - 10. ----~
11. -~---

12.---~­

NAME
ADDRESS- - -

Bulls

{over

1, 000

'US
TO lltE

QAJLY SENTINEL
111 COURT ST.

POMEROY, OHIO
45769

25 -

18.85, Feeder Bulls (&lt;00-BOO
lbs.) 22 . 50-31.
SlriUgh t er Cow s- Utility 1327, Canner -Cutter 16.85-23 .
Vea l s (choice -pr ime) 49.85 ·
65.50, Sla ug hter Lambs 47 .50,
Feeder Lambs 45 -46 .50, Hogs
50 .40-50.50, Sows 41 ·42, Boars
35 -40, Pigs {by the h ead) 35 40.

ANAHEIM
!UP! )
America 's first official
national rugby team will play
an international malch
against Australia a t Glover
Field here Saturday.
"Some people thought it
would lake three years for us
to get our fit"st international
game and then probably
aga inst a second-level rugby
nation ' like Canada," said
Dennis Storer of UCLA, the
national team coach. "But
it's happened. '.'
The U.S. National Rugby
Union was organized last
June in Chicago.
LOS ANGELES IUPI) Chris Evert, winner over
Virginia Wade at Landover,
Md., Sunday, has moved into
the lead in the Virginia Slims
points race .
·
Evert passed first-week
leader Martina Navratilova,
who sa t out the second event
of the 10-toutnament series
leading to the $150,000 finale
at the Sports Arena here
April 12-17. Evert has 200
points . iri two tournaments
followed by Sue Barker of
England, who has llO .
Navratilova also has 110.
PALM SPR IN GS, Calif.
IUPI) - Sixty.&lt;Jne women
pros will compete in the fifth
annua l Colga te-Dinah Shore

Winners

Circle

Cham ·

pionship golf tournament at
the Mission Hills Country
Club April 1-4.
The $200,000 event-,- the
richest
t our nament
in
women's golf ....carries a first
prize . of $32,000 'plus a new
car . The finals will be on
nationa l television.
World - H c c k e y Associa ti on
Stand i ng5
By United Pre ss I nt ernation al
East
w l
T Pts .
New Eng land
2 1 12
5
47
Cincinnati
2 1 24
I
43
Cleveland
18 25 3
39
lhd ianapolis
18 Ui 2
38

west

MAIL WITH

lbs.)

W. l

Houston
San Di ego
Mrnnesota
Phoen ix

30

. T
16

Pis
0

60

1975 CHEV . ESTATE WAGON

197o'PL Y.-C UDA

12691

Mobile Homes For Sale
197 5 W IND SOR Mobi le Hom e,
l.l )( 10 with
pul l oul , J
bedroom , l ' "' bath , w w
carpe t , bui ll In s tereo , new
wash er and dryer , co m
pte re ly f urnished , tola l elec
to r qui ck sa l e , $8 ,500 . F ir si
traile r on right going towa rd
Pag etown , J etti e Ar i x .
1 27 Jtc
197 4 SKY LINE Mobi le Home
2 bedrooms , blue an'd while :
Phon e 949 2860 .
I 23 61 c

for Rent

La Salle
HOTEL
M iddleport. 0 . Ph . 992 -2nl

1941 CHEVROLET p ic kup ,
good condition . Call 99 2
) 640 .
1 77 5tc
1971 L T 0 . 4 dr , p .b ., p .s, a ..c .,
radial tire s. S1.995 A lso 1
1966 Mu st ang '1 dr ,, lot s of
goodies, S5 95. Call Fi r eston e
Store. 99 ~ · 2138 .
I 23 6t c

I&lt;ETIRE D or semi retired
lady to live i n r ree roo m
and board and small wages
for l ight dulies See at 308
Page St .. Midd le port , Ohio
l I I I I t:
BABY SI TTER needed in my
home , preferab l y liv e -in .
Phon e 247 -282 1 after 6 p rh .
I 25 -4f p

Wanted
lASH paid fo r al l makes and
models of mobile homes
P hon e area code 614 ·423 :
953 1.
4-13-lfc

Wanted To Buy
WANTED old . upright p ianos
in any c ond.ition . Will _pay
$10 eac h . F irst fl oor .o nly ,
Wr ite givi ng directions 10
Witten Piano Co . • B.o)( 188 ,
Sardis, Ohio 4.3946.
·
1-21,1Otp

- ----

·•n

196:, fORO L T O : NfiW 12 ga .
Wi n c hest er 37 A Si ngle shol
Phone 742 7359 .
I 13 261p

H OUSEfRA ILEf.&lt;
ncar
Ra cine . 3 BR ., bath , no pe l s,
1 s mall chil d · o .k . 550
d eposit , ~ 1 00 plu s uti li ties .
Phon e 949 1093
I 28 Jlc

HOSPITAL bed . l ike n ew , all
posit ions.. P~one 992 2876 or
992 5565 .
I 2S 61C

H OU SE in Mason , 5 r ooms and
bath , n ice lo catio n . PhOne
99 1 '5126 .
1·28 J tc
14

PER SO N to help drive to
Flo r ida for fr ee trip , ear l y in
Februa ry . Phone 99:1 792'1
I 27 ) IC
REL I AB LE babysitter n ee d ed
in M iddl epo rt area . Phone
99 2 2220 aller '6 p .m .
1 28 - .lt c

l l RCO H eti I R C w elding
mac h ine . n ~ w e t ec
,, (1
accessor ic·s inctud (' O Phon e
3.11 0
I 0 7H I t c

GOOD h ay f&lt;:ir sal e, Sr" bale .
Phone 74 2 1 108 , L e ad in~
Cr ee k ROad
1 ~5 .:!Jp

f' T MOTOR horil e, like
n ew . sleeps six, generator,
a . c ., $2 50, we ek pIus 20c m li e
Phon e 949 2770 for res. er
va lion .
I 28 31 c

WALNUT c on sole , modern ,
am tm
rad i o , 4 speed
changer Balance $101.3 1 or
terms Call 99 2 3965 .
1 27 lfc
STAR CRAFT T ra i l e rs and
Fo ld down s, some 197 5 Fol d
down s l eft . 1974 25 f t . delu)(e
Slarcrafl
A .C. .
Au ro
awn . , $.:1 ,489. Best pr ice
Tri Slat e ar ea . Se rv ice what .
w~
se l l .
Fina n c ing
ar ran ged . Camp Cant e Y
Slarc rafl Sal es, Rt : 62 N . of
Pt . Pleasan t.
1 ?7 41c

REDU CE sa fe anct fas t Wi th
GoBese Tabl ets a. E Vap
" wa ter pills ," N elson Drug .
1 28 ltp
NEW Im p ro ved "Zi ppi es,"
the g r eat iron pill n ow wi lh
Vitamin C. N e lson Drug .
1 28 11 p
F REE RENT A T V I LL AGE
MANOR .
IN
MID ,
OLE PORT! We are so sure
that· yo u w il t l ove ou r
apartments that
g ive you
two weeks RENT F REE .
Ju s t pay your sec urity
depos i t and stay Si )( month s
and the fi rst 2 week s is free .
You will enjoy mon th ly
l eases ., a l l e lec.tric li v ing ,
carpe l tng ,
r a ng e
and
re frigerator , fr ee trash
pickup , cab l e TV {op l iona l )
an,d
l~undry
facilit i es .
Cor:-vent enl to sh oppi ng on
Th', ~r d
and M i ll in Mid
dleport . V I L LAGE M A NOR
is you r s for one bedioom
apartments s t arling a t $104
monthly p l us elec . We pay
for eve r y tning e l se . See th e
Manager
at
Riverside
A partments or ca ll 99 7&gt;3273
Th is o ~fer wiil end soon , sO
mov~ tn now and seve$$$$ .
'· 10·-23 -lf c

.1971 (OMET G .T V 8 s td .. 7
dr . good condition , S950.
Phone {6 14) 985 35911 . .
I 21 Si p

we

CO/\ L r OR St. LE C/\0 Coal
.Company . I rni te north ol
Ch eshire, on t:e t. 7 Pi c k your
own , S?O p er ton . Op en 6 days
per week, or ta ll (61 .1) 307
73JO for fur th er in fo r m at ion .
1 8 781 c

GASh eai ing s tove with blo.w er
-,- . .,., ___
tor sa l e. $15. co,:rpertone ,
old _upright pitlnos TRAILER space tor ren t
rang e hood Phone (614 ) 985 tn · any cond1tion . Will pay
privat e lol in the co untry :
4222 .
S10_ eac~ . _F) r s 1 floor on l y .
Phone (614 ) 985 42 10.
1-25 -4tp
Wrlle g1vmg direclions to
1 25 tllp
- ,..-..-"-- -------~- Witten Piano Co ., Box 188,
TWO hardrock:·, maple t w in
Sardis , Ohio 43946.
ONE bedrm . apartment , all
bed s a_nd mattresses AlSo,
1-25 - IOip
elec Pomeroy Home and .
mat ch1ng double dresser
Auto , 600 E
Ma in Sl . ,
$175 . K i tchen tabl e with 6
20 or 25 H · P · oul board motor
.f'omeroy .
ma l c hinq
c ha i r s.
n~w
Call 992 178 1_after 4 p .m . ·
t: ondit ion , $85 . 10 speed
1-25 -6tc
----- -- ------,-·
AMF Sc or c her Bicycle ,
1-27 -41c ext:ellent condition , S60 .
~ 0~
RENT OR S/\ LE , J
DEt. L E R S iri scra p , iro n ,
Phone 99 2-5606.
bedr _m . mobile nome , un
meta l s. jun k auto s Rider's
1-25 61 c '
furn•st1 ed, utilities paid on
Savage Phone 992 S-168
Rt 33 in Bur l ingham . Pt1one -•---'--------992 775 1
·' 2 29!p
12 J 1 t r c
G IN ', E N G. &lt;.,72 p er l b Phone
t-t
O
l+~.E
in
Ru!.lan
d
(fi
ll 9 92
161 '1) 37116219
Sfl .\8 .
· 1 16 · fc
I •I I f c
~---- -~-'- ·--

CARPETING

ACOOUNTANT

FOR SALE

Free esti mates on car·
peling and installation .

3

1 BR Bri ck ·home , 6 yr s , 2':
ba +h s. garage on :z 8 ac r es
on pa ved r oad ne-a r I ork cd
Run StatE I crest
Phon e
(614 ) 667 37 87 \]8 ,000
I 15 171p
10 RM . HOU SE , 2 bath s, full
ba seme nt , gla sse d in por ch ,
carpe t and _ ga rag e in
Mic;ldl epor t . $11.000. Phone
99 2 33 19
1 -17 6! (.
BEDRM . hou se in M id
d t epor t, corn e r lot . N ew
ba th , s1or y and ha lf. u!i l lty
room , n ew carpeti ng and
neW rooL garage and w or k
room , f ruit ce ll ar Close 10
sc hool
and
shopping .
$1 7.500. Ph one 991 7624 .
1 27 ntc

TEAFORD
Virgil 8 ., Sr .. Broker
llO,Mechani c Pom eroy , 0 .
?
Phone 99'2-lllS
20 ACRES - 2 houses . one
new 3 BR s. '2 bath s, stove,
ret r i gera 1or. barn . and
l a rm pond . $3 1,000.

RUTLAND

~

B room

house, bath .·nal . ga s h eat, 2
ca r garage and gard en .

s 17,000 .
12

ACRES

3

BR

ren Ov at ed hom e, good
garden land . ga s l urnc1 Ce.b.:Jrn , in l awn . S29,500 .

NEW LISTING

~

J acres

on 124w i l h drilled w el l. and
2 mobile hom·es . Sl 6,500.

OLDER HOME - J 8R s.,
hot water heat , mod . kit. ,
full ba se m e n1, view of
rive r . $29 ,500 .
MASSIVE ....,. 10 roo m s, 2
lul l bath s, m od . k it.. woodburning ·fir epl ac es, gas
furna ce, fi sh pond, and dbl.
garage S35,000 .
ba th . mod . k il .. g as lurnace , fu ll basem en! and
garden . S17,500 .

COUNTRY ·HOME

~

EXC AVtdiNG ,
dozer ,
b ackhoe
and
d itchc r
Char les R Ha tfie ld Bac k
Ho e Ser vice . Ru l t and . Ohio
Ph one , ,17 2008
11 30 1B r c
D &amp; 0 lREE Trtl"flming , 20
year s ex perien ce Insu r ed ,
fr ee es timates .. Ca ll 992 2384
or {6 14) 698 7751 Alba ny ,
10 15 If (
SEW IN G MACHINE Repai r s .
serv ice. all mak es . 992 228-t
Th e Fa br ic Shop , PonHJroy
A ul h orizcd Si ng er Sates and
S.e.r vi t: e .
We
sha rpen
Scissors
3 79 t f c

Rill £state f or Sale
ACRE ::. Wiln
r tn tsnl"'d
bas e ment Ca tt ( 61-1) 985
420 3 af ter 5 p m
1 ?8 6tp

~

house, bath. 4 BR s., woodburn.ing fir eplac es, porch ,
bar n , and some t imber . .

BEAT INFLAT ION, BUY
NOW. SE LL LATER .

71 a .. J BR.

SNOW TIRE SALE!

•5 Discount

OLD l urnll ure , ice boxes ,
brass beds , stone jar s. or
comp le te household s. Write
M . D . M i ll er,
Rt.
2,
Pomeroy, Ohio . Call 992
, 776 0.
10 -7-7.ot

Pets
Mi •LE borde r ( (J it •e . year old ,
!rad c f or Bca~do:.&gt; plip or sell
r ea sonab le Phone 992 5149.
I 28 41p

"J +-E tlR M

OFF A PAIR
OF CO-OP
SNOW TIRES

•rail er ~Ph o ne 9~1

]J7 I

1 16 r.c
4 RM HOU SE wit h garage .
For more i nformat ion , ca ll
992 25 02 .
l -25 -6t c

AppHes to tires in

------·'-----~--- ---

POMEROY LANDMARK
9.~ Jack W. Caney, ft\vr .
....
Pho•e 992 -2111

3 ROOM ep l. Adults only . Call
992 -3129 or 992 -543.:1 .
1-26-3tc

------- ------for Sale

-- - -·-

1t~ck.

COf• L linH:f. ronr cu. J .111 ty pes
of sa lt and rock salt for Ice
and sn ow removal . Ex .
C!?ISi or Se ll Works , Eau
Mam Sl ., - Pomeroy. Ohio
Phoni! 99 2-3891 .
·
12 7 lit:

-

------ ~-- -----·

WILL be paying more and
more rent . WHY not buy
n ow . Here is a nice 3 BR
hOme, balh . The si d ing ,
root and. carport are nearly

new. JU ST A LOW $8,000.
5 YEARS O~D &amp; o'er looks
the vattey . J SR . balh.
dining R ., ha rdwood floor s.
full basement, about llr
acr e. $19,500.

A MONEY MAKER - Ll'e
in 'lh e lat"ge 4 BR apa rtm ent and rent the 2 smaller
furnished apartments . (all
are always rented~ Th is is
a brick wi th low upkee p
and ha s spa ce for a large
garden . S22 .000.

FOR
THE
LAAGER
FAMILY - &lt; BR , 1'''
baths , lovely new cabinets
in the kitchen , coal or N .
gas heat , full basement
with shower. Walk to shop.

Reg .

1 1\ NK S Cl eaned
Mod ern San i ta tion . 992 3954
or 99 7 73•t9
9 I!! II C

SAVE 30%

CONTACT :
Lois P1uley
Branch Manager

39 ·95

1995

POCKET
CALCULATOR
DESK STAND

"MINI"
LABEL MAKER

1.00

•

INCREDIBLE
SPECI L PURC

Reg.

39~

riA

fi

,_ ,I

t•
FULL FEA.TURE AM-FM
STEREO RECEIVER ~y REALISTIC '

16%

PALM-SIZE 4-DIGIT
RESET COUNTER

LAMP
DIMMER
SOCKET
Reg.

5.95

4.99

68 · )020

\.)

" ts your prese n stereo sys tem
Adap
to .exciting 4-chann ell

Reg .

2.39

(~

,_j

31 -4001

•

BR A D FO RD , A uct ,
Conl ple l e Ser.,.ic e. ~neer .
9~9 ? &lt;~ a7 or 9&lt;~9 2000 R h_one
Oh io , Cr ill Bradford . tcme .

'·

-.~

16%

SAVE

Hurry for thi s trul y
outsta ndin g hi-li barga1 n1
Our STA-7 1 f eatures main
and/ or remote speaker
sw itc h; separate bass .
treb le. bala nce , vo lum e,
controls; tape
inputs/ outpu ts with
monitor . Phono input.
headpho ne jack , ster eo indi ca tor.
Walnut gra ined vinyl veneer case.
There·s only o ne plaCe you ca n
find it
. Radio Shack

.

$

'

•,

31-1976

. . ·a nd you can
'

CHARGE IT.;
At Radio Shack

REALISTIC l.AB-34
AUTOMATIC CHANGER

we have h undr eds at
carpet va l ues . You r job can
be comp leted in 1 to 2
w eeks
~o
long ' wailif'lg

Reg .

79.95

11

~~~irOsd erp :ril~~~:l ~~-r ~:~e;~
ms.Ja ll alion . You ' ll
what you g et

AM-FM
··f{ADIO
.tASSETTE RECO

Reg :

Reg.

6.95

89.95

•

95
14-822

A TTEN'iiON CB BUYERS!

l ike

FREE.

CALL 742 -2211
TALK TO WEND~Ll

.
GRATE
:
CARPET CONSULTANT

BATTERY CLUB CARD
AVAILABLE AT
YOUR RADIO SHACK
STORE! GET 1 FREE
BATTERY PER
MONTH FON ONE
FULL YEAR!

RUTLAND

FURNR'URE
742·2211

r

ss

688 -PAGJ
ELECTRONICS
DICTIONARY

RUBBER BACK

.,

992-7133

Reg .

SAV

I

Reg .

•

REALISTIC SQ II
. 4 -CHANNEL ADAPTER

ASSORTED STEREO. Reg . 2 88
S-TRACK TAPES BY
·
TOP ARTISTS!
Hurry for bes t se lect ion '

Square
Yard

Have buyer for lot on
river. Do you have
one? Call us.

804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2298
Alter Hours Ca II

. ~·

5

99.95

~ EP T IC

$499

------ n

---

ELW OOD BOWER S' Rt'PAIR
'
Sw eepers ,. toasicrs . irons , ·
all sm all applian ces . L aWn
mower . n c ~&lt;. t to Si·ate Hig h
way Garag e on RouTe 7
Phone 98 5 387 5.
J 16 lfc

Carpeting
501 NYLON

NO. 1-16 - 3 BR . a ll el ec. 1
home . fully carpeted, full
basement , 2 acres. $25,600.

AS TIME GOES 'ON YOU

,.

3-PIECE REALISTIC DELLiXE
STEREO S-TRACK
PLAYER SYSTEM

LET US DO IT!!

ranch, mod. kitch en, built.
in elec. range , d ishwash er ,
refr igerator . FoUr tra i le r
lot s w -wa ter &amp; sewage
hookup, c lose to new mine
area, $40,000.00 .

-·-'----~·----

STATE

MORE SPECTACUlAR RADIO SHACK SAVINGS DURING OUR GRAND OPENING

IMCOUOR ... TEO

NO. 153 -

ADDRESS
CITY

----------------~11.~

·Strout«
Realty

Good older

.

E~20

SAVE S30

3

BRs ., gas f urnace , bath,
a l uminum siding , on one
acre. $25 ,000.

157 ACRES

'

READY N1IX CON~~~;c
deliver ed rig ht to your
proje c l F as t an d easy . f' re e
estimates Ph on e 99 2 3184 ,
Goeg l ein R eady M i)( Co ,
Mid dl eporl , Ohio
6 30 lfc

C

and bath hom.e. new dri l l ed
w el l a nd furna ce , n ew
bathroom . 7 l irepla ces . good
lo ca tion ~n Lelart
Fa.l l s
Ohio . S7. 500 Phone 747 3853 ,
1 23 1?tc

I
I
I
1
I
I
1

NAME

I

PomeroY

O'DELL "'t1neme n t to cated
behind
R u1land
Grade
Sc hool . Tun eup . bra kes .
wt.cet balanc;in g , al ineriwnt
PhO!"'€ 74? 7004 ~
11 16 lfc

5 room s

FEB. 2, 1976

68 · 1022

I
I
I
I
I
I

THRU THIS ~---~--------------~---~-----~
COMING MONDAY

THESE SALE PRICES GOOD

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

3, lt AC ~E S bu i lding -s.i te in
Ba shan . water and ga s,
SS .OO.O Phon e Ch esler ( 6 \;1 )
98 5 4245
•
N E W HOME or rem oal'ling by
,1 25 41p
t'lour or contra ct . Pt1on e 992 ·
35 11 or 99 ? 7523 after s p .m .
L OT , Fai rv iew Hgr s
with
'
115 11'J
se p t ic tank and wa te r ta p
!~·2~?n:Shon e 1614 ) 985 41 53. C t.! t, NE Servi ce .
bui di ng
cr e c lion . -10 fl
d ·rr i ck
1 75 41R
P hone 997 5468
7 RM HO WSE on JO acres in
2 261 p
c: ounlrv . Bac k of Letart
Ohio . Ph on e 247 2286.
'
E&gt;: CAVA TIN G , BAC · H QES
I 2!i
A ND DOZ E R . LARC: ANO
SMALL
SEPTIC .ANK S
IN S T A LLED
BILL
2 BED ROOM m ollit e home
PU LLI N S, PHONE li-122478
w it h 3l, ac r e's of g round
D AY O R NIGHT
'
Phon e 247 ?1 61 L e tart , Oh io .
111J ]8 tp
1 ?3 12tc
AC ~Ei . big g ard ert ,

Otter Exorres

WO U LD YOU BEL IE VE ?
Buil d an all steel bu it dinQ at
Pol e Barn pr ice s? Go t"den
Gia n t 1\ 11 Stee l Build ing!&gt; ,
R t 4, Bo){ 148, Wav-erly ,
Oh iO Pt. on e 947 27.96 '
7 24 1fc

5 RM HO U SE. with bath Ne w
f uel oil hearer Ap pro:x
1
bJ.,f ild i ng s
n ear
a cr e
Pome r oy , B all Run Roa d
Conla c t R ic h ard Wi t t, Rl. •1
Pomeroy , Oh io;
·
'
l 78 .ttc

Ha ndy for ho m e or
ca rr First Powerbeam -5
Flashlight FREE .
Extras at $1.39 .
Persons under 16
must be accompaoied
by an adu lt.

OUT NEW STORE MANAGER

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Sp et:ia l ist

Value

FLASHLIGHT

"

COME IN AND MEET

Fr om the largest True 1o; or
Buttdo!er Radiator tc:. ~ ,.
.
sma ll es t H eater Core .

Ph . 991 -2114

Reg. 1.39

POWI;RBEAM-5

MIKE FEATHEROFF

REMODELIN G.
Pl umbin g ,
heati n g and all type s Ot
gen-er a t " r epa i r
work.
guaranteed . 20 year s e,.,
p er i en c e . Phon e 99 :1 2&lt;109 .
5 1 ti C

I

STORE ONLY

Mike Young , Manag er
Sa les and Installa tion
Rt . 3, Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
Phone day or night
614 -99~-2206
1 14- l mo .

E XCAVAT ING . do l er . loa'u~:: ,
and ba ckhoe work . sep t ic
ta nk s
insta lled ;
dum p
tru c k s and to boys to r h i re ;
will ha ul fill d irt , lpp soil
limestone and grav el . Cal l
Bob or Roger Je ff er s. day
phone 997 7089 , n ight phone
997 3525 or 992 5232
2 11 1 fc

11

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

save .

UNC Set 13 pes . I 18.50.

1

'\

•

We'll bring sa mple,. to your
home with no olm9ation .
See how you can really

R&amp;J COINS

BR HOME , iust finish ed
remodeling . Sa l em S t ,
Rutland . Pt1one 7d1 230 6
alter 4 p .m or SEe Mi l o B .
Hutchinson .
10 9 tic

W~ NT ED

-·- -

Bicentennial Coins
197SS Proof Set (6 ·pes .)
S2S.OO; 1975 Mint Set $9.00 ;
1976 Silver Proof Set (3
pes . ) s 15.00 ; 1976 Silver

Roger Wam sley
1 '23 I mo

MIDDLE PORT - 3 BRs ..
A N T I QUE Vi c torian Lo\ie
sea t
e)(cel l en t condit ion ,
Sl50 .
Portable
H oover
washer and dryer , harves t
gold , good cond i tion , Sl50 .
Por table
dishwas_h.er .
avo ca do , good condttron ,
S50 . Phone 99 2-5236 or 9.92.
59 10.
1 21 Btp

4 10 1 mo

PUBUC

HOU SE on lincoln Hgt~ 2
bedrm , lar ge k i lchen . lu l l
ba se ment . excell en t biJV for
!.8.900. with n ew f urn it ur e .
o.nlv \10 ,3 00. PhQn·e 992 7648
I 6 26 1c

3

for Sale

Ph. n2-3993

SLOAN'S

R., Estate for Sale

•
•

S-,4-acuse, Ohio

COINS

1-22 1 mo

••

LARRY LAVENDER

Call Rutland. 74 2-2JJ1

1969 MERCURY wagon , $395
Runs good
Ca!l 99 2 3619
befo r e 2 p .m .
I 25 4tp _

1974 C HEVROLET 1 ton , V 8
c abin chassis ; .1 speed , p.s .,
p .b , S3.600 Phon e (6 14) 985
35 94 .
I 27 5tp

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

Currency and Supplies
Buy , Sale or Trade

PH. 992-6173

-

Blown into Walls &amp; AHics '

(

Now accepting clients
for bookkeeping and
tax service.

1969
DODGE
Campe r ,
Spe ci a l. '·• 1on tru ck v 8, 4
sp .. 5600 . Phofi! e 992 526 4
1 28 Jtc

1968 1 TON Fo rd , F lat bed. V
8, auto .• t ransm issiOn . $750 .
Phone ( 614) 985 3594 .
1 27 5tp

COU NTRY
Mobile Hom e
Par k. Rt . J3 , ten mi tes north
of Pomeroy . Large to t s w i th
concrete patios. sidewalks,
runn ers and off stree -t
p arkj ng Phone 997 7479
12 31 tf c

' Help Wanted

p.m-:

C HEV Y '• ton .1 w heel
dr ive · p ic kup
n at ,1 r'Ce o t
tnc'ory w.n r il nly Ch rc}o.
•his befor e you buy ,, n ew
nn e Pll on c &lt;l i ter '1 p m or on
w~clo.,ends . 991 J 196
I 9 i fc

11 9 t fc

SEW IN G ot at t 1&lt;.mas. ar.e sses
f or all ot:caslo ns , s tac k s.
St1i rt s, new born laye lles,
curtains , drapes . Phone 99'1
30~5 and ask for Doroth y .
1 27 61(

1969 CHEVELLE 396 , 4 sp ., 4
elev en
gears .
positive
traction , ex.,tra parts , S695
Phon e 747 3076 ~It er 6
1 28 6tc

! 97~

3 A ND 4 - R;M . furnished and
unfurnish ed apts . Phon e 99 2
5434 .
'.

Employment Wanted

1· 12- 1 mo .

LARRY WHOBREY

Special Rate 1
by Week
or Month

REWARD tor any in l ormation
lead ing lq the r eturn of 7
Western saddles taken fr om
th e residence of Robert
Wi l son . Plea se phone 992
3621. eveni ngs .
1-26 -6tc

Call 992-7537
Pomeroy , Ohio

•
•••
•
•
•
••
•
•••

Blown
In sula tion Services

Pomerov Office
105 Bunernut
992· llH
Formerly W ee d Whol esa le.
Featuring ;
OetuJC Zerox Copy Ser vi ce,
0 1 f ice
Sf.l ppt i es ;
MimeogrOJph
Supplies ,
lar gest selection of we d
d ing .supp l ies in South
ea ste rn Ohio .
Th e Print Shop Complet e
( Stil! in busin ess in Middl epor tl
128 2rno .

Kuhl Cake Decor

Oar.k maroon finish , blk . b ucket vinyl seats, radio, V-8
engtne , automatic . power steering. good tires. a
sportsman 's dream .

Rooms, SS.OO up

Lost

16295

•
•

FREE ESTIMATES

Quality Print Shop

Ltcense d
baker
and
decorator.
Kitchen State Inspected

Slicker 17300.00 . SALE PRICE 16295.

12 21 4
48
22 18 3
WI LL GIVE 1\W/\Y 6puppiei, FREE ZER bt'CI
Phone 992
21 19 4
A6
-~
mates .
I
female .
56 16.
Canadian
Th oro uqhbred H einz 57 . Catt
I 21 ,6fp
w. l
T
Pts.
949 2673 betw een 6 a m , ant.l
Winnipeg
33 . 17 0
-·--66·
11 noon ,
Quebec
29 16 2
60
I 27 lip B EU 'cir·~.:~.s cr . ma 11rc !.s e o .
Ca lg;uy
25 19 2
52
':! al t::.m mapt e, f inish , ~ood
Edmonton
18 JO 1
38 A KC Irish Se ller , 7 mon ths
condition . Wanl $200. Phone
Toron to
15 28 3
992 5833 .
33
old Phone 992 7030.
x Ottawa
14 26 I
29
I 23 -4t p
1 27 Si c
, x Team d isbanded
Monday's Rnulh
8
r~ E E to good home . Male ;..;; ·I q I ~ N d \.·'ot \jl r ~'!!n•n
I No games scheduled J
dog . • . kus.sian Wolfhound ,
tra c k '•1Pl'
am lm rr1di o
11
Tucsda v's Games
8o)(er
Good
with
combination . "aluncc S9H.60
Cin cinna ti at Quebec
or term s. C~ll 991 396 S
child ren . Phone 992 2649 .
Edmonton at Toronto
I 27 3tc
1 ~ r rc
PhOen ix at san Diego

"

12695

Dark red . s imu la ted wood tr im , 3 seat , fu ll y equ ipped
with every Chev . option, .. low miles , ne w titl e boss' s
wife car .
'

P A R A SOL
Boutiqu e
an
nounces ·
P er manent
Sp eci a l s ! Un ip erm , r eg . t?O,
now $17 .50 ; R eg . $17 .50. now
SI S, R eg . $ 15, now $13.50.
Specia l s from Jan 20 1h thru
3 1st Lo cated next Jo Skate
A Way Rol l er Rink . Op en
Tues l hru Sal urday . Ph one
(61-0
985 4141 . Owner :
Sand ra ( Tru sse ll J K ern5 .
I I!! 12t c

Saturday, Jan . 24, 19-76
Feeder Steer s {400-800 lbs .)
25-31.75; Feeder He ifer s 1400

Cakes, Baked
and Decorated
To Your Order

f in ish. good tires , radi o , real economy . Book Value
Pri ce 52875 .00 - Clei'rance .

~5 Per Cent Discoun t on pa id
ads and ads pa id w i lhin 10
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
i:l 00 l or 50 word min imum
Ea c h a dd i t io n a l word 3
cents
BLIND ADS
1\ dd i t.io nat 25c Charge per
ll dvert 1S!! ment
OFFICE HOURS
8· JO a . m . to 5: 00 p . - m .
Daily . 8 · Joa m . to 12: 00 Noon
Saturday .

PERM A N E NT Waves Sa te fo r
n ext :;&gt; w eeks . Fashion
Beauty , ttl' ;• E . Se cond Sr.
I 28 41p

Business Services

Loc~l 1 owner, a u tomati c, blk . vinyl int. tr im , silver

?6 cen ts pe r word Si K co n
sccu t ,vc inscr!io n's

700 lbs . I. 22:50·18.25; Slaughter

PHONE _ _ __

1974 OAT5UN 710CPE .

th re e

Notice

-----------.

Pomeroy
QUALlll Motor Co.

M in imum Charge $ 1 oo

l.t

X

em- - --

-@ 2 SIGNS
OF

Fo.r Wa!lf Ad Serv ice
5 ren ts pe r word one inse rtion

~==·==-=~-::::::~·:::;-~r-.,_~~LJ~~·:•!"!"•:•~ted by the abo"e cartoon.
Lr_...,_
•~1111.:._
"".:._
""-.JI ''(X I XJ-0-[ L J"
r ...,.. r~h y' •

'
Correct
ions

RATES

u

Auto Sales

-· ··

W1ll be accepted unt i l 9 a m .

~:- -- '{iJ'~~~"?r;, · ,

) I I
JNSO UC

\- - .1.
011 - "-,

.

Auto Sales

fo r Day o t P ublic a tion .
REGULATIONS
The P ub lish er reser ..,.es the
r rrJIII •n l"dl! or r eiN. I nnv ads 1
deemed ob tectionat . Th e
publi s h t' r
will
no t
llt&gt; 1
responsible lo r more than on e
incorrect insert ion

~ ..__
_
~ - ~• •)

A

g::~ t ~~'em

~~,~~~.~£~noo,,:l:.~,. aee~m

..,
..::::-

R

OEAOLINES

Q

] [j

R

1N~

. . 1

OONES

I [

R

15

Rutland

I.
•

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SHACK ' FOR ANY
ANTENNA NEED
PLUS HARDWARE
AND ACCESSORIES
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Aadi'o Shack ~n!r o du ced •.I S lamo11S to w-cos t Real• slrc CB l•nc m
1960 and has been a worl d leader tn C1 t1zens Band tor 16 years
While some o f Rea listic s 16 radios lma'f. be in,shorl ~ upptv allimes
it'l l be worlh vour whtle to WAI T FOR 'RtAll S'r'IC (It you ha11e to)
an d avoid th e 11assle and' probl erils q l de~l ing .yt.ith Slorc lt and
Brand X We also make 01 11' ow n A.r t: h.!r l ind of 'CB an!ennas,
. c rystals . coax cables and accessom:s . Th ese are m la1rly
good supply toda y Aeallsllc CB IS sold and serv •c ed ONL '( bv
Aadro Shack 1n our ove t 4000 shops tn ttHl USA ;tnd Canact&lt;1 Buy
!ro m a really qualified spec•at•sl - yo11 r tr~encl \v ne 1ght&gt;o rllood
Aad10 Shack

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tuning meter . headphone jacks.
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'
'

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GALLIPOtiS

REFRESHINGLY
ROOMY ~ • rli ce BPs .. 1
batha , nice la rge kitchen.

Mo1t •t•ms •t•o •va11able
at Radio St1ac::k Oeal•rs
Look for -thi•

In yovr

"'11'

n~uihborhQO~

part basement with rec . R .
1 . .1 ~ l::.l ' Hrw ..
llome.
lus t
finished , rt:modl!ting , Safem
!&gt; t ., Rutland . Phone :'42 2306
after- 4 P.m . or see Milo e
Hutchison .
·
9 2J lie

tary~

e n c losed patio , garage ,

NOT VERY OLD . SJO,IIOO .
fH~ SIG N OF
KNOW
HC'W IS HERE - LET US
SELL YOUR PROPERTY .
nl 2259or .,. 2561

-,

RADIO SHACI&lt; PRICES ON AVl:RAGE HAVE INCREASED LESS TH~N 1% SINCE JULY, 1974!

$8.500.

Hot wa ter heal ,

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fl A TANDY CORPORATION COMPANY

SILVER 'BRIDGE PLAZA
•

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PRICES MAY VAR Y AT IN DIVIDUAL STORES

�JG The

D&lt;lil~

St•ntJrwl. Muhllt'J1tlri -Pnllwru.' . 0 ,, Wl&gt;t.ln,·sd.iy . .J,;m. 28 .

J ~Ii'li

VL•trrans l\ll'moriallfo!lpital

Porncruy , and J a n. 28, .a .son

Kennedy .
Mtddlepo r t;
Gladys Goulding , New
Haven.
DISCHARGES -- Leola
Kcck ,

Mary

T homp so n,

Frances Swartz . Myr tl e
Dm·st, Charles Can ter, Paul
Burn s,

Lo ui se

Hawkin sJ

Pearl Dar st. Wanda Imboden. Oto Johnson.
Pleasa nt \'alley Hospital
DIS CHARGES - Helen
Andrews, Donald Workman,
Juhn
E win g,
Frances

Tygrett,

Mrs.

Edward

Hus se lt , Barbara HcHt ,
Albe r t Steven s, Stephen

Show, all of Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Harry Varian . Clifton;
Mrs. Clifford l.eport, Mrs .
Paul Bush, both of Hende rso n: Floyd McMillin.
Hartford; Mr s. Robert
Wilcox. Chill icothe ; Robert
Chee s eman ,
dau g ht e r,
Chester.
Births - Jan . 27, a son to
Mr. and Mrs . Larry Vance,

MEIGS THEATRE

\

Putney, Eloise Rea, Mrs.
James Reed and son, Jeffrey
Rife , Karen Riggs, Richard
Rogers , Carolyn Salser ,
Ba rb ara Schraaer , Mary
Scurlock, Mrs. Nelson Sharp
and son , Thoma s Sh arp ,
Me li.nd a Sin gleton, Clyde
Stollings , Patricia VanMatre,

COACH MARY J ANE DEELEY TELJ.B Ute girls how
Larry
Morrison Gym when Meigs downed Federal Hocking 74to
52.

w play Ute second baH of action Monday night at

Marmtha Ve nnar i, J a mes
Willis, Lu!Ha Wise.

A PPL E DUMPLING
GANG

daught er ,

bill in the House Utilities
Committee.
Rep. William E. Hinig, DNew Philadelphia, chainnan
of the committee , surprised
everyone when he ordered
the bill pending befor e his

tlle chairma n.''

Hinig did not give any
reasons behind his move, and
would not elaborate on the
·hal t of the bill 's s teady
movement for the last two
weeks in his committee.

Margaret Curtis

• Com pl ete ho me la undry
just 24" wi de
• Family-si:Ze ce~ p ac ity
• 4-positi on Wat er
Tempera tu re Sel.ecto r

died on Tuesday
Miss Margarel .C. Curtis, 86
of Rutland Rd., Middleport,
di ed Tuesda y evening at
Ve te rans Memorial Hospital.
Born Jan. II, 1890, she was

the daughter of the late Owen
P. and Martha Hysell Curtis.

• Au toniati c; Dry Cycle

She was a lso preceded in

Now Only

death by a sister, Martha,
and a bro ther, James.
Surviving a r e a s is te r ,
Sa r a h P a trici a Cur tis,

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPOIU,·OHIO

Middleport; a niece, Mrs.
Margaret Staggs, in Florida.
Fun eral services will be
held at 10 a.m. Friday at the
Sacred Hearl Church with Fr.
Pa ul Welton offi ci atin g.
Friends may call at the
Rawlings-Coa ts Funeral
Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p .m . Thu rsday . Rosary
services will be held at the
fun eral hom e at 7 p.m. Thursday.

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TWO FOR PRICE OF ONE

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BUY ONE $1.95 KENTUCKY
FRIED CHICKEN DINN.ER-

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WITH
.COUPON

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WojtanOwski a nd former
PubHc Utilities Commission

of Ohio Chairman Henry
Eckhart were circulating a
petition in the committee
room Tuesday to genera te the

required 31.7,000 signatures of
qualified voters to place the
were contingent on " working proposed measW'e on the
out a compromise with the ba llot. '
Wojtanowski was collecting
utility industry."
Neither Wojtanowski nor signatures on his petit ion in
utility industry re pr~se n ­ the cQmmittee hea ring room
ta lives could 'estima te the

minutes before Hinig a n-

More tourist
infonnation
.
centers urged

News •• in Briefs

tennial year .

On

The economic effec t of·
TICs is dramatic. About one
out of ten cars will slop in a
regioo becau.se of a TIC.
Each stop helps local
business because tra velers

~--·--·--~~-~cc.uP40Ni-ciOvvi'

I

Visit the Colonel and get a free dinner. You buy one ·1
and get the second one free. Each Dinner Box 1
conta ins three pieces of finger lickin ' good Ken - I
lucky Fried Chicken, potatoes and gravy , slaw, and I

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a roll

NO SUBSTITUTIONS
Offer Good Wed., Jan . 28 and Thur., Jan. 29 Only

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It's A Great Day For
.

.

KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN

CHOW'S STEAK HOUSE
·

·

POMEkOY, OHIO

Ohio osteopaths give
$103..000 to OU-COM

in Ohiu studen ts and $2.550 for
COLUMBUS - The Ohio additi ona l tra ining
nounced his decision to wait Osteopathic Foun dation has os teopathiC ma n ip1,1la tion, o ut -o f -s t ate s t u d en t s.
"at least a week" before any · a warded two gran ts totaling which is based on Ute total Recipien ts of the Foundati on
furl het hear in gs on the $1 03,000 to the new Ohio interre la tionsh ip of lhl! !:ithol e~rs hi ps will . be deterlegislation .
· mined
by
OU-COM 's
·Un ive rs ity Co ll ege · of vari ous body systems.
The bill substitutes a "fair Osteopathic Medk ine 1OUIn addition, ne ar ly 75 Sch olars hip Advi s ory
value" method in place .of the COM I in Athens .
percent of all D.O.s go into Commtttee .
. reconstruction cost rlew forThe bill ' to 'establish an
The grants include $5:!,000 genera l practice, while only
ac tions Tuesday .
mula now used by the utility for
the purc hase of i7 percen t of the graduating os t..opathic college in Oh io
The bill , as ori gi nally industry. The formula also microsco pes and other M.D.s c hoose fam il y prac tice Was origi nally introduced as
dra fted by Wojtanowski , allows utilities to figure into la boratory equipme nt as well as their careers.·
H.B. 229 in the Ohio House of
r e'pealed the ''reconstruction their ra te base the cost of as $50,000 for the purchase of
Ki nds vatter announ ced Representatives in Janua ry·
cost new" formula used by constru cHon n ow unde r way, scientific books, jour nals and that the Foundation also will 1!175 by State RepresenU!tive
utilities and replaced it with provided the new facilities refere nce publications for I he a ward fo ur schola rshi ps per Tum Fries ( D-Dayton) .
an nm:igina l cost '' formula. come "on line" within three university library. In ad· cl&lt;:t ss to cover tuition for the
An ame nded . ver s ion
But in cqmmittee hearings ye ars .
dlti on, the Foundation has college. The scholarships - passed the Oh io House by a
·last week , a mendme nts were
also established a scholarship wh ich will total 16 when the nwrgin of 90 l.o 4 arid later
adopted to allo w several
p'rog r a m to assist needy fi rs t four. classes are enrolled passed the Senate on J uly 28
other factors to be included in
students .
- will be based on financia l by a vote of 24 to 6. The bill
the rate base, upon whi ch
Acco rding to Chr is H. need as we ll as th e was s i,l:!ned by Guve rn or
utility ra tes for homeowners
Kind sva t.t er , exc eu tive ·qualifications of the can- Jat.n es A. Hh tides in August
.
and industries are deter di rec tor of th e Ohio dtdales.
a nd
became
effecti ve
mined.
Os teopathic
Assoc iati on
OU-COM will accept' 24 November 17, 1975.
Those amendments ca used
tOOA), the money for the students in its fi rs t class to
Acting Dean of the n e ~
Wojtanowski lo abandon his
Foundation
comes
from
a
begin
in
September
1976
.
'
medical
college is Gerald A .
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio bill and join in a drive to
$250
assessment
on
each
of
Tuition
is
$1,350
per
year
for
Faverm
an,
Ph . D.
Symbols of the new emphasis
th
e
assoc
ia
tion
's
l
,U
21
on tourism in m ideast and
OHIOANS VOTE
southeas
t Ohi o are th e members . The i:ISScssment
WASHI NGTON (UPI ) was unan imously a pproved
The vote by which the House, Tourist Inform a tion Cen ters by the OOA's House of
on a 323 to 99 roll call, opening in the region.
How to open and opera te a De leg ates las t .Ju ne to
Tuesday passed and sent to
COLUMBUS - F INDINGS FOR RECOVER Y totaling
the White Houes a $112 billion Tourist [nformation Center · provide support for Ohio 's
firsl college of osteopathic $4 334 were announced Tuesday by state Auditor Thomas E.
will
be
discussed
ala
meeting
Defense Appropriations bill
medici ne .
Fe'rgu son as the result of an audit of the Fairfield County
conta inin g a cla use that sponsored by th e Buckeye
"
These
grants
represent
·
Welfare Department, covering the pe riod from Jan. I, 1972,
Tourist
Co
un
cil
a
t
·I
p.m.
would ban mHitary aid w
the
professioh
's
commitment
through March 31, !975.
Tuesday,
Februau
3,
in
the
.
..
Angola .
to
OU-COM,"
sa
id
Kinds·
Th
e
findings,
representing
a
cash
defr
ctt~ were made
Ohio
Pow
er
Co
mpany
Voting for were 251 Demovatter
.
''Theassessffient
is
an
against
former
county
W
elfare
Director
.
Wtlbam Lowry,
mee
ting
room
,
136
South
9th
crats and 72 Republicans.
Wlprecedented
ac
tion
by
a
n
Director
Donald
Dowell
and
county
commtsstoners
Rtchard
St.
,
Cambridge.
Voling aga inst were 30
Ohio
profession
to
help
Brandl
Donald
Kuffman
and
James
Mills
.
The
cash
defictt
An
yo
ne
interested
in
Democrats
and
69
.
support
the
trainin
g
of
its
own
resulted
from
failure
of
lhe
department
to
deposit
alimony
and
opening
and
operatin
g
a
Republicans.
support checks in the count y treasury.
Ohio , 8 Democrats, 15 Tourist Informa tion Cen ter is students.' '
The United States has two
invi ted. All Chamber of
Republicans
co
mpl ete
sc hoo ls
of
CINCINNATI - THE PROCfER &amp; GA MBLE CO .. a
· Democrats for: Ashley , Commer ce executives in the
me
di
ci
ne,
osteo
pathic
a
nd
world-wide
producer of household products, made nea rly $192
l!kounty
Buckeye
Tourist
Carney,
Hays,
Mottl ,
Seiberling, James Stanton, Cow1eil region have been all opath ic. Os t eopathi c million in the last six months. Company offi cia ls Tuesday
colleges award the deg ree reported an 11 per cent increase in earnings on a sa les boost of
invited.
Stokes, Vanik.
D.O., all opa thi c colleges 5 per cent during the last-half of 1975.
ln
1974
there
were
no
Republicans for: Brown,
· P&amp;G headquartered here, manufactures and markets
ClanCy, Guyer , Harsha , Touris t Information Centers award the degree M.D.
Bot.h M.D.s and D.O.s are dozens ~f household products like Pringles pota to chips,
Milicr, Mosher, Regula, J . ITIC J operating within the
fully
licensed to practice Charmin toilet paper, Folger's coffee , Crest toothpaste, Jif
rnicleast
a
nd
southeast
Ohio
William Slanton, Whalen,
region . In the entire state medi cine and surgery , and peanut butter and Ivory soap. Net earnings forth~ last haH of
Wylie.
Republica ns against : Ash- there were only three in bo th utilize all .a ccepted 1975 were $191.9 million, im increase of 11 per cent from ~ar­
nings of $173.4 million the same slx months of 1974. Earnings
brook, Devine , Gradison. opera tion . In 1975 Tourist methods of diagnosis and
treatm
ent
.
The
ma
jor
per share jumped from $2.11 to $2.33.
Infor
rriati
on
Ce
nte
rs
were
Kindness, Latta .
_opened in
Cambridge, distinction is that D.O.s have
Marietta, 'Zanesville, and St .
Clairsville . The Buckeye
Tourist Council hopes to see
several more open in the
region during this Bicen-

INTEREST

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GALLIPOLIS UNIT AT WORK ·- Gallipolis firemen brought their ladder truck to the
scene to get water on the roof of Stiffler 's Department Store. Even so, the fire would not
abate.

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Pomeroy
is cleaning up !

effect of the proposed bill on
homeown er and industry
utility bills. That development, as well as hundreds of
lett er s
pouring . into
legislators' offices against
Ute bill, figured into Hir\ig 's

later date "to be specified by

Frigidaire
Laundry Center

rtood

l&lt;lcked onto the leg islation
last week prompted llinlg's
stop to the bill.
But Rep . Dennis J . Wojtnowski, D-Willoughby Park,
sponsor of the bill, said
further hearings on the bill

to further hearings on a
con trove rsia l utility ra te base,

committee to be "ca rried
over" and considered a t a

!

a

amendment appare ntly were
behind Tuesday's abrupt halt

WANT AD WAY

Show Sta rts 7: 00p.m .

will be held Friday at 2 p.m.
at the Sand Hill Cemetery in
Long Bottom .

Utility industry lobbyists change the rate-base formula
sa id they thought poo r through an amendment to the
drafting of the bill caused by state constitution.

By J. R. KIMMINS
COLU MBUS (UP! )
Sloppy committee work and a
dri ve to take the issue
directly to the people with aJ

EVERYBODY
Shops the

It Di sney's

evening . Graveside services

Rate base issue may come
to statewide vote in Ohio

(Births, Jan. 271
Mr . and Mrs . Ronal d
Conger, son, \Vellston ; Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Lewis,
daug hter, Crown Ci ty; Mr.
an d Mrs. Danny Mi sse n,
daugh ter, Pt. Pleasant ; Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas ·Rainey,

propose d con s titu t ional!

FRI. THRU . TU E S.
We~

Fisher , W. Dona ld Galloway,
Eva Gilmore, Cindy Grin·
stead, Kelsey Henry, Gail
Layton , Helen Litch fi el d,
Bertha Martin, Myr tle
Marlin, Pa ul Montgomery,
Marie Moria rty, Lo uis
Na nce,
Sa ndra

.,

orie sist.!r. Mrs. Katherine
Sickles, West Jefferson,
Ohio ; five grandchildren ,
She was a member of the
Order of Bast.!rn Star, Ladies
Shrine, Colwnbus and the
Nitro Moose Club.
Funeral serv ices will be
Thursday at 10 a.m. at the
Blue Ridge Funeral Home,
Beckley, W. Va . The body will
be brough t to the Ewing
Funera l Home Thursday
afternoon with calling hours
to be fr om 6 to 9 Thursday

Harold Doug las , Carolyn

James Ros~.
Gallipolis.

•

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one stepson, Larry, Chester ;

son 1 Gallipolis ; Mr, and Mrs.

TONIT E THRU
T HUR S.
JA N. 18 -29
NOT OPEN

....--

She is survived by her-

Barke r. Rowena Barnhart,

Melissa
Norris,

\1\\\l\

J

husband, Denver 0 . Curtis ;
son, Keith of Charleston ;
daught.!r, Cindy, at home;

Raymond Boothe, Sleve n
Buzzard , Mrs. Edward cai n
and daughter, Mary Deer,

Morri s,
Wa lter

. ..

Belt.! J . Curtis. 5(), of Rt . I,
Mount Hope, W. Va ., died
Tuesday at the Char leston,
W. Va . Memorial Hospital .
She was the daught..r of the
late William and Evelyn
White.

ADMISSIONS ~ 11aleigh to Mr . and Mrs. Wtlham
Sayre . New Haven ; Henry Switb , Point Pleasant , and a
Roney. Sr.. New Haven ; son to Mr . and Mrs. Btlly
Jesse Bush , Long Bottom : Nibert, point Plea sant.
Grace Beabout, Middleport ;
Holzer Medica l Center
Dennis Utile, Cli ft on; Virgil
t Discharges, Jan. 271
Hudson. Pomeroy; 11onald
Hilda
Bailes, Thelma
Dailey, Pomeroy ; Ja ck
Sn1ith , Middlepor t ; William

Super Savings! Bargain Days in Area Stores Friday, Saturday

Bette Curtis
. died Tuesday

HOSPITAL NEWS

I ·----------------------------------------

'1,000 Minimum

1 Yr. Term
NIM!y chry lnlenrll-lly
If
withdrawn before
mllwtty chrtt.

MeilsCcLBim

·...@

and tourists purchase gas, .
food, lodging, and recreation
services.
.
Sponsoring the development of Tourist Information ·
Centers ls only one of many
promotions of the Buckrye
Tourist Council. At present it
is promoting Ibis part of Ohio
at eight travel shows, such as
in Pittsburgh, Colwnbus, and
Cleveland. II has also
developed
a . regional
brochure, a ser ies of radio
commercials, and features
for national publications. ·
. Anyone interested in further information abou'. the
Tuurist Information Center
mcc!i ng or about the Buckeye
Touris l Cuuncil should write
wthe Counci l at 853 Wheeling
Ave., !Un . 211:1, Cambridge,
Ohio 43725.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
BE SURE TO READ OUR AD
IN THIS NEWSPAPER

'

TOMORROW EVENING FOR
SHOPPING NEWS
ABOUT BARGAIN DAYS IN POMEROY
FRIDAY AND SAtuRDAY, JAN. 30 tnd 31

Elberfelds In ·Pomerov

Mrs. Ueri Walton, above, employe of tbe Meigs County
Branch of Ute Atbens County Savings and Loan Co., braved
cold weather wiUt her coffee urn Wednesday morning to
provide hot coffee for firemen on Ute battle line fighting the
Stiffler Department Store fire close by. A canteen was also set
up inside Ute firm .
CENTE R, ABOVE ; LOOKING UPRIVER PAST Ute Main
St. entrance to Stiffler 's Swre, at the height of the fire fight
Utat took eight hours Wednesday w win, firemen weren't sure
whether or not Utey could save tbe lower business block.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles Legar had nothing but praise for
Ute help given by every available fireman In the area.
ABOVE, AT RIGHT, THIS scene is of behind the Warner
Barber Shop on W. Second St. about 10:35 a. m. Wednesday as
flames spread from the rear of Stiffler's Ollpurtment StQre into
wall4o"wit ll structures adjoining .

'i·.J V;:;::::-: ·::·:· ;:·:::·i·; : :::J i;i;/;\l
-:··

By United PresoiDiei'JIIItloaal
.·.:
DETROIT - PARENTS, POLICE AND SCHOOL officials
had geared up for probloma,·but alter three days of a courtordered busitlg lntegralidli 'plan, awehenslon had turned to
prtde. By Wednesday, attendance at the city's public schools Ute fifUt largest system In Ute nation and Ute largest In which
busing bas bee n implemented - was at normal levels.
"l am overwhelmingly pleased that Ute overwhelming
majority of parents are cooperating beautifully and are sending their children to school," said Dr. Arthur Jefferson,
school superintendent. . "That includes bla~k and while
parents ."

However,· pockets oi resistance !'l'mained. Absenteeism
was double Ute citywide rate at previously all black schools
whe re students from all while neighborhoods on Ute Nortbeast
and Southwest Side of the city were heJne sent.
WASIIINGTON - MAYORS FRO]If 125 cities open tbeir
midwinter meeting today, with most efforts geared at lobbying
Ute Whit.. House and capitol Hill for enactment of public
employment and revenue sharing legislation.
The schedule includes meetings with President Ford and
administration leaders,and the House Democratic leadership.
Among wpics earmarked for prime discussion are a public
works anti-recession bill to authorize fund!! for cities with high
unemployment, and other measures for public and private
programs aimed a t stimulating Ute economy.
.
The mayors also want reenactment of general revenue
sharing.
CHARLESTON, W. VA. - WITH TilE THREAT of an
additlooal state tax this year hanging over Its head, tbe West
Virginia coal industry ls bringing out last year's ledger books
to battle arguments it should pay more tax dollars. Edwin K.
Wiles, president of the West Virginia Coal AMociatlon,
released figures Wednesday that show the coal Industry paid
more than $103 million· In business and occupation severance
taxes for 1975.
"Coal, Uterefore, paid more than a third of the total B&amp;O

•

e
VOL XXVII NO. 202
.

en tine

a1

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1976

.

PRICE FI FTEEN CENTS

-·

Losses by fire
to top $500,000
By Bob Hoeflich
Losses are expected to run
Pomeroy firemen on tbe seene through the night and Ibis
at least a half million dollars
m'orniug guarded against a new outbreak of flames from
and probably will exceed that
smouldering embers In tb e Stiffler Store and adjoining
fi gure considerably as the
buildings ..
result of a fire which struck
Court, Main and Second Sis. around lhe an!a of the Ore in
the Stiffler Department Store . the lower business block are blocked off from traffic, which Is
in the lower block of down·
being routed east-west along tbe river through the parklug
town Pomeroy early Wedlots. ACcess to uptown last night was also being routed over
nesday morning.
Mulberry Ave ., east on Seeond to Sycamore, thence to East
The four floors or the
Main .
'
Stiffle.r Store, with entrances
on three different stree ts of
Pomeroy's new wate r system
the town , were complet.!ly would have burned .
He ex pressed thanks on. with its 500;000 gallon storage
gutted with all merchandise
being destroyed by the fire. behalf of his department. The tan k a t nearby Breezy
The
Pomeroy
Fire ae rial ladder trucks of Heights. The new system
Department answered a call Gallipolis and Ripley were weri t into oper a tion only
io the store at 7:02 a. m. illvaluable in fi ghting the fire about three months ago. It
Wednesday when the blaze which was fanned at time by provided the fire departwas reported by two men who high winds. Firemen battled ments with plenty of water
noticed the fire wt. ~ n they Ihe bl aze in bi Iter co ld . and pressure with which w
fight the fire . The aerial
pa!'Sed by the Second St. wea ther .
Chief Legar said when the ladder trucks of Ripley and
entran ce of the bus in ess·
P om e r oy De p a r t men t Gallipolis pumped water
establishment.
·
Middlepor t, Racine, and arri ved on the scene, it a p- from the Ohio River.
BLACK SMO.KE rolled skyward as the Stiffler Store fire raged near out of control
Fortunately, there were no
Syracuse Fire Departments peared a t first that the blaze
Wednesday
morning. Noone, miraculously, was seriously 'injured although several firemen
soon joined the Pomeroy co uld be brou gh_t under major injuries in the blaze
suffel'l'd
lacerations.
·
department in fighlin g the c.on trol. However, he said the which was one of the worst in
fire. An aerial ladder truck fire seemed to sweep through the village in many years.
the struc ture, ge tting com- Several firemen suffered cut
was
s ummon ed
fr om
Fred Morrow, manager of Wlder control in the afternoon
Gallipolis. The fire continued plet..ly out of control. Stif· hands and se v e ral were fr om the fire area downr ive r
by
smoke. to the Jones Boys. This left Ute local Ohio Power Co., sent a nd some were still mopping
out of control and Rutland, fl er 's has three e ntra nces , overc ome
Ripley, W. Va., and New one on Second St. , one on However, all stayed in the Ute lower part of the com- for two crews from Por ts- up later Wedn esda y night.
munity without power. As a mouth to come to Pomer oy to Power was restored to Ohio
Haven, W. Va. Departments Cour t St. , and one on West fire fight.
Electricity of the Ohio resul t homes with furnaces assis t In ge tting power Power customers about 3;25
arrived to help. Personnel Main St.
Firemen of the a rea were Power Co. was off completely operating by electrically restor ed when it was sa fe for p.m.
from Nelsonville and Athens
The blaze spread to th ~
Fire Departments also came. at a ll of the e ntra nces at one time in the town and controlled thermostats went firemen.
(Continued on page 2)
Firemen brought Ute blaze
Pom eroy
Fire Chi ef fi ghtin g the blaze which in was. then shut off ·partially cold.
Charles Legar sa id that time spread to other nearby
without the tremendous help s truc tures. Other busi nesses
received fr om a rea fire near the Stiffler building
departments, the entire block vacated their structures.
Credit.!d with being a big
.
assist in bringin g the fire
under control finally, too, was

.

Planning group ·wants

Evelyn Oark

$400,000 block grant
A bl ock grant of $400,000 in
federal funds for four
projects in Meigs county will
be sought by · the Meigs
Coun ly Regional Planning
Commission.

Mee ting Tuesday evening
a t the Farmers Bank
. Buildi qg, th e commiss ion
hea rd C. E. Blakeslee ,
executive director, outline
lhe dates when the several
phases of the block grant
application are to be completed .
Included in the projects of
Ute application is $105 ,000 for
: rura l house numbering ;
$80,iioo for Community Action
Agency's house rehabilitalioo
project; $200,000 for access
roads to county property near
the former Children 's Home
on Mulberry Ave ., and $15,000
ror a consultant to study the
capital improv e men t
capa bilities of the county,
Blakeslee poin t.!d out also

Ural villages of the county can
apply for block grants qn
projects In the next four year
period.
Mrs. Elean or Thomas ,
executive dire ctor of the
Meigs County Council on
Aging, reported that she has
been meeting along with
county cQmmissioners With

architects on plans for a
se nior

citize ns

center

building which tenta tively
will be located on Mulberry
in
Pomeroy .
Heights
Residents of Pomeroy are
hopeful to · receive a grant
which would make the
moneys for the center
adequate for a community
center and a senior citizens
cenwr .
ll was again brought out at
the meeting there is considera bl e interest In the
establishment of a nursing
home in Ut-. county. Meeting
dates of the commission were

hegins tenn on

changed w the third Monday
of each month at 3 p. m. to
coincide with meetings of the
county commissionersso that Mrs. Evelyn Clark of
Ute commissioners ca n · at· Pomeroy Tuesday will
tend planning commission become tbe first womWt to
meetings later in the day. The . serve pn the Meigs County
next meeting was se t for Board of Elections.
March.
·A Republican, Mrs. Clark
The commission authorized was recently named by the
Blakeslee to proceed with Meigs County
Centra.!
establishment of a housing . Committe e to fill the
assistance plan by Jennings remainder of the unexpired
and Associat.!s of Columbus. wrm of Jam~s Quivey who
The plan will ~se fi gures resigned recently. Mrs. Clark
compiled ~uring the past has been given her oath of
year on housing in Mid- office and will attend her first
dleport, Rutland and town- meeting next Tuesday to
ships or the county. Such a · complete Quivey's term.
plan will be required if the
She has also been
block loan grant application recommended for a four year
pr ogresses thr ough its t.!rm to the board as ~s Mrs.
required stages. Blakes lee Jean Blazewiez, a Democrat,
was authorized to sp•·nd a by t.Qe central committee of
maximwn of $300 in getting her party. Both ladies are
Jennings and Associates to expected to begin full four
work up the housing yea r terlrul on the board in
Conllnued on pagt 11
March.

hoard Tuesday

_..,..,_
,,

.
.

f" I

.

EIGHT HOURS AFI'ER 'l1IE FIRE was detect..d by
ch&gt;.nce passersby at 7:02 Wednesday, the Stifflpr store'
fire finally was brought under control. This is ' ·ene on

..

Main St. wiUt the Gallipolis ladder truck in operation
getting wawr on the roofs of burning buildings.

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