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                  <text>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 ..
~
..

,'
.,'
·~.

�3- The Daily Sentinel. Mlddleoort-PnmP.rov. 0 .. Wednesday, Match 3,1976
&gt;·d&lt;&gt;;.-;~&gt;i(tf§&lt;ii•:;-&gt;·-&gt;··;m;.;w.=.:&lt;•XMw···

2 - '!be Dally Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 3, J97ij

·7-:WZ.

~:;:;:-,:-«;:::;:~;~:z:::--:•:;w~.-m::::-~W#.::«.:::::~::;.:~?::::!:~:f;tf:;z~:::r~

,~m.
.,.,..-..;. T oday 's
~·;

Scenes .from the Maso.n County jail blast

~
(.::::~

·®~~

··:v

~~

im

·;:.:::-:
··;;·
~,t

'

svort rn ara a·e
~~~~~~~~:;mAN

~
=·=«·

;~~~
:::~:::

\~%

~~

NEW YORK (UPI) - The years have been compassionate
with Jack Sharkey. They have inflicted some of the aches and
pains that nonnally.go with age but they haven't fogged his
mind.

t-:

•

••
,,

BRUCE REED (front) works under the experienced
direction of his training supervisor, Roger Hysell,
cashier, after being promoted recently to the position of
"teiier" at his training station, The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. In Pomeroy. Bruce is a distribu!fve education
student at Meigs Higb School with a career objective in
banking . As part of his training during his senior year,
Bruce arrives at the bank each day at I p. m. His on the
job experience
be of great value when he continues
,eollege level work next year.

will

•

Rusl1i11g To Am hulant't' With Vit:lim

Falcons ·win fir:st tilt in tourney
SPENCE R - Wahama's
White Falcons rallied from a
two-point ha lftime deficit
here Tuesday night to post a

sectional title.
The White Falcons led 17-14
at lhe first quarter , but sa w
Wirt come back to take a

29~

73-59 victory over Wirl in a . 27 halftime edge. Wahama,

Deputy Tom Hatfield Make.s Way Into
First Floor Explosion [,oc;alion

Class AA, Region I, Section 4
tournament game ,
Wah~ma, upping its season
record to 4-17, will face
Spencer Friday night for the

however, came back to fire in
46 points in the final two
periods to walk away with the
victory.

Wt RT COUN TY .( S9 )
DaviS 4, Aye r 4, Sni der 29,
Watson 11. Rader 6, Ferg.uson
1, Roberts 3.
WAHAMA
(1 3 )
T
Tu·c k er 19 , Smi th 28 , J .
Tu cke r 13, Lamb er t 4, R .
Tu cke r 9. ·
By Quart er s :
Wi rt Cou nt y
14 15 16 14- 59
Waham&lt;~
17 10 20 26 7J

•

m

WIN FIRST PLACE
Students of Meigs High

Polly's Pointers

School won first place in

Deputy Dayton Ravnes
.
T(Jlks With Dispatcher

Spanish in group folk singing
competition Saturday at
Ohio Univ~rsity in the second
annual Southeastern Ohio
Language Fair.

WASHINGTON

I UPI)

wouu ta ble that I would like to
decoupage b ut how do 1 go

about it? - DEB S.
DEA R DEB - Decoupagc
weli done Is not as easy as It
seems on the surface - it is
painstaking Mrk. Do lry

-

The Ohio vote, i n wh i ch the
House,on a 210 to 183 roll call,
Tuesd8y llpproved a bill fo
liberalize black lung benetlls
to coal miners .
Voting
tor
wer e
189
Democra f s
and
21
Republicans .
Voting aga inst were 71
Democra t s.
ana
112
Republicans .

something small first. When

starting it is well to learn
correct!)'· I advise going to an
arts and crafts class; most

cities ha ve such classes
In
sc hool s,
availabl e

Ohio , 8 Democrats , IS
Republicans .
.'
Democrats tor : Carney,
Hays , M&lt;;~tll , Seiberling,
Jemes Stanton , Stokes ,

Vanlk .
Democrats
Aahley .Republlcans
Whelen .

against :
tor :

Miller .

Republlc.-ns against : Ash brook,
Brown ,
Clancy ,
Devine , Gradison , H.!irshB,
Kindness , Latfa . Regula , ..
Williams Stanton . Wylie .
Republicans nof voting :
Guver , Mosher .

EFFORT FAILED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
~lean Party has failed in
11a bid to make the June 8
Ohio primary election ballot.
Assistant Secretary of State
James Marsh said Tuesday
that American · Party
followers failed to collect the
. necessary valid signatures by
1,328 signatures to win
placement on the June
primary hallot.

unvarni shed

recreo1tion c~nters at hand-

th r

glasses arc gone for you. With ·

locally. II classes are not
available there must be a
.Place that sells such supplies
and they could advise you as
. to methods or perhaps a hook
that would give detailed
instrudions. - PO LLY

their usual generosity our
readers came lorth with ail
sorts of Ideas. The following
seem a bl.t different and
really worth a try. Mrs.
· G.E.P. wrote that her
husba nd put moi es ~in on the ·
nose pieces and that did the
trick lor her. When it gets
soiled new pieces are put on.
D.M.H. suggests that you buy
new temple pieces with ear
hooks or an adjustable clastic

DEAR POLLY - I am an
arts an d crafts nut and am
. usually pretty careful but
today I got stain ali over my
hands and nails and could not

POINT PLEASANT Polic e Chief Jim
Gaskins discussing tragedy with Gallia
County Deputy George Plants .

DR. LAMB

DEAR DR. LAMB .- I am
In need of answers about
pinworms. My 4-year-old
daug~ter has been infected at
least a half dozen times
within ,a year. At first it
-med like every couple of
months they would recur. The
dOCtor gave me medicines to
'treat
her. Now within six
1
weeb after the last dose she
II Infected again. It seems
lhat the medicine always
tOes care of them because I
· dleck with the flashlight at
' ntcht.
.
She always starts out with a
.bad stomach ache, then I
· llnow enough to check her out
..ell!. I have folD' other
ehidrri who have had them
only occasionally.
When I give the. medicine
: tbe entire famUy likes It. I
talcJ the doctor about the
· frequerlt recurrence. He said ,
· 10111etlme1 the pinworms
llldliP In the appendix and
tlan't lei treated. He stated
lhllt pnetlmes when the

grandm others made soap
with such fat ) and I noti ced a
few clean spots on my nanas
where the fat had spattered . i
then used one-fourth of a strip

cotton behind each ea r and
that holds her glasses tight
and it is hidden by her hair.
Mr. R. G. says the problem
can be reduced by the usc of

of bacon and m y hands· were

hard plastic instead of glass

band, mad-: for this, that goes
glasses on. Iris puts apiece of

· clean. - S.R.T.
DEAR POLLY - My Pe t
Peeve is the sa turation of
te lev ision and radio an d
newspa pers with articles
about who Is going to run for

lenses as they weigh only half
as much and are safer, too.
Hope one of these helps you.
- POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My
kitchen is so small i decided '
President.. One elec tion is to rn(Jke a pi e crust on the
before slick plasti c tablecloth on my
scarce ly
ove r
dinette table . I used less flour
and the dough did not stick as
I rolledit.- MRS. I.G.
You will receive a dollar if
Polly us es your la vorjte
homemaking idea, Pet

'

)

pionship will go to Minford
for district play.
Gallipolis - Sprague ~ 1r
Edelmann ~ 10 , Bry,an 1-2-4 ,
Young 2-1,5, Groves 4-0-8,
Ni bert 2-0-4, Shaw 1·0-2.
Totals 20.3-47.
Chesapeake - Wood 12+
30, Plummer 1.0.2, Kimball I·
0.2, Mayse 0.2.2, Henson 2·3·7 .
' Hunt 1-1-3. Totals 17-12-45.

0

0

•

•

0

0

•

•• •

WRAPPED

California
Lemons

PIMENTO DfEESE

doz.

SentinP.I ·

City Editor
Published da ily excep t
Sa turday b y The Ohi o
Va tt ev Pu bti s llin g Com
pany ,
111
Cour t
St .,
Pomeroy ,
Ohio
45769 .
Bu siness Off ice Phone 992
215.l'.i . Edi tor i a l f1f\one 992
7 157
Seco nd c l ass p os tag e
paid at P ome roy , ·Oti lo.
Na t ional . a d 'Ve r f is i nCJ
r epresentat i ve
Ward .
Grlf_fith . Company , tnc .,
AOfl1nell1 &amp; Gallagher D iv .,
75 1 TMird A v e. , New York 1
N.Y . 10017·.
·
Subs cr ipt i on
rate s :
Delivered by carr ier where
a vai l ab le 75 cen t s per
week . B y Motor Route
w here carrie,- service not
a vailab le, One month ,
S3 .25. By m'a i l I ~ Ohio an d
W . Va . . One Yec! r , $72 .00 ;
S ix months . $ 11 50 ; Three
months, $7 00 . Elsewhere
526.00 year ; Six month s
S1J .50 ; three mon t hs, $7 .50 .
!j u bscrlp tf on pr ice in c ludes
'iundav Times -Sentine l .

•••• •

INDIVIDUALLY

165 count 69~

D E VOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS · MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
E xcc . Ed.
.
ROBE !ItT HOEFLICH

•

KRAFT

crawling with worms. He also

1

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADM ITTED - Diana lhle.
Racine;
Pauline Cunningham, Minersville.
DISCHARGED - Linda
Bailey , Neiiie Hatfield , Allen
Blackwood , Wiiiie Collins.

Hershey's Syrup ..............................1.~ -~~: . .... •2/89~
. ...... .... ....... -.........
46 ....
oz. .... .... _, 59$
HUnt'S 1i0111at0 JUlte
Lemon Pledte .......................... .... }~.~~: .......•1.39
Best's;heavy duty Garbage Ba25............ ~..~?.:~... ]9~.
Joan of Arc Red Kidney Beans.... ,........ ~?- ~~ : ...... 59$
Jumbo Scott Towels .....................~~~.?.'.'.,...3/'1.00
Li~ton Tea 8aRS ............................... i~.8~:: .... i~::
2
Pnc:le Crackers .........................._.........
Del Monte Cut Green Beans ...... ,...... !~.?.~: .... 2/59c

solution to a problem. Write
Polly in ca re of this
newspaper.

Dai~

Craddock, ail Point Pleasant ;
Edwin Oldaker, Letart ; Mrs.
Alv in Morri son, Rave ns·
wood; Mrs. Mel vi n Ray,
daughter. Southside: L1ifford
Cornell, Buffalo and James
Rai ney, Apple Gro"c .

United Press lnteraatlonal
Golden Siate Warriors for·
ward Rick Barry says teammate Phil Smith is on the
verge of superstardom in the
National Basketball
Association.
The way Smith played
Tuesday night, !he Buffalo
Braves may be convinced
he's already arrived.
Smith scored 23 points In
the second half to lead the
Warriors to a 100.93 win over
the Braves. Included in his
game.!Jigh 31 points were five
goals he scored midway
through the final quarter as
be outscored Buffalo, 111-4,
during a spurt that put
Golden State ahead, 87-81.
"I was one of his biggest

Barry of the second-year
guard from the University of
San Francisco. "I said be
could be a s..,erstar in this
league in a couple of years.
Right now, He's playing as
good as any guard In the

missed 20 shots. Randy Smith
had 18 points, Jim McMillian
17 and Ken U.aries 12 for the
Braves.
Washingtqn defeated
Philadelphi s, 128-111,
New
Milwaukee
beat
Orleans, 111-109, Seattle
topped the New York Knicks,
109-IOS, Kansas aty Kings
downed Detroit, 127-113, ahd
Portland whipped Chicago,
116-IOS, In other NBA games.
Indiana defeated San
Antonio, 107-97, and St. Louis
beat Kentucky, 97~, in ABA
Bullets 128, 71ers Ill;
Elvin Hayes scored 30
points, Phil Chenier, .26 and
Dave Bing 2S to lead
Washington o.ver
Philadelphia . The Bullets
clinched the gw_ne by opening

league.''

Smith's scoring has left
Barry free to do other
things- like pass off for II
assists Tuesday night.

He's 73 and still sharp enough so that nobody had better mess
" I've had m,any yea rs of
with him. He doesn 't go around hearing bells In his head as so
scoring
poin!B. I don't have
many other ex-lighters do.
anything
to prove ," said
Three weeks ago, the old heavyweight champ cracked a few
Barry,
who
scored only six
ribs when he took a tumble varnishing the floor of his Epping,
Buffalo. "I'm
points
against
N.H., borne. He isn't ready to go otit dancing yet, but he's up
very
content
to
let the other
and aro1md again, staying abreast of everything that's going
players
do
it.
That might
on.
prolong
my
career
a little
Jack Sharkey got on the subject of Joe Frazier.
bit
."
He talked about Frazier's decision to keep ~n fighting and
Bob McAdoo led the Braves
what a mistake he thought it was.
with
28 points, even though be
boosters
last
year
."
said
Jack 9!arkey was talking from experience. He made the
same mistake. He knew he should've quit after he lost his
world heavyweight title to Primo Camera in 1933 when he was
31, but be didn't . He kept fighting, hoping to win his title back.
He never did. ·
,
He got back to Joe Frazier though. "He 's a pretty smart
!ella," said the former champ. "He has a good aspect on life
and I'm sure he's well taken care of financially. He's got the By TRACY RINGOU!BY
reportedly returned to
recognition, the money and everything else, so what can be UPI Sports Writer
Lawrence to work under
gain fighting any more? I know what he's thinking. 'Just one
LAWRENCE:, Kan. (UP! ) Tinunons' direction and just
more.' That 'one more' could be the one to do the damage. If I - Distance runner Jim Ryun, a couple of weeks ago ,
were him, I'd call a press conference and announce my who came back home to get in promoters of the professional
retirement."
shape
.. for
another International Track
Jack Sharkey remembers.how be felt when Carnera knocked professional track season, Association said they
him out in sixrounds to take his title. He told his manager, the · has decided to retire from expected him to be running
late Johnny Buckle-;, he didn't want to fight any more.
near world record times on
competition .
4"1 was morose after Camera beat me," Sharkey said,
Ryun and Coach Bob Tim· this year 's ITA circuit .
remembering. "I had lost the championship to a character. I' mons scheduled a news
But expectations of others
told my manager I wanted to quit. I said to him it was ge1tlng conference today to announce have long been problems for
tougher for me to get In shape, I had a wonderful wife, three Ryun 's retirement.
Ryun.
lovely children, a beautiful horne and all the money I wanted,
"For the only time in my
A ihree·time Olympian,
and he said to me, 'Ahh.!J.!J,yo~'re talkin ' crazy. You stiU got a life, I'd rather no( say , Ryun became the first high
few years left."'
anything' yet," Ryun said schooler to run a sub-four·
9!arliey won the heavyweight Iitle by outpointing Max when contacted about reports minute mile when he won the
Schmeling in 1932. He had beaten Carnera the y~r before and be was retiring. "We are Kansas State high school
before fighting him again, be had told Buckley he intended to going to have a news championship in 1965 with a
retire after this bout. Buckley said nothing about that, but conference and I will make a 3:58.3.
while Sharkey was training for his title defense against major announcement at that
During the next two years,
Carnera, Buckley made two future matches with King time."
he set five American records,
Levinsky and Tommy Loughran for later In the year. So after
Ryun, who ran under Tim- . world marks in the mile at
be lost to Carnera, 9!arkey still had to go through with those mons at Wichita, Kan., East 3:51.1, 1,500 meters at 3.:31.1
two bou!B.
High School and ·again at and the hall mile at I:44.9 and
The Levinsky fight was to be held in Chicago's Comiskey Kansas
University, in 1966 was named the winner
Park .
Fight night arrived.
"I remember going to Qlmlskey Park; I remember coming .
out of the dugout; I remember being introduced in the ring,"
~
!Q)arkey said. "That's ali I remember. Next thing I knew I was
• ·,;y
·
in my hotel room. I said to Buckley, you ready? C'mon let's go
· By PAUL VARIAN
. ' to the fight .''
like. I will cootinue to use the
Buckley told Sharkey to relax, the fight was all over.
EAST LANSING, Mich . facility and get arrested until
"Did I get knocked out'" 9!arkey wanted to know.
(UP!) - Los Angeles they agree to have an
"No, but you were up and down four or five times and you Dodgers pitcher Mike appropriate bearing on this."
lost the decision," Buckley informed. him.
Marshall says he will conduct
Marshall has been feuding
Nine · days Jater, Sharkey met Loughran in Philadelphia. his spring training in a for tbe past four years with
Four years before, Sharkey had flattened Loughran In three Michigan State University Intramural Director Harris
rounds, but this time he lost to him In IS. Sharkey remembers sports facility - no matter F. Beeman over whether be
his annoyance With Buckley on the train back to Boston.
how many times he is must reserve the turf arena,
" I said to him, John, whadd'ya want ? Do you wanna wheel arrested.
which also is used for tennis
me up to the ring in a wheelchair? I told you I don't wanna iight
The outspoken former Cy and basketball.
any more. Johnny, I'm telling you right now,l'm all through, Young Award-winner already
University officials
fmished !"
10 expressed ftustra tion over
faces
a
March
9!arkey didn't fight for 28 months. Ayoung fellow out of the arraignment on charges
Alabama cotton fields by the name of Joe Louis was starting to stemmlilg from two recent
come along about this time and Buckley put a bug in Sharkey's arrests at the building and be
head by telling him he certainly could lick Louis. Sharkey kind has been banned from the
of liked the idea of becoming the first ex-heavyweight champ premises.
ever to win back his tiUe .
Marshall says he will be
He fought four more fights and on the evening of Aug. 18, back anyway. .
.
1936, Jack Sharkey, pushing 34, met hard.!Jltting 22-year-old · •·If you allow even trtvlal
·
Joe Louis, who knocked him out in three rounds .
injustice to continue, then the
"Suddenly I foiDld myself on the floor," Sharkey said. "The /injustice wili grow until it
The Rio Grande College ·
referee was counting over me, on his fingers , and I remember contaminates the entire sys.
Community
College basebail
some&lt;Jne saying to me, 'Take your time, take your time, tern," said Marshali, a
team
will
participate
in th~
everybody's with you.' I thought to myself, what a helluva graduate assistant in
Florida
Basebalt
Schools'
wonderful place to be ! Everybody's with me tonight.''
Michigan State 's Physical Round Robin Baseball
'-When
he
finally
wlis
helped
to
his
corner,
Sharkey,
with
his
Education Department.
1
gloves stiU on his hands, threw a couple of kisses to the. c·rowd
" I wili be in there Tourmanent at San lord, Fla.,
.
and drew one of the greatest ovations be ever received. He was tomorrow at the regular time March 16-18.
·
Tlie
training
camp
allows
kissing everyone goodbye was what he was doing. Jack to use the facility . And they
9!arkey never fought again .
may arl'llSt me again if they teams from the north to work
on fundamentals and engage
in actual game competition
prior to starting regular
spring schedules when the
northern weather permits
later in the spring.
Along with Rio Grande
Ohio Valley Conference the Flyers , 81-73, and se t up the game, 75-71.
Qlllege
·Community College,
However,
Bob
Johnson
hit
a
rivals Oak Hill and the sectional showdown at
in the tourney
other
teams
field
goal
and
Dale
Russell
Chesapeake advanced to the 7:30p. m. Friday.
include
Tufts
University,
converted
free
throws
for
Cla'ss A sectional finals at, Experiencing no dif·
Shippenberg
College,
Chesapeake
to
pijl
the
Ironton following Tuesday ficulties from the Bobcats,
Milligan
College,
Kenyon
out
of
reach,
Panthers
night wins . .
Oak Hill was led by four·
Coiiege, the University of
Russell
finished
with
25
Oak Hill's sixth-ranked players in double figures .
Oaks jumped to a 21-8 lead Tirri Williams led the way poin!B to lead all scorers, but Wisconsin at Superior . Rio
and coasted to an 82-SI semi- with 21 points, while Doug the Panthers ' attack showed Grande will play two gaines
each day or a total of eight
final ~icto~y over outmanned Hale netted IS and John, unusual balance . Roger
games during the tourAdkins
netted
16,
while
Kevin
Green Township. Wiiiiams had 14.
Rice
had
I~ and Johnson 14.
nament.
Chesapeake, taking ad ·
Green, which dropped its
The trip will be taken
Jim
Cline
and
John
Gaigal
vantage of Ironton St . Joe's 18th decision in 19 starts, was
during
the ~reak between
sparked
St.
Joe
with
22
and
21
foul difficulties, eliminated paced by Rick Suttles' 13
winter and spring quarters at
points
respectively.
points. Randy Grace · con·
Rio Grande College · Com· tributed 12.
GREEN TOWNSHIP (51)
munity
College. To finance
A l~penholf 9, Suttles 1 J,
Che5apeake, improving its -Cline
Tuesday ' s
4,
Otwarth
l
,
Grace
12,
the
trip
the baseball team is
Ohio High School
record to 13-7, roared to a 22- Gannon J, White 6, Moore 2. raising iIs own money. A
Tournament Results
OAK HILL (IU - Boggs 10 ,
14 lead over the Flyers and
Results
raffle and a brochure with
T. Willilms 21. Hele 15. Allen
United Press International
held off last quarter rally for 4, J . Willi1ms 14, Roof 6, advertising are helping in the
CLASSAAA
the victory. St. Joe, which Jayne 2, Dunn 8, Kalinoski 1. · fund raising.
At Columbua
By Quarters :
•
West e rville South 61 Co l
finished at 11·9, cut its deficit Green
6 1J 15 l7 - 5 1
The regular Rio Grande "
South 56
~our points with, 1: 12left in
Oak H i ll
21 19 24 18- 82
t:ol Lind en 53 H II liard 44
Community
College baseball
IRONTON ST. JOE (13) At St~ubenville
Miller
16,
Swuh
4,
Cline
22
,
schedule
includes
17
E.
Liv e rpool
56
New
Gligai 21, Wagginger 8, Clay
scheduled
playing
dates
Philadelphia 37
2,
CLASS AA
beginning with West Virginia
CHESAPEAKE !Ill At LUCISYilie
Russell
25
,
Johnson
u,
State College on Monday,
Minford 70 Port smoufh Wesf
Adkins U, Rice 15, Marshall
56
March 22. All scheduled
7, McWhorter 4.
At Chagrin Falls

Colle ge Ba sketball Results

Ryun plans"to .retire

Ma... h all

By United Press l nterna1 io nal
Playoffs and Tqurnam ents
East Coasr Cont. Playoffs

(I st Roundl

of the James E. Sullivan
Award as the amateur athlete
of the year . .
· But through three Olympic
efforts, he never won a gold
medaL
The
biggest
disappointment for Ryun was
the 1972 Olympics when be
fell down during the
preliminaries of- tile 1,500
meters and failed to make the
finals .
Another setback in the 29- ·
yearo{)ld . Kansan's career

came in 1971, when he was
attempting to regain a spot as
one of the world's premiere
distance runners and lost to
Marty Liqouri in the mile at
the Martin Luther King
Games in Philadelphia
despite a time .of 3:54.8.
The (Mist three years, Ryun
has competed on the !'(A
circuit.

•n .
Wl•tt try aaoz·
e

the last perioa with a I~
spurt. Fred Carter had 27
points and George McGinnis
had 26 for the 76ers.
Bucks lll, Jazz 109:
Brian Winters scored 12 of
his 28 p&lt;lin!B in overtime,
including a ZG.foot jump shot
with three seconds left in the
extra period, for Milwaukee.
Winters scored the last 12
points, including his game·
winning shot. Nate WiUiams
scored 33 points and Pete
Maravich 22 for New Orleans.
Sanies 109, Knlcks 105:
Bruce Seals scored 29
points and Slick Watts 24 to
lift Seattle past New York.
The key to the Sonics' win
was their conversion of 2£k&gt;f.
21 foul tries in the second

Temple BS Rid er 69
Hof stra 77 Bucknell 58
NAI A Di strict Play
Grnd Cnyn 74 W' minster U tah
57
Tex . Sout hern 89 MictW~tern 81
Bthny N az . 55 Cnt .Ok la .S t. 53

half. Spencer Haywood led and 17 rebounds to lead St.
the Knicks with 31 points.
Louis over Kentucky. The
Kings 1%7, Plllona 113 :
Colonels led with 10:40 left
Jimmy Walker and Nate but the spirits then pulled
Archibald scored 22 of their away to lead 91-31. ~2 points In the third quarter,
rallying KBnsas City past
Our Interest 1s
Detroit. Bob Lanier, wbo hit
Gre1ter For You
10 of his first II shots, led
Detroit with 34 points.
Blazers Ill, Bulls 105:
Geoff Petrie scored 29
points as Portland scored its
On 90-Day
third straight win In liB battle
for a playoff slot. Mickey
Certl~,..-~
Johnson had 23 poinlll for
Chicago.
[&gt;.75 per cent Plid 011
Pacers 107, Spurs 97 :
Indiana ended its lout· 190 day Certlflq~tes of
game losing streak, leading 'Deposit. · $1.000.00
from start to finish as Billy Minimum .
Interest
Knlgbt tallied 31 poinlll. The ,Payable Quertwrly.
victory also helped the
\
Pacers protect a two-game A substant ial penalty Is
invoked on all certif icate
lead over St. LIJuis in the accounts
w i thdrawn prior
battle for the league's fifth to the dete of matur i t y .
and final playoff position,
James Silas was high Jor San
Antonio with 26 points.
Spirits 97, Colonels 89:
Ron Boone scored 29 points
and Marvin Barnes had 24

5.75%

Sout hern Utah 95 Mesa 86
East

A lbany NY 91 Hamilton 83
Brand eis 106 Tuffs 95
Connect icut 72 Fairfield 70
Dartmouth 66 Har\lard 64 , ot
Dow l ing 53 Rutge r s.cam den 41

Georgetown DC 76 lona 68
Ithaca 85 B ing hamton St. 75
Mass . 103 Vermon t 100

New Pa lt z 106 Osw ego St . 92
Pitt 74 St . Franc is Pa . 69
RM de I sland 99 Btown 79

SIGNUPDAYSET
The Portland Independent
ball club will have a sign up
day Sunday at 2 p, m. at
PorUand Elementary. 'lbe
"Bandit" asked those in·
terested to attend.

Cello Carrots
16

oz. bag 2/29~

99~2

oz . pkg.

PARKAY
'

~-:;MARGARINE
HOME MADE

HAM SALAD
PERIOR

lb.
•• • 0 •

•••••••

59~

Sr. Mi chael 's 86 Sien~ 85
South
Ky . Ws lyn 80 Ind . St. -E'\11 75
Midwest
Cr eig h ton 77 UNC -Charlolte' 71
Doane 92 Ha st ings 73
Loyola t tl . 87 Ci ncinnati 71
Olivet Na z. BJ Trini ty til.
Xa11ier Ohio 98 Duquesne 86
Southwest
H . Payne 62 St . Mry 's Tex . 60
We s ~

THE INN PLACE

THURSDAY NIGHT

•

Cent . Wash . 52 E . Wa'sh . 49
Montana 84 Montana St . 15
Nev LV 90 L oyola Cal . 69

SPECIAL

PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Coach Dick Vermeil of the
Philadelphia Eagles has
reached into the college ·

U

ranks for an assistant.

his attitude.
"It's a very, very small
thing on his part," said Vice
President Robert Perrin .
"IrS unfortunate that he has
to play this rather childish
game. That building has to
accommodate the needs of
over 50,000 people and there
obviously has to be rules. And
we don't set them for one
per.s on."

Vermeil
announced
Tuesday that Lynn Stiles, 34,
an assistant at UCLA, would
coach the outside linebackers
and also would handle
defenSe phases oi the special
teams . ·
Stiles came to UCLA In 1971
and served under Pepper
Rodgers for three -years
before hecoming an assistant
under Vermeil in 1974.
·

Visit Our Salad Bar
Spaghetti Garlic Bread
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

Cle . Cathedral Lallr'l 84
Beachwood .53
At Troy
Verse Il les 72 Milton Union 52
Springfield Shawne e 53 Tipp

·

Ind ian Lllke 73 Nor thwester n
68
CLASS A

by the piece

CASING BOLOGNA•1.19 BUJE WATER FROZEN
SLICED '1.29 lb. FISH AND BArrER
SUPERIOR ASSORTED '
$
LUN.Pf MEAT1b.~k!!· } 19

99~ ~.

•2.95
Plu s tax

The Tri-County•s Most
Ex&lt;iting Night Spot

THE MEIGS INN·
Phone 992-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

·
gam&lt;s except one are double
headers. Johnny Ecker is
coach of the 1975-76 edition of

the Rio rande College Community College baseball
team.

Oaks, Panthers gain finals

cuv &lt;a

lb•.

The At"ens Cou~tv
Slvints &amp; Lolli co.
· 2" s.c'ond St.
Pemerov. Ohio

Stonehill 95 SE Mass. 81

Rio basebailers to ta-ke
• £tOn
VJ
•da tourney
pa rt ·zn

Peeve, . Polly's Problem or

The

Louella Sa wyers, Mrs .• Juhn

nose

around the head to bold

lodge in the blind end of the der wear , clean bedding and
large colon (cecum) in the that this is carried out
stated that the worms can · area where the appendix is, regularly . Certainly all of the
cause symptoms of ap- but they may also be present children • should
wash
pendicitis, but that they did in much of the large bowel . their hands carefully before
not remove an appendix just and small intestine. They are eating snacks or otherwise
usuaily elim inated with putting their hands to the
for pinworms,
·, mouth. When one ch ild in the
I have also heard stories adequate treatment.
The
reason
that family is infected it 's usually
about washing hands before
eating. What I can't figure recurrences are so frequent · a guod idea to treat the entire
our is why one child in the is that the infection is so family as you have been
family isn 't susceptible. An widespread . Most likely your doing .
answer would bring relief to 4-year-old .has not lear.ned
That 's ahout ail you cah do.
proper hygiene yet. .In small Just keep in tnind that they
our minds.
DEAR READER - Pin- c hildren scra tc hing and are not serious even though
worms are a very common putting unclean hands in the the y
are
distressing .
Infection . Fortunately they mouth is a frequent way of Whenever they recur you 'll
usually
c ause
more ~ reinfectin g oneself wi th
just have to treat them again .
discomfort than harm. The another cycle of eggs.
For information on when
most common symptom is . The eggs can also live on and how to treat a cold send
itching around the anal area. bedding and other areas but 50 cents for The Health
The female worm crawls usually only lor a day or two Letter, Number 3-2, Colds
out of the rectal area at night because they don 't survive and Flu . Group, Prevention
and tills is what produces the dry air very well .
and Treatment. Enclose a
The best thing I can suggest lon g,
itching feeling ,
stamped,
selfThere
is
some is to. make a real effort to addoessed envelope for
disagreement as whether teach your smail child better mailing. Address your letter
pinworms actually cause hygiene. Be sure at the to me in care of this
. indigestion or upset stomach beginning of treatment that newspaper, P.O. Box 1~51,
as you snggest in your letter . she is completely bathed and Radio· Ci ty Station , New
ll is true that the worms clean and ha s clean un · York. NY 10019.
appendix is removed it is

days of sliding

remov e it wi th soap and
. water . Later I was fr ying
bacon r rem em her how our

Pinwonn infection hard to eliminate
By I.Awreace E. Lamb, M.D.

Chesapeake Tammy Wood
led all scorers with 30.
Jn the Vinton - Nelsonville
contest Pam Rogers of Vinton
had 14 and Debbie Smith of
20,
in
the
second
game
of
Nelsonville 24.
news any more that g lves one
Gir
ls
Sec
tional
basketball
Friday Fairland will go
a fee ling of stability and
action
Tuesday
nig
ht
at
agains
t Belpre at 7 p.m. and
improvement.
Larry
Mon
ison
Gym.
Warren
will- play Sherifan at
We get the idea that Ford
With
t
:30
left
in
.th
e
8:
IS.
is doing nothing but trying to
In the se mi ,finais on
b.e elected ir• l!l76 and the Gnll ipolis - Chesa peake
contest
Gall
ipolis
was
ahead.
Tuesday,
March 9, Meigs will
legislature is doing nothing .
by
10
when
Chesapea
ke
put
pl
ay
Ga
llipolis
and New
but re neging on every good
on
a
ful
l
court
press
and
Lexington
will
go
against
idea we thoug ht was a lready
nearly
pulled
the
game
out,
Nelsonville
.
decided; all with a barrage of
F'oo· Gallipolis Ka ren
The championship will be
the same old tired names of
Sprag
ue
and
Barb
Edelmann
played
Saturday, Mar ch
who is goi ng to run for ufficc .
coch
scored
10
poin
ts.
For
Winners
of ' th e cham·
13.
- LENA.
DEAR MARION - I think

craft shops. lllquirc ar-ound

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Erma
Waugh, Crown City; Mrs.
Ross Roush, Mason; Mrs.
Archie Whitt, Betty Leonard,
Mrs . Cecil Sines, Mr .

.

llOCK SPRINGS
d efeated
Ga lli p oli s
Chesapeake 47 to 45 in the
POLLl"S PROBLEM
''publicity begins on wh o will first [(arne and Nelsonville
DEAR POLLY - I have a- run ned time . There is no - w01i e~sily over Vint{,) n, 49 to

,,

brown-stained

How they voted

Decoupage an
exacting hobby

.
tourney victory
.

Hospital News

Waniors edge by Braves, 100-93

1
'O ak Hill :2 :J::~~n51

Chesepeake811ronton Sl . Joe
73
At Dover
Indian Valley N 56 Gareway

.
.9

At Wars•w
Indian Valley S 72 Zane Trace

Ohlo College

la~k•tbltl Scorea.
United Preulnternatlonat
·
· Tuesd1y
xav ier 98 buquesne 86
Loyall CIUIO 87 Cincinnati 71

INTERNATIONAL HOCKEY
LEAGUE STANDINGS
u ·n lted Press International
North
W . L . Pets . GF . GA
SaQinaw 35 2l 9 79 274 226

By Quarfer s:
St . Joe
16 1.4 22 21 ~ 73
Chesape ake ~2 19 22 18 - 81

Por't Huron
30 22 11 II 246 223
Fl in1
28 25 11 67 224 205
21 25 12 66 209 200

""'ASON, W.VA •

22 35 7 5 I 225 281
South

Will Open Tomorro~
THURSDAY, MARCH 4

Kalama1oo
•

W. L. T. Pis GF GA

Darton
36 21 8 ·ao 268 199
Fort Weyne 25 28 12 ! 244 246
Toledo
20 32 13 53 210 2•0
Columbus
23 37 7 53 ·~23 29~
Tuesdiy•s Result
' Muskegon • Kalamazoo 2
Tonleht's Game
Port Huron at Deyton
Thursdav's Games
No oemes scheduled .

International® 674 . : .· Utility and Row Crop . ·
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�3- The Daily Sentinel. Mlddleoort-PnmP.rov. 0 .. Wednesday, Match 3,1976
&gt;·d&lt;&gt;;.-;~&gt;i(tf§&lt;ii•:;-&gt;·-&gt;··;m;.;w.=.:&lt;•XMw···

2 - '!be Dally Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 3, J97ij

·7-:WZ.

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,~m.
.,.,..-..;. T oday 's
~·;

Scenes .from the Maso.n County jail blast

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svort rn ara a·e
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NEW YORK (UPI) - The years have been compassionate
with Jack Sharkey. They have inflicted some of the aches and
pains that nonnally.go with age but they haven't fogged his
mind.

t-:

•

••
,,

BRUCE REED (front) works under the experienced
direction of his training supervisor, Roger Hysell,
cashier, after being promoted recently to the position of
"teiier" at his training station, The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. In Pomeroy. Bruce is a distribu!fve education
student at Meigs Higb School with a career objective in
banking . As part of his training during his senior year,
Bruce arrives at the bank each day at I p. m. His on the
job experience
be of great value when he continues
,eollege level work next year.

will

•

Rusl1i11g To Am hulant't' With Vit:lim

Falcons ·win fir:st tilt in tourney
SPENCE R - Wahama's
White Falcons rallied from a
two-point ha lftime deficit
here Tuesday night to post a

sectional title.
The White Falcons led 17-14
at lhe first quarter , but sa w
Wirt come back to take a

29~

73-59 victory over Wirl in a . 27 halftime edge. Wahama,

Deputy Tom Hatfield Make.s Way Into
First Floor Explosion [,oc;alion

Class AA, Region I, Section 4
tournament game ,
Wah~ma, upping its season
record to 4-17, will face
Spencer Friday night for the

however, came back to fire in
46 points in the final two
periods to walk away with the
victory.

Wt RT COUN TY .( S9 )
DaviS 4, Aye r 4, Sni der 29,
Watson 11. Rader 6, Ferg.uson
1, Roberts 3.
WAHAMA
(1 3 )
T
Tu·c k er 19 , Smi th 28 , J .
Tu cke r 13, Lamb er t 4, R .
Tu cke r 9. ·
By Quart er s :
Wi rt Cou nt y
14 15 16 14- 59
Waham&lt;~
17 10 20 26 7J

•

m

WIN FIRST PLACE
Students of Meigs High

Polly's Pointers

School won first place in

Deputy Dayton Ravnes
.
T(Jlks With Dispatcher

Spanish in group folk singing
competition Saturday at
Ohio Univ~rsity in the second
annual Southeastern Ohio
Language Fair.

WASHINGTON

I UPI)

wouu ta ble that I would like to
decoupage b ut how do 1 go

about it? - DEB S.
DEA R DEB - Decoupagc
weli done Is not as easy as It
seems on the surface - it is
painstaking Mrk. Do lry

-

The Ohio vote, i n wh i ch the
House,on a 210 to 183 roll call,
Tuesd8y llpproved a bill fo
liberalize black lung benetlls
to coal miners .
Voting
tor
wer e
189
Democra f s
and
21
Republicans .
Voting aga inst were 71
Democra t s.
ana
112
Republicans .

something small first. When

starting it is well to learn
correct!)'· I advise going to an
arts and crafts class; most

cities ha ve such classes
In
sc hool s,
availabl e

Ohio , 8 Democrats , IS
Republicans .
.'
Democrats tor : Carney,
Hays , M&lt;;~tll , Seiberling,
Jemes Stanton , Stokes ,

Vanlk .
Democrats
Aahley .Republlcans
Whelen .

against :
tor :

Miller .

Republlc.-ns against : Ash brook,
Brown ,
Clancy ,
Devine , Gradison , H.!irshB,
Kindness , Latfa . Regula , ..
Williams Stanton . Wylie .
Republicans nof voting :
Guver , Mosher .

EFFORT FAILED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
~lean Party has failed in
11a bid to make the June 8
Ohio primary election ballot.
Assistant Secretary of State
James Marsh said Tuesday
that American · Party
followers failed to collect the
. necessary valid signatures by
1,328 signatures to win
placement on the June
primary hallot.

unvarni shed

recreo1tion c~nters at hand-

th r

glasses arc gone for you. With ·

locally. II classes are not
available there must be a
.Place that sells such supplies
and they could advise you as
. to methods or perhaps a hook
that would give detailed
instrudions. - PO LLY

their usual generosity our
readers came lorth with ail
sorts of Ideas. The following
seem a bl.t different and
really worth a try. Mrs.
· G.E.P. wrote that her
husba nd put moi es ~in on the ·
nose pieces and that did the
trick lor her. When it gets
soiled new pieces are put on.
D.M.H. suggests that you buy
new temple pieces with ear
hooks or an adjustable clastic

DEAR POLLY - I am an
arts an d crafts nut and am
. usually pretty careful but
today I got stain ali over my
hands and nails and could not

POINT PLEASANT Polic e Chief Jim
Gaskins discussing tragedy with Gallia
County Deputy George Plants .

DR. LAMB

DEAR DR. LAMB .- I am
In need of answers about
pinworms. My 4-year-old
daug~ter has been infected at
least a half dozen times
within ,a year. At first it
-med like every couple of
months they would recur. The
dOCtor gave me medicines to
'treat
her. Now within six
1
weeb after the last dose she
II Infected again. It seems
lhat the medicine always
tOes care of them because I
· dleck with the flashlight at
' ntcht.
.
She always starts out with a
.bad stomach ache, then I
· llnow enough to check her out
..ell!. I have folD' other
ehidrri who have had them
only occasionally.
When I give the. medicine
: tbe entire famUy likes It. I
talcJ the doctor about the
· frequerlt recurrence. He said ,
· 10111etlme1 the pinworms
llldliP In the appendix and
tlan't lei treated. He stated
lhllt pnetlmes when the

grandm others made soap
with such fat ) and I noti ced a
few clean spots on my nanas
where the fat had spattered . i
then used one-fourth of a strip

cotton behind each ea r and
that holds her glasses tight
and it is hidden by her hair.
Mr. R. G. says the problem
can be reduced by the usc of

of bacon and m y hands· were

hard plastic instead of glass

band, mad-: for this, that goes
glasses on. Iris puts apiece of

· clean. - S.R.T.
DEAR POLLY - My Pe t
Peeve is the sa turation of
te lev ision and radio an d
newspa pers with articles
about who Is going to run for

lenses as they weigh only half
as much and are safer, too.
Hope one of these helps you.
- POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My
kitchen is so small i decided '
President.. One elec tion is to rn(Jke a pi e crust on the
before slick plasti c tablecloth on my
scarce ly
ove r
dinette table . I used less flour
and the dough did not stick as
I rolledit.- MRS. I.G.
You will receive a dollar if
Polly us es your la vorjte
homemaking idea, Pet

'

)

pionship will go to Minford
for district play.
Gallipolis - Sprague ~ 1r
Edelmann ~ 10 , Bry,an 1-2-4 ,
Young 2-1,5, Groves 4-0-8,
Ni bert 2-0-4, Shaw 1·0-2.
Totals 20.3-47.
Chesapeake - Wood 12+
30, Plummer 1.0.2, Kimball I·
0.2, Mayse 0.2.2, Henson 2·3·7 .
' Hunt 1-1-3. Totals 17-12-45.

0

0

•

•

0

0

•

•• •

WRAPPED

California
Lemons

PIMENTO DfEESE

doz.

SentinP.I ·

City Editor
Published da ily excep t
Sa turday b y The Ohi o
Va tt ev Pu bti s llin g Com
pany ,
111
Cour t
St .,
Pomeroy ,
Ohio
45769 .
Bu siness Off ice Phone 992
215.l'.i . Edi tor i a l f1f\one 992
7 157
Seco nd c l ass p os tag e
paid at P ome roy , ·Oti lo.
Na t ional . a d 'Ve r f is i nCJ
r epresentat i ve
Ward .
Grlf_fith . Company , tnc .,
AOfl1nell1 &amp; Gallagher D iv .,
75 1 TMird A v e. , New York 1
N.Y . 10017·.
·
Subs cr ipt i on
rate s :
Delivered by carr ier where
a vai l ab le 75 cen t s per
week . B y Motor Route
w here carrie,- service not
a vailab le, One month ,
S3 .25. By m'a i l I ~ Ohio an d
W . Va . . One Yec! r , $72 .00 ;
S ix months . $ 11 50 ; Three
months, $7 00 . Elsewhere
526.00 year ; Six month s
S1J .50 ; three mon t hs, $7 .50 .
!j u bscrlp tf on pr ice in c ludes
'iundav Times -Sentine l .

•••• •

INDIVIDUALLY

165 count 69~

D E VOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS · MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
E xcc . Ed.
.
ROBE !ItT HOEFLICH

•

KRAFT

crawling with worms. He also

1

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADM ITTED - Diana lhle.
Racine;
Pauline Cunningham, Minersville.
DISCHARGED - Linda
Bailey , Neiiie Hatfield , Allen
Blackwood , Wiiiie Collins.

Hershey's Syrup ..............................1.~ -~~: . .... •2/89~
. ...... .... ....... -.........
46 ....
oz. .... .... _, 59$
HUnt'S 1i0111at0 JUlte
Lemon Pledte .......................... .... }~.~~: .......•1.39
Best's;heavy duty Garbage Ba25............ ~..~?.:~... ]9~.
Joan of Arc Red Kidney Beans.... ,........ ~?- ~~ : ...... 59$
Jumbo Scott Towels .....................~~~.?.'.'.,...3/'1.00
Li~ton Tea 8aRS ............................... i~.8~:: .... i~::
2
Pnc:le Crackers .........................._.........
Del Monte Cut Green Beans ...... ,...... !~.?.~: .... 2/59c

solution to a problem. Write
Polly in ca re of this
newspaper.

Dai~

Craddock, ail Point Pleasant ;
Edwin Oldaker, Letart ; Mrs.
Alv in Morri son, Rave ns·
wood; Mrs. Mel vi n Ray,
daughter. Southside: L1ifford
Cornell, Buffalo and James
Rai ney, Apple Gro"c .

United Press lnteraatlonal
Golden Siate Warriors for·
ward Rick Barry says teammate Phil Smith is on the
verge of superstardom in the
National Basketball
Association.
The way Smith played
Tuesday night, !he Buffalo
Braves may be convinced
he's already arrived.
Smith scored 23 points In
the second half to lead the
Warriors to a 100.93 win over
the Braves. Included in his
game.!Jigh 31 points were five
goals he scored midway
through the final quarter as
be outscored Buffalo, 111-4,
during a spurt that put
Golden State ahead, 87-81.
"I was one of his biggest

Barry of the second-year
guard from the University of
San Francisco. "I said be
could be a s..,erstar in this
league in a couple of years.
Right now, He's playing as
good as any guard In the

missed 20 shots. Randy Smith
had 18 points, Jim McMillian
17 and Ken U.aries 12 for the
Braves.
Washingtqn defeated
Philadelphi s, 128-111,
New
Milwaukee
beat
Orleans, 111-109, Seattle
topped the New York Knicks,
109-IOS, Kansas aty Kings
downed Detroit, 127-113, ahd
Portland whipped Chicago,
116-IOS, In other NBA games.
Indiana defeated San
Antonio, 107-97, and St. Louis
beat Kentucky, 97~, in ABA
Bullets 128, 71ers Ill;
Elvin Hayes scored 30
points, Phil Chenier, .26 and
Dave Bing 2S to lead
Washington o.ver
Philadelphia . The Bullets
clinched the gw_ne by opening

league.''

Smith's scoring has left
Barry free to do other
things- like pass off for II
assists Tuesday night.

He's 73 and still sharp enough so that nobody had better mess
" I've had m,any yea rs of
with him. He doesn 't go around hearing bells In his head as so
scoring
poin!B. I don't have
many other ex-lighters do.
anything
to prove ," said
Three weeks ago, the old heavyweight champ cracked a few
Barry,
who
scored only six
ribs when he took a tumble varnishing the floor of his Epping,
Buffalo. "I'm
points
against
N.H., borne. He isn't ready to go otit dancing yet, but he's up
very
content
to
let the other
and aro1md again, staying abreast of everything that's going
players
do
it.
That might
on.
prolong
my
career
a little
Jack Sharkey got on the subject of Joe Frazier.
bit
."
He talked about Frazier's decision to keep ~n fighting and
Bob McAdoo led the Braves
what a mistake he thought it was.
with
28 points, even though be
boosters
last
year
."
said
Jack 9!arkey was talking from experience. He made the
same mistake. He knew he should've quit after he lost his
world heavyweight title to Primo Camera in 1933 when he was
31, but be didn't . He kept fighting, hoping to win his title back.
He never did. ·
,
He got back to Joe Frazier though. "He 's a pretty smart
!ella," said the former champ. "He has a good aspect on life
and I'm sure he's well taken care of financially. He's got the By TRACY RINGOU!BY
reportedly returned to
recognition, the money and everything else, so what can be UPI Sports Writer
Lawrence to work under
gain fighting any more? I know what he's thinking. 'Just one
LAWRENCE:, Kan. (UP! ) Tinunons' direction and just
more.' That 'one more' could be the one to do the damage. If I - Distance runner Jim Ryun, a couple of weeks ago ,
were him, I'd call a press conference and announce my who came back home to get in promoters of the professional
retirement."
shape
.. for
another International Track
Jack Sharkey remembers.how be felt when Carnera knocked professional track season, Association said they
him out in sixrounds to take his title. He told his manager, the · has decided to retire from expected him to be running
late Johnny Buckle-;, he didn't want to fight any more.
near world record times on
competition .
4"1 was morose after Camera beat me," Sharkey said,
Ryun and Coach Bob Tim· this year 's ITA circuit .
remembering. "I had lost the championship to a character. I' mons scheduled a news
But expectations of others
told my manager I wanted to quit. I said to him it was ge1tlng conference today to announce have long been problems for
tougher for me to get In shape, I had a wonderful wife, three Ryun 's retirement.
Ryun.
lovely children, a beautiful horne and all the money I wanted,
"For the only time in my
A ihree·time Olympian,
and he said to me, 'Ahh.!J.!J,yo~'re talkin ' crazy. You stiU got a life, I'd rather no( say , Ryun became the first high
few years left."'
anything' yet," Ryun said schooler to run a sub-four·
9!arliey won the heavyweight Iitle by outpointing Max when contacted about reports minute mile when he won the
Schmeling in 1932. He had beaten Carnera the y~r before and be was retiring. "We are Kansas State high school
before fighting him again, be had told Buckley he intended to going to have a news championship in 1965 with a
retire after this bout. Buckley said nothing about that, but conference and I will make a 3:58.3.
while Sharkey was training for his title defense against major announcement at that
During the next two years,
Carnera, Buckley made two future matches with King time."
he set five American records,
Levinsky and Tommy Loughran for later In the year. So after
Ryun, who ran under Tim- . world marks in the mile at
be lost to Carnera, 9!arkey still had to go through with those mons at Wichita, Kan., East 3:51.1, 1,500 meters at 3.:31.1
two bou!B.
High School and ·again at and the hall mile at I:44.9 and
The Levinsky fight was to be held in Chicago's Comiskey Kansas
University, in 1966 was named the winner
Park .
Fight night arrived.
"I remember going to Qlmlskey Park; I remember coming .
out of the dugout; I remember being introduced in the ring,"
~
!Q)arkey said. "That's ali I remember. Next thing I knew I was
• ·,;y
·
in my hotel room. I said to Buckley, you ready? C'mon let's go
· By PAUL VARIAN
. ' to the fight .''
like. I will cootinue to use the
Buckley told Sharkey to relax, the fight was all over.
EAST LANSING, Mich . facility and get arrested until
"Did I get knocked out'" 9!arkey wanted to know.
(UP!) - Los Angeles they agree to have an
"No, but you were up and down four or five times and you Dodgers pitcher Mike appropriate bearing on this."
lost the decision," Buckley informed. him.
Marshall says he will conduct
Marshall has been feuding
Nine · days Jater, Sharkey met Loughran in Philadelphia. his spring training in a for tbe past four years with
Four years before, Sharkey had flattened Loughran In three Michigan State University Intramural Director Harris
rounds, but this time he lost to him In IS. Sharkey remembers sports facility - no matter F. Beeman over whether be
his annoyance With Buckley on the train back to Boston.
how many times he is must reserve the turf arena,
" I said to him, John, whadd'ya want ? Do you wanna wheel arrested.
which also is used for tennis
me up to the ring in a wheelchair? I told you I don't wanna iight
The outspoken former Cy and basketball.
any more. Johnny, I'm telling you right now,l'm all through, Young Award-winner already
University officials
fmished !"
10 expressed ftustra tion over
faces
a
March
9!arkey didn't fight for 28 months. Ayoung fellow out of the arraignment on charges
Alabama cotton fields by the name of Joe Louis was starting to stemmlilg from two recent
come along about this time and Buckley put a bug in Sharkey's arrests at the building and be
head by telling him he certainly could lick Louis. Sharkey kind has been banned from the
of liked the idea of becoming the first ex-heavyweight champ premises.
ever to win back his tiUe .
Marshall says he will be
He fought four more fights and on the evening of Aug. 18, back anyway. .
.
1936, Jack Sharkey, pushing 34, met hard.!Jltting 22-year-old · •·If you allow even trtvlal
·
Joe Louis, who knocked him out in three rounds .
injustice to continue, then the
"Suddenly I foiDld myself on the floor," Sharkey said. "The /injustice wili grow until it
The Rio Grande College ·
referee was counting over me, on his fingers , and I remember contaminates the entire sys.
Community
College basebail
some&lt;Jne saying to me, 'Take your time, take your time, tern," said Marshali, a
team
will
participate
in th~
everybody's with you.' I thought to myself, what a helluva graduate assistant in
Florida
Basebalt
Schools'
wonderful place to be ! Everybody's with me tonight.''
Michigan State 's Physical Round Robin Baseball
'-When
he
finally
wlis
helped
to
his
corner,
Sharkey,
with
his
Education Department.
1
gloves stiU on his hands, threw a couple of kisses to the. c·rowd
" I wili be in there Tourmanent at San lord, Fla.,
.
and drew one of the greatest ovations be ever received. He was tomorrow at the regular time March 16-18.
·
Tlie
training
camp
allows
kissing everyone goodbye was what he was doing. Jack to use the facility . And they
9!arkey never fought again .
may arl'llSt me again if they teams from the north to work
on fundamentals and engage
in actual game competition
prior to starting regular
spring schedules when the
northern weather permits
later in the spring.
Along with Rio Grande
Ohio Valley Conference the Flyers , 81-73, and se t up the game, 75-71.
Qlllege
·Community College,
However,
Bob
Johnson
hit
a
rivals Oak Hill and the sectional showdown at
in the tourney
other
teams
field
goal
and
Dale
Russell
Chesapeake advanced to the 7:30p. m. Friday.
include
Tufts
University,
converted
free
throws
for
Cla'ss A sectional finals at, Experiencing no dif·
Shippenberg
College,
Chesapeake
to
pijl
the
Ironton following Tuesday ficulties from the Bobcats,
Milligan
College,
Kenyon
out
of
reach,
Panthers
night wins . .
Oak Hill was led by four·
Coiiege, the University of
Russell
finished
with
25
Oak Hill's sixth-ranked players in double figures .
Oaks jumped to a 21-8 lead Tirri Williams led the way poin!B to lead all scorers, but Wisconsin at Superior . Rio
and coasted to an 82-SI semi- with 21 points, while Doug the Panthers ' attack showed Grande will play two gaines
each day or a total of eight
final ~icto~y over outmanned Hale netted IS and John, unusual balance . Roger
games during the tourAdkins
netted
16,
while
Kevin
Green Township. Wiiiiams had 14.
Rice
had
I~ and Johnson 14.
nament.
Chesapeake, taking ad ·
Green, which dropped its
The trip will be taken
Jim
Cline
and
John
Gaigal
vantage of Ironton St . Joe's 18th decision in 19 starts, was
during
the ~reak between
sparked
St.
Joe
with
22
and
21
foul difficulties, eliminated paced by Rick Suttles' 13
winter and spring quarters at
points
respectively.
points. Randy Grace · con·
Rio Grande College · Com· tributed 12.
GREEN TOWNSHIP (51)
munity
College. To finance
A l~penholf 9, Suttles 1 J,
Che5apeake, improving its -Cline
Tuesday ' s
4,
Otwarth
l
,
Grace
12,
the
trip
the baseball team is
Ohio High School
record to 13-7, roared to a 22- Gannon J, White 6, Moore 2. raising iIs own money. A
Tournament Results
OAK HILL (IU - Boggs 10 ,
14 lead over the Flyers and
Results
raffle and a brochure with
T. Willilms 21. Hele 15. Allen
United Press International
held off last quarter rally for 4, J . Willi1ms 14, Roof 6, advertising are helping in the
CLASSAAA
the victory. St. Joe, which Jayne 2, Dunn 8, Kalinoski 1. · fund raising.
At Columbua
By Quarters :
•
West e rville South 61 Co l
finished at 11·9, cut its deficit Green
6 1J 15 l7 - 5 1
The regular Rio Grande "
South 56
~our points with, 1: 12left in
Oak H i ll
21 19 24 18- 82
t:ol Lind en 53 H II liard 44
Community
College baseball
IRONTON ST. JOE (13) At St~ubenville
Miller
16,
Swuh
4,
Cline
22
,
schedule
includes
17
E.
Liv e rpool
56
New
Gligai 21, Wagginger 8, Clay
scheduled
playing
dates
Philadelphia 37
2,
CLASS AA
beginning with West Virginia
CHESAPEAKE !Ill At LUCISYilie
Russell
25
,
Johnson
u,
State College on Monday,
Minford 70 Port smoufh Wesf
Adkins U, Rice 15, Marshall
56
March 22. All scheduled
7, McWhorter 4.
At Chagrin Falls

Colle ge Ba sketball Results

Ryun plans"to .retire

Ma... h all

By United Press l nterna1 io nal
Playoffs and Tqurnam ents
East Coasr Cont. Playoffs

(I st Roundl

of the James E. Sullivan
Award as the amateur athlete
of the year . .
· But through three Olympic
efforts, he never won a gold
medaL
The
biggest
disappointment for Ryun was
the 1972 Olympics when be
fell down during the
preliminaries of- tile 1,500
meters and failed to make the
finals .
Another setback in the 29- ·
yearo{)ld . Kansan's career

came in 1971, when he was
attempting to regain a spot as
one of the world's premiere
distance runners and lost to
Marty Liqouri in the mile at
the Martin Luther King
Games in Philadelphia
despite a time .of 3:54.8.
The (Mist three years, Ryun
has competed on the !'(A
circuit.

•n .
Wl•tt try aaoz·
e

the last perioa with a I~
spurt. Fred Carter had 27
points and George McGinnis
had 26 for the 76ers.
Bucks lll, Jazz 109:
Brian Winters scored 12 of
his 28 p&lt;lin!B in overtime,
including a ZG.foot jump shot
with three seconds left in the
extra period, for Milwaukee.
Winters scored the last 12
points, including his game·
winning shot. Nate WiUiams
scored 33 points and Pete
Maravich 22 for New Orleans.
Sanies 109, Knlcks 105:
Bruce Seals scored 29
points and Slick Watts 24 to
lift Seattle past New York.
The key to the Sonics' win
was their conversion of 2£k&gt;f.
21 foul tries in the second

Temple BS Rid er 69
Hof stra 77 Bucknell 58
NAI A Di strict Play
Grnd Cnyn 74 W' minster U tah
57
Tex . Sout hern 89 MictW~tern 81
Bthny N az . 55 Cnt .Ok la .S t. 53

half. Spencer Haywood led and 17 rebounds to lead St.
the Knicks with 31 points.
Louis over Kentucky. The
Kings 1%7, Plllona 113 :
Colonels led with 10:40 left
Jimmy Walker and Nate but the spirits then pulled
Archibald scored 22 of their away to lead 91-31. ~2 points In the third quarter,
rallying KBnsas City past
Our Interest 1s
Detroit. Bob Lanier, wbo hit
Gre1ter For You
10 of his first II shots, led
Detroit with 34 points.
Blazers Ill, Bulls 105:
Geoff Petrie scored 29
points as Portland scored its
On 90-Day
third straight win In liB battle
for a playoff slot. Mickey
Certl~,..-~
Johnson had 23 poinlll for
Chicago.
[&gt;.75 per cent Plid 011
Pacers 107, Spurs 97 :
Indiana ended its lout· 190 day Certlflq~tes of
game losing streak, leading 'Deposit. · $1.000.00
from start to finish as Billy Minimum .
Interest
Knlgbt tallied 31 poinlll. The ,Payable Quertwrly.
victory also helped the
\
Pacers protect a two-game A substant ial penalty Is
invoked on all certif icate
lead over St. LIJuis in the accounts
w i thdrawn prior
battle for the league's fifth to the dete of matur i t y .
and final playoff position,
James Silas was high Jor San
Antonio with 26 points.
Spirits 97, Colonels 89:
Ron Boone scored 29 points
and Marvin Barnes had 24

5.75%

Sout hern Utah 95 Mesa 86
East

A lbany NY 91 Hamilton 83
Brand eis 106 Tuffs 95
Connect icut 72 Fairfield 70
Dartmouth 66 Har\lard 64 , ot
Dow l ing 53 Rutge r s.cam den 41

Georgetown DC 76 lona 68
Ithaca 85 B ing hamton St. 75
Mass . 103 Vermon t 100

New Pa lt z 106 Osw ego St . 92
Pitt 74 St . Franc is Pa . 69
RM de I sland 99 Btown 79

SIGNUPDAYSET
The Portland Independent
ball club will have a sign up
day Sunday at 2 p, m. at
PorUand Elementary. 'lbe
"Bandit" asked those in·
terested to attend.

Cello Carrots
16

oz. bag 2/29~

99~2

oz . pkg.

PARKAY
'

~-:;MARGARINE
HOME MADE

HAM SALAD
PERIOR

lb.
•• • 0 •

•••••••

59~

Sr. Mi chael 's 86 Sien~ 85
South
Ky . Ws lyn 80 Ind . St. -E'\11 75
Midwest
Cr eig h ton 77 UNC -Charlolte' 71
Doane 92 Ha st ings 73
Loyola t tl . 87 Ci ncinnati 71
Olivet Na z. BJ Trini ty til.
Xa11ier Ohio 98 Duquesne 86
Southwest
H . Payne 62 St . Mry 's Tex . 60
We s ~

THE INN PLACE

THURSDAY NIGHT

•

Cent . Wash . 52 E . Wa'sh . 49
Montana 84 Montana St . 15
Nev LV 90 L oyola Cal . 69

SPECIAL

PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Coach Dick Vermeil of the
Philadelphia Eagles has
reached into the college ·

U

ranks for an assistant.

his attitude.
"It's a very, very small
thing on his part," said Vice
President Robert Perrin .
"IrS unfortunate that he has
to play this rather childish
game. That building has to
accommodate the needs of
over 50,000 people and there
obviously has to be rules. And
we don't set them for one
per.s on."

Vermeil
announced
Tuesday that Lynn Stiles, 34,
an assistant at UCLA, would
coach the outside linebackers
and also would handle
defenSe phases oi the special
teams . ·
Stiles came to UCLA In 1971
and served under Pepper
Rodgers for three -years
before hecoming an assistant
under Vermeil in 1974.
·

Visit Our Salad Bar
Spaghetti Garlic Bread
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

Cle . Cathedral Lallr'l 84
Beachwood .53
At Troy
Verse Il les 72 Milton Union 52
Springfield Shawne e 53 Tipp

·

Ind ian Lllke 73 Nor thwester n
68
CLASS A

by the piece

CASING BOLOGNA•1.19 BUJE WATER FROZEN
SLICED '1.29 lb. FISH AND BArrER
SUPERIOR ASSORTED '
$
LUN.Pf MEAT1b.~k!!· } 19

99~ ~.

•2.95
Plu s tax

The Tri-County•s Most
Ex&lt;iting Night Spot

THE MEIGS INN·
Phone 992-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

·
gam&lt;s except one are double
headers. Johnny Ecker is
coach of the 1975-76 edition of

the Rio rande College Community College baseball
team.

Oaks, Panthers gain finals

cuv &lt;a

lb•.

The At"ens Cou~tv
Slvints &amp; Lolli co.
· 2" s.c'ond St.
Pemerov. Ohio

Stonehill 95 SE Mass. 81

Rio basebailers to ta-ke
• £tOn
VJ
•da tourney
pa rt ·zn

Peeve, . Polly's Problem or

The

Louella Sa wyers, Mrs .• Juhn

nose

around the head to bold

lodge in the blind end of the der wear , clean bedding and
large colon (cecum) in the that this is carried out
stated that the worms can · area where the appendix is, regularly . Certainly all of the
cause symptoms of ap- but they may also be present children • should
wash
pendicitis, but that they did in much of the large bowel . their hands carefully before
not remove an appendix just and small intestine. They are eating snacks or otherwise
usuaily elim inated with putting their hands to the
for pinworms,
·, mouth. When one ch ild in the
I have also heard stories adequate treatment.
The
reason
that family is infected it 's usually
about washing hands before
eating. What I can't figure recurrences are so frequent · a guod idea to treat the entire
our is why one child in the is that the infection is so family as you have been
family isn 't susceptible. An widespread . Most likely your doing .
answer would bring relief to 4-year-old .has not lear.ned
That 's ahout ail you cah do.
proper hygiene yet. .In small Just keep in tnind that they
our minds.
DEAR READER - Pin- c hildren scra tc hing and are not serious even though
worms are a very common putting unclean hands in the the y
are
distressing .
Infection . Fortunately they mouth is a frequent way of Whenever they recur you 'll
usually
c ause
more ~ reinfectin g oneself wi th
just have to treat them again .
discomfort than harm. The another cycle of eggs.
For information on when
most common symptom is . The eggs can also live on and how to treat a cold send
itching around the anal area. bedding and other areas but 50 cents for The Health
The female worm crawls usually only lor a day or two Letter, Number 3-2, Colds
out of the rectal area at night because they don 't survive and Flu . Group, Prevention
and tills is what produces the dry air very well .
and Treatment. Enclose a
The best thing I can suggest lon g,
itching feeling ,
stamped,
selfThere
is
some is to. make a real effort to addoessed envelope for
disagreement as whether teach your smail child better mailing. Address your letter
pinworms actually cause hygiene. Be sure at the to me in care of this
. indigestion or upset stomach beginning of treatment that newspaper, P.O. Box 1~51,
as you snggest in your letter . she is completely bathed and Radio· Ci ty Station , New
ll is true that the worms clean and ha s clean un · York. NY 10019.
appendix is removed it is

days of sliding

remov e it wi th soap and
. water . Later I was fr ying
bacon r rem em her how our

Pinwonn infection hard to eliminate
By I.Awreace E. Lamb, M.D.

Chesapeake Tammy Wood
led all scorers with 30.
Jn the Vinton - Nelsonville
contest Pam Rogers of Vinton
had 14 and Debbie Smith of
20,
in
the
second
game
of
Nelsonville 24.
news any more that g lves one
Gir
ls
Sec
tional
basketball
Friday Fairland will go
a fee ling of stability and
action
Tuesday
nig
ht
at
agains
t Belpre at 7 p.m. and
improvement.
Larry
Mon
ison
Gym.
Warren
will- play Sherifan at
We get the idea that Ford
With
t
:30
left
in
.th
e
8:
IS.
is doing nothing but trying to
In the se mi ,finais on
b.e elected ir• l!l76 and the Gnll ipolis - Chesa peake
contest
Gall
ipolis
was
ahead.
Tuesday,
March 9, Meigs will
legislature is doing nothing .
by
10
when
Chesapea
ke
put
pl
ay
Ga
llipolis
and New
but re neging on every good
on
a
ful
l
court
press
and
Lexington
will
go
against
idea we thoug ht was a lready
nearly
pulled
the
game
out,
Nelsonville
.
decided; all with a barrage of
F'oo· Gallipolis Ka ren
The championship will be
the same old tired names of
Sprag
ue
and
Barb
Edelmann
played
Saturday, Mar ch
who is goi ng to run for ufficc .
coch
scored
10
poin
ts.
For
Winners
of ' th e cham·
13.
- LENA.
DEAR MARION - I think

craft shops. lllquirc ar-ound

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Erma
Waugh, Crown City; Mrs.
Ross Roush, Mason; Mrs.
Archie Whitt, Betty Leonard,
Mrs . Cecil Sines, Mr .

.

llOCK SPRINGS
d efeated
Ga lli p oli s
Chesapeake 47 to 45 in the
POLLl"S PROBLEM
''publicity begins on wh o will first [(arne and Nelsonville
DEAR POLLY - I have a- run ned time . There is no - w01i e~sily over Vint{,) n, 49 to

,,

brown-stained

How they voted

Decoupage an
exacting hobby

.
tourney victory
.

Hospital News

Waniors edge by Braves, 100-93

1
'O ak Hill :2 :J::~~n51

Chesepeake811ronton Sl . Joe
73
At Dover
Indian Valley N 56 Gareway

.
.9

At Wars•w
Indian Valley S 72 Zane Trace

Ohlo College

la~k•tbltl Scorea.
United Preulnternatlonat
·
· Tuesd1y
xav ier 98 buquesne 86
Loyall CIUIO 87 Cincinnati 71

INTERNATIONAL HOCKEY
LEAGUE STANDINGS
u ·n lted Press International
North
W . L . Pets . GF . GA
SaQinaw 35 2l 9 79 274 226

By Quarfer s:
St . Joe
16 1.4 22 21 ~ 73
Chesape ake ~2 19 22 18 - 81

Por't Huron
30 22 11 II 246 223
Fl in1
28 25 11 67 224 205
21 25 12 66 209 200

""'ASON, W.VA •

22 35 7 5 I 225 281
South

Will Open Tomorro~
THURSDAY, MARCH 4

Kalama1oo
•

W. L. T. Pis GF GA

Darton
36 21 8 ·ao 268 199
Fort Weyne 25 28 12 ! 244 246
Toledo
20 32 13 53 210 2•0
Columbus
23 37 7 53 ·~23 29~
Tuesdiy•s Result
' Muskegon • Kalamazoo 2
Tonleht's Game
Port Huron at Deyton
Thursdav's Games
No oemes scheduled .

International® 674 . : .· Utility and Row Crop . ·
models, 61 PTO ('lp' (diesel) 58 PTO hp ' (gas ).
•
Internationa l 574 . . · . Uti lity a nd Row Crop
mod els. 52 PTO hp [gas or diese l)
Inte rn ation a l 464 Utility .
sell and 4 4 PTO hp (gas).

shift on-the-go to SF - 4R speeds
Hydrostatic power steering. big Dyn&lt;flife®
clutch plus more features that make Ihese
the biggest "little " tractors in their class•

45 PTO hp [die: ·• Precision . drafl conlrol 3·pt hitch. Big rear·
mounted fuel tank. New walk· thru deck . .
• Th e most completely ne w utility tractors in
· 2~ years
built with advanced features
to do more work
;

;

Ask us t?r a demonstration. We'll show why you get more "new tractor" from
International Harvester'
•

I

Featuring those delicious thick. thick milk
shakes and "Sjleclal"

3 CORN DOGS _____ ,•1.00
'I

UTILITY
•Est Mak hp

AT 1 hOO A.M.

a...----~.h. m~.~s•1

. 01'
....
.... w.l.
SIZe
...........

• More productive leatures .. . "Lig htning
Flash " Shill sync hromesh tran sm issio n with
compact planetary final drive - le t's you

BOB'S THICK SHAKE

Muskeg on

3 TractoJS with features
and work!JC~Wer for any

i

--

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
Phone 992·2176

Pomeroy, Ohio

..

'

I

J

lit

'

�•

n;;;;;;;rt-Pp
-,~;;~·r~~;::::,~=;l Four more fields are completed
::::

:·:·

::::

reserve clause
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Iron 1 office of the defending
world champion Cincinnati
Reds is officially getting into
the debate on baseball's
disputed reserve system.
Reds
President Bob
Howsam has penned an
"Open Letter wReds Fans,"
in whi ch he argues that
" ba seball ca nnot operate
successfully without an
effective reserve system."
And , Howsam's publicity
staff has written and
distributed to the news media
a 600-word article entitled
" Reserve System Lets Stars
Develop, " advancing the
theory that a lot of big stars
wouldn 't have gotten a
chance in baseball without
the reserve system .
Howsam's "Open Letter"
is on the front page of the
current issue o"f ~ 'Reds­
Letter,"
the
official
publication of the Reds .
While acknowledging that
major league owners have
offered to " relax " the
reserve sy~tem and allow
veterans to play out their
option, Howsam wrote that
some type of reserve system
was still needed to "assure "
the continued development of
quality ballplayers.
"The Reds are spending
nearly $2 million annually in
player development to assure
our fans that talented young
players will be available for
the Reds," Howsam staled.
"To do this, we must know
that we will have the services
of these players at the major
league level for a reasonable
period of time.
"The
~ Seitz
ruling'
(dumping the
reserve
system ) would eliminate this
assurance, which is why it is
being cl!allenged in the
courts.
·
"We believe that baseball
cannot, operate successfully
wiihout an effective re&lt;erve

system . It is imperative thal
baseball have an effective
reserve syste m and we
believe that the clubs, the
and
their
Pla Jvers
represen tatives will benefit

addedHowsam, "that abase·
ball team's most important
assets are its players. Otiu~r ..
sportshaveseentheproblem
whir h occurs when players
movefreelyfromclubtoclub
an d , as a COnsequence, C1Ubs
lost their identity with the
fans .
The article distributed by
the Reds pubJicity staff,
written in a "feature story
style,'' begins, "Imagine
baseball without Stan Musial,
Pete Rose, Maury Wills and
W e S h "
arr n pan...
The article .states that
""without baseball
. 's reserve
system,
it
is
quite
conceivable that (such )
Players woul"'t' never get an
oppJrtunity in the future to
work their way W major
league stardom."
The essense of the article is
Ulat club owners used . time
and mon~y to develop such
stars in the minor leagues
._
because th ey k new tde
reserve clause would let the
cl.ub reap possible future
dividend!;; .
The article states that
Musl'a) failed as a pl'tcher and
developed his hitting in the
. ors·, that Rose "begged 11
mm
forachancetoperfor;mand
gotitintheminors·,thatWills
spent nine years in the
minors before making the
.
d h
S h
maJors , an t at pa n
pitched three seasons in the
minors.
" Without
a . reserve
" th
t' l
ed
system,
ear 1ce stat ,
"players who do not appear
to be instant big leaguers w~ll
never get their shot at the
· 1
11
major eagues.
lt

Loyola of Illinois was a lot
more successful, riding a 27poinl
effort
by
Tad
Dufelrneier to an 87-71 upset
of 18th-ranked Cincinnati.
Loyola · held , Cincinnati
scoreless for five minutes of
-the secoml half to insure the
victory, only the ninth
against 16 losses for ·the
Ramblers. Cincinnati fell to
22-S.
In other major . games,
Temple dumped Rider, BS-69,
and
Hofstra
stopped
Bucknell, 77-58, in the East
Coast Conference piayoffs,
Connecticut edged Fairfield,
72-70, Dartmouth shaded
Harvard, 66-64, in overtime,
Georgetown (D.C.) downed
lona, 76-68, Pittsburgh
defeated St. Francis (Pa.),
74-69, Rhode Island crushed
Brown, 99-79, Creighton held
off North Carolina-Olarlotte,
77-71, and Xavier (Ohio)
whipped Duquesne, 98-86.

Training event slated March 18
Trainin g in filling out
Medicare forms will be given
at Rio Grande College on
March 18 from 10 a .m. to 2
p.m . The one day training
will be sponsored by the Ohio
Commission on Aging, Area
Agency on Aging 'District 7,
Social
Security 1 Administration and Nationwide
1 n s u r a n c ~ M e d i care ·

MISSION Kan. (UP!) -

;:;:
/ Class AA l?urnament competition at Federal Hocking )
:::; Thursday mghl at 7:30 when they tangle With the Belpre ;';!
:;:; Golden Eagles, 2-15, on the year.
:;:;
·.-.
Th.e Maraude r~got PasttheNew
Panthers
::::
.
.Lexington
·
.· . :·:·
::::
;:;: last Saturday to wm the nght to play Thursday. MeigS IS ::::
!{ top-seeded in the tournament, and if they get by the!\!\
:;:; Golden Eagles, the Marauders Will be 10 the fmals ::::
::;: Saturday night lighting for the right to advance to the ;;:;
·:·.
•
•
•
••·•
;:~ Distru;t Tournament.
:;:;

regional tournaments for the
32-team 1976 Division III
basketball championship il
was announ ced Tu es day . '
Before Tuesday, the only
r eg ional
tournament
completed was the South .
Three other divisions
'
however, have yet to extend

by the Eastern Remonal to
.
o•
City College of New York and
Rochester Institute of Technology, to Southeastern
Massachusetts University in
Northeast Regional
to
'
Widener College, Mansfield
State and Grove City in the
Middle Atlantic Regional, to
the University of the South in
the Southern Regl'onal and to
•
Cornell College and Simpson

fr~~ ~~t"fe s~!e~:~~';; ~\:::::::::::::::::;:::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::: : ::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:=:::::::::=:=:::::::::::::::::::r ~:;~~~~~ whic~o;ill cu~~ ~~~~~~

N_evada-Los Vegas ends
season with 28-1 mark
United Press International
Loyola of California can at
ieast say it held fifth-.-anked
Nevada-Las Vegas to under
its average of 110.8 points per
game.
The Rebels ended their
regular . season with a 28-1
record Tuesday night by
easily defeating Loyola of \he
West
Coast
Athletic
Conference, 9()..fj9, UNLV's
only defeat of the season
ca me at the hands of
Pepperdin.e of the WCAC.
Eddie OWens led the Rebels
with 29 points and senior
Boyd Batts added 16, all but
two in the second half.
Loyola, playing slowdown ·
most of the way, book only 17
shots in the first half and hit
on II. The Rebels still
managed to lead at halftime,
45-28.
Nevada-Las Vegas now
must await word as to where
it will play in the NCAA "
regional playoffs.

::::

B G
Ba'l
:·:·
·
'
·
•
Y reg 1 ey
:::; Fields were completed In four
The Me~gs Marauders, now 10-9 on the year, resume ;:;: more of the NCAA's eight

Program.
·
The training is available
for persons who assist the
elderly with Medicare forms.
Individuals interested in
a !tending · the training
session, should contact the
Area Agency on Aging
~i s lrict 7, Rio Grande
College, Rto Grande, OhiO
45674, phone 245-5353, Eel. 26.

p ro

,-------------.
I

',

I
1
1

I

1

sta:f11Jll'l.O"S
_] •

I

Sprm' g sessi'on
slated May 8

I
1
1 The Ohio Co uncil for
fiiit
• Elementary School Science
IOCESS) will hold its spring
NBA standings
conference on May 8, at
. ld Oh ' R . I I'
By United Press International Mansf •e ' 10 - egiS ra IOn
Eastern
Conference
bl
k
Atlantic Division
an s are ava1.1a bl e ·m· the
.
1 R
W L P t
Boston
. . c . g b I ns t ru e t Jona
esource
40 18 ·690 Center located in the
7
Buffalo
35 27 .565
Phila delph ia 35 28 .556 71 1 'basement of Holzer Hall on
New YoC~ntral 3givJi!io·~7 6 121 1 the Rio Grande College·
w l p 1 b Communlty College. campus.
Washo·ngton
39 ,·, .609c . g
R
' th l'
.11 b
·
. ooms w1
men w1
e
24
36
600
1
Cleyeland
·
Houston
30 31 .492
71 2 ava1'la ble a t As h) a nd Colleg e
NewOrlean s 27r 34 .443 10'7 forstudentsat$3perperson
AtiMta
26 35 .-126 111 1
F 'd
.
M
Western con~erence
on fl ay evemng
ay 7,
Midwest Division
1976.
Anyone
interested
in
w
1
Milwaukee
j/
·.4~~
·
gb
reservingaroomormakinga
27
Detroit
24 36 .400 21 1 reservation should contact
KansasCI.IY 23 39 ·371 417 . Mrs. J oan Loe ffl er, ASSIS
. ta nt
Ch~eago
18 .:12 .300 51 2
Pacific Dlvi•ion
. Professor of Education, at
w. L. Pet . gb R'IO
Gran de
co11 egeGolden
State
44
17 .721
C
't
C
11
seattle
ommunt Y o ege.
32 31 .508 13
Los Angeles 31 31 .soo 13 1 .1
Phoenix
27 32 .458 16
Portland
28 35 .444 17
Tuesday's Results
Golden St &gt;~e 100 Buffalo 93
LEXINGIDN , Ky. (UPI)
seatt le 109 New York 105
Washington 128 Philadelphia 111 - The WOOd portion of the
Kansas City 127 Detroit 11 3
grandstand at ' Keeneland ,
111 N
o1
109 0 t
M.l
'w
•w
r
eans
·
buill prior to the its inaugural
Portland 116 Chicago,105
Wednesday 's Games
meeting in 1937, will be
Bos Ion at Ph 1.,ade 1Ph"1a
dismantled and replaced with
Seattle
at Detrail
ClevelandatPhoen ix
concrete and steel at the
Houston at New Orleans
conclusionofthespringmeeThursday's Games
Boston at Atlanta
ting.
track
officiah
Kansas City at Milwaukee
annowtced today.
Chicago at Goolden Sflt1e
W!!!shington al H·ovston

ABA Standings
By United Press International
W. L. Pet. gb
Denver..
.t6 16 742
New York
40 23 .635 6 1 '}
Slln Antonio 36 25 590 91•
KentuCky
34 31 523 131~
Indiana
32 34 .485 16
St. Louis
30 36 455 18
Virginia
12 52 :188 35
Tuesday's Results
St. Lou is 97 Kentucky 89
Ind iana \07 San Antonio 97
Wednesday's Games
New York at Denver
St. Louis at San Antonio
Virginia at Indiana
Thursday's Ga'mes
(No gam.eS schedulect)

San Diego
x Minnesot

nate with the semifinals and
finals• which· will be played• at
Albrtght College, Reading,
Pa on March 19-20
·• . .
·
Invitations were extended

in the Midwest Re-

MISSIO N, Kan . tU PI ) The foll owing is a list of
NCAA Division Ill reg ional
si tes and pairings :
N·o rtheast reg iona l

F"rna l co
lle•ue
· ti•
r.'IJ
.
e

nu~

e~

. 11 1
e osto n
MI SS ION , Kan . (U P IJ
alphabettca
Y :
555
Th e final Di Yision I I and II State : M · • Chicago, Ill. ,
cor nell ,City.
Iowa ,PaDoan
e, Nebr ,
College basketball rank ings Grave
.• LeMoyn
I records
throu gh games
Monday ):
Owen . Te nn ., Lynchburg ,
DIVISION 11
va ., New York , City Coll ege
Points of , On eonta Sta te, N . Y . ,
1 Ph ita Te)nil e, Pa . (24-2)
Rensselaer Polytechni c, N.
120 Y ., Rhode Island College.
2. Nic holls St. , La . C20 3) 11 2 Rochester
Ins tit ute
of
3 . Win .. sat St .. N.C. { 23 41
Technology, N. Y ., 'Simspsotnh ,
90 towa , Univer . ot the ou ,
4 Fla . Tech 120.31
80 Tenn
·conn
Tuft s,,
.
Mass .,.. Trirdty,
Union. N.
Y., .,Upsllla
5. Morgan St.,M d. l215 l 78 N J ., andYorkCollege , N.Y.
6 Rollins , Fla . ( Hl·5)
64
7 Bridgeport , Conn . (21 .4)
6
505
B . No. Dar kola (20·5)
9 . Tenn . s ta te (19.7)
s1
10 . E11an sville , Ind . (19 Bl 40
11.
eynt ey
St .. ,Pa.
(22·4)
12· Ch
Puge
sound
wash
. \22 -7)38
37
13.
No.
Alabama
(19
61
16
14 Kentucky St . l"-5 1
"
·
15 . Bakersfield , St., Cal (21 oi l
10
16 . Hartwi ck, N. Y. (21 · 3 l
10
17 . Wise
Green Bay (20.7) 10
Others receivi ng con
s I d e r a t i o n I· I i s t
alphabetic al ly J: Armstrong
St a t.e, Ga .; Assumption- ,
Mass .; Balt imore . Md. .:
Sellarmine , Ky .; Bentl ey,
Mass ; B u If a 1o s ta 1e, N . v , :
California , Da11Js ; Cameron ,
Okla ; Ch i'c: o Stat e, Cal if.;
Edin boro St at e, Pa .; Ftorida
A&amp;M,· Grambling, La .;
Lincoln , Mo .: Madison , Va .:
Mankato State , Minn .:
Merrimack. Ma ss ., Missour i,
Rolla ; Neb raska , Omaha ;
North Da kota State ; Old
Dominion, Va ., Qv inn.ipiac ,
Conn ; Sl. Joseph's , Ind .;
Tennessee , Chaltano og a ;
West G.eorgia ; Wr ig ht Stat e,
Ohio

240 220
30 25 4 64 21 1 212
DIVISION Ill
Canadian
.
Poinh
W L T Pts gf ga
1. Coe, lowa (22 0l
120
Winn ipeg
J4 21 7. 90 288 707
2. Sc ranton , Pa . (225l
112
Quebec
38 20 4 .80 274.233 J. Widener , Pa . (21 6 )
104
Calgary
32 27 4 68 238 216
, Oh io (19 3) 96
Edmonton 22 .:10 s J9 223 284 4.5.Witlenberg
Ash land , Ohio (19 6 )
B4
Toronto
17 40 5 39 264 319 6. Monmout h, N. J (2 1 51 71
x-Ottawa
14 2.6 1 29 134 172 a. Lake Sup . Sl., Mic h. (21 .J)
x-Team disbanded
58
Tuesday's Results
9. Ocddental , Ca lif . 12 1 6J 56
Toronto 5 Quebec 2
10. Ha mili on, N.Y. ( 19'3) 56
Phoenix 5 Ind ianapolis 2
11. August ana , Ill (18·61 39
Calgary 6 Edmonton 3
12. Man stie id St , Pa ( 16.7) 22
. New Englal)d o:t Sa.n Diego 3
13. Suffolk . Mei ss. {19 4)
18
Wednesday's Games
14 . Mil es, Ala . ( 19 7)
17
CleYeland al Cincinnal i
15. Shepherd Co l ., W . Va 127 Calgary at Edmonton
2) '
13
NHL Standings
Thursday's Games
16. Tra nsy lvani a, Ky . ( 1817)
By United Press International
New England at San Diego
13
Campbell Conterence
C i n~;i nnall at Ind ianapolis
Olh ers re ce iYi ng ,c.on .
Patrick Division
Quebec
at
Ca
lgary
sjde r ation
(listed
W L T Pfs gf ga
Philadelph i 40 lO14 -- 94 279 175
NY lslantlers 34 11 n 81 242 151
Atlan la
27 29 9 63 204 195
NY Rang ers 23 34 7 5J 211 262
Smythe Division
W L T Pts gf ga
Chicago
26 21 17 69 195 191
Vancouver 25 27 11 61 213 216
St. Lo"uis
23 30 10 5.6 195 214
Minnesota 18 43 4 40 160 244
Kansas City 12 41 10 34 \51 267
Wales conference
Norris DiYision
W l T Pts gf ga
Montr'eal
46 9 10 102 270 141
. ·'
LOS Angeles 31 27 7 69 210 216
~iltsbUrgh
2.8 26 11 67 272 246
Delroit
19 36 9 47 166 245
washington 8 48 9 25 180 318
Adams Division
'1;1 L T Pts gi ga
Boston
40 11 II 91 2.:16 176
Buffalo
35 18 ll 81 266 191
Toronlo
29 25 11 69 242 222
Ca lifornia
23 35 8 54 205 227
" Tuesday's ~e!iults
NY Islanders 2 Ca lifornia 1
Pil!sburgh 6 Minnesota 2
Wednesday's Games
Vancouver at NY Rangers
Detroit at Atlanta
Ca lifornia a! Montreal
Toronto at St . Louis
4-lnch pipe, 10 foollenglht,
Boston at Los Angeles
belled end
Thursday's Games
Vancouver at NY Island ers
only
per lenglh
Philadelphia at Kansas City
Chicago at Buffalo
and we have all the neces·
30 29

March 11 12 ot Rhode Island
lslantt College
115-8 1 vs . Boston 5Iale
Colleoe 12t -&lt;1 . ano Su ffolk u .
t..Xa~~~sch~;;;,~1 116\~· 5 E
Easl reglona1 - March 11 12 ot. Rensselaer Po16ytechnlc
lnSIOi
RPI UnivE!rsitY
11 -7· vsoi.
·nn erute
of State
'll.e.w Yor k Athlet.c ,fon -

College. R hode

l:'~~ceYo~1".

r:'!l3T

0

~o:

rr10lfRS'I"
"SSIAM"CliAN 'lOUR

DO

CAJtllfi'S."
THE PllOfiSSIOtW. y,ay;
Rent the fantastic new Up &amp;

Out Hydro·Miat Machine for
11uperior carpet cl,aning. Loosens and
removes dirt ,

Rochester 1nstitu te 118 ·71 ·
Middle Atlantic regiona l March 12 13 at Un1vers1ty of
scr anton . scranlon IPa .l 122-

~~~:nrf:.~~l:6fi~~. &lt;:~~~ffel~

south Allan llc reg ional Ma
rche. 11Monmout
' 12 at Mon mout h
Colleg
h tN . J.)
(21 ·4) vs . Lun ch burg Col lege
IV a. (22 61 . and Glassboro
St at e Coll ege CN. J.J { 18·81 '
vs . Stlepl'1 erd College, w. va .
128-21.
South reg ional - March 12·
13 at Transylvan ia Univer .
, ;tv Transvlv an la IKv .l (187l
vs .
Le Mo.yne Owen
Coll eg e, (T enn . (17 .81. and
Miles College, (Ala .) (19 6L
. ivers iry of the 5ou th
vs . Up
11181
Grea t Lakes regional March 12 · 13 at Ash land
IOh ' 1 119
~l~~ ~Pr~- ,:~~~~1~ge IO h\~ ) ( 16 ·
4l the winner of the Oh io
Ath le tic con feren ce, ami an .
at large team will be pa ired
'su.nday .
Midw est reg Iona I - M arc h
12-13 at Augus tana Coll ege.

STAR SUPPLY
RA&lt;;INE, OHIO

5- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 3, 1976

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

rM~t;;»;bii:t;it'ih:hd:;;;; wvu atumni association organized
;:;:· · ···~._

"
A Meigs CoWity cystic
fibrolia child will have her
nam~inscribed on a plaque to
be hWig in the National
Jewish Hospital at Denver,
Colo. ·
The Meigli County Salon
710, Eight and Forty, decided
Monday night to contribute
•100 to Ute National Jewish
Hospital, a treatment center
for children with respiratory
diseases, in the name of
Sherrie Marshall. This
qualifies the Salon to have
Sherrie's name inscribed on a
plaque.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Marshall, Hemlock
Grove, Sherrie is a student at
the Salisbury Elementary
School and an active jWiior
member of the American
Legion Auxiliary, Drew
Webster Post 39. 'She is a
victim of cystic fibrosis and is .
under continual medical
treatment.
Meeting at the home of
Mrs. Rhoda Hackett; the
Salon members were also
reminded of another proJ'ect
- that of building a swimming pool at the Soldiers and
Sailors' Orphans Home at
Xenia. They were asked by
Mrs.
Myrtle
Walker ,
departemental children and
Youth chairperson, to make a .
bicentennial gift of 76 cents
each. Ground for the pool has
been broken and ap-

·.·.
proximately $40,000 has been winter pouvior. It was
raised, but another $36,000 is reported that Mrs . Veda
needed to complete project. Davis is ill at home. A
While the Salon has agreed cosmetic sale was annoWiced
to donate $100 toward the • by Mrs . Pearl Knapp .
nurses scholarship program, Arrangements were made to
il was reported by Mrs. Julia send an Easter remembrance
Hysell and Mrs. Eileen Searls to Sherrie Marshall, and
that only $41.75 has been members contributed dimes
raised to dale. Donations on a
to go toward cystic fibrosis
gift were taken to boost the research .
total with the gift being won
Welcomed into memby Mrs. Catherine Welch.
bership wa,s Kathy Sayre.
A yard sale was set for The April meeting will be
April 3 at the Cole St. held at the home of Mrs.
residence of ' Mrs. Mary Hampton. Members are to
Martin . Mrs . Lula Hampton tak.e bottle caps . Mrs .
presided with Mrs. Martin Hackett and Mrs . welch
giving a report on the mid- served refreshments .

craift

ShOW pianned
·

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains Booster
association will sponsor a
craft show which will be open
to the public.
Crafts will be on display
and will be .for sale with 25
percent of the proceeds going
to the boosters.
The show will be held in the
school gym on Monday • Aprtl
12 from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. A
booster meeting will follow .
For additional information
and registration persons m•·,·
contact Pat Shrivers at &gt;854279 or Libby Sayre at 985-

4283. All entries must be
submitted by April I.

SERVICE SET
Th ere wi 11 be a specia1
service at the Flatwoods
United Met h odist Ch·urch
Sunmday, March 7 at 7 p.m.
Speakers will be the Rev.
·Pearl Casto, the Rev. Barry
Bennett and the Rev.
· ker . Spec1a
· 1
Sy d enstnc
·
·
b
f
smgmg y a group rom
1 is
Kingston, 0 hio. The pubic
invited to attend.

POINT PLEASANT - The
Mason-Gallla Cbapter of the
West Virginia University
Alumni Association met
recently to elect officers for
1976-77 and to continue
planning for the chapter
banquet to he held April!, at
the Moose Hall, Point
Pleasant.
Cecil Minton was elected to

~Island

serve as the association 's
first president. Also elected
were Bernie Smith, vicepresident; Mrs . Sandra
Nichols, secretary, and Gary
Park, treasurer .
Minton stated enthusiasm
was running high among
West Virginia Univer sity
Alumni and friends in the

A ,yt
f ,

1

• Slate d
+a lie tS

1/1

The public is invited to hear
Mary E. Phillips speak on
"Island Art" and show slides
Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. at
River~, home of the French
Art Co ony.
Miss Phillips' talk will open
Ute March exhibit at Riverby
of the art works of Bahamian
school children. The works to
be exhibited were executed
by stu dents from two private
schools and several governmentschoolsinthe Bahamas.
The works were recently
returned to Nassau following
display in Scotland.
There are approximately
700 IS
· 1an ds in t he Bahamian
ch am
· 1ocated about 200 mil es
fr om th e coast of Florida, a
four hour journey by air from ·

Columbus. Schools, both
government and private,
bave their own individual
uniforms, and children are
required to wear these
· un iforms to schoo1every da y;
they are thus easily identified
by the color combinations of
their uniforms . In addition to
an academic program, the
schools offer Art , Music,
Ph ys1ca
· 1 · Ed
' ucat'10n, Horne
Economics and Woodwork.
Staffs a t all schoo1s are
cosmopolitian in composition
wiih teachers being recruited
from all over the world.
Miss Phillips, daughter of
Mr s. Gomer . Phill'Ips, 212
F'1rs t Ave., Ga II'1po !1' s, is
·
currentl Y a t each er m
Marion, Ohio.

Mason-Galli a
area
to
organize an alumni chapter.
He pointed out in the M-G
area there is apotential
me m ber s h i p
o1
approximately ;wo. Further,
he reported that he had been
in touc:h with the W.V.U.
Office of Alumni Affairs and
had rec:eived a listing of all
known alW!Uli in the M.(;
area and each person will be
contacted by leiter inlonning
them of the chapter activities
and plans. However, he noted
the listing may be incomplete
and an y alumnus new to the
M-G area should call him at
675-4198 or 675-2739 to have
their name placed on the
mailing list.
During the planlting session
lorthe banquet, Mrs. Sandra
Nichols reported she is
finalizing plans to obtain a
speaker . She indicated a
program would soon be
announced . The following
chairpersons and committees
were appointed : publicity'
John
Cooper ;
social
functions, Richard Sayre and
Bill Hockenberry ; banquet,
Beverly Smith and Lou Gene
Kingery.
The next meeting of the
West Virginia University
Alumni Chapter will be
announced in local papers as
well as radio. Attending the
meeting were Lou Gene
K'mgery, Beverly Smith,
Robert Hockenberry, Bill
Tatterson, David Nibert, Mr.

and Mrs. Don Pullin, Mr. and
Mrs. John Cooper, Gordon
Harlow, Maurice A. Mayes,
Kenneith Evans, Rick I'.
Powell, Richard A. Sayre,
Cecil Minton, Kenneth
Boyle s, Bill Ho ckenberr y,
Charles Cham bers, Gary
Park, J . J. Wedge and Sandra
Nichols.

EXERSOL£
SHOES
AND

SANDAlS
.heritage house
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

AnotherGOOD BUY

BAKER'S
BUDGET SHOP
FROM

16x48

DOOR MIRROR
ONLY

$695

BAKER· FURNITURE
Middleport, Ohio .

PEARL &amp; LOCUST
STREETS

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO
PEARL AND LOCUST STREET, MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

---

4 64

STORE HOURS: MONPAY-FRIDAY 9-8

BALLARD$

.'FRANKIE WEINERS

Honef
or
I Vt

$4

CAKE
MIX

BOLOGNA

49~

ARMOUR

pkg.

CHILl
With Beans

1 lb. roll

5Q "'"

Duncan .Hines

SUPERIOR

S-BRAND

12 oz.

Sage

lb. Vanilla.

ChOcollll, Cnoeotate
Mint, Buner5cotc:h
MfQ. l ist

SAT. 9-9 SUNDAY 11-5

SUPERIOR

SAUSAGE

SPECIAL SELLING

ONLY

15 oz.

49~

TRUCKLOAD
-SALE-

...

lty Boclon Olddn10n

#&gt;lOt!

Mfg. List $2.29

*1.12

12.50

Yillage Pharmacy

sary fittings!

WHA Standings
By United Press International
East
W L T Pis gt ga
New Englnd 27 31 6 60 201 230
Cincinnat i 29 33 1 59 237 264
'Cievelalid
26 31 5 57 209 .218
tndianapoiS 24 36 3 51 t85 198
West
W L T Pts gf ga
Hous1on
.:10 22 0 80 252 210
Phoenix
32 24 6 70 233 206

Welke~s

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PH. 992-5759

MATERIALS CO.
MASON, W. VA.

773-5554

Valley Bell

Maple Lawn Poultry

FARM FRESH

Grade A
large

EGGS

WHITE
GRAPEFRUIT
5 lb. bag

lJz PORK LOIN
SLICED

HEAD
LETTUCE

PEPSI-COLA or
7-UP

69~
ea. 29~

JELLO-GELATIN

Wlllf 3 LB. BEEF ROAST
1..6upon good Feb. 29 lhru Mar. 6. 1976

g:::.~. . . . . ~~.-~. 57~

extra
VALUE STAMPS

'

500
t--------------------___________
,
_
,
_
,
.
,
....
--·11-e
lOOextra
500extra
WITH '10.00 OR MORE ORDER
' GOOD TIL MARCH 6th

5
extra
TOP VALUE STAMPS

Wmt 10 LB. NEW RED POTATOES
·Coupon good Feb. 29 thru

(I

..

TOP VALUE STAMPS

TOP VALUE STAMPS

WITH ARMOUR STAR TURKEY

WITH 2-4-PACK CHARMIN
TOILET TISSUE

Coupon good Feb. 29 thru
Mar . 6, 1976

Coupon good Feb. 29 thru .
Mar. !976

We Re!.erve Right to Limit

I

EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS

WITH 3 KING SIZE HOLSUM BREAD

Prices EffectWe
Thursday lhru' Sunday

Assorted Flavors ...'.:..... -~ o_z:..

-·

extra
VALUE STAMPS

Open ·
9 til7
Mon.·Sat.
Sun. 10 to 5

lb

.

~r:s~~·-··· · · ·-~~- -~- . 89~
Wagner's

Returnable
Bottles

$129

,J

·

8-16 oz.

CENTER RIB

PORK
CHOPS

(Ill.) Augustana , 111. (18-61
vs . Cornell ( 15 71 and Coe
College ( Ia . ) (22·01 vs .
Simpson Co11ege Oa ; 1 I 16 -81.

.',

Coupo~

good Feb. 29 lhru
Mar. 6, 1976
.

;o-eiira-.

WITH 2 STALKS CELERY
Coupon good F.eb . 29 thru
Mar . 6, 1976

extra
TOP VALUE STAMPS

50
extra
TOP VALUE STAMPS

extra
ALUESTAMPS

WITH Sib. DOMINO SUGAR

WITH 2 HEADS LE11UCE

WITH GAU.ON 2% MILK

Coupon good Feb. 29 thru
Mar . 6, 1976

Cpupon good Feb. 29 lhru
Mar. 6. 1976

'

FAMILY PACK GROUND

TOP VALUE STAMPS

Coupon good Feb. 29 thru Mar. 6, 1976

~--·---------~-········-'-'-···...!!

•
. I

extra
TOP VALUE STAMPS

'·

Coupon good Feb. 29 thru
Mar. 6, 1976
I·

···-~-~-··--····--··----··-'·
•

�•

n;;;;;;;rt-Pp
-,~;;~·r~~;::::,~=;l Four more fields are completed
::::

:·:·

::::

reserve clause
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Iron 1 office of the defending
world champion Cincinnati
Reds is officially getting into
the debate on baseball's
disputed reserve system.
Reds
President Bob
Howsam has penned an
"Open Letter wReds Fans,"
in whi ch he argues that
" ba seball ca nnot operate
successfully without an
effective reserve system."
And , Howsam's publicity
staff has written and
distributed to the news media
a 600-word article entitled
" Reserve System Lets Stars
Develop, " advancing the
theory that a lot of big stars
wouldn 't have gotten a
chance in baseball without
the reserve system .
Howsam's "Open Letter"
is on the front page of the
current issue o"f ~ 'Reds­
Letter,"
the
official
publication of the Reds .
While acknowledging that
major league owners have
offered to " relax " the
reserve sy~tem and allow
veterans to play out their
option, Howsam wrote that
some type of reserve system
was still needed to "assure "
the continued development of
quality ballplayers.
"The Reds are spending
nearly $2 million annually in
player development to assure
our fans that talented young
players will be available for
the Reds," Howsam staled.
"To do this, we must know
that we will have the services
of these players at the major
league level for a reasonable
period of time.
"The
~ Seitz
ruling'
(dumping the
reserve
system ) would eliminate this
assurance, which is why it is
being cl!allenged in the
courts.
·
"We believe that baseball
cannot, operate successfully
wiihout an effective re&lt;erve

system . It is imperative thal
baseball have an effective
reserve syste m and we
believe that the clubs, the
and
their
Pla Jvers
represen tatives will benefit

addedHowsam, "that abase·
ball team's most important
assets are its players. Otiu~r ..
sportshaveseentheproblem
whir h occurs when players
movefreelyfromclubtoclub
an d , as a COnsequence, C1Ubs
lost their identity with the
fans .
The article distributed by
the Reds pubJicity staff,
written in a "feature story
style,'' begins, "Imagine
baseball without Stan Musial,
Pete Rose, Maury Wills and
W e S h "
arr n pan...
The article .states that
""without baseball
. 's reserve
system,
it
is
quite
conceivable that (such )
Players woul"'t' never get an
oppJrtunity in the future to
work their way W major
league stardom."
The essense of the article is
Ulat club owners used . time
and mon~y to develop such
stars in the minor leagues
._
because th ey k new tde
reserve clause would let the
cl.ub reap possible future
dividend!;; .
The article states that
Musl'a) failed as a pl'tcher and
developed his hitting in the
. ors·, that Rose "begged 11
mm
forachancetoperfor;mand
gotitintheminors·,thatWills
spent nine years in the
minors before making the
.
d h
S h
maJors , an t at pa n
pitched three seasons in the
minors.
" Without
a . reserve
" th
t' l
ed
system,
ear 1ce stat ,
"players who do not appear
to be instant big leaguers w~ll
never get their shot at the
· 1
11
major eagues.
lt

Loyola of Illinois was a lot
more successful, riding a 27poinl
effort
by
Tad
Dufelrneier to an 87-71 upset
of 18th-ranked Cincinnati.
Loyola · held , Cincinnati
scoreless for five minutes of
-the secoml half to insure the
victory, only the ninth
against 16 losses for ·the
Ramblers. Cincinnati fell to
22-S.
In other major . games,
Temple dumped Rider, BS-69,
and
Hofstra
stopped
Bucknell, 77-58, in the East
Coast Conference piayoffs,
Connecticut edged Fairfield,
72-70, Dartmouth shaded
Harvard, 66-64, in overtime,
Georgetown (D.C.) downed
lona, 76-68, Pittsburgh
defeated St. Francis (Pa.),
74-69, Rhode Island crushed
Brown, 99-79, Creighton held
off North Carolina-Olarlotte,
77-71, and Xavier (Ohio)
whipped Duquesne, 98-86.

Training event slated March 18
Trainin g in filling out
Medicare forms will be given
at Rio Grande College on
March 18 from 10 a .m. to 2
p.m . The one day training
will be sponsored by the Ohio
Commission on Aging, Area
Agency on Aging 'District 7,
Social
Security 1 Administration and Nationwide
1 n s u r a n c ~ M e d i care ·

MISSION Kan. (UP!) -

;:;:
/ Class AA l?urnament competition at Federal Hocking )
:::; Thursday mghl at 7:30 when they tangle With the Belpre ;';!
:;:; Golden Eagles, 2-15, on the year.
:;:;
·.-.
Th.e Maraude r~got PasttheNew
Panthers
::::
.
.Lexington
·
.· . :·:·
::::
;:;: last Saturday to wm the nght to play Thursday. MeigS IS ::::
!{ top-seeded in the tournament, and if they get by the!\!\
:;:; Golden Eagles, the Marauders Will be 10 the fmals ::::
::;: Saturday night lighting for the right to advance to the ;;:;
·:·.
•
•
•
••·•
;:~ Distru;t Tournament.
:;:;

regional tournaments for the
32-team 1976 Division III
basketball championship il
was announ ced Tu es day . '
Before Tuesday, the only
r eg ional
tournament
completed was the South .
Three other divisions
'
however, have yet to extend

by the Eastern Remonal to
.
o•
City College of New York and
Rochester Institute of Technology, to Southeastern
Massachusetts University in
Northeast Regional
to
'
Widener College, Mansfield
State and Grove City in the
Middle Atlantic Regional, to
the University of the South in
the Southern Regl'onal and to
•
Cornell College and Simpson

fr~~ ~~t"fe s~!e~:~~';; ~\:::::::::::::::::;:::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::: : ::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:=:::::::::=:=:::::::::::::::::::r ~:;~~~~~ whic~o;ill cu~~ ~~~~~~

N_evada-Los Vegas ends
season with 28-1 mark
United Press International
Loyola of California can at
ieast say it held fifth-.-anked
Nevada-Las Vegas to under
its average of 110.8 points per
game.
The Rebels ended their
regular . season with a 28-1
record Tuesday night by
easily defeating Loyola of \he
West
Coast
Athletic
Conference, 9()..fj9, UNLV's
only defeat of the season
ca me at the hands of
Pepperdin.e of the WCAC.
Eddie OWens led the Rebels
with 29 points and senior
Boyd Batts added 16, all but
two in the second half.
Loyola, playing slowdown ·
most of the way, book only 17
shots in the first half and hit
on II. The Rebels still
managed to lead at halftime,
45-28.
Nevada-Las Vegas now
must await word as to where
it will play in the NCAA "
regional playoffs.

::::

B G
Ba'l
:·:·
·
'
·
•
Y reg 1 ey
:::; Fields were completed In four
The Me~gs Marauders, now 10-9 on the year, resume ;:;: more of the NCAA's eight

Program.
·
The training is available
for persons who assist the
elderly with Medicare forms.
Individuals interested in
a !tending · the training
session, should contact the
Area Agency on Aging
~i s lrict 7, Rio Grande
College, Rto Grande, OhiO
45674, phone 245-5353, Eel. 26.

p ro

,-------------.
I

',

I
1
1

I

1

sta:f11Jll'l.O"S
_] •

I

Sprm' g sessi'on
slated May 8

I
1
1 The Ohio Co uncil for
fiiit
• Elementary School Science
IOCESS) will hold its spring
NBA standings
conference on May 8, at
. ld Oh ' R . I I'
By United Press International Mansf •e ' 10 - egiS ra IOn
Eastern
Conference
bl
k
Atlantic Division
an s are ava1.1a bl e ·m· the
.
1 R
W L P t
Boston
. . c . g b I ns t ru e t Jona
esource
40 18 ·690 Center located in the
7
Buffalo
35 27 .565
Phila delph ia 35 28 .556 71 1 'basement of Holzer Hall on
New YoC~ntral 3givJi!io·~7 6 121 1 the Rio Grande College·
w l p 1 b Communlty College. campus.
Washo·ngton
39 ,·, .609c . g
R
' th l'
.11 b
·
. ooms w1
men w1
e
24
36
600
1
Cleyeland
·
Houston
30 31 .492
71 2 ava1'la ble a t As h) a nd Colleg e
NewOrlean s 27r 34 .443 10'7 forstudentsat$3perperson
AtiMta
26 35 .-126 111 1
F 'd
.
M
Western con~erence
on fl ay evemng
ay 7,
Midwest Division
1976.
Anyone
interested
in
w
1
Milwaukee
j/
·.4~~
·
gb
reservingaroomormakinga
27
Detroit
24 36 .400 21 1 reservation should contact
KansasCI.IY 23 39 ·371 417 . Mrs. J oan Loe ffl er, ASSIS
. ta nt
Ch~eago
18 .:12 .300 51 2
Pacific Dlvi•ion
. Professor of Education, at
w. L. Pet . gb R'IO
Gran de
co11 egeGolden
State
44
17 .721
C
't
C
11
seattle
ommunt Y o ege.
32 31 .508 13
Los Angeles 31 31 .soo 13 1 .1
Phoenix
27 32 .458 16
Portland
28 35 .444 17
Tuesday's Results
Golden St &gt;~e 100 Buffalo 93
LEXINGIDN , Ky. (UPI)
seatt le 109 New York 105
Washington 128 Philadelphia 111 - The WOOd portion of the
Kansas City 127 Detroit 11 3
grandstand at ' Keeneland ,
111 N
o1
109 0 t
M.l
'w
•w
r
eans
·
buill prior to the its inaugural
Portland 116 Chicago,105
Wednesday 's Games
meeting in 1937, will be
Bos Ion at Ph 1.,ade 1Ph"1a
dismantled and replaced with
Seattle
at Detrail
ClevelandatPhoen ix
concrete and steel at the
Houston at New Orleans
conclusionofthespringmeeThursday's Games
Boston at Atlanta
ting.
track
officiah
Kansas City at Milwaukee
annowtced today.
Chicago at Goolden Sflt1e
W!!!shington al H·ovston

ABA Standings
By United Press International
W. L. Pet. gb
Denver..
.t6 16 742
New York
40 23 .635 6 1 '}
Slln Antonio 36 25 590 91•
KentuCky
34 31 523 131~
Indiana
32 34 .485 16
St. Louis
30 36 455 18
Virginia
12 52 :188 35
Tuesday's Results
St. Lou is 97 Kentucky 89
Ind iana \07 San Antonio 97
Wednesday's Games
New York at Denver
St. Louis at San Antonio
Virginia at Indiana
Thursday's Ga'mes
(No gam.eS schedulect)

San Diego
x Minnesot

nate with the semifinals and
finals• which· will be played• at
Albrtght College, Reading,
Pa on March 19-20
·• . .
·
Invitations were extended

in the Midwest Re-

MISSIO N, Kan . tU PI ) The foll owing is a list of
NCAA Division Ill reg ional
si tes and pairings :
N·o rtheast reg iona l

F"rna l co
lle•ue
· ti•
r.'IJ
.
e

nu~

e~

. 11 1
e osto n
MI SS ION , Kan . (U P IJ
alphabettca
Y :
555
Th e final Di Yision I I and II State : M · • Chicago, Ill. ,
cor nell ,City.
Iowa ,PaDoan
e, Nebr ,
College basketball rank ings Grave
.• LeMoyn
I records
throu gh games
Monday ):
Owen . Te nn ., Lynchburg ,
DIVISION 11
va ., New York , City Coll ege
Points of , On eonta Sta te, N . Y . ,
1 Ph ita Te)nil e, Pa . (24-2)
Rensselaer Polytechni c, N.
120 Y ., Rhode Island College.
2. Nic holls St. , La . C20 3) 11 2 Rochester
Ins tit ute
of
3 . Win .. sat St .. N.C. { 23 41
Technology, N. Y ., 'Simspsotnh ,
90 towa , Univer . ot the ou ,
4 Fla . Tech 120.31
80 Tenn
·conn
Tuft s,,
.
Mass .,.. Trirdty,
Union. N.
Y., .,Upsllla
5. Morgan St.,M d. l215 l 78 N J ., andYorkCollege , N.Y.
6 Rollins , Fla . ( Hl·5)
64
7 Bridgeport , Conn . (21 .4)
6
505
B . No. Dar kola (20·5)
9 . Tenn . s ta te (19.7)
s1
10 . E11an sville , Ind . (19 Bl 40
11.
eynt ey
St .. ,Pa.
(22·4)
12· Ch
Puge
sound
wash
. \22 -7)38
37
13.
No.
Alabama
(19
61
16
14 Kentucky St . l"-5 1
"
·
15 . Bakersfield , St., Cal (21 oi l
10
16 . Hartwi ck, N. Y. (21 · 3 l
10
17 . Wise
Green Bay (20.7) 10
Others receivi ng con
s I d e r a t i o n I· I i s t
alphabetic al ly J: Armstrong
St a t.e, Ga .; Assumption- ,
Mass .; Balt imore . Md. .:
Sellarmine , Ky .; Bentl ey,
Mass ; B u If a 1o s ta 1e, N . v , :
California , Da11Js ; Cameron ,
Okla ; Ch i'c: o Stat e, Cal if.;
Edin boro St at e, Pa .; Ftorida
A&amp;M,· Grambling, La .;
Lincoln , Mo .: Madison , Va .:
Mankato State , Minn .:
Merrimack. Ma ss ., Missour i,
Rolla ; Neb raska , Omaha ;
North Da kota State ; Old
Dominion, Va ., Qv inn.ipiac ,
Conn ; Sl. Joseph's , Ind .;
Tennessee , Chaltano og a ;
West G.eorgia ; Wr ig ht Stat e,
Ohio

240 220
30 25 4 64 21 1 212
DIVISION Ill
Canadian
.
Poinh
W L T Pts gf ga
1. Coe, lowa (22 0l
120
Winn ipeg
J4 21 7. 90 288 707
2. Sc ranton , Pa . (225l
112
Quebec
38 20 4 .80 274.233 J. Widener , Pa . (21 6 )
104
Calgary
32 27 4 68 238 216
, Oh io (19 3) 96
Edmonton 22 .:10 s J9 223 284 4.5.Witlenberg
Ash land , Ohio (19 6 )
B4
Toronto
17 40 5 39 264 319 6. Monmout h, N. J (2 1 51 71
x-Ottawa
14 2.6 1 29 134 172 a. Lake Sup . Sl., Mic h. (21 .J)
x-Team disbanded
58
Tuesday's Results
9. Ocddental , Ca lif . 12 1 6J 56
Toronto 5 Quebec 2
10. Ha mili on, N.Y. ( 19'3) 56
Phoenix 5 Ind ianapolis 2
11. August ana , Ill (18·61 39
Calgary 6 Edmonton 3
12. Man stie id St , Pa ( 16.7) 22
. New Englal)d o:t Sa.n Diego 3
13. Suffolk . Mei ss. {19 4)
18
Wednesday's Games
14 . Mil es, Ala . ( 19 7)
17
CleYeland al Cincinnal i
15. Shepherd Co l ., W . Va 127 Calgary at Edmonton
2) '
13
NHL Standings
Thursday's Games
16. Tra nsy lvani a, Ky . ( 1817)
By United Press International
New England at San Diego
13
Campbell Conterence
C i n~;i nnall at Ind ianapolis
Olh ers re ce iYi ng ,c.on .
Patrick Division
Quebec
at
Ca
lgary
sjde r ation
(listed
W L T Pfs gf ga
Philadelph i 40 lO14 -- 94 279 175
NY lslantlers 34 11 n 81 242 151
Atlan la
27 29 9 63 204 195
NY Rang ers 23 34 7 5J 211 262
Smythe Division
W L T Pts gf ga
Chicago
26 21 17 69 195 191
Vancouver 25 27 11 61 213 216
St. Lo"uis
23 30 10 5.6 195 214
Minnesota 18 43 4 40 160 244
Kansas City 12 41 10 34 \51 267
Wales conference
Norris DiYision
W l T Pts gf ga
Montr'eal
46 9 10 102 270 141
. ·'
LOS Angeles 31 27 7 69 210 216
~iltsbUrgh
2.8 26 11 67 272 246
Delroit
19 36 9 47 166 245
washington 8 48 9 25 180 318
Adams Division
'1;1 L T Pts gi ga
Boston
40 11 II 91 2.:16 176
Buffalo
35 18 ll 81 266 191
Toronlo
29 25 11 69 242 222
Ca lifornia
23 35 8 54 205 227
" Tuesday's ~e!iults
NY Islanders 2 Ca lifornia 1
Pil!sburgh 6 Minnesota 2
Wednesday's Games
Vancouver at NY Rangers
Detroit at Atlanta
Ca lifornia a! Montreal
Toronto at St . Louis
4-lnch pipe, 10 foollenglht,
Boston at Los Angeles
belled end
Thursday's Games
Vancouver at NY Island ers
only
per lenglh
Philadelphia at Kansas City
Chicago at Buffalo
and we have all the neces·
30 29

March 11 12 ot Rhode Island
lslantt College
115-8 1 vs . Boston 5Iale
Colleoe 12t -&lt;1 . ano Su ffolk u .
t..Xa~~~sch~;;;,~1 116\~· 5 E
Easl reglona1 - March 11 12 ot. Rensselaer Po16ytechnlc
lnSIOi
RPI UnivE!rsitY
11 -7· vsoi.
·nn erute
of State
'll.e.w Yor k Athlet.c ,fon -

College. R hode

l:'~~ceYo~1".

r:'!l3T

0

~o:

rr10lfRS'I"
"SSIAM"CliAN 'lOUR

DO

CAJtllfi'S."
THE PllOfiSSIOtW. y,ay;
Rent the fantastic new Up &amp;

Out Hydro·Miat Machine for
11uperior carpet cl,aning. Loosens and
removes dirt ,

Rochester 1nstitu te 118 ·71 ·
Middle Atlantic regiona l March 12 13 at Un1vers1ty of
scr anton . scranlon IPa .l 122-

~~~:nrf:.~~l:6fi~~. &lt;:~~~ffel~

south Allan llc reg ional Ma
rche. 11Monmout
' 12 at Mon mout h
Colleg
h tN . J.)
(21 ·4) vs . Lun ch burg Col lege
IV a. (22 61 . and Glassboro
St at e Coll ege CN. J.J { 18·81 '
vs . Stlepl'1 erd College, w. va .
128-21.
South reg ional - March 12·
13 at Transylvan ia Univer .
, ;tv Transvlv an la IKv .l (187l
vs .
Le Mo.yne Owen
Coll eg e, (T enn . (17 .81. and
Miles College, (Ala .) (19 6L
. ivers iry of the 5ou th
vs . Up
11181
Grea t Lakes regional March 12 · 13 at Ash land
IOh ' 1 119
~l~~ ~Pr~- ,:~~~~1~ge IO h\~ ) ( 16 ·
4l the winner of the Oh io
Ath le tic con feren ce, ami an .
at large team will be pa ired
'su.nday .
Midw est reg Iona I - M arc h
12-13 at Augus tana Coll ege.

STAR SUPPLY
RA&lt;;INE, OHIO

5- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 3, 1976

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

rM~t;;»;bii:t;it'ih:hd:;;;; wvu atumni association organized
;:;:· · ···~._

"
A Meigs CoWity cystic
fibrolia child will have her
nam~inscribed on a plaque to
be hWig in the National
Jewish Hospital at Denver,
Colo. ·
The Meigli County Salon
710, Eight and Forty, decided
Monday night to contribute
•100 to Ute National Jewish
Hospital, a treatment center
for children with respiratory
diseases, in the name of
Sherrie Marshall. This
qualifies the Salon to have
Sherrie's name inscribed on a
plaque.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Marshall, Hemlock
Grove, Sherrie is a student at
the Salisbury Elementary
School and an active jWiior
member of the American
Legion Auxiliary, Drew
Webster Post 39. 'She is a
victim of cystic fibrosis and is .
under continual medical
treatment.
Meeting at the home of
Mrs. Rhoda Hackett; the
Salon members were also
reminded of another proJ'ect
- that of building a swimming pool at the Soldiers and
Sailors' Orphans Home at
Xenia. They were asked by
Mrs.
Myrtle
Walker ,
departemental children and
Youth chairperson, to make a .
bicentennial gift of 76 cents
each. Ground for the pool has
been broken and ap-

·.·.
proximately $40,000 has been winter pouvior. It was
raised, but another $36,000 is reported that Mrs . Veda
needed to complete project. Davis is ill at home. A
While the Salon has agreed cosmetic sale was annoWiced
to donate $100 toward the • by Mrs . Pearl Knapp .
nurses scholarship program, Arrangements were made to
il was reported by Mrs. Julia send an Easter remembrance
Hysell and Mrs. Eileen Searls to Sherrie Marshall, and
that only $41.75 has been members contributed dimes
raised to dale. Donations on a
to go toward cystic fibrosis
gift were taken to boost the research .
total with the gift being won
Welcomed into memby Mrs. Catherine Welch.
bership wa,s Kathy Sayre.
A yard sale was set for The April meeting will be
April 3 at the Cole St. held at the home of Mrs.
residence of ' Mrs. Mary Hampton. Members are to
Martin . Mrs . Lula Hampton tak.e bottle caps . Mrs .
presided with Mrs. Martin Hackett and Mrs . welch
giving a report on the mid- served refreshments .

craift

ShOW pianned
·

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains Booster
association will sponsor a
craft show which will be open
to the public.
Crafts will be on display
and will be .for sale with 25
percent of the proceeds going
to the boosters.
The show will be held in the
school gym on Monday • Aprtl
12 from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. A
booster meeting will follow .
For additional information
and registration persons m•·,·
contact Pat Shrivers at &gt;854279 or Libby Sayre at 985-

4283. All entries must be
submitted by April I.

SERVICE SET
Th ere wi 11 be a specia1
service at the Flatwoods
United Met h odist Ch·urch
Sunmday, March 7 at 7 p.m.
Speakers will be the Rev.
·Pearl Casto, the Rev. Barry
Bennett and the Rev.
· ker . Spec1a
· 1
Sy d enstnc
·
·
b
f
smgmg y a group rom
1 is
Kingston, 0 hio. The pubic
invited to attend.

POINT PLEASANT - The
Mason-Gallla Cbapter of the
West Virginia University
Alumni Association met
recently to elect officers for
1976-77 and to continue
planning for the chapter
banquet to he held April!, at
the Moose Hall, Point
Pleasant.
Cecil Minton was elected to

~Island

serve as the association 's
first president. Also elected
were Bernie Smith, vicepresident; Mrs . Sandra
Nichols, secretary, and Gary
Park, treasurer .
Minton stated enthusiasm
was running high among
West Virginia Univer sity
Alumni and friends in the

A ,yt
f ,

1

• Slate d
+a lie tS

1/1

The public is invited to hear
Mary E. Phillips speak on
"Island Art" and show slides
Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. at
River~, home of the French
Art Co ony.
Miss Phillips' talk will open
Ute March exhibit at Riverby
of the art works of Bahamian
school children. The works to
be exhibited were executed
by stu dents from two private
schools and several governmentschoolsinthe Bahamas.
The works were recently
returned to Nassau following
display in Scotland.
There are approximately
700 IS
· 1an ds in t he Bahamian
ch am
· 1ocated about 200 mil es
fr om th e coast of Florida, a
four hour journey by air from ·

Columbus. Schools, both
government and private,
bave their own individual
uniforms, and children are
required to wear these
· un iforms to schoo1every da y;
they are thus easily identified
by the color combinations of
their uniforms . In addition to
an academic program, the
schools offer Art , Music,
Ph ys1ca
· 1 · Ed
' ucat'10n, Horne
Economics and Woodwork.
Staffs a t all schoo1s are
cosmopolitian in composition
wiih teachers being recruited
from all over the world.
Miss Phillips, daughter of
Mr s. Gomer . Phill'Ips, 212
F'1rs t Ave., Ga II'1po !1' s, is
·
currentl Y a t each er m
Marion, Ohio.

Mason-Galli a
area
to
organize an alumni chapter.
He pointed out in the M-G
area there is apotential
me m ber s h i p
o1
approximately ;wo. Further,
he reported that he had been
in touc:h with the W.V.U.
Office of Alumni Affairs and
had rec:eived a listing of all
known alW!Uli in the M.(;
area and each person will be
contacted by leiter inlonning
them of the chapter activities
and plans. However, he noted
the listing may be incomplete
and an y alumnus new to the
M-G area should call him at
675-4198 or 675-2739 to have
their name placed on the
mailing list.
During the planlting session
lorthe banquet, Mrs. Sandra
Nichols reported she is
finalizing plans to obtain a
speaker . She indicated a
program would soon be
announced . The following
chairpersons and committees
were appointed : publicity'
John
Cooper ;
social
functions, Richard Sayre and
Bill Hockenberry ; banquet,
Beverly Smith and Lou Gene
Kingery.
The next meeting of the
West Virginia University
Alumni Chapter will be
announced in local papers as
well as radio. Attending the
meeting were Lou Gene
K'mgery, Beverly Smith,
Robert Hockenberry, Bill
Tatterson, David Nibert, Mr.

and Mrs. Don Pullin, Mr. and
Mrs. John Cooper, Gordon
Harlow, Maurice A. Mayes,
Kenneith Evans, Rick I'.
Powell, Richard A. Sayre,
Cecil Minton, Kenneth
Boyle s, Bill Ho ckenberr y,
Charles Cham bers, Gary
Park, J . J. Wedge and Sandra
Nichols.

EXERSOL£
SHOES
AND

SANDAlS
.heritage house
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

AnotherGOOD BUY

BAKER'S
BUDGET SHOP
FROM

16x48

DOOR MIRROR
ONLY

$695

BAKER· FURNITURE
Middleport, Ohio .

PEARL &amp; LOCUST
STREETS

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO
PEARL AND LOCUST STREET, MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

---

4 64

STORE HOURS: MONPAY-FRIDAY 9-8

BALLARD$

.'FRANKIE WEINERS

Honef
or
I Vt

$4

CAKE
MIX

BOLOGNA

49~

ARMOUR

pkg.

CHILl
With Beans

1 lb. roll

5Q "'"

Duncan .Hines

SUPERIOR

S-BRAND

12 oz.

Sage

lb. Vanilla.

ChOcollll, Cnoeotate
Mint, Buner5cotc:h
MfQ. l ist

SAT. 9-9 SUNDAY 11-5

SUPERIOR

SAUSAGE

SPECIAL SELLING

ONLY

15 oz.

49~

TRUCKLOAD
-SALE-

...

lty Boclon Olddn10n

#&gt;lOt!

Mfg. List $2.29

*1.12

12.50

Yillage Pharmacy

sary fittings!

WHA Standings
By United Press International
East
W L T Pis gt ga
New Englnd 27 31 6 60 201 230
Cincinnat i 29 33 1 59 237 264
'Cievelalid
26 31 5 57 209 .218
tndianapoiS 24 36 3 51 t85 198
West
W L T Pts gf ga
Hous1on
.:10 22 0 80 252 210
Phoenix
32 24 6 70 233 206

Welke~s

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PH. 992-5759

MATERIALS CO.
MASON, W. VA.

773-5554

Valley Bell

Maple Lawn Poultry

FARM FRESH

Grade A
large

EGGS

WHITE
GRAPEFRUIT
5 lb. bag

lJz PORK LOIN
SLICED

HEAD
LETTUCE

PEPSI-COLA or
7-UP

69~
ea. 29~

JELLO-GELATIN

Wlllf 3 LB. BEEF ROAST
1..6upon good Feb. 29 lhru Mar. 6. 1976

g:::.~. . . . . ~~.-~. 57~

extra
VALUE STAMPS

'

500
t--------------------___________
,
_
,
_
,
.
,
....
--·11-e
lOOextra
500extra
WITH '10.00 OR MORE ORDER
' GOOD TIL MARCH 6th

5
extra
TOP VALUE STAMPS

Wmt 10 LB. NEW RED POTATOES
·Coupon good Feb. 29 thru

(I

..

TOP VALUE STAMPS

TOP VALUE STAMPS

WITH ARMOUR STAR TURKEY

WITH 2-4-PACK CHARMIN
TOILET TISSUE

Coupon good Feb. 29 thru
Mar . 6, 1976

Coupon good Feb. 29 thru .
Mar. !976

We Re!.erve Right to Limit

I

EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS

WITH 3 KING SIZE HOLSUM BREAD

Prices EffectWe
Thursday lhru' Sunday

Assorted Flavors ...'.:..... -~ o_z:..

-·

extra
VALUE STAMPS

Open ·
9 til7
Mon.·Sat.
Sun. 10 to 5

lb

.

~r:s~~·-··· · · ·-~~- -~- . 89~
Wagner's

Returnable
Bottles

$129

,J

·

8-16 oz.

CENTER RIB

PORK
CHOPS

(Ill.) Augustana , 111. (18-61
vs . Cornell ( 15 71 and Coe
College ( Ia . ) (22·01 vs .
Simpson Co11ege Oa ; 1 I 16 -81.

.',

Coupo~

good Feb. 29 lhru
Mar. 6, 1976
.

;o-eiira-.

WITH 2 STALKS CELERY
Coupon good F.eb . 29 thru
Mar . 6, 1976

extra
TOP VALUE STAMPS

50
extra
TOP VALUE STAMPS

extra
ALUESTAMPS

WITH Sib. DOMINO SUGAR

WITH 2 HEADS LE11UCE

WITH GAU.ON 2% MILK

Coupon good Feb. 29 thru
Mar . 6, 1976

Cpupon good Feb. 29 lhru
Mar. 6. 1976

'

FAMILY PACK GROUND

TOP VALUE STAMPS

Coupon good Feb. 29 thru Mar. 6, 1976

~--·---------~-········-'-'-···...!!

•
. I

extra
TOP VALUE STAMPS

'·

Coupon good Feb. 29 thru
Mar. 6, 1976
I·

···-~-~-··--····--··----··-'·
•

�...
6 - The Daily Sentinel. Mtd&lt;Ueport-I'Qnwro). 0 ., We-dnesday, Ma rch 3, 1976

,:fi~gi~'~ ' ' bi;t,hd;y:: ~pp';~~;~h;i;g'l'i

Society enjoys
Saturday ·tea

::::

'

Past

pr es irl('nts

and

cha r ter members of Alpha
Om lcrnn Chapter of Delta

Kappa Gamma. internationa l
t.eact1ers honorary society.
were honored at a tea gi\·cn
Sa tw·ctay at the McArthur
f:lementa ry School.
Those honored include d

U1ree charter Inembers, Mrs.
Ruth \)ra ke Eu ler , Mi ddle port : Miss Luci lle S111ith,
Chester. and Mrs. Margaret
Parsons. Rutla nd . a char ter
rnc m ber ami fir~t preside nt
Of the Chap ter , who W:JS
un able 1o &lt;Jitend .

Past presidents of Meigs
Countv honored were Mrs.
Nan -Moore. Miss Mildred
Bo wley , Middleport; Mrs.
Robe rta Wilso n. Salem
Center ; Mrs. ·f ay

Sauer,

Middleport, Rout&lt;· 1. t\nother
Meigs County past president
unable to all end Wit S Nellie
Va le . Hutl and . Oth ers
honored were Mrs . Rachel
Warner. Mrs . Enea Adams.

Miss Elizabe th Lantz, Mi ss
Amut Ma ude Fehnun and

A dinner in celebration ol
the birthday ol the Ameri can
Legion will be held in FeeneyBennett Pust 128 lor
Auxiliary members and
licgionnaires on March 17.
Plans for the celebration
were made at . a recen t
meeting ol the Auxiliary.
Reservations are to be made
with Mrs. Erma Hendricks,
Uberty Lane, 992-3819, or
Albert Roush , 992-3169, by
Mon day, Martit lo.
The unit ordered 1,500
popp ies lor the annual Poppy
Day sale in Mav and selected

Mrs. Edith Hoffm an.
Eaeh one spoke briefly
gh•ing highli gh ts of her term
of offi ce . For the occasion,
the honore d group c;une
aUired in dress simi lar to
that worn during some activit y of their bienni unt.
During the mee ting Olive
Page and Hebecca Tate of
Meigs Cowtt y were voted into
membership,
A bice ntennial theme was
ca.Ti ed out in the ta ble ,..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___,
decorations . Cookies, coffee -rL _ /1
•
and pw1ch were served :
I rzt I'T~
Others attending !rom here
Cl were Mrs. Jeannie Bowen,
Mrs. Martha Husted, Mrs.
Nellie Parker, Mrs . Maxine
Phi lson. Mrs. Vi lma Pi kkoja.
Mt·s. Emily Sprag ue. Miss
Mary V. Reibel, Miss Carolyn
Smtih , Miss Hosa lie Story ,
Mrs. Anna Eliza beth Turner
and Mrs. Dorothy Woodard.

* (/

BEN
FRANKLI.N

Cancer program discuss
A film on ta ncer · and a

devotions using scripture
disc uss ion on th e fr ee from 2 Ti m . :3 , verses l'-5.
1\ll:ll'!rtc.a wac;
mon th ly clinic at Veterans Mrs. Wilcox presided a't t!ie
England
Me ni o r i il l
H o s pit a I · business mee ting with ~aula
irnpto!ie!d
ffie ''5~1t!P
higltli ghted the Fe br uary Hay nes
giving
the
mee tin g of the Women 's secretary 's report , and Mi's.
-This was a
Fe ll owship of the Meigs Wyatt the treasut·e r's report.
stamp o11 all 1e9a1
County Churc hes of Christ.
March mee ting will be held
dowments, Ben
Meeting at the Bradbw·y at the Bradford Church of
tougntand
Churc h of Chr is t, ll1e Ch rist with Mr s. Kathryn
dete.:~tect it.
program opened with PauJa Evans to give a demonHaynes lea ding songs and strat ion on ceramics. The
Mrs . Mmyl n Wilcox at the Bt·adbury church history was
piano. " Open My Eye s give n. Closi ng song was
Tha t I Mi ght See" was " How Great Thou Arl " with
the prayer so ng with Mrs. Mrs. Ann Lambert having the
Trudy Andrews giving the cl os ing pra yer . He!res li prayer . Mrs. Virgin ia Wyatt ments were served in the t,;,;;o;.;;o.;,---~;;,;.;-....o
of the 'z ion Church had church social room.
•

a

Play scheduled at Rio Grande
HlO GHANDE -~ Pa ul
Ze nde l' s P uli tze r Priz e
win ning play, " The Effect of
Gamm a Rays on Man ~j n.t he­
Moon Marigolds" , wi ll be
presented by the Rio Grand e
CQ!Iege ·Community College
Titeatre March 4, 5, and 6 alB
p.m . in Rio Gran de Coll~g e 's
Community HalL
J osie Ba pst po r tr ays
Bea trice Hun sdorfe r, a bi tter
woman whose life , ln her
word s, adds up to one big
'' ze ro ;.. Re se ntful of her
d a ughter s, Be atri ce
spiritually maims thein Ruth, portrayed by Catherine
Benet, a !lightly but fr agile
15-year -olrl social butterfly,
and Tilly, pla yed by Virginia
Tirpak, the tim id younger
daughters wh o is fasc inated
by science, "cloud chambers, " and "gamma rays ."
.la)·ne McKenzie appea rs
as J;m ice Vickery, Ti lly's
co mp et itor in the sc f1 uol
science fair . Su.,an Alth err
· and Cecilia Osborne appear
on alternate nights as Nan ny ,
an ag ed boa r de r whose
pat he~ i c

senility sym bolized

the hopelessness and futili ty
that seems to entra p all of the
charac ters.
The producti on is directed
by Ed Roark . Ron Baker is
Assis tant Dir ec tor . Admission will be $2 fo r adults ,
$1.50 for students, and $1 for

AMMONS ARRESTED
CINCINNATI ( UPI)
Carey Gipson Anunons, 34, .
Cincinnati, was arrested by
·:-: th e FBI here Tuesday and
other live co-sponsored by
organizations and businesses.
A se nior community
ser vice party at the ·Athens
Mental Health Center was
announced lor March 18 and
it was noted that good used
jewelry and pocketbooks are
nee ded. Members are
making identification tags for
USDA
Ute diabetics to be worn at the
parties. A report on the
re cent junior community
.lb.
service party at the Center
was given . Gilts valued ·at
$190 were taken by the two
members attending.
A donation was made to the
8 lb.
Ca ncer Society. Read was a
letter I rom the Department of
Ohio concerning units selling
poppies in a communit y
where there is another active
unit.
Heported ill were Mrs.
Fern Bradbury, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Kennedy, Mrs. Edith
Spencer, Mrs. ROsa Searls,
Mrs . · Louise Hawkins ,
Charles Sauer, Charles
READY TO EAT
McElh inny, a patient · at
Holzer.
Mrs. Hendricks presided
and Kim Ro ush ; junio r
member, gave the opening
and closing prayer in the
absence o! the chaplain. .
A dinner preceded the
meeting with legionnaires,
junior and senior members
attending . Chr isti Smith
donated the door· prize which
was won by Mrs. Freda
Clark .

children twelve and under.
NOTE: Beca use of the intensity of cer tain scenes, the

Buckeye
Girls '
State
delegates, two from Eastern
High School and four from
Meigs, with the names lo be
announced once confirmation
of acce ptance has bee n
received. One of the girls will
be sponso red by Ute unit, the

ROUND
STEAK

FUNDS REPAID
COLUMBUS !UP!) _ Ohio
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson
said today all funds borrowed
in December to meet a
general lund crunch have
been repaid, with the transfer
of $10 mill ion from the
general lund to the federal
revenue Sharing trust lund.
F erguson
had
been
authorized to transfer money
between funds to allow the
state to meet December's
unu sua 11 y h eavy school
foundatiOn pa yments and
payroil, the higher education
subsidy and monthly welfare
payments.
· A total of $38.9 million was
transferred - $30 million
from the federal trust fund
and $8.9 million from three
other rotary accounts - to
the general fund with $28.9
million paid back in two
transfers in February.
nw ith today's transfer ,"
Ferguson said, " the state is
back in balance in all
accounts and we now expect
to end the fiscal year on June
30 with a modest balance."

PURE

Musser and Paul Musser, and
Bill Hall , pianist, who sa ng
several- 'inspirational g o~peJ
hymns . Mrs . James Sheets
shared Appalac hia music an d
culture with th e group
playing Ea rly Americ a n
ballads on the dUlcimer , and
co ncludin g with pi:t triotic
selections in keeping with the
bicenten nial sin gin g and
playin g her autoharp .
g'uests introduced by Mrs.
Roberta Wii son ~ principal,
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Dowler, Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Morris, Mr. and Mrs. James
Shee ts and children , and
Meigs Local Band Boosters
Hobert Snowden .
are sponsor ing a Jitn.cy
Mrs. Minni e Riggs presided
Supper Salw·day from 4 to 7 at the business · . !Tleeting ..
p.m. in the ca feteria at the Ci ndy Fetty and Missy Higgs,
high school prior to the
Brownies,led in the pledge to
championshi p gam e of the the flag. The tables for the
Sec ti on al Basketball Tour- dinner were decorated in the
na ment.
red, white and blue culor
Slo ppy_ joes. hot dogs , scheme.
salads, vegetables, desserts
and beverages will be on th e
menu . The J azz Band will
entertain duri ng the .Jitney
Supper.

Potato Salad
Ham Salad

Chickcm salad
Cheese Spread

PILLOW CASES
. ~ WHI TE

Get Organ ized!

.

'

•

LIDS-CAPS

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE
All
Grounds

31b.

'439_
FREE PARKING

COT TON-

Va lves to $8.99
Pr in ts &amp;

Wi t h Carr y Handl e'

SHEER NYLON ST RETCH

A.LADDINS QUART

ON SALE

SEAMLESS NUDE

UNBREAKABLE STEEL

HIGH SCHOOL
T-SHIRTS

PANTY
HOSE

THERMOS
BOnLE

1st &lt;.Juitli t y

.

2. $ 1

ROBERTSHAW ELECTRIC

PENDULUM
WITH

VELOUR BATH TOWELS
EXTRA lliiCK AND ABSORBANT

WALL CLOCK

SOliDS - PRINTS

ST~KE

TRAVEL ALARM
H 11n d.~o m e
~ tyrere
1r,i1Yt l ~ oiU
S ~'tioll er
pr:oot &lt;r!'!§ ld l, l um •nou5
fll (f' , ·~wo:!! p al ~~rm .

Bro~n or bl~~ k c il~e

!i7 .95 Va l ve

Chitdr ens Sit es. Too

$1994

Pr

"WESTCLOX"

Sel e ct
f rom
Pot n l
P l t a s an t.
G~ ll l ;o
Acade my or Waham ~ .
Ae gular I J, U , Me n s
Si r e ~ S..M L

5 Year Guar ant ee

89c Va lu e

. VINYL SHOWER CURTAIN
6Ft.x6Ft.

5 Solid Colors

EMBROIDERY TRIMS

A 516.95 Va lue

NOT

E)(act l y

As Pic tu red

WOMEN'S BLOUSE
SALE
Entire Stock ol Regul ar $4 .94
New Spr ing Fabrics
Pol ~e s t er sh~r p n nl~. stl k. look pr int!. or !i.ol irl
&lt;:olcrs. Lon g ~ l ceve ~ ly le~ A hu ge ,t s~or t mcn l
of P• •tt e r n ~ and color~

WK - KEY WOUND

ALARM
100%

VEGnABU

POLYESTER

_Or

FLOWER

SEEDS

99

Reg ular 35c

PR.

THE JUMBO
QUART SIZE

LANDERS
TOILETRIES
•Eu Slt1mpoo
•H«iNI Slt1mpoo
•llallam Hai' Conditioner
•Kiddies 8utlble l1alh

•BibJ Powder
•lllbJ Sltlftlpoo
• Ctumr Bubble l1alh

'3"

Vli!IIS to '1.49

GIRLS DENIM
JEANS
Sizes7 tol4

(ollon den iom il'a ns wi t h
t h e l 11 s 1'1 lon ll &lt;~re te 11 .
Regul clr stock reduci! d l cr

ARnFICIAL-

H_ANGING
PLANTS

'

as~

Selec t from a
. ,. "" r I e t y
o1
IIOW('r lng pl &lt;'lnl ~
"'dd color to ~ our

"'m•

this ev en! .

sandals

ALL OCCASION GREETING CARDS
'

BOX OF 10

39e

ARTIFIDAL POLY

SPRING Fl.IMERS
Who Has A Better Selection ?

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
POINT PLEASANT-MASON

Birthday
honored
A Raggedy Andy · theme
was carried out at a party
honoring Robbie Rawlings on ·
his fifth birthday. The party
was given by his mother,
Mrs. Rose Mary Sayre, and
his grandmother, Mrs.
Maxine Dorsi, at the Dorsi
home in l)liddleport.
Party hats, whistles and
suckers were given to the
children and ice cream, cake,
potato chips and Kool-Aid
were served. Guests at the
party were Mrs . Dottie Davis
. and chi ldren, Micky and
Heather, Chris Becker, Nellie
Hanson, Scott and Tim
Frazier, Cathy Thomas, Mike
Dorst and Mary and Pleasant
Ellis .
Sending gilts were Maxine
and Roy Kesterson , Brady
Sayre, Cathy and Blll
Car leton, Sue Rawlings,
Craig Rawlings and Sherry
Sayre.

POMEROY, OHIO

NO. SALES TO- DEALERS
1
QUANTITY .
RESERVEIJ
. .....

..

USDA Choice 1st 4~Ribs

'
RIB ROAST••••••••••• !~....
Superiors . . ·.
· 12 oz.

1
79
~
FRANKl ES .~ ••••••••• ~~;.. ·
7
SAUSAGE ·\····· •••••••• .1~·. 9 ~
29
~ .

Superiors Polish

,y

Social
Calendar

'•

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT
FIREMEN'S Auxiliary, 7:30
p .m . Wednesd'ay a t the '
department headquarters.
Mrs. Euvetta Bechtle and
Mrs.
Kate
Bachner,
hostesses. Election ol officers
and silent auction o! baked
goods.
MIDDLEPORT ,
LITERARY Club, home o!
Mrs. M. L. French. Mrs .
Charles McDaniel to review .
· "Historical Churches of the
United States." Roll call , "An
Interesting Church I Have
Attended. "
SOUTIIEASTERN OHIO
Garden Tractor Club meeting
at secretary's ol!ice on Rock .
Springs Fairgrounds, 6 p.m.
Wednesday; members and
interested persons Invited.
THURSDAY
VEGETABLE AND bean
supper, pie and co ffee,
beg inning 5 p.m. Thursday,
Bethany Church social room
at Dorcas spon sored by
Dorcas Women's Fellowship;
take own contniners for carry
out.
AUXILIARV TO the Big
Bend Citizens Band Radio
Club, 7 p.m. Thursday in Ute
new headquarters at the
former Childr en'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 o! Ute Eastern
'Star, 7:30 Thursday at the
Temple. Dues payable.
fi"RIDA\'
POMONA Grange, 8 p.m.
Friday at the Rock Springs
hall. Filth degree to be
conferred: Racine Grange to
be hosts .
SATURDAY
MEIGS SENIOR Citizens
Center sponsoring a square
dance
at
Pomeroy
Elementary School, 8 to II
p.m. Saturday; music by
StringdWJters. Open to pubUc.
· $1 . admission with children
Wlder 12 admitted free .
REGULAR MEETING
Bedford Township Trustees,
Saturday, 6:30p.m. at home
o! Clark Helen Swart..
JITNEY
SUPPER
Saturday, 4 to 7 p.m. in
cafeteria at Meigs High
School prior to championship
game of ~tectlonal basketbaU
tournament under sponsorship o! Meigs Local Band
Boosters. Jaz~ band will
entertain during supper with
sloppy joes, hot dogs, salads,
vegetables, dess~rts and
beverage to be .available.
Proceeds go towards finish
paying for new band
Wllforms.
SQUARE DANCE Salta'·
day at Pomeroy Elementary
School from 8 to 11 p.m.
Sponsored by ~enlor clllzens.
Millie by String Dusten.
Admisaion
Olildren under
12 admitted free If acco'l'paniedlby ~-ents.

'1.

·•

.,

:;;.:z::~:::w:~9.~?~)$:t~:*'-~"'i.:!&amp;'

i
QUART
THERMOS

.298 Second St.

ROBBIE RAWLINGS

ALADDIN

Sale
Pr iced

A 69' VAI.~E

..

99'

btls.

SOli !;Is

MONITORS NAMED
Riverby monitors for this
weekend
have
been
announced . Sat urda y's
monitors are Mrs. John
Knepper , Mrs , Tim Cornell, I
to 3 p. m.; Mrs. Isabelle Bias,
Mrs. Roy Grose, 3 to 5 p. m.
Sunday's monitors are Mrs.
William Eachus, Mrs. Phillip
Ba iley , I to 3 p. m. ; ·Mrs.
Betsy Simpson , Mrs. DOnald
Warehime, 3 to 5 p. m.

•

8-16 oz.

BLANKETS

Stock Up Now!

FAMILY SPLASH party
and swim Sunday at Lyne
Center . Hio Grande College,
sponsored by Parents
With out Partners , Rolly Hill s
Chapter 838. Meet at the pool
al 4p. m.

·OHIOAN TAPPED
WASHINGTON IUPI)
President Ford announced
his intention Tuesday to
nominate attorney Roger A.
Yurchu ck, Columbus, Ohio,
to the board o! directors of
the
Lega l
Services
Corporation
for
the
remainder of the term
expiri ng July 13, 1m.

lb. 59~

R. C. COLA

ALL THERMAL AND POLYESTER

SUNDAY
SIGN UP Sunday for Portland Independen t ball cl ub, 2
p.m. at Portland Elemen.tary .

The Fabric Shop

$129

...

'.

Hav e you r se ll a sew ing spree . Choose our . colorfu l
fa brics in pri 'lfs, p l aids. pa tt erns and pla ins . All
inspirationa l ... at pi n cu shi.on pr ices. B u ~ ya r ds .

lb.

---,T.;.UR-!-~-,:-E~-L-- r--:-::;;-;:;==~M.:.:.:..A~NY
SPECIAL su YSI
140
$4 .-i9 Va l ue

Thru.

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

$29B

~?n7 PLEI'IT\' OF

Whil e

'

5lbs.

-CANNING SUPPLIE$-

Macaroni Salad

They Las! !

ALL SET AND READY
'
TO SEW FOR SPRING!

CHOPS

Cole Slaw

PORTAFILE

Effec~ve

ONION SETS

89e

CLOCK

FOR SPRING
FOR EASTER
FOR PROMS

F

STARTS TOMORROW ·

Jitney supper
set at tourney

event

9

- ~·D@I't''O

Famlfy night and room
visitation . were observed .:1l
the Monday night mee ting of
Ute Sa lem Center PTA .
A di rl ne r . with · th e invoca lion by the Rev . Gene
Mu sser wa s !oll owe!l by
entertainmen t. Mrs. Wykle
whitley prese nted the Good
News Tri o compose d of
Che ryl Smith, Roberta

fa·bric

•1•

play is no t recomm ended lor
\'ery young or impressionable
children .

Family night observed

SRr1ng

GROUND
BEEF

CHOICE

7-UP

S-16 oz. bottles

Price$
March 6, 1976

$549 . PORK

lARD

had allegedly violated hlll
parole alter relea!te from
)rison.
Ammons Is to be returned
to Toledo authorities, local
FBI agents said.
.. - - - ·
-

parole
charged • · with
violation.
FBI agents said Ammons
had been convicted of tbe
armed robbery of a Toledo,
(~tio, bank flv~ years ago and

USDA Choice Chuck
.

. .

.

lb.

ARM POT ROAST••••••
USDA Choice
ENGLI.SH ROAST•••••• ~b;.
USDA Choice
lb;
CHUCK STEAK •••••••••
All Purpose
.
.
101b
POTATOES •••••••••••• .".

16 ·oz. Jars
Coffee-Mate.••••••••••~:.
MIXED
16 ounce
VEGETABLES
VEG ALL, ••••.••••••••••••

College Inn 13~ oz•.

CHICKEN BROTH •••••••
Wagner's 54 oz.

·

2

-'1

r~

KIDNEY

4 Quarts fur
With Coupon

$2

Limit 1 Per Cuslomor

Good AI Powell's Super Volu
Coupon Explros: 3-6-76

cans

BEANS.:~:~.

rClUPO N

C.HA~MIN

VALVOLINE

MOTOR OIL

cans

Joan of Arc

ORANGE DRINK•••••••• _~
' ( 'l 1f ' 11

s

-I!
VEGETABLE SOUP .,.
.,,. .
6 Cans for

With Coupon

$100

Limit 1 Per Customer

Good:AI Powell's Super Valu
COUP!'fl Expires: 3-6-76

.)

:-,
..

.

.TOILET TISSUE
4 Roll Pkg .
With Coupon

sgc.

SERVING
Regular Sa .99

With Coupon

$699

~

.. I
:I;
I

,

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good AI Powell's Super Valuo
Coupon Expires : 3-6-76

Limit 1 Per Customor

Good AI Powell's Super Yolu
Coupon Explros: 3-6-76

�...
6 - The Daily Sentinel. Mtd&lt;Ueport-I'Qnwro). 0 ., We-dnesday, Ma rch 3, 1976

,:fi~gi~'~ ' ' bi;t,hd;y:: ~pp';~~;~h;i;g'l'i

Society enjoys
Saturday ·tea

::::

'

Past

pr es irl('nts

and

cha r ter members of Alpha
Om lcrnn Chapter of Delta

Kappa Gamma. internationa l
t.eact1ers honorary society.
were honored at a tea gi\·cn
Sa tw·ctay at the McArthur
f:lementa ry School.
Those honored include d

U1ree charter Inembers, Mrs.
Ruth \)ra ke Eu ler , Mi ddle port : Miss Luci lle S111ith,
Chester. and Mrs. Margaret
Parsons. Rutla nd . a char ter
rnc m ber ami fir~t preside nt
Of the Chap ter , who W:JS
un able 1o &lt;Jitend .

Past presidents of Meigs
Countv honored were Mrs.
Nan -Moore. Miss Mildred
Bo wley , Middleport; Mrs.
Robe rta Wilso n. Salem
Center ; Mrs. ·f ay

Sauer,

Middleport, Rout&lt;· 1. t\nother
Meigs County past president
unable to all end Wit S Nellie
Va le . Hutl and . Oth ers
honored were Mrs . Rachel
Warner. Mrs . Enea Adams.

Miss Elizabe th Lantz, Mi ss
Amut Ma ude Fehnun and

A dinner in celebration ol
the birthday ol the Ameri can
Legion will be held in FeeneyBennett Pust 128 lor
Auxiliary members and
licgionnaires on March 17.
Plans for the celebration
were made at . a recen t
meeting ol the Auxiliary.
Reservations are to be made
with Mrs. Erma Hendricks,
Uberty Lane, 992-3819, or
Albert Roush , 992-3169, by
Mon day, Martit lo.
The unit ordered 1,500
popp ies lor the annual Poppy
Day sale in Mav and selected

Mrs. Edith Hoffm an.
Eaeh one spoke briefly
gh•ing highli gh ts of her term
of offi ce . For the occasion,
the honore d group c;une
aUired in dress simi lar to
that worn during some activit y of their bienni unt.
During the mee ting Olive
Page and Hebecca Tate of
Meigs Cowtt y were voted into
membership,
A bice ntennial theme was
ca.Ti ed out in the ta ble ,..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___,
decorations . Cookies, coffee -rL _ /1
•
and pw1ch were served :
I rzt I'T~
Others attending !rom here
Cl were Mrs. Jeannie Bowen,
Mrs. Martha Husted, Mrs.
Nellie Parker, Mrs . Maxine
Phi lson. Mrs. Vi lma Pi kkoja.
Mt·s. Emily Sprag ue. Miss
Mary V. Reibel, Miss Carolyn
Smtih , Miss Hosa lie Story ,
Mrs. Anna Eliza beth Turner
and Mrs. Dorothy Woodard.

* (/

BEN
FRANKLI.N

Cancer program discuss
A film on ta ncer · and a

devotions using scripture
disc uss ion on th e fr ee from 2 Ti m . :3 , verses l'-5.
1\ll:ll'!rtc.a wac;
mon th ly clinic at Veterans Mrs. Wilcox presided a't t!ie
England
Me ni o r i il l
H o s pit a I · business mee ting with ~aula
irnpto!ie!d
ffie ''5~1t!P
higltli ghted the Fe br uary Hay nes
giving
the
mee tin g of the Women 's secretary 's report , and Mi's.
-This was a
Fe ll owship of the Meigs Wyatt the treasut·e r's report.
stamp o11 all 1e9a1
County Churc hes of Christ.
March mee ting will be held
dowments, Ben
Meeting at the Bradbw·y at the Bradford Church of
tougntand
Churc h of Chr is t, ll1e Ch rist with Mr s. Kathryn
dete.:~tect it.
program opened with PauJa Evans to give a demonHaynes lea ding songs and strat ion on ceramics. The
Mrs . Mmyl n Wilcox at the Bt·adbury church history was
piano. " Open My Eye s give n. Closi ng song was
Tha t I Mi ght See" was " How Great Thou Arl " with
the prayer so ng with Mrs. Mrs. Ann Lambert having the
Trudy Andrews giving the cl os ing pra yer . He!res li prayer . Mrs. Virgin ia Wyatt ments were served in the t,;,;;o;.;;o.;,---~;;,;.;-....o
of the 'z ion Church had church social room.
•

a

Play scheduled at Rio Grande
HlO GHANDE -~ Pa ul
Ze nde l' s P uli tze r Priz e
win ning play, " The Effect of
Gamm a Rays on Man ~j n.t he­
Moon Marigolds" , wi ll be
presented by the Rio Grand e
CQ!Iege ·Community College
Titeatre March 4, 5, and 6 alB
p.m . in Rio Gran de Coll~g e 's
Community HalL
J osie Ba pst po r tr ays
Bea trice Hun sdorfe r, a bi tter
woman whose life , ln her
word s, adds up to one big
'' ze ro ;.. Re se ntful of her
d a ughter s, Be atri ce
spiritually maims thein Ruth, portrayed by Catherine
Benet, a !lightly but fr agile
15-year -olrl social butterfly,
and Tilly, pla yed by Virginia
Tirpak, the tim id younger
daughters wh o is fasc inated
by science, "cloud chambers, " and "gamma rays ."
.la)·ne McKenzie appea rs
as J;m ice Vickery, Ti lly's
co mp et itor in the sc f1 uol
science fair . Su.,an Alth err
· and Cecilia Osborne appear
on alternate nights as Nan ny ,
an ag ed boa r de r whose
pat he~ i c

senility sym bolized

the hopelessness and futili ty
that seems to entra p all of the
charac ters.
The producti on is directed
by Ed Roark . Ron Baker is
Assis tant Dir ec tor . Admission will be $2 fo r adults ,
$1.50 for students, and $1 for

AMMONS ARRESTED
CINCINNATI ( UPI)
Carey Gipson Anunons, 34, .
Cincinnati, was arrested by
·:-: th e FBI here Tuesday and
other live co-sponsored by
organizations and businesses.
A se nior community
ser vice party at the ·Athens
Mental Health Center was
announced lor March 18 and
it was noted that good used
jewelry and pocketbooks are
nee ded. Members are
making identification tags for
USDA
Ute diabetics to be worn at the
parties. A report on the
re cent junior community
.lb.
service party at the Center
was given . Gilts valued ·at
$190 were taken by the two
members attending.
A donation was made to the
8 lb.
Ca ncer Society. Read was a
letter I rom the Department of
Ohio concerning units selling
poppies in a communit y
where there is another active
unit.
Heported ill were Mrs.
Fern Bradbury, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Kennedy, Mrs. Edith
Spencer, Mrs. ROsa Searls,
Mrs . · Louise Hawkins ,
Charles Sauer, Charles
READY TO EAT
McElh inny, a patient · at
Holzer.
Mrs. Hendricks presided
and Kim Ro ush ; junio r
member, gave the opening
and closing prayer in the
absence o! the chaplain. .
A dinner preceded the
meeting with legionnaires,
junior and senior members
attending . Chr isti Smith
donated the door· prize which
was won by Mrs. Freda
Clark .

children twelve and under.
NOTE: Beca use of the intensity of cer tain scenes, the

Buckeye
Girls '
State
delegates, two from Eastern
High School and four from
Meigs, with the names lo be
announced once confirmation
of acce ptance has bee n
received. One of the girls will
be sponso red by Ute unit, the

ROUND
STEAK

FUNDS REPAID
COLUMBUS !UP!) _ Ohio
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson
said today all funds borrowed
in December to meet a
general lund crunch have
been repaid, with the transfer
of $10 mill ion from the
general lund to the federal
revenue Sharing trust lund.
F erguson
had
been
authorized to transfer money
between funds to allow the
state to meet December's
unu sua 11 y h eavy school
foundatiOn pa yments and
payroil, the higher education
subsidy and monthly welfare
payments.
· A total of $38.9 million was
transferred - $30 million
from the federal trust fund
and $8.9 million from three
other rotary accounts - to
the general fund with $28.9
million paid back in two
transfers in February.
nw ith today's transfer ,"
Ferguson said, " the state is
back in balance in all
accounts and we now expect
to end the fiscal year on June
30 with a modest balance."

PURE

Musser and Paul Musser, and
Bill Hall , pianist, who sa ng
several- 'inspirational g o~peJ
hymns . Mrs . James Sheets
shared Appalac hia music an d
culture with th e group
playing Ea rly Americ a n
ballads on the dUlcimer , and
co ncludin g with pi:t triotic
selections in keeping with the
bicenten nial sin gin g and
playin g her autoharp .
g'uests introduced by Mrs.
Roberta Wii son ~ principal,
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Dowler, Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Morris, Mr. and Mrs. James
Shee ts and children , and
Meigs Local Band Boosters
Hobert Snowden .
are sponsor ing a Jitn.cy
Mrs. Minni e Riggs presided
Supper Salw·day from 4 to 7 at the business · . !Tleeting ..
p.m. in the ca feteria at the Ci ndy Fetty and Missy Higgs,
high school prior to the
Brownies,led in the pledge to
championshi p gam e of the the flag. The tables for the
Sec ti on al Basketball Tour- dinner were decorated in the
na ment.
red, white and blue culor
Slo ppy_ joes. hot dogs , scheme.
salads, vegetables, desserts
and beverages will be on th e
menu . The J azz Band will
entertain duri ng the .Jitney
Supper.

Potato Salad
Ham Salad

Chickcm salad
Cheese Spread

PILLOW CASES
. ~ WHI TE

Get Organ ized!

.

'

•

LIDS-CAPS

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE
All
Grounds

31b.

'439_
FREE PARKING

COT TON-

Va lves to $8.99
Pr in ts &amp;

Wi t h Carr y Handl e'

SHEER NYLON ST RETCH

A.LADDINS QUART

ON SALE

SEAMLESS NUDE

UNBREAKABLE STEEL

HIGH SCHOOL
T-SHIRTS

PANTY
HOSE

THERMOS
BOnLE

1st &lt;.Juitli t y

.

2. $ 1

ROBERTSHAW ELECTRIC

PENDULUM
WITH

VELOUR BATH TOWELS
EXTRA lliiCK AND ABSORBANT

WALL CLOCK

SOliDS - PRINTS

ST~KE

TRAVEL ALARM
H 11n d.~o m e
~ tyrere
1r,i1Yt l ~ oiU
S ~'tioll er
pr:oot &lt;r!'!§ ld l, l um •nou5
fll (f' , ·~wo:!! p al ~~rm .

Bro~n or bl~~ k c il~e

!i7 .95 Va l ve

Chitdr ens Sit es. Too

$1994

Pr

"WESTCLOX"

Sel e ct
f rom
Pot n l
P l t a s an t.
G~ ll l ;o
Acade my or Waham ~ .
Ae gular I J, U , Me n s
Si r e ~ S..M L

5 Year Guar ant ee

89c Va lu e

. VINYL SHOWER CURTAIN
6Ft.x6Ft.

5 Solid Colors

EMBROIDERY TRIMS

A 516.95 Va lue

NOT

E)(act l y

As Pic tu red

WOMEN'S BLOUSE
SALE
Entire Stock ol Regul ar $4 .94
New Spr ing Fabrics
Pol ~e s t er sh~r p n nl~. stl k. look pr int!. or !i.ol irl
&lt;:olcrs. Lon g ~ l ceve ~ ly le~ A hu ge ,t s~or t mcn l
of P• •tt e r n ~ and color~

WK - KEY WOUND

ALARM
100%

VEGnABU

POLYESTER

_Or

FLOWER

SEEDS

99

Reg ular 35c

PR.

THE JUMBO
QUART SIZE

LANDERS
TOILETRIES
•Eu Slt1mpoo
•H«iNI Slt1mpoo
•llallam Hai' Conditioner
•Kiddies 8utlble l1alh

•BibJ Powder
•lllbJ Sltlftlpoo
• Ctumr Bubble l1alh

'3"

Vli!IIS to '1.49

GIRLS DENIM
JEANS
Sizes7 tol4

(ollon den iom il'a ns wi t h
t h e l 11 s 1'1 lon ll &lt;~re te 11 .
Regul clr stock reduci! d l cr

ARnFICIAL-

H_ANGING
PLANTS

'

as~

Selec t from a
. ,. "" r I e t y
o1
IIOW('r lng pl &lt;'lnl ~
"'dd color to ~ our

"'m•

this ev en! .

sandals

ALL OCCASION GREETING CARDS
'

BOX OF 10

39e

ARTIFIDAL POLY

SPRING Fl.IMERS
Who Has A Better Selection ?

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
POINT PLEASANT-MASON

Birthday
honored
A Raggedy Andy · theme
was carried out at a party
honoring Robbie Rawlings on ·
his fifth birthday. The party
was given by his mother,
Mrs. Rose Mary Sayre, and
his grandmother, Mrs.
Maxine Dorsi, at the Dorsi
home in l)liddleport.
Party hats, whistles and
suckers were given to the
children and ice cream, cake,
potato chips and Kool-Aid
were served. Guests at the
party were Mrs . Dottie Davis
. and chi ldren, Micky and
Heather, Chris Becker, Nellie
Hanson, Scott and Tim
Frazier, Cathy Thomas, Mike
Dorst and Mary and Pleasant
Ellis .
Sending gilts were Maxine
and Roy Kesterson , Brady
Sayre, Cathy and Blll
Car leton, Sue Rawlings,
Craig Rawlings and Sherry
Sayre.

POMEROY, OHIO

NO. SALES TO- DEALERS
1
QUANTITY .
RESERVEIJ
. .....

..

USDA Choice 1st 4~Ribs

'
RIB ROAST••••••••••• !~....
Superiors . . ·.
· 12 oz.

1
79
~
FRANKl ES .~ ••••••••• ~~;.. ·
7
SAUSAGE ·\····· •••••••• .1~·. 9 ~
29
~ .

Superiors Polish

,y

Social
Calendar

'•

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT
FIREMEN'S Auxiliary, 7:30
p .m . Wednesd'ay a t the '
department headquarters.
Mrs. Euvetta Bechtle and
Mrs.
Kate
Bachner,
hostesses. Election ol officers
and silent auction o! baked
goods.
MIDDLEPORT ,
LITERARY Club, home o!
Mrs. M. L. French. Mrs .
Charles McDaniel to review .
· "Historical Churches of the
United States." Roll call , "An
Interesting Church I Have
Attended. "
SOUTIIEASTERN OHIO
Garden Tractor Club meeting
at secretary's ol!ice on Rock .
Springs Fairgrounds, 6 p.m.
Wednesday; members and
interested persons Invited.
THURSDAY
VEGETABLE AND bean
supper, pie and co ffee,
beg inning 5 p.m. Thursday,
Bethany Church social room
at Dorcas spon sored by
Dorcas Women's Fellowship;
take own contniners for carry
out.
AUXILIARV TO the Big
Bend Citizens Band Radio
Club, 7 p.m. Thursday in Ute
new headquarters at the
former Childr en'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 o! Ute Eastern
'Star, 7:30 Thursday at the
Temple. Dues payable.
fi"RIDA\'
POMONA Grange, 8 p.m.
Friday at the Rock Springs
hall. Filth degree to be
conferred: Racine Grange to
be hosts .
SATURDAY
MEIGS SENIOR Citizens
Center sponsoring a square
dance
at
Pomeroy
Elementary School, 8 to II
p.m. Saturday; music by
StringdWJters. Open to pubUc.
· $1 . admission with children
Wlder 12 admitted free .
REGULAR MEETING
Bedford Township Trustees,
Saturday, 6:30p.m. at home
o! Clark Helen Swart..
JITNEY
SUPPER
Saturday, 4 to 7 p.m. in
cafeteria at Meigs High
School prior to championship
game of ~tectlonal basketbaU
tournament under sponsorship o! Meigs Local Band
Boosters. Jaz~ band will
entertain during supper with
sloppy joes, hot dogs, salads,
vegetables, dess~rts and
beverage to be .available.
Proceeds go towards finish
paying for new band
Wllforms.
SQUARE DANCE Salta'·
day at Pomeroy Elementary
School from 8 to 11 p.m.
Sponsored by ~enlor clllzens.
Millie by String Dusten.
Admisaion
Olildren under
12 admitted free If acco'l'paniedlby ~-ents.

'1.

·•

.,

:;;.:z::~:::w:~9.~?~)$:t~:*'-~"'i.:!&amp;'

i
QUART
THERMOS

.298 Second St.

ROBBIE RAWLINGS

ALADDIN

Sale
Pr iced

A 69' VAI.~E

..

99'

btls.

SOli !;Is

MONITORS NAMED
Riverby monitors for this
weekend
have
been
announced . Sat urda y's
monitors are Mrs. John
Knepper , Mrs , Tim Cornell, I
to 3 p. m.; Mrs. Isabelle Bias,
Mrs. Roy Grose, 3 to 5 p. m.
Sunday's monitors are Mrs.
William Eachus, Mrs. Phillip
Ba iley , I to 3 p. m. ; ·Mrs.
Betsy Simpson , Mrs. DOnald
Warehime, 3 to 5 p. m.

•

8-16 oz.

BLANKETS

Stock Up Now!

FAMILY SPLASH party
and swim Sunday at Lyne
Center . Hio Grande College,
sponsored by Parents
With out Partners , Rolly Hill s
Chapter 838. Meet at the pool
al 4p. m.

·OHIOAN TAPPED
WASHINGTON IUPI)
President Ford announced
his intention Tuesday to
nominate attorney Roger A.
Yurchu ck, Columbus, Ohio,
to the board o! directors of
the
Lega l
Services
Corporation
for
the
remainder of the term
expiri ng July 13, 1m.

lb. 59~

R. C. COLA

ALL THERMAL AND POLYESTER

SUNDAY
SIGN UP Sunday for Portland Independen t ball cl ub, 2
p.m. at Portland Elemen.tary .

The Fabric Shop

$129

...

'.

Hav e you r se ll a sew ing spree . Choose our . colorfu l
fa brics in pri 'lfs, p l aids. pa tt erns and pla ins . All
inspirationa l ... at pi n cu shi.on pr ices. B u ~ ya r ds .

lb.

---,T.;.UR-!-~-,:-E~-L-- r--:-::;;-;:;==~M.:.:.:..A~NY
SPECIAL su YSI
140
$4 .-i9 Va l ue

Thru.

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

$29B

~?n7 PLEI'IT\' OF

Whil e

'

5lbs.

-CANNING SUPPLIE$-

Macaroni Salad

They Las! !

ALL SET AND READY
'
TO SEW FOR SPRING!

CHOPS

Cole Slaw

PORTAFILE

Effec~ve

ONION SETS

89e

CLOCK

FOR SPRING
FOR EASTER
FOR PROMS

F

STARTS TOMORROW ·

Jitney supper
set at tourney

event

9

- ~·D@I't''O

Famlfy night and room
visitation . were observed .:1l
the Monday night mee ting of
Ute Sa lem Center PTA .
A di rl ne r . with · th e invoca lion by the Rev . Gene
Mu sser wa s !oll owe!l by
entertainmen t. Mrs. Wykle
whitley prese nted the Good
News Tri o compose d of
Che ryl Smith, Roberta

fa·bric

•1•

play is no t recomm ended lor
\'ery young or impressionable
children .

Family night observed

SRr1ng

GROUND
BEEF

CHOICE

7-UP

S-16 oz. bottles

Price$
March 6, 1976

$549 . PORK

lARD

had allegedly violated hlll
parole alter relea!te from
)rison.
Ammons Is to be returned
to Toledo authorities, local
FBI agents said.
.. - - - ·
-

parole
charged • · with
violation.
FBI agents said Ammons
had been convicted of tbe
armed robbery of a Toledo,
(~tio, bank flv~ years ago and

USDA Choice Chuck
.

. .

.

lb.

ARM POT ROAST••••••
USDA Choice
ENGLI.SH ROAST•••••• ~b;.
USDA Choice
lb;
CHUCK STEAK •••••••••
All Purpose
.
.
101b
POTATOES •••••••••••• .".

16 ·oz. Jars
Coffee-Mate.••••••••••~:.
MIXED
16 ounce
VEGETABLES
VEG ALL, ••••.••••••••••••

College Inn 13~ oz•.

CHICKEN BROTH •••••••
Wagner's 54 oz.

·

2

-'1

r~

KIDNEY

4 Quarts fur
With Coupon

$2

Limit 1 Per Cuslomor

Good AI Powell's Super Volu
Coupon Explros: 3-6-76

cans

BEANS.:~:~.

rClUPO N

C.HA~MIN

VALVOLINE

MOTOR OIL

cans

Joan of Arc

ORANGE DRINK•••••••• _~
' ( 'l 1f ' 11

s

-I!
VEGETABLE SOUP .,.
.,,. .
6 Cans for

With Coupon

$100

Limit 1 Per Customer

Good:AI Powell's Super Valu
COUP!'fl Expires: 3-6-76

.)

:-,
..

.

.TOILET TISSUE
4 Roll Pkg .
With Coupon

sgc.

SERVING
Regular Sa .99

With Coupon

$699

~

.. I
:I;
I

,

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good AI Powell's Super Valuo
Coupon Expires : 3-6-76

Limit 1 Per Customor

Good AI Powell's Super Yolu
Coupon Explros: 3-6-76

�1- 1lle Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 3, 1976

OPEN TH

TIL 8 PM -

OPEN SATURDAY TIL

MIDDLEPORT.
STORE ONLY
LADIES' DRESSES
21
SKIRT &lt;\S;;
- ANDSETS
~~:- 'iff .
. ,

t/
·
'
~· ; ~":;" Jj

.

/:::·-_;,-~- ,,;._.;;
~- .j '\ --

sets '" sohd and prtnts.

.PRICE
~le1~1G3~

Cl.lrt

4u1 /. •

. S.qLE

t

"''"'

~~

~0/tl, n~~

1)-/JRTs

Close Dur 4•r I'IEHs
Ut. 111ANO ,~,HID

,· {

,,.,

~ ) y · \ \,}

·.·

~-=."
i- ..•\-"
V:r1

1

/

-,

.

I \ \ , ;,.;;_;;;;.

r

\1~•

\ &lt;),

',"

$

·.

Lo_d~s 1~ Polyester Pan I·

Available in white, chamois, beige and
yellow Sizes S-M-L

/ 4,_·~- 1

.tJ; 1~/l.VI~. /.1'. ,',· ·.:;· ;_.-· ;_. _;:-;:•·
'.~·r
':1
"'

Pick from either long. 01
short sleeves tn Juntor
Missel 6nd Half Size1 .

- PVC SHIRT JACKET

-l
.l 01L"'\
"J
\-_.~ .!

'·-.. .,.,Q'

ladt~S dr~sses and ~k1rt

LADIES'
PANT SUITS
sutts tn ccordmate patterns and

1488

HECK'S REG.
$13.99
ClDiliiM /11111.

SHop
~RLy

.

'

)

s15''

16V. /24l'&gt; .

-

,

!\
I

~~

.·{ ._.. i,

'
I

~

,

J\

I~

,

Pido Irom tM .. t t po&lt;O'- pot:ktl

lly~l.

~

·siZES: 4-6

, \J~y. $

I

I

SIZES: 7-14

•\
1

\

\\'

'

\

· '-

'

'

\ ~·
_.,.~ ·;; l\

$]88

.

~

·

TO $4.88

---·.

ClDTI/111&amp; /11111.

lodres prmt tee shirt$ with skort deeves Clnd
\
round nee~ . In sizes S· M· L.
_, '. J

. 8fi~Hf ~li JWE*P

4.6 6
•

HECK 'S . s·
REG.
$588

VALuEs -+a 'f!O .

.

MENs Lo, ~ ~lEv£

,

..

_..

• \

\

'""' ·•;&lt;t7,
., t(li; ' ' '
,t • :,.

-~

'
'

;·

.-

-...

I

r/ . . . . . ,, ...

f

- • .,..,..
;\~·... .,,
.

~ ~

GIRLS'
SKIRTS ·

Soh, serene. That best desuibes our linca-rie

for

1

- ~;;!A

In comfortable Dol: ron colton.

in assorted colors of denin fabric . Sizes: 7- 14.

, ·. ' 1..'- ~ : td • .
I ·~r... ·-' 1
' · ~ ~'t . ' .
i

.

HECK'S REG.
. ' $6.11 .

HICK'S
RIG •
$4.11
,,.,.

' ' ,,:.J. .

.

. X. ' . .

'•.....&lt;; .

. ' ,.,.., \. · ·

•r.

'

' ()J· $377

---.~;.
.(.... . ·...
~

_~-1''\,

•r.

•

BOYS'
FOOTBALL
JERSEY

4 PC. S-TAINLESS
STEEL MEASURING

$2.99

HECK'S
REG.
$10.88

CI.OTNING DEPT. .

CUTTING BOARD

FOOD CHOPPER

COLOIED ALUMIIUM

PERCOLATOR

TOILET BOWL

$19.9

•

'
'

!

$544

. RAYON
WET
MOP

SJ.77

HECK'S
REG.
$3.66

..,

IID#ISEWAII

IIDIISIWAif

fiiiiT.

O'CIDAR

$'iiCIAL e1or~ tl"' ' •.,. 51/Qaxt ~ Si..J«p
!Aores
BlftNo i F'14t1K6t 5/R""'- CISNJ up ~tt;* __. ~~
.
. !'11:7/f AN~ /.YtJyf . __,.,

.

.,

.... .(/(£T

·Y•u

COTTON WET
MOP

$133

$1.' '

HECK'SREG. $1.71

HECK'S REG.
$2.49

..,.

Mott~IY•

1101/SEWAM
/11111.

GOLD CARNIVAL
OLIVE CARNIVAL

HECKS
. · REG.
$3.66
EACH

5 QT. ALUMINUM
COLAI DEl

$ ~- 99

..

...,,, ,,

.

VINTAGE
3 PC. SALAD SO ·

H:~::s
$3.79

HICK'S
RIG.

IACH

•r.

$2.99
IACH

5166
EACH

.

.

NQIJSEWAM

1.
•.

llfWSIWAII-.r.

COUNTRY KITCHEN

~

$]19

O'CEDAR

NYLON DUST ·
MOP

$188

HICK'SRIG.

$3.09

HICk'S
REG.
$5 .44

,.,,

IID#ISIIIIAII

INDIANA GLASS

.GLASSWARE
ASSORTM.NT
e CA"DY IOWL a COYU
e WIDDING IOWL a COYII

e MILK GLASS CANDY IOWL
ANDCOYII

CHOICE

$139

IACH

"'"·.li
.i,. ,

I
·t
' *;
-t~

. ·~0

2QT. TEA.KEmE

$2''
HICk'S RIG. $3.99

...,A.,-.,r.

1/

'

.

~.· :i.~
I

·~
~-

•

t~

r· · · If

TEA KETTLE

BROOM

$244

,' ::~ '\N '

3 QT, PIWTER SnLE

O'CEDAR

HICK'S
RIG.
$2.47

. HICK'S
lEG.
$3.29

$ 222

IIOIISIIIIAB

$219_ .
e CRYSTAL e OLIVE e GOLD

ANGLE BROOM

IIIWSIWAII

1

HECK'S
REG.
73 1

O'CEDAR

$2.09 .

tArl ~·

OVAL BOWLS

$9.99

HICK'SIIG.

)INE

CLEANER

HICK'S
REG •

O'CIDAR

'"

SprinliJ nighh , , , Selec:tKKt

Baby [)oils
in solid colors with lcxe trim. Siu' S,M,L.X,XX.

.l onger length girls skirb

HECK'S RIG,
TO $2.98
Cl0111M

dm:~my

of WoltzlenQth and long gowns or

j

H:::s $ 199

'

HECK'SREG.
$11.18

!
!

BAR
STOOL
. ASSORTED COLORS
SET

.

o' +

·. / I
' '
·&gt; J

i

j

301NCH

~- ~

~

I

J

$200

!

DE~T.

LADIES' PRINT
: TEE _SHIRTS ~ ~ ~

! I .\

J

I

7-1 4.

I

HECK'S REG.
$4.99
ClOTIIIIIC

I 'j

i '\!

Girls cotton olc_nit tops in
w~it1, navy, pink, an);:l
yellow. Sizes A-6X and

$349 .· ',

HECK'S REG
$6.88 .

~1 \~/}r,·i

KNIT
TOPS

~

'

C. ··~ .&gt;Oo-i\i_,

HECK'S REG.

. -..;::1

1

AS PICTURED

-~1$~'. r. ~~
t ll ·' "I ~

1.

.

Boys tw ill ieons w'ith controu trim a nd stitching . Size~ 8-1B

4'' .

..

Gl

BOYS'
TWILL
JEANS .

A polyester blend tunic top
with \horl , leves gnd belt , In
s ite~ S·M·l onJ 38/4.4.

!IJO'Ii:, (O IIo r&gt; d.nim
lhrH tlylfl
thoow frOfl'l, ,....,;loblt ...;It! ri~ o•
ll"i f~PI dO IIIII oftd ~ !IO'"""d Mit loopo

,

. /JIIIT.

NOT EXACTLY

·~ -·· f'·,\f'-_

/: 1!~

; t·

HECK'S REG.
$19.99
· CI.OT/1-/JI/IT.

. CI.QiliM

LADIES'
TUNIC TOPS

GIRLS'
JEANS

I•;

·- ·-·-1 ·- - -

(/#, ,.,,

'1 @ii '
~_A~ ·~ i 1.:('
~f \tJfi·~ . . 1f\,

auorted colon. long sleeYe
but,ton front in •izes 8/18 and

·

lADIES JEANS

.

�1- 1lle Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 3, 1976

OPEN TH

TIL 8 PM -

OPEN SATURDAY TIL

MIDDLEPORT.
STORE ONLY
LADIES' DRESSES
21
SKIRT &lt;\S;;
- ANDSETS
~~:- 'iff .
. ,

t/
·
'
~· ; ~":;" Jj

.

/:::·-_;,-~- ,,;._.;;
~- .j '\ --

sets '" sohd and prtnts.

.PRICE
~le1~1G3~

Cl.lrt

4u1 /. •

. S.qLE

t

"''"'

~~

~0/tl, n~~

1)-/JRTs

Close Dur 4•r I'IEHs
Ut. 111ANO ,~,HID

,· {

,,.,

~ ) y · \ \,}

·.·

~-=."
i- ..•\-"
V:r1

1

/

-,

.

I \ \ , ;,.;;_;;;;.

r

\1~•

\ &lt;),

',"

$

·.

Lo_d~s 1~ Polyester Pan I·

Available in white, chamois, beige and
yellow Sizes S-M-L

/ 4,_·~- 1

.tJ; 1~/l.VI~. /.1'. ,',· ·.:;· ;_.-· ;_. _;:-;:•·
'.~·r
':1
"'

Pick from either long. 01
short sleeves tn Juntor
Missel 6nd Half Size1 .

- PVC SHIRT JACKET

-l
.l 01L"'\
"J
\-_.~ .!

'·-.. .,.,Q'

ladt~S dr~sses and ~k1rt

LADIES'
PANT SUITS
sutts tn ccordmate patterns and

1488

HECK'S REG.
$13.99
ClDiliiM /11111.

SHop
~RLy

.

'

)

s15''

16V. /24l'&gt; .

-

,

!\
I

~~

.·{ ._.. i,

'
I

~

,

J\

I~

,

Pido Irom tM .. t t po&lt;O'- pot:ktl

lly~l.

~

·siZES: 4-6

, \J~y. $

I

I

SIZES: 7-14

•\
1

\

\\'

'

\

· '-

'

'

\ ~·
_.,.~ ·;; l\

$]88

.

~

·

TO $4.88

---·.

ClDTI/111&amp; /11111.

lodres prmt tee shirt$ with skort deeves Clnd
\
round nee~ . In sizes S· M· L.
_, '. J

. 8fi~Hf ~li JWE*P

4.6 6
•

HECK 'S . s·
REG.
$588

VALuEs -+a 'f!O .

.

MENs Lo, ~ ~lEv£

,

..

_..

• \

\

'""' ·•;&lt;t7,
., t(li; ' ' '
,t • :,.

-~

'
'

;·

.-

-...

I

r/ . . . . . ,, ...

f

- • .,..,..
;\~·... .,,
.

~ ~

GIRLS'
SKIRTS ·

Soh, serene. That best desuibes our linca-rie

for

1

- ~;;!A

In comfortable Dol: ron colton.

in assorted colors of denin fabric . Sizes: 7- 14.

, ·. ' 1..'- ~ : td • .
I ·~r... ·-' 1
' · ~ ~'t . ' .
i

.

HECK'S REG.
. ' $6.11 .

HICK'S
RIG •
$4.11
,,.,.

' ' ,,:.J. .

.

. X. ' . .

'•.....&lt;; .

. ' ,.,.., \. · ·

•r.

'

' ()J· $377

---.~;.
.(.... . ·...
~

_~-1''\,

•r.

•

BOYS'
FOOTBALL
JERSEY

4 PC. S-TAINLESS
STEEL MEASURING

$2.99

HECK'S
REG.
$10.88

CI.OTNING DEPT. .

CUTTING BOARD

FOOD CHOPPER

COLOIED ALUMIIUM

PERCOLATOR

TOILET BOWL

$19.9

•

'
'

!

$544

. RAYON
WET
MOP

SJ.77

HECK'S
REG.
$3.66

..,

IID#ISEWAII

IIDIISIWAif

fiiiiT.

O'CIDAR

$'iiCIAL e1or~ tl"' ' •.,. 51/Qaxt ~ Si..J«p
!Aores
BlftNo i F'14t1K6t 5/R""'- CISNJ up ~tt;* __. ~~
.
. !'11:7/f AN~ /.YtJyf . __,.,

.

.,

.... .(/(£T

·Y•u

COTTON WET
MOP

$133

$1.' '

HECK'SREG. $1.71

HECK'S REG.
$2.49

..,.

Mott~IY•

1101/SEWAM
/11111.

GOLD CARNIVAL
OLIVE CARNIVAL

HECKS
. · REG.
$3.66
EACH

5 QT. ALUMINUM
COLAI DEl

$ ~- 99

..

...,,, ,,

.

VINTAGE
3 PC. SALAD SO ·

H:~::s
$3.79

HICK'S
RIG.

IACH

•r.

$2.99
IACH

5166
EACH

.

.

NQIJSEWAM

1.
•.

llfWSIWAII-.r.

COUNTRY KITCHEN

~

$]19

O'CEDAR

NYLON DUST ·
MOP

$188

HICK'SRIG.

$3.09

HICk'S
REG.
$5 .44

,.,,

IID#ISIIIIAII

INDIANA GLASS

.GLASSWARE
ASSORTM.NT
e CA"DY IOWL a COYU
e WIDDING IOWL a COYII

e MILK GLASS CANDY IOWL
ANDCOYII

CHOICE

$139

IACH

"'"·.li
.i,. ,

I
·t
' *;
-t~

. ·~0

2QT. TEA.KEmE

$2''
HICk'S RIG. $3.99

...,A.,-.,r.

1/

'

.

~.· :i.~
I

·~
~-

•

t~

r· · · If

TEA KETTLE

BROOM

$244

,' ::~ '\N '

3 QT, PIWTER SnLE

O'CEDAR

HICK'S
RIG.
$2.47

. HICK'S
lEG.
$3.29

$ 222

IIOIISIIIIAB

$219_ .
e CRYSTAL e OLIVE e GOLD

ANGLE BROOM

IIIWSIWAII

1

HECK'S
REG.
73 1

O'CEDAR

$2.09 .

tArl ~·

OVAL BOWLS

$9.99

HICK'SIIG.

)INE

CLEANER

HICK'S
REG •

O'CIDAR

'"

SprinliJ nighh , , , Selec:tKKt

Baby [)oils
in solid colors with lcxe trim. Siu' S,M,L.X,XX.

.l onger length girls skirb

HECK'S RIG,
TO $2.98
Cl0111M

dm:~my

of WoltzlenQth and long gowns or

j

H:::s $ 199

'

HECK'SREG.
$11.18

!
!

BAR
STOOL
. ASSORTED COLORS
SET

.

o' +

·. / I
' '
·&gt; J

i

j

301NCH

~- ~

~

I

J

$200

!

DE~T.

LADIES' PRINT
: TEE _SHIRTS ~ ~ ~

! I .\

J

I

7-1 4.

I

HECK'S REG.
$4.99
ClOTIIIIIC

I 'j

i '\!

Girls cotton olc_nit tops in
w~it1, navy, pink, an);:l
yellow. Sizes A-6X and

$349 .· ',

HECK'S REG
$6.88 .

~1 \~/}r,·i

KNIT
TOPS

~

'

C. ··~ .&gt;Oo-i\i_,

HECK'S REG.

. -..;::1

1

AS PICTURED

-~1$~'. r. ~~
t ll ·' "I ~

1.

.

Boys tw ill ieons w'ith controu trim a nd stitching . Size~ 8-1B

4'' .

..

Gl

BOYS'
TWILL
JEANS .

A polyester blend tunic top
with \horl , leves gnd belt , In
s ite~ S·M·l onJ 38/4.4.

!IJO'Ii:, (O IIo r&gt; d.nim
lhrH tlylfl
thoow frOfl'l, ,....,;loblt ...;It! ri~ o•
ll"i f~PI dO IIIII oftd ~ !IO'"""d Mit loopo

,

. /JIIIT.

NOT EXACTLY

·~ -·· f'·,\f'-_

/: 1!~

; t·

HECK'S REG.
$19.99
· CI.OT/1-/JI/IT.

. CI.QiliM

LADIES'
TUNIC TOPS

GIRLS'
JEANS

I•;

·- ·-·-1 ·- - -

(/#, ,.,,

'1 @ii '
~_A~ ·~ i 1.:('
~f \tJfi·~ . . 1f\,

auorted colon. long sleeYe
but,ton front in •izes 8/18 and

·

lADIES JEANS

.

�PUNTY

-----

Of PRII

PLENn
OF FREE
PARKING

PRICES II EFFECT
UMC03TRAY

TACKLE
BOX

COLEMAN

WILSON

2 GAL. JUG

FIELDER
GLOVE

A valve-priced " bo ~t . 3 troy\, 2 1

$499

comporlmenll. 13110

H:~::s
$6.99

11.1 ~6 ~

in .

SPIN CAST
REEL

_

HECK'S
REG.

~'

... ''-.....................

""'

..,.

_

$9.99

S/1011$ .

~--~
-~' '
SINKER ....-~-I
·' I
SELECTOR ,... - fi! lll.!a:Jc:!!O.IAC: :-: - : • - '~~~'lo(']
,__ · i

HECK 'SREG.

78'

$22 .S6 .

SIWTS . .T.

EVANS

SHYSTER

LURES ·

. •09 EACH

. SI'OITS IJBIT.
.61NCH

.54~ACI
HECK'S REG.

-89'
PACK

.-.. '- ......

BELT &amp; BAIT ·
BOX
W~h

BeH Loops

Heck's gg~
R~g. s1.29 _

SI'ORTl

DEPT.

SPIN CAST
..RODS

BASEBALL
BA.T

$288

DUPONT

' CARBURETOR
CLEANER

9...9c
HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG.
$3.99

SI'OITS
IJBIT.

STP

LIMIT
6QTS.

59:,.

. .... . '

GAS TREATMENT

:

.

REG •

$12 .99

HECK'S
REG.

SIWTS
1191.

$4.77

. PINT

REG.

MODEL 202
HECK'S REG.

w1m

POLISIIIIG
COIIPOUI.

COMPOU•
CHOICE

..,...,.

HICil'S RIG.

' $1.o9

.............awgh_..., __ ...,
&lt;~.

HICK'S
RIG .

29'
6LB .... ..... 37'
8 Ll •• 34' - -,,
12LI .. 42•
ISLB •• 44•
•

77(

HECK' S
REG •

99'

99'

..,

M'IOIIJI(Jrtvl

SPORTS

·DEPT.

$1676
HECK'S RIG. $19.96
•ws.•r.,,,

PRES TONE
STARTING
FLUID SPRAY

FOR 015( OR DRi.JM B~AKE S

CAN OPEMER

G.E.

"·2177

I

AM.fM Portable

Heck'$ $816
Reg. '11.96

.,,.,

HECK'S RIG.
$19.96

RADI0$24111
Heck's

IJBIT.

11-80

~

l"::.b-~---­

51~

.... WF-1

Water FinM
SIIMER .MASSAGE

•1'9 97
lid's Reg. '27.96

RALLY VINYL
TOP CLEANER

CASSETTE RECOIDIIIG

TAPE

$ 146.

HICK'S
RIG.
$2.49

.,...,..,

15 OZ. IRICK

-

• • in wal11111 p n !iMII.

$697

.,..., ,

HICK'S
RIG.
$1.49

2 OZ. CLAIROL

LIFESAVERS
BEECHNUT

..

$1576

HICK'S
RIG.
$19.96 '

JEWIUr•r.

.:Mpc~ 'No oeporDI•

$976

..,

&lt;omplino!..d -"·

AUTOMOTWI
119T. .

RALLY CAR
UPHOLSTERY

·RALLY ·VINYL
TOP DRESSING

GUM

in,.,,._

$1476

-110

CLEANER ~~

RALLY BLACK
VINYL TOP WAX

•oz.uou•

sI 09

HICK'S
RIG.

HECK'S
REG.
$1.0f

AIRI

AllrtJMOrtvl

..,.

..

' 1.66

PLANTFOOO

44'

'

'

' '

HICK'S
RIG.
69 4

I

.....

IIAHWA.

..,

•RI/1/JJ
~ HII'Yl 111'1111!.

..,.

120Z.

I

"

)

AI"

I'~

TEFLOI
BAKE lr ROAST
PAl

TEFLON
COOKIE PAN
HICK'S
RIG.

S3 •66

EACH

$219
EACH

A•nacaa
FOOD

$133
HICK'S
RIG.
$1.99

••

OZ•.VITAUS
SUPERIOLD

CIOSCll/J .

HAIR SPRAY

CLOSE-UP

.
89,.

TOOTHPASTE

HICK'S
RIG.
$1.18

HICK'S47
REG •
' 71 1

i

[&amp;:.·
1M l1

:mJ
I ....... ....a.

~ --·

12 CUP TEFLON

MUFFIN PAN

$219

SLB. LIME -

sac --

HICK'S
RIG • .
$1.21

..,

IIA.WAII

BULB

POniiG
SOIL

PLANTER

'
HAIDWARI

DIPT.

RUTLAND

PAINT

49(
HICK'S

,.,

~~29 sa~

_ HOFPMAN

. 2.1 LIS.
. TUWIUM

110.

.A.WAII

3 PACK
ROLLER
COVERS
SET

11" x 16" x'h"

PRESTON£ PRIME
GAS DRYER

,.

COSMI'IIC . .1.

SLB.AZALEA

.)

~-·

.,...,

HICK'S
RIG.
17.96

2.7 oz.

6-PACK

AUTOMOTIVE

ST.·U.PLANT

$17.96

~r.

$1.11

119T.

$1376

·.

'

"" "

.,...,..,

HiCK'S
RIG.

JIWRRY

~~ o! tn. 51-tot Of

doooninog P'".,.,.d,..'• '~•"•" lint b.oi~""
Chedibrown_s.pottillg '5tao~• 1IH-i-"'• loo'i

llflfM.e V iwol~ lllow•FM•AA ...... In
.,._e lN irl aud - - " " fM. • F..mt. rad
........... ,..,.~ . • Solicf.ltd&lt;cuitf)". • ,~­

HICK'S
RIG.
$1.19

HICK'S
RIG.

HECK'1
REG.
$1.99

.....,al

'16ol. e Allfllrnllk Volwmi' t ....ol . • lu;IHn Ale

89'

1!!

'5.H·d!loni. ... ~ ......,

''"""\1

$13.99

lron!MtOI" - hti!i•pr-fll c~ lrCiffl llllpwal•r

·~ · t....,,.....a,........;c

CONDITION

~II!I!R2

99(

AM-FM TABLE
RADIO
........ Siido'••

.._._.ro~~~~wot...otolorof~. u..-.

~.
pir:.lit ......... ~ a.iral ClllklrriG!ic.. ~ , . . . . ., ......

,_. C.l. Ill tWa _ , and lock ioo plow.

HECK'.S
RIG.

SHOT 0' STEAM
IRON 5' -

G.l. ·

SUNSET
120M,NUTE

to

C.B. LOCK
MOUNT

"""- Ofl"'i"'l th.ft.

SUNIEAM

CHOICE

HECK'S
REG.
$1.09

.t·:

PBSSURE COOKER
$p..o.mW• •-u1,...... i&lt;KJ ........_,
wr.,_,,.......,,n....,..,......_,._

TINNA
J •

.1
. . .'

- ~:~··-···-_""")

'

BRAKE FLUID

$157

-VanWyck

.Jim "Catfish" Hunter AII·Stor
Model has a molded tiber core
and leather (0\'er .

r

u

12 OZ. DUPONT

$3.66

SlYLER DRYER

Con Air

$1.99

u

H:~::s

ZOOM A GROOM

ool eo..:!

SAWYER'S
AUTOMATIC

HECK'S
REG.

HICK'S.
REG.

HECK'S
REG.
49'

;::¥SII•'"G.E.

c-.-.._.~.

· - - 4, 1

-~-

BA.SEBALL

'-r- :....1-- H

29C

o••••
58CUCI

·--.--._&lt;---·__

• ,..._.4,..- - - ...... _... ..... - ...

:::: ,'::,!,':".,i,~~::..~~·hood.~~
............l:t::

Art1fl liP';.

PBSTOIE DE-ICER
Will SCRAPER
TOP

JBIIUY •111.

HECK'S lEG.
$22.96

UJ

A.10110TWI

-OIT

.Jewelry Dept.

SLIDE VIEWER
$976 _

51 .99

HECK'S
REG,
99'

Hook into any car rodio and li1fen to
C .B. transmissions .

PD-1

WILSON

HICK'S RIG.
74' QT. ·

,.,

C.l. COIVEITER ·

.

$119

REEL

FRAIILL
ECON-0-LITE
BAIT BUCKET

4LB .........

,.,

RALLY CAR
WASH
CONCENTRATE

Heck's Reg. •21.96

DEPl.

$1.18

AlrtJMOTNI

AllTO
IIII'T.

.

HECK'S RIG.
• $34.96

AGLIA
DRESSED
MEPPS
LURES

HECK' S
REG . .
$1.99

51 .67

$344

SPORTS . $ .

HECK'S

Sporls Dept.

H&amp;B
LEAbER

HECK 'S

3604

BERKLEY
BEE LINE

MR. TWISTER
MULTI-COLOR
. WORMS
PK. OF4

77(

sac
· EACH

GARCIA

easy to carry. It has tone control and a
convenient carrying handle. BoHeries are

FISHING
CAP

TROUT
NET

ASSOR TED SIZES AND COlOR S

H:~::s

The .pinning rod and reel combo f~n
every fisherman . Prediion quol•ty
rod and rtel designed lor the om olevr as well a• the expe rt.

HICK'S REG, ·

TINNA

Allows you to regular· Mt, condition-~et for a wardrobe
of instant hairdos , Comes with 20 rollers, conditioner.
and o complete 1tyling guide.

included.

FRAIILL

SPLIT SHOT

'$14''

MIST CONDITIONER
HAIR SETTER·

ZEICO

$1355

SPINNING
REEL COMBO

CLAIIOL

This portable 8-lr. player is lightweight and

of cowhide leather.

...

· BERKLEY

PORTABLE I TR. PLAYER

A.utogrophed by Cotfish Hunter .Mode

......., .... -poDol, ....... ____,,_ wid. ·
- . . . .. ..,........,. , _ . Mlect.e.n ..ll~..brotol·

59(

GRAND PRIX

Not Exact~
As Pictured.

•••

REMOVER
$318

HICK'S
IIG.
$2.88

HICK'SUG.
$1.50

HECK'SIEG.
$3.99

$133
,,,,.
--

III«'S

..,

••wAll

NA8WAII . .1.

IIA8WAII•r.

BASI.CAB/1111

2 DOOR CABINET

'· UTILITY CABINET. 22" WIDE," DEEP, IJY' HIGH. White

20'' Wid., 16" Deep, 36" High. Co.,.~
Ina,!~ Compamn.nt and de~p drawer for
kik'*' utenlil•, white gl itt., fkn;tic top. Ecny
glide drawe; runne!l, 2 WI tpoce 5, thrOme
ho nd'-i, whihl balled on enamel.

Enamel Finish. Cold-Rolled furnit\Jrt Stnl.
Hondfe1. Spring Ccitches. 2 Door, A Sht!lf Spcxe1.

S1888
.....,,,,

"

HECK'S REG.

HICK'S RIG.

$26,88

$26.18

I

HA.DWA.I DEPT.

__,MIIIIl'T.

'

.\

•

'.

.I·~
•• ,i
t

,

.

'

�PUNTY

-----

Of PRII

PLENn
OF FREE
PARKING

PRICES II EFFECT
UMC03TRAY

TACKLE
BOX

COLEMAN

WILSON

2 GAL. JUG

FIELDER
GLOVE

A valve-priced " bo ~t . 3 troy\, 2 1

$499

comporlmenll. 13110

H:~::s
$6.99

11.1 ~6 ~

in .

SPIN CAST
REEL

_

HECK'S
REG.

~'

... ''-.....................

""'

..,.

_

$9.99

S/1011$ .

~--~
-~' '
SINKER ....-~-I
·' I
SELECTOR ,... - fi! lll.!a:Jc:!!O.IAC: :-: - : • - '~~~'lo(']
,__ · i

HECK 'SREG.

78'

$22 .S6 .

SIWTS . .T.

EVANS

SHYSTER

LURES ·

. •09 EACH

. SI'OITS IJBIT.
.61NCH

.54~ACI
HECK'S REG.

-89'
PACK

.-.. '- ......

BELT &amp; BAIT ·
BOX
W~h

BeH Loops

Heck's gg~
R~g. s1.29 _

SI'ORTl

DEPT.

SPIN CAST
..RODS

BASEBALL
BA.T

$288

DUPONT

' CARBURETOR
CLEANER

9...9c
HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG.
$3.99

SI'OITS
IJBIT.

STP

LIMIT
6QTS.

59:,.

. .... . '

GAS TREATMENT

:

.

REG •

$12 .99

HECK'S
REG.

SIWTS
1191.

$4.77

. PINT

REG.

MODEL 202
HECK'S REG.

w1m

POLISIIIIG
COIIPOUI.

COMPOU•
CHOICE

..,...,.

HICil'S RIG.

' $1.o9

.............awgh_..., __ ...,
&lt;~.

HICK'S
RIG .

29'
6LB .... ..... 37'
8 Ll •• 34' - -,,
12LI .. 42•
ISLB •• 44•
•

77(

HECK' S
REG •

99'

99'

..,

M'IOIIJI(Jrtvl

SPORTS

·DEPT.

$1676
HECK'S RIG. $19.96
•ws.•r.,,,

PRES TONE
STARTING
FLUID SPRAY

FOR 015( OR DRi.JM B~AKE S

CAN OPEMER

G.E.

"·2177

I

AM.fM Portable

Heck'$ $816
Reg. '11.96

.,,.,

HECK'S RIG.
$19.96

RADI0$24111
Heck's

IJBIT.

11-80

~

l"::.b-~---­

51~

.... WF-1

Water FinM
SIIMER .MASSAGE

•1'9 97
lid's Reg. '27.96

RALLY VINYL
TOP CLEANER

CASSETTE RECOIDIIIG

TAPE

$ 146.

HICK'S
RIG.
$2.49

.,...,..,

15 OZ. IRICK

-

• • in wal11111 p n !iMII.

$697

.,..., ,

HICK'S
RIG.
$1.49

2 OZ. CLAIROL

LIFESAVERS
BEECHNUT

..

$1576

HICK'S
RIG.
$19.96 '

JEWIUr•r.

.:Mpc~ 'No oeporDI•

$976

..,

&lt;omplino!..d -"·

AUTOMOTWI
119T. .

RALLY CAR
UPHOLSTERY

·RALLY ·VINYL
TOP DRESSING

GUM

in,.,,._

$1476

-110

CLEANER ~~

RALLY BLACK
VINYL TOP WAX

•oz.uou•

sI 09

HICK'S
RIG.

HECK'S
REG.
$1.0f

AIRI

AllrtJMOrtvl

..,.

..

' 1.66

PLANTFOOO

44'

'

'

' '

HICK'S
RIG.
69 4

I

.....

IIAHWA.

..,

•RI/1/JJ
~ HII'Yl 111'1111!.

..,.

120Z.

I

"

)

AI"

I'~

TEFLOI
BAKE lr ROAST
PAl

TEFLON
COOKIE PAN
HICK'S
RIG.

S3 •66

EACH

$219
EACH

A•nacaa
FOOD

$133
HICK'S
RIG.
$1.99

••

OZ•.VITAUS
SUPERIOLD

CIOSCll/J .

HAIR SPRAY

CLOSE-UP

.
89,.

TOOTHPASTE

HICK'S
RIG.
$1.18

HICK'S47
REG •
' 71 1

i

[&amp;:.·
1M l1

:mJ
I ....... ....a.

~ --·

12 CUP TEFLON

MUFFIN PAN

$219

SLB. LIME -

sac --

HICK'S
RIG • .
$1.21

..,

IIA.WAII

BULB

POniiG
SOIL

PLANTER

'
HAIDWARI

DIPT.

RUTLAND

PAINT

49(
HICK'S

,.,

~~29 sa~

_ HOFPMAN

. 2.1 LIS.
. TUWIUM

110.

.A.WAII

3 PACK
ROLLER
COVERS
SET

11" x 16" x'h"

PRESTON£ PRIME
GAS DRYER

,.

COSMI'IIC . .1.

SLB.AZALEA

.)

~-·

.,...,

HICK'S
RIG.
17.96

2.7 oz.

6-PACK

AUTOMOTIVE

ST.·U.PLANT

$17.96

~r.

$1.11

119T.

$1376

·.

'

"" "

.,...,..,

HiCK'S
RIG.

JIWRRY

~~ o! tn. 51-tot Of

doooninog P'".,.,.d,..'• '~•"•" lint b.oi~""
Chedibrown_s.pottillg '5tao~• 1IH-i-"'• loo'i

llflfM.e V iwol~ lllow•FM•AA ...... In
.,._e lN irl aud - - " " fM. • F..mt. rad
........... ,..,.~ . • Solicf.ltd&lt;cuitf)". • ,~­

HICK'S
RIG.
$1.19

HICK'S
RIG.

HECK'1
REG.
$1.99

.....,al

'16ol. e Allfllrnllk Volwmi' t ....ol . • lu;IHn Ale

89'

1!!

'5.H·d!loni. ... ~ ......,

''"""\1

$13.99

lron!MtOI" - hti!i•pr-fll c~ lrCiffl llllpwal•r

·~ · t....,,.....a,........;c

CONDITION

~II!I!R2

99(

AM-FM TABLE
RADIO
........ Siido'••

.._._.ro~~~~wot...otolorof~. u..-.

~.
pir:.lit ......... ~ a.iral ClllklrriG!ic.. ~ , . . . . ., ......

,_. C.l. Ill tWa _ , and lock ioo plow.

HECK'.S
RIG.

SHOT 0' STEAM
IRON 5' -

G.l. ·

SUNSET
120M,NUTE

to

C.B. LOCK
MOUNT

"""- Ofl"'i"'l th.ft.

SUNIEAM

CHOICE

HECK'S
REG.
$1.09

.t·:

PBSSURE COOKER
$p..o.mW• •-u1,...... i&lt;KJ ........_,
wr.,_,,.......,,n....,..,......_,._

TINNA
J •

.1
. . .'

- ~:~··-···-_""")

'

BRAKE FLUID

$157

-VanWyck

.Jim "Catfish" Hunter AII·Stor
Model has a molded tiber core
and leather (0\'er .

r

u

12 OZ. DUPONT

$3.66

SlYLER DRYER

Con Air

$1.99

u

H:~::s

ZOOM A GROOM

ool eo..:!

SAWYER'S
AUTOMATIC

HECK'S
REG.

HICK'S.
REG.

HECK'S
REG.
49'

;::¥SII•'"G.E.

c-.-.._.~.

· - - 4, 1

-~-

BA.SEBALL

'-r- :....1-- H

29C

o••••
58CUCI

·--.--._&lt;---·__

• ,..._.4,..- - - ...... _... ..... - ...

:::: ,'::,!,':".,i,~~::..~~·hood.~~
............l:t::

Art1fl liP';.

PBSTOIE DE-ICER
Will SCRAPER
TOP

JBIIUY •111.

HECK'S lEG.
$22.96

UJ

A.10110TWI

-OIT

.Jewelry Dept.

SLIDE VIEWER
$976 _

51 .99

HECK'S
REG,
99'

Hook into any car rodio and li1fen to
C .B. transmissions .

PD-1

WILSON

HICK'S RIG.
74' QT. ·

,.,

C.l. COIVEITER ·

.

$119

REEL

FRAIILL
ECON-0-LITE
BAIT BUCKET

4LB .........

,.,

RALLY CAR
WASH
CONCENTRATE

Heck's Reg. •21.96

DEPl.

$1.18

AlrtJMOTNI

AllTO
IIII'T.

.

HECK'S RIG.
• $34.96

AGLIA
DRESSED
MEPPS
LURES

HECK' S
REG . .
$1.99

51 .67

$344

SPORTS . $ .

HECK'S

Sporls Dept.

H&amp;B
LEAbER

HECK 'S

3604

BERKLEY
BEE LINE

MR. TWISTER
MULTI-COLOR
. WORMS
PK. OF4

77(

sac
· EACH

GARCIA

easy to carry. It has tone control and a
convenient carrying handle. BoHeries are

FISHING
CAP

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NET

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The .pinning rod and reel combo f~n
every fisherman . Prediion quol•ty
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Allows you to regular· Mt, condition-~et for a wardrobe
of instant hairdos , Comes with 20 rollers, conditioner.
and o complete 1tyling guide.

included.

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'$14''

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HAIR SETTER·

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$1355

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This portable 8-lr. player is lightweight and

of cowhide leather.

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A.utogrophed by Cotfish Hunter .Mode

......., .... -poDol, ....... ____,,_ wid. ·
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59(

GRAND PRIX

Not Exact~
As Pictured.

•••

REMOVER
$318

HICK'S
IIG.
$2.88

HICK'SUG.
$1.50

HECK'SIEG.
$3.99

$133
,,,,.
--

III«'S

..,

••wAll

NA8WAII . .1.

IIA8WAII•r.

BASI.CAB/1111

2 DOOR CABINET

'· UTILITY CABINET. 22" WIDE," DEEP, IJY' HIGH. White

20'' Wid., 16" Deep, 36" High. Co.,.~
Ina,!~ Compamn.nt and de~p drawer for
kik'*' utenlil•, white gl itt., fkn;tic top. Ecny
glide drawe; runne!l, 2 WI tpoce 5, thrOme
ho nd'-i, whihl balled on enamel.

Enamel Finish. Cold-Rolled furnit\Jrt Stnl.
Hondfe1. Spring Ccitches. 2 Door, A Sht!lf Spcxe1.

S1888
.....,,,,

"

HECK'S REG.

HICK'S RIG.

$26,88

$26.18

I

HA.DWA.I DEPT.

__,MIIIIl'T.

'

.\

•

'.

.I·~
•• ,i
t

,

.

'

�.·
12 - The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. Mardi

13 - The DIIUy lientinet,
Wednoiday, March 3,1978

\1'''"''''"'"'::::;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:-~:::::;::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:,,:,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;::;:;.;::-~~

Helen Help

I US. • •

.

n, ,,.,, .., n.u.l

I

Senate
approves
hingQ

Lameut to a TV set
Dear Helen :
During the day I often make a mental list of things I either
need or want to do in the evening, like fix the car, read, get
some exercise.
Often I am greeted at our door by my wife with, "Come
quick and watch this show!" I think , "Oh no, it's got her
Passively I abandon my even.ing plans as I sink into II:"
easy chair and pay homage to this modern totem. pole, thiS
audio-visual God of Techoology. The car goes unfU&lt;ed, mat!
and books go unread, body and soul grow weaker fro'!' want of
exercise. Dinner is prepared and consumed during
commercials.
There must be millions of other self-made victims like us,
sacrificing each day to the Great Gods NBC, CBS and ABC.
Tomorrow I must expand my social life - tune into a different
serial. 1 must plan more exercise - watch a sports sh~w . As
for reading, I can catch the-signs behind the street action on
police shows.
·
Will a white knight come riding across the screen some
day and save us ? Should we pray for a power failure to break
the spell?- DEVOTED AND FAITHFUL SERVANT OF THE
PLUG-IN GOD

C"yrirht an - ·ne Krtrer Co. lt1•1 11111 Prlces pe• tllfu

•rorr stern, tlu

sat.. Ma rcil 1. 11J1 ill 111 wut V i ~' lia
Bhrtf il'l , Vir!ilil , Pillm ille , KY., llallllllliS 11
We rtstne

l~t ,

Pillsbury
Flour

Pt•treJ, DIIW .

tilhl It liMit .lllltitu. NONE SOLD TO DULEIIS .

Cost Cutters Help
Trim Your
Food

.

With Coupon

Vold

·

I State .&amp; Local TalC•

;
;:

Campbell's
Tomato Soup

1alf2·11·88c
7 Can•
With Coupon

Limit 1 Coupoo wtftl $10 or Moro Purchno

-Mr. and Mrs. Monid Good

Void Aft•r Sot., Mcuc:h 6, 1976

I

Local Ta•••

Nuptial vows read

Dear TCERD :
SYRACUSE
The ushers were Roger Imboden
Try "The Mother's Almanac" by Marguerit~ K~lly and
Syracuse
Church
of
the and
Paul
Imboden,
Elia Parsons a medium-priced paperback that ts btlled as
was
the
setting
for
Nazarene
Columbus,
and
Mrs.
Harold
"The Most eo'mplete Book Ever Written on Loving and Livjng
the
Dec.
21
wedding
of
Donna
hnboden,
Minersville.
Their
with Small Children."
hnboden,
Minersville,
and
boutonnieres
were
white
It's a wise, witty and thoroughly readable collection of
short paragraphs on the realities - and fun --:of m,otherbood, Monid Good, Long Bottom. carnations tinted in royal
The
wedding
was blue and gold. The groom .was
and it makes good reading for fathers too . In 11 you 11 fmd ttps
performed
by
the
Rev
. attired ln a dark blue suit and
on everYthing from toilet training and tantrum management to .
George.
W.
Cundiff
with
Day
he had a white and blue
child crafts and cookery, including "how a parent can win
Hayman,
pianist,
and
Mary
carnation boutonniere. He
through a rainy dav."
··
Janice Lavender, vocaljst, wore a watch given to him by
An excellent book[ I'm sorry it waan't available when the
Bolte! progeny were under 6 - but they're reading it now, singing " Whither Thou the bride.
Goest.;:
For
her
daughter's
since they now have small fry of their own. - H.
Given in marriage by her wedding,
Elma
Mrs.
+++
cou~in
,
Oscar
Imboden,
Imboden
wore
a
blue
PERSONAL TO "NOT SURE": There's im old saying,
Columbus,
the
bride
wore
a
polyester
dress
with
''Tr iers try; doers do. '' When you say, ''I'll try,'' you imply, ''I
gown of light blue crepe with carnation corsage.
doubt myself." Say "I WILL," and you can!- H.
white lace front overlays and
A reception honoring the
gathered lace at the wrist and couple was held in the church
neckline. Her veil of whit~ social room in the parsonage
netting was made of white basement. The three tiered
and blue tinted carnations cake trimmed in blue rose
tied with blue streamers and replicas, was topped with a
carried on a white Bible. She miniature bride and groom.
wore a yellow gold watch, gift
Registering guests was
of the groom. For "some~ . Mrs . Mickey
Cundiff.
An ordination and in ~ )'lev . Ernest - Stricklin, his borrowed,'' sh,e carried a lace Presiding at the reception
stallation service was held wife and their daughter, handkerchief belonging to · were Mrs. Leonard Bass and
Sunday at the Harrisonville Rebecca conducted the Mrs. Lynn Murray, Athens, Mrs. Barbara Brown ,
and Mrs. Murray's mother, Syracuse; and Mrs. Roger
Presbyterian Church .
service.
Mrs. Wilma Gardner. Her hnboden and Mrs. Jenny
David Riggs was ordained
The Rev. Mr. Stricklin, a blue and white garter was Smith, Columbus. Candles for
and installed as elder and professor at Ohio University,
member of the Session, and has been serving the from Mrs. Lillie Kennedy, the ceremony were lighted by
Pomeroy.
Dale Queen, Albany.
Felix Alkire, Ordained Harrisonville Presbyterian
The
bride's
matron
of
Mr. and Mrs .. Good, both
earlier, was installed as an Church as pastor for the past
honor was Mrs. Linda Roe; employed at Veterans
elder and Session member for ·several months.
Columbus, arid her . brides· Memorial Hospital are now
another three year term . The
maids were Mrs. Lenora residing at Route I, Long
Stewart, Syracuse, Mrs. Ruth Bottom I
Shain, Racine, and Miss
Sandy Winebrenner,
Syracuse . All of the
attendants are cousins of the
(
· bride. Their gowns were in
royal blue and gold polyester
High
and they carried white
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
carnations tinted and tled Tommy Lasorda , third base
Spirited
with streamers of blue and · coach of the Los Angeles
gold. The bride's daughter, Dodgers and the team's
Jayne Ann, served as lfower perennial cheerleader,
girl. She wore a blue gown returned this week from Italy
with lace overlay designed where he participated in a 17similar to the one worn by her day baseball clinic .
mother.
"Everybody in Italy is
Dewayne Good was hest going crazy over baseball,"
man for his father, and Lasorda sald.

Installation held ~unday

Fresh Whole

Gunnoe's
Sausage

Po-rk
Loin

l·lb.$128
Rail

lit.$ 18

With Coupon
limit 1 Co1poft Wlih $10 a·r Mara PurchaH
Void A'-•r Sat, Mo rch j\, 1976,
·~olbjod to Applicable State &amp; Local Ta11n

.. .

'

'

.

'

'

.

......

·

Markotholttt

Grade AA
Larce

Eus

,,

Gr~le A~

U.S. No. 1 Wisconsin

Russet ·
Potatoes
15
.....

Large Eggs

...

......

Hi·Nu 2%
Lowfat Milk .•

0.Tomato
1·-··

.......

hi.
• • • •

Cll.

• • •••

.·~~.aac
c..

Juice

Sungold
Bread •

...... 4&amp;!!.*I

•:i'•. :.;.;"·'·. 2·'s!.aac
e

I

I

Peac s • . . • •

c..

Spotlleht

lean
Coffee

Jarman's

lively new
slip-on sets
a fall 1976
'pace. Aircorded seam,
braided otrap,
sole an4 heel

Open ·

G "8A IEL

Now you can have asettin9. by Keepsake
... even if your diamond isn t a Keepsake.

are ju1t the right
height. Try a pair.

Choose from 25 pages of new mountings in !he colortul
Keepsake carq "llie P811«:1 Setting_" Each was desi gned
by the ~ craftsmen Who fashion Keepsake and Slarfire
diamood rings. 'tllu'll also find seu ings for cocklail rings, earrings and pendants. and men 's rings. Come in soon. The ne1t
best thing ro a Keepsake ...is a selting by Keeps~ke.

Complete Selection of Jarman ~··

24

&gt;

.a

Day

(Except Saturtlay Mlclntg•t 'tU 9 1.11. S.Uy)

Middle of

Block

o.

Enrythlt11
Kr091r I•
r uur totul

INt~er Welco~~~es

Your Federal
Food Sta...s

Open All Day Thursday
FRIDAY NIGHT TIL&amp;
Sal

'

Moreh 6, 1976

I

+++

ESPECIALLY ON RAINY

.!.&amp;Be
•••

'

Lholt 1 Coupe• With $11 or Moro Po,.....

Dear Servant:
·
Why not pray for WILL POWER to break the spell? TV is
addictive because it goes down easily with so little effort - and
it offers an excuse to avoid more difficult things, like using
your brains. muscles, voice or ingenuity.
When you reach a point where you're watching the dull
along with the good, just because it's there, you need a few
days of cold turkey to prove you aren't hopelessly hooked. So
pull the plug and don 'I weaken !
You'll be surprised how withdrawal pangs lesson once
you're involved in active pursuits. - H.

g'_rv1- THREE'S A CROWD.

place to shop. ..
for nice things
to wear.

91115

•
1

UPJ Slateho- Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) Legislation officially
authorizing
bingo· for
charitable purposes and
setting strict regulations for
conduct of the games has
received topheavy
endorsement in the Ohio
Senate and Is on Its way to the
House.
The Senate approved the
measure Tuesday, 28 to 2,
after adding fraternal and
service clubs and accredited
parochial schools to the list of
organizations entitled to
operate bingo games.
Religious and veterans' organizatims, as well aa volunteer fire departments, would
also be ellglble to conduct
bingo under the bill, which
P,.ompted about an hour of
debate on the Senate floor .
Meanwhile, the House
passed, 78 to 14, and sent to
the Senate an emergency bill
designed to ellminate long
lists of statewide delegates
from Ohio's June 8
presidential primary ballot .
' That blll, aimed at
reducing voter confusion and
speeding the counting
process, needs fullleglslatlve
approval by the time primary
ballots are printed Mxt
month.
Sen. Charles L. Butts, DOeveland, chief sponsor of
the bingo bill, said about 1,000
legitimate bingo operations
'are awaiting the legislation to
continue their games under
proper licensing.
Butta was successful in
lacking an emergency clause
onto the bill , meaning
Ucensing would begin 45 days
after signature by Gov .
James A. Rhodes.
Ohlo voters laat No'l'ember
directed the legislature to
write regulations for bingo
games, which had prevlouitly
been techolcally outlawed by
the state Constitution,
Enforcement has not been
otrict, and Butts said bingo at
rune locations in Oeveland
alone has produced more
than $12 million a year - with
· 40 per cent of lt going to the
operators.
·
" We want to knock out the
profttei!rs who have moved
Into the bingo business," ssid
!lutts. "This is a strong blll,
110d I belleve lt will do the

OUR BIGGEST SALE THIS YEAR!
YOUR CHANCE TO SAVE BIG
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SAVINGS OF 10% TO 35%

Living the
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light tan ~d light green.
•Jackets sized 36 'to 46 in regular and
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•Slacks size 32 to 42 waists in short,
medium and long length s
•All 100% Polyester knit
•Regular 1 41.00 Outfit.

LEISURE SHIRTS
Regular •12.00 Values
Aceate and nylon leisure ·
shirts. sizes : 5, M , L &amp; XL.
Regular $10.00 &amp; $12 .00. Over
120of these shirts taken from
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OF

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blouses ·
REGULAR '18.00

SLENOC.R~..

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Machine Nash and dry .

a

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Beautiful floral designs .

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job.ll

Under the bill, a charitable
·organization would have to
qualify for tax-exeinpt status
under the Internal Revenue
Service
Code.
Bingo
operators would have to be
volunteers and members of
the organlzattoti conducting
. the game. They could receive
no compensation.
· Butts' bill would prohibit
concessions and .outside
• advertiaing of the games,.
,which would be limlted to five
hours and could not last
· beyond midnight. A $3,000
limit would be placed on
prizes diatributed in a single
game.
Ucenslng would be dooe by
the state attorney general's
office, and local pollee forces
would be empowered to
review recorda which the
organization would be
reaulred to maintain.
Conducting an illegal bingo
; game would be punishable by
·' a one-to-tO year jall term and
' ,a
maximum
$15,000
• organizatianal fine.
.
• Only persons over 18 could
play, unless the game were
merely for amusement or the
receipts were redistributed
among the players. The
penalty for underage players
would be a mallimum 60-&lt;lay
jall -term and a maxlnium
$500 fine .
MOll of the debate on the
blll focused on . allowing
fraternal and service .
· • organizations to conduct
, bingo games.
.
1 Sen. Thomas E . Carney, D1
Girard, successfully got them
Included as charitable
; ! organizations despite
• · complaints there would be
; ' loopholes.
;,
"A non-profit organization
, • Is not necessarily a
• charitable organization,"
~ ; aald Sen. Martgene
Valiquette, D-Toledo, one of
the two oppooents of the blll.
Sen. Max H. Dennll, R·
Wllminlton, was the olher.
· Sen.
Robert
E.
O'Shaugmeuy, D-ColiJIIIbUB,
amended the bill to Include ·
parochlal lldtoola,~he
'saki were not IDe! _
the
bill's deflnllkll of .
organlutlon bee. . . they did
not "meet In common

'19.00 ro ss1:oo
NOW
OFF

LADIES P.V.C.

20%

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OUR ENTIRE STOCK QF
NEW SPRING DRESS COATS
AND PANT COATS. BEAUTIFUL
NEW SPRING COLORS.
SIZES: 8 10 18 AND l&amp;lh TO m~

REGULAR ·128.00

BOYS P.V.C.
JACKETS

So soft . and good looking,
P. V. C. has the look and feel
of fine leather bu t it is so
easty to c:are for ... i ust
sponge it clean . Sna p front,
yoke embro idery detail,
Color s
are
all
spring . . , pink , light blue
and I ight ta n.

REGULAR 117.00
Great looking leather-like
ja cke ts for boys. Sizes 8-18
in dark brown, ca mel , and
~ ige. Great for these cool
m6rning wa iting for the
school bus . NOW O NLY

ENTIRE STOCK OF

DRESSES

le

CCJtS!

SLEEPWEAR
SHIFT GOWNS
'AND

THIS
SEASON'S

HURRY IN FOR BEST SELECTIONS

BABY DOllS
REG. '5.00 &amp; 16.00
Sote and lu Ku rlous .
·perfec t for spring _and

summer
dream 1ng.
Slies :. P, S,. M, I!.L.

'9"

THIS GIGANTIC
TOPPERS
STOCK REDUCTION
MEN'S P.V.C.
SALE ENDS SATURDAY JACKETS
e10% OFF ·ALL LADIES HANDBAGS
e10% OFF ENTIRE CHILDREN'S DEPT.

REGULAR 125.00
Choose f rom 2 and ~
pock et models , leatherlike P. v .C. are the " in "
ia ckets th is sp r i ng .
Sizes : S, M, L. &amp; XL.
Colors of navy , luggage,
tan , and beige . NOW

ONLY

Choose yours in luscious

shades ol pink , blue,
maize, or mint .

NOW
ANOTHER BIG
SHIPMENT

Famous Cannon

BATH
TOWELS
&amp;
53.00

e10% OFF ALL SHOES
e10% OFF ALL LUGGAGE
DECORATOR

THROW
PIUOWS

$4.00

Values

If Perfect

Regular S7 .so

3FoR .s5oo

'

'

"BUENA WOVEN"

DUPONT RED LABEL POLY Flu.ED

BED PILLOWS
· S-TANDARD '
SIZE
. QUEEN SIZE
OR
KING SIZE

99

BEDSPR
REGULAR

'15.99
FULL
SIZE ONLY
100% HEAVYWEIGHT
CODON
eNO PRESS

YOUR CHOICE

'2

(Continued on Jllle 16)

·'

SHOP

eNew spring colors of light blue,

worlhlp."

•

•

IN THE SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

By LEE LEONARD

again !"

Dear Helen :
I'm Ute mother 6f two preschoolers and a tiny baby. I have
a thousand questions about everything from guidanc~ and
discipline to keeping them amused an.d keepmg my samty andthosedoctor'sbooksonchildcareomitsomeofthehuman
element.
Could you recommend a book that would help a mother

CO X 'S• • •A good

•MACHINE WASH
(MACHINE DRY

EACH
\

NOW
)

Gold, pink, white,
blue and avocado.

$}099

YOUR
CHOICE

'

�.·
12 - The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. Mardi

13 - The DIIUy lientinet,
Wednoiday, March 3,1978

\1'''"''''"'"'::::;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:-~:::::;::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:,,:,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;::;:;.;::-~~

Helen Help

I US. • •

.

n, ,,.,, .., n.u.l

I

Senate
approves
hingQ

Lameut to a TV set
Dear Helen :
During the day I often make a mental list of things I either
need or want to do in the evening, like fix the car, read, get
some exercise.
Often I am greeted at our door by my wife with, "Come
quick and watch this show!" I think , "Oh no, it's got her
Passively I abandon my even.ing plans as I sink into II:"
easy chair and pay homage to this modern totem. pole, thiS
audio-visual God of Techoology. The car goes unfU&lt;ed, mat!
and books go unread, body and soul grow weaker fro'!' want of
exercise. Dinner is prepared and consumed during
commercials.
There must be millions of other self-made victims like us,
sacrificing each day to the Great Gods NBC, CBS and ABC.
Tomorrow I must expand my social life - tune into a different
serial. 1 must plan more exercise - watch a sports sh~w . As
for reading, I can catch the-signs behind the street action on
police shows.
·
Will a white knight come riding across the screen some
day and save us ? Should we pray for a power failure to break
the spell?- DEVOTED AND FAITHFUL SERVANT OF THE
PLUG-IN GOD

C"yrirht an - ·ne Krtrer Co. lt1•1 11111 Prlces pe• tllfu

•rorr stern, tlu

sat.. Ma rcil 1. 11J1 ill 111 wut V i ~' lia
Bhrtf il'l , Vir!ilil , Pillm ille , KY., llallllllliS 11
We rtstne

l~t ,

Pillsbury
Flour

Pt•treJ, DIIW .

tilhl It liMit .lllltitu. NONE SOLD TO DULEIIS .

Cost Cutters Help
Trim Your
Food

.

With Coupon

Vold

·

I State .&amp; Local TalC•

;
;:

Campbell's
Tomato Soup

1alf2·11·88c
7 Can•
With Coupon

Limit 1 Coupoo wtftl $10 or Moro Purchno

-Mr. and Mrs. Monid Good

Void Aft•r Sot., Mcuc:h 6, 1976

I

Local Ta•••

Nuptial vows read

Dear TCERD :
SYRACUSE
The ushers were Roger Imboden
Try "The Mother's Almanac" by Marguerit~ K~lly and
Syracuse
Church
of
the and
Paul
Imboden,
Elia Parsons a medium-priced paperback that ts btlled as
was
the
setting
for
Nazarene
Columbus,
and
Mrs.
Harold
"The Most eo'mplete Book Ever Written on Loving and Livjng
the
Dec.
21
wedding
of
Donna
hnboden,
Minersville.
Their
with Small Children."
hnboden,
Minersville,
and
boutonnieres
were
white
It's a wise, witty and thoroughly readable collection of
short paragraphs on the realities - and fun --:of m,otherbood, Monid Good, Long Bottom. carnations tinted in royal
The
wedding
was blue and gold. The groom .was
and it makes good reading for fathers too . In 11 you 11 fmd ttps
performed
by
the
Rev
. attired ln a dark blue suit and
on everYthing from toilet training and tantrum management to .
George.
W.
Cundiff
with
Day
he had a white and blue
child crafts and cookery, including "how a parent can win
Hayman,
pianist,
and
Mary
carnation boutonniere. He
through a rainy dav."
··
Janice Lavender, vocaljst, wore a watch given to him by
An excellent book[ I'm sorry it waan't available when the
Bolte! progeny were under 6 - but they're reading it now, singing " Whither Thou the bride.
Goest.;:
For
her
daughter's
since they now have small fry of their own. - H.
Given in marriage by her wedding,
Elma
Mrs.
+++
cou~in
,
Oscar
Imboden,
Imboden
wore
a
blue
PERSONAL TO "NOT SURE": There's im old saying,
Columbus,
the
bride
wore
a
polyester
dress
with
''Tr iers try; doers do. '' When you say, ''I'll try,'' you imply, ''I
gown of light blue crepe with carnation corsage.
doubt myself." Say "I WILL," and you can!- H.
white lace front overlays and
A reception honoring the
gathered lace at the wrist and couple was held in the church
neckline. Her veil of whit~ social room in the parsonage
netting was made of white basement. The three tiered
and blue tinted carnations cake trimmed in blue rose
tied with blue streamers and replicas, was topped with a
carried on a white Bible. She miniature bride and groom.
wore a yellow gold watch, gift
Registering guests was
of the groom. For "some~ . Mrs . Mickey
Cundiff.
An ordination and in ~ )'lev . Ernest - Stricklin, his borrowed,'' sh,e carried a lace Presiding at the reception
stallation service was held wife and their daughter, handkerchief belonging to · were Mrs. Leonard Bass and
Sunday at the Harrisonville Rebecca conducted the Mrs. Lynn Murray, Athens, Mrs. Barbara Brown ,
and Mrs. Murray's mother, Syracuse; and Mrs. Roger
Presbyterian Church .
service.
Mrs. Wilma Gardner. Her hnboden and Mrs. Jenny
David Riggs was ordained
The Rev. Mr. Stricklin, a blue and white garter was Smith, Columbus. Candles for
and installed as elder and professor at Ohio University,
member of the Session, and has been serving the from Mrs. Lillie Kennedy, the ceremony were lighted by
Pomeroy.
Dale Queen, Albany.
Felix Alkire, Ordained Harrisonville Presbyterian
The
bride's
matron
of
Mr. and Mrs .. Good, both
earlier, was installed as an Church as pastor for the past
honor was Mrs. Linda Roe; employed at Veterans
elder and Session member for ·several months.
Columbus, arid her . brides· Memorial Hospital are now
another three year term . The
maids were Mrs. Lenora residing at Route I, Long
Stewart, Syracuse, Mrs. Ruth Bottom I
Shain, Racine, and Miss
Sandy Winebrenner,
Syracuse . All of the
attendants are cousins of the
(
· bride. Their gowns were in
royal blue and gold polyester
High
and they carried white
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
carnations tinted and tled Tommy Lasorda , third base
Spirited
with streamers of blue and · coach of the Los Angeles
gold. The bride's daughter, Dodgers and the team's
Jayne Ann, served as lfower perennial cheerleader,
girl. She wore a blue gown returned this week from Italy
with lace overlay designed where he participated in a 17similar to the one worn by her day baseball clinic .
mother.
"Everybody in Italy is
Dewayne Good was hest going crazy over baseball,"
man for his father, and Lasorda sald.

Installation held ~unday

Fresh Whole

Gunnoe's
Sausage

Po-rk
Loin

l·lb.$128
Rail

lit.$ 18

With Coupon
limit 1 Co1poft Wlih $10 a·r Mara PurchaH
Void A'-•r Sat, Mo rch j\, 1976,
·~olbjod to Applicable State &amp; Local Ta11n

.. .

'

'

.

'

'

.

......

·

Markotholttt

Grade AA
Larce

Eus

,,

Gr~le A~

U.S. No. 1 Wisconsin

Russet ·
Potatoes
15
.....

Large Eggs

...

......

Hi·Nu 2%
Lowfat Milk .•

0.Tomato
1·-··

.......

hi.
• • • •

Cll.

• • •••

.·~~.aac
c..

Juice

Sungold
Bread •

...... 4&amp;!!.*I

•:i'•. :.;.;"·'·. 2·'s!.aac
e

I

I

Peac s • . . • •

c..

Spotlleht

lean
Coffee

Jarman's

lively new
slip-on sets
a fall 1976
'pace. Aircorded seam,
braided otrap,
sole an4 heel

Open ·

G "8A IEL

Now you can have asettin9. by Keepsake
... even if your diamond isn t a Keepsake.

are ju1t the right
height. Try a pair.

Choose from 25 pages of new mountings in !he colortul
Keepsake carq "llie P811«:1 Setting_" Each was desi gned
by the ~ craftsmen Who fashion Keepsake and Slarfire
diamood rings. 'tllu'll also find seu ings for cocklail rings, earrings and pendants. and men 's rings. Come in soon. The ne1t
best thing ro a Keepsake ...is a selting by Keeps~ke.

Complete Selection of Jarman ~··

24

&gt;

.a

Day

(Except Saturtlay Mlclntg•t 'tU 9 1.11. S.Uy)

Middle of

Block

o.

Enrythlt11
Kr091r I•
r uur totul

INt~er Welco~~~es

Your Federal
Food Sta...s

Open All Day Thursday
FRIDAY NIGHT TIL&amp;
Sal

'

Moreh 6, 1976

I

+++

ESPECIALLY ON RAINY

.!.&amp;Be
•••

'

Lholt 1 Coupe• With $11 or Moro Po,.....

Dear Servant:
·
Why not pray for WILL POWER to break the spell? TV is
addictive because it goes down easily with so little effort - and
it offers an excuse to avoid more difficult things, like using
your brains. muscles, voice or ingenuity.
When you reach a point where you're watching the dull
along with the good, just because it's there, you need a few
days of cold turkey to prove you aren't hopelessly hooked. So
pull the plug and don 'I weaken !
You'll be surprised how withdrawal pangs lesson once
you're involved in active pursuits. - H.

g'_rv1- THREE'S A CROWD.

place to shop. ..
for nice things
to wear.

91115

•
1

UPJ Slateho- Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) Legislation officially
authorizing
bingo· for
charitable purposes and
setting strict regulations for
conduct of the games has
received topheavy
endorsement in the Ohio
Senate and Is on Its way to the
House.
The Senate approved the
measure Tuesday, 28 to 2,
after adding fraternal and
service clubs and accredited
parochial schools to the list of
organizations entitled to
operate bingo games.
Religious and veterans' organizatims, as well aa volunteer fire departments, would
also be ellglble to conduct
bingo under the bill, which
P,.ompted about an hour of
debate on the Senate floor .
Meanwhile, the House
passed, 78 to 14, and sent to
the Senate an emergency bill
designed to ellminate long
lists of statewide delegates
from Ohio's June 8
presidential primary ballot .
' That blll, aimed at
reducing voter confusion and
speeding the counting
process, needs fullleglslatlve
approval by the time primary
ballots are printed Mxt
month.
Sen. Charles L. Butts, DOeveland, chief sponsor of
the bingo bill, said about 1,000
legitimate bingo operations
'are awaiting the legislation to
continue their games under
proper licensing.
Butta was successful in
lacking an emergency clause
onto the bill , meaning
Ucensing would begin 45 days
after signature by Gov .
James A. Rhodes.
Ohlo voters laat No'l'ember
directed the legislature to
write regulations for bingo
games, which had prevlouitly
been techolcally outlawed by
the state Constitution,
Enforcement has not been
otrict, and Butts said bingo at
rune locations in Oeveland
alone has produced more
than $12 million a year - with
· 40 per cent of lt going to the
operators.
·
" We want to knock out the
profttei!rs who have moved
Into the bingo business," ssid
!lutts. "This is a strong blll,
110d I belleve lt will do the

OUR BIGGEST SALE THIS YEAR!
YOUR CHANCE TO SAVE BIG
ON NEW SPRING CLOTHING.

SAVINGS OF 10% TO 35%

Living the
leisure life!
OUR MOST FAMOUS BRAND OF
. LEISURE SUITS NOW
AT SAVINGS OF 27%

WEEKDAY
EVENINGS
TIL

light tan ~d light green.
•Jackets sized 36 'to 46 in regular and
large.
•Slacks size 32 to 42 waists in short,
medium and long length s
•All 100% Polyester knit
•Regular 1 41.00 Outfit.

LEISURE SHIRTS
Regular •12.00 Values
Aceate and nylon leisure ·
shirts. sizes : 5, M , L &amp; XL.
Regular $10.00 &amp; $12 .00. Over
120of these shirts taken from
regular stock. NOW_ ...

~799

NOW ONLY

9 OtCI.OCK
PLENTY OF
FREE PARKING AT
THE PLAZA

'2999

LARGE GROUP
OF

(FREE ALTERATIONS. OF . COURSE)

SOf-t..

BOYS
LEISURE
SUITS

blouses ·
REGULAR '18.00

SLENOC.R~..

100% POLYESTER KNIT
Machine Nash and dry .

a

REGULAR '20.00

Beautiful floral designs .

100% Polyester
Sizes: 8 to 18

Sizes : 8 to 18

·fOR

$}299

NOW

Co.lors: Rust, Tan , Light
Green and Blue

SPRING

NOW ONLY

. REGULAR

job.ll

Under the bill, a charitable
·organization would have to
qualify for tax-exeinpt status
under the Internal Revenue
Service
Code.
Bingo
operators would have to be
volunteers and members of
the organlzattoti conducting
. the game. They could receive
no compensation.
· Butts' bill would prohibit
concessions and .outside
• advertiaing of the games,.
,which would be limlted to five
hours and could not last
· beyond midnight. A $3,000
limit would be placed on
prizes diatributed in a single
game.
Ucenslng would be dooe by
the state attorney general's
office, and local pollee forces
would be empowered to
review recorda which the
organization would be
reaulred to maintain.
Conducting an illegal bingo
; game would be punishable by
·' a one-to-tO year jall term and
' ,a
maximum
$15,000
• organizatianal fine.
.
• Only persons over 18 could
play, unless the game were
merely for amusement or the
receipts were redistributed
among the players. The
penalty for underage players
would be a mallimum 60-&lt;lay
jall -term and a maxlnium
$500 fine .
MOll of the debate on the
blll focused on . allowing
fraternal and service .
· • organizations to conduct
, bingo games.
.
1 Sen. Thomas E . Carney, D1
Girard, successfully got them
Included as charitable
; ! organizations despite
• · complaints there would be
; ' loopholes.
;,
"A non-profit organization
, • Is not necessarily a
• charitable organization,"
~ ; aald Sen. Martgene
Valiquette, D-Toledo, one of
the two oppooents of the blll.
Sen. Max H. Dennll, R·
Wllminlton, was the olher.
· Sen.
Robert
E.
O'Shaugmeuy, D-ColiJIIIbUB,
amended the bill to Include ·
parochlal lldtoola,~he
'saki were not IDe! _
the
bill's deflnllkll of .
organlutlon bee. . . they did
not "meet In common

'19.00 ro ss1:oo
NOW
OFF

LADIES P.V.C.

20%

JACKETS

OUR ENTIRE STOCK QF
NEW SPRING DRESS COATS
AND PANT COATS. BEAUTIFUL
NEW SPRING COLORS.
SIZES: 8 10 18 AND l&amp;lh TO m~

REGULAR ·128.00

BOYS P.V.C.
JACKETS

So soft . and good looking,
P. V. C. has the look and feel
of fine leather bu t it is so
easty to c:are for ... i ust
sponge it clean . Sna p front,
yoke embro idery detail,
Color s
are
all
spring . . , pink , light blue
and I ight ta n.

REGULAR 117.00
Great looking leather-like
ja cke ts for boys. Sizes 8-18
in dark brown, ca mel , and
~ ige. Great for these cool
m6rning wa iting for the
school bus . NOW O NLY

ENTIRE STOCK OF

DRESSES

le

CCJtS!

SLEEPWEAR
SHIFT GOWNS
'AND

THIS
SEASON'S

HURRY IN FOR BEST SELECTIONS

BABY DOllS
REG. '5.00 &amp; 16.00
Sote and lu Ku rlous .
·perfec t for spring _and

summer
dream 1ng.
Slies :. P, S,. M, I!.L.

'9"

THIS GIGANTIC
TOPPERS
STOCK REDUCTION
MEN'S P.V.C.
SALE ENDS SATURDAY JACKETS
e10% OFF ·ALL LADIES HANDBAGS
e10% OFF ENTIRE CHILDREN'S DEPT.

REGULAR 125.00
Choose f rom 2 and ~
pock et models , leatherlike P. v .C. are the " in "
ia ckets th is sp r i ng .
Sizes : S, M, L. &amp; XL.
Colors of navy , luggage,
tan , and beige . NOW

ONLY

Choose yours in luscious

shades ol pink , blue,
maize, or mint .

NOW
ANOTHER BIG
SHIPMENT

Famous Cannon

BATH
TOWELS
&amp;
53.00

e10% OFF ALL SHOES
e10% OFF ALL LUGGAGE
DECORATOR

THROW
PIUOWS

$4.00

Values

If Perfect

Regular S7 .so

3FoR .s5oo

'

'

"BUENA WOVEN"

DUPONT RED LABEL POLY Flu.ED

BED PILLOWS
· S-TANDARD '
SIZE
. QUEEN SIZE
OR
KING SIZE

99

BEDSPR
REGULAR

'15.99
FULL
SIZE ONLY
100% HEAVYWEIGHT
CODON
eNO PRESS

YOUR CHOICE

'2

(Continued on Jllle 16)

·'

SHOP

eNew spring colors of light blue,

worlhlp."

•

•

IN THE SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

By LEE LEONARD

again !"

Dear Helen :
I'm Ute mother 6f two preschoolers and a tiny baby. I have
a thousand questions about everything from guidanc~ and
discipline to keeping them amused an.d keepmg my samty andthosedoctor'sbooksonchildcareomitsomeofthehuman
element.
Could you recommend a book that would help a mother

CO X 'S• • •A good

•MACHINE WASH
(MACHINE DRY

EACH
\

NOW
)

Gold, pink, white,
blue and avocado.

$}099

YOUR
CHOICE

'

�H - The Daily Sentinel, Middle port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , ~larch 3, 197~
The Almanac

WANT ADS

Uni1{'(l Pres'S Jntrrnnt.imtal
Toda y is Wednesday ,
March 3, t he 6.'lrd da y of 1976 ·
With 303 to follow.
The moon is moving toward
the first quarter,
·
The m orning s ta rs Hre
Merrury and Venus.

Th e eve ning stars are
Mars, Jupiter and Sa turn .
Timse born on Uus dale are

1mder the sign of Pisces.
Alexa nder Gra ham Bell ,
inventoiofthe telephone, wa s
born March 3, 1847 .
Also on this rk1y in histor y:
In 1849, the United States
Department of Interior was

created by Congress.
In 1879, a woman lttwycr.
Mrs. Belva Ann Lockwood,
practiced befo re the U.S .
Supreme Court for the first
time,
In 1931, the Sta r Spangled
Banner was des ignated by ;m
Act of Co ng ress as the
'·National Anthem of the
Uni ted States."
In 1974, 345 persons were
killed when a Turkish plane

crashed near Paris.

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
'&gt;
P M
On y
B l' t o r c·
Publtc at ton

Mon&lt;l a v

Dt&gt;adltnc

v

1 Ill

1

l&lt;'ncel l a r ton
Cor r €'cr.o n s w ttf oc
rrpred un t il 9 a m
n~;~y o t P u b l•c al tQ n
REG.ULA TIONS

ac
lo r

The P Ubl tS h l'r r e s er ves
' h f' rHthl to ed t I tl r r e i !:'Cl
,;~ny
a d s Uee rn t;:od
ob

iec •10na l The p ub liS h e r
will not be rcspo n sf-b l e for

lllore than o n e in cor r ec!
m'iertton

RATE S
For Want Ad Scrvtc['
'&gt; cc n rs t&gt;c r wo rd on e
tnse r t,o n
Mt n mlUill Ch a r Q(' S 1 00
J.J ce n 1s pe r w o rd th r r f'
co n s('CUtt\IC
in&lt;;c r tio n $
26 (; (' n ts P. Cr w o r d s ix
(O il Sf.'CUIIVC

H1 SC fl iOn&lt;;
I'&gt; p ,., r Ce n t D ISC Oun t On
p il ict ,Hl &amp; iHHt ad s IHt id

wilh1 n 10 days
CARD OF- THANKS
&amp; OB IT UARvS? 00
tor
50
w o rn
111111 , , um
E'ac h a dd i11Q n i'11 w ord 3
C('n IS
BLIND ADS

i\ddi!ion at ?!tr; Cha r q('
pe r A d ve rt iSt'ml"n l
OFFICE HOUR S
8 10 a m 10 5
p m
DJ i l y 8 30 a m to l'l oo
N oon Sat urd ay
Ph on e loday 991 7 1'16

oo

15 - 'J'ho Tlollv SPntf.,.tMldcleport.~ov. 0., Wednl!orlrov . March3,1976

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
Auto

Lost

® 2S~NS

BEAR( AT RADIO !&gt;!.' r ial No
318806, Mond ay (I IJNnoo n on
R t 7 b e tw ee n Hobson a nd
Po mero y . reward ,
S50
Ph o n e 991 7575
J 3 41 C
B LAC K A ND TAN &lt;.. oon houn d
lost Sunday near Long Run
Coll ar says " EiwoQd N one ' '
Ph o n c 84J 18511
3 3 36t c

Sal~

Auto Sales

Business Services

'

Pomeroy
QUALITY Motor Co.

j

1974 OPEL MANTA CPE .

$2495

4 speed tran s ., radio, good tires, green fin ish , low
m i leage .

N E ED S a g ood\ hom e Male
sheph er d lype, ligh l brown
dog E :oteel l ent con d i t i o n .
appro)(irnatety Smonths otd .
Lovely di spositi on , wou l d
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9n 3837 .
3 3 6tc

197JMONTE CARLO.COUPE

$3295

Bla c k w ilh whi te v "roof, al l power ·equipme nt. a ir .

1975 SUBURBAN C204X4

$6144

NEW. auto ., P .S ., P . B., center seat, mirrors , radio ,

gauges , H. D. sh ocks F&amp; R ., co lor beige.

~~~~ ·' up

Call Collect 311· 8239

\ Ameri can writer Willi a m
Henry Hudson said, ''You
canrot Oy like an eagle with
the wings or a wren ."

In
build · UP
rooting &amp; ho t roots . Free
Estimates . 10 vears ex perience.
·
Harve Ferrell
Bidwell, Ohio
2 -6 -1 mo .

WRITE YOUR
OWN AD!

-SPECIAL!--

12 WORDS
4DAYS
$}25

,., 7

WANT TO

CONSTRUCTION

SAVE MONEY?

CARPOING

Take advantage of our
prices.
Qualifv
bu ill
home s . Nice lots available
in nice IO&lt;:ations.

Free estimates on car- :
peting and installation .
We'll bring samples to your
home with no obligation .

For Sale

O~DER

BISSELl BUILDERS

_ Each
initial
and
group
of
figures
counts as on e word .
B e s ure to count
·; na me and a ddress, i f
~· u sed , and yo ur phone
~- numb er.
Including
p rices for ite m s of ·
•• fered in your want ad
increase
.,~ w i ll
. r esponse.

.

,.

1. -~ ~-~~~

2 _ _ _ __

.

" 3. ----~--­

"

4., ~--~.........C---

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'

V•

.

8·- - - - - ;: 9, _ __ __

~. io. ~
· ~-~ri

•

~ 11 . --~--•

12.-

BO'RN

FREE ESTIMATES

LOSER

"!.oNE ME: MO~E~!"

I'M L£/&gt;.VIfJGo f-DW ,
hiV E: ~

Real Estate For Sale

For Rent

LARRY LAVENDER

Notice

,,._

•••
·' urn.E O RP IIDfANNIE -LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-LITTL E

R&amp;J COINS

AHHIE 'LL BE
COMIH' 1-()ME
SOON,GAMM1'
·-kiM

I

MFET HE R~

'l'

OF COURSE ··· BUT
00 ~' 1

!iO BEYOND

iHE ~NeROR
CROSS TnE
STREET-

I'll 13E RfAL

rn
. RfFUL ,

. • \· _,.

,.. I

~~""''""" . .

1

NAN TRAP

CHfE! HfRE COMES "TH'
· KtD fiOW, AL L ALOtiE All ! C.OTTA DO 15 GRAB
.

'.

HIM - S TUFF HIM IHTO DIS

Jolts· OlD MAH' Il
8E \IJArTIW AT TH '
OTHER END W!H'i

111 ' rnR --

SAcK AND SI&lt;IP DQWM
DIS A~LEY - -.

__

.

----;---'--

______
I

": NAME :._
..
:· ADDRESS - - - - -

Rooms,

~.00

\-...__........,""'":'_.....,.
.. :THEN &gt;'CHI ~ '
HECK 00 'vtJU
~ 1 1\JK WE CAN
DO A~ WA.LKlN'
AROUND OUT
11-II!REi?

..."THA.T'S WHY WE'RE

GONNA USE
IUFT!

She ma4

just have

a point!

RI,JTLAND

Special Rates
by Weelc
or Month
.... ..-· -

FURNITURE

1

..-f-+-tJ•

Help Wanted

EXPERIENCED

~~~~

LOOK &amp; SAVE ·

TEAFORD

I

158 -

m-3:ns

•30G

MEDICAL

Complete Air Condition Operational Check

SECRETARY

"YOJMEAN WENDY SOMETHINGWANIS YOU 10
ABOUT A ..JOe&gt;
COME TO NEW

MaW LALlY?
0 !.CRf BE ....

DON'T TELL ME 1HE MAN

lN 11-1E MOON HA:7 Da.JE
OOT HIM:&gt;ELF A WIFE!!

FOR BONNAZ

YORK AND
WOULDN'T

TELL YOU

WHY?

CALL

~·

;· CITY- - - - - ' PHONE _ _ __

"'

MAIL WITH
'

'1.25
TO TliE

DAILY SENTINEL
111 COURT ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

45769
,L----___1

446-5189
Gallipolis, Ohio

For Sale

T A PP t~ N

stain l ess steel drop
in e lec . range , 575 . Wa r m
Morning 65 ,000 blu ga s
h er~ ter , 'l y r s ol d , S200 . Ga :!.
room
heater
with
A SSI ST A NT D lf:.. E(TOR . 1-~. i d ,
mechanical t h e! rm . ~25
· ex ec ut i ve in s t a ff c· ~pa c ity
by co o rdin 'a t i ng · offi ce Use d 1, g lass e)( t eri or "door ,
$15. Phon e 992 7354 after 6
se r vices . su ch a s budget
pm
preparat io n , a n d cont r ol ,
2 29 3tc
r eview
co n t i'a c t
ad
min i st ra !io n
and
co
19 7•t HONDA X R 75 . good
o rdinat e c olle c t i o n
and
cond i t io n . Phone 2.J7 25-&lt;tl
p rcf.l.:trarion o t rep o rt s,
1 29 3tc
... $9,0ou E :-:pericn ce d CJnd or
t ra 1ned applic;J nt
Se nd
BOLEN' S ga rd en tractor with
re su me to A H D E C 0 .. P
c ulti&gt;.~ator . Also , CB radio
0
Bo:w: 1515 . Portsmouth
Oh io
Phon e 992 7826 .
1 29 6t (
3 1 J)c

1

.

I·-'..

r-·--_
-

.
\

co.op

'

6 ,

Reg.

'

inSula t ed, storm windows ,

Aulomallt Water
Conditioner
Model UCXXX,
210 ,000
Week ly Groin
Capacity

$299 .

1339. ~

-

Val .

POMEROY LANDMARk
9 ... Jatk W. C.rsoy, Mt·r .
~
Pllonoffl-2111

$19.000 ,00.
No. 153 - 72 a .. 2 yr . old
rcm ch st yle, J . BR ., 2 baths,
kit . comp let ely bu ilt i t;~.
dr illed &amp; dug well, 3 tra iler
lot.s wi t h sewer &amp; wat er li ne·

hook up , $40 ,000 .00 .
804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992 -2298
After Hours Call
992-7133
CONTACT :
Lois Pauley
Br;.flCh

fi

Mttnager

RUSTIC HILLS- 3large
brs 1,, bath , mod. kll .• family
rm.1 on nice lot . $24,500 .

Kee~ watching our ads for more money.savlng coupon1;
com1ng vour way weekly.
,

BAS HAN - 6 rms .. 3 brs ..
bath,
ga s
furnace,
basement 2 c~r garage, 1
acre.

BUSINESS LOT 7, at Chester .

On ~t .
Util it ies

SERVICE A CUT ABOVE THE BEST
3 NIASE Certified Mechanics
20 Yean Service Management Experience.
1111 Work Guaranteed ·
Reasonable Rates
Very Friendly People

•
•
e
'•
•

us.

DO BUSINESS WITH

LEADER

Smith Nelson MotOIS, Inc.
500 E. Mlin St.

•

A

~

Ph. ffl-211•

Pemtroy,D.

~

NOPE·-

PLAIN Qt.:
LVE SOAP
15 GOOD
ENUFF FER

ME

available.

3 ACRES Dug well,
utilities available . Only
n .ooo.oo in the tountry .
DO YOU WANT TO SELL,
WE DO, SO, L1ST IT WITH

t

II

Pulling crucial contract trick

-----

WANTED

IVINTEN
I
I [)

WIN AT BRIDGE

.

Strout"'
Really

I l) [J I

~

Carpeting I
501 NYLoN !

up

11 :00--Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4; Gambit
8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13; Elec. Co. 20.
11 :3()-Hollywood Squares3.4.15; Happy Days 13; Love
of Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20.
· 11 :55--Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10.
. 12 : oo--Magnlllcenf Marble Machine 3,15; Let' s Make a
Deal13; Bob Braun ' sSO·SO Club4; News6,8,10.
12 : 3~Take My Advice 3,15; All My Children 6.13;
Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
12: 45--Eiec. Co. 33.
12 :55--NBC News 3, 15.
1 :00--News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phl .l Donahue 8;
Young &amp; fhe Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1 : 3()-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, 13;
As the World Truns 8,10.
AN OlNTMENI ONE
2:00--520.000 Pyramid 6,13.
M1C.HI5ET FR:OM
2:3()-Doclors 3,4,15; Neighbors 6,13; Guiding Light
A 5LA\{E.
8,10.
.
3:00--Anolher World 3,4,15; General Hosplfal6,13; All
In The Family 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 .
·
J :3()-0ne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Matth
· Game 8,10; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20; IT.\ /
Utilization 33.
4 · 00--Mlster Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
· Bewitched 6; Mltkey Mouse Club 8; Mister .R&lt;&gt;gers ·
20,33; Movie " Born Reckless" 10; Dinah 13.
(Aalwen 10-.orrowJ
4 : 30--Bewllched 3; Mod Squa~ 6; Partridge Family 8;
~
Jumbl•,. PARTY GOOSE DABBLE ABOUND
Sesame S. 20,33; To be Anouhced 15.
Yetl..,rday' •
·
5:'00--Bonanza
]; Family Altair 8; Star Trek 15,
Antwrn What the t•ampire'H 11.011 WGH f!rl the..,afl team5:3~Adam - 12 4,13; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
.
B4TBOY
'
Elec . Co.20,33.
' 6:00--News 3,4,8,10,13,15; Zoom 20; ABC News 6.
6 : 3~NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ; Lilias Yoga
by THOMAS JOSEPH
·- ,
&amp;· You 33.
7:00--Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling
ACROSS
. 38 Downright
for Dollars 6;' Space : 1999 8; News 10; Lei's Make a
I Josip Broz
39 Ritual
Deal 13; Family Affair 15; Anyone lor Tennyson?
5 Matter •·
to MGM's lion
20; Family at War 33.
.
(law)
U Imitated
7:3~Hollywood Squares 3,4; Ohio State Lottery 6;.
K Algerian
DOWN
Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky 20; Wild
Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Music City
I Aifport ·
eity
U.S. A. 15.
9 Visual
structure
8:00---Cop &amp; The Kid 3,4, 15; Weltome Batk, Koller
13 Island
.2 Furious
6,13; Wallons 8,10; Great Performances 20; The
in U.S.
3 Fly (4 wds. )
Way II Was 33.
.
·
Yesterday's
Answer
Marine lore
4 Of - mind
8 :3~Grady 3,4,15;
Barney Miller 6,13; Lowell
14 Pulley blqck 5 : •Barber of
16 Distance .
25 Mortgage
Thomas Remembers 9,33.
SeviUe"
wheel
measure
27 This
9 :00- Movle "McNaughton's Daughter" 3,4,t5;
15 Paris
character
19 Cha!Jge
nlinute
Streets of San Francisco 6;13; Hawaii FJve.o 8;
season
6 Reverberate 20 Sleepwalker 30 Speechily
Hollywood Television Theatre 33; Movie
16 "0 Sole - " 7 Litigate
of Bellini
31 Called
" MarrlaQe on the Rocks" 10.
10:00--Harry 0 , 6,13; ' Barnaby Jones 8..
17 Bird's nest 10 Runway
33 Break
opera
ll :QO-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15.
18 Hire
( 2 wds.l
bread
23 Hebrew
11
: 3~Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mannix 6, 13; Movie
20 Biblical
11 Fly
O.T. notes
36 - volatile
" Gumshoe" 8; Movie "Tortilla Flat" 10; ABC
·p atriarch
1% Cochise and 24 Facing
37 Altar conNews 33.
21 EarthenGall
wds.
stone
stellation
12 : 0~Janakl 33 .
ware jar
12 : 4~Longstreef 6,13.
22 Wee bit
1 :oo-Tomorrow 3 . ~.
23 Impure
1 :50--News 13.
metal
s ul!ide
ZS Bed or table b--1--+item
•
26 Arthur
of tennis
27 High-pitched
pones the club play until the
sound
NORTH
· end of the hand and before he
28 Persian
• 10 8 6 3
gets around to it he will have
• Q87
found that West held the kind
tiger
tKQJ
of spades . ·
%9 Think out
ofo
KJ 5
Therefore, in order for East
32 Ending for
WEST
EAST
to have more than 15 high- ·
cup or pay
• AQJ .4
K 7 52
card points and a proper
33 Adams or
¥ A3
• 54
notrump East will be holding
Ameche
t A 10 2
-+-+--ilt 9 6 53
that
black lady.
34 Lala's
• Q63 2
,fo1074
Now
South attacks clubs by
beginning
=-+--+-4-11
SOUTH
leading
the jack from dummy.
35 Grape
.9
If East ducks , South lets i,t
37 "My Name
¥KJ10962
ride ; if East covers South
is - "
+874
proceeds
to
finesse
ofoA98
successfully against West's 10
Both vulnerable
spot.
JJAILY CRYPTO(lliOTE - Here's how to work It :
AXYDI,BAAXR
West Nortb East South
is I. 0 N G F E L L 0 W
IN. T . 2¥
A Texas reader wants to
One letter simply slomds fo r anothe r. In this .sample A is
Pass
4¥
Pass Pass
know if we would open the bidused for thr thrt"f' I.'s. X fur lh t• two O' s, l'lf . St n glc letters.
ding with one spade if holding :
apost rophes. the lt"n~th ilnd rormati~n of thC' words nrc at~ Pass
Open~ng lead - 2 •
hints. F.nrh day tht" rmlc letters one d1ilere nt .
•AJJ0987¥2 t32.AJ108.
Our answer is that we like
I'RYPTOQUOTES
open this hand. We count
to
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
our spot cards in the black
LPY
IJJHJ C JXLBJSP
D S W Z S K B • Match-point play ·w ith its suits as fully worth two points
emphasis on over tricks and open in spite of holding
USSY
USSY
OCAWNJPU.
N F Y Q • should tend to help .a rubber- only 10 actual high-c ard
bridge playe r In finding out points .
zs s y VL.Hf WLYF A Q special ways to score the con(Do you have a question
LPY
USSY
tract trick .
for the experts ? Write "Ask
BSAUV .South finds himself in a the Jacobys " care of this
VFLC.B.VR
LPY
NJU
LPY
slightly unsound four·heart newspaper. The Jacobys will
contract ilfter East has open- answer individual questions
TLDEQSP
FCJXLNFBV
e d the bidding with one if stamped, self-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
Yesterday's Cryploquole: I HAVE ONE YARDSTICK BY "W~~~~t too unsound South
most interesting question,
WHICH I TEST EVERY MAJOR PROBLEM - AND THAT will have 10 tric)(s if he can will be used in this column
YARDSTICKIS:ISITGOODFORAMERICA? - DWIGJ!TD. pick up the queen of clubs . and will receive copies of
EISENHOWER.
Naturally, enough, he post- JACOBY MODERN)
t® 1976 Kina fo'eaturt'&amp; Synd ic•te, Inc . )

I

Rill Eslate for Sale

La Salle
HOlEt

6: 00--Sunrlse Semester 10.
,
6: 15,--Farm Report 13.
6 :20-Pallerns for Living 13.
6:»--Columbus Today 4; News 6 ; Sunrise Semester 8;
Urban League 10.
6:40--Qunc:e of Prevention 10.
6:-'5--Mornlng Report 3.
6:55--Chuck While Reports 10; Good Morning. Trl
Stale 13.
'
7:00--Today 3.4.15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News B; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7 : 3~Schoolles 10.
8:00--Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
8:3()-Big Valley 6.
9:00--Nol For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9:3()-A.M. 3; One Llfe to Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
10:00--Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Edge of Nlghl 6;
Prlce ls Righi 8, 10.
10 : 3~Hlgh Rollers 3,4,15; Dinah 6.

l1y 'If NHI A !IN( II(} •'"" IHHl l ( (

COINS

'

THURSDAY.MARCH4, 1976

Unscrambl~ these rour Jumbles.
ont lttttr to t~h square, to
rorm four ordinary word s.

EV5P. '?AF

For Sale or Trade

Found

~&amp;~~ ® . IJ.ol~otrw"J -.1 , -

I.I.O:JLD 'DJ f'R!:;FEP.
I Dt~'T TA~K TO
'IOU AT AU..~

"&amp;IVE Mfi /l()llfi~!'
I'? THAT AU.. 'IOU

SOME

MOtJE~ t

rrio. "

l------------

Wanted To Buy

AVAILABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
NO REFUNDS.

'"

SLOAN'~ ·

V tN DALE 12 X 6A . ] b c d r m
·' ·• Ton· t nternal ioh tn Pic kup , 4
From a shell to a house, all
bath &amp; i;, 1411 . expan d o ,. 25
sp
transm Jssior.~, he a vy
typ es of building and
fl . awning a nd por c h , full y ZENITH co lor TV , 23 inch
dut y spr in gs , Approx . 10.000
remodeling
from
th e
scree n . El( ce ll ent co n di t ion .
ca rp ete d : Phone 7J2 7880.
mi te s . P hone 992 70lj ·
· foundation up , Addition s,
. Se~ how you can really
Phone
99
2
7244
.
"l. 29 lOt c
'}7 6tp
·carpe ting , pa-inting, $iding,
I WOULD li ~e ld !h ank all
7 79 Jtc
save .
roofing , pan eli ng·, paper
tho se who se nt m e b irthday ·
Mike Young , Manager
card s o n my 99 t h birthpay , U N FU RN I SHED l 4~e70mo bi te LO SE we1gh! With N ew Sh ape 1969 4,12 OLD SMOBILE with
h •nging et c ..
ho me . toia l ele-c. , 3 ton
Y o u r k i ndness was ap
Tablet s and Hydr ex W a ter
Sales arid Insta-llation '
35 0 engi n e, $ 1, 20 0. Ph one
ce ntra l air co nd iti one r .
Pill s ·a t
Dutton
[).lrug .
preciated Mary Dieh l .
991 3259
Rl . 3, Pome roy , Ohio 45769
ex
c
ell
ent
cond
i
tion
Phone
•
Ph
.
949·2023
or
843
-2667
Ph . \!614) 985-4102
3 3 li p
Midd l eport
and
N e l son
3 2 6t p
2&lt;17 2684 or , 7&lt;17 2.664 .
Phon! day or night
"\
Drug .
2
19
-1
mo
.
3
3
6tc
2-12· 1 mo .
614 -992 ·2206
J.:.H:l
3 2 ]tp
1 WI SH'" exp r ess m~· ttJanks
1969 Z28 Camaro , 302 4 ·speed ;
'
'
'
'
"'
I
to all f o1 the ldndness t hat
1971 Cutla ss Au tomat ic ,
12x60
Ki rkwood
Mo bi l e H AY for s al e , ca ll { 614) lj185
was sh o w n m e du r ing the
both in good c ondit i on . RE A DY M I X C ON~~CrL ·
Hom es , t o tal e l ec ., e)( ce llen t
H71 a ft er' 6 p . m .
i ll ness o t my &lt;;i Sie r , Lena
Phon e 992 5737 .
de l ivered ri ght to your
condi t io n . P h on e 247 2705 or
3 3·6t c
Guth
Thanks
to
Fr
3 3.6tc
p r oject. Fast and easy . Free
247 2731 .
Falscem . Fr . Kraiovic. F r
~ ...
. ...-----,---'-- -~-esti mat es . Phon e ~9 2 - 3284 ,
3 3 \He " GRAPEFRUIT PILL " with
Yaunt z. Dr Boi c e, F•·: ing
B'lown
1972 (A MARO . V 8, p S, d i sc
Goe.g tein Ready Mix ' Co .,
Diadel&lt; plan more co n
F uneral
Ho me ;
Dr .
brakes , a ir co nditioning ,
MiddleporL O h io .
BUY~ SELL or. TRADE
ve
n
ien
t
t
han
grape
fru
its
.
Insulation
Services
Raymond Boice . and all my
automatic
Ex ce ll e nt
6·30 lfc
Eat sa t is f ying me als and
k i n d neig hbo rs and fri ends
con
di
t
ion
and
easy
on
gas
.
Financing
A&gt;.~ailabte I
lose- weight. N e lson Drugs .
for ! hei r masSes , flowers
buri ed
treasure .
Find
Aski ng $2 , 600 , but w ill EL WO OD BOWERS REPAIR
Blown i nto Wall s &amp; Att1d
3 3 11 p
and f ood Sin cerely, KaTi e A LLI S C H ALMERS round
Coins , rings, silve r, gold.
ha c kl e . Phon e 992 7360 after
Sweepers , toast ers, irons.,
ba
ter
,
good
co
ndit
io
n
and
STORM
Guth
Coin &amp; Metal
~ p .m
al l s mall appliances Lawn
t and E.' m 8 whe C' I fertili;e r
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
3 3 I tp
De fectors
JO HN BOA T , g ood co nd i t ion .
2
79
6tp
mo
w
er
,
ne)(t
1o
St
ate
High
spr e ader , and 500 bales
REPLAC 'f:: M E NT
For R ent
Phone B43 2653 ev eni n gs .
way
Garage
on
Rou
t
e
7
.
c lea n s traw . Phon e 949 2770
WINOt&gt;WS
or
3 2 Jtc
Phone
985
3825
ALUMINUM
? 76 tOte
For Sale
4 16 lfc
StOING
·
SOFFITT
10 X 22 rT . A WN I N G " and
F OUND
Germ an s hort hair
GUTTERS-AWNINGS
por ch
for mobile home , O N ~ AC..I'&lt;t , 6 rms and bath , SE P T I C TANK S cleaned .
dog , March I . Owner my
R
t
.
3
,
P
ome
r
oy
.
Ros.e
H
i
lt
.
awning
less
th
an
I
y
ea
r
old
M
oc;t
ern
Sanitation
.
lj192
.3954
c a ll , 997 736 5 and indentify' .
Di ck Davi s prop erty , full
Will sell s~pa rat e . N o pri ce
or lj192 7349 .
3 '3 4t c' FUR NI SH ED apt . 5 room s
Rutland 742 -2331
Syracuse, Ohio
' b aseme nt ,
alllm in'r! m
over phone Call (6 1·1) 667
rj 18 · II C
an d bath , la rge b ac k an d
Roger Wamsley
Ph . 997: · 1'19]
si d ing , ppn eled . $10 ,000 . Ca ll
17
1'
1
9
fr ont porc h wit h yard ,
d 10 I mo .
J -1·1mo .
3 7 4l p
Oak Hil l 685 6576 ev e ning s;
utilities pa id . Call b efore 6 p .
REMODELING , Roofing and
Jackson
'286
3004
day
s.
SW EEPER
an d
Se w ing
rll
992 2937 .
pa int ing . Cal l 949 2379.
7 5 30t p
O N E 197&lt;1 Hond a m o torcycl e
AVA TIN G . d ozer , lo ift. t: • - REMODEL IN G
· M a chines Repair , Parts and
A N'o
2 26 ~t e;
3 3· 41 c EXC
wi ! h 4.000 mi tes in n ew
an d ba c khoe work., sep t ic
Supp l ies
Davis Vacu u m
REROO FI N G , CALl 247
1 1
condition . Ph on e 991 7692 .
RM HOUsC, ~ w alum in u m
ran ks
i n st alled ;
d u mp
C l e an e r :
mite
up
2361 .
SMA LL UPSTAIRS A PT . for
3 2 51 p .
si.d ing at Ga ll ipoli s Fer ry . E~~ADV~ci~~~ ·. l~~~~Hf~6
t ru c k s and lo boys fo r hir e ;
Geon::j e's Cr eek Rd . off State
2 77...__
-Me
sing l e pe r son : no anima ls .
1
w Va . on ., ac re tot n ca r SM ALL. SEPT I C TAN KS
wi ll hau l f i ll dirt . top .soil,
RoutC 7. Phone "C61 4l 446
Phone 992 578 6,
TOPP ER w it h boat
8 FT
h ard road . Cheap. co m e see .
limestone
an
d
g
r
avel.
Ca
ll
029&lt;1
WILL TRIM or c u 1 t r ees and
I N S TALLED .
BIL L
3 3 61 (
ra r; k .
Con t ac t
H e rb ert
Phon e (]OJ ) 675 '19~6 .
Bob or Roger Jeffer s , day
3 3 11 c
shrubber y
Phone ~49 7545
PULLIN S, PHONE 992 247 8,
~-,-·---·
Gi l k (' y a l t er 5 :30 p ,rn , 991
'} 27 6tp
pho
n
e
91!2
70
89
,
nigh
t
phone
or 742 3167.
DAY OR NIGHT .
S RM H OUSE in R aci ne a r e a . 5666 o·r see on Rl . 33, at loot
992
3525
or
992
5292
.
2 n 76tc
2 22 52 tp
Pho n e 992 5858 .
ti t Darw in Hill.
MOD E ~N .hom e in C h e~ t er. 8
2 II I lc
-:---'-'-·
·';'"·-"'
3 3 If c
rooms, 2 baths , 7 por c he s,
---· --.'"""I
FOREMAN WA NT E'O
O ' DELL Ali n emen t loca t ed REMODELING ,
sunpor c h , 1? baseme n t , ci ly
Pt u mbin ~,
We
are seeki n 9 an
ex 2 BE DRM m ob ile hom e,. very
nd
Ru
tl
and
Grade
b
e
h
i
'&lt;~ n d well waier, na t ur a l gas.
heating an d all ·t v pes elf
p er l en ce d sU perVisor ' for a
LET US DO\ IT! I
Sc ~ool
Tuneu.p , brak es.
rii c:e . Pho n e 992 3324
g arag e . Priced t o se ll .
gene r a l
r e pa i r·.
Work
lig'ht
~ sse mbly ·
fa cto r y
AN D AS H 23 c hann el c itizens
wh
e
el
bal
ancing
,
alinemenl.
Phone
(614
l
985
410
2
2 29· tf c
g
uarant
ee
d·,
70
years
e
l(
loca ted in Ga llipdlis
Point
b an d , lran sceive r , 1\M F M
Phone 742 2004.
2 d lfc
pe r ien ce !Phon e 992 2409 .
Pleasant a r ea . Mus.t b e a bt.e·
MPX ra dio , 8 track t ap e
11 16 lf c
3
BEDRM
furn
rs
hed
hOme
.
5 1 tf c
to mQI iv ai e er:n ploy ees ·a"n d
Pl ayer . Ca l! lj191 396 5.
al so a mobile hom e in
-+-.be qllal.it y co n sc ious . Se nd
'l 26 lfc
3
BED~M
hom e.
just C BR A D FORb , A u ct ioneer . EXC A V A TING ,
M iddleport , SJO week , gas
dozef ,
re su me i n c l udi n g sal a r y'
t in i shed . remo d e li ng , Sa l em
Com~:&gt; t ete Serv ice . Phon e
an d water pa id . Ph one 992
backhoe
and
dit c h e r :
history to Box &lt;144 -A , Ca r e o f ,
WAR E:' H OU SE or storeroom .
St ., Rutland P h one 7d7 7306
949
24
87
or
949
2000
.
Rac
ine
3509
o
r
inquire
a
t
Bo
l(
159
5,
Ch arles R . Hatfie ld Baclo.
"Z 4X48, J 11 Cond or St ( r ear
Daily Senlinel.
u f l er 4 p .m . or see Milo B .
Oh io . Cr itt Br a dford .
'
Bvc k e y e L ak e, Ohio
H oe Serv ice . Rutland , Oh io .
3 3 die
610 E . Ma in SU R ent all or.
H utc hi son .
10 9.Jf c
2 29 tfc
Pl'l one 742 20Q B
part. Phone 992 7 178 .
9 23 , ,
11 30 78tc
2 26 6tc
1v'IAKE SURE you get eve r y T WO bedrm
WI
L
L
do
oddjob
s
.
roofing
,
b ath , on t wp .
possib le deductio n ! his year
pa
in
ti
ng
,
haul
i
ng
,
tre
ework
D 8. 0 TREE T ri mmi ng , 20
road . four m i te s to mi n e no.
Have your F'ed.cral a n d
and mowing Call lj19'J 7·10 9
COIIL , l imeston e a nd a l l type s
J P hon e (6 1.:0 669 3953 .
years experl~n ce . In sured ,
$499square
State In c ome Tax r eturn by
3 2 26tc
Of sa l! an d rock salt for ice
fr ee es timat es . Cslt 99 2 2384
7 29 3t p
an ac countant. PhOne 992
Yard
and s now re m ova l
Ex
o r (6 14 } 698 7957 A lbany .
6173 ."
RED DOG . l imeS tone , gra&gt;.~e t
TR A I L E R ~ pa ce , 1.1 mi le
ce tsi or Sn it Wo rk s. East
10 15 tfc
1 21 52tc
and fill di r t delive r ed .
nort h of M eiqs H igh Sch ool
Main St ., Pom er o y , Ohio .
RUBBER BACK
Phone Bi l l Pu l lins . 992 .24'7 8. 'SEWING MACHINE Repai r s ,
Phon e 991 389 1.
on Old R I 33 PllOn e 992 -29&lt;1 I .
M A NL EY 'S A ntiq ues. Op en
2 19 26tc
·
2·
19
Jtc
12
7 1f c
se
r
v
i
ce.
all
m
a
kes
.
91j12
278:4
.
M o n d ay , · TuesQay.
and .
we l'la\1~ hundreds , .of "
Th e r abric Shop . Pom l?r"o y .
W e dne sd ay
Bv a pp oint
carp e t va l ues . You r fob c an
PLAY
PEN , $5 .00
Baby
A uthoriz ed Si nger Sales and
meni or c han ce _ 1 01i le ea s t · t~
~
be cO mp leted if! \ to 2
s, wi ng o malic , $ 5 ; FleXin g
Se rvi ce
·we
s h a rp e n
of- T uppers P lains , on Rl
w ee ks
~'-ttl
tOng wailln;g
elCcrcis er , $ 15 . Phon e 992
Sc
issorS
.
1'&gt; 81 Phone 161 -&lt;~) 667 3276
per
iod
PtJr
in
st aller ha s 28
5833 .
3 29 ti c
H OUS E · on do u bl e l o t in
3 2 3tp
· yea r s ex p er ience .. , El':pert
3 3· 41p
T uppers Plains , ins ide no t
i ns._ta t l at ion
You'll l ike
ABOUT '• ACRES f i n is h ed . Pri ce d to sell
A SPHA L T I~ G d r ive way s and
w h at you g el ,
NE W HOME zig zag se w in g
Phon e [ 614 1 661 6 150 .
pa r kin~ lois , se pt ic t an k s
Almost new h ome. 3 br ..
m a c h ine w ith cam s $ 125 ;
3 2 6tp
Installed . c.o n cr e t in g and
CALL 742 -27:11
bat h ,
dining
r .. full
WORK HO R SE or mule , Huqh
1974 Honda CL 200 , $600 ;
b ac kho e worlo.
F owler ' s 1
TAU&lt;
TO WENDELL
basement wi th u t i lit y r .,
Middleport, 0 . Ph . 992-2771
Phon e 992 6162.
L ei fh eit , ohone 992 5918 .
F OR .S ALE n ea r L an g sville, 5
Co n st r uctio n . P h on e 99 7 I '
GRATE
.
3 3 41p
3 3 6t c
HW
floor s,
porche s.
• r oom house . root ce ll ar w i t h
748 1 o r 742 ?~ 9 3
CARPET CONSULTANT
- -·~-~--r
oom
over
.
2
bay
de!
ac
h
cd
$19,500.
2 2-l 61 c
U\~ H p aid for all m ak es and
GOOD H A Y , n ev er w et . Phone
garage, Jla a c re s , no bath ,
FULL FAMlL Y HOME - 4
mode l s o f mobile horhe!'i
949 2523
no t and col d wat er in kit
LUCK E~T Farrn EQuipment. 1
Pho n e area cod e 6 14 423
BR , 2 baths, large kitchen ,
3 3 6tc
c hen , L P g a s lieat , heat e r s
West
Wash i nglon I St ..
953 1.
w i th hous e . Call 742 ?8.19
recrea tion R. la r ge glas sed
Albany Phon e { 61.1 ) 69 .!1 3032 1
4- I 3 I l c
F I SHING SIN KE R S made by
alter !I p m .
or 698 7881.
I
•
p·at io ; garage , c lose to
m ol d , r~ 1 oz . th r ough 2 11? oz..
3 2 6tp
2
261
1
GOOD u;e·d rot o t i l l er~ Ph~ ne
,
c
~·.,'.'llloi
·l•l•l•l----•R•"i!'·'•o.•.,•._.,
sc
hool
.
$30,000
.
Very r e asonabl e. Phone 991
997 70 36 or 992 24.tl aft er 5
5829 .
NEEDED
3 or 4
HOME f or sa l e by privat e
D I'll
3 J 171p
owner.
3 11
a t re s,
4
p.lrtition s, shower or tub,
3 2 1fc
bedro
o
m
s,
barr) on bla ck top 1
•·
wou
ld
have·t
love
l
y
hom
e
.
T WO 10 sp ee d bi c y c l es. i 35
road . gas and wat er . Phon e .. '
OLD fu rni t ur e, Old i ewe lry , HOUSE in Ru tl nnd Ctlll 992
Lot a lone worth askihg
and S·t5. 7 in c h r ee l tap e
9119 2023 .
q ui lt s,
or
c.ompl e te
"1!l 58 .
r ec order .
$5 0.
Square
pr lce.
CA LL
FOR
3 1 26 tp
hou seho ld ~ .
Ma nl e y 's An
1 .t He . shooter P o lar oi d c am er a,
~
$7,000.
PARTlCULARS.
tiques , R . R
I , Box 101 .
$15. Phon e 992 75 5 1.
100 )( 700 LOT in Fi ve P oi n ts
R eedsville , Oh i o . P h on e
A BUY - Homes on each
area Phon e 997 3576 .
3 1 3tc
3 ROOM F urn rshcd ap a rt
(6 1·1) 667 3276 . } mil e eas t o t
side have so ld for over
J 1 61(
rne nt ,
10
m il es
fr om
Tup p e r s. Pla ins on R t. 681
$25,000. JB R, 1 11-J ba ths,
Pom eroy
Ph on e 992 6161 CU /\ 1 I(JR SALE . (/1. 8 Co a l
3 2 6tp
HOME f o r • s a t e , s pac i ous
7 27 6tc
lovely kitchen with e&gt;~: tr as ,
Company , I mi l e n o r t h of
ti&gt;.~ing room , d ini n g roorn , 2
Cheshire . on R t 7 P i c k your
l ul l basemen t , HW hea t ,
OLD f ucni!u r e. ice b oxe s.
bedr oo ms , large kit c hen .
ovvn
,
":.
70
pe
r
ton
0
Den
6
day
s
U
N
F
URNI
SHED
apt
1n
brass
b e ds ,
old
wall
c lose to shopp i ng . A LOW
fa mily ro om s, n ew bath .
p er week . or c;, ll ( 61 ·11 367
Pom eroy . 7 bedrm . n ewly
te l ephon es and par Is , or
Phon e 997 ·1394 .
$17.000 .
7JJ
O
for
f
u
rlh
er
1
n
f
orm
ation
.
redecorated
.
fully
ca
r
p
e
ted
.
comp l ete· hou se hold s Writ e
3 2.6tc
1
8
78
1(
Call
in
the
ear
ly
a
.m
.
992
ANNUAL
INCOME
M
D
Miller ,
Rt
2,
2288
.
Abou t $5,000.00 plus gas
Pom e r o y . Ohio . Call 992
12x60 MOB ILE HOME , J
7760
MA NUR E l oad er . $ 175 . Phon e
acres, w elt water , naturll l
we ll. Home an d 2 apts. has
{ 6 141 378 6 ~1 1 af t er 6 p .m .
10 7 7.&lt;.
gas , S6900 . Ph one 992 -3955 .
f ree gas , &amp; ow n wate r
2 29 6t c
3.J .6t c
EN J OY g r acious living at '-'
:o.ystem s, 22 acres wft h
~-'-------'--- -·-Villag e Manor
in Mid .
MIXED hay, 70 c b a l e . Phon e
bu i lding s ites. CA LL.
5 R OOMSan dbal ho n 15 0x 100
dh~ p ort l or a s tow. as $ 110
16 14). 37 8 631 1 a f ter 6 p m
fl . lo t, com p lete fi na n cin g .
TOS
.
E
L
L
LET
US
HELP
Pe
r
mOnth
Wi
t
h
a
ll
SIIL 1S BURY
Town s h ip
P ho n e 99 2'-5786 .
2·79 6t c
uti l i ties
pai d .
Th ese
YOU - CA LL TODAY.
Trustees n ee d s person for
3 3·6t!J
are b ran d new h ig h qu a lity
ope n mg graves at
Ro c k
992-2259 or 992· 2568
----~---...------apar t ment s at, pri ces you S25 PER HUNDR E D s t uff ing
Spr i h gs Cem e tery . Co nta ct
J B R HOME , just f in ished
e nvelop es .
Se n d
s e lf
ca n . a ff o rd
You r rent in
Denver Hy se ll , p hOn e 997
remode l ing . Sa l e m
St. ,
add r e sse d . s t a mped e n
e lud es mo nth l o month
5850 .
Rut la nd .. Phon e 742 · 2306
ve top e. T . K . En terp rise ,
lea ses , a l l elec . living .
3 3 61 c
a f te r 4 p .m . or See M ilo B.'
Box. 76. Stanb e rry , Mo .
ca rp e t i n g ,
ra n ge
a nd
H ut c hinson ;
644 89 &lt;
re fr i g e r a t o r , f ree t ra sh
2 29 7tp
10·9·1fC.
p ic kup . ca bl e T V at yo u r
e11 p e n s e ,
and
on .site
l aund ry f ac i l ities . Con . T WO ca l ves , mi~&lt; e d Here ford
cow w i th ca l f. Phone 843 Another Money Saving Coupon For You
venlen t to sho p pi ng on Th ird
• I NCO R PQRA T!O
2353
an d Mill Slr ee rs in Mid
2 29 6tc
No.
36 a ., s ·r . home,
dl epo rt. See t h e manag er a t
Vlrgll B., Sr. , Brol&lt;er .
COUPON
R i v e r s ide A partment S or
carpet ed. mod . kitchen,
110Mechanic Pomeroy. 0 .
c a l l 99 2 3273
Fu rnished
Phone
t 97 ·1 24
F T . MEL
MAR f irep lace, f orced a i r f ur ..
apartment s
.ar e
a lso
Good through
WORTH
M o tor
H o m e,
one
of
fr .
ce llar,
seve ral ,
av a ilaO i e .
th e
best.
exce l
DORCAS - Building tot .
Mar . 19, 1976
ou t b ldg s .,. quie t co untry
2 1 78t c
lent co ndition , cos t over
se tting, $32,000 .00 .
194 x 124 next to c h urch .
S2Q·, ooo n ew, cornp lel efy se lf
No . 157 - 3 BR ., bat h &amp; v, ,
W ater available. S3,000 .
ON A
3 A ND .t f.IM . t u rni Sht:' d and
c ontained. 5000 wall gen .. 3
mod . kit. , ful l base ., a lum .
un f urnis h ed a pis . Phone 992
air con dit ione r s. fUr n ace ,
POMEROY 12 room
5434 .
s idi ng : fully insu l a t e d ,
bath , hot wat e r heater , gas
older
home
tor
the
11 9 t f c
and clec . r e f .. am t m rad io
$20,300.00 .
lnvester
.
Has
all
uti
lities.
s t er eo throug hout , roll o ut
Includes : Chetklng Complete System lor Leaks
No . 147 - 2 BR .. l ull base .,
COU NTRY
Mobile HomP.
S7500 . or make u s an offer .
awning , auto . tran sm ission ,
Add Freon if Nec;essary
some carpeti ng, $9,000.00
P a r k , R t. JJ , t en mi les nonh
ps , and pb , muc l'l m ore .
BURLINGHAM - 2 brs ..
Check Air Condition for proper operation
o t Pom eroy Lar ge tot s with•
No . 146 3 BR .. t ully
Phon e 9&lt;19 2770.
ba th , porches, gas hea.t.
c on c r e ~e patib s , sidewa lk s ,
Reg . Price ... S13 .50
Speciai ... Slo.so Plus Fre'on
'l 26 71c
. ca rpete d, mod. kit.. fu ll
T . P . Water . S6800. ortrade.
ru nn e rs and off streel
base .. o ther outbldg s ., 2
parking Phone 9917&lt;179 .
MIDDLEPORT - 7 rms ..
aC r es , $25,600 .00 .
Free Car Wash with Us' oflhis Coupon
12 3 1 1t c
· Now at Landmark
birch kit.. dining , 3 brs. ,
•
No. 133- J BR ., f ull ba se.,
bath , &amp; f lt ll basement .
LR . &amp; OR .. bath 8. 1 ,, 2
·~
, ·
Gard en . $17,000 .
cl·osed . in
porches ,
a ll

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

CASH WITH

"

. 992: ·2114

--·~

MAIL!

"''
·•

•

'

ORDER BY

ONLY

·SMITH NE~SQ.N·
MOTORS, INC._

D&amp;D

-

lfS EASY TO

__

Mobile Homes For Sale
1.1 x 70 MO B ILE Hom e, total
c le c 3 ton ce ntral a i r c on
di tio n e r . f'X r CII L" n l c on
d11 io n
Phon e 7.17 26BJ or
266-1
·; ?.l 7tc

--

A Low Cost
Want Ad
Will Cut
Cost of
I living •.....

Nath an Biggs
Rad ia tor Specill_i_~f

Specializ~

In Search of a Maestro 33.
11 :00--News 3,4,6,8,10.13.15; ABC News 33 .
11 : J~Johnny Carson 3,~.15; Movie "The Sex Symbol"
6.13 ; Movle " Massacre at Fori Holman" 8; Movie
"Let's Dance" 10; Janakl 33.
1:oo--Tomorrow 3~~ ; News 13.

1 0 : 3~Aimannac 20;

6:00--News 3, 4,8, 10, 13,15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33 .
6:30--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlltllh 6;
CBS News 8.10; Stan Bucklew : Basketball 9; Crop
Game 20; Carrascolendas 33 .
7:00--Tru th or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling lor
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; Wild Kingdom
13; Family Altair 15; Book Beat 20; Know Yo~r
School 33 . ,
7:3()-Lasl of fhe Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; yYild Wild
World of Anlmals 6; Match Game PM 8; Evening
Edition with Marlin Agron sky 20; The Judge 10; To
Tell the Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Book Beat 33.
8:00--Litlle House on the Pralrle 3,4, 15 ; Blonl&lt; Woman
6,13;; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10; The Way II Was
20; t mages of Aging 33.
8:3()-Lowelt Thomas Rememembers 20.
9:00---Chico &amp; The Man 3.4, 15; Bar etta 6, 13; Cannon
8.10; Great Performances 33; Images of Aging 20 .
9:3()-Dumpllngs 3,4,15.
10:00--Petrocelli 3,4,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6.13; Bluue
Knight 8, 10; ; News 20.
10:05--Garden Party 33 ..

F"rom th~ lergest Truck o'r J
Bulldoze,...Rad lator to . the
alles t Heater ,Core .

delivery

service ,

Card of Thanks

A thought for the da y:

and

for easr. viewing

5:00--Bonanza 3; Family Altair 8; Star Trek 15.
. 5:30--Adam·12 4 ; News6; Beverly HillblllleS8; Elec
Co. 20,33;.
·

FERRELL ' S GLASS &amp;
HOME MAINTENANCE
Siding - V i nyl
&amp;
Aluminum . Window Glass
&amp; Glazing . On t he Job or In

l~g

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3,1976

Pluaglau . Table Top s ·
M i rrors . Storm &amp; Screens .

BULk WATER
AVAILABLE
Tuppers Pla i n s Chesler
Wat e r D istr ic t now se ll ing
bulk water to tanks on
trucks al our new office!
Located on St. Rt . 7
I M i le N orth of
Eastern High School
Se rve Yoursel f Dispenser
Taking quarters on l y , one
·at a time, for 250 gallons of
water .
Open al l1he Time
tor your c onven ie nce!
3-t . Jmo .

i

Pets

Television

NOPE .. MAW'5
ALREADV GOT

A CORSET

[ ALMOST fANICJ&lt;'ED...

6UT NOW I'vE 015COVERf17
I DON'THAVE 10 WOR~...

�H - The Daily Sentinel, Middle port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , ~larch 3, 197~
The Almanac

WANT ADS

Uni1{'(l Pres'S Jntrrnnt.imtal
Toda y is Wednesday ,
March 3, t he 6.'lrd da y of 1976 ·
With 303 to follow.
The moon is moving toward
the first quarter,
·
The m orning s ta rs Hre
Merrury and Venus.

Th e eve ning stars are
Mars, Jupiter and Sa turn .
Timse born on Uus dale are

1mder the sign of Pisces.
Alexa nder Gra ham Bell ,
inventoiofthe telephone, wa s
born March 3, 1847 .
Also on this rk1y in histor y:
In 1849, the United States
Department of Interior was

created by Congress.
In 1879, a woman lttwycr.
Mrs. Belva Ann Lockwood,
practiced befo re the U.S .
Supreme Court for the first
time,
In 1931, the Sta r Spangled
Banner was des ignated by ;m
Act of Co ng ress as the
'·National Anthem of the
Uni ted States."
In 1974, 345 persons were
killed when a Turkish plane

crashed near Paris.

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
'&gt;
P M
On y
B l' t o r c·
Publtc at ton

Mon&lt;l a v

Dt&gt;adltnc

v

1 Ill

1

l&lt;'ncel l a r ton
Cor r €'cr.o n s w ttf oc
rrpred un t il 9 a m
n~;~y o t P u b l•c al tQ n
REG.ULA TIONS

ac
lo r

The P Ubl tS h l'r r e s er ves
' h f' rHthl to ed t I tl r r e i !:'Cl
,;~ny
a d s Uee rn t;:od
ob

iec •10na l The p ub liS h e r
will not be rcspo n sf-b l e for

lllore than o n e in cor r ec!
m'iertton

RATE S
For Want Ad Scrvtc['
'&gt; cc n rs t&gt;c r wo rd on e
tnse r t,o n
Mt n mlUill Ch a r Q(' S 1 00
J.J ce n 1s pe r w o rd th r r f'
co n s('CUtt\IC
in&lt;;c r tio n $
26 (; (' n ts P. Cr w o r d s ix
(O il Sf.'CUIIVC

H1 SC fl iOn&lt;;
I'&gt; p ,., r Ce n t D ISC Oun t On
p il ict ,Hl &amp; iHHt ad s IHt id

wilh1 n 10 days
CARD OF- THANKS
&amp; OB IT UARvS? 00
tor
50
w o rn
111111 , , um
E'ac h a dd i11Q n i'11 w ord 3
C('n IS
BLIND ADS

i\ddi!ion at ?!tr; Cha r q('
pe r A d ve rt iSt'ml"n l
OFFICE HOUR S
8 10 a m 10 5
p m
DJ i l y 8 30 a m to l'l oo
N oon Sat urd ay
Ph on e loday 991 7 1'16

oo

15 - 'J'ho Tlollv SPntf.,.tMldcleport.~ov. 0., Wednl!orlrov . March3,1976

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
Auto

Lost

® 2S~NS

BEAR( AT RADIO !&gt;!.' r ial No
318806, Mond ay (I IJNnoo n on
R t 7 b e tw ee n Hobson a nd
Po mero y . reward ,
S50
Ph o n e 991 7575
J 3 41 C
B LAC K A ND TAN &lt;.. oon houn d
lost Sunday near Long Run
Coll ar says " EiwoQd N one ' '
Ph o n c 84J 18511
3 3 36t c

Sal~

Auto Sales

Business Services

'

Pomeroy
QUALITY Motor Co.

j

1974 OPEL MANTA CPE .

$2495

4 speed tran s ., radio, good tires, green fin ish , low
m i leage .

N E ED S a g ood\ hom e Male
sheph er d lype, ligh l brown
dog E :oteel l ent con d i t i o n .
appro)(irnatety Smonths otd .
Lovely di spositi on , wou l d
rnake a good pet
M e igs
COu n ty H uman e So c ie t y ,
9n 3837 .
3 3 6tc

197JMONTE CARLO.COUPE

$3295

Bla c k w ilh whi te v "roof, al l power ·equipme nt. a ir .

1975 SUBURBAN C204X4

$6144

NEW. auto ., P .S ., P . B., center seat, mirrors , radio ,

gauges , H. D. sh ocks F&amp; R ., co lor beige.

~~~~ ·' up

Call Collect 311· 8239

\ Ameri can writer Willi a m
Henry Hudson said, ''You
canrot Oy like an eagle with
the wings or a wren ."

In
build · UP
rooting &amp; ho t roots . Free
Estimates . 10 vears ex perience.
·
Harve Ferrell
Bidwell, Ohio
2 -6 -1 mo .

WRITE YOUR
OWN AD!

-SPECIAL!--

12 WORDS
4DAYS
$}25

,., 7

WANT TO

CONSTRUCTION

SAVE MONEY?

CARPOING

Take advantage of our
prices.
Qualifv
bu ill
home s . Nice lots available
in nice IO&lt;:ations.

Free estimates on car- :
peting and installation .
We'll bring samples to your
home with no obligation .

For Sale

O~DER

BISSELl BUILDERS

_ Each
initial
and
group
of
figures
counts as on e word .
B e s ure to count
·; na me and a ddress, i f
~· u sed , and yo ur phone
~- numb er.
Including
p rices for ite m s of ·
•• fered in your want ad
increase
.,~ w i ll
. r esponse.

.

,.

1. -~ ~-~~~

2 _ _ _ __

.

" 3. ----~--­

"

4., ~--~.........C---

:":" 6.~~· _-_-_---~
_ __
·· ], _...........;____
'

V•

.

8·- - - - - ;: 9, _ __ __

~. io. ~
· ~-~ri

•

~ 11 . --~--•

12.-

BO'RN

FREE ESTIMATES

LOSER

"!.oNE ME: MO~E~!"

I'M L£/&gt;.VIfJGo f-DW ,
hiV E: ~

Real Estate For Sale

For Rent

LARRY LAVENDER

Notice

,,._

•••
·' urn.E O RP IIDfANNIE -LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-LITTL E

R&amp;J COINS

AHHIE 'LL BE
COMIH' 1-()ME
SOON,GAMM1'
·-kiM

I

MFET HE R~

'l'

OF COURSE ··· BUT
00 ~' 1

!iO BEYOND

iHE ~NeROR
CROSS TnE
STREET-

I'll 13E RfAL

rn
. RfFUL ,

. • \· _,.

,.. I

~~""''""" . .

1

NAN TRAP

CHfE! HfRE COMES "TH'
· KtD fiOW, AL L ALOtiE All ! C.OTTA DO 15 GRAB
.

'.

HIM - S TUFF HIM IHTO DIS

Jolts· OlD MAH' Il
8E \IJArTIW AT TH '
OTHER END W!H'i

111 ' rnR --

SAcK AND SI&lt;IP DQWM
DIS A~LEY - -.

__

.

----;---'--

______
I

": NAME :._
..
:· ADDRESS - - - - -

Rooms,

~.00

\-...__........,""'":'_.....,.
.. :THEN &gt;'CHI ~ '
HECK 00 'vtJU
~ 1 1\JK WE CAN
DO A~ WA.LKlN'
AROUND OUT
11-II!REi?

..."THA.T'S WHY WE'RE

GONNA USE
IUFT!

She ma4

just have

a point!

RI,JTLAND

Special Rates
by Weelc
or Month
.... ..-· -

FURNITURE

1

..-f-+-tJ•

Help Wanted

EXPERIENCED

~~~~

LOOK &amp; SAVE ·

TEAFORD

I

158 -

m-3:ns

•30G

MEDICAL

Complete Air Condition Operational Check

SECRETARY

"YOJMEAN WENDY SOMETHINGWANIS YOU 10
ABOUT A ..JOe&gt;
COME TO NEW

MaW LALlY?
0 !.CRf BE ....

DON'T TELL ME 1HE MAN

lN 11-1E MOON HA:7 Da.JE
OOT HIM:&gt;ELF A WIFE!!

FOR BONNAZ

YORK AND
WOULDN'T

TELL YOU

WHY?

CALL

~·

;· CITY- - - - - ' PHONE _ _ __

"'

MAIL WITH
'

'1.25
TO TliE

DAILY SENTINEL
111 COURT ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

45769
,L----___1

446-5189
Gallipolis, Ohio

For Sale

T A PP t~ N

stain l ess steel drop
in e lec . range , 575 . Wa r m
Morning 65 ,000 blu ga s
h er~ ter , 'l y r s ol d , S200 . Ga :!.
room
heater
with
A SSI ST A NT D lf:.. E(TOR . 1-~. i d ,
mechanical t h e! rm . ~25
· ex ec ut i ve in s t a ff c· ~pa c ity
by co o rdin 'a t i ng · offi ce Use d 1, g lass e)( t eri or "door ,
$15. Phon e 992 7354 after 6
se r vices . su ch a s budget
pm
preparat io n , a n d cont r ol ,
2 29 3tc
r eview
co n t i'a c t
ad
min i st ra !io n
and
co
19 7•t HONDA X R 75 . good
o rdinat e c olle c t i o n
and
cond i t io n . Phone 2.J7 25-&lt;tl
p rcf.l.:trarion o t rep o rt s,
1 29 3tc
... $9,0ou E :-:pericn ce d CJnd or
t ra 1ned applic;J nt
Se nd
BOLEN' S ga rd en tractor with
re su me to A H D E C 0 .. P
c ulti&gt;.~ator . Also , CB radio
0
Bo:w: 1515 . Portsmouth
Oh io
Phon e 992 7826 .
1 29 6t (
3 1 J)c

1

.

I·-'..

r-·--_
-

.
\

co.op

'

6 ,

Reg.

'

inSula t ed, storm windows ,

Aulomallt Water
Conditioner
Model UCXXX,
210 ,000
Week ly Groin
Capacity

$299 .

1339. ~

-

Val .

POMEROY LANDMARk
9 ... Jatk W. C.rsoy, Mt·r .
~
Pllonoffl-2111

$19.000 ,00.
No. 153 - 72 a .. 2 yr . old
rcm ch st yle, J . BR ., 2 baths,
kit . comp let ely bu ilt i t;~.
dr illed &amp; dug well, 3 tra iler
lot.s wi t h sewer &amp; wat er li ne·

hook up , $40 ,000 .00 .
804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992 -2298
After Hours Call
992-7133
CONTACT :
Lois Pauley
Br;.flCh

fi

Mttnager

RUSTIC HILLS- 3large
brs 1,, bath , mod. kll .• family
rm.1 on nice lot . $24,500 .

Kee~ watching our ads for more money.savlng coupon1;
com1ng vour way weekly.
,

BAS HAN - 6 rms .. 3 brs ..
bath,
ga s
furnace,
basement 2 c~r garage, 1
acre.

BUSINESS LOT 7, at Chester .

On ~t .
Util it ies

SERVICE A CUT ABOVE THE BEST
3 NIASE Certified Mechanics
20 Yean Service Management Experience.
1111 Work Guaranteed ·
Reasonable Rates
Very Friendly People

•
•
e
'•
•

us.

DO BUSINESS WITH

LEADER

Smith Nelson MotOIS, Inc.
500 E. Mlin St.

•

A

~

Ph. ffl-211•

Pemtroy,D.

~

NOPE·-

PLAIN Qt.:
LVE SOAP
15 GOOD
ENUFF FER

ME

available.

3 ACRES Dug well,
utilities available . Only
n .ooo.oo in the tountry .
DO YOU WANT TO SELL,
WE DO, SO, L1ST IT WITH

t

II

Pulling crucial contract trick

-----

WANTED

IVINTEN
I
I [)

WIN AT BRIDGE

.

Strout"'
Really

I l) [J I

~

Carpeting I
501 NYLoN !

up

11 :00--Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4; Gambit
8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13; Elec. Co. 20.
11 :3()-Hollywood Squares3.4.15; Happy Days 13; Love
of Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20.
· 11 :55--Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10.
. 12 : oo--Magnlllcenf Marble Machine 3,15; Let' s Make a
Deal13; Bob Braun ' sSO·SO Club4; News6,8,10.
12 : 3~Take My Advice 3,15; All My Children 6.13;
Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
12: 45--Eiec. Co. 33.
12 :55--NBC News 3, 15.
1 :00--News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phl .l Donahue 8;
Young &amp; fhe Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1 : 3()-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, 13;
As the World Truns 8,10.
AN OlNTMENI ONE
2:00--520.000 Pyramid 6,13.
M1C.HI5ET FR:OM
2:3()-Doclors 3,4,15; Neighbors 6,13; Guiding Light
A 5LA\{E.
8,10.
.
3:00--Anolher World 3,4,15; General Hosplfal6,13; All
In The Family 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 .
·
J :3()-0ne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Matth
· Game 8,10; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20; IT.\ /
Utilization 33.
4 · 00--Mlster Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
· Bewitched 6; Mltkey Mouse Club 8; Mister .R&lt;&gt;gers ·
20,33; Movie " Born Reckless" 10; Dinah 13.
(Aalwen 10-.orrowJ
4 : 30--Bewllched 3; Mod Squa~ 6; Partridge Family 8;
~
Jumbl•,. PARTY GOOSE DABBLE ABOUND
Sesame S. 20,33; To be Anouhced 15.
Yetl..,rday' •
·
5:'00--Bonanza
]; Family Altair 8; Star Trek 15,
Antwrn What the t•ampire'H 11.011 WGH f!rl the..,afl team5:3~Adam - 12 4,13; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
.
B4TBOY
'
Elec . Co.20,33.
' 6:00--News 3,4,8,10,13,15; Zoom 20; ABC News 6.
6 : 3~NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ; Lilias Yoga
by THOMAS JOSEPH
·- ,
&amp;· You 33.
7:00--Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling
ACROSS
. 38 Downright
for Dollars 6;' Space : 1999 8; News 10; Lei's Make a
I Josip Broz
39 Ritual
Deal 13; Family Affair 15; Anyone lor Tennyson?
5 Matter •·
to MGM's lion
20; Family at War 33.
.
(law)
U Imitated
7:3~Hollywood Squares 3,4; Ohio State Lottery 6;.
K Algerian
DOWN
Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky 20; Wild
Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Music City
I Aifport ·
eity
U.S. A. 15.
9 Visual
structure
8:00---Cop &amp; The Kid 3,4, 15; Weltome Batk, Koller
13 Island
.2 Furious
6,13; Wallons 8,10; Great Performances 20; The
in U.S.
3 Fly (4 wds. )
Way II Was 33.
.
·
Yesterday's
Answer
Marine lore
4 Of - mind
8 :3~Grady 3,4,15;
Barney Miller 6,13; Lowell
14 Pulley blqck 5 : •Barber of
16 Distance .
25 Mortgage
Thomas Remembers 9,33.
SeviUe"
wheel
measure
27 This
9 :00- Movle "McNaughton's Daughter" 3,4,t5;
15 Paris
character
19 Cha!Jge
nlinute
Streets of San Francisco 6;13; Hawaii FJve.o 8;
season
6 Reverberate 20 Sleepwalker 30 Speechily
Hollywood Television Theatre 33; Movie
16 "0 Sole - " 7 Litigate
of Bellini
31 Called
" MarrlaQe on the Rocks" 10.
10:00--Harry 0 , 6,13; ' Barnaby Jones 8..
17 Bird's nest 10 Runway
33 Break
opera
ll :QO-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15.
18 Hire
( 2 wds.l
bread
23 Hebrew
11
: 3~Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mannix 6, 13; Movie
20 Biblical
11 Fly
O.T. notes
36 - volatile
" Gumshoe" 8; Movie "Tortilla Flat" 10; ABC
·p atriarch
1% Cochise and 24 Facing
37 Altar conNews 33.
21 EarthenGall
wds.
stone
stellation
12 : 0~Janakl 33 .
ware jar
12 : 4~Longstreef 6,13.
22 Wee bit
1 :oo-Tomorrow 3 . ~.
23 Impure
1 :50--News 13.
metal
s ul!ide
ZS Bed or table b--1--+item
•
26 Arthur
of tennis
27 High-pitched
pones the club play until the
sound
NORTH
· end of the hand and before he
28 Persian
• 10 8 6 3
gets around to it he will have
• Q87
found that West held the kind
tiger
tKQJ
of spades . ·
%9 Think out
ofo
KJ 5
Therefore, in order for East
32 Ending for
WEST
EAST
to have more than 15 high- ·
cup or pay
• AQJ .4
K 7 52
card points and a proper
33 Adams or
¥ A3
• 54
notrump East will be holding
Ameche
t A 10 2
-+-+--ilt 9 6 53
that
black lady.
34 Lala's
• Q63 2
,fo1074
Now
South attacks clubs by
beginning
=-+--+-4-11
SOUTH
leading
the jack from dummy.
35 Grape
.9
If East ducks , South lets i,t
37 "My Name
¥KJ10962
ride ; if East covers South
is - "
+874
proceeds
to
finesse
ofoA98
successfully against West's 10
Both vulnerable
spot.
JJAILY CRYPTO(lliOTE - Here's how to work It :
AXYDI,BAAXR
West Nortb East South
is I. 0 N G F E L L 0 W
IN. T . 2¥
A Texas reader wants to
One letter simply slomds fo r anothe r. In this .sample A is
Pass
4¥
Pass Pass
know if we would open the bidused for thr thrt"f' I.'s. X fur lh t• two O' s, l'lf . St n glc letters.
ding with one spade if holding :
apost rophes. the lt"n~th ilnd rormati~n of thC' words nrc at~ Pass
Open~ng lead - 2 •
hints. F.nrh day tht" rmlc letters one d1ilere nt .
•AJJ0987¥2 t32.AJ108.
Our answer is that we like
I'RYPTOQUOTES
open this hand. We count
to
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
our spot cards in the black
LPY
IJJHJ C JXLBJSP
D S W Z S K B • Match-point play ·w ith its suits as fully worth two points
emphasis on over tricks and open in spite of holding
USSY
USSY
OCAWNJPU.
N F Y Q • should tend to help .a rubber- only 10 actual high-c ard
bridge playe r In finding out points .
zs s y VL.Hf WLYF A Q special ways to score the con(Do you have a question
LPY
USSY
tract trick .
for the experts ? Write "Ask
BSAUV .South finds himself in a the Jacobys " care of this
VFLC.B.VR
LPY
NJU
LPY
slightly unsound four·heart newspaper. The Jacobys will
contract ilfter East has open- answer individual questions
TLDEQSP
FCJXLNFBV
e d the bidding with one if stamped, self-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
Yesterday's Cryploquole: I HAVE ONE YARDSTICK BY "W~~~~t too unsound South
most interesting question,
WHICH I TEST EVERY MAJOR PROBLEM - AND THAT will have 10 tric)(s if he can will be used in this column
YARDSTICKIS:ISITGOODFORAMERICA? - DWIGJ!TD. pick up the queen of clubs . and will receive copies of
EISENHOWER.
Naturally, enough, he post- JACOBY MODERN)
t® 1976 Kina fo'eaturt'&amp; Synd ic•te, Inc . )

I

Rill Eslate for Sale

La Salle
HOlEt

6: 00--Sunrlse Semester 10.
,
6: 15,--Farm Report 13.
6 :20-Pallerns for Living 13.
6:»--Columbus Today 4; News 6 ; Sunrise Semester 8;
Urban League 10.
6:40--Qunc:e of Prevention 10.
6:-'5--Mornlng Report 3.
6:55--Chuck While Reports 10; Good Morning. Trl
Stale 13.
'
7:00--Today 3.4.15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News B; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7 : 3~Schoolles 10.
8:00--Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
8:3()-Big Valley 6.
9:00--Nol For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9:3()-A.M. 3; One Llfe to Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
10:00--Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Edge of Nlghl 6;
Prlce ls Righi 8, 10.
10 : 3~Hlgh Rollers 3,4,15; Dinah 6.

l1y 'If NHI A !IN( II(} •'"" IHHl l ( (

COINS

'

THURSDAY.MARCH4, 1976

Unscrambl~ these rour Jumbles.
ont lttttr to t~h square, to
rorm four ordinary word s.

EV5P. '?AF

For Sale or Trade

Found

~&amp;~~ ® . IJ.ol~otrw"J -.1 , -

I.I.O:JLD 'DJ f'R!:;FEP.
I Dt~'T TA~K TO
'IOU AT AU..~

"&amp;IVE Mfi /l()llfi~!'
I'? THAT AU.. 'IOU

SOME

MOtJE~ t

rrio. "

l------------

Wanted To Buy

AVAILABLE TO
INDIVIDUALS ONLY!
NON COMMERCIAL
NO REFUNDS.

'"

SLOAN'~ ·

V tN DALE 12 X 6A . ] b c d r m
·' ·• Ton· t nternal ioh tn Pic kup , 4
From a shell to a house, all
bath &amp; i;, 1411 . expan d o ,. 25
sp
transm Jssior.~, he a vy
typ es of building and
fl . awning a nd por c h , full y ZENITH co lor TV , 23 inch
dut y spr in gs , Approx . 10.000
remodeling
from
th e
scree n . El( ce ll ent co n di t ion .
ca rp ete d : Phone 7J2 7880.
mi te s . P hone 992 70lj ·
· foundation up , Addition s,
. Se~ how you can really
Phone
99
2
7244
.
"l. 29 lOt c
'}7 6tp
·carpe ting , pa-inting, $iding,
I WOULD li ~e ld !h ank all
7 79 Jtc
save .
roofing , pan eli ng·, paper
tho se who se nt m e b irthday ·
Mike Young , Manager
card s o n my 99 t h birthpay , U N FU RN I SHED l 4~e70mo bi te LO SE we1gh! With N ew Sh ape 1969 4,12 OLD SMOBILE with
h •nging et c ..
ho me . toia l ele-c. , 3 ton
Y o u r k i ndness was ap
Tablet s and Hydr ex W a ter
Sales arid Insta-llation '
35 0 engi n e, $ 1, 20 0. Ph one
ce ntra l air co nd iti one r .
Pill s ·a t
Dutton
[).lrug .
preciated Mary Dieh l .
991 3259
Rl . 3, Pome roy , Ohio 45769
ex
c
ell
ent
cond
i
tion
Phone
•
Ph
.
949·2023
or
843
-2667
Ph . \!614) 985-4102
3 3 li p
Midd l eport
and
N e l son
3 2 6t p
2&lt;17 2684 or , 7&lt;17 2.664 .
Phon! day or night
"\
Drug .
2
19
-1
mo
.
3
3
6tc
2-12· 1 mo .
614 -992 ·2206
J.:.H:l
3 2 ]tp
1 WI SH'" exp r ess m~· ttJanks
1969 Z28 Camaro , 302 4 ·speed ;
'
'
'
'
"'
I
to all f o1 the ldndness t hat
1971 Cutla ss Au tomat ic ,
12x60
Ki rkwood
Mo bi l e H AY for s al e , ca ll { 614) lj185
was sh o w n m e du r ing the
both in good c ondit i on . RE A DY M I X C ON~~CrL ·
Hom es , t o tal e l ec ., e)( ce llen t
H71 a ft er' 6 p . m .
i ll ness o t my &lt;;i Sie r , Lena
Phon e 992 5737 .
de l ivered ri ght to your
condi t io n . P h on e 247 2705 or
3 3·6t c
Guth
Thanks
to
Fr
3 3.6tc
p r oject. Fast and easy . Free
247 2731 .
Falscem . Fr . Kraiovic. F r
~ ...
. ...-----,---'-- -~-esti mat es . Phon e ~9 2 - 3284 ,
3 3 \He " GRAPEFRUIT PILL " with
Yaunt z. Dr Boi c e, F•·: ing
B'lown
1972 (A MARO . V 8, p S, d i sc
Goe.g tein Ready Mix ' Co .,
Diadel&lt; plan more co n
F uneral
Ho me ;
Dr .
brakes , a ir co nditioning ,
MiddleporL O h io .
BUY~ SELL or. TRADE
ve
n
ien
t
t
han
grape
fru
its
.
Insulation
Services
Raymond Boice . and all my
automatic
Ex ce ll e nt
6·30 lfc
Eat sa t is f ying me als and
k i n d neig hbo rs and fri ends
con
di
t
ion
and
easy
on
gas
.
Financing
A&gt;.~ailabte I
lose- weight. N e lson Drugs .
for ! hei r masSes , flowers
buri ed
treasure .
Find
Aski ng $2 , 600 , but w ill EL WO OD BOWERS REPAIR
Blown i nto Wall s &amp; Att1d
3 3 11 p
and f ood Sin cerely, KaTi e A LLI S C H ALMERS round
Coins , rings, silve r, gold.
ha c kl e . Phon e 992 7360 after
Sweepers , toast ers, irons.,
ba
ter
,
good
co
ndit
io
n
and
STORM
Guth
Coin &amp; Metal
~ p .m
al l s mall appliances Lawn
t and E.' m 8 whe C' I fertili;e r
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
3 3 I tp
De fectors
JO HN BOA T , g ood co nd i t ion .
2
79
6tp
mo
w
er
,
ne)(t
1o
St
ate
High
spr e ader , and 500 bales
REPLAC 'f:: M E NT
For R ent
Phone B43 2653 ev eni n gs .
way
Garage
on
Rou
t
e
7
.
c lea n s traw . Phon e 949 2770
WINOt&gt;WS
or
3 2 Jtc
Phone
985
3825
ALUMINUM
? 76 tOte
For Sale
4 16 lfc
StOING
·
SOFFITT
10 X 22 rT . A WN I N G " and
F OUND
Germ an s hort hair
GUTTERS-AWNINGS
por ch
for mobile home , O N ~ AC..I'&lt;t , 6 rms and bath , SE P T I C TANK S cleaned .
dog , March I . Owner my
R
t
.
3
,
P
ome
r
oy
.
Ros.e
H
i
lt
.
awning
less
th
an
I
y
ea
r
old
M
oc;t
ern
Sanitation
.
lj192
.3954
c a ll , 997 736 5 and indentify' .
Di ck Davi s prop erty , full
Will sell s~pa rat e . N o pri ce
or lj192 7349 .
3 '3 4t c' FUR NI SH ED apt . 5 room s
Rutland 742 -2331
Syracuse, Ohio
' b aseme nt ,
alllm in'r! m
over phone Call (6 1·1) 667
rj 18 · II C
an d bath , la rge b ac k an d
Roger Wamsley
Ph . 997: · 1'19]
si d ing , ppn eled . $10 ,000 . Ca ll
17
1'
1
9
fr ont porc h wit h yard ,
d 10 I mo .
J -1·1mo .
3 7 4l p
Oak Hil l 685 6576 ev e ning s;
utilities pa id . Call b efore 6 p .
REMODELING , Roofing and
Jackson
'286
3004
day
s.
SW EEPER
an d
Se w ing
rll
992 2937 .
pa int ing . Cal l 949 2379.
7 5 30t p
O N E 197&lt;1 Hond a m o torcycl e
AVA TIN G . d ozer , lo ift. t: • - REMODEL IN G
· M a chines Repair , Parts and
A N'o
2 26 ~t e;
3 3· 41 c EXC
wi ! h 4.000 mi tes in n ew
an d ba c khoe work., sep t ic
Supp l ies
Davis Vacu u m
REROO FI N G , CALl 247
1 1
condition . Ph on e 991 7692 .
RM HOUsC, ~ w alum in u m
ran ks
i n st alled ;
d u mp
C l e an e r :
mite
up
2361 .
SMA LL UPSTAIRS A PT . for
3 2 51 p .
si.d ing at Ga ll ipoli s Fer ry . E~~ADV~ci~~~ ·. l~~~~Hf~6
t ru c k s and lo boys fo r hir e ;
Geon::j e's Cr eek Rd . off State
2 77...__
-Me
sing l e pe r son : no anima ls .
1
w Va . on ., ac re tot n ca r SM ALL. SEPT I C TAN KS
wi ll hau l f i ll dirt . top .soil,
RoutC 7. Phone "C61 4l 446
Phone 992 578 6,
TOPP ER w it h boat
8 FT
h ard road . Cheap. co m e see .
limestone
an
d
g
r
avel.
Ca
ll
029&lt;1
WILL TRIM or c u 1 t r ees and
I N S TALLED .
BIL L
3 3 61 (
ra r; k .
Con t ac t
H e rb ert
Phon e (]OJ ) 675 '19~6 .
Bob or Roger Jeffer s , day
3 3 11 c
shrubber y
Phone ~49 7545
PULLIN S, PHONE 992 247 8,
~-,-·---·
Gi l k (' y a l t er 5 :30 p ,rn , 991
'} 27 6tp
pho
n
e
91!2
70
89
,
nigh
t
phone
or 742 3167.
DAY OR NIGHT .
S RM H OUSE in R aci ne a r e a . 5666 o·r see on Rl . 33, at loot
992
3525
or
992
5292
.
2 n 76tc
2 22 52 tp
Pho n e 992 5858 .
ti t Darw in Hill.
MOD E ~N .hom e in C h e~ t er. 8
2 II I lc
-:---'-'-·
·';'"·-"'
3 3 If c
rooms, 2 baths , 7 por c he s,
---· --.'"""I
FOREMAN WA NT E'O
O ' DELL Ali n emen t loca t ed REMODELING ,
sunpor c h , 1? baseme n t , ci ly
Pt u mbin ~,
We
are seeki n 9 an
ex 2 BE DRM m ob ile hom e,. very
nd
Ru
tl
and
Grade
b
e
h
i
'&lt;~ n d well waier, na t ur a l gas.
heating an d all ·t v pes elf
p er l en ce d sU perVisor ' for a
LET US DO\ IT! I
Sc ~ool
Tuneu.p , brak es.
rii c:e . Pho n e 992 3324
g arag e . Priced t o se ll .
gene r a l
r e pa i r·.
Work
lig'ht
~ sse mbly ·
fa cto r y
AN D AS H 23 c hann el c itizens
wh
e
el
bal
ancing
,
alinemenl.
Phone
(614
l
985
410
2
2 29· tf c
g
uarant
ee
d·,
70
years
e
l(
loca ted in Ga llipdlis
Point
b an d , lran sceive r , 1\M F M
Phone 742 2004.
2 d lfc
pe r ien ce !Phon e 992 2409 .
Pleasant a r ea . Mus.t b e a bt.e·
MPX ra dio , 8 track t ap e
11 16 lf c
3
BEDRM
furn
rs
hed
hOme
.
5 1 tf c
to mQI iv ai e er:n ploy ees ·a"n d
Pl ayer . Ca l! lj191 396 5.
al so a mobile hom e in
-+-.be qllal.it y co n sc ious . Se nd
'l 26 lfc
3
BED~M
hom e.
just C BR A D FORb , A u ct ioneer . EXC A V A TING ,
M iddleport , SJO week , gas
dozef ,
re su me i n c l udi n g sal a r y'
t in i shed . remo d e li ng , Sa l em
Com~:&gt; t ete Serv ice . Phon e
an d water pa id . Ph one 992
backhoe
and
dit c h e r :
history to Box &lt;144 -A , Ca r e o f ,
WAR E:' H OU SE or storeroom .
St ., Rutland P h one 7d7 7306
949
24
87
or
949
2000
.
Rac
ine
3509
o
r
inquire
a
t
Bo
l(
159
5,
Ch arles R . Hatfie ld Baclo.
"Z 4X48, J 11 Cond or St ( r ear
Daily Senlinel.
u f l er 4 p .m . or see Milo B .
Oh io . Cr itt Br a dford .
'
Bvc k e y e L ak e, Ohio
H oe Serv ice . Rutland , Oh io .
3 3 die
610 E . Ma in SU R ent all or.
H utc hi son .
10 9.Jf c
2 29 tfc
Pl'l one 742 20Q B
part. Phone 992 7 178 .
9 23 , ,
11 30 78tc
2 26 6tc
1v'IAKE SURE you get eve r y T WO bedrm
WI
L
L
do
oddjob
s
.
roofing
,
b ath , on t wp .
possib le deductio n ! his year
pa
in
ti
ng
,
haul
i
ng
,
tre
ework
D 8. 0 TREE T ri mmi ng , 20
road . four m i te s to mi n e no.
Have your F'ed.cral a n d
and mowing Call lj19'J 7·10 9
COIIL , l imeston e a nd a l l type s
J P hon e (6 1.:0 669 3953 .
years experl~n ce . In sured ,
$499square
State In c ome Tax r eturn by
3 2 26tc
Of sa l! an d rock salt for ice
fr ee es timat es . Cslt 99 2 2384
7 29 3t p
an ac countant. PhOne 992
Yard
and s now re m ova l
Ex
o r (6 14 } 698 7957 A lbany .
6173 ."
RED DOG . l imeS tone , gra&gt;.~e t
TR A I L E R ~ pa ce , 1.1 mi le
ce tsi or Sn it Wo rk s. East
10 15 tfc
1 21 52tc
and fill di r t delive r ed .
nort h of M eiqs H igh Sch ool
Main St ., Pom er o y , Ohio .
RUBBER BACK
Phone Bi l l Pu l lins . 992 .24'7 8. 'SEWING MACHINE Repai r s ,
Phon e 991 389 1.
on Old R I 33 PllOn e 992 -29&lt;1 I .
M A NL EY 'S A ntiq ues. Op en
2 19 26tc
·
2·
19
Jtc
12
7 1f c
se
r
v
i
ce.
all
m
a
kes
.
91j12
278:4
.
M o n d ay , · TuesQay.
and .
we l'la\1~ hundreds , .of "
Th e r abric Shop . Pom l?r"o y .
W e dne sd ay
Bv a pp oint
carp e t va l ues . You r fob c an
PLAY
PEN , $5 .00
Baby
A uthoriz ed Si nger Sales and
meni or c han ce _ 1 01i le ea s t · t~
~
be cO mp leted if! \ to 2
s, wi ng o malic , $ 5 ; FleXin g
Se rvi ce
·we
s h a rp e n
of- T uppers P lains , on Rl
w ee ks
~'-ttl
tOng wailln;g
elCcrcis er , $ 15 . Phon e 992
Sc
issorS
.
1'&gt; 81 Phone 161 -&lt;~) 667 3276
per
iod
PtJr
in
st aller ha s 28
5833 .
3 29 ti c
H OUS E · on do u bl e l o t in
3 2 3tp
· yea r s ex p er ience .. , El':pert
3 3· 41p
T uppers Plains , ins ide no t
i ns._ta t l at ion
You'll l ike
ABOUT '• ACRES f i n is h ed . Pri ce d to sell
A SPHA L T I~ G d r ive way s and
w h at you g el ,
NE W HOME zig zag se w in g
Phon e [ 614 1 661 6 150 .
pa r kin~ lois , se pt ic t an k s
Almost new h ome. 3 br ..
m a c h ine w ith cam s $ 125 ;
3 2 6tp
Installed . c.o n cr e t in g and
CALL 742 -27:11
bat h ,
dining
r .. full
WORK HO R SE or mule , Huqh
1974 Honda CL 200 , $600 ;
b ac kho e worlo.
F owler ' s 1
TAU&lt;
TO WENDELL
basement wi th u t i lit y r .,
Middleport, 0 . Ph . 992-2771
Phon e 992 6162.
L ei fh eit , ohone 992 5918 .
F OR .S ALE n ea r L an g sville, 5
Co n st r uctio n . P h on e 99 7 I '
GRATE
.
3 3 41p
3 3 6t c
HW
floor s,
porche s.
• r oom house . root ce ll ar w i t h
748 1 o r 742 ?~ 9 3
CARPET CONSULTANT
- -·~-~--r
oom
over
.
2
bay
de!
ac
h
cd
$19,500.
2 2-l 61 c
U\~ H p aid for all m ak es and
GOOD H A Y , n ev er w et . Phone
garage, Jla a c re s , no bath ,
FULL FAMlL Y HOME - 4
mode l s o f mobile horhe!'i
949 2523
no t and col d wat er in kit
LUCK E~T Farrn EQuipment. 1
Pho n e area cod e 6 14 423
BR , 2 baths, large kitchen ,
3 3 6tc
c hen , L P g a s lieat , heat e r s
West
Wash i nglon I St ..
953 1.
w i th hous e . Call 742 ?8.19
recrea tion R. la r ge glas sed
Albany Phon e { 61.1 ) 69 .!1 3032 1
4- I 3 I l c
F I SHING SIN KE R S made by
alter !I p m .
or 698 7881.
I
•
p·at io ; garage , c lose to
m ol d , r~ 1 oz . th r ough 2 11? oz..
3 2 6tp
2
261
1
GOOD u;e·d rot o t i l l er~ Ph~ ne
,
c
~·.,'.'llloi
·l•l•l•l----•R•"i!'·'•o.•.,•._.,
sc
hool
.
$30,000
.
Very r e asonabl e. Phone 991
997 70 36 or 992 24.tl aft er 5
5829 .
NEEDED
3 or 4
HOME f or sa l e by privat e
D I'll
3 J 171p
owner.
3 11
a t re s,
4
p.lrtition s, shower or tub,
3 2 1fc
bedro
o
m
s,
barr) on bla ck top 1
•·
wou
ld
have·t
love
l
y
hom
e
.
T WO 10 sp ee d bi c y c l es. i 35
road . gas and wat er . Phon e .. '
OLD fu rni t ur e, Old i ewe lry , HOUSE in Ru tl nnd Ctlll 992
Lot a lone worth askihg
and S·t5. 7 in c h r ee l tap e
9119 2023 .
q ui lt s,
or
c.ompl e te
"1!l 58 .
r ec order .
$5 0.
Square
pr lce.
CA LL
FOR
3 1 26 tp
hou seho ld ~ .
Ma nl e y 's An
1 .t He . shooter P o lar oi d c am er a,
~
$7,000.
PARTlCULARS.
tiques , R . R
I , Box 101 .
$15. Phon e 992 75 5 1.
100 )( 700 LOT in Fi ve P oi n ts
R eedsville , Oh i o . P h on e
A BUY - Homes on each
area Phon e 997 3576 .
3 1 3tc
3 ROOM F urn rshcd ap a rt
(6 1·1) 667 3276 . } mil e eas t o t
side have so ld for over
J 1 61(
rne nt ,
10
m il es
fr om
Tup p e r s. Pla ins on R t. 681
$25,000. JB R, 1 11-J ba ths,
Pom eroy
Ph on e 992 6161 CU /\ 1 I(JR SALE . (/1. 8 Co a l
3 2 6tp
HOME f o r • s a t e , s pac i ous
7 27 6tc
lovely kitchen with e&gt;~: tr as ,
Company , I mi l e n o r t h of
ti&gt;.~ing room , d ini n g roorn , 2
Cheshire . on R t 7 P i c k your
l ul l basemen t , HW hea t ,
OLD f ucni!u r e. ice b oxe s.
bedr oo ms , large kit c hen .
ovvn
,
":.
70
pe
r
ton
0
Den
6
day
s
U
N
F
URNI
SHED
apt
1n
brass
b e ds ,
old
wall
c lose to shopp i ng . A LOW
fa mily ro om s, n ew bath .
p er week . or c;, ll ( 61 ·11 367
Pom eroy . 7 bedrm . n ewly
te l ephon es and par Is , or
Phon e 997 ·1394 .
$17.000 .
7JJ
O
for
f
u
rlh
er
1
n
f
orm
ation
.
redecorated
.
fully
ca
r
p
e
ted
.
comp l ete· hou se hold s Writ e
3 2.6tc
1
8
78
1(
Call
in
the
ear
ly
a
.m
.
992
ANNUAL
INCOME
M
D
Miller ,
Rt
2,
2288
.
Abou t $5,000.00 plus gas
Pom e r o y . Ohio . Call 992
12x60 MOB ILE HOME , J
7760
MA NUR E l oad er . $ 175 . Phon e
acres, w elt water , naturll l
we ll. Home an d 2 apts. has
{ 6 141 378 6 ~1 1 af t er 6 p .m .
10 7 7.&lt;.
gas , S6900 . Ph one 992 -3955 .
f ree gas , &amp; ow n wate r
2 29 6t c
3.J .6t c
EN J OY g r acious living at '-'
:o.ystem s, 22 acres wft h
~-'-------'--- -·-Villag e Manor
in Mid .
MIXED hay, 70 c b a l e . Phon e
bu i lding s ites. CA LL.
5 R OOMSan dbal ho n 15 0x 100
dh~ p ort l or a s tow. as $ 110
16 14). 37 8 631 1 a f ter 6 p m
fl . lo t, com p lete fi na n cin g .
TOS
.
E
L
L
LET
US
HELP
Pe
r
mOnth
Wi
t
h
a
ll
SIIL 1S BURY
Town s h ip
P ho n e 99 2'-5786 .
2·79 6t c
uti l i ties
pai d .
Th ese
YOU - CA LL TODAY.
Trustees n ee d s person for
3 3·6t!J
are b ran d new h ig h qu a lity
ope n mg graves at
Ro c k
992-2259 or 992· 2568
----~---...------apar t ment s at, pri ces you S25 PER HUNDR E D s t uff ing
Spr i h gs Cem e tery . Co nta ct
J B R HOME , just f in ished
e nvelop es .
Se n d
s e lf
ca n . a ff o rd
You r rent in
Denver Hy se ll , p hOn e 997
remode l ing . Sa l e m
St. ,
add r e sse d . s t a mped e n
e lud es mo nth l o month
5850 .
Rut la nd .. Phon e 742 · 2306
ve top e. T . K . En terp rise ,
lea ses , a l l elec . living .
3 3 61 c
a f te r 4 p .m . or See M ilo B.'
Box. 76. Stanb e rry , Mo .
ca rp e t i n g ,
ra n ge
a nd
H ut c hinson ;
644 89 &lt;
re fr i g e r a t o r , f ree t ra sh
2 29 7tp
10·9·1fC.
p ic kup . ca bl e T V at yo u r
e11 p e n s e ,
and
on .site
l aund ry f ac i l ities . Con . T WO ca l ves , mi~&lt; e d Here ford
cow w i th ca l f. Phone 843 Another Money Saving Coupon For You
venlen t to sho p pi ng on Th ird
• I NCO R PQRA T!O
2353
an d Mill Slr ee rs in Mid
2 29 6tc
No.
36 a ., s ·r . home,
dl epo rt. See t h e manag er a t
Vlrgll B., Sr. , Brol&lt;er .
COUPON
R i v e r s ide A partment S or
carpet ed. mod . kitchen,
110Mechanic Pomeroy. 0 .
c a l l 99 2 3273
Fu rnished
Phone
t 97 ·1 24
F T . MEL
MAR f irep lace, f orced a i r f ur ..
apartment s
.ar e
a lso
Good through
WORTH
M o tor
H o m e,
one
of
fr .
ce llar,
seve ral ,
av a ilaO i e .
th e
best.
exce l
DORCAS - Building tot .
Mar . 19, 1976
ou t b ldg s .,. quie t co untry
2 1 78t c
lent co ndition , cos t over
se tting, $32,000 .00 .
194 x 124 next to c h urch .
S2Q·, ooo n ew, cornp lel efy se lf
No . 157 - 3 BR ., bat h &amp; v, ,
W ater available. S3,000 .
ON A
3 A ND .t f.IM . t u rni Sht:' d and
c ontained. 5000 wall gen .. 3
mod . kit. , ful l base ., a lum .
un f urnis h ed a pis . Phone 992
air con dit ione r s. fUr n ace ,
POMEROY 12 room
5434 .
s idi ng : fully insu l a t e d ,
bath , hot wat e r heater , gas
older
home
tor
the
11 9 t f c
and clec . r e f .. am t m rad io
$20,300.00 .
lnvester
.
Has
all
uti
lities.
s t er eo throug hout , roll o ut
Includes : Chetklng Complete System lor Leaks
No . 147 - 2 BR .. l ull base .,
COU NTRY
Mobile HomP.
S7500 . or make u s an offer .
awning , auto . tran sm ission ,
Add Freon if Nec;essary
some carpeti ng, $9,000.00
P a r k , R t. JJ , t en mi les nonh
ps , and pb , muc l'l m ore .
BURLINGHAM - 2 brs ..
Check Air Condition for proper operation
o t Pom eroy Lar ge tot s with•
No . 146 3 BR .. t ully
Phon e 9&lt;19 2770.
ba th , porches, gas hea.t.
c on c r e ~e patib s , sidewa lk s ,
Reg . Price ... S13 .50
Speciai ... Slo.so Plus Fre'on
'l 26 71c
. ca rpete d, mod. kit.. fu ll
T . P . Water . S6800. ortrade.
ru nn e rs and off streel
base .. o ther outbldg s ., 2
parking Phone 9917&lt;179 .
MIDDLEPORT - 7 rms ..
aC r es , $25,600 .00 .
Free Car Wash with Us' oflhis Coupon
12 3 1 1t c
· Now at Landmark
birch kit.. dining , 3 brs. ,
•
No. 133- J BR ., f ull ba se.,
bath , &amp; f lt ll basement .
LR . &amp; OR .. bath 8. 1 ,, 2
·~
, ·
Gard en . $17,000 .
cl·osed . in
porches ,
a ll

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

CASH WITH

"

. 992: ·2114

--·~

MAIL!

"''
·•

•

'

ORDER BY

ONLY

·SMITH NE~SQ.N·
MOTORS, INC._

D&amp;D

-

lfS EASY TO

__

Mobile Homes For Sale
1.1 x 70 MO B ILE Hom e, total
c le c 3 ton ce ntral a i r c on
di tio n e r . f'X r CII L" n l c on
d11 io n
Phon e 7.17 26BJ or
266-1
·; ?.l 7tc

--

A Low Cost
Want Ad
Will Cut
Cost of
I living •.....

Nath an Biggs
Rad ia tor Specill_i_~f

Specializ~

In Search of a Maestro 33.
11 :00--News 3,4,6,8,10.13.15; ABC News 33 .
11 : J~Johnny Carson 3,~.15; Movie "The Sex Symbol"
6.13 ; Movle " Massacre at Fori Holman" 8; Movie
"Let's Dance" 10; Janakl 33.
1:oo--Tomorrow 3~~ ; News 13.

1 0 : 3~Aimannac 20;

6:00--News 3, 4,8, 10, 13,15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33 .
6:30--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlltllh 6;
CBS News 8.10; Stan Bucklew : Basketball 9; Crop
Game 20; Carrascolendas 33 .
7:00--Tru th or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling lor
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; Wild Kingdom
13; Family Altair 15; Book Beat 20; Know Yo~r
School 33 . ,
7:3()-Lasl of fhe Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; yYild Wild
World of Anlmals 6; Match Game PM 8; Evening
Edition with Marlin Agron sky 20; The Judge 10; To
Tell the Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Book Beat 33.
8:00--Litlle House on the Pralrle 3,4, 15 ; Blonl&lt; Woman
6,13;; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10; The Way II Was
20; t mages of Aging 33.
8:3()-Lowelt Thomas Rememembers 20.
9:00---Chico &amp; The Man 3.4, 15; Bar etta 6, 13; Cannon
8.10; Great Performances 33; Images of Aging 20 .
9:3()-Dumpllngs 3,4,15.
10:00--Petrocelli 3,4,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6.13; Bluue
Knight 8, 10; ; News 20.
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F"rom th~ lergest Truck o'r J
Bulldoze,...Rad lator to . the
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delivery

service ,

Card of Thanks

A thought for the da y:

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for easr. viewing

5:00--Bonanza 3; Family Altair 8; Star Trek 15.
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·

FERRELL ' S GLASS &amp;
HOME MAINTENANCE
Siding - V i nyl
&amp;
Aluminum . Window Glass
&amp; Glazing . On t he Job or In

l~g

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3,1976

Pluaglau . Table Top s ·
M i rrors . Storm &amp; Screens .

BULk WATER
AVAILABLE
Tuppers Pla i n s Chesler
Wat e r D istr ic t now se ll ing
bulk water to tanks on
trucks al our new office!
Located on St. Rt . 7
I M i le N orth of
Eastern High School
Se rve Yoursel f Dispenser
Taking quarters on l y , one
·at a time, for 250 gallons of
water .
Open al l1he Time
tor your c onven ie nce!
3-t . Jmo .

i

Pets

Television

NOPE .. MAW'5
ALREADV GOT

A CORSET

[ ALMOST fANICJ&lt;'ED...

6UT NOW I'vE 015COVERf17
I DON'THAVE 10 WOR~...

�..
•

•

1&amp; - The DMily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, March 3, 1976
,.

Bayh, broke, drops out

~--------------------------1

:
I

Area Deaths - !
•

I

H. B. MANUEL
Herschel B. Manuel. 54 ,
d i,ed Wednesday morn ing at
h is home
In
Syracuse
following a lingering illness .
Mr . Manuel had been
service manager at the Karr
and Van Zandt Motor Co. for
17 years . He was a veteran of
World War II and belonged to
Rac ine Post Amer ican
Legion . He .was a member Of

the Pomeroy Masonic Lodge.
Preceding him in death
were his parents, Harry and
Maggie Hawthorn Manuel , a
brother, Russ~ll , and a sister ,

Gail Hopkins .

Surviving

JOHN TRIPLETT

New clerk on the job

ar~

his

wife.

Nlarjorie Moore Manuel. two
daughter s, Mrs . Jeann ie
Allen of Syracuse , and Mrs .
Janice Lisle of Pomeroy : a
brother , Dennis, of Marietta ;
two sisters, Mrs . Pauline
Monette, Columbus, and Mrs .
Coralee Cummins, Racine ;
four · grandchildren and
several nieces and nephews .
Funeral services will be
hel? at ·1 p . m . Friday at the
Ewmg Funeral Home with
the Rev . Richard Jarvis
officiating . Burial will be in
Letart
Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home anytime after 7
thi s evening .

he commuted to college. He
John Triplett, Wellston, has
begun his duties as clerk of stayed on campus the. final
MRS. PEARL HOLLOWAY
two yea rs of college.
the Meigs Local School
Carl Brannan, Middleport ,
Following graduation, he received
District's
Board
of
word of the death of
worked in the cons truction his sister , Mrs . Pearl
Education. A graduate of
business before acce ptin g Holloway , Eaton Rapids ,
We llston
High
School ,
Monday .
Mrs .
Triplett is the son of Mrs . appointment as a business Mi c h .,
Holloway
re sided
in
teacher at Wellston ijigh Middleport for about six
Agoes Triplett of Wellston
School: Triplett replaces L. rrionths. For many years she
and the late Irvin Triplett.
A business graduate of Ohio
W. McComas who resigned was a housemother at the W.
University, Triplett worked
after hailving served as clerk Va . Cottage at the VFW
National Hom e at Eaton
in his family's construction ' sin ce the district was formed ~apid s, Mi ch. Her funeral
10 years ago.
business during his first two
services wilt be held in that
city at th e Shel ly Funeral
years at the university when
Home on Fr iday .

News .. in 6riefs
(Continued from page 1)
about 18 and boys 16, 10 and 6, unidentified but possibly
members of the same family. They were sent to the state
medical examinee's office in Chapel Hill for autopsies . " Our
agents w;e just completely in the d;irk now. Everybody just
assumes 11 was a whole famil y," said State Attorney General
Rufus L. Edmisten .
Edmi$ten said first reports indicated all five had fractured
skulls.

BANK

BY MAIL

evening at the home ot a
daughter , Ethel Drake, in
New Haven.
Mr . Swiger is suntived by
his wife , Jessie Barker

Sw iger ; a son, Robert P.
Swiger, Proctorville ; three
daughters, Mrs . James
(Et hel) Drake , New Haven ;
Mr s.
David
( Wi l ma)
W~t er man , Marietta , and
Mr s.
{Es ther )
Blount ,

Martin s Fe rry , Ohio ; a
brother, three siste r s. 18
grandchildren and
great -grandc hildren .

seve n

Funeral services will be
held Thursday at 2 p. m . at
the Mt. Zion United Methodist
Church near Center Po int
with Dr . Donald L Flynn and

th e

Rev .

Marcus

Traugh

officiating . Burial will be in
Christian Church Emelery
Center Point.
'
Fr iends me~y c.:~ ll at the ·
Harbert Funeral
Home ,
Sa lem, W. Va ., until noon on
Thursday. The body will lie in
state at the church from 1 to 2
p , m. on Thursday .

FLORENCE ICENHOWER
LETART, W. Va . ~ Mrs
Florence Icenhower, 84 ; RD;
Letart, who died Monday in
Holzer Medical Center ~ was
born in Hartford , a daughter
of the late Albert ·and James
Hudson Roush ·and the widow
of the late Joseph Icen hower,
who died in 1954.
Funeral serv ices will be
held Thursday at 10: 30 a . m .
from the Foglesong Funeral
Home in Mason, the Rev .

CHECK PRESENTED ~ Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, third
from left, executive director of the Meigs County Council
on Agmg, presents Mrs . Maxine Plummer executive
director of the community mental health program of
Galha, Jackson and Meigs Counties with a $4,000 check

be r ealloca te d to other
counties if they had not been
appropriated to mental
health to be used in Meigs
County.
The board will place the
Meigs Coun ty mental health
levy on the ballot on June 8 . .
The amount of the levy will be
.2 of a mill, the same
requested fo r the levy
ren~::wal in November .
The Novem ber levy needed
only 350 votes of support in
order to pass.
The center in Meigs Co unty
ser ves approximate ly 400
persons, 1,200 patient visits
per year . the clinic also
prov ides
approximate ly
$15,000 of Jnedicalion at no
cos t to the patient. ' This is

Continuation of lim ited
Morri son · setvices was assured this
officiati ng . Burial wi ll be in
week when $12 ,000 was obthe IOOF Lodge Ceme tery in tained to balance the Meigs
Mason
·
Friends wi l l be received at County mental health clinic's
the funeral home from 2 to 4 budget until June 30.
and 7 to 9 p, m . today .
Sources of th e funding ,
Survivinq are a ha tf.sister .
according
to Mr s. Maxin e
Mn•. Lena Johnson, Brilliant
Plwnrner,
executive
director
Ohio ; a half ·brother. Gar lan·d
Roush , Brilliant; a niece ,
of the 648 Board of the Gallia Mrs . Pete (Betty) Burris,' Meigs-Jackson Counties, was
Brilliant ; two nephews,
LESTER PAUL SWIGER
from three soW'ces:
Albert L. Roush , Letart , w ith
NEW H·AVEN Lester
I ~ '$2,245 from personal
whom she lived, and Richard
Paul Swiger, 69 , Cen ter
E. Roush . Ctleshire, Otl io.
propei ty taxes fro{n the
Poin t, W. Va ., died Monday
October , t975 setllemenl.
2 - The sun1 of $4,000
transferred as. a grant from
the Oh io Comm iss ion on
1Continued from page 1)
Aging for Aid to Independent
The ladder truck as it sits will cost $10,000 and will require . Living I ass urin g m en ta l
health services to seniors who
$4,000 to $6,000.to update and equip it.
·
Thus, a total of $14,000 to $16,000 is needed to provide an may be clients ).
3 -c. The balance pf the
aerial ladder for thE;! fire and rescue service of your area
compared to the purch~seprit'O of approximately $150,000 for a $2,000 in matching ftmds fror'n
new aerial ladder truck. A thou.~and dollars has already boen the slilte.
Arrang~ment s for ,"con paid to hold the truck for us and the balance will have to be
. tiriuation of the! service were
paid when the truck is picked up .
·
"The truck should be a vailable within two to three weeks, completed Ht a rn ee ling on
so this does not give us much time to raise the money with Feb . 23 of the 648 board.
which to purchase the vehicle .
Earlier, the board had a n" A fund drive will be started similar to the drive that was nounced it would discontinue
conducted to purchase the Middleport emergency squad truck services in Meigs County if
in 1974 which was very successful because of your generositx. local fUflds were not made
"I sincerely hope thiat this fund drive can be as successful available by Marcl1 t.
because the fire services of the county, especially Pomeroy
The clinic nnw with the
and Middleport, with their larger business districts, certainly additional funds, will operate
need this aerial ladder truck. Again, the success or failure of with limited staff until adthis project depends upon you."
·
ditional can be made
While a door~o-door campaigu is not planned in other available through a local levy
areas served by the Middleport Fire Department, a spokes- which will be proposed to
man said that contributions will be greatly appreciated. voters On june 8. ·
Contributions can be sent to the department at 2lffi Race SL,
Mr s. Eleanor Th omas ,
Middleport. Checks should be made out to the Meigs County executive director of Meigs
Citizens Fire Departments Fund .
County Counci l on Aging
sta ted
that
the sli:\te
legislatur e app ropriated
SERVICES SET
fWld s to the Ohio CC1mmission
World Day of Prayer service
will be held Thursday, March on Aging to be used as
matching funds for Aid to
4, at the Hysell Run Free
(Continued from page 131
Independent I.iving monies in
In
other
legislative Methodist Church at 7:30 each of the 88 counties to help
p .m. The public is invited to
developmentS :
provide services to sen iors.
attend.
-The House adopted, 87 to
These fund s ha ve to be
6, and sent to the Senate a
match ed with Tille XX
resolution calling on the
monies, and Mental Health
LOCAL TEMPS
attorney
.general
to
has a contract with the stale
Tern'pcratW'e in downtown
investigate. the s~pply and
to prov ide these services.
quality of canning jar lids Pomeroy Wednesday at 11
The fund s would have had
a.m. was 75 degrees under
sold in Ohio.
to bo returned to the state to
partly cloudy skies. ·
Jame s

DO YOUR BANKING
BY MAILI
A Home Bank

G.

firemen

Nobody asked Willi
· •ams CODVIC
• 1e d
the trustees
on four charges

which will keep the Meigs CPI!nty Mental llealth Center
operating until June 30, this year. Looking on from the left
are Mrs. Maxine Wingett, Racine, a : member of the trlcounty board, and Mrs. Mary Skinner, director of the
Meigs County Advocacy Program.

,

Meigs .health clinic continued
made possibie by the " 648"
Board's contract with the
Slate Pharmaceutical Board
for all medications of patients
for the three counties.
Mrs. Plummer slated that

local Ohio communit-ies now
have the responsibility of
providing local mental health
services. In the past, these
patients from Meigs County
were going to Athens Mental
Health Center for outpatient
treatment and medication .
The outpatient unit at Athens
Mental Health Center has
been closed and has also the
Nelsonville
Children's
Center.
Unless a patient needs to be
hospitalized, the Meigs
County clinic is the only

service provides for these ·
patients. The approximate
cost for a patient per year in a ·
state hospital is $19,000 per
patient. The Mental Health
Center for outpatient care
cost is $1,200 per patient. The
cost per day at Nelsonville
Children's Center averaged
$250.
The 1Meigs County Men!al
Health Center is providing_
funds for the Personal Advocacy program and \he
Meigs Care line . The Personal
Advocacy program is funded
100 percent by a grant from
Ohid Developmental
Disabilities. These programs
were approved by the Board
to continue , with no reduction

in

~rvices.

Elberfelds In Pome·roy

he would support in the looking ahead to the Illinois
gradually narrowing field primary the
following
still actively seeking the Tuesday, starts a two-&lt;lay
nominatiion.
lllinois trip Friday and may
Bayh ~U~id his campaign follow it up with a final
had been aiming at reaching Florida visit.
full swing In the New York
Udall, after finishing
primary April 6.
second in Massachusetts
Because of his financial behind Henry Jackson, went
condition and the losses in to New York to urge liberals
New England, Bayh said, it to unite behind him or see the
would not be reali.stic to nomination go to Jackson,
continue campaigning.
Jimmy Carter or George
I n I n d i a n a p o I i s Wallace.
·
Wednesday, a close friend
Udall predicted the April 6
said Bayh would become an New York primary may be
"inactive candidate" in the
"the last chimce we have to
race, which would allow him see
a
mainstream
to receive matching federal progressive
get
the
campaign funds but would . nomination."
not require him to campaign
Jackson predicted "a clean
in future primaries. _ .
victory" for himself in New
On the GOP front, Ronald York. He said his MassaReagan is opening a four-day chusetts win showed his
blitz in Florida before next strength in the big industrial
Tuesday's showdown with states, which he termed the
President Ford.
Ford, key to the nomination.

.e

CHESHIRE - Residents of
this community are disturbed
over recent noise and dirt
problems caused by the
" litUe gianl" south of here,
the General James M. Gavin
Plant.
,, .
The situation has become
so bad, in fact, a committee
has been appointed to meet
with
Gallia
County
Prosecuting Attorney Gene
Wetherholt to see what can be
don~ legally .
The committee is composte d of Mayor Scotty ·
Lucas, councilman Lee
· McCarty
and
a
citizen represent~tive , Jim

Preston. The meeting will be
held at 10 a.m . Friday.
According to Mayor Lucas ,
residents have become highly
irritated over a loud lljetlike" sound caused by a
leaking safety valve known
as "a super-heater outlet
header relief valuve ." The
aro und-the- clock noise
sta,..,d several weeks ago.
Assistant Gavin plant
manager Andy Mulato
Wednesday afternoon said
the problem will be resolved
during routine m~intenan ce
work beginning Ml!rch 13.
" We ·have assured Cheshire
residenls and the Village

Meil(s County

William Smith, Rutland
Township trustee, announced
People
. today that the trustees have
never been approached by
anyone to have Happy Hollow
Road blacktopped as stated
by
Robert
Richmond,
Rutland , to . the commissioners last Tuesday .
Smith urged all interested
persons to attend the trustee
meeting which are held the
last Wednesday of each
month at the Rutland Fire
Stateion
at 6:30 p. m . Other
RACINE
OHIO
trustees are Harold Dewhurst
, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,
, and Charles Barrett, Jr .

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL
BANK

,-----------------------------· ~--

FRONT TRACTOR TIRES ·
"TRIPLE RIB R/S"

CLAIMED BY DEATH
EWINGTON - Mrs. Goldie
Graham, Ewington, died
Tuesday evening at Holzer
·Medical Center following a
brief
illness .
Funeral
arrangements are being
made at the Wilkesville
Chapel of the Walker Funeral
Home .

500xl5x4 Ply

Plus .67 F.E.T.

MEIGS THEATRE

650x16x4 PLY

600x16x4 PLY

-~~u~ET

$27'6

i.~su~ET

Tonite thru Thurs.
Mar. 3·4
NOT OPEN

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MEIGS TIRE CENTER
POMEROY

992-2101

and
three-day
costs jail
and sentence
was given
on a
DWI charge.

THIS GROUP OF SPANISH students of Meigs High School won first place in Spanish folk
singing at tl1e second annual Southeastern Qhio Language Fair held at Ohio University
Saturday. InCluded are: front row, I tor, Kay Vujaklija, guitar; Dan Will, guitar · Cecelia
Rinaldi, instructor; second row., I tor, Laura Cole, Julie_Byer, Karen DeMoss,
Brauer, ·
Cindy Dorst , Helen King, Lori Wyne; back row,! tor, Chuck Kennedy, Todd Rawlings, Bob
·
Seelig, Chris Yeaug~r and Nick Joseph.

This Week

OHIO

Fr.-Sai .-Sun .
Mar. 5-7
French Connection 11

I Technlcotor l
Show sf arts 7: 00p.m .

prices off

At Ingels

Furniture

$3 9988
.·

.

.

NORGE commercial
Quality Heavy

the sa me hlltlVy-duty transmisSion
proven in use in Norge equipped coin ope rat ed commerclal laundries and In · pr '11 ' -&gt;liq l ,tl\

lt lqill '1 k1 tll

millions of homes · ask about 5 yr.

~l!lll f ! o l q.1 ·1 rlr'v' ''

SECOND PLACE IN bicentennial map-making at the
Southwestern Ohio Lauguage Fair at Ohio University
Saturd11y went to Lori Wyne, left, pictured with her
Spanish instructor, Cecelia Rinaldi. MisS Wyne won the
two Charlie Brown books, printed in Spanish, as Mr prize.

:

Pancake supper set March 12th

war~anty

complete price washer AND dryer
: !
FAMILY SIZE FULLY AUTOMATIC NORG'E PAIR

Imag me .. your .OWr'l fully i;!ulomatlc washer and your choice of efectric or gasdrytJr'a complete home~ d ·
.
·
un ermscen 1er a1 or;e 1ow pr~ce. for ~th mach.mes.
You get fam ily si.ze 10 lb. capacity, more than enough to han 1e the average
wash load of today s awu.ctge fam•ly . You get 5 auromariC washing cycles, 3' automatic d'ying cycles, plus the same
ma~hinas.
features, the same convamance, the same Norge quatitv that is built into the big Norge 20 lb.
j

•

.

Middleport police investigated two accidents
Wednesday resulting in
mediwn to heavy damages
and one person hospitalized.
At 2:37p.m. on Powell st.. a
car driven by Ralph J.
·Lowenstein, Cincinnati,
struck the rear of a c~r
driven by Juanita M. Ferrell,
Middleport, who had slowed
in her lane of traffic.
The Ferrell car. was not
damaged, but there were
extensive damages to the
front of Lowenstein's. A
passenger in the Ferrell"car,
Louella J . Ratliff, Mid"
die11ort, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital

Pam'

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•
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•ll WI\ IOtJIJI\\\'.1:-.Itl'r
' 11 ndd lllJI. 10!1{1/t.l'll~ltlli' dr yl 't

'

Damage heavy
in traffic mishaps

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Hand-Crafted
Transmission:;---Jw____j____

call from ' the Sisk family
saying the child had been
abducted .
The body was found in a
freshly dug grave in a field.
near the Sisk•s mobile home
at Letart.
·
However , a pathologist had
detennined that the baby had
been strangled and her head
beaten, according to Cecil
Dean, assistant prosecuting
attorney of Mason County.
interrogating
the
In
mother, Dean said, 11 Her
story was that one or her
socks got stuck on a piece of
furniture and she fell on it."
A surviving 19-month-&lt;Jid
Sisk boy has been placed in
the custody of the West
Virginia Department of
Welfare . Dynamite wrappers
were found by State Police at
the Sisk home .
Koerner quoted Sisk 's
parents as saying he was
very upset by the infant's
death , and they figure he
(Continued on page 12)

Dateline 1776

Mass., March 4 - A Ioree
Council the leakage problem · villagers' woes, Lucas said.
of 3,000 Americans under
command of Gen. John
wiU be repaired," Mulato
Thirty - five village
said.
Thomas began the oc·
r~sidents registered comcupation of · Dorchester
Sever a l residents have plaints during • the regular
complained that the nois~ is Cheshire council me·e ting
Heights during the night.
so intense they cannot sleep Momjay night.
Cannon brought overlan4
at night.
from Ticonderoga and
Mayor Lucas said village
materials lor lortllleatlons
folks also are " up in arms "
poured onto the mill
Cloudy, chance of showers
over the dirt from the plant
throughout the darkness.
and additional dirt and coal or thundershowers tonight, ;:;:;:::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
flying off trucks bringing.coal lows in the upper 50s. Cloudy,
to the plant. It has been warm with showers and
LOCAL TEMPS
estimated that 300 trucks thunderstorms Friday. Highs
in
the
mid
70s.
Probability
of
Temperature
in downtown
haul .coa l to the piant each
rain
60
per
cent
today,
40
per
Pomeroy
Thursday
at 11 a.m.
·
day.
70
per
cent
cent
tonight,
·
was
75
degrees
under'
parity
The added traffic has
Friday.
cloudy
skies.
caused more dirt 'and dust ;
which has added .to the

Big_ selection of fabrics and colors in both lined and
unlmed styles. Please bring window measurements.

QUALITY
and VALUE··
Sales
Days

'

enttne

at y

FOR YOUR HOME OR OFFICE

'

GOODYEAR "SPECIAL"

'1976

Ronnie ... Williams, 23,
Middleport, was convicted on
four charges when he appeared in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night. He was fined
$50 and costs, disorderly
manner; $50 and costs and a
10-day jail sentence for
resisting arrest; 30 days in
jail on a charge of issuing a
menacing threat to a police
officer, and 15 days on a
charge of issuing a menancing threat to an infant.
Margaret V. Yonkers
Mason, W: Va ., was fined $150

POINT PLEASANT
Authorities still puzzled today
over what triggered a
dynamite explosion in a jail
cell which killed a young
co uple and two law enforcement officers and injured II other persons .
Bruce Sisk, 19, who carried
the dynamite into the cell in a
sui tease, and his wife,
Harriet, 18, were killed along
with Mason County Sheriff
Elvin " Pete" Wedge, 48, and
Deputy Kenneth Love, 34.
Mrs . Sisk was being held in
the ceU on a murder charge in
the death of th~ couple's two,

•

-Sleep isn't easy in Cheshire

&gt;

For

l

•

CUSTOM DRAPERIES

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Blast trigger
~till mystery

Three Democrats who
fared
poor
in
Massachusetts
Fred
Harris, Sargent Shriver and
Milton Shapp - said they
would keep campaigning.
Harris, in Chicago, said he
expects to pick up many of
Bayh's supporters because
"a lot of what he says
parallels what I'm saying."

month-&lt;Jld daughter.
The injured included six
law
officers and five jail
wlbere are no conditions
inmates
.
whatsoever that would lead
Sisk
used a shotgun
me to withdraw," said Shapp.
Tuesday
night to force the
· Carter claimed Jackson
admit him to his
jailer
to
ran a one-issue campaign in
WANTS REELECTION
wife's cell, declaring he was
Massachusetts focused on
- Larry E. Spencer,
going to spend the nlghtwith
busing but he can't do that in
Racine, Republican clerk
her.
Florida . .
or C&lt;Jurls, Tuesday flled· hts
Although some officials
Jackson branded the
petition to seek nomination
speculated that Sisk fired his
charge " malarkey ." The
to run for reelection to his
shotgun into the dynamite to
reason he ran full-page ads in
county post Flllag for the
detonate it in his wife's cell.
Boston announcing he was
Democratic Central
West Virginia State Police
against busing, Jackson said,
Sgt. M. P. Koerner said it has
was to counter " the Committee TUesday was
Mrs. Audrey Young ,
not been detennined how the
misrepresentation by Gov.
Pomeroy First Ward.
blast was triggered.
(Continued on page 12)
"We need to complete a
search for the type of explosives used." Koerner said .
" We haven't found the shotgun the man was supposed to
have used ."
The mother was arrested
Monday in the death of her
infant daughter whose bolly
was foWld by authoritles in a
VOL
XXVII
NO.
227
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
THURSDAY,
MARCH
4,
1976
PRICE
FIFTEEN
CENTS
live-hour search Saturday.
-----:---'-~-------------'-------------_:._ _ _ _:.___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Authorities responded to a

NOW YOU CAN SAVE 30% .ON

Senate

FOR GREATER CONVE:.NIENCE!

By J()IIN MOODY
NEW YORK (UP!)
Senator Birch Bayh, D-lnd.,
today dropped out of the
active . race
for
the
Democratic presidential
nominatioll.
"Our campaign treasury is
depleted and we are left ·
without
the
resources
necessary to conduct the kind
of active campaign required" ·
following bad showings in the ·
Hampshire
and
New
Massachusetts primaries, he
said.
" ] have determined to suspend my active campaign for
the Democratic presidential
nomination," he said.
The move left seven majo1·
Democrats in the race for the
White House .
In a written statement
issued prior to a news
conference, Bayh made no
mention of which Democrat

The Meigs County Council the food for the supper and
on Aging will stage a ·public members of the group will bo
pancake and sausage supper handling
the
pancake
,from 4 to 7 p.m. friday, makiqg.
March 12, a\ the Senior
Citizens Center, W. Main St.,
Pomeroy.
Tickets lot the supper, with
AA .OPENSUP
An open meeting .of
the Rev. Robert Bumgarner
as chairman, are available at Alcoholics Anonymous will bo
the center at $1.75 for adults · held alB p.m. Saturday in the
and $1 for children under 12. former council chambers,
'l1le Meigs County United first floor of Middleport
{
~thodlal Men are furnishing ·Village Hall.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Wholesale prices ·fell 0.5
percent in . F'ebruary, the
biggest monthly decline in
nearly a year, the Labor
Department said today.
The
overall · decline
reflected the fourth consecutive monthly drop in food
prlces and an easing of inflationary pressures on industrial goods.
Wholesale prices, which
generally foreshadow pr,ices
paid by consumers, have
either declined or remained
un.c hanged over the past !our
months . But February's
repor! showed the bigge~t
single monthly improvement
since an 0.5 per cent drop in
March, 1975.

SUIT FILED
A suit for partition of real
estate has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
Carrie
Neutzling,
by
Pomeroy, against Bertha
Ebersbach , Middlep!H't et al.
The property is locateg in
A house-to-house canvass
Pomeroy . Carol Sue Layne for funds to be used on the
was granted a divorce from purchase of an aerial ladder
Leo Francis Layne on truck for use in the area will
charges of gross neglect of be conducted in Pomeroy
duty and extreme cruelty.
from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday.
Sunday also was to he
Heart Fund Sunday drive day
in Pomeroy. However, Heart
TEACHERS APPEAL · Fund officials said members
CINCINNATI (U PI) _ A of Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of
teachers organiza lion is Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
.
completed the dr1ve earher
appealing a federal appeals : tha
h dul d
.n
court ruling that Cincinnati
. n sc e e • 1eavl g 0 n1Y
bl'
h 1 te h
t Middleport to observe Heart
fu ~c ~~ 0 \
~cd_e~.
~us
Fund Sunday.
tve ln e SC 00 IS lC •
A house-to-hoUse canvass

Y

K

DAMAGED COURTIIOUSE C!.OSED- The Mason County Courthouse has been closed
until further notice following TUesday night's blast which killed four persons and injured 11
others. Nole crack ill corner of the Ill-year-old structure at bottom of photo , - Steve Wilson
photo.

Ladder fund drive is Sunday
. in Middleport for the aerial
ladder truck as a result of the
Heart Sunday Drive has been
scheduled for Sunday, March

joined by other volunteers for weeks .
the canvass, and -in Naylors
Need for the aerial ladder
Run, the Junior Auxiliary will truck became appare nl
handle the drive. In some .during the. recent Stilf 1
14.
instances workers may begin Dept. store lire and a gn• 1
In Pomeroy, the American · the drive before the 2 to 4 started a fund drive for ·t
Legion Auxiliary of Drew p,m. drive Sunday.
first departments of th . •
Webster Post 3ll is sponsoring
An aerial ladder truck has county, hopefully to raise
the aerial ladder truck fund been located in Springfield, money for an aerial ladper
drive with Mrs. Faye Ill., and can be purchased for vehicle.
Wildermuth,
community $10,000. Some $4,000 ad"
The truck will be available
service chairperson of the ditional funds will be needed for use throughout&lt; · Meigs
auxiliary, and Mrs. Grace to put the vehicle in good County. Checks ior the truck
Pratt, auxiliary president, repair and to equip i I. A down should be made out to the
co-chairpersons.
payment has been made on Meigs County Fire DepartAuxiliary members will be the vehicle which should be ment's Citizens Fund .
available in the next few

House hill would have in~ustry buy special g~s

By J.R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio House Wednesday apOW
OU
llOW proved, 7~19, and sent to the
In her lifetime , one termite Senate legislation requiring
queen can produce over 500 Industries alone to bear the
C&lt;Jst of emergency natural
million children.
gas purchases, despite
Republican objections that
..
OFFICER NAMED
the bill would force Industry
QES PLAINES, Ill. \UP!) to leave the slate.
~ Richard W. Owens has
Rep. Mike Stinziafio, Dbeen elected secretary of the CoiUJllbus, introduced the bill
American Farm Bureau last January as an al!Swer to
Federation. Owens, retired a Public Utilities Commission
secretary ol'the California of Ohio order spiiUing (he
Farm Bureau Federation, cost· of the emergency
was elected during an AFBF purchases between induatrial
board of directors meeting and residential customers.
Wednesday. He will also be
Slinziano argued that
chief administrator of the holll!!Owners shoul~ not have
national farm group, and will to pay between $18 million
work out of the Des Plaines and $20 million for th~ 17
office.
billion cubic ~ol ~as

N

where she was admitted.
Lowenstein was fined $10 and
costs in the court of Mayor
Fred Hoffmim for failing to
maintain clear distance .
At 6:25p.m. on Second Ave.
a car driven by David C.
Tiemayer , 17, Pomeroy,
struck the parked car of
Roscoe Gibson, Akron, in
Middleport visiting relatives .
Tiemeyer told officers .he
dropped a cigaret and
reached over- to retrieve it
when he struck the Gibson
car. The car driven by
Tiemeyer is owned by
Timothy Davidson. There
were medium damages to the
left rear and fender of the
Gibson car and to the right
front of the Davidson vehicle . .
Tiemeyer will · be charged
with assured clear distance in
Meigs County Juvenile Court.

purchases which reduced
"Homeowners are already
Industrial curtailments.
subsidizing industry at a
Stinziano is also asking magnificent raie," countered
homeowners to withhold $1 a Stinzlano, citing statistics
month from their gas bUls as which showed that in .1974,
a protest to the PUCO action. residential customers paid
Tuesday, the Ohio Supreme more
than
industrial
Court temporarily set aside 1 customers for less natural
two lower court rulings which gas purchased. .
had prohibited Columbia Gas
The bill contains an
of Ohio, Inc. from collecting emergency clause, which
the residential surcharge for would put lt into effect
the $33 million emergency · immediately
upon
the
gas pllrchase.
governor's signature.
The PUCO is to begin
The surcharge began to
appear on homeowner bills hearings later this month to
last month.
determine pricing policy on
"This bill will give jobs to future emergency natural
other states," said Rep. Nor- gas purchases - if needed.
man A. Murdock, R·
Stinziano's bill, if enacted,
Cincinnati. "Industry has would supercede any PUCO
been and cootinues to suffer. Internal decision oo what
This bill is a sham, a charade class of customer would pay
and ol political ill repute." for the e~rgency purchases.

The legislator told the ·
House that failure to pass the
discourage
bill
would
Industry from changing;:_to
alternative fuel sources, or to
continue measures to
conserve what natural gas is
currently
available
to

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday
tb~Ough
Monday, fillr Saturday and
Sunday and a chance ol
showers Monday, Highs
will be in ihe mid 30s lo the
40s Saturday and in the 40s
to the 50s Sunday and
Monday. Lows will be in
the upper 20s to the 30s
Saturday and Sunday and
In the 30s Monday . .

Industry .
Opponents said the bill was
a " terrible precedent" of the
legislature invading the
utility ·r.ate-rnaking function
of the PUCO, and that
consumers would pay fiH' the
emergency purchases
anyway, since industries
would have to raise the retail
price of their manufactured
goods because of tbo extra
cost of energy.

WANT THE LEAK
W'ASHINGTON (UP! )
The House has given ils
Ethics Committee broad
powers to track down the leak
of a classified congressional
intelligence report to CBS
reporter Daniel Schorr.
~

.~

I

(

'

.

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