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10 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monda y, M•rch 8, 1976

Eight teenagers
killed in road
CEUNA, Ohio (UP!) Eight teen-agers, en route to
a dance, were killed and live
others injured late Sunday
when they were struck by a
car as Utey stood in the
middle of a county road 10
miles
south
of
th is
norUtwestern Ohio city.
Seven of tl1e victims were
killed instantly and Scott
Weslerheide, 15, Minster,
who was critically injured
died early tnday a t St. Rita 's
hoSpital in Lima.
The other victims were

identified by the Ohio Highwy
Patrol as Michael KemJK'r,
17 ; Lester Ranly, 16 ;
Barbara Olding, 14; Anthony
Kemper,
17:
Becky
Moorman ,' 15; Kenneth
Sommer, 15, and Joy
Brandewie, 14.
All of Ute victims were
from Minster, Ohio.
Ohio Highway Patrol Sgt.
Victor Ralston said about 50
teen--agers were riding in a

ca ravan of

nine

cars,

treated for minor injuries at
St. Marys Joint Township
Hospital in St. Marys. The
other injured teenagers ,
Douglas Heyne, 16, and
James Dues, 16, were in fair
condition today at Community Hospital in Cold "'aler , Ohio. All the tnjured
were from Minster.
Southwes t
Kansas 55 Okl ahoma 50
Kansas St 81 Ok l ;, , St 78 (ot J
N ew M e»t1co 59 Texas E l
Paso 58
N . Mex 5 1. IOJ So . Ill , 9 2 lo t i
Tulsa 87 Or al Robe r ts 78

Sunda'l'') College
Bask e tball Result s
Un ited Pr ess lnter-naft onal

San

PCAA Pl ayoff ,
Diego St . 76 Pa ci f 1c

ICal l 64

MarQu elle 7'l Sou lh Ca ro11na

''PING INAUGURATED
ATHENS, Ohio I UP!)
Newly inaugurated Ohio University President Charles J .
Ping said universities must
prepare Jl&lt;'Ople for work in
both public and private life .
His statements came in his
Saturday inauguration
address, shortly after Ohio
Supreme Court Chief. Justice
C.
William
O'Neill
administered the oath of
office.
Ping, a former provost at
Central Michigan University,
became
OU 's
18th
president.

apparently en route to a
nearby teenage ballroom at
the time o! the accident 10
miles south o! Celina, Ohio.
"The lead car stopped in
Ute westbound lanes of Ft.
Recovery·Minster Rd .,"
Ralston said. "The victims
got out of Ute cars Utey were
riding in to see what was
~appening .
They were
standing in the eastbound
lane when they were struck."
Ralston said no charges
were filed , pending an
investiga lion o! the mishap .
LOCAL TEMPS
Injured ana in critica l
The
temperature
in
condition at St. Rita 's
downtown
Pomeroy
at
11
Hospital in Uma was Scott
a.m. Monday was 47 degrees
Westerheide, 15.
tmder
partially cloudy skies.
Chris Deters , 15, was

MEIGS THEATRE
Mon . Mar . 8
NOT OPEN

Tues .- Thurs .
Mar . 9·11'

NASHVILLE
( Techn icolor)
Starring : Many Nashville
stars and songs. 11 R"
Show Starts at 7: 00p .m .

;.;.;.:-: :·:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:::.·-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:···:·:·:·:·:·

W r.i,ltht Patman

of Texas dies
WASHINGTfiN jUPI) Rep. Wright Patman, !).
Tex., the 82-year-old dean
of

th e
House
uf
ReprPsentatives "'ho was

strlpJK'd of his powerful
committee

chairmanship

last year, died Sunday
after a tw&lt;rweek bout with
pneumonia.
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday at the
First Baptist Church In
Texarkana ,
Tex .
Patman e ntered
Congress in 1928 to battle
the big hanks and the
federal reserve system,
which he called " a wholly
owned subsidiary of the
American
bankers

association."
.;.;.;.;.;.;.;:;.;.;:::;.;.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:

llRI~~~SE N SJ(;NS
CINCINNATI IU PI ) - The
Cin&lt;"innati Reds have nine
players unsigned today,
following the weekend
signing or inlielder-&lt;lulltelder
Danny Driessen.
Driessen, who hit .281, had
seven home runs and knocked
in 38 runs last season lor the
World Champions, Saturday
became the 31st Reds player
In come to tenns.
Among Utose still dickering
is all-star second baseman
Joe Morgan.

TWO HOSPITAUZED
RACINE - The Racine ER unit Sunday evening took
Mrs. Gaynell Clark, Racine ,
to Veterans
Memorial
Hoapital. Mrs. Clark had
been injured in alaU. She was
admitted at 9:45 a.m.
Satur&lt;J;oy, the Racine squad
took Raymond Hartley,
Racine, w VMH where he
was admitted.

--------------------------I .

Area Deaths

CARROLL E. MATTHEWS

CHESHIRE - Carroll E.
Matthews, 54 , Rt . 1. Cheshire.

who

died
unexpectedly
Sa turda y evening at the
Veteran s M emorial Hospital ,
was born here Apri l 3, 1921.
ttl e son of th e late Davrd and
Mayme Frasier M atthews
He was a lso pr eceded in
deat h by three brother s.
Surviving are his wife ,
Evelyn Fi fe Matthews ; a
daug tlt er , M r s
Richard
(Carolyn) Haldeman , Dover .
Delaware , on e son. Gerald
tJerry) Matthews, Cheshire ;
t wo s i st e r s, Mr s. Fred
(V i r ginia) Tay lor , Price .
Utah , a nd Mrs . Claude
(Winifred)
Rid e nour ,
Ch eshire; two brother s,
Way ne, Chesh1re, a nd Dav1d .
Jr ., Beckley, W. Va ., thr ee
gr anddaughters, a nd two
grandsons .
He was a m ember of the
Silver Run Free Will Baptist
Church. a veteran of the

News •. in Briefs
I Continue'&lt;! from page 1)

Liberation Army .
"My hoP&lt;' is that I will be able to testify in court; il my
laW';ers feel I should, and I will talk a bout what my part is in
this whole Uting," Soiiah, 27, said in an interview when asked
about Hiss Hearst. Soliah shared his San Francisco aparlment
with Ute newspaper heiress at Ute time ol her capture last
September . He is accused of taking part in an April 21, 1975,
SLA-linked robbery In which $15,247 was taken from a Crocker
National Bank branch in Carmichael, Calif. Customer Myrna
Lee Opsahl, 42, a mother of lour, was killed by a shotgun blast
while making a deposit for her church.

army 1n Wor ld War 2, and
worked as a steel wor ker at
Midwest St eel Co .
Funera l services wi ll be
held Tuesday at 2 p.m . at the
Silver Run Free Wil l Bap t ist
Chur ch with the Rev . Merlin
Teet s offic iat ing. Bur ial witt
be in the Cheshire Grav,et Hill
Ce metery .
Friends may call at l he
Rawl1ng s· Coats
Funer al
Home until 12 30 Tuesday
when th e body wi l l be taken to
the church .

Huspila.l News
Veterans Memorial Huspit31
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
Raymond · Hartley ,
Racine; Clara Lavender ,
Syra cuse ; Mary Wond s,
Syracuse .

SATURDAY
DIS CHARGES
LQvie
Wa tsu n. Phillip La co mb,
Pauline Cunningham, Violet
McDonald, Richard White,
Wyllis Davts, Sr., James
Eakins, Geraldine Spencer,
Vernon Blevins, Ava Gilkey ,
Anthony Mills, Truneda
Bragg, Fred Henderson and
Arthur Roberts.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Richard Gibbs, Racine; Ellsworth Dill, Reedsville; David
Mills, Middleport ; Tanya
Cundiff, Mason ; Amanda
Auther s()n,

Pomeroy;

Thelma Fitchpatrick, Middleport ; J uanita Chapman,
Clifton, W. Va.; Allen Hamm,
Pomeroy ; Juanita Ferrell,
Middleport ; Marian Durham,
Pomeroy ; Chester Knight ,

Pomeroy; Mildred Bissell,
Tuppers Plains; Ida Dudding, Middleport: Jo Ann
Wolfe , Syracuse ; Eugene
Underwood, Tuppers Plains;
Cora Clark, Racine ; Loretta
Imboden, Middleport.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Emerson Houdashelt,

Bar-

Sgt~

David Proffit, 46,

•

1814: We hail another hero.
Maybe our generals haven't done very well on the northern
front. But do we have a fighter down south! The British have
planned to seize New Orleans and kill our Mississippi trade.
They even think they'll hold Louisiana and trade it in at the
end of the war for territory in the Northwest. Andrew Jackson. has a different idea. He's a frontiersman and an Indian
fighter. He knows how to use every man in the area, every
gun and every mule. Never mind that they're too few. Never
mind that most of them have never before seen battle. He
knows strategy, and his men know how to shoot. The British
veterans attack. And Jackson and his handful show them
what they know. It costs the British 2,000 casualties in a
twenty-minute battle. Jackson loses 8.frontiersmen . We win
the Battle of New Orleans. !il

help coming to pay cost
of Blue Cross hospital plans

claimed by heart attack
Sgt. David L. Proffit, 46 , 491
Maple St., Gallipolis died at
4:40a .m . Monday at Holzer
Medical Center following an
apparent heart attack. He
was born Oet. 12, 192!) at
Portsmouth , son of the late
Alvan Proffit and Hel en
Cooper Proflit of Chillicothe.
He was a member of the
Ohio State Highway Patrol.
He entered the patrol
academy May 3, 1954. He
received his commission
Aug . 6, 1954 and was stationed
at the Gallia-Meigs post. He
served at the Cinciinnali post
frOIIl 1964~ an d returned to
Gallipolis in 1966. He was
promtoed to corporal in 1967
and sergeant in 1969.
He married Mary Ross
Nov . 12, 1955 in Gallipolis. She
survi ves along with two

L

awmen

!Continued from page I )
Wedge, who came w pay
Hol•er Medical Center
Uleir la st respects, joined in
I Births, March 51
as tl made its way south ward
Mr . and Mrs. Jess V. thr oug h Point Pleasant,
Louden, daughter, Bidwell: turning left at 6th St. and
Mr . and Mrs . Hobert M.
traveling approximately 20
r.Jullms, daughter, Wells ron: mil es to the Creston
Mr . and Mrs . David R eese , Cemetery on Route 87 where
Nettie Boggard Wright
son,
Oak Hill ; Mr . and Mrs . the final salute was given the
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Nellie
Boggord
Wright ,
77,
Carl E. Smith , daughter , former popular sheriff.
Syr acuse,
died
Sunday
Jackson.
"Th1 s is a time of deep
morning at the Arcadia
1
Births,
March
6)
sorrow
and loss" said Dennis
Nursmg Home .
Mr
.
and
Mrs
.
Warr
en
Colburn
at the funeral serMrs. Wright was preceded
in death by tler hu sband , Joe Bayes, daugh ter , Wellston; vtce .
D. Wright, an infant Mr. and Mrs. Timothy A.
"We think ol the eternal
daug hter , and a brother .
Coli,
son,
Jackson
;
Mr
.
and
things
whtch cannot be seen.
A m ember of t he Fir st
Mr
s.
Ronnie
E.
Steed,
All
that
is of value tha t can be
Church of God here, Mrs
Wrigh t is survived by a daughter, Kitts Hill ; Mr. and seen is gone . He has gone to a
daughter, Mrs . Charles
Mrs. Davtd B. Vanchoff , son, merciful God," Colburn told
(Dollie) Hayes , Pomero y ; a
Middlepor t.
th e appr oximately 400
grandson , Charles W. Hayes,
1
Births,
March
7)
listeners
in side the funeral
Columbus . a granddaughter .
Ma r,y
Sue
Hayes,
of
Mr. and Mrs. James Smtih , home.
Gallipotis ;
two
great . son, Bidwell: Mr. and Mrs.
In speakin g to the family
grandsons and several nieces Frank T. Wright, daughter, directly, he sa id their ·'loss is
and nephews.
•·
a personal one accompanied
Funeral services wil l be Jackson.
held at 2 p.m . Tuesda y'at lhe
by personal sorrow .'
. PLEASANTVALLEY
Ew.ing Funeral Home with
Feeling much of that
DISCHARGES - John
the Rev . Georg e Oiler of·
personal
sorrow were the
ficlating . Bur ia l will be 1n Parsons, Buffalo ; ·J ohn
policemen
who attended the
Leta rt Fa lls Cemetery
Chapman , Galltpoiis Ferry;
Friend s may call at t he
flUl eral , m parhcular the
Rebecca Mills , Mrs. Virgil
funeral horr. ~ .-~t any tim e,
Mayor, Mrs. Robert Turner, Mason County Sheriff's Dept .
daughter, all Gallipolis: which lost tis leader and one
Leo nard
co r!ee,
Lena of tis deputies besides two
Crookham , Leon; Finnie injured in the explosion.
Law enforcement umts
Litchfield . Mr s. Ronald
from
other parts or the state
Johnson , Letart ; Charles
included
Point Pleasant,
Fultz, Cottag eville; M,ike
Eleanor, Pa rker sb ur g,
Mrs. Louis DeLuz is a post Smith . Hen~ er son ; Gra ce
Huntington ,
Charlesto n.
operative patient at Holzer White, Ivan Newell, Mrs.
South
Charleston,
Mason,
Medical Center, but expects Gar land Mayes, Naom i
Cabell , Kanaw ha , Fayette.
to be discharged soon.
Woomer , Sheldon Franklin,
Braxton
and
Mrs
. Eunice Hesson, Mrs. Mari on,
Mr . and Mrs . Tim
Gallipolis.
Wilkinson and sons , Shawn Willi am J ameson, Harry
Surviving Sheriff Wedge
and Kevin of Columbus spent Simpkins, Arn old La ne , all
are
his wile Francis Austin
a recent weekend with her P oint Pleasant ; He len
Wedge; a daughter, Leisa
parents, Mr. and Mrs . Rud y Spragg, Racine; Tim Kaiser ,
Racine ; William Edwards, Wedge: a stepson, Richard
Durst.
Wedge ; his mother, Lucy
Mrs. Ruby Bryant and Mrs. New Haven ; Mrs. Charles
Smith Wedge , and two
Freda Middleswar t shopped. Wheeler, We st Co lumbia ;
Clifford Murray , Pomeroy ; brothers, J ohn and Everett
in Gallipolis on Thursday .
Wedge , all of Point Pleasant .
Mr. and Mrs. Thoma s Mrs. Gtles Workman, BufHe was 'lason County
Birch, Waterford, and Mr . fal o; John Adams, Gallipolis
Commissionea
~ four years
and Mrs. Joe Lipps and F erry, and Stephanie Sneed,
prior
to
hi
s
election
as sheriff
grandson , Christopher, of Mt. Alto.
in 1972. He operated along
Vincent, were Sunday callers
with his two broUters the
at the home of Clint Birch and Bryan!, Charleston, W. Va .,
Wedge Lumber and ConLeota Sue.
were visitors at the home of stru ction Co. ol Point
Mrs . Gary Wells, Portland, Mr. and Mrs . Bill Bryant and
Pleasant and was a member
attended a workshop for family recentiy .
of the Sherilfs Association ol
s pecialized ins tr uctor s at
Charles Hilton is a patient West Virginta .
Ohio University, Athens, over at
Veterans Memorial
Pallbearers were Michael
the weekend.
Hospital at Utis writing.
Shaw,
E. Bartow Jones, State
Troy Boggs of Long Bottom
Mr . and Mrs. Gene Lemley Police CPL. Richard Perry .
was an overnight guest of we re business visitors in
and Sheriffs Deputies Dayton
Paul De an Evans on Pomeroy on Monday.
Raynes, Eugene Benson and
Satw:day.
Mrs. Merle Evans visited Paul Maynard.
Mrs . Mike Evans and Mrs . Shirley Lon g on Friday
children, Mrs. Ada Van afternoon.
Meter, Mrs. Fannie Durst,
Mrs . Ruby Bryant, Mr . and
Mrs. Violet Ritchi ~ . local, Mrs. Rudy Durst, Mr. and
Maxine Powell, Long Bottom, Mrs. Tim Wilkin son and sons,
Tom Durst of Athens and Mrs. Mary Greer, David
Randy Forbes, Pomeroy Bryant, Duke Dailey, Debra
.were visitors ol Mr. and Mrs. Bryan!, Stacey and Tammy
R. R. Durst in the past week. Proffitt, Troy Boggs, Danny
jl'lrs. Vicki Proffitt and Black, Leonard Cornell, Mrs .
daughters , Mrs. Bill Mid- Mildred Donohew, S. W.
dleswart , Mrs . Barbara Durst, Gene Carpenter and
Abbott, lo cal , Mrs . Vena Mr . and Mrs. R. R. Durst,
Marcinko and Clint Donovan, visited with the E. H. CarP ome_:_oy and Marshall penters r ecently .
Mr. and Mrs. John Downs,
local, and Mr. and Mrs. John
E. Murphy and Chris of
Syracuse were Sunday
visitors of Mr.' and Mrs. J. R.
Murphy, .Peggy, Carmel and
Barbara, when they returned
from a week's visit in
FROM
Florida.
Barbara
Murphy
is
spending a lew days with
Unda Rosenbawn .
Peggy Murphy visit~d with
Mrs. Raymond Roach, local.
Mr. Michael Knapp and
lriend, Jodie , ol Columbus,
we re Saturday evening
visitors of his uncle and alUit,
Mr
. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Nylon Fabric and
Kail, Kevin and Charles.
Coil Springs
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Slack
and
lamily ol Syracuse were
Com
At 1350........ .
Stu •rtay afternoon visitors of
Mr. ;111cl Mrs . Harley E.
Johnson,Tarnrny,Cheryland
Terry.
Mr. and Mrs . Elmer Bailey
were Thursday evening
visitors of Mr: and Mrs . Guy
Middleport, Ohio
Sargent ami Jonathan.
bara Anthony .

Stiversville
News Notes
0

From a Great American Bank

S~me

children,
Penny
and
Jacqueline, both at home.
Other survivors include two
brothers, Henry, Chillicuthe,
Tom, Las Vegas, Cali!.: one
sister, Mrs. Orville (Billie)
Frost, Downey, ~!if.
He was a member of Ute
Presbyterian Church at
Christiansburg, Va . and
attended Ute First Baptist
Church in Gallipolis. He was
a Navy veteran.
Funeral services will be 2
p.m. Wednesday at the First
Baptist Church with the Rev .
Wilson Wahl and Ute Rev.
Charles Lusher officiating.
Burial will follow in Pine St.
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the Waugh-Hnlley-Wood
FW1eral Home Tuesday after
2p.m.

Middleport town council
Monday night agreed to pay
approximately 25 Jl&lt;'rcen t o! a
Blue Cross hospitalization
insurance plan lor its lull
time employes.
Council President Marvin
Kelly presented facts on the
insurance program showing
that a family plan will cost
each employe about $40 a
monUt , an individual plan $15
a month .
Cost or the program to the
village will be from $700 to
$800 a year, Mayor Fred.
Hollman said .
Council agreed to pay up to

SGT. DAVID PROFFIT

Racine Social Events
ByMrs.FrancisMorris
Mrs. Mabel Cleland is a
medical patient in Pleasant
Valley Hospital at Pt .
Pleasant, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart
and Henry Roush have
returned arter two weeks in
Florida. They arrived at St.
Cloud, Flonda, Feb . 14th to

son spent a recent Satuday
with Mr. and Mrs . W. S.
Kmney of Brohard, W. Va.
Mr . and Mrs . Dennis
Manu el ' and family o!
Marietta spen t the weekend
here with re latives and
friends .
Mr . and Mrs . Larry Grimm
and lamily of Columbus spent

sw·prise Mr . Hart's father,

the weekend with her mother,

Mr . Earl Hart on his 86th
birthday . They took Mr .
Roush to Okeechobee where
he· spent a week wtth his
grandson and Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Grimes. Mr . and Mrs.
Hart spent a week with Mr.
and Mrs. Roderick Grimm at
Ruskin, Florida. They visited
Mrs . Ja ne Gil,key at Pal111elto
and Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Yeauger,son Kevln , and Mrs.
Reva · Beach a t West
Melvourn e.
Mrs. Isabel Simpson spent
a week in San Anlonio, Texas,
with Mr . and Mrs. Kelley
Welle r a nd Jennifer
Mr . and Mrs. Don Jr .
Walke r and dau ghter.
Michelle, Summersville. W.
Va . spent overnight Saturday
and Sunday with his parents,
Rev . and Mrs. bon Walker .
Mr. and Mrs . A. J. Gould of
Marietta spent Sunday with
her parents, Mr . and Mrs .
Francis Morris.
Mr . and Mrs. Mack Howard
and Mi ss Helen Riln e of
Hartlord, W. Va . and Bill
McKe nzi e and two sons of
Gallipolis spent Sunday alternoon with Mr . and Mrs .
Roy Rilne .
Mr. and Mrs Cntl Bradford , Jr ., of Worthingt on
spent a weekend with Mr . and
Mrs. Crill Bradford, Sr .
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert
Sayre and Mrs. Helen Simp-

Mrs. Anna Win es.
Mrs, Kenneth Turley and
sons spent Sunday with Mr .
and Mrs . Sheridan Russell ,
Jr . and Paula at Mason, W.
Va
Mrs. June Miller of Anna,
Ohio, was a recent guest of
her parents. Mr . and Mrs.
George Neig ler.
Rev. and Mrs. Don Walker
were in Charleston, W. Va.
Monday and visited two of
their fri ends who were in the
hospital.
.

LocaJ Bowl.iiu!
Man:h 3, 1976
Women ' s W edn ud ay

AI ·

te rnoon Bowling Leagu e WI BC Mason Bowling Center ,
Mason , W. Va . (3 man

Teams!

Standtngs

Latecomers

Globetroll ers
Rooki es

Three G ·s
All ey Ca ts
H ils &amp; Misses

W L

so 2'1
42 30
38 34

34 JB
30 47

22 50
T ei!llm h igt1 IOill l pins H it
ahd M isses 1129 , Latecomers
1126 . Th r ee G 's 111 1.

Team
r11gt1
game
U!rtecomers 420 , Three G 's
411 ; Rooki es 393

l ndlv1d ua l h i gh ser ies :
Ne lson 459 . Bunny
Estes 426 ; Diana Pyatl 420 .
In div i dual htQh game :
Diana Pvalt 17 0 . P.unnv
Estes 164, Nan cy N elson 159 .
Bunny
Es te s ,
As!t .
Secretllr y , 882 ·26 10.

Nan cy

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Just
breezing along

GOOD BUY

BAKER'S
BUDGET SHOP

2 PIECE LIVING ROOM

SUITE

POMEROY, OHIO
M.GOO.OO Mlxlmum lnlurlftCil For e.ct1 D ea1llol
Mlmlllr , ...... o.po." lnlurlftee Cat$ -'lon

BAKER FURNITURE

9

By (;harlene Hoeflich
The concep t of a living
library with the focus on
" people teaching people"
was presented by Dr. Anthony Man zo, a reading
specialist, to Meigs Teacher
Corps personnel and members of the lree reading
committee Monday morning .
The professor in the
Graduate
School
of
Education at the University
of Missouri in Kansas City, is
here as a consu ltant to the
Teacher Corps program .
Ways of 'making the
libraries, bnth public and
school, more serviceable
through programs which
would steer tl aside from the
"cultura l academ ic
storehOJ..Ise" stereo'type were
explained by Dr. Manzo.
He made several proposals
for the development of a
living library which he
defined as a facility where

with signs of grow thh , are
evident."
One proposa l was an open
invitation to pe ople to
produce manuscripts which
could be put into the library
ctrculation. His suggestions
were for materials perlaining
to the loca l comm unity ,
htstoncal s tones , a nd Utose
with regional relerence. He
proposed
that Epglish
students get involved in such
projects:
Another suggestion was lor
the e nco ura ge me nt of
children to write ~ hildren 's
stories
makin g
!hese
avai lable
thr ough
the
libraries for other boy s and
gir ls to read.
As for a ''forum of exchang e,"
Dr .
Ma nzo
proposed a sys tem of an ·
notations on b'ooks by
readers. These a nnolalions ,
which would be a n ex planatton or criticism or

Totally at ease in any oituotion. Toni Todd's topstitched tunic to~os a slim bolt, then glidos o•er a
swingy milered-stripe slirt, Stripes on the matching
scarf, too. In polyester lnit, machine wash-dry. Blacl/
white
B-18.
M.in Store, Anne••nd W•rehause' .
Open WHkdays 9:30to5 •00p.m.

•

e
VOL XXVII NO. 230

By STEVE GERSTEL
MIAMI (UP!) - Despite
raitl, winds a nd tornado wartongs, Floridians voted tnday
in Ute Sou Ill 's first primary,
lured by a show&lt;jown between
President Ford and Ronald
Reagan
and
George.
Wallace 's battle for control of
Dixie Democra Is.
,
Severe weather dominated
the state's Panhandle a rea cons ider ed Wallace and
Reagan country. A tornado
tnuched down · at Live Oak
and a tornado watch was in
effect through the morning.
Wind and rain plagued the
eastern and western coasts of
the Sunshine State .

But the voter turnout was
termed ''brisk" in several
key areas , dampening
Reagan's hopes that bad
wea Uter would cut into the
vote and help him beat Ford
for the first time .
More Utan I million Floridi·
ans were expected to vote in
Ute fourth primary of the
bicentennial election year.
Ford and Reagan . were
locked head-to-head in the
Republican
presidential
primary, a critical stop in
their campaigns for Ute GOP
nomination . In the Democra tic primary, Jimmy
Carte r and Sen. Henry
Jackson hoped w dethrone

Wallace as the most powerful
vote-getter south or the
Mason-Dixon line.
At stake were 81 delegates
to the Democratic National
Convention and 66 delegates
to the Republican conclave.
Even more important was the
potential momentum a
Florida victory could give the
winners.
• The turnout was termed
"ve ry brisk " in Pinellas
County, which has more
Republicans than any other
and is a key in the ReaganFord race.
"We anticipate a turnout o!
over 60 per cent,'' a county
election official said.
Similiar reports came from
oUter parts of the stale.
Voters waited 20 minutes in
parts of Tampa. An official in
Ft. Lauderdale said, "If the
number. of phone calls we've
been
getting
is any ·
indication, it wlll be heavy."
Reagan's Florida
manager. Tommy Thomas,
predicted today tlle lormer
California governor would
" win, and win nicely~ per
cent is a landslide and I think
we'll get a landslide."
Rep. Lou Frey, Ford's state
and he had it amputated.
manager,
said, "Florida is
Wallace had been un the
obviously
a
great state for
Patrol force for two years.
Bruce Sisk, 19, armed with Reagan. But I think the
a sui tcase of dynamite and a figures tonight will SJK'ak
eloquently
than
shotgun, forced his way into more
we
can
say
Utis
anyUtlng
the jail and demanded to stay
morning."
with his wife who wa s bemg
held lor the murder of their
two-mo nth-old daughter,
Davi.
Forty minutes later, as
The nationwide problems of
s tate police and local officers
the
U.S. Postal Service
waited outside the cell area,
reached
local post offices
Sisk touched off the
Paul Casci,
today
with
dynamite, killing himself; his
Middleport
postmaster
,
wife, Harriet, 18; Sheriff
a
reduction
in
the
announcing
I Continued on page 10)
services at Ute post office as
of Mard1 15. In a statement
today, Casci said.
"!am sure that most of you
are familiar wiUt the !act that
the postal service has been
Cora E .. Christy, 91, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, died this morning
a t the Angel of Mercy Nursi ~&gt;g Home in Albany.
The daughter of the late
George and Ruth l.eighlfoot,
she was also preceded in
The fund drive to raise
h
money lor the purchase of an
death by cr husband, Joseph aerial ladder fire truck for
M. Christy, an infant Meigs County got an alinost
daughter, lour broUters, and $4,000shotinthearmoverUte
a Sister.
weekend.
h
Mrs . C rhisty was a
A house-to-house canvass
member oft e Silver Ridge was held ,·n Pomeroy by the
Ch · h
U 't dB th
nJ e
re ren urc .
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
She is survived. by five Post 39, Amert'can Legt' on,
o George A Mtddleport
s ns,
·•
.
. ; with Mrs. Faye Wildermuth
Manley, of Guys.vtlle; Cltf- - and Mrs. Gracy Pratt coford of Pomeroy AlbertS
'
'
'' chairpersons . Thetotalasthe
of Ravenna , and Raymond result of the drive as anG .,
Atwater;
thr~e nounced by Mrs. Wildennuth
daughte rs, . Mrs . Calvm Monday was $3,773.10 which
(Sara) Srntth, Pomero.y: t'ncludes a contr!'bult' on of
M
Cha 1 (E5Ia) D3 1d
rs.
res
. Y ' $2,000 from the Jaymar Coal
Ravenna, a nd Mrs. Wilham Co. in the Cheshire 8 r
d
{Eiste) Jones, Pomeroy; 28
ea an
grandchi l dren, 51 greatgrandc hildren , and four
great-•reat-grandchildren
to
• ,
Funeral services will be
held Thursday at 1 p m at
The Meigs County Museum
.
.·
. prepara t'IOn for 1'Is next
Ewmg
Funeral Home. wtth
m
the Rev . O'Dell Manlay of- exhibit, SPORTS, is asking
ficiating. Burial will be in for ~e loan of items which
Carleton Church Cemetery . per tam to any type of sport
Friends may call at the mcludmg baseball softball
•
•
funeral home after 7 p.m. basketball, football , golf ,
today
tennis, hunUng 1 swimming
·
· etc ., especially
•
skatmg,
sport'
LOCAL TEMPS
items fro111 several years
·
The
tempera ture
in ag•o . Al so needed PICtures.
downtown Pomeroy at 11 news clippings, rules and
else
having to do
a .m . Tuesday was 40 degrees anything
.
'
under cloudy skies.
w1th sports.

Deputy He s son
!~News • •.•.zn -Brzefsi;
is 5th victim
of jail blast
(;: :~,:~:,~,~,,~~'~'''~'~'~,.~~;.,.~~,~:.:~.,.,.~ ,.,~.~;~~,',~:,:.· ~-,~~,,:,~~/,~;,,, ,:;

.:.•

By United Preos lnlernatlonal
CHARLESTON, W. VA. - LAST WEEK 'S WILDCAT
strike in West Virginla 's southern pits deprived the miners'
health and retirement lunds ol $500,000 each day, the United
Mine Workers union said Monday. Trustees of the funds said
Ute 1974 pension and benefit trusts suffered the brunt of the
actual dollar losses - nearly $150,000 daily in pensions, and
$160,000 in benelits.
Contributions paid by coal operatnrs are directed into four
separate trust funds that provide pensions and heaiUt benefits
lor more than 760,000 working rriiners , retirees and their
lamilles, the union said. The union said the two 1900 trusts Utat
pays benefits to retired miners and their lamilies, however,
sustained Ute heaviest impact or Ute illegal work stoppage .
Trustees said Ute 1900 benefit trust, set up on a "pay-as-yot!
go" bllsls wiUt no financial reserves, lost about $50,000 daily ,
while the pension trust forfeited nearly $140,otioeach day .

&lt;l)LUMBUS - THE OHIO HOUSE TODAV scheduled
final legislative authorization to pla ee the second of an
expected ·seven constitutional amendments on the June
)rimary ballot. ,Monday, Ute state Senate voted 2ll-O tn
authorize a June referendum on a proposal to repeal the sixmonths voter residency requirement and conform sta te laws
with federal court decisions concerning the right ·of 18-year
olda to vote.
Today's scheduled House vote was on a Senate-passed
resolution to enable state and local governments to make loans
Utrough bond issues for the purchase o! energy conserving
lacllities and equipment . The measure passed the Senate
March I. Tite deadline for legislative approval of all June
(rimary 188Ues is 4 p.m. Wednesday.

vice.

Lee wiU start with one
vehicle and add more as
business increasE's . There
was no objection from any
councibnan and it was apparent that the mayor will
issue the license.

CoiUlcll approved the first
rea ding o! an ordi nance
approving the by·laws of the
Middleport Police AUJiliary
which will be composed of no
more than 15 persons who will
work about eight hours a
month in assisting officers of
Ute police department. It wu
decided not to give the ordinance Utree readings under
emergency measures laat
night in order to give the
public an opportun ity to
make comments before final
approval .
A complaint was received
(Continued on page iti) ·

•

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

police fees - a rota] of
$1,886.10 ~ was approved .
Mayor Hollman discussed
with council the request of
Lewis Lee of Racine lor a taxi
license. He said Lee had
given excellent references,
had indicated his prices
would be lair, and Utat he
would provide 24 hour ser-

enttne
TUESDAY, MARCH 9, 1976

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

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

Voters come out
despite weather

POINT P LEASANT, W.
Va. (UP!) - Deputy Sheriff
Ern ie Hesson died today,
becoming the filth vic li on or
an explosion touched off last
week in the Mason County
Jail by a distraught
teenager .
71 , sulle red
Hesson,
multiple injuries in the blast
that ripped the jail apart and
caused exte nsive damage to
the Mason County Courthouse.
Another lawma n, sta te
pollee trooper Uoyd Akers,
remains in the intensive care
unit but his condition is listed
a's improved.
Ohio State Hi ghw ay Patrol
Officer Bruce Wallace, 28,
stationed a t the Gallipolis ,
Ohio, Post, was listed in
stable condition. His leg was
severely injW'ed in the blast

Two cars
in collision

Two traffic accidents were
investigated by th.e Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept.
Monday in which no personal
PARIS
COMMUNIST-LED UNIONS CALLED on
inj!U'ies were reported.
hospital, postal, rallway, school and other public workers to
In Racine o'n Third St.
atage a general strike throughout France today on Ute heels of
Rhonda E. Bales, 19, Bidwell ,
an impressive left-wing victory in local elections. The unions
backing from a laundrymat,
!lppealed to workers In the public sector to march through
was turning west when a car
Poria streets from the historic Bastille Square, birthplace of
driven by Roger F. Roush, 17,
Ute 1789 French Revolution , to the Palais Royale.
Syracuse, was turnlng east.
The nation's two largest labor union umbrella
They collided. Tit ere wa~
organizations, the Conununist - dominated Confederation
minor damage. No citations
Generate du Travail and Confederation, Francoise
were issued.
Democratique du Travail, ordered the two-&lt;lay work stoppage
'Henry Carroll White, 36,
. to press demanda for higher wages. The union action
Rt. 1, Racine, was driving a
came two days after left-wing parties won 58.1 Jl&lt;'r cent of the Township-owned truck south
vote In the ltrst round of elections lor local councilors. The on TR 131, when Its gravel
ruling conter-t"ight Coalition won f3.2 per cent.
shifted and the truck tipped
over . There was medium
IRVINGTON, N. J. - BUS DRIVERS, CLERKS and dam age.
mechanics today went on strike against Transport of New ·
The department said this
Jersey, the nation's largest private bus line, forcing nearly morning Howard Ery in ,
half a mllllon conunuters to look for other transportation. The Racine,)lad parked his car at
3,400 employes voted 2,318 to 708 Monday to reject the the intersection of SR 124 and
COOipany'a final contract offer of a 12 Jl&lt;'r cent wage hike over 336 near .the BeUtany Church
two yean and walked off the job at 12:01 a.m. EST. Their while he went to work .
contract ezplred March 1.
When he returned this
TNJ provides traMportation for 85 per cent of intrastate morning at 8:52 a.m. the
bua rlclen, 10 per eent of the state's passengers to New York windshield had been broken
CltyaQdabout 4G percent of the riders between New York and out, gas stolen, and the gas
Pblladelpbla. No new nesotlationa were scheduled.
cap missing. The int idenl is
MaJor luue In the negotiati0118 was an automatic wage believed to have happened
Increase plan dlreclly tied to Ute cost of living.
1
befor~ 4 a.m.
1

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

pare

Living library's
focus on people

LORl\IN, OHIO - CITY SCHOOL TEACHERS were to set
up picket lines at 6 a.m . tnday because or a school board move
to save money by reducing Uteir numbers .
The teachers voted Monday afternoon to strike if the
school board went ahead with plans w eliminate 49 teaching
posi\111118. The board voted 4-1 Monday night not to renew the
contracts·of all 49 teachers involved. School board spokesmen
!laid the syste111 must save $250,000 or go into Ute red. The
board also cited a drop In enrolbnent ol 2,000 pupils over the
laat five years as justification for reducing the number of
teachers.

Wolfpen
News Notes

S

READING SPECIAUST DR. ANTIIONY MANW,
left, University of Missouri proiessor, speaking to Meigs
Teacher Corps personnel and the free reading committee
Monday at a meeting in Ute Colwnbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. office, proposed Ute "living library" concept
as a reading promotion technique. Pictured wiUt Dr .
Manzo are Dr. John Redenee, center, assistant director of
the Meigs Teacher Corps, and Dr. John Mangieri, project
·
director.

$3.75 on the individual plan
and to $10 monthly on the
family plan taken by employes. There are 11 eligible
employes; Utose not wishing
the insurance may sign
waiver cards and will not be
able to sign up for a year.
Clerk-Treasurer
Gene
Grate read a letter !rom
Columbia Gas of Ohio stating
Utat cost of gas in the vUiage
will be reduced 2.12 cents Jl&lt;'r
l,OOOcubic ft. as of the April!
billing. The mayor 's report
for
February showing
collection of $1,758.10 in fines
and fees and $128 in merchant

COSMETOL9GY SKilLS ~ put tO tile test Monday and the winner selected by a
panel of five Metgs County beauticlllllS was Debra Drake pictured center with Tammy
Schoonover, third place winner ,left, and Beth Haye as they began combing o~t the sets.

Drake winner in Cosmetol~gy
Debra Drake was the
Judging was on the basis of
winner in the Fow·th Annual cutting, pennanent waving,
VICA Skin Olympics in tinting, •and styling, \)lle for
Cosmetology slaged onday at daytime wear , and the other
Meigs High School.
lor evening. The judges were
Second place winner was lola Damewood and Diana
Teresa Mitchell Dolin, while Lewis or lola's Beauty Salon,
third place went to Tammy Syracuse; Vicki Brauer,
Schoonover.
Kay's Beauty Salon, MidMiss Drake, whose model dleport; Linda Hill, Linda's
was Brenda George, will now Ladylair Beauty Salon,
participate in regional Racine, and Diana Johnson,
competition
which
is o! Jeanie's Beauty Shop,
scheduled to be held on April Middleport.
3 at the Washington County
Mrs. Mary Powell and Mrs.
Joint Vocational School.
'[jnda Yonker are instructors

In the cosmetology program
at Meigs High. Studenta
participating in the contest
were Merri . Ault, Marlene
Barrett, Miss Drake, Mary
Kay Mills, "Be th Haye, Miu'y
Johnson,' Dale Luster, Mrs.
Dolin, Mrs. Schoonover and
Debra Spires, all seniors.
Their models were Jane
Sisson, EsUter Black, Brenda
George, Carol Sigman,
Maxine Burns, Ellen Johnson, Gladys Dillon, Katherine
Mitchell, Faye Manley, and
Jody Yost.

Mail leaving ·Middleport. restricted

Cora Christy
died Tuesday

compelled to work and
function with a great
reduction in operation costs.
The postal services are most
certainly suffering form
today's present inflation.
" As the result we here in
Middleport must also make
some adjustments and ask
lor cooperation to make Ute
job not easier, but an efficient
operation. Therefore, we are

compelled In make some
cbanges. Starting March 15,
Illis coming Monday, we shall
make our last collection at
the same two points, namely
Second and Rutland Sis. and
Second and Race Streets, at
4:30p.m. in front of the post
office the last collection will
be made at 4:45 p.m. any
mail deposited anywhere else
or later will not be ~ollected

until the following day. So
this is most Important. Keep
in mind a ny mail alter 4:45
p.m. will not leave Middleport Uta! night.
" We have to make the
connection with our mail
truck which must leave Ute
Middleport post office by 5
p.m. Also , all business
houses, especially if they
(Continued on page 2)

Ladder fund b~osted by$3,774
$200 from the Meigs Aerie

Fraternal Order of Eagles.
Mrs. Wildermuth and Mrs.
Pratt extended Utanks to Ute
workers and also asked that
anyone not a t home Sunday
during the drive send their
d ti
th
ona ons to
e Pomeroy
Fire Department. . Next
Sundayasimilardrivewillbe
held in Middleport witl! Mrs ,
Pratt and Mrs . Ruth Powers
heading
the
activity.
Volunteers
joined
the
auxiliary Sunday for the
Pomeroy drive .
A conunittment bas been
made to purchase the aerial
ladder truck at a cost of

sport momentos needed

$10,000. Some $4,000 to $6,000
additional money will be
needed to fit up Ute aerial
truck and equip it.
Contribu tors Sunelay i n
elu ded Dav id Slater . Will i am
Ohlinger . George Brothers r
Bernice
Eva'ns.
V irg ie

Hobstelle, , Charles WHth ,
Ph il Ohlmger , Greg Cund itf ,
Pau l Simpson , Jr, Paul
s;mpson , s, . Don Hunnet ,
Frances

1.

Mik e

and Mrs Harry Watson , Mr .

and M rs . Ned M en chlnl , Gan

FamHy ,

M, .

and

Mrs

~i!~~~ti ~~r ~~d ~~~· 5 ~~';,

LeSie' Pr ice. Mr and Mrs
Dale Snider , Mr . and Mrs

David c ampbell . ·Mr. and

Mrs

Reed

Will ,

Frances

Hewctso n . M' . a nd M'&gt; .
Donald Di xo n, Mr . and Mrs

Marvin Burt , Ma rie Custer,
Mr . and Mrs . Frank Sisson .
Goodw in Fami ly , Mrs Helen

Ha,pe,
, F'"nklln Parsons,
Raymond Jewett. Faye Will ,

Mrs

Items also are needed
represen t·mg d'ff
1 eren t pas t
and present school teams,
bands and cheer lea~ers .
Anyone who has a sport Item,
ptcture or ·news chppmg
'
,
'
Utey would hke to have
displayed may leave them at
n._
'
lhts
' week . F or
~on-=: Museum
lnlormation phone 992-3810.
Th IS1S8
' · chan ce to "cheer"
one's favorite sport. Open
house for this exhibit will be ,
Sunday, March 14, 2·4 p.m.

Car l elon.

Brolhers . Belva Gla ze. Mr .

Edna Sl us h er , Donna

Bun ch. Joyce Bunch , eme

Bunch, Oscar Qualls , Sh aron
Buff i ngton. Mary Qualls ,

Beny wn1s . Rober! Lewis,

;yaaXre~ . ~~fz~~=+~ · St~~~~nJ~

Bolinger. ~haron Sm ;1n ,
Norman Smo th, W".ltam
S 11ve rs ,
Bt ll
Sher1dan .
Evoretl Da ney , Rol la nd
NeuiZI ;ng . Jewell Curt;s ,
A

Homer
Hysell.
Lou is e
Hank ins. M innie v . Beng el.

Claro M;'!er. Donny Zirkle.
Troy Ohlinger ; Sr , Grace
Camp
bell . Bill smith , Earl
Denny . Mae Ketchka , Erich

Oresha . Sugar
Mill
BeTty

Run

Shelton .

Flou'
wayne

SWISher , Harr i s Scholl ,
Charles Eskew , W. 0 . Bar .
nita , Zue lef!a Sm i th , Gladys
Cumings, Richard Collins ,
Keit h Riggs , Lou ise Har .
brecht, Archie Swartz. Addle
Heilman , Madel ine Cf1 af ln. B .
Haynes ,
Donna
Jones .
Michael Bor i ng , RU1h Hen .
nessy . Pauline Kennedy ,
Harold
Ha mm ,
Dwight
Cullum s. Ri ck Mcfarland .
Richard
Warner , ' Ruby
Guinlher , Ralph Welker ,
George Molden. Clarence
Massar , Dorothy Gloeckne r ,
Kal ie Guth , Edi1h L.pnJll.I)Ji.

(Continued on page 10)

Dozer kills
Donald Sheets
Donald Sheets o! the
Ches ter area was killed
Tuesday when a bulldozer he
was operating overturned,
crushing him. The accident
occurred on Township Road

250.
The : SEOEMS unit answered
th e
call
to
the scene and the body
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The call
for help was received about
10 a.m. Mr. Sheets was a
brother of State Highway
Patrolman James Sheets. No
other information was
available.

�r--------- --,

3 The Pomeroy Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday March 9 1976

2- 'lbe Puneroy Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday March 9 1976

Taping
•
meetmg
•IS

out

For the time bemg atleast
t.pe recorders will not be
permtlted durtng board
meetings of the Gallia County
Local Board of Education
Prior to Monday s regular
busmess sesston board
member James V Blevms
who last meeting (Feb 26)
refused to turn off his tape
recorder asked that the
cootroversy he resolved He
ISSUed a statement of hts
pos tion on the matter
At the end of h s remarks
Blevms stated As a board
member

and

c1t

zen

Patty was SLA queen

Busmess tax cuts cnt1cu.ed

I

COLUMBUS (UPI )- The Ohio AFL-CIO said today
itfindsGov James A Rhodes attempt to lure busmess
to Obio by pr6ml$mg business tax cuts offensive and
said he Is gtving away the store just to get a few
cumomers
We have no quarrel wtlh the governor an hiS
attempts to brmg new jobs mto Obio S81d the AFLCIO in Its weekly pubtcation NeWll and V ews The
latest unemployment rate m the state IS a staggermg
8 5 per cent and jobs are certainly needed
But we do find t offensive to read that the governor
and his Corporate Crew are usmg promises of bosiness
tax cuts and an indifference to destructioo of the
enworunent as the carrot stick to lure new compames
into Obto satd Rhodes
Spectal tax cuts for business has been a iong-ttme
goal of Mr Rhodes and when he presented that concept
to the people last November the tdea was drubbed by
nearly 5-11&gt;-1 satd the labor organization We re
sarry the governor has refused to listen to the people
Voters have S81d they want new mdustry m Ohto but
everyone should pay thetr fatr share
The Ohto AFL-CIO ts for new JObs and orderly
expanston of busmess m our state 11 said And we
pledge to help the governor achieve thiS goal but we
don t think we should g1ve away the store JUSt to get a
few customers

respect the author ty of thts
board as a government.]
body to make reasonable
lead to furthe degrad ng BeHer Educat on Comm t ee
rules lor the conduct of wi
of ou a eady subsfanda d
Upon Blev ns
ecom
bus ness Pend ng the results school system At a t me menda on Sup C Come
oflegalmqwr es I have made when we a e In th~ past on to Bradbu y was d rec ed to
to detennme whether the ban bu ld the best schoo sys em deve op a Tornado D saste
In the state we face a serous p an by Ma ch 25 The an
of tape recorders 1S legal I risk
of los ng the schoo w
be pu nto effect a al
am elec Ung to turn off the system tse f I u ge th s county schoo s no ater than
eve se th s Ap 1 Tornado d s w be
tape recorder that this board bo,p d to
on and ac to esto e pract ced on reglJia bass as
so greatly fears Hopefully dtheect
ntegr y of lh s boa d An aefedrs
this board can now proceed to ndlcat on of th s act on w
Anothe mot on egard ng
resolve important bus ness
be when th s boa d has the p ofess ona meet ngs was
Following is the complete cou age and w sdom to tab ed In h s mot on B ev ns
text of Blevms statement on reverse I s reso ut on on ape moved tha the super n
ref orders
en dent be g ven au hor ty o
tape recorders
As a boa d membe and app ove o d sapp ove al
I have prepared thts c zen
I
espect
the reqlJests for perm ssion o
st.tement to the board m aufhor ty of lh s boa d as a attend profess ona
response to the boards gove nmenta body o make meet ngs, hat a epor be
easonab e lJ es fo
he p esenled to he boa d at the
resolution banmng the use of conduct
of bus ness Pend ng next egu a meet ng sum
tape recorders at board the esu s of ega nqul es l mar z ng a
equests the
meetings
hj!llve made to dete m ne act on aken and he reason
It ts regretful' that t me whether the ban of tape for the ac on taken and tha
s s ega
I am the establ shed g levance
must be devoted to thts mmor recorde
e ect ng lo u n off he tape procedure be used to a a
matter when so much tm recorde that th s board so gr evances ar s ng f om
portant work watts to be great y lea s Hopefu ly th s d sapp ovals
The o he boa d membe s
done However smce th s board can now proceed to
agreed to go a ong w h the
ve mportant buslness
question represents much of reso
ecommendat on f t s ega
Our ng the d scusslon
what ts wrong wtUr this Duane Hunter Addison and f the p nc pa s were
board I believe thts comment pub c ty chairman fo the given f s author ty to ap
prove or d sapp ove A check
Comm ttee
for
Bette
tsneeded
Educat on asked the othe of the schoo law book
The sunshme law was board
members why they evealed that the super n
passed m response to public objected o he use of tape tendent does no have that
rests w th he
demand for open action by tts recorders"' On y one mem autho ty
com boa d of educat on
pub! c offtc ais While the ber J C M tche
Blev ns a so pointed out
men ted and he sa d
have
public has mandated that th s no
that Sup! B adbu y shou d
comment
board and other govern
111ake recommendat ons on
Former boa d member
mental bodies open ail Da e Rothgeb J Ass stan the emf oyment of personnel
deliberattons to pubhc v1ew City Ed lo for the Ga I pol s w thou he board rev ew ng
Dafly T bune objected to every app can He sa d.
and scrutmy lhts board ts Mr
w th the adm n sf a ve
B ev ns
s atement
tak ng clear action to regard ng dlsto led and staff hots ava able
feel
mimnuze 1ts public exposure mls ead ng news repo s
th s wou d speed lJP our
I bebeve that both the Rothgeb noted at no me meet ngs f we had ecom
mendaflons w thout he board
he was on the boa d o
manner in which the con when
now has any of the board rev ew ng a I appl cants
sensus was arrived at on the membe s to d h m what to
The board heard lh ee bus
tape recorder question and wr te Rothgeb also no ed dr ver p oblems du ng he
the passage of the resolutton that the term rmnecessary sess on
M s Barba a Neff Rf
c osed sess ons
mpl es
itself violate the spirit and bus
ness was condlJcted n Chesh re asked the boa d to
intent of the sunshme law
secrecy on someone s back do some h ng rega d ng the
The act on Is but one n a po ch or back oom That dep crab e cond tlon of a bus
long series of slmllar ac ons type of bus ness w lh he dr ven by M s E Ita Jo Ha I
which characterize this exception of awful board h I n the Kyger Creek a ea
Accord ng to Mrs Neff the
board s desire to h de Is executive sess ons was neve
bus
has broken down 2 t mes
conducted
Ro
hgeb
stated
"' act ons from the pub lc

f

Ttiese Include unnecessary

closed sessions

rude and

board meet ngs

fallu e to

unfa r treatment of v s tors to
state clear

and

comp ete
ons taken

reasons for act
and distorted and m slead ng
news ••ports
I can understand the fear
of pub lc exposure that must
be felt by any board member
who because o~hls own bias
prejlJdices pr persona n
leresis does not act n the best
Interest of
the schoo
children However a board
member who Is mot vated by

the best nterest of the schoo

children has no eason to fear

publ c exposure In fact the

max. mlJm

flow

of

n

format on to the publ c shou d
be welcomed However when
that board member a ows

Blevins late moved that
the board s esc ut on ban
nlng tape reco ders be
resc nded. That mot on died
fo a lack of a second He then

asked that board c erk Naom

n the as h ee weeks She
sa d lhat the bus was so bad
she
efused to a ow he
child en to r de t
Mrs Neff also compla ned
of d sc pi ne problems on the

bus

She sa d o der h gh

Beman be directed to record
a 1 board m nutes on a tape
recorder and that a tap ngs

schoo boys were p ck ng on
e ementary ch ld en M s

permanent record That too

the p ob ems we en

be made part of the board s

d ed for a lack of a second

B ev ns ater p esented
four eso lJt ons to the board
Act on was taken on two of

the lou The boa d agreed
w lh h m on strong y op
pos ng Sub HB 920 wh ch
purports to c eate a program
of tax cred ts to prov de re et
fo eal p operty axpaye s

but wh ch wll cripple the
school finances for yea s to
come Letters vo clng ob
ject ons w I be sent to
several S a e Senate s and
R~presentat ves

h mself to be manipulated to
act contrary to who! he
knows to be r gh he v olates
The board tabled a requesf
both h sown ntegrlly and his
pub lc trust This appl es not by B ev ns to em ploy Dale
only to th s question but to Teete s ta)( conslJ tant from
Wash ngton C H at a sum
any other mat er
S nee Is ncept on this not to e&lt;eeed $3 000 to ass st
board has method cal y the board n prepar ng and
proceeded on a cou se of subm It ng Is 976 school
act on wh ch f unchanged budget Teeters recent y
spoke at a meet nQ of

he

Halfh I the bus driver sa d
as bad

as she was mak ng hem out
to be but that seve a
students
tlave
caused
prob ems and had been
ttJrned In to he schoo
p nclpa s M s Jane Brooks
anothe
pa ent
also
discussed prob ems on schoo
buses
Sup!
Bradbu y was

author zed to check with the

blJS dr ve s and Prine pa s
Max Ha fel and Robe t
Lann ng
egard ng bus
disc p ne comp ants
Ano her bus d ve com

pia nt made by fhe Wood ow
Russel lam y R 2 Bldwel

apparen y arose f om a

family p ob em
charged bus drive

They
Sha on

Ferre w th tlarrass ng the r
ct1 dren Mrs Fe rell s a
s ster n aw
Again
the
adm n strat on was d reefed

to check Into the matter

By DONALD B THACKRE\'

SAN FRANCisa&gt; ( UPI)
Patricia Hearst s kidnapers
treated her as queen of the
Symb10nese Uberation Anny
because of the media
at tent on she brought them
sa ys
a
crtmmologist
teshfymg a t her bank
robbery trl81
Dr Joel Fort of San
Franc sco
sa d
the
newspaper hetress JOined the
SLA wtthin a mooth of her
abduchon and w1U ngiy
part Cipated m the holdup
because she was rtpe for
convers on to an exc1tmg new
lifestyle
Somethmg was miSSing m
her life he sa d
Fort sa d M ss Hearst was
bored and dissatisf ed and
felt her life lacked a sense of
mearung As a result he sa d
she was tmpressed by the
Willingness of SLA members
to d1e for their behefs
He deptcted her as a
rebeU1ous teen..ager who took
drugs diSliked her parents
engaged 10 sex at 15 fought
wtth teachers was bored wtth
her fiance and lied to get out
of light spots

By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS UPI) For
mer Democrattc Gov John J
Gtll gsn off aally a non
candidate th s year says he
has no favorttes for the U S
Senate seat he mtght have
sought nor for Pres dent
But GiUtgan m announcmg
Monday he would not run for
the Democrat c Senate
nommatton sa1d his cho ce
for the vice prestdency ts U S
Sen John H Glenn Jr R
Ohio
I would say hts chances
are excellent sa1d Gilllgsn
of Glenn whom he attempted
to convmce to run for
lieutenant governor mstead
of lhe Senate m 1974
I think be s one of the top
three or four under
consideration
for
the
Democratic v1ce prestdent al
nommation and I don t care
who s nommated he would
add great strength to the
ticket
Glenn accused Gtlligan of
participating m boss sm m
1973 when ti)e gover~or
wanted the fonner astronaut
to accept the second spot on

J

f

wh ch refers to the per
sonahty changes or dementia
that can occur m ndiv duals
wtth severe advanced low
thyroid function
S mtiariy one can see
pal ents w th psychoses
wh ch may be temporary in
assoc ation w1th lakmg
corllsone and other adrenal
cortex honnones
Sex hormones can affect
ooe s behavior Male hor
mone tends to make men
more aggressive Estrogen
tends to Increase a woman s
femininity and receplivtness
although this response s
more noted m anunals below
the level of the human
EmotiOnal d sturbances
often occur at the menopause
lime but whether they are
specificaily related to a
hormone imbalance or not Is
often open to question There
are many other factors gomg
oo at thts phase of hfe Such
emot onal disturbances are

frequently not helped by the
admm stratton of female sex
hormones
The problem is com
pllcated by the nadvisable
practice of gtving female
hormones to women w lh
emohonal dtslurbances
whtch are not really related
to the menopause at aU
Many menopausal symptoms
overlap the kind of symptoms
assoc~&amp;ted w th anx ety and
depresston problems The
cbnic1an must be alert to
separate the two conditions
and treat the one that IS
really g1v ng the d1ff1culty
Women can have a very
early premature menoapuse
There are cases on record
younger than 30 years of age
One can tell 1f there is a
deficiency of female hormone
by specialstams done oo ceUs
obtamed with the Pap smear
One can also get some idea of
a hormone deficiency by
tesbng the urme and blood
Since you have ra1sed thts

Mve a degree in eltber
paychlatry or paycholoiY
said be doubted the SLA
members had the sldlls to
conduct lhought reform
He said he believes Miss
Hearat kidnaped Feb 4 1974
was converted to the SLA s
philosophy by March I and
did not spend 57 days in Uny
closets as estimated by
defense experts He conceded
ber abduction must have
been terrifying
His assessment of the
defendant
before
her
kidnaping
She
was
extremely ndependent
strong willed rebellious well
educated mtelligent but not
particularly mtellectually m
clmed
Fort said she told hun she
had her first sexual relatiOns
at 15 and that she had a very
mdependent VIew of sexualtty
and rules m general
He sa d M ss Hearst told
him she had experimented
w th mart]uana mescaline
and um and always had
good tr ps

the
Ohto
Democrats
statewide t cket
Although the governor
named Glenn s prtmary
opponent
Howard M
Metzenbaum to an interun
Senate tenn Glenn fought
back and won a conVIDcing
VICtory
In announcmg he would not
run this year Gilligan ended
months of speculation about
his posstble candtdacy He
S81d he ts keepmg open h s
options to run for pubbc office
m the future mcluding for
governor of Obto m 1978
He offered no Immediate
endorsement of any of the
three contenders for the
Democratic nominatton Metzenbaum U S Rep
James V Stanton and
nursmg home operator
James D Nolan ail of
Cleveland - but satd he
might announce support
sometime
durmg
the
campaign
He also satd he has no clear
preference
for
the
Democrattc presidential
nommalion but will back the

party convention s r ho ce
unless t 1s Alabama Gov
George C Wallace
Gilligan defeated m a btd
for r...,]ect10n m 1974 by
Republican James
A
Rhodes sa d he fell hiS entry
111to the Senate contest would
have been destructive to the
party
The former governor added
he believes he can best serve
h s state and party by
continumg to work at the
state and national level m
del mng
and
solving
government problems
Metzenbaum was seen as
the pr me benefic ary of
Gtll gan s refusal to enter the
race The two are known to
share voter support and
ph losophical vtews on a
number of tssues
Metzenhaum S81d he had
not expected or sought
G I! gan s endorsement
Personally I am glad Mr
G Ugan ts not a candidate
S81d Metzenbaum s nee I
feel that 1t w ll help me I
have the greatest respect for
Jack Gtii gan

Cheaper home gas proposed
COLUMBUS (UPI)
A
coallt on of consumer groups
around the state has offered a
proposal that would force
Ohio s gas and electric
ut1ht es to provide thetr
servtces to restdentiai
conswners at lower costs
me proposal known as
ts one of four
lifeline
constitUtiOnal amendments
being pushed by OhiOans for
Utiltty Reform
The group ktcked off a
campaign Monday to collect
the 307 1100 voter s gnatures
needed to place the four
tssues on the November
ballot
Other three ssues would
-Create a res denlial
utility consumer actioo group
to represent coosumers m
ulihty proceedmgs The
independent nonprofit group

Horntones linked to personality
DEAR DR LAMB - I
would !ike to know tf a hor
mone imbalance can cause
emollonal dtsturbances in a
woman under 30 years of age
I know this can occur dunng
the menopause and patients
are given hormone pUis U
this is true how could I go
about finding out if a hor
mone imbalance exists Can
you tell by a pap smear•
Pleuelet me know because I
believe I have a hormone
Imbalance
DEAR READER
Your
glands may affect your
penonallly and your per
PUII!ty may affect your
glands That statement s not
limited to sex honnones but
they certainly are included in
It
I have Jlltlents wtth
pyschotlc epllodes aaociates
wllh 111 overactive thyroid
At the other end of the
IIPI!Cil'um we have a condition
called myxedema madness

IObbel y bealue ol ooerdft
penualion
The doctor who does not

Glenn strong candidate for
No. 2 on Democrat ticket

DR. LAMB

By Lawrenee E Lamb M 0

Fort faced a llormy crouexamlnatlon today from de
fense attorney F Lee Bailey
who shouted accusations at
him during preliminary
questtoning last week
Fort was asked by
prosecutor James Browning
Jr if Miss Hearst was as the
defense clallllS the ooly
soldier m an army of
generals•
No I think she was a
queen he S81d
Fort S81d he bel eved both
Miss Hearst and her
kidnapers became so excited
at the unpact they were
making m the news mediB
througbout the world that she
became a key f1gure m their
group
She did not partiCipate m
the bank robbery out of fear
of her life he testified She
d d 11 voluntartly as a
member of the SLA
Fort a crurunologist and
phys ctan who has testified m
270 crurunal cases reJected
three defense psychiatrists
analysts that MISS Hearst
suffered a traumatic neuro
s s because of her treatment
by the kidnapers and JOrned
them m the April 15 1974

quest on I am sure you w1U
not be sat1sf ed until tl 1s
answered The solutiOn then
ts to go see your obstetrics
and gynecology spectai st
and tell h m what you reaUy
want to know He can do or
have the proper tests dote
However I thmk that If he
tells you that your hormone
balance s qwte nonnal the
next step IS to see about
gett ng some help lor what
you have labeled as an
emotional disturbance and
that does not mean hormone
therapy
For more mformatton
about endocr nes and their
effect on personal ty at the
menopause send 50 cents for
The Health Letter number 512 Menopause Send a long
stamped
self addressed
envelope for mailing Ad
dresa your letter to me m
care of this newspaper P 0
Box 1551 Radio aty Station
New York NY 10019

would be funded by voluntary
contrtbutwns througb check
offs on monthly utility bills
-Requtre legislative
approval for nuclear power
plant construct on
-Simplify the procedures
for gett ng n t at ve and
referendum issues on the
ballot and reduce the number
of stgna lures needed
Robert lAJ tz 53 Akron
group spokesman sa d
Ohtoans for Utility Reform
s takmg the amendments
directly to the people because
we are trr.ed of walchmg our
utility btU. mcrease moothly
because the state s energy
pobcy ts bemg corrupted by
freesspendmg ulihty
lobbytsts and partisan
politics
I.AJ!tz told a news
conference
The uliiity
reforms we propose were
generated by citizens the
initiBtive campaign wtU be
waged by citizens and the
amendments w11l be voted on
by the cttizens
He said the goal1s to obtam
tOO 000 signatures by July 4
There would be no more
filling way to celebrate

The

Da1~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THEP
NTEREST OF
ME GS MA$0N AREA
CHESTER L TANN&amp;HlLL
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFL Ct&lt;
C ly Edllo

Pub shed da

Sa

d•y

u

by

v

Th•

eKc;ep

Ohio

Va ev Pub sh ng Com
pany
Cour
s
Jitome

ov

Oh o

4576i

Bus ness Off ce Ptlone 992

2 S6

2 57

Ed o al F"t\,ane 992

Second c ess ~Oi1age
pa d a Pome o~ Ot\ o
Na ona

adver s ng

rep esen a ve Wa d
G ff h Company
nc
Bo nel &amp; Gall4gher 0 v
751 Th dAve New York
N V 00
Subscr p on
• es
Oe ve ed by ca er Whe e
ava abe 75 cen s pe
week
Sy Mo or Route
whe e ca er se \1 ce no
eva abe Ont mon h
SJ 25 By me

W VI

1"10h o and

One Ve•r 122 00

6 ,. man h~ s SO Three
tnon hs $7 00 e llwhere
S26 00 yea
t .-; mon hs
113 50 hree months $7 so

Subsc p on p ce nc udes
Sunday T mes Sen ne

Amertca s mdependence than
by promotmg the direct
democracy of the llllhative
petition
Under the
lifeline
amendment
residential
consumers of natural gas and
electricity would be charged
no more than the average
rate charged by a utility
Consumer groups have
claimed that utilities have
been charging residential
customers more per urut of
energy than large industrial
and commeflcal users who
get a cheaper price for
buymg in volume

Mail
(Continued from page 1)
have mail for Middleport
proper are ask to band it
together so that t wiil not
leave Mtddleport They
should do this or drop in into
lhe M ddleport mali slot In
the offtce
There may be more
reductions but they will be
announced when and f they
occur We also ask that you
have pallence w th the clerk
on duty since most of the time
only one w1ii be available to
serve you We deeply regret
these changes but by the
same token we must reduce
costs If you have any
questions on the changes
please call 992-5131
Also for general 1n
fonnation most of the public
is placing two 13 cent st.mps
on letters over one ounce
Keep n mmd that only the
first ounce is 13 cents the
subsequent ounce IS II cents
All postcards are nine cents
each
Also on Sundays and each
holiday the only mail that w!U
leave Middleport is that
wh1ch IB placed 10 the two
boxes outside the post office
The post office wUi be closed
at 7 each evening and opened
at 6 a m Monday through
Saturday On Sundays and
holidays the office wtU not
open untii noon for
boxholders
and
mall
deposit

:I

Tide edges Vanderbilt
84-77 for SEC crown

~

March 7 1976
Dear Sir
I am astonished that you would prmt m your paper the
editorial of another newspaper that speaks in
opposttlon
to
an
issue
in
which
I beiieve that neither you nor the author of the
editorialts very weU informed I am referring to your front
page article m Sunday s Ttmes-Sentinel entitled Threat to
Quality Education All a teacher who is most concerned with
the passage of Senate Bill208and an educator concerned wtth
proVIding quality education for the youngsters of the State of
Oh1o I find that one must be uninfonned as to the
accountability and credibility of many boards of education
throughout Ohio
The editorial as written misrepresents the major thrust of
Senate Bill 208 As an indtvtdual who has heard aU testtmorues
m the open hearmgs of the House Education Committee thus
far I know first hand what the bill speaks to and the various
amendments lhat have been made by a suhcormruttee and the
amendments that have been proposed by education
management groups the PTA and the organized teachers of
Ohto The btllls by no means meant to tie the hands of school
hoards or school management but an effort to unprove the
overall quality of teachers and administrators m the schools of
Ohio The bill will reqwre school management to be more
selective m filling vacancies as they occur and also will
reqwre that all teachers wtll be evaluated annually for the
purpose of 1dent1fymg strengths and weaknesses of the teacher
and giVIng the teacher an opportumty to correct an:,&lt;
defiaenc1es so observed Also tbe bill will grant teachers the
r1ght to due process which they do not now have One must
remember that our U S constitution entitles ooe to a due
process procedure but teachers in the State of Ohio teaching
on a itmlled contract have not had this conslltutional rtght wtth
the extsting state law I feel that m thts bicentenrual year that a
most appropriate opportunity avails 1tself to the state
legislators in the fonn of Senate BtU 208 to afford the nghts
that our forefathers so vehemently str ved for some 200 years
ago
I stroogly encourage taxpayers and all concerned persons
to write to the legtslators encouragmg the passage of thts bill
- Respectfully B1ii Bahr
ED NOTE We are not shaken m the conVIction that
automatic tenure to any teacher regardless of qualification
who has completed three years of consecutive servwe prtor to
passage of the bill S B 208) would lead to weakening the
quality of teachers m Oh1o
In the Oh1o School Boards Assoctation Leg1slalive Report
of March 5 were these comments pertinent to the points ratsed
lr; Mr Bahr
The House Education Comm ttee hea. j both proponents
and opponents of Sub SB 208 (celebrezze D-25) the instant
tenure bill Test1fymg m support of the subshtute bill were
representatiVes of the OEA who stated tliat the major thrust of
the liill remams mtact Opponents of the btU mcluded
representatives of the Ohto School Boards Assoc alion the
Obio Assodat on of Elementsry School Prmapals the Ohio
Congress of Parents and Teachers and the Buckeye
Association of School Admmistrators
The OSBA representatives outlined the followmg areas of
the btU that remam as serous objectiOns
- THE GRANDFATHER CLAUSE - The bill will
automat cally g1ve tenure to all teachers wtth three years of
service m a distr ct at the exptralion of their current contracts
DUE PROCESS-The btU stU! provides the same
extensiVe due process procedures for the noo-cenewal of a
person el gible for a contmumg contract as are currently
proVIded to tennmate a contract
- SUPPLEMENTAL CONTRACTS - Persons on
supplemental contracts are not eltgtble for conlinumg status
oo such contracts but the due process procedures apply to non
renewal of sucli contracts
- EUGIBIUTY FOR TENURE The billelimmates tbe
need for professional or -permanent certificates in order to be
conSidered eiig1ble lor tenure
GROUNDS FOR NON RENEWAL AND
TERMINATION
The deflllltlons lor just cause and
mcompetence m the bill are sliD so vague as to impose an
unposs1ble burden of proof on a board of education
EVALUATION PROCEDURE
Although the OSBA
supports the concept of mandatory evaluation wtth
appropriate mput m the development of procedures from staff
the reqUirements of the btU are too restrictive Tbe bill also
contams the obJectionable requirement that evaluation
procedures be mutuaily determmed i e negotiated at the
bsrgammg table
In addttion the OSBA expressed concerns rela live to the
unpomtion of personalliabihty on school board members when
IndiVIdual employment contracts do not meet the rigid
specifications of the bill the excesstve delineation of items
that must be ncluded m the employment contract the
reqwrement of an l!lltial two year contract for princ pais the
overbroad discovery procedure involved wtth the hearings
process an overly restrictive schedule of evaluations durmg
the trulial year of employment and the need for amplification
and clarification of the layoff procedure when a school district
lacks sufficient funds to ina!ntam the existing program The
OOBA will attempt to secure amendments to the bill to meei
these major objections
Automaltc tenure would contribute little to the sallsfacttoo
of the universal desire by school boards parents and
taxpayers to improve the quality of education as Mr
(teacher) Bahr s letter puts it Ratber 11 would msure the
renewal pf his and other teacher contracts in a few months
UTespective of thetr merits as educators
That we beiieve does warrant front page
- Aa for Rebecca Noll s letter below she apparenUy is
misinformed as to what remains m the bill If tbe School
Board s Legislative Report is to be beUeved and we believe it
The House Education Committee wtU take up the bill again
tomorrow at 8 p m
Mllrch 7 19'16
Dear Editor
Senate bW 208 has been amended extensively since it went
to lhe House Committee on Education and as it was reported
out of subconunlttee this pall Wednesday It no longer contains
any of the objectionable points listed in the editorial from the
Portamouth Times that appeared on the front page of &amp;mday s
Times-Sentinel
The grandfather clause extending contlmdnglservlce
statlill (or tenure) to any teacher who hal completed lhree
years of consecutive service prior to the pauage of the bW hu
been removed Principals coacbea club advison lind other
extra-curricular activities advisorl are no 10118• covered in
the bUI The subcommiUee added languace to require
conUnu~ educatloo for teach•
The bill aever limited a acbool board to l'eJilCivins a
teadler for any rea11011 a:cept groa morlll mllconduct Fram
lhe 11.-1 the bill has listed three condltionl for termlnattnc the
employment of a teach• (I) incompetency defined •
continuing faUure to impart knowledge of the 111bject matter
as it relates to the pupils lor whom a teacher is directly
(Contmued on page 10)
.I

By O'NEIL HENDRICK
United Press International
Losses m key games over
the past three seasons had
earned a talented Alabama
basketbail
team
the
reputatton of a choke
team
Defeats m the b g ones
forced the Tide to share the
Southeastern Conference
champ on s h p wtth
Vanderbtll m 1975 and
Kentucky n 1975 And
Alabama appeared to be
following the same scr pt thts
season
Needmg only one VIctory m
tis last two games to wm the
undisputed SEC Iitle the T de
was upset by Ken ucky
Saturday and seemed to have
lost tts season f na e to

Vanderbilt Monday nightIra lmg ~with six seconds
left
That s when T R Dunn
took charge
Dunn took the mbounds
pass ran the length of the
court and fred a 13-foot Jump
shot that mtssed Scramblmg
under the board he grabbed
the rebound and tapped tl m
as the buzzer sounded The
Tide had a repr eve
The shot I took I knew 1t
was short and followed t up
mst net vely sa d Dunn
Regmald King took 1t from
there scormg e ght pomts m
the overtone to gtve seventh
ranked Alabama an 84 77
VICtory at Nashvil e Tenn
King scored 27 pomts for
the game but b g center Leon

Douglas had a game-It gh 311
pomts and 12 rebounds before
foulmg out m overtone
The vtctory gave the T1de
the SEC crown wtth a 15-3
record one game abead of
14th-ranked Temessee 14-4
It showed people we
weren t a choke team
something we ve had the
reputation of being called
S8ld Douglas We finaUy did
It
Alabama
22 4) now
advances to the NCAA
playoffs meeting sixth
ranked North Carolma m the
deadly Mideast Reg10nals
wh1ch also ncludes top
ranked Indiana and No 2
Marquette
Tennessee 21~) as SEC
runnerup goes to the East

:I Bench,

Pro

~ Stalltlings

Rose hope to
'get things moving'

:

Na ona Bil$ketb• Auo c at on
s and ng s

DAYTON OhiO UPI
CincmnaU s Johnny Bench
w L Pc
G8
who s worr ed to death
47 20
~s ~"0
J6 2
and Reds teammate Pete
5
P h ••• p h •
l 29 56
Rose who says be s tired of
4 4
New Vo Cent
k
sharmg a workout! eld With
a l D vl son
w L Pc
G8
a gang of guys from a beer
wosh
ng on
4 26 6 2
league hope to use tbe r
C ev e an d
3 26 58
2
Hou• on
n ll m
influence as two of baseball s
A on o
28 36 438
heavy h tiers to Jar
New 0 ean s 28 36 438
1
We5fern Conference
somethmg
oose
In
M dwes o v son
stalemated ta lks between
M wa k.ee
w 2 ~ 3~c 4 4 GB club owners and the Major
De o
25 38 39
l.eague Players Assoc at on
K•n sas c Y
25 40 lBS
Bench and Rose plan to talk
Ch ago
9 44 302 9
Pac t c o v son
to several other maJor league
w L Pc
GB
stars m what they descr bed
Go den S a e
6
8
9
1
L os An ge es
32 32 soo 4 as
a n attempt o get
Sea e
32 34 485 5 answe rs at the ve ry least
Phoe n &lt;
JO 33 4 6 s
Dayton (Oh o) Journal
Po and
29 3
439 8
Monday s Resu s
Herald Sports Editor R tter
No games s hedu ed
Collett wrote n Mondays
Tuesday s Game s
ed 1 ons
Sea e a Cl'1 cago
By un ed P

eu nte nilt on a

Etute n Con erence
A tant c D v s on

Regionais for a ftrst..-ound
meetmg with Southern
Conference champion VMI
Vanderbiil finished third in
the SEC at IU and 1&amp;-ll
overail but immediately
after 1ts loss to Alabama
coach
Roy
Skinner
announced hts res1gnat1011
I ve been domg 11 for 2t
years and I m ready to try
somelhtng else
sa d
Sk nner who was UPI s SEC
Coach of the Year
In other games on the final
rught of SEC regular«ason
acllv ty Kentucky beat
MtSSiss pp1 State m overtone
94 93
Auburn downed
MtSSISSipp I~ and Flor da
defeated I.AJwsiana State 9+
81

°

Go den S a e a D e o

Los Ange es a New Yo k
New 0 eans
s
Bas on
Ha

a

Florida State
coach Un h apvy

fo Cf

Pomeroy Boys' League
sign ·up day March 20th ~=~ ~0

Ame can Basketball As oc a

Today's

on Sland ngs
By Un t•d P eu In e na ona

Sport Parade
By MILTON RI CHMAN
UPI Spor s Ed to
NEW YORK UPI ) It has been suggested by some mostly
mana gement peop e that MarVIn M ler negollator for
baseball players ultunately would hke to run basebail
maybe "' en be the new comm sswner
Oh my God no he comes ba ck augh ng That s the last
thmg I want
From the wa he says the mean s t and the reason he does s
easy enough to f gure out
For one thmg he s s ngularly eqwpped for the job he s do ng
by long training and exper ence he obv ously enJOYS t much
more than he would al the adm rustrat ve dut es that go w th
the comm1ss onersh1p and bes des there are far less
headaches nvolved
The mon ey difference sn t that grea etther Bow e Kuhn
gets $150 000 a year Marvtn M Her $100 000
M ller s cr t cs always make the pont he has no vested
mterest m basebaU and that as a labor leader he wouldn t
care if profess onai baseball ceased to operate at all On the
fa ce of t the charge IS unfa r because if there was no more
profess onal baseball M ler would have tn look for another job
and he likes thts one fine
That s absolute nonsense he says reply ng tn those who
ciaun he has no personal feel ng for baseball I ve been a
baseball fan sm ce I was a k d It s a great game and a great
sport As an adult though I real ze t s all those thmgs but t s
also a bus ness
Meanwhtle there seems to be no munedtate solut on m s ght
for the present standoff between the owners and the players
Negottattons bet" een th e two s des have grown stale and few
new tdeas are be ng offered by e ther s de Frank Lane sn t
par of management s negot at ng team but he has come up
w1th an idea whi ch at least s novel
Why not make gtve the players an actual stake m
mana gement suggests Lane
The way could be done wou d be for each of the 24 major
league clubs to g ve f ve per cent of Its ownership to Marvm
M Her and he then could work It out among the players
What he s alkmg about s prof t shar ng says Miller
Were the col ect ve barga nmg representative for the
employees We are not management we are not entre
preneurs The ball clubs have certam prerogat ves of their
owners They can dec1de which players to employ where to
locate their !ranch se where to move It how much topsy thetr
management help who ts to be the comm ss oner and what to
dow th the r profits There s no harder Job m the whole world
of economtcs than to def ne a prof l Are we talking about
profits before or after depreciation• Are ri talkmg about
profits before or after taxes Are we say ng the players have a
r gbtlo determ ne the amount of the r dep ec ation? Doesn l
that deprec1atton affect the prof ts
Occas onally prof t sharmg works occas on ally 1t doesn t It
all depends on the owners and employees who are shar ng the
profits As Marvm Miller pomts out t s almost unposs ble to
del ne what cons! tutes a prof t I go along w th that I also say
t helps IJJUneasurab y when both part es come nto court w th
clean hands and how often do you see that happen

Indy 500 has
first lady entry
By GARY KALE
UPI Spurts Wriler
NEW YORK UP! )
Veteran sports car dr ver
Janet Guthr e today became
the f rst woman ever to be
entered lor the demanding
Indtanapol s 500 n e auto
class c and the $250 000 purse
that goes to the w nner
A $1 000 entry check was
turned over to lndtanapoi s
Motor Speedway offtc als last
Wednesday by Guthr e s
sponsor Bryant Heat ng and
Cooling Company for her
ride in a Rolla Vollstedt tea
car as the No 2dr ver beh J
Dick Simon
Guthrie m Indianapolis for
the noon EST announcement
of her entry s no stranger to
rear engine cars She was
clocked at 160 m1les an hour
m a Chevron B16 prototype at
sebring where she competed
against Marlo AndreU and
the late Mark Donohue and
Peter Revson
Janet who grew up m
Miami Fla and lives in New
York was first in her class m
the 12-holD' Sebring behind
the wheel of an under 2-Uter
prototype
The hallowed oval at Indy
that gave fame and fortune
for three-time wimer A J
Foyt Donohue legendary
World War I flying ace Eddie

R kenbacker and B II
Vukov ch Sr among others
proVIdes the sternest lest of
Guthr e s 13 year racmg
career

Indy s 2'h mile track a
lengthy left turn all the way
has been a barr er for
toughened drivers on the
Un ted States Auto Club
champ onsh p tratl Now
curvaaous Janet Guthr1e has
elected to conquer the Mt
Everest of motor sports in a
btd for a spot on the grid lor
the May 30 race
To even qualify however
Guthrte must first pass the
nerve bend ng rookie test in
which the first 20 laps are run
at 160 miles an hour and
another 20 laps at whatever
speed the driver deems most
comfortable
The unwrttten rule
naturaUy ts the laster you
go the better chance of
makmg the starting hneup oo
race day
I think 11 s high lime a
woman raced at Indy said
the 30ish Guthrie I have tbe
background and expertence
to handle the drive
It appears at present
that I might be driving at
Trenton N J ) on April 25 to
further famll arlze myself
w th USAC champiOnship
cars

The s gn up date for youths
w sh ng to par c1pate n the
Pomeroy Boys League s
baseball program for 1976 has
been set for Sa urday March
20from 10 am unttl2 p m at
the Pomeroy C ty Hall
bottom floor
A reg slrat on fee has been
set at $5 for each youth and
w II be patd on stgn up day
The regiSlrat on fee will go to
the league s general fund to
he used n pu chas ng caps
balls
bats
catchers
eqwpment team

nsurance

etc
The Pomeroy Boys League
sponsors programs for Pony
League ages 13 15 LilUe
League ages 10-12 Pee Wee
ages 8 9 and th1s year w II
start a new program (tee
ball for youth ages 5 7 The
chtid s age as of August I
determ nes what league they
" II play m
The tee ball program
\1 II be a fJrs t for the Pomeroy
Boys League A youth has to
he 5 years of age before
Augus t 1 1976 and cannot
turn 8 years of age before
August I 1976 to parttcipate
n hiS program In th s
program here s no p tch ng
The ball s h t off a rubber tee
to be put n play
The eague has purchased
new un forms fo all the Lilt e

Fred Taylor
Scholarshzp
Fund approved
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
State President Harold
Enarson has announced the
establishment of a Fred R
Taylor Scholarship Fund at
OOU m honor of the Buckeyes
retmng basketball coach
Enarson
made
the
announcement Mooday mght
at the school s annual
appreciation banquet for the
Buckeye squad lll)d coaches
Taylor will have the pril
velege of specifymg the
cr terta to be used m
seiectmg the rec ptent
Enarson s81d
The fund was estobhshed
With a $10 1100 permanent
endowment which Enarson
s81d he was confident would
grow substanUaUy m the
years ahead and would be
among the most coveted
awards at The Obio State
Uruverstty
Several persons mcluding
OOU Athletic D rector Ed
Weaver patd tribute to
Taylor at the banquet
Taylor who just wound up
his 18th season as head coach
of the Buckeyes announced
last month that he would step
down at the end of the season

CINCINNATI (UPI) -AI
thougb the Reds didn t g1ve a
salary f1gure m announcmg
the mgnmg of Joe Morgan to
his !976 contract Mooday
sources s81d that the National
League s Most Valuable
Player last season probably
had become Cincmnati s
second $200 000 player
C1ncy catcher Johnny
Bench mgned last week for
what he satd was about
$200 000
The No 1 olfen.~ive player
in baseball the last three
years Morgsn intimated last
F'rlday that he wouldn I settle
lor less than $200 000 Last
season Morgan batted 327
stole 67 bsses m 77 attempts
drove in 94 runs hit 17 home
runs and scored 107 ttmes

W l

2~

Pet GB
5
: 36
2

By HilL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK UPI)
No
nd an a
33 3
4
8 2
League teams and one Pony
one
could
qu
bble
With
the
s
JO 38 44 20 2
League
learn
If sV gLou
na
2 56
76 38 2 selectton of North Caro na
Monday s Re ults
arrangements can be made
State and San Franc sco to
No games s hedu ed
there sa possibility all of the
Tuesday s Games
the Nat onal Inv1ta on
teams m the Pomeroy Boys New Yo k. a Den e
Tournament
Monday but t
League w ll be us ng the V rg n a a Ken ky
was the schools not p eked to
Sal sbury Grade School f eld
complete the 12-team f eid
and the fields at Me gs High
which created the element of
School for the r home games
Nat ona Hockey Leillgue Stand
surprtse
The league s n need of
ngs
N C State ranked 20th m
By Un ted P ess In e na ona
managers for a Pony League
the natton desp te 1ts also-ran
Campbell Con e ence
team and a Uttle League
Pa ck 0 son
fmtsh n the tough Atl~ t c
W L T P s GF GA
team The league IS also n
9
Ph d ph
3 0
00 295 8 Coast Conference and
need for parent support The NY
sind s
won lost mark and San
next meeting of the league Is
36
86 256 60
Franc sco 23-7) runnerup m
Aana
28 o 0662020
scheduled for Sunday March NY
Rng s 23 35 9 55 223 2 9 the West Coast Athletic
28 at the Pomeroy Legton
Smythe D son
Conference
were the
W L T P s GF GA
Hall All parents coacbes
Ch ago
26 23
69 202 204 glamour p cks m the fmal stx
and mteres ted persons are Vanco
2 2
3 6 228 28 selections The other four
59 '20 236
urged to attend The leagues s ou s 24 3
M nneso
8 S 4 40 6 53 teams were St Peter s 19draft w II be conducted on Knss C y 2 4 0 3 56 28 2 10) North Carolma-Charlotte
thts date
Wales Con e ence
( 21 5) Kansas State 20-7 )
No s 0 v son
If anyone has any questions
W L T P s GF GA and Holy Cross 21 9)
regard ng the Pomeroy Boys Mon ea 49 9 0 08 283 6
69 2801
League Program they may P sb gh 29
Los Ang s 3
69 2 4 225
contact
Don
Hunnel Deo
20
99
9
pres dent Roger S!&lt;&gt;warl Washng n 8 50 'I 25 86 328
Adams 0 v son
v ce pres dent) or Alice
W L T Pts GF GA
Wamsley secretary)
eos on
42
2
95 258 86
k
SanAnono
Ken u ky

2

9 26
6 3

600
5

0
4

Morgan

inks '76

Bu a o
36 9 2 84 2 a 10
To on o J
s 2
25 23
Ca fo n
24 6 9 5 2 8 2
Mond•v s Resu s
No games s hedu ed
:ruesday s Games
Bos on a A an a
Van ou e a Los Ange es
S Lou s a N Y s ande s

Oh o H gh School

B.ukelbal Tournamen
Resu s
Un ted Press nte na onal

contract
CINCINNATI UPI) - AI
thoug!t the Reds dtdn t g ve a
salary figure m announc ng
the stgn ng of second
baseman Joe Morgan to h s
1976 contract Monday
sources speculated that he
National League s Most
Valuable Player last season
had become C ncinnat s
second $200 1100 player
C ncy catcher Johnny
Bench stgned last week for
what he satd was about
$200 000
The No I offens ve player
m baseball the last three
years Morgan mltmated last
Fr day that he wouldn settle
for less than $200 1100
Last season Morgan batted
327 stole 67 bases n 77
attempts drove m 94 runs hit
17 home runs and scored 107
tunes
Thirty-three players have
now s gned for 1976 wtth the
Reds Seven remam wtlbout
contracts

CLASS AAA
AI T oy
Be e on a ne 5 T oy 46
T o wood Mad son 6 S dney

56

A Ash and

Ga on 45 Man s e d Mad son
3
She by 54 Mans e d S 30
ClASS AA
At Columbus
Co
s
Cha es 86 Ma on

P easan 58

Ma

on E g n 60 Co Mohawk

H c c k e y Assoc a on
Stand ngs
By Un ed Press n e nat ona

Wo

d

Eas

W

L

T Pts
C nc nn
3 35
63
New EnQ nd
18
6 62
ceend 2832 S 6
nd np s 26 3
55

e omes

e

H

a

E

sda

e

4

Resul s
Un ted P ess nte na onal
CLASS AAA
At Mus on
Mass on Pe y 41 Lou sv e
22
can on S 50 Can on cen ca h
JS

Can on G en Oak 46 Can on
Lnon30
ClASS AA
Lehman 4

42

41

CLASS AAA
Cen e v
Sl o

At DIY on

e 55 K e er ng A e

Day on Be mon 66 Ke e ng
F a mon E 53

At Ox to d

Lebanon 59 Ham

on Taf 48
M dd e own 98 C n Sycamo e

s

ClASS A
A Steubenv

nd an va tv N

w

e

Buckeye

49

nd an va ev s 56 H and 43
add g

s sb
CLASS AA
A Dayton

Oakwood 4 P eb e Shawnee
3
B ookv e 6 Day on Dunba

60

Day on
M am

e e son 49

28

6

222 22
92

06

Phoen x
32
San D ego 32

x M nns

2 6 o 2
29
68 25

30 25

Canad an

22 2
22

64 2

2 2

L T Pis GF GA
45 2 2 92 29
08
Quebec
39 22
82 282 2 5
Ca ga y
33 JO
0 249
Edmn n 24 4 5 53 23 295
To on o
8 40 5 4 269 3
xoawa 426
29
3
2
x Team d sbanded
Mondays Resu ts
No games scheCIU ed

Wnnpg

W

Tuesdays Games
Quebe a Cs ga v
W nn peg a To on o
San 0 ego a Hous on

Can on

Magno a Sandy Va ley
Manches e
add boys sb

2

W L T Pis GF GA
Hous on 4 23 0 82 262 2 8

Ga es M s Hawken 6
G rl s Ohio H gh Schoo
Basketbal Tournament

AtHatve
Can a F u on NW 5

GF GA
249 2 6

West

4]

CLASS A
At Can on
C e L u he an E 63
Keys one 45

e

va ey v ew 53 K ngs M
K ngs 38
CLASS A

At Par smouth
Coa G ave 45 Green 32
Wes Un on 34 Po smou h
No e Dame 26

t31!1JMJ]3)1l§®lk.J•cuw

Selected on Sunda were
I.AJu svtlle North Carol na
A&amp;T Kentucky N agara
Oregon and ProVIdence
But t was the overlooked
teams that made the b ggest
nose at the selectwns and
maybe they had a pomt
The way our luck has been
runn ng th s year
sa1d
F1or da State Coach Hugh
Durham
there were s x
teams picked and we were
probably number seven m
cons deration I felt th steam
was as good as the one that
went to the NCAA fmals four
years ago
F1onda State hmshed 21Hl
better than NIT p cks St
Peters Nagar a ( 17 11)
Oregon (19 10 Kentuck'; (1510) Providence 19 10 Holy
Cross Kansas State and even
N C State
SllDIIar ly there were cr es
of compiamt from George
Washmgton whtch was 20-7
agamst reasonably strong
compelltlon It appears to
me that toward the end of the
PICking they must of chosen
one out of a hat sa d
Athletic D rector Bob FariS
Wtth our record and a more
difficult schedule t shard to
understand the commtttee s
chotces
The tournament wtll begm
Saturday afternoon wtth Ken
lucky and Nl8gara meeting
at 1 p m ProVIdence taking
on North Carolma A&amp;T at 3
p m UNC-Charlotte meetmg
San Franc sco at 7 p m and
Sl Peter s opposmg Holy
Cross at 9 p m

Hoosiers tops

wi.-J,..-

I
J I [J

Ir

GLASSES AND
S lVEA?

YOU'D

BETTER CALL
!(((
'·'I 0

~0

I

I

'~ f\ I I

o I

.J))

SAYRE
HARIJNARE

New Haven W Va
882 2525

nc eased n
vah.Je a a Bu don wa
un f e educes you unde
nsu ed home o ashes o nd
ou See me and
exp an
how a S a e Fa m Homeown
e s Po cy w h
a on Cov
e age can keep you home
nsu edfo a
swo h

00
252
24
20
92

90
4

Fletcher

6

2

l

20

•6
0

1258 Powell St
Middleport 0

PH. 992 7155

0

STATE FARM

9

F

e

and Casua ~;,- Como 1 n'y
Home 0 ce
oom ng 011
no

I
WHAT HE NV TED
HER: UP 10 H S
AP &lt;\RTMENi FOR

tSEPORC
HA TfOR

SPOTS ON
DSHES

e

I tJ

[]

YOU
HAVE:

] 6

I CANYFl
I POSOW

DO

4 8

59

11

res pons bie for aliowing
someth ng to happen to
basebaU
1th nk t s ume for people
l ke myself to speak out I
th nk the maJortty of players
want to r each a settlement
and that calls for active two
way negot ations
Marv n,. could he 100 per
cent rt ght n prtnciple
added Bench but if we stl
back and wa t for the owners
to gtve up the reserve clause
th s thmg could last until the
Fourth of July
Bench and Rose plan to
approach WUie Stargell of
Pittsburgh I.AJu Brock of St
Lou s and Tom Seqver and
Joe Torre of the New York
Mets among others
Bench and Rose agree
there should be some kind of
reserve clause but they also
th nk the old unilateral
clause IS unacceptable
Baseball defimtely needs
a reserve clause Rose said
I d say the tune lumt ts
negot able
Rose sa d he s also
disgusted wtlh the deadlock
lor a strong personal reason
I ve watled 13 years to
wear a C nc nnati Reds
un form as world champ on
the All-Star third baseman
sa d
So here we are
hearmg all kinds of strange
thmgs and sharmg a workout
f eid w th a gang of guys from
a beer league

Po nts

Urt~cramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each tquan to
form four ord nary words

t

Now arranr• the eire led letters

"\J
\J V ~ to form the 1urpr 11e answer as
~~~_;l~=;-~~.A:;~"'-~J1
~~·;u~r~re:•t~ed by the above eartoon
I "=a-:s' I "[ I I I I I 1&amp; [ I I I 1

.... l•••

lumb

NEW YORK (UPI)
World champion pacer Nero
was syndicated Monday by
Alan
J
Leavitt for
$3 600 000-the highest prtce
ever paid lor a standard
bred
Leavttt of New York and
the prestdent of Lana I.AJbell
Fanns of Hanover Pa satd
Nero would race during the
1976season then retire to stud
at Lana Lobell
Nero wonl4of 15starts as a
two year-old and as a threeyear~ld was the world s
leading
two m1nute
performer His earnings for
those two years were
$402 459

I m worr ed to death
Col ell was told by Bench m
Tampa Fla stte of Cincm
na s suspended spr ng
lrauung headquarters
Bench referred to remarks
made ove the weekend by
MLPA Execullve Director
Marv n M lier
Wha t we ha ve s an
owners st ke M Uer was
quoted as saymg I s a
str ke aga nst the fans and
agalllSt the player" and s
w Ulout JUSt ficat10n
If owners abandon base
ball the players themselves
could take over the game
sadMUer
Th s th ng could rum the
game Bench satd Can we
as pla yers afford to be

PRUNE

A GOA

BES&lt;_OW

t '-n
h ma f'
BIG OPEA ATOR

DAHL A

hb a d "p JJ

-NOWOPEN-

l&lt;eaturmg
Ice Cream m
Quarts, Pmts, and

Cones

Adolph's Dairy Valley
Hrs 10 00 A M T1lll 00 P M Sun Thur
10 00 A M T1ll2 00 P M Fr1 &amp; Sat

Maybe tt's because they thmk
of h1m as a salesman mstead
of the fr1end he can be
We re nsurance agents p o ess ona peop e
who s pec al ze n your nsu a nee needs If
you have any quest on at al regard ng n
sura nee drop nand ask us

~

When you see us don t th1nk of
msurance
but when you
lhmk of Insurance see us

DOWNING-CHILDS
AGENCY, INC.
Middleport Oh1o

992 2556

W MAIN

A

POMEROY 0

�r--------- --,

3 The Pomeroy Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday March 9 1976

2- 'lbe Puneroy Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday March 9 1976

Taping
•
meetmg
•IS

out

For the time bemg atleast
t.pe recorders will not be
permtlted durtng board
meetings of the Gallia County
Local Board of Education
Prior to Monday s regular
busmess sesston board
member James V Blevms
who last meeting (Feb 26)
refused to turn off his tape
recorder asked that the
cootroversy he resolved He
ISSUed a statement of hts
pos tion on the matter
At the end of h s remarks
Blevms stated As a board
member

and

c1t

zen

Patty was SLA queen

Busmess tax cuts cnt1cu.ed

I

COLUMBUS (UPI )- The Ohio AFL-CIO said today
itfindsGov James A Rhodes attempt to lure busmess
to Obio by pr6ml$mg business tax cuts offensive and
said he Is gtving away the store just to get a few
cumomers
We have no quarrel wtlh the governor an hiS
attempts to brmg new jobs mto Obio S81d the AFLCIO in Its weekly pubtcation NeWll and V ews The
latest unemployment rate m the state IS a staggermg
8 5 per cent and jobs are certainly needed
But we do find t offensive to read that the governor
and his Corporate Crew are usmg promises of bosiness
tax cuts and an indifference to destructioo of the
enworunent as the carrot stick to lure new compames
into Obto satd Rhodes
Spectal tax cuts for business has been a iong-ttme
goal of Mr Rhodes and when he presented that concept
to the people last November the tdea was drubbed by
nearly 5-11&gt;-1 satd the labor organization We re
sarry the governor has refused to listen to the people
Voters have S81d they want new mdustry m Ohto but
everyone should pay thetr fatr share
The Ohto AFL-CIO ts for new JObs and orderly
expanston of busmess m our state 11 said And we
pledge to help the governor achieve thiS goal but we
don t think we should g1ve away the store JUSt to get a
few customers

respect the author ty of thts
board as a government.]
body to make reasonable
lead to furthe degrad ng BeHer Educat on Comm t ee
rules lor the conduct of wi
of ou a eady subsfanda d
Upon Blev ns
ecom
bus ness Pend ng the results school system At a t me menda on Sup C Come
oflegalmqwr es I have made when we a e In th~ past on to Bradbu y was d rec ed to
to detennme whether the ban bu ld the best schoo sys em deve op a Tornado D saste
In the state we face a serous p an by Ma ch 25 The an
of tape recorders 1S legal I risk
of los ng the schoo w
be pu nto effect a al
am elec Ung to turn off the system tse f I u ge th s county schoo s no ater than
eve se th s Ap 1 Tornado d s w be
tape recorder that this board bo,p d to
on and ac to esto e pract ced on reglJia bass as
so greatly fears Hopefully dtheect
ntegr y of lh s boa d An aefedrs
this board can now proceed to ndlcat on of th s act on w
Anothe mot on egard ng
resolve important bus ness
be when th s boa d has the p ofess ona meet ngs was
Following is the complete cou age and w sdom to tab ed In h s mot on B ev ns
text of Blevms statement on reverse I s reso ut on on ape moved tha the super n
ref orders
en dent be g ven au hor ty o
tape recorders
As a boa d membe and app ove o d sapp ove al
I have prepared thts c zen
I
espect
the reqlJests for perm ssion o
st.tement to the board m aufhor ty of lh s boa d as a attend profess ona
response to the boards gove nmenta body o make meet ngs, hat a epor be
easonab e lJ es fo
he p esenled to he boa d at the
resolution banmng the use of conduct
of bus ness Pend ng next egu a meet ng sum
tape recorders at board the esu s of ega nqul es l mar z ng a
equests the
meetings
hj!llve made to dete m ne act on aken and he reason
It ts regretful' that t me whether the ban of tape for the ac on taken and tha
s s ega
I am the establ shed g levance
must be devoted to thts mmor recorde
e ect ng lo u n off he tape procedure be used to a a
matter when so much tm recorde that th s board so gr evances ar s ng f om
portant work watts to be great y lea s Hopefu ly th s d sapp ovals
The o he boa d membe s
done However smce th s board can now proceed to
agreed to go a ong w h the
ve mportant buslness
question represents much of reso
ecommendat on f t s ega
Our ng the d scusslon
what ts wrong wtUr this Duane Hunter Addison and f the p nc pa s were
board I believe thts comment pub c ty chairman fo the given f s author ty to ap
prove or d sapp ove A check
Comm ttee
for
Bette
tsneeded
Educat on asked the othe of the schoo law book
The sunshme law was board
members why they evealed that the super n
passed m response to public objected o he use of tape tendent does no have that
rests w th he
demand for open action by tts recorders"' On y one mem autho ty
com boa d of educat on
pub! c offtc ais While the ber J C M tche
Blev ns a so pointed out
men ted and he sa d
have
public has mandated that th s no
that Sup! B adbu y shou d
comment
board and other govern
111ake recommendat ons on
Former boa d member
mental bodies open ail Da e Rothgeb J Ass stan the emf oyment of personnel
deliberattons to pubhc v1ew City Ed lo for the Ga I pol s w thou he board rev ew ng
Dafly T bune objected to every app can He sa d.
and scrutmy lhts board ts Mr
w th the adm n sf a ve
B ev ns
s atement
tak ng clear action to regard ng dlsto led and staff hots ava able
feel
mimnuze 1ts public exposure mls ead ng news repo s
th s wou d speed lJP our
I bebeve that both the Rothgeb noted at no me meet ngs f we had ecom
mendaflons w thout he board
he was on the boa d o
manner in which the con when
now has any of the board rev ew ng a I appl cants
sensus was arrived at on the membe s to d h m what to
The board heard lh ee bus
tape recorder question and wr te Rothgeb also no ed dr ver p oblems du ng he
the passage of the resolutton that the term rmnecessary sess on
M s Barba a Neff Rf
c osed sess ons
mpl es
itself violate the spirit and bus
ness was condlJcted n Chesh re asked the boa d to
intent of the sunshme law
secrecy on someone s back do some h ng rega d ng the
The act on Is but one n a po ch or back oom That dep crab e cond tlon of a bus
long series of slmllar ac ons type of bus ness w lh he dr ven by M s E Ita Jo Ha I
which characterize this exception of awful board h I n the Kyger Creek a ea
Accord ng to Mrs Neff the
board s desire to h de Is executive sess ons was neve
bus
has broken down 2 t mes
conducted
Ro
hgeb
stated
"' act ons from the pub lc

f

Ttiese Include unnecessary

closed sessions

rude and

board meet ngs

fallu e to

unfa r treatment of v s tors to
state clear

and

comp ete
ons taken

reasons for act
and distorted and m slead ng
news ••ports
I can understand the fear
of pub lc exposure that must
be felt by any board member
who because o~hls own bias
prejlJdices pr persona n
leresis does not act n the best
Interest of
the schoo
children However a board
member who Is mot vated by

the best nterest of the schoo

children has no eason to fear

publ c exposure In fact the

max. mlJm

flow

of

n

format on to the publ c shou d
be welcomed However when
that board member a ows

Blevins late moved that
the board s esc ut on ban
nlng tape reco ders be
resc nded. That mot on died
fo a lack of a second He then

asked that board c erk Naom

n the as h ee weeks She
sa d lhat the bus was so bad
she
efused to a ow he
child en to r de t
Mrs Neff also compla ned
of d sc pi ne problems on the

bus

She sa d o der h gh

Beman be directed to record
a 1 board m nutes on a tape
recorder and that a tap ngs

schoo boys were p ck ng on
e ementary ch ld en M s

permanent record That too

the p ob ems we en

be made part of the board s

d ed for a lack of a second

B ev ns ater p esented
four eso lJt ons to the board
Act on was taken on two of

the lou The boa d agreed
w lh h m on strong y op
pos ng Sub HB 920 wh ch
purports to c eate a program
of tax cred ts to prov de re et
fo eal p operty axpaye s

but wh ch wll cripple the
school finances for yea s to
come Letters vo clng ob
ject ons w I be sent to
several S a e Senate s and
R~presentat ves

h mself to be manipulated to
act contrary to who! he
knows to be r gh he v olates
The board tabled a requesf
both h sown ntegrlly and his
pub lc trust This appl es not by B ev ns to em ploy Dale
only to th s question but to Teete s ta)( conslJ tant from
Wash ngton C H at a sum
any other mat er
S nee Is ncept on this not to e&lt;eeed $3 000 to ass st
board has method cal y the board n prepar ng and
proceeded on a cou se of subm It ng Is 976 school
act on wh ch f unchanged budget Teeters recent y
spoke at a meet nQ of

he

Halfh I the bus driver sa d
as bad

as she was mak ng hem out
to be but that seve a
students
tlave
caused
prob ems and had been
ttJrned In to he schoo
p nclpa s M s Jane Brooks
anothe
pa ent
also
discussed prob ems on schoo
buses
Sup!
Bradbu y was

author zed to check with the

blJS dr ve s and Prine pa s
Max Ha fel and Robe t
Lann ng
egard ng bus
disc p ne comp ants
Ano her bus d ve com

pia nt made by fhe Wood ow
Russel lam y R 2 Bldwel

apparen y arose f om a

family p ob em
charged bus drive

They
Sha on

Ferre w th tlarrass ng the r
ct1 dren Mrs Fe rell s a
s ster n aw
Again
the
adm n strat on was d reefed

to check Into the matter

By DONALD B THACKRE\'

SAN FRANCisa&gt; ( UPI)
Patricia Hearst s kidnapers
treated her as queen of the
Symb10nese Uberation Anny
because of the media
at tent on she brought them
sa ys
a
crtmmologist
teshfymg a t her bank
robbery trl81
Dr Joel Fort of San
Franc sco
sa d
the
newspaper hetress JOined the
SLA wtthin a mooth of her
abduchon and w1U ngiy
part Cipated m the holdup
because she was rtpe for
convers on to an exc1tmg new
lifestyle
Somethmg was miSSing m
her life he sa d
Fort sa d M ss Hearst was
bored and dissatisf ed and
felt her life lacked a sense of
mearung As a result he sa d
she was tmpressed by the
Willingness of SLA members
to d1e for their behefs
He deptcted her as a
rebeU1ous teen..ager who took
drugs diSliked her parents
engaged 10 sex at 15 fought
wtth teachers was bored wtth
her fiance and lied to get out
of light spots

By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS UPI) For
mer Democrattc Gov John J
Gtll gsn off aally a non
candidate th s year says he
has no favorttes for the U S
Senate seat he mtght have
sought nor for Pres dent
But GiUtgan m announcmg
Monday he would not run for
the Democrat c Senate
nommatton sa1d his cho ce
for the vice prestdency ts U S
Sen John H Glenn Jr R
Ohio
I would say hts chances
are excellent sa1d Gilllgsn
of Glenn whom he attempted
to convmce to run for
lieutenant governor mstead
of lhe Senate m 1974
I think be s one of the top
three or four under
consideration
for
the
Democratic v1ce prestdent al
nommation and I don t care
who s nommated he would
add great strength to the
ticket
Glenn accused Gtlligan of
participating m boss sm m
1973 when ti)e gover~or
wanted the fonner astronaut
to accept the second spot on

J

f

wh ch refers to the per
sonahty changes or dementia
that can occur m ndiv duals
wtth severe advanced low
thyroid function
S mtiariy one can see
pal ents w th psychoses
wh ch may be temporary in
assoc ation w1th lakmg
corllsone and other adrenal
cortex honnones
Sex hormones can affect
ooe s behavior Male hor
mone tends to make men
more aggressive Estrogen
tends to Increase a woman s
femininity and receplivtness
although this response s
more noted m anunals below
the level of the human
EmotiOnal d sturbances
often occur at the menopause
lime but whether they are
specificaily related to a
hormone imbalance or not Is
often open to question There
are many other factors gomg
oo at thts phase of hfe Such
emot onal disturbances are

frequently not helped by the
admm stratton of female sex
hormones
The problem is com
pllcated by the nadvisable
practice of gtving female
hormones to women w lh
emohonal dtslurbances
whtch are not really related
to the menopause at aU
Many menopausal symptoms
overlap the kind of symptoms
assoc~&amp;ted w th anx ety and
depresston problems The
cbnic1an must be alert to
separate the two conditions
and treat the one that IS
really g1v ng the d1ff1culty
Women can have a very
early premature menoapuse
There are cases on record
younger than 30 years of age
One can tell 1f there is a
deficiency of female hormone
by specialstams done oo ceUs
obtamed with the Pap smear
One can also get some idea of
a hormone deficiency by
tesbng the urme and blood
Since you have ra1sed thts

Mve a degree in eltber
paychlatry or paycholoiY
said be doubted the SLA
members had the sldlls to
conduct lhought reform
He said he believes Miss
Hearat kidnaped Feb 4 1974
was converted to the SLA s
philosophy by March I and
did not spend 57 days in Uny
closets as estimated by
defense experts He conceded
ber abduction must have
been terrifying
His assessment of the
defendant
before
her
kidnaping
She
was
extremely ndependent
strong willed rebellious well
educated mtelligent but not
particularly mtellectually m
clmed
Fort said she told hun she
had her first sexual relatiOns
at 15 and that she had a very
mdependent VIew of sexualtty
and rules m general
He sa d M ss Hearst told
him she had experimented
w th mart]uana mescaline
and um and always had
good tr ps

the
Ohto
Democrats
statewide t cket
Although the governor
named Glenn s prtmary
opponent
Howard M
Metzenbaum to an interun
Senate tenn Glenn fought
back and won a conVIDcing
VICtory
In announcmg he would not
run this year Gilligan ended
months of speculation about
his posstble candtdacy He
S81d he ts keepmg open h s
options to run for pubbc office
m the future mcluding for
governor of Obto m 1978
He offered no Immediate
endorsement of any of the
three contenders for the
Democratic nominatton Metzenbaum U S Rep
James V Stanton and
nursmg home operator
James D Nolan ail of
Cleveland - but satd he
might announce support
sometime
durmg
the
campaign
He also satd he has no clear
preference
for
the
Democrattc presidential
nommalion but will back the

party convention s r ho ce
unless t 1s Alabama Gov
George C Wallace
Gilligan defeated m a btd
for r...,]ect10n m 1974 by
Republican James
A
Rhodes sa d he fell hiS entry
111to the Senate contest would
have been destructive to the
party
The former governor added
he believes he can best serve
h s state and party by
continumg to work at the
state and national level m
del mng
and
solving
government problems
Metzenbaum was seen as
the pr me benefic ary of
Gtll gan s refusal to enter the
race The two are known to
share voter support and
ph losophical vtews on a
number of tssues
Metzenhaum S81d he had
not expected or sought
G I! gan s endorsement
Personally I am glad Mr
G Ugan ts not a candidate
S81d Metzenbaum s nee I
feel that 1t w ll help me I
have the greatest respect for
Jack Gtii gan

Cheaper home gas proposed
COLUMBUS (UPI)
A
coallt on of consumer groups
around the state has offered a
proposal that would force
Ohio s gas and electric
ut1ht es to provide thetr
servtces to restdentiai
conswners at lower costs
me proposal known as
ts one of four
lifeline
constitUtiOnal amendments
being pushed by OhiOans for
Utiltty Reform
The group ktcked off a
campaign Monday to collect
the 307 1100 voter s gnatures
needed to place the four
tssues on the November
ballot
Other three ssues would
-Create a res denlial
utility consumer actioo group
to represent coosumers m
ulihty proceedmgs The
independent nonprofit group

Horntones linked to personality
DEAR DR LAMB - I
would !ike to know tf a hor
mone imbalance can cause
emollonal dtsturbances in a
woman under 30 years of age
I know this can occur dunng
the menopause and patients
are given hormone pUis U
this is true how could I go
about finding out if a hor
mone imbalance exists Can
you tell by a pap smear•
Pleuelet me know because I
believe I have a hormone
Imbalance
DEAR READER
Your
glands may affect your
penonallly and your per
PUII!ty may affect your
glands That statement s not
limited to sex honnones but
they certainly are included in
It
I have Jlltlents wtth
pyschotlc epllodes aaociates
wllh 111 overactive thyroid
At the other end of the
IIPI!Cil'um we have a condition
called myxedema madness

IObbel y bealue ol ooerdft
penualion
The doctor who does not

Glenn strong candidate for
No. 2 on Democrat ticket

DR. LAMB

By Lawrenee E Lamb M 0

Fort faced a llormy crouexamlnatlon today from de
fense attorney F Lee Bailey
who shouted accusations at
him during preliminary
questtoning last week
Fort was asked by
prosecutor James Browning
Jr if Miss Hearst was as the
defense clallllS the ooly
soldier m an army of
generals•
No I think she was a
queen he S81d
Fort S81d he bel eved both
Miss Hearst and her
kidnapers became so excited
at the unpact they were
making m the news mediB
througbout the world that she
became a key f1gure m their
group
She did not partiCipate m
the bank robbery out of fear
of her life he testified She
d d 11 voluntartly as a
member of the SLA
Fort a crurunologist and
phys ctan who has testified m
270 crurunal cases reJected
three defense psychiatrists
analysts that MISS Hearst
suffered a traumatic neuro
s s because of her treatment
by the kidnapers and JOrned
them m the April 15 1974

quest on I am sure you w1U
not be sat1sf ed until tl 1s
answered The solutiOn then
ts to go see your obstetrics
and gynecology spectai st
and tell h m what you reaUy
want to know He can do or
have the proper tests dote
However I thmk that If he
tells you that your hormone
balance s qwte nonnal the
next step IS to see about
gett ng some help lor what
you have labeled as an
emotional disturbance and
that does not mean hormone
therapy
For more mformatton
about endocr nes and their
effect on personal ty at the
menopause send 50 cents for
The Health Letter number 512 Menopause Send a long
stamped
self addressed
envelope for mailing Ad
dresa your letter to me m
care of this newspaper P 0
Box 1551 Radio aty Station
New York NY 10019

would be funded by voluntary
contrtbutwns througb check
offs on monthly utility bills
-Requtre legislative
approval for nuclear power
plant construct on
-Simplify the procedures
for gett ng n t at ve and
referendum issues on the
ballot and reduce the number
of stgna lures needed
Robert lAJ tz 53 Akron
group spokesman sa d
Ohtoans for Utility Reform
s takmg the amendments
directly to the people because
we are trr.ed of walchmg our
utility btU. mcrease moothly
because the state s energy
pobcy ts bemg corrupted by
freesspendmg ulihty
lobbytsts and partisan
politics
I.AJ!tz told a news
conference
The uliiity
reforms we propose were
generated by citizens the
initiBtive campaign wtU be
waged by citizens and the
amendments w11l be voted on
by the cttizens
He said the goal1s to obtam
tOO 000 signatures by July 4
There would be no more
filling way to celebrate

The

Da1~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THEP
NTEREST OF
ME GS MA$0N AREA
CHESTER L TANN&amp;HlLL
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFL Ct&lt;
C ly Edllo

Pub shed da

Sa

d•y

u

by

v

Th•

eKc;ep

Ohio

Va ev Pub sh ng Com
pany
Cour
s
Jitome

ov

Oh o

4576i

Bus ness Off ce Ptlone 992

2 S6

2 57

Ed o al F"t\,ane 992

Second c ess ~Oi1age
pa d a Pome o~ Ot\ o
Na ona

adver s ng

rep esen a ve Wa d
G ff h Company
nc
Bo nel &amp; Gall4gher 0 v
751 Th dAve New York
N V 00
Subscr p on
• es
Oe ve ed by ca er Whe e
ava abe 75 cen s pe
week
Sy Mo or Route
whe e ca er se \1 ce no
eva abe Ont mon h
SJ 25 By me

W VI

1"10h o and

One Ve•r 122 00

6 ,. man h~ s SO Three
tnon hs $7 00 e llwhere
S26 00 yea
t .-; mon hs
113 50 hree months $7 so

Subsc p on p ce nc udes
Sunday T mes Sen ne

Amertca s mdependence than
by promotmg the direct
democracy of the llllhative
petition
Under the
lifeline
amendment
residential
consumers of natural gas and
electricity would be charged
no more than the average
rate charged by a utility
Consumer groups have
claimed that utilities have
been charging residential
customers more per urut of
energy than large industrial
and commeflcal users who
get a cheaper price for
buymg in volume

Mail
(Continued from page 1)
have mail for Middleport
proper are ask to band it
together so that t wiil not
leave Mtddleport They
should do this or drop in into
lhe M ddleport mali slot In
the offtce
There may be more
reductions but they will be
announced when and f they
occur We also ask that you
have pallence w th the clerk
on duty since most of the time
only one w1ii be available to
serve you We deeply regret
these changes but by the
same token we must reduce
costs If you have any
questions on the changes
please call 992-5131
Also for general 1n
fonnation most of the public
is placing two 13 cent st.mps
on letters over one ounce
Keep n mmd that only the
first ounce is 13 cents the
subsequent ounce IS II cents
All postcards are nine cents
each
Also on Sundays and each
holiday the only mail that w!U
leave Middleport is that
wh1ch IB placed 10 the two
boxes outside the post office
The post office wUi be closed
at 7 each evening and opened
at 6 a m Monday through
Saturday On Sundays and
holidays the office wtU not
open untii noon for
boxholders
and
mall
deposit

:I

Tide edges Vanderbilt
84-77 for SEC crown

~

March 7 1976
Dear Sir
I am astonished that you would prmt m your paper the
editorial of another newspaper that speaks in
opposttlon
to
an
issue
in
which
I beiieve that neither you nor the author of the
editorialts very weU informed I am referring to your front
page article m Sunday s Ttmes-Sentinel entitled Threat to
Quality Education All a teacher who is most concerned with
the passage of Senate Bill208and an educator concerned wtth
proVIding quality education for the youngsters of the State of
Oh1o I find that one must be uninfonned as to the
accountability and credibility of many boards of education
throughout Ohio
The editorial as written misrepresents the major thrust of
Senate Bill 208 As an indtvtdual who has heard aU testtmorues
m the open hearmgs of the House Education Committee thus
far I know first hand what the bill speaks to and the various
amendments lhat have been made by a suhcormruttee and the
amendments that have been proposed by education
management groups the PTA and the organized teachers of
Ohto The btllls by no means meant to tie the hands of school
hoards or school management but an effort to unprove the
overall quality of teachers and administrators m the schools of
Ohio The bill will reqwre school management to be more
selective m filling vacancies as they occur and also will
reqwre that all teachers wtll be evaluated annually for the
purpose of 1dent1fymg strengths and weaknesses of the teacher
and giVIng the teacher an opportumty to correct an:,&lt;
defiaenc1es so observed Also tbe bill will grant teachers the
r1ght to due process which they do not now have One must
remember that our U S constitution entitles ooe to a due
process procedure but teachers in the State of Ohio teaching
on a itmlled contract have not had this conslltutional rtght wtth
the extsting state law I feel that m thts bicentenrual year that a
most appropriate opportunity avails 1tself to the state
legislators in the fonn of Senate BtU 208 to afford the nghts
that our forefathers so vehemently str ved for some 200 years
ago
I stroogly encourage taxpayers and all concerned persons
to write to the legtslators encouragmg the passage of thts bill
- Respectfully B1ii Bahr
ED NOTE We are not shaken m the conVIction that
automatic tenure to any teacher regardless of qualification
who has completed three years of consecutive servwe prtor to
passage of the bill S B 208) would lead to weakening the
quality of teachers m Oh1o
In the Oh1o School Boards Assoctation Leg1slalive Report
of March 5 were these comments pertinent to the points ratsed
lr; Mr Bahr
The House Education Comm ttee hea. j both proponents
and opponents of Sub SB 208 (celebrezze D-25) the instant
tenure bill Test1fymg m support of the subshtute bill were
representatiVes of the OEA who stated tliat the major thrust of
the liill remams mtact Opponents of the btU mcluded
representatives of the Ohto School Boards Assoc alion the
Obio Assodat on of Elementsry School Prmapals the Ohio
Congress of Parents and Teachers and the Buckeye
Association of School Admmistrators
The OSBA representatives outlined the followmg areas of
the btU that remam as serous objectiOns
- THE GRANDFATHER CLAUSE - The bill will
automat cally g1ve tenure to all teachers wtth three years of
service m a distr ct at the exptralion of their current contracts
DUE PROCESS-The btU stU! provides the same
extensiVe due process procedures for the noo-cenewal of a
person el gible for a contmumg contract as are currently
proVIded to tennmate a contract
- SUPPLEMENTAL CONTRACTS - Persons on
supplemental contracts are not eltgtble for conlinumg status
oo such contracts but the due process procedures apply to non
renewal of sucli contracts
- EUGIBIUTY FOR TENURE The billelimmates tbe
need for professional or -permanent certificates in order to be
conSidered eiig1ble lor tenure
GROUNDS FOR NON RENEWAL AND
TERMINATION
The deflllltlons lor just cause and
mcompetence m the bill are sliD so vague as to impose an
unposs1ble burden of proof on a board of education
EVALUATION PROCEDURE
Although the OSBA
supports the concept of mandatory evaluation wtth
appropriate mput m the development of procedures from staff
the reqUirements of the btU are too restrictive Tbe bill also
contams the obJectionable requirement that evaluation
procedures be mutuaily determmed i e negotiated at the
bsrgammg table
In addttion the OSBA expressed concerns rela live to the
unpomtion of personalliabihty on school board members when
IndiVIdual employment contracts do not meet the rigid
specifications of the bill the excesstve delineation of items
that must be ncluded m the employment contract the
reqwrement of an l!lltial two year contract for princ pais the
overbroad discovery procedure involved wtth the hearings
process an overly restrictive schedule of evaluations durmg
the trulial year of employment and the need for amplification
and clarification of the layoff procedure when a school district
lacks sufficient funds to ina!ntam the existing program The
OOBA will attempt to secure amendments to the bill to meei
these major objections
Automaltc tenure would contribute little to the sallsfacttoo
of the universal desire by school boards parents and
taxpayers to improve the quality of education as Mr
(teacher) Bahr s letter puts it Ratber 11 would msure the
renewal pf his and other teacher contracts in a few months
UTespective of thetr merits as educators
That we beiieve does warrant front page
- Aa for Rebecca Noll s letter below she apparenUy is
misinformed as to what remains m the bill If tbe School
Board s Legislative Report is to be beUeved and we believe it
The House Education Committee wtU take up the bill again
tomorrow at 8 p m
Mllrch 7 19'16
Dear Editor
Senate bW 208 has been amended extensively since it went
to lhe House Committee on Education and as it was reported
out of subconunlttee this pall Wednesday It no longer contains
any of the objectionable points listed in the editorial from the
Portamouth Times that appeared on the front page of &amp;mday s
Times-Sentinel
The grandfather clause extending contlmdnglservlce
statlill (or tenure) to any teacher who hal completed lhree
years of consecutive service prior to the pauage of the bW hu
been removed Principals coacbea club advison lind other
extra-curricular activities advisorl are no 10118• covered in
the bUI The subcommiUee added languace to require
conUnu~ educatloo for teach•
The bill aever limited a acbool board to l'eJilCivins a
teadler for any rea11011 a:cept groa morlll mllconduct Fram
lhe 11.-1 the bill has listed three condltionl for termlnattnc the
employment of a teach• (I) incompetency defined •
continuing faUure to impart knowledge of the 111bject matter
as it relates to the pupils lor whom a teacher is directly
(Contmued on page 10)
.I

By O'NEIL HENDRICK
United Press International
Losses m key games over
the past three seasons had
earned a talented Alabama
basketbail
team
the
reputatton of a choke
team
Defeats m the b g ones
forced the Tide to share the
Southeastern Conference
champ on s h p wtth
Vanderbtll m 1975 and
Kentucky n 1975 And
Alabama appeared to be
following the same scr pt thts
season
Needmg only one VIctory m
tis last two games to wm the
undisputed SEC Iitle the T de
was upset by Ken ucky
Saturday and seemed to have
lost tts season f na e to

Vanderbilt Monday nightIra lmg ~with six seconds
left
That s when T R Dunn
took charge
Dunn took the mbounds
pass ran the length of the
court and fred a 13-foot Jump
shot that mtssed Scramblmg
under the board he grabbed
the rebound and tapped tl m
as the buzzer sounded The
Tide had a repr eve
The shot I took I knew 1t
was short and followed t up
mst net vely sa d Dunn
Regmald King took 1t from
there scormg e ght pomts m
the overtone to gtve seventh
ranked Alabama an 84 77
VICtory at Nashvil e Tenn
King scored 27 pomts for
the game but b g center Leon

Douglas had a game-It gh 311
pomts and 12 rebounds before
foulmg out m overtone
The vtctory gave the T1de
the SEC crown wtth a 15-3
record one game abead of
14th-ranked Temessee 14-4
It showed people we
weren t a choke team
something we ve had the
reputation of being called
S8ld Douglas We finaUy did
It
Alabama
22 4) now
advances to the NCAA
playoffs meeting sixth
ranked North Carolma m the
deadly Mideast Reg10nals
wh1ch also ncludes top
ranked Indiana and No 2
Marquette
Tennessee 21~) as SEC
runnerup goes to the East

:I Bench,

Pro

~ Stalltlings

Rose hope to
'get things moving'

:

Na ona Bil$ketb• Auo c at on
s and ng s

DAYTON OhiO UPI
CincmnaU s Johnny Bench
w L Pc
G8
who s worr ed to death
47 20
~s ~"0
J6 2
and Reds teammate Pete
5
P h ••• p h •
l 29 56
Rose who says be s tired of
4 4
New Vo Cent
k
sharmg a workout! eld With
a l D vl son
w L Pc
G8
a gang of guys from a beer
wosh
ng on
4 26 6 2
league hope to use tbe r
C ev e an d
3 26 58
2
Hou• on
n ll m
influence as two of baseball s
A on o
28 36 438
heavy h tiers to Jar
New 0 ean s 28 36 438
1
We5fern Conference
somethmg
oose
In
M dwes o v son
stalemated ta lks between
M wa k.ee
w 2 ~ 3~c 4 4 GB club owners and the Major
De o
25 38 39
l.eague Players Assoc at on
K•n sas c Y
25 40 lBS
Bench and Rose plan to talk
Ch ago
9 44 302 9
Pac t c o v son
to several other maJor league
w L Pc
GB
stars m what they descr bed
Go den S a e
6
8
9
1
L os An ge es
32 32 soo 4 as
a n attempt o get
Sea e
32 34 485 5 answe rs at the ve ry least
Phoe n &lt;
JO 33 4 6 s
Dayton (Oh o) Journal
Po and
29 3
439 8
Monday s Resu s
Herald Sports Editor R tter
No games s hedu ed
Collett wrote n Mondays
Tuesday s Game s
ed 1 ons
Sea e a Cl'1 cago
By un ed P

eu nte nilt on a

Etute n Con erence
A tant c D v s on

Regionais for a ftrst..-ound
meetmg with Southern
Conference champion VMI
Vanderbiil finished third in
the SEC at IU and 1&amp;-ll
overail but immediately
after 1ts loss to Alabama
coach
Roy
Skinner
announced hts res1gnat1011
I ve been domg 11 for 2t
years and I m ready to try
somelhtng else
sa d
Sk nner who was UPI s SEC
Coach of the Year
In other games on the final
rught of SEC regular«ason
acllv ty Kentucky beat
MtSSiss pp1 State m overtone
94 93
Auburn downed
MtSSISSipp I~ and Flor da
defeated I.AJwsiana State 9+
81

°

Go den S a e a D e o

Los Ange es a New Yo k
New 0 eans
s
Bas on
Ha

a

Florida State
coach Un h apvy

fo Cf

Pomeroy Boys' League
sign ·up day March 20th ~=~ ~0

Ame can Basketball As oc a

Today's

on Sland ngs
By Un t•d P eu In e na ona

Sport Parade
By MILTON RI CHMAN
UPI Spor s Ed to
NEW YORK UPI ) It has been suggested by some mostly
mana gement peop e that MarVIn M ler negollator for
baseball players ultunately would hke to run basebail
maybe "' en be the new comm sswner
Oh my God no he comes ba ck augh ng That s the last
thmg I want
From the wa he says the mean s t and the reason he does s
easy enough to f gure out
For one thmg he s s ngularly eqwpped for the job he s do ng
by long training and exper ence he obv ously enJOYS t much
more than he would al the adm rustrat ve dut es that go w th
the comm1ss onersh1p and bes des there are far less
headaches nvolved
The mon ey difference sn t that grea etther Bow e Kuhn
gets $150 000 a year Marvtn M Her $100 000
M ller s cr t cs always make the pont he has no vested
mterest m basebaU and that as a labor leader he wouldn t
care if profess onai baseball ceased to operate at all On the
fa ce of t the charge IS unfa r because if there was no more
profess onal baseball M ler would have tn look for another job
and he likes thts one fine
That s absolute nonsense he says reply ng tn those who
ciaun he has no personal feel ng for baseball I ve been a
baseball fan sm ce I was a k d It s a great game and a great
sport As an adult though I real ze t s all those thmgs but t s
also a bus ness
Meanwhtle there seems to be no munedtate solut on m s ght
for the present standoff between the owners and the players
Negottattons bet" een th e two s des have grown stale and few
new tdeas are be ng offered by e ther s de Frank Lane sn t
par of management s negot at ng team but he has come up
w1th an idea whi ch at least s novel
Why not make gtve the players an actual stake m
mana gement suggests Lane
The way could be done wou d be for each of the 24 major
league clubs to g ve f ve per cent of Its ownership to Marvm
M Her and he then could work It out among the players
What he s alkmg about s prof t shar ng says Miller
Were the col ect ve barga nmg representative for the
employees We are not management we are not entre
preneurs The ball clubs have certam prerogat ves of their
owners They can dec1de which players to employ where to
locate their !ranch se where to move It how much topsy thetr
management help who ts to be the comm ss oner and what to
dow th the r profits There s no harder Job m the whole world
of economtcs than to def ne a prof l Are we talking about
profits before or after depreciation• Are ri talkmg about
profits before or after taxes Are we say ng the players have a
r gbtlo determ ne the amount of the r dep ec ation? Doesn l
that deprec1atton affect the prof ts
Occas onally prof t sharmg works occas on ally 1t doesn t It
all depends on the owners and employees who are shar ng the
profits As Marvm Miller pomts out t s almost unposs ble to
del ne what cons! tutes a prof t I go along w th that I also say
t helps IJJUneasurab y when both part es come nto court w th
clean hands and how often do you see that happen

Indy 500 has
first lady entry
By GARY KALE
UPI Spurts Wriler
NEW YORK UP! )
Veteran sports car dr ver
Janet Guthr e today became
the f rst woman ever to be
entered lor the demanding
Indtanapol s 500 n e auto
class c and the $250 000 purse
that goes to the w nner
A $1 000 entry check was
turned over to lndtanapoi s
Motor Speedway offtc als last
Wednesday by Guthr e s
sponsor Bryant Heat ng and
Cooling Company for her
ride in a Rolla Vollstedt tea
car as the No 2dr ver beh J
Dick Simon
Guthrie m Indianapolis for
the noon EST announcement
of her entry s no stranger to
rear engine cars She was
clocked at 160 m1les an hour
m a Chevron B16 prototype at
sebring where she competed
against Marlo AndreU and
the late Mark Donohue and
Peter Revson
Janet who grew up m
Miami Fla and lives in New
York was first in her class m
the 12-holD' Sebring behind
the wheel of an under 2-Uter
prototype
The hallowed oval at Indy
that gave fame and fortune
for three-time wimer A J
Foyt Donohue legendary
World War I flying ace Eddie

R kenbacker and B II
Vukov ch Sr among others
proVIdes the sternest lest of
Guthr e s 13 year racmg
career

Indy s 2'h mile track a
lengthy left turn all the way
has been a barr er for
toughened drivers on the
Un ted States Auto Club
champ onsh p tratl Now
curvaaous Janet Guthr1e has
elected to conquer the Mt
Everest of motor sports in a
btd for a spot on the grid lor
the May 30 race
To even qualify however
Guthrte must first pass the
nerve bend ng rookie test in
which the first 20 laps are run
at 160 miles an hour and
another 20 laps at whatever
speed the driver deems most
comfortable
The unwrttten rule
naturaUy ts the laster you
go the better chance of
makmg the starting hneup oo
race day
I think 11 s high lime a
woman raced at Indy said
the 30ish Guthrie I have tbe
background and expertence
to handle the drive
It appears at present
that I might be driving at
Trenton N J ) on April 25 to
further famll arlze myself
w th USAC champiOnship
cars

The s gn up date for youths
w sh ng to par c1pate n the
Pomeroy Boys League s
baseball program for 1976 has
been set for Sa urday March
20from 10 am unttl2 p m at
the Pomeroy C ty Hall
bottom floor
A reg slrat on fee has been
set at $5 for each youth and
w II be patd on stgn up day
The regiSlrat on fee will go to
the league s general fund to
he used n pu chas ng caps
balls
bats
catchers
eqwpment team

nsurance

etc
The Pomeroy Boys League
sponsors programs for Pony
League ages 13 15 LilUe
League ages 10-12 Pee Wee
ages 8 9 and th1s year w II
start a new program (tee
ball for youth ages 5 7 The
chtid s age as of August I
determ nes what league they
" II play m
The tee ball program
\1 II be a fJrs t for the Pomeroy
Boys League A youth has to
he 5 years of age before
Augus t 1 1976 and cannot
turn 8 years of age before
August I 1976 to parttcipate
n hiS program In th s
program here s no p tch ng
The ball s h t off a rubber tee
to be put n play
The eague has purchased
new un forms fo all the Lilt e

Fred Taylor
Scholarshzp
Fund approved
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
State President Harold
Enarson has announced the
establishment of a Fred R
Taylor Scholarship Fund at
OOU m honor of the Buckeyes
retmng basketball coach
Enarson
made
the
announcement Mooday mght
at the school s annual
appreciation banquet for the
Buckeye squad lll)d coaches
Taylor will have the pril
velege of specifymg the
cr terta to be used m
seiectmg the rec ptent
Enarson s81d
The fund was estobhshed
With a $10 1100 permanent
endowment which Enarson
s81d he was confident would
grow substanUaUy m the
years ahead and would be
among the most coveted
awards at The Obio State
Uruverstty
Several persons mcluding
OOU Athletic D rector Ed
Weaver patd tribute to
Taylor at the banquet
Taylor who just wound up
his 18th season as head coach
of the Buckeyes announced
last month that he would step
down at the end of the season

CINCINNATI (UPI) -AI
thougb the Reds didn t g1ve a
salary f1gure m announcmg
the mgnmg of Joe Morgan to
his !976 contract Mooday
sources s81d that the National
League s Most Valuable
Player last season probably
had become Cincmnati s
second $200 000 player
C1ncy catcher Johnny
Bench mgned last week for
what he satd was about
$200 000
The No 1 olfen.~ive player
in baseball the last three
years Morgsn intimated last
F'rlday that he wouldn I settle
lor less than $200 000 Last
season Morgan batted 327
stole 67 bsses m 77 attempts
drove in 94 runs hit 17 home
runs and scored 107 ttmes

W l

2~

Pet GB
5
: 36
2

By HilL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK UPI)
No
nd an a
33 3
4
8 2
League teams and one Pony
one
could
qu
bble
With
the
s
JO 38 44 20 2
League
learn
If sV gLou
na
2 56
76 38 2 selectton of North Caro na
Monday s Re ults
arrangements can be made
State and San Franc sco to
No games s hedu ed
there sa possibility all of the
Tuesday s Games
the Nat onal Inv1ta on
teams m the Pomeroy Boys New Yo k. a Den e
Tournament
Monday but t
League w ll be us ng the V rg n a a Ken ky
was the schools not p eked to
Sal sbury Grade School f eld
complete the 12-team f eid
and the fields at Me gs High
which created the element of
School for the r home games
Nat ona Hockey Leillgue Stand
surprtse
The league s n need of
ngs
N C State ranked 20th m
By Un ted P ess In e na ona
managers for a Pony League
the natton desp te 1ts also-ran
Campbell Con e ence
team and a Uttle League
Pa ck 0 son
fmtsh n the tough Atl~ t c
W L T P s GF GA
team The league IS also n
9
Ph d ph
3 0
00 295 8 Coast Conference and
need for parent support The NY
sind s
won lost mark and San
next meeting of the league Is
36
86 256 60
Franc sco 23-7) runnerup m
Aana
28 o 0662020
scheduled for Sunday March NY
Rng s 23 35 9 55 223 2 9 the West Coast Athletic
28 at the Pomeroy Legton
Smythe D son
Conference
were the
W L T P s GF GA
Hall All parents coacbes
Ch ago
26 23
69 202 204 glamour p cks m the fmal stx
and mteres ted persons are Vanco
2 2
3 6 228 28 selections The other four
59 '20 236
urged to attend The leagues s ou s 24 3
M nneso
8 S 4 40 6 53 teams were St Peter s 19draft w II be conducted on Knss C y 2 4 0 3 56 28 2 10) North Carolma-Charlotte
thts date
Wales Con e ence
( 21 5) Kansas State 20-7 )
No s 0 v son
If anyone has any questions
W L T P s GF GA and Holy Cross 21 9)
regard ng the Pomeroy Boys Mon ea 49 9 0 08 283 6
69 2801
League Program they may P sb gh 29
Los Ang s 3
69 2 4 225
contact
Don
Hunnel Deo
20
99
9
pres dent Roger S!&lt;&gt;warl Washng n 8 50 'I 25 86 328
Adams 0 v son
v ce pres dent) or Alice
W L T Pts GF GA
Wamsley secretary)
eos on
42
2
95 258 86
k
SanAnono
Ken u ky

2

9 26
6 3

600
5

0
4

Morgan

inks '76

Bu a o
36 9 2 84 2 a 10
To on o J
s 2
25 23
Ca fo n
24 6 9 5 2 8 2
Mond•v s Resu s
No games s hedu ed
:ruesday s Games
Bos on a A an a
Van ou e a Los Ange es
S Lou s a N Y s ande s

Oh o H gh School

B.ukelbal Tournamen
Resu s
Un ted Press nte na onal

contract
CINCINNATI UPI) - AI
thoug!t the Reds dtdn t g ve a
salary figure m announc ng
the stgn ng of second
baseman Joe Morgan to h s
1976 contract Monday
sources speculated that he
National League s Most
Valuable Player last season
had become C ncinnat s
second $200 1100 player
C ncy catcher Johnny
Bench stgned last week for
what he satd was about
$200 000
The No I offens ve player
m baseball the last three
years Morgan mltmated last
Fr day that he wouldn settle
for less than $200 1100
Last season Morgan batted
327 stole 67 bases n 77
attempts drove m 94 runs hit
17 home runs and scored 107
tunes
Thirty-three players have
now s gned for 1976 wtth the
Reds Seven remam wtlbout
contracts

CLASS AAA
AI T oy
Be e on a ne 5 T oy 46
T o wood Mad son 6 S dney

56

A Ash and

Ga on 45 Man s e d Mad son
3
She by 54 Mans e d S 30
ClASS AA
At Columbus
Co
s
Cha es 86 Ma on

P easan 58

Ma

on E g n 60 Co Mohawk

H c c k e y Assoc a on
Stand ngs
By Un ed Press n e nat ona

Wo

d

Eas

W

L

T Pts
C nc nn
3 35
63
New EnQ nd
18
6 62
ceend 2832 S 6
nd np s 26 3
55

e omes

e

H

a

E

sda

e

4

Resul s
Un ted P ess nte na onal
CLASS AAA
At Mus on
Mass on Pe y 41 Lou sv e
22
can on S 50 Can on cen ca h
JS

Can on G en Oak 46 Can on
Lnon30
ClASS AA
Lehman 4

42

41

CLASS AAA
Cen e v
Sl o

At DIY on

e 55 K e er ng A e

Day on Be mon 66 Ke e ng
F a mon E 53

At Ox to d

Lebanon 59 Ham

on Taf 48
M dd e own 98 C n Sycamo e

s

ClASS A
A Steubenv

nd an va tv N

w

e

Buckeye

49

nd an va ev s 56 H and 43
add g

s sb
CLASS AA
A Dayton

Oakwood 4 P eb e Shawnee
3
B ookv e 6 Day on Dunba

60

Day on
M am

e e son 49

28

6

222 22
92

06

Phoen x
32
San D ego 32

x M nns

2 6 o 2
29
68 25

30 25

Canad an

22 2
22

64 2

2 2

L T Pis GF GA
45 2 2 92 29
08
Quebec
39 22
82 282 2 5
Ca ga y
33 JO
0 249
Edmn n 24 4 5 53 23 295
To on o
8 40 5 4 269 3
xoawa 426
29
3
2
x Team d sbanded
Mondays Resu ts
No games scheCIU ed

Wnnpg

W

Tuesdays Games
Quebe a Cs ga v
W nn peg a To on o
San 0 ego a Hous on

Can on

Magno a Sandy Va ley
Manches e
add boys sb

2

W L T Pis GF GA
Hous on 4 23 0 82 262 2 8

Ga es M s Hawken 6
G rl s Ohio H gh Schoo
Basketbal Tournament

AtHatve
Can a F u on NW 5

GF GA
249 2 6

West

4]

CLASS A
At Can on
C e L u he an E 63
Keys one 45

e

va ey v ew 53 K ngs M
K ngs 38
CLASS A

At Par smouth
Coa G ave 45 Green 32
Wes Un on 34 Po smou h
No e Dame 26

t31!1JMJ]3)1l§®lk.J•cuw

Selected on Sunda were
I.AJu svtlle North Carol na
A&amp;T Kentucky N agara
Oregon and ProVIdence
But t was the overlooked
teams that made the b ggest
nose at the selectwns and
maybe they had a pomt
The way our luck has been
runn ng th s year
sa1d
F1or da State Coach Hugh
Durham
there were s x
teams picked and we were
probably number seven m
cons deration I felt th steam
was as good as the one that
went to the NCAA fmals four
years ago
F1onda State hmshed 21Hl
better than NIT p cks St
Peters Nagar a ( 17 11)
Oregon (19 10 Kentuck'; (1510) Providence 19 10 Holy
Cross Kansas State and even
N C State
SllDIIar ly there were cr es
of compiamt from George
Washmgton whtch was 20-7
agamst reasonably strong
compelltlon It appears to
me that toward the end of the
PICking they must of chosen
one out of a hat sa d
Athletic D rector Bob FariS
Wtth our record and a more
difficult schedule t shard to
understand the commtttee s
chotces
The tournament wtll begm
Saturday afternoon wtth Ken
lucky and Nl8gara meeting
at 1 p m ProVIdence taking
on North Carolma A&amp;T at 3
p m UNC-Charlotte meetmg
San Franc sco at 7 p m and
Sl Peter s opposmg Holy
Cross at 9 p m

Hoosiers tops

wi.-J,..-

I
J I [J

Ir

GLASSES AND
S lVEA?

YOU'D

BETTER CALL
!(((
'·'I 0

~0

I

I

'~ f\ I I

o I

.J))

SAYRE
HARIJNARE

New Haven W Va
882 2525

nc eased n
vah.Je a a Bu don wa
un f e educes you unde
nsu ed home o ashes o nd
ou See me and
exp an
how a S a e Fa m Homeown
e s Po cy w h
a on Cov
e age can keep you home
nsu edfo a
swo h

00
252
24
20
92

90
4

Fletcher

6

2

l

20

•6
0

1258 Powell St
Middleport 0

PH. 992 7155

0

STATE FARM

9

F

e

and Casua ~;,- Como 1 n'y
Home 0 ce
oom ng 011
no

I
WHAT HE NV TED
HER: UP 10 H S
AP &lt;\RTMENi FOR

tSEPORC
HA TfOR

SPOTS ON
DSHES

e

I tJ

[]

YOU
HAVE:

] 6

I CANYFl
I POSOW

DO

4 8

59

11

res pons bie for aliowing
someth ng to happen to
basebaU
1th nk t s ume for people
l ke myself to speak out I
th nk the maJortty of players
want to r each a settlement
and that calls for active two
way negot ations
Marv n,. could he 100 per
cent rt ght n prtnciple
added Bench but if we stl
back and wa t for the owners
to gtve up the reserve clause
th s thmg could last until the
Fourth of July
Bench and Rose plan to
approach WUie Stargell of
Pittsburgh I.AJu Brock of St
Lou s and Tom Seqver and
Joe Torre of the New York
Mets among others
Bench and Rose agree
there should be some kind of
reserve clause but they also
th nk the old unilateral
clause IS unacceptable
Baseball defimtely needs
a reserve clause Rose said
I d say the tune lumt ts
negot able
Rose sa d he s also
disgusted wtlh the deadlock
lor a strong personal reason
I ve watled 13 years to
wear a C nc nnati Reds
un form as world champ on
the All-Star third baseman
sa d
So here we are
hearmg all kinds of strange
thmgs and sharmg a workout
f eid w th a gang of guys from
a beer league

Po nts

Urt~cramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each tquan to
form four ord nary words

t

Now arranr• the eire led letters

"\J
\J V ~ to form the 1urpr 11e answer as
~~~_;l~=;-~~.A:;~"'-~J1
~~·;u~r~re:•t~ed by the above eartoon
I "=a-:s' I "[ I I I I I 1&amp; [ I I I 1

.... l•••

lumb

NEW YORK (UPI)
World champion pacer Nero
was syndicated Monday by
Alan
J
Leavitt for
$3 600 000-the highest prtce
ever paid lor a standard
bred
Leavttt of New York and
the prestdent of Lana I.AJbell
Fanns of Hanover Pa satd
Nero would race during the
1976season then retire to stud
at Lana Lobell
Nero wonl4of 15starts as a
two year-old and as a threeyear~ld was the world s
leading
two m1nute
performer His earnings for
those two years were
$402 459

I m worr ed to death
Col ell was told by Bench m
Tampa Fla stte of Cincm
na s suspended spr ng
lrauung headquarters
Bench referred to remarks
made ove the weekend by
MLPA Execullve Director
Marv n M lier
Wha t we ha ve s an
owners st ke M Uer was
quoted as saymg I s a
str ke aga nst the fans and
agalllSt the player" and s
w Ulout JUSt ficat10n
If owners abandon base
ball the players themselves
could take over the game
sadMUer
Th s th ng could rum the
game Bench satd Can we
as pla yers afford to be

PRUNE

A GOA

BES&lt;_OW

t '-n
h ma f'
BIG OPEA ATOR

DAHL A

hb a d "p JJ

-NOWOPEN-

l&lt;eaturmg
Ice Cream m
Quarts, Pmts, and

Cones

Adolph's Dairy Valley
Hrs 10 00 A M T1lll 00 P M Sun Thur
10 00 A M T1ll2 00 P M Fr1 &amp; Sat

Maybe tt's because they thmk
of h1m as a salesman mstead
of the fr1end he can be
We re nsurance agents p o ess ona peop e
who s pec al ze n your nsu a nee needs If
you have any quest on at al regard ng n
sura nee drop nand ask us

~

When you see us don t th1nk of
msurance
but when you
lhmk of Insurance see us

DOWNING-CHILDS
AGENCY, INC.
Middleport Oh1o

992 2556

W MAIN

A

POMEROY 0

�4 _The PQmeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 9, 1976

Easter Seals in mails this week

•

Easter Sales are being
mailed to thousands of
cenlral Ohio residents this
week. marking the start of
the annual fund-raising
appeal for the local Society
for Crippled Children and
Adults. The campaign begins
- this week and extends
through Easter Sunday, April
18. In Meigs County, the
Middleport-Pmeroy Rotary
Club is the Society for
Crippled Children and Adults.
The Eastern Seals are
mailed without obligation for
persons to use in personal
letters or in any other way
they choose . Donations are
used to support local services
for handicapped children and
adults.
Some of the servi ces
avai lable through Ohio 's

Easter
Seal
societies
are : residential camping for
handicapped children and
adults: transportation to
clinics, medication , shoes for
orthopedia

correction,

epilepsy clinics, speech and
hearing clinics. and loan of
wheelchairs, braces and
crutches.
Other services provided

through the local or state
Easter Seal Society include
special
education,
formation, referral

inand

follow-up, .information on
architectural barriers, advocacy

projects,

and

legislation: and research
grants to find causes, cures
and prevention for cippling,
Easter Seal societies adapt
their

services

to

meet

specific community needs.
Through referral to qualified
professionals, rehabilitation

sei1rlce, compared with the
263,000 persons served in
1974 .
The
nonprofil
organization was founded in
Elyria, Ohio in 1919.
'!'he Easter Seal Society is
the naton 's oldest and largest
voluntary health agency
serving the handicapped. It
has 77 affiliates in Ohio. Last
year, the Society provided
services tn a total of 24,068
physically disabled children
and adults in Ohio. 1976
Easier Seal Chairman is
Jimmy Drwn of WCHM-TV

Longer lines ahead

Easter Seal societies are

DR. JANE Z. WOODROW, above who has served the
Jackson.{;allia-Meigs CommWJity Mental Health Center ·
for the past four years as a clinical psychologist, has been
elected president of the Southeastern Ohio Psychological
Association. Dr. Woodrow Is presently working in the
Gallia.Jackson-Meigs Community Mental Health clinics
where she has primary responsibility for diagnostic
testing and clinical evaluations. Dr. Woodrow is in the
Gallipolis clinic every Tuesday and is available to the
Meigs and Jackson clinics on Wednesday and allernating
Thursdays.

Elementary
school pupils
win honors

after victory

The Salisbury Elem entary

School fourth si x weeks
period honor ro ll :
Fi rst Grade ' Melanie
Arnold , Lin Chase , Apr i l

ORLANDO, Fla. (UP!) Hale
Irwin, with $114,000 in Clark , H e ath e r Cul l um s,
programs as physical, OC·
winnings
already this year, Todd Cutlums . Harl ey Eblin ,
cupalional, speech and
Dar l a King , Mich l King ,
plans
to
take a " much Phillip
vocationa l therapy ,
King , Lisa Pullins ,
By combining your Auto
deserved'' two-week vacation So!l ll y Radford , Brenda Sin .
psyc
hological
testing
and
, Cathy Stotts.
end Homeownert In·
from the golf tnw- to conlem" clair
counseling.
Second G rade Jod i
suronco Into ONE pclllcy
National chairman of the plate the vagaries of putters Harrison , Darren Haye s,
Kevin Mowery , Angie Pat .
You moy bub to to
1976 Easter Seal campaign is and two-part playoffs.
terson , Cheri Sauters, Cindy
Irwi n won his second Sauters , Tim Sloan ," Anita
Wayne Rogers, TV actor
tournament
in three weeks Smith , David Warth .
currently appearing in NBC's
Third Grade _.. Jackie
Mond
ay
morn
ing when Welker
"City of Angels," and well
, Deni se Stegal l , Kim
Roush , Teresa PralL J immy
known for his portrayal of Kermit Zariey misSed two Park
Dn your YN rlv Insurance
e r , Ch11rlotte Ly ons,
premiums.
··
Trapper John on CBS's M·A· three-foot putts in a sudden- Sandy Hoy t, Rut-h Fry .
death playoff in the Citrus
Fourth Grade - Rhonda
S.H series.
Jeffers, Mike Kennedy , Angie
Open.
The
playoff
began
"In fl ation has taken a
Pratt , Craig Si nc lair , Pavia
We wi II revie w your
special toll on the nation 's Sunday but was called after Swindell, Billy Carswell
insurance program
Fifth Grade Natal i e
ph ysica ll y handi capped," two holes because of Lambert
, John Smith, Greg
with you f r ee of
darkness.
,
Taylor
.
poi nted out Rogers. "Senior
charge any day of the
"We should have had time
Grade --'"
Da te
Si xth
citizens on Sociai Security or
Br i ck l es , Dicky King , Er.ic
week.
to
finish
the
playoff
on
a fixed income suffer the
Lipscomb , Kathleen Parker ,
Irwin
,said. La ura Smith. Fred Young .
Call or stop
most. The price of wheel- Sunda y,"
and see us.
chairs, canes, crutches and "Somebody goofed. II put a
walkers has skyrocketed, and lot of pressure on both of us to
many disabl ed perso ns have to wail that long. I spent
depend on Easter Seal loan a sleepless night playing the
equipment programs for next hole. I tnssed and turned
so much I bit my lip."
these items."
lnsulllnl:f! Setvices
Zarley must have had a bad
RAC INE - The Rac ine
More
than
353,000
" The
night
of it, tno. He had a E lementary school B or
ph ysic all y han di capp e d
In s urance
better honor roll for the
per sons r eceived direct chance to win the tournament fourth
si x weeks gr ad ing
Store"
with
a
three-fool
putt
on
the
services from Easter Seal
period has been announced . a
fifth
extra
bole
and
missed
it.
societies across the nation
gr ade of "B" or above to be
Phone 992-5130
during 1975. This represents a He missed another one on the na med to the ro ll were :
G rad~ 1 - M atthew Jewe ll,
dramatic 34112 percent in- sixth eJ&lt;Ira hole, giving Irwin
2. . 1 E. Mai n
Pomeroy
li sa Pope, Rac hel Rei ber,
the
$-10,000
winner
's
prize
.
crease in direct rehabilitation
Di an e Si mpson, Tammy
"Kermit 's putter ~arried · Theiss
, Wendy Wolfe.
him so far , then le.t him
G rad e 2 Lor i Adams,
down," said Irwin, winner at Ke rrl Beeg le, Jay Bos tick,
the Los Angeles Open two Di xie Dugan, T ina F ores ter,
nd y Hi ll , Me li ssa · lhle.•
weeks ago and now the leader Ma
Lisa Parsons, Ke ll l Rizer ,
on the PGA money list.
Kenda Rize r , Chad. Sayr e,
"'When he missed that putt Rebecca VanMeter,
Gra de J - Vincenf Clelan&lt;;t,·
on the fifth playoff hole, I
an Crisp, Kevi n Duga n,
couldn't believe it, It was like Al
Ralph Fisher , Sa ndra Ha r the sun not coming up. I den, Deborah Hol ter , Lois
thought I was out .of it, but "lhl e, Davi d Powe l l, Lori
tllal miss put the dagger at Si mpson, Me lody West, Lori
Wolfe.
his throat. "
Gr ade 4 Sammy Am ·
Zarley, who took the $22,800 burgey, Jam es Bus h, Kevin
second prize, ·"said, "I had Cur f m an, Beck·y Johnson ,
Hale in a box and l should li nda Pro ff itt, Lare11 Wolfe,
.
have won the tow-nament · Tony Wolfe.
Gr ad e S Kathy Baker,
, then. Like Hale said, I got Seck y Lee, Cl a ir M orri s,
into the playoff with my Terr y Pa tte r so n, Jo h n
putter and then lost with it. " Port e r , Dav id Sa l mons ,
Irwin, already in his fifth Tonj a Sa lser, Lori Warden,
an nie Weese .
consecuti ve $100,000 year , Mel
Gra de 6 - Kim Bicker s,
said he will "take a much- Vic ky Dee m, Kim Fo ll rod,
Reason 1.
are
me tax
deserved vacation the next Lori P owell, T om Roseberry,
two weeks" and rejoin the M e l i nda Salmons, R i t a
specialists. We ask the right question s.
Sl ater , !;.aura Wol fe, Ken t
tour at the Heritage Classic Wolfe.
We dig for every honest deduction. We
on Hilton Head, S.C., which
want to leave no ston e unturned to
he won in 1971 and 1973.
.make sure you pay the smallest
CU NIC HELD
legitimate tax.
A total of 2,361 children
were screened in ·the vision
clinic
and 2011 of them were
Wedn esda y Atternoon
found
to have other than
Ma rc h J, 1976
Team
w L norm a i vision and were
Th re e Devi ls
1
59 29
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
referred to the nurse. 87 of
R idenour's T V &amp; App l. 57 31
Rose berr y's Penn zoil 52 36
these children were seen in
Vi st a 3
44 44
the Diagnostic • Ocular
Sw eet P's
34 54
Pediatric
Clinics.
M in er svi ll e Gir ls
18 70
lreatment is available in such

Personal!

in worsening oils crises '·

independenUy operated and
funded, and inquiries for
assistance should be directed
tn the chairman of the local
society or to the city or
county public health nurse .

lnvin plans
2-week rest

Racine school
honors listed

llenry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax help.

CANTON, Ohio (UP!) The lines at gasoline stations
of 1974 wUI "look like a
picnic" unless alternative
sow-ces of fuel are developed,
according to Federal Energy
Adrninislrator Frank Zllrb.
"We can look forward to
higher oil prices," Zllrb said
before addressing a Walsh
College crowd Monday,
"unless we put our domestic
house in order. This should be
a signal to Congress.
'"If we don't make
provisions now, the gas lines
of two years ago will look like
a picnic," said Zarb.
Zarb said he is trying to get
congressional approval for a
three-point program:
- Giving industry
maximum incentive tn fully
develop natural oil and gas
capabilities.

RACINE
Thirteen
students of Southern High
School took part in the
DisiTict 17 annual solo and
ensemble

music

con tes t

Saturday in Athens. Their
iosrutctor. is Mrs. Joy Bigler
Norris.
Students were rated one
through five with one being
supen o1 ; two, excellent :
three, good, etc. Several
students played solos as well
· as taking part in an ensemble.
Molly

Fisher,

senior,

clarinetist, received a rating

of ·I; Corena Rhodes , .senior,
saxophone, a II ; Carol
Morris, freshman , clarinet,
fl. Bobbi Chapman, junior,
flute, a II. Two snare
drummers, Miss Rhodes and
Brenda Lawrence played for
the judges' comments and
received favorab le remarks .
Miss Fisher, Miss Morris
and Barb Theiss received a I
for their performance as a
clarinet trio. A brass quart,t
consisting of Jaye Ord and
Becky Crow, trumpets: Brice
Hart, trombone, and Marie
Picke ns, baritone horn,

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Although temperatures in
Central Ohio dipped below
the freezing level for the past
several days, it has not hurt
the fruit crop in Central Ohio.
a t least, an Ohio Sta te
University horticulturist said
today.
James
D. Utzinger,
associa te pr ofessor of
horticulture at OSU, said
\emperatures would have to
drop between 18 a nd 20
degrees before the freeze
could damage trees already
early,
. budding
from
unseasonably warm weather
early this month.
Utzinger sa id the next few
weeks will be critical for the

Local Bowling

Hi g h se r ies
Pea r l
Ru sse ll 413, Sharo n H ines 408 .
and Betfy Writese l 400 . 1
Hig h game - M ary Hoo v er
162, Jean Spencer 159, and
Pearl Russel l 147.

.OPEN : 9-6 Wttkcloys, 9.5 Sot.
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSIIRY

This Wook •i Spocl•l

FRYING
CHICKEN

WHOLE

~

~

CHICKEN

~

VAN CAMPS

Whi te, tan V-roof, tan viny l
int ., slant 6 au to., P.S ..
P. B., radio, good tires, 1

owner.

FOOTWEAR

3495

5

For Th e Entire Fam i ly

•••

FRESH,
LEAN

•
f

I
•
''

17

(

Karr &amp; Van landt

by Ked s
Converse

Middle port , Ohio

WHOLE

69C

LB.

FRESH
LB. 79c
CABBAGE

c

SOLID HEADS

LB.

SLICED

STARKIST

THE INN PLACE

TUNA

YELLOW
COOKING
.

6lh OZ. CAN .

ONIONS

WEDNESDAY NIGHT

SPECIAL

and will support $en. Henry

Jackson, D-Wash.

3 LB.
BAG

ANOTHER ~~-

DECORATOR

SCOTT TOWELS

GOOD BUY FROM

.

•

JUMBO

Vis it Our Salad Bar
B-B-Q Ch icken
F ried Rice
Gol den Peac h Teasers
Hot Rolls
Co ffee, Tea or Milk

ROCKERS
Reg. s69.95

· ROLL

GOLDEN ISLE FROZEN VEGETABLES
CUT CORN, ~REEN PEAS,
10 oz.
FORDHOOK L1 MAS,.

3

Plllsburv

CAKE MIXES

PKG.

WHITE, YE.LUM,
GERMAN CHOC.,
CHOC. RAVOR

00

*2.95
pi\JS tax

The Tr i. County 's Most
Euiting NightSpot

BETSY ROSS
BAKE &amp; SERVE

SCOiliES

THE MEIGS INN
Pho11e 992-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

BUDGET NOTED
Th e Hea lth De par tment
worked under a budget of
$35,975.89 for the year 1975.

BREAD

FACIAL TISSUES
I•

l·

200 CNT. PKG.

CAT
FOOD

WHOLE FRYERS
COFFEE
PHEBE 'S STORE

3

.

Prices Effective "March 9-13

Right Reserved io lim it Quantit ies
We Gladly. Accept Fed . Food Stamps
Monday thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00
s.,,,,d,,v9to9

LB. CAN

$399

. CAMPBELL'S SOUP
TOMATO OR
VEGETABLE

.·KRAFT CHEESE........, .~~~:
......
.
.
4
$1
GREEN BEANS..........
. oc
PUNCH MIX.:.............~~~:.1
HEINZ VINEGAR ....... ~r-. 29

SALADS

Grade A
LIMIT 1

In

lb~

49~

Containers

Macaroni,

Fine For Ba r becuing

Tasty Smoked

CHICKEN
QUARTERS

PICNIC
HAMS

lb.s3~

SHREDDED MO.ZZER ELLA

1~b.

I

Slaw

lb. as~

.-.b.~

Sliced

BOILED
HAM
lb.

•1••

••
II

Cans

WYLER'S COLA OR

.

l oz.

CRISCO

~

MALT, SALAD, GARLI\. , WtNE _

J

FOR COOKING
AND BAKING

•

.

J ID.

Can

~~49

~:~ 2V&gt;

394 •

PILLSBURY RICH •N EASY
FROSTING

WITH
COUPON

TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

CARMEL, MILK QfOC., DBL DUTCH,
FUDGE, CREAMY VANILlA
No. 105
~ WITH
COUPON
TWI E;,;.i,;,;;; 3-13-76
GATEWAY

9

Ohio Volley

BACON
lb. '1.39

HANOVER

PORI(_ &amp;
BEANS

69~

No . 75

1

POTATOES 10 lb. '1.29 FLORIDA ORANGES
50 lb. bag, '5.75
5 lb. bag69•

0

SYRUP
No. 105

No . 1 Maino Elling

'

r:rllJPON

BUTTERWORTH~

MRS.
24 oz. btl.

89~

lti.IN CITIES GATfltAY
Expires 3-13-76

......._JL...
-• _.....;;:
•
•
0
•
•
•
•
•

COUPO N

COOKIES

LliiiY' S CUT

303

COUPON

KEEBLER PITTER PATTER

Potato - Dlicken,

CUT-UP FRYERS........ :... •b. 55'

&amp;CANS$1

All
6lh Ol
FLAVORS CAN

New At Phebe's

Welker's

· 2 LOAVES

PURINA

~
FOLGER'S

-PRODUCE-

Calla Hams

~c. .79~

BEEF

You'll Like Our Qua lity
GMA C F INANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings ' til6 : 00
Ti l S ~. m . Sal.

NKIE
WIENERS

GROUN

Way cf Doing Business.

heritage h~

FRENCH CITY
SMOKED

NO.2 CAN

••••

49~

L8.43~

FRYING CHICKEN

PORK &amp; BEANS

•I

LB.

FAMILY PAK

USED CARS

75 DODGE
Dart Swinger

LB.

CUT UP TRAY PAK
•

CANVAS

618 E.' MAIN ST.
Pomeroy, Ohio

-

On Mar. 26, the Sou.thern
Junior High students will
participate in the solo and
ensemble contest on the
jun ior high level at Jackson .

VANIK fOR SCOOP
WASHINGTON &lt;UPI)
Rep . Charles A. Vanik, D·
Ohio, says he has given up the
idea of run ning as a favorite
son in . Ohio's June 8
preSidential primary eJection

CLOSED SUNDAYS SO OUR EMPLOYEES MAY AnEND
CHURCH OF THEIR CHOICE.

BIRTHDAY HONORED
A surprise birthday dinner
honoring Virginia Carson was
he ld Saturday, March 6 at the
home of her aunt, Ina Rife, .
921 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis.
Among those attending were
Mrs . Millie
Meadows,
Pomeroy : Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Rife, Cheshire, and
Mrs. and Mrs. Lark Napier
and sons Larkie and Kevin of
Cheshire

numbers .

expected large fruit crop in
Ohio.
He said .the cold temperatures have taken a toll of the
peach crop, but said it was no
worse than usual.

OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9:00P.M.
FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

Zllfb.

received a II for their performance . MiSs Chapman,
Lois Bailey, Lisa Warner and
Penny Smith received a liJ
for their flute quartet

Fruit crop was safe Monday

~1fllt(i~....... .

- Realisiic pricing IJid effl·
cient use of available fuel.
-Storage of a me-year
supply of oil.
"By 1985, we can look
forward to e•panding our use
of synthetic fuels, but it will
be between 1985 and 1995
before the technology bet!ins
tn make a difference," said

Southern High students win music ratings

Save 10 to 25%

euter-Brogan

IN111EWEEI

,,

in Columbus.
As in past year, Easter Seal
donations are received in
Columbus to expedite handling and are then forwarded
tn local affiliates where the
funds are expended for direct
services.

WITH
COUPON

..
•

lWIN CITIES

G:A~AY

. . . . . . . Expires
. . . . .3-13-76
.. . . .

JIF
BUTTER.

WITH
COUPON

...
•

•

Expires 3-13-76
•

..
•

•

.....
•

•

•

•

•

E&gt;&lt;Dir.•• 3-13-76
0

•

•

•

•

•

•

COUPON

COUPON

FINAL TOUDi

CHIFFON FAMILY

FABRIC SOFTENER
No . 205
64 oz . bit

0

$}49

TWIN CITIES GATEWAY
Expires 3-13-76

79~

WITH•
iar
COUPON
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

ta oz .

TWIN CITIES GATEWAY
0

·

COUPON

$129

3 lb, can

SOFT-WEVE

2 roll pkg .

COUPON

(JOe Off)

j

TOILET TISSUE
WITH
~~~:::d 2/89~ COUPON

·

FLUFFO
SHORTENING

....
COUPON

5/$1 ()()

WITH
COUPON

MARGARI
No. 105 49~
1
lb.

COUPON
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY
Expires 3-13-76

f

'I

�4 _The PQmeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 9, 1976

Easter Seals in mails this week

•

Easter Sales are being
mailed to thousands of
cenlral Ohio residents this
week. marking the start of
the annual fund-raising
appeal for the local Society
for Crippled Children and
Adults. The campaign begins
- this week and extends
through Easter Sunday, April
18. In Meigs County, the
Middleport-Pmeroy Rotary
Club is the Society for
Crippled Children and Adults.
The Eastern Seals are
mailed without obligation for
persons to use in personal
letters or in any other way
they choose . Donations are
used to support local services
for handicapped children and
adults.
Some of the servi ces
avai lable through Ohio 's

Easter
Seal
societies
are : residential camping for
handicapped children and
adults: transportation to
clinics, medication , shoes for
orthopedia

correction,

epilepsy clinics, speech and
hearing clinics. and loan of
wheelchairs, braces and
crutches.
Other services provided

through the local or state
Easter Seal Society include
special
education,
formation, referral

inand

follow-up, .information on
architectural barriers, advocacy

projects,

and

legislation: and research
grants to find causes, cures
and prevention for cippling,
Easter Seal societies adapt
their

services

to

meet

specific community needs.
Through referral to qualified
professionals, rehabilitation

sei1rlce, compared with the
263,000 persons served in
1974 .
The
nonprofil
organization was founded in
Elyria, Ohio in 1919.
'!'he Easter Seal Society is
the naton 's oldest and largest
voluntary health agency
serving the handicapped. It
has 77 affiliates in Ohio. Last
year, the Society provided
services tn a total of 24,068
physically disabled children
and adults in Ohio. 1976
Easier Seal Chairman is
Jimmy Drwn of WCHM-TV

Longer lines ahead

Easter Seal societies are

DR. JANE Z. WOODROW, above who has served the
Jackson.{;allia-Meigs CommWJity Mental Health Center ·
for the past four years as a clinical psychologist, has been
elected president of the Southeastern Ohio Psychological
Association. Dr. Woodrow Is presently working in the
Gallia.Jackson-Meigs Community Mental Health clinics
where she has primary responsibility for diagnostic
testing and clinical evaluations. Dr. Woodrow is in the
Gallipolis clinic every Tuesday and is available to the
Meigs and Jackson clinics on Wednesday and allernating
Thursdays.

Elementary
school pupils
win honors

after victory

The Salisbury Elem entary

School fourth si x weeks
period honor ro ll :
Fi rst Grade ' Melanie
Arnold , Lin Chase , Apr i l

ORLANDO, Fla. (UP!) Hale
Irwin, with $114,000 in Clark , H e ath e r Cul l um s,
programs as physical, OC·
winnings
already this year, Todd Cutlums . Harl ey Eblin ,
cupalional, speech and
Dar l a King , Mich l King ,
plans
to
take a " much Phillip
vocationa l therapy ,
King , Lisa Pullins ,
By combining your Auto
deserved'' two-week vacation So!l ll y Radford , Brenda Sin .
psyc
hological
testing
and
, Cathy Stotts.
end Homeownert In·
from the golf tnw- to conlem" clair
counseling.
Second G rade Jod i
suronco Into ONE pclllcy
National chairman of the plate the vagaries of putters Harrison , Darren Haye s,
Kevin Mowery , Angie Pat .
You moy bub to to
1976 Easter Seal campaign is and two-part playoffs.
terson , Cheri Sauters, Cindy
Irwi n won his second Sauters , Tim Sloan ," Anita
Wayne Rogers, TV actor
tournament
in three weeks Smith , David Warth .
currently appearing in NBC's
Third Grade _.. Jackie
Mond
ay
morn
ing when Welker
"City of Angels," and well
, Deni se Stegal l , Kim
Roush , Teresa PralL J immy
known for his portrayal of Kermit Zariey misSed two Park
Dn your YN rlv Insurance
e r , Ch11rlotte Ly ons,
premiums.
··
Trapper John on CBS's M·A· three-foot putts in a sudden- Sandy Hoy t, Rut-h Fry .
death playoff in the Citrus
Fourth Grade - Rhonda
S.H series.
Jeffers, Mike Kennedy , Angie
Open.
The
playoff
began
"In fl ation has taken a
Pratt , Craig Si nc lair , Pavia
We wi II revie w your
special toll on the nation 's Sunday but was called after Swindell, Billy Carswell
insurance program
Fifth Grade Natal i e
ph ysica ll y handi capped," two holes because of Lambert
, John Smith, Greg
with you f r ee of
darkness.
,
Taylor
.
poi nted out Rogers. "Senior
charge any day of the
"We should have had time
Grade --'"
Da te
Si xth
citizens on Sociai Security or
Br i ck l es , Dicky King , Er.ic
week.
to
finish
the
playoff
on
a fixed income suffer the
Lipscomb , Kathleen Parker ,
Irwin
,said. La ura Smith. Fred Young .
Call or stop
most. The price of wheel- Sunda y,"
and see us.
chairs, canes, crutches and "Somebody goofed. II put a
walkers has skyrocketed, and lot of pressure on both of us to
many disabl ed perso ns have to wail that long. I spent
depend on Easter Seal loan a sleepless night playing the
equipment programs for next hole. I tnssed and turned
so much I bit my lip."
these items."
lnsulllnl:f! Setvices
Zarley must have had a bad
RAC INE - The Rac ine
More
than
353,000
" The
night
of it, tno. He had a E lementary school B or
ph ysic all y han di capp e d
In s urance
better honor roll for the
per sons r eceived direct chance to win the tournament fourth
si x weeks gr ad ing
Store"
with
a
three-fool
putt
on
the
services from Easter Seal
period has been announced . a
fifth
extra
bole
and
missed
it.
societies across the nation
gr ade of "B" or above to be
Phone 992-5130
during 1975. This represents a He missed another one on the na med to the ro ll were :
G rad~ 1 - M atthew Jewe ll,
dramatic 34112 percent in- sixth eJ&lt;Ira hole, giving Irwin
2. . 1 E. Mai n
Pomeroy
li sa Pope, Rac hel Rei ber,
the
$-10,000
winner
's
prize
.
crease in direct rehabilitation
Di an e Si mpson, Tammy
"Kermit 's putter ~arried · Theiss
, Wendy Wolfe.
him so far , then le.t him
G rad e 2 Lor i Adams,
down," said Irwin, winner at Ke rrl Beeg le, Jay Bos tick,
the Los Angeles Open two Di xie Dugan, T ina F ores ter,
nd y Hi ll , Me li ssa · lhle.•
weeks ago and now the leader Ma
Lisa Parsons, Ke ll l Rizer ,
on the PGA money list.
Kenda Rize r , Chad. Sayr e,
"'When he missed that putt Rebecca VanMeter,
Gra de J - Vincenf Clelan&lt;;t,·
on the fifth playoff hole, I
an Crisp, Kevi n Duga n,
couldn't believe it, It was like Al
Ralph Fisher , Sa ndra Ha r the sun not coming up. I den, Deborah Hol ter , Lois
thought I was out .of it, but "lhl e, Davi d Powe l l, Lori
tllal miss put the dagger at Si mpson, Me lody West, Lori
Wolfe.
his throat. "
Gr ade 4 Sammy Am ·
Zarley, who took the $22,800 burgey, Jam es Bus h, Kevin
second prize, ·"said, "I had Cur f m an, Beck·y Johnson ,
Hale in a box and l should li nda Pro ff itt, Lare11 Wolfe,
.
have won the tow-nament · Tony Wolfe.
Gr ad e S Kathy Baker,
, then. Like Hale said, I got Seck y Lee, Cl a ir M orri s,
into the playoff with my Terr y Pa tte r so n, Jo h n
putter and then lost with it. " Port e r , Dav id Sa l mons ,
Irwin, already in his fifth Tonj a Sa lser, Lori Warden,
an nie Weese .
consecuti ve $100,000 year , Mel
Gra de 6 - Kim Bicker s,
said he will "take a much- Vic ky Dee m, Kim Fo ll rod,
Reason 1.
are
me tax
deserved vacation the next Lori P owell, T om Roseberry,
two weeks" and rejoin the M e l i nda Salmons, R i t a
specialists. We ask the right question s.
Sl ater , !;.aura Wol fe, Ken t
tour at the Heritage Classic Wolfe.
We dig for every honest deduction. We
on Hilton Head, S.C., which
want to leave no ston e unturned to
he won in 1971 and 1973.
.make sure you pay the smallest
CU NIC HELD
legitimate tax.
A total of 2,361 children
were screened in ·the vision
clinic
and 2011 of them were
Wedn esda y Atternoon
found
to have other than
Ma rc h J, 1976
Team
w L norm a i vision and were
Th re e Devi ls
1
59 29
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
referred to the nurse. 87 of
R idenour's T V &amp; App l. 57 31
Rose berr y's Penn zoil 52 36
these children were seen in
Vi st a 3
44 44
the Diagnostic • Ocular
Sw eet P's
34 54
Pediatric
Clinics.
M in er svi ll e Gir ls
18 70
lreatment is available in such

Personal!

in worsening oils crises '·

independenUy operated and
funded, and inquiries for
assistance should be directed
tn the chairman of the local
society or to the city or
county public health nurse .

lnvin plans
2-week rest

Racine school
honors listed

llenry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax help.

CANTON, Ohio (UP!) The lines at gasoline stations
of 1974 wUI "look like a
picnic" unless alternative
sow-ces of fuel are developed,
according to Federal Energy
Adrninislrator Frank Zllrb.
"We can look forward to
higher oil prices," Zllrb said
before addressing a Walsh
College crowd Monday,
"unless we put our domestic
house in order. This should be
a signal to Congress.
'"If we don't make
provisions now, the gas lines
of two years ago will look like
a picnic," said Zarb.
Zarb said he is trying to get
congressional approval for a
three-point program:
- Giving industry
maximum incentive tn fully
develop natural oil and gas
capabilities.

RACINE
Thirteen
students of Southern High
School took part in the
DisiTict 17 annual solo and
ensemble

music

con tes t

Saturday in Athens. Their
iosrutctor. is Mrs. Joy Bigler
Norris.
Students were rated one
through five with one being
supen o1 ; two, excellent :
three, good, etc. Several
students played solos as well
· as taking part in an ensemble.
Molly

Fisher,

senior,

clarinetist, received a rating

of ·I; Corena Rhodes , .senior,
saxophone, a II ; Carol
Morris, freshman , clarinet,
fl. Bobbi Chapman, junior,
flute, a II. Two snare
drummers, Miss Rhodes and
Brenda Lawrence played for
the judges' comments and
received favorab le remarks .
Miss Fisher, Miss Morris
and Barb Theiss received a I
for their performance as a
clarinet trio. A brass quart,t
consisting of Jaye Ord and
Becky Crow, trumpets: Brice
Hart, trombone, and Marie
Picke ns, baritone horn,

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Although temperatures in
Central Ohio dipped below
the freezing level for the past
several days, it has not hurt
the fruit crop in Central Ohio.
a t least, an Ohio Sta te
University horticulturist said
today.
James
D. Utzinger,
associa te pr ofessor of
horticulture at OSU, said
\emperatures would have to
drop between 18 a nd 20
degrees before the freeze
could damage trees already
early,
. budding
from
unseasonably warm weather
early this month.
Utzinger sa id the next few
weeks will be critical for the

Local Bowling

Hi g h se r ies
Pea r l
Ru sse ll 413, Sharo n H ines 408 .
and Betfy Writese l 400 . 1
Hig h game - M ary Hoo v er
162, Jean Spencer 159, and
Pearl Russel l 147.

.OPEN : 9-6 Wttkcloys, 9.5 Sot.
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSIIRY

This Wook •i Spocl•l

FRYING
CHICKEN

WHOLE

~

~

CHICKEN

~

VAN CAMPS

Whi te, tan V-roof, tan viny l
int ., slant 6 au to., P.S ..
P. B., radio, good tires, 1

owner.

FOOTWEAR

3495

5

For Th e Entire Fam i ly

•••

FRESH,
LEAN

•
f

I
•
''

17

(

Karr &amp; Van landt

by Ked s
Converse

Middle port , Ohio

WHOLE

69C

LB.

FRESH
LB. 79c
CABBAGE

c

SOLID HEADS

LB.

SLICED

STARKIST

THE INN PLACE

TUNA

YELLOW
COOKING
.

6lh OZ. CAN .

ONIONS

WEDNESDAY NIGHT

SPECIAL

and will support $en. Henry

Jackson, D-Wash.

3 LB.
BAG

ANOTHER ~~-

DECORATOR

SCOTT TOWELS

GOOD BUY FROM

.

•

JUMBO

Vis it Our Salad Bar
B-B-Q Ch icken
F ried Rice
Gol den Peac h Teasers
Hot Rolls
Co ffee, Tea or Milk

ROCKERS
Reg. s69.95

· ROLL

GOLDEN ISLE FROZEN VEGETABLES
CUT CORN, ~REEN PEAS,
10 oz.
FORDHOOK L1 MAS,.

3

Plllsburv

CAKE MIXES

PKG.

WHITE, YE.LUM,
GERMAN CHOC.,
CHOC. RAVOR

00

*2.95
pi\JS tax

The Tr i. County 's Most
Euiting NightSpot

BETSY ROSS
BAKE &amp; SERVE

SCOiliES

THE MEIGS INN
Pho11e 992-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

BUDGET NOTED
Th e Hea lth De par tment
worked under a budget of
$35,975.89 for the year 1975.

BREAD

FACIAL TISSUES
I•

l·

200 CNT. PKG.

CAT
FOOD

WHOLE FRYERS
COFFEE
PHEBE 'S STORE

3

.

Prices Effective "March 9-13

Right Reserved io lim it Quantit ies
We Gladly. Accept Fed . Food Stamps
Monday thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00
s.,,,,d,,v9to9

LB. CAN

$399

. CAMPBELL'S SOUP
TOMATO OR
VEGETABLE

.·KRAFT CHEESE........, .~~~:
......
.
.
4
$1
GREEN BEANS..........
. oc
PUNCH MIX.:.............~~~:.1
HEINZ VINEGAR ....... ~r-. 29

SALADS

Grade A
LIMIT 1

In

lb~

49~

Containers

Macaroni,

Fine For Ba r becuing

Tasty Smoked

CHICKEN
QUARTERS

PICNIC
HAMS

lb.s3~

SHREDDED MO.ZZER ELLA

1~b.

I

Slaw

lb. as~

.-.b.~

Sliced

BOILED
HAM
lb.

•1••

••
II

Cans

WYLER'S COLA OR

.

l oz.

CRISCO

~

MALT, SALAD, GARLI\. , WtNE _

J

FOR COOKING
AND BAKING

•

.

J ID.

Can

~~49

~:~ 2V&gt;

394 •

PILLSBURY RICH •N EASY
FROSTING

WITH
COUPON

TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

CARMEL, MILK QfOC., DBL DUTCH,
FUDGE, CREAMY VANILlA
No. 105
~ WITH
COUPON
TWI E;,;.i,;,;;; 3-13-76
GATEWAY

9

Ohio Volley

BACON
lb. '1.39

HANOVER

PORI(_ &amp;
BEANS

69~

No . 75

1

POTATOES 10 lb. '1.29 FLORIDA ORANGES
50 lb. bag, '5.75
5 lb. bag69•

0

SYRUP
No. 105

No . 1 Maino Elling

'

r:rllJPON

BUTTERWORTH~

MRS.
24 oz. btl.

89~

lti.IN CITIES GATfltAY
Expires 3-13-76

......._JL...
-• _.....;;:
•
•
0
•
•
•
•
•

COUPO N

COOKIES

LliiiY' S CUT

303

COUPON

KEEBLER PITTER PATTER

Potato - Dlicken,

CUT-UP FRYERS........ :... •b. 55'

&amp;CANS$1

All
6lh Ol
FLAVORS CAN

New At Phebe's

Welker's

· 2 LOAVES

PURINA

~
FOLGER'S

-PRODUCE-

Calla Hams

~c. .79~

BEEF

You'll Like Our Qua lity
GMA C F INANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings ' til6 : 00
Ti l S ~. m . Sal.

NKIE
WIENERS

GROUN

Way cf Doing Business.

heritage h~

FRENCH CITY
SMOKED

NO.2 CAN

••••

49~

L8.43~

FRYING CHICKEN

PORK &amp; BEANS

•I

LB.

FAMILY PAK

USED CARS

75 DODGE
Dart Swinger

LB.

CUT UP TRAY PAK
•

CANVAS

618 E.' MAIN ST.
Pomeroy, Ohio

-

On Mar. 26, the Sou.thern
Junior High students will
participate in the solo and
ensemble contest on the
jun ior high level at Jackson .

VANIK fOR SCOOP
WASHINGTON &lt;UPI)
Rep . Charles A. Vanik, D·
Ohio, says he has given up the
idea of run ning as a favorite
son in . Ohio's June 8
preSidential primary eJection

CLOSED SUNDAYS SO OUR EMPLOYEES MAY AnEND
CHURCH OF THEIR CHOICE.

BIRTHDAY HONORED
A surprise birthday dinner
honoring Virginia Carson was
he ld Saturday, March 6 at the
home of her aunt, Ina Rife, .
921 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis.
Among those attending were
Mrs . Millie
Meadows,
Pomeroy : Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Rife, Cheshire, and
Mrs. and Mrs. Lark Napier
and sons Larkie and Kevin of
Cheshire

numbers .

expected large fruit crop in
Ohio.
He said .the cold temperatures have taken a toll of the
peach crop, but said it was no
worse than usual.

OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9:00P.M.
FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

Zllfb.

received a II for their performance . MiSs Chapman,
Lois Bailey, Lisa Warner and
Penny Smith received a liJ
for their flute quartet

Fruit crop was safe Monday

~1fllt(i~....... .

- Realisiic pricing IJid effl·
cient use of available fuel.
-Storage of a me-year
supply of oil.
"By 1985, we can look
forward to e•panding our use
of synthetic fuels, but it will
be between 1985 and 1995
before the technology bet!ins
tn make a difference," said

Southern High students win music ratings

Save 10 to 25%

euter-Brogan

IN111EWEEI

,,

in Columbus.
As in past year, Easter Seal
donations are received in
Columbus to expedite handling and are then forwarded
tn local affiliates where the
funds are expended for direct
services.

WITH
COUPON

..
•

lWIN CITIES

G:A~AY

. . . . . . . Expires
. . . . .3-13-76
.. . . .

JIF
BUTTER.

WITH
COUPON

...
•

•

Expires 3-13-76
•

..
•

•

.....
•

•

•

•

•

E&gt;&lt;Dir.•• 3-13-76
0

•

•

•

•

•

•

COUPON

COUPON

FINAL TOUDi

CHIFFON FAMILY

FABRIC SOFTENER
No . 205
64 oz . bit

0

$}49

TWIN CITIES GATEWAY
Expires 3-13-76

79~

WITH•
iar
COUPON
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

ta oz .

TWIN CITIES GATEWAY
0

·

COUPON

$129

3 lb, can

SOFT-WEVE

2 roll pkg .

COUPON

(JOe Off)

j

TOILET TISSUE
WITH
~~~:::d 2/89~ COUPON

·

FLUFFO
SHORTENING

....
COUPON

5/$1 ()()

WITH
COUPON

MARGARI
No. 105 49~
1
lb.

COUPON
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY
Expires 3-13-76

f

'I

�7- 'fbe Pomeroy SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Tuesday, March 9,
~ - The

P001eroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 9, 1976

ilf' ' ' ' ' '''''&lt;G;~:;;;'i~~'' ' 'i{';;,, .,.,., ., ,.:.,i[ Basketball
;:;;

:::
:::·

.

.

By llt ·lt·n and :-iut• Bottd

;':'

{

:-:·

Grad Ceremony Is Tum.()ff
Dear Helen and Sue :
I'll be graduating from high school a year earlier than the
rest of my class. I don't want a graduation ceremony and
would prefer just to receive a diploma.
My parents say I wiU regret this in a few years, but tlley

~:;~~~~:::~k-7!:'~ ~ :~ c~;:~~:tr!~~e ~~~:~ti

want wdo is get out and get on with my life ' - DAVID

Dear David :
Aren't you frogetting one tlling ? Most high schools insist
you attend graduation ceremonies, unless you have a goldplated excuse (and that 's not to be confused with the "gold
Irick" variety ),
You wouldn't want your parents lying for you, right'? So
resign yoursell : Who knows, you might even enjoy it. HELEN

-

+++

David :
You're right, in cases like yours, tllat the graduation
ceremony is more for parents than tlleir children, but look at it
this way: Two hours out of your life won't ruin it - and you r
folks have worked pretty hard bringing you this far. Even if
you tllink the cap-and-jlown route is a phony act, don't "rain on
tlleir ·charade.'' - SUE

+++

RBp :
It seems to me every time a person thinks of goind to bed
with so.[Jleone, you au tomatically ngure they mean having sex.
I'm 16 and mediumly mature . ) don 't want children but a
career . I could fall in love, but I'm turned off by the worry of
being THAT close. Why can't you go to bed with someone of the
opposite sex and just kiss and be. near without having
interco urse? - JUDY

•
•

Judy:
It's possible, but not probable. A better solution: if you
don't want sex, don 't go to bed. - HELEN AND SUE

+++

Dear Helen and Sue:
I am 15, my boyfriend is 16 and in tlle navy . We're planning
w get married in the spring. My mother sa id she will sign for
me, but then, every time I do something tbe lest bit wrong , like
talk back or forge! my housework , she says this proves I'm too
yoWlg and she won't sign.
I could be almost perfect, and she'd find fault. I'm so upset
with this on-again, off-again thing I get fo rgetful abou t chores,
and then it'soff-again . What 's with her anyway ? -G.U.M.
Dear Mother of G.U.M.:
Witll these threats and bribes, you're actually saying,
"Now be a good little girl or Mummy won't let you get married
... " (All the while hoping ''G." WON 'T conform so you'll have
an excuse not to sign.) That's kid stuff !
You've got a perfect right to say "No t" Use it. - HELEN

+++
NOTE FROM SUE: Your mother is taking· the chicken
way out : instead of an ulti{natum - "You can 't marry unlil
you're of legal age 1" - she's making YOU provide reasons to
cancel a spring wedding. And tllis can cause nothing but
resentment. Let's hope she takes a stand and sticks to it, even
though it probablywori't be the one you want right now .

Polly's Pointers
\

By Polly Cram er

Sandpaper those
slippery soles

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Please
tell me what to do with
slippery lea ther so les on
shoes. Is there anything to do
when wearing them outdoors
on ice ? - O'NE LL.
DEAR O'NELL - Briskly
rub tbe soles with sandpaper
until they are a btl rough and
lose that slickness. Then rub
in som e lins e·ed oil. A
waterproof ·a dhesive cloth
backed tape applied to the
sole might also provide a
better grip - POLLY.
.
DEAR POLLY - Many
childr en's cloth es have
nothing to hang them up by,
so I make three and a half
inch loops at the inside back
neckbands on cove ralls',
jackets, coats and so on. That
alone is not so new, but I use
shoe laces of the proper color
and they work so well . Such
lo ops on gar ments help
Children learn to hang Up
th eir clothes , and is
especially nice when coat
hooks are placed low enough
that the little ones can reach
them. Shoe laces are good to
use for making repl acement
hooks on tllese garments that
have had them previously. MRS. H. K.
DEAR POLLY - An old
bread hox, repainted, can
store cook-books, file, pencil,
etc. It is also useful for
keeping medicine away from
children by turning the open
side to the wall . Cleaning
supplies could be kept in one
and away from toddlers. FRANCES.
DEAR POLLY - I work in
a super market and have
been interested in the Pet
Peeves of the women shoppers . We always like to find a
better way to do things, but I
also hove Pet Peeve. When I
go to work I hove to look
forward to straightening up
the mess made by the
cuswmers. People pick up
something and after they
have gone ohout two aisles
decide t~y do not want it so
they take it out of the cart and
leave It on just any shelf. By
leaving it in tlle wrong place
ltgetashuffled arotmd all day
li1d finally ends up on the
dlmaged table. When you
change your mind leave the
r

.--.... Birthday

LETART FALLS - The
l.elart Falls PTO Monday
night made blacktopping the
outdoor basketball courts, a
pri ority and as ked Dee
Spencer and Glen Tucker to
check into the cost.

courts made priority
new uniforms for the !iflh
grade basketball team was
given.
The group also agreed to
give $30 to the kindergarten
to help buy materials for
graduation gowns. A new
d ock will be purchased for
.............. .......... .... .. ...... .. . !he auditorium, and Bonnie

Card party

:;:r=·;;;;.·=· [J;;;;;~:·=,; :

to be held

to deliver {
····
:.: first sermon ii: ~~:%~~t~~:;r~ ;;;~llt~;~~~~7~

':':

::::

Mrs. Spencer , Mrs . Rose
Youn g and Bill Downie were
.,., appointed to the nominating

@

Committees for the annual
St. Patrick's Day card party
to be held March 18 were
announ ced at a recent
meeting of the Catholic
Women's Club of the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church .
Mrs. Susan Blaker presided
at the mee ting with reports
being presented by the officers . A report was given on
the dinner honoring Ra lph
Graves.
Committees for the card
par ty to be held from 7:30 to
10::!0 p.nl . are as follows:
Tickets , BHrb Smith;

Mrs. Peterson, a graduate
of Ohio University with
majors in Philosophy and
Languages, is the daughter of
Chester Tannehil.l of Middleport. She is the wife of Dr.
Carl Peterson, professor of
Chemistry at Ohio Wesleyan

public i ty,

Univers ity.

Rose

Sisson;

posters, Carol McCullough
and Rolan de Brown ; tallies,
Ann a Black wood; table
prizes, Elsie Sutherland, Jo
Ellen Roush; canvassing for.
favors , Susan Blaker, Barbara Mul len and Rose Sisson ;
cashier, Mary Kunzelma.n
and Janet Duffy.
The food hostesses to
serve cookies, sandwiches,
coffee and soft drinks are
Susan Blaker, Colburn,
Sandy Kovalchik, Kate Welsh
Sharon Michae l, Mar y
Morrow, Dorothy Gloeckner,
Rolande Brown, Katie Biron,
Philomena Follrod, Helena
Brickl es, . Cecili a Mitch,
Susan Baer, Rita Hamm,
Shirley Huswn, Barb Mul len.
On the c leanup committee
are all of the women who
played cards. Tables are to
bese t up at JOa.m. on the day
of the car d party .

COLUMBUS
Ja nice
Tannehill Peterson, a student
at the Lutheran Theological
Seminary here, will deliver
her firs t sermon this Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the St.
Luke Lutheran Church, 1:1 E.
Norwich .

year. A jitney supper was
tentatively set for April 10,
The basketball players and
che erleaders
were
introduced by William Wickline
and Bev Wickline. Also introduced was the school's
new TiUe 1 teacher. The
attendance a ward went to
Roger Roush's fifth grade . To
open the meeti ng the
basketball players led in the
pledge to the flag . The Lord 's
Prayer wa s led by the

cheerleaders

the

meeting. The fourth grade
mothers served refreshments.

Class dotuJtes
to board
A contri buti on on the new
bulletin board was made
dw-ing a recent meeting of
tlle Golden Rule Class at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Mrs. Jerry Fi elds presided
with Mrs. Richard Evanson
giving devotions from the
112th Psalm in the Living
Word. Mrs. Louis . Osborne
gave prayer . Th e Ap ri l
meeting will be held at .the
church·wi th each member to
take a box lunch.
Mrs. Edward Venoy conducted games with ihe prize
going to Mrs. Charles Eskew .

Homemade ice cream and
ca ke were served. Attending
besides tpose named were
Richard Evanson, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill McDaniel, Roc helle
MEETING TONIGHT
and
Roxanna, Mr. and Mrs.
Xi Gam ma Mu Chapter of
Gardner
Wehrun g, J erry
Be~ Si gma Phi Sorori ty will
~' i e ld s' a nd Terry, Mrs.
meet at 7:30 tonight at the
offices of the Columbia Gas Wayne Klein and Seth, Mrs.
Co. in Middlepor t. Texanna Gertrude Bass, Mrs. Eva
Wells and Judy Werry will Dessa uer and Mrs. Denver
present the program on the Kapple.
topic, "A Woman Chooses."
SHRINE TO MEET
Mary Shrine 37, Order of
White Shrine , will meet at a
p. m. Friday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. Officers for
the coming year will be

to close

elected and all reports are to
be in for the meeting. All
ritualistic items are to be
turned in w the worthy scribe
a t th e mee ting. Potl uck
refreshments will follow the
session.

Birthdlly

GIFT!
TH E B. DAVID

FAMILY
CROWN"'PI

-..
•
~-

~

...
l-

I

I

MINI-PATCH DENIM PATCH KIT
4 denim patches
Embroidered in

100 TYLENOL TABUTS

1
1

Safe.
f•st
relief ... without

I
I
With Coupon I
l omot 2
I

mu111 -

69C

colored yarns

Iron on In seconds
Rog. S1.29

pai n
asprin

79~ With Coupon
l imit 2

Reg . $2.16

~

Prices va lid March 10-l 4

Prices va lid Marc h 10-14

~%-;~'i"'fil'Wl- - ---r---~-------------COUPON
1

OLD SPICE AFTER SHAVE
LOTION

$}09

Reg. s2.2 5

.

1

32

I
I

With Coupon
l imit 2

I
I

BEAUTY LOTION

I1

~ With Coupon
Limit 2

$259

Ilea. 14.10

Herbal, peach 1 strawberry
Pr ofel'1 enrlchPri

Prices valid March 10-14

49/io

Reg. 98.c

.

.

Prices valid ~rch 10-14

------------------r---------------COUPON
COUPON
EM

1
I

--

Toshiba

B!~~~B~~.~Uf!~~o~NIMALS I SOLID STATE AM
$159

6W' tall
Reg. 13.98

PORTABLE RADIO

I

monkeys, dog and ca t

II Rev. 119.95

With Coupon
Lim it 2

With Coupon
Li mi f 2

I 6'12 oz ,

COU.,ON

~~t, firm a-bsor bent

a nd

cheri shed a lways .

Beauti f u l pear shape
stones in the color of the
fa mil y' s
b ir th st one s
per $0na li ze and gi ve this
pin special signi f i cance .

only

•n.oo
Goessler's
'

JeweiiJ Store
POMEROY

19

Reg . 49c

~ With Coupon

Limit

COUPON

2

With free

I1

ALPHA KERI SOAP

I
I

Reg . $2.90

1

t'nces valid March 10-14

$}79

~~~ ~~:.
With Coupon
l imit 2

Pri ces valid March 10-14

------------------r----------------COUPON
COUPON

31/4

oz .

.

Foley

CLEARASIL SOAP

39

Reg. 69c

KITCHEN GADGET SAU

~ Wttn coupon

Your choice or 9 items

With Coupiln
R-..... . 76 c •.. 59~ Llmtf
2

limit 2

Pnc es va lid March 10-14

Prices v~lid March 10-14

I

'

- ----------------L-Bfi•111ij•h1.
l +---------fi•lll:l•l~l -~- --

I
I

MEN's TUBE SOCKS and
WOMEN'S SPORT SOCKS

7.

Reg. so.s•

Pr ices valid

35

Reg . 70c

~ With Coupon
limit 2

Prices valid Mar ch 10-14

·-----r-.-""!"-------~------

COUPON

I
I
I
I
I
I

SESAME STREET RECORDS
AsSorted tit les

69

Jar

WSTRE CREME SHAMPOO

s~ With Coupon I
limit 2
I
I
March 10-14
I

COUPON

Req . Sl.29

4 oz .

~ Witn Coupon

28 OZ. LESTOIL
The all -purpo$e hoUsehold
clea ner

I

Limit 2

I

Prices va.tid March 10-14

79'

Reg . St .59

With Coupon
Lim it 2

Prices valid March tO-t4

------------------·----------------IIJ•III:l•l~l
I
·•II•III:l•J~I
1776 AMERIC.A.N

1

Faultless .

6-DIGIT POCKET CALCULATOR

I
I
I

2-qt . bag ot du rabl e I alex .
Sloraqe purse
No. 2666

Ad d s, s u b t ract s , mulfipl les,
di vi des

$7

Reg. $14.99

99

g

g~ With
Coupon
Reg. n .l8
limit 2
·
I
.
1
Prices valid 10-14

ltmtt 2

valid March l0-14

Prices

FEMININE SYRINGE

:

With Coupon

-----------~ - - --,-- - --------------COUPON

COUPON

1 16 oz.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

100 EXCEDRIN
The ex t r a . sfren gfh pa in r eliever

With Coupon
Limit 2
Prices valid March 10-14

ALBERTO BALSAM CONDITIONER
Regular

With Coupon
limit 2
Rev . 12.50
Prien valid March 10-14

-----~------1 -- - - ------------COUPON - -- - ~COUPON

I

5 SCHICK
Coupon
limit ~
29~ With

Reg. Sl.OO
Prices

~:'-~:::;~~-~4___

_1_ ___ Prices valid

BA~!r ~~~~~d~J!ON
When you need money for your kid 's hrac~s. or any good reason,
talk to us. We handle Personal Loans quick ly. easily anrl wi t·h
consid e ration. You can borrow with t rust where people save with
trust. C ity Loan &amp;Savings.
.

CITY LOAN

Trimmed With
Fresh Flowers

&amp;.SAVINGS
EST 191.2

20%0FF

85
--

With Coupon
limit 2

-------

COUPON
12 Faultless GOLF BAllS

Reg . 90C eoioh
Reg . $8.95 doz

$444 With
Coupon
limit 2

' jj \

'

1112

oz. BAN ROLL-ON

DEODORANT
Re9ular or un scented

.,
RIll · St ·-

Prices valid March 10· 1•

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

Req . ate

59

~

79' WI!~

Coupon
lomol 2

With Coupon
limit 2

March t0-14

~~==:=;=

COUPON

I

Amity MEN'S

TRIFOLD BIUfOLD
Top

Grain leathe·rs In popular colors

Valuta to SI.IO

Reduces fever and relieves stuffy nose.

.l;ho · (

I
I
t
I

March 10-14

COUPON

I _____
Prices valid
_____
_.
. -.
=

36 CONGESPIRIN

l ,o1; 1 n .~ !ro ·~ 1 ' • •11 1 1 1 lhi'HII I! h

I
I

Prices valid March t0-14

COUPON

12:3 E. Main Street !!92-2 171

304

Reiiutaror Menthol
With Coupon
Req . 51 · 09 · ';J limit 2 ,

~

9. OZ -. MENNEN

~

SHAVE CREAM

1

COUPON

Reg . S1.59

11 oz . BARBASOL

1
I

PLATINUM _PLUS BLADES

~

C:

:r.
::&gt;
•
...

C

E
"'
::'
'
!.!.
::;o
"'

~

....~
:
..•t;

~~

$3

99 Limit
With toupon
2 .

PrlcH valid March t0-14

COUPON

FAMILY
INDIP.INDENT

PHARMACY .

Lean, Pure,
Tender Beef!

lb.

.

"
.,.

!:'.

i

t

""
:·
:.,.
:
;:

;. . ~:J:;e;~·th! :O~~~f 'ivt~~:
Pearl Reynolds. Mrs. Everett
~ Taylor to present the
• program .
:- '
THURSDAY
~·
MEIGS COUNTY Huniane
r • • Society, 7:30 p. Ill. Thursday
at Middleport village hall .
..,.,. Public inv ited .
CE RVI CAL CAf'ICE R
Clinic Thursday at Veterans
:., Memorial Hospila l. For
• · appointment call American
~ Cancer Society ~t 992-7531 or
• J an Jud ge, 992-5832 .
•·
LAU REL CL·IFF Better
•' Hea lth Club, 7:30 p.m.
t ':'hursday at the home of Mrs.
Bertha Parker.
•
•
,
SPONSORING SHOW
'
CHESTER - The Chester
PTA will sponsor a talent
s how at 7:30p.m. Saturday in
th e Ches ter Element ary
School auditorium . Taking
par t will be Kim Batey,
Andr ew Batey, th e. Reed
;. Brothers (New Life Singers),
"' J ea n Tr ussell, Mar gar et
~· Tuttle, Doug Circle, Fay and
::· J im Weston , Nick and Danny
Leonard, the Gospel Tones ,
' Sand y and J ean Sexson and
~· 'Bryce Buckley. Prac tice for
'' par ti cipants will be at 7:30
• p.m. Friday. Refreshments
: will be sold. during the
.,_ evening. Admission is $1 for
~ adul ts and 50 cents for
' children up to 12 years of age.

GROUND ROUND ••••••••••• ;. $1
FRESH AND LEAN
'

NU WASTE

GROUND CHUCK

og

AU PURE FRESH LEAN BEEF

lb

r

BEEF STEW •••••••••••·•••••• l~·.. ·
SUPERIORS POLISH

SAU SAG E••••••••••••••••••• _.I~; • 89
WIENERS ••••••••••••••••••• ~~~.

FLAVORITE

BREAD

POTATO CHIPS

79t;

11 oz.
bag

·~k.

l.oilll ( 'l•lll!lilll V

•

•

-""·

Purina

TENDER
VITTLES
FRISKIES

for

Beef, Meat Stew,
Beef &amp; Egg,

DOG &amp; CAT Chicken &amp; Uver,
Uver, Eggs &amp; Bacon
FOOD

oz.$

141fz

cans

Powers Out Dirt•• •Powers In Brightness

=RGENT

SWIFT'S
BEEF STEW

umE

CASH SAVER

ICICLE
PICKLES

pr

PESTA BRAND

BANANA
PEPPERS

. 32 oz.
pr

PAMPERS

24 OOUNT BOX

59~

FROZEN
FOODS

-

3

pint
prs

THURSDAY
AND SUNDAY

DAIRY BUYS

,'BROUGHTON'S
2% LOW FAT

MILK

'129

gal.
BROUGHTON'S

HOMO. MILK
carton

SEVEN-UP
16 oz.

8 PAK
**********************************

C 64 oz. bot.
each

7s~

FAIRMONT

QiOC. MILK'

2

AU WEEK LONG

Throwaways

box

EXTRA ABSORBENT

25 LB.
BAG

PESTA DILL

HAMBURGER
SLICES

on~

DAYTIME 30 COUNT

99

DOG
FOOD

24 oz..

carton

CIGARS

Introducing the P esta Brand!
PESTA FRESH PAK

R,.= 39~

WINCHESTER.

24 OZ. CAN

D

ANNIVERSARY NEAR
The Skate-a-Way Roller
· Rink of Route 7 near Ches ter
.will observe i Is 20th anlllversary on Saturday .
~Owners Mr. and Mrs . Bob
,TrusseD will serve lee cream
' to skaters and there will be
.races, prizes and balloo111.
::oPen skat11111 at , the rink Is
:'1:30 to 10 p.m. Wednesday,
•Friday and Sa turday each

$

SUPERIORS AL1. MEAT

lfz p:al.

•

bxs

ggc
BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••••.•• ~~:. ..,
ggc
SUPERIORS AU MEAT

~

•

99~

C

•

SUPPER SET
The Pomeroy Fire Depar tment will stage a public '
spaghetti supper Saturday at
' tlle fire station , Butternut
'' Ave ., from 3 to 7 p.m. The
menu will include spaghetti,
tossed salad and rolls with
~ desse r t and beverage for an .
additional charge over the $2
adult pri ce and $1.2:i for
children 12 and under.
Tickets may be purchased
from any fireman , at M~yer's
• Barber Shop or at the New
:.Yprk Clotlling Ho11se.

lb.

$J09

•

r·
E

AGED BEEF

U.S. GOVERNM ENT
INSPECTED

OUICK FIX NO WASTE STEAKS
FROM USDA CHOICE LEAN BEEF

TUESDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Chapte r
53, D.A.V ., 7:30 p. m .
Tuesday at the home on
Butternut Ave.
CHESTER ,. Tow nship
Trustees, 7:30 T~esday at the
town hall in Chester.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge363, Tuesday, 7p. m. at
the Masonic Temple . Master
Mason degree to be conferred. All master Mason·s
invited.
WIODNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Amateur

;~

CORN FED

BUCKET STEAK

Calendar

9-

CHOICE

No Wcme!

REGULAR 99' MR. BEE

t:..

KERI LOTION

I
I

CURITY COTION BALLS

.,..

..,

W'lh
' coupon
Limit 2

~

.

w

-

LANOLIN PWS SHAMPOO

I
1
I
1

With Coupon
l imit 2

..

;o.

Prices valid March 10-14

1

...

•

~

----- ----- --- --~
4oz.
I -16-oz.- -------COUPON -----COUPON
OIL OF OLAY

..,...,
~

oz.

89

Reg. S1.59

'.
1!1

VEL LIQUID DETERGENT

I
I

Prices valid March. 10. 14

1-------

59 N. Second St.
Middleport, Ohio

-...

----------------...,-----·-=
=
COUPON

60

item in your basket and when
you get to the cashier give it
to he r and say you do not
wan t it and then t he item will
be put right back in its proper
pl ace . Yo u would ne ver
believe how much time we
have to spend getting peanut
shells, chocolate chips, open
packages of co okies and
can dy off the shelves so we
can stock our merchandise.
A
FRUSTRAT ED
STOCKER.
DEAR POLLY - I am a
gr ea t grandm other and
recen tly had dinner witll a
young grandmother who also
had two of her small grandchildren with her. She placed
a large sheet of plastic (big
bags would serve the purpose 1 under each of their
chairs at the table and her
carpet was pr otected. I
thought ihi s such a nice idea
as the children could. eat
without fear of being chided
to be careful . It made it nicer
for the adults, too. No worr ies
for anyone. - MRS. H. G.
You will receive a dollar If
Pull y uses your fa vorite
hom emaking Idea, Pet
Peeve, Polly's Problem or
solution to a problem. Write
Polly in care of this newspaper.

MAGICAL
FOLIAGE
GARDENS

......

S;

6tJANf iTIES
•!.-JMITE D

- -~~e~_:a~~~~~_2~~---J----~~'.!.!~':.~~~~·~-·--

Th e story of Mother's life
beau ti f Ully told In a truly
quality piece of lewelr y
that w ill be worn wi th pride

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kane of
Marietta enteriJ!ined SWlday
with a party honoring their
daughter, Heather Michelle,
on her first birthday.
Also celebrated at the party
wu the birthday of !lruce
Blackston, 18. A Raggedy
Ann and Andy theme was
carried out and a Winnie the
Pooh cake was served witll
ice cream, sandwiches and
Kool-Aid.
Attending from Pomeroy
were Heather's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Blackston and sons, Bob and
Bruce ;
her
grea tgrandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
William Grueser and Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbur Bailey, and Mr .
and Mrs . Kennetll Harris,
David and Kenny .. Others at
the party were Mr. and Mrs .
David Wiley and Angela,
Washington, W.Va .; Mr . and
Mrs. J ack Kovac and Jennlfer, Cleveland , and Dean
Lutz. Steubenville. Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Kane, Cleveland,
sent a gift .
Visiting Monday were Mr .
and Mrs . F . E. Shaeffer,
Columbus, Heather's greatgrandparents.
Mr . and Mrs. Kane recently
moved ·from Steubenville w
Marietta where he is
associa ted , wi th WMOA
Radio.

,.. _

USDA

MINUTE· STEAK

..,._

The PTO also discussed the
need for an extension of the
gymnasium so basketball
games can be played there
rather than having to use the
Racine Junior High . Ap proval for the purchase of

~~::~~=~~g~af:e~!0s~~~~~

WE FEATURE SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE BEEF

--.. celebrated

.

qts.

BANQU_ET

•

FRIED CHICKEN

2 lb •
box

JOHN'S HOME STYLE

PIZZA

each

SCOT LAD

ORANGE JUICE

4

79c
6 oz.
cans

Grade 8
LARGE

SCOT LAD

ICE MILK
*gal.

see

EGGS

89e

doz.

sgc

PRODUCE

Juicy Calif.

LEMONS

6

~

FOR

39~

••••••••••••••••••

YELLOW

ONIONS

3 ~~~. 49c

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily' 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to 10
We Act;ept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE 992-3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts. We reserve the ri8ht to 11mlt quantities. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•

I

�7- 'fbe Pomeroy SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Tuesday, March 9,
~ - The

P001eroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 9, 1976

ilf' ' ' ' ' '''''&lt;G;~:;;;'i~~'' ' 'i{';;,, .,.,., ., ,.:.,i[ Basketball
;:;;

:::
:::·

.

.

By llt ·lt·n and :-iut• Bottd

;':'

{

:-:·

Grad Ceremony Is Tum.()ff
Dear Helen and Sue :
I'll be graduating from high school a year earlier than the
rest of my class. I don't want a graduation ceremony and
would prefer just to receive a diploma.
My parents say I wiU regret this in a few years, but tlley

~:;~~~~:::~k-7!:'~ ~ :~ c~;:~~:tr!~~e ~~~:~ti

want wdo is get out and get on with my life ' - DAVID

Dear David :
Aren't you frogetting one tlling ? Most high schools insist
you attend graduation ceremonies, unless you have a goldplated excuse (and that 's not to be confused with the "gold
Irick" variety ),
You wouldn't want your parents lying for you, right'? So
resign yoursell : Who knows, you might even enjoy it. HELEN

-

+++

David :
You're right, in cases like yours, tllat the graduation
ceremony is more for parents than tlleir children, but look at it
this way: Two hours out of your life won't ruin it - and you r
folks have worked pretty hard bringing you this far. Even if
you tllink the cap-and-jlown route is a phony act, don't "rain on
tlleir ·charade.'' - SUE

+++

RBp :
It seems to me every time a person thinks of goind to bed
with so.[Jleone, you au tomatically ngure they mean having sex.
I'm 16 and mediumly mature . ) don 't want children but a
career . I could fall in love, but I'm turned off by the worry of
being THAT close. Why can't you go to bed with someone of the
opposite sex and just kiss and be. near without having
interco urse? - JUDY

•
•

Judy:
It's possible, but not probable. A better solution: if you
don't want sex, don 't go to bed. - HELEN AND SUE

+++

Dear Helen and Sue:
I am 15, my boyfriend is 16 and in tlle navy . We're planning
w get married in the spring. My mother sa id she will sign for
me, but then, every time I do something tbe lest bit wrong , like
talk back or forge! my housework , she says this proves I'm too
yoWlg and she won't sign.
I could be almost perfect, and she'd find fault. I'm so upset
with this on-again, off-again thing I get fo rgetful abou t chores,
and then it'soff-again . What 's with her anyway ? -G.U.M.
Dear Mother of G.U.M.:
Witll these threats and bribes, you're actually saying,
"Now be a good little girl or Mummy won't let you get married
... " (All the while hoping ''G." WON 'T conform so you'll have
an excuse not to sign.) That's kid stuff !
You've got a perfect right to say "No t" Use it. - HELEN

+++
NOTE FROM SUE: Your mother is taking· the chicken
way out : instead of an ulti{natum - "You can 't marry unlil
you're of legal age 1" - she's making YOU provide reasons to
cancel a spring wedding. And tllis can cause nothing but
resentment. Let's hope she takes a stand and sticks to it, even
though it probablywori't be the one you want right now .

Polly's Pointers
\

By Polly Cram er

Sandpaper those
slippery soles

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Please
tell me what to do with
slippery lea ther so les on
shoes. Is there anything to do
when wearing them outdoors
on ice ? - O'NE LL.
DEAR O'NELL - Briskly
rub tbe soles with sandpaper
until they are a btl rough and
lose that slickness. Then rub
in som e lins e·ed oil. A
waterproof ·a dhesive cloth
backed tape applied to the
sole might also provide a
better grip - POLLY.
.
DEAR POLLY - Many
childr en's cloth es have
nothing to hang them up by,
so I make three and a half
inch loops at the inside back
neckbands on cove ralls',
jackets, coats and so on. That
alone is not so new, but I use
shoe laces of the proper color
and they work so well . Such
lo ops on gar ments help
Children learn to hang Up
th eir clothes , and is
especially nice when coat
hooks are placed low enough
that the little ones can reach
them. Shoe laces are good to
use for making repl acement
hooks on tllese garments that
have had them previously. MRS. H. K.
DEAR POLLY - An old
bread hox, repainted, can
store cook-books, file, pencil,
etc. It is also useful for
keeping medicine away from
children by turning the open
side to the wall . Cleaning
supplies could be kept in one
and away from toddlers. FRANCES.
DEAR POLLY - I work in
a super market and have
been interested in the Pet
Peeves of the women shoppers . We always like to find a
better way to do things, but I
also hove Pet Peeve. When I
go to work I hove to look
forward to straightening up
the mess made by the
cuswmers. People pick up
something and after they
have gone ohout two aisles
decide t~y do not want it so
they take it out of the cart and
leave It on just any shelf. By
leaving it in tlle wrong place
ltgetashuffled arotmd all day
li1d finally ends up on the
dlmaged table. When you
change your mind leave the
r

.--.... Birthday

LETART FALLS - The
l.elart Falls PTO Monday
night made blacktopping the
outdoor basketball courts, a
pri ority and as ked Dee
Spencer and Glen Tucker to
check into the cost.

courts made priority
new uniforms for the !iflh
grade basketball team was
given.
The group also agreed to
give $30 to the kindergarten
to help buy materials for
graduation gowns. A new
d ock will be purchased for
.............. .......... .... .. ...... .. . !he auditorium, and Bonnie

Card party

:;:r=·;;;;.·=· [J;;;;;~:·=,; :

to be held

to deliver {
····
:.: first sermon ii: ~~:%~~t~~:;r~ ;;;~llt~;~~~~7~

':':

::::

Mrs. Spencer , Mrs . Rose
Youn g and Bill Downie were
.,., appointed to the nominating

@

Committees for the annual
St. Patrick's Day card party
to be held March 18 were
announ ced at a recent
meeting of the Catholic
Women's Club of the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church .
Mrs. Susan Blaker presided
at the mee ting with reports
being presented by the officers . A report was given on
the dinner honoring Ra lph
Graves.
Committees for the card
par ty to be held from 7:30 to
10::!0 p.nl . are as follows:
Tickets , BHrb Smith;

Mrs. Peterson, a graduate
of Ohio University with
majors in Philosophy and
Languages, is the daughter of
Chester Tannehil.l of Middleport. She is the wife of Dr.
Carl Peterson, professor of
Chemistry at Ohio Wesleyan

public i ty,

Univers ity.

Rose

Sisson;

posters, Carol McCullough
and Rolan de Brown ; tallies,
Ann a Black wood; table
prizes, Elsie Sutherland, Jo
Ellen Roush; canvassing for.
favors , Susan Blaker, Barbara Mul len and Rose Sisson ;
cashier, Mary Kunzelma.n
and Janet Duffy.
The food hostesses to
serve cookies, sandwiches,
coffee and soft drinks are
Susan Blaker, Colburn,
Sandy Kovalchik, Kate Welsh
Sharon Michae l, Mar y
Morrow, Dorothy Gloeckner,
Rolande Brown, Katie Biron,
Philomena Follrod, Helena
Brickl es, . Cecili a Mitch,
Susan Baer, Rita Hamm,
Shirley Huswn, Barb Mul len.
On the c leanup committee
are all of the women who
played cards. Tables are to
bese t up at JOa.m. on the day
of the car d party .

COLUMBUS
Ja nice
Tannehill Peterson, a student
at the Lutheran Theological
Seminary here, will deliver
her firs t sermon this Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the St.
Luke Lutheran Church, 1:1 E.
Norwich .

year. A jitney supper was
tentatively set for April 10,
The basketball players and
che erleaders
were
introduced by William Wickline
and Bev Wickline. Also introduced was the school's
new TiUe 1 teacher. The
attendance a ward went to
Roger Roush's fifth grade . To
open the meeti ng the
basketball players led in the
pledge to the flag . The Lord 's
Prayer wa s led by the

cheerleaders

the

meeting. The fourth grade
mothers served refreshments.

Class dotuJtes
to board
A contri buti on on the new
bulletin board was made
dw-ing a recent meeting of
tlle Golden Rule Class at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Mrs. Jerry Fi elds presided
with Mrs. Richard Evanson
giving devotions from the
112th Psalm in the Living
Word. Mrs. Louis . Osborne
gave prayer . Th e Ap ri l
meeting will be held at .the
church·wi th each member to
take a box lunch.
Mrs. Edward Venoy conducted games with ihe prize
going to Mrs. Charles Eskew .

Homemade ice cream and
ca ke were served. Attending
besides tpose named were
Richard Evanson, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill McDaniel, Roc helle
MEETING TONIGHT
and
Roxanna, Mr. and Mrs.
Xi Gam ma Mu Chapter of
Gardner
Wehrun g, J erry
Be~ Si gma Phi Sorori ty will
~' i e ld s' a nd Terry, Mrs.
meet at 7:30 tonight at the
offices of the Columbia Gas Wayne Klein and Seth, Mrs.
Co. in Middlepor t. Texanna Gertrude Bass, Mrs. Eva
Wells and Judy Werry will Dessa uer and Mrs. Denver
present the program on the Kapple.
topic, "A Woman Chooses."
SHRINE TO MEET
Mary Shrine 37, Order of
White Shrine , will meet at a
p. m. Friday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. Officers for
the coming year will be

to close

elected and all reports are to
be in for the meeting. All
ritualistic items are to be
turned in w the worthy scribe
a t th e mee ting. Potl uck
refreshments will follow the
session.

Birthdlly

GIFT!
TH E B. DAVID

FAMILY
CROWN"'PI

-..
•
~-

~

...
l-

I

I

MINI-PATCH DENIM PATCH KIT
4 denim patches
Embroidered in

100 TYLENOL TABUTS

1
1

Safe.
f•st
relief ... without

I
I
With Coupon I
l omot 2
I

mu111 -

69C

colored yarns

Iron on In seconds
Rog. S1.29

pai n
asprin

79~ With Coupon
l imit 2

Reg . $2.16

~

Prices va lid March 10-l 4

Prices va lid Marc h 10-14

~%-;~'i"'fil'Wl- - ---r---~-------------COUPON
1

OLD SPICE AFTER SHAVE
LOTION

$}09

Reg. s2.2 5

.

1

32

I
I

With Coupon
l imit 2

I
I

BEAUTY LOTION

I1

~ With Coupon
Limit 2

$259

Ilea. 14.10

Herbal, peach 1 strawberry
Pr ofel'1 enrlchPri

Prices valid March 10-14

49/io

Reg. 98.c

.

.

Prices valid ~rch 10-14

------------------r---------------COUPON
COUPON
EM

1
I

--

Toshiba

B!~~~B~~.~Uf!~~o~NIMALS I SOLID STATE AM
$159

6W' tall
Reg. 13.98

PORTABLE RADIO

I

monkeys, dog and ca t

II Rev. 119.95

With Coupon
Lim it 2

With Coupon
Li mi f 2

I 6'12 oz ,

COU.,ON

~~t, firm a-bsor bent

a nd

cheri shed a lways .

Beauti f u l pear shape
stones in the color of the
fa mil y' s
b ir th st one s
per $0na li ze and gi ve this
pin special signi f i cance .

only

•n.oo
Goessler's
'

JeweiiJ Store
POMEROY

19

Reg . 49c

~ With Coupon

Limit

COUPON

2

With free

I1

ALPHA KERI SOAP

I
I

Reg . $2.90

1

t'nces valid March 10-14

$}79

~~~ ~~:.
With Coupon
l imit 2

Pri ces valid March 10-14

------------------r----------------COUPON
COUPON

31/4

oz .

.

Foley

CLEARASIL SOAP

39

Reg. 69c

KITCHEN GADGET SAU

~ Wttn coupon

Your choice or 9 items

With Coupiln
R-..... . 76 c •.. 59~ Llmtf
2

limit 2

Pnc es va lid March 10-14

Prices v~lid March 10-14

I

'

- ----------------L-Bfi•111ij•h1.
l +---------fi•lll:l•l~l -~- --

I
I

MEN's TUBE SOCKS and
WOMEN'S SPORT SOCKS

7.

Reg. so.s•

Pr ices valid

35

Reg . 70c

~ With Coupon
limit 2

Prices valid Mar ch 10-14

·-----r-.-""!"-------~------

COUPON

I
I
I
I
I
I

SESAME STREET RECORDS
AsSorted tit les

69

Jar

WSTRE CREME SHAMPOO

s~ With Coupon I
limit 2
I
I
March 10-14
I

COUPON

Req . Sl.29

4 oz .

~ Witn Coupon

28 OZ. LESTOIL
The all -purpo$e hoUsehold
clea ner

I

Limit 2

I

Prices va.tid March 10-14

79'

Reg . St .59

With Coupon
Lim it 2

Prices valid March tO-t4

------------------·----------------IIJ•III:l•l~l
I
·•II•III:l•J~I
1776 AMERIC.A.N

1

Faultless .

6-DIGIT POCKET CALCULATOR

I
I
I

2-qt . bag ot du rabl e I alex .
Sloraqe purse
No. 2666

Ad d s, s u b t ract s , mulfipl les,
di vi des

$7

Reg. $14.99

99

g

g~ With
Coupon
Reg. n .l8
limit 2
·
I
.
1
Prices valid 10-14

ltmtt 2

valid March l0-14

Prices

FEMININE SYRINGE

:

With Coupon

-----------~ - - --,-- - --------------COUPON

COUPON

1 16 oz.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

100 EXCEDRIN
The ex t r a . sfren gfh pa in r eliever

With Coupon
Limit 2
Prices valid March 10-14

ALBERTO BALSAM CONDITIONER
Regular

With Coupon
limit 2
Rev . 12.50
Prien valid March 10-14

-----~------1 -- - - ------------COUPON - -- - ~COUPON

I

5 SCHICK
Coupon
limit ~
29~ With

Reg. Sl.OO
Prices

~:'-~:::;~~-~4___

_1_ ___ Prices valid

BA~!r ~~~~~d~J!ON
When you need money for your kid 's hrac~s. or any good reason,
talk to us. We handle Personal Loans quick ly. easily anrl wi t·h
consid e ration. You can borrow with t rust where people save with
trust. C ity Loan &amp;Savings.
.

CITY LOAN

Trimmed With
Fresh Flowers

&amp;.SAVINGS
EST 191.2

20%0FF

85
--

With Coupon
limit 2

-------

COUPON
12 Faultless GOLF BAllS

Reg . 90C eoioh
Reg . $8.95 doz

$444 With
Coupon
limit 2

' jj \

'

1112

oz. BAN ROLL-ON

DEODORANT
Re9ular or un scented

.,
RIll · St ·-

Prices valid March 10· 1•

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

Req . ate

59

~

79' WI!~

Coupon
lomol 2

With Coupon
limit 2

March t0-14

~~==:=;=

COUPON

I

Amity MEN'S

TRIFOLD BIUfOLD
Top

Grain leathe·rs In popular colors

Valuta to SI.IO

Reduces fever and relieves stuffy nose.

.l;ho · (

I
I
t
I

March 10-14

COUPON

I _____
Prices valid
_____
_.
. -.
=

36 CONGESPIRIN

l ,o1; 1 n .~ !ro ·~ 1 ' • •11 1 1 1 lhi'HII I! h

I
I

Prices valid March t0-14

COUPON

12:3 E. Main Street !!92-2 171

304

Reiiutaror Menthol
With Coupon
Req . 51 · 09 · ';J limit 2 ,

~

9. OZ -. MENNEN

~

SHAVE CREAM

1

COUPON

Reg . S1.59

11 oz . BARBASOL

1
I

PLATINUM _PLUS BLADES

~

C:

:r.
::&gt;
•
...

C

E
"'
::'
'
!.!.
::;o
"'

~

....~
:
..•t;

~~

$3

99 Limit
With toupon
2 .

PrlcH valid March t0-14

COUPON

FAMILY
INDIP.INDENT

PHARMACY .

Lean, Pure,
Tender Beef!

lb.

.

"
.,.

!:'.

i

t

""
:·
:.,.
:
;:

;. . ~:J:;e;~·th! :O~~~f 'ivt~~:
Pearl Reynolds. Mrs. Everett
~ Taylor to present the
• program .
:- '
THURSDAY
~·
MEIGS COUNTY Huniane
r • • Society, 7:30 p. Ill. Thursday
at Middleport village hall .
..,.,. Public inv ited .
CE RVI CAL CAf'ICE R
Clinic Thursday at Veterans
:., Memorial Hospila l. For
• · appointment call American
~ Cancer Society ~t 992-7531 or
• J an Jud ge, 992-5832 .
•·
LAU REL CL·IFF Better
•' Hea lth Club, 7:30 p.m.
t ':'hursday at the home of Mrs.
Bertha Parker.
•
•
,
SPONSORING SHOW
'
CHESTER - The Chester
PTA will sponsor a talent
s how at 7:30p.m. Saturday in
th e Ches ter Element ary
School auditorium . Taking
par t will be Kim Batey,
Andr ew Batey, th e. Reed
;. Brothers (New Life Singers),
"' J ea n Tr ussell, Mar gar et
~· Tuttle, Doug Circle, Fay and
::· J im Weston , Nick and Danny
Leonard, the Gospel Tones ,
' Sand y and J ean Sexson and
~· 'Bryce Buckley. Prac tice for
'' par ti cipants will be at 7:30
• p.m. Friday. Refreshments
: will be sold. during the
.,_ evening. Admission is $1 for
~ adul ts and 50 cents for
' children up to 12 years of age.

GROUND ROUND ••••••••••• ;. $1
FRESH AND LEAN
'

NU WASTE

GROUND CHUCK

og

AU PURE FRESH LEAN BEEF

lb

r

BEEF STEW •••••••••••·•••••• l~·.. ·
SUPERIORS POLISH

SAU SAG E••••••••••••••••••• _.I~; • 89
WIENERS ••••••••••••••••••• ~~~.

FLAVORITE

BREAD

POTATO CHIPS

79t;

11 oz.
bag

·~k.

l.oilll ( 'l•lll!lilll V

•

•

-""·

Purina

TENDER
VITTLES
FRISKIES

for

Beef, Meat Stew,
Beef &amp; Egg,

DOG &amp; CAT Chicken &amp; Uver,
Uver, Eggs &amp; Bacon
FOOD

oz.$

141fz

cans

Powers Out Dirt•• •Powers In Brightness

=RGENT

SWIFT'S
BEEF STEW

umE

CASH SAVER

ICICLE
PICKLES

pr

PESTA BRAND

BANANA
PEPPERS

. 32 oz.
pr

PAMPERS

24 OOUNT BOX

59~

FROZEN
FOODS

-

3

pint
prs

THURSDAY
AND SUNDAY

DAIRY BUYS

,'BROUGHTON'S
2% LOW FAT

MILK

'129

gal.
BROUGHTON'S

HOMO. MILK
carton

SEVEN-UP
16 oz.

8 PAK
**********************************

C 64 oz. bot.
each

7s~

FAIRMONT

QiOC. MILK'

2

AU WEEK LONG

Throwaways

box

EXTRA ABSORBENT

25 LB.
BAG

PESTA DILL

HAMBURGER
SLICES

on~

DAYTIME 30 COUNT

99

DOG
FOOD

24 oz..

carton

CIGARS

Introducing the P esta Brand!
PESTA FRESH PAK

R,.= 39~

WINCHESTER.

24 OZ. CAN

D

ANNIVERSARY NEAR
The Skate-a-Way Roller
· Rink of Route 7 near Ches ter
.will observe i Is 20th anlllversary on Saturday .
~Owners Mr. and Mrs . Bob
,TrusseD will serve lee cream
' to skaters and there will be
.races, prizes and balloo111.
::oPen skat11111 at , the rink Is
:'1:30 to 10 p.m. Wednesday,
•Friday and Sa turday each

$

SUPERIORS AL1. MEAT

lfz p:al.

•

bxs

ggc
BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••••.•• ~~:. ..,
ggc
SUPERIORS AU MEAT

~

•

99~

C

•

SUPPER SET
The Pomeroy Fire Depar tment will stage a public '
spaghetti supper Saturday at
' tlle fire station , Butternut
'' Ave ., from 3 to 7 p.m. The
menu will include spaghetti,
tossed salad and rolls with
~ desse r t and beverage for an .
additional charge over the $2
adult pri ce and $1.2:i for
children 12 and under.
Tickets may be purchased
from any fireman , at M~yer's
• Barber Shop or at the New
:.Yprk Clotlling Ho11se.

lb.

$J09

•

r·
E

AGED BEEF

U.S. GOVERNM ENT
INSPECTED

OUICK FIX NO WASTE STEAKS
FROM USDA CHOICE LEAN BEEF

TUESDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Chapte r
53, D.A.V ., 7:30 p. m .
Tuesday at the home on
Butternut Ave.
CHESTER ,. Tow nship
Trustees, 7:30 T~esday at the
town hall in Chester.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge363, Tuesday, 7p. m. at
the Masonic Temple . Master
Mason degree to be conferred. All master Mason·s
invited.
WIODNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Amateur

;~

CORN FED

BUCKET STEAK

Calendar

9-

CHOICE

No Wcme!

REGULAR 99' MR. BEE

t:..

KERI LOTION

I
I

CURITY COTION BALLS

.,..

..,

W'lh
' coupon
Limit 2

~

.

w

-

LANOLIN PWS SHAMPOO

I
1
I
1

With Coupon
l imit 2

..

;o.

Prices valid March 10-14

1

...

•

~

----- ----- --- --~
4oz.
I -16-oz.- -------COUPON -----COUPON
OIL OF OLAY

..,...,
~

oz.

89

Reg. S1.59

'.
1!1

VEL LIQUID DETERGENT

I
I

Prices valid March. 10. 14

1-------

59 N. Second St.
Middleport, Ohio

-...

----------------...,-----·-=
=
COUPON

60

item in your basket and when
you get to the cashier give it
to he r and say you do not
wan t it and then t he item will
be put right back in its proper
pl ace . Yo u would ne ver
believe how much time we
have to spend getting peanut
shells, chocolate chips, open
packages of co okies and
can dy off the shelves so we
can stock our merchandise.
A
FRUSTRAT ED
STOCKER.
DEAR POLLY - I am a
gr ea t grandm other and
recen tly had dinner witll a
young grandmother who also
had two of her small grandchildren with her. She placed
a large sheet of plastic (big
bags would serve the purpose 1 under each of their
chairs at the table and her
carpet was pr otected. I
thought ihi s such a nice idea
as the children could. eat
without fear of being chided
to be careful . It made it nicer
for the adults, too. No worr ies
for anyone. - MRS. H. G.
You will receive a dollar If
Pull y uses your fa vorite
hom emaking Idea, Pet
Peeve, Polly's Problem or
solution to a problem. Write
Polly in care of this newspaper.

MAGICAL
FOLIAGE
GARDENS

......

S;

6tJANf iTIES
•!.-JMITE D

- -~~e~_:a~~~~~_2~~---J----~~'.!.!~':.~~~~·~-·--

Th e story of Mother's life
beau ti f Ully told In a truly
quality piece of lewelr y
that w ill be worn wi th pride

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kane of
Marietta enteriJ!ined SWlday
with a party honoring their
daughter, Heather Michelle,
on her first birthday.
Also celebrated at the party
wu the birthday of !lruce
Blackston, 18. A Raggedy
Ann and Andy theme was
carried out and a Winnie the
Pooh cake was served witll
ice cream, sandwiches and
Kool-Aid.
Attending from Pomeroy
were Heather's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Blackston and sons, Bob and
Bruce ;
her
grea tgrandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
William Grueser and Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbur Bailey, and Mr .
and Mrs . Kennetll Harris,
David and Kenny .. Others at
the party were Mr. and Mrs .
David Wiley and Angela,
Washington, W.Va .; Mr . and
Mrs. J ack Kovac and Jennlfer, Cleveland , and Dean
Lutz. Steubenville. Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Kane, Cleveland,
sent a gift .
Visiting Monday were Mr .
and Mrs . F . E. Shaeffer,
Columbus, Heather's greatgrandparents.
Mr . and Mrs. Kane recently
moved ·from Steubenville w
Marietta where he is
associa ted , wi th WMOA
Radio.

,.. _

USDA

MINUTE· STEAK

..,._

The PTO also discussed the
need for an extension of the
gymnasium so basketball
games can be played there
rather than having to use the
Racine Junior High . Ap proval for the purchase of

~~::~~=~~g~af:e~!0s~~~~~

WE FEATURE SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE BEEF

--.. celebrated

.

qts.

BANQU_ET

•

FRIED CHICKEN

2 lb •
box

JOHN'S HOME STYLE

PIZZA

each

SCOT LAD

ORANGE JUICE

4

79c
6 oz.
cans

Grade 8
LARGE

SCOT LAD

ICE MILK
*gal.

see

EGGS

89e

doz.

sgc

PRODUCE

Juicy Calif.

LEMONS

6

~

FOR

39~

••••••••••••••••••

YELLOW

ONIONS

3 ~~~. 49c

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily' 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to 10
We Act;ept Federal Food Stamps
PHONE 992-3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts. We reserve the ri8ht to 11mlt quantities. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•

I

�. I -1be Pomeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 9, 1976

Notice

WANT A D S
I N , OR M A TI O N
D E AD LI N ES
s PM
Dav
B e fore
Publ ication
Monday DeaDl in e 11

o.m

Cencelta tlo n
for

K ODCOT
Cosm etr c s
has
un li m i te d oppor t un ity f or
s el es g ! r l s In tere st e d
tn
tl eaut y The r e ' s " B e au t y
D i re ctor " po ss tb lll!l es w tt h
or g an l za fl on of yo ur own
Conta ct
A nn Sa uvage ,
Sy ra c u se , OFuo 99 2 32 72
( I ndep en den t Otstrt b utor )
......
J -5 6tp

oa 't' of P' ublicalion ,
R EG U LATI O NS
The Publ isher reur v es

the r lgtJt to ed 1t or re [ec t
any eds dee m ed ob
ltc tl onal The P\J blish e r
will not be respons•b fe for

more lh1n one •ncorre ct

RAT ES
For W an t Ad Sendee
S cen Is per word one
lnserllon

~

pos s ib l e d edu c ti or1 thi s yea r
Ha ve yo u r Fe der al a n d
Stat e In come Ta x r e tur n by
an account a n t Phon e 992
6 173
1 21 52 t c

U cen ts per word th ree
consecut •ve
Inse rtio n s
26 cen ts per word si x

Inser tiOn s
on

DI SC OUnt

SLOAN'$
CARPOING
. .

1913 CHEVY 'h TON
$2895
Cust . de luxe 6 cyl. , std. rad io, P.S , body side mldg s,

uns
W·S tires , black · w hite

ad s pa t d

C A R D OF T HANK S
&amp; OBI TUARY

S2 00

for
50
wor d
m inimum
Each a d d ill ona l wo r d 3

1970 CAMAR08 CYL.
$1995
Auto • P S., radto , g ood ti re s, green and black vinyl
roof

De p ar t m ent BV V
3918 Meadowbrook R d.
Minne tt p olis, M N 55426

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

cen ts

WANTlO

SAVE MONro

Free e st i mates on Cl r · ,
p eting a nd installation .
We' ll br_il}g samples to your
hom e -w tth no obligation .
Se e ho w you ca n r eally
sa ve .
M i ke Young , Manager
Sale s and Insta l lation
Rt.l, Pomeroy , Ohio H 769
Phone day or night
6 1 4 -9~2 -2? 0'
JJ ~ ] rrio

de fu)(e tutone fin ish, red and whtte.

1973 MON TE CARLO
A.uto ., P.S , P B.. 8 cy l. , r ad io ,

25c

Ch ar ge

OF F ICE HO U R S
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m
Da i l y , 8 30 am to 12 oo
Noon Saturctav
P h on e today99 2 2 156

fh~lator Spec•all u

wd h l 1v er sp eckl m g Found
tn M tn er sv tlle , Oh io a rea
c a ught in s te e l l aw trap Has
Wtde b l ac k c o l lar Wtt h bra ss
s tu \1d m g and spi kes Own er
may c la im by paymg for ad
a n d 11e t ert n ary f ee
Ca l l
M AS ON
CO
H u mane
Soc1 e ty , ( 304 1 675 16 59 or
675 4515
3 4 6tp

Card of Thanks
WE WO U L D like t o tak e !h iS
op portun rty to extend ou r
s ince r e appr ecr atio n to a ll
for t l1 e rr kt n dness shown
d uri ng our re cen t trme o f
sorro w Sp ec ia l th an ks to
th e
Syracu s e
l adtes
Auii:rli a ry , M ar c ra K arr ,
Sara Ro ush and pal lbear e r s
from Ka r r and V an Za ndt
M oto r Sa l es
T h e ma n y
c ard s, bea ut ifu l f lowers an d
spoken word! o f WISd o m of
God ' s t r ut h w ill al! be a pa rt
of the m emo r tes tha t now we
wi l l c l1 ertsh
H ers11e l Ma nu el F a m tl y
3 9 1 tp

Lost
LO ST 1n R u tla n d ar ea , G er
man Shepl1 e rd b lack , g r a y
a n d ta n , n am e "Sr lv er "
R eward o ffered Con t ac t C
T Jewett , R t I , Middl ep or t ,
o r c a ll 742 2135
'
3 9 6tp

'

TO TH E UN K N OWN H E I R S, O L D fu rnttur e , te e boli:es
br ass
bed s ,
ol d
wall
THEIR E XEC UT ORS . A D
t eleph on es an d parts , or
MIN IS TR ATORS
A ND
c omp l e te h ou seho lds W rt le
A S SIG N S
OF
WAY N E
M
D
M il l er , Rl
2.
CHE VAl i E R ,
D ECEA SE D ,
Po m er o y , Oh ro Ca ll 99 2.
RE SID E N CE
U N KNOWN

~

--------------FORD lr a c to r , m ode l 2000 .
ltke new On e so r rel g e tdtng
r 1d1 n g hor se , g en tl e 6 y ear s
o ld , Ar n o ld Gr a t e, Rut l an d ,
Oh to Ph o ne 7.t 2 224 1 or 74 2
22 46 e v ent ngs
3 5 6t c

-··

5850

3 3 61 c
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cas e No . 21660 VR I L L COOK. - a nd ktl ch en
c oo k
A ppl y 1n p e r s o n
E5tate of LUCINDA OANES,
Cr a w 's
Steak
Deceased.
H ou se ,
Porn ero y , Oh ro
Not .ce is hereby grv en th a t
Rose S. Reynolds . o f 266 Mrll _"':'
3 5 61c
Str ee t, Mtdd te port. Oh 10 , ha s
b e en
Quly
ap po m te d
E ii: ec u t rix of th e E st at e o f
Lu c tnda Danes, d eceased , la te
SM AL L UP STA IR S A P T , f or
of M e igs Count y , Oh io
st n g le p erson , no an rm a ls
Creditor s a r e r equtred t o
Phon e 99 2·57 86
tlle the tr c lai ms w it h sa td
3 3 6t c
fidu ci ary wit h in f our m o nths
Date d t h iS 20th day of
2BtoR"
M
m
ob
i
l
e
Hom
e,
very
Feb ruary , 1976
n tce P h on e 992 3324
2 29 tf c
M ann tn g D We b ste r

--- ---

~\

~.- -

For Rent

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

3 BE DRM ho u se w tl h ba th m
R u tland Ph one 992 585 8
3 9 t fc
4 ROOM S furni sh ed ap art
me nt , all uti l it ies p a i d
Ph one 992 335 6.
3 9 3tc

Tile Almauac
Ualled Press International
Today is Tuesday, March a
the 88th day of 1976 with 297 to

follow.

The moon is between its
lint quarter and full phase .
1be morning stars are
~ercury and Venus.
~ evening stars are Jupi-

kir, Mars and Saturn.

.,
I

'•
'I

1111* born on this date are
under lbe sign of Pisces.

Itallan navigator Amerigo
Vespuccl was born March 9,

1461.
On Ibis day In history :
In 1822, lbe first patent for
..-tlfldal teeth was awarded

to

Olar1es Graham of New

York City.
' In 1947, after 440 days, the
United Auto Workers reached
1ft llfeemenl with lbe Case
Manufacturing Company of
Racine, Wll., toendoneof the
IGngest strikes on record.
In 11182, 31 men were killed
In a coal mine exploaton In
w~

apt
rn
U N F U R NI SH E D
Pomeroy 2 bed r m n ew l y
r ed ec ora t ed , fu l l y carpe t ed
Call in the ea rl y a m 992
22a 8
2 22 lfc
EN JO Y' g ra cious l tvi n g ar V rll age M a nor 10 M 1d
d lep ort for as to w as $ 130
per
m onth
w1 th
all
utr l itles
paid
Th ese
drc br a nd ne w h tg h q uatr ty
ap art men t s at pr 1c es yo u
can . a ffo rd Y o ur rent tn ·
el ude s month to m o nt h
leas e s, a l l el e c
ltv t ng ,
rang e
and
c a r p e t tng ,
r e fr 1g er at o r , tr ee trash
pr ck up , c abl e T V at yo ur
ex pe n se ,
a nd
o n s1 te
l a u n dr y f acil i t i es
Co n
v en ien t t o shop pi ng on Th tr d
and M ill Str eets in M td
dl epo r t See the m ana ger at
Riv ersi de A par t m en ts or
c all 992 : 3273
F u rn i Sh ed
ap art men ts
ar e
a l so
ava 1tab l e
2 2·78tc
----~-- - --

3 A' N u 4 R M turn1shed and
unfurn ts h ed apls Phon e 992·
5434

------·------Jl_~ fc
CI)U N T R Y Mob 1le Home
' Park , Rt 33 , ten m iles norl h
of Pomero y Large tots w i th~
cencret e pa!los , sidew a lks ,
ru,ners and off s tre e t
p ark ing Ph on e 992 1479.
..._
t23 1 ttc

___ ___________ _

Gtnnany.

In
1967,
Russian
Communllt dictator Joaef
Slalln'a daupter, Svetlana,
detected to lbe United States.

1969 Z28 Ca m a r o , J 02 4 spee d .
197 1 Cu ll ass A utoma lte,
bo t h' i n goo d co n di tio n
Phon e 992 573 7
3·3 6t c

M I X ED hay , ph one 99 2 3709
3.9 3tc

1968 CHE VY 1 ? ton p ic kup 6
c y t sta n da r d , 8 fl s tepsrde ,
$4 50 Ph one ( 61 4) 985 3594
3·5 Bt p

--------1974 F ORD F 250 Rar1g er ,

-

19.000 m il es ·. 1973 10f t ca b
ov er c amp e r . l ike new
M ag1 c Che f El ec
r ange ,
COl em an o il fu r n ace Wi lh
t a nk f o r m ob il e h om e
Ph one ( 614 ) 698 7255
3 9 3tp

-~~------

'

COJ\ L F O R ~ A L E CJ\ B Co al
Co mpan y , 1 m tl c n or l h o f
Ches h .re , on R t 7 Pr ck yo ur
ow n , $20 p er I on Open 6 days
p er wee k , or cal l ( 6 1JJ 36 7
73 30 for f urth er 1nlor m a t10n
I 8 78 t c

Conditioner

Model UCXXX ,
210,000
WeeklyGnen
Cap• city

BUY
NOW
AND
SAVE

kJ.Reg. :~~~

Val.

POMEROY LANDMARk
. . . : J.ck W. Carsey , Mg'r .
lilil Phone992-2111
REFR I GERA T OR , be droom
su i te , large .ron an t tq u e
apple bu tte r k e tt l e Ph on e
99 2 5792
J 5 5t c
MANU R E
lo a d e r ,
$ 175
P hon e ( 614 ) 37a 6311 aft er 6

om

3 5 6t c

--~

--~-----

s a l e Ph on e 992 73 06
3 5 121p

-------------W Hit E Legh or n s, 75c each .
good Ia ye r s P hon e 949 204 3
3 5 6tc

----------·---A RE YOU p/an n m g ca bm ets
In your h ome? We h ave a
l1mtled supp l y of n e w
w ooden c a b ine t do or s, an d
d r awer fr on t s Bv a ila bl e a t a
rea son ab le pr ic e Som e wt th
g la ss tn sert s Some solid , all
to p q uat t t y Ca n b e seen at
Kr n gsb u ry M o b t l e Ho me
Sa les . 1100 E
M am St ,
Po m eroy , Oh io or call 992
7034
3 5 5tc
-~---------'----

E N G INE 350 , 2 ba rr el , au to
tr an Sm i SS ton , $200
Ph on e
( 614 ) 985 3594
3 5.6t p

-------------OLI V ER doze r , f r on t en d

load er. fork l 1fts an d blad e,
new eng m e, S2,800. Pho n e
{6 14) 98 5 35 94

3 5 81 p
197 1 350 JO HN Deer e do l er ,
w in c h , can op y , r evers a l
b ar , S7 ,500 Ph on e (6 14J 985·
35 94
3 5 81 p

----- --------19 74 SE A R S 10 h p , de lu :.;e
l a wn tr ac to r , 36" cut wit h
wh ee l we ig hts . onl y 35 hou r s
of use. l1k e n ew See Charlt e
M afl hew s, 99'2 2257 .•
3.5 5t c

-------------GO OD qu al1ty ha y for sal e
Ca ll 992 36 58

3 5 12/c

--~-

-'-

CO-OP
Automatlt W•ter

_

---------------- ---H AY for

____________

10 F T
SELF CON TA IN E D
c a m pm g trader w 1th e li: tr as
E x cell en t c on dr t ron Phor1e
77 3 5876
3.9 6t c

WE INSTALL!

______ _

Judg e
Co ur t of Co mmon P leas ,
Pr ob ate D1vt sior1
( 2) 24 (J ) 2, 9, 31 c

'

-· -~..,

110Mechanlc Pomeroy. O.

Mulberr y Ave. 520,000.
RUTLAND - Near sc hool ,
6 rm s , b ath , new Nat gas
f ur nace, 3 Br s , and nice

LARRY LAVENDER

gas f irepl ace, hot w at er
h ea t,
a nd ga rag e on

CO A L . Ir ;;es t on e an d all types
of sa lt an d roc~ salt for tee
a n d sn ow remo v al
Ex
: e ls1or Sa lt Wor k s. East
M a m St , Pomeroy Oh 10
Phon e 99 2 389 1
12 7 t f c

-

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

UN F INI SH ED
f urn lt u r i ntght s ta n d . f ull Sile b ed
w 1th mattr ess a n d b o li:
s pr 1ng s
n ine
dr aw er
dr esser . Se ll 2 wt n gba ck
c ha trs w1t h ottom an
Se ll
sep arat e or log eth er P ho ne
992 ] 317_
3 4 7t p
7 ACR E: S v ac an I land, n tc e fc.., ·
h om e or !ra tt er Pon e ( 614)
669 4723
3 7 4tp
-"'-- - -------~w

__ _

1974 T S1 85
SU ZUK I
A 1
c ond1t1on , 1. 10 0 m il es . Ca ll
74 2 21~3 a fte r 5 p m
1 8 9tC

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

ON E Sy l van ia co lored T V se t ,
good co nd it ion Phon e 99 2·
2262
3 7 3tc
- - -- - ----~-----

19 71 YAMA H A 650 Spn n ger ,
fr o n t
and
tube ,
full y
c hop ped Ca ll a fter 5 p m
992 59 14
3 7.6t c

------------ASSO RTE D pat n ts, 50c and
75c qu ar t. Can be se en at
F r y R esi d ence , nex t to
Sa lrsbur y Sch ool
3 7 .3t c

lots o f bu ild i ng s Close t o
mmes $17 ,500
RUTLAND - 1 BR . ba th ,
dtning R , w ash R , garage,
cl ose to school $8,500
BRICK- Live m the n tce 4
BR -apartment, r ent the 2
f u rnished apt s for i 11com e

Excellent

$22, 000
POMEROY
2 BR .
BATH . N. ga s heat, garden
plot. porches, J ust $4,500
WALK TO SHOP - Large 2
story frame , 4 BR , 1112
ba ths, new kifc hen , ful l
ba Sem ent , coal or gas heat

$8,500
992·2259 or 992-2568

NEW LISTING - Bus iness

nothmg down.

HAVE BUYER FOR 100
ACRES OF LAND

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

WANTED

(:ommerclal Rabbit Producers
Who Need:

• INCOME Limited only by your
•GUARANTEED MARKET
I INDEPENDENCE
•SECURITY
The

lime

USDA.enspected plant of United Rabbit
ProcessiJ1g in W•verlv . Ohio needs an addltionai10,000
Frver5 a week to meet demands.

CAN YOU QUALIFY?.
Wrtte:

CHIHU A H UA S for sal e
f em al es Ph on e 992 2265

3

3 7 61 p

Livestock Exchange Bldg .
1600 GenessH Sf.
Kansas City, Misspuri, 64102

or phone : 816.474·6041

2 5 JOtp

------ ----- --3 BE D R M ~ ~~ b ath W1th atr

--....~·----

--------------AC RE S, 2 b edr m m obile
h ome , r oom ad ded , l a nd
sc ap e d , appl ia nces , c ar
f' e l l n g, n e w b iHn , out
bu il d i ng s ,
fru 11
t ree s ,
A lexander T w p , 7 m li es
sout h of A th en s
5. 12,000.
Phon e 1614 ) 592·42 45
3 7 7t c

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

B R H OM E , JUst f in iSh ed
rem od e l1n g
Sa l e m
St ,
R utl and
Phon e 742 23 06
aft er 4 p m or se e M ilo 8 .'
Hulch1nson
10 9 ttc

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

--- - -------- -·-

3

BEORM
honl e .
1us i
fini sh ed , r ~ model l ng , Setem
St , Rutland . Phone 74 2 2306
after 4 p m or see Mi lo B
Hutr:h/son

9 23 tfc

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

'

COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST- What? . . . 5
bedrooms, lovely kitchen with all bulltins, dining room
with sl1dlng glass doors opening to a hugh deck, family
room, lower level patio, tenlral air, total electric,
Intercom system ; some finishing wor k required on
first floor . Where? ... Riggscresl Manor near Tuppers
Pia Ins. One of the finest homes In the area al a

living at a price you can afford ... Just S29,SOO You will
have a home with prestige

This is
a nice

neiqhborhood,
Clovia!

--------------O ' tiEi. L All n eme n.t loca ted :...
be h in d
Ru tla n d
G r a de
Sc hool
Tuneup , b r ake s /
wh ee l ba lan c in g , alln em en t
P hon e 742 2004
11 lt .tfc ~·

. ,.
I'

EXCA VATING , BA C KHOES ·'
AND DOZER LA RGE A NO ~
SMA LL , S EPTIC TANK S 1'
IN S T A LLED
BILL :
PULLIN S, PHON E 992·24 78 ~ )
DAY OR NIGHT .
' ~
2 22 52tp '\1 ;,

2 Food ; dog
3 Talk widly
4 Angered
S Mrs. North
6 Georgia city
7 Reverberate
8 " Exodus" hero tQt~
9 Clangor
Yesterday's Answer
10 Nigerian
23 Pa rticle
35 - Vidal
city
14 In a pleas- 24 Declare
36 Utah
ant way
verboten
city
17 Social club 2S Lambkin's
37 High
member
ma
school
18 South Seas 27 Comedian,
dance
port
Louis 38 Panay
19 Comnuser- 31 Alaskan
Negrito
a tion
Indian
39 Actress
20 Yearn
32 Of aircraft
Perrine,
painfully
33 One of the
Ill some
21 E ncourage
Upamshads 40 B1bhcal
22 Anatomical 34 Southwest
verb
network
wind
ending

WEDNESDAY , MARCH 10, 1976
6:()()-...Sun rlse Semester 10.
6: 15-Farm Report t3.
6 :-..The Story 13.
6: 31)..-.Columbus Today 4; Ne ws 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Farmllme 10.
6· 4()--()un ce of Prevention 10
6 :45-Mornlng Re por t 3.
6:5&gt;-C huck While Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
Stale 13.
7: 00-Today 3.~. 15 ; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:3o-Schoolles 10.
8:00-Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St. 33.
8:3o-Big Valley 6.
9:()()-...Not for Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with O.J , 13.
9 ·30-A.M. 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
10:00-Celebrlty Sweepslakes3.~. 15; Edge of Nlgh16;
Price Is Right 8,10.
10 :3Q-High Rollers 3,4,15: Dinah I 6.
11 :()()--Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4: Gambit
8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13.
11 :3o-Hollywood Squares 3.4,15; Happy Days 13; Love
of Life 8.10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
12 :()()-...Magnlflcenl Marble Machine 3,15; Let' s Make a
Deal13; Bob Braun'sso.so Club 4; News6,8.
12 :30-Take My Advice 3, IS; All My Children 6, 13;
Search tor Tomorrow 8, 10.
12 :45-Eiec. Co. 33.
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
'&gt;
1 :00-News 3; Ryan' s Hope 6,13;( Phil Donahue 8; '
Young &amp; the Rstloss 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:30-Days pf Our Lives 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; R"son 6,13;
As the World Turns 8,10.
2 : ~520,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2 :30-Doctors 3,4,15; Neighbors 6,13; Guiding Light
8,10.
3: 00-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6, 13; All
In The Family 8,10; Kup's Show 20.
· 3:30-0ne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game 8,10.
4:oo-Mtsler Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mtster Rogers
20,33; Movie " Vicki" 10; Call It Macaroni 13.
4:3o-Bewltched3; Afterschool Speclal6,13; Partridge
Family 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Fllnlstones 15.
5 .()()-...Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5: 3o-Adam·12 4,13; News · 6; Beyerly ~[llbll!les I ;
E lee. Co. 20,33.
'
6:Go-News 3,4,8,10,13 ,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 :3Q-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Crop Game 20; Carrascolendas 33.
7:()()..-Truth or Cons. 3; Vaudeville 4; Bowling tor
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10: Wild
Kingdom 13; Family Affair1s; Book Beat 20; Know
Your School 33.
·
7:3o-Last of the Wild 3; Wild Wild World ot Anllmal,s'
6; Match Game PM 8; Evening Edltllan with
Martin Agransky 20; The Judge 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Elook Beat 33.
8 : ~Little House on lhe Prairie 3.15,4; Movie "The
Six Million Dollar Man" 6,13; Tony Orlando &amp;
Dawn 8,10; The Way It Was 20; Images ot Aging 33.
8:30-Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
9 : ~Movle "The Entertainer" 3,4,15; Cannon 8,10;
Theater In America 33.; Images of Aging 20 .
9 :30-Movle " Starsky &amp; Hutch" 6,13.
10· 00-Biue Knight 8,10; News 20.
10:3o-Aimanac 20.
11 :()()--News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 : 30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie "Trilogy of
Terror" 6.13; Movie "The Green Slime" 8; Movie
"23 Paces to Baker Streel" 10; Janakl 33.
1 : 00-Tomorrow 3,_.; News 13.

I

For Wedneadey, Merch 10,
1878

ARIES (March 21 · April ttl
S o meon e mav Wa n t t o do
so m e th1ng sp ecial Just for you
today. It might defeat your pur~
pose t o brtng an un tnvtted person mto the act.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) II
you stt on a good Idea you g et
tod ay t oo long . 1t's ve ry likely to
get shelved an d never put to
the test.

1

GEMINI (Moy 21·duno 201 Be

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE 'MONDY, HOW'D
EVER OET
IN\QLVED WITH
THIS ""OON

THOUG HT OF

ME1 EH ?

LAW" BALL,

b ·

Bemtce Be~ Oeol

·· ·~~D=;:&gt;I-:f.? I" many
One man
women L-...1.-.l......J-..Lis

'&gt;OJ NA1URALLY

t

Grap...

Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

it :

su r e th at serv1 ces yo u 'r e halling p erfo rm ed to day are done
by people wh om y ou tr ust.
Do n ' t ex p er~ me n t wtt h un k nowns

On e l ~ttc r s1mply stam"i s for :moth er In t his sam pie A is
u"ed for the three I.'s. X fur th e tw o O's, rtc . SJO glc letters. CANCER (Juno 21 -July 221

apostro phes. t he le ngt h 11nd form.1t ion of the \\ nrds are all The co urse of least resistance
1s likely to be th e m ost a ppealIn ni s Each d:ty tl w t·ode le tl(' rs :1rc d1fferent
tn g to you today . Th ings th at

CRYPT!lQUOTES

, AN'rWAY?
T NC
NRP E
M DU

F C YQ

E P Q EM GP

QII M Q
C DUN

T NCE

CDX C ESPU

O AM Q

TN C

A M RP

sh o uld be atte nded to may b e
neg lected

YQPV Y
VMY Q
UN D P

-

LEO (JUIJ 23·Aug. 221 Be
care ful to whom yo u pass on
con f td enUal Informa tion today
If tt r eaches the wrong ears. it
m ay be misused

VIRGO (Aug, 23-Stpt. 221
Be fore le nd in g an y th in g of
valu e to a recent acqu atntance ,
11 m ay be w1se to ge t t o kno w
th 1s person better

AP DET
UEC FF N D U
Yeste rday's Cryptoquote: HOLLYWOOD : A PLACE ,WHERE
GREA'l'-G[{A NDMOTHERS DREAD TO GROW OLD. PHYLLIS BATTE LLE
LIBRA tS.pt. 23-0ct: 231
(() 19 1 6 Kina .~ea tures Sy ndl cat ('. lnc .)

DON'T TRV TO TALK, LOWEEZV ..
I JEST DRAPPED BV TO SAV
I'M SORRV \IE GOT A SORE
PIPE

Mon., Tuea., Wed. &amp; Sat.-t:30tll5:00
THURSDAY tiL 12 NOON

MASON FURNITURE
.

1 : 30-T omorrow 3,4; N e w s 13.

~o-

Japanese
city
" Till Was You"
Helmsman

~:•

/

Herman Grate

DOWN

1 "0- Mio1'

( 3 wds )

••

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

a·

the Ja co bys " care of th1s
newspaper The Ja cobys wt/1
answer md1v1duaf questions
'' sta mped. se/1-addrsssed
en velopes are enclosed. The
mos t mterestm g quest1ons
wtff b e used m th is column
and will recei ve cop1es of
JA CO BY MODERN I

30 Egyptian
deity
31 Beam e of
New York
City
32 Ever y bit
An Othello
hale r
37 Wa nt;
desire

W ILL TRIM or cu t 1rees an cl
shrubber y
P hone 94 9 2545
or 742 ·3167
2·27 ·26tc

STOR[ HOURS

773-5592

and how 1t got ets name .
This IS a ra the r semple.play
As declarer you hold ace·Ja&lt;k·
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
small of a suet The kmg IS
opened
and you Simply play
South bed four spades rather
low.
if
the suit is continued
cheerfully although he dedn 't
ha
ve
picked up a tric k. if
you
rea lly expect to make it He
ra the r hoped tha t East or not. you have ga ined t1m1ng It
West would take the push to es supposed to have been first
fiv e hearts , but e veryon e played In the E nglish resor t of
·
passe d a nd t he defen s e Bath
started out w1th two hearts
! Do you have a question
and two clubs before sheflmg lo r the e•perts ? Wflt.'Ask

Na me Tha!Tune 13; Fam ily Affa ir 15; Antiques 20:
Wild, Wild World of Anima ls 33. _
7:3o-Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywopd Squa res 4;
Let' s Deal · With It 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8; Nalloneo
Geographic 20,33; P rlce Is Right 10; To Tell The
Truth 13; High School T.V. Honor Soc tety 15.
B:CIO-Movln ' On 3,4,15 ; Happy Da ys 6,13; Or. Seust
8, 10.
8:30-Laverne a nd Shi rley 6,13; Good Ti mes 8,1 0;
Consumer Survival Ktt 33; Snythesls 20.
9:00-Pollce woman 3. ~. 15; Lolo Fal ano 6,13; M-A·S·H
8,1 0; Adams Chr onicles 20,33.
9:3()--()ne Day At A Time 8,10.
10:00-0ean Ma rli n 3,4,15; Fa mily 6,13; Ame r tcan
P arade 8,10; News 20; Woman All'iel 33.
10:3o-Woma n Alive! 2o. Woman 33.
11 :()()-...Ne ws 3.~. 6,8 , 10, 1 3, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :3o-F lor ida Primar y 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15; Ja nak! 33.
12:00-Johnny Carson 3.4, 15; Myster y ol the Week
6, 13; Movie " T he Cha irman" 8; Movie " Wa y o f a
Gaucho" 10.

( 2 wds. )

- -=-=-:::-------- ..... --- ..

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

to know wha t a Bath Coup es,

Openmg lead - 2 ¥

16 Sticky
substance
ll Sea bird
18 Braz1lian
tree
21 Fit for
farmmg
25 Hermc
26 Und ergo an
mfa tualion
( 3 wds )
28 Kind of
collar
29 Sailor' s
affirma tive

MAlON IIOINITURI

POMEROY - High view ... low prlte, check this 3
bedroom home with large dining room ; living room
wllh fereplac e; k•t chen and bath, nat. gas, furniture
goes too
. one low price SISOO.OO.

Want tha,t FOR SALE ad to reed SOLD.
Call Jimmy Deem

.

An Arkansas reader wants

P ass

- -·-------------

and S P.M.

spa c 1ousness of this th ick walled brick home; open
stairway : la rge living room with ll tlreplace ; huQe

4• 4•

Pass

( 2 wds.)

8 A.M., The Noon R_,ort,

BICENTENNIAL SPECIAL - 560 N. Second St ,
Middleport. Sit on the large front porch and watch l~e
world go by , slep Inside the large foyer arid lee I tho

Pass

15 Ran up bills

....... ~--

AT

reasonable price. Call f or appointment

1o!o

1•

S EWING MACH I NE Repai r s ,
serv ic e. all makes 99 2 22 84
Th e Fa br. c Shop , Po m eroy
A u tho r iled Sin ger Sal es an d ,
We
Sh a rp en
Se r vice
SCISSOrS
,
3 29.tf c ,

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

EXPANDED WEEK DAY NEWSCASTS

I

a.

Pass
J"'

ACROSS
I Temporary
currency
6 Ge ne ral at
Gettysburg
II " Butterfield 8" ·
author
12 Ca ustic
13 Jacquehne
Susann
novel, with
" The 11

WMPOAM-FM

.

South

~"~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

------------,.,-~

ON

DON ' T FLIP OUT

North East

Suppose spades broke 3· I
Then South would have been
mtnus 200. for down two, but
Eas t-West wo uld have made
their heart game. if allowed to
play 1t.

The game was duplica te and
South noted tha t minus 100
would be worth some match
pomts smce so me East~Wes t

0 &amp; D T REE T r"rmmtng , 20
yea r s e~rp e r 1 tnce I n sured ,
fr ee est 1m at es Ca ll 99 2 2384 ,
or ( 614 l 698 7151 A l bllny
.
10 15 1fc ,

HEAR NEWS FIRST

CA LL QUIC K.

West

and was one down

mer e 100 pomts.

-~-;:
-~ .·••·
.r--;........_· ---'!""'"0-------••

w ooded hills ide just cr yl ng f o r a cabln . .' Here' s
scener y and secl usion .. at less than $300 p er acr@.

o!o4 3
• A Q 1074

South was on lead and had to
peck up lhe queen of spades In
orde r to hold the penalty to

E XCA VATIN G ,
dozer .
backho e
a nd
dil ch er ,
H a t , l eld B ac k
Ch arl es R
Hoe Send ee , Rutla nd Oh to
Ph on e 742 2008 ,
1130 78t c

4

EAST

to a d1amond .

5 1 1f t:

-----

3.7 12tp

c on ditiOn ing tn M id dlepor:t
Phon e 992 3129 or 992.54 34
3 1.31 c

bedrooms w i th a sun porch. Plenty of room · for real

111100cl~1 ""'·
HEY! HIX! .
LfGGO 0' ME!
SOMETHII'tei f.lSE 7

_________ ___ _

90 ACRES VACANT LAND - youwould ·know spring ls

949-2388

DIDti' T tlRIH&lt;;

~-------.._______

ON E Att&lt; t , 6 r ms a rld ba t h,
R t 3, Pom er oy , Rose H tll
Dt ck Dav•s prop erty , t ull
b a seme nt ,
alum i nu m
Stdi ng , P,iln eted $10.00 0 Call
Oa k H 1ll 68 5 6576 e v en tn gs
J a ck son '2 86 3004 d a ys ,
'

formal dining room ; big kitchen. Upsta irs Is 4

TO SRIII(I flACK

~HhtfAJ't

yOU

.-

H OME f or sa le b y p r i v at e' 3 1'
a c r es 1
4
o w n er ,
b edrooms . b arn on bla ckto p
ro ad , g a s an d wa t er P hon e
949 2023
3 1 26t p

Call for IPPOtntment

I RIIO lDJ 10
00 A SIMI'I.f JOB ·

AF F OLTER
REAL T Y ,
B R OK ER . 22 07 C a mden
Ave , Par k ersburg . P h one
•
( 30 4 ) 485 6467 Joe Boyles
(O h i o ),
( 61 4 )
66 7 3829 R E A DY MIX C O N r_ f\ r::u;.dell v er ed r i g ht to your
TU P PERS P L A IN S N o 1, 2
pro j ec t F ast a nd easy Fre~ 1
o r 3 Br fram e ra nc h , u t ,l rt y
es l 1m a1es Ph on e "1192 3784, •
room , h ardwood an d carpe t
Goeg le ln R eady Mi,. "'Co , '
fl oo r s . ci ty w at er , eli: t ra lot
M idd lepo r t , Oh io
available Close to g r a d e
6 30 t f c
scho ol Goo d t o r r elrr e m ent
or f tr s t home , S22 ,700 2 3
B R fra me , 9Bm e r oom Wtf h E L WOO D BOWER S RE P A IR
~ S wee p e r s , toaster s, ir o ns.
b at h , h ardwood an d car p e t
a l l sma ll ap p liances La wn
f loor s, util i ty rooms , ou t
m ow er , n ext to State H igh ·
buildt n g , patio , lo t 200 I( 200,
w a y Garage on Rou 1e 7
a g ood b uy . S24 .000
3
Pho n e f8 S 3825
Bea u tiful sell ing on w oode d
41 6 tfc •
ac res , 3 BR . 11 ' bal h family
roo m , ha r d wood f l o o rs , - ----------~--basemen t ,
o u t b u ilding , SEPT I C TAN K S c l e aned \
Mod er n San il al to n . 99 2 3954 ,
$43 .000
Or 991 734 9
3 7. 2t c
9-18 tt c ,'
--~=-=--=-------MO D ER N hom e In Cheste r , 8
room s, 2 bath s . 2 p or c h es
EXC A VATI N G , do zer , loi'l&lt; tw '
sun por c h , 11 b asement , cit y
a n d back hoe wor k , se p tic ~
and well wa t er , natura l gas ,
t an ks
i n s t a ii Pd ,
d u m p ..
gara g e
Pri ce d t o se ll
tr ucks an d to bo y s f or h ir e ,
Phone ( 6141 98 5 4102.
Will h aul f ill d ir t, tor SO i l ,'"~
_:_
2 4 tf c
li m eston e a n d g r av e Ca ll ..
B ob or Ro ger J effer s , Cl a y ~
7 R OOM hou se w it h b at h , good
ph on e 99 2 7089 , n ig ht phone '
toc at ro n Full ba semen t , 39 1
99 2 3525 or 992 5232 .
~
South Seco nd , Mid d lep ort
2 t 1-tt c 1
Ph one 992.22 65
'

BUI LD I N G , M a m
St
1n
Ru tl and , see or c all T 0
S t e w a r t , Ru tl a n d . O hiO,
Phon e 74 2 242 1
3 9 6t c

Th is ls the rtght price for th is modern two bedroom
home In the country near Bashan. City w ater and
natura l ga s. E v en a garden .

0

~--rot)

-------... --.-----Real Estate For Sale

here when you see th is w ide green valley with a brook
running through It ; jvst perfect for a large lake ;

16000.00 -

'

AVAILABLE
T u ppers Pl ainS · C h es t er
Water Dis tr i c t now selli n g
b ulk wa ter to t an ks on
tr uc ks at ou r n ew off tce t
L oca t ed o n St Rt , 7
I M ile North o f
E ast ern H rg h Schoo l
s er 11e Yourse lf D is p enser
T ak in g q ua rt er s onl 'p' , on e
a t a t im e , for 25 0 ga llons of
wa t er
Op en a lit he Time
tor you r conve n 1ence 1
3. f . Jm o

LUCKET T F a r m Equtpm en t,
W a s h rng l o n
St ,
W es t
A l b an y t Ph one ( 614 ) 69B 3032
or 698 ·7881
2 18 261 c

bu ilding wi th 2 bedr oom
a p arJm e n t
ove r ,
1n
R u tl and
A sking $13,500
10 Percent down FHA on
the above homes VA

J

..
'.'
e
•

BUL K WA T ER

RE D DOG~ Ti m es t o n e gra v el
an d ft ll dirt del i ve r ed
P ho n e 8 111 Pullin s, 99 2 24 78
2 19 26 tc

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

'1.1 5 PER H U NDR E D s t uff ing

en 11e l opes
Se h d
se lf
ad dre ssed , s t a mp ed e n
ve lop e T
K
Enterpr i se,
Bo x 26, St a n berr y, Mo
64 489 ,
2·2 9.7tp

ne tghborhood

... AIR F~lhHT.

BRA D FORD . Au c tion eer
REMODELING ,
Pl umbin g ,
Comp lel c Ser vice
Phon e
h eat mg and a ll t yp es d f
949 2487 or 949 200 0 Ra c in e
g enera l
r e parr .
Work
Oh•o , Cr i ll Bradford
'
g uar ant eed
20 years ex .
10 .9 Jfc 1
p er ten c e
Phon e 991 2409

---

l 'h ba th s, a complete ly
m od, k 1t , hot w ate r heat ,
c ove r e d
p a t to , 2 c ar
ga r age , and 3 lot s Very
n ice a t $ 46 ,900

United Rabb1t Ranchers Assn .

Pets

3 Brs ,

f t. lot, co m ple l e f i n anc mg
Ph on e 992 5786
3 3 6t c

FARM - 30 c lean ac r es 3
BR home (no bath) ba rn &amp;

I'M FL'ilf.lb 1./0U
TO Tit&amp; COf.GT ...

20 rot&gt;tJD? e~ "' w~
FI&lt;OM TU!;SO"''i '?'

Ph 949-2023 or 143-2'67

WI L L do od d jobs , ro o f rn g ,
pamti n g , h a ul ing , t r eework
and mo w rng Ca ll 992 74 09
J 2 2~JIC

----~---'-- -----~--

--------------..F I SH IN G S! N KERS m ade by

mol d ,'" oz t hro ugh 2 11'' o:z
V ery reason ab l e Ph one 9925829
3 3 12t p

C

furna c e , g ar a ge, pa t io a nd
acre . $18, 500

5 RO OM S a n d ba lh on 150 li: 100

P!JT ~

HIM--·

1/ '

-~-

~Ill!&lt; 'lOll ()J.J

4 10 I mo .

S30,000
UNION AVE. - B r ms , 5
Brs . 2 baths. gas F.A.

l h 60 MOB I LE H O M E , 3
ac r es , we ll wa t er , n a tu r al
gas , $6900. Phone 992 3955.
3 3 6t c

~----------

ur,·

Ph " 2·3993

bath s, l arge k 1t , d tn ing ,
vtil! ty, an d carp ort . I acre.

o!o B6

• KJ62
t 54
t 32
o!o K J 10 7 4
... A Q 9 2
SOUTH
"' KJ9 8 2
• B5
t A K 10 9
"' 53
North·South vulnerable

CONSTRUCTION

Sy r acuse, Oh1o

lot $12.500
NEW LISTING - Br and
new 3 BR S , 2 ce r a mic

t QJ876
o!o Q6

F r om 1 shelf to 1 hou1e. 111
typu of build i ng and
remodeling
from
the
foundation
Add itions,
c~ r peting , PI ntlng, sl dlnt.
roofing, paneline·, paper
hang~ng etc

paers would have been a llowed
to play al a heart partia l a nd
three hearts would be a surer1r e contract irrespective of
how the spades divided. South
noted further that 1f spades
were 3-l the four hea rt con·
tract would "have wheeled In ,
so South banged down his top
spades, pe cked up the queen

9

• 93

IIIII "

D&amp;D

Blown mto Walls &amp; Athcs
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOW S
ALUMINUM
SIDING· SOFFITT
GUTTER S- AWN I NG S

N E W HOM E Zrg :zag sew tng
ma c hi n e w1t h cam s S1 25
197 4 Hon da CL 200, $600 ,
Phone 992 6 162
3 3 6t c

CA5 E WA5
THUTMIJ§E

WEST

F lnan ct ng Avatlabl e

P-tf2-3l25
I
ESTATE - 8 rm s, 1'/,
baths, 4 B. R 5 , 2 l•v ings.

NORTH IDI
"' A1 0 7 5

THE M·M ""IJMMY

-,

Brown
insulation- Services

Virgil B.. Sr .• Brok01

OR EAM HOME -

POLICE-

2· t 2. J mo ..
_ __....:...:.:....,;;;;;:...r

FREE ESTIMATES

.TfEAFOJm

1974 C H EVY 1 l on l ong w h eel
ba s e. 12 f L b ed w t th s to c k
r a c k s, v B. 4 spe ed p s,
p b , 19,000 mrles
$3 ,600
Ph one 16 14 1 985 J594
3 5 61 p

G.OO O H AY , never wet P hone
94 9 252 3
3 3 6t c

~,.__

~

1969 MU ST A N G Fa s tba c k 1 V 8
st an dard 1900 Phon e ( 61 .41
985 3594 I
3 s at p

Real Estate For Sale

.

South does his arithmetic

YO U 5AY IN&lt;!&gt;
THAT T HIN &lt;5
THAT GOT OUTA

2. 19 . 1 mo

----CJS , V a, good
Rill &amp;lite for Sale
$2,400 Ca ll 992

- ---- -----

QUAR T ER h or se w i th sa ddl e
Gen tl e
Bea u t1 ful ani ma l
S300 Phon e ( 614) 378 6311
af ter 6 p m
3 5 6t c

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

'"

--

-- - -------

--------

a f te r 7 P m
1973 CH EVY Vega G T , 4
_ _ _ _ _ _ :_9_Jtc
~ ffid , S1.2 00 Ph one 992
1975 20FT CHAMP I O N m otor
ho m e ,
pow e r
s 1ee r rng ______ •____ __ :_B_!tp
pow er brak es till s t ee r ing
1968 OL O SMOB I LE D ella sa,
w hee l, r oof at r , 2, 400 m iles
P s , p b, r h . Sl 25 Phon e
sl eep s 8 Phon e 99 2 3253
99 2 37 18
3 9 6tc
J . ] 3t p
OLIV ER n L PTO , H Y D 2
1975 D AT SU N Mod el B 210.
r ow c u lt 1v a to r , r ea d y t o go
S3, 000 Phon e 992 3453 or 992
P hon e 161 4 ) 98 5 4 13 1 o r 949
3381
2473 all er 6 p m
3 7 61c
3 9 Jt c

~lp

H AY to r sal e, c a l l (6 14 ) 98 5
4271 aft er 6 p m
3 J 6f c

--

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

-

Rutland 742 2331
Roger Wam sley
3-1-lmo .

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

RUMMA G E Sal e, T h ur sday
an d Frt da y , Ma r c h 11 12
fr om 10 a m
t ti l 4 p m
be s td e Sh u ler ' s Ma r k e t
3 9 2tp

77 60

Help Wanted

39

R&amp;J COINS

------ ----· -

BASE M E N T SA LE . 894 Pearl
St , M iddl ep o r t. T uesd a y .
Wednesday , T h ur sda y 9 ttl

Wanted To Buy

or

For Sal e

LO SE weight w 1th N ew Sh ape 1973 JEEP
c ond tt ton ,
Ta ble ts ar1d Hy dr ex Wa t er
5911
P il ls a t D ullon Dru g m
3 7 31p
N e l so n
M i d d l ep o r t and
D rugs
'
1
3 9 3tp 1972 CH EV Y Ch eye nne ? to n .
m rrro r s, v 8, c ar p et , fa c tor y
~Br a kes .
g au ges ps , d 1sc
HAY for sa le , 70c per ba le
automa t iC , topp er , e)( ce ll en t
C all af t er 4 p m 99 2 70 15
co ndt lt on , $2, 69 5 Call 99 2
3 9 3tp
77 70 or 992 5B76
J 7 6tp
M I X ED hay , call 99 2.28 77
__ , - - - -

I N DA SH 23 cha nn el c rt 1zens
b an d , t r an scei ve r AM F M
_MP X rad 10 , 8 tr ac k tape
play e r Call 99? 396 5
2 26 tf c

do g , spo tte d . an sw er s to th e
r1ame ot " D rce " R eward
Ph one 992 379 2
3 9 61p

Employment Wanted

For Sale

For Sale

------------BL AC K and w h rl e Dalma t tO n

10 7 74
Yo u ar e h ereb y no t tfled th a t
a Com pl arn t h a s b een f li ed 1n
the Com m on Pl ea s Cour t of : A SH p at d tor aft m ak es an a
models of m o bile ho m es
Mei gs Count y , Oh ro , Pr obat e
P hon e a r ea code 6 14 423
Dr vrs ro n ,
Co ur t
House,
95J I
Po m ero y , Ohro . 45769. Ca se
4 13 t f c
No
2 1, 7 18,
bY
E dw a r d
Chev al ier , Ad m 1n 1stra t or of ------ ~-----th e
E s t a te
ot
Way r1 e TIM BER , top prt ce
f or
D ecea s ed
C h ev at re r ,
s t andin g t imber Call (6 14)
Pla in ti ff ,
YS
Edward
446 a57 0
Ch e11aller , et a l , ar1 d t h e
3 7 lf c
un k nown
h e tr s
the 1r
eli:e.c ut ors, admrn1 &amp;trat ors an d 5 TO 20 AC R E S w1t h or
assr gns of Wayn e Ch eva li er ,
w tth out h ou se P hon e 992
Deceese d , D ef en da nt s, w h ose
5352 o r 991 ,2496
res iden c es ar e unknown Th e
3 9 6t c
ob j ec t of th e Co m pla1r1t an d
the d em an d for r eltet ar e to SM ALL apartm en t srz e ga s
de te rm me wh o a r e th e nex t o f
c ooki n g •rang e wi th oven
t1.1n , he trs at la w , thetr
P h or1e 992 57a 6 or 992 2529
e:.;ecu tor s. adm mt s fr a tor s and
• 3 9 6t c
ass ign s ot Wa yne Ch eval ter , --~-------~-~
-D ec ea sed , enl tt led b y the taw s
of th is s ta te to th e n ext es t at e
of m herrt ance and to d eter
m tn e the shar e to Whtch t h e
n e:.; t of k m or h e1rs at ta w , W I LL do ba b yS i lltn Q tn m v
home ,
Chest e r T uppers
lh e tr
exec u t or s .
ad
Pl a m s Br ea
P hon e ( 614 J
m lnt s tra t or s an d ass tgn s. ar e
985 386 7
en ti tl e d acco r d tn g lo t h e
3 7 4tp
statute tn such c ases ma d e - --- __,
end prov1 ded , and t or su c h
o th er r e1 1ef as t h e c our t may
d etermin e
Y ou ar e he r eby nottft ed th at
you ar e r equtr ed to answer th e SOM E ON E to serv t ce an
esta bl tshe d 1nsuram e sales
Compla tn t wit hin twen t y e tgh t
ro ute 10 th e M idd leport
d ay s af te r th e la st publ rca t ton ,
Ch es h tr e ar ea
v er y g oo d
th e l ast publlc at ron o f whi c h
wages , a ll fr tn ge ben ef lls.
wilt b e on th e 6th d ay of AprrL
an ou ts tan d in g op port unity
1976
'
for so m eone w 1th a l il l ie
am b il 1on an d a se lf work er
M A N N I N G D WEB STER ,
A tt inqui r tes c on fr den tta l
JUDGE AND
a· BOii: ' 67 2,
W r it e P
EX OF FI CI O CLERK ,
Pom eroy , Ohto 457 69
COMMO N P LE AS COURT ,
ME IGS CO U NT Y , O HI O ,
3 7 7t c
PR OBAT E D IV I SIO N
S A L IS B URY
T ownshrp
( 2) 24 (3 ) 2, 9, 16 23 . 30 ( 4) 6,
Tru s t ees n eeds per son fo r
open m g g r aves at Rock
S p r~r"' gs Cemet er y Con tac t
D en11e r H ys ell, ph on e 992

-----~

UNFURN I SHED 14x7 0m o b il e
home , t ot al etec 1 3 ton
c entra l arr c o n dilior1er .
excel lent condtlton Phon e
247 268 4 o r 247 2664
3 l 6tc

-- --- --- -----PUBLIC NOTIC E

19 74 D ODGE 1 1 1on pi c k up V
1968 C HE VY A r1 w rth 197 0
a, au1o , p s . tow mtl eag e,
mo l o r , 6 cy t
c a r pete d ,
tn c l ud e s 23 c hann e l Cb
pan eled , s t ereo ta p e d eck"
Mohawk wh eels and 6 pl y
FM rad ro , mag wh ee ls tn
mud and sn ows Pr 1ced near
good
c ond1 t 1on ,
S1. 300.
wh oles ale
E xc ell ent cog
Phon e 99 2 3710
dilton Phon e 992 7066 or 992
3 9 31c
72 10
---·------~----3 7 41 C 197 3 DODGE Po la r a Cu stom ,
f ully equipped , good shape ,
$2 ,000 Phon e 99 2 7797
3 9.3tp

VIND A LE 12 x 68. 3 be drm
bath 8. 1 L 14 fl expa ndo , 25
fl . awn 1ng and por ch, f ully
c arpet ed
Ph on e 742 2880
2 29 10t c

- -- --· -

F tnd
bu rtt d tr eas ure .
Co in s. rings, Sliv er , gold .
Coin &amp; M etal
D et ec tor s
For Rent

MIWT E l AilE

Ph. (614) 985-4102

Pte u t l l ss • Table Top s M lrrer s . Stor m &amp; Scree ns.
FERRELL ' $ GLASS &amp;
HOME MAINTENANCE
S i d i ng - VI n vt
&amp;
Al uminum Wi n dow Glass
&amp; G la zi n g On th e J ob or In
Shop .
P ick u p and d e li ve r y
se r v tee
Call Coll ectJ8B-82l9
Speclall u
t n butld - up
roofmg &amp; hot rooh . F ree
E st i mates · 10 y ears exper i ence.
H.uv e F e rr ell
Bidw ell , Oh1o
2 6 1 mo .

BUY, SELL or TRADE

Mobile Homes For Sale

DO~IN6 Till;

Ph . " 2· 2174

-

IY-W.WAIT A

BUT [ REVIVED

MONTHS LATER -- AND
PUT &amp;ACK THE ORIGINA l.
At.l eiE I.I T. MUIM\Vl E V£ 1'1.
S INCE THEt.l l'IIE 5 EEN

BISS£U. BUILDERS

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, ,.;~~

COINS

2 Y E A R m ale h ound , w h tte

WIN AT BRIDGE

Nathan B i ggs

, . - - - - --

Found

per Ad vert tse m e n t

Toke odv•nt•go of our
prices.
Quality
built
homes . Nice lots •v•ll•bt.
In nlte locations.

From the largtst Truc k or
Bull do ze,...Rad i at or to th e
all est Heet e r Co r e .

BLIND A D S

Addit iona l

TUESOAY, MARCH 9, 1976
5 :00-Bonanza 3; l{odeo Glri 4; Gunsmoke 6; Famll~
Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3o-Adam·12 ~ . News 6; Beverly Hillbi llies 8,
Electric Company 20,33; Ada m· ll 13.
6:00-News 3, 4;8,10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; lTV
Uti li za tion 33.
6 :3o-NBC N e ws3. ~, 1 5; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias, Yoga
and You 33.
7·00-Tr ulh or Conseque nces 3; To Tell The Truth 4 ;
Bowling For Dollars 6; Count ry Place 8; New 10;

Business Services

Pomeroy
QUALITY Motor Co.

v tn y l roof

R U T LA ND Gun Cl ub m eel lng
an d 22 R tfl e Ma t ch a t N ew
U ma Road , Frtd !ly , 8 p .m
E ve r yo n e w e lco me
3 9 Me

Television log for easy viewing

Auto Sales

@) 2s;Ns,

Wan l ed to own " nd ope rate
c and y
a nd
c onf ec t i on
VPnd ing ro ute
Po m eroy
and surr ound i ng area .
Plea san t b u si n ess . H ig h
prof i l t te ms Ag e or ex
p er ience no t I mpo rt an t
Requ i r es c ar a nd Sl495 t o
54 795 c ash ln v est men 1. F or
det ai l s wr ite an d In c l ud e
your phone n umber

MA K E SU RE yo u g e t 'everv

M in imum Charge Sl 00

patd ads and
w i th1n 10 days

Auto Sales

RES PONSIBL E
PERSON

_____ _______ _

Inse r tion

conse cut tve
25 Per Ce n t

Bu~n~ Opportun~~

-------·- ------

Corrections w ill be lie
cepred un t 1l 9 am

For Fast Results Us_e The Sentin.e l Classifieds

WO U LO you l i ke to ha ve ex t ra
1n c om e s ~!l ing Ra wle igh
Pr od uc tt? Ca ll 2-47 2204 f or
more ln ,orm &amp;rlon
3 7 3tc

',,

."• f',.,.I'
~

Muan, w. Ve.

.,

WHV, SHORE --·
I'D LOVE A CUP

Halfway measures won 't cut1t

;o;-.;oU today

PerSis.t8tiC• .

d e termlnBt t on
and
resourcefulness will be needed
to achie11e your goals

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No•. 22)
An Ill feeling you're nursing
about something done to you
m the past could overly In·
fluence you in deahn g with this
person today

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0.C.
21) Should you see a friend b&amp;mg taken advantage of today,
speak up Th ts Individual may
not be aware of what's happen-

mg

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen.
19) Yo u may lmd yourself Involved in a new proJect with
anot h er today . If It 's to be
successfu l. your g oals must be
m harmony

AOUARtUS (Jon. 20·1'4b. 11)
Pess1m1st tc associates could
t alk you o ut o f your good tdeal
today Try what you bel ieve In ,
provid ed there's no n sk r&amp;qwred

PISCES (Fob. 20· M•rch 20)
Treal all you r frtends equally
t oday or y o u ma y hurt
someone's feeling s unintent to n a ll y B e loya l to those
who ' e been true to you

~'PX

~b(~
M•rch 10, 1171
M any n e w tr tends are hkety to
enter your lite thts year through
r ather u nusual c~rc um stan ces .
It could all starl from an acq uaintance you'll m eet casually

�. I -1be Pomeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 9, 1976

Notice

WANT A D S
I N , OR M A TI O N
D E AD LI N ES
s PM
Dav
B e fore
Publ ication
Monday DeaDl in e 11

o.m

Cencelta tlo n
for

K ODCOT
Cosm etr c s
has
un li m i te d oppor t un ity f or
s el es g ! r l s In tere st e d
tn
tl eaut y The r e ' s " B e au t y
D i re ctor " po ss tb lll!l es w tt h
or g an l za fl on of yo ur own
Conta ct
A nn Sa uvage ,
Sy ra c u se , OFuo 99 2 32 72
( I ndep en den t Otstrt b utor )
......
J -5 6tp

oa 't' of P' ublicalion ,
R EG U LATI O NS
The Publ isher reur v es

the r lgtJt to ed 1t or re [ec t
any eds dee m ed ob
ltc tl onal The P\J blish e r
will not be respons•b fe for

more lh1n one •ncorre ct

RAT ES
For W an t Ad Sendee
S cen Is per word one
lnserllon

~

pos s ib l e d edu c ti or1 thi s yea r
Ha ve yo u r Fe der al a n d
Stat e In come Ta x r e tur n by
an account a n t Phon e 992
6 173
1 21 52 t c

U cen ts per word th ree
consecut •ve
Inse rtio n s
26 cen ts per word si x

Inser tiOn s
on

DI SC OUnt

SLOAN'$
CARPOING
. .

1913 CHEVY 'h TON
$2895
Cust . de luxe 6 cyl. , std. rad io, P.S , body side mldg s,

uns
W·S tires , black · w hite

ad s pa t d

C A R D OF T HANK S
&amp; OBI TUARY

S2 00

for
50
wor d
m inimum
Each a d d ill ona l wo r d 3

1970 CAMAR08 CYL.
$1995
Auto • P S., radto , g ood ti re s, green and black vinyl
roof

De p ar t m ent BV V
3918 Meadowbrook R d.
Minne tt p olis, M N 55426

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

cen ts

WANTlO

SAVE MONro

Free e st i mates on Cl r · ,
p eting a nd installation .
We' ll br_il}g samples to your
hom e -w tth no obligation .
Se e ho w you ca n r eally
sa ve .
M i ke Young , Manager
Sale s and Insta l lation
Rt.l, Pomeroy , Ohio H 769
Phone day or night
6 1 4 -9~2 -2? 0'
JJ ~ ] rrio

de fu)(e tutone fin ish, red and whtte.

1973 MON TE CARLO
A.uto ., P.S , P B.. 8 cy l. , r ad io ,

25c

Ch ar ge

OF F ICE HO U R S
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m
Da i l y , 8 30 am to 12 oo
Noon Saturctav
P h on e today99 2 2 156

fh~lator Spec•all u

wd h l 1v er sp eckl m g Found
tn M tn er sv tlle , Oh io a rea
c a ught in s te e l l aw trap Has
Wtde b l ac k c o l lar Wtt h bra ss
s tu \1d m g and spi kes Own er
may c la im by paymg for ad
a n d 11e t ert n ary f ee
Ca l l
M AS ON
CO
H u mane
Soc1 e ty , ( 304 1 675 16 59 or
675 4515
3 4 6tp

Card of Thanks
WE WO U L D like t o tak e !h iS
op portun rty to extend ou r
s ince r e appr ecr atio n to a ll
for t l1 e rr kt n dness shown
d uri ng our re cen t trme o f
sorro w Sp ec ia l th an ks to
th e
Syracu s e
l adtes
Auii:rli a ry , M ar c ra K arr ,
Sara Ro ush and pal lbear e r s
from Ka r r and V an Za ndt
M oto r Sa l es
T h e ma n y
c ard s, bea ut ifu l f lowers an d
spoken word! o f WISd o m of
God ' s t r ut h w ill al! be a pa rt
of the m emo r tes tha t now we
wi l l c l1 ertsh
H ers11e l Ma nu el F a m tl y
3 9 1 tp

Lost
LO ST 1n R u tla n d ar ea , G er
man Shepl1 e rd b lack , g r a y
a n d ta n , n am e "Sr lv er "
R eward o ffered Con t ac t C
T Jewett , R t I , Middl ep or t ,
o r c a ll 742 2135
'
3 9 6tp

'

TO TH E UN K N OWN H E I R S, O L D fu rnttur e , te e boli:es
br ass
bed s ,
ol d
wall
THEIR E XEC UT ORS . A D
t eleph on es an d parts , or
MIN IS TR ATORS
A ND
c omp l e te h ou seho lds W rt le
A S SIG N S
OF
WAY N E
M
D
M il l er , Rl
2.
CHE VAl i E R ,
D ECEA SE D ,
Po m er o y , Oh ro Ca ll 99 2.
RE SID E N CE
U N KNOWN

~

--------------FORD lr a c to r , m ode l 2000 .
ltke new On e so r rel g e tdtng
r 1d1 n g hor se , g en tl e 6 y ear s
o ld , Ar n o ld Gr a t e, Rut l an d ,
Oh to Ph o ne 7.t 2 224 1 or 74 2
22 46 e v ent ngs
3 5 6t c

-··

5850

3 3 61 c
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cas e No . 21660 VR I L L COOK. - a nd ktl ch en
c oo k
A ppl y 1n p e r s o n
E5tate of LUCINDA OANES,
Cr a w 's
Steak
Deceased.
H ou se ,
Porn ero y , Oh ro
Not .ce is hereby grv en th a t
Rose S. Reynolds . o f 266 Mrll _"':'
3 5 61c
Str ee t, Mtdd te port. Oh 10 , ha s
b e en
Quly
ap po m te d
E ii: ec u t rix of th e E st at e o f
Lu c tnda Danes, d eceased , la te
SM AL L UP STA IR S A P T , f or
of M e igs Count y , Oh io
st n g le p erson , no an rm a ls
Creditor s a r e r equtred t o
Phon e 99 2·57 86
tlle the tr c lai ms w it h sa td
3 3 6t c
fidu ci ary wit h in f our m o nths
Date d t h iS 20th day of
2BtoR"
M
m
ob
i
l
e
Hom
e,
very
Feb ruary , 1976
n tce P h on e 992 3324
2 29 tf c
M ann tn g D We b ste r

--- ---

~\

~.- -

For Rent

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

3 BE DRM ho u se w tl h ba th m
R u tland Ph one 992 585 8
3 9 t fc
4 ROOM S furni sh ed ap art
me nt , all uti l it ies p a i d
Ph one 992 335 6.
3 9 3tc

Tile Almauac
Ualled Press International
Today is Tuesday, March a
the 88th day of 1976 with 297 to

follow.

The moon is between its
lint quarter and full phase .
1be morning stars are
~ercury and Venus.
~ evening stars are Jupi-

kir, Mars and Saturn.

.,
I

'•
'I

1111* born on this date are
under lbe sign of Pisces.

Itallan navigator Amerigo
Vespuccl was born March 9,

1461.
On Ibis day In history :
In 1822, lbe first patent for
..-tlfldal teeth was awarded

to

Olar1es Graham of New

York City.
' In 1947, after 440 days, the
United Auto Workers reached
1ft llfeemenl with lbe Case
Manufacturing Company of
Racine, Wll., toendoneof the
IGngest strikes on record.
In 11182, 31 men were killed
In a coal mine exploaton In
w~

apt
rn
U N F U R NI SH E D
Pomeroy 2 bed r m n ew l y
r ed ec ora t ed , fu l l y carpe t ed
Call in the ea rl y a m 992
22a 8
2 22 lfc
EN JO Y' g ra cious l tvi n g ar V rll age M a nor 10 M 1d
d lep ort for as to w as $ 130
per
m onth
w1 th
all
utr l itles
paid
Th ese
drc br a nd ne w h tg h q uatr ty
ap art men t s at pr 1c es yo u
can . a ffo rd Y o ur rent tn ·
el ude s month to m o nt h
leas e s, a l l el e c
ltv t ng ,
rang e
and
c a r p e t tng ,
r e fr 1g er at o r , tr ee trash
pr ck up , c abl e T V at yo ur
ex pe n se ,
a nd
o n s1 te
l a u n dr y f acil i t i es
Co n
v en ien t t o shop pi ng on Th tr d
and M ill Str eets in M td
dl epo r t See the m ana ger at
Riv ersi de A par t m en ts or
c all 992 : 3273
F u rn i Sh ed
ap art men ts
ar e
a l so
ava 1tab l e
2 2·78tc
----~-- - --

3 A' N u 4 R M turn1shed and
unfurn ts h ed apls Phon e 992·
5434

------·------Jl_~ fc
CI)U N T R Y Mob 1le Home
' Park , Rt 33 , ten m iles norl h
of Pomero y Large tots w i th~
cencret e pa!los , sidew a lks ,
ru,ners and off s tre e t
p ark ing Ph on e 992 1479.
..._
t23 1 ttc

___ ___________ _

Gtnnany.

In
1967,
Russian
Communllt dictator Joaef
Slalln'a daupter, Svetlana,
detected to lbe United States.

1969 Z28 Ca m a r o , J 02 4 spee d .
197 1 Cu ll ass A utoma lte,
bo t h' i n goo d co n di tio n
Phon e 992 573 7
3·3 6t c

M I X ED hay , ph one 99 2 3709
3.9 3tc

1968 CHE VY 1 ? ton p ic kup 6
c y t sta n da r d , 8 fl s tepsrde ,
$4 50 Ph one ( 61 4) 985 3594
3·5 Bt p

--------1974 F ORD F 250 Rar1g er ,

-

19.000 m il es ·. 1973 10f t ca b
ov er c amp e r . l ike new
M ag1 c Che f El ec
r ange ,
COl em an o il fu r n ace Wi lh
t a nk f o r m ob il e h om e
Ph one ( 614 ) 698 7255
3 9 3tp

-~~------

'

COJ\ L F O R ~ A L E CJ\ B Co al
Co mpan y , 1 m tl c n or l h o f
Ches h .re , on R t 7 Pr ck yo ur
ow n , $20 p er I on Open 6 days
p er wee k , or cal l ( 6 1JJ 36 7
73 30 for f urth er 1nlor m a t10n
I 8 78 t c

Conditioner

Model UCXXX ,
210,000
WeeklyGnen
Cap• city

BUY
NOW
AND
SAVE

kJ.Reg. :~~~

Val.

POMEROY LANDMARk
. . . : J.ck W. Carsey , Mg'r .
lilil Phone992-2111
REFR I GERA T OR , be droom
su i te , large .ron an t tq u e
apple bu tte r k e tt l e Ph on e
99 2 5792
J 5 5t c
MANU R E
lo a d e r ,
$ 175
P hon e ( 614 ) 37a 6311 aft er 6

om

3 5 6t c

--~

--~-----

s a l e Ph on e 992 73 06
3 5 121p

-------------W Hit E Legh or n s, 75c each .
good Ia ye r s P hon e 949 204 3
3 5 6tc

----------·---A RE YOU p/an n m g ca bm ets
In your h ome? We h ave a
l1mtled supp l y of n e w
w ooden c a b ine t do or s, an d
d r awer fr on t s Bv a ila bl e a t a
rea son ab le pr ic e Som e wt th
g la ss tn sert s Some solid , all
to p q uat t t y Ca n b e seen at
Kr n gsb u ry M o b t l e Ho me
Sa les . 1100 E
M am St ,
Po m eroy , Oh io or call 992
7034
3 5 5tc
-~---------'----

E N G INE 350 , 2 ba rr el , au to
tr an Sm i SS ton , $200
Ph on e
( 614 ) 985 3594
3 5.6t p

-------------OLI V ER doze r , f r on t en d

load er. fork l 1fts an d blad e,
new eng m e, S2,800. Pho n e
{6 14) 98 5 35 94

3 5 81 p
197 1 350 JO HN Deer e do l er ,
w in c h , can op y , r evers a l
b ar , S7 ,500 Ph on e (6 14J 985·
35 94
3 5 81 p

----- --------19 74 SE A R S 10 h p , de lu :.;e
l a wn tr ac to r , 36" cut wit h
wh ee l we ig hts . onl y 35 hou r s
of use. l1k e n ew See Charlt e
M afl hew s, 99'2 2257 .•
3.5 5t c

-------------GO OD qu al1ty ha y for sal e
Ca ll 992 36 58

3 5 12/c

--~-

-'-

CO-OP
Automatlt W•ter

_

---------------- ---H AY for

____________

10 F T
SELF CON TA IN E D
c a m pm g trader w 1th e li: tr as
E x cell en t c on dr t ron Phor1e
77 3 5876
3.9 6t c

WE INSTALL!

______ _

Judg e
Co ur t of Co mmon P leas ,
Pr ob ate D1vt sior1
( 2) 24 (J ) 2, 9, 31 c

'

-· -~..,

110Mechanlc Pomeroy. O.

Mulberr y Ave. 520,000.
RUTLAND - Near sc hool ,
6 rm s , b ath , new Nat gas
f ur nace, 3 Br s , and nice

LARRY LAVENDER

gas f irepl ace, hot w at er
h ea t,
a nd ga rag e on

CO A L . Ir ;;es t on e an d all types
of sa lt an d roc~ salt for tee
a n d sn ow remo v al
Ex
: e ls1or Sa lt Wor k s. East
M a m St , Pomeroy Oh 10
Phon e 99 2 389 1
12 7 t f c

-

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

UN F INI SH ED
f urn lt u r i ntght s ta n d . f ull Sile b ed
w 1th mattr ess a n d b o li:
s pr 1ng s
n ine
dr aw er
dr esser . Se ll 2 wt n gba ck
c ha trs w1t h ottom an
Se ll
sep arat e or log eth er P ho ne
992 ] 317_
3 4 7t p
7 ACR E: S v ac an I land, n tc e fc.., ·
h om e or !ra tt er Pon e ( 614)
669 4723
3 7 4tp
-"'-- - -------~w

__ _

1974 T S1 85
SU ZUK I
A 1
c ond1t1on , 1. 10 0 m il es . Ca ll
74 2 21~3 a fte r 5 p m
1 8 9tC

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

ON E Sy l van ia co lored T V se t ,
good co nd it ion Phon e 99 2·
2262
3 7 3tc
- - -- - ----~-----

19 71 YAMA H A 650 Spn n ger ,
fr o n t
and
tube ,
full y
c hop ped Ca ll a fter 5 p m
992 59 14
3 7.6t c

------------ASSO RTE D pat n ts, 50c and
75c qu ar t. Can be se en at
F r y R esi d ence , nex t to
Sa lrsbur y Sch ool
3 7 .3t c

lots o f bu ild i ng s Close t o
mmes $17 ,500
RUTLAND - 1 BR . ba th ,
dtning R , w ash R , garage,
cl ose to school $8,500
BRICK- Live m the n tce 4
BR -apartment, r ent the 2
f u rnished apt s for i 11com e

Excellent

$22, 000
POMEROY
2 BR .
BATH . N. ga s heat, garden
plot. porches, J ust $4,500
WALK TO SHOP - Large 2
story frame , 4 BR , 1112
ba ths, new kifc hen , ful l
ba Sem ent , coal or gas heat

$8,500
992·2259 or 992-2568

NEW LISTING - Bus iness

nothmg down.

HAVE BUYER FOR 100
ACRES OF LAND

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

WANTED

(:ommerclal Rabbit Producers
Who Need:

• INCOME Limited only by your
•GUARANTEED MARKET
I INDEPENDENCE
•SECURITY
The

lime

USDA.enspected plant of United Rabbit
ProcessiJ1g in W•verlv . Ohio needs an addltionai10,000
Frver5 a week to meet demands.

CAN YOU QUALIFY?.
Wrtte:

CHIHU A H UA S for sal e
f em al es Ph on e 992 2265

3

3 7 61 p

Livestock Exchange Bldg .
1600 GenessH Sf.
Kansas City, Misspuri, 64102

or phone : 816.474·6041

2 5 JOtp

------ ----- --3 BE D R M ~ ~~ b ath W1th atr

--....~·----

--------------AC RE S, 2 b edr m m obile
h ome , r oom ad ded , l a nd
sc ap e d , appl ia nces , c ar
f' e l l n g, n e w b iHn , out
bu il d i ng s ,
fru 11
t ree s ,
A lexander T w p , 7 m li es
sout h of A th en s
5. 12,000.
Phon e 1614 ) 592·42 45
3 7 7t c

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

B R H OM E , JUst f in iSh ed
rem od e l1n g
Sa l e m
St ,
R utl and
Phon e 742 23 06
aft er 4 p m or se e M ilo 8 .'
Hulch1nson
10 9 ttc

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

--- - -------- -·-

3

BEORM
honl e .
1us i
fini sh ed , r ~ model l ng , Setem
St , Rutland . Phone 74 2 2306
after 4 p m or see Mi lo B
Hutr:h/son

9 23 tfc

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

'

COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST- What? . . . 5
bedrooms, lovely kitchen with all bulltins, dining room
with sl1dlng glass doors opening to a hugh deck, family
room, lower level patio, tenlral air, total electric,
Intercom system ; some finishing wor k required on
first floor . Where? ... Riggscresl Manor near Tuppers
Pia Ins. One of the finest homes In the area al a

living at a price you can afford ... Just S29,SOO You will
have a home with prestige

This is
a nice

neiqhborhood,
Clovia!

--------------O ' tiEi. L All n eme n.t loca ted :...
be h in d
Ru tla n d
G r a de
Sc hool
Tuneup , b r ake s /
wh ee l ba lan c in g , alln em en t
P hon e 742 2004
11 lt .tfc ~·

. ,.
I'

EXCA VATING , BA C KHOES ·'
AND DOZER LA RGE A NO ~
SMA LL , S EPTIC TANK S 1'
IN S T A LLED
BILL :
PULLIN S, PHON E 992·24 78 ~ )
DAY OR NIGHT .
' ~
2 22 52tp '\1 ;,

2 Food ; dog
3 Talk widly
4 Angered
S Mrs. North
6 Georgia city
7 Reverberate
8 " Exodus" hero tQt~
9 Clangor
Yesterday's Answer
10 Nigerian
23 Pa rticle
35 - Vidal
city
14 In a pleas- 24 Declare
36 Utah
ant way
verboten
city
17 Social club 2S Lambkin's
37 High
member
ma
school
18 South Seas 27 Comedian,
dance
port
Louis 38 Panay
19 Comnuser- 31 Alaskan
Negrito
a tion
Indian
39 Actress
20 Yearn
32 Of aircraft
Perrine,
painfully
33 One of the
Ill some
21 E ncourage
Upamshads 40 B1bhcal
22 Anatomical 34 Southwest
verb
network
wind
ending

WEDNESDAY , MARCH 10, 1976
6:()()-...Sun rlse Semester 10.
6: 15-Farm Report t3.
6 :-..The Story 13.
6: 31)..-.Columbus Today 4; Ne ws 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Farmllme 10.
6· 4()--()un ce of Prevention 10
6 :45-Mornlng Re por t 3.
6:5&gt;-C huck While Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
Stale 13.
7: 00-Today 3.~. 15 ; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:3o-Schoolles 10.
8:00-Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St. 33.
8:3o-Big Valley 6.
9:()()-...Not for Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with O.J , 13.
9 ·30-A.M. 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
10:00-Celebrlty Sweepslakes3.~. 15; Edge of Nlgh16;
Price Is Right 8,10.
10 :3Q-High Rollers 3,4,15: Dinah I 6.
11 :()()--Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4: Gambit
8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13.
11 :3o-Hollywood Squares 3.4,15; Happy Days 13; Love
of Life 8.10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
12 :()()-...Magnlflcenl Marble Machine 3,15; Let' s Make a
Deal13; Bob Braun'sso.so Club 4; News6,8.
12 :30-Take My Advice 3, IS; All My Children 6, 13;
Search tor Tomorrow 8, 10.
12 :45-Eiec. Co. 33.
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
'&gt;
1 :00-News 3; Ryan' s Hope 6,13;( Phil Donahue 8; '
Young &amp; the Rstloss 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:30-Days pf Our Lives 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; R"son 6,13;
As the World Turns 8,10.
2 : ~520,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2 :30-Doctors 3,4,15; Neighbors 6,13; Guiding Light
8,10.
3: 00-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6, 13; All
In The Family 8,10; Kup's Show 20.
· 3:30-0ne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game 8,10.
4:oo-Mtsler Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mtster Rogers
20,33; Movie " Vicki" 10; Call It Macaroni 13.
4:3o-Bewltched3; Afterschool Speclal6,13; Partridge
Family 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Fllnlstones 15.
5 .()()-...Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5: 3o-Adam·12 4,13; News · 6; Beyerly ~[llbll!les I ;
E lee. Co. 20,33.
'
6:Go-News 3,4,8,10,13 ,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 :3Q-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Crop Game 20; Carrascolendas 33.
7:()()..-Truth or Cons. 3; Vaudeville 4; Bowling tor
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10: Wild
Kingdom 13; Family Affair1s; Book Beat 20; Know
Your School 33.
·
7:3o-Last of the Wild 3; Wild Wild World ot Anllmal,s'
6; Match Game PM 8; Evening Edltllan with
Martin Agransky 20; The Judge 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Elook Beat 33.
8 : ~Little House on lhe Prairie 3.15,4; Movie "The
Six Million Dollar Man" 6,13; Tony Orlando &amp;
Dawn 8,10; The Way It Was 20; Images ot Aging 33.
8:30-Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
9 : ~Movle "The Entertainer" 3,4,15; Cannon 8,10;
Theater In America 33.; Images of Aging 20 .
9 :30-Movle " Starsky &amp; Hutch" 6,13.
10· 00-Biue Knight 8,10; News 20.
10:3o-Aimanac 20.
11 :()()--News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 : 30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie "Trilogy of
Terror" 6.13; Movie "The Green Slime" 8; Movie
"23 Paces to Baker Streel" 10; Janakl 33.
1 : 00-Tomorrow 3,_.; News 13.

I

For Wedneadey, Merch 10,
1878

ARIES (March 21 · April ttl
S o meon e mav Wa n t t o do
so m e th1ng sp ecial Just for you
today. It might defeat your pur~
pose t o brtng an un tnvtted person mto the act.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) II
you stt on a good Idea you g et
tod ay t oo long . 1t's ve ry likely to
get shelved an d never put to
the test.

1

GEMINI (Moy 21·duno 201 Be

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE 'MONDY, HOW'D
EVER OET
IN\QLVED WITH
THIS ""OON

THOUG HT OF

ME1 EH ?

LAW" BALL,

b ·

Bemtce Be~ Oeol

·· ·~~D=;:&gt;I-:f.? I" many
One man
women L-...1.-.l......J-..Lis

'&gt;OJ NA1URALLY

t

Grap...

Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

it :

su r e th at serv1 ces yo u 'r e halling p erfo rm ed to day are done
by people wh om y ou tr ust.
Do n ' t ex p er~ me n t wtt h un k nowns

On e l ~ttc r s1mply stam"i s for :moth er In t his sam pie A is
u"ed for the three I.'s. X fur th e tw o O's, rtc . SJO glc letters. CANCER (Juno 21 -July 221

apostro phes. t he le ngt h 11nd form.1t ion of the \\ nrds are all The co urse of least resistance
1s likely to be th e m ost a ppealIn ni s Each d:ty tl w t·ode le tl(' rs :1rc d1fferent
tn g to you today . Th ings th at

CRYPT!lQUOTES

, AN'rWAY?
T NC
NRP E
M DU

F C YQ

E P Q EM GP

QII M Q
C DUN

T NCE

CDX C ESPU

O AM Q

TN C

A M RP

sh o uld be atte nded to may b e
neg lected

YQPV Y
VMY Q
UN D P

-

LEO (JUIJ 23·Aug. 221 Be
care ful to whom yo u pass on
con f td enUal Informa tion today
If tt r eaches the wrong ears. it
m ay be misused

VIRGO (Aug, 23-Stpt. 221
Be fore le nd in g an y th in g of
valu e to a recent acqu atntance ,
11 m ay be w1se to ge t t o kno w
th 1s person better

AP DET
UEC FF N D U
Yeste rday's Cryptoquote: HOLLYWOOD : A PLACE ,WHERE
GREA'l'-G[{A NDMOTHERS DREAD TO GROW OLD. PHYLLIS BATTE LLE
LIBRA tS.pt. 23-0ct: 231
(() 19 1 6 Kina .~ea tures Sy ndl cat ('. lnc .)

DON'T TRV TO TALK, LOWEEZV ..
I JEST DRAPPED BV TO SAV
I'M SORRV \IE GOT A SORE
PIPE

Mon., Tuea., Wed. &amp; Sat.-t:30tll5:00
THURSDAY tiL 12 NOON

MASON FURNITURE
.

1 : 30-T omorrow 3,4; N e w s 13.

~o-

Japanese
city
" Till Was You"
Helmsman

~:•

/

Herman Grate

DOWN

1 "0- Mio1'

( 3 wds )

••

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

a·

the Ja co bys " care of th1s
newspaper The Ja cobys wt/1
answer md1v1duaf questions
'' sta mped. se/1-addrsssed
en velopes are enclosed. The
mos t mterestm g quest1ons
wtff b e used m th is column
and will recei ve cop1es of
JA CO BY MODERN I

30 Egyptian
deity
31 Beam e of
New York
City
32 Ever y bit
An Othello
hale r
37 Wa nt;
desire

W ILL TRIM or cu t 1rees an cl
shrubber y
P hone 94 9 2545
or 742 ·3167
2·27 ·26tc

STOR[ HOURS

773-5592

and how 1t got ets name .
This IS a ra the r semple.play
As declarer you hold ace·Ja&lt;k·
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
small of a suet The kmg IS
opened
and you Simply play
South bed four spades rather
low.
if
the suit is continued
cheerfully although he dedn 't
ha
ve
picked up a tric k. if
you
rea lly expect to make it He
ra the r hoped tha t East or not. you have ga ined t1m1ng It
West would take the push to es supposed to have been first
fiv e hearts , but e veryon e played In the E nglish resor t of
·
passe d a nd t he defen s e Bath
started out w1th two hearts
! Do you have a question
and two clubs before sheflmg lo r the e•perts ? Wflt.'Ask

Na me Tha!Tune 13; Fam ily Affa ir 15; Antiques 20:
Wild, Wild World of Anima ls 33. _
7:3o-Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywopd Squa res 4;
Let' s Deal · With It 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8; Nalloneo
Geographic 20,33; P rlce Is Right 10; To Tell The
Truth 13; High School T.V. Honor Soc tety 15.
B:CIO-Movln ' On 3,4,15 ; Happy Da ys 6,13; Or. Seust
8, 10.
8:30-Laverne a nd Shi rley 6,13; Good Ti mes 8,1 0;
Consumer Survival Ktt 33; Snythesls 20.
9:00-Pollce woman 3. ~. 15; Lolo Fal ano 6,13; M-A·S·H
8,1 0; Adams Chr onicles 20,33.
9:3()--()ne Day At A Time 8,10.
10:00-0ean Ma rli n 3,4,15; Fa mily 6,13; Ame r tcan
P arade 8,10; News 20; Woman All'iel 33.
10:3o-Woma n Alive! 2o. Woman 33.
11 :()()-...Ne ws 3.~. 6,8 , 10, 1 3, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :3o-F lor ida Primar y 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15; Ja nak! 33.
12:00-Johnny Carson 3.4, 15; Myster y ol the Week
6, 13; Movie " T he Cha irman" 8; Movie " Wa y o f a
Gaucho" 10.

( 2 wds. )

- -=-=-:::-------- ..... --- ..

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

to know wha t a Bath Coup es,

Openmg lead - 2 ¥

16 Sticky
substance
ll Sea bird
18 Braz1lian
tree
21 Fit for
farmmg
25 Hermc
26 Und ergo an
mfa tualion
( 3 wds )
28 Kind of
collar
29 Sailor' s
affirma tive

MAlON IIOINITURI

POMEROY - High view ... low prlte, check this 3
bedroom home with large dining room ; living room
wllh fereplac e; k•t chen and bath, nat. gas, furniture
goes too
. one low price SISOO.OO.

Want tha,t FOR SALE ad to reed SOLD.
Call Jimmy Deem

.

An Arkansas reader wants

P ass

- -·-------------

and S P.M.

spa c 1ousness of this th ick walled brick home; open
stairway : la rge living room with ll tlreplace ; huQe

4• 4•

Pass

( 2 wds.)

8 A.M., The Noon R_,ort,

BICENTENNIAL SPECIAL - 560 N. Second St ,
Middleport. Sit on the large front porch and watch l~e
world go by , slep Inside the large foyer arid lee I tho

Pass

15 Ran up bills

....... ~--

AT

reasonable price. Call f or appointment

1o!o

1•

S EWING MACH I NE Repai r s ,
serv ic e. all makes 99 2 22 84
Th e Fa br. c Shop , Po m eroy
A u tho r iled Sin ger Sal es an d ,
We
Sh a rp en
Se r vice
SCISSOrS
,
3 29.tf c ,

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

EXPANDED WEEK DAY NEWSCASTS

I

a.

Pass
J"'

ACROSS
I Temporary
currency
6 Ge ne ral at
Gettysburg
II " Butterfield 8" ·
author
12 Ca ustic
13 Jacquehne
Susann
novel, with
" The 11

WMPOAM-FM

.

South

~"~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

------------,.,-~

ON

DON ' T FLIP OUT

North East

Suppose spades broke 3· I
Then South would have been
mtnus 200. for down two, but
Eas t-West wo uld have made
their heart game. if allowed to
play 1t.

The game was duplica te and
South noted tha t minus 100
would be worth some match
pomts smce so me East~Wes t

0 &amp; D T REE T r"rmmtng , 20
yea r s e~rp e r 1 tnce I n sured ,
fr ee est 1m at es Ca ll 99 2 2384 ,
or ( 614 l 698 7151 A l bllny
.
10 15 1fc ,

HEAR NEWS FIRST

CA LL QUIC K.

West

and was one down

mer e 100 pomts.

-~-;:
-~ .·••·
.r--;........_· ---'!""'"0-------••

w ooded hills ide just cr yl ng f o r a cabln . .' Here' s
scener y and secl usion .. at less than $300 p er acr@.

o!o4 3
• A Q 1074

South was on lead and had to
peck up lhe queen of spades In
orde r to hold the penalty to

E XCA VATIN G ,
dozer .
backho e
a nd
dil ch er ,
H a t , l eld B ac k
Ch arl es R
Hoe Send ee , Rutla nd Oh to
Ph on e 742 2008 ,
1130 78t c

4

EAST

to a d1amond .

5 1 1f t:

-----

3.7 12tp

c on ditiOn ing tn M id dlepor:t
Phon e 992 3129 or 992.54 34
3 1.31 c

bedrooms w i th a sun porch. Plenty of room · for real

111100cl~1 ""'·
HEY! HIX! .
LfGGO 0' ME!
SOMETHII'tei f.lSE 7

_________ ___ _

90 ACRES VACANT LAND - youwould ·know spring ls

949-2388

DIDti' T tlRIH&lt;;

~-------.._______

ON E Att&lt; t , 6 r ms a rld ba t h,
R t 3, Pom er oy , Rose H tll
Dt ck Dav•s prop erty , t ull
b a seme nt ,
alum i nu m
Stdi ng , P,iln eted $10.00 0 Call
Oa k H 1ll 68 5 6576 e v en tn gs
J a ck son '2 86 3004 d a ys ,
'

formal dining room ; big kitchen. Upsta irs Is 4

TO SRIII(I flACK

~HhtfAJ't

yOU

.-

H OME f or sa le b y p r i v at e' 3 1'
a c r es 1
4
o w n er ,
b edrooms . b arn on bla ckto p
ro ad , g a s an d wa t er P hon e
949 2023
3 1 26t p

Call for IPPOtntment

I RIIO lDJ 10
00 A SIMI'I.f JOB ·

AF F OLTER
REAL T Y ,
B R OK ER . 22 07 C a mden
Ave , Par k ersburg . P h one
•
( 30 4 ) 485 6467 Joe Boyles
(O h i o ),
( 61 4 )
66 7 3829 R E A DY MIX C O N r_ f\ r::u;.dell v er ed r i g ht to your
TU P PERS P L A IN S N o 1, 2
pro j ec t F ast a nd easy Fre~ 1
o r 3 Br fram e ra nc h , u t ,l rt y
es l 1m a1es Ph on e "1192 3784, •
room , h ardwood an d carpe t
Goeg le ln R eady Mi,. "'Co , '
fl oo r s . ci ty w at er , eli: t ra lot
M idd lepo r t , Oh io
available Close to g r a d e
6 30 t f c
scho ol Goo d t o r r elrr e m ent
or f tr s t home , S22 ,700 2 3
B R fra me , 9Bm e r oom Wtf h E L WOO D BOWER S RE P A IR
~ S wee p e r s , toaster s, ir o ns.
b at h , h ardwood an d car p e t
a l l sma ll ap p liances La wn
f loor s, util i ty rooms , ou t
m ow er , n ext to State H igh ·
buildt n g , patio , lo t 200 I( 200,
w a y Garage on Rou 1e 7
a g ood b uy . S24 .000
3
Pho n e f8 S 3825
Bea u tiful sell ing on w oode d
41 6 tfc •
ac res , 3 BR . 11 ' bal h family
roo m , ha r d wood f l o o rs , - ----------~--basemen t ,
o u t b u ilding , SEPT I C TAN K S c l e aned \
Mod er n San il al to n . 99 2 3954 ,
$43 .000
Or 991 734 9
3 7. 2t c
9-18 tt c ,'
--~=-=--=-------MO D ER N hom e In Cheste r , 8
room s, 2 bath s . 2 p or c h es
EXC A VATI N G , do zer , loi'l&lt; tw '
sun por c h , 11 b asement , cit y
a n d back hoe wor k , se p tic ~
and well wa t er , natura l gas ,
t an ks
i n s t a ii Pd ,
d u m p ..
gara g e
Pri ce d t o se ll
tr ucks an d to bo y s f or h ir e ,
Phone ( 6141 98 5 4102.
Will h aul f ill d ir t, tor SO i l ,'"~
_:_
2 4 tf c
li m eston e a n d g r av e Ca ll ..
B ob or Ro ger J effer s , Cl a y ~
7 R OOM hou se w it h b at h , good
ph on e 99 2 7089 , n ig ht phone '
toc at ro n Full ba semen t , 39 1
99 2 3525 or 992 5232 .
~
South Seco nd , Mid d lep ort
2 t 1-tt c 1
Ph one 992.22 65
'

BUI LD I N G , M a m
St
1n
Ru tl and , see or c all T 0
S t e w a r t , Ru tl a n d . O hiO,
Phon e 74 2 242 1
3 9 6t c

Th is ls the rtght price for th is modern two bedroom
home In the country near Bashan. City w ater and
natura l ga s. E v en a garden .

0

~--rot)

-------... --.-----Real Estate For Sale

here when you see th is w ide green valley with a brook
running through It ; jvst perfect for a large lake ;

16000.00 -

'

AVAILABLE
T u ppers Pl ainS · C h es t er
Water Dis tr i c t now selli n g
b ulk wa ter to t an ks on
tr uc ks at ou r n ew off tce t
L oca t ed o n St Rt , 7
I M ile North o f
E ast ern H rg h Schoo l
s er 11e Yourse lf D is p enser
T ak in g q ua rt er s onl 'p' , on e
a t a t im e , for 25 0 ga llons of
wa t er
Op en a lit he Time
tor you r conve n 1ence 1
3. f . Jm o

LUCKET T F a r m Equtpm en t,
W a s h rng l o n
St ,
W es t
A l b an y t Ph one ( 614 ) 69B 3032
or 698 ·7881
2 18 261 c

bu ilding wi th 2 bedr oom
a p arJm e n t
ove r ,
1n
R u tl and
A sking $13,500
10 Percent down FHA on
the above homes VA

J

..
'.'
e
•

BUL K WA T ER

RE D DOG~ Ti m es t o n e gra v el
an d ft ll dirt del i ve r ed
P ho n e 8 111 Pullin s, 99 2 24 78
2 19 26 tc

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

'1.1 5 PER H U NDR E D s t uff ing

en 11e l opes
Se h d
se lf
ad dre ssed , s t a mp ed e n
ve lop e T
K
Enterpr i se,
Bo x 26, St a n berr y, Mo
64 489 ,
2·2 9.7tp

ne tghborhood

... AIR F~lhHT.

BRA D FORD . Au c tion eer
REMODELING ,
Pl umbin g ,
Comp lel c Ser vice
Phon e
h eat mg and a ll t yp es d f
949 2487 or 949 200 0 Ra c in e
g enera l
r e parr .
Work
Oh•o , Cr i ll Bradford
'
g uar ant eed
20 years ex .
10 .9 Jfc 1
p er ten c e
Phon e 991 2409

---

l 'h ba th s, a complete ly
m od, k 1t , hot w ate r heat ,
c ove r e d
p a t to , 2 c ar
ga r age , and 3 lot s Very
n ice a t $ 46 ,900

United Rabb1t Ranchers Assn .

Pets

3 Brs ,

f t. lot, co m ple l e f i n anc mg
Ph on e 992 5786
3 3 6t c

FARM - 30 c lean ac r es 3
BR home (no bath) ba rn &amp;

I'M FL'ilf.lb 1./0U
TO Tit&amp; COf.GT ...

20 rot&gt;tJD? e~ "' w~
FI&lt;OM TU!;SO"''i '?'

Ph 949-2023 or 143-2'67

WI L L do od d jobs , ro o f rn g ,
pamti n g , h a ul ing , t r eework
and mo w rng Ca ll 992 74 09
J 2 2~JIC

----~---'-- -----~--

--------------..F I SH IN G S! N KERS m ade by

mol d ,'" oz t hro ugh 2 11'' o:z
V ery reason ab l e Ph one 9925829
3 3 12t p

C

furna c e , g ar a ge, pa t io a nd
acre . $18, 500

5 RO OM S a n d ba lh on 150 li: 100

P!JT ~

HIM--·

1/ '

-~-

~Ill!&lt; 'lOll ()J.J

4 10 I mo .

S30,000
UNION AVE. - B r ms , 5
Brs . 2 baths. gas F.A.

l h 60 MOB I LE H O M E , 3
ac r es , we ll wa t er , n a tu r al
gas , $6900. Phone 992 3955.
3 3 6t c

~----------

ur,·

Ph " 2·3993

bath s, l arge k 1t , d tn ing ,
vtil! ty, an d carp ort . I acre.

o!o B6

• KJ62
t 54
t 32
o!o K J 10 7 4
... A Q 9 2
SOUTH
"' KJ9 8 2
• B5
t A K 10 9
"' 53
North·South vulnerable

CONSTRUCTION

Sy r acuse, Oh1o

lot $12.500
NEW LISTING - Br and
new 3 BR S , 2 ce r a mic

t QJ876
o!o Q6

F r om 1 shelf to 1 hou1e. 111
typu of build i ng and
remodeling
from
the
foundation
Add itions,
c~ r peting , PI ntlng, sl dlnt.
roofing, paneline·, paper
hang~ng etc

paers would have been a llowed
to play al a heart partia l a nd
three hearts would be a surer1r e contract irrespective of
how the spades divided. South
noted further that 1f spades
were 3-l the four hea rt con·
tract would "have wheeled In ,
so South banged down his top
spades, pe cked up the queen

9

• 93

IIIII "

D&amp;D

Blown mto Walls &amp; Athcs
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOW S
ALUMINUM
SIDING· SOFFITT
GUTTER S- AWN I NG S

N E W HOM E Zrg :zag sew tng
ma c hi n e w1t h cam s S1 25
197 4 Hon da CL 200, $600 ,
Phone 992 6 162
3 3 6t c

CA5 E WA5
THUTMIJ§E

WEST

F lnan ct ng Avatlabl e

P-tf2-3l25
I
ESTATE - 8 rm s, 1'/,
baths, 4 B. R 5 , 2 l•v ings.

NORTH IDI
"' A1 0 7 5

THE M·M ""IJMMY

-,

Brown
insulation- Services

Virgil B.. Sr .• Brok01

OR EAM HOME -

POLICE-

2· t 2. J mo ..
_ __....:...:.:....,;;;;;:...r

FREE ESTIMATES

.TfEAFOJm

1974 C H EVY 1 l on l ong w h eel
ba s e. 12 f L b ed w t th s to c k
r a c k s, v B. 4 spe ed p s,
p b , 19,000 mrles
$3 ,600
Ph one 16 14 1 985 J594
3 5 61 p

G.OO O H AY , never wet P hone
94 9 252 3
3 3 6t c

~,.__

~

1969 MU ST A N G Fa s tba c k 1 V 8
st an dard 1900 Phon e ( 61 .41
985 3594 I
3 s at p

Real Estate For Sale

.

South does his arithmetic

YO U 5AY IN&lt;!&gt;
THAT T HIN &lt;5
THAT GOT OUTA

2. 19 . 1 mo

----CJS , V a, good
Rill &amp;lite for Sale
$2,400 Ca ll 992

- ---- -----

QUAR T ER h or se w i th sa ddl e
Gen tl e
Bea u t1 ful ani ma l
S300 Phon e ( 614) 378 6311
af ter 6 p m
3 5 6t c

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

'"

--

-- - -------

--------

a f te r 7 P m
1973 CH EVY Vega G T , 4
_ _ _ _ _ _ :_9_Jtc
~ ffid , S1.2 00 Ph one 992
1975 20FT CHAMP I O N m otor
ho m e ,
pow e r
s 1ee r rng ______ •____ __ :_B_!tp
pow er brak es till s t ee r ing
1968 OL O SMOB I LE D ella sa,
w hee l, r oof at r , 2, 400 m iles
P s , p b, r h . Sl 25 Phon e
sl eep s 8 Phon e 99 2 3253
99 2 37 18
3 9 6tc
J . ] 3t p
OLIV ER n L PTO , H Y D 2
1975 D AT SU N Mod el B 210.
r ow c u lt 1v a to r , r ea d y t o go
S3, 000 Phon e 992 3453 or 992
P hon e 161 4 ) 98 5 4 13 1 o r 949
3381
2473 all er 6 p m
3 7 61c
3 9 Jt c

~lp

H AY to r sal e, c a l l (6 14 ) 98 5
4271 aft er 6 p m
3 J 6f c

--

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

-

Rutland 742 2331
Roger Wam sley
3-1-lmo .

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

RUMMA G E Sal e, T h ur sday
an d Frt da y , Ma r c h 11 12
fr om 10 a m
t ti l 4 p m
be s td e Sh u ler ' s Ma r k e t
3 9 2tp

77 60

Help Wanted

39

R&amp;J COINS

------ ----· -

BASE M E N T SA LE . 894 Pearl
St , M iddl ep o r t. T uesd a y .
Wednesday , T h ur sda y 9 ttl

Wanted To Buy

or

For Sal e

LO SE weight w 1th N ew Sh ape 1973 JEEP
c ond tt ton ,
Ta ble ts ar1d Hy dr ex Wa t er
5911
P il ls a t D ullon Dru g m
3 7 31p
N e l so n
M i d d l ep o r t and
D rugs
'
1
3 9 3tp 1972 CH EV Y Ch eye nne ? to n .
m rrro r s, v 8, c ar p et , fa c tor y
~Br a kes .
g au ges ps , d 1sc
HAY for sa le , 70c per ba le
automa t iC , topp er , e)( ce ll en t
C all af t er 4 p m 99 2 70 15
co ndt lt on , $2, 69 5 Call 99 2
3 9 3tp
77 70 or 992 5B76
J 7 6tp
M I X ED hay , call 99 2.28 77
__ , - - - -

I N DA SH 23 cha nn el c rt 1zens
b an d , t r an scei ve r AM F M
_MP X rad 10 , 8 tr ac k tape
play e r Call 99? 396 5
2 26 tf c

do g , spo tte d . an sw er s to th e
r1ame ot " D rce " R eward
Ph one 992 379 2
3 9 61p

Employment Wanted

For Sale

For Sale

------------BL AC K and w h rl e Dalma t tO n

10 7 74
Yo u ar e h ereb y no t tfled th a t
a Com pl arn t h a s b een f li ed 1n
the Com m on Pl ea s Cour t of : A SH p at d tor aft m ak es an a
models of m o bile ho m es
Mei gs Count y , Oh ro , Pr obat e
P hon e a r ea code 6 14 423
Dr vrs ro n ,
Co ur t
House,
95J I
Po m ero y , Ohro . 45769. Ca se
4 13 t f c
No
2 1, 7 18,
bY
E dw a r d
Chev al ier , Ad m 1n 1stra t or of ------ ~-----th e
E s t a te
ot
Way r1 e TIM BER , top prt ce
f or
D ecea s ed
C h ev at re r ,
s t andin g t imber Call (6 14)
Pla in ti ff ,
YS
Edward
446 a57 0
Ch e11aller , et a l , ar1 d t h e
3 7 lf c
un k nown
h e tr s
the 1r
eli:e.c ut ors, admrn1 &amp;trat ors an d 5 TO 20 AC R E S w1t h or
assr gns of Wayn e Ch eva li er ,
w tth out h ou se P hon e 992
Deceese d , D ef en da nt s, w h ose
5352 o r 991 ,2496
res iden c es ar e unknown Th e
3 9 6t c
ob j ec t of th e Co m pla1r1t an d
the d em an d for r eltet ar e to SM ALL apartm en t srz e ga s
de te rm me wh o a r e th e nex t o f
c ooki n g •rang e wi th oven
t1.1n , he trs at la w , thetr
P h or1e 992 57a 6 or 992 2529
e:.;ecu tor s. adm mt s fr a tor s and
• 3 9 6t c
ass ign s ot Wa yne Ch eval ter , --~-------~-~
-D ec ea sed , enl tt led b y the taw s
of th is s ta te to th e n ext es t at e
of m herrt ance and to d eter
m tn e the shar e to Whtch t h e
n e:.; t of k m or h e1rs at ta w , W I LL do ba b yS i lltn Q tn m v
home ,
Chest e r T uppers
lh e tr
exec u t or s .
ad
Pl a m s Br ea
P hon e ( 614 J
m lnt s tra t or s an d ass tgn s. ar e
985 386 7
en ti tl e d acco r d tn g lo t h e
3 7 4tp
statute tn such c ases ma d e - --- __,
end prov1 ded , and t or su c h
o th er r e1 1ef as t h e c our t may
d etermin e
Y ou ar e he r eby nottft ed th at
you ar e r equtr ed to answer th e SOM E ON E to serv t ce an
esta bl tshe d 1nsuram e sales
Compla tn t wit hin twen t y e tgh t
ro ute 10 th e M idd leport
d ay s af te r th e la st publ rca t ton ,
Ch es h tr e ar ea
v er y g oo d
th e l ast publlc at ron o f whi c h
wages , a ll fr tn ge ben ef lls.
wilt b e on th e 6th d ay of AprrL
an ou ts tan d in g op port unity
1976
'
for so m eone w 1th a l il l ie
am b il 1on an d a se lf work er
M A N N I N G D WEB STER ,
A tt inqui r tes c on fr den tta l
JUDGE AND
a· BOii: ' 67 2,
W r it e P
EX OF FI CI O CLERK ,
Pom eroy , Ohto 457 69
COMMO N P LE AS COURT ,
ME IGS CO U NT Y , O HI O ,
3 7 7t c
PR OBAT E D IV I SIO N
S A L IS B URY
T ownshrp
( 2) 24 (3 ) 2, 9, 16 23 . 30 ( 4) 6,
Tru s t ees n eeds per son fo r
open m g g r aves at Rock
S p r~r"' gs Cemet er y Con tac t
D en11e r H ys ell, ph on e 992

-----~

UNFURN I SHED 14x7 0m o b il e
home , t ot al etec 1 3 ton
c entra l arr c o n dilior1er .
excel lent condtlton Phon e
247 268 4 o r 247 2664
3 l 6tc

-- --- --- -----PUBLIC NOTIC E

19 74 D ODGE 1 1 1on pi c k up V
1968 C HE VY A r1 w rth 197 0
a, au1o , p s . tow mtl eag e,
mo l o r , 6 cy t
c a r pete d ,
tn c l ud e s 23 c hann e l Cb
pan eled , s t ereo ta p e d eck"
Mohawk wh eels and 6 pl y
FM rad ro , mag wh ee ls tn
mud and sn ows Pr 1ced near
good
c ond1 t 1on ,
S1. 300.
wh oles ale
E xc ell ent cog
Phon e 99 2 3710
dilton Phon e 992 7066 or 992
3 9 31c
72 10
---·------~----3 7 41 C 197 3 DODGE Po la r a Cu stom ,
f ully equipped , good shape ,
$2 ,000 Phon e 99 2 7797
3 9.3tp

VIND A LE 12 x 68. 3 be drm
bath 8. 1 L 14 fl expa ndo , 25
fl . awn 1ng and por ch, f ully
c arpet ed
Ph on e 742 2880
2 29 10t c

- -- --· -

F tnd
bu rtt d tr eas ure .
Co in s. rings, Sliv er , gold .
Coin &amp; M etal
D et ec tor s
For Rent

MIWT E l AilE

Ph. (614) 985-4102

Pte u t l l ss • Table Top s M lrrer s . Stor m &amp; Scree ns.
FERRELL ' $ GLASS &amp;
HOME MAINTENANCE
S i d i ng - VI n vt
&amp;
Al uminum Wi n dow Glass
&amp; G la zi n g On th e J ob or In
Shop .
P ick u p and d e li ve r y
se r v tee
Call Coll ectJ8B-82l9
Speclall u
t n butld - up
roofmg &amp; hot rooh . F ree
E st i mates · 10 y ears exper i ence.
H.uv e F e rr ell
Bidw ell , Oh1o
2 6 1 mo .

BUY, SELL or TRADE

Mobile Homes For Sale

DO~IN6 Till;

Ph . " 2· 2174

-

IY-W.WAIT A

BUT [ REVIVED

MONTHS LATER -- AND
PUT &amp;ACK THE ORIGINA l.
At.l eiE I.I T. MUIM\Vl E V£ 1'1.
S INCE THEt.l l'IIE 5 EEN

BISS£U. BUILDERS

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, ,.;~~

COINS

2 Y E A R m ale h ound , w h tte

WIN AT BRIDGE

Nathan B i ggs

, . - - - - --

Found

per Ad vert tse m e n t

Toke odv•nt•go of our
prices.
Quality
built
homes . Nice lots •v•ll•bt.
In nlte locations.

From the largtst Truc k or
Bull do ze,...Rad i at or to th e
all est Heet e r Co r e .

BLIND A D S

Addit iona l

TUESOAY, MARCH 9, 1976
5 :00-Bonanza 3; l{odeo Glri 4; Gunsmoke 6; Famll~
Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3o-Adam·12 ~ . News 6; Beverly Hillbi llies 8,
Electric Company 20,33; Ada m· ll 13.
6:00-News 3, 4;8,10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; lTV
Uti li za tion 33.
6 :3o-NBC N e ws3. ~, 1 5; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias, Yoga
and You 33.
7·00-Tr ulh or Conseque nces 3; To Tell The Truth 4 ;
Bowling For Dollars 6; Count ry Place 8; New 10;

Business Services

Pomeroy
QUALITY Motor Co.

v tn y l roof

R U T LA ND Gun Cl ub m eel lng
an d 22 R tfl e Ma t ch a t N ew
U ma Road , Frtd !ly , 8 p .m
E ve r yo n e w e lco me
3 9 Me

Television log for easy viewing

Auto Sales

@) 2s;Ns,

Wan l ed to own " nd ope rate
c and y
a nd
c onf ec t i on
VPnd ing ro ute
Po m eroy
and surr ound i ng area .
Plea san t b u si n ess . H ig h
prof i l t te ms Ag e or ex
p er ience no t I mpo rt an t
Requ i r es c ar a nd Sl495 t o
54 795 c ash ln v est men 1. F or
det ai l s wr ite an d In c l ud e
your phone n umber

MA K E SU RE yo u g e t 'everv

M in imum Charge Sl 00

patd ads and
w i th1n 10 days

Auto Sales

RES PONSIBL E
PERSON

_____ _______ _

Inse r tion

conse cut tve
25 Per Ce n t

Bu~n~ Opportun~~

-------·- ------

Corrections w ill be lie
cepred un t 1l 9 am

For Fast Results Us_e The Sentin.e l Classifieds

WO U LO you l i ke to ha ve ex t ra
1n c om e s ~!l ing Ra wle igh
Pr od uc tt? Ca ll 2-47 2204 f or
more ln ,orm &amp;rlon
3 7 3tc

',,

."• f',.,.I'
~

Muan, w. Ve.

.,

WHV, SHORE --·
I'D LOVE A CUP

Halfway measures won 't cut1t

;o;-.;oU today

PerSis.t8tiC• .

d e termlnBt t on
and
resourcefulness will be needed
to achie11e your goals

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No•. 22)
An Ill feeling you're nursing
about something done to you
m the past could overly In·
fluence you in deahn g with this
person today

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0.C.
21) Should you see a friend b&amp;mg taken advantage of today,
speak up Th ts Individual may
not be aware of what's happen-

mg

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen.
19) Yo u may lmd yourself Involved in a new proJect with
anot h er today . If It 's to be
successfu l. your g oals must be
m harmony

AOUARtUS (Jon. 20·1'4b. 11)
Pess1m1st tc associates could
t alk you o ut o f your good tdeal
today Try what you bel ieve In ,
provid ed there's no n sk r&amp;qwred

PISCES (Fob. 20· M•rch 20)
Treal all you r frtends equally
t oday or y o u ma y hurt
someone's feeling s unintent to n a ll y B e loya l to those
who ' e been true to you

~'PX

~b(~
M•rch 10, 1171
M any n e w tr tends are hkety to
enter your lite thts year through
r ather u nusual c~rc um stan ces .
It could all starl from an acq uaintance you'll m eet casually

�Meigs Local purchases on emergency basis

10- Tbe Pcmeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Marcb 9, 1976

Deputy
(Continued from page 1)
Elvin "Pete" Wedge, 48; and
Chief Deputy Kenneth Love

34.

'

ErnHt R. Hesson, !he 71
year-old \ailer at the Mason
County Ia I, died at about 1: 15
a.m . today. Hesson had been

on the hospital 's critical lis!

since he was brought there

MEIGS lHEATRE

following the explosion . He
was unconscious the entire
time he was In the hospl1al .
Hesson , a resident of
Franklin Ave., was a former

Sheriff of Mason

County,

having serveC in the early
1940s . He was also a deputy
sheriff under Frank Morrison
and then served as jailer for

!he late Sheriff Elvin E.
I Pelel Wedge.

!-lesson held an elective
post on ~he Republican State
Executive Committee . He
was also a member of the
West Vir-ginia Sheriff's Assn .,
belonged to the Ma sonic

Beni - Kedem

Temple

officer of Carcenters local
1159

ol Point Pleasant for

many years.

( Techn icolor)

Hesson was preceded. ·In

dealh by
E.

Starring : Man y Nashv i lle
sta rs and song s. " R"
Show Starts at 7: 00p .m .

Point PieaSilnl, allended 11\e
St . Peter's lutheran Church .
Funeral services will be

Thursday at 1: JO p.m. at
Wilcoxen Funeral Home with

Rev. Tally Hanna ofllclatin9 .
Burial will be In Moores
Chapel Cemetery at Ashton .

Friends may call at the
Wll col!len Funeral Home from
7-9 p.m . Wednesday.
·

of

He worked on £onstructlon
for many years and was an

NASHVILLE

Pleasant ;
three
step grandchildren , and four step·
great grandchildren .
HessOn , who spent his
entire life as a resident of

Lodge, Scolllsh Rite and
Charleston .

Tonile thru Thurs.
Mar . 9- 11

granddaug h te, . Miss Lisa
M1rle Hesson of Point

~Is

and

father , Willard

brother ,

Les lie
I Doily) , both in 1973.
Survi'l ing are his mother ,

Zola Mayes He&gt;Son of Ciif.

ton ; one s tep-daughter , Mrs .
Margaret

L.

Stalnaker

of

Amarillo. Texas ; one great

PLEASANT VALLEY
Mrs .
DISCHARGES David Wolfe, Portland ;
Gretchen Conley, Diana Schwartz, Anthony Rae, James
Smith, Point Pleasant; Floyd
Bush, Letart; James Long,
Apple Grove; Willard Nibert,
Fraziers Bottom; Mrs.
Harold Birchfield , son,
Southside, and Brady Duncan, Apple Grove .

Were Celebratin' the
"Wearin' of the Green"
With A

o o

o

Veterans Memorial Hospilal
ADMITTED - Kenneth
Reed , Reedsvill e; Robert
Phillips, Portland ; Charles
Young, Tuppers Plains ; Jack
King, Pomeroy; Billie Jean
Herald, Minersville ; Myrtle
Wilson. Vinton; Doris Curry
New Haven ; Leona Hubbard ,
Syracuse; Nellie Lemley,
Portland ; Laura Michael,
Syracuse ; Raymond Justis
Middleport; Amy Roush:
Ches hire .
DISCHARGED - Penny
Landers, Donna Robbins,
Donna Vance, Earl Ka ulf,
Ann.e tle Lambert, Daniel
Davidson,
Margaret Allen
.
Os1e Manuel, Carl Greenlees,
Los hia Mitc hell, Sarah
Congo, Doris Thomas.

.

Some help
(Continued from page I)
about dust being raised on
Beech St . by trucks and
Mayor Hoffman will check
into it. Another suggestion
was received t hat all
residents be required' to ~lean
their si dewalks of s now
during the winter months.
There was no action taken
since council expressed an
opinion that some residents
would be physica ll y incapable
of
cleaning
sidewalks . Another complaint was received on the
plac ement of
wrecked
vehicles on a lot at th e corner
of Locust and Sycamore Sts.
and it was agreed that Mayor
Hoffman will contact the lot

owner.
Closing the mee ting was
Councilman James Brewer
who charged that the street
~eeper has been operating
outside the corporation limits
imd that the police cruiser is
bein g used for purposes other
. than "offici al business ."
Mayor Hoffman will look into
both matters.
Attending were the mayor,
clerk, and council members
Kelly, Brewer, Carl Horky,
Allen Lee King and George,
Meinhart. The Rev . Don Cole
gave prayer preceding the
. meeting.

DO

YOU

NOW THROUGH MARCH 31

HAVE:
RUSTY WATER
THAT STAINS

SAVE 15%

AJTURESANO

CLOTHING?

YOU'D .

BEITER CAU

Of The Normal Finance Charge!

~((

Mil

We ' re selling money!
During Pomeroy National
· Bank's Money Sale you can
save 15 percent of the normal
finance charge on any
installment loan of $1000 or
more. And that's for the
duration of the loan .
Pomeroy
Nat i onal's
Money Sale applies to all
kinds of loans. Auto loans.
Personal
loans .
Home
improvement loans. Home
furnishing loans : Vacation
loans.
Boat
loans.

Consolidation
there ·others?

loans .

Are

So. if you are planning to
borrow money, do it now
during Pomeroy National's
Money Sale ... and save.
Remember, during this
periQd you can save 15
percent of the normal
finance charge . on ariy
installment loan of $1000 or
more .
It's here ... the big Money
Sale. At Pomeroy National
Bank!!!

fi(AW'''IH

SAYRE
HARIMARE
New Haven. W.Va .
882-2525

AIDMEN CA LLED
The Pomeroy E-R unit was
called to the Meigs Inn at 2:28
a.m . Tuesday for Maxine
Sellers who was having chest
pains. She wsa taken to
Veterans Memotial Hospital.

Ladder fund
I Con tinued frorn page 1)

E . F . Robin son, Erma Smith.
Mrs . Ph illip Me inh ar t. Pat
Duft y , A l ice GtobokC'Ir , Bob
Rober ts , Marcia Houdashelf .
R . R. Rupe , Bur l Windon ,
Gar'net Harbrech t. Helen
Handley , ReY . W . H . Perr in ,
CROWS' CLOSING
Char l es Evans , Kennelh
Craw's Steak House will be McC ullough , Lydia Ebers bach,
Harlan
Warner .
closed today and Wednesday Gert
rude M itc.hel l , Chuck
for extensive remodeling.
Bartels, Larry Dugan , Aaron
Zahl. Roy Reuter , Alva
Phalin , Julia Elliott , Wilson
Carpenter . Roy Bel zing . Otho
Murray . Joe Sisson , Ada
Warner . Mary Harbrecht.
Harry Osborne , Lav en na
Ebersbach , D elbert Murra y,
Jerry Colmer
rcontinued from page II
Carl Roa ch, Merlin Tracy ,
simply a comment on the C lar enc e AndrewS , Susan
content of the book, read by a Andrews , Gertrude Andrews ,
Carl N orto n . Ja m es Fugate,
library visitor could serve as Jeane Tatt erson . Step h en
a motivation toward reading Tatterson, Net ta Warner ,
Ruschel.
Alfred
the book, the specialist said. Eugene
Ruschel. Waller Whi t e , Ellen
His proposal was that the Wilson , Otto Lo hn , Conrad
Oh.ling er, James Owens. Ed
annotations on books be kept Cozart
. Dora Heaton , W illiam
in loose leaf folders for easy Knittle , Lloyd MoOre , Th elma
eva luation by potential N e a se, Carl Hendri cks,
Charles
Hayes , Willia m
readers. Another suggestion Fetty , Ke nnet h Braun .
was for placing books of Waller Couch, Jam es Dieh l ,
Al l eM
Eic h inge r ,
linda
questions on tables in lbraries Sheets,
George Nash, Edna
to stimulate interest in books Coooer , Marion Ebersba ch,
Polly Legar, John Terrell ,
on particular subjects, along Joe
Str uble ,
Roger
with a guide on what KovB i chik . Gene Mit ch , Pal!!
materials are available on E ichi nger , Elizabeth F ic; k,
F lo yd Spence, Bob M i ll er.
tile subject. This, said Dr. Emma
H ood. Oi an e Pe t tit ,
Manzo, would make library . Roy H e ndri:-: , Etta W i ll ,
r ge
Horak ,
Clif f ord
visitors familiar with the Geo
Young, Shu ler's Mark e t . Art
potential of the library to Gilmore , Betty Mank in . E l l tin
, Simon Johnson 1 Roy
a nswe r
thou sa nd s
of Johnson
J e nkins .
Mary
Alice
questions ,
Samuels , Samue l Fry , Dave
Certification through in- See . Ve ra VanMeter , Bill
Bowen , Em mett Bl ackburn .
' dependent s tudy was another Harold Eb e rsba c h , Ellen
Couch, Gerald
H o ffn er ,
proposal by Dr. Manzo.
Cha rl es Holfn er . L afe Cogar ,
He spoke of the tremendous Steve Stewar l.
oppor tunity offered by
Charles Coh en . Ed Bowen .
r e~ Haye s . Claren ce
libr a ries f or independe nt Mild
Fre_e rnan , Ray W ini n g. H elen
study and suggested the L ocha r y, H ester Blackwood ,
certifica te approach as a Pear l Ash , jo hn Sebo, Re nee
Stone, Eva Oessauer , Will
method of creating in terest. Dur s t. Wi i !M d Durst , Ethel
Elementary, junior high and Bush , Mag~delen e Rus se ll .
Albert Pelt it. H . H . Wehrung ,
high school students , he said , Jame~
Phill i p s,
Rober !
could lhrough independent Burton , Anna 0111. Jer r y
Mr s . N i11, Websler
study become specialists in a Fulak.
H odge , Ste ll a Ebersba c h ,
particular field and act.Jally Roge r Dillard . E liza be t h
write a study prog ram, offer Duffy . Genevi eve Wel l, Ruth
Pears on . Susa n Casto . Ray
tutorin g se rv ices, and Sm
i th , Harlan Whitlatch ,
Dr en n er ,
Earl
arrange for meetings with Max
sm an ,
Gary
Hy sell.
resource people, thereby Mos
Truman ' Rus se ll , George
using the "people U.aching Wright , Marie Le ifheit , Bot
Grimm , Gar y Michael , Edna
people '' approach .
Hart. Ton v Tay lor . Bet t y
"Li bra ries need to be Rawli ngs , Hel en Houdashelt ,
placed wher e things are Randy Houdashell . A ll e n
Ha rTley . Ji m Soulsby . Lo uis,
happe nin g," th e spea ke r R eibe l , Nel !e J . Bi n ~ . Robert
Morr is. Sr ... J am es Wisec up ,
concluded .
A l eshire ,
Sco tt
o_ward
In the absence of Mrs. H
Sh a nk . Evely n La·nd ers. v . D .
Bonnie · Fisher, Teach er E dwards . Li ll-i i:".. Hau ck., An ra
ward..
Cec i;l
EiSelslein ,
Corp s free read ing .com- ·wi
ll iam StPp hen son , Dew e._,.
mittee
lea de r ,
John Ly o n s, M i ldr ed Ward , G l adys
Rcdovian , Local Educa tion Cain . Paul . B urn s, Me l vin
Hood , Clyd e W ines . Jr _, Clar a
Agency
coo rdin ato r , Thomas . John M i tch , A rt hur
prese nted a n outline of Pri ce. Richard Owe n s .
Davton Phillips . L eon ard Van
proposals for getting books M
e t er ,
Daisy
Sh mu l er .
in to the hands of the over Glenna Tucker , Phyll is
, Agn es Imboden .
1,300 elementary sc hool Barker
Richar d N eulzling , Max
students . in the district.
M ees, C l i t t o rd Ken n edy .
'Pow e ll.
Wall er
While smfle fundin g is Steve
Grueser , Clara Shustei- , Or .
available, additional will be R . R P ick."ens, H . D .
solicited for the purchase of Goeg l ein . D r . Lewis T ell e ,
Pau l Elch , Gera ld Rough ,
paperbacks. Acco rdin g to Dan
Morris . Geor"Qe Morr is.

Living

Mrs . Fisher 's pian a corps of
volunteers will be organized
in each section of the school
district. These volunteers will
be trained in four workshops
in the areas of book selection,
readin g aloud , library
visitation,
and
home
visitation.
Role of the volunteers will
be to help students in tile
selection uf books, to arrange
for a visi t to the library and to
do a follow-up home visit.

Hoffner , Ral Mathotn, Mr .

and Mrs . Leonard .,lewe ll , Mr .
and Mrs . Gilbert Mees, Mrs .
Thomas Young, Mrs . Mary
M cAngus , Ken Collins, Carl
W ill , Don Young. Larr y Lee,
Mr . and Mrs . VIctor Young,
Jr . .
Tom's
Carry -Out,
Marjorie
Goett , M i nnie
,Johnson , Freda L!evl ng , H .
H . Wehrung , Tom Abl es, Jr .,
Basilio Girolam i. Roland
Richards , Charles Swat.zel.
Helen Holt , Irene Baxter ,
Anna Cornell , Mrs . Ed
Foster , Mrs . James E .
Hawley , Mrs . Harry L .
Ba i tey. Mrs . L . P . Sterr ett,
Mrs . Gertrud e Casto.

CLINIC SET
A cancer clinic, free to all
Meigs County women , will be
· eld Thursday at Veterans
emorial Hospital. Women
wishing an iappolrttment may
call the cancer office, 991-7531
or 992-5832.

END MARRIAGE
Dixie Rose Cadle, Middleport, and Lee Roy Cadle,
Middleport, have filed for
dissolution of marriage In
Meigs County common Pleas
Court. PhylUs Irene Curfman
was gran ted a divocce lrorn
Charles Norman Curfman.
CHICKEN DINNER
SYRACUSE - The Ladles
Auxiliary or the fire department here will hold a chicken
dinner Satw-day ~ginning at
II :30 a .m . at the municipal
building.

IN HOSPITA·L
Freda Durham of Middleport is a medical patient at
Pleasant Valley Hospital ,
Her room number is 119.

'•

ELBERFELDS
·1N POMEROY
................................ .

••

..

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

Start dreaming in a

GORGEOUS
SPLASH OF COLOR

The one word

•

Glamorous you ... in our nifty nylon tricot
gowns! Soft, sensuous and oh, so wildly beau·
tiful! The gowns with gentle keyhole gathers.
The coat ... dramatic zipper float style with
side pockets . Machine washable and dryable,
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UKES HARD~ARE BUSlNESS--,J ~ff Warner, right, is instructed by his trainingsupervisor, Roy E1chmger, on his parttun~ job at Ehersbach Hardware Store in Pomeroy.
Jeff, a senior at Meigs High School in Distributive Education was elected president of the
Meigs DECA Club, a student organization related to the
E. program. Jeff's career
objective is in the hardware business. After graduation he plans to work full time wi!JJ !Jle
Ebersbach firm .
·

D.

By STEVE GERSTEL
MIAMI (UP!) - President
Ford rolled to a fourth
straight
primary
win
Tuesda'y in Florida and
Jimmy Carter claimed the
role of Democratic front·
runner by ending George
Wallace's rule in Dixie.
Ronald Reagan, 65-year old
leader of · the GOP's
conserva_tive wing , and
Wallace, t~ paraly-zed Utreeterm Alabama governor,
were the big losers in the
nation's fourth and the
South's first primary of the
Bicentennial election year.
Reagan, who has failed to
stop the suddenly smooth
Ford political machine, said
he would not quit. But he
hinted at a new Southern
strategy to ~eep his hopes
alive
for
the
GOP
Wallace - who shocked the
Democrats four years ago by
winning the Florida primary
with 42 per cent of the vote said he was proud of his
second place finish although
almost 10 per cent of the
Floridians deserted him. Sen.

r;;;;,;'~ ':"'~i~'"B;i~fJ Gooding
~

By United Press lnternatlo1111l
LORAIN, OHIO - J'lEGOTIATORS FOR the Lorain
, Education As~ciation . were to meet today with
representatives of the school board in their first talks since
many teachers went on strike Tuesday. They .struck over the
board 's decision to fire 104 teachers and dismiss or downgrhde
11 administrators, which they clain1ed violated a contract
. provision that teachers "shall have a voice in aU policy

inatters."
The board said the contracts of 85 employes would not be
renewed and thHt 51 of the 85 were teachers; that it was simply
a question of management; and pointed to the fact the school
system has lost some 2,000 pupils over the last few years to
explain the staff cutbacks.
FRANKFURT; WEST GERMANY - POUCE today
lowered $389,1100 in a briefcase io a terrorisi who stormed a
~Wrtroom here, barricaded himself with two hostages in a
back room and threatened to shoot them if his demands were
not metfor nearly $3million ransom and a plane to Cuba.
Police lowered the cash - I million marks - in a black
briefcase from a third floor window to the room below
occupied by the raider and his two captives. The sum,
however, fell far short of the ransom demands of the te.-rorist
who had asked foc a total of almost $3 million in French and
Swiss francs , U. S. dollars and German marks, He also
demanded a Boeing jetliner to fly him to Cuba.

EAST MEIGS - Chester
Gooding was rehired as
principal at Eastern High
School and given a three year
contract by the Eastern Local
School Board Tuesday night.
J ohn Riebel, superintendent, said the board in a
long session also adopted a
policy cove ring overtime
worked by non -a c ademic
employees that requires it be
approved in advance by the
board .
·
The board entered into an
agreement with the Athens
County Board of Education
for the service of an EMR
supervisor and with the
Meigs County Board for a
workstudy coordinator. It
also passed a resolution
giving support to the Right to
Read Program at Tuppers
Plains.
Four persons submitting
letters asking employment in

case of vacancies were Ma·ry

1 ·1 I I

,

The board discussed use of facillllel of the dlatrlct for
the Pmeroy Boya Uttle League Program with Don Hunnel and
Ed Kennedy.Supl. Dowler saidhewillworltout detalia.
Frank Casto, on behalf of the Tractor PUlling Aalln.,
requested permiiSion to purchase some ol the bleachers
removed frun \be junior high school in Puneroy. However, he
was told the bleacbers can probably be used in other locations
IUld are not for sale at this lime.
During this discussion, it was reported that Supt. Dowler
Md his assistant, Morris, are taking an Inventory of aU
articles in abandoned buildings not needed by the district.
According to plans, aU of these items will be moved to the
Rutland gymnasium where a public sale will be held .
At the request of the new clerk, the board agreed to
purcbase oo a lease agreement a mini.(!()ID]IUier for use in his
office, The machine will make possible Writing of payroU
cbecks by the new clerk. The payroU checks are now done by a
Belpre firm at a cbarge of.$225 a month. It was reported also
that the new machine will make it possible for aU work to be
done in the clerk's office without the employment of another
person which had been planned. The machine wiD provide
immediate financial statements for board members.
A letter from Eleanor Thomas, executive director of the
Meigs County Council on Aging, was read !Jlanklng the board
for use of facllilles.
A\lending were &amp;!pt. Dowler, Assistant Supt. Morris,
board membfrs Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, WendeD Hoover, Robert
Snowden, Dr. Keith Riggs, and Virgil King and·Prlncl(ll$ Bob
Morris, Jeff Weaver and James Diehl and Clerk Triplett.

en tine

Fi£teen Cents
Vol. 27, No. 231

Ford, Carter win in Florida

nomination.

~

school in the district which has gone over 5days permitted for
schools to close due to emergency situation. Water problems
brought aboot some of the clQSings at Bradbury.
April I Is tile first day of the spring vacation break.
A letter was read from the Middleport PTA In regard to
serious leaks at tile Middleport Elementary School and Asst.
Supt. Dan Morris reported a discussion he had this week wi!JJ
ooe firm representative on what is needed to eliminate \be
problem. According to the representative, about $12,000 In
costs will he Involved which will not mean a new roof for the
ooilding, as rumoced .
The roof has leaked since 1957 and is steadily getting
worse.
The board changed a policy for teaehen on Umlted
contracts with \he change be!Dg \bat lheoe teachen can be
dismissed from service wl\houl lbe supe!intendeot bavlog to
state a reason and wi!Jloat pubUc bearing,
The board employed Juanita Owens as a substitute bus
driver and tabled a request from Jean Shaver, a Meigs High
School teacher for four days professional leave to attend an
environmental workshop next mon!JJ. It was agreed to make
application foc Title IV-B fund-! lhroogh which various types ol
equipment can be purchased.
It was reported !Jlat the employment of John Triplett as
new clerk of the board was not In compliance with state law.
Therefore, the board, to comply, employed Triplett as clerk
until its organizational meeting In January. H he is
reemployed In January, then he must be given a two year
contract.

Henry Jackson, winner In severe and possibly fatal
Massachusetts, finished a blow to Reagan 's hopes of
solid third.
unseating Ford.
Ford described himself as
After listening to the
"overjoyed" by his victory, results In Rock Island, !D.,
while Carter caUed his upset · Reagan dismissed Florida as
of Wallace "unbelievable ... a "not a typical Southern
majorstepforward"toafirst state" and said he was
baUot nomination In July In aiming his campaign at the
New York.
South and Southwest, a
Wallace and Reagan tried marked change In strategy
to brush off their losses and a clear indication he felt
calling Florida atypical of the Ford might beat hlin again in .
South. Reagan said "there's Dllnois .
no quitting now, I am going
BiUy Taylor, the officially
all the way to Kansas City." neutral
Florida
slate ·
With 95 per cent of the 3,420 cbairman, said of Reagan: "I
precincts reported, here's would say he has two ch"'ces
how the Democrats stacked for the nomination now up:
poor and none."
Carter 423,313 - 35 per
Said Ford In Washington,
cent; Wallace 381,768 - 32; "Tonight is not a night to talk
Jackson 276,1109 - 22.
The GOP vote was :
Ford 298,232 - 53 per cent;
Reagan '262,312- 47:
Ford and Reagan clash
again next · Tuesday In
lllinois. A defeat for Reagan
In his native state could give
Ford a triumphant ride to the
GOP presidential nomination
at Kansas City in August.
The Florida results were a
PARTRIDGE, Ky. (UPI)
- The bodies of 15 miners
trapped five and a half miles
underground when an ex·
ploslon ripped through a mine
near this eastern Kentucky
village
were found early
.
'
today.
The mine had
the resignation of Emily
previously
been cited for
Street as French and English
having
high
concentrations
of
teacher . and hired James
metllane
gas.
Kolar.
Nine were killed in the
·The board recessed· imtil
explosion
and six apparently
March 18, at 7: 30 when it will
later from a
suffocated
discuss the budget. Riebel
of
heavy
smoke and
mixture
said the district will receive
methane
gas,
said
Kentucky
less money this year than last
Department
of
Mines
and
and the budget will have to be
Resources
ComMineral
revised.
Attending were Oris Smith, . missioner Harreld Kirkpresident; David Smith, patrick.
The explosion occurred
Doug
Bissell, Dorothy
Tuesday
at the Scotia Coal
Calaway, Dorset Larkins,
Co.
mine,
a subsidiary of Blue
board members; Eloise
Coal Co., KnoxviUe,
Diamond
Boston, clerk; Chester
Tenn
.,
near
the Virginia
Gooding and Riebel.
border and about 40 miles
from Hyden, Ky., where a
me!Jlane gas explosion killed
38 miners five year~ ago.
Kirkpatrick said six of the
miners apparently were not
killed ins tan Uy.
driving under suspension,
"Nine of them were found
speeding, spinning tires,
in different spots and !Jlere
illegal · license
plates, were six who evidently were
shoplifting, disturbing the
not killed instantly," said
peace, resisting arrest and
Kirkpatrick. " They were
one for juvenile court. One able to partlaUy barricade
case was dismissed.
themselves ."
department
inThe
vestigated six accidents
during the month and
collected $927.50 in parking
. meter collections. The police
RACINE - Larry Wolfe,
cruiser was driven 4,394
principal
at . Portland
miles .
Elementary School was hired

bodies .
found

rehired

students who are interested
and parents approve and pay
the expenses. The board
approved the firm of Personal Service Insurance Co.,
for student insurance for next
year; approved Coach Spike
Berkhimer, Joe Mitchem and
Archie Rose to attend a
football clinic in Pittsburgh
on March 26; granted Duane
Wolfe , Larry Heines and John
Riebel permission to attend
the state basketball tournament in Columbus on
March 26.
In a special meeting
recently the board accepted

27 arrested in F ebrU.ary
Twenty-seven arrests were
made by Middleport Police in
February according to the
monthly report of Chief J . J .
Cremeans presented to
village council Monday night.
:. Of the total, six persons
were charged with driving
while intoxicated; four with
failure to yield the right of
way; three for disorderly
manner, and two each with
trespassing and menacing
threats. There was one each
for reekless operation,

Bonnie Harding , Rt. 2,
Pomeroy. Tracy is a fifth
grade student of Miss
Rebecca Tate's.
Room winners were, grade
5, Mrs. Mary Hyusell,
teacher, Kim Morrow,
dailghler of Mr . and Mrs.
Fred Morrow, Syracuse;
alternate, Anna Baxter,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Baxter, Pomeroy;
grade 5, Miss Rebecca Tate,
teacher , winner, Tracy
Harding, daughter of Mrs.
.j

about victory, exceptio thank southerners in the Sou!JJ. He
people fm- the fine job they told his supporters, "I lhinll;
did."
I'U be No. 1 on the first
His campaign manager, ballot."
Howard Callaway,
on
Jackson accepted his third
television juggled three place finish and again
oranges in honor of the insisted the nomination would
Florida trlwnph and declared be decided In the industrial
Reagan's hopes dead.
· North.
"The President has so
"Let him (Carter) join me
much momentum now I don't in New York," said Jackson,
see any way we can be who h8s targeted the Empire
prevented from winning," he State for his second victory.

said.

"·T hat's

Carter expressed surpr~
at his solid victory over
WaUace in the first primary
clash between the two

Jackson added . "What
lndustr.ial state will Carter
carry?"

his

problem,"

Dozer slid off

.
'. truck onto man
Mmers
Donald Lee Sheets, 33, Rt.
I, Reedsvllle, brother of
Gallia-Meigs
Highway
Patroiman E. J.Sheets, was
latally Injured in an accident
at 9:35 a.m. Tuesday on TR
250, one and nine tenths miles
south of Rt. 681 in Meigs
County.
According to the Gallia Meigs Post State Highway
Patrol, Sheets was unloading
a bulldozer from a truck
when the dozer skidded
sideways. He attempted to
jwnp clear, but the dozer
rolled over on him.
Mr. Sheets is survived by
his wife, Jean; a daughter,
Cassie, at home; his parents,
Ezra E. and Frances Sheets,
Route 1, Reedsville; three
brothers, Ezra J ., Route 2,
Pomeroy; David L., Route 3,

Pomeroy; Johnny of Fort
Hood, Tex.; two sisters,
Sandra of Reedsville, and
Delilah of Columbus.
Funeral services wiD be
held at I p.m. Friday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with
the Rev . W. H. Perrin officiating. Burial will be In the
Be'thertJB Cburch cemetery.
Friends may caD at ihe ·
funeral horne after 7 this
evening.

42 die in
ski mishap
.

Firemen make
60 responses
The · Middleport Fire
Department answered .60
calls in February. Of the
total, eight were to fires, all
of a minor nature; 49 were
first aid runs and three leU
into a misceUaneous category
(going to auto accidents) .
tile emergency calls, 35 were
in town and 14 out of town.
The deparbnent spent 88.8
hours answering lire calls
and 178 hours on first aid
calls. The total mileage for
all vehicles was 1,466.4 .

or

TRENTO, Italy (UPI) The village of Cavalese lay
only 200 yarda ahead, the
final stop for 43 skiers
jammed in a red cable car as
it slowly descended from the
slopes of snow-covered Mt.
Cennis.
Suddenly, the gondola
began to bounce, swinging
wildly above a sleep ravine
carved out by the Avisio
River.
Within seconds, a pylon
holding . !Jle support cable
collapsed and the car plunged
230 feet onto the ravine's
jagged slopes, police said.
Forty-two persons died In
the crash, most crushed
beneath the gondola's threeton
overhe~d
support
carriage when it crashed into

the ravine.
The accident Tuesday was
one of western Europe's
worst cableway disasters.

Summer director is hired

Sixth grader best speller

from

"THE FR/1£NDLY BANK"

"·

Bower and Doris Koenig,
Carlotta
Reed,
WASHINGTON - AS a result of Tuesday's Florida cooks;
primary results, if Ronald Reagan's campaign is not dead it at teacher-aide, and Debbie
least Is on the critical list. And if Jimmy Carter ls not the front- Samos, secretary .
Severla parents met witll
runner for the Democratic nomination, then no one is , Reagan
says he wiD continue his cballenge of Ford all the way to the the board about a bus route
pr&lt;lgram.
GOP national convention in Kansas City in August.
A request by Diana Taylor
But unless the former California governor can quickly
er11se the memory of losses to Ford after confrontations in New . to use the Chesler building for
Hampshire and Florida, as well as defeats in Masaacbusetts art classes was approved.
and Vermont, he will be regarded as nothing more than a The program will be for
dogged loser.
Carter says there stiU is a long way to go to win the
Democratic nomination, and he is right. But by defeating the
Alabama governor In Florida, a state where WaUace routed all
Demcicratlc comers four years ago, Carter demonstrated that
Winner of the annual
WaUace is vulnerable in the South and reduced him again to
spelling bee at Pomeroy
the status of protest candidate.
Elementary
School
is
Mr.
Gregory
Thomas,
son
of
WASHINGTON -.. CONGRESS' JOINT Economic
Committee said today President Ford's budget would weaken and Mrs. Don Thomas, a
recovery from the ~ion, leave unemployment high and sixth grader of Mrs. Pamela
Continue Inflation at 8 per cent, The committee's Democrats L. craw's.
Greg will represent his
caned Instead lor higher government spending, temporary
jobs programs for a miWon persons and a voluntary prlce- school in the annual county
lncomea policy to reduce infla Uon generaUy to 4 per cent in spi!Uing hee at Salisbury
Elementary Wednesday,
1977.
Committee Republlcans, in a minority report, said the March 24.
Alternate will be Tracy
proposed program "requires more ollhe excessive spending
and hUIIe deficita which contriooted heavily to ow- bout with Harding , daughter of Mrs.
lnfla\lon and recession in the first place."

WALK~ UP TELLER WINDOW AND

pomeroy pomeroy
rutiC!nd nationa
tuppers plams, bank
.

'.

letter to editor·
Continued from page 2
responsible ;" (2) cooviction of a felony ; (3) behavior
"affecting professional performance In an adverse fashion Sll
as to prevent a teacher from perlormin8 competenUy," The
third phrase is quite open to Interpretation, and gives a local
board of education a great deal of latitude In determining
whether or not they wish to rehire a teacher .
The editorial upset me because whoever wrote it has
missed the entire point of the biD, which Is to guarantee due
process oflaw to teachers when !Jley are not rehired . Many
teachers in Ohio have been terminated without ever having
been evaluated. Others have been . given satisfactory
evaluations during the year, and !Jlen not r.ehired, And \hey
never know why, because the law as it now stands says school
boards do not have to give reasons for dismissal, or listen to an
appeal by the non-renewed teacber. The only way teachers In
Ohio have been able to keep their righta to due process, whicb
are guaranteed by our federal constitution, is to turn to the
courts.
SB 208 would require that a teacber be evaluated yearly,
notified of his deficiencies, be given suggestions as to how .he
can correct these deficiencies, and be given time to try to
correct them . Only if a teacher fails to correct deficiencies that .
he has been made aware of can a school board not rehire on the
grounds of incompetency. I don't feel that any reasonable
person can say that this is asking too much for the teachers ol
Ohio.
.
For those of you in the community who do not know me, I
teach junior and senior high social studies at Gallia Academy
High School. I am very active In professional aS90Ciatloos and
have followed this bill ever since it was introduced In the
Senate.! have a copy of !Jle bill whlcb I quoted from earlier In
!Jlis letter. I've attended one public hearing on the bill and
Intend to attend the next one this Wednesday evening . .
I feel that the biD as amended is an eKceDent bW and is
eertainly not a threat to quality education In Ohio.- ~cerely,
Rebecca S. Nolt, 133 Rear 3rd Ave.

Andrews and several Pomeroy village council members.
Nature of !Jle business was not being disclosed.
The board agreed to renew an agreement with the county
board of education for employment of the work-etudy
coordinator, Mrs. Mary Bacon, who works hoth in Gallia and
Meigs Counties. Supt. Dowler explained that most of Mrs.
Bacon's salary is paid by the state.
A letter was read from the Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency in regard to the agency's Interest in use of the
Rutland gymnasium building far a Head Start center to serve
some 60 youngsters on a nine month basis. While the agency
cannot pay rent, it was reported that certain services, such as
a janitor, would be provided by the agency and utilities.
The board expressed interest in cooperating with. the
agency if the project would not involve any ootlay of funds by
the board and if the program did •not Interfere with ot~r
activities that take place in the building.
Mrs. Phyllis Hackett was given another year's leave of
absence. She is currently working on her master degree and
will be a certified elementary principal upon completion of
~r work. Don Leigh was given permission to attend an
American Personnel and Guidance convention In Chicago,
April 12- 14. The board approved mUeage for attendance of
Martha Vennari to a wockshop on identification of
handicapped children in Nelsonville on March 3.
The board took no action on a request from the Teacher
Corps for the purchase of $SOD worth of paperback books for
distrirution to students and approved April I as a makeup day
for the Bradbury school. The Bradbury school is the only
~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday , March 10, 1976

.:····-······································································..

!

Stop in the Pomeroy National Bank and its branches
at Rutland and Tuppers Plains, on March 13, St.
Patrick's Day (March 17}, a.n d March 20 to enjoy
refreshments with our friendly staff. There will also
be favors!

Tiemeyer , Harold Hood ,
Dennis Harris . Lawrence

.

'•

Several administrators were given two year contracts by
the Meigs Local School District Board of Education in regular
session Tuesday night in Middleport. The board also tightened
Its belt In the face of a fmanclal crunch.
The board agreed to request an advance draw of $100 000
from the county auditor after which Supt. Dowler stated that
he would issue a directive at once conveying to personnel that
only emergency purchases will be approved.
Given two year contracts upon the recommendation of
&amp;lpt. Charles Dowler were Dan Morris, assistant
superintendent of the district; James Diehl, high school
principal ; Fenton Taylor, assistant high school principal · Jell
Weaver, junior high principal; Donald Hanning, Bradoory
principal; Greg McCall, Harrisonville principal, and Eric
Hart, Rutland principal. Some adjustment in the salary
schedule for the administration team wiD be made later. Other
principals of the district were not considered since their
contracts do not expire !Jlis year.
The board accepted the resignations of Jolane Curtis ,
teacher at the high school at the end of this school year·
Virginia Wears, cook at Salisbury as of ·March 15 ; .Ella Ma~
Romine, cook at Bradbury at the end of the school year;
Barbara Arcber, junior high school secretary as of June 11,
and Nonga Roberts, Pomeroy Elementary teacher who is
retiring at the end of the current school year.
The board met In executive session for one hoor and 40
minutes before !Jle regular meeting got underway. During this
time, the board conferred with two groups, apparently about
oos driver problems, . and with Pomeroy Mayor Clarence

Stewart, John Wyatt. loretta

.

for the people
St. Patrick's is a friendly day ...
A day to stop awhile
To talk a bit and visit .. .
To share a friendly smile , , . so ...

SORORITY TO MEET
Preceptor Bela Bela
Chapter of Beta Sigma Pill
Paul Warner . Ted Down ie.
Sorority will meet at the
Leslie Fultz , w . P . Loc hal"y ,
Tra .c v
Whaley ,
Ber t ha home of U!Uan Moore at 7
Canaday. Chlor Flck, Evelyn
p.m. Satw-day for a box
Knight , Joe Cook , Harry social. Hus bands will be
Osborne . Dan Wh ite. Mary
Webster . Ferman Moore , Ed guests and the social wiD
Freeman , Richerd Freeman , replace the regular weekly
Richard Ronberry, A. M.
meeting . Beverage and
Bradford , James ThOmas,
Ellza Gilmore, Charles" dessert will lie furnlahe&lt;l.
Nicholas , Fred Goeg lein , Oon
Members are to take a box
McKn ight. Doris Carder,
Jerry Van lnwagen . Caro lyn lunch.

Bonnie Harding; alternate,
Gina Johnson, daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Larry Johnson,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy; grade six,
teacher Pamela L. Crow,
winner, Greg Thomas, son bf
Mr . and Mrs : Pon Thomas;
alternate Tammy Pettit,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Pettit, Pomeroy,
Dwight
Goins,
instnunental music instructor
at Meigs High school was !Jle
pronouncer.

Purchase of insurance
from the Personal Service
Insurance Co. for coverage
as summer recreation for students.
- The clerk-treasurer to ·
director by the Southern
advertise
for bids for a new
Local Board of Education
riding
lawn
mower at Letart
Tuesday night.
Jane Wagner, clerk, said Elementary School,
- Participating In the
!Jle board also raised the
salaries of the Racine sub- ESEA TIUe IV program and a
stitute drivers to $16.05 per resolution to proceed with the
day. In other business the bond indebtedness levy that
board gave the Racine PTO will be placed on tile ballot at
approval to use the high the J~me election.
The clerk·lreasurer to
school cafeteria on March 27
for a fifth and sixth grade attend the 20th annual
basketball banquet, and OASBO workshop on March
approved one-half day as 31 and April 1 and 2 in
to Howard
calamity day at Portland Columbus;
Elementary and at Southern Caldwell. and Carl Wolfe to
High School. It also ap- attend the State Basketball
finals in Columbus; accepted
proved :
a ·gift
from
Racine

Elementary of a slide and
used refrigerator ; a contract
with !Jle Meigs Co1111ty Board
of Education for workatudy
coordinator, and the Baseball
'Association to use the Racine
elementary school on March

16.
Attending were Jack
Bostick, president; Robert
Sayre, Dennis Evans, Dallaa
mu and Roger Adama, board
members; Bobby Ord,
.superintendent; Jim Adams,
Jennings Beegle, Robert
Beegle, BiD Baer and Larry
Wolfe, principal&amp;; aU the
regular bus drivers and
substitute bus drivers, and
Mrs. Wagrier . The board wiD
meet again this evening at
1:30 p.m.

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