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                  <text>32 - The Sunda;• Times-&amp;ntinel, Feb. 29, 1976

Truman biographer to
he in Rio Grande soon

Den talk

Turkey Roundup·

'

POMEROY - In the first
srx turkey hunting seasons
under the free permit system
only 68 percent of the people
"ho received permits ac·
tually hunted . The $5.35 fee
the refore was introduced in
wn par11y as a way tu
eli minate per·mit recipients
wl10 ne,•er went hun hng.
In 1972 and 1973. 70 percent
of the permittees hunted . The
increase of the permit fee to
$10.50 in 1"9i4 and 1975
resulte d in considera bly
fewer .applicants, but of those
who received permits, 79
percent· hun ted.
In my opini on, requiri ng
Umt the fee be su bmitted
along with the applicayon has
worked well administratively
for three years. as has the
method uf issuing permits for
two year~ on a first-c.,me ,
firs t-served basis.
This svstem sho uld be
continued. in 1976. Further,
the use of the new Turkey
llan•esl Record Book, and
help by fo ur priva te
businesses in c he cki ng
tu rkeys, shou ld al so be
eonti nued fOr the 1976 season.
Law Enforcement
Turkcv
season
law
,·iolations arc diffi cult to
detectduc to the na ture of the
hu nt. Hun ters have been
made
aware
of the
regula tions. how to hunt, and
identification of the gobbler
an d the hen thr oug h
. Jitc r&lt;:~lur e rec eived be fore
each season.
Law en forcement pet.·sor nel
have
cat.•e fully
patrolled forest hun ling areas
in cRrs during the past 10
seasons. Tht:&gt;se procedures
hare
helped to keep
violat ions to . a minim um .

GALLIPOLIS - Merle
Miller, the author of Plain
·Speaking, an oral biography
of Harry S Truman, will .
appear as part of the 1975-76
Artist Lecture Series at Rio
Grande College-Community
College.
Miller will be on campus on
Wednesday , March 3, at 3
p.m. and 8 p.m. in the college
dining hall . The evening
session will be a lecture
presentation while the afternoon session will be more
discussion . The publi c is
invited to both secti ons .

Only nine infractions of the
law have been rec orded .
These have included hunting
without a permit, failure to
check turkey. and he n
shooti ng. One minor hunti ng
accident has occurred.
Future Outlook
Ohio can no longer be
considered a novice in turkey
h;~ r\' est management.
For
many people in the state , the
turkey season has become a
traditional part of the hun ting
year. Much has been learned
from both .successful and
unsuccessf ul hunters . Administratively, proced ures
become more standardized
each year. These fa c ts,
coupled with yearly da ta
ga thered through liv elrapping and tra ns plan ting,
gobbling counts , and observations, have proven that
the turkey population is well
es tablished in certain oreas
and can withstand moderate
hun ting pressure on limited
range . Wild turkey trapping
and transplunting to un occupied and unde rs toc ked
range will continue in the
Ohio Hill Country, as a means
of
establi shi ng
new
populations and . increasing
hunting opportunity .
From 1966 to 1969, four-day
spring seasons were held.
From 1970 through 1974, two
4-day spring seasons were
held each year. In ·1975, the
spring season was expanded
to two 6-day hun ts. During
these 10 seasons over 9,000
hunters
harvested 500
turkeys, a success ratio of
one in 19. considered good for
spring hunt ing. Questionna ire comments have varied,

Miller
attended
the
University of Iowa and the
London School of Economics.
He served as a combat
MERLE MILLER
correspondent and eventually
became executive editor in
Paris lor Yank, The Army pr es idents per so nally ,
Weekly. Mr. Miller has also Miller 's longest friendship
served as an editor for Time was with Presiden t Harry S .
magazine and later for · Truman . His book, Plain
. Harper's while continuing his Speaking, covers some of Mr.
fiction and non-fi ction Truman' s mos t important
decisions including dropping
:writing.
Miller
was
pu·blicly the atom bomb and firing
blacklisted as a rather too General Douglas MacArthur.
outspoken s ocial com- Pr es id en t Tr uman ' s
mentator during the Senator assess men t of presidents
Joseph McCarthy era and succeeding him in also part of
was unable to publish under the book. These topics will be
his own name during the a part of Mr. Miller's lecture
and discussion at RGC-CC on
1950s.
, While know ing sev eral March 3.

bu t

most

have

expressed

New wing ready
for opening day

They walked across the river
Riverview Hotel which stood on the present site of the
home of Dr. and Mrs. Keith Braooeberry. In the photo
with eight persons on the ice the big house, foreground is .
at the upper end of the public use area today, occupied as
a residence by Gen. Bush. (Photos from a collection
owned by Mrs. Evan Roderick).

When heavy ice gorged the river in January, 1918 much
damage was done to boats and barges, but hikers had a
tllrill walking across the river as shown here. The four
men fa cing tlle camer~ are (l tor ) Howard Neal, William
McKnight, Robert McCormick and A. C. Safford. Note the
dense trees in the park, the Green Line whartboat and the

Ice gorges locked tight
the river 58 years ago

enjoyment in the hunt.
~'or !976 a two-week season
has bee n approved (Monday ,
April 26, through Saturday,
May 8). Two thousand perBy Major Gen. (r-et.)
Marm et at Pt. . Pleasant
mits will be issued on a firstGeorge
Bush
(wit
hou t steam) was lorn.
come, first-served basis· for
GALLIPOLIS
·A
li
ttle
loose
by i.ce and struck the
the entire two weeks.
over
;58.
yea
rs
ago
an
event
of
.
Enterprise
Or} the Gan:lner
Each hunter will be allowed
much
consequence
happened
doc
ks
with
the. ferrybo a t
one bearded turkey, to be
here.
an
d
elsewhere
along
the
Relief
on
them
. Then the C. C.
k1ken by shotgun or longbow
Ohio
River
Valley
when
ice
Bowyer,
Golden
Rod and
between 6 a.m . and noon.
go
rges
c
losed
t
he
ri
ver
,
Helen
E
.
and
several
barges
STATE FARM·
This new regulation will offer
causi
ng
heavy
damage,
and
an
other
drydock
broke
hunters several advantages:
TJae \\brld's
Monday,
January
14,
1918,
loose.
The
whole
fleet
drifted
( I) No cho ice will be
needed in selecting a hun tin~ the Gallipolis Daily Tribune. down the Ohi o River to
Number One
printed a repor t wh ich Galli polis where the boats
period .
Homeowners
stated
: •
lodged in mid-rive r in fr ont of
(2) The likelihood of ad11
River
cl
osed
Sunda
y,
the wharfboa t.
Insurer
verse weather spoiling the
January
13,
1918.
·-rhe
Ohio
"Over 1000 persons were at
If you're looking tor !he best hun ting season will be River closed here Sunday and the city wharf to see the
minimized.
vo lue in homeowners insurance
13 ) More huntin g op- gorged at the island above speci&lt;Icle, the like of wh ich
- you'll fin d it at State Fa1m.
portunity will be offered each town and in the bend below was never before wi tnessed
town. It is the first time the here ," the repor t said .
Give me a call today . You'll hunter.
At 4:30 &lt;J .m. on the 15th of
discovei what's made State Farm
(4) More time will be river has closed at this poi nt
the number one homeowners in- available to scout and· hun t for over 13 years. The Sirs. January the ice gorge moved
Tacoma, Courier , Hele n again the fl eet wa s carried on
- sut.er in the world .
new areas.
Undoubtedly, hunters will Lane, Chris Green; ferryboat down the river , and was
CARROL K. SNOWDEN experience some congestion Franics, and the Green Line greatly damaged. Some boats
for the firs t few days under Wharfboa t are in tilis harbor lodged on the )lead of
24 Sta te St.
the new regulation , as has fbehind the ice pi ers ). Ra cc oon Island and viGa llipolis
Th ere
was
been the case in past years. Damage may occur when the cin ity.
446-4290
ice
move
s·
out.
Kanawha
alm
os
t
no
coal
On
the
This problem will always
Hom e 446-4518
River
is
again
frozen
over
its
·
boats
and
·pe
o
plealong
the
ex ist with Ohio's limited
entire
length."
river
were
suffering
for
lack
turkey range, unless permit
like 1 good n~19llbor.
The next day the Tribune of coa l. Hun ting ton wa s
allotment
is cut drastically.
Sllte fir m is tllere.
reported
that the Otto closed by ice gorges for the
Although some townships
first time in :n years.
have received little hunting
ITUI !A a ..
Sllta Fl~f11
On Monday , January 21,
pre ssure, many of these these
virtually
new
FtrC&amp;nd C~suaiW Companf
the
Tribune reported: '' Many
ter
ri
tOr
ies
for
po
len
tial
townships
contain
huntable
HOmE OII1Ce
RIOOI'llOQICn . tlh110is
turkey' populations. Hunters hunting sites be(pre the 1976 persons crossed the river on
p 7402
· the ice here Sunday with the
would do well to investigate spring sea son.
gor ges the hea vie s t ever
kn owh at l his -point.''
(See the accom pa nyi ng
photos provided through the
courtesy of Mrs. Eva n
Roderick)
The report continued :
" Dynam itin g was co n.
tinued in the Ga lli polis
harbor below the ice piers
Sunday (Jan. 20) under the ·
superv ision of Ca ptain Harry
SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ON.Ll '
H. Peters (presumably from
.FEB. 29 THRU MARCH 7th
the U.S. Army Distr ict
Engineers Office) and much
effec tive work was accomplished. The Chris Green
was first to be freed Sunday
noon . All the packets here
will be relea sed from the

present, but we are still interested in knowing the
whereabouts of these unique,
rare photos so that when
facilities become available
we can make, catalog and file
our own copies.
Everyone interested may
telephone inquiries to Mrs . G.
Randolph
Hand,
our
. Historical .Society Library
Chairman, (446-1870 ), or the
Gallia County Hi storical
Society Publicity Chairman, Mrs. Keith Suiter 14462259) after 5 p.m.

'

terested in obtaining and
ca talo ging ph otographs of
unusual historica l · interest
1either the photo as a gift or
as a "loa n un til our Socie ty
Photographer can make a
copy . our facilities are
limited for storag e at

POINT PLEASANT Final preparations wer e
made Saturday for Pleasant
Valley Hospital's new
addition to have it prepared
for tbe opening day, Monday,
March I.
Patients will begin being
transferred into the new
three floor facility early
Monday morning. According
to Executl ve Director Farley,
"the only duties that will
remain on Monday will be the
actual transfer of the
patients.' ' ·Farle y add ed.
· &lt;~ our
personnel
ha ve
responded ill the many rece nt
challenges and I am ver:
pleased
with
their

e n th u sias m
a nd
cooperation .''
Six members of Pleasant
Valle: Hospital 's med ical
staff will be moving their
offic-es into th e new wing ,
Doctors, Cheng, Choi, Grubb,
Jamora, Montrie and Slack
are busy organizing their
offi ces toda y so they can
begin seeing patients Monday
morning.
'
The public i&amp;reminded tllat
Pleasant Valley Hospital's
Open House is scheduled for
Sunda y, February 29, 1976
from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Refreshments will be served
following the tours.

- --

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

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with a flair! A new Contemporary
idea from

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BERKLNE

'

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tufted ~u per soft vtnyl that looks

and f(~t ' l &lt;. l r ~r · f11w glove leather
Whl'n r(JU ~rt. '[)U smk into

LUNCH TIME GOODIE. ..
eHOT DOG

df·Pp , 1 rn k \Prll urs h to n ~ wr th
\Hdharw ioilrn l~ rc. hly rrn r!lhed

wood cHm po~ts ddrl &lt;H!Oiher
dccorauvr• rnli?H'\ t All thrs look

pl u" you net'd on ly a damr

"&gt;llon~e
~oib

ice. "

This brief description does
not give an accurate accoun t
of the dangers, the damage
and the deprivations of the
'~ i ce invasion" of January 1
1918. However , it is historical
f1ICt and , in general terms at
least, merits repeating occasionally in the interes t of
our local history .
·
Today it is acce pted that
ice go i·ges like those of
January, 1918 could almost
certainly not happen here
now because the stage of the
river is some 30 fee t higher
than it was then (before the
new sys tem of locks and
dams were ins talled ). A
simple deduction in physics
tells us llmt beca use there is
much more water to fteeze it
would require Arctic temperatures over long periods
to cause such ice jams.
turthermore, temperatures
are milder today than they
were in the second decade of
tliis century.
Th e
Gallia
County
His turlc a l Society is in-

to IJkP &lt;.&lt;He of spr ll ~ and

SALE PRICES
SOFA
Regular $349.00
Matching Recliner
Regular $249 .00
Sale

Matching Love Seat ·
Regular $298.00 .

$19f'

Lounge Chair, Regular $198.00, Sale ..... · ···.·.~

15SOO

SALE

Just RecelvedL. A Large Shipment of . .
Berkllne Racllnen and Rock-0-Lounges

/

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
Monday, March, I. I 976

Governor inks
pay raise bill

•

••

e

•

at

mond had 230 signatures.
The commissioners told
Richmond it was up to the
illwnship trustees. And Richmond replied that he had
gone to the trustees and they
wid him to go 'to the commissioners .
The commissioners poin ted
out they do not ha\'e
jurisdiction over township
roads .
Wesley Buehl. cou nty
engineer, agreed to inspect
the roaq approximately 2
miles long - contact the
trustees , and set up a meeting
with them . Buehl will try to

help the trustees solve the
problem.
Judge John C. Bacon introduced to lhe commiss ioners
Mr s.
Jack
Curnmin who has been em·
ployed to work · in a new
program (bureau of support).
Bernard Gilkey, commissioner, said the commissioners should discuss the
possibility of re-locating an
unemployment office in
Meigs County. Commissioner
Henry Wells indicated he has
· tal ked to Pomeroy M;lyor
Oarence Ait.drews in regard

• •in Brre+sl\
·
,. ''~\

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
''Seven of our mines are not ·
,.,
By Ualted Presolnleruallonai
' (UJ;'I) - A walkout in West · working , two have short
CARACAS, VEN~ZUELA - THE KIDNAPERS of Virginia's southern coalfields crews, and two are working
AmerlCBII busineSsman William Niehous have threatened to over a "Black Lung" bill in the Southern part of .tbe
execute him If the goveminent Interferes with their plans to some UMW dissidents believe state," said Lewis. "OUr five
Iring him to trial as "an enemy of the ·people." Nlehous, 45, worthless took hold today Northern West Virginia
vice president aoo manager of Owens-Dlinols of Venezuela with thousaoos of miners off mines are working."
Expecting trouble Sunday
was abducted from his home Friday night by seven armed, tlle job.
masked men.
Despite pleas from UMW night, on the first shift of the
Police said Sunday they were giving credence to a President Arnold Miller for week, Miller cautioned his
"manifesto" from a self-&lt;llyled lefilsl guerrilla band claiming tlle men to continue working, membership to work, if possi~albiHty lor tbe abduction of the Toledo, Ohio, executive. Eastern-Associated Coal Co., ble.
Miners unhappy with the
The communique made it clear the ki~pers were not tlle state's second largest
interested in any type of ransom.
rilining firm, reported that bill under consideration by
It said Nlehous bad been "arrested and imprisoned" 3,000 ol its men failed to show Congress held weekend
meetings. At one such rally,
·because hla company had intervened in the country's internal up for shifts.
·
affairs. The documentasld Nlehous was kidnaped because "he
"You can assume tbat most in Logan Cowtty, about 250
Is an agent of transnational companies and because of that, an of the mines in Raleigh, miners assembled at a ball
Boone,
Wyoming
and park and refused to let a
enemy of the people."
1\fcDowell counties are shut Charleston newsman attend.
" It is clear to me that a
mGH-TEMPERATURE REOORDS were broken Sunday down," said Al Lewi.s, a
Easternspokesman
for
handful
oi individuals are
in aU secllona of Ohio, except the extreme south, where the
Associated,
which
employs
going
to
try
to force a strike,
hottest weather of all prevailed. The 8(k!egree reading
7,000 miners in West Virginia starting with tbe midnight
establlabed for Cleveland in 1880 feU to a 68 aoo the prev)ous and Pennsylvania.
shift Sunday.'' MiUer said.
high of 58 for Toledo, also reached 96 years ago, gave way to a
'
62.
Other record-blghs, all set in 1972, were eclipsed in AkronCanton (84 degrees), Colwnbus (69), Dayton ( 70), Findlay
(84) Youngstown (65) and Zanesvllle (71) . The mercury
clln{bed to 71 degrees along tlle Ohio Ri..,r acrOl'IS from Merri Ault, daughter of Mr. the Middleport Masonic
Huntington, W. Va ., but that was not a new top for March I. and Mrs . William Ault, · Temple Friday night.
,Neither were records broken in Marietta and Cincinnati, Middleport, was crowned · First runnerup in the an·
where it was 74.
Sweethear I of the Meigs nual competition was Paula
Chapter, Order of DeMo lay at· Eichinger, daughter of Mr.
WASHINGTON - IT LboKS UKE THE warmest
:February In 100 years may cost the National Cherry Blossom
'Jietltivall18 liar atlraction.
:
Bahny temperatures in the Washington area this month
:bave produced bulla on most of the 900 cherry trees that line
': the .Tidal Basin. Hort!culluralisl James Lindsay predicted
:SIIIW'day that, barring a bad c~ld speD, most of the trees will
be in full bloom by rnid-Marcll,
'
Thl!t meana the big display could be a fading memory by
' the time of the April $ festival.

"' quarters and call back.
Buehl reported lour bridges
in need of repair : one
in
Bedford
.township
and
three
in
Orange township , at a total
estimated cost of $24,745.
Buehl said - that work on
County One Road project is
complete . The · county was
reimbursed with $41,000 from
federal funds · today. Work
under County One Project
was done to CRs 27 and 1-1\..
Attending .were Wells,
Warden Ours , Gilkey,
commissioners; Buehl, and
Mart ha Chambers, clerk. ·

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 27. No. 224

Miller said an unauthorized
walkout "may very well'' kill
tlle UMW's hopes of getting
the black hmg program
continued by passing a blU
Tuesday in the House of
Representatives.
If dissidents succeed,
MlUer said in a statement
telephoned to Charleston, the
black. lung program wiU end
in 1981, since the current law
expires then.
" As president of the UMW,
I strongly urge every UMW
member to make every
possible effort to . k~ep Ibis
group of people from
wrecking our chances to pass
tlle black lung biD."
Critics of the bill met in ·
southern n•al towns this
weekend ~nd laid plans to
picket mines.
Continued on page 8

Auto ditched, another dunked, droU?Ring poodle
Saturday at approxinwtely 9 p.m. on SR 124, Minersville, Marilyn D. Hendricks, 21,
Parkersburg, ·traveling east, lost control of her car in a curve, went to the left, !ben to
the right and over an embankment rear end first . Above the car has' been pulled up the
embankment. There was moderate damage; no injuries or atresl.
Sunday at 1.0:00 a.m. at Royal Oak Park a poodle dog drowned when tlle brakes on a car it
was in parked on top of a hill apparently let go. The car went down the hill, smashed a picnic
table, plunged into the lake and submerged.lt tool&lt; I 'lz hours to recover the car . The car was
• owned by ,lolmny Rose, 21, Huntington,, W. Ya. ,

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Tuesday ·through
Thursday; fair Tuesday, a
chance of showers Wednesday and clearing and
cooler Thursday. Highs
inostly In the 50s Tuesday
aDd Wednesday and In the
30s and low tos Thursday.
Lows in the 30s and upper
20s Tuesday and Wed·
nesday and generally in the
20s Thursday morning.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

WEATHER
Cloudy, mild chance of
showers tonight and Tuesday.
Lows tonight in the mid or
upper 40s. Highs Tuesday in
tlle upper 60s or low 70s.
Cbance of rain 50 per 1cent
today and 40 per cent tonight
and Tuesday.

Merri Ault is '76 ·Sweetheart

'
RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL - THIRTY-THOUSAND
: bespallllled dancers swayed and gyrated through the heart of
:downtown Rio today in a raucous parade of samba clubs - the
,~¥blight of lhll year's pre-Lenten Carnival.
'
More !ban 80,000spectators settled In to watch the 14 clubs
cover the 10-block route along Rio's Avenlda Presldente
Varpa and ww;lulate inlo the grandltand built especially for
:the Caralval compelltiAXI.
'
Tbll P.rade got underway Sunday night and was expected
' lo lilt tluwlh thiS afternoOn. Competition among the
· "EacoludeSIImba," or samba schools, Is intense, and groupe
:P'Icllceallyearforwlnning honors and cash prizes. Thla year
;lheclubllptnta total ofteOO,OOOon costumes and floats.

MuucbaleUI' primary 'I'Uellday and Florida's IHllll week.
Some Democrats camplign!JW in Massachusetts .were
havlnl a bltlle of endoraements: U. N. ambaaed or Dllnjel
Pltrlck Moynihan II for Henry Jacllaon, fannwor)terl ' chief
; Ceur Olavn and • • Roberta Flack were campaigning
: wtth s.rglllt Sluiver, Morrla UdaU leaned heavily on
: ~ncloraements by former

deficit," said Connecticut state Sen. John Groppo.
Groppo's colleagues were considering amendments to the
Connecticut constitution to prohibit deficits and balance the
budget.
U.S. Sen. Carl Curtis, R-Neb., has formed a special
committee designed to answer the fears of a constitutional
convention . Curtis is chief sponsor of a proposed constitutional
spending amendment he hopes wiU flourish if a convention
movement appeared headed for success.
Curtis contends there are adequate safeguards to protect the
U.S. Constitution from a rewrite at a convention. The first one,
he said, i~ tbe legislation and the appropriation Congress
would bave to pass before the convention could be convened.
The ultimate safeguard against a rewrite would be the
ratification of a new constitution by the states.
California State Sen . H.L. Richardson tllinks the chance of a .
constitution convention is remote.
"These legislators would no more call a constitutional
convention than they would levitate," Richardson said of his
colleagues in Sacramento.
Nonetheless, Richardson said, he intends to bring the
resolution up next year.

en tine

Thousands of miners
ir,,, ,;,,,,,*~',~~-~,,,, , ~, ,~, , , , ~, , ~,,:::,:,:::,:;::,~::.::~,,,,,,:,:,::~f off j oh m·coal ' state

prtlldentlal candldalelare. concentrating on clotlel' targeta -

•

"cOngress is an ailing, inept institution," said Ohio state a convention.
Rep. Alan Norris in advocating a constitutional convention.
Nebraska state Sen. Ernest Chambers, the unicameral's
"The first test of government is to balance the budget, and only black member, said a convention might be the catalyst for
they flunk."
an inter nal revolution.
Convention resolutions bave been adopted In Louisiana,
If tbat happened, he said, "the history of this nation may
Mississippi, Maryland, Georgia, North Dakota, Delaware, well be written in Russian, or even Chinese ."
Wellt Virginia and Nebraska.
Attempl8 at passage were planned in lllinois, South Dakota,
Despite strong arguments against a constitutional convenNevada, New Hampabire and California. Legislators in other tion, supporters cootend the near financial collapse of New
state were considering similar proposals.
York city should prove the need to control federal spending.
Many state lawmakers believe in the balanced federal
West Virginia House of Delegates Finance Chairman BiUy
budget concept aoo contend the government is risking Burke contends the nation already is moving in the same
financial ruin with a national debt of $584.2 billion. But many financial direction as New York city.
fear a constitutional convention might lead to sometbing worse
Most lawmakers attempting to drum up support for a
- a rewrite of the Constitution.
convention are counling oo Congress to take the initiative once
"I can't believe anybody in his right mind wants to see a it learns there is no way out.
constitutional convention caUed," said Missouri. state Sen.
"They want tbat (a convention) like they want a boa
Paul Bradabaw, "You've got a lot of kooky people running constrictor in bed witll !bern,'' said Nebraska stale Sen. John
around these . days with a lot of kooky ideas on how the Murphy.
Constitution ought to be changed."
In other states, the concern was more at the state ralber
Georgia's black delegation opposed the convention resolu· than the federal level.
lion, saying civil rights could be wiped out of tbe document by
"Who am I to judge ? We have trouble with our (state l

Petitioners ask repairs
for Happy Hollow Road

COLUMBUS t UP!)
Gov. James A. Rbiides
Sunday signed into law a
bill to Increase board ol
election members pay
abaut 30 per cent. The bill
paosed the Ohio House Jan.
.U. The Senate amende&lt;!
The buck, as the late
the bill sad passed II Feb.
11. The House agreed with President Truman used to
the Senate's ameadments say, stopped with him.
The matter of whose
Feb. 18. There was little
opposition. It will co&amp;! Ohio responsibility it is to repair
, ciMlntles about ,300,000 a the Happy Hollow road was
' year.
·
bucked around today when
Quick acllou on the bill .the Meigs County Soard of
Commissioners mel. And it
w1s nece!lsary because two
didn't stop anywhere,
memben on each coun,ty
Meetin g with the comboard are to be reappointed
as of IIiday. Salaries lor missioners was Robert Richmemben of the boards are mond of Rutland, who substill to be computed on ·tbe . mi tted a peti !ion asking the
basi• of county population, county commissioners and
with minimum com- lt'ustees of Rutland Township
to work together to blacktop
pensation set at · $1,800.
Maximum· pay is set at TR 174 known as "Happy .
Hollow Road ."
'1Z,SOI.
The road serves the people .
The Legialative Budget
Office said · tbe bill would .Uving along it and many
cost Ohio counties about additional families when
Rutland is blocked by high.
$300,000 a year.
water . It is a flood e&lt;it to

PRESIDENT FORD ALREADY IS LOOKING forward \0
November when, he says, he'D win all 50 atates, but most

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
,.

Halbl'ook.
Without a prod from the states, he said, Congress won't do a
thing.
.
A UPI survey allows the eight state legislatures adopted
resolutlona calltng for a constitutional amendment banning
,
federal deficit spending.
If the resolutions are ignored by Congress, the states ask
!bat their proposals be considered petitions for a constitutional
cooventiOI), which would require action from two-thirds of the
$0 stales.

~:;::11~
t~ 7\.Tews •

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT, 3RD FLOOR

'•

By DON BEMAN

Ualled Pn!u lmei'IUitioaal
Eight alate legislatures, led up with a riling national debt
!bat nowreada 12 flgiireo In the red, are advocating an amend;
ment to the U.S. Cooatltutioo that would require a balanced
national budget.
If Congr... fails to act on their request, they want to force
the i.uue with the finiiCOMtltutional coovention·in nearly 200
years, a move OPPCI!ents contend would wreak bavoc in the
United ·statea.
"I don't want the government spending my grandchildren
into the poorhouse," said Mississippi state Rep. David

There is no charge or fee .

for the harves t season have

Mandatory balanced budget amendment gains

Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox
Con tlnued on page 8

The new Sweetheart of
and Mrs. Paul Eichinger of
Pomeroy, and second run~ .DeMolay is a member of
nerup was Angie Sisson, ·Heath United Methodist
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Church in Middleport. She
Frank E. Sisson, Pomeroy. has been a cheerleader at
Meigs High School four
years, serving as captain for
two. She's a senior at the
Meigs High School in the
cosmetology course .
President of the Student
Booster Club, !&gt;!iss Ault is
vice president of the
Cosmetology club and was a
football homecoming queen
candidate last fall . She i~ a
member of the Meigs High
VICA Dub and has belonged
ill the Pep Club four years.
She is a dancer in the musical
of the Big Bepd Minstrel
'
Assn . and is senior princess
'
of Bethel 62, International
Order of Job's Daughters to
which she bas belonged three
years.
Miss Eichinger is a junior
· at Meigs High School where
she is enrolled in the Scientific college prep course. She
maintains a four point
. average. She is vice president
· of the student council; a
member ··of the symphonic
band and was a tast member
of the junior class play. Upon
graduation she plans to atDEMOLAY'S SWEE111EART - MERRI AtiLT, Middleport, center, Is tlle 1976
tend Ohlo State University
Sweetheart of the Meiga Chapter, Order of DeMolay. She was selected in Middleport Friday , and study in the medical
Night. At left is Paula Eichinger, Pomeroy, first runnerup, and at right is Angie Sisson,
continued on page 8
Pomeroy, second runnerup.

..... ·'

Pomeroy firemen
busy on weekend
The Pomeroy Fire Dept.
and its E·R unit answered
nine calls Saturday and
Sunday. These were :
.At 12:03 a.m. Monday , E·R
unit to the Eagles Club in
Pomeroy to take BiH Yonkers
who had suffered a possible
broken ankle, to Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
At 10:11 p.m. Sunday, Mrs.
Leonard · Van Meter, Locust
St., a medical patient, was
taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
At 8:09p.m., the E-R went
ill the fire station where
Sheila Fisher, who was ill;
had been brought; she was
transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 1:42 p.m. firemen went to
Leading L'reek to extinguish a
brush fire on John Davidson
property.
At 1:17 p.m. Sunday theER squad went to 10 Anne St.
for Kim Demoss, a medical
patient, who was taken to
VMH; and at 12:42 p.m.
Sunday firemen extinguished

a brush fire on the .Simpson
property, Rose Hill.
· At 9:55p.m. Saturday, E-R
to Rock Springs Grange Hall
for Helen Grate, taken ill
VMH, treated and released.
Two brush fires w.ere extinguished Saturday by
firemen, the first at 2:33p.m.
near .the Jeffers Coal Co. on
.Laurel Cliff and the secpnd at
3:21 p.m. on Sprlng Ave..,
Pomeroy.
BRUSH BURNS
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Fire Dept. was called · to the
Bob Williams property on
Horner Hill , Route 143, at I : 23
p. m. Sunday to extinguish a
brush fire. The department
got a second call at I :40 p. m.
lor a brush fire on the John
Davidson property, Leading
Creek Road . Busy on the
Williams fire, the department
under its mutual aid
agreement referred the call
to the Pomeroy department.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature
in
downtown Pomeroy at 11
a.m. Monday was 65 degrees
under cloudy skies.

HOURS NOTED
Lynne Crow, secretary of
the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce , announced today
TICKETS ON SALE
the chamber office will be
James Diehl, principal at
open. Mondays and Wed- Meigs High School, annesday's from 9 a.m. to 12 nounced today tickets for the
noon and I to 4 p.m. and on Me igs-Belpre g~me at
Thursdays from 9 a.m. to t2 Federal Hocki ng Thursday at
noon . She said tlle chamber 7:30p.m. are on sale at the
wants more listings of rental office at the high school lor
propet.·ty. Call 992-5005.
$1.50 each.

Fire alarm found false
Three calls were answered
by Middleport's E-R squad
and one false alarm fite taU
was taken over the weekend.
The false alarm came at
4:39 p.m. Swtday when a
home was reported on fir~ on
SR 143. The call, which did
not sound authentic, was
checked out by Miss Martha
Howell, dispatcher , who
found it to be false , so
firemen were not summoned .
At 5:15p .m. Sunday, the E-

R unit went to CR 3 for
Marcia Harrison who was ill.
She was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital. At 8 p.m.
Sunday, the squad went to SR
124 for Ellis Lambert, a
medical. patient, who was
taken to VMH where he was
treated and released.
At 7:12 a.m. Monday the
unit was ca lied again for
Lambert and he was again
taken to VMH.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Momlay, March 1, 1976

Broncos, Miami
near to showdown

Castro got revenge in
deaths of 2 Kennedys
' LAS VEGAS , Nev. (U PI) Cullan Prenuer Fidel Castro
learned of a CIA plot to have
him assassJlla ted after the
Bay of Pigs mvas10n and
vowed revenge agamst the
Kennedys which led to their
murders, the Las Vegas Sun
reported today In a
copyrighted story
Publisher Hank Greenspun
said, " Evidence in my
possesswn , coupled with
documents m the hands of
congresstonal mtelhgence
agency oversight committees
proVIdes a clearly marked
trail leading to lo gical
conclusions as to .. hy I he
Kennedy brothers were
killed.
"That path leads straight to
the door of a vengeful
Castro," said the Greenspun
story.
'' .. There LS now credible
evidence of Castro's purpose
to respond to the a!tempts on
his hfe by ordering the
assassination of President
Kennedy"
Castro met with officials
from South and Latin

Amencan states shortly after
the last attempt on his life m
1963 and told the assembly,
"11Ie Kennedys have sought
to kill me, I shall mete out the
same justice to them," said
Greenspun .
(A Senate mtelligence .
report in November said
Robert Maheu, a former FBI
agent who worked for the CIA
and headed Howard Hughes'
Nevada operatiOns until 1970,
recruited John Roselli to hire
Cubans to assassinate Castro.
(Roselli, an underworld
figure with ties m Havana
and Las Vegas, hlfed Cubans
in Miami and asked the help
of Sam G1ancana, a Chicagobased gangster, and Santos
Trafhcante, Cosa Nostra
chieflam rn Cuha, according
to the report. Giancana was
killed last year before he
could answer a subpoena to
testify before the Senate
comrnl ttee.)
"C',astro ;~gents captured a
CIA assassin and tortured
him mlo revealing to Castro
personally, the entire plot to
kill him," said Greenspun.

·'What is most sigmficantiS
that Castro's threat was to
the Kennedys and not to the
President alone
This
becomes
even
more
meaningful m light of the
subsequent assassinations of
both John and Robert
Kennedy "

The late U.S Chief Jushce
Earl Warren was advised "by
a person of unquestioned
mtegnty and pa triolism" of
the CIA plot to kill Castro and
of the premier's vowed
revenge
against
the
Kennedys , wrote Greenspun.
Warren then instructed

U S. Secret Service chief
James Rowley to 1tell the
American people the truth
but mstead he turned the case
over to the FBI, said the Sun.
The Ia te FBI Director J.
Edgar Hoover covered up the
FBI mvestigat1ve error made
in Its report to the Warren
Comnusswn by mformmg
then President Lyndon
Johnson that Lee Harvey
Oswald
acted
alone,
Greenspun srud.

Will Bailey get her off?
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) F. Lee Bailey has all but
completed Uie defense for
Patricia Hearst and Uie question from all sides is. "Will he
get her off?"
It is a cynical question for 1t
tromps immediately on the
fundamental of justice that a
person is deemed mnncent
until judged guilty by a jury
taking into consideration
reasonable doubt
It also is a logical question
The American people have
long ceased to be strangers to
the fact there IS a separate
and special brand of JUStice
for the rich and powerfuL
But in Miss Hearst's case
there is one basic that is
sweepmgly tgnored and It IS a
cmch the veteran crlffilnal
lawyer will not let the jury
forget it when he makes his
final argument.
Patricia Hearst IS charged
with robbmg a bank and
wielding a deadly weapon
that could have killed
someone. Nothmg more.
Nothing less
She is not charged with
jomlng a weirdo terroriSt
gang. She is not charged w1th
spurnmg her parents She IS
not charged with smokmg pot
.. or takmg LSD In Los
Angeles, she Is charged with
assault with a deadly weapon
and kidnapin~ but not in this
federal courtroom.

She IS charged w1th robbmg
a bank. And put m that frame
the defense has a powerful
case.
The prosecution has not
attempted to deny she was a
legitimate kidnap victim. Nor
have they $Ubstantially
shaken her story that she was
subjected to brutality by a
murderous cull that could
have unhinged the mind of a
captured paratrooper, let
alone a 19-year-old glfl
If that IS so, why should 11
not take the JurY more than a
few mmutes to bring in a

verdict of riot guilty"
Take a look at Uie government case.
She did take part m a bank
robbery She was holding an
Ml automatic carbme. Bank
movies show her waving it
around. A customer whose
test1mony was never shaken
said she told him to he down
on Uie floor or she would blow
his head off.
All of that, however, could
be explamed by what the
defense psych1alnsts have
termed
j'coercive
persuas10n" - she was a
dead little glfl 11 she didn't
act that way.
The point where 11 all
comes together Is in the term
"credtbtlity n Is Patncta
Hearst telling the truth? The
whole trulli ?
She has been Ia uded by
~

Bailey as haVIng been one of
Uie best witnesses on the
stand he ever had.
The Jury may thmk she was
a httle too good
Some news accounts have

had the defendant almost
drowrung in tears when she
talked about being confined
m the closets and sexually
molested.
This reporter has sat in Uie
courtroom for ftve weeks and

has yet to see her break down
and cry. Her voice has
faltered, she has gulped for
breath, her eyes have
reddened and she has ilabbed
at them willi a handkerclnef,
she has sniffled
But the ImpresSion she left
after a week on the stand was
that of a young woman of
remarkable composure with
a sharp mrnd wbo look some
scarcely concealed glee rn
trippmg up a government
prosecutor who is not the
brightest m the business.
In a dromng, almost
wllimng, voice she told her
story - not once, not tWice
but perhaps a dozen times
and always m the same way
as she was led through direci
and cross examination.
But It was what she did not
tell that may sink PatriCia
Hearst.
She will go up to Uie bank
robbery and her shooting up
of a sporting goods store m

FINISH THIRD - These Southern High School French students participated m the
second Annual Lanmta~e Fair in Athens Saturdav. More than 1,700students from 45 schools
fin!Shed _ in
third
place
overall.
They
took
attended. Southern
second place with their French play, flfSt place lor their Bicentenrual Exhibit and Jeff
Thornton won f!fst place with his Bicentenmal Map and third place lor his Bicentenrual
Poster. Their advisor ls Steve Wagner.

French students did well
By Greg Bailey
RACINE - The weather
wasn't the only beaul!ful
thmg Saturday for Southern
H1gh School French students
as they f1mshed third m the
second
annual
Ohio
Umvers1ty Language Falf m
Atllens w1lh more than 1700
foreign language students
from 45 schools competing
This year's theme was
"Ethmc Contributions m the
United States" m honor of the
81centenmal .
It was a remarkable
learmng expenence as
studenJs competed m foreign
smgmg , dancmg,
puppet
plays, skits, exlnbils, games
and maps and posters When students weren't

part1c1pahng m these, they butldmg a b1centenmal
watched foreign language • kwsque garnered a ftrst place
movies. Most students en- 1n the French exhibit best
JOyed a "Migh ty Mouse" expressmg the bicentenmal
cartoon m French
theme. Jeff Thornton won
There was an mternational f1rst place for having the best
bazaar for those that chose to bicentennial map He also
eat where a wide vancty of came m thtrd for hts poster
foreign pastfles, cakes and
Several other projects were
cookies were available at a entered such as an Eilfel
very low cost. It also featured Tower bwlt entrrely from
1terns lor sale from the many toothpicks by M1ke Proffit, a
countries represented.
wand-carved French sailing
Jaye Ord and Teresa vessel by Tim Imboden, a
Meadows entered the French French electromc question
spelling bee and Teresa board by Brice Hart and
fimshed third
Several many maps and posters.
students formed the French
The day came to a close
cast for a play "Au Bureau de with French and Spamsh
Poste 11 which rinished stnging and dancing before
second.
awards were presented
A combmed effort m

Library Appreciation Week
is observed in New Haven
NEW HAVEN , W Va The New Haven Public
Library observed Library
Appreciation Week recently
with the children enrolled in
the Head Start program as
guests of the story hour. Mrs
Los Angeles, watching on
televisiOn six of her
Symbionese LiberatiOn Army
captors dymg m a burning
house.
After thaI II IS as If a
curiam had !allen on thiS
courtroom drama . She will
provide only the haziest
account of what she was
domg for the last 17 months
before her arrest.

Krawsczy n ts the
direflor of the Head Start
program.
Thirty-six cluldren and 24
adults attended. Mrs. Paul
Powell, libranan, and Mrs
Wayne Carter, chmrperson of
Story Hour, were m charge of
the program.
The senior Citizens , who
meet regularly 10 the hbrary
recreahon room on Wednesday, were invited to hear
Mrs. Powell speak on the
programs of the library and
the purpose of Library AppreciatiOn Week Refreshment.&lt;; were served by the
Voiunt,er Committee
The ladies a&amp;,OCiated w1th
John

Contradictions don't ruffle candidate Carter
ATLANTA (UP!) - In ten
years
of
political
campaigning and public
statements, Jimmy Carter
has issued a slrmg of
contradictions which he
considers normal and his
crttics find fasc1natmg
Suddenly the frontrunner
lor
the
Democratic
nomination, Carter opposes
busmg and abortiOn but
wants no constltul!onal
amendments to prohibit

e1ther He now favors
decrimtnahzatton
of
mariJuana use, but when
running for governor rn 1970
promised "to prevent the
legaltzahon of marijuana" as
h1s lop
law-and-Order
priof!IY,
Although philosophically
attuned to "nght-to-work"
laws, Carter told labor
leaders he would sign a
repeal of the ban on
compulsory umon member-

ship if they could gel It
through the largely antiunion Georgia legislature.
Carter opposed bailing out
New York c1ty with federal
funds but favors a federal and
state sharing of the city's
welfare programs.
He constders 10 per cent of
the welfare caseload capable
of workmg and wants them
derued benefits if they turn
down jobs. But he speaks of
treating the other 90 per cent

DR. LAMB

with "dignity."
At the same time he would
pare down the bureaucracy
he says has one government
employe lor every five or six
welfare recipients.
Carter nominated Sen.
Henry Jackson, D-Wash.,
now the most outspoken of h1s
detractors, for president at
the
1972
Democratic I
Convention. Since then ,
Jackson has called Carter's
reorgamzatton of Georgia

government a sham and
pledged "to get the pubhc the
truth" about Carter.
Carter apparently has
offended
liberals
and
conservatives equally tn hiS
unsuccessful 1966 campaign
lor governor, his wmning 1970
race and now his presidential
bid two years out of the

governor's manston.

Segregationist
former
House Speaker Roy Harris of
Augusta endorsed Carter lor
governor ln 1970 but Carter
refused to reappoint him to
the state Board of Regents .
HarriS later called Carter "a
shaved hippy" and said he
wooed the George Wallace
vote just long enongh to oust
former Gov. Carl Sanders In
the Democratic runoff.
Carter got only about 10 per
cent of the black vote rn the
reported that deaths from runoff but carried 65 per cent
heart and vascular disease rn his general election camactually mcreased 75 per cent paign.
m men taking estrogen lor
Carter's predecessor,
cancer of the prostate, which Lester Maddox, went to
makes this therapy even Florida and New Hampshire
more questionable in the to denounce him as "the most
mmds of many authoflties. dishonest man rve ever met 1 '
This bemg the case, there and promised to act as a
seems little jushflcation for "one-man truth squad"
using either estrogen or following Carter's campaign.
performmg castral!on except
Yet,
as
lieutenant
to provide symptomatic governor, Maddox said in
rehel.
1970: "I'm behind him all the
Obv1o¥sly, I can't say way. He's a good man. He's a
anythmg about what your life dedicated man ."
expectancy is without
knowmg 1! your disease had
. .
already spread beyond the
Campatgrung the summer
prostate. Those who want after the Kent State shootings
more mformalion on the . that left four Ohio stu~nts
.
dead, Carter promised
proslale, mcludlng prostate "personally to direct any
mlect_Ions and enlargement, such actions to guard against
can send 50 cen Is for The loss of life and damage to
Health Letter, Number 1-0, property
of Georgia's
Prostate Gland. Enclose a clllzens." He said that meant
long, siamped self-addressed he would take personal
envelope for malllng. A~- command of national guardsdress your letter to me m men with "shoot to kill"
care of th1s newspaper, P 0 orders If necessary
Box 1&gt;51, Radio City Station,
'
·
New York, NY 101119

Prostrate cancer is big killer
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - On a
routme examtnatton my
doctor found a hardemng of
my prostate He sent me to a
specialist lor a biopsy that
turned out to be malignant
He prescribed one gram of
diethylstilbesterollor the rest
of my hfe and mformed me I
may have to have my
testicles removed .
I asked him what my hfe
expectancy was and he said
20 years and let him worry
about 11. I asked my family
doctor and he said one to five
years.
Any mformahon you would
~are to give m'e would be
greatly appreciated
I
already have enlarged
breasts.
_ DEAR
READER
Opinions differ on the best
treatment for cancer of the
proatate so don •t be surpnsed
that what I tell you may vary
from what you have heard
There are about 25,000 new
cases of cancer of the
proslate m ll!nencan m~n

each year and 17,000 deaths.
It Is one of the most Important ca ncers tn men

About half of these can be
identified by a simple rectal
exammatwn That IS one of
several reasons why sUch an
exan1ination should be part of
every physicaL
Many men have climcally
lnsigmficant forms of cancer
of the prostate. A small nest
of relatively machve cancer
cells may be found ms1de the
prostate If a man hves long
enough, he will likely have
this even though 11 may never
cause h1m any trouble at all
What to do about cancer of
lhe prostate depends enbrely
on how far it has progressed Whep the cancer
Is
cdnlmed
to
the prostate as a small nest
of cells or even when 11 IS
large enough to be fell on
rectal examination but is shll
confme~ to the gland 1\self,
efforts should be made for a
complete cure of the cancer,
, How is this done? By surgery
,on the gland or rad1atwn or

both Hormone therapy or
chemotherapy has no place in
th e treatment of these
localized cancers. That
means no female hormones
and no castration, but rather
total removal or destruchon
of the actuallocahzed cancer.
II the cancer has spread
outside the gland to mvolve
the pelvis area or to distant
boney si les then you can
consider the use of hormones
or castration. The Idea is to
ellmlnate the mfluence of the
male hormone Which IS
essen Ita I for the maintenance
of the cancer cells regardless
of where they are located. ,
Sometimes such I herapy Is
succes.•lul in reducmg spots
o£ bone spread, and particularly in relieving pain
There is no rea] evtdence
though that 'the use of female
hormones or castration or the
combination actually prolong
life.
The United Stales Veterans
Adnumslration Co·nperahve
Urological Hesearch Group

~-The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Monday, March 1, 1976

the Volunteer Bookmobile
scrv1ce vtslted the Letart
Elementary SchooL Rick
Powell, pnnc1pal, presented
the library a letter of thanks
expressmg the value of the

serv1ces given to the school
and !he community of Letart
A large

number

of m-

terest.ed c1 hzens m the area
attended an Open Hour .
Members of the Library
commtttee served punch and
cookies, and assisted Mrs.
Powell
1n
answenng
questions concerning the
Library Programs.
Members of the Library
Volunteer Commtttee are

Marwn Batey. Ruth Camphell, Mary Lou Edwards,
Jenny Dndd, H1ld~ Smith,
Carol Edwards, Mary Divers,
Maf)one Hoffman, Alberta
Wiles and Genevieve Woeds.
The New Haven Garden
Club held Its regular monthly
mcetmg m ~he main hbrary.
Mrs. Lee Gibbs presided .with
Mrs. Powell, guest speaker.
Mrs. Powell spoke on good
books lor Garden Club
members, and had arranged
a display of new books on
gardening and arranging.
She concluded her talk with
an ongmal poem enl!tled
"Our Gardens" that compared her .. urk as librarian
with the work of the members
of the club. Mrs. Gibbs, wellknown area artist, presented
Mrs . Powell one of her
paintings ,
Several

"In

Memory"

books have been l'resented to
the library recently. The
Mason County Extension
Homemakers Council gave
Lawrence Welk's book, AhOne-Ah-Two, m memory of
Mrs. Mary Zerkle, and
Strangers and Travelers by
Dorothy Wli.son in memory of
Hattie Reed . Miss Lelah Jane
Powell presented Will Rogers
- The Man and Hls Times by

Basketball
this week
GIRLS' BASKETBALL
(Week ol M•rch 1·5)
(At Meigs)
AA Secttonal

Tuesday . March 2, GaiJia

Academy
Chesapeake

(4

(2

1)

5)
al

vi
7 00 .

Vlnlon County (2 51 vs Nel

York (3 -41 at 8 15 Friday ,
Mer 5, Fa1rland (6 4) vs

Belpre

(.5

61 at 7 00 , warren

{4 61 vs Sheridan ~56) 8· 1S

At Fe.der•I-Hocklng
A Sectional
Tuesday, March '2. Miller
vs
Notre Gall Ia, 6 30 ,
.. Symnmes Valley vs Kyger
Creek i 3· 6) at 8 00
F riday, March 5, Tr1mble
vs Federal Hocking (3 .4) at
6 30 ,
Eastern
(6 21
vs
Crooksville 14 7 ) at 8 . 00

United Press InternaUonal
The stage is set for
Wednesday mght's litanic
Mid-American Conference
showdown between ooleaders
M1amt
and
Western
Michigan.
Both tpok care of the
p:eliminaries with Saturday
victories, although the Redskins' 76-75 win over Ohio
University didn't come
without a few anxious
moments.
Western, meanwhile, rolled
over Ball State 93-07 for Its
2?nd win of the year.
AIUiough Miami led from
midway in the second half, It
took a pair of free Uirows by
John Shoemaker with :02
remaining to put the Bobcats
away for good.
"It was a typical Miami-OU
struggle," is the way·
Redskins coach Darrell
Hedrlc desa-ibed his team's
close shave. "It was a wellplayed game between two
good teams.
"It makes the Western
Michigan game that much
bigger," Hedric said in reference to Wednesday night's
encounter.
AldrlcJce To(ll Miami
The two teams will enter
the contest with 13-1
conference marks, altbough
Western has the upper hand
in overall records, 22-lto 17-7.
Archie Aldridge's 23 points
and 18 by Shoemaker led
Miami in scoring. OU was
paced by Mike Cor~ and
Steve Skaggs with 16 markers
each.
Toledo pumped Its MAC
mark to II.J with an 83-72
victory
over
Eastern
Michigan.
Larry Cole and Mike
Larsen scored 22 points each
to lead Toledo to Its ltlth win
in 23 games overall.
The
Rockets
led
throughout, although Eastern
managed to get within five
points with nine minutes
remaining. Toledo then ran
off six unanswered pointers
to take a 69-58 edge and was
never threatened
At Bowling Green, tlie Falcons' Tommy Harris, John
Arnold and Ron Hammye
combined lor 63 points to lead
BG to a 79-02 victory over
Northern Dtinois.
Kelll State Falls
Harris scored 26 points,
Arnold 19 and Hammye 18
and Bowling Green overcame
a 24-pomt, 20-rebound
perfonnance by the Huskies'
Matt Hicks.
At Mount Pleasant, Mich.,
Kent State, playing wiUtout
the services of guard Corteze
Brown most of the second
hall, dropped a 66-63 decl.sion
to Central Michigan.
Junior forward Leonard
Drake put Central ahead 8361 with I :56 remaining and
seconds later Russ Davia
sank a pair of free throws to
give Central a 65-61
advantage.
Kent State lost junior
Brown less than two minutes
into the second half when he
mjlll'ed hls ankle. AlthOugh
Brown was out half Uie game,
he was Kent State's leading
Continued on page 8

This week's
college games
Today
Wis at Oh to St
Youngstown St at Ashland

Tuesday

Akron at Ill St
Cin at Loyola 1111)
Duquesne at Xavier

Wednesday

Western Mlch at Miami
BowltnQ Green et Kent St
Ohio un ...,. at Toledo
Youngstown St at Cle St
Thursday
No games scheduled

Frld•y

Marquette at Xavier
Ohio Conference
Tournament F1n11s
Southern Division
Wittenberg vs Capital
Northern DIVISiOn
Oh10 Northern vs Obertm
Saturday
Oh io St at lnd
Ball st at Toledo
Bowling Green at Western
Mich
Miami at Eastern Mich
Kent St at Northern Ill
Fta St at Dayton

COLLEGE SCORES

Cln 80 Duquesne 73
Nor thwestern 17 Ohio St 78
Ctn 89 San Francisco 88 (ofl
Central Mtch 66 Kent St 63
Miami 76 Ohio Unlv 15
Toledo 83 Easfern Mlch 12
Ashland 115St Francis (lnd J
69
Thiel 61 John Carroll 60
Dayton 11 Xavier 75

Bowling Green 79 Northern

Ill 62
Western Ill 97 Akron 93
Wright St 109 Wilmington SJ
Youngsto~n St
69 West
minster 56
Hiram 97 ,wesnlngton &amp;
Jefferson 66
Bethany 99 Case Western
Reserve 93
Ohio Conference Tournament
At Weoster
Oberlin 13 Kenyon 72
Ohio Northern 57 Heidelberg

56

At GrJnvllle
Otterbein 60 Musklngum 51
Wittenberg 56 Capital 47

Marauders win tourney opener 65-48

scorer with 14 polntl.
In a nationally tolevlsed
contest, sophomore Pat Cum·
mings hit a 12-loot j1m1p shot
w1th : 05 remalnlns ln
overtime to lifl lfltll rlllked
Cincinnllti to an 8N8 victory
over San Francilco.
Near MIN for Cilley
Cincinnati, which blew a 13point sec«~cUialflead, tralled
8U7 with just : t4 left In
overtime and almost failed to
get off its game-winning shot .
San Francisco nearly llole
the ball with :10 remalninll,
but Cummings, a 6-8 forward,
scooped up the loo11e ball,
drove the basket and hit the
final shot of the game.
Cummings
Jed
the
Cincinnati IICOI'ing w!Ui :ID
points. Brian W'tllliiDB added
16, sophomore Mike Jooes 1f
and 6-11 sophomore Bob
Miller 10.
Northwestern, powered by
the hot shoollng of sophomore
forward Bob Svete, who hit 1.5
of 19 shots for a career-hi@
52 points, defeated Ohio State
8'1·78. It was the lflh loss tn 16
Big Ten games for the
Buckeyes and dropped them
to 6-18 overall.

By Greg Haolt·y
Behand

M1ck
Davenport's 22 pomJs and I he

•

•

••
•

..•

•

•

•

••
•

••
•
MARAUDERS RAlLY-The Meigs Marauders came to life In the Uilrd quarter to run
away from New Lexmgton in the opening round Saturday ought at Federal Hockmg H1gh
SchBol of the Northern Class AA (Southeast) Sectional Basketball Tournament Terr;
Qu~ s (20 J above and at nght of page, seruor forward of the Marauders was a spark m the
drive to victory H1s Jump shot from 15 feet has become a deadly weapon this year, as has
his QUickness and agility on defense and offense. The Marauders won 6$-48 - .hm Hamm
pictures

Tournament Results
Un1ted Press International
CLASS AAA
At Canton
Alliance 44 Ravenna Ji
Wooster 53 Massillon Perry

l1
At A1-hl1nd
Belle\'ue
68
Manstield
Matabar &lt;~9
Ashland SO Lexington 40
At Ehda
Marion Harding 58 Napoleon

--· Southern sharp
in first round
•

At Lrma
Fmdlav 60 Cel1na 54
At Col
Grove
City
59
Upper
Arlington
Col Central 64 Newark S4
Col North land 69 Groveport

,.6

"

AI Athens

Lan caste r 6.4 Athens 52
Port!mOUHl 74 Miam i Trace
71
CLASS AA ""
At Routord
"
Rossford 59 Otsego SJ
At Col
Fairfield Union 64 Col Ready

'"
...

..

62 (Of)

At Napoleon
Ottawa Glandord 74 Swanton
71 (Of)

Delta 63 Wauseon 48
At Gallon
Colonel Crawford 70 Ontar io

63
At Ada

L1ma Cent Cath 67 Kenton 6S
van Wert 69 Ltma Bath 60
At Westuvllle
Col Mifflin 67 Utica 53
Big Walnut 81 Mt Gilud 74
At Gallipolis
Gallipolis 68 Wellston -40
At Feeler at Hocking
Meigs 65 New Luington All
At lucasville
Wheelersburg 90 Unloto 56
At weuuvlllt
Col OeSates 51 Buckeye
Valley co
Jotmston 12 N Ridge 47
At New Ph•l•detpflll
Ridgewood 67 Tuscarawas
Valley 60
wersaw River V 1ew
54
Cta.,.mont 48
At M.uiett1
Morgan 62 Meadowbrook 55
Maysv i lle 75 Ft Frye 61
AtCantan
Canton Lehman 61 Rittman

'"

•"

"·u

..

Akron S 53 Coventry 52
CLASS A

At Partsmoulh
New Boston 53 s Webster 47
At Netsonvlne
85
Albany
Alexander
Hemlock M1ller 75
Ar Newark
Newark Cath 62 E KnoK 53
Canal Winchester 46 Cen
terburg 42

...

'"
"'

At Bryln
Pelllsv i lle 65 Htlltop 54
Ed9erton 69 N Central 4til
At Willard
Ashl&amp;nct Crestview 49 New
London 4?
At Bucyru1
Wynford 58 Tiffin Calvert 53

"

.,

At Smithville
Dalton 62 Loudonv ille 53
At St Mlrys
Mar1on Local 56 New Bremen

•o

At van Wert
Llncolnv lew 69 Warne Trace
68
At Patrick Htnry

Holgate 54 Tinora 53
Hicksville 69 Northwood 54
At Dttaware
Col Hartley 64 Mar ion Cath .tO
At M1rlan
W Jefferson 66 New Albany 63

"'
"
'~~

,,
••
'",.
~~
" ~~~

AI PomtrO\'
Southern 84, Hannan Trace 46 ,

41

r---'--------,.;.,,,llll

The

Dlilr Suliiel

DEVOTED TO THi&gt;
tNTERIST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTIR ~ fANNIHJLL

II II

""

""

l~tc. Ed.
Pill
ROBERT HDII'Liqt
City Editor
,J
Publllllltd dally ••copo
Saturday by The Ohlo '-1
Valley Publlthlng Com - '' '
Deny, 111
Court so ..
~omeroy
Ohio .U76~ •·• 1

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.hi

•I

,.

m1

,,

..
...
"'

n1

1-----------4 ,...~:

..

•

In Class A SectiOnal play
Sat urday mgh t, second seeded Southern came out of
the locker room f1red up and
stayed that way all mght as
they stormed to a stunmng 8446 vi ctory over the highly
touted
Hannan
Tra ce
Wildcats In first round actiOn
at Meigs High School Jumor
Ch1p Brauer tossed m 32
pomJs 10 less than three
quarters or pl ay to lead the
attack , but 11 was the superb
team effort that allowed the
Tornados to r oll to their
fifteenth victory agamst four
defea ts on the season. One of
those losses came at the
hands of the Wildcats
Hannan Tra ce look Its on ly
lead or the game, 2-0, on a
short junnper by se mor Dave
Shaffer at !he 6·30 mark
Then Brauer hil a threepomter and another field
goal, and JuniOr Dave Roush
hi I on an other three-pom 1
play to g tv e Sou thern a qm ck
11-2 lead w1lh fiv e mmu tes
showmg

J6

At Ottaw1
Patrick Henry 60 Leipsic 58
Columbus Grove 74 Kalida 65
At Findlay
Van Burun 70 Vanlue 60
Cory Rawson 64 Mccomb 30

closer contest most of the
way.
At flfst, 1t looked like the
Marauders of Coach Ron
Logan might run away w1th 11
as they made thetr first hve
attempts from the field to
take a 10 point lea d hefore
New Lex could get on the
scorebomd But then behmd
the shooting of the Panthers'
Dave Murray and Tun
Shunnaker, th'e boys of Coach
D1ck Bowman fought back to wonder If that would have an
narrow the score to 16-1:! at ef£ect on the Marauders'
the firs t buzzer
chances
~
New Lex drew first blood m
Jun10r Dale Browmng
the second canto, and tt was a came off the bench and
one~pomt, see-saw battl e the
qwckly tossed in h1s first
res t of that quarter unhl the bucket and "cleaned" the
final seconds when the New board on several key
Lex Pan !hers dropped 10 the rebounds to lead his team to
last shot to go mto the locker thai surge that put them
r oom w1th their biggest lea d ahead to sta v From that
of !he mght, 27-24
pomt on, the Marauders
In that flfst half , floor never looked back
leader Steve Randolph of toe
The Marauders ' defense
Marauders pi cked up three stiffened and held the Panpersonal fouls and had to go thers scoreless for several
two and three mmute pertods
New Lex scored only eight

But the Wild cats weren 't
abou t to roll over Gibson,
Shaffer, and Kevm Petrte all
con nected on field goals and
narrowed the scored to 12-8,
but from that pOint on, the
boys of Coach Dan Cornell
never got closer, as the first
quarter ended with Sou! the• n
leadmg 21-12 Brauer had
gotten 12 of those 21.
Hannan 's Ken t Halley
opened the second quarter
with a three-pomter to cut the
lead at 21-15, but from then
on 1 Coac h Carl Wolfe 's
Tornados never looked back
as they coasted to an 18 potnt
lead at half-lime, 40-22 In
tha t second canto, Halley, the
SV AC's third leadmg scorer
w1th a 16 point average,
picked up his lh!fd foul at the
4. 33 mark and ended the
game with only five pomts.
That first hall showed
Southern dommallng the
boards, 21 caroms to only
mn e lor the W1ldcats
The third quarter contmued
the. same way w1th Southern
mcreasmg its lead to 59-31 at
the buzz~ r . The Wildcats,
wanhng to do something to
slop the hoi Tornados, lrted a
full-court press w1th f1ve
minutes remommg tn that
third period, but the Funnel
Clouds wouldn't have 11 as
JUniors Enc Dunmng, Carl
Johnston, and all-leaguers
Dan Brown and Mike Roberts
broke the press Brown,
although scoring only eight
points, hauled in II rebounds
(most of them m that spurtJ
and Roberts ' ball-handling
seemed to stymie the Wildcats Coach Wolfe praised h1s
boys lor a fine, unselfish
team effort, as the fourth
quarter saw Southern continue on Its way to the easy
victory ~

Key factors in the game
besides the team effort were
rebounds and assists The
Tornados outrebounded the
Wildcats t41o 25, w1th Brauer
leading in that category w1th
12, followed by Brown's II

Meadows

(52 percent)

(110 percent)

GillSON DRIVES - Scott Gibson, who had 8 pomts
for his night's work m a losmg effort for Hannan Trace,
dnves on a Southern player who has his left loot m
posiilon to obstruct him Southern won the Class A
SectiOnal game at Meigs High 84-46 - Katie Crow
picture.

..

Auburn 89 f; tor•da so
Clemson 1'22 F la Sou tn ern 79
F lor 1da 51 90 Mer cer 16
Ceo
Wasn1ngton
Anwr1can U 66
Georq ,a T ec h 91 Ch arl es ton

"

52

(56 )

PLAY TONIGHT
Coach Art Lanham's Rio
Grande College Redmen
(15-131 will play Central
State University (17-9) in
an opening round District
22 NAIA tournament game
at
Xenia
tonight.
Tip-off lime is 8 p.m. The

90 Georg1a 7~

LANCASTER

(il4)

Adams 3 2 8 S w~neharl 6 1
13, N e lson 53 13 , Petty 11 2
24 Odie 2 0 4 . Howe ll 1 0 2
TOTALS 28 ·8· 64.
ATHENS{521 - M eek 52
12 , Blackford 6 2 1&lt;~ Whealey
0 2 2 Heady 2 0 4 Chonko o
3 3 F au l kn er 2 0 4 Gre er 3 3
9 Goldsberry 1 0 2 TOTALS
19 14 52

Score by quarlen ·
Lancas ter
16 16 20 12 6.1
A t h ens
B 17 B 19- 52

game will be broadcast hve

by Bill Gray on WJEH- FM.
In the other District 22 tilt ·
tonight, Defiance plays at
Findlay. Tonight's winners
will clash Wednesday for
the Dlstrtct 22 title and a
trip to Kansas City.

scored 73 points m the second
half for Its 35th wm agarnst 'l:l
losses.
Suns 109, Pistons 98
Paul Westphal scored 32
pornts, mcluding 14 in the
second period, when Phoenix
rallied from a 15-point deficit
to trail Detroit by only a point
at the half.
Lakers 108, Cavaliers 97
Los Angeles went into a
second1Jiace tie willi Seattle
in the PaCific DiVISion willi
the help of 26 pomts by
Kareem Abdul Jabbar and
key points by Stu Lantz,
Cazzie Russell and Kermit
Washington. The loss was
only the fourth in the last 20
games for Cleveland, now
tied with Washmgton for the
Central Division lead.
Blazers 102, Hawks 98
Geoff Petrie and Sidney
Wicks scored 20 points each
in leading Portland past
Atlanta . John Drew led
Atlanta witll 32 pomts before
fouling out willi six minutes
left.
Nuggets 112, Colonels 111
Dan Issei scored 35 points
his
former
against
teammates to lead Denver,
sealing the win with two free
throws m Uie last seven
seconds

Could you

rebuild
your
tiome

at today's prices?
House values ha ve doubted

m the last 20 years Unless
~ ou r co-.erage has doubted
your fue 1nsurance may
only pa~ tor hallal"louse

Homeowner s tl"lsurance

lrorr\ N11t1onw1de 1s des1gned

to projec t you r home at
tod ay &amp; •nd tomorrow's
values Ask a Nat1.,nw1de
agenT ror 11et11nts

P. J. PAULEY
804 W Mam, Pomeroy
PH 992-2318

~[I NATIONWIDE

1!!JI ~~!~~~~~~
llll hD~• dt 1.4 ulu l l ~" ' l n..,•tn~ t
'"'o"'t O!Ou Col~ ll'l•wl Of" a

84

Stetson 75 ArKansas St 71
Tu tane 95 Ga Sl 63
V1rgm'i a T ec h 92 Syrac u se 8 1
W ak e Forest 98 N C St 916
Wsn
K en t ucky 76 Aus t.n
Peay 75
As hland 115 St
Fra nc •s
1 ln d ) 69
Bowling Grec11 79 No tt il no• s

~'2

M1 Ch1 gan 66 K en t St 63
Clnc.nna11 89 Sa n Fr a nc1sc o
Coe 106 Gr1nn et1 82
payton 77 Xav 1er (Ohto ) 75
DePaul 67 W1s Gree Bay 60
Oet.ro1t 89 LOyOiil Ill! I R'i

St 78

10 48

By GIL PETERS
UP! Sports Writer
It was btlled as the game
between the NBA champions
of 1975 and 1974, the
nal!onally televised sneak
preview of Seven Games rn
May . "
Had Sunday's basketball
game been a drama, critics
would have said the suspense
last two rrunutes and the rest
dragged to a foregone conclusion. The Boston Celtics dispensed with the climax m the
first 12 mmutes, then stuck
around to finish off the
Golden State Warriors 119101.
The Atlantic Division
Jeadmg Cell!cs . obviously
played their running game
while the WarriOrs did not.
The Celtics' runmng
resulted in 20 fast break
pomts while their pressing
defense contained
the
WarriOrs to nine baskets in a
41-24 first period that was the
difference in the game.
Boston, after shooting .720
m the first quarter, hit at a
.500 in the second quarter but
mcreased its lead to 21 points.
The second hall was rather
dull as Golden State came no
closer than 16 and trailed by
as much as 32.
Dave Cowens led six Boston
scorers m double figures With
23 pomts . John Havlicek
added 20, Scott 18, Jo Jo
White 16, Don Nelson 13 and
Paul Silas 11. Jamaal Wilkes
paced the Warriors with 23,
rookie Gus Williams had 19
and Rick Barry was one of
three players With 14
Washmgton defeated
Houston 1111-108, Philadelplna
beat Seattle 130-115, Phoemx
lopped Detroit 109-98, Los
Angeles downed aiveland
108-97 and Portland beat
Atlanta 102-98 in other NBA
games.
Denver defeated Kentucky
112-111, the New York Nets
heat Indiana 130-118 and St
Louis downed Virginia 113-109
in ABA action.
Bullets 110, Rockets 108 ElVIn Hayes ' jump shot
with one second left enabled
Washipgton to beat Houston
76ers 130, Scoles 115
Philadelphia, which trailed
lrj four pomts at the half,

No Carolina 91 Duke 71
So Caro t 1na 110 Ga Sou th ern

88 ( OI l

Murre~y

J
0
0

Celtics ·run
pas't Warriors

"

Mad ison 70 Wa sh &amp; L ee 65
Maryland 81 V1rgln1a 73
Middle Tenn 86

11
14
12
6
2

Waverly, behmd Chuck
Lancaster advanced to
Thompson's 21 pomts and secon d round play m the
Rob Holsmger 's 15 rebounds, Class AAA Sectwnal Toureltmmated Hillsboro 64-56 in nament at the Convocation
!he Class AA SectiOnal Ce nter m Athens Saturday
Tournament at Unwto mght by ehrnmahng Athens,
Saturday mght
64-52
Tile Tigers, 12-7 overall, led
The Gales, 14-5 on the year,
16-10, 33-2.1 and ~5-35 at the led 16-8, 32-25 and 52-33 at the
quartermarks
quartermarks. Athens bowed
Waverly h1t 24 of 56 field out 7-12 on the year
goal allempts 142 9 percent )
Lancaster h1t 28 of 77 field
and 16 of 21 chanty tosses
goal attempts for 36.4 perThe wmners picked off 40 cent. The Gales were eight of
rebounds.
16 at the foul hne and had 33
Hillsboro lut 21 of 49 field rebounds .
goal attempts lor 42 9 perAthens hit 19 o£38 field goal
cent, The losers were 'l4 of 21 · attempts for 50 percent. The
at the foul hne and had 25 Bulldogs were 14 of 21 at the
rebounds
foul hne aQd had 22 rebounds.
Waverly will meet Vmton
In Thursday's first game,
County at 1-:10 p m Thursday Lancaster will meet Logan at
tn a senufmal con test.
7 p.m Portsmouth w11l battle
Box score.
Chillicothe m the mghtcap.
WAVERLY
(il41
Box score
Hol smQer 3 3 9 , Daven o 2 4 a

Nor folk St 91 W1n s ton Sa lem

Kentu c ky 9d Mi SStSSIP PI 87

L SU 89 Vande rbilt 75

27

by Gales

BRAUER SHARP-Chip Brauer(44) had his best night of the season, fittingly enough
whwhen needed perhaps the most, Saturday night when Southern defeated Hannan Trace
84-46 m the Class A Secttonal Basketball Tournament at Meigs H1gh SchooL - Kal!e Crow
picture.
St

0
I
4
3
0
1
1
0

Hillsboro

Lar1mer 4 3 11 Coffman 1 0
2. Seelmg 4 9 17 McKenz 1e 1
0 2 . F ull er 8 2 18 , Woods 2 0
.t Marsh I 01 TOTALS 21 -14·
l6 .
Totals by quarters
wav er ly
16 17 12 19 64
Hill sb oro
10 13 12 2 1 56

M1 ss

4
J
6
7
1
6
0
0

Athens
ousted

24 - lil 64.
HILLSBORO

Scra nton 90 Upsala 64
Se ton Hall 79 lona 178 (at)
Temple 58 Drex el 54
Th1PI 61 John Carro ll 60
Union (NY) 73 Tuft s 67
Villanova 1l Sl
Jo~eph s
( Pa J 60
West Chester 8.:1 Bu c~ nell 73
Ya l e 46 Penn d4
A labama ~3 T ennes see 90 (2
otsJ

RBS F TP

Waverly
defeats

Whaley J ~ 9 Thompson 8
5 21 , S Thomas 4 1 IU ~ytt e
I 2 4 Tower I 0 2 TOTALS

Arm y 78 Navy 6'}
Georgetown ( 0 C 1 73 Ford
ham 66
Harva rd 92 Co lu mbia 83
Holy Cross 82 Boston COl i 77
Jacksonv ille 64 Marshall 54
Latayelte 77 Leh 1gll 75
Penn St 76 Fa1r ft e ld 68
Pnn c eton 70 Brown 59
Prov iden ce 67 Sr John 's 53
R•der 80 Delaware 70
Rochester 87 LeMoyne 77
Rutger s 103 LIU 87
51 Bonavenlure 14 N1agara

rebounds compared to 27 for

the Panthers .
New Lexmgton was led by
Ed Fisher's 14 pomts while
Shumacher and Murray
added 12and 11, respechvely
They hit a respectable 22-55
from the floor for 40 percent
and netted 4-8 from the
charily str1pe
Ofhc1als for the game were
Mel Carter and John Tipton.
By Quarters
,
M
16 24 42 65
N L
13, 27 35 48

FG A FT A
4 15
J 4
7 19
00
6 10
00
35
0 1
11
0 1
I5
12
00
00
00
00
22 55
4· 8

Dave Murray
Ed Fi sher
T1m Schumacher
Phil Spurgus
Rtck Parker
Randy Wyctnskt
T1m Stensen
Jerry Hen r y

2 1 40 59 8 4
12 22 31 46

Southwest Conference
SMU 103 Texas 90
Arkansas 8 1 T CU 65
Hou ston 88 Baylor 86
Te)(a s Tech 101 R1c e 84

Belpre !2-16 on the year )
Thursday mght at 7. 30 at
Federal Hockmg A victory
would put Meigs into the
fmal s the following Saturday
Davenport's 22 markers
paced h1s team m scormg, but
he was JOined in double
figu res by Meadows and
Cremeans w1th 12 each
Cremeans also had 10 of his
team's 20 ass1sJs . The team
h1t a hot 31-59 from the field
for 52 percent and canned 3-7
from the free throw line. The
Marauders picked off 28

NEW LEXINGTON

By Quarters

Playoffs
1sf Round Att1on
Southern Conference
VMI 7 1 Dav1tl son 69
WM &amp; Mary 70 Furman 57
R1chmond 82 Th e C1Hld el 69
Appala c h•an
St
79
E
caro tma 72

ance The Marauders play

' 10
6 14

Dave nport
Randolph
Brown rng'
Mart1n

Southern
Roberts 4 2 10
Brown ;J i a, Cross 'J 0 4 D
Rou 5h .1 1 9 , Brau er 11 10 32
J Br own 2 0 1 Johnston 0 2 2
Gunnmg I 0 8 , F 1ndtay 10 4
T eaf ord 1 1 3 Totals 3) 18 84
Hannan ira ce
Halley t_
1 5, Shaff er 50 10, Pcl r 1e 2 0
4 Gibson J 'l. B. Wh1ll J 0 6
M cGu1 r e 1 1 4 Wells 0 2 2
M ooney I 4 6 Campbe ll 0 1 1
To tals 17 12 ~6

Un i ted Pres s tnternahonal

Although Meigs had 24
turnovers to New Lex's 16,
Coach Logan saJd 1t was an
overall tea m effort that
sparked the victory
He and h1s boys "'ere appreciative of the good turn ot'it
of fans and sho.. ed 11 by their
line second hall perform-

FGA FT A RB5 F TP•
5
4
B
00
00
12
'
01
5 10 2 2
8
12
1116
02 4
1
22
J5
00
I
5
6
24
1-3
5
0
5
02
00
1
1
0
Jl -59
J-7
28 11
65

Quails
Crem e ans

a

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

e1ghteen

MEIGS

Three Wild ca ts had lour
carom s aP~ece Hanna n
Trace had four assists, but
Southern had 16. Dave Roush
had ftve of those, wh1lc
Roberts and Dunmng had
four each. Southern had 23
turnovers , and H-T had 17
Sout hern connec ted on
33-li9
shots
for
a
' hut 48 percent, and net-ted 18
of 27 foul shots The
Tomados "Ill pial' Kyger
Creek next ThUt sday at 7.30
Dan Cornell's boys ended
thetr season \\otth a 11-8 mark
Sa turday mght they h1l on
only I nB shots for cool 35
percent and managed only 1223 free throws, They had mne
steals and three blocked
shots

'

pOi nts m the third quarter,
wh1ie Mmgs ree led off

Meigs-New Lex box

.._

w

1n

e1ghl points wh1le Randolph
and b1g Milch Meadows each
had four to round out the
scormg The reason , m some
observers' mmds, that the
Panthers even stayed close
wa s that th e rebounds
seemed to be s imply falhn g
mlo thelf hands.
But Coach Logan must
have
put
a
lew
"words of wtsdom" m
his boys' ears while they
were m the dressmg room at
mtermtsston because they
came stormtng out the second
hall and reeled off the first
eight pomJs to surge mto a 3227 lead. But m the first few
seconds of that th1rd pennd,
Randolph picked up h1s
fourth foul, and fans began to

•

l7

65

Davenport each tossed

Although the ftnal ma1 g m
was 17, Ulc gam e WHS a much

,"'
!

clutch play of subshtute Dale
Browmn g, the top-seeded
Meigs Marauders advanced
to second-round play m the
AA Scchonal at ~'ede ral­
Hocking Saturday mghl by
defeatmg !he New Lcxmgton
Panthers. G5-48

•

Ohio High School

Col Marion Fra nklin 70 Col

10 the bench 1-"or the Metgs
Counltans m that hall, semor
Jerry
Cremean s
a nd

se m or

~~~!~!~

A J. ST.U:Hll

FOR PRICES CALL COLL£CT
r=AREA COD£ (114~

L_ 252-3181 __j
One or Two Day Full Denture

i

1Play it oafe and 1111re
It may be time to
have your present
policy updated.

l.ef's folic Soon

OFFICE
M~: 9:30 to 12, 2 to S !CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.l-EAST COURT

St rranc1s I Pa I 78 Can 1S 1U s

DALE C. WARNER
992 2143

Pomeroy

1n2 W Ma•n

AJ

\

Dl FlEEMAN MAlTZ

'

z

w

c

Service, Part1als, EXtract tons,
X· Rays, Cleil'l&lt;ng

Co

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Momlay, March 1, 1976

Broncos, Miami
near to showdown

Castro got revenge in
deaths of 2 Kennedys
' LAS VEGAS , Nev. (U PI) Cullan Prenuer Fidel Castro
learned of a CIA plot to have
him assassJlla ted after the
Bay of Pigs mvas10n and
vowed revenge agamst the
Kennedys which led to their
murders, the Las Vegas Sun
reported today In a
copyrighted story
Publisher Hank Greenspun
said, " Evidence in my
possesswn , coupled with
documents m the hands of
congresstonal mtelhgence
agency oversight committees
proVIdes a clearly marked
trail leading to lo gical
conclusions as to .. hy I he
Kennedy brothers were
killed.
"That path leads straight to
the door of a vengeful
Castro," said the Greenspun
story.
'' .. There LS now credible
evidence of Castro's purpose
to respond to the a!tempts on
his hfe by ordering the
assassination of President
Kennedy"
Castro met with officials
from South and Latin

Amencan states shortly after
the last attempt on his life m
1963 and told the assembly,
"11Ie Kennedys have sought
to kill me, I shall mete out the
same justice to them," said
Greenspun .
(A Senate mtelligence .
report in November said
Robert Maheu, a former FBI
agent who worked for the CIA
and headed Howard Hughes'
Nevada operatiOns until 1970,
recruited John Roselli to hire
Cubans to assassinate Castro.
(Roselli, an underworld
figure with ties m Havana
and Las Vegas, hlfed Cubans
in Miami and asked the help
of Sam G1ancana, a Chicagobased gangster, and Santos
Trafhcante, Cosa Nostra
chieflam rn Cuha, according
to the report. Giancana was
killed last year before he
could answer a subpoena to
testify before the Senate
comrnl ttee.)
"C',astro ;~gents captured a
CIA assassin and tortured
him mlo revealing to Castro
personally, the entire plot to
kill him," said Greenspun.

·'What is most sigmficantiS
that Castro's threat was to
the Kennedys and not to the
President alone
This
becomes
even
more
meaningful m light of the
subsequent assassinations of
both John and Robert
Kennedy "

The late U.S Chief Jushce
Earl Warren was advised "by
a person of unquestioned
mtegnty and pa triolism" of
the CIA plot to kill Castro and
of the premier's vowed
revenge
against
the
Kennedys , wrote Greenspun.
Warren then instructed

U S. Secret Service chief
James Rowley to 1tell the
American people the truth
but mstead he turned the case
over to the FBI, said the Sun.
The Ia te FBI Director J.
Edgar Hoover covered up the
FBI mvestigat1ve error made
in Its report to the Warren
Comnusswn by mformmg
then President Lyndon
Johnson that Lee Harvey
Oswald
acted
alone,
Greenspun srud.

Will Bailey get her off?
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) F. Lee Bailey has all but
completed Uie defense for
Patricia Hearst and Uie question from all sides is. "Will he
get her off?"
It is a cynical question for 1t
tromps immediately on the
fundamental of justice that a
person is deemed mnncent
until judged guilty by a jury
taking into consideration
reasonable doubt
It also is a logical question
The American people have
long ceased to be strangers to
the fact there IS a separate
and special brand of JUStice
for the rich and powerfuL
But in Miss Hearst's case
there is one basic that is
sweepmgly tgnored and It IS a
cmch the veteran crlffilnal
lawyer will not let the jury
forget it when he makes his
final argument.
Patricia Hearst IS charged
with robbmg a bank and
wielding a deadly weapon
that could have killed
someone. Nothmg more.
Nothing less
She is not charged with
jomlng a weirdo terroriSt
gang. She is not charged w1th
spurnmg her parents She IS
not charged with smokmg pot
.. or takmg LSD In Los
Angeles, she Is charged with
assault with a deadly weapon
and kidnapin~ but not in this
federal courtroom.

She IS charged w1th robbmg
a bank. And put m that frame
the defense has a powerful
case.
The prosecution has not
attempted to deny she was a
legitimate kidnap victim. Nor
have they $Ubstantially
shaken her story that she was
subjected to brutality by a
murderous cull that could
have unhinged the mind of a
captured paratrooper, let
alone a 19-year-old glfl
If that IS so, why should 11
not take the JurY more than a
few mmutes to bring in a

verdict of riot guilty"
Take a look at Uie government case.
She did take part m a bank
robbery She was holding an
Ml automatic carbme. Bank
movies show her waving it
around. A customer whose
test1mony was never shaken
said she told him to he down
on Uie floor or she would blow
his head off.
All of that, however, could
be explamed by what the
defense psych1alnsts have
termed
j'coercive
persuas10n" - she was a
dead little glfl 11 she didn't
act that way.
The point where 11 all
comes together Is in the term
"credtbtlity n Is Patncta
Hearst telling the truth? The
whole trulli ?
She has been Ia uded by
~

Bailey as haVIng been one of
Uie best witnesses on the
stand he ever had.
The Jury may thmk she was
a httle too good
Some news accounts have

had the defendant almost
drowrung in tears when she
talked about being confined
m the closets and sexually
molested.
This reporter has sat in Uie
courtroom for ftve weeks and

has yet to see her break down
and cry. Her voice has
faltered, she has gulped for
breath, her eyes have
reddened and she has ilabbed
at them willi a handkerclnef,
she has sniffled
But the ImpresSion she left
after a week on the stand was
that of a young woman of
remarkable composure with
a sharp mrnd wbo look some
scarcely concealed glee rn
trippmg up a government
prosecutor who is not the
brightest m the business.
In a dromng, almost
wllimng, voice she told her
story - not once, not tWice
but perhaps a dozen times
and always m the same way
as she was led through direci
and cross examination.
But It was what she did not
tell that may sink PatriCia
Hearst.
She will go up to Uie bank
robbery and her shooting up
of a sporting goods store m

FINISH THIRD - These Southern High School French students participated m the
second Annual Lanmta~e Fair in Athens Saturdav. More than 1,700students from 45 schools
fin!Shed _ in
third
place
overall.
They
took
attended. Southern
second place with their French play, flfSt place lor their Bicentenrual Exhibit and Jeff
Thornton won f!fst place with his Bicentenmal Map and third place lor his Bicentenrual
Poster. Their advisor ls Steve Wagner.

French students did well
By Greg Bailey
RACINE - The weather
wasn't the only beaul!ful
thmg Saturday for Southern
H1gh School French students
as they f1mshed third m the
second
annual
Ohio
Umvers1ty Language Falf m
Atllens w1lh more than 1700
foreign language students
from 45 schools competing
This year's theme was
"Ethmc Contributions m the
United States" m honor of the
81centenmal .
It was a remarkable
learmng expenence as
studenJs competed m foreign
smgmg , dancmg,
puppet
plays, skits, exlnbils, games
and maps and posters When students weren't

part1c1pahng m these, they butldmg a b1centenmal
watched foreign language • kwsque garnered a ftrst place
movies. Most students en- 1n the French exhibit best
JOyed a "Migh ty Mouse" expressmg the bicentenmal
cartoon m French
theme. Jeff Thornton won
There was an mternational f1rst place for having the best
bazaar for those that chose to bicentennial map He also
eat where a wide vancty of came m thtrd for hts poster
foreign pastfles, cakes and
Several other projects were
cookies were available at a entered such as an Eilfel
very low cost. It also featured Tower bwlt entrrely from
1terns lor sale from the many toothpicks by M1ke Proffit, a
countries represented.
wand-carved French sailing
Jaye Ord and Teresa vessel by Tim Imboden, a
Meadows entered the French French electromc question
spelling bee and Teresa board by Brice Hart and
fimshed third
Several many maps and posters.
students formed the French
The day came to a close
cast for a play "Au Bureau de with French and Spamsh
Poste 11 which rinished stnging and dancing before
second.
awards were presented
A combmed effort m

Library Appreciation Week
is observed in New Haven
NEW HAVEN , W Va The New Haven Public
Library observed Library
Appreciation Week recently
with the children enrolled in
the Head Start program as
guests of the story hour. Mrs
Los Angeles, watching on
televisiOn six of her
Symbionese LiberatiOn Army
captors dymg m a burning
house.
After thaI II IS as If a
curiam had !allen on thiS
courtroom drama . She will
provide only the haziest
account of what she was
domg for the last 17 months
before her arrest.

Krawsczy n ts the
direflor of the Head Start
program.
Thirty-six cluldren and 24
adults attended. Mrs. Paul
Powell, libranan, and Mrs
Wayne Carter, chmrperson of
Story Hour, were m charge of
the program.
The senior Citizens , who
meet regularly 10 the hbrary
recreahon room on Wednesday, were invited to hear
Mrs. Powell speak on the
programs of the library and
the purpose of Library AppreciatiOn Week Refreshment.&lt;; were served by the
Voiunt,er Committee
The ladies a&amp;,OCiated w1th
John

Contradictions don't ruffle candidate Carter
ATLANTA (UP!) - In ten
years
of
political
campaigning and public
statements, Jimmy Carter
has issued a slrmg of
contradictions which he
considers normal and his
crttics find fasc1natmg
Suddenly the frontrunner
lor
the
Democratic
nomination, Carter opposes
busmg and abortiOn but
wants no constltul!onal
amendments to prohibit

e1ther He now favors
decrimtnahzatton
of
mariJuana use, but when
running for governor rn 1970
promised "to prevent the
legaltzahon of marijuana" as
h1s lop
law-and-Order
priof!IY,
Although philosophically
attuned to "nght-to-work"
laws, Carter told labor
leaders he would sign a
repeal of the ban on
compulsory umon member-

ship if they could gel It
through the largely antiunion Georgia legislature.
Carter opposed bailing out
New York c1ty with federal
funds but favors a federal and
state sharing of the city's
welfare programs.
He constders 10 per cent of
the welfare caseload capable
of workmg and wants them
derued benefits if they turn
down jobs. But he speaks of
treating the other 90 per cent

DR. LAMB

with "dignity."
At the same time he would
pare down the bureaucracy
he says has one government
employe lor every five or six
welfare recipients.
Carter nominated Sen.
Henry Jackson, D-Wash.,
now the most outspoken of h1s
detractors, for president at
the
1972
Democratic I
Convention. Since then ,
Jackson has called Carter's
reorgamzatton of Georgia

government a sham and
pledged "to get the pubhc the
truth" about Carter.
Carter apparently has
offended
liberals
and
conservatives equally tn hiS
unsuccessful 1966 campaign
lor governor, his wmning 1970
race and now his presidential
bid two years out of the

governor's manston.

Segregationist
former
House Speaker Roy Harris of
Augusta endorsed Carter lor
governor ln 1970 but Carter
refused to reappoint him to
the state Board of Regents .
HarriS later called Carter "a
shaved hippy" and said he
wooed the George Wallace
vote just long enongh to oust
former Gov. Carl Sanders In
the Democratic runoff.
Carter got only about 10 per
cent of the black vote rn the
reported that deaths from runoff but carried 65 per cent
heart and vascular disease rn his general election camactually mcreased 75 per cent paign.
m men taking estrogen lor
Carter's predecessor,
cancer of the prostate, which Lester Maddox, went to
makes this therapy even Florida and New Hampshire
more questionable in the to denounce him as "the most
mmds of many authoflties. dishonest man rve ever met 1 '
This bemg the case, there and promised to act as a
seems little jushflcation for "one-man truth squad"
using either estrogen or following Carter's campaign.
performmg castral!on except
Yet,
as
lieutenant
to provide symptomatic governor, Maddox said in
rehel.
1970: "I'm behind him all the
Obv1o¥sly, I can't say way. He's a good man. He's a
anythmg about what your life dedicated man ."
expectancy is without
knowmg 1! your disease had
. .
already spread beyond the
Campatgrung the summer
prostate. Those who want after the Kent State shootings
more mformalion on the . that left four Ohio stu~nts
.
dead, Carter promised
proslale, mcludlng prostate "personally to direct any
mlect_Ions and enlargement, such actions to guard against
can send 50 cen Is for The loss of life and damage to
Health Letter, Number 1-0, property
of Georgia's
Prostate Gland. Enclose a clllzens." He said that meant
long, siamped self-addressed he would take personal
envelope for malllng. A~- command of national guardsdress your letter to me m men with "shoot to kill"
care of th1s newspaper, P 0 orders If necessary
Box 1&gt;51, Radio City Station,
'
·
New York, NY 101119

Prostrate cancer is big killer
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - On a
routme examtnatton my
doctor found a hardemng of
my prostate He sent me to a
specialist lor a biopsy that
turned out to be malignant
He prescribed one gram of
diethylstilbesterollor the rest
of my hfe and mformed me I
may have to have my
testicles removed .
I asked him what my hfe
expectancy was and he said
20 years and let him worry
about 11. I asked my family
doctor and he said one to five
years.
Any mformahon you would
~are to give m'e would be
greatly appreciated
I
already have enlarged
breasts.
_ DEAR
READER
Opinions differ on the best
treatment for cancer of the
proatate so don •t be surpnsed
that what I tell you may vary
from what you have heard
There are about 25,000 new
cases of cancer of the
proslate m ll!nencan m~n

each year and 17,000 deaths.
It Is one of the most Important ca ncers tn men

About half of these can be
identified by a simple rectal
exammatwn That IS one of
several reasons why sUch an
exan1ination should be part of
every physicaL
Many men have climcally
lnsigmficant forms of cancer
of the prostate. A small nest
of relatively machve cancer
cells may be found ms1de the
prostate If a man hves long
enough, he will likely have
this even though 11 may never
cause h1m any trouble at all
What to do about cancer of
lhe prostate depends enbrely
on how far it has progressed Whep the cancer
Is
cdnlmed
to
the prostate as a small nest
of cells or even when 11 IS
large enough to be fell on
rectal examination but is shll
confme~ to the gland 1\self,
efforts should be made for a
complete cure of the cancer,
, How is this done? By surgery
,on the gland or rad1atwn or

both Hormone therapy or
chemotherapy has no place in
th e treatment of these
localized cancers. That
means no female hormones
and no castration, but rather
total removal or destruchon
of the actuallocahzed cancer.
II the cancer has spread
outside the gland to mvolve
the pelvis area or to distant
boney si les then you can
consider the use of hormones
or castration. The Idea is to
ellmlnate the mfluence of the
male hormone Which IS
essen Ita I for the maintenance
of the cancer cells regardless
of where they are located. ,
Sometimes such I herapy Is
succes.•lul in reducmg spots
o£ bone spread, and particularly in relieving pain
There is no rea] evtdence
though that 'the use of female
hormones or castration or the
combination actually prolong
life.
The United Stales Veterans
Adnumslration Co·nperahve
Urological Hesearch Group

~-The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Monday, March 1, 1976

the Volunteer Bookmobile
scrv1ce vtslted the Letart
Elementary SchooL Rick
Powell, pnnc1pal, presented
the library a letter of thanks
expressmg the value of the

serv1ces given to the school
and !he community of Letart
A large

number

of m-

terest.ed c1 hzens m the area
attended an Open Hour .
Members of the Library
commtttee served punch and
cookies, and assisted Mrs.
Powell
1n
answenng
questions concerning the
Library Programs.
Members of the Library
Volunteer Commtttee are

Marwn Batey. Ruth Camphell, Mary Lou Edwards,
Jenny Dndd, H1ld~ Smith,
Carol Edwards, Mary Divers,
Maf)one Hoffman, Alberta
Wiles and Genevieve Woeds.
The New Haven Garden
Club held Its regular monthly
mcetmg m ~he main hbrary.
Mrs. Lee Gibbs presided .with
Mrs. Powell, guest speaker.
Mrs. Powell spoke on good
books lor Garden Club
members, and had arranged
a display of new books on
gardening and arranging.
She concluded her talk with
an ongmal poem enl!tled
"Our Gardens" that compared her .. urk as librarian
with the work of the members
of the club. Mrs. Gibbs, wellknown area artist, presented
Mrs . Powell one of her
paintings ,
Several

"In

Memory"

books have been l'resented to
the library recently. The
Mason County Extension
Homemakers Council gave
Lawrence Welk's book, AhOne-Ah-Two, m memory of
Mrs. Mary Zerkle, and
Strangers and Travelers by
Dorothy Wli.son in memory of
Hattie Reed . Miss Lelah Jane
Powell presented Will Rogers
- The Man and Hls Times by

Basketball
this week
GIRLS' BASKETBALL
(Week ol M•rch 1·5)
(At Meigs)
AA Secttonal

Tuesday . March 2, GaiJia

Academy
Chesapeake

(4

(2

1)

5)
al

vi
7 00 .

Vlnlon County (2 51 vs Nel

York (3 -41 at 8 15 Friday ,
Mer 5, Fa1rland (6 4) vs

Belpre

(.5

61 at 7 00 , warren

{4 61 vs Sheridan ~56) 8· 1S

At Fe.der•I-Hocklng
A Sectional
Tuesday, March '2. Miller
vs
Notre Gall Ia, 6 30 ,
.. Symnmes Valley vs Kyger
Creek i 3· 6) at 8 00
F riday, March 5, Tr1mble
vs Federal Hocking (3 .4) at
6 30 ,
Eastern
(6 21
vs
Crooksville 14 7 ) at 8 . 00

United Press InternaUonal
The stage is set for
Wednesday mght's litanic
Mid-American Conference
showdown between ooleaders
M1amt
and
Western
Michigan.
Both tpok care of the
p:eliminaries with Saturday
victories, although the Redskins' 76-75 win over Ohio
University didn't come
without a few anxious
moments.
Western, meanwhile, rolled
over Ball State 93-07 for Its
2?nd win of the year.
AIUiough Miami led from
midway in the second half, It
took a pair of free Uirows by
John Shoemaker with :02
remaining to put the Bobcats
away for good.
"It was a typical Miami-OU
struggle," is the way·
Redskins coach Darrell
Hedrlc desa-ibed his team's
close shave. "It was a wellplayed game between two
good teams.
"It makes the Western
Michigan game that much
bigger," Hedric said in reference to Wednesday night's
encounter.
AldrlcJce To(ll Miami
The two teams will enter
the contest with 13-1
conference marks, altbough
Western has the upper hand
in overall records, 22-lto 17-7.
Archie Aldridge's 23 points
and 18 by Shoemaker led
Miami in scoring. OU was
paced by Mike Cor~ and
Steve Skaggs with 16 markers
each.
Toledo pumped Its MAC
mark to II.J with an 83-72
victory
over
Eastern
Michigan.
Larry Cole and Mike
Larsen scored 22 points each
to lead Toledo to Its ltlth win
in 23 games overall.
The
Rockets
led
throughout, although Eastern
managed to get within five
points with nine minutes
remaining. Toledo then ran
off six unanswered pointers
to take a 69-58 edge and was
never threatened
At Bowling Green, tlie Falcons' Tommy Harris, John
Arnold and Ron Hammye
combined lor 63 points to lead
BG to a 79-02 victory over
Northern Dtinois.
Kelll State Falls
Harris scored 26 points,
Arnold 19 and Hammye 18
and Bowling Green overcame
a 24-pomt, 20-rebound
perfonnance by the Huskies'
Matt Hicks.
At Mount Pleasant, Mich.,
Kent State, playing wiUtout
the services of guard Corteze
Brown most of the second
hall, dropped a 66-63 decl.sion
to Central Michigan.
Junior forward Leonard
Drake put Central ahead 8361 with I :56 remaining and
seconds later Russ Davia
sank a pair of free throws to
give Central a 65-61
advantage.
Kent State lost junior
Brown less than two minutes
into the second half when he
mjlll'ed hls ankle. AlthOugh
Brown was out half Uie game,
he was Kent State's leading
Continued on page 8

This week's
college games
Today
Wis at Oh to St
Youngstown St at Ashland

Tuesday

Akron at Ill St
Cin at Loyola 1111)
Duquesne at Xavier

Wednesday

Western Mlch at Miami
BowltnQ Green et Kent St
Ohio un ...,. at Toledo
Youngstown St at Cle St
Thursday
No games scheduled

Frld•y

Marquette at Xavier
Ohio Conference
Tournament F1n11s
Southern Division
Wittenberg vs Capital
Northern DIVISiOn
Oh10 Northern vs Obertm
Saturday
Oh io St at lnd
Ball st at Toledo
Bowling Green at Western
Mich
Miami at Eastern Mich
Kent St at Northern Ill
Fta St at Dayton

COLLEGE SCORES

Cln 80 Duquesne 73
Nor thwestern 17 Ohio St 78
Ctn 89 San Francisco 88 (ofl
Central Mtch 66 Kent St 63
Miami 76 Ohio Unlv 15
Toledo 83 Easfern Mlch 12
Ashland 115St Francis (lnd J
69
Thiel 61 John Carroll 60
Dayton 11 Xavier 75

Bowling Green 79 Northern

Ill 62
Western Ill 97 Akron 93
Wright St 109 Wilmington SJ
Youngsto~n St
69 West
minster 56
Hiram 97 ,wesnlngton &amp;
Jefferson 66
Bethany 99 Case Western
Reserve 93
Ohio Conference Tournament
At Weoster
Oberlin 13 Kenyon 72
Ohio Northern 57 Heidelberg

56

At GrJnvllle
Otterbein 60 Musklngum 51
Wittenberg 56 Capital 47

Marauders win tourney opener 65-48

scorer with 14 polntl.
In a nationally tolevlsed
contest, sophomore Pat Cum·
mings hit a 12-loot j1m1p shot
w1th : 05 remalnlns ln
overtime to lifl lfltll rlllked
Cincinnllti to an 8N8 victory
over San Francilco.
Near MIN for Cilley
Cincinnati, which blew a 13point sec«~cUialflead, tralled
8U7 with just : t4 left In
overtime and almost failed to
get off its game-winning shot .
San Francisco nearly llole
the ball with :10 remalninll,
but Cummings, a 6-8 forward,
scooped up the loo11e ball,
drove the basket and hit the
final shot of the game.
Cummings
Jed
the
Cincinnati IICOI'ing w!Ui :ID
points. Brian W'tllliiDB added
16, sophomore Mike Jooes 1f
and 6-11 sophomore Bob
Miller 10.
Northwestern, powered by
the hot shoollng of sophomore
forward Bob Svete, who hit 1.5
of 19 shots for a career-hi@
52 points, defeated Ohio State
8'1·78. It was the lflh loss tn 16
Big Ten games for the
Buckeyes and dropped them
to 6-18 overall.

By Greg Haolt·y
Behand

M1ck
Davenport's 22 pomJs and I he

•

•

••
•

..•

•

•

•

••
•

••
•
MARAUDERS RAlLY-The Meigs Marauders came to life In the Uilrd quarter to run
away from New Lexmgton in the opening round Saturday ought at Federal Hockmg H1gh
SchBol of the Northern Class AA (Southeast) Sectional Basketball Tournament Terr;
Qu~ s (20 J above and at nght of page, seruor forward of the Marauders was a spark m the
drive to victory H1s Jump shot from 15 feet has become a deadly weapon this year, as has
his QUickness and agility on defense and offense. The Marauders won 6$-48 - .hm Hamm
pictures

Tournament Results
Un1ted Press International
CLASS AAA
At Canton
Alliance 44 Ravenna Ji
Wooster 53 Massillon Perry

l1
At A1-hl1nd
Belle\'ue
68
Manstield
Matabar &lt;~9
Ashland SO Lexington 40
At Ehda
Marion Harding 58 Napoleon

--· Southern sharp
in first round
•

At Lrma
Fmdlav 60 Cel1na 54
At Col
Grove
City
59
Upper
Arlington
Col Central 64 Newark S4
Col North land 69 Groveport

,.6

"

AI Athens

Lan caste r 6.4 Athens 52
Port!mOUHl 74 Miam i Trace
71
CLASS AA ""
At Routord
"
Rossford 59 Otsego SJ
At Col
Fairfield Union 64 Col Ready

'"
...

..

62 (Of)

At Napoleon
Ottawa Glandord 74 Swanton
71 (Of)

Delta 63 Wauseon 48
At Gallon
Colonel Crawford 70 Ontar io

63
At Ada

L1ma Cent Cath 67 Kenton 6S
van Wert 69 Ltma Bath 60
At Westuvllle
Col Mifflin 67 Utica 53
Big Walnut 81 Mt Gilud 74
At Gallipolis
Gallipolis 68 Wellston -40
At Feeler at Hocking
Meigs 65 New Luington All
At lucasville
Wheelersburg 90 Unloto 56
At weuuvlllt
Col OeSates 51 Buckeye
Valley co
Jotmston 12 N Ridge 47
At New Ph•l•detpflll
Ridgewood 67 Tuscarawas
Valley 60
wersaw River V 1ew
54
Cta.,.mont 48
At M.uiett1
Morgan 62 Meadowbrook 55
Maysv i lle 75 Ft Frye 61
AtCantan
Canton Lehman 61 Rittman

'"

•"

"·u

..

Akron S 53 Coventry 52
CLASS A

At Partsmoulh
New Boston 53 s Webster 47
At Netsonvlne
85
Albany
Alexander
Hemlock M1ller 75
Ar Newark
Newark Cath 62 E KnoK 53
Canal Winchester 46 Cen
terburg 42

...

'"
"'

At Bryln
Pelllsv i lle 65 Htlltop 54
Ed9erton 69 N Central 4til
At Willard
Ashl&amp;nct Crestview 49 New
London 4?
At Bucyru1
Wynford 58 Tiffin Calvert 53

"

.,

At Smithville
Dalton 62 Loudonv ille 53
At St Mlrys
Mar1on Local 56 New Bremen

•o

At van Wert
Llncolnv lew 69 Warne Trace
68
At Patrick Htnry

Holgate 54 Tinora 53
Hicksville 69 Northwood 54
At Dttaware
Col Hartley 64 Mar ion Cath .tO
At M1rlan
W Jefferson 66 New Albany 63

"'
"
'~~

,,
••
'",.
~~
" ~~~

AI PomtrO\'
Southern 84, Hannan Trace 46 ,

41

r---'--------,.;.,,,llll

The

Dlilr Suliiel

DEVOTED TO THi&gt;
tNTERIST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTIR ~ fANNIHJLL

II II

""

""

l~tc. Ed.
Pill
ROBERT HDII'Liqt
City Editor
,J
Publllllltd dally ••copo
Saturday by The Ohlo '-1
Valley Publlthlng Com - '' '
Deny, 111
Court so ..
~omeroy
Ohio .U76~ •·• 1

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.hi

•I

,.

m1

,,

..
...
"'

n1

1-----------4 ,...~:

..

•

In Class A SectiOnal play
Sat urday mgh t, second seeded Southern came out of
the locker room f1red up and
stayed that way all mght as
they stormed to a stunmng 8446 vi ctory over the highly
touted
Hannan
Tra ce
Wildcats In first round actiOn
at Meigs High School Jumor
Ch1p Brauer tossed m 32
pomJs 10 less than three
quarters or pl ay to lead the
attack , but 11 was the superb
team effort that allowed the
Tornados to r oll to their
fifteenth victory agamst four
defea ts on the season. One of
those losses came at the
hands of the Wildcats
Hannan Tra ce look Its on ly
lead or the game, 2-0, on a
short junnper by se mor Dave
Shaffer at !he 6·30 mark
Then Brauer hil a threepomter and another field
goal, and JuniOr Dave Roush
hi I on an other three-pom 1
play to g tv e Sou thern a qm ck
11-2 lead w1lh fiv e mmu tes
showmg

J6

At Ottaw1
Patrick Henry 60 Leipsic 58
Columbus Grove 74 Kalida 65
At Findlay
Van Burun 70 Vanlue 60
Cory Rawson 64 Mccomb 30

closer contest most of the
way.
At flfst, 1t looked like the
Marauders of Coach Ron
Logan might run away w1th 11
as they made thetr first hve
attempts from the field to
take a 10 point lea d hefore
New Lex could get on the
scorebomd But then behmd
the shooting of the Panthers'
Dave Murray and Tun
Shunnaker, th'e boys of Coach
D1ck Bowman fought back to wonder If that would have an
narrow the score to 16-1:! at ef£ect on the Marauders'
the firs t buzzer
chances
~
New Lex drew first blood m
Jun10r Dale Browmng
the second canto, and tt was a came off the bench and
one~pomt, see-saw battl e the
qwckly tossed in h1s first
res t of that quarter unhl the bucket and "cleaned" the
final seconds when the New board on several key
Lex Pan !hers dropped 10 the rebounds to lead his team to
last shot to go mto the locker thai surge that put them
r oom w1th their biggest lea d ahead to sta v From that
of !he mght, 27-24
pomt on, the Marauders
In that flfst half , floor never looked back
leader Steve Randolph of toe
The Marauders ' defense
Marauders pi cked up three stiffened and held the Panpersonal fouls and had to go thers scoreless for several
two and three mmute pertods
New Lex scored only eight

But the Wild cats weren 't
abou t to roll over Gibson,
Shaffer, and Kevm Petrte all
con nected on field goals and
narrowed the scored to 12-8,
but from that pOint on, the
boys of Coach Dan Cornell
never got closer, as the first
quarter ended with Sou! the• n
leadmg 21-12 Brauer had
gotten 12 of those 21.
Hannan 's Ken t Halley
opened the second quarter
with a three-pomter to cut the
lead at 21-15, but from then
on 1 Coac h Carl Wolfe 's
Tornados never looked back
as they coasted to an 18 potnt
lead at half-lime, 40-22 In
tha t second canto, Halley, the
SV AC's third leadmg scorer
w1th a 16 point average,
picked up his lh!fd foul at the
4. 33 mark and ended the
game with only five pomts.
That first hall showed
Southern dommallng the
boards, 21 caroms to only
mn e lor the W1ldcats
The third quarter contmued
the. same way w1th Southern
mcreasmg its lead to 59-31 at
the buzz~ r . The Wildcats,
wanhng to do something to
slop the hoi Tornados, lrted a
full-court press w1th f1ve
minutes remommg tn that
third period, but the Funnel
Clouds wouldn't have 11 as
JUniors Enc Dunmng, Carl
Johnston, and all-leaguers
Dan Brown and Mike Roberts
broke the press Brown,
although scoring only eight
points, hauled in II rebounds
(most of them m that spurtJ
and Roberts ' ball-handling
seemed to stymie the Wildcats Coach Wolfe praised h1s
boys lor a fine, unselfish
team effort, as the fourth
quarter saw Southern continue on Its way to the easy
victory ~

Key factors in the game
besides the team effort were
rebounds and assists The
Tornados outrebounded the
Wildcats t41o 25, w1th Brauer
leading in that category w1th
12, followed by Brown's II

Meadows

(52 percent)

(110 percent)

GillSON DRIVES - Scott Gibson, who had 8 pomts
for his night's work m a losmg effort for Hannan Trace,
dnves on a Southern player who has his left loot m
posiilon to obstruct him Southern won the Class A
SectiOnal game at Meigs High 84-46 - Katie Crow
picture.

..

Auburn 89 f; tor•da so
Clemson 1'22 F la Sou tn ern 79
F lor 1da 51 90 Mer cer 16
Ceo
Wasn1ngton
Anwr1can U 66
Georq ,a T ec h 91 Ch arl es ton

"

52

(56 )

PLAY TONIGHT
Coach Art Lanham's Rio
Grande College Redmen
(15-131 will play Central
State University (17-9) in
an opening round District
22 NAIA tournament game
at
Xenia
tonight.
Tip-off lime is 8 p.m. The

90 Georg1a 7~

LANCASTER

(il4)

Adams 3 2 8 S w~neharl 6 1
13, N e lson 53 13 , Petty 11 2
24 Odie 2 0 4 . Howe ll 1 0 2
TOTALS 28 ·8· 64.
ATHENS{521 - M eek 52
12 , Blackford 6 2 1&lt;~ Whealey
0 2 2 Heady 2 0 4 Chonko o
3 3 F au l kn er 2 0 4 Gre er 3 3
9 Goldsberry 1 0 2 TOTALS
19 14 52

Score by quarlen ·
Lancas ter
16 16 20 12 6.1
A t h ens
B 17 B 19- 52

game will be broadcast hve

by Bill Gray on WJEH- FM.
In the other District 22 tilt ·
tonight, Defiance plays at
Findlay. Tonight's winners
will clash Wednesday for
the Dlstrtct 22 title and a
trip to Kansas City.

scored 73 points m the second
half for Its 35th wm agarnst 'l:l
losses.
Suns 109, Pistons 98
Paul Westphal scored 32
pornts, mcluding 14 in the
second period, when Phoenix
rallied from a 15-point deficit
to trail Detroit by only a point
at the half.
Lakers 108, Cavaliers 97
Los Angeles went into a
second1Jiace tie willi Seattle
in the PaCific DiVISion willi
the help of 26 pomts by
Kareem Abdul Jabbar and
key points by Stu Lantz,
Cazzie Russell and Kermit
Washington. The loss was
only the fourth in the last 20
games for Cleveland, now
tied with Washmgton for the
Central Division lead.
Blazers 102, Hawks 98
Geoff Petrie and Sidney
Wicks scored 20 points each
in leading Portland past
Atlanta . John Drew led
Atlanta witll 32 pomts before
fouling out willi six minutes
left.
Nuggets 112, Colonels 111
Dan Issei scored 35 points
his
former
against
teammates to lead Denver,
sealing the win with two free
throws m Uie last seven
seconds

Could you

rebuild
your
tiome

at today's prices?
House values ha ve doubted

m the last 20 years Unless
~ ou r co-.erage has doubted
your fue 1nsurance may
only pa~ tor hallal"louse

Homeowner s tl"lsurance

lrorr\ N11t1onw1de 1s des1gned

to projec t you r home at
tod ay &amp; •nd tomorrow's
values Ask a Nat1.,nw1de
agenT ror 11et11nts

P. J. PAULEY
804 W Mam, Pomeroy
PH 992-2318

~[I NATIONWIDE

1!!JI ~~!~~~~~~
llll hD~• dt 1.4 ulu l l ~" ' l n..,•tn~ t
'"'o"'t O!Ou Col~ ll'l•wl Of" a

84

Stetson 75 ArKansas St 71
Tu tane 95 Ga Sl 63
V1rgm'i a T ec h 92 Syrac u se 8 1
W ak e Forest 98 N C St 916
Wsn
K en t ucky 76 Aus t.n
Peay 75
As hland 115 St
Fra nc •s
1 ln d ) 69
Bowling Grec11 79 No tt il no• s

~'2

M1 Ch1 gan 66 K en t St 63
Clnc.nna11 89 Sa n Fr a nc1sc o
Coe 106 Gr1nn et1 82
payton 77 Xav 1er (Ohto ) 75
DePaul 67 W1s Gree Bay 60
Oet.ro1t 89 LOyOiil Ill! I R'i

St 78

10 48

By GIL PETERS
UP! Sports Writer
It was btlled as the game
between the NBA champions
of 1975 and 1974, the
nal!onally televised sneak
preview of Seven Games rn
May . "
Had Sunday's basketball
game been a drama, critics
would have said the suspense
last two rrunutes and the rest
dragged to a foregone conclusion. The Boston Celtics dispensed with the climax m the
first 12 mmutes, then stuck
around to finish off the
Golden State Warriors 119101.
The Atlantic Division
Jeadmg Cell!cs . obviously
played their running game
while the WarriOrs did not.
The Celtics' runmng
resulted in 20 fast break
pomts while their pressing
defense contained
the
WarriOrs to nine baskets in a
41-24 first period that was the
difference in the game.
Boston, after shooting .720
m the first quarter, hit at a
.500 in the second quarter but
mcreased its lead to 21 points.
The second hall was rather
dull as Golden State came no
closer than 16 and trailed by
as much as 32.
Dave Cowens led six Boston
scorers m double figures With
23 pomts . John Havlicek
added 20, Scott 18, Jo Jo
White 16, Don Nelson 13 and
Paul Silas 11. Jamaal Wilkes
paced the Warriors with 23,
rookie Gus Williams had 19
and Rick Barry was one of
three players With 14
Washmgton defeated
Houston 1111-108, Philadelplna
beat Seattle 130-115, Phoemx
lopped Detroit 109-98, Los
Angeles downed aiveland
108-97 and Portland beat
Atlanta 102-98 in other NBA
games.
Denver defeated Kentucky
112-111, the New York Nets
heat Indiana 130-118 and St
Louis downed Virginia 113-109
in ABA action.
Bullets 110, Rockets 108 ElVIn Hayes ' jump shot
with one second left enabled
Washipgton to beat Houston
76ers 130, Scoles 115
Philadelphia, which trailed
lrj four pomts at the half,

No Carolina 91 Duke 71
So Caro t 1na 110 Ga Sou th ern

88 ( OI l

Murre~y

J
0
0

Celtics ·run
pas't Warriors

"

Mad ison 70 Wa sh &amp; L ee 65
Maryland 81 V1rgln1a 73
Middle Tenn 86

11
14
12
6
2

Waverly, behmd Chuck
Lancaster advanced to
Thompson's 21 pomts and secon d round play m the
Rob Holsmger 's 15 rebounds, Class AAA Sectwnal Toureltmmated Hillsboro 64-56 in nament at the Convocation
!he Class AA SectiOnal Ce nter m Athens Saturday
Tournament at Unwto mght by ehrnmahng Athens,
Saturday mght
64-52
Tile Tigers, 12-7 overall, led
The Gales, 14-5 on the year,
16-10, 33-2.1 and ~5-35 at the led 16-8, 32-25 and 52-33 at the
quartermarks
quartermarks. Athens bowed
Waverly h1t 24 of 56 field out 7-12 on the year
goal allempts 142 9 percent )
Lancaster h1t 28 of 77 field
and 16 of 21 chanty tosses
goal attempts for 36.4 perThe wmners picked off 40 cent. The Gales were eight of
rebounds.
16 at the foul hne and had 33
Hillsboro lut 21 of 49 field rebounds .
goal attempts lor 42 9 perAthens hit 19 o£38 field goal
cent, The losers were 'l4 of 21 · attempts for 50 percent. The
at the foul hne and had 25 Bulldogs were 14 of 21 at the
rebounds
foul hne aQd had 22 rebounds.
Waverly will meet Vmton
In Thursday's first game,
County at 1-:10 p m Thursday Lancaster will meet Logan at
tn a senufmal con test.
7 p.m Portsmouth w11l battle
Box score.
Chillicothe m the mghtcap.
WAVERLY
(il41
Box score
Hol smQer 3 3 9 , Daven o 2 4 a

Nor folk St 91 W1n s ton Sa lem

Kentu c ky 9d Mi SStSSIP PI 87

L SU 89 Vande rbilt 75

27

by Gales

BRAUER SHARP-Chip Brauer(44) had his best night of the season, fittingly enough
whwhen needed perhaps the most, Saturday night when Southern defeated Hannan Trace
84-46 m the Class A Secttonal Basketball Tournament at Meigs H1gh SchooL - Kal!e Crow
picture.
St

0
I
4
3
0
1
1
0

Hillsboro

Lar1mer 4 3 11 Coffman 1 0
2. Seelmg 4 9 17 McKenz 1e 1
0 2 . F ull er 8 2 18 , Woods 2 0
.t Marsh I 01 TOTALS 21 -14·
l6 .
Totals by quarters
wav er ly
16 17 12 19 64
Hill sb oro
10 13 12 2 1 56

M1 ss

4
J
6
7
1
6
0
0

Athens
ousted

24 - lil 64.
HILLSBORO

Scra nton 90 Upsala 64
Se ton Hall 79 lona 178 (at)
Temple 58 Drex el 54
Th1PI 61 John Carro ll 60
Union (NY) 73 Tuft s 67
Villanova 1l Sl
Jo~eph s
( Pa J 60
West Chester 8.:1 Bu c~ nell 73
Ya l e 46 Penn d4
A labama ~3 T ennes see 90 (2
otsJ

RBS F TP

Waverly
defeats

Whaley J ~ 9 Thompson 8
5 21 , S Thomas 4 1 IU ~ytt e
I 2 4 Tower I 0 2 TOTALS

Arm y 78 Navy 6'}
Georgetown ( 0 C 1 73 Ford
ham 66
Harva rd 92 Co lu mbia 83
Holy Cross 82 Boston COl i 77
Jacksonv ille 64 Marshall 54
Latayelte 77 Leh 1gll 75
Penn St 76 Fa1r ft e ld 68
Pnn c eton 70 Brown 59
Prov iden ce 67 Sr John 's 53
R•der 80 Delaware 70
Rochester 87 LeMoyne 77
Rutger s 103 LIU 87
51 Bonavenlure 14 N1agara

rebounds compared to 27 for

the Panthers .
New Lexmgton was led by
Ed Fisher's 14 pomts while
Shumacher and Murray
added 12and 11, respechvely
They hit a respectable 22-55
from the floor for 40 percent
and netted 4-8 from the
charily str1pe
Ofhc1als for the game were
Mel Carter and John Tipton.
By Quarters
,
M
16 24 42 65
N L
13, 27 35 48

FG A FT A
4 15
J 4
7 19
00
6 10
00
35
0 1
11
0 1
I5
12
00
00
00
00
22 55
4· 8

Dave Murray
Ed Fi sher
T1m Schumacher
Phil Spurgus
Rtck Parker
Randy Wyctnskt
T1m Stensen
Jerry Hen r y

2 1 40 59 8 4
12 22 31 46

Southwest Conference
SMU 103 Texas 90
Arkansas 8 1 T CU 65
Hou ston 88 Baylor 86
Te)(a s Tech 101 R1c e 84

Belpre !2-16 on the year )
Thursday mght at 7. 30 at
Federal Hockmg A victory
would put Meigs into the
fmal s the following Saturday
Davenport's 22 markers
paced h1s team m scormg, but
he was JOined in double
figu res by Meadows and
Cremeans w1th 12 each
Cremeans also had 10 of his
team's 20 ass1sJs . The team
h1t a hot 31-59 from the field
for 52 percent and canned 3-7
from the free throw line. The
Marauders picked off 28

NEW LEXINGTON

By Quarters

Playoffs
1sf Round Att1on
Southern Conference
VMI 7 1 Dav1tl son 69
WM &amp; Mary 70 Furman 57
R1chmond 82 Th e C1Hld el 69
Appala c h•an
St
79
E
caro tma 72

ance The Marauders play

' 10
6 14

Dave nport
Randolph
Brown rng'
Mart1n

Southern
Roberts 4 2 10
Brown ;J i a, Cross 'J 0 4 D
Rou 5h .1 1 9 , Brau er 11 10 32
J Br own 2 0 1 Johnston 0 2 2
Gunnmg I 0 8 , F 1ndtay 10 4
T eaf ord 1 1 3 Totals 3) 18 84
Hannan ira ce
Halley t_
1 5, Shaff er 50 10, Pcl r 1e 2 0
4 Gibson J 'l. B. Wh1ll J 0 6
M cGu1 r e 1 1 4 Wells 0 2 2
M ooney I 4 6 Campbe ll 0 1 1
To tals 17 12 ~6

Un i ted Pres s tnternahonal

Although Meigs had 24
turnovers to New Lex's 16,
Coach Logan saJd 1t was an
overall tea m effort that
sparked the victory
He and h1s boys "'ere appreciative of the good turn ot'it
of fans and sho.. ed 11 by their
line second hall perform-

FGA FT A RB5 F TP•
5
4
B
00
00
12
'
01
5 10 2 2
8
12
1116
02 4
1
22
J5
00
I
5
6
24
1-3
5
0
5
02
00
1
1
0
Jl -59
J-7
28 11
65

Quails
Crem e ans

a

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

e1ghteen

MEIGS

Three Wild ca ts had lour
carom s aP~ece Hanna n
Trace had four assists, but
Southern had 16. Dave Roush
had ftve of those, wh1lc
Roberts and Dunmng had
four each. Southern had 23
turnovers , and H-T had 17
Sout hern connec ted on
33-li9
shots
for
a
' hut 48 percent, and net-ted 18
of 27 foul shots The
Tomados "Ill pial' Kyger
Creek next ThUt sday at 7.30
Dan Cornell's boys ended
thetr season \\otth a 11-8 mark
Sa turday mght they h1l on
only I nB shots for cool 35
percent and managed only 1223 free throws, They had mne
steals and three blocked
shots

'

pOi nts m the third quarter,
wh1ie Mmgs ree led off

Meigs-New Lex box

.._

w

1n

e1ghl points wh1le Randolph
and b1g Milch Meadows each
had four to round out the
scormg The reason , m some
observers' mmds, that the
Panthers even stayed close
wa s that th e rebounds
seemed to be s imply falhn g
mlo thelf hands.
But Coach Logan must
have
put
a
lew
"words of wtsdom" m
his boys' ears while they
were m the dressmg room at
mtermtsston because they
came stormtng out the second
hall and reeled off the first
eight pomJs to surge mto a 3227 lead. But m the first few
seconds of that th1rd pennd,
Randolph picked up h1s
fourth foul, and fans began to

•

l7

65

Davenport each tossed

Although the ftnal ma1 g m
was 17, Ulc gam e WHS a much

,"'
!

clutch play of subshtute Dale
Browmn g, the top-seeded
Meigs Marauders advanced
to second-round play m the
AA Scchonal at ~'ede ral­
Hocking Saturday mghl by
defeatmg !he New Lcxmgton
Panthers. G5-48

•

Ohio High School

Col Marion Fra nklin 70 Col

10 the bench 1-"or the Metgs
Counltans m that hall, semor
Jerry
Cremean s
a nd

se m or

~~~!~!~

A J. ST.U:Hll

FOR PRICES CALL COLL£CT
r=AREA COD£ (114~

L_ 252-3181 __j
One or Two Day Full Denture

i

1Play it oafe and 1111re
It may be time to
have your present
policy updated.

l.ef's folic Soon

OFFICE
M~: 9:30 to 12, 2 to S !CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.l-EAST COURT

St rranc1s I Pa I 78 Can 1S 1U s

DALE C. WARNER
992 2143

Pomeroy

1n2 W Ma•n

AJ

\

Dl FlEEMAN MAlTZ

'

z

w

c

Service, Part1als, EXtract tons,
X· Rays, Cleil'l&lt;ng

Co

�6 - Till Dtllq SeatiMI,Mlddlepart-Pomeroy, o., Monday, March 1, 1976

4 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , March I, 1976

Blue Devils oust Rockets

Social Calendar
MONDAY
SO UTH E RN
BAND
TRI COUNTY CB Radio
Boos
ters
,
special
meeting
,
Club Monday, 7: 30 p. m . a t
7:
30
p
.m
.'
Tuesday,
at
the
Orchid Room . All CBe rs in
hi gh sc hoo l, Raci ne; all
Meigs, Gallia and Mason
parents
or band members
invited to attend .
invited
.
MEETING TO e. pl a in
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
· E ur opean s umm e r s tud y
can Legion, meeting , 8
Ameri
tour. 7 p. m . Monday, Room
p.m.
Tuesday
a t post home .
202 , Meigs High School for
area high sc hoo l and college
a ge s tuden ts and the ir
WAYSIDE GARDEN Club
parents .
Tuesday meeti ng a t the
LETART FALLS PTO
Colu mbia Gas Office in
Monday,
7:30
p .m .. Middleport , 7: 30 p .m .
Cheerlea ders a nd ba sketball
players will be introduced.
POMEROY
CHAPTER
RACINE CHAPT E R 134
O.E .S.
7: 45
Tues da y ;
Monday at B p.m . Requested
Pomer oy Masonic Temple
all dues be paid .
Officers to wear gowns. Due~
MIDDLEPORT GARDE N
mus t be paid this month.
CLUB, 7:30p .m . Monday at
· the home of Mrs . M. L.
French wi th Mrs. J am es
Harley and Mrs. Roy Casse ll ,
co-hostesses .
SALEM CENTER PTA ,
Monday with a nnual open
house at 6:30 p.m . Covere&lt;\
dish dinner , special music :
PO ME RO"Y G ARDEN
\
CLU B, Monday , 7:30 p.m . at
By Polly Cra mer
home of Mrs . J . W. Mc-

Gallipulis came on s trung
in the second half to defeat
We llston 611-40 in an opening
•round game of the Class AA
Sec lional Tournament at Coal
Grove Saturday nigh t.
Coach Jim Osborne's Blue
Devils trailed the Golden
Rocke ts five points , 25-20,
with 3:49 remaini ng in the
firs t half before catching fire
in their opening _post-season
contest.
Down 27-24 wilh 2: 14 left in
the half. the-Ga llians blanked

We llston the fin a l two
minut es and a seconds of the
firs t half and the first 2:26 of
the third peri od while rin ging

up nine straight points.
During the GAHS explos ion, Gallipolis outscored
the Roc kets 33-~ to take a

GAHS . . Wellston box

WE LLSTON ROCKETS ( 40 )
FG-A FT -A PF RB TO
I
1-2
4
I
0-1
Terr'tMcKinn !ss , c
Ka y ill i1and, f
1-2
0-0
4
9
I
1
Rand y Peo~l es, 9
2· 11 0-2
3
5
Ray Barne , f
4-8
3-6
3
5
3
Er vi n Swingl e, f
o.o
0-0
0
0
0
Rick Brooks, c
1 10
n
0-0
2
,Jim Derrow, g
0-2
1
I
2
5-6
Steve Arn old , g
I
5
4· 12
J.S
3
Ron Hudson, f
0-1 0-0
2
0
0
A thought for the day : . Mik e Watts, g
1-2 0-0
2
0
0
o.o
0-0
0
0
0
Ame rican writer Henry Tho- Dave Swonger , f
0-3
0-0
0
0
1
r e au
sa id :
" It
is John Royster , g
TOTALS
14-45 12-21 19 32 20
characteristic of wisdom not
GAHS BLUE DEVILS(68)
to do desperate things ."
PLAYER- Pos.
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO
7. ]6 3-5
Ton y Fo lden , f
1
2
6
Brent Saunder s. f
1-3
2-3
3
7
1
Brent Johnson , g
6·10 3-6
2
4
1
Kei th McGuire, c
2-6
2.2
2
6
2
Gary Swa in. f
2-6
0-0
1
2
1
Terr y Walt, g
0-0
4
1
1
4·7
] .J
Herb Epli ng , f ·
0·3
1
1
0
1·3
0-2
1
0
0
G r~ Maynard, g
Ed mi th, c
48
0-1
8
0
0
o.o
Mike Dressel. f
1·2
0
3
0
Da vid Warren , f
0-2
0-0
3
0
0
TOTALS
29-66 10-22 16 41 1
P LAYER- Pos .

Polly's Pointers
Shredded lettuce
.
saves mayonnatse

Murra y, Mason, W. Va .
Program will be by Mrs.
Irv ing Ka rr.
EIGHT AND F ORTY,
Meigh Coun ty Sa lon ·no ,
Monday night, 7:30 a t the
home of Mrs . Rhonda
Hackett . Annua l re ports will
be presented. A ba keless
ba ke sale will be held and
members are reminded to
take their pe nnies, dimes and
tickets for specia l projects .
EASTE RN SCHOOL Board
Monday , 7 p.m. at the hi gh
school.
TUESDAY
,
MIDDLE PORT MASONIC
Lodge 363 Tuesda y, 7:30 p.m .

INFLATION FIGHTER
DEAR POLLY - We ma ke

our Qwn mayonnaise and I

Doubt~ up,

Amertca.

BUIES CREEK, N .C .
(UP!) - Campbell will meet
North Carolina-Wihnington
in the Southern Division and
VIrginia State will meet
Norfolk State in the Northern
Division today in the
basketball playoffs for tbe
NA!A District 29 title.
· Campbell, ranked · No. 1 in
the Northern Division at 22-3,
will play NC-Wilmington,
ranked No. 2 at 13-4. Virginia
State, ranked No . I in the
North, . will play at secondranked Norfolk State.
The championship game
between the winning teams
will be played Wednesday at
a neutral site. In two previous
meetings, Campbell and NC·
Wilmington have each W"!l

·-.

once.

Two can ride cheaper
than one. · ·
A

v

,__ ,,... _ ,,.. _.,....r-...1

I

2
4
II

0

4
5
II

0
2
0

0
40

TP
17
4
15

ST. LOUIS (UPI) - The·SI.
Louis ,Jilues Sunday night
recalled defenseman Jamie
Masters
from their
·Providence farm club .
Masters, the Blues' second
choice in last June 's amateur
draft, played five games with
the club earlier this season.
He was recalled because Rick
Smith is expected to be out of
action .for several games with
an injurJ .

Sectio na l
finals
Is
Thwsday, GAHS will battle
Jackson .in a semifi nal game scheduled 7:30p .m . Saturday
at Coal Grove. Tipoff t~ is at Coal Grove. The winner
7:30. Wed.1esday , Ironton will will advance to the Rio
battle So uth Point io a Grande Class AA District
Tournament.
semifinal contest.

6

4
8
2
2

SPECIAL

GOOD THROUGH SUN., MAR. 7

Helen Help
Us .•• By I-Iden Bolle!
Tired of His Retirement!
Dear Helen :
Wbat do you do with a man who thinks retirement means
staying with his wife every single minute of the day and night ?
I was accustomed to nine hours of being my own wom'!Jl . Since
James retired last month ; he feels hurt if I don't include him in
all my plans . If I'm invited out to lunch with women friends or
go to my regular bridge club , h~ mopes .
Must a wife " r~ire " from her social life be~au se her
husband is no longer a way at the office? - TOO MUCH OF A
~DM~
'

B~R-B-QUE

BEEF
FRENCH
FRIES,
AND A
SMALL
PEPSI
REG, 11.15

Phone
992-5248

McCiun~'s

68

12 15 2 11 ~ 40
15 14 19 2D-68

World Day of Prayer is Friday

SPIRIT OF '76'

8
2
0

washer loads this is really a

saver . Of course, a ll the
laundry is done in cold water.
While on the subject the
was a lways vaguely tr oubled
(waste not. want not ) about only energy the next hint will
the ma yonnaise clinging to save is your own frustra tion .
the beat ers and mixing bowl If you have tried practically
afte r I had scraped all! coul.d ever ything a dvertised plus
scrape into a jar . While anything else you can think of
preparing lettuce for a salad and still have trouble with
it dawned on me tha t I could that " ring around the collar"
shred some lettuce into the and dinginess , try an extra
bowl where the mayonnaise rinse between soak and wash
was made, give the beaters a cycles. If you add blea ch to
few turns and perhaps get to the soak and borax to the
use every drop. It worked . wash you will be amazed at
When mayonna ise is made the results.
Collars also need th e e xtra
there is usually e nough for a
wash.
This worked on an old
salad
base
or
to
add
to
a
All inaster masons invited.
tossed salad . - AGNES B. towe l that was so dingy that
for a year or so I had been ·
DEAR POLLY - Since we using it as a bath mat . It
are all trying to save in every came out so snowy white that
way we can I wan t to send m y m y good towels looked dingy
Specia l thanks to the reader
by comparison - that is until
who sugges ted giving clothes
the y got the same treatment.
They were washed in cold
an extra spin before putting
them in the dry er . Even wa ter.
Mos t of the "dirt" that
hea vy bath towels are then
builds
up in the bathroom
thoroughly dried on only the
"no press " cyCle.
sink is just toothpaste and
To save fuel I ha ve changed
soa p scum . F org e t th e
cleanser and just take a Wet ,
the way I do my laundry a nd
(or the most part find the new
net cover~ d sponge and scrub
methods .a re ac tually easier awa y . You will be surprised
than the old. Even in ma tched
at the amount of suds you will
sets the dryers hold larger
rai se and maybe even .enough
loads. than th e washers do . to clean some of the tile
Most of · us can save by
behind the sink . You will have
dividing three washer loads fewer suds and easier rinsing·
into two dryer loads and save
than when usin g a cleanser .
one complete drying cycle.
- TERESA .
First launder the heaviest
You will receive a dollar If
Polly uses your lavorlte
towels, ete . and star t them
dry ing . Next wash the " inhomemaking l.dea.
Pet
be tween" (c otton underwear, Peeve, Polly's Problem or
no-iron linen s , e tc . ) Add
solution to a problem. Write
about half-of this washer load · Polly in care of this newspaper.
to the dryer . When all are
dri ed and the ma chine is
empty start drying the
remainde r of th e " inbe tweens." Launder the "no
press " clothes and add to the
dryer . Since I have never
found a way to divide my
laundry mto less than three
PINEHURST, N.C. . (UPI)
- Bobby Allison, who was
injured in an eight-car pileup
in Sunday's Carolina 500
stock car race, was listed in
satisfactory condition today
in Moore Memorial Hogpital.
Allison was second on tbe
323rd lap of the 492-lap event
when
he
hit
Cale
Yarborough's car and his
auto flipped through the air.
He cleared one car but landed
on the front of Richard
Childress' car. Bruce Hill,
NASCAR Rookie of the Year
in 1975: and Childress also
were slightly injured in tbe
mishap . .

' '

Score by ·quarters :
Well st on Rockets
GA HS Blue Devi ls

TP

commanding 57-30 lead with
4:28left in the game. Bi ggest
GAHS lead was 32 points , 6634, with J :44 remaining .
Hay Barnett and Ste ve
Arnold led Wellston 's atta ck
with II points apiece. The
R!Jeke ts hit !4 of 45 field goal
attempts for 31 percen t. WHS
was !2 of 21 at the foul line.
Wellston had 32 rebounds , 10
by Hick Brooks . The Rocke ts
had 20 costly turnovers .
Tony Folden had 17 a nd
Brent J ohnson 15 for GAHS.
Terry Wall and Ed Smith
each had eight fo r the winners. GAHS hit 29 of 66 field
goal attempts for 43.9 perce nt. The Blue Devils were 10
of 22 a t the foul line. GA HS
had 41 re boun ds, eight by Ed
Smi th. GA HS had se ven turnovers .
The Blue Devils upped their
season r ecord to 12-7.
Wellston bowed out with a 414 ma r k.

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE Chonile members pictured
above, front row, left to right, are : Debbie Northup, Lani
Ross and Elle n Leftwich ; second r ow, Barbara Wa llen,
Debbie Dunn, Renee Orr , Gale Douthitt, Tim McGhee ,
Karol Carpenter , Connie Bradsha w and Amo Hoskins ;

DAIRY ISLE

Infants
Boys &amp; Girls

heritage house

Middleport,
Ohio

Middleport. 0 .

AA. UW has meet

Whdll pay you the

'

on your savings?

+++

Dear Helen :
My wife had told me all about her affair with a man· she
met at the office. I listened sympathetically (that's the
"inodern" way , ,isn 't it ?) thinking if sh.e saw how
understanding I was, she 'd see this is just a fling .
Instead , she says I'm wonderful and she'll aways lo ve me ,
but she knows ·I'll understand that she must divorce me and
marry him - because he insists on marriage .
But she doesn 't want to break off with me entirely . She
wants us to remain friends and part-time lovers, as "she
couldn 't bear the thought of losing me forever. " I asked her if
the other man would go alon~ with this sharing olan , and she
said, "Heavens no! so we won't tell him."
This is my wife's first affair and I think she 's goqe
overboard. Should I go along with the amicable divorce in the
·hope that she'll soon tire of No . 2 and remarry me ? "UNDERST~D!NG" HUSBAND
Dear Un :
This "modern understanding " by any other name is still,
"Hey , there, Patsy !'.' Tell your wife a divorce will be final , and
she 'II turn in her latchkey as she walks out the door . An
ultimatum may end her fling where sympathetic listening can
only prolong it. - H.

+++

Dear Helen :
.
With women entering every other fi eld, how come we don't
~more female car salespersons? I understand that over the
country there are ahout five women new-car sellers to every
2,000 males in that occupation.
I'd sooner buy a car from a woman than a man because
she wouldn 't be as sharp. ~ CURTIS

Contributions
made to fund

no matter what you're looking
for in savings or investment ·
certificates...
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

GOLO.EN PASSBOOK

3-MONTH CERTIFICATE

S Y.~.%
UH

2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

3-YEAR CERTIFICATE

6 ~,
R- Tl

e

P1 ~1bl1 b"t11 l ~

•

M 1 ~""""'

$ 1. 000 DO

4-YEAR CERTIFICATE

TUESDAY NIGHT

6-YEAR CERfJFICATE

.. ..'),

.

AMI In IG&lt;IIHOI'I 10 Ill IPI II , , , lllllllltly M

QUirtltl~ lntlln . , • l)llcl"' n , IWCI . 11'1111.
IOIIt , 01' I ll )'HI Ctrllflc:tiH . I""'-' 11'11'·
afllt moniM~ II y011 Gtllrt "' ttrllkltll

7 Y.~.%

wllh

uu

t

Pl·t-11 Qnrltrl1 t M i ~lmu m $1 .000110

t~et

lflll'lllnt at 15.00l.oa 01 .,...,

H nllf\' lOt Dfti'I'IIIIHI WllflclriWII

tate lunas.

The facts of life.

wnnt a fa ir r~t urn , th e hig h est le-

Bank wants and promises their de-

cess ibility to these funds

•

to be at an

all-time high.

.

wiJi OhioValley Bank
·

Ga llipo lis Otuo

,....... 'DIC

Phone 992-3629
The leading savings plans are al the leading saving• blink.

~·\
L:f

~

~'

' " .GJ . • •
~ .. .

.. . _

_

N

&lt;;;&gt;.

~ _,_~
'1:.&gt;'

.... _ _

" It says, "Bingo in the
colosseum every Wednesday
night.' "
In 1932, famed flyer
Charles Lindbergh's 20month-old son was kidnaped _.
The boy's body was found
and
Bruno
May
12,
Hauptmann was electrocuted
for the kidnap-murder in
1936.

'

only Norge has it and in rail-around
and permanently installed models, too.
Career girls are busy girts. Norge
and money with a f\.'IIY automatic
in your kitchen , or bathroom, or
You'll never run out of clean

"

OFFERING SESSION
Mrs . Lelah W ea therby ,
L. P .N .• active with th e
Re tire d Senio r Voluntee r
Progra m a t the Senior
Citizens Cente r , will offer
anothe r session of the home
nursing cours e ThutSday 1
10 :15 to II : 15. Emphasis will
be on caring for a bedfast
indiv idual.

THE OFFICES OF

Automatic Washer

can sar.~e you time
washer and dryer
even in a closet.
things again.

Automatic Dryer

• washes 2 to 10 lbs.

• dries 2 to 10 lb . loads

• gets clothes really clean

• all fabric tim er control

• all fabric controlled

• permanent press cooi·down

• 10 programmed cyCle s

• multi heat selecuo-n

• permanent press care

• big efficient lint tiller

'

• automatic dispensers

ATTORNEY AT LAW

'

• ideal .drying weather buill right In

plus Norge commercial_heavy-duty quality in a home
washer and dryer

WILL BE' MOVED
FROM ITS COURT STREET LOCATION
to NEW QUARTERS

Ingels Furniture

at 104 Mulberry Avenue

Bank Rate Financing

992 -2635

Middle pod

as of March 1, 1976

Holbrook wins
full scholarship
NE W HAVEN, W. Va . Kenneth Ma rtin Holbrook,
son,of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Holbrook of New Haven , has
been a warded a scholarship
covering tuition and fees for
the 1975-76 academic year at
West Virginia Tech .
The 'College a warded 42
sc hola rs hip's to incoming
freshmen , according to John
R . Cobb, director of financial
a id a t the school. A graduate
of Wahama High School,
Holbrook was a member of
the Nati ona l Honor Society,
Key Club and recipie nt of the
Good Citizenship Award .

.m. MASONITE

~=M~

CRESTWALL PANELING

The Friendy Ores

Durable, easily-cleaned panel in
YOI!r choice of warm, room pleasing color tones; Man-made
fin'lsh on hardboard. l/4'' x 4' x 8'.

'

kn ow how 19 take care of
yourself in the water.

water safety courses are
offered ail ave r lhe

I:•

We want everybody - even i1 tt ie ki ds
- to know Th e Facts of Li fe in the
water. Since we bFgan to teach swim ·
ming, we've issued a grand to1al of
"" ·'""' · ' 1uuswlri1mi ng certificates. Million s upon
mil lions of people have learned tc swim wi th us.
Or learned to swim beller.
.
If you '"Ve ever wondered where Red Cross money
goes, consider just this one fact nearly eve ry life·
guard serving i.n Ame(ica is Red Cross tra ined and

~:Mt)

accred l!ed.
Isn't Red Cross a good idea ? Belong.

The Fnencly Ores

'.

Red Cross.

The Good Neighbor.
'I

~ '

I

1t1at' s why Red Cross

•

.

you can do quick loads
in the evening with your
21" Wide. Big Capacity, Fully Automatic
Washer &amp; Dryer
that fit mosl anywhere.

swim ming, lifesaving and

pos ito rs. No wonder savings de·

plu s ta x

THE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy, Ohio

1

Thi s is exactly what Ohio Valley

posi ts continue

fits into your Iife.

It can also be a barrel of dan ger,

Whe n it cotnes to y o ur savin gs, you

&amp; "

INIOIRIGIEI

H you don't know the fundamentais -

on reaso na ble noti ce el withdrawal.

safety for your.lunds, a nd ac-

I

ROBERT BUCK

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY LODGE 164, F .
an d A.M., Wednesday, 7:30
p .m . P ome roy Masoni c
Temple . All master mason s
invited.
THURSDAY
GALLIA COUNTY Salon
612, Eight and Forty, Thursday , 7:30p .m . at the home of
Mrs . Dor othy Hecker , Third
Ave., Gallipolis.

IF YOU ARE A CAREER GAL

Swimming 's a barre l of fun . .

Why settle fu r less th a n the best?

ga ily possible. wi th a gu a ra ntee o f

The Tri -Counly's Mosl
Exclllng Night Spot

Chorale's Marc h 12 through
22 Florida Tour Show.
Tickets for the program are
on sale at $6.50 per person or
$10 per couple for the din ner
a nd theatre . Tickets a lso may
be sec ure d fo r lh P e n.
te rt.ainmen t segmen t al one,
a t $2 for adults and $1 for
studen ts.
Reserv a li ons sh ould be
made by phonin g Rio Gra nde
College a t 245-5353 extension
59 or by writing Rio Gra nde
Co1lege , post office box 525 .
Stude nt cha irman of the
dinner
th e~ tr e,
De bble
·North up , sa ys th a t a ll
proc:eeds fr om the even t will
go toward Rio 's Florida Tour
F\lfld ,

women to attend Friday 's
se rvice

LAFF- A- DAY

at Clll1tfl•

Ohio Valley Bank
•2.95

~:·:·:~

UNI C EF for projec ts in
Niger, Malagasy Republic
a nd Boli via to provide a sale
~ nd accessibl e wa ter supply
a nd a source of protein .
Co ntributi ons are be in g
made for leg al defense and
famil y assistance for political
prisone rs under re:pressive
for
politic al
regim es :
refugees from Lati n Amer ica
need
physica l ,
who
psycholog ical and economic
.rehabilitation, and to projects
helpi ng wome n make their
full co ntri b ution in their
commun it ies and nat ions,
through programs such as the
one in Goa, India , which
enables r ural women to articul a te their needs, to seek
and suggest solutions, a nd to
rece ive training which will
help them ear n a livi ng.
Mr s . Cor de li a Ben tz ,
president of Me igs Coun ty
Church Women United, ex·
tends a n invita ti on to all area

Fldtttl lltjjlllatlon1 ,...iirt 1 subiiMtlll

• PIJd le Owl t lt tl y t Mi N i 111~m $1 ,000.to

you'll lind it at

•

.

.keeping busy

1-YEAR CERTIFICATE

Visit Our Salad Bar
Liver and Onions
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee. Tea or Milk

.:.....~

Senior citizens

• ,I ~Ui t Cull erl y • M tftHII ~fll 11 110!1 00

SPECIAL ·

"The 21st Ce ntury' ' was the borhoods , the pa rt women
theme of the program at a will ta ke in selec ting state
recent mee tin g of the Mid- a nd national ca ndidates, an d
dl eport - P om er oy Ar ea the pa rt women wil l take In
Branch of th e Am er ica n loca l an d s ta t e s er vice
Asso ciati on of Uni versi t y or ganizations.
Miss Smith then talked on
Women. ·
to Hinvent the fut ure"
how
Meetin g in the Me igs High
using
the word " pla n" for her
School library , Mrs . Ber nice
.
e
mphasis
on third centur y
Carpenter introduced Miss
of
women
an d their
roles
He len Sm ith , p rogram
for
seei
ng th at
responsibility
cha irperson , who presented
Mrs. Ma xine Wungett . She Amer icans have a soul .
Hos tesses for the meeting
talked on the 21s t Cen tury as
were
Mr s. Betsy Hor ky, Mrs.
a time for self-evalua tion and
de cision m a kin g for th e Carp e nle r , Mrs . J ea nnie
Martha
future us ing ' 'action" a s lu.w Parsons , Mrs .
Husted, Mrs. Ida Diehl, and
key word .
The future and values of Mrs . Ma rgaret "P arsons . A
women in soci et y was silen t a uction was held and it
discussed by Mrs. Eileen was ann owtced tha t Te resa
wtll
g ive
he r
Buck while Mrs. J eanette · Casc i
in
educationa
l
experienced
Thomas outlined the four
Austra
li
~
at
the
Ma
rc
h
23
ac tion steps for deve lopment.
• She listed per sona l pl ans, meeting of the AA UW.
plans for the future of neigh-

Dinner theatre slated : ~\: :
j::\·!Tuesday at Rio Grand~-:~ ~

\::I

Trip highlights given

Dear Curt:
Dq you mean sharp - tricky ? or sharp - smart"
Whichever, I don 't know why there aren 't
more car saleswomen, as they're certainly sharp enough to
·
handle the job. - H.

THE INN PLACE

:~~~~~lm;~;~~~~;~;~;~;~~l~ili;i;m;~w~li~lil;~m;~mmmmmmm~~m;m~~m~~~;~;;;mi~;~;i;;~~~;~i~;!i~~~;Q~~i

The Rio Grande College
Grade Chorale will present a
dinner thea tre in the Rio
Gran de dining hall Tuesday ,
Marc h 2. Dinn er will be
ser ved from 7 p. m . un til B p .
m . followed by the thea tre
en ter tainmen t. ·
Fea tured guests for the
theatre are Ohio Uni ve rsity
Swin g Choir . T he y will
com bin e fi nge r -s nap pi ng
chore og r ap hy wi th li ghthear ted singing to produce
their rendition of a bice nte nnia l salute to American
mu sic .
Two
tale n te,d
s tudents, Gar y Le nsenmayer
and Myrona Dela ney, crea ted
mus.i ca l
the · s how 's
a rra ngements a nd the sc'r ipt.
The Gra nde Chorale, under
highli gh t the second segment
with a '· Prev iew of Florida
Show" , Musio t o be per formed will inc lude selecti ons from " The · Ballad for
Highlights of !he ir . trip to SusarJ Fles hman. ga ve the Amer ic an s " as well as
the Holy Land wer e given by prayer and the choir com. . selection fr om the 16 voice
Mr . and Mrs . Ll oyd Wrigh t posed of Mr . an d Mrs ,
and Steve Eblin at the Sunda y Charles Foster, Mr . and Mrs.
nig ht service of the La urel Mike Wri ght, Be linda Friend ,
Cliff Free Method is t Church . Dia na ~w i s , Mr . and Mr s.
The yo un g adults ha d Jack Jacobs, J oa nne Clark ,
~ harg e of the mee tin g with
Mr . and Mrs . Geor ge Folmer ,
Virgil Phillip s presidin g. . Ka ihy Scar berr y a nd Brenda
Ha ggy sa ng " Tr y a Little
Several fun d raising acKindn ess " alon g with a
tivities have been pla nned fur
medle y of familiar hymns.
Marc h by the Meigs County
Scripture was given by Se nior Citii e ns.
Mike Knight . Darla Hawl ey
On Saturday from 8 to 11
wa s pian ist For the service.
p .m . a t the Pomer oy
Ushers were Be linda Friend , Ele mentary School a square
Contribution s
to
th e
Ka thy Scarberry, Rick Ash
aerial ladder fir e tru ck
da nce will be held with the
a nd Rand all Hawley , with
lund and the t)_cart fund we re
" Str ingdusters "
providing
pra yer by the Rev. Floy d
made at a recen t mee ting of
the m usic. Admission is $1
Shook . . The program con- pe r pe r son with c hildre n
the Light and Life Men 's
cluded with a duet, " I Wish
Fellowship of the Laure l Cliff
under 12 be ing a dm itted free.
We Would Ha ve All Bee n
Free Methodis t Church.
On Marc h 12 from 4 to 7
Rea dy" by J a ne J acobs a nd p.m . at the Ce nte r , a panca ke
Meeting at the parsonage,
Diane Lewis .
the meeting op e ned with
and Sa usage supper will be
prayer by the Rev. Fl oyd
ser ve d . Tickets ar e n ow
Shook. Pearl Jacobs read
BIRTHDAY HONORED
ava ilable at the Center or
Th e e ighth bir thday of from an y membe r of the
from Acts 2, with J a mes
Gilmore giving "How to Live Curtis Braley was celebrated Coun cil on A ~in g . The Meigs
Close to the Lord ," and the Sund ay with a fam ily dinner United Methodi s t Men ·are
Rev . Mr. Shook , "The Grace a t the home of his grand- donating the pan cake mix
of God." The financi a l re port parents·, Mr. and Mrs. Ernes t and will be he lping with the
was given by Ed Van [n. Powe ll. Attending were Mrs. supper.
wagen .
Mary Bra ley , Jackie , TimOn Ma rch 26 a soup bea n
Plans were discu.Sed for a m y, Curtis, Sean a nd Jamie, and cornbread suppe r will be
softball team with final R obin Ca mpbell , Ronnie served a t the Center . Servi ng
arrangements to be made at Bac hte l, Ja ye Roberts , Mr. will be from 4 to 7:30p.m. and
the next meeting .to be held at and Mrs . Ivan Pow~ll a nd e nter tainme nt · will
be
the home of Gilmore.
Iva n Euge ne.
featured duri ng the evening.

inf.e1cst

Dear Too Much :
No ! But a husband needs time to adjust , especially if be
hasn 't planned ahead for an active retirement.
Separaterl from his job James no doubt feels useless , so he
clings to you as the one person who still wants him . Wben be
finds new interests and hobbies, he 'll probably agree that tbe
best kind of togetherne ss happens when you spend ma ny hours
apart . (As in, " For better or for worse, but not for lunch every
day. ") - H.

third row, Phil Ohlinger, Jim Bennett, Frank Timmons,
Greg Leschishin, Mike Justice, Howard McDaniel, Jim
Hollinger, Vinton Rankin and Greg Bane, top row,
Director Merlyn Ross. Not pictured , Gregg Smith, Kyle
Drew and Edie Ross.

World Day of Pra yer will
be cele br a te d Friday by
Churc h Wome n United of
Meigs County who will join in
a c ha in of prayer with
millions of people in 169
countries.
The Meigs County serv ice
will be held at the Minersville
United Methodist Churc h a t
1:30 p.m . a nd will feature a
Spa nish s peaking g ues t
soloist who will accompany
herself on the guitar. In
addi tion Mrs. Marcia Russe ll
of the hos t church will have a
s pec ia l program for the
children attending .
This year the wors hip
serv ice has bee n prepared by
women in Latin American
a nd re fl ects t he th em e
" Education for All of Life."
Concrete situatio.ns, common
to the lives of some L.atin
Amer ican women, form an
integral part of the worship
exper ience .
This marks the 90th year of
the ecumenical celebration of
World Day of Prayer. The
offe ring this year will go into
a fund admini stered by the
In ter contin en tal Mission
Committee of Church Women
United, all owing fo r the
annua l grant to women 's
colleges in As ia and the
Middle East to be continued .
The Committee on Christian
Litera ture for Women and
Childre n, founded with World
Da y of Prayer gifts ; also
r eceived an annual grant.
Funds will also be allocated
to writers 1 workshops wher e
women are trained to prepa r e
literature rela ted to the ir
special needs in the areas of
fai th., family life , nutriti on
ary d developme nt.
Annual gifts fro m the offe rings are a lso rnade for a
Christian ministr y in ni)tional
parks, for sc holarships for
women throug h the World
Council of Churc hes, and to
the In ternationa l Committee
for the World Day of Prayer
for leadership training.
The offe rings also make
possible gifts for short-term
proje c ts relate d to th e
Celebration theme . This year
gifts are being m a de through
Churc h World Se rvice and

In 1~. five coogressmen
were wounded when Puerto
Rican nationalists began
shooting from the gallery of
the
U .S.
House
of
Representatives.

POMEROY
CEM.ENT BLOCK ·CO.
The Department Store
of Building Since 1915.

�6 - Till Dtllq SeatiMI,Mlddlepart-Pomeroy, o., Monday, March 1, 1976

4 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , March I, 1976

Blue Devils oust Rockets

Social Calendar
MONDAY
SO UTH E RN
BAND
TRI COUNTY CB Radio
Boos
ters
,
special
meeting
,
Club Monday, 7: 30 p. m . a t
7:
30
p
.m
.'
Tuesday,
at
the
Orchid Room . All CBe rs in
hi gh sc hoo l, Raci ne; all
Meigs, Gallia and Mason
parents
or band members
invited to attend .
invited
.
MEETING TO e. pl a in
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
· E ur opean s umm e r s tud y
can Legion, meeting , 8
Ameri
tour. 7 p. m . Monday, Room
p.m.
Tuesday
a t post home .
202 , Meigs High School for
area high sc hoo l and college
a ge s tuden ts and the ir
WAYSIDE GARDEN Club
parents .
Tuesday meeti ng a t the
LETART FALLS PTO
Colu mbia Gas Office in
Monday,
7:30
p .m .. Middleport , 7: 30 p .m .
Cheerlea ders a nd ba sketball
players will be introduced.
POMEROY
CHAPTER
RACINE CHAPT E R 134
O.E .S.
7: 45
Tues da y ;
Monday at B p.m . Requested
Pomer oy Masonic Temple
all dues be paid .
Officers to wear gowns. Due~
MIDDLEPORT GARDE N
mus t be paid this month.
CLUB, 7:30p .m . Monday at
· the home of Mrs . M. L.
French wi th Mrs. J am es
Harley and Mrs. Roy Casse ll ,
co-hostesses .
SALEM CENTER PTA ,
Monday with a nnual open
house at 6:30 p.m . Covere&lt;\
dish dinner , special music :
PO ME RO"Y G ARDEN
\
CLU B, Monday , 7:30 p.m . at
By Polly Cra mer
home of Mrs . J . W. Mc-

Gallipulis came on s trung
in the second half to defeat
We llston 611-40 in an opening
•round game of the Class AA
Sec lional Tournament at Coal
Grove Saturday nigh t.
Coach Jim Osborne's Blue
Devils trailed the Golden
Rocke ts five points , 25-20,
with 3:49 remaini ng in the
firs t half before catching fire
in their opening _post-season
contest.
Down 27-24 wilh 2: 14 left in
the half. the-Ga llians blanked

We llston the fin a l two
minut es and a seconds of the
firs t half and the first 2:26 of
the third peri od while rin ging

up nine straight points.
During the GAHS explos ion, Gallipolis outscored
the Roc kets 33-~ to take a

GAHS . . Wellston box

WE LLSTON ROCKETS ( 40 )
FG-A FT -A PF RB TO
I
1-2
4
I
0-1
Terr'tMcKinn !ss , c
Ka y ill i1and, f
1-2
0-0
4
9
I
1
Rand y Peo~l es, 9
2· 11 0-2
3
5
Ray Barne , f
4-8
3-6
3
5
3
Er vi n Swingl e, f
o.o
0-0
0
0
0
Rick Brooks, c
1 10
n
0-0
2
,Jim Derrow, g
0-2
1
I
2
5-6
Steve Arn old , g
I
5
4· 12
J.S
3
Ron Hudson, f
0-1 0-0
2
0
0
A thought for the day : . Mik e Watts, g
1-2 0-0
2
0
0
o.o
0-0
0
0
0
Ame rican writer Henry Tho- Dave Swonger , f
0-3
0-0
0
0
1
r e au
sa id :
" It
is John Royster , g
TOTALS
14-45 12-21 19 32 20
characteristic of wisdom not
GAHS BLUE DEVILS(68)
to do desperate things ."
PLAYER- Pos.
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO
7. ]6 3-5
Ton y Fo lden , f
1
2
6
Brent Saunder s. f
1-3
2-3
3
7
1
Brent Johnson , g
6·10 3-6
2
4
1
Kei th McGuire, c
2-6
2.2
2
6
2
Gary Swa in. f
2-6
0-0
1
2
1
Terr y Walt, g
0-0
4
1
1
4·7
] .J
Herb Epli ng , f ·
0·3
1
1
0
1·3
0-2
1
0
0
G r~ Maynard, g
Ed mi th, c
48
0-1
8
0
0
o.o
Mike Dressel. f
1·2
0
3
0
Da vid Warren , f
0-2
0-0
3
0
0
TOTALS
29-66 10-22 16 41 1
P LAYER- Pos .

Polly's Pointers
Shredded lettuce
.
saves mayonnatse

Murra y, Mason, W. Va .
Program will be by Mrs.
Irv ing Ka rr.
EIGHT AND F ORTY,
Meigh Coun ty Sa lon ·no ,
Monday night, 7:30 a t the
home of Mrs . Rhonda
Hackett . Annua l re ports will
be presented. A ba keless
ba ke sale will be held and
members are reminded to
take their pe nnies, dimes and
tickets for specia l projects .
EASTE RN SCHOOL Board
Monday , 7 p.m. at the hi gh
school.
TUESDAY
,
MIDDLE PORT MASONIC
Lodge 363 Tuesda y, 7:30 p.m .

INFLATION FIGHTER
DEAR POLLY - We ma ke

our Qwn mayonnaise and I

Doubt~ up,

Amertca.

BUIES CREEK, N .C .
(UP!) - Campbell will meet
North Carolina-Wihnington
in the Southern Division and
VIrginia State will meet
Norfolk State in the Northern
Division today in the
basketball playoffs for tbe
NA!A District 29 title.
· Campbell, ranked · No. 1 in
the Northern Division at 22-3,
will play NC-Wilmington,
ranked No. 2 at 13-4. Virginia
State, ranked No . I in the
North, . will play at secondranked Norfolk State.
The championship game
between the winning teams
will be played Wednesday at
a neutral site. In two previous
meetings, Campbell and NC·
Wilmington have each W"!l

·-.

once.

Two can ride cheaper
than one. · ·
A

v

,__ ,,... _ ,,.. _.,....r-...1

I

2
4
II

0

4
5
II

0
2
0

0
40

TP
17
4
15

ST. LOUIS (UPI) - The·SI.
Louis ,Jilues Sunday night
recalled defenseman Jamie
Masters
from their
·Providence farm club .
Masters, the Blues' second
choice in last June 's amateur
draft, played five games with
the club earlier this season.
He was recalled because Rick
Smith is expected to be out of
action .for several games with
an injurJ .

Sectio na l
finals
Is
Thwsday, GAHS will battle
Jackson .in a semifi nal game scheduled 7:30p .m . Saturday
at Coal Grove. Tipoff t~ is at Coal Grove. The winner
7:30. Wed.1esday , Ironton will will advance to the Rio
battle So uth Point io a Grande Class AA District
Tournament.
semifinal contest.

6

4
8
2
2

SPECIAL

GOOD THROUGH SUN., MAR. 7

Helen Help
Us .•• By I-Iden Bolle!
Tired of His Retirement!
Dear Helen :
Wbat do you do with a man who thinks retirement means
staying with his wife every single minute of the day and night ?
I was accustomed to nine hours of being my own wom'!Jl . Since
James retired last month ; he feels hurt if I don't include him in
all my plans . If I'm invited out to lunch with women friends or
go to my regular bridge club , h~ mopes .
Must a wife " r~ire " from her social life be~au se her
husband is no longer a way at the office? - TOO MUCH OF A
~DM~
'

B~R-B-QUE

BEEF
FRENCH
FRIES,
AND A
SMALL
PEPSI
REG, 11.15

Phone
992-5248

McCiun~'s

68

12 15 2 11 ~ 40
15 14 19 2D-68

World Day of Prayer is Friday

SPIRIT OF '76'

8
2
0

washer loads this is really a

saver . Of course, a ll the
laundry is done in cold water.
While on the subject the
was a lways vaguely tr oubled
(waste not. want not ) about only energy the next hint will
the ma yonnaise clinging to save is your own frustra tion .
the beat ers and mixing bowl If you have tried practically
afte r I had scraped all! coul.d ever ything a dvertised plus
scrape into a jar . While anything else you can think of
preparing lettuce for a salad and still have trouble with
it dawned on me tha t I could that " ring around the collar"
shred some lettuce into the and dinginess , try an extra
bowl where the mayonnaise rinse between soak and wash
was made, give the beaters a cycles. If you add blea ch to
few turns and perhaps get to the soak and borax to the
use every drop. It worked . wash you will be amazed at
When mayonna ise is made the results.
Collars also need th e e xtra
there is usually e nough for a
wash.
This worked on an old
salad
base
or
to
add
to
a
All inaster masons invited.
tossed salad . - AGNES B. towe l that was so dingy that
for a year or so I had been ·
DEAR POLLY - Since we using it as a bath mat . It
are all trying to save in every came out so snowy white that
way we can I wan t to send m y m y good towels looked dingy
Specia l thanks to the reader
by comparison - that is until
who sugges ted giving clothes
the y got the same treatment.
They were washed in cold
an extra spin before putting
them in the dry er . Even wa ter.
Mos t of the "dirt" that
hea vy bath towels are then
builds
up in the bathroom
thoroughly dried on only the
"no press " cyCle.
sink is just toothpaste and
To save fuel I ha ve changed
soa p scum . F org e t th e
cleanser and just take a Wet ,
the way I do my laundry a nd
(or the most part find the new
net cover~ d sponge and scrub
methods .a re ac tually easier awa y . You will be surprised
than the old. Even in ma tched
at the amount of suds you will
sets the dryers hold larger
rai se and maybe even .enough
loads. than th e washers do . to clean some of the tile
Most of · us can save by
behind the sink . You will have
dividing three washer loads fewer suds and easier rinsing·
into two dryer loads and save
than when usin g a cleanser .
one complete drying cycle.
- TERESA .
First launder the heaviest
You will receive a dollar If
Polly uses your lavorlte
towels, ete . and star t them
dry ing . Next wash the " inhomemaking l.dea.
Pet
be tween" (c otton underwear, Peeve, Polly's Problem or
no-iron linen s , e tc . ) Add
solution to a problem. Write
about half-of this washer load · Polly in care of this newspaper.
to the dryer . When all are
dri ed and the ma chine is
empty start drying the
remainde r of th e " inbe tweens." Launder the "no
press " clothes and add to the
dryer . Since I have never
found a way to divide my
laundry mto less than three
PINEHURST, N.C. . (UPI)
- Bobby Allison, who was
injured in an eight-car pileup
in Sunday's Carolina 500
stock car race, was listed in
satisfactory condition today
in Moore Memorial Hogpital.
Allison was second on tbe
323rd lap of the 492-lap event
when
he
hit
Cale
Yarborough's car and his
auto flipped through the air.
He cleared one car but landed
on the front of Richard
Childress' car. Bruce Hill,
NASCAR Rookie of the Year
in 1975: and Childress also
were slightly injured in tbe
mishap . .

' '

Score by ·quarters :
Well st on Rockets
GA HS Blue Devi ls

TP

commanding 57-30 lead with
4:28left in the game. Bi ggest
GAHS lead was 32 points , 6634, with J :44 remaining .
Hay Barnett and Ste ve
Arnold led Wellston 's atta ck
with II points apiece. The
R!Jeke ts hit !4 of 45 field goal
attempts for 31 percen t. WHS
was !2 of 21 at the foul line.
Wellston had 32 rebounds , 10
by Hick Brooks . The Rocke ts
had 20 costly turnovers .
Tony Folden had 17 a nd
Brent J ohnson 15 for GAHS.
Terry Wall and Ed Smith
each had eight fo r the winners. GAHS hit 29 of 66 field
goal attempts for 43.9 perce nt. The Blue Devils were 10
of 22 a t the foul line. GA HS
had 41 re boun ds, eight by Ed
Smi th. GA HS had se ven turnovers .
The Blue Devils upped their
season r ecord to 12-7.
Wellston bowed out with a 414 ma r k.

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE Chonile members pictured
above, front row, left to right, are : Debbie Northup, Lani
Ross and Elle n Leftwich ; second r ow, Barbara Wa llen,
Debbie Dunn, Renee Orr , Gale Douthitt, Tim McGhee ,
Karol Carpenter , Connie Bradsha w and Amo Hoskins ;

DAIRY ISLE

Infants
Boys &amp; Girls

heritage house

Middleport,
Ohio

Middleport. 0 .

AA. UW has meet

Whdll pay you the

'

on your savings?

+++

Dear Helen :
My wife had told me all about her affair with a man· she
met at the office. I listened sympathetically (that's the
"inodern" way , ,isn 't it ?) thinking if sh.e saw how
understanding I was, she 'd see this is just a fling .
Instead , she says I'm wonderful and she'll aways lo ve me ,
but she knows ·I'll understand that she must divorce me and
marry him - because he insists on marriage .
But she doesn 't want to break off with me entirely . She
wants us to remain friends and part-time lovers, as "she
couldn 't bear the thought of losing me forever. " I asked her if
the other man would go alon~ with this sharing olan , and she
said, "Heavens no! so we won't tell him."
This is my wife's first affair and I think she 's goqe
overboard. Should I go along with the amicable divorce in the
·hope that she'll soon tire of No . 2 and remarry me ? "UNDERST~D!NG" HUSBAND
Dear Un :
This "modern understanding " by any other name is still,
"Hey , there, Patsy !'.' Tell your wife a divorce will be final , and
she 'II turn in her latchkey as she walks out the door . An
ultimatum may end her fling where sympathetic listening can
only prolong it. - H.

+++

Dear Helen :
.
With women entering every other fi eld, how come we don't
~more female car salespersons? I understand that over the
country there are ahout five women new-car sellers to every
2,000 males in that occupation.
I'd sooner buy a car from a woman than a man because
she wouldn 't be as sharp. ~ CURTIS

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Pl·t-11 Qnrltrl1 t M i ~lmu m $1 .000110

t~et

lflll'lllnt at 15.00l.oa 01 .,...,

H nllf\' lOt Dfti'I'IIIIHI WllflclriWII

tate lunas.

The facts of life.

wnnt a fa ir r~t urn , th e hig h est le-

Bank wants and promises their de-

cess ibility to these funds

•

to be at an

all-time high.

.

wiJi OhioValley Bank
·

Ga llipo lis Otuo

,....... 'DIC

Phone 992-3629
The leading savings plans are al the leading saving• blink.

~·\
L:f

~

~'

' " .GJ . • •
~ .. .

.. . _

_

N

&lt;;;&gt;.

~ _,_~
'1:.&gt;'

.... _ _

" It says, "Bingo in the
colosseum every Wednesday
night.' "
In 1932, famed flyer
Charles Lindbergh's 20month-old son was kidnaped _.
The boy's body was found
and
Bruno
May
12,
Hauptmann was electrocuted
for the kidnap-murder in
1936.

'

only Norge has it and in rail-around
and permanently installed models, too.
Career girls are busy girts. Norge
and money with a f\.'IIY automatic
in your kitchen , or bathroom, or
You'll never run out of clean

"

OFFERING SESSION
Mrs . Lelah W ea therby ,
L. P .N .• active with th e
Re tire d Senio r Voluntee r
Progra m a t the Senior
Citizens Cente r , will offer
anothe r session of the home
nursing cours e ThutSday 1
10 :15 to II : 15. Emphasis will
be on caring for a bedfast
indiv idual.

THE OFFICES OF

Automatic Washer

can sar.~e you time
washer and dryer
even in a closet.
things again.

Automatic Dryer

• washes 2 to 10 lbs.

• dries 2 to 10 lb . loads

• gets clothes really clean

• all fabric tim er control

• all fabric controlled

• permanent press cooi·down

• 10 programmed cyCle s

• multi heat selecuo-n

• permanent press care

• big efficient lint tiller

'

• automatic dispensers

ATTORNEY AT LAW

'

• ideal .drying weather buill right In

plus Norge commercial_heavy-duty quality in a home
washer and dryer

WILL BE' MOVED
FROM ITS COURT STREET LOCATION
to NEW QUARTERS

Ingels Furniture

at 104 Mulberry Avenue

Bank Rate Financing

992 -2635

Middle pod

as of March 1, 1976

Holbrook wins
full scholarship
NE W HAVEN, W. Va . Kenneth Ma rtin Holbrook,
son,of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Holbrook of New Haven , has
been a warded a scholarship
covering tuition and fees for
the 1975-76 academic year at
West Virginia Tech .
The 'College a warded 42
sc hola rs hip's to incoming
freshmen , according to John
R . Cobb, director of financial
a id a t the school. A graduate
of Wahama High School,
Holbrook was a member of
the Nati ona l Honor Society,
Key Club and recipie nt of the
Good Citizenship Award .

.m. MASONITE

~=M~

CRESTWALL PANELING

The Friendy Ores

Durable, easily-cleaned panel in
YOI!r choice of warm, room pleasing color tones; Man-made
fin'lsh on hardboard. l/4'' x 4' x 8'.

'

kn ow how 19 take care of
yourself in the water.

water safety courses are
offered ail ave r lhe

I:•

We want everybody - even i1 tt ie ki ds
- to know Th e Facts of Li fe in the
water. Since we bFgan to teach swim ·
ming, we've issued a grand to1al of
"" ·'""' · ' 1uuswlri1mi ng certificates. Million s upon
mil lions of people have learned tc swim wi th us.
Or learned to swim beller.
.
If you '"Ve ever wondered where Red Cross money
goes, consider just this one fact nearly eve ry life·
guard serving i.n Ame(ica is Red Cross tra ined and

~:Mt)

accred l!ed.
Isn't Red Cross a good idea ? Belong.

The Fnencly Ores

'.

Red Cross.

The Good Neighbor.
'I

~ '

I

1t1at' s why Red Cross

•

.

you can do quick loads
in the evening with your
21" Wide. Big Capacity, Fully Automatic
Washer &amp; Dryer
that fit mosl anywhere.

swim ming, lifesaving and

pos ito rs. No wonder savings de·

plu s ta x

THE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy, Ohio

1

Thi s is exactly what Ohio Valley

posi ts continue

fits into your Iife.

It can also be a barrel of dan ger,

Whe n it cotnes to y o ur savin gs, you

&amp; "

INIOIRIGIEI

H you don't know the fundamentais -

on reaso na ble noti ce el withdrawal.

safety for your.lunds, a nd ac-

I

ROBERT BUCK

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY LODGE 164, F .
an d A.M., Wednesday, 7:30
p .m . P ome roy Masoni c
Temple . All master mason s
invited.
THURSDAY
GALLIA COUNTY Salon
612, Eight and Forty, Thursday , 7:30p .m . at the home of
Mrs . Dor othy Hecker , Third
Ave., Gallipolis.

IF YOU ARE A CAREER GAL

Swimming 's a barre l of fun . .

Why settle fu r less th a n the best?

ga ily possible. wi th a gu a ra ntee o f

The Tri -Counly's Mosl
Exclllng Night Spot

Chorale's Marc h 12 through
22 Florida Tour Show.
Tickets for the program are
on sale at $6.50 per person or
$10 per couple for the din ner
a nd theatre . Tickets a lso may
be sec ure d fo r lh P e n.
te rt.ainmen t segmen t al one,
a t $2 for adults and $1 for
studen ts.
Reserv a li ons sh ould be
made by phonin g Rio Gra nde
College a t 245-5353 extension
59 or by writing Rio Gra nde
Co1lege , post office box 525 .
Stude nt cha irman of the
dinner
th e~ tr e,
De bble
·North up , sa ys th a t a ll
proc:eeds fr om the even t will
go toward Rio 's Florida Tour
F\lfld ,

women to attend Friday 's
se rvice

LAFF- A- DAY

at Clll1tfl•

Ohio Valley Bank
•2.95

~:·:·:~

UNI C EF for projec ts in
Niger, Malagasy Republic
a nd Boli via to provide a sale
~ nd accessibl e wa ter supply
a nd a source of protein .
Co ntributi ons are be in g
made for leg al defense and
famil y assistance for political
prisone rs under re:pressive
for
politic al
regim es :
refugees from Lati n Amer ica
need
physica l ,
who
psycholog ical and economic
.rehabilitation, and to projects
helpi ng wome n make their
full co ntri b ution in their
commun it ies and nat ions,
through programs such as the
one in Goa, India , which
enables r ural women to articul a te their needs, to seek
and suggest solutions, a nd to
rece ive training which will
help them ear n a livi ng.
Mr s . Cor de li a Ben tz ,
president of Me igs Coun ty
Church Women United, ex·
tends a n invita ti on to all area

Fldtttl lltjjlllatlon1 ,...iirt 1 subiiMtlll

• PIJd le Owl t lt tl y t Mi N i 111~m $1 ,000.to

you'll lind it at

•

.

.keeping busy

1-YEAR CERTIFICATE

Visit Our Salad Bar
Liver and Onions
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee. Tea or Milk

.:.....~

Senior citizens

• ,I ~Ui t Cull erl y • M tftHII ~fll 11 110!1 00

SPECIAL ·

"The 21st Ce ntury' ' was the borhoods , the pa rt women
theme of the program at a will ta ke in selec ting state
recent mee tin g of the Mid- a nd national ca ndidates, an d
dl eport - P om er oy Ar ea the pa rt women wil l take In
Branch of th e Am er ica n loca l an d s ta t e s er vice
Asso ciati on of Uni versi t y or ganizations.
Miss Smith then talked on
Women. ·
to Hinvent the fut ure"
how
Meetin g in the Me igs High
using
the word " pla n" for her
School library , Mrs . Ber nice
.
e
mphasis
on third centur y
Carpenter introduced Miss
of
women
an d their
roles
He len Sm ith , p rogram
for
seei
ng th at
responsibility
cha irperson , who presented
Mrs. Ma xine Wungett . She Amer icans have a soul .
Hos tesses for the meeting
talked on the 21s t Cen tury as
were
Mr s. Betsy Hor ky, Mrs.
a time for self-evalua tion and
de cision m a kin g for th e Carp e nle r , Mrs . J ea nnie
Martha
future us ing ' 'action" a s lu.w Parsons , Mrs .
Husted, Mrs. Ida Diehl, and
key word .
The future and values of Mrs . Ma rgaret "P arsons . A
women in soci et y was silen t a uction was held and it
discussed by Mrs. Eileen was ann owtced tha t Te resa
wtll
g ive
he r
Buck while Mrs. J eanette · Casc i
in
educationa
l
experienced
Thomas outlined the four
Austra
li
~
at
the
Ma
rc
h
23
ac tion steps for deve lopment.
• She listed per sona l pl ans, meeting of the AA UW.
plans for the future of neigh-

Dinner theatre slated : ~\: :
j::\·!Tuesday at Rio Grand~-:~ ~

\::I

Trip highlights given

Dear Curt:
Dq you mean sharp - tricky ? or sharp - smart"
Whichever, I don 't know why there aren 't
more car saleswomen, as they're certainly sharp enough to
·
handle the job. - H.

THE INN PLACE

:~~~~~lm;~;~~~~;~;~;~;~~l~ili;i;m;~w~li~lil;~m;~mmmmmmm~~m;m~~m~~~;~;;;mi~;~;i;;~~~;~i~;!i~~~;Q~~i

The Rio Grande College
Grade Chorale will present a
dinner thea tre in the Rio
Gran de dining hall Tuesday ,
Marc h 2. Dinn er will be
ser ved from 7 p. m . un til B p .
m . followed by the thea tre
en ter tainmen t. ·
Fea tured guests for the
theatre are Ohio Uni ve rsity
Swin g Choir . T he y will
com bin e fi nge r -s nap pi ng
chore og r ap hy wi th li ghthear ted singing to produce
their rendition of a bice nte nnia l salute to American
mu sic .
Two
tale n te,d
s tudents, Gar y Le nsenmayer
and Myrona Dela ney, crea ted
mus.i ca l
the · s how 's
a rra ngements a nd the sc'r ipt.
The Gra nde Chorale, under
highli gh t the second segment
with a '· Prev iew of Florida
Show" , Musio t o be per formed will inc lude selecti ons from " The · Ballad for
Highlights of !he ir . trip to SusarJ Fles hman. ga ve the Amer ic an s " as well as
the Holy Land wer e given by prayer and the choir com. . selection fr om the 16 voice
Mr . and Mrs . Ll oyd Wrigh t posed of Mr . an d Mrs ,
and Steve Eblin at the Sunda y Charles Foster, Mr . and Mrs.
nig ht service of the La urel Mike Wri ght, Be linda Friend ,
Cliff Free Method is t Church . Dia na ~w i s , Mr . and Mr s.
The yo un g adults ha d Jack Jacobs, J oa nne Clark ,
~ harg e of the mee tin g with
Mr . and Mrs . Geor ge Folmer ,
Virgil Phillip s presidin g. . Ka ihy Scar berr y a nd Brenda
Ha ggy sa ng " Tr y a Little
Several fun d raising acKindn ess " alon g with a
tivities have been pla nned fur
medle y of familiar hymns.
Marc h by the Meigs County
Scripture was given by Se nior Citii e ns.
Mike Knight . Darla Hawl ey
On Saturday from 8 to 11
wa s pian ist For the service.
p .m . a t the Pomer oy
Ushers were Be linda Friend , Ele mentary School a square
Contribution s
to
th e
Ka thy Scarberry, Rick Ash
aerial ladder fir e tru ck
da nce will be held with the
a nd Rand all Hawley , with
lund and the t)_cart fund we re
" Str ingdusters "
providing
pra yer by the Rev. Floy d
made at a recen t mee ting of
the m usic. Admission is $1
Shook . . The program con- pe r pe r son with c hildre n
the Light and Life Men 's
cluded with a duet, " I Wish
Fellowship of the Laure l Cliff
under 12 be ing a dm itted free.
We Would Ha ve All Bee n
Free Methodis t Church.
On Marc h 12 from 4 to 7
Rea dy" by J a ne J acobs a nd p.m . at the Ce nte r , a panca ke
Meeting at the parsonage,
Diane Lewis .
the meeting op e ned with
and Sa usage supper will be
prayer by the Rev. Fl oyd
ser ve d . Tickets ar e n ow
Shook. Pearl Jacobs read
BIRTHDAY HONORED
ava ilable at the Center or
Th e e ighth bir thday of from an y membe r of the
from Acts 2, with J a mes
Gilmore giving "How to Live Curtis Braley was celebrated Coun cil on A ~in g . The Meigs
Close to the Lord ," and the Sund ay with a fam ily dinner United Methodi s t Men ·are
Rev . Mr. Shook , "The Grace a t the home of his grand- donating the pan cake mix
of God." The financi a l re port parents·, Mr. and Mrs. Ernes t and will be he lping with the
was given by Ed Van [n. Powe ll. Attending were Mrs. supper.
wagen .
Mary Bra ley , Jackie , TimOn Ma rch 26 a soup bea n
Plans were discu.Sed for a m y, Curtis, Sean a nd Jamie, and cornbread suppe r will be
softball team with final R obin Ca mpbell , Ronnie served a t the Center . Servi ng
arrangements to be made at Bac hte l, Ja ye Roberts , Mr. will be from 4 to 7:30p.m. and
the next meeting .to be held at and Mrs . Ivan Pow~ll a nd e nter tainme nt · will
be
the home of Gilmore.
Iva n Euge ne.
featured duri ng the evening.

inf.e1cst

Dear Too Much :
No ! But a husband needs time to adjust , especially if be
hasn 't planned ahead for an active retirement.
Separaterl from his job James no doubt feels useless , so he
clings to you as the one person who still wants him . Wben be
finds new interests and hobbies, he 'll probably agree that tbe
best kind of togetherne ss happens when you spend ma ny hours
apart . (As in, " For better or for worse, but not for lunch every
day. ") - H.

third row, Phil Ohlinger, Jim Bennett, Frank Timmons,
Greg Leschishin, Mike Justice, Howard McDaniel, Jim
Hollinger, Vinton Rankin and Greg Bane, top row,
Director Merlyn Ross. Not pictured , Gregg Smith, Kyle
Drew and Edie Ross.

World Day of Pra yer will
be cele br a te d Friday by
Churc h Wome n United of
Meigs County who will join in
a c ha in of prayer with
millions of people in 169
countries.
The Meigs County serv ice
will be held at the Minersville
United Methodist Churc h a t
1:30 p.m . a nd will feature a
Spa nish s peaking g ues t
soloist who will accompany
herself on the guitar. In
addi tion Mrs. Marcia Russe ll
of the hos t church will have a
s pec ia l program for the
children attending .
This year the wors hip
serv ice has bee n prepared by
women in Latin American
a nd re fl ects t he th em e
" Education for All of Life."
Concrete situatio.ns, common
to the lives of some L.atin
Amer ican women, form an
integral part of the worship
exper ience .
This marks the 90th year of
the ecumenical celebration of
World Day of Prayer. The
offe ring this year will go into
a fund admini stered by the
In ter contin en tal Mission
Committee of Church Women
United, all owing fo r the
annua l grant to women 's
colleges in As ia and the
Middle East to be continued .
The Committee on Christian
Litera ture for Women and
Childre n, founded with World
Da y of Prayer gifts ; also
r eceived an annual grant.
Funds will also be allocated
to writers 1 workshops wher e
women are trained to prepa r e
literature rela ted to the ir
special needs in the areas of
fai th., family life , nutriti on
ary d developme nt.
Annual gifts fro m the offe rings are a lso rnade for a
Christian ministr y in ni)tional
parks, for sc holarships for
women throug h the World
Council of Churc hes, and to
the In ternationa l Committee
for the World Day of Prayer
for leadership training.
The offe rings also make
possible gifts for short-term
proje c ts relate d to th e
Celebration theme . This year
gifts are being m a de through
Churc h World Se rvice and

In 1~. five coogressmen
were wounded when Puerto
Rican nationalists began
shooting from the gallery of
the
U .S.
House
of
Representatives.

POMEROY
CEM.ENT BLOCK ·CO.
The Department Store
of Building Since 1915.

�..
61lhe

7-'lbe l'lllUy Sentino1, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, u ., Monaay, J¥U&lt;rcu '· mu
Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomer oy, 0 ., Monday , March 1, 19i6

~ l1/1~)1[g® /4.J 1/;tGM&amp;IJ ..-J ~

l'tturamhl..rhto~e fourJumblrs.

one lt&gt; ll t'r 10 ea.c h squ a re, lo
fo r m fo ur o rd i n a ry wo rd s .

SN.HB

. .

I I

(j

v .
L' 0 r

•

Fast Results Use The Sentin.e l Class.ifieds
•

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Auto Sales

~~A­

I YULTIG
I
[]
I [ )
UNTH.-tG

HOW A GUY WH O 'S
LOOt&lt; I NG FOR SOA~E

'AC.TION ' MIGHT Ei'JD UP.

I

( )I

"

Now arrange the l'ircled letters
to form the surprise ans""·er, as
SUif[ltsted by the above cartoon.

IPrilll die Sllt'I!IISHNSWIR here I IN [ I 1 XI I X :u
CAn8 .. rrl tumo rroM •
Juno!.!.·· · HAZEL

~111unl ~, · ~

·

I

DADDY

M AGNUM

AMOEBA

1\,. ••n . " Lady- look both u ·ay»! ..-"MAOAM"

NOTICE OF
APOINTMEN T
ca sr: N o 217 42
E state of Va nd en W. Bu zz a r d,
Dec ea se d.

IN THE

COMMON PLE A S COURT
OF M E G I S COUN T Y ,
OHIO
WAND A -RIZER .
N o tice is he r e b y gi v en t h a t
FRANKLIN M . RIZ E R , Her
t ci e M B uuar d . of Ro u t e 4,
H us band,
P om e r o y . Ohi o , h a s b een duly
E a s t M~in Str ee t,
ap poin t ed Adrm n lst rat r i K of
th e Es tate of V an den W . • Pom eroy , Ohto 45 7611 ,
P laintiff .
Buu ard , d ece as ed , la t e of
vs.
M eig s Cou n t y , Ohio .
HELEN HENDRICKS , wh ose
Cr e d ito rs arc requi r ed to
l a st k nown
re s1 denc c w as
fi le th eir c la im s w d h said
Park er sburg , W . Va .• Addre ss
fi duci ary wit hi n four m onth s
no w unk nown ,
Date d lh is 25t h day ot
F ebr u ary 197 6.
UN KN OWN
HEIRS ,
DEVISEES ,
LEGATEES ,
M an ni n g D W ebSt E' r
DISTRIBUTEES ,
AO
Judg e
M INI STRATOR S,
AND
( 3 1 1, 8, 15, 3t c
EXECUTORS, IF ANY , OF
TH E E ST ATE OF GEORGE
HENDRICKS ,
SR ,
DECEASE 0 ,
Add ·r e sHs

ALow Cost
Want Ad
Will Cut
Cost of

Uving
. .•••••
WRITE YOUR
'
OWN AD! .
ITS EASY TO
ORDER BY
J

MAIL!
-SPECIAL!-

12 WORDS
4 DAYS
$}25

ONLY

CASH WITH
. ORDER

AVAILABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
NO REFUNDS.
Each initia I and
group of figur es
counts as one word.
Be sure to count
name and address . if
used, and your phone
number.
Including
prlces for items offered in your want ad
w iII
1ncrease
response.

1.
2.

UNKNOWN
H E I RS ,
DEVISEES ,
LEGATEES ,
DISTRIBUTEES ,
AD ·
A ND
M IN ISTRATO R S,
EXEC U TORS, I F ANY , OF
TH E ES T A TE OF HELEN
H E NDRICK S,
DECEASED .
Addre ss es unk nown,
UNKNOWN
HEIR S .
DEVISEES ,
LEGATEES ,
DI S TRIBUTEE S ,
AD ·
M INI STR ATO R S,
A ND
EXEC UTOR S, IF ANY , OF
TH E ES T ATE OF MAGG IE
HU RD , D EC E ASED ,
Ad·
dr ess es U n known .
Defendant s.
SERV I CE BY
PU. BLICATION
TO
T HE
DEFENDANTS
ABOVE NAMED :
You ar e h e r e by n o l ,f &lt;e d I hal
y ou
h av e
bee n
na me d
D e f endan ts i n a leg al ac t ion
entill ed ! " W an d a R iz.e r , e ta l
V s . ·H ar ry Po f t s, Jr .. E&gt; l a l ." in
th e Co mm on P l ea s Co urt "o f
M e tgs Count y Gh1o , Ca se No
160 22
T h e o bj e ct o t t h e
Co m p la in t b e ing to p a rt 1t ion
th e fo ll ow in g de sc r 1bed r ea t
es t a t e, to w i t .
Th e fo ll owrn g desc nb e d r ea l
es t.;! t e situa t e i n the Vi llag e of
Sy ra cuse . m M e1gs Co un t y ,
bou n de d
and
O'h10 , and
d esc r i b ed as fol lows . Bemg
To w n Lot N o . On e ( 1l 1n
Car l eto n 's Ad d 1teon to sa1d
V i llag e of Sy r a cus e, Oh1o .
and t h e d em and o f the
Co m p la in t 1s to sel l Dclen
dant s ' in t er est in th e a bove
d es cr i bed pr em lses .
Y ou ar e no tif ie d th at you ar e
the
r e qu1 r ed
to
an s w er
Comp laint w i t h in tw enty e ight
day s a ft er th e la st publ i c at ion .
wh1 ch w il l b e p u bl iSh e d on ce
e ach w ee k for s i x consec utiv e
we e k s . The l a s t p ubli c at ion
will b e m ad e on the 22nd day
of Mar ch, 19 76 .
In cas e of y our failur e ro
an swe r or ot h er wis e r e spon d
;;~s
p er m it ted by t he Ohi o
Ru l es o f Civ1l Pr oce d ur e
th e
l im e
s tal e d ,
w it h in
iud gm enl b Y d efaul t w i ll ' b e
r end er e d aga in st yo u t or the
r e l i e f d e m a nd ed
in
lh f"
Co m p ain t .
Lar ry E . Spenc er
Clerk o f Cour t
M ei g s County , Oh io
(? I i t. , 23, ( 31 I. B. 15, 22. 6t c

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF ME1GSCOUNTY ,
OHIO

1975 CHEV . IMPALA 4 OR .

Notice ·
MAK E SURE yo u ge t ev er y
p ossi bl e ded uc t io n th is year
Hav e y o u r Fe de r a l a n d
State In come T ax r eturn by
an a cco untant . Ph o n e 99 2
61 73 .
1 21 52 tc
I NCOME
Tax
Sc r v 1c e.
F ede r a l o r St a t e ta xes
P l1o n e 99 2 7 228
o r se e
W all a ce Ru ss e l l. Br a dbur y .
l -30 26 1C

O LD furnitu re . i ce boxes .
b ras s
b eds ,
o ld
wall
telephone s and p ar is. or
comp le te h ou seho ld s Wr i t e
M
D
Mill e r ,
R l . 2,
Pom er oy , Ohi o . Ca ll 992
77 60 .
10 7 7 ·1

C I\ S H p a 1d f o r a ll ma k es and
m odel s of mob il e h omes
Phon e ar ea cod e 614 423
953 1.
. 4 rr u c
-

HeIP wan Ied

1975 PINTO MPG
1974 OA TSUN 710 CPE .

S269S

19 72 (A M A RO . V 8. p .s ., d isc
bra k es , ai r co n d i t i on ing ,
au t o m at1 c
E )( ce l len t
co n d it ion an d eas y on gas
As k i n g $2 , 600 . b ut w i l l
h a c Kl e Phon e 992 73 60 a ft er

1971 CH EV . Sub ur ba n 350, V8
At . p b , p .s . Com e see ,
ma k e o ff er P h on e 992 2 1178.
2 27 41C
Ton l nt ernal1 ona l P1 c kup , 4
s p . t ra n s miS Si o n·. h eav y
d ul y sp r 1ngs . A p p r ox . 10,000
mi les . Phon e 99 2 70 17
2 27 61p

197-1

M US T A N G II Ghia ,
e ~.: ce ll e nt c on d i ti On . P S. P B .
air condit ion in g , P h one 9'n
39 9.1 or 992 767 1.
2 27 3tp

1973 MO NT E Ca rl o . pow er
w in dow s a n d doo rl o c k s, ai r ,
SJ ,OOO. Ph on e 91i12 22 43 .
2 25 6t p

5 p m.

For Sale

RED UC E sal e and f as t w it·h
G o Bese Tab lets &amp; E Yap
· wat er
p il l s ,"
N el son
Dru gs
3 '· 1tp

MEDICAL
-SECRETARY
•

CALL

446-5189
Gallipolis, Ohio
AS SI ST A NT DIRECTOR , A id
exec ut 1ve in s ta ff c a pa c i t y
by c o or d1 nat i n g
off ice
ser vices . su ch as b ud g et
pr eparat io n , and c on trol ,
c on t ra ct
ad
r e v 1e w
m i n i s tr a r1on
a nd
co
o·rd1nat e co l l ectio n a n d
pr ep arat io n of
r eport s,
$9,00 0. E x pe r 1en ced and or
t rai n e d appl i c ant . Sen d
r es u m e to A H D . E C 0 . p ·
0
B o ~t · 1525 , P or tsmou t h
Ohio .
3 J 3tc

For Rent
2 BE DRM m obt le h om e, ve ry
n 1ce P h one 992 332-1.
2 79 II C
3 BEDRM . f urn is h ed h om e ,
al so a · m ob i le ho me •n
M idd l ep ort , $40 wee k . gas
an d wat e r p a id Phon e 992
35 09 or inqu 1r e at Box 1595 ,
Buc key e Lak e, Oh io .
2 29 t f c
TWO be dr rn . b al h , on twp
roJd . four mt les to m 1n e n o
3 Ph on e (6 1il ) 669 395 3.
2 29 Jt p
TRAILE R s pa c e . J 1 mil e
north o f M eig s H ig h Sc hool
on o ld R t . 33 P h on e 99'} '1 94 1
2 ?9 3t c
F URN I SHED a p t . 5 r oo m s
an d bath , larg e b ack and
f r ont por c h w i t h y a r d ,
ut i l1fi es p a id . Call b efor e 6 p .
, m . 99 7 2937
2 26 6t c

La Salle
HOTEL

Gt\ S DRYE R . l ik e new , $50 ,
c a sh r eg 1s ter , R . C . Al len ,
SJO Phon e 747 ?45 9
? ?7 3t c
F IRE WO OD , ph on e 949 1089
2 1B 121c
G OOD hay , n e"v e r w et
949 7523

Ph one
2 25 6tc

197 4
750 TRI U MPH Tr id en t
m o t o r c y c l e, 2. 80 0 m i l es ,
exc ellen t c ondi t ion . $2,000
A l so , 19_66 V . W .. goo d c on
d Ji to n an d pri ce d to sell
Phon e 949 2 133 .
2 25 Stc
SUPE R fl. F arm al l , n ew p a in t
iob , n ew ba tt er y . c u11 1vat or ,
att il c hm c n t ,
t e r t il i ze r
H 11t er s , in good con dit iOn .
Pr iced to s e ll Pho n e 9.19
276 1. A lb ert H i ll. Ra ci n e,
Oh ro
10 SP E ED b 1c y c te E )( c ell enl
con dd 1on . S60. P h on e 99?
586 •1

NOTICE T.O
W ARE HOU SE or s t ore r oom ,
CONTRA CTORS
LLOYD SEL LARD S, ET AL. ,
24x 48 , 3 11 Condor Sl , ( r ear
ST A TE OF OHIO
M•ddleport, 0 . Ph : 992 ·2771
Plaintiffs,
6 10 E . Main St. l. R en t all or
D E PARTMENT OF
vs.
pa rt Phone 91il 7 7178 .
TRANSPORTATION
FLOYD SELLARDS, ET AL. ,
2 26 6t c
Columbu s, Ohi o
D ef en da n t s .
Febr u ary 13,1976
Contract Sal e s
No.1 5,953
COAL . l i me s t one a n d all typ es
L eg a l Copy No. 76 ·35
- NOTICE OF SALE o f sa H and ro c k sail f or icc
UNIT PRICE C.ONTRAC T
Pur suan t to an Ord er o t Sal e
and "s now r e mo v al
E.:
Seal ed p r o pos a l s w i l l I:J e
issu ed b y th e Com m on Pl eas
ce ls1o r Salt Works , East
re
cei
v
ed
at
the
Off1ce
ot
th
e
Co urt Of M e 1g s County , Oh 10. I
Ma i n SL, Pomeroy , Oh io .
0 1r ec tor o f th e Ohio D epart
wi ll o ff er for sal e at publ 1c
PhOn e 99 2·3891.
m
en
l
of
Tr
a
n
s
portation
,
a uc t ion on th e 3rd . da y of
12 7 tf c
Co
l
umbu
s
,
Ohi
o
,
until
10
:00
A pr1l , 1976 , at 10 00 A M on
A
.M
..
Oh
io
Standard
Time
.
th e Co.u rl Ho u se Step s a t lh e
M c DANIEL
Cu s t om
But
Co u rt Ho.u se ' in Pom e roy , Tuesday , Mar c h 9, 19 76, tor HOU SE 1n R ut land Cilll 9"92
i mprov em ent s in :
ch ering , West Columbia , w .
Oh io , th e foll ow i ng desc rib ed
S 8~ 8
M e ig s Coun t y , Ohio , on
Va We b u tch er ca t lle and
rea l es tat e
1 ' ' 11c
ho g s .
$ 10
ca tt le
Th e fol low i n g, r ~ a l es ta1 e Sec tion MEG 7 (0 .08 ) ( 8 341,
Stat e Ro u t e 7 in Sa l isbury
s la ug ht er ; S7 for hog s ; 12c
situ a te d in t h e Co unt y o f
Town s h i p .
by
r e m o ving 3 ROOM F ur n 1s hed apart
f or cuttin g and wrappin g .
M eig s, m I h e St a te o f Oh10 and
Stat e and f e d era l Inspect ed ;
in t he Vi ll age o f Rut l and , e x 1s t in g g uard r ail an d con
m ent ,
10
mi l e s
f ro m
Open 6 day s p er week
bound ed and d es c r i bed a s s tru ct ing Typ e !i guard rail ,
Pomero y
Phon e 992 616 1
i nclud i ng r e s hap1n g _ berm.s
Phon e (3011) 882 322 4.
follow s · Be in g Lol N u m b ~ r
7 77 61c
1 30 -261 C
Fo ur (4) in L uh 's Ad di! ion to and an ch or ass embli es.
P
r
oj
ect
L
ength
3.55
m
il
es
.
R utlan d , Oh 10
ap t .
in
R e f ere n c e D eed . V o l. 26 1, ~ " The d at e se t tor c omp le t ion U N F U R NI S H E D
I N D A SH 23 ch an nel c i tizen s
l. p ag c 945 . Dee d Rec ord s M eig s o f thi s work shall b e a s se t . Pom er oy . 2 b ed r m . n ewly
band , tran sce iv er , A M -FM
fort
h
in
th
e
bid
ding
proposa
l.
"
red
ecorated
,
t
ul
l
y
c
ar
pe
t
ed
.
Cou n t y , Oh io .
MPX r adio , 8 track tape
Ea
c
h
b
i
dd
e
r
s
hall
b
e
Call
in
th
e
ear
l
y
a
.
m
99
2
Tti is pr op er t y is locate d on
p lay er Call 992 J96 5
r
equ
ir
ed
to
fil
e
with
hi
s
bi
d
a
22
88
.
D epo t Str ee t bet w ee n Stat e
2 26 tf c
ce r1 i t1 ed c he c k or c ash1er 's
2 22 lfc
R o ut ~ 1211 an d Tow n sh ip Road
176wh ic h c r o sses or int e r se c t s c h eck for an amoun I eq ual to
74x24 F T . MEL MAR Motor
sai d Depot Str e e t im m e dra te l y f ive per cent o f hi s b id, I:J u t 1n
Home . one of the best , ex E as t an d W es t , r eSp ec t i v ely , no ev ent m ore than f1fty ENJOY grac io us l i v in g a t :
c ellent conditio n , cost over
tho
us
an
d
do
l
lar
s,
o
r
a
bond
for
llag
e
Manor
~
1n
Mid
V
i
pt sa id prop ert y Th ~J" re is n o t e n per cent of hi s bi d , payabl e
$20,000 new , com pl ete l y self
dl eport t or a s low a s $ 130
s t r e et number
cont ai n ed , 5000 watf gen . 3
to
the
Dire
c
tor
.
p
e
r
mon
t
h
with
al
l
T erm s of sa l e : Cas h , l or not
air cond it ion er s, fu.rnace,
Bid der s mu s t appl y 1 on th e
u ! il i l.i ~s
paid .
. T .h~
less than two th ird s of th e proper
ba th , h ot wa t er h eater , gas
f orm s. tor qualtfi c at1on
are
brand
new
h
ig
h
qua
l
1ty
ap pra ise d valu e, a n d ~ubie c t
and e lec . r ef ., am fm radio
a
t
lea
s
t
l
en
days
prior
to
the
a
part
men
t
~
at
prices
you
to r e al es tat e taxes f or 1976.
sl ereo throughout , r o l! out
dat e set f o r openmg bi d s 1n
can . afford . Your rent in
Pr ope rly
a p pra ise d
al
awning , auto . transmission ,
acc or d an ce with Cha p ter 5525
e l ude s m on t h to m o n t h
$10 ,500.00
ps , an d pb , mu c h m ore .
Oh io Revise d CoQ e .
le a se s , a l l e l ec
l i vi n g,
Phon e 9-19 2710 ,
Plan s an d spe c 1fi ca t1 ons ar e
carp
e
t
i
ng
,
rang
e
and
Ro b ert C Harl enba c h , on f il e in th e Depa rt m en t of
i 26 7k
refrig
era
t
o
r
,
tr
ee
trash
Sh enff of
Tran sport a tion an d the o ff ice
pi
ckup
.
c
abl
e
T
V
at
your
Mei qs Count y , Oh 10 of
AL L I S C HA L M E RS round
the
0 1s tri c t
D e puty
ex p en s e ,
and
o n si t e (3 l 1. 8, 15. 21. . ?9 . St c
ba le r , g ood condi t ion and
Dir ect or .
l a undry· fac i l i t i es
Co n .
tan d em 8 wheel fertilizer
The Drr ector r ese rv es th e
ve n ient to shoppin g on Third
spread er , and 500 bal es
rig h t to r e j ec t an y a nd a ll b id s.
and Mill Stre e ts 1n M id ·
c lean straw . Phone 9119 2770
dleport· See th e manager a l
2-26- 61C
RI
C
H
A
RD
D
J
A
C
K
SON
R i v ers 1de Apartm ents or -·~----Today is Monday, March I,
--~--- -- ·
DIRE CTOR
call 992 -32 73. Fu rn ish e d BALED HAY , $1.00 pe r ba l e
ille 61st day of 1976 with 305 to
apartments
are
a l so
Phone (61JI 985 -4207 . Ca l l
(2 l 23 13 1 1, 2t c
follow .
avai l able .
an y time .
2 2 78tc
The moon is moving toward
2 26 ·4t p

Rooms, '5.00 up
Special Rates
by Wee~

5.

6.
7.

8.
9.

10.
11.
12..
NAME
ADDRESS

,,
.

CITY .
PHONE
MAIL WITH
11.25
'
TO ll!E
I

---

bAlLY SENTINEL ·
"

The evening stars are

" lll COURT ST.

ifPOMEROY,
. - OHIO '.
"'115169

'
'

the first quarte r .
The morning s tars are
Mercury and Venus

"

Mars , Jupiter a nd &amp;!turn .
'!)lose born on this day ·are
wider the sign of Pisces .
,American
singer-actress
Dina h Shore was born on
March I, 1920.

-

Also on this day in history :

In 1181, the American colonies adopted the Articles of
Con fe deration , pa v ing the
way for a federal union.
In 1803, Ohio became the .
17th state of the Union.

·-- ---..,.-----··- -··----

3 A ND 4 RM . furn is h ed a~-d · TWO 10 sp ee d bicycles , $35
unfurnish ed apt $ Phone 992
and $,15. 1 inch reet lape
!io.I JJ
reco r de r ,
$50 . . Sq uare
11 9 lfc
Shoo t er P o laroid camera ,
$ 15. PhQne 91il2 7551 .
COUNTR Y
Mob i l e Hom e
3 I 3t c
Park , Rt . 33, ten m il es north
o f Pomer o y Large lOi s w i th·
1,000 BALES of hay . Phone
c oncr e te pat iOS, ~sidewa lk s ,
Ha rold Roush , Portla n d ,
r unn ers and off slreel
843 22 55 .
pa r king . Phone 992 7479.
'J 25 6tc
:2 -31 t·f c

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph. 992 .2174

From a sh e lf to a hou se. all
types of bu ilding itnd
re m odeling
from
th e
foundation up . Add itton s,
carpeting , painting , siding,
roofing , paneling·, paper
hang ing etc .. ..

PomeroY

WEST

EAST

..

. 72
•K 3

.'

'

• Q 10874
• 9 8 53

• A 10 7
• A2

.,'

?-19 1 mo .

•9 3

• 64
SOUTH (D)

A SP H A LT lN G dr i v ew ays an d
park in g lots . sep t1 c tan k s
m SI &lt;t t l ed , c o n cr et i ng an d
ba c kh o e wor k . F o w l er ' s
C o n s t ru c tion P hon !!- 99 7
/ J8t or 7&lt;1 2 ?593.
2 24 6tc

Ph . (614) 985-4102
2 11-1 mo .

~te

BA C K HOE S
AND DOZ Ef&lt; LARG E AND
';M A LL , S EPTI C T A NK S
IN S TALLED .
B I LL
P U LLIN S, PHONE 99 2 2478,
D A Y OR N I G HT
2 2'1 52tp

ABOUT

WI L L T R t1-ll
c u t tr ecs ., and
Sh rubb er y
P hone 949 25 .15
o r 747 3 167 .
2 27 261C

pa t io . garag e,

c lo se

schoo l. $30,000.
NEEDED
3

or

to
4

par tition s, sh o w er or t ub,
wou ld have a lo ve l y home.
Lot al on e wOr th a sking

pri ce .
CAL L
PARTI CULAR S.

H OM E t or sa l e . s pa c iou s
l 1ving r oom . din in g _r oo m . 2
b e dr ooms . l ar ge kllc h c n ,
ba t h ,
fi'l m i ty ro om . new
P h on e 99 ? 73 9 4
2 '].t 61(

A BUY -

FOR
$7 ,000.
on each

Hom es
sfde ha ve sold for

525.000. 3BR , 1'''

ov er

ba ths,

lovely kit c hen w it h e~ tr as ,
full ba sem en t . HW heat,
dose to shopp ing . A LOW

ROO M h ou se , 11 ~ bat h
Phon e 99 2 3 129 or 992 54 34
2 29 3t c

$17,000.
ANNUAL INCOME
About $5 ,000 .00 plus ga s

BEDR M
h ome .
ju s t
f i n ish ed , ·r e mo ae lin g . Sa lem
St , R utla n d . Ph one 7J2 2306
a ft e r rl p .m . or se e Mi lo B
Hut c h ison .
9 23 ti c

we ll Home and 2 apfs . ha s
free gas. &amp; own wat er
.. ys t em s, 22 ac re s wrfh
bu i lding sit es. CAL L.

TO SEL L- LET US HE LP
YOU - CALL TODAY .
992 -2259 or 992-2568

--- - c:.--=
-c......=~=~

For Sale

-

BR , 2 bath s, large k it chen ,
recreation R . lo;,rge glassed

Real Estate For Sale

MOD E RN h om e in Ch es ter , 8
room s. 2 bath s, 2 por c h es ,
sun p orch , 1 ~ basemen t. c ity
and w ell water , n a t ural ga s.
garag e. Pric e d to se l l
Phone ! 614 ) 98 5·11 107.
2·4 t f c

ACRES

s 19,500.
FULLFAMILYHOME-4

O P E NED ! ! ! Hun t ' s Pe l Sh op ,
2 1, mi l es n o rth e ast o f
Ch e s ter , Oh 1o on Rt 748 W e
sp ec iaf ize in trop ic a l f 1sh
and s"upp t1es
~ p e c 1 a l s all
th is w ee k !
·
'] 15 6tp

3

'•

THREE B E DRM two b a th
hom e. fu lly c ar pe t ed , o v er
a c r e gr oun d , full y
la nd
sc aped two fam ily r oo m s 1 12X4 6 ov er look ing Oh io
Riv er . So m e f urn itu re and
all app li an c es . bo at doc k ,
L oc at ed n e ar Po meroy ,
Oh io , pri ce d $ ~8 . 5 0 0 . Cal l 1
(6 14) 992 3018 to see
' 2 27 31p

197 5 K AWA SAKL jooc c s tr eet
bike in eKcell enl cond i tio n
wit h · lo t s of a cce ssor ies.
Phon e 992 60311. after 6 p m
2 29 3t c . LARGE HOU SE m to wn l or
s ale or t rad e l or s ma lle r
---------~--...ho me . Ph one 99 2 71 97.
M A N URE loa d er. $]75 . Ph one
2 27 31 p
(614) ]78 .6J 11 after 6 p .m .
2 29 .6tc
7 RM House , n ew a l u m inum
s iding at G a ll ipolis F erry ,
MIX E D hay , 70C ba le . Phone
W . V a . on :~ ~ a c re lo t n ea r
( 6 1.:1) 378 631 1 a f ter 6 p .m .
hard road . Cheap , co m e see .
2 29 6tc
Phon e (3 04 1 675 2946 .
- ---·-·L----2 27 61p
!.25 PER HUNDRED stuff 1ng
env elop e s .
Se n d
self
1
addressed , stamped en . ON I:: A tt-n::~ 6 rm s an d bath .
Rt . 3. P o m e ro y , R6se Hil l.
v elope . T . K . Enlerprise ,
O ic,k D a v is p r op ert y , full
Box 26 , Stanber r y , M o .
ba se ment ,
aluminum
64489 .
2 29" 7tp
siding , pane led . SI O,OOO. Cal l
Oak Hill 68 5 6576 e venings ,
Ja c k son '2 86 3004 days .
T WO caLves , m i)(ed Her e ford
2-5 30tp
.
cow with ca lt Phone 843

-

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

23 53.

J

Now at Landmark

!~\

;.._lllll,jii-~
-

mt.~

JUOGI! CIIIAttS
IWI HOT $JGIEO
1141! OIIOER 1HAT

OCIILO ,._ P!&lt;l
~ LITTLE BlllV
BAC"- TO HIS
FATHER•

POMEROY LANDMARk
. . . _Jock W. Carsey. Mgr .
,..
PhOne 992-2111

ctJAC 'rOR

Sf\L E CA·iJ-i:oa"if
Compan y , 1 mi l e nor th of
Ch e sh ir e. on Rl . 7. P ick yo ur
own , i20 per Io n Open 6 d ays
per w ee K. or call (6 14 ) 367 · ·
73 30 tor f ur t h er information .
1 78tc

a

F~O~E~F-Jl~
I'LL 00 IT M"(
WA'f~

',.

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

I

'JOU MEAN

WI:'RE

TUESDAY. MARCH l, 1976
6:00-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6: 15-Farm Report 13,
6:2G-Rev. Cleophus RObinson 13.
6:30-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester!;
Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
6:4()--Qunce of Prevention 10. ·

6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:55-Chuck White Reports 10: Good Morning, Trl
Slate 13.
7:00-Today 3.4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS ._.
News B; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:3G-School les 10.8:00-Lassle 6: Capt. Kangaroo
8, 10; Sesame St . 33.
8 :3G- Big Valley 6.
9:00-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Luq , ..
Show B; Wk• Douglas 10; Morning wllh D.J . 13,
9:30-A.M. 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
10:00-Ce lebrlty Sweepstakes 3.4.15; Edge of Night 6;
Pr ice is Righi 8,10.
10:'3G-High Rollers 3,4,15; Dinah 6.
11 :00-Wheel ol Fortune 3, 15; Weekday 4; Gambit
8, 10; Farmer's Daughfler 13; Elec. Co. 20.
11 :3G-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Happy Days 13; Love
of Life 8, 10; Sesame St. 20.
11:55-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
12 : 00-Magn lflcent Marble Mach lne 3,15; Let's Make a
Deal13; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News 6.8,10.
,l
12:3G-Take My Advice 3.15; All My Children 6,131

15

SEW I NG M A CH IN E R epa1 rs ,
sen dee . a l l m a k es 992 22 84
the F a br ic Sh op , Pomeroy .
A u t h or 1Ze d Sin ger Sal es and -"~
Se r vi c e
We
sharpen ,
1
Sc issor s
3 29 t f c
gr av el ,." :

I F Y O U n eed yo ur
h auled . c a ll ( 61.t l 985 4 119
an y tim e.
2 18 12tp

i lf l•

GASOUNE ALLEY

too old-to
IIVIrlrl

fnl~ic;.

.With 40Ur

It's aoc)a
when one
knows one's
own -faults!

IF INTER E STED in b u il d ing ,,
a
n ew
h ome .
c onta c t ....
R O U SH CO N ST R U CTION , :....,
f ree est im a t es , Gr eg RoU sh ,""'
99'1 ] 583 .
2 18 12t c
LU C K ET T F ar m Equ i pm ent ,
We!l t
W as h in g ton
St . 1
A l bany . Phon e (t.I JJ 698 30 32
or 698 7881
·, 18 26t c

I haven't
done one
worthwhile
thinq in
tnll whole
1ife!

You a1lrr1ost
married
f'---:;'&gt;'h:J.

me '

...':,

~

P A, P E R h a n g i n g , pa i nting ,
pan elin g . e tc . Phon e 9,119
2023
'l 1811tp • •

.,,

--- --·--

R E A DY MIX C ON' ~: "'c:: , t:•
d e liv e red ri gh t to yOJ.Jr
pro jec t. F a st and easy . Free •'
es ti m at es. P h one ~92 3284,
Goegt e in Rea d y M i K ' Co ..
M iddl eport , Ohio .
6 30 rt c

1-!MM!!-THAT PLACE IS
TCO WEL.L GUARDED. SIJMMON MY
FLYIN6 CARPETr!- . r-----:J

IN THE BACI&lt;WARD
WESTE='f&lt;N WORLD
THEY'D CALL'THAT

OF

.....

2 Tilting, as
a ship

3 Expressed
an aspiration 14 wds,)
4 Night
before
5 Toothed
6 Possession
7 Shea
Stadium
athlete
8 Venetian
landmark
(3 wds.)
9 Streaked
with
lines
10 Registered
17 Undivided

Yesterday'sAII8Wel"
ZO Famed
political
cartoonist
23 Burrowing
beast
24 Take an
oath
25 Sile of
Dante's
tomb

CAN'T 'IOJ AT
LEAST 6 1VE N\f;:
A HINT OF WHAT
~15 IS ALL
ABOUT?

,.
'

26 EMui
28 Hood's rod

30 Took
.heed
31 Pens
35 In our
midst
3'1 Before
39 Japanese

river

ALL I CAN
6AY 18 .. ..
MOON
LADY!

j~

AstraGraph
Bernice B - Oool
For T - r . MII'Ch 2, 1171

(Morell 21·Ajlrll 11)

.

OI!MlNI (Moy 21-June 20) The

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTEis

TE

11
II

Xp N

Here'~

how to work it :

AXYDLBAAXR
I.ONGFI!LLOW

PITTER

·.Mrr&amp;R

_'_,

leadership rote in any groUp
endeavor today Is likely to fall
on you . Use your In it iative to
get things rolling .

fare rather well.

are your strong sutt. You c. r

work tn harmony wtlh IIIIi
about anybody.

8CORP10 (Ool 14-Nor Ill
There won1 be much loolfnl

around tor you today. ft ohouM
be a vwy pooducltwl doy.
•
IAGmARIUI ( -

~

~

C W A.

Ap

TW

I.PRRXSPPZ ,

QP

AP

WVS

FV
FV

c

X P J U .- F VJ A

for you today. Putthat., ftM·

PISCES (Fib 20-M-

Cryptoquote: CYNICS_ ARE ONLY HAPPY IN
MAKING THE WORLD AS BARREN FOR OTHERS AS THEY

GEOROB

:=t:~~ ;~~~ya ~~~:::;,~;~0~~

endeavor .

are very encouraging. II 1'011'111
enterprising, you could
your bank balance.

boOIIII

·

'

·r.

w~

MII'Ch 2, 1111

Opportunities are all aratiiW
you that you may h..,.lgn.,..
In the paat. This coming ryou will be able to lake 1 .....
cond look. and reap 11 ....,_

LIBRA (Sept 2:1•0CI 23) To- · ed harvest

I COULD WRITE
SQ\IE THIN6 00 IT ABouT
THE SICENTENNIAL

Ill

Over the next few Mya COftoo ,
ditlons affecting you m...,.

day. Become Involved in things
where you can use your

R C I. J Avenues ol gain cometh rough

tit

mind of yours to good use, for•
yourself and others.

D N M M V D D ag ,nation Is especially keen to-

D N J Y · C W Z crealive abllllles to the lullesl.
VIRGO (Aug 23·Sept tiJ

HAVE MADE IT FOR THEMSELVES. JIEQDITH

AQUARIUS (Jifl 20-fob

Mental tasks should be 1 II'IIP

LEO (Jul~ 23·Auo 22) Your lm-

'vaieniay•s
ONE OF THESE DAYS
I'M DIGGIN'ME A
DADBURN WELL

~

'

wr•tit

CRYPTOQUOTES

'·
:.
•:
:;

.

day you wlll naturally lall l!IW;
partnershiO situations, whllli~'

should ftnd you'll have
21) You're a Joyous , _ -r
more elbow room toda)' to act
well-mel today. You'll brlgIndependently of others
Bny group you're part of.
demands. Concentrate on ad. CAPRICORN (Dec 21.....
vancing your own Interests.
If you have a chance to
-+--t--ITAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) things up in an Important sttuetoday to clean up a
tlon today, by all means do to.
11-1--t- + - t--JI.;;-&amp;;t,,;'·ime
you know wlisn 't hand1- . Don't teave loose ends, even If .
-:-+-t--t-t--Jiotilerp5roperly, even though you have 10 push othtrl con.
~
may not be aware of the cerned .

One l('lt er simply stands lor nnother . In this sample A is CANCER (June 2t-July 22)
u:-;erl for the three I.'s, X f(,r the two O's, ('IC. Si ngle l e tters. The next few days you may be
even more ambitious than
apostrophes, lhe length And for mation of the words are all
usual. T houg h you ' ll h~t_ve
hints. Ench day the ('ode l etlers are different.
some challenges, you should

Com pl ete Service
Phone , .
949: 2487 or 949, 2QOO . Racine,;. 1
Oh10 . Crltt Br a dford .
.,. :

:.O.UIIIOER iHUNDER

12 :45-Eiec. Co. 33.
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
1:00-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil OonahUf! II
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:3o-Days ol our Lives 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; ,,
As The World Tuurns 8,10.
·
2:00-S20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:30-Doctors 3,4,15; Neighbors 6,13; Guiding Light
8, 10.
3: Do-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital-6, 13; A"
In The Family 8,10; Llllas Yoga &amp; You20.
3:30-Qne Life to Live JJ; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game 8.10; You Can Do It 20; lTV Utilization 33.
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; 'krv Griffin 4; Somersotl5:
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister
Rogers 20,33; Movie " Thoroughbreds Don'l Cry" .
10; Dinah 13.
·
4 :3G-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 81
Sesame St . 20,33; To Be Announced 15 .
5:00-Bonanz' 3; Family Aflalr 8; Star Trek 15.
,
5:3G-Adam -12 4,13; News 6; Beverly Hlliblllles ·8;
E lee. Co. 20,33.
6:00-News 3.4,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; lTV
U!lllzatlon 33.
6:3G-NBC News 3,4,15i ABC News 13: Andy Grlfllth 61 ·
. CBS News 8, 10; HO(jgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias Yog•
&amp; You 33,
•
·
7:6o-Truth or Cons . 3; To tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Country Place B; News 10; Name That
Tune 13; Family Aflalr 15; Antiques 20; Wild Wild
World of Animals 33.
7.: 3G-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal With II 6; [
$25.000 Pyramid 8; Ev~nlng Edition ,with Martin i
Agronsky 20; Price is Right 10; To tell the truth 13; '
High School TV Honor Society 15; Family Theat..33.
8:00-Movln' On 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; Good Timet
8,10; International Anlmallon Festival 20; Behind
the Lines 33.
8 :3G-laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Mash 8,10; Consume~ ;
Survival 20,33.
&gt;
9:0G-Pollce Woman 3.4, 15;; Rookies 6,13; , Adami (
Chronicles 20,33 ,
9:30--Qne Da y at a Time 8,10.
10:00-City of Angels 3,4,15; Marcus Welby, M .D. 6,\3: '
Switch 8,10; News 20; Woman Alive 33.
'
10:3G-Woman Alive 20; Woman 33.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Ma ssachu~etts ·
Primary
Speclol :
13, 15,3,4,6,8 .10; Janak I 33.
11 : 45-Mystery of the Week 6,13,
12 :0G-Johnny Carson 3.4.15; Movie "Let's Switch" 8; •
Movie "A Ticket to Tomahawk" 10.
1: 15-News 13.
.1: 3G-Tomorrow 3,4,

,,

I Prefix for
phrase or
site

O ' DEL L AH n ement located •
behind
Rutland
Grade
Sc ho o l. T u n e u p , brakes ,
wh eel ba l ancing , alinemenf.
Phon e 742 2004.
11 . 16 tfc ...."•

N

ACROSS
I Mauled.
&amp;Saunter
II Living ·
12 European
finch
13 Ascended
14 Pinch
pennies
15 Rowan tree
16 Ballerina 's
mainstay
18 Sandra or
Ruby
19 Apartment
dweller
21 Civil War
vets org .
Z2 Squire
23 Dole out
24 Not verse
26 Showed
disdain
27 Bombast
28 One kind
of club
29 Eggs
30 Embrace
32 My !Fr.~
33 Had dinner
:14 Son of
Miled

DOWN

Mod ern San itat ion . 99 2-3954 a
or 992 73 49.
-t.
9· 18 -t f C' ,

-10·9-JfcE
OOG, l ini e'i tone , (nave
and fill dirt dellverect ~~ ·
Phon e Bill Pul lins, 992·2478. 2-19 ·26tC \.

AJxxx opposite K x x.

There was no adverse bidding
and both opponents followed
when he cashed dummy's
king.
Our answer is that the play
for the drop is more likely to
s ucceed than the finesse .
(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win
at Bridge , " c/o I his
newspaper, P. 0 . Bo• 489,
Radio City Slation, New York,
N Y 10019)

world
4% Otate
t3 Billiard sbot

4 - 16 - lfc . ~

R·E-o

Os wald : "A rubber-bridge
player has no problem with
today's hand He lets East
hold the first spade with his
queen , ducks the second spade
also, and wins the third. Then
he takes the c lub finesse and
makes his contract whether it
wins or loses ."
Jim: " A match-point player
s hould also duck the first
spade , but will put in con·
sidera ble study about the se·
condone . If he wins it and the
club finesse is on he ruhs oil

wise or

S EPTl c - TA N K S~Ie-;~d-:-' :

'

An Iowa reader asks if he
s hould finesse or play for the
drop when holding :

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

38 Motherless
calf
40 Booby trap
41 Word with

PRIVACY~

- Sweeper s . t oaste r s, irons , ., ..
all sma ll app l i an c es . lawn , ,.
mow er , n e xt to St ale H igh -•,,;
way G arag~ on Ro u te 7. ,.
Phone ' 85 3825.
,
··~ ·

----·-------

lead - 6 4

36 Bury

AN INVASION

ELW OOD BOWER S REPAIR

C. BRADFORD , A ut:tioneer .

Pa.ss

by THOMAS JOSEPH

D &amp; D iRE E Tr imm·ing . 20 ....
year s expltrifnce . I nsu red .
fr ee es t i ma te s. Cal l 992 238 4 .. ,
o~ (6 14l 698 72 57 A l ~~n y . 1f c

- -- - - - - - - -

3 N. T. Pass

Sootb

Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.

~tMtf•~ tar'

E X CAVA TIN G ,
d oz er ,
b ac k h oe
a nd
d ilc h·er
C ha rl es R
Ha tf iel d Ba c k
Hoe Ser v ice . Rutl an d , Oh io Phon e 742 ?0 08
11 30 7Bt c

·- ~

Ease

GOING

'TO LEAVE HIM ~EllS' ?
WHY?

·'RAIII RAII'I
Vol

SAIOHEl'~
YOU'VE MADE

,.

---

'

Pass
Pass

Opentng

SOME 1tMf.S IT
15 l'lt-ll TO &amp;
~T AlERT It-!
A PEACEFUL
GARCftt ·

' CLmiR CLATTER

'299
Rev.

•'
•..
•
''·

LITTLE ORPHAN

-·

-- -

'

b-:J,

BR HOME ." just fi n ished
rem o deli n g
Salem
Sf . ,
Rut l an d . Phone 7112 . 23 0~
a ft er 4 p .m : or see Milo B.'
Hutchinson .
10 9·1fC \

--~ - -- ------- - .----

CO-OP
Automotlc Wotoo
Condillonor
Model UCXXX.
210,000
Weekly Groin
Copotlty

•

v

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

Nortb

IN . T.

. ' UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

REMODE LIN G ,
Pl umbi ng .
h ea l in g a.n d a ll types Of '
r e pa 1r .
W or k .'
g ene ra l
70 y ear s e x ~
g u ar an t ee d
p er ie n c e . Pt1on e 99 '1 2409 ~
5 1 lf c

Almo st n ew h om e . 3 br ,
b ath ,
dining r .,
ful l
bas em e nt with u til i t y r .,
HW
fl o o r s ,
por c h es ,

·.
or

6

Free estimates on car p eting and installation .
We' ll bring sa rftples to vour
hom e with no oblig a tion .
See h ow vou can really
sa v e.
Mik e Young , Manager
Sales. and Installati on
Rt . 3, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769'
Phone da or night
61 4.992 ·2106• J . 14 1 m o .

-

West

•'

E X C AV A TI NG . do ler , lo.fu t: , .....,;.,l
1"
a n d ba c kh oe work : sept tc
t anks
i n s t a lle d ; ' du m p ' ~ .
! r ucks an d lo boys for h ir e ;
_,
W1 ll ha u l fdl d irt. top soil . ·r
l 1m estone an d grav e l . Call
Bob o r Roge r J eff er s, day
,
p hone 992 7089, nigh ! phone ..tH '
992 3525 or 1192 5232 .
7 Ll ·tf c

for Sale

EXC A V AT ING .

R E M O D ELI N G
A N D
RE ROOI' I N G , CAL L 247
23 6 1
2 ?i 6tc

Both vulnerable

SLOAN'S
CARPETING

Take advantage of our
pr ices .
Quality
buil t
homes. N ice lots available
in n ice location s.

Rill

.Q 8 72

-

SAVE MONEY?

1:00-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13,

twelve tricks . If the club
finesse loses and spades were
6-2 he still makes five odd. If
they were 4-4 he makes the
same three he would score if
he had ducked the second
spade . But if West had led ·
from a five-card spade suit, he
will have chucked his contract
right out the window,"
Oswald: " Most match-point
players woold grab that second spade. They would see
that illeir three no trump was
a very normal contract and
woold go after the overtricks.
This time they would be
rewarded irrespective of
where the king of clubs
happened to be because East
held only two spades. "

• 95
• K 53
tK JlO
• A J 10 9 5

•K JB642
• J 96

Ph . 949·l023 or 841-2661

WANT TO

MO DERN CHEMICALS
100 Kerr Str ee t
Pom er o v , Oh io 45769
(614 ) 992 -2798, Dick Seyler
1 '1 9 1 mo .

n

1974
KX 25 0
K a wa s a k i
M o tor c ro ss . ne w leat her s
in c lu d ed W1lh b ~o t s 3 h our s
r idrn g tim e , neve r b een
r ac ed . P h . 992 7693.
2 29 31p

CONSTRUCTION
N ath an Biggs
Radiator Specialist

9:3G-Maude 8,10; World Press 20.
10 :00-Jigsaw John 3 3,4,15; Rich Man, Poor Men 6,131
Medical Center 8, 10; News 20; Bl -Ways 33.
10 :3G-Lock, Srock, &amp; Barrel 20; Cakh-33 33.
11 :00-News 3.4.6.8.10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :3G-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Academy of Counlry
Music Awards 6,13; Movie "Leflers from Th,.
Lovers" 8; Movie "Revenge Is My Oestfnyu 10·
Janak! 33.
'

Match point vs. rubber bridge
NORTH

1 F r om th e largest Truck or 1
Bul ldoze r" · R a d ia tor to th e '
, s m a lles l Heat er Co r e .

9:00-Joe Forrester 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10.

WIN AT BRIDGE
D&amp;D

BISSEll BUILDERS

We Bu v Ant1ques

ST RAW. 75c b al e , on e new J pt
h i tc h , on e r o w c u lt i v at or .
$7 5 P hon e ( 6 1J ) 985 3581
2
3to

l ? )( 60 K I R K W OOD M ob il e
Hom e, to tal e l eC ex. c on
d i!ion P h one 7H 22 05 or 247
?73 1.
2 79 .3t c

EASY

WASH GI&lt;:AI!i!S"'A-;;!1-,.
0ATMOOK AND
PREPARES TO SHOVE OFF.. lJNAWA~E
THAT THE MlJMMY . fiA5 Lf;APED
ASOARD, TOO!

'·

FU R NIT U RE
STRIPPI NG SERVICE
Re m oval
ot · Paint s
Pla s tics Va r nishe s, e tc .
Wood or M e" tal
Re pairs . R e fin 1S h1ng of
F urniture . 1
Burni Sh in g Polishing of
Copper &amp; Bra ss

19 75 KA W A SAK I K Z40 0, t" 974
Ford Co ur ie r , bo t h w it h
ex t ras . m u s t se ll P hon e 992
7066 .
2 29 2tc

.-

CAPTAIN

.. .

. .' -

Rutland 142- 2331
Roger Wamsley
3-1- lmo.

M od er n

A n fiq ue

TO G IV E AWAY
Pup pies , 5
mal es , 1 f em al e . 8 w ee k s BOLEN 'S g ard en tra c tor Wtl h
old . Ca ll 9.t9 26]] be tw ee n 6
c ulli v ator . A lso. CB r a d io
am an d J2noon
·
Phon e 992 7826
2 27 4tp

Z ENITH c ol or TV , 23 in ch
Scr een E :w;cellen1 cond i tion .
P hon e "992 72 4·1
2 ?9 Jtc

Tup pe r s Pla i n s .Ches t er
W a t er D is tr ict now set ti ng
but k wat er to tanks on
tru c k s at our new office!
L oc a t ed on St R t. 7
1 Mile North of
Eas t ern H lgh SchOo l
Serve Y ourself D ispenser
T a king (luarters only . one
at a tim e. for 250 g allons of !.
wat er .
Op en al l t he T i m e
for your c on v eni ence *
3· \ . \mo .

• A Q64

1974 H O ND A X R 75, g o od
cond i t io n
Phone 2-1 7 254 1
2 29,3t c

t d x 70 MOB IL E H o m e. total
c lec 3 ron c en l r a t a i r con
d ili onc r , c x c ,r ll en r c o n
dil 10n . P hone 247 26H &lt;1 or
'} 17 2661
1 :.o.t 7tc

For Sa le

R&amp;J COINS

Ple x agta ss · Table Tops ·
Mirrors - Sto rm &amp; Screens .
FERRELL ' S GLASS &amp;
- HOME MAINTENANCE
Si d i ng - V i nyl
8.
Al u m in um W indow Gl ass
&amp; G la zi ng On the Job o r in
Shop .
Pi ck up an d deliv ery
se r v i ce .
Ca ll CoiiHt 388 ·8239
•n
b uild · up
Sp e cia l i J e
roofing &amp; hot rooh . Fre e
Estimates
10 years ex ·
perie n ce .
Harve Ferrell
Bidwell. Ohio
2 6 1 mo

2 29 3t c.

Mobile Homes For Sale

or

Ph . 992 ·3993
4 10 1 mo .

T A PP A N s ta in l ess s t ee l drop
in elec r a n g e, S75 w arm
Mo rn in g 65 , 000 btu gas
h ea rer . 2 yr s. o l d . $200. G as
roo m
h e a te r
wlf h
m ec han ic;;~ !
the r m . $2 5.
Used 1.· g lass ex t er ior door ,
~ 1 5 . P h one 992 73 5·t a lt er 6

'·

EXPERIENCED

2 29 6t p

Find buri e d
1r e asure .
Coins , rings , si lv er , gold .
Coin &amp; Metal
De t ectors
For Rent

LARRY
LAVENDER
Svratuse, Ohio

Lo c a l 1 own er , automa t i c , bile vi n yl Int . trim , sil ve r
fi ni sh , good t i r es, radi o, real ec onom y . Book Val ue
Pri ce $2875 .00

TER
A\IAILA LE

BUV , SELL or TRADE

Fln•nc i ng Available
Blown into Walls &amp; Attics
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING- SOFFITT
GUTTERS· AW NING S

S2895

VIND A L E 12 1t 68, 3 bedr m .
H E LP to f ence a f a r m . Ph on e ·
b a lh &amp; J ? , 11 II cx pando , 25
94 9 20 57.
It awn ing and p or c h , t ull y
2·29 31c
c arp et ed . Ph on e 8·1? 2880
2 211 6tc

WANTED

S449S

BULK

COINS

Blown
Insulation Services

Whrt e.2 dr , .4 sp eed tra·ns. , ra dio, bod y m ould ings. W· S·
w t ires It' s l ike new w ith less than 5,200miles .

Pels

Wanted To Buy

v.a

FREE ESTIMATES

Br on ze f ini sh , s t a nd stone v inyl tr i m , 350
turbo
hydr a m a t ic , powe r st eer i n g , pow er b ra kes. f actor y
a1r , r adro, ra dial t ire s . Less th a n 10, 500 m iles by
origma l ow n er .

.1.1

MONDAY, MARCH 1,1976
5 :00-Bonan&lt;a 3; Family Arlalr 8; 5tar 1reK 1;.
5:30--Adam-12 ~.13; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
E lee. Co. 20,33.
6 :00-News 3,4,8.10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
Special Education 33.
6:3G-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13: AndyGrlffl!h 6.;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
I :00-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling lor
Dollars6; Buck ~s B; News 10; Candid Camera
13 : Family Affair 15; On aging 20; Resourceful
West VIrginia 33,
1:3G-That ·Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Don Adams
Screen Test 4; Match Game PM 6: Price Is Rl hi
8; EvenlnQ Edition wl!h Marlin Agronsky 20; !ftgh
Road to Advenrure 10: To !ell Truth 13; Friends
ot Man 15; Marco Sport lite 33.
8:00-Bobby Vinton 3; Movie "You ng Pioneers" 13;
Rich Little 4,15; College Baske!ball6; Gunsmoke 8:
U.SA People &amp; Politics 20,33; Rhoda 10.
8:30--We Think You Should Know 3; Ambassador
College Concert 33; Phyllis 10; Findings 20 .

Business Services

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

or Month

3.
4.

''

u n ~;&lt;n o wn .

Ca n ce ll a t i on
Correc l 1on s w ill b e ac
c c p ted until 9 a rn f or
Day o f Pubi 1Ci:\ I 10n
R EG ULATIONS
The Pu b lis h er r ese rves
th e r 1Qh l ro ed i t or r l!- j ec t
a ny ,1 d s d e eme d ob
iec1 1on al
Th e p ub lisher
w 111 no r be r esp on s 1b le for
more tha n on e in c or rect
1n s.c r t! on
RAT ES
Fo r W o1n t Ad Servin ·
~
c ents pe r w o rd on f'
1n ser 110n
M in im u 111 Cll ar g e $1 00
1.1 c en rs per wo r d th r ee
r on secul i v e
l f! Se rt ion s
} t. ce n ts pe r w ord si x
r on sc cu r i v e
1n s er 11on s
?~ P er Ce nt D1sc ou n t on
pa i d ad s a n d ad s pai d
w 11 h 1n 10 da y s
CA RD OF TH A NKS
&amp; 0 6 1TU A RY
'S 7 0 0
for
50
word
mi n im un1
E ac h a cld it ional w or d 3
c cn rs
, BLIND AD S
A ddi t1cn a 1 75c Ch a r ge
p er 1\ dv ert ise m en r
OFF I CE HOUR S
8 JO a m ro 5 00 p 1'n
Da i l 'f 8 30 am to 12 00
Noon Sal urd ay
Phon e roday 99 2 2 156

Television log for easy .viewing

Auto Sales

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

.=!Ill

OJ J

DD 'l1tAcy

~

�..
61lhe

7-'lbe l'lllUy Sentino1, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, u ., Monaay, J¥U&lt;rcu '· mu
Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomer oy, 0 ., Monday , March 1, 19i6

~ l1/1~)1[g® /4.J 1/;tGM&amp;IJ ..-J ~

l'tturamhl..rhto~e fourJumblrs.

one lt&gt; ll t'r 10 ea.c h squ a re, lo
fo r m fo ur o rd i n a ry wo rd s .

SN.HB

. .

I I

(j

v .
L' 0 r

•

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•

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Da y
Bc t Or ('
Publ i t: i'ti iOn
Mo n day D £! ad l i n e 9

Auto Sales

~~A­

I YULTIG
I
[]
I [ )
UNTH.-tG

HOW A GUY WH O 'S
LOOt&lt; I NG FOR SOA~E

'AC.TION ' MIGHT Ei'JD UP.

I

( )I

"

Now arrange the l'ircled letters
to form the surprise ans""·er, as
SUif[ltsted by the above cartoon.

IPrilll die Sllt'I!IISHNSWIR here I IN [ I 1 XI I X :u
CAn8 .. rrl tumo rroM •
Juno!.!.·· · HAZEL

~111unl ~, · ~

·

I

DADDY

M AGNUM

AMOEBA

1\,. ••n . " Lady- look both u ·ay»! ..-"MAOAM"

NOTICE OF
APOINTMEN T
ca sr: N o 217 42
E state of Va nd en W. Bu zz a r d,
Dec ea se d.

IN THE

COMMON PLE A S COURT
OF M E G I S COUN T Y ,
OHIO
WAND A -RIZER .
N o tice is he r e b y gi v en t h a t
FRANKLIN M . RIZ E R , Her
t ci e M B uuar d . of Ro u t e 4,
H us band,
P om e r o y . Ohi o , h a s b een duly
E a s t M~in Str ee t,
ap poin t ed Adrm n lst rat r i K of
th e Es tate of V an den W . • Pom eroy , Ohto 45 7611 ,
P laintiff .
Buu ard , d ece as ed , la t e of
vs.
M eig s Cou n t y , Ohio .
HELEN HENDRICKS , wh ose
Cr e d ito rs arc requi r ed to
l a st k nown
re s1 denc c w as
fi le th eir c la im s w d h said
Park er sburg , W . Va .• Addre ss
fi duci ary wit hi n four m onth s
no w unk nown ,
Date d lh is 25t h day ot
F ebr u ary 197 6.
UN KN OWN
HEIRS ,
DEVISEES ,
LEGATEES ,
M an ni n g D W ebSt E' r
DISTRIBUTEES ,
AO
Judg e
M INI STRATOR S,
AND
( 3 1 1, 8, 15, 3t c
EXECUTORS, IF ANY , OF
TH E E ST ATE OF GEORGE
HENDRICKS ,
SR ,
DECEASE 0 ,
Add ·r e sHs

ALow Cost
Want Ad
Will Cut
Cost of

Uving
. .•••••
WRITE YOUR
'
OWN AD! .
ITS EASY TO
ORDER BY
J

MAIL!
-SPECIAL!-

12 WORDS
4 DAYS
$}25

ONLY

CASH WITH
. ORDER

AVAILABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
NO REFUNDS.
Each initia I and
group of figur es
counts as one word.
Be sure to count
name and address . if
used, and your phone
number.
Including
prlces for items offered in your want ad
w iII
1ncrease
response.

1.
2.

UNKNOWN
H E I RS ,
DEVISEES ,
LEGATEES ,
DISTRIBUTEES ,
AD ·
A ND
M IN ISTRATO R S,
EXEC U TORS, I F ANY , OF
TH E ES T A TE OF HELEN
H E NDRICK S,
DECEASED .
Addre ss es unk nown,
UNKNOWN
HEIR S .
DEVISEES ,
LEGATEES ,
DI S TRIBUTEE S ,
AD ·
M INI STR ATO R S,
A ND
EXEC UTOR S, IF ANY , OF
TH E ES T ATE OF MAGG IE
HU RD , D EC E ASED ,
Ad·
dr ess es U n known .
Defendant s.
SERV I CE BY
PU. BLICATION
TO
T HE
DEFENDANTS
ABOVE NAMED :
You ar e h e r e by n o l ,f &lt;e d I hal
y ou
h av e
bee n
na me d
D e f endan ts i n a leg al ac t ion
entill ed ! " W an d a R iz.e r , e ta l
V s . ·H ar ry Po f t s, Jr .. E&gt; l a l ." in
th e Co mm on P l ea s Co urt "o f
M e tgs Count y Gh1o , Ca se No
160 22
T h e o bj e ct o t t h e
Co m p la in t b e ing to p a rt 1t ion
th e fo ll ow in g de sc r 1bed r ea t
es t a t e, to w i t .
Th e fo ll owrn g desc nb e d r ea l
es t.;! t e situa t e i n the Vi llag e of
Sy ra cuse . m M e1gs Co un t y ,
bou n de d
and
O'h10 , and
d esc r i b ed as fol lows . Bemg
To w n Lot N o . On e ( 1l 1n
Car l eto n 's Ad d 1teon to sa1d
V i llag e of Sy r a cus e, Oh1o .
and t h e d em and o f the
Co m p la in t 1s to sel l Dclen
dant s ' in t er est in th e a bove
d es cr i bed pr em lses .
Y ou ar e no tif ie d th at you ar e
the
r e qu1 r ed
to
an s w er
Comp laint w i t h in tw enty e ight
day s a ft er th e la st publ i c at ion .
wh1 ch w il l b e p u bl iSh e d on ce
e ach w ee k for s i x consec utiv e
we e k s . The l a s t p ubli c at ion
will b e m ad e on the 22nd day
of Mar ch, 19 76 .
In cas e of y our failur e ro
an swe r or ot h er wis e r e spon d
;;~s
p er m it ted by t he Ohi o
Ru l es o f Civ1l Pr oce d ur e
th e
l im e
s tal e d ,
w it h in
iud gm enl b Y d efaul t w i ll ' b e
r end er e d aga in st yo u t or the
r e l i e f d e m a nd ed
in
lh f"
Co m p ain t .
Lar ry E . Spenc er
Clerk o f Cour t
M ei g s County , Oh io
(? I i t. , 23, ( 31 I. B. 15, 22. 6t c

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF ME1GSCOUNTY ,
OHIO

1975 CHEV . IMPALA 4 OR .

Notice ·
MAK E SURE yo u ge t ev er y
p ossi bl e ded uc t io n th is year
Hav e y o u r Fe de r a l a n d
State In come T ax r eturn by
an a cco untant . Ph o n e 99 2
61 73 .
1 21 52 tc
I NCOME
Tax
Sc r v 1c e.
F ede r a l o r St a t e ta xes
P l1o n e 99 2 7 228
o r se e
W all a ce Ru ss e l l. Br a dbur y .
l -30 26 1C

O LD furnitu re . i ce boxes .
b ras s
b eds ,
o ld
wall
telephone s and p ar is. or
comp le te h ou seho ld s Wr i t e
M
D
Mill e r ,
R l . 2,
Pom er oy , Ohi o . Ca ll 992
77 60 .
10 7 7 ·1

C I\ S H p a 1d f o r a ll ma k es and
m odel s of mob il e h omes
Phon e ar ea cod e 614 423
953 1.
. 4 rr u c
-

HeIP wan Ied

1975 PINTO MPG
1974 OA TSUN 710 CPE .

S269S

19 72 (A M A RO . V 8. p .s ., d isc
bra k es , ai r co n d i t i on ing ,
au t o m at1 c
E )( ce l len t
co n d it ion an d eas y on gas
As k i n g $2 , 600 . b ut w i l l
h a c Kl e Phon e 992 73 60 a ft er

1971 CH EV . Sub ur ba n 350, V8
At . p b , p .s . Com e see ,
ma k e o ff er P h on e 992 2 1178.
2 27 41C
Ton l nt ernal1 ona l P1 c kup , 4
s p . t ra n s miS Si o n·. h eav y
d ul y sp r 1ngs . A p p r ox . 10,000
mi les . Phon e 99 2 70 17
2 27 61p

197-1

M US T A N G II Ghia ,
e ~.: ce ll e nt c on d i ti On . P S. P B .
air condit ion in g , P h one 9'n
39 9.1 or 992 767 1.
2 27 3tp

1973 MO NT E Ca rl o . pow er
w in dow s a n d doo rl o c k s, ai r ,
SJ ,OOO. Ph on e 91i12 22 43 .
2 25 6t p

5 p m.

For Sale

RED UC E sal e and f as t w it·h
G o Bese Tab lets &amp; E Yap
· wat er
p il l s ,"
N el son
Dru gs
3 '· 1tp

MEDICAL
-SECRETARY
•

CALL

446-5189
Gallipolis, Ohio
AS SI ST A NT DIRECTOR , A id
exec ut 1ve in s ta ff c a pa c i t y
by c o or d1 nat i n g
off ice
ser vices . su ch as b ud g et
pr eparat io n , and c on trol ,
c on t ra ct
ad
r e v 1e w
m i n i s tr a r1on
a nd
co
o·rd1nat e co l l ectio n a n d
pr ep arat io n of
r eport s,
$9,00 0. E x pe r 1en ced and or
t rai n e d appl i c ant . Sen d
r es u m e to A H D . E C 0 . p ·
0
B o ~t · 1525 , P or tsmou t h
Ohio .
3 J 3tc

For Rent
2 BE DRM m obt le h om e, ve ry
n 1ce P h one 992 332-1.
2 79 II C
3 BEDRM . f urn is h ed h om e ,
al so a · m ob i le ho me •n
M idd l ep ort , $40 wee k . gas
an d wat e r p a id Phon e 992
35 09 or inqu 1r e at Box 1595 ,
Buc key e Lak e, Oh io .
2 29 t f c
TWO be dr rn . b al h , on twp
roJd . four mt les to m 1n e n o
3 Ph on e (6 1il ) 669 395 3.
2 29 Jt p
TRAILE R s pa c e . J 1 mil e
north o f M eig s H ig h Sc hool
on o ld R t . 33 P h on e 99'} '1 94 1
2 ?9 3t c
F URN I SHED a p t . 5 r oo m s
an d bath , larg e b ack and
f r ont por c h w i t h y a r d ,
ut i l1fi es p a id . Call b efor e 6 p .
, m . 99 7 2937
2 26 6t c

La Salle
HOTEL

Gt\ S DRYE R . l ik e new , $50 ,
c a sh r eg 1s ter , R . C . Al len ,
SJO Phon e 747 ?45 9
? ?7 3t c
F IRE WO OD , ph on e 949 1089
2 1B 121c
G OOD hay , n e"v e r w et
949 7523

Ph one
2 25 6tc

197 4
750 TRI U MPH Tr id en t
m o t o r c y c l e, 2. 80 0 m i l es ,
exc ellen t c ondi t ion . $2,000
A l so , 19_66 V . W .. goo d c on
d Ji to n an d pri ce d to sell
Phon e 949 2 133 .
2 25 Stc
SUPE R fl. F arm al l , n ew p a in t
iob , n ew ba tt er y . c u11 1vat or ,
att il c hm c n t ,
t e r t il i ze r
H 11t er s , in good con dit iOn .
Pr iced to s e ll Pho n e 9.19
276 1. A lb ert H i ll. Ra ci n e,
Oh ro
10 SP E ED b 1c y c te E )( c ell enl
con dd 1on . S60. P h on e 99?
586 •1

NOTICE T.O
W ARE HOU SE or s t ore r oom ,
CONTRA CTORS
LLOYD SEL LARD S, ET AL. ,
24x 48 , 3 11 Condor Sl , ( r ear
ST A TE OF OHIO
M•ddleport, 0 . Ph : 992 ·2771
Plaintiffs,
6 10 E . Main St. l. R en t all or
D E PARTMENT OF
vs.
pa rt Phone 91il 7 7178 .
TRANSPORTATION
FLOYD SELLARDS, ET AL. ,
2 26 6t c
Columbu s, Ohi o
D ef en da n t s .
Febr u ary 13,1976
Contract Sal e s
No.1 5,953
COAL . l i me s t one a n d all typ es
L eg a l Copy No. 76 ·35
- NOTICE OF SALE o f sa H and ro c k sail f or icc
UNIT PRICE C.ONTRAC T
Pur suan t to an Ord er o t Sal e
and "s now r e mo v al
E.:
Seal ed p r o pos a l s w i l l I:J e
issu ed b y th e Com m on Pl eas
ce ls1o r Salt Works , East
re
cei
v
ed
at
the
Off1ce
ot
th
e
Co urt Of M e 1g s County , Oh 10. I
Ma i n SL, Pomeroy , Oh io .
0 1r ec tor o f th e Ohio D epart
wi ll o ff er for sal e at publ 1c
PhOn e 99 2·3891.
m
en
l
of
Tr
a
n
s
portation
,
a uc t ion on th e 3rd . da y of
12 7 tf c
Co
l
umbu
s
,
Ohi
o
,
until
10
:00
A pr1l , 1976 , at 10 00 A M on
A
.M
..
Oh
io
Standard
Time
.
th e Co.u rl Ho u se Step s a t lh e
M c DANIEL
Cu s t om
But
Co u rt Ho.u se ' in Pom e roy , Tuesday , Mar c h 9, 19 76, tor HOU SE 1n R ut land Cilll 9"92
i mprov em ent s in :
ch ering , West Columbia , w .
Oh io , th e foll ow i ng desc rib ed
S 8~ 8
M e ig s Coun t y , Ohio , on
Va We b u tch er ca t lle and
rea l es tat e
1 ' ' 11c
ho g s .
$ 10
ca tt le
Th e fol low i n g, r ~ a l es ta1 e Sec tion MEG 7 (0 .08 ) ( 8 341,
Stat e Ro u t e 7 in Sa l isbury
s la ug ht er ; S7 for hog s ; 12c
situ a te d in t h e Co unt y o f
Town s h i p .
by
r e m o ving 3 ROOM F ur n 1s hed apart
f or cuttin g and wrappin g .
M eig s, m I h e St a te o f Oh10 and
Stat e and f e d era l Inspect ed ;
in t he Vi ll age o f Rut l and , e x 1s t in g g uard r ail an d con
m ent ,
10
mi l e s
f ro m
Open 6 day s p er week
bound ed and d es c r i bed a s s tru ct ing Typ e !i guard rail ,
Pomero y
Phon e 992 616 1
i nclud i ng r e s hap1n g _ berm.s
Phon e (3011) 882 322 4.
follow s · Be in g Lol N u m b ~ r
7 77 61c
1 30 -261 C
Fo ur (4) in L uh 's Ad di! ion to and an ch or ass embli es.
P
r
oj
ect
L
ength
3.55
m
il
es
.
R utlan d , Oh 10
ap t .
in
R e f ere n c e D eed . V o l. 26 1, ~ " The d at e se t tor c omp le t ion U N F U R NI S H E D
I N D A SH 23 ch an nel c i tizen s
l. p ag c 945 . Dee d Rec ord s M eig s o f thi s work shall b e a s se t . Pom er oy . 2 b ed r m . n ewly
band , tran sce iv er , A M -FM
fort
h
in
th
e
bid
ding
proposa
l.
"
red
ecorated
,
t
ul
l
y
c
ar
pe
t
ed
.
Cou n t y , Oh io .
MPX r adio , 8 track tape
Ea
c
h
b
i
dd
e
r
s
hall
b
e
Call
in
th
e
ear
l
y
a
.
m
99
2
Tti is pr op er t y is locate d on
p lay er Call 992 J96 5
r
equ
ir
ed
to
fil
e
with
hi
s
bi
d
a
22
88
.
D epo t Str ee t bet w ee n Stat e
2 26 tf c
ce r1 i t1 ed c he c k or c ash1er 's
2 22 lfc
R o ut ~ 1211 an d Tow n sh ip Road
176wh ic h c r o sses or int e r se c t s c h eck for an amoun I eq ual to
74x24 F T . MEL MAR Motor
sai d Depot Str e e t im m e dra te l y f ive per cent o f hi s b id, I:J u t 1n
Home . one of the best , ex E as t an d W es t , r eSp ec t i v ely , no ev ent m ore than f1fty ENJOY grac io us l i v in g a t :
c ellent conditio n , cost over
tho
us
an
d
do
l
lar
s,
o
r
a
bond
for
llag
e
Manor
~
1n
Mid
V
i
pt sa id prop ert y Th ~J" re is n o t e n per cent of hi s bi d , payabl e
$20,000 new , com pl ete l y self
dl eport t or a s low a s $ 130
s t r e et number
cont ai n ed , 5000 watf gen . 3
to
the
Dire
c
tor
.
p
e
r
mon
t
h
with
al
l
T erm s of sa l e : Cas h , l or not
air cond it ion er s, fu.rnace,
Bid der s mu s t appl y 1 on th e
u ! il i l.i ~s
paid .
. T .h~
less than two th ird s of th e proper
ba th , h ot wa t er h eater , gas
f orm s. tor qualtfi c at1on
are
brand
new
h
ig
h
qua
l
1ty
ap pra ise d valu e, a n d ~ubie c t
and e lec . r ef ., am fm radio
a
t
lea
s
t
l
en
days
prior
to
the
a
part
men
t
~
at
prices
you
to r e al es tat e taxes f or 1976.
sl ereo throughout , r o l! out
dat e set f o r openmg bi d s 1n
can . afford . Your rent in
Pr ope rly
a p pra ise d
al
awning , auto . transmission ,
acc or d an ce with Cha p ter 5525
e l ude s m on t h to m o n t h
$10 ,500.00
ps , an d pb , mu c h m ore .
Oh io Revise d CoQ e .
le a se s , a l l e l ec
l i vi n g,
Phon e 9-19 2710 ,
Plan s an d spe c 1fi ca t1 ons ar e
carp
e
t
i
ng
,
rang
e
and
Ro b ert C Harl enba c h , on f il e in th e Depa rt m en t of
i 26 7k
refrig
era
t
o
r
,
tr
ee
trash
Sh enff of
Tran sport a tion an d the o ff ice
pi
ckup
.
c
abl
e
T
V
at
your
Mei qs Count y , Oh 10 of
AL L I S C HA L M E RS round
the
0 1s tri c t
D e puty
ex p en s e ,
and
o n si t e (3 l 1. 8, 15. 21. . ?9 . St c
ba le r , g ood condi t ion and
Dir ect or .
l a undry· fac i l i t i es
Co n .
tan d em 8 wheel fertilizer
The Drr ector r ese rv es th e
ve n ient to shoppin g on Third
spread er , and 500 bal es
rig h t to r e j ec t an y a nd a ll b id s.
and Mill Stre e ts 1n M id ·
c lean straw . Phone 9119 2770
dleport· See th e manager a l
2-26- 61C
RI
C
H
A
RD
D
J
A
C
K
SON
R i v ers 1de Apartm ents or -·~----Today is Monday, March I,
--~--- -- ·
DIRE CTOR
call 992 -32 73. Fu rn ish e d BALED HAY , $1.00 pe r ba l e
ille 61st day of 1976 with 305 to
apartments
are
a l so
Phone (61JI 985 -4207 . Ca l l
(2 l 23 13 1 1, 2t c
follow .
avai l able .
an y time .
2 2 78tc
The moon is moving toward
2 26 ·4t p

Rooms, '5.00 up
Special Rates
by Wee~

5.

6.
7.

8.
9.

10.
11.
12..
NAME
ADDRESS

,,
.

CITY .
PHONE
MAIL WITH
11.25
'
TO ll!E
I

---

bAlLY SENTINEL ·
"

The evening stars are

" lll COURT ST.

ifPOMEROY,
. - OHIO '.
"'115169

'
'

the first quarte r .
The morning s tars are
Mercury and Venus

"

Mars , Jupiter a nd &amp;!turn .
'!)lose born on this day ·are
wider the sign of Pisces .
,American
singer-actress
Dina h Shore was born on
March I, 1920.

-

Also on this day in history :

In 1181, the American colonies adopted the Articles of
Con fe deration , pa v ing the
way for a federal union.
In 1803, Ohio became the .
17th state of the Union.

·-- ---..,.-----··- -··----

3 A ND 4 RM . furn is h ed a~-d · TWO 10 sp ee d bicycles , $35
unfurnish ed apt $ Phone 992
and $,15. 1 inch reet lape
!io.I JJ
reco r de r ,
$50 . . Sq uare
11 9 lfc
Shoo t er P o laroid camera ,
$ 15. PhQne 91il2 7551 .
COUNTR Y
Mob i l e Hom e
3 I 3t c
Park , Rt . 33, ten m il es north
o f Pomer o y Large lOi s w i th·
1,000 BALES of hay . Phone
c oncr e te pat iOS, ~sidewa lk s ,
Ha rold Roush , Portla n d ,
r unn ers and off slreel
843 22 55 .
pa r king . Phone 992 7479.
'J 25 6tc
:2 -31 t·f c

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph. 992 .2174

From a sh e lf to a hou se. all
types of bu ilding itnd
re m odeling
from
th e
foundation up . Add itton s,
carpeting , painting , siding,
roofing , paneling·, paper
hang ing etc .. ..

PomeroY

WEST

EAST

..

. 72
•K 3

.'

'

• Q 10874
• 9 8 53

• A 10 7
• A2

.,'

?-19 1 mo .

•9 3

• 64
SOUTH (D)

A SP H A LT lN G dr i v ew ays an d
park in g lots . sep t1 c tan k s
m SI &lt;t t l ed , c o n cr et i ng an d
ba c kh o e wor k . F o w l er ' s
C o n s t ru c tion P hon !!- 99 7
/ J8t or 7&lt;1 2 ?593.
2 24 6tc

Ph . (614) 985-4102
2 11-1 mo .

~te

BA C K HOE S
AND DOZ Ef&lt; LARG E AND
';M A LL , S EPTI C T A NK S
IN S TALLED .
B I LL
P U LLIN S, PHONE 99 2 2478,
D A Y OR N I G HT
2 2'1 52tp

ABOUT

WI L L T R t1-ll
c u t tr ecs ., and
Sh rubb er y
P hone 949 25 .15
o r 747 3 167 .
2 27 261C

pa t io . garag e,

c lo se

schoo l. $30,000.
NEEDED
3

or

to
4

par tition s, sh o w er or t ub,
wou ld have a lo ve l y home.
Lot al on e wOr th a sking

pri ce .
CAL L
PARTI CULAR S.

H OM E t or sa l e . s pa c iou s
l 1ving r oom . din in g _r oo m . 2
b e dr ooms . l ar ge kllc h c n ,
ba t h ,
fi'l m i ty ro om . new
P h on e 99 ? 73 9 4
2 '].t 61(

A BUY -

FOR
$7 ,000.
on each

Hom es
sfde ha ve sold for

525.000. 3BR , 1'''

ov er

ba ths,

lovely kit c hen w it h e~ tr as ,
full ba sem en t . HW heat,
dose to shopp ing . A LOW

ROO M h ou se , 11 ~ bat h
Phon e 99 2 3 129 or 992 54 34
2 29 3t c

$17,000.
ANNUAL INCOME
About $5 ,000 .00 plus ga s

BEDR M
h ome .
ju s t
f i n ish ed , ·r e mo ae lin g . Sa lem
St , R utla n d . Ph one 7J2 2306
a ft e r rl p .m . or se e Mi lo B
Hut c h ison .
9 23 ti c

we ll Home and 2 apfs . ha s
free gas. &amp; own wat er
.. ys t em s, 22 ac re s wrfh
bu i lding sit es. CAL L.

TO SEL L- LET US HE LP
YOU - CALL TODAY .
992 -2259 or 992-2568

--- - c:.--=
-c......=~=~

For Sale

-

BR , 2 bath s, large k it chen ,
recreation R . lo;,rge glassed

Real Estate For Sale

MOD E RN h om e in Ch es ter , 8
room s. 2 bath s, 2 por c h es ,
sun p orch , 1 ~ basemen t. c ity
and w ell water , n a t ural ga s.
garag e. Pric e d to se l l
Phone ! 614 ) 98 5·11 107.
2·4 t f c

ACRES

s 19,500.
FULLFAMILYHOME-4

O P E NED ! ! ! Hun t ' s Pe l Sh op ,
2 1, mi l es n o rth e ast o f
Ch e s ter , Oh 1o on Rt 748 W e
sp ec iaf ize in trop ic a l f 1sh
and s"upp t1es
~ p e c 1 a l s all
th is w ee k !
·
'] 15 6tp

3

'•

THREE B E DRM two b a th
hom e. fu lly c ar pe t ed , o v er
a c r e gr oun d , full y
la nd
sc aped two fam ily r oo m s 1 12X4 6 ov er look ing Oh io
Riv er . So m e f urn itu re and
all app li an c es . bo at doc k ,
L oc at ed n e ar Po meroy ,
Oh io , pri ce d $ ~8 . 5 0 0 . Cal l 1
(6 14) 992 3018 to see
' 2 27 31p

197 5 K AWA SAKL jooc c s tr eet
bike in eKcell enl cond i tio n
wit h · lo t s of a cce ssor ies.
Phon e 992 60311. after 6 p m
2 29 3t c . LARGE HOU SE m to wn l or
s ale or t rad e l or s ma lle r
---------~--...ho me . Ph one 99 2 71 97.
M A N URE loa d er. $]75 . Ph one
2 27 31 p
(614) ]78 .6J 11 after 6 p .m .
2 29 .6tc
7 RM House , n ew a l u m inum
s iding at G a ll ipolis F erry ,
MIX E D hay , 70C ba le . Phone
W . V a . on :~ ~ a c re lo t n ea r
( 6 1.:1) 378 631 1 a f ter 6 p .m .
hard road . Cheap , co m e see .
2 29 6tc
Phon e (3 04 1 675 2946 .
- ---·-·L----2 27 61p
!.25 PER HUNDRED stuff 1ng
env elop e s .
Se n d
self
1
addressed , stamped en . ON I:: A tt-n::~ 6 rm s an d bath .
Rt . 3. P o m e ro y , R6se Hil l.
v elope . T . K . Enlerprise ,
O ic,k D a v is p r op ert y , full
Box 26 , Stanber r y , M o .
ba se ment ,
aluminum
64489 .
2 29" 7tp
siding , pane led . SI O,OOO. Cal l
Oak Hill 68 5 6576 e venings ,
Ja c k son '2 86 3004 days .
T WO caLves , m i)(ed Her e ford
2-5 30tp
.
cow with ca lt Phone 843

-

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

23 53.

J

Now at Landmark

!~\

;.._lllll,jii-~
-

mt.~

JUOGI! CIIIAttS
IWI HOT $JGIEO
1141! OIIOER 1HAT

OCIILO ,._ P!&lt;l
~ LITTLE BlllV
BAC"- TO HIS
FATHER•

POMEROY LANDMARk
. . . _Jock W. Carsey. Mgr .
,..
PhOne 992-2111

ctJAC 'rOR

Sf\L E CA·iJ-i:oa"if
Compan y , 1 mi l e nor th of
Ch e sh ir e. on Rl . 7. P ick yo ur
own , i20 per Io n Open 6 d ays
per w ee K. or call (6 14 ) 367 · ·
73 30 tor f ur t h er information .
1 78tc

a

F~O~E~F-Jl~
I'LL 00 IT M"(
WA'f~

',.

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

I

'JOU MEAN

WI:'RE

TUESDAY. MARCH l, 1976
6:00-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6: 15-Farm Report 13,
6:2G-Rev. Cleophus RObinson 13.
6:30-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester!;
Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
6:4()--Qunce of Prevention 10. ·

6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:55-Chuck White Reports 10: Good Morning, Trl
Slate 13.
7:00-Today 3.4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS ._.
News B; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:3G-School les 10.8:00-Lassle 6: Capt. Kangaroo
8, 10; Sesame St . 33.
8 :3G- Big Valley 6.
9:00-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Luq , ..
Show B; Wk• Douglas 10; Morning wllh D.J . 13,
9:30-A.M. 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
10:00-Ce lebrlty Sweepstakes 3.4.15; Edge of Night 6;
Pr ice is Righi 8,10.
10:'3G-High Rollers 3,4,15; Dinah 6.
11 :00-Wheel ol Fortune 3, 15; Weekday 4; Gambit
8, 10; Farmer's Daughfler 13; Elec. Co. 20.
11 :3G-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Happy Days 13; Love
of Life 8, 10; Sesame St. 20.
11:55-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
12 : 00-Magn lflcent Marble Mach lne 3,15; Let's Make a
Deal13; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News 6.8,10.
,l
12:3G-Take My Advice 3.15; All My Children 6,131

15

SEW I NG M A CH IN E R epa1 rs ,
sen dee . a l l m a k es 992 22 84
the F a br ic Sh op , Pomeroy .
A u t h or 1Ze d Sin ger Sal es and -"~
Se r vi c e
We
sharpen ,
1
Sc issor s
3 29 t f c
gr av el ,." :

I F Y O U n eed yo ur
h auled . c a ll ( 61.t l 985 4 119
an y tim e.
2 18 12tp

i lf l•

GASOUNE ALLEY

too old-to
IIVIrlrl

fnl~ic;.

.With 40Ur

It's aoc)a
when one
knows one's
own -faults!

IF INTER E STED in b u il d ing ,,
a
n ew
h ome .
c onta c t ....
R O U SH CO N ST R U CTION , :....,
f ree est im a t es , Gr eg RoU sh ,""'
99'1 ] 583 .
2 18 12t c
LU C K ET T F ar m Equ i pm ent ,
We!l t
W as h in g ton
St . 1
A l bany . Phon e (t.I JJ 698 30 32
or 698 7881
·, 18 26t c

I haven't
done one
worthwhile
thinq in
tnll whole
1ife!

You a1lrr1ost
married
f'---:;'&gt;'h:J.

me '

...':,

~

P A, P E R h a n g i n g , pa i nting ,
pan elin g . e tc . Phon e 9,119
2023
'l 1811tp • •

.,,

--- --·--

R E A DY MIX C ON' ~: "'c:: , t:•
d e liv e red ri gh t to yOJ.Jr
pro jec t. F a st and easy . Free •'
es ti m at es. P h one ~92 3284,
Goegt e in Rea d y M i K ' Co ..
M iddl eport , Ohio .
6 30 rt c

1-!MM!!-THAT PLACE IS
TCO WEL.L GUARDED. SIJMMON MY
FLYIN6 CARPETr!- . r-----:J

IN THE BACI&lt;WARD
WESTE='f&lt;N WORLD
THEY'D CALL'THAT

OF

.....

2 Tilting, as
a ship

3 Expressed
an aspiration 14 wds,)
4 Night
before
5 Toothed
6 Possession
7 Shea
Stadium
athlete
8 Venetian
landmark
(3 wds.)
9 Streaked
with
lines
10 Registered
17 Undivided

Yesterday'sAII8Wel"
ZO Famed
political
cartoonist
23 Burrowing
beast
24 Take an
oath
25 Sile of
Dante's
tomb

CAN'T 'IOJ AT
LEAST 6 1VE N\f;:
A HINT OF WHAT
~15 IS ALL
ABOUT?

,.
'

26 EMui
28 Hood's rod

30 Took
.heed
31 Pens
35 In our
midst
3'1 Before
39 Japanese

river

ALL I CAN
6AY 18 .. ..
MOON
LADY!

j~

AstraGraph
Bernice B - Oool
For T - r . MII'Ch 2, 1171

(Morell 21·Ajlrll 11)

.

OI!MlNI (Moy 21-June 20) The

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTEis

TE

11
II

Xp N

Here'~

how to work it :

AXYDLBAAXR
I.ONGFI!LLOW

PITTER

·.Mrr&amp;R

_'_,

leadership rote in any groUp
endeavor today Is likely to fall
on you . Use your In it iative to
get things rolling .

fare rather well.

are your strong sutt. You c. r

work tn harmony wtlh IIIIi
about anybody.

8CORP10 (Ool 14-Nor Ill
There won1 be much loolfnl

around tor you today. ft ohouM
be a vwy pooducltwl doy.
•
IAGmARIUI ( -

~

~

C W A.

Ap

TW

I.PRRXSPPZ ,

QP

AP

WVS

FV
FV

c

X P J U .- F VJ A

for you today. Putthat., ftM·

PISCES (Fib 20-M-

Cryptoquote: CYNICS_ ARE ONLY HAPPY IN
MAKING THE WORLD AS BARREN FOR OTHERS AS THEY

GEOROB

:=t:~~ ;~~~ya ~~~:::;,~;~0~~

endeavor .

are very encouraging. II 1'011'111
enterprising, you could
your bank balance.

boOIIII

·

'

·r.

w~

MII'Ch 2, 1111

Opportunities are all aratiiW
you that you may h..,.lgn.,..
In the paat. This coming ryou will be able to lake 1 .....
cond look. and reap 11 ....,_

LIBRA (Sept 2:1•0CI 23) To- · ed harvest

I COULD WRITE
SQ\IE THIN6 00 IT ABouT
THE SICENTENNIAL

Ill

Over the next few Mya COftoo ,
ditlons affecting you m...,.

day. Become Involved in things
where you can use your

R C I. J Avenues ol gain cometh rough

tit

mind of yours to good use, for•
yourself and others.

D N M M V D D ag ,nation Is especially keen to-

D N J Y · C W Z crealive abllllles to the lullesl.
VIRGO (Aug 23·Sept tiJ

HAVE MADE IT FOR THEMSELVES. JIEQDITH

AQUARIUS (Jifl 20-fob

Mental tasks should be 1 II'IIP

LEO (Jul~ 23·Auo 22) Your lm-

'vaieniay•s
ONE OF THESE DAYS
I'M DIGGIN'ME A
DADBURN WELL

~

'

wr•tit

CRYPTOQUOTES

'·
:.
•:
:;

.

day you wlll naturally lall l!IW;
partnershiO situations, whllli~'

should ftnd you'll have
21) You're a Joyous , _ -r
more elbow room toda)' to act
well-mel today. You'll brlgIndependently of others
Bny group you're part of.
demands. Concentrate on ad. CAPRICORN (Dec 21.....
vancing your own Interests.
If you have a chance to
-+--t--ITAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) things up in an Important sttuetoday to clean up a
tlon today, by all means do to.
11-1--t- + - t--JI.;;-&amp;;t,,;'·ime
you know wlisn 't hand1- . Don't teave loose ends, even If .
-:-+-t--t-t--Jiotilerp5roperly, even though you have 10 push othtrl con.
~
may not be aware of the cerned .

One l('lt er simply stands lor nnother . In this sample A is CANCER (June 2t-July 22)
u:-;erl for the three I.'s, X f(,r the two O's, ('IC. Si ngle l e tters. The next few days you may be
even more ambitious than
apostrophes, lhe length And for mation of the words are all
usual. T houg h you ' ll h~t_ve
hints. Ench day the ('ode l etlers are different.
some challenges, you should

Com pl ete Service
Phone , .
949: 2487 or 949, 2QOO . Racine,;. 1
Oh10 . Crltt Br a dford .
.,. :

:.O.UIIIOER iHUNDER

12 :45-Eiec. Co. 33.
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
1:00-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil OonahUf! II
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:3o-Days ol our Lives 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; ,,
As The World Tuurns 8,10.
·
2:00-S20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:30-Doctors 3,4,15; Neighbors 6,13; Guiding Light
8, 10.
3: Do-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital-6, 13; A"
In The Family 8,10; Llllas Yoga &amp; You20.
3:30-Qne Life to Live JJ; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game 8.10; You Can Do It 20; lTV Utilization 33.
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; 'krv Griffin 4; Somersotl5:
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister
Rogers 20,33; Movie " Thoroughbreds Don'l Cry" .
10; Dinah 13.
·
4 :3G-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 81
Sesame St . 20,33; To Be Announced 15 .
5:00-Bonanz' 3; Family Aflalr 8; Star Trek 15.
,
5:3G-Adam -12 4,13; News 6; Beverly Hlliblllles ·8;
E lee. Co. 20,33.
6:00-News 3.4,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; lTV
U!lllzatlon 33.
6:3G-NBC News 3,4,15i ABC News 13: Andy Grlfllth 61 ·
. CBS News 8, 10; HO(jgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias Yog•
&amp; You 33,
•
·
7:6o-Truth or Cons . 3; To tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Country Place B; News 10; Name That
Tune 13; Family Aflalr 15; Antiques 20; Wild Wild
World of Animals 33.
7.: 3G-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal With II 6; [
$25.000 Pyramid 8; Ev~nlng Edition ,with Martin i
Agronsky 20; Price is Right 10; To tell the truth 13; '
High School TV Honor Society 15; Family Theat..33.
8:00-Movln' On 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; Good Timet
8,10; International Anlmallon Festival 20; Behind
the Lines 33.
8 :3G-laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Mash 8,10; Consume~ ;
Survival 20,33.
&gt;
9:0G-Pollce Woman 3.4, 15;; Rookies 6,13; , Adami (
Chronicles 20,33 ,
9:30--Qne Da y at a Time 8,10.
10:00-City of Angels 3,4,15; Marcus Welby, M .D. 6,\3: '
Switch 8,10; News 20; Woman Alive 33.
'
10:3G-Woman Alive 20; Woman 33.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Ma ssachu~etts ·
Primary
Speclol :
13, 15,3,4,6,8 .10; Janak I 33.
11 : 45-Mystery of the Week 6,13,
12 :0G-Johnny Carson 3.4.15; Movie "Let's Switch" 8; •
Movie "A Ticket to Tomahawk" 10.
1: 15-News 13.
.1: 3G-Tomorrow 3,4,

,,

I Prefix for
phrase or
site

O ' DEL L AH n ement located •
behind
Rutland
Grade
Sc ho o l. T u n e u p , brakes ,
wh eel ba l ancing , alinemenf.
Phon e 742 2004.
11 . 16 tfc ...."•

N

ACROSS
I Mauled.
&amp;Saunter
II Living ·
12 European
finch
13 Ascended
14 Pinch
pennies
15 Rowan tree
16 Ballerina 's
mainstay
18 Sandra or
Ruby
19 Apartment
dweller
21 Civil War
vets org .
Z2 Squire
23 Dole out
24 Not verse
26 Showed
disdain
27 Bombast
28 One kind
of club
29 Eggs
30 Embrace
32 My !Fr.~
33 Had dinner
:14 Son of
Miled

DOWN

Mod ern San itat ion . 99 2-3954 a
or 992 73 49.
-t.
9· 18 -t f C' ,

-10·9-JfcE
OOG, l ini e'i tone , (nave
and fill dirt dellverect ~~ ·
Phon e Bill Pul lins, 992·2478. 2-19 ·26tC \.

AJxxx opposite K x x.

There was no adverse bidding
and both opponents followed
when he cashed dummy's
king.
Our answer is that the play
for the drop is more likely to
s ucceed than the finesse .
(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win
at Bridge , " c/o I his
newspaper, P. 0 . Bo• 489,
Radio City Slation, New York,
N Y 10019)

world
4% Otate
t3 Billiard sbot

4 - 16 - lfc . ~

R·E-o

Os wald : "A rubber-bridge
player has no problem with
today's hand He lets East
hold the first spade with his
queen , ducks the second spade
also, and wins the third. Then
he takes the c lub finesse and
makes his contract whether it
wins or loses ."
Jim: " A match-point player
s hould also duck the first
spade , but will put in con·
sidera ble study about the se·
condone . If he wins it and the
club finesse is on he ruhs oil

wise or

S EPTl c - TA N K S~Ie-;~d-:-' :

'

An Iowa reader asks if he
s hould finesse or play for the
drop when holding :

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

38 Motherless
calf
40 Booby trap
41 Word with

PRIVACY~

- Sweeper s . t oaste r s, irons , ., ..
all sma ll app l i an c es . lawn , ,.
mow er , n e xt to St ale H igh -•,,;
way G arag~ on Ro u te 7. ,.
Phone ' 85 3825.
,
··~ ·

----·-------

lead - 6 4

36 Bury

AN INVASION

ELW OOD BOWER S REPAIR

C. BRADFORD , A ut:tioneer .

Pa.ss

by THOMAS JOSEPH

D &amp; D iRE E Tr imm·ing . 20 ....
year s expltrifnce . I nsu red .
fr ee es t i ma te s. Cal l 992 238 4 .. ,
o~ (6 14l 698 72 57 A l ~~n y . 1f c

- -- - - - - - - -

3 N. T. Pass

Sootb

Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.

~tMtf•~ tar'

E X CAVA TIN G ,
d oz er ,
b ac k h oe
a nd
d ilc h·er
C ha rl es R
Ha tf iel d Ba c k
Hoe Ser v ice . Rutl an d , Oh io Phon e 742 ?0 08
11 30 7Bt c

·- ~

Ease

GOING

'TO LEAVE HIM ~EllS' ?
WHY?

·'RAIII RAII'I
Vol

SAIOHEl'~
YOU'VE MADE

,.

---

'

Pass
Pass

Opentng

SOME 1tMf.S IT
15 l'lt-ll TO &amp;
~T AlERT It-!
A PEACEFUL
GARCftt ·

' CLmiR CLATTER

'299
Rev.

•'
•..
•
''·

LITTLE ORPHAN

-·

-- -

'

b-:J,

BR HOME ." just fi n ished
rem o deli n g
Salem
Sf . ,
Rut l an d . Phone 7112 . 23 0~
a ft er 4 p .m : or see Milo B.'
Hutchinson .
10 9·1fC \

--~ - -- ------- - .----

CO-OP
Automotlc Wotoo
Condillonor
Model UCXXX.
210,000
Weekly Groin
Copotlty

•

v

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

Nortb

IN . T.

. ' UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

REMODE LIN G ,
Pl umbi ng .
h ea l in g a.n d a ll types Of '
r e pa 1r .
W or k .'
g ene ra l
70 y ear s e x ~
g u ar an t ee d
p er ie n c e . Pt1on e 99 '1 2409 ~
5 1 lf c

Almo st n ew h om e . 3 br ,
b ath ,
dining r .,
ful l
bas em e nt with u til i t y r .,
HW
fl o o r s ,
por c h es ,

·.
or

6

Free estimates on car p eting and installation .
We' ll bring sa rftples to vour
hom e with no oblig a tion .
See h ow vou can really
sa v e.
Mik e Young , Manager
Sales. and Installati on
Rt . 3, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769'
Phone da or night
61 4.992 ·2106• J . 14 1 m o .

-

West

•'

E X C AV A TI NG . do ler , lo.fu t: , .....,;.,l
1"
a n d ba c kh oe work : sept tc
t anks
i n s t a lle d ; ' du m p ' ~ .
! r ucks an d lo boys for h ir e ;
_,
W1 ll ha u l fdl d irt. top soil . ·r
l 1m estone an d grav e l . Call
Bob o r Roge r J eff er s, day
,
p hone 992 7089, nigh ! phone ..tH '
992 3525 or 1192 5232 .
7 Ll ·tf c

for Sale

EXC A V AT ING .

R E M O D ELI N G
A N D
RE ROOI' I N G , CAL L 247
23 6 1
2 ?i 6tc

Both vulnerable

SLOAN'S
CARPETING

Take advantage of our
pr ices .
Quality
buil t
homes. N ice lots available
in n ice location s.

Rill

.Q 8 72

-

SAVE MONEY?

1:00-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13,

twelve tricks . If the club
finesse loses and spades were
6-2 he still makes five odd. If
they were 4-4 he makes the
same three he would score if
he had ducked the second
spade . But if West had led ·
from a five-card spade suit, he
will have chucked his contract
right out the window,"
Oswald: " Most match-point
players woold grab that second spade. They would see
that illeir three no trump was
a very normal contract and
woold go after the overtricks.
This time they would be
rewarded irrespective of
where the king of clubs
happened to be because East
held only two spades. "

• 95
• K 53
tK JlO
• A J 10 9 5

•K JB642
• J 96

Ph . 949·l023 or 841-2661

WANT TO

MO DERN CHEMICALS
100 Kerr Str ee t
Pom er o v , Oh io 45769
(614 ) 992 -2798, Dick Seyler
1 '1 9 1 mo .

n

1974
KX 25 0
K a wa s a k i
M o tor c ro ss . ne w leat her s
in c lu d ed W1lh b ~o t s 3 h our s
r idrn g tim e , neve r b een
r ac ed . P h . 992 7693.
2 29 31p

CONSTRUCTION
N ath an Biggs
Radiator Specialist

9:3G-Maude 8,10; World Press 20.
10 :00-Jigsaw John 3 3,4,15; Rich Man, Poor Men 6,131
Medical Center 8, 10; News 20; Bl -Ways 33.
10 :3G-Lock, Srock, &amp; Barrel 20; Cakh-33 33.
11 :00-News 3.4.6.8.10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :3G-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Academy of Counlry
Music Awards 6,13; Movie "Leflers from Th,.
Lovers" 8; Movie "Revenge Is My Oestfnyu 10·
Janak! 33.
'

Match point vs. rubber bridge
NORTH

1 F r om th e largest Truck or 1
Bul ldoze r" · R a d ia tor to th e '
, s m a lles l Heat er Co r e .

9:00-Joe Forrester 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10.

WIN AT BRIDGE
D&amp;D

BISSEll BUILDERS

We Bu v Ant1ques

ST RAW. 75c b al e , on e new J pt
h i tc h , on e r o w c u lt i v at or .
$7 5 P hon e ( 6 1J ) 985 3581
2
3to

l ? )( 60 K I R K W OOD M ob il e
Hom e, to tal e l eC ex. c on
d i!ion P h one 7H 22 05 or 247
?73 1.
2 79 .3t c

EASY

WASH GI&lt;:AI!i!S"'A-;;!1-,.
0ATMOOK AND
PREPARES TO SHOVE OFF.. lJNAWA~E
THAT THE MlJMMY . fiA5 Lf;APED
ASOARD, TOO!

'·

FU R NIT U RE
STRIPPI NG SERVICE
Re m oval
ot · Paint s
Pla s tics Va r nishe s, e tc .
Wood or M e" tal
Re pairs . R e fin 1S h1ng of
F urniture . 1
Burni Sh in g Polishing of
Copper &amp; Bra ss

19 75 KA W A SAK I K Z40 0, t" 974
Ford Co ur ie r , bo t h w it h
ex t ras . m u s t se ll P hon e 992
7066 .
2 29 2tc

.-

CAPTAIN

.. .

. .' -

Rutland 142- 2331
Roger Wamsley
3-1- lmo.

M od er n

A n fiq ue

TO G IV E AWAY
Pup pies , 5
mal es , 1 f em al e . 8 w ee k s BOLEN 'S g ard en tra c tor Wtl h
old . Ca ll 9.t9 26]] be tw ee n 6
c ulli v ator . A lso. CB r a d io
am an d J2noon
·
Phon e 992 7826
2 27 4tp

Z ENITH c ol or TV , 23 in ch
Scr een E :w;cellen1 cond i tion .
P hon e "992 72 4·1
2 ?9 Jtc

Tup pe r s Pla i n s .Ches t er
W a t er D is tr ict now set ti ng
but k wat er to tanks on
tru c k s at our new office!
L oc a t ed on St R t. 7
1 Mile North of
Eas t ern H lgh SchOo l
Serve Y ourself D ispenser
T a king (luarters only . one
at a tim e. for 250 g allons of !.
wat er .
Op en al l t he T i m e
for your c on v eni ence *
3· \ . \mo .

• A Q64

1974 H O ND A X R 75, g o od
cond i t io n
Phone 2-1 7 254 1
2 29,3t c

t d x 70 MOB IL E H o m e. total
c lec 3 ron c en l r a t a i r con
d ili onc r , c x c ,r ll en r c o n
dil 10n . P hone 247 26H &lt;1 or
'} 17 2661
1 :.o.t 7tc

For Sa le

R&amp;J COINS

Ple x agta ss · Table Tops ·
Mirrors - Sto rm &amp; Screens .
FERRELL ' S GLASS &amp;
- HOME MAINTENANCE
Si d i ng - V i nyl
8.
Al u m in um W indow Gl ass
&amp; G la zi ng On the Job o r in
Shop .
Pi ck up an d deliv ery
se r v i ce .
Ca ll CoiiHt 388 ·8239
•n
b uild · up
Sp e cia l i J e
roofing &amp; hot rooh . Fre e
Estimates
10 years ex ·
perie n ce .
Harve Ferrell
Bidwell. Ohio
2 6 1 mo

2 29 3t c.

Mobile Homes For Sale

or

Ph . 992 ·3993
4 10 1 mo .

T A PP A N s ta in l ess s t ee l drop
in elec r a n g e, S75 w arm
Mo rn in g 65 , 000 btu gas
h ea rer . 2 yr s. o l d . $200. G as
roo m
h e a te r
wlf h
m ec han ic;;~ !
the r m . $2 5.
Used 1.· g lass ex t er ior door ,
~ 1 5 . P h one 992 73 5·t a lt er 6

'·

EXPERIENCED

2 29 6t p

Find buri e d
1r e asure .
Coins , rings , si lv er , gold .
Coin &amp; Metal
De t ectors
For Rent

LARRY
LAVENDER
Svratuse, Ohio

Lo c a l 1 own er , automa t i c , bile vi n yl Int . trim , sil ve r
fi ni sh , good t i r es, radi o, real ec onom y . Book Val ue
Pri ce $2875 .00

TER
A\IAILA LE

BUV , SELL or TRADE

Fln•nc i ng Available
Blown into Walls &amp; Attics
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING- SOFFITT
GUTTERS· AW NING S

S2895

VIND A L E 12 1t 68, 3 bedr m .
H E LP to f ence a f a r m . Ph on e ·
b a lh &amp; J ? , 11 II cx pando , 25
94 9 20 57.
It awn ing and p or c h , t ull y
2·29 31c
c arp et ed . Ph on e 8·1? 2880
2 211 6tc

WANTED

S449S

BULK

COINS

Blown
Insulation Services

Whrt e.2 dr , .4 sp eed tra·ns. , ra dio, bod y m ould ings. W· S·
w t ires It' s l ike new w ith less than 5,200miles .

Pels

Wanted To Buy

v.a

FREE ESTIMATES

Br on ze f ini sh , s t a nd stone v inyl tr i m , 350
turbo
hydr a m a t ic , powe r st eer i n g , pow er b ra kes. f actor y
a1r , r adro, ra dial t ire s . Less th a n 10, 500 m iles by
origma l ow n er .

.1.1

MONDAY, MARCH 1,1976
5 :00-Bonan&lt;a 3; Family Arlalr 8; 5tar 1reK 1;.
5:30--Adam-12 ~.13; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
E lee. Co. 20,33.
6 :00-News 3,4,8.10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
Special Education 33.
6:3G-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13: AndyGrlffl!h 6.;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
I :00-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling lor
Dollars6; Buck ~s B; News 10; Candid Camera
13 : Family Affair 15; On aging 20; Resourceful
West VIrginia 33,
1:3G-That ·Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Don Adams
Screen Test 4; Match Game PM 6: Price Is Rl hi
8; EvenlnQ Edition wl!h Marlin Agronsky 20; !ftgh
Road to Advenrure 10: To !ell Truth 13; Friends
ot Man 15; Marco Sport lite 33.
8:00-Bobby Vinton 3; Movie "You ng Pioneers" 13;
Rich Little 4,15; College Baske!ball6; Gunsmoke 8:
U.SA People &amp; Politics 20,33; Rhoda 10.
8:30--We Think You Should Know 3; Ambassador
College Concert 33; Phyllis 10; Findings 20 .

Business Services

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

or Month

3.
4.

''

u n ~;&lt;n o wn .

Ca n ce ll a t i on
Correc l 1on s w ill b e ac
c c p ted until 9 a rn f or
Day o f Pubi 1Ci:\ I 10n
R EG ULATIONS
The Pu b lis h er r ese rves
th e r 1Qh l ro ed i t or r l!- j ec t
a ny ,1 d s d e eme d ob
iec1 1on al
Th e p ub lisher
w 111 no r be r esp on s 1b le for
more tha n on e in c or rect
1n s.c r t! on
RAT ES
Fo r W o1n t Ad Servin ·
~
c ents pe r w o rd on f'
1n ser 110n
M in im u 111 Cll ar g e $1 00
1.1 c en rs per wo r d th r ee
r on secul i v e
l f! Se rt ion s
} t. ce n ts pe r w ord si x
r on sc cu r i v e
1n s er 11on s
?~ P er Ce nt D1sc ou n t on
pa i d ad s a n d ad s pai d
w 11 h 1n 10 da y s
CA RD OF TH A NKS
&amp; 0 6 1TU A RY
'S 7 0 0
for
50
word
mi n im un1
E ac h a cld it ional w or d 3
c cn rs
, BLIND AD S
A ddi t1cn a 1 75c Ch a r ge
p er 1\ dv ert ise m en r
OFF I CE HOUR S
8 JO a m ro 5 00 p 1'n
Da i l 'f 8 30 am to 12 00
Noon Sal urd ay
Phon e roday 99 2 2 156

Television log for easy .viewing

Auto Sales

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

.=!Ill

OJ J

DD 'l1tAcy

~

�8 - The Datly Senhnel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0, Monday, March I, 1976
h1s masters degree 1n

Library

Educa lion from Marsha II
Umversaty, iilld IS conhnuJng

Contt.nued fr om page 2
Richard M. Kelchurn tn
memory of hfr brolher,

his educHiton at W V.U He ts
presenll) prtnctpa l al the
lhe former Shtrley Mtller , a
teacher at the vocational

Wea ver,

Robin

Stewar t ,

Rathe Reed. The money wtll Cheryl Weaver . Chn s ly
be used to purc ha se new Kearns, Cheryl Huber and
Judy Needs
books.
The library will celebra te
Other persons prese ntmg

books

were

J ack

He ss,

Donald Bumgarner, Thelma
Scally, D1x1e F1owers 1 Nancy

Kimes, Mr. and Mrs DHvtd
Russell, Jackte Ridgwa y,
Mtldred Kmg, Charles Dodd ,
Mrs. James Wtse , Mrs I.

20 years of se rvtce to the
pubh c lhts spnng II was

es tablts hed as lhe ftr s l
lOmmumty proJec t of the

Ne\\ Haven Women's Cl ub,
whtle Mrs. Powell was se r\' Wg as the f1 r st president

The board of dtrectors and
Charles Sa lser, Darlene lhe hbranan thank the people
Hensley, Mrs Harold Lewis, for the ir conhnued suppm t
Smtih Capehart Pos t of the Thomas Walson once satd,
Amencan LegiOn, Mrs Jack · Once an orgamzatlon loses
Needs,
Mrs .
Ha rol d Its spmt of pwneenng and
l.onganacres,

Ann

B1 r d ,

Bumgarner , Mrs

Velma

Roush ,
Mrs
The lma
Capehart, and Alberta Wiles
The hbrary has purchased
lhe latest edilton of Community
Leaders
an d

res ts on lts early works, Its
pi ogress stops " Mrs PoweU

asks that the people keep
lhelr ptoneer sptril and help
llle libra ry grow mm e and

conlt nue to gtve the besl
posstble to
the
servtces
Noteworthy Am e n c an s
publlc
prmted and ed ited by
American BIO graphi c al
Inshlute. Nommahons musr

be made by colleges and

olhers m positions of trust. M Ntxo n looked tann ed,
Among those selected lor lhts healthy and relaxed as he
award was Rtck P Powell of returned from a mne-day 1np
Pomt Pleasa nt, a former to Chma wtth lhe pratse of
of New

Ha ve n

Pekmg 's leaders rmg1ng m

,Powell, a graduate of West his ears.
V1rgm1a Umvers1ty, received

MEIGS THEATRE
Tomte thru Thurs
Mar l -4
NOT OPEN

Fr . S.at. -Sun.
· Mar. s 7

French Connect1on n
C Techn1color l
Show start s 7 DO p m

high in Massachusetts
BOSTON (UPI ) - The
Massachusetts primary campatgn, endtng today, has
taken on the appearance of
etght men marching in ntne
directtons .
But
the
candidates do seem to agree
on one thing - a good
endorsement ts worth a hundred handshakes
Henry Jackson came up
with the juictest plum with
lhe endorsement of Darnel
Patrtck Moynihan, former
U.S Ambassador to the
Uruted Nations Moynihan's
backing was announced in
newspaper advertisements
today and, lor gravy, in a
scheduled news conference
with the senator.
Sargent Shriver, related by
marrtage to hts best-known
endorsements, campaigned
with members of the
Kennedy family, mcluding
Robert Kennedy Jr ., and
United Farm Workers chief
Cesar Chavez Sunday, and
had singer Roberta Flack and
District of Columbta Rep.
Walter Fauntroy with him for
daylong stumpmg through
bla ck neighborhoods In
Boston.
Morrts Udall has leaned
heavily on his endorsements

questtomng by the S€nate
lntelhgence Committee. He
has

most

k:l iready

an s wered

of

71
ques hons se nt to h1m Feb. 5

m arnved a t Los Angeles
In t.ernaltonal Airport m a

cold drtzzle that splattered
Nixon a nd hls entourage of
aides and Secret Service

agents.
Ntxon walked down the
limousine only a lew feel
from repor ters, but observers
could see no s1gn of the hmp

He also toured lactortes m
New Bedford and North
Andover and vistted an
abandoned railroad station
where he asked: " How can a

government tolerate such a
high unemployment rate
when there

IS

so much work

to be done putting our
railroad
system
back
together"
Udall said in a television
mterview Sunday he heheved

Merri Ault
Contmued from page 1
fteld
Mtss E tchln ge r attends
lhe United Melhodtst Church
m Pomeroy where she ts
m a girls' Gospel trio . She Is

Ntxon 's daughter, Trtcta

more than 20 years of

Cox, and a bout 40 re porte1 s
were on hand Sunday evemng
when the same Chinese-

hos hhty, Nixon was g1ven a n
e~e n more lavtsh receptiOn

tnp

tha t

thawed

Stn o-

than he
Prest dent.

re ceived

as

liberal and one conservative

left" alter the vote.
Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind.,
satd on teleVISion he didn't
think " there wtll be a clearcut verdict in Massachusetts
... what we are looking for is a
fellow on lhe dance floor at
lhe end of the marathon."
Juruny Carter was finished
wtth his Massachusetts campaigning, but the other soutHerner in the race, George
Wallace, was flying back for
a last day of speeches ending
wtth a final night rally in a
!heater.

Girls end
cage season
on ll-1 record

Ve terans Memonal Hospital.
Miss Sisson 1s a semor at

Metgs Htgh School and plans
to attend Rto Grande College
to prepare for work as a
laboratory techmctan. She is
lhe honored queen of Bethel
62, International Order of
Job's Daughters and serves
Eptsco pa l

Church

in

lhe student counctl and vtce
prestdenl of the Drama Club
She was a dele ga te to
Buckeye Gtrls State tn 1975
and 1s listed 1n ''Who 's Who Jn
Amertcan Mustc Students "
and " Who's Who m Amertcan
High School Studen Is "
event presented a talent act

whtch was judged as a part of
the

contest

M1ss

Ault

a hat and cane
dance routine to "Alley Cat. "
presen~d

M1ss E 1chmger sang " I'm

Sorry" and Mtss Sisson
presented a trump ~ ! solo,
~ ' Valse

Brilliant"

ac-

compamed by Lori Wood.
Judges were Apnl Stevens,
14th dtslrtcl Sweetheart, and
Elame Cook , past ltrs t
dtstnct sweelheart.
Mtss Aull, durmg the

on

defens e

bonds and flowers and Miss
Etchmger and Mtss Stsson
each recetved a $25 bond and
a bouquel of car~atwns
Bonds were donated by the
Ctttzens Nattonal Bank,
Racme Home National Bank,
The Farmers Bank and
Savmgs Co. and the Pomeroy
Nahonal Bank
The olher ftve con~stants
each recetved a flower and a
cash award

lt1 1 1\IAN;./III!.&lt;II IVF

1814: lnsptratwn under the bombs.
The Bnti sh have burned our capital. Now, they h ead for
Baltt more, fu ll of pride and pi a us for a nother easy VICtory But &lt;1t Balt1more, our mihtia 1s ready . Ready to
meet t herr ca nnons a nd rockets a nd bombardme nts of
Fort McHenry a ll through a long m ght's battl e. Held
aboard a Bntish sarlmg shtp and watching through the
mght IS a young Am er ican lawyer named Francis Scott
Key He paces He worne s He wonders if our flag is still
wavmg In the mornmg, when the smoke clears, h e sees
t he star-spa ngled banner, ragged bttt fl ymg h1gh ." He jots
down a proud poem h e calls "The Defense of Fort
McHenry. " Puts 1t to an Engli s h drinking tune. And
soon, it becomes qmte a hit und er a new t rtle: "The
Star Spang led Ban9er " ~

Mrs . Miller was born Dec
30, 1897 tn Wayne County , W

Va , the doughier of the tale
Wilham and Mary Belle
Carey Drenner. She was the
w1dow of Raymond Miller,

wh o died In Seplember, 1972

Surv iving are a daughter,
Mrs . Edtth Re1ser, Route 4
Pomeroy ; a granddaughter,
Mrs Betty Van Matre ; Route
1 M1ddlepor t. a great

Thousands
Continued from page 1
Last Frtday, the union's
secretary-treasurer, Harry
Patrick , echoed Miller 's
warnings and satd a small
group was spreading "totally
false" rumors that the UMW
was
supportmg
a
"memorial" strike next week

to dr{lllllltize support lor the
bill.
been
Leaflets - have
etrculated throughout Ute
southern coal belt by
dtsstdents who declared
"we'll calltt ourselves" if the
UMW leadership fails to call
a memorial strike.

Opponents of the bill up for
amendments in Washington
have said 11 "isn't worth the
paper it's wrttten on," and
the UMW hierarchy has
acknowledged that it isn 't
totally satisifted wtlb the

measure.

They were

Deanna Baker, daughter of
Mrs. Walter Baker, Coolvtlle;
Martha Carson, daughter of
Mrs. Mary Carson, Coolville;
Marlene Harnson, Mr and

Mrs Marto? Harnson ,
Gallipolis, Teresa Sheline,
daughter of Mr and Mrs.
Henry Sheline, Gallipolis,
and Dee Stmms, daughter of
Mrs Mary Simms, Mmers-

ville.

:·

Maire, Roule 1 Middleport ;
two brothers, Loe Drenner,
Fort Meyers. Fla .. and John
B

Drenner, Route 1 M1d
three

sisters,

Mrs
Elizabeth Adk ins,
Punta Gorda. Flo.. Mrs
Louise Epperson , South
Charleston , W. Va ., and Mrs

Haney Adkins. East Lynn, W
Va.
She a1h!nded the Rutland

Church of the Nazarene

Besides her parents. Mrs.

Miller was preceded In death
by two sons, a daughter, a

brother and a sister
Funeral servtces will be at

2 p m. Wednesday at the

Rutland Chapel of the Wolker
Funeral Home wtfh

Lloyd 0

f tc tating

me

w:ev

Gnmm. Jr .. of.

Burial will be In

Miles Cemetery

Friends

may call at the chapel any

time after 2 p.m Tuesday

until time of services Wed-

nesday The family will
receive fr iends at lhe chapel
from 7 to 9 Tuesday evening.

THEODORE B. JOHNSON
LETART. W. Vo . Thedore (Ted! B. Johnson.
Rt 1 Letart, who died Sunday
in LeKington House Nursing
I me in Charleston , was a
n red farmer , born July 23,

19UO al Millwood

Scoring for

Meigs were

BEANSOUPSALE
RACINE - The Dorcas
Women's Fellowship wtll hold
a vegetable and bean soup
sale begmmng at 5 p.m.
Thursday tn the soctal room
of the Bethany Church at
Dorcas Pte and collee will
also be available. Persons

Vetera• Memorial HOfllllal
SATURDAY AOMlSSIONS
- Forrest Jolllllon, Muon;
Emerson Houdashelt,
Pomeroy; Arthur Roberti,
Middleport ; Wilma Andenon , Long Bottom; Vemon
Blevins, Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DIS·
CHARGES
Milton
Bailey, Cindy Stearns,
Bernice Molden , Martin
Gibbs, George Buckner,
RDbert Jeffers, Dana Me·
Cain,
Chester Foully,
Kathryn Mehger, Oarence
Spurrier, Henry Phelps,
Robert White, Mildred Bales.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Zelma Grady, Racine; Edna
Stiles, Pomeroy; Mary .
Machir, Point Pleasant; •
Harold Adams, ReedBville; :
Donna Vance, Albany;
Daniel Davidson, Pomeroy;
Donna Robbins, Pomeroy ;
Loshia Mitchell, Middleport;
Mary King, Minersville ;
Lester Lewis, Cheshire.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Debbie Hendri•, Sylvia
Wolle, Charles Batley,
Harold Brannon, Arnold
Bush .
Holzer Medical Center
( Blrlba, Feb. Z7 •
•
Mr. and Mrs. Larry L.
Gray, daughter, Wellston ; :
Mr. and Mra. Clifford D. '
Greer , daughter, Jackson ; ;
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Kno• ,
daughter, Radcltffe ; Mr. and Mrs Stephen J . Marshall, •
son, Patnot; Mr. and Mrs. ,
Ralph T. Perkins, daughter,
Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Myrl
T. Samons, son, Gallipohs ; •
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis E. Short, •
daughter, Crown Ctly.
(Births, Feb. Z8)
Mr and Mrs. John D.
Coleman, son, Oak Hill ; Mr. :
and Mrs. Tommy L. Hall, •
son, Oak Htll; Mr . and Mrs.
Claude M Perry, son, New
Haven, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs . •
William E Remy, daughter ,
Wellston .
1Blrlba, Feb. 29)
Mr and Mrs Thomas D.
Clark, daughter, Wellston ;
Mr and Mrs. Daniel A.
Taylor, daughter, Patriot.

His wile , Anne, died In 1973

Survivors Include three
sisters, Mrs Fannie Oiler,
Rt. J, Pomeroy ; Mrs Ruby

Bush. Long Botlom, and Mrs
Ruth Lewis. Rt. 1 Letart. two

brothers , Clarence Johnson,

Poinl Pleasant, and Kelly
Johnson, Middleport

Funeral services will be held

Wednesday at 10 30 a m ol

Foglesong Funeral Home in
Mason The Rev . George

Hoschar will

olfl ~ lale

Burial

will be In the Fa~rview
Cemetery Friends may call
at the funeral home from 6 to
9

p m Tuesday.

HILOTEMPS
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
highest temperature reported
Sunday lo the Natio nal
Weather Servtce, excludmg
AJaska and Hawaii, was 88

degrees al Cotulla, Texas
Today's low was minus 10
degrees at International
Falls, Mtnn

Soviets clap for detente

,J:f1~ wc~~~~~~~g

Pam Vaughan 17, Beth
Vaughan 2, DemariS Ash 6,
Mary Boggs 9, Ca thy
Meadows and Glenda Brown
2 each and Pat Vaughan 4.

H~spit~ New~

He was a son of the late
Simon Henry Johnson and
Sarah Etten Biggs Johnson

Meigs allowed Logan 4
potnts, 2 or which were foul ··
0
shots, durtng the second hall
MoscOW
and cbantfDI i!::
Meigs came ahve the
"Long
Uve
Communism,"
some
5,tltltl
delegateo
to lbe ::
fourth quarter as lhey conSoviet
Communis!
party
Coogreso
today
unanlmo•ly
::.
sistently broke Logan 's
approved
the
party's
prograin
lor
tbe
ae:llllve
ye1n
.;,.
press Pam Vaughan scored
detente
abroad
and
the
pursuit
of
Communllt
obje&lt;!Uve1
.;:
on three bast breaks. One fan .. at home.
.;:
said, " Metgs just got warmed
::
bt
a
brief
speecb,
party
General
Secrelltry
Leonid
I.
.::
up as Logan got worn down ' 1
Brezbnev said "Proletarian lnternallonallam, the -~~
Mary Boggs was tough
lrleadsblp ol peoples and the atrnggle lor ~~'See IWBded ·::
offenstvely and defensively
unanimously" In speeche1 durlug the ftnl week ol tbe 10. :;:.
desptte lhe fact she was
day congress.
;::
playing on a weak ankle .
"This Is our policy and we will not deviate from It," :,;.
The ftrst tournament game : Rrezhnev said.
:::,
for the gtrls wtll be on March ~
j
9 at 8 15 at Metgs High
.·
School

crowmng. received two $25

bypc1m1s5 10t10f I I U

dleport, and

Memorial Hospital following

outs tandtng

of the Ca ndystripers of

Each of the etghl contestants 1n Frtday mght's

From a Great American Bank

losers and to identify leading
contenders of Ute liberal and
conservative wings of the
party .
Jackson, who has called the
Massachusetts primar y
crucial, continued to predict
he would win it.
Shriver said he would do
"very well" but added in a
statement "tl 's JUSt plam
absurd" to credit lhe idea
"Utat there must be only one

a long tllness .

Honor Society, treasurer of

InternatiOnal Orde r of Job 's
Daughters, and 1s prestdent

Pomeroy

Ame ncan relatlons Hft e r

was " not to pronounce
winners" but to eliminate

grandson, Ken Everett Van

At Metgs Htgh School, Mtss
Stsson ts. a member of the
Pep, Marchmg and Symphom c Bands She ts a
member of the Nattonal

Juntor prmcess of Belhel 62,

began bothering htm agam
m Chtna.
anmversary of h1s hts tortc

he had "a better chance
Utan anyone else" to win the
nominatton Udall said the
role of the early prunaries

I
I

MINN IE C MILLER
Mrs M1nn1e C M11ter. 79,
Route 4 Pomeroy , died
Sunday morning at Veterans

"That's why the UMW is
going to try to improve it on
the House floor Tuesday,"
Patrtck said " And if we're
not successful, we'll try to
The Meigs Girls Basketball improve It in the Senate."
Team has ended tts regul ar
Patrie(( said a "handful" of
season wtlh a 11-1 record . In disstdents were atlempting to
lhe last game they defeated "blackmail" the UMW with a
Logan 42 to 24
wildcat strike
Meigs started out slow the
"I don't know what their
ftrstquarter but soon came to moltves are lor lhis action,
!tie and scored hve baskets to bot I do know the UMW is not
Logan's lour Two of Metgs gotng to let years of lobbying
s tarters, Beth and Pam go down the dram because of
Vaughan , had to stl oul the a handful of people who think
second quarter due to earl&gt; 'pte m the sky' ts better than
foul trouble At half-ltme they winning black lung benefits
only had a 2 point lead.
for an addttional UMW
In the lhtrd quarter Metgs famthes "
was shll unable to find the
ra nge on offense but was :-

HS an acolyte at Grace

es ta te
c oncermn g
In·
telhgence activities dunng
his admJmstraliOJI

Boemg 707 he departed

corporations."

from his leg atlment, "htch

During his stay tn Cht na,
al hts San Clemente, CHhf , which marked the fourth

ow~ed

by former
Watergate
prosecutor Archibald Cox
and House Democratic
Leader Thomas O'Netll of
Massachusetts.
Touring a Boston clothing
factory with O'Neill today,
Udall urged workers to untte
behind a liberal candidate himself - who "is committed
to making lhe federal government respond to ordinary
families, not the giant

active m the chmr and smgs

pla ne's ra mp lo a wattmg

W1 th h1s return, however ,
fac es
further
N1xon

:

I

Nixon looks quite well

umversilies, orgamzations,
LOS ANGELES (UP !) chambers of commerce and Form er Preside nt R1cha rd

r~s1dent

Endorsements ranking : Area Deaths

Letart school anrl marncd to

Wilham Bowell Mrs Paul
Powell presented the book schooltn Mason County He 1s
Creattve Art of Sewmg b) lhe son of Mr . and Mrs Paul
J oan Ftelds m memory of B Powell of New Haven.
Members of the Keyettes
Mrs . Adrain t Maxm e l
fr
om Wahama High School
Lathey Mrs. Harry Layne
have
been volunteenng on
and other members of t11e
Thursde:ty evcn mgs a t the
Dyer lamtly gave lhe books
from lhe hbrary of the late ltbrary for the pasl several
weeks They tnclude Karen
Mrs Harry Dyer
Snnth,
Ktm Kmgh l, Mtndy
Cash contrtbutions were
Rayn
es,
Carletta Gibbs,
made by Mrs
J a m es
Ctndy
Gnnstea
d , Dmah
MacKmght tn memory of her
Myers
,
Ltnda
Zesl,
Cheryl
son, George MacKnight and
Adams,
Lora
Smtih,
Jenmler
the Robert R Hollman
famtly tn m e mory of Mrs

r --------- --------------- - -~

News •• in Briefs

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - John
Long , Mrs. Jack Randolph,
Mrs. James Belcher, Cathy
Cremeans, all of Letart; Mrs.
Don Ball, daughter, Letart;
Mrs . Richard Jeffers ,
Leetonia, 0 .; Bernard
Wallace, Pomeroy ; Danny
Marshall,· Red Ho- ; Mra.
Joe
Roach , daughter,
Pomeroy;
Ada
Craig,
Robertsburg; John Steinbeck, Gallipollo ; Mrs. Gene
Herdman, Evans ; Mrs.
Charles
Baird,
son,
Southside; Mrs. Don Siders,
son, Galhpolis Ferry ; Mrs.
Joe Tucker, Grimms Landing ; Mrs Richard Fauver,
son , Leon ; Mrs . Samuel
Holley, Ashton ; Albert Upterlrall , Galhpolls: Mane
Burdett, Charleston.

Contmued from page 1
and House Democratic leader Thomas O'Neill, who Is highly
popular in his home state of Massachusetts. Ronald Reagan
had gone home to California lor a couple ol days' rest when
Ford made his sweeping claims of victory - in the Florida
primary and in the general electioo.
WASHINGTON - REP . OTISPIKE, D.N.Y., chainnan af
lhe House Select Intelligence Committee, says Secre~ af
State Henry Kissinger "yells McCarthyism" whenever he Ia
crltictzed.
In an Interview with Newhouse News Service, Pike said :
"Secretary Kissinger Ia undoubtedly a tremendously able'
diplomat, but I don't think he believes much lu democracy. I
lhlnk he's impatient with the democratic processes. "We lowtd
lhat Secretary Kissmger yella McCarthylsm whenever
anybody criticizes him."

REVIVAL NOTED
POINT PLEASANT - A
revival wtll begin Tuesday
evening at the Church of God
of Prophecy, 2129 Uncoln
Ave., Point Pleasant The
Heavenly Highway Trio will •
sing on Tuesday and ~~PtCial
music wtll be presented each
evening of the revival which
will run all week The Rev.
Paul Chapman Is pastor;
services begin at 7 30.

to bring contatners.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
' .

•ROBE

GOOD BUY FROM
BAKER'S
BUDGET SHOP

•LONG SHIFT

Nylon Fabric and
Coil Springs
Com pare At '350 ...... ..

Tricot in Rambling Rose or

Cahco Blue. Sizes S-M-L-XL

by

2 9

S

..a .... • • 1

POMEROY, OHIO ,

SAO.OOO.CIO M111lmum lnaurence For E.ch D F-'""
Mlmber Fedlret ~It lnlurence Corpor•lon

..

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleport, Ohio

I

--

~

Lingerie Departl!lltlt, Second Floor

Elberfelds .In Pomeroy

The bonds will be dated
Aprtll, 1971 and bear mterest
at the rate onginally
estimated
(approximately
six percent per annwn) and
shall malure in substantially
equal annual installments
over a pertod of 20 years alter
lheir tssuance.
The notes, in the principal
amount of $415,000 will be
used in anticipation of the
tssuance of bonds They will
be dated Aprtl 1, 1976, and
bear interest at the rate of
five percenl payable at
maturity whtch wtll be April
I , 1977.
The other ordmance passed
by council under emergency

'"

NINETY-NINE MONDAY - Mrs. Laura Bradbury
observed her 99th birthday anniversary at Veterans
Memorial Hospital Monday Mrs. Bradbury received
flowers on the occasion and a cake was served to hospital
employes to mark the event. Mrs. Bradbury moved from
Gallia County to Meigs County when she was seven years
old. Her three children include Mrs. Rutll Arnold and
Cecil Bradbury of Middleport and Mrs . Esther Greer of
Miami Beach, Fla .

measures

to

meet

7, Harrisonville PTO to sohc1t

and the Pomeroy firemen to

Partly cloudy and contmued warm tomghl and
Wednesday wtth lows tomght
tn the mtd 50s and highs
Wednesday m the low lo mtd
70s. The probabtlity of rain ts
20 per cent today, tomght and
Wednesday.

sell popcorn from lhetr
popcorn !ruck on Saturday.
It was noted that persons
before solictti~ g lhe vtllage
must have permiSSIOn by

contactmg Mayor Andrews.
The mayor read Chief Jed
Webster's February report
whtch showed the depart-

ment mvesltgated 18 accidents, made 47 arrests,
issued 1,387 tickets, collected
$2,820 50 from the parking
meters, put tho new police
crwser 10 servtce on Feb 6

and drove tl 3,835 miles.
Councilman Harold Brown
commended Chief Webster
and hts department on the
recent recovery of stolen
property The mayor also
commended Webster of the
work that has been done m
controlling lottertng on the
parking lot
Councilman Harry Davts
sugges ted Cong Claren ce
Mtller be mformed the
Naltonal Fl ood Insuran ce
Program is " hmdrance to

Dateline 1776
NEW BERN, N. C., March
2 - The provincial Congress
banned the expo•t of pork,
beef, bacon, flour, peas and
rice Without a license except

those that would be sold
abroad lor the purchase of
salt, arms and ammunition.

All flour and pork was
reserved lor purchase by the
colony.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, MARCH 2,' 1976

~~I~:::::=:~::::=:=:=:·:·:::::::.:::·:·:o:·:·: :· ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·.·:·:·:·=·=·=·=·=~=·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::~:=:=:::::~:=

I! News • • •in Briefs\\ Sharing system
By Ualled Press International
GOV. GEORGE WAlLACE AND SEN. HENRY
JACKSON laced thetr first 1976 presidential primary test
lOOBY in a field of etght major Democratic candtdates
scralclting for votes, delegates and campaign momentum in
Massachusetts and Vermont
President Ford and Ronald Reagan were in their second
match of the year in Massachusetts, but neither campaigned
and interest focused on the Democratic ballot Only Ford and
Utree major Democrats were on the Vermont ballot, which was
a beauty contest with no delegates at stake. But in
Massachusetts there were 104 Democratic delegate votes on
tile line. Both Wallace and Jackson had skipped New
Hampshire to concentrate on seeking lhem.

DENVER - AUTHOR JAMES MICHENER says the
Blcentenmal has become a " national tragedy" because
businessmen are talting advantage of the event by selling
Items ranging from Minutemen salt and pepper shakers to
nag-emblazoned cars.
"Junk, junk and more junk," said Michener, a fonner
writer for the American Bicenterutlal Commission. "It ts a
national tragedy lhat the Bicentennial could not be celebrated
properly. Things leU into cheap political hands and everything
went down the drrun."
CINCINNATI - The mystery of the local "Big Foot'
apparently has been solved.ln recent months there have been
reports of a large, hairy creature roaming the area, evading
both capture and ldenttflcation
Last week, "Big Foot " was seen again and although it got
away, police made a mold of one of its footprints and took it to
Cincinnati Zoo Director Ed Maruska. Decided the zoo director,
"The print was made by a large dog."
CLEVELAND - DOWNTOWN HOTELS are struggling
along with their worst occupancy rates since the Depression, a
hotel eKecutlve satd Monday. " I haven 'I seen the bote!
business so bad since the Depression," said Allen J . Lowe,
president of the 790-foom Sheraton-Cleveland Hotel.
He said hts hotel's occupancy rate averaged 31 per cent
last year but has been only 20 per cent since January. One
national hotel accoiDlting firm estimates it takes a 57 per cent
occupancy rate to break even. Lowe also said a $5 to $7 million
renovation of his hotel has been postponed until owner Thomas
Uoyd can find financing somewhere outside the city. He said
Cleveland banks would not put up the money.

covers retreat
new study says
WASHINGTON (UP!) For the past five years the
federal government has used
the $30.2 bilhon revenue
sharing program "to cover a

cover a retreat from the
assumplton of nattonal
responstbility to deal wtth

TRUSTEES TO MEET
The Bedford Township
trustees wtll meet m regular
sesston at 6·30 p.m. Saturday,
Helen Swartz, clerk, satd .

Jan e

Walton ,

STRAIGHTEN UP!
POMEROY - Mayor
Clarence Andrews Monday
night warned that anyone
apprehended and convicted
ol littering the parking lot
area with bottles or papers
or lolterlug or drinking on
the slreels of Pomeroy will
he arrested and lined not
less than $50.
GRANT APPROVED
WASHINGTON , D.C Rep . Clarence Mtller has
announced the approval of
three Head Start grants lor
Southeastern Ohto Communtty Actwn Agencies. One
is a $120,730 grant to the
Galha-Metgs Comm umty
Action Agency.

living high
on the hog
WASHINGTON !UP!)
- Comptroller of lbe
Curreocy Jame• E.
Smllb hal been living
" high off lhe hog" aad
has been lax In his job of
regulati ng baaka, according to Sen. WOllam
Proxmire,

D·Wh.

Chairing a heariDg of
the Senate Banking
Commit tee
Monday ,
Proxmlre said Smith
has spe nt almost as
much time travellug as
be bas In Wasblugton,
Including many trips to
attend meetings jointly
sponsored
by
the
American

Bankers

Association.
He produced a list of
Smith's travels and
expenses and challenged
Items Including $1,213.30
for

" meals,

other" during
day meeting In
"You' re living
orr the hog,"
Smith.

lodging,

a threeHouston.
too high
he told

CHARLESTON, W. Va .
(UP!• - Momentum m a
wtldcat stnke protesting
proposed federal black hmg
legislation picked up in some
soutnern West Virginia mines
today, but appeared to fizzle
in others.
Reports from Ute coalfields
showed Utat two additional
Consolation Coal Co. mines
were closed by roving pickets
brmgmg the total work force
out at that company to 2,300,
according to spokesman
Leonard Gross.
However, the plctiire
Eastern Associated Corp.
wiUt several mines opening
after being closed Monday.
Company spokesman AI
Lewis said he had no linn
ligures on the number of men
out.
About 3,000 miners stayed
off work at Eastern
Associated Corp. mines
Monday.
Consolidation Coal Co. Is
the largest in West Virginia,
while Eastern AsSoctated has
the second largest workforce.
An estimated 5,000 miners
refused to cross picket lines

in the southern section of the

state Monday. One United
Mine Workers orricial blamed
the illegal strike on what he
termed a " black lung" ploy to
break up the union.
The House scheduled floor
action today on a committeeapproved bill, with mnnerous
amendments proposed both
to weaken and strengthen the
legtslatioo .
Some 300 members of the
United Mine Workers of
America union lobbied on
Capitol
Hill
seeking
congressional support for the
legislation, despite opposition
from dissidents within the
IDIIon who claim the bill in Its
present form Is worthless.
In southern West Virginia,
roving ptckets kept miners
orr their jobs, apparently
dissatisfied with a provision
awarding black lung benefits
to· any mtner who worked 30
years in an wtdergrolUid
bituminous mine or 25 years
in an anthracite mine.
United Mine Workers
President Arnold Miller '
warned the strikers they
were endanMering the future
(Continued on page 10)

Mother arraigned
READY FOR BICENTENNIAL - Mrs. Paul
Haptohstall of Mtddleport, above, models her Martha
Washington gown made by a relative, Mrs. Winfield
Glaze, of Lancaster. Mrs. Haptonstall wore it at a recent
Presidents' Day party of Group II of Ute Middleport Ftrst
Uruted Presbyterian Church which she hosted, and will be
appearmg In the gown on many special occasions during
the bicentennial year. A contest is being plaMed by the
Metgs County BicenteMial Commission to encourage
restdenis to costume lor this 200th year since the
Declaration of lodependence.
'

It was reported that the
LETART, W Va .- The 18year-oid Letart woman ac- only thing Mrs. Sisk satd was,
cused of murdenng her two- "What am I charged wtth?"
monlh-old daughter Saturday Justice Smith read the
was arraigned before Jusltce charge of murder to her. She
of the Peace Charles (Sonny) made no plea No bond was
Smith soon after she was set and the case was
arrested Monday by Mason remanded to the Mason
County Sheriff Elvin (Pete) County Ctrcmt Court Judge
James Lee Thompson lor
Wedge.
Harriet Thompson Stsk, further dispostbon .
It was at approximately
who was arrested at her
mobile home on Board Rd. tn 11 ·35 a.m. Saturday that
Letart was led into Smith's Shertff's Depuly K W. Love
olfice at exactly 12:30 p.m. by and Trooper J. Searles of the
State Police discovered the
Wedge and two deputtes.
body of Davt Calline Siskin a
shallow grave 584 feet from
lhe Slsks' mobile home The
tnlant
was reportedly
wrapped
in three blankets
past
mdebtedness
lo
with
a
rag
doll tnstde the
SEOEMS, the letter states,
blankets.
"ltscal prionties within lhe
The discovery of Ute infant
county mdicate we are left no
came
at a time when officials
alternative unless · the
from
the
Shertlf's Dept. and
commissiOners appropnate
the
state
police were lnadequate funds to contmue
vesttgating
a possible kidthe
comprehensive,
napping
of
the
chtld.
professiOnal
e m e rgency
The
mlant
was
later taken
medical service m Meigs
w
C&amp;bell
Huntmgton
Hospital
County ."
where
an
autopsy
was
perCalls recetved by SEOEMS
formed
.
Detatls
of
the
lor servtce in Ute area forautopsy
have
not
been
merly served by the Pomeroy
station will be referred to the released. Graveside services
nearest Meigs County lor Davl Calline were to be
emergency volunteer untl, held this afternoon at Oak
Grove Cemetery.
lhe letter advised

Pomeroy SEOEMS out of business
The emergency medical

service in Meigs County from
the Pomeroy station, has
been dtscontmued by t he
Southeastern
Ohi o
FIRE DOUSED
Emergency Medtcal Servtce,
The Mtddleport Fire Dept. Inc ., accordmg to a letter
went to Ward Road, off route which was to have been
554 near Kyger, Monday presented to the Metgs
evening to douse a brush fire. County Commissioners this
mornmg

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy E-R unit
wenl to Mulberry Ave. at
11 :26 a .m. Monday for
Margaret Gans, who was til .
She was taken to VMH where
she was admitted.

tr easurer;

clerk, Crow and Barlage.

"seemed to improve" for

problems of poverty, rac1sm,

unemployment and urban
retreat'' from questions on decay," lhe report satd
~&lt; poverty,
racism,
It said current fund
unemployment and urban distribution does not put the
decay, " according to a report money where the need is
released today.
greatest, partteularly in the
The 210-year project, rural areas and central ctties.
"Revenue Sharing: The Case
" A strong dtscruninatory
lor Reform," was conducted unpacl on rrunortltes and the
by the League of Women poor" results from the
Voters Educatton Fund, present use of per captta
Center for Community mcome to determine where
Change , National Urban the money goes, and the
Coalition, and the Center lor report
recommended
National Policy Review.
substituting the percentage of
"Despite inittal people below the poverty
administration disclaimers, level for the per capita
the program has been used tncome to address needs
over the past live years to more accurately.
Black and Htspanic Amertcans along with women suffer
discrlrnlnation both as job
EXTENDI::D OUTLOOK
Thursday lhrough applicants and recipients of
Salurday, fair Thursday servtces at the hands of their
and Friday and a chance of state and local governments,
rain or snow Saturday. the report found . It suggested
Highs will be In the 40s to that "because of the
the low 50s Thursday, merrectiveness of the Office
Sharing
cooling to the upper 30s BOd of · Revenue
40s Friday aad Saturday. enforcement efforts," maJor
Lows will be In the upper responstbility should be
30s to the 40s Thursday translered from the Treasury
morning and In the 20s to to the Justice Department.
the low 30s Friday and
SaturdaY,.

Pomeroy.
Altendtng were Mayor
Andrews, Ralph Werry, Lou
Osborne, Davts ~ Dr. Brown,
Phil Globokar and Bartels, ·
council members; Ch iel
Webster, Phyllts Hennessy,

Coal strike
goes spotty

en tine

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

lhe village on Wednesday,
March 3 and Frtday, March 5
for donations lor a pageant,

Weather

•

e
VOL XXVII NO. 225 .

was

reqUJrements of the "Sun- ol the cost to pamt Ute ct ty
shine Law 1 H declaring an hall building. Chuck Bartels
meetings to he open to the reported" price of $283.50 on
pubhc and news media will be loots for the slreet departnotified of all spectal ment which council agreed lo
meetmgs at least 24 hours m purchase
advance.
An eshmate was submttted
Crow explatned that m- by Charles Kttchen of
terested persons can also be Pomeroy to mstall gutter and
notified of special meetings downspout .at lhe rear of the
provtdmg they provide a lee village hall at a cost of $100.
of $10 and supply a sell- The olher esltmate was
addressed envelope Crow submtlled by Gary Snouller
satd some meetmgs could be to supply matenal and labor
private when counctl has to lor rooltng and down spouting
constder employme nt or at a cosl of $400. No actwn
dismtssal, selhng or property. was taken
PermissiOn was granted
or a conference with their
the
Amencan
Legton
attorney
In other busmess Mayor Auxthary to canvass the town
Oarence Andrews said new (or an aenal ladder
be
used
lor
parking meters have been to
hre ltghling tn • Metg s
sht~ped and gave an estimate

Comptroller

The letter stgned by
William H. Taylor, director of
lhe Southeastern Ohto
Emergency Medtcal Service,
cites the commission's
fail w-e to " recogmze 1ts pnor

financial commitment to

SEOEMS and to appropnate
adequate fiDidtng for 1976" as
hemg the reasons for the
action.
Services in western Meigs

Counly
mcluding
the
Southern Ohio Coal Company's Mmes 1 and 2 will be
conltnued by the Rutland
stat JOn

Notmg
that
funds
remaming to operate the
Pomeroy station m 1976 are
about $400, the letter explams
lhat a limtted transfer servtce for Veterans Memorial
Hospttal will continue unhl
March 12 when lhe station

will be closed.
A lmancial accoiUltlng of
money available to operate
SEOEMS in the county for
1976 was to be attached to the
letter mdtcattng after
payment or expenses for the
Rutland untt and for ltxed
costs, $7,201 remam m the
Pomeroy stalton Deductions
of $6,811 owed by the county
lor 1972 through 1974
operations by SEOEMS
leaves $300 lor 1976 The
operation lor 1976 would have
needed from $6,000 to $7,000,
tt is reported .
In reviewing the county's

Delay of Eureka Dam project called critical

Loungeweight Antron .. .Nylon

2 PIECE LIVING ROOM
SUITE

works system Improvements.

PERTH AMBOY, N.J. - THE PROSECUTOR in the
celebrated Lindberg kidnaping case has labeled
"preposterous" the most recent claim Ute lamed aviator'a son
still is alive. "I think It's preposterous and beyond the reabn of
poatbillty," said David T. Wllentz, who succesofuly prosecuted
Bruno Richard Hauptmann for Ute 1932abduction of Charles A.
Undbergh, Jr., of a suit filed last week by Kenneth KerWin, 45,
of Sanford, Me., claiming he is Charles A. Lindbergh Jr. and
seeking part of Lone Eagle's estate.
Wllentz said he was satisfied the Undbergh child had not
survived the abduction. The senior Lindbergh identified as his
(Continued on page 10)

•SHIFT

ANOTHER ............ .........

Fred Crow, Pomeroy
village solicitor and Bernard
Barlage of a Ctnctnnah
bondmg hrm met with
Pomeroy eouncil Monday
night to assist m legtslating
two ordmances , one to issue
notes for $415,000 in antictpatton of issutng bonds.
The money Will he used to
retire indebtedness of the·
waterworks system m lhe
amount of $420,000 and
provides $55,000 for water-

COLUMBUS, OHIO - The chief political counselor to
President Ford said Monday he had "no feeling" about today's
Massachusetts' GOP primary, but he predicted that Ford
would wln easily In F1orlda and illinois later this month.
"I think the momemtun ts runnmg our way - the
pendulum Ia swinging our way," said Rogers C. B. Morton, a
lonner secretary of the Interior and secretary of commerce.
Morton addressed a joint, noon luncheon of Ute Columbus
Kiwanis and Rotary clubs.

w1shmg carry out serv1ce are

CLUB TO MEET
th e Southwes tern Ohto
Garden Tracoor Club will
meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday at
lhe secretary's office of the
latr board on the Rock
Springs fairgrounds.
Members and Interes ted
persons are invlted .

Pomeroy borrowing $475,000

'.

CINCINNATI - Harry M
Mack, President of The Ohio
Valley
Improvement
Aaeoclatlon, warned today
lhat deferral of acUon by the
Office of the Secretary of the
Arn\y with re~~PtCt to the
critical Gallipclls, Ohio,
navigation project on lhe
Ohio River bears adversely
Ill the futiD'e electric energy
supply and threalens to
compound problems of
market access and IUlemployment In steel, chemicals,
coal mining, and oUter Industries, as welt as g8llollne

which could reqmre many
months of addthonal work
River Basin .
The Corps has already had
Mack u'rged mterested
the
replacement proJect
citizens throughout the basm
under
study over a long
lu commiDiicate their conperiod
of
years, and the Chtel
cern to appropriate public
had
reported
a remarkably
offtclals and members of
high
ratio
of
benefits
to cost
Congress.
of
4.2
to
1
0,
fully
justtfylng
These
adverse
consequences, Mack said, could replacement of tht&lt; present
result from the December, antiquated, Inadequate and
Galltpolts
1975, decision of the Office of dangerous
navigation
locks.
Ute Secretary of the Army to
Mr Mack stated that
defer transmittal to Congress
of the highly favorable report programmed growth In
of the Chief of Engineers energy supply and tndustnal
pending extensive reanalysts capacity Is already consupply, in the Upper Ohio

I

stramed by inevttable senous
c ongestion of the old
Galhpolis locks
Tralltc via these locks,
completed in 1937, has been
growing raptdly for many
years and Is now close to
practtcal capactty of 33 6
· million tons per year . Wtth a
lead ltme of etght years for
design and construclton
work, the earliest possible
date of replacement is 1984.
By 1964, yearly waterborne
movements of essential fuels
and matenals via Gallipolis
are projected at over 50

,,

mtllion tons. Further delay "
would e•ert a senously
depressive effect on the tn·
dustnal economy of the
Upper Ohio Bastn Alternative rail and htghwa y
movements are not available

eKCepting, on some of tile
lrafltc, vta roupd-about
routings at several-fold th~
cost, whtch would render
shipments uneconomtcal.
Wtth the complehon 111 1919
of all modernized navigation
wurk s now under construchon on the Ohto Rtver ,
lhe present Gallipolis locks

will remain the most serious stattons above Gallipolis
bo ttleneck in the OhiO- provide an Important conMisstssippt River System be- tribulton to low-cost power,
tween the Pittsburgh area which ts of criltcal imand the Gull of Mexico. The portance to .the con tlnued
region of the Upper Ohto Industrial development of the
Basm, whereby rharooned, Ohto Valley. 'l'o comply with
includes the Pittsburgh area, clean air standards, large
eastern Ohio, northern West tonnages of burnt hme and
Virgmia, and the KanawHa low-sulphur western coal
have been programmed lor
Rtver Valley
The largest development movement vta Gallipolis .
adversely affected ts the Production aftd employment
supply of electric energy m Oh10, Kentucky, and West
dependent on the Gallipolis Vtrginla coal mlnln&amp; are
locks for waterborne coal senously mvolved.
Other affected mdustrles
Ohto Valley electnc power

'

include the Pittsburgh and
Upper Ohto Valley steel industry, dependent on the
Gallipolis locks lor essential
coking coal and lor waterborne steel shipments having
an annual value exceeding
$580 million and represenlmg
steel pa)Tolls of aver $230
rrullion yearly .
The chemtcal lndustrv of
the Upper Oh10 and Kanawha
Valleys relies on receipts via
Gallipolis of essential feed
stocks from the Gulf Coast
and from downstream oil
(Continuid on page 10)

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