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                  <text>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)

�•
_2.;- The Daily Sentmel1 Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Jt!.esday !!arch 2 1976

Senate is solid for ID cards

Trick charged
zn coal strike
0

CHARLESTON W Va
(UP! ) - Up to 5 000 nuners
rt:[used to work m southern
West V trg~nta Monday and
one Uruted Mme Workers
offt etal blamed the tllegal
on
what
he
strtke
characteriZed as a black
lung ploy to break up the
umoo
Joe Tuemler an eight year
mmer from Kanawha Coun tj
and a member of COMPAC
the uruon s pohltcal alTII.
tried to persuade members of
his local to go back to thetr
jobs
Mmers who mstst on
will
fac e
ptcketlng
disctphnary actton from the
UMW s excecuttve boar d
Tuemler satd
Rovmg pickets succeeded
tn keepmg about 5 000 rruners
from reaching thetr JObs
foUowmg a sertes of ralites In
which the black lung bill
before Congress was denoun
ced

Tuemler warned that a
rebellion has shaped up
Withtn Ute UMW ranks one
he srud was directed by the
same men who chrunploned a

rtght to strike movement

last summer

These guys could g~ve a
darn less about black lun g
he S8ld The; re mamly
tnterested tn sphttmg the
UMW
Tuemler smgled out Bruce
MtUer and Skip Delano l\l o
leadmg advocates of the
rrght to strike cause
Som ebod y s backtn g
Delano and Mtller to bust the
unton l'uemler mamtamed
Once that s done we rrughl
as well forget workmg tn the
nunes
Tuemler satd the effect of a
strike would lose frtends m

COlUMBUS (UP!) Leg slatton provuling for state-issued
tdenliftcalton cards fo r nondriVIng handtcapped persons and
semor ct\tzens ts on tts way to the Ohio House followmg
Wlarumous Senate approval Monday mght
The measure ts amted at furmshmg the elderly the disabled
the blmd and those wtth an unpatred earnmg capac1ty wtth
offtctal tdenttft catton for use tn cashing checks or gaining
access to cred tt
Under the ~til sponsored by Sen Harry Meshel !).Young
stown the state Bureau of Motor Vehicles would tssue the four
year cards for a $2 50 fee to anyone who IS over 65 or can
furnish a phystetan s statement provmg he Is bandtcapped
Meshel satd as many as 500 000 non-driving Ohioans rrught
be able lo take advantage of the proposed cards
Many of these people have no means of tdentlftcalton
except Soctal Securtty cards and are unable to cash checks or
use credit whtch most of us take for granted satd Meshel
The ldentifi catton cards would contam color photographs
and the same mformat10n mcluded on drtvers licenses

However they would be marked not valid for driving a motor
vehicle
Like drtvers hcenses the ca rds would he renewable every
Congress
stn ce many four years and safeguards would be establlshed to prevent
represenlattves would be fraudulent use
reluctant to vote for a
Gov Jrunes A Rhodes last year vetoed legu!lalton provtding
measure under the pressure for tdenltficatton cards to all non-drtvmg Ohtoans on grounds tt
of a strike
would cost the state too much
What would your atlttude
He subsequently mstttuted by administrative order Golden
be' Tuemler asked I ll tell Buckeye Cards offermg semor ettizens diSCOunts at
you how you d feel You d partictpaltng pnvate busmesses and ultunately m public
have an attrtude of to hell programs
IH\h
you
They re
Meshel srud the $2 50 fee for his proposed cards would more
handctiffmg our delegatton than cover the cost of productton perhaps leavmg a surplus w
because they can t get carry mto future years
through to other pohttcrans
We ve got to g~ve our pohti
ctans a chance

Let

mus cal extravaganza

Freedom Ring
Produced
b) World of L fe In
ternaltonal Let Freedom
Ring features the 100 votce
Colleg an Chotr whose
sptr ted songs are enJoyed by

•
ID

televts on rad o and concert
audtences across the country

The mus cal was wr tten by
Harry Bollback co-dtrector
of Word of Life who wtll
appear n person along w th

Jack Wyrlzen who wtll speak
on
Amenca s
foWJdat on

sp1r tual

Let Freedom Rug wtll
be presented at the John F
Kennedy Center for the
Performm g

Arts

The Senate also gave unarwnous approval to a conslltutional
amendment pemuttiog the state w tasue bonds for energy
development and conservation programs
U passed by the House the proposal would go on the June 8
prunary hallot
-nte Ohto electorate approved a constttutional amendment tn
1974 authorwng the tssuance of bonds for pollution control and
sohd waste disposal but revenue bonds for energy projects
were not included
Sen Robert E 0 Shaughnessy l&gt;-co!umbus chief sponsor
of the new resolution, satd the Ohto Energy and Resource
Development Agency has discovered that desptte Jegtslatlon
passed last year ERDA has no authortly to make loans for the
development production recovery storage transportation or
conservation of energy
He sa1d adoption of his proposed amendment would asstst
Ohto s s.:lf-help drilling program under which prtvate fmns
are bemg encouraged to develop new supplies of natural gas
for use during fuel shortages
In some leftover busmess from last week Senate Minortty
Leader Mtchael J Maloney R-Cincmnall asked perrrusston of
the Senate to correct what he satd was an error m the journal
of last Thursday
Maloney complained that Lt Gov Richard F Celeste
changed a motton tn the rruddle of a roll call to allow it to pass
wtth a majority wte Instead of a three-rtfths vote as reqwred
The motton allowed Senate Democrats w brmg to the floor
and reJect the appomtment of Charles S lnpeman as chatr
rrum of the state Board of Ta• Appeals
Maloney satd the Journal lll8ccurately reflected the
proceedings Democrats defeated hts attempt to change the
JOurnal and approved tis wording
The House was to reconvene at II am today and the Senate
was to meet at I 30 p m

Young mother charged

Meigs student
in Institute choir
Davtd Kmg son of Mr and
Mrs Vtrgil King Rt 2
Pomeroy ts attendmg the
Word of Ufe B ble Ins! lute
Schroon Lake N Y where he
ts a member of the 100-vo ce
chotr made up of Btble In
st lute students The chotr s
presentmg the Btcentenmal

tn

Washtngton D C on Sunday
March 21 as part of Is ctty to
ctly tour

DA\ID KING

daughter's murder

Smtih
The arrest of Mrs Stsk 18
followed an around the-clock
mvesltgat10n by Shenff
Wedge and members of hts
department asstsled by State
Pohce after the baby was
reported mtssmg at 6 30 am
Saturday
Members of the famtly
accordmg to Sher ff Wedge
phoned the shertff s depart
ment at about 8 a m that the
tnfant gtrl named Davt
Calhne had apparently been
abducted from the bedroom
of the Stsk s rural mob le
home
Ofhctals of the sher ff s
department
headed by
proclatmed revolutionary
Wedge
tmmedtately
slogans and casttgated her
parents were wrttten for her responded to the call and
by members of the SLA satd later were JO ned by Stale
Poltce and two agents from
Dr Smger
Carter ruled there was no the FBI
About 1! 35 a m durmg a
precedent for testunony by
of the area Shertff s
search
an expert on speech patterns
Deputy
K W lnve and
and that the trtal already m
Trooper
J
L Searls
ts s1xth week would be
dtscovered
a
freshly
dug plot
lengthened by several days if
of
ground
at
the
edge
of a
she took the stand wtth the
fteld
The
top
sot!
had
been
JUry present
neatly put back m place and
POINT PLEASANT - A
murder charge wsa filed
Monday afternoon by Mason
Count; Shertff Elvtn E
Pete) Wedge agamst the
mother of a two months old
Letart area baby found dead
Saturday
Shertff Wedge satd he had
taken Harr et Stsk of Board
Road RD Letart mt o
custody
She w 11 be
arratgned before Justice of
the Peace Charles (Sonny)

Bailey rests Hearst defense
By DONALD B THACKREY
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Atwrney F Lee Batley after
losmg his second legal battle
of the day turned to the Judge
at Patrtcta Hearst s bank
robbery trtal and announced
Your honor the defense
rests
Bailey ended hts 1!-day
presentahon after U S
District Court Judge Ohver J
Carter rejected a defense
motton for dismtssal of all
charges on grounds the
government had w thheld
evtdence tendmg to show
Miss Hearst ts mnocent
The JUdge earlier refused to
let the Jury hear testunony
from an expert on speech
patterns
who sa d the
hetress
rev&lt;J lutt onary
statements oo Symbtonese
Ltberahon Army tape
recordings were wrttten by
members of th e ktdn ap
gang
Twelve wttnesses were
called by the defense "tlh
the htghi1ght bemg the 22year.,Jd defendant herself
spendmg a week on the stand
telling of bemg held m a
closet raped and threatened
until she jomed her ktdnapers
tn the robbery to avotd bemg
killed
Three psychialrtsts who
have
studted
the
bramwashmg of prtsoners of

wru backed up her story
saymg her treatment caused
a traumattc neurosts
which made her want to
please her captors
After the defense rested
Carter recessed the trtal unttl
ooday when the prosecution
begms Its rebuttal testunony
The case could go to the JUry
late thts week but tt ts more
likely to wmd up early next
week
The defense vrapped up tts
case by chargmg the
prosecut tot lad wtthheld
pi otog rap s made
by
at er as n San Francisco s
H bern

a Ba nk "h ch showed
gu s pomted at M ss Hearst
durmg the April 15 1974
holdup
FBI photographic expert
Vernon Ktpp ng called as the
f nal defense Witness
testtfted there was no attempt
to deliberately
lrtm
anythmg m the Orlginal5 by 7
mch sttlls made from the 413
frames of moVIe ftlm taken
by bank
survetllance
cameras
But he acknowledged the
larger ~Y 10 mch photos
showed Mtss Hall pointing a
rtOe In the dtrection of Mtss
Hearst whtle the smaller
pictures left out the SLA
member

Dr Margaret Singer of the
Unlverstty of Caltfornta at

Berkeley took the stand With
the Jury out of the courtroom
to explatn her speech
pattern studies of tapes and
wnhngs by Mtss Hearst
during her 19 mooths tn
captiVIty
She satd her study showed
Mtss Hearst used her own
words tn JUSt ftve of 25
secttons of SLA tape
recordmgs The ones m
wh1ch
she
stridently

Laurel Oiff
Sabbath school attendance
Feb 29 at tl e Free Methodtst
Church was 103 Chotr
members present was 10

Mr and Mrs Harmon Fox
and Mr Sam Radford
returned home Saturday
from a months stay tn
Flor da
Mrs Roy Howell en
tertatned Sunday wtth a
b rthday d nner m honor of
her mothery Mrs Harmon
Fox Those present were Mr
and Mrs John Douglas Mrs
Rose Ann H ne s Guysvtlle
Mr and Mrs Larry Walker
Mr Howell and Mr Fox
Mr Roy Howell returned
Sunday to hts employment at
Cadtz Oh o
Mrs James Gttmore spent
a week w th l er daughter
Mrs Sandy Darst and
ch ldren M ian She also
v stted \\tlh Mr and Mrs

st cks stewn over the area

WII run Jacobs Columbus
wh le there Mrs Gtlmore fell
and broke two bones m her
ankle
Mrs Theo Davts daughter
Peggy wen to Columbus
v st ed recenUy wtth Mrs
Dons Parents and Mr and
Mrs Pearl Jacobs
Nmety persons attended
the Sunday evenmg servtces
conducted by the young
people of the local church
Mr and Mrs Uoyd Wrtght
and Mr Steve Eblin talked on
thetr trtp to the Holy Lands
Pictures of the Holy Lands
~ere also shown
Mr Fnt~ Stahl New
Marshfteld and Mr and Mrs
Paul Stahl Columbus VISited
Sunday wtth Mr and Mrs
Norman Schaefer
Mr and Mrs Ed Bauer
grandaughter Kelly Sue
Cleveland spent the weekend
wtth Mr and Mrs Dick Karr

DR. LAMB

Hyperventilation is her problem
By Lawrence E

Lamb M D when I had these spells I dtd
DEAR DR LAMB Some but t.lus has helped very ltttle
months ago my husband Is there anything you can
underwent surgery and I had • ~gest that I can do that wtll
a severe shock when I was relteve me other than drugs'
told that he mtght not I am very nervous from the
recover Since then he has tmgl ng and from the
progressed very well but I weakhess m my legs
haven t I developed tioglmg
DEAR READER - In VIew
in my hands and feet and up or. your story and .the
my legs with some weakzlesa· el!ltiDtnaltons that you ve
I have feelings of hot and cold had I would suspect that you
with persptratllm and cold do not have any senous Ill
apots m my scalp I awaken ness
Hyperventilation
from bad dreams wtth a means over breathmg Wtth tt
jarring start I have loss of a person blows off too much
appetite and some Joss of carbon dioxtde and tt s fatrly
weight
standard to tell a patient to
I visited tlree phystetans breathe mto a brown paper
with no results Extenstve X bag (not a plasttc bsg)
rays cardiograms and aU the Laboratory analysts has
tests failed to show anything shown that chemically this
111d one doctor prescrtbed may not always do too much
Valium I was referred to but t! does seem to help some
another doctor who dtas Jl09ple Others as m your
nosed my trouble as • case get very ltttle beneftt
bypervenUiaUon and he sent from It
me to a neurologlst The
Your hyperventtlatton ts no
neuorologist gave me doubt related to an anxtety
elltenslve tests and sug~ested reaction whtch vou are
I breathe mto a pa per &amp;ag

•

expenencmg And tha&lt; ts also
the explanation of some of
your other symptoms The
anxtety reaction was no doubt
lrtggered off by the shock
that you I ad from your
husbands acute tllness
Gettmg over tl ts not always
that easy
I think you should ask your
doctor to refer you w a
psychtatrist Let s face it the
Situational aru&lt;1ety response
that you are havmg ts
basically an emottonal
problem You need help for
that JUSt as much as if you
had a broken leg You would
be surprtSed how much good
you can get out of quahty
professtonal counseltng m
such sifuatwns Some of these
situahonal problems can be
relieved rather qutckly
There are a vanety of
medtcmes which help
dependtng on whtch k nd of
emottonal response a person
has expertenced
The
medtcmes that are ava !able
certrunly extend beyond the

"

•

3- The Dally Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday March 2 1976

,

range of prescr1bmg Valium
alone or any other just SliDple
tranqulltzer
You ll get a lot more good
out of some professtonal
counselmg tbsn you will out
of breathmg lnoo a brown
paper bag In your particular
mstance It may help
unprove your life thereafter
Why take tranquilizers or
medtclnes to dull your
responses wsomething when
you have a good opportimlty
wtth professiOnal counseling
to resolve the situation and
free yourself from medicines
entirely'
For information on how
spray devices affect your
health send 50 cents for The
Health Letter Nwnber 3-4
Aerosol Dangers Enclose a
long
stamped
self
addressed envelope for
mallmg Address your letter
to me In care of this news
paper P 0 Box 1551 Radio
C ty Station New York NY
10019

accordmg to Wedge
Shertff Wedge after bemg
told of the area of loose d rt
mstructed offtcers to check
further and tl was deter
mmed tl was the stte of
makeshtft grave the baby
bur ed some 2 '2 It deep
NBA Stand ngs

By Un ted P eu lnte nat onal
Eas ern Conference
Atlant r:: D v son

W L Pr::t

Bos on
Buffa o
Ph ad e ph a
New Yo k
Centra

8

690

35 26

40

574

gb

6

35 27 56 5 7
30 32 484
'J
D v s on
W L Pel gil
Wash ng on
38 25 603
C e"Ve and
36 24 600
Houston
30 31 49 2 7
New Orleans 27 33 .4 50 9
A an a
26 35 426 1
Western Conference
M dwest o "' s on
w l Pet gil
M waukee
26 34 433
De o
24 35 407
Kansas( V
n 39 36 4
Ch cage
18 4
305 7
Pac I C 0 VISIOn
W l Pr::t gb
GodenSae 43 7 717
Seatt e
3 3
500 IJ
Los Ange es
3 3
soo 3
Phoen K
27 32 458 5
27 35 435
7
Po and
Mondays Resu Is
No games schedu ed
Tuesday s Gilmes
Go den S ate a Buffalo
Sea le at New Yo k
Ph ade ph a a Wash ng on
De o a Kansas C y
New 0 eans a M waukee
Ch r::ago at Po land
Wednesday s Games
Boston a Ph 8delph a
Seatea Derot
C eve and a Phoen K
Hous nn at New Orleans

The Dally Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THI:!
INTER EST OF

MEIGS MASQN AREA
CHESTER L TANN&amp;HlLL
Exec Ed

ROBERT HOE~Lictl
C ty Editor
Publ sh•~ ~· v exceo

Sa urday by The Ohlo
Val ey Publ sh no Com
pany
1 1 Court
St
Pomeroy
Ohio
4S761l
Bui ness 6ft ce Pbone 991
21.5"6 Ed tor al Pt\Qine 992
2157
Second c ass postage
pa Ct a Pomerol( Ot'llo
Nat onal
a(lver s ng
representative
Ward
Griff lh Company Inc
Bo nel i &amp; Gall,gher 0 v
75f Th rd Ave New York
N Y 10017
Subscrlp on
ra es
Del vered by carr er where
available 75 cen s per
week
Bv Motor R:ou e
where carr er serv ce no
ava ab e
One mon h
t3 25 By ma irwOh o and
w va One YeiT" S22 00
S x months S11 so Three
tnon hs S7 00 Elsewhere
S26 oo year -t ~ months
s 3 50 three months $7
Subscr P1 on pr ce Includes
Sunday Times Sentinel

so

-

I

The chtld accordmg to
Wedge "as wrapped n three
blankets A rag doll was
mstde the blankets wtlh the
gtrl
Sher ff Wedge mmedtalely
not fted Dr John Grubb
Mason County Coroner and
Prosecutor Don Kmgery of
the fmdmgs and then trans
ported the baby to Wtlcoxen

Rutgers completes perfect season
BY JOE CARNICELU
UPI Sporto Writer

Pastoral couple comes

.:~:::, :::::::::::::~::::::::::; ~::::::v~::::~:::~::::: ;:::::::::;:::,:

Mason

~nty

endeavor m Burlingham Is
bemg cooducted at meetings
each Wednesday evening and
each Sunday morning and
evemng at the old community
church A weekly Bible study
ts bemg held in the
Burl ngbrun area at the home
of Roscoe Prater tn Oarwm at
t p m each Thursday New
Southern Baptist work has
also begun m Middleport wtth
Rev Elkins conducltng
weekly Btble studies at 7 30
p m each Tuesday mght at
587 Matn St Rev Elkins will
be speaking at revival ser
vtces at the Burhngham
church m April
!!&lt;~ ~~~

;:;t

News Notes

By Alma Marshall

NHL Stand ngs
By Un ted P ess Internal ona
Campbel Conference
Patr ck 0 v s on
WLTPtsgfga
Ph ad ph a 40 IO 14 94 279 5
NY slande s 33 7 13 19 240 so
A an a
27 29 9 63 204 95
NY Range s 23 34 7 53 211 262
Sm vthe D v sion
WLTPts gf ga
Ch cago
26 2 7 69 95 191
Vancou"Ver
25 27 I 61 2 J 216
S Lou s
23 30 10 56 195 224
M nneso a
8 42 4 40 158 238
Kansa s c y 2 4 0 j4 15 26
Wal~s Conference
Norr s D v son
W L T Pts gl ga
Montrea
46 9 0 102 270 14
Los Angeles 31 27 7 69 2 o 2 6
P 1Sburgh
2 26
65 266 244
De ro
19 36 9 47 66 245
Wash ng on
a 48 9 25 80 3 8
Aditms D v s on
W L T Pts gf ga
40 1 11 9 246 76
Boston
Buffa D
3S 18 11 B 266 9
To on o
29 25 }1 69 242 222
Cal torn a
23 34 8 54 204 225
Monday s Result
To onto 4 M nneso a 2
Tuesdily s Games
Ca to n a a NY Is anders
P t sburgh at M nnesota
Wednesday s Games
Vancouver a NY Range s
Oetroj et A lanta
Ca fo nla a Mon real
Toron o at St Lou s
Bos on at Los J\poe es

WHA stana ngs
By Un ted

Preu Internet onal

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS Ohto (UP!)Fred Taylor sSt John Arena
career ended Monday mght
jUSt as It began 18 years ago
-with a loss
But 11 wasn t always that
way for the dean of Big Ten
bssketball coaches who an
nounced his res1gnat10n
several weeks after leading
the Buckeyes w seven Btg
Ten tiUes
We lost the ftrst one and
we lost the last ooe Taylor
rerruntsced after his team s
91 79 loss to lowly WtscOIIStn
Mooday night but we sure
had a lot of fun ones In
between
Mooday night however
was not one of them
The Buckeyes playing
again wtthout tbe servtces of

";:il

i
?.

11-10 center Cratg Taylor and
wttil only brief appearances
by Larry Bolden traded
l!lmost all the way m a game
which undoubtedly doomed
them to the Big Ten
basement
Both WtSConsm and the
Buckeyes went into the game
with 2-14 conference marks
deadlocked for the bottom
rung m the standings and
Ohto State s last game
Saturday ts agamst No I
ranked
Indiana
at
Bloorrungton
Taylor makmg hts fmal
appearance at home as Ohio
State coach received a two
mmute standing ovalton
when he walked onto the
court before the game He
appeared embsrrassed by
the receptton and gave only a
shght wave In reply to the

Southern wins
7th grade play
RACINE
Southern 7th
grade defeated Eastern 41 29
Saturday afternoon to take
ftrst place m the Southern
Seventh Grade Basketball
Tournament at Southern
Juntor High Southern took
charge wtth the tntltal ltp-&lt;Jff
when Talbott passed to
Teaford for hts ftrst two
points The ftrst quarter
ended ~ Southern
Southern took full com
mand m the second penod
outscormg Eastern 15 to 4
Eastern tr ed to press
Southern but could not stop
them as Teaford and Mtller
each scored two baskets
Southern led at the half 23-10
lh the second half Southern
played good ball control and
outstandmg defense
Barrtnger was held to 9
pomts and Wtgal to 5 by
Southern s tight man to-man
defense Southern made 45
percent of tts free throws
whtle Eastern canned 90
percent of thetrs Eastern s
cold shootmg was a factor as
they canned only 1(}.56 shots
for 18 percent from the fteld
Mtller of Southern led all
scorers with 15 pomts whtle
Teaford ha:d 13 Barrmger led
for Eastern with 9 pomts
Below are the boys scores
Barringer had 13 of Eastern's
33 rebounds The Eagles
ended thetr season at ~
Coach James R Lawrence
wtshes to thank all the teams
who took part and all the
parents and fans who gave
their support to make this
first seventh game tour
nament a big success

MASON - The Mason Seruor Citizens at lhetr meeting
Thursday spent a portion of the day cleaning their trailer
home on Adams St Some of the ladies washed windows others
marked qutlla and still others made butterflies of stryrofoam
On the first Thursday of every month the group will have a
pot luck dinner and on the third Thursday of every month
senior citizens having birthday s durmg the monUt will
celebrate with a party complete With lee cream and cake
Clara Staats was nommated and elected to represent the
group on the board She succeeds Mary Phillips who resigned
The seruor cttizens have extended th¢followlng Invitation
We Mason Senior Citizens wlah fo welcome all new
members who would hke to one of us
Attending were Blanche Jones Ruby Bond Goldie Smith
Erma TurnlltU Wilda Coleman Ella Ford Clara Staats
Barbara McDaniel Helen Elias Bertbs Hall S118le Brinker
Edna Burrts president and JoBM Hendrickson aide
Penooal Mention
MASON - Guests of Mr and Mrs Robert Roach and
family recently were Mr and Mrs Jack Forshee and children
John Tunothy Tammy and Jason of Cincinnati Mr and Mnt
Burton Webb Mansfteld Ohio Mr and Mrs Paul Randolph
Stella and Stacie Krebs Mrs Manford Hutton June Ann and
James David Roach Kathryn Russell Mr and M11t Earl
Stewart Renea and Troy Rev and Mnt Walter Cloud Mr
Michael Whalen Mr T R Davis Mrs Robert W Oliver
Mr and Mrs Curtis McDaniel visited their daughter and
son~n law Mr and Mrs James lnyd and family at Nashport
Ohio over the weekend
Mrs Curtis McDaruel has learned that her granddaughter
Demse McDamel a Senior at Point Pleasant has been named
honor student of her class

Hopefully th s can become
an annual event
SOUTHERN - Mtller s.:;.
15 McNtckle Q.M Mark
Wolfe 11 3 Teaford 6 I 13
Talbott 1 2-4 Curfman 142
Hupp 1 2-4and Lee Bryan
Wolfe Satterfield Ctrcle and
Jack Wolfe z ps
EASTERN - Bowers 2 3 7
Barrmger 4 I 9 Inng ~
Cole 2 1 5 Wtgal 2 I 5
Kennedy~ Matthews 1 1-3
and Grtbbs Larkins Van
Meter Hawk Chapman zips
Waterloo defeated m the
consolatton (prehmtnary)
game to take third place tn
the tournament
The ftrst quarter ended m a
11-8 t e but by half ltme Shade
led 111-11 behind the scormg of
Allen wtth 8 pomts Waterloo
fought back m the thtrd
quarter behind the shooting
ot Urtgsby who scored 10
pomts the only pomts for
them m that pertod but
Shade still led by 34 21
But m the fourth quarter
Waterloo took charge
commg out wtth a full court
press and outscormg Shade 24
to 9 Waterloo bed the score
43-43 at less than a mmute left
and wtth less than 30 seconds
made the wtnning basket
Grigsby of Waterloo scored 20
of hts game high 24 pomts in
the second half Ttmberlake
had 14 pomts
For Shade Allen had 20
pomts Guthrie 10 points and
Ricbmood 9 pomts Thts was
only the third game Waterloo
won th1s season the second
being over Wahama here
Thursday mght

Pirates to battle
SW Wednesday

EiiSf

W L T Pis 9f ga
29 33 1 59 237 264
26 31 6 S8 197 227
26 3 S 51 209 218
24 35 3 51 183 193
West
W L T Pts gf ga
Hous on
40 22 0 80 252 210
PhOen )(
31 24 6 68 228 204
San 0 ego
30 28 4 64 237 216
)II; M nneso
30 25 4 64 2 212
canadian
WLTPtsgfga
Wlnn peg
44 2
2 90 288 207
dueber::
38 19 4 ao 272 228
Calgary
31 27 4 66 232 213
Edmonton
22 39 5 &lt;t9 220 278
Toron o
16 40
37 259 3 7
x o awa
14 26
29 34 72
K Team d sbanded
C nc nnat
New Engtnd
Cleveland
nd an&amp;po s

s

North Gallia
1975 76
Southern Valley Athleltc
Conference champ battles
Southwestern Wednesday In
the semi finals of the Class A
Sectional Tournament at
Meigs High School Coach
Jim
Foster s
Pirates
defeated Eastern last
weekend w advance to the
semi finals NG has a 17 2
season mark
Coach Richard Hamilton s

•

Southwestern Hlghlandera
fimshed fourUt in the SVAC
Overall SWhau 5-13record
Thursday night Kyger
Creek r..J3 battles So~rn
11&gt;4 In the semi flnlla Coach
Carl Wolfe a Tornados
ellmtnated Hannan Trace
last weekend Coach Keith
Carter s Bobcats will be
playing their firat tour
nament game
Both games start at 7 30
pm

the ECAC Metropolitan
Regtonal to determtne
representabves m the NCAA
tournament
It was a busy rught for
many of the nation s top 20
teams Top-ranked Indtana
moved to within a game of a
perfect seaSOII by beatiog
Northwestern 7~ No 5
Nevada Las Vegas
smothered St
Mary s
(Calif ) 124 86 No 7
Alabama downed Georgta
87 76 No 10 Notre Dame
topped Western Michtgan, 95,.
88 tn overttme No 13
Tennessee edged MtSSISSJppl
State 711-76 No 16 St John s
shaded N1agara 115,.64 and
No 17 lnmsvtlle blasted
Bradley 107-89
Scott May scored 25 pomts
to lead lndtana past
Northwestern The vtctory
was Indiana s 25th thts
season and 56th strrught tn
regular season play Should
tile Hoos1ers defeat Ohio
Slate m thetr season flll8le tt
would mark the ftrst time
smce 1968 that two major
colleges went unbeaten m the

same season Houston and St
Bonaventure dtd It that year
but both were ousted tn the
NCAA tourney as UCLA went
on to wm
Eddie OWens scored 35
pomts and Glen Gondreztck
31 to lead Nevada Las Vegas
past St Mary s II was the
21st time thts season over the
100-pomt mark for the
Rebels who lead the natton m
scormg average
Leon Douglas and Anthony
Murray scored 20 pomts each
as Alabama beat Georgta and
Btlly P~terno scored nme of
Notre Dame s 17 overtune
potnts to bft the Irish over
Western Michigan Bernard
Kmg scored 33 potnts
tncluding the wmmng basket
wtth three seconds left. to ltft
Tennessee past MISSisstppt
State and Glen Williams
basket wtth two seconds left
boosted St John s over
N1agara Rtck Wtlson s 26
potntS helped LOUISVIlle
defeat Bradley
Elsewhere Provtdence
dumped Vtllanova 89 81
SeWn Hall beat Manhattan

Taylor bows out with 91-79loss

MASON- Trooper J L Searls of the West Virginia State
Pohce had as his topics burgularles in the United States home
safety and kinds of locks when the Mason County Historical
Funeral Home n h1s veh1cle Soctety met Feb 26 at the Virgil A Lewts home In Mason He
The remams were trans
was introduced by Mason s Mayor Fred Taylor
ported to Cabell Huntmgton
Searls satd tilere are two million buglar1es tn the U.S last
Hosp tal where an autopsy year oneoccurmg every 13 seconds Good locks Include the pin
¥.as performed
tumble Jock wtth 3 w 7 pms dead bolt lock and the double
Gravestde r tes for Davt cylinder lock Cham locks on the inside of the home kept locked
Calhn who was born on the durmg the day proVIde extra securtty
day before Chr stmas wtll be
He srud the county has pretty good police protectton but it
held Tuesday at 1 30 p m at cannot be everywhere He advised a buddy system in each
the Oak Grove Cemetery m netghborhood Report strangers m the netghborhood who keep
l.etart There wtll be no drtvmg around as they could be casmg your business
calhng hours Rev Bobby
Among the do nots were don t htde keys under the door
Woods
wtll
off c ate mat or Dower pot do not leave bicycles or lawn mowers on the
Wtlcoxen Funeral Home ts m outstde and leavmg wmdows unlocked ts like leaving a door
charge
unlocked
Survivors mclude her
When a public building Is hemg used interested persons
parents Bruce and Hamel should keep a record of who has keys and have a periodic
Thompson Stsk a brother mventory to make sure aU keys are accounted for
Bruce Mtc)tael at home
At the openmg of the meeting Mrs Landon Smith and Mnt
maternal grandparents Mr Russell Barton offered prayer and the latter read saipture 2
and Mrs Albert Thompson Peter 3 8 Mmutes of the preVIous meeting were read by Ml'l!
Letart paternal grand John Marshall and approved No treasurers report was g1ven
parents Mr and Mrs
The proposed by-laws of the Mason County Histortcal
Howard Stsk
Mason
Soctety were read by Mrs WtUtam Zerkle The society voted to
maternal
great
accept the by laws as written
grandparents Mr and Mrs
Mrs Earl Ingels was elected vtce prestdent to succeed
Harry Thompson I etart
Mrs Ray Proffitt
and
paternal
great
The Board of Governors made up of the executive
grandparents Mr and Mrs corrumttee wtU meet on Thursday March 4 at 10 a m
E R Harrah ol Greenbner
Attendmg Ute pot luck dinner at noon were Trooper J L
Searls Mayor Fred Taylor Mrs Smith Mrs Ingels Mnt
Marshall Mrs Proffitt Mrs Wtlliam Zerkle Mrs Fred
ABA stand ngs
Taylor Mrs Russell Barton Mrs Robert Guthrte Mnt Addie
E'y Un ted Press nternat onar
Brown Mr and Mrs Norman Reynolds
W L Pet gb
Denver
46 6 142
New Yo k
40 23 6JS 6
San An on o
36 24 600 9
34 JO 53
3
Ken ucky
nd ana
3 34 477 6
S Lous
29 36 .t46 8
Vrgna
2 5
88 34
Mondays Resu t
Denver- 5 V g n a 109
Tuesdays Games
Ken uc ky at S Lou s
San An on o a nd ana
Wednesday s Games
New York a Denve
S
ousa SanAnono
V rg n a a nd ana

IS

The
screaming
and
An obviously dramed
stomping outside had not yet Coach Tom Young wasn t
subsided and exhausted making any predictions He
Rutgers players were still was just happy it was aU
dripping with sweat and over
champagne after capping an
The season s over and the
unbeaten season But there pressiD'e for an undefeated
was still enough energy left to season Is over said Young
to tssue a warning
after his fourth..-anked club
People had just better be became only the 19th major
ready for us srud guard college team since 1939 to
Mike Dabney after helping flmsh unbeaten We didn t
Rutgers
defeat
St play well m the first half- !
Bonaventure s 85 80
think we were too high II was
Monday rught to complete a one of the best games I ve
2S.Q season
We ve been ever seen St Bonaventure
crtticized for havmg an easy play
schedule and not being
Rutgers needed a 17~ burst
pushed But the people who In the last six rrunutes to
do most of the talking about overcome a 75-&lt;18 Bonme lead
our schedule only watch Phd Sellers led Rutgers wtth
televlaion once a week The 25 pomts six m the cructal
coaches the wr1ters the streak and Dabney scored
people who vote tn the polls 19 Ed Jordan 16 and Hollis
know And so do our op
Copeland 11 Glen Hagan led
ponents
St Bonaventure with 22
But this IS only one pomts
plateau and now tt s tune to
The Scarlet Knights meet
move oo to another I m lnng Island University
kinda hopmg tl botls down to Thursday mght at Prmceton
Rutgers and North Carolma N J tn the openmg round of
In the finals of the Ea.&lt;rt Then

Rev BDd Mrs EWliJ

Bobby Elkins a May 1973
graduate of Clear Creek
Bapltsl School Ptnev1lle
Ky ts the new paswr of the
Burhngham Southern Bapttst
Chapel whtch ts sponsored by
the French Ctty Baphst
Church Galhpohs
A native of West Vl.l'gmta
he graduated from Mtlton
lligh School m 1955 He and
Mrs Elkms the former
Nancy Taylor have four
chtldren Bobby Kathy BtU
and Judy Rev Elkins has
done pastoral work tn Ken
lucky and Bellville Ohto
before com ng to Met gs
County
The new Southern Bapltst

we II see how tough the ACC

!

I

crowd of 6 698
I appreciated It he satd
of the ovation I certainly
don t like the etrcumstances
that brought It about but
that s over and done wtth
OhiQ State fell behind
rrudway through the first
half trailed by eight at
halftune and never got any
closer as the btgger Badgers
led by 6-4 Ken Patertck and 118 Dale Koehler won gomg
away
Patertck scored 23 pomts
Koehler 20 Ertan Colbert 17
and 11-8 Bob Johnson 16 for
Wisconsm
Ohto State had five players
tn double figures topped by
Fred Poole with 15 Mike
Daugherty had 14 Jud Wood
13 Clance Hammond 12 and
Mike Clme 10
Taylor surrounded by
newsmen m hts small arena
offtce after the game talked
of some of the htghlights of
the past 18 years Including
the one game whtch stands
out most in his mind - the 7555 wtn over Californta tn the
1960 NCAA fmals
That team led by then
sophomores Jerry Lucas and
Johit Havhcek played w~at
Taylor called a near perfect
game
The mght those kids beat
Calitorma tn the fmals you
can t beheve how well they
played Taylor satd They
took 19 shots m the ftrst half
and made 16 of them and only
a couple were n81de 15 feet
People apprectated those

edged Mtchtgan 81 79 Micht
gan State stopped Iowa 93-88
Wtsconsm beat Ohto State 91
79 North Texas State npped
West Texas State 811-69 and
Oral Roberts shaded St
UJUIS 79-76

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Edttor
NEW YORK (UP!) - Every mornmg he goes to work
Clarence S Campbell sets a record For pure durabiltty and
sheer staymg power at the top nobody can touch hlln
PreVIous record-holder was the late Kenesaw Mountatn
Landts He had the longest run as head man of a professtonal
sport servtng as commtsStoner of baseball 24 years The 70..
year.,Jd Campbell has hun beat by SIX years
He s ftrushtng hts 30th year as National Hockey League
preSident and gtvmg up hts JOb for a gtrl
Campbell a law;er told the league s Board of Governors he
has been grossly unfatr to hts wtfe over the years not spending
as much time With her as he should ve because of his work and
now be d like to try to make tl up w her He has told them to
fmd a new prestdent and he ll do everythmg he can to help
them
It s not gomg to be easy commg up wtth another Clarence S
Campbell
Hts honesty ts frtghtenmg says one NHL offtctal and
you don t find hts ktnd of mtegnty anymore
To get some tdea hsten to what happened 21 years ago when
Campbell showed up at the Montreal Forum after suspending
Canadtens superstar Maurtce Rocket Rtchard for the
bslance of the season and the playoffs
When the fans spotted Campbell headmg for hts seat they
began muttermg angrily They threw debrts and other objects
at him The crowd turned so ugly pobce moved m to protect
campbell Someone exploded a tear gas bomb and many fans
pamcked and rushed for the extts
A worrted ftre chief ordered the buddmg cleared and after
the game was forfe ted to the viSltmg Detrott Red Wmgs
hoodlums outs de the arena began throwmg brtcks settmg
ftres smashmg the wtndows of netghbormg stores and lootmg
them
Clarence S Campbell dtdn t have to go to the game m
Montrealthat mght He could vetaken the easy way out but he
didn t He never has smce bemg named league boss m 1946
when he came to the JOb d rectly from the War Crunes Trtala m
Germany where he served as asststant prosecutor
If you ask him to what he attrtbutes hts JOb longevtly
Campbell laughs and says the terms of hts employment were
well defmed at the very start
There were only SIX owners of clubs tn those days and they
were strong wtUed people he says I m sure they had some
mtsgtvmgs about any new person who was gomg to run thetr
busmess or who was going to try to hell.' them do so but what
they satd to me was Mr Campbell you re conung m here
wtthout lunttattons of any kind We want you to stay that way
It ts unhkely we ll all agree wtth you m the deetstons you make
That s the thmg you ll have to hve wtth We don t care what
your dectstons are but the thmg you have to do ts make sure

when you do make a dectston you make the same one the next

tune
And he has hved up to his terms of employment
Aftve-rnan search commttlee whtch mcludes Campbell has
heen establlahed to ftnd hts successor Members of the
commtttee are empowered to look etther mstde or outstde the
league
Among those under constderation are John Ztegler Jr
Detrott s legal counselor Jun Cullen who performs tbe same
function for the St lnms Blues and Sam Pollock vice prest
dentaand general manager of the Canadtens who has satd he
sn t mterested m the JOb
Another posstble candtdate ts Don Ruck one of tire vtce
prestdents of the league and prestdent of NHL Servtces Inc
Personable hard workmg and excepttonally capable the 47
year-&lt;Jld Iron Rtver Mtch native has been the architect
behind many of the leagues more successful busmess ven
lures He seems to understand how to wQrk wtth 18 different
to 15 pomts 75-60 w1th 3 40 owners as well as for them and Clarence S Campbell can tell
left before Rio made one fmal him that s one of the most unportant aspects of the JOb
effort to pull I out of the ftre
The Redmen reeled off seven
stratght pomts to cut the
deftctt to etght 75-67 wtlh
1 2e left but that was as close
as the Redmen could get
Each team had 39
rebounds Rio had 19 costly
turnovers agamst the speedy
LAUDERHILL Fla (UP!) fmtshed off J C Snead who
Marauders Central State had - After ha vtng wbs t he stayed wtthtn range until the
mne turnovers
called the best year of hiS final four holes and refused w
It was the fmal college career m 1975 Jack Ntcklaus QUit even then
game for Rio s Jim Stewart ts off and runnmg again m
Snead finished wtth a 611Paul Albanese and Bob 1978
272 JUst three shots behind
Caldwell all semors
Ntcklaus won his ftrst event Ntcklaus 269 total
Noe led Rio s attack w th of the year Monday when he
f felt hke I played
23 pomts Stewart added 16 shot seven-under-par 65 to extremely well
Nicklaus
Prtce and Albanese each had take his second Tournament satd
Players Champtonshtp It
12
I fiillshed the first nme tn
Carl Ealy 11-8 sophomore was only the third TPC ever 33 and at that point I felt I had
rorward paced the wmners held
ootal control of my game I
with 27 pomts 19 coming tn
Ntcklaus got the wm m felt like I wasn t gomg to rruss
typtcal !ashton He stayed a shot ali day he srud
the first half
Jtm Lewts tossed tn 14 Ken near the top durmg the ftrst
It was Ntcklaus 59th wtn on
Smtih
and
Roosevelt three rounds and then burted the PG A tour stnce he turned
Leverette each had II for the his oppostlton on the fmal pro tn 1962
day
wmners
The $60 000 hrst place
The Golden Bear scored check he won Monday tn the
In the other Distrtcl 22
game at Findlay Monday no bogeys ft ve birdies and ramdelayed tournament
rught Ed Urbantak scored 24 carded an eagle three when ratsed hts career wmnmgs to
pomts to pace Ftndlay to 66.,4 be canned a 4D-foot putt on the $2 609 527
wm over a late rallymg par five 15th hole The eaol•
Deftance qwntet
The Otlers moved (o a 36-33
lead by mtermtsston but the
Yellow Jackets led by John
The Insurance Store
Kornowa With 14 pomts kept
Complete
tt close m the last half Fmd
Insurance
Service
lay had a 66-61 lead w1th two
mtnules left and held
Deftance to only four free
throws
It made Ftndlay 17-8 for the
season whtle Deftance closed
at 111-13
Here s Rto ~ box ore

CSU erases Rio
Rio Grande College hit a
cold spell mtdway through
the second half and the result
was an 83 71 setback at the
hands of Central State
Umverstty Monday ntght
The loss ehmmated Coach
Art Lanham s Redmen from
further Dtstr ct 22 NA!A post
season tournament action
The game was played on the
Marauders

horne

court

Beacon Htll at Wtlberforce
near Xenia
Central State now 18-9 on
the year wtll now host
Fmdlay m the Dtstrtct 22
champ onshtp game Wed
nesday wtth the wmner ad
vancmg to the NAJA tour
nament m Kansas Ctly
Rto Grande completed tts
1975,.76 campatgn wtth a J5,.14
record
The game was much closer
than the !mal score tndtcates
The score was !ted 11 tunes
and the lead exchanged
hands 20 ltmes
During ftrst half aclton
netther team managed more
than a ftve pmnt spread It
was 40-all during the halfttme
mtenmss10n
Rio behmd Jtm Noe and
Jtm Stewart mcreased tls
lead to stx pomts 48-42 with
17 10 left m the game before
the Marauders came stor
ming back to !mot the count
at 41Htll on a steal by Jtm
Lewts at the 15 25 mark
Gtl Prtce s goal ( 12 34) put
Rio up 52-51 Jtmmy Noes
goal with II 56 rematmng put
Rio on top for the final ltme
54-53

l

1960 years but f don t think
they really realized just how
good those kids played
Taylor also recalled what
he dtd the mght he was
handed the Ohto State
basketball retns tn June of
1959
About nudntght he satd
a group of my frtends and I
came to the arena and
pamted the Btg 0 m the
center of the Door
And Monday that 0 was
still oo hts rrund
He sa d he woke up about
2 30 Monday morning unable
to sleep and got to thtnking
ah9ut all the ktds who have
played here and run through
Utat 0
Taylor refused to ptck an
allttme team of the top
players durmg hts regime
but satd Lucas Havltcek
and Jtmmy Cleamons
probably contnbuted the
most We ve always used
them as examples
Taylor wasn t the only
lame duck coach on the
Door Monday mght because
Wtsconsln s John Powless
has also announced his
restgnation But Powless
apparently bows out with less
respect than Taylor
Asked what Powless satd to
him Taylor replied he sa1d
he
appreciated
bemg
mtroduced tomght because
they dtdn t do tt for hlln at
home
Desptte what has happeoed
thts year wtth Ohio State 1119 Buckeye fans wtll always
remember Fred R Taylor

75-63 West Vtrgmta blasted
New Hampshtre 91 67
Jacksonville downed Georgta
Southern 77 65 Kentucky
ripped lnwSJana State 85-70
MtS SI SStppt t o pp e d
Vanderbilt 81 72 Mmnesota

Then tt happened Lewts
got a tipm for Central State
with II 20 left m the game
Before Rio could score agam
the Marauders had reeled off
10 straight points durmg a
four minute span and tt was
63-54 m favor of the home
team wtlh 8 16 left In the
game
Central State upped its lead

L

Nicklaus claims
first '76 title

RIOGRANDE0 1 - P r::e
52 12 Noe 10 3 23 Albanese
52 12
Caldwell
J 0 6
Stewar B 0 16 Car ng on o
2 2 Swan 0 00 TOTALS 3

911
CENTRAL STATE Ill

-

EaJv 1'2327
Fower 328
Leve et e S 1
L..ew s 1 0
Jav s 0 2
t4 Sml h 21
Boltman 0 0 o C after 5 o 0

214 E Mam

"QUALITY •ncl

SERVICE"

TOTALS 3S 1313

Halft me score Cen ra 40

R o 40

I

r

Progress noted
in diamond talk
FORT LAUDERDALE
Fla (UPI ) - Baseballs
owners and the Major League
Players Assoctatton have
reached an agreement-that
some progress ts bemg
made
It tsn t much but Webster s
future
deftmlton
of
progress could be deftned
as any time both Marvm
Mtller executt ve director of
the Players Assoctatton and
Lee MacPhail prestdent of
the Amertcan League ISSue
'ra1rly optuntsttc statements
on the same day
I would say tt was a
constructtve meeting satd
Miller after the two stdes met
for abnost f1ve hours
We made some techmcal
progress S8ld MacPhail I
hope we re closer to a
settlement but tt doesn t
mean 11 s gomg to bsppen m
the next few days
The maJor stumbling block
m the dtspute remains the

College Basketba Results
By Un ted Press Internal ona
Tournaments and Payoffs
Oh oVal ey Conf Playoff
I sf Round)
Aus n Peay 82 Mu ay S 11
M dd e Tenn 84 Tenn Tech 72
Mo ehead S 75 E Ky 64
W Ken tu cky 91 E Tenn 74
NA A 0 str ct Play
B hny NiH 76 Okla Bapt 66
B ar C ff 90S Amb se 67
Ed nbo o 93 Clar on 90 o
F Hays 9 Kan ws yn as o
Has ngs B Doan e 65
Wes eyan 03 NE I 77
nd ana Pa 83 Waynesbu g 67
K en ucky 5 9 Be ea 6
Mars H
4 Cha eston 63
Marymoun 98 Empor a S 67
N w es e n a 64 Buna Vs a 64
Qu n cy 85 S Xa"V e 70

reserve system The owners

have suggested that veterans
of eight years be granted free
agent status after Utetr ninth
or option year while the
players assoctation contends
the arbttrator s ruling m the
Andy Messersmith case
makes all players free agents
after they have played two
years thetr cootract year
and thetr optton year
Monday s meeting was the
ftrst time both stdes agreed to
resume after a lunch break
They met at 9 40 a m broke
lwtce then disbanded at 4 25
p m Both sides will caucus
on Tuesda y Miller meeting
wtth mdtvtdual players tn
Mtanu for a br efmg sesston
and
the
owners
rep res enta ttves getttng
together wtth thetr players
relations COlllllllttee
The next-and 24thnegottallng sesston is
scheduled for Wednesday
mornmg m Miarm
In New York meanWhile
Commtsstoner Bowte Kuhn
announced that George
Stembremer prunary owner
and chief executtve of the
New York Yankees had been
remstated following a Illmonth suspens1on
Steinbrenner was
suspended by Kuhn In
November of 1974 after he
was tndtcted on cbsrges of
contrlbutmg Illegally to the
1972 rwlection campatgn of
Prestdent Ntxon Stembren
ner pleaded gwlty to the
charge m August 1974

E~st

Am he st 2M dd bury 50
CCNY6 Yo k NY S
Co by 84 Bowdo n 82
Dow ng 1 Dom n can NY 52
J sy C ty S 79 T ntn S 61
L eMoyn e BO A rred 67
P ov dence 89 V anova 8
Qu nn p a 90 Am n 64
Ru g e s 85 S Bonavn e 80
Se on Hal 5 Manha an 63
S
ohn s 65 N agar a 64
West V
9 New Hamp 67
South
A abama 87 Geo g a 6
Campbel 98 N C W m 86
en enry 98 Va c wea ttl 94
Coppn S 1 S
F she 74
Jac kson"V
Ga Southern 65
Kentu cky 85 LS U 70
Lou sv e 01 B ad ey 89
McNeese as Sou h A abama 76
M ss ss pp a vandrb 12
Tennessee 8 M ss S 16
M dwesl
Ash and 72 Youngs n S 67
Cen S 83 R o G and e 7
D u y 84 Mo Wes ern 67
Eau C a re 7 Car hage 59
F nd ay 66 Det ance 65
Frankl n 74 Ea ham 70
I t no s s 88 Akron 69
nd S TH 87 E'Vl!nSVI 79
nd an~ 76 Nor hwes em 63
Lake Super o 75 Sag naw 74
Manches er 74 T S a e 63
M nneso a 8 M ch gan 9
M ch gan s 93 Iowa 88
Nebr Om 95 Mo S Lou s 87
No owa 95 w
no s 9.t
No re Dame 95 W M ch gan 88
W scans n 9 Oh o S 79
Southwesl
N M S
25 H df1 S mmons 02
New 0 eans 4 Ok a C y 67
No Texas S 99 West Te)( 69
0 al Robe s 79 S Lou s 76
S Marys Tex 61 H Payne 5
West
Nev L V 24 S Ma y s 86

Gnffey ts 25th

Red to mk pact
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Reds announced
today that outfielder Ken
Grtffey has agreed to terms
for the 1976 season
Gnffey the 25 year-old
rtghtftelder batted 305
durmg the 1975 season with
the Reds hitting four home
runs and gettmg 46 RB!s
He was the 25th member of
the world chrunptons to sign
ieavmg 15 yet to agree

can help pay
~oanng hospttal

tl

and surgtcal btlls

Cllltme

Monday s
Oh o Cottege
Basketba I Resu ts
Un ted Press lnternat onal
W scons n 9 Oh o S 79
Ash and 72 Youngstown St 6
no s s 88 Akron 69
NAIA Tourney
F nd ay 66 Def a nee 65
Cent al s 83 R o Grande 7
Oh o H gh Sc,..ool
Tournament Resu te
Un ted P ess Intern atonal
Class AAA
At Co umbua
Co
Eas moor
2
Co
Whe s one 46
F rank n He gh s 51 CQ
wes and 45
At T oy
P qua 55 Greenv e 42
Be eron a ne 70 Fa born
Bake 43

c ass

Bill Fletcher
1251 P'llwell St
Middlepert. 0.

PH. 992-7155

AA

At Salem
wes

B an ch 63 M nerva 62
Class A
A

Struthers

Sou her L ocal 61 lee on a 43
Co umb ana 58 Sebr ng S7

This is
Jack's
wife and
kids ...

p 71S.

�•
_2.;- The Daily Sentmel1 Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Jt!.esday !!arch 2 1976

Senate is solid for ID cards

Trick charged
zn coal strike
0

CHARLESTON W Va
(UP! ) - Up to 5 000 nuners
rt:[used to work m southern
West V trg~nta Monday and
one Uruted Mme Workers
offt etal blamed the tllegal
on
what
he
strtke
characteriZed as a black
lung ploy to break up the
umoo
Joe Tuemler an eight year
mmer from Kanawha Coun tj
and a member of COMPAC
the uruon s pohltcal alTII.
tried to persuade members of
his local to go back to thetr
jobs
Mmers who mstst on
will
fac e
ptcketlng
disctphnary actton from the
UMW s excecuttve boar d
Tuemler satd
Rovmg pickets succeeded
tn keepmg about 5 000 rruners
from reaching thetr JObs
foUowmg a sertes of ralites In
which the black lung bill
before Congress was denoun
ced

Tuemler warned that a
rebellion has shaped up
Withtn Ute UMW ranks one
he srud was directed by the
same men who chrunploned a

rtght to strike movement

last summer

These guys could g~ve a
darn less about black lun g
he S8ld The; re mamly
tnterested tn sphttmg the
UMW
Tuemler smgled out Bruce
MtUer and Skip Delano l\l o
leadmg advocates of the
rrght to strike cause
Som ebod y s backtn g
Delano and Mtller to bust the
unton l'uemler mamtamed
Once that s done we rrughl
as well forget workmg tn the
nunes
Tuemler satd the effect of a
strike would lose frtends m

COlUMBUS (UP!) Leg slatton provuling for state-issued
tdenliftcalton cards fo r nondriVIng handtcapped persons and
semor ct\tzens ts on tts way to the Ohio House followmg
Wlarumous Senate approval Monday mght
The measure ts amted at furmshmg the elderly the disabled
the blmd and those wtth an unpatred earnmg capac1ty wtth
offtctal tdenttft catton for use tn cashing checks or gaining
access to cred tt
Under the ~til sponsored by Sen Harry Meshel !).Young
stown the state Bureau of Motor Vehicles would tssue the four
year cards for a $2 50 fee to anyone who IS over 65 or can
furnish a phystetan s statement provmg he Is bandtcapped
Meshel satd as many as 500 000 non-driving Ohioans rrught
be able lo take advantage of the proposed cards
Many of these people have no means of tdentlftcalton
except Soctal Securtty cards and are unable to cash checks or
use credit whtch most of us take for granted satd Meshel
The ldentifi catton cards would contam color photographs
and the same mformat10n mcluded on drtvers licenses

However they would be marked not valid for driving a motor
vehicle
Like drtvers hcenses the ca rds would he renewable every
Congress
stn ce many four years and safeguards would be establlshed to prevent
represenlattves would be fraudulent use
reluctant to vote for a
Gov Jrunes A Rhodes last year vetoed legu!lalton provtding
measure under the pressure for tdenltficatton cards to all non-drtvmg Ohtoans on grounds tt
of a strike
would cost the state too much
What would your atlttude
He subsequently mstttuted by administrative order Golden
be' Tuemler asked I ll tell Buckeye Cards offermg semor ettizens diSCOunts at
you how you d feel You d partictpaltng pnvate busmesses and ultunately m public
have an attrtude of to hell programs
IH\h
you
They re
Meshel srud the $2 50 fee for his proposed cards would more
handctiffmg our delegatton than cover the cost of productton perhaps leavmg a surplus w
because they can t get carry mto future years
through to other pohttcrans
We ve got to g~ve our pohti
ctans a chance

Let

mus cal extravaganza

Freedom Ring
Produced
b) World of L fe In
ternaltonal Let Freedom
Ring features the 100 votce
Colleg an Chotr whose
sptr ted songs are enJoyed by

•
ID

televts on rad o and concert
audtences across the country

The mus cal was wr tten by
Harry Bollback co-dtrector
of Word of Life who wtll
appear n person along w th

Jack Wyrlzen who wtll speak
on
Amenca s
foWJdat on

sp1r tual

Let Freedom Rug wtll
be presented at the John F
Kennedy Center for the
Performm g

Arts

The Senate also gave unarwnous approval to a conslltutional
amendment pemuttiog the state w tasue bonds for energy
development and conservation programs
U passed by the House the proposal would go on the June 8
prunary hallot
-nte Ohto electorate approved a constttutional amendment tn
1974 authorwng the tssuance of bonds for pollution control and
sohd waste disposal but revenue bonds for energy projects
were not included
Sen Robert E 0 Shaughnessy l&gt;-co!umbus chief sponsor
of the new resolution, satd the Ohto Energy and Resource
Development Agency has discovered that desptte Jegtslatlon
passed last year ERDA has no authortly to make loans for the
development production recovery storage transportation or
conservation of energy
He sa1d adoption of his proposed amendment would asstst
Ohto s s.:lf-help drilling program under which prtvate fmns
are bemg encouraged to develop new supplies of natural gas
for use during fuel shortages
In some leftover busmess from last week Senate Minortty
Leader Mtchael J Maloney R-Cincmnall asked perrrusston of
the Senate to correct what he satd was an error m the journal
of last Thursday
Maloney complained that Lt Gov Richard F Celeste
changed a motton tn the rruddle of a roll call to allow it to pass
wtth a majority wte Instead of a three-rtfths vote as reqwred
The motton allowed Senate Democrats w brmg to the floor
and reJect the appomtment of Charles S lnpeman as chatr
rrum of the state Board of Ta• Appeals
Maloney satd the Journal lll8ccurately reflected the
proceedings Democrats defeated hts attempt to change the
JOurnal and approved tis wording
The House was to reconvene at II am today and the Senate
was to meet at I 30 p m

Young mother charged

Meigs student
in Institute choir
Davtd Kmg son of Mr and
Mrs Vtrgil King Rt 2
Pomeroy ts attendmg the
Word of Ufe B ble Ins! lute
Schroon Lake N Y where he
ts a member of the 100-vo ce
chotr made up of Btble In
st lute students The chotr s
presentmg the Btcentenmal

tn

Washtngton D C on Sunday
March 21 as part of Is ctty to
ctly tour

DA\ID KING

daughter's murder

Smtih
The arrest of Mrs Stsk 18
followed an around the-clock
mvesltgat10n by Shenff
Wedge and members of hts
department asstsled by State
Pohce after the baby was
reported mtssmg at 6 30 am
Saturday
Members of the famtly
accordmg to Sher ff Wedge
phoned the shertff s depart
ment at about 8 a m that the
tnfant gtrl named Davt
Calhne had apparently been
abducted from the bedroom
of the Stsk s rural mob le
home
Ofhctals of the sher ff s
department
headed by
proclatmed revolutionary
Wedge
tmmedtately
slogans and casttgated her
parents were wrttten for her responded to the call and
by members of the SLA satd later were JO ned by Stale
Poltce and two agents from
Dr Smger
Carter ruled there was no the FBI
About 1! 35 a m durmg a
precedent for testunony by
of the area Shertff s
search
an expert on speech patterns
Deputy
K W lnve and
and that the trtal already m
Trooper
J
L Searls
ts s1xth week would be
dtscovered
a
freshly
dug plot
lengthened by several days if
of
ground
at
the
edge
of a
she took the stand wtth the
fteld
The
top
sot!
had
been
JUry present
neatly put back m place and
POINT PLEASANT - A
murder charge wsa filed
Monday afternoon by Mason
Count; Shertff Elvtn E
Pete) Wedge agamst the
mother of a two months old
Letart area baby found dead
Saturday
Shertff Wedge satd he had
taken Harr et Stsk of Board
Road RD Letart mt o
custody
She w 11 be
arratgned before Justice of
the Peace Charles (Sonny)

Bailey rests Hearst defense
By DONALD B THACKREY
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Atwrney F Lee Batley after
losmg his second legal battle
of the day turned to the Judge
at Patrtcta Hearst s bank
robbery trtal and announced
Your honor the defense
rests
Bailey ended hts 1!-day
presentahon after U S
District Court Judge Ohver J
Carter rejected a defense
motton for dismtssal of all
charges on grounds the
government had w thheld
evtdence tendmg to show
Miss Hearst ts mnocent
The JUdge earlier refused to
let the Jury hear testunony
from an expert on speech
patterns
who sa d the
hetress
rev&lt;J lutt onary
statements oo Symbtonese
Ltberahon Army tape
recordings were wrttten by
members of th e ktdn ap
gang
Twelve wttnesses were
called by the defense "tlh
the htghi1ght bemg the 22year.,Jd defendant herself
spendmg a week on the stand
telling of bemg held m a
closet raped and threatened
until she jomed her ktdnapers
tn the robbery to avotd bemg
killed
Three psychialrtsts who
have
studted
the
bramwashmg of prtsoners of

wru backed up her story
saymg her treatment caused
a traumattc neurosts
which made her want to
please her captors
After the defense rested
Carter recessed the trtal unttl
ooday when the prosecution
begms Its rebuttal testunony
The case could go to the JUry
late thts week but tt ts more
likely to wmd up early next
week
The defense vrapped up tts
case by chargmg the
prosecut tot lad wtthheld
pi otog rap s made
by
at er as n San Francisco s
H bern

a Ba nk "h ch showed
gu s pomted at M ss Hearst
durmg the April 15 1974
holdup
FBI photographic expert
Vernon Ktpp ng called as the
f nal defense Witness
testtfted there was no attempt
to deliberately
lrtm
anythmg m the Orlginal5 by 7
mch sttlls made from the 413
frames of moVIe ftlm taken
by bank
survetllance
cameras
But he acknowledged the
larger ~Y 10 mch photos
showed Mtss Hall pointing a
rtOe In the dtrection of Mtss
Hearst whtle the smaller
pictures left out the SLA
member

Dr Margaret Singer of the
Unlverstty of Caltfornta at

Berkeley took the stand With
the Jury out of the courtroom
to explatn her speech
pattern studies of tapes and
wnhngs by Mtss Hearst
during her 19 mooths tn
captiVIty
She satd her study showed
Mtss Hearst used her own
words tn JUSt ftve of 25
secttons of SLA tape
recordmgs The ones m
wh1ch
she
stridently

Laurel Oiff
Sabbath school attendance
Feb 29 at tl e Free Methodtst
Church was 103 Chotr
members present was 10

Mr and Mrs Harmon Fox
and Mr Sam Radford
returned home Saturday
from a months stay tn
Flor da
Mrs Roy Howell en
tertatned Sunday wtth a
b rthday d nner m honor of
her mothery Mrs Harmon
Fox Those present were Mr
and Mrs John Douglas Mrs
Rose Ann H ne s Guysvtlle
Mr and Mrs Larry Walker
Mr Howell and Mr Fox
Mr Roy Howell returned
Sunday to hts employment at
Cadtz Oh o
Mrs James Gttmore spent
a week w th l er daughter
Mrs Sandy Darst and
ch ldren M ian She also
v stted \\tlh Mr and Mrs

st cks stewn over the area

WII run Jacobs Columbus
wh le there Mrs Gtlmore fell
and broke two bones m her
ankle
Mrs Theo Davts daughter
Peggy wen to Columbus
v st ed recenUy wtth Mrs
Dons Parents and Mr and
Mrs Pearl Jacobs
Nmety persons attended
the Sunday evenmg servtces
conducted by the young
people of the local church
Mr and Mrs Uoyd Wrtght
and Mr Steve Eblin talked on
thetr trtp to the Holy Lands
Pictures of the Holy Lands
~ere also shown
Mr Fnt~ Stahl New
Marshfteld and Mr and Mrs
Paul Stahl Columbus VISited
Sunday wtth Mr and Mrs
Norman Schaefer
Mr and Mrs Ed Bauer
grandaughter Kelly Sue
Cleveland spent the weekend
wtth Mr and Mrs Dick Karr

DR. LAMB

Hyperventilation is her problem
By Lawrence E

Lamb M D when I had these spells I dtd
DEAR DR LAMB Some but t.lus has helped very ltttle
months ago my husband Is there anything you can
underwent surgery and I had • ~gest that I can do that wtll
a severe shock when I was relteve me other than drugs'
told that he mtght not I am very nervous from the
recover Since then he has tmgl ng and from the
progressed very well but I weakhess m my legs
haven t I developed tioglmg
DEAR READER - In VIew
in my hands and feet and up or. your story and .the
my legs with some weakzlesa· el!ltiDtnaltons that you ve
I have feelings of hot and cold had I would suspect that you
with persptratllm and cold do not have any senous Ill
apots m my scalp I awaken ness
Hyperventilation
from bad dreams wtth a means over breathmg Wtth tt
jarring start I have loss of a person blows off too much
appetite and some Joss of carbon dioxtde and tt s fatrly
weight
standard to tell a patient to
I visited tlree phystetans breathe mto a brown paper
with no results Extenstve X bag (not a plasttc bsg)
rays cardiograms and aU the Laboratory analysts has
tests failed to show anything shown that chemically this
111d one doctor prescrtbed may not always do too much
Valium I was referred to but t! does seem to help some
another doctor who dtas Jl09ple Others as m your
nosed my trouble as • case get very ltttle beneftt
bypervenUiaUon and he sent from It
me to a neurologlst The
Your hyperventtlatton ts no
neuorologist gave me doubt related to an anxtety
elltenslve tests and sug~ested reaction whtch vou are
I breathe mto a pa per &amp;ag

•

expenencmg And tha&lt; ts also
the explanation of some of
your other symptoms The
anxtety reaction was no doubt
lrtggered off by the shock
that you I ad from your
husbands acute tllness
Gettmg over tl ts not always
that easy
I think you should ask your
doctor to refer you w a
psychtatrist Let s face it the
Situational aru&lt;1ety response
that you are havmg ts
basically an emottonal
problem You need help for
that JUSt as much as if you
had a broken leg You would
be surprtSed how much good
you can get out of quahty
professtonal counseltng m
such sifuatwns Some of these
situahonal problems can be
relieved rather qutckly
There are a vanety of
medtcmes which help
dependtng on whtch k nd of
emottonal response a person
has expertenced
The
medtcmes that are ava !able
certrunly extend beyond the

"

•

3- The Dally Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday March 2 1976

,

range of prescr1bmg Valium
alone or any other just SliDple
tranqulltzer
You ll get a lot more good
out of some professtonal
counselmg tbsn you will out
of breathmg lnoo a brown
paper bag In your particular
mstance It may help
unprove your life thereafter
Why take tranquilizers or
medtclnes to dull your
responses wsomething when
you have a good opportimlty
wtth professiOnal counseling
to resolve the situation and
free yourself from medicines
entirely'
For information on how
spray devices affect your
health send 50 cents for The
Health Letter Nwnber 3-4
Aerosol Dangers Enclose a
long
stamped
self
addressed envelope for
mallmg Address your letter
to me In care of this news
paper P 0 Box 1551 Radio
C ty Station New York NY
10019

accordmg to Wedge
Shertff Wedge after bemg
told of the area of loose d rt
mstructed offtcers to check
further and tl was deter
mmed tl was the stte of
makeshtft grave the baby
bur ed some 2 '2 It deep
NBA Stand ngs

By Un ted P eu lnte nat onal
Eas ern Conference
Atlant r:: D v son

W L Pr::t

Bos on
Buffa o
Ph ad e ph a
New Yo k
Centra

8

690

35 26

40

574

gb

6

35 27 56 5 7
30 32 484
'J
D v s on
W L Pel gil
Wash ng on
38 25 603
C e"Ve and
36 24 600
Houston
30 31 49 2 7
New Orleans 27 33 .4 50 9
A an a
26 35 426 1
Western Conference
M dwest o "' s on
w l Pet gil
M waukee
26 34 433
De o
24 35 407
Kansas( V
n 39 36 4
Ch cage
18 4
305 7
Pac I C 0 VISIOn
W l Pr::t gb
GodenSae 43 7 717
Seatt e
3 3
500 IJ
Los Ange es
3 3
soo 3
Phoen K
27 32 458 5
27 35 435
7
Po and
Mondays Resu Is
No games schedu ed
Tuesday s Gilmes
Go den S ate a Buffalo
Sea le at New Yo k
Ph ade ph a a Wash ng on
De o a Kansas C y
New 0 eans a M waukee
Ch r::ago at Po land
Wednesday s Games
Boston a Ph 8delph a
Seatea Derot
C eve and a Phoen K
Hous nn at New Orleans

The Dally Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THI:!
INTER EST OF

MEIGS MASQN AREA
CHESTER L TANN&amp;HlLL
Exec Ed

ROBERT HOE~Lictl
C ty Editor
Publ sh•~ ~· v exceo

Sa urday by The Ohlo
Val ey Publ sh no Com
pany
1 1 Court
St
Pomeroy
Ohio
4S761l
Bui ness 6ft ce Pbone 991
21.5"6 Ed tor al Pt\Qine 992
2157
Second c ass postage
pa Ct a Pomerol( Ot'llo
Nat onal
a(lver s ng
representative
Ward
Griff lh Company Inc
Bo nel i &amp; Gall,gher 0 v
75f Th rd Ave New York
N Y 10017
Subscrlp on
ra es
Del vered by carr er where
available 75 cen s per
week
Bv Motor R:ou e
where carr er serv ce no
ava ab e
One mon h
t3 25 By ma irwOh o and
w va One YeiT" S22 00
S x months S11 so Three
tnon hs S7 00 Elsewhere
S26 oo year -t ~ months
s 3 50 three months $7
Subscr P1 on pr ce Includes
Sunday Times Sentinel

so

-

I

The chtld accordmg to
Wedge "as wrapped n three
blankets A rag doll was
mstde the blankets wtlh the
gtrl
Sher ff Wedge mmedtalely
not fted Dr John Grubb
Mason County Coroner and
Prosecutor Don Kmgery of
the fmdmgs and then trans
ported the baby to Wtlcoxen

Rutgers completes perfect season
BY JOE CARNICELU
UPI Sporto Writer

Pastoral couple comes

.:~:::, :::::::::::::~::::::::::; ~::::::v~::::~:::~::::: ;:::::::::;:::,:

Mason

~nty

endeavor m Burlingham Is
bemg cooducted at meetings
each Wednesday evening and
each Sunday morning and
evemng at the old community
church A weekly Bible study
ts bemg held in the
Burl ngbrun area at the home
of Roscoe Prater tn Oarwm at
t p m each Thursday New
Southern Baptist work has
also begun m Middleport wtth
Rev Elkins conducltng
weekly Btble studies at 7 30
p m each Tuesday mght at
587 Matn St Rev Elkins will
be speaking at revival ser
vtces at the Burhngham
church m April
!!&lt;~ ~~~

;:;t

News Notes

By Alma Marshall

NHL Stand ngs
By Un ted P ess Internal ona
Campbel Conference
Patr ck 0 v s on
WLTPtsgfga
Ph ad ph a 40 IO 14 94 279 5
NY slande s 33 7 13 19 240 so
A an a
27 29 9 63 204 95
NY Range s 23 34 7 53 211 262
Sm vthe D v sion
WLTPts gf ga
Ch cago
26 2 7 69 95 191
Vancou"Ver
25 27 I 61 2 J 216
S Lou s
23 30 10 56 195 224
M nneso a
8 42 4 40 158 238
Kansa s c y 2 4 0 j4 15 26
Wal~s Conference
Norr s D v son
W L T Pts gl ga
Montrea
46 9 0 102 270 14
Los Angeles 31 27 7 69 2 o 2 6
P 1Sburgh
2 26
65 266 244
De ro
19 36 9 47 66 245
Wash ng on
a 48 9 25 80 3 8
Aditms D v s on
W L T Pts gf ga
40 1 11 9 246 76
Boston
Buffa D
3S 18 11 B 266 9
To on o
29 25 }1 69 242 222
Cal torn a
23 34 8 54 204 225
Monday s Result
To onto 4 M nneso a 2
Tuesdily s Games
Ca to n a a NY Is anders
P t sburgh at M nnesota
Wednesday s Games
Vancouver a NY Range s
Oetroj et A lanta
Ca fo nla a Mon real
Toron o at St Lou s
Bos on at Los J\poe es

WHA stana ngs
By Un ted

Preu Internet onal

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS Ohto (UP!)Fred Taylor sSt John Arena
career ended Monday mght
jUSt as It began 18 years ago
-with a loss
But 11 wasn t always that
way for the dean of Big Ten
bssketball coaches who an
nounced his res1gnat10n
several weeks after leading
the Buckeyes w seven Btg
Ten tiUes
We lost the ftrst one and
we lost the last ooe Taylor
rerruntsced after his team s
91 79 loss to lowly WtscOIIStn
Mooday night but we sure
had a lot of fun ones In
between
Mooday night however
was not one of them
The Buckeyes playing
again wtthout tbe servtces of

";:il

i
?.

11-10 center Cratg Taylor and
wttil only brief appearances
by Larry Bolden traded
l!lmost all the way m a game
which undoubtedly doomed
them to the Big Ten
basement
Both WtSConsm and the
Buckeyes went into the game
with 2-14 conference marks
deadlocked for the bottom
rung m the standings and
Ohto State s last game
Saturday ts agamst No I
ranked
Indiana
at
Bloorrungton
Taylor makmg hts fmal
appearance at home as Ohio
State coach received a two
mmute standing ovalton
when he walked onto the
court before the game He
appeared embsrrassed by
the receptton and gave only a
shght wave In reply to the

Southern wins
7th grade play
RACINE
Southern 7th
grade defeated Eastern 41 29
Saturday afternoon to take
ftrst place m the Southern
Seventh Grade Basketball
Tournament at Southern
Juntor High Southern took
charge wtth the tntltal ltp-&lt;Jff
when Talbott passed to
Teaford for hts ftrst two
points The ftrst quarter
ended ~ Southern
Southern took full com
mand m the second penod
outscormg Eastern 15 to 4
Eastern tr ed to press
Southern but could not stop
them as Teaford and Mtller
each scored two baskets
Southern led at the half 23-10
lh the second half Southern
played good ball control and
outstandmg defense
Barrtnger was held to 9
pomts and Wtgal to 5 by
Southern s tight man to-man
defense Southern made 45
percent of tts free throws
whtle Eastern canned 90
percent of thetrs Eastern s
cold shootmg was a factor as
they canned only 1(}.56 shots
for 18 percent from the fteld
Mtller of Southern led all
scorers with 15 pomts whtle
Teaford ha:d 13 Barrmger led
for Eastern with 9 pomts
Below are the boys scores
Barringer had 13 of Eastern's
33 rebounds The Eagles
ended thetr season at ~
Coach James R Lawrence
wtshes to thank all the teams
who took part and all the
parents and fans who gave
their support to make this
first seventh game tour
nament a big success

MASON - The Mason Seruor Citizens at lhetr meeting
Thursday spent a portion of the day cleaning their trailer
home on Adams St Some of the ladies washed windows others
marked qutlla and still others made butterflies of stryrofoam
On the first Thursday of every month the group will have a
pot luck dinner and on the third Thursday of every month
senior citizens having birthday s durmg the monUt will
celebrate with a party complete With lee cream and cake
Clara Staats was nommated and elected to represent the
group on the board She succeeds Mary Phillips who resigned
The seruor cttizens have extended th¢followlng Invitation
We Mason Senior Citizens wlah fo welcome all new
members who would hke to one of us
Attending were Blanche Jones Ruby Bond Goldie Smith
Erma TurnlltU Wilda Coleman Ella Ford Clara Staats
Barbara McDaniel Helen Elias Bertbs Hall S118le Brinker
Edna Burrts president and JoBM Hendrickson aide
Penooal Mention
MASON - Guests of Mr and Mrs Robert Roach and
family recently were Mr and Mrs Jack Forshee and children
John Tunothy Tammy and Jason of Cincinnati Mr and Mnt
Burton Webb Mansfteld Ohio Mr and Mrs Paul Randolph
Stella and Stacie Krebs Mrs Manford Hutton June Ann and
James David Roach Kathryn Russell Mr and M11t Earl
Stewart Renea and Troy Rev and Mnt Walter Cloud Mr
Michael Whalen Mr T R Davis Mrs Robert W Oliver
Mr and Mrs Curtis McDaniel visited their daughter and
son~n law Mr and Mrs James lnyd and family at Nashport
Ohio over the weekend
Mrs Curtis McDaruel has learned that her granddaughter
Demse McDamel a Senior at Point Pleasant has been named
honor student of her class

Hopefully th s can become
an annual event
SOUTHERN - Mtller s.:;.
15 McNtckle Q.M Mark
Wolfe 11 3 Teaford 6 I 13
Talbott 1 2-4 Curfman 142
Hupp 1 2-4and Lee Bryan
Wolfe Satterfield Ctrcle and
Jack Wolfe z ps
EASTERN - Bowers 2 3 7
Barrmger 4 I 9 Inng ~
Cole 2 1 5 Wtgal 2 I 5
Kennedy~ Matthews 1 1-3
and Grtbbs Larkins Van
Meter Hawk Chapman zips
Waterloo defeated m the
consolatton (prehmtnary)
game to take third place tn
the tournament
The ftrst quarter ended m a
11-8 t e but by half ltme Shade
led 111-11 behind the scormg of
Allen wtth 8 pomts Waterloo
fought back m the thtrd
quarter behind the shooting
ot Urtgsby who scored 10
pomts the only pomts for
them m that pertod but
Shade still led by 34 21
But m the fourth quarter
Waterloo took charge
commg out wtth a full court
press and outscormg Shade 24
to 9 Waterloo bed the score
43-43 at less than a mmute left
and wtth less than 30 seconds
made the wtnning basket
Grigsby of Waterloo scored 20
of hts game high 24 pomts in
the second half Ttmberlake
had 14 pomts
For Shade Allen had 20
pomts Guthrie 10 points and
Ricbmood 9 pomts Thts was
only the third game Waterloo
won th1s season the second
being over Wahama here
Thursday mght

Pirates to battle
SW Wednesday

EiiSf

W L T Pis 9f ga
29 33 1 59 237 264
26 31 6 S8 197 227
26 3 S 51 209 218
24 35 3 51 183 193
West
W L T Pts gf ga
Hous on
40 22 0 80 252 210
PhOen )(
31 24 6 68 228 204
San 0 ego
30 28 4 64 237 216
)II; M nneso
30 25 4 64 2 212
canadian
WLTPtsgfga
Wlnn peg
44 2
2 90 288 207
dueber::
38 19 4 ao 272 228
Calgary
31 27 4 66 232 213
Edmonton
22 39 5 &lt;t9 220 278
Toron o
16 40
37 259 3 7
x o awa
14 26
29 34 72
K Team d sbanded
C nc nnat
New Engtnd
Cleveland
nd an&amp;po s

s

North Gallia
1975 76
Southern Valley Athleltc
Conference champ battles
Southwestern Wednesday In
the semi finals of the Class A
Sectional Tournament at
Meigs High School Coach
Jim
Foster s
Pirates
defeated Eastern last
weekend w advance to the
semi finals NG has a 17 2
season mark
Coach Richard Hamilton s

•

Southwestern Hlghlandera
fimshed fourUt in the SVAC
Overall SWhau 5-13record
Thursday night Kyger
Creek r..J3 battles So~rn
11&gt;4 In the semi flnlla Coach
Carl Wolfe a Tornados
ellmtnated Hannan Trace
last weekend Coach Keith
Carter s Bobcats will be
playing their firat tour
nament game
Both games start at 7 30
pm

the ECAC Metropolitan
Regtonal to determtne
representabves m the NCAA
tournament
It was a busy rught for
many of the nation s top 20
teams Top-ranked Indtana
moved to within a game of a
perfect seaSOII by beatiog
Northwestern 7~ No 5
Nevada Las Vegas
smothered St
Mary s
(Calif ) 124 86 No 7
Alabama downed Georgta
87 76 No 10 Notre Dame
topped Western Michtgan, 95,.
88 tn overttme No 13
Tennessee edged MtSSISSJppl
State 711-76 No 16 St John s
shaded N1agara 115,.64 and
No 17 lnmsvtlle blasted
Bradley 107-89
Scott May scored 25 pomts
to lead lndtana past
Northwestern The vtctory
was Indiana s 25th thts
season and 56th strrught tn
regular season play Should
tile Hoos1ers defeat Ohio
Slate m thetr season flll8le tt
would mark the ftrst time
smce 1968 that two major
colleges went unbeaten m the

same season Houston and St
Bonaventure dtd It that year
but both were ousted tn the
NCAA tourney as UCLA went
on to wm
Eddie OWens scored 35
pomts and Glen Gondreztck
31 to lead Nevada Las Vegas
past St Mary s II was the
21st time thts season over the
100-pomt mark for the
Rebels who lead the natton m
scormg average
Leon Douglas and Anthony
Murray scored 20 pomts each
as Alabama beat Georgta and
Btlly P~terno scored nme of
Notre Dame s 17 overtune
potnts to bft the Irish over
Western Michigan Bernard
Kmg scored 33 potnts
tncluding the wmmng basket
wtth three seconds left. to ltft
Tennessee past MISSisstppt
State and Glen Williams
basket wtth two seconds left
boosted St John s over
N1agara Rtck Wtlson s 26
potntS helped LOUISVIlle
defeat Bradley
Elsewhere Provtdence
dumped Vtllanova 89 81
SeWn Hall beat Manhattan

Taylor bows out with 91-79loss

MASON- Trooper J L Searls of the West Virginia State
Pohce had as his topics burgularles in the United States home
safety and kinds of locks when the Mason County Historical
Funeral Home n h1s veh1cle Soctety met Feb 26 at the Virgil A Lewts home In Mason He
The remams were trans
was introduced by Mason s Mayor Fred Taylor
ported to Cabell Huntmgton
Searls satd tilere are two million buglar1es tn the U.S last
Hosp tal where an autopsy year oneoccurmg every 13 seconds Good locks Include the pin
¥.as performed
tumble Jock wtth 3 w 7 pms dead bolt lock and the double
Gravestde r tes for Davt cylinder lock Cham locks on the inside of the home kept locked
Calhn who was born on the durmg the day proVIde extra securtty
day before Chr stmas wtll be
He srud the county has pretty good police protectton but it
held Tuesday at 1 30 p m at cannot be everywhere He advised a buddy system in each
the Oak Grove Cemetery m netghborhood Report strangers m the netghborhood who keep
l.etart There wtll be no drtvmg around as they could be casmg your business
calhng hours Rev Bobby
Among the do nots were don t htde keys under the door
Woods
wtll
off c ate mat or Dower pot do not leave bicycles or lawn mowers on the
Wtlcoxen Funeral Home ts m outstde and leavmg wmdows unlocked ts like leaving a door
charge
unlocked
Survivors mclude her
When a public building Is hemg used interested persons
parents Bruce and Hamel should keep a record of who has keys and have a periodic
Thompson Stsk a brother mventory to make sure aU keys are accounted for
Bruce Mtc)tael at home
At the openmg of the meeting Mrs Landon Smith and Mnt
maternal grandparents Mr Russell Barton offered prayer and the latter read saipture 2
and Mrs Albert Thompson Peter 3 8 Mmutes of the preVIous meeting were read by Ml'l!
Letart paternal grand John Marshall and approved No treasurers report was g1ven
parents Mr and Mrs
The proposed by-laws of the Mason County Histortcal
Howard Stsk
Mason
Soctety were read by Mrs WtUtam Zerkle The society voted to
maternal
great
accept the by laws as written
grandparents Mr and Mrs
Mrs Earl Ingels was elected vtce prestdent to succeed
Harry Thompson I etart
Mrs Ray Proffitt
and
paternal
great
The Board of Governors made up of the executive
grandparents Mr and Mrs corrumttee wtU meet on Thursday March 4 at 10 a m
E R Harrah ol Greenbner
Attendmg Ute pot luck dinner at noon were Trooper J L
Searls Mayor Fred Taylor Mrs Smith Mrs Ingels Mnt
Marshall Mrs Proffitt Mrs Wtlliam Zerkle Mrs Fred
ABA stand ngs
Taylor Mrs Russell Barton Mrs Robert Guthrte Mnt Addie
E'y Un ted Press nternat onar
Brown Mr and Mrs Norman Reynolds
W L Pet gb
Denver
46 6 142
New Yo k
40 23 6JS 6
San An on o
36 24 600 9
34 JO 53
3
Ken ucky
nd ana
3 34 477 6
S Lous
29 36 .t46 8
Vrgna
2 5
88 34
Mondays Resu t
Denver- 5 V g n a 109
Tuesdays Games
Ken uc ky at S Lou s
San An on o a nd ana
Wednesday s Games
New York a Denve
S
ousa SanAnono
V rg n a a nd ana

IS

The
screaming
and
An obviously dramed
stomping outside had not yet Coach Tom Young wasn t
subsided and exhausted making any predictions He
Rutgers players were still was just happy it was aU
dripping with sweat and over
champagne after capping an
The season s over and the
unbeaten season But there pressiD'e for an undefeated
was still enough energy left to season Is over said Young
to tssue a warning
after his fourth..-anked club
People had just better be became only the 19th major
ready for us srud guard college team since 1939 to
Mike Dabney after helping flmsh unbeaten We didn t
Rutgers
defeat
St play well m the first half- !
Bonaventure s 85 80
think we were too high II was
Monday rught to complete a one of the best games I ve
2S.Q season
We ve been ever seen St Bonaventure
crtticized for havmg an easy play
schedule and not being
Rutgers needed a 17~ burst
pushed But the people who In the last six rrunutes to
do most of the talking about overcome a 75-&lt;18 Bonme lead
our schedule only watch Phd Sellers led Rutgers wtth
televlaion once a week The 25 pomts six m the cructal
coaches the wr1ters the streak and Dabney scored
people who vote tn the polls 19 Ed Jordan 16 and Hollis
know And so do our op
Copeland 11 Glen Hagan led
ponents
St Bonaventure with 22
But this IS only one pomts
plateau and now tt s tune to
The Scarlet Knights meet
move oo to another I m lnng Island University
kinda hopmg tl botls down to Thursday mght at Prmceton
Rutgers and North Carolma N J tn the openmg round of
In the finals of the Ea.&lt;rt Then

Rev BDd Mrs EWliJ

Bobby Elkins a May 1973
graduate of Clear Creek
Bapltsl School Ptnev1lle
Ky ts the new paswr of the
Burhngham Southern Bapttst
Chapel whtch ts sponsored by
the French Ctty Baphst
Church Galhpohs
A native of West Vl.l'gmta
he graduated from Mtlton
lligh School m 1955 He and
Mrs Elkms the former
Nancy Taylor have four
chtldren Bobby Kathy BtU
and Judy Rev Elkins has
done pastoral work tn Ken
lucky and Bellville Ohto
before com ng to Met gs
County
The new Southern Bapltst

we II see how tough the ACC

!

I

crowd of 6 698
I appreciated It he satd
of the ovation I certainly
don t like the etrcumstances
that brought It about but
that s over and done wtth
OhiQ State fell behind
rrudway through the first
half trailed by eight at
halftune and never got any
closer as the btgger Badgers
led by 6-4 Ken Patertck and 118 Dale Koehler won gomg
away
Patertck scored 23 pomts
Koehler 20 Ertan Colbert 17
and 11-8 Bob Johnson 16 for
Wisconsm
Ohto State had five players
tn double figures topped by
Fred Poole with 15 Mike
Daugherty had 14 Jud Wood
13 Clance Hammond 12 and
Mike Clme 10
Taylor surrounded by
newsmen m hts small arena
offtce after the game talked
of some of the htghlights of
the past 18 years Including
the one game whtch stands
out most in his mind - the 7555 wtn over Californta tn the
1960 NCAA fmals
That team led by then
sophomores Jerry Lucas and
Johit Havhcek played w~at
Taylor called a near perfect
game
The mght those kids beat
Calitorma tn the fmals you
can t beheve how well they
played Taylor satd They
took 19 shots m the ftrst half
and made 16 of them and only
a couple were n81de 15 feet
People apprectated those

edged Mtchtgan 81 79 Micht
gan State stopped Iowa 93-88
Wtsconsm beat Ohto State 91
79 North Texas State npped
West Texas State 811-69 and
Oral Roberts shaded St
UJUIS 79-76

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Edttor
NEW YORK (UP!) - Every mornmg he goes to work
Clarence S Campbell sets a record For pure durabiltty and
sheer staymg power at the top nobody can touch hlln
PreVIous record-holder was the late Kenesaw Mountatn
Landts He had the longest run as head man of a professtonal
sport servtng as commtsStoner of baseball 24 years The 70..
year.,Jd Campbell has hun beat by SIX years
He s ftrushtng hts 30th year as National Hockey League
preSident and gtvmg up hts JOb for a gtrl
Campbell a law;er told the league s Board of Governors he
has been grossly unfatr to hts wtfe over the years not spending
as much time With her as he should ve because of his work and
now be d like to try to make tl up w her He has told them to
fmd a new prestdent and he ll do everythmg he can to help
them
It s not gomg to be easy commg up wtth another Clarence S
Campbell
Hts honesty ts frtghtenmg says one NHL offtctal and
you don t find hts ktnd of mtegnty anymore
To get some tdea hsten to what happened 21 years ago when
Campbell showed up at the Montreal Forum after suspending
Canadtens superstar Maurtce Rocket Rtchard for the
bslance of the season and the playoffs
When the fans spotted Campbell headmg for hts seat they
began muttermg angrily They threw debrts and other objects
at him The crowd turned so ugly pobce moved m to protect
campbell Someone exploded a tear gas bomb and many fans
pamcked and rushed for the extts
A worrted ftre chief ordered the buddmg cleared and after
the game was forfe ted to the viSltmg Detrott Red Wmgs
hoodlums outs de the arena began throwmg brtcks settmg
ftres smashmg the wtndows of netghbormg stores and lootmg
them
Clarence S Campbell dtdn t have to go to the game m
Montrealthat mght He could vetaken the easy way out but he
didn t He never has smce bemg named league boss m 1946
when he came to the JOb d rectly from the War Crunes Trtala m
Germany where he served as asststant prosecutor
If you ask him to what he attrtbutes hts JOb longevtly
Campbell laughs and says the terms of hts employment were
well defmed at the very start
There were only SIX owners of clubs tn those days and they
were strong wtUed people he says I m sure they had some
mtsgtvmgs about any new person who was gomg to run thetr
busmess or who was going to try to hell.' them do so but what
they satd to me was Mr Campbell you re conung m here
wtthout lunttattons of any kind We want you to stay that way
It ts unhkely we ll all agree wtth you m the deetstons you make
That s the thmg you ll have to hve wtth We don t care what
your dectstons are but the thmg you have to do ts make sure

when you do make a dectston you make the same one the next

tune
And he has hved up to his terms of employment
Aftve-rnan search commttlee whtch mcludes Campbell has
heen establlahed to ftnd hts successor Members of the
commtttee are empowered to look etther mstde or outstde the
league
Among those under constderation are John Ztegler Jr
Detrott s legal counselor Jun Cullen who performs tbe same
function for the St lnms Blues and Sam Pollock vice prest
dentaand general manager of the Canadtens who has satd he
sn t mterested m the JOb
Another posstble candtdate ts Don Ruck one of tire vtce
prestdents of the league and prestdent of NHL Servtces Inc
Personable hard workmg and excepttonally capable the 47
year-&lt;Jld Iron Rtver Mtch native has been the architect
behind many of the leagues more successful busmess ven
lures He seems to understand how to wQrk wtth 18 different
to 15 pomts 75-60 w1th 3 40 owners as well as for them and Clarence S Campbell can tell
left before Rio made one fmal him that s one of the most unportant aspects of the JOb
effort to pull I out of the ftre
The Redmen reeled off seven
stratght pomts to cut the
deftctt to etght 75-67 wtlh
1 2e left but that was as close
as the Redmen could get
Each team had 39
rebounds Rio had 19 costly
turnovers agamst the speedy
LAUDERHILL Fla (UP!) fmtshed off J C Snead who
Marauders Central State had - After ha vtng wbs t he stayed wtthtn range until the
mne turnovers
called the best year of hiS final four holes and refused w
It was the fmal college career m 1975 Jack Ntcklaus QUit even then
game for Rio s Jim Stewart ts off and runnmg again m
Snead finished wtth a 611Paul Albanese and Bob 1978
272 JUst three shots behind
Caldwell all semors
Ntcklaus won his ftrst event Ntcklaus 269 total
Noe led Rio s attack w th of the year Monday when he
f felt hke I played
23 pomts Stewart added 16 shot seven-under-par 65 to extremely well
Nicklaus
Prtce and Albanese each had take his second Tournament satd
Players Champtonshtp It
12
I fiillshed the first nme tn
Carl Ealy 11-8 sophomore was only the third TPC ever 33 and at that point I felt I had
rorward paced the wmners held
ootal control of my game I
with 27 pomts 19 coming tn
Ntcklaus got the wm m felt like I wasn t gomg to rruss
typtcal !ashton He stayed a shot ali day he srud
the first half
Jtm Lewts tossed tn 14 Ken near the top durmg the ftrst
It was Ntcklaus 59th wtn on
Smtih
and
Roosevelt three rounds and then burted the PG A tour stnce he turned
Leverette each had II for the his oppostlton on the fmal pro tn 1962
day
wmners
The $60 000 hrst place
The Golden Bear scored check he won Monday tn the
In the other Distrtcl 22
game at Findlay Monday no bogeys ft ve birdies and ramdelayed tournament
rught Ed Urbantak scored 24 carded an eagle three when ratsed hts career wmnmgs to
pomts to pace Ftndlay to 66.,4 be canned a 4D-foot putt on the $2 609 527
wm over a late rallymg par five 15th hole The eaol•
Deftance qwntet
The Otlers moved (o a 36-33
lead by mtermtsston but the
Yellow Jackets led by John
The Insurance Store
Kornowa With 14 pomts kept
Complete
tt close m the last half Fmd
Insurance
Service
lay had a 66-61 lead w1th two
mtnules left and held
Deftance to only four free
throws
It made Ftndlay 17-8 for the
season whtle Deftance closed
at 111-13
Here s Rto ~ box ore

CSU erases Rio
Rio Grande College hit a
cold spell mtdway through
the second half and the result
was an 83 71 setback at the
hands of Central State
Umverstty Monday ntght
The loss ehmmated Coach
Art Lanham s Redmen from
further Dtstr ct 22 NA!A post
season tournament action
The game was played on the
Marauders

horne

court

Beacon Htll at Wtlberforce
near Xenia
Central State now 18-9 on
the year wtll now host
Fmdlay m the Dtstrtct 22
champ onshtp game Wed
nesday wtth the wmner ad
vancmg to the NAJA tour
nament m Kansas Ctly
Rto Grande completed tts
1975,.76 campatgn wtth a J5,.14
record
The game was much closer
than the !mal score tndtcates
The score was !ted 11 tunes
and the lead exchanged
hands 20 ltmes
During ftrst half aclton
netther team managed more
than a ftve pmnt spread It
was 40-all during the halfttme
mtenmss10n
Rio behmd Jtm Noe and
Jtm Stewart mcreased tls
lead to stx pomts 48-42 with
17 10 left m the game before
the Marauders came stor
ming back to !mot the count
at 41Htll on a steal by Jtm
Lewts at the 15 25 mark
Gtl Prtce s goal ( 12 34) put
Rio up 52-51 Jtmmy Noes
goal with II 56 rematmng put
Rio on top for the final ltme
54-53

l

1960 years but f don t think
they really realized just how
good those kids played
Taylor also recalled what
he dtd the mght he was
handed the Ohto State
basketball retns tn June of
1959
About nudntght he satd
a group of my frtends and I
came to the arena and
pamted the Btg 0 m the
center of the Door
And Monday that 0 was
still oo hts rrund
He sa d he woke up about
2 30 Monday morning unable
to sleep and got to thtnking
ah9ut all the ktds who have
played here and run through
Utat 0
Taylor refused to ptck an
allttme team of the top
players durmg hts regime
but satd Lucas Havltcek
and Jtmmy Cleamons
probably contnbuted the
most We ve always used
them as examples
Taylor wasn t the only
lame duck coach on the
Door Monday mght because
Wtsconsln s John Powless
has also announced his
restgnation But Powless
apparently bows out with less
respect than Taylor
Asked what Powless satd to
him Taylor replied he sa1d
he
appreciated
bemg
mtroduced tomght because
they dtdn t do tt for hlln at
home
Desptte what has happeoed
thts year wtth Ohio State 1119 Buckeye fans wtll always
remember Fred R Taylor

75-63 West Vtrgmta blasted
New Hampshtre 91 67
Jacksonville downed Georgta
Southern 77 65 Kentucky
ripped lnwSJana State 85-70
MtS SI SStppt t o pp e d
Vanderbilt 81 72 Mmnesota

Then tt happened Lewts
got a tipm for Central State
with II 20 left m the game
Before Rio could score agam
the Marauders had reeled off
10 straight points durmg a
four minute span and tt was
63-54 m favor of the home
team wtlh 8 16 left In the
game
Central State upped its lead

L

Nicklaus claims
first '76 title

RIOGRANDE0 1 - P r::e
52 12 Noe 10 3 23 Albanese
52 12
Caldwell
J 0 6
Stewar B 0 16 Car ng on o
2 2 Swan 0 00 TOTALS 3

911
CENTRAL STATE Ill

-

EaJv 1'2327
Fower 328
Leve et e S 1
L..ew s 1 0
Jav s 0 2
t4 Sml h 21
Boltman 0 0 o C after 5 o 0

214 E Mam

"QUALITY •ncl

SERVICE"

TOTALS 3S 1313

Halft me score Cen ra 40

R o 40

I

r

Progress noted
in diamond talk
FORT LAUDERDALE
Fla (UPI ) - Baseballs
owners and the Major League
Players Assoctatton have
reached an agreement-that
some progress ts bemg
made
It tsn t much but Webster s
future
deftmlton
of
progress could be deftned
as any time both Marvm
Mtller executt ve director of
the Players Assoctatton and
Lee MacPhail prestdent of
the Amertcan League ISSue
'ra1rly optuntsttc statements
on the same day
I would say tt was a
constructtve meeting satd
Miller after the two stdes met
for abnost f1ve hours
We made some techmcal
progress S8ld MacPhail I
hope we re closer to a
settlement but tt doesn t
mean 11 s gomg to bsppen m
the next few days
The maJor stumbling block
m the dtspute remains the

College Basketba Results
By Un ted Press Internal ona
Tournaments and Payoffs
Oh oVal ey Conf Playoff
I sf Round)
Aus n Peay 82 Mu ay S 11
M dd e Tenn 84 Tenn Tech 72
Mo ehead S 75 E Ky 64
W Ken tu cky 91 E Tenn 74
NA A 0 str ct Play
B hny NiH 76 Okla Bapt 66
B ar C ff 90S Amb se 67
Ed nbo o 93 Clar on 90 o
F Hays 9 Kan ws yn as o
Has ngs B Doan e 65
Wes eyan 03 NE I 77
nd ana Pa 83 Waynesbu g 67
K en ucky 5 9 Be ea 6
Mars H
4 Cha eston 63
Marymoun 98 Empor a S 67
N w es e n a 64 Buna Vs a 64
Qu n cy 85 S Xa"V e 70

reserve system The owners

have suggested that veterans
of eight years be granted free
agent status after Utetr ninth
or option year while the
players assoctation contends
the arbttrator s ruling m the
Andy Messersmith case
makes all players free agents
after they have played two
years thetr cootract year
and thetr optton year
Monday s meeting was the
ftrst time both stdes agreed to
resume after a lunch break
They met at 9 40 a m broke
lwtce then disbanded at 4 25
p m Both sides will caucus
on Tuesda y Miller meeting
wtth mdtvtdual players tn
Mtanu for a br efmg sesston
and
the
owners
rep res enta ttves getttng
together wtth thetr players
relations COlllllllttee
The next-and 24thnegottallng sesston is
scheduled for Wednesday
mornmg m Miarm
In New York meanWhile
Commtsstoner Bowte Kuhn
announced that George
Stembremer prunary owner
and chief executtve of the
New York Yankees had been
remstated following a Illmonth suspens1on
Steinbrenner was
suspended by Kuhn In
November of 1974 after he
was tndtcted on cbsrges of
contrlbutmg Illegally to the
1972 rwlection campatgn of
Prestdent Ntxon Stembren
ner pleaded gwlty to the
charge m August 1974

E~st

Am he st 2M dd bury 50
CCNY6 Yo k NY S
Co by 84 Bowdo n 82
Dow ng 1 Dom n can NY 52
J sy C ty S 79 T ntn S 61
L eMoyn e BO A rred 67
P ov dence 89 V anova 8
Qu nn p a 90 Am n 64
Ru g e s 85 S Bonavn e 80
Se on Hal 5 Manha an 63
S
ohn s 65 N agar a 64
West V
9 New Hamp 67
South
A abama 87 Geo g a 6
Campbel 98 N C W m 86
en enry 98 Va c wea ttl 94
Coppn S 1 S
F she 74
Jac kson"V
Ga Southern 65
Kentu cky 85 LS U 70
Lou sv e 01 B ad ey 89
McNeese as Sou h A abama 76
M ss ss pp a vandrb 12
Tennessee 8 M ss S 16
M dwesl
Ash and 72 Youngs n S 67
Cen S 83 R o G and e 7
D u y 84 Mo Wes ern 67
Eau C a re 7 Car hage 59
F nd ay 66 Det ance 65
Frankl n 74 Ea ham 70
I t no s s 88 Akron 69
nd S TH 87 E'Vl!nSVI 79
nd an~ 76 Nor hwes em 63
Lake Super o 75 Sag naw 74
Manches er 74 T S a e 63
M nneso a 8 M ch gan 9
M ch gan s 93 Iowa 88
Nebr Om 95 Mo S Lou s 87
No owa 95 w
no s 9.t
No re Dame 95 W M ch gan 88
W scans n 9 Oh o S 79
Southwesl
N M S
25 H df1 S mmons 02
New 0 eans 4 Ok a C y 67
No Texas S 99 West Te)( 69
0 al Robe s 79 S Lou s 76
S Marys Tex 61 H Payne 5
West
Nev L V 24 S Ma y s 86

Gnffey ts 25th

Red to mk pact
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Reds announced
today that outfielder Ken
Grtffey has agreed to terms
for the 1976 season
Gnffey the 25 year-old
rtghtftelder batted 305
durmg the 1975 season with
the Reds hitting four home
runs and gettmg 46 RB!s
He was the 25th member of
the world chrunptons to sign
ieavmg 15 yet to agree

can help pay
~oanng hospttal

tl

and surgtcal btlls

Cllltme

Monday s
Oh o Cottege
Basketba I Resu ts
Un ted Press lnternat onal
W scons n 9 Oh o S 79
Ash and 72 Youngstown St 6
no s s 88 Akron 69
NAIA Tourney
F nd ay 66 Def a nee 65
Cent al s 83 R o Grande 7
Oh o H gh Sc,..ool
Tournament Resu te
Un ted P ess Intern atonal
Class AAA
At Co umbua
Co
Eas moor
2
Co
Whe s one 46
F rank n He gh s 51 CQ
wes and 45
At T oy
P qua 55 Greenv e 42
Be eron a ne 70 Fa born
Bake 43

c ass

Bill Fletcher
1251 P'llwell St
Middlepert. 0.

PH. 992-7155

AA

At Salem
wes

B an ch 63 M nerva 62
Class A
A

Struthers

Sou her L ocal 61 lee on a 43
Co umb ana 58 Sebr ng S7

This is
Jack's
wife and
kids ...

p 71S.

�DaUy Sentinel,__Middl_epo_rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 2,1976

arrangements for
"""""' homes included on
tile ifiiDl8 home tour of Beta
stall Phi Sorority will be
prowAd by the Bend Q' the
ru.,.. &amp;arden Club.
1\{eillng recently at the
hodle 01 Mrs. James Diehl,
Mullllcn Heights, the club
agteilt to provide floral
piecea with Mrs . Wilson
~r and Mrs. Bert
. Grimm
to
do
the
IIT~ents .

· A8
~

•

a bicentennial

the_,.

project,
members discussed
the jJIItlilbility-of marking the

.~~ re:tted
a seedlin
Logan asElm
in the
, eet1t
at the Letart Falls
Sc~
Mr . Carpenter
dj~d
a pamphlet
• ~by the Meigs County
Office on making a
nial flower bed,
·
flowers and the
~r planting.
. ~~- 0 . Barnitz read the
cluli poem, Mrs. Andrew
Q-oas"ttad the prayer,' and
Mra. Clifford Morris gave the
d!OQIIIt for the month. Mrs.
Dlt!lli'tdevotions were on the
~=~ order theme with
being taken from
5 and Proverbs 4.
the hymn, "The
Hymn" and con-·
with the · prayer,
Me to Grow."
·
call members

:

'~\l

In 1975, three men set off

explosions that destroyed a
multimillion dollar rubber
factory in Shelton, Conn. No
one was injured.

DOXO-L
.,.

.

By Helen and Sue Bottel

..

discussed forcing branches
such as pussy willow and
forsythia, as well as fruit tree
branches. There was also a
discussion on ecology with
the emphasis on water and
sewage. Mrs. Cross spoke of
the Dowers at Disney World,
some plantings particularly
for the bkentennial, and
exhibited a flower call
"B l~ck Ears."
The
traveling
pri ce
provided by Mrs. Grimm was
awarded to Mrs . DiehL The
program by Mrs. Cross was
on the hosta plant. She told of
the varieties, of its need for
rich soil and plenty of water
nd of the ease in
p pagating. It was noted
th t Mrs. Morris has several
in h r garden. The plants are
pere nials, grow in clumps
and are attractive when used
in flower arrangements.
Mrs. Carpenter suggested
that plants or rootings be ·
exchanged at the next
meeting . She received a blue
ribbon for her arrangement.
Refreshments were served
by the hostess.

51

Engagement '~vening of Psalm'
~: announced presented by adult choir

~r&lt;,:&lt;':';9.(;;;;;;~i;;''~''i{;~,,,,,,,,,.,.,.,.,,~,J.

arrangements
made for tour

SEE OUR
SPRING LINE

N

"An Evening of Psalm "
was presented Sunday
evening by the Adult Choir of
the Bradbury Church of
Christ. The program was
directed by Paula Haynes
with Mrs. Marilyn Wilcox,
accompanist.
The men of the choir sang
" In Times Like These "
followed by "All People That
On Earth Do Dwell" and the
reading of Psalm 100 by Glen
Evans. Christy Stanley read
Psalm 104 after the choir
sang "Worship the King,"
and Mrs. Kathryn Miller,
Psalm 23, following "The
Lord is My Shepherd." "Thy

PT. PLEASANT, W. Va_Mr. and Mrs. Donald F.
Gabritsch of Oshel Road ,

Will Good Guy Go WroagJ
Rap :
Almost every time you read of a mass murderer or
someone who kills his wife or family, it turns out he was a
model child, maybe even an Eagle Scout when yowtg.
So how can you trust anyone' Ilook at my boyfriend who Is
wonderful to me, has never been in any kind of trouble, and
hasn't even dated much, and I think, " He 's too good to be
true." Maybe underneath that quiet, kind outer layer, Is a
future wife-killer. How is a girl going to know? - SCARED

Point Pleasant, W. Va ., are

announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage of
lheir only daughter, Jacque ,
to David Cornell Fowler , son
of Mr. and Mrs. George C.
Fowler of Ripley Road, Point
Pleasant.
.
Miss Gabritsch is a student
at West Virginia State
·college where she is
majoring in SO\!ial work and
psychology and Is active in
many campus organizations.
She was formerly a student at
West Virginia Tech where she
was a majorette-twirler,
editor of student newspaper, .
A thought for the day :
a ·m ember of · student
government and on the British statesman John
housing and appeals com- Viscowtt Morley said, "In my
mittee as well as active in creed, waste of public 'money
many drama productions. is like the sin against the Holy
She is one of the original cast Ghost.''
members of "Gallia Coun·
In 1945, units of the U.S. 9th
try" and a former Gold
Army
reached the Rhine
Medalist in Baton Twirling
River
op"posite
Dusseldorf,
Olympics in Spain .
Germany.
Her fiance is a graduate of
Point Pleasant High School
where was active in VICA

Dear Scared :
How do you know a new car won't throw a wheel and pitch
you over a cliff ... Or a tiger won't break out of the zoo and
maul you to death ... Or your parents won't desert you ... Or
little green men won't carry you off to Mars?
If you let unreal worries rule your life, you could end up
afraid to take a chance on anything, or anybody ..- HELEN

+++

NOTE FROM SUE : Look : One in maybe 50,000 "model
Eagle Scout" types become wife murderers. With odds like
these, it's safe to bet on your good buy.
Your problems are: too much imagination and too little
trust. Work on 'em !

+++

Dear Helen and Sue:
I've been with Donna for six months now and we plan to
marry soon. Everything is fine, except lor her aunt. The
family approves otherwise, but the aunt hates me.
See, I'm in a professional rock 'n roll band. Aunt J . has me
stereotyped - if you play in a band you're a doper surrounded
by groupies.
She's very old-fashioned, and is shocked by everything
"modern." Donna and her aunt have never gotten along and
and other organizations, and
now, because of me, they're not speaking.
How can I conVince this woman I'm not your stereotyped holds a state welder's certificate. He has been active in
rock musician, and I won't hurt her niece? - E.H.J.
4-H for many years both on
the county and sta te levels
Dear E.:
Since the rest of Donna's family likes you, why worry and plans to attend college.
, The wedding will take place
about an opionated aunt?
Be polite and distant, and let Donna handle her own fight at t.he Good Shepherd United
Methodi st
Church
at
- she's probably. enjoying' it. - HELEN
Flatrock, Rt . 2, Point
+++
Pleasant, on March 21 at 2 p.
Dear E.: ·
Can you convince a rock it's a daisy? Don 't waste too much m. The gracious custom of
time trying to win over Awtt J . Just give her a kiss on the cheek open church will be observed.
and a free ticket to one of your concerts. THAT should
confound her! - SUE
TALKS RESUME
+++
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Rap :
Talks aimed at working out a
This is to "Future Runaway ," the 13-year-old with family new contract between the cit'y
problems.
and its ·policemen have
Please don't run away ! You'U only gain tons more resumed.
problems that are harder to cope with.
Federal mediator John
I'm 15. Two years ago !felt like you do . But with the help of · Wagner sat in on Monday's
good friends and a school cowtselor, I realized my parents session
between
c.ity ·
were as worried and unsure as I was - and just as miserable . negotiators and
local
A lot more Understanding on all sides helped us through the · Fraternal Order of Police
Terrible Thirteens.
'
officials.
Everyone isn't against you: it just seems that way after
The city's 1,175 policemen
you've had a fight with your parents.- DENISE
have been working without a
contract since Jan. 1 and
talks have been sporadically
conducted since last autumn .
Although there has been no
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mount Vernon. Mr . and Mrs. wage agreement, the city has
rwJ rs.
Leonard
Bass, Bass have five grand- temporarily given the policeSyracuse, were honored !)ec. children , Christine and men the same 7 per cent pay
26 with a surprise open house Steven Bass, Rodney and raise that firemen received in
in observance of their 30th Robyn Stewart, and Mark their new contract.
wedding anniversary.
Brown.
This Week '$ Specltllfl
Of the 50 guests attending,
,.,
Hosting the party were the
couple's five children, John , those from out of town were
Dexter ;
Mrs.
Lenora Mr . and Mrs. John Cline, Sue
Stewart , Mrs . Barbara and Darla, Beverly, arid Mr.
Brown and David. liass, and Mrs. Carl Wicks , Brenda,
Syracuse, and
Sherri , Carla and Jan a, Lancaster.

SHOP TWIN CITIES GATEWAY
FO.R THE BEST FOOD BUYSI

were Tammy Stanley, Paula
Haynes and Karen 'nngley.

df

Word Have- I Hid In My
Heart" was tre next selection
with Mike Miller then reading
Psalm 119.
Delores Dailey read Psahn
for "Be Still, My Soul";
Randy Haynes, Psalm 121,
for "Unto the Hill ," and Bill
Bailey Luke a verses 22
· through 25, f~r " Fierce
fulged the Tempest. "

KEDS

t .

·~

.•'

:•
''-"'

"-' .. ·

r0iiliiith11er;,;m,;;e;;;m;;;be;;;rs;,;o;;;,f,;;th::;:e~c,ho:;;,ir
;; ~---------.

- NOW OPEN-

Featuring
Ice Cream in
Quarts, Pints, and
Cones

Adolph's Dairy Valley

"MEAL-OF-THE-WEEK"

Hrs.: !O:OOA.M. Tilli:OO P.M. Sun.-TJ1Ur.
10 : 00 A.M. Till2 : 00 P. M. Fri. il. Sat .
992-2556
W.MAIN
POMEROY,O.

Chuck Roast Supreme. Cook tender
beef w iih carrots, onions and conn•
ed or fresh mushrooms, to produce
rich savory gravy. Serve with corn
relish or fresh salad and ovenbrowned potatoes. Top off wilh
fresh-fruit pie!

USDA CHOICE

·CHUCK STEAK
USDA CHOICE
LEAN

lb.

USDA CHOICE

/

CHUCK
ROAST
·-

SHOULDER ROAST

lb.

ENJOY IVERY OUNCE YOU BUY

BONELESS CHUCK ROAST
BONElESS ENGLISH ROAST
BONELESS STEW BEEF

THEIR WARMEST ATTENTION

·~.

· ·'· AND RE.GULAR DELIVERY DAYS

· iiARDWICil
;ijRANGES

WARM MORNING
HEATERS

·+RIDENOUR
t -..". ~

I
•...

j. ;

TV-APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

\\J -

· '~Dester, Ohio

r

985-3307

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, March I)
Lonnie Adkins , Frank
Booth e,'
Barnes, Ruth
Timothy Coon, Leslie Evans,
William Evans, Earl Fletcher, Joseph Fletcher, Mrs.
Larry Gray and daughter,
Lawren ce Hale , Phyllis
Henry, Artha Hornsby,
Goldie Huff, Melvin Johnson,
Mrs. John Knox and
daughter , Mrs. Stephen

Marshall and son, Charles
McElhinny , Caro l e
McLaughlin, Charles North,
Mr s. Ralph Perkins a nd
daughter, Dennis Roush ,Lenna Shelton, Mrs . Curlls
Short and daughter, Dorothy
Spencer, Alberta Stapleton , ·
Virginia Thorn e, Velma
Young.
(Born, March I)
Mr. and . Mrs. Theodore
Wooten, daughter, Bidwell.

HILTON'S

2

.

OYSTER STEW..•.~;,~~::·
PHEBE'S STORE
Prices Effective March 2·6
Right Reser ved fiil::lmlt Quant ities

W_e flladiy Accept Fed. Food Stamps
Monday thru Friday
'-.&lt;.u"'OO.· :
9:ooto 7: 00
9to9

NEW LOW PRiCE

lib .

7

cans$100
for

DOG FOOD

lb ..

15e

ib. bag

IT
69~

49•
PINEAPPLE .•...•..•c:t••••
e
KETCHUP. .............~:~~:·. 79
,
NOODLES ........•... :.k.g~ 4
It

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No. 2

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INN MAID KLUSKI

·

$5195
You ' ll like Our Qua li t y
Way of Doing Bu siness .
GMAC FINANCING

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PUFFS FACIAL

69~

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Open ~venings '1il6 : 00
Tots o.m. Sat.

MOTTS ·
44 OZ. JAR

COMPANY

__.

~.

'

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-

8 oz. •

•••

GOLDEN ISLE FROZEN

JUICE!.~:~:$ }39

COUPON

~~:c~~~~R
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King

With 10.00 or
More
Purchase
1

BUlTERMILK

69'

~~~
NSER
1
12

14 oz.

Can

CUBE
. STEAK
lb.

:T:¥!¥!4~-.~..;.,~

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TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

BEEF LIVER ........ !~·.. :..
FRENCH CITY

o

o

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2aoz .

:

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L~~~~.~EANER
79~
36 6

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White, Aqua. Gold
And Pink
No.245
Bath Size

1\10 . 155
200 CNT. Lkg .

49~

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lWIN-· CITIES
GATEWAY
-· Expires 3·6·76

COUPON

COUPO"'

GLAD FOOD

STORAGE BAG's
WITH
COUPON

No. 155 ·
75 Cnl. Pkg .

69~

WITH
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lWIN CITIES GATEWAY

ltiiN CITIES GATEWAY
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•

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SALAD DRESSING..•8f

CDUPO N r

-&amp;X93133&amp;. t...._

2 _lb . .

20 ct.

~

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ii:
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GLAD WRAP
WITH
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CAMPBELLS

.. . . . . .. .. , , ·I
;•;::::;:;;.-;::;;;~- ~ . ~ . . . . ~ _;_~· . . . ~
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140 Cnt.

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29 e

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Expires 3-6·76
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BOLOGNA ............~~~~ .... ..
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_IASTEE

o

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USDA CHOICE BEEF
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SLICED TENDER

~ .

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4 Roll

TOILET TISSUE .. ~:!~]9*

GATEWAY
BREAD

"'V....~~~1
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~...-:-....~~:a.:._:- 11 r, --:-:-.-: --=---:7·7:"·-:

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3 lb. Package or MorP.
· Our Top Quality Hamburger ·

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VALLEY BELL

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TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

:1:.

CHARMIN

29

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69~

Regular Price
All Pre· Packaged

ICE CREAM ...... ~~:.?:!·.Bf

FRESH CARROTS .... ~ ..~-~~-~:
e
LARGE SOLID
·
HEAD LffiUCE ............................. ~..

WITH ·
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·· ·······
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20• OFF

SLIC. BACON

99~

32 oz .
Btl .

· :
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. .1
. . . . . .· .. , • • . . . . .. · . . . . . . ., .,;#.;

lb.

DAIRY LANE

FRESH
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BCH..
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CELERY...........................

(15• OFF)

i'
':1:·I

5 Lb. Bag

99~

IVORY LIQUID

fl
~I

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Ground Beef Sale
quart

WITH
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$189

FOR

COUPON

:-.-; -;- --;- 1

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9'"
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OXYDOL DETERGENT ~:

French City USDA Choice Meats

MIRACLE WHIP

., pl.

SALTINE
CRACKERS

GOLDEN ISLE
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GOLDEN ISLE .
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8 OZ PKG 59~
AMERICAN CHEESE SINGLES ..... ...........:. ~....:..
BOUNCE FABRIC SOFTENER .......... ~~..~~~:.~.~~.. 39~

AP;P~ESAUCE

CITY LOAN

.

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2% MILK .•....••...?:!·.~l 39

WESTERN, BEANS &amp; FRANKS
11 OZ. PKG.

99

When you need money lor home impmvernents. or a ny good
reason, ta lk tn us. We hand I(' H omeOwner Loan~ qui ckly, easily
and w1th consrde rat10n. Amou nts up to $15,000 available.

pr

PORK&amp; BEANS 4!!::· 89~
SJ49
CRISCO•......•.....•..•c::.
JO-BO BRAND

ROTS

89~

BROUGHTON

ORANGE
BANQUET DINNERS

FOLGER'S s 1~:~~!R
39~
INSTANT COFFEE............

Size Box

MACKEREL •......•.~a.: .. ~

SPECIALS

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GOOD ALL WEEK ·

14,000 mI.

39•

IVERYDA Y LOW PRICE

POLISH SAUSAGE

tb.

NO
LIMIT

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IS oz.

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GOLDEN ISLE

rad io-st ereo tape · player,

l-

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SALISBURY STEAK, MEAT LOAF,

(25• OFF)

SWEEPSTAKES

lb.

FAMILY PAK
PURE LEAN

8-16 OZ. BOTTLES

Red -b lack la ndau roof ,
bla c;:k vin yl int ., full power ,
fact. air , SS wheel s, AM

992-5342

-

8 9 e ~~E~~D
R. C. COLA lb.69e t.79e

75 Olds Cu~
Salon Coupe

HOSPITAL NEWS

GIVES YOUR

~HEATING&amp; COOKING PROBLEMS

•
l

Middleport, Ohio

. •' '(!.

DO X OL DEALIR

I

FOOlWEAR
heritage house

USED CARS

~,YOUR

1

OPEN EVES TIL 9:00

Coupk honors anniversary

'

o.1 I

~ .~

�DaUy Sentinel,__Middl_epo_rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 2,1976

arrangements for
"""""' homes included on
tile ifiiDl8 home tour of Beta
stall Phi Sorority will be
prowAd by the Bend Q' the
ru.,.. &amp;arden Club.
1\{eillng recently at the
hodle 01 Mrs. James Diehl,
Mullllcn Heights, the club
agteilt to provide floral
piecea with Mrs . Wilson
~r and Mrs. Bert
. Grimm
to
do
the
IIT~ents .

· A8
~

•

a bicentennial

the_,.

project,
members discussed
the jJIItlilbility-of marking the

.~~ re:tted
a seedlin
Logan asElm
in the
, eet1t
at the Letart Falls
Sc~
Mr . Carpenter
dj~d
a pamphlet
• ~by the Meigs County
Office on making a
nial flower bed,
·
flowers and the
~r planting.
. ~~- 0 . Barnitz read the
cluli poem, Mrs. Andrew
Q-oas"ttad the prayer,' and
Mra. Clifford Morris gave the
d!OQIIIt for the month. Mrs.
Dlt!lli'tdevotions were on the
~=~ order theme with
being taken from
5 and Proverbs 4.
the hymn, "The
Hymn" and con-·
with the · prayer,
Me to Grow."
·
call members

:

'~\l

In 1975, three men set off

explosions that destroyed a
multimillion dollar rubber
factory in Shelton, Conn. No
one was injured.

DOXO-L
.,.

.

By Helen and Sue Bottel

..

discussed forcing branches
such as pussy willow and
forsythia, as well as fruit tree
branches. There was also a
discussion on ecology with
the emphasis on water and
sewage. Mrs. Cross spoke of
the Dowers at Disney World,
some plantings particularly
for the bkentennial, and
exhibited a flower call
"B l~ck Ears."
The
traveling
pri ce
provided by Mrs. Grimm was
awarded to Mrs . DiehL The
program by Mrs. Cross was
on the hosta plant. She told of
the varieties, of its need for
rich soil and plenty of water
nd of the ease in
p pagating. It was noted
th t Mrs. Morris has several
in h r garden. The plants are
pere nials, grow in clumps
and are attractive when used
in flower arrangements.
Mrs. Carpenter suggested
that plants or rootings be ·
exchanged at the next
meeting . She received a blue
ribbon for her arrangement.
Refreshments were served
by the hostess.

51

Engagement '~vening of Psalm'
~: announced presented by adult choir

~r&lt;,:&lt;':';9.(;;;;;;~i;;''~''i{;~,,,,,,,,,.,.,.,.,,~,J.

arrangements
made for tour

SEE OUR
SPRING LINE

N

"An Evening of Psalm "
was presented Sunday
evening by the Adult Choir of
the Bradbury Church of
Christ. The program was
directed by Paula Haynes
with Mrs. Marilyn Wilcox,
accompanist.
The men of the choir sang
" In Times Like These "
followed by "All People That
On Earth Do Dwell" and the
reading of Psalm 100 by Glen
Evans. Christy Stanley read
Psalm 104 after the choir
sang "Worship the King,"
and Mrs. Kathryn Miller,
Psalm 23, following "The
Lord is My Shepherd." "Thy

PT. PLEASANT, W. Va_Mr. and Mrs. Donald F.
Gabritsch of Oshel Road ,

Will Good Guy Go WroagJ
Rap :
Almost every time you read of a mass murderer or
someone who kills his wife or family, it turns out he was a
model child, maybe even an Eagle Scout when yowtg.
So how can you trust anyone' Ilook at my boyfriend who Is
wonderful to me, has never been in any kind of trouble, and
hasn't even dated much, and I think, " He 's too good to be
true." Maybe underneath that quiet, kind outer layer, Is a
future wife-killer. How is a girl going to know? - SCARED

Point Pleasant, W. Va ., are

announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage of
lheir only daughter, Jacque ,
to David Cornell Fowler , son
of Mr. and Mrs. George C.
Fowler of Ripley Road, Point
Pleasant.
.
Miss Gabritsch is a student
at West Virginia State
·college where she is
majoring in SO\!ial work and
psychology and Is active in
many campus organizations.
She was formerly a student at
West Virginia Tech where she
was a majorette-twirler,
editor of student newspaper, .
A thought for the day :
a ·m ember of · student
government and on the British statesman John
housing and appeals com- Viscowtt Morley said, "In my
mittee as well as active in creed, waste of public 'money
many drama productions. is like the sin against the Holy
She is one of the original cast Ghost.''
members of "Gallia Coun·
In 1945, units of the U.S. 9th
try" and a former Gold
Army
reached the Rhine
Medalist in Baton Twirling
River
op"posite
Dusseldorf,
Olympics in Spain .
Germany.
Her fiance is a graduate of
Point Pleasant High School
where was active in VICA

Dear Scared :
How do you know a new car won't throw a wheel and pitch
you over a cliff ... Or a tiger won't break out of the zoo and
maul you to death ... Or your parents won't desert you ... Or
little green men won't carry you off to Mars?
If you let unreal worries rule your life, you could end up
afraid to take a chance on anything, or anybody ..- HELEN

+++

NOTE FROM SUE : Look : One in maybe 50,000 "model
Eagle Scout" types become wife murderers. With odds like
these, it's safe to bet on your good buy.
Your problems are: too much imagination and too little
trust. Work on 'em !

+++

Dear Helen and Sue:
I've been with Donna for six months now and we plan to
marry soon. Everything is fine, except lor her aunt. The
family approves otherwise, but the aunt hates me.
See, I'm in a professional rock 'n roll band. Aunt J . has me
stereotyped - if you play in a band you're a doper surrounded
by groupies.
She's very old-fashioned, and is shocked by everything
"modern." Donna and her aunt have never gotten along and
and other organizations, and
now, because of me, they're not speaking.
How can I conVince this woman I'm not your stereotyped holds a state welder's certificate. He has been active in
rock musician, and I won't hurt her niece? - E.H.J.
4-H for many years both on
the county and sta te levels
Dear E.:
Since the rest of Donna's family likes you, why worry and plans to attend college.
, The wedding will take place
about an opionated aunt?
Be polite and distant, and let Donna handle her own fight at t.he Good Shepherd United
Methodi st
Church
at
- she's probably. enjoying' it. - HELEN
Flatrock, Rt . 2, Point
+++
Pleasant, on March 21 at 2 p.
Dear E.: ·
Can you convince a rock it's a daisy? Don 't waste too much m. The gracious custom of
time trying to win over Awtt J . Just give her a kiss on the cheek open church will be observed.
and a free ticket to one of your concerts. THAT should
confound her! - SUE
TALKS RESUME
+++
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Rap :
Talks aimed at working out a
This is to "Future Runaway ," the 13-year-old with family new contract between the cit'y
problems.
and its ·policemen have
Please don't run away ! You'U only gain tons more resumed.
problems that are harder to cope with.
Federal mediator John
I'm 15. Two years ago !felt like you do . But with the help of · Wagner sat in on Monday's
good friends and a school cowtselor, I realized my parents session
between
c.ity ·
were as worried and unsure as I was - and just as miserable . negotiators and
local
A lot more Understanding on all sides helped us through the · Fraternal Order of Police
Terrible Thirteens.
'
officials.
Everyone isn't against you: it just seems that way after
The city's 1,175 policemen
you've had a fight with your parents.- DENISE
have been working without a
contract since Jan. 1 and
talks have been sporadically
conducted since last autumn .
Although there has been no
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mount Vernon. Mr . and Mrs. wage agreement, the city has
rwJ rs.
Leonard
Bass, Bass have five grand- temporarily given the policeSyracuse, were honored !)ec. children , Christine and men the same 7 per cent pay
26 with a surprise open house Steven Bass, Rodney and raise that firemen received in
in observance of their 30th Robyn Stewart, and Mark their new contract.
wedding anniversary.
Brown.
This Week '$ Specltllfl
Of the 50 guests attending,
,.,
Hosting the party were the
couple's five children, John , those from out of town were
Dexter ;
Mrs.
Lenora Mr . and Mrs. John Cline, Sue
Stewart , Mrs . Barbara and Darla, Beverly, arid Mr.
Brown and David. liass, and Mrs. Carl Wicks , Brenda,
Syracuse, and
Sherri , Carla and Jan a, Lancaster.

SHOP TWIN CITIES GATEWAY
FO.R THE BEST FOOD BUYSI

were Tammy Stanley, Paula
Haynes and Karen 'nngley.

df

Word Have- I Hid In My
Heart" was tre next selection
with Mike Miller then reading
Psalm 119.
Delores Dailey read Psahn
for "Be Still, My Soul";
Randy Haynes, Psalm 121,
for "Unto the Hill ," and Bill
Bailey Luke a verses 22
· through 25, f~r " Fierce
fulged the Tempest. "

KEDS

t .

·~

.•'

:•
''-"'

"-' .. ·

r0iiliiith11er;,;m,;;e;;;m;;;be;;;rs;,;o;;;,f,;;th::;:e~c,ho:;;,ir
;; ~---------.

- NOW OPEN-

Featuring
Ice Cream in
Quarts, Pints, and
Cones

Adolph's Dairy Valley

"MEAL-OF-THE-WEEK"

Hrs.: !O:OOA.M. Tilli:OO P.M. Sun.-TJ1Ur.
10 : 00 A.M. Till2 : 00 P. M. Fri. il. Sat .
992-2556
W.MAIN
POMEROY,O.

Chuck Roast Supreme. Cook tender
beef w iih carrots, onions and conn•
ed or fresh mushrooms, to produce
rich savory gravy. Serve with corn
relish or fresh salad and ovenbrowned potatoes. Top off wilh
fresh-fruit pie!

USDA CHOICE

·CHUCK STEAK
USDA CHOICE
LEAN

lb.

USDA CHOICE

/

CHUCK
ROAST
·-

SHOULDER ROAST

lb.

ENJOY IVERY OUNCE YOU BUY

BONELESS CHUCK ROAST
BONElESS ENGLISH ROAST
BONELESS STEW BEEF

THEIR WARMEST ATTENTION

·~.

· ·'· AND RE.GULAR DELIVERY DAYS

· iiARDWICil
;ijRANGES

WARM MORNING
HEATERS

·+RIDENOUR
t -..". ~

I
•...

j. ;

TV-APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

\\J -

· '~Dester, Ohio

r

985-3307

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, March I)
Lonnie Adkins , Frank
Booth e,'
Barnes, Ruth
Timothy Coon, Leslie Evans,
William Evans, Earl Fletcher, Joseph Fletcher, Mrs.
Larry Gray and daughter,
Lawren ce Hale , Phyllis
Henry, Artha Hornsby,
Goldie Huff, Melvin Johnson,
Mrs. John Knox and
daughter , Mrs. Stephen

Marshall and son, Charles
McElhinny , Caro l e
McLaughlin, Charles North,
Mr s. Ralph Perkins a nd
daughter, Dennis Roush ,Lenna Shelton, Mrs . Curlls
Short and daughter, Dorothy
Spencer, Alberta Stapleton , ·
Virginia Thorn e, Velma
Young.
(Born, March I)
Mr. and . Mrs. Theodore
Wooten, daughter, Bidwell.

HILTON'S

2

.

OYSTER STEW..•.~;,~~::·
PHEBE'S STORE
Prices Effective March 2·6
Right Reser ved fiil::lmlt Quant ities

W_e flladiy Accept Fed. Food Stamps
Monday thru Friday
'-.&lt;.u"'OO.· :
9:ooto 7: 00
9to9

NEW LOW PRiCE

lib .

7

cans$100
for

DOG FOOD

lb ..

15e

ib. bag

IT
69~

49•
PINEAPPLE .•...•..•c:t••••
e
KETCHUP. .............~:~~:·. 79
,
NOODLES ........•... :.k.g~ 4
It

. CRUSH .ED, SLICED, CHUNK

No. 2

-

-

-

'

HEINZ

INN MAID KLUSKI

·

$5195
You ' ll like Our Qua li t y
Way of Doing Bu siness .
GMAC FINANCING

...I

Pomeroy

PUFFS FACIAL

69~

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

.

.. . .

----~
• •
•
'
• •

125 C:. Main Slreel 992-217 1

Open ~venings '1il6 : 00
Tots o.m. Sat.

MOTTS ·
44 OZ. JAR

COMPANY

__.

~.

'

.

-

8 oz. •

•••

GOLDEN ISLE FROZEN

JUICE!.~:~:$ }39

COUPON

~~:c~~~~R
~,;;..._--:-

King

With 10.00 or
More
Purchase
1

BUlTERMILK

69'

~~~
NSER
1
12

14 oz.

Can

CUBE
. STEAK
lb.

:T:¥!¥!4~-.~..;.,~

JSlQO
~WITH
4I -

COUPON

TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

BEEF LIVER ........ !~·.. :..
FRENCH CITY

o

o

'

'

2aoz .

:

: ) 11: :_

Btl.

L~~~~.~EANER
79~
36 6

TWINECxPIT_riEeSs ~ ~~EWAY

~~·~·~·~~~·~~~~·~·~·~·~~~~·~·1 .

&amp;;.;:

WITH
COUPON

.

WIENERS ............ :.~~:..... .

· MIRACLE WHIP

'LOAVEs89

cit.

:::
: :: ..

- - ~

39.,.

DIAL
BAR SOAP
White, Aqua. Gold
And Pink
No.245
Bath Size

1\10 . 155
200 CNT. Lkg .

49~

4I 99~ ' CQ~~6N

.

'
'

r

lWIN-· CITIES
GATEWAY
-· Expires 3·6·76

COUPON

COUPO"'

GLAD FOOD

STORAGE BAG's
WITH
COUPON

No. 155 ·
75 Cnl. Pkg .

69~

WITH
COUPON

lWIN CITIES GATEWAY

ltiiN CITIES GATEWAY
•

-i

......

•

'

&gt;,

•I

••

\

Jar

SALAD DRESSING..•8f

CDUPO N r

-&amp;X93133&amp;. t...._

2 _lb . .

20 ct.

~

-GARDEN FRESH PRODUCE-

ii:
:_ :[

GLAD WRAP
WITH
COUPON

CAMPBELLS

.. . . . . .. .. , , ·I
;•;::::;:;;.-;::;;;~- ~ . ~ . . . . ~ _;_~· . . . ~
COUPON

140 Cnt.

·

29 e

, ,SV,..ij.-! ,

'

}~:.:

:·
: :II: {i:

Expires 3-6·76
~~~~~~~ .

39~·

$149
BOLOGNA ............~~~~ .... ..
$119

_IASTEE

o

AJAX

USDA CHOICE BEEF
·

o

1f.~ •

$139

SLICED TENDER

~ .

.

4 Roll

TOILET TISSUE .. ~:!~]9*

GATEWAY
BREAD

"'V....~~~1
I~ '~f

~...-:-....~~:a.:._:- 11 r, --:-:-.-: --=---:7·7:"·-:

AJAX

3 lb. Package or MorP.
· Our Top Quality Hamburger ·

'

VALLEY BELL

'

TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

:1:.

CHARMIN

29

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

69~

Regular Price
All Pre· Packaged

ICE CREAM ...... ~~:.?:!·.Bf

FRESH CARROTS .... ~ ..~-~~-~:
e
LARGE SOLID
·
HEAD LffiUCE ............................. ~..

WITH ·
COUPON

·· ·······
······ ·· ·······~
- -COUPON

20• OFF

SLIC. BACON

99~

32 oz .
Btl .

· :
· Expires 3·6·76
. .1
. . . . . .· .. , • • . . . . .. · . . . . . . ., .,;#.;

lb.

DAIRY LANE

FRESH
.
BCH..
PASCAL
CELERY...........................

(15• OFF)

i'
':1:·I

5 Lb. Bag

99~

IVORY LIQUID

fl
~I

TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

Ground Beef Sale
quart

WITH
COUPON

$189

FOR

COUPON

:-.-; -;- --;- 1

. .
9'"
flouR
' ......•...........•.
:r

FRESH
BAKED

.. . . . . . . . . ~~~~. ~~~~ 49~

,. w4f'!il!!it~ I

GOLD MEDAL

~

3

'

"

..."
'.

49c

~

J~~~M~~x .................... 2

OXYDOL DETERGENT ~:

French City USDA Choice Meats

MIRACLE WHIP

., pl.

SALTINE
CRACKERS

GOLDEN ISLE
·
~·
MACARONI AND CHEESE .. ........... t:!..~~-~-~~~ ..
GOLDEN ISLE .
.
.
8 OZ PKG 59~
AMERICAN CHEESE SINGLES ..... ...........:. ~....:..
BOUNCE FABRIC SOFTENER .......... ~~..~~~:.~.~~.. 39~

AP;P~ESAUCE

CITY LOAN

.

.

2% MILK .•....••...?:!·.~l 39

WESTERN, BEANS &amp; FRANKS
11 OZ. PKG.

99

When you need money lor home impmvernents. or a ny good
reason, ta lk tn us. We hand I(' H omeOwner Loan~ qui ckly, easily
and w1th consrde rat10n. Amou nts up to $15,000 available.

pr

PORK&amp; BEANS 4!!::· 89~
SJ49
CRISCO•......•.....•..•c::.
JO-BO BRAND

ROTS

89~

BROUGHTON

ORANGE
BANQUET DINNERS

FOLGER'S s 1~:~~!R
39~
INSTANT COFFEE............

Size Box

MACKEREL •......•.~a.: .. ~

SPECIALS

~--------~L-----~----

GOOD ALL WEEK ·

14,000 mI.

39•

IVERYDA Y LOW PRICE

POLISH SAUSAGE

tb.

NO
LIMIT

·'

IS oz.

SMOKED

GOLDEN ISLE

rad io-st ereo tape · player,

l-

SUPERIORS

SALISBURY STEAK, MEAT LOAF,

(25• OFF)

SWEEPSTAKES

lb.

FAMILY PAK
PURE LEAN

8-16 OZ. BOTTLES

Red -b lack la ndau roof ,
bla c;:k vin yl int ., full power ,
fact. air , SS wheel s, AM

992-5342

-

8 9 e ~~E~~D
R. C. COLA lb.69e t.79e

75 Olds Cu~
Salon Coupe

HOSPITAL NEWS

GIVES YOUR

~HEATING&amp; COOKING PROBLEMS

•
l

Middleport, Ohio

. •' '(!.

DO X OL DEALIR

I

FOOlWEAR
heritage house

USED CARS

~,YOUR

1

OPEN EVES TIL 9:00

Coupk honors anniversary

'

o.1 I

~ .~

�Mltldlep!!l"t·Pclltleroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 2, 1976

Mrs ..Karr gives
program on cotton
change.
Mrs . Fred Blaettnar ,
president , cond ucted the
business meeting . The group
changed its meeting time to I
p.m. on the first Tuesday of
each month . It was announced Mrs. Harvey Van
Vranken will host the next
meeting with the program to
be a workshop. Members are
to brin g material for
arrangements .
The club decided to make
eight arrangements for the
Pomeroy Alumni banquet. An
invitation to the open meeting
cording to Mrs. Karr, is the of the Winding Trail Garden
leading 'producer of cotton , Club was read, and the April
but it is of average quality. 24 regional meeting in Athens
Major stat es pr oducing was announced. Discussion
cotton are Oklahoma, Texas, was held on the free cancer
Kansas , Arkansas and clinic for women held each

MASON, W. VA. - Mrs. ·
Irving Karr was in charge of
the program at the Monday
night meeting of the Pomeroy
Garden Club at the home of
Mrs. J. W. McMurray here .
Mrs . Karr displayed a
cotton plant she had grown
from seed. Mrs. Karr noted it
takes 10-15 weeks for the pod .
The flowers then a ppear
followed by the boll . She said
cotton was first heard of in
3 000 B.C. in Egypt where the
~st quality cotton is still
grown.
The Un ited States, acMRS. RUTH PARSONS

90th -birthday honored
Mrs.
Ruth
Pa rsons Kelvington, Letart, W. Va.;
celebr ated her 90th birthday Robin and Chuck Fortun e,
on Feb. 2 at the home of her Racine; Preston, Edna an d
son, - Presto n
Parso ns, Mark Pars ons, Racine ;
Racine, Route 2.
Wilm a Siders, Mr . and Mrs.
Tw o long-time fr iends. William J. Parsons, Billy Joe
Mr s. Lottie Bradford and and Kelly Joe , Raci ne.
Mrs. Bessie Stitt, both of the
Mrs. Parso ns rec eive d
Racine area, spent the day nw11er0us gifts along with 35
with Mrs . Parsons and joined car ds fr om fr ien ds and
her in a birthday dinner . relat ives . Th ose calling
Others call ing to . extend during the day were served
congratulations were Harry cake and ice cream .
and No ra Staats. Lilly

Polly's Pointers
\

By Polly Cramer

Plastic insert
aids coaster query

POU.Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POU. Y - I found
an unfinished piece of
embroidery I had stitched as
a child. It is six small
coasters and one large one to
put under a pitcher. Now that
I
am
finishin g
the
embroidery I would like to
back each piece or finish
them off some way. Also, I
want to thank Claire for
sending in the way to stiffen
crocheted doilies as I had
been wanting to know how to
do this for a long time. DEB.
DEAR DEB - You might
back your embroidered
pieces with a heavy cotton
fabric. when sjltchlng aroWJd
them 1eaye an opening large
enough to sUp in a piece of
plastic cut from tile top of a
margarine tub or. something
Sew
opening
similar.
together by hand. This plastic
wUI provide protection for a
table top and' can be removed
when the coasters need
washing or cleaning. Also you
might be able to buy metal
coasters the embro idery
would Htln after being tightly
stretched around a piece of
• cardboard or plastic cut to
the proper size. The last idea
would be inure practical if
each piece were covered with
IIIIo glass cut . to size. -

POU.Y.
DEAR POLLY - I have
quite a few Pet Peeves but
one of'the worst is with the
directions on things we buy,
Uke in the drug store, that are
printed so smhll you cannot
read them. - MRS. T. H.
DEAR POLLY - To have a
.. better pie crust make it as
• usual but before adding the
filling put the crust in the

•
"•

•
•

..

•

.'
.•
~

:

!

LOWER GAS PRICES
CLEVELAND (UPI )
The price of gasoline at
Standard Oil of Ohio (Sohio)
stations was two Cents lower
today because of " lower
crude oil costs," according to
Robert G. Griffin , Sohio
marketing vice president.
· Sohio also lowered the price
of diesel fuel and heating oils
one cent per gallon and
announced
the
same
decreases were for its Boron
Oil Co. subsidiary.
A gasoline price reduction
of .8 of a cent per gallon was
announced fur its BP Oil Inc.
subSidiary.
PATIENT VISITED ·'
Brian Keith Friend, a ~
patient at
Childre n's
Hospital, was visited over the
weekend by his parents, Mr .

"" and Mrs. Brian Friend, Mrs .
•-= Edna Fox, Mr . and Mrs.
~

• Richard Friend and Mark,
::: Bonnie Friend, and Mr. and
:' Mrs . Pat Johnson and Gene.
~

~

••

:;
~

:
"'
:;:
"
••

month at Veterans Memorial

Mississippi .

Mrs. Karr said that in ,1661 Hospital.
in Polans, the·inventor of the
fir st mechanica l weavin g
loom was ex:ecuted and his
loom destroyed because the
BACK FROM TRIP
country fel t it would lead to
Rebecca
Eblin , Steven
the destructi on of its
Eblin,
Lloyd
Wright
and Jean
economics.
Wright
have
returned
home
For devotions, Mrs. Mcfollowing
a
12
day
trip
to
the
Murray read a passage from
Holy
Land.
They
visited
Tel
St. Mark and a meditation
entitled, '' The Eternal Call of Aviv , Haifa. J e ru salem ,
Bethlehem, MaWJI of Olives,
God."
Roll call was a plant which the Garden of Gethsemane,
had been received at the the tomb of Jesus and many
October meeting plant ex- other in teresting places .
They also took a boat ride on
the Sea of Galilee. On their
PERFECT

" "A bridal shower was he ld

recently honoring Mrs. Greg
Grover, the former Linda
Thayer, at the home o£ Mrs .

Marcia Houdashelt.
Hostesses were Joyde
Grove r , Pat Humphrey ,
Nellie Grover, Myrtle Grover
and Jerri Mowery.
Games were played with
prizes awarded to Brenda
Haggy, Deanna Denny,
Bonnie Prater and Myrtle
Grover.
Refreshments of cake, jello

provided ' by the String
Dusters. Admission Is $t .
Children under 12 admitted
free if accompanied by
parents.

Party held
on birthday
;
Mr. llld Mrs. Arland King
: • entertained Saturday af·
• .. lemoon with a party honoring
; ; their daughter, Marsha, on
: ! her fourth birthday.
:•
A Mickey Mouse theme was
: uaed in the decorations and
Mrs. King served d~rated
••• • cupcakes,
ice cream and Kool
Ald. Games were played with
favors going to all the
• · children.
•'
Attending were Neil Rich' ' monel, Tracy and Tammy
Eblin, Jay Humphreys,
, , Deeanna Henderson, Amy
.and Shawn Goeglein, Tim
· Jeffers, Angie Sloan, Usa
Darst, Mandy Eblin, Cindy
Neutzllng, Usa and Randy
King, Michl King " Mrs .
Susanne Richmond , Mrs.
Sharon Darst, Mrs. Jan
Eblin, Mrs. Rita Eblin and
Mr. and Mrs. Gene King.
On Saturday evening
Marsha's grandparents, Mr.
• · and Mrs. TOlly Fowler and
: ' Mr. and Mrs. Clarence King,
: . loined the Arland King family

THE INN PLACE
WEDNESDAY NIGHT

SPECIAL

salad, potato chips, mints

punch and coffee were served .
Others atte nding were
Eunice Eblin, Kay Morris,
Billy , Mike and Sandy,
Loraine Venoy , Robin and
Tony , Betty Reed , Edi th
Barton, Joan Eads, Lo uise
Eads, Colena Mowery, Tina
Collins and Traci, Stephaniee
Haggy., Nancy Russell and
Mandy, Todd a nd Terri
Grover , ArJ ene Hanson ,
Genia and Karen Grover.
Gloria Grover, Joe and Gene
Hwnphrey , Brent and Brian

Houdashelt. .
Sending gifts were Marjorie Smith, Judy Harrison,

2 Cleaners
Available
C«i~ll

For

Reservatlo'n

$}2

For
8 Hours

Vi si t Our Salad Bar
B- B-Q Pork Chops
',
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Vegetabl e
.•
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

•
2 95
plus fax

882-2525
return flight they spent two
days sightseeing in Rome.
They returned home over the
Alps, France, England, into
Canada and dow n to New
York.

SAYRE
HARDWARE

1

THE MEIGS INN

1

.
'.
' '

..'

".
''•

•

·

SILVER PLATE
I I

:· .~ .,

Gift

5' Po~ro Od Pao• &gt;l••••e Bo,.i ·
Lon• •

$13.50

sol ution is to first rinse ln

mild soapy detergent , slip
them on the hands and then
rub· the hands together with
just a bit of toothpaste as this
mild ab rasive makes them
come clean. Rinse in warm
water, hang ir; the cuff end
and while drying blow in
them ever so often to keep the
fingers open, This is for •
washable kid . I have also
found that toothpaste does a
wonderful cleaning job on my
eye glasses. - CLARA.
DEAR POLLY - My
Pointer is for Mrs. M. K. who
complained about the pockets
in pants wearing out so
quickly because of the poor
quality material used . I do
not replace the entire pocket
but cut off the lower, worn
part - about half the pocket.
I use that as a pattern and cut
out a new part from coarse
muslin. Be sure to allow for
seams and then sew to upper
part of the pocket. This
makes a full size replacement
that is never noticed since the
top is as italways was. HELEN C.
You will receive a dollar if
Polly uses your favorite
homemaking idea, Pet
Peeve, Polly's Problem or
solution to a problem. Write
Polly in care of this news·
paper.

Com pot~
Bon Bon

~

$1UO

rf!~.

., ·--'

Allwe
to • ·deamongus
isthe total of what we produce.

Bread Tray $11.50

Goessler
JEWELRY STORE
Court St., Pomeroy

•

Have we forgotten that simple truth?

Henty Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income ~x help.

It seems so, for we are on a collision course with great ·
need .
~

and wants of the populatio n-a nd the people are starting
to f ee l it.

Up to this point in our short history, America has grown in
the production of goods and services faster than the
population and its needs.

You are.

Faster, in our history, than all the other nations on earth
have grown in theirs.
What made it all possible?
The ever-increasing application of energy funneled
through ~:nachines .. . and the determination for a better
life.
·
·

'

.
I

Applied energy made production burgeon .

....

It also made possible a myriad of industries which neve r
existed before , new jobs, and new technologies wh ic h, in
turn, created other industries.

~.~

Reason 14. We're human, and once in a
great while we make a mistak~ . But if
our error means Y9U must pay additional
·tax, you pay only the tax. We pay any
interest or penalty. We stand behind

Result . . . We have had more to divide among all of our
people simply because we have produced more .
So much more that the American standard of living
became the envy of the world .

our work .

-H~-R-B
.....~~O~C~K®

· But now Americ!l is beginning to lose. its way.

ADCISHEltE
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office announced
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
the March distribution of
.
$35,379,765 in Aid to Dowen.
dent Children to 576,418
Pomeroy
,
Ohio
recipients In Ohio 's · 88
counties. In Meigs County,
' oPEN: 9-6 weekdays, 9-s sat.
$44,604 was distributed to 783
'---N•O•A-P•P•O•I•N•T•M-E..N•T•N.._E.,C•E•S•S•A..R•Y---..1
participants.

618 E. MAIN ST.

We're·losing sight of the fact that, without the application
of energy, there can be no production and, without
product ion , the needs of the people cannot be filled. ·
Already our production of gool,ls and services has slowed
to the point where it is not keeping pace with the needs

Suddenly your pay doesn't buy as much. And your wallet
empties quicker. One reason .i s that, when too many chase
alter too little, prices explode. In reality, your standard of
living declines.
And- as our population continues to grow-you will re·
ceive a smaller and smaller share of what we produce .. .
unless we can produce more.
A whole lot more, if the miliions coming into our world are
to have an even chance at a decent way of life and if the
needs of America 's poor are to be met.
But increased production is not possible without the increased application of energy. And therein lies the
problem . We are becoming more and more dependent lot
that energy upon precarious foreign sources which can
be shut off at any time.

d

BIRTHDAY HONORED
son of
Mr. and Mrs. Maz Eichinger,
Sr ., celebrated his ninth
birthday recently wl th a
lUling party. His guesta
were D. J. Randolph, Kevin
Fick, Jimmy Thomas and
Kemy Ray Riggs. Others
presentlnt! gift&amp; were his
parenta and sister, BeCky,
Mr . and Mrs . · Allen
Eichinger, Darla Kelly, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Eichinger.
Paula and Tammy, Mr. and
Mrs. JIJllea Fry. Ruth Ann
and Sue Ellen, Mr. and Mrs.
John Fry.

And unless we produce more, so more Americans can
have more to divide, the American standard of living, as
we know It, will become history.
·
That simple truth we should never forget.

'

American Electric Power Company, Inc.

~

1 09

FULL CUT

,39

lb. •

Superiors
. - - - - USDA Choice
\,

SIRLOIN ·
TIP ROAST

ROUND

Superiors USDA Choice

STEAK

RUMP
ROAST

.

'

Superi11s USDA Choice Beef

GROUND
BEEF

Superiors USDA Choice

BONELESS

SLICED
BACON

Marie V Special Buysl
Pillsbury

15~

box

GRAVY MIX

on~

Duncan Hines

large
fami~

BROWNIE MIX

size

2

SPREAD
laundry Detergent

lb.
tub

20 oz.

BOLD

box

.

$179
·

12 oz.
pkg.

99~

Superiors Fresh and lean

10~

BEEF ·sTEW

Favorite

2

'BREAD

89~

$1.19

Purina Brand
bxs.

Bloe Bonnet

lb

Superiors 'Dart'

lb._

Regular

more

CUBE
STEAK

'129

Low Prlcef

lb.69~

sib.
or

Superiors USDA Choice Beef

ROUND STEAK I

At New

TENDER VITTLES

$10,9

for

ht 'luzit and Glade Solid

49~

Room Deodorizers

THURSDAY
AND SUNDAY

on~

4 Varieties

DRY CAT FOOD
Party
ICE

EGG

10 lb.

NOODLES

REAME'S

-

bag

39'

$

each

Little Friskies

. 12 oz.
pkg.

Package

Grade 'B'
Large

59~

EGGS
a 59~

SEVEN-UP

DAIRY DELIGHTS

All WEEK LONG
16 oz.

FROZEN FOODS -

FAIRfttONT LOW FAT

MORTON DINNERS

2% MILK .....................................~~·...~ 1.39

All Varieties

8 PAK

PEPSI-COLA

BROUGHTON'S CREAMY.

ORANGE JUICE
SCOT
LAD

All WEEK LONG

'

.

46· cansoz. $1

BROUGHTON'S LOWFAT

,. • ..

2% ·MILK ..... :.................~ ....~~~.~.~~-

$

1.39

16 oz.
PRODUCE

8 PAK

UNCLASSIFIED

***********************************

PEPSI-7-UP
AU WEEK lONG
YOUR
atOICE ·

.v

•

quart

bottles

POTATOES
20 lb.
bag

!149

·suPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10
·
Sun. 10 ~ 10

YELLOW

$

ONIONS
1

3 b:~ 49'

Gorne1

e

COllAGE CHEESE ............... ~.~~.~.~.~: .. 89
BROUGHTON'S GRADE A
.
HOMO. MILK ......................:.:.~.~1:.~~: ... 79'

49~

EACH

***********************************

Mu Eichinger, Jr.,

Coal Is our only reliable domestic source of abundant
raw energy. Locked in it is the extra e!lergy for the
needed greater production.

Subsi ~aries: Appalach ian Power Co .. Indiana &amp; Michi gan Elec tric co .. Kentucky Power co .. K ingsport Power Co., Michigan Power Co., Ohio Power Co., Wheeling Electric Co.

(

POMEROY
CHAPTER,
7 :45
Tuesday,
O.E.S.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Officers to wear gowns. Dues
must be paid this month.
W'iONESDA Y.
MIDDLEPORT
FIREMEN'S Auxiliary, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the
department headquarters.
Mrs. Euvetta Bechtle and
Mrs.
Kate
Bachner,
hostesses. Election of officers
.and silent auction of baked
goods. ·
MIDDLEPORT
UTERARY Club, home of
Mrs. M. L. French. Mrs.
Charles McDaniel to review
•• "Historical Churches ·of the
: United States." Roll ca ll, "An
Interesting Church I Have
Attended."
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
Garden Tractor Club meeting
: at secretary's ofiice on Rock
Springs Fairgrounds, 8 p.m.
Wednesday; members and
Interested persons invited.
THURSDAY
VEGETABLE AND bean
supper' pie and coffee,
beginning 5 p.m. Thursday,
':. Bethany Church social room
at Dorcas sponso_red by
Dorcas Women's .Fellowship;
take own containers for carry
oot.
. AUXIUARY, TO the Big
Bend Citizens Band Radio
Club, 7 p.m. Thursday in the
new headquarters at the
former Children's Home
building, Mulberry Heights.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
hall. Third and fourth
degrees to be conferred. _
. EVANGELINE CHAPTER
172, Order of the Eastern
Star, 7:30 Thursday at the
Temple. Dues payable.
FRIDAY
POMONA Grange, 8 p.m.
Friday at the Rock Springs
hall. Fifth degree to be
conferred. Racine Grange to
be hosta.

That is why we must turn more and more to coal.

BUCKET STEAK

U. S. Government Inspected

Social
Calendar

p $22.00

)

SWISS STEAK
lb.

were served with ice cream.

WAYSIDE GARDEN Club
Tuesday meeting a t the
Columbia Gas Office in
Middleport, 1:30 p.m. ·

...§,

Superiors USDA D10ic:e

for a celebration. A "Happy

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT MASONIC
Lodge 363Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.
All inaster masons invited.
- S"u O"i'li ERN BAND
Boosters, special meeting,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday, at the
high school, Racine ; . all
parents of band members
Invited.
·
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
American legion , meeting, 8
p.m. Tuesday at pos t home.

~

Wo o ~

•

'
'' '
'
'' '

Phone 992-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

New Haven
w. Va.

'

Superiors USDA Dloice

Superiors USDA Qloice

House" cake was made by
·
Mrs. Arland King, and a
• ' heart-shaped cake topped
, , with a china doll figurine with
~; a "4" made by Mrs. Fowler

The Tri -County 's Most
Exciting Night Spot

•

"Any Occasion"

. ,.

oven at 400 degrees for· five
minutes or until crust is
warm and beginning to cook.
Add filling and the crust will
not be soggo; - the preheating does it. - ELEN.
DEAR POLLY - There are ·
certain occasions when many
of us like to wea r whi t~ kid
gloves but the cleaning is
something else. I found the

l i' ' 'M;;~=':':':':':c:;~:~:;;,,7~'t;d~~

SPONSORING DANCE
The senior citizens wiU
sponsor a square dance
Saturday at the Pomeroy
« Elementary School from 8 to
Virginia Whaley, Debbie II p.m . Musi c will be
Chambers, Jean Thayer and
Mary Venoy.

Mtll

We Accept Federal J'ooct :Stamps .
PHONE 992·3480
and Second Sts. we reserve the rliht to limll quantiiiee. MIDDLEPORT, 0~

�Mltldlep!!l"t·Pclltleroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 2, 1976

Mrs ..Karr gives
program on cotton
change.
Mrs . Fred Blaettnar ,
president , cond ucted the
business meeting . The group
changed its meeting time to I
p.m. on the first Tuesday of
each month . It was announced Mrs. Harvey Van
Vranken will host the next
meeting with the program to
be a workshop. Members are
to brin g material for
arrangements .
The club decided to make
eight arrangements for the
Pomeroy Alumni banquet. An
invitation to the open meeting
cording to Mrs. Karr, is the of the Winding Trail Garden
leading 'producer of cotton , Club was read, and the April
but it is of average quality. 24 regional meeting in Athens
Major stat es pr oducing was announced. Discussion
cotton are Oklahoma, Texas, was held on the free cancer
Kansas , Arkansas and clinic for women held each

MASON, W. VA. - Mrs. ·
Irving Karr was in charge of
the program at the Monday
night meeting of the Pomeroy
Garden Club at the home of
Mrs. J. W. McMurray here .
Mrs . Karr displayed a
cotton plant she had grown
from seed. Mrs. Karr noted it
takes 10-15 weeks for the pod .
The flowers then a ppear
followed by the boll . She said
cotton was first heard of in
3 000 B.C. in Egypt where the
~st quality cotton is still
grown.
The Un ited States, acMRS. RUTH PARSONS

90th -birthday honored
Mrs.
Ruth
Pa rsons Kelvington, Letart, W. Va.;
celebr ated her 90th birthday Robin and Chuck Fortun e,
on Feb. 2 at the home of her Racine; Preston, Edna an d
son, - Presto n
Parso ns, Mark Pars ons, Racine ;
Racine, Route 2.
Wilm a Siders, Mr . and Mrs.
Tw o long-time fr iends. William J. Parsons, Billy Joe
Mr s. Lottie Bradford and and Kelly Joe , Raci ne.
Mrs. Bessie Stitt, both of the
Mrs. Parso ns rec eive d
Racine area, spent the day nw11er0us gifts along with 35
with Mrs . Parsons and joined car ds fr om fr ien ds and
her in a birthday dinner . relat ives . Th ose calling
Others call ing to . extend during the day were served
congratulations were Harry cake and ice cream .
and No ra Staats. Lilly

Polly's Pointers
\

By Polly Cramer

Plastic insert
aids coaster query

POU.Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POU. Y - I found
an unfinished piece of
embroidery I had stitched as
a child. It is six small
coasters and one large one to
put under a pitcher. Now that
I
am
finishin g
the
embroidery I would like to
back each piece or finish
them off some way. Also, I
want to thank Claire for
sending in the way to stiffen
crocheted doilies as I had
been wanting to know how to
do this for a long time. DEB.
DEAR DEB - You might
back your embroidered
pieces with a heavy cotton
fabric. when sjltchlng aroWJd
them 1eaye an opening large
enough to sUp in a piece of
plastic cut from tile top of a
margarine tub or. something
Sew
opening
similar.
together by hand. This plastic
wUI provide protection for a
table top and' can be removed
when the coasters need
washing or cleaning. Also you
might be able to buy metal
coasters the embro idery
would Htln after being tightly
stretched around a piece of
• cardboard or plastic cut to
the proper size. The last idea
would be inure practical if
each piece were covered with
IIIIo glass cut . to size. -

POU.Y.
DEAR POLLY - I have
quite a few Pet Peeves but
one of'the worst is with the
directions on things we buy,
Uke in the drug store, that are
printed so smhll you cannot
read them. - MRS. T. H.
DEAR POLLY - To have a
.. better pie crust make it as
• usual but before adding the
filling put the crust in the

•
"•

•
•

..

•

.'
.•
~

:

!

LOWER GAS PRICES
CLEVELAND (UPI )
The price of gasoline at
Standard Oil of Ohio (Sohio)
stations was two Cents lower
today because of " lower
crude oil costs," according to
Robert G. Griffin , Sohio
marketing vice president.
· Sohio also lowered the price
of diesel fuel and heating oils
one cent per gallon and
announced
the
same
decreases were for its Boron
Oil Co. subsidiary.
A gasoline price reduction
of .8 of a cent per gallon was
announced fur its BP Oil Inc.
subSidiary.
PATIENT VISITED ·'
Brian Keith Friend, a ~
patient at
Childre n's
Hospital, was visited over the
weekend by his parents, Mr .

"" and Mrs. Brian Friend, Mrs .
•-= Edna Fox, Mr . and Mrs.
~

• Richard Friend and Mark,
::: Bonnie Friend, and Mr. and
:' Mrs . Pat Johnson and Gene.
~

~

••

:;
~

:
"'
:;:
"
••

month at Veterans Memorial

Mississippi .

Mrs. Karr said that in ,1661 Hospital.
in Polans, the·inventor of the
fir st mechanica l weavin g
loom was ex:ecuted and his
loom destroyed because the
BACK FROM TRIP
country fel t it would lead to
Rebecca
Eblin , Steven
the destructi on of its
Eblin,
Lloyd
Wright
and Jean
economics.
Wright
have
returned
home
For devotions, Mrs. Mcfollowing
a
12
day
trip
to
the
Murray read a passage from
Holy
Land.
They
visited
Tel
St. Mark and a meditation
entitled, '' The Eternal Call of Aviv , Haifa. J e ru salem ,
Bethlehem, MaWJI of Olives,
God."
Roll call was a plant which the Garden of Gethsemane,
had been received at the the tomb of Jesus and many
October meeting plant ex- other in teresting places .
They also took a boat ride on
the Sea of Galilee. On their
PERFECT

" "A bridal shower was he ld

recently honoring Mrs. Greg
Grover, the former Linda
Thayer, at the home o£ Mrs .

Marcia Houdashelt.
Hostesses were Joyde
Grove r , Pat Humphrey ,
Nellie Grover, Myrtle Grover
and Jerri Mowery.
Games were played with
prizes awarded to Brenda
Haggy, Deanna Denny,
Bonnie Prater and Myrtle
Grover.
Refreshments of cake, jello

provided ' by the String
Dusters. Admission Is $t .
Children under 12 admitted
free if accompanied by
parents.

Party held
on birthday
;
Mr. llld Mrs. Arland King
: • entertained Saturday af·
• .. lemoon with a party honoring
; ; their daughter, Marsha, on
: ! her fourth birthday.
:•
A Mickey Mouse theme was
: uaed in the decorations and
Mrs. King served d~rated
••• • cupcakes,
ice cream and Kool
Ald. Games were played with
favors going to all the
• · children.
•'
Attending were Neil Rich' ' monel, Tracy and Tammy
Eblin, Jay Humphreys,
, , Deeanna Henderson, Amy
.and Shawn Goeglein, Tim
· Jeffers, Angie Sloan, Usa
Darst, Mandy Eblin, Cindy
Neutzllng, Usa and Randy
King, Michl King " Mrs .
Susanne Richmond , Mrs.
Sharon Darst, Mrs. Jan
Eblin, Mrs. Rita Eblin and
Mr. and Mrs. Gene King.
On Saturday evening
Marsha's grandparents, Mr.
• · and Mrs. TOlly Fowler and
: ' Mr. and Mrs. Clarence King,
: . loined the Arland King family

THE INN PLACE
WEDNESDAY NIGHT

SPECIAL

salad, potato chips, mints

punch and coffee were served .
Others atte nding were
Eunice Eblin, Kay Morris,
Billy , Mike and Sandy,
Loraine Venoy , Robin and
Tony , Betty Reed , Edi th
Barton, Joan Eads, Lo uise
Eads, Colena Mowery, Tina
Collins and Traci, Stephaniee
Haggy., Nancy Russell and
Mandy, Todd a nd Terri
Grover , ArJ ene Hanson ,
Genia and Karen Grover.
Gloria Grover, Joe and Gene
Hwnphrey , Brent and Brian

Houdashelt. .
Sending gifts were Marjorie Smith, Judy Harrison,

2 Cleaners
Available
C«i~ll

For

Reservatlo'n

$}2

For
8 Hours

Vi si t Our Salad Bar
B- B-Q Pork Chops
',
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Vegetabl e
.•
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

•
2 95
plus fax

882-2525
return flight they spent two
days sightseeing in Rome.
They returned home over the
Alps, France, England, into
Canada and dow n to New
York.

SAYRE
HARDWARE

1

THE MEIGS INN

1

.
'.
' '

..'

".
''•

•

·

SILVER PLATE
I I

:· .~ .,

Gift

5' Po~ro Od Pao• &gt;l••••e Bo,.i ·
Lon• •

$13.50

sol ution is to first rinse ln

mild soapy detergent , slip
them on the hands and then
rub· the hands together with
just a bit of toothpaste as this
mild ab rasive makes them
come clean. Rinse in warm
water, hang ir; the cuff end
and while drying blow in
them ever so often to keep the
fingers open, This is for •
washable kid . I have also
found that toothpaste does a
wonderful cleaning job on my
eye glasses. - CLARA.
DEAR POLLY - My
Pointer is for Mrs. M. K. who
complained about the pockets
in pants wearing out so
quickly because of the poor
quality material used . I do
not replace the entire pocket
but cut off the lower, worn
part - about half the pocket.
I use that as a pattern and cut
out a new part from coarse
muslin. Be sure to allow for
seams and then sew to upper
part of the pocket. This
makes a full size replacement
that is never noticed since the
top is as italways was. HELEN C.
You will receive a dollar if
Polly uses your favorite
homemaking idea, Pet
Peeve, Polly's Problem or
solution to a problem. Write
Polly in care of this news·
paper.

Com pot~
Bon Bon

~

$1UO

rf!~.

., ·--'

Allwe
to • ·deamongus
isthe total of what we produce.

Bread Tray $11.50

Goessler
JEWELRY STORE
Court St., Pomeroy

•

Have we forgotten that simple truth?

Henty Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income ~x help.

It seems so, for we are on a collision course with great ·
need .
~

and wants of the populatio n-a nd the people are starting
to f ee l it.

Up to this point in our short history, America has grown in
the production of goods and services faster than the
population and its needs.

You are.

Faster, in our history, than all the other nations on earth
have grown in theirs.
What made it all possible?
The ever-increasing application of energy funneled
through ~:nachines .. . and the determination for a better
life.
·
·

'

.
I

Applied energy made production burgeon .

....

It also made possible a myriad of industries which neve r
existed before , new jobs, and new technologies wh ic h, in
turn, created other industries.

~.~

Reason 14. We're human, and once in a
great while we make a mistak~ . But if
our error means Y9U must pay additional
·tax, you pay only the tax. We pay any
interest or penalty. We stand behind

Result . . . We have had more to divide among all of our
people simply because we have produced more .
So much more that the American standard of living
became the envy of the world .

our work .

-H~-R-B
.....~~O~C~K®

· But now Americ!l is beginning to lose. its way.

ADCISHEltE
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office announced
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
the March distribution of
.
$35,379,765 in Aid to Dowen.
dent Children to 576,418
Pomeroy
,
Ohio
recipients In Ohio 's · 88
counties. In Meigs County,
' oPEN: 9-6 weekdays, 9-s sat.
$44,604 was distributed to 783
'---N•O•A-P•P•O•I•N•T•M-E..N•T•N.._E.,C•E•S•S•A..R•Y---..1
participants.

618 E. MAIN ST.

We're·losing sight of the fact that, without the application
of energy, there can be no production and, without
product ion , the needs of the people cannot be filled. ·
Already our production of gool,ls and services has slowed
to the point where it is not keeping pace with the needs

Suddenly your pay doesn't buy as much. And your wallet
empties quicker. One reason .i s that, when too many chase
alter too little, prices explode. In reality, your standard of
living declines.
And- as our population continues to grow-you will re·
ceive a smaller and smaller share of what we produce .. .
unless we can produce more.
A whole lot more, if the miliions coming into our world are
to have an even chance at a decent way of life and if the
needs of America 's poor are to be met.
But increased production is not possible without the increased application of energy. And therein lies the
problem . We are becoming more and more dependent lot
that energy upon precarious foreign sources which can
be shut off at any time.

d

BIRTHDAY HONORED
son of
Mr. and Mrs. Maz Eichinger,
Sr ., celebrated his ninth
birthday recently wl th a
lUling party. His guesta
were D. J. Randolph, Kevin
Fick, Jimmy Thomas and
Kemy Ray Riggs. Others
presentlnt! gift&amp; were his
parenta and sister, BeCky,
Mr . and Mrs . · Allen
Eichinger, Darla Kelly, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Eichinger.
Paula and Tammy, Mr. and
Mrs. JIJllea Fry. Ruth Ann
and Sue Ellen, Mr. and Mrs.
John Fry.

And unless we produce more, so more Americans can
have more to divide, the American standard of living, as
we know It, will become history.
·
That simple truth we should never forget.

'

American Electric Power Company, Inc.

~

1 09

FULL CUT

,39

lb. •

Superiors
. - - - - USDA Choice
\,

SIRLOIN ·
TIP ROAST

ROUND

Superiors USDA Choice

STEAK

RUMP
ROAST

.

'

Superi11s USDA Choice Beef

GROUND
BEEF

Superiors USDA Choice

BONELESS

SLICED
BACON

Marie V Special Buysl
Pillsbury

15~

box

GRAVY MIX

on~

Duncan Hines

large
fami~

BROWNIE MIX

size

2

SPREAD
laundry Detergent

lb.
tub

20 oz.

BOLD

box

.

$179
·

12 oz.
pkg.

99~

Superiors Fresh and lean

10~

BEEF ·sTEW

Favorite

2

'BREAD

89~

$1.19

Purina Brand
bxs.

Bloe Bonnet

lb

Superiors 'Dart'

lb._

Regular

more

CUBE
STEAK

'129

Low Prlcef

lb.69~

sib.
or

Superiors USDA Choice Beef

ROUND STEAK I

At New

TENDER VITTLES

$10,9

for

ht 'luzit and Glade Solid

49~

Room Deodorizers

THURSDAY
AND SUNDAY

on~

4 Varieties

DRY CAT FOOD
Party
ICE

EGG

10 lb.

NOODLES

REAME'S

-

bag

39'

$

each

Little Friskies

. 12 oz.
pkg.

Package

Grade 'B'
Large

59~

EGGS
a 59~

SEVEN-UP

DAIRY DELIGHTS

All WEEK LONG
16 oz.

FROZEN FOODS -

FAIRfttONT LOW FAT

MORTON DINNERS

2% MILK .....................................~~·...~ 1.39

All Varieties

8 PAK

PEPSI-COLA

BROUGHTON'S CREAMY.

ORANGE JUICE
SCOT
LAD

All WEEK LONG

'

.

46· cansoz. $1

BROUGHTON'S LOWFAT

,. • ..

2% ·MILK ..... :.................~ ....~~~.~.~~-

$

1.39

16 oz.
PRODUCE

8 PAK

UNCLASSIFIED

***********************************

PEPSI-7-UP
AU WEEK lONG
YOUR
atOICE ·

.v

•

quart

bottles

POTATOES
20 lb.
bag

!149

·suPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10
·
Sun. 10 ~ 10

YELLOW

$

ONIONS
1

3 b:~ 49'

Gorne1

e

COllAGE CHEESE ............... ~.~~.~.~.~: .. 89
BROUGHTON'S GRADE A
.
HOMO. MILK ......................:.:.~.~1:.~~: ... 79'

49~

EACH

***********************************

Mu Eichinger, Jr.,

Coal Is our only reliable domestic source of abundant
raw energy. Locked in it is the extra e!lergy for the
needed greater production.

Subsi ~aries: Appalach ian Power Co .. Indiana &amp; Michi gan Elec tric co .. Kentucky Power co .. K ingsport Power Co., Michigan Power Co., Ohio Power Co., Wheeling Electric Co.

(

POMEROY
CHAPTER,
7 :45
Tuesday,
O.E.S.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Officers to wear gowns. Dues
must be paid this month.
W'iONESDA Y.
MIDDLEPORT
FIREMEN'S Auxiliary, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the
department headquarters.
Mrs. Euvetta Bechtle and
Mrs.
Kate
Bachner,
hostesses. Election of officers
.and silent auction of baked
goods. ·
MIDDLEPORT
UTERARY Club, home of
Mrs. M. L. French. Mrs.
Charles McDaniel to review
•• "Historical Churches ·of the
: United States." Roll ca ll, "An
Interesting Church I Have
Attended."
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
Garden Tractor Club meeting
: at secretary's ofiice on Rock
Springs Fairgrounds, 8 p.m.
Wednesday; members and
Interested persons invited.
THURSDAY
VEGETABLE AND bean
supper' pie and coffee,
beginning 5 p.m. Thursday,
':. Bethany Church social room
at Dorcas sponso_red by
Dorcas Women's .Fellowship;
take own containers for carry
oot.
. AUXIUARY, TO the Big
Bend Citizens Band Radio
Club, 7 p.m. Thursday in the
new headquarters at the
former Children's Home
building, Mulberry Heights.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
hall. Third and fourth
degrees to be conferred. _
. EVANGELINE CHAPTER
172, Order of the Eastern
Star, 7:30 Thursday at the
Temple. Dues payable.
FRIDAY
POMONA Grange, 8 p.m.
Friday at the Rock Springs
hall. Fifth degree to be
conferred. Racine Grange to
be hosta.

That is why we must turn more and more to coal.

BUCKET STEAK

U. S. Government Inspected

Social
Calendar

p $22.00

)

SWISS STEAK
lb.

were served with ice cream.

WAYSIDE GARDEN Club
Tuesday meeting a t the
Columbia Gas Office in
Middleport, 1:30 p.m. ·

...§,

Superiors USDA D10ic:e

for a celebration. A "Happy

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT MASONIC
Lodge 363Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.
All inaster masons invited.
- S"u O"i'li ERN BAND
Boosters, special meeting,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday, at the
high school, Racine ; . all
parents of band members
Invited.
·
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
American legion , meeting, 8
p.m. Tuesday at pos t home.

~

Wo o ~

•

'
'' '
'
'' '

Phone 992-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

New Haven
w. Va.

'

Superiors USDA Dloice

Superiors USDA Qloice

House" cake was made by
·
Mrs. Arland King, and a
• ' heart-shaped cake topped
, , with a china doll figurine with
~; a "4" made by Mrs. Fowler

The Tri -County 's Most
Exciting Night Spot

•

"Any Occasion"

. ,.

oven at 400 degrees for· five
minutes or until crust is
warm and beginning to cook.
Add filling and the crust will
not be soggo; - the preheating does it. - ELEN.
DEAR POLLY - There are ·
certain occasions when many
of us like to wea r whi t~ kid
gloves but the cleaning is
something else. I found the

l i' ' 'M;;~=':':':':':c:;~:~:;;,,7~'t;d~~

SPONSORING DANCE
The senior citizens wiU
sponsor a square dance
Saturday at the Pomeroy
« Elementary School from 8 to
Virginia Whaley, Debbie II p.m . Musi c will be
Chambers, Jean Thayer and
Mary Venoy.

Mtll

We Accept Federal J'ooct :Stamps .
PHONE 992·3480
and Second Sts. we reserve the rliht to limll quantiiiee. MIDDLEPORT, 0~

�8-~~N~~~~~:~~e:::~dlepo~l~~~·~~~:~~~·· Tuesday~~a~ocp2;;,

g~.~».Mm~~

a.

'.

P r og
Bond R ettrement

3.33 5 58
37 . 497 20

Misce llaneous
·1.os9 ?o
L unch Room
(4, u ,s 47) Other Exp __,
40 , 143 16
TotAl Exp
ESE A T i lle I
29.80 5 6~ Transfers To
Total
Gener al
4,641 17
124 156 85
Total R ece ipts '
General
34 7 58
General Fund
4.988 75
857 187 38 ' Total Tr l!nsfer s
'
Exp . &amp; T r an sfer s
45 , 131 91
DISadvantag ed Pup11s
,
\ 881 1, De c 3 1. 1975
16 , 9 ~ 3 51
Prog .
9, 106 42 Tota l E xp &amp; Tran sfer s
43 .984 53
Plu s Bal Dec
Bond Ret1rement
Lun ch Room
81,3r19154
62 075 42
31 1975
NDE A
10
, •
eseA T111 e 11 '
E SEA T 1tle I
32,269 flO R c cetpl s
ESES Till e I I
1,628 00 F edera l Subsidy
1,68 2 00
Tota l
1.026,552 37 Tota l Rece1pts
1,il8 2 00
Total Rece 1p ts &amp; Ba l a nces
total Begmn1n9 Ba l ance
General Fu nd
914 ,851 25
Plu s Rece1p ts &amp;
1.682 00
Otsadv an ta ged Pup rls
Tr an:; f ers
Prog
12,4&lt;12 00
Ex p end1tures
Bon d R e t1remen t
81,481 73 M1scellaneous
? ,062 07
Lu nc h Room
77 , 174 12 Ol her Exp
2.062.07
Tota l Exp
(380 07)
1,002 70 Ba l De c 31, 1Y75
NOEA Till e Ill
62 ,075 42 Tota l Exp Plu s Bat
ESEA T t tle I
Dec 3 1.1975
1,682 oo
1,68 2 00
ESES T il!e II
t n t er· Fund Tran sfer
1' 150,7,09 22
Tota l
Reco n ctltat 10n
F ro m T1tte 1 to
4,641 17
Ge n eral
E x pen dt1u res
General F und
856 ,870 70 From Tille I to
347 58
Ge n er al
D tsad vantage d Pupil s
P r og
8.894 30 Fro m DPPF to
JJ n
Ge n eral
Bond Rel1rement
48 ,755 43
L unch Roo m
83.9d7 97 From G enera l
147 92
to Tille I
N D EATtt le/ 11
1, 00 270
ESEA Til l e I
45 ,13 1 91 Fr om Ge nera l to
T 1tl e ll
5087 0
ESE S Tit le I I
2. 06 2 07
690 1'
Tota l
1,046 ,604 .07 Tola l rransiers
s,
Asse t s and L 1a b•llt1 es
Ba la n ce Dec 11,1 975
D ec , JL 1975
Ge nera l Fun d
57,980 55
Asse t s
Di sa d van t aged Pupils
Pr og
J,5J7 70 Dep osit ory Ba l ances
104,044 23
Bon d R et 1rement
32,726 39
J4 280 00
L unch Room
(6,773 85) Lan d
1, 134 000 00
ESEA T 1tle I
16, 9&lt;1 3 51 Bui!dmgs
150 .000 00
ESE S Ti l le II
(3 80 07) Eq u 1pme nt
1,432, 324 ?3
Tota l
10&lt;1 ,044 23 Tota l Assets
L•abtllf ies :
CASH BA L AN CE .
Accounts Payabl e
264 .995 47
R E CEIPTS, AND
Bon d Indebt edness 131 ,000 00
E X PENDITU RES
Tota l L1a bdti 1CS
395.995 47
BY FUND
Excess of Asse ts
1,03 6 328 76
Ge ner a l Fund
1,423.324 23
Bal, Jan 1, 1975
57, 663 87 T otal
IND E BTEDN E SS Re c[!i pt s- Reven ue
PA RT I BOND S
Pr op er t y Tax (G r ossi
Pur pose For Wh 1ch Debl
Gene r a l - Rea l Est ate
wa s Gr ea r ed
179,303 76
14 ,693 38 Cons tr uctio n of N ew
Tan g1 bl e Per sona l
H 1g h Sc hOo l
St ate Sub Sid ieS
Out s t an ding Ja n 1.
Sc hool Fou nda t ion (Gross )
1975
147 ,000 00
Ba s1c A l lowa n ce ' 679 746 19
Rede emed D uri ng
Bus Pu r ch ase
Year 1975
16,000 00
7,798 .00
A llowance
Othe r State Subs 1d1es 4,002 73 Ba l ance Out s tan d 1ng
Dec 31, 1975
13 1.000 00
5,939 38
Othe r Revenue
In! Rate
4 50
To ta l R e ven u e
1983
Receipts
84 1,483 44 Ma t ur 1t y Ye ar
To tal Bonded Debt Rece1pts - N on Revenue
Out st andi n g Jan
A d tus tme nt s &amp;
147.000 00
l , 1975
10,670 42
Re fu nds
T ota l Bonded D eb t
Tot al N on -R ev enue
Re d eemed Our~ ng
10,670 42
Receipts
16.000 00
Yea r 1975
T r an sf ers From
Til le I
4,64 1 17 T ota l Bonde d D ebt
Ba l ance Outs t an d 1ng
T 1tl e l
347 sa
Dec 3 1,1 975
131.000 00
OPP F
44 77
( 3 ) ~, 1tc
Total T rans f er s
5. 033 52
To t al R ece 1p ts ( Reven ue,
Non R eve nU e &amp;
Tra nsf ers J
857,1 87, 38
P UBLIC NOTIC E
Tot a l B eg inn 1ng a a tan ce
P lus R ece 1p ts
914 ,851 25
TO T H E UN K N OW N H E IR S
E x pendttur es
Tota l Ad m n 1stra ll on 31,818 09 T H EI R EXECU T O R S, AD
AN D
Tn ta l Adm
490 ,705 29 M IN I S TRA T ORS
ASS I G N S
OF
WAY N E
Tot al Co ord mo~~ te A
890 34 CHEVA LIER ,
DECEA SED
Acti v ities
9.366 28 RE SI DE N CE
UNKNOWN
Tota l Li brar y
82 ,207 58
Tot al Pup 11 T ran sp
You ar e he r e by notlfte d that
To t al Sc hoo l P l ant
105,543 33 a Comp la1 n t has b ee n file d 1n
Op eratton
th e Com mon Pleas Co ur t o f
Me1g!&gt; County, Oh io , P r oba t e
Tot al Sch oo l P lant
Co u r l
H ouse ,
Matn t
19,63 6 03 D1v1S1 0 n ,
Pom eroy , Oh 10 , 45 769 . Case
To t al O th er Auxil1 ar y
~ 1.7 1 8,
by
E d wa rd
E:tepe n se
11 5,517 48 No
Tot al C ap ,t al Ou t lay
534 66 Ch ev a1 1er, Adm m 1Sir ator o f
the
Estate
of
Wayn e
T r an sfe r To
147 92 C h eva l 1e r ,
Deceased ,
T 1ll e I
508 70 P t a, n tdL
vs
Edwa rd
T i tl e Ill
656 62 Ch e va l 1er, et a l , and th e
Tot al Tr a n sf er s
un k n o w n
h e tr s.
t h etr
T ot al Ge n eral F un d
execu t or s 1 adm 1n 1stra tor s a nd
Exp and Tra nsfe r s
856,87 0.70 assig n s of Way n e CheiJalle r .
D ece ased , De f endan ts, whose
Ge ner a'! F und Ba l ,
57 ,980.55 r es1 de n ces ar e un k nown Th e
D ec 31. 1975
Tota l Exp an d T ran sfe r s
obj ect of th e Compla1 n t an d
th e deman d f or relie f are t o
Plus S al Dec
31, 1975
914 .851.25 de t erm m e who ar e I h e n ext o f
k tn , h e tr s at t a w , the1r
Otsadvantaged P u prl s
e&gt;o:eculors , admtn1 st ra tors an d
Program Fund
Bat , Ja n 1, 1975
3,335 58 ass1g n s of Way n e CheiJa lt er ,
Dece ase d , en !tiled by the taws
Revenu e Rece i pt s
Ot h er R evenue
9, 106 42 of th ts state to the next est at e
To te ! Reven u e Rec
9, 106 42 of 1n h entance and to det er
m1n e th e sh are to wh 1ch th e
To te ! B eg in n in g Ba l ance
Plu s R ecei p ts
12.442 00 neK t o f k.m or he trs at law ,
l h e 1r
ex ec u t ors
ad
E x pendttu res
m 1n 1s tr ators and ass1 g ns are
General A d m ,
Se ta r 1es and Wa g es
350 00 entitled acc or d i n g to th e
s tat u te 10 suc h cases ma d e
lnstr uc t 1on
4,835 46 an d provi ded, an d for su c h
Other Ex p
othe r r el 1ef as th e cour1 ma y
Health
2,5 13 93 de te r m 1ne
Sal a ri es an d Wages
80 .64
You are h ereby n o tt fie d tha t
Ot her Ex p
yo u ar e requ1 r ed to an swe r th e
M iscell an eous
1,069 50 Comp l a 1n t wit h1n twenty e1ght
Oth er E x p
8,849 53 days a f te r the la s t p u bl ic at ion ,
Tot al Exp
th e l a st p ubl 1ca t 10 n of wh tc h
Tr'a n sf ers To
Ge n era l
44 77 w tl l be on the 6th day of Ap nl.
Total Tra ns f ers
44 77 1976
Exp and Transf er s
8,89 4 JO
Ba l D ec 31, 1975
3,547 .70
M A NN IN G D WEB ST ER ,
To t al Exp &amp; Tr ansfe r s
JU D G E A N D
EX O F F I C I O CLE R K ,
P lus Ba t D ec 31 , 1975.,\,
COMMO N PL EA S COURT ,
ll,442.00 ,
Bond R ettr em ent Fund
I
M E I G S COU NT Y , O HI O ,
Sal , Jan 1, 1975
37 497 ,·20 '
PROBATE DIVISION
R ec e tpls:
Pr o p er t y Tax ( Gross ) ,
., (2J 24 131 2, 9, 16 , 23. Jo (d) 6',
1
Gen eral - R ea l Estate
71c
15.9111 •n
T a n g1b l e Personal
1,562,n
Oth er R evenu e
26,507 Sit
To ta l Rece 1p ts
4j, 994 .Sj 1
T o tal 6eg1nn1ng Bala n ce
Ttle Almanac

,2,. oo;

•

Plus Recoipls

Expendttures

81 ,48 1 73

United P ress toternational

Fe es a. Ch a rges Wd hh eld
t oday is Tuesday March 2
- Tax se ttle ment 1o.so1 84, th''S2nd day of 1
with 3,_;.,

I n t . On Bon d s
Bond R ede m p t ton
No fe . c erll f tca t e
R ede m pt ion

Tota l Ex p
c 3L 1975
Tot al Ex p . P Ius
Ba l., Dec 31, 1975

6 ~747 , 50

978

c,

16 ,000 00
·-;]~,,... 11
16,000.:00' ·
48 ,75S . l~"

V'l

to follow.

The m oon i s movina
toWard
.. -"eJ

the. prst quar ter.
32.7 26 19
The morning stars a r e
"
dV
s1.•11 73' Mercur
y an
enus.

The evening

Lunchroo m Fun(l

Bo l , .Jo n. I. 1975
A ece 1pfs:
sol e of Lunches
Feder.• I suosi~y

stars

are

14, 145 42 1 Mars Jupiter a nd Saturn
'
,
·
35,896 61 Those born on tins day are
45 ,422 93 under the sign of Pisces .
1
he

Tot al fte v en ue &amp;
N o n . Rev~ nu e Receip t s

•

Texas

frontier

ro Sam

8LJ19. 54 Houston was born MarCh' 2
'
1783 ·
•
,
,
E Kpenditure"
Also on thiS day m history:
So laroes and Wages . 31 ,377 os
In
1899
Congress
Food &amp; Food H an d li ng
,
'
, ,
su ppl ies
51.9d7 31 estabhs)led Mt. . Ra1mer
623 6 1 ~tlmai Park in Washington
Olher Exp
Total Exp .
83•947 97
te
To ta l B eg in ning Ba la n ce
Pl us Rece tpt s
77 ,174 12

Ba l, D ec 31. 1975

(6.773 851

•

Tolo l Exp 1!. Tran.ters
In 1927, Babe Ruth of the
31·
Ba
l
Dec
NewYorkYankeessignedfor
Plus
12
1975
77,174
$70,000, the highest paid a t
H 0 E . A. Titl e Ill
the time with Jractically no
R ec eipts ·
Fe d era l Su bS idY

or .r ast

m~~~;,"e~;~.~and ;:::~ .r

Endtng D ec l1,19lS
T ra n sfer s
1,002 70
Southern . Lo ~iil
Total Cegl nn ing Balan ct'!
Sc h~ol Dt s1nct
Plu s Re cei pt s
Metu County _
T ra n o; t er s
1. 002 70
So x 174 Qacme , Ohto
Eto:penditvres
February20 , 1976
.
I ce rflfy th e fo ll owmg re porJ MISCc.'ll an eou 51 002 70
to b e corr ec t
Other E x p
1,002 7Q
E xp
Jane Wagner Total
Clerk., Treasurer of Total E xp P l u s Ba t ,
D ec 3 1. 197 5
1.00~ 10
the Board of Educal ton
E . S EA . T1tte I
6 19949 '27 00
29.805 62
Brt ! , J an 1. 1975
CA SH RECONCILIATION
R ece1pts
Total F und Bcslance
31 . 121 BB
De c ) I , 1975
S.I OJ ,Q.SJ 23 Fed e ral Subs1d y
32 , 111 88
T otal Recei p ts
Oeposdor v Ba I an ces
170 ,910. 16 Trc:1n sf er s t rom ·
147 9 '1
General
Sub Total Deposno ry
147 9'1
Balances
120,910 . 16 To ta l Tra n sfe r s
To tal Rc ce1 pt s an d
Sub Total Cash on Hand
Tran sf er:;
32 .269 80
120 , 910 16
Total
120,910 . 16 Total B cg tnnmg Bala nce
Plu s R, ec e1pt s &amp;
Total Clerk Treasu re r 's
Tran sf erS:
62 075 42
Ba t , De c J t , 1975
104.0J4 73
Expcndtturcs
S U MMA R Y O F CAS H
General ,Adm ini s trat1on
BALA NCES, R ECEIPTS
S alar~e s and Wa g es
49t 00
AND EXPEND I TURES
Ol hNExp
5656
Bali!l n ceJan 1, 1975
tnstrucl1on
General Fund
57. 663 87 Salar
1es an d Wa g es
JS, \ 60 .84
OtsadvantaQed Pup il s
Other Exp
3,344 56

494 oo income ta xes

p

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DE A DLINES
s P M
Da y
Be f o r e
Pu blic a tiO n
Mon d ay O e adlm e Y
.1 n1
C a n c e ll a t 1o n
Corr ec tions w i ll be a c
co p te d un it! 9 a m for
Day o f P.ubl lc l!l l tOn
REGULATIONS
Th e Publ iS h cr r eser\1 es
th e r•ghl to e d 1t or r e te d
a ds d e l'm Cd ob
an v
tec tional Th e pub l tsh e r
w d 1 no I be r es p on s1b le f or
mor e than on e m corr ect
1n SC' rl 10n
RATES
For Wan t Ad ServiCe
5 c e n IS orr word one
1n sert 1on
M1nmwm ChargeS ! 00
14 c en 1s per word lhree
con sec u11ve
mser l 10n s
26 cenl s p er wor d six
conse cutive
m ser1 1ons
25 Pe r Cent D•scoun t o n
pcud ad s and ads pa 1d
w1th tn 10 days ,
\, CARD OF THA N KS
&amp; OBITUARY
)2 00
for
50
word
m 1n•m um
Each add1t1on al word 3
cents
BLI N D ADS
Addi t ro na t 25c Charg e
per AdvCrlts e me n t
OFF I CE HOURS
8 3 0 a .m to 5 00 p rn
Dall y 8 30 a m to 12 00
Noon Sal ur day
Ph om&gt;loday 99 2 2 156

Noti ce
1&gt;/IAKE SUR E you ge t C\le ry
po ssi bl e deduction th1s year
Hav e yo ur Fede r al and
State Income Tax re turn by
an accountant Phone 99 2t.HJ
1 71 52tc

-M-ANL- EY-;s- A ;;-, j~~~ -Qp en
Monday , Tu es day ,
and
Wednesdav
By appo1nt
ment o r chance 1 mile east
of T up per s Platns , on Rt ,.
68 1
P hone (6 1&lt;11 667 3226
3 2 Jtp

Wanted Jo Buy
CA SH pa1d for a~makes a n d
m o de l s of mo iR- h omes
P hone ar ea co e 614 " 423
953 1
4-13 t f c
GOOD used rototllt er P h one
997 7036 or 99 2 2441 after 5

pm

3 2 tf c

OL D tu rn 1tu r e , o ld 1ewelr y ,
quilts ,
or
co m plete
households
Ma nley's An
t1qu es , 'R R
1. Box 101 ,
R ee d SIJill e, Oh10
P hone
(614) , 66732~6 . 1 mt leeas t of
Tu pp er s P latns on Rt 68 1
3 2 61p
OLD
f u r n ilu re . rce boxes.
bras s
be d s,
ol d
wa ll
te le phones and pa rt s , or
com p l ele hou seho lds. Wri t e
M
D
M 1l l er , R t
2,
Porn e roy , Ohio
Ca ll 99 2
77 60
10 7 7 4

1973 CHE V.

Galipolis, Ohio
AS SI S T A N T D I R-EC TOR , A td
execu t tve 1n s t a ff cap acily
by
co or d i nati n g o ff tce
se n 1 1ces, such as b udge t
pr eparalton , an d control,
r eview
co ntr ac t
ad
m tn 1Sirat1o n
a nd
co
or di n a t e co l lec t ion an d
prepara t iOn
o f r ep o r ts ,
$9,000 Exp er 1en ced an d or
tr ained app l 1can 1 Sen d
r esu m e to A H D E C 0 , P
0
Bo x 1575. Por tsmouth
Ohio
3 I 31C

Pets
TO G I VE AWAY - · Pup p ies, 5
males , I f e ma l e B w ee ks
old Ca ll 949 2673 b etween 6
a m an d 12 noon .
2 27 41p

Mobile Homes For Sale
14 x 70 MO B I LE Home , t ota l
elec J to n ce ntral a1r c on
d r ttone r . exce ll en t con
dt t io n
Phon e 247 2684 o r
247 2664
2 24 7tc

'I' TON FLEETS ID E

191l iN TER NATI ONA L 1600 SER IES
53895
102'" cab to axle, 2 speed, R ax le, 6 speed. good 900x20
1972 CHEV . 2-TON C&amp;C
102" C. A . heavy duty springs,

or

For Sate

12995

R&amp;J COINS

292-6 cyl. engme. 15.000
lb 2 speed rear a)Ci e, foam sea t , mirrors, clean cab

POM0~~?!ve~?!~.~. CO. 'Oi'

1971 C HEV Suburban 350, V8
At , p b, p s , Come see,
make offer Phone 992 2478
2 27 &lt;l ie
~ ~ Ton

For Sale or Trade
AL LIS CHALMERS round
ba le r . good cond1l10n and
tandem 8 whee l fer t ilize r
spread er , and 500 ba les
c lean s traw Phone 949 277 0
2 26 101c

For Rent
FURNISHED apt 5 room s
an d ba t h , l arg e back and
f ronf porch with yard.
u til1flespa1d Ca ll b efor e6 p
m 992 2937
2 26 6t c
2 BEDRM mobile home , very
n 1ce Phon e 99 2 3324
2 29 !fc

l nternat 1on al P1 c- kup . 4
sp
transm1SS1on , h eav y
duty s pr~ n gs Ap prox 10.000
m 1l es Phone 9'92 7017
2 27 61 p

1974 MU ST A NG II G hi a,
excelle n t cond11ton P S. PB.
a1r- c onditton 1ng, Phone 992
3994 or 99 7 767 1
7 ')] 3tp
1972 CAMARO , V 8. p s, d isc .
brakes, a~r condii 10 n1nQ ,
automatiC
E xce l lent
cond1t 1on and easy on gas
Ask1ng $2 . 60 0 . put will
hackle P hon e 992 7360 after
5 p m
2 29 61p

__....

___-·----- ----

1973 MONTE Ca rl o. p o w er
wtndows and door locks , a1r ,
3 BEDRM fu rnishe d home ,
SJ, OOO PhOne 992 1243
also a mobi le home m
2 25 61 p
Mtdd lepor t , 540 w eek , gas
and water pa1d P hon e 992
3509 or mq u ~re ;;11 Box 159 5,
Buckeye. L ake, Oh 1o
2 'l9 tfc

For Sale

TWO bedrm ba t h , on twp L OS E we1g h t w i th N ew Sha p e
Tab l e ts and Hydr e~t water
r oad . four mit es to m tn e no
P ill s at
Dutton
Dru g ,
3 Phon e ( 614J 669 3953
and N e l s~:m
M i ddl ep or t
2 79 3tp
Drug
3 2 31p
TRA I LER space. ~ ~ m il e
norl h ~o f Metgs H 1gh Sc hoo l
197 5 36" MA G I C Chel Elec_
on ol d R 1 33 Phone 992 19 41
tr1c rang e, 1975 Wh1rlpoo l
7 29 3tc
F r o s t Fr ee re f r tgerator
Btl ~ h
used les s than 6
mont h s
Pr~ ced
on
1rt
spectton Phon e 99 2 )31 7
3 2 7tp

La Salle·
HOTEL

JO H N BOAT good co nd tt1on
P h on e 843 ~653 even1ng s
3 2 3t c

Mtddteport, 0 . Ph . "2 ·2771

~.00

22 x 100 FT AWNING and
po r ch for mob il e hom e ,
awn ing less than 1 yea r o ld
W 11! se ll sepa r a te No pn ce
over phone C all (614) 667
3769
3 2 3tp

up

Special Rates
by Week
•
or Month

ONE 1974 Ho n da m ol or c y c1e
w1th 4 000 miles 1n n ew
condd1on
Phon e 992 7692
3 2-5tp
8 FT
TO PP ER w tt h boa t
Co n t a c t
H er b e r t
r ack
G ilkey q fl er 5 30 p m 992
5666 or see on R l , 33 at f oot
of Darwm H ill

H OU SE 1n Ru t l an d, Ca ll 992

5858
1 I I'

3

ROOM F urn iSh£' I ('
ment.
10
m lies
Pom er oy
P hon e 9'.'

n

3 2 41p

61
1 6tc

U N F U R NI SH ED
apt
1n
P om er oy ~ b edrm newly
r ed ecor at ed , f ully carp e t ed
Ca lt m the ear l y am 992
'1288
2 22 t f c

COAL. l 1m eston e and al l types
o f salt and ro ck. sal t for 1ce
an d sno w rem o\lal
Ex
ce ts,o r .s alt Works, East
Ma i n St , Pomer oy , Oh to
Phone 997 389 1
12 7 11c

WAREHOUSE o r s tor eroom.
EN JOY g r aC IOU S liVIng at 24x48, 311 Con dor 51 lrea r
10 Mid V illage Ma n or 610 E Ma 1n St l Ren t a ll or
dl epo r t f or as tow a s ~130
p art Phon e 992 717 8
pe r
mo nt h
W1th
all
2 26 61C
u l t l l t t es
patd
T h ese
ar e br and new h 1gh q ua l tt y
a part men ts a t pr 1ces you IN DA SH 23 ch an nel Citi Zens
ban d , tr an sce 1ver' , AM F M
ca n - afford Yo ur r en t m
MP X r ad 1o , B track ta p e
e lu des m o n th 10 mon t h
pl ayer Ca l l 992 3965
l e ases , a ll elec
l1 vlng,
2 26 lf c
ca rp etm g ,
r ange
an d
re f r , gera t or, f ree t r as h TWO 10 sp ee d~-b1 cyc les . S35
p 1ck up , cab le T V at yo ur
an d S45 7 1nch r col t ap e
expense
a nd
o n s ll e
r ecorder,
$50
Squar e
Co n
l avn d ry fac rli lies
sh oote r Po ta r o 1d c amera ,
ven1e n t Ia shop p ing on T h 1rd
!. 15 Pho ne 992 755 1
an d Mill Str eets m M 1d
J 1 Jtc
dl ep ort See t he man ag er at
R ivers 1de A p a r tmen ts o r
ca ll 992 -3273
F ur nt shed 1,000 BALES o f hay Pho n e
a pa r t me n ts
ar e
a l so
Haro l d Ro u :;h , Po rtla n d ,
av.a lla b le
843 2255
...._
2 2 78 t c
2 ~5 6t c

-- - -----

_________ ____ _

l A ND 4 J.i.M f urnis hed and
unf u rnish ed apt s Phon e 992
5434
11 9 tf c

-·-- - - - · --..-

-~-- ---

COU NT RY M o b de H omP.
Pa r k , Rt 33 , len m1l es north
of Pomero y , L ar ge lots with'
c t'ln cre te pa tios , si d ewa l k~.
run n e r s a nd off st r ee t
park ing P h on e 992 -J.t79
12 J 1 1fc

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

For Sale

-4- -~--~-~----

1975 KAWASAK I. 400cc s tr eet
b ike In exc e ll en t con d it ion
wit h lots o f access ori es
P h on e 997 60 34 a fte r 6 p m
2 29 3tc

--

___ - - ----.-.-----

-- -~---~-

-

.

..

Na th an B tggs
Rad1 at or Sp ec ralls t

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

23S3 .

2 2? 61c
CUAL ~ OR SALE C/1.0 Coa l '
Compaf1y, 1 mtJe no r th o f
Chesh1 r e. on Rt 7 P1 ck yo ur
own , $2 0 per ton Open 6 days
per week. , or ca ll (614) 367
7330 f o r fur l h er ln l orma t ll')n
1 8 18tc

Now at Landmark

,••11,..

e• \ CO-OP
.._~
_'!iii~;. Automotlc Wotlf
Conditioner
Model UCl\l\)(,
210.000
Week IV Grain
Capac ltv

l

$299

;t:::__-:J.. Rl!!l . 1m.oo Val
POMEROY LANDMARk
• • - Jock W. C.r"V· Mgr
.Iii Phanem-2111

'

.'

"

SAVE MONEY?

..

~l.Yd~ ® /ko/ _11.1.-J , _

Take a d vantage of our
p rices .
Qu alify
butlt
homes Ntce lots avai la b le
m nice locat 1ons.

P h. 'ii49-202J or 843 -2667

Ph. ( 614) 985·4102

U nscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form f our ord i nary word s.

I'LL HA'it 'CV
h K;UV MY
Ut-tt.E [X)';W

Cl:.Wf'lf:'f7 A

2 12 1 mo

2 19 1 mo

CHAIR OF

Blown
Ins ula t ion Ser v ices

-------- - - -Rill Elllte for Sale

H OUSE -on double lu , 1n
Tuppers P l a1ns ms1d e not
lin is h e d
Pr ice d to se l l
Phone ( i1 14) 667 6150
3 2 6tp

ILABBED

F 1nanc1ng Avatl a bl e
Blown tnto wail s &amp; Att ics
STORM
W I N DO WS &amp; DOOR S
REP L ACEME N T
W I N D OWS
ALUMINUM
SI DIN G- SOFF I TT
G UT TERS - AW NIN G S

F ree estima tes on ca r - .
peting a nd i n s t a lla t i on .
W e' ll brmg samples t o y our
home w i th no obl ig atton .
See how y ou ca n rea ll y
save.
M i k e Young , M a nager
Sa les a nd Installa tion
Rt l, Po m e roy , Ohto 45 769
Phon e da y or mght
61 4·991 -22 06
) _ l·~ --~ mo

-

-.

ANV IL, 'f'OO

--------------T HR EE B E O R M two b at h
h om e, f ul l y c arp et ed, over
acre g round , ful ly lan d
sc a p cd two f am tiY r oo m s 1 12xd6 overlook in g Ohio
R i ve r Some f ur n itu re and
~I I
appl ra nces , boa t dock.
L ocated near P ome r oy ,
O hio, p ri c ed $28 .500 Ca l l 1
(61&lt;1 1 992 30 18 to see
2 27 Jtp
L ARGE H OU S E 1n town l or
sa l e o r tr ade for sm a ller
home Phon e 997 7797
2·27 3tp

7 RM H ou se , n ew a tummu m
si d ing a t G a ll ipolis F er r y ,
w va on 3 ... acre lo t n ear
h ard road Ch eap, come see
Phon e (304) 675 2946
., 77 6tp

TQ YOU-

~-

5URE

I'LL Gtl HIM

FOR 'fUH fAS'(

t

8 5hMG HIM HERf:
~140 YOU PAYS Of F

THEN I FAOfS

~-

00 Jll'5T AS
I TOI D YOtl
'-'NO I'M
su ~€

W«.J'lL

C"--n ta•orro w}

11AvE 1'4 0
TROuEIL E ~

Yrtlud1y'1

-

REMODEL I N G
A ND
R E ROOF I NG , CALL 247
?3 61
2 27 6t c

~

by THOMAS JOSE,H

,.
..,;
- -

.,

i

,
• •;
....

I

I

..''.'.
'

.''
"

,,

~ ;

WILL TRIM or cut t re es an d
sh rubb ery PhOn e 94Y 2S 45
or 7-12 3167,
2772 6t (

Mrs. Wallet' Clov;a
has decided to mov~
and qet a room
:-::::----. someplace!

I '

l

J

, '

t

r,
' '.
L UC KET T Fa rm Equ1pm cnt ,
'
West
Washi ngt on
St , -'

---;---- - ·--- .___
Real Estate For Sale

A l bany Phone (6 l ot ) 698 303 2
or 698 7881
~ 18 2Mc :-.:;:..

--

M ODER N hom e 1n Chester, 8
r oo m s, 2 ba t hs . 2 p orc h es ,
sun porch , t ~ basement. c ity
a n d we ll wa t er , natural ga s,
g a r age
P r i ce d t o sell
P hon e ( 6 141 985 -4102
2 4 lf c

P APER hangmg , pa 1nting , •
pan e tm g , e 1c Phon e 94 9
'

,,

C

.."

BRADFORD , Auctioneer
Com pl e te SerY 1cc
P hone
.9JY 248 7 or 9.4 9 2000 Ractn e
Oh1o , Crtll Bracflord
' ..,_

/?CW'T

OUR HE"ADS
A RE" SAFE:

O'DEl L A llne m ent located "' 'beh1nd
Rut l an d
Grade ..--.
Schoo l
Tu ne u p , br akes ,
whe.c l b alan c mg , almement
Ph one 7d2 200~
1ttillfc

..'

BEDRM
home .
jUSt
l mish ed, remode ling , Sa lem
Sl , Rutlan d Phon e 742 2306
a ft er 4 p m or see M110 B
Hu tc hison

KNO~

,:._..:.:_...:.:.__ _.-"--)

ON
ABOU T 'I•

ACRES . -

A I mo st new h om e

bath ,

J br ,

r,

din l~ g

full

EXPANDED WEEK DAY NEWSCASTS

basem ent w 1th uti lity r •
HW
floo rs,
po r c h eS ,

I

ll

!I

"•

$19,500
FULL FAMILY HOME - 4
BR , 2 ba ths, large kitchen,
r ecr eation R . la rge glassed
pati o , ga ra ge, c l ose to

school . 130,000.
NEEOED

3 or

4

partition s, shower or t ub ,
w ould ha ve a lovely home.
L ot a lone worth a sking

price .
CALL
PARTI CULAR S

FOR
$7.000.

8 A.M., The Noon Report,

$25,000. 3B R,

STORE HOURS
Mon ., Tues., Wed. &amp;
THURSDAY

c lose to shopping. A LOW
$17 ,000 .
ANNUAL INCOME
About $5,000.00 plus gas
we ll. Home and 2 apts. has
free

ga s,

~)'s t e ms ,

&amp;
22

own w a ter
acres

building sites . CALL.
TO SELL - LET US HELP
YOU - CALL TODAY .
992 2259 or 992·2568

."'
•

'

''

M
,.';.
'.

'

':

~

GUESS I. HAVE NO
ALTERNATIVE I I'LL ....
I'LL HAVE lDGOSEE
WHAT 11-\IS IS ALL
ABIYJT

,,

T CG

BMH S NI A Y F

3N T.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

CRYPTOQUOTES

UMD G

I.

S...tb

A good ma lch·point player
would
go down at three
WB

notrump m an effort to score

overtricks He would know
K U AYU
A
IGNI
G D GH B
VMQ T H
that suits break 3-2 68 per cent
of the time and that the odds
JHTWEGV
MC S
I U M I
B M H S - were that West had led away
.
!rom a dia mond honor
N I AY F
AN :
AN
AI
PTTS
L TH
So he would play a low d1a·
mond from dummy . Eas t
M V G H A Y M ? - S K A P U I·
s
G AN
would take his queen and lead
back a club. South would rise
GCU TK G H
with the ace and go after
hearts West would show out
on the second heart lead
wher eupon South would cash
three hearts and two spad'es.
hnesse against West 's king of
diamonds, get out lor down

~~~~

A Nebraska reader wants to
know what we think of llle

premature save.
He is reierring to a bid IIICb
as f1ve clubs after partner hu
overcalled a one-heart opening b1d with two clubs tmd
third hand has jumped to
three hearts. The 1dea is that
fourth hand knows the opponents are going to moke
four hearts and hopes to )111111
them to five
The bid is fine when It works
and all experts try it on occa·

sion.
(Oo you have a queeflon
tor the e•perts? Write "Aek
the Jacobys " care of thla
newspaper.· The Jacobya will
answer md1v1dual queallona
11 stamped, se/1-addrelftd
envelopes are enclosed. The
most interesting que111on1
will be used in this column
and •wll receive cop/11 ol
JACOBY MODERN.)

'

1'1&gt; bafhs.

lovel y kit ch en with ex tras,
full b asem e nt, HW h ea t ,

I

- .;.y ·

MASON IIIURNITURE

A BUY ...... H o mes on ea ch
sl de ha ve sold for o ver

North East

Pass
Pass 2 •
Pass
Pass Pass Pass
IOpomin1: lead- 2 t

-·~ 11

and 5 P.M.
~·
..----------------------------~·=
~~~~~~~~~--~~ ~~~~~~~--~~~·~ ,

.

3:3D-One Life to Li ve 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game 8,10.
4 ·DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Bewitched 6;
Mickev Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie
" The Gambler from Natchez" 10; Dinah 13 ..
4:3l)....Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame ST. 20.33 ; To Be Announced 15.
5:DO-Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3l)....Adal"(1·12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec:. •
Co. 20,33;.
f:
6:0l)....News 3, 4,8,10,13,1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6·3()-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlffllh 6;
, CBS News a,10, Stan Bucklew : Basketball 9; Crop

West

. ~~ ~ :

~

AT

Serach for Tomorrow 8, 10.

12·45-E iec. Co. 33 ..
1:DO-News 3; Rya n' s Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
I :3(}-Days of Our Lives 3,4, IS; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, t3;
As the World Turns B, 10.
2:D0-$20.000 Pyramid 6.13.
2.3l)....Doctors3,4,l5; General Hospltal6,13 ; Allin The
Family.

t•

•

WMPO AM-FM

6 · 40--0unce of Preventi on 10.

6· 45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:55--&lt;huck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Tri
State 13.
7:DO-Today 3,o,l5; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
. News B; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
·
7.3()-Schoolles 10,
&amp;:DO-Lassie 6; Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St. 33.
8· Jl)....Big Valley 6.
9:DO-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue • · 15; Lucy
Show 8; mke Douglas 10; Morning with D.J , 13.
\
9 ·3(}-A.M. 3: One Life to Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
10 DO-Celebr ity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Edge of Night 6r
Pr ice Is Right 8, 10.
10·30-High Rol lers 3,4,1 5; Dinah 6.
I 1. DO-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Weekday 4; Gambit
8. 10; Farmer"s Daughter 13.
11 · 3l)....Hollywood Squares 3,4, IS; Happy Days 13; Love
of Li fe 8, 10; Sesame St . 20,33.
11 .55-Take Ke rr B; Dan lmel's World tO.
12 : DO-Magnificent Marble Machine 3, 15; Let's Make a
De ai !J; Bob Braun's 50-50Ciubo; News6,8,10.
12 3()-Take My Advice 3, IS; All My Children 6, J,a;

~ ~~%~

;-~~-=~-==-~~-=-~-=-~-===-=-~
~ ::~::::~::::::::~10~9:·~1f-~CI :

HEAR NEWS FIRST

6. oo-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6 15-Far m Report 13.
6·20--The Story 13.
6:3o-colu mbus Today 4; News6 ; Sunr ise Sem Hier 8;
Farmtl me 10.

~======~()l]~~~~~:A[i.~~~~~~--------~:;~~----~~55~~~~};~~~~41
WhrnMical
.
n~:;o = LADGHING~

~02 3

'l 18 11 tp

WE DN ESDAY, MARCH 3, "76

r-t-+-+-t-1WIN AT BRIDGE
Rubber bridge much safer

IF I NTERE STED tn b ull d1ng . : ·
a
n ew
hom e .
con t a c t · •}
ROUSH CO N STRU C TIO N , I 1.
fr ee es t 1ma t es Greg Ro usn. ,' : ,
Y92 75 83
2 18 12tc ~ •'

OPENEO I I I H un t ' s P e t Shop
2 1 ~ m tt es n orth ea st o f
Ches t er . Oh 10 on Rt 248 We
sp ecialize 1n troptea l ft sh
an d supp!les Sp ec rals a ll
thIs w eek!
2 25 61p

Chronicles 20,33.
9:JO-One Day at a Time 8,10.
10.DO-City of Angels 3,4, 15, Marcus Welby, M.D. 6,13;
Switch 8,10; News 20; Woman Alive 33.
10 3()-Woman Alive 20; Woman 33.
I 1:DO-News 3,o,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ·ABC News 33.
11 ·30- Massachusetts
Primary
Specl•l :
13, 15.3,4.6,8, 10; Janak I 33.
11 :H - Mysfery of the Week 6.13.
12 .DO-Johnny Carson M , 15; Movie "'Let's Switch " 1:
Movie "A Ticket to Tomahawk" 10.
1: 15-News 13.
1:JG- Tomorrow 3,,.

ACROSS
5 Wlth
I No-fat eater
irritation
· - 6 All·
6 Kind of
embracmg
strength
Game 20; C a rrascolendas 33.
II Make even
7 WidesJread
7:DO-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
12 Spring8 Ught-switch
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; Wild Kingdom
13; Family Affair IS; Book Beat 20; Know Your
field, e.g.
position
School 33
13 Card mamp. 9 Wholly
7:30-Lastofthe
Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Wild Wild
ulator's
ID Scottish
of
Animals
6: Match Game PM 8; Evening
World
ruse ( 2 wds ) river
Edition with Martin Agronsky 20; The Judge 10; To
15 Electric 14 Handloomed
Yesterday's Aruiwer
Tell the Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Book 11. .1 33.
16 Carry
garments
B.DO-LIItle House on the Prairie 3.4.15; Bionic Woman
17 Theatrical
17 Mother
23 Sea eagle
34 Harrow's
6,13;; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10; The Way It Was
a rt
I Fr. )
24 Speechless
20; Images of Aging 33.
cricket
Thomas Rememembers 20.
8:3(}-Lowell
18 Guevara
18 Uncas'
28 " Les Miserrival
9:DO-Chico &amp; The Man 3,4,15; Barella 6,13; Cannon
21 ,Enghsh
beloved
ables'"
35 Nourished
8, 10; Great Performances 33; Images of Aging 20.
19 Stag
character
essayist
36
Household
9·30-Dumpllngs
3,4,15.
24 Bewail
20 Ares '
30 Motorist 's
IO
:DO-Petrocelll
3,4, 15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, lJ; Bluue
god
25 Turmoil
mother
stopover
Knight 8, 10; ; News 20.
37 Super
1hY.ph. wd 1 21 "Major
31 Tocsin
10:05-Garc:fen Party 33 ..
Barbara"
32 Conduce
27 Laceor alter
10:30-Aimannac 20: In Search of a Maestro 33.
owning
playwright
33 Anatomical
38 Gypsy
11 :00--News 3,A,6,8,10, 13, 15; ABC New$ 33.
22 Strain
network
queen
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie "The Sex Symbol"
husband
6, 13; Movie " Massacre at Fort Holma n" 8; Movie
28 lnsh ste w r.--n---rr-'1%"'"""1:'IZ'"""'Tr-'IJ"""V'"""'r-1
" Let ' s Dance" 10; Janakl 33.
mgredient
1:DO-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
29 Microscopic 1;;---t-+-11--t30 Rwriinate
31 Tarsus or
remur, e .g.
32 Three, m
Salerno
35 London's
one and a fair match-point
journalism
NORTH (D)
2 score stnce lots of olber
center
674
players would be going down,
12 wds. )
•AKQ 7 5 2
A rubber-bridle player
tAB 3
39 Bird of prey hr-+-1--t-would study the dummy for a
674
40 His horse
while. If an optimist be mlcht
WEST
EAST
is Scout
also duck that first diamond,
6 J 863
6 Q 10
but if he were a realist be
.10
.J984
&gt;U:M'I&lt;
'o-A!I/42 German ctty
would say that a game In llle
tQ4
t K 972
hand is a nice thine to have.
DOWN
Q 9 ~5
"'K 10832
Then he would rise with dum·
SOUTH
my's ace of diamonds, lead a
6AK952
'-'" r&lt;....- Z
3 Get out ol
low heart and wind up wltb
• 63
two spades. five hearts, two
bed
tJ10 6 S
mmor-suit
aces and game and
4 Soldier or
6A J
1 rubber.
Both vulnerable
carpenter

I• 4 '

IF YOU nee d your g ra vel
h au l ed , call {614 1 Y85 &lt;1 119
any 11me
7 18 - l ~t p

G fi UII U'fW '11 looking fur •ome " a('tion " might
&lt;nd up - IN TRACTION

6Lu ..~

"\

~:

SEW I N G MACt-I I N E Re p ai rs . ·~
serv 1ce, all makes 99'1 278A
Th e Fab r ic Shop , Pom er oy
AUihDr 1Z ed Smger Sat es and
Scrv1ce
We
sharp en
·•
Scissor s
J.29 lf c • 1

.,. 2 22 521p

I

Jumbl••· BASIN CROAK GUILTY NAUGHT
Anuor r : /lou:

o

DAY OR NIGHT
_____________
__ _

3

kA'-4E

TilE AODRE5S AND l POII'\T£0

OUT THE. KID

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

ONt:: A U&lt;t:. 6 rms and b ath ,
R t 3. Pomeroy, Rose Hil l
D1 c k. Oav 1s p r ope rt y, full
ba s e m ent ,
a l uminum
sid 1 n~,. ppne lecL $10 .000 Ca l l
Oak nil ! 68 5 657t. even 1ngs ,
Ja c kson ' 286 3004 days
2 5 JO! p

ORPHAN ANNIE-BRING

'"

Syracus e. Ohto
Ph 992 ·3991
4 10 1 m o

IN STA L LED
B I LL
PUL LIN S, PHONE 992 2478 .

WHAT i HE VAMP'IRE'5
50N WA5 O N T HE
SA"-1:. TEA/,1\ .

i~1lTUTiOIJ'? 1

LITTLE

Ks

3 BR HOME , IUS! 1tn 1Shed
r e m o del1ng
Sa lem
St ,
Rutland
Pho n e 742 -2306
after 4 p m o r see Mrto B ,'
Hut ch mson
10 9 lfc

t

U 'M1..E ORPHAN ANNIE

LARRY LAVENDER

SMALL , SEPTI C TANKS

h

• d

READY MIX CO N ~ ~crL
d e l 1ver ed r 1g ht to your WILL do Odd lOb s, roof tn ~ ,
pamltng , haultng 1ree worK
pro 1ec t F a st and easy , F r ee
and m ow 1ng CAll 99'1 7409
estima tes Ph on e t:;n 3284 ,
3 ~ 26tc
Goeg lcin Ready M 1x ' Co ,
FOR SA LE near Lan gsville , 5
Midd lepor t. Oh iO
room house , root ce ll ar w ith
......,._ 6 JO lfc E X CAVATING do h . . lotfl.l ~ •
room ove r , 2 bay d etach ed
and back.h oe work , septic
1
ge r ag e, l 11 ac r es , no ba th
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
tanks
1nst -a tl ed
dum p
hot and cold wa t er in k.tl
-· Sw ee per s. t oas t ers trons ,
tru c k s and lo boys lor hlfe
che n , L P g as h eat. h ea te r s
Wil l hau l f ill d irt . top so l i,
a ll sma ll app l iances Lawn
w1f h house
Ca ll 7d2 ~8 19
m o w er . n ex t to Stat e H1 Qh '
l lme'ilton Et and g rav e! Call
after5pm
way Garage on Route 7
Bob or Reger J eff ers , day
3 2 6tp
Phone •es 3825
pllOne 992 708&lt;;1 , n1gh t phone
4 1~ t f c
992 3o525 q r 99 7 5232
H OME for s at e by p r 1val e
2 11 t f c
ow n er
31 ,
ac re s.
.t
S E Pl l c- r · ;;.-N
c l eaned
be dr ooms . ba rn on black top
Pl u mb l_ng ,
Modern Santtat 1on 992 -3954 REMODELIN G ,
road . gas and water Ph one
h c a110 9 and al l t y p es rJf
o r 997 7349
9dq 2023
9 18 tt c
g e n e ral
r e pa i r
Wo rk
3 1 26t p
g u ar an t ee d
20 ~ear s ex
p er 1en c e
Ph on e 992 2409.
100 x 200 LOT 10 Ftve Pot.nl s RED ob G. !t mes ton e, g rav el
5 1 tt c
and flit dlf t d e l 1ver ed .
area Ph one 992 J576
Phone Bill P Ull inS , 997 ·7478
3 1 6tc
dOler ,
2 l9 26tc EXC A V A TIN G ,
backho e
a nd
dtl c her
HOME l o r sale, spa cious
Charl es R H a t11e td Back
l1vlng room . dm1ng room , 2 A SP H A L TING- dr-;veway s and
Hoe Serv ice . Rutland , Oh io
park 1n g tot s, septtc t ank s
be dr ooms , l arg e kllchen
Phon e 7·12 '1 00 8.
1n sta ll ed c o ncre tm g and
family rooms , new , bath ,
11 30 78tc
backhoe work . Fowler' s
Phone 992 739&lt;1
ConslfUCIIOn Phon e 99 2
3 2 6t c
0 &amp; 0 TR E E Tfl m mlng 20
748 1 or 742259 3
years e &gt;o:p l!r1 en ce l n surtd,
2 24 6tc
tree cst 1mat cs Ca ll 992 23U
6 ROOM house, 11,. bat h ,
or (.6 14) 698 7257 A lbany
P h on e 992 3129 or 9925 434 EXCAVA T ING , BACKHOES
1 15 1t c
7 2Y 31c
AND D OZER L ARGE A N D

_______

SOOGE

APPI..16D

"

FREE ESTIMATES

SLOAN'S
CARPOING

\974 24 F T
MEL MAR
M o tor
Hom e ,
one
of
the
be st ,
ex cel
le nt co n dtt1on , cost over
S2 0,000 n ew , comp letel y sel f
co n ta med , 5000 watt ge n 3
a1r condilloners . f urnace ,
bath hot water heat er , gas
and e lec re f , am -fm radi O
ste r eo th roug h out , ro l l out
aw n 1ng , auto- tr ansmission ,
ps , and pb , m uch more
PhOn e 949 277 0
2-26 7t c

S.DO-Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3(}-Adam -12 4,13; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies '8;
E lee Co. 20,33.
·
6:DO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15 ; ABC News6; Zoom 20; lTV
Utilization 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8.10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33.
,
7 DO-Truth or Cons. 3; To tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Country Place a; News 10; Name That
Tune 13; Fami ly Affair 15; Antiques 20; Wild Wild
World of Anima ls 33
7,: 3(}-Hoilywood Squares 3,4; . Let"s Deal With It 6;
$25,000 Pyramid 8; Ev~n l ng Edition with Martin
Agronsky 20 ; Price is Right 10; To te ll the truth 13;
High School TV Honor Society 15; Family Theatre
33.
8:DO-Movln' On 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Good Times
8, 10, International Animati on Festival 20. Behi nd
the Li nes 33
8·30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Mash 8,10; Consumer
Surviva l 20.33.
9.DO-Police Woman 3,4, 15,. Rookies 6, 13; Adams

,-

...'

BISSEU. BUILDERS

For Sale

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

TWO ca l ves , m 1xed H er ef ord
c o w w 1t h calf Ph on e 843

..

' • f '

~

' ",,'

--- .....,._

S25 P ER H U N DRED Sl u ff in g
enve l opes
Sen d
se lf
addresse d , s t a m p ed e n
veto p e, T K . Enter p rise ,
Box 26, Sta n be r ry , M o
64489
2 29 7tp

TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 1916

- -':

From a sh elf t o a hou se, a II
t yp es of b ui l di n g a nd
r e m o d e lin g
f ro m
the
found a t ion up . Add it t on s,
cnp et i n g, pai nttng, sl d1ng ,
r oo fing , pa n eling-, paper
h a ng i ng etc . , _

Pom eroY

P h 991 217 4

'

ON MATTRESSES.''

' '

WANT TO

CONSTRUCTION
From 1he l argest Truck or
Bulldozer" Rad 1ator l o the
llest Hea te r Core

WALLS SOUNDF'I'lOOFED,
THE TARGETS MOUNTED

"·

HOME MAINTENANCE
Sidi n g - Vtny l
&amp;
A l um 1num . W indow Gl ass
!. Glaz ing , On the Job or Jn
Shop
P ick up and del i very
serv 1ce
Call Coll ec1 388 8239
Specialire
'"
bUild -up
roohnljl &amp; hot roo fs Fr~e
Estimates . 10 years ex·
pertence.
Harve Ferr ell
B•dwell, Oh io
2 6 1 mo

D&amp;D

MIXE D hay , 70c ba l e Phon e
( 6141 378631 1 a ft er 6 p m
2 29 61 c

ZENIT H color TV , 23 inch
sc re e n E xce l len-t co nd tl tOn
Phone 99 2 7244
2 29 31c

AP PO I NTMENT
Case N o. 21660
Est a te of LUC I NDA DANES , REDUCE safe and fa st wi th
o ecease d.
GoBese T ab l e ls &amp; E Vap
" w a ter
p1 II S, "
N e lson
N ot tee 1S he reby glyen th at
D r ugs
Ro se S Reyno l ds , of 266 M 111
3 l li p
Str eet , · Mfddt epo r t , Oh to , has
been
duly
app otn fe d
Exe c u tri x of th e Es t a t e of !974
K X 250
Kawasaki
L ucind a Danes , deceased , l ate
Motorc ross , n ew leat h ers
of Meigs Co un h
Oh io
1nc luded wtth boots 3 hou rs
Creditors are r equ1r e d lo
r 1d1 n g ltme, never bee n
file the1r c la tm s wtl h sa id
race d P h 992 7693
fiduciar y Wtl h 1n fou r months
2 29 3 fp
Dated lh tS
20 th day o f
February 1976 .
GOOD hay, never wet P h one
949 2523
.
Mann in q 0 Webste r
2 2S 6t c
Judge
Co ur i of Common Pl eas .
Probate Oi VtSIOO fl REWOOD . phon e 949 ~069
2 18 12tc
' ' ? 1 DJ 7 9 J tc

EX

MA NU RE loader. $175 P h on e
(614) 378 6311 a ft er 6 p m
2 29 ·61 c

-----

17 x · 60 K IR KWOO D Mobil e 11174 HO N DA XR75 , go o d
Ho me , lola ! e lec ex con
co n dt l1on
P hon e ~47 ~5 41
d i l lon Phon e ~47 2205 or 247
~1-29 J t c
_ ..._._
273 1
2 29 3tc BOLE N' S ga rd en trac tor w tl h
cu lt 1v a tor A l so , C B ra d 10
Phone 992 7826
2 29 6tc

Rut l a nd 742 - ~331
Roger Wa m sley
l -1-1mo .

Television log for easy viewing

l.OWfR I'YAS USED
tTn~c• U FOR TARCET

". '

v

'

FERRELL' S GLASS &amp;

Tupp ers Pla1ns Cheste r Water 0 1str~c t now selling
b u lk waler to ta nks on
trucks ·at our new Off tcel
L oca ted on St R t 7
1 Mil e Nort h of
Eastern Htg h Sch ool
Ser\le Yours elf D is p en ser .
Tak in g quar te r s on l y, one
at a time, for ~5 0 gallons of
water
Open all th e T ime
f or your con\le n 1ence 1
3· 1-1mo

~

POMEROY, OHIO

1969 44 2 OLD SMOBI L E With
350 engme, $ 1 700 Phone
992 3759
3 2 6t p

AVAILABLE

buned
treasure .
Find
Coi ns, rings . silver, gol d .
Coin &amp; Metal
De t ectors
For Ren t

11r es, fram e reinforced , V 8 en g me , heater , r eady to
w ork

T A P PA N s t a1ntess stee l drop
1n elec r an ge, S75 Warm
Morntng 65.000 btu g a s
heater , 2 yrs ol d , S200 Gas
room
h ea l e r
wit h
' VI NDALE 12 x 68, 3 bedr m
mec h a n 1ca t l h e rm
!.2 5
bath 8. 1 -., 14 tt ex pan do , 25 Used 1 J g lass ex t eri or door ,
f! awn 1ng and porc h , f u l ly
S15 Phon e 992 7354 a ft er 6
pm
c arpeted
Phone 742 2882
2 29 3t c
2 29 Btc

NOTICE OF

1269S

'

Ptua91ass - 'Table Tops
M irr ors . 5torm &amp; Scre ens.

BULK WATER

BUY , SELL or T R ADE

...

.......,
,,,

Business Services
COINS

H duty ti r es. spring s, booster-brak es, st ep b umper , V
8 e ngine, std . trans , t1nted gla ss . Clean int

WANTED

446-5189

j

~~·

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

QUALITY

7 29 3tc

CALL

v~e ~

s
.
l Cl
d
e entzne
asSlJ ze S

Middleoort-Pomerov.O .. Tuesday March2 1976

DICK TkACY .

Auto Sales

® 2~~NS

Ph on e

MEDICAL
SECRETARY

""'h

Tr

esu ts

Rooms,

EXPERIENCED

l

Auto Sales

Help Wanted
HELP 10 fence a farm
949 2057

R

9 - ~llaUySentinPI

.

Sat.-&amp;:30tii5 : 00
TIL 12 NOON

'
'•:'

'

,1·

''
'.

II .,

I, .

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

1:.•'.' '

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

w. v•. '..
.. .._.r;

Malon.
Herm1n Grate
~~_.~ ~~ ~

..

~~_.~

..

'.

''•'
''.

~E

SAID TO TELL l{()U
THAT IF l(()IJR FOOT IS
TO HEAL f'ROI'ERLI{, l(OO'RE
60iN6 TO HAVE TO 6ET UP
AND MCNE AROUND

THAT's WH'1' HE PUT A
''WALKING Cf&gt;.ST" ON 1{00

WHAT Does HE KNOW?

�8-~~N~~~~~:~~e:::~dlepo~l~~~·~~~:~~~·· Tuesday~~a~ocp2;;,

g~.~».Mm~~

a.

'.

P r og
Bond R ettrement

3.33 5 58
37 . 497 20

Misce llaneous
·1.os9 ?o
L unch Room
(4, u ,s 47) Other Exp __,
40 , 143 16
TotAl Exp
ESE A T i lle I
29.80 5 6~ Transfers To
Total
Gener al
4,641 17
124 156 85
Total R ece ipts '
General
34 7 58
General Fund
4.988 75
857 187 38 ' Total Tr l!nsfer s
'
Exp . &amp; T r an sfer s
45 , 131 91
DISadvantag ed Pup11s
,
\ 881 1, De c 3 1. 1975
16 , 9 ~ 3 51
Prog .
9, 106 42 Tota l E xp &amp; Tran sfer s
43 .984 53
Plu s Bal Dec
Bond Ret1rement
Lun ch Room
81,3r19154
62 075 42
31 1975
NDE A
10
, •
eseA T111 e 11 '
E SEA T 1tle I
32,269 flO R c cetpl s
ESES Till e I I
1,628 00 F edera l Subsidy
1,68 2 00
Tota l
1.026,552 37 Tota l Rece1pts
1,il8 2 00
Total Rece 1p ts &amp; Ba l a nces
total Begmn1n9 Ba l ance
General Fu nd
914 ,851 25
Plu s Rece1p ts &amp;
1.682 00
Otsadv an ta ged Pup rls
Tr an:; f ers
Prog
12,4&lt;12 00
Ex p end1tures
Bon d R e t1remen t
81,481 73 M1scellaneous
? ,062 07
Lu nc h Room
77 , 174 12 Ol her Exp
2.062.07
Tota l Exp
(380 07)
1,002 70 Ba l De c 31, 1Y75
NOEA Till e Ill
62 ,075 42 Tota l Exp Plu s Bat
ESEA T t tle I
Dec 3 1.1975
1,682 oo
1,68 2 00
ESES T il!e II
t n t er· Fund Tran sfer
1' 150,7,09 22
Tota l
Reco n ctltat 10n
F ro m T1tte 1 to
4,641 17
Ge n eral
E x pen dt1u res
General F und
856 ,870 70 From Tille I to
347 58
Ge n er al
D tsad vantage d Pupil s
P r og
8.894 30 Fro m DPPF to
JJ n
Ge n eral
Bond Rel1rement
48 ,755 43
L unch Roo m
83.9d7 97 From G enera l
147 92
to Tille I
N D EATtt le/ 11
1, 00 270
ESEA Til l e I
45 ,13 1 91 Fr om Ge nera l to
T 1tl e ll
5087 0
ESE S Tit le I I
2. 06 2 07
690 1'
Tota l
1,046 ,604 .07 Tola l rransiers
s,
Asse t s and L 1a b•llt1 es
Ba la n ce Dec 11,1 975
D ec , JL 1975
Ge nera l Fun d
57,980 55
Asse t s
Di sa d van t aged Pupils
Pr og
J,5J7 70 Dep osit ory Ba l ances
104,044 23
Bon d R et 1rement
32,726 39
J4 280 00
L unch Room
(6,773 85) Lan d
1, 134 000 00
ESEA T 1tle I
16, 9&lt;1 3 51 Bui!dmgs
150 .000 00
ESE S Ti l le II
(3 80 07) Eq u 1pme nt
1,432, 324 ?3
Tota l
10&lt;1 ,044 23 Tota l Assets
L•abtllf ies :
CASH BA L AN CE .
Accounts Payabl e
264 .995 47
R E CEIPTS, AND
Bon d Indebt edness 131 ,000 00
E X PENDITU RES
Tota l L1a bdti 1CS
395.995 47
BY FUND
Excess of Asse ts
1,03 6 328 76
Ge ner a l Fund
1,423.324 23
Bal, Jan 1, 1975
57, 663 87 T otal
IND E BTEDN E SS Re c[!i pt s- Reven ue
PA RT I BOND S
Pr op er t y Tax (G r ossi
Pur pose For Wh 1ch Debl
Gene r a l - Rea l Est ate
wa s Gr ea r ed
179,303 76
14 ,693 38 Cons tr uctio n of N ew
Tan g1 bl e Per sona l
H 1g h Sc hOo l
St ate Sub Sid ieS
Out s t an ding Ja n 1.
Sc hool Fou nda t ion (Gross )
1975
147 ,000 00
Ba s1c A l lowa n ce ' 679 746 19
Rede emed D uri ng
Bus Pu r ch ase
Year 1975
16,000 00
7,798 .00
A llowance
Othe r State Subs 1d1es 4,002 73 Ba l ance Out s tan d 1ng
Dec 31, 1975
13 1.000 00
5,939 38
Othe r Revenue
In! Rate
4 50
To ta l R e ven u e
1983
Receipts
84 1,483 44 Ma t ur 1t y Ye ar
To tal Bonded Debt Rece1pts - N on Revenue
Out st andi n g Jan
A d tus tme nt s &amp;
147.000 00
l , 1975
10,670 42
Re fu nds
T ota l Bonded D eb t
Tot al N on -R ev enue
Re d eemed Our~ ng
10,670 42
Receipts
16.000 00
Yea r 1975
T r an sf ers From
Til le I
4,64 1 17 T ota l Bonde d D ebt
Ba l ance Outs t an d 1ng
T 1tl e l
347 sa
Dec 3 1,1 975
131.000 00
OPP F
44 77
( 3 ) ~, 1tc
Total T rans f er s
5. 033 52
To t al R ece 1p ts ( Reven ue,
Non R eve nU e &amp;
Tra nsf ers J
857,1 87, 38
P UBLIC NOTIC E
Tot a l B eg inn 1ng a a tan ce
P lus R ece 1p ts
914 ,851 25
TO T H E UN K N OW N H E IR S
E x pendttur es
Tota l Ad m n 1stra ll on 31,818 09 T H EI R EXECU T O R S, AD
AN D
Tn ta l Adm
490 ,705 29 M IN I S TRA T ORS
ASS I G N S
OF
WAY N E
Tot al Co ord mo~~ te A
890 34 CHEVA LIER ,
DECEA SED
Acti v ities
9.366 28 RE SI DE N CE
UNKNOWN
Tota l Li brar y
82 ,207 58
Tot al Pup 11 T ran sp
You ar e he r e by notlfte d that
To t al Sc hoo l P l ant
105,543 33 a Comp la1 n t has b ee n file d 1n
Op eratton
th e Com mon Pleas Co ur t o f
Me1g!&gt; County, Oh io , P r oba t e
Tot al Sch oo l P lant
Co u r l
H ouse ,
Matn t
19,63 6 03 D1v1S1 0 n ,
Pom eroy , Oh 10 , 45 769 . Case
To t al O th er Auxil1 ar y
~ 1.7 1 8,
by
E d wa rd
E:tepe n se
11 5,517 48 No
Tot al C ap ,t al Ou t lay
534 66 Ch ev a1 1er, Adm m 1Sir ator o f
the
Estate
of
Wayn e
T r an sfe r To
147 92 C h eva l 1e r ,
Deceased ,
T 1ll e I
508 70 P t a, n tdL
vs
Edwa rd
T i tl e Ill
656 62 Ch e va l 1er, et a l , and th e
Tot al Tr a n sf er s
un k n o w n
h e tr s.
t h etr
T ot al Ge n eral F un d
execu t or s 1 adm 1n 1stra tor s a nd
Exp and Tra nsfe r s
856,87 0.70 assig n s of Way n e CheiJalle r .
D ece ased , De f endan ts, whose
Ge ner a'! F und Ba l ,
57 ,980.55 r es1 de n ces ar e un k nown Th e
D ec 31. 1975
Tota l Exp an d T ran sfe r s
obj ect of th e Compla1 n t an d
th e deman d f or relie f are t o
Plus S al Dec
31, 1975
914 .851.25 de t erm m e who ar e I h e n ext o f
k tn , h e tr s at t a w , the1r
Otsadvantaged P u prl s
e&gt;o:eculors , admtn1 st ra tors an d
Program Fund
Bat , Ja n 1, 1975
3,335 58 ass1g n s of Way n e CheiJa lt er ,
Dece ase d , en !tiled by the taws
Revenu e Rece i pt s
Ot h er R evenue
9, 106 42 of th ts state to the next est at e
To te ! Reven u e Rec
9, 106 42 of 1n h entance and to det er
m1n e th e sh are to wh 1ch th e
To te ! B eg in n in g Ba l ance
Plu s R ecei p ts
12.442 00 neK t o f k.m or he trs at law ,
l h e 1r
ex ec u t ors
ad
E x pendttu res
m 1n 1s tr ators and ass1 g ns are
General A d m ,
Se ta r 1es and Wa g es
350 00 entitled acc or d i n g to th e
s tat u te 10 suc h cases ma d e
lnstr uc t 1on
4,835 46 an d provi ded, an d for su c h
Other Ex p
othe r r el 1ef as th e cour1 ma y
Health
2,5 13 93 de te r m 1ne
Sal a ri es an d Wages
80 .64
You are h ereby n o tt fie d tha t
Ot her Ex p
yo u ar e requ1 r ed to an swe r th e
M iscell an eous
1,069 50 Comp l a 1n t wit h1n twenty e1ght
Oth er E x p
8,849 53 days a f te r the la s t p u bl ic at ion ,
Tot al Exp
th e l a st p ubl 1ca t 10 n of wh tc h
Tr'a n sf ers To
Ge n era l
44 77 w tl l be on the 6th day of Ap nl.
Total Tra ns f ers
44 77 1976
Exp and Transf er s
8,89 4 JO
Ba l D ec 31, 1975
3,547 .70
M A NN IN G D WEB ST ER ,
To t al Exp &amp; Tr ansfe r s
JU D G E A N D
EX O F F I C I O CLE R K ,
P lus Ba t D ec 31 , 1975.,\,
COMMO N PL EA S COURT ,
ll,442.00 ,
Bond R ettr em ent Fund
I
M E I G S COU NT Y , O HI O ,
Sal , Jan 1, 1975
37 497 ,·20 '
PROBATE DIVISION
R ec e tpls:
Pr o p er t y Tax ( Gross ) ,
., (2J 24 131 2, 9, 16 , 23. Jo (d) 6',
1
Gen eral - R ea l Estate
71c
15.9111 •n
T a n g1b l e Personal
1,562,n
Oth er R evenu e
26,507 Sit
To ta l Rece 1p ts
4j, 994 .Sj 1
T o tal 6eg1nn1ng Bala n ce
Ttle Almanac

,2,. oo;

•

Plus Recoipls

Expendttures

81 ,48 1 73

United P ress toternational

Fe es a. Ch a rges Wd hh eld
t oday is Tuesday March 2
- Tax se ttle ment 1o.so1 84, th''S2nd day of 1
with 3,_;.,

I n t . On Bon d s
Bond R ede m p t ton
No fe . c erll f tca t e
R ede m pt ion

Tota l Ex p
c 3L 1975
Tot al Ex p . P Ius
Ba l., Dec 31, 1975

6 ~747 , 50

978

c,

16 ,000 00
·-;]~,,... 11
16,000.:00' ·
48 ,75S . l~"

V'l

to follow.

The m oon i s movina
toWard
.. -"eJ

the. prst quar ter.
32.7 26 19
The morning stars a r e
"
dV
s1.•11 73' Mercur
y an
enus.

The evening

Lunchroo m Fun(l

Bo l , .Jo n. I. 1975
A ece 1pfs:
sol e of Lunches
Feder.• I suosi~y

stars

are

14, 145 42 1 Mars Jupiter a nd Saturn
'
,
·
35,896 61 Those born on tins day are
45 ,422 93 under the sign of Pisces .
1
he

Tot al fte v en ue &amp;
N o n . Rev~ nu e Receip t s

•

Texas

frontier

ro Sam

8LJ19. 54 Houston was born MarCh' 2
'
1783 ·
•
,
,
E Kpenditure"
Also on thiS day m history:
So laroes and Wages . 31 ,377 os
In
1899
Congress
Food &amp; Food H an d li ng
,
'
, ,
su ppl ies
51.9d7 31 estabhs)led Mt. . Ra1mer
623 6 1 ~tlmai Park in Washington
Olher Exp
Total Exp .
83•947 97
te
To ta l B eg in ning Ba la n ce
Pl us Rece tpt s
77 ,174 12

Ba l, D ec 31. 1975

(6.773 851

•

Tolo l Exp 1!. Tran.ters
In 1927, Babe Ruth of the
31·
Ba
l
Dec
NewYorkYankeessignedfor
Plus
12
1975
77,174
$70,000, the highest paid a t
H 0 E . A. Titl e Ill
the time with Jractically no
R ec eipts ·
Fe d era l Su bS idY

or .r ast

m~~~;,"e~;~.~and ;:::~ .r

Endtng D ec l1,19lS
T ra n sfer s
1,002 70
Southern . Lo ~iil
Total Cegl nn ing Balan ct'!
Sc h~ol Dt s1nct
Plu s Re cei pt s
Metu County _
T ra n o; t er s
1. 002 70
So x 174 Qacme , Ohto
Eto:penditvres
February20 , 1976
.
I ce rflfy th e fo ll owmg re porJ MISCc.'ll an eou 51 002 70
to b e corr ec t
Other E x p
1,002 7Q
E xp
Jane Wagner Total
Clerk., Treasurer of Total E xp P l u s Ba t ,
D ec 3 1. 197 5
1.00~ 10
the Board of Educal ton
E . S EA . T1tte I
6 19949 '27 00
29.805 62
Brt ! , J an 1. 1975
CA SH RECONCILIATION
R ece1pts
Total F und Bcslance
31 . 121 BB
De c ) I , 1975
S.I OJ ,Q.SJ 23 Fed e ral Subs1d y
32 , 111 88
T otal Recei p ts
Oeposdor v Ba I an ces
170 ,910. 16 Trc:1n sf er s t rom ·
147 9 '1
General
Sub Total Deposno ry
147 9'1
Balances
120,910 . 16 To ta l Tra n sfe r s
To tal Rc ce1 pt s an d
Sub Total Cash on Hand
Tran sf er:;
32 .269 80
120 , 910 16
Total
120,910 . 16 Total B cg tnnmg Bala nce
Plu s R, ec e1pt s &amp;
Total Clerk Treasu re r 's
Tran sf erS:
62 075 42
Ba t , De c J t , 1975
104.0J4 73
Expcndtturcs
S U MMA R Y O F CAS H
General ,Adm ini s trat1on
BALA NCES, R ECEIPTS
S alar~e s and Wa g es
49t 00
AND EXPEND I TURES
Ol hNExp
5656
Bali!l n ceJan 1, 1975
tnstrucl1on
General Fund
57. 663 87 Salar
1es an d Wa g es
JS, \ 60 .84
OtsadvantaQed Pup il s
Other Exp
3,344 56

494 oo income ta xes

p

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DE A DLINES
s P M
Da y
Be f o r e
Pu blic a tiO n
Mon d ay O e adlm e Y
.1 n1
C a n c e ll a t 1o n
Corr ec tions w i ll be a c
co p te d un it! 9 a m for
Day o f P.ubl lc l!l l tOn
REGULATIONS
Th e Publ iS h cr r eser\1 es
th e r•ghl to e d 1t or r e te d
a ds d e l'm Cd ob
an v
tec tional Th e pub l tsh e r
w d 1 no I be r es p on s1b le f or
mor e than on e m corr ect
1n SC' rl 10n
RATES
For Wan t Ad ServiCe
5 c e n IS orr word one
1n sert 1on
M1nmwm ChargeS ! 00
14 c en 1s per word lhree
con sec u11ve
mser l 10n s
26 cenl s p er wor d six
conse cutive
m ser1 1ons
25 Pe r Cent D•scoun t o n
pcud ad s and ads pa 1d
w1th tn 10 days ,
\, CARD OF THA N KS
&amp; OBITUARY
)2 00
for
50
word
m 1n•m um
Each add1t1on al word 3
cents
BLI N D ADS
Addi t ro na t 25c Charg e
per AdvCrlts e me n t
OFF I CE HOURS
8 3 0 a .m to 5 00 p rn
Dall y 8 30 a m to 12 00
Noon Sal ur day
Ph om&gt;loday 99 2 2 156

Noti ce
1&gt;/IAKE SUR E you ge t C\le ry
po ssi bl e deduction th1s year
Hav e yo ur Fede r al and
State Income Tax re turn by
an accountant Phone 99 2t.HJ
1 71 52tc

-M-ANL- EY-;s- A ;;-, j~~~ -Qp en
Monday , Tu es day ,
and
Wednesdav
By appo1nt
ment o r chance 1 mile east
of T up per s Platns , on Rt ,.
68 1
P hone (6 1&lt;11 667 3226
3 2 Jtp

Wanted Jo Buy
CA SH pa1d for a~makes a n d
m o de l s of mo iR- h omes
P hone ar ea co e 614 " 423
953 1
4-13 t f c
GOOD used rototllt er P h one
997 7036 or 99 2 2441 after 5

pm

3 2 tf c

OL D tu rn 1tu r e , o ld 1ewelr y ,
quilts ,
or
co m plete
households
Ma nley's An
t1qu es , 'R R
1. Box 101 ,
R ee d SIJill e, Oh10
P hone
(614) , 66732~6 . 1 mt leeas t of
Tu pp er s P latns on Rt 68 1
3 2 61p
OLD
f u r n ilu re . rce boxes.
bras s
be d s,
ol d
wa ll
te le phones and pa rt s , or
com p l ele hou seho lds. Wri t e
M
D
M 1l l er , R t
2,
Porn e roy , Ohio
Ca ll 99 2
77 60
10 7 7 4

1973 CHE V.

Galipolis, Ohio
AS SI S T A N T D I R-EC TOR , A td
execu t tve 1n s t a ff cap acily
by
co or d i nati n g o ff tce
se n 1 1ces, such as b udge t
pr eparalton , an d control,
r eview
co ntr ac t
ad
m tn 1Sirat1o n
a nd
co
or di n a t e co l lec t ion an d
prepara t iOn
o f r ep o r ts ,
$9,000 Exp er 1en ced an d or
tr ained app l 1can 1 Sen d
r esu m e to A H D E C 0 , P
0
Bo x 1575. Por tsmouth
Ohio
3 I 31C

Pets
TO G I VE AWAY - · Pup p ies, 5
males , I f e ma l e B w ee ks
old Ca ll 949 2673 b etween 6
a m an d 12 noon .
2 27 41p

Mobile Homes For Sale
14 x 70 MO B I LE Home , t ota l
elec J to n ce ntral a1r c on
d r ttone r . exce ll en t con
dt t io n
Phon e 247 2684 o r
247 2664
2 24 7tc

'I' TON FLEETS ID E

191l iN TER NATI ONA L 1600 SER IES
53895
102'" cab to axle, 2 speed, R ax le, 6 speed. good 900x20
1972 CHEV . 2-TON C&amp;C
102" C. A . heavy duty springs,

or

For Sate

12995

R&amp;J COINS

292-6 cyl. engme. 15.000
lb 2 speed rear a)Ci e, foam sea t , mirrors, clean cab

POM0~~?!ve~?!~.~. CO. 'Oi'

1971 C HEV Suburban 350, V8
At , p b, p s , Come see,
make offer Phone 992 2478
2 27 &lt;l ie
~ ~ Ton

For Sale or Trade
AL LIS CHALMERS round
ba le r . good cond1l10n and
tandem 8 whee l fer t ilize r
spread er , and 500 ba les
c lean s traw Phone 949 277 0
2 26 101c

For Rent
FURNISHED apt 5 room s
an d ba t h , l arg e back and
f ronf porch with yard.
u til1flespa1d Ca ll b efor e6 p
m 992 2937
2 26 6t c
2 BEDRM mobile home , very
n 1ce Phon e 99 2 3324
2 29 !fc

l nternat 1on al P1 c- kup . 4
sp
transm1SS1on , h eav y
duty s pr~ n gs Ap prox 10.000
m 1l es Phone 9'92 7017
2 27 61 p

1974 MU ST A NG II G hi a,
excelle n t cond11ton P S. PB.
a1r- c onditton 1ng, Phone 992
3994 or 99 7 767 1
7 ')] 3tp
1972 CAMARO , V 8. p s, d isc .
brakes, a~r condii 10 n1nQ ,
automatiC
E xce l lent
cond1t 1on and easy on gas
Ask1ng $2 . 60 0 . put will
hackle P hon e 992 7360 after
5 p m
2 29 61p

__....

___-·----- ----

1973 MONTE Ca rl o. p o w er
wtndows and door locks , a1r ,
3 BEDRM fu rnishe d home ,
SJ, OOO PhOne 992 1243
also a mobi le home m
2 25 61 p
Mtdd lepor t , 540 w eek , gas
and water pa1d P hon e 992
3509 or mq u ~re ;;11 Box 159 5,
Buckeye. L ake, Oh 1o
2 'l9 tfc

For Sale

TWO bedrm ba t h , on twp L OS E we1g h t w i th N ew Sha p e
Tab l e ts and Hydr e~t water
r oad . four mit es to m tn e no
P ill s at
Dutton
Dru g ,
3 Phon e ( 614J 669 3953
and N e l s~:m
M i ddl ep or t
2 79 3tp
Drug
3 2 31p
TRA I LER space. ~ ~ m il e
norl h ~o f Metgs H 1gh Sc hoo l
197 5 36" MA G I C Chel Elec_
on ol d R 1 33 Phone 992 19 41
tr1c rang e, 1975 Wh1rlpoo l
7 29 3tc
F r o s t Fr ee re f r tgerator
Btl ~ h
used les s than 6
mont h s
Pr~ ced
on
1rt
spectton Phon e 99 2 )31 7
3 2 7tp

La Salle·
HOTEL

JO H N BOAT good co nd tt1on
P h on e 843 ~653 even1ng s
3 2 3t c

Mtddteport, 0 . Ph . "2 ·2771

~.00

22 x 100 FT AWNING and
po r ch for mob il e hom e ,
awn ing less than 1 yea r o ld
W 11! se ll sepa r a te No pn ce
over phone C all (614) 667
3769
3 2 3tp

up

Special Rates
by Week
•
or Month

ONE 1974 Ho n da m ol or c y c1e
w1th 4 000 miles 1n n ew
condd1on
Phon e 992 7692
3 2-5tp
8 FT
TO PP ER w tt h boa t
Co n t a c t
H er b e r t
r ack
G ilkey q fl er 5 30 p m 992
5666 or see on R l , 33 at f oot
of Darwm H ill

H OU SE 1n Ru t l an d, Ca ll 992

5858
1 I I'

3

ROOM F urn iSh£' I ('
ment.
10
m lies
Pom er oy
P hon e 9'.'

n

3 2 41p

61
1 6tc

U N F U R NI SH ED
apt
1n
P om er oy ~ b edrm newly
r ed ecor at ed , f ully carp e t ed
Ca lt m the ear l y am 992
'1288
2 22 t f c

COAL. l 1m eston e and al l types
o f salt and ro ck. sal t for 1ce
an d sno w rem o\lal
Ex
ce ts,o r .s alt Works, East
Ma i n St , Pomer oy , Oh to
Phone 997 389 1
12 7 11c

WAREHOUSE o r s tor eroom.
EN JOY g r aC IOU S liVIng at 24x48, 311 Con dor 51 lrea r
10 Mid V illage Ma n or 610 E Ma 1n St l Ren t a ll or
dl epo r t f or as tow a s ~130
p art Phon e 992 717 8
pe r
mo nt h
W1th
all
2 26 61C
u l t l l t t es
patd
T h ese
ar e br and new h 1gh q ua l tt y
a part men ts a t pr 1ces you IN DA SH 23 ch an nel Citi Zens
ban d , tr an sce 1ver' , AM F M
ca n - afford Yo ur r en t m
MP X r ad 1o , B track ta p e
e lu des m o n th 10 mon t h
pl ayer Ca l l 992 3965
l e ases , a ll elec
l1 vlng,
2 26 lf c
ca rp etm g ,
r ange
an d
re f r , gera t or, f ree t r as h TWO 10 sp ee d~-b1 cyc les . S35
p 1ck up , cab le T V at yo ur
an d S45 7 1nch r col t ap e
expense
a nd
o n s ll e
r ecorder,
$50
Squar e
Co n
l avn d ry fac rli lies
sh oote r Po ta r o 1d c amera ,
ven1e n t Ia shop p ing on T h 1rd
!. 15 Pho ne 992 755 1
an d Mill Str eets m M 1d
J 1 Jtc
dl ep ort See t he man ag er at
R ivers 1de A p a r tmen ts o r
ca ll 992 -3273
F ur nt shed 1,000 BALES o f hay Pho n e
a pa r t me n ts
ar e
a l so
Haro l d Ro u :;h , Po rtla n d ,
av.a lla b le
843 2255
...._
2 2 78 t c
2 ~5 6t c

-- - -----

_________ ____ _

l A ND 4 J.i.M f urnis hed and
unf u rnish ed apt s Phon e 992
5434
11 9 tf c

-·-- - - - · --..-

-~-- ---

COU NT RY M o b de H omP.
Pa r k , Rt 33 , len m1l es north
of Pomero y , L ar ge lots with'
c t'ln cre te pa tios , si d ewa l k~.
run n e r s a nd off st r ee t
park ing P h on e 992 -J.t79
12 J 1 1fc

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

For Sale

-4- -~--~-~----

1975 KAWASAK I. 400cc s tr eet
b ike In exc e ll en t con d it ion
wit h lots o f access ori es
P h on e 997 60 34 a fte r 6 p m
2 29 3tc

--

___ - - ----.-.-----

-- -~---~-

-

.

..

Na th an B tggs
Rad1 at or Sp ec ralls t

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

23S3 .

2 2? 61c
CUAL ~ OR SALE C/1.0 Coa l '
Compaf1y, 1 mtJe no r th o f
Chesh1 r e. on Rt 7 P1 ck yo ur
own , $2 0 per ton Open 6 days
per week. , or ca ll (614) 367
7330 f o r fur l h er ln l orma t ll')n
1 8 18tc

Now at Landmark

,••11,..

e• \ CO-OP
.._~
_'!iii~;. Automotlc Wotlf
Conditioner
Model UCl\l\)(,
210.000
Week IV Grain
Capac ltv

l

$299

;t:::__-:J.. Rl!!l . 1m.oo Val
POMEROY LANDMARk
• • - Jock W. C.r"V· Mgr
.Iii Phanem-2111

'

.'

"

SAVE MONEY?

..

~l.Yd~ ® /ko/ _11.1.-J , _

Take a d vantage of our
p rices .
Qu alify
butlt
homes Ntce lots avai la b le
m nice locat 1ons.

P h. 'ii49-202J or 843 -2667

Ph. ( 614) 985·4102

U nscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form f our ord i nary word s.

I'LL HA'it 'CV
h K;UV MY
Ut-tt.E [X)';W

Cl:.Wf'lf:'f7 A

2 12 1 mo

2 19 1 mo

CHAIR OF

Blown
Ins ula t ion Ser v ices

-------- - - -Rill Elllte for Sale

H OUSE -on double lu , 1n
Tuppers P l a1ns ms1d e not
lin is h e d
Pr ice d to se l l
Phone ( i1 14) 667 6150
3 2 6tp

ILABBED

F 1nanc1ng Avatl a bl e
Blown tnto wail s &amp; Att ics
STORM
W I N DO WS &amp; DOOR S
REP L ACEME N T
W I N D OWS
ALUMINUM
SI DIN G- SOFF I TT
G UT TERS - AW NIN G S

F ree estima tes on ca r - .
peting a nd i n s t a lla t i on .
W e' ll brmg samples t o y our
home w i th no obl ig atton .
See how y ou ca n rea ll y
save.
M i k e Young , M a nager
Sa les a nd Installa tion
Rt l, Po m e roy , Ohto 45 769
Phon e da y or mght
61 4·991 -22 06
) _ l·~ --~ mo

-

-.

ANV IL, 'f'OO

--------------T HR EE B E O R M two b at h
h om e, f ul l y c arp et ed, over
acre g round , ful ly lan d
sc a p cd two f am tiY r oo m s 1 12xd6 overlook in g Ohio
R i ve r Some f ur n itu re and
~I I
appl ra nces , boa t dock.
L ocated near P ome r oy ,
O hio, p ri c ed $28 .500 Ca l l 1
(61&lt;1 1 992 30 18 to see
2 27 Jtp
L ARGE H OU S E 1n town l or
sa l e o r tr ade for sm a ller
home Phon e 997 7797
2·27 3tp

7 RM H ou se , n ew a tummu m
si d ing a t G a ll ipolis F er r y ,
w va on 3 ... acre lo t n ear
h ard road Ch eap, come see
Phon e (304) 675 2946
., 77 6tp

TQ YOU-

~-

5URE

I'LL Gtl HIM

FOR 'fUH fAS'(

t

8 5hMG HIM HERf:
~140 YOU PAYS Of F

THEN I FAOfS

~-

00 Jll'5T AS
I TOI D YOtl
'-'NO I'M
su ~€

W«.J'lL

C"--n ta•orro w}

11AvE 1'4 0
TROuEIL E ~

Yrtlud1y'1

-

REMODEL I N G
A ND
R E ROOF I NG , CALL 247
?3 61
2 27 6t c

~

by THOMAS JOSE,H

,.
..,;
- -

.,

i

,
• •;
....

I

I

..''.'.
'

.''
"

,,

~ ;

WILL TRIM or cut t re es an d
sh rubb ery PhOn e 94Y 2S 45
or 7-12 3167,
2772 6t (

Mrs. Wallet' Clov;a
has decided to mov~
and qet a room
:-::::----. someplace!

I '

l

J

, '

t

r,
' '.
L UC KET T Fa rm Equ1pm cnt ,
'
West
Washi ngt on
St , -'

---;---- - ·--- .___
Real Estate For Sale

A l bany Phone (6 l ot ) 698 303 2
or 698 7881
~ 18 2Mc :-.:;:..

--

M ODER N hom e 1n Chester, 8
r oo m s, 2 ba t hs . 2 p orc h es ,
sun porch , t ~ basement. c ity
a n d we ll wa t er , natural ga s,
g a r age
P r i ce d t o sell
P hon e ( 6 141 985 -4102
2 4 lf c

P APER hangmg , pa 1nting , •
pan e tm g , e 1c Phon e 94 9
'

,,

C

.."

BRADFORD , Auctioneer
Com pl e te SerY 1cc
P hone
.9JY 248 7 or 9.4 9 2000 Ractn e
Oh1o , Crtll Bracflord
' ..,_

/?CW'T

OUR HE"ADS
A RE" SAFE:

O'DEl L A llne m ent located "' 'beh1nd
Rut l an d
Grade ..--.
Schoo l
Tu ne u p , br akes ,
whe.c l b alan c mg , almement
Ph one 7d2 200~
1ttillfc

..'

BEDRM
home .
jUSt
l mish ed, remode ling , Sa lem
Sl , Rutlan d Phon e 742 2306
a ft er 4 p m or see M110 B
Hu tc hison

KNO~

,:._..:.:_...:.:.__ _.-"--)

ON
ABOU T 'I•

ACRES . -

A I mo st new h om e

bath ,

J br ,

r,

din l~ g

full

EXPANDED WEEK DAY NEWSCASTS

basem ent w 1th uti lity r •
HW
floo rs,
po r c h eS ,

I

ll

!I

"•

$19,500
FULL FAMILY HOME - 4
BR , 2 ba ths, large kitchen,
r ecr eation R . la rge glassed
pati o , ga ra ge, c l ose to

school . 130,000.
NEEOED

3 or

4

partition s, shower or t ub ,
w ould ha ve a lovely home.
L ot a lone worth a sking

price .
CALL
PARTI CULAR S

FOR
$7.000.

8 A.M., The Noon Report,

$25,000. 3B R,

STORE HOURS
Mon ., Tues., Wed. &amp;
THURSDAY

c lose to shopping. A LOW
$17 ,000 .
ANNUAL INCOME
About $5,000.00 plus gas
we ll. Home and 2 apts. has
free

ga s,

~)'s t e ms ,

&amp;
22

own w a ter
acres

building sites . CALL.
TO SELL - LET US HELP
YOU - CALL TODAY .
992 2259 or 992·2568

."'
•

'

''

M
,.';.
'.

'

':

~

GUESS I. HAVE NO
ALTERNATIVE I I'LL ....
I'LL HAVE lDGOSEE
WHAT 11-\IS IS ALL
ABIYJT

,,

T CG

BMH S NI A Y F

3N T.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

CRYPTOQUOTES

UMD G

I.

S...tb

A good ma lch·point player
would
go down at three
WB

notrump m an effort to score

overtricks He would know
K U AYU
A
IGNI
G D GH B
VMQ T H
that suits break 3-2 68 per cent
of the time and that the odds
JHTWEGV
MC S
I U M I
B M H S - were that West had led away
.
!rom a dia mond honor
N I AY F
AN :
AN
AI
PTTS
L TH
So he would play a low d1a·
mond from dummy . Eas t
M V G H A Y M ? - S K A P U I·
s
G AN
would take his queen and lead
back a club. South would rise
GCU TK G H
with the ace and go after
hearts West would show out
on the second heart lead
wher eupon South would cash
three hearts and two spad'es.
hnesse against West 's king of
diamonds, get out lor down

~~~~

A Nebraska reader wants to
know what we think of llle

premature save.
He is reierring to a bid IIICb
as f1ve clubs after partner hu
overcalled a one-heart opening b1d with two clubs tmd
third hand has jumped to
three hearts. The 1dea is that
fourth hand knows the opponents are going to moke
four hearts and hopes to )111111
them to five
The bid is fine when It works
and all experts try it on occa·

sion.
(Oo you have a queeflon
tor the e•perts? Write "Aek
the Jacobys " care of thla
newspaper.· The Jacobya will
answer md1v1dual queallona
11 stamped, se/1-addrelftd
envelopes are enclosed. The
most interesting que111on1
will be used in this column
and •wll receive cop/11 ol
JACOBY MODERN.)

'

1'1&gt; bafhs.

lovel y kit ch en with ex tras,
full b asem e nt, HW h ea t ,

I

- .;.y ·

MASON IIIURNITURE

A BUY ...... H o mes on ea ch
sl de ha ve sold for o ver

North East

Pass
Pass 2 •
Pass
Pass Pass Pass
IOpomin1: lead- 2 t

-·~ 11

and 5 P.M.
~·
..----------------------------~·=
~~~~~~~~~--~~ ~~~~~~~--~~~·~ ,

.

3:3D-One Life to Li ve 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game 8,10.
4 ·DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Bewitched 6;
Mickev Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie
" The Gambler from Natchez" 10; Dinah 13 ..
4:3l)....Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame ST. 20.33 ; To Be Announced 15.
5:DO-Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3l)....Adal"(1·12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec:. •
Co. 20,33;.
f:
6:0l)....News 3, 4,8,10,13,1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6·3()-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlffllh 6;
, CBS News a,10, Stan Bucklew : Basketball 9; Crop

West

. ~~ ~ :

~

AT

Serach for Tomorrow 8, 10.

12·45-E iec. Co. 33 ..
1:DO-News 3; Rya n' s Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
I :3(}-Days of Our Lives 3,4, IS; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, t3;
As the World Turns B, 10.
2:D0-$20.000 Pyramid 6.13.
2.3l)....Doctors3,4,l5; General Hospltal6,13 ; Allin The
Family.

t•

•

WMPO AM-FM

6 · 40--0unce of Preventi on 10.

6· 45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:55--&lt;huck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Tri
State 13.
7:DO-Today 3,o,l5; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
. News B; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
·
7.3()-Schoolles 10,
&amp;:DO-Lassie 6; Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St. 33.
8· Jl)....Big Valley 6.
9:DO-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue • · 15; Lucy
Show 8; mke Douglas 10; Morning with D.J , 13.
\
9 ·3(}-A.M. 3: One Life to Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
10 DO-Celebr ity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Edge of Night 6r
Pr ice Is Right 8, 10.
10·30-High Rol lers 3,4,1 5; Dinah 6.
I 1. DO-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Weekday 4; Gambit
8. 10; Farmer"s Daughter 13.
11 · 3l)....Hollywood Squares 3,4, IS; Happy Days 13; Love
of Li fe 8, 10; Sesame St . 20,33.
11 .55-Take Ke rr B; Dan lmel's World tO.
12 : DO-Magnificent Marble Machine 3, 15; Let's Make a
De ai !J; Bob Braun's 50-50Ciubo; News6,8,10.
12 3()-Take My Advice 3, IS; All My Children 6, J,a;

~ ~~%~

;-~~-=~-==-~~-=-~-=-~-===-=-~
~ ::~::::~::::::::~10~9:·~1f-~CI :

HEAR NEWS FIRST

6. oo-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6 15-Far m Report 13.
6·20--The Story 13.
6:3o-colu mbus Today 4; News6 ; Sunr ise Sem Hier 8;
Farmtl me 10.

~======~()l]~~~~~:A[i.~~~~~~--------~:;~~----~~55~~~~};~~~~41
WhrnMical
.
n~:;o = LADGHING~

~02 3

'l 18 11 tp

WE DN ESDAY, MARCH 3, "76

r-t-+-+-t-1WIN AT BRIDGE
Rubber bridge much safer

IF I NTERE STED tn b ull d1ng . : ·
a
n ew
hom e .
con t a c t · •}
ROUSH CO N STRU C TIO N , I 1.
fr ee es t 1ma t es Greg Ro usn. ,' : ,
Y92 75 83
2 18 12tc ~ •'

OPENEO I I I H un t ' s P e t Shop
2 1 ~ m tt es n orth ea st o f
Ches t er . Oh 10 on Rt 248 We
sp ecialize 1n troptea l ft sh
an d supp!les Sp ec rals a ll
thIs w eek!
2 25 61p

Chronicles 20,33.
9:JO-One Day at a Time 8,10.
10.DO-City of Angels 3,4, 15, Marcus Welby, M.D. 6,13;
Switch 8,10; News 20; Woman Alive 33.
10 3()-Woman Alive 20; Woman 33.
I 1:DO-News 3,o,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ·ABC News 33.
11 ·30- Massachusetts
Primary
Specl•l :
13, 15.3,4.6,8, 10; Janak I 33.
11 :H - Mysfery of the Week 6.13.
12 .DO-Johnny Carson M , 15; Movie "'Let's Switch " 1:
Movie "A Ticket to Tomahawk" 10.
1: 15-News 13.
1:JG- Tomorrow 3,,.

ACROSS
5 Wlth
I No-fat eater
irritation
· - 6 All·
6 Kind of
embracmg
strength
Game 20; C a rrascolendas 33.
II Make even
7 WidesJread
7:DO-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
12 Spring8 Ught-switch
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; Wild Kingdom
13; Family Affair IS; Book Beat 20; Know Your
field, e.g.
position
School 33
13 Card mamp. 9 Wholly
7:30-Lastofthe
Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Wild Wild
ulator's
ID Scottish
of
Animals
6: Match Game PM 8; Evening
World
ruse ( 2 wds ) river
Edition with Martin Agronsky 20; The Judge 10; To
15 Electric 14 Handloomed
Yesterday's Aruiwer
Tell the Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Book 11. .1 33.
16 Carry
garments
B.DO-LIItle House on the Prairie 3.4.15; Bionic Woman
17 Theatrical
17 Mother
23 Sea eagle
34 Harrow's
6,13;; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10; The Way It Was
a rt
I Fr. )
24 Speechless
20; Images of Aging 33.
cricket
Thomas Rememembers 20.
8:3(}-Lowell
18 Guevara
18 Uncas'
28 " Les Miserrival
9:DO-Chico &amp; The Man 3,4,15; Barella 6,13; Cannon
21 ,Enghsh
beloved
ables'"
35 Nourished
8, 10; Great Performances 33; Images of Aging 20.
19 Stag
character
essayist
36
Household
9·30-Dumpllngs
3,4,15.
24 Bewail
20 Ares '
30 Motorist 's
IO
:DO-Petrocelll
3,4, 15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, lJ; Bluue
god
25 Turmoil
mother
stopover
Knight 8, 10; ; News 20.
37 Super
1hY.ph. wd 1 21 "Major
31 Tocsin
10:05-Garc:fen Party 33 ..
Barbara"
32 Conduce
27 Laceor alter
10:30-Aimannac 20: In Search of a Maestro 33.
owning
playwright
33 Anatomical
38 Gypsy
11 :00--News 3,A,6,8,10, 13, 15; ABC New$ 33.
22 Strain
network
queen
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie "The Sex Symbol"
husband
6, 13; Movie " Massacre at Fort Holma n" 8; Movie
28 lnsh ste w r.--n---rr-'1%"'"""1:'IZ'"""'Tr-'IJ"""V'"""'r-1
" Let ' s Dance" 10; Janakl 33.
mgredient
1:DO-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
29 Microscopic 1;;---t-+-11--t30 Rwriinate
31 Tarsus or
remur, e .g.
32 Three, m
Salerno
35 London's
one and a fair match-point
journalism
NORTH (D)
2 score stnce lots of olber
center
674
players would be going down,
12 wds. )
•AKQ 7 5 2
A rubber-bridle player
tAB 3
39 Bird of prey hr-+-1--t-would study the dummy for a
674
40 His horse
while. If an optimist be mlcht
WEST
EAST
is Scout
also duck that first diamond,
6 J 863
6 Q 10
but if he were a realist be
.10
.J984
&gt;U:M'I&lt;
'o-A!I/42 German ctty
would say that a game In llle
tQ4
t K 972
hand is a nice thine to have.
DOWN
Q 9 ~5
"'K 10832
Then he would rise with dum·
SOUTH
my's ace of diamonds, lead a
6AK952
'-'" r&lt;....- Z
3 Get out ol
low heart and wind up wltb
• 63
two spades. five hearts, two
bed
tJ10 6 S
mmor-suit
aces and game and
4 Soldier or
6A J
1 rubber.
Both vulnerable
carpenter

I• 4 '

IF YOU nee d your g ra vel
h au l ed , call {614 1 Y85 &lt;1 119
any 11me
7 18 - l ~t p

G fi UII U'fW '11 looking fur •ome " a('tion " might
&lt;nd up - IN TRACTION

6Lu ..~

"\

~:

SEW I N G MACt-I I N E Re p ai rs . ·~
serv 1ce, all makes 99'1 278A
Th e Fab r ic Shop , Pom er oy
AUihDr 1Z ed Smger Sat es and
Scrv1ce
We
sharp en
·•
Scissor s
J.29 lf c • 1

.,. 2 22 521p

I

Jumbl••· BASIN CROAK GUILTY NAUGHT
Anuor r : /lou:

o

DAY OR NIGHT
_____________
__ _

3

kA'-4E

TilE AODRE5S AND l POII'\T£0

OUT THE. KID

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

ONt:: A U&lt;t:. 6 rms and b ath ,
R t 3. Pomeroy, Rose Hil l
D1 c k. Oav 1s p r ope rt y, full
ba s e m ent ,
a l uminum
sid 1 n~,. ppne lecL $10 .000 Ca l l
Oak nil ! 68 5 657t. even 1ngs ,
Ja c kson ' 286 3004 days
2 5 JO! p

ORPHAN ANNIE-BRING

'"

Syracus e. Ohto
Ph 992 ·3991
4 10 1 m o

IN STA L LED
B I LL
PUL LIN S, PHONE 992 2478 .

WHAT i HE VAMP'IRE'5
50N WA5 O N T HE
SA"-1:. TEA/,1\ .

i~1lTUTiOIJ'? 1

LITTLE

Ks

3 BR HOME , IUS! 1tn 1Shed
r e m o del1ng
Sa lem
St ,
Rutland
Pho n e 742 -2306
after 4 p m o r see Mrto B ,'
Hut ch mson
10 9 lfc

t

U 'M1..E ORPHAN ANNIE

LARRY LAVENDER

SMALL , SEPTI C TANKS

h

• d

READY MIX CO N ~ ~crL
d e l 1ver ed r 1g ht to your WILL do Odd lOb s, roof tn ~ ,
pamltng , haultng 1ree worK
pro 1ec t F a st and easy , F r ee
and m ow 1ng CAll 99'1 7409
estima tes Ph on e t:;n 3284 ,
3 ~ 26tc
Goeg lcin Ready M 1x ' Co ,
FOR SA LE near Lan gsville , 5
Midd lepor t. Oh iO
room house , root ce ll ar w ith
......,._ 6 JO lfc E X CAVATING do h . . lotfl.l ~ •
room ove r , 2 bay d etach ed
and back.h oe work , septic
1
ge r ag e, l 11 ac r es , no ba th
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
tanks
1nst -a tl ed
dum p
hot and cold wa t er in k.tl
-· Sw ee per s. t oas t ers trons ,
tru c k s and lo boys lor hlfe
che n , L P g as h eat. h ea te r s
Wil l hau l f ill d irt . top so l i,
a ll sma ll app l iances Lawn
w1f h house
Ca ll 7d2 ~8 19
m o w er . n ex t to Stat e H1 Qh '
l lme'ilton Et and g rav e! Call
after5pm
way Garage on Route 7
Bob or Reger J eff ers , day
3 2 6tp
Phone •es 3825
pllOne 992 708&lt;;1 , n1gh t phone
4 1~ t f c
992 3o525 q r 99 7 5232
H OME for s at e by p r 1val e
2 11 t f c
ow n er
31 ,
ac re s.
.t
S E Pl l c- r · ;;.-N
c l eaned
be dr ooms . ba rn on black top
Pl u mb l_ng ,
Modern Santtat 1on 992 -3954 REMODELIN G ,
road . gas and water Ph one
h c a110 9 and al l t y p es rJf
o r 997 7349
9dq 2023
9 18 tt c
g e n e ral
r e pa i r
Wo rk
3 1 26t p
g u ar an t ee d
20 ~ear s ex
p er 1en c e
Ph on e 992 2409.
100 x 200 LOT 10 Ftve Pot.nl s RED ob G. !t mes ton e, g rav el
5 1 tt c
and flit dlf t d e l 1ver ed .
area Ph one 992 J576
Phone Bill P Ull inS , 997 ·7478
3 1 6tc
dOler ,
2 l9 26tc EXC A V A TIN G ,
backho e
a nd
dtl c her
HOME l o r sale, spa cious
Charl es R H a t11e td Back
l1vlng room . dm1ng room , 2 A SP H A L TING- dr-;veway s and
Hoe Serv ice . Rutland , Oh io
park 1n g tot s, septtc t ank s
be dr ooms , l arg e kllchen
Phon e 7·12 '1 00 8.
1n sta ll ed c o ncre tm g and
family rooms , new , bath ,
11 30 78tc
backhoe work . Fowler' s
Phone 992 739&lt;1
ConslfUCIIOn Phon e 99 2
3 2 6t c
0 &amp; 0 TR E E Tfl m mlng 20
748 1 or 742259 3
years e &gt;o:p l!r1 en ce l n surtd,
2 24 6tc
tree cst 1mat cs Ca ll 992 23U
6 ROOM house, 11,. bat h ,
or (.6 14) 698 7257 A lbany
P h on e 992 3129 or 9925 434 EXCAVA T ING , BACKHOES
1 15 1t c
7 2Y 31c
AND D OZER L ARGE A N D

_______

SOOGE

APPI..16D

"

FREE ESTIMATES

SLOAN'S
CARPOING

\974 24 F T
MEL MAR
M o tor
Hom e ,
one
of
the
be st ,
ex cel
le nt co n dtt1on , cost over
S2 0,000 n ew , comp letel y sel f
co n ta med , 5000 watt ge n 3
a1r condilloners . f urnace ,
bath hot water heat er , gas
and e lec re f , am -fm radi O
ste r eo th roug h out , ro l l out
aw n 1ng , auto- tr ansmission ,
ps , and pb , m uch more
PhOn e 949 277 0
2-26 7t c

S.DO-Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3(}-Adam -12 4,13; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies '8;
E lee Co. 20,33.
·
6:DO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15 ; ABC News6; Zoom 20; lTV
Utilization 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8.10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33.
,
7 DO-Truth or Cons. 3; To tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Country Place a; News 10; Name That
Tune 13; Fami ly Affair 15; Antiques 20; Wild Wild
World of Anima ls 33
7,: 3(}-Hoilywood Squares 3,4; . Let"s Deal With It 6;
$25,000 Pyramid 8; Ev~n l ng Edition with Martin
Agronsky 20 ; Price is Right 10; To te ll the truth 13;
High School TV Honor Society 15; Family Theatre
33.
8:DO-Movln' On 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Good Times
8, 10, International Animati on Festival 20. Behi nd
the Li nes 33
8·30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Mash 8,10; Consumer
Surviva l 20.33.
9.DO-Police Woman 3,4, 15,. Rookies 6, 13; Adams

,-

...'

BISSEU. BUILDERS

For Sale

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

TWO ca l ves , m 1xed H er ef ord
c o w w 1t h calf Ph on e 843

..

' • f '

~

' ",,'

--- .....,._

S25 P ER H U N DRED Sl u ff in g
enve l opes
Sen d
se lf
addresse d , s t a m p ed e n
veto p e, T K . Enter p rise ,
Box 26, Sta n be r ry , M o
64489
2 29 7tp

TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 1916

- -':

From a sh elf t o a hou se, a II
t yp es of b ui l di n g a nd
r e m o d e lin g
f ro m
the
found a t ion up . Add it t on s,
cnp et i n g, pai nttng, sl d1ng ,
r oo fing , pa n eling-, paper
h a ng i ng etc . , _

Pom eroY

P h 991 217 4

'

ON MATTRESSES.''

' '

WANT TO

CONSTRUCTION
From 1he l argest Truck or
Bulldozer" Rad 1ator l o the
llest Hea te r Core

WALLS SOUNDF'I'lOOFED,
THE TARGETS MOUNTED

"·

HOME MAINTENANCE
Sidi n g - Vtny l
&amp;
A l um 1num . W indow Gl ass
!. Glaz ing , On the Job or Jn
Shop
P ick up and del i very
serv 1ce
Call Coll ec1 388 8239
Specialire
'"
bUild -up
roohnljl &amp; hot roo fs Fr~e
Estimates . 10 years ex·
pertence.
Harve Ferr ell
B•dwell, Oh io
2 6 1 mo

D&amp;D

MIXE D hay , 70c ba l e Phon e
( 6141 378631 1 a ft er 6 p m
2 29 61 c

ZENIT H color TV , 23 inch
sc re e n E xce l len-t co nd tl tOn
Phone 99 2 7244
2 29 31c

AP PO I NTMENT
Case N o. 21660
Est a te of LUC I NDA DANES , REDUCE safe and fa st wi th
o ecease d.
GoBese T ab l e ls &amp; E Vap
" w a ter
p1 II S, "
N e lson
N ot tee 1S he reby glyen th at
D r ugs
Ro se S Reyno l ds , of 266 M 111
3 l li p
Str eet , · Mfddt epo r t , Oh to , has
been
duly
app otn fe d
Exe c u tri x of th e Es t a t e of !974
K X 250
Kawasaki
L ucind a Danes , deceased , l ate
Motorc ross , n ew leat h ers
of Meigs Co un h
Oh io
1nc luded wtth boots 3 hou rs
Creditors are r equ1r e d lo
r 1d1 n g ltme, never bee n
file the1r c la tm s wtl h sa id
race d P h 992 7693
fiduciar y Wtl h 1n fou r months
2 29 3 fp
Dated lh tS
20 th day o f
February 1976 .
GOOD hay, never wet P h one
949 2523
.
Mann in q 0 Webste r
2 2S 6t c
Judge
Co ur i of Common Pl eas .
Probate Oi VtSIOO fl REWOOD . phon e 949 ~069
2 18 12tc
' ' ? 1 DJ 7 9 J tc

EX

MA NU RE loader. $175 P h on e
(614) 378 6311 a ft er 6 p m
2 29 ·61 c

-----

17 x · 60 K IR KWOO D Mobil e 11174 HO N DA XR75 , go o d
Ho me , lola ! e lec ex con
co n dt l1on
P hon e ~47 ~5 41
d i l lon Phon e ~47 2205 or 247
~1-29 J t c
_ ..._._
273 1
2 29 3tc BOLE N' S ga rd en trac tor w tl h
cu lt 1v a tor A l so , C B ra d 10
Phone 992 7826
2 29 6tc

Rut l a nd 742 - ~331
Roger Wa m sley
l -1-1mo .

Television log for easy viewing

l.OWfR I'YAS USED
tTn~c• U FOR TARCET

". '

v

'

FERRELL' S GLASS &amp;

Tupp ers Pla1ns Cheste r Water 0 1str~c t now selling
b u lk waler to ta nks on
trucks ·at our new Off tcel
L oca ted on St R t 7
1 Mil e Nort h of
Eastern Htg h Sch ool
Ser\le Yours elf D is p en ser .
Tak in g quar te r s on l y, one
at a time, for ~5 0 gallons of
water
Open all th e T ime
f or your con\le n 1ence 1
3· 1-1mo

~

POMEROY, OHIO

1969 44 2 OLD SMOBI L E With
350 engme, $ 1 700 Phone
992 3759
3 2 6t p

AVAILABLE

buned
treasure .
Find
Coi ns, rings . silver, gol d .
Coin &amp; Metal
De t ectors
For Ren t

11r es, fram e reinforced , V 8 en g me , heater , r eady to
w ork

T A P PA N s t a1ntess stee l drop
1n elec r an ge, S75 Warm
Morntng 65.000 btu g a s
heater , 2 yrs ol d , S200 Gas
room
h ea l e r
wit h
' VI NDALE 12 x 68, 3 bedr m
mec h a n 1ca t l h e rm
!.2 5
bath 8. 1 -., 14 tt ex pan do , 25 Used 1 J g lass ex t eri or door ,
f! awn 1ng and porc h , f u l ly
S15 Phon e 992 7354 a ft er 6
pm
c arpeted
Phone 742 2882
2 29 3t c
2 29 Btc

NOTICE OF

1269S

'

Ptua91ass - 'Table Tops
M irr ors . 5torm &amp; Scre ens.

BULK WATER

BUY , SELL or T R ADE

...

.......,
,,,

Business Services
COINS

H duty ti r es. spring s, booster-brak es, st ep b umper , V
8 e ngine, std . trans , t1nted gla ss . Clean int

WANTED

446-5189

j

~~·

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

QUALITY

7 29 3tc

CALL

v~e ~

s
.
l Cl
d
e entzne
asSlJ ze S

Middleoort-Pomerov.O .. Tuesday March2 1976

DICK TkACY .

Auto Sales

® 2~~NS

Ph on e

MEDICAL
SECRETARY

""'h

Tr

esu ts

Rooms,

EXPERIENCED

l

Auto Sales

Help Wanted
HELP 10 fence a farm
949 2057

R

9 - ~llaUySentinPI

.

Sat.-&amp;:30tii5 : 00
TIL 12 NOON

'
'•:'

'

,1·

''
'.

II .,

I, .

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

1:.•'.' '

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

w. v•. '..
.. .._.r;

Malon.
Herm1n Grate
~~_.~ ~~ ~

..

~~_.~

..

'.

''•'
''.

~E

SAID TO TELL l{()U
THAT IF l(()IJR FOOT IS
TO HEAL f'ROI'ERLI{, l(OO'RE
60iN6 TO HAVE TO 6ET UP
AND MCNE AROUND

THAT's WH'1' HE PUT A
''WALKING Cf&gt;.ST" ON 1{00

WHAT Does HE KNOW?

�Locks delay
(Continued from page I)
refineries . In 1914, the locks
million tons of

~~~\~~.3.4

Purple bacteria can t~
1•
h
•
d
sun Ig t mto energy, 1.00

The supply of gasoline and
fuel oil throughout the Upper
Ohio Basin is \ilso affected.
The Gallipolis locks are now
transiting into the · region
some 750 million gallons of
gasoline yearly , equivalent to
aver 90 percent of the total
gasoline consumption of the
State of West Virginia . Much
of the oil refini ng and
distribution industry of the
central and tower Ohio Valley
relies on these locks for access to Upper Basin markets .
1975,
In
December,
Governor James A. Rhodes of
Ohio wrote Secretary of the
Army Martin R. Hollman
urging prompt and favorable
action on th e Ga!Hpotis
replacement. The Governor
drew attention to Ohio's
program for river and lake
por t development and to the
urgency of provision of
enlarged job opp9rtunity,
particularly in the easlern
Ohio Appalachian area. He
reported further with respec t
to the Gallipolis locks :
"Approach conditions are
hazardous; delays of tows
awaiting access to Jocks are
long and in ~reasingiy costly ;
and II is now evident that by
the time constrUction of the
replacement locks can be
completed, traffic demand
will far e.ceed practical
capacity,
with
s~ve~e
congestion resulting ID
sizeable increases In trans·
portation costs of coal,
petroleum products , in·
dustrial chemicals, iron and
steel1 and other vital com·
modities."
Mack, speaking tor The
Ohio Valley Improvement
· Association, stated that plans
are now being made for early
Congressional action within
the constraints of orderly and
legal procedure' to permit
preconstruction planning
with a view to prompt
. initiation of constru ctio n
upon
Congressional

authorization. He noted,
however, that the •affected
government agencies and
many members of Congress
have not been made aware of
· the critical urgency of the
project.
Monday' s Results
{ No games schedu led )
Tuesday ' s Games
New England a! San Diego
Indianapolis at Pl1oenix
Edmonton at Calgary
Queb.::~ . a~ Tor_
o nlo

MEIGS tHEATRE
Tonite th..-u Thurs .

Mar. 2-4
NOT OPEN

Fr . ~ Sai .- Sun .

Mar . S-7
French Connection II
(Technicolor)
Show starts 7:00p.m .

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

•

10·- The DailvSentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, March 2, 1976

!

HI lOA KELLY REED
M rs. Hilda Kelly Reed.

~

SAN FRANCIS&lt;Xl (UP! ) Scientists have discovered in
the Dead Sea a purple
bacteria
that convert s
sunlight into energy and food,
it was reported today.
Until now, the only system
in nature known to convert
s unli ght has been the
photosy nthes is of green
chlorophy ll by
plants,
regarded as the ultimate
energy source for all plant
and animal life.
A team of scientists at the
University of Cali fornia
Medical Center a nd the
National Aeronautics and
Space Administration's Ames
Laboratory announced the
discover y at a
news
conference . They sa id it
provides an important new
understanding of plant an
animal cell ftm ction s and
ma y
have
practical
applications in medicine,
agriculture , the desalination
of sea water and generation

Coal strike
(Continued from page I)
of the black lung program by
their action .
The "Ford administration
and the National Coal
Association oppose the bill .
Rep . John Erlenborn, R·
Dl. , called the bill a "rip-off"
of conswners, saying it would
increase utility costs and give
unprecedented retirement in·
come to coal miners.
Black lung, the common
name for coal miners '
pneumoconiosis,
is
a
respiratory disease induced
by an accumulation of coal
dust in the lung and
characterized by breathing
difficulties.
In 1969' when
the Federal
.
Coal Mine Health and Safety
Act was passed, provisions
were included to compensate
miners proven to be disatiled
by black lung and widows of
miners . killed by the
disease.
.
Congress
~ .xpanded
benefits in 1972 to include a
presumption that a min~r had
black lung if he had a severe
respiratory disease a.n d
worked 15 or more years in a
deep mine prior to July' 1971,
the date new federal coal dust
standards went into effect.
This year the UMWA
sought to make the payments
automatic for all miners with
15 years experience in a mine
by 1971, but the House
Education
and
Labor
Committee set the automatic
provision at 30 years, with 25
years for hard coal miners.
The · bill would ·create an
industry-financed trust fund
to pay benefits for miners
who filed claims after 1973.
·The Congressional Budget
Office estimated cost to the
government of $150.8 million
in fiscal 1977, dropping
sharply to $21.4 million the
following year and down to $6
million by 1981.

of solar power.
The discovery of the microscopic photosynthesis e qui~
ment in na lure was made by
Dr. Walther Stoeckenius of
the University of California
Medical Center. He found the
purple pigment in a hacteria
from the Dead Sea and salt
Oats
around
the
Mediterranean .
With all green plants at
work absorbing the sun's
rays, photosynthesis is
viewed as the ultimate source
of energy and food for ali life
on earth. It is also the most
efficient way known for using
the sun's energy directly .
"The new photosynthetic
process is ~sed on a purple
pigment instead of a green
one ,'' the announcemeptsaid .
The purple pigment is a
protein molecule called
" bacteriorhodopsin.'' It was
found in a bacteria called
haloba cterium halobium,
wWch lives in water nearly
saturated with salt.
These bacteria have been
known for 100 years and are
the reason why red herring
are red, the scientists said.
They also account for the red
eyes in salted fish.
What the scientists discovered was that a single protein
molecule in the bacteria
functions as a miniature
lightpowered electrical
generator. Dr . Stoeckenms
and his team identified the
purple pigment chemically
and found that when
illuminated "it ejected
protons to the surrounding
liauid
medium."
An

experiment was worked in
which the pigment was used
to pump hydrogen ions across
a membrane, thus converting
"solar energy into electrical
energy."
The newly discovered
purple
pigment
also
" appears to increase the
evaporation rate of salts and
may
contribute
to

desalination of sea water,"
the scientists said.
It
also
resembles
rhodopsin, a litle-understood
pigment of the eye and " may
help explain the process of
vision and its evolution along
the life chain," the scientists
said.

Meigs
Property

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Carrie
Neutzling ,
Pomeroyi
Geraldine Spender, Racine;
Okey Kiser, Sr., Racine;
Doris Thomas , Minersville ;
Margaret Gans, Pomeroyi
Evelyn Moore, Syracuse;
Orpha Bennett, Reedsville;
Anthony Miller, Rutland;
Phillip Lacomb, Reedsville;
David Carnahan, Long
Bottom; Ronald McCarty,
Cheshire.
.
DISCHARGED - Cheryl .
Haning, Harold Jeffers, Elsie
Decker , Ellis Johnston, Gaye
Fields, Charles Lewis,
O.bora Ashcraft, Kathryn
Swain , Charles Rathburn,
. Gregory McKinney, Anthony
Rowe, Regina Adkins.

Bridgeport , W. Va . , wh o
formerly resided at th e home
of Mrs , Electa Souders, 395

Fitth Ave.. Middleport, died
Sunday in a Morgantown, W.
Va ., hospi t al following a br.lef
illness.
Born in Wes ternport, Md.,
March 21, 1911. Mrs. Reed
was a daughter of the late
ONen E. and Sarah Cathe rine
Emswiller Kelly .
She is survived by her
husban d. W. Delbert Reed ; a
son. Wi ll iam 0 . Reed, Jr.,
Clarksbu rg , W. Va. ; two
daugh ters , Miss Diann Reed
of Tampa , Fla ., and Mrs.
Charles J. (Judy) .Wat son of
lost Creek , W. Va ., a brother
and two grandchildren .
Mrs. Reed was a member
of the Bridgeport , W. Va ,
United Method ist Church .
She was marr ied at t he home
of Mrs . Souder s on Mar c:h 26,
1933 . Funeral servi ces wilt be
held at 11 a .m. Wednesday at
the Dav is Funeral Home in
Clarksburg . Burial will be in
,. the Br idgeport Cemetery.

Transfers
Clyde E . White , Mar y L .
Wh i t e to Clyde E . Whit e ,

Mary L . While. Ftar ce ls .
Bedford .
Ea e rty Dowell , Mildr e d
Dowell to Waller B . Jewell,
Jettie B . J e well, Parc el s.
Sa lem .
Ralph T . Durst , St e lla M
Dur st to Virgil Walker ,
Bonnie S. Wa lker. 112 Acre .
L etarl. Darrell R . Nelson ,
L inda Nelson to M ic hae l L .
Wright. S h&lt;~ron Wri g h t, 1
Acre , Rutland .
Jean
A lkire ,
Charles
A lk i re , Ja.me s Car nahan ,
Nancy Carnahan to James
Carnahan, Nancy Carnahan,
Parcels , Sutton .
James Carnahan, Nancy

Carnahan , Jean
Alkire .
Charles Al k ir e to Je an Alkire ,
Charles Al k ire , Parc els ,
Sulton .
Lena A . Welch to Ronald J .
Hann lng ,sandra S. Hanning , .
Parcels , Columbia , Scipio

Hospital News

Homer Hysell.

Hallabctle

HYsell to Robert Homer
Hysell , Anna M . Hys ell ,
Parcels , Pomeroy .
Cl ar enc e E . DeWees, ,Fay
C. DeWees to Henr y E . Durst ,
Gra ce K . Our ~ t , LOI , M id ·
dleport .

HENRY AND KIRK
PALM SPRINGS, Calif.
(UP! ) - Secretary of State
Henry Kissipger and his wife
Nancy stayed over an extra
day at the desert home of
''their host, actor Kirk
Douglas, but got •no extra
sunsh[ne. Cold rain fell
throughout the day Monday
on the usually warm and
sunny desert resort .

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Arnold
llibbinbotham ,
Southside;
Alford Rusche!, Pomeroy ;
David
Holley,
Vinton ;
Michael Marshall, Buffalo;
Lobi Baker, Point Pleasant;
Herbert Nelson, Glenwood;
Mary Beagle, New Haven;
Gregory Young, Red House ,
and Rose Hayman ' Leon .

Independent tourney
RACINE - The .Southern and the player scoring the
Athletic
Boosters
are most points in the toursponsoring an Independent nament.
Entry fee is $35. A drawing
Basketball Tournament at
will
be held at Southern High
Southern High School on
School
on March 8 at I p.m. If
March 15, 16, 17, 18, t!J, 20 and
you
ca
nnot
attend, send your
21. Rosters are to be filled
address
so
that
a copy of the
with 10 players with no
pairings
can
be
mailed.
college varsity experience,
To
.enter,
send
your name,
except players over age 30.
and
entry
fee
to
Carl
Wolfe at
. Trophies will be awarded to
Southern
High
School
or call
the champion, runner-up, and
at
949-271111
days
or
949·
him
third place winners , with
trophies
to 2866 evenings .
indi vidua l
members of the cham- · If there are any conflicts
pionship team. They will also with other tournaments a
select an all-tournament convenient playing time may•
team , most valuable player, be arranged. ·

, , .ere are auto loans at low rates and
at high rates. We offer one of the
most reasonable loan plans in town.
Investigate It today!

ANOTHER

••**.***~************;f~
.._
"The Priendly
t~ .,
:
Bank Since 1906"
'\ '?
t***********************~

Wa,.-Up Teller Window and Auto Teller Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7." P.M.
.PJT1rseUIIIGtt,

GOOD BUY ·
'
FROM BAKER'S
BUDGET SHOP
9x12 LINOLEUM

.,••

ROOM SIZE RUGS
ONLY
'
-·

BAKER FURNITURE

Corporation

SITS INSURED TO '40,000

""--~;......;..----

M onday at the
Holzer
Medical Center. A re 11red
coal miner and a member of
the United M ine Workers of
America, he was the· son of
the late Robert and Josephine
Adkins Fraley . He belonged

to the Church of God of
Prophecy.
Surviving are hi s wtfe ,
Luella Cain Fraley ; four
sons, Cl ifton and Clarence of
Carpenter ;
James
of
Prairieville, La ., and Dennis
Jr .. of Morgan City , La .; two
daughters, Lorra ine Hinkle ,
Grafton , W. Va . and Dori s J .
Baker , London , Ohio; 34
grandchildren, 36 great .
grandchildren , and a sister,
Essie Marcum. of Kentucky.
Funeral servi ces will be

held at 2 p.m . Wednesday at
th e Bigony.Jordan Funeral
Home In Albany with the Rev .
Alfred Havens officiating .
Burial will be in Temple
Cemetery . Friends may call
at the funeral home after 2

p.m . today . The family will
receive friends at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 6. to 9
today. Burial will be in

Hill

Cemetery . Fr iends may call
at t he funeral home at
anytime .

MRS. ELLA D.· NEWlON
CHESTER ~ Mrs . El la D.
Newlon. 83, of . Chester, for ·
merty of Point Pleasant, died
th is morning at Veteran s
Memorial HospitaL
Mrs . Newlon was born Dec: .
18, 1892 at Heater. W. Va . The
daug~ter of the late John
Homer and Frona Heater
Long . She was a member of
the He ights United Methodist
Church of Point Plea sant.
She is survived by her
husband G. R. Newlon , Sr .;
one daughter , Mrs . Luella
Fick Chester ; one son·, G .
Rus~ell Newlon, Jr ., Point
Pleasant, two grandchildren,
Mrs . Connie J . Lanca5fer ,
San Jose, Calif. , and Miss
Karen R. Fiek , Chester, and a
great .grandchild,
Renee
Lancas ter, San Jose , Calif .
Funeral services will be
held "Thursday at 11 a .m . at
the Crow · Hvsse ll Funera l
Home with the Rev . Roy
McCoy officia ting . Burial will
be in Sun c:rest Cemetery .
Friends rnay ca ll at the
funeral home Wedn esday
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 .

CABLE STRUCK
RACINE - State Highway
Patrol officers said today a
low hanging cable over
Bowman's Run Rd. one tenth
of a mile from SR 124 caused
moderate damage to a
vehicle driven by Don K.
Grueser, 39, Rt. 1; Minersville · at 12:40 p.m . Monday.
The patrol said the cable was
owned by Charles McGraw,
Rt. I, Racine. There were no
injuries, or charge.

prec:;e ded In death by a
grandson. two half brothers .

and three half-sisters. He was

a member of the Bradford
Ehur ch of .Christ.
Mr. Lambert is surv ived by

his wife, Ruth Py les Lam bert ; thre-e daughter s, Mrs .
Howard ( Mary Francis)
Stewart,
Galion ;
Mr~ .

Virginia D. Sayre, Rt. 1,
Middleport. and Mrs. Ralph
(Jessie M .) Rose, Cresllne ,
Ohio ; two sons, James E. and

William R, Lambert , both of
Gallon ; one step-daughter ,

Mrs. Robert ( Joann) Conkle,
Cheshire ; one sister, Mrs.
Homer (Ed ith) Forrest , Rt. 1,

M i ddelport, a half -sister ,
Bessie of Columbus ; 19
grandchildren , three step- ·
grandchildren and several
grea t .grand~hi ldren .
Funeral servlce·s will be
held Wednesday at 10 a .m . at
the Rawlings Coats Funeral
Home with Jack Perry offic iating. Buria l will be in
Cheshire Grave l Hi II Cemtery. Friends may calt at the
funeral home at anytime.

LIZZIE MAY OAVIDS(lN
Mrs . Uzzle May Davidson,
44 , Mi ll St .• 'M iddleport, died
Monday morning at Holzer
Medical center following a
lingerinft illness.
Mrs. Davic!son was born
March 6, 1931 at Pomeroy .
She was preceded in death by
her father, William Kidder .
She is survived by her
husband, Ben Davidson i her
mother, Mrs . Helen Kidder.
Parkersburg ; a daughter ,
M iss Dianne Davidson ; three
sons, Carl R., William B.,
John R., Ben F . . Jr ., and
Mic~ael

Middleport, Ohio

probe Culpeper
b omb sh e Iter
0$

WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen. William Prox,mire, 0Wis., said today be and Rep .
Wright Patman, 0-Tex., will
conduct a full investigation of
th e
Federal
Reserve
System ' s
emergency
preparedness project
Proxmire called "a supermodern bomb shelter" inside
a mountain in Culpeper, Va .
"The Culpeper facility is, in
effect, a huge subterranean
mattress stuffed with about
$4 billion in newly printed
bills of all denominations .
. Under
this
doomsday
scenario; we would have $4
billion in cash and no people
except a
few
lonely
radioactive government officials," Proxmire said.
Patman and Proxmire, top
ranking members of the Joint
Defense
Production
Committee , said they will
schedule hearings on the $7
million Federal Reserve
project.
''The amount of money
involved iQ this disturbs me
greatly," Proxmire said . He
charged the Federal Reserve

R.. al l of Middleport ;

has made "a $7 mlllion
molehill out of a Virginia
mountain.' '
Proxmlre
said
the
operation involves a massive .
bomb shelter and money
storage facility inside Pony
Mountain in Culpeper, about
80 miles southwest of
Washington . He said the
facility' . known a~. the
"Culpeper
Switch
Is
designed to " house up to 400
people, Including in all
probability, the members and
employes of the Federal
Reserve Board."
Initial construction costs
were at least $7 mlllion,
Proxmire said, but operating
expenses run into the
millions . For 1974,. the most
recent year for which figures
were available, operatmg
expenses totaled $1.8 mlllion
including at least $650,000 for
an
elaborate
telecommunications system.
This system is intended to
form the basis of a financial
communications system in
the event of a nuclear attack
he said.

Bernice Bede Osol

MORE PIC11JRE.'! ON PAGE Z
worker , allowed a woma n held in the same cell with his wife to
POINT PLEASANT - An apparently distraught young leave .
. d
fann worker set off a suitcase full of dynamite in a jail cell
The outer jail office was crowded with officers who ha
Tuesday night, killing himself, his wife, the county sheriff and been called to the scene after Sisk forced his way Inside at
one of his deputies .
gunpoint. A state police detachment is located in an adjacent
Police said the man's wife was being held for the murcter building .
.
of the couple's baby daughter .
Fitzwater said Sisk arrived at the jail about 10:50 v.m.
Killed in the explosion were Mason County Sheriff Elvin with a sawed-off shotgun and a suitcase , demandmg to be
"Pete" Wedge, 48, and deputy Sheriff Kenneth Dale Love, 38. placed in the cell with his wife.
The farm worker Bruce Sisk, 19, an&lt;l Ws wife Harriet, 18, were
Fitzwater said the explosion occurred about ll : 30 p.m.
~ blown up . Eleven persons were injured and two were
Mrs. Sisk was held for the murder of her 2-month-oid
listed ln critical condition today.
daughter whose body was found last weekend in a freshly dug
Police ~aid Slsk forced Ws way into the jail with a shotgun grave near ber rural home. Police began a search after they
and a suitcase full of what later proved to be dynamite and had been told the baby had been abducted.
demanded to be placed in the cell with Ws wife . Officers
Also killed in the blast was .Mason County Deputy Sheriff
complied.
Kenneth Dale Love. Sheriff Elvin "Pete" Wedge died early
" Sisk may have fired into the dynamite," said State Police today in St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington.
. .
Cpl. J . L. Fitzwater. " That's sometJ¥ng· we don't know yet." · " God it was a mess, said Fitzwater . "The jBii IS a
The man and his wife were in the cell alone and the law shambles: 1 heard the explosion and came running, they were
officers were behind a steel door In an outside office."
..
still carrying the victims out when I arrived." .
The explosion shook buildings in this Ohio River town
"We really don't know what happened after SISk was let m
which was struck by tragedy in 1967 when a b&lt;idge connecting the cell alone with his wife," said the officer. uone of my men, .
West Virginia wilb Gallipolis, Ohio collapsed killing 46 wbo was injured, said they were discussing just what to do
persons. Pt. Pleasant is located about 50 miles east of · about the situation when the blast went off."
Charleston.
"They were able to get another, who w~,s in ~e ceH with
Fourteen prisoners were housed in the jail, but the Mrs . Sisk out, and also removed the ln)Sties, he satd . .
·
majority were on the second and third floor of the facility
Mrs . Sisk, 18, was held for the murder of her two-monthlocated In the Mason County Courthouse. Sisk, a dairv f•rm

VOL. XXVII , NO. 226

News .• in Briefs

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

::Fe·~:::~b;,~n~~~~~~~=f~::::e:ce ~~!=~~~
27

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 1976

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

SERIOUS CONDmON - Bruce WaUace, 28, of 126
First Ave., Gallipolls, was seriously injured in Tuesday
night's explosion at the Mason County Courthouse in Pt.
Pleasant. Wallace was visiting a friend, West Virginia
State Trooper lloyd Akers and apparently had gone to the
jail wben lawmen were alerted. A member of the Gallia·
Meigs Post, Ohio State Patrol, Wallace was off duty at the
time of the blast. He joined the local patrol unit in
November, 1973. Wallace is a nallve of Middleport wbere
be starred in football, basketball and track. He lettered in
foothall at Marshall University. Wallace was Uated in
serious condition in the Intensive care unit at Pleasant
Valley Hospital as of 11:35 a.m. today. Wallace's right leg
was blown off by the blast. He was in tbe emergency room
for surgery more than an hour and one half early this
morning.

·

•

·

goIDg

.

fund
drive
h
h
.

.

~

A house-to-house canvass will be conducted in Middleport
on Sunday, March 14, asking money needed to buy an aerial
ladder fire truck. for use throughout the county.
Heading the house-to-house drive in Middleport on behalf
of the Middleport Fire Department will be Mrs. Grace Pratt
. and Mrs . Ruth Powers.
. Considerations in the purchase of the aerial ladder truck
were explained today in the following statement by Middleport
Fire
ewer Robert c. Fisher :
COLUMBIA, N . C. ~ THE GASOllNE.SOAKEDhodies of .
"
As Middleport Fire Chief, I would like to take this
five persons - a woman and four children - were found
opportiiiUty
to notify every person residing or doing business in
smoldering Tuesday in a shallow, freshly dug grave in a stand
the
area
protected
by the Middleport Fire Department that for
of reseeded pine trees. A county forest ranger sent to the area
the
first
lime
in
history
we are within reach of having an aerial
to fight a brush fire discovered the grave and two of the bodies
ladder
truck.
Such
a
vehicle
wjli help protect your proper~y.
and siimmoned sheriff deputies, wbo uncovered the other
.
"Whether
we
reach
our
goal or not depends upon )low
three.
generous
you
are
in
donating
towards
this aerial ladder truck
The bodies appeared to be of a woman about 50, a girr
fund.
·
·
(Continued on page . 16)

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

.

0 USe· Q U S!e

The bill requires health care plans , such as Blue Cross, to
require participating hospitals to take steps to reduce costs by
promoting sound management practices and eliminating
unnecessary services and facilities. It also gives the state
superintendent of insurance greater powers to regulate
contracts and rates offered by health care piBns.
· ..
Sen. Robert E. O'Shaughnessy, ~oiumbus, Ooor
manager of the bill, said per capita hospital costs grew twice
as fast as take-home between 1967 and 1974. He said Ohioans
pay up to $700 million a year in Blue Cross premiums.

"Even though the truck will be housed in the Pomeroy fire
station, the f\liddieport Fire Department will tra~·ts firemen
to operate the ladder and firemen will work on the adder truck
DATELINE 1776
on fires .and rescue operations side by side wi . Pomeroy
CAMBRIDGE,
Mass.,
firemen just as we , work side by side at the present time
March
3
In
preparation
I
fighting fires in both our villages.
for the occupation of
" I would like to stress that should Middlepilrthave a fire in
Dorchester
Heights ,
the business district. the aerial ladder wiJ.I respond .
American
military
began
automatically and will be available to the people in this area
firing
Into
·
Boston,
for .any other fire or rescue work for which the ladder . is
needed.
· ·
·
knocking down a number of
houses.
General orders
" Members of the area fire departments are dedicated to
alerted
tbe
soldiers in
the prot!'ction of the life and property of the people in their fire
Washington's army that "a
districts and this protection can be greatly improved if you will
conteitr sOon rbiy be
generously give to this project.
brought on."
(Continued on page 16·

"lt .__..,.,..,
~

run
TAURUS (April 20·MOf 20)

•· r;;T

You 'll be more prone to do
things lor others today if you
feel you are doing them voluntar ily . But even it you 're pushed
a little, do th em anyway.

CANCER (Juno 21-.lutr 22)
lnilially you may have some
sell-do ubts , but once you
ttecome enmeshed in a project
you'll lind you can handle it.

•

at

COLUMBUS
COMPREHENSIVE LEGISLATION to
Iring tighter regulation and more strict cost controls to health
insurance plans has cleared hoth chambers of the Ohio

For W~nHday~ March 3, 1878
ARIES (Morch 21 · Aprlt 11)
Those whom you depend upon
may not comE! through today.
Don't b!3 concerned . Things
sho!)ld work out in the long

GEMINI (Mer 21-Juno 20)
Gene rally , you ·re a ver·v
sociable person. Today you
may not be as
"""~ mmodatlng,
but event ua .
·our real ·
character will shu1 .... through .

•

old daughter whose body was found last weekend In a freshly
dug grave near her rural home in the Letart area of Mason
County about 30 miles upriver from here.
Police began a search after they bad been told the baby
had been abducted.
The jail is located In the basement of the. three-Btory
Mason County Courthouse. Police said the biBs! knocked out
windows in the building and tore a huge hole in tbe cell where
the Sisks had been visiting . The blast jarred houses up to two
miles away .
The injured, including six law enforcement officials and
five prisoners, were taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital in this
Ohio River Community ,
.
Usted in critical condition were Deputy Sheriff Ernie
Hesson and Bruce WaliBce, an off-&lt;luty Ohio State Highway
pat.l"oiman.
Wallace, a native of Middleport, Ohio, stationed at the
Gallia-Meiga Post of the Ohio Patrol in nearby Gallipolis, was
reported in critical condition at 10 a .m . In Pleasant Valley
Hospital. Reports indicated he lost one of his l"!ls.
Thirteen volunteers from the Gallipolis Fire Department,
six deputy sheriffs, two units from the Gallia County Volunteer
Emergency Squad and one SEOEMS ambulance rushed to
Point Pleasant Tuesday night following the explosion at the
Mason Counl'; Jail.
Thirteen volunteer fire fighters were on duty for over two
hours there.

IN~~!:~:~~ri;f;1Ladder

Toledo, OWo, and a vice president of Owens llllnois of
Venezuela, was drugged and kidnaped by at least seven
masked gunmen . His captors left his wife, Donnia , a live-in
maid and three teen-aged sons bound and gagged .

Astra.Graph

Four killed, 11 injured in jail blast

·e

step daughters, Mrs. Ronald
(Charolette) Hann i nQ and
Mrs . Kathryn Gardner, both
of Midd l eport. and Mrs .
(Continued from page I)
Thoma s (Helen) Mulford ,
Cheshire ; step son, Danny ,
son the body of the cWid found near the Lindbergh home in
with the Air Force in Rhode
Hopewell , N.J., Wilentz said. "Can you imsgine the
Island ; Allen of Cheshire ,
Arthur of Ironton , and · Undberghs not knowing their own baby, " said Wilentz.
Warren of Sideny, Ky ., and
two grandsons, thr ee sisters,
CARACAS: VENEZUELA - POUCE haye identified two
one brother and severa l
gunmen wanted in bizarre kidnaping of American glass '
n ieces and nephews.
·
company, executive William Niehous, threatened with death
Funeral services wilt be
by untraleftist gtieriliBs . Soucres close to the case said Monday
Wednesday at 2 p.m . at the
Rawlings Coats Funeral
authorities named two of the alxluctors as left-wing militants
Home with the Rev . George
Asdrubal Guzman Cordero and Angel Simon Marquez. ·
Oiler off iciat l.ng . Burial will
In Maracay, 70 miles west of Caracas, police said they
be In Chesh ire Grave l Hill
found
an aband.oned car containing the Clothing worn by
Cernetery . Fri ends may call·
at the funera l home an 1time. Niehaus when he was abducted Friday. Niehous, a native of

I

Reg. ssgss Upright
with Reg.51995
Above·The·Fioor

Cleaning 1bols

lEO (Jutr 23-Aug 22) Look for
the plus side in any dealings
today . If you encounter ·
someone you 've' had a disagreement with , remember;
Making up is a pleasant experience.

'\.
'

VtRGO (Aug 23·8ot&gt;l 22) II
you're dol.ng a favor for
someone today, work with their
resources. It's important to
show them how to depend on
themsetves.

'

\,

LIBRA (Sept 23·0c:l 2.3) Don't

DIVORCE WANTED
A suit for divorce and a
dissolution of marriage have
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court. Asking
divorce was George Mora,
Rt. 3, from Unda Kay Mora ,
Checotaha, Oklahoma, on
charges of gross neglect o.f
duty and e~treme cruelty.
Filing for dissolution were
Donald H. Call, Middleport,
and Nancy Lee Call, Rt. I,
Rutland.
NOW YOU KNOW
The star is the most
common symbol found on
nags of the world, appearing
in one form or another on 41
of them. The second most
popular sym boi ~ lhe
crescent - appears on only
nine.
LOCAL TEMPS
The
temperature
in
downtown Pomeroy at 11
a .m. Tuesday was 72 degrees·
under suriny skies.
·

anticipate the actions of othBfS
negatively. Once you have a
chance to observe what actually transp i res , you·n be
pleasantly surprised .

SCORPIO (Oct 23·Nov 22)
Find time to work on things you
enjoy doing for yoursetf today.
You can do this without neglecting your obligations.

ASK TO WED
A ·marriage license has
. been issued to David Edward
Ross, 19, RD ·Middleport, and
Belinda Sue Hail,. 16,
Pomeroy .

Placing Injured Man On Stretcher

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Doc
21) Grasp the reins it you feel
there's a situation you can handle beHer than others. Your Intuition is correct.

Legion plans birthday
party on March 16th

CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jon 11)
Don't set yqur sights too high
today. You can accompllsh.that
which , Is within reasonable
reach.

AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Fob. 11)
Conditions beyond your control may effect some changes
In your plans today. However,
they may turn out baUer than
the original scheme.
PISCES (Fob 20-Motch 20) .
Encourage "friends who can
help you behind the scenes at
work today. A word from
someone on the Inside can cut
yar s of red tape .

Model1416
Powerized to clean on the floor

or above the floor with fewer
EOOE KLEENEPI
tl••n• lhtl

l1111oqh
tn~n 11ono
the biHbotfd

4-WAY
DIAL·A·NAP«'

to
ct••• Prom low
Pi.ll lo detp 1h1g
H11 111111'111

strokes. Huge disposable dust-

bag ~as 560 cu. ln. usable
capacity. Lifetime lubricated
motor never needs oiling .

tLEANS SHAGS I

~ IJ:AX .

~t&gt;r~
Mon:h 3,
1171

MIDDL£PORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance

82. RO&lt;Jte · J · Albany, died

Gravel

I

Aug . 27, 1905 at Cheshire , a
son of the late Mr. and Mrs .
Issac Lambert. He was also

DENNIS FRAlEY
ALBANY - Denni s Fral ey ,

Cheshire

! Proxmire

Z'fl':.'g"!;?~gHiiT:~!~~
following
Mr . La mbert was born

STAR SIDELINEIJ.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Russian ballet star Valery
Panov will be sidelined for a
minimum of three lo five
weeks because of a probable
torn calf muscle, the San
Francisco
Ballet
said
Monday night. Panov was
ElliS R, LAMBERT
injured Thur$day night whi!e .
Ellis R. Lambert, 70. Rt. 4,
dancing in his new ballet Pomeroy, died Monday afat
Veteran s
"Heart of the Mountains." ternoon

scheduled at Southern
When it comes
to new wheels,
get a loan!

Area Deaths

t

will

You've made some friends who
are more concerned for your
Welfare thfln you are aware of.
This year you may see
evidence of their worth you'll
find hard to believe .

Store, Annex and Warehouse
Open Wednesday and Thursday
9:30to5p.m.

Main

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
•
•

•

Plans were completed for
the annual birthday party to
be held at Drew Webster Post
39, of the American Legion,
on March 16 beginning at 7: 30
p. ·m .. Paul Casci announced
today.
The plans were made at a
meeting of the post Tuesday
night. The Jegionaire of the
year will be announced at the
party.
Guest speaker at the party
will be John Epling of
Gallipolis and Armand
Turley will provide mdsic for
the sing-along.
In other business the
members agreed to ~elect
two boys to attend Boys State
again this year and to hold
memorial
services
at
Memorial Gardens, time to
be set by the Memorial Day
Committee.
John Blaetnnar was introduced as I' new member
and Leonard Jewell, chair-

man of the Cancer Fund for
the Post, announced that $25
was collected from Monday
night's games. Sick cards
were sent · to Mrs. Carrie
Neutzling and Pete Morarity.
Jewell reported on the
bowling team that went to
Columbus the past weekend
to participate in the statewide
American Legion Tour·
nament. Closing prayer was
by Allen Downie.

WANTS REELECTION

-

Larry E. Spencer,

Racine, Republlclll clerk
or courts, Tuesday ftled hi•
petition lo seek nomination
to run lor reeledion to his
county post. Filing for the
Democratic Central
Commiltee Tuesday was
Mrs. Audrey Young,
Pomeroy First Ward.

:,:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:::::::·:::::::::::::·:::':::::,:·:::::':·:·
REAGAN HURTING .
MIAMI (UPI) _ Ronald
Reagan's top aides are
advising him to vi~late the
lith cum mandmcnt h'e
adopted at the start o of his
campaign - 'jthou shall
not speak Ill of another
Republican.''
Since then Reagan has
refused to attack President
Ford lest he divide the
party lor the November
eleclions.
Now David Keene,
southern coordinator, and
Tommy Thomas, , Florida
campaiign manager, feel
he has to go after Ford or
forfeit not only the March 9
Florida primary but the
nominu(ion.

Pleasant Valley Hospital Physicians,
slaJJrr cwmg
. . A tlenlwn
· "'
E 1 · v·rcttm
·'
1 o .xp oswn

Gas Co

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Co·
lurnbia
Gas
won
an
alternative writ from the
Supreme
Court
Ohio
Tuesday, temporarily setting
aside two lower court rulings
which prohibited Columbia
from collecting increased
residential rates for an
industrial emergency gas
purchase.
The writ , issued late
MASON SHERIFF Elvin
Tuesday afternoon, restrains
(Pete) Wedge IVa' one of
:·=·:.;.;:::::::::::;:::;:;.;.;.; ·:·:· :·:·:·:·: ·:::~:·:::· :·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:· the Franklin County and
four persons killed in
FIRE DOUSED
Lucas County common pleas ·
Tuesday night's blast in the
A brush fire which was courts froin further action on
Mason Countv Jail.
extinguished by the Pomeroy the issue and also prohibited
fire depar tme nt Sunday the two courts from enforcing
afternoon on Leading Creek any temporary restraining
CHAMBER TO MEET
was on the r. . Casto
The Middleport Chamber pi property , not th e . John grders they had issued in the
case,
Commerce lvill meet at 12:15 Davidson property as was
Columbia Gas, earlier
p.m. Thursday for a luncheon reported earlier by the fire
. Tuesday, asked the high
at th~ Martin Restaurant.
department .

•

WIDS

stay

court to set aside the two
lower court orders. Columbia
argued those courts did not
have the authority to issue
the orders since Ohio law
provides only the Ohio
Supreme Court has the right
to review and change actions
by the Public Utiltles
Commission of Ohio.
In its writ, the Supreme
Court ordered the two
common pleas ~o urts to
answer the complaint by
March 12. Columbia was
instructed to file a brief on
the merits of its case by
March 22. The two lower
·courts were then to answer
the gas firm's brief by April
1, with a Columbia reply
scheduled before April 5.
The
alternDtive wrli t
immediately
pr e vents

further implementation of the
lower court orders and
shortens the time for replys
in the case.
The PUCO last month
authorized Columbia Gas to
bill all · of its one million
customers for the $17, I
million used to purchase 13.1
billion
cubic
feet
of
emergency gas bought by the
company.
Columbia, in its testimony
before the PUCO, said
residential customers had
benefited
from
the
emergency gas purchase
because the gas had reduced
curtailment in 'Ohio this
winter, thereby saving jobs
and improved the overall
economie climate of the\
state .

Jackson,

Ford win
•

pnmary
By ARNOLD SA~LAK
United Pre!!&amp; lnleruUoaal

Sen. Henry Jackson, short
on charisma but long on cando experience, beat a field of
nine opponents in the
Massachusetts ·JX"imary and
put himself into the
narrowing race for the 1976
Democratic presidential
nomination.
The veteran Washington
State Democrat, in his first
JX"imary effort Tuesday, led
Rep. Morris Udall of Arizona,
Gov. George Wallace of
Alaba.ma, former Gov.
Jirtuny Carter of Georgia and
five also..-ans in the biggest
jX"imary of the young political
season.
Carter, who led in last
week's New Hampshire
primary, got a second New
England trophy. by winning
.t he . Vermont
"beauty
contest" preferential
primary, which had no
delegates at stlike.
President Ford whipped
Ronald Reagan in both
Massachusetts and Vermont,
giving him a string of three
primary victories in two
weeks. The former California
governOr was on the ballot In
the Bay State, but only a
write-in in Vermont.
Jackson immediately
turned his attention to
F1orida next week, wbere he
said his contest · against
Carter and Jackson would be
"tough," but he looked
forward to a possible
landslide in New York's dele·
gate rich AJX"il 6 contest.
Udall's second place finish
made hirri the liberal leader
in the Democratic land rush ,
He ran behind Wallace during
much of the vote counting,
but pulled ahead in the
waning hours of the tallying .

,..

.....

$35,000 loss
caused by lire
Losses were set at '$35,000
as the result of a fire which
destroyed the one story ranch
home of Ross Shuler and its
contents Tuesday morning .
Pomeroy
Fire
Chief
Charles Legar said the fire
was "bursting" out of the
house, when firemen arrived
on the scene , on Rt. 124 near
.Wilkesville. A fuel oll fw;;ace
exploded causing the blaze ,
Chief Legar said. Loss of the
home was set at $25,000 and
contents, $10,000. There is
insurance cov,e raq, Legar
reports ..
~
..

,'
.,'
·~.

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